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                  <text>14-The

Meig~

Ohio Lottery

property
transfers
Compiled by
Emmogene Holslf lR Congo
Meigs County Recorder
Claude J. Reltm lre, dec. to
Goldie M. Reitmlre, cert. of
trans. ,·Pomeroy .village.
Otmer G. Polk to Steven T.
Fitch, Teresa A. Fitch , pa1·cels,
Chester.
Rot&gt;ert A. Harris, J;'eggy Harris to Ronald W. Vance, parcel ,
Olive.
James Keesee, ' Linda E. Keesee to Victory Baptist Church,
parcel, Middleport vlllage.
Commercial Banking &amp; Trust
Co. to Ha rold C. Sharp, Frances
K. Sharp, 1.001 acre, Orange.
Roger L. Hawk, Shirley A.
Hawk to Ronald Randall Shields,
Pamela Sue Shields, lots,
Orange.
William A. Elam, dec. to Eula
M. Elam, affidavit, Salisbury.
Frances E . Hewitt , fka Moore,
dec .. to Beth Ann Knotts, Robert
T. Hewitt , Michael E. Hewitt,
Frances Ann Hewitt, ce rtifica te
of transfer, Pomeroy village. ·
Eric ]1!. Bumgardner, Elizabeth A. Bumgardner to Marvin
G. Little, Juanita M. Little, .863
acr'e, Rutland.
George D. Lemley , Helen M.
Le mley to Linda M. Shaver,
tracts, Salisbury.
Ceorge D. Lemley, Helen M.
Lemley to Debra Kay Lemley,
.57 acre, s,.lisbury.
Charles L. Craft, dec. to Myrtle
L. Craft, affid avit, Orange.
Thomas D. Hendrix, Frances
P. Hendrix to Ohio Power Co ..
easement , Rutland.
Chester A. Sexton, Geraldine
Sexton to Minday Kay Custer,
lots, Middleport.
Robert Steven Burson to Ma rk
Owen Burson, 1.60 acre, Bedford.
Robert Steven Burson, Pamela
Lynn . Burson, J eanne Burson,
Mar k owen Burson to Mar k Owen
Burson, 14.77 acres, Bedford.
Robert Steven Burson, Pamela
Lynn Burson, Mark Owen Burson, Jeann e Burson to Robert
Steven Burson, 16.37 acres,
Bedford.
Robert Steven Burson, Pamela
Lynn Burson, Mark Owen Burson, Jeanne Burson to Pamela
Lynn Burson, 16 .37 acres,
Bedford.
Mark Owen Burson, J ea nn e
Burson to Pamela Lynn Burson,
easement right o! way, Meigs.
Mark Owen Burson , Jean ne
Burson to Robert Steven Bu rson,
right of way easement, Meigs.
Bert W. Taylor, Beverly P.
Taylor to Bert W. Taylor, Beverly P. Taylor, parcels, Scipio.
Robert F . Meeks, Joyce !.
Meeks to Buckeye Rural Elect ric
Corp., Inc., right of way ,
Bedford.
Bryan D. Jordan, Tracie L.
Jordan to Buckeye Rural Elec.
· Corp. , Inc .. rig ht of way,
Columbia .
S. Ca rr Winters. ·Lillie Groppenbacher, dec., affid avit, Ru tland village.
Jack W. Carsey to Harry S.
Yarbrough, parc~ls , Pomeroy
village.
Ida Evelyn Young, dec. to
William A. Young, . Cert. of
Trans., Rutland vil lage.
Ida Evel yn Young, cd. , to
William A. Young, affidavit,
Rutland Village.
Colleen PAyne to Barbara E.
Uher, 8.236 acres, Scipio. .
Charles R. Uher, Bar bara E.
Uher to William Anderson, Linda
Anderson, 8.236 acres, Scipio.
Marton L. Boston, dec. to Nina
M. Boston. affidavit , Olive.
Carol R. Pierce, aka Ca rol ,
Nellie 1. Pie1·ce to Caro l F.
Pierce, 69:45 acres, Rutland .
Neacil E . Carsey. dec. to J ack
W. Carsey, cert. of trans.,
Middleport village. .,
Robert Steven Bursxm to Robert E . FacemyPr, Melissa F.
Facemeyer, 3.96 acres, Bedford.
Bruce J. Reed, Rit a J . Reed to
Theodore T. Reed Ill , Kathy M.
Reed , lots, Pomeroy village.
Robert Harris, Peggy R. Harris to Michael O'Brien, pa rcel,
· Olive.
Bobby Jones, Estella Jones to
Larry J. Caldwell, Debra S.
Cal dwell , parcel, Columbi a.
George Donova n, Mar lene
Donovan to Marlene Donovan,
1.12 acre, Orange.
·GeralQ R. Douglas, Linda L.
Douglas to Joseph Woodgerd ,
parcels, Columbla /Dyesvilie.
.Leonard Earl VanMeter, dec. to
M. Colleen VanMeter. aka Martha C., affida vit, Middleport and
Pomeroy villages.
Adqie E . Petrel, Ben Earl
Petrel , D.Ja nnie Petra! to Ben
Earl Petrel, lots, Racine village,
Terry D. Talbott, dec. by adm .,
to Ma ry Jan e Talbot!, tracts,
Orange.
Robert J . Reeve to Columbia
Town §lJip , right of way:
Columbia.
·
Keith Myers, Judy Myers,
Louise Lila . Green to Buckeye
Rural Electric Coop., Inc.', right
of way, Scipio.
Timothy B. Walker, Stephani€'
A. Walker to Buckeye Ru ral
Electric Coop., Inc., right of way,
Columbia.

Daily Number
695
Pit k 4
4667
Super Lotto
I 0-20-22-35-39-41

Christmas
countdown

We Reserve The Right To
Umit Quantities

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

•

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY,-OH.

PRICES,EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., DEC. S, 1987

at y

Vol.38, No . 144
Copyrighted 1987

•

•

Low near 30 tonight, chance
of rain 70 percent. Cloudy
Friday, scattered flurries.

•

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 3, 1987

2 Sections, 16 Pages

25 Cenu

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

County replaces four Meigs jail heating units
BUCKET

$

.

219
Steak ••••• ~-

Cube
usDA CHOICE
'
Round Steak .•• ~.$1 99
CORN. KING
Boneless Ham .: $]99
USDA CHOICE
Chuck Roast •••:S1 19

MIXED

Frver Parts •••••••
CHICifEN
·Lea Quarters ••••
COLUlfBIA
Sliced·
Bacon':·::~
KENTUCKY BORDER
.
W1eners •••••••••••••

BY NANCY YOACHAM
· Sentinel Staff Writer
Problems with heating units at
the Meigs County Jail should be
corrected within the next few
weeks. The Meigs County Commissioners Wednesday approved
a quote of $7,138 from Johnson
Conrols, Charleston, W.Va., to
replace four existing units at the
jail, and all the mechanical work
Involved In the replacement.
Replacement of the units will

alleviate the problem of not being
able to regulate heat througho~t
the building. The units must be
ordered and payment will come
from the county's 1988 budget.
Philip Roberts , county . eng!neer, reportedonanOhloDepartment of Transportation Conference which he attended Tuesday
In Columbus. Oneofthesemlnars
he attended was on bicycle paths .
He attended this seminar In
anticipation of assisting Pome-

roy and Middleport In their ·
joint-endeavor to construct a
connecting bike path through the
two v111ages.
Roberts also reported that he
expects by summer the state will
be ready to present criteria on
applying for Issue II funding for
certain types of comrimnity
projects.
Roberts said he has received a
letter of agreement from Southern Ohio Coal Company to

purcha_se the majority of hot mix
material need ed to resurface
approximately one mile of
County Road 27 from Mine No. 2
to Route 689 at Point Rock .
Roberts said SOCCO agreed to
purchase approximately $18,000
to $20,000 of hot mix If the county
highway depar tment would furnish the labor and equipment.
Roberts said the one and one-half
inch layer of hot mlx w111 be
applied In the spring. Roberts

.Bishop to visit Atlanta prison
\

LB.

LB.

FAMU..IAR SIGHT - Salvation Army kettles
are a famUiar sight every holiday season. Here
bell ringer Charles Jones accepts donations for

CALIFORNIA

Celery •••••••••••• 2/·$1

VALLEY BELL

2°/o Milk ••••••••••
·.

GAL.$149

GRADE A

Large Eggs ••••••••
DOZ.

BANQUET FROZEN

SUNSHINE

Dinners ••••••••••••• 89&lt;

Dog Food •••••••••
20 LB.

11

THANK YOU CHERRY

Pie Filling •••••••••
21

SWISS MISS REG. OR MARSH.

12 ENV •.
BOX

79(

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Pow~l 's Supermarket
iiiier Good Thru Dec. 5, 1987

oz.

GOLD MEDAL

HOT COCOA

FLOUR
SLB.

BAG

the organization which Is known
Its Christmas,
as well as year 'round, giving to the underprlvl·
!edged. rhe Army's kettle Is at Krogers.

Stocks ·down in early trading

12 OZ.PKG.

79(

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarktt
Offer Good Thru Ot&lt;. 5, 1987

oz.

·JENO'S FROZEN

Pizza ••••••••••••••1 :~z. 89·&lt;

• DOMINO SUGAR
S LB.

BAG

$149

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Sup~markot
Offer Good Thru Dt&lt;. 5, 1987

MAXWELL HOUSE

COFFEE
3 LB.
CAN

$599 ·

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Dec. S, 1917

elab·o rated by saying tpat he and
In final action, the commisSOCCO have been working fo r sioners approved a reimburseseveral months to finalize this ment of $361.44 to the sheriff's
arrangement. It will be benefi- automobile repair account.
cial to both the county and the
Present for the meeting were
coal company Roberts said.
Co mmissioners Richard Jones
After a short executive session a nd David Koblentz, Roberts,
to discuss personnel matters at David Spencer, highway departthe highway garage, Roberts ment otflce manager, and Stacey
reported that highway depart- ,Shank, 15, of Pomeroy, who sat1n
ment workers are still cutting on the meeting to meet a
brush and are dlichlng on County requirement in attaining the
Road 35.
Eagle Scout ·award.

NEW YORK (UPl) - Stock
The modest back·to-back ad· mixed performance in relatively
prices fell In active early trading
vances In the Dow Industrial quiet trading.
today , confirming Sl.\splclons
average on Monday and Tuesday
The market w!l! probably " be
that the market had already
has provided little comfort to a In a confined range over the next
nervous Wall Street, where ana - few weeks ," said Eugene Peroni
discounted a reduct!on In a key
West Germany Interest rate.
lystsb~lieve the market remains
Jr., chief technical analyst at
TheDowJones!ndustr!alaver- vulnerable to a host of , JanneyMontgomeryScottlnc. ln
age, which rose 6.63 Wednesday ,
uncertalnt!es .
Phllade!ph!a. "That narrow corwas down 15.08 to 1833.89 at 10
"There Is no conv!ct!on," said rldor will be defined by Intermita.m. EST.
Ernie Rudnet, manager of block tent perceptions about the dollar,
Declines led advances 746-339 trading at Mabon, Nugent &amp; Co. Interest rates and Capitol Hill
among the 1,573 issues crossing "lt wouldn't take much for this act!v!ty on the budget."
the New York Stock Exchange market to get battered around.
Peron! said the market "!s
tape. Volume was act!ve, Nor would it take much to go very much pigtailed to the dollar.
amount!ng to about 48.56 million forward. It' s a very neutral However, the concern Is not so
shares during the flrst30m!nutes
market."
much with the Immediate swings
of trading.
·-Rudnet said the market re- but with perceptions as to the
This morning, the Deutsche mained gripped by uncertainty steps (contemplated) to arrest
Bundesbank, West Germany's because "there are just too many its fall . There !s an emerging
central bank, lowered Its dis- . things we don't control," lnclud- senseofconfldenceaboutcoopercount rate from 3 percent to 2.5 lng the outcome of the budget ation among ou r all!es about
percent.
process In Washington, the ef- interest rates."
Tlte Bundesbank counc!l an· forts to stabilize the dollar.
Peroni predicted a ''limited"
nounced the move after meeting moves by trading partners to rally !n the near· term because he
for about four hours amid specu· stimulate their economies and believes the majority of Dow
latlon In the financial markets on consumer spending.
industr ial stocks are oversold .
whether the discount would be
"All of those things are on
"There !s a little window of
cut and by how much. The cut peoples' minds," Rudnet said.
opportunity for traders "Peroni
takes effect Friday .
"Until we starte!lm!natlng some said. "However, we a~e recom··· The Reagan adminlstrat!on of them,:· the uncerta inties and mending only the agile and
had hoped for the rate cu.t as a the " rallies in a bea~ .ma rket "
agresslve enter the market. It !s
means to stimulate the Germany should continue.
too early to put cl!ents (!n the
. economy and Increase export
The stock market failed to market) who are conservative
opportunities for the United sustain a la te afternoon advance and looking for the long term.
States .
Wednesday and closed wi th a

ATLANTA (UPl) - Roman
· Catholic Bishop Agustin Roman,
who helped end an uprising by
Cuban prisoners !n Louisiana ,
planned to go to Atlanta today in
hopes of persuading Cubans at
the federal penitentiary to surrender, the bishop's M!am! office
said.
" It Is meant for me to be
there," Roman said·.
A spokesperson at the bishop's
office confirmed · that Roman
said he plans to leave for Atlanta
sometime today .
Roman , the Cuban-born auxiliary bishop of Miami, sent a
taped message to the 1,107
Inmates at the fortress-like prison Wednesday, urging his fellow
countrymen to be calm and
realistic in their expectations .
Wednesdy night Roman said,
"They are asking for me at this
moment."
Bermldette Mancini, spokes·
woman fo r the archdiocese of
Miami, said Roman was still !n
Miami this morning.
"He said last night that he
would go today," she said. "So
we're waiting for word. "
It was Roman's videotaped
message to 989 Cuban Inmates
who took ·28 hostages at the
Federal Alien Detention Center
In Oakdale, La., that helped end
that siege In its eighth day.
Atlanta Legal Aid lawyer Gary
Leshaw said he acted as an
adviser for the Cuban inmates
Wednesday and "went into the
ramifications of the issues that
they were concerned about" in
settling the standoff, which be·
gan Nov. 23.
"They are quite satisfied with

so me of the issues," Leshaw
said, " bu t there Is one major
stumbling block that is getting In
the way otprogress. "
Leshaw declined to elaborate
on the stumbl!ng block, and .
J ustice Department spokesman
Pat Korten has refused to discuss
any details of the bargaining.
Korten said the last face·toface talks between federal of!lc!als and Cuban Inmate representat i ves was Tuesday
afternoon, "but there have been
a numb e r of phone
conversations."
The Justice Department spokesman said he had not seen an
exact translation of the Catholic
bishop's message to the Inmates ,
"but generally he said, 'Try to be
reasonable about what you are
doing, try to be reasonable about
coining to an agreement on a
settlement." '
Despite the snags !n the negotiations, federal officials expressed optimism Wednesday of
an Impending settlement ·to the
siege at the fire-ravaged prison.
Korten said there appeared to
be a "sincere desire" by the
Cubans to reach , a settlement,
"althOugh it Is h;nportant to
understand that such a settle·
mentIs not immine nt."
One reason for the optimism
was the release Tuesday night of
hostage hostage Abdul-Saboor
Rashdan , 36, as a birthday
pres.;:nt to Carla Dudeck, coordinator of a coalition that has
supported the Cuban detainees.
Rashdan said the hostages
were being treated well and their
worst Initial fear was that federal
officials would try to retake the

prison:
"Once they made the an nouncement In Washington that
they wouldn't Invade !f the
hostages weren 't harmed, we all
signed with relief, and the
Cubans became less tense, "
Rashdan said.
Just before nightfall Wednes·
day, two Inmates complaining of
chest pains - one a Cuban
detainee and one American were taken from the prison to' a
hospital; where they were reported !n good condition .
Cuban inmates decorated a
Christmas tree Wedesday atop
the hospital annex, which has
become a vantage po!ntfor them
to see ralat!ves gathered across
the street and deliver messages
over a loudspeaker .
The Cuban Inmates rioted Nov.
23, burning prison buildings and
seizing hostages after the Cubarr
government agreed to repatriate
soine 2,500 " undesirables" who
came to the United States !n the
1980 Marie! boa tUft. One Inmate
was killed and there were several
Injuries.
The Atlanta riot came less than
two days ~fter Cuban detainees
at . the Oakdale, La., prison
revolted and burned most of the
facil!ty. The Atlanta Inmates say
the accord ending the Louisiana
uprising "duped our Cuban
brothers ,"
Atlanta' s prisoners released a
Jist of eight demands last week In
which they sought to be Included
under the 1966 CubaQ Reform Act
that lets refugees become per·
manent residents after a year
and apply for U.S. citizenship.

Replacement named for ODOT post;
• •
Joseph L. Leach to assume posttwn
A graduate of Kyger Creek
MARIETTA - Warren J .
High
School, Leach received his
Smith, director of the Ohio
Department of Transportation civil engineering degree from
(ODOT), announced Monday Ohio University in 1965 a nd his
that Joseph L. Leach will assume masters deJtree from Marshall
the role of deputy director for University in 1971. He also
ODOT District 10. Leach will earned an associat e degree !n
replace George D. Dougan who mining from Rio Grande College .
Once Leach assum Ps the role of
will retire. Jan. 1.
deputy
d!rector, · he will be
Leach, from Gallipolis, has
responsible
fo r the district's
been a self-employed construcadministra
tive
policy and procetion consultant and ownerdures
!nvolv!ng
the nine county
operator of oil and gas wells since
1983. Between 1964 and 1983, he j ur!sd ict!on.
Leach and his wife, Barbara, a
was an engineer and estimator
for highway co nstr uction and registered nurse, have two childInterstate firms . He was a , ren Charla J . Brown, 19, a
superintendent for Coffey Con- ' sophomore at Rio Gran'de College, and Charles L. Brown, 15, a
struct!on Co .. Raceland, Ky.:
sophomore
at Gall!a Academy
assistant general manager for
High
School.
Vecel!lo and Grogan Inc. , Beck"Joe Leach will be a worthy
ley, W,Va.: vice- pres!den t of the
succes,[or
to George Dougan,
J .J. Blazer Construction Co.,
who
h~
served
his district long
Wheelersburg: and assistant su.
l\.s
an
experienced
and
well
perintendent of the Nat!otlal
Engineering and Contracting hardworking engineer, he wJ.ll be
a valuable asset to the depar t·
.Co., Strongsvllle.
ment, " Smith said.

DONATIOl\1 MADE - Tim Martin, safety
supervisor at Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs l)!vlson No. I mine, presented a S500
donation check to Jerry Black and Marcia Elllol
of the Rutland Emergency Medical Services.

Their service lends .support to the area that
Incorporales the Meigs No. I mine near Salem
Center. There are also a substantial number of
Southern Ohio Coal employees who reside In the
Rutland area.

Trial begins today in
Meigs County Court

NAMED TO POST - Joseph L. Leach of Gallipolis has
been named ODOT District 10
Deputy Director. He will rec
place, George Dougan, who Is
retiring·on Jan. I, 1988.

Jury ·selection began this morning In Meigs County Court in
the State 's case against Gary Wolfe of Racine. Wolfe is charged
with assault and resisting arrest !n conn.ec tlon with incidents
that allegedly occurred Sept. 9 durin g a marijuana Investigation by the Ohio Bureau of Criminal Investigation and the Meigs
Co unt y Sheriff's Department.
Although jury selection was expected to be concluded today,
Meigs County Court Judge Patrick O'Brien did not expect
presentat!on of evidence to begin unt!l Monday.
Judge O'Brien , who stepped down as presiding autho rity In
the case, has be~n replaced by Vinton County Court Judge
Warren Lotz.
'

Burley prices
slip Tuesday
LEXINGTO N, Ky . . (UP!) Burley tobacco prices slipped a
l!ttle Tuesday as nearly 80
percent of the grade averages
were dowri from a day earlier by
mainly $1 to $3 per 100 pounds,
the Federal·State Ma rket News
Service said.
However, more desirable tobacco still sold for around $162
per hundredweight. Tobacco
classified as variegated color
seems to be In th e least demand . ,
the Lexington-based service '
said.

�.

•
Thursday, December 3. 1987
December 3. 1987

Sentinel

The

The Daily Sentinel
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

~~

ts:m~
~v

............. L..-.-,...........,o:::::~,""'

ROBERTL.WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant· Publisher/ Controller
•

•

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of Tlie Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers AII!OCiatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. Allletlers are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be In good taste, addressing Issues, not personal I·

~·

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They don't make
like that anymore

Ohio University overwhelmed
Robert Morris (Pa. ), 87·57; and
Cleveland State topped St. Joseph's (Pa.), 77-72.
At Ann Arbor, Mich .. Gary
Grant scored 26 points, hitting 12
of 26 field goals, including two 9f
three 3-polnters to pace the
Wolverines. He also passed for 8
assists, speared 2 rebounds,
blocked a shot and collected two
steals.
"Gary was steady, although he
was careless with the ball ,"
Michigan coach Blll Frle!jer
satd: "He's got to cut down on the
furnovers. ''
Two 3-polnters by Steve Martenet helped the Falcons , 2-1, to a
quick 1()..8 lead. But Michigan,
3·1, raced ahead with 15 straight
points.
"We got a little bit disorganIzed and turned the ball over,"
Bowling Green coach Jim Lar-

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H.B. 309 has been introduced I can guess what polltlcal party
. lpto t~e Ohio General Assembly Ms . Campbell belongs to. Teddy
· by Jane Louise Campbell of
Kennedy would love that blll and
• Cleveland. This bill wlll require If It ever reaches Governor
: the local phone company to Celeste's desk he will sign lt. He
· provide low-cost service to low- believes in "big daddy"
1ncome people. I think low·cost government.
really means free.
I am not in the poor class yet.
You know who wlll pay that but am In the making ends meet
: bill, don ' t you? Middle income C'lass, right next to the poor. I
: l)hlerlcans who arc carrying this need some help on getting the
•country on their backs, that is . rats out of our house and would
• who will pay the bill. The phone like to have my toes tickled every
· company will find some way of morning just before I jump out of
Putting it on YOUR bill. This idea bed. Who do I apply to?
of free phones is just another
Gayle Price
layer of bloated welfare. I bet you

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CLEVELAND (UPI) - Cleveland ln(!lans' third base coach
Johnny Gory! and bullpen coach
Luis Isaac wlllbe back In their
positions next year, but hitting
coach Bobby Bonds has been
released.
Bonds. 41, the hitting coach for
the last four seasons, said Wed·
nesday club officials telephoned
to tell him he had been released,
"You're always disappointed
when something llke this
happens," Bonds told The Cleve· land Plain Dealer in a telephone
Interview from his Oakland,
Call!., home. "But you're hired to
be fired. I'll start all over.
hopefully. I want to stay In
baseball. I'm planning to call
some clubs."

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By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio J.D.
Graham says he doesn't have a
Division V football "dynasty" at
Newark Cathollc High School.
Mogadore's Norm Lingle figures
If not, It's the next best thing.
NC and Mogadore meet Satur·
day afternoon (2: 30) In Ohio
Stadium for the Division V
championship, both entering the
game with 13-0 records.
"I don't know If It's a dynasty,
but it's Incredible," Lingle said
of the Green Wave's record.
which includes the last three
small school titles, four out of the
last five, five overall and eight
straight appearances In the
championship game. Besides Its . .
five titles, NC also has lost four
Urnes In the finals.
"J.D. is 180·19 at Newark
Cathollc," said Lingle, whose
1979 Wlldcats won the small
school title. "Even If' you're
playing at! girls schools, which
they don't, you couldn't have that
type of record. We're 117-40-1
here and we feel like we .have a
great program, but It looks llke
Abbott and Costello compared
with what he's done."
Graham, In hls17thyear atNC,
has posted a record comparable
!o the great Cincinnati Moeller
teams under Gerry Faust, but
says "I don't consider it a
dynasty"
"I just'· like. to feel we have the
best Division V program In
Ohio," said Graham. "We have a

SUPER SIZE BLACK MATRIX SCREEN

Ohio scores

Wales Conference
Patrick Dl\lklon

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New Jeraey ..... 13 8
WMhlnpon ""' 11 11
Plttlburrh ......... a 11

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Minnesota ....... 10 II 3 U
Torolllto ........... 10 12 2 !%
Chk:ap ..._........ ID 13 2 22
St. LaWti ............l 12 2 2e
Sm)'Ute Division
Calpr7 ........... 14 8
31
Edmoaton ...... , 14 Ul 2 3t

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WJaaJpeJ ......... ll 12

ELEtTAIC

DRWER

On this date in history:
In 1859, abolitionist John Brown was hanged for his raid on the

•

105

Allam• Dl¥181on
'I 8 SS Ill
Boscon ............. 15 10 I 32
Buffalo ..............9 12 4 12
Quebec ............ ID I! 1 n
74
llardord ........... .8 10 4 10
Campbell Conference

Montreal ......... 16

A thought for the day: American financier Frank Vanderllp said, ·
"A·conservat!Ve Is a person who does not think anything should be
done for the first time."

Mlchl~tP

WLTPts. GF G.o\

..

federa l arsenal at Harper 's Ferry.
In 1921,' the Model A Ford was Introduced as the successor to the
Model T. The Model A roadster had a sticker price of $395.
· In 1942, the "Atomic Age" was born when scientists demonstrat~:d
the first self·sustalning nuclear chain reaction at a laboratory below
the stand~ at the University of Chicago football stadium.
In 1961, President Fidel Castro disclosed he was a communist,
acknowledging he concea led the fact untll he solldlfled his hold on
Cuba.
Tn 1982, 62-year-old retired dentist Barney Clark became the first
person to receive a permanent artificial heart. He survived 112 days.

Oblo Collea:e Buketball ResuJ1s

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE

NV l•lander11 ... l8

,
By United Press International
Today Is Wednesday, Dec. 2, the 336th day o!l987 wlth29 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this dale are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include French painter Georges Seurat In 1859; circus co·founder
Charles Ringllng in 1863; engineer Peter Carl Goldmark,lnventor of
the long-playi ng record, In 1906; actor Ray Walston In 1914 (age 73);
opera singer Marla Callas in 1923; former Secretary of State
Alexander Haig Jr. in 1924 (age 63): actress Julie Harris In 1925 (age
62); Attorney General Edwin Meese in 1931 (age 56), and · figure
. sk~ttcr Randy Gardner in 1958 (age 29).

REG. 51995

$1497

lot of very average football
players who a lot of times play
bigger and b,etter than they are. I
guess it's just tradition."
Saturday's meeting wlll be the
fourth in playoff competition
between Newark Catholic and
Mogadore. TheGreenWavehave
won the pre"v!ous three, Including
28-21 in 1983 and 42·28 in 1985 In
games Graham calls "classics."
Both Newark Catholic,. ranked
No. 1 all season by the UPI Board
of Coaches, and No.3 Mogadore,
have balanced offenses, not
relying heavlly on the running or
passing game as In previous
years.
"They run the ball better than
other Mogadore teams In the
past," Graham said, "and they
stlll have the ability to throw."
Newark Catholic has won 54 ·or
Its last 55 games, broken only by
a 14-13 loss a year ago to Watkins
Memorial. The Green Wave's 14
consecutive playo!fs wins Is a
state record, topping Moeller's
.
previous mark of 13.
The playoff weekend gets
started Friday at 4 p.m. with the
Division II title game between
Steubenville (12·1) and Akron
Buchtel (11-1), followed at 7:30
by Columbus Academy (13·0)
against Gates Mills Hawken
(11·1) for the Division IV title.
At 11 a.m. Saturday, Thorn•
vllle Sheridan (13·0) and Young·
stown Cardinal Mooney (11·1)
meet In the Division III cham·
plonshlp contest, while Clncln·
nat! Princeton (11-1) and Board-

Scoreboard ...
NHL results

$267
REG. S359

lUTOMlTI~

WISHER

I

I:J

Vaaeouwr .........9 l8 3 !1
Lot AD1eln .......'l 14 4 18
WedDelcla,y '• Results

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81

85

12! It
91
90 t9
86 Dt
&amp;8 122

119

Soliton II, Hartford 3
Vancouver J, MoniN!al3 4Ue)
NY lalanden '7, PUllbUI'Jh I

REG. S419

NV KA~~Cen atBotlOD, 7: §p.m .
Hardord - Pblladelphla, l : 31 p.m.
Quebec M Buffalo, '7: SS p.m.

St. LouiJa&amp;NewolereeJ, 7:45p.m.
Teronto at C.lpry, t : II p.m.
Wl•lpel at Loa ..\.a pie., 10: II p.m.
Prld.,'• GattM!I ·
NY hlalldera U WMhiQ&amp;ton, alaht
Olk:ap II De&amp;roH,IIIJbl

Sports Traa•ctiOM

Jlaaeball

O!ICMJO (NL) ' - Slped outfielder
Jerry Mumphn!y to 1·)1lar coutrad. •
Clevelaad- flred llltthw coach Bobby
Bonds; recalned thlrd-b.e eoachJobany
Gor)'l and buUpen caach Lui&amp; laaac;
nil.med Mark Wiley pUdlinJ coach, Tom
Speacer flnt-bue coach aad Charlie
Manuel hJUiar coach.
Los An 1elet - Ia red lerey Mo1111es a•
scout In l"berto IUoo.
· PHtAhuf1h - Elected Oa~t~IU Daa·
forth chairman and C:arl Bars:er
president
Baakelball
Albany iCBA)- Stped loi'WIIrd Ken

.

LA Laken - Placed awlnpnan oleff
Lamp on lll.lun!d U.t.

PIIU. .elplllla - Slped tuanl Gerald
Header.a• &amp;o I· year cencrad.
8aerameate - Announced auard
Derek Sml\h wUI be placed oo lnjuredllst.
Collep
MJ,anl - Baaketball player LemUill
Howard anao.mced he la leavlnJIClbool.
Fooltall
Atllaca - Place4 t11M end Kea
Wbile.. ua&amp; on IIIJlln!d re~rw.
Hotaion- Slane• pwater Jeff Gouett
cemerbaek ToiQ New.om.
L4. Runa - Rele~d fullback Owen
Gill: slped fv.llback Da~ld .Uam1.

-.o•

Calendar '
Golf ~rao, na. - 1150,100 MJxed
Te11111 Cluilc
.:
Soccer
MaJor buloor Soe&lt;~er Leapt
Clevelud at Baltimore, 7:31
Tunis

,.m.

Nf!W Yort -IIOI,.ONahltrt:o Mullen

men'a Gran• Prix

~·edne!lday'a

Df!mwer Activated pard Mike
Evan1; waiYed forward Andre Moo~•

Thllfllda,y's Games

I'

Transactions

JehnAOa.

Ddroti 1, Edmoatoa 4
8&amp;.
5, Qlleap .I

t.o•

$367

Wed., Dec. 2
ll'l, BowUar Greea ·n

Kent State 'JI, Trl St~~ote lind) 'JI
Daytoa '10, Miami IS
Toledo 8S, MIIIDflio&amp;a lli
Cleveland St 'TJ, Sf: .la1M!pb'8 (Pa) 11!
Ohio Unlv In, Robert Morrla (Pa) 57
Heidelher1 8~, F1ndlay •
John Carron ,., Marietta S8
Ohio "'es1eJaa l2, Ohio Northern 16
Wooster 73, Hiram M

78
76

I USPS 14 ~9 6&lt;! )
A Division of Multimedia, Inc.

Nebraska before taking the Galll· Columbus Clippers of the Inter·
polls job, was the Baltimore national League.
The three·time all-star, who
Orioles pitching coach last year,
whlle Spencer coached the Gen· began his major leagtle career In
eva Cubs In the New York-Penn 1968 with the San Francisco
Giants, hit .268 ~lth 332 home
League.
Bonds, whose son Bar!.')' plays runs and 461 stolen bases.
He played for the Giants
for the Pittsburgh Pirates, said
he enjoyed working for the through 1974 and later played for
Ex-GAHS Coach Hired
the New York Yankees, CaliforIndians. ·
The Indians also named l\iiark
"It's a good organization," nia Angels, Chicago White Sox,
W !ley, who coached Gallla Bonds said. ''The people are hard Texas Rangers, Indians, St.
Academy High School to Sou- · workers. I want to see them win Louis Cardinals and Chicago
theastern Ohio League basket· the pennant.
Cubs.
ball and baseball championships
Bonds Is the only player to hit
"If I'm not working, I'll be In
in 1959 and 1960, as pitching the stands when the Indians play at least 30 home runs and steal30
coach and Gallipolis native and in Oakland. I'll follow them all bases In a season more than
former GAHS three-sports star year as closely as I follow my .twice. He did It five times.
Tom Spencer as first base coach. son," he said.
Wylle, who managed in the
Bonds' playing career came to
class D League at North Platte, an end In 1982 with the Class AAA

Mlaaeuta - 81petlllaebacker Pek!r
Najarla•; waive• ruard Michael
Durrell.
New EBJiaad - 8ipd wide receiver
DeaDlaOath...
NY Glutl - Placed wide rec.lwr
SCIC)' Bobl1110a oa lhjured rMerw;
IIKaed detellllve lac~ Bill BerthuiW!In. 1.

cro~

man (11·2) decide the Division I
title Saturday night at 7.
·
Princeton, whlc h set a playoff
scoring record with Its 55·6·
semlflnal win over Toledo
Whitmer last Saturday In Ohio
Stadium, Is a two-time former
champion. The Vikings won In
1978 and again In 198,3.
Steubenvllle also has a previous state title, the Big Red
beating Whitehall 12-9 In over·
time In 1984.
Youngstown Cardinal Mooney
won the big school championship
back In 1973, the second year of
the playoffs when It was Class
AAA, and also took the Division
II title In 1982.
The Academy-Hawken game
In Division IV, matches No. 1
against No.2 and also showcases
Hawken's O.J. McDuffie, one of
the state's premier backs.
McDuffie rushed for 213 yards
and scored three touchdowns In
Hawken's 21-14 semifinal win
over Archbold last weekend .

I

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohi o, by the Ohio Valley Pub·

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Ohio

POSTMASTER: Send address changes
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Local bowling

Saturday Sunrise Youtl'! U!ape

I

Week of 11·07417

TEAM STANDINGS
WON WST
Team #5 Blue Streak Cab ............. 33
7
Team #2 ..... .. ........................ ..... 21 19
Team #l ....... ...... .. .......... .. .. ..... ..... 20 20
Team #6 ........................... ......... . 17 23
Team #4 .. .... ..........
.. .... .... 16 24
Team #8 ..................................... 13 'l:r

TEAM STANDINGS
WON LOST
Team #:i Blue Streak Cab ............ 41
7
Team til ................... .... ............ ;: 26 22
Team P2 .......... .... ...... .... .. .. .... ...... 25 23
Team it6 ........
.. ..................... 19 29
Team 113 .......... ... ........ . ............. .. 17 31
Team 114 .... ,....
.. .................. 16 32

Team Series: #5 Slut' Streak Cab-865;
Team #J.860; Team 113-772.
Team High Game: Team #5 Blue STreak

Team Ser'lcs: 1!5 Blue St reak Cab--96..1;
Team #4-851; Team #3·74K
Team High Ga m e: Team tiS Blue Streak

Cab-321; Team #1·310; 290.
High Series: Tim P eterson-333; HeaT h
Shoemakff·273; Jason Ryan ·266; LeeGlllllan -314; Candy Hen slcy-233; Raehacl
Hawley-204.
•
High Game: Tim Peterson-123. 121;
Jamie Barre-lt-116, Lee Gillilan-108. 106,

;

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Inland Dally Press Associatio n and th.e
Ohio Ne-w spa per Associ at ion. Nat lona1
Advert is ing RepresPI')tatlve, Branham
Newspaper Sales, 733 Thll'd Avenue,
New York, New York 10017.

Saturday Sunrise Youth Lea.1{11e
Week olll-14-81

100.

.

.

The Daily Sentinel

Bonds wlll be replaced by
Charlie Manuel, who recently
became a roving hitting coach
for the Minnesota Twins. He was
a former head coach for the Class
AAA Toledo Mud Hens and the
Maine Guides of the Ipterna·
tiona! League.

Newark·eyes another

SOUND

RCA

Model GMFI651F'I

daddy' government

record to 2·0. The.. Redskins,
paced by Eric Newsome's . 22
points, fell to 1·2. ·
At Philadelphia, William Tom·
lin hit a three·polnter to break a
72·72 tie with 2: 54 remai ning to
lead Cleveland State to its
victory over s 't. Joseph's.
The Vikings, led by Eric
Mudd's 17 points and 11 rebounds, won despite the efforts of
St. Joseph's Rodney Blake, who
scored 18 points and blocked 12
shots. Blake broke his own
record lor blocKed shots and was
. two blocks short of the NCAA
record set last year by David
. Robertson of Navy.
.
Cleveland State upped its slate
to 2-0 while the Hawks sUpped to
1·2.
In other games, Heidelberg
blasted Findlay, 88·69; John
Carroll beat Marietta, 74-58; ·
Ohio Wesleyan stopped Ohio
Northern , 72-66; a nd Wooster
downed Hiram, 73-56.

ranaga said . "At (hat point, thl'
game was over lor us in terms of
the win. "
Martenet led the Falcons with
19 points and Anthony Robinson
had 13, Including 9 in the second
half.
At Kent, Eric Glenn scored 18
points and Stacy Williams added
15 to pace Kent State past
Tri-State. The Flashes Improved
to 2-1 whlle Tri-State dropped to
2-3.
At Athens, the OU Bobcats got
double-figure scoring from five
players, led by Paul Graham's 22
points, in pos ting their first win of
the season against Robert Mor·
rls. Both teams are now 1-2 on the
season.
At Oxford, Negele Knight hit a
10-foot jumper with 10 seconds
remaining in the game to give
Dayton , Its narrow win over
Miami. Knight finished with 11
points and had four assists In
-.,;.;.;:..;.;;.;;,.biiiooiiis t their

Gallia's Torn Spencer new Indians coach

SAMSUNG

Letters to the editor
~big

Minnesota had overcome e(lrly
klns tried to take the loss
turnovers
to take a 15-point lead
phl!osophlcally. "\V~en you're
with an eight-point run midway
trying to rebuild a pr{)gram these
through the first half. Ray
are the things you have llve
Gaffney's jumper from the
through , We got beat by a fine
corner put the Gophers up 17-9 at
ballclub," Haskll)s said.
9:00.
Both teams traded baskets
Minnesota widened Its lead to
early In the second half before
35-20 at the 2: 55 mark on
Toledo put on an eight-point run.
Newbern's fastbreak layup.
Wade's second-straight threepointer gave the Rockets a 51'47
Newbern ted the Gophers with
advantage at 9: 59. ·
eight points In the half.
The Mid-American Conference
Richard Coffey led Minnesota
with 16 points, while Melvin
Rockets used the free throw line
to widen their lead against the · Newbern added 14 and J lm
.cold-shooting Gophers of the Big Shlkenjanskl had 12.
.
Ten. Haar's two free-throw's at
Another MAC team also faced
2:04 put the. Rockets up 73-65.
a Big Ten opponent Wednesday
Toledo's 11-polnt run before the night, but was unable to pull off
end of the first half kept the an upset. · Bowling Green was
Rockets in •the contest. Led by defeated 92· 71 by the 13th· ranked
Haar's 12 points and Branch's Michigan Wolverines .
basket just before the buzzer,
Elsewhere, · Kent State deToledo pulled to within 35-31 at feated Tri-State (Ind.), 79-71;
intermission.
Dayton nipped Miami, 70-69;

Mark Wylie also named to post

By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (U PI) -A researcher accuses textbook publishers
of displaying "cowardice, commercialism, condescension and
crasssness" in reporting American history.
'-'Figures like John Adams are being pushed out of American
history textbooks to be replaced by Florence Kelley, the fqunder of
trye National Consumer League," he complains.
.
·
Shucks, and I assumed every schoolchild ~till was taught that John
Adams was . our second president and the {itther of John Quincy
~dams, the sixth. Otherwise, I would have adaressed the pushing-aut
tssue sooner.
Frankly, history lessons and all, I never heard of Florence Kelley
before. I guess history texbooks were remiss on that score 'I' hen I was
In school.
However, I am perfectly willlng to believe she founded the National
Consumer League. Somebody had to do It, dldn'tthey? Look out for us
consumers, I mean.
I also am male chauvinist pig enough to believe she had a better
figure than John Adams.
.
Likewise, I deem it within the realm of possibility that textbook
publishers are guilty of "cowardice, condescension and crassness."
It is when they are accused of "commerclallsm" that my credulity [s .
weakened.
The middle name of. John Adams, if he had one, is unknown to me. I
do know, however, thai the president who served between George
Washington and Thomas Jefferson came from a distinguished
Massachusetts family of Johns.
. ·
Adams' father was named John and for all I know his grandfather
might have been, too.
In his native state, apparently, you could give your first-born son a
middle name like Quincy with impunity. That must have been before
the Fltzgeralds were Invented. Fortunately for all of us, the oldest chlld in the Adams famlly was a
girl and was named for her mother. Otherwise, our sixth president
might have been a boy named Abigail.
·.
And then where would we be? Talk about wimps in the current
campaign'
.
.
Plain John adams, incidentally, could have been his own vice
president. At ~;~ny rate. he got as many Electoral College votes for
veep as he did for the higher office.
,
(See former Chief Justice Warren Burger, head of the commission
appointed to plan the celebration of the 200th anniversary of the
Constitution, about this flaw in the electoral system.)
Be that as it may, we are told our s~ond president was the first to
serve only one term. Unlike his predecessor, who had to beg off
serving a third term, Adams was defeated for re-election.
(Maybe those early electors knew someth.ing.)
The former first lady, incidentally, was one of the Smith girls and
her daughter married a man named Smith. Identification must have
been fairly easy, however.
One became Abigail Smith Adams and the other Abigail Adams
Smith. You don ' t get much ·s tufflike that in American history books
nowadays.

More

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Toledo upsets Big I 0 foe Minnesota, 83-75
By United Press International
Toledo coach Jack Eck says
accurate free throw shooting and
Min~esota's
compla .c ency
helped his Fto~ltetsscore an·upset
victory over the Gophers
Wednedsay night.
Jeff Haar scored 19 point's and .
. Keith Wade and William Branch
chipped In with 17 apiece to lead
Toledo to an 83-75 triumph over
the Gophers before 10.082 fans In
Minnesota's Wllllams Arena .
"They got a little complacent
when they got the lead," said
Eck. "We hit our free throws
down the stretch and that
helped."
Toledo used 37-43 foul shooting,
Including Haar's perfect 13-13
free throw performance, to
mount their second half comeback after tralling 35•31 at
i-ntermission.
Minnesota coach Clem Has-

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Pomeroy, Ohio

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Hig h Series: Tim Pelerson-388; HeaTh
Shoemaker·318: John Dodson-295: Candy
H('nsley-298; Rachael Hawley-284.
Hlgh Gam{&gt;: 'Ilm Pelerson ·l42: John
Dodson-136; Tim Pf.'terson-132: Candy
Hens ley-105, Rac hael Haw ley-104, Ca ndy
Henslcy-98.

Outside Meigs Coun&amp;y

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No\v,
If
You
Want
All
This,_
Fried Fish Filet or Ribeye Steak or Fried Chicken Breast

Spielman

Lombardi
fmalist
HOUSTON (UP I) -Ohio State
linebacker Chris Spielman, one
of-four Ilnallsts (or the Lombard!
Award, says the firing of Buck·
eyes coach Earle made him
realize college football Is a
11
money business.''
"Maybe I was blinded," Spiel·
man said Wednesday. "I didn't
realize how the administration
ran the program. I wanted to
know why he . was fired and 1
talked to the (school) president
(Edward Jennings) personally.
All he said was he couldn't say .
why and he unders toed how we
felt. It just showed how college
football is a money business and
shows how poll tics Is Involved."
Spielman said the Bruce firing
capped a disappointing season
that started with former OSU
wide receiver Crls Carter being
ruled Ineligible to playbecauseo!
deallngs with a sports agent.
"It was a disappointing year
for our team," he said. "I think
we all know the reason for that."
Spielman Is the favorite to win
the Lombardi Award, which
honors the nation's top lineman.
The three other finalists are
Syracuse nose ·guard Ted Gregory, Oklahoma light end Keith
Jackson and Auburn defensive
tackle Tracy Rocker, the only
junior In the group.
The winner wlll be named
tonight at the 18th annual Lombard! Award dinner, sponored by
the Rotary Oub of Houston. The
award Is named after legendary
·coach Vince Lombardi, who died
of cancer. Proceeds· from the
dinner benefit the American
Cancer Society.
'
Former Kansas City Chiefs
quarterback Len Dawson wlll
serve as master of ceremonies
for the awards dinner. NFL
referee Jim Tunney Is the fea·
turgct speaker.
•

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..

..

�Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 3. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~ctory,

Oilers cop fourth straight
By \Jnited Press ln.ternational
league," Gall!\nt said, " Winning
Tne Edmonton Oilers lack a game ilke this will help our
their mystique of invincibility confidence. II you can beat
these days, but-a· victory over the Edmontop you can beat anyone
defending Stanley Cup cham- in the league."
pions .stili means something
Detroit jumped to a 3·0 lead in
speciaL
the first 3:09 of the game. Brent
John Chabot and Gerard Gal- Ashton converted Petr Klima 's
lant each scored a pair of goals rebound 42 seconds Into the first
Wednesday night to lead the · period, Gallant scored his first
Detroit Red Wings to their fourth goal of the game at i :02, and
straight victory, a 7-4 triumph Shawn Bllrr added a power-play
over the Oilers at Joe _L0 uis goal at 3:09.
Arena.
''We felt contident when we
"If you don't beat Edmonton, were ahead 3-0," Gallant said.
you don't get respect around the "It was far from ov~r. but it's

tough lor teams to come back
against us when we're up 3·0. "
Craig Simpson scored the first
of his three goals for Edmonton
at -8:10, but the Red Wings
answered with goals by Chabot at
8:10 and Gallant at 11:47 to take a
5-1 lead. Chabot's goal was his
first In his last 21 games.
Detroit scored five goals in
eight shots against starting
goalie Grant Fuhr.
"It wasn 't all his fault," Oilers
Coach Glen Sather said. "We got
beat outside, we got beat Inside,
we gave the puck away four or

each scored first-period goals to
enable New- York to snap the
Penguins' four -game unbeaten
streak . Pittsburgh has failed
behind 3-0 five times in Its last
seven games, recording a 1-2-2
record in that span. Pat Riggin
nas been in goal for four of those
games.
Blues 5, Blackhawks I
At St. Louis, Bernie Federko
scored a goal and had ' three
assists and Rob Ramage added
hvo goals as the . Blues sent
Chicago to its fifth loss in six
games. The Blackhawks are
2-12·1 on the road this season.

CINCINNATI (UPI)- College
football coaches believe nearly
one in three of the nation's top
football programs commit se·
rious rules violations, a survey
conducted by a group of criminologists at the University of Cincinnati says.
0(
the 192 ·h ead football
coaches at Division I and I-AA
college programs, 122 responded
to the survey released Tuesday.
Coaches addressed questions regarding now often they believed
violations of NCAA rules OC·
curred, causes for those infrac·
tlons and possible rule reforms.

Gary Harrison niember
·of Cedarville cage.squad
CEDARVILLE - Cedarville
freshman guard Gary Harrison,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Gary M.
Harrison of 23 Neil Ave., has been
a significant part of the Yellow
Jackets' 5-0 start, according to
head coach Don Callan.
Harrison, a former ali-star -at
Gallla Academy who Is the
• all-time leading scorer in Blue
:.Devil boys' cage history, has not
· started lor the Yellow Jackets,
but has been Callan's first guard
off the be nch so far in the season.
To date he has averaged 21
minutes on the floor, shot 12 of 21
from the field and 12 of 15 from
the foul line. He is averaging
: about eight points per game.
"There may be times this
season when Gary will he called
upon to score," said Callan.
"However, he understands that
1te has a different role this
season, and that is to run the bali
club. We have enough firepower
that presents a balanced attack.
Gary's balihandilng and passing
. _ have already been _key weapons

for us."
However, he has scored in
double figures twice, Including
an IS-point performance against
Judson (Ill.) College in the first
game of the Cedarville

AND

:

Friday;s games

'

Logan at Jackson
Marietta at Athens
Gallipolis at ,Warren Local
Kyger Creek at Hannan Trace
North Gallia at Southwestern
Eastern at Oak Hill
Southern at Symmes Valley
. Northwest at Wheelersburg
Waverly at Lucasville Valley
Hillsboro at Greenfield
Minford at Portsmouth West
Meigs at VInton County
Saturday's Games·
Galllpolls at Chesapeake
Wheel ersburg at Jackson
Zanesville at Portsmouth
Cambridge at Warren Local

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CLEVELAND (UPI) - North
Coast Athletic Conference champion Allegheny captured two of
the three Individual NCAC postseason honors and Kenyon College the other In voting by league
coaches.
Kenyon quarterback Eric
Dahlquist, a junior from Deerfield, Ill., the NCAC leader In
both passing yards and touchdown passes, was voted the Mike
Gregory Award as player of the
year on offense.
Allegheny junior defensivd
tackle Mike Parker, of Cleveland'
Collinwood High School, was
named vnnner of the Hank
Critchfield Award as the defen·
sive player of the .year.
The Gators' Peter Vaas also
was selected as the league's
coach of the year by hls peers.
Dahlquist, a 6-foot-6, 214pounder, passed for 1, 764 yards
and 10 touchdowns. He established or equalled four confer·
ence and six Kenyon passing
records.
In a 42-26 loss to Case Western
Reserve on Sept. 26, Dahlquist
completed 31 of 61 pases for 379
yards and lour touchdowns, ail
NCAC" single-game records.
Parker, a 6-foot, 260-pounder,
led the nation's sixth-bes t scorIng defense vnth a total of 90
tackles, 36 of them unassls ted
and 22 behind the line of
scrimmage.
Vaas, In his second season at
Allegheny, located In Meadville,
Pa., led the Gators to a 9·0-1
overall regular season record,
6-0 in the NCAC, and a No. 5
ranking in the final NCAA
Division III football poll.

ies. #22.098

POMER9Yr OHIO

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PHOTO'S BY HONEY PORTRAITS

power the Cowboys, 2·0. Wyom·
lng shot 80 percentfrom the 'floor
In the first half, compared to 30
percent for the Buffaloes, In
building a 51-24 lead at intermission. Robyn Davis had 16 points
for the Cowboys, while Scott
Wilke led Colorado with 25.
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Gary
~ Grant scored 26 points and Glen
Rice added 19 to propel the
Wolverines. Sean Higgins added
12 points for Michigan, 3-1, while
Grant collected eight assists.

Steve Martenet led the Falcons,
1-1, with 19 points and Anthony
Robinson added 14.
.
At Raleigh, N.C., Chuckle
Brown scored 19 poln ts and
Vinnie Del Negro had 18 to help
the Wallpack. Charles S}:lackleford added 16 points, 13 In the
second half, for N.C. State, 2-0,
and freshman Rodney Monroe
had 13 points, ali in the second
half. Nate Johnston led the
Spartans, 2-1, with 23 points.
Freshman Fred Lewis added 15

points and Terry Rupp 11.
In o ther games, it was: Army
73, Bucknell 71: Cleveland State
77, St Joseph's 72: Connecticut
69, Yale 59; Dartmouth 89, Holy
Cross 63; St. John's 82, Farlelgh
Dickinso n 68; Villanova 84, Penn
55; Southern Mississippi 107,
McNeese State 74; Dayton ·70,
Malml 69; Illinois 86, Chicago
State 57; Nebraska 92, Texas
A&amp;M 60; Mississippi State 72,
Rice 68; Utah 86, Providence 62
and Washington 73, Portland 63.

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catcher Mike Lavalliere, Minnesota Twins third baseman Garv
Gaettl, Toronto Blue Jays outfielder Jesse Barfield, New York
Mets first baseman Keith Hernandez, St. Lnuls Cardinals third
baseman Terry Pendleton, and Chicago Cubs outfielder Andre
Dawson. The other 12 vnnners were not present for the ceremony.
(UPI)

GOLD GLOVE WINNERS- Rawlings announced in New York
Wednes day the winners of their coveted Gold Glove Awards. On
hand to recel:ve the trophies are, left to right, Plt!sburgh Pirates

Allegheny cops
two major awards

... ·

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.-

In other games involving
ranked teams, No: 11 Wyoming
ripped Colorado 100-68, No . 13 .
Michigan routed Bowling Green
92·71 and No. 20. North Carolina
State romped past Division II
Tampa 85-60.
At Boulder, Colo., Fennis
Dembo totaled 19 points, 10
reboun,ds and five assists to

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DATE: ,Saturday, Dec. S, 1987

42-1130

By \Jniled Press lnlernatlonal
When guard Curtis Aiken finIshed his career at Pittsburgh,
Coach Paul Evans needed a
shooter to take the pressure off
life Inside game of Charles Smith
and Jerome Lane . _
Freshman Sean Miller showed
evidence We«)nesday night he
may be that shooter.
Miller scored 20 points, connecting on ali six of his 3-polnt
attempts, to help the No. 4
Panthers to an 88-70 victory over
St. Francis (Pa. )
With the Red Flash defense
sagging on Smith and Lane, the
Panthers, 2·0, could only manage
a 36-34 halftime advantage.
MIUer, however, scored 11 points
and dished out six of his seven
assists after the Intermission to
open up Pitt's lead.
"He pretty much has the green
light to shoot the bali when the
defense Is sagging," Evans said.
"He is one of the more poised
freshman I have coached. He
really doesn't make many
mistakes."
Smith finished with 19 points,
~~ in the second half, and Lane
scored 14 points and grabbed 14
rebounds.
"I thought Sean Miller did a
great job," first-year St. Francis
Coach Jim Baron said. ''He did a
great job of shooting the 3-pointer
and shooting It vnth confidence.
We knew If we were going to get
beat, weweregoingtogetbeatby
their freshmen o·n the

perimeter."

11·

PHOTO SPECIAL
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On Otterbein team
WESTERVILLE - Former
Lady Eagle Angie Spencer, a 5-8
j unlor post player for the Otterbein women 's basketball team,
has begun her career vnth the
"Cardinals, according to Cardinal
head coach Mary Beth Kennedy .
Spencer, whose first two years
in college were spent at Marietta
College, where she lettered in
basketball, and at Shawnee State
University, was a four-time
ail-SVAC selection and as a
senior a t Eastern High School,
was an honorable mention ail state pick.
The Cardinals, who flnished
last season at 16-9 overall and
10-6 In the conference, will begin
the 1987-88 season against Dyke
College Saturday in the Penn
State/ Behrend Tournament.
They will begin Ohio Athletic
Conference· play at Wiittenberg
on December L

Reg.
199.95

Start computing right away

In vita tiona!.
Harrison and his teammates
w1U travel southeast to play Rio
Grande on January 23. The
Yellow Jackets will host the
Redmen on February 20.

son was injured during the game
and three players were riding the
bench in foul trouble In the
second half didn't help the
Galllans' chances for victory,
though Johnson picked up 13
points In the contest.
The Defenders' next contest Is
Friday, at 8:30p.m., when they
host Grace Christian School as
part of a four-team invitational
tournament hosted by OVCS.

129Q~

percent of the coaches said
nearly all or most Division I
coaches are "very honest and
have high ethical standards ."
Most coaches, 67.2 percent,
said an excessive emphasis on
winning creates cheating.
Revision of the NCAA's existIng rules was "strongly" backed
by 59.1 percent of the coaches and
"favored" by 33.9 percent.
"The context for reforms are
ripe," said Francis Cullen, a
criminology protessor at UC and
the chief researcher.
Athletes' drug use was another
subject which the survey addressed In detaiL
Nearly 46 percent said marlju~na use by players was a
"serious" problem, while 35
percent felt the same way about
cocaine use. Alcohol use was
rated "very , serious" by 45
percent of the coaches.

Pittsburgh Panthers post 88-70 victory

ELECTRONICS GIFT

Fainiew posts 79-43 victory
ASHLAND, KY. - The Fair·
view Eagles of Ashland, Ky.,
hosted Ohio Valley Christian
School's Defenders .In hardwood
action Tuesday night and
breezed past the visitors 79-43.
The Eagles' Hobbs led the
home team's offensive effort
with 17 points, followed by 13
from Boggs and 10 !rom Shultz.
Defender forward John Keenan,
who grabbed 10 rebounds and
had six steals, led ali scorers with
20 points.
Strong inside play was cited for
the Eagles ' victory, as their
pivotman was In the midst of a
scoring thrust that put the hosts
up 35-21 at halftime. The fact that
Defenders' forward Brady John-

The survey reported that 31.1
percent of responding coaches
believe Division I schools regu ·
larly commit serious violations
and 49.6 percent have sinned In
the last five years.
But at the same time, 73.3

r'\_,_Shop Now and Avoid the Holiday Rush!
Most Stores Open Late Until Christmas

GARY HARRISON

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Coaches say one in
three schools ·cheat

7-4, over Red Wings

five times. They came after 'us Sylvain Turgeon, Dave Babych
and Scot Klelnendorst had goals
and we didn't do much to deter
lor the Whalers.
them ."
Canadlens 3, Canucks 3
In other games, Boston topped
At
Montreal, Stephane Richer
Hartford 5·3, Vancouver and
and
Chris
Chellos each sco~ed a
Montreal skated to a 3-3 tie, the
.
second-period
goal to help the
New York Islanders dumped
..
Canadiens
improve
to 6·3·3 In
Pittsburgh 7-1 and St. Louis
their last 12 games and extend
defeated Chicago 5-1.
their home unbeaten str, lk to 11
Bruins 5, Whalers 3
games (8·0·3). Their last .' ~ss In
At Hartford, Conn., Ken Linsethe Forum came Oct. 26th
man scored two goals and Ray
Bourque added three assjsts to against Calgary.
Islanders 7, ·P enguins 1
power Boston. Randy Burridge,
At Pittsburgh, Mlkko Makela,
Bill O'Dwyer and Keith Crowder
also scored for the Bruins. Bryan Trottier and Denis Potvin

...

Thursday, December 3, 1987

Gallipolis·
209 Upper River Road

. (614)446-4103

11

If,(

�Page- 6-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 3, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Trail ~lazers finally defeat LA I akers
By United Press International
The Portland Trail Blazers
caught the Los Angeles Lakers
undermanned Wednesday night
and administered a whipping
that helped ease the embarrassment of a 56-month droughtln the
Forum. ·
"It means a lot for our team to
beat the Lakers," Jerome Kersey said after scoring a careerhigh 32 points In Portland's
seventh straight victory, 117-104.
"We're not going to get all
excited about beating them one
time. They're still an outstanding
team and they. were playing
without (James) Worthy, but we
will enjoy this olte."
Clyde Drexler added 28 points
as the Trail Blazers won for the
ftrsttlmeln thelrlast20gamesat
the Forum, dating to Aprill983.
"This was an ugly effort,"
Lakers Coach Pat Riley said.
"We're fooling ourselves. We had
the easiest schedule In the
league, with nine of our first 13
games at home. We've been
caught by the fact that we were
10-2.
"We are not a very good team
right now. We've been beating
sub-.500 teams and getting out
butts kicked against good
teams."
Michaei Cooper, despite a
sprained right shoulder suffered
Tuesday night , extended his

UPSHAW SPEAKS- Gene Upshaw, executive director of the
Natlonal Football League Players Association, speaks at a news
conference Wednesday In Washington, D.C. The union announced
It was seeking a courl order declaring 527 players to be free agents,
able to sign wlth any team, effective February 1, 1988. (UPI)

Browns' pride hurt
BEREA, Ohio (UPI) - Some
members of the , Cleveland
Browns have vented their frus trations over a loss to San
Francisco on a convenient
target.
An anonymous player tacked
up several newspaper stories on
a bulletin board iD the players'
lounge, prompting lectures· by
wide receiver Gerald McNeil and
cornerback Frank Minnifield to
express opinions to the writers
involved.
"A guy can write something,"
said McNeil, who was ineffective
against the 49ers Sunday, "but
that' doesn't mean I'm going to
accept it. Criticize, sure. But be
fair."
Quarterback Gary Danielson,
who as holder on field goals and
conversions Is part of a place·
ment unit that has been erratic In
the past two games, declined to
comment on the matter.
"The players have pride,"
says running back Earnest
Byner. "But we're our own worst
critics. The pride Inside will
come through · Sunday against
Indianapolis."
Also on the bulletin' board was
an article in which Colts quarterback Jack Trudeau predicted hls
team would win.
"We'll have to see if we can do
someth ing about that," said a
smlling Byner. "In the meantime, business as usual."
An injury to starting left
outside linebacker Lucius Sanford may give former replacement player David Grayson an
expanded role in the Cleveland
Browns ' defensive plans.
.
Sanford has a sore hamstring,
and did not.partlclpate in Wednesday's workout at BaldwinWallace College. Cleveland
coach Marty Schottenhelmer
said Sanford's status would depend on his availability the rest
of the week.
''We'll work David some more,
but his progress and Sanford's
recovery will dictate what
happens, " said the coach. "But
we're very pleased with what
Dav~d has done. He certainly has
a lot of potential."
Grayson, 23, a product of
Fresno State, returned a fumble
17 yards for a touchdown In the
38-24 loss at San F ranclsco.
"I don't try to do anything

slx meetings with Indianapolis,
6-5.
Colts coach Ron Meyer, who
has won nine of 14 game-s since
joining the Colts on Dec.''l, ·r986,
says Cleveland "Is the best team
In the AFC."
"I think the Browns look strong
everywhere," said Meyer.
"Their loss to Sam Francisco
was just one of those things. The
Browns just came up against a
hot Joe Montana .
"Losing (starting quarterback) Gary Hogeboom hurts us
because we 've won seven and
lost two wlth ·hlm . We've had a
roller-coaster the last three
games, but we feel we're
Improving."
The Colts' offense depends on
running back Eric Dickerson,
who has four straight 100-yard
games. Dickerson faced the
Browns on Oct. 26 before the Los
Angeles Rams traded him to
Indianapolis.
"The (Cleveland Stadium)
field Is bad, most definitely, but
the Browns play on It too," he
said. "Whoever makes the least
amount of mistakes will win.
"The Browns' front four Is
tough. The secondary reacts well
and they execute their strategy .
We'll hav~ to be as tough."

consecutive-games streak to !1-32
(Including playoffs) and led the
Lakers wlth 17 points. The 1986
NBA champions had only nine
players available.
.
Worthy missed his third
straight game with tendinitis In
his left knee, Mike Smrek sat out
with a stomach virus, and Jeff
Lamp underwent shoulder
surgery last week and Is sidelined for the season.
"!don't care," Riley said ofthe
Injuries. "1 only play elgllt when
I've got I2 anyway. You don't
lose home games. As soon as we
were challenged, we backed
away. They made us play that
way."
Klkl Vandeweghe returned to
the Trail Blazers itneup after
missing six games with back
spasms, and scored 16polntsln 33
minutes off the bench.
"We were beginning to think
we would never win here, but
tonight changed all that,"
Drexler sa\d. "We played great
team defense, hit the open man
on offense, and our outside shots
were falling."
1n other games, Boston
smashed New Jersey 130-99,
Cleveland clipped Seattle 104102, Detroit dumped Milwaukee
115-105, Indiana edged Washington 108-102, San Antonio stopped
Houston 97-93, Denver drubbed

Boston coach denies report
Ohio State is recruiting him
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Boston College's Jack Bicknell, ·
considered one of the leading
candidates for the vacant Ohio
State football coaching job, denled Wednesday having talked to
anyone about the position.
"I haven't talked to anybody
from Ohio State," Bicknell ~aid
in Boston. "I'm just worklng'llke
heck trying to recruit for Boston
.College."'
The Ohio State job opened last
month with the firing of Earle
Bruce by OSU President Edward
Jennings, who said his reasons
for firing him could not be
divulged because It was a personnel matter.
In nine years as Ohio State
football coach, Bruce had an
81-26-1 record , a .755 winning
percentage. The Buckeyes were
6-4-1 this season, which Included
a 23-20 win over Michigan five
days after Bruce's firing was
announced.
Bicknell, who now coaches at
the same school from which Ohio
State grabbed basketball coach
Gary Williams just over a year
ago, said he was "very, very
happy" at BC.
"I'm not smart enough to be
devious enough to tell you one
thing when another thing has
happened," he said. "I have not
talked to anybody from Ohio
State and, until I do, I don't have '
any comment on anything be. - - - - - - -- - - - - - - , ·

Punter George Winslow
worked out as the holder along
with Danielson Wednesday. "It
means nothing, " explained
Winslow.
Injury report: Indianapolis
lists Hogeboom (shoulder) as
out, with defensive back Fred
Robinson (ankle) and tight end
Tim Sherwin (wrist) as questionable and linebacker Johnie Cooks
(foot) as probable.
Cleveland has five players
listed as .probable: cornerback
Hanford Dixon (calf). tackle
Gregg Rakoczy (shoulder), Sanford (hamstring) , guard Larry
Wllilams (s houlder ) and
wldeout-klck returner Glen
Young (back).
Tight end Travis Tucker Is
eligible, to be activated off
Injured reserve, but Schottenhelmer said the player ''Isn't ready
yet."
The Browns report that 14,000
tickets remain for Sunday's
r--wl
game, w h lch II not be televised
locally.

Local bowling

I

FJarly Wedne~day Mb:ed
10.28-87

DELIVERY AVAILABLE ON ALL ITEMS THROUGH DECEMBER 24TH, 1987

WEST VIRGINIA
~ MOUNTAINEER

or
OHIO STATE

Pop Up Units &amp;
Bedding Extra

BUCKEYE
BLANKET
Call or Stop In For Details!

PEOPLES
.
BANK
"The Better Bank"
Filth Street
New Haven, W. Va.
882·2135

TEAM

Pat H ill fo'ord

Vldro-624.

Hig h Series Men - Terry Seidenabel·
500; Mike Nease-470; Larry Tucker-456.
High Game Me n - Mlke Nease-188·
Terry S€-Jdenabel-181; Riel&lt; H~lfleld- 1 80.'
High Series Women - Loretta Atklns446: Judy Mu.'iser-439; Terri Whllman-428
High Came Women - Terri Whitman~
187; Loretta Atklns-169; Judy Musser-165.

EarJy Wednesd1\Y Mixed

11-01-87

TEAM

Tonys Carry Out. ............................... 5()
Shammy's Carry Out.. ..... .......... .. ....... .48
Mlddleporf Lunch Room ........... ..... .. ...14

. 2l

Team Series: Shammy's·1945-.
Team Game: ,$tlammy' s-694
High Scrles: Larry Sayre-568; Maxine
Ougan-481; 2nd High Series: Bob Hensley$52; Debl Hensley-466
Hlgo Game: Bob Hensi!&gt;Y-208; Dcbi
Henslcy-191; 2nd Hlgh came: Larry
Sayre-202; Maxine Dugan-190

1995

SPECIAL PRICES ON COMPLETE AQUARIUM

.

· •Monday Prlzeo Retail Vaklt •Tuudoy Prlzeo Rollll Vlluo
•Wodnnday Prlzn RollO Voluo
·Thul1doy Prlzea Retail Value
Poinoottlo
$4.98 .
Poln~onlo
$4.98
Pol•ottia
$4.111
Polnoettio
$4.98
t Dozen Naval Orongta •·
21 Maod Nuto
$3.00
Cindy Of Your Cholet $$.00
112 Pk. FNU Baskol $U8
•Friday Prlzn Rolall Valut
·Soturday Prlzn Rolli! Voluo
•Sunday Prtzn
Rotalt Value
Polnstttla
$4.9a
Poiftoottll
$4M
Polnoenlo
$4.98
Chrlot,... Tra $t5.00
Bu. Rod DoL App1to $1M
Maod Fruh Of YourCholca $5.00
~

Pomeroy, Ohio.

W. Main 51.

992-2164
Tho Store With " AI Kind• of StuH''
fO&lt;. Ptll, Stabl11, LCir!ie &amp; Small Animal!, Lawn• &amp; Gardtn1

•

•

..

•Chromacolor Contrast Plctw-e 1\.abe for exceptional
contrast and color Ddelity.
•Electronic tuntng.
•Computer Space Conunand 'IV/VCR Remote Con·

95

SWIVEL ROCKERS

trol.

ONLY

ONLY

$199 95

$639.
AVAlLABLE IN OAK OR
MAPLE FINISH. SET l'lCLUDES :!0" TABLE WITH
A 12" LEAF AND FOUR
SIDE CHAIRS.

All Other 3, 5 &amp; 7
Piece Sets
PRICED TO GO!
limited Time Only •

$349.

Great Selections
At
Super Savings!

SEVEN COLORS INCLUDING WVU &amp; OHIO STATE

•Early American Style .. Pine color finish.

ONLY

COME IHANDSEEOUR NEWLY
EXPANDED DESKUNE, ROlL
TOP AND STUDENT DESKS IN
STOCK. THEY ARE GOING
FAST; GET YOURS TOOAYI

BEAN BAG CHAIRS FEAlURING HEADREST SUPPORT; DOUBLE ZlP·
PER; DOUBLE SEWN SEAM. (ONE INNER SEAM Wll)i TOP STITCH
REINFORCING).
'

Save $90. On Any
. Swivel Rocker
(. j Regular $289. 95

• TV /VCR remote ~ntrol, operates both VCR &amp;. com·
patible Zenith remote control TV,

Desk's At Sale Prices!
NEED A
DESK!

R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.

$299.

' ZENTTH VRIIIO, Coble
• 14-day/4-event auto--11XXlrd timer.
• Instant record.

10 Gun Cabinets· .$249.

Sa~~~·-~ -~m~_J_J E~g1~(' R~~r.~r ., :;::: .. :.::~~
F.O.F: . 2171 ............... :: .. .,.... ..

Choose dark oak Counlry styled
gun cabinets. Solactelthor tho6
or 1ogun case made with aimu·
laiod oak vontars and brass
plated hardware. Fnturlng tomptrod olchod g1au door l,..rto
wlih • c1a11tc rood ond bird
daalgn. Tha bollom It odrop 11d
wlih a locking talch which tockl
tho anUra gun cablnll Prolaclod by Ashloy't Mega-Tuff
flnloh.

Grown In OUr Greenhouses · Our Quality Is Unsurpassed!

.Wi HA..-11: ... CANAIIU, PAIAIEEYS,
FINCHES, COCKATIELS AND HAMSTERS.
TOYS FOR DOGS AND CATS... . .

ONLY

...,,...lUCy, plw HQ dmlllry,

$2495
AQUARIUM w /Hood .....
2 GALLON ·
.
$
-

Conlemporary decorator-streamline 19-lnch diagonal
Table 1V with Super VIdeo Range Tuning.

1

. Solid Foam
Slools $24.95

Dlqonal CUSTOMSERIES

Color TV • DI910B

GUN CABINETS

(looal~

4 GALLON

AQUA TANKS •••••••••••••••••.

ZENITH 19"

EVERY SUI'TE IN STOCK REDUCED FROM $100.00 TO SSOO.OO OFF OUR
ALREADY LOW PRICEFOR'THIS SALE. PRICES WILL NEVER BE LOWER.
DECORATE YOUR HOME TODAY WITH ANEW LIVING ROOM SUITE FOR
CHRISTMAS.

Cj{pJSTMfitS Pl(T-'FS -- !Pl('FS:JlGrown)
CUtf

Woodv's Rollers

High Game Team - Pat Hill Ford-646·
tt6-643; WoOOy's Roll~:&gt;r's-624; Carpent er S

$499.

Remote Control Color TV • SD%707N

Plus
ofFitEEFiell

Carpenlers Vldro
M.G.M.

ONLY
::----

ZENITH %7" Diagonal CUSTOMSERIES

•s•w01111

Rod's Wrecker Service

High Series Team - ttG 1755; M .G.M.·

50°/o

Save Up To
On Selected Suites

ZENITH 2!" Dlal(onal CVSTOMSERIES Color TV
S6520G
• Chromacolor Contrast Picj:Yre Tube for exceptional
contrast and color fidelity.
• Reliant Chassis with I00% Modular desiart
• Electronic Tuning.
• Classic Style. Nutmeg Oak Color flnish. · •

Member F.D.I.C.

1Deluxe Starter Kit

MONDAY NJTE MiXED
ll·il:J.If.7

BEAN BAG CHAIRS &amp;FOOTSTOOLS

• Zenith Custom Series Color 1V
• Zenith Smart Deck Video

1

The Traditional Christmas Flower
Choose From Thousands ··61' 2" pot.......$2. 98 &amp; Up .

WITH

Local. boowling

Priced
From

Recorders

POINSEITIAS-

AQUARIUM

OUR SELECTION OF STYlES AND FINISHES IS
COMPLETE. BuY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS!

budget prices.

All Living Room Suites Priced To Go!

MASON, W.VA.

10 GALLON

· Gifts of Quality
The Whole Family Will

CURIO
CABINETS

Zenith quaUty at

Scotch Pine· White Pine· Blue Spruce··$12.95 &amp; Up

Cleveland, 7-4, has won the last

1732: Por Hill 'Ford~1727 .

WHITE IRON DAY BED
WITH LINK SPRINGS

At Bob's Market &amp; Greenhouses

--l

•LIMITED QUANTITIES

MANY OTHER SAVINGS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION, PR.ICES ON MOST OF THE ITEMS LISTED
HERE AND MANY OTHER ITEMS THROUGOUT THE STORE ARE GOOD THROUGH DEC. 24, 1987'.

(With A Qualifying Deposit)

2212 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, w. va.
675·1121 .

•FREE GIFTS FOR EVERYONE

Open 9 a.m. To 9 p.m. Friday, December 4th

F .O.E . 2111... .................. .... ...... ..... ...... 20

belong."

-

•LAYAWAYS ACCEPTED

, 2.. ....... ..... ..... .. ........... ..... .. .............. 26

but did not play the bulk of the
game. " I just try and play splld
football. Basically, I'm lucky to
be here and that's why I have to
continue to Improve- and show I

•6

To He$ You, Our Customer, AiidA1rof Us At Mason Furniture
Kick-Off The Christmas Season. We Have Reduced Our Entire Stock
Of Merchandise To Super Low Prices. Never Again Will Prices Be This
·
This Time Of Yew; Come In AM,Save Lots Of Dollars ·
GRATE

FREE

Second Street
Mason, w. va
773·5514

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7 ·

WE'RE HAVING A
GRATE CHRISTMAS KICK-OFF
, A.T MASON FURNITURE CO.

TEAM

says Grayson,
started two weeks ago tn Houston

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

r···-~~~·---~---~--··--~---~---~-~~~~~~·~-· ~~·~~~~~~-~··--,~----··--g---·~--~---'·-~·~·

Tonys Carry Ou t.. .......................... ..... A!
Sayres Small Engi ne Repair .. ,............ .42
Middleport Lunch Room ......................!2
Shammy's Carry Out... ...................... .42

Team' Series: Say res Small Engine
Repalr-2022
·
J•am Game: Middleport Lunch R..;m.
7
,High Series : Ray Roach-596, Marg
llyatt-524; 2nd High Series: Larry Say,...
573; Pat Cars.;:m-510
Hi gh Game: Ray Roach -213 . Debt
Hensley· Pat Carson -203; 2nd High Game
who r - - - - - - - - - - - - - L•_r_ry_Sa_y_r_e2-1-1;_M_•_•I_n•:.:D:.:u.:.
ga:.:n..:
·20..:2::_
.

fancy ,''

cause it would be ridiculous."
Of the coaches who have been
mentioned to succeed Bruce,
Including Pitt's Mike Gottfried,
Kent State's Glen Mason, a
former Bruce assistant and an
OSU graduate, West Virginia's
Don Nehlen and Don James of
Washington, Bicknell's Is the
most prominent.
The Columbus Dispatch, In Its
Wednesday . edition, said two
sources had said Bicknell was the
man. although Athletic Director
Jim Jones dented a decision had
been made .
"At this point ·In time I don't
believe there Is a leading prospect," Jones told The Dispatch .
"I'tn still trying to abide by my
president's deadline," added
Jones.
Jennings, after he fired Bruce;
said he hoped a new coach could
be found by Jan. 1.
Jones was named athletic
director by Jennings after Rick
Bay resigned in protest of Bruce's firing.
Follow!Jlg his dismissal,
Bruce, who was In the second
year of a three-year contract,
sued J ennings and the university
for $7.4 million dollars. Last
week, however, he settled out of
court for $471,000.
Bicknell, a 1960 graduate of
Montclair (N.J.) State, has a
50-31-1 ·record t.6I6) In seven
years at Boston College, lncluding a 5-6 mark the past season.
His overall record In 12 years as a
college coach, Including five at
Maine, Is 69-65-2:

Sacramento 147-120, Chicago Chuck Person added 20 for the
beat Utah 105-101 and the LA Pacers,
Clippers downed Philadelphia
Spurs 97, Rockets 73
88-85.
At San Antonio, David GreenCeltlcs 130, Nets 99
wood scored his only two baskets
At Boston·, Larry Bird scored In the t!nal 1:40 and Johnny
34 points and extended his Dawkins added two free throws
consecutive free-throw streak to In the final seconds to rally the
a team-record 59, helping to hand Spurs, , who snapped a threethe Nets their seventh straight game losing streak.
loss . Bird hit six foul shots to
Nuggets 147, Kings 120
surpass Bill Sharman's 31-yearAt Denver, Lafayette Lever
old mark of 55. New Jersey fell to sc9red 21 points, Alex English
0-6 on the road this season, 2-11 added 18 and both sa tout the final
overall.
period as the Nuggets cruised.
Cavaliers 104, SuperSonics 1®
Blair Rasmussen added 22 points ·
At Richfield, Ohio, Mark Price for the Nuggets.
and Phil Hubbard each scored 22
Bulls105, Jazz 101
points and Brad Daugherty
At Salt Lake City, Michael
added a pair of free throws with Jordan scored 47 points to lead
six seconds left to help the the Bulls, who used a I0-0 run In
Cavaliers snap a three-game the final period to take a 94-91
losln)ptreak.
lead . Scottie Pippen added II
Pistons 115, Bucks 105
points before leaving the game In
At Pontiac, Mich., Adrian the third period with a dislocated
Dantley scored 25 points and Bill right thumb. Karl Malone lead
Lalmbeer added 24 to lead tile Jazz with 33 points.
Detroit. Randy Breuer scored a
Clippers 88, 7flers 85
career-high 33 points to lead the
At Los Angeles, Quintin Dailey
Bucks. The Pistons converted all . scored 10 of his 16 points In pte
15 free throws In the first half and final 4:41, Including a layup With
led 61-56.
five seconds remaining, to lift the
Pacers 108, Bullets 102
Clippers . Los Angeles beat the
At Indianapolis, Wayman Tis- 76ers for the first time In 15
dale scored I9 of his 23 points In games dating to Feb. 21, 1980.
the first half and the Pacers The Clippers have held · oppoovercame a five-minute score- nents below 100 points seven
less stretch In the final period . times this year.

Thursday, December 3:1987

The quality goes in before the name goes on:

Lane® CEDAR CHESTS

.

Tremendous ."'"'"
Regular $349.95

TODAY'&amp;
TREASURES,
TOMORROW'S HEIRLQOMS .•
NOW AT SPECIAL SAviNGS!

Get Your Christmas Recliner
Today. Super Buy On A
Super Chair!
Regular $199.95
Lim~ed Supply !

......., ond -~ hardwoodl wlltl
tocllond koy. 42X1h17·114" H.

Open 9 a.m. To 9 p.m. Friday, Dec. 4th
·For Your Sho
Convenience

Sale

Price

�·•
Page-S-The

Pomeroy-Middleport.

Sentinel

Thursday, December 3, 1987

Ohio

By The Bend

Shearson says agreement signed to buy Hutton
NEW YORK (UPI) -Shearson Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc. said today It had resolved
last-minute snags and signed an
agreement to buy E.F. Hutton
Group for nearly $1 billion In a
historic Wall Street merger that
likely will mean thousands of
layoffs at Hutton.
The deal will allow Shearson
Lehman Brothers to challenge
Merrill Lynch &amp; Co. as the
nation's largest retail brokerage
firm.
In a statement, Shearson said
the accord will result ln Its
acquisition of all of the outstand·
lng common stock of E.F.
Hutton.
"Shearson will buy up to 28.1
million shares of Hutton common
stock at $29.25 per share In cash
pursuant to a tender offer commencing within a few days," It
said.
Under terms of the agreement,
about 4.8 million shares of Hutton
stock will be exchanged for a bout
$139.8 million In face value of
10-year debentures of Shearson
Lehmnan Brothers, the state·
ment said.
Dean Wltter Financial Servi·
ces Group, which also had been

an active bidder for the broker- Peterman said.
skewed to ' 'tax advantaged prO·
age, received a call Monday
Perrin Long, a securities Inducts," and is heavily concen·
night from E.F. Hutton officers dustry expert with Lipper Ana·
trated in municipal bonds. Thf!
company's retail 'sales force,
stating that a rival bid had been lyt!cal Services, said E .F . Hutton
which boasts about 1.2 million
accepted, said Donna C. Peter- might not have Integrated very
man, a Dean Witter smoothly Into Dean Witter. He
customers·, Is widely regarded as
spokeswoman.
said Dean Witter traditionally Its most attractive asset.
Long and other analysts ().ave
On Nov. 23, E.F. Hutton has empliaslzed products such as
announced It was Inviting poten- mutual funds, which Hutton's
said the Shearson·Hutton deal
tial purchasers to make offers for salespeople have generally would mean thousands of layoffs
lt In a public bidding process. On down played.
of Hutton employees.
Hutton's product mix Is
the same day Shearson Lehman
Brothers confirmed that it would
NATIONAL
SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST '12·3-81
pursue E.F. Hutton's Invitation
to consider buying the brokerage
house.
In addition to Shearson and
Dean Witter, Hutton reportedly
extended similar invitations to
Xerox Corp., Transamerica
Corp., Equitable Life Assurance
Society of the U.S. and Merrill
Lynch &amp; Co.
Some companies have publicly
criticized Hutton's decision to , .
hold a public bidding contest.
V
Dean Witter's Donna Peterman said her company, while it
had been actively Interested in
buying Hutton, did not want til
bid competitively.
·
"We weren't interested in the
bidding process. We would have
liked to negotiate with Hutton,"

...----Local news---

~SNOW

- -~

EMS has 3 calls Wednesday

Stock 1 11341, 2 doorl, ·~· 6 cyl, llr

cond, outo. tnno, PS, PB, PW, 1111 whN~
cruloo control, AIM'II IIdia, lldlol tlno,
whlto wolll, buclcol NMI, ..., wtndow
defog.
SALE PRICE

$9995.

Central Trust Company of Southeastern Ohio has been
granted a ·judgment of $31,859.25 plus interest in a foreclosure
action against Verlln M. Butcher, et al.
People's Bank of Point Pleasant. W.Va. has filed an action
against Wanda L. Beaver, Guysville, for a judgment of $4,792.
Beneficial Ohio Inc., Pomeroy, has filed an action against
Christopher P. Haye, Rutland, and Harriet Haye, Rutland,
for a judgment of $3,1»!9.24.
A reciprocal action for child support has been filed by
Margaret Ann Geiger against Richard Claire Geiger.

South Central Ohio
Rain likely this afternoon, with
highs In the upper 40s. Snow
likely tonight, with a low near 30.
Mostly cloudy Friday, with scat·
tered morning snow flurries and
highs In the upper 30s.
The probability of preciplta·
lion Is 60 percent today, 70
percent ton~ht and 40 percent

'

One person has
super lo~to ticket

Grants are .approved
State Senator Jan Michael Long and States Representative
Jolynn Boster announced today that elderly and handicapped
transit fare assistance grants totaling $56,595 In state funds
have been approved for Middleport and Athens.
Middleport will re&lt;;elve a grant of $38,025 and Athens a grant
os $18,570. The officials added that these gran IS will allow the
communities to offer fares to elderly and handicapped riders
using public transportation.
The Ohio Department of Transportation awards the grants to
transit operators which reduce fares by one-half the regular
adult fare.

MAXIMA
Stock I 118t0, 4 daon, Ndan, !rant whHI
drfvo, 8 cyl., I~ cond., IUIO. t11n1., PS, PB,
power wind-, power oNI, power door
loeb, Ilk whool, cruloo control, AIM'II ,.
dlo, ttfrto tlpt, r'ldlll tim, whHt Wlnt,
buckltltlto, 1111 window dolog, oun raol.

Friday.
Winds will be from the south at
10 to 15 mph today and from the
northwest at 10 to 15 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Fair Saturday, with a chance
of rain or snow Sunday and
Monday. HIghs will be In the 30s
Si1turday1and Jn the 40s Sunday
and Monday. Overnight lows will
IStcock I 11580,4 docn, ttd.,, Irani """l
be In the 20s early Saturday and IStc&gt;e~ 184532,4d-,hordtop,lrantwhHI . . .,... ' cyl, olrcond, IIIIa. trono., PS, PB,
between 30 and 35 Sunday and ••nvo, 4 cyl., llr cand., ...o. 111no., AIMM
whNI, AMRI rodlo,lldlot tiM, bucktl
•rocuo, bucket 11111,17,000 miiH.
··
Monday mornings.

$9999.

1985 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER CS

Darle ne Shain, Pomeroy. and
Paul Leona,rd Shain, Pomeroy,
have flied In Meigs County
Common Pleas Court for a
dissolution' of their marriage.
Claudette Laudermllt was
granted a divorce from Gregory
Allen Laudermllt.
An action bY Teresa Lynn
Jordan and Ricky t:ee Jordan
has been dismissed.

·clark's ]ewelrv Store .

=~~==

NOBODY, BUT NOlO CAN
SELL YOU DIAMONDS OF THIS
QUALITY. FOR LESS. COME IN
AND SEE FOR YOURSELF.

Announcements
Square dance
Friday night
.
A square dance will be held
tomorrow night, 8 to 11 p.m., at
the Long Bottom Community
Building. The public Is Welcome.

DIAMOND SO LIT AIRES

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions
Louise Eden, Pomeroy.
Wednesday Discharges
Golda Smlth.t

1 CARAT ................ NOW ONLY $199 500

SUPER
.

$79500
1/4 CARAT..... ,............ NOW ONLY $29500
lf2 CARAT .................. NOW ONLY

SANTA
SAVINGS · •

'

'

WE'Ll MOUNT YOUR DIAMOND IN EITHER A
NECKLACE OR RING IN YELLOW .OR WHITE GOLD.

REESE'S

PEANUT BUTTER
CHIPS
12

NOW

$)99
$399
1 Carat
$799
YELlOW 01 WHITE GOlD

oz.

HERSHEY'S

NEW

SEMI-SWEET
CHOCOLATE
CHIP.S

MAALOX
WHIP
ANTACID
EXTU STRENGTH

$ 89 8 oz.

oz.

~illage

....
....

~~'":Ia,":"-

Pharmaey

992-6669

271 N. SECOND

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ANTIQUE
STYLE
JOK

, SALE PRICED

S62995
COIN

JEWELRY
' REPLICA
NOW

·'$12995

EVERY

DIAMOND
113 COURT
POMEROY
992-2054
.FREE ENGRAVING

CARAT DIAMOND

DINNER RING

1/4 Carol
112 Carat

•

12

1f2

7 DIAMOND CLUSTERS

$ 57
Milk Chocolote K1sses .....~2!~ 1 ·
HE~SHEY'S

$149

1987 FORD
TEMPO

THE
VIDEO TOUCH

Stocks

Seek divorces

Stock 1 ·12073, v.e, o1r cand., outo. ltlnl.,
PS, PB, power wtndow, tUt whNI, alliiN
cont...., AMfll lldlo, ...... lldlot
IIIII, ...... 1!111, 314 ton plclrllp, gaogN,
SAJ.E PfiiCE

SALE PRICE

Advertisements for substitute teachers with the goal being to
reopen schools of the Meigs Local School District appeared In
publications today.
At a recent board of education meeting, It was decided to
reopen the schools and the payment for substitutes was
Increased to $125 a day for the strike period. No date was set for
reopening the schools and still had not been set this morning,
Supt. Dan E. Morris said.
The strike was today In its 18th day.
According to an advertisement, the district is now accepting
applications for substitute teachers in all areas of certification
with the pay rate of to $125 a day. The announcement advises all
teachers who are willing to cross a picket line to immediately
contact the superintendent's office ai 621 South Third ·Ave. In
Middleport or to call the office at 992·2153.
There have been no new negotiating sessions set between the
board of education and the teachers, Supt. Morris said.

$139

1982 CHEVROLET
C-20 VAN

SALE PfiiCf
CLEVELAND (UPI) -There ....-------------1
was one winner of the $3 million
jackpot In Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing Wednesday night.
The player who holds a ticket
with the numbers of 10, 20, 22, 35,
39 and 41 can have It validated
OPEN
today at a regional lottery office
SUNDAY 11 AM·7 PM
to become eligible to claim the
jackpot.
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
The winnings will be paid In 20
10 AM • 9 PM
annual pre-tax payments of
$150,000, a lottery commission
992-3462°
spokesman said today.
2 71'12 N. SECOIID AYE.
In addition to the jackpot
winner, 106 players picked five of l===~~~~~=~~
the numbers to win $1,000 each,
and 4,699 players selected four of
a,;r----------================::;:::;:;:~~~
the numbers to win $87 apiece.
Ticket sales for the midweek
drawing totaled $3,538,658, with
the prize payout totaling
.
GALLIPOLIS - POMlROY
$3,514,813. The jackpot for Satur·
day's drawing will again be $3
mlllion.

Substitute teachers sought

Page-9

-.

Mike Kubachka and Steve
Addington have recently received promotion's at Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs No.2
mine .
Kubachka was named general
mine ·superv!sor-!ongwall, and
Addington was promoted to long·
wall coordinator at the under·
ground mine near AI bany.
Kubachka lolned the American
Electcrlc Power· System In 1976
as a section foreman trainee at
the company's Windsor Coal Co.
near Beech Bottom. He was
transferred to Southen Ohio
Coal's Meigs No. 2 m Ine I n 1978 as
a section supervisor and in 1983,
became longwa!l coordinator.
Kubachka Is a graduate of
West Virginia University ln Mor·
gantown where he earned a
bachelor's degree in m!nlng
engineering In 1976. He and his
wile, Beverly, live In the com·
munlty of Shade with their

OOOT seeks applications• for transport

25°/oi

Ruby
Sapphire
. YOUR CHOICE

S11995
1OK YRLOW GOLD

•RINGS
•EARRINGS
•NECKLACES
SAVE
342 2ND

OPEN SUNDAYS TILL

GAlLIPOliS
•446-2691 .
FREE GIFT WRAP

Thaksgivlng dinner guests of
Mr. and Ms. Virg!lKingwereMr.
and Mrs. Charles Hucklebee and
family and Mrs. Hazel Ollver,
Byesville; Miss Gracie King,
Mansfield, the Rev. and Mrs .
Alan Blackwood and family, Mr.
and Mrs. David King , and Mr.
and Mrs. Weber Wood.
Mrs. Nellie Lowe, Ruth Lowe
and son were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Lowe and famlly, Columbus.

should be made prio r to J a n. 1,
ODOT. which writes the pur·
1988.
chase specifications and obtains
the vehicles fo·r recipients. Fed·
Grants are avail able through
the federally-funded Section 16 eral funds cover 80 percent of the
(B) (2) Grant Program for fiscal
cost 'and individual agencies pay
year 1988 to help Improve and
the remaining 20 percent. The •
Increase transportation services
grants are awarded on the basis
to elderly and handicapped rid· of need.
ers throughout Ohio.
For additional Information ,
Only private, non-profit agen· organizations may write to the
cies are ellglble to participate In
Ohio Department of Transpora·
the program ilvallable through
tlon, Dlvls!onofPubl!cTranspor·
the Urban Mass Transportation
tation, 25 South Front St. , Room
716, Columbus, 43216-0899, or call
Act of 1964.
Applications are submitted to
614·466-8969.
A surprise party was held
recently honoring Mrs. Caroline . . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Miller at the Middleport Fi rst
Baptist Church tn observance of
her 90th birthday.
Hosting the occaslo'n was her
daughter, Mrs. Laura Cornwell
of West Palm .Beach, Fla.
The social room was decorated
and refreshments were served .
Attending were friends from the
church along wlth several from
Letart, Racine . and Gallipolis . A
former resident of Letart Falls,
she taught Sunday school there
for many years.
She has always bee n an avid
SHOES, by Dexter. Connie, Dingo, Nu(semates,
church goer and Is still able to
Red Goose. Nike, Pony, Converse •. Aviva, Brooks
atteQd with the assistance of
friends from the Middleport
ISOTONER SLIPPERS
church where she Is a member.
PURSES
She resides at Village Manor
Apartments.

The Ohio Department of Trans·
portatlon Is accepted gra nt re·
quests for special-equipped veh i·
cles to transport the elderly and
people with handicaps. Inquiries

·Surprise
birthday
· observance
STEVE ADDINGTON

MIKE KUBACHKA

children, Kevin, Lisa and
Matthew .
.
Addington joined Southern
Ohio Coal's Meigs No. 1 mine In
1975 as a general inside laborer.
He was named malnienance
technician at the company's
Raccoon No. 3 mine In 1976, and
the following year he .was pro·
moted to maintenance engineer.
Addington also has held the

position o! maintenance supervl·
sorattheRacoonNo . 3andMelgs
No. 2 mines.
Addington earned an assoelate's degree in electronics and
hydraulics In 1974 from what is
now the Shawnee State College in
Portsmouth. He and his wife,
Linda, live In Bidwell with their
daughters, Lindsey, Meredith,
and Stephanie .

Harrisonville community happenings

WEATHER MAP - Snow will fall across the Great Lakes
region, most likely near the lower Gral Lakes. Rain wiD be llkly
over the Ohio Valley and much oii!Uaois. Rain andmountainsnow
wiD widespread from the northern hall of the Pacific Coast across
the northern .Plateau and the northern Rockies. Sunny over the
central Plains and the southern third nation.

------Weather------

Am Electric Power ............ .25%
AT&amp;T .... ... ........................... 27
Ashland Oil .. ........ .. ... .. ....... 53~
Bob Evans .. .. .. .... .. ..... .... .. .. 15\-1
Charming Shop pes .... .. .. ...... 10%
City Holding Co .. .. .. ........ .. .. . 34
Federal Mogul.. ...... ........ .. ... 31'
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ..... ..... ..... 50%
Heck 's Inc ......... .. ........... .. .. . 1lfs
Key Centurion ........ .. .... ....... 35
Lands' End ...... ..... ... .. .. ... .... 16J-1
Limited Inc .... .. ......... : .. ....... 17
Multimedia Inc . .. ...... .. .... .. ... 43
Rax Restaurants .. ... ! .... .. ...... 3\-2
Robbins &amp; Myers ...... .. .... ..... 6%
Shoney 's Inc .......... .. ........... 20\-2
Wendy's Inti .................. .. .. . .4%
Worthington Ind .... .. ............ I7~

SALEPfiiCf

l2lJ

Granted judgmeiu

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith ·
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi

Stock I 84121, 4 cyt., Altf'lllldo,
!apt, lldlll droo, 112 ton ~
.....u.... -·top bum!l'r.e"''l"· ....
lng - glllo, 17.000 ......

to receive precipitation ifX1,cated.

Me!g's County Emergency Medical Services reports t(lree
calls Wednesday; Pomeroy at 10:49 a.m. to the senior citizens
building for Louise Eden to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 3:24p.m. to Dr. Ridgway's office for Della Coleman
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:35 p.m. to the
Amerlcare-Pomeroy Nursing Center for Jerry Romine to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Thursday, December 3, 1987

Coal company
promotes men
at Meigs 2 .
near Albany

-RAIN
SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static . . Occludl1d .
Map shows maximum temperarures. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast

II

The Daily Sentinel

Ray Alkire, Columbus, spent
several days here recently with
hls parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Alkire.
Mrs. Stella Atkins and Miss
Ruby Diehl were Thursday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Kloes, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs . Cecil Blackwood
visited Sunday with Mrs. Ellen
B\lrgess, Portsmouth.
·
Miss Barbara Sleple, Ind. and
Miss Bill Sleple, Cincinnati,

spent several days here with
their aunt, Mrs. Frances Young.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Sam Stlementz
were Mr. and Mrs. Joe Chapman
and family, Mrs. Marcella Chap·
man, Mr. and Mrs. James Payne ·
an&lt;) family, Mr. and Mrs. Bret
Chapman and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Danny Young and son, Mr .
and Mrs. Allen Futz, Lisa Bev·
rick and son, Doug, and Jerry
Bevrick.

Santa Shops
Here!

Gift Ideas For The Family

0

0
0
0
•

Standard time
Standard time is reckoned
from Greenwich, England , rec·
ognized as th e prime meridian of
· longitude. The world Is divided
into 24 time zones , each one hou r
differen t fr om those adjacent to
. it.

Meigs County school honor rolls announced ·
The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Letart
Falls Elementary School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above in ali their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
Second Grade: Nathan
Hensler, Kristen Hill, Julle Hunnell, Jackie Proffitt, Jennifer
Roush, Stacy Warden, Ranetta
Wheeler.
' ThlrdGrade: Johnnie Gilland,
Brian Kimes, Adam Roush,
Jessica Sayre, Lora Sayre, Va·

Ashl! Davis, Megan Drummer,
Justin Jeffers, Tara Knighting,
Ryan Nease, Helen Rice, Elicia
Rltchart. Kim Sayre, Bria,n
Thomas.
Grade Two: Erica Arnott,
Mick Barr. Cynthia Caldwell,
Jennifer Friend, Alicia Mulfdrd,
Lisa Russell, Evan Struble, Billy
Young.
Grade Three: Brian Allen,
Chris Ball, Philip Hamm, .Jason
Lawrence, Tavis Lisle, Amber
Thomas.

all their subjects to be named to
the roll were:
Seniors : Jennifer Arnold, Pam
Ash, Chris Baer, Bridget Bing,
Ronnie Burkhamer, Patrece Clr·
cle, Leanne Clark, Shawn Cun·
nlngham, Carla Garrison, Angie
Garten, Angle Grueser, Tammy
Holter. Bill Hupp, Darla Lam·
bert, Scott ,McPhail, Heather
Shuler, Tina Sloter, KJm Stobart,
Brenda Teaford, Wendy Triplett,
Dena Watson.
Juniors: Tracy Beegle,IVIarvln

nessa
Shuler.
Fourth
Grade: Jason Barnett.
Fifth Grade: Tracy Pickett.
Sixth Grade: Michael Jarrell,
Stephanie Sayre, Sam Shain.

Grade Four:
Rochelle
Jennifer
Lawrence,
JayJenkins,
McKel·
vey, Mandy Mills, SammiSisson ,
Rayan Young.
Grade Five: Brian Anderson, .
Mason Fisher, Andrea Moore,
Matt Morrow, Ryan Wllllams.
Grade Six: Aaron Drummer,
Andrew Fields, Jodi . Hobbs,
Michael McKelvey, Amber
·
Ohlinger.
The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Southern
High School has been announced.
Making a grade of B or above Jn

Bickers,
Shelly
Connolly,
Una Cooper,
Becky
Evans,Chris·
Ryan
Evans, Carol Fisher, Danny
Gheen, Steven Grady, Debbie
Greathouse, Carissa Hill, Crys·
tal Hill, Monica Hill, Billy Jones,
Amy Lawson, Missy Rainey,
Herb Rose, Ann Sellers, Eliza·
beth Smith , Loretta Smith, Todd
Wolfe.
Sophomores: Shelly Arnold,
Amy Harrison, Kathy Ihle, Chris
Murphy, Sheri Roush, Greg
Weddle, Sarah W
. lies, Diane
Wlllbarger, Trlsh Wolfe.

The second slx weeks grading
period hOnor roll at the Portland
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in ail their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
First Grade: Jessica Cooper,
$teve Boso, Mary Francis, Jason
~oush. BUlle Jo Sellers. Tommy
Smith.
Second Grade: Jonathan .Dai·
ley, Ashley McKinney, Lindsay
Smith, Zach Ward.
Third Grade: Emily Duhl,
Hillery Harris, Greg McKinney,
Amy Rizer, Sarah Wailbrown,
Joshua Roush.
Fourth Grade: C.J. Harris.
Fifth Grade: Michelle Harris,
Erica Meadows.
Sixth Grade: Jamey Smith.
U.H.: James Parsons . .
The second six weeks grading
pedod honor roll at the Rae!·
neEiementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
First Grade: Robbie Card,
Jennifer Carleton, Joshua Ervin,
Suzanne Evans, Jody Hupp,
Keith Imboden, Josle Jarrell,
Amy Johnson, Jeremiah John·
son,Kara King, Jesse Little, .
Jessica Smith, Crlssy Snider.
Second Grade: Chad Clark,
Ryan Grace, Matt Hill. Nicole
Hlll, Melissa Layne, John Mat·
son, Matthew Riffle, Danny
Sayre, Amanda Theiss, Tyson
Evans.
Third Grade: Je,s se Maynard,
Jennie Scarberry, Bobby Wrl·
tesel, Camllla Yoac'ham.,
Fourth Grade: John Card,
Jason Hudson, Paul lhte, Craig
Knight, · Jonna Manuel, Ryan
Martin~ Richie Wamsley.
Fifth Grade: Grant Circle,
Jason Ervin, Scott Grace, Kevin
Ihie, Shannon Morarlty, Travis
Mugrage, Kendra Norris, Court·
ney Roush, Jeni Stewart.
Sixth Grade: Ryan Adams,
_Beth Clark, Jenny. Cleek, Ra·
chael Hensler, Jennl Hlll. Ryan
Holter, Brandl Mallory, Freddie
Matson, Marcy Mathews,
Jeremy Northup. Mike
VanMeter .
The second six weeks grading
perlQ&lt;I honor roll a,t the Syracuse
Elert1entary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to be
named to the roll were:
Grade One: Erron Aldridge,
11fcky Collins, Bridget Cross,

SWEATS

Freshmen: Junie Beegle, Jar·
rod Circle, Jason Circle, Shanno~
Counts, Jennifer Damron, Rl·
chard Deaver, Chris Harmon,
Tonya Ingels, Roy Johnson, Mica
Jones, Jenny Lisle, Elizabeth
Lyons , Colin Maidens, Norman
Matson, Cheryl Pape, Joyce
P1ckens, Jeremy Rose, Heather
Roush, Michael ~usseil, Carolee
Scarberry, Jenmfer Smtih, An·
gf'l Snider, Robyn Stout, Andrea
Theiss , Jan Williams, Shelly
Winebrenner, Mayla Yoacham.

0

GYM BAGS
SCHOOL JACKETS

0
0

FOOTBALLS

0
0
0
0

T-SHIRTS

BASKETBALLS
JERSEYS
SOCKS
AND MUCH, MUCH MORE

FREE PARKING - REGISTER FOR SHOPPING SPREE
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

MIDDLEPORT

992-5627

1

r;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~

SUGGESTED GIFT ITEMS
FOR THE MEN
•Suits
•Sport Coats
•Blazers
•Arrow Shirts

4

DRAWER ' •
CHEST
Reg. 169

$4995
SAVE S20

......z

~r---

•

5

DRAWO.
CHEST
log.sU

Whites, Colored
Short &amp; Long Sleeve

•Levi Denims
Prewashed and
Unwashed

•

:--"'---1

•Dress Pants

by Hubbard &amp; Levy

~5995

1•0ne Rack
Co-Ordinate
SlJortswear

6 GUN ·

GUN

· CAB1NET

Slitrts, Blouses ·
&amp; Some Slacks

REG. '249.95

SAVE lSO

NEWJK.

lii'WIG ... sunEi

·~199' 5 .
SAVE S120

· .~nJ

Lane··

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

Pullovers and
Cardigan
(crew neck &amp; V-neck)

•Sleeveless Sweaters
Pullover &amp; button Fronts

•Men's Underwear
by Jockeys &amp;Hanes

•Socks

by Interwoven

•Neckties

REDUCED

30°/o

•Men's Hats
Dress &amp; Casuals

•Bib Overalls
Size 34-50

•Brown Duck
Bib Overalls,
Coveralls and
Jackets

FOR THE WOMEN

SAVE 125

·$19995

•Sweaters

•Men's
Jackets &amp; Coats

RECLINER
$1999 5
ltg.
1309.9S

Saw•

1110

•One lot of Ladies
Blazers, Jackets ·
and Suits
Reduced

30%

Reduced 20%
•Ladies Blouses

•White Stag
Sweaters, Skirts
Long &amp; Short Sleeve
and Slacks
Reduced 20%
•Levi Bendover
•Excellent S.election Slacks
Ladies Sweaters
Average and Regular
Pullover, Cardigan, .
Sl~tveless

VIII

•Co-ordinate
Ladies
Knit Suits

Reduced

20°/o'

•Robes &amp; Jogging
Suits 200fo Off

•London Fog
All Weather
Coats &amp; Jackets

25°/o to 50°/o

Off
•Sherwood
of Ohio
Wool Coats &amp;
Jackets
20°/o Off

�Thursday, Dece!llber 3. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 3, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar .
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangellne
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, wlll meet at the Middleport
Masonic Temple at 7:30 Thursday. 'A gift exchange of S3 to $5
wlll be held. Refreshment will be
served. An officers practice will
be held Dec. 6 at 2 p.m. at the
temple.
SYRACUSE -The Meigs Association for Retarded Citizens will
meet Thursday at the Carleton
School, 7 p.m .
ROCK SPRINGS - Salisbury
Pack 246 wl)l hav.e a Christmas
party tonight (Thursday), 7p.m .,
at the Rock Springs Grange Hall.
Each boy should bring a $2 gift
exchange.

Hu~
. rFy

26" M •
·to en, &amp; Lli~·

FRIDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - A rum mage and bake sale, spcnsored
by the Pythlan Sisters of Long
Bottom, will be held next to the
Tuppers Plains Post Office on
Friday and Saturday from 10
a.m. to 4 p.m .'

PRIC '

~egular
.,99

RACINE - Morse Chapel
Church on Racine-Portland Road
Is having a hymn sing on Friday,
starting at 7 p.m., featuring the
Harvest Trio of Reedsville. Rev.
David Curfman Invites the public
to attend.

.

Nine members having birth·
days In October, November. and
December were honored when
the Chester Council 323, Daugh·
ters of America met recently at
the haiL
·
In the honored group were
Charlotte Grant. Sandy White.
The]ma White, Alta Ballard.
Ruth Smith, Ada Bissell, Mae
McPeek. Esther Smith, and Ada
Morris.
Margaret Tuttle, councilor,

NIBERSfh

Portable AM/FM
Stereo
Recorder
Patable AM/FM stereo

PREVIOUSLY MARKED DOWN

.,.~unlr.,.&lt;&lt;ati'&lt;

CLOTHINC ITEMS.

recorder. Features built-In rnr111"'""'
microphone, auto tape stop
sho!llcler strap. comes In black,
and white.

4 Roll

Bath

·tissue

I

Academy®

Sleeping

Bag

casserole
or 6 cup
Tea Pot

DAV dinner
POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and DA V
Auxiliary will hold their Christ·
mas dinner and regular meeting
on Dec. 14 at 7 p.m. Reservations
for the dinner must be received
by Dec. 10. To make reservations
call 992-2636 or 992-2272. All
members and their families are
urged to attend.

s Piece
Dining

set

The Operation Evangelize
Team will be the recipient of
funds from the money tree plus
another $10 as a special gift from
the Meigs County Churches of
Christ Women's Fellowship.
Arrangement to give the mo·
ney to that special group were
made at a recent meeting held at
the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Janel Venoy Installed the new
officers Including Jeannette Carter, president; Mary Lash, first
vice president; Ruth Underwood, second vice presldnet; Pat·
Thoma, secretary; Marjorie
Purtell, treasurer; Isadora Willi·
ams, news reporter . and Eleanor

Hoover, card cpalrman.
Singing of "Count Your Bless·
lngs" opened the meeting, with
Charldene Alkire giving the
opening prayer . Devotions were
given by Eleanor Hoover who
read Psalms 106. In the absence
of Eileen Bowers, president,
Ruth Underwood presided at the
meeting.
Mrs. Lash gave a meditation
on Thanksgiving using Psalms
95. Members related reasons for
thankfulness. There was special
music by Maryln Wilcox of the
Mlddleprt church who sang
"Leave It There" accompanied
by Ann Lambert. Mrs. Purtell

All

S.T.P.

open

stock
Oil
1
Treatme"•
Glassware
..

CHILLICOTHE, Ohio (UPI)The efforts of thousands of John
Cougar Mellencamp fans who
signed a peUtion urging the pop
singer to do a concert In their
"small town" will be rewarded
when Mellencamp performs In
Chillicothe Dec. 16.
Mellencamp will do two free
shows In the south central Ohio
community for the 6,200 people
who signed a petition saying they
would " be more than happy to
pay $15 to $20 each to see John
Cougar Mellencamp perform In
our small town of Chillicothe,
Ohio."

The drive started a bout 18
months ago when Chip Arledge, a
disc · jockey at radio station
WFCB-FM, launched the petition
drive. Mellencamp's "Scare·
crow" album, which Includes the
hit "Small Town" about life ln..
rural America, was on the charts
at the time.
"We set out to get 5,000
signatures," Arledge said
Wednesday,
He said he delivered copies of
the petitions to Mellencamp's
manager, Harry Sandler, In
Bloomington, Ind., and later to
his agent In New York.

and Mrs. Lambert sang "I Call
Him Lord" accompanied by Mrs .
Wilcox.
Refreshments of cookies and
fruit salad were served by
members of the host church.

Open house h~ld
More than 1,500 persons at·
tended the Pomeroy Flower Shop
open house held Saturday and
Sunday at their Butternut Ave.
shop. Winner of the grand prize In
a drawing was Edith Spencer,
Middleport. Other winners were
Leslie Carr, Neva McElroy, and
Barb Mullen, on Saturday, and
Irene Parker, Sharon Cotterill,
and Linda Turley, on

30°/o OF.F
FOR MEN &amp; WOMEN

6-V

10W-30

or
10W-40

Motor

ou

125 ounce
Dutch
Deterg~

· Holiday
Paper Towels
or 120 Count
Napkins

COinmander

Lantern
'
with
.Battery

.

ALL
Pyrex®

Clear
Bakeware
j

Planters

Microwave
Popcorn
Original
or,
Butter

FRIDAY ·SATURDAY ·SUNDAY

If you missed the "Holiday Gifts For All
Sale", it's being held over this
FRI AY, SATURDAY, and SUNDAY

ALL CHRISTMAS ITEMS

50°/o OFF

MARGUERITE
· SHOES
992-3639
102 EASE MAIN

.·

2SOfo OFF STOREWIDE

I

•

OPEN: SAT. 10 A.M.-S P.M./SUN., NOON-S P.M.
VISA-MASTER CARD
LAYAWAY

I

REGJ5nR FOR
PROMOTIDN .GIVEAWAY .

9/cvQ/~~~
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-7521

"Holiday Specials"
Guess who shops at
Swisher Lohse
Pharmacy
Christmas Gift Boxes
PACKAGES OF 2-3·4

TABU

88&lt;

AND

AMBUSH

COLOGNE
SPRAY
1.7

$329

•

oz.

Reg. S4.95

531 JACKSON P1M.E • RT. 35 WEST
PhoN 446-4524

SATU RDAY I SUNDAY ~TINEES
"JILL SEATS $2.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 11.99

MEN'S

NORELCO RAZORS
~Ml\ll

OOif.L IS
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lilat k""'
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#550TL
REG. 525.95

NOW

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REG. 539.00
NOW

$17 99
$2 699

ROBITUSSIN DM
6-8 Hour Cough
Control
NOW

$2 29

9:00P.M. DAILY.

SWISHER LOHSE

"FREE GIFT WRAPPING"

-Layaway Now.2..

-

Searles birthday ::
·is observed

$1.29

DANIEL GREEN SLIPP,ERS

I

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

REG.

Chtisfmss Ssvings
Valvoline

Racine VFD asking for donations
of $15 for needed equipment. In
appreciation for each $15 dona·
tlon. the fire department will
give a complimentary certificate
lor an 8X10 color portrait. The '
fundfalser Is legitimate and the
fire department asks for support
from the community In this
endeavor.
Gifts needed
POMEROY - Athens Mental
Health Center Is asking for gifts
for patients through Drew Webster Post 39 of the American : ~· . .: .
: ·• ,. .• Legion. Gifts may be dropped In
the container In the window at
:.,
Qulckel~s Insurance In Pomeroy .
•
No glass Items please.
JOY M. SEARLES
CanceUed
MIDDLEPORT - An MGM
District awards dinner sche·
duled f(lr Thursday night In
Middleport has been cancelled.
Banquet
Joy Marie Searles celebrated
CHESTER- The annual Ches- her first birthday recently at the
ter Bow Hunters awards banquet home of her parents, Mark and •
and Christmas party has been Judy Searles, Red Hill Road, :
scheduled for Sunday, Dec. 13 at Langsville. Family members '· ·
1:30 p.m. at the Indoor range. The attended the party where a: ·
affair Is for bow hunters and their Cabbage Patch cake was served
families. Those attending are to with other refreshments. Gifts
take a covered dish.
were ·presented to the youngster. :

were Beulah Maxey, Iva Po we II,
Genevieve Ward, Erma Clelarid,
Virginia Lee, Eva Robson, Mary
Holter, Betty Young, Lora Damewood, Everett Grant, Ethel Orr,
Faye Kirkhart. Jo Ann Baum,
Dorothy Ritchie. Donna Grueser,
Sadie Trussell. Betty Roush,
Marcia Keller, Doris Koenig,
Elizabeth Hayes, Brenda Cun·
nlngham. Doris Grueser, and
Opal Hollon .

presided at the meeting with the
pledges to the American and
Christian f!~gs being given along
wlih the Lord's Prayer. For
devotions, verses from Psal.m 100
were read .
Cathy Pullins was reported Ill,
and It was noted that Thelma
McManis had broken her hip in a ·
faiL Also reported was the death
of Edna Reibel.
New officers were nominated.

MelleflCamp to perform
for fans in Chillicothe

Soft

HARRISONVlLLE - Harrl·
sonvllle Holiness Chapel Is in
revival through Sunday with
services at 7:30 p.m. each
evening. Evangelist will be Sis·
ter Nadine ·Fetterman. Pastor
David Ferrell invites the public ,

Fellowship makes contributions

•
soundeslgn®

corning®
Pastel Bouquet

SUNDAY
RUTLAND- "The Branches "
will sing at the Rutland Church of
Christ Sunday evening at 7 p .m .
A free will offering will he taken.
Bill Carter, pastor, invites the
public to attend.

Taking applications
•
POMEROY - The Salvation
Army will be taking applications
for Christmas food baskets and
toys for the needy on Tuesday
and Wednesday. Dec. 8-9, !rom 10
a.m. until 12 noon, and from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m . both days .
Band boosters
POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet Monday, 7
p.m ., In the Meigs High band
room.
PTO meeting
CHESTER- Chester PTO will
meet Monday, 7 p.m., at the
schooL .
_Orange trusleP•
Orange
REEDSVILLE Township Trustees will meet In
regular session Monday, 7 p.m.,
at the home of Dorothy Calloway,
clerk.
·
Garden club
MIDDLEPORT - Mlddlepott
Garden Club will meet for dinner
on Monday at 6 p.m. at the new
American Legion Hall, followed
by a meeting at 7:30 at the home
of Mrs. William Morris. Mrs.
Morris and Mrs. Sibley Slack will
be hostesses. The program will
be presented by Mrs. Rl ta
Hamrh. A gilt exchange of
garden related Items will be held.
Sutton trustees
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will mE!et Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Building.
Blood pressure cQnlc
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Senior CitizenS Club will
hold a blood pressure clinic on
Tuesday, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon,
at the townhouse, A l&gt;uslness
meeting will· be held for
members at 1 p.m. The public Is
Invited.
Fundralser underway
RACINE - Over the next
several weeks, a persori representing the Racine Volunteer Fire
Department will be canvassing
all homes In the area serviced by

Daughters of Affierica hold recent meeting

AL

g

RUTLAND - Square, round
and slow dancing will be featured
Saturday evening, !rom 9 p.m. to
1 a.m. , at the Ell Denison Post467
of the American Legion, Ru·
tiand. Live band. snack bar and
refreshment stand. Donations at
the door. $2 per adult. $1.50 per
child. Public welcome.

POMEROY - The District
SCIPIO - Scipio Township
Deputies and Past Councuors
Trustees will meet In regular • Club of District 13, Daughters of
session at 7 p.m. Friday.
America, wIll hold a Christmas
dinner at the Western Slzzlln'
Steak House at Athens Saturday
SATURDAY
at 1:30 p.m. There will be a gift
DEXTER - The De'cember · exchange.
meeting of Star Grange will be
held Saturday at 8 p.m. at the
CHESHIRE - A Christmas
Star Grange HaiL All baking craft and bake sale will.be held at
contests·-subordlnate, youth, the Cheshlre-Kyger Elementary
_young adult and junlot'·WIII be School on Saturday from 10 a.m.
•held. All members are urged to to 5 p.m. The event Is sponsored
attend.
by the PTO. Everyone welcome.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
United Pentecostal Church Is
sponsoring a Christmas VIllage
from 10 a .m. to 2 p.m. on
Saturday. Santa's workshop
(featuring pictures with Santa).
a
bake shop, a craft shop and
POMEROY - Revival servirefreshments
may be enjoyed.
ces will be held at the Senior
Rev.
Clark
Baker
Invites the
Citizen's Center In Pomeroy on
public.
Friday, starting at 7:30 p.m. ,"
with Evangelist Herbert Inscoe,
MIDDLEPORT - Heath UniThe public Is Invited.
ted Methodist Church Is sponsorPOMEROY - The Enterprise Ing a bazaar and luncheon this
United Methodist Church will Saturday. Everyone welcome.
hOld Its annual Christmas Baz,
HARRISONVILLE - Harriaar at the Main St. Pizza,
sonville
Lodge 411 F&amp;AM will
Pomeroy, on Friday and Satur·
meet
In
regular session on
day. Handmade gifts and holiday
Saturday
at
7:30 p.m., followed
decorations , candy and baked
by
Installation
of officers for the
goods will be offered for sale
coming
year.
All
master masons
during the bazaar which runs
welcome.
Refreshments
will be
from 9·a.m. to 4 p.m . both days.
served.
POMEROY - Heath United
POMEROY - The Meigs
Methodist
Church Is sponsoring a
County Fox Chasers Association
bazaar
and
luncheon this Saturwill meet Friday at 7 p.m.-a t their
club house on Eagle Ridge. New day, Everyone welcome.

-s,,,d s·lite""'''
ON

officers will be elected and 1988
dues are payable at the meeting.

Pharmacy
Kenneth McCuHoutft, R.Ph .

J

Chai'IH Aitfla. R.Ph ,

Ronald Haning. fL ~Mon. nwu ,Sat . 1 :00 A.i\11 . to 9 P.M.

Surodey 1b:OO A .M . to 4 :00P .M
PH . 992 ·291SIS
PRESCRIPTIONS

CIGARETTES
REG. &amp; KINGS ..... $995 carton
1OO's ............... $1 028 carton

Pomeroy. Oh.

Plus FREE Scripta Disposable Lighter

OFFER GOOD THROUGH
MONDAY, DECEMBER 7, .1987

'
",FREE
GIFT WRAPPING''

.
E, M••n

Frlandly Satvk•
0 en Nloh11 1111 9

;

�Page' 12-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday. December 3. 1987

· Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·230 dozen
cookies
bound
for
.
sailor son

Len Bias' mother
sends love in her
anti-drug message
\_

'

LEBANON, Ohio (UP!) - A
woman who started out baking a
box of cooklesforher son, a sailor
at sea, says the 230 dozen
chocolate chip-oatmeal cookies
winging their.way to the Persian
Gulf this week were a project
.that "just grew a little bit."
Judy . Koontz said she decided
after sending one box to her son,
Johnny Koontz, that his shipmates might be hungry for
home-baked edibles, too, so she
baked ·enough for every sallor
aboard the USS Thach.
" It star ted out for my son 's
birthday, " said Koontz . who
began baking In mid-October and
" kept It up every evening for a
· month.
The cookies required 25 pounds
of butter, 50 pounds each of
sugar, flour and oatmeal, and 25
large-size bags of chocolate
chips.

.,

Koo11tz's husband, John, mixed
dough and helped her pack the
cookies, then looked for a way to
get them to the Middle East.
Shipping clerks at the Airborne
Express hub In Wilmington got
authorization to fly the 300
pounds of cookies anywhere In
• the United States for free. Rep.
· Bob McEwen, R-Ohlo, got In·
volved and the Navy told him If
Airborne would fly the cookies to
Norfolk, Va., the Navy would
complete the delivery.
Airborne spokeswoman Diane
Wilson said the cookies were to
be shipped early today and
arrive in Norfolk shortly after
dawn.
Wilson said the cookies were
guaranteed . not to crumble be·
cau's e they were packed. by the
Koontzes In freezer bags and foil,
boxed and then packed In air
freight crates.
"Everybody here calls It the
Cookie Express Caper," said
Rita' Carey. communication
manager for Airborne.
The monumental baking project made Koontz "a little bit
tired'· of cookies and cooking,
she said Wednesday, adding,
"My husband can go to the
bakery if he wants anything

else."

•

HJS'l'OR)' MAKER • Tabalba Foster, 3,'
continues to write medical history each day she

lives after her Nov. I surgery for five-organ
transplant. With her Is mothe, Sandra.

Restless leopard takes a bite
of Juliet Prowse's ear, neck
,,

BURBANK, Calif. (UP!) - A
leopard upset after being caged
all day bit dancer Juliet Prowse
In the ear during a television
rehearsal Wednesday, the se·
.cond time the entertainer was
hurt. by the same animal ln just
more than two months .
Prowse was rehearsing with
the 80-pound cat on the "To night
Show" stage, where she was
scheduled to appear Wednesday
night, when the leopard lunged
and sank its tooth Into her Inner
ear, said Dan Jenkins, spokes·
man for "Circus of the Stars."
The 51-year-old dancer-actress
spent several hours at St. Joseph
Medical Center in Burbank,
where a plastic surgeon stitched
the ear and bandaged a smaller
wound to her neck. After the
procedure, Prowse was "chipper
and cheerful," he said, adding
that Prowse narrowly avoided
permanent hearing loss.
A smiling Prowse, ·wearing a
white bandage around her head ,

and.makealongdlstancecallfor
an un!lmlted time," Jone$ said.
The company is also setting up
centers In Green Bay, Wis., and
Fort Scott, Kan. , where I( has
affiliated companies, Jones said.
The pro~ram is designed to
allow senior citizens to talk to
loved ones who JIO longer live in
the area , Jones said.
The company also makes ar·
rangements for those in nursing
homes and the non-a mbulatory
to take a~van tage or the pro gram , he said.
This year will be the seventh
time the company has run the
holiday program. Jones refused
to say how much it costs Lincoln

_a n_
y_se_nl_or_c_IU_ze_n_ca_
n_co_m_e_in_N_at-io_na_l_ea_c)j_y_ea_r·- - - - l

THE BEST HOUSECLEANEit
· IS A WANT AD ,

told reporters as she left the
Prowse went back to rehearshospital Wednesday night that
ing the day after the earlier
the leopard's tooth "had gone
accident. "Circus of the Stars"
Into the ear canal, very close to
was taped in October, and
the nerve."
Prowse's segment with the leo"She's very lucky . This tooth
pard "went off beautifully,"
went into the inner ear and lt
Jenkins said.
missed everything," Jenkins
Jenkins, speaking about the
said. "It could have been a hello!
bite Prowse suffered In Sep·
a lot worse. If she hadn't turned
\ember, said that "both the
her head, (the leopard) might
trainer and Juliet are quite sure
have caught her face ....
it was a playful gesture."
Prowse was rehearsing at NBC
But after Wednesday's attack,
studios in Burbank 11bout 4:30
Jenkins reported that Prowse
p.m . prior to an appearance on
said of Sheila: "She wasn't
the "Tonight Show '' when Sheila,
playing this time."
an 80-pound leopard, lunged at
The leopard had been flown to
her and grabbed her ear and neck
California from Florida Tuesin Its jaws, Jenkins said.
day. The Wednesday afternoon
The appearance on the late·
attack came as "Juliet had a talk
night show was planned to
with the leopard," re·
promote an act taped in October acquainting herself with the
for a "Circus of the Stars"
animal and walking through the
television special.
act, Jenkins said.
The "Tonight Show" act,
"The leopard was upset. She
drawn from the "Circus of the
had taken a long flight, had been
Stars" production scheduled to
caged up all day. She was In a
air Dec. 15, ca lled for the leopard
strange place and her four
to get "up on her hind legs and
leopard friends' weren 't with
put her front paws on Juliet's
her," Jenkins said .
shoulders, " Jenkins said.
"There was a large, rather
''At that moment (during the wavery mirror right alongside
rehearsal), Juliet turned her where the two of them were
head to the right and the leopard standing. The trainer says the
suddenly went for her ear and the mirror obviously upset Sheila &gt;
side of her neck ," he said.
"The trainer is convinced
The same leopard bit Prowse that's what triggered the whole
during a Sept. 28 rehearsal lor thing," he said.
the "Circus of the Stars" show, · "The trainer says Sheila is shy
and after that Incident she and deflhltely is not a vicious
needed five stitches to close neck animal," Jenkins said, but
wounds dangerously close to the ,;when you're working with · an
carotid artery, which delivers 80-pound leopard, it can get out of
hand ."
blood to the brain .
Jenkins said the leopard's
After two violent encounters
with Sheila, Prowse said, "!don't trainers were wary of bringing
know if I would work with wild the cat to California for the
"Tonight Show" appearance,
animals again ."
. Jenkins said he asked Prowse "but they got talked Into lt."
whether "this Is about it with
Sheila and the trainers were
animal acts and she said, ' No- scheduled to return to Florida
thing larger than an Riley cat."' Thursday morning.

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT ·~
~
STORE
w

I

!.

Christmas Savings

W

I

~

MEN'S

!

!

POLAR FLEECE SHIRTS
REG. $17.99

11.

I

II.

I

NOW $14 40
LADIES NQVELTY
SWEAT SHIRTS

W

I

~

20°/o OFF

w

1

I
!
i

os otferong

)'OLr

huge

sa~tn9S

on a

un~ue

mechone. the Songer' ' Lrmrled Ethlron· Model
6230 Th1s g reat model comm~moratps ttw 1.001h
Ann·v~~ry olt~e US Cqnstrluloon .;~ nd come~
wllh IO!Jll\1'' 1819$1 pdv1ncas ,, wwong
tecMotogy Don 1 rn•ss rn11 Dig ~vent•

AS LOW
AS •199.99

PRICES

.

STOREWIDE
SAVINGS TOO!

THE FABRIC SHOP
II 0 Will MAIN, POMEROY
992-2284

·SINGER
APPRCNED DEALER
. ,u,,r~mpll(lQ lllq

'Ill

su •.

115 1 a~9 9t
ot Th~ Smgotr Comp.ony
··~·.eopt oy ,.,a•r tiler purCI'ISII'

lrl1~'mal'h

Nov. 20th Winner-Sherry Johnso", Middlpeort
Nov. 27th Winner-Shirley Miller-Rutland

~

I

I
I

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

I

I

I

I
I
I

I

W

i

.

[iiJ

.

DAYS

ONLY

W1,

L~-~w..:~~w..:w..:w..:w..:~wwww..:~ww..:w..:w~~~r

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias

Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus

House Plants
Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees
Candle Arrangements
Grave Blankets

By SONJA HILLGREN
UPI Farm Editor
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
Senate's finished legislation
authorizing a $4 b!Ulon bailout of
the Farm Credit $ystem would
have taxpayers cover part of the
bond Interest, but once the
system was nursed back to
health It would r~pay the debt.
After debating the bill for two
days, senators wrapped up details Wednesday but delayed a
final vote until Fr[day morning.
Aides said Senate Republican
leader Robert Dole of Kansas
busy campaigning for president:
requested the delay so he could
· be present for the vote.
The Senate bill would authorize

In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night,
eight defendants were fined with
four others forfeltlng bonds.
Fined were Patrick 0. Conley,
Athens·, $47 and costs, speeding;
Norma Mills, $48 and costs,
speeding; Shirley Durst, Syracuse, $43 and costs, left of cen-ter
lmd $63 and-costs, no operators
license; Michael Amodia, Mid·
dleport, $50 and costs, on charges
of no financial respons!blllty and
assured clear distance; Chester
Ross. Portland, $63 and costs, no
operator's license; James Peytpn, Dexter, $47 and costs,
speeding; Kenneth Carpenter,
Akron, $63 and costs, operating
under suspension; and Tammy
Johnson, Racine, $48 and costs,
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Darrell
Hawthorn , Long Bottom, $48,
speeding; Garyj Hrlnda, Holly wood, Fla, $63, expired plates;
Gerald Dill, Jr., Racine, $48
speeding; Walter Riggs, Middleport, $63, expired plates.

Screening Saturday

Middleport court

OPEN DAILY 9·5
SUNDAY 1-5
SYRACUSE
992-5776

In Middleport

Two persons were lined and
three others forfeited bonds In
the court of Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were Charles Whittington. $20 and. costs. disorderly
mariner, and Brian R. Grindstaff, Racine, $10 a nd costs,
running a stop sign, and $50 and
costs for driving under
suspension.
Forfeiting bonds were Larry
R Spencer. Columbus, $450 on
DWI; Johnnie Bonecutter, Leon,
W. Va., $100 on disonlerly
manner, and Jeffrey P. Hood,
Middleport, $41, speeding.

Seeks divorces

Veterans Memorial
Darlene Shain, Pomeroy, and
Tuesday
Admiss ions - Ka ren·
Paul Leonard Shain, Pomeroy,
Phalln,
Pomeroy;
Henry Turner,
have petitioned the Meigs County
Middleport;
Golda
Smith, Reeds·
Common Pleas Court for a ,
ville;
Albert
VariCooney,
dissolution of their marriage.
Pomeroy.
Claudette Laudermllt has been
Tuesday Discharges - Clyde
granted a divorce from Gregory
Bobo,
Robert Roberts .
Allen Laudermi!L

ClOSED SUNDAY

....., ............
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D&gt;.&lt;llf!l'lt ,.IUC ATION

... o..o•,. ••H:•

IIO..A .. IOTU~On
7QOI M OOUNUOT

'"'""

"'!011111).0~1001'~
''""
Tt1UOIO.OY

Description

Stock No.

WAS

'IV

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On November 27, 1987.
in the Meigs County Probate

NOW

Washer

26731

469.99

332.99

Dryer

66721

359.99

251 .99

Washer

26721

459.99

332 .99

Dryer

66701

339.99

260.99

81329

19" Remote Television

81041
42109

169.99
199.99

152.99
179.99

359.99

259.88

SAVINGS
137.00
108.00
127.00
79.00
17.00
20.00

I 00.11

13" Remote Television

40652

254.99

229.49

25.50

VCR

53295

314.99

224.99

90.00

MANY, MANY MORE GREAT VALUES
OPEN A SEARS CHARGE PLUS
ACCOUNT TODAY AND RECEIVE A
FREE CORNINGWARE DISH

SEARS CATAL'OG
MERCHANT
BILL HAPTONSTALL

781 N. 2Nd
992-2178
MIDDLEPO~T
W.VA. CUST~ERS ONLY 1·100·127· 7799 ·

_/

00 OM O~ IDOY

Public Notice

...

01!011

.. ~ ..

•011

.. ~..,

.,, ..

:~~=

~·--·.----·

-

·-loi-"--·---·...
:11-- .......

.........

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

:::.:::.......

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

M - ............

==~t.:-::;t;.

...

« -~•o••

Ch~ulet

deceased.

E. Friley,

late of 1716

Chester Road. Pomeroy.

70-,._._

7:1- •-aowa·,

Clabtjied pa~J cour 1he
jollowin~ 1elt1phone uchan,!eL .

-··----

"'-·
...- ... a.ftt:t.:::&amp;::
,,.._,_

Lena K. Nesselroad, Clerk

112) 3. 10, 17, 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
Salu issued out of the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs COunty, Ohio, in the
caae of Diamond Savings 8t
Loan Companv. Plaintiff. ve.
Charles Humphreys, at al .,
Defendants; upon a judg·
mant therein "rendered. be·
ing Case No. 87·CV·68 in

aaid Court. I will offer for
sale at the front door of the
Courthouse in Pomeroy,
Meigs County, Otiio, on the

,,.

171-··---·-·
:::=r'.::: ... .,_N_H_

=~~n.

':::;~ ·::

ttl - -

··~-­
~--

•Trophies - Plaques

Badges
•Name Tags for

761-·-·
··-

107 LOCUST ST.

New Location:

POt.OOY-985-3561

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

985-3561

We Carry Fishing SuppiHis

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS .PHONE
lb 14) 992·bSSO

RESIDENCE PHONE
lbi4). 992-77S4

All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Dryers •Freezers

WE SEll USED

MARCUM
CONTRACTING r

1

CHESTER. OHIO

I

•HOME BUILDING
•FIOOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
.

SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;

BACK HOE WORK
Phone Day or Evenings

985-4141

GENIIAL CONlRACTOIS

11 -~ttn

References

Roger .Hysell
Garage

Public Notice

Avenue and Walnut Street.

ORDINANCE NO. 1189-87

Walnut Street lies South,

Additional Appropriations

First Avenue lies East, Se·
cond Avenue lias Wast and
Rutland Street lies North of
the real estate. a more
complete description of said

lorBe1987.
it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport as follows:

Middleport. Ohio 46760;

Situated in the County of
Meigs. in the State of Ohio
and in the Village of MiddleFour.
corner of Front and Walnut
Streeta in said Vitlega and
being formerly known as the
Commercial Hotel property
and the Grand View Hotel
property, known now as the
Hotel Ohio. and baing the
same real aatata conveyed in
deeds recorded in Volume
Being Lot number

An Ordinance to Provide

BOGGS

ROOFING

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authariud John Deere,
New Hoiland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Deoier

NEW- REPAIR

949-2263
or 949-2168

Paris

Sec. 1. That the 1987

Our sincere thanks to
Pieasers Restaurant, Radio
Station WIIPO and PiZZI
Hut for your contributions
and haip in our annual ride
to provide toys for. under.priviiqed children in
Meias County on Nov. 7.
These places were omitted
from our orisinal thank you
notice.
•
Jo Fry, .on behalf

GUN.SHOOT

appropriations for the Vil lage of Middleport be ifi·
creased as follows:
Swimming Ppol Fund increase by $3700 from

EVERY
SUNDAY

817,300 to 821,000.

Public Transportation
Fund Increase by

1:00 P.M.

$58,886 .from 8106.116 to
8166,000 . .
Revenue Sharing Fund -

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Increase by $282.89 from
8412.J1 to t676.00.
Economic Development

Fund - lncr-e by $3065
from $17,936 to 821,000.

RACINE, OHIO
I 0· 9· tfn

Reference Deed : Volume

cannot be sold for leu than
two·thirds the appraised
value.

THE DABBLE SHOP

Sac. II. That this ordinance
is hereby d8cl ared to be an

Middleport, Ohio

emergency in order that the
village can meet ita financial
obligations for 1987 and is
neceuary to provfde for the
safety and welfare of village
residents.
Sec. Ill. This Ordinance

IS FOR SALE
If interested stop by.

1f2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW

shall take affect and be in

TERMS OF SALE: Cash force from and after Nov.
8th day ol January, 1988. et
23. 1987.
10 :15 A.M.. the following on delivery of deed .
Palled the 2 3rd day of
·
Howard
E.
Frank,
lands and tenements, lo·
November,
1987.
Sherilf of
cated at the corner of First
Meigs County. Ohio Atteot: Jon P. Buck, Deputy
Dewey M. Horton,
{12) 3, 10, 17 , 3tc
1 Card of Thanks
President of Council
DEC. J. 10, 2tc

THANKS

~.!2:~!~!~~:§U

Fund ..- Increase
158, Page 809. and Volume bySewage
S67001rom S106,300to
193 , Page J41, Meigs
$112,000.
County Deed Records.

256, P011e 733; Volume
292, Pogo 989 and Volume
292, Page 991 , Meigs
County Deed Ra.cordo.
APPRAISED AT:
S6,000.00. Tho reol estate

few

a ..
pennies spent he.re
comes back folding money

WANT
ADS
WORK!

.

PLASTERCRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
.MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC .
'

12-2-'87- 1 mOpd

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES
Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine.

WEBER FARM
742-2143

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

Bosham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Foctory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns

.·DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED
$2500
$5.00 Extra

Ron Diles or

For Skinning

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734

11 ~4 - 1

12·3·87-1 mo.

mo.

Before and after auto tune·up.
(Co mparator) Fill up your
tank. and watch it subtract add
display fuel consumed.

UNOER '90
Monitors for MCF-CCF used

for furnace s, calibrated to
your gas meter.

Middleport-CaL, Ohio

11 ·5 ·87-1 mo.

FREE LANCE
VIDEO .
Rec:ord Those Spec:ial
Occasions on VIIS
Tape
•Holidav Parties
•Weddings
•School &amp; Church Programs
•Spol1ing Ewnt!l
•Annivenaries
•Record Valuables,
Documents
•Tranafer Photo Albums to
VHS Tape
•Transfer 8mm and Super B
Movies to Video Tape
•Create Training Film• for
Students and Employees

DENNY CO~GO
WILL HAUl
JUST CAll!
992-3410
liMESTONE
GRAVEl - SAND
TOP SOil
Fill DIRT
10·8-tfc

Tag Your Tree
Early
For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
2 112 miles from ,,•.,,_··:·

•ROOFING
' •GUTTERS
•CAR PENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREI ESTIMATES
CALL 949·2969

11·23·'87·1 ma.

RADIATOR
SERVICE
We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiator$. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

992 -2196

Announcements

99'2-3711

"

HOME MAINTENANCE

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS i

992-7632

11/ 16/' 87 I mo. d.

HOSKINS

Middleport, Ohio

REASONABLE RATES
CALl fOR fREI ESTIMATE
·

.

FOR RENT
Bedroom, . Stove
&amp; Refrigerator ,
Jurnished. Loundry·
facilities available.
E.O.H.
11·23·'171 mo. pd.

' elevision Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Servi
Hearing Evaluations For Ail Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ licensed Clinical Audiologist
J: (614) 446-7619'01' (614) 992-2104
z 417 Second Avmue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio
8-13 lfn

7 ·

Yard Sale

........ Ganrpolis......... .
&amp; Vicinity

Wanted To Buy

W e pay casll for late mod'el clean

ill,/u

PUBU(

PAT Hill FORD

2

LOST between Henderson, Crab
Creek and Southside, Coonhound, black head white body,
lots of little black spots. If seen
please coli 304· 675-6459 .

9

'

TREES

LOST: Between Henderson Crab
Creek &amp;. Southside - Coon
Hound-Black head &amp; white
body, lots of little black •pots. If
seen please call304-675 -6459 .

Huge ~ u mmage Sale. Ewington
Town House, 5 minutes from
Vinton , Ohio . Childrans clo·
thing, mu c h more, Friday Doc. 4 ,
10;00.

742: 2035
11·J·1 mo. pd .

CHRISTMAS

614 -992-2466 .

Open Fridays • Saturday!i •
Sundays. 9 to 5.

l" DO(U-01 hp.

Add on mini fuel computer
system. Fits any car. Instant
miles per gallon readout.
Know your fuel consumption
from one block to hundreds of
miles .
Commercial;
Store to Job Cost
Taxi Service

lOST: Add ison, red Cho'fo' German Shepherd . Wearing
black collar, answers to name of
"Pugs" . Reward . Call614 -446·

Gallipolis Flea MarkBt· Former
Thaler Garage- Rts. 35 &amp; 160.

WHITE HILL RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

1-23.'87·1 rna,

LOST: Billfold-Sun.- near Methodist Church in Cheshire. Keep
money &amp; return papers. No
questions asked. Call 614 -446·
3604.

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

JERRY'S
CUSTO,
SLAUGHTER

PH. 992-2772

LOST: Fleward. Traelna_ Walker
meta Coonhound. was huntingThe Little Bulls kin area. lnforma·
tion7 Plaasec.aU 6'4-266 -1617

11-%7.'17 1 mo. pd.

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

FREE ESTIMATES

LO ST; Ladi• wri•t gold watc h.·
In Captain 'D ' s, Tabor's, Carp etland, or Haffett' s area. Reward .
Call 614 - 367 -7689 .

1758.

Garv Cummins
Insured/ Licensed

Lost and Found

5 head of cross breed heifers.
strayed in the vicinity of Camp
Conley and TNT area. Contact
Atmer Matheny . 304· 468·

No Sunday Calls

9'92-6226
Middleport

Rutland, Ohio

6

lOST small black dog, Pek A
Poo. vicinity of Sand Hill Fld,
REWARD , 304 -676·1664.

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

D&amp;C
ELECTRIC

304-675 . 3834 .

LOST Female Siamese cat , Gill
Ridge - Rollinsvilla, Reward ,
phone 304-895-3436.

New Homes Built

.....

Puppies half German Shepherd.

614-367-0588 .

3·ll ·ttn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

'VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN IN
INSULATION

"Free Estimates"

DON'T LET YOUR ELECTRICAL PROIUMS BECOME A
SHOCK TO YOUI
CALL

6 month o ld male and female
kittens. Black. •t.ripe. Female
dog. 614· 986- 3884.

lost : large, white hound dog.
Brown ears. pink nose. In
,Cheshire area. Valuable family
member. Large rti'W"ard. Call

SIDING CO.

&amp; :."""""

black, 4 long haired brown . 6
wks. old. Call 614-446 -1159

Set of kevs. several on chain
Withe silver heart and Amfll'icen
legion tag
If found, call

BISSELt.

farm Equipment

4· 22·8.7-tfn

"'~- ·-··-

Business·

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

11·23-'87-1 mo.

Howard L. Writesel

PuppiBS Must Go. 3ahort haired-

4327.

FREE ESTIMATES

6· 17-Hc

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home &amp; Auto
1614) 992-37.!.8

.,'

•Insulation
• Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

Also 1ransmtsslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

3398 .

. 304 · 676-1566.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

'·

remodeling
- Roolin g and guner work
- Concrete work
- P lumbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

•'h T8frier·% Poodle, 3 mos. old
10 give away. Call 614 ·446·

675 -4312 .

q92 -621S or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio ·
4· 15.'8G·Ic

ArriLIA~I~t~

1 Orange &amp; white mafekhtan, 8

wks, old. Call 614-446-1822.

Puppies Part German Shepherd
pan Doberman, phone 304-

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addons and

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•Ranges •Refrigerators

1/28/ tln

~:::r.:.,a-

Public Notice

YOUNG'S

KEN'S APPUANCE
.SERVICE

Giveaway

Gas cook s~ove. works. Call
614-992· 3814.

4·16·86·tln

11-20·'87· 1 mo.

...- ..

1:11'- lllf!-

Day or !'light
NO SUNDAY CALLS

CHESTIR, OliO 45720

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

n - .._11....
~ -c-oo.•

PH. 949-2801
.'
or 949-2860

HOUSE FOR RENT
168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

4

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GA~AGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

Sale"
• )
•Golf Clubs · ~
Shirts . Shoes

mv

I.lind. Dale L. little.

BUILDERS

JOHN TEAFORD

1-24·'87-1 mo. pd.

N,o hunting Qr tre1pusing on

BISSELl

Dogs.

.,_.._

and bounded and des ·
Meigs County, Ohio 46769. port
cribed 11 followa:

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge

........_. ,,...
1'1--·..,··-n--•'-'•""

11- fN .........

Court, Case No . 26897.
Charles E. Friley, Jr .. P. 0.
Box 266, Minto, N. D.. real estate is as follows:
58261 was appointed Executor of

.I

ZOOI IO I~U&lt;lU
IOOI M WI ONUOU
oo 1 " rwuo•o••

j

S UNtlAT lOll 0

VALUE EXAMPLES BELOW

... "

''"'"~"

COI'Y Dt.OI&gt;&lt;JOof.

FRI., DEC. 4th/SAT., DEC. 5th

-

''"~· ···'CoOl."'

...... ...... .. ....
... - ·- .........
~

RATES

lt-'1 - 0 1 ... .

·-c..•••

EVERYTHING -IN STOCK
EVEN IF IT'S ALREADY ON SALE!!

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

..... .. .
•o•..
:...:·.:r·..
.::::: :::: .
..................
·-~· ---·"'·
,.,... .....

a-c ....,

10°/o OFF

Teaching Thompso~.
s ·c haum, Bastien
From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For Information

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB
"Chrlshnu \~-~~

INSULATION

Co,. 100 , _ ,

EXTRA

Hospital mews

PIANO LESSONS
You '11 Nm' Too Old
To turn/

J&amp;L

JO n&amp;CI AN AD CAll 992-21 S6
MOHDU tltru fRIDAY I A.M. t• S ,_M.
I A.M. Until NOON SATUMIAY

3 Announcements

Business Services

the private sale of up to $4 billion $2.5 b!ll!on In this fiscal year, but
In 15-year bonds to ball out the that would not overcome objections under Senate budget rules.
system, w)!ich has lost !;4.8 billion
The Congressional Budget Of·
since 1985.
flee
estimates the farm er-owned
Lawmakers agreed the U.S.
system
will need $3.1 billion ln
Treasury would pay all of the
bonds,
With
. interest expenses
bond Interest for the first five
years, would share interest ex- ending up about $1.2 billion.
Senate Agriculture Comnllttee
penses with the FCS In the next
f!ve years and would require the Chairman Patrick Leahy, D-Vt. ,
system to pick up the tab In the said Wednesday that Congress
remains "about 10 years from
final period.
In a key amendment approved the goal line. " He predicted
by voice vote, senators agreed to House members and senators
require the FCS to repay the • probably will reach an agreeInterest subsidy after 15 ·years ment In principal to resolve
differences between their bills
when It Is financially stable.
before Congress recesses !or the
Senate Budget Committee
year.
Chairman Lawton Chiles, DBoth bills would permit banks
Fla., pointed out that other
and
insurance companies to
bailout recipients such as Lock·
compete
with the FCS In lending
heed ·corp. and Chrysler Corp.
farm
mortgages
with establish·
had to repay Interest. Letting the
ment
of
a
secondary
market
FCS avoid repayment could set a
under
which
financial
lnstftu·
precedent "which could haunt us
tlons
could
pool
and
sell
loans
as
for years to come," he warned.
An alternative FCS bailout, securities.
The legislation also would
approved by the House two
guarantee
farmer stock in FCS
months ago, would authorize the
banks,
would
require restructursale of government loans to raise
ing of troubled farmer s' loans if
the costs are equal to or less than
Clinic results
foreclosure, would enhance bor·
Free clinics for DPT. MMR. rowers' rights and would encourpolio and HlB Immunizations age state-supervised mediation
wl!l be held Dec. 15 and 29 from 9 · between farmers and lenders.
Borrowers' rights and restruc-·
to 11 and 1 to 3 at the Meigs
turing
also would apply to
County Health Department,
borrowers
of the Farmers Home
Norma Torres, R.N. nursing
Administration,
the Agriculture
supervisor, announced today.
Department's
farm lending
Last two days for flu vaccine
wtll be ' Dec. 7. from 9 a.m. to agency.
noon, and Dec. 28 from 8 to 10
p.m. No flu vaccine can be given
past Dec. 31. To date, Mrs.
A free speech and language
Torres reports that 1150 doses
screening
for children between
have been administered by our
nursing staff. The fee remains at the ages of tbr~e and eight years
50 cents for senior citizens and will be held at the Pomeroy
disabled residents. and $1 for the Library in Pomeroy Saturday .
Diane Nader-Harris , M.A., of
general public .
the Holzer Clinic Speech and
Language Pathology Depart·
Aciion filed
ment will be conducting the
screen ings on a !lrst come, first
Debbie Meldau, Pomeroy , has serve basis from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m.
flied a Meigs County Common
Purpose of the screening !s to
Pleas Court action against Mike make early detection of child ~
Meldau, Racine, charging do- reo's speech problems easily
"lestic violence. The court has accessible to parents in Me igs
Issued · a restraining order County. For further information
against the defendant.
residents may contact Ms.
•
Nader-Harris at 446-5135.

Pomeroy court

The Daily Sentinei - Page- .1 3

Ohio

Farm credit bill completed

Monument Sprays

SALE

I
I

Hubbards Greenhouse

Truckload
Appliance

''2''

Microwave 1.1 700 Watt

I
I
w
I

OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 8

I

Microwave

REGISTER FRIDAY NIGHT, DEC. 4TH,
5-8 P.M. FOR FRE.E TURKEY

I
I

In
Middleport

I

i

I
I

YEAR'S SUPPLY OF
McCA LL'S PATTERNS FREE!••

"No one wants to hear about
love because II seems so !rail and
unsubstantial," Bias said. But
receiving enough love In the
family home Is the best Insurance to keeping a child off
drugs, she said.
"You'd be surprised at the kids
that carry guilt around because
their parents are divorced," Bias
said.
Young people are astute and
can tell a phony , she said. They
have trouble believing adults

~

I

T/'11s 1! a ~erv br9 deal'

DAYTON, Ohio (UP!-)- Love,
not virtue, .wlll keep kids away
from drugs, said the mother of
Maryland basketball Len Bias,
who died of cocaine Intoxication
last year.
Lonise Bias says school kids
need compelling reasons to ig·
nore the temptation of drugs, and
love in the family home provides
the biggest motivation of all.
"I bring a basic message,"
Bias said Wednesday before
speaking to students at Dunbar
High School in Dayton. "If you
love yourself you wlll do nothing
to harm yourself."
"You have to go to the cause,"
Bias said, "You have to treat the
wound."
Bias said the death of her son
on June 19, 1986 and the drugrelated deaths of other young
people have focused attention on
the problem of drug abuse among
youths.
Bias said during her nationwide speaking tour she has found
many young people bewildered
from growing up in broken
homes. Their childhood leaves
them poor at coping with stress
and peer pressure, she said.

f'!I':M!lMW..:W..:~lM~~~\!j;li~~~~~IQB:l~~-~~~~~

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

R1ght now TH[ FABRIC SHO P

who advocate not using drugs
without giving coJJvinclng reasons !or living a drug-free life.
Bias commended Fl rst Lady
Nancy Reagan's anti-drug cam·
paign, but suggested it doesn't go
far enough.
"This woman stood up and
said, ',Just say no.' But we need to
dig deeper , Why do you say no to
drugs."
Bias said she had no knowledge
of lwr son 's drug use before he
died. The two-time Atlantic
Coast Conference Player of the
Year - for the University of
Maryland had been drafted two
days before his death by the
Boston Celtlcs In the first round
of the NBA draft.
He had returned home !rom
Boston, after signing a $1 million
contract wi th Reebok shoes, and
was celebrating with friends
when he collapsed In his dormitory room.
,
His mother said she Isn't
convinced the athlete caused his
own dealh. "Why would someone
drink cocaine," she asked, noting
that an autopsy showed thfi fatal
dose of cocaine was In her son's
stomach.

By ALISON GRANT

Elderly may reach out
for free holiday calls ·
FORT WAYNE. Ind. (UPI)A Fort Wayne insurance company is offering sen lor citizens an
opportunity to reach out and
touch someone for free dut!ng
the holiday season, a spokesman .
said Wednesday.
Under lhe ' Let Happiness
Ring' program,. the Lincoln Na·
tlonal Corp. is setting up tele·
phone centers in the city where
I he elderly c an use phones to
make !ong·distance calls with the
company paying the bill, said
spokes man Bob Jones .
'
" We identify · particular locations in the community and
ins tall WATS lines !n each of the
locations and then publicize that

0

Thursday, December 3, 1987

1-13-tfc

.3 Announcements

used cera .
Jim Mink ChEN" .·Oids Inc.
Bill Gane Johnson
614-446 -3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 mo~el
and newer used cars . Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614 -446 228-2.

- - -- -

OtANTED TO BUY: Used wood
&amp; coal h.eaters . Swain ' s Furniture. 3rd. &amp; Oliva St. Gallipolis.
Call 614 -4?· 3169 .
Buying daily gold, silvar coins.
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins. large currency . Top prices . Ed Burkett Ba rber Shop,
2nd. AIM . Middleport, Oh. 614 -

992· 3476.
Raw fur, beef and deer hides.
Gvn Sing and Vetlow root. We
hlNe whaat and nite lit111.
Trapping supplies for sal a. (Buy·
ing used traps) . Ga orge BUcklfJ'{.
Hours12·9 . 614-664-4761 . ,

Antiqua glassware, old co ins,
old jars, rings , pictures. ·any ne..,.Y
glass, Fenton, Imperial. Call
Brian Lee 614· 386-6099 . .
Gl Joe figure Destro. Ca ll
614-992 -3892 after 5p.m.
•
QUILTS .
High pr ices paid tOr pre-1950
quilts. Applique, pieced. anY
condition. Call 614 -992 -210.1
614-992 -5657.

\-.Jant hood. to p end w inds hiel d
4ram e f or 1979 Jeep CJ5.
30 4-675 -5909 .

Employment
Serv1ces

A different kind or datin g
Help Wanted
sarvlca. For information Writ e, 11
Kupid '• Nest· P.O. Box 519, _ __:_ _ _ _ _ _ __
Ironton, Ohio 46638 or call
606-836·2745.
Apply in p erson- Ha ir· Stylls't.
No hunting or traspauing, day Heir Happening- Silver drldge
or night on t he Charles E. Yost Plaza.
Farms.
Attentio n Baautlcians- Tired of
wurldng ior someon e else? Rent
New C..-edit Card. No one 11 station from us and be your
refuted I Major CrBdlt Cards, giJt own boss. EJttra large shop 'in a
the factst Call todav tor report geiod location. Call for details,
and application. 1 -6 18·469 - 6 14-446· 3703.
'3734 ext. C -1622 24 hra.
Matur&amp; lftdy to II\IA in wrth widoW
No Hunting on Gill Ridge on With pay. Light housework. Cllll
properties of C. R. Gill , Mlt9hell 614- ~46 · 1 023,
Cullen, Georga Gill without
written parmiasion. VIolators E~tpet"ienced &amp; responsible per·
wll! be prosecuted.
to care for In fant in your
4 days a weak. dey shift.
Tlntel and Mn. ·saftta' • Gift
Cia 825
114
"Shoppe, New Haven Bnur,
~
I
i DailytoBo•
Tribune.
gifts, baked goods. balloons, 3rd . Ave . Gallip&lt;:'lis, Ohip
c raftt.
45631

"3:,7:~~~=~~~

'

�•

11

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

44

Apartment . 1 136 2nd ., Gallipo·
lis. 2 BR . Stove &amp; refrig.
fumlahed. tl 86. Water paid.

Local company now hiring for
full· time employment. No exp•
rience nec811 •ry. E'4n ing work.
Light lifting invotved. t1200 a
mo. Profit aharin.g &amp;. other
benefits. For peuonal intervi8w
call 614-446-6146 ,

Cell 614--448 -4416 after 7 PM

Furnished uprcairs- 1 BR . Utili·
tl• paid. •220 a mo. 876 dep.
94 Locust St. Call 614 -4461340 or 448 -3870,

61 4-448-7025.·

Tara Townhouse Apts. • 2 BAS ,
t lh b.. hs, AC . Start U99 a mo.
Utilhi• not lnctuded. Call 814-

367-7860.

New 2 BR . equipped kitchen,
low utiliti•. convenient location. No pet1. Ref. &amp; dep, Call

Government Jobs. t16.040 ·
859.230 yr. Now hiring Your
area. 806·887-6000 Ext. R·
9806 for current repo federal
lilt.
The Meigs Local Scho9l Dlltrict
is accepting application• tor
substitute teachers. Substitutes
are needed in all certificatioll
area~ . The daily ra11 ot pay·
8126 . Ohio Certified Teachers
willing to cross a 'picket line
should immediately contact
M&amp;IIJI Local School Superin·
tendent's office, 621 South
Third Avenue, Middleport. Ohio

467&amp;0. &amp;14-992-2163.

2 BR. g.-age apartment with
refrig. &amp; range. Adults only No
pills. Referenc:o &amp; deposit. Call

81 4-448-4336.

"That bomb shelter we
laughed at 25 years ago rents
for $500 a month!"
3 BR . Ranch·attached gwage.ln
town. Good location . Low
t40 's. Call after 5 :30 P-M.
614·446· 1406.

AVON · All areas. Call Marilyn
WerNer 304·882· 2645 .

2 BR. house with g•age.
Carpeted, draperies . dis:
l'lwasher. refrigerator 106 K1·
neon Dr. Na•the n.wcity pool.

Call 614-446-4347

304-875-1429

Carpeted, 6 rooms &amp; bath
Seduded country home ne•
Dam· 21fl acrM. Cell 814-446·
2914 after 5 PM . Glenwood,

MONEY FOfl COlLEGE is avail·
able to Individuals who become
memb8t's of the Army Nattonal
Guard. Call 304·676· 39150 or
1 -800-642·36 19

WVa. $29,900.

Phny Truck Stop Rest., Rt. 36,
now accepting applications for
waitreu·coolc. 304· 757 -8357,
10:00 am t1ll 6 :00 pm.

2 BR . home in Patriot. Partially
remodled, nu.d• •om&amp; wo.rk
inside. 1,-2 acre. t22,500. Call
614·379-2441

Giovanni's Piua taking applications Thursduv morning 9 00 till
1 1·00 2322¥2 Jackson Aw.,
Po;nt P1euant. W . Va.

8 room houte for sale. ~ acre~~
land. 3 or 4 bedroom, 111:! bath.
carport. aluminum si~ng . Lo·
cited In Rutland. 614 -742·
2696 or 1·464- 1380.

Part Time AssisUmt manager,
Goodwill Industrial, 409 Main
St., Point Pleas&amp;ot, W. Va. High
School Graduate. retail sal•
experience. supervisory skill.
Submit applicatiOn at store by
Dec 11 E.O.E., M ·F·U·H

2 bedroom. 2 baths, 2 car
garage, IBYel lot on At. 33.
Swimming pool, sataUte, close
to Melga High Call 614-992·

3254.

'

Frve lots on corner with 4
bedroom house. Carpeted. full
basement. central hell. fire·
place, garag&amp;. Call 3(14· 882·

Get paid for reading booksl
$100.00 per title. Wnte ACE·
617D . 161 S. Lincolnwasy, N.
Aurora , Ill. 6p542 .

2775.

Rent or Sale: Large houae needs
repair. Eut Main St. Pomeroy.
Call After 6;00 p.m . 614-986-

Get paid for reading books!
5100.00 tter title. Write: ACE ·
517D, 161 S . Lincolnway, N.
Aurora, Ill. 60542 .

4427.
3 BR, kitchen, lR, bathroom
upstairs. fully carpeted. electric
heat, full buement. gaa heat.
full garage, insulated. windows.
utility room. storage room. big
yard , gard&amp;n, all appliances. Call

V!:TERANS· Let u-s help pay your
, Christmas bill1. Army National
Guard .. parnime jobs·full time
benefrts. 304-675 · 3950 or1 ·

800-542-3519

Furnished etflciency apt. Carpet
t.,ru out. Private&amp;. quiet. Single
working person only. Call 614·
446-4607 or 446-2602.

I1-:~:::::;:;:~~;::;;::::::;;:::;~~~···~iftjiiiiiiiii~
31 Homes for Sale
Re nt als

New phy1ician' soffice in Racine
looking for LPN or R N and
receptionist-billing clerk. Please
send resume to The Daily
Sentinel, P.O. Boll 729H , Pom•
roy , Ohio 46769 .
·

AVON all areas. Shirlfl\1 Spears.

~

614·446·1250.

41

Homes for Rent

614-992-7787 EOH.

3 BR . house. Elec1riC"WOOd
heat. 1 0 min. from town. Call

992-6858.

Nicely furnisht&lt;l small house
Adutta ontv. Ref. required . No
pets. Call 614 -446-0338.

3 room apt. for rent Partly
furnished. 614· 992·6908 .

2 Furnished cottage~~ 3 roo.lis
each. N1ce and clean. Adults
onty . No pets R&amp;f. &amp; Oep Call

3 room apt. Partly furnished.

2, 3, or 4 bedroom houses and
al)1 . 1n Pom81"0V area. Pay own
utilities, deposit required Cell
614·992-5113, 614·992-6723
or 814-992-2509. Call after
6 :00. pleaee.
Newly renovate&lt;!, all electric
whh heat pump and central air. 3
bedrooms, plenty yard and
g•den spece m Portland, Ohio.
5 mile~ from Ravenswood, W .
Va. Call 614-843-6309.
3 bedroom house for rent t200
per month. Mulberry Ave. Pomeroy . 614-992-6587 or 614-

992-7450.

Insurance

1 v, story, newly equipped kit·
chen, large family room, air
cond, convient location, 304· ·

Call us for your mobile home
insurance: Miller lnsur&amp;n ce,
304 · 882 -2145 . Also : &amp;uto,
home. life. health.

675-5027.

Three bedroom. brick home.
large living room, possible loan
assumptiOn, close to Point Pleasant. 304-675-6306 .

18 Wahted to Do
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Septic tank pumping, residential
&amp; com m111ical. 880 per load.
Ron Evans Enterprises Jackson,
Ohio. Call 614 -286·6930
Child care24 hours Reasonable
rates, ell ages. Mei!lls furnished.
614· 992· 2458 .

1977 Fairmon1 Bayview 14x70.
All alec , hookup for woodstove.
2 DR .. Ca. wa1her S. dryer,
stove, rafrig. , &amp; underpinning:
All set up material. Home IS
clean. Furnished or unfurnished.
Call 614· 388· 9837 .

1 will take care of elderly women

in private nursing home. prefer
women who are not bed fast .
Will prov1de 3 hot meals plus will
take24 hours a day cere. Can be
reached between 5 :00 and
10 00 PM at 304·937·2577.

1985 Fleetwood 60.~~:14 mobile
home and lot. 2 bedroom, all
electric, underpinning. ln dudes
16.~~:24 ft. g•age. Will ~on•ider
selling separate. Located In
Autl&amp;nd. 614·742-2696 or 1·

Will do house work or care for
elderty in their homes. 304· 773·
6802

3
4 1:----l-4-,-5-:·:::
8-:0-:-.----:-------:----:-~;::

14x70 W1ndsor with 14x30
addition . 3 bedrooms, approxi·
mately 3 acres. black top road.
Several out·buildings and pond.
Gallipolis Ferry. 304-676-6930.

Financial
Business
Opportunity

1973, 12x60 Holly Park mobile
home in Poln1 Pleasant. price
negotiable, phone 304 -468 ·
1069

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

1973, 12~e66, · 2 bedrooms, 2
baths, mobile home. lot avail ..
ble, S4 . 600 .00 . 304 · 676·

21

ING CO . recommends that you 3763.
do qusinesl with people you 1 ;:;:==;=:;::::::::~===kno~.Y. and NOT to send money
B ·
34
throt.~gh the mail until you have
ustness
1nwe11tigated the offering
Buildings
Atterttion . Beeuticians· Tired of
wor.jfng for som&amp;Onaellle1 Rent
a st~tlon from us and be your
bot• Extra large S'hop in a good
locat'ion. Call for details · 614 ~

Commercial buildings for' lease.
Downtown Pt Pleasant. Stores.
offices. A-One Real Eltate.
Carol Yeager. Broker. Call 304675· 6104

446 -3703.

Professional
Services
Bq~

CUne Taxidermy, Member
W 'We. TIIC id8fmY Anoc, Rt 2
l~l'l 782, Point Pleasant, W . Va.

3QA·675·1448.

Real

a1

Eslate

Homes for Sale

749 Third Ave . Presentty The
Gift Shop. 1600 sq. ft. Commercial or warehouse. Parking on
side. Adjacent to Third &amp; Pine St.
Call 614 · 446 · 2362 for
appointment.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
In Gallipolis on Pine St. Vacant
lot with water and aweage. No
mobile homes permit ted .
86 ,000. Call after 5 :00 PM -

814-594-3833.

q '·R
---.,-;,-..,-~-.,-.-.-fu-:--1-:--1b-:-.,-am-.,-,:-:.3

16 acrea tor tale in Rutland. Call
T.O.Stewafl 614 -742·2421 .

mi. so. of Gallipolis. 134,900.
Days-614· 446 · 1616, after
6 ;ljl0 · 446 -1244.

For ule: 90x110 lot In Twin
Cedar addition. New Haven,
W.Va. $4600. firm 304-882 -

~nd new 3 SR . near Gallip~lts

3206.

C~l

loql\l en Rt. 7 . 2 car gar~ge. n~t?l'
Jot. Immediate poueu,on. W•ll
cor1•lder trade in ot Mobt!•
horre. property. e1c. Baruam
pri~. C•ll 814-446 -8038.
Mo}•n 3 fiR. houae. Patriot,
. Oh'o·. WHI f'telp finance Call

111-446-1340, 448 -3870.

Washert. dryers. tefrtg•ators.
rangea . Shgga Appllane ...

304-675-2130.

OHice Space for rent . Excel
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call 814-446 -4222

Two bedroom house halt mile
out Jericho Road, call after

6:00pm, 304-675·6483.

Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or less
920 4th., Gallipolis. &amp;75. Water
paid Call614· 446 -4416aftar7

Two room cot .. ge furnished,
utiliti81 paid, 865 .00 week.
single person. call 304 -676 ·
3100 or675-5609 .

PM

Trailer space for rent. Rural
water. garden area located on
160. SBO a mo. Call 614 -388 -

42 Mobile Homes

9364.

for Rent

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental tra1lers. Call 614-992·
7479.

2 8r trailer-cable. Beautiful river
view. , Foster's Mobile Home
Park. Call 614·446 -1602.

Space for small trailers. An
hook- ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms, air and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Call 304 -773 ·6661 .

Spacious 2 8R Windsor has
dining room. 11/t baths. Upp81"
At . 7 . Water paid Call614-246-

Rent or sale. Large trailer spec e.
East Main St. Pomeroy. Call
after6p.m 614-985·4427
2 Building Iota· 1 112 acres each
with county water. Jerrys Run
Rd . Apple Grove, W. Va . Call
304 -576·2383.

1----------

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, 304·675·

2 BR . Mobil 11 Hom• At. 160.
8250 . Deposit required . Call

3073.

614-388-8319.

•

Trailer spaces for rent. fli. 1
Locust Road, back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home Park. 304· 675 1076.

N1ce 14x65 2 Br. trailer. Call
614-379· 2409 , if no answar·

446-9727.

49

For Lease

2 bedroom, furnished, washer
and dryer, air. S196. PBf month
plus deposft and utilities:. 614992 -7479 .

1400 sq. ft . commercial spaca
suitable for offices, retailing, or
servtces. Prime location-corner
or 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis .
Arriple park1ng in rear. 8350 per
month. Call 814·446-4249 or
446 -2325

Two bed rooms, Upper River
fload. will accept working person or family with 2 children,

614-446-0508.

51 Household Goods
Apartment
for Rent
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- $399
Uving room suites- $199-!699
Bunk beds with bedding- $199
Full slze mattre•s &amp; foundation
start)ng · $99 . Recliners
1tarting- $99
USED· Beds, dressers, bedroom
suites, $199 - $299 . Desks.
wringer washer , a complete line
of used furniture.
NEW· Western bootl· $30.
Workboots 818 &amp; up (Steel &amp;
soft toe) . ·call 6t4 -446-3159 .

2 BR . apts. 6 closets, kitchen·
appl. furnished , Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet. newly
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Aptl. Call 304·676· 7738 or
676· 5104.
Furnished apt. next to library.
One professtonel adOtt only .
Parking Call 614-446 -0338 .
N

Downtown· Modern 1 BA .,
co mplete kitchen, carpet, air,
electric helll. Call 614·446·
4383·diiVS. 446 ·0139-even. &amp;
weekends.
Furnished. 4 room• &amp; bath.
Cle11n No pets Adtlhs onty. Ref
&amp; dep. required Call 614-446·

1619.

Jullt arrived· 3 truck loadl· New
living room suites; new wood 6
pc. living wood auites, $399.95;
cheat of drawers; twin mat·
tresses. !96 set; microwave
oven stands.

THE WORKING

MAN'S FRIEND

Warm Morning Wood Stovawhh
blower. Call 8 14·446-1340.

•1••11

Firewood for
hardwood.
t515a cord. Call614·379· 2834.
Crafts S. candy, baby bootiM.
baby quiha, doili•. afghans &amp;
' more. 113 Vinton Court. Sun •

Doc. 6, 10-8. 446-2798.

Vallev Furniture
New and used furniture and
applicsnces . Call 614 -446 ·
7672. Hours 9-6.
Carpet Pri(fes Stflrting at :
Commtucial· 84 a yd . ,
Sculpture-S&amp; a yd .. Plush· 87 a
yd . Lots of room .f'&amp;menh in
stock. Financing available. Mollohan Furniture. Upper River Rd.
• 614 -448 -7444 .

4PM.

1460.

Magnova" 25 inch floor model
color TV. Genera I Electric porta·
ble, phone 304-675-2815

Amana 18 cu. ft upright deep
freezer. t25. F L. Tkomaa.

614-448-3971 .

Mixed h•d wood slabs. t1 2 per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 'lh
ton. F08. Ohip Pallet Co
Pomeroy. Ohio. 614·992-6461 .
Firewood split end delivered.
$40, per load. Cherry, locu1t.
ussytra• and hidtory. Call614·

992-6335.

Firewood for sale. Mixed, hard·
wood, split and dellveted. t36
per pick-up load. 814-992-

6947.

Exerci1e jogging mechtne. Manuel. $76 . Call614·985-4418.
Electric natural gas ranga t200.
2411.48 brass glus fire acreen
840. 614-992 -2571 . Pom•oy,
Ohio
Electric house organ $700. Like
new. Exercise bike new t76.
One acre lots. t~OOO . 614-992·
2671

Antiques

ANTIQUES. Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques, 1124 E11t Main
St. Pomeroy . Hours. Mon.Tues.-Wed. 10 am to 6 p.m .
Sun.· 1 p.m .· 6 p.m. By chance
or appointment. Russ Moore
614 -992·2626 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

Plastic cistern state 11pproved,
plastic septic tanka, plastic
cul\lerh:, metal culverts. RON

Mi~eed fir8W'ood. 180.00 dump
truck load, delivered, 304-576-

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son. Oh' 614-286-6930

Quality firewood. all hardwood.
for sale. 825 a pick· upload . Call

FirB'Nood delivered, 1tacked.
835.00. Mason Counti•, Galli·
polis other ere• whhin raaaonat
our discretion, 304-896 -3446.

614·367~ 0669 .

Sears exercise bench &amp; weight
set (like new). 8130 . 2 sets
weighh S. trimming bah . Pierre
· Carden space sa~o~er , stereo
system (new) . 8170, won as
prize. 2 yr. old large tel•cope
with different eye lenses, 8100like new, paid 8269 new. Call
after 8 00 614-379-2183 .
Custom deew cutting Cut &amp;
wrapped, S26 Over 10 years
experience . Call 614 · 446 ·

Tree &amp; Stump removal. tir&amp;wood He&amp;p vouchers accepted .
Uve white pine Christmn treea .

$37.50. Cell 514-446-9646 .

Ladles nice coats. Call614-446-

2696

Twin mattr81s and box springs.
good cond, call 304-675 -381 B.
Samsonite 8 ft. "Mess" table.
half price, used once. ideal for
chureh or club, phone304 - 675~
211 1.
•
Zenith television, 26 Inch, console. good cond. 8126 .00. Kerosine heater built In blower
variable heat, $100.00 . 304~
675-2680.

SURPLUS ARMY, DENIM.
RENTAL , CARHART CLO ·
THING . Original army camouflage, H. 0 . "Sam" Somerville 's, Old R1. 21
East -Raven1wood. Fri, Sat, Sun,
noon - 8 :00pm. 304-273· 5665.
Insulated camouflage coveralls
$26 .00 . Black -White snow
camouflage.

55 Building _Supplies

Renewly redecorated . Very nice
apartments in downtown Geltl·
polis. 1 &amp; 2 SR .· unfurntshed,
aecond floor, from I 175· S226.
Dep. &amp; references requir.:l . Call

ave. 61 4-446-2326 or 4464249.
513 Third Ave.· 1 BR . Deposit
required . Call 614 -446 -4346
between 6 :00PM &amp; 10:00 PM

U.S . 36 W•t, Jackson,

814-288-8461'

Ohi~ .

Mauey Ferguson, New Holland,
Buth Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractora to choose from
&amp; complete tina Of new &amp; u1ed
equipment. Largest srelec1ion in

S.E. Ohio.

Utilhy building spl: 27'x36'll8',
1-13'11.8' sliding door, 1·3'18r·
vtce door- $4444 . Iron HorH
Bldfl. Call 614·332-9745

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
30 used tractors to choose from.
Fre1h load 6', 7', 8 ' rear blade~.
Buy now before Jan. "1· price
increase. 36 we1t - Gallipolis.
614-446-9777.
3&amp;0 J .D. Opzer. 6 way blade.
88,600 Call 614· 266-6769 .
New Holland end ot teason hay
toot ule. All hay tools at delaer
cost plus inter•t free tinaneing
untd June 1. 1988 with normal
down payment. Two461, 3 pt. 7
ft mowers $2,100.00 . One311,
3 joint PTO. standard tires
regular pickup, t8,600.00. One
472, 7 ft haybine. •s.9oo,.oo.
One 474, 7 ft hayb1ne,
tl.400.00. Keeten Service
Center. St. Rt . 87, Leon, W . Va.
Phone 304-896-3874.

Modal 110 Malley Ferguson
manure spreader with beater,

$1,050.00. 304-458-1031 .

Chri1tmas Trees for sai•S6.00·
$10.00. Rodney &amp; Bidwell Rd.
Call 614 -246-6246, Rtchard
Fischer. ·

2783.

Ready mix concrete and all
concrete aupplia. Call us Vallev
Brook Cement and Supplies.

304-773-6234.

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... AII
..yle~. lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614·446-0231 .
Dragonwynd

Cattery Kennel .

CFA Hlmalovan. Parol\ln and
Sl&amp;mMe kittens. AKC Chow
puppi•. New kittens: Persians.
Ca11614· 446·3844 after 7PM .
Parakeets jutt. off the nest. $10
each. Call614 ·446 -1364.
•
New errNals for ChristmasRegistered AKC Chow puppies.
Call614-388-8801 .
Mounts Kennel · Bordenlng Large run area. Call 614-388·

9364.

ton truck.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

814-446·4383 dovo. 448-0139

evens. &amp; weekends

·

1977 Bronco • 4x4. 302 , dual
exhaust. Good cond. Runs great .
U200. Call 614 -379 -2162 af·
ter 7 PM .

International 1050 Grinder
Mlur, exc cond, 304-2 734216,

~Cheert

IIHD M'A'S'H

t4.300.00. 304-469-1031 .

FRANK AND ERNEST

74

I. PON 1T I&lt;NOW A8our

Honda Z&amp;OR . Auto. Like new.
Used approx. 3 hu. W1ll sacrf.
fice. Call 614-448-4171 after

You,

4:30PM.

8UT THIS I,S'N'i
l)OING A THING FoR

1983 Honda Shadow 600. New
cond. 700 mil• onty. Ideal
ChrittmDI gift. UOOO. Call
814-446-1822

MY

1986 Honda CR80. vary good
cond, 1550.00. 304-676·6 182.

$~LF·E!SiEEM!

Now buying sbell corn or a•
oell for latntquot••· River
City Farm Suppty, 814 -446-

2985.
63

Livestock

Duroc Bores for better ratt1 ot
gain, Roger Bentlev· 613·684·
2398, Fablna. Ohio.
Pure Bred Jersey Heifer. 2 years
old. Sire-Top Bras1 Due to
calv&amp;·Dec 29th. &amp;red to volunteer. Call 814-367· 7222 .

--

...."''
~

....1

REE

i

It

TTENS...

1986 four wheeler 126 Hon'da
$900 .00 . Phone 304-876 ·

i

•

ALLEY OOP

Auto Parts

THAT'S TH' SAMe QUESTION
WE WANTA ASK 'rOU,
MOOVIAN!

Budget Trantmiuions: Used and
rebuilt. all types. Guarantee 30
days. Call 614· 379· 2220 or

3LoveStories
of Chrlatmaa
with Leo Buscaglia

304-675-4230.

The 1ntemal/onally known
au1hor and speaker on the
dynamics of loving
rsla1ionships shares warm
and wonderful memories or
past Chrlslmas holidays. .
1121 Prlmenewe Wrap ups of
1he day's wilrld news and In
dep1h feature raports. (1 :00)

Servi ces
Home
Improvements

62 Wanted to Buy

C01f1.

7:05 CD Andr GriHHh
7:30 II ill Hollrwood Squares
IJ) Newlywed Goome
fi(J] Judge
1!DJ Wheel of Fortune Q
iiJI Croatfire (0:30)
1111!21 liS Jeopard111 Q
[gj Barner MYlar
• (!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 CD Sanford·and Son
1:00 ill Hell Town
II ill liS The Coabr Show
Clair gives Theo tickets to a
tatavision dance show. Q
IJl CJ (J] Sledge Hammer! A
two·timing toy tycoon gets
totalled by one of his own
toy tanks. C
Cll Adamo Chronic/eo John
Quincy's son Charles Is
appointed minls18r to Grea1
Britain. C
1!DJ 11111121 Ufe and
Advenlureo of Santa Claus
This Is the tale of Santa from
boyhood to Immortality along
with how the many
Christmas traditions evolved.

•'

ilJ) Hoover va the Kennedya,

BASEMENT

Port 2 {NR)
g (!) MOYIE: Brewster's
MUllane {PGJ (1 :41) ,
8:05 (lJ MOVIE: The Greal
Northfield Minnesota Raid
{PG) (1 :31)
8:30 II
liS A Different World
Denise joins the track team
and earns hsrself the ti11e
Linle Engine.
IJl flt (J] The Ch111111ngs
The Charmlngs are robbed;
Lillian's hornfled to lind the
Mirror gon8. Q
9:00 rn 700 Club
D
liS Cheere Rebecca
humiliates herself by mak1ng
an awkward pass at her
boss.
IJ) B (J] MOVIE: 'Plaza
SuHe' ABC Thursdar Night
Movie C
Cll II]) Myalerrl Harriet

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifMime guarantee. local teterenc:es furnished .
Fre8 "timat". Call collect
1-614· 237-'04881 dl'f or night.
RogeraBa1ement
Waterproofing.

ITS MY LOOSY WCk \
lHAT KEtPS Nf- HE:R£...)

SWEEPER and seWing machine
repair, parts, and suppHM. Pidl
up and delivery, Dsvil Vacuum
Cleaner: one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 614-

rn

I 00/J'T

l&lt;kJOW...

446-0294.

RON'S Television Service.
House calls on RCA. Querar.
GE . Special1ng In Zenith. Call
304-576-2398 or 614 -446-

rn

2454.

2 8arvice age Holstein bulls, A1
sire~, dams whh OHI papers.
Hamm Valley Farms 614-9492674

71 Auto's For Sale

Starks Tree and lawn Service,
lawn car&amp;, landscaping. stump
removal, 304 - 678·2842 or

1974 White Corvette Stingray.

676-2903.

1986 300 ZX Tufbo. 23,000
miles. Auto., T· top. Black over
gold. M1nt cond. Call 614-4488126.

B2

HEHA5 .R JTIE
6TRINEi50N
HIS TOES...

MYDADHAS
A TERRIBL-E:
MEMORY.

Transportati on

TO REMIND HIM 10

REM-EMBER "!l--E' 6TRING5
ON HIS

enlists Lord Peter's aid to

FIN~ER6,

solve the mysterious events.

gi1J1 Larry
11111121 Simon and Simon
King Live/ In deplh

Ca11814-446-1756 .

1978 Chrysler Cordoba . Runs
good. Needs little body work.
1976 Datsun 280-Z, 4 spd.
Runs &amp; looks good. Am · fM ·
Cau.• new tires, clutch. brakes,
throw-out beering . Asking
$1600. Call 614-446· 1172 or
1985 Ford Escort. 4 spd. Sharp I
$2999. John'• Auto Sales.
below Holiday Inn. KanaugL Rt.
7
1983 Chevy Citation AM radio,
69,000 miles . e1100 . Can ba
sean at the Gallipolis Oaity
Tribune or for more information
1971 Camaro 350, 4 spd.,
intake. ha.ders, chrome. Excel.
cond. Beat offer. Call 614·6694879
1975 Hurst Oldsmobile W-30,
new engine. exhaust, brakes and
interior, PS, PB. AC. tift wheat
naw tirea. 614 -986 -4163

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

AND HEATING

Cor. Founh and Pine
GaUipoli1, Oh10
.
Phone 614· 446-3B88 or 614·

446-4477

Electrical

575-1786.
85

General Hauling

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
Cisterns, Wells. Delivery Any.
time. Call 614· 446 -7404-No
Sunday calis.
J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming ·
pools. cJstorns, w&amp;lls. Ph. 614·

245, 9285.

' 76 Chw. Malibu, V·8 auto. 2
~oor, hard top, good. cond,

Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools. cisterns: weils. Call 614·
446 -3171

1988 Chevy Beretta , like new.

loaded, 111,160.00, 304-675.

4480.

•

TOTif
CARD GAME,
MAW ~.

Reatdential or commercial wir·
lng New service or repairs
Licensed electrician . Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304·

R &amp; A Watar Service. Home
ciaters. wells, pQols filled. Formerly James Boys Waters. Cell

$800.00. 304-675-1247.

I'M OFF

&amp; Refrigeration

1 986 Plymouth Reliance K.
Auto, PS, PB. AM -FM radio, AC.
fuel InjectiOn. Ellcallent condi·
tion. Call 814 ·992 -6084 after

5·30.

rn
rn

CARTER'S PWM81NG

84

LooKLoqK
See.See. ·

304-675-5370.

I

I

:I

Watterson ' 1 Water Hauling,
reuonable rates, lmmediate
2,000 gallon deifvery, cinernt,
pools, well , etc. call 304 -576-

2919.
'76 Dodge Dart, 8'200 .00. 304·

AKC Chihuahua pups. Call 614·
446·7766 .
Male AKC - Chine.e Pug. 18
mo1. old. Parttv housebroken.
Good with children. 304-676 -

3621 .

57

676-2457.

2H70X16 atudded snow tires
mounted on four wheal1 ,

$80.00. 304-875-2385.

1975 Ptymouth, 440 motor,
$460.00. '71 Plymouth Cricket,

uoo.oo. 304-896 -3926.

Musical
Instruments

'74 lTD. nice inside and out,
runs good. asking t750.00will
take first reaaonable oHer, 304·

675'7147

' 74 Buick LeSaber, t400 .00 ,

304-676·2467.

87

Upholstery

PEANUTS

. - - - - - - - - ,,

&amp;tf.l..m J; 1JBt!

A &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholstery, St. Rt. 7, Crown
City, Oh . 614·258 -1470, Eve.
614- 446-3438 . Open dally 9 to
4 :30. Sat . 9:30 to 1·30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.

i
I'
I

Mowrey's Upholstering serving
trl countyarea22 years. The best
in furniture upholstarmg Call
304 · 676 - 4154 tOr froe
estimate•

}JJI

,,
~- -

-'

ln18rviews wi1h top
newsmakers and celebrl11es .
9:30.11
liS Night Court
10:00 ill Slraight Talk
D
liS L.A. Law Kuzak's
patience is tested by a
sell-destructive celebrity
client.
(J) College Balketball
Cll Spldar't Web A
diplomat's wile tries to
dispose of an unexpected
body before her husband
returns with a top level
guest. •n this Agatha Christie
play.
!I.QJ 1111121 Knot• Landing The
entire community Is grief
slncken by the news of
Laura's death. Q
II]) Peter, Paul and Marr's
25th Anniversary The
enduring folk 1rio gathers In
Nashville to celebrate 1helr
anniversary wl1h renditions of
classics like II I Had a
Hammer and Blowln' in 1he
Wind. (1 :50)
i1J1 Evan/ng News A wrap up
or today's news and a look
shaed to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
@N8WI
11 (!) Benny Hill
10:20W MOVIE: Buck and the
Preacher (PGJ (1 :42)
10:30 ()) Greal American Outdoors
- (0:30)
• (!) Hogan'• Heroee
11:00 ill Remfnglon Steele
• ill IJ) CJ ()) !I.QJ II) 1!21
@News
i1J1 Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial n8ws with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
@Jelle..ane
• (!) Lova Connection
11:30 II ill liS Tonight Show
IJ)Ch..re
8 (J] Nighdlna C
!I.QJ @ r.fagnum, l&gt;.l.•
i1J1 Sparta Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
•1121 'Night Heat' CBS Late
Night The man who killed
O'Brien's partner reappears.

1 7 United fNhllt S

ICIIII Inc

•

~ •

__

~~:s:

I

11.-J

..

Rearrange

I

lellers

of

WOlD
GAM I

POLLAN

lhe

words

to form four simple

HAGSRI
2
I I I I· 1

1

Ii

I

HETTE
1-T-1
. ; ;-;, "-ril~:---'11---

1•l

K0 SET
As a kid I was always jumping
t--r:s,....r.,-r- r--1 ~ from one thing to another. Mom
_ 1
_ 1
.
1_ 1_ _ •• 881d that I should be like a

I

I
I1---rl;:...;,l,.-::,1"-,,-;;,-r.,,rl 0

poetage stamp and stick to one

E PE KRE
_

thing until I - - Complele lh '!,. chuckle qvoled

•

by flllmg In ftl e miss1ng words

_

1--.JL.-_._ _,__..__..__, you develop from step No 3 bel¢w

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Pompom - Irony - Noted - Jovial - I'M NOT
A man reed a nota found on his freshly dented car; "The

P80P'- watch!~ malhlnk I'm leaving my name and Insurance
cgm_pany, but I M NOTI" ....

BRIDGE

Dobbs. (0:30)
11111!21 liS Wheal of Fortune

1982 Jeep Wagoneare, 4 wheel
drive, PS, 4 speed transmission,

S© tt&lt;ll~- "£trs~~

four scrambled words be·

low

and financial news witt, Lou

1979 GMC 8 passenger Van.
low miiNge, air. PS . PB . heel.
cond. Call 614-448 -0173.

81

0

reports on world economics

1980 Ford Bronco Ranger XLT.
4K4 . Cali 814 - 446 · 1612
Evenings.

&amp; Accassories

call614-448-2342.

56

73

76

388-9327.

Concrete blocks all sizes y'rd or
delivery . 1\(lason und Qailipolis
Block Co., 123'.1 Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614 -446 -

on

PUIUU

the entertainmant world Is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
@ WKRP In Clnclnnall
81 (!) Too Close lor Comfort
8:35 (lJ'Caro/ Burnett
7:00 ill Remington Steele
II ill PM Magozln~
IJl Entertainment Tonight
CJ (J] Paople'l Court
Cll II]) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
1!DJ Nawo
iiJI Money/Ina Curren1

2961

$400. Call 614-448-8446.

Buildlng Materials
Block, brick. sewer pipes, win·
dowa. lintela, etc. Claude Wtn·
tars, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614·
246-6121 .

Chevy

fll (J] ABC News !;I

1!21 ShowBiz Todar News' of

1982 Dodge 260 Ram Cutt.om
conversion. Trailer ready . Call

2903.

Modern 1 BR apartment. Cell

61 4·446-0390.

CROSS &amp;SONS

Set of Paul Bunyun heevy duty.
bunk beds. Complete. same as
new. Half size wooden poster
bed, complete. Chest type
1962 ton truck, runt good,
freezer. Ail very good condition.
t200.00. Like new freezer 25 cu
Poll Parrot with cage. Call ,ft tJOO .OO . Fencing suppli•
304-773-9186.
cheap. 304-896·3855.
All Chrlstme1 Treea 112 .. Come
early before cold w••har, tag
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile above Muon
on Hanging Rock Rd. 304· 7735371 or 882 -2886.

1987

' 304·675-1769.

•

II]) Rockachool

$1,450.00.

TIIAT DAILY

- - - - - - - ldltod by CLAY I ,

Cll NlghUy Bus/neat Report
i!Dl 11111!21 CBS News

61 Farm Equipment

Quilt• for ule. Hand Bfld machine quilted. Call 614· 992-

firewood 836.00 load, delivered
Mason County and Gallipolis.
Cuttom cut and ru lh orders
t40.00. Call 304·896· 344«5.

'
' .'

L1v~stock

Girls fashion boots. Mana
Hieker• 819 96, Snow boots.
87-112. Simons Pic:k· A·Pair,
Pom81"oy.

Call ahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tires, sizes12, 13. 14. 15.
16. 16 .6. B m1les out Rt. 218.
Call614-256 -6261

Bruce eeattie

LL"tllt

Supplies

2488.

1..:===========-L.:=====::::::::::;;;~
Jl.r"''Di1l~

Farm
&amp;

RCA·VCR with wirltd remote . 2
yrs. old. Good c:ond. t100. Call

614-446-9629.

~

SNAFU ®

54 Misc. Merchandise

EVENING

~

1979 Ford F100 pick up. 3

.
~~~·~"'~·;·~··~~~~~~~~Tiiiii.i~~iii~~iiiii1 304-458·1031
speed. Ps, PB.

, PARSON'S FURNITURE

3 Big Days
Thur.· Fri .. Sat .
VIRA
Genetal Merchandise
Open Daily 10-6
Closed Sun . &amp; Mon.
12 in. 8j'.1)( bikes, 838 .95. 10 in .
scouteJS, S34.96. Pogo bella,
$8.99. Talk back be&amp;rs, 819.99.
Heard it through the grape vine
sweat shirts. $11 .99. Brass
Unicorn mirrors. $18 96 Pluah
stuffed animals- starting at
61 .99 to $23.95 Rt, 141 ·
located lnCentenaryareaV.mile
down Lincoln Pike. 446· 3168 .

CAPTAIN EASY

6 truck tires, whltelpokerims, 8
lug big tires. t180 for 111. Good
tires. Call 614-388· 9336.

in good shape. Call 614· 266·
6732 or 446· 9640 .

304-675-2969.

446· 4782
16 Court: 2 br., 1'12 beth, l&amp;rgfl
living atea. w·w carpet, new
kitchen, di1hwasher, wired for
phone &amp; tv. Gas hut. Parking.
1350-mo. plus utilities. Oep . &amp;
Ret Call 614-446·4926.

· 1979 Ch8'oly pickup. 4 wheel
drive. 8" lift, 16 -fi-40 gumbo
mudders· lika new. new doore I.
fenders . New hood. Frame dam·
aged . $1300 . Call 814·4483684 after 8:00 PM .

Will take any gi\le away furniture

Merchandise

Two bedroom trailer for rent,

8

814-446-8750.

90 Days same as cash with
appro\led credit. 3 Mil• out
BulaviHe Rd. Open Sam to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614- 448·

53

'

1982 GMC 516. 8 cyl., 4 opd.

Firtrwood· All hardwood. $20
piclt· up load . Call 614· 256·
1670

Call 614 -949-2969.

814-367-7760.

THURS.. DEC. 3

•.

6:00 ill Crazr Uke io Fox
• ill IJ) CJ (J] I!Dl 1111!21
@Newo
(J) Tennla
Cll Dr, Who
II]) Square One TV C
I!JIIntlde Poi/Uct 'B8
@ Facta of Ule
• (!) One Dar al a Time
6:05 CD Allee
8:30 D ill liS NBC Nlghlir News

Excellent condition. 82500. Call

3695.

Would like to provide nice home
tor elderly persons. lndepend·
ence. prfvacy , full maintainen ce.

mo.
required
.. drapee.
. Call8226
614·
Stove.Raf.
refrig

a.

Pickens Used Furniture ·
Dinettes. sofas. ch&amp;~u. end
tables. lamps. beds, dressers.
desk, glassware . 304 -675·

4 bedroom home for rent or Ml e.

Q

0

sea.

Apartments In Henderson. W.
Va call 304·675-1972 after
6.00 pm

46 Space for Rent

Nice private spt
uiet. flar
HMC. Oneaduh only. No pet1.

Sofas and chairs priced from
8396 to 8996 . Tabl• esc and
up to t126. Hid•e·beas $390
to $695. RectinMS 1226 to
8376. Lamps t28 to f126 .
Dinettes e109 and up to *496 .
Wood table w -8 chain t2815 to
1796. Desk f100 up to t376 .
Hutches $400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w·mlttres•s
$295 and up to $395. Baby be~
11 10. Mattreue1 or boll springs
full or twin
firm $78, end
t88. Queen sets $22&amp;. king
$360. 4 drawer ch•t $69. Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Gas or e4ectrlc
range $376. Baby mattresMS
836 a. 846. Bed frames t20.
830
selectionKing
ot treme
bedroom
s5o. auit•,
Good
metal cabinets. headbo•d• e30
and up to 186

•

0

19159 Chevy., excellent condlllon, *2100. 1969 Ch011y, body
rough. good engine. t428 . Call

0

LAYNE 'S FU RNITURE

Television
Viewing ·

0

Trucks for Sale

72

Upper River Rd betide Stone
Cr11t Motel . 614-448-7398.

Good used washer &amp; dryer. Also
2 piece Bushline living room
suite. Call 614- 446 ·7316 after

Furnished room . $76 . Utilities
paid Share bath. Single male
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446· 4416 after 7pm. .

614-949-3027.

44

•a.

GOOD USED APPUANCES

In Middleport. Ohio, 1 and 2
room furnished apts, private
baths. utilities Plltd. 304·882·
2666.

Rooms for rent, day . week.
month. Gallia HoteL Call 614·
446·9680. Rent as low as S120
month.

For rent 3 bedroom house in
Pomeroy . Deposit required .

581 II.
New 1988 Preattge 14x70 total
alec., 3 BR , 2 baths, furni1hed.
Anchors. skirting. loaded with
alltras. 814,500 . Kanauga Mo·
bile Homes· 614 -446·9662.

'

45 · Furnished Room,s

'

Babysitting in my home Newborn and up. Rutland and
surrounding areas. E11.perienced.
Call 614-742· 2390 anytime.

1986 Daytona TUrbo Z, red·
silver, leather Interior, n_w tlr•.
760.00 con11der par'losdad,
till trade. 304-6'76· 15306

Ave Galllpolit, OH .

APARTMENTS. mobile hom&amp;S,
houses. Pt. Pleasant and Galllpo· ,
lis. 614-446-8221 .
Upright freezer in good condi·
tion. 17112 cu. ft . 876 . Call
2 bedroom furni1ed apt, ref and
614-448-7372 .
deposit, New Haven. W. Va ..
304-882·3267 or 304· 773·
Brawn Eartv Amer.lcan couc:h S.
5024
matching rocking chair. Good
condition. $159 Call614-245·
Beech Street. Middleport. Ohio,
9391.
2 bedroom furnis hed apt. utili·
ties paid, references and deposit,
Like n81N couch &amp; loveseat. Call
304-882-2686.
614-446 -7307 after 6 PM .

8 260 per mo.· Country cottage
of log for rent. 2 BAS.· 4 rooms
total. Good location. Virginia L.
Smith- R.E. 814·388·8826.

GOVERNMENT HOMES trom
S1 .00 (U repatr) toreclosures.
repos, tax deliquent properti81.
Now selling your area. Call
1· 316· 736· 7357 ext. 2P-WV -H
for cur'r ent list. 24 HRS,

13

614-992-5908.

614-446-2543.

3 bedroom house. Stove furnished. f260 per month plus
utilities. Deposit and reference
required . No Petl inside. Call

3 berdrooms, large frOnt room,
full size basemertt, one car
g•age. many elttras, 304 -896·
3865

Nice apt. Hudd approved. New
carpet, clean, Pt. Pleasant. 614-

1·614-653-2463 altar 6 PM .

5 rooma &amp; bllth. Closed in porch
in Mason. Call614-992·2813.

1'lz story house. 3 bedrooms,
basement, half mile from Shadle
Bridge, At. 35 , 304-675-6912.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bfld·
room apartmen1s at Village
Manor and Riverside Apanm8nts in Middleport. From
$216. including utilities. Call

448-2419.

Situations
Wanted

614-667-5329.

Opeo SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sot. 814-448-1699, 627 3rd.

The D'aily Sei-rtinei-Page- 15

Ohio

1970 c.,welle 11 ,600.00. 402
Ch.wy motor t226.00. 61 4·
446-4803

0322.

614-446-0444,

Unfurnished 2 BR .. refrig . &amp;
stove. Lower Second. Ref. &amp;
dep. Call 614-446 -39 49 or

614-992-6666.

Have an opening for elderly lady
in my home on ST. RT. 7.
Tuppers Plains . 1 floor level
home. semi· private room, plenty
of TLC . Reasonable rates . No
bed fast. Call 614 -667·3402 or

3997. E.O.H.

Furnished apartment· 4 rooms&amp;
bath. 1 or 2 flduhs No pets. Ref.
S. Sec. dep. required . Cell

3 BR . house &amp; g•age. A· 1 Real
Estate. Carol Yeager· Brokef'.
304·676-6104.

514-742-2856.

12

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 636 Jackson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
1hop and movies. 614-446 ·

71 Auto's For Sale

County Applianea. Inc. Good
ll*td applienc. end TV ..ta.

2 BR. apt. Stove &amp; refrlg.
furni1hed. Nur Go Mart. Call

'

KIT ·N' CARLYLE ®by

51 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

HELP WANTED

Pharmaeiet· Four store md•
pendent pharmacy Athen1 arN
h• imm8di.te opening tor staff
ph•macist. 44 hour work week.
Competitive ulary bued upon
experience. Benefits· package.
Send resume with reterenCM·
Medical Center Pharmacy, 400
E. SUite St ., Athens. Ohio
46701 · An : Eric Rich•ds·RPh.
Bidding closes Dec. 16th

Thursday, D~mber 3. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page 14 The Daily Sentinel

NORTH

11-3-87

+ 10 9 3

.KQ104

James Jacoby

+J

+AKI064

Struggling
to make 11

EAST

WEST

+J 2
.J6532
• s2

+As
.9 8 7

tA9870

+H

+Q9 8 2

By James Jacoby

SOUTH

North did not have to jump to four
spades. Bidding three would have been
enough. That way South would not get
so carried away that the partnership
winds up in five spades, a contract
that any bridge player should abhor.
Still, there declarer was in an lHrick
contract under his own power, and he
had to figure out the best play to bring
it home.
East won the ace of diamonds and
continued the suit. The cards played
indicated that West was now out of diamonds. Although the location of the
spade ace was uncertain, declarer had
to guard against the likelihood that
East held the spade ace and West the
spade jack. In that event, how could
declarer prevent West from ruffing a
third round of diamonds with the
spade jack? Declarer cashed his heart
ace, traveled to dummy with a high
club and played K-Q of hearts, throwing his diamonds away. Now he played
a spade from dummy. East grabbed
the ace immediately and played the
expected diamond. What now?

.A
+

+KQ8761
K Q 10 6
+7 3

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: North
Nortb
1+

West

••••

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

East

Soolh

2+

2+
4 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead.

••

+3

Since East had shown six diamonds
with his jump bid and had followed to
three rounds of hearts, it was very un·
likely that he began with A-J-x of
spades. Declarer's best chance is to
ruff with the king or queen of spades
and play the other one. If West started
with J-5-2 of spades, there is no hope
for the hand anyway.

•

~twMl'llar'
by .THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS· 43 Ac_tor
1 Loony
Oliver
Ff!llow
44
Prefix
5
9 Muslim
for room
deity
DOWN
J 1 Hades
1 Panache
"12 Thin
2 Distribute
rock
3 Sudden
Relieve
brightness
13
Opposite
4
Make lace
15
of vert.
5 Gregor)an
Yesterday's Answer
16 Was a
20 Defi&lt;;iency 31 Product
candidate
6 Child
23 Money
of Ireland
18 Wood
of Loki
maker?
32 Vote in
sorrel
7 Everywhere 24 Refuge
36 Like
19 Lessee
8 Appease
25 Bridge toll
George
21 Ms Harper 10 Presage
26 Dennis , e .g. Apley
to friends '14 New Haven 27 Scat!
38 Caddban
22 Emcee
school
28 Nourished
Indian
Ron _ '
17 "30 Pumpkin, 40 Constel23 Dole (out)
for one
latiun
24 Moved
apace·
26 Bog down
27 Wearing
mules
28 Marsh
29 Layer
30 "-on My
Mind"
(Hl67 song)
33 Danuhe
tributary
34 Seraglio
chamber
35 Badly
37 .Japanese
city
39 Cretan
capita,!
41 Czech
river
42 Upright
1213

DAILy CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work II:
AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sampl~ A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Smgle letters,
apostrophes, the iength and fonnatio~ of the words are all

hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

12·3
F

AK

BIVC·NFAKSN

E F V

G R Z

H A E S
K D S V C

R A K

KDSVCK

INQAVQ

J Z I N

F

J Z I

HZ

E Z V S J
•

K Z I N Y -s
IVTVZGV
Yesterday's Cryptoqoote: I HAVE NEVER MET AN
AUTHOR WHO ADMITIED THAT PEOPLE DID NOT
BUY HIS BOOK BECAUSE IT WAS DULL. -;- MAUGHAM
'
'

�Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

People in
the news
By BILL LOHMANN
United Press International
AMY FLYING SOUTH:
Former Brown University under·
graduate Amy Carter, advised
by the school to take a break from
classes, says she does not plan to
return to the Ivy League ·school
and might look for a school closer
to home. "I think I want to go to a
more Southern school," said
Carter, 19, the youngest child of
former President Jimmy Carter,
as she joined Brown students in a
protest against CIA recruiting
Tuesday . Carter said she has not
chosen a school yet and is taking
the year off from classes. She
also continued to deny reports
that she had been expelled from
Brown this summer, saying the
school told her "to take a
semester off. I wasn't expelled.'"

$249

LOST IN A CROWD: The wife .
of "Hill Street Blues" co-creator
Steven Bochco reveals that one
reason Bochco likes using large
ensemble casts Is so no actor can
become more Important than the
series. "Steven liked It that way
because If an actor ever got
nasty, he could lose him," says
Bochco's wife, actress Barbara
Bosspn, In the Dec. 121ssue of TV
Guide. Bosson was a cast
member In "Hill Street Blues"
and currently Is co·star with
John Ritter in Hooperman,"
Bochco's latest creation !or ABC·
TV. Bosson says "Hooperman"
breaks the Bochco mold with one
central star. "'Hooperman' Is the
John Ritter show," she said. "It's
designed around John's talents. "
11

STAR FOR JOSE: Jose FeD~!·
ano, the blind, Grammy award·
winning singer-composer who
has sold tens of millions of
albums· worldwide, Is the proud
owner or, the 1,861st star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame. Fellcl·
ano, 42, attended the unveiling
Tuesday of .his star, which 1tes
between those previously dedi·
ca ted to actor Jose Ferrer and
VIola Dana, a silent screen
actress. Feliciano, who was born
blind, began teaching hlmseH .
.music with an accotdlon·llke
concertina at age 6 and later
learned guitar. His first hit on the
U.S. pop charts was .his version of
"Light My Fire" In 1968. He won
two Grammy awards by the time
he was 23 and added anotller this
year.

884

Pick 4
1691

-laser Pickup Synem
-Auto. Progro"' locate Device
-Auto. Program Search System

ONLY

FLOOR
LAMPS

Howard Mill• ttlndl for

•ctllent qUIIity.

MAHOGANY

for reading,

sewing or
everyday u•. 3

REG. Sl95.00
YOUR CHOICE

159

REG. S79.99

TOWEL
SALE
lATH TOWRS, HAND

ONLY$577 7

TOWElS, WASHCLOTHS,
DISH TOW!LS
Prints and Solids.

styI".

ssss

Thick end Aboorbent

MISSES

· Reg. 99&lt; to S7.99
Sale Priced

RUSS

·Sportswear
Sale

79( to $6 39

SWEATERS, BLOUSES,
SKIRTS, SLACKS and
BLAZERS

LADIES' REG. 56.00

Cbtlttmll S•l•

All CHAIRS ON
SALE NOW!

I~HL!;,

$4 79

~~~~~~R

BERKllf\E
.
I .

FROM SANTA CLAUS
CLAUS, INDIAN.AI.!
PROOF IS IN

Reg. S289.00

SALE ............ $231
Reg. S399.00

SALE,........... $319
Reg. 5449.00

SALE ............ $359
LITTLE BOYS'

SHIRTS and
SWEATERS
SALE
New distressed looks,

PANTS
SALE

REG. S6.75 to S20.9S

Chrl1f111as Safe Prleed

SIZES 2 to 7
. Jean5, distress
dyed pants,
suspender pants.
Lee, Wrangler,
LeTigre
CklllfMtt Stls

PIIHi FI'Otrl O•lg

MEN'S "BIG BEN
BY WRANGLER"

SALE I

COVERALL$
Shorts, Regulars, Tons in

MEN'S SPORT
SHIRTS

Sit• 36 to 50. Fisher
lfripe and blue dtnim.
Pnshru'*, unlined. Zips
from top to bottom. Ac·
lion back.

Sizes S, M, Land XL, plus big
sizes and tails. Solid color.
patterns. flannels and poly·
conan blends. Packaged fold.
ed shirts included.

Reg. S26.95

SALE

$21.59
Reg. S28.95

$539 TO SJ679_

$

3.19

TIMEX
WATCH SALE

HROW RUGS

Huge selection. Meny new
colors. Small throw rugs.
runners and large throw
rugs up to 4 ft. by 6 ft.

Give a watch this
Christmas!

Men, women and
youth styles in gold

Reg. :6.99 RUGS ........................ SALE '5.59
Reg. 8.99 RUGS ........................ SALE •7.19
~eg. :12.99 RUGS .................... SALE '10.39
eg. 22.99 RUGS .................... SALE '18 39
Reg. '27 .99 RUGS .................... SALE •22.39
.

and silver . Quartz
electric and marathon styles.

Christmas Sale

$7 96 to $4396

SPECIALS for BABY

Ffee Chfltftnll Gilt Boxe~

We've Values Galore On All Nursery Furnishings.

Dreuers, Mattresses and Mare.

MEN'S

KNIT
SHIRTS
Sizes S. M, Land XL.
Jeans shirts, rugby
knitsr distress dyed
looks, dressy looks .
Fine Selection .

REDUCED

20°/o

SPECIAL SALE PRICE$ Oil
MEN's and BOYS' WEAR · 2nd
•Men's Ties
•Western Shirts
•Men's Jackets
•Men's Sweaters
•Men's Dress Slacka
•Men's Flannel Work Shirts
•Men's Leather Belts
"'""•'• Wallets

2 Sections, 16 Pages

26 C~ntt

A Multimedi~ Inc. Newspaper

Eblin exl&gt;lalned that he has a
new packer truck and will pick up
one day a week rather than two
days a week. All garbage pickups
Will be on Thursday effective
Jan.l. He did state that residents
wishing large Items .to be picked
up, stoves, refrigerators,
couches, etc. are asked to notify
·him In advance. However, there
will be an extra charge for this

type or service.
Council noted that residents
who are not on the sewage
system will not be provided
water as they are In violation
when they failed to hook onto the
sewage system. Jack Williams,
council president, noted that the
matter will be refe~red to the
water board.
Kenny Buckley announced that
the tennis courts cannot be paved
this year. However, the Shelly
Co. will be In Syracuse In the
spring and will provide council
· with an estimate on resurfacing
th~ two courts at that time.
Council Is optimistic that the
paving will be done.
Council approved requests
made by Mayor Eber Pickens for
the department to purchase
crystals for the radio In the fire
true k and also for parts needed
for the air mass. Council also
approved thepurchasxeo!pubUc
officials and employee liability
Insurance.
Attend the meeting were ·
Mayor Pickens, Janice Lawson,
·clerk-treasurer; Wllllains, Buck·
ley, Minter Fryar, and Kathryn
Crow, council members, and Jim
Connolly, chlef.of pollee.

EARLY PRESENT -Syracuse VIllage olllclals were presented
an early Christmas present by Roger Michael, project englnee'r for
the house number project, Thursday night during a regular
meeting of council. Michael has completed the project and Is .
shown presenting Janice Lawson, clerk-treasurer, with a card ·
Index fUe llstlnl!' the names of all residents, their streets and bouse
numbers.

Area rock slides may occur
.anytime according· to official

SALE ............ $191

Sizes 2 to 7

provides garbage. pickup within
the viUage. He explained that he
has operated within the village
for two years and has charged
the same amount as set down by
the previous collector. He will
now establish a uniform rate
schedule which will Include rate
Increases. He was given the
backing of council to do so.

$730

Reg. 5239.00

oxfords and Rugby striipe.s_ .4
Thick. warm sweaters.
Wrangler, Lee, LeTigre

. council with aerial photos of the
. By KATIE CROW
village and a sample directory
Sentinel Correspondent
The house numbering project listing the names or all residents
for the VIllage of Syracuse has and their street addresses.
He noted that the directory has
been, completed.
not
been completed but will be
Meeting with Syracuse VIllage
done
In a two week period. The
Council Thursday evening was
directories
will be available to
RAlger Michael, project engineer
residents
free
of charge. Letters
!or the house numbering, to
will
be
sent
to
residents
advising
Inform council that all house
of
their
assigned
house
them
numbers. In the town have been
numbers.
Residents
will
be
re·
assigned.
sponslble
for
the
purchase
and
Michael also completed a card
Index file that lists the name of placement of those numbers.
In listing the advantages, It
each resident, states whether
owner or renter, location and was noted that house numbering
house number. Michael has also will 'a ssist emergency and fire
compiled a master sheet, filed department members, utility
albabetlcally by streets. where companies and flrrris delivering
·
street Is located, name of resl· within the village.
Also
meeting
with
council
were
dent and house number.
Michael last night presented Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eblin. Eblin

IPs~

LITTLE BOYS'

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Friday. December 4. 1987.

to XL. 50"/o Cotton • 50% fl::~:n~~~~~~;~~~:bv
Polyester
Wrangler and Springfoot.

sas to$60

redin•s, rod!:-o-loungers and ·
swivtl rocktrs. Stylt1 and
fabrio to fit '""Y demr.

at y

Ll14·161. Xl(18·20I

Ptl~sd

CHAIR SALE

- SPECIAL!
BOYS' HOODED

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR S!.~~!,~~~!T,S
Solids and Prints in Sizes

SIZES 6 to 16

Oual~r lerldioo wall·o·way

•

Scattered snow flurries,
chance of precipitation fO
percent. Low In upper 20s.
Cloudy Saturday . Highs In
mid 30s.

Syracuse completes house numbering project

Be•utlful brua
pllltlld floor
lamps. Perfect

Ba .. tlful Chfmllll, ·
Wel~ht Driven.
' OAK, CHERRV .or

1

Vol.38, No. 146
Copyrighted 1 987

PURCHASE! .

Grandfather
Clocks

CD PLAYER

e

SmtAL

HOWARD MILLER

Reg. SJ89.00

"Jessie" and "Joann,/ 1 worked

The Ohio Department of Liquor
Control has put the bite on Spuds
McKenzie, the popular spokes·
dog for Anheuser·Busch Co.
Spuds, a lald·back bull terrier, is
featured on some cartons of Bud
Ll ght beer wearing a Santa Claus
suit as hollday promoti.on. But
Ohio Jaw forbids the use of Santa
Claus to promote alcohol, so the
Uquor control department has
ordered the brewer to remove or ·
recall all cartons featuring Santa
Spuds . Anheuser·Busch officials
have promised to cooperate.

Daily Number

Sale Priced
From Only

DID SHE OR DIDN'T SHE?:
Was Jessica Hahn of PTL fame a
virgin, as she claims , before her
1980 hotel encounter with televl·
slon evangelist, Jim Bakker? 'Or
was she a prostitute, as a former
New York madam asserted?
Roxaime Dacus made the accu·
sa tlon at a news conference
• Wednesday at the New York
headquarters or Penthouse mag·
azlne, which has published a
story based on Dacus's allega·
!Ions of Hahn's past as a
prostitute. Dacus said Hahn,
whose working names were

THIS SPUD'S NOT FOR YOU:

Ohio Lottery

Christmas
countdown

·BOXED
CHRISTMAS
CARDS

XING RECOVERING: Talk·
show host Larry King Is recover·
lng nicely from heart-bypass
surgery at New York University
Hospital. The television and
radio personality was listed- in
stable condition at the hospital
after undergoing the operation
Tuesday and doctors said they
expect him to recover fully .
Known as the "mldntgh t king of
the airwaves," Klng ran out of
ques tlons on his way to surgery.
"When Larry was .w)leeled into
the operating room, he was asked
If he had any questions," said
Bob WooH, a King spokesman.
"Ironically, for the first time In
his life he couldn't think of
anything to ask." Klng, 54, who
suffered a heart attack earlter
this year, plans to return to the
air In four to six weeks.

for her during the 1970s when she
ran a house of prostitution out of
her Long Island home. In add!·
tlon, Dacus claims, Hahn was not
Inexperienced when she came to
work for her In 1977 as an
18·year-old. "It was my business
to know what the m'en wanted,"
Dacus said. "I know she wasn't a
virgin when she came to me,
because (someone) would have
come out or the room and
bragged about it. " Hahn, who
has denied the prostitution
charges, has threatened to sue
the magazine. Penthouse pul;&gt;·
lisher Bob Guccione claims the
allegations can be supported.

'

Thursday. December 3, 1987.

Pomeroy- MiddlePOrt. Ohio

FLOOR

• Boys' Jackets
•Boys' 'Jeans
•Boys' Denim Jeans
•Boys' Swaetera
•Boya' Trouattra
•Boys' Shlru

.'.

HIGH CHAIR..
.. ............................................... SA~E '41 .00
JUMPER / W/'&gt;lKER .. ........ ................... .. .. .. ........... ... SALE '41 .00
WICKER BASSINETTE ........ .................... .. ............... SALE '63.00
JENNY lYNN CRADLE .......... .................................. SALE '71 .00
UMBRELLA STROllER ............................................ SALE '28 99
PI.AYPEN ..................... :............ .......... ...... ....... ... ... .. SALE '71 :oo
MAPLE 8A8Y BED ................................................. SALE '169 .00
TOI~ET TRAINER .... ........ ............ ............ ............ .... ... SALE '9 .00
CRIB MATIRESS ...... .. ...... ~ .......... , .......................... SALE '27.00
COMMUTER CAR SEAT ............ .......... ..................... SALE '81 .00
CRIB BUMPER PAO ...................................... ........... SALE 0 10.00
MAPLE CHEST w/CHANGING PAD.. .....................
'159 .00
!TI~!.!:!:!:' ANIMAli.AMPS.... ...................................
•39 .00
'59 .00

I

·Hapsen ~aY.s that experts can
By N'ANCY.NQACHAM
examine overhanging rocks and
Sentinel Staff Writer
No one, not even geologists, ''predict the potential of a slide,"
can predict If or when another but It's ''Impossible to predict the
rock slide might occur lri Pome- actual occurance."
Although ODNR keeps track of
. roy, or for that matter,anywhere
r&lt;ick
and land slides throughout
else.
the
state;.
rock slides are nor·
Havoc was created In Pomeroy
mally
prevalent
only In the
about 2: 30 Sunday afternoon
por·
Eastern
and
Southeastern
when tons or boulders !eJI from
tlons
of
Ohio
where
there
are
the cliffs along West Main Street.
The slide brought down trees and thick masses of sandstone and
power lines, destroyed part of the slopes, Hansen says.
"Pomeroy Is a unique sltua·
old Shamrock Motel, and caused
Uon," he adds, because most of
heavy
:
damage
to
a
trailer
concern ·about the slight overhan~r left after
UNPREDICTABLE - Sund!Q''8 rock slide In
occupied by Johnriy Eblin. Eblin the town Is built beside 0 r on top
Sunday's
sHde. Anytime rock Is left Jutting out
Pomerny could not have been predicted according
fled the .traller as soon as he of a sandstone cliff.
from a main cliff, It could be a potential problem;
Hansen has examined Pome·
to Dr. Michael C. Hansen, Ph.D., geologist with
heard the noise or the rocks
But no one can ever be sure, not even the experts.
sandstone formation on
roy'S
the Ohio Department of Natural Resource's
beginning to break loose, nar·
numerous
occasions, Including In
Geological Survey. Some people bave expressed
rawly escaping Injury. Barbara
December
1971 wben a rock slide
McDaniel of Mason, W.Va., tra·
came
down
on the Pomeroy Post
vellng In her car toward Middle·
port, suffered minor cuts arid Office. He says problems stem
abrasions
when her vehicle was from the vertical cracks, or
Investiga tlon of a shooting Cheryl Hysell had suffered one · ers were "unresponsive." Squad
struck by !aiUng trees and power : joints , that are vlslble_.through·
out the cliffs. Water gets Into the
Thursday night In Columbia gunshot wound to the foot. Rick members again attempted ~o
lines.
Township Is · underway by the Green had several lacerations to treat Rick Green, who again
Mike Hansen. with the Ohio joints , he explains, causing In·
Meigs County Sheriff's the head, the sheriff reports, and refused .t reatment. Charles
Department of Natural Resour· creased weight on the rocks.
Rutland EMS was called to the Green also refused treatment.
Department.
ce' s Geological Survey, says It Gravity and the increased weight
After midnight the sheriff's
Sheriff Howard Frank reports scene. Hysell was transported to
was fortunate that these were can eventually cause the rocks to
department
received another
his department was called at6: 25 Veterans Memorial Hospital but
were the extent of damages peel or split off. This Is a natural
p.m. to the residence of brothers, Green refused treatment. Cha· call to the residence. The two
caused by the slide. Rock slides process, Hansen explains, and •
brothers
had
moved
out
of
the
rles
Green
was
Intoxicated,.
the
Rick and Charles Green, on
occur quickly and without warn· can often be seen Is wooded
house
and
had
left
the
area
In
a
·
sheriff
reported.
carpenter Hill Road (County
ing, Hansen says, which Is why areas. But when this natural
vehicle.
Authorities
checked
all
At
6:
52
EMS
was
called
back
to
Road 10) where a shooting had
. they are so dangerous. "There's process takes IJiace In a popu ·
In
th!'
area
but
were
unable
roads
the
scene
by
a
member
or
the
Ia ted area, lives and property are
occurred. Upon their arrival at
not a lot of time to run."
6:42, authorities found that family who fel t the Green broth· to locate the brothers.

Sheriff probes shooting incident

First major winter stontt ~its Ohio;
expect inch of snow to fall today
"It's not the cold that does It
backyards, they get excited
By United Press International
(Increases
sales) , It's the first
about
skiing,"
he
said.
The first major winter storm of
snowfall,"
Lenny
heavy
Expressing
similar
sentiments
the season moved Into Ohio was Jack Shea, a downtown Goldfarb, general said
manager
of ·
Thursday, dumping several
Lake County Hardware In Pal·
office worker.
Inches of snow In the northern Toledo
"If It's going to snow hard, I nesvllle Township. "I guess they
part or the state.
·
A winter storm warning was In don't mind," Shea said. " Let it realize, 'Hey !!' ~winter time."'
down In buckets. I don't
It was a considerable annoy·
effect tor the northern quarter of come
like
these
wimpy
flurries."
ance
to the Akron pollee.
the state, where up to three
On
the
other
side
of
the
"We
get an enormous amount
Inches of snow was on the ground
argument was Bob Finley of of calls from people asking what
early today .
.
the roads are like," said Sgt.
The National Weather Service Lakewood
''I hate It," he said. ''No one Is David Culp. "So many, In fact,
predicted the northern partolthe ever ready !or winter. You
state would get up to three Inches· always put off win terlzlng the that one guy who used to .work
of additional snow accumulation automoblle, fixing the storm here had a standard response:
before'the storm moves out of the winters and buying the boots you 'All the roads entering the city
state. Also, the snowbelt area of should have gotten In September. are lee-covered and slippery. All
the roads leaving the city are
northeast Ohio eas(..of Cleveland
"Wlnter should be like Christ· clear and dry.'
was expected to get ''significant mas - one big day and It's all
"People would thank him and
accumulations" of snow today.
over."
hang
up ,without even thinking
A winter weather advisory was
Tom Gillis, a supervisor In the about it. "
In effect for central and east , Lake County engineer's office,
The storm producing the snow
central sections of the state. with said road crews had spread 60 was
expected to let up today,
snow expected to accumulate · tons ot salt and 80 tons of cinder
except In the northeast snowbelt,
about one Inch today.
by late afternoon.
where squalls were likely to give
The snowfall was good news for
"We're ready," he said while additional accumulations south
ski enthusiasts.
watching the snow fall, adding, and southeast of Cleveland.
Bill Harris, manager of the "we better be."
Northerly winds and flurries
Alpine Valley Ski Area jn Ches·
Hardware stores In the snow associated In the backwash of the
terland, · Geauga County, said belt were reporting heavy sales
storm were to' ,continue tonight,
about 2,000 skiers hit the slopes of space heaters, weather strip· .. with Improvement slated state·
Thursday.
ping and snow shovels .
· wide on Saturday.
"When they see snow In their

\hr_e;lt~n~.

Measures can be taken to
eliminate rock sliding in poten·
tially dangerous areas, Hansen
says, such as cutting back the
rocks in a controlled, supervised
manner, or putting up barriers to
catch any slide that might occur.
However, he points out, "these
methods are neither Inexpensive
nor easy."
Even though ODNR lreeps
track of rock slides In the state,
their responsibility Is of a sclen·
tific nature, Hansen says. AI· ·
though ODNR will examine spe·
clflc areas and make '
recommendations when re· •
quested to do so, they must avoid
competition with private consult·
lng firms. For this reason, any
report from ODNR regarding
rock slide potential would not be
highly detailed.
Other Meigs County areas with
the potential for rock sliding
Include the Antiquity area along
Route 338, and the Long Bottom
area along Route 124. "Anyplace
where a promontory Is jutting out
from the main cliff, with no
lateral support, Is a potential
danger," according to Hansen .
"Especially If the supporting
base Is known to have been
undercut by any type of ·
excavation.' '

Jobless rate drops to 5.9
percent during November·
WASHINGTON (UP!) - .The continues a resurgence I!IAmerl·
nation's unemployment rate • ca's factories that has been going
dropped to · 5.9 percent In No' on for most of this year.
The 5.9 percent unemployment
vember while the average
rate
drops to 5.8 percent If one
number of hours worked re·
adds
to the labor force all
malned near the highest levels In
miliJary
personnel stationed on
two decades, the Labor Depart·
U.S. bases .
ment said today .
The rate for adult men dropped
The fall from October's 6
percent rate provides the first 0.1 percentage point to 5 percent
clear evidence that the economy whlle remaining unchanged . for
was not severely crippled by the women at 5.2 percent. Teenagers
saw their Jobless rate fall 0.6
Oct. 19 stock market collapse.
The government S;!.id the rate percentage point to 16.8 percent.
Amorig whites, the' job picture
dropped because the labor force
0.1 percentage point,
Improved
grew by 313,000 to 113.5 mllllon
5.1 percent. But for
dipping
to
while the number of people out of
blacks
the
rate
rose 0.1 percenwork and looking for a job fell by
58,000 to 7.12 million. The number tage point to 12.1 percent, and for
of people who were out of the Hispanics the picture got 0.8
labor force also dropped, by percentage point worse, rising to
9.1 percent.
96,000, to 62.85 million.
The average work week In
The labor force has grown by 2
million so far this year, with private business held steady at 39
adult women providing 60 per· hours, while among manufactur·
cent of the Increase and Hlspan· ers both the average week and
lcs a quarter of the total, the average overtime dropped 0.1
hour, to 41.2 hours of work and 3. 9
· Labor Departm~nt said.
,·Manufacturing provided about llours of overtime.
Despite the drop, both still
four of every nine jobs added to
the nation's payrolls, a survey of rank among the highest work
establishments Indicated. Tllat weekS In 20 years, the Labor

Department said.
Average earni ngs rose by 5
cents an hour to $9 .14 or by 83
cents a week ·to reach $318.07 In •
November. Over the past 12
months , hourly earnings have
risen 26 cents and weekly earn·
ings have gone up $9.93, the
government said.
The Labor Department bases
its unemployment; report on .two
surveys. One, taken In house·
holds, is used to compute the
unemploym ent rate. The other,
of establishments, looks more
closely at the types of jobs'
created and lost.
The establishment survey
found the number of factory jobs
grew by 19,000 in November, with
nearly an 20 of the Labor
Department's Industry categories showing gains. Construction
work did particularly well, show·
lng a 35,000 Increase after seasonal adjustment when fewer
people were laid orr than usual
wltll the onset of cold weather.
Health services, transport&amp;·
tlon and public utilities and
wholesale trades each added .
Continued on page 7

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