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l
Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

· Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

.

..

Tuesday. November 17. 1987

•

r---Local news----. Storms weaken a bit, move north 'today
Negotiations slated Wednesday

By United Press International
A storm system that spun off a
barrage of tornadoes killing 11
people In two days In Texas and
Louisiana simmered a bit today
as it moved across Alabama a,nd
F lorida, but carried some of its
"real p~nch" north as It extended to the Great Lakes,
weather officials said.
"There is still a severe !hunderstorm watch in effect for
parts of Georgia 4ntil 8 a·.m.
(EST) ... with a chance for severe
thunderstorms and tornadoes
across Florida. Georgia and
South Carolina ," said National
Weather Service forecaster
Hugh Crowther. "There's a
lesser threat of a few thunder·
storms - not reaching severe
levels - extending up into the
lower Great Lakes . Some of the
rea 1 punch is movIng
northwards."
The death toll from a rare
onslaught. of November torna·
does Sunday and Monday stood
at 11, all in Texas and Louisiana,
but damage. was s~ severe in

A negotiating session between teams representating the
Meigs Local School District Board of Education and the Meigs
Loca l Teachers Association - the first since a teachers strike
began at 12:01 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 6- will be held at 4 p.m.
Wednesday .
.
Meigs Local Superintendent Dan E. Morris said that he has
been notified that the session will be conducted by Federal
Mediator Joseph Crowe who was working with the two groups
prior to the strike.
Teachers of the district have establlshed picket lines at the
schpols of the district since the strike began but no negotiating
sessions have taken place.
Meantime, efforts are underway to hold a public meeting
Wednesday evening at the Civic Center In Rutland. A promoter
of the meeting said that the Idea was to have the board of
education and the teachers association represented and they
were to explain their positions In relation to the strike. State
representatives also had been invited. However, with the
negotiations resuming on Wednesday ,It was not known today if
plans would continue for the Wednesday night session.

Fire units help fight blazes
Tuesday's tatn is expected to provide reiief for local fire units
whO were .plagued with brush fires In various locations of the
county on Monday , the Meigs County Emergency Medical
.Services reports.
Monday calls included: Middleport at 9: 18a.m. to Park St.!or ·
Kim Armstrong. taken to Holzer Medical Center: Pomeroy at
10:06 a.m . to Railroad St. for Dorothy Roush, treated but not
transported; Middleport to Bradbury at 12:35 p.m. for a brush
fire at the rear of Radio Station WMPO. with firemen not being
able to return to their station unti15: 38 p.m.; Salem to Danville
at 12: 35 p.m. for a structure fire at the Anthony Cardillo
residence with Rutland assisting; Pomeroy at 1:20 p.m . to
Bradbury to assist Middleport with a brush fire; Tuppers Plains
at 2:25 p.m. answered a call to· Success Road for an auto
accident with Richard Allen being taken to Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va.; Pomeroy at 2:33p.m. to Long
Hollow Road, the scene of a . motorcycle accident, taking
William Stnlth to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2:43
p.m., to the New Lama Road for a brush flre near the Larry
Johnson residence, returning to station at 3:20p.m.: Pomeroy
to Bailey Run Road at 4:24p.m. for a brush fire returning to the
station at 6:41p.m.; Syracuse to Minersville at 4:31 for a brush
fire returning to their station at 6:50p.m.; Middleport to Park
St. at 8:32 p.m. taking Barb Bolin to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 8:50p.m. to Stonewood Apartments for
Shirley Frazier, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Turkey dinner postponed
The annual public turkey dinner of the Rutland Fire
Department scheduled for Thursday evening at the Rutland
Elementary School has been postponed until February or
March due to the Meigs Local teachers strike. While there were
no objections to proceeding with the dln.n er from the teachers or
the administration to going ahead with the event, the
postponement came about because some of the department
members did not wish to cross a picket line at the school, it was
reported.

Democrat executives to meet
The Meigs County Democrat Executive Committee will hold
Its regular meeting Thursday evening at the Carpenters Union
Hall, E. Main St., Pomeroy. All interested Democrats are
Invited to attend.

Dogs involved in accident
A West Virginia man was Injured In an acc,ldent Monday. at
2:20p.m .. in Olive Township on County Road 46, one.mile from
Ohio 7, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
Richard Allen, 37, of Parkersburg, W.Va., was taken by the
Meigs EMS to Camden-Clark Hospital In Parkersburg after
ending his travels in a ditch. Allen was admitted for a fractured
left arm. At last report he was listed in fair condition.
The report stated that Allen was driving west when he
swerved to avoid hitting a dog In the road. He lost control. went
off the right side of the road and Into a ditch.
The accident Is currently under lnve.stlgation by the patrol.
A Kentucky man was cited in a motorcycle accident Monday.
at 2:17 p.m., in Sallsb~ry Township on Township Road 27A,
about a mile and a quarter south of U.S. 33 .
William Smith, 69, of Catlettsburg, Ky., was cited for not
having valid registration after his motorcycle went down on the
The report said that Smith, who was riding north, swerved to
miss a dog. As he did so, he lost control and went dowJ\ on the
road.

Continued from page 1
Early.···-----==.:.:..._~-­
give this market a lot of tolerance. If it goes up or down 20or 30
points, that is not a real indica ·
lion of very much. "
Rodd Anderson, vice president
In equity trad ing at Shearson
Lehman Brothers Inc., said the

I

market .was anxiously awaiting
news from Capitol Hill.
"The longer we don't hear
anything,. If It goes to Thursday
or Friday, whatever the numbers
are, people here are going to be
more concerned," Anderson
said.

Charles Gotschall

Charles V. Gotschall, 83, Bra·
denton, Fla., formerly of Meigs
Oounty, died Sunday In Bradenton. Fla.
A retired ca rpenter, Mr . Gotschall was born in Harrisonville,
a son of the late Charles Addison
and Emma Carpenter Gotschall.
Surviving are three daughters ,
Juanita Clark and Nancy K.
Merrill, both of Baltimore, Md.,
and Janet Grimes, Bradenton,
Fla .. 11 grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren.
. Arra ngements will be an nounced by the Ewing Funeral
Home.

Lula Wheeler

The grange hall on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds will be the ·
one and only location for a
special distribution of food ftom
10 a.m . to 4 p.m . Thursday, the
Gallla-Meigs Community Action
Agency announces.
Cheese, cornmeal, honey and
rice will be given out at the
grange hall . in only the one
location this time due to the need
to register for new food cards.
Qualfled persons may register
before Thursday at the C.A.A.
office at Cheshire. Persons also
may fill out applications at the
fairgrounds location on
Thursday.
Those filling out applications
must take their blue commodity
card along with proof of toncome
to update records and receive
new cards.
Applications are also available
through Methodist pastors of
Meigs County. Anyone needing
further Information may call the
· C.A.A. at 992-6629.

I Stocks

Area deaths

raised, Charles W. Wheeler,
West Columbia and several nie·
ces and nephews.
Services will be Thursday at
1:30 p.m . at the West Columbia
United '1.'Jethodist Church of
which she was a member, with
the Rev·: Bennie Stevens·and the
Rev . Terry Alva rez officiating.
Burial will be at Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday from 2 to4.pm. and 7·9 p.m. at
the Foglesong Funeral Home,
and one hour prior to services at
the church on Thursday .

Public meeting
postponed

through the gulf today. U.S.
officials said.
The convoy, which left Kuwait
at 6:30a.m. Sunday, included the
80,000-ton Kuwaiti product carr!·
ers Surf City and Chesapeake
City, and the frigates Thach,
based In San Diego, CaiU., and
the Carr, based In Charleston,
s.c . .

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Daily Number
998.
Ticket sales totaled $1,230,977,
with a payoff due of $298,515.
PICK-4
1785.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$197,358.50, with a payoff due of
$88,847.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,448. PICK-4 $1 boX bet pays
$227.

this morning for parts of Minnesota, and winter storm watches
were up for northwest Minnesota
and extreme northwest Wlscon·
sin where up to 6 Inches of snow

was possible. the weather service said.
Gale warnings remained up
i hls morning ovE&gt;r all five Great
Lakes.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Lru!wl
Am Electric Power .. ........... 25%
AT&amp;T .................................. 29
Ashland 011 ................ ........ 52')4
Bob Evans .......................... 15')4
Charming Shoppes ............. .12%
City Holding Co ..... .............. 34
Federal Mogul. ............... ..... 31
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48'Vs
Heck's Inc ............ ,.............. 2'4
Key Centurion .................... 36\!z
Lands' End ................ .. .... ... 14'4
Limited Inc . ....................... 19%
Multimedia Inc .......... ... ...... . 46
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 6%
Shoney 's Inc..................... ,20%
Wendy's Inti. ............... ..... .... .6
Worthington Il'\d .... .... .......... 16%

A public meeting for parents,
Lula B. "Pi nk" Wheeler, 80, teachers, administrators and
West Columbia, died Monday In board of education members
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
which had been set for WednesBorn July 7. 1907, in Clifton, she day evening at the Rutland Ci.vic
was a daughter of the late Center · to discuss details of a
William and Addie Tate Wheeler. teac hers strike In the Meigs .
She was also preceded in dea lh Local School District has beerr
Veterans Hospital
by two sisters and five brothers. postponed.
Admitted
- Peggy Hartman,
She was a seamstress for the
The meeting will be resche· Pomeroy; Linda Hawley, Mid·
Yonkers
M·a n u I act
urI n g duled when needed. The post'
.
.
dleport; Ja cq ueline Jewell, Ma·
Company.
ponement was brought about by son, W. Va.; Shirley Frazier
Surviving are one brother. an announcement that negotia. Middleport.
'
Charles S. Wheeler, West. Colum· !Ions between Meigs Local
Discharged
Beatrice
Dobla; one sister, Mrs . Jap1es Teac.hers ahd the Meigs Local
nahue, J essie , Palmer, Leah
Elizabeth Roush , West Colum- Board of Education will resume Williams, Robert Boling.
bia; one nephew whom she .Wednesday,

Hospital news

~Major

~~

Hoople's·
selections

Daily Number
001
Pick 4

•

8331

a1 y
Vol .37, No .135
Copyrighted 1987

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, November 18. 1987

Partly cloudy tonlgh1. LOw
mid 30s. Cloudy ThurSday.'
Highs in mid 40s.

'•

2 Section$. 16 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc , Newspaper

Powell resigns ·f rom ·M_eigs school board
r:r.1

~SNO

FRONTS:

11

W
Warm

~
RAIN ;.....&amp;.
.
8'0'J SHOWERS
~
"'f::old

r

Static . .. Occluded

WEATHER MAP- Rain and thunderstorms will be widespread
from the Great Lakes thtough the Ohio Valley, the Appalachians
and the southern Atlantic Coast Into the Florida Panhandle. Rain Is
likely across the upper Great Lakes and the central Appalachians
wllh the strongest thunderstorms to occur over Alabama, much of
Georgia and the Florida Panhandle. Rain showers will also be
scattered from the central PacUic Coast Into the Great Basin.
Showers will be most numerous from southwest Oregon Into
central CaiUomla. Snow is likely acr0118 the upper Mississippi
Valley with the heaviest acr0118 nortbe.a st Minnesota. Snow
showers will be scattered throushOut much of the northern and
central Rockies. IDgh temperatures wlll be In the !lOs or 60s acr0118
much of the nation.

Weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy and windy today, with scattered showers and
thunderstorms and highs near 65.
Partly cloudy and windy tonight,
with a chance of showers and a
low in the low 40s. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday , with a chance of
showers and highs between 45
and 50.
·The probability of preclplta·
tlon Is 80 percent today and 30
percent tonight and Wednesday .
Winds will be from the soutti at

20 to 30 mph with higher gusts
today and from the southwest at
20 to 30 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Partly cloudy Thursday, with a
chance of snow flurries Friday ,
and fair weather on Saturt;lay .
Highs will be between 35 and 40
eacli day. Overnight lows will be
between 25 and 30 early Thurs·
day and in the 20s Friday and
Saturday mornings.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The resignation · of Pomeroy
Businessman La rry Powell from
the board was accepted Tuesday
night wnen the Meigs Local
Board of · Education met in
regular session at the Central
Office in Middleport.
Powe ll was appointed to serve
on the board in February, 1979,
replacing Wendell Hoover who
resigned in December, 1978.
Powell did not file for reelection
to the board this year. His term of
office ,e xpires next month.
AbOut 30 people attended last
night's board meeting and during
a public participation . sec tion
questioned the board of ed ucation on aspects of a teac hers
strike which began al12: 01 a.m.
on Nov. 6. The discussion was
orderly except with only one
parent, 1va Session, being declared out of order by Board
President when she ques tio ned
administrat ive salary increases
as the discu ssion moved along.
One parent said that she feels
the board of education and the
teachers are not thinkin g of. the
' kids at this poin t in tim e. She
charged that the kids and the

parents are "getting the shaft"
as she asked why it has taken so
long for the board and the
teac hers to res ume negotiations.
President Snowden ex plained
that the negotiations were in the
hands of a federal mediator when
the s trike began and that the
board had to wait until that
negotiator al,lowed what he
called a "cooling off period" to
pass before he again got the two
groups together. Snowden also
expla ined tha t negoliations be·
gan in the summer bui were '
slowed because the teachers'
fi nancia l person was not avilable
at vatious times.
Snowd.,n reco mmended that
parents attending last night's
meeting talk to the teachers as
well as the board of education.
Upon questioning, he pointed out
that the board has Stated that
there would be no layoffs of
teach ers for two years and the
offer was re jected by the
teachers. He said that the board
has not disc ussed cutting the
staff even though the budget is
has been reduced to the "bare
bone".
Sisson suggested excessive ad'
ministrative costs to which

Snowden replied that everyone
could be cut a nd school discontinued. Board Member Robert
Bar t.on sa id that the Meigs
District covers a wide area in
ma,ny directions and that administrators are needed. Board ·
Member Larry Rupecorrimented
that all of the ad ministrators
could be cut and the savi ngs
would not be enough to meet the
demands of the teachers.
Another parent said that she is
employed and knows that when
there is not enough money to
maintain a busi ness, budget cuts
mus I be made.
"They are going to have to
understand that there must be
cuts and there are people out
there who want jobs." she
commented.
The question of administrative
salary increases arose and the
board said at no time have
administrators been given two
raises In a time slot where other
employees go t one. The board did
acknowledge that administrators have been given r.aises when
teachers sa laries have been
increaged so · they 'would be
making more money a rrd "those
they are administering". There

will be no administrative raises
for the next two years, Snowden
said.
. Parents attending the meeting
were urged to co ntact the state to
let the state gover nment know
that there is not enough money to
meet the needs of school districts
these days .
. Another parent said she would
be happy to work towards the
passage of a new tax levy in the
district. She expressed concern
over the amount of time being
missed during the strike.
Snowden said that a five .mill
levy, if passed, would only bring
in only half of the money asked by
teachers and indicated that the
board had promised duri ng negotiations to place a levy before
voters of the district. Snowden
said that the Meigs Local District
is now paying teachers $800
above the state minimum requirement for new teachers and
$5,000 more a year over the state
minimum for those at the top
level pay scale.
Parents expressed concern
that the entire school year mi ght
be lost if the strike is not ended.
However , Snowden sa id that the

time out could go to the first of the
A dlsussion was held on one
year and the 180 required days class at the Harrisonville Eieco uld be met if Satu rdays and . mentary School which has 35
other time slots were used as students and the teacher Is
makeup days. Asst. Supt. James
unable to cope with problems and
Carpenter indicated that there is is unable to provide a gOO(!
a lot of flexibility invo lved but ed ucational situation. Supt. Dan
that the 180 days of sc hool must E. Morris said that he is aware of
be completed by June 30. Accordthe problem and Is working
ing to the last contract with the towards solutions In creating a
teachers, Saturday classes are better learning classroom for the
subject to the approval of students.
teachers. It was reported that the
The board accepted the resig•
State Department of Education nation of Patricia Parker as a
does not interfere In strikes substitute teacher in the district
unless time is r unning out so that a nd accepted Lisa Lynn Pridea district can complete a schOol more as a tuiti on student. A level
three, formal grlevanee was:
year.
.
Some of the parents last night ta bled at the request of thE&gt;
pushed for a joint meeting with Individual Involve.
:
the board and the teachers so
The board moved Into execu&gt;
they could '' know what 's happen- tive session to discuss personnel;
ing". However, the board con- finances and negotiations and
tended that it has been publishing then recessed until 8 Wednl!sday
the facts in tne newspa pers and evening. At 4 p.m. this afternoon
the teachers have taken no action nego tiations resumed betweert
to contradicate the board's state· the teac hers and the board
ments. Snowden pointed out that through a federal mediator.
records of the Treasurer Jane
Attending last night's meeting
Fry are available to the public so were board members, Snowden,
that people can look into any Rupe, Richard Vaughan, and
matter on which they have Barton and Morris, Fry and
1
questions.
~rpen~r.

Mine subsidence insurance
available in Meigs, Gallia
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
. Property owners in Meigs and
Gallla Counties. and in 37 other
Ohio counties. now have · the
option of bu ying additional insurance to protect their homes
agai nst losses caused by mine
subsidence.
'
Mine subs idence means loss to
a structu re caused only by the
collapse of underground manmade mines.
Mine subsidence coverage has
been ava ilable s ince October 21
and is made possi ble by state
legisla tion which provided for
establishment of the Mine Subsidence Insurance ·Underwriting
Association (MSIUA). Al l Ohio
Ins urance agents who insure
property are mandatorily
members of MSTUA.
MSIUA encourages property
owners livin!( in the 39 counties

where mine subidence insurance
is available, to consider the new
coverage. The annual premiutn
is $20 for coverage up to $50,000 .
Funding for the subsidence
coverage is made ,available by
the Mine Subsidence Fund which
is comprised of moneys from the
state and from the Federal
Special Revenue Fund. The program is intended to be self·
sustaining and the see~ funds are
to be paid back within five years.
The program account is overseen
by the state treasurer.
For convenience sake, local
insurance agents are ta king
applications fo r the additional
coverage, ~o ll,ec ting premiums
and receiving claim notices.
The coverage Is for personal
dwellings only a nd not commercia l properties . New policy
holders, as Well as existi ng policy
holders, are eligible for the
coverage which is written by

attaching an additional form to
home, farm and mobile home
owners policies.
The actual administrative and
claims handling for the mine
subsidence insurance will be
handled by the Ohio FAIR Plan,
which Pomeroy insurance agent
Bill Quickel says is " the state·
r un Insurance."
With mine subsidence coverage, if a claim · occurs, the
policyholder will report it to the
local agent. who then notifies the
FAIR Plan of the cIa im and
confirms the coverage. The
FAIR Plan will then proceed with
fi nalization of the claim.
To determin e if mine subsl·
dence coverage would be a good
addition to your property insurance policy, con tact your local
insurance agent for more infor·
mation and to make application
for the optional coverage.

Cold ,. front moves toward east
RECEIVES SUPPORT - The Columbia
Township Volunteer Fire De11,artment recently
received some financial support from Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division. A check for
$450 was presented to Jim Gaston, center, fire
chief, by Ray Llevin~:, left, mine superintendent

'

We Ah~tays Knew People
From Meigs County Were
Above Average!

Rhonda Lyons is the new clerk
of Racine Village - maybe.
Lyons received 182 votes for
election to the office in the
unofficial tally at the Nov. c3
election with her oppo ne nt , inf'Cm11lltmt , .Jane Beegl~. rece iving
!81 votes.
Tuesday , the Meigs Count y
Board of Elections held its
official tallyoftheNov .3election
an d Lyons and Beegle ca me out
of that count each with 182 votes.
The board of elec tions placed th.::

Survey data shows 71% of Ohioans read a daily newspaper in the past week. •

Our survey shows more than 83% of the people in Meigs
County read The Daily Sentinel. **

two names In a hat and Lyons
name was drawn from the hat
and she was declared the winner .
However, on Monday the board
will co nduct a mandatory recount of votes cas t for the office.
WhOever gets the most votes in
the recount will be the winner.
However, should a tie again
result, Lyons will be nam ed to
serve in the post since she w;:~s
selected by lottery in the recount
on Tuesday when the originai tie
developed.

_AT&amp;T proposes 3.6 percent rate cut

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON I UP I I - Longdis tance telephone rates for
American Telephone &amp; Tele·
graph cus tomers wou ld fa ll by 3.6
percent on Ja n. 1 under a plan
submitted to the Federa I Communications Commission.
·The rat e cuts, proposed Tues·
' da y, would mean savings of $800
million overall for AT&amp;T's custo·
mers, with the biggest savings on
calls inade during th e day. The
average home phone long·
·dis tan ce bill would drop by 2.6
percent a nd business bills would
f~ll by about the same amount,
the company said·.
"Jlhe company sa id the exact
amount of the price cuts, subject
to approva l by the FCC, hinges on .
an FCC review of the fees that

We Deliver
For Subscription or Advertising Informati_o n .

Call992-2156
• Source: Market Opinion Research
•• Telephone survey of 2,000 Meigs county resid~nls laken November 1986
through January 1987.

0

lor ,the company's Meigs No. 2 mine, and Fred
Zirkle, right, administration manager. The
volunteer fire department Is responsible for the
area that incorporates the Meigs Division's
general office and Meigs No. 2 mine, Zirkle said.

Rhonda Lyons new
village clerk -. maybe

~

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•

Ohio Lottery

.

•

,,

'.

;)

Food distribution
site is announced

.

~-

Mississippi that Gov. Bill Allaln
declared a state of emergency
Monday night. More than 250
people were Injured in the three
sta tes. No 's erious injuries were
reported in Mississippi.
The storm system left Mlsslssippi and moved across Alabama
and the Florida Panhandle early
today with strong winds that
blew out windows, damaged
roofs and overturned trucks . But
NWS spokesman Dan McCarthy
said the thunderstorms were
losing strength.
" It Is starling to simmer down
a little bit," he said.
Showers and thunderstorms
early today stretched-from southern Indiana and western Kentucky across the central Gulf
Coast, Crowther said. Wldes:
p.read rain was reported across
the middle and upper Mississippi
Valley and the western Great
Lakes states, with snow and.sleet
stretching from north central
K11nsas · across Iowa in to
Minnesota.
A snow advisory was in effect

I ran strikes ...___..:c.:.:on=u=nu=ed:.:..:.:fr-=om:.:.:..!:p::!ag:.::e-=1_ _
The ship was believed to be about
25 miles north of the United Arab
Emirates port of Ras AI Khaimah and was sending a May Day
distress signal during the attack,
Lloyd's reported.
Shipping sources said the at.tac k on the Esso Freeport owned by Exxon Corp. of New
York but flying a Bahamian flag
- followed an ambush at 3 a.m.
Sunday on the Libei'ianregistered motor tanker Lucy In
the same area.
The 36,512· ton oil tanker, which
is managed Marltlme 01/erseas
Corp. of New York, anchored off
Dubai Monday morning, · the
shipping sources said. She was
attacked by three Iranian speedboats and sustained damage to
her starboard engine room, the
·
sources said.
The ,a ttacks came after one of
the heaviest rounds of Iraqi air
strikes on shipping in the service
of Iran in weeks. The attacks are
aimed at choking the flow of
Iranian oil, Tehran's main
sourCe of foreign exchange to
'fund the war with Iraq.
A spokesman for the Iraqi
armed forces said Iraqi warplanes attacked two oil tankers
off Iran's northern Persian Gulf
coastline at 9:54 p.m. Sunday,
· Baghdad radio reported Monday
morning. There was no lndepend·
ent confirmation of the attacks.
The 18th convoy ' of u .s. Navy
ships and Kuwaiti tankers flying
the American flag steamed south

•

local phone compa nies charge
long -distance firms for their
hookup to local networks .
. The local compa nies have
proposed cutting AT&amp;T's access
charges by $200 million on New
Yea r 's Day, but AT&amp;T, in a
compla int filed last month, said
the fees still would be $1 .15 billion
too high.
•
AT&amp;T is requ ired to pass any
reductions in its access charges
along to Its customers, dollar for
dollar.
AT&amp;T spokeswoman Ed ie Her·
man sa id the compan y believes
the $SOO million figure Is "conser·
vative," but Is prepared to revise
the cuts in Dece mber after the
FCC finis hes rev iewi ng the pro·
posed local char~es.

Litter grants
awarded
State Rep. Joly nn Boster and
State Sen. Jan Michae l Lo ng
a nnounced today thai Gov. Richard F. Celeste has awarded
liter prevention and recycling
grants for Athens, Meigs and
Gallla Counties .
Accordi ng to Boster a nd Long,
tht&gt;se three cou nties are among ·
83 recipients receiving a co m.
bined tota l of more than $4.5
million for litter prevention and
recyling programs. Long and
Boster report that $70,717 will be
awarded to Athens County;
$62,334 to Gallia Cou nty. a nd
$76,713 to Meigs Coun ty.
The Ohio Department of Na tu ral Resources awards the funds,
which are administered by the
Division of Litter Preve ntion and
Recycling. The local programs
see k to address the litter problem
by combinin g se veral approaches such as litter and
recyc ling educatio n, public
awareness, law enforcement,
containment, collection and Increased recycling opportunities.
Boster and Long added that $44
million In grants have been
awarded for litter prevention and
reclycling since the es tablish,
menl of the Divlson olf Litter
Prevention and Recycling in
1980. The grants, Boster and
Long concluded, are part of an
effort to establish self-sufficient
local programs throughout the
state.

By United Press International
A cold fro nt crept toward the
rai ny Eastern Seaboard today as
a killer storm system that raked
the Gulf Coast headed out to sea.
The storm system that left in
its wake deat h. destru ct ion and a
major clean up job across the
Gu lf Coast sta tes Sunday and
Monday a nd soa ked F lorida with
more than

4 inches

of ~

ra in

Tuesday moved off the Atlantic
Coas t ea rly today.
Rainshowers lingered ahead of
the cold front over Maine and
some of the rema'ining coastal
sections of New E ngland. Showers and a few thunderstorms
were reported over coastal North
Caroli na and south F lorida.
Elsewhere, a few li gh t rain and
snow showers dotted the upper
Great Lakes region, parts of
souther~ Kansas, western Okla·
homa and northwest Texas. Up to
3 inches of s now was measured in
north-central Wisconsin.
Ga le warnings remained in
effect for lakes Erie, Ontario and
Michigan a nd eas tern Lake Superior because of strong gusty
winds.
The cold .front headed for the

East Coast extended across
western New York to northwest
Florida and curved a bit over
western sections of Virginia.
"It's moving east and by early
Thursday it will have pushed on
off much of the Atlantic Coast ,"
said National Weather Service
forecaster Hugh Crowther.
Pre-dawn. temperatures in
areas east of the creeping front
remained above 50 today , with
readings in the 60s and 70s along
much of the AUantlc CCoast,
Crowther said.
On Tuesday, parts of the Eas t
Coast enjoyed unseasonably
warm weather. The temperature·

climbed to 72 degrees Tuesday 111
Philadelphia, less tha n a week
after a s torm dumped up to· 4
inches of snow in parts of
s 0 utheas(ern Pen nsylva nia.
.
ln . the West, readings dipped
into the si ngle digits and even
dropped below zero over parts of
the Rocky Mountain region.
Heavy snow that blanketed
parts of the centra l a nd northern
Rockies dtmlnishep overnight,
a nd all snow advisories for the
region were ca nceled. As much
as 13 inches of snow Tuesday
plied up at the Monarch ski area
in the Co l ora~o moun tains.

County board business routine
The Meigs County Board of Education conduc ted the
following business In its Tuesday night meet in g:
Approved the minutes of the Oct. 13 meeting.
Approved the treas urer's financial report.
Approved payment of the monthly bills .
Approved a school bus driver certificat e for Don Smith of
Southern Local.
Passed a , resolution to participaJe in the COG -SEOVEC
Computer Program.
Scheduled the next meeting for Dec. 8.

.Middleport, Pomeroy ~ill
combine Christmas parades
Middleport and Pomeroy wi ll
join han'ds in welcoming in the
Christm as season.
Representatives of the Pomeroy and Middleport Chambers of
Co mme rce met Tuesday a nd
agreed that the two tow.ns will
'combine their annual parades

,

in to one ven ture on Sunday, Nov.
29.
.
The parade will begin in
Middleport forming on South
Second Ave., at 12:30 p.m. The
parade will move through Mid·
dleport at l p.m., dlsmantiP at
the Sears parking lot and reform

•

behind the Pomeroy Fire
Department .
The parade units will then
moV.e through Pomeroy at 2 p.m.
In Pomeroy, the parade will
move from th e fire department .
out Buttemut ave ., onto Main St.,
Continued on page 7

�'

Commentary
The

~Daily

Sentinel

Ill f ourt Sl r~•·t
Pnnwroy , Ohio
DF.VIlTED TO 'I' ll F. 1:-;T F.RF:STS OF TilE )IEIGS-)1.\SI):-; \I!E \

ROBERT L \\I,..GET1'
Publisher

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P:\T WIIJTEHEi\D
Assistant Puhli•h&lt;•r; Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
GPnrr.al

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, Burst of activity by
House ethics panel

Page- 2- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, November 18, 1987

Space laser shortcut -By Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta _
chemical laser lost its charm
following Reagan' s Star Wars
speech in March 1983. Attention
was focu sed on free-electron
lasers, nuclear-powered X-ray
lasers, partlclebeam weapons
and other exotica Abrahamson's
new SDI Office all but spiked the
modest Alpha program
For SDI enthusiasts, the key
fa ctor was wave length - the
shorter the better Alph a's rivals
were much shorter, and would be
bnghter, more destructive and
more effi cient. •But by mld -1986, Abrahamson
had changed his position, more
from political than technlc!ll
considerations. The White House
wanted early resull s, and the
general knew that every )aser
bul Alpha would take at least 10
years to perfect. Thus was born
lhc Zenith Star program: the
Alpha chemical laser with tracking, computer and other systems
to make il a fully integrated

WASHINGTON - President ready to test tn space until long
Reagan's secret decision last alter Reagan leaves office.
December to go ahead with the
Absolutely the earliest Zenith
"Zenith Star" chemical laser Star can have a chemical laser
program was motivated by his weapon ready to send up, these
longstanding desire to have at sources said,, ts late 1990. And
least a prototype laser weapon In · that 's only 1f technical problems
space before he leaves the White do not cause delays.
House. But he won ' t make il.
The news has been a keen
Reagan' s' intense failh in his disappointment to the president
Strategic Defense Initiative, pop- As one top White House aide
ularly known as "Star Wars," explained, Reagan "would like to
was what led him to order Ll. demonstrate one of these exotic
Gen. James Abrahamson, direc- weapons tomorrow, if he could."
tor of SDI , to forge ahead with
It was shortly after his election
Zenith Star even though the In November 1980 that Reagan
president believed It would even- conftded to several key Republltually violated Ihe U.S. -Sovlet can sena tors that he mlended to
Antiballistic Missile Treaty of accelerate the development of
1972.
space-based laser weapons as an
The same sources in the White · anti-missile defense. The laserof
House, the Pen lagon an&lt;l the - choice at lhat time was fueled by
intelligence community wflo con- hydrogen fluoride an d was
firmed the story of Reagan 's known is Alpha. It had been
decision to Dale VanAtta predict unde,r development since the late
that the hydrogen-fl uoride laser 1970s.
under development will not be
But the relattvely s imple

•

·-·-

Earlier this year, the committee was under fire from several
sources, accused of ducking its responsibility to investigate
complaints against members and, when appropriate, recommend
punishment by the full House.
The strongest criticism came from an unlikely alliance of
conservative Republicans and Common Cause, the generally liberal,
self-styled citizens lobby _
- "The ethics committee has -chosen to act as a shield for the
members rather than as a protector of the inlegrity of the House,"
Common Cause President Fred Wertheimer charged in a July letter
; • to the committee chairma n, Rep. Julian Dixon , D-Ca!if.

The panel also was criticized for not recommending disciplinary
action against mem bers found guilty of violating House rules, as in
the cases of Rep. Mary Rose Oakar, D-Ohio, Rep. Dan Damel, D-Va.,
and former Rep_ James Weaver, D-Ore.
In August, the Republican crittcs put the committee on the spot by
" demanding a House vote on a resolution that would have ordered the
panel to reopen the StGerma in probe. The resolutton was defealed,
291-111, bu t the committee. members were not pleased lo have their
judgme nt challenged in such a public way _
Unlike most other co ngressional commmittees, the ethics
commtttee has an equal number of Republican and Democratic
members, but that has not spared the panel from charges by the band
of GOP conservatives who say the committee Is unduly protective of
suspected wrongdoers. The fact that nearly all of the ethics cases
Involve Democrats has not made things any easier for Chairman
Dixon or the House Democratic leadership_
The committee, formally known as the Committee on Standards of
Official Conduct, may have muted some of the criticism with Its
recent burst of activity , but not everyone is satisfied.
Last month, in the case of Rep _ Richard Stallings, D-Tdaho,
mvolving the misuse of campaign funds, the panel followed lhe
earlier pattern of ftnding that a member did indeed violate House
rules, but then voting to not recommend any punlshmenl because Ihe
violation was inadvertent and amends were made. That was the kind
of conclusion that provoked so much earlier criticism .

weapon.
When the presldenl was finally
sold on Zenith Star at an Oval
Office meeting last Dec 17 with
Abrahamson and Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger, he
insisted on mak'lng It a supersecret program . The reason was
the Republicans' loss of Senate
control and the fear of opposition
if the Democrats learned about
it.

So Reaga n ord ered that Zenith
Star be a " black" program,
meaning one that Is so secret that
few If any members of Congress
are cleared to know aboul lt.
Zenith Star went through its flrsl
phase - January through Mayas a tull y black program.
But then, as the second phase
began, some of I he secrecy was
lifted in a cleverly dtsarming
fashion. Parts of the program
have been downgraded to a _
"secret" classification level and
removed from 1he spcciaJ access
codes that protected the earliest
phase from curious m embers of

By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UPI) -After a period in which critics accused the
House ethics committee of being a shield for errant members, the
committee recently began revita lizing its image as enforcer of House
rules.
In a series of cases , the committee adv;anced investigapons of
members accused of wrongdoing or handled down decisions that
violations had Indeed occ urred.

Common Cause complained about the panel's reluctance to reopen
an mvesligatwn of the financial dealings of Rep_ Fernand St
Germain, D-RJ., chairman of the House Banking Committee, and its
failure to conclude a lengthy Investigation of Rep_ Bill Boner,
D-Tenn., who rece ntly reSJgned from the House following hi s election
as mayor Or Nas hville.

•

U.S. mining
HELENA, Mont. (NEAl Huge dump trucks, each capable
of carrying 85 tons of rock, scud
• across the undulating landscape
hauling ore from. an open -ptl
mine to an industrial complex a
half-mile away.
Montana Tunnels, a mining
and processing operation that
exemplifies the resurgence of an
industry ravaged by severe economic problems only a few years
ago, is thriving in the Boulder
Mountains almost 25 miles south
of Helena.
Mining is experiencing a resurgence throughout the West Facilities that were shut down
during earlier In the 1980s are
reopening and new mines are

being established .
"Today's mining industry is
slowly coming. out of its worst
period since the Great Depression," says American Mining
Congress Preside nt John A.
Knebel. "Everywhere I go, I
sense a feelin g... that the worst
may be over."
To meet the challe nge posed by
low-cost production overseas,
lhe copper lnduslry commilted
more than $700 million last year

But the panel did launc h a prelilminaryinvestigation of Rep_ Austin
Murphy , D-Pa .. and his handling of office finances. That turned up
enough evtdence for the panel to later announce it would hold a
disciplinary hearing, a more serious step and one Ihat could lead to a
recommendation to the House that Murphy be punished.
The committee similarly advanced its investigation of Rep_
Charles Rose, D-N C, accused of misusing campaign funds, and
voted to take up the case of Rep. Mario Biaggi, D-N Y., who was
convicted in federal court of accepting an Illegal gratuity.
And the committee ha s voled to investigate allegations of payroll
fraud by Fofo Sunla, of American Samoa, one of five non-voting
delegates in the House
What th e committee will decide in all these cases ts unknown, but at
OK, I have no objection to
least for the moment the panel has freed itself of tis earlier do-nothing - bemg called the Mortimer Snerd
Image.
'
of eco nomi c theory_
I didn't do well in economics in
high school, and I haven 'texactly
dlsllnguished my self in money
ma tters since. However, I do
take a certain pride in the fa ct
tha t I did not take a bath In the
recent stock ma r ket crash a nd
By United Press International
that, except on rare occasions
Toda y ts Wednesday, Nov _18, the 322nd day of1987 wilh 43 to follow .
when I subtracted my checkbookThe moon IS waning, moving toward its new phase.
'
wrong, I have never spent more
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
than I made ,
The evening star s are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
So, as I star ted my Christma s
Those bor n on thts date are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
shopping and felt my usual
French philosopher and writer Pierre Bayle in 1647; German
uneasiness at not fi nding Americomposer ~arl von Weber and English composer Henry Bishop
can products in American stores,
("Hom e Sweet Home"l in 1786; French physicist Louis Daguerre,
I was kind,of embarrassed. After
inventor of daguerreotype photography, in 1789; English librettist
all, protectionism vs. an entirely
W.S. Gilbert, who created comic operas with composer Arthur
free market was something I
Sulliv11n , In 1836; Polish composer Ignace Paderewski In 1860;
hadn't wreslled with since Politiorche~ tra conductor Eugene Orma ndy In .1899; pollster George
cal Science 101, and nothing I
Gallup in 1901 , co medic actres s Imogene Coca in 1908 (age 79);
could ever formulate a scientific
so ngwriter Johnny Mercer in 1909; astronaut Alan Shepard, Ihe first
et hi c about.
American in space. in 1923 (age 64), and actress Linda Eva ns In 1942
I'll admit I 'm not a purist. I buy
(age45 ).
{"
imported products If I can ' t find
something comparable made In
On this date In history:
· the United States, and depending
In 1477, "The Sayings of lhe Philosophers" was published, th e
upon my Ju st lor a certain Item, I
earliest known book printed in England to carry a date.
can stretch those limi ts pretty
In 1874, the National Women's Christian Temperance Union was
far. But the older I get, th e more
organized·iri Cleveland, Ohto.
my personal s hopping ethic
In 1SBJ, the United States adopted Standard Time and sel up four
seems guided by a very unscienzones : Eastern, Central, Mountain and Pacific.
tifi c and un-eco nomlcally sound
In 1928, Mickey Mou se made his acllngdebut In "Steamboat Willie"
principle: loyalty. I'd rather buy
al the Co lony Theater In New York Ci ly.
a car from my brother (who, by
·, In 1978, more than 900 people died in a mass suloide led by the Rev .
the way, does sell cars) who I
Jim Jones at the People's Temple commune In Guyana, following the
would have to watch march to the
murder of Cali fornia Congressman Leo Rya n.
poor farm, than from a guy In
another lawn who I will probably
A thought for the day: W.S. Gilbert said , "I only know two Junes
never see again afler I sign on Ihe
One Is 'God Save the Queen.' The other Isn't."
dolled line.

COmeS

to modernize its aging facilities.
In Arizona, where Phelps Dodge
and Cyprus Minerals have
slreamlined their operations,
copper production Is Increasing
and

dormant

mine s are

reopening.
In Alaska , developmenl began
m July on the Greens Creek
Project near Juneau. When the
mme opens in mid-1988, it wtll
produce silver and. to a lesser
extent , gold, zinc and lead.
Near Kotzebu e, Alaska, preliminary work is underway lo

develop the Red Dog min e, which
will yield lead and zinc when it
opens iil the ear ly 1990s _
In Idaho, the Lucky Friday
mine near the small town of
Mullan was the counlry's largest
producer of silver in 1985 but
closed In 1986 because of declining prices .
But the mm e reopened _th ts
June and Is expecled to produce
as much as 5 million ounces of
sliver as well as 70 million pounds
of lead annually The Sunshine
s ilver mine, near Kellogg, Idaho,
also closed in 1986 but It too may
soon1 reopen .

Congress
On Oct. 5, Ihe Pentago n even
iss ued a press release about
Phase Two - without using the
still cl assified Zenith Star code
name. Instead, they threw ou l a
little blue smoke.
The three· month, $10.8 million
contract is " lo develop a co mprehensive road map and a ground
verifica tiOn an d integration test ·

ing pla n for existing key elemen ts of the space- based laser
program," th e Pentagon an·
nounc ed: It added solemnly:
' 'The study a nd th e resulting plan
will be entirely compliant with
the 1972 ABM Treaty."
That disin genous sta tement is
technic al ly true, but it attempts
to disguise the real purpose of the
Zenith Star program- a purpose
that will not be achieved in the
second phase. The goal is to
design a fully in tegrated chemical laser weapon Ia be tested in
space at the ear li est possible
mom ent.

back____R_o_b_er_t_W:_a_lt_er_s
In Montana, the Stillwater
mine, Hte only source of platinum
and palladium outslde the Soviet
Union and South Africa began
produclion earlier this year near
the town of Nye: It is expected to
eve ntually supply 7 to 10 percent
of this year near Ihe town of Nye.
It is expected to eventually
supply 7 to 10 percent of this
country's requirements for tho se
rare metals.
In Butte, "the richest hill on
earth" yielded 20 billion pounds
of copper, 704 million ounces of
sliver and 3 million ounces of gold
before 1983 when the Anaconda
Minerals Co abandoned the
massive open pit mines It had
.
worked for 99 years
Now, however, Montana Reso urces, Inc . has resumed the
quest for copper just east of
Anaconda's famed Berkeley Pit
and expects to produce 60 million
pounds of the me tal this year.
Bu t enhanced efficiency an-d
Increased productiv ity have
been a mix ed blessing for
workers . Anaconda, for example, provided jobs for almost 600
uni·onizec.i workers in Bufte, while

Monlana Resources has only

,-

........ .
I

Call it perverse - because
maybe the folks at th e Lee jea ns
fa ctory won 't give a darn if I end
up marching to the poor farmbut this sense of loyalt y ha s
started to extend to people I don 't
know who just live in the sa me
state, or even the samecountry.l
find m yself thinkin g of how 1 .
depend on them to buy the
newspapers that carry my column and wat c h the televis ion
station I work for . I expect to
deliver the best product I can for
their mon ey, an d hope thai's
good enough, I Imagine they
probably do the same.
I kriow I won't make it through
the Christmas season wlthoul
buying at least somelhing that
was made in a foreign country,
but a couple of things have really
started to irk me: First, American clothing designers who advertise th eir wares as being
Intrinsically American - "the
prairie look," with models posed
in rugged sweaters a nd rough
leat hers - but whose labels say,
"made In Hong Kong'' or "made
in the Philippines." If that lsn' t
the height of hypocrisy, 1'11 eat
raw lamb with ~ sirloin tartar
chaser.
The second Irritant ar'e Ameri ca n entrepreneurs who make
healthy profits with fa ctories
here, bu t who decide to move the
assembly line to a fo reign country just to make even bi gger
profits. I don't have much
argument with compan ies that
can't compete in the market

because producllon cos ts ar e so
high her e_ ! have a big disagreement with those who move solely
to expand the bottom ltne.
The bottom line. It 's .a term
tha t's taken on an almost mystical quality , as if it were as
worthwhile and imp ortanl as
decency. We look at it as bein g

Coaches speak out against
firing of·O.S U's Earle Bnice

GRAYSON, Ky . - Ron Rittin ger and Anthony Raymore combined their scoring talents In the
closing minu tes of Tuesday's
game against Kentucky Chr istian to wrest the lead away from
the Knight s and allow Rio
Grande to post a 73-70 win.
Rlttlnger's a nd Raymore's
performances came at the end of
a suspenseful encounter between
the Redmen and Coach Randy
Kirk's club, which was 2-0 going
Into the contest.
" We feel fortunate to get out of
lhere with a win ," Redmen
Coach John Lawhorn commented, looking back on a game
that saw the lead change hand s
continually throughoul bo th
halfs. "They tKentucky ChrisHan ) are a senior-dominated
basketball team and as a res ult
they played very well."
The . Knights employed lhe
home courl advantage early ,
reversing leads established in
the opening seconds by Rittlnger
and senior Ray Singleton and the
lead gyrated vio lently back and
forth during the flrsl half as Rio
Grande and Ihe hosts edged each
other by a single point Rittinger
scored a basket near the end of
the half to allow the Redmen to
lead 34-33, but a foul on the
Knights' Greg Wallace gave
Wallace the opportunily to sink
two free throws.
The Knights led at the half,
35-34 .
Rio Grande came back in the
opening of the second half, as
Raymore sa nk a three-point field
goal to post a 46-43 advantage.
From there, the Redmen butlt on
the lead, outdistancing the
Knights by as much as 11 (58-47) .
Through lhe top scoring of
Kentucky Christian's Wallace

CHICAGO (UPI ) -Michigan
coach Bo Schembechler says the
firing of Ohio State coac h Earle
Bruce has done " irreparable
harm " to the college football
coaching professio n.
Schembe~hler, whose club
enqs the season against the arc h
rival Buckeyes qn Saturday, was
one of several Big Ten coaches
who spoke oul Tuesday agams't.
lhe ills missal of Bruce .
" II has done irreparable damage to the profess ion," Scherrbechler said. "I wish we could do
more to control this thing.
There's no justification in what
happened. "
Schembechler,aclosefriendo!
Bruce and the late OSU coach
Woody Hayes, said Bruce did
everything a top football coach
could do with "honesty and
integrity."
" The first thing I thought of
was what Wood y's reaction
would be. I thought he was be
disappointed with the univer sity," Schembechler said. "Ohio
State used to be the graveyard of
coaches . Woody changed all
that."
Bruce said he was upset about
the timing of the dismissal
comlng before th e school's game
-

GRAYSON, Ky _- A concerted
team efforl a nd Renee Halley's
26-potnt scoring total powered
the Rio Grande Redwomen to a n
83-52 season opener victory over
Kentucky Christian Tuesday at
Lusby Center on the KCC

sightly more than 300 non·union
employees. Anaconda paid $131o
$15 per hour while Montana
ResourCes' wage scale runs from
$5 to $10 per hour.
,
In Idaho, the Lucky Friday
mine reopened only afler reducing it s work force by 25 percent
a nd cutting wages and benefits
by 28 percent. The Sunshine mine
wtll nol reopen unles s il secures
simila r concessions.
Montana Tunnels typifies lhe

campus . .

The Redwomen scored ear ly
and often and never looked back
as Coach Cheryl Flelitz employed alrnosl the entire be nch
agai nst the Lady Knights .
"I think the bench pla yed real
well , especially Missy 1Pack),"
Flelitz co mmented. " Re nee
played real welL We needed a btg
win goi ng into Ihi&gt; Bevo Francis
Classic."

indu stry's transition from labor-

intensive to capital-intensive operations. It s owners spent $57.5
milli on to build a modern facility
at a remote site.
The mine, which began operating earlier this year, eve ntually
will yteld 106,000 ounces of gold,
1. 7 million ounces of silver, 60
tons of zinc concentrate and
11,000 tons of lead concenlrate
annually .
But onl y 170 workers will be
required to operate Its sophisticated mtlls, tanks, grinders and
ot her specialized equipment :
"The pick-a nd,shovel days are
long go ne," says Montana Tunnels executive John Fitzpatrick.
" These guy s are technicians." •

. Halley , a 5-5 senior a.nd a
former standout bas ketball
player at Gallia Academy High
Sc hool, sco red three slraight
baskel s after an a wkward beg in• ning for both teams and put the
Redwomen ahead 6-0. Halley a nd
junior Holly Ha stjngs, who
scored 18 points , continued to
score on th e hosts, allowing Rio
Grande to lead by 24 points
!43-19) near the e nd of the half.
The Redwomen led go in g int o the

and Craig Yates, the Knight s
mounted a concerted threat,
nar rowed the margin and in the
concluding minutes recaptured
the lead . Denny Ferguson's
three-po int field goa l put the ·
Knights ahead -by 3 (70-67) when
Raymore npped in a basket,
followed by another from RitUn·
ger and one more by Raymore In
the last f~w seconds.
,
"We played hard all the way
down the stretch," Lawhorn
sa id. "Rittlnger had a big game
and played the way seniors
should play_"
AL MVP - Torohto Blue
Rl ttlnger, the 6-3 forward from
Jays' out!Ielder George Bell
Chillicothe, scored a total of 28
was named the American
points and was backed up by
League MVP by the Baseball
Raymore 's 14. Freshman Brian
Wrllers Association of Arner·
Watkins had another big scoring
ica Tuesday In one of the
night, recording 12 points .
closest races In the 54-year
For the Knights, Wallace led
history of the award. BeU
the field with 20 points, while
received 332 points to edge
Yates added 18. Ferguson and
shortstop Alan Trammel ol
Rick Stone had 8 points each.
the AL East champion Detroit
Law horn felt the Knights '
Tigers, who had 311 points.
biggest strength· was in catc hing
(UP I)
'
the ball and shooting, a superior·
ity evidenced in the fact Kentucky Christian sa nk 14 of 15 tries
at the free throw line lor 93
percent. Rio Grande was 40
percent on 4 of 10 atlempls from
the charil y stripe.
"They were excellent at that,
and we were mi serable lhere,"
he sa id,
The Redme n remain Idl e- until
Friday, when they play Spring
ANN ARBOR, Mich. tl!PI) Arbor at 9 p.m. in the first night
of action In the Bevo Francis Jamie Morris's 'place In Bo·
Schembechler's heart is greater
Classic.
than his spot in the University of
r· RIO GRANDE 173 ) - AnthQny Ra,_yrMrr,
1 · 0.~· 14; Ron IUIUnK!!t , I H·3·tl\, Jim K1•orn.&lt;o,
Michtgan
rushing record book.
2:! '! 7. l~ay Sln,;ll~on. ~ 0.1 ol: Rob .Jocbon,
"Morris is a great, great
I·IJ..5·2: I}Qu,c FoKt , 3-D-~ · 6, Brian \\ atklM,
:I('! HI-I 1:! 1'ttlaiK a4( .1)-l· lf.. 7:!
football player -as great as any
KENTUC'K\' CHRISTit\N r10J - Gn•Jl W,.Jthat has ever played for me,"
I:ue, 6-~2-20, 01•nny fcr~ll!oOO, I(!Hl-1-K; T ndd
l . . ayni', I n-1 2 Doug Platt. -1-n-nl: C rul~~; Yatrs.
Schembechler
said before put6-6-2-1!1, Rltk Stun~. IJ~J-0-1-~: ,)(•If Khu~t•y,
:1- 1.1-~- 6 Tota l ~ 22{-IH-1 -9-iO
ting his Wolverines through
anolher day of practice for their
annual regular season-ending
game against Ohio State_Michigan is hosting the game this year.
"The reason: you see him once
a week. I see him every day_ He's
a joy to coac h, a gentleman, a
leader,"
Morris, a 5-foot-7, 180-pound
clone of his running-back brother
Joe of the New York Giants, Is 130
secortd half, 45-24.
yards short of th e Michigan
Kentucky Christian's plucky single-season rushing record of
o!feose pressed away at the 1,469 yards set by Rob Lytle in
Redwornen, wilh Natalie Grimes 1976. He has the Ohio State game
scoring a helpful three-point fi eld and Hall of Fame bowl game to
goal - the only one of the nigh'! better that totaL
for the hosts
He also is the third running
Fielitz felt the Lad y Knights back in Big Ten history to total
remained a th reat during the more lhan 4,000 career yards.
ga me due to their ability to s hoot The first was Archie Griffin of
from the outside. Fielitz credited Ohio State. The second was
th e Redwomen defense with Michigan State's Lorenzo White,
keeping the Lady Knights' of- also this season.
fense from scoring heavily
"He runs in practice and
In additi on to Halley and blocks in practice exac tly as you
Ha &lt;tings , junior Pack made her see him run and block on
mark on the' scoring column with Saturday," Schembechler said.
12 points while jumor Lea A,nn " I'm sure we'll be friends for~
Mullins added seven. For Ken - lon g, long time after his career is
tucky Christian, fre shm an Lynn done at Michigan. Manges led wtth 1fi and ·sopho"He's never, never down I've
more Natalie Grimes had 13. never seen him have a down day
Freshman Lori Ha nn added 1L
since he's been at Michigan. You
T he Redwomen pla y again just like to have him around. You
Friday in th e Bevo F ra ncis like to be around him. And he can _
Classic Friday a t 4 p rn _ when deliver. "
they face Georgian Cour t.
Morris will probably enter the
RIO Gltt\l'IODt: ilt:H - Murl o Hh•tlt· r. H~·G ,
pros
the same way his brother
·h ·nnl ( OI.M h. 1 - fl- ~, llull y ll asU n~" · K·~- IK ; l.o~ • a
.\n n Mu lll nli. 21 lf.tl i: Hl' ..'l' ll a l11•y , 13-0-211; lklh
did - in a later round and as a
( ull, 3·0·6: Hilli r .Ju ~tj• ph i'IL~ un . :H).fi, )lb"l'
reserv~ for hi s first couple of
l 'l~lk. ~~ ~ l'l TtHnl10 '{ II] I )~,· K:I
Kl': ~tl ' l 'fKY t'IIK ISII\N (]!J Lurl llunu,
seasons. He needs about 10 more
i- 1· 11 '1/ ,l l.llil' Gr lllll' ~ . 2i .1) -0·1:1 (hrl~ Tumnw l,
pou nds of muscle on an already
It~ !: l.ynn M u ll,l;:(':o.. II II lti: Erin t' it'q)alr1ll4 .
!·lf-.t; ~~ .. ~t• l.lnw~ .l-()..ti Tutal"'!'ll31 ~; .5_•!
tough frame to endure the game
to game pounding he'lllake as a
professionaL He does not have
blazing speed but enough to get
by. And he can catch the ball
with 62 points, followed in order
corni
ng out of the backfield .
by Ca pital 61. Il eidel be rg 35,
Morris has four runs of 45
Mari etta 32, Baldwin-Wallace
and Mount Unio n, tied with 24 yards or grea ter• for Michigan
this season and a career total of
each, and Otte rbein with 20.
94 receptions. The 94 catches
Following Wittenberg a nd Ohio
make him fourth on the WolveNorlh e rn in Ihe media selections rines' all -lime list.
we re Capt tal with 175 a nd five
first place votes, Musk ingum
with 147, Marie tta 90, Otterbein
The Daily Sentinel
83, Heidelberg 73, BaldwinWalla ce 56 and Mount Unio n 47
( USJ•s 115-960 )
A Oivl ~ lon of Multimedia, In c.
Witt e nberg ffn ished with a 25-8
record las t season and has three
Pu blis hro ('\'('l'V &lt;~ II C'rn oon M o ndJ y
ret urning s tart ers from th at
1ht ough Frida\. Ill Court ~~ . .•o·
mcr ov, Ohio. bv thf' Ohto Valle&gt;v Pu b
team - 6-foot -5 seniot' forward
• l l ~h ln g C'omp,mv 'Multim('(li,J , Inc ..
·rom Weller , 5-foot-11 senior
Pomrro\. Oh io 45769 Ph 99l 2156. Sc
gJard Rodney Littlefield and
co nd .cl&lt;t:-;o.; po!itagl' patd al Pom Noy.
Oht O
6-foot-4 junior guard Steve
Allison.
MPmbf't . Un !1 Nl Prf'ss l ntf'rn.lli Onal
1,
lnl .tn d D&lt;.t l lv P r t•ss As.sOCta t lo n a nd lh£'
0 Jte rbe in. ~h e thr ee- lime deOhm N&lt;'ws papcr Ass oci ation. Natlonul
fe ndm g regul6r season champ,
Arht'rl ts in g R Ppt rsPn T&lt;tliv £' Branham
los t all fiv&lt;' _ of its starter s,
Nt•v.'sp.tpPr Sa lPS. 7:t\ Thitd Av t'ntH'.
Nev. York. New Yo r· k 10017
including a ll-American forward
Dick Hempy.
POSTMASTER· Send a ddri"Ss cha n~l'S

Michigan
has great
•
runner In
Jamie Morris

Wittenberg 0 AC favorite
COLUMBUS. Ohto (U PII Wit tenberg is th e solid choice of
both the coaches and new s media
to win this year's Ohio Alhlettc
Co nferen ce ba s ketba l l
charnpionshJp _
The Tigers of coach Larry
Hunter , who won last year's OAC
post-season tournament and fin·
ished third tn the NCAA Divtsion
Tf! Tournament, picked up eigh t
of the nine fi rs I place votes !rom
the league coaches, and 80 point s
from the med ia based on nine
point s for a firs t place vote, eight
for second, etc.
Ohio Northern was the seco nd
choi ce of both the coaches and
th e medta . The Polar Bears got
th e oth er first place from lhe
coac hes, and 67 poin ts from th e
media , while th e media g"ve
Wtttimberg 12 fir st place votes
for 188 points a nd Nor thern five
firsts for 176 points.
Rounding out the coac hes ·
picks were No. 3 Musktn gum

r es ponst ble to our stockholder s,
preferring to Ig nore th at it can
also mean being heartless to
people who live down the street
from us, whose children go to the
same sc hools ours do. It's a
judgment Cll ll. My Jud gem ent
doesn 't pla ce It very high on my
list of priorities.

Berry's World

Shoct=ut at the

OK EROR!RAGE:

to Thr Dally Si'n•tncl. 111 Cour1
PomC'l'OY . Oh Ia -15i69
SUBSCRIPI'ION RATES
By Carrier, or Motor IWule

Banquet is cancelled
J

~~
1J
@ 19B7 b~ NFI" lnt

1

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Rio' Grande cops
second _cage win ·

Redwomen, with big
effort by Halley, cop
83-53 win over KCC

That protect~onist itch ____________:::S=ar~ah~O~v=er-=st~re~et

Today in history

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

COLU MBUS, Ohio tUPI)
Ohio State University, in th e
wake of the firing of footba ll
coach Earle Bruce, has canceled
Monday night 's scheduled foot ball appreciation banquet.
A univers ity spokesman sa id
the banque l, al which team
awards are a nnually presented,
may be rescheduled al a la ler
date.
Those·who already ha ve purchased lhe $20 tickets for the
banquet, which was to l'te held a\
the Shrine 's Aladdin Temple
Mosque in Columbus, may get
refunds through th e OSU Athletl ~
Depar tment.

w 1•1,h,Mt chtg~n

presidential ca ndidates,
·1 he way 1! l~as. handl ed tt not
"! think It's very tragic for the
the way Ohw ·State ha s done coaching profession and ' a
thtngs _ 1 1 ,~ought It wa:s a ~lass , tragedy for Ohio State," Morton
operau~n,
Bt uce _sa~d .. The satd. "We "talk about integrity!
on ly thmg I can cnttctz: ts the grades and runnlngtheprogram .
ttmmg nght before the Mtchlgan His t•eco rd was impeccable,"
game. It was bad for th e tea~ I
Michiga n State coac h George
hope we ca n hold It together .
Perles said Bruce will get
Bru ce said he was deter mined a nother job, possibly with Jess
to s tay m coachtng_
pressure than fo llowing a "le" I'm a coac h and a doggo ne _ gend" Iike Hayes.
good coach. I'll coach some place
"The biggest problem Earle
I guess for five, six or eight more will have is choosing the best
years," Bruce sa id.
job," Perles said., " He may look
Minnesota coach John Cute- back and see It might be a
kunst agreed with Schem bechler blessing in disguise."
,
that the dt smissal of a coach who
Illinois coach Mike White was
"had such a strong record as puzzled by Bruce's firing .
Bruce's would hurt " the coach" It's very, very unfatr. In any
ing profession.
bu si ness, there has to be criteria
Iowa coach Hayde n Fry said he for s uccess," sa id White. "In this
wanted to control his stateme nts case, I didn ' t see any area where because he wa s afraid of what he he didn't measure up I've talked
would say.
to players who all speak very
"I'm afraid I might have to 1'\lghly of him ."
clean up my language for what I
Indiana coach Bill Mallory's
might say," Fry said . " I went name has been mentioned as a
throu gh it personally at SMU successor to Bruce. He didn 't
years ago and I don't wa nt to comm ent on the s peculation but
really get into tL"
spoke out against the firing.
Wisconsin coac h Don Morto n
" It's too bad, particularly
questioned whether univers1ties when the season isn't comwere heading towa rd choosi ng pleted," said Mallory. "Natucollege football coaches like rally he had a rough year this
year and losing (Cris) Carter
was tough. But I know he'll
rebound and come back."

Foreman agrees to series of fights

Anderson Saturda y night m Orl;mdo, Fla Forema n, who held
Former heavywe ight cham- the heavyweight title m 1973-74.
pion George Foreman, 39, has is 48-2 with 45 knockouts.
Fr.e nc h mtddlrwctg llt Pierre
agreed lo a series of fights for
Frank
Winterstein scored a unTop Rank , Inc., promoter Bob
Arum said. Foreman, who has antm ous decision O\ier Sea n
won three fights on his comeback Mannion of South Boston , Mass. ,
trail, will fight Rocky Sekorski of in an eight-round bQut near
SL Paul, Minn., Dec. 18 at Las Paris . Wml erstem Improved to
Vegas, Nev . . He, faces Tim 44-1-L
By United Press International

TIME TO CHECK
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�)\'8dnesday, November 18, 1987

Ohio

Clev
R!CtWJELD, Ohio IUPll .Ron Harjll;'r watched Cleveland' s
victory over Boston Tuesday
nigh! with a mixture of sa tlsfac·
tlon , sympathy and regret.
The Cavaliers' starting shoot ·
log guard and leading scorer.
who will be sidelined until
January wtth a seve rely
sprained left ankle, said he could
reiat&lt;&gt; to the anki~ Injuries
suffered by Ce ltlcs star torward
Larry Bird but was unhappy he
could participate In a 109-88
victory.
"I feel terrible . that I'm not
playing; and T know what Larry
Bird Is going through," said
Harper. "It can cat away at you .
"StIll , it was good to see us pla y
well tOgefher and beat one of the
bes t teams In the league. "
Hubbard has 17 points to lead
seven Cl eveland players In dou·
ble figures, handing Boston Its
first' defeat of the season after the
Celtics won their first six
contes ts.
Bird, who entered the game
averaging 31.8 polnts. scored 14
" point s in th e fi rst half. With 2:38
remaining In the second quarter.
1he eight -time All -Star and three·
time Most Valuabil' Player went
up for a spinning shot, missed
and landed hard. He noticeably
favored his right leg after the
incident.
Bird played only the first 24
&lt;econds of the thll'd quarter
before being rep laced by Darren
Day e.
Bird, whd mi ssed three games
•
last December with a strained
Ca•allcrs' Kevin Johnson (11), as Alngc goes In
BALL BATTED AWAY- The Boston (;ettlcs'
right Achilles tendon. declined to
lor a layup. Acllon took place In the llrstqnurlerof
Danny Aln~e (44) has lhc hull hutted away by the
speak
to repot·tqrs as trainer Ed
Tuesday night'.• contfst In Cleveland. (UI'I)
Lacerte escor ted him out or the
locker room .
" It was clear he was limping,"
sa
id Jones. "He had to come out.
,•
Hight now, we don't know
Buckeye coac h's firing during a Saturda y's home toss to the
DES MOINES. Iowa iUPI)whether It 's Just hi s ankles or h,ls
news conference with IJrantad U nlvcr·sity oi' i owa - !he Haw·
Achilles tendons. too . We'll have
: :&lt;Jhlo Gov . Richard Cele.&lt;le says
about a new promolional ef!ort keyes fl1·st win at Columbu ss lncc
to sec. He' ll be exam ined back
·. 4he firi ng of Ohio State football
home ( today).
• coach Earle Bruce S&lt;' nds a . lied to ' th e Midwest Governors' J%9.
Branstad . an Iowa gra d who ·
' Th e Cavalier s were very
Conference. He said his job
· ; message to young ath letes dlscrlpllon "docs not Include, . celcbrat&lt;&gt;d his 41st birthda y
stea dy and our defense wa s like a
/ "Don't go Into coaching."
Tuesday. sa id theHawkeyes ·wln
dart boa rd _ full of holes.. we
fortunately, hiring or fll'lng of
·: • And Iowa Gov. Terry Bran ·
over Ohi o Sta t(' "was the best
couldn't g~t any thing going on
any coaches ."
·• "S tad , (lu r ing a joint news confer·
bl rihday prl"sen t 1 could get."
· , ho board s, so 1 decided to give
"T would like to leave that to
.: ::ence Tuesday with Ce leste on
L
al
cr
·
Brans
tad
made
com
·
the ben ch so me playing time."
the
board
of
trustees
...
Earle
·:. "tlnother matler. said Iowa State
Bruce ha s certainly worked hard
Universit y " would pl'obably love
mcn! S which COuld Ca use a S ill'
among Iowa State fans and
on behalf of Ohio State Unlver·
to have tBruce) ba ck" where he
si ty. I am a fan when the
first·ycar Cyc lone Coach .Jim
coached beforl' joi ning the
Buckeyes
win.
I
·am
a
fan
.when
Walden.
who has led JSU to a J·7
Buckeyes.
rccOI'd
this
season.
Cr leste was asked about the · I he Buckeyes lose." he said .
"We
'll
takr
Earl e Br uce
Bruce was (Ired two days after
back." Bra nstad said. " I owa
Sta te would probably l ove to
have him ba c k. He was very wrll
Ilk r d."
Cur rent I SU footbalt cpac h,Jim
Walden
ot' 1\ lhl t• tl r Direc tor M ax
( 'blt•KJ{I/
NBA rcsuhl'l
Ml_..hlllll.
!1!1
Urick wPre nol lmnwdi~;~te i y
SL l..oul ..
0
avai labl e for com m L• nt .
n,, 'u llo•d l 'n·.... lnh•ru.tlhmnl
S ru yli1 " nlvl~l u n
/'lo t\ 'IIU Ni\1 . '''VIKI·, TIII\LI. t\ S/.;41('.,
1-:(1111 ~111111 II
n
~fi
Asked if thr flrlngofBrucr sent
..'.:"t•·rn ( !lnirr••••• ,.

Cleveillfld. on the str1'ngth ~I a
:13-polnt second qua.rw•· buoyed
by reRNV~ .Johnny Hogers's ttlne
point s and eight from Phil
Hubbar·d, tu l'ned a 26·2.1 first ·
qu arter lead lnto a 59-48 halftime
advantage.
.
"Our kl~s pla yed har-d ." Sl)ld
ClevPiand cooch Lenny Will&lt;~lls .
" We established !he tempo e('(r\y.
and the players (!eser'VI' aR the
crPdit .''
Hubbard led Cl eve Janel wllh 17
points. and Dell Curry had etght
of his l61n the th lrd quarter as the
Cavaliers buill . up a 85·6:l lead
and coasted In the· final ~2
minutes to •end a four-game
losing streak before 14.621 at the
Richfield Coliseum .
"This Is very sati sfying, not

just to beat Boston but fa play a
consistent 48 minutl!s," said
Curry . "We need games Ilk&lt;' this
to bl!Hdconftdencc in ourselves ."
Brad Daugherty had 12 point s
for the Cavuller·s while Roge1·s .
M!Vk West and Mark Price each
added 11 points . Cl eveland ha s
beaten Basion lhn'e -&lt;trolght
times a! home.
Dennl!; ,Johnson led Bo ston
wllh 16 points and Duye added 12.
The Cctucs had Just 15 points In
the third quarter.
" It's tough playing without
Larry, .. suld Johnson . " He does
sO much fOr this team . We just
had no t·hythm at au:·
Daugherly had elghl points. as
Cleveland led· 26-23 after one
quar ter.

.

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WITH
FRIES
.
. ............ $1,19

The Daily Sentinel

POMEROY, OH.

.

We-Deliver

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For Spbscription or Advertising Information
.
'

.

l.

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY
VALLEY
.
.. At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Br~dge
PH. 992-25511.

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After
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'shrinks tight to stop drafts and prevent frost on five
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ca~

and CirfY temiS ontv

_,_

When questioned if they had read a daily or Sunday new spaper in the p~&lt; t week

90% of those who spend $75 or more per week at grocery stores said "Yes··
Source: Market Opinion Reseatih

J

SATURDAY. :-IOV . 2i
Air Force 24 Hawaii 22
ApJ!ai ac hlan Sf 30 Wester n Carol
lrla 28
Bowling Green 17 Ct•nfra l ~ll t' h l:
gan

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Colorado 49 Kansas !&gt;1-lli' 11.
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THURSDAY . NOV. 19
Holy Cross 47 VIllano,· a 20 ·-

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designer style. NHF300

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Three ·te mperature setting ranges from 750 to
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medium and coarso alumfnum oxide sandpape1.

ltldi~l®•l Uulers may '!Tllt quanhtltS
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Clear lape Js pertecl for inslalling ptast 1c storm

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Bowl ass ignm ent. Thry will ~t.-.. 1 11
big 42·24 trtmuph owr lh&lt;'
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Ballling for maj or bowl bid s
South Ca r oil nd , ACC champ
Clemson ani! lndcpcn(icnt South
Ca r oilna wIll g-el it un for th e 851 h
1Jmr ( I·:S PN -TV I. In I he upset Of
the c.ta~'. we sec QB '!'odd t:: lli s
pa ssi ng Sou th Carol in a to u
stunn ing 2R 2·l vic t or~ · i n th('
Ga rn ('cor k s' W illiam~ - Grir (•
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with Its sig ht s '''' on thf' Rose
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Elsl'w lwre. IIH' 1·1oopte , ys tern
sees SyracusP wrapping up It s
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conquest of West VIrginia . ·
In other traditional classics.
M ichi gan wil l edgr Ohio Sta te.
28·24, In thei r 84th blood letting,
and. would vou oellcvr. t.chtgll
will top t.ar,iye llc, 2H·20 in th eir
123o·d tnPCiing. And my bt•lovNI
Yal e Bulldogs will turn ba ck
.J ohn Ha rva rd's lads. 2R-n In
their l04 th baltic. Rooitl ·Boola!
Lrd bv \'Pr su til l' Corclil' Loc i;:
baurn. dw ll oly t'ro:-;s Crusadt'I'S,
the No. l team in 1 -A.~ ranks. will
f'asi l y d('f('al nlfl fri('olt
VIllanova .4 7·20.

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. .. , Less mfr.
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S~ecial of the Week ..
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PH. 4411-11199

Tlllllllll hii,Y - !&lt;&gt; ll(lll' d nflo •n ~i \o • 1\1\1'
mun ,\'l ;ork I '"'l"' r , W&gt;l ht•d lr o•ol "'tfl•l\
ICI1 •k "''"'' "' unil l lf( ltl ' ' " " St·· ~··
llulluwny

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wJml.ing('.., l f)f ldH •r Jn th(' f'lub's
llhi1Wy, dlt·tl T u('S d~I ,Y It! UH' u.gc.::r

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710

Si\!(;\SOTJ\, Fi lo. IU I'I i
Fo1 rn&lt;•J ('i rH'In natllleds pltchlnf(

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C IIII I J~ II'IIJ,.n lo •"' "' ' ' '

tl

~ h owlng

When it comes to a buying decision for groceries,
more than 90% of Ohioans use daily newspapers. *

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

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"' '' ' "" " "
Paul Derringer,
Reds' ~rreat, dies
Huff:.lo•

r ork -

Nebraska' s heAd honcho, h&lt;&gt; has
won 146, losi32 and tied 3. PrettY
cla ssy record s, ch what 9
'
Bot the Nebraska-Oklahom a
game will be decided on th e
playing fi('id .
With th e Sooners brilliant QB
Jumeile Holieway and .FB Lydeil
Ca1'r unable l o piny. the Hoo ple
Hunch Is Nebraska will win.
Slippery optton QB Steve Taylor
will "s hake and fake" his Corn·
husker s to a 31-27 victory - and
th&lt;' COV('II'd Ora nge Dow! berth.
Th e ol h&lt;•r half of the TV
sp&lt;.'Cta cuiHr (on CBS ) has Notre
Dl\ m(' v i ~ \lin g Anolht'r pC'rf\nnial
indcpc-ndt'nl powe t', Pt•nn Stare.
Lou Holt z's Ir ish nrc shoofin g for
Oevln e (9·2-1) d~parlcd In 1980.
Noll'c Dam e's alluck Is ba si·
ca lly Infantry with option QB
Tony Rlrf' nt lllf' f·o nr rols. Howevrr. with •'1lPC I'in tlvc receive r
Tim BI'Own roaming loose. the
ll'isll Clln .hufl you th ro ugh the
ai r . Resourceful Jof' PJtf'rno has
"'' other ('XCrllc nt cl ub built
around HB Blai r Thomas. In a
sa lid. hllfd·hilltnggam e wc see II
go ing tn the it·ish..1R·24.
Sout hern Ca l and l'CI.A will
bull hPads for 1he :.71 It 1i me in Ill&lt;'
hugl"' Lo:o=:: An gPlrs Co l\ s(' Um .
UC'L;\ 's B l' u l n s. ll' it h All ·

ha s los t sigh! of its aea dC'mi c
missio n by t•m pha sizin g " thlr ti c
s uccess.
"I be li eve ve ry strong ly the
challc ngP at Ohio S1&lt;1 tr Univrr
sil y and ail of ou r statr• run
edu ca ti onal institu l lons is f irs t
~tn c! forPmoM a cadr·mlcs. Tha i
('(l l'lo lnly Js whflrr our" rPsourcC's
~~~· ,. goin g ... wP spp 1ha 1 as a
r·h.aiiPtlg,..," Cc!C'!-.IC sui d .
"Foo tba ll stories will ro m e
and ~o . F.vcn fo r 01110 Sial &lt;'.
altllough I here arc some w l1o still
ilw anrJ die wit h foo tb"tl, th e
Jong·l tt rm mi ss ion of !hal univer·sJ l yc l e(.lr ly l.O.:. bo th 1o(•nl1a ,.Jc&lt;• 11H.1
qu alit y of it s acMlf"'m fc progTams
and IO rn sure GICCPSS.r:; t O ltl OFW
programs .
"My un dC'I'Sia ndln ~ is llwl i~
fa r· an d away lhP ovrrrl d lngcon ccr n at th e universi ty," h0

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

T 0 · s00·ners. Nebraska I·s too much

Tom Osborne's 15 seasonS as

lhC'i r bE'S!

his o.; talc 's r•ducutional sys tem

1\uh "rh u i'IIIMI

\'rJ.,I n~ lll •l~luu

.., .. ", rt ·I t I

lrstr sa id , "Don' ! go Into
coac hin g. ··
"Colng int o coaching is a lol
I ik&lt;' got ng In to politics ," he sa Id.
Ce leste sa ld he dors not beliPvr

l'&lt;rllwt'l "" l njttl'•• olll ~l. llt 'l h111 t•d ,,.,.,,,., ;,

I ,I•' 1. !\

"

of Bru('f''s wi nning rl'CO nl . CC'·

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lt .ay llldlllrll ~un : 111 1 ~""r d Mnrk ltldh·D
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)ItoIIIII&gt; - o\dl•·ul o•!L l(llUf!l 1\ &lt;'lld llrt vi~:
,.11.1\i•d (ll:trll c\1 \\&lt;loitl
h1di 1U111 - l' loto•t•d MIWirt! S t lilt ,'i kllt ·~ Ill\

'''''•·I'•'
til•'
I' m ri• ·k 11 1\l~lo n

hd.&lt;IIIIPh•

a mC'ssng0 to youngsler!' In Ji g: ht

1\;o~lo...tl•iol l

111 .., ..,.,,,,,.,.11111,

MIIIMl (UP ! ) - Th e T oled o
night: with as few dlstrac tions as
Roc kets arc not high .on th e
possible."
third-ranked Miami Hurrica nes'
. Miam i looked sluggish against
li st of priorities this week. .
·
Virginia Tech and th e Hu rriSur&lt;&gt;, th e HurriCa nes say
canes were embarrassed with
they're wor ri ed about this week 's
I hll final mal'gin or victory.
ga me with Tol edo In the Orange
"We had such a poor perl orBowl. but with the Rockets
mance against V,i rginia Tech, so
spor·ting a 3·6·1 record and the
we' re looking forward to going
game not even l isted by odds·
out on the field and provi ng we're
makers. It Is hard to tak e them
better than we looked .• , sa id
ser low;ly.
1
quarterback Steve Wal sh. "Bul
Before playing Toledo Satur·
we're not looking to put up 100
day night, the Hurr icanes will
points or ' anything . we·re just'
officially accept a bid to play i n
golng out to win ..,
the Orange Bowl against the
..It's in theb ackofou t mlnds,"
and Michele Laughery. Third row - Monica Adams, Michael
PERFECT SEASON - The SVAC champion Eastern Eagles Jr.
Nebras
ka·Ok
iah
oma
winner.
Walsh
said, " but we know we
Smith, Danney Shorl, Mike Hollman," Tim Bissell, Brent Halley.
111gb Football Team posled a perfect 8·0 record this season under
The
Hurricanes
also
are
begin·
have
a
long way to get to that
Jay Swain, Charlie Francis, Chad Savoy, and Tiffany Gardner.
head Collch Dennis Eichinger and assL•tanl Jim llayman.
ut seve nth·
point ...
ning
to
think
abo
Back row - Susie Francis. Jeremy Cline, Todd Marcinko, Brad
Plclured ar~ members of this year's championship team and
The first step on the way is
ra nked NotrP D a me, who they
Powell, James McDaniel, Tim Michael, CoaehJim Jlayman, Steve
members of the cheo!rleadlng sttuad. Front, l·r, Tracey Murphy,
will
play
Nov.
28
on
national
Toledo
. .John so n sa id that while
Barnett, Rod Newsome, Jeff Durst. Phillip Woods , Wes Holler, and
Lelllla Jlulslngcr, Carrie Gillilan, Chastldy Mlllhone. Second row
te levision. Mi ami hasn' t pla yed a
the Hurrica nes played a! less
Tina Connolly. Absent from plcl ure was head Coach Dennis
-;- .rulle ltllllc, Kevin Klein, Scott Burke, Joe Marcinko, Rickie
nationally ranked team si nce
than full inten si ty against Virgl ·
Causey,
Parker, Rrh&lt;n Long, Robbie Calaway. Mike
Newland.
Eichinger .
.
.
defeating Florida Stat e Oct. 3,
nia Tech, they were no t as bad as
although the Hurricanes did
the media made them outlo be.
str uggle against VIrginia Tech
"We have played better,'' he
before winnin g 27· 13 last
sa ld, .. but t heobjectofthega m e
Saturday.
is to go out and win. and we won. 1
7
By MaJ . Amos Jllloople
Stale 12
Mis siss ippi 36 Mi ss is sippi Slate Sou th Carolina 28 Clem son 24
Throw all tlt ese fac tors to ·
guess people have go tten.so used
Wizard of Odds
Fullerton State 21 Montana 17
28
Stanford 26 Ca li fornia 18
ge t her, and suddenl y coach
to winnin g here t hat a close
Furman 38 Citadel 7
Mis souri 31 Kan sas 7
Syracuse 42 Wes t Virginia 2l
Jimmy Johnson is concerned the
victory is cause for concer n. The
Egad , frlond s! Thl.' Is lhl•weok
Illinois 35 Northwestern 20
Nebraska 31 Oklahoma 27
T ennessee 35 Kentucky 28
Hurricanes. 8·0, will be thinking
only thing I care about is winning
you've been waiting fo r. By
fndlana 24 Purdue 21
North Ca rolina 35 Duke 17
T exas 28 Baylor 10
more abou t bowl bids and future
the ball game. I don•t care If we
sundown Saturday, mos t or the
Towa 37 Minnesota 18
Na1re Dame :J8 Penn Sta te 24
Texa s Tech 30 Houston 20
opponents th an Toledo.
win by four or 40 points. I j ust
ro llegr foolball bowls will have
Lehigh 28 La l aye tt e 20
Oklahoma State 42 Tow a State 14 Texas A&amp;M 29 Texas Chr istian 22
" I I hink there i s a real danger want to wi n.
made fh~ l r rl10!rPs . Bu t , l)cforc
Orego n .18 Oregon Sta te 28
UCLA 42 Southern Cal 24
of' his team lookingpa st Toledo ,
"As much as some people may
L ong Bea ch State 24 Utah State
the bids go oui, lhNe m·r some
12
Pennsylvania 28 Dartm ou th l4
Va nderbilt 30 Mar y land 23
Johnson said Tuesday . " The be surprised, we were ex tremely
cr ucia l games to be played.
Louisiana State 35 Tu l ane 17
Pittsbur gh 49 Kent Stat e 17
Vlrglqia 38 Nor th Carolina Stale
main thing we·ve go t to do is be pleased In the ball game with
1'hc .. Game ol t he Year" will
Memphis Stat ~ :1 t Tuls a 25
Prine! on ]7 Cornell lO
20 .,
totally prepared/ for Toledo. Virginia Tech, in that we notched
be played In Lin co ln, Nob., where
Miami (Florid a 1 5(; Toledo 14
Richmord 21 Willi am &amp; Mar y 8
Virg ini a Tech 32 Cincin nati 28
We've got to make sure we do No. Sin the victory column. 1 was
I he Nebrasl&lt;a Co rnhu skoJ·scnt cr·
Michigan 28 Ohio Sta te 24
f\utgcr s 27 Temple l4
Wake ~'crest 22 Georgia Tech 18
everything possible in practice just happy to get the victory and
taln the Oklahoma Sooners (on
so_w_e_g:_o_ln_t_o_lh_e._:.g_am_e_S_a_t_u_rd_a..:Y__g_e_t_o_n_to_th_e_n_ex_t_b_a_I_J.:g_a_m_e_
·._··_
CBS-TV). Tho collision wil l prob· ,_.:M:..:.:.Ic:.:h;:.;l::.~a:.:n;;.;:S.;.ta::.t:.:e_.~:::3_W:.:..::Is:::c:.:o;:.;nc::.sl::.n:.c1:..:4:....._s.,.a_n_D__:Ie.::g.;.u.::S..:ta::.t.::e..:4.::2.:.N..:e.;.w_M::.:.:e.:.:x.:.:lc:.:o:..:l..:4_Yalr 28 Harva,r'-'d:_.=:24!.....-_ _ _ _ _ _
ably register 8.0 on tho Richter
scnlf&gt;!
'
Going Into the Big Eight lit le
cla sh, either Oklahoma or Nc·
brusku Is No. 1 in rushing, tot al
offense. scor ing and ru shin g
defen se. How' s that roo' being
evenly matched.
And on I he s lldcllnes arc two of
the finest coaches In the hlsiory
of the game. fn 15 Y&lt;'ars at th e
helm . Oklahoma·s Barry Switzer·
lws won 146, lost 25 and tied 4. In

Har-rumph

HOLE fN ONE - Anyone who hits a t.ole-ln-one 111 Mason'!
ntverslde Golf Course can lotJll forward to receiving" gold putter
lrom Jim (;obb Chcvroh,t-atdsmohllc:catllllac Inc. ol Pomeroy.
Jlere, ,ltm Cobh, at lt~lt, owner of lhe Pomeroy auto dealership,
presents a plltler to Rev. Warren Bass, olllarl!ord, W.Va., lor hl~
St'pt. 21 hole-In-one on No.4 ut the Mason course.

Page 5

UT hopes to .catch
Miami off guar~

.nm

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'" '' '' ""
"' ' "
"' •' '' ...
•' ' ' "

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

109-88

top9

.. Celeste praises Bruce, Iawa wants him back

Scoreboard ...

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

,.

�•

•

_,

Page- 6- The Daily Sentinet-

Announcements
Revival
A revival is ·und erway ihrough
Sunday, 7 p.m. each night. ai I he
Pomeroy Church o! the Nazarene. Evangelist is David Ca nfit&gt;ld. Featured singers are Jim
and Cathy Sisson. ·
Co uncil to M eet
Syracuse Village Council will
meet 7 p.m. Th!lrsday . at the
village ha lL The house numbering project will be discussed.

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Court news

Hospital news

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

Eleve n de!endanis were fined
and two others forfeited bonds in
the court or Middleport Ma yor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Kenneth
R. Le.esburg. St. Clairsville. $450.
driving while intoxicated, a nd
Samuel L. Bennett. Gallipolis,
$450, re.ckless operation.
Fined were James L. See,
Middleport, $25 and costs, disor-

derly manager: 1\'ayne Fi sher.
Middleport. S250 and cos t ~ and a
10 day suspended jail s e nten c~ .
having a pit bull on a \&lt;'ash but
wi thou t a muzzle: Michael L.'.
Conley, Portland. $25 and costs.
stea ling tires: Vicky Quillen,
Middleporr. a nd Mickey J. Schartiger, Middlepor t, each .$25 a nd
costs. disorderly manner: James
L. Cra mer. Middleport, $10 and

c o~t s.

expired lice nse: Kenneth
F'.· Mit cheli. Langsville, $100 a"d
rosts, possession of a controll ed
' ubstan cc: $"425 and three days in
jail, driving while intoxicated,
and $100 and costs, dri ving while
under suspension: Lance T .
Herma n. Middleport, $425 and
costs, three days In jail, driving
while intoxicated, and $25 and

·costs, no ppera tor's license:
William D. Whittington. Pomeroy. $10 and costs, ex pired
license: Jerry L. Johnson, Mid·
dieport, $425 and costs, and ihree
days in jail, driving while intoxi·
cated: $100 and costs, driving
while under suspension: David
Tyree. Middleport, $10 and costs,
expired plates.

.

.

~---Local news----~
CUe driver after accident

·Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Adm issions- Gladys
Parfitt, Pomeroy; Charles Fri·
ley, Pomeroy; Avis Lawson,
Middleport: Maria Pellagrlno,
Tuppers Plains .
Tuesday Discharges - Rose
Curry, Leland Saxton, Ruth
Monk, Jacqueline Jewell.

'

WIC dates are announced

EMS receives six culls

BU:YONE

U.S. GRADE A 17-LBS. AND UP

FRITO LAY

_Frozen Young
Turkeys

6-CT. REGULAR OR SOUR DOUGH

Kroger
English Muffins

Rold Gold
Pretzels

Pound

!1-oz.

GET ONE

•

FREE!

$1
sgc
lb•.

FROZEN

Kroger
Pie Shells ......... 1o-oz.

ADVERTISED ITEM I'IILtCY
Each of th ese advenised items is required to be readily
available for sale in each Kroger Sto re, except as
specifically nOled ln this ad. If we do run out of an
advertised item, we will offer you your choice of a
comparable item, when available, reflecting the same
savings or a ra in check which will entitle you to purchase
the advertised item at the advertised price within 30
days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item
piJrchased .

REYNOLD 'S

••

•

Mark Alan Harrison, entered voluntary pleas of guilty to two
charges of tra fficking in drugs when he appeared earlier this
week in Meigs County Common Pieas Court.
Harrison was sentenced by Judge Charles Knigh t to a one
year determinate sentence in the Orient Correction Reception
Center for the first charge of seJUng cocaine, a nd a six mon th
determinate sentence ai Orient for ihe second charge of selling
marijuana .
Both sentences are be be served' concurrently beginning
January 5.
"
In other couri matters. Farmers Bank and Savings Company
was awarded a $30,071.21 judgment from Lester Shoemaker, et
al, in a foreclosure action for properties in Rutland Township,_
Bv order of the· court, Wilford C. Hill, defendant in an action
filed · by Milo B. Hutchinson and Betty Ann Hutchinson,
relinquished his right, titlE! ·and interest to the plaintiffs in a
·
lease for oil and gas wells.
Sabina Farmers Exchange Inc. of Sabina ha s filed suit
against Dan Smith, Racine, for a judgment of $4,740.60. .
An action by .Jonathan Scott, e t al, against Scott D. Haube-r,
has been dismissed.

16-0Z. REGULAR OR RIPPLE COUNTRY
OVEN POTATO CHIPS .. . $1.69

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE !SERVES 81
COMPLETE JUST HEAT &amp; SERVE

Turkey Dinner

•10-12~~-

Avg. Weight Turlctyo2~bs. Drilling
Gravyo2~ba. Grnn O..ns
Roh•1~b. Cranberry Relish

•2-ib. Giblet
•12 Dinner

Will Be Open
8:00am-4:00pm

Place Orders By Nov. 21st. And Receive
A FREE 10" Pumpkin Pie
•.

•
.· .

Roasting Pan
With Rack ............. 1-ct.

!~~~~y~H!~~~~~Ios~~y
. Stores Re-Open Friday Nov . 27th . At
7 :00arr. &amp; Resume Norma\ Hours

SMALL REYNOLD'S ROASTING PAN 2 FOR $1.00

HONEY WHITE OR REGULAR
CRACKED OR 100% WHOLE

Springdale
2% Milk

16-oz.

Gallon

38

•

For

I&lt; roger Vac Pak Coffee .................. ..

3-lb.

REG ULAR OR UN SALTED

I{ roger
. Saltines ..... ........... ............. .... 16-oz.
Cost Cutter Whit~ Bread ...............
.. 16-oz .
•
REGULAR OR LOWFAT

'

Kroger Cottage Cheese ................ :.. 24-oz ..
NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE

.·

Big I&lt; Soft Drink ............................... . 2-Ltr .

$499

sgc
25c
ggc
sgc

12-PAK 12-0Z. CAN S . . . $1 .97

California
Celery
Stalk

FROZEN MOUN TAIN TOP

Real Old Fashion
Pumpkin Pie.
26-oz.

(

Area deaths

Robert Smith
Robert' K. Smith, Sr. , 73,50641
State Route 338, Racine, died
Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Hospi ta l following an extended
. illness.
A miilwr!ght , Mr . Smilh was
born March 11, 1914 a l Homestead, Pa .. a son of the late Lewis
and Elizabeth Frye Smith. He
was a member of the Apple
Grove Uniled Methodist Church
and the United Steelworkers
Union.
Surviving are his wife. the Rev.
Florence Smith, four sons, Ro bert K. Smith, Jr .. and William L.
Smith, both of Millva le, Pa.:
· MartinJ . Derou in , WillowStreet,
Pa., and Joseph E. Derouin,
Millvale, -Pa.; two daughters,
Mrs. Jerry M. (Dorothy! John son, Racine, and Mrs. James E.
tCaroil Freeman. Romeo,
Mich.: eighi gra nd so ns. 11
granddaughters, ihree · grea tgra ndsons , two-g reat granddaughters: a· sister, Mrs . Vern
Rosser, West Mifflin , Pa., and
severa l nieces and nephews.
Besides hi s parent s. he was
preceded in death by his first
wife, Marie Smith, three broth·
ers and two sisters.
Services wi ll be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral
. Home with the Rev. Roger Grace
officia ting. Buirial wili be in
Lqtart Falls Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 a nd 7 to 9 p.m., both on
Wednesday and Thu rsda y ..

Charles Gotschall

I

encouraged to contact the Pomeroy Chamb er so that choirs can
perform preceding the parade.
Those interested should contact
the chamber at 992-5005. Santa
will visit with child ren in the
Pomeroy mini -park following the
parade.
Those wishing to. take part in
th e Middleport and Pomeroy
parade are asked to complete the
~cco mpan ying for m.

MIDDLEPORT·PO~IEROV

20%
SAVINGS

. :.J

..

·usE OUR LAYAWAY PlAN
The very newest ladies watches from Europe.
Swiss craftsmanship. tested accuracy to within one
minute per year. gold tone and stainless steel cases
and bands. Davos watches come with the
~ _
exclusive two year warranty.

COMPLETE SELECTION OF ~ :
BULOVA, CARAVELLE &amp; PULSAR
SAVE

CHRISTMAS PARI\D)&gt;

20°/o

~

Theme: "Home tor the Holiday s"
Live remote from WMPO Radio

~~~~meroy

NAME -----------------------------------1\DDRESS ____________________
~--------~-

.

..

.

PHONE -----------------------------------TYPE OF ENTRY ------------------------c------Send to : Pomeroy Chamber of Commerce

Phone: 99H05ll

216 W. Main, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

DRY CLEANING SPECIAL

burial in Standish Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral ·
home from 7 to 9 p.m. on
Wednesday.

To end marriages
Catherine McGraw,' Portland ,
)las filed for a divorce in Meigs
Co unt y Common P leas Couri
from Cha rles C. McGraw .
Wellston.
James R. Reeves, Cheshire,
and Emily S. Reeves , Cheshire,
and Cynthia Ann Hayes, Middleport. and John Gregory Hayes,
Middleport, have filed for dissolutions of their mar

AT THE FABRIC SHOP
SPECIAL ENDS NOV. 25

Get Ready for Cold Weather Have Your· Sweaters Cleaned at

_2 5°/o Off Regular Price

lhe FABRIC SHOP

110 W. Main
Pomeroy, Ohio 992-2284

KRISP &amp; SERVE VAC. PACK

Sliced Bacon.:••••••••••w.!.K.&lt;t.•• S1.29
SUPERIOR

Big Red Bologna ..•.•....•.•..t}•••• 99&lt;
SHREDDED lb.- S2.39 :

SWIFT ECKRICH

·Virginia Baked

Ham ....... Sliced lb. $2. 19

HOMEMADE

M·l!at

s·alad .................................~@••••••••••• 89&lt;

Cleaning by:
Classic Cleaners
KRAFT 16 SltCI PIMENTO

PROCESSED
CHEESE ..............!?.?.~: s1.89
BLUE BONNET

MARGARINE .
QUARTERS •.•.••••••.••!:!l&gt;-••• 79&lt;
HOMEMADE

CHEESE SPREAD ••••~t s1.89

HEAD
LETTUCE .•••....•••.••• .?Ul.69&lt;
ID LB. BAG .

IDAHO BAKING
POTATOES ................ 51.69 :
FANCY WHIT£

SWEET POTATOES .UL69&lt;

BIRDS-EYE

.6 BIG DAYS OF SAVINGS
NOV. 19 20 &amp; 21 and NOV. 23, 24 &amp; 25

Cool Whip .••••••••.••..•~.~~·••........ 99&lt;
·MRS. PAUL'S

Fish Sticks ••...•...~ .••••U.~!•••.• S2 .S 9
CAMPBELL'S CREAM OF

Chicken Soup ..........~~~~P.z.-.. 2 /99&lt;
BUSH'S

l~RGE

Lima Beans ...•••.•.•...~t~~. 2fS1.1 S
SCOTLAND

...

Char les V. Gotschall. 83, of
Bradenton, Fla .. formerly ?f
Meigs Couni y, dted Sund ay tn
Bradenton, Fla .
A retired carpen ter. Mr. Gotsc hall was born July 14, 1904 in
Harrlsonviile to the late Charles
Add ison and Emma Carpenter
Goischall .
Survivors include three daughters, Juanitll Clark and ,Nancy K.
"'Merrill, both of Baltimore , Md.,
and Janet Grimes of Bradenton,
Fla.: 11 grandchildren and seven
great grandchildren.
Besides his parents, Mr. Gotsc hall was preceded in death by
his wife, Ollie Mae Jacks Gotschall, and one son, Hallie
Gotsc hall.
Services will be 1 p.m. Thursday at Ewing Funearl Home with

for

Sunday, Nov. 29, 1987
Fonnlng al 12:30 - So. 2nd, Middleport

I

YOUR FRIENDLY GALLIPOLIS KROGER

Kroger
Wheat Bread
•

then to Sycamore, to Second St. ,
and to the !Ire house where it will
disband.
Court St. in Pomeroy wili be
closed. Following 'the parade,
trophies will be presented to the
selected groups. Groups doing
performances are encouraged to
remain and perform on Court St.
as the parade will not be stopping
enroute to·permit performances .
Church choirs -.re also beihg

Harrison pleads guilty
LIMIT 1 PER FAMILY WITH $15.00
ADDITIONAL PURCHA SE

k

Middleport ... Cont inued rrom page 1

Racine Viilage. Council ha s announced that no residents
· should dump limesto ne, gravel or other fiil material between
village streets and the sidewalk without permission from Street
Commissioner Glenn Rizer: or by submitting a request to
village ·council.
Much grading has ta ken place in the village to alleviate
dra inage problems, so an adequate amount of material must be
removed before other ma terial, such as gravel, may be added.
In the future, other areas where the adjoining soil or berm is
highter than the highway, will be graded .

KROGER DEEP DISH PIE SHELLS 12-0Z. 95¢
.
.
.
HERRUD ROYAL CROWN
WHOLE

Semi-Boneless
Smoked Ham ........

.

Racine Council issues reminder

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES .
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .

Friday through Sunday
Mostly cloudy today , with a
A· chance of snow flurrie s
chance or showers a!ld highs
between 45 and 50. Partly cloudy , Friday and Saturday and a
tonight, with a low between 30 chance of showers" on Sunday in
and 35. Partly cloudy Thursday , the northeastern part of . the
state, With fair weather elsewith highs in the mid 40s .
The probability of precipita- where in the stale. Highs will be
tion is 30 percent today and near between 35 and 40 Friday and
Saturday and ranging from the
zero tonight and Thursday .
upper 40s to the low 50s Sund ay .
Winds will be from the west at
Overnight lows will be in the 20s
15 to 25 mpn and gusty today and
Friday and Saiurda)' mornings
from the west at .10 10 20 mph
and
near 30 early Sunday.
tonight.

Issued license

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six cails
Tuesday: Pomeroy at 9 a. m . to Mulberry Ave. for Uila-Rice to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 11:56 a.m. to the
Americare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Char les F'riley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital: Middleport Fire Department at
3:23p.m. to a structure lire at the Mohler residence on Watson
Grove Road in Cheshire Township; Pomeroy at 3:·35 p.m. to
Park St. for Barb Bolin to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 9:51p.m. io Bradbury Road for Wilma Chapman
· who was treated but not transPorted; Rutland at 9:58p.m. to
Cooks Gap Hill for Julia Moodispaugh to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.

------We@ther - - - - - Court
News
.
l
Ohio Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
Se\:en were fined and 12 others
on a charge of petty theft, and

S

The Meigs Coun ty Department of Health announces the WIC
coupon pickup dates for December.
·
Pickup days are Dec. 1, 2 and 3. Makeup days are Dec. 7. 14
and 21. Hours for the pickup of coupons are 9 to 11 a.m. and I. to3
p.m.
Immunization days lor December are Dec. 15 and 29. Hours
are 9 to 11 a.m. and I to 3 p.m.

COPYRIGHT 1987 · THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY , NOV. ·ts, THROUGH
SATURDA Y, NOV . 21, 1987, IN !alLIPOIISANDPO MEI DYSTOU$

I

forfetted _bond s m the court of $163 for failure to comply with
Mayor Rtchard Seyler Tuesday · author ities by providi ng propt.r
mght.
identification .
Fi ned were J une Opal Johnson,
Also fined were William EaPomeroy . . $43 a nd costs, for kins, Pomeroy , $113 and co sis,
public intoxicalion: Shawn Tayopen mg her door in iraffic
st nkmg anot her car . and $50 and lor, Reynoldsburg, $44 and costs,
costs for no financial responsibil- speeding: a nd Thomas J. Riity; Ken neth Brown, Pomeroy, chardson, Pomeroy, $4~ and
fined $375 and cos ts on a charge costs, assured clear distance.
of DWJ; Mi chael Tillis, fin ed $63
Forfeiting bonds on speeding
and costs for no operaiors license charges were Ronald Holter,
~ nd $375and costs driving·wh lle
Racine, $45; Nancy Hayes,
Pomeroy, $47; Robert Lawrence.
mtox1cated.
Clarence E. McDa niel, Jr., $45; Betty Hoffman, Rutland:
Larry Rutter, Pomeroy, $46;
Rutla nd . was fin ed $213 and costs
Kristi Chapman, Rutland, $44;
(OC S ·
Kathleen Luebbert, The Plains,
Daily stock prices
$45; Sharon Johnson, Racine.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
$46; Roy A, Holter, Pomeroy,
1
·8ryce and Mark Smith
$45.
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Ot her forfei tin g bonds were
Am Electric Power ............. 25% Anna Obitz, Racine, $43 on
AT&amp;T .. .. .. .. ......................... 28'4
failure to maintain assured clear
Ashland Oli ...................... .. 5P,i d istance: Roger Clark, Racine,
Bob Evans ........................... 16
$375, DWI; Gena 'Philson, RaCharm!ng Shop pes ............. .13% cine, expired plates, $63.
City Holding co ........ .. ........ 34
Federal Mogul. ........ :.... ; .. ... 31%
Marriage licenses have been
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48%
issued in Meigs County Probate
Heck's Inc ........................... 2~ Court to Jack Alan Hannan , 26,
Key Centurion .......... .. . ,...... 36'4
Middleport. and Trina GaleBowLa'nds' End ......... ... .. ........... l4 ~
ers, 20, Middleport : Calvin D:
Pickens, 35, Racine, and Kaaron
Limited Inc ................ ,....... 19 \1.1
K. Hatfield , 3i, Racine: James
Multimedia Inc ..... .... .. .. ... .. .44~
Rax Restaurants ........ .......... a% Arthur McDonald , 22, Rutland,
Robbins &amp; Myers .. .... ........... 7Y,
and Teresa Renee Rathburn, 20,
Shoney's Inc .............. . ...... .. 20% Rutland; James Edward Baer,
Wendy's Inti. ............... .... ... .5'%
38, Pomeroy, and Rebecca Ann
Worthington Ind ................. .16% Co tterill, 33, Middleport.

A Pomeroy woman was cited in an accident Tuesday. at 10:15
a.m., In Salisbury Township at the inter,section of County Roads
25 and 26, according to the Galiia-Meigs Post of the· Slate
Highway Patrol.
• Mona P. Knapp, 40. of Flaiwoods Road, Pomeroy, was cited
for failure io yield after her car was hit by a car driven by Floyd
K. Rupe, 25, of Rutland.
.
Knapp was driving north on Co unty Road 25 as Rupe was
traveling west in County Road 26. Knapp failed to yie ld as she
drove from lhe sto p sign at the'intersection. As a result , Rupe's
car hit Knapp's car.

Go Krogering For All Your Holiday Needs

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pomeroy- Middleport , Ohio

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

Sliced Peaches ••••••...~t~~ •.... $1.19
ROYAL PRINCE
17 oz. .
97&lt;
Yams •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
DEL MONTE WHOLE

-

Wax -Beans •••.•..•.•••..~t~t 2fS1.39
Quaker Oats •••••••••..•.•. ~ ..... S1.4 9
Bounty Towels ••••.•..~~~t~•• 2}$1.39

.

HARTLEY SHOES
MAn VANVRANKEN· OWNER
210 EAST MAIN ·

992-5272

HORMEL CANNED

POMEROY

Lunch Meat-. .•••••.••.•.~t~t .... S2 .19
Dream Whip •••.•••••• M.~!••..• $1.89
Hi-C Drinks ...••••••.. ~.1~.~t .... $1.1·,

�.
Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy

;.......,,y, Nowm"" 18,

w~nesday. November 18, 1987

Middleport, Ohio

"They attacked me. They Jon Lester and Scott Kern, both
came at us," he replied.
18, are charged w!th second·
Pirone and Jason La ctone, 16, degree llUlrder. Ladone, Lester
arc charged wit h second-degree and Kern also are charged with
manslaughter In Griffith's death. assaulting Sandlford.
black men in the predominately asked.
white middle-class neighborhood ,------,------_.:.:.:.:::.:....:.....:::._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _....:::._ _ _ _ _ _ __
in Queens.
Sandlford. 37, was scheduled to
resume his testlmogy today in
Ta~le
the state Supreme Co urt in
Queens.
All four you ths are charged In
the death of Michael Griffith, 23,
the black man who fled onto a
highway where he was struck by
a car and k!lled. Three of the
defendants also are charged with
assaulting Sandlford. The third
black man, Timothy Grimes, 19,
escaped unharmed.
The three men , whose car had
broken down on the outskirts of
Howard Beac h, stopped to eat at
a pizzeria and e ncoun tered 'the
youths armed with sticks and a
baseball bat wh en they stepped
TeleRora's
Send the FTD0
outside, Sandiford testified.
Country Basket Bouquets
Harvest Bowl'" Bouquet.
"Did the group of white youth s
charge you•" as ked defense
lawyer Stephen Murphy , whose
client, Michael Pirone, 18, .is
charged only In Griffith's death.
. "They say 'nlggers, get ... out
of the neighborhood' and they hit
Polneroy, Ohio
106 Butternut
992-2039
me," Sandlford, an illegal alien
from Guyana, told the court.
" Who moved first?" Murphy

black companion on a highway .
"They came at us." Cedric
Sandlford said Tuesday in his
second day of testimony at the
trial of four youths accused of the
Dec. 20, 1986, attack on the three

Former speaker
is in good spirits
for surgery today
BOSTON (UP!)- Doctors say
they are optimistic retired House
Speaker Thomas P. " Tip"
O'Neill Jr. will fully recover
· from surgery for rectal cancer
because the tumor ha s appar·
ently not spr ead.
O'Neill's spirits remained g9o&lt;)
as he prepared for the surgery ·
today , and cards and flowers
continued to pour in from across
the country, a hospital spokeswoman said.
"The speaker is still in good
spirits, he's ·optimistic and has
been resting comfor tably." said
Kathleen O'Donnell of Brigham ·
&amp; Women's Hospital.
She said O'Neill had received
''lots of well wishes from every·
where." In the form of cards and
flowers .
Doctors said tney were "quite
· optimistic" that O'Neill will
recover after surgery because
the ca ncer has not spread.
The tumor was found in
O'Neill 's lower rectum at the
bottom of the colon in a series of
tests last week at Sibley Memor·
ial Hospi ta l in Washington.
O'Neill, 74. who retired last
year after 34 years in the House
of Representatives. " under ·
stands our decisions and what
has to be accomplished," sa id
Dr. Richard Wilson, chief of
surgical oncology at Brigham
and Women's Hospital a nd th e
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute.
. Cancer of the rectum or colon

is considered the most common
form of the Illness. with 140.000
cases diagnosed nationwide ·in
1986, according to the American
Cancer Society. Between 80 per·
cent of those diagnosed with
rectal cancer ca n be expected to
recover.
O'Neill served 10 ·years at
House speaker. A book of hi s
political memoirs, titled "M~ n of
The House," was published In
September .

This Holiday Set The

Ohio

.

THANKSGIVING

EASTMAN'S.: Your Independently Owned

Howard Beach victim said he was charged at
By BARBARA GOLDBERG
N.EW Y6RK (UP!) -A black
&gt;urvlvor of the Howard Beach
attack testified that white youths
charged with murder and mans·
laughter initiated the violence
that resulted In the death of his

. 2 ...,y- Middleport,

1987

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Inspired by a real-life
incident. "Blue Jean Cop" tells
the story of New }'ark's
underground economy and the
potentlal for police corruption
th,at stems from it .
Baker, the daughte&amp;,of actress
Carroll Baker, has appeared In
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"Raw Deal." "French Post ·
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Seduction of Joe Tynan."

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"Over the last several years
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Hypertriglyceridemia Is a dis·
order in which the fatty acid
triglyceride circulates in the
blood in abnormal levels. It is
inherited in some people, while
others develop it for reasons ye t
unexpla ined by medical
research.
Scientists have found that
people afflicted with "the condi·
tion can develop excruciatingly
painful inflammation of t,lle pan creas. the organ responsible for
secreting digestive enzymes and
the hormone insu lin.
The condition can be controlled
by diet and medication, but
capsules of fish oil can prove
harmful, Harris ~id.
"Using reasona ble levels of
fish oil had reverse effects in
.patients we slud ied," ·he said.
Fish oil typically lowers levels
of low·density lipoprotein, LDL,
in normal people.
People participating in th e
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middle-age men and women who
were required to take 12 caps ules
of fish oil dietar.y supplement
daily .

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MIDDLEPORT 992-2635

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.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Wednesday, November 18, 1987
Page-10

'·

Flower show winners Walking
( Through a Winter Wonderland
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH
The annual holld'a y flower
show of the Me igs County Garden
Cl ubs Association lived up to its
theme, " Walkin g in a Winter
Wonderland."
There were unique arrangements in both modern and
traditiona l design, attractive
wrea ths and swags, dn exte nsive
display ol homemade madonnas
by Betty Dean, orname nts
created from nature. a nd petted
plants and berried branches
galore.
Exhibitors and visitors alike,
even as temperatures soared into
the 70's, left the Senior Cit izegs
Center where the show was held
with "that special Chr istmas
feeling.
Melanie Stethem and Sheila
Taylor were co-chairma n of the
show which had more than 250
entries. Arrangements with cotorful balls and ba ubles, black·
light des igns, others depicting
motion, some with figurines, toys
and treasured wood were
inc luded.
__
Special awards went to Sheila
Curtis, best of show, with J udy
Snowden rec ieving th e reserve
best of show. Mrs. Stethem with
her blacklight design won the
• creativity award , while Miriam
• Taylor's wreat h was the winner
of the award of disti nct ion. Suzy
:Carpenter with her specimens
accum ulated enough awards to
~

win

the

hort ic ultur e

£weeptsta kes.
.: In the junior classes Lisa
Stet hem won the junior best of
:s how while Zachary Bolin took
•t he junio r hor t iculture
:sweepstakes.

Artistic Arrangements
Jn the artistic arra ngements
division the winners, listed first
through fourth respectively,
were as follows:
' Wonderful "Way to Give .
Thanks'", in a cornucopia : Shelia
Taylor, Melanie Stet hem, Marge
Purtell , and Debbie Ball .
"Wishbone Wishes'" , tradl·
tiona! Thanksgiving design : Pea: .
rle Canaday, Kathryn John'Son,
Lisa Stethem , a nd Allee
Thomoson.
"Winter Walk" , mass design:
Judy Snowden, Suzy Carpenter,
Alice Nease, and Sl)ella Horky.
'"W hirling Winds", modern
showing motion : full size, Pat
Holter , Ruth Erwin, Kathryn
Johnson. and Jo Hill ; miniature, ·
Evelyn Hollon, Ruth Erwin.
Me lanie Stethem, and Shelia
Taylor.
" Whims ica l a nd Wonderful ",
blacklight design: Melanie Ste·
them , Shelia Tay lor, Pat Holter,
and Peggy Crane.
" Win ter's Wand". tall line
design: Betty Milhaon , Lori
Barnes, Shelia Curtis, and Ruth
Erwin.
" Winter Weekend" , still life:
Melanie Stethem, Sheila Curtis,
Sheila Taylor, and Addalou
Lewis .
'' Waiting and Watching" , in·
eluding evergreens: Pat Holter .
Peggy Crane, Suzy Carpenter,
a nd Jo Hill.
"Wacky Waterever", pop art:
She lla Taylor, Betty Milhoan,
Melanie Stethem, and Pat
Holter.
"Woodland Window" , featured
treasured wood: full size, Pau·
line Atkins, Sheila Taylor: Adda·

lou Lewis, Evelyn Hollon; minia·
ture, Sheila Taylor, Melanie
Stethem, no third, a nd Peggy
Cra ne, fourth .
"Wander ing Wizards" , using
two containers: Shelia Curtis,
Evelyn Hollon, Betsy Horky , and
Ruth Erwin.
" Wa iting World", including a
madonna: tra ditional , Sheila
Curtis, Melanie Stethem. Judy
Snowden, and Ruth Erwin; mod·
ern, Sheila Taylor, Melanie Ste·
them,. Pat Holter, and 'Alice
Thopson; and miniatu re, Judy
Snowden, Sheila Taylor, Evelyn
Hollon, and Melanie Stethem .
" White and Windblown" , using
artific ial snow arid glitter: Sheila
Cur tis , Iva Sisson, Evelyn Hollon
and Neva Nicholson.
'Wishes and Wan ts", junior
class, using a toy: Lisa Stethem,
Billy Crane, Zachary Bolin, and
Ben Crane.
" Wink and Whiskers " antici·
paling Santa's arrival: Lisa
Stethem , Kary Thompson. Billy
Crane, and Ben Cra ne.
Horticulture Division
Junior classes: be r ri e d
branches, Zachary Bolin, Becky
Taylor, Billy Crane, and Ben
Crane; dried roadside mat.e rlals,
Zachary Bolin , all four places.
Houseplants : foliage, Id a
Murphy, Alice Thompson, Betsy
Horky , and Maurita Miller;
blooming, Evelyn Thoma,
Evelyn Hollon, Alice Thompson, '
and Judy Snowden .
African violet: Virginia Chad·
well, fi rst and third . Alice
Thompson , Sarah Gibbs .
Christma s cactus : Judy
Snowden and Debbie Ball.
Berried branches : Suzy Car·
penter. first and second, Sheila
Horky, a nd Eva Robson .
Dried roadside materials:
Peggy Crane, Debbie Ball, Ida
Murphy, and Maurita Miller .
E yergreen branches : narrow
leaf, Eva Robson , ,'iuzy Carpen·
ter, second, third and fourth ;
broadleaf. Suzy Carpenter first
and fou rth , Sheila Horky, and
Eva Robson.
Educational
Wit and Wisdom
" Women 's Wizardry" ,
wreathes: ou tdoor, Betsy Horky,
Suzy Ca rpent er, Judy Snowden,

Poet's corner

alium and pfllm le+1ves in vib,rant colors.

:Beat of the bend

.

Remember birthdays
By 808 HOEFLICH
Two peop le you wi.W want to
remember this weekend .
Lee W. McCo·
ma s, long-ti me
s up erinte ndent
of Middl epo rt
Sc hool s a nd
later clerk of th e
•. Mei gs Loca l
· · Board of J:;ducation, will be marking his birt hday
anniversary on Saturday.! know
many admirers and former stu d:ents and associates wi ll want to
remember him. Th e address is
341 Mai n St., Middleport.
Norma Goodwio. former
: Pomeroy florist and business
· woman, will mark her birt hday
&gt;a nniversary Sunda y. I don 't need
·:eo tell you how many people
' Norma has remembered on
: special occasions over the yea rs.
-tJer address is 200 Lasley St.,
Pomeroy .

...

' Pteasenote that tJi ~ MeigsUnit

''of the American Ca ncer Society

Thanksg iving, as sc heduled at
1h e Mei gs H j g h s c h 0 0 l

•

paid In adva nce.
FlamP fellowoihip
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipclls·
Flame Fellowship Chapter will
MeetFriday,6:30p.m'., atDale's

Syracuse Church of the Naza·
rene. Evangelist Is Rev . Ron
Roth. Services begin at 7 p.m .'
Revival underway
nightly through Saturday. Sun·
PoMEROY - The Midd leport
C
s
·
·
day
services will be at. 10: 30 a.m.
1
Child Conservation League wi\1
SYRA U, E -A rev1va IS
6
meet Thursday at the home of r_:S'.!_ITl~or~g:_:a~s::::b~or:_:d~-__:::S_'::p::_ea~k~e~r__:":_:'i~ll...:::_b:_e_:u::.nd::e::r_:w..:a:::y:_t::_h::_r.::_ou:::g:h.:.__::_Su::.n::.d::.a::y_a_t__a_n_d_.:.P_·m_._· - - - - . . . : . - - Peggy Ha rris , 7:30 p.m . Helen
Blackston will have devotions
and the traveling pri ze.
Members are to take baby Items
which will be used In a coun ty
pre-natal program. Hosteses will
GALLIPOLIS
be Linda Broderick and Beckv
Broderick.
·
POMEROY

Community calenda,r
WEI)NESDAY
POMEROY
Wildwood
Garden Club will meet Wednes·
day . 7:30 p.m. , at the hom e of
Hilda Yeauger. Cindy Oliveri
will be guest speaker.

SYRACUSE -The Third Wed·
nesday Homemakers Club will
meet Wednesday aiJOa.m . at the
Syracuse Village hall. Members
are to take plastic canvas, four
ply yarn and patterns .

HARRISONVILLE
Rev .
Charles Bennington of Arizona
wil l be guest spea ker at Harri·
so nville Holiness Chapel on Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Public
invited.

POMEROY - The Meigs
Cha pter of the American Cancer
Society will hold an open board
session at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
at the Trinity Church in Pome·
roy; all Interested persons are
invited.

Bob Shackleford from Delaware,
Ohio.

-~~
~

MGM DINNER
·'
MIDDLEPORT - MGM District, Boy Scouts .of America,
recognition dinner will bj; held on
Dec. ·3 at the new American
Legon Hallin Middleport.
Reservations are to be mad e
by Nov. 27 with Lisa Roush, 33178
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
45769, or by ca lling 992-3 486. 'All
reservations of $6.50 mus t be

a·ULOVA-SEIKO-PULSAR
COLIBRE

Pocket Watches
ALL

Women's Fellowship hears attorney

NOW UNTIL
CHRISTMAS

Jennifer Sheets, attor ney,
talked on th e c hangin g rol es of
women a t a recent meeting of the
Meigs Co unty Churches of Christ
Wom en's Fellowship he ld at the
Dexter Church.

New officers Ins talled were
Sheets discussed women in
divorce, their r ights and re.spon· Jeanne tte Ca rter , ·,President;
sibilities, a long with women and Mary Lash, vice president ; Ruth
esta tes, the need for havi ng a Underwood, second vice presi·
will, and the necessity for mak- dent; Pat Thoma, secretary;
Ing arra ngements for sma ll Isadora Williams, news reporter,
childre n in the event of dea th of Marjorie P urtell. treasurer, and .
both parents . s he said that Eleanor Hoover, card chairma n.
Group singi ng of "Trust and
non-probat e property is property
which does not go through the Obey" was the opening song,
Probate Co urt, such as survlvor- with Mary Nelson giving prayer.
ship property and bank accounts. · Devotions was a responsive
To conclude her commentary reading e ntitled "Faith in
on
th e need for wills, she Christ .''
The Bashan Ladies Auxiliary
A church and Sunday school
tr
ibu t ~d pamphlets listed
dis
announced winners at th eir Haianswers 'to 14 mos t•asked q~es· growth seminar to be held at the
Iowseen party.
Rutland Church of Christ wa s
lions on wi lls .
Winning cakewa lks were John
announced
for F"rlday and Satur·
Riley, youngsters , and James
l'ay
with
Scott
Carter as the
McDani e ls, adults. Costume
Ins
truc
tor.
Thursday
night' s
winners were: Holly Rose , An·
meeting
of
the
women's
fellowthony !'&lt;utter and Crystal Baker,
Plans for a bake and pre· s hip will be held at the Pomeroy
one through three; Tara Rose,
Christmas sale a t th e g ift s hop at Church wi th each church to have
Amber Baker. Cassie Rose, four
10 a.m. ori Nov. 24 were made a special song, reading or s kit.
. through six; Robert Harris, Mike
when th e Women's Auxiliary of
There will also be a money lree
Laughery, Martie Holter, seven
Veterans Memori al Hospital met wit h a special offering to give to
through nine; Jeremy Jackson,
th ere recently.
missions. Mrs . Hoover gave the
Jeff Rose, David Smith, 10
The meeting will . also take closing prayer and those attendthrough 12; Denise Laugh ery,
place th a t sa me day at 1: 30 p.m. Ing sang" Are You Washed in the
J ea n Spencer. Tammie Capehart
The Chr istmas party was Blood."
..! ,..a nd Brenda Tu tti&lt;:. adu lts.
planned for Dec. 8 in the
Refreshments were served by
Guessing game winners were · cafeter ia .
the
)lost chu rch.
Kas Bissell, Mike Lawson, Robert Harris a nd Martie Holter.
Door prize~ went to Crissy Riley,
youngs ters. and Ca ndy Mllhone,
a dults.
Becky Pullins, auxiliary president , extended thanks to ali who
helped make the party a success .

Pendant Watches

20°/o

_BELOW
REG. PRICE

Bashan auxiliary
holds meeting

with crested celosia, scnsieveria and while pine,
while Miriam Taylor, won the award of distinction
with her wreath, and Sizy Carpenter was th e
horticultrue sweepstakes award winner.

AWARD WINNERS- Sheila Curtis, left, took
best of show with her arrangement in the
' 'Wondering Wizar~s" class using two containers
and She lia Taylor; indoor Mi·
riam Taylor, Evelyn Hollon,
Ruth Erwin, and Betsy Horky .
"Warm Welcome", swags and
wall hangings : outdoor, Shelia
Curtis, Evelyn Halon, Jo Hill ,
and Eva Robson; indoor, Sheila
Tay lor, Evelyn Thoma, Evelyn
Hollon, and Ida Murphy.
'Wild Whim s" , ornaments
from nature: Peggy Crane,
Betsy Horky, Ruth Erwin, Shelia
Taylor.
"Wistfu l Whatn ot", ornament
from nature, junior class: Lisa
Stethem, Jo E llen Crane, James
Ewing, and Becky Taylor, with
honorable mentio n from Billy
Crane, Michael Tay lor; and Ben

Auxiliary plans

LA-Z·DOY'

C r~ne.

"Winter's Wreath", junior
class : James Ewing, Jo Elen
Crane, Mi chae l Taylor, a nd Lisa
Stet hem, with honorable mention
to Billy Cra ne and Ben Crane.
Th e show fea tured a display on
basket weavi ng by Shi rley Huston, a long with a va r iety of
holiday books from th e Meigs ·
Libraries.

This is your
life, Ralph

JUNIOR BEST OF SHOW - With her "Wishes and Wants"
arrangeme nt of pine and red and white verigated arrangements
with a stuffed reindeer, eight-year-old Liz Stethem took the junior
hes l ol s how.

Whm you do ihC' best you can, Hel p a
frlmd , Hold a hand, Th is Is love.
·
When WC' wipe a tearrut cy(', Say a
pra yer. Tu God on High, T his Is lOVE'.

When WI' visit scmeont• il l. &amp;caus(' w('
wa nt to do God's Will. This is IOV('.
T hose 1hal help 1he ones In need. an d t he

hungry soul s I he~' f eed. This is love.
If you $£'e sonwone 1hat s sad cht'('f' them
up Mak£' them gl ad. Th is Is love .

"What Breakfast Was
Meant To Be'""

~I~I

I
I

-.tfi0111/Wiom~&lt;111-...

MltiGt~UpqM

--------~0

~ASO .

Till. ·~~

MONEY SAVING COUPONS

~ ,

I

NBC.
Edwa rds will sur prise two
celebrity guests, using t.he sa me
format he found successfu l in the
·· 1950s. He will chronolog ically
cover the hig h point of eac h
guest 's life while introducing
other cele br ities, friends and
relat ives.
"Th is Is Your Li(~" began on
radio In 1948 as a segment of
Edwards' long-running " Trulh
or Conseq uences" shOw and
made its debut on NBC in )952.
The show 's most recent appear·
ance was a s pec ia l last April
fea turin g Betty White and Dick .
Va n Dyke as s urprise hono rees.

992-2054

E

GALLIPOLIS

446-2691
. .. YOUR OfiiL Y DI AMON D SHOP

r

NOW IN PROGRESS!!

Life" in a one-hour show f or

" For God so loved 1he World 1hal hPgavP
hi s only begonen son thai whus(}('vPr
bellevelh on him should not perish havP
£'verl astlng lift''.
What D Gift! Thi s is love

•VISA
•M/C
•DISCOVER
•TERMS

POMEROY

LAYAWAY NOW!

HOLLYWOOD lUPil -Once
again , host Ra lph Edwards will
return to te levision Nov. 26with a
spec ial edition of "This Is Yo ur

Auditori um.
WhE'n bomrunf' Is hu n ,in stdC'. Spread
COIIIIIMIN : Ollto r1ilnii'-Git011t«v110'1 MI~IIUI'dlnlll
There was some action on your arms. open wldp hug t hE'm. Thl.t Is
.,-Ail.U: ld'LLOGG SAUS COWP~V • - ......, IIIII co~n '" IOI:Oidll'*
copott..,..... upoii"''Uffl Cn/1 ..."'1/1001;
moving the show to the Ru lland love.
\Wwlllrlll!1li'tbltlll luld ... mln(:lldr, ....
IG t:II;I'T
GOOd on •nv variety
!IG.o !lll:lel. U
TXIS5I!I.QIII7
Ci vic Center in Rutland since the
God Is Jove and hP cares. All of our
of MUESLI)(
C&gt;lllllllfiOIQCDmilan'r
Meigs High School Audi torium is · bu rd ('ns h£' bears. T his is love.
pretty busy with ath1etic activiMrs. Barbara James
ties for th e students--a nd tha t Is ~-~--~~~--~~-~--------~---~-~---------------~---~-~-­
as it should be. The problem for
the m instrel group, however. is
t he Sun fl ower Gmup
.1'2~
.1'2~
the Sun flower Group
that the show wh ich has been
rehearsed in segments in four
differen t locat ions must be put on
a Stage several times before
Show nigh t.
However, sc hool representa·
lives have worked out a plan
which will be sa tisfac tor y in
allowing the cas t to have the
--··-~ "·•auditorium for those last few
rehearsals .
so ..the final se tup is:
this
Saturday beginning at 2 p .m . all
cast membe rs will report to the
Meigs Hi gh Auditorium. The
WITH ARMOUR;,l!aCANNED MEATS
rehearsal will start with the
fi nale so that cast members can
leave after they have done
numbers jn which they are
involved. On the night before the
show. Friday, Nov. 27, at 7 p.m.
th e cast will again report to· the
Meigs Hi gh Auditorium for
a nother s tagi ng session and the
third run through rehearsal will
be at the auditorium from 1 to 3
p.m·. on the afternoon of the
presentation. In addition, a spe·
cia! rehearsal will be held next
Monday eve ning at the P:o meroy
Village Auditorium beginning at
7 p.m .

ROCKER RECLINERS, WALL HUGGERS,
SLEEP SOFAS, SWIVEL ROCKERS,
SECTIONALS!

Li1estYJ2~;~

Free
Delivery
Christmas FURNI TURE SHOWCASE
Evej

Too.

THIRD &amp; OLIVE STREETS, GALLIPOLIS

Friday
9-8

... .

is moving.
' The office has been located In
"the Po meroy Masonic Tem ple
, which is being abandoned. The
' society's new loca tion will be in
: the former Meigs Genera l Hospi·
. tal Buildi ng on W. Second St.,
:Pomeroy.
Dr. Harold Brown a nd Allor·
ney Steven Story have rear·
ra nged operations at the former
hospita l btlilding to accomodate
. tJ!e unit a nd of course,l..arry and
Jean Powell of Powe ll' s Super·
\1alu will allow an extra car on
their store's busy parking lot for
If you looki ng for a little loca l
·two days a week so (hat the offi ce
touch Christmas gift, perhap~.
can be conveniently staffed. The
you might want to contact lhe
society's phone number will be
Meigs County Pioneer a nd Histhe same 992-7531 or you can ca ll torical Society. The society has a
Executive Director Li llian
new coffee mug which features a
Moore at home. 992-7231, if you
picture of the Chester Court·
)lave questions or a problem that
house, th e f1rst one In the county,
re&lt;JUire some answers.
as well as the logo of the society.
---....-Real neat and It sells for $5.
Varieties of '87 ... being staged
by the Big Bend Minstrel Associ·
alion, will be staged at 8: IO p.m.
o~ Nov. 28. the ·SaturdaY after

The Daily Sentinel - Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Fire Fighters Assocla·
THURSDAY
lion will meet Wednesday. 7:30
REEDSV ILLE - Rl\-:erview
p.m., at th e Middleport 'Fire · Garden Club will hold a Christ·
Station.
mas Workshop at 7: ~0 p.m.
Thursday at the · Reedsville
MIDDLEPORT -The Middle· Church of Christ, Members are to
port Literary Club will meet at take gifts for the Athe ns Mental
the home of Mrs. George Ho· Health Ce nter.
sc har Jr. 6n Wednesday at 2 p.m.

"THIS IS LOVE "

CREATIVITY AWARD- Melanie Stethem won the creativity
award In the Meigs County Garden Clubs' annual holiday flow er
show with her blacklight arrangement In the " Whimsical and
Wonderful" class. In a suspen ded-In-air modern arrangement
Mrs. Stethem depicted the relnde~r and sleigh using twisted reed,

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

IRRESISTIBLE

EATING!
·Ch~~ Party Mix!

3oe.

.
.. I
~&gt;·1~
~-{~1

::_ I
I
,~
, ·:

.:···'

. j.~ 'l

'I•:Jij
' ,·
I '

The philosphy of today Is not
how you play the game but
whet her you win or lose. Ask Earl
Bruce. Do keep smiling.

1

OFF
30c
OFF
When you buy one 2-llter bottle or pne 6-pack of 12 oz.
cans or 16 oz. non-returnable bottJes of Orange, Diet

3o·

:.;.If.. OFF

..

.•,......._

.
I

•

•

'

[·

.b:t·"!¥

cOr~~?!~.~~~~~ "~~,~~~?-~,~~~~~!,,~. ~~r"~mu~"?a~~~~?ble.
~
VOIJ and 1118 consumor comply With lhe terms of thiS Olll)t Any other oopltcotron conshfu16S
trcull IIWOICes showmg your purcllOse 01 su"tcrenr slock ro cover all coupons
be snown

uoon request Cosh redomphon value 1/20 or IC Gooa ooly tn the area servi!d by lhe .Alhens

0

Bontmg Co \lord wflere toJ9!1 profiiDI!IId or ti!Siflctell Consumer musl poy on~ re~uu11d soles
tox ond O&amp;POSJI lrmrt one CDI.IPDn pe r purtflQse Redeem by morlrng 10 lhe Atnens Bonlrng
Co 2001 Eosl Store STreet Ati\IJns, OH 45 701
bptratlo. Dett December 31, 1117.

·

I .,
I •., ,,.
•
,
1 ....
.. ~·...-;:,!:~··
~-

·---------.u ·,
• ~----~----~~--·
-,,
·
~~~
WC.".;·~
•

.. w.~

~~~

·- ~

�-.
(

Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

.

..

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, November 18, 1987

Fireman's
auxiliary

Spencer
Danielle Marie Spencer cele:
bra ted her fiflh birthday recently
with a party at the home of her
parents, Dan and Sheila ·White
Spencer. Tupper~ -Plains.
PrPsenting gifts to her were
her parent s. brother and sister.
Kirl and Tiffany. · ma tE'r nal
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Grover .White. maler nal grea t grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Woodrow Fortney , Serena'Whlte,
Mr. and Mrs , Jeff Circle, Nikki
ilnd Jeffrey , paternal grandpar ent, Mr'• and Mrs. R ichard
Spencer . paterna l grea t grandmother, Elea nor Boyles,
. Tim Sp;,ncer. Sandra and Starli ng Massar, and M arilyn
Wozniak.

Public Notice

Public Notice

Plllns for se!'l·ing the Troctor
Pu llers Association dinner Sa turday at the firehouse were made
when the Ladies Auxiliary met
t here FCcently,

\.

I

"

PU8UC NOTICE
The annual report Form
990PF

1986,_for the Kibble Founda·
tion, Bernard V . Futtz, Trustao,
is available for public inspec·
tion at Bernard V. Futtz Law ·
Office, 111 'h W. Second

The fire department ,and t he
auxiliary Christmas dinner and
part y was announced for Sunday ,
Dec. 13, a t the firehouse. L ora
Damewood and Opal Hollon gave
officer s' reports. M oney for
cards and dues were collected
and ~Ills wer e pai d. Car ds for the
sick were si gned.

..
"

DANIELLE i\1, SPENCER

for DOcember 31 ,

PU 8LIC NOTICE
Public water supplies are
required by State Regula tion, Rule 3745 -81 -21 .
Ohio

to

Administrative Cqde,

routinely

monitor

the

micrObiological quality of
the drinking water in their

S(rOOl Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, · distribution system in order
during regular businoos hours

to iosure

that safe water is
supplied_ to the

lor o period ·of 180 dill'S
subsequent to publication of

being

this notice.

The village of Rutland is
required to coll~t;pnd exam·

(111 16, t9. 20. 22. 23, 24,
25, 7tc

2

Public Notice

Public Notice

In Memoriam

A holiday visi t to the Meigs
County Infirmary was planned
when the Reedville United Meth·
od lst W om en met r ecently with
M rs.
Douglas wi th Mrs."
Mar lene Pu tman as co-hoistess.
' Mrs. Robin Putman gave devoJions using " Thanksg iving" as
her topic. Mrs. Judy El kins read
the poem, " On Th anksgiving."
~ember s and guests expressed
the thin gs for which they ar e
tbankful.
More than a hundred shutin
calls were r eported during the
meeting. Cards w ere signed fo r
friends , and th ank you notes

By Clarice Allen
M r. and Mrs Donald Matlack
have returned to their home in
Lake Worth , Fla .. after a week's
visit here with Mr. and Mr s. Roy
Christy and Mr. and Mrs. Virgil
Roush. They were enroute home
from a v isit wi th their daughter
and son-in -law. Donna Kay e and
Andrew Semple, Fort Dix . N. J.
Mr. and Mrs. Oris Frederick
nave left for their winter home in
Winter Haven , Fl a.
Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Beat.
Pomeroy. and Mrs. Betty Cheva lier, Tuppers Plains. wer e Sun "
day dinn_er guests of Jll!r. and

The bids will be for tho

·I

Happy
Birthday,
Roger!

Board of Education reserves
tho right to accept or reject
any and all parts of any and

all bids.
BOARD OF EDUCATION
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900 SA 7
REEDSVILLE, OHIO

46772
Eloise Boston, Treaaurer

Mom &amp; Oad
11

Help Wanted

(111 4, 1 1. 1 B. 25 4tc

Mrs . Ki r k Chevalier, Jessica and
Kri sten .
Lando Clay has been returned
home after undergoing surgery
at Veterans Memorial HospitaL
June Ridenour returned home
Monday from a Parkersburg
hospital where she was a surgical
patient.
Mr . and Mrs. Homer Biggs of
Unionport. were recent visitors
of Mrs. Bonnie Landers.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hayes spent
several days at Veterans Memorial Hospital for medical
treatment.

1

I

1 1, 4 · 1 mo .

1988 cale,dar vear. Said

Catalog MIDDLEPORT StOlE

Chester community happenings

I

9·92-6226
M iddlep o rt
lns1.ned / lic en se d

ing.

.

·''

. SEND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAILEY, R. N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 S EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

DURING

It's Holiday Baking
T•1me.r
.
·

FREE turkey with any cataldg
purchase of $300 orJnoret

•

I

Property transfers·

Yockey. Chester/ Sutton.
Penn Central Corp .. 2.33 A. to .
Ronald E . Black and Warren D.
Hart, Rutland.

Ru ssell Wooten , parcels, to
Car roll K Woodgerd and F ernie
Woodger d. Columbia:
Wa yne E. Yockey aka', Wayne
Edwa,rd Yockey, Certificate of
T ra nsfer , to Way ne D. Yockey ,
Sutton/ Ches ter .
Way ne D. Yockey and L aurie
Yoc key. Parcels, Pauli ne R.

'

William Earl Backu s and Vir ginia Alberta Backus. lot 13, to
I vor N. Farrar and Elizabeth
Farrar. Middleport VIllage.

'

LOVE.~

For 1ht&gt; 1imt• hi• liwd herr on t'afl h..

And hhi lilt• hr ~&lt;~V!" on

raka ry..

THUR$.: 7 PM - EI 6:4S

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.

PONIROY--985-3561
KEN~S

$14,900.00.
~~ ~ .

7 - 181\ acre mini larm

wit h oldet 4 bedroom home.
Large rooms barn. slorage
shed &amp; chicken hou se. ASKING $40,000.00.
.

SELLERS RIDGE ROAD Deer hunters patadise on
approx. 150 acres ol va cant
land. Electric available.
drill ed well. royalty income
&amp; lree gas. Will split acreage.
Ask lor information .
LANGSVILLE AREA- 75 acre
larm, bar~ satellle . dis ~ lencing &amp; a nice 4 bedroom home
w/country kitchen owner may
help finance MAKE OFFER.
LETART TOWNSHIP~ DEER
COUNTRY - 29 acres ol
most~ wood land. building
sites lor home or hunlrn g
ca bm. Most l'(linerals. MAKE
OFFER $14,000 00.
CALIFORNIA CONTEMPO·
RARY- 3-4 bedroom home
located on 5 acres in the
country. 2 baths, wood burner hookup. elec. B.B.
_He at $39,900 00.
SILVER RIDGE - SR 7 Aoorox. 19.80 acres. all minera ls and royall ies fr omexisting weli. 2 sprin gs lor develop ment. WANT $12,000.00.

CINNAMON ... ...... .... ..... _
........... 4 oz. 59C::
CLOVES .. .. .. .. .. ... ..... .... .. .. ..... .. 4 oz. '1 .44
ALLSPICE .... ...... ........... .... ... .... , 4 oz. 64C::
POULTRY SEASONING .. .. ... ..... . 4 oz. 46C::
SAGE .................... . ...... ..... ....... 4 oz. 40C::
GARLIC POWDER ...... ... . ......... 4 oz. •1 .02
PUMPKIN PIE SPICE .......... .. ..... 4 oz. SSC
GINGER ............. .. ...... .... .. ..... .. . 4 oz. 60C::
CURRANTS .. ...... ...... ,..... .. .. .... .. lb. $2.20
WHOlE DATES ._...... .. ......... .. ... ... tb. •2 .25

NEW LISTING - Cute little
two story home w/ a view ol
the beauttlul Oh ro River. 3
bedroom s. PRICED TO SEL L
AT $19.900.00

REMEMBER fRUIT AND NUT SNACKS
FOR COLLEGE STUDENTS.
WE WILL SHIP.

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS

I 1./Wfi Him
't't-'5. ~1\ Lordi dJdn·t know him at Jll
Then onl'dsv I heard my Saviour ca ll
I Low• Him

I n Hi m I wil l pu t al l my t rust
&amp;&gt; cau se I k now within I mu st..
I LovC' Him

Hr's bl'en P~ Jovr throughnu tth c yrar s..
Hi 'l nat! .,~...HI'd hands havr v.·ipcd my

Throu~ h J esu s Christ I

S14 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

·_

992-6910
We Awepl

--.

IIOOS -0!

h ~.

11 n 111

PUBU( I~VIfED

_,._·

FIREWOOD
locust, Oak, Cherry

$J500 .

WE'RE STILL ALIVE!

OR TO BE A REPRESENTATIVE

10· 19-87

BACK HOE WORK

Phone Day or h1ning1

985-4141

G£N£Rll CONTRACTORS

Food Stamps

1 1- l ·tfn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
7-ttn

SLUG SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER
1:00 P.M.
AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE
FACTORY CHOKES

I Lov£&gt; Him
H (' l.oVf'S Mf' ,

J l..() vc Him

949-2263
or 949-2168

Ba r bar a J am es

Roger Hysell
. Garage
At. 124, Pomer,ity Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also I ransmiuion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

No m:lllf'r how 1ar I vC&gt;
By lund or sm ..

EASTERN HILL
FABRIC SHOP

~one

Throug h violent ~lor m s.
He's sl ood by me no maltrr whal .
My batt!PS ht&gt; has alwa ,v~ fought. .
I Love Hi m
I can't count rhc

low· .

.

tim~

M y Snviuur nrvcr lf'l
I i.ov£' H im

Our L ord, My God

FABRIC &amp; CRAFTS
NOW OPEN

l 'v(' been down

Mon., Tues., Wed. &amp; Fri.
10 A.M;-S P.M.
Sat. 10 A.M.-2 P.M.

me ~o ..

rl'lg n ~

on high..

Hi s sheep and flock nE'VN di r ..
This is why I ' m tell ing you ..
M y Cod t o mt'ls always t rue' ,

Located on State Rt. 7 .

100 Watt rack stereo

VCR with remote

Color TV with remote

VW9294

E53295

VW4m9

w
.. Gen
' " '·"
'" " "
FeU
. Catnlog

36999

Reedsville, Ohio, 5 miles N.

I Lllve Hi m

of

Chester, Ohio

CD-compatibl e. Dual cassettes with high spe ed dubbing . 100-w. min. RMS . 8 oh ms.
40Hz-20KHz , .Q 9% THD.
O!fet on etfecl un(ll

NATIONALLY KNOWN DOLL ARTIST

Washington Co. Rd. 84

Little Hocking, Ohio

..

&lt;: ·. -,._- ;.

'

Washers, dryerf,

PARTS

NEW AND USED

WIDE

I

SATURDA_ , .NOVEMBER 21st
'

l.A'f' will be signing dolls from 12:004:30 either from
your collet'lion or those thai you choose lo purchase
while there.

CbtigfmBI Spe~is/gf

I

Kitchen appliances

SAVE $100 19·in drag meJs. Quartz-tuned
color TV VW4 2251 . .
. 269.99'

SAVE $90 Extra cap . washer with 2 speeds
DR26701 . .
..... 349.99

SAVE S80 t 9-in . diag. meas. color TV with
MTS stereo E42311 . . . .
. ..... 339.99

SAVE $60 Extra cap 4- tem perature Kenmore
dryer. p R66701 . , , ..... , ... . ....... :a79.99

SAVE St40 Built- on doshwasher wtth ' ULTRA
WASH system. NV1677.5
. ,349.99

BIG BUY! Contemporary stereo console TV.
25-ui. diag . meas. E49078. reg . pnce .. 459.99

SAVE St25 Ex tra cap. washer." electronic l em pera1 ure controL E26811 , . , . , , ... , . , .374.99

SAVE $60" .5 cu .lt solod-stale microwave .
t24.99
NV88217 . .. . .

VALUE! Cable-compatible stereo console TV
E48203. reg. price , .
. . 529.99
SAVE $25 13-tn. diag meas. color TV woth remote . NV40431 .
. . . . . . . . 249.99

SAVE $100 5-te mperature dryer wrth electrorrk:
sensors. E66821 . .
. ._299.99

BIG BUY ! .8 cu.M solod-s1•1e mtd-soze mocrowave. DR88329. reg proce
169.99

.

SAVE 5205 Stereo system wrth CD player. remote. E9301 6 .. ,
579.99
SAVE S205 Proneer stereo system with CD
player. remote . E930:) . .
. .. 779.99

SAVE $t20 " La rge-capaco ty 1 3 cu.lt mocrow ave NV88347 ,.
. . 219.99
SAVE $155 t8 .6 cu.lt. total cap .. lactory- ·
installed icemaker. DR 77921 .
· 594.99
SAVE $145 t 9.9 cu.tl. tolal cap. with rcetn aker
K77041 .
, .... -674:99
SAVE $100 t9 .0 cu.lt total cap sode·by-srde
. .. , . . .... 61i9.99
model NV58911..

SAYESttO 41 peak H P (1 .10 HPVCMAI Power-Mate vac . E26413 .
. .. 239 .99

Each ol these advert1sed it ems Is readily avaolabte lor sale as advertised .

CALll61•1 989-22U fOI fUITHEIINFOUAnON

Both Outlets will be open FRIDAY, NpVEMIER 27
Middleton Doll Outlet
261 Front St.
Marietta, Oh.
16141 374-DOLL

Middleton Don Outlet
Waohington Co. Rd. 84
Little HCKking, Oh.
(614)989 -2294..

i,

SEARS CATALOG MERCHANT
788 N. 2ND
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
992-2178
W: Va. Customers Only 1·800-732-7799

HOURS
Man., Tu·es., Wed, &amp;
Fri. 9:~0-5:00

t.d~tU

STOllE

Thur. 9&gt;30-12 Notm
Sat. 9:)e·2:0G

~

l
l
l

ON SElECTED VINYL AND ALL PORCELAIN LESS-THAN-PERFECTS!II

-r/rei e . ntr•l,.vt

;;tEJt.RS

' !ea~s . Roebqck_and Co ..
Sa r•stacl /on

1987

or rour mon r v bac k

TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NITE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS
Buying Roots~
Beef Hides and
Deer Hid_
es
GEORGE BUCKLEY

II
I
I
I

ill DAYS
•3 LINES (15 Words)
•3 NEWSPAPERS (Gallia, Meigs &amp; Mason) .

Only

$ 300

1. ..... ........... --- .......
s. --- .. - ............... 1 1. .. ............... -...
2. ............ . .. . ....... 7. ..... .............. . . 1 2 . .........................
3 ................ .'............... :· 8 . ............ :................. 13 . ....................
4. .......... ....................
9. ......................... 14 . .'.:.........................
5 .. .................,............. 10 . ··········-····-·-·····-·... 15. .........................
GOOD FOR ADS PURCHASED THROUGH NOV . 30. 19S7

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

I

~

I
I
I
I
I"'~IC
II
I

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

'

(Comparator) fill up · your
tank, and watch it subtrac:t and
display fuel consumed .
UNDER •90

Monitors for MCF -CCF used
for furnaces. calibrated to
meter.

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

A different kind of dating
service. For information write,
Kupid't Nest . P.O . Box 619,
Ironton, OH 4563B

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
-

SERVICE

Addons lind remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and electr ical
work
(Free Estimates)

Pomeroy, Ohio
4 15-'86-tc

SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

New Home~ Built
"Free Estimates"

Authorited John Deere,
New Holland, Buoh Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

1 1·3-1 mo. pd .

Country Gifts
and Docor
SIXTH ST., SYRACUSE, ·OH.

SAlE

Cross Stitch Supplies
50% Off

Baohl Supplies
20'\'o Off
Discount on Selected Items
HOURS : Tues.- Sot .
10 am to 5 pm

"414-992 -5082

ALL
HEATING

New Location:
1b8 North Setond
Middleport, Ohio' 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Phone

Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6Sl0
R~IIDENCE PHONE
16141 992-1714
.

1·3-' 86 ttc

11

Help· Wanted

Lady to stay part- time wi1h
eiderty lady. Must be local. Call
614-256-661 3.
Christmas around the corner and
no money? Sen Avon 1!J, ear.n
mOnB';' &amp; prices. Call 614·4462156.
I
TEXAS REFINERY CORP .
needs mature person now in
Gallipolis area. Reg.-dl•s of
training, write D.L Hopkins. BoK
711 , Ft. Won~ . T)l . 76101 .
Aggressive Marketing Exp. &amp; Cl.
Lab. Background qualifiBI yo'u
for this position. Sal•y ·Comm.
Company c•. Send resume &amp;
ref. to : Box 33 Gallipolis, Ohio
45631 .
lab. Manager with previous
exp8f"inces in Bench Work. Q .C .•
equip. maintenance. etc . Send
resume &amp; ref. , to : BoK 33;
Qallipolia, Ohio 46631 ,
Needed: Social Service Director
for 1 100 bed SN~·ICF Nursing
facility located in Gallipolis, OH.
E)lcellent ulary and benefit..
Ucense &amp; BSW recommended .
Appty with resume to ~ Sceni c
Hills Nursing Center. 636 Buck·
ridge Rd . GallipoHt. OH
Gavernment Jobs . 516,040 •
659,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
area. 805- 687- 6000 Ext. R9805 for current t9po federal
list.
AVON · All are•. Call Marilyn
We8'11'er 304- 882- 2646 .
Herdsman. JeffersOn County ,
W. Va.; to mUk 200 cowt once a
dlrf and faed 6 days per week.
·Must have r«ferencet. &amp;KC hous·
ing and pay. 304-725- 8308
between 8:00· 9:00.

FOUND : Black Labfador Re·
trievar on Kemper Hollow Rd.
Call 614 -446·2823 aher 4 PM.

13

One 8 wk. old kitten to give
away . Call 614·446-7100.
7 mos. old male dog. Gr. Shep. &amp;
Blue heeler. Black &amp; tan Color.
Call614· 245-9578.

6 Lost and Fouhd

WHITE HILL RD.

Parlt &amp; Smlu

Serv1ces

Insurance

Call us tor your mobile home
insUrince : Miller Insurance.
~04 - 8112 · 2145 . Also: auto,
home, life, health.

18 Wanted to Do
House Cleaning or offi&lt;:G clean.
ing by day. Caq give reference.
Immaculate cleaner, call 614446·8106 .
Will care f or your child while you
c ,l lristmas shop, _attend holiday
dm~ers or parties, or during
Cllmtmas va c ation . Convenient
location, experienced mothe,.
Call 614· 448- 0065 after 6:00

,PM .

SLAU~HTER

and

E111ploy111ent

Baby sitter 6 :00 a.m . to 1:00
p. m. Monday thru Friday, 9
milt• N . Pt. Pl. Long Hollow Ad .
Non SmokeJ. 304- 895· 3823 .

Gray, blar:k, gold a td _tabby
kittens. 3 manlha old. Give to
good home only . 814· 8436446 .

JERRY'S
CUSTOM

PLUMBING &amp;

Raw fur, beef and deer hideS.
Gyn Sing and Yellow root. We
have wheat and nite lites.
Trapping supplies for sale. (Buy ing used traps} . George Bucklfll/.
Houn 12-9 , 614-664- 4761 .

FOUND: Friendly black -gny
strjpped female Clll . Sunset Or..
between Second Ave . 8r. Golf
Course. Call 614 -446-B607.

5 month old kittent. Male and
famaht. Young female dog.
614· 985 -3884.

BUSINESS

Wanted : John Deere 420 dozer
tor parts. Call 614. 992·7789.

Experienc:ed plumber with
W.Va . License. Apply Orman
Hall Inc., 1317 Ohio St . Point
Pleasant .

No Sunday Colis

OPEN FOR

Cash tor standing timber . WfJ
bu~
veneer white oak and
walnut. Call AI Tromm, 614·
742-232"-

Giveaway

4

Refrig., wa•her &amp; 2 alec. stoves.
All need repair. Must take all.
Call 614·446-0770 anytima.

Farm Equlpmut

BERRY BASKET

No Hunting ar Tresspa ..ing on
my farm, if caught will be
prosecuted by law or my gun.
N 0 DOGS . Jim Stewart.

PH. 949-28611
or 949-2801

742-2035

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

No HuntiniJ an Gill Ridge on
properties of C . A. Gill. Mitchell
Cullen. Gearge Gill without
written permiuiqn. Violators
will be prosecuted.

Puppies to give away to good
llome. Call 614 ·387·0229.

INSULATION

RUTlAND, OHIO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Piano lessons. Now acceptiny
nudenta. Beginners through advanced . Call 614 -949·2890
ENenings.

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992: 7314

HOURS
Mon.-Sat . 2 to 9 P.M .
Sunday 5 to 9 P.M.

BOGGS

3 Announcements

"At Reasonable Prices"

614·664·4761

10/ 2711 mo.

'

Commercial :
Store to Job Cost
Ta)li Service
Before and after auto tune-up .

MASTERCAFID / VISA! Regard less of credit history , Also, nfNV
aedlt ctrd. No one reluaedl For
information ctiL 1· 315-733 6062 Ext. N -2758 .

10-15-1 mo.

he Daily Sentinel
-------------------------------------,
r
ALL ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE
I

miles.

11 / 2 / 87 1 mo.

10-8-tlc

992-2156

II
I

Ke~more "dryers !'UQuore connectors not•ncluaecr rn pr·CM snown ·Many l&lt;o~mcr8 models camt 1n c:otors at ~dOd•onat cost
· Pncu are catalog t:J•.ces now ava~able ,., 0\lt DR E Jl K KA NV caratog!o • Si"rif)pll'lg •l'ls!allii!On f1.o;!f8 • ASll abOut Sears c•&amp;aft oiar!:&gt;

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

I·

I

SAVE $t25 3.9 peak' HP 11 0 HP VCMA) Power-Mate vac . DR24975
t94 .99

992-3410

Sell, Buy, Rent - Find and Give
Notice, Too!
Your feast of bargains will be falling
right in - iust call our dassified ·
department staffers if you need help.

pr•Ge 'n ettec• "n111 It 25 87

SAVE St70 Burtt -in dishwa sher with 15 cycles.
D R1 5565 .
. . 299.99

BIG BUY ! VHS VCR With on ~scree n programming. E53298 , reg. price . , , ..... 294.99

'

19' incll diagonal meas . TV with quar.tzel e ctronic tuning , 18-key remote . Up to 119
channels cable compatible.
"S.:11e

Electronics

-

,~
,,.

25 87

VHS VCR wi th wireless remote accesses
up to t08 channels . 14-day, 4-event timer.
Ca ble compatible HQ picture. .

26999*

More terrific buys on electronics ~d applfahces!

LEE MIDDLETON
' WILL APPEAR AT THE
MIDDLETON DOLL FACTORY OUTLET

11

24999

'

system. Fits any car. Instant
miles per gallon readout.
Know your fuel consumption
from O!Je block to hundreds of

949-2969

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Buying daily gold. 1ilver coins,
ring1 , jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins, l•g• ,currency . Top prtces . Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd . Ave . Middleport. Oh . 614·
992- 3476.
•

Add en mini fuel computer

Parts &amp; Service on all
Makes.

v.w.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Feast
~our Eyes On These
Thanksgi.,ing Bargains:

·Home &amp; .;iuto
1914(992-3718

Yard Man mowers, Echo
tr.immm, saws, blowers
- Snowoff blowers. Ore·
gon saw parts.
Winter Spe£iais: push .mowers picked up and tuned and
teturned '20.00.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Wanted to buy- standing tiblber .
Call 614-379 -2758.

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

located half way between Rt. 7 and Bashan.

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

ture, Jrd. &amp; Olive St . Gallipoll• .
Call 614·446-3159.

:·

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

PH.

WANTED TO BUY : Uaed wood

&amp; c oal held:ura . Swa in' s Furni-

'j '·;. .. "

1 - 13-tfc

6-17-tfc

Som('limPS In lilt• I havr ft'll down
No truer fr\Pnd l 'v•• 1•vr1 found
I Love Him

99

Announcements

SELECTION
ALL MAKES ·AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

HE''s thE' only man t hat s st ood by m e..
know t 'm fr ee

tt&gt;a r s ..

GLitters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

REASONABlE RATES
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio

4-22-17-tln

Basham Building

AW

NEW- REPAIR

10-9-tfn

PAT lULL FORD

Howard L Write·sel

ROOFING

_
•School &amp; Chur ch Programs
•Sporting Events
•Annivarsariee
•Record Valuabl8&amp; ,
Docume:nta
•Transfllf Photo Albums tO
VHS Tape
•Transfer 8mm tind Super 8
Movies to Vidoo Tape
•Create Treininy Filma for
Students and Employ-ees

OHIO

I

REPAIRS

•Weddin~s

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

10/ 28/ 1 mo.

SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;

I."Holiidoy Parties

SER,ICE

Rtiiser "

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;

OFFICE ...................... 992 -2259

CAll
SUSAN &lt;OlEMAN
742-277B
or
,
SHIRLEY COlEMAN
742-2125
"It ',, A Grear Fund

Record Those Special
Occasions on VHS
Tape

RADIATOR

GuarantHd the Sa,., Far

MARCUA)
CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

lotNRY E. ClUANO, JR ..... 9l12 -6191
IUN TRUSSELl .......... ,. 949 -'lbbO
DOlliE TURN£R ........... 992 -5092

4-5-tlc

BILL SLACK
614-992-2269

Referenr:es

RACINE,

WE SEll USED APPLIANCES

81 Years
FOR FULlER BRUSH
PRODUCTS

Evenings

NEW LISTING -Se clud ed in
the country. Approx. 76 acr es
&amp; a 24'x24' cabin . .Owner
want s sa le at $29,900.00.

•Dryers •Freezers

Per Pickup load
Delivered

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

RACINE
GUN CLUB

•Ranges •Refrigerators

JJ -

ST. RT.
About lour
mil es to Co. Rd. 14. 25 acres
of va cant ground. Approx . 8
acres pasture . Good build·
ing site. WANT $tl,OOO.OO.

APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Makes

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

•Washers •Disflwashers

TRACY RIFFU ..... ...... 949 -308C

I know wh en I lay down to sleep ..
My soul he will alwa ys keep .
I Lovr Hlm

ME."

BINGO

EAGLEl CLUB- POMEROY, OH.

NEW LISTING - POMEROl'i
VILLAGE - Fram e house
With upper &amp; lower one bed·
room apts. Good rental mvestment ' $300 per mont h
inco me potent ia l. ASKING

TIME TO MAKE A STOP AT OHIO
VALLEY BULK FOODS FOR ALL
BAKING SUPPLIES

Poet's Corner
" I LOVE HIM ... IIE

POMEROY,O.
992-2259

$48,900.00.

OR CALl 992-2104, EXT. 213

3 DAYS ONLY! Nov. 19-21 .•. Get a

··E. 'Ni:.irtL.Il~tL.L..II

EASTERN DISTRICT ON RT.

Immediate opening for full time and
part time R. N ."s to work in areas of
•Special Care
•Emergency Room
•Skilled _Nursing Facility
•Medical. Surgical .U nits
Salary comparable with experience.
Excellent Fringe Benefits

\Sue

I

Ron Diles or

be acted on during the regu ·
lar December board meet-

Card of Thanks

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Garv Cummins

4

consumer.

Business Services

S

D&amp;C
ELECTRIC

ceived in the Treasurer's of
fica by : 2 :00 P.M . on Ou·
c&amp;mber 1 0, 1987, and will

t'111t6, 17, 18, 3tc

The

-~~ ._

In order to be eonsi~ered,

were collected and analyzed
, for th e month of Seplember.
Th e w ater department Jlas
. taken st eps to insure that
adequate monitoring will b e
performed in the future.

SHOP EARLY FOR

WANT ADS'

DON'T lET YOUR EtHTRI CAl PROBlEMS BECOME A
SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL

all sealed bids shall be re·

REGISTERED NURSES

~~Jl/Rl~

Thing!&gt; are buzzin' 1n the

Specification sheets are
available at the Triaaaurer's
office. ,
·

A' Chr lstmas par ty was set far ·
Dec. 2 at 7 p.m at the home of Cl eo
Smith, pres id ent. T here wil l be a
$3 gm exc hange.

Reedsville UMW has meeting

Happy Ads

5

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
;:::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;
The Board of Education of
Eastern Local School District
desires to receive .&amp;881ed bids
on the following:
Fleet Insurance

·inO a minimufTl of one (1)
microbiological samples
each month. No samples

1

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Lost: Compound bow. alon~
road in Addi•on strip mine.
Approx . 6:00 11-13- 87. Call
614-446-8647-Aak for Carl.
i=OUNO: Mad. aize Collie-Male.
Brown &amp; whhe- wearing brown
coli• . On Roush L.ane-Ch•hire.
Call 304-676 -7423.
LOST: Black &amp; white Tov
Poodle. Vicinity of Sun Vai iiPf
Dr. Answers to "Peanut" . We•·
ing red collar with beU. Reward .
Call 614·446· 207.9.
Black and white mate kitten, 6
montlt old. Travels undl!lr vahicl~ and could be anywhere from
SR 143 to Pomarov or Alhens .
Call 614- 992-6321 ,
LOST-REWARD . Large bla ck
Lab. with wh ite spat on chest
wearing yellow caller. 304- 675·
3999 pr 67~ · 6037 .

7

Yard· :?ala

1128/11~

HILLSIDE
MUIILELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO

•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

OPEN I to 9 P.M .

·· ... "GallipoliS' ...... ·-&amp;Vicinity
3 temlly, CentenarvTownhouae.
17 · 18 . stereos. tapeplayer,
dishse, cloth•. dolls, mia.c .

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Acro11 from
Happy Hollow Rd .

Rt. 124

RUTLAND

614-74'-USS

· 11 -6 -1 mo.

Rick Pearson Auctioneer · 11 cen .. d in Ohl'o and Wnst Virgi nia. Ellate, antique, l•m. liqu tdation sal•, 304· 773 -6786.

Carpenter work. $6 a hr. or by•
the JOb. Panelling. painting:
drywall. remodeling. Call 614 -'
446 -6377 .
.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

! NOTIC E!
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLisH.
lNG CO rocommands 1het you
do "busin ess w ltll people yotJ
know . an d NOT t o aend mones"
through the mail until you hav e
Invest ig ated th e offering .
LaSalle Gallery , Middleport . Eattblished Turn-Key Operation.
For appo intment 1 call614 · 9 92·
7 5 21 . Financiang a va ilable
Le• e or buy building.
•
S9 . 99 ON( PRICE SHO E
STORE OR &amp;10 -$ 20 FASHION
STORE ! Open • non-f ranchise
store with 1h e liberty Fashions
advantage. Over 1, 300 brand
names. One-time tee. Inventory,
fixture&amp;. buying trip, sup pli ~~ot~~.
instore train ing and more. Call
any time. Dan Kostechy 501·
•
327-8031 ,

23

Professional
Services

CALL
HUSTONS WElDING
,
&amp; FAB.
!Certified }
-..
For any welding rep11ir-or fabri Cation work. No job too amall q,.
too l,arge. Alum i!lum weldmliJ. 1
lpecralty , We gtve qual ity and
quick servic, . Please call 614682.7 122 for est im ate.

�•

....

Page-14- The Daily ,Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

22 Money to Loan
Ettabli1h credit. Get credit
c•ds. Gat low ~nter"t Joana.
Details. Monev aid· 8749 Hwv

51 Household Goods

54 Mise , Merchan(liso

PARSON ' S FURNITURE

Catalvlic con vertar1 . only
S8!;) .96. Most modelt. ln1tall•
t1on also available Muffler Man,

Juat anrved- 3 truck loads - New
living room su1tes; naw wood 6
pc living ~ood suites. S 399 .95,
chest of drawers: twm mat·
treues , $95 set; microWB\18
oven stand$.

172 w . Uberty, Ky 41412

THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND

Real Estale
31

Furniture
New and used furnh:ure and
applieances . Call 614 -446 7572. Hours 9·5
Like now- 5 cubic ft ckest
fr eezer. Ltke new Gibson olectrie
dryer Tradittof1al sofa. 6 ft .
porc tl glider, white baby bed
wtth manress Corbtn &amp; Snyder
Furniture Co. 955 2nd Ave
Gallipolis, 614-446-1171

Home for Sal• by Owner:
Greenbriar Eat . 38R .• bt-level
on 2.4 Beres. AC. W .B F P., wet
bar. 2 c111 garage Ph . Before
4 :00PM 614· 446-4009 After
4PM. Ph. 304-676-3816.

Carpet Prices Starting at.
Commerc1al · 54 a yd .,
Sculptura-$6 a yd , Plush· S7 a
vd. lots of room r111ments m
stock Financing available. Mollohan Furniture, Upper River Rd .
- 614-446-7444.

4BR . fireplece,fullbuement 3
mi so of Galli pohs . $34,900.
Call Days-614-446-1615, after

5:00 448· 1244.

Neat, elean ranctt Restricted
subdivit ion . Hannan Trace
Schools. Paymants lower than
rent . Beautiful view. C1U 614·
266· 6200.
2 yr. old- 4 BR hou se. 2 baths.
all elee'lric. 2 decks, outbuilding,
pond. Extra trailer spot. Rural
water. 2-6 acres. 3 m1les from
Merc erville . Call 614-266 ·

6e67.;

2 bedf"oom tn city, priced reasonable Call 614 446-0897.
3 BR .• bath 8t half, kitchen, living
room-fireplace, dif11ng area Att·
ached garage, basement . Good
eondrt1on Will sell- land contract. First St. west Hol~ e rs
Call614-446-3801 .
Modern 3 8R house. Patriot,
OhiO Will help f1nance. Call
f\,4 -446-1340. 446-3870.
House for sale, Rt. 33. Level lot,
2 BRS ., 2 bat hs. 2 car garage,
swimming pool, s&amp;tlllte Close to
Sailtbury &amp; Meigs High. Call
614-992-3254
•
GovernmHnt homes from $1 tU
repa1rj . Delinquent tall property
Repossessions Call 805-6876000 EJd. GH -9805 for current
repo list.
3 bedroom, 7 room one flo or
hom e m M1ddleport. 200x200
lot. Bob Haggerty 614-9925304 Priced under $14.000.
Houso fo r sate. 2126 Lincoln
Ave .. phone 304·675- 3475

-I

HouM. 2 bedrooms. family
room, fllll basement. central
heat and air cond, vmyl siding,
~ • storm wmdows and doors, large
lot. garden space. 304-676·
3119 after 4 00 pm.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
19B4 Triumph II 14ll70 custom
made Ellce. shape. All electric
S9,000 Call614-596-4429 .
1974 Indy 12K65, 2 BR , AC.
total alec Very nice. S6500. Call'
614- 669-3091
1979 Bayv•ew 14x70 wtth 24x7
exton From porch, carport.
en dosed back porch or shop
area. wood burner on 1 .4 acres.
$15000 or best offlw. Ne•
Crown Cit\1 &amp; MM cervill e. Call
614-446-7602 or 256-1538
19B1 Shuhz14x52 Que tiCreek
Mobile Park. Call 614-245-

9438

14 K70 Concord 1974 3 BR .•
tot e! (!lee. New carpet Er.tra
nice throu gh ou t. 86900 Call
614-446 0175.
1970, 12;~~:65 , 3 badroom Ttpout, stove, refrigflfat or, underpmn tng 64000 . 614 -992 7479
1974 Hillcras1 12 "' 60 fur·
nlshed 4 miles out Rt , 43 . Turn
onto Wolfe Pen Rd 1 2 miles
S2500. 614-992-2265
12.w.65 MobileHomewilh 1 2k24
a~ d-on With extra to t. 304 6757669 .
14x70 Wmds or with 14k30
add1tjon 3 bedrooms approu·
mately 3 acres , black top road
Several out-bwldings and pond.
Gallipolis Ferry. 304-675 -6930.

33

Farms for Sale

160acr elarm , 1 mile back New
Haven, W Va. phone 304-8822666

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial bufldtngs for leas'e
Downtown Pt Ple asant . Stores,
offioes A-On&amp; Reel Estate.
Ca rol Yeager. Broker, Call 304-

675· 6104.

749 Thtrd Ave PrMently The
G1ft Shop 1600 sq ft CommerCial o r warehouse. Park ing on
11de. AdJacent to Third&amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appomtment.

35 Lots

&amp; Acreage

2 Buildrng IOt!f· 1 111 acres each
with count y water Jerrvs Run
Rd Apple Grove. W. Va Call
304-676-2383.

Renlals
41

Homes for Rent

3 br .• CA , basement, garage.
patlo. c•pet, 1 cut stone
firep tece &amp; 1 br ick firepl ace.
inground pool Ref. A-1 Real
Estate, Carol Yeager -broker.
304-675-5104.
2 BR . house . Stove &amp; refng
furn . Located 1 928 Y2 Chestnut
St. t176 mo 875 d8p Call
614-446-3870.
3 BA , 2 Y• baths, 2 fireplaces .
Split IM~el In country. &amp;400 plus
depoait Call 614-446-4514.
In ChMhlre Vrllage. Deposit
required . $ 180 month Call
61 4-446-0486 after 6pm
6 t oom ho use· First Ave., Gall ;..
poliS. Off street parking No
pets. Ref &amp;·Oep Call61 4 -266·
1529
3 BA , wdbr, . cwport Low
utilities Very clean. Ref. &amp; dep
t300 a mo Call614-446-0905

"Dad, could we go right past
the facts of life and concentrate on the fantasies?"

~-----------.,.-----------­
41

Homes for Rent

Unfurn1shed. 2 BR. Lower Se·
cond Ave No pets. Nece. 2· 3
edults. Ref. &amp; Oep. r9qu1red .
Call 6 14-446-3949, 446-2419
2, 3, or 4 bedroom houses and
apt in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utH ities. deposit required Call
614-992-5113, 614-992-6723
or 614-992-2509. Call after
6 :00. please
Newtv renovated, all electric
wtth heat pump and central air 3
bedrooms. plentv yard and
garden space in Portland. Ohio,
5 miles from RIN &amp;nswood, W .
Va Call 614·843·6309.
Unfurnished house for rent in
Pomeroy . Storm windows and
doors. insulated, all new painl.
DepoSit required . Cal\614-9923090
2 bedroom hDuse for rent Fulty
carp&amp;ted. linooln Heights in
Pomeroy References required.
Call 614-992·2270 after 6 00
pm

For rent or la111e : 3 bedroom, 2
blllks, stove and refrigerator,
g• heat. central air, carport.
large yard, near Middlepol1
tchool, perkandthopping $225
month. plus deposrt Call 614992-7065 after 6 :00 p.m . for
appt .

44

Apartment
for Rent

Extra clean, nfiV¥ carpet . Nice for
wGrking lectv or gentleman. Pt
Pleasant C11ll 614-992-6858 .
New, furnished. 2 bedroom.
apal1ment near Me1gs High
School . Call 614-446-8898 or
614-992· 6304

Beech Streat, Middleport. Ohio.
2 bedroom furnished apartment.
uttht1es paJd Reference &amp; Deposit, 304-882·2666.

Two bed room house rn Pomt
PI6JSant. NO PETS, 304-6751386.

In Middleport Ohio, 1 and 2
roo m furni shed apartments. Pri·
vete baths, ut1ht1e&amp; paid 304882-2566

2 bedroom all elec. References &amp;
Depoa:it Call wemngs 304675-2214 aft• 6 .00.

Modern one bedroom apartment Very c;lean and nice No
Pets. Ph . 304-675· 1386

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furnished· Cable. ide1l for on&amp;
man New carpet. Clean Fos·
ter's Mobile Hom e Perk. 614·
446· 1692
Furnished 2 8r mobile home
located on Eastern Ave. $186
month, S126 deposit. Call 614256- 1187
2 mobile homes on one acre.
Rural water. Blacktop road . 21f.t
miles from Mercerville tnear
Han nan Trace). Ref. &amp; dep.
requ•red. Call 614·256· 6343.
2 bedrooms. furn1shed mobile
hom e, Kanauga. Ohio, referen ce
requ~red , 304-675-6196 .
Mobtle home for rent, 1 4x70, 2
bedrooms, located Henderson,
c all 304· 675-3643

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
Bas•c rent for 1 bdr ,
rent
S1 B3.00; 2bdr .. $219 00 . Also
required a $200.00 sac::urity
depo1 it. CONT ACl .Jackson
Esta tes Dept. Ph 446-3997
Equa l Hous tng Opportunity.
2 BR epts 6 closets, kitchon appl furnished, Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, neY~~Iy
pamted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Apts Ca ll 304-675-7738 or
675-5104
Furnishad apt next to library.
One professiOnal adult only.
Par king. Call614-446· 0338 .
----~-------------- c4
Nice private apt. Quest. Ne•
HMC . One adult o nly . No pets.
Stove, refrtg ., drapes . $226 a
mo. Ref required . Call 614446- 4782
1 5 Court: 2 br • 1 % bath, large
hvmg area w-w carpet, new
kitchen , dishwasher. wired for
ptlone &amp; tv . Gas heat . Parking.
S350· mo plut utilities Oep. &amp;:
Ref Call 614-446- 4926
Downtown- Modern 1 8R •
complete kitchen. c arpet, eir,
electric heat. Call 614· 4464383-davt, 446-0139-even &amp;
weekends
1
Brookside Apartments- Large
country kitchen, s tove
refrig·
erat or. Unfurnished. 1 BA , bath,
quiet •r•a Call614-446-1932.

a

Nice 2 BR apt. Stove·. refrig
furnished Water &amp; garba13e
paid . Near Skyline Lan ea Call
61 4·446·7025.

Uaed refrigerators enQ used
e lectric renge. Moll ohan F"urniture, Upper Rivtn Rd 614-4 46 7444
Maple frame couch w•th bhJ&amp;
cushions. Good co nd Call eher
4 PM, 614-367-7800.
China- servtee for 10- nev4;1r
been used . Carnival glass- green
&amp; amber. Antiqu e dishes . Call
614-446-8106.
New 2 Qu een stze Turtl&amp; we lor
beds, mattresses. box spnngs &amp;
heavy duty frame. Must see.
Bes t off81'. Can 614-446-4220
Couch &amp; chair &amp; fo ot stool.
Coffee table &amp; 2 11tnd tablos8100. Cal\614-446-9751 Rt . 1
Gelhpolis. Ohio

tn PomMoy, 2 bedroom, partly
furnished apt Off Spring Ave
Recent tv r;emodeled Call after jft 30 1nch el~rtc ran ge. Harvest
6.00 pm, 614· 992· 6886.
Gold 5100 Cat\304-773·5911
after 4 p m
2 bedroom, 2 bath Middleport
Deposit. $140 month. Conwt- (New) que en-sited water bed.
nient. 614-992-2679.
Never been used Mirrowed
h eadboard wrth all ai:cesso rl es
APARTMENTS, mobil e homes,
2 refrigerators Good. S90.
houses Pt Pleasant and GaUipoeach . 2 gas cook stoves. natural
lis. 614-446-B221
ges, good. S60 eac h Ca ll
614-992-2B66
2 bedroom furnisud apt. ref and
depo.rt., New Haven, W. Va., One large Norge hp- top elect ric
304-882-3267 or 304-773·
cooking range S85. 614-992·
6024
5512 after 6p.m

For rent 1 br apt . with laundry
t6om, air cond.. ceiling fans,
water • trash paid. Y1rd cared
for . No Pets No Children.
Referenca Required . 1·2 Adults
304 - 88~ - 2827 or 773-5352

45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent, day week.
month Galha Ho tel Call 614446-9580 Rent as low as 5120
month
Furnished room. 575. Utiliti ..
pa1d Share battl. S1ngl e male
919 Second GathpOIIS Call
446-4416 after 7pm

46 Space for Rent
Office Space for rent E11.cel.
downtown Gallipolit loc1tion
lnq~uries call614-446 -4222.
Mob1le Home lot 60ft or less
920 4th , Gallipolis 875 Water
pa1d. Call 814-446-4 416 aher 7

PM

large tra1ler lo t . Bulav lll e·
Addison Rd Ward's Trail.- Park
Call aftM 4 ·30 PM , 614-4464265
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, Nortli ol Pomeroy
Rental trfjilers Call 614-992·
7479
Space for s mall trailers. All
hook- up s Cable Also efficiency
rooms, air and cable. Mas o n...
W.Va Call304-773-5651

49

For Lease

1400 sq h commerctal space
suiteble for offices, retailing, or
servicBS Primo locatmn-corner
or 2nd. &amp; Pine tn Gallipolis.
Ample park in g •n rear t1360 per
month Ca ll 614· 446 -4249 or
446-2326

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FU RNITURE 62
Olivo St , Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc wood group- 5399
Living room suites - 8199- 8599
Bunk beds w1th bedding- 5199
Full stze mattress &amp; foundat io n
sta rting · $99 . Rec li ner s
ata rt ing- $99
USED - Beds, dr esse rs, bedroom
s uites. $199 - 8299 Desks ,
wringer washer, a co mplete tine
of used furmture .
NE'f'· Western boots- $30.
Workboou &amp;18 &amp;: up fSteel &amp;.
soft toe) . Can 614-446-3 169.

GE wash er. excellent shape
$125. Ch&amp;::ihrre 614-367-0322
P1 cke ns Used Furniture Dinettes. sofas, chairs, end
t1blos. lamp 9, beds, dressers,
desk,· glassware. 30 4 -675 1460.

53

Antiques

1920's 9x12 woo l rug Wrt h
mat ching 3~~:5 runner. $126 Call
614· 99 2-3965 or 614-992·
6975
ANTIQUES , Buy or Sell Rtverine Anttques, 1124 East Mae n
S t. Pomeroy Hour s.· Mo n .
Tues ·Wed. 10a.m. to 6 p m. By
c hance or appointment Russ
Moore 614-992-2526

54 Misc . Merchandise
Callahan's Used Tire Shop Over
1,000 tires. sizes 1 2. 13 , 14. 15,
16 , 16 6. 8 miles out Rt. 2 1B
Call.&amp;14 ·256 -6261 .
Piastre cistern sto t e approved ,
plast tc sept ic tanks, plast1c
c ulvert s. motel culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Ja ckso n, Oh 614-286·5930.
Quality ftrewood. all hardw ood,
for sale. $25 a pick-up load. Call

61 4~ 367· 0669

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wrighl

.

8 1g Dakota Farm Home- bulll on
your lot only 512,995 &amp; up. Call
614· B86-7311
Atari wn h 33 gamQS &amp; super
chargll!f. $140. Call 614-4469700 ask for Jo e.
Ben Fran klin wood or coat
burntng stave Good cond.
$150 Cell 614 -388-9930
Seasoned Oak &amp; Ash ftrewoodSeasoned one veer . Large load
Split &amp; deltvered · S35. Cell614256 1340 or 256-9303
WANTED place t o store 196.5
Bui ck for winter In Gallipolis
area Cell 614·446-2015
MU ZZ lElOADIN G 1tems- Bleck
pow d er, ce ps, ball , fl asks,
c appers. meas urers. patches,
lig htn ing load ers, m ol ds. etc
Pr1ces drestioallv reduced for
going·out of bustness sa in Koebei ''S Mill Creek Rd . Hrs. -Mon .,
Wed , Frt · 5-8 PM Sat 1-6 PM
Phone 614-446-2316 .
Tree &amp; stum p rom oval, firewood
120 dump load, HEAP voucher •
accepted Ltv e Chrittmas troes
Oon's l an dscapes, 614-4469 646.
Bed, chest drawer s, entertain ment cen ter , dehumidifi er, Eu·
reka sweeper. tree trtm m er,
roelung love seat Celt 614-446-

1-800 843-3767
app~o• .

A CAT SfAI2E~ AT YcJJ,
1-111 C,&lt;\1'1 AGTllAU.V I'UIC.E" lt\ouqHf:&gt;

1'12

W~IOI'I

lt\To

50 Ca liber Hawkins Muzzl e
loadvr S cope and tling. Like
neY~. Caii614-74Z·3066.

Fuel oil heflter With t&amp;f\k·l•k e
new. 3 drawer desk Good cnnd.
Ca ll 614-446- 40 53.

YOJ?. BRAIN .

RenBWiy red.tu»rated. Vet'y:,n1ce
apart,ents In downtown Gall ..
polis 1 &amp; 2 BR .· unfurnished,
secoJ"'d flo or. from 8175-&amp;22 6.
Dep &amp; rflfW81"1C9S requir .. . Call
&amp;\le 614-446-2326 or 446 ·

4249.

'

Great location N•wly remodeled. 2 BA Upstairs Partly
furn lthed apt Utilit1M pttld Call
after 3:30 PM, 614-446-1457
2 BR furnished apt Adulls only.
Nice location. Call 614-446·

2404.

Gr•c1ous hving 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor and RivtrStde Apartments t.n Middleport . From
$215 . including utillthtt Call
614 -992-7787. EOH
i

74

Eurcise treadmtll for tale, S75.
Cross bow Wltl't arrows, $40.
Call 614-985-4418.

•

11 I f

Stereo. AM -FM .8 track Good
con dition. Asking $75 For sole

75

orgen. l·i;::::;;~=~~::::r.::::::~·~··~·="~"~'-'~'~~~

1979
Trans
Am
Runs good.
or
trade
double
ktJYboard
low
mileage
Askr
ng 83000.

Remington Model 742, 30·06

56

ADL 3x9 WeJNur Windfujd,
sling, case, 3'h boxes Ammo
Exc ellent condition $326. 304·
676 -2l95 or 614-992-2683.

¥2 Chow Chow puppies- 4
males. 3 female~ Cute Mother
AtCC reg $25 eech. Call 614446·2108

Humptlrevs radt al fire cir culator,
40 BTU . Reasonable. 614-992·

2900.

AKC Black male Cock• Spaniel.
1 yr. old. House brok.,, Bought
at Petland. S160 Ce\1614-6827164.

For sale. Rasoneble Stereo in
cabinet, radio, reco rd player and
tapea. 614· 992· 3626.

Pure bred Auatrali&amp;n Shepherd
pups $26 a piece. 4 wks. old 1
mala Doberman. 1 yr. old. $40 .
Free pal1 Coll1e. Good homes
please 614--742-2192

2 tw in beds with matching
headboards. mattresses and
springs Included. 2 twin comfor·
Iars, heart dos igns. matching
p1llow shams, dust ruffles and
cul1ains, AlleKcellenl cond1tion.
Call 614-992-6018

Pure Bred Slam8Se kittens Call
evenings e14-949-2290.

Firewood for sa le. Delivered
anytime. $30.00. 304-8953446.

Full blooded male Toy Po odle.
light caramel color 8 wks. old.
Has boen wormed . &amp;75 614·

Buy 6 Tonmg Table. and reCeiVe
a free Suntan bed Offer good
until Doc. 30, 1987. Call Carib·
bean Tans, Inc .. 304-422-4200

992·7566

All Christmas Trees $12 .. Come
early b'fore cold welflher, tag
your tr98 at Newell's Christmas
Tr ee Farm 1 mlle above Maton
on Hanging Rock Ad. 304-7735371 or 882-2886

Christmas PuppiM AtCC registered buff coloted Cocker Spaniels, 304-773i5492.

3 year old male Boogie $40.00 .
Phone 304-675·6941 .

Ye• old male Beagle. sell or
trede fOt' pick-up load f~rewood .
$25 304-675-6174. Needs
tr1ined

Pioneer stereo receiver 80W·eh
S200.00, equahzer $66 .00,
OBX ftltar 820 00. Oi sc.c amflfa
-&amp;18 .00. 23 chanel CB $15.00,
Fuzz buster 820 .00. Phono304·
675-5 968 after 5 .00PM .

57

100 p ercent o ak firewood, S30
pickup load delivered . 304-8963568 after 6pm

Musical
Instruments

Piano lessons Allen Stra•t. Call
614-446 -4463 Of 446-0687
Ktmbel p1ano , axe c ond.
5800 .00 Phone 304· 675 ·
1646

8 ""M Camcorder wrth VCR
8800.00 li11ing room su1te
$ 350.00. 1988 Chev pick-up
4&lt;'14. 3 04-675-6574

58

Beauty shop equipment. 1 wet
station, 1 1:1 11 purpose hydraulic
chair, 2 dryers and chatrs, 1
s hampoo chair, e.llc co nd , phone
after 5:00, 304 -675-6115

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Dunrovin Fruit Farm Will close
for the season November 26th
St Rt . 681 southeast of Albany

Two tickets. round tr1p air,
Columbus, Ohio to Miami, Fie,
depart Nov 23, return Nov 30
Call 304·675· 1390 after 6 .00

Call 614·69e-529e.

Another load Lake Ontado large
epples, new crop Naval Oranges.
Ruby Red Grapefruit, nuts.
candy, bananas Jacks Frurt
Mkt , Rt . 35, Henderson, W. Va

pm

Twin beds, mattres s, bor.
s prmgs, like new. 304-676·
7315
Remington 7600 ADL pump
30-06, 3 to 9 Bushnell scope,
1% box skelts. $325 00 304675-4616.

Bob Chn e Tatr:edermy, Member
W Va TB!Itdermy Assoc Rt . 2
Box 7B2 Pt Pl. WV 304 -6761448

1a69 Camaro· 327, new body
parts, new tires Blue with silver
ltrtpes Good cond 52500 Call
614-446-9370.
1978 Dodge Colt Wagon . AM FM stereo, 5 spd , good intenor,
body good sh~tPe. nOW' exhaust
system Good work car. 8375 or
best offer . Call 814-379-2507.
1971 Chwette Call 614-379·
2409 after 6 00 PM.
1978 Mercury Monerch Auto ,
PS , PB. AC Good cond Call

614· 246· 5120 .

1977 Cam•o Z-28 T-top. 350
LT1 . 4 spd. $1500. or best offer
Call 614-446· 1096
1983 Datsun 280-ZX coupe,
excellent condition. 42, 000 ITll
loaded 89500 1963 JEEP
CJ&amp;. fair condition. englneunas·
sembled. 8660. Call 614-3792610 before 6 .00 am or aher
6 00 pm
1983 Dodge Ar~s Wagon Small
down payment-mke over Pill·
ments. Caii. 614-38B-84,67.
1976 Dodge Customized Van.
318, auto. Sharp. $1400orbest
offer Call 614·446·7354 after

5 PM .

1974 Duster Good con d . 8450.
Call 614- 388 -9325.
Deer Hunters Special- 69 Bu1ck
Wagon No rust AC , PS, PO,
360 V8 , $650. 79 ATC 3
wheeler. ?0 cc. exc&amp;l. eond ..
8300 Buv both for $900. Call
614· 446· 7357 after 4 .30 ·PM

,987 Oldsmobile Cutl au Supreme l oa ded $12,000 Call
304· 773-6911 after 4 p m,
1975 Plymouth Valiant 1977
Plymouth Volarie. 614- 9923888
1987 Olds Cutlass Supreme.
Top skape Assume loan Call
avonlngs, 304- 773-691 1 or
304-773-5615
1983 Uncoln 4 door Continental
Mark VI, ltke new, 304-675·
4384

266-6522

55 Building Supplies

AU equipment in s tock Zeator
Tractofl, manure- lime spreader,
rotary mower. 10 percent over
eost Morr is Equipment, Flu·
lland, Otlio, 46775 Phone
614-742-2466,

-Building Mat erials
Block. brt ck. sewer pipes, win·
dows. hntels etc . Claude Win ters, Rm Grande, 0 . Call 614245-5121

New Holland end of season hay
tool sale. All hav tools at dela8f
cost plu ilnteresl free financmg
until June 1, 1988 with normal
downpaymMt Two451 , 3pt, 7
ftmowen$2, 100 00 One311 ,
3 JO int PTO , standard tires
regular p1c:Mup, 86.600.00 One
472, 7ft hayb1ne. &amp;6,900.00
One 474 , 7 ft haybrne ,
$6,400.00. Keefers s-.rvice
Center, St. Rt. 87, Leon, W Va.
Phone 304-896-3874.

Concrete blocks all sazes yerd or
delivery Mag on s&amp;nd. Gallipolis
Blo ck Co.. 123V1 Pine St ..
Ga ll ipohs, Oh io Call 614· 4462793
Ready mix concrete and all
co ncrete su pphM Ca ll us Vallev
Brook Cement and S upphes,
304-773-5234.

Pets for Sale

lnternat to nal 1050 gr mder
mixer New Holland 7 f1 hay
bind, both 1n goo d co nd, 304·

Groom and Suppfv Shop-Pet
Grooming All breeds .. All
styles. lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph 614-446-0231 .

19 81 Ford Coumer black-whit e
spoke wheels. 6 s p, overdrrve.
looks &amp; runs good. 81400. OBD .
304 576-2941
1970 Chwelle. rad-blk stripes,
meny new perts. ,972 ChiNelle,
green - white l hipe , b ot h
82,000 After 4 p.m. 304· 676
6781

Buy bar chotn and sprocket for
any 111w gat second chain free,
offer good ttll Dec 1. S1ders
Equipment Co Phone 304-676-

7421

Seasoned fir ewood S30 pi d\up
load , delivered Within re8son.
Call 614-245-5039 ahec- 4PM .

g
Ell 0 .

Cheers

1987 Chwy S ilvoradro. Loaded.
8 ,000 miles. 8500 down and
take over payments. Call 614·
446 8894

•

62 Wanted to Buy

1972 Ford truck $450 Good
ru nmng truck. Ca ll 614-3677296

Livestock

Reg . American Saddle Br~
Ho rse&amp; lor sale. Good bloodluie.
Reasonabl e prices . Call 614446-8387 or 256-6461 after

Sofas and chairs pnood from
$395 to 8995 . Tebl• S50 an d
up to $ 126 . H•de-a -beds S390
to $595. Recllneu $225 to
t375 . Lamp s $28 to &amp;125.
Dinettes 81 09 and up to $495.
Wood table w·6 chatra $286 to
8795. Oetk &amp;100 up to S375.
HutchEIII 8400 end up Bunk
beds complflte w -mattranGs
f 295 and up to S 39 5. Be by beds
81 10. Mattreues or box sprin13s
full or twin 868, firm $78, and
$88 Queen seta $226, King
&amp;350. 4 drawer chest S69 Gu n
cabinets 6 gun Gas or electFic
range $375, Baby mat.tresau
835 &amp; $46. Bed h am01 $20,
830 &amp; King frame t5 0 . Good
telect1on of bedroom s u1tes ,
metal cabinets, headboards •3o
end up to 865,

6:00 ~M

~egistered Quarter horses. Call
614-448-018 3

For ule registered Tamworth
BDar Ca ll aher 6pm 614-24 69224
•
Show Saddle with ailver head
stall &amp; breast S1tllps Registered
Sorrell mare-borned Jan. 25,
1979 16 hand• 3 " . S850 Call
6 14-286·6522
Ouroc Bores for better ra te of
gain. Rogm Bentley- 6 13-6842398, Fabina, Oh io

I 64

Hay

8o

Grain

I
I

Good milled hay fo r SBie. Call
614·949-2237.

1985 S -10 Chevy. PS , pg_
Extras. Cal l anyttma, 614· 2466626 or 614 446· 9513
1961 Ch"-'Y Y2 ton wrth 54 6
cy l full pressure m o tor Runs
well 3 spd. tra ns. Drtven 20
mil es _dally Ne¥.1 king pins
good ur as . &amp;850. Ca \1614-446-

=

:t. AL.WAY5

1:,'
~

5U)PECTED"A&lt;; MUCH.

.l

·.

I

0

..

i

i'
•

· Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

1979 ChHVV Luv 4K4, Lift kit, roll
bar, tonneau cover Good co n d.
Sharp. $2260 Call 614-3792262.

1!1J Highway IO

enilsls Jonalhan·s help. 0

. ALLE

OOP
..• SO MAKE

YOU'LL HAFTA

DO BETTER'N
THAT, FELLAS!

DANG SURE

Y'PON'T LOSE

SIGHT O'HIM!

Sports Festival Fall Finals
from Daylona Beach (T)
(}) Q (I) Perfect Strangers
Larry 's scherne 10 expose a
counterfeit operatiOn puts
h im 10 danger. E;J
(!) Some Girls
•.

®J 111 ~ The Oldest Rookie
Ike and Tony go undercover
as 'father and son who

operale a pawn shop. c;J

I!]) In Performance at !fie

White House Singer Barbara
Cook performs the music of
Jerome Kern, and Marv1n
Hamhsch return s as the
master of ceremonies.
@ Primenews Wrap ups of
the day' s world news and m

EEK &amp; ' MEEK

dap1h fealure repons . (1 00)
@ MOVIE: Blazing Saddles

M WMW \DDAY
ARt. ..JET Lll::£ 11-\EJR

(A) (1 33)

Ell(!] MOVIE: Porky's II: The
Next Day (A) (1·35)
8:05@ MOVIE: Doctor Zhlvago

/lOTI-lE.~ ...

Janice claims to have a
po1terge1st, and 1t shows up

1n 1he classroom . 1:;1
9:00 CIJ 700 Club
0 (ll @) A Year in the Life
Alone and vulnerable, Anne
Is man ipulated into an
unseemly Sltu t!tion .
Ill Q (I) Hooperrnan Harry

'MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
~----------------~~----------------~---

WHAT

HAPPENED
TO YOW~

I WENTTOG'ET

I RAN INTO A

I DIDN'TKNOW

A HAIRCUT AND
r.JU5TMY LLXX ...

EIARBER THAT

THERE W/&gt;6 ANY

KAT~S

KIDS .

OTHER /&lt;IND.

lnfll1rates !he hangout of a
knuckle-beatmg loan shark.

li\Responsible
Sex Educa11on: Who's
®I Ill@ Magnurn, P.l.
Magnum becomes embroiled

Plumbing
c •• , .. ~EA

!he 1alk1es.

1:;1

@ Larry Klnjl Live! In depth
enterv1ews w1th top

...

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fou rth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3B8B or 614-

newsmakers and celebritie.s.
9:30 @) American Muscle

EIGHT

445 ·4477

)~

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Magazine

BRANO ~ NEW
PIGLETS

Ill 0 (I) Slap Maxwell
Story Judy and Charlie seek

!!

Sla p s support during rough
times. [;J

10:00 CIJ Straigh1 Talk
0 (2) @ St. Elsewhere
Cra1g Implants hiS art1flcta l
heart in a less than w1lling

Reside nt ial or commercial wirIng. New service or repairs
Licensed elect r1 c1an Estimate
free R1den our Elect r~cal, 304-

patient.

0

(}) Q (lj Dynasty Storm
prov1des the catalyst for a

67S·17e6.

surpnse fourth mamage for
Alex1s

General Hauling

Dillard Water Service Pools
Cist erns. Wells. Delivory Any:
tune. Call 614· 446-7404-No
Sundav ctdls
J &amp; J Water Serv1ce S w1 mmmg
pools, CISterns, wells Ph 614·
245 -9285

J.l~. Fre.' t:t) )OU

. .ll\KE: iO
\(ffi' ACTIVE

E.V~

Ca-l51PER.
1j:$f\RING?

Uphol stery

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
R~up hols tery, St Rt. 7 . Crown
Ctty, Oh. 614· 256· 1470, Eve .
614· 446-3438 Op&amp;n dally 9 to
4 .30 , Sat . 9 .30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
now Uphostere d.
Mowr av'!f Upholste ring l~lng
tn count yR rea22\lears 'lhebett
tn furni tu rA u pholstering Ca ll
30_4 · 67 5 - 4 154 lo r free
eshmatt~s

By James Jacoby
If you a re baflled by the bidding, the
final contract IS a result of Roma n
key~card Blackwood combined wi th
South's unbndled optimism The re·
sponse of five hea rts to four no·trump

'1'E5, MAAM, I'M HERE
TO SEEM'{ DOG ... /5
HE ALL RIGHT ?

~---

HE GOT f.IURT

PLA'{ING HOCKEI(1

I WONDER HOW
IT HAPPENED..

THERE I WAS, RACING
DOWIHI1E ICE, WA'&lt;NE
GRETZK'I' CI-IASING ME.

WEST

EAST
• 9 65

•+sK46 3

.74

+L08 752

.KJ9 62

SOUTH
.QJ8 3
.. AK1097
+AQ9

. A.

showed etther two or five key cards

(key cards ar e aces a nd the trump
king) and demed having the queen of
t rumps. Since South held the other
three of the five key cards and the
trump qu een, he bid seven spades.

'
Vulnerable:
Both
Dealer South

However, 13 trtcks required much

more than just solid trumps and five
key cards m the two hands, so it was a
brash undertaking to bid the grand.
Luckily for declarer, he played the
hand better than he bid 1t.
He went right up wi th the ace of
spades a nd Jed the jack of d1amonds
from dummy . When EasL covered,
South won the A~Q of d.amonds and
ruffed a diamond with dummy's spade
deuce. Then came A-K of hear ts, fol lowed by a heart ruff with a high
trump. The hand would have been over
had hea rts d1v1ded 3~3, but such was
not the case Declarer returned to his

6&amp;~"*~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
5

40 Leftove rs .

mishap

41 Antlered

East

Pass

2•

Pass

Pass
Pass

3•

2.

1 ..

PaS&gt;~

s ~•

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

4 NT

Opemng lead: • 7

L------------'
ha nd with the club ace and trumped
still another heart i~ dummy. Since his
last heart was now a winner, he re-

turned to his hand by ruffing a club
and had to hope that trumps were 3-2.
They were, a nd 13 tncks came rollmg
in.

--r:F.T.:::r.::

DOWN ·

10 French

I Dealt lll
2 Sigourney

to

Weaver

13 Turkish

15 Actress

ft.lm
3 Depart

Sandra
16 Curve part

5 Uncommon 14 Host

17

,.
South

one

9 Palm leaf

12

Nor1h

Wight

Surfeit
Stockmg

painter
Similar

West

39 -of

ACROSS

l

JH8.87

• 74

.QJ 6 2

Indian
weight

18 Forget it!

20Sweet
potato

21 Engltsh ,
river
22 French
statesman
23 English
cathedral

4 Watch

6 Time being
7 4lklay
crutse
ship
8 Proceed
at will
11 Pick up
the tab

16 Light
19 Lummox
22 Expense
24 Strip

29 Use a
credit
card
30 Banish
34 Czech
river

of wood

25 Card game 36 MiL

officer

26 Lonely

27 Card game 37 Secreted

_..,.....,....-,.,.....

town
"--Grant"

25 Finnly
fiXed
27 Fastener·
28 Alternate

to nothing

29

Resolve

31 Caviar
32 Nonsense!
33 English
river

35 Asian
donkey
37 Former

sec'y
of state

Happening
()AILYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work it:

38

•

Jerome Kern , and Marv1n
Ham lisch returns as tt1e

master of ceremonies
®) Ill ~ The Equalizer A
woman 1s haunted by psychiC
v1sions of a strangler
~ Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a (ook
ahead to tomorrow' s news
S10r1BS. (1 :00)

PEANUTS

NORTH
+ A K 10 2
.. fi 3

+J4

@ News
Ill (!] Benny Hill
10:30 CIJ American Snapshots
(!) Billiards Greal Pool
Snooker Challenge. 9 Ball
Compe tition (Steve Mizerak
vs Sieve Dav1s) (R)
Ell CZl Hogan's Heroes
11 :00 (1)-Remlngton Steele
u rn Ill o Cll ®I l!ll
lllll2l l!1l News
C!l Sign Ott
@ Moneyllne Curren!
reports on world economics
and financtal news With Lou

Dobbs. (0 :30)
@ Jeftersona
Ell (!] Love Co~nection
11:30 D C2J l!1l Tonight Show
(!) SponaCen1er (L)
(})Cheers

11 118

AXYDLBAAXR
isLONGFELLOW

Cook performs the mus1c of

THE GRIZZWELLS®

.

.Q 10 8 fi 3

(!) In Performance at the
White House S 1nger Barbara

R &amp; R Wat er Serv ice. Hom &amp;
ci&amp;te r s, wells, pools filled Fo r
merly Ja m es Bova Wat ers.Cal'
304-675-6370.

87

1:;1

II

24TV's

chrontclesi&lt;eaton·s career

&amp; Heating

17

I III

Unbridled
optimism

1n Carol's prolessional and

pnvate l1fe .

'

4

BRIDGE

city

B2

85

I

I'

'

My friend had boon sharing household chores w1th h1s w1te .
Wh1lolrying to select a new vacuum cleaner he 1nqu1red If there
was a RIDING one.

(G) (3:17)

8:30 CIJ Last Frontier
(}) Q (I) Head ot the Class

fro m his start in vaudeville at
age four to h is wdrk tn Silent
f1lms and his transition into

Watter!on ' s Wat e r Hauling.
reasonable rates , immedi lrte
2,000 g~llon delivery, cisterns.
pools; well , etc. call 304-57629 19
.

73

rn

Heaven An athletic counselor
at a ·ca mp {or the bhnd

[J) Buster Keaton: A Hard
Act to Follow Th1 s p rogram

,9B3 Dodg e. 4 s pd: topper,
sport rima, new tirM . $3999
Jo hn's Auto S ales, below Holidav Inn, Kanaug a· Rt . 7 .

1985 half ton Chwy pi ckupV ·B,
air co nd , low mile. Nlce, 304·
675 7286 even1ng1

0

Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn care, landsc ap ing, stump
removal , 304-576 - 2842 or
576-2903.

Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pool t, cisterns, well s. Call 614446- 3171

1987 S10 pick- up PS. PB, 4
speed long bod. Vory munnll ·
ble 614- 992-6675.

8:00 (]) Second Honeymoon

(!) 1987 National Collegiate

SWEEPER and sewtng machtne
repa ir, parts. and supplia Ptck
up and dellverv. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one kalf mtle up
Georg .. Creek Rd . Call &amp;H446-0294.

a

2306.

M'A' S' H
7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:30 0
Hollywood Squares
(!) Scholastic Sports
Arner~ca (T)
(}) Newlywed Garno
Q@ Judge
®I Wheel ot Fonune 1:;1
@ Crossfire (0:30)
lllll2l l!1l Jeopardy! I:;!
@ Barney Miller
lll 0 WKRP in Cincinnati
7:35@ Sanford and Son

rn

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondilional hfet1me guaran tee local references furntshed
Frae estimAtes, Call collect
1-614 237-0488, day or night
R cgersBasement
Walerproohng

Trucks for Sale

1979 F100 pick-up V-8 , ttan d·
ard S750. Cell after 6 PM
61 4-266-9364.

63

Even bulls like pracllcal jokes.

Dobbs. (0:30)
®) Wheel of Fortune

Ill@

273·4215.

SNAFU ® by Bruce Beattie

0322.

reports on world economics
and f1nanc1al news w1th Lou

Servic~s

84
72

@) SportsCenter (L)
(}) Entertainment Tonight
Q ® People's Court
(!) l!lJ MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewsHour (1 ·00)
®)News
tlJJ Moneyline Current

1977 Titan motor home 26 ',
3500 wt genMator, fully self·
contained, dual gld tankS, sleeps
sill, low mi 304-675-6372
anvttme.

Rotary or cable tool drtlllng.
Most wells completed same day
Pump sales and service. 304895 -3802

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN TH ES E SQUARES

Complete the ch vckle qvoted
bv fdlrng in the m1.S51ng words
yeo develop from step No 3 below

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Mingle -- Juror -- tc1ng -- Dainty -- RIDING

D m PM Magazine

19 ft . Lakeland travel camper,
fully eontaif1ed Sleeps 6 h eel
cond. &amp;1400 Call 614-3670447

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal Call 304-676· 1331 .

8

@. WKRP in Cincinnati

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

2464.

I

I

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
fOR ANSWER

Ell 07oo Close tor Comfort
6:35 ill Carol Burnett
7:00 CIJ Remington Steele

Auto Repair

RON 'S Telev is ion Serv1ce.
Hou se c alls on RCA , Ouazar,
GE . Speciehn g tn Zenith. Call
304-576- 239B or 614 446-

o~pects

York [0·30)

1983 Ford Ranger. 4 cyl, 4
speed, pal11, call efter 6 ·00,
304-675-3073

Home
Improvements

The old man says that a father is
a rnan who
h1s son to be
as good a rnan as he 10 -

NATJUY

anchored live from New

DiJal exhaust kit s, S99 96 in·
stalled Most Fords, Chevy
trucks, Vans,. 4x4' s. Muffler
Man, 9 Stimpson Alo'lll., Athens, ·
Ohio 1-800-943-3787.

•
Wh ite-

61 Farm Equipment

4020 JD tractor w it h 4 row no
till corn plantar· 86960. T0 -30
MF tractor, plow•, disc &amp;
cult•vator- 52600 Clll .Sl4·

her soap opera idol. t;1
@ ShowBiz Today News of
1he entertaenment world is

- - - - - - -- - - - -·1¢-

81

I

7 lrl
1---r-l_,_1.:..,.::1,:.....;1.,..:...
0

Voula fmds out Luc1e
shophtts; Stephanie meets

Budget Transmissions: Used and
rebutlt, all types Guarente8 30
days Call 614-379-2220 or
304-675-4230.

New motor home 2700 mil•
Trade for truck &amp; campDf. Mutt
be nice. Call 614-256-6613

;

.~_;;.N:._;;O,_.:..Y.,H
I I I:,:..;E-11
s I . .._:

[!) Degrassi Junior High

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Struts, 8119 95 pair, instalted.
Most models. Mufflar Man, 9
Stimpson Ave . Athens. Ohio
1· 800· 843- 3767

•sa

®I lll ll2l CBS News

14' V-bottom boat with trliler
9 8 Mercury motor. 2 gall tanka
&amp; oan, 4 hfejackets&amp; nng 260'
V2" nylon rope. 82,000. 304773· 5775

1 983 Dodge Ch•gM. 4 cyl ,
auto .. AM-FM radio. new tir•
Ught brown. Call 614-2466026 after 6 00 PM

I

I

RUBVE

~-,-...-,:,1.:....;...:1::.,;...
1' .:;...-.11

(!) Nightly Business Report

14ft. V bottom boat and trailer

SMANUK
-I

Inside the PGA Tour (A)
(}) Q (I) ABC News 0

Boats and
Motors for Sale

77

I

li\

9.8 HP Met'cury motor, 2 g•

76

•

'

6:05 (I) Alice
6:30 0 (2) @ NBC Nigh11y News

Motorcycles

1977 Ford Thunderbtrd AM FM-Cus. excel. cond Silver
Call 614-245· 9667

Stainless steel exhautt systems.
Now custom made for your
truck, motor home or classic car
Wrth life-time warranty Muffler
Man, 9 Stimpson A\18., Ath ens.
Ohm 1· 800-843-3767

Utility building spl. 27'x36'11.8' ,
1-13'K8 ' sild1ng door, 1· 3 ' serVIce door- 54444 Iron Hone
Bldra Call 614-332-9746

W1nchester Model 94, 30 -30
ca!btne and rrfle for sale. Call
304-773-5303

614 · 388 ~ 8647 .

19B4 Merc ury Topaz
Alpine. AM FM -Cau s tereo ,
AC Excel!. cond. $3400 Call
614·446· 8502 efter 8 :30 PM .

CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S . 36 West, Jackton. Ohio
614-286-6461 .
Massey Ferguton, New Holland,
Buatl Hog Sahli &amp; Serv1ca Over
40 used trecton to choo1e from
&amp; complete fine of new &amp; used
equipment. Largest selection In
S .E. Oh1o

Floor mo del stereo tape player &amp;
deck. am· fm, 3 size records
hard ly us&amp;d. lbnas gurtar org
304·675- 5460.

1976 P1nto, reliable, $175 or
best offer 1972 Nova, fair
condition, S350 , reliable Call

Form Supplies
&amp; Llv~slock

AVON, all areas, Shnley Spe•s.
304-675-1429
Sears LP gas wall turnace.
24,000 btu. th er mostat controlled , used for two seasons,
good cond, 8150.0 0 . 304- 5762203

71 Auto's For Sale

GAMI

Ill (!] One Day at a Tirne

tanks, oara. 4 life jacket• and Ute
ring 250 tt 1h: mch rapt '2000.
lnqurre at 304-773-5776

Transportation

Pets for SaiQ

EVENING

OJ) tnaide Politics
@ Facts of Lite

1981 Honda XR , BO . Good condition. $200. Run1 good. Call
614·446-0290.

For sale. HardWood. Split. Seasoned. S26 per load. Delivered
836 load Call 614·949·2069.

WED., NOV. 18

woao

6:00 CIJ Crazy Like a Fox
0 (2) (}) Q (I) ®I lll ll2l
1!1J News
(!) SportsLook (T)
(!) Dr. Who
I!]) Square One TV 0

77 Ch811' Blazer Chevnne. After
4 .30 call304·676- 5460

Grave Blankets, $10 and $15.
Also wreatks. Call 614-9492115.

90 Day• aa me as cas h wnh
approved credit. 3 Mil • out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat . Ph. 614-446-

•

304· 675·4045.

1984 Dodge Ram pi ckup New
radials 5 s pd Topper. $5000.
Call 614-446-0276 a fter 6 ·0 0
PM .
' '

Furnrshed 4 room• &amp; ~eth .
Clean. No pets Aduhs only Ref.
&amp; dep. roquired: Call 614-446
1519.

Furnished Eff ictency . 701 4th.
Ave Gall lpoltt •175. Ut;tit ias
paid . Call 446· 4416 a h er 7 PM .

• •

I Hlift R&gt;Wif~ .
I ~AlE 1'\J~I!:S i
I Hl'ife&gt; 1'\J\'f'IE!:. .

tirea whh wheels an d kub cap1
from 1988 Ford. Call614-9854339.

R1o Grand&amp;- Nt ce 2 BR. Stove.
refrigerator furnished $225. No
putt. Call 614-446-803 8 .

Modern 1 8R apartment Call
614-446-0390.

•

15

Sentinel

T.e levision
Viewing

&amp; 4 W .O.

1983 Dodge Ram convertion
van , low mileage. exe. eond.

4 new 235x15 all wea1ker radial

56

BORN LOSER

·lc1985 Nissan 4K4 King Cab
pi ok- up. 43.000 mil•. good
t ires , pn ced to s ell. Pho ne
614-992·6485 and alk for John
E Ounng day time.

Mixed hard wood slaba. eu per
bundle Contalnin(l

Vans

The

Pomeroy- Middleport , Ohio

1976 CJ7 . Bent frame. Running
gears good . 6 cyl e600, Firm
C1ll after 6 Pm 614-258-9 364

281j 7.

Jr. si~:c winter coat w1t h hood·
S11e 9 . 16 pr. s lacks-Size 7-9
Excellent cond. 6 h green
art1ftetal Christma s tree. Call
614-446-3375

73

9 Stimpson Ave , Athens, Oh•o

t9n
FOB Okto Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Oklo 614-992-6461

Valle,~

HomesJor Sale

Brand new 3 BR . naar Galltpohs
locks on Rt. 7 2 car gwage, nice
lot Immed iate possession. Will
considfllr tl'ltde in of Mobile
home, property. etc. Bargain
pnced Call 614-446-8038

Wednesday. November 18, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

November 18. 1987

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 iength and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters 1\re different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

11·18

CGYJDX

HX

X N E G

J M

H K I

C G I K I

y 'j E N K H 0 A I X .

C G I K I

H K I

M J A U

CGYJDX

L M K

S G YE G

T H J

H

J M C

L M N J Z

ENKI . --O IKJHKZ

OH KNEG

G H X

Yesterday's Cryptoqllote: IF THEY WANT PEACE,

NATIONS SHOULD AVOID THE PINPRICKS THAT
PRECEDE CANNON SHOTS. -- NAPOLEON

�.LAST

WEEK
FOR OUR
MONEY

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 'PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY; OH.

BACK.
CARDS

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., NOV. 21, 1987
! '

-

'

We Will
Double
Punch
CRISPY SERVE
Your
Bacon ••••••••••••••• ~~••••
&lt;
Cards
. ....
. ~~••• $139 With Each
·1',4 por.k Lo1n
Purchase.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$
•

79

9
8
Rump Roast ••••• ~... 1 ·

HOMEMADE·

Pork Sausage •• ~••• $129

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

Tur key .•...••...•....•••. 79&lt;
TOMS 16-22 AVG. LB

----

Chuck Roast ••.••• !~.

$50.00
G. Schneider, Syracuse
,, Louise Siders, Middleport

FRYER

Leg Quarters •••••••• 39&lt;

520.00

LB.

Dorothy Johnson, Racine
Fay Steinmetz, 'Pomeroy
Helen Davis, Pomeroy

CHICKEN

Drumsticks •••••••• !~ .• 89~.·.

510.00
Rosemary Randolph, Long
Bottom
Mary King, Long Bottom
Zelma Hawley, Syracuse
S. Battey, Pomeroy
Jill Davis, Hartford, WV
Ada Titus, Syracuse
VIda Davis, Pomeroy
Mary Bussell, Pomeroy
Barb Colmer, Pomeroy
Brenda Hayes, Pomeroy
Allee Knapp, New Haven
Texanna Well, Pomeroy
Cathy Wilson, Pomeroy
Pam Ghee, Racine
Irene Klein, Pomeroy

..

·Cranberries •••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

ss.oo

BROUGHTON

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
GAL.

FLAVORITE

Margarine •••••••••• 3/Sl
LB.

BIRDS-EYE
LITTLE DEBBIE

Cool Whip ••••:.-:•••••• 69&lt;

Snack Cakes ••••••••• 59&lt;.· LLOYD HARRISS PUMPKIN OR
GOLD MEDAL
$-119
Apple
Pie
•••••.
•
••
~.~z~.
.
8
9
(
Fl OIJ r •••••••••••••••••••••
'·

12 PAK

•

S LB. BAG

1

DOMINO SUGAR
,

S LB. BAG

$149
limit 1 Pfr Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Nov. 21, 1917 .

· . •. ''''
... •,• •·····couPON·······
••
·····couP&lt;W·······• •• ••..'.••.. cou:pm
•
DOWNY
•

•••••
••

• •••••

"

•

•••

$1 9'9

.WHITE CLOUD

•

TOILET .TISSUE
Roll
••• 4PKG.

\'

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supe&lt;morket
Offer Good Thru Nov. 21, 1917

• •

•

:• FABRIC SOFTENER
: b4 oz.
: BTL.

NO NEW CARDS
ISSUED
MONEY BACK
WINNERS

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

..
i

EXAMPLE:
S14 Purchase
S28 Punched

•

•••••••

• CRISCO SHORTENING :•
3 LB. CAN
•

•
•
••

89&lt;

:
Limit 1 Per C111tomer _
• Good Only ·At Powell's Suposmarktt
o, Offer Good Thru Nov. 21, 1987

• •••••

•

. ,•

• • • • • .• • • • Iii • • • • • • • ·• ·• ••

limit 1 Per Cuttomer
Good Only At Powell's Supermorkot
Offer Good Thru t~G•· 21, 1917

•

.-.............•.......

•-

0

Carol Oliver, Racine
Iva Upton, ReedsvUie
Paul Nease, Pomeroy
Peggy Westle, Pomeroy·
Linda Broderick, Pomeroy
Gladis Chaney, Pomeroy
1 Reba Northup, Clllton
N. Neutzllng, Middleport
Viola Shoemaker, Middleport
Lelia Baggy, Pomeroy
L. Patterson, Pomeroy
Betty Donovan, Syracuse
M. Wingett, Racine
Linda Holter, Racine
Nellie Hatfield, Dexter
Shelba Wickline, Racine
Ann Bing, Long Bottom
Sharon Folmer, Pomeroy
Gloria Fowler, Mil!dleport
P. Barrett, Rutland
K. Turley, Racine
Anna Greene, Pomeroy
Florence Musser, Pomeroy
Becky Pearson, MaSon
V. ~rown, Pomeroy
Beatrice Blake, Syracuse
Avanelle Bass, Pomeroy
Cora Woodard, Pomeroy
C. lfoudashelt, Pomeroy
S. Mattox, Pomeroy
Wanda Eblin, Pomeroy
Diana Knapp, West Columbia
Joseph Wolfe, Middleport
Joan Tiemeyer, Pomeroy
Donna Davis, Middleport
Marie Hawk, Pomeroy
Carolyn Roush, Syracuse
Joan Tuttle, Racine
Leola Wolle, Racine

Ohio Lottery

Pairings
for fifth .·
Bevo Classic
.

.

Daiiy' Number
679
Pick 4
0321
Su~r Lotto
4-7 -13-21}.32-39

Page 3

e

Vol. 37. No. t36
Copyright~d 1987

•

at y

Cloudy tonight. Low in mid
20s. Partly cloudy Friday.
,Highs in mid 30s. _

entine

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, November 19, 1987

2 Sections. 16 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

COmmissioners award office, computer bids
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Bids for office space and a computer system for
the Meigs County Bureau ·or Support were
awarded Wednesday by the Meigs Co un ty
Commissioners. Starting Dec. 1, the Bureau of
Support will become a part of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services and will no longer
be under the jurisdicltion of the Common Pleas
Court.
Before making their final decisions, the
commissioners reviewed the bids with _Michael
Swisher, human se~vlces director.
.
Two bids were received last week for office
space In Middleport. One bid was for space on
Race St. across from the main Department of
· . HumanServlces building. Theotherwasforspace
in the same building on North Second Ave. in
Middleport where additional offlcess of the
Dejlartment of Human Services are already
located.
·

Both bids were nearly the same - two-year
contracts, with options to renew, $400 per month
rent not including utilities. However, the Race St.
•building did not have an alarm system •and the
alarm system at the North -Second Ave. building
would have to be expanded to Include the
additional space.
After checking Into the costs of the alarm ·
systems, and also the installation ·or telephone
systems, Swisher reported that it would cost
approximately $2000 more to Install the services
at the Race St. building. The reason for the
difference in costs Is that new .systems must be
installed on Race St:. whereas the systems in the
North Second Ave. building would be continuations of existing systems, Swisher said.
Swisher also pointed out !hat the necessary
installations In the Race St. building could not be
guarant eed by the Dec. 1 deadline.
Based upon this Information and the recomm endation of Swisher, the commissioners accepted a

Tripp, Kostival families also honored

.

bid from Maxine Gaskell for the office space on
North Second Ave.
Two 'bids for computer equipment were also
received last week. Both bids met specifications,
Swisher said, but !he high bid exceeded
specifications. He said the reason for this Is that
the high bid of $45,575 was for a completely new
computer system, while the low bid of$23,810 was
an add ition to the department's existing computer
system. Based upon Swisher's recommendation,
the low bid from Cards Inc., of Elida, Ohio, was
accepted by the commissioners.
In related discussion, Swisher repor ted that all
necessa"y arrangements for the D.ec. ·1 move of
the support bureau should be finalized by the
deadline. He said the office, which will then be
called the Meigs Ccu)lty Child Suppo rt Enforcement Agency, will definitely open In Middleport
on the Dec. 1 date. Office hours will be 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. and employees will rec~ive one-half
hour for lunch and 10 paid holidays . He said the
office will remain open during the lunch hours. .

County Engineer Philip Roberts reported that
be has advised Scipio Township officials to make
changes at the intersection of Township Road 11
and State Route 689. Roberts said the Intersection
is dangerous and would necessitate some earth
moving to alleviate the problem. Roberts said the
la ndowner has offered to give the township the
right-of-way to make the changes and that the
county highway department will assist with the
project as much as possible.
Roberts also reported that the highway
department Is replacing steel and the deck on a
bridge in Lebanon Township.
Clerk Mary Hobstetter reported that Blair
Windon has been hired by the Soil Conservation
Service as district technician, replacing David
Burt who resigned the position to take a job
outside the county .
Finally, Interdepartmental transfers wer~
approved for the commissioners, the board of
elections and probate court.
-J

GOODYEAR HONOREES- Dave Doblnsky,
left, representing the Goodyear Tire and Rubber

.Co., presents the Goodyear Farmer of the Year
Award to Dale and Joanne Kautz and BID and Usa
Kautz.

Kautz families 1987
farm conservation honorees
The Dale and Bill Kautz
families were presented the
Goodyear Conservation Farm
Award at the annual Meigs Sol!
and Water Conservation District
dinner meeting held at Eastern
High SchooL
The award was presented by
Dave Dobinsky, reperesentlng
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co., and is presented each year to
a farmer in the county who has
practiced good conservtlon over
the past several years.
The Alvin Tripp and Jan
Kostlval families received the
Outstanding Farm Family
awards lor conservation effort
practices on their farms over the
past two years. Both Tripp and
Kostival are enrolled In the long
term agreement program
through the agriculture stabilization and conservation Office and
(he Soil Conservation Service.
Charles Ray Hartis received
the Wildlife Conservation Award
from Larry Johnson, wildlife
biologist, representing the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour-

Rubbish
niay have
been cause ·
of blaze

ces, Division of Wildlife. Harris presented to the Southern FFA,
has been active In the food plot first place team. High scoring
and other wildlife programs over individuals were David Custer,
the past several years.
first place; Benny Dailey, seRex Shenefield was presented cond, and Kevin Grueser, third.
a plaque for 26 ye&gt;ars service as a The fourth member of the team Is
supervisor of the Meigs Soil and James l,.angwelL
Affilliate membership certifiWater Conservation District.
Shenefield has served as director cates were presented to busifor Area 6 South, of which Meigs nesses which became members
County Is a part, for approxi- · over the past year artd went to
mately 20 of those 26 years. He is Agracon, Inc .; Bank One of
retiring from the board at the end Athens NA; Bill's Tire Service; ·
of December.
Central Trust Co.; Chester AgriThomas Theiss was reelected Servlce; D. R. Rotrsh's Body
to a three year term on the board Shop; D. V. Weber Construction;
and Marvlene Beegle was Dairy Valley; Facemyer
elected to a three year term. The Lumber Co.; Farmers Bank and
terms begin Jan. 1, 1988.
Savings Co.; Ferrellgas; G. and
Soil judging awards were pres- J. Auto Parts; Gibson Beauty
ented to Meigs Future Farmers Shop; Greenup Reclamation;
of America for being the first Harris Farm and Greenhouse;
place team in the agriculture Home National Bank; J. D.
judging contest. High individuals Drilling Co.; Jaymar Coal Co.;
receiving cash awards were Keefers Service Center; MGM
Frank Parker, first place; Roger Farm City; Montgomery Trailer
Fraley, second, and Bill Scarbo- Sales; Ohio Pallet Co.; Peoples
rough, third, The fourth member Bank; Quality Print Shop; South·
of the team Is Jeff Parker. In the ern Ohio Coal Co., and 3-R
urban contest, a trophy was Industries .

Meigs Local teache~s fringe
benefits cancelled tomorrow
Fringe benefits of Meigs Loc.al
School District te ac hers were
cancelled as of tomorrow , Frl- .
day, Nov. 20, when the district's
board of education met In recessed sessio n Wednesday night.
Negotiations between the
teachers, whO went on strike
Nov. 6, and the board of education were resumed at 4 p.m.
Wednesday with Federal Mediator Joe Crowe and continued until
7:45p.m.
·
:The negotiation session, the

fir st since the strike began, did At the present time the board is
not bring an end to the strike, but paying $202.29 per month In
at least another session between · insurance costs, 100 percent, for
the two groups was set for 1 p.m. each teacher with the family
next Tuesday. Meantime, Crowe Insurance plan. It was repo~ted
asked both groups to consider not this morning that teachers will
releasing any public statements have the opportunity to continue
on the strike at this time.
thfse fringe benefits at their own
The board then met lor Its expense.
recessed session taking the ac·
As an indication of Increasing
tion to cancel the fringe benefits costs in the district, Asst. Supt.
of teachers which Includes lnsu· James Carpenter said that the
ranees- hos pitalization, dental, distric t has been notified that
optical, major medical and life.
(Continued on Page 9)

LONDON (UPI) - A fire
turned a bustling subway station
50 feet below ground into an
inferno of heat and blinding
smoke, killing at least 30 people,
and authorities said today the
blaze spread suspiciously fast.
The fire broke out Wednesday
A "cleara nce sale" was autho- se niors. The resignation of Patri- teac her at Tuppers Plains for a
night In a wooden escalator at
rized Wednesday night when the cia Parker as a subslltute leave without pay arrangement
King's Cross "underground" sta:
Eastern I,.ocal School District teacher was accepted and because of a. family medical
tion. London's busiest, and
Board of Education met In Theresa Marcinko was named a problem was approved. The
caused a s tampede among thouregular session .
substitute cook for the rest of the board set Monday, r:iec. 14, at 7
sands of commuters, survivors
The board authorized Supt. Dr. current sc hool year.
p.m. for a special meeting to
said. The beat was so Intense it
Dan Apiing to hold the clearance
Approval was give n to an work on the 1988-89 budget and
cracked concrete.
sa le to dispose of outdated and no appropriation modification Monday, Dec. 21. 7 p.m. lor the
Police and fire officials gave
longer useful textbooks and transferlng $2,000 from library . next regulai· meeting: Both sesconflicting casualty figures but
equipment that. due to its condi- books and materials to regular sions will be held at the high
Scotland Yard said today it .,
tion, age and state of non - instruction. supplies . The re- sc hool.
OUTSTANDING FARM FAMILY- Rodney Chevalier, Meigs
appeared the toll was 30dead and
repairability, is of no use to the vised Chapter II application for
The board met In executive
SWCD supervisor, left, presents the Outstanding Farm Family
21 Injured.
which
there
is
no
board
and
for
year
waqs
the
current
school
session
to di scuss financial mat Award to Jan Kosllval. Alvin Tripp also received the same award.
"We are rat her mystified at
longer any storage space accepted and approved.
ters
relative
to the 1988-89 budget
th e moment about why at the end
available.
A
special'
exception
to
Mrs.
and
to
hear
a
grievance filed bv
of the rush hour with lots of a brlc!lng early today .
Some witnesses described the
The board set Sunday, May 29, Cind y Linton, kindergarten OAPSE Chapter 448.
.
people about. a relatively small
One' of the first theories put star.t of the fire as a "flash" and
at 6:30p.m. for the graduation of
fire ca n accelerare and cause forward about the cause of the . survivor Andrew Lee spoke of a
suc h horrendous damage and
fire was that it began in rubbish " sheet of flame."
injuries In such a short space of accumulated under the esca la·
The fire gutted the escalator.
time," divisional fire officer Phil tor. But authorities later dis- believed to date back to World
Lloyd said today.
counted it .
The Ohio Departp-~ent of Natu- ·constitution.
Local ' DAR chapters may set
War II, a nearby ticket office and
Fire Department officials said
The Ohio Nurseryman's Asso- up ceremonies for their respec Lloyd said Investigators had most of the concourse for the raJ ResourcE's and the Daughters
they were not ruling out any
methods "to Identify acceler- underground station. Bodies of the American Revolution, In elation bas agreed to donate two tive counties. and the Ohio Board
possible cause pending compleants, explosives or any other we~e found scattered under- conjunction and cooperation with trees per county lor each county of Education Is · also being contion of their investigation.
terrorist or fire accelerants that grob nd In train tunnels and in the the Northwest Ordinance and In the state. Although no specific tacted for ass istance in involving
One of the dead was a firefigh- may have been used by person or concourse.
United State Bicentennial Com- tree variety was mentioned In the yo uth in t)le dedication
ter and two more were among the
perso11s u'nknown."
,.
mission,
are planning a state- letter, all trees are to be programs,
"It was a devastating scene,"
seriously injured when some
Pollee first put the death toll at firefighter Brian Cla r k said.
wide
program
to honor the U.S. approximately six feet htgh and
Plaques will be made availa ·
firefighters raced Into the 32 and said at least 33 others were
Constituton In each of Ohio's 88 either balled in burlap or In a ble, at no cost. ·to eac h county, to
The !jre broke out on tile
smoke-fill ed tunnels to rescue !hissing. But after searching escalator leading up from the
.
counties . The Meigs County container.
Signify that the county· participeople without waiting for the subway tunnels four times , they popular Piccadilly Line. which
Commissioners were apprised
The 1rees will be transporte'd to pated In "Plant a Living
arrival of their oxygen tanks at
said 30 people were killed and all serves Piccadilly Circus.
Wednesday, by letter, of the the Civilian Conservation Camps Legacy ."
the station on London's north side others were accounted for. PoThe first passengers on the
program, called "Plant a Living In the state, the closest to Meigs
Counties will be asked to select
irl the world's oldest subway
lice said as many as 100 people escalator did not know about the
Legacy." The Ohio program Is - ' County being Zaleski, for pick up where the trees should be planted
system.
were treated at the scene for · fire untll ' th~ smoke and flames
modeled after the national · by county representatives. The and where the plaques should be
"Everybody who went down
smoke inhalation .
broke through the steps at their · "Plant a Living Legacy" pro- · trees ·are to be obtained in early placed.
that first flight of steps went into
Queen Elizabeth II said she feet.
gram which encourages Amerl· ' April and planting is being
The ~onimissioners said they
,
.
.
the unknown," Assistant Chief was "deeply shocked" by the
"The fire started and It ap- cans to plant trees In honor of the . recommended during Arbor look forward to participating In
Fire Officer Joe Kennedy said In
fire.
Conlinued on page 9
the program .
I)lcentenniai of the U.S. WeeK, April 25·29, 1988.

Board authorizes 'clearance sale'

Meigs to participate iri-- program

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