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                  <text>Monday. December 12, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page 12 The Daily Sentinel

.--- Local news briefs ...
Contlnued from page 1
In another weekend accident, pollee said a vehicle driven by
Gerl S. Matson, Pomeroy, and stopped at the traffic llght on W.
Main St. , was struck in the rear by a vehicle driven by Sandra K.
Scott, Cheshire. There were llght damages to the Matson
vehicle and moderate to the Scon vehicle. No charges were
flied.

EMS has 13 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 13 calls
over the weekend, 11 on Saturday and lwo on Sunday . .
Saturday at 12:56 a.m., Pomeroy to Five Points ror ·Karl
Krautter to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 1:49
a.m. to Railr0ad St. for Lewis Taylor to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Pomeroy at 8:57a.m. to Rose Hill for Don Betztng to
Veterans Memorial »ospttal; Racine at 9: 59.a.m. to Pine Grove
Road for Go ldie Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 12:54 p.m. to Dock St. for Helen Boyd who was
treated but not transported: Pomeroy at 3:20p.m. to East Main
St . for Char lotte Jacks to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 5:14 p.m . to a trailer fire at the Howard Lockhart
res idence on Landaker Road: Pomeroy was called back to the
Lockhart residence at 7:15 p.m.; Syracuse at 6:18 p.m. to
Chester lor Murl Ours to Holzer Medical Center: Chester Fire
Department, Tuppers Plains and Pomeroy at 7: 23 p.m.
transported Leona and Ray bond Wallace !rom an auto accident
on on State Route 7: Rutland at 10:05 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 1
lor Douglas Kitchen toO'Bienness Memorial Hospital; Rutland
at 10:56 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. lforEtson Munn toO'Bienness
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday a t 10:58 a .m ., Pomeroy to Pomer!&gt;Y Cliffs Apts. for
Evely n Spencer to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
12:44 p.m . to Ra ilroad St. for Lewis Taylor to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Plan dinner party

Sen ..Byrd... _c_on_u_n_ue_d_f_ro_m_p_a_g_e_1--~------------strong posture while we talk," Byrd
said.
The senator, who recently won
another six-year term in the Con'
gress, said he felt by moving to the

Hospital news ·
Veterans Memorial
Sat~rday Admissions- Goldie
Roberts, Rac ine; Charlotte
·Jacks. Langsvllle; Leona Wal·
, lace, Pomeroy.
Sa turda y Discharges
Carden Randolph , Jessie Jarrell,
Elza La rkins , Charles Blake.
Sunday Admissions - Flossie
Moeller, Gallipolis: Orner Dal·
ley, Racine; Evelyn Spencer,
Pomeroy; Lewis Taylor ,
Middleport .
Sunday Discharges - Addle
Cummins .

Racine American Legflln AuxIliary wlll have a Christma s
dinner and party on Thursday. at
6 p.m., at the Racine United
Methodist Church basement.
There wm be a gift exchange.

appropriations
committee.
he build the various ARC highway
would be able to help West Virginia corridors in the state, Byrd said in·
fusion of funds to revive the commore than as Majority Leader.
· "I will have something to say ' mission is necessary.
"I plan to suppot:t legislation to
about projects that will have impact
on !he state's economy, busi ness, do just thaL I think it is a must to
education, transportation and olher our economy and to have better
transportation," Byrd said. .
.
matters," Byro said.
1ssue
facmg
Con·
But
the
major
The ARC is one or Byrd's top
priority items in the next Congress. gress this coming year, Byrd said.
Pointing out that ''$15 million here wiU be the deficit and how 10 cor·
and $3 million !here" isn 'I going 10 reel the problem.

Ohio Lottery

•

12 more
·days 'til

Daily Number
467
Pick4
5076

Christmas

Meeting tonight
Racine Board ol Public Affairs
will meet tonight (Monday),. 7
p.m .. at Star Mlll Park._

•
.
.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. December 13, 1988

Co ntinued from page 1
there, as well as in Maryiand,
Delaware. Washington, D.C . and
the Vtrgtnlas.
"This is pretty much the
season's first cold wave caused
by arctic air from Canada
pushing across the United
States." NWS meteorologist
Hugh Crowther said.

Survivors Include her husband,
daughter of the late Ira Brawley
Frost, Thornville; two
Kenneth
and Bessie Alice Brawley. of
sisters,
Ada
Hoce, Pomeroy . and
Charlotte M. Jones, 65, Akron, Coolville, who survives. She was
Ruth
Thivener,
of Gallipolis; one
Ohio died Saturday, Dec. I 0, 1988, employed by the K-Mart Corpobrother, Donald West, cH Somin th~ Akron City Hospital.
ration, Vienna, W.Va., and was a
merville, S.C.; and several n)e·
Born March 25, 1923 in Mason, member . of the Grace United
ces and nephews.
she was a daughter or the late John Brethren Church.
She was preceded In death by
H. and Minnie R. Vandall Ord.
In addition to her mother, she
her parents, three sisters and one
Also preceding her in death was is survived by her husband, Dale
brother.
her husband, Otho.
Rockhold; two daughters, An·
Services wtll be Tuesday, 2
Surviving are a son and drea and Heat her; and one son.
p.m., at the Sheridan Funeral
daughter-in-Jaw, Doyle W. and Walter, all at home; flve sisters,
Home, 222 South Columbus St.,
Shirley Jones, Stow, Oh10; three Mrs. Junior (Irene ) Blake, of
Lancaster. with Rev. Jerry Neal
brothers, Wilbur H. and John A. Reedsville, Mrs. Jim (Kathy)
officiating. Burial will be in St .
Ord both or Akron, Doyle W. Ord, Bobo, of Missouri, Mrs. Bob
Mary's Cemetery, Lancaster.
Ma;on:
several
nieces and (Patty) Franklin, of Ashley,
Friends may call at the funeral
nephews.
Mrs. Charles (Terril Modesitt
home on Monday from 7 to 9 and
The fun eral will be Wednesday and Mrs. Roy (Donna) Welch.
at 10 a.m. at the Foglesong Funeral both of Coolville; and three Tuesday until the time of
Home with the Rev. Andrew M. brothers, Walter Brawley, of services.
Hoover officiating. Butial will fol- Dayton. and David and Danny
low in the Suncrcst Cemetery, Point Brawley, both of Coolville.
Pleasant.
·Besides her father. she was
Friends may call Tuesday, from 7 preceded in death by a sister,
Dally stock prices
to 9 p.m.utthe funeral home.
Nancy Fleming.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Services
will
be
Wednesday.
1
Bryce
and Mark Smith
Chlorus Grimm
p.m.. at th'e White Funeral
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Chlorus Grimm. 85. Route 2. !;lome, with Rev. George Horner
Am Electric Power. ............ 27 14
Racine. a retired Meigs County officiating. Burial will be In the
AT&amp;T, ................................ 29 o/s
school teacher. died Sunday at Coolvllle Cemetery. Friends
Ashland Oil ...... ..... ............. 33~
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol· may call at the funeral home
after 3:30p.m. on Tuesday.·
· Bob Evans .......... .. ...... ..... ... 15 ~
lowing an extended illness. ·
Charming Shoppes ...... ........ 12 %
Mrs . Grimm was born May 16,
Bernice Frost
-City Holding Co .................. 31~
1903 in Racine, a daughter of the
Federal Mogui.. ................. .48'A,
late Oliver and Louellen Priddy
Meigs
County
native,
Bernice
Goodyear
T&amp;R ............. ...... 47o/s
Coe. She wa s a gracjuate of Rio.
M.
Frost,
81.
of7820Pieasantvtlle
Heck's
............
...... .......... ..... %
Grande College and also took
Road,
Thornville,
formerly
of
Key
Centurion
....................
15~
post graduate courses at Ohio
Mt.
Vernon,
died
Saturday
morn·
Lands'
End
........................
;-271,1,
University over the years. She
Limited Inc ......................... 27
was a graduate of Racine High lng at the Heartland-Fairfield
Care
Center,
Thornville,
Multimedia Inc .. .'................ 70~
School and a member of the
Born
May
30,
1907
In
Meigs
Rax Restaurants .................. 3~
Letart Falls United Methodist
County,
she
was
a
daughter
of
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12V.
Chu rch. She belonged to the
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
W.T.
West
and
was
Shoney's
Inc ........................ 7%
Racine Chapter 134, Order o!
member
of
the
Amerian
Legion
a
Wendy's Intl.. ............... ... .... 53f.
Eastern Sta r; the Bend o' the
Worthington Ind ................. . 22
River Carden Club and the Auxiliary, Harrisburg, Pa.
United Methodist Church
Women.
Surviving are her husband,
Bert L. Grimm, Pomeroy; two
sons, Robert Grimm, Columbus,
and Ru ssell Crimm, St. Clalrs·
v ille; a s isier, Dorothy McKenzie, Racine: five grandchildren,
six great -grandchildren and several nieces a nd nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
COMPLETE PAYROLL
preceded In death by seven
brothers. three sisters, and an
PROCESSING AND
infant son, Freddy .
Services will be held at 10:30
PAYROLL CHECK
a.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
F unera l Home with the Rev.
WRinNG.
Roger Grace officiating. Burial
OIL A. IEILII Ill, CPA
will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 this evening.
Friends may make contributions ·
to the Letart Falls Cemetery In
992-7270
her memory .

Charlotte Jones

:-1·

Stocks

PHARMACY IN NEW LOCATION- Rite Aid
Pharmacy has moved Into this brand new
quarters onE . Main St. and Is open lor business In
the new location. The store had been located onE.

'

By CHARLES A. MASON
•· '()VPStafr
.

~. ..

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Kaiser's Ravenswood Works will
be sold. The buyer is a new com·
pany 10 be formed by an apparent
domestic · investment
group,
officials announced today.
The
aluminum
production
facility employs about 400 Mason
countians as weU as a large number
or Meigs and Gallia countians. The
sale is expected to be concluded
during the first quarter or next year,

SILVER

ICICLES

CHRISTIIAS CARDS
#

IIIZKI'-tw:KABE OF If
WITH EIMUJI'ES

tw:KABE OF

.

MEIIIEII

OLD

BRACER

OR SPORT llUC
3.5 OZ. SIZE OR

BRUT 33
SI'Wif.DII
UITIDII
3.5 oz. llllE

AR'EBSHAVE
umtJII
liES., LEATHEII OR

CONDITIOffiNO
4.25 OZ. SIZE

/~

611 East Main StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio

liU·•

ALL
MANUFACTURERS'
COUPONS

4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
Every Monday and

Two injured in Monday wreck

POPCORN·
4.5 OZ. BAG

LARGE PEPPERONI
and CHEESE PIZZA

75&lt;

$499

SAVINGS EVERY
DAY IN EVERY
AISLE AT RITE AID!

flflltEI EFFECTWE DEC. IZ 7111111 11ft II, lUI • WE RUEIFE THE - T TO 1/IIIT GUAinTIE$ • lOT REmflllll FOR Tmlf/IANICAI. E/1110111

Additional topping 90'

Jlece•sary)
IPICIC UP1or EAT Ill ONLY ON THIS OFFER I
(No Coupon

INO OIHII DISCOUNTS APPLY)

RITE

'

CALL 992·2228 or 992-9922

MAIN STREET
PIZZA
992 •2228
Pomeroy
216 East •1•
992-9922
t

L ft

We Are Your Hometown Place
t l tf t. tf t t t Jt t I L1st t d t I Lf t l
.

.

t

t

(

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586 ,

~
.,

'.

...

'

about the agreement to sell Mondiy
morning: A meeting is seheduled
ror Dec. 20 between the union
officials and the International
United Steelworkers officials. he
said.
There are 2,000 members of
USW Local No. 5668.
Stidham said the sale could put
on hold Kaiser's plans in February
10 open another potline at the smcl·
ter, causing the possible loss of 100
new jobs. There are currently three
potlines runninJt at the smelter and
Continued on page 10

Study reveals Ohio's poverty
rate has fallen to 13.6 %

Local news briefs-.. . .

HEll'S

Tuesday In December

.

Allee Diane Rockhold, 37, of
Reedsvtlle, died ,Sunday at
Camden-Clark Memdrtal Hospl·
tal, Parkersburg, W.Va. ,afteran
extended tllness.
Born Feb. 11, 1951, she was a

I\~ i i #I ACCEPTS

Customer Appreciation
Christmas Special.

officials said.
"It (the sale) is consistent with
our strategy of setling selec~ assets while, 81 the same ume,
preserving our competitive role as a
fully
· integrated
aluminum
producer," said James S. Pasman
Jr., Kaiser Aluminum chairman and
chief executive officer.
"Next week we are 10 meet with
. representatives of .the new ovmer·
ship," said Dan Sudham, pres1dent
of the United Steelworkers Local
No. 5668 in Ravenswood. The
union official said he first heard

CLEVELAND (UP!)- Ohio's only 10.9 percent In 1980 and 9.8
percent tn 1970.
poverty rate has fallen for a
A family of four with an Income
fourth-consecu tlve year, but
there are sttll 285,472 more of less than $11,650 a year.
Ohioans tn poverty now than including cash !lnanclal assist·
there were In 1980, a study ance but excluding non-cash
financial assistance such as food
released Monday said.
Ohio Poverty Indicators, pub- stamps, Is con£ldered to be living
lished by the Council for Eco- In poverty. A single person with
. nomic Opportunities !n Greater an income of less than $5,770 Is In
Cleveland, said 1,464,647 poverty . ··
Twenty-one counties, lnclud·
Ohioans, or 13.6 percent of the
population; are living tn pov{&gt;rty. tng 19 along or near the Ohio
Ohio's poverty rate was 13.8 River from near Steubenville to
percent In 1987, 14 percent In 1986, east of Cincinnati, have a poverty
14.2 percent In 1985 and 14.6 rate of at least20 percent. Twelve
percent In 1984, the study said. · counties have rates In the 15
However, the poverty rate was percent to 20 percent range, and

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

Ali~ Rockhold

Main St., In what Is known tn the community as the
Stark Building. A grand opening celebration will
be held later.

Kaiser Ravenswood Works to
be sold to investment group

ISN'T IT
f'B0Ul
TIME.

Clara Bell Thomas, 78, Route l,
Ches hire, died Sunday at Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
A homemaker, Mrs. Thpmas
was born March 18, 1910 In
Middleport, a daughter of the
late George and Julia B. Bodkins.
:'ihe was a member of the
Ches hire Baptist Church.
Survivi ng are a daughter and
so n-in-law , Haroldlne and John
Oiler, Hollywood, Fla.,; four
grandsons, Johnny, Joey and
' ' Tommy Oiler, all of Hollywood,
Fla. , and Michael Beaver.
Cheshire.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband. Harold Eugene Thomas; a
daughter, Myrna Beaver, a sis·
ter and a brother.
Memorial services wlll be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Cheshire
Baptist Church with Mr. Stewart
Jamison oftlciatlng. Burial will
be tn Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. The Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home Is In
charge of arrangements.

1 Section, 10 Pages

26 Cents

A Muttimedia Inc. Newtp8ptr

Funds approved for
continued taxi senrice

Record...

-----Area deaths-----

Clara Thomas

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 20s. Wednesday , partly
cloudy. Highs In mid 40s.

Both drivers were Injured In a two car accident at 12:50 p.m.
Monday at the junction of CR. 25 and CR. 26, near Pomeroy tn
Sutton Township.
Troopers said a car driven by Tracy Green, 18, Rutland,
slowed for a right turn and her car was hit from behind by
another vehicle driven by Debra Burke. 30, Pomeroy. Damage
was moderate to both vehicles.
Both drivers suffered minor vltslble injuries and were taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The patrol cited Burke for failure to stop within the as sured
distance.

Gallia judge denies request
Gallia County Common Pleas Court Judge Donald A. Cox
dented a request Monday for a preliminary injunction In the
Trt-Star Cleaners case filed by Dave · Vance, 750 First Ave.,
Gallipolis against Ellis Hunt, 1034 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Vance sued Hunt and another defendant, John Doe, doing
business as Mr. Vacuum, W.Va., for $200,000 damages jointly
permanent
and severally, and sought preliminary and
lnj.t'nctlons to stop Hunt from advertising Trl-Star vacuum
cleaners.
Vance, a representative of Trt-Star Cleaners for the Calltpolts
area, flied the suit, alleging that Hunt was advertising a
Continued on page 10
·
·

55 counties have poverty rates
below 15 percent.
The lowest two poverty rates of
4.4 percent tn GeaugaCounty and
4.6 percent In Lake County are
just to the east of Clevelimd.
Th~ highest rates of 35.2
percent tn Adams County and
30.9 percent In Vinton County are
tn southern Ohio.
"There was very different
regional performance across the
state," said George Zeller, sen tor
researcher for the group. "We' re
not only measuring poverty, but
we' re also measuring economic
performances.
"The Ohio Valley has been
clobbered. In a lot of those areas,
the poverty has doubled and In
Harrison County (In eastern
Ohio) , the poverty has nearly
tripled In the 1980s."
Poverty has been less severe In
·central Ohio and In the !arm
' areas of northwest Ohio, he said.
Twelve counties have seen
Increases of at least 75 percent
since 1980, and eight of those
counties -Columbiana, Carroll.
Jefferson, Harrison, Guernsey,
Belmont, Noble and Moriroe are clustered together In eastern
Ohio.
The other counties with Increases of at least 75 percent are
Vinton and Gallla in southern
Ohlo, Hardin In northwest Ohio
and Ashtabula In extreme , northeast Ohio.
During the same elght·year
period, 11 Ohio counties have
experienced a de&lt;;rease In poverty. Seven of the counties Franklin, Madison, Union,
Champaign, Clark, Greene and
Warren - are clustered from
Columbus west and southwest.
The others are Wood, Erie and
Wyandot In northwest Ohio and
Portage just east of Akron.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
State and federal funds total·
ing $152,278 have been approved
for continuance of the
Middleport-Pomeroy taxi ser·
vice operations In 1989.
This was reported Monday
night by Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman when Middleport Vtl·
!age Council met In regular
·
sessiori.
Mayor Hoffman read a com·
munlcat ion from the Ohio De·
partment of Transportation indl·
eating that . $46,186 In federal
funds and $68,067 in state funds
have been approved by the Ohio
Department of Transportation
and the Urban-rural Mass Trans·
portation System for contlnu·
ance of the system which is
operating tn Meigs County under
the name of the Blue Streak Cab
Co.
In addition, Mayor Hoffman
reported that $38,025 was ap·
proved earlier for the elderly and
handicapped to bring the grand
total funds alloted to the $152,000
figure.
Council approved a fire con·
tract with Cheshire Township for
1989. The contri'ct provides for a
flat payment of $4,650 for the
year plus $75 for each call.
Council also approved the report
of Mayor Hoffman showing re·
celpts of $3,898 In fines and fees
for the month of November. _
A list of village workers to
receive Christmas bonuses was
approved and Clerk-Treasurer
Jon Buck was au thorlzed to make
necessary lund transfers within
the budget to balance accounts
by the end of the year.

Mayor Hoffman read a letter ary. Mayor Hoffll)an reported
from the Attorney General's that approximately 150 other
office calling for a meeting for communlltes In Ohio were also
Dec. 16 at 10 a.m . because the cited for not complying by the
· village was not In compliance July 1 date.
The mayor reported that no
with EPA requirements In re·
word
has been received from the
gard to the sewage disposal
system last July 1. However, state on the town's applications
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that for funds to provide Improvethe problem was not with the ments at the Dave Diles Park
village or the contractor but was through the Division of Waterdue to the !act that . chlorine ways. However, council dispumps needed in the project cussed the lack of proper signs at
were difficult to obtain. A repre· the park and that will be taken
sen ta tlve from Floyd G. Browne care of regardless of the outcome
and Assocll!les will attend the of the grant appllcatlon. Mayor
Dec. 16 meeting and the matter ts Hoffman thanked Council Prest·
Continued on page 10
expected to be cleared by Janu·

Celeste calls for
more school taxes
.

- -·

and 84 percent said the voters
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) rather than the General AssemSaying baste and higher educa·
bly should decide on a tax hike.
tton are the cornerstone of Ohio's
"I am very respectful of the
future, Gov. Richard Celeste
people of this state," said the
called Monday for a public vote
governor, adding that he sees a
In mtd-1989 on a tax Increase for
ballotlssue on taxes as "kind of a
both primary and secondary
referendum on the future of
schools, 'and colleges and
Ohio. ''
universities.
Although Celeste has hinted for
At the same time, the state
Board of Education recom- weeks about the need for a public
referendum on a tax Increase, It
mended that the state personal
was the first time he has publicly
Income tax rates be rolled back
adyocated .going to the ba'llot,
·to their 1985 levels - about 22
and the first time he has said
percent higher than they are now
colleges and untversltles ought to
- and that an extra $1.62 btlllon
be Included.
be spent on primary and seconThe governor told the board he
dary educat ton In the next two
,
Is
convinced by legislative lead·
years.
ers
that there Is no mood In the
"Everybody who cares about
General
Assembly to pass a tax
teaching and learning and about
Increase, chiefly because Senate
the future wants the best solution
Republicans used an anti -tax
to the question of what can be
message last fall to defeat one
done to improve education," said
Democrat and retain 12 out of
F'Tanklin Walter, state superln·
their 12 seats up for election.
tendent of public Instruction.
·'The only way we have a
"The state board's package of
realistic chance (Of Increasing
recommend a lions ts the
revenues to fund education)," he
answer."
. The recommendations wtll be . said. "Is to put It on the ballot,
especially tf we want equity In
forwarded to Celeste for consld·
BETHESDA, Md. (UP!) school funding."
eration In proposing the 1990-91
Martin Marietta Corp. said Mon· state budget. which he plans to
The governor said higher eduday the Department of Energy release In late January .
cation should be Included In the
has announced Its Intention to
ballot Issue as part of an ovE:rall.
"We cannot meet the bottnm
extend by five years contracts line of what you are proposing
idea that colleges should work In
with Martin Mar letta Energy here today without more re·
concert with public schools to
Systems Inc. to operate . five venues," Celeste told the state
improve education.
factlttles.
Board of Education.
"I think there Is a growing
The original Martin Marietta
He said a Gallup Poll commls·
sentiment that education needs
contract, which would · expire stoned by his administration last
to be a single piece of ·cloth," he
Sept. 30, 1989, will be extended to month shows that 67 percent of
sat d.
Sept. 30, 1994, to operate faclllttes the people of Ohio would support
Wt!Uam Napier, vice chancel·
In Oak Ridge, Tenn., Paducah, a tax Increase tf It were demon- lor of the Ohio Board of Regents,
Ky ., and Portsmouth. Ohio, offl· strated to go for a good purpose,
Continued on page 10
clals said.
Under the contracts, Martin
Marietta Energy Systems will
manage and operate the Department of Energy Oak Ridge
facllttles, Including Oak Ridge
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP)) National Laboratory and the
her In a letter the new law "Is an
Celeste
signed
Gov.
Richard
early and the best Christmas
nuclear components plant, com·
legislation Monday permitting present I ever got."
pany officials said.
' 'This ts a great step forward,"
The contracts also call ·for victims of drunken driving accl·
· Martlh Marietta to manage and dents to be compensated for the said Dorothy Taylor, state chairoperate two uran tum enrichment first time under the state's crime man of Mothers Against Drunken
Driving. "It sends a clear mesplants at Paducah and Ports· victim reparations progr,am.
The legislation, which takes sage that ihe state of Ohio
mouth, officials said.
A change tn the scope of the effect next March 14, also dou- considers drunken drtvlng a
contracts will place the Paducah bles the maximum award to violent crime."
crime victims from $25,000 to
Celeste and William Denihan, ·· ·
and Portsmouth gaseous dlffu·
$50,000,
and
gives
victims
two
director
of the Ohio Department
ston facilities under one contract
years
Instead
of
one
to
apply
for
of
Highway
Safety, used the
so that officials can focus man·
Officials
said
this
Is
money.
occasion to urge Ohio motoris ts
agement attenUon on the ura·
possible because the fund, fueled 19 refrain from drinking and
nlum enrichment enterprise.
by an assessment charged those driving during the holidays.
The Oak Ridge Gaseous Dlffu·
ap~arlng In court, Is sound.
"Celebrate the holiday In a
slon Plant, on standby as a
Although the blll was spon· responsible ;"aY," said Den than ,
uranium enrichment plant, prosored by Sen. David Hobson,
"don't drink and drive." He said
, vjdes business and technical
R-Sprtngtleld, the drunken driv- 795 J:M10Ple were killed In alcoholservices and supports the ura·
Ing portion was originally au- related traffic accidents In Ohio
nlum enrichment program. The
thored by Rep. Marte Tansey, tn 1987, and 31,000 others were
plant also develops and demon·
R-Vermllton.
injured.
strates the Atomic Vapor Laser
"This legislation Is vitally
The new law also Will increase
Isotope Separation process to
important,"
said
Celeste
at
a
$75 to$100 the fee a motorist
from
enrich uranium.
bill-signing ceremony In the mus't pay to retrieve his or her
The federal government will
Statehouse rotunda. "It ensures driver's license after It Is susfinance about $10 million toward
that.. victims of drunken or pended for an alcohol-related
the operation and maintenance
drugged driving are eligible lor offense.
of the plants over the five-year
Celeste also signed a bill,
period covered by the contracts, ·compensation."
Tansey said the legislation was effective March 14, establishing
ofllclals said.
Inspired by a Sandusky woman state licensing requirements lor
Martin ·Marietta Energy Sys.
who lost a daughter five years respiratory therapists. One year
terns receives an annual lee
ago In an accident caused by a later, all respiratory therapists
based on its performance. The
drunken driver.
practicing In Ohio will have to be
five facilities employ about
Tansey
said
the
woman
told
licensed.
18,800 people'

Contracts
.extended
by DOE

Govemor signs legislation
for drunken driving victims

�,-

.

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

~mSI

. 'ql~

,......_..._-.-,......,=l,,.
.

ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslan! Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINtoN are welcome. They should be less than 300 wOTds
long. AJI!ettersare subject to editing and must be signed wltb name, address and

telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, not persatalltles.

·Don't forget your "fanny-pack'

dollars·
Special interests vie for Pentagon Jack
Anderson
WASHINGTON - Viewed
from afar, the Pentagon is the
nerve center of an awesome
mllrtary complel&lt; - its bases
around the world bristling with
armaments, Its warships stretch·
lng from horizon to horizon. Yet
viewed up close in Its particulars•.
the · Pentagon is uninspiring,
wasteful and counterproductive.
It is also wracked with dlssen·
slon, insubordination and
maladministration.
The cost of this far-flung
military array -Is scandalous.
During the Reagan year, a
staggering $1.83 trUllon was
poured into the Pentagon. Bll~ .
lions went right down the drain.
The four military services
rushed ahead with new weapons
before they had been proven.

Little effort was made to coordl·
nate the spending. With no
system of priOrities, the Reagan
administration simply Sllld yes to
almost everything.
Money was lavished on arma·
ments that should have been
scrapped or never should have
been built In the first . place.
Sclentlllc advances also made
many weaponns systems obsolete faster than advocates of
those systems could adjust their
mllltary th_lnklng. Procurement
raced ahead of modernization;
maintenance was unable to keep
up with operations.
Their future Is complicated by
the fact that the president-elect
has backed just about every
weapons system in the Pentagon
pipeline. Yet he has sworn not to

Increase taxes to pay for them .
Each system is supported by a
formidable lobby, composed of
members of the military brass
who believe In It, the contractors
who manufacture the component
parts, the workers who put them
together and the members of
Congress whose districts enjoy
the economic benefits Qf having
that particular system produced.
Most multlbllllon·dollar procurement decisions are made in
the Pentagon's backrooms with
little public scrutiny. These decl·
slons Involve much-agitated
backstage wire-pulling, with the
wires often crisscrossing.
Military officers with vested
Interests In a weapons system
will slip up to Capitol Hili behind
the backs of their superiors and

..

Berry's World

Million''

Ohio Outdoors

111\~\.0A's PL~A

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President-elect George Bush says It's the
American way to forgive and forget the slings and arrows of the harsh
campaign In which he emerged the victor.
And certainly he Is acting as iflt were all a game. all in tradition and
nothing remiss in the way he sought the presidency.
But some political pundits think that Bush's campaign against
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls was a sorry ,commentary on
what it takes to get elected in America.
. Accent the negative. All is fair in love and war. Bush, running 17
points behind at the outset, took the advice of his hard ball counselors
and hit home runs with his focus on the Pledge of Allegiance. prison
furloughs and defense spending.
Tbose on the campaign trail said that he was "kinder and gentler'·
in the morning and then reverted to the form his political mentors
wanted at late afternoon and evening rallies.
His paid commercials were almost sinister at times, so unlike a
Yale educated man of the aristocracy. He would give reporters a look,
meaning that he was still a good guy and there are some sacrifices
that are necessary in the heat of the battle. This hurts me more than It
hurts you was the general impression he U'led to convey.
When It was over and the race was won, Bush proceeded in a
traditional manner to mend fences and to assume that he would be
able to start with a clean slate. His belligerency on the hustings
appeared to be an attempt to toughen his eight-year image in the vice
presidency as one who was seen and rarely heard.
Suddenly. he had to be his own man and observers, who had
watched him in a variety of top scale jobs over the years, were not
sure whether the real George Bush was stepping for~ard or not.
But now he believes that the opponents he skewered should let
bygones be bygones. He has met in good fellowship wltli Dukakis,
Jesse Jackson, Pat Robertson and Robert Dole.
The meetings have been marked by smiles, handshakes and
friendly conversations - but not exactly tension free during the
post-elecl!on chat with Dukakis.
Everyone is a good sport. Bush feels he can come home now. Allis
forgiven. "Some people don't understand the campaign," he said.
·'They thInk that when you run against someone In a campaign, that
injures friendships. That's not true. It's wonderful the way the
American political system works."
Well, it takes two to tango. Bush may find that while it is the
American system to give a new president a honeymoon, and to give
him his moment of glory during inauguration week. It could all be of
short duration if he proceeds on one legislative crack and they on
another.
Bush is going to have to do a lot of stroking to keep happy the
Democrats. who control both houses of Congress. Many of them
represent the liberal wing of the Democratic Party and they have
enough votes to call the shots if he decides to continue the Reagan
conservative agenda.
Bush is having a smooth transition since he will succeed a member
of his own party. There will be no major disruption of the White House
on Jan. 20. Inauguration Day, when there will be no party
changeover.
,
Since the vice president has an office in the West Wing of the White .
House, he has to take only_a few steps to land in the Oval Ofllce.
He also has been intimately Involved In all aspects of the Reagan
administration through two terms and has presided over important
crisis meetings and the drug task force.
So he won't have to do all the homework that engulfs new
presidents. But he does have to pour on the charm toerasesomeofthe
hard feel!ngs of the past. And he's working hard on his "I'm just an
ordinary guy" image.

'$38.46

The Daily Ser1tinei-Page~3

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December 13. 1988

Bush wants bygones
to be bygones

"It's called
Picasso."

·-

Tueeday, Decembef 1~. 1988.

by Pablo

KOSAK SACKED . - Cleveland quarterback
Bernie Kosar (19) Is sacked during Monday

OOT

6UILW.

Dolphins shock Browns 38'-31
substance abuse policy.
MIAMI (UP!) - Cleveland's
"This win makes me feel a
"Dawg" defense, .which entered
lfttle bit better about our team,"
the game as the AFC's best unit
said Miami Coach Don Shula.
against the pass, was no match
" It's been a tough five weeks but
for Dan Marino and his fleet
I didn't give up on the football
receivers Monday night.
team and it dldn' t give up on'
The Miami quarterback threw
itself."
for 404 yards and lour touch·
Marino threw touchdown
downs, and Lorenzo Hampton
passes of 11 and 9 yards to Mark
scored on a l·yard dive with 34
Clayton, and 2 yards each to Jim
seconds remaining to lift the
Jensen and Hampton. Fuad
Dolphins to a 38·31 win over the
Revelz added a 35-yard lleld goal
-Browns, who fall to 9-6. Clevefor
Miami, which Improved Its
land can stlll make the playoffs
hom"
record in prime time
as a wild card team, but may
games
to
24·8.
have to play Sunday against
Marino
completed 30 of 50
Houston without quarterback
passes
and
was intercepted three
Bernie Kosar, who sprained his
times. He now has 4,239 yards
left knee and Is questionable for
passing on the year, making him
the Oilers' game.
the only quarterback In league
A Cleveland win at home
history to eKceed 4,000 yards
Sunday ensures a playoff spot for
passing four times. He also leads
the Browns for the fourth
straight season.
• ~~~s!~~gue with 28 touchdown
The Dolphins, 6·9, snapped a
Clayton, who set a club record
five-game losing streak and
by
catching a pass for the 37th
racked up 497 yards of offense
and tied a club record with 34 straight game, .caught eight
first downs. The OGlphlns also passes lor 108 yards and two
have . been plagued in recent touchdowns, giving him an NFL·
weeks by rumors surrounding leading 13 scoring receptions.
the suspension of receiver Mark · Fred Ban'ks, waived by Cleve·
Duper for violating the NFL's

.

.

New housing breaks the cookie cutter
DECATUR ISLAND, Wash.
(NEA) - The first clue that
Decatur Northwest Is not the
typical "second home" real
estate development Is provided
by the shape of the parcels being
sold: They're circular rather
than rectangular or square.
;r'he second hint comes from
the size of the lots priced at
slightly more than $100.,000
apiece: They're not two, five or
20 acres, but a mere 75 feet in
diameter or barely a· tenth of an
acre- just large enough to hold a
vacation or retirement home.
But Decatur Northwest is more
than a collection of small, round
home sites. The project Is a
spectacular commerlc;ll success
and widely acclaimed for using
laf14 In a manner sensitive to the
requ'll'ements of both Its res!·
dents and Its surroundings.
"We wanted to utilize the land
in a fashion that dldn'tchange its
character, so that what people
experienced the frist time they
came here was what they would
have forever," explains urban

~tanner Philip Sherburne, who

developed tlie project with bus!·
nessman James Youngren.
They began with 485 acres In
the northwest corner of Decatur
Island,_one of about 175 San Juan
Islands 80 mileS north of Seattle:
They tlien limited the number of
home sites to 77, with each
positioned to maximize privacy
and exposure to the Island's
natural beauty. All but seven
have been sold.
Although each buyer holds
exclusive title to only a small
piece of property, all the pur·
chasers collectively own the
remaining 95 percent of the land.
That unspoiled common land Is
no-table not only for its beauty
but also for Its diversity including rocky cliffs and sandy
beaches along a 2';4-mlle-long
shoreline, dense groves of cedar
and fir, tranquil meadows, moss·
covered terraces, madrona
groves and even a fresh-water
lake.
Decatur North is only one of a
number of developments that are

Robert Walters

taking unconventional ap·
proaches toward reslderitlal real
Springs, north of Birmingham,
estate development and eschew·
lng reliance upon uninspired Ala.
"Our model," says River·
tract housing.
Other notable efforts Include !ron t' s developer, "is the ·New
Sea Ranch In California · and England town at Its most cranky
more than a dozen communities and ldlosynctatlc."
cited by architectural ,, critic
Some .. of .the .b9JI!est ex peri· .·
Philip ·· Langdon in an article ments are being conducted In the · ·
published earlier this year In The midst of densely populated urban
Atlantic Monthly titled "A Good areas. Perhaps the most ambl·
tlous Is Battery Park City, In
Place to Live."
Langdon cites Seaside, In Blor· lower Manhattan just west of
Ida's Panhandle about 100 miles New _ York . City's financial
west of Tallahassee, as ." themost 4\S~~~t· 1tL • :".£-.~
•
~·
celebrated new ·American town
, There 'lire no private cars (a
ofthe decade." Its wood-shingled .modest fleet of community·
and clapboard homes have deep, owned_Yehlcles is adequate) and :.
wide front porches and cupolas no telephones - but there are '
riSing from their roofs - lea· countless birds, deer, goats,
tures reminiscent of 19th-century raccoons. sheep, whales, seals,
construction.
sea lions, otters, clap1s, crabs
Other examples of Innovative, and salmon.
iteo-tradltlonal residential devel·
Popular activities Include pic·
opments Include Mashpee Com· nicking, kayaklng, canoeing,
mons, west of Hyannis. Mass.; salllng, fishing and wlnd·sallin. .
Riverfront, south of Manchester, "This," says homeowner Sherry
N.H.; Friday Mountain, southw- Weinberg, "1~ - summer camp or
est of .Austin, Texas; and Blount grownups,"
"'

•

Duke, Michigan retairi·
top spots in UPI poll

.'

Save the environment without hype
Another round of envlronmen·
those pitiful seagulls caked with
lal consciousness-raising seems oil from a spUJ . In the Santa
to be upon us. "Can Man Save Barbara Channel?
This Fragile Earth?" asks the
Pollution! It would kill us!
cover of the National Geogra· There was very little notlceofthe
phlc. ABC·TV progr&amp;ms a whole fact that during this time adult
week on "The Poisoning ot life expectancy was going up at
America."
the fastest rate In the 20th
. The environmental Impulse century.
Itself Is noble. But the last time It
Soon - predictably - there
touched us, it polluted our was a · counterattack. Shutting
dialogue and our politics. We down a dam to save a snail
wasted too much energy In a
darter? Burying a car? Singlespasm of sterile and screechy family home? Can We be really
finger· pointing.
running out of oil if tl)ere is an oil
There are grounds for hope
glut?
that this time we can do better.
Then the environmentalists
The beginning of "last time"
rallied. Watt was dumped. A
can probably be dated from the standoff ensued.
publication Of Rachel Carson's
Comes now a new envlronmen·
environmental classic "Silent tal moment.· Two llems seem to
. Spring" In 1962. That environ·
have heralded its arrival. First
mental era - both the action and
was the record-breaking hot
reaction - can be said to have summer of 1988, deemed by some
ended In 1983 with the forced to be evidence of "global warm·
resignation of Secretary of the lng," the "greenhousing" of the
Interior James Watt.
world. If true, It is a monumental
Soon after "Silent Spring," we problem. And second was the
were regaled with a steady campaign statement by George
drumbeat of ecological doom·
Bush, "I a~~~vlronmenlal·
saying and exaggeration. The !st." No ec~~~~~ In the Bush
GNP was descP.Ibed as the administration.
.
"Gross National Pollution."
Question: Can we do better in
Paul Ehrlich announced that Round Two than In Round One?
popli1atlon growth was "mallg· That depends on the answer to
nant." Environmental activists another question: Is there a way
staged a demonstration whose In a free society to prevent
central photo opportunity in· environmental exaggeration?
valved the burying of a brand
On the surface, no. Both law
new automobile. Alleged experts and language seem to aid the
told us that nuclear power plants exaggerators. When television
might melt down and Irradiate news practice Is coupled with
us. We were told we were running free speech, we are guaranteed
out of oil. We were told that in an that moderate views will be
energy-short world the problem driven out by flamboyant sound
was . "the single-family home bites. We see It at work again.
ethic." Toxic-waste sites made · The president of the National
big news. And who can forget Geographic magazine features
•

Ben Wattenberg

Ehrlich glorifying the repressive
.,
Chinese lamlly·plannlng pro·
between Round Two and Round
gram that Is stili yielding
One. This: We have seen what
coerced abortions.
happened with unchecked exag· -·.
But exaggeration is not a eration in Round One. We have
policy. Nor does it yield sound seen the p~st, and It dldn' t work . '
policy. It is hard to legislate well.
wisely In a toxic atmosphere.
It dldrj't work well for environ, . ,
Is there a self-correcting sta·
mentalists, and it didn't work
blllzaer? Are we doomed to do it well for eco·bashers. This time, . ',_.'
all over again? Perhaps not.
as the :atble says, "Let us reason
There Is one thing different - together:'
"J

'

..

Today in historY ·

..

.'

By United Press International
Today ls Tuesday, Dec. 13, the 348th day of 1~88 with 18 to follow .
The moon is waxing, moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning star is Veri us.
.
·
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Juplt~r and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include clergyman Phillips Brooks, who wrote the Christmas carol
"0 Little Town of Bethlehem," in 1835, World War I hero Sgt. Alvin
York in 1887, actor Van Heflin In 1910, Secretary of State George
Shultz in 1920 (age 68), comedian-actor Dick Van Dyke in 1925 rage
63) and actor Christopher Plummer in 1929 (age 59).
--....:..

On this date In history:
In 1642, Dutch navigator Abel Tasman discovered New Zealand.
In 1816, the nation's first savings bank; the Provident Institution for
Savings, Oi&gt;flned In Boston.
In 1862, an estimated 11,000 Northern soldiers were killed or
WO\Uided in a battle with Confederat4 troops outside Fredericksburg,
Va.
In 1982, the Sentry Armored Car-Courier in New York discovered
the overnight theft of $11 million from its headquarters. It was the
biggest cash theft in U.S history .

'

.'

.,

A thought for the day: Medical missionary Albert Schweitzer once
defined happiness as "nothing more than health and a poor ··
memory.' '
-'

\

night's NFL contest in Miami. The Browns were
upset, :18-31, by the Dolphins. (UPI)

NEW YORK (UPI) - Duke
and Michigan, protecting the
nation's top two ranklngs with
the ferocity of a mother bear over
her cubs, Monday kept the .
resi&gt;ect of the United Press
International Board of Coaches.
As they have since the preseason, Duke held the No. 1 spot and
Michigan the No. 2. And, as they
have since the preseason, both
continued 10 generate more vot·
lng points than the prevfous
week.
Duke, 6-0, received 626 of a
possible 630 points and 39 of 42
first-place ballots. The Blue
Devils earned no vote lower than·
third place. Michigan, 8·0, col·
lected one top vote en route to570
points.
Big East schools Syracuse, 8-0,
and Georgetown, 4-0, retained
their Nos. 3 and 4 ranklngs,
respectively. The Nos. 5 and 6
spots were held by Big Ten
schools Iowa and Jllinols, both
6-0. The Hawkeyes inched one
place higher from last week and
the lllinl, which garnered a No. 1
vote, jumped three spots. Syracuse grabbed the other top vote.
Oklahoma, 5·1, held at No. 7
and North Carolina, 8-1, slipped
three notches to No. 8. No. 9
Arizona. 3-1, No. lOMissourl. 7·2,
No. 11 Georgia Tech, 4·0, and No .
12 Florida State, 4·0, all lm·
proved one ranking.
No. 13 Nevad~·Las Vegas, 2·2,
plummeted five places. No. 14
Ohio State, 4·1, jumped. one
position and No. 15 Seton Hall,
7-0, soared four notches. No. 16
Louisville, 4·2, fell back two
levels and No. 17 Tennessee, 4-0,
sank a place.
No.18NotreDame, 4-0,andNo.
20 North Carolina State, 2·1,
entered the Top 20 while No. 19
UCLA, 4·0, stumbled one posl·
Uon. Villanova and Oregon van·
!shed from the ranklngs.
The Atlantic Coast Conference/
and Big Ten each sent four teams
to the Top 20, the Big East had
three representatives and the
Big Eight, Metro and Paclflc-10
each delivered two schools.
Duke, Michigan, Syracuse,
Georgetown and Illinois appeared on all42 coaches' ballots.
"The mal n thing Is we have
been a.ble to really handle all the

land in 1985, caught six passes for
118 yards, including a 46-yarder
with 37 seconds left that set up
Hampton's winning touchdown.
Cleveland, which trailed 31·17,
tied the score with 59 seconds left
when former Dolphin Don Strock
hit Reggie Langhorne with a
2-yard scoring pass. Strock;
released this year after spending
14 years In Miami, also con·
nected with Langhorne on a
3-yard scoring pass with 6:27 to
play .
But the Dolphins wasted no
time getting into the end zone as
Banks beat Cleveland corner·
back Hanford DiKon on the
46-yard pass .
"When I first started playing
DiKon (in the Cleveland training
camp). he picked on me physl·
cally," Banks· said. "He had my
number at one time. I had his
tonight."
Cleveland also scored on a
39-yard Kosar pass to Earnest
Byner, 2-yard Kosar run, and a
33-yard Matt Bahr lield goal.
"It was obvious that their
quarterback had a great night
and we made errors in the final
.analysis that we were unable to
overcome," said Cleveland
Coach . Marty Schottenhelmer.
''I'll tell you this: I'm proud of
our football team. Our team
never gave up."
Kosar's status for Sunday will
be determined either Tuesday or
Wednesday, Schottenhelmer
said. Kosar missed six games
earlier this year with an elbow
injury.
Marino, who went over 400
yards passing lor the ninth time
in his career, also an NFL
record, had plenty of time to
throw. He was not sacked for the
11th straight game, an NFL
record.
"It shouldn't have been as
close as it was," Marino said. "I
made it tough myself with all the
Interceptions. I had tl~ to
throw, but what was great was
the way the receivers were able
to get free."
Mal'! no was intercepted twice
by Felix Wright, but on the first
interception return, Wright
fumbled and Marino recovered.
Kosar completed 21 of 30
passes for 202 yards, and Strock
completed seven of 11 for 70
yards.
.
Cleveland cornerback Frank
Minnifield missed most of the
game with cramps in his legs.
"Fortunately, with all the
adversity we've had on the team,
we still have the opportunity to
achieve the playoffs and the
Super Bowl," Minnifield said. "A
lot of other teams would like to
have that opportunity and

•
By JERRY PICKRELL
MemberOWAA
Distributed by UPI
Trappers and mountain men bl
the old west always carried a bag
with them that they called their
"possibles" bag. In It was
everything from a quick chafge
for the flintlock to a week's worth
of emergency rations. It was
something that they really never
left home without. For modern
outdoorsmen,, a credit card or
several have taken that slot.
Still there are times when you
can't get what you need with any
kind of plastic money. Deep in
the forest or far (jown .the river
there are no automatic teller
machines. And there are no
convenience stores to spend
money In if you had lt. In these
situations; you have to take It ·
with you .
That's where the' modern-day
possibles bag comes ln.
The best kind of these is what is
known. as a "fanny-pack." It's
called that because It's made like
a wide place In a strong belt and
it's worn just above the buttocks:
How roomy it is depends o'n
which size you buy, but mosr are
designed to hold an emergency
supply of toilet paper, a folding
raincoat, some candy bars and
waterpro~f. matches. Naturally,

you .may stock yours wit h whalever strikes your fancy , but
you'd be wise to stick with
convention on that first item
anyway.
Because they have no shoulder
straps; these neat . little packs
don't get in your wa;y at ail. It 's
-easy to forget you have it on until
you realize It contains something
you want. For short trips out-of·
doors, they're ali you 'll need.
Hunters can use them for extra
shells, hikers might want an
extra pair of dry socks . You'll
lind a million uses lor yours after
the first time you use it. It's one of
those things you'll wonder hOw
you got along Without. You can
even use It to hold a quick charge
lor a flintlock If you think you
might need a fast reload.

Local bowling

TIFFIN, Ohio (UPI) - Tony
Meyer scored 19 points to lead a
balanced attack that carried
Heidelberg to a 62·46 Ohio At·
hletlc Conference victory over
Ohio Northern Monday night.
Marty Kimbrough added 15
points and Andy Krueger and
Richard Langford chipped In _
with 11 apiece to help Heidelberg
raise its record to 6-3 overall and
2·1 in the OAC.
Meyer's 19 points pushed his
career total past the 1,000-point
mark - the lOth. Heidelberg
player to reach that plateau In
the history of the school.
The Student Princes led all the
way. including 32-22 at halftime .
and by as many as 19 points in the
second half.
Ohio Northern, now 1·6 overall
and 1·2ln the l~ague, got 15 points
from Thad Eikenberry. and 10
from Shawn Allen.

MONDAY NrrE IIIIXED
High Team Game - Rod's Wfecker
Servlce-609;
578.

-581; Amerlcare-Pomeroy-

High Team Series - Rod's Wrecker
Servlce-1725; Pat Hill Ford-1643: Main St.
Ptzza-1639.
High Game - Men-Brian Hartman-2lJ2:
-180;

Don Harrtson -165. Women-Debby

Tlllls-160; Ann Splres-153: Ann Spires and

Betty McKlnley-148.
High Series - Men-Don Harrlsm-481;
· Bob Boring-470; Ron Smlth-453. Women,
Ann Splres-442; Betty McKinley-401; Ellen
Hatfield-396.

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things that go into being No. 1,"
said Duke Coach Mike Krzy.
zewskl, whOSEl, team has won its
six games by an average of
. nearly 29 points pe~ g~m~- "The
time you give up, the fact your
team Is No. land Is a favorite, all
the teams come at us really hard.
Overall, this is good lor us. It's
the type of situation you don't
know how long you'll be in It and
we've handled It well. It's good
for us. There's nothing bad for us.
It's maturing our team."
Duke, which does not play Its
seventh game until Dec. 21
against Wake Forest, has relied
on Danny Ferry. That was
particularly evident Saturday In
the Blue Devlls' most difficult
game, a 117·102 victory over
Miami. Ferry, a 6-foot-10 senior,
hit on 23 of 26 field goals and
scored an ACC record 58 points.
"He's the major reason we
handle the ranking so well," Krzyzewskl said. "He's been In
the limelight since high school.
He knows how to live with the
(attention) all the time. The fact
he's having fun and playing hard
and not really talking about those
things (No. 1) helps everyone
else. The team takes its lead
from Danny ."
don't.''

....
...,

SALE ENDS
OUR GOING OUT OF BUSINESS SALE
ENDS DEC. 24
All MERCHANDISE NOW REDUCED 50-75% IN·
CLUDES EVERGREENS, SHRUBS, SHADE TREES,
FLOWER SHOP EQUIPMENT, HOME SUPPUES,
CHEMICALS, FERnUZERS, DECORAnONS, SUCH
AS SILK AND DRIED ARRANGEMENTS, WREATHS
FOR CHRISTMAS OR EVERY DAY, CASH REGISTER, TABLES, SHELVES AND SO FORTH.

LTZERS
FLOWER SHOP &amp; GARDEN CENTER
453 JICISON Pill, G'IWPCKQ, OHIO
446·4141 01446-6611
.

'

IF YOU'VE BEEN PAYING MORE THAN 15% ON
• YOUR CREDIT CARD, THEN YOU'VE BEEN THE LOSER!
lsi's set lhe record slralghl. Interest
rates and annual fees on credit
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If you don1 shop and compare. you
might end up carrying a card that
carries a higher Interest rate

It's official. Our VISA·and
MASTERCARD offer all the benefits
of other credit cards. but at lower

Interest rates. Take time oul to apply
a credit card lhat cos!$ less and
saves you more. COfl or come In lor
on application today.

for

Peoples Bank
Member F.D.I.C.

5th Str"t

NlwHIIVIn
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2212 Jackaon Avenue
Point PI-nt
675-1121

I

2nd Sll'MI
MIMD
'77WI14

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•

Tuesday. December 13, 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4 The Daily Sentinel

•

-- - - --·· --------

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•
m
seven starts, 86-71
Iowa· Hawkeyes remain unbeaten
By JEFF SHAIN
UPI Sports Wrller
No. 5 Iowa ran Its record to 7-Q

Monday· night with an 86-71
victory over Jackson State, but
the Hawkeyes may have two

Scoreboard ...
.

NFL results

'

By \ JI'Iiti•d Pr4"lis lnltr18tkln;ll
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~1.1~ 2:15 all

l.·dlnr:hMI dM~kln lllr

y·d lnchE"d playoff IM.•rth
Mondw.y '!iRII":!I-'t
Miami lll. nrvrland :11
Sllturd~ Dfoo.:. 17

Wll'lltln,;toa at ctncinwtl.

''

N~·

.

l ~::lll

p.m.

En&amp;tand Ill Dfonwr. I p.m .
Su .. a)·, Of&gt;1·. II!

..

Buflaloal l•dl..rwapolill,l p.m.
Dtocrok at TamiJ' Bay , l p.m.
Hou:ot&amp;onal -fll'Vf'liuul., I p.m.
Miami at Pllt!4lu...-·h, I p.m.
I\'\' GIMt!Ut NV ,J('lll, I p.m.
PhlladdplliuJ IJaii!L'&lt;, I p.m.
Atlanta W 'N~'Yi Orlf'IUIM, I: :tl p.m.
Grf'l&gt;n Ba~r al Phomb , l p.m.
KanMN City IU San Dh·~. -1 p.m .

.'

£ko• Kfonltl!dy .
ft;ew Jt&gt;nry - Aucq ulrrd drlent~emaa
TomnQ" AlhPII'n lrom tpe~ lor fUIUI't"
co ""-dt!nitvra.
NY Raftlfrl - Traded lo...-.N r,tor
U ba. t:f'nltr '!'odd Ell k, df'l!:lflllf'OUI•
Mlt:lt*"" BO)'l"i' Mid fuiWf' co .... dPndioM
to w .. Alllf'IPII lor detf'ftlll'man

lln• De.l!ll.al"«:•ue.
Wlllf'r Polo
U.S. NaHo_. Tum- Rt-eiKtd Bill
Bar 181 t!OJK'h,

Tuesday's scores
Ohio ('ollrlf' 8&amp;'1 Wtball Res ulli
l!ly Unittod Pr""Minli'1'11Uknlll
Monday , Dro.:. l!:
TolecP li, nlftn Sll
HcldrltJrrr'2, Ohio Nortlwrn II
Gt'oflt!f.OWn {Kyl 6-1, Cf'diW'vlllf' l'l
Ret bPI (Trnnl _IU. l !rbana 103
Girls Ohio Hl~h St•hool BaM lrthllll
AstM Ed&amp;eweod -17, G.-nnll :Ho
'.Uhl HIU'hOr 35, Asht St Jo ... !l3
llllrberton 71. Akr SprlaiCIIeld 56
lk!l.vf'n 'rHII az, Day Cluun-Jul :u
BoanimiUI 1:1. tnunp Hayen 31
Brookfield U, &lt;ll•nplo•"'

BGCkt")'f' SW U. 8Pavf'r Loul 36
Camhrld&amp;•' fit, Woo!IRfteld 14
Ue lAalhf'I'IUI W 58, Mt"dlr&amp;a Batekf'Yr 35
Coldw:atf'l' &amp;J, uma cath n
Day W~llt' 5I. Troy :t1 ·
Euh'rn Brll"'nl'l', North AdiUUII .II
Fort Fryt&gt; Sl. CaldwPII4.'t
Grand Val u. Gates Mill~&gt; Hawken tl
Indian Valley M. t:'oshoclon:Jt
.ft&gt;fi«Mn 1!, Madi!IOn 5!
IUn~•• Bad...- 51, E PaleMIIIH" 3:t
Lllllnaf' 5~. N""t.a P11llt. U
Loa Clowrlt&gt;al :n, Rittman t't
LyN'hll.lf'l CIQ 51, GretnleiUII
M-1• l' rr§IW.od U, GarrdlsvUif' U
M&lt;~~Dermou Northwesl H. WHl Unloa
M.,dl,_ I!It lapt !13, T11mplf' Chr 211
Paltwfl Rlversldf' :n, Connel\lll U

.

Perry $0, ThompSon Ledl(l!m•nt ~~
Py,na.tu .. n• Val 56, Mllldlnd Cap-dlrual
RootiJI·(Wo'Jl II, gamonl

..'/

AdE'Ipli Ill, \'ork ColieJ;r (NV} 12
Boston Coli. 74. Md.·&amp;MiernShono 10

Darlmoalh II. H.-rlloN U ·
FqHtf'vUir ~- Me, llowar4 In
Fonlh111n I:S. Army 51

Tu1'!id1&amp;,V'"' Gam""'
MIIWJ.U kl&gt;t• ld Phlhsdt&gt;lph\, 7: :SO p.m.
lloiilon at U'ashinl{ton. 7:30p.m .

I.A l ,ake~aiCif'\'f'l Mid, 1: :JO p.m.
('hw-loltA&gt; . ~ lndiW~il , j';:IOp.m.
Nl'l'' ,Jf-'rM'Y at Ne-w \ 'orlo;,·Kp.m ,
t\tliUII&amp;

at fhiCill{ll, II: :40 p.m.

t~lck'n

ShU I' at Dalla", 11::~ p;m.
Hnultlon at Df'nwr. 9:if0 p.m .
Phot&lt;nb! al Sl.'aUifl, Ill p.m.
SIUI ,\nttmlo :d Sa1.-rv.mtonto, 18::!6 p.nl .
l o~\

(:JipPl"h ac Poni!Uicl, 19::10 p.m .
" 'edne!idM)I ' "' Gamf.'N
Uah at Roston, nl~
L1\ La ... t ...!lillt Nrw ·ll'rwy . nl~ht
lnclllllll :Lt Chw-lolk•. nlll[hl
Phlladf'lphl:~:ll Atlan&amp;a, nl&amp;hl
MIIWilU ll't' "'lk'troil. nl~
Miami al LA nlp~rs, •lll[hl
NATIONAJ.IIOI 'KEl' u :,\GU t:

Monda,'11 Rt"'ul"
l.o~ Astrt-1~ 3, NV Rane•r 14~
Monll"('a\ :1. Boslon 1
t'ltlgary ~ . Torenlo.l (01'1
'1\Jl'!Oid~'!l f.lamt&gt;S
w~~... wn~orlltl Qul'horc, 7: :I:; p. m.
Minfl'sota at l&gt;tol rolt. i: :l.i p.m.
~1 . Louis at Nl'w .JI"r!ll'y, i : 13 p.m .
,WPdiii'Mia,\1 ',. Gamrs

..

NV \l;;\.andrr~; Ill N\' RIID!II'f!l, nlll[hl

IAI' i\n R•ofn;at l'lll-!ih.1 ~h. nl~;ht
Edmonton~~ Toronto, nl~~~:ht
H~trtlonl at l"hlcall[o, nl(hl
Bollalo a1 Winnlpt'll[. niii[N

Transactions
Basl'hl&amp;ll
Mlnrrsota - ~I pt"d pllch~ll &amp;y
Smith andGaryWI\Y ... ; lrf'l'&amp;&lt;;enl ri!llhl
llt&gt;ldl'r Ramt~r Bulih all[l'\'t'd lo bindln~~t:
;~r hltn\llon.

Oaklud - Namt'd Tommlf' lkfnolds
In t'hiU'II['r ol ollen~o~l~f' w.d
dt •lf"nsl\lf' ll:llnw prt'par&amp;Uon.
Blui kl'th all
~acnt.mf'tlto - Nllmf'd Hrrman Kull
Wl!lb!C.nt t·ou.ch.
Collt.'Kt!
I:O&amp;~. : h

•

T~llH

.AiM -

Allnoulll'l"d JaekiP

Sh..,.rtll l't'slprd ll..'l athlttlc dlrf'cior and
fuolhall (:Oal' h; namt&gt;doiONI 0.11\lld CrllW

aahl etll' cHn-Ltor11ndR .r , SIDCUm foothllll
' '\Nlt•h.
Hot•kl")'
Df't r un Sent drlro!temM ,Jplf
Slua.-pl"" to i\dlrondack olllw AHL.
Lo ~ AnKt'l..,._- Aquil'f'd 11'11 wlnJIII[Or
Uhll from tiM' Nt'W York R.,.,;er!l plu11
('enk'r Todd Ellk and dl'let~!ll!mu Mlkl'
Roycf&gt; l'rom thr Ru~rM ' IHL afllllal•~n
Of'nvf"r In exchanll[e lor ddet~ !M" mlft

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TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Ball
State forward Greg Miller has
been selected as the men's
Mid-American Conference basketball player or the week .
Miller, a 6-loot-8 junior from
Yorktown, Ind:, came off the
bench to score 29 points In
Cardinal wins over Indiana State
and Purdue last week.
He had 12 points In 21 minutes
of action In an 80-56 victory over
Indiana State on Wednesday and
17 points In 26 minutes In

"

Phlla. Ph ann. 71, Vallry l&lt;'o~f' 51
Siena tit Falrkollh Dltkln!IOn fill
Slatt&gt;n l1l•d Ill, City Coli. (Nl'l 1-1
T('mple &amp;:!, St.lo!Jt'ph'l (Pa.) 37

south
Alabama !It, Aaptillt. 7tl
Aldi;. · BrOIIIddus. 7t Glll'nvlllf' '1!
Ap)alnchlan Sl. Ill, Georw;l a St. l't
Davidson II, Er8khw 1.1
Ga. Soudlrrn lit, IE. Kentll!k.f 19 ,
GramhiiiiJI~

Fullert98t. A7
Troy st '211
Whf't'IJnl .kult lt-1, Ohlo-Bf'lmont I!!
U~l•r;Monll,

Ml--~

lk1JHol ltl; Urbana JU
EutrrnDIIDOIIIM, Elmt.lrst.
E\lulvllle 14, 1Julll111• S&amp;.ate 71
GeeWKriown ( lly) 1-1, Cf'darvllk&gt;f!

Helck'lbl!rl!lll. Ohio Norlht"''n ••
Iowa IIi. Jackllon St•te·11
Kuu• Ill, N. Arlleaa 5t

Mlchipn 1111, E. MJchlJIUl :n
&lt;MI;IahomMI St. !n, Brookcyn 10
Tol ..do 11, Tlfnn 58
WictiMa st.l!, Oral Robtort11 91

NO' VORKC UPI~-TheUal&amp;edPre88
llllt"r.Ukt_. Board ol C~hf!A' Top 20
L'O IIrKl' b•lletball ratlnp, wlth flrf!lt·
pat:• ''oletl andreeords ihrtN~KhDec. .. In
pe.re•lhHI'§, lolaJ poiiMs (b_.d on I~
pl~e. If

lor fll!'eond, etc.)

• • lallt WPf'k'~ ran kinp:
T~am
...
I . Du"f' (Sill {6- 0)
•
!. Mlchipn (II Ct'·Ol
:1. Syrnc.-u• (II (1\·01
I . Geol'leiOWn i-1-0l
5. IGWa (6-tl
I. Ullnols(ll (~I)
7. O"laboma (~1)
8. North CIU"ollllll 1~· 1 1

t . .o\rU.na (3-1_ t

ID. MllffiOIIIi

rot ala

,.

•• 1

.
~

5H :t

........, '
on •
H7 I

:ns s

II. Gt'Ord~tTf'eh t.f-Dl
12. Jolllrida Stair (4·Dl '

196 II
1'71 12
139 1S

1:1. Nt'\l&amp;d~r-L~~~t Vf'J;U (lot)
I &lt;1. Olllo St•le (,._1)

119 •

1~ .

(1-\!)

Sf'loo Hall 17·GI

16. Lout!ivlllr (Hl
17. Tenlll'!ltrf' (4-Dl
lit Not"" Damf' ( ~· II

II. UCU (4-01
tO. Ner1h Carolina Slatf' 12-11
:&amp;·IIIII'Uilf'd

II :US

8111
71 l.f

3:t 11

.

:i2 z

'"''
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OUN'r8 reeetvtnc velu: Arltulau ,
,\rk.,.IIU-lJll\ro Rodt, Ball !:Uate, Gf'or~a. Ku•• State, Loullilana Tecb,
Mempllls Stall', st . .John'll, So. .lWt'8t
Mla1011rt Slale, Scan forti, TMIU·EI P&amp;IIO.

Wlchl&amp;a Slall'.

-----Sports briefs-----

Saturday's 70·56 decision over
Purdue.
Miller made 11 of 18 field goal
attempts and five of seven free
throws In the two games, had
nine rebounds and five assists.

Ironton seeks teams
for '89 .open dates

CINCINNATI (PI) - Dave
NlckPl and Scott Criner, both
origina l members of lomier
University of Cincinnati football
coach Dave Currey's staff, have
resigned.
Nickel was offensive coordlna·
tor and oflenslve line coach of the
Bearcat s and Criner coached the
" wide receiverS.
Currey, whose team finished
• with a ·J-8 record the past, earlier
turned in his resignation after
•• five years in the position. His
' overall record was 19·36.
Dave Ritchie, Currey's defen·
sive coordinator the past two
• season, has been named Interim
• director of the UC football omce.
•
•
•

w.~li~~?~!n!"' I

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ataom&amp;t1
KANSAS Cln ROYAL lcit ....
'"0 ,.
ROOKIE ALL-STAR .'
~-··

JEFF

MONTGOMERY
7 Wins, 2 Loss.S
1 Save, 3.45 Ell
WIU IE AT

GLOECKNER'S

J

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - A free
blood,pressure clinic will be held
TUesday, 10 a.m. to 12 noon, at
the HarriSonville Town HaiL A
business meeting for Harrison·
ville Senior .Citizens will be held
following lunch.

CHESTER - Chester Township Trustees meeting, 7:30p.m .
Tuesday at town hail.

REEDSVILLE - The River·
view Garden Club will meet at
the home of Mrs. Denver We ber
on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Mrs .
Paul Thomas will co-hostess.
Members are to bring fruit for
fruit baskets.

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT- The Middleport Literary Club will meet at 2
p.m on Wednesday at the home of
Mrs. Bernard Fultz. Mrs. Cha·
rles Gaskill will review Seven
Stories of Christmas Love by Leo
Buscaglia. The Rev . Sonny Zun·
lga wil present vocal selections of
Christmas must~ . Members are
asked to share a favorite orna·
men! for roll call.

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S1495 1

POMEROY - Monthly meet·
ing of PQrneroy Area Chamber of
Commerce, 12 noon Tuesday at
Trinity Church with Christmas
luncheon to be served .

wheels, setting an adjusta·
bje anglers ta manufactur·
er' s ariginal specifications•
Most damestic and import
can.

See Us For Dependable Quality and
Courteous Services For All Your Under
· Car Services.

FULL LINE OF MUD &amp; SNOW TIRES 'IN STOCK

CHESTER- The Past Councl·
tors Club of Chester Council will
meet at 6:30p.m. Wednesday for
a holiday dinner party Instead of
7:30 p.m. as was previously
announced.

Museum planning night
hours for public viewing
The Meigs County M4seu!Yt,
Butter'nut Ave., Pomeroy, will be
offering evening hour$ on Wed·
nesday and Thursday, 7 to 9 p.m .
In addition to the regular hours of
Tuesday through Saturday, 1 to
4:30p.m.
Residents are given a special
Invitation to visit the museum· to
view the special Christmas deco·
rations and collections.
This year the museum tried
something different to celebrate
the holiday season. A traditional
ChriStmas dinner was held with
. over 50 persons attending earlier ·
.· · thiS month followed by remarks
from several along with a tour to
view the decorations. The special
celebration committee tleco·
rated the interior while Rod
Pullins added ,the extra touch
with outside decorations.
Mrs. Margaret Parker, presi·
dent, suggested gifts from the
museum for holiday giving. She
noted that there are several
, books of Inte rest to historians

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L. ..:;r:: :.A;.;;~e;. ..1
600 EAST MAIN

EAST MEIGS ~ The Eastern
Band Boosters will meet Tues·
day , 7:30p.m., In the 111gb school
band room . .

EAST MEIGS- The Eastern
Band 'Boosters will meet Tues·
day , 7:30p.m ., In the high school
, band room.

POMEIOY

992-2094

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.and genealogists, collector
mugs, and homemade bears in
colors · representing the sur·
roupding school districts or the
college of choice.
The Meigs County His tory, Vol.
2, published in 1987 Is available.
II contains over 900 family
histories and Is completely In·
dexed. An interesting addition to
the book Is the Inclusion of
photographs of all 1987 Meigs
County fair outstanding boy and
girl winners, the king and queen,
Little Miss and Mister. There are
photos of Bicentennial celebra·
tlons and yesteryear observan·
ces along with church photos and
histories, and reflections through
pictures from communities.
Early rlvermen, towboats, in·
dustrles. telephone service, are
included and there are histories
of churches, civic organizations
and clubs. Copies are available
at the museum and as suggested ·
by Mrs. Parker, make a lifetime
gift of Information and pleasure.

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JERICA CLARK

Clark party
held recently
Jertca Clark was honored
recently with a party at the
Middleport Park. Games were
played with prizes going to Gerry
Stobart and Stephen McCullough
and Jessica Stobart, Koolald,
chips, Ice cre/im. and cake were
served. Attending were Arthur
Conant, Joann Conant, Harry
Clark, Venessa and Jeff, Sonny
Gloeckner, Vicki Gloeckner,
Brent Hanson, Chad Hanson.
Jessica Stobart, Sara Craig,
Amy Hayes, Rainy Walker,
Steve McCullough, Terry Sto·
bart, Nancy Clark.
Sending gifts were Erin Hag·
gerty, Wendt Daniels, Rick
Clark, and Ellen Stewart.

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encom.passes
warmth and good cheer as we cherish che blessings we've shared
this past year. For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest ~Ieasure!

Wish all your customers and
friends a very Merry Christmas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 23rd.
'
I

J

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•

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

992-2156

11 0 EAST UN, PO.IOY

WED., DEC. 14,
4 PM to 7 PM FOR
AND

I

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MR. and MRS. VICTOR STEWART

Stewarts observe anniversary

Star Grange conducts meeting
Bernice Midkiff was the
winner In the Honey Nbl Bread
baking contest when Star Grange
met recently.
Other winners In the bread
contest were Neva NichOlson,
second place and Catherine Col·
well, third place. There were 5
entries. ,

..

·'

•UNDER THE CAR•,

A doubleheader of basketball
action will be played at Lyne
Center tonight as the Rio Grande
men's and women's basketball
teams host the Storm of Lake
Erie Co liege.
The women wilt play at 5:30
p.m. , with the men's game to
begin at 7~30.
The Rio Grande Redwomen
are currently 3·4 on the season
following last Saturday's 93-41
loss to District 22 powerhouse
Central State on the Lady Ma·
rauders' court.
Lake Erie's women's team.
coached by Sara Lee, Is 0.8
entering tonight's contest.
The Redmen boosted their
record to 8·2 by turning back
District 22 champion Defiance
75-65last Saturday at home. They
,are facing an improving Lake
Erie squad coached by Wll
Shuster. The Storm Is currently
2·10, with its victories coming
over emerging district powers
Shawnee State !71·70) on Nov. 27
and Tl!lln (73-67) last Saturday
night.
Lake Erie. based In Palnes·
ville, Ohio, Is fielding men's and
women's basketball teams for
the first time In the school's
history.

zlne, a monthly magazine with a
Hockey
circulation of 850,000 owned by
New Jersey Devils right wing
The Petersen Publishing Co.
John MacLean, who scored hat
Green most recently was presl·
tricks in consecutive games and
dent and chief exeuctlve officer
seven goals over three games
of Metroplltan Sunday Newspap·
last week, was named the NHL
ers Inc. He will replace Charles
Player of the Week.
M. Stentlford, who will remain at
Marathon
the magazine during a six-month
Silva,
the
second
runner
John
•
transition
period, effective Jan.
from the met ropolltan area and
3.
the first from Brooklyn to finish
Soccer
the New York Marathon Nov. 6.
Mike Burcham, athletic dlrec· .
Wichita
mldflelder
Chico
was disqualified for not running
tor
at Ironton High School,
Borja, who notched a gamethe enUre course. Silva, 30, was
announced
that he Is seeking
winning goal and two assists to
among 19 runners dlsquaiHied
schools
interested
In playing the
from the record number of 22,405 help the Wings win both their
Tigers
on
Aug.
25
and Oct. 20,
games, earned MISL Offensive
fl nishers and the only money·
1989,
the
two
open
dates
on next
winner disqualified. Silva, who • Player of the Week honors. Los
·
year's
football
schedule
.
• would have earned $1,100, was
Angeles defender Mark Freder·
Interested principals and at·
lckson scored one goal and hat;!
timed In 2:26:28 and finiShed
eight .blocked shots to and was hletic directors should contact
42nd overalL
named MISL Defensive Player of Burcham at Ironton High School.
Miscellaneous
•
1701 S. 7th St., Ironton, Ohio
Lewis C. Green was named the Week.
45638, at 1-532-5235.
publisher Monday ofSportM~~a ·
•

Resign UC posts

r

Rio teams hosting
Lake Erie's Stonn

UPl ratings

pobU tor nnt

point differe nce. The victory was
the biggest for Kansas since last
season's 94·38 romp over Porn·
ona Pitzer a nd was the 11th time
In school history that the Jay ·
hawks won a game by at least 50
points.
Northern Arizona, 1·4, went the
first 3: 50 of the game without a
point. Northern Arizona was
down by ' 20 points before It
cracked double figures and shot
just 23.8 percent from the floor In
the first half and 37.5 percent In
the game. .
Freeman Wes t added 16 points,
Milt Newton 15, Mike Maddox 14
and Scooter Barry13 for Kansas.
Northern Arizona was led by
Anthony Valentine and Osaro
Onalwu, each with 11 points, and
Steve Williams with 10.
At Philadelphia, Mark Macon

POMEROY HOME &amp; AUTO

Miller named MAC player of week

...-.er

8 .&lt;\."iKETB,\LL ASS()(',
MondM,Y 'N ftf"Sull
Utah 110, Mi-"1 !I.J

as the Tigers beat Hiram 84-66
and won the Tufts Tournament
by defeating Hobart 85-64 and .
Tufts 91·65.
Baldridge hit 24 of 34 field goal
attempts, had 33 rebounds and
seven blocked shots In the three
games.

'

IJnc:oln 82, WI
!WI
Marltli !13, F.aM Strou:IKhtlrJ 88
Md. -llalllmore Co. 63, Franklin Pleft't'

,~ ,\TIONAL

.•

Southl'~W'I.lfl

.,.,,

Pro scores

..

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - Wit·
tenberg center' Brad Baldridge
has been selected the Ohio
Athletic Conference men's bas·
ketball player of the week.
Baldridge, a 6-foot-10 sopho·
more from Dublin, Ohio, had 61
points in three games last week

St Muy111&amp;, O.lpho11 St ,JobnM U
Slreet!iboroft, Mopdol't' .&amp;I
Twlnlhufl57, Rlclunond Ht11 M Cot)
Un~niAeal 51. BarnetVUit' $8
WoodrldlriiK, Windham :IR
Collf'!f'Ball llelhall Rei .. M

Mniiii\Y . Dfoc. 19
Ill Mlnrr,H.t.a. 'f p.m.

With Michigan leading 34-27 at
halftime. Higgins pressured
Eastern Michigan's guards Into
turnovers on four of their first six
possessions after h~l!tlme,
sparking an 11·0 Michigan run.
Higgins picked up a loose ball
after the last of the four turnovers and converted a three-point
play when he was fouled during a
breakaway layup. His free throw
capped the burst that made the
score 45-27,
"We changed the press (de·
lense) at halftime because we
thought they'd be talking about
our first-half press," Michigan
Coach Bill Frieder said. "We put
some big people qp there."
The Wolverines, 9·0, also got 12
points from Terry Mills and Loy
Vaught.
Lorenzo Neely led Eastern
Michigan, 5·1, with 18 potrits.
At Lawrence, Kan., Mark
Randall scored 25 points and
Kansas notched Its fifth straight
victory with a 109-59 rout of
Northern Arizona.
Kansas, 7-1, scored the first 10
points of the game and led 25-4
when Randall coaxed a ball .
through the basket with 9: 44 left
In the half.
The Jayhawks stretched the
advantage to 75·25 with 13:24 left
In the game and 84·29 with 10:56
left before Sf)J'tllng for the 50·

Baldridge top OAC cage perfonner

"

SfoatUr Ml LA RllidH~i, ~p. m.
L,\ Ram,. aU San f'rarH.iSl'O, !1. p. m .
Chit.· ~.,

.,..r

Jtt.n,..~

more starters out with Injuries.
Matt Bullard Injured knee
llgaments early in the first half
and Is expected to be out at least
four weeks. In _addition, guard
B.J. Armstrong Is suffering from
hlp spasms and may miss the
Hawkeyes' game· Wednesday
night against Central Florida.
Iowa already has lost starting
forward Michael Ingram for the
season because of a knee Injury
suffered Dec. 2 against Brown.
"It was a hard -fought game In
the sense that we had to struggle
so much, partly due to Jackson
State and partly due to some of
the problems 1\lal we had," Iowa
Coach Tom Davis said. "That
certainly Is not an exciting
prospect for any of us."
Ed Horton scored a season·
high 22 points and pulled down 16
rebounds to lead four Iowa
players in double figures.
"! thought Eddie Horton really
toughed It out when we needed
him down the stretch. especially
when Matt (Bullard) went out,"
Davis said. "Eddie really tried to
take over the game and did a
very nice job.
Also in the Big Ten, Sean
Higgins scored 18 points and
caused four Eastern Michigan
turnovers to start the second half
In leading No. 2 Michigan to an
80-57 victory over the· Hurons.

By The Bend

scored 25 points and Mike Vres·
wyk added 16 to tead Temple to a
63-57 Atlantic 10 victory over St .
Joseph's.
Vreswyk scored 11 points In the
second half, Including a threepoint basket with 14:39 to play
which gave the Owls the lead for
good at 39-36.
The Ow Is took a 48·-43 lead on a
Vreswyk jumper with 8:15 to
play and a 60·51 advantage on a
layup by Macon with 52 seconds
to go.
.
Brian Leahy scored 20 points
and Craig Amos added 12 for St.
Joseph's, which lost Its fourth
straight game.
In other games Monday night,
Fordham topped Army 63-57,
Alabama clipped Augusta 94-78
and OklahOma State thrashed
Brooklyn 97-60.

'

Christmas party
planned by group
A Christmas play will be held
at the MI. Union Baptist Church
Dec. 18 at 6:30p.m. at the church
on State Route 143 on County
Ro.ad 10. Joe Sayre, pastor,
Invites the public.

CCL party set .

.
party

The ahnual Christmas
and dinner of the Middleport
Child Conservation League will
• be held Thursday at 6:30p.m . at
the Rock Springs United Metho·
dlst Church. Mem)lers are to turn
In baby Items .

In the Strusel Coffee caKe
contest, Linda Montgomery re·
celved first place; Patty Dyer,
second place; and Opal Dyer,
third place.
In the Blueberry Muffin con·
test - . Larry Montgomery received first place and In the
Peanut Butter Brownies- Patty
Dyer received first place. .
Catherine. Colwell, Women's
activities chairman reported on
safety and making sure electrl·
cal things are UL approved.
Christmas caroling and dellv·
ertng of fruit baskets to the
elderly and shut Ins In the area
was scheduled for Dec. 22.
The Christmas party and gift
exchange was set for Dec. 17 at
6: 30 p.m. at the Salem Center
Fire Station.
Ruby Lambert, Lecturer, pres·
ented the following program:
Theme - Christmas; The First
Christmas by Ann Halliday;
Christmas Cards by Patty Dyer;
The Challenge by Neva Nichol·
son; Kids Corner by Bernice
Midkiff; Home for Christmas by
Catherine Colwel); Riddles by
Ruby Lambert ·and song- Silent
Night by aiL

Bonnie Belles
host party
The Bonnie Belles of the Mt.
Union Baptist Church hosted a
ChriStmas party Friday night at
the home of Joe Sayre, pastor,
and Mrs. Sayre.
Besides Mr. and Mrs. Sayre
attending were the Rev . and Mrs.
N. L. Russell, Don and Gracie
Wilson, Raymond and Lisa Cotte·
rill, T. K. and Mildred Workman,
Ted and Melinda Hayes, Todd
and Christy Byrd, LlllleMarklns,
Cathy Rupe, Louise Myers, and
Teresa Wood.

Mr. and Mrs . Victor Stewart of Huntington. W. Va. and Jerry
Merritt Island, fla., formerly of Stewart of Johnson City, Tenn.
Meigs County, recently cele· They have lour grandchildren,
brated th eir golden wedding and two great-grandchildren
who were In Florida lor the
anniversary .
occasion
and hosted a dinner
Mrs. Stewart Is the daughte r of
reception
for a hundred friends
the late Mr. and Mrs. Roy Jones
and her husband Is the son o( the and family members .
Other family members attend·
late Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stewart.
They are both graduates of ing were. Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Jones, Jr. of Green Bay, Wise.
Pomeroy High School.
Mr. and Mrs. Stewart have two . and Evelyn Lucke, Syracuse.
children, Linda Pleasants of

Rock Springs Grange meets
The charter was draped for
Fred Goegle in, long-time faithful
member when the Meigs County
Pomona Grangf met recently at
the Roek Springs haiL
·
Pautine Atkins, master, read
Psalm 23 and a poem in. the
memotlal service.
· ....
Arthur Crabtree, Meigs
County deputy, reported on at·
tending the state Grange session,
and reported on the awards
received by the Star Junior
Grange. Westlne Crabtree noted
that this Is the lOOth year of junior·
grange.
Eldon Barrows, legislative
chairman, gave his report. Crabtree·with the assistance of Eldon
and Rose Barrows and Barbara
Fry Installed the officers .
A report was given on the
officers' conference at the hall
and Crabtree congratulated·

those who enteted craft work at
the state grangejSesslon. It was
noted that stuffed toys were
given to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
The schedule of visits during
the new year announced Included
Columbia to visit Racine, Harrl·
sonvllle to visit Columbia, Hem·
lock . to ~!sit Rock Springs,
Racine to visit Star. Rock
Springs to visit Hemlock and Star
to visit Harrisonville.
Refreshments were served by
Star Grange.

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RT. 33 NORTH OF POMEIOY, SHADE, OHIO

STATE

I

ZIP

�•

•

Tuesday, December 13. 1988

· Pornefoy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday,

December 13, 1988

•

Judge limits North's use of classified data
WASHINGWN (UPI) - A federal judge
charged Mon~y that Oliver North •haS " undermined" the caSe against him by demanding to
expose thousands or pa,ges of classified data at
trial and limited the ex·White House aide to use of
300 documents.
U.S. District Judge Gerhard Gesell, breaking a
month!;-long impasse in the Iran-Contra prosecution, assailed ''North's unwillingness even to pay token respect'' to court orders that he define
which of 3,500 documents were vital for his
defense.
_ln a separate order, Gesell laid out procedures
fQI protecting national secrets during North' s
trial, including directives barring lawyers from
identifying CIA employees, sources and methods.
The rulings marked major victories for
irtdependent prosecutor Lawrence Walsh, who
has struggled to prosecute North for his
clandestine efforts to arm the Nicaraguan Contra
re'bels despite myriad legal problems.
'However, North still has pending a motion
challenging the constitutionality of the Classified
Information Procedures Act, the law aimed at
protecting sensitive data used In criminal trials.
In rejecting North's demand to have the option
of using most of the classified information the
government made available to the defense, the
judge noted that North had been warned that the
tactic of '"graymall' would not be permitted. "
Graymail is an attempt to forestall prosecution
by threatening to reveal nation'al securil} secrets

at trial without being able to prove their
relevance.
The tact~ . employed by defense lawyers in the
late 1970s, forced the government to drop several
criminal prosecutions and prompted passage of
the classified documents Jaw, which offers
procedures for protecting against such disclosures during tes tlmony.
•
•
Gesell accused North's lawyers of a "deliberate
disregard" _of his orders that they deflnP which
documents they consider critical for his defense.
"The effect or this tact~ on the efficient and
reasonably expeditious pretrail proceedings Is
immense," Gesell wrote: "Confusion. delay and
uncertainty result and the court's cOntrol of the
proceedings is undermined.
"Some strain is to be expected, but the tensions
resulting from this obdurate, purposeful obfuscation (has) brought matters to the breaking point."
Gesell said his examination or the nearly
500-page list of documents and examples Walsh
provided provide "ample eviden~ of North's
attempt to frustrate the prosecution."
He said North sought to use numerous
Irrelevant documents with sensitive Information
on "the reaction of variOus Central American
countries to congressional · legislation, the life
history of a potential defector, the precise
distribution of Sandinista forces at a particular
time among various villages, a possible terrorist
attack on a businessman, the president's
&lt;Reagan's) comments on legislative develop-

Don't pry
about
holiday

FORT MILL, S.C. IUPI) PTL went on the 1auction block
"
Monday, but the highest bid, by
...NN UND£RS•
an Orthodox Jew from .Canada,
,.1918. '-- A.nPn
TlmN Syn•I'M• •nd
was so low that even the
c~..... Syndh·•'"
television ministry's trustee pre.
Dear Ann Landers: The Christ·
dieted it would be rejected by a
mas holidays are approaching.
federal bankruptcy judge.
Please do your readers a big favor
Stephen Mernlck, a Toronto
and ask them not to inquire of reading public. Bless them for the
businessman who last month
friends and co-workers where they freedom they have given me. You
offered $115 million for PTL's
luxury hotel, water slide, televiare goiJI8 for holiday supper. They can be sure that this column will
appear in print
sion studlons and 1. 700 acres of
may not be going anywhere.
undeveloped land, bld$36,250,000
lletlr Ann Landers: I come from a
. £very year at this time I wish I
for the assets , In Monday's
cOuld commit suicide and come poQr, uneducated, dysfunctional
family. As a result of an unhealthy bidding.
bOck to life on jan. 2.
The only other bidder was
environment,
I becilme an unmarflease, Ann, don't suggest that I
Charlotte
broadcasting execugo to the Salvation Army or ried mother before my 15th birth·
tive
Cy
Bahakel;
who In partneranother of those place; that feeds day. I hadn't. completed the eighth·
ship
with
George
Shinn, owner or
people. I know a great many folks grade.
the
Charlotte
Hornets
National
By the grace of God, a lot of hard
in this town and everyone is aware
Basketball
Association
team,
work and a little bit of luck, I
th8t I have children. I am ashamed
made
the
opening
bid
$20
mlllion.
managed to break out of the cycle
that my children do not include me
Bahakel called the process a
and am doing very well.
and I don't want to make them
card game, and said the winning
For yea~ l"ve been socializing
look bad.
hand won't be . seen before
with
middle- to upper"l:lass profes·
Thank you for printing this. You
Tuesday, when U.S. Bankruptcy
sionals. With each new introduc- Judge Rufus Reynolds has scheneed not comment because I am
tion I am faced with the same duled a hearing on the sale.
~ure your thoughts are the same as
mine. - WNELY IN NEW ENG- question: "How old are your chil·
"It's almost like a card game,"
dren?" Answering this question
LAND
Bahakel said. "You know If I
reveals how young I was when I showed my high card right now it
DEAR WNEL Y: This letter in
had my first child.
print may not chanl!f your life, but
wouldn't be good. We played and
I can assure you that it is going to
I try to tactfully chanl!f the played and played, but the guy
make a difference in some families.
subject, Sometimes this works, but shuffling the cards said, "This Is
Sometimes people need to be more often than not it only intensi· not the rules of the game.·"
The guy shuffling the cards
nudged into doing the right thing,
ties the person's curiosity. He or she
was
court-appointed bankruptcy
and I'm sure your letter will nudge becomes more persistent and I feel
trustee
M.C. "Red"·Benton, who
them.
trapped.
declared
Mer nick the high bidder
Dear Ann Landers: Please tell
After 20 years of counseling, I after about two hours or
those dunderheaded men out there still can't talk about my childhood ·
negotiations.
that just because a woman has had
excq!t with those whom I've grown.
Benton refused even to cona hysterectomy does not mean she
to love and trust. How can I handle sider a bid from the Rev. Sam
no longer desires sex.
Johnson, the president of HeritWomen who have had this opera- this?
age Ministries who for the past
I
will
not
lie,
and
I
don't
want
to
tion can still become sexually
appear mysterious. -WEST PALM three weeks has conducted a
ar&lt;;msed and have orgasms. In fact,
telethon to raise money for the
BEACH
sex can be better than ever when
purchase of PTL. Heritage MinDEAR W. PALM: You have no
there is no worry about getting
istries is essentially .what reobligation to respond to questions mains or the· bankrupt, scandalpregnant It is also a great relief not
you do not wish to answer. If a scarred ministry.
to be bothered with menstrual
person continues to press for the
cycles.
Johnson said he will' ask the
I don't know if your editors will
a(!es of your children, consider it a bankruptcy court to set aside all
allow you to print this, but I hope
fishing expedition, and reply, "They other bids and consider his
they do because it is a topic that
are grown now;· and chanl!f the Instead.
needs to be aired. The amount of subject.
"Our bid is not a: secular bid.
i8Jiorance on this subject among
Do you hallf! questions about sa, It's not to make a profit. It's not
so-called enlightened men is appal·
but nobody y 0 u can talk to aboui to make money," Johnson said.
ling. Sign me - LIBERATED BY
them• Ann Landers' newly revised "Our bid is to buy back what
belongs to us. The past is past.
SURGERY AND HAPPIER 1HAN
boolclet, "Sex and the Teenager," will It's a brand new day, and we're
EVER
give you the answers you need. Tore- going on. "We will throw ourDEAR LIB.: There is a great deal
ceive a copy. smd $3 plus a self-miof evidence to support the theory .. dressed, stamped business-si;;e enve- selves on the mercy of the court
(Tuesday)."
that if a woman loses interest in sex
lope
(45
cents
postage)
to
Ann
Offer's made at the auction
after hysterectomy the reason is
Landers, P.O. Box 1/562, Chicago, must be approved by Reynolds at
psycholO@ical.
Ill. 6061 J.()562.
a hearing Tuesday in Columbia,
My editors are very good about
S.C .. The judge Insists that a
letting me decide what goes into this
AM lAIClERS •
successful buyer postS percent of
column. They understand that my
01988. los Anoeln Times Syndicoto and the purchase price when the
C.11tofl Si!lllicote
principal objective is to educate the

.

agreement Is approved, pay $50
mUllan within 60 days • after
closing and secure the remaining
amount.
But the high bid from Mernick
was less than even the judge had
anticipated, and the trustee said
he believes the judge will reject
the sale, which would pay little to
the ministry's creditors, who are
owe~ as much as $130 million.
"We are disappointed in the
price," said Benton. "Like Mr.
Bahakel said, this was more or
less like a card game where each
side is testing the other side.
(Rejecting the high offer) is one
possibility. That's happened before where the bid has not been
satisfactory. We'll see."
· Meanwhile, PTL founder Jim
Bakker said he was saddened by
the low price that his former
ministry's assets had produced.
''The price is. so low that it is
severely unfair to the lifetime
partners and the directors,'' he
said. "Tammy and I remain
committed to the full restoration
of the benefits the F'l'L lifetime
partners so richly deserve."
Up for sale since It defau !ted on
a payment to creditors in May,
PTL has generated at least a
dozen offers, including one from
Bakker, whose effortfalled when
his purported Greek tycoon
turned out to be a convicted con
artist wbo promised to arrange
funding from overseas Investors.
At least one lawyer In the case
said PTL Is unlikely to ever
return to its glory days when its
television ministry reached millions or American homes took in
up to $124 mUllan a year and
managed to spend even more.
"Anybody who's still holding
out hope some white knight Is
going to come In and turn this
thing around and go back to the
way it used to be - that's a
dream," said c;&gt;eoff Levy. "Too
many nails have been driven In
the coffin."
PTL's current financial problems can be traced to a 15-mlnute

LaRoe said. An autopsy was · death of former Teamster International President Jimmy Hoffa
scheduled.
In
1975. He was never charged.
LaRoe said Provenzano lived
Michael Sciarra, a longtime
In a single cell and apparently
Provenzano
supporter who was
caused no problems In prison.
barred
from
seeking office in the
''He kept a low profile,' ' he said.
Teamsters
union
because of Ills
"He sure didn't cause any
alleged
lies
to
the Genovese
problems."
crime
family,
expressed
his
Provenzano was serving a
sorrow
over
Provenzano's
death.
20-year sentence for a 1979
The tactics Provenzano, along
conviction in New Jersey for
with
his brothers, Nunzlo and
extorting more than $300,000 in
Salvatore,
used to maintain mob
illegal payoffs. He also was
.
simultaneously serving a life
sentence for masterminding the
1961 murder of union dissident
Anthony Castelilto In Kerhonkson, N.Y.
Provenzano was a suspect in
the disappearance and presumed

••

Christmas party
The Olive-Orange Veterans of
Foreign Wars and Its Auxiliary
will hold a Christmas party
beginning at 6:30p.m. Friday at
the post quarters . Those attending are to take a covered dish
with the auxiliary to provide
ham, turkey and baked beans.
There will be a gift exchange for
children attending. ~

I

·DON'T IE A SCROOGE ABOUT
GIVING BLOOD
COME TO THE BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAYI DECEMBER 14
•

POMEROY SE.OR CITIZEN CENTER
' 1.:00-5:30
'

control over the Local560 led to a
judge's decision In 1984 to oust
the union's officers and appoint a
federal ·trustee. The , unprecedented decision was upheld by
the Supreme Court In 1986 and the ·
trusteeship went into effect
shortly thereafter,
Local 560 has traditionally
been one of the largest and most
powerful Teamsters locals In the
nation.
'

,,

I
I

"YOUR WBDIIII SUPPLy'
AIIO REPAIR CENTER"

• CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY.

~

STOP IN AND REGISTER TO WIN •
LINCOLN 225 AMP AC WELDER

fi

DRAWING DECEMBER 22ND, 1:00 P.M.

~
'1.

No PurchaM Neceaory-Nwd Not It Prlllllf to Win

"7 point NnA type only used
"Stnlinel il not utspon!lible for err()fs flirter firsl diiV . (Chltdt

~

•'

SOUTHERN OHIO
COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO . 2
LEGAL NOTICE
Southern Ohio Cool Company. Meigs Nine No. 2 . P.

0. Box 490, Amons, Ohio,
45701, has submitted on
appllcetion 10 revise a Coot

1 0. to the Ohio Department
of Netu111l Rnources1 Oivl·
sion of Reclem•tlon. The

lhe

Vtnton CountyNtnton
Towo•oip ond Moigo County,
Columloio Townsloip ino. The
etplicltion 1M DJI 0 11 ~~ · pond the . . . lor 1
and
.... ..-ground oi)kolng.
pnMole lor
on

I
I
I
I

p•• """"""'

..

I

II

'

-

FREE!
)'~~~UP-GRADE

h , ·&lt; to 4 '' PRO-:Sl&lt;~EI
10
'
RAINTS

..

SERVICE

GET A CQUF!ON for

GUARANTEED

f\~?
t-., ....

8x10
I

.•

:

: ~~~R~
e

I 110o~~~::MM I c6~~~M

50•~ OFF

EACH ROLL
WITH COUPON

·
CouPOIImuttoooompanyoroer
One roll por coupon
•

1
I

II

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

\

..

t

1

BORDEALESS
PRINTS
l

No person, which ia the

owner or•ha charge of doga,
1hall permh: them to run at
Iorge in me Vilf0111e.

PROBATE COURT
. .' OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF
ROBERT C. OLIVER, SR ..
DECEASED
Case Number 26080
Docket N, Pogo 70
NOTICE
(O.R.C. 2129.021
Ta All Croolton af

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Service Center for Ryan
Pro.du&lt;h
8.7 Fine1ncirig or• Yaodm1onl

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc '

Service on

Furniture •nd •ppllan~ by the

pric.
being
paid.houMhold.
Ce ll 614· 44,-.
piece or
el)tlr!
Fa W.,

3158

.

Stlnding Timb•. Ctll614 ·379 ·
2758 .
..
W•nt•d to Buy·Good fuel o il
he•et' with blower. c.n 814 245 ·9101 .
U111d turnhur' by' ttle pi8&lt;:8 or

•ntire tiousehold 1iso •eltinu~
614-742 -2465 .

W•nted to buy standi!liiJ timber,•

304-875-5328,

I

Ellllllll~IIIHI11
Service s

SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

.

11

.

Help Wanted

.

Authori1ecl Service

161 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

&amp; Ports

Briggs &amp; Stratton

Tecumseh
Weed Eater
Homelite
Jacobsen

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We (!a"y Fishing

Wanted To Buy

We Honor MC/Din/Viso

HUDNAlL.

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

I

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
~~r- IUSINOS PHONE
(6 t41 992-6550

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp;SUPPLY
Middleport, Ohio
992·6611

115101NCE PHONE
1~141 99

Whoever violates the Ordi·
nance ahall be fined not less
than ten or more than

twenty-five d,ollarl plus

11 ·71 mo.

ORDINANCE #675
An Ordinance to provide
additional compen11tion' for

3~ ' 87 lin

Vitfogo employees lor 1988.
8o h Ordained by the
Council of tho Villlllte of
Pomeroy, two-thirds of all

members concurring
thereto;

Section 1: That for the year

1988 tha Village shall pay
and part time
amployau in active employ·
ment as of December 16 ,
1988 in addition to all other

each full

11larv · 1nd fringe benefits

heretofore provided the sum

of e100.00 Regular Employee~.

$60.00 Extra .Em.·

ployaes, •• additionalulary .

Section II: That thi1 Ordi·
nence is hereby dect1red to
be en emergency in order
that the employHI may be
paid thi1 eddltional compen·
11tion before Chrittmas and
inadequate meetings are
tchaduled to pau this Ordinance by norma'l
procedures .

· Section Ill: Thi•Ordinance
shall take effac:t and be in
force from and aher De·

comber 1 5. 1988.
PASSED: Dec. 5,1988
ATTEST: Jane Walton,

WANTED

LINDA'S
PAINTING
FREE ESTIMATES
Take the pain out of
painting. Let me do
it for you.
VEIY REASONABLE
HAVE REFERENCES

614-985-4180

(121 13, 1tc

RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS

985-3561
We Service Aft Makes

ONLY

• l/22188/ tf•

11-19-'88 I mo. d.

YOUNG'S

.9-19-88 tin

ROUSH
CONSTRUOION

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Ad doni and remodeling
-Roofing and gutter work
-Concrete work
-Plumbing and alee1rical
w..-k

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill ,
992-6215

HILLSIDE MUZILE
LOADING

OWNO: GIIG I. IOUSH
....
GENERAL
:' ••.- .
CONTRACTORS
~ RESIDENTIAL
~ COMMERCIAL

Alii

MODERN GUN .
SUPPLIES
Munlelaading Supplies
Modern Gun Supplies
Gum - Ammo • Slugs •
22 Ammo
124 Eost of Rutland
Anass Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. "4·742·2355

.CUSTOM KITCHENS II BATHS
•EXTENSIVE REMODELING
•YINYL SID! NO &amp; ROORNG
•METAL BUILDINGS
HOUSING !!a APT. PROJECTS
SINO: 1969 .

DUllY IT, 5YUatll

992-7611

Pomeroy, Ohia
11-14-'88·tln

ll-21-8B-11n

9!20/thl 1 me. pd.

Shop

Richard Seyler. Mayor

Where
Santa

Prof•s.ional long haul driver..
Sam Tankslltf Trucking is now

1

hiring experienced over the road
driYen. We need first , MCO"d. &amp;
team drivera. Excellent benefil• ,
&amp; weekly IJIIV checkt . C.U tod.,.
304-562· 6652 Of 1-800-621·
team. Subjee1 to drug 1creen &amp; ·

E.O.E.

. '

Up to t15 hour proceuing m•il·
weekty . Check gulfenteed, tree

dfl'l:ails,

so

write

w.-

1067

Philadelphi&amp;. Sulta239-GO , On·

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

Services
·d

,w.;

8~Qml.oc

FIREWOOD

~

OAK. LOCUST.
CHERRY

BUY
NOW
PAY
LATER

With Cub Codot Financing
10°/e Down
With Approved Credit
No Paymonl or lnt•nl
'Til July I, 1919

PER LOAD
OELIV£REO

BILL SLACK
992-2269

0. J.' S TRADING POST
614·992·7301

MtODIIPOIM,~ 1 mo.

8-8-&amp;-tln

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEl
SERVICE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
IINSULATION

'

SYRACUSE, OliO

BISSELL
SIDING co.·
New H-• luHI

Moat Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles

A/ C Seovice
AM Major • Minor
Repairs

::Free Estimates"

NIASE Certified Mochnc

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

NO SUNDAY

Certified Ucensed Shop

'ALARM
SYSTEMS
•Residential
•Commercial

10 Years Experience

HUNTER
SECURITY

614-992-5952
11-9-IMO~ pd.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
.. At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
SUNDAY CALLS

NO

5-25-tfn

BOOKCASES
CROCKS .
WASHSTANDS
ORESERS
LAMPS

Your
Goodie
Orders In Now.

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

Television listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sentic4
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
•

CJ
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ .Licensed Clinical Audiologist
J: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
3 417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio
8-13 tin

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION
Formerly Meig1 Excavating

Full Excavating and Construction
Residential 8t Commercial
Free Estimates for Residential 8t
Farm Work
Rt. 1 , Vinton
Owner

38B-B745
8o. Operator,
Tony Cardillo
11-s-1 mo.

JUST OPENED
CAKES .
by Donna

1:
ll
1:
ll
I:

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays
Specializing in
character and novelty
cakea .
lt. 1, lox 1U, VintOR
742-~~_..,

TOP OF THE STAIRS
AltD

I'

DESIGNEI IOUIIQUE
111 Wlllf S.. P-roy

992·6720

12-5-18-1 mo.

J&amp;L
INSULATION

Mastic &amp; Certainteed •
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Re~lacement Windows
Blown Insulation
Storm Doo11 &amp;

'.

1:

Windows

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

8/ 15/W"

1

I(

OHIO

f•r• E••itlllttl
P1rts &amp; Se11le1

-"

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM·7PM

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

1-3-'86-tlc

-· · ·~.-

. ,

..

Paying today
Dec. 12, 1988

6:30P.M.

Factwy (ltllte
12 Gavgt Shote•• Ontr
S1rictly Elformol

!Subject to Change
Withaut Nolktl

10-7-tlot

U. S. RT. SO EAST
Authorized John
Deere, New Holtand,
Bush Hog Farm
Equipment Deater

1

Basham Building .

CHRISTMAS
TREES

614-662-3121

MIDDUPOIT, OHIO

TRI-COUNTY
RECYCLING

FOR SALE

GUYSVIL~E,

992-6669

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEn.

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SERVICE

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

CI.ASRDAD

#1 COPPER"" 83' lb.
CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS ........... 40' lb.
CLEAN ALUMINUM
CAST ............ 35 1 lb.
Al.liMINUM
CANS ........... 42' tb.

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE
3597 5 Flatwoods

Rd.

992-51,14

PotMroy, Ohio

located Off Bypa,11
At Jet. of Rta. 7 &amp;
33, Pomero'l. Oh.

2 milts frtm 11. 7 on

C-'J load 26
11-25-'88-1 mo.

12·11·88·1 mo.

\

WELCOME TO

CHRISTMAS
AT

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

Christmae Selections.

f« your s~ping conwtniwe will bt or,: en Sun-

tiiCI

4aro from 1 to
0... 11, 1911.

p.m. 1lru

742-2421

Smith lun

MARCUM CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

985-4141
GENERAl CONTRACTORS
References
11-16·'88-tfn

STOVES
•12 Years Experience

CHIPWOOD
POLES.
MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON
LARGEST END

$14 PER TON
DEUVERED TO

OHIO
PALLET
COMPANY
PO. .IOY,

o•o

992-6461

45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNACES
Fe¥urin@: Conoolidated, Dul&lt;h
We11t, Brunco, A.8hley
LOWEST PRICES
WE TRADE

BINGO
POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB

224 E. MAIN ST. -

992-9976

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

PRIZE

2 H.D. FREE with coupon end purchee of min.
H.C. Peckage. Limit 1 coupon per customer per
bingo snslon.
WE PAY $60.00 PER GAME
OVER 1 10 PEOPLE 165.00 PER GAME
L...I;lLi,~;;c..,:#~O~O::il5;,j·3~2.__ _ _ _..__ _ _ _1:,:2~·1,:.1;,;·~tf::.:n....&amp;l

aek for

LEAPING INSURANCE COM'
PANY seeks individual to ow~
and operate their own in1urance

agency. We offer up to •z4,000
par yur plus benefits to start.
Average incomes now a_t
e60,000. All training provide4.·"
For confidential intervi81N contact George

Puc~ovieh

614-.,

776· 1230.

• ...

WANTED : Full-time employ.

ment in your own home es a
Home Servicn Worker with
Bucktr(e Community S•vices .
We provide HiltY plua benftts •
and 1 daily room and board ratf:.,
You Piovkle a home, guidance '
and friendship in a f.mit\t •
a1mosphere. Requir• abilitv tD •
teach p•aon1t living •kills and.~
commitm.,t 10 the growth and '
d ... eopmant of en indtvlduel(ah
with mental r.terdMion . Con·
tact Sylvia Day at 448-7109
after 5:00 PM. Applicants mu~ ,
rNide in Gallla County. Equa( .
Opp!Jftunity Employer,
TEXAS

REFINERY CORP ,

nHds mlltura peraon now ih ,

1

Gellipolia area. Aeg.-dl•• qf "
tr•inmg. Write : F.G, Hopkins.
Boll711 , Ft. Worth, Tx . 11101 .• 1
Part· time ~LT tor fuity equipped : r
Physidan' • Office bboretory, ·
Apply in penon to The MediCfl•
Piau, 203 J1ckson Pike b.,:. ·
tween 8:30-4:30.
' ;"

Holdl-r· lnn 1t Gtilipoli• is

,

now~

accepting applicat ion1 fo,r ,
1-iost/ Hoat,-s· Ceshi•. Apptv in •
person. N 0 Phone Calit.

Autonlobile Club of SoutheMt·
ern Ohio (AAA), Direct Salei· :
High Commilsion. If you are .
interNted In e uUing c•e• in

An 11 ou ncc 111 en Is

the•tern Ohio, 710 Wall• St.:~~
Por1.-nouth, Ohio 46682, Attn: •
Merketirtg Dept.

AAA, Automobile Club of Soa,·

3 Announcements
Don 't spend the Holld.,.s atonal
Eligible m., • women w1nt to

meet you . Wrll:e: He.-t: Se•ch,
Box 6848. A1h.,s. Ohio 41701,

We will haul coal for emergency
HEAP, Meigs County Dept. of
Human Service., •nd HEAP
vouch... We can give you
prompt deliveri•. hcelsior Salt
Works. Inc. Pom•oy, Ohio.

614-992-3891 .

U-H•ul'a For Rent. Sid•sEquip.
ment Co, U.S. Rt. 36 . Hender·

IOn,WV,

4

Giveaway

Kitten• to give away to good

homes. Call 814-266-8080.

2 female puppi•. 8 wb . old,
Small breed. Bleck •nd white.
Good hou• dogs . Call 814-

247-3344.

Free to good home. Coon Hound
puppil!lll, Cell 614-742·2366.

old, one tamale p1n Co~•
Spaniel, three 6 week old
puppi•. 304-882-3569.

6

lost and Found

FOUND: Young Elk Hound7
Brown, black &amp; gray. ChMhire.
Coll•r but no tlg. Call614-387·

7681 .

LOST ·Black Chow."Sun-Dec. 4.
Siameaa Clt·Sept. N•ighborkood Rd. Reward. Call 614·

Government Jobs. •1 6 ,040 '. • ,
t59.230 yr. N.ow hiring. C.ta.• 1
1-806-687-8000 ext . R-9806
for current feder•llist.
JOB HUNTING1 NEED A SKILIJ'"
WE TRAIN PEOPLE FOR JOBS

AS Auto Mechlf'lics. Car pan-·

tau, Coematologiats. Oiverai:- •
fled Medical Workers, Electri- 1 -.
ci1111,

Food Service Worker• ,,.

ElamroniCI Technid.,t, inclu• •
triel M•inten•nce Workers .. •
Nursing A11it1anta and Order:,,
M•chinists. Offlee Workers ~
and W .. dert. Regieter now for"
ct••• beginning January Jrd.
Cell Tri· CountyVacational Adu It '
Center •t 753·36 11 ut. 14 , A
vfllriMy of funding sourc• to pay .
for tr.ining ere INeileble for ..
tho•• eligible.
.. •

li•.

SKILL IS POWER . BRIGHTEN ,. ,
YOUR JOB OUTLOOK. We train ' ·

people for jobs u electrlaiant., ,
lighting, power, air·
condl11oning end rafrigeration •·
component• 111 op_.,.te througl;l •
electrical tystama that •re in· •
stall ad •n~wlrod bv eleclriciM"'I: •
Clauea for ,t he Adult Electricity
progr•m at Tri-County Voc•
H. .t:ing,

tionlll School begin January 3rd. '

~~~~~~';53~J~; ;n:~ i~~,~~

'.
may be eligNble for moni• to • ·
pay for your training, ask about. •
our financi~ aid sources.

10 ladi• needed for talepho.,, · .

work. Must read well; 2 shifts
av1llllblc 9 :00 am -2:30 pm;
4:00· 9 :00 pm, Good haurf¥ •
wege; paid weakly; apply after •
10:00 em Thureday, Dec. 1 11). 1
1041/J (upsteira) Main St..• '
Pomeroy.
• •
letcher at Meigl Junior High
needl babysi'ltar far beb&gt;f . Mutt

supply referenc•. be 1 non-•,
smoker, and live in MiddleportPomeroy.· Call Suunne, 614.'
949·2369.

I

448-6458.

Certified Medical A .. lstant for
Famity Practice ~hYih:i., ' a of·

LOST: Chihulhua-186 MUlberry
Ave. Call 814·992·6838 .

flee. Full time. temporary basi• 1 •
for 2 or 3 months. EKperienc&amp;
helpful but no1 necnHI)I . Send •·

Found : WQ. Dec. 7 in front of

Brogan W1rner ln1ur~nc1 ,
Pom•oy. 1 aet of key1 on ring .

o~~~etoP . O . Box4&amp;8, Racine. •

Coli 614-992-8188.

Found: Cont1ct c•• In front: of

Bank On• Seturdert. Dec. 1Oth,
Pick up •• D1ily Sentinel.

B

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction-

CARPENtER, OliO (Off St. Rt. 1431

698-6121

814 -992-2104

The Gallia County •rt•Why ntn" •
look into AAA. Send us soma.
Information about you,.eU S. '
your work h111ory , Send to:"

Cute black kittens need a good
home. 304-675-3778.

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

Call

Denise .

AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI

One male Wired Halrlerrier2 Yrt

LAJIST
Jl. &amp; MIUY
FASIIONS,
HAll STYUNG &amp; TANNIIG
GRIAT OIIISTMAS GIFTS
GliAl PIKES • GIFT
(IITIFKATfS

Licensed Physical Therapist it
Vetarens Memorial Hospital .• ,

Need babyaitter in my home for
3 yr. old. Must hwe refarancH.
Call 614-446·8832.
r u

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

Jr.j 1nd Jane F. Oliver. Co·

,

1:00 P.M.

"fN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
·

(12) 13. 20, 2tc

Noticols her.eby given t,.t
on the 21th doy of No.. mber. 1988, Robert C. Oliver.

$35

EVERY SUNDAY

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

INTERIOR-EXTEIIOR

Clerk·Trau.

COlli,

GUN. SHOOT

DEAD OR AUVE

such Decedent:

,..el

614-992-3643

.

I

11216. 13. 20. 3tc

Public Notice

Speeches.
Computer Graphics,
Public Relations,
Ath1rtising ~

system'

271 .... SECOND

Probate Court

PUBLIC NOTICE
ORDINANCE 301 .06
Vlftoge of Recine

Leesa M. MIII'P,hey
Fr•·Lance Writer

·---------------------------~:

VALUABLE COUPON

Robon E. Buell, Judge

(1 11 16. 22. 29; (1 2) 6, 4tc

-g,..,,.u.,

1
:
1:

of •Uch dece·
dent must preient their
claims, to thl• Court, wrthin
lix (61 months, altor1ho date
of •uch filing, or their claims
will be forever berred a• a
possible fton upon 1ho Ohio
reel ettale of such decedent .

Public Notice

. Ptauffllt•

•·r

creditor~

43224. within 30 days of
the lut date of publication
of this notice.

o,

P"-:

to

ing 8-3. Columbus. Ohio

12-11·88·1 mo.

I·

All

Written comments and/or
requests for an informal
cont.eMe miY be Hnt to
tho Divioion ol Roclomotion.
Fountain Square. Build-

PH. 1-992-6822

w:

OF THESE

grented

1h.., bv'Tho Ctrcuk Coun of
Randolph County, Indiana.

Reconler. Meigs

488151 lor public viewing.

50°/o
TO 75°/o

I!
I!

1ppointment

County Court Hou•~ Sec·
ond Street, Pomeroy. Ohio
46769 and the Vinton
CountY Recorder. Vinton
County Court Hou•. Main
Street, McArthur. Ohio

SAVE

I
I
I

thi• Court en authenticated
copy of the hrtter• of ·their

I.... Business
·.\ • •"' .

. ..

·EXC:LU.SIV.E

'

County

of the Estate of

Winch•ter. lndien1. filed in

prarfooooly ..,.,.._ 10 be
min ad.
The application ia on file1t
the oHiCH ol the Meigs

LIMITED EDinON

•

Executor~

Robort C. Oliver, Sr.. OocoMed. t.to ol 1he Citv

tooogwal mOihociO and . , _

Collectors of
Emmitt Kelly Jr.

F.te.,.,.,; ·.

oF:FER

Located Halfway
between Rt. 7 &amp; Bashan.

Public Notice

Public Notice .

thoM ai'8M Md · - previouJtv oppr.-11o be min oil. to
•pond · - to be mined by

CLOWNS

I

I

•

1 DAY

·-u . ,.

Wlk-• and
pr-oly 3.4 mit• west of

I
e
••
t"'e
DE~~;~rPqNG
).

YOU'LL

end Redemation

Mining

Permit Numbered A-0356-

·I

WHEN _YOU
BIING YOUI ·,
FilM IN
TO US

YAIDMAN &amp; ECHO

9

tario, CALIF 9062.

·-~---------------------~
, ··
_THIS IS_: TH~ ~EASON ~

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Public Notice

Dealer for

PAT HILL FORD

Middleport, Ohio

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling
Dump Truck
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Business
WANT TO BUY WRECMIO OR
JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-fREE E5TIMAT15for any of then serwi,es roU

SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

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

Betweon 9 a.m.-6 p.m.
or leov•

· Public Notice

vllle 7'h ml"""' IJ. S.G.S. _.
drongle maps, opproxinotefy
% north to 51h: mil• north of

24 EXP •••••••••••••••••••••••••ft~e•••• 5, 99
ee~•ee• S8.49
36 EXP. e••••e•e••e•e•••e•••••••~
'

MONDAY PAPER .

TUESDAY PAPER

319 So. 2nd Ave.

SER~ICE

614-742-2617

IICI'•

~••••••••••••• l;...."S4.4 9
15 DISC •••••••••••
.
:· - ~~ ~

COPY DEADLINE -

tor .,rots first dar ad runt in paper! . Call before 2:00p.m .
d.- afler publicltktn 1o mlk• correction.
•Ads tt,• must be paid itt advanee are
Card of fh~nkt
Happy Ads
In MltmoriMt
Yt~td Sal•

proposed unclefground min
ing . . . . ._ _ 10,063
and •• locltad on the
Mulga, VIII• M . . ondWitkso-

I

$10 .00
$15 .00
$25 .00
$80.00

"A elauified advertisement pl111ced in TheDaity Sentinel fe• ·
ce,p t · · das1ified displ8f, 8uain11111s Card and legal not ices)
w1ll nlso 11ppear in th&amp; Pl. Pleasant Registe• and the G•!lf.
polis Daily Tribune. ruching over 18 .000 homu.

"Price ot ad for d ·c apQIIf!lters is do ubi e price ot ad cost .

38; Vin1on County, Vinton
Townshp, Soctlono 1, 2, 3,
4, 7, 8.13 ond 19, Froctlona
1, 2, 3, 4, 7.12, 13: Vinton
County, Wilkeovftfo Township, Sections 4. 6, 8, 10,
11. 12, 17, 18, 23, 24. The

.
12 EIP•••••••••••••~••••••••,•• ~~:•••• :S 3~2-9

$51.00

H .OO

for ear.h diN' as

paid.

Townlhip, Fraction 31. Md
Sections 29, 30, 34, 38. end

.

$33 .00

26-36 WORDS

Rat" a·re for eonseet~tNe runs. bto•an updrlfl will be charged

""eceive t .50 discount lOt Ids paid in advance
"Free ads - Gjveawwt and Found ads under 15 w Qrds will be
run 3 dar,s at no ch•ge.

County, Columbia T-nlhip. Sections 32. 33, and
34: Meigs County, Solem

.

$4.00
ss.oti
$8.00
$13.00

3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

·

proposed coat minilllt ,ond

BRING YOUR FILM IN TO
us FOR PROCESSING.

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282

16-25 WORDS
$5.00
S8.oo
$13 .00
$21 .00

0 ·15 WORDS

1 DAY

"Ads outside Meigs, Gellia or M1son count ies must bl!ll pre·

lfl
I
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1
5=·
I ---------------------------·••
BLACK AND' WHITE FILM
!·
I Colorwatch
f/Kodak'~
ONE DAY SERVICE
i.

1-I 17COU
Twin City Machine and Welding I
POIIIOY, OliO I
~92-3761

POLICIES

rectam1tion op.-ation will
be conducted in Meigs

FOR . TAKING
PICTURES!

~·========t~;==iiiiinii~r:::;ITor:=::~~;::::;:::::::::;n
EAGLE RIDGE

RATES

TO PlACE AN AD CALL 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
SUNDAY

The,.new ·V,eterans of Foreign
Wars-Post6p8,wjllmeetat7p.m.
WednesdaM. atocthe Pomeroy VIllage Hall 'Auditorium. All
members and residents wishing
to become&lt; members . are requested to be .p resent .
·

GO. ONE

r----------------------~
TWIN cny MACHINE AND WELDING
1

1

sexual flln'l! Bakker had eight
years ago with former chut'Ch
secretary Jessica Hahn .
.
Bakker resigned from PTL m
March 1987 just as The Charlotte
Observer was about to break the
story. He turned the ministry
over to the Rev. Jerry Falwell,
founder of the Moral Majority,
but donations went into a tailspin
as allegation after allegation
unfolded about Bakker's lifestyle
and sexual preferences.
An Aug. 18 appraisal or PTL's
assets by Arthur Little &amp; Co. of
Atlanta showed PTL to be worth
~UO million, but only under the
leadership of a well-known charismatic like Bakker. Under a
lesser-known ministry, it was
appraised at $92 million, 'iuid If
sold piecemeal it was valued at
$76 million to $85 million.

Business ervtces

•

• The Area's Number 1 Marketplace

· New post to meet

Mobster Anthony Provenzano dies in California
LOMPOC , Calif. (UPI) Anthony "Tony Pro" Provenzano, a soldier In the Genovese
organized crime family who used
intimidation to control a New
Jersey Teamsters union local tor
more than 20 years, died of an
apparent heart attack Monday.
He was 71.
' Provenzano had been admitted
to · a local hospital more than a
month ago for treatment or
congestive heart failure, said
Chuck LaRoe, spokesman for the
Lompoc Federal Penitentiary
where he was serving a 20-year
sentence.
Provenzano died at 7:56a.m.,
and the tentative cause or death
was listed as a heart attack,

Classifie

"There would be no trial. "
In a separate court filing, North 's lawyer s
ci)allenged Gesell' s latest order that they submit
a summary of planned testimony In the case that
·might include classified Information.
They asserted that in seeking to screen North' s
own testimony, the order violates his F.ifth
Amendment right against self-incrimination •
because the defense cannot yet mll.ke a judgment
as to whether he even will testily,
·
Gesell's order, they argued , al so would unfairly
require the defense to disclose its case to
prosecutors In advance or the triaL
.
Last week, Walsh "rged the judge to resolve
some Issues by allowing jurors to look at copies of
the classified material or to . listen to certain
material with earphones , but Gesell rejected that
alternative.
"This technique lor denying public access to the
full proof in the interests of protecting national
security cannot serve the requirements of this
particular case, which will Involve thousan~s of
pages of (edited) material and numerous
substitutions," Gesell ruled.
.
"A hard-fought criminal trial is in prospect," he
said. "All significant issues or !act are contested.
Some of the information (edited) or substit~ted is
itself controversial and subject to different
interpretations . Numerous witnesses will be
called. Sharp questions or credibility will be
raised. A fully open, public trial is essential."

•
t
d
releC
e
PTL bid low, ~ay be 'J .

.

I

•
ments and any contacts from the White House
with religious leaders, how informatiOn conc~rn­
lng the location of hostages was obta,lned and the
like.''.
Gesell's rulings . followed seven days or
complicated closed hearings to evaluate deletions
of classified data In 395 documents Walsh
proposes to use In prosecuting North, the first of
four defendants facing trial for the secret
diversion of proceeds from the '1985-1986 U .S .
arms sales to Iran to the Contra rebels In
Nicaragua.
Gesell disclosed during the closed hearings that
ended Friday, Walsh agreed to drop use of about
100 of tbe documents. The judge directed North's
lawyers to identify by Jan. 3 300 classified
d&lt;X:uments they want to use in his defense and that
they be appropriately edited within the following
six days for use at trial.
The judge has said he wants the trial to begin at
the end of January. ·
.
Gesell expressed regret that North might suffer
because of the hard-line posture or his lawyers,
led by Brendan Sulllvan and Barry Simon, but the
judge also noted, "Tbe Intimate involvement or
North in the tact leal decisions ... Is apparent from
~Pe nature of the case."
"Only through (North) can counsel learn a bout
the murky events that may underlie the simple or
coded text of the documents," Gesell wrote.
He said that If North's tactic of refusing to state
why documents are relevant were permitted,

The Daily Sentinel

Ohio

Rick Pe•son Auction... II·
C.nMd Ohio and W•t Virginia.
Ett.ate, 1ntique, f•m. liquid•
tlon HI•. 304--773-8781!1.

9

Wanted To Buy

c••· mod..
1911 E11tern

TOP CASH paid for '83
and n.wer used
Smith
Buic:k·PontiiC.

Avo., Goliipolil. Coli
2282.

814-448-

Complete hou•holdl at furni·
ture • antiques. Al1o wood &amp;
hNtert. Swlln'a Furniture
Auatkln, Third &amp;. OINe,

COli

•

AVON · All area•. Cell Marityl'l
.

We..-er 304·882-2846.

AVON allaUIIIII Shirlev Speau1 ,

304•675 -1429,

Billing Clerk,. Aver• Famll'i..
Health is Milking en •n•getlc
indiv&amp;duel tor ~rt time posh ion
of billing cl•k. knowlege of
medic:'i lerminology a muat,
eKI)Itnence preferred . 304 -6758015, Ayers Family Huttt, will
b1 loc~ed In GellipOiis Ferry,

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Ml
h
Iii

W.Va.

:

S.t•

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17-:--:------:-:---- •
Agents • Photographtr
with 36 mm cem•a needed for

::~:i•G~~i=I:.·~~:.Y~~our~

:

Oakhill end Pt. PIH11nt well,

,.,
mu1t be able to work waU with 1i
people and work whhout aup•· fl
vision &amp; under 1 deadline ,~

8t4-448·3119.
Junk co .. with or whhout preuure. For lntetviii'W eppoi'"·
motooo. Cooil Lorry Uvooiy-814- ment cflll .or,gg, 1·800·38&amp;· .,•
_ae_a_-s_J_o_3._ _ _ __ _ 3326 .

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PBge-8-The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A-DAY

Help Wanted

11

W.nt8d I~ ton.y •tnlghtwhh
ti.S.tr IIIIIY, no work. .phone

49

F or leas e

Commercitl Buildi ng for IMie.
Pt. Ple. .nt. Ctll 304-676·
5 10 4.

304-171· H10.
AUenUon: -.ctN.m income fot
home HMrftbtr ~Ofk. Into. cllll
1104-141·1700 Dopl. p 2303.

Pool tabla. 8runawiak.7'Xl,4'
alate, ac. incld. perfect condi·
tio n, t1 ,000. INeninga 304·
675-3772 .

A.,.,, Family H..lth ill •eking 1i
pert time mMiial usiltllnt.

contllct Oeo"'._, Pol., 304·
178-4:140.

12

I

Situations ·
Wanted·

Merchandtse

'
I

SWAIN

Loving c•• tor eld•ly ond
h~ndie~pp.t . aaoo pluL Call

814-812-1873.

•

"OK, I'm in for fifty cents. My
name is Howard Feeney and

Schools
ln11ruction

I live at 215 Lexington
Avenue."

RE -TRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS

COlLEOE. 529 Jackton Pike.
C811.WI-•UI?. Reg. No. 88-11 ·
10518.

41

18 Wanted to Do

44

Homes for Rent

W.l do blbvtkting In my home.
w.-d-.'• • . w.llktndl. Any
C1ll 614-446-8647.

Nicel'( lurnlth'ed •matl house.
Adulh onty. Ref. required. No
Pelt, Clll614·441·0338 .

W"l

3 IR ., AC. c•pet pool. u••wa.
2 fiupt.c.,_ fence. Good loca-tion. Call A·1 R111l E1t11e
Bro._., 304·1!176· 5104.

•N:"·

.,.,sitc...
••,....D&amp;
Mt

In my home. Hwe

1..

114 -«1-8104
1 -1 PM.

MQoenl• Cu.t:om Butch•ing,
open&amp; d.,-a._.tc, ctlll304-882·
3224 .
'

Hou11· 7 rooma, . unfurni•hed.
*226. 29 Nell Aw., G811ipolil.
Call "48· 441ltfter 7 PM .

Bl~titter tv.illlbl'

fluibla
~n.. full or p.rt tfme. behind
OrMenct School h.,e rtf•tn·
eoor 304-171-2784.

5 Court:21ivlng are•. 3 BR ., 1 Vt

bllh ot1 one aida.. 1 BR . 6 bMh on

other. Both kitch_.., furnlaMd.
Idee&amp; for ftmily wh:h gr.ndptrent. Overlooks ~rk&amp; river. Walk
to echoolt. Downtown. t375 a ·
mo. plua utiliti•. Depo•lt &amp;
reference~ . Calll14-441-4128.

•

21,

1

3 BR. double. Excel. cond.
Aero .. from Galli• AcadlllftV.
*250 p• mo. C.H ·1!114-441·
0041 or weekerKt. aft..- I PM.

Busineu
Opportunity

In Cli•hire. Ohio, 3 BA., 2
bMhl1 til eleetrlc. AC . DepoUt
r~und . Calll14-387-71517ar
703-318-1108.

I NOTICE! I

THII! OHIO VALlEY PUBLISH-

ING CO. NC~Dmmendl th• you
do · butin.. with peo:rle you
knCM, tnd NOT to ..., monev
ttw6ugh th mllil untl You hiVI
inVMtlg.tlld the otf•lng.

2 Hou•• for rant, 1 BR.- t175e
mo. • 2 BR ,· •176 a mo. In
Crown Clly. Rat. Cal1614·446·
1511 or 261-11580.

c••

T•W• 1nd dtlpl.,for
flbrlc thop. Alao hiVe tome
tlllilcMtdnotiona. Willt.U aH for
•eooo. Call 814-918-3809 or
114·881•4202.

3 bedroom home on Rt. 1 41,
ne• Gre.n Elem. •300 plua
depoait. c.n 814· 441· 61561.
Hou • for rent. t300 mo. plu1
aec. dep. B22 Jack1on St.
Vinton. OH Ctll614·388·1360.

Ha(r 'SIIon, high tr~~ffic high
vollfmelhop. Reduced tor qui..
Hie. 304·15215-301515 or 304·
823·72n.

Nice •Piit -... 2 flrepltc•. 2
garege. II) country. '390
plul depolit. Call 8,1 4·446·
4&amp;14.

.

C:lf

23

Profes1ional
Services

R•• nice 3 bedroom hou•. j/1
city. Call814· 448·9523.
Hou• wi1h btth. Ne• Racine.
Nice y1rd, .a•d«t tptce. Cell
114-992·8168.

Mary Luc•·Piw.o &amp; org.-. lei·
sana. Cell 114-441-9787 or
441-4421.

3 bedroom hou• in MiddltpOrt.
A.C ., buih-in kitchen. f22ri .
plua depotit. Ctll 114·992·

3189.
31

Homes for Sale

Vrr tltl'llctive brick4 btck'oorn.
2 btth. family room with fir•
pl.u. far..-.1 dlninv. l•geiiYing
room. 30ft. CYatom Olk ldtchtn

3 SR. hOY .., deluxe. AC. &amp;
poot-S.Ie orTrede. 4 IR . houM,
QOOd location. Clll 30•-8758104.
Hou• for ••• PONiblt land

contract. 122 J1cklon 61. Vinton. OH 114-388-9310.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1118 New Moon 12x60, 2 BR .
t1900. Call 114-446-0390.
1870 1 2x60 Mon11rch mobU •
home. 2 BR . c.ll 614-388·
8114.
1811 Flettwood. 12x64, bottle
g• hilt tnd hot Wltlr. f3000.
Ctll 114·843· 5310 ~ 114·
843-6401 tnytirne. Alk for
Danny.
Double wide mobile home. on
tound1Uon. tpprox. 2
dlote to town •nil tchoole,. lg.
kitctten. ltundrv. ~ b. .oom1. 2
blthl, new c•p«. concrete
pDfCh·WIIke. btck decks, pttlo,
refinilhed celllf, pump, •cell.nt condiUon. Lltge b•n with
concnte floor. 614·992· 3218
e'olenlngl 11ter 5 : 30 or
W.ektndl.

•a..,

1177 &amp;chutu 1'*•10 on 2 aeret.
Jutt outlidt A1clne. Will 1ep•·
.... Call 814-148-3087 1fter
lp.m.
2 Ndroom 12xl0.
304-178-2722.

t1900.

1978 Liberty 14•70, 3 bedroom, t7,9bO .OO . 304·175·
1871 andl78-1713.
2 bedroom. 10d0 mobile hom•
In oood ehape. tiiO .OO c•h or
own• .will fin•ce. 304·1715·
2722.

36 lots

&amp;

Acreage

Athton beMitul ._ge building
Iota. mobile hom• permitted,
public wat«. alto rW« lot 1.
CtvH Bawtn. Jr, 304-5712331.

lit'lli.ds
41

Homes for Rent

Pt.ms lub.·4 lA., fuM ......
mlllt, c•pet. gM rano• cit'[
oohoolo. No pOl~ Dop. &amp; Ro .
_...,, U28 ,.., mo. Coli
114-441·0271 oft• I PM,
. . . . . . anytime.

Apartm.,ts for the Eldltfly.
Gellia Manor Apartments. 165
Buhl Morton Ao.d . Deaignedfor
the Senior Cidren (12 II older)
and Han~capp.t persona. EqUIII
housing opportunity. Applic•
tiona rMy tt.pick.t up M Spt'ing
Valllrf Plan, 529 Jacbon Pike
Of cllll14-441·4839 .
Mod11rn 1 BR . doWntown. comkitchen, tir.- c•pet, Oap·
oatt. no P••· C.ll 614-446·
0131 eveningt, lifter 5.

pi••

821 'h Sec. heel. cond .. 2 BR .,
~uippld kitChen. tir. Aw.iltlble
Nov. 1 at. t225 plus dep. Ctll
614-441-0103 0&lt; 1141-2169.
Nice-2 BR . tpt. 4Yl mil• from
Gtllipolis. Stov1, refrig. &amp; wtter
furnithed . •226 a mo. No pets.
Call 614-448-8031 .
1 &amp; 2 BA tPertment. 1300
month. lndud.. ell utlliti•.
Adultl ontv. no J)MI, dep.
requirH. Call 614-448-4222
between 9&amp;6.

Nicety furniahed 't-2 BA . W•er
&amp;"g.-bage Plid. Privlte Pitkin g.
Oepo1h required . Call814-446·
4346 afler 6 PM .
Pomeroy · 2 BR . remodeled
IJ)artment off Spring Ave, See.
dep. &amp; ref. Call tfl• 8 PM, •
814·992·1886.
Furniahed downttalu, 3 rOom•
&amp; bath. CIMn. No petl. Adult1.
Ref. &amp; dep. Ofhtreet perking-1
c•. C. II 81 4-446-tf-19.

Unfurnlthed 2 BA g•ege apart·
ment. In town . C.rp•ed. Adutu
onty. No peu. Call 114-4414111 .
Furnl•hed 3 room tpt. t221i p11r
mo. t715 dep. Utilhl• ptid. No
children. 94 lOCUli. C.ll 814·
441-1340, 441-3870.
Furniahed 1 Br. mod•n apt.
Dep . • r11f. No p.. l . 980 Firat
A..,e. Ctll 814·448-1079.

SHADY

LAWN APTS· 729

Full b•emant, one end htllf
atory, quite locaUon, 8 mil•
north of Point Ple••nt, 30•·
175· 1071.
t110.00. 2 bedroom tmall
hou 1e, t200.00 or will tell on •
lend cont.-ct. 304-676-2722.

3 BA .-6 Court St. Kitchen with
ltove &amp; refrig. t210 plutdep. &amp;
fill . No peta. Call 114-441-.
4821.
'

c.Wnlltl, otll: wooctrwork. finish
b.-m..t, 2 c• g•~g-. I.,.M
IMdiCIPed tot, 4 mile~ fronv lmmtditte occupancy . 11
Holler HotPitll off At. 36- roomt, centdl hHI and air,
Porterbrook SubdiYilton. Call c•peted, 8•age. 806 28th St ..
814-441-4119.
, 614-441- 193 anytime.
schools. Uttlhle1 low. Woodburn•. Nttuql g• furn.ce.
Prictd to aell. CIU 614-446·
0271 lfter 1.. PM, weekends
•nvtime.

Apartment
for Rent

Seoand Aw. Furnished efflaien·
ci• starting .. t171t 11 mo.
including Wllt8f a g•b-ua.
Single •duh• only. C.ll 614·
448-4807 or 448-2802.

1----------2 bedroom. tour room ll)t,

4 BR .. full b•ement • g••ge,
fully c•peted leoma ni'IN) . City

' ~:::::;::;;:::::~=

!42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Mobile Hom• tor

rent. In
K1n1uga .,.. . Conatruction
wor1ter1 welcome. Cell 814·
448·0608.
Newtt decorttld. 2 BA ., tullv
c•peced. Sec. dep. required.
Call 114-441-8658 or 4-464766.

2 BR mobile home at Evergreen.
No Sund"¥' ctll1 piNII. C.ll
614-379-2878.
14.&amp;6 2 8R . t260 a mo. Cell
614-266-1293.
Furnilhed 2 BA , be•tiful riv..view. C.ble IYiilable. Fottert
Mobile Home P•k. 614-448-

1802.

Nice 3 bedroom• with exptndo
living room. L•g•yerd. 314 3rd.
St., Kana~ga. Cell 614-4487473.

3 bedroomt, no peu, mutt h..,e
rel•enc•. 304-4158-1887,
Trtll••· unfurniahad. coupl•.
smtll childrln sccepted, Rt. 1 ,
Locutt Road. Pt.Pit,1 b1hind
KloK . 304-178-1071 . .
2 mobile hom• furnilhld; 2
bedroom tpt. furnished. 304·
875-81512 or 676-3900.
Homeetead Rutty, •le or rtlnt,
trtiler . 4 lou. more .
f1 3,600.00. Nancy Ctnterbury, 304-171-5140.

44

72

KIT N' CARLYLE® by larry Wrl1ht

1 Br.· 7 Court. Kitch.n wrth
ltow&amp; retrig. t171 pluadep. •
rat. No p&amp;ta. Call 114-448·
4821 .
· 183 Third. Gallipolia-Ouphtl, 2
BR . upi1Bira, c•pllted, appliMc•. Wllher a dryer hookup.
•2150 plu• dep. Cell 814·245·
9595.
Larg41 1 room efficienr:v tpt. with
btth. All utiiRiel ptld. Call
114-246-5223.
Ntwtt remodMed 1 BR . ll)t.
Appl. furni•hed . lfiletllocltton-1
block from downtown. Ctll
814-448·4639.
2 bedroom Apta. for rent.
Ctrpeted. Nice aettlng. Llundry
ftcilltill twlileble. Call 614·
992·3711 . EOH.
One Month Free Rent
Qualified renter• ~Y UOO.
deposit tnd no rent for the
month. No~tember or De·
c ember ontv. Villtge Manor
a"d RiverJide Aptrtmenta in
Middl.,rt. From t182.
614-992-7787. EOH.
New efficiency 1 or 2 bedroom

eptt. in Middleport. Furnllhedor
unfurniahed . C•ll 614 -9926304 01' 814-992-2778.
2 bedroom tpartment k'l Middl•
port, reeently 11modehtd. large
rooma. 1186. per month, depotit required. Day 114-992·
23&amp;1 ·or night&amp;1•· 992-2509.
4 ep1rtment'a In Pomeroy. One
and two bedroom1. ,.nly turnilhed kitchen. For more lnfor~
m•ion. call 814-992 -1216 or
SU-992-3768.
Beach Street, Middleport, Ohio,
2 bedroom furnlthed tpartmenl.
utlhi• paid, r.t•encea. Phon•
304-882-2888.
•

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . IPta. I cloMtl, ldtc:henIIPPI. furnished, W•her· Dryer
hooll- up, new plutl'l c•ptt. tl-.
paint.
Nlot good loo•ion.
Aegan"f. Inc. Apt a. Cell 304171-110....._ or 1715-15381 or
878-773New completely furnished
apartment &amp; mobile home in
city. Aduhs onty . P•ldng. Cell
814·441 -0338.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACKSON EITATEI, 131 Jtcbon
Pike from •113 a mo. W.. k to
lhop 1nd movi•, 114-4412518. E.O.H.
T•• Townhou• ..,.rt~•· 2
IAa.. 1 ~ baths, CA., diahwath•. dillpostl, private en·
ctoHd petk», poal. pl.,pound.;
W.t•. eewer, &amp; lfllth lnduded.
Starting at U89 p• mo. Call
614-317-7810 .
Furnlllhed IPt· N•• HMC. 1 BA ,
U31. Ulllhl• poid. Coli .UI·
.W11 after 7 PM .
Ap. .m.-tl 1nd hoUNI. c.tl
304-171-110 • .

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
OINe St., Gelllpolia.
NEW· 6 pc . wood group.. t399.
Uv ing room 1Uhea· f199-tti99.
Bunk bedl whh .bedding- •249.
Full 1ile mettretl &amp; foundalion
attrtlng- ' 99 . Recliners
lllrting· t99.
USED - Bedl, dt81..,1, bedroom
auit•. Detb. wringerweah«, 1
complete line of ullld furniture.
NEW· W•t•n boot• t36.
Workboata t18 a up. (Steel &amp;
aoft toe). Ctll 814-448-,3159 .
County Applienci Inc. Good
uMd tppli.nc• tnd TV Sl'tl.
Open BAM to 8PM. ~an thru
Stt. 614· 446·1899, 127 3rd .
A .... Oallipolil. OH .

73

GOOD USED APPUANCES
dryer~. retrig. . ton.
rang11. Sk1gga Appll1ncea.
Upp1r Riv11r Ad. btefde Stone
Creat Motel!. 614·448· 7391 .

w.. hlra.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof• tnd chain priced from
$396 to f996. Tabl• f&amp;O tnd
u~ to f125 . Hid .. a·bedl 1390
to f696. Aedln•• *226 to
$376. Limp• •21 to •1215.
OintltH t109 tnd up to •485.
Wood table w·l chaira t286 to
1796. D11k f100 up to 1375.
Hutch• t400 and up. Bunk
bedl complete w·mtttrHtet
t296 1nd up to,396 , Beby beds
t110 . ManrNMaorbox 1pring1
full or twin tee. firm 178, tnd
t88. Quean set• t250 • Up,
King U60, • dr1wer ch•t f89 .
Gun clbineta 6, 8 &amp; 10 gun.
Btby mmreue• t36 &amp; '45.
8td fr•m• UO, '30 &amp; king
frame 1150. Good 11lection of
bedroom tutlll, mettl cabin ala.
heedbotrda no and up to t65 .

14 k•at gold ditmOnd cluater
cO dd:all ring. 1 aa• toul
weight· Y.! kaat matching ••·
rlnp. Togeth• or •p..,e. Cilll
614·446-0718 for d11t1ll1.
Whirlpool M.c:tric 1tow. Wer·
Clr'IJtt.. Siam•• kitten, ch_. of
drewera. curtlin1, tmlll kttch ..
epplian,cet &amp; mi~e. C1ll 814448-0066 .

~;;::::::~~~:::~~:::1'~~~~~;:::;~~:::::::1
56
Pets for Sale
64 Hay &amp; Grain

D,.gonwynd Cmo.y Konnol.
CFA P•tltn tnd Sltm. . kit·
tena. AKC Chow puppt•. New
Hlmal.,.tn klt1en1. ·Cell 81•·
441-38.U oft• 7 PM.

AKC Miniature Schnauzer
puppy, femal-. I wb. old. Sell•
pepp•. Bhatt. t200. Call 814441-4180.

Vorkahlre T•"-· I moa. old.
mete. All that.. •221 . C.ll
114-446-7882.

J . S FURNITURE
1415 Eaatern Aw.
4 drawer ch•t. •48 . 5 drtwer
ch•t t54.815. 6 pc. wooden
dlnnlllte 11tt. t199.95.

Mtple upright piano, t471. G•
doubl•own cookltOVII, copper·
tone. t100 . Call 814·992 ·
3159.

AKC Chlhu8hu• pupa. I wkl.
old. C•ll&amp;14·44&amp;-nl&amp;.

VIRA ' a FURNITURE AND
APPUANCES
I
Optn D•itv Mon.·Sat .. I AM -5
PM
Sun., 12 Noon-&amp; PM
Open tfter houra by
1ppointment

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS ·
Bentwood rocken. '41.9&amp;.
Hewy duty ruttic bunk !)edt,
•229-complete. 4 pc. bedroom
autte with triple dr••r. '418.
Ruttic 4 dr. wood ch•t. •sa. 4
dr. ch•t. *44.96. 15 dr , ah•t.
154.96. Sofa a chair· reg. •ass
now t219. Ytughn 1ot•• chtir,
reg. f2400 now tell. I pc.
wood group. reg. •&amp;98 now
t361 . Ytughn S..eltt well
hugger r~lln••· f199. ~uatic
country tlble. 3chllirt &amp; llend'l,
t289wlth m1tchinghYtch tl60
for both pleca.
.
Chri1tmaa toys nd g--.••1
merchtndill '' discount price~.
4 ft. Stnt1. •29.96. Bi.,cl• &amp;
tric:vcl• ltlrtlng at •19.$15 . 14
K golddUcb, f7.49•all. Mr. &amp;
Mrs. Cl•t. 114.95 1 lit. Iron
Stone churn, t14.9&amp;. 'Child'l
otk rocking chllra. f8 .99 . Pogo
btllla, •7.99. Remote &amp; rtdlo
controlled c•• &amp; truck•'· chint
doll1, t14.96. 12a18 Rellv'out.
dew, &amp; acene piCiuree, t'7.99 .
layaw•v now for Chr~t.,..l .
Open 9 -5 on the 24th. At. 141 in
Centenary- v. mile on lincoln
Pike.. 814-446-3168 .

Snowbl.tt for 4-whHI•. Buah
Hog brand, like n..,, t1215,

dlff•entltll• for 1971 Jeep
CJ -15.. 3-16 ratio, front and re•,
Phone 'dll¥'1. 614-317·02715,
night1ctll 114-912-7312"

45

Furnished Room•

Furnlthed room-918 Stcond
Ave., Galllpolil . t715 • mo.
Utlllti• ~d. Sinal a mila.. Sh••
bMh. Call441·""11afler7 PM.
Aooma for rtnt -w.lk or month.
luning • t120 e mo, Gallll
Hot .. ·l14·441-9180.
Sleeping rooma with cooling.
Alto Tr-'1• .,.ce. All .hoall- upa.
CAll after 2p.m. 304-773151151 . Maaon WV.

46 Space for Rent
Coon1ry MobUe Home P11k.
Rpute 33, North of Pomwoy.
Lott. rtntel•. ptrtl, .,, ... Call
S14-982·7479.

'IES, Mf:i.AM .WE'VE COME TO
RENEW i-llS D06 LICENSE

law.. to form four simple words

iii Ill Ill Ill

' .

...
8

•t.

*·

1811 Bulak, 4
One awn•.
88,000 mle~, AC. Excel. oond.
New*-· AM·FM . t1891. Cllll
114-441-0822.

IntentiOn a

Auto Parts
Accessorie1

mil•.

Low
E..cel. eond.
114-441-1711.

C•'-

Ctdlllac Sevllle.IDeded. Ft .. c•.
No ru.t. Trade-dump truck.
pi'*"P· 1882 Eocon. n 200.
Colll14·441·7018.

AKC A•g. Shettit pups Mini•
ture Colli•. Flr11 lhotl a
wormed. *1150. Call 114-379·
2113.

1187 Ford Station Wagon. Cell
114-288-8198.

AICC Regilter.t BatMH pupa. I
- - · old. 0128. Coll1 4-el7·
8718.

11U Motu Hom•Only 4.100
mi•HH n., Toyou 21 h ..
Momatlc tnn1.. 111 Mit contain ... bath room wtth llhower.
I . 1• cookttove. g• oreiiCtflc

AICC reglatered rntlt Beegle. 7
monthl old. Good prNpeel.
$110 . 114·848-2843.

•....... _, ............. w.. ...
outright or take I AUTOMO.I LE

Pu,. bred male Pomeranill'l.
N- ....... Col1114· 74~·2880.

IN ON A TRADE . Coli ""'
114-448·7891. OYonlngo 814·
44a.H39. Trtvel when you
want to.

Fl1h Ttnk. 2413 Jltdtson Aw,
Poim PI-n~ 304-171-2013.
10 gil • up •1•.8lend 101111
eompl.,. 043.28.

1111 Red lroc CtmlfO. Excel.

cond. CoR oft"'7 PM. 114·378·

SURPLUS ARMY , DENIM,
CAAHAAT, Rental clothing, ,
Sm.U Anny Equipment Ace•· Ch•lttm• puP!II-. AKC Ngio1ort•. SAM SOME!AVILLE'S, .t•ed Pom•ltns, Mitt lei. ShlhOlD ROUTE 21 , NEW ERA Shu. Slbtri• HulktlpL POOtl-.
304-273-8811, Noon-8 PM . depoJit wtll hold your choloe till
Nov, Dtc,. (lnauiMed Coveralls Doc, 24. 304-878-2183' "'
t27.10),' Jungle Bo011 U.S .A.,
Will hold untl ChriltlnHNorweOriginal Army clothing. Noft.
mlllttry cemtltuge p1nt1 ollll Elkhound puppl• 040.00.
~ male Beaat• runninG. 304012.00.
. ..08-1818 oft• 7:00PM.
All Chrlltmtl tN• •12.00,
come e.ny before CGid we•h• AKC regiltefed Minltu,. Dacho
ilnd tag your trM, Newell• 1hund, ftnWel month• old. hid
Chriltm11 Tr.. Ftrm, one mile all thots. red color, houM pet,
ebove Muon on Hanging Rock 304-773-9888.
Roed, 304-773-6371 or 304882-2886.

2431.

1817 MM'eld• 210-S. 01200.
Colll14·448·0338 oft• 8 PM.
1181

OldlmobUo Ooho II.
Royele Broyghtm. Auto. Good
condiUon. •1410. 114·9482181 .
1111 01* Omega. CrYIM conIll whool. AM·FM -oo.
814-841-2888.

uol.

1871 Fonl Futura. I cyL. nerw
,....,. tlrel. good condttion.
0480. CAR 814-888-447~ .

0 Mlllml Vice

FRANK AND ERNEST

a crook ond Cllaaa

:t PON T WANT TO F'UT
"'..'
A STOP PAYMENT ol\1
.
MY Cf1fcft:,, JUST" A
0'

oul

1

eve

iolntHH typee. C.l 114-379·

2220 .. 304-171-1711.

'

1877ChO&gt;iyVon. 02800. 1872
HI ..... 402 Big Lo'* Ch"'y
•llin• t1200. 410 Po.-trac'
,... . . ,.. .110. 114-· 2· 7807.

YlfLfl ~IG/ij Of WAY

.. POOft BOYS TIRES
Mavlno to Rt. 31, tten-.on.
W.Va. Into n., bldg, bv Dec.
18th. Coli 304-171-1331 '

UNTI t..

CAN MA/&lt;E
A PEpo]ITI:

~
,!
I

j

I'

•

ALLEY OOP

BASEMENT
WATERPAOOPINO
UnconcltioNII llf•lme ...,.. .
lee. Loc• ,.,.,.._ lurnlthed.
Free _........_ Call collect
1-114-237-\)4118. d.... •i9h'·
Rog•ra8aaemeftt '

IW!!PER aul aewMg maahin•
..,..... pot11. ond .. ppll• . PI'* •'
.., •d dellv'.-y, Dw• Vewum
Cle•n..,, one half mile up
O.Or.- Creek Rd. Cell 114.UI-0214.
,

441-7843.

RON'I Telnlelon Ser.,ice.
H011• oals Oft RCA. Qu.ur, .

liE. Bpoallllng in ZonMh. CoR
304-&amp;71-2318 Of 114·441·
2414.
Fetty TfHI Trimming. etump
remowl . Cell 304-171-1331 .

881-3802

RON 'S AI'PUANCE SERVICE,
hout• cal -.lotna OE, Hot
Point, wnh•a. llftyert •nd
atovea. 304-17.1 ·2318.

•R•

30•-

e-.

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
YOU M5AN HERE AEi-AIN5 T
THIS ROO&lt; a&lt; INTHI610vVN

OOYOU EVER
VIONDER WHY
WE'RE 1'-\ERE'l

OR ON THIS S'IR1H OR ...

MAYBE I'LL EiO CJONN
TO THE:'Y'ANDPtAY
SOME PIN6-R:lN6.

I

I

/

.....

ot•·

-lor. bo*

I

I!J CI'IIHII,.

11J Night CGurt
Ill VlclooCounlly
7:35 (J) lanfanl ond San
1:00 ID MOVII!: ANZACS: The
War Down Undw, PL 1 (2:00)

e (2)

1111 Mlllal* Finding a
mining w11nos1 becomes a
matter of life a dellh. 1;1

Sam dlaobeya Tony and
angrily drives olf for B
Vermont weekend. 1;1
&lt;D C!J NIIVII. Follow six
medical students. C
Ill 1111121 TV 101 r&lt;eegan
finds hlm..lf In the middle of
a tough ethical dilemma. 1;1
1811J) MOVIE: Wllkend
IRl 11 :29)
11)) PtlmeNuoa
!Hi MOVIE: 11'1 1 Wondortul
lifo (NR) (2:09)
II) Mu-. She Wrote
il!l Naohvllle Now
8:011 Ill NBA Balkotbllt "
8:30 (J)
flo-nne Dan
almost k)sea Roseanne's
trusl by exposing a 15 year
old secret 1;1
t.OOet2l 11Jl.ln the HHtal the
Night MlchNI Wlrren·guBst
stars as Tibbs' ex-partner
and Althea'a ex-lover. 1;1
I!J Prolnolansl Boxing
(J) • ()) Moonlighting
Maddie and David are lead
on a chase through the
desert In a balloon. 1;1
l1l (!) The Amorlcen
Experlonce Father Charles
Coughlin, radio priest during
Depression, Is profiled. C
ill eO MOVIE: 'PromoM'
Ho11111111c Hill of F1me
01 LorTJ King Llvel
0 The
Atso lllno, Part
f(NR)

a..,

1:30 Ill Now Caunlly
10:00 (2) 700 Ctub
,
• (2) 1IJ) Midnight C.llor

Killian's ex-girlfriend gets
AIDS from an lrttentlonally
reckllls man.
.
(J) • ()) lhlrtyoomethlng
Elliot pursues an attractive
lawyer and Naoct_maete e
charming editor. 1;1

i•

!'

•

l1l 181 ......

...

BARNEY
YOU WON'T
BELIEVE WHAT
ELVINEY J~ .
TOLD ME.
PAW!!

(!) Bill Mayors' Journal

IrS ENUFF
TO MAKE YORE

·, ,.AIR STANP
01" ENO I!

Moyore talks wi1h Sir Huw
Wheldotl, who In hill aevan
years a8 managing director
of the BBC created a golden
age of British television .

MY

WHAT?

Ill liD 18rney Mitior

I!JEvenlng111 Crook ond ChaN
10:20 (J) MOVIE: Trlbel (G) (1 :30)
10:30 l1l EloiEndoro A conUnulng
chronicle ol the Uvea ol
raeldantl in London's East
End. (0:30)
18llll Odd CGuple
Ill YldlaCaunbJ
11:00 ID Remington • - Love
,o.mong the Staot1
• (2) (J) • ()) 1111 • 1121
iiiiI!J Ughler 8lclo of &amp;porta
l1l EleiEnclors A conunulng

ASTRO•GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol

c•.

h••·

8 e 1121 01 JIIOPirdYl
Ill liD M'A'B'H

e ())

C.p. .• Woflt-by hoYr or job.
P~nallng. plllntlng. drywlfl. re·
madeline. Cell Fred Cox. 114·

1978 Ford Pinto. 2 door. nice.
Coli 814·9115-3134 oft"! 6 :00
67
Musical
p.m.
. Ak•• Tr" Trirnmfnt and Stump
RemG¥11. Free •tlma.. C.M
ln11rumenta
18n Ford LTD. UkeM~~W l... h. 304-171-7121 .
EqY~m.nt, 80 Seri• ditch
..... No rull. &amp;14·882· 2440.
witch. 1183fi111AIIIIdo.z.... ll...
new. ctll 1tter 1 :00, 304-273Ron' • Chlmn-r Sweep. epllal ..
lowry Encore orglft w / maQic 1977 FO&lt;d LTD . 74,000 mi-.
3188 0&lt; 273-3031 .
thru 0..,..,._ .38.H. Cell
· Genie. Excel. cond. Compl. . Good ohopo. 01800. 114·948· 304-773-1348 .. 773·1B40.
w / bench. Mutt 1111. t310. Ctll 2871.
Chri1ttn11 Tr. .. Eckard Chtptl
Ro~;~nleNeal
114-241-9117.
Rold. Rt. 2. 7 mii•North Point
For• grNtdetlonen~t~~Worulld G. Greenend.onsCon..-llteend
Plnunt. White .. d Bootch
1985 Wunllnr' oratn. Modtl c•. truokOfwn, . . Kenny leu Contraallng. tnt.;or ~nd • •·
t16.00. Coll304-176·8773 .
848.
UOO.Coll814-l82·
2084.
It .Jim Mink Che.,rolet ·
flor pMntlng. c•pentery tnd
Good used floor model end
oldo...-o. 114-.UI-3172 .. m .........
Pool ..ble. 8ryntWick 7ft x ~in
porttble color tv'• for "'" C.ll
Oiblon L• Ptul guitar ptu1 304-773-8134 .
&amp;14-448-1149.
1111e. acc•sori• included. P•·
Roltnd Modll 10 amp. C.ll
feet cond, t1 ,000.00. evening~
C1pta1n Ste.m• Clean•., get 2
114-448-0088.
1111 Buick Ll SDe. one evere1•
304-175·3772.
Weuinghou• weat-ter, t76 .
rooms cerpet
ow,..-, exc cond. 13,1500.00. .. _,_. na.oo
wllh thll
Whirlpool Wllher. t96. Ken·
lndlvldutl oullar I•~··
304-171-3030, 878·4232 ond od. 304-171· 2211.
more dryer, t95. RefriQ. frostginn..,
•rloua
gulterllit.
lrui171-3431 .
56 8uilding Supplies
frll, t915. Refria. lld•b\'· aide
Gar«&lt;ill Mutlc. 11._...-0117,
· coppertone. t115. Kenmore
J.tf Wlftlll., lnllniDtar, 114. 1910 Cutl•• luprem., 1178 82
Plumbing
Wllh•·lllle ntw, 1175. Electric
.UI-8077. Llmhod op. .lngo.
Moente Carlo, 1171 Pontlec·
fllnge 30"' •no. a.. tinge,
Building M•erialt
&amp;
Heating
'-nant. 19715 PontiiC Conn•
t75. G .E. dithwllher, t71ii .
Blodc, brick, aew• plpea, wift1971
Mlllbu
Wegon.
Sktgga ,lpplllllcee-Upp« Rtver
dawa, llntele. etc. CIIUde Wln171-7888.
Rd .. 114-446-7398 .
ttrt. Rio Grande. 0 . C1tl 814·
CARTER'S PLUMBING
245-6121 .
AND HEATING
1818 Oldl Cutt... Cl••· ona
For ule. 5 piece wood IN'ing
aw,..-, low mllaage. •c. cond.
Cor. Fourth 1ncl Pine
room tuht, 111dng t715 . In tllr
Concrete blodcl· ell ailet- yard
304-171-1238.
O.IIIDollt. Ohio
condition. Ctll814-387·7215 .
01 dtlllvtry. M .. on •nd. GallipoPhone 114•UI-3188 or 814tit Block Co., 123Y.t Pine St.,
1881 Chryaler La•"· 441-4477
Uaed tewlnl m1chlna Priced
(lolllpolli, Ohio. Coli 814-446tl5,000. 00. phone 304 -875·
from •49.9 . The Ftbric Shop,
2783.
4410.
ltittt Siipplw
Pom«oy, Ohio. Call 614-992·
84
Electrical
2284.
WESTERN RED CEDAR
&amp; I 1'/1" ltd k
1 Ill DocJae 100 conwrtlbl'
• Chennll Aultlc
&amp;
R
efrigeretion
u,aoo.oo. 304-171-.Uao .
and Beveled Lap Siding
ladl• Kroller rediner nMtt
• Deck Mat•l••
uphola.. red t250.00. Sing•
1110 Vol.._..,n Dut.r dl•
Ga.rtnleed Quality
sewing mtchine wfth rnahogMy
.... good aond, n,ooo.oo.
Allldenlill Of COmmlrl'llial Wircabinet t&amp;O .OO : .304-175- CETIDE, INC .• Athens-614·
304-871-2838 .
Ing. New llfwioa or reptira.
894-3178
2052.
Ucenaed 11-=tricl.,. Eatimatt
UTILITY BLDG . 8PL .: 1112 Pontiac lonn•lle. big free. Rld81'1our Electrteal, 304Hide • Way bed scfa. jult llkt
30' ...0'd'8" Cle•ance. 1 · V·l ..,gin-. Mlto. Pl. PB, PW, P 176-17S8.
new, verygDOdcond,t160.00, 1 ,100boerdJ eetofoeklumber, 15' 1118' track door. 1-3' w.tlr. ._..., 4 door. nl• cl.-.
;;30;4;·;17;8;·;19~2;;9:.;:;,;;:;,;;:;,;;:;,;;;;;_l.:o:2:28:.:00:.:~:0:4:-4:1:1·:1:8:88=-=:J -H -: 81d&lt;o.
$4181
ERECTED. loon n.7ao.oo. 304-171-8788.
Colll14-332-1748
86
General HauHng
CoiiOOI.
•74 Chwrol• v.,., 4 cr"L
UIO.OO. 77 three q.ner ton
SNAFU® by Bruce iJeattie
Chwrol• pldl up 350 V-8, Diltlrd Wll• S•vtiCit: Pool1.
0800.00. 304-171-2487.
Cistern•. Walle. Delivery Any.
0
time. C.ll 114-441· 7404-No
0
Sund_. ctlllt.
•
72
Trucks for S•le
•
i&amp; J Water Serviee. Swhnmlni
M2 Gt_.. Combine. both
1t83 Fonl Ront• v -e. 4 soc~. pool1, Cilterns,. welt.. Ph. 114.
304-137•2011 .
overdrtw, AC. topper. A·1 CD~ 248-9281.
New Holllnd 382 grin..., miaar dillon. 02398. Coli 114·211·
R a. R Wiler &amp;•vice. Poon
with btlng tlr-. 2 101'._ tnd
clalernt , wellt. lmmadlllt:
magnll. good oond, 304-17&amp;1•71 Chwrolel 81ep tkle. 400 1,000 or 2,000 gllontdellvflty
4218.
.
mot.-• .auto., PS. PB, AM·fM· Coli 304-878·1370.
c....-. Runt •eel. '140o.
Coli 114·388-8807 oil• 1:30 Watlerton' t Wtlet Hauling
PM .
N•ontble flit•. 'IOiume di..:
ODUnla. 2,000 to 4.000 CIP JC18e2 F-110 2 WD, Old. ''""~ Ity, . .,..,., - · _.._ etc
'
N- -oodclowllhpod.hood MuM MIL UIOO. Coli oft• 7, 304-178-281t .
...II. &amp; .,..., 011111. Modo IPI e 14-441-201111.
Coal and llm•on• dellrtei~~
S - R..,.l. 01100 ..... '
1171 Ford 4•4 thon bM . phone304-171·31to. .
Ull. Colll14·211-1822 .
tkle. Too meny ...... to lilt
1111.-noollotoalll'""•· Ext:re ... _,. tiiOO firm. c.l
2 PM 0&lt; oft• 10 PM 87
Upho111~~ry
•1000. Thorouohbred FICII hM-. All
Coli 114·441- 114-448-8124.
2107· doyt, JSI-1104·
1171 Dodgopld&lt;up 31a 4nglno.
,IIUto. t:ran1, Pl., Pl., 41,000 Mowrer' • Upho41111ftng llr1rlnt
trl countyerH 23 .,..,. Thl ._
I month old pollY aott for .... ICIUIII mil-. ftiiW lirN, pltfeGI In hlrnituM ufholalering. Cal1
J..,... "M·FM·Co...
no. Colll14·281-soeo. Good
304 · 171-4 64 lor h is
No Nit:. No
work. •3500 ntlmatM.
Chriltmlla Pr•.,.l
" Sorry, that one's part of the yard hera... "
fll'm . Coli 814-448· 40..0.

b•

EEK &amp; MEEK

P,.ntlng: lnl..-ior • E Kteriar. \
FNe .......... c.ll 114-441·
83.U.

AOIIIry or cable tool drlllintMottwelltoolhpleltdnm•d.,.
Pump .... .,d .-vi-. 304-

AmtriCII
(J) Enterllllntnlllt Tonight
D (J) USA Today

w.-

.

w·~~

7:05 (J) Andy Orlftllh
7:30 D (2) family Foud
(!) Scholallc 8parto

(!) Mu- ~rlne
(J) D ()) Who a the lou?

Home
Improvements

1110 C..e dozar, 304-9372018.

v••

(!)

11)1 Cheft

1982 bleck Trtn•AM. loaded.

AKC Rottweil« pups. Wormed.
thota. Champion blood line.
0380. Coli 814·311-8384 .

D ()) Cumont Aftelr

M..NOU/ Loh,.r
NlwoHour (1 :00)
1111 e 1121 01 WhHI of
Fortune 1;1
.
Ill liD Thrile'o Compony

BUDGET TRANBMIIIION Utecl a rebuilt all typu.
W..--ty--30 d"'t. ,1_ tl8 6
up. Uted • r*'lt tor.,.
conwn..a. Standard alutch-.

81

BRIDGE

(J)~r

1111 Ch-1o, 02500. 1171
Ch-1o, f700. Colll14· 251·
1270.
1919 Chryll• lmp•lll. 1H8
Ford lronco W11g0n, Call 114251·1618.

Rotary - Whoop - Brute - Thatch - WORrH
"Sure the cost of living is high," said one old gent, "but 1
for one think it' s WORTH it."

a (2) PM M~gozlne
(J)

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. 11) Take
pains to give credit where credit is due

today, especially if ll was an associate.'s

Dec . 13, 1988
Gon s idera ble t ravel for commercial
pu rposes is stron g lik e liho od in the
year anead. What you' ll want might not
be on your doors tep and you 'll have to
mo ve aroUnd a bit to get it .
SAGI'fTARIUS (Nov. 23·0ec . 21) You 'll
bfl at' le to sell a n ot her of your ideas
a asily t o da y. This pe rson will be enthu·
s1ast ic and wa1ti ng for something to de-

a..

velop, so be sure you follow lhrough.
Know whocre to took for romance and
you 'l l find 1t. The Astro ~Graph Ma,ch·
mak e r instantly revea ls which signs bre
roma nt lcany perfect for you. Mall $2 to

cooperation that made your ach le..,eri1ent possi ble. Good manners assure
you of thi s person 's continued help.
PISCES (Fob. 20-Ma•ch 20) More opportunities th an usual are still hovering
about you Do not take these conditions
fo r grant ed . because th ey cou ld be subject to change .
ARIES (March 21·April19) Do not act
againsl your own best interests today in
order to placate a selfis h a s soc iate who
never thinks of anyone else. Be fair, but
not foolish .
TAURUS (April :It-May 20) It may not
be wise today to accepl compensation
or praise tor an achievement that Is not
yet complete. Delays could -o ccur that
might embarrass you.
GEMINI (Mar 21-.luna 20) If you have

Matchmaker, c/ o this newspaper, P.O.
Box 91428, Cleveland, OH 44101-3428. arrived at a decision thai Is P•odlcatod
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 11) ll's pos- ' upon carllulatudy, don't devlale lrOm it
sible you mav be thinking that money Is today. You 'hould get the result&amp; you
a lit lie easier to come by lhan It really Is. anticipate If you follow throuQh on plans
Continue t o be nopelul, but al s o be . you've outlined .

,p•uden1.

· CANCER (Ju~o 21-July 22) Resources .

'

you have earmarked tor essentials ,
should not be diverted to fr ivolous ·
channels today so that later you won't 1
come up short when bills al'e due.

LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Today you may
be tempted to renege on a promise
you've made to another. It's best that
you don 'l , since this person wilt be
counting on you.

VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22) Pressing as- .

signments or tasks should be attended
to as early in the day as posstble. Your
determination could wane considerably

If tHay are lelt to the last minute.

LIBRA (lopl. 23-0cl. 23) Your chances '
for success will be substantially en· l

hanced today II you don't make what's .
In tt lor you your primary consideration.

Selllsh though1s will restrlc1 your
thinking .
SCORPIO (Oct. :14-Nov. 22) Be sincerely apprecla11ve of one who will treat you '
. generously 1oday, • ..., though you
might not get all 1hat you hoped for.
This person will be doing the best that
can be done for you .
@-, . . . . . ANI! I INNTIIIIJIU
..IOIUII AIIH.

chronicle of the lives of
resldente In London's Eall
End. (0:30)
(!) lllgn 011
Ill liD LOVII Connection
11)) M-yllne
I1J Tlleo from the Darkolde
OMloml Vice
You C.n II 1 8tsr
11:30 (2) 01 1111 of C.rson
C!l......-c-(L)
(J) Cllelre

a
e

l1l ABrancfrwlne Chrleanao
c.tal " sleigh full of
ChMatmaa caroll, o pacltage
of musical gilts and a
glimpse of St. Nicholes are
pr1Mntad in this
heartwarming apecial. (NR)

~30)

1111 lfu."T.:.~ 1;1
Ill liD
o.m.
0 .,_ Olllghl
e !It 'Niaht Nlot' CBI Lots

...,.,ad

Nlghl O'hn and Oia!llbone .
Investigate 1n unuouol
hOmlcltlo in I bar. (R)

OIHII._ ....
til Amer1c1n Uag·r'ne
12:00 ID ....,_ Cllue Billy Pierce
(!) Chevrolet CoNIIIol

Ctlallel.

•

SCIIAM-LETS ANSWERS

a

'rxR1215 Hond• 4 Wheeler
MII.OO. 1187 Y.,..,., Big
181r t1 ,4II.OO. 304-&amp;71 ·
2111 .

.. '

PRINT NUMBERED
.LETTERS IN SQUARES

0&gt; •

1:35 (I) 9 to 5
7:00 ID Our Hause The Best

tiJ Maneyttne

Oowrnment s•ed Vehid•
from t100. Fardl, Mer.-1-.
Carvet:t••· Chavya. Surplua.
au,_, Guide. t11 8015-187·
1000,
1 ·10181.

.

..

11JIIocly Electric
C!J Nightly Buaine'" Ropolt
ill Ill 1121 CBS Nlwa
Ill liD WKRP In ClnclniiiU
I!JSIIowlllzTodoy
I1J WKRP In Clnclnoti
0 C.rtoon Expre..
You C.n Be 1 Star

Rt. !5 Cycle . . . .. Southalld&amp;
WV. Ph. 1 -304-17&amp;-41 30. Now
Billing N.w Pol~rie 4 wheel . .
tndulld4wh ...••·

Vien~nty-12......,..

...

E MA R D Y

Targaet Shooting Game (R)

078. 114-11112-IBI2.

............ r.e•kll·

fhe·.

~ TOJVOt Shooting Clay

71 Auto's For Sale

Darling. cuddly tadd\' be•
puppt•'lt Chow, no. Wond•tul Chriltmu: gift. call 814441·8312.

..,.,,n...

(JJ (J) •

l1l

1914 Ch.vv Chavttte. Automttic. AM radio, almoat: n...tlrn. 80,000 mK•· Ae• •II
ntedl replaced. t1000. For
mof'll lnformetlan clll PMII at
114-441-2.342. Mev be . . . at
The Galllpoh Dely Tribun., 8-1
weelr.d-r•-

of

leiters

in front of her c lass, Ramon a
dreads going back. (NRJ
C!J Dr. Wllo The Time
Moqster .
lllilll Happy Dap
.11)1 Facta ol Lne
0 FotAibert
Wfonclongo
1:05 Cil Ono Day at a Time
1:30 D (2) OJ NBC NighU, Nowo

ICIIWuald 400. Good for p.t&amp;

&amp;

~
Unfurniah..t tpt. on• bedroom,
1U electric. niiW capet. new
paint. Me It Gino'• Pine.
M•on. W.Va.

•

Rearrange

four scrambled words be·

l1l Ramona After getting sick

4 W.O.

Motorcycles

76

CFA Regilteted c,..., Point
Him.,.,an kit-.. Mail&amp; Shota,
• wormed. Lit1w tralll.:l. ezoo.
Ctll814-388-1810.

Firewood for Mle. f35. pic:kup
truck lold. O.liverld. HEAP
vouch•• •ccepted. Call 814·
949 -2087 . . . 8 :00p.m.

G E Wtlh•. Worb pertea.
t125. Triple inaulned ttove
pipe. UNd. Cheop. SPOOdQueon
Dryer. A1 shape. t7$. 114-387·
0322.

0

.

Ul Nowo
1!J SportaLook

I r .111S[JIIrlallllll

W•t HlgNtnd White Terri•a.
AkC puppl•. A Chrillmll Gift
lhll wit ltat. c.H 11•·3170124.

Vall.., Fumhure
New and uMd furniture end
appllc•ncea . Call 114 -448 7572. Houu 9 -5 .

For low pric:et on Outlhy Carpet
&amp; Furntture come lo Molloh.,
Furniture·Upp.- RNer Ad., 814446·7444.

Milled h.,. t1 .215 bale. 304-17158211.

AKC Cock• &amp;penill IMIP•·
mtlu- t110, tem•l•e·t200.
Tal!&amp;ing depot.it tor Chrlttmle.
Coiii14-3SI-8880.

Blcycl• 20 incfl · 28 inch . Call
614·4·1·7453.

20 Inch biD;"cle. Brand new.
Llrge Met. Colt t171 . Sell for
0110. 114-992-7240.

Oro...nd thai •&amp;.00 p• 100 lb.
ttrew *1.50, Atfalfa •3.00,
&lt;011nd boloo 028.00, 1 :00 til
12:00 dlilr' , Morgtnt Woodllwn Farm, Rt. 315, Pliny, W .Va.
304-937-2018 .

Groom and SYpplf ShopoPet
Grooming. All br11d1 .,. Afl
atyiM . lam• Pet: Food D•••·
Julio Webb Ph. 11 ~-441·0231 .

For Sele DDg hou . .. 11h mil•
out At. 141. C•ll 814-4410683, w.,-na lhoem.k •.

Firewood. S20. tmtll pickup,
t26 . regua. pickup. No deliver·
i• . 814-742-3112.

E~o

11M by NEA, Inc.

74

.'

~y

(J) 8 ())ABC Non 1;1

90 Dey • 11me 11 c•h with
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9•m 10 &amp;pm
Man. thru S•. Ph. 614-446·
0322.

PICKENS USED RJRNITURE
Complete hou11hold lurnlth·
ings. ~ mil• out Jenldlo.
304-67Ci-1460.

EVENING

•

1178 .Jeep Ch•o... Chief.
1177 Ch.- F·W-0 tulo, 1978
Dodae 318, euto. 30•· &amp;1'1 ·
7818.

CHRISTMAS TREE'S
Home grown Chrilttnll Tree' a.
Scotoh tnd Whht Pine.
Weba'' s Ftrm in Rutland.
614-742·2143.

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

&amp;

TUES .. DEC. 13

won

8
UMI
'::!:~:~' S©Rctl~-l£"E.ffS
Editod
CLAY I . POLLAN - - - - - - -

1:110 (JJ Bonanza: The Loli

1117 Ch•y Altro V•. fuM
load..t. E•.._ cond. Call tfter I
PM, 114-211-1181 .

Browning 22 c:el .• euto.. Win. 12
ga , •uto. High atendlrd 22 c ...
pl•tol. Win. mod. 72 22 c•. C1ll
614-246-9258 '

MLK•d h•d wood tiD. f12p•
bundle. Conttlning ilpprox. 1 'Ia
ton. Ohio Pill« Co., Pom•oy,
Ohio. 11•·992 ·1481 .

•

1974Fo~wlndawwn. z..-..
302 V-8 enllin• wtomMic
trtna. AC. E 210. 81,000 ICh. .
ml•· Coli 11 4-281·1838.

54 ftllisc. Merchandise

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allisan, 1210 S•ODnd Ava.
Gallipolit, OH 114-441-4331 . '

Vans

The Daily Seritinei- Page- 9

Television
Viewing

for Sale

1811 tour ...... ·~ o.. aun
plc:lo-up. Aunoaood. - -0878. Coli 814-11112-2121 oli•
15 :00 p.M.
i

Buy or Sell. Riv«ine AnUquee.
1 1 24 E . Mtin StrNt, Pom~WDV.
Houra: M.T.W 10t. m. to lp.m .•
Sund., 1 to lp.m. 814·992.,2121 .1

Chriatmu Trt•-1 14 mi. from
Rodnev on Rodnev -Bidwell Rd.
Ctll Rich•d Flach•. 114 -24&amp;8241.

BORN L.vo.:.n

olf•.

Antiques

Firewood for •le t30 pidwp,
doliye•od. 025 U-h .. o. Roeooon
Rd. 'Ctll814-441-·982.

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

1172 Ford pk*up, 380, euta.
Aunt &amp; drMI good. tHO 01'
boll
Coli 814-241-1812.

Upp• River Road
G111ipoli1, Ohio
614· 446-7444.

Wh-'tchtlrt-ntw or u•d. 3
whe+led electric scootn. C•l
Rog•s Moblty collect, 1·814·
170-9811 .

Truck•

I

1117 Ch.,-y I · 10. 2 tont; ...aa,
" " -· 4 cyl .. 4 tpd.. 28.000
actuel mn • . t&amp;l500. For Inform.
Colll14-441-4919.

51 Household Goods

381-1711 .

16

Household Goods

MOLLOHAN FURNITURE
Compt•alintofc•p.._ congol.,m, 'ol inylt tnd c•p• r1m1.
Carpet in ttock only. Vlnyle
ltlrting a~ t3.91 yard In atoc*
ortly , Free tatimetea, no )ob to
ltr g• or amall. Two lac.e:k)ns.
122 Vl.,d StrMt
Point Pl . .ant. W.Va..
3 04· 6715·8498

53

I

Need Mont¥7 Needlld mllil or
f.mtle for Htte-ln 11ttend.m
.......... the h_....cep in my
home-Jt.lllt. 110, Vinton7d.,,
• wuk. C.ll 114-388-1561 or

51

Tuesday, Decembe~ 13, 1988

TU81day, December 13, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,,

•

NORTH

...

1!-U-11

+K715
•Qs 7 3
tK4
+AJlO

Unwavering
deceit

WEST
+AU
.K 10

By James Jacoby

'

..

EAST
t108S

•su

tAH2

tQ17U
Purists may disagree with South's +K 878
+54
game-try of two no-trump with such a
' .,
SOUTH
meager diamond stopper, but his hand
+QJB
was balanced with honors in all suits,
.'
.AJH
and 11 points seemed enough to Invite
tJlO
game. North had 13.points, a double+QU2
ton and a working 10-spot. That made
Vulnerable: Neither
it OK to bid four hearts.
Dealer: North
To choooe the best lead· by process
of elimination, West would need to be
l!ul
Soo~
playing in a game with five suits. AI·
Pus
ter all, one doeso't lead away from
Pua
2NT
Pus
aces in a suit contract or lead a trump Paso
Paa
Paa
from K-10 dt!Ubleton, and leading a Pass
~
club from the king attacks dummy's
.,.·•
first-bid suit. Those choices are all noo.,tning lead: • 8
.,
nos, so what's 'a player to do? In fact
West tried a dose of that bridge pallialive called deception. He led the club
eight.
club ruff, and the defenden stUI bad · ,
Since West had disguised his an- two aces left to set the CODtract two .
gulsh nicely before making the open- tricks.
ing lead, declarer bad no suspicion
Lesson: H you are going to make u ··
that the club eight was anything but an unusual deceptive opening lead, doa't
honest card . So, fearing an early de- give it away by agonizing a long lime. .
fenslve ruff, he rose with tbe club ace.. first. Here if West bad traaced for aa,· •
Banking all on the chance that East length ol time before the lead, decll'l- ·
held K-x in hearts, he played a trump er might have llellled that IOIIIIIblnl
back to bis jack. West took the king,. was amiss and bave taken the club fl- played the club king and gave East a nesse at trick one.
·

1.

..

'-------------.J

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Fellow
15 Actress,
Lynn 9 Whetstone

10 Chief
deck

hand

11 Beyond ·
12 "A Clockwork -

.. .;.

-&amp;1 Nevada
city
42Smooth ·
consOnant
43 Algerian
city

"

14 King (Sp.)
115 Merriment
16 Singing
syllable

DOWN
1 Errand
2 Be Irresolute

3 Phrase
of

vengeance 13 Avid
28 Late U.S.
U Favoring
. atty. gen.
17 Before
5 Carried
21 Have debts 30 SLralghten
18"6 Stubborn 22 Health
32 Fight site
potato,
- mule
resort
33 Mortise
two ..."
7 Examine 23 Romney,
fitting
19 Crone
quickly
e .g.
38 Weight
20 "The Quiet 8 Thankless 24 Dodgson's
unit
Man"
· one
pen name 39 Spanish
director · 10 Ricochet 27 Alliances
.,....,rr-r,...::nr.;;..
22 French
port
23 .Barge
215 Equal
26 Belgian
27

4 Apiece

.-

Asinine
sound

· 29 G~nera­
tiun
30 Nicknarne
of 1936

31 Munch
34 Bird
315 God of
discord

..,

'

(var.)
. 36 Digger's
find

..

37 Lyrical

39 Kiln
o&amp;O French
city

DAILYCRYPTOQUOTFS-He.re'aliow to work it:

II/IS .

AXYDLBAAXR

IILONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnaUon of the words are ali
hints. Each day the code letters are different.

•

•

'

CRYPTOQUOTE

12-13
BO

0 C VIE

OD

J M II A

CE

BO

CE

c

0 C VIE

YGPU

0 8 YI
•

.-.

QBJIMOCMBCZ

OD

J M II .A

c
•

MCPI
UDMEI . -U . Q . YIZPVIZ
YHtenla)''e Cryptoqaote: SOMETIMES WE MAY

.. .

LEARN MORE FROM A MAN'S ERRORS THAN FROM
HIS VIR'I'UES. - H. LONGFELLOW

.. ,

()1M&amp; K111Q Fut.,.ai Syndicale. tnt.
.

-...·-···-...-........

�•
Page-1 0-The Daily $entinal

Local news briefs...----continued from page 1
vacuum cleaner, that ap~ared to be a new Tri-Star Ueaner. for
less than dealer's cost. Vance charged Hunt was Instead
a dvertising a used machine.
However, Judge Cox dented the preliminary Injunction and
dismissed th&lt;:&gt; eomplalnant's request for a permanent
injunction.
While the lnjunctlop requests were disposed of Monday's, the
rest of the case remains intact. Judge Cox said the suit seeking
damages of $200,000 would be set for trial.

EMS has 11 calls Monday
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports II ~ails
Monday: Pomeroy at 6:03a.m. to Spencer Road for Inez Pooler
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 8:43 a.m.
transported Eula Ward to St. Joseph's Hospital: Racine at 11:57
a. m. to an auto fire at Fourth and Vine Sts.: Pomeroy at 12:57
p.m. transported Debbie Burk and Tracy Green ·crom an auto
accident on Flatwoods Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 1:11 p.m. to South Second St. for Dorothy Morris
to Holzer Medical Center: Poemroy at 5: 28 .p.m. to Peacock
Ave. for Grace Campbell to Veterans Memorial Hospital:
Rutland at 6:57p.m. to Long St. for Aloysuls Grueser to Holzer
Medical Center; Tuppers Plains at 6:58p.m. to LongBottom for .
. Elza Larkins to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 7:37
· p.m . .to College Road for Douglas Eblln Jr. who was treated but
not transported: Racine at 8:12p.m. transported Vester Walsh
who was treated but not transported; Tuppers Plains at 8: 45
p.m. -to E_d en Ridge for Margaret Westfall to St. Joseph's
Hospital.

Trio charged with man's death
A Vlnton"County couple and a Jackson County man have been
charged with the murder of a retired Jackson County
courthouse custodian, according to reports to the Jackson
County Journal· Herald.
Oscar Hamblin, 25, Rt. 1, Creola, is being charged with
murder. His wife, Teresa Caldwell Hamblin, 23, and her
brother, Michael Caldwell, 20, both are being charged with
complicity, a high·degree ·felony, according to Vinton County
Sheriff Del no McClure.
All three ar&lt;' being charged In connection with the murder of
Dick McGoon, 71, whose body was found Tuesday, Dec. 6,
twelve miles from where his burned car was found.
Mr. Hamblin is being held In the Jackson County jail. Mrs.
Hamblin and Caldwell are being held In Athens County. Bond
was set at $100.000 for each. All threE' will face thP grand jury.

Maggie M. Arnold, 77, Arnold
Road, Pomeroy, died Monday at
the Holzer Medical Center follow ·
lng an extended illness.
A homemaker, Mrs. Arnold
was born July 22, 191lln Grants
Lick, Ky., a daughter of the late
John Leap, Jr. , and Anna Hodges
Leap. Besides her parents, she
was preceded In death by four
brothers and four sisters.
Mrs . Arnold was affiliated with
the Zion Church of Christ near
Pomeroy.
Surviving are her husband,

Charles E. Arnold ; three daugh·
ters, Mrs. Ray (Dorothy) Under·
wood, Warsaw; Mrs . Daniel
(Martha) Cunningham, Pomeroy, and Mrs. Loren (Mary)
Coleman, Pomeroy; nine grand·
children. fwo great·
grandchildren and several nle·
ces and nephews.
Services will be held a( 2 p.m.,
Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Mr. Scott Stewart
officiating. Burial will be In
Horner Hill Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from . 2 to 4 and 7 to · 9 p.m.
Wednesday.

·Ka er"'---~-----lS.

Continued from page 1

ihe · fabrication plant is "running which aluminum is smelted - to
real good," according to the union the new corporation under a three·
official.
year supply agreement h will also
MAXXAM
Inc.'s.
Kaiser supplY. cenain technical services for
Aluminum and Chemical Corp. an· ' a sim1lar period.
nounced the ~ment The
MAXXAM
Inc.
operates
agreement also mcludes selling primarily through its wholly owned
aluminum production facilities at subsidiaries, including KaiserThch
Bedford, Ind., and its regional dara Ltd., which through its subsidiary
center at Columbus, Ohio.
Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
The new corporation will be Corp., is a fully integrated
fanned by Stanwich Partners Inc., aluminum producer, ancj. The
an
invesunent
company Pacific Lumber Co., a 1eading
headquartered in Stamford, Conn. producer of redwood lumber and
The sale is subject to various con- other forest products. MAXXAM is
ditions, consents and board ap- also engaged in real estate
provals.
management and developmenL The
Tenns were not disclosed by common stock of MAXXAM is
company officials.
traded on the American, Pacific and
Pasman said the sale of the three Philadelphia stock exchan§es under
properties and their assets is "an in- the ticker symbol "MXM.
tegral pan of our corporate busi·
Stidham said the current union
ness plan." He added the proceeds contract runs through October 1990
from the sale will be used to pay ·and that concessions negotiated in
down corporate debt
that contract should not lead to ud·
The Ravenswood Works consists ditional job combinations caused
of a smelter capable of producing by the sale of the plant to the new
about 150,000 metric tons of owners.
primary aluminum per year and a
"To my knowledge, the sale
sheet and plate rolling mill capable lloesn't affect it (the contract),"
of fabricating between 500 million 'Stidham said. He added it's not
and 600 million pounds of beyond the realm of possibility that
aluminum products per year since an invesunent group is
depending on the product mix.
buying the plant that it could be
The Bedford plant is engaged in sold again.
aluminum can scrap reclamation,
Stidham was firm in his expectaand the dara center serves the in- tion that the plant will remain open
formation systems needs of both and will not be closed in the near
facilities.
future.
Stidham said the Bedford facility
employs about 150 people while
the total worker complement at
Kaiser Ravenswood, salaried and
hourly, is more than 2,000.
The company officials said.
Kaiser Alumihum will sell alumina
- the intermediate material from
4 P.M. to 11 P.M~

said he was not surprised to hear
th at Celeste proposed that higher
education be part of the ballot
Issue.

Christmas programs

'

The Zion Church of ChriSt on
Route 143 will have two Christmas programs. On Sunday night,
Dec. 18, at 7: 30 p .m. , the young
people or the congregation will
pr!'sent the play "A Rented
Christmas Family." Kathryn
Johnson, youth sponsor, directs
the play.
,
The church will also present
"Call Him Jesus," a cantata by
Marty Parks, on Christmas. day
at the 10 a.m. service. The choir
consists of 14 members with Jell
Arnold, pianist, along with Becky
Napp~:r, percusslpn, Melanie Ar·
nold, synthesizer, and Gary
Coleman, trumpet; Robert E .
Purtell, minister, directs th.e
program .
The Apple Grove Methodist
Church will have their Christmas
program on Dec. 23 at 7 p.m.
Everyone ·ls welcome.
Racine Amerclan Legion Aux·
lllary's Christmas dinner and
party willbeThur~ay, 6p.m. ,at
the Racine United Methodist
Church. There will be a gift
exchange.

"I think that's been our as· "Here Is what we believe we
sumption all along, " said Napier. must achieve In the area of
"We've been trying to make our education," he said, adding that
case to political leaders that If voters will have to be assured the
there Is to be a gallot Issue, money Is not belrlg wasted but
higher education should be a part will achieve the goals mentioned.
of it . Our needs can't be met by
C.J. Prentice, a board member
the existing revenue structure."
from Cleveland, chastised the
The Board of Regents has governor for falling to provide
proposed spending an additional leadership for past Board of
$750 million In flscal1996-91.
• Education spending proposals.
Celellte said he hopes to crys·
"We had ihe same thing
taiUze his education proposals by (budget request) last time and It
the time he makes his Stateofthe dldn'teven makethefioor (of the
Ohio House)," said Prentice, a
State address Jan . 10.
The governor said the educa· black woman who wants more
tion tax Issue should be on the opportunitieS for her three
ballot either at the May primary grandsons. "We can't afford to
or a June special election, and have you do what you did the last
should not be held until No- time. You got to get on It ,
vember. There Is no general governor. "
Celeste did not offer to take
statewide election In 1989.
Any. ballot proposal should leadership for the tax Increase.
contain the elements of accounta · He said It was "shared work"
blllty, re11chlng out to disadvan- a!!long himself, other political
taged young people, and attrac_t· !elders and educators. The last
lng and retaining quality budget saw primary and seconteachers, Celeste said.
dary educallon receive about. an
"This ballot Issue should say,
8 percent Increase In spending.
The Board of Education plan
Licences i88Ued
calls for a 25.7 percent hike,
Marriage licenses have been lncluqlng an extra $750 million
Issued In Meigs c;ounty .Probate for the basic school foundation
Court to Gregory Wayne Taylor, formula, $195 million for special
23, Pomeroy, and Patricia Jan education, $125 million for voca·
Duffy, '22, Pomeroy; Charles tiona! education, and $75 mllllon
Edward Fitchpatrlck, 21, Mid· In new money for pre·school and
dleport, 11nd Billie Sue Bush. 18, programs for "at·rlsk" dlsad·
vantaged youth.
· Middleport.

Now Open For The
Christm88 Season.
•POINSETTIAS
i •POINSETTIA HANGING

'liASKETS •HOLLY TREES
•AFR ICAN VIOLETS
•FOLIAGE PLANTS t!o
BASKETS oCUT
CHRISTMAS TREES
OP_
EN DAILY 9 AM·5 PM

HEADQUARTERS

YOU'LL FIND GIFTS FOR
EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Paul
Bostick, Racine; Grace Campbell1 Pomeroy; Elza Larkins,
Long Bottom; Patricia Harmon,
Rutland.
Monday Discharges - John
McKenzie, Susie Edwards, Hugh
Lelfbelt, Kathryn Seiter, Darrell
Dugan.

~eeting can~lled
Ohio's TOPS Club No. 570 will
not meet tonight for their Christ·
mas party, due to the weather.
The party has been rescheduled
·
for next Tuesday.

Stocks

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP

Dally stock prices
(As of 10::l0 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power ........... .. 27'){,
AT&amp;T .......... ...... ....... .. ...... .. 29%
Ashland Oil .................... .... 32l's
Bob Evans ..... ............. .. ...... 15%
Charming Shoppes ......... ..... 12J's
City Holding Co ....... .. ......... 31~
Federal MoguL ................. 47:Y.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... ... ......... .47¥.
Heck's ............. ., .... .... .. ....... . 11.
Key Centurion ..................... 15
Lands' End ............ ............ .26%
Limited Inc .. .. ... ................. 26%
Multimedia Inc .. ..... ... ...... ... 70~
Rax Restaurants ..... .......... ... 3~
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .............. 12~
Shoney's.lnc .................. ... ... 7%
Wendy's Intl. .... .. ... .............. 5';l
Worthington Ind . .... ............ 21l's

- 2 7 MONTHS WITH MONTHLY INTEREST
9.25%
...........
8.75%
' . . . . '. ' . ' .
8.50%
. .. .. ' .....
8.00% ' . . ...... ' ' . . . .

.
'
'
.

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

THIS LIMITED OFFER MAY BE WITHDRAWN A_:r ANY T.. ,I!!.!M-"-'E.

FOR INFORMATION:

446-2631 • 1-800-GO TO OVB • (468-6682)

Aclclitional Topping 90'
Ulo Coupon tlec:111ary)
(PI(I UP or EAT II OILY ON THIS OFF.EII

CALL 992-2228 or 992-9922

MAIN STREET
PIZZA
992-2121

l

----·

·*'·

992 _9922

Pomeroy

We Are Your Hometown Place
tf tl tf •• tf ...... d •• tktl

-- ,.. _,__-

191
Pick-4

"*'

Mos!QI cloudy, low near 30
tonight. Chance of preclpha·
tlon 20 percent. Thursdi!J',
variable cloudiness, highs In
mid 30s.

4829

•
1&amp;4

December 1

1988

2 Sections, 16 Pagoo 25 Conti
_A Multimedia Inc. N11wsp•per

1988

Connector road update
is ,topic· of .c hamber·
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Stall
The prosposed connector road
from Route 33 to the bridge at
Ravenswood, W. Va. was at the
forefront of business topics at
Tuesday's meeting of the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce.
Charles Blakeslee, executive dl·
rector of the Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission,
updated chamber members on
the status of the proP,Osed road.
Blakeslee pointed out that the
connec)or road Is really a reloca·
lion of State Route 124 from the
Route 33 Interchange at Rock
Springs, across country to Great
Bend and the Ravenswood
Bridge.
Five alternate routes for the
proposed road have been considered, but one route Is preferred
over the others. The five alterna·
tives Included, not building a
connector route' at all, plus t~e
Commerce on the slatus of the proposed ' other four alternatives. The no
CHAMBER MEMBERS RECEIVE UPDATE
· build alternative was rejected
connector road from Rock Springs to Great Bend
- Charles Blakeslee, executive director of the
and one of the four alternate
and the Ravenswood Bridge.
Meigs County Regional Planning Commission,
routes
was selected over the
updates members ol. Pomeroy Area Chamber of
others. This preferred route has
not been officially approved .by
the ·Ohio Department of Trans·
portatlon as yet, but additional
Information on this route Is being
collected. Until official approval
comes however, the preferred
ro~te could change.
Although the environmental
study
for the proposed road has
. By LEE LEONARD
regulate the rafes charged and that have them have a monopoly
not
been
finiShed yet, James M.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
the services offered, but the Ohio power. They're In private
Jennings
Associates, Columbus,
· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Environmental Protection hahds. ''
Thomas Chema, chairman of the
Agency would regulate the siting
"It's an Interesting concept,"
Public Ut llltles Commisslqn, of
and environmental concerns.
said Cincinnati Councilman Guy
Ohio, said Tuesday that solid
Hazardous waste disposal fa· Guckenberger. "Maybe It's an
waste disposal facilities may
cllltles are regulated by the Idea whose time has arrived."
soon be declared public u tllltles
federal government, Chema
Guckenberger said that as land
for the purpose of economic
said.
becomes more scarce, price and
regulation.
"! personally think It's a good service area regulation "would
"In the relatively near future,
Idea," Chema said of PUCO avoid cities being gouged (by
probably two yerars, there's
regulation. "From a regulatory high-rate contracts) In future
The Gallla·Melgs Post of the
going to be an effort to change the
point of view, It would make years."
State
Highway Patrol. Invest!·
definition of a public utlllty to sense ''
Richard Sahli, deputy director
gated
16
accidents Tuesday in the
Include solid waste dispOsal
Ch~ma sald counties are run· of the Ohio EPA, said there have
wake of the first measurable
facilities," Chema told United
nlng out of landfill capacity, and been discussions of Chema' s
snow In the trl·county area. The
Press International.
the landfills are virtually a Idea , "but we wouldn't be lnltiat·
patrol investigated six accidents
The chairman explained that monopoly. "No one wants these lng it. ..
In
Meigs County and 10 In Gallla
his agency would be assigned to
things," he sal~. "The people
Continued on page 6
County. One person had a com·
plaint Injury In a Meigs County
accident but was not treated.
Two persons were cited In Meigs
County accidents.
The driver was Injured In a one
car accident at 9:20 a .m. Tuesday on SR. 143, 0.2 miles north of
mile post 2. The patrol said a car
education Issue,'' the governor budget will have· to be divided
By LEE LEONARD
driven
by Melinda K. McDonald,
told )Jnlted Press International among a host of sp~:clal Interest
UPI Statehouse Reporter
20,
Rutland,
went offthe road Into
COLUMBUS - Gov. Richard during an Interview In his offlce.
groups, minus schools and cola
ditch.
Damage
was minor.
Celeste said Tuesday that any
Celeste said he Is concerned
leges, if the education tax Is
One driver was cited In a two
public referendum on a tax about programs for senior cltl- approved by the voters.
car
accident at 12·noon Tuesday
,
zens
and
a
bout
health
care
and
Increase next year will be con·
The governor has projx&gt;sed
on
SR.
338, 0.1 miles east of mile
fined strictly to education and care of the Indigent and mentally going to thepubllc In mld·1989
S.
near Letart Falls. The
post
will not Include other areas, such retarded. "We're going to ad- wlth a ballot Issue on the
patrol
said
a car driven by Jollan
as mental health, human servl· dress those In the context of the
resources necessary to bring
S.
Hill,
16,
Racine, slid left of
ces and programs for sen lor budget," he said.
Ohio to the 21st century In both
center,
colliding
with another
The estimated 8 percent . primary and secondary educa·
citizens.
Richard L.
vehicle
driven
by
"The Issue on the ballot Is an growth In the next two.year
lion and colleges and
Moreland,
57,
Racine.
No one
universities.
was
Injured.
Damage
was
minor.
The financial ouilay has yet to
The
patrol
cited
Hill
for
left of
be calculated, but the state
center.
Department ·or Education Is
The patrol cited Willard R.
asking for an additional $1.62
Stanley,
Jr., 21, Glouster, for
billion over two years tor prim·
!allure
to
maintain control a{ter
ary and secondary education,
Twelve defendants forfeited bonds and three others were
an
accident
at 6:40 p.m. at the
and the Ohio Board of Regents
fined Tuesday night In the court of Middleport Mayor Fred
junction
of
SR.
143 and SR. 7,
has requested $750 million more
Hoffman .
near
Middleport.
Troopers said
In 199().91.
Forfeiting were Wayne Williams, Middleport, $100, dlsor·
Stanley
passed
another
vehicle,
"I have felt from the very
derly manner: Linda Rhodes, Shade, $43; Helen Blackston,
lost
control,
and
coiiided
with
beginning that If we're going to
Pomeroy, $42; Detner R. Roush, New Haven, W. Va., $43;
another
car
driven
by
Brian
K.
do an education Issue with the.
Francis J . Baker, Des Moines , Ia., $41; Betty J . Moles,
Woodyard,
20,
Pomeroy.
No
one
people of this state, It needs to be
Cheshire, $43; Linda Bledsoe. New Haven, $45; Sally Caldwell,
all education from pre·school to was Injured. Damage was minor.
Bidwell, $43: Patricia Circle, Racine, $40; Lisa K. Calandros,
The patrol Investigated a two
gra~uate school," said Celeste.
Addison, $40, all posted on speeding charges; Oelmes K. Goff,
car accident at 9: 55 a.m. TuesLangsville, $50, left-of center: Eddie Patrick, Middleport, $100,
day on SR. 124, 0.5 miles east of
failure to appear.
·
·
mile · post 23, nea_r Pomeroy.
Fined were Marlin D. Hughes , Lancaster, Calif., $15,
Troopers said a car driven by
speeding; Elizabeth J. Swisher, Cheshire, $10 and costs, '
Open house Sunday
Mark H. Hawk, 20, Pomeroy,
expired tags; · Billy Lunsford, Middleport, $25 and costs,
pulled from Welchtown Road,
A public open house will be Into the path of another vehicle
disorderly manner.
observed this Sundi!J' at the new driven by Robert R. Cun·
Overbrook Center, a nursing nlngham, 23, Syracuse. Damage
care facility located on Page St. was minor.
In Middleport, from 1 to 5 p.m.
The driver escaped Injury In a
There will he plded lours for one car accident at 9:55a.m. on
Five defendants forfeited bonds and seven others were fined
the public and refreBhmenlll wlll SR •. 124, 0.3 miles east of mile
Tuesday night In the court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
be served. The 101 bed facility post 24. Troopers said Robert J.
Forfeiting were Kimberly Taylor, Route 1, Pomeroy, $63,
will employ approxlmalely 10 Lewis, 68, Pomeroy, lost control
expired plates; Patricia VanMatre, West Columbia, W. Va.,
luD and part time workers when on the slippery highway, His
$63, expired plate; Gregory A. Taylor, Route 1, Pomeroy, $50,
liBWinp Into fulllbne operation. vehicle went off road, striking a
driving under suspl!nslon; June Landaker, Pomeroy, $50,' no
brick wall. Damage was
Continued o.n page 6
moderate.

Solid waste ·duritps may soon
~ . declared public utilities .

Snow blamed
for six Meigs
auto mishaps

Local news briefs---...__,

Three fined in Hoffman's court.

Seven fined in Pomeroy court

(flO 01111 DISCOUtm APPI. Y)

2 16 East Main

Daily Number

days ·'til
Christmas

Governor Celeste says ballot
issue~ restricted to education

Take Advantage ofthis Limited Time Jnvestrn~nt
•
Opportunity only at Ohio Valley Bank.

$499

.II more

There will be revival services
at the Stlversville Word of Faith
Church, Wednesday through Sunday, at 7 p.m. each evening.
Evangelist will be David Carpen·
ter from Bellville, W.Va. Pastor
Gary Holter welcomes the
!&gt;ubllc.

GIFT

BOW KILL- Mike Johnson
of Route 7, near Pomeroy, Is
pictured with a buck deer he
killed this year with a bow and
arrow In the Chester area--

Ohio Lottery

•

Soudl Central Ohio
Tonight : Partly cloudy, with a
low between 25 and 30. Winds
south 5 to 10 mph.
Wednesday: Partly cloudy,
wlth highs In the mid 40s .
Extejhled ForecMI
Thund~~J~ lhroulh- Saturd~~J~
A chance of rain or snow
Thursday, generally dry Friday,
and a cl\ance of snow Saturday.
Highs will range from the mid 30s
to the mid 40s Thursday, In the
20s Friday ,a nd lrom the upp~:r
teens to the middle 20s on
Saturday. Early morning lows
will range from the upper 20s to
the mid 30s Thur~ay , from the
mid teens to the mid 20s Friday,
and In the teens saturday.

A'S

LARGE PEPPERONI
and CHEESE PIZZA

Seeks div011ce ·

A divorce action has been filed
In Meigs County Common Pleas
Cour t by Lyle R. Sinclair, Shade,
against Joyce- A. Sinclair, Shade.
Betty L. Anderson, Reedsville,
and William Anderson, Reeds·
vOle, have flied· for a .dissolution
of marriage.
Granted dissolutions were
Raymond Dewitt and Laura
Dewitt; and Sheila A. Randolph
and Randy I Randolph. Sheila
Randolph was . restored to her
former name, Shellia Dickens.·

Weather

dentloewey Horton for his role In Satter{leld.
SUNDAY ~ PM-5 PM
a meeting to Iron out problems
Last night's meeting was the
with the use of an alley behind the . only meeting council will hold In
.. UIIAID'S GREENHOUSE
Christian School at the Rejoicing December unless an emergency
992-SJn-STIICISI, Dll.
Life Church. A plan to alleviate situation arrives.
problems was worked out and Is
being tested to see If Is satlsfac·
tory to residents on the alley as
well as to the school.
Carla McCabe of McNally,
Patrick and Associates met with
council to discuss health lnsu·
rance'for employees and council
voted to accept Advacare for the
employees effective Jan. 1.
Mayor Hoffman had stated earllt!r that Blue Cross charges were
being lncreBS!!d 50 percent so
council accepted the alternate
Advacare.
Under Advacare · employees
•COMPLETE LINE OF"TOYS
must use doctors af{lllilted with
•RUSSELL
STOVER CANDY •WRAPPING PAPER
the program and In this area
•CHRISTMAS CARDS
these are physicians •of the
Holzer j::llnlc. The 11rogram provides full coverage and referrals
"FREE DELIVERY AREAS" ·
to other doctors and Institutions
Middleport, Pomeroy, Bllldbury, Minersville,
are covered If they are made by
Rutland, SyrtiCu••· Met10n, W Ve.
the Holzer doctors. Out of town
OROERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3 P.M.
emergencies are also covered If
Free Delivery On All Presoriptlona, If You Don't Nud A
the emplOyee reports the Inc!·
Prncrlptlon We WHI Deliver Anything In Store FREE On
dent to Advacare within 72 hours.
A •&amp;.Ofl Minimum Order.
A three tier plan wlll be provided
for the village which provides for
STORE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
a single plan, a couple plan for
SAT. 9 A.M.-3 P.M.
two people, and a family plan for
two people and their children. A
'
representative of Advacare will
meet wlth the employees In the
near future to discuss all aspects
of the program. Attending last
night's meeting were Mayor
Hoffman, Clerk Buck, and Coon·
992-6669
cllmen Horton, James Clat·
.271 N. SECOND e MIDDLEPOIT, OH.
worthy, Bob Gilmore, Paul Gerard, William Walters and Jack

Every Monday and ,
Tunday In December

A foreclosure action has b~n
(iled In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court by Home National
Bank, Racine, against William
W. Harris, Middleport, and
VIckie K. HarriS, Middleport, et
aL
A case by Jeri S. Matson
against Jerry E. Matson has
been dismissed.
.
·~ .

l

Plan revival

Funds approved... Continued from page 1

Customer Appreelation
Christmas Special

Action filed

-

Tuesday, December 13;1988

from page 1
Celeste· ·Continued
·--------------

--""":"". Area deaths-Maggie Arnold

.

P01118ioy-Middleport, Ohio .

has prepared a status report on
the cbnnector route for the Meigs
County Regional Planning
Commission.
According to the status report,
the length of the proposed road Is
18.4 miles at a total estimated
cost of about $149 million. It has
been projected that In the design
year C2000), tramc on the road
will average 5,000 'vehlcjes per
day, which jUstifies the construe·

lion of only a two-lane, for now ,
but on a four-lane rlght·Of·way.
The four·lane rlght·of-way Is
wanted because the new rouie
might stimulate traffic In excess
of the projected 5,000 vehicles per
day. Once completed, the new
State Route 124 conneo::tor would
make the combination of U.S. 33,
State Route 124 and Interstate 77
the shortest major route between
Continued on page 6

PREFERRED ROUTE - The· dark line shows the preferred
route for the connector road across country from Rock Springs to
the Ravenswood Bridge. Althou1h this route is preferred, It Is not
the official route as yet and could stUI be changed.

Pomeroy chamber to
hold New Years dance
If you haven't made plans for
New Year's Eve, then consider
attending Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce's New
Year's Eve Dance at the Pomeroy Elementary School.
Chamber member Bruce Reed
reported at Tuesday's Chamber
meeting that costs for the dance
wUI be $25 per couple or $15
single. The building will open at 8
a.m. wlth the dance to start at 9.
Music- will be by Danny Hood and
some refreshments for the even·
lng wlll be provided . Because the
building Is limited to 100 couples,
tickets for the dance must be
purchased In advance. Tickets
wlll go on sale Thursday at Bank
One, Famers Bank and Savings
Co., Hartley Shoes and the
Chamber office In Pomeroy, and
at Pat Hill Ford In Middleport,
and also from some Individual
chamber members. Transporta·
lion home from the dance, If

..

needed, wlll be available, Reed
added. '
Sherry Hart, chamber secretary, announced that Chamber
ando the Winding Trail Garden
Club Is · again sponsoring a
Christmas lighting contest. Cate·
gorles are religious, non·
religious and entryways. A tentative date for the judging Is Dec.
22. Although applications are not
necessary to be considered for
judging, Hart suggests that l{
homes are located In out-of·theway areas of the village, a call to
the chamber otrjce with the
location would be wise.
Speaker at Tuesday's meeting
was Charles Blakeslee, execu·
live director of the Meigs County
Regional Planning Commission.
Blakeslee updated me.m bers of
Chamber on the status of a
proposed connector road from
Rock Springs to the Ravenswood
Continued on page 6

Teacher is arrested in
New York schools scandal
NEW YORK (UPI) - A Bronx grade school teacher was
arrested on heroin charges Tuesday In the latest escalation of a
city schools scandal sparked by the arrest one month a1o of a
principal on cocaine charges.
Ramon Dlaz, 43, a resident of the Wakefield section, was
arrested at 3: U p.m. on a Bronx street along with six other .
people, said Officer Joseph Gallagher, a pollee spokesman.
Dlaz was alleledly carrying two glassine envelopes believed lo contain heroin- along wllh a lin and a vialr both of
which contained a white substance pollee believed to be
cocaine, Gallagher said.
"Tbe lourth-grade teacher was charged with criminal
possession of a controlled substance, police sal d.
Dlaz lausht at Public School 5, a school located In a
predominantly WspaDic section ol the Bronx which ranks
among the lowest In the city In terms or reading scores, said
Frank Savrlno, a Board of Education BJIOkesman.
The school ranked 555111 out of 616 schools In the city In terms
of reading scores, Savrlno said. Only 48.7 percent of the school's
studenlll read at or above grade level, he added.
Th~ arrest of Dlaz came lillie more than a month after Public
School 53 Principal Matthew Barnwell was arrested on cocaine
possession charges. PS 53 also Is In t!le Bronx.
FoUowlng Barnwell's arrest, the schools scandal mush·
roomed to Include a Oood of allegatloDII a1aiDIII school board
members !hroil1hout the city, lncluciiJ11 charges that
Barnwell's employ~r, School District 9, held late-night drug
parties on school prQPerly. ,
Savrlno had no lnlermatlon on whether Dlaz, whose sciloolls
In District 7, had any previous arrest record, and could not
comment on whether dlaclpllnary action was taken.
"We got word of hla arrest late In the day, and we haven't
1otten any lnfonnatlon about hbn," Savrtno said.
·
•

Giv e A Gilt Subscription To The Daily Sentinel This Holiday Season - Call 992-2156
-,--

.........

--· - ;--:-- --· -.

~---,. ·

''

I

I

"

..•••

•

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38688">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38687">
              <text>December 13, 1988</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="257">
      <name>arnold</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
