<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12711" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12711?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-10T04:49:21+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43683">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/bd405e1516844289c3ec2a62d4aa74c5.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f8f25209d7d0f635cec427109d6f25c7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39856">
                  <text>Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December 22, 1987

Ohio Lottery

Little hope remains 'for discovering
more Dona Paz collision survivors
not able to confirm a report the . Tuesday.
boy was conscious and remem- · President Corazon Aquino
bered being placed on the log by called Sunday· nights Incident a
his father after the passenger "tragedy of harrowing propervessel ~na Paz went down.
t!ons." She ordered a "thorough,
Officials, meanwhile, called unsparing and full-scale
off the search for more survivors Investigation."
of the Sunday night shipwreck,
Officials said there were 1,493
saying there was only a "very passengers aboard the Dona Paz
slim" chance of finding anyone and 13 crewmen on the tanker.
else alive. They reported more Only 26 sur!v!vors had been
than 21 bodies had been reco- rescued and brought to Manila.
vered from beaches on Mindoro
·
·
·
island near the scene.
Survivors said more than 3,000
The motor tanker Victor carpeople may have been jammed
rylng 8,800 barrels of petr~leum
aboard the liner bona Paz when
products, slammed into the 2,300- .It was struck amidships Sunday
ton Dona Paz, turning the foggy,
night by the tanker Victor, but
officials said they could not
shark-filled waters 100 miles
southeast of Manila Into a raging
confirm the report the number of
passengers exceeded authorized
Inferno for several hours before
the two vessels sank more than
limit.
1,000 feet to the bottom.
A spokesman for the coast
Officials said there were 1,493
guard said one of Its vessels had
passengers aboard the Dona Paz
picked up the bodies of 20 victims
and 13 crewmen on the tanker.
along the shores of Mindoro
Only 26 surlvlvors had been
Island, 10 miles west of the scene
rescued and brought to Manila
of the tragedy, and they were
before the boy was found
being taken 25 miles north to
·
Batangas province, where a
funeral will be held.
News photographers earlier
saw at least 10 bloated and
burned bootes washed ashore in
the cpastal town of Naujan on
Mindoro Island, but It was not
immediately clear whether they
... • :tiP- )!G
I
were among the bodies picked up
-~
...
__......., ~by the coast guard.
The coast guard earlier confirmed another body, of a woman
1,030 killed
aged 20 to 22, was found on the
beach of the nearby town of Pola
and returned to Manila. The
North Atlanlic Ocean
1,503 killed
bodies included a large number
of women, including two pregJapanoso .... u.,.,,,
nant women and a child.
Survivors said most of the
passengers were asleep when the
tanker smashed into the Dona
Paz, tearing it virtuaily in two,
and then exploded in a bail of
1,196 killed
flame that engulfed both ships in
seconds.
Medi101ranoan
"I am tempora~ily suspending
the . search until I get a good
lead ," said Capt. Antonio BE!· .
bijes, director of the Manila
1,000kiUed
Rescue Coordinating Center. He
Haltlax Harbor,
1,600 killed
Monl Blane and
said weather was bad at the
Nova Scalia
Dec. 6,1917
collision site between Marloduque and Mindoro islands, with
South China Sea
1,000 killed
Hong Kong
rain, low clouds and fog.
Marclt-18, f921
''There is a very slim chance of
Soulh ol S~anghai,
1'100 killed
finding any more survivors,"
Babljes said. "There was no
sighting of survivors or even
Japanese Coast
1,17_
2 killed
· debris. "
Baltijes said five helicopters,
esbmaled
Including three from ,.the U.S.
1,460 killed
Dec. 20. 1987
Clark Air Base, joined Phil!pUPI Graphic
pines coast guard ships and
commercial vessels in combing
the sea today . An earlier oil slick
WORST DISASTERS- Rescers now hold little hope for most of
in the area had disappeared.
the nearly 1,500 Christmas travelers believed to have perished In
"The area is relatively free of
the fiery collision between the passenter ship Dona Paz and the
any debris of the two vessels,"
tanker Victor on Sunday. This chart lists other maritime tragedies
said coast guard spokesman Lt.
and their casualties. (UPI graphic)
Cmdr. 'Cipriano Luspo. "The sea

MANILA, Philippines (UPI)Fishermen found a 5-year-old
boy clinging to a log today nearly
36 hours after the fiery collision
between a 'tanker and a passenger ship that left more than
1,500 people missing and feared
dead, a rescue official said.
Antonio Babljes, director of the
government Rescue CoordlnationCenter. said a radio operator
in the governor's office in Oriental Mindoro reported fishermen
found the boy clingl!!g to a log
along the shore in the village of
Tinamalayan. about 10 miles
from the scene of the Sunday
night wreck. He is the 27th known
survivor of the collision Sunday
night.
"They rushed him to the
hospital there in Mindoro," Ba·
b!jes said. "He was stiil alive but
in serious condition."
The rescue director said he had
heard the boy had been removed
from the island by helicopter but
no rescue organization confirmed the report. He also was

Worst maritime
disasters
since 1900

Christmas
countdown

Vol.38, 1\io. 1 58

DONA PAZ- The Dona Paz, the Ill-fated ferry
carrying at least 1,500 people, Is shown In one ollts
previous voyages. The 2,250 ton Inter-island

vessel sank off the coast of the central PhUippines
alter li coUided with an all tanker S11nday night.
(UPI Reuters)

were aboard the ship.
is clean."
The Dona Paz, with an authoBabljes ana Luspo said they
rized capacity of 1,600, was had no knowledge of a report
heading for Manila from the attributed to some survivors by a
central islands of Leyte and prlvateradlostation, DZRH, that
Samar packed with passengers the ship's crewmen had been
planning to celebrate Christmas drinking the night of the collision.
with relatives In the capital. The
"I suppose it is possible they
tanker was heading south toward were celebrating Christmas
the nearby Island of,Masbate.
early, but .there Is nothing to
Relatives of the passengers substantiate these rumors. We
waited for the manifest at the don't know," Babijes said.
If no more survivors are found,
office of the ship's owners In
Manila: k one point, a reporter the accident will be the worst at
for an independent radio station · sea since the French ammunition
read a partial list of passengers ship Mont Blanc exploded Dec. 6,
through a bullhorn.
1917, in Halifax , Nova Scotia,
A 36-year-old housewife, Lill- killing 1,600 people.
beth Cruz, wept when she heard
The sinking of the French
the names of her mother and cruiser Provence that killed 3,100
16-year-old sister.
people Feb. 26, 1916, holds the
"I hQpe they bring back even reco rd as the worst recorded
just the bodies," s;~id Edmund non-military maritime tragedy.
The sinking of the Titanic on
Espiritu, 25, whose mother, father, grandmother and a sister Apri114, 1912, killed 1,503 people.
••

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; L&lt;lewi
Am Electric Power ... ........ .. 25% •
AT&amp;T ................................. 27¥8
. Ashland 011 ....... ................. 58¥.!
Bob Evans ........... ,............ ,. 15%
CIJarming Shoppes .'....... ,..... 12%
City Holding Co ................... 29
Federal Mogul. .................... 33
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. ..... 60~
Heck's1Inc . .......................... 1~
Key Centurion ..................... 37
Lands' End ......................... 20*
Limited Inc ........ ................ 16%
Multimedia Inc ................... .48
Rax Restaurants ...... ..............3
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 7'1.
Shoney's Inc ....................... 21'1.
Wendy's Inti ...... .' .............. ... 4¥.
Worthington Ind .................. 16~

The Employees of your Sundry Store would like to "Thank
You" for your kind patronage
in 1987!

WE'RE #1 IN PHOTO PROCESSING!

VID_EO

12 EXPOSURE
1.&amp;6 VALUE

3.89
PLUS 12 EXPOSURES FREE!

CHRISTMAS Gl
TO YOU IS ••••

IODACOLOR
35 II FILM
SALE PRitE
OUR RE,. 1.&amp;9

llSS REllA!! --::----'-'=;:

3

SAL£ PRICE

6.99

LESS REIIATE

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

SUPRALIFE

ALllLIIE llnERIES

2 PAC! C-D CEU•9 VOLT SINGLl
· SALE PRICE
OUR REG. 2.69

LEss REtiAl£

ONE FREE!

FUJI COLOR
DISC FILM

271 NORTH SECOND AVE. 992 "3642

TRI•PRIITSrM

ONE ULTRA 4"16" BORDERLESS PRINT PLUS
TWO 2"X3" PRINTS AT ONE LOW PRICE!
GLOSSY FINISH FROM 35MM ONLY!

TOUCH
·ouR

I

at y ·. enttne
2 Sections. 1 2 Pt!iges

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Teachers strike continues in Meigs district

"t'ft\

VIDEO TOUCH

•

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 23, 1987

c_oryrighted 1987

LET US HELP PRESERVE
SPECIAL IEIORIES!

ONE PER FAMILY- NO PURCHASE NECESSARY

•

e

WE IE.SERYE THE Rl&amp;H110' LllttT QUAitltltES ·

YOU'LL RECEfVE ONfFREE TAiE
RENTAL ON WEDNESDAY
.
I
DECEMBER 23, 1987 ONLY!!

Cloudy tonight. Chance of
rain. lAw in 40s Occasional
rain Thursday .

..

·Merry Christmas!

THE

Daily Number
576
Pick 4
8391

SUPER HEAVY DUTY

BAnERIES
2 PACl C-D CEU
9 VOLT SIII&amp;LE

SALE
PI ICE

LESS REtiAl£

~~:IIAIE

2/1.&amp;0
-1.00

2150'
PICI ...... ... 2/2.01

AFTER CHRISTMAS SALE
EFFECTIVE DECEMBER 26

SAVE

UP
TO

SELECTED
HOLIDAY AND

CHRISTMAS
ITEMS!

-.

A teachers strike which began
on Nov •. 6 in the Meigs Local
School District continued today
as a negotiation session between
teams of the teachers· a nd the
board of education In Athens
Tuesday failed to bring about a
settlement.
A spokesman at theadminstralive office in Middleport said that
the session which was supposed
to have started at 10 a.m. did not
get underway until about 11 a.m.
due to late arrival of the teacher
representatives.
The session lasted about an
hour and failed to bring any
settlement, Asst . Supt. James
Carpenter reported . in fact , that
, the proposal of the teachers

made ' Tuesday called for -even
more money than previous proposals pecause teachers asked for
pay for the days schools have
been open this week using
substitute teachers. The
teachers are still asking for a
three year contract, Carpenter
said, but indicated that teachers
have indicated they are flexible
in the amount of money involved.
Carpenter said the board team
made the same offer that it
thought it had made at another
negotiation session held recently
in Athens. That offer, termed the
last and the best by Board
President Robert Snowden, was
rejected by the teachers negotiating team. The board team

indicated to t(le teachers that il
will take the latest proposal from
the Teachers Association back to
the board of education for
consideration.
Federal Mediator David Thorley, assisted in yesterday's negotiations by mediator Ward Wilson, told both teams at the close
of the session that no more
negotiating sessions will be scheduled unless there is some
Indication -from one side or both
that mnvement will take place in
reaching a settlement.
Meantime, six of the nine
sc hools ?f the district were open
today for the third consecutive
day through the use of substitute
teachers. Reports this morning

indicated that the teachers asso elation is abiding by the restrain ing order issued by Judge Charles Knight in the common pleas
court limiting two pickets at each
entrance to the schools.
Attendance was upforthe third
day at the Pomeroy Elementary
School this morning. There were
160 students present while the
total of Tuesday was 146. At the
Meigs High School Wednesday's
attendance was recorded . at 288
this morning while it was at 322
on Tuesday.
This is the final day of c lasses
in the district preceding the
Christmas break. However, the
holiday vacation is ·. being cut

s hort and schools will be open for
classes again on Monday and are
scheduled to be open on Dec. 28,
·29 and 30. Then they wlll close for
New Year's, reopening again on
Jan. 4. The board of education
has scheduled classes also on
Martin Luther King Day and on
Saturdays. Jan. 16 and Jan. 30.
According to the new calendar
developed by the board of educa -lion, the last classes In any Meigs
District school will be on June 30
to wrapup the year provided that
not a lot of calamity time
involved due to bad weather.
Schools of the district are also
sub ject to inspection by the state
to ensure that meaningful educa-

tlon is tak,ing place in classrooms
th rough the use o!'the substitute
teachers.
Some vandalism was reported
overnight . According to reports,
the tires on vehicles of one
substitute teacher and her husband were slashed and the
substi tut e was unable to report
for classes today. However.
officials said that she did indicate
that she will report when classes
resume on Monday.
Changes have been made in the
restraining order issued by
Judge Knight last Friday but as
of this morning, Judge Knight
h_ad no t officially signed those
changes, it is reported.

MLTA ·disappointed, but not
surprised at Tuesday's results
Members of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association expressed
disappointment but not surprise
today with the result s of Tuesday'_s negotiating session in
Athens before federal mediators
David Thorley and Ward Wilson.
"l really do not believe the
board representatives went to
the meeting to negotiate . What
was billed as a negotiating
session resulted only in an
exchange of positions with no
real bargaining taking place, ..
MLTA President Michael Wilfong said.
Wilfong said the board representativE's offered only a proposal that was sent to him earlier
by certified mail. The two-ho'u r

meeting was called at the·request
of the federal mediators.
"We rejec ted their proposal
because it did not have jol:&gt;
protection that we have wanted
all along and their three-year
wage offer was not adequate,"
Wilfong said.
"We offered a counterproposal. which essentially contained job protection throughout'
the three years of the contract.
Also. as soon as they agree to the
concept of a pay increase in the
third year of the contract, we will
be flexible in negotiating the
actual a_mount, "the MLTA presidentadded.
,
Wilfong said teachers were
una~le to accept the last proposal

from the board. which only
guaranteed Meigs teachers
would get no less money In the
new contract than they received
in the 1986-87 school years, which
is the level teachers were being
paid this school year.
"I might add that it's time to
get on with s~rious bargaining
and resolve this crisis and get the
children back In school.
Teachers want to end this strike
as soon as possible." Wilfong
said.
Wilfong said from reports of
ML TA pickets. the board may be
overestimating the number of
students crossing picket lines in
order to impress the State
Department of Education.

Foote Mineral buy out step
closer after loan is approved
REMEMBERING THOSE LESS FORTU·
NATE- The Farmers Bank and Savings Co. and
their employees again this year are sharing lhelr
Christmas joy with those less fortunate. Bank
employees each purchased a toy and then d~llar
lor dollar the Bank matched the amount spent and

purchased more toys. They were then presented
. to the Salvation i\rmy along with a check from the
Bank to help on purchasing food lor lhe needy.
Here Dora Wining, left! and Eloise Adams of the
Salvation Army accept the gilts from Ted Reed,
left, and Paul Reed of the Bank .

•

ByCHARLESi\.MASON
OVP News Staff
The buyout of the closed Foote
Mineral plant in New Haven is
c loser thi s week with an announcement today that the state ·
of West Virginia has approved a
$5 million loan as part of the
financing package.
A press conference was sc heteachers from any source what - duled for this morning in Charlessoever. The new order preven ts
ton in connection with the approthe MLTA only from demanding
val Tuesday by the State Board of
the names from the board of
Investments of the loan. The
education.
money comes from the state 's
"T he previous restraining
Industry Assistance Corp .. acorder prohibited any congregatcording to reports from United
ing in large numbers at any
Press International.
buildings on board property . Th~ . · William Doepkin. a Pittsburgh
revised or modified order now
attorney who Is engineering the
presents MLTA members from
buyout of the ferroalloys plant
attempting to prevent by mass for American Alloys , Inc., said
congregation or intimidation a ny this week that the state's appropersons from freely entering or· val of the loap is just one crucial
leaving the board 's property .
Meanwhile. the MLTA reported less than 1,000 of the
dis trict's 2600 pupils showed up
Tuesday . The MLTA said about
75 substitutes (scabs) reported
on the second\l}ay schools were
officially open out of 155 regular
teacher s.
·

Meigs teachers tssue statement
The Meigs Local Teachers
Association Tuesday afternoon
released a statement in regard to
the dismissal of charges against
six members - and disclosing
aspects of a modification of the
Friday restraining order issued
aga inst the association by Judge
Charles Knight in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
The statement reads:
"Contempt charges against six
members of the Meigs Local
Te.a chers Association were dismissed in Pomeroy Tuesday by
Common Pleas Court Judge
Charles Knight.
" The teachers were charged
with contempt of a court injunction that Included limiting
pickets at each building In the
Meigs Local School District. The
MLTA has been on strike against

the district since Nov. 6, but
schools have been officially open
only Monday and Tuesday this
week .
"The MLTA agreed to release
only the board of education from
a ny claims against the board
arising from the contemp\
action.
"Meanwhile, the number of
police was reduced from 117 from
seven counties on Monday to just
local sheriff' s deputies and police
·
Tuesday .
"Judge Knight also agreed to
modify or vacate his original
Iempora ry restraining order limiting pickets at two per building.
The new order will permit two
pickets per entrance or access.
''The previous order also prohibited the MLTA from obtaining
names of substitute . (scab)

part of the total package which
must be approved before the end
of the year.
·" A key component Is the
finalization of the state's commitment to lend." he said . Other
components still under negotiation include other financing by
private institutions . United Steelworkers Union Local No. 5171
must approve a termination
agreement with Foote Mineral as
one of the la st steps, Doepkin
said.
Gov. Arch Moore, who came to
Wahama High School Feb. 2 last
year to announce the state was
putting $4 million behind the
buyout deal as seed money , !s
el!pected to announce today in
Charleston that the state h;l s
Increased that loan to $5 million .
According to reports by United
Press International the$5 million

is part of a $19.8 million package
approved this week by the state
Board of Investments for a
business that could be up a nd
running within 90 days.
The goal is to gel one of the
plant's ., three furnaces up and
running by next month, if the
buyout is completed. The plant
could be back to 180 employees
working within six months, with
work shifts phased in , officials
close to the buyou t said.
A professional manager will be
hired to run the newly opened
plant, the organizers said.
,
Doepkin said Tuesday afternoon that the plant's buyout is
still not complete. bliJi added
things have progressed considerably since just a month ago.
"Absolutely." he said. adding,
"The rest of the transaction
Continued on page 5

Eastern hoard approyes new policy
A policy on bomb threats was
approved on the first reading
when the Eastern Loca l Board of
Education met Monday night in
regular session. The policy reads
as follows:
· In the event of a bomb threat,
the Board of Education hereby
directs the. superintendent to
take actions that are prudent and
responsible in dealing with the
problem. Additionally, the Su pe rintendent Is directed to develop adm lnlsiralive procedures
to deal with the problem. These
administrative procedures shall
be approved initially by the
board and. from time to time,
reviewed and changed as
necessary.
The intent of this policy,
according to a report submitted
by Superintendent Dan Apling on ,
behalf of the Eastern Board. is to '
insure that the safety of children
and staff is of greatest cnocern,
and that minimization of disruptions to the school day Is of

secondary concern.
The board also took action to
assemble a broadly based commit tee, to be convened and
chaired by the superintendent,
for the purposes of researching,
developing and recommending
to the board a policy on Acquired
Immune Def!C'!ency Syndrome
(AIDS).
Other business conduct ed by
the board included:
Employed Nancy Circle, Darla
Kennedy and Kathlee Peyton as
substitute teachers for the 198788 school years.
Approved a resolution express- .
ing thanks and appreciation to
Roger Gaul for his eight years of
exemplary service to the Eastern Local Schools as a board
member.
'
.Joined the Ohio School Boards
A ssoci~tion for 1988.
Accepted, wllh regret, the
resignation of Carolyn Tripp
from the position of language
arts and reading teacher at the

high school.
Accepted a bid from the
Nationwide Insurance Compa ny
for fleet insura nce.
Met in execu live session for the
purpose of dealing with an appea l
of a student disci plina ry action,
personnel matte rs and matters
relating to the 1988-89 budget.
Set the 1988 organizational
mee ting fo r 7 p.m. on Thursday,
' Jan . 7.. a t the high school.
Set the January 'regular meet ing for 7 p.m . Jan. 14 at the high
·
school.
Suspended an ea rlier policy on
overtime-compensatory time
and approved. on firs t reading, a
·new poli cy on overtime compensatory time.
Accpeted J .P . Davis, son of
Terry and Kay Gardner, as a
tuition student for the balance of
the 1987-88 school year . The
parents will pay the non-·
refundable tuition In a dvance.
and will furnish transportation .

- HOLD ON TIGHT- Ottle Jarvis and James
Keesee, employees of J&amp;L Insulation, MiddlepOT!, seemed · ohlivious to the height as they

worked Monday afternoon making repairs to the
Meigs County Courthouse dome.
•

•

�Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE ~lEIGS MASON AREA

ts:~~
m~

r-T"'-',__-r,,........,.,d,"""

qjv

ROBERT L WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press International Inland Daoly Press
Associauon and the Amencan Newspaper Publishers Association
LET1 ERS OF OPINION arc wei rome They should bE' less than 300 "ords
iOn!:! All letters are subJ C!Ct to edit !ng and must be signed" !I h nam e add1 ess and
telephone numbf'r No uns1gned lcttl?rs will be published Letters should be in

good taste, addressmg issues, not jX'rsonalitles
.

Congress
Time is ·
not on their side
By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON tUPI ) -Its Chrostmast1me and Congress IS late
Ltke ltttle elves scurrymg to wrap the holtda&gt; packages
lawmakers are trymg to fmtsh thetr work m It me to get on a plane and
head home ahead of the cro'Ads
Will they make tl 01 won t the}?
Almost every year tl ts the same scropt Congress 'A ails until the
last mmute burns the mtdntght 01! holds a few Saturday sesswns
threatens to keep 'AOrkmg Ulltil G:hnstmas Eve and fmallv gets It all
done Whev.'
Its usual!) the budget or a money btU or the fear of shu tung down
the government that keeps them gomg unul the last mmute It ts
fraught wtth backroom wheclmg and dealing and concern that the
work

IS

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, December 23, 1987

•

The banking industcy___
WASHINGTON - American
bankers once operated by a
simple 3 6 3 formula They paid
depositors 3 pet cent mterest, lent
money at 6 percent and hit the
golf course by three o clock
Today the banks' compehtors
are staymg Ia ter and do mg more
than the law allows the banks to
do On top of record loan losses
bank fatlures a n sagging ear n
mgs, bankmg ts an mdustry
desperately trying to hnd Its
mche Archatc restncttons dat
Jng back to the Depress ton have
handtcappt&gt;d the mdus try, ac
cot dmg to numerous pnvate and
governl)'lent experts
The threat goes beyond the
welfare of bankers The fact ts,
the current srtuatwn will slowly
lead to a less safe and sound
bankmg system And a tht eat to
bankmg ts a threat to the
avatlablltty of loans m tht&gt;
pl!vate sector a threat to the
fmanctal system m wh1ch trtl
!tons of dollat s change hands
each day, a th reat to the conduct
of monetary policy and even a
tht eat to the safety of savmgs
Wtlham SeJdman, chairman of
the Federal Deposit Insut ance

Corp , has won high mat ks for his
innovative and 1 more Important
Independent approach to the
restructuring of the banking
Industry He has no allegiance to
special interests ,and he offended
extremists on both ends of the
spectJ urn when he unveiled hts
agency s sweeping blueprint for
financial change It combines
strict supervision wtth 'a pro
gram to permit banks to compete
wtth emerging flnancJal
supermarkets
To understand today's debate,
it ts crucial to realiZe that
financial markets and the forces
that compete wtth banks have
changed dramatically since 1933,
-.nen the Glass Steagall Act first
Imposed a wall between bankmg
and securities acttvtties
Depresston era lawmakers de
ctded Ihat the bankmg ctlsts was
caused by banks daobling m
confllctmg mterests
Hamstrung by the rules, banks
have watched as virtually every
bank hke or thn!t hke product
has been taken over by dtverst
fted financial servtces firms the non banks that evade regula
lions by not makmg commercial

By Jack Anderson
_.:a:::::nd:::_:D~a-=-=-le-=::-:Va~n~At;::-ta

loans You can open a checkmg
account at Mernll I:.ynch You
can get a loan at Sears
• We are now m a new e1 a of
finance ' states 'Mandate for
Change ' a recent FDIC publtca
tJon that sets forth the Seidman
manifesto As a result, banking
Is threatened by the widening
gap between the products and
services demanded by financtal
set vices customers and the per
mtssJble products and services
that banking can offer '
Some examples of how ban)&lt;s
are losing the turf war to outstde
competlors Banks are witness
lng erosion m their consumer
loan portfolios as savmgs mstitu
ttons and fmance ftrms vie for
what used lo be t he banks' turf
The banks ' share of the auto
ftnanctng market dipped from 60
percent In 1977 to 41 percent In
1986 Ove1 the same penod,
fmance compames more than
doubled their shat e Historically,
commercial banks most tmpor
tant busines has been commer
e ta! lendmg But banks have lost
an Important chunk of this
business m recent years to the
cheaper commerctal paper

never done

But does Congress really wo1 k best under deadlines?
The answe1 ts probably no In the rush to get everyth10g done
somethmg ts always mtssed Th mgs get pushed astde and pet projects
qUietly are folded 10to maJor leg tslalton only to be dtscovered bv
reporters or opponents weeks or days lat er
Important debates occur late at mght long after newspapet
dead!mes so they do not always make the front page or the evemng
news and the public remams tgnorant a bout what has happened on the
floor of the !louse or the Senate
Ltke the chtld who Js ca ught playmg hooky there ts some remorse
but not much And the questwn rema10 s why cant Congress work m
a more orderly fashton and keep on a schedule?
Perhaps 11 ts the process or the system Jtself Butt! ts not only tn
modern limes that Congress has had thts problem
Before 1933 Congress only worked about SIX months a year- one
short sesston from December unttl March 4 and then a second longer
sess ton that began 10 months la ter
In those days the mtdntght otl burned on March 3 much m the same
way tt does today accordmg to Don Rttchle a Senate htstonan
Everythmg ts poltttcal Rttchte says 'Whenever you have the
mcennve for gettmg people out of town tt ts always easter to
compromtse
People tealize they have got 10 give m or lose tlw battle And the
sys tem tends to fmd ways to bottle thmgs up at the end of the sesswn
Some thmgs are always easter to do when It comes dowrt1o thewtre
-like money btlls whtch are tradttwnally, left unultast
Everyone wants to leave to~.&lt; n They have thetr ttckets tn thetr
poe ,ets Rttchte says Evet yone wants to make compromtses but
1t also creates a wonderful o pportumt ~ for the mmont y to tht ow up
roadblocks
And somenmes there ts almost a fes ttve atmosphere 10 Congress
when at 2 a m the lawmakers arc trymg to get thet r deeds done and
head home
Some come to the floor m formal at lire havmg left ho' da y parttes
to tend to the nat ton s bus mess And 11 seems the work actually gets
done be!ore the Ne11 Year nngs tn
In fa ct thmgs actually were ha rde1 10 Washmgton m the
summertime before atrcondtttonmgwas tn\ented In those da)S the
government JUSt could not functton 10 Wa shmgton s notonous heat
ln 1933 ~ h en Prestdent Franklin Dela no Roose\elt took offtce 10
toe depths of the Depreso10n he called Congress mto spectal sesston
to pass htstonc Ne~.&lt; Deal Jegtslatwn
And th ey worked untt l the summer heat forced them to go home
unn l December

Letters to the editor
Support teachers
I and other members of local
1886 support the Me1gs Local
Teachet s Umon We do not

support Non Umon acttvttles
Gene C Otler
Pt es Local 1886
Untied Mme Wor'&lt;ers

Expresses rrppreciation
Mr Edttor
We would ltke to take thts
opportumty to publtdy express
our appreciation towqrd the
Southern Ht g h School Marchmg
band fo r supberb performances
thts yea. Unrler the threctlon of
Roberta Matdens asststed by
J m Van Retth June Buchanon,
Davtd Deem Veromca Provo
and Vicki Damron who have
done a super super JOb the
students pt ogt essed with eacl
perf0rmance The ban has gone
u om &gt; handful • students to
stxty ftve marchm. and hard
wm kt·g young men a
women
who'" an outstend10g JOb Each
one snould be Jmmended for
t hell hard .vork ttme, and
enthu&gt;tasm
Members are Bre da Ash
,Kns Ash Bethany Bass Mary
Bvcr Roberta Cald'Aell John
Chaney Pat nee Cercle, Jennifer
Ct oss Aleashd ruster Valarie
: onnolly, Shannorr- Counts
Benny Pat.ev, Jenmfer Damron,
Serena Davts, Leslee Dudding
Robtn Foley, Debbte Halley,
#endy Harmon, Crystal Har
man Cmey Hatfteld, Tamara
Hayman Terr ' Hayman,
Hee• her Htll Walessa Hunnell
Na•lCY Hunt, "tml orJy Jenklt~.
!?•andt Kmg z, .a Laws ,n,
Vle' ' rrda Len,Jey, Colin Maidens,
' hnstl "atdens Tanya Mea
ows Anb1e Mills, Eber P1cken ·

Tet esa Pterce, Crystal Powell
Aaron Fletcher Bnan Shuler
Jenmlet Smtih, Elizabeth Smtih
Teddt Smtth Loretta Smtih
Mary Smtih Donald Spaun
P0nald Spaun Lee Spaun Don
'&gt;tepenson Seth St0bart Mtsty
Swisher Emtly Sham Heather
Shuler Mtchelle Stobart Angle
Swiger Mel Van Meter Chris
Wea• er Jan Wllhams Brent
Wtlson Sarah Wtles Rebecca
W11es Ctndy Wolfe Sl.awn
WnJfe, Vanessa Younr Michelle
F'ner J Dee Cline and
y
Moore
The school ana community
s hould be proud of each one's
effott ard dedtcal.on If a·yone
feels as we do, please take the
time Ia let t1em know They 11
apprectate 11 Great job Kids'
Also we we tid hketo thank the
busmesses for donattons towa•rl
our New Unifo rms Fund Thanks
so much'
The Southern H gh Scho• Band
Boosteb
Edna Hunnell, Pres
Deborah Kmg Vtce pre·
Anna Shuler, Sec freas
Ruth Shain Ways and Means
Chairman
t.~ane \""n H1ll
Tom"'" n weaver
Lura Swiger
Therosa VanMeteJ
Mary Plkens

" No, no, you misunderstood. You guys are staying here factory that's moving to Mexico

it's the toy

market Euro markets and for
elgn banks
There are risks mherent In
allowing banks to diversify
Unsupervtsed, a bank could
mmgle the funds of 1ts dtverslfled
substdtartes making them flnan
clally vulnet able toone another's
ups and downs The Seidman
plan seeks to balance those risks
wtth the teallty that much or the
fmanclal mdustry ts already
deregulating Itself thrGugh loop·
holes Ieavmg banks m a danger
OUS pOSitiOn
The Seidman plan 1s bullt on
flve stmple prmctples 1 Non
banking afftltates and subsldtar
les of banks would be separately
capttaltzed so they could stand.
or fall alone and not have to be
propped up by the bank 2 The
operations of banks and theh
non banking a!!lltates would be
clearly separated and rigorously
supervtsed 3 Transactions be
tween banks and their affiliates
and subsldtai tes would be do neat
'arm's length ' as tf totally
separate firms were deali!lg with
each other 4 Both banks and
then competttors would be able
to be in the same busmesses
meaning they could compete
f~trly 5 Rules would be estab
lished to safeguard against con
centratlon of bankmg and finan
eta ! power
In an mtervlew with out
assoctate Mtchael Bmstein Seld
man ta lked about one of the
deepest concerns stemming
from banking deregulation- the
mlschtef maktng polentlal of too
many close connect tons between
a bank and tts substdJartes or
afftllates
' The key question ts can you
build a ftrewall around the bank
the wtll keep tt safe and sound
through supet vtston? And there
fore, you don't have to worry
about regulatmg tts affiliates tls
substdtanes 01 tts parent just as
long as the bank lives by the
rules, 'satd Seidman
'Our expertence says that
you can, In fact , create such a
firewall that tt has been done In
the pas t since we are doing )t and
have been domg It as regulators
of banks for 54 years m terms of
msidcr lendmg abuses The basic
purpose of the firewall ts to
prevent Improper and unsafe
transactions In a deregulated
e nvironment between the bank
and Its parent or the bank and its
su bstdtary '

Sarah Overstreet
If a beep answers···-------I ve taken a lot of flack from
my fnends lately and not be
cause of any of my numeJ ous
faults whtch I will acknowledge I
catch thetr Ire because of one
sti uatton I can t help and be
cause of another about ~.&lt;htch
w1th t hetr constant harpmg I've
become as stubborn as a dog that
doesn't want to go outstde at
mght
They stat t on me bee? •se I m
never home If I could be home I
would by home I hke home No
one hass les me at home except
the dog who wont go outstde at
mght and won't stop ba r kmg out
code to her cohorts once she does
They contmue to berate me
because they can neve1 1each m e
when !hey 'Aant and because I
won t buy an answet tn g
machme
Frankly I don t know why I
won 1 buy a n answenng rna
c hmc except fat the fact that my
friends Ignore my other wonder
lui quahttes tn makmg then
determlnatton of my overall m
constdctal ton I am the kind of
fncnd who wtll ltsten to them

rage on all nrght about an
unworthy lovet will travel early
m the mornings m my housecoat
to jump start thetr cars and wtll
dole out money tf they get behind
in their house payments because
they ve overestimated thetr ab1l
t!tes to buy a Saab Yet they ptck
on me because I won t buy an
answermg machme
I don t know why Maybe tt 's
the dumb thtngs I heat when 1
reach one myself that keeps me
from 11 I don't know whJch IS
worse hcarmg thesctlpt they re
readmg off the machme' s m
struction sheet 'Hello Th•s ts
the Layman Bryant testdence
We ate not able lo come to the
phone 11ght now but If you wtll
leave your m ~ssage, we wtll get
right back to you Plea•ewatt one
minute to hear the tone
Nngggeeeeeepp
or the cutsy
ones 'This Is Sandra I have my
head n the oven nght now but tf I
decide I can face the crowd at
work one more day , I II call you
back If I can't you get m y
designer coat '

I guess tt doesn ' t make much
sense Answermg machine~ ar
en't that expensrve, and I
wouldn t have to listen to my
fnends' whtmng anymore But
then, tf I dtd have an answenn~
mach me I d have to listen to 11
every night whe n I got home
When I get hom e I want to take
off my shoes and ptck up a book I
don t want to hear a lttan} of
what was so Important that
someone couldn' t wa1t to tell me
I don't want to call back a list of
people who know my work
number and know I take calls at
work but who dtdn t want •o be
bothered gQJO g through the
secretary
And I can t see that any one has
been mconveme nced a ll that
much by not havmg tmm ed tate
access to my ear In fact my lac k
of an an~we1 mg machme has
given my fnends the trendtest
new excuse for not keepmg In
touch Well I called&gt; our house
s~veral t1mes but you weren 1
hem~ an d I just gave up
I
have my doubts that their fingers
touched touch tone buttons more

than once
II I dtd buy an answermg
machine I m afratd I couldn't
rests! temptatiOn
Ht, thts ts
Sarah If" hat you have to say ts
so Importan t, tl.ten say II If not,
call back when I'm home If
you rea butglaJ be adv rsed that
I wtll seek you out and p1 osecute,
and fatltng that wtll drlveifty car
over and run over your legs And
II wouldn't be wm th tt to you,
anyway The last crew already
got my VCR and• I dldn t buy
anothet one The old black and
white TV tS sl!ll thet e, and I don ' t
plan on r .ymg co lor The stereo
ts too old to sell Leave your
message after the tone '
Maybe my fnends wtll get
together a nd buy me an answer
mg maclune for Chnstmas Be
advtsed I still know how to leave
things tn the box and am too
stuptd too figure out electronic
equtpmen t I hat s why I m not
buymg anothet VCR It took me
three monlhs to learn how to
program the last one, and I can't
go th rough that agam

Help the needy? Bah humbug!

Southern rebounds, whips KC to stay in tie for top spot
C'HESHIRE - Jeff Caldwell
scored 19 po10ts a nd Dave
Am burgey cont11buted 17
markers as Southern defeated
J&lt;yge1 Creek 74 43 7uesday
mght

PATRIOT- Eric Faye scored
18 pomts to pace Oak Hill to a
63 48 "tn over Southwestern
Tuesday night
The wm was the Oaks' third In
a row and enables them to keep
pace with Hannan Trace and
Southern In the current three
way SVAC tttle chase
However DougHale theOaks'
fifth year coach said he was not
totally satisfied with his team's
performance against the High
landers, whose losing streak was
extended to seven
We got
lackadaisical when we picked up
a large lead, and that s what
caused a grea t deal of our
turno\ers, he sa1d
Whtle the Oaks committed
several turnovers In the first
half mostly as a result of their
expenment10g wtth downcourt
passmg and other elements of the
run and gun offense the High
landers were moderately sue
cessfulm convertmg on the Oaks '
mtstakes The experimentation
apparently In prepara tiOn for the
commg battles w1th current
co leaders Hannan Trace and
Southern was limited to the first
haH and seemed moderately
successful
The Highlanders fatlure to

convert on more of the Oaks'
m1stakes which may have made
the game closer than tt was, took
nothing away from the Southw
estern frontcourt's effort In bat
tllng the larger Oaks inside for
rebounds The frontcourt of 6 3
sophomore center Shawn
McNeal and 6 1 senior forward
John Darnell was effective In
holding Jedd Rawllns the Oaks
6 8 pivot, to two pomts In the first
half Rawlins sat out approxi
mately half the game because of
foul trouble his playing time
abbreviated by his picking up hts
third foul at the 4 50 mark in the
second quarter
Wtlh Rawhns out, the High
landers did well in battling 6 3
forward Mtke Hale who was
pressed Into service as the
center However, in spite of such
inspired play by the Highlanders
under the boards Hale who Is
the coach's younger brother, was
able to register 12 pomts mostly
on layups
Faye, in spite of 'relying on hi s
Jumper, whtch wasn t fal110g'
as Coach Hale satd led all
scorers at halftime with 11
points His strong, fast dnves to
the hoop In the second half helped
keep the 0aks comfortably

Scoreboard ...

'

NBA results
:'11:

MIMt'SOta at PhUadt&gt;lphht. 7 ~ p m
-.,:l b;)and~rsat ChkaRo H 3.i p m
Toronlo at M lAnds II l5 p rn
l.AJs An Kt&gt;h ~ at \' ancouvl'r 10 3i) p m

\T\ON \1 8 \8KET81\LL 1\SSO&lt;
~

~ll'rn

f onf&lt; r&lt;'OCP

1\tlanth [)h \slon
\\ L Pit
G8
H II 65')II 1&lt;1 ~~~ 3

t"t&lt; ..iot
I Ill ld&lt;'lfltlht
\\

1.•.;lln~

N1

11. '

n

II

1rli

15

1111

"i 16

;f{)l

I Ul

Ill

,
.
"

~f'W lH~'I'

M
JG 1

( cntr ,, n lv \,.)tHl
\~

pttrql!
HI nt1

"

( 111 a~.: 1

Mllwtulu

II
1~

lnd 1111
( lr" land

.... -

5

700 -

'
II
'

II

~· r

rn ( unfl'r('flt'l
:\lltl\\tM ll1vlslon

IJrn\1 r

...

tiS• -

"II '
I' II'
II II

lluust 111

l l It
!'i m \nlonlo
S 11 r"nu 1 l •

~

:J

1711

\\; .. t

I) dl~s

6 15

Ml

~t

\) 1.!

ll!'~

15K
I"

•,
3
I'I' ''

Pac ific 011\"lun

l\llklr!'&gt;
rurllllld

" "13' "' ''I
'' "'113 II''
' '"
I'

St'alt\1

I hOt ni x
I \ ( \lptll r,.
Ookh n St

aKI

II

lilt "dll' s U l's tllt ~
1 \(tll do!ph!a II~
C'lr\1 t:u d 100 U a.-.h In~::t•m 1!1~
Uall•" ttl I hit t~tl UIO

HoMJIII

II~

Mil\\ tuktc I ) No.1" lvrk ltl.l
II• ll'&gt;llln I
\tlillUI 1~1
ll1nnrtl!t lhotnlxlill
Satr.:tnH nit 1)0 ~an AJtlonlo 96
I• rt!J.nd I IIi Guldi'n SIIH Ill
\\tdml'olll.t) ,.GIIIlf~
I htladt Iph Ill a t N1 \\ h rs; Y .. 30 II Ill

&lt;lllt'U~u tl "' W l trk '" 10 I'
1lthatlhll'land 7 lllpm

1tJ

ttl\lil)tp;r!&gt;IO Hlp m
St r\111 niO 1\ L\Laktr"' 10 :J,IIpm

Sm\nt•n!

Bo.;n11 rat c... ld n Slth 1{1 Ill p m
ll11tNiuv s Oa nu "
:II Jtll ll ll!i ~ctn dulf'd

c .11

BIL&gt;;l'hu.\1
I llllforn!a Rc-sl~:ncd lr ,.. 1,11;1 nt
pttc h~r Ml k~ \\Itt tu a 2 Yf'llr c;onlnHI
New l ork (1\L) -Tradt'dplll h; rStt'vt
Trout and outftcldcr lie nry ( ttlu lu
St'Utlh tor plu hers Let Gut ttt'rman
Clay Pllli:er aod Wilde Taylor a.&lt;~~!OI~~d
Taylor to Fort Laud~nlu.\e ol thl! Fl11rlda

l ~u

Tt&gt;lOl" - Signed lntlt ld cr-uu lfieldH
8arhnro &lt;urhey tu a cuntruut with
011 lllhnnm f'tl) of thl' Amerit an A.s,;ot Ia
tlun (A. ,\\) protnottd Dllk E~~:w.n Ill
hdllpt'n ami lhslstanl pllthlng c:onch
hind Da~(' Frt\Jdeben IL" pitching euitch
fur SarJ.suta ol the Gulr Cva.-.t Leu~:ur

'"

Dt nvrr- rradl'd ~:uard Oti~ Smith to
Gt.kh n State for lot are consldcroUon:o~
Ul1halt'd ~:uartt Mauri ce Martin
t.olden Sltde - Phu~e d furwllnl Lnrr)
Sn tth on the injured list
Mllwaula•c \ l'tivllt&gt;d s~Jngm11n
l('rry R1 ynuldM Iron Jhu Injured list
w11ived forward Rich Win-.low
New fl'r!'l('y SIJ:'ned frPI'-a~nt
turwartl Mlkl OKurcn riQUlsledwll v
l.'rs un forward \driLin Branch
Philtu!Piphln- \\ahed JtWrd \'loc enl
Mktw

WIW!in.oon - Pluu'd j{tUlrd IJarrl'fl
\\alker on llu lujurt'd list siJIW'd
fnt.. U.JI:Enl ~uard Stcvt ( olttr
( O!JI'gt
O..l'aul- N;uned Phil ( 1W!I ~u lth"'l
Miami- "' ~"IJ:' Ill' d u 11llt tllrt&gt;ctor
Sam lanko\':h II t t a :; H'ar cont nut
~orlh Aluhu1111 NIUTltd Rill lull!'/!
llhl ellt du1•tlitr
Fuothull
Miami - N uned Edtlh l vtM~ vlu
ftrtskltm of ldntlni~Jratlon and hnaoct

..tli] lhc

Girls scores

.,

011 St ,.... M •nluntl 1\ 1ltlrn trt ( u 614
(tnlril)hcl !)7 \\rlg lt Sllill
{ 1111 irt ill ' !'ilt INIM hta1 l.:j ro

lru1 t hn t 91 Xtvilr"~6
K mtl r1 ~hrint T 1 U'tuln1• n!
1 lr!&gt;l lt!Jund
:'li o rth &lt; trt l na ( n1 .,..hue t61 ))('niMJn
'lu~k tgotl'"l'l F'r ~thur~tl\11)1tilll

It ldt iht rg II 11id.a3 ( la... slt

mq lun~-&gt;ltip
66 Ohl
:"oiJrlhirn
t ns illllon
Mfl If pt ( l\-luh l1~
I l

11 tdtlltrt:
\\ N

NHL

(A J

ll:' n '"kcthnll It• ~ nih

IIV I nllt !I Itt s!'o In it rnatlon tl

"

~.A-ugur

~ll!U'h

naua.. at I dl:ut• -:Wpm
SP11tl tflncnl:\ !t:IOp m

nil,

Transactions

stat.,.

" "" 739" -'
" ' 667 I •

Ill

al

rf'~ults

' lfiOS\1 IJO(KE\ IE \1 ll
luo &gt;oda\ ,., Uf'MJIIII
lit ..t 111 ! II tfl tlu II
\\a.~lun ~ ton
Qu ht 1
1 !ul d IJII
6 """' H tngt r ~ I
\\ lUI/)('): 1 '\:l l!&gt;olll tld(l'!'i 1

( tl)l•tr~ li Jlartfonl •tOrt
tdm1n1on~ l.os\n,K~h"
\hdn• sd l.,l' ~ G 10\('S
Uufl tl u 11 l)t I roll ~ 3~ p m
\\ ~.-..llnJ.,"'tn

a l Munlrtal

"'!t pm

Girls OhiO 11\gh Nl h1H! Ra~liclt tl!

Hy lnUPd rre"~ htto rnulion1i
T\Jt sday 1)4 c ~{
1\u kfl• Ct ntrul t.' Wynfllrd 31
{In l'th rc' ~.., Cin M[Attlf'\ L
tIn ~orth'&gt;l""'l 17 Nur~o~&lt;uutl I ~
Pdaw:~rt 711 Olrntungy I ~
Easl Clf' Shaw 76 C.:o l South " 1
East Knox .J.I Johnslllwn ~ ridge 3!i
F.ustlakt' North 16 ~ df11nl 35
• Fah1\dd Union 57 Hralh 11
Pr•montSt luMph Q'" (Jydt II
Hit ksvllk 50 Str~kPr :n
Mayfield ~1 L)'ndhursl Brush Ill
1\&lt;IEntor lll W\llouJChhr ~ulh IS
Nf'wark HI Ht hron Lakt \loud !6
Nu'&gt;urk Cath II Uanvlllt :It!
N ( ollc 1:1 Hill II l-'1 nm ) town 311
Nt rton 14 Tttlhnadr;t :l.''i
Oak Hartwr M Rossfonl II
Otlnwa Glandorf 4 I Dt\pho s Jf'Hrrstm

W

I

Plymouth 2g Sent'U Eas1 2 1
Purt Cllntun 67 Tol WlUic IIi
Sherwood Fairview J'2 Ulc r(f Ct nit r

"'

tt l'lttt&gt;l urt:h .. h 11m

~11\ard

$1 Milan EdltWn 10
\\onhinrton fhr ~'! Nt&gt;w i\lhlln)' II
ZaiM'~ Rmwcrans 311 Col Wllller!Oon 3~

Tuesday's cage scores
R 1'" nlnt lltJ,:I ~~hull\ tla,.,lil thall
II \ l1 l!t t I r•~ .. h ttrnalmrt1l
J'IH ~tJ 1\

CANOGA "ARK California
reqesttng co ntnbutiOns ht eom
Even Jess JUSttftable Is the sa ttsfy the corporatiOns area
holtday shoppers
(NEA)- Chnstmas Is commg to
exp lanatiOn ofle1 ed by a mat ket
mm ketmg managet
Callfornta -and ot s not a very
The Salvation Army's ket!les
mg executive at the Northridge
Arguing that the tent blocked
pt otty 5nt
long have been a pre Chrrstmas Fashion Center 10 the netghbor
the statio n s stg n he not only
The Salvation Army s bell
fixture on public stdewalks oul
mg commumty of Northridge
demanded that the scouts rc
rmgmg sohct tors have beer.
stde depat tment stores In most
We oon t want shoppmg to be? move tt but also threatened to
bantshea from . shoppmg malls
ctltes But much of the country's
ttl! not! We want It to be a , revoke the lease held by the
th•ou 0 hoUt the state by JandJQrds
shoppmg ts now done m suburban
pleasant experience "
generous stat ton operators tf ht s
more concerned about thetr
malls whose operators prohtblt
Translati~n
'We certamly 01 ders were r.ot followed
potEntia' legal hahtlittes than , all sollcitmg on their priva te wouldn qvant people mt ent upvn
Chevron eventually backed
ng .he needy during the
po opcrty
spendmg btg bucks at our s!ores down - after bemg co nfro nted
1 u11day Season
Thetr 'chnstmas spirit ' •&lt;
distracted by thoughts of the by both publtc tndtgnatwn and a
One of the state s largest
Illustrated by 'hetr explanat.voos sick, the handtcaapped and the site survet y rondu&lt;.:ted by mumc
coroorat10ns, Chevron USA
;.,r banning the Sa.vatJOn Army
Impoverished If the concept or tpa I o!ftci? Is that showed both 1he
probably captur~d Scrooge of
from s hoppmg centers m the San
charity has somehow' v .ved as scouts' tent and the Che'I on stgn
the Year honors , • en It attemp
Ferroando Valley a spraw 11 -..,. ar element of the Christmas were on publtc tath er tha n
ted to prevent a group of
suburban of Los Ange.~•
sea,on, it's not our job to remind ptlvate la nd
handi capped youngste1 s from
' II you let one organization people of It ·
That expertencl' suggests that
sell ing Christmas trees next to Its
solicit, you have to let all of the
~xt thero s the CLlSe vf San
a principled stanu 1o1ade by those
ga 1lne stations
rest do thP same,' says a
Francisco based Chev1 on and who care may be the most
Isolated examples of lnsenst
representattve of the co. pany
the physically and/ or mentally effective mean s of neutraltzlng
ltvtty lnvrrlably sur:ace arou nd
that owns Topanga Plaza In
handicapped Boy Scoots and Cub the callousne~s of those who
the country at th1s time ~f year
Canoga Park
Scouts from Florida who hoped to don i
but a dis tu ll\ng pattern of
Stur' •.,. of bureaucrah" be
u'" the money they eat ned from
When shoppmg mall operators
lnslituttonalizer' selffsh nc· has
havwr will inst · otly 1ecognize Christmas trPe sales to pay for 10 the San Francisco ar&lt;'a sough t
eme1 ged In recent week\; m this
that as a variation of the favorite
sur' mer camp
to banish SalvatiOn Army sahel
trend setliug stat&lt;&gt;
excuse of these • "willing or ' - The 50 youngsterss set up a tors area chut c h leaders JOmed
&lt;t, there are the problems of
unable to dlstlngutsh among sales location next tv a F'londa toge&lt;het and urged thetr part
the -JlvatJon Army whicn notes
vaJ!ous allernattves 'I d love to
Chevro n service station and got shoners to boycott those s hop
lhal lis long and dlstingulsheJ
help you but that. I'd have to do it
the statio n operators permission ping ccn tct ~ Sevet a! of the malls
recording of helping the heedy
for everyone else too '
t'o erect a large yellow ten t to 01 omptly changeo thetr poltcv
h
'earned (It) the prlvlteeP. 'nf
protect th~ rrees- but that didn't

The win put the Tornadoes
back on the wmnlng !rack after
Fnday mghl s 85 77 loss to
Hannan Trace allowi ng the
Racine area based squad to keep
pace with the Wildcats and the

Oaks m the three way SVAC title
race
Southern now 5 l tn the SVAC
wtll take on lndtan Vall ey South
10 the Convocation Center tn
At hens on December 29

Oaks top Highlanders, 63-48

'"" I r~ \

Robert Walters

The Datly Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohto

Wednesday, December 23, 1987

I

ni

K' m Jfi
1 nlr\ ! \\ 1M!rld1t:• ~·

\It " \1

~t..r 1

)) I

\kt 1 1 ~tlll! lt\lhl t:ll- tl! sll'
\kr I r1 ~W ill "'I "ilt\\ 1l
\ 1 " ul r lo lklpll ii~
\mtll!tbt t u~\\\lttol• ..eorlill
\ tth \ \\ 1\1 ~• Ort t:IIJila~ !i l
\ur 'til I ~It tid! fl ld I 1rdu~tl :»1
llorh1rt n Jfl (II t\tnlld\ Ki
B 1 ,~ d I H rlun Ut rli~lllr t 16
II dl nl h11 I t~ li 1k ~~ tlh 51
11 , , 'li ttp;. rl. JO :\It d!na I ~ t II
11!•11 I or11.ll I Utrm lnl n 1/1
II h ill HI IIU \ 1111{" \\i),. n 63
1\r k1-• lll til l •diCitJ\ttl~a 1•9
1\rt 1"'\111 k J!i lit n 1 oti
1\n 1&lt; 1 St, th ! 1\udi• \(' :'&lt;iorth 6"'
Uud; " 1n ! Iii !-i ltortJ.ntl 1h ;~~
1!11 ~~' \ tlh \ 5 Olt IIUIIIKY ..
( ml trig ~I lukin,J:VIIIt yifl
1 Jfil ldll "' s tl!nuthU
t, tl u .t!lt 1 lla3 Oakv.1wd 16
t I !ll{th n ~~~ I rtt K S lltf' ' "' II
th t mlr\ \)I\ 1111 \\llllnn~httr:o:U
( , t a:-i \1, ~~~ (! i\lttlltr~ti
(, H tli lllll~li linllattntll
tl ~~ Jg "tlusll 1utst trantls~o
1!orm rl:'l\1!;6)1 C'linltn~l~~~~ ~ ·
f ! \ 1tl&lt;f'lH'
Utx:lrv II
(t!li
lh n l\\1 '"111\ll!!or"l"rt ~l
(t!ln ()!Jilt I M t an~fld(h rto
{ol mill t.a 6t J.,nnt~lllltn~l
(ulmhltnt( '"hhwll6 lh \\ ral
I "" ultir ''illnWrl 1111 Cathfil
(rpl•1h 1 UtrE\Irt51
1 I'll tnt! Lukt\1 \\ bl :\ltplt'wootl61
I• .. tJ!., Ill '1 nlf II ul5•
H \I II r"'u'"K l)t}Shlllns!lll
ll•lltto Crnmt61
OtltJtlhtlor(it3"1 To\EmU1p30
IJ!t...dtnlrt\ t\.161 I~!H•rVII'V. 1:.
lh I!! Ill ~ r ill I nW n 1&gt;1
~~~~ JJ H rpoul 6ti \\1 lrtun (" \ n) ~5
I lt11rld lnlt II !iH I.Jht rt.)' Ulli tn !10
f' I} It• Il l '\furutl (1\1\ h ) 7~ (ot)
I 1 Milrlt ~~ Jlu))l W(il L1Hllun $0

FosU rlu " e ndtl n til Ounhur} ~H
Fr t.nklln t~ far\I!Ok a3
Frunkltn i\lonrttl' 101 Rroukvill1 G'"
t rt tlrrlt klown II~ 1\lnrtun futh ill
Fruntl• r it~ Fort t'r~l o5

{,uha.nna61 Marlutllanllng ~ l
G• 1 rgttown S9 IUpiCY 29
Glh" nhur~: :1 t.Jmw .d II~
lwlrurd 6! Huhhani iii
Coru~t'purt 11 hoi Kug1 rs 5H
II a milton 69 8t awn r \' • k lit
II 1111!1ton Kndln g9 Trenton Etl~t:~ ~uod

,,

llancnt'rton Unitt tllil :'\ R 1nl{t =&gt; 1
H•mlOtkM111t-r7(1 \lnlm{ount\ 61
1111\top '"5 E\l•r_llrtt n 8!1
llulgi!.ll' 0 1 Krtl~\11111 16
lndlanVaiN113 hwt'IISt'! fi.l
Ironton IH Rock IIIII 7$
Jo~mthan Udl'r 69 Hljl: \\lllnut 6!1
Kal!dl&amp; 19 \'an Huron 39
Katnsa~ Lalwtu 7l \\oodm orf' 19
Kirtland 'I Pt rry ~
L trM a.&lt;litflr Fl ~ht r Ti Lu~~:an f;!u 7ii
l~a,lttl'lharR LnJiuo 116 t.arrtlts\'1111'

" Uma

Cath 75 liorl Hf'cu\'t'ry6fl
IJrm\ Sr 7K Defhmce 611
Logan 56 r'ol "•Unut Rldllt ~S
l..o\eland fl GO!iht n 53
Lowe!lv11\~ IU I eetonla IR
1\fan!illeld St Pl'l~ 1!J Rtdgrdal! 15
~flln!dield Sr li'l }.(.1 mi tt So1t1hvh ~ fl:l
i\1a.r)'!'I\IJI(' 6!t "rst Jc fff'rson 50
~1tL'ISillon 91 Cl~ SouJh lit
MuyMvllll' 119 1\lorjil:llD 56
M~adu~hrouk 74 t:adlz. 71
Mtftlor&amp;J "1\lolll(hlySII
Milan Edlsun 71 Nrw Lundun ~6
Milford g1 i\melit1 liS
J\1ogadol1' ll 1\JrDunald 59
Monroe (Michl 70 Tnl Rows\11 r 611
i\lc unt Vernon '70 1\lumdleltll'tladi!&gt;On II
NdMtnVIJI( ti!l Fed Ho cklnlt 116 tvll
Nc" Concol\l Glenn 110 r.iew Lt'xlng4on

"

N~wark {ath

6! "ulli!M Mrm11rlml 119

N ..w,nmf'rSUI\\11 ~S

land 45
Nt wport !Ky) Ca th

Pre~port

li~

Cln

Lttli('

Elder~

Kyger Creek wtll play m the
Gallla County Tournament on
December 28 and 29
Southern also won the reserve
game 58 41
Vars1 ty box score
SOUTHERN (74) - Caldwell
5 3 0 19
Amburgey 4 2 3 17

McMillan 3 0 3 9, Dld(!le 3 0 2 8
Rtffle 1 l 2 7 Turley 3 0 0 6,
Stout 2 0 0 4, Cu nnmgham I 0 0
2 Stmpson 0 0 2 2 T01 ALS 22-6 12 74
KYGER CREEK (43)- Love
day 4 0 2 10 Bradbury 3 0 2 8
Leach 2 0 4 8, Denney 3 0 0 6

43
Score by quarters
Southern
13 16 24 2I-74
KCHS
4 9 12 17-43
Res~rve game - Southern 58
Kyger Creek 41
Leading scorers
Chns
Murphy (Southern) 14 points
John Stpple (Kyger Creek), 17
pomts

Virginia tops BYU in
All-American Bowl

ahead as d1d Rawlins who put in
etght pomts m the fourth quarter
to finish with 10 markers
The Hlghlandep led only once
In the game when 59 junior
guard Dave Mershon hit a short
BIRMINGHAM Ala (UP I) jumper to score the game s first
The Unrverstty of Vtrglnta does
pomts less than a minute Into the
not have the storied bowl history
first quarter Mershon took the
of schools ltke Alabama and
game honors with 20 pomts, 12 of
Notre Dame but tts record m
those commg on four three point
postseason play ts perfect
Jumpers Sentor Brad Htvely
The school founded by Thomas
followed wtth 11 and McNeal
Jefferson known more !or aca·
frnished with 10
demtcs than athletics won tts
Mershon was also responsible
second bowl game m as many
for brmgmg the Highlanders to
outmgs wtth a 22 16 vtctory
wtthm seven pornts on two
Tuesday nrght over Bngham
occasrons The fi~st was With one
Young m the All Amencan Bowl
secontlleft before halftime, when
Scott Secules ran for one
he cut the Oaks' l~d to 28 21 wtth
touchdown and passed 101 the
a three point shot The second
Cavaliers Many of the Vtrgmta
was at the 5 40 mark In the final
se mors who ended their colle
frame, when he agam connected
gta!e careers a !so played m the
on a three pomter to reduce the 27 24 vtctory over Purdue tn the
vtsttors' advantage to a 46 39 1984 Peach Bowl, maktng las t
lead Apart from the openmg night' s vtctory that much more
mmutes of the game the Htgh
spec tal
landers were never closer
I came m wtth a bowl wm I'm
Oak Htll was 14 of 17 from the gomg out wtth a bowl wtn
foul !me whtle Southwestern Cavaliers defenstve e nd Sean
went 8 for 10 from the chanty Scott satd
There s nothmg
stripe
sweeter
Oak Hi ll now 51 in conference
In a game btlled as an offenstve
competJtton wtll travel to Athens shootout Scott a nd the Vtrgmta
on December 29 to take on Rock defense dominated
Htll m tournament actiOn
Cougars quarterback Sean Co
Southwestern 0 6 m the league,
vey set an All Amencan Bowl
wtll participate in the Gallta
record for pass attempts htttmg
County Tournament qn De
37 of 61 for 394 yards and the
cember 28 and 29 at North Gallta
touchdown BYU fatled to score
Htgh School
on two dnves tnslde the 5
OAK Hll.L (63)
Faye mtssmg two fteldgoals BYU also
6 I 3 0 I8 Howell4 0 5 2·13, Hale fell short on a fourth and 1)when
50 2 3 12 Rawlins 50 0 4 10, Co
pas 20307, \Yard 20024
Mtller 0 0 0 1 0 TOTALS - 24-l
14-8·63
SOUTHWESTERN (48)
Mershon 3 4 2 0 20 Hively 3 0 5
3 11 McNeal 5 0 0 2 10 Darnell
20014 Walker 10052 Bry
ant 0 0 0 1 0 Ruff 0 0 0 1 0 TO·
TA.LS - 144 8 1348
°
Score by quarters
Oak Hill
21 7 18 17-63
SWHS
4 17 13 14-48
Fouled out- Walker
Reserve game - Oak Htll 39
Southwestern 34
Leadmg scorers - S Jenkms
(Oak Hill) 8 pomts Ertc Lloyd
(SWHS ) 14 pomts

The Daily Sentinel

Scott stopped Covey for no gam
at the Cougars 46 \1/tth 3 50 left
I thmk the key In the football
game ts that we dtd a good job on
our goa l 1me Vtrgmta Coach"
George Welsh sa id We made
some plays down there and we
stopped them We made some
plays that forced them to ktck
lon g fteld goals that they missed
You have to score touchdow ns
usually to win games ltke thts and
that s where our defense came
through for us '
Vlfgtnta 8 4 scored m the ftrst
quat ter on a 2 yard run by
Sccules a 25 yard Kevm Morgan
run m the second and In the
fo urth when Secules htt John
Ford on a 22 yard pass
Bngham Young 9 4 scored on
a 20 yard held goal by Leonard
Chitty an 8 yard run by Fred
Whttttngham and a 1 yard pass
from Covey to Whtttmgham The
Cougars outgamed Vugtnta 489
yards to 349 ya1 ds m total
offense
I gtve Vtrgmta credit but" e
took tl away from ourselves
Covey satd We wanted to wm
thS&gt;ga me very badly We had the
chances we dtdn t take advan
tage of them '
Seculcs was 10 of 19 passes for
162 yards and earned Most
Valuable Player honors
Contm ued .on page 4

(USPS 145-900)
A -p" Is ion of Multimedia. Inc
Pub! sh(l(l ever) afternoon

Monday

lhroug~ Fnday 111 Courl Sl
Po
mero; Ohio by the Oh!o Valley Pub

l1shlng Company/ Multimedia Inc
Pomeroy Ohio ~5769 Ph 992 2156 Se
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy
OhiO \
Mt:mbcr United Press Internatlonal 1
I nland Dally Press Association and th e
Ohto Nf'wspaper: Association Nat lonal
Adverllf;mg Representatlv(&gt; Branham
NewspapEr Sales 733 Third Avenue
Nev. York New York 10017
POSTMASTER

Send address changes

to The Datlv Sentinel lU COor1 Sr
Pome1 oy Ohio 45769
SUBSCI!IPTION RATES
By Carrier or 1\lotor Route
One Wepk
One Month
One Year

$1 25
$5 45

$65 00
SINGLE COP\
I'JUCE

Dmh

25 Cents

Subscn bers uot desiring to pay thcrar
ncr mav remit In advance direct to
The Dat ly Sent lnel on a 3 6 or 12 m ont h
basis CrC'dll w11l be given calller each

~

No s ubscnpt!on~ by mall pel mit ted In

ar ras v. hC'l

o home

tal 1 lcr service Is

uvallabl e
Mrul Subscriptions

13
26
5'2
13
26

Inside ~hlgs County
WeE&gt;k s
V.. eeks
v. ee-ks
Outside Meigs County
\'1 ecks
Weeks

$17 29
$34 06
$66 56
$18 20
$35 10

52 Wf'eks

$67 60

the 12 days of
C · tanas
S TFREE
at Ponderosa!

Wyche says
Oilers play
dirty football

One F~ Ktds Meal for kids 10 and under with coupon and
the purchase of each
,____
adult entree.

CINCINNATI rUPI) - Add
Cmcmnal! Bengals coach Sam
Wyche to the Its! of NFL coaches
who belteve the Houston Otlers
play dtrty football
Wyche sa td Tuesday the Otlers
wtll single out one Bengal to
mtlmtdate when they play Sun
day m Houston
Last week lagamst Pttts
burgh ) it was the runnmg backs
they smgled out. that they trted to
tnJure Wyche satd The week
before that 11 was Morten An
dersen the placektcker of the
Samts they smgled out. a nd they
gave htm a pretty good shot that
affected hts ktckmg
So they wtll have someone
pte ked out to mt1mida te It wlll be
our JOb to ptote ct that person
We II see
Steelers coach Chuck Noll and
Samts coach Jtm Mora com
plamed bttterly followmg thetr
games agatnst Houston that the
OtleJ soften used Illegal hits
I can see why those com
ments are made Wyche satd
I under stand exactly why
Chuck Noll and Jtm Mora were
angry after the ballgame The1e
were some unnecessary hits tn
those ballgames
Houston under (coach) Jerry
Glanvtlle ha s always been a
very physical team
Wyche
satd "The dtfference between
phystcal and dtrl y IS sometimes a
matter of opm ton somet imes tits
a very fine line In Jooktn g at the
ftlms we can see some thmgs
t11at arP 1ust on the other stde of
that border ltne

I

KIDS
IOANDUNDER
EAT FREE

I

TFREE

ctuooo At pan ~()at ng

~ltl.lkhouses

One F1ee ~ids Mfi! WI lllhe purcliaSe o! each
entree Klls Mea! oncluoes cnoce ot ham
tlugerw blr1!$l'loldogw~h!roes&lt;J"Salad8ti1let
can no oe used wllh Olher diScounts l;u no! n
eluded At pa rt c pattng steal\ nooses

PI u ""'

PONDEROSA

"" ''"' '""

One Free Kids Meat wth the purcn~se ot ucn
adU!I enlree KliS Meal rcludes chatce ot !lam

~ugerw~htnes hild~1t~h r~arS&lt;U081J,el

b11 Qll Wth IlleS h~ dCIJW~h lteSOI Salild 8ut1el

Cannot be used w lh olhe II scoun!s Til' 11(1! n
eluded AI pamt()al ng Slt!a~hOU5eS

c~nno1

"" '"" ""

I

IOANDUNDER

One Free l((!s Mea Yifth the purchase ot each
illlu t enuee ~Ills Mea! ncJudes choiCe o ham

PONDEROSA

be used w tho

""

h~r

adu~

d scoonls Tax n01 n

PONDEROSA

IOANDUNDER

!OANDUNDER

One Free Kids Mea! w h 111e 1Mtha5e o uch

One Free Kids Meal wth the purthase ot ea&lt;:h

cannOIC eusedwnnotne~diSCOUII§

entree I( ds Mea! mc!udlls ChQIC! otnam
burgf!l ,..~ lnes hd dllJ wd/11 leS or Salatl BUllet
C.Jnnol be used w lh other dl~nts Tax n~ n

One free Kos Mea! wtn tM pu cna~ ot eacn
adu~ en1 ee Kid s Meal ndudes chOICe ()I ham
bu \PM wthtnes 001 00g WI hInn or s.aoo lkltlet
GanmxbeuseownhotneratScounts loll(n~ n
dude&lt;! A.l paniC pa ng steakhouses

~Ou!l

aau t en11ee 1&lt;11s M!lid nC!uces cllOIC~ ol h¥n
butge wt hines holdOgwdnluesorSalad&amp;iltel

l.Jtnot n

p&lt;fl CPat ng Slf..'lki\Qilses

c u[led AI partlt pa ng s e~nouses

CluOOCI At

"" ''"' ""

"" "'" "" PONJIEROSA

PONDEROSA

Ont F•ee Kds M$31 w th lhe purcrtasc ol e&lt;~cn
adu!l ent Be !((Js Mea ndudes chrJCe ot ham
llu get wrn tncs 001 009 wnn t 1C$ or Salad Buffet
Canl'lot be used w !h other d ~coont:s rax n~ In
c!udt!d A p.lfi!Cop.it! ng stea~hoiJses

"" ''"' '"''

PlU ' ' " ' " "

PONDEROSA

KIDS

1

I
I

I
I
I
I
I

I
I
1

PONDEROSA~

KIDS
KIDS
!OANDUNDER
10 AND UNDER
Hl ANP UNDER
EAT FREE EAT FREE EATFREE
One free K(!s Meal wlh the purchase ot MCh
atlu t entree l'ittls M!ltt nr:ludes chace oi ham
ou ger wrth trteS h~ d!J;l w•n lrltls or Salall Bunct
Ca~no be usud w th othe d st:Oilnt!i rv: not n
ctoded At pan c pal ng st!IO~hOuses

I
I

---j

KIDS
10 AND UNDER
EAT FREE EAT FREE EATFREE

Ashley honored
KANSAS CITY MO - The
NAIA recently named 11\s Dlv
Is ton I All Amenca football
team selected by a nme man
commttte composed of NAIA
football coaches
Mtddleport s Robert Ash ley a
61 190 lb senJor punter forWect
Virgmra State €a llege s Yellov,
Jackets was chosen as a second
team defenstve All Amencan
Ashley was one of only three
Ohtoans named as eith er ftrst or
second team All Americans The
ofhers were ltneman Kevin Tur
pin of Central State University tn
Wilberforce (second team of
fense), and lineman AI Huge of
Htllsdale College m Missoutl
(!itst team defense)

Hodge Q 0 6 6, Vtllanueva 0 0 3 3
Perry 0 0 2 2 TOTALS- 12 0 19

One F ee Kll~ Mea wnn tne Pllrtnase ot each
adu t enl ee Kds Mllil! ndudu chllice o ham
llUIQ!1WK~Ines h(idl),lwftll Je~(Jsal.t~Burlet
Ganno! be used w !h a1he d scoun!s ~no n
r.lufJid AI pan c•p~ ng sta.~MouSil\

PONDEROSA

PlU ' ' " ' SN&lt;b

KIDS

I
I

I
I
II
1

I
----1
I
I

PONDEROSA

KIDS

~!xi~~ ~!!.@K~ ~!!~i~~ i

I
I

&amp;du~ entree Kl!s Mea l ncuaesch..:e ol h.-n

II

eluded At par'!IC pal n(lstoakhouSils

1

bu ge wt h tnes 11o1 dr.g l'llh oes (J"5a\aa B11t1et
Cao~OlOeusedwnhotteriliSC(ltjntS Tilllnot n

I

aoun enteu Kids Mea ncki!Jes choce ot ham
l'Hrrge w th 1 teS not pog wnn rnesor5.11ad IIIJM!ll
Canootbeuseow~hohordlscoun ~ T~M1 n
c!uGed At pant paung s ukho.rses

1

I

adu 1entree Kros Mea! nci!XIes cnota Of Mm
Ou Q"" wrth fl'les hildogwom t IES Or Salad SuMel
Cal1110tlle usedwth othe dsccums Tax nom
eluded At parhc!Pa ng Me&lt;lkh\ILJS~s

II

I

L~~~~-PONDEROSA~-~~~~-PONDEROSA~-~~~·.,_PONDEROSA~

Closed early
Chrrstmas Eve and
closed Chrrstmas day

/

·

tit

=-=po=NDER=--=-:08=-=-:A
'~------------------J

There's a family feeling at Ponderosa. ••
t£: 1967 Portclerosa Inc

Check the while pages lor
the locatton nearest you

�..

•
Wednesday. December 23, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

By GENE CADDES
recruit him (Bnrson) while at
UP I Sports Writer
Nort hwestern. Be's solid all
Barring a sudden turnaround, around.
Gary Will iams' second Ohio
"I thinkourkidslosttheirpoise
State basket ball season may be a with three tcchnicals , but they're
long one.
.
young. " Bzdelik said. "They
The Buckeyes won th eir(firth work very hard and want to win ."
ga me In seven tries Tue~ Ohio State. which came within
night in St. Jolin Arena. but they one of matching UMBC's 28
· struggled from start to finish In turnovers ror the game. trailed
beating Universi ty of Ma ryland· for onl y the first th ree minutes .
Baltimore County , 77·68.
But with two minutes left in the
That's the UMBC Retrievers. half, it was 31 -29, then 39-33 at the
not the Maryland Terrapins. It' s. Intermission .
" We ' ve forced teams into
the same team that lost 89-59 a t
Georgetown in its last game a nd turnovers before. but I've never
the same one which was beaten · seen 55 turnovers with so little
779-67 by powerful Radford.
pressure, " said Williams. " !
" We 've got to forget about the think 27 ts an amazing amount of
Florida game," said Williams.
turnovers for us . That's got to
"Good tea ms get b.etter and change."
that' s our job. rm disappointed
JerryFrancisscorred17points
bel~g 5·2. We should be 6·1. but fortheBuckeyesandpulleddown •"'
we re commg along. I was 8 rebounds. bu t also matched
Curtis Wilson in turnovers with 6.
d isappojnted we didn't have that
go get ·em alti tude. We played
UMBC, now 3-4, was led in
hard at times , but not en·ough."
scoring by Gamel Spencer with
Ohio State had its four -game 18 points. Larry Simmons added
winning streak snapped a week 15 a nd Kenny Reynolds 13.
ago at Florida . 102-69, and
The Buckeyes are Idle until
Williams feels the Buckeyes a re they take on Long Beach State
s till feeling the effects.
Dec . 26 in the first round of the
Williams praised the play of Lobo Classic.
E lsewhere Tuedsay ni ght. Cin·
guard Jay Burson. who hit 9 of 15
from the fie ld for 18 points, a nd cinnati defeated Metropolitan
freshman Perry .Carter, who had Sta te. 72-62; Providence whipped
14 points and a game-high 10 Xavier, 96-76; and Central Michl·
rebounds..
.
gan bombed Wright State, 97-68.
UMBC Coach Jeff Bzdelik, a
At Providence, R. !. . De lray
former a ssis tant at Northwest · Brooks scored 22 points and
er n, also liked Burson's play.
Carlto n Screen 16 in leadin g the
''Th ey t Oh io State) pla y very Friars past Xavier. Marty Conhard and th€y have great guard lan added 14. Steve Wright 11 and
play, " said Bzdelik. "I tried to Quinton Burton 10 for the Friars.

EAST MEIGS - Gaining 54
points from its inside dynamic
duo of SStevc Horner and Mikr
Martin. the Eastern Eagles
!'Oared to a grinding 78·60 SVAC
triumph over the North Gallia
Pirates here Tuesday night in
boys' high school basketball
action.
Ho.rn~r. a 6·1 senior. scor.ed a
career high 32 points a nd
grabbed 13 rebounds, while Martin dominated insided by adding
22 points and 13 rebounds in
sparking the Eagles.
Shaun Savoy added nine
points. Allen Tripp 6, Mark
Gri![in 6, and Tony Hendrix
three.
For North Gallia Keith .
Burnette led with 12, sharing
honors with Don May s who also
had 12. Steve George added ll,
and Rusty Denny 12 as four

w·Jd
I
cats
.

Pira tes hit the double digit mark.
Eas tern jumpe&lt;Nnto an early
lead l)ehind an agressive attack
of agility and speed that forced
the Piartes to abandon ship.Se·
nio r Mark Griffin hheaded the
quickness department. where he
and Horner picked·the Pirates'
pockets for several steals.
'Griffin headed the fastbreak
and as slats s how had a great
passing game with 16 assists.
In the ·first half alone Horner
and Martin blistered the nets
with 16 and 10 points re~pec ·
lively. While Martin worked the
paint with perfect, Horner was
near perfect from the charity
stripe in.
Eastern led 19·17 after one
frame , then held a 3il-22 lead at
the half.
Going Into the final round

Eastern held a 46·36 edge, then
lifted the upper burners to lead
by 22 at one point before slipping
to the 78-60 finale.
Eastern hi t a ho.t 30-66 from the
field lor 45 percent. and a great
15-18 at the tine for 83 percent.
North Gallia hit only 22·80 in a
fr lgld 27 per5'ent exhibition.
while knotting just 10-18 at the
line.
According to EH$ charts East·
ern won the battle of the boards
37-20, led by Martin and Hor ner.
while Mays collected 5.
·
EHS had 16 turnovers com·
par ed to the 28 for ced by the
tenacious EHS defense.
Eastern had 14 steals and
North Gallia 12.
In th'e reserve contest Eastern
claimed a 47-38 triumph as
Kenny Caldwell poured in game·
high 24 points and Dan Tripp

WILLOW WO OD - Ch ~is Pe·
tro scored 2&gt; points and grabbed
16 rebound s to lead the visiting
Hannan Trace Wild ca ts to a
101·71 whitewas hing of Sym mes
Va lley .
The Wi ldca ts improve their
SVAC re.-ord to 5·1 and stay in the
three-way title chase with South·
ern and Oak Hill. SymmesValley
drops to 2-5 tn the league.
Viking senior Duane McCarty
led ai) scorers with 24 points.
Team m ate Tony Pernest i
grabbed 12 of the Vikings' 32
rebounds .
·
The. Wildcats s hot 35 of 74 from
the field and were 26 of 35 from

a dded 13. B.J. Hammell had 14
and T. Petrie had 10.
Eastern is now 4·4 aM 2·3 in the
league, while North CalHa Is also
4·4 a nd 2·3 in the SVAC race.
Eastern plays Jan. 8 at home
agai nst Symmes Valley at home . .
EASTERN ( 78)
Steve
Horner 11·10·32. Mark Griffin
3·0·6,Tony Hendrix 0·(1) ·0·
3; Allen Tripp 2-2·6, Michael
Martin 11·0·22. Scott Fitch 0-0·
O,and Shaun Savoy 3-3·9. TO·
TALS 30-1·15·78.
NORTH GALLIA (60) - Greg
Glassburn 2-0-4,Keith Burnett
1·2+12. Ru sty Denny 5-0-10,Don
Mays 5-2-12, George5·1·ll ,Blaine
Gil more 1·0·2,Benji Blackburn
2·2·6,Todd Petrie 0·1·1. and Ches·
ter Hess 1·0·2. TOTALS 22·2·10-60
By Quarte rs:
Eastern .. ............ . 19 2116 22-78
NG HS .................. 17 15,14 14·60

the fo ul line. The 'ilkings were 27
of' 76 from the floor and 15 of 23
from the stripe.
Ha nnan Trace will participate
in the Gallia Cou nty Tournament
on December 28 and 29 a t North
Gallia High School. Symmes
Va ll ey will play In the Holid ay
Tournament on December 28 and
29 in Fairview , Ky.
HANNAN TRACE (101) Pe tro 5·2·7·3·23; Stitt 3·1·6·2·15;
Rankin 5·1·1·4·14; R. Swain 6·0·2·
3-1 4; G. Johnso n 5-1·0·3·13;
Brumfield 4·0·0·2-8; J enkins 1-0·
.?·2·7; J . Swain 1·0·2·1-4; Cre·
meens 0-0·2·1·2; T. Johnson 0-0·1·

O·l. TOTALS 30·5·26"21·101

SYMMES VALLEY (71)
McCarty 7'2-4·4·24; Tibbs 7·0·1·5··
15; Schneider 6·0·2·2-14; White
3-0-6·3·12; Cade 1·0·0·1·2; Mootz
0·0·2·1· 2; Pernesti 1·0·0·0-2;
Miller 0·0·0·5·0. TOTALS 25·2·15· .
23-71
Score by quarters
Hannan Trace .. 25 24 27 25-101
Symmes Valley . 16 15 14 26-71
Reserve game Hanna n
Trace 57, Symmes Valley 48
Leading scorers - Bill Bailey
( HTHS), 14 . Paul Ha yes
(Symmes Valley ). 18

Truck driver hurt in accident
A .Long Bottom .truck driver was cited in a two-ve hicle
accident Tuesday, at 7::.4 a. m., in Orange Township on S.R. 681.
according to the Ga llia-Meigs Pos t of the State Highway Patrol.
Charles E. He nsley, 23, was cited for failu re to yield aft erJl is
semi-tractor trailer' hit a car driven by Or ville W. Bennett , 44. of
Reedsville.
Bennett was driving west when Hensley pulled from a private
drive and hit Bennett' s car.

EMS has five calls
Meigs County Emergency Me dical Services re ports five ca lls .
Tuesday ; Racine at 10:18 a. m. to the Americ.a n Legion ror
Pauline Rose who was treated but not tr;;tns ported; Middleport
at 10: 49 a.m. fo Fruth Pharmacy for M;Jrtha Chambers who was
treated but not tran sport ed; Rutland at 4: J8 p.m . to Pageville
fo r Lester Howelt to Ve tera ns Memorial Hospita l; Rutalnd at
8: 30 p.m. to County Road I lor Nancy Chapman to Holzer
Medical Ce nter ; Middleport at 10:&gt;4 p.m. to Walnut St. for
Marjori e Bratton to Holzer Medical Center .

S.M.A.RJ.l

SCHECUED t.\AJNTENANCE AI REGUI.AA TillES

Rival classic results
allowed by either defense. The
Extra point try was wide giving
Kyger Creek an 8-0 advantage.
Eastern mounted a drive, but
self destructed with a pair of big
penaltys.then with time running
out a fourth down pass was
batted into th e hands of Greg
Smith.'who returned it to the end
zone to cap the scorlng.
The EP try was blocked.
After one more desperat e
series by the Eagles the Bobcat's
dropped on the ball to run out th e
clock and preserve the 14·0 win.

ANT&gt;i ARBOR, Mich. (UP! ) Michigan football coach Bo
Schembechler was released
from .St. Joseph Mercy Hospital
Tuesday afternoon, one week
after undergoing quadrupJ c

heart bypass s urgery. and school
sports .officials sa id he was In
good spiri ts and feeling welL
"I talked to Bo today ," sa id
Bruce Madej of Michiga n's
sports information department.
"He's was joking. He's reeling
good. He just needs a little bit of
res t to get healed from the
surgery."
Madej sa id when he asked
Schembech lcr how he felt, the
coach quipped "Not bad lor a guy
who got .hit by a freight train ."
Doctors sa id the surgery pre·

vented an imminent and lik ely
fatal heart attack for the 58-year·
old Schembechler. 'The opera·
tion. Schembechler's second.
was .o rdered when the · coach
experienced chest pains while
recovering from a test conducted
to determine blood vessel block·
age in the heart.
Doctors have said Schem ·
bec hler should be able to resume
coaching activities in two to
three months.
'
He will not. however , be with
his team when it mee ts Ala bama
Jan. 2 in the Hall of Fame Bowl in
Tampa. Fla.
This marks the second time
Schembechler' s heart problems
have sidelined him from a bowl
game.

Meigs tax bills late

I
I
I
I
I
I

Meigs County Treas urer George Collins and Auditor William
Wlckltne want loca l residents to know that tax bills are late
being mailed this year because the county has not received
necessary reduction factor s [rom · the State Department of
Taxat ion, in order to prepare the tax bills.
The reason, the reduction factors from the Sta te are late,
explained Collins, is because levies for the Tri &lt;County ~oint
Vocational Sc hool a nd Rio Grande Communit y College
overlapped with other counties. Propert y valuations for those
counties involved in the levies must be submitted to the State
before the reduction fac tors lor each separa te county may be
calculated by the Sta te. Although Meigs County's va lua tion has
been submitt~d to the State, the State is wai ting for valuations
from other counties .
Collins and Wickltne said they hope to have the reduction
factors in time to prepare the tax bills and hav e the m m ai le d out
some time dur ing the firs t week in January.
The tax books a re sc heduled to c lose on J an. 29, bu t an
ex tension into February will be granted if necessa ry. Co llin s
said .

GETA FREE
COFFEE MUG*
WITH
OIL &amp;FILTER
CHANGE
I

$1895

DOOte... _
Continued
from_
pa ge_
1 _ _ _ __
r1
__

4 Cyl.

Cars

$21 95 ~a~s ~ 'lr1~cks

needs to be put together."
Doepkin. who e ngineered the
employee bu yo ut of Wei r ton
Steel. said " We are making
progress on a ll the other facet s.
Th ings should co me toge the r in
the next four to five days."
Foote Mineral has given Amer·
. lean Alloys, In c .. until Dec. 31 to
engi neer the deal. Doepkin said
the idea of a deadline has bee n
both a blessing and a curse. "In
some way s II ha s been more
helpful; in some ways t the
dea dline ha s made t.hlngs 1 more
diftlcUlt ."

OFFER EXPIRES 2/ 28 / 88

• Ne w oil
(up to 5 qts cars/6 qts trucks)
• New Moper oil filter
• Check fluid levels
o Check battery
o Vehicles requiring special/
extra oil and diesel filters
slighfly higher
('See our Service AdvisO&lt; for detolls.)

I

COOPER
( hrysler ·Plymouth· Dodge
99:2-6421
399 S. Third Street

Announcements

Middleport . Ohio

Santa to visit
Santa Claus will be at the

J
I
I
I

!_______________
• ~ 1 1 !• _,
vit

Virginia ...
Continued from page 3
"I think it shou ld. go to the
defense ." Secules said. " I think
they won the ball game for us."
The Cougars fai led on th ree
fourth -dow n plays. including a
fourth-and-goal from their own 2
on their i ni tia I possession of the
seco nd half.
Brigham Yo ~n g sco red fi'rst.
with Chitty hi tting a 20-yard field
goa t to cap an 83-ya rd. 1l·play
drive. The Cougars drove to the
Virginia 3 on the strength of a
&gt;0-yard pass [rom Covey
David Miles. but Darre n Handley
dropped a pass in the corner of
the end zone on third down a nd
BYU h•d to 'ettle for three.
Chitty missed field goa ls of 47
and 5J vards for the Cougars.
Virginia answered with touc h·
down run s by Secules and Mor·
gan on its next two possessions to
ta ke a 14·3 hal fti me lead.
BYU dominawd th e third quartPr, controlling the ba ll fo r
a lmost l:l mi nutf's but scored
onlv once on Whittingham's
8-vard run with 10 seconds left. A
tr}· for two points failed .

'

answered

with

an

11 pla y, 76·yard drive tha t ended
with the 22-ya rd scoring pass
from Secules to Ford. Sec ulcs hit
Ma rcu s Wi ls on for 'two points to
make it 22·9 with Jl: 17 left.
Brigham You ng drove 76 yards
on 1" pla ys to cu t the margin to
:12 16 on Whit tingham's 1-ya rd
''"tch V:•ith 7:07 Jell but failed to
nwk• · a fi r st down on its last two
p(~~&lt;;p -.s. i n n s.

Tut·sday's

seores
\ u r1h l ,u lton { q, l ri lunfrmn l.al&lt;l• 1 1

'\urn..J l ll '' !lr l.u orl on dll•• :n
O.LI&lt;JI .rrlli''~l

r•urtftln!tm1!1

(U .,. ·pr!i'r '\•,rthv.m!ll (~
Ott.aY.:t r;J .onrlq/1 ;ij, Br)an SJ
OttllloiU 11111.0: i ll I.J h&lt;•rty fPn ll't 711
f1unn11 fi •Jl\ 1'-'arnr• 60, ' 'u!llunia HI
Pafrklr lfl'n r ,t lili, ~a· pr.olf'Ofl 5~

l'lr kr dn~~: t m1 tl'l'. MlamiTnH.'l' J l
Plonr:r'r' ( o•ntral 91f, t"d,;t'rltln ~9
f'lqua 11 :;, f:ro •r•n~llll' 7:t jlul)
Jtr1dm• lw.nutlrl'l'n 71, K,n :r r rrrl'k 13

Rutland F ire Departme nt on .
Wednesda y at 7 p.m. to give out
treats to children 12 a nd under.
Christmas Eve mass
Christmas Eve Mass at the
Sacred Hear t Church , 152 Mul ·
berry Ave .. Pomeroy, will begin
at 11 :30 p.m . Thursda y with the
singing or tradi tional carols .by
the church choir and the service
beginning at midn ight . Th e pub·
lie is invited .
Location changed
Th~ Me igs Cou nty AA and
Alanon meetings sc hedule d for
Thursda y, De c. 24 , and Thurs·
day. Dec . .11. a t the J .T .P.A.
offices have been changed to the
for mer Diamond Savings and
Loan Co. building in Pomeroy
with both sessions to begin at 7
p.m;.

I

Wtfliam B. Downie. 71. 46885
Morning Star Road. Racine.
well-known in the comm unity as
a long-time active member of the
Meigs County Fair Board a nd as
a sales representative of the
E lberfe ld Department Store In
Pomeroy, died Tuesday at the
Holzer Medical Center.
Mr . Downie was born in
Pomeroy on Se pt. 25, 1916, a son
of the late Dr. C. E . W. a nd Flora
Bengel Downie . He was a
member of St. Paul's Lutheran
Church. Mr. Downie was a
vetera n of World War II. a
member of Drew Webster Post
39, Ame.rican Legion, the Meigs
County Fair Board, the U.S.T.A ..
a nd the Pomeroy Masoni c
Lodge.
Su rviving are his wife. Ra·
chael Elberfe ld Downie; a son.
· William B. Downie, Jr .. ·Racine;
a sister. Christine Bright, Dun·
bar. w. va.; a slster-in'law.
Dorothy T. Downie of Pomeroy,
and two nephew,s, Charles A.
Downie, Wolfsboro. N. H., and
Allen T. Downie. Pomeroy.
Besides his parents , he was
preceded in death by a brother.
Ted Downie, and two infant
daughters.
Services will be held at I p.m .
Sa tu rday at the St. Paul's Luthe·
ran Church with the Rev . Wil·

license; William 0 . Quatls , Jr. ,
Fivl:' defend a nt s lorfei.Jlid
liam Middleswar th officiati ttg. ·
Gallipolis
, and Linda A. Turley,
bonds
in
the
court
of
Mlddle1J'cll't
Burial will be in Beech Grove
Racine,
-$40,
both posted on
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
Tuesday
Ce metery. Friends may call a t
·
s
peeding
c
harges
.
.,
night.
the Ewing Funeral Home from I
Fined
in
the
court
we
re
Bar·
They
are
Michael
T.
Gard,
. to 4 p.m. ThUr$day and on
bar~ Doczi. Middleport, $25 and
Middleport , $450 , driving while
Saturday morning.
intoxicated; $200 reckless opera- costs, per mittin g an unlicensed
drfver to operate a !flO\or vehi·
tion; $225. fleeing poltce. and $50,
no operator's license: Otis M. cle. and Terry Hysell, Middle·
port, $425 and costs, dr ivi ng
Nob le. Jr., Point Pleasant. $50.
while
intoxicated. a nd $200 and
ru nn ing red light; Randy Ste·
South Central Ohio
cos
ts,
resisting arrest.
wart, Middleport, $50, expired
Becoming partly cloudy today.
with highs between 45 and 50.
Becoming cloudy tonight , wi th a
chance of rain and a low in the
lower 40s . Occasional rainThurs·
day,. with highs between 55 and
60.
The probability of precipita·
lion is near zero today, 40 percent
tonight and 90 percent Thursday.
Winds will be va ria ble at less
than 10 mph today and from the
southeast at fi ve to 15 mph
•
tonight.
Ohio Extehded Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of drizzle Friday.
with snow flurries mainly in the
northern part of the state Satur,
day and Sunday. Turning colder
Christma s- Day with tempera·
lures falling into the upper 30s
and 40s. Hi ghs will be in the 30s
Saturday and bet ween 25 a nd 35
Sunday. Overnight lows will
· range from 3&gt; to 45 ea rly Friday
and in the 20s Saturday and
Supday mornings.

Weather

Miller in Honduras for four
months tour of active duty
.'

.

Middl epo rt police o[[i cer Bill
Miller, who was recently act !·
va ted for a s ix months period by
the We st Virg in ia· National
Guard, has arr ived in Hondura s
for a four- month tour of active
duty in that country.
Mille r was activated in Oc·
tober a nd spent October and
Novem ber at Fort Meade, Mary-

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As ol10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi

Doepkin sa id the idea or
engineer ing a buyout of th e Foote
Mineral plant tha t has bee n
closed for two years is a tso more
Am Electric Power ............. 25)'8
difficult. Whil e a purchaser of an
·
AT&amp;T ........... ...... ................ 28%
operating plant ca n promise a
Ashland Oil .................. ..... 60%
lender a maint ai ned market
Bob Evans ............ ... ........... 15 3/i
sha re or inCreased m arket share,
Cha rming Shoppes .............. 12)',
those attempting to obtain m o·
City Holding Co ............... .... 29
ney for a c losed plant can also
Federa I Mogul ...... .............. 32'%
forecast that '&lt; hey will regain
Goodyear
T&amp;R , .............. .... 61\&lt;1
their market share they once
Heck's
Inc
............ ............... 1Y,
had.
Key Centurion .................... 37Y,
Lottery numbers
Lal'\ds' End .. ........... .. .... .... .. 20 %
Limited Inc ............... .... .... .17\'4
Daily N umh ~ r
Multimedia Inc . .................. 48Y,
576.
Rax Res ta u rant s .. . .................3
Ticket sa les to ta led $1.432,600,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 7Y,
with a payoff du e or $1.367.434.50. Shoney's Inc . .... .................. . 22
PICK·•I
Wendy 's Inti . ...... ................. 5%
8391.
Worthington Ind .................. 16%

land, preparing equipment for
shipment to Honduras. After a
brief visit hom e during the
Thanksgiving holiday. he re·
turned to For t Meade from where
he tell by ship for Honduras as
support for road construction
operations in that country. He is
in charge of re frigeration equip·
ment.

Miller Is on a leave or a bsence
from the Middleport pollee de·
partment where he has been a
police officer for the past 13years
and assistant chief of police for
the past two years. He resides In
Middlepo r t with his wife
Mar ilyn.
Miller's a ddr ess is, Sgt.
George W. Miller. J r., 458-66·
4.164, Hqs. 11lth ENGP, Fuertes
Caminos, 88-HO APO, Miami,
Fla. 3404.3.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions- Donald
Goff, Racine; Les ter Howe ll.
Albany.
.
Tuesday Disc har ges - Law·
renee Scarberry. Leo Vaughan.

--;=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::::::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::!.
1,

CI+€RISI+ M€MORI€S OF

CHRISTMAS

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

EHS principal
receives doctorate

W

Virgin'i&lt;l

William Downie

The Daily Sen tinel will observe an early news dead line of 9
a. m . on Thursday , Dec. 24 . The Sentine l business office will
close as soon as all of Thursday 's papers are pi cked up by
vario us carrl_ers. The early deadline permits carriers to flnish
th eir routes In order to be home in time to spend Christmas eve
with th eir families.
The Sentinel wlll not publish on Christmas Day Friday .
Norma l hours of operation wili resume Saturday for publication
or the Sund ay Times-Se ntinel. ·

,--------------,
GET I

Bo released from hospital Tueaday

Tuesday night against Brigham Young in
Birmingham, Ala. At right is BYU defend er Chad
Robinson (.15) . The Cavaliers heat the Coijgars
22·16. (UPI)

·List Sentinel holiday ho,:,_rs

----Court news--,

Area deaths

,...1

stay in three-way tie _for first

EAST ME IGS- Behind a solid
defe nsive perfor m a n ee, th e
Kyger Creek Bobcats alumni tied
knots in the Eagle feathers of t!le
Eastern a lumn i enroute to a 14·0
shu t-out win in the annual alumni
(ootball classic.
Scoreless ln the firs t ha lf·
,Kyger Creek. broke out on top
with a sa flY in the third quarter·
.Then in the •las t period Tom
Waugh ran a quarterback sneak
around the left end and fOr the
only offensive TD.
That TD was the only TD

DIVING FOR YARDAGE - University of
Virginia tailback Kev in Morgan t3'1) dives lor
extra yardage alter being tripped up in the fourth
&lt;JUart er of the AII·American Bowl, played

--Local news-___,.....__,·1

Pirates .d rop 78-60 decision to Eagles

Bucks s-truggle in
77-68 cage victory

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 5

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 23, 1987

..

Thanks for giving us the .b est gift we could hope for: Your trust.
Trust It's often talked about in business, but very rarely achieved. We believe gaining the confidence
of our customers is what good business is all about. It's what we strive for every day. We're motivated
from knowing that over the years, our contacts with you have earned your confidence.
And we're conunitted to keep it Your trust in us is our greatest source of pride. "Happy
Holidays" from all of us at GTE! We look forward to serving you for years to come.
•

[iji#t

.

The Eastern Loca l School
District ha s received lnforma·
lion and is pleased to announce
that Donald Shue , princ ipal of the
Tupp ers Plains Elementary
School, has just completed all
requi rements fo r his Doctor of
Philosophy Degree in adminis·
tratlon and curriculum from
Ohio University. Dr. Shue's di s·
se riation topic was "An Inves t!·
gation or Religious Policies.
Guidelines and Activities in the
Public Sc hools of Ohio: Awareness an d Knowledge of Super ln·
tendenl s a nd Principals ."
Dr. Shue received hts Bachelor
of Sc ience Degree from Ceda r·
ville College, Cedarville. In 1967.
specializi ng in ele mentary edu ·
cation : a Master of Divinity
Degree ·from Grace Seminary,
Winona Lake, Indiana . gradual ·
ing with high honors in 1971; a nd
a Maste rs In Education, special·
izing in ed ucat ional administra·
lion, from Ohio Unive rsitY. In
1983.
Dr. Shu e is in his seco nd year
as elem en tary principal of
Tuppers Plains. His previous
experienc es in education Include
seven years as a sixth grade
teacher at Shade E leme ntary in
the Alexander Local Schools.
Albany. and seven years as an
e le mentary teacher and assist·
a nt princ lP~lln private schools in
North Carolina and Michigan.

.

with every disc or roll of

color prinr film brought
in for processing.

.'
12 .

Exposure

312 GIFTS IN ONE
GIVE A YEAR'S GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF TH,E DAILY SENTINEL
TO THAT SPECIAL PERSON ON YOUR SHOPPING LI ST.

.

.

1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION ...................... Only

~ 57 .2 0
'.

We will send a gift subscription card with your name telling of
your special gift.

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"YQur Hometown Newspaper" .
786. N. 2nd, MII)DLEPORT

....J

\

'

r

r

•

�.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

~'BRAND

N

Wednesday, December 23. 1987

The Daily Sentinel

ES FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING''·
!~ . El.Ehf~CcSFTS
I
ON·voufusl · ~

By The Bend

r·---~--------~-~------~

Nows the time
to get a new TV or VCrt

•24 Button Video Remote
Control
•152 Channel Capability
•Sleep Timer
•Electronic Volume Control
•Cable Ready

~

~

J
J

J
\i
\i

MOO!l NO. S960BAK

!

26 INCH REMOTE

£{

l

sssa,

' '

1

, Garden Club

Beat of the ben!!

has meeting

One big, big tree...

J

By BOB HOEFLICH
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hupp, Smith
Ridge, Long Bottom, are really
into Christmas.
They're sport·
ing - ln their
llv ing room yet
a 25 foot
spruce Christmas tree which
they purchased
at the Bradford Tree Farm- the
largest ever sold there. I'm told.
for home use.
Ed ls ln the landscaping
business and the huge tree is
really a drear come true for
him. By the way, his mother.
Mrs. lana Hupp, makes her home
there too - so she, too. is
enjoying · the very special and
very big tree.

i
i

·i

i
J
J
\i

Ii
~

WITH TRADE

If your last name be!llns with
U, V. W, X. Y and Z. _you are
running out of time to take care
of your license plates.
You are due to.get your plates
during December and with the
ho.liday season, the license bu·
reau located at 186 Mulberry
Ave., Pomeroy, will be closed
some of'the time.

WE HAVE THOSE
LAST MINUTE
GIFTS FOR
EVERYONE ON
YOUR LIST!!

'

The office will be open until12
noon on Thursday. Dec. 24. but .
will be closed on Dec. 26. Hours
on Dec. 28. 30. and 31 wlll be 9
a.m. to 4 p.m. and from 9 a.m. to 7
p.m. on Dec. 29. Theo!ficewiil be
closed on Jan. 2. So. you see, you
are running out of time.

ALL CLOTHING

There are so many beautiful
outdoor decorations in Pomeroy
this year.
Seems that so many people
. have gone all out - really adds a
festive · atmosphere lo the com·
munity. · However. I'm glad I
didn't have the job of selecting
the winners in !he annual Pome·
roy home lighting contest spon·
sored by the Pomeroy· Chamber
of Commerce and the Winding
Trail Garden Club. Now that was
a ''toughie''.
Winners in the overall cate·
gory were Dale Thoene, 262
Union Ave., first place. and
Ardith Barton. 2~0 Mu)berry
Ave.. second with honorable
mention going to Ronnie Casto.

20°/o-50°/o

REDUCED
EARRINGS FOR MOM
BELT BUCKLES FOR DAD
PHOTO BADGES FOR GRANDPARENTS
FOR THOSE LlnLE ONES
ACCESSORIES GALORE!!

Merry Christmas fROM
VICKI AND SHIRLEY

Arrangements to do a planting
for the Ohio State Fair were
made when the Friends and
Flowers Garden Club met recently at the home of · Lily
Kennedy.
The planting will be entered in
competition with the judging to
take place in August. The planting itself will be done in May.
Judy Hill a member of the club
who resides in Columbus will
maintain and spray the garden
throughout the summer,
"God's Great Gift" was the
title ol a poem which opened the
meeting. Officers' reports were
given.
From the Kennedy home the
group went to Craw's Restaurant
for a dinner and then returned to
the Kennedy home for a gift
exchange and dessert. Packages
were judged with Camille Bolin
taking first for contrived flowers,
and Mrs. Hill first in the
evergreen divison. Judy
Snowden will host the next
meeting at which time a slide
presentation on raising cacti will
be t&lt;eld.

410 Spring Ave., and Wmlam
Young, 411 Spring Ave. In the
entrance way category, first .
place went to Kevin Betzing, 274 .
Mulberry Ave., with Wayne
·Davis, •215 Mulberry, taking
second place honors. Honorable
mention went to Scott Shank, 10:i
Union Avenue.
Marjorie Bowen, 126 Butternut
Ave., took first place in the
religious category with Rick
Blaettnar receiving second place
prize.
In the commercial category.
first place went to the Meigs
County In!irmary; second to the
Pomeroy Flower Shop, Butternut Ave., and third to Francis
Florist, East Main St.
Out-of-town judges were
driven on their judging tour by
Peggy Crane and Ruth Moore
and after judging were entertained at the home of Addalou
Lewis. Prizes for the contest
were donated by Pleasers'
Restaurant,
The Peoples Bank at Mason.
W.Va .. is receiving financial
donations needed for 11-year-old
Rachel Beasley. of Mason. who
must undergo a liver transplant.
She ls currently undergoing
evaluation at Children's Hospital
in Pittsburgh, Pa., to determine
if she is a candidate for a
transplant.

Exchange student staying in Meigs area

A total of $1,959.76 was cleared
after expenses for sponsors of the
annual Big Bend Minstrel Association's "Varieties of '87" staged
at Meigs High School Thanksglv·
ing weekend.
The Meigs High Athletic Boosters and the Pomeroy Chamber
of Commerce each received
$979.88 as their share of the
proceeds and each group made a
$100 contribution to the Big Bend
Minstrel Association to help with
futurk presentations. The contri·
butions were a nice gesture since
the association does function on a
very thin shoestring in staging
the ·a nnual show.

MIDDLEPORT- While many
are singi ng "I'll Be Home for
Christmas", Lawrence Cua. an
exchange student from the Phi·
lippines who lives in Middleport
with Dwight a nd Wanda Ashley.
thinks it's no big deal to be aw&lt;&gt;;Y
from home this year.
•
In fact. he's' looking forward to
it and , hoping that the Bend will
have tnore than a song with the
dream of a "White Christmas"that actually the ground will be
covered with snow .
Lawrence saw his. first snowflakes a week or so ago. and he's
looking forward to the time when
there' s enough s now to go sled·
ding with his friends. After ail

HOLIDAY HAPPINESS - Lawrence Cua,
center, joins his good lriend J.D. Keesee, nephew
of Wanda and Dwight Ashley, his host family, and
their daughter, Jennifer, at the Christmas tree.
Cua says he doen't think it's a big deal to be away

Go ahead - dream of a white
Christmas - but I'm tellln' you
- you're gonna get rain. Keep
smiling any-ray.

The origins and traditions of
Christmas were given by Evelyn
Hollon for the program at the
Christmas party-of the Wildwood
Garden Club held at the home of
Juanita Will. Heidi Elberfeld was
co-hostess for the party.
Readings included "A Christmas Eve of a Harried House·
wife" by Mrs. Hollon and there ·
was group singing of carols led
by Janet Theiss. Kathryn Miller
gave everyone there a scented
tree ornament. and gifts were
presented to the members by
Juanita Will.
Gift wrappings were judged
before the exchange with Janet
Theiss winning for the prettiest.
and Kathryn Miller for the most
original.
Mrs. Miller read a s tory
entitled "The First Gift Ex·
change" with Mary Nease giving
devotions . She read "Sleep'
Softly", "What is Christmas".
and "Christmas Candles" fol·
lowed by a prayer.
A letter was read from Lucille
Macomber. former regional di·
rector; tl)anklng the club for .

.
, ..
Annual holiday supper of the
Tuttle. Ethel Orr and Inzy Newell
Past Councilors Club of Chester
will be hos tesses for the January
Council 323. Daughters of A mer·
meeting. There was a Christmas
ica. was held recently at Mom
program by the hostesses and a
Perry's. Bounty Table In Ravens·
gift exchange.
Attending besides those named
wood. Hostesses were Opal Hoi·
IOQ .who gave grace and Cora
were Fern Morris, Mary Show a I·
Beegle.
ter. Sadie Trussell. Charlotte
Elizabeth Hayes presided at· Grant, Mary K. Holter, Lora
· the meeting opening with scrip· Damewood. Goldie Frederick.
ture from Chapter 2. St. Luke.
Alta Ballard. Thelma White.
The Lord's Prayer and pledge to
Betty Roush. Mary Hayes, Ada
the flag were given in unsion.
Bissell. Laura Mae Nice. and
Margaret Amberger · and Mae
visitors. Shirley Beegle and
McPeek had the officers' re · · Harlan Ballard.
'
ports. Erma Cleland on behalf of
the club gav.e a poinstettia to
Letha Wood. a member at the
Extended Care Unit, Veterans
Richard Davis of Pomeroy was
Memorial Hospital, and a fruit
best man at the wedding of Terri
basket for Ada 1\lorris. a member
' Ann Zirkle and Bruce Anthony
at her home.
Mrs. Cleland 'read "Happy Hysell who were married on July
Birthday. Jesus" and several 25 at the First Church of God In
other members had Christmas New Haven. W. Va. His name
poems. Favors. provided by the was unintentionally omitted by
the family from the wedding
hostesses. were at each place.
material
submitted to this
Gifts were won by Marcia Keller.
Pauline Ridenour. and Margaret
newspaper.

'I

Correction

A LARGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM

WIC pickup times announced
The pickup dates for WIC
coupons at the Meigs County
Department of Health are announced and include: Dec. 28. 29.
Jan. 4 and 5. Makeup days are
Jan. 11, 18. 25 Hours for pickup

I

ALL SKIRTS

$9 99

REDUCED TO
REG. $13.99 TO 526.59

HOUSE COATS

$8 99

REDUCED TO
REG. 513.59

NIGHT GOWNS
9
REDUCED TO $ 7 S
. REG. S13.59

SANDY'S ·
992-7478
222 EAST MAIN
POMEROY, OHIO

are 9 to 11 a.m. and 1 t~3 p.m.
Shot days at the Depar . ent of
Health for January are t e 12th
and 26th with the hours to be the
same as those ior the pickup of
WIC coupons.

Wedding plans are completed
Open church wedding of Andy
Lee Patterson and Terri Lynn
Wilson will be held on Dec. 24 ·at
the Ash Street Freewlll Baptist
Church. Middleport, at 1:30 p.m.

Pre-nuptial music will begin at 1
p.m. A reception will be held
Immediately following in the
church basement.

Poet's corner

r

The following poem was wr il - ·
But no one knows. as on the day
ten by G. I. Cundiff following t~e goes
collapse of the Silver Bridge. Mr.
when the wind blew l!P the
Cundiff di ed in 198'2 .
rivet.
.r
As the Wind Blows Up the River
The day was ·cold. the clouds
were bold,
and the wind blew up the
river. ,

Came evening nigh , with a
wintry sky,
stU! the wind b)ew up the
river.
All homeward bound, to each
his town.
as the wind blew lip the river .

'

from home for Christmas, but he is hoping that
there will be plenty of snow during the holidays.
That would be a nice change for the young
Fllopino who had never seen snow until he came
here. (Sentinel photo)

that's something he isn ' t able to
do in the Philippines and he will
be returning there after the
school year.
The 15-year-old has already
received and opened the Christ·
mas gifts which his parents, Mr.
and Mrs, Alegendro Cua, sent.
Were he at home. he would be
joining other members of his
family tor the traditional Ca·
tholic Midnight Mass on Christ·
mas Eve. the exchange of gifts
around an artificial tree. and
special holiday foods.
He has a brother and a sister,
both in college. who will be home
tor the holidays. Christmas there
is a time for the immediate
family with a much larger

celebration with extended family
and close friends gathering for a
big celebration on Dec. 31.
Lawrence says.
The somewhat shy and softspoken Filopino is now attending
the Ohio Valley Christian School
in Gallipolis. He had originally
enrolled at Meigs High School but
due to the ·teachers' strike and
the prospect of not being able to
finish his sophompre year before
time for him to leave for home in
early June, the youth changed
schools.
Cua is one of 37 s tudents from
the PhilippinE's in the United
States under the exchange pro·
gram of the Educational Found a·
tion for Foreign Study.

Stegall reassigned
in FmHA Marietta
Archie R. Stegall has been
promoted and rerassigned to
work as a district loan speci~list
in the Farmers Home Admlnis·
!ration Ma r ietta District Office.
Stegall has been. employed by
FmHA since 1968 and was county
supervisor in the Pomeroy office
before being assigned to the
district office.
Farmers Home Administra·
tion is an agency of the United
States Department of Agricui-'
ture with county and district
offices serving, all counties in '
Ohio. The Marietta District Office serves 15 counties in Southeast Ohio including Meigs,
Athens and Vinton.

Wildwood· Garden Club holds meeting

Past Councilors Club
has holiday
meeting
,

I
The Perfect
Christmas Gift

Page-7
'

w

i
J

Wednesday, December 23. 1987

I

.And so a crash. and ln just a
flash,
, the bridge went in the river .
Many were lost. as the water
tossed,
from the wind blowing up the
river.
But the piers are there. like
monuments as we stare-,
and still the wind blows up
the river.

cooperation. F-aye Wiggins gave
a report on the amarlyis noting
that the bulbs are sold In the fall
and winter and that the first year
blooms appear 'three or four
weeks after planting. Care afterwards determines future blooms.
The spent bloom should be cut off
at soil level and the plant kept
moist until August when it should
be dried off and put to rest in the
dark tor
weeks. Then it

'
should be repoted.
she said:
placed in the light. with watering
and feeding resumed to promote
another bloom .
Christmas arrangments were
displayed by Mrs . Hollon and
Mrs. Nease.
RefresHments were served to
13 members and two guests.
Virgine Elberfeld and Helen
Will. There will be no meeting in
January.

Wilson birth
Wilson birth. with pic to come.
Mr. and Mrs . Alan C. Wilson.
Racine, are announcing the birth
of their first child. a daughter,
Morgan Elaine.
Born at the Holzer Medical
Center on Oct. 16. the infant
weighed nine pounds. eight oun·
ces. She was 20 inches long.
Mr. and Mrs. Louis Laudermilt , and Sybil Riffle. all of
Racine, and the late Robert
Riffle. are the grandparents.
Great-grandparents are Rita
Laudermilt. Rutland, and Mr.
and Mrs. James Eynon. Chester.

KANDIS JO HUMPHREY

Humphrey birth
Joe and Jamie Humphrey of
Mountain Home, Idaho are announcing the birth of their first
child, a daughter, Kandis Jo. The
Infant was born at the Mountain
Home Air Force Base on Nov·. 18
and weighed seven pounds. 11
ounces. She was 21 inches long.
Maternal grandparents are
James and Betty Acree and the
paternal grandparents are Gene
and Pat Humphrey. all of Po me·
roy.
Paternal great·
goandmother is Myrtle Grove,
Pomeroy, and maternal great·
grandparents are Melvin and
Mae Roach of West Columbia.
Pat Humphrey has returned
from a two week vacation with
the Joe Humphrey family.

�Wednesday. December

Pomeroy-MiddiE!port, Ohio

Chester~

'.

..

I
.I

VISITORS- The 7-Up griomes visited children
in Holzer Medical Center at a Christmas party
· provided by Athe'ns Bottling and Foodland

recently. The gnomes }lere visit Paul Millins Jr.,
7, from. Wellston, in his room on the pediatric unit
of the liospltal.

Donation made to video project
The Athens Bottling Company,
represented by Henry Thrapp,
Ches hire district sales manager,
and Food land. with Robert Eastman, president and Brent Eastman, 'director of sales and
promotion fo~ the five area
Foodland stores owned by the
Eastmans, hosted a Chr istmas
Party for childr en who were
hos pitalized on Dec . 16.
They brought ice cream, two
special cakes baked and deco·
rated in the Foodiand Bakery,
and Seven up, which were served
to each child in his or her room by
two 7-Up gnomes.
'
Following the party, a check
for $500 from the Athens Bottling
Company ws presented to Nancy
Casteel. R.N., head nu rse In
pediatrics, to be used to pu rc hase
videocassettes. for the per manent library of programs being
es Ia bl !shed for the children to
view on portable playback units
that are taken to the roo ms on
request..
Presenting the check were
Thrapp and the Eastmans on
behalf of both 7-Up a nd Foodla nd. The H6izer Foundation for
Tri-State Health Care in iti ated
this program earlier in 1987 to !ill
a need for individualized entertainment in the childre n's hospital rooms.
To entertain the children in
addition to the 7-Up and Foodland party, were 13 members of
the Beta Club from North Gallia
High School who sang carols to

each child, and in the hallways.
After carolling for the children
they went throughout the ho spital with the nursing supervisor to
the units where patien ts of all
ages could enjuy the music of the

proylding the advertising campaign to promote their "Special
Santa" program, Nov. 16 - Jan. 3,
1988, with 10 cents from every
12-pack of 7-Up and ?epsi sold In
the Food)and stores, des igna ted
for the Holzer Medical Center
pediatric videocassette library
project. This will be a n additional
gift to be presented after th e New
Year's holida y.

season.

Throughou t the holiday seaso n, WagnerBroadcastingjolned
with the Athens Bottling Com.
pany and the Foodland stores by

Wed

23. 1987

.;

..)'.

yC&gt;ar in a row, we haye a major

bowl game that w!ll decide the
national championshiP of college
football. No. 1 Oklahoma takes on
No. 2 Mia mi of Florida d n the
Orange Bowl Classic on Jan. 1.
Here's wha t to expect in all of
tM V~ar-end bowl games.
Gator .Bowl: Louisiana State
(9-1-1) vs. South Carolina (8-3),
at Jacksonville, Fla., CBS-TV.
Thursday, Dec. 31, 2:30 p.m.
EST.
The No. 7 LSU Tigers, SEC
champs, had a good yea r. No. 11
South Carolina lost to No. 2
Miami. No. 5 Nebraska and No.
18 G~orgia. It's a duel. of soph
QBs. Tommy Hodson of LSU and
Todd Ellis of SC. Make it South
Caro lina, 24-21.
Blue bonnet Bowl : Pittsburgh
(6-3) vs. Texas (6· 5), at Houston,
Nizlou-TV, Thursday, Dec. 31, 8
p:m. EST.
Pitt, No. 19, wasonethesuprlse
teams of 1987. The Panthers
stuck it .to old tormentors Pe nn
State (10-0), a nd Notre Dame
(30-22) . Texas, while rebuilding,
was in the SWC race down to the
rlnalc. It's Pitt. 31-17.
Florida Citrus Bowl: Clemson
(9-2 ) vs. Penn State (8·3), at
Orlando, Fla., ABC-TV, Friday,
,Jan. I, noon EST.
The ACC champ Is No. 13
Clemson. But Penn State's Joe
Paterno is making his 19th bowl
trip. His tQams have a way of

~:;&lt;"._:~

WINNER- Steve M. Martin of Middleport was the winner of a
free VCR give n In a holiday promotion which required no purchase
to participat ~ at Video Touch, Middleport. He re 1\lartln, 14,
receives th e VCR from John McKinney.

r ising to the occas ion . On cxpc-

r·ience alone. we are picking the
No. 20 Nit tany Lions- by a score
of 22-20.
Cotton Bowl: Texas A&amp;M (9-2)
v,. Notre Dame (il-3). at Dallas,
CBS-TV, Friday, Jan. 1, 1:30
p.m. EST.
No . . 10 Texas A&amp;M coach
Jackie Sherrill ha s an unprecedented third straight SWC title.

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY~ J.A.M. of Pomeroy Church of Christ wiU present
a Christmas play " The Best
Christmas Ever," on Wednesday
at 7:30p.m.

--RACINE -Carolers will leave
~

from Bethany Church at 7 p.m.
on Wednesday , and visit hom es
in the Carmel and Sutton areas,
before ending at Morning Star
Church for refreshm~nts.
POMEROY - VFW Post 9053
will have a regul ar meeting on

Candlelight service
DONATION- Foodfand and 7-Up bottlers teamed up to made a
$500 donation to the children's video projec t at Holzer Medical
Center. Accepting the check Is Nanc y Casteel, head pediatric
nurs.e. From left are, Robert Eastman and Brent East.mun of
Foodland, Ms. Casteel, and Henry Thrapp of Athens' Bottling
· Company.
·

The annual Christmas ca ndlelight service will be held at 7 p.m.
Thursday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church. The public, is
'

invited.

Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. All
members are urged to attend.
RUTLAI\ID- Sa nta Claus will
be at th e Rutland Fire De pa rtment on Wednesday at 7 p .m. to
give out treats to child ren 12 and
under.

tee has been cancelled. The nex t
meeti ng will be on Thursday.
January 3, 1988.
Meeting change
SALE-M TWP- Salem Town ship Trustees ' meeting has been
·changed to Thursday, Dec. 31, at
9:30a. m., at th e firehouse.

THURSDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
AA a nd Al -anon will meet Thursday, 7 p.m .. at the JTPA office on
Second St. in Pomer oy, instead of
at 1\Je Sacred Heart Church.

627 . 3rd Ava., Gallipolis
PH. 446·1699
HOURS: 8 A.M.·6 P.M.

------People in the news
By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International

LAST MINUTE GIFT IDEA

Miss -U.S.A .. Michelle Royer .
They left Va n Nuys Air Force Base in Califo rnia righ t ~ ft er
Diller dressed In a Santa Claus suit, presented Ho pe wllh a
bottle.of prune juice. Hope sa id he wasn 't concerned about the
volat iiit y''of the Persian Gulf. "The wor ld as such doesn't mea n
a nything to me." he said. "It's those kids over there. I want to
see the ir reaction s to thi s. They're going to be away from home
for Christmas . That's ali."
SITTING WITH RESOLVE: Cosmpolitan Editor Helen
Gurley Brown wa nts to improve her posture in 1988. Brown,
asked by th e Howard Miller Clock Co. about New Year's
resolutions, said posture \vas a lohg-running concern for her. " I
continue to tell myself to scooch my fanny up against th e back of
the chai r and tuck my tummy in bu t I ca n' t get myself to lis ten."
she says. "So it's still slump, slump , slump ."
Writer· George Plimpton, who's tried his hand at boxing,
foot ball. and myriad other adve ntures, want s to broaden his
horizons even further. His resolution: " Try something I've

HELPING CHARITY: Weatherman Willard Scott , and
count ry comedian Jerry Clower are doing their bit for charity .
The "Today" show weatherm a n showed up in Boston wearing a
fur -trimmed Santa 's ha t Monday and recited " The Night Befor~
Christmas" under the direction of conductor John Williams.
The occasion was a benefit that ra ised more than $400,000 for
the Boston Symphony Orchestra and the Boston Pops. As for
Clower. he's getting involved in distributing the surplu s from a
Florida clothing ~]rive. T he clothes will go to th e needy in
Tenn essee and Mississippi. Clow·er's home state.
LA CK OF FUNDS: Joseph Papp's New York Shakespeare
Festival is canceling three non-Shakespeare plays because of a
cas h shortage. The ca nceled works are "Berlinale" by m6vie
direcTOr Paul Schrader. "Investigation of a Murder in El
Salvador " by Charles Mee a nd two one-ac t plays by August
Strindberg.
"We knew that we were li ving on borrowed time." Papp said .'
"This is literally a shortage of enough money unless we dip into
the e ndowment. Everytime you dip in to the endowm ent. you
take away the possibility of the income th at you deri~e from th e
endowment. " Papp's plans to pu t on all of Sha k'e speare's works
are not enda ngered. however.
NO HOPE FOR DAMONE AND STONES: Vic Damone's
kidney stones prevented him and hi s wife. Diahann Carroll,
from leaving Monday on Bob Hope's Chris tmas tour to U.S.
military bases in the Pacific. the Ind ia n Ocea n and the Persian
Gulf. To make up for their absence. Hope added Connie Stevens
and her daughters Tricia Fisher . 19, and Juely Fisher , 20. to an
entourage that also inc ludes Barbara Eden. Phyllis D!ller a nd

•T·SHIRTS
•JER.SEYS
•GYM BAGS
•SOCKS
~
•BASKETBALLS~~
•FOOTBALLS
•BALL CAPS .~
~
tGIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE! ,

::r.t:

Wishing You A Merry Christmas~
and a Happy New Year/

never done before."

GLIMPSES: Eddie Murphy's box-offi ce hit "Raw" received
a n "R" rating only after conside ra ble editin g to delete some of
explosions of expletives. But hard-core fa ns ca n see and hear
the uncut version when it co mes out on vid eocassette ... Ralph
Yarborough, 84. the form er Texas senator and liber a l light,
underwent heart bypass surger y Tuesday in Austi n. He was in
sta ble cond ition after the three- hour operat!Of\ ... D•me Peggy
Ashcroft , considered by many to be Britain's greatest living ·
stage actress, celebrated her 80th birthday Tuesday th~ way she
has handl ed her stardom for 61 years- privately. But a vtrtual
rollcall of the Briti sh theater took over London 's Old Vic theater
Sunday night for an unmatched tribute to Ashcroft. ·

OPEN CHRISTMAS EVE TIL
CLOSED DEC. 26TH

·3

-

high-tech researc h and develop·
mentofficewhocalishimself"an
average American over 40 who
tries to stay in shape," sa id he
has no rescue experience.
''I'm j~st so glad he is alive."
Dobbs said of Paulding. " I Just
co uldn 't watch the guy drown. I
think r jumped tnto th ewate rout
of self-defense. 1 wouldn' t have
been a ble to live wi th myself if he
had drowned a hd I had done

The unoccupied ca r. pulled
from the Potomac, had Virginia
license plates but did not have a
current safety inspection tag.
po lice sa id . u.s. Parks Po lice
said th ey did not know whether
Paulding will be charged wi th
any traffic violations.

communist China': FRESNO,
Ca lif. (UP!) - A churc h is
defyi ng the city by refusi ng to
take down posters inviting the
needy to a free Christm as Eve
dinner , saying the disobedi&lt;jllce
is "like smuggling Bibles into
communist China."

8 AM. Unttl NOON !ATURDAY

&lt;lOSfD SUNDAY
!"''.'" "'•• Qol ••• ., ""'"""""'"'"'''':'"

I

..........,,..,., ..... .
,',',,'',";.·,:.:;.;:. ............... ,..,...... ,_,
. ~. '.'.:,··.~~:..::;: ..: '" '"'" ....... ·( '"'
.,.,.. '"''""""" '" "'''' '" ''""" w ••.
.. ' ., "'""' ""'" .....,.
.'

~··

fi · · -. . ,..., , •••• - · " ' "

In nursing home

I '"'" "''"'""'''''''

KatieGuthofPomeroy isnowa
patient at Americare-Pomeroy
Hea lth Care Center, ha ving been
taken there following treatment
at Veterans Memorial Hospi ta l.

Receives degree
Brett Allen Hart, 2$519 Oak
Grove Road, Racine, received
his master of education degree at

~~wli~~~~re~~"1'::,~~c~~~~~sl~:

held on Dec. 19 at Anderson
Arena.

$1 . 99

1
tl!

•

t;

!
I(

M
. OM PERRY'S

fi
fi

SMORGASBOARD

~

R

W

tl!

~ WE WILL CLOSE ON THURSDAY, DECEMBER 24TH

I!

i
Itl!

AT 2

pM

··

tt!

AND R

I(

ii

EOPEN ON SATURDAY,
DECEMBER 26TH AT 6 A.M.

tl!

~

!

TREAT YOURSELF TO OUR NEW YEAR'S
EVE FEAST ON DECEMBER 31ST,
3 P;M.-9 P.M.

:

I(

tl!

I(

1
1
il
I
~
I

~

oo &gt;OUR~

o&gt;•

·~ .~

0-11 MIIUH II ··

W~lll

I(

I

CRAB LEGS, CLAM STRIPS, FROG LEGS, COD
FISH, CATFISH, SHRIMP SCALLOPS, OySTERS,
ONION RINGS, HUSHPUPPIES, PLUS MUCH,

!=

.

W

MUCH MORE.

$6 99

W

OUR LOW PRICE

tl!

.

I(

MOM PER~~~~-~~2~1iASBOARD

I 138 WASHINGTON STREET

1

~

i

RAVENWWOOD , WV

·i::tl!l:i:~!flal!l:i:-~!fla lal!l:i:~ l!l:i:~~~~~~~ !Ia I:S:.&lt;I&lt;II!I:i:~ .

..

In

11 1111

11&lt;»

01 011

OIGQO

IOAU
IIOAY.

01 01;1
OUOil

o1J (I&gt;

O)IGO
OH DCI

1 IIOOOI T~

03:1.111)

--

UIOO
I f! 1&lt;1

'

OR DINANCE NO.1 188-87
An Ordinance to EstAblish
Sal arieS for Village Officials.
Be 'it ordai n ed by the
Council oi the Village of
Middleport as follows :
Sec. I. That ~illage council
nrembers shall be paid $25.00
per council meeting. ~p. to a
maximum of 24 meettngs per
year. .
Sec 11. That v~lage council
pres"'ent shall be paid $30.00
pet council meeting, ~p to a
maximum of 24 meettngs per
year
Sec. 111 . That village Board
of Public Affairs members
s hall be paid $15 .00 per
meeting up to a maximum of
12 meetings per year.
Sec. IV . This Ordinan ce
shall take effect and be in
force from and after the earliost date as p·r ovided by law ,
Passed the 14th day of
Decembor, 1987.
Altest: Jon P. Buck , Clerk
Dewey Horton ,
President of Council

{121 23, 30 .

'. BILL SLACK

61'4-992-2269

second .

The 10-11-year-old boys' co mpetition saw Rio Grande Elementa ry's Tommy Morgan best Mike
Donn ally of . Wash in g t on
Elementary.
·
Alicia Ward of Addav!ile Elem enta r y was the winner in the

10-11 -year-old girls' event. leaving second place , to Ge nn ie
Tu cce rl of Rio Gra nd e
Elementary .
Was hin gto n. E l ementary's
Ru ssell Sargent placed firs t in
the lO-ll-year-old competiii on.
while Joe Justi ce - of Bidwell
Porter took second place.
The 8'9-year-old girls' contest
was won by Whitney Has twell of
Green Elementary. Rio Grande
Elementary's Beth Vol! bor n was
th e runner- up .

____ ..

.,., _... .., .... ,_
u-•-•••
:14-··-~: : ~ ~..":;':;,:.,

..

.... . ...
.1 --·. . ..........
........... 1 • • _ .
U - U.-

10 - II .. IeiO"'

1he

::.::~':1.

:'.:"'~~::

Public Notice

ORDINANCE NO . 1187-87
An Ordinance to provide
additional compensation for
village employees for 1987.
Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport as follows:
Sec. I. That for the year

1987 the Village shotl poy

each full -time employee in
the active employment as of
De cember 15 , 1987 in addition to all other salary and
frinOe benefits heretofore
provided the sum of Two
Hundred dollars ($200 .00 )
as additional salary.

Sec. tl . l1HAT be

~

funher

resolved that the Village shall
pay each part- time employee
in th e active employriient as
of December 15, 1987 in ad·
i:tition to all other salary fringa
tlenefit &amp; heretofore provided
the sum of One Hundred dol-

lars ($100.00) •• odd~inat so•
lary.
S~c .

Ill . This Ordinance
shall take effect end be in
forCe from and after the ear·
liest date provided by law .

Peuod the 14th dov of

__

· --·--...
· ·~--··-

··- ~-Y\'.tiR••
. 10- Mlo--o
!1- "'-00 fo l'o

Public Notice

Public Notice

December, 1987.
:Attest : Jon P. Buck, Clerk
.
Dewey Horton ,
President of Council

!121 23. 30

'

WANT ADS bring
Vacation Money
Public Notice
NOTICE Of SALE
By y_irtue of .an Order o'f
Sale tsaued out of the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County, Oflio, in the
case off Bank One, Ath ens,
N . A .; Plaintiff, against
Ricky L. Murphy, at al.,
Defendants, upon a judo·
mant therein rendered, be-

ing Coso No. 87-CV-73 In

$4,700.00 .

Terms of Sale: Cash.
· The real estate cannot be
sold for les s than two-thirds
of the appraised value .
Howard E. Frank,

said Court, I will offer for

' · S herltf of

sale, at the front door of the
Court House in Pomeroy ;
Meigs County , Ohio , on the

Meigs CoUnty, Ohio

!11) 25; 1121 2, ·9, 16, 23,
5tc

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. _

z

417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

~ Licensed Clinical Audiolo_g ist
~ (6141 446-7619 or (614) 992-2 104

985-3561

All Makes

•Washers •D;shwasheos
•Ranges •Reh;ge.ators

or at
Veterans Memarial Hospital

Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy. Ohio

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE
1974 Chevrolet Van- fprmer emergency squad
vahicle.
Racine Village Clerk Jane
Beegle will receive SEALED
BIOS until 6 P.M . Monday,
January 4 , 1988, for t he
above described VAN . BIDS
will be opened at 7 :30P.M .
Monday , January 4 f 1988,
during thEf village council
meeting .
· Council reserves the right
to reject any or all bids.
The vehicle may be seen
during day hours BA to 3P by
co nta cting Street Commissioner Glenn Rizer at the
water building.
'

BIDDERS PLEASE MARK
ON ENVELOPE " BID FOR
EMERGENCY SQUAD
VAN ".

Jane G . Beegle. Clerk

(121 16, 23, 30. 3tc
6 Lost and Found

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO
10-9-tln

J&amp;L
INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURN~CES

•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES
PH. 992-27 72
1-13-'87-1 mo.

DON'T LET YOUR ELEC TRICAL 'PROBLEMS BECOME A SHOCK TO YOU!
CAll

FAMILY PET

Middleport

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

RIGGS CREST SUBClVISION - Really Nice! Split
foyer ho me with 4-5 bedrooms all in exceiienl condition Ga rage, nice ·lot. W.B.
hook-"P- $~4.900 . 00.
POMEROY - Trailer only, '"
go&lt;Xi condilin. 1973 12'x60'
pius underp1nmng and new
Iron! porch. WANT $4,900.00.
MICCLEPORT -- PRICE
RECUCEC ,- 2 bedrooms,
large lot: bath, Iron! porch.
all on one floor. OWNER
WANTS SALE' $14,000 00.
POMEROY - Older ·2 sto-y
home w/gorgeous wood\'rak
fireplace and nice cabinas. 3
bedrooms. huge iamily room
eq"ipped k~chen. Much More!
$39,900.00.

ST. RT. 33 - About4 miles
to Co"nty Road 14. Approx.
25 acres of of vacant
ground. Approx. 8 acres
pastu re. Good build1ng site
WANT $11 ,000 00.

LETART - 3 bedroom trame ·
home with al "min um sid1ng.
Large rooms , workshop, car. port. Close to schools. Nice
lot. Garden area. ASKING
$23.000.00.
CREW ROAD - POMEROY
- Really n1ce split Ioyer
home. 3-4 bedrooms m a
great neighborhood. FinIShed basemen t on a large
· I \1 acre lot. $49.500.00.
H£NRY E. ClHAND, JR •. 997- bJf~l
Jl4N TRUSSELL ............ 949- 2660

DOTTIE TURN ER ........... '!'q2- S692
TRACY RIFrt{ .............. 949- 3080
OFFICE ......................... 9'J2- 22S~

- rn
~~ -

~

R!AlTOR

•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK
Phone Day or Evenings

985 -4141

GENERAL CONTIACTORI
Ref91en ces

11-3·ttn

992-3410

Early

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - S~ND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tfc

THE DABBLE SHOP
Middleport, Ohio

GOING ON NOW
PLASTERCRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC .
1 2·2-'87· 1 rno pd

Tag

Your Tree

For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence
35975 flatwoods ..Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio·
2'1: miles from fiye Points.

ll-il-'87 I mo.

PIANO LESSONS

You'll Nsm Too Old
To

[eq~nf

Teaching Thompson,
Schaum. Bastien
From Beginners to

Advanced Students
Call For lnfornialion
DIANA IHLE
949-2890
1-24-'87- 1 mo. pd.
- . ',.

Basham

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259
RUTLANC - 2 bedroom
home pn a level lot. Rental
1nvestment as 11 rs now
rented or a nice c01y home.
Walking d1s!ance to sh opping. $13.900.00.

CHESTER , OHIO
•H OME Bt!ILOING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS

CHRISTMAS
TREES

12· 7· '87 tfn

FIRE DEPT.

608
E. Ma;nolooWii~loloi-

MARCUM
,
CONTRACTING

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

lf2 PRICE SALE

Insured/licensed

992-2791.

co.

SIDING
I
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Culls
3· 11 -tln

D&amp;C ELECTRIC

LOST: COCKAPOO

groun~s.

BISSELL

~;a'Sf'-

REWARD
Black &amp; White. Brown
collar and flea collar.
Rocksprings Rd., fair-

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATI ON

·• IS FOR SALE
If interesled stop by.

Ron Diles or
G~ry Cummins
992-6226

1 STORY'S RUN ROAD - 3
bedroom ranch home with a
l2'x65' 3 bedroom mobile
30th day of December,
home lhat rent s lor $210/ mo.
1987 at 10:00 O'Clock
Garage workshop most~ lmA .M . the following lands and !
lshed. 2'h acres. $35,000.00.
tenements, to-wit;
· Situated in the Township
of Orange. County of Meiifs
and State of Ohio, bounded
and described as follows :
Lot No. 3 in the tow.n of
Martinsville. and recorded
as such in Volume 1 in the
Book of Plats for said
County at ,Pages 16 &amp; 17.
REFERENCE is made fo
deed from Edna lamp to
Ricky Murphy and .Connie
Murphy, dated August 13,
1984, and recorded in Volume 294, Page 21 , Meigs
County Dee" Aecords .
Said parcel appraised at

~

4 5·Ut;

MIDDLEPORT - Nicely remodeled l 1h story home on a
quiet street. 3 bedrooms,
fr ont porch, storage build·
ing: Mu st See! $19,900.00.

..__
...
,,,,_
,,_,.............
,.... . .

Television listening Dev ices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ....,;,.1
A
,, Hearing Evaluations For All ges·
""

WI SEll USED APPLIANCES

~

~.vver

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.
POI't'iROY- 985-3561
KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

•Dryers •Freezers

Portland Elementary took the
honors . while Sa ra Cre mea ns of
Rio Grande E lement ary was

000 00

following t elep#wne uchan gc1 ...

Public Notice

Per Pickup Load
Delivered

the 12-13-year-old girls'

.,_,
... .........
..... _.,........... .... . ........... .... .....
ClaA••'f ied pa8e5

$3 500

competition, Christie Cooper of

I I . WO~DI

u m

OI&lt;Il

~~~~·~.

r~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~ - ~~~~~~~

~

"IGHT TU ESO.O,Y
531 JACKSON PIKE·RT 35 WEST .
DECEMBER tB thru 24
~===.;;:::::;;::!'~"""~
' t~h" THURSDAY:

The game scheduled for East er n was cancelled at the request
of the ~Eastern coaching staff
beca use of the labor dispute in
the Meigs School Distraict.

"" •.•• ,., •• , ......... c ..........

.I
BARtA!"

the young Spartans 32-29. Held
scoreless in the fir st qua rter and
down 6-17 at halftime, the Little
Marauderettes outscored Al ex 19
to 8 In the last two frames to knot
the xcore at 25 and th en canned 7
points to the Spartan's 4 in the
overtime period to ?PI the win.
Kelly Smith wa s Jvl eigs' lead·
ing scorer with 16. Jenn ifer
Taylor canned 8, Amy Rouse hit
for 6 and Amy Wagner a nd
Shannon Newsome had one eac h.
Scoring for Alexarlder wa s
Skinner with 14, Ma ce 7. Runyon
5 and Fletcher 3.

'

r::::::::::::::::::::::;::;~::;::;~::;;:;;;:;;;;;:-jlI

MATINm oArLv- All sEAr s s1.5o

·~""'"' .......

'

•o~ • •
JOAU

locust. Oak, Cherry

runner -up.

RATES

MONDU th•u fRIDU 8 A.M. to ~ P.M.

1

nothing."

out an overtime ·~ ictory downing

TO PlA&lt;E AH AD CAU 992-1156

'

No thanks lor rescuer: WA SHINGTON iUPT) - A jogger
jumped into the Potomac River
and saved a man whose car
plunged into the chilly water. but
the driver quickly walked away
without so much as saying thanks
ro his rescuer. witnesses said.
Wearing on ly running s hoes.
shorts and a T-shirt. Bruce
Dobbs : 46. jumped in and helped
the driver. Scott Paulding, out of
rhe brown Toyota Tuesday as it
quickly sank about 25 feet off the
Virginia shore. witnesses said.
i'&lt;~ulding, 20, fled to the Lincoln
Mrmol'ial. police sa id . Authori ties met the Alexandria. Va ..
rrsident there and took him to
George Washington Hospital.
'where he was in fatr condition .
The car, heading northwest on
the George Washington Parkway, entered the river about 300
yards south of 'the Memorial
Bridge. The car sank almost
immediately, and when Paulding's feet touched ground again
with Dobbs's help, he rapidly
walked away .
" lie dldn 't eve n thank the
guy." a witness said.

The Marauder reserves pulled

The a nnual " Hoop Shoot"
contest, featuring elementarysc hoo l student s from Gallia a nd
Meigs Co un ties in Ohio and
Mason County in West Virginia,
was held Sa tur day In th e GAHS
gym .
David Hager, Jr ., of BidwellPorter Elementary, won in the
12-13-yea r-old boys' category,
while So uthwester n Elementar y's Jamie Morse was the

P.M.

0

Quirks in the news ______._________;,__

E wing was held scoreless bu t
chalked up three assists while the
remaining te am members had
two each.
Scoring for Meig&amp;: Sto bart
4-0-0-8; Woods 3-0-1-7; Taylor
4-0-6-14; Fry 5-0-0-10; Wright
3-1-2-11.
Sco ring lor Alexander: Kieffer
5-0-5-15; Peterson 1-0-0-2; Ca r ruthers 3-0-1-7; L'Heure ux_1,0·1·
3; James 6-0-4-16; J effer s 1-0-911.

Shelly Stobart led: the Mei!ls
1eam in rebounds wtth 13 whtle
.Jody Taylor grabbed 8 and
Wendy Fry pulled down 6.
, Tammy Wright had 8 steals for
Meigs. plus three assists. Bet h

FIREWOOD

Hoop shoot
wtnners
are

'

Despite a balanced scoring
at tack with three players hitting
double figure s, the Meigs Girls
varsity dropped to third place in
tile TVC race, losing to the Lady
Spartans of Alexa nd er 54-50.
Federal Hocking remains the
TVC leader. undefeated, fol lowed by Nelso nville York and
Alexan der with one loss each and
Meigs - with two conference
losses. r.
Five players. three from Alexa.nd(&gt;I'~ an·tr~heliy Stobart and
Tammy Wr ight of Meigs, all
were sent to the -bench in the
fourth quarter as the result of
five personal foul s each. Meigs
was assessed 25 personals and
the Spa rta ns were whistled fo r 22
infract ions during the evening.
The Spartans were a ble to
capita lize on theirechances from
the charity stripe as they hit20o(
:11 tries 164 percent) whil e the
Marauderct tcs hit only 8 of 28 fo r
a very cool 28 percent. which
proved to IJe the difference at the
final buzzer. The Meigs girls hit
:l3 percent on field goa ls. s inking
21 of 6~ attempts.

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

Cancelled
POMEROY - The December
meeting of the Meigs. Co unty
Democratic Executive Co mmil ·

The Aggles are toug h on defense,
Miami, NBC·TV, Friday, Jan. 1,
which could trouble No. 14 No tre
8 p.m. EST.
Dame's running . Helsman
This is the premier game of the
winner Tim Brown of N. 0. should
season. All the marbles go to the
be ready. The Hoople System
winner, Over the past three
sees a mild upset. with the Irish
years, 1985, '86 and '87, Ok lawinning. 31 -25.
homa , now No . 1, has y.-on 33
Fiesta Bowl: Florida State
games and lost only tw o- BOTH
(10-1) vs. Nebraska (10-1), at
to MlamL For the No. 2 HurriTempe, Ariz., NBC-TV, Friday,
canPs, coa ch Jimmy Johnson' s
Jan. l , 1:30 p.m. EST.
three-year record is: 31-3. Can
The No. 3 Florida State Semi·
the Hurricanes put the hpx on
noles, whose only loss was a
coach Barry Switzer and his
thrill er , 26-25, to No.2 Miami, go . Sooners three years running?
against No. 5 Nebra ska , whOs e Will Miami drop a big bowl game
only defeat came at th~hands of, three years in a row? The Hoople
No ," 1 Oklahoma, 17-7. There Is
Hunch Is Oklahoma, 28-24.
almost no way to choose between
Hall of Fame Bowl: Michigan
these two on offense and defense.
(7-4) vs. Alabama (7-4), at
We' re callin g it for Florida State, Tampa Fla., NBC-TV, Saturday,
2J-25.
Jan . 2, 1 p.m. ES'I'.
Sugar Bowl: Syracuse (11-0)
The teams are as evenly
vs. Auburn (9-I ), atl\lew Orleans,
marched as the ir records. StranABC-TV, Friday, Jan. I, 3:30
gely. Alabama and Michigan
p.m. EST.
havenever met on .the gridiron.
The No. 4 Syracuse Orange- But Alabama is making its
men were the biggest surprise of record 40t h bowl appearance and
1987 . All-American QB Don
Mich iga n is notching its 19th.
McPherson wouldn 't let th em With s uper RB Bobby Humphrey
lose. The No. 6 Auburn War showing the way, the Hoop le
Eagles, SEC champs, have a n System sees Alabama winni ng,
excellcn I passer in Jeff Burger- 30-29.
'
and a stout defense. On momenP each Bowl: Tennessee (9-2·1)
tum, Syracuse, hopi ng for a · vs. Indiana (8-3), at Atlanta,
national crown if Oklahoma and 1\lizlou-TV, Saturday, Jan. 2, 1
Miami tie, Is our choice, 28-24, in p.m. EST.
a classic struggle.
Hi gh-scoring Tennessee. No.
·Rose Bowl: Michigan State 15, stumbled in mid -season, but
(8-2-1) vs. Southern Cal (ll-3) , at
wo n its last four con tests. lnd iPas.adena, Calif., NBC-TV, Frl· ana tied for second in th e Big
day, Jan. 1, 5 p.m. EST.
Ten. Watch for s tandout perforA rematch for No. 8 Mi chi gan maces from UT passer Jeff
State, the Big Ten winner, and Fr.a ncis and Indi ana's Allthe No. 16 Trojans , the Pac-10 America receiver, Ernie Jones.
titl ehold er. In their '87 opener,
In a crowd-pleaser, it's Tennes· the Spartans,' playing at home.
see, 36-30.
turned back USC, 27-13. Now look
for QB Rodney Peete and hi s
Troj an sta lwarts to out-point
All -American RB Lorenzo While
and his traveling. Spartans. I t's
•
usc. 30-27.
Orange Bowl: Oklahoma (11-0)
vs. Miami of Florida (11-0), at

Meigs girls_lose to · Alexander

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

MIDDLEPORT ~ Christm as
Eve services at Middleport First
Baptist Church will be held
Thursday at 7 p.m.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Ohio

Business Services

By Maj. Amos B Hoople
Fei\rless Forecaster
Egad, friends! For the second

will

·,.

Pomeroy-

, Count on Sooners to reach the top fr=::~~:::::trr=::::;.======:::::;-r;;::=:::==::;::::==;::===t

Books will be audited on New beth Hayes, Sadie Trus$ell, 1-'au Year's Day at 1 p.m at the home . line Ridenour, Opal Hollon, .Ada
of Helen Wolf. At the next regular Morris.
Betty Ro ush. Betty Young, Jo
meeting members are to wear
white for the draping of the Ann Baum, Susan Ba um , Mae
charter for Edna Reibel. At that McPeek, Ada Bissell. Harien
Ballard. Alta Ballard , Cora Beebe installed.
time officers
~tty Denny , Nettie Hayes,
.
gle,
Attending the dinner party
were Mary Holter. Everett Shirley Beegle, Lill ian DemosGrant. Marcia Keller, Thelma key , Inzy Newell. Laura Mae
White, Charlotte Grant, Sandy Nice, Beulah Maxey, Eva RobWhite, Dawna "Grueser, Faye son, Iva · Powell, Genevieve
Kirkhart, Doris Grueser, Helen Ward, Doris Koenig, Margaret
Wolf. Erma Cleland. Lora Dame· Amberger. Margaret Tuttle, Eiwood, Zelda Wber, ~ ut h Smith, lee n Martin, Julie Curtis,.Bonnle
Ethel Orr, Esthe r Smith , Eliza - Landers, Go ldie Frederick. and
Todd Bissell.

,,;:!!: ,:, .,,. '

23, 1987

Har-rumh!

Council has meeting

A holida y dinner and program
highlighted the recent meeting of
Chester Council 323, Daughters
of America, held at the hail.
The refreshment committee
·hosted the dinner with turkey and
all the trimmings being served.
Betty Roush had the blessing.
· There was a carol sing and
readings including, "Because"
by Goldie Frederick. "Would
You " by Susan Baum, "The
Night Before Christmas" by
Lora Damewood, "The 23rd
Channel " by Eva Robson , "No
Room· in the Inn" by Margaret
Amberger, "The Meaning of
Christmas" by Julie Curtis, "The
Shepherds Story" by Inzy Newell,' 'Memori es of Christmas by
Dawria Grueser. "December" by
Marcia Keller , "A Special Time"
by Todd Bissell. "Old Folks Are
People" by Thelma White,
:·God's Gift Upon a Tree" by Eva
Robson. "Gimmlcs" by Jo Ann
Baum.
Margaret Tuttle, councilo r,
presided at the meeting with the
Chr istian and American flag and
the Lord' s ·Prayer being given In
unison. The 33rd Psalm, verses
1-5 were read.
'
Reported · ill were Dorothy
Ritchie a patient in Mt. ,Carmel
West, Letha Wood, In the Extended Care Uni t at Veterans
Memorial Hospital. and Thelma
McManis recuperating from a
broken hip at Kimes Nursing
Home, Athens. Cards of appreci·
a lion were read from the families
of Edna Reibel and Mary
Easterday.

December

6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke'
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10· 7- tfn

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTTERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOM E
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREE ESTIMA TIS

CALL 949-2969

11· 21·'87·1 mo.

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

$2$00

$S.OO Extra
For Skinning

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

949-2734
11 · 27•' 87 1 mo. pd.

FOR RENT
VILLAGE GREEN
APTS
2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. laundry
facilities available.
E.O.H.
992-3711
11 · 23·'17 I mo. pd.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"Af Rea1anable Prices"
PH. 949-2801

or

949-2860
Day or Nighl
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tln

BINGO
EAGlES ClUB - POMEROY, OH .
THURS.:7 PM -EB 6:4S

20 Hard Cord Gam~J
$50 per gum~
OVIR II 0 PEOPLE

US

per gam~

(onr-AII 1~111111fll 111 ldr"'lloo"

1 Hard Cards FRH
with this ad onrl purchOit
of minimum pad1 age.
Limit 1_ per tustomlf ptr

Bmqo snsion.

L1 1. ~OOJ - 01 hp. 211'1/81

PUBLI(

I~VlTEO

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES
Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine .
WEBER FARM
Rutland, Ohio
742-2143
11-3-87-1 mo.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authorized John Deere,

New Holland, Bu•h Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer
Farm Equipment
Partr &amp; Service
1-3-'86 ttc

~

v.w~ ·

.PARTS
NEW AND USED

WIDE
SELECTION
All MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315
12-4-'87-1 mo. d.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Siorm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windo w s
•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
11·13-'87-1 mo.

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
At. 124 Across from
Happy H ollow Rd.

RUTLAND

614-742-2355
12/ 14 / 1 mo.

Roger· Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR ·
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682

or

992-7121
6-17-tfc

------~-

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middlepon. Ohio

1 -13 -tfc

YOUNG'S

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
. New location:

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE·
We Carrv Fishfng Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE I

(6t41

992- bSSD
RIStO IN(( PHONE
t6141 9n7H4
I· ?~11!n

CARPENTER
SERVICE
Addons and dmodelrng
Aoolmg ro .d gutter work
C oncrr.c work
Ph•• •IJII19 \l,nd elccl rical
work

(Free Est ima tes)

YOUNG Ill
qq2 -62 15 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

V. C.

415 '86tr

�Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

41

LAFF-A-DAY

CLASSlHEO ADS
asupermarket
tor everything

Homes for Rent

3 BR . hou• near Patrkn Call

apt. in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilit ies, deposit reqUired

Call

614-992-5113. 614-992-6723
or 614-992-2509
5 ·00, please

IN THE MEIGS AREA
CALL 992-2156

Announcements

"I was a personnel manager."

21
11

3 female. 1 malepanlrtshS ett er
and part Golden Retnever Call
6 14- 992 -3614
Ki ttens t o good homes on ly
M ilc ed Col ors. Call 614 ~8 43 5445.
La b and Doberman puppies All
bl ack looklik elab. Free togood
ho me 61 4-9 49-238 2
614 -

One Au strahan 's hepherd 8
week· old pup, f emale. cute and
loves childr en, 304 -773-5696.
Small Rat Tarrter, 7 mo nth s old,
pho ne 3 04 -675 -1 273 aft e r
4 00 pm
Small bob tailed house dog.
Beh1nd A&amp; A Mkt Hart fo rd . WV

6 Lost and Found
LO ST In Kroger's on D ec 6 t h·
Wh it e gol d ring wrth Ruby
sett in g Wtth 6 small d1amonds.
Reward If fo und call 614 -446 2 68 9

FOUND: Small short hmred
whlt e &amp; bl ack female dog. Bl ack
eye patches Call 614 -446 ·
4646
LOST: Wtr e Wh eel Co·Je r en
vactntty of Spruce Street &amp; First
Ave . • Sunday, Dec. 20th If
tou nd · p le ~t s e c all 614 -4461255. Eve's.
LOS T: l adi es gl asses between
Su parAmcrica- Pine St &amp; Oflio
Vallev Bank Gray Cordaroy
case Reward Call 614 -446 -

e50 e.
FO U N O: Chsc n of key s includ1n9
autom obile. Fair fiel d Chu rch Ad .
Ca ll 61 4-37 9 -2 732
lost . black and tan m ale an d
femal e Coon Hou nds Ne ar
Ru tl and Rew ard for informa t ion Ca11614 -742- 2521 .
Foun d coi n purse in Pomeroy
Friday afternoon. Brl).ught t o
Sentinel Oftc ce
los1· 2 young female Be agiM
St l\lfH&amp;vdle area. 614 - 843 54 03
lost H1 ckory Chapel are a, Uttl e
lon g- h air¢ dog, ba•ge. Sengi
65 0 rew ard. Jim Barnett. 304 675 - 3536

7

Yard Sale

.... ·Gallriiiitis...... ·
&amp; Vicinity
Gallipoli s Flea Ma rk et - Form er
Thaf8f G11ragtt-R t s. 35 &amp; 1 SOOp en Sat urd ays Bo. Sundil\l s.

9-5

Publ ic Sal e
&amp; A uction

lmude Fl ea M kt, old A rbuckle
Furnitu re Store, Sat and Sun,
sellers welcome

9

Help Wanted

Giveaway

Pu ppiM · Pan Beagle to g iv e
awa\1 . Call 614 -446 -3969

8

Financial

Employment
Services

I will M t b e res-pons •ble for any
debts contra cted for by anyone
ot her t ha n my sel f. Edward
RAmsbUijl

Pu ppies, Pu ppies, Pupp1es· 11 ,
on\1 col or- wh 1t e. golden, bla ck,
etc Cali 614-446 -7025 .

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash tor late m odel clean
used cars
Jim Mmk Ch'ev ·Oid s Inc
Bill Gene John son
61 4 -446-367 2
TOP C ASH patd f or ' 93 modal
and newer used ~ars . Smith
Buick Pontiac, 19 11 Eastern
Ava .. Qal!tpolls Call 614 -446 2282
WA N TED TO BUV: U~;ed w ood
&amp; t:oal heilter5. Sw11tn's Furniture. 3rd. &amp; Oltve St Galltpohs
Ca ll 614-44 6 -3 159.
Buying da1ly gold , silver cotns,
rcngs, jaw~lry , sterli ng w er e, ol?
coms. large currenC\1 To p pr.ces Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Ave Middleport, Oh . 6 14-

The Village of Rio Grande is now
ac cept ing resume ' &amp; and llll1en
of mterest for the posttion ot
Clerk of Court!. Interested persons must ba a vill~e resident
and must be bondable letters
and resume ' s can be sent to.
Village of Rio Grande, c/ oAng1e
Se agraves. Clerk. P .0 8011 343,
Rio Grande. Oh1o 45674. Must
be recetved by December 3 1,
1987
"F riends Retail Corp" of Gr~llt·
polis. Ohio 'seeks a competent
sal f:IS person to work tn Ch1ld·
ran' s Cloththg Store. Must be
highly mottvated and LOVE
wotking INtth children Send
resume to · Friends Retail Corp .
P 0 . Bo.11 981. Gallipolis. Oh1o
45631

304-882-2566.

Furnished Rooms

Be in demand Food serv1ce
workers make up one o.f ttte
largest and fastest growing
occupattonal groups in the labor
fore-a Enrotl now for winter
quarter in the Adult Food
Manag ement and Catermg Pro·
gram at The Adult Education
Center--Tri·COunty Vocational
School We hii'Ve a vartety of
funding sources ava1laPle for
tho se who qualifv' . Call 7533511 e.llt 14.
Part 1ime i nsurance cl erk ·
recept ionist for busy med1cal
office Send resume to The Daily
Sentlnet. Box 729M , Pomeroy.
Ohio 45?69 .
Government Jobs 816 .040 ·
$59.230 year. Now Hiring . Your
Area. 805 -687-6000 Ext. R·
9 805 for current Federal list
The Meigs local School D1str1ct
ts accept ing applicattons for
substitute teachers Substitutes.
are needed tn all certification
areas The dally rate of pay
$125 Scttoola are open and a
temporary restraining order JS in
effect . Ohio Certifu'ld Tuchers
willing to cross a picket line
should 1mmediatley contact
Meigs local School Superin·
tendents office. 621 South Third
Ave M iddleport , Ohio . 45760.
614 -99 2- 215 3
AVON • All areas. Call Martl\ln
Weaver 304 -882 -2645
MOM AND DAD : let the Army
Nat tonal Guard help pay lor \lOUr
child's co llege edu c ation. Call
304·675· 3950 or 1-B00 -642·
3619
PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
means elltra money for members
, of t he Army National Guard Call
304-675 -3950 or 1-800· 6423619 .
Secreta ry recepttonist 1or doc·
t ors offi ce Send r asume Box
C-16, Care o f Pt Pl. Regtster,
2 0 0 Main St Pt PI , WV
Re e1l verv Room Staff Nurse
Immediate openmg tor RegiS·
tar ed Staff Nurse In recover,o
roo m . P.R.N . bas it. Salary comm ensurate w ith expertence .
Co ntact Geoff Polen , D1rec1or of
Personnel Phtasant Vall"t' Hospital, Vallfl'l Dr1ve. Point Pleasa nt. W .V. 26660. 304 6764 3 40 ex t 307. AA · EOE .

12

Two 2 -bedroom house nailers. 1.
all electric, 1 fuel orl S160
montt"t plus ut1httes 304 -676-

40aa.

12ll65 Shulu, acre ground,
furnished or unfurnishB:d with or
without satelite system, price
negot iable. 304-676-2192 .

44

46 Space for Rent
ll ·~

Steel bu1ld1nfl dealershtp wtth
major manufaCiurer- Salos and
Engineering support. Starter ads
furmshed Some areas taken
Call (303)769 -3200 &amp;.111 .2401

apt. next to ltbrary
One profe5aionai adult Only.
Parkmg Call 614-446-0338

23

Professional
Services

Bob Cline Ta.lltderm\1. Member
W . Va. Tu.idermy Assoc. Rt . 2
Box 782, Po1nt Pleasant, W Va
30,4-675-1448

676-6104
Furn~shed

Nice 1 BR . apt . Near HMC . No
pets Stove. refrtg . drapes
8225 a mo Ref required. Call

31

Homes for Sale

4 BR .. f1replace. full basement 3
mi so of Gallipolis. S34, 900
Call Da\IS· 6)4-446-161 5, after

5,oo- 446-1244.

Brand new 3 BR . ne'\~ Gallipolis
LD&lt;:ks on Rt . 7. 2 car garage, nic.:e
lot. lmmed1ate pouesston W1U
con11der trade in of Mobile
home, property, etc. Bargam
pr1ced Call 614-446 ·9038
2 bedroom. 2 baths, 2 car
garage, I&amp;Yel lot on Rt 33
Sw1mming pool, satelita, close
to Meigs High Call 614·992 ·
3254
Government Homes for S1 (U
rpair) Delinquent tax proport\1 .
Aeposseuions . Call B05 -687·
6000 El(t GH -9805 for current
repo list .
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
$1 00 (U repair) foreclosures .
repo1, ta.11 deliquent properties.
Now selling your area Call
1-315-736 -7367 ext. 2P-WV H
for ' rrent list, 24 HAS ,
3 bedroom. 2 bath, full finished
basement, new furnace 8t cen·
tr.!ll air, garage, fenced yard, low
60 ' s 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave .

304-675-1774. .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 12.1165 Freedom 3 BR ., gas
furnace with cenual air, washerdr\l&amp;r. all kitchen appliances.
d1nette set, underpmnmg. blodt
&amp; porches Caii614-367-06B3.
1976 Beyvtow, 2 BR , fro nt den,
AC , porch &amp; awntng. Call
614 -256 -1774,
Mobile home for sale 12x60
Call614 -992- 3160.
For sale or ront · 4 mobil ehomes.
One 3 bedroom. three 2 bad·
rooms 614-742-3033 No pets
New 1988 Country Villa .
14x72 All electnc "Already set
up on River fro nt lot. 614 -992 3348 .

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial bu ildings for leas e
Downtown Pt . Pleasant Stores,
offJ&lt;:es. A ·One Raal Estate.
Carol Yeager Bro ker Call 304·
675 -6104 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 , Nonh of Pomero\1 .
Ranta! trailsrs. Call 614-992·
7479
Spa ce for small trailers All
hook-ups Cable. Also effidency
rooms. air and cable. Mason,
W.Va Call 304-773· 5651
Spac1ous mobile home lots for
rent, Fam1ly Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry. 304- 675Trailer spaces for nmt. At. 1
locust Road , back of K &amp; K
Mobcle Home Park. 304 -676 1076.

49

1400 5q ft. commercial space
suitable tor off1 ces. retailing, or •
services Prtme lo cation-corner
of 2nd &amp; Pin e in Gallipolis
Ample p~rk1ng in rear 5350 per
month Call 614-446-4249 or

Furnished 4 rooms &amp; bath,
Clean. No pet&amp; Aduhs only , Ref
&amp; dep reqUired Call 614-446·
Call

Renev¥1y redecorated Very nice
apartments m downtown Gallipolis. 1 &amp; 2 BR • unfurmshed.
second floor, from 5175-$225
Dep. &amp; references required Call
eve. 614-446-2325 or 446·
4249
Furmshed upstairs· 1 BR Utcltt•es pa1d $210 a mo Dep 94
locust St. Call 614-446- 1340
Of 446 -3870.
2 BR . apt Stove &amp; refrig
furnished Near Go Mart Call
614-446 -7025
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES, 536 Jackson
Pike from 6183 a mo. Welk to
shop and movies 614 -446 3997 E 0 H
Upstairs u nfurnished apartment.
Carpeted. Utlhftes pa1d No
ch1ldran or pets Call 614-4461637
luxury Tara Apanmenu El egant. 2 Br. 2 floor. fully
carpeted, CA and heat Private
entrance. enclosed pat to, pool &amp;
playground Start - $299 per
month Uttltt ies not mduded.
Call 614 - 367 -7B50
Furmshed EffiCiency . $160.
Utilities p8id. 607 2nd. Gallipolis Share bath Calt 446- 4416
af1er 7 PM
Furnished apartment
$210
Utilit1es paid . 1 BA , 701 Fourth
AYft Galltpohs . Call 446-4416

;.~tt~o,~7~p~m~.::-:-::::::::==~J

11 Court · large apartment. 2
BR . 2 baths. w / w carpet,
complete k1tchen . S325 plus
ut1lities
23B First · Rtvar v iew· 1 BR . 1
bath, no c hildren S175 plus
utilities. All apartments-Dep &amp;
ruf. No pets Call 614 -446·
4926

New brick 2 SR ., equipped
kttct"ten, laundrv room Private
parking. No pets. Ref. &amp; dep.
Call 614 -446-1250.
New furn ished or unfurnished 1
BR , apt. near Meigs H S . Call
614· 446 ·8898 or 992 -5304

!'! 1

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FU~NITURE 62
Olive St . Galhp olis.
NEW- 6 p c. wood group- S399 .
Liv1ng room suhes- S199-S599 .
Bunk beds w ith bedding - $199 .
Full siu ma1tras s &amp; foundation
atarting · 899 . Recliners
stan1ng- $99.
USED· Beda, dressers, badroom
suites , S199 - S299 Dnks.
wringer wash or, a complete linB
o f used furniture.
NEW- Western boots- S30
Workboots $1B &amp; up. {Steel &amp;
soft toe) . Call 614 -446 -3159 .
County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Op en BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614·446 -1699. 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigerators.
ranges Skaggs Appliances .
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446 -7398
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
'
Sofas and chairs priced from
:5395 to $995 Tables S50 and
up to S1 25 H1d~a·beds $390
t o $596. Recltnors $225 to
$375 lamps S2B 10 S126.
Dinettes $109 and up to S495.
Wood table w -6 chairs S285 to
$795 Desk $100 up to $375.
Hutehes $400 and up Bunk
beds complete w -manressos
$296 and up to S395. Babv beds
51 10 Mattresses or box spnngs
f ull pr twtn $68, firm 878 , and
$ 88 Ouaen sets 5225, King
5 350 4 drawer chest $69 Gun
cabinets t) gun Gas or electric
range $375 . Baby mattresse•
536 &amp; S46 Bed frames S20,
530 &amp; Kmg frame $50 . .Good
selection of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets, headboards $30
and up t o 865
.......... ..
90 Days sam e__.as c ash wtth
approved ctpllif.' 3 Miles o ut
ulovill~ Ad . Open 9am to 6pm
Mon thru Sat. Ph 614 -446·
03 22 .
Vall&amp;y" Furmt ure
New nnd used ~urntture and
appli c an ces Call 614 -446 7572 Hours 9 -5

PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc llvtng room
su1tes, $399 . 95 , chest of
drawers-4 drawer, $48; twm
mattresses. $96 set; mi cr-owave
oven standi.
THE WORKING
MAN ' S FRIEND

Gar age apt,• Fufnishad· 1 BR
29'h Netl. Gali1pohs $ 225 utiliti es pa1d. Call 446-4416 after 7
PM

Used reconditioned washars &amp;
dryers. with guarante es. Call
6 14 -38B -8481 .

1 BR . 960FirstAve. Ref &amp;d op.
Call614 -446 ·1079

Whit e Westingho use washer &amp;
dryer. E 11. co ndttion. Less th an 2
\le an old Call 614-446 -0343

Gra cious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at V1ilog e
Manor and RNerside Apartments in Middleport. From
.S:215 . including utilities. Call
614· 992·7787 EOH

----

WANT ADS bring

Vacation Money
'

51 Household
Goods
,
Refrtgll!'ator. like new With
fcemaker. 5250 Call614-446 4051
G E. Washer A · 1 condition. Call
614-367-0322.
PICKENS USED FURNITURE Sofa' s. chain. lamps. reclin•s.
dith81, dinnette, beddtng, hid•
a-bed. glassware &amp; misc. 304-

Quasar 21 in ch color TV, S85.
Fr1g1daire refr~gerat o r, S125
Call614 -446 -1313.

Nice apt. Hudd approved. New
carpet, clean , Pt. Pleesant 614 992- 685B

27a3.

Ready m•• concrete and all
conaele supplies. Call us Valley
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304-773-6234.

53

Groom end Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming All breeds .. All
nyles. lemt Pat Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph 61 4· 446· 0231

Antiques

ANTIOilES. Bu\1 or SelL Rive ·
rine AntiQuea, H 24 East Mein
St Pomeroy Houu · MonTues.- Wed. 10 a.m . to 6 p .m .
Sun- 1 p m.· 6 p.m B\1 chence
or appoiMtment . Rust MoOte

614-992-2526.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan ' s Used T1reShop. Over
1.000tlret. slzea12.13.14. 15.
16, 16.6 . 8 millll out At 21B.
Call 614 -266·6261
Susoned Oak &amp;. Ash firewood.
Seasoned one yeer. large'1oeds

Split &amp; dol $35 C•ll 614-266·
1340 or 256 -9303, anyt1me
Tree &amp; stump. firewood . Heap
Vouchen accepted. L1ve balled
ChriStmas tUIBI, t37 60 Don' I
landscapes. 614- 448-9846.
1 - model 12 Winchester 30"
full . 1· model 48 Remington 30
" full 1 · model 31 Remington
32 " full. 1. ValiM'It 32" full solid
rib . Call 614 -446-3348.
Warm Morning Woodburner
w1th 3 tpd. blower. Good con d.
Call614·266-6413
Firewood· Se•oned Oak · split,
delivered and stacked . $36 a
very large toad . Cell 614 -446 7993.
One blcyci&amp;-Exerclse &amp; one
roller eKerclte. Both fur $100.
l1ke new C.ll614·266-1267
Movie camera w / sound, zoom.
macro. etc. Excellent condiHon.
Call 814-448- 2642

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himel.,an, Persian and
Siemeae kittens. AKC , Chow
puppi81. Call 614 -448 -3844
after 7PM .

57

Wonderful Christmas Present
Upught pteno ., good condthon
Only $200. Call P1zza Dan's at
614-742-2089 .

For SaiB:' SterB:o with 100 watt
Ptoneer receiver, 120 w•tt BIC
Venturi apaakors, Techniques
automatic turntable. Techniques
cassatte deck Also Fisher VHS
V.C .R., deluxe weight bench &amp;
weights &amp; 1 •tarter 1et of golf
dubs &amp; bag· Incomplete. Call
614 -446-4113
Mt.118d hard wood slebt $12 per
bundle Cantaining approx 1 112
ton. FOB . Ohio Pallet Co.
PomeJOy, Ohio. 614·992-646 1
Infant car seat for sale. E ~~Cell ant
condition. Call 614-992·7143.
Custom made couch . love seat.
2 chain , blege and rust velvet.
Like new 8800 firm 614· 992·

2571 .

-AU Chrtstmas Trees 112 . Come
early before cold weather. tag
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mtle above Mason
on Hengmg Rock Rd . 304 -7735371 Of 882·2BB8.
Mixed firewood. $80.00 dump
tru~ k load, delivered. 304-676·
2903.
Firewood detivered, stacked,
t36 .00 Mason Counties, Galli·
polis other areu within reason at
our dlscretton, 304-895· 3446.

SURPLUS ARMY . DENIM.
RENTAL. CARHART CLO·
THING . Original army camouflage, H. 0 . "Sam " Som~
rvllle ' s, Old " Rt
21
East -Ravenswood . Fri. Sat, Sun.
noon · 8 :00pm. 304 -273-6856.
InsUlated camouflage coveralls
$25 00 Black -White snow
camouflage .
U Haul trucks and traders for
rent, 304-876 -7421 .
Gibson eleetric guitar with
sound effects and amplfler
'200 op Compound bow wilt!
arrows $76.00 2 complete
Datsun pickup trucks for parts,
very good tires, 176 00 each.
Call 304-773-6892 ask for Ada

gets caught cheating. Joey's
;oke backfires O

72

Trucks for Sal!)

GOOD! IT'D flt ~ SI-IAMf,
1D W~KW WIIH OOW

WO.G~D NOT 10
GEl ON~ ANOTI1~R
AGl f\ RW.E,M&amp;.Rt

1982 Ford F160 long bed. 351
engine. auto. pow•r ataarklg,
power brak81J. trailer ~owing,
AM -FM radio, new ttre1, XLS
Pkg., camper also available If
wanted Cell 614 -742 -2289.

NewsHour (1 .00)
1m News
crll Moneyline Current
reports on world econom1cs
and financial news With Loo

•

Dobbs. (0 .30)
1!1@ ~ Wheel of Fortune
g ,Chaers

fJ)
74JeepCJ5 , 304motor, newU
JOints tie rods. body good

74

FRANK AND ERNEST

Motorcycles

76

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Used &amp; rebU1It transmiutons All
internally inspected &amp; guarnteed . Call 814-448 -0966. We
buy JUnk transmisSions

(!I Scholastic Sports

INSURANC£

WE &lt;"ALL li THE
tP DfPUCTlllLE", .51R,
NoT c'f\LL '(ou
_CAN 8~EAI&lt; fo[&lt;&gt;

7oo

DOLLARS': ·

MaaMy Ferguson. New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal 81 &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractor• to choose from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment largest 18lection in
S.E . Ohio. '
1973 666 lnt'i Diesel. wide
front, $3960. Late model 2400
int'l round bal.-. Nice! 83960.
1986 60 HP bulldozer, low
hours. OwnBT will finance. Call
614-286-6622.
Now , till Dec. 31 all Zea1or
tractors in ttock 10 pEifcent over
cost No trade-in. Morris Equipment. Rutland. Ohio. 614 -7422455.
BUY WHOlESALE. White tarm
Tractors at wholesale invoice
plus frei~ht .Compare the price
and quahty . Models from 16 to
180 t-Ip. Leas1ng available. Otf.good through Dec 31 Stdeu
EqUipment Co .. US 36 . Hender·
son, W Va. 304 -675·7421

62 Wanted to Buy

ALLEY OOP

Pony . saddle and bridle for sal,e.
$160 . Gentle with children Call
614-742 -2339

Hay

8t

A snow storm block 's Larry

Y'WANTA PUT 'IM

and Balk1's plans to go to
Wosconsin . (A) 0
{f) il]) A Child's Christmas

IN ... TH' CAGE,

YER HICOHIIIESSr

in Walaa

Welsh town Olds Geraint
shares memones with his
grandson.

1m 1!1@ Top ot the Pops: A
Very Special Chris1mas U2.
S1ing, Aun-D.M C and John

Services

Cougar Mellsnkamp head!ine

lh1s all star line-up of

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local referenc• turmshed.
Free est1mates Cell collect
1-614-237-0488. day or night.
Aogers8asement
Weterproof1ng
SWEEPER and sew1ng machine
repair, parts. and suppllea Pick
up and delivery. Davia Vacuum
Clean•r. one half m11• up
Georgel Creek Rd Call 614·
446·0294
RON'S Television Service .
House calls on RCA. Quazer,
GE, Spec1aling in Zenith Call
304·676 -2398 or 614 · 446·
2454.

Y'KkX).V .IT &lt;X_(cm:D

mME "THAT If llJ£: JUSf
lOOK A l=f.I&lt;(WTAGf
OF lHE. t:IDFilS ...

MACf. BY ALL THOSE
£X- ADMIIJ151RA11QIJ
ri\:61DE.R3 liJHO ARE

W~

contemporary pop mus1c
art1sts per1orming the1r own
styhstic rend1t1ons of ho!iday
songs in th1s special insp1red

CCU..D CLEAR

UP 11-\£. W"'ICIT

by the record album tilled A
Very Special Christmas.

CXJT PE.DCU"-:G ll-\£1R

11]) Primenews Wrap ups of
the day 's world news and 1n

IIJFLUWCf. ...

depth feature reports (1:00)

IHJ Hogan's Heroes

fJ) ill MOVIE' Gaily, Gaily

(1 '47)
8'05 ® MOVIE' The Bells of St.
Mary's (NR) (2:06)
(NR)

8:30 (]) Last Frontier

CIJ 0 CIJ Head of lhe Class

12 l'3

Students accidentally

sabotage each others'
science fa1r entries (R) Q

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
WINTHROPSMY

BESI FRIEND...

Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal Cell 304-675-1331 .

AND HIS !Q 1'5

ABOLJT l'HE SAME /&gt;5
H ISHATSIZE .

IF THATDOESN'rPROv'E

!M

N OT AN INTELLECTUAL
ELITI61; \\/HAT IXJES?

Chnstmas Eve attracts an
unusually colorful collection

oi characters. 0

-

Starks Tr&amp;o and Lawn Service,
lawn cara, landscaping. stump
removaf, 304 - 576 - 2842 or
676 -2903.

h

~

· (!) Moyers: God and Politics
Explore the Chnsttan
Reconstruction movement.

I.

g Ill ll2J The Oldest Rookie
Ike and Tony ir.vest1gate a
new perfume that produces

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CAATER•s PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Gallipolil, Ohio
Phone 614 -446 -388B or 614·
446- 4477

84

odd side ellects . O

GLORY BE I!

HE'S MAKIN' A
THAT'S WHAT HE 'S
DOIN',
DOC

THAT'S TH' PURTIEST
PERSCRIPTION
I EVER SEEN

Quasar 19" ponabla color television. 875. 304· 676-28"16 .
Tflree piece bedroom suite,
304 -676-2961 after 4 .00 PM

41

Se•oned oak firewood, split
and delivered 304-6715 -1761 or
895 -3046

Homes for Rent

3 BR . houae &amp; garage. A ·1 Reat
Estate. Carol VeageT· Broker
304 675 -5104.
Nicety furnl1hed 1mall house.
Adults only Rei requ ired . No
pet s. c.tt 814 -446 -0 338 .

1986 S-10 Blazer, 4 spd . with
nir, S7200. 1986 Etcort. 6 spd ,
22.000 miles. $3200 . Cell 61 4 ·

Crahmetic chnir. tan c,vith heat

197B Ford LTD . Good tlret. new
battery, air. 8700. Call 614·
245· 6239

larg e 2 -3 BR hOuse Pl enty o f
st o rag e. Henderson area. C•ll
6 14 -44 6- 70 26 .

55 Building Supplies

Convenient 6 room. home- one
f loor. two bedrooms, in Gallipoli s t 2 60
month, J)lu t
ut1Htl811 Ca ll evenings· 614.
446· 1890 or 446 -2 326.

Buildtng Meterials
Stock, brick. uwer pipee. win·
dowt. llntel1, etc. Claud a Winters, RiQ Grande, 0 Call 814-

"'Says he didn't see the speed tiump sign."'

1981 Dodge Arie~ K 1tet10n
wagon. AM-FM ttar&amp;o-cau ,
cruiae control. Good cond . Call
614 -246 -9698.

Sam SomervHie' 1 Army Surplus.
East Ravenswood Old Route 21 .
Hours until Xma1 . Noon · 8 00
pm 304 -273 -6665.

304-676-4616.

Per

19B4lynx 1983 Escort atationwagon. 1982 Kawnaki. 6150
ltd. for tale or trade. Call
614 -268 -1270.

Electrical

9,30 CIJ 0 (J) Slap Maxwell
Story Hard-charg•ng,
romant1c sportswnter has ,
~hly oplntonated style (A)
10,00 CD S1raigh1 Talk
CII 0 (]) Dynasty Adam , ,
Fallon and Steven hold lha~r
first busmess meeting. c;J
(!) Coach Look a1 the long,

General Hauling

245,5121 .

446-aa98

1986 Olda Firenza. Auto . AM ·
FM -Ca11. eir. 16,000 m1lat . like
new. $8600. Call 614 -446·
6694.
1984 Cam.-o Z 28. Blac:k, auto.,
air, VB . Srtarpl 17400. C.ll

614-446-6579 .

'

J &amp; J Water Service. Swtmming
pools, cisterns. wells Ph. 614246 · 9285.

coach Roll1e Massimino.
Scott bring s two client s a

psych!atnc patient and a con
artiSt. (A )
I!J) News
il]) Evening rJ'ews A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow 's news

Paul Rupe. Jr. Water Sarviee.
Pools, cisterns. wells. Call 614446 -3171 .

stones (1 ·00)

OH . NO ! IT's A
C ~R I STMAS CAI&lt;.D

FROM LYDIA'
87

Upholstery

BEEN
OUHf.IRI5TMASED !!

fJ) I1J Benny Hill
10:30 (I) American Snapshots
il]) Moyers' God and Politics
Explore the Christian
Reconstruction mo11emen t.

~ ffi''Mgan's Haroes
10:35 00 MOVIE' Young at Heart
(NR ) (1 ·57 )

M owrey' s Upholttermg serving
' tr1cqu nty are a 22 years The best
in f u rntture upholstering Call
;304-6 76 · 4164 f o r free
est i f'1HU!l$

Ed;ltd bi CLAY ' · POLLAN

ORBRAH

I
I-~1

•

KARME

I1----,:.!-1

:..:,.,.:.:....ll

l

I ,j

CUL E N

We had stopped at a ranger
station to get weather information
before stalling our hike. Someone
had wntten on a blac kboard ,
"You should have been here--

~-.;..,..;...:...;;,...:.:,.,...-t ~

I
·

I

I

Is

I'

·

·

·

·

r

·

~

~--------.,

-;_ll..:!,QI....::.S....;.TI~Q;.,I7: ._U=1e-ll ft" 1~omplelc
.

.

V

1he ,h,kle qvoled
by idl1ng 1n the m1ss1ng words

L_lL-L-...L_J...._JI-..J you develop from

step

No. 3 below .

11,PO&lt;D Remington Steele
I) ~ lil 0 CIJ 1m Ill @
«51 News

{f) Sign Oft
il]) Moneyllne

..

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS

"

Convoy - Pygmy - Essay - Allied - MY LANE
My sister came home all excited,about her first ~!ght of boW!-

1ng on a league. "I got one strike, she beamed, but 1t d1dn t
count. It wasn 't in MY LANE."r------- -- - - - - - ,

BRIDGE

NORTH
+Q8 2
.Q9 753
+Q

Selecting
the best discard

1%-23-81

•

+A K 7 3

EAST
+K 5 43

WEST
+A 10 7 6

"---

. 108 6 42

By James Jacoby

tAJ943

• 87

'

Today we have a Jacoby-transfer
bidding sequence North's two-dtamond response forced opener to bid ·
two hearts Then three no-trump de·
scnbed enough ·strength to play in
game. Knowing that North held five
hearts and fearing that the combmed
hands would not have a secure spade
stopper, South placed the game con·
tract m the maJor suit. Although three
no-trump would have been easier. declarer can take 10 tricks in hearts with
a little caution. In fact the defenders
made everything easy, but South succumbed to cnmmal carelessness.
If West had' led from his doubleton
club, the contract would have eas1ly
been set, but he opened the spade ace
and continued the suit. East won the
king, cashed the diamond ace and then
returned a third spade. Declarer dtd
not really believe that West had led
from A-6 doubleton m spades , so he
discarded - a diamond. That was the
fatal error. He now played a high
heart and learned that West held all
five trumps. He still had a chance 1f
West bad started with three clubs, but
West took the setting trick by ruffing
m on the th1rd round of clubs.
Although it is unlikely that trumps

+ 9 6 54

+ 10 2

SOUTH
+J9

"AKJ

tKJ0652
+QJ 8

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South
Wesl

North

2.

Pass
Pass

3 NT
Pass

Pass

East

South

2.4.

1 NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening l ead

+A

would be 5-0, 11 does no harm for declarer to shed a club on the third
spade. When the bad news in trumps is
disclosed, declarer can ca sh the Q-J of
clubs, play king of diamonds while
throwmg a top club from dummy , and
then ruff a di amond, dummy's spots
bemg good enough to overruH whatever trump West plays. The remaining
top club in dummy can be ruffed with
a high heart, and the contract is

secure

~tl4dtl?~ .. ~
by THOMAS JOSEPH
3 Devoured
ACROSS
1 Theater
part
5 or the

4 Assume

5 Source
6 Soviet

inland
sea
7 Mrs.
river
11 Caravan
Nixon,
12 "Star-"
to fnends
13 Demos8 Commotion
thenes,
9 Celtic
(or one
deity
11
Model
·14 Stand
.
111
Beverage
16 Purloined
16
Contour
18 Party
17 Wreck
stuff
completely
21 Jostle
22 Sculptor's 18 Ibsen's
forte
concern
19
Cay
24 Dilatory
20 Frost ,
25 Singer
for
Jerry
one
26 In pieces
28 Convened
again
29 Prefix
meaning
pope

10 Greek

· Yesterday's Answer

33 "Mr.-,"

21 Rebuff
23 Catch

34

up
with
27 Natural
gift
28 Operated
31 Bellow
32 British
carbine

1983 movie
"All the

Things
You_..
35 Inlet
(Sp.)
37 Inept
38 Mexican
tree
39 Sawbuck

.,.-,F-,.;:.;;..,..:-r.-,

"clay"
30Turkish
mountain
32 Bias
33 Fine
fur
36lnfringe
upon
40 Position,
in a
way
41 Leafy
vegetable
42 Implied
43 Garden
spot
DOWN
1 Before Sun.
2 Misdo

DAR..y CRYPI'OQUOO'ES- Here's how to work it:

12123

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

football coach Joe Paterno
Villanova basketball

A &amp; R Water Service Home
cisters, walls. pools filled Formerly Jomos Soya Waters,Call
304 -675 -6370 .

2919

I

and

liiD 1!1 ll2l The Equalizer

WUD
GAMI

R:eorronge letters of the
four scrambled words below to form four s1m ple words

succe ss ful careers of
Pennsylvania State University

114E "TWELVE
MEALS Cf
CHRI?TMA5...

Otllerd Water Service: Pools,
Cisterns, Wells. Delivery Any·
time. C&amp;ll 614-446 · 7404-No
Sundll'f calls.

Watterson ' s Water Hauttng,
reasonable rate•. i mmedt.!lte
2,()00 gallon delivery, ci sterns.
poola. well, etc call 304-576-

I!J) A Chris1mas Calendar
Trace some of the best loved
Chnstmas tradition s to their
ongins Jn Germany , and
expensnce these traditiOn s
firsthand with host Loretta
Swit.
@Larry King Live! In depth
mterv1ews With top
newsmakers and celebnt1es.

Ras1dent1al or commercial wir·
lng. New servtce or rep!'ltfl
Licensed elltCirician. Esttmate
tree Ridenour Electrical. 304·
675 - 1786

85

9:00 QJ 700 Club
0 (]) «51 MOVIE' 'Christmas
Eve' NBC Movie of the
Week 1:;!
CII 0 (J) Hooperman

Rotary or cable tool drilhng.
Most wells completed samedllY.
Pump sales and service. 304~

e95-3a02

1HJ College Basketball

@ Top Rank Boxing

. I LOJ5:

1983 Z-28 Camero. 40 ,000
miiM. t6196 Call632 -2613or
532 -0040.

Capture the warmth

and ageless sp1nt o1 Dylan
Thomas' poem about
ChnstmastlmB 1n a small

Grein

· lcMixed hay tor sole. Cali 614~
742- 2716.

of toy weapons .

Houston, TX (T)
CII 0 (J) Perfect Strangers

AAEYOU SURE

&amp; Refrigeration
64

7,35 00 Sanford and Son
8:00 rn Second Honeymoon:
I)~ ~ Highway to ·
Heaven Jonathan helps

Championships

4 wheels with good t~res for a
Subaru. 304-676-69B4

Now buymg shell corn or e.corn Call for latest quotes . River
City Farm Supply, 614 -446-

Livestock

fJ) 11J WKRP 1n Cincinnati

&amp;\Pull1987 Truck and Tractor
From

CltNl .,NU "'"

63

@ Barney Millar

defend Santa. who protested

402 B1g Block • ChEWy engtna
304-675-2683

82

29a5.

1

America (T)
CII Newlywed Game
O(J) Judge
®),Wheal of Fortune 0
il]) Crossfire (0 30)
Ill@ @ Jeopardy! 0

a promotion

New ttudded snow tires , G78 16, two for SBO 00 304-676 7771 .

61 Farm Equipment

614-286-6451 .

ill M'A'S'H

7,os 00 Andy Griffith
7,30 I) rn Hollywood Squares

1981 Honda 400 ltreet bike
1979 Honda XR 250 dirt bike.
1979 Yamaha VZ 80 dirt bike.
All good cond s 160-8560 Call
614· 266-1924.

B1

CROSS&amp; SONS
36 West. Jackson. Ohio.

(I) Entertainment Tonight
ti) (J) People's Court
{f) I!J) MacNeil/ Lehrer

).fORt !J/IOf!'INC ruu•·n

73 . Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

rarm Supplies
&amp; l1veslock

u:s

6'35 00 Carol Burna«
7:00 &lt;D Ran.ington Steele
I)~ PM Magszlne
(!) SportsCenter (L)

•

0

IHJ WKRP In Cincinnati
fJ) 11J Too Close for Comfort

19B2 Ford F-260 Ktng Cab B ft.
bed, auto.. atr, red 8&amp; gray.
t6200 Call 614·388-9631 Of
446- 6579

1982 Dodge 250 Ram . Custom
conversion. Trmler reedy Call
61 4-446 -43B3 dllfl, 448 -0139
evens. &amp; weekends

S©\t4U1A-L6t.tfS"

@ Inside Politics '88

•

For sal a 6 RC- drum set, Very
good cond 304-676 ·6976

71 Auto's For Sale

Ins urance

M ot her o f 2 witl cere for you r
chtldren d1.u ing tfH1 holid ay f est fvities Evenmgt, week end•. or
during th e sc hool va cation
Co nvenient locat ion. r easo nabl e
rates Call 61 4· 44 6·0065 .

Musical
Instruments

liJ 0 CIJ ABC News t;l

304-675·2467.

e43 ·5355

Bassett puppiea. Reedy to go
Christ mal EvB:. 4 mala, 31emale.
s 100 each. Call 614 -742 2412 . 33234 Sidehtll Rd .,
Rutland .

~ NBA Today (T)

{f) Nightly Business Report
®) Ill il2l CBS News
il]) Degrassl Junior High Yick

3 -WheoleT ATV ·Kawasaki 200.
Good cond Call 614-446·
7025.

Transporl alion

Rentals

_

York (0:30)
IHJ Facts of Life
fJH!I One Day at a Time
&amp;,05 00 Alice
6:30 I) rn «51 NBC Nightly News

mil81.. Clean. $9.000. 304-8764480
..:.:::.:,:,__ _ _ __ - :-:-:::'76 Chrysler Cordova . $400

Pure bred Am8f1can Eskimo
puppiet Ready for Chr1stmaa.
E.~~:cellent bloodline. t50 each
Cell 614-446·0089

AKC regittered Collie pups
Males, 8200. Have 2 ubleand2
tris. Femeh•. $176 , 2sablea. All
worm8d, have had pUppy shots
ReB!fv now-7 weelts old. 614 -

•

anchored live from New

hB8 Pontiac Fiero GT, 9.000

304-676 -7376.

AKC Reg Chittuahua puppi•
for sale. Caii614-3B8·B481 .

EVENING

':~~:~;~'

_ _:_::.:..:_.:..___::.:..:..=

w

1988 Ch~rolet Beretta. loaded.
$10,900. 304-67&amp; -4480

Completa hamsten set- up with
h81'1ster. S6 00 nch
Baby
parakeets, 18 &amp; 10 each Baby
rabbits,t1 .50uch Babyhaml•
ters, S1 26 eectt Call 446 ·
1364.

446-69ao.

Ca ll us f or your mobil e home
ins urance. M iller ln1ura n ce,
30 4 - 88 2-2 14 6 Al so· au t o,
home. life. health.

Pets for Sale

Junk c•1. $25 for complete
cau , Body ' s towed away . Call
614 -245·9264 or 682· 6760.

Flr9WOOd S20 .00 pickup load,
no dehverles. 304-875 -7771

Wtll do baby sitt ing tn my hom e
Have 16 year s ell p er ience and
have ref erence tf needed 30 4 675 3 774

18 W anted t o Do

Concrete block a all sires vard or
deUvery Maaon sand. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123% Pine St ..
Galhpolis. Ohio Call 614-446·

56

-lcChild car e. ex perienced mother.
all hou rs, all ages w elco m e.
Su pervis&amp;d act ivit ies Meals fu rnished. Cal l 614 -992 -2468 .

13

55 Building Supplies

676 1450.

446 -2325.

Merchandise

Downtown- Modern 1 BR .
complete kitch9fl, carpet, air,
electuc heat Call 614· 446·
4383-dfllls. 446 -0139 -even. &amp;
weekends.

Modern 1 SA apartment
614-446·0390 .

For Lease

50 acres · County wat er, lot s of
t imber Be st offer Call 614·

Situations
Wanted

~...!:============;:=====:::":'":':~:'""::~:!~

PM

614-446-47a2.

1519.

Real Estate

•

WED., DEC. 23

6:00 (I) Crazy Like a Fox
u rn lil o (J) ®J ll2l
«51 News
• (!) Sportslook (T)
{f) Dr. Who
il]) Square One TV O
il]) ShowBiz Today News of
the entertamment world Is

;%'{ONe.

1987 Escort, 4 door. 3.900
miles,, PS, autometic tranamiS·
sion. AM · FM rad1o , AC .
87,200 00 . 304-773-6108.

3073.

Apartment
for Rent

FO!i!

1978 Ponttac Phoenix . Motor
aM body not good Good !Ires.
Many other good parts. *100.
614- 992-6692

•••• Call614-446-4416 aha•7

M0btle home 64x14, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms. all electric. children
but no pets, 304-468-1887.

MAKe 61FT?

446-6579.

.Furni1hed room. S76 Utllrtt81J
pa1d. Share bath. Single male.
919 So con d. Gallipolis Call
446 -4416 after 7pm

Inquiries can 614-448-4222.
Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or leu.
920 4th .. Gallipolis. S76. Walet

2 BR . apts . 6 closets, kitchen·
appl. furn~shed, Washer- Dryer
hook- up. ww carpet. nowtv
peinted, deck. Regency , inc
Apts. C~ll 304-675 -7738 or

Accounting instructor needed
Minimum requirements. BAdegree Call 614 · 446 ~ 4124
Job hunttng? Need a sktll? We
train people for jobs as auto
mechanics. carpenten, eleCitl·
Ctan s, food serv1ce workers,
electronics technicians. industr ial matntenanceworkers, nursIng assistants and orderlies,
machinists. and welders. Register now for cl asses beginning
January 4th Call Tr1 -County
Vocat ional Adult Center at 7533511 e.11t. 14 A variety of
funding sources to pay for
traimng are available for those
el1g1ble

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

•

DEGIDWID

1985 Pontiac 6000. Black
w / gray inter., auto., air. 4 ayl.
18300 Cal1 614- 388 -9631 or

Room s tor renl. d ay . W&amp;ek .
month. Gallt e Hotel. Call 814·
446- 9580. Rant as lowes S120
month.

O~ILTS

t.tigh pnces patd for pre ~ 1950
q~.ults Applique , pieced. any
condlfton Call 614-992-2101
or 614 992 5657

11\10 HOj-lMY ~ -

frir AU..otJIOO ll1E' [;SCAL.AIDIJ

.,.__.__., M'{ ~ISTMA? ! ntiS YE'AR l'V&amp;:

1985 Ch01rrolet Cavalier Statl·
onwagon. Auf'o.. a1r, red. black
interior. N1cel 83BOO . Cell 3889631 or 446 -6679.

fo\U-1 W::l A'.&gt;l£€1&gt; llr-1!:&amp;.
"fl'lti M/&gt;1~ ?1M b..\Rit-1.1:!

lias paid. references and deposit,

Office Space for rent. heal.
downtown Gallipolis locatiqn.

International Metal Building Ma·
nufacturer Selectmg buildttr·
l daalerlnsomeopenarees High
potentia$ profit in our ' growth
1ndustry [303) 759· 3200 ht
2403

Driver &amp; Oispatcher(B -5. 30)
needed Call 614 -446 -0451
R C.Botthng Co of Pt. Pleasant
is now 1ntervtewtng for ex peri anced s&amp;l8fl"'an Also part- bme
secreta,. .

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do business wfth people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the mail until you have
mvest1gated the offering

992 3476.
Raw fur, beef and deer htd91
Gyn Sing and Yellow root We
have wheat and nita lites.
'rrapp1ng supplies for sa l e ( Buv·
1ng usi'KI traps) . Geo rge Buckley
Hours12-9. 61 4·66 4 -476 1.

~~R061NV~ I~

2 bedfoom furnished apt. udi·

Television
Viewing

Cl= ~'(I~ iO Rlll~ 1!1&amp;: '5f'IRiT OF

1983 Ford Escort. 4 dr . •uto.,
air con.d 82300. Call614 -3889631 or 446-6579,

IS'AwA~ of1H~ ~Et\Cl'H

Beech Str!Kit, Middleport, Oh•o.

aga. private. ntOBiocation 304-

• KLIP ID 'S NEST Offers two
ki.ntl1 o f dat ing sarvi ~. wnte
P.tf·· Bo• 519, Ironton, OH
45 638 (606) 836 -2745

5 cute &amp; adorabl e pup;Ji9S, 6
we eks .old Great Christmas gi f1
Call 614 -367-0558

woN~IF

6 room duplex, basemant, gar·

675-3753

Announcements

Femal e Elkh ound Dog.
985 -35 27

I

r!M

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

3aa-9631

'ftl!&lt; ~ b.E~EPIIL.

304· 773 ·

5C2il.

45

Unfurmshad 2 bedroom house
for rent Energy efftclent. nice
and clean . Carptrl. Call 614·
992· 3090

IN THE MASON AREA
CALL 67 S-1333

4

~Jnd

Call attar

Nt ce 3 bedroom tlouse . Family
room , garage , basemen1 ,
forced-air haat. 6 wooded acres,
barn. S276. p• month S100.
deposit. No inside pets. 10 Eaat
St., Pomeroy, Ohio. 614·423·
6289

IN THE GALLIA AREA
CALL 446-2342

or

•

1984 Trans AM . Blue. auto.. air,
T-top , VB . 17900. Call 614-

deposit, New Haven. W. Va .,

304-882-3267

'

Wednesday, December 23: 1987

71 Auto's For Sale

Apartment
for Rent

requtred . Call614-446-1406. ' 2 bedroom fum ised apt rat

2, 3, or 4 bedroom ho us01 and

I
.I

44

Ntca 3 BR . house. Garage. C ity
ach ools, 1350 a mo. Ref &amp; Dep

614-379-267a.

3

Wednesday, Deeember 23. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.\

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

LHTTF

SCGNJRC

MECGG

AE C AKE C

LKTT,

N L C

G H Y V ,

N L

NLC

W K T T ,

N H

N L C

c·

SC K G N ,
P C T U HI C

ICEEF
ULE JGN I K G
HTM
ULEJGNIK G
GHYV
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: OF ALL THE FESTIVALS,
THAT OF CHRISTMAS AWAKENS THE STRONGEST
AND MOST HEARTFELT ASSOCIATION. - WASHINGTON IRVING

�'·
12::...The Daily Sentinel

Deeember 23, 1987

Ohio

CLOSED
··CHRISTMAS
.DAY
We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

e-

STORE HOURS ·

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Vo1.38, No.1 59
Copyrighted 1987

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.

SAT., DEC. 26

'PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT.,. DEC. 26, 1987

I
I
I

I
I
I
.1 . •

&lt;
&gt;
t-

..

I...

c::
&gt;
C:l

..

~

1"'1

~

tol ·

•"'

~

•

,..0

•

""0

"d

1"'1

2

c:
"'I

0

FRESH PORK BUTT STEAKS OR

Pork Roast •••••.•L:.••• 99&lt;
BONELESS CORN KING
.
Hams ••••••••••••••••••••
6-8 LB. AVG.

LB.

KAHN'S SLICED

0

z

~----------J

ent1ne
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, December 24, 1987

CHARLESTON - The long
wait ended this week and the
Christmas present New Haven
and Mason County has . been
awaiting lor about two years was
unwrapped just two days before
Christmas. Within six months,
180 workers in Mason County will
be back on the job at the new
American Alloys, Inc.
On Tuesday, the final papers
wiJI be signed in Pittsburgh on
the buyout of the old Foote
Minerai plant in New Haven by
American Alloys, Inc ., a 49
percent employee-owned com pany, said Michael J. Farrell, of
Renaissance Partners, Inc .. of
Pittsburgh.
Renaissance Partners, the of·
lice of West Virginia Gov. Arch

Moore, state Sen. Mike Shaw,
Frank Lee and the Mason County
Development Authority, and ofli·
clals of United Steelworkers
Local No·. 5171 worked together to
pull off the resurrection of the old
ferroalloys plant.
"We estimate that these !ndi·
vlduals will be back at work by
the first of the year - now you
can't go any f~ster · than that,"
Moore said at a Charleston press
conference this week.
Farrell said the story of the
buyout shows faith in the basic
industries for the future.
"Renaissance Partners bas
focused , on basic industries,"
Farrell said. "We have had a fair
degree of success with basic
industries," he said. adding, "We
believe that basic industries are
here to stay."
,·
. This is a story of old fasbio~ed

teamwork which included the
.employees themselves and the
engineer of the Weirton Steel
buyout, Pittsburgh attorney William Doepkin . Moore, in an·
nounclng this week the state's
intent to loan $5 million toward
the more than $20 mlllion !inane:
ing package, said, "This wasn't
an easy one to ·put together."
'he road to Wednesday morning's announcement was full of
dips, turns and sometimes, out
and out roadblocks, officials
said.
''There · were two occasions
when this deal was in serious
jeopardy," Lee said. "Sen. Shaw
got involved in the firing llne on
this thing."
"It (government) worked the
way its supposed to," Shaw said.
· " This is what government
should be doing. We all pulled

LB. PKG •

U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS

49
Chuck Roast .... ~:·•• $1
BUCKET .
99
Cube Steaks ..... ~:·•• $1

U.S.D.A.CHOICE

.

Round ·Steak ..•..L:...

0
~

"':::

LB.

""

·····~··············

Sl 99

________ _

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

·

I,
I
I

MIXED

'

Fryer Parts •••••••••••
LB.

together."
of 10 percent per year. Payback
Moore, in a letter dated Dec. 23 on the loan is five years.
to William D. Beard, president
" Our willingness to suppor.t
and chief executive officer of the this project is based on our
new American Alloys , Inc., con- c()nfidence in your community's
firmed the $5 million state loan desire to create their own jobs,"
commitment. Moore, in a public Moore wrote Beard, who ran the
ceremony last . February in the old Foote Mineral plant at New
Wahama High School gymna· H~ven in the 1970s. "We wlli
slum , signed papers showing the continue to work closely with
state was behind the project $4 American Alloys in structuring
million worth. calling lt seed the appropriate detailed arrang·
ments to make this project a
money .
The .s tate Board of Invest· reality ," Moore wrote.
With a swipe of his pen and a
ments - Moore, State Auditor
Glen B. Gainer Jr. and State smile on his face, Moore on ·
. Tuesday signed the papers and .
Treasurer A. James Manchin approved the $5 million loan in a remarked, "employees will be
meeting Monday. The name of back to work alter the first of the
the company was not revealed to year."
" I'm just glad it's over," said
the press. The terms and condi·
Bernard
White of Local 5171,
lions of the loan include the state
"and'
it
gets
the guys back to
has the first lien on the plant and
work."
;&lt;~
the loan Is to bear an interest rate

"'I

..._

i

-

"'I

t-

~

Ul

&gt;
C:l

0

0

l"'l

......"'

~

oft

AMERICAN ALLOYS - The former Foote
Mineral plant, soon to be an American Alloys Inc.

plant, stands
to occupy Its former place In
the Mason County manufacturing community.

""

2

VATICAN CITY (UPJ)- Pope
John Paul II met the "real Santa
Claus" - a red -suited Lutheran
from Finnish Lapland - and
wished the world a happy and
holy Christmas during an au·
dience with some 2,000 pilgrif)'l S
and tourists.
Today , the pope will preside
over a traditional Christmas Eve
Mass in St. Peter's Basilica.
Christmas morning he will de·
liver an address from the central
balcony of the basilica before
thousands of pilgrims and tour·
ists in St. Peter's Square, Vati·
can officials said .
The meeting with St. Nick took

-----------.J

$ Q9
Potatoes •.•••••~.L:·.a:~. 1

.

----~--r----

,.

2~/o

...r ...

Milk •••••••••••••• $149

KRAFT BONUS PAK

.

.

$

RHODES WHITE-2 CT. PKG. .

$

2

"'

Cl:l

PARKAY

-

"C

.
.-""""

&gt;

GAL.

Margarine •••••.•L:.••

-·

&lt;
&gt;

VALLEY BELL

I
I
.._
I

t-

•
Ul
0

l"'l
~

...

0
0

0

wish you all a happy and holy
Christmas."
The English-language address
also included "heartfelt condo·
iences" to the families of nearly
1.600 people killed Sunday in a
fiery collision belween an oil
tanker and a passenger ship in
the predominantly Roman Ca·
t hollc Philippines .
"It is the everlasting love of.
God that gives us comfort and
hope when we recall the 'sad
events of our world," John Paul
said. "I am thinking in a special
way of the tragic shipwreck off
the coast of the Philippines .
(Continued on Page 9)

&lt;

z

C'l

~ 1 . 50 .

manufacturer's

place Wednesday in the Vat!·
can's Paul VI auditorium, where
the pontiff also reminded his
listeners of the suffering of
thousand s of Filipinos who lost
relatives in one of history's worst
maritime disasters .
rn an address broadcast
around th e world by Vatican
radio. the pope told of the
significance of Christmas for the
Catholic church.
In briefer versions of his
address in Spanish, French,
English, Spanish, Portuguese,
German and Polish . he also
offered Christmas wishes.
In English the pope, said. "I

•

•The total value of the coupon
•Any

place in and out of Meigs County,
we felt It necessary to maintain a
higher number of officers than
normal," Snowden remarked.
The board president said that
only one person was charged
with assaulting a police officer
and he was physically detained
and charged . There were no
other such incidents, Snowden
said. This was not a teacher, but
was the husba nd of a teacher ,
Snowden reported.
Charges ·agai nst teachers ar ,
rested at one school were
dropped with a provision into the
agreement that the MLTAwould
abioo -by provisions of the res·
training order, Snowden said.
Referfing to. Tuesday's negotl·
ations session in Athens,
Snowden said that ·' the offer
rejected by the teachers was the
"last and best". 'the board has
been advised there wilt be no
further negotiation sessions un·
less the mediator, David Thorley
is notified that some movement
on the part of either side or both
will be taking place in settlement
of the strike, Snowden concluded.

-c

ARMOUR ·~

may not exceeti

ment did not have enough personnel to handle Friday's activities
at the high school, Snowden
commented.
Snowden estimates that dam·
ages to the 41 vehicles will total
$10,000 and commented that the
board of education does have
pictures of Friday's vandalism
and as a result felt that extra
protection was needed.
The board president termed
Wilfong's statement that there
were 118 police officers on duty
Monday
as " absolutely
ridiculous" .
" There was not half that
many," Snowden said ..
Snowden charged that the flow
of people among buildings of the
district was more than the 55.
people which Wilfong reported.
Even though a court order
limiting the picket-s to two per
building was read on the picket
lines teachers stay_ed on the lines
for an hour or so. leaving about
the same time the substitute
teac hers attending the inservice
session did, Snowden stated.
"With vandalism to the 'substi ·
·tutes' vehicles and homes taking

I:J

___ .., ______ _,
LIMIT
10

Mac./ Cheese .• :·~~!·2 / 1 Frozen Bread .•••• 2./ 1
APPLE, CHERRY, PEACH BANQUET
COUPONS
Treet ...•••...•...•••.~;.o;. 99&lt; Frozen Pies •••• :~~!•.. 9 9~

"We're very thankful it 's fi·
naj)y come through," said Local
5171 president Gary Freeman.
"We' re .very thankful to the
state, Freeman said . " This is the
best Christmas pres~nt for
everyone."
Also present at the signing
were .Bartow Jones, Jim Lewis,
and an officialfrom the USW, Joe
Chapman.
r
Contained in the papers Moore
signed are these terms as out·
lined in the letter to Beard. The
state Investment board is to
receive cash payments each year
of 5 percent of the profits. The
profits are defined as net income
after taxes plus depreciation
minus principle payments minus
$1.5 million for normal, required
capital expenditures.
The state board of investments
Continued on page 26

Pope meets St. Nick during audience

"C

0

U. S. NO. 1 RUSSET

Robert Snowden, presic;Jent of
the Meigs Local Board of Educa·
lion, has taken exception to a
news release issued by Michael
Wilfong, president of the Meigs
Local Tea12hers · Association,
charging that the Meigs Local
School District became a " pollee
state" on Monday when schools
reopened with substitute
teachers..
"We did not attempt to reopen
schools we did reopen them."
Snowden commented. Snowden
said that on Frida-y 41 motor
vehicles belonging to substitute
teachers were vandaitzed at the
Meigs ·High School where an
inservice session for !he substi ·
tutes was being h'eld. The board
president said In view of that
circumstance "we felt It neces ·
sary to have adequale police
protection because our school
district extends over a wide rural
area." Snowd~n stated that the
Meigs County $heriff was asked
to have whatever police force
was necessary/ on hand for
Monday to ·maintain order. Ap·
parently, the sheriff's depar t·

•

,..0

3 Sections, 32 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Snowden takes exception to
·news release by Wilfong

r----------

Bologna •••••••••••••••
CRISPY SERVE
Bacon · · .

•

•

Foote Mineral Plant buyout 'becomes reality
By CHARLES A. ~IASON
OVP News Staff

,-----~--~~-,

•

coupon

greater than 51 c will be redeemed at face value only .
•Only one manufacturer's coLI ·
pon per item .
•The total value of the manufac.turer's .coUpon cannot exceed
the purchase price of the item .
Money will not be refunded .
•This offer does not apply to Powell's Super Value Coupons.
free coupons. or anv competi·
tor's coupons .
•This offer excludes ci~j arettes,
or any other items proliibitec'
by law .
•Offer is only good for'produ t 1
on hand . No Aainchetks.

CHRISTMAS PROJECTS - Parishioners of
Sacred Heart Parish, Pomeroy, had several
projects !his year to keep the Christmas message
ollove and concern lor others. 'l'oys, blankets and
coals were given to people in Metgs County. Over
12S gilts of blankets and toys were taken to West
Virginia·. The parish members also visited a

destitute area of poverty In Kentucky. A truckload
ol coats, blankets, toys and food were delivered by
three members ol the parish. The high school
members ol the parish helped to wrap and pack
the gills. Pictured are Bracy Kom, Jean-Paul
LaBonte and Todd Smith carrying out work with
the gifts to celebrate the beauty olthe season.

Lawmen hunt Manson devotee
ALDERSON. W.Va . (UPli Lawmen scoured treacherous
mountains today for Lynette
"Squ~aky" Fromme, the fanati·
cal follower of mass murderer
Charles Manson who slipped
away from the prison where she
was serving life for trying to kill
BPresldent Ford in 1975.
More than 100 federal and stale
law officers threw up roadblock s,
searched abandoned fishin g
camps and posted lookouts along
train tracks that run 50 feet from
the federal penitentiary for
women at Alderson that Fromme
escaped from Wednesday night.
. But Warden Ron Burkhart said
Fromme, 39, had been corres·

ponding with Manson, the impri·
soned culL murderer, and ac,
knowledged that the red-haired
zealot with an "X" carved on her
forehead may have fled In a
·
waiting getaway car.
"We are not precluding the
possibtiity of anything . My opinion is that getting someone to
help with ii vehicle would be the
quickest way out," Burkhart
said.
The Secret Service was
a lerted. and a Los Angeles
County prosecutor who helped
try the Manson family murder
case said he feared for his life.
"S,hc ' s threatened my life
before and I'm very concern.ed

that's she's out. What makes her
so dangerous is that she wlll do
anythiqg that )'A anson wants her
to do without questlo!J, " pr.osecutor Stephen Kay told the Mutual
Broadcasting System.
Fromme turned up missing
during a prisoner count at 9:30
p.m. EST, and Associate Warden
Maureen Atwood said other
inmates may have seen her as
late as 8: 50 p.m. She first was
thought to be hiding on the
96·acre prison grounds but
searchers did not find her.
"We've got everybody out up
there, but we've turned up
nothing. We have no Idea which
1 Continued on page 8

CHRISTMAS ROYALTY - Southern High
School crowned a Chrlst)llas Queen from these
five senior candidates during Wednesday night's
holiday dance at the school. From left to right
clockwise are Bridget Blng,l)ena Watson, Wendy
l

'

Triplett, lUna Shuler and Donette Talbott.
Sel!'_cted as queen was Dina Shuler. Other
attendants Included Becky Evans , junior; Jennifer Johnson, sophomore; Cheryl Pnpe,
freshman.

___ __._
...

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="221">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2811">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39858">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39857">
              <text>December 23, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="3858">
      <name>downie</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
