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Page-D-B-The Sunday Times-Sentinel

.'

Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

November 29. 1987

Ohio Lottecy

Official:
wreckage
not
sighted;
probably
sank
immediately
.
.
Johannesburg.
An Air Maurltus official told
United Press International In a
telephone interview the crash
s!te has not been found.
"We have not Identified the
crash site yet. We have'! found
anyth!ng. We think this means
the aircraft crashed and sank
Immediately, " said Joseph Yip·
ptong from Port Louts, the
capital of Mauritius.
" Perhaps there is nothing to
see," he said.
•
Earlier reports from Reunion
island, 175 miles southwest of
Mauritius, that a French military aircraft had spotted the
plane's wreckage were errone-

By'BJ,tENDAN BOYLE

JOHANNESBURG , South
Afrlc~ (UP!) - A South African
- Airways jet wlth 159 people
aboard plunged into the Indian
Ocean near Mauritius today ,
moments after the pilot reported
a fire In the cabin of the Boeing
747, airline officials said.
There was no immediate word
on whether any of the 140
passengers or 19 crew members
survived the crash of Flight 295,
which left Taipei, Taiwan, on a
4,0oo·mlle flight to Mauritius, 600
miles east of Madagascar off the
southern tip of Africa. It was
later scheduled to fly to

and American aircraft based on switchboard was jammed for - airline's Taiwan o!t!ce, said'
the Island of Diego Garcia, 1,200 hours after radio and television among the passengers were at
broadcasts gave numbers for least 47 Japanese, Including 37
miles to the northeast.
South African Airways of!!- relatives to call for information. fishermen who were employees _
Venter said relatives of pas. of Nippon Su!san, Japan 's larg·
ctals said the ground control lost
contact with the Boeing 747 about sengers aboard the flight who est commercial fishing
20 minutes before It was sche- were waiting at the airport for company.
The passenger list also Induled to land at 2:13 a.m. , just the jetliner to arrive had been
cluded
30 Chinese, 19 South
moments after the pilot radioed notified of the crash, Including
Africans
and several Europeans~ Taiwanese couple expecting the
of trouble.
:I'here
was
also at least one tour
"The last message !rom the arrival of their young daughter
group
on
board.
pilot was that there was smoke In and her grandfather.
Flight 295 had departed from
VIncent Lin, who works on a
the cockpit and that he probably
Taipei
at 10: 24 p.m. Friday for
dam
project
In
South
Africa,
and
had a nre," airlines spokesman
the
12-hour
flight to Mauritius.
hls
wlfe,'Sherry
Chen,
wept
when
Nlco Venter said.
Its
takeoff
ws delayed for 84
they
learned
the
jet
was
missing.
"Search and rescue operations
minutes
by
bad
weather .
are In progress under the control They were waiting for their
The
Taipei
to
Mauritius flight :
of the Mauritius government, 6-year-old daughter, who was
route
·
Is
95
percent
over water
assisted by French authorities on being brought to South Africa by
and
is
the
carrier's
longest
route. :
, ,the nearby Island of Reunion," her grandfather, Tldo Lin .
It
was
the
first
major
Soutfi •
The South African air force
Venter said.
,
Africa
Airways
accident
since :
The South African transport was prepared to join In the ocean
April
21,
1968.
when
122
people
:
minister arrived at Johannes- search, an alrilnes spokesman
were
killed
In
a
Boeing
707
crash
•
burg's Jan Smuts Airport and said. The operation was being
at
Windhoek,
Namibia,
while
on
:
joined officials at a crisis cent,er monitored by President Pleter
set up to handle calls from Botha and his Cablnet.m!nisters. flight from Johannesburg to ·
•
Tlnus Jacobs, manager of lhe London.
anxious relatives. The airport
,•

ous. The French crew had
mistaken abandoned fishing
!!oats for airplane wreckage.
Two Mauritian aircraft. a
French mll!ta~y vessel, French
military planes from nearby
Reunion Island and civilian ships
were searching the waters In the
area for signs of wreckage and
survivors. , One American plane
was Involved in the search.

SouthAfrlcanTransportMin!ster Eli Louw said. ·a plane with
South African officials and a viatlon Investigators· left Saturday
morning for Mauritius. He said
authorities in Mauritius had
asked for help from Australlan

PIJ'\l ·
!I

Christmas
countdown

Daily Number
537
Pick 4
8106
Super Lotto
l-13-14-3-29-32

•

at y

e

Vot.38. No.141
1987

WASHED AWAY - Typhoon Nina washed
away an approach to a major concrete bridge In
Sorsogon province In central Philippines. Trans-

1

,o

corded 55 confirmed dead in
Albay with five towns still not ·
heard from, a !though an armed
for ces spokesman in Manila
earlier placed the provinces
death toll at 70.
.
Red Cross and Office of Civil
Defense officials listed a total of
43 killed in nine other provinces.
In ,the coastal villages of
Sorsogort, where officials listed
14,000 houses totally destroyed
and many more damaged. the
homeless awaited help In any
available shelter, often a school, ·
house wh~:&gt;re babies lay sleeping

award went to Joan Collins for ·
her continuing and very publlc :
divorce from hubby No.4, Peter :
Holm. Their case, Harmon said,
"supplied a real-life story line more entertainment-worthy than .
a whole season of 'Oynasty' cliff
hangers."
In the journalism category,
CBS Evenh1g News anchor
~ather came out as top Bozo for
"walking off his news set In a huff
when the recent tennis playoffs, : .
preceding his newscast, ran
overtime," Harmon said.

1987 MODELS CLEARANCE SALE IS NOW!
STOCK #738

in tbe pupils' desks.
"I was afraid," said Gemma
Mansio, 20, recalling the flood ing. "I looked out the window and
saw nothing but water. It was
very dark but I knew our house
was no longer there - the dogs
were howling- and crying."

1987 OLDSMOBILE 98 REGENCY BROUGHAM "Demo"
YOUR COST

RETAIL $20,52l.OO

NO PAYMENT TILL FEB. 1, 1988

STOCK #813

Joutlll 1 Mhlto llklufh CMo mae
'tfiU I 1011 fiA --.6 "' lM

1987 CHEVROLET Z-28

WANT ADS

Silver, fully equipped, power windows, power door locks, power hatch.

RETAIL $16,892.00

BARNETT

•Ford
•Mercury
•Lincoln

.

.

s14 800

YOUR COST

I

...t---·· ···~

STOCK #1015

j

Med. gray. gray custom interior.

84 Escort

4 dr., 4 cyl., auto. air cond, AM/FM rodio, new tires, low mileage.

,

NOW

WAS ' 4495

$

3995

NOW $

~p!~. Hatchback, 4 cyl., A· I cond., 4
WAS •4295

1987 OLDS FIRENZA 2 DR.

369 5

Rosewood exterior with matching interior.

YOUR COST

NO PAYMENT TILL FEB. 1. 198B

84 Ford' LTD

NOW

WAS ' 5495

$4695

NOW

$3895

RETAIL $14,579.00

$ ALL SOFAS· Recliners

10 0 00

~
ll

~

SAVE

W
I

g:~;
w 9 to 5

W

WMonday &amp;
I Fndoy
W 9 to 8

60°/o OR MORE oN·MANY ITEMS

L1•nst ~,
I

~

•Layaway
Welcome
~ •Chrisl~as
ht Dlltvtry
Freel

512,500

Christmas
parade is
success

1987 CHEV. CELEBRITY EUROSPORT
V-6. alum. wheels. 55/45 seat.

RETAIL 514,920.00

-~

I
;:

S12 I 700

REMEMBER, NO PAYMENT TILL FEB. 1, 1988
SEE US FOR DETAILS.

WE WANT YOUR BUSINES·SI

1o1

I
I
I
I

WE HAVE THE INVENTORY - NO TIME IS BEnER THAN NOW.
NEW INCENTIVES FROM G.M. WILL BE PASSED ON TO YOU.
'

BANK &amp; GMAC FINANCING AVAILABLE

LET OUR STAFF HELP YOU -AFFORDABLE RATES AND PAYMENTS
ARE AVAILABLE NOW!
"

I

Ji 1ft Mi kChevrolet-Oldsmobile

I

iI
I
I

YOUR COST

NO PAYMENT TILL FEB. 1, 198B

S222DO ~

OUR ALREADY .
LOW-LOW SALE PRICES
ssooo OFF LOVESEATS!

~
~

~

OFF

STAltltNG AT

YOUR COST

STOCK #1103

B.s K&gt;ll'o&lt;:&lt; liOl!.""" 15::&lt; B:l B:l ~~

LAST DAY!
MONDAY ONLY

.

NO PAYMENT TILL FEB . 1, 19B8

SEE BOB ROSS FOR THE BEST DEAL IN THE AREAl
STATE RT. 93
614-682-7731 OAK HILL, OHIO

~~:

of years due to a rock fall. The tall came just after
the Christmas parades In Pomeroy and Middle·
port creating traflic problems lor thousands who
had been on hand for the parades. '

Dark,red, leather trim.

WAS '4995

I

TONS OF DEBRIS -Tons and tons of boulders
fell from cliffs overlooking West Main St., in
Pomeroy Sunday about 2: 35 p.m. hitting the
Shamrock Inn which has been closed for a number

1987 OLDS CALAIS G.T.

long bed, 6 cyl. 4 speed w/topper, new
tires.
·

~

$1 0,000

STOCK #939

82 Ford F-1 00

~

-

'

RETAIL 511,660.00 4 Dr., V-6, auto., AM/FM stereo, dean
car.

$12,400

NO PAYMENT TILL FEB. 1, 19B8

STOCK #756

84 Honda Civic

1

YOUR COST

RETAIL $14,145.00

I

..

1987 CHEVROLET MONTE CARLO LS

(formerly Abele Ford)

l'o&lt;:&lt; l'o&lt;:&lt; l'o&lt;:&lt;.I'N ~l'o&lt;:&lt; l'o&lt;:&lt; K&gt;ll'o&lt;:&lt; !':&lt;:! l'o&lt;:&lt; l'o&lt;:&lt;

been in the kitchen· which was heavily damaged
when he heard the loud noises ol tons of boulders
lulling and ran from the trailer, owned by Carroll
Johnson of Middleport.

S17 ,500

NO PAYMENT TILL FEB.1,1988

r~

ESCAPED POSSIBLE DEATH - John H.
Eblin escaped probably death when . a huge
boulder rolled Into the kitchen of his trailer home
on West Main St., Sunday afternoon. Eblin had

White with carmine interior. All power.

·

1616 EASTEIN AVE.

'

1HIID &amp; OliVE, GAUIPOli.S 4U-3045
. !
.
L~~B:I~~~~~~~~~----~~---~~
·

I

TIUCIS: 446-2000

e.n ttne

'

1 SectiOn, 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

No one hurt seriously
•
m Sunday rock slide

TIME IS RUNNING OUT!

portatlon was hampered and the flow of goods to
nelghbornlng provinces severed. (UPI/ Reuter)

Typhoon death toll over 500
SORSOGON CITY, Philippines
(UPI) - Officials accused the
government of falling to provide
adequ~te aid as the first re lief
supplies arrived today in th e
B!col peninsula, three days a lter
Typhoon Nina killed at least 513
people and left thousands home·
less and hungry.
Red Cross and military authorIties confirmed 513 dead nationwide from the storm's deadly
passage Wednesday night, including more than 400 In Sorsogon province alone.
Officials estimated 80 percent
of the schools and 50 percent of
other public buildings were dam aged in Sorsogon and Albay
provinces. Damage to priva te
homes was 90 percent in Sorsogon and 80 percent in Al bay,
while crops in the two provtnces
1
•
were wiped out.
Social Welfare Secretary Mita
Pardo de Tavera accompanied
the firs t . mercy flight aboard a
Fokker F -27 ICY Lega spi , the
capital of Albay province and the
closest airstrip to the worst-hit
areas in neighboring Sorsogon.
about 200 miles southeast of
Manila.
Albay Governor Romy Sala lima complained the help was too
little and Joo late to meet the
region 's urgent needs .
"The national government has
not released funds," ·he said.
"What we need is immediate
attention for victims - food.
medicine , constuct!on
materials."
The government did in fac t
release funds totaling $50,00Q
Friday after President Corazon
Aquino declared a state of
emerge nc y in 11 provinces, but
air force spokesman Col. Pablo
Gonzales agreed the relief effor t
has been limited.
"Nothing has been airlifted yet
except for a small amount of
relief goods brought along by
Secretary Tave ra," he said. "I
would say today's shipment was
about half a ton only. we have not
sent too much yet."
He said the shipment was
comprised mainly of rice, dried
fish , can ned goods, clothing and
a small amount of medicine. The
government has also authorized
the distribu tion ofll,OOO pounds
of rice f rom national
storehouses.
· The governmen t and resc ue
organizations confi r-med 513
dead, but reports from the areas
indica ted the death tolls could be
higher. Ofilcials confirmed 215
deaths in Sorsogon. 200 in Mat nag, 55 In Albay and 43 In other
provinces.
,
Military officia ls in Sorsogon
reported the 215 confirmed
deaths in the province, Incl uding
145 in Sorsogon City, with offici a 1
reports still to come from eight
towns. including ' the worst-hit
community of Matnog, where the
government confirmed at least
200 killed.
Matnog Mayor Emil Obaldo
s~!d he personally counted 275
victims In hiS• town and Bishop
Jesus Varela of Sorsogon
counted another 50 dead in the
fishing v!Jlage of B!tanco.
Th~ military , In Legaspi re-

lions about their financial deal·
ings and his sexual encounter
with Hahn.
Hart, Donna Rice and Hahn
shared the Bozo In the
"funster" category . Hart, a
recipient In 1984, showed us
"that Indulging in 'minute Rice'
can cause pol\tlcallndlgestlon,"
said Larry Harmon, television's
original Bozo the Clown.
Hahn won the award for
"baring her soul along with her
body for Playboy."
The show business category

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, November 30, 19B7

Copyrighted

Bozo Awards go to host of 'clowns' :
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Former presidential candidate
Gary Hart, newsman Dan
Rather and ex-secretary Jessica
Hahn captured prest!geless 1987
"Bozo Awards" for running
around, walking out and almost
baring all, respectively.
Other Bozo awards bestowed
Friday went to Jim and Tammy
·Faye Bakker, who received a
newsmaker Bozo award for the
scandal that toppleq them from
the leadership of their television
ministry and subsequent revela-

Cloudy tonight, Tuesday .
Chance of snow flurries. Lows
tonight near 30. Highs Tuesday mid 30s.

.
. ._,

''

"
• &lt;&gt;·

TRAPPED IN VEHICLE
This car driven by Barbara
McDaniel, Mason, w. Va., was trapped under trees and power
lines which were brought down by tons of rocks which fell on West
Main St., in Pomeroy Sunday afternoon. McDaniel was treated !or
minor cuts and abra.~lons at Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Santa again proved himself the
most popular "!ella'' in Pomeroy
and Middleport Sunday a(ternoon when the two communities
,,, officially welcomed In the Christ·
mas season.
Thousands lined the business
sections of the two towns to see
the parade which started in
Middleport and then was rec.
pea ted In Pomeroy. Mercha11ts of
the two towns held open houses
and special prices on selected
merchandise. Business was
brisk.
The parade featured "something for everyone'' and was well
received. Led by the Southern
Hlgh School Band, the only band
taking part In the event, and the
Feeney-Bennett Post of Middleport Color Guard, partlpants
included , cheerleaders ; numer,
, ous scout units, floats, a variety
of baton and dance groups,
numerous fire and emergency
units from Pomeroy, Middleport
and Bashan. cloggers dancing
their way along the route, eques·
trlan units, clowns and other
costumed f.tgures.
Mary Lou Boggs of the Middle·
Continued on page 5.

.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Miraculously no one was seriously Injured or killed when
tons of boulders fell from cliffs
overlooking Pomeroy on West
Main St., about2: 35p.m. Sunday.
The fall of huge rocks did
create some havoc In the
Pomeroy-Middleport-Mason
County area, however, as both
Pomeroy and Middleport were
packed with people who had
come to the business sections of
the town for the parade and other
activities being held to welcome
in the Ctirls tmas holiday season.
The boulders hit into the
Shamrock Motel which has been
closed for a number of years as
· the result of an earlier rock slide.
John B. Eblin narrowly escaped probably death at his
trailer home located on the west
side of the Shamrock Inn . A
boulder caused heavy damages
to the kitchen of the trailer. Eblin
had been in the kitchen at the
time of the rock fall. However, he
heard a tremendous noise as the
rocks broke loose and he ran
from the trailer. The trailer Is
·owned by Carroll Johnson of
Middleport.
As the rocks come crashing
down from the overhead cliff,
they took trees and power lines
with them. Trees falling onto the
road struck a car driven by
Barbara McDaniel of Mason, W.
Va., heading downriver. McDa·
ni€'1 suffered minor cuts and
. abrasions and was taken to
Veterans Memorial Hospital by
the Pomeroy Emergency squad.
She was treated and released.

bus Southern Power Co, completed repairs and restored service to its customers . There was
a four or five minute outage for
other Ohio Power Co. customers
Co ntinued on page 5

mers at 2: 35. Service to about 180
of those Ohio Power Company
customers was restored at about
4:30p.m. with the remainder not
getting service restored until
about 9:30p.m, when the Colum-

*"

• •a

•• •

•

BEST CQ~MERCJAL- This well-done float IJy J.D. Drilling,
tbe be~t commercial entry In lhe Pomeroy and
llaclne,
Middleport holiday parades Sunday. The float featured handcrafted snow people and a handcrafted, colorful Christmas tree.

was

Police officers of the two towns
and the department of Sheriff
Howard Frank, already burdened with the heavy traffic
created by the opening of the
Christmas season, found themselves with other problems due to
the rocR fall. Pomeroy firemen
joined to help out at the scene of
the fall since power lines were '
down creating a hazardous situation and traffic was tied up as
motorists attempied to return to
their homes following the Christ mas parades.
West Main St., was closed to
traffic below Butternut Avenue
and traffic was routed over the
flood road. Mason pollee kept
traffic off the Pomeroy-Mason
bridge for a period of time on the
West Virginia side of the river to
help ease the problem. Shortlyi
after the rock fall, those having
to cross the bridge into Mason
County from Pomeroy were
permitted to proceed down Main
St., and were permitted to move
across the bridge without travelIng the flood road route. It was
about 9 p.m. Sunday before West
Main was cleared for full traffic
operations due not only to the fall
of trees but to the extensive work
that power company workers
had to carry out in restoring
service. Pomeroy street department workers joined the pollee
officers In handling the traffic

a~e~~~~~~~-some 175 custorflers

of the Columbus Southern Power
Co. was lost at the time of the
rock fall and the Ohio Power Co.
lost service to some 200 custo-

POPULAR GUY- Santa _drew tremendous crowds In both
Middleport and Pomeroy Sunday wlien the two towns welcomed In
the Christmas season. Santa distributed treats along the parade
route In Middleport and met wllh youngsters In the Court St.
mini-park at Pomeroy to distribute treats. Here three year old C. J .
Estep confers with Santa on the upcoming Christmas visit.

·Meigs teachers remain on strike
The approximate 150 teachers
of the Meigs Local School Dis·
trlct remained on strike Monday
morning after turning down the
latest proposal of the Meigs
Local Board of Education Sun- ,
day night .
The latest proposal !rom the
board was offered following a
long negotiating session on TUes4ay. It was reported that
teachers met Sunday night at the
Rock Springs Grange Hall for a
vote and turned down the Ia test
offer.
The board's last offer was a
three year contract with no
salary increases to teachers for
the next two years and a
guarantee that 63 percent of all

general fund money In the
district during the third year
would go for teachers salaries
and fringe benf!ts . The teachers
now receive that percentage on
current general fund Income of
the district. The board offered
that It would not Impose a
reduction In force clause for the
1987-88 or the 1988·89 school
years. Other contract language
was to remain the same as the
language in the last contract
which expired on Aug. 31.
Last week, the board of educallon met .In special session
following the latest proposal and
agreed to reopen schools but no
date was set for the reopening.

During the meeting the boa rd
agreed to pa y substitute teachers
$125 a day lor the duration of the.
strike. The average teacher in
the district now makes $131 a day
plus fringe benefits, it Is
reported.
Plans were Mnderway this
morning ·towards following the
plan of reopenin g schools with
the use of subs titutes. There have
been no additional negotiatin g
sessions set at this time between
the board of education and the
Meigs Local teachers . ·
Supt. Dart E . Morrls said that
the last proposal of the teachers
was beyond the reasonable financial expectations of the district.

..

'

,.

•

�The Daily Sentinei- Psge-3

•

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

-

~lb

ts:m~

~v

........_.._...,..,r"T"E!!d•=

~ ROBERT

L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD ·
Asslst!\nt Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Assoolaled Press, Inland Dally Press Ass&lt;&gt;datlon and the American Newspaper Publishers A!iSOClatlon.

LETI'ERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words lon1. All letters are subjed lo editing and must be signed wllh
name. address and telephone number. No unsigned letters .wUl be published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing Issues, no&amp; personal I·

lies.

Ohio Republicans
prepare for new chairm~

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomerof-Middleport, Ohio

·.

Anderspn and VanAtta _

WASHINGTON - With the gating two earlier Wall Street Congress had asked the SEC tlonal liquidations to meet marusual20-20 hindsight, many stock shocks. One occured on Sept. 11 sleuths to Investigate. They were . gin calls and broker-dealer
market experts have said that and 12, 1986, when the Dow Jones
told to be on the lookout espe- capital requirements, finally
the " meltdown" of Black Mon- average fell 120 points in record cially for any signs of Illegal leading to a market collapse."
day, Oct. 19, was not only trading volume. The second manipulation of the market.
This Is an almost eerily letterInevitable but predictable. What occurred on Jan. 23 of this year,
They warned that "speclftc perfect description of what hapthe experts never seem to ex- when the Dow made a sickening scenarios may warrant further pened on Oct.19. By all a~unts,
plain, though, Is why they failed free fall of 115 points In little analysts." Why? Because, the the 508-polnt plunge In the Dow
to predict the $500 billion drop In more than an hour of trading.
SEC report explained, there was Jones Index was ln fact exacer- r
stock prices.
The SEC detectives studied the a possibility that the new trading bated byt he automatic sell
Well, actually, the dramatic circumstances of these two warntechniques, such as portfolio orders launched by the big
collapse was predicted wtth Ing shocks and_ Identified a
Insurance and stock Index fu- traders' computers.
uncanny accuracy - by unsung potential threat. They concluded tures trading, "could trigger
Unfortunately, Instead of propanalysts n the Securities and that computerized , trading - . selling that temporarily exceeds osing regulations to curb the
Exchange Commission. In two used by huge Institutional inves- market liquidity."
dangerobs high-tech stock trad·
reports prepared earlier this tors and professional speculators
This, the SEC analysts warned, lng techniques, the SEC Investiyear , they provided a description . - Increased the volatility of the could create a "cascade effect" gators went to the seven big
of what would occur- and why . - market to such a degree that ln a of falling stock prices: "The brokerage firms whose operaThe reports weren't kept secret; situation of falling prices they resultant plunging stock prices tions they had studied on the
they were published. But nobody could lead to a crash.
could t,rlgger stop-loss sell orders mini-crashes and asked for their
paid any a\tentlon .
Alerted to these earlier, Jess In Individual stocks," the ana- optnlons. Not surprisingly, the
The SEC analysts were Invest!- frightening drops In the Dow,
lysts warned, "and force addt- brokerage firms defended their
-practices.
"While most traders acknowl·
edged the posslbUty of slgnlfl.cant market movements In short
time frames," one of the SEC
reports says, "They found the
chances of ... market collapse
remote for several reasons." So
much for Wall Street's expert
opinion.
While they found no evidence or
Illegal manipulation, the SEC
Investigators did recommend
that surveillance capabilities be
Improved In light of the sophlstl·
cation of the computerized tradIng techniques. In the wake of
Black Monday's cataclysm, a
presidential commission, two
congressional committees, the
General Accounting Office, the
New York Stock Exchange and
the U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission In Chicago
have all launched Investigations.
Their various reports are expected by year's end.
Already several members of
Congress have called for more
market regulation. But any constraints, particularly on the
free-wheeling Chicago futures
exchange, will face stiff opposition.

Learm the lrongate lessons __G_;_eo_rg_eM_cG_-_ov_er_n
breakdown,-pushed elements of the
administration into a moral and polit·
ical jungle and sava~ed the presi·
dent's personal authority ...."
l'o the Post editors, "the worst
thing that comes out of , ~e report is
the lying ...." I share the Post's revul·
sion to the brazen lying done by Oliver
North, John Poindexter, William Ca·
sey and, from all indications, the pres·
ident himself. But at least as disturb·
ing are the unconstitutional behavior
and odious policies the lying was de·
signed to hide.
I have no doubt that the Reagan Ad·
ministration is·guilty of more serious
offenses against our constitutional
system
than
the
Nixon
Administration.
The Senate-House report concludes
that the president violated his constitutional obligation In failing to "take
care that the laws be faithfully executed."
The authors of tbe report tried valiantly to avoid directly charging the

president with lying or lawbreaking.
But after numerous citations of laws
broken and lies told, the committee
concluded, "The ultimate responsibilIty for -the events in the Iran-contra
affair must rest with the President."
The 'report notes further: "In the
Iran-contra affair, officials viewed
the law not as setting boundaries for
their actions, but raising impediments to their goals. When the laws
and the goals collided the law gave

Truman kept on his desk: "The buck
stops here."
What particularly shocks members
of the investigating committees is
that the president "has yet to condemn ... subordinates who lied, shr;ed·
d!'d documents and covered up their
a'ctions ... ." The report suuests that
the reason for Reagan's silence is that
both he and his aides saw the miscon·
duct coming from officials who
thought they were "acting in accor·
way."
dance with the president's secret
Trying to escape the charge of pres- wishes and policies.
idential lying, the committees con"
This all adds up to the most shock·
eluded that Mr. Reagan made 11\any ing example yet of high officials substatements to the public that turned verting the Constitution and mislead·
out to be "wrong."
;_
ing the public in a mistaken quest for
Detailing numerous laws that were "national security."
broken by his subordinates, the comThe net resulfwas not more nation·
mittees contended: "If the president al security, but a worldwide setback
did not know what his national securi- to our national standing and the credi·
ty adviser was doing, he should have." bility of our policies and leadership.
In a sense, the language of the report Let us hope that these lessons will not
is a version of the slogan President be lost on future presidents.

A vote for a one-party state ___W_ill_iam_R_us_h_er

Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monda y, Nov. 30, the 334th day of 1987 with 31 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward Its full phase.
The morning s tars are Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus , Jupiter and Saturn . .
Those born on th is date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include Ita lian Rena issance architect Andrea Palladia In 1508; Irish
satirist Jona than Swift In 1667: novelist· Mark Twain (Samuel
L~nghorne Clemens) In 1835;
British statesman Sir Winston
Churc hill In 1874; Shirley Chllsolm, the first black woman elected to
Congress. In 1924 1age 63) ; actors Efrem ZlmballstJr. ln 1923 (age 64)
and Richard Crenna 1n 1927 1age 60) ; TV music show host Dick Clark
ln 1929 I age 58) , and former 1960's radical Abbie Hoffman In 1936 (age
51).
On this da te In histo ry:
In 1731, a series of earthquakes struck China. Modern experts
.estimate more than 100,000 people died.
In 1782 .. prellmlnary peace articles formally ending the American
Revolutionary War were s igned In Paris.
In 1939, the Russo-Finnish War s tarted after the Soviet Union failed
to obtain territorial concessions from Finland.
• In 1975, Israel pulled its forces out of a 93-mlle.-long corridor along
the Gulf of Suez as par t of Its Sinal Inte rim peace agreement with
~pt .
•
'
.
A thought for the day: Wins ton Chu rchill said , " In war Y,OU can be
killed only once. In poli tics, ma ~y times. "
J•

A visitor from another planet,
dropping by Washington today,
would probably marvel at the
sheer number of problems confronting this country.
The Iran/ contra controversy
may still lie ahead for North,
Poindexter and others. But the
related question of what to do
about Nlcarargua Is still at white
heat, and the scarcely less
closely related problem of fashioning a U.S. policy for the
Persian Gulf Is simmering on a
back burner.
Then there Is the domestic
problem of the huge federal
budget deficit and What to do
about It, and the Important
matter of who shall fill the
vacancy on the Supreme Court
The visitor from afar could be
forgiven for wondering how any
nation could hope to cope with
such an array of Intractable
problems.
And yet all five of these
problems are at bottom simply
aspects of One Big Problem. And
that ls the ongoing civil war
between the executive and legislative branches of the fed eral
government.
We have just obse~ved the
200th anniversary of the signing
of the Constitution . I plead guilty
to having participated, with
reservations (one or two of them
voiced) , In the orgy of self·
congratulation that ce lebrated
that event. But the truth js that
the American Constitution · Is
scarcely working at all right now
In some very Important respects,
and that Its failure to do so may
doom this country unless the
problem is faced and corrected

soon.
Most of the world 's genuinely
democratic societies are based
on the so-called " parliamentary

Montana has hot hand as
49ers rip_
Cleveland, 38-24

Monday, November 30, 1987

'

AnalystS SaW Crash COming

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS - Now that Republican State Chairman Michael F .
Coiley ha s announced his early resignation, the race is on for the job
to lead the Ohio GOP Into the 1990s.
Colley did the party a fa vor by s tepping aside before his term ends
next May. It will give the new chairman a chance to get a handle on
things for the importan t presidential and U.S. Senate campaigns in
Ohio In 1988.
Republicans have not won very much in the las t 15 years, and If they
are to be any kind of a force in Ohio politics before the end of the
centUry, they need to start winning In 1988.
There are signs the Republicans are moving in that direction. They
have decided to hire a full -time party chairman to succeed Colley,
who Is not only Franklin County Republican chairman but has a law
practice to look affer .
Robert T. Bennett, the Cuyahoga County Republican vice
chairman for the last 13 years. announced last week he will seek the
state chairmanship when the 42-member central committee
convenes in January.
.
Others may compete for the job: Martha C. Moore of Cambridge,
the veteran state party vice chainpan; Robert V.. Holmes, Allen
County party chairman; and James E. Betts, a Cleveland-Columbus
attorney and lobbyist who was the party's nominee for the U.S. Senate
In 1980 ."
Bennett told -reporters last week that his Idea of a full-time
chairman· is one who will be in the office "from 7:30a.m . until late Into
the hours of the evening." He also pledged to move to Columbus. One
could hardly ask more of a chairman.
Bennett also said the party needs "to go back to the Ray Bliss era
and bring it up to the 1990s." Everybody always says that, but nobody
·
ever does It .
Ray Bliss was the party chairman from 1949 until1965. when he was
hired as chairman of the Republican National Committee because he
had done so well In Ohio.
In those days, the Republicans owned Ohio, due In no small part to
"The common ingredients- of the
the way Bliss managed things. I_n order to turn things around, the new Iran and contra policies were secre:
chairman will have to organize from the ground up , get the county cy, deception and disdain for the law.
A small group of senior officials be·
chairmen working in harmony and raise money.
Bennett said he Is prepared to do these things , and that Republicans lieved that they alone knew what was
right. They viewed knowledge of their
don't have any problems that a few election victories won't solve.
The major hurdle Bennett has In soliciting votes among Republican actions by others in the government
State Committee members Is the p&lt;&gt;rception that he is an extension of as a threat to their objectives ....
"When exposure was threatened,
the Cuyahoga County-big city axis that has dominated the party since
they destroyed official documents and
Bliss left and former Gov. James A. Rhodes took over.
lied to Cabinet officials, to the public
"That Is not my method of operation," said Bennett, who denied and to elected representatives in Conthat either Rhodes or Cuyahoga County Republican Chairman Robert gress .... Time and time again, we bave
E. Hughes will dominate party decisions If he Is chairman.
learned that a flawed process leads to
There are signs that party leaders and lesser officials are bad results and that a lawless process
recognizing that the days of Rhodes's influence on . the party have leads to worse."
This summary statement by the
ended . The anti-Rhodes wing of the party Is not rushing to put up an
Senate and House committees investi·
opponent to Bennett.
Showing up for his announcement last week were two operatives of gating the Iran-contra affair may be
the most serious indictment ever levSenate President Paul E. Gillmor, R-Port Clinton, who tried to dump
eled at an American administration.
Rhodes In 1986 and Is a s trong possibility for governor in 1990.
A Washington Post editorial says of
It may be that the Republicans are finally ready to make their
the congressional findings, "The recome back In Ohio, starting next year.
port is a devastating portrait of the
way secrecy, deception and 'disdain
-' for the law' oroduced a fearful policy

'

system," under which the executive power Is exercised by a
prime minister chosen by, and
responsible to, the legislature. If
he loses the support of the
legislature, his government
''falls."
In the relatlvely few cases
where the chief execu tlve Is
chosen separately (e.g., certain
Latin American nations), the
tendency Is for the president to
become the top banana, with the
legislature being little more than
his rijbber stamp.

Wright recently confer privately
with Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega? Because Wright
wants to promote poltcles In
Central America that are at
variance with those of the State
Department.
Why, when you come rig hi
down. to it, is there a budget
deficit at all? Because Congress
wants to raise taxes and the
president Insists on cutting expenditures. Why Is there still ~
after two attempts, a Supreme

Court vacancy? Because the
president wants one kind of
nominee, and the Senate another.
You can hall this chaos, If you
wish, as " democracy at work."
But In truth It's spectacular -c ase
of democracy not working, and
we had better find some way to
solve this One Big Problem
before It overwhelms us. For
starters, how about going back to
government by a single party?

The Unlte_d States, however, Is
one of those very rare exceptions

In wblch the executive and the
legislature are elected separately, given Important powers to
thwart each other, and then
Invited to fight It out like a pair of
enraged scorpions.
The only thing that ever made
this zany-formula workable was·
the party system, under which a
president and a Congress controlled by his own party were
usually able to compromise their
(Jifferences enough to make
governance possible. But ever
since the American people be·
gan, more than 40 years ago, to
give the pres ldency to one party
and the Congress to the other, the
American government has been
a house divided against Itself.
Why do your suppose President
Reagan carried out his Iran
poltcy through his own NSC ·
agents? Because confiding ln
Congress . would have ended,
Instantly, the necessary secrecy.
Why Is U.S.· policy In the
Persian Gulf debated so endlessly? Because we have In that
respect, as President Reagan
recently complained, " 535 Secretaries of State."
Why did House Speaker James

Berry's World

" Hmmm! Interesting! When did you start havIng this recurring dream about Glenn Close
and SherR Hlte?"

This season It has been Jerry
Rice. Sunday. the gifted Rice
caught seven passes for126 yar ds
and three touchdowns. ln his last
three ga~es, Rice has scored
nine touchdowns .
As stunning as Rice' s perfor mances have been, it was Montana who both Cleveland's Marty
Shottenhelmer and San Francisco's Bill Walsh praised first
"I'm not going to take anything
away from Jerry, but you ' ve got
to give credit to the guy with the
football In his !land,'' the Cleveland coach said. " There Is a
reason Montana Is rated the best
of all time."
"Joe Montana is an excellent
ball player ," Walsh said . .
''Maybe some time soon those
people who criticize him Will
realize that:"
Montana completed 23 of 31
passes for 342 yards, one lnter·ception and the four touchdowns .
He also was the 49ers leading
rusher picking up 43 yards In four
carries.
Against the Browns, Montana
basically took what the defense
gave him. He hit Rice on plays he
was single covered and went to
tight end John Frank and his
backs when the Browns rolled
their defensive backs to Rice's
side.
"We got the ball to our backs a
,
lot and pretty much did the same
· thing throughout the game, "
Mo!ltana said . "I don't thin~ they
respected us as much before the
game as they did after the

SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) Receivers have come and gone,
but Joe Montana has remained
the main man for the San
Francisco 49ers offense.
Sunday night, Montana threw
for 342 yards and four touchdowns, three to Jerry Rice, to
lead the 49ers to a 38-24 victory
over the Cleveland Browns.
The triumph ran San Francisco's season mark to 9-2, one game
In front of New Orleans in the
NFC West. Cleveland fell to 7-4,
but the Browns main taln a
one-game lead over Pittsburgh
and Houston In the AFC CentraL
Montana has twice been
named Super Bowl MVP. In 1981,
he teammed with wide receiver
Dwight CI ark to lead San Francisco to Its first Super Bowl title.
In 1964, Montana relied on the
pass catching ability of running
back Roger Craig to catapult San
Francisco to an 18·1 record and a
second World Championship.

MONTANA SHARP- San Francisco 49er wide
receiver Jerry Rice took a long pass from
quarterback Joe Montana In the fourth quarter

By United Press International
Toledo Whitmer coach Pat
Gucciardo got a first -hand lock at
what Cincinnati Princeton's Pat
Mancuso has said might be his
best Viking tea!ll ever.
·
"I knew they were good," said ·
Gucciardo after his Panthers
were dismantled 55·6 by Princeton's bevy of speedy backs, "but I
had no Idea they were this good. I
do •feel we played better In the
second half."
By then, however, the only
question was what the final score
was going to be. Princeton
already had a 41-0 lead and 343 of
its 495 total yards, which In·
clu_ded 421 on the ground .
Marcus Thomas and Dean
HuiJter each scored three touchdowns and Shawn Vernon and
Craig Thompson one each for
Princeton, which set a playoff
record with Its 55 points. The
previous mark belonged to
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney,
which beat Lebanon 50-0 In lj)80.'
Thomas scored on runs of 1 and
41 yards and also caught a
touchdown pass of 35 yards from
Garrick Berkhalter . Hunter, a
second tea mer, scored on runs of
4'. 21 and 71 yards .
Vernon had a 35-yard scoring
run and Thompson caught a
28-yard TD pass from Berkhal·
ter. Whitmer's only score came

on a 25-yarc) J;D pass In the final
quarter from 'Bill Semler to Tony
Gucciardo.
Vernon led Princeton with 135
yards in 11 carries, Thomas had
97 in 11 and Hunter 116 in 13.
"It's the best first half we
played all year," said Mancuso,
who said he was surprised by
ease of his team's win. "You
don't see 50 points in a game very
often."
At Akron, In Division I, Jason
Marucci, who scored all the
touchdowns, had the game
winner on a 1-yard plunge In an
overtime period to lead Boardman to a ·21-14 win over Sandusky . Marucci's two-point con verlon In the fourth quarter had
sent the game Into overtime.
In Sandusky's overtime pos session, the Blue St reaks
fumbled on the 6 with Boardman's Bill Christoff coming up
with the ball to send his team Into
Saturday's state final against
Princeton .
Sandusky 's Corey Croom had
scored the game' s fir st touchdown In the closing seconds of the
first quarter and Troy Keegan hit
Jonathan Moore with a 30-yard
pass in the fourth quarier .
. Marucci scored... In the third
period and ln the fourth , with the
two-point conversion being ne-

cessary since the point after
attempt after the first touchdown
failed.
In Division IV, Mike Morosky
ran for three touchdowns and
Todd Decker threw to Don
Leshnock for two more to lead
undefeated Columbus Academy
to a 38-7 win over Versallies.
Academy scored three touchdowns in third quarter to break
open a tight game. Academy
takes a 13-0 record Into Saturday's game against Gates Mills
Hawken, a 21-14 victor over
Archbold.
In that game a t Berea, O.J.
McDuffie scored all three
Hawken touchdowns, Including
the game winner with five
seconds left .
In Division V, Mogadore
scored 13 points in the third
quarter for a 26-12 win over
previously undefeated Delphos
Jefferson. Mogadore will go into
the title game against three-time
defending champion Newark Catholic. a 21-0 winner Friday over
Middletown Fenwick .
Eric Baker caught two TD
passes for Mogadore. Damon
Ulm scored both of Jefferson's
touchdowns on pass plays of 5
and 80 yards from Jon Boggs .
However, Jefferson could not
convert the extra point tries .

Elway has ·big day; Broncos romp
"This was a great win fo r us,''
By DAVE RAFFO
Johnson said. "Tll,e race is
UP! SPORTS WRITER
tightening up. If we lost today, it
John Elway led the Denver
Broncos to the AFC champion- would've been Impossible to win
the division ."
ship last season and says he and
The Broncos have their work
his teammates have Improved.
cut
out for them. They play at
San Diego Coach AI Saunders
Seattle
ln two weeks and finish at
will vouch fo r that, which is bad
home
agalhst
San Diego. Denver
news for the entire conference
also
plays
New
England and
but especially for the two clubs
barely ahead of Denve r In the Kansas City at home.
The Chargers los l their second
AFC West.
Elway passed for 347 yards and straight game, despite an NFLthree touchdowns Sunday to give record 103,yard interception rethe Broncos a 31-17 victory over turn for a TD by Vencle Glenn.
the Chargers . in San Diego. They were pounded 34-3 by
Denver. 7-3·1. tightened the AFC Seattle a week ago and might be_
West race by creeping within a losing the momentum they
hlllf-game of the first-place gained by winning three games
during the strike. San Diego also
Chargers, 8-3.
has a tough road ahead , playing
Seattle plays at home tonight
In
Houston next week before
against the Los Angeles Raiders,
and the Seahawks, 7-3, can either returning hom~ against Pitts·
burgh and Indianapolis and fin move into a tie for first or drop
Ishing In Denver .
,
Into third.
If the Broncos return to the
·'I can't remember when we've
Super Bowl, they won't find the
played better," Elway said.
New York Giants there. The
" We' ve got to make It folij' in a
row to keep the - - -~A11tum 1defending NFL champions were
"'"'•llv eliminated with a 23-19
going."
-\
loss
at Washington, a.s the
"We saw today that John
Redsklns
moved to a three-game
Elway Is for real," Saunders
said. "He did an excellent job as ' lead In the NFC East. The victory
he has the last couple of weeks. avenged three Washington deHe made great plays when he had feats against the Giants last ·
to. He carried the team to season, Including a 17-0 beating
In the NFC Championship Game.
victory.''
''I think our guys really wanted
'One of Elway's TD passes was
game. From a team standthis
a 9-yarder to Vance Johnson, who
point,
our guys wan ted to beat the
tied a club record with a scoring
Giants
because of last year,"
reception In six straight games.
Washington
Coach Joe Gibbs
Johnson caught seven passes for
said.
88 yards.

,

J ay Schroeder, playing because of an injury to Doug
Williams, passed for 331 yards
and three touchdowns to help the
Redsklns overcome a 16-0deflclt.
The outcome was in doubt until
Dennis Woodberry and Vernon
Dean ta ckled Giants running
back Tony Galbreath on .the
2-yard-lin e after a 14-yard reception as time expired.
"A loss Is a loss, but this one
hu r ts worse than any of them,"
Galbreath 1 ~Jiid . "A lousy two
yard s was !he game."
The New Orleans Saints
clinched their first winning season with · a 20-16 victory at
Pittsburgh. The triumph pushed
the Saints to 8-3 and close to their
first playoff appearance In the
franchise's 21-year history .
Morten Andersen capped a
New Orleans comeback with a
32-yard field goal In the fourth
quarter and the defense stopped
two Pittsburgh deep drives

Montana threw touchdown
passes of 2 and 30 yards to Rice
a nd 40 yards to Clark to give the
49ers a 21-17 halftime lead.
Clark's three catches and 57
reception yaqls In the contest
made him the 49ers all-time
reception and reception yardage
leader.
Bernie Kosar, whO was 26 of 37
for 275 yards , 0ne touchdown and
one Interception, threw a touchdown pass of 21 yards to Brian
Brennan, Earnest Byner reco·
vered a fumble In the end zone
and Jeff Jaeger hit a 28-yard field
goal for Cleveland's first half
points.
In the second half, Kosar said
the 49ers took the Browns out of
their offense.
•'The 49ers took away our
passing game,'' he said. "They
have a good sound defense which
rarely makes mistakes."
Montana tossed a 29-yard scorIng pass to Rice In the second half
while Ray Werschlng addf'!l a
38-yard field goal and Joe Cribbs
a 9-yard scoring run.
Cleveland's only points came
on a 17-yard fumble return for a
touchdown by David Grayson,
Ironically a 49er training camp
cut,
While discouraged by the loss,
Schottenhelmer did not think It
fatal to his team's playoff hopes.
"There ls nothing fatal about
falling-down," he said. "It's only ·
fatal if you don't stand up. We'-re
going to stand up."

Goalie Froese scores
in 3-l Ranger victory

and jubilantly goes In for a touchdown in Sunday's
matchup In San Francisco. Trying for the stop is
Browns' safety AI Gross. The 49ers won 38-24.

Princeton gains finals with
55-6 thrashing of Whitmer

game.;'

so Nov. 28, 1979 at Colorado.
By United Press International
The Rangers had taken a 2-0
Bob Froese of the New York
' CELEBRATES ACE- Lee
first-period
lead on goals by John
Rangers became only the second
Trevino celebrates his hole-In·
at 5:28 · and David
Ogrodnick
goalie ever to score a goal in an
one on the 17th tee Sunday,
Shaw
at
11:04.
Shaw's goal was a
NHL game and was left begiving him a $175,000 skim.
50-foot
power-play
score that
fuddled over how he accompTrevino had high earnings for
Smith was screened on.
lished the feat.
the two-day event of $310,000.
At 3: 01 of the second period,
Froese was the last Ranger to
(UPI)
touch the puck before New York Alan Kerr brought the Islanders
Islanders center Brent Sutter within 2-1 with a 20-footer past
sent lt into his own net 8:59 Into Froese.
In other games, Edmonton
the second period of the Rangers'
cruised past Buffalo 5-2 and New
3-l victory Sunday night.
With the Rangers leading 2·1 Jersey and Los Angeles skated to
LA QUJN'l'A, Call!. (UP!)
and the Islanders shorthanded, a 2-2 tie.
Lee Trevino made his Skins defenesman Denis Potvin picked
Oilers 5, Sabres 2
Game debut last year and scored up the puck at his own bluellne
At Buffalo, N.Y., Mark Messan eagle - and $55,000- with a and skated In alone on Froese. ier had two goals and an assist ·,
68-yard wedge shot. .
'
Potvin's shot hit theoutsldeof the and Jeff Beukeboom notched
For those who wondered what post after Froese kicked at It, and three assists to pace Edmonton.
he was going to do for an encore, the puck went Into the left corner. '1essier broke a 2-2 tie when he
Trevino hall the answer Sunday
ored his 18th goal of the season,
"I don't know how I got
on the 17th hole: a 6-lron, credited wit.h It," Froese said. at 7:58 of the secof\d period. With
167-yard hole-in -one worth "Potvin broke In on the net and Buffalo a man short, Beukeboom
$175,000,
took the shot, which hit off the took a shot from the point that
"I knew when I hit It, It was post. I don't know if It glanced off deflected off Messler.
going to be close," said Trevino, my pad; I couldn't believe It
Devils 2, Kings 2
who pocketed more than three when lt went all the way down the
At Inglewood, Calif., Jimmy
times as much with that shot than Ice and went Into their net."
Carson scored a power-play goal
he did In 11 PGA ·tournaments
40
seconds Into the third period to
Referee Terry Gregson then
this year ($51,212). "But never In called a penalty on Rangers lift Los Angeles to the tie. Carson
my wildest dreams ... "
center Marcel Dionne. Islanders scored his 18th goal of the season
It turned out to be a pretty wild goalie Billy Smith started to on a 10-foot slap shot In front of
morning at PGA West for Tre- . leave the Ice for a sixth skater Devils goalie Alain Chevrier
vlno. The 47-year-old finished when Sutter picked up the loose aft.er taking a pass from Luc
with $310,000, collecting every puck in the corner and attempted Robitaille.
cent of the $285,000 the fifth to pass it back to a teammate.
annual tournament had to offer - The puck conllnued the length of
NHL results
on Its second day.
the Ice into the Islanders net.
NA1'JONAL HOCK~V LE.4.GUE
After beginning the back nine
The Islanders protested but
Saturd"Y'slksultt~
Detroll3, Boston 2 (OT)
with $25,000, Trevino rolled ln Gregson said they had not lost
NY ll!llandeu 5, NY R~rs 4
birdie putts of 15 leeton No.lOfor control of the puck.
Phlladripbla B, Quebec 3
Wll!lhiQton !i, PUWbursh 5
$25,000; 20 feet on No. 12 for
"The only thing I asked GregHartford 4, Toronlo%
$50,000; and 12 feet for $35,000 on son was did he blow the whistle
MlnnetoU I,~ . Louis 4
MOntreal 7, Wlnalper S
the final hole.
before the puck went In," Islandcat~ary 8, lA• An ret e~~ I
The skin on No. 18, bagged ers Coach Terry Simpson said.
Sunda,'ll Relulb
t.Aimonton s, Btlllalo ~
when two-time defending cham"The Rangers outplayed us and
NY R....-ers S. NY bluden J
pion Fuzzy Zoeller missed a
were a better team tonight."
New Jersey 2, Lo1 An~~:elee! Hie)
Monday's Game~~
five-foot putt, also earned TreIronically, Smith was the first
Rfl8toa at Montr!al, 7: Slli p.m.
vino an automobile.
Chlup at C~t.lpry, t: :IS p.m.
NHL goalie to score a goal, doing
TuHda,'s Game8
The car was nice, but not much
Vanceu¥er at Q.ebee, nllhl
will surpass the thrill of a $175,000
hole·ln-one struck In competition
against Arnold Palmer, Jack Hannan Trace at Oak Hill
Nicklaus and Zoeller.
Kyger Creek at Eastern
The Daily Sentinel
"That was my second hole-in- Southern at North Gallla
•
one In 35 years," Trevino said. "I Symmes Valley at Southwestern
(USPS 14&gt;-1160)
A Dlvlslnn of Multimedia, Inc.
didn't get to see the ftrst one West at West Union
because It was on a Saturday Portsmouth at Chillicothe
Published , evl'ry afternoon, Monday
morning and I was first off the t!!e Athens at Lancaster
lhr ough Friday, 111 Co urt St., Pom eroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Puband I had stayed out all night.
Ports NO at Chesapea~e
lishing C o mpa n y /M&amp;~Itimedla, In c.,
"Then, three people were New Philadelphia at Marietta
Pomeroy, Ohi o 45769, Ph . 992-2156. Se-jumping up and down. 1 said, . Jackson at Minford
cond class pos tage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio.
'Where the hell Is the ball,' and ·· saturday's results
they said, "It's in the hole."'
Hannan Trace 92, Fairland 69
Member: Un ited Press International.
Sunday's shot was witnessed Gallipolis 58 Waverly 44
lnlandDall y Press Assoclatlonand the
by a somewhat larger -goup. A Greenfield 54 Paint Valley 47
OhloNewspapcrAssocta1lon . National
national television aU-dience and
Advertising Re presentative, Branham
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a gallery Of about 8,000 watched
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Trevino's ,d rive land about four .----:P"'--.,..,F------+t ; · POsTMASTER: Send address ~hanges
feet In front of the flag before
to The Dally Sentinel, m c oun St. ,
disappearing Into the cup on the
1 Pomeroy, Oh to 45769
Island green .
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that's the most astonishing hole·
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SINGLE COPY

Trevino scores ace,
earns $175,000

Tuesday's games

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THANK YOU ••••
TO THE VOTERS OF RUTLAND
TOWNSHIP FOR YOUR VOTE
&amp; SUPPORT
CHARLES RIFE
Pd. Pol. Ad.

lt.

Ohio

No subsc riptions by ma il pt&gt;rmllted In
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a va ilabl e.

Mtall

Su~crlptloM

Inside Meigs County

13 Weeks , .. ........... ........ ............ $l 7.29

2S Weeks ............. .... ............ .... , S34.06
52 Weeks .. ., ................ .. ........... , 566.56
Outside Meigs County
13 Weflks ......... ........ ................. , $18. 20
26 Weeks .... ..... ........................ $35.10
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�~

•

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, Noilember 30,
. 1987.

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

P~oy-Middleport,

Monday, Novamber30, 1987

one hurt ...
----~alnews----- NoContinued
from page 1
NBA results

John l :arrollataoehea&amp;erTediTo ......

NATIONAL BASKETBALL 1\SSOC.
Cunfr rPIICI'
:;\th•nll•· Dh•ialun

t:a..,. ~rn

\\' L Pt·t .
R0Mon
PhUa. dt'lphiM

10

.a

GB

SuDday, ~- .
J
John Carron at Rocbeater Tech

TournPy

Calendar

.'2HI ,.aOO 4

4

i

Nf'w \ 'o rt.

4

M .SS!

~

M'usllln!{ton

4

H .US

$

New J erse-y

~

9 . Ia

~~

Football
LA Raidf'rs at Seattil'. 8 p.m .
Ho c ~)'

ll081on at Montreal, 1: S5 p.m .
Ollup Ill carcary,lt.35 p.m .

Central Dl\'l!ilon
Olll'~o~ao

10 3 .1111 M 4 . 1111 1%
II 5 .1115 2

1\fllwaukf'e
Indiana

Atlan&amp;a

1

5 .5113

2%

7

5 .5KS

!1.4

Delrnlt
tlt'\'elan~

~
11
We !i~rn t::onl~rence

Mldwelit Dlvl11km
Oenver
II 4
Dull&amp;$
'7 5
lJ tuh
1 5
Holl!iton
7 6
San Antonio
S II
Sacnt.mento
I 1

.n3

f

.687 JUI..'I

I

.ISS

t

.SSII
.JKS

I I},
31,\

.114

3%

P acillc Dlvhion

Lt\ Laket!i
l'ortland
Se attle

9
1
I
t

.818 s .1&amp;1 I 'll!
I .Me 3 Yr

!

1 ... to
t
M .:IS3
2 10 .111

Phoenix
LA Cllppu s
Go lde n St .

t 1fr
5'1a
W1

Sllturday 'li Rr !iull!l

New York 105, Cle,·el•nd 93
WIIShlngton Ut. Detroit let
Atlant. 1%1, San An tonto liD
bldll&amp;na 131, Seat&amp;h 115
L'hl c a~ !IS, Hnu.Uon.S6
Mll..,'aukee ll'l. Bu11lon 87
Den~r.lt8,

Dallas 98

Sttcrt\mento 115,1"hlladf'lphlall4 t 01')
Sunda.r'!ll Re11u.ll
Portland ,!5, New Jer~y IM
M-onday·~ Game.
ladlana II. Milwaukee, 11:30 p.m .
l"blladelplda Ill. Ulah, 11:30 p .m .
'I'ue!!day'11 G11me11
Detmlt at New Jf'rwy. niJhl
Seattl~ al New York , nl!hl
Bosto n at Atlanta, nl1hl
IJ.enver-at Hou..'llon, Di,ltlt
O.lnxo at Golden Stale, niJht
LA La.kers al Sllcnmulo, nlrht
Phoenb: at l"ortland, nt111t

' NFL results
Ni\'riONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Thursday's Re•ult11
" '"''sas Cll)' 21, Detrolt20 '

Playoff results

Ollio Hllh School
Rt11ll11
Division I
· t;ln Prl~e ton 53, Tol Whitmer &amp;
Boardman :n , Sudusky a
Dlvlson II
Steubenvlllt! ZH, "euerlnc Alter 10
Akron Buchtel .20, Cle Benedict lilt' 8
DIYkiiODIII
Stterktan !1, Cln. Foreet Park 7
Vounr MocutE&gt;y U , Elyria C..th t
Di"YistoDIV
Col AeadHny 38, venallles 1
G11h:e Mills Hawken tl , Ar-chbold U
DIYI!IIon V
Mopdore t6.. Delpllo• .le lfeHOn U
New11rk Calh %1, Mlddlt&gt;lown Fenwick t
Footba.lll"l~orr

Cluamplonshl p pair1ngM
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) - Schedlilr
lor the final s nf the Ohio HIJJh School
football playol{s :
Division I
Cincinnati Princeton {Il-l ) Yll Board·
man ( 13-fl Saturd!ll', 1 p.m . , Ohio
SllldlUfll.• Columbu11.
DI.Yislon II ·
Sieubenvtllc (12-1 ) n ..Ur1.111 Buchtel
(11·1 I Friday , .a p.m ., Oh,lo Sladham,
Columbus.
Division Ill
Thurnvllle Sheridan ( I:J-0) vs Yo~IJ·
scown Mooney {11-1) , Sldurd~cy, II a.m.,
Ohlo Sl11dium, Columbus,
Division IV
Cohnbus Ac ademy (IJ.tl v11 G~tte.
Mills Hawken (lr.-1) F'rWiay , 1: SO p. m ..
Ohio Stadium, Columbu1.

DIYislon V
Motr~tdore

V§ Nrwark C11tholle
111-01, Saturdlll·, 2:30 P.m ., Ohio Stadium, ( :olumbus.

Ohio CollegE'
flMkl'lhall Reslllts
Saturday, Nov, 'al
Ohio Slllle 9~ . Mlssouri-Sl.l.ouis '74

NY Je11121, ChtdnnP,I20
Chkal{o 23, Gt'een lilly 10
Indlanupoll s ~1. Houstoa 27
Buffa]!) l! l, Miami 0 New Ori~.IUUI !II,

Pltt.o;hui'Kh 16
P.hlladelpbla!l~. N~w EnJland 31 (OTI
St . Lout~ 34, A.llanta ~I
Washhalion 23, NV Giants II
Dcnvrr 31. San Dlero 11
LA Ram~ 3:), Tampill Bay 3
San Frant:iM:o 311, Cle~·eland 't-1
Monday 's GamP
LA Ralden at Se attle, 9 p.m .
Sundll)'. Dec. 6
Phlladt&gt;lphlaal NV Gli1.nts. I p. m .
Atlanta 11.1 Dal ..!li, I p.m.
Indlanapells at Oe\'eland, 1 p.m.

"ansas City at Clnclnaatl, 1 p.m .
LA Ram_q at Detroll, I p.m.
San Dlegu Ill How&gt;lun, I p.m .
San Franelsco.al Grre11 Bay, 1 p.m . •
Seattle at Pftlshur[!:h. I p.m .
W&amp;.'JIIIagton Ill St. LouiM, I p.m .
Tampa Bay at New Orle&amp;nll, 4 p.m .
fljrw ED~~:Ia.d Ill Den...er, -1 p .m .
Buffalo at LA Raiders,~ p.m .
Chicago at MlniW!IOLil , H p.m .
Monday, Dec. 7
NV ,IM .o,; at Miami, 9 p.m .

This week's games

Cupltlll '71, Kt&gt;nl stale BK
Indlllllll 90. Miami (Ohio) U
Oh.loWesleyan 121!:, Ohio V•IYtrlill)' II~
Toledo 1$, Chico State {Caltf) 50
Dayton 63. WIUenbera- 61
YoW~gslown Stale 81, WoO!iier 58
Xavier II!, Huntlqton Clnd) 1%
Oberlin 81, Baldwin-Wallace 76
HeklelberJJ 63, Defiance 87
All~(heny (Pa)7.a, Joha Carroll11
Genna j Pal 81, Malo'ne SR
Ftndla)· 71, Wltmlrclon &amp;4
Muklni(Um Than""Jhltng TolWNiment
A.t Nl'w Concord
Mu11ldn1JU111 7-1, Berra (Ky) •5. ch
Rio Grand" 115, Ohio Dominican 116, corw
K ol C Tour1111.ment
At Canton
Calvin ( Michl 15. Walsh 86, ch
Mt St Mar;fs (NV) 74, Dau•mea (Nl' ),
con~

Prep scores
Boy11 Ohio High
SchOOl 1\askethaJI

Saturday , No\'. 28
Ada 11!:, Rld[!:emon.t 52

Akron

1\kr Flre!"lone 45, Ridtfleld Rl''o'ere .f3
Akr Manehes&amp;er ~. Rittman 5'l
Akr North 11 , Ravenna 61
Amelia tt, New Richmond &amp;4
Auront.. 91, Cuyahoa-u Hl8 i-1
Barberton 95, Cle Eut Trch 113

Bc&gt;cllord SR. WIIIOIIIhby South 33

lkdlord Chanel63. Cle Rellf!diLtlne ~9
Bellbrook ~3. D11y Stebhl .. 5I
Rellt&gt;lnntalne 53, Indl~n Lake 37
BruukvUie &amp;a. Natiolllll Trail M
Brunswick 52, Bern Mldpiirk oltl
Buckey_. f'.enlral '78,llu:u 51
BucyrW!' '23, Rlwr Valley G8
Cambrldae 82, Meado"1lfook 11
Can Cen Calb 71, Norwayne J4
Can Mc"lnley 67, Wad1worth n
Can Tlmken 61, VoWJ.: R11.yen t8
f:anal WI• hester 72, Frankfort i\clena

DPnl.~on

Cl•darvllle at MKione
Dl'tlance. at Bluffton
l\11tunl \lf'rnon a1 Walsh
RJo Grandt&gt; at Tl rnn
Wednc.'Sday, Dec•. Z
BO"·IIng Gref'n at Mlchlsan
Tri-Siult&gt; ai Kent Stille
Paylnn at Miami
Tuiedo Ki Mhme"ota
fle...eland Slate a&amp; St. Joseph' s CPa\
H e idelbe~J~: at Findlay
Juhn Carroll Ill Marll'lta
Oh In WM~Ieyan at Ohio North em
Otwrhl'in at Ec~rd (F1it )
Hiram at Wooster
Thunday , Dec. 3
Clnclnaatl at More hl'lld Stutt!Wounl Unlnn at Wuh &amp; ,Jeff ( Pa )
OUerfleln at RuUin..'l (Fia )
Urhanaut. flnclnnutl Bible
Dykr at Point I' ark (Pa)
Wllmht(ton ~ Northern Kent~~&amp;:ky
Frldll)' , Dec. ~
ZlpCla,..,;lt~

Voun~~:~town

State al Marshall Tourney
CuM- Spartan t' la~!ii~J
Dr nlson Big Rrd CitLSSiC
K'uotil!lr.lll Ro c he~t.rr Tourney
MLtlone Pioneer Clas'iit•
Blolfton Tourney
Saturdl')', Dtoc. 5
Bowling Green nt Da\'ldson
• K••rrt St ate at Jamt'"S Mattison
Miami at t'l nclnnall
Toledo at ))ptrolt
Nonht•rn low.. at Dlt)·ton
Xavll•r at Murqucue
Pace at Wright Slate
1\turlrtta a t Wilmington
Wllk'nhl' fll: at Ke nyon
Ohio Wet;ll'y.uJ at Capital
ll e ldclber~: at Ohio Nortlwrn
Adrian (Mich l at Mount Union
Hiram at i\~ hlund
C'• • d 1trvlll~· at Findlay
C'lnl'lnnatiBihlt- at Rio GnndeWalsh at Point Pllrk tPau
Oa kland ( MI~h ) at Dt'fhuw~e
D)'kt at D11.eman (N\'1
1\krnn Zip Ull.'l~lc
VUU111Pituwn Stalto at Marllhall Totll'ney
Ca se Spar&amp;an OaHslc
De nlaon Dig Red Cl&amp;ll!llc
. Malon'' Pioneer Clas!lh'
1\luflt on 1'ourney
\\'oo!'ter at Rl.Jt, h~s tt:• r Tournt')'

56

Men110nll.c Chuall'
At Bluffton
Hano,·er (lnd) 17, Blallton 68. ch
' Sllnda)', Nov. 29
(;lncinnaU 16, Northern Keatucky 65

Ohio Culkoge Ba!ikf'lhall
Monday , Nuv. 30
Findlay al Bowlin« Green
Cal Stai("-Olko at Kent Stute
William &amp; Mary ai ,MIIlml
Ohio Unh·er!Oity at Morehl'ad State
Ottrrheln at f1or1da Southern
('Jarlun ( Pa) Slal e nl Cleveland Stall'
St . ,Joseph (In d ) at Xavier
Tu&lt;!11day, Det:. I
\\'t'!iWrn Mh·hiJ:an at Ohio Slatf'
flnclnnllll ut Kenl~teky
WWJh &amp;. ,J,.rr ut

( 13-0)

College scores

Mlnnefliota H , naiLas :111
Sunday'!! Re!!ulh~

-.

·'

ill

Carlbk&gt; 511. LeRHln Moarot&gt; 5I
Carrollton 50, Ntw Philadt&gt;lphlll U
ClrclevUk&gt; 6%, Tell)'s Valley 51
Clark NW lH, DeGratf RIYenldl' 5fl
Cle Cent Calh '7S, BeaChwood 8$
f'll' CoiUnwood ~8. Rocky River 4-1
Cll' st l.: ..tlw. 73, Cle Uncoln W 411
Cle St Joseph 8t, Cit&gt; Helrhl11 !!()
Col F.ull2, Findlay 39
Collndepende..:!e 15, Col St Chu 60
Coldwater 10. Arcanwn 6e
Colwnbus Grove 68, 1\.yerR\/IIIe G4
Copley 61. Cl~ Kennedy 53
Conllnelllal 50, Paukllftll: 49
,
Cortland Laknlew M, Grand Valley M
Covington 73, Bndlord 6~
Cre11Hne 61, South Centnd 6:&amp;
01)' Val &lt;..br Acad '74, Woudrldke 63
Day .Jefterson 94, Dar Me.~t.dawdllle 15
Detlanee 7t, 1'01 Woodward ~3
Dixie Ill, Day Oakwood 03
Dover 61, Mullillon Jackson 51 (\!nt)
Drelldcn Trl-\'1161', IJck.lna: Val SR
Ea11t t;le Shaw 103, ae Glen"111e II
Eu181de (In d) 7%, Edon49
Elyria CAih 56, Parma Holy Namt&gt; 52
Euclid 106, Ea1tlake North U
Fairbanks 15, N Lewlsbu...- TriMd -19
Fairview 64, Columbia 60 (ot)
Fayette 16, Uberty Center 69
Field 59. Akr Sprlna:lleld ~6
Fo11torla H, Oyd e 63
Gallon Northmor -18, CenlerlntrM 4'7
Gallipolis 58, \\'averly H
Glen &amp;te 83, N Bud Til)' lor 5I
Gollhen 73, Clermont NE 54
Gran "file 1~, lJberly Union 62 '
Greenevlew IS, Wuhl~~glon CH U
Greenfield 5-1, Paint Valley -17
Grove City 51, Reynokllhur&amp; 48
llamllton 19, Ed aerwn 38
Hardin Northern 84, Spencerville 82
Hlckavllle 14, Monipelltlr $II
Holcate 11, OtloYIIIe 11
Howland 61, Aahlabula H•rbnr 4!1
lludAon U , "ent Ro08C\'tU t8
JohMiown N'rhiJJe 65, MlllenpGrt 6-1
.Jonathan Alder 53, Mechanlellh•rlli SO

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J.
(UP!) -The New York Jets held
their share of the AFC East lead
alter receiving news that went
from good to bad to great In a
span of 12 seconds .
With the score tied Sunday,
Cincinnati's Jim Breech was
wide left on a 46-yard fleld:goal
try. But the referees ruled the
kick had come after the twominute warning.
However, Breech's second op·
portunlty turned worse for the
Bengals. Barry Bennett blocked
the attempt, Rich Miano scooped
up the ball and sprinted·67 yards
to a touchdown with 1:48 left,
giving the Jets a 27-20 triumph
over Cincinnati.
The Jets', who have looked
wonderful-In beating New Eng·
·land and Seattle and terrible In
losing to Indianapolis and Buffalo, moved one game over .500
for the fourth time this year and
nestled Into at tle at 6-5 with the
Colts and Bills for first place In
the AFC East. Miami and New
England, who had entered Sunday part of a five-way tie In the
division, are· a game back.
"We needed a p'i ay like that to
get things going," Jets linebacker Bob Crable said of the
blocked kick. "Hopefully, now
things will finally snowball for
us. We'll know soon If that was
true."
Barney Bussey Intercepted a
Ken O'Brien pass to set Clnctnnatl up at the Jets 45-yard line
with 4: 12 left. On thlrd·and·slx at
the 29, the Jets blitzed their two
Inside linebackers and fullback
Larry Kinnebrew was stopped
for 1 yard. Tjlat forced the
Bengals to go for the field goal.
"We were committed to our
run defense," Jets defensive

•,d

•

Ohio deer gun hunters are not
allowed to carry more than one
firea r m and m ust declare on
their 1987 deer hunting permit
which firearm they are using.
Handgun hunte rs \luring 1986
killed 1,043 deer .

Special permits are required
for handgun hunters In Ohio state
parks.
All handguns must be openly
displayed and visible at all times
and the hunter must have a valid
deer permit declaring his Intent
to use a revolver.
Legal shotguns for 1987 Include
10, 12, 16, and 20 gauge weapons.
The .410 shotgun Is no longer
legal for deer hunting In Ohio.
Department officials said It Is
Illegal to use rifles or rifled
barrels In Ohio wh!'" hunting
deer on either private or public
land. However, It Is legal to use a
single·shot muzzle·loaded rifle of
.38 caliber or larger.
. Non-resident hunters must pay
tR1 f?r an Ohio hunting license
anu ... for a deer permit.
Out-of-state hunters using a
small game hunting license are
not allowed to klll deer in Ohio,
the department said.
Hunters are also reminded that
It Is Illegal to hunt from allterrain vehicles.
Hunter s are required to tag
their deer Immediately after the
kill at the place the animal fell.
The deer mustthen be taken to an
official check station lor tagging.

'EMs has 13 weekend calls

GAME BREAKER- Rich Miano ofthe New York Jets plcb •P
the blocked field goal at~mpt by the Bengals' Jim Breech with two
minutes left In the game and goes on to score the wlnnlnJ
touchdown Sunday in the Meadowlands. The Jets won 2'7·20. (UPI) .

Hannan Trace in
92•69 victory over
Fairland Dragons
PROCTORVILLE - 'senior
The Wildcats started off
Scott Rankin scored 28 points slowly, leading by only three at
Saturday ni~ht to pace Hannan the end of the first quarter. But
Trace to a lopsided 92-£9 win over the Mercerville five outflred the
host Fairland.
Dragons 27-20 In the second
With 12 rebounds to his credit, period to take a 42-32 lead at
Rankin, who led all scorers, was halfitme. The aggressiveness of
as active on the boards as he was the Wildcats on the boards at
With the nylon. Teamm.a tes Tim · both ends of the court, as
Brumfield and Grady Johnson evidenced by HTHS' s 25 o!fen·
picked up eight rebounds each.
sive rebounds and 55 total

contrlb·
uted a pair of three-point shots to
tlon game. The Redmen were pick up 11 points for Fairland,
careless. ••
By GENE CADDES
Jay Burson's 17 points led. Ohio bested by Berea, their opponent was one of the three Dragons
UPI Sports Writer
.
In the opening NAJA Nationals making double figures on the
If Saturday night's opening State, with Curtis Wilson adding
compellllon
In 1985, by a score of
game win over Missouri-St. 16 and Doss 15 off the bench.
scoreboard. James Burris, who
90-7'1
on
Friday.
Ohio Dominican
. Louis is any Indication, depth Jerry Francis score 13 and
registered seven points from the
fell to the Muskies 84-41 Friday . . foul line, also scored 11.
Isn't going to be a luxury Ohio Carter added 12.
At Athens, Ohio Wesleyan's
"I think Periy is going to be a
State Coach Gary WWIIllams can
For Hannan Trace, a 16·point
scoring
machine Scott Tedder
player
here,"
Williams
said
good
count on.
contribution by senior Rick
Ohio State manhandled the of the 6-foot-8, 235-pounder. "I scored a record 50 points as the
Swain made him the only other
Division II Rlvermen by a liked the way he and Grady · Bishops stunning Ohio Univer - Wildcat to score In double
comfortable 95-74 margin, but played. If those three (Including sity 122-115.
figures.
Tedder hit 19 or 20 from the
when Williams "called off the Doss) cari play even:. night, that
"We had three starters on the
dogs" late in the game, the gives us eight and you need eight field and nine of 10 from the
bench with three fouls at halffree-throw line. He was three of
Buckeyes were outscored 30·9 the players In the Big Ten."
time," said Wildcat head coach
Rlvermen Coach Rich Meck- five from behind the 3-polnt line.
final eight minutes. That had to
Mike Jenkins. "However, we
That output Is a Convocation
be disappointing for Williams, fessel was dlsapplnted In his
stayed with playing man-to-man
although the Buckeye coach was team's performance, although Center record and the 122 points
defense and baseline to baseline
willing to take a watt-and-see admitting "we knew Ohio State's was the most a visiting team had
the whole game," he said.
aggressiveness would make ·it scored. The total of 237 was also a
attitude.
Hannan Trace, now 1·0 on the
Wi lltams did get solid perfor· tough. Gary called off the dogs rewcord.
year, will begin Its defense of Its
OU sophomore Dave Jamermances from eight players, late and I appreciate that. Now
SVAC title Tuesday night at Oak
son, who sat out last season after
we go back to the real world."
including three off the bench Hill .
Eric Love led Missouri-St. knee surgery, led the Bobcats
Randy Doss, Grady Mateen and
HANNAN TRACE (92) Louis with 21 points, hltting5of10 witt, 39 points in their season
freshman Perry Carter,
Rankin 10·2-2-2-28; R. Swain
Ohio State scored the first five 3-polnt field goal attempts. Chris opener .
7-0-2-3-16; Petro 4-0-1-4-9; Stltt
"Our guys are just elated to
points of the game, led 48-23 at Pllz, off the bench, added for the
2-1-2-4-9; Jenkins 4·0·0-5-8;
have beaten an outstanding OU
halftime and 86-44' with 8:33 to Rlvermen, who fell to 0-2.
Brumfield 3-0-0-3-6; Cremeeens
Ohio. State's next game Is basketball team, " said Bishops
play.
1-0-1·2-3; G. Johnson 3-0-1-0-7; J.
''We tried to run the half-court Tuesday night when the Buck- coach Gene Mahaffey. "We exeSwain 3-0-0·0-6. TOT.U.S 40·9-11%.
offense the second half and I was eyes host Western Michigan of cuted and did the things we
FAIRLAND (69)- Pay1-5-3-3normally try to do without
not pleased with that," said the Mid-American Conference.
20; McClung 1-2-3-2-11; Morrison
In tournament action, Muskin- overdoing them,"
Williams.
3-1·0·3-9; Lester 2-0-0-3-4; Fuller
Ohio University, which plays
"We had some guys In there gum won 118 Thanksgiving Tour·
2-0-3·3-7; Burris 2-0-7-1·11;
who played in St. John Arena for nament 7._65 over Berea (Ky.) Morehead State Monday night,
Schindler
l -0-0-2-2; Dillon 2·0·1-0·
the first time. They were a ltttle after Rio Grande beat Ohio will be playing the same kind of
5.
TOTALS
17-20-69.
nervous and got a little Dominican 85-66 In the consola· game then, trying to improve on
Score by quarters

o~rsystemis newtoourktds,

tt. ..
but Ill play the same way at
. Powered by Lea Ann Mullins' 21 and 16 points~· respectively . Morehead State, " said Bobcat
game high of 29 points, the Rio Boosting the home effort were coach Billy Hahrt. "I still believe
Grande Red women stopped visit- points supplied by juniors Angela In our (run -and-gun) system. We
ing West Virginia Tech cold Packard and Billie Jo Stephen- got 115 poin ts from It, but we have
Saturday and posted a 87-69 win son and freshmen Coli, Jennl up 122 and one guy gets 50 points.
Couch, Chris Williams and Lelsa Amazing!''
over the Lady Bears.
Rio Grande, 4-0 overall, over· Anderson.
At Bloomington , Ind., veterans
came a lackluster performance
Shoring up the Lady Bears' Dean Garrett and Rick Calloway
ln the first half to lead the · scoring were Kim Jones with 14. paced defending ~NCAA Cham·
opponents, whowere1-2enterlng Easley's 13 and 11 from Desper, pion Indiana to a 90-65 win over
the game, by as much as 27 who scored the visitors' single Miami of Ohio. Garrett scored 25
points.
3-polnt field goal.
points and Calloway added 19.
"During the halftime, I told
The Redwomen will host Con·
In other games, Capital
them , 'You can't underestimate cord College at 5:30 p.m. Tues · stunned Kent State 71·68, Toledo
an opponent,"' Redwomen day and travel to West VIrginia downed Chico Stat.e (Calif.)
CoachCheryiFielitzcommented State Thursday for a 7 p.m . 75-50, Dayton edged Wittenberg
later. "After the half, we came game.
,
63.61, Youngstown State got by
out and did a lot better. Our press
RIO GRANDE (87) _ Jennl Wooster 61-58, Xavier stopped
Couch, 1-0-0-2; Holly Hastings, Huntington (Ind.) 112-72, Oberlin
was very good."
Tech, with Carol Robinson 10-1 -3-21; Lea Ann Mullins, 9(2) - defeated Baldwin-Wallace 81-76,
scoring 23.polnts, gave the hosts a ·s-1-29; Renee Halley, 7·2·2-16:
Heidelberg edged Defiance 68-67,
game in the opening of the first Beth Coil, 1-2-1-4; Billie Jo Allegheny beat JOhn Carroll
half as both sides traded baskets Stephenson, 2-0-3-4; Chris Willi - 74-72, Geneva (Pa .) downed
to take the lead. Things didn't ams, 3-1-3-7; Angela Packard , Malone 61-58 and Findlay beat
start looking up for Rio Grande 1-0·2-2; Lelsa Anderson, 1·0-2-2. Wilmington 76·64.
until baskets by Mullins, junior TOTALS 35(2)-11-17-87.
.- Calvin (Mich.) beat Walsh
Holly Hastings, senior Renee
WEST VIRGINIA TECH (69)
75-66 for the championship of the
Tina Desper, 3(1) -2-3:11 ; K of C Tournament In Canton
Halley and freshman Beth Coil created some scoring distance. ~lbby Easley, 6·1-4·13; Cathy ~hlle Mt. ~tyMarys (N.Y. ) beat
aeman ( . ) 74-56 for consola·
olns, 2-0·1-4; Carol Robinson,
The half ended with the Redwo·
lion
honors .
10-3-4-23; April Raab, 1·0·1·2;
men ahead, 38·30.
Hanover·
(Ind .) handed BlufDelene Toliver, 1-0-1-2; Kim
Mullins started the second half
fton
a
77·68
setback In the
Jones, 7-0-3-14. TOTALS 30(1HIoff right with two 3-pOint field
chan;~pionship of Bluffton's Mengoals. Coupled with that and a 17·69.
nonlte Classic.
strong defense, the Redwomen
held down the Lady Bears'
'
assault, although Robinson,
Libby Easley and Tina Desper
made a good showing on the '
scoreboard for the visitors .
"Lea Ann played great," Flelitz said of the 5-7 guard and team
~.a- captain from McGuffey , Ohio.
She was a major key In our win
today ."
Mullins was also the Redwo. ·men's top player at the free
HA~E
throw line, \psslng In 5 points,
,. Hastings ibd Halley continued
CALL (614) 992-2104
building a record as two of the
(304) 675-1244
Redwomen's top scorers, posting

-

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE

i

HEARING AIDS"

Han. Trace
Fairland

15 27 28 22-92
12 20 20 17-69

Reserve game - Fairland 41,
Hannan Trace 31.
Top scorers: Morrison (Fair·
land), 12 points. Jarrell (Hannan
Trace ), 11 points.

Toledo results
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) -Grain
Dealer grabbed the lead out of
the starting gate and stayed In
front the rest of the way, posting
an 8 'h length victory in Sun4ay
night 's featured lOth race pace at
Raceway Park.
The winner, driven by John
Konesky Ill, covered the mile IR
2:00 l-5 and returned $3.20, $2.40
and $2.20. Tex McKinzie finished
second and paid $4.20 ano $2.40,
while Tornado Bret came In third
and kicked back $2:40.
The 3-4 daily double combination of Archies Mile and Crash
Bam was worth $32.60.
Sunday night's crowd of 2,436
wagered $200,265.

HUBBARDS
GREENHOUSE
Now Open for the
Christmas Season
Poinsettias
H~nging Baskets
Christmas Cactus
House Plants
Live &amp; Cut Christmas
TrHs
Candle Arrangt ...nta
Grav~ Blanketa
Monument Sprays
Open Daily 9·6
Sunday 1-6
, '
SYRACUSE
99NT~6J
\

•

Trustees to meet
.. Lebanon Township Trustees
wlll meet Wednesday, 6 p.m., at
the township building,

"::====='====================~
11
,l _

~ea

Frank Smith
Frank B. Smith, 80, of Portland, died Sunday at the
Amer\care-Pomeroy Nursing
Center.
Mr. Smith was born In Portland on July 12, 1907 to the late
Ben and Mary Wade Smith. A
farmer and carpenter, he was a
member of Carpenters Local 650,
Pomeroy.
Survivors Include his wife,
Elsie M. Hunter Smith, Portland; three sons, Herbert Smith
of Elk City, Okla., Donald Smith
and Ray Smith of Racine; three
daughters, Patricia Smith of
Long Bottom, Janice Salser of ,
Racine and Janie Lawrence of ·
Portland; 18 grandchildren:
eight great grandchildren; one
brother, Paul Smith of Racine;
two sisters, Zana Gainer of
Pomeroy and Ruby Grueser of
Minersville; several nieces and
nephews.
· Besides his parents, he was
, preceded In death by three
brothers, Roy, Bud and Bert
Smith; three sisters, Hattie
McMurray, Nora Hoback and
Mary Wood; and one grandson,
Scott Franklin Smith.
Services will be 2 p.m. Tuesday
at Ewing Funeral Home with
Rev. Charles Norris officiating.
Burial will be In Letart Falls
Cemetery. Friends may call at,
the funeral home anytime after 2
p.m. on Monday .

Ottie Roach

d eathS

· Auction slated
A Christmas auction, with
au_!:tloneer Dan Smith, will be
held at the Syracuse Volunteer
Fire Department on Saturday at
7 p.m. Proceeds from the auction

'·

Rosa Likens
Rosa Nell Conkle Likens, 80,
Gallipolis Ferry, died Sunday In
Pleasant Valley Hospital after a
long Illness.
Born Oct. 11, 1907 in Henderson, she was a daughter of the
late William Conkle and Gertrude Clonch Conkle.
· She was a member of Gillispie
Chapel Church In Gallipolis
Ferry.
She was preceded In death by
her husband ,. Jesse Norman
Likens In 1980. She was also
preceded in death by three
brothers.
Surviving are two daughters,
Mrs. Robert (Dorothy) Bonecutter , Gallipolis Ferry, Mrs. Henry
{Bertha ) Elliot, Point Pleasant;
one son, John Park Likens,
Gallipolis Ferry; three sisters,
Mlsslourl · Robinson , Henderson,
Kate Kinnaird, Baltimore, Md.,
Lena Thompson, Plain City,
Ohio; three brothers, John Newell, Oregon, Columbus Newell.
Plain City, Ohio, Elmer, Newell ,
Plain City; nlne grandchildren;
14 . great- grandchildren and
three
great-great grandch lldren,
Services will be Wednesday at
11 a.m. at the Wilcoxen Funeral
Home with the Rev . Charles H.
Birchfield officiating. Burial will
follow at Rogers Lone Oaks
Cemetery, Gallipolis Ferry.
Friends may call at the funeral
home Tuesday from 7 to 9 p.m.

Flora Friley

Weather

0

Ohio Extend~d Foreclllll
Wednesday through Friday
Varia ble cloudiness and a
chance of snow flurries In the
nor theastern pa rt of t he state
Wednesda y, with fair weather
across the state Thursday alld
Friday . Highs will be in the 30s
Wednesday a nd ranging from the
mid 30s to the mid 40s Thurdsay
a nd F riday. Overnight lows will
be in the 20s early Wednesday
and ranging from 25 to 35
Thursday a nd Friday mornings.
South Central Ohio
' Cloudy today, with a chance of
dr izzle and highs between 40 and
45. Cloudy tonight and Tuesday ,
with a chance of snow flurries .
Lows tonight will be near 30, with
highs Tuesday between 35 and 40.
The probability of precipitation is 30 percent through
Tuesday.
Winds will be from the west
near 15 mph today and !rom the
west near 10 mph tonight.

c:z:1SNOW ,
FRONTS:

E23J SHOWERS

-RAIN

11 Warm

"Cold

. . Static . . Occluded

Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% ct
to receive precipitation indicated

any shaded area is tcrecast
UPI

-----Announcements----- Hospital news

Firemen plan fundraiser
The Racine Volunteer Fire Departn\~nt Is sponsoring a
fundratsing drive to raise money for needed equipment. Over
the next several weeks, a person representing the fire
department will be contacting all homes In the area serviced by
the Racine VFD , asking for a $15 donation.
The fire department wishes to thank everyone for their
donations by giving a complimentary certificate for an 8 by ten
color portrait.
This is a legitimate fundr"alser and tlie fire department asks
for the support of the community.
·

•th
•
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•
OU
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•
~~~~d~/~P~~:~~t~h~r~~~~!!
Osu
.. opens WI VIC ory,
eaten, ~~~~-:;~~~~h~~s ~~~~ t~~'t:~v::
• G d (• • h h• d •
R 10 ran · e .IDIS es t Ir ID tourney th;o~:h~:~~u~:~~~;·

Redwomen down Lady Bears

over e weekend; six Saturday and seven Sunday.
Saturday at 5: 41 a.m., Rutland to Langsvllle for Lena
~arpenter to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at
~01 a.m. to Reedsville for Opal Randolph to Camden-Clark
C emorlal Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:35a.m. to Pomeroy Health
are Center for Flora Friley to Veterans Memorial Hospital ·
RUlland Fire Department at 11:39
to a structure fire at~
Langsville store; Salem Township Fire Department at 11:44
a.m. to the same !Ire; Pomeroy at 12:33 p.m. to the sheriff's
department lor Charles Stewart to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
.
Sunday at 11:15 a.tn. to the Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Gladys Shumway to Veterans Memorial Hospital· Syracuse at ·
11: 15 a.m . to Route 124 for Roy Arms to Holzer M~dlcal Center·
Orange Township Fire Department at 11:23 a.m. to a structur~
fire at the Jack Hood residence on Route 7; Pomeroy at 2: 41
p.m. ,to W~st Main St. for Barbara McDaniel to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Racine at 2: 47 p.m. to Sandy Desert Road
for James Harmon to Veterans Memorial Hospital· Middleport
at 4:08 p.m. to Hartinger Parkway for Alice Pla~ts who was
treated but not transported; Tuppers Plains at 7: 07 p.m .
transported Scott Dillon to !=amden-Clark Memorial Hospital.

a.m.

'

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 12·1-87

to

Me;~s County Emergency f&gt;1edlcal Services reports 13 calls

scorer Steve Pay, who finished

,
0 hio S deer Season gets underway today
CO LUMBUS, Oh io (UP!) The Ohio Depar tment of Natural
Resources predicts more than
300,000 )\unters will to head to the
field for Ohio' s six-day annual
dee r gun hunting season, which
began today.
Hunters last year killed 55,756
white- tailed deer during the
six-day deer gun season. That
was short of the 1984 record of
56,636 deer.
T he total1986 deer klllln Ohio,
counting the number killed by
bow hunters and all other methods. was a record 67,626.
Officials cautioned hunters
th is year that several regulation
changes have been made, lncludln·g legal weapo ~:·
dl!er
zones . Hunter s will be a.u ..... .,
hunt with a revolver In the
following callbers only: .357
Ma gnum, .357 Max ., .41 Magnum , .44 Magnum, and .45
calibe r Long Colt.

coordinator Bud Carson sald.
"With a field goal as valuable to
them as It was, they couldn't take
the chance of a sack. They had to
play It by the book."
The Jets went against the book
on Breech's second attempt. Jets
special teams coach Larry Pas·
quale said nose tackle Joe
Klecko, who normally powers
straight ahead on kicks, took a
step back. Left guard Bruce
Reimers, anticipating Klecka's
usual move, fired forward. That
left a hole between guard and
tackle that was filled by Bennett.
Miano gathered the ball in a
driving rain and followed Carl
Howard's block on Breech to
dash down the right sideline to
the end zone.
Miano Intercepted a Boomer
Eslason pass with 65 seconds left
to seal the outcome of the
Bengals' latest collapse. Clnclnnatl, 3-8, has lost six games by
seven or less points and the
Bengals have blown four games
In the final minutes.
Cincinnati coach Sam Wyche,
whose job appears In jeopardy,
closed his team's locker worn for
20 minutes after the game. ·
"If there ever was a case of the
ball not bouncing our way ... ,"
Bengals cornerback Louis
Breeden said. "I've been here 11
years and I've never seen things
happen the way they have this
year."
The Bengals also were harmed
In the fourth quarter b~ one of a
number of debatable calls. Early
In the period, with the score .tied
17·17, Eslasoti threw a 17-yard
touchdown pass to Eddie Brown.
But the referees ruled a sack
because Eslason was In the grasp
of Mark Gastineau before the
throw.

just after the final repairs were
completed and a final switch on
was made
restore all service.
Cable television service was
disrupted from the time of the
rock fall and brought down lines
until Sunday evening about the
time that the power was res tored
to all customers. Also tho"~!
withOut power service were
without heat for tne most part.
Street lights were out while
repairs were made Sunday night.
One of the last.major rock falls
·In Pomeroy occurred early on
Dec. 3, 1971 when boulders
crashed Into the Pomeroy Post
Office and Its loading dock. The
dock was completely destroyed
and the boulders hit Into one
corner of the post office. Cost for
repairs amounted to about one
million dollars.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-5

Ohio

will
be used
purchase
and gifts
to betogiven
awaycandy
when
Santa Claus comes to town later
In the m.onth. Anyone wishing to
donate money or gifts for Santa' s
visit should call 992-7181 or
992.-7775.
To spon'sor evenl
Middleport United Pentecostal
Church Is sponsoring a Christ-

Christmas ...

mas Village pn Saturday from 10
a.m. to2p.m. Everyonelslnvlted
to stop by and visit Santa and his
workshop. Craft Items, baked
goods and re(reshments will also
be available.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Lena
Carpenter, Langsvllle; Thurstdn
Stone, Middleport; Mark Beegle ,
Racine;
Garth S mith ,
Reedsville.
Saturday Discharges - Burl
Plan breakfast
·Blevins,
John DeMoss, June
Scipio Township Senior Ci tlCremeans,
Clara Howa rd , Nora
zens will be serving breakfast ,
starting at 5 a.m., lunch and Hartman, Max Folmer.
Sunday Admissions - Clyde
dinner, for deer hunters, all this.
week Including Saturday. Meals Bobo, Reedsville; James Meawill be served at the senior dow s , Portland ; Beatrice
citizens building In Pageville. Rairden , Hartford, W.Va.
Sunday Discharges - None.
Everyone welcome, Reasonable
prices.
·
Game at Bulchel
Due to labor disputes. TUesday's Meigs High basketball
game will be played at
Nelsonville-York. Reserve game
starts at 6 p.m.

OPEN ·
SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 AM • 9 PM

992-3462
271112 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

TO MY OLDER AND NEWER DEAR
FRIENDS ••• A BIG SINCERE
"THANKS" FOR YOUR VOTE &amp;
CONFIDENCE.
HENRY W. "DUKE" BENTZ

Continued from page 1
port Department Store said she Eastern Star
Pomeroy Chapter 186 Order of
was well pleased with the busi·
Eastern Star will hold a regular
ness done at the store during the
meeting on Tuesday at 7:30p.m.
parade and open house. Bahr
in the . Chester Masonic Lodge
Clothiers reported a good day of
Hall,
Chester. Officers are to
business. Corner Collections rewear
chapter dress. Refreshported "super" business, the
ments
will be served.
•
largest weekend since last April.
Business In Pomeroy was good
also. Swisher and Lohse Pharmacy reported excellent traffic
and at Clark's Jewelry people
began lining up as early at 7:30
a.m. Sunday In preparation for
the store's 11 a.m. opening and
there was a long line at the
establishment well before the
opening.
In Middleport, Santa distributed treats to children along the
parade route and In Pomeroy he
met in the mini park with
youngsters and presented them
treats:
Sunday's joint venture In
Pomeroy and Middleport was
sponsored by the chambers of
commerce of the two towns.
Winners of trophies for the
parade were Vaughan's Cardinal, Middleport, the best equestrian unit; J.D. Drilling, the best
commercial unit with "live"
snow people and a "live" Christmas tree, with the characters
and tree being hand made with a
person Inside each; Charla
Burge, the best non-commercial
entry as Meigs County's Little
Miss County Fair; the Stylettes
Baton Corps; Southern High, the
best band; The Dance Company
led by instructor Shirley Quickel,
the best entertainment group.

Ottle T. Roach, 87, of Letart,
died Sunday at Pleasant Valley
Flora McClure Friley, 86, gf
Hospital.
Pomeroy, died Saturday evening
He was born July 29, 1900, at
at the Americare-Pomeroy
Letart, son of the late Noah Health Care Center after an
William and Ada D. Edwards extended illness .
Roach. He was preceeded in
Born in VInton County, she was
death by his wife. Nettie A.
the daughter of the late Daniel
Roach, in 1977, and by two and Anna Carpenter Cleland .
brothers, Dale and Elmer Roach.
She was a member of the
He was a coal miner and
Middleport United Pentecostal
farmer and he a!tended the Church. Survivors Include a
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Christ. Fairview Bible Church.
daugher-ln-law, Nl&lt;;la McClure,
mas shopping bills will be no
He Is survived by three sisters,
Albany, one granddaughter , DI - problem for the Super Lotto
Miss Alice M. Roach and Mrs.
ane Paulsen, Albany, and onP player who holds the one winning
Stella F. Johnson, both of Letart, . grandson , Bill McClure, San
ticket from .Saturday's drawing.
and Mrs. Ada .J. Caufman of
Jose, Calif. , and eight greatGallipolis.
grandchildren.
Funeral services will be TueAlso surviving are one brother,
say, l: 30 p.m., at the Fogle.song
Sylvan Cleland, Middleport,
Dally stock prices
Funeral Home In 'Mason. Olfi·
three sisters, Golden Caster,
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
elating will be the Rev. Rankin
Pomeroy, Freda Davis, Rutland,
Bryce and Mark Smith
Roach and the Rev. Charles
and Neva Taylor, Barberton, and
of
Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Hargraves. Burial will be In the
three ' step-children, and eight
Fairview Community Cemetery . step-gra ndchlldren.
Am Electric Power .... .. ....... 25%
Friends may call Monday. 6·9
Besides her parents, she was
AT&amp;T .... .. . .'............ ... ... ....... 27%
p.m ., at the funeral home .
preceded In death by her first
Ashland Oil ... .. .. ............. .. .. 53%
husband, Marion McClure, and
Bob Evans ......... ............... . .l4 Y,
Samuel Boneeutter
her second husband, Charles
Charming
Shop pes ..... ... , .... .11 y.
Friley, Sr.. one · son, Carl
City
Holding
Co .. ......... ... .. .. . 34
Samuel M. Bonecutter, 62.
McClure. an Infant daughter,
Federal
Mogul.
.... .... ... ........ 30¥,
Point Pleasant, died Saturday at
Mary Francis McClure, olne
Goodyear T&amp;R ... ....... ........ .48%
his home. ·
sister and two brothers.
Heck's Inc ............. ........... .. ...2
He was born Nov. 12, -1925 in ·
Services will be held at l p.m.
Key Centurion .. ........... .. .....34 'h
Point Pleasant, to the late
Wednesday at the Blgony -Jordan
Lands ' End ...... .. ... ......... .. .... l6
Wllllall! Bonecutter and Nora C1 Funeral Home in Albany. The
{..imited
Inc . ........... .. ........ .. 18Y,
Love Bonecutter.
Rev. Clark Baker wll officiate
Multimedia
Inc ..... .... :..... ..... 45
He had worked for the West
and burial will be In the Robinson
Rax
Restaurants
............... .. . 3%
VIrginia Department of High- Cemetery In Rutland Township .
Robbins
&amp;
Myers
... ..... .... ....... 7
ways In Mason County and was
Friends may call Tuesday from 2
Shoney's
Inc
.
....
.......
... ........ 19'h
retired as a city worker lor Point
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
'
Wendy's
Inti.
..
..
........
.......... .4%
Pleasant. ·
Worthington
lnd
...
............
.-..16%
Surviving are his wife, Nina
Smith Bonecutter; two daugh· Veda Parker
ters, Sandra Sue. Jackson, Doris
don, Reedsvlile; one grand·
Faye, Southside, W.Va .; one
Veda E . Parker, 86, of State
daughter, Ruth Durst, Reedsbrother. Gerald Bonecutter, Co· Route 681, Reedsvllie, died Sun·
ville; tl\ree great grandchildren,
lumbus; a half-brother, Denlve day afternoon at St. Joseph's
Bryan,
Jeff and Steve Durst, all
Clagg, Gore Springs, Miss . , and Hospital In Parkersburg, W.Va.
of
Reedsville;
and several nieces
two grandchildren.
A former school teacher, she
and
nephews.
· Services will be Tuesday at 11 was born Nov . 18, 1901 In Meigs
She was preceded In death by
a.m. at the home of Ellen and · ,county, a daughter of the tate
her
husband, Everett D. Parker
Bucky Bass, Lakin, with the Rev . C.H. and Hattie Hostottle Green.
..
In
1983,
and by a brother, Lowell
Herman Jordan and Jack Finn!Survivors Include a daughter
Green
.
cum officiating. Burial wlillle In and son-In -law, Esther and DarServices will be 1 p.m. Wednes the Oak Grove Cemetery In rei Landon of Reedsville; two
day
at the White Funeral Home
Ll&gt;tart.
sisters, Wilma Pierce of Green
with
Rev. Roy Deeter officiating.
Friends may call at the Bass Valley , Ariz. and Ruth ~ambert
Burial will be In 'tuppers Plalps
Residence after 3 ·p.m. Monday. of North Jackson; two brothers,
Christian
Cemetery. Friends ·
Funeral arrangements are Paul Gree n of Midland, Pa. and
may
call
at
the funeral home
under the direction of the Wll- Don Green of South Charleston,
-·
after
3
p.m.
on
'tuesday.
coxen'Funeral Home.
. W.Va.; one grandson, Carl Lan·

THE
VIDEO TOUCH

RACINE VILLAGE COUNCILMAN ELECT
Pd. Pol. Ad. by (and., P.O. Box 731, laclne, Ohio

•

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i

One· has ticket

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Stocks

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Wi~h wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire I
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
~
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the blessings we've shared ·I
J?ast year. For us it means saying·"thanks" r_o you, our many
fnends, old and ne!', whose kind support we'll always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!
I

th~s

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,I

;·

Wis-h all your customers and friends.
a very Merry Christmas in our
~ Christmas Greeting Edition on
December· 24th. ·
ADVERTISING

I

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ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

~

992-21 6

I

THE DAILY SENTINEL

I

•""'t!:t~llllt•B:a~l!&lt;:•~lliOt!l!:t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~!l!:t~~~~~~~~~!l!:t·I
· ·

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�•
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, November 30. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, November 30, 1987

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 1

Business Services

Gardeners meet

I

i

Lori Barnes was installed as
president of the Rutland
Friendly Ga~deners held at the
home of Judith Hill, Grove City .
01 her officers Installed were
Iva Sisson, vice president ; Mar·
garet Bishop, secretary; · Margaret Edwards, treasurer .
Members named varieties of
pumpkins for roll call. Plans
· were made for filling baskets for
shutins In the Rutland communIty during the holidays.
The program was on making
corn husk turkeys from styro·
foam eggs an wire. Gardening
lips were given by Mrs. Barnes
on protecting hardy mums during the winter season. Mrs . Hill
had an arrangement, "Ail
Splendor."

•t

lA

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
614-662-3821

Aulhoriud Jolin DHrt,
New Hoiland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

"'--·

'

"GUN SHOOT

FIAT!I

·-..-- ........ . . .....-..................

FLOATING iWDOLPH ...: Rudolph, the red·
nosed reindeer, was the accent on this holiday
float from Fruth Pharmacy taking part in

_
_

.

Sunday's Christmas parades In 'Pomeroy and
Middleport.

Cak~r--------------------------LETART FALLS- The Letart
Fellowship Chapter meeting,
TUESDAY
LONG BOTIOM - Talent
night will be observed at Tuesday's meeting of the Flame

Recorders'
Association
meeting held

WINNERS - The Dance Company of Shirley
Quickel won the trophy for the best entertainment

group taking part In the Middleport and Pomeroy
Christmas parades Sunday.

POMEROY -EmmogeneHol· .
stein Congo, Meigs County Re·
corder, attended the 61st Annual
Conference of the Ohio Re·
corders Assn. held In Columbus
Nov. 16-18.
Sixty-five out of the 88 counties
were presented at the convention
and 17 deputy recorders and 30
guests were also in attendance.
Eighty out fo the 88 counties of
Ohio are now members of the
Ohio Recorders Assn. Mrs.
Congo reports that the Columbus
session proved to be helpful and
Informative.

qo p.m. at the Mt. Ollve
Community Church, Long Bottom. Those attending are invited
to sing a song, testify, or present
some other talent. Suzanne Bush,
president, invites the public . to
attend.

COI'"f

auom" -

lo!OI'tlln •••n

TYUOA~ ,_,..
"ICW!!.OAY PAI't~
IHUUO·~ U!'lo

•••oov o.....:o

IUNOU OOH:O

e.~

&lt;&lt;OQo
.,
..
I '"'I, "' JII()I"OAY
•••~•o

.~-:

::~c

~=
OM.CIII

01 1.11&gt;

ClaUified pufe• cover the
ft}llowing !lf!leplwne uchflnBU ...

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

..
1"" •,. oMuou o••
t"" • • •u••on

··,-~­ ""'

4094-Misses Sizes 12
to 20. Great two-piece
dress with side

tie~

and

!llastic waist skirt. Size t 2
takes 2% yards of 60
inch fabric.
Each panern $3.25 plus
75¢ postage /handling.
IN Y&amp; II I res1derltudd sates tax.J
Send to:
lle-11111

.

The Daily Sentinel
Box 4000, Nllftlll , 411204000. Print Name,--·

s

Zip, Size, Pattern Number.

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Books (value $8.85)
when Y::'er one of the
$2.95
~sted below.
111-Hairpin Crochet
t t 5-Easy Ripple Crodtet
t t ~-~rt of Needlepoint

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

POMEROY, OH.

FASHION
A T T E R N
1!. as Eas)-1

n~ .. ,

~
. -J

You'll be flooring on a cloud with
the buys you'll find in the
c/assifieds.
2

Middleport, Ohio
.

.

'

.Santa's Workshop: Where Kids Fin~ Mom and
Dad's Gift Alone
Bakery &amp; Craft Shop: All Homemade Items
.

Christmas Carqli,ng: Presenting Tiny . Tech
Pre-School With 60 Children
Live Nativity Scene: Presenting Tiny Tech
Kindergarten with· 16 Children

SATURDAY, DECEMBER 5, 1987
10:00 A.M.· 2:00 P.M.
VARIETIES - A receptive audience of
approximately 700 residents was on hand
,Saturday night for the presentation of Varielies of
'87 by the Big Bend Minstrel Association at Meigs
High School. The show was dedicated to Mrs.
Kathryn Crow, long·tlme associatiQfJ president,
and the late Bill Clark, long time performer and

banjoist with th e group. Mrs. Crow and Ida Mae
Clark, widow of Mr. Clark, were presented gifts
during a mld·show break. Among the acts taki ng
part in the fast moving production was this dance
trio, I tor, Shirley Quickel, Ins tructor, Lori Roush
and Kristen Shtwter.

'

r

Public /nrifed

.

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

located half way between Rt. 7 and Bashan.

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 17, 1987,
in the Meigs County Probate

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 17 , 1987,
in th&amp; Meigs County Probate
Court. Case No. 26691 .
Maurice Reed. Post Office
Box, Re8dsville . Ohio
46772 , 'was appointed Exec-

Court. Case No. 25692,
Earie Lee Wood, 39504
White Oak Road, Pomeroy,
Ohio 46789, was appointed
EKecutor of the estate of
Ernest Wood. deceased, late
of 39624 Landaker Road.
Bedford Townahip. Pomeroy. Maigs County, Ohio.

Robert E. Buck ,
Probate Judge
lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk

1 L·2l·'87·1 mo.

Yard Man mowers, Echo
trimmers, saws, blowers
- Snowofl bloJNers, Ore·
gon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push. mow·
ers picked up and tuned and
returned '20.00.

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New Lo,ation:

168 North S.&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing Su~plies

Pay Your P-hone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
1614) 992-6510
RESIDENCE PHONE
1614) 992-7754

Parts 8t Service on all
Makes.

PH . 949·296!!

11 / 2 / 87 1 mo.

Reed,

deceased , late of
Olive Township, Reedsville.
Meigs County, Ohio.

Robert E. Buck,

Probate Judge
Lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk
(11) 23, 30: 1121 7, 3tc

Business
Services

system. Fits any car. Instant
miles per gallon readout.
Know your fuel consumption

fromone block to hundreds of

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

11·23-'87-l mo.

Commer&lt;.ial:
Store to Job Cost
Taxi Service

Before and after auto tune-up.
(Comparaton fill up yo__ur
tank, and watch it subtract and
display fuel consumed . •
UNDER '90

Monitors for MCF-CCF used

for furnaces , calibrated to
your gas meter.
Middleport-Col""./ Ohio
11 ·1) ·87 -1 ""'"

Announcements
3 Announcements

FR!l ESTIMA m

CALL 949-2969

Hof11e &amp; Auto
(614) 992-3718
Add ofl min i fuel computer

miles .

•ROOFING
•GUTTERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
All TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
li&lt;. I OOS·Ol hp. 2 / 11t/ lr

PUBliCI

_

_·

A diffMDOt kind of dating
serviefl. For informatio" write,
Kupld' s Nest· P.O.Bo)l 519 ,
Ironton, Ohio 46838 or c•ll
~~~~~~-:--:::-"11 606 -836·2745.
.

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Tag Your Tree
Early

For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence
3597 S Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
miles from five Points.
'

. \128/tl n

1 mo.

No hur1ting or tres~auing. day
or night on the ChariB5 E. Yost
Farma. ·
Christmas and Senior Photo cut
off date- Tu esday , Dec. 1 . Call
Precious Memory Studio for
appointment, now. 614-9493060.
Christmas and Senior photo cut
off dete is Tuesday De e. 1 . Cali
Precious Memories Studio for
a~~olntmant now. 614- 9493060.
ChristmBI flea market inside.
Nov. 30, Dec. 1,2. Fourt~ end
Croolc St. Svrecusa. Follow
slgr1s. Nilw and u~ed misc .
No huntir1g or tr"peuir1g on.my

land. Oaiel. Little.

utor ef the estate of Alvin S .

111)23. 30: (1217. 3tc

11

In Memory Of
PERRY A.
RIGGS
. Who departed
this life
Nov. 30, 1986
Missed by Wife.
Children and
Grandchildren.
11

Help Wanted

OPHTHAlMIC ·
ASSISTANT

In Memoriam

Experience
necessar~ to
work .in clinic.
Excellent
salary and
fringe benefits.
Send resume to Box
11 3 c/o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825
3rd Ave~ Gallipolis,

Oh. 45631.

Help Wanted

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

S

&lt;

a73 South Third

No Sunday Calls
3·11-lfn

'

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

CHESTER . OHIO
•HOME BUILDING

1
t

CJ

I

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;

~

z

-

985-4141

GINEIAL CONTIUTORS
, 1· 3-ttn

Naw Credit Card. No one
refused! Majer Credh Cards, gat
the fectsl Call today for r&amp;~rt
end application. 1-51 B-469 ·
3734 ext. C-1822 24 hrs. •
Christmas Trees! HomegrDWn
White and Seoteh Pin•. W~_fli
Farm in Rutland. Call 614-7U2143 .
~ •

0: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS S.
8ACK HOE WORK
Phon• Day or henings
References

Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Ser~,icei
Hearing Evaluations For Ail Ages

-

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy. Ohio

Add $1 .05 lor pos...,._lng.

--

TINY TECH-

·-·-

"'~~···­

~._.,_....

~

Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken '

ristmas illage

.....

~--·~--·-·--....
n--•••

,,...,

11- 1 -

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

FREE ESTIMATES

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

n-r..-•••
1J-~··-..o·.
M
--..,._

0 - .... - - · -

P

parade In the Pomeroy and Middleport Christmas
Parades Sunday. The band received the best band
trophy.

___
..· -_-·
__ ........
..
..........
··--···"-·-·
,,

1._......... ,_

I H OM OA oOn

Usms llr1· Cfassifird ~

TOP BAND -The Southern High School Band,
directed by Roberta Maidens, was not only the
best band, but it was the only band, which took

: ::.:. :.:=:&amp;.,.

·---a-.. .

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

~

Factory Choke
.12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-7-tfn

U - Mo .... "',... 1111 IOio

!1- W - l oPo

H7-c- .

t U - 1•11•. . .

FOR JUST

PH. 992-5432

0! 0 011

IU - Oojo"" Dlt&lt;

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
YOU CAN EAT

$ 3•2

Ul.ll&gt;

011111

•New Roofing

HOSKINS
-HOME MAINTENAI'(CE

SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

:1 ---··
u-'-'"''•
:10----lo·

;.,.,..,..rae';•·
•-~'~
' \1 gg
OHIO

-.
__
....... - ... ..

ooy 11'001 011.\ICAHO"'

TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

(Dining Room Onlyl
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy, cole
slaw. hot roll , butter and coffee. Sorry, no substi·
totes except beverage with additional price.

1 MII ... M

I ......

Falls PTO will meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the school. Santa's Secret
Shop wlil be open.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will met Tuesday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, 7 p.m .

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY

MilO

.··-··
.............-............................._
.. --···

............. ....... . ...., .. ...
. ...,,,.,. • .,., _ . . , .,.,.,, • .,,,.., .,, oc •,....,..,,,,.,
,_ ., _.,,
....
.
.
........ .......,..,_,,_,
.. -..,.,_,..,
... ......
...........
e...........
_ "·-........
" 7 _. .... _...., ....

Sunday as Pomeroy and Middleport staged
parades to welcome in the haliday seas?"·

JDA"

U 011 •··

!::

.e._lH.•oc-'"'oa•
- · - ••••
··-Q._,_
..... lo.,,,,,...,
.." , ___ ""'"'*'w l ...
-~ . .,,
" _, ., ,

PARTICIPANTS- Ruffles and Flourishes was
one of several exceelent baton corps taking part

••••"""1

,

.. Free Estimates"

or 949-2801

1-3.'86 tfc

•I nsulation
•Storm Windows
• Replacement Windows

Far111 Equipment
Partt &amp; Service

.." ..jly. _-,'

".:

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

SIDING CO.
PH. 949-2860

EVERY
I OUI

INSULATIO~

• Storm Doers

..

'I·
,_..

New Homes Built

Dealer

Basham Building

TO PUCE AN AD CAll 992· 2156
MONDAY thr~t FIIHI.IY I A.M. te S P.M.
I A.M. U•til NOON 5ATUIDU
ClOSED SUNDAY
I'OiJCIU
,..

J&amp;L BLOWN

BISSELl ..

GUYSVILLE, OHIO

GIVING, SHARING- That Thanksgiving Is a time for sharing
and thinking of others was proven at the Riverview Elemenmtary
School al"a Thanksgiving assembly. Students took food Items to
school to share \YIIh the elderly. This "sharing" assembly
concluded with a program of Thanksgiving music and a fUm. Some
students are pictured with donations.
·

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

601
E. Main

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
,

POMEROY,O.
992·2259

NEW LISTING - CREW
ROAD, POMEROY - Really
nice split foyer home, 3·4 bed·
rooms in a great neighbor·
hood. Finished basement on a
large l'h acre lot PRICED TO
SELl AT $49,500.00.
RACINE- Two story older
home with large beautiful
lot. House needs some repair. meral sheds &amp; outbuildings. Front porch.
ONLY $i6,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Beo.Jtdul
colonial home w/4 bedrooms,
2 car garag~ leaded glass
windows &amp; door. Attic studio
w/skylighl. Well insulated.
MUST S[EI $62.000.00.
ST. RT. 338 - River front
property with a nice cabin,
lull basement, 2 bedrooms,
su n porch wrth a river view.
Fruil cellar. 42'!32' metal
buildin~ $27,900.00.
STORYS RUN ROAD - 3
bedroom ~an ch home wLa
12'x65' 3 bedroom mobile
home thai rents for $210/mo.Garage workshop mostly fin·
ished. 2\7 acres. $35,000.00.
RUTlAND - 2 bedroom
home on a level lot. Renta l

LICENSED PRACTICAL
NURSE

Immediate opening for full and part time
LPN on the 3-11 shift on a 35 bed SNF/ICF
unit. Excellent benefits. Salary commensurate with experience.
Contact: Rhonda Dailey
Director of Nursing
Apply at Veterans Memorial Hospital
115 East Memorial. Drive
· Pomeroy, Ohio
·
OR CALL 614-992-2104, Ext. 213
E.O.E.

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opening for full and part
time R.N.'s to work in areas of
•Special Care
•Emergency Rc .- ....
•Skilled Nursing tfu..... ,
•Medical, Surgical Units
Salary comparable with experience.
Excellent Fringe Benefits
SEND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAILEY, R.N.
DWIECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS. MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

OR CALL 992-2104. EXT. 213
E.O.E.

invest ment as it is now
rented or a nice' cozy home.

Wa lking distance to shop·
p in~ $13,900.00.
PRICE REDUCED on this han·
dicap accessible home Ramp
way s. special floor covering
special baih I~ lures etc.Would
make nice home 3 bedrms.,fi·
replace basement. large modern krtchen. $34,900.00
RACINE- 4 bedroom home
w/large mod ern krtchen. lam·
~Y room w/woudburner. Nice
carpel tHroughout. carport,
concrete drive. Large lot.
MUCH MORE. $31.000.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Two story
colOnial home in town. Has
many gr eat features stx:h as
W.B.f.P., workshop, rental
apartment, great living room.
$34,900.00.
FARM - 60 acres w/a 2
stay remodeled far"l house.
3 bedrooms 1\1, baths, H.W.
B. heat, new plumbing &amp; wir·
ing equipped krtchen. MU CH
MORE! CAll FOR DETAILS!
$52,000.00.
t£NRY E. UELAND, Ji1:..... 992. lt1ql
J(AN TIIUSUll ............ 9411 ·2660

0011111URNIR ......'..... 992 ·Sb92
TRACY RIFFlE .............. 949· 1080

OfFIU .... .. ,.................. 992 ·2259

'

OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
Rt . 124 Across from
Happy Hollow Rd.

RUTLAND

614-7•U.U55

· t1 -6 -1 mo .

WE'RE

4
Howard L Writesel

.ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4·22-ll·tfn

STILL ALIVE!

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

BERRY BASKO

$2500

SIX'Ill ST., SYIACUSE, OH.

$S.OO Extra

Cross Stitch Supplies
SO% Off
Basket Supplies
20% Off
•
Discount on Selected Items

large ShapMd type dog to give
to good home. Call 614·
446-8107 evenings.

Country G.ifts
and Decor

IIWay

SALE

For Skinning

.MAPLEWOOD

LAKE

10amto6pm

614-992-5082

1012711

mo .

Guaranteed the Samt Far
81 Yean

FOR FULLER BRUSH

PRODUCTS

OR TO IE A REPRESENTATIVE

CALL
SUSAN COlEMAN

742-2778
or

SHIRLEY COlEMAN
"It'.~

742-212S
A Great Fund ,
Raiser"
10128/1 mo .

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and remod eling
- Roofing and gu t1er wo rk
~ Concrele work
- Plumbing and electrical
work
{free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

992-6215

PH. 949-2801

EVERY

Roger Hysell
Garage

SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

10·9-tfn

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR
Also ·rransmlsshn

'PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
6·17-tfc

FREE LANCE
VIDEO
Record Those Special
Occasions on VHS
Tape
• Holidsy Ptuties
•Weddin"ga
,
•School &amp; Church Programs
•S~orting Events
•Anniversaries
•Rflleord Valuables.
Document s

•Transfer Ptloto Albums to
VHS Tnpe
•Transfer 8mm an d Super 8
Movies to Video Ta pe
•Create Training Films for

StUdents and Employee!

REASONABlE RATES

(All FOR FREE ESTIMATE

992-7632

11/16/'87, I mo. d.

AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE
FACTORY CHOKES
10/29/1 mo.

White rabbit. Call 614-4464287.

3 Doe rabbits to giveaway.
614·992-3844.

Schaum . Bastien
From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For Information

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

1-14-'87·1 mo. pd.

•

2 cute small puppiM tor gbod
home. Part Dachshund. lOA·
896-3645.
. ..

6

.

Lost and Found ·· •

..

LOST ~ Blaek,l ab. 4 mos. oldpy(l,
Call 614-446· 6432.
: -. ~
· FOUND: Smell black &amp; brow~
male dog·we•ing a chat.
collar. Vicinity of Camdus. :

lost : l.arge white hound d~O·
Brown head , pinll nose . Loll ,
Kyger area . Valued faQ'II!y
member. Reward . 614-3.17 0688 .
Large real flufty white Samoyld,
wearing blue collar, 304-676 .

3 386.

'

7

GUN ·SHOOT

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·16-86-lln

PIANO LESSONS
You '11 Nm, 7OD Old
To l11ml
Teaching Thp mpson,

. 1:00 P.M.

4-15-' 861c

"At Reasonable Prices"

or 949-2860

SlUG SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER

Great Dene- 2 v&amp;ars old. Black &amp;
white. Call 614-446-9442.

Female calico cet. 6 monthsftl&lt;(
Mutt give away , moving. 304.675-3726 .
' ..

HOURS : Tuos.·Sa1.

949-2734
11-27-' 87 I mo. pel.

Giveaway

DENNY CO~GO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
i0-8-tfc

J&amp;L
INSULATION
. HEATING &amp;
COOLING

Yard Sale

.......

G~nrr;olrs······-· ·

.

&amp; Vicinity
·· ··············· ····· ·····-- ··c·-,•

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772
1·13-'87·1 mo·.

Inside Y•d Sale: 218 Third A..;.,.:
Wed.-Oec .
2nd. Thura.-Oec..
3rd, Fridev· Oec. 4ttl . Lou of •
Chrittmas Mems, clothes 81\d a
little of everything else.
..,
-------~ .

Dec. , , 2 . 8 :30·3:00. Cente(iary.
T ownhouse . New cra ft s. •

clothes . lots· of goOdies.

· -p:fPieasiinr ·~- :
&amp; Vicinity

FOR RENT.

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS
2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. Laundry
facilities available.
E.O.H.

992-3711

11·23-'871 mo. pd.

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

\

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

' ..;..-41.'·
"Christmas ~
" 111

JERRY'S
CUSTOM

Sale"

•Golf Clubs
Shirts · Shoes
•Trophies · Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags lor
Dogs.

SLAUGHTER
WHIT£

Hill RD.

RUTLAND, OHIO
742-2035

11-3-t ·mo. pd.

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores . We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiatorS. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

PAT HILL FORD
992 · 2196
Middleport, Ohio

1 -13-tfc

U

·

JOHN TEAFORD
CHESnl, OHIO 45720

11·10-'87-1 mo.

992·8228

11 · 4-1

m(l .

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auctioneer II· 1
can sed in Ohio 1nd West Vir ;i· ·
nia. Es1ate, antique , l•m. liqUi· '
datio n sales, 304-773-6785.

Raw fur. beef ~nd deer hlda. :
Gvn Sing and Yellow root. We ,

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

Trapping supplies tor sale. (Buy. ·

•Oryen •Freezers

Insured/ LicenHd

B

107 lOCUST ST.
POMEROY -985-3561

All Makes

Middlopon

Christmaa Flea Marlcet inskftt. '
No..... 30, Qec. 1-2. 1st treilerQn '
lucas Lane. New mdse. 9 - 1. •'

_9 _ w_ a_n_te_d_T_o_e_u_v _.

•Washani: •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerators

Gary Cummins

30 4-576- 2635

HOUSE FOR RENT ,.·

985-3561
Ron Diles or

G,jlrage sale. Big Xma&amp; sale 111 the
Rummage room, Apple Grove. ,
% oH on all stuffed toy a.. •

WE SEll USED APPliANCES
4·5·\lc

hwe

wheat

1nd

nite lites. '

ing used traps) . Gaorg&amp; Buckley. 1
HourK12"9 . 614·684-4781 .
•
Ar1tiqua glassware. old cotns. :
old jars. rir1gs, pictu{eS, eny new
glass, Fenton, Imperial. C1ft
Brian lee 614· 31!6-6099 .
Want hood, t op arid windshield :
frame for 1979 Jeep CJ6. ,

304 ·876-5909 .

�P,11g9 8

The Daily Sentinel

LAFF·A·DAY

Wanted To Buy

9

44

We. pay c•kfor late model clean
u1td c••·
Jim M i nk C hew.·Oids Inc.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
1t1d n~Wer us.d
Sm h~

r;:••·

Buick-Pontiac. 1911 E11tem
Ave .• Gallipolil. Call 614-4462282 .
WANTED TO BUY : Used wood

&amp; coal ha•au. Swain' I Furni·
turt, 3rd. &amp;. Olive· St . Galllpolls.
Ct1161 4 -446-·3159 .
Wlnted to buy- standing l imbet.
Call 814-379-275 • .
Buying daily gold, silver coina,

rings, jBWelry. starling war e. old

coins. large currency. Top pri-

ces. Ed Burkett hrber Shop,
2nd. Aw. Middleport, Oh. 614·
992-3476.

Employment
Services
11

"We all hate Mondays, Preston, but that's no excuse for
a tantrum."

Appty in perton· Hair Styliat.
Hair Happening- Silver Bridg•
Aaza .

J-IELP WANTED

loe.l compeny now hiting for
1ull-time employment. No experience nec .. •ry . Evening work.
L(ght lifting involved. $1200 a
n10. Profit lh.,ing &amp; oth81
bentrfh:s. For P.eraonal intarviuw
cWI614·446·6146 .

'

do\lernment Joba, $11,040 ~9 . 230 yr. Now hiring. Your
.tea. 805-687-6000 EICt. R·
;.~6 for current rep~ federal
Patient ServiceJ Asaistant ta
Qoordinate the aetivhies of
~eiga County famity planning
dinic. Must•have H.S. diploma
or equivalency; additional edu·
at ion preferred with succa11ful
ork history in related field.
esponsible po•ition for e mature indiVidual, sensitille to
rlproductive heahh needs of
+omM and families. Must be
well org.,ized; have demontitrated compeunce with figures
tlnd recordMeeping . Must ba able
work under guidDiin• ""(ith
minimal supervision and heve
IUPtrlor verbal communication
•kills. ·Rallsble transportlltion.
flacibility of time and ability to
t.favel locally ,.quired. Evening,
Saturdey and weeN day hoursara
to be allp9Cted. Send rnume
.P,d two employment ref.-ences
tp Plann~ Paranthood of South . .st Ohio, 398 Richland
Awnue. Athens, Ohio 45701 ,
~ Oecembitr 4, 1987. EOE·
~~P.·

*
.p

Mtddlapon Chamber of Comf!"¥ce nu.ds an individual to
'f($1~k as Santa Clause star1 ing
Nov. 29 . Weekday aftarnoona
lll'ld
Pays minimum waga.

s ...

•

Arcedia Nursing Center is now
accepting applications for porttime AN~ sand LPN ' a, Com pet•
tive w•g•. ExceUent benefita.
Apply 9-5 . 614-667-3198.

AVON • All ar••· C•ll Marilyn
we.,er 304-882- 2645 .
AVON all areu. Shirley Spears.

304-675-1429.

12

· Situations
Wanted

Babysitting in my home. Newborn and up. Rutland and
surrou"ding aren. Experienced.
Call 614· 742·2390 anytime.

31

Ho.mes for Sale

Business
Opportunity

! NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends that you
do business with people you
know , and NOT to aend moniiV
through the mail until yo~ have
investigated the o ffering .

23

Professional
Services

Bob Cline Taxiderrny, Memb&amp;r
W, Ve. Taxidermy Aasoe. Rt. 2
Box 782 , Point Pleasant, W . Va.

304-675-1448.

Real Eslate

Homes for Rent,

Unfurnished 2 BR ., refrig. &amp;
stove. lower Second. Ref. &amp;
dep. Call 814 -448-3949 ar

446-2419.

3254 .

2 BR . in Cheehlra. Stolle , refrig.

&amp; dishwuher. Large yard , 2 - c•
carport. Deposit required . $189

7 room brick home. Upper
Mason. Carpet. o:tove. ret. dou·
ble garage. 304· 773-5397.
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM
t1 .00 lU-Aapeirl also talC dellquent and forecloture propertiM
aveilable now. For listing. CaU
1-31 6-733·8062 ext. G2938.

a mo. Call anytime 614·446·
0486 or 367-0694.
2 BR . partty furnished. City.
Deposit· 8100. 8126 rent . No
.per:s. Call 614-446 -2447.
3 BR . hputt. Electric-wood
heat. 10 min. from town. Call
1 - 614- 66~ - 2463 aftM 6 PM .

GOVERNMENT HOMES from
t1 .00 (U repeir) foreclosure•.
repos , tax dellquent propertiet.
Now Mlling vour area. Call
1-31 5-736· 7357 ext. 2P-WV -H
tor current lilt. 24 HAS.

2, 3, or 4 badroom hoU181 and
8pt. in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilitlM, depolit required , Cell
or 614-992-2509. Call after
6 :00, piMI&amp;.
Newly renovated. all electric
with heat pumpandcent111l air. 3
bedrooms, plenty yard and
g•den space in Ponlend. Ohio.
&amp; milee from R~Wenswood . W.
Va. Call 614-843-6309.

675 -6027 .

32 Mobile .Homes
for Sale
1976 Bayview, 2 BR, porch &amp;
awning. Price negotiable. Call
614 -256-9309 or 614-266·
6206.

TAX &amp; TITLE DOWN Sale on all

3 bedroom house for rent t200
per monttt. Mulberry Ave . Pomeroy. 614· 992-6687 or 614·

_:_9_:_9_::
2_·7_4_::5_::
0_.. _ _ _ _ _ __

1

For rent 3 bedroom houl8 in
Pomeroy . Deposit required .
614-992-6666.

u1ed homes! Free Oelivary. We
Finance. Call Todayl We hl'ole
30. ELSEA HOME Centers.
614-772 -1220 or Ohio Wet•
800-826 -0762.

3 bedroom house. Stove furniahed. $2150 per month plua
ytifitiM. Oeposh: and reference
required . No pets inside. Call

14d6 Windsor. EJ((:elient eOI\ditlon. All appllcances, woodburner , AC. large porch .
810.000. Cell 614-379·2768
evaningt.

2 BR . house for rent . Unfur·
nlshed. All new paint. earpet,
storm windo.ws &amp; doors. Call

,978 Victorian Deluxe 67'•14' ,
2 BR ., 1 bath, carpeted. Qas
heal &amp; stove. New 42 gal.
electric water heater. Nice. Call
after 6 :00 or FridiiV for appoint·
ment, 614-446·2157.
1985 Fleetwood 60x14 mobile
ttome and lot. 2 bedroom. all
electric. underpinning. lncludea
16x24 ft. garage. Will eonslder
SBIIing separate. Loeated In
Rutland. 614· 742-2595 or 1464·1380,
14x70 Windsor whh 14x30
addition. 3 bedrooms, approxi·
mately 3 aer•. blaek top road.
Several out-buildings and; pond.
Gallipolis Ferry. 304-87&amp;-6930.

1984 Skyline, 14x70. exccond,
eentrelair. underpenning, rented
lot, many extras, 304-676-1294
evenings, weekends.
1973 mobile home, 2 bedroom
on rented lot. 304-676-3783.
1973 12x60 Holly Park in Pt.
Pleasant. 16,000 Firm. Ph.
304-468 -1069.

·34

Business
Buildings

Commercial building• for leBSa.
Downtown Pt . Pleaaan.t. Storet,
offices. A-One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broluw. Call 304·
675-6104.
749 Third All&amp;. Presently The
Gift Shop . 1600 sq. h . Commercial. or warehouse . Parking on
side. Adjacent to Third&amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appoi ntment.

35 Lots &amp; Ac reaga

614-949-3027.

614-992-3090.

Homes for Sale

4 BR .. fireplace, full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. $34,900 .
Ca'll Days-814- 446 -1816. aftet
5:00- 446-1244. .

•

76 acres-newer house. County
wster, electri c lla phone hooked
up. Will sell acres. Re aaonable
offer eceep1ed. Call 614-448-

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Governmant Homes fro m *1 .00
" U Repair''. Also tax delinquent
property. Call 806 -644-9533
Ext. 513 for in fo ,

2 Building lots· 11/2 acrM each
whh county water. Jenys Run
Rd . Apple Grove, W . Va . Cell

Modern 3 BR . houae. Patriot,
Ohio. Will help finance. Call
814-446-1340. 446 -3870.

Rentals

304-576-2383 .

1 979 1 4x 70 nice mobile home,
1.3 aeres, 2 bllths, verden tub.
fireplace . front porch. S14,900.
C•ll 614 -25 6· 6702.

41

Cottage In Inglewood. Fla. c loae

2 BR. house. ~.:-... .
&lt;.~ ,..
furn. located 1928 V2 Cheat ..... .
St. $175 mo. 176 dep. Call

to beaeh. Call after 6 :00 PM·
1 -813-867-6944.

Honwa for Rent

614-446-3870.

3 BR . Rench-anaehad garege. In 6 room houee-FI,tt Ave., Gallitown . Go od locat ion . low polis. Off stre et parking. No
t40' a. Call a-her 5:30 PM,· pets~ Ref. &amp; Oep. Call 814 - 266-

614-446-1406.

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rant, dey. weeN.
month. Gallia HotDI. Call 614-'
446· 9680. Rentas lown $120
month.
Furnished room. t76. Utilhi~
paid. Share bath. Single male.
919 Second . Gallipolis. Cell
446 -4416 after 7pm.

46 Space for Rent
Offlee Space for rent . E~el .
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call 61 4 ·446 -4222.
Mobile Home lot. 60ft . or lass.
920 4th .. Gallipolis. 176. Water
paid. ·call 61 4- 446·441 6 after 7
PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
~oute 33, North of Pomerov.
Rental trail•.• · Call 614-9927479 .
Space for small trailert. All
hook· ups. Cable. Also effidency
rooms, air and cable. Mason.

W.Vo. Coli 304-773-5661 .

47 Wanted to Rent
view. Fo1ter"s Mpbile Home
Par'k. Call 614-446·1602 .
3 BR . trailer- 10 min. from town.
Privata lot. 1226 a mo. Water
Included. Call 814·448 -0382.
Spacious 2 BR . Windsor h•
dining room, 1 1h baths. Upper
AI. 7 . Water paid. Call814 -2465818 .
3 bedroom. 14•70 Mobile
f1ome . 1 Y2 bath. newly carpeted.
Nice. Middleport, Oh. 814-992 ·
5858.
2 bedroom mobile ham e. 1160
plus utilities. 614-992-5732.
Trailer n..r Big Wheel· Laurel
Cliff Rd. 12x65, 2 BAS ., 1111

both1. Coli 614 ·992-2272. '

44

Want to rent house in the
country, have pets. Call Marie
after 7pm. 304-773-9589 .
DONE
Want To Rent Houae in the
country. have pets. Call Marie
after 7 p.m .. 304-773-9689.

49

For Lease

1400 sq. ft. commercial apace
suitable for officet, retailing.. or
services. Prime location-corner
or 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis .
; Ample parking in rear. 1350 per
month. Call 614-446-4249 or
446-2325 .

Merchandise

Apartment
for Rent

RenaNiy redecorated. Very nice
apartments in downtown Gallipolis. 1 &amp; 2 8R .· unfumished,
second floor, from 8116·8225.
Oep. &amp; references required . Cell
eve. 614-446-2325 or 4484249 .
Great location . Newt~,' ramodeled. 2 BR . Upstairs. Partly
furnished apt. Utilities paid. Call
after 3 :30PM, 614-448 -1467.

2 BR . furni1hed apt. Adults only .
Nice loeation. Call 614-4462404.
513 Third Ave.· 1 .8R . Deposh
required . Cell 614·446- 4346
between 6 :00PM &amp; 10 :00 PM
Apartment · 1 136 2nd ., Gallipolis. 2 BR . Stove &amp; refrig.
furnished . 8186. Water paid.
Call614 -446 -4416 after 7 PM .
Furnished upstain- 1 BA . Utili·
ties pai~ . 1220 a mo. 875 dep.
94 lOCUli St. Call 614 -4461340 or 446 -3870 .
2 BR . apt. Stove &amp; refrig.
furnished . Near Go Mort . Call
Tara Townhouse Apts. . 2 BR S.,
1 "'I baths, AC . Start t299 a mo.
Utiliti• not in cluded . Ca11814367-7860.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bfld·
room apartments at Village
and Middleport.
Riverside ·Apar1·
Manor
ments in
From
1216. including utilities. Call
814 -992-7787. EOH .

53

Antiques

Antique · marbh~slab-- dresser.
Antique oak cupboard . Both
&amp;lleellant condition. Call 614·

3S7-7260.
ANTIQUES, Buv or Sell. Rive·
rine Anttquas, 1 124 East Main
St. Pomeroy . Hours: Mon. Tuea.·Wed . 10 a.m . to 6 p.m.
Sun .· 1 p.m.· 6 p.m . By chance
or eppointment. Russ Moore

614-992-2526.

54 Misc. Merchandise

SURPlUS ARMY, DENIM.
RENTAL ClOTHING ICarh•ta
51 Household Goods · 10 pe;r cent over coati . Original
armv camouflage. H . 0 . " Sam"
Somerville's, O!d At . 21 East
Ravens~Nood,
Fri, Set, Sun,
SWAIN
Noon 8 :00pm. Other daysaft¥
AUCTION 1!. FURNITURE 62 6 :00pm. 304-273-6855. InsuOlive St .. Gallipolis.
lated camouflage covaralls
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- 8399, 525 .00.
living room aui1es· 8199 ·8699 .
BunM beds with bedding• $199. Firewood $36.00 load, delivered
Full 1ize mattress &amp; foundation Mason County and Gellipolif,
starting· $99 . Reeliners Custom cut and rush ardara
$40 .00. Call 304-895-3446 .
sterti.ng· 899.
USED- Beds. dressera, bedroom
suites, $199-$299 . Desks , King woodburner with blower.
wringer washer , a eomplete line 8100. 304-896-39 36.
of used furniture .
NEW- . Woo:tern boota- $30, 1 2' o:moked maateao:e. Excellent
Workboots 818 &amp; up. {Steel &amp; co ndit ion. S1 250. 304-676 soft toe) . Call614-446·3159 .
1156.
County Appllanca, Inc. Good
used eppliancea~ and TV sets.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Set. 614- 448 -1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .
6 pc. living room suite. $186.
Call 614 - 446 · 34'3, after
4:00PM .
Upright freezer in good condi·
tion. 17V2 cu . ft . 875 . Call
614-448-7372.
•
Pickens Used Furniture ·
Dinettes, sof81, chairt, end
tablet, lamps, beds, dressers,
deJ 11:, glessware . 304 -675 1450.
luxal'e gai furnace. 82,500
BTU . Citation gaa range, rowina
exercil8 machine. 304 -675 -

Roallatic am-fm eauotta stereo.
$75 . EICC. Cond. Sean 6 hp.
Go·Art. E:.c. Con d. 8160. 304675-7436.
J eep Engin e 304. 8300. co mplete. Jeep parts. Call 304-676·

2635.
141170 trail er for rent . 304· 8757271 .
White baby bed with mattress
$20. White chosl of drawers
$10. Dreuing table 820 . 304-88 2-3674.
living room suha, draperies,
metal thelves, record player,
rfleords. All good eondition.
Other items. 304-676 -5558.
23" color TV, 8,60; 16" BMX

~.:7:8:8:3~•:•:6:7:5:-3:0:2:4:.===:.t":i':":·:'4:6:.:3:0:4:-6:7:5:·:2:34:3:.=:..

Bruc.e Beattie

Clean 2 bedroom apt. in New
Haven. Alao apece for reataurant , aerObics, dey c•e. furni·
lure, etc. Call 614-992·7481 .

e'"'"' "f• ....

Nics apt, Hudd approved. New
carpet, clean, Pt. Pleasant. 614992-6868.

Two bedroom hou• w ith gar·
age. No Pets. 30 4-675 · 1400.

Callahan's Uted Tire Shop. 0\laf
1,000 tlr•. ib:ea12. 13, 14. 16,
18, 16.6 . ~ mil• _out At . 218 .

Kimbel oonsole a,k piano, exeel·
lent condition. t1 ,500. S•ious
inquirl• only. 304·676-13%&amp;.

1979

61 Farm Equipment

614-367-0669.

CROSS 1!. SONS
U.S. 36 W•t. Jacbon, Ohio.

For the athlete, DP Qympac
1600 fitness
stam. Call 614·
446·2235
., 8pm.
Seare exercise benetl &amp; weight
· set (liMe new). t130. 2 •t•
weights &amp; trimming batt. Pierre
Carden spaee aaver, stereo
system jnii'W), 8170, won as
prize. 2 yr. old l•ga tal.cope
with diffBJent eyelenaes. t100·
like new. paid $219 n~ -v. Call
after 8 :00 814-379-2 183.
Bicvcl•like new. Trash Com·
pactor. Call 814- 446-7.,63.
HALF PRICE! Flashing arrow
signs t2991 Lightltd. non·errow
t2891 Unlighted '2491 FrM
letters! See loeally. Cell todayl
Factory ; 1 (800) 423 -0183.
anytime.
Coal nove with fan . Good
condition. Ce11814 -4415-8382.

9962 ohO! 4 :30 PM.

Cuttom deer cutting. Cut &amp;
wrapped, 125. Over 10 veers
experience . Call 614-448-

369!.
1 2x28 Add·a-room for mobile
home. Call 614-446-8940.

614-288-64S1 .
Mas.-., Ferguton, New Holland,
Bush Hog S•l• &amp; Service. Over
40 uaed tractors to choose from
&amp; complete line of new lla u•d
eq'uipment. Largest •lection in
S.E. Ohio.
xB ~

vice door· 14444. Iron Horse
Bldrs. Call 614-332-9746 .
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
30 used tl'llctors to choose from.
Fresh load 6', 7', 8 ' rear blades.
Buy now before Jan . 1· price
incre••· 36 west • Gallipolis.
e 14· «1·9777.

New Holland and of •••on hay
1ool sale. All hay tooll at del..coet plus lnt•rnt free financing
untl Juna 1. 1988 with normal
down pevm~r~t . Two 481. 3 pt. 7
ft mowers 12.100.00. One31 1,
3 jo1nt PTO, 1tandard tires
regul• pldtup, •&amp;.800.00. One
472. 7 ft h.,.blna. •&amp;.900 .00.
One 474 . 7 II hayblne,
16,400.00. Keefen Service
Center. St. Rt . 87. leon. W . Va.
Phone 304-896-3874 .
Buy bar chain and sprocket for
Iff!/ •w glt eecond chain

tree.

off• good till Dee. 1 . Siders
Eq'u ipmant Co. Phone304-676·

7'21 .

2985.

Firewood· All hardwood. 120
pick-up load. Call 614-2681670,

Ouroc Boree for better rete of
gain. Roger Bentley -513-5842398. Fabina, Ohio.

Tree &amp; Stump removal. fir•
wood. Heap \IOueh•• accepted .
Live whit a pine Christmas trlft,
&amp;37.50. Call 614-446-9848.

Reg. Tamworth Bore. Call after

UIIV' I Keepuke 14K gold Mer·
quia ring &amp; band. 22 point, siz.e
51f.l .. Like nevv. $450. Call
614·388 -9862.

55 Building Supplies

6'00 PM-614·245-9224 .

4 bedroom home tOr rent 01 1111 e.

Laureland apartments. George
St.. New Haven, W. Va. 2
bedroom•. ·c.,.peted,-.11 electric,
for more Information caH ]04-

304-676-2130.

682-37 16.

"The worst part of my nightmare was
swollowing the broomstick , when I tried •
to slither home."

'

Chwy Truck. 78,000
Good cond. t1800. Call

614-38B-829S.

IIJl Moneyllne Current

1986 lA ton Cht~~~y , Sitverado
pack.ge, V-8, auto. AC. low
mileqe. bed mat. C•ll814-446&amp;890 Evenings.

reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
e1121 il!l WhHI of Fortune
ichaere
81 (l) M'A'S'H
7:05 (!) Andy Griff~h
7:30 (2) Hollywood Squares
I!) NFL Monday Night
· Memorlee
(I) Newlywed Game
GWJuclgo
l!ll WhHt of Fortune 1;1

19'6 $ Cl'!tNy.,, excellent condl·
tion. •2100. 1969 CheYy, boctv
roug.h, good engine, $428. Call
814-367-n8o .

a

1

1982 Dodge 250 R•m. Cu.s tom
conwrsion. Tr•ll• re.ty . Cell
614•446·4383 dJ'{I, 448-0139
evens. &amp; weekends.

\' '(oU HAVE REACHf'P THE

r
;,..,.--,..,..-----,-- --

74

IDl Crollflre (0:30)

1111121 IIJl Jeopardyt E;l
IIJl Birney Miller
81 (l) WKAP In Cincinnati

TELf'f&gt;HoNf CoMpANY-Pt..EASE" 1-fo[..;p WHIL..E

Motorcycles

1984 Honda 200 TRS. 4
wheeler. t1100. Call 614-992-

we

6641 .

76

f?Aif~

ouf?

7:35 (!) Sanford and Son
8:00 CD Fllher Murphy
1J (2) ALF Kate dreams tha1
shs and ALF are opponen1s

~Ai'ES.~'

in a presidential election. C
I!) NFL Monday Night Me(ch

I

Auto Parts
~ Accessories

Budg.t Transmissions: Used and
rebuilt, all typal . Guarantee 30
dtl'fs. Call 614-379·2220 or
304-875 -4230 .
Truck topper for Chevv short
w .b., Le• Alum. t200. Set of
full running board• t50. 304-

Concrete blocMs all sizet yard or
delivery. M•son sand. Gallipolis
Bloak Co., 123Yt Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 814 -446 -

2783.
Ready mix conaoete and all
concreteaupplies. Call utVellf!lf
Brook Cement end SuPPiiM,
304-n3-6234 .

56

Pets for Sale

About Z.OOO~ bales '"Oced grau
h&amp;tf. 81 .00 a bela. Call8, 4-448-

RON ' S Television Service .
House calls on RCA, Ouazar,
GE . SpeelaUng in Zenith. Cell

2784.

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Call304 -876 -1331 .

71 Auto's For Sale

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Moat wells completed same dey .
Pump sales and service, 304-

1984 Mereury Topaz. Whit•
Alpine. AM -FM-Ceu atareo,
AC. E•cell. cond . t3400. Call
614- 446·8602 after 8 :30PM .

Starks Tree and ~wn Serviee.
lawn eare, landscaping, stump
removal, 304 -676 -2842 or

83

Nis•n. 83

Horizon. 83

Hondo. 78LTOII . 81 loolion1.84
Pontiac T 1000. 77 MOB. low
mil• &amp; nevv paint. Call 814·
448-15980.
1986 Ford LTD II. Clean . 12.900
Auto., AC .. PS, PB, tilt,
cruiee. Call 814-388-8240.
1979 Pinto. 1650. Cell 614448· 4913 after 4 :00 P~ .

1986 DodgeOmni. Auto, 4 dr ..
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel .
14.000 milea. Good cond. Call
CFA Himalayan. Paralan and . 6...1_4_
- 3__7_9_·.:.27_2_8_._ _ _ __
Siameae kittens. AKC Chow
1984 Pontiae Firebird. E~el .
puppiet. New kittens; P-'rsians.
cond. 28,000 milee. sunroof.
Call 614 -448 -3844 after 7PM.
louver, 4 apd.. 4 cyl., 1uel
injected, PS .. PS . *4800 . Call
"12 Chow Chow puppiM- 4
614-448-7447.
males. 3 femalea. Cute. Mother
AKC reg. 826 each. Call 614197B Rally Sport Cam•o. LT
446-2108 0! 446-9S15.
350, T-top, air, spoke mags, dual
exhaust, cruise. SHARP! No
Bleck &amp; white pony, very gentle.
Trades. t279&amp;, neg . Cell 614·
With saddle. 8260 . Call 614-

89&amp;-3802

82

B4

B6

A6

I OON'r KNOW WHY

UI&gt;OBTRU51VE
A5 f'()SSIBLE.

I BOTHER TOA6K
HIM ANY'~INEf.

Parakeatt just off the nest. t10
each. Call814-448· 1354.

1974 White Corvette Stingray.
C~all 814-446-1768.

245 -92e5.

~ NFL Monday Night

Magazine
-·
9:00 CD 700 Club
8 (2) IIJl MOVIE: 'Fatal
Confeulon: A Fllhar
Dowling Myatacy' NBC
Monday Night at the MoviH

ljl College Baokalbal

(I) 8 W ABC Monday Night
F -IIC
tml 1111121 liWVIE: 'The
Semt Garden' Hlllmark
Hal of Fame 1;1
(]] That'a Dancing! Gena
Kelly lakes viewers on a
journey through the history

;,• WHAT AR€ WE
HAVIN' FER
SUPPER, MAW?

•

of dance from the daring

,,

I I.D\IE

J &amp; J Wetar,Service. Swimming
pools. cisterns. wells. Ph. 614·

DI~HER

THEATER

R &amp; R Water Service. Home
eisters, wells, pools filled , Formerly Jam011 Boys Waters.Call
304-676-6370.
Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Servi ce.
Pools. ciaterns. wells . Call 6-14446·3171 .

Wattenon ' s Water Hauling,
reasonable ratu, immediate
1984 Ford Eseort. PS, PB, AC, · 2,000 gallon delivery, cisterns,
auto. E11eallent eondltion.
pools. well , etc . cell 304 -576t3400. Co11614-379-2122.
2919.
.

Is it true you can buy Jeeps for
t44 ttwough the U.S. government7' Get the facts todeyl Call
1-312-742 · 1142 Ext. 4089.
1977 Marcury. Running condi·
tion. Auto . 1460. 614-992-

8939.
1969 Station Wagon, Converted
to truck. 318 engine. Auto.
Trans. 814·992· 2886 .

87

Upholstery

- - ' - --

- - -- - -

R ' &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholstery . St. At . 7 , Crown
Cltv. Oh. 614 -268 -1470. E\le.
614 -44 6·3 438. Opon daily 9 to
4 :30. Sat 9:30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
new Upho~terad .
Mowrey' 1 Upholstering ser.tlng
tri eountyarea 22 years . Theb"t
in furnhura upholtterlng, Call
304 - 876 - 4,54 t or free
estlrpates.

why she divorced

Richard when he pays a visH.

.

1987 Olda Cutlass Supreme.
Top shape. Auume loan. Call
e\lanings, 304-773· 5911 or

Academy of Television Arts &amp;
Sciences proudly announcss
the latest additions 10 Its
· prestigious Hall of Fame as
Johnny Carson,
Jacques· Yves Cousteau.
Leonard Goldenson, Jim
Henson, Bob Hope. Ernie
Kovacs and Eric Sevareld
are formally inducted.
8:05 (!) MOVIE: 1t1J Favorite Year
lPG) (1 :32)
8:30 D (2) Valarte'a Family Sandy
r~members

I

General Hauling

61 't-446-6927 .

Roland Cube- 60 wan · amp.
Good eond. Hes chorus. t300.
Call 614 -446 -2278 ..

WHATOOYOLl
.THINK T
SHOOLDBE~

Resid ential or eommetcial wiring. New aer\lice or repairs.
Ucenud electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304675 -1786.

Dillard Water Service: Pools.
Cisterns. Wells. Delivery Any time. Call 614-446-7404-No
_Sunday calls.

8126 .

O',N1T DECIDE 'M-lAT
I WANT 1'0 131= wHEN
reROWLlP.

Elaj:trical
&amp; Refrigeration

Must see to appreciate- 1983
Buick Riviera. All black eJiterlor
wrth vinyl top . Burgundy velour
int•ior. PS, PB, AC .- In fact
power everything. *7100. Call
61 4 -446-2297, between 10
AM 1!. 7 PM .

1985 300 ZX Turbo. 23,000
miles. Auto., T -top. 81aeM over
gold. Mint eond. Call 1514-44&amp;-

r

CARTER'S PWMaiNG
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -446 · 3888 or 614:
448 -4477

AKC Colli• Beautiful female. 7

1981 Honda Civic- 4 dr. Sedan.
Auto.. inter. wipers. AM ·FM Call .• reardef., PB . *1626. Call
614-448-1608.

nme (PGJ (1 ,44)

e CD Hall of Fame The

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

448-6175.

Musical
Instruments

I call £VEAl HA\k
A LAW'-.{.R ~T

678-2903.

246-9167.

mot, hou•broken,
1200. AKC
Dachshund
puppies-miniature,
1126. Small Pomttn~niM, f•
male. red, tpayed, 2 yrL t125 .
Will hold any fo•Ch!il1m01. Call

Nashville to celebrate1helr
anniversary with renditions of
classics like Ill Had a
Hammer and Blowln ' in the
Wind. (1 :50)
1!1) IIJl Btly Grahom
(]] The Sleeping Beauty The
classic fairy tale performed
on lce1o Tchalkovsky's
glorious music performed by
the London Symphony
Orche61ra.
IIJl Primenewa Wrap ups of
1ha day's worfcl news and fn
dep1h feature reports. (1 :00)
1111121 Billy Grellam Denve•
CruNdtl
•
IIJ) MOVIE: Somewhere In

304-!76-2398 0! 614 -448·
2464.

Tronsportation

mila~ .

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

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditiDnal lifetime guaran··
tee. Local retarenCee furni•hed.
Free estimates. Call collect
1-814-237-0488, dev or ntgh1:.
RogersBasement
Watarproofing.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Up Los Angales Raiders at
Seattle Seahawks ffi
(I) fiJ W The Ultimate
Stllfl1mlln: A Tribute to Dar
Roblnoon Celebrate the
specta&lt;:ular career of 1he late
stunlman Oar Robinson, who
pioneered high-fall
technology, In this
star-studded special.
(JJ Peter, Paul and Mart'•
25th Annlvereart The
enduring lolk lrto gathers in

Home
I mprovamenta

Cleaner. one half mile up
Georgea Creek Rd. Call 614448-0294.

,..,er

245-6121 .

81

O Rearrange

lettert of the
four tcrombled words b.
low: to form four simple words.

~~ i ~~
R

PEANUTS
diDN1T KNOW

WAS A DOG'?!

WELL. COULD '(OU CALL

I DOl&amp;IN TO 5UR6ERI( KIGf.IT
AWM? Tf.IANK '1'00 ...

SHE SAID THE\' 'fHOU6J;IT
;IE WAS A LITTLE KID
WITH A 816 NOSE!

Chartes1on of 1he 1920s to
the spontaneous dance of
1he 1980s.
II)) Larry King Llval In dep1h
Interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrities.
10:00 ()) Straight Tallc
· · "Ill To Eetabllah Juatlce
Essence of the Constitution
11J1 Evening Newo A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
tBl Newe
81 (l) Benny Hill
10:05 (!)World of Audubon:
WhoiHI Narrated by Johnny
Carson. this special presen1S
the first underwater look at a
baby sperm whale nursing
from Ita mother; at the
breeding of the North Atlantic
Right Whales and unique
footage of sperm whales.
t0:30 CD Courtahlp of Eddie'•
Fother
• (l) Hogan•a H11011
· t 1:00 CD Flemington Steel•
a C2l ill II) 1121 IIJl New•
I!) College B11ketbell
Ill Sign Off
(]] He MakH Me FHI Llfce
O.ncln' Oscar winning 111m
feaMes Jacques d"Ambolse
and his tenacious yet
successful eflort6 to teach
dance to thousands of Now
York C11y school children.
(NR) (0:49~

11J1 Moneyllne Current
reports on wortd aconomlcs
. and flnanc~l news

r,

1

-r.~~~~_:_F-.:-I1 ...:;,j~~~ i

1-!

l

~.

. . .,.:l. . :C;. .B: .,;.L. :.M;. . . . l ~·!

· I've Oflln found 1M! the trouble
with speaking tlne'a mind Ia thit
what you can talk about 11 .

I Is I' I _~

" woRDSE
\
1--,.,:,::....;;.1....:..:-.1:::....;1-,::...,~.,..7-1

l

e

.

Co mplete the chuckle quotod
.
.
.
.
.
~'I filling in the missing words
L-.:.J-.....L-..1...-'---''--'
· you develop from step No. 3 be~w .

I' r 11 r I' r I' I
!O I I I I I I I I

•

• ~~~~~~~~~E;mus
• g7F:~~EER LETTERS

.

.

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
1Mm01r - Ghoul - VW10m - IAvllh - MORE SO
SlQn h.,glng above the newly lllllalled computer eyot~m:
"To ~rr 11 Hum.,, And To Bl8!1'11 "On A Computer 11 E;ven
. MOR~ SO."

BRIDGE

1!1) NIWI

For Mle. aaveral buteh•lng hogs SWEEPER and sewing maehine
2209 lb. to 300 1... 304-675- repair, parts. and suppll•. Pick
1e07.
up and delivery, Davis Va~um

Building Materials
pip81, win·
Block. brick.
dows. lintels, etc. Claude Win·
ten. Rkl Grande, 0 . Call 614-

Yamaha- CP30 electric piano.
·C ost 81400 naw- U60. Call
614 -388 · 8837 even ., 446 ~
1968 d-vs.

.

'r'OO KtvOW, If IT ctOOD&amp; UP
AI-JD 'lU~ mmi?A11JRHAll~
35 DEGK~~~ IT COOtO SOOW'

Livestock

304-773-5616 .

2 bedroom furnised apt. rwt and
deposit, New Haven, W . Va .,
304 -882 - 3267 or 304 -773·

ARLO AND JANIS

Services

63

57

1ha entertalnmen1 world is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
IIJ) WKAP In Cincinnati
81 CD Too Clo111 for Comfort
6:35 (!) Luve It To Beaver
7:00 CD Flemington s~
8 (2) PM Mag..lne
I!) SportoConter (L)
(I) Ent_,nment Tonight
8 W People'• Court
(JJ ltD MacNeil Lehrer
N.ewoHour (1 :00)

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buying shell corn or ear
corn. Call lor latnt quotes. River
Ctty Farm Suppty, 614 -446-

e1121 CBS NIWI

ltD Colofloundt
11J1 ShowBiz Today News of

u•••y building
apl: 27' 0&lt;36'..S'. ,_7_3__v_a_n_s_&amp;_4_w_._o_._
1 -13
alldlng door. 1 · 3' 18r· .

AM·FM · Eight track ttereo
phone and cauette converter.
Great cond. 8200. Cell 814446-3993. .,

Three AKC Registered German
Shepherd female pups. 860,00.
eeeh, 904· 882 ·20n.

APARTMENTS. nlobile hom111.
hou ses. Pt. Ple11antand Gallipolis. 814-448,8221 .

1!1)

675-1677 .. 675-2714.

Collie pupa, AKC Ragi•tered.
Leuie type. Will be raady for
Santa . Celll514·843-636&amp;.

3 room apt . Parity furnished.

(I) a W ABC Newo !;I
ill NlghUy Buolnetl Report

Trucks for Sale

mHa~.

Qualhy firewood. all hardiNood.
for ~~:I e. t26 a pick-up lo.d. Call

New arrWals for Christma ..
Regltter8d AKC Chow puppi•.
Cell 814-388-8801 .

614-992-5908.

•

72

plus

. 1 and 2 bedroom apt. Call
Cleland Realty 814-992 -2269 .

6024 .

Suppiii!S
:&lt;. Livestock

f.lrlll

Pl•tic ci1tem s'llllte approved,
plastie septic tanka, pllltlc
culverts, mBial cutverta. AON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Joel&lt;·
1on. Oh. 814·288·6930.

1 · AKC Toy PoDdl• 1 1 mos.
old., $160. 1· Parak8111 with
large eage, 840. Ca11 814- 4415 -

3 room apt. for rent Partl'f
furnished . 614-992 -6908 .

~ Suffer Magazine (A)

UMI

Edited loy CLAY I . 'OLLAN

ea21

e

r------..,

Coli &amp;14-256-&amp;261 .

Qll

IIJ)Inllkle Pol111co •aa
IIJ) Foeti of Ule
(l) One Doy II a Tlmo
6:05 (!) Allee
8:30 8 (2) IIJl NB!: Nightly Nawo

675-7642 .
1984 Bonneville Pontiac. 4 door
slty blue, dk blue vinyl top.
304 -876-8878 or 876-1825.

ew

wen

· '::~:~~~' 'O©~JUlA-l&amp;'B!fS•
1

· Ill Dr. Who
ltD Squere One TV C

1978 Mereury Mona~h. runs
good, looka good . $860. 304·

Muaical
Instruments

(I)

illllleWI
I!) Sportolook (T)

'73 Chevy 400 cu In, smell tMock
with turbo 400. runs good.
304-87&amp;-2714 or 676-1677 ..

57

8883.
2 bedroom apt. t136
utilitiea. 814 -9 92-6732.

•C2l

1984 Ch:.Vrolllt ,Impala TLC.
load ltd. 84800. 304·876· 2663.

290S.

Fresh Christmas trees for aale
820 . and down. Cut or dig vour
choice. 1YJ miles out Millstone
Road, ApPle Grove, W . Ve .• or
call 304-576-2233.

6:00 CD Crazr Uke 1 Fox

1986 Monte Carloluxurv Sport.
V-8, all powtlr 1H11. windows.
etc; 17.000 miltl, 89 ,000.00
firm. 304 -675-6084 after 4 :00.

54 Misc. Merchandise

M

EVENING

$1.900. 304-876-2683 0! 875676e.

Firewood for sale. All hardwood,
split and delivered . 836. Also
1977 lTD . Call 614-992-5619
or 614·992-3652.

Ail Christmaa Troos 112 .. Come
~ar ty before cold weather. tag
y our tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
on Hanging Rock Rd . 1)4-7735371 or 882·28B6 .

• - MON.. NOV. 30

1981 Reliant "K " Car. air. aUto..
PS, front wheel drive, 4 cvl. ,
80 ,000 miles . Qood buy ,

Roug h lumber 400 ft. Walnut.
4000 ft . Pine and Poplar. Air
dried 4 yrs. 814-992-3921 .

Buy 6 Toning Tablae and receive
a free Suntan bed. Offer good
until De c. 30, 1987. Call Caribbean Tan•. Inc., 304-422-4200.

Ci:f01":7TICIC&lt;:. ~

4224.

Sl!l\laga 22 Hornet rifle. 16
gauge. bolt action ahotgun.
1974 Chcwv Suburban 4x4. lA
ton, 454 engine. Call 614·446-

Natural gas cooN sto\le. Worke
good. 614·992-2866.,

10 CO WITH ~

1979 Trans AM . Solid body.
Maroon. 12600. Call 814 ·986·

Sheepskin lined eoat, sir:e 42 L.
160. Eleet:rlc heat8f, 130. Call
814-643· 2487. if no entwer,
keep trying.

6e47 .

WH!IT N::e WE

••.ooo.

•

The

Television
Viewing

1985 Aen-..h Allanca 4 DR ..
Auto. trans. , AM -FM radio.
approx. 32,000 mil•.
Call 814-992-2892.

Firvwoo d split and del;vered,
$4\l. per load . Cherry, locust.
aassyfraa and hickory . Ca/1614 -

Firewood for sele. Mixed. hard·
wood, splh and delivered. $36
per pick-up load . 614 -992-

BORN LO

19155 Antique ford LTD . Leas
than 33 .000 mil•. Call 814·
992·6938 Of 614 -992 -6872.

For Sale- Cut dl)' firewood . You
haul. •2&amp; aiDad. Call614· 388-

892-6335.

- Pomeroy-' Middleport, Ohio

992-260Z.

Mixed hllr'd wood slabs. t12 per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 V:!
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 614-992.-6461 .

1628.

F01 Sale- 3 BR .. 2 baths. 3 BR , house&amp; garage. A -1 Re81
"fo dl..llar wlth garag e. City Estaie, Carol Veager-8roker..
1chools. Must See. Call 614- , 304 -675-510 4.
446 -6221 after 4 PM .

8 room house for ula. % acr•
llf'ld, 3 or 4 bedroom. 1Vz b .. h.
carport, aluminum siding. LoCJiild in Rutlend. 614-7422596 or 1 - 46~ · 1380

45

2 Br. trail er-cebl e. Beautiful river

6860.

In Gallipolit on Pin e St. Vaeant
lot with water and swe.ege. No
Brand ni!I'W 3 BR . ne,r Gallipolis mobile h o mes permitted .
Lodes on At. 7 . 2car g•age. .nice •6.000. Call after 5 ;00 PM lot. Immediate pouession . Will 614 -59 4· 3833.
considl!lf trade in of Mobile
home, property, ere . BargAin · 1 e acres for sale ln Rutland. Call
prioed. Call 614-446 -8038 .
T.O.Stewar1. 614 - 742 ~ 2421..

Modern one bedr oom apartment. Very clean and nice. No
Pets. Ph. 304 -875· ,386,

Carpet Prices Starting •t :
Commercial· $4 a yd . ,
Seulptur&amp;-86 a vd .• Plulh-$ 7 a
yd . Lots of room remenu In
•tock. Financing available. Mollolian FUrNture, Upper River Ad.
- 614 -446-7444:

Monday, November 30, 1987

1981 Fireblrd ·esprit. Auto..
AM -FM c•uane, air. Grelll
. condition. UBOO. Firm. 614·

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

614-446 -0390 .

Spacious mobile hom e lots for
rent, Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, 304· 8753073 .

614-446-7025.

31

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

GOOD USED APPUANCES
Waahera. dryers, refriuerators.
rangas. Skaggs Appliance• ,
Upp.- River Rd . bwide Stone
Crest Motel. 1514-448-7398.

SofH and chairt priced from
8396 to 8996. Tabl•· 850 and
up to 8126 . Hi&lt;le-a· bedl 8390
2 BR . apts . 8 cl osiJls, kitchen- to $696. Radlners $226 to
appl. furnished, Washer- Dryer t376. Lamps •28 to 8126 .
hook-up, ww c arpet. ntfWtv Dinettes .1109 and up to $496.
peinted. dedc. Aeg&amp;ncv. Inc. Wood tabla w-6 eheifl *285 to
Apts. Call 304-675· 7738 or 8796. Desk 8100 up to 8376.
676-6104.
Hutches 1400 and up. Bunk
beds eomplete w -manras...
Furnished apt. nBllt to library. 8295 and up to 8395. Baby bedl
One profenlo nal adutt onty. t 1 10. Mattressea or bo~t springa
Perking. Cell 614-448-0338 .
full or twin $68 , firm *78. and
$88. Quean aats *226, King
Nice private apt. Quiet. Ne.- 8360 . 4 drawer chest t69. Gun
HMC. One adutt onlv . No pets. cabinets 8 gun. Gas or electric
Sto\le. refrig.• drap81. •226 a . r.ange · 1376. Babv mattre•••
mo. Ref. required . Call 614· 135 &amp; *45. Sed tram• 820.
448 -4782.
830 &amp; King frame 150. Good
selection of bedroom su+t",
16 Court: 2 br .• 1 V:! beth, large metal cabinata. he.tdboard1 830
living area. w - w c•pet. new end up to $66.
kltehen, dishwasher, wired for
phone &amp; t\1 . Gas haM. Parking. 90 Days aame •• cash -with
1350-mo. plus utilities. Oep. &amp;. approved eredit. 3 Mil• out
Raf. Call614-446·4926 .
BuiiiVIIIe Ad. Op~m9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 614-446Downtown- Modern 1 BR ., P322.
complete kitchen. carpet. air,
electric heat: Cell 614-448PARSON'S FURNITURE
4383 -dava. 446 -0139 -even. &amp;
weekends.
Just arrived - 3 truck loads- Naw
living room suites; new wood I
BrookSide Apartments - Large pc. living wood tuites. 8 399.96;
eountry Mitchen. atove &amp; refrig- cheat of drawers; twin materator. Unfurnished. 1 BR . bath, tresses, , 896 set: microwave
quiet area. Call614·448 · 1932. oven sta.n di.
THE WORKING
Furnished: 4 rooms &amp; bath. MAN 'S FRIEND
Clean. No peta. Aduhs only. Ref.
&amp; dep. required . Cell 614·446Vallev Furnhure
1519.
New and used furnitt.~re and
applieances. Call 61 4-446 ·
Modern 1 BR apartment. C.ll 7672 . Hours 9 T6 .

614-992-6113. 614-992-8723

1 ,h story, ni!I'Wiy &amp;quipped Mh·
chen, large famil'{ room, air
eond. con\lient location. 304·

1973 14~t70 Community, 3
bedrooms, 11ft baths. total electric. 86996 .
1973 Camercm, 12•65. 3 ,bed·
rooms, gas, nice, t6495 .
13
Insurance
1966 Casto, 12x80, 3 bed·
rooms, electric. 83495.
1973 Papalia 12x66, 3 bedC11tl us for your mobile home rooms, total electric. $5995.
D &amp; W HOMES
insurance : Miller lnsuranee,
1304) 676-4424
304 -882 -2 146 . Als o: auto,
home, lifa. health.

Financial

41

2 bedroom. 2 baths, 2 car
garage. lWei lot on· Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, utallte, close
to Malgs High. Cell 814·992·

Baby sitting in my home. 11ny
shift or hours. EJtperienced.
304-882-3 674.

21

71 Auto's For Sale

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

Help Wanted

814-882-5141 .

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 ~droom apanmento: for
rent.
Buie rent for 1 bdr ..
*183.00; 2bdr .. 8219.00. Also
required a 1200.00 tecurhy
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Eltetes Dept. Ph 446· 3997
Equal Houting Opportunrtv.

Bill Gena Johnson
614-441-3672

I

Monday, November 30, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

NORTH
.Q851

U-11-11

•u

176U

Ws instructive to watCh Careful
Charlie play a band. He pays attention
to his spots in the trump suit and a!ways handles his entries with caution. ,
When the jack of hearts was led
against four spades, Charlie ducked in
dummy. East won the king and returned the suit. Charlie then played a
diamond right away, finessing his 10.
West won the king and played back a
low tr~mp. Declarer won the king in
his hand and played back the jack.
West took the ace and exited with his
last trump. Charlie won that trick in
dummy. Now what?
Obviously declarer needs to take an·
other diamood finesse. He also needs
to take a winning club finesse. But it
all bas to be done in such a way that be
will not suddenly be stranded in the
wrong band. What Charlie did was
simple enough - he led the club queen
from dummy. When East played low,
he unblocked wltb the jack. He was
now able to play another club and retain the lead In dummy. Afte.r making
two club tricks, he switched back to diamonds, taking the successful finesse
against East's diamond queen to make
bis contract.
Other plays can lead to failure. Sup-

..

+Q 109

WEST

EAST

•8

• A32
• J 10 8 6
1 K az
• 816

.KUIS

IQH
+KIIS
SOUTH

.KJ 1017

•Qz .

IAJIO
+AJZ
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wool

Norda

Eut
Pus

Pus
p...
Pus

PUI

Ope~ing lead: • J

..

pose declarer first plays the nine or io
of clubs from dummy. That's fine, but
what happens the next time tile suit il
led? If declarer then leads dumlily'l
queen, defender Eut can cover ~d:
declarer will suddenly find blmself..jlf.
the wrong hand to play diamonds. · '

~~
~--'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

3 Lorelei
4 Palm leaf
1 Broom
5
Set free
6 Assailed
Gloria
De
6
11 Spanish
province
12 San
7 Stout •
Antonio
8 Mr. Duryea
landmark
9 ··1 13 Navigation
Ca.mera"
device
10 Sanskrit
14 Bribable
school
Ye~~terday'1 Alllwer
U - out
17 Tanner?
(just
20 Miss Evans 28 Cote cry 39 Overget by)
21 Blvd.
29 Gunfire
indulger
16 Function 22 Negative
31 Swale
40 22nd state
18 Place
prefix
33 Jewish
(abbr.)
for thieves 23 Last word,
school
41 Aglow
19 Prosaic
often
34 Yucca kin 42 Mrs. Artie
24 Best
24 Lack
35 Risk
Shaw,
25 Stratford's 26 Propel
money
once
36 Star's
44 Educator
river
a galley
26 Moroccan 27 Soul (Fr.)
, go-between Dorothea
city
29 Amalgamate ...,_+-l--+-t30Where
Muscat is
31 New Guinea
1=-+--ltown
32 Ride out
34 Milkfish
37 Auricle
38Joke
39 Caesar,
for one
43 Maxim
45 Miss Oyl
46 Donated
47 Turkic
language
48 Bring
to bear

DOWN
1 Bundled
2 Call forth

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTF.S- Here's how to work It:

10/30

AXYDLBAAXR

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

CRYPTOQUOTES
11-30
[

K Q

K TN
KQ

XF

0
0 T

BKKY

QSXNTYFVXU

R KR0 A

OAZKFR

XBTKSOTWN
QSXNTY'F
CNT

SNHOSYF

R V N

VNWVR

K

MKE S

Q

FNWSNRF
.

.

•
Yetterdaf'• C17Ptoqaote: NOVEMBER RUNS INTO
-DECEMBER, DECEMBER RUNS INTO CHRISTMAS AND
CHRISTMAS RUNS INTO MONEY. - ANONYMOU.S

•

�•

..

•

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY

Ohio Lottery

THIS
WEEK'S
GAMES

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"
97 N. 2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT

992-6661
INSTALLMENT LOANS
992-3007
'

Monday, November 30, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

10 The Daily Sentinel

•

PHARMACY
·"3 Registered
.Pharmacists
To Serve You"

992-6491

'-----

GIRLS

&lt;th!!~

NOV. 23 - EASTERN - HOME
NOV. 2S - SOUTHERN - AWAY
NOV. 28 - MILLER - AWAY

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Dining • Carry Out •
Drive-Thru

NOV. 27 -GALLIPOLIS . - HOME
DEC. I - NORTH GALLIA - AWAY

GIRLS BASKETBALL

*
*

*

l'

'\

MUZZLE LQADING
and HUNTING SUPPLIES

BOYS BA!IETBALL

HOURS:

GIRLS BASKETBALL

6 A.M :- 1Q.P.M .
8r Sat. 6 A.M. - 12 P.M.

____ _

Mon. thru Fri.
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

NOV. 23 - GALLIPOLIS - HOME
NOV. 2S -MEIGS -HOME
NOV. 28 -ALEXANDER- HOME

698 W. Main Street. Pomeroy

992-2057

BOYS SCHEDULE

II?~

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

(t,1cOIMIRSij

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. !-Nelsonville-York , , .............. Home
Dec. 4-Vinton County ................... Away

~BIBIKS

Dec.
Dec.
De(,
Dec.

DH. 8-Trimble ............................... Away

lb:t;J;y

Dec. 11-Belpre ............................... Home
Dec. I 5-Aiexander ........................ Away

THE AREA'S MOST
COMPLETE ATHLETIC
FObTWEAR ST()RE!

Good Luek Teams!

_____ _
992-5627

MIDDLEPORT

Dec. 19-Logan ................................ Home

Dec.
Dec.

Dec.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
jan.
Jan.

tan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jon.

22-Wellston .......................... Away
5-Federal Ho,king ................. Away
8-Miller ......:............... 1............ Home
12-Nelsonvllle-York.J............ Away
I S-Vi~ton County ..
Home
19-Tnmmble .......................... Home

i.......

!-Kyger Creek ....................... Home
4-0ak Hill ............................. Away
8-Southern ............................ Away
11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
1 S-Porkersburg Cath. (6: 15) ... Away
22-North Gallia (6:00) ............ Home
8-Symmes Valley ................... Home
12-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
15-0ak Hill ........................... Away
19-Federal Hocking ...;............ Home
72-Southern ........................... Home
29-North Gallia .................... Away

Jon. 22-Belpre .............................. Away

feb. 2-Miller .............................~ .... Away

Jan. 26-Aiexander ......................... Home
Jan. 30-Point Pleasant ................. Away
Feb. 2-Warren ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Wellston.............................. Home ·
feb.. 9:....A thens ....................................... Home
Feb. 12-Federol Ho,king ............... Home

Feb. 5-Honnan Trce ........................ Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath ............ Away
Feb.I9-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL
De(,
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
De(,
De(,

r

!-North Gollia ...................... Away
4-Symmes Valley .................. Away
8-Eastern ................................ Home
11-0ak Hill ............................ Home
18-Hannan Trace .................. Away
22-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
, Dec. 29-lndicm Valiey So .... Convo. Center
Jan. 2-Southeastern ..................... Away
Jan. 8-Sauthwestern ..................... Home
Jan. 12 -North Gallia ..................... Home
Jan. I 5-Symmes Valley ................. Home
Jan. 22 -Eastern ............................ Away
Jon. 29-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
Jan. 30-Miller ................................ Home
FEb. S-Oak Hill ....................:........ Away
Feb. 6 -Federal Ho,king ................. Away
Feb. 12-Hannan Trace ................... Home
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL
De(. 3-Nelsonville-York .. ;............. Away
Dec. 7 -Vinton County .................... Home
Dec. I 0-Trimble ............................. Home

De&lt;: 14-Belpre .............................. Away
Dec. 17 -Alexander ......................... Hom,e

Df(. 23-Eastern .........,...................Home
Jan. 4-Wellston ..............................Home

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"

Jan. 7-Federal Hocking .................. Home

Jan. 9-Miller................................... Home
Jan. 14-Nelsonville-York ............... Home
Jan. 18-Vinton Count ................... Away
Jan. 21-Trimble ............................ Away
Jan. 25-Belpre ............................... Home
Jan. 28-Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 4-Wellston ............................. Away
Feb 8-Federal ~o,king .................. Away
Feb. 13-Southern ........................... Home

H. Ewing-Director

PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.
I

-

SOUTHERNHIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL
'De(. 3-0ak Hill .............................. Home
De, , 7-Southern ............................. Home
Dec I 0-Hannan Trace ..........;........ Home
Dec. 14-Miller ................................ Home
Dec. 17 -Southwestern ................... Home
Dec. 19-Federal Ho,king .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 23-Meigs ................................ f1ome
Jan. 7 -Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11 - Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 14-0ak Hill ............................ Home
Jan. 21-Southern .......................... Away
Jan. 28-North Gallia ..................... Home
Feb. !-Symmes Vlaley ................... Home
Feb. 4-liannan Trace .................... Away
Feb. 11-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Federal Ho,king ............... Home

"COME GROW

De,. 3-Symmes Valley ................... Home
Dec. 7-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec.IO-Oak Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 17-Hannan Trale ................... Home

Dec. 19-Aieander .......................... Away
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

POWELL'S

• COMPLETE RADIATOR SeRVICE
•MAJOfl REPAIRS
• CO,M P ~ETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
&amp; BA~ANCE

•MOST MAJOR CREDIT. CARDS
ACCEPTED

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.
BODY WORK

1992 -l196j ~~~~~:NCE
•

WELCOME

461 3RD AVE., MIDDlEPORT, OH.

r

--

'

FARMERS
BANK
&amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. ' 992-2136

I............ j"111G
-· (_.,.,
.,._...

Rawlings
Coate
Blo•er
Funeral

~oar

Dealer on

The River

Hollii
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992·5141

Buy More for .
Leu .at

GUTfED -The Langsville Grocery Is out of business. It was gutted by fire early Saturday
·
afternoon.

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
POMEROY, OHIO
........

~- 1

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS
DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE
Ill SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342

"HOME BANK

MEMBER FDIC

·EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

992 G144

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
STORE HOURS:
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M.-1 O·P.M
SUNDAY ,..
10 A.M.-1 Q P.M:

SYRACUSE OFFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
CJ49-2210

-··~·

'' ..

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 Cantt
A Multimedia Inc. Nttwspaper

()8.1 percent)., Cuyahoga (]7.1 percent) and
"The minimum wage (unchanged at $3.35 since
Hamilton (15 .9 percen t) have the highest poverty
1981) has had a direct effect on the people In
rates, and Stark (11.5 percent), Franklin (11.3
poverty. And we know that there are special kinds
percent) and Butler (11.2 percent) had the lowes t
of problems with unemployment and the changes
rates .
. in employment," Corcoran said. "We have begun
The poverty rates in five CQunlles, all in eastern
to try to tackle certain ·aspects of the problem."
Ohio, have gone up more than 100 percent since
She said that programs are either being used or
1980. They are Harrison (158.3 percent), Ashtab·
are being planned aimed at reforming welfare
ula (139.8 percent), Carroll (133.5 percent),
programs , keeping students In school and
Columbiana (116.3 percent) and Monroe (112.6
reducing the teen pregnancy rate, among other
percent) counties.
goa ts.
"Southwest Ohio has actually Improved in
Nearly every county in northwest Ohio,
recent
years but the eastern part of the state has
meanwhile, Is among the 24 counties with rates
seen
huge
increases In poverty rat~s ." Zeller said.
below 10 percent.
"
As
the
mills
closed and the coal mines got hit, .
The highest rates are found in Adams (36.8
.
..
some
of
the
worst
distress of the state has been in
percent). Vinton (33.7 percent) and Pike (31.4
that
area.
'
'
percent) counties in extreme southern Ohio, while
During ihe same period, the poverty rate
the two lowest rates are found in Lake (4.9
dropped
in 13 counties, including Madison (down
percent) and Geauga 15.3 percent) counties just
10.8
percent),
Erie tdown 14.9 percent) and
east of Cleveland.
Champaign (down 31.8 percent) .
Among Ohio's 10 largest counties, Mahoning

ing, totaling about $25,000, were
not insured according to William·
son. Because ownership papers
had not been finalized , Williamson was not sure if the building
itself was Insured.
Rutland had 12 firemen on the
scene and was assisted by ·six
Salem Center firemen with water
and portable pumps. Flreflgh·
. ters were on the scene approxi·
mately two and one-half hours.

Meigs Local teachers issue
statement to clarify position

HOME PEOPLE"

Sales &amp; Servi(e

14.4 percent nationally .
SEO Area Worst
The 22 counties with poverty rates of at least 20
percent are concentrated In several counties In·
the the Appalachian region extending south of
Youngstown along the Ohio River to just eas t df
Cincinnati, as well as. Ashtabula, Holmes and
Hardin counties.
In Southeastern Ohio, Meigs Cou nty's figure
stood at 26 .1 percent; Gallla 26.4; Athens 23.9;
Vinton 3s.7; Lawrence 26.0 and Jackson 21.0.
In 1986, the last year for which national
sta tistics are available, Ohio's rate was 14
percent, compared with 13.6 percent for the
nation. In 1980. Ohio's, poverty rate was 10.5
percent, compared with 13 percent nationally.
''There are a couple of phenomenon occurring
. that are making it difficult to stay ahead of the
game," said Maureen Corcoran. executive
assistant on human services to Gov. Richard
Celeste.

Despite efforts by Rutland and have been electlcal in nature,
Salem Center firemen, the Williamson said, starting in a
Langsville Grocery was des- ceiling In a back room. The fire
troyed by fire on• Saturday was discovered by Roger Carafternoon. ·
penter, who was In the process of
Rutland Fire Chief Blll Willi· . bu ying the buildi'lg from a
amson reported that the building Dexter party. Carpenter tried at
was engulfed in flames by the first to put out the flames with
lime his department arrived. fire extinguishers Williamson
Rutland rece ived the call to ·the sa id.
scene at 11:39 a.m.
The building was completely
Cause of the fire appears to gutted and contents of the build-

FOR

Chevrol"t•Oidsmobile
•Cadillac, Inc.

enttne

Langsville store ·hit by blaze

Feb. 13-Meigs ............................... Away

· Jim co.bb

WITH US"

4- Kyger Creek ........................ Home
7-Southweslern .................... Away
11-North Gallia ..................... Home
14-Symmes Valley ................ Away
2D-Gallipolis ......................... Away
21-Eastern ............................. Home
28-Kyger (reek ..................... .Away
!-Southwestern ..................... Home
4-0ak Hill .............................. Home
11 - Hannan Trace .................. Away

CLEVELAND (UP!) - One of every seven
Ohioa11s lives below the '·poverty level, a study
released Monday by th·e Council fm~ Economic
Opportunties In Greater Cleveland shows.
Ohio's poverty rate is at 13.8 percent, the lowest
level since 1982 but 32 percent higher than It was In
1980, the study shows. That means 1.5 million
. people are living below the poverty level, which is
$5,500 a year for a single person and $11,200 for a
family of four.
Income used In determining poverty ·status
includes all wages. interest and government cash
assistance, but not non-cash assistance such as
food stamps . ·
·
.
"Th.e recession we saw in the economy in the
early part of the decade, was the largest influence
in 1981, 1982 and 1983: That very large jump was
never really recovered from since," said George
Zeiler, senior researcher for the council.
Ohio's poverty rate used to be well below
national figures, but that changed in 1984, when
Ohio's rate went to 14.5 percent, compared with

OF
FURNITURE

------

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. December 1. 1987

, COMPLETE
SELECTION

•

.GIRLS SCHEDULE

Ben

CHESTER, OH.

II

SOUTHERN

~utn.-Thurs.

.__

985-3301

NOV. 24- MILLER- HOME
DEC. I - KYGER CREEK - · HOME
NOV. 23 -MEIGS- AWAY
NOV. 30. - KYGER CREEK - AWAY

.._

"Your Building. Mattri.. Market Place''

BOYS BASKETBALL

Featuring
* Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on a
Croissant Stuffed Baked"
Potatoes Taco Salads
Salad Bar
* Real Ice Cream

*

HARDWARE

EASTERN

at y

Cloudy tonight. Ch;lnce ol
snow flurries. Low In upper
20s. Cloudy Wednesday. Highs
in mid 30s.
·

Ohio's poverty rate up 32 percent since '80

BAUM

AWAY

•

e

VoL38, No .142
Copyrighted 1987

786 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH.

BOYS BASKETBALL

A GREAT PLACE

218
Pick 4
1558

Sunday 11-~

NOV. 24- ATHENS - HOME
Res,heduled for Feb. 9
NOV. 27 -MILLER -

Daily Numher

Open Till 9:00
Every Night

MEIGS

.

Christmas
countdown

-

''

Tea·c hers strike enters 16th
day; no settlement in sight
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Wriler
A strike by the Meigs Local
Teachers Association today
moved into its 16th day with no
set tlement apparently In sight.
District Supt. Dan E. Morris
today Issued a statement on
behalf ef the Meigs Local Board
of Education reviewing the view·
point of the board and the status
of the strike situation. It reads:
"The Meigs Local Board of
Education learned today, Nov.
30, that the Meigs Local Teacher's
Association bargaining unit
turned down on Sunday, Nov. 29,
the board of education's last offer
made in a nine and one-half hour
mediation session on Nov. 24 . The
· board ' honored the mediator's
request that no public statement
be made while the offer was
being considered.
"The board's offer was as
follows: a contract of three years
in length; the board will add to
the reduction in force article that
it will not make use of the article
for the 1987-88 and 1988·89 school
year; contract language is to
remain the same In all other
articles as in the las t co ntract: in
the 1987-88 school year no in·
crease in the salary sc hedule, in
the 1987·88 school year no increase In the sala ry schedule and
In the 1988-89 school year no

increase In the salary schedule
and in lhe 1989·90 school year 63
percent of all general fund
revenue in FY90 shall be used for
salaries and fri nge benefits for
members of the MLTA bargain·
ing unit; all increases in board
costs for fringe benefits In FY88
and FY89 shall count as a part of
the 63 perce nt.
"The three year contract is
offered as the MLTA is Insisting
on a co ntrac t of that duration.
The board ha s made offers of one
and two year duration which
have been rejected. The offer of
not using the red uction in force or
lay-o ff policy for two schdols
years Is in response· to a concern
expressed by the union. The
board has not discussed the issue
of lay-offs and without · any
significant increase in expend i·
tures or negotlatied costs feels
that it can exte nd the guarantee
of no layoffs for the years cited.
During the process of negotia·
tions from May 26, 1987 to the
present, the only artic les-issues
discussed were money. and the
reductlon .ln force; therefore, the
board 's proposal that a ll other
co ntt'act articles remain as in the
last contract. The 63 percent
offer was extended as thjs
percentage is the level of expen·
diture for salary and fringes as is
currently bein·g expended for the

teaching · staff's salary and
fringes.
"The board offer cited above is
just one of several that have been
presented to the MLTA negotiating team (Rita Slavin, Don
Dixon, David Bowen, Carol Ohlinger, Ml~e Wilfong and Ben
Gerber, OEA Unlserve represen tative) and all have been
rejected.
"The board of education has
expressed its willingness to the
MLTA to negotiate over money
that it ha s or knows that It will
have. The teachers association Is
aware that moneyo certified otto
be received for the next two
years (FY88 and FY89) Is not
sufficient to justify raises or
inc(eased expenditures. They
have with the mediator and
reportedly with their own membership expressed an understanding of this fact.
"The MLTA Is Insisting upon
negotiating a three year contract
with guaranteed sa lary raises
and bonuses In the third year that
are conservatively estimated to
cost one million dollars. They are
also Insisting that the board of
education negotiate a 'no lay-off
policy' regardless of the schools'
financial situation.
"The board of education's
position on the third year guaran·
(Continued on page 4)

Meigs Local Teachers whO ·
have been on s trike since Nov. 6,
this morning issued a statement
clarifying their position in the
failure of a settlement being
reached.
Their statement reads :
Since the Meigs Loca l Board of
Education has violated the re·
quested news blackout by the
federal mediator. the Meigs
Local Teachers' Association
feel s cqmpelled to clarify further
misinformation issued by the
Board's office.
At the insistence of the Board,
a proposal made by them on
Tuesday, Nov. 24, was presented
to the certified staff.
The proposal was for a contract of three yea rs with no
increase in salary schedu les the
first or seco nd years. The third
year, sixty·three (.63) percent of
all general fund revenue in FY-90
would be used for salaries and
fringe benefits for mel')1bers of
the bargaining unit. '
All increases In Board costs for .
fringe benefits in FY-88 and ·
- FY·89 would count as part of the
sixty-three percent. Also accord·
ing to the proposal, the Board
would add to the Reduction in
Force Article that it would not
make use of the Article for the

1987·88 and 1988-89 sc hool years.
Co ntra ct la nguage would remain
the same in all other articles as in
the last contract.
On Nov. 29, the approximate
120_ ML TA members in attendance were unanimous in their
resolve that this proposal from
the Board was not a settlement
offer to end the strike.
The MLTA has repeatedly
made clear to the Board that the
two major Issues th at must be
addressed are job security and
an adequate salary commitment
to teac hers, The Board 's proposal fails to meet either of these
issues.
Teachers in the first three
ye ars of their individual con·
tracts can arbitrari ly be nonre·
newed wit hout any reasons
give n. In fiscal year 1990 the
Reduction in Force (RIF) could
be used to cut teachers and·or
programs . The MLTA does not
believe that cutting programs or
classes is the answer to the
Board' s c urrent financial diffi·
culties. The sixty-three percent
offer . in the third year would
more tha n likely result in a
salary decrease rather than a
raise after inclusion of increased
insurance costs for FY·88 and
FY-89.

f., f I

The ML TA gave the Board a
proposa I at the last negotia.tion
meeting which included a cost
containment in insurances to
help offset possible premium
•
increases.
We are willi ng to wait until the
third year for a salary increase to
allow the Board to gain financial
stability. We have consistently
indicated that our position Is
flexible and that we are ready to
reac h an equitable solution at the
negotiations table that would
bring an end to the strike, the
MLTA statement concluded.
"The strike by the teachers In
the Meigs Local Schokols Is now
in its 16th day. The days schools
are closed must be made up. The
State standards require a minimum number of days that
schools be open to receive State
monies and to be able to grant
credit and graduate students.
The Board of Education has
only the option of opening schools
using substitutes to keep our
education a I program functioning
and to allow out students to
receive credi t. The Board has
directed the administration to ·
begin preparation for the open·
ing of schools and plans are being
formulated at this time.
Continued on page 4

f

Construction pace · down ·in October
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The $334 billion, 2 percent a bove the annual rate and construction of
pace of construction spending amount for the same 'period of religious Institutions slid by $300
nationwide slowed by 0.5 percent · 1986. The rate does not take million for a $2.4 billion rate.
, in October - t.he first drop since inflation Into account.
Some of those losses were
The home building Industry made up by Increases In · the
Marc h - mainly because of
contributed nearly a third Of the annual building rates for office
cutbacks In building private
decrease by falling $600 million buildings and hospitals.
factories and shop s. the Co m·
to a $204 billion a nnual rate.
merce Department said today .
Public construction grew by
· The governmc.nt estimated the Construction .or non-resldenthil $500 million to total $76.9 billion,
buildings, meanwhile, dropped with most of the Increase cenvalue of new construction put up
. during October at a seasonally off by $900. million to total $88.2 tered on educational buildings,
adjusted annual rate of $407.9 billion .
highways, streets and conservaWithin the private non- tion work.
billion, down from September's
$409.8 billion rate. Those figures residential ca(egory, construcOctober's 0.5 percent decline
of
Industrial
plants
dropped
tion
Indicate what a year's worth of
marked the first drop In the'
cbnstructlon spending would be if $1 billion to total $13.3 billion, construction report since March,
when It fell 3.3 percent. The
every montb was like the one other commercial buildings studied and seasonal factor s mainly shopping centers- saw a construction rate rose 1.5 percent
$500 million cut to a $26.2 billion · In September and 1 percent ill
were Ignored.
Construction for the first 10 rate, hotel arid motel building fell August.
months of this year has totaled $200 million to reach a $6.7 billion

CLEANUP OPERATIONS UNDERWAYCleanup op.e ratlons began Sunday following the
'

rock slide at · the loot of the Pomeroy-Mason
Brldf!C. ~alllc was tied ll.P. lor hours alter the · .
'
·
Incident.
·

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39798">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
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    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39797">
              <text>November 30, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="446">
      <name>bonecutter</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="2705">
      <name>conkle</name>
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    <tag tagId="6639">
      <name>friley</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="405">
      <name>green</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1669">
      <name>likens</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="467">
      <name>parker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="160">
      <name>roach</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="7">
      <name>smith</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
