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Ohio lottery

Notre Dame .
wins, 34-21

Daily Number
050
.
Pick-4

4371

Page 3

•

Super Lotto
10-1'3-14-22-25-42

Snow flurries tontght. LOw
near ~. Chance of snow '70
perceat. Wednesday, partly
cloudy. High near 25.

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Vol.39, No.188
Copyrighted 1989

Pomeroy-Midd~eport,

Ohio,"-Tuesday, January 3, 1989

~.

1 Section, 10 Peg" · 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

-Ohio ·G.e neral Assembly convenes fOr 1989 ·
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- After only a few weeks off, state
lawmakers made their way back to Columbus
today foJ;' the start of the 118th General Assemb)y
- a session that will last until December 1990.
Opening ceremonies, featuring handshaking,
families and picture-taking, will give way later in
January to hard work on the budget and education
issues, which will dominate the agenda for the
rest of the year.
Gov. Richard Celeste also is likely to press
lawmakers for action on health care at more
affordable costs and programs for elder care
which could cost $150 million. He will deliver his
. "State oUhe State'' address to a joinr legislative
· session Jan. 10.
Though the . final gavels for the recently· .
completed 117th session sounded last Thursday in
the Senate and Friday in the House, lawmakers
were lh only briefly in November and December.
They completed most of their work by last June.
There will be little change in the complexion of

· veteran Sen. Stanley Aronoff, R-Cincinnati.
Senate will be a major overhaul of the state's
domestic relations law. A task force headed by
Celeste Is expected to submit the 1990-91 budget
in lat~ January, and that will occupy lawmakers
Sen. Grace Drake, R-Solon, made recommenda·
until at least July 1. Complicating the budget Is a
tlons on that subject in 1988.
proposal to ask Ohio voters. to hike income tax
The House is expected to receive a report soon
of its task force Investigation info child abuse.
rates by 1 percent across-the-board for educatiQn.
""There'.s no ques tlon the budget is one of the
Other House task forces will be reporting on
most serious problems we've had since I've been
streamlining Ohio's court system and refining the
state's workers' compensation system. .
speaker," said Riffe.
Before that problem Is solved, lawmakers will
That latter ma.tter was in bill form ready for
have to deal with a $135 . million shortage In
action in the Senate throughout 1988 but was
Medicaid funding. A combination of reductions to · blockaded by organized ta·bor. It may make a
reappearance this year.
vendors, co-payments by recipients and a
The Legislature may have. to tak.e action by
supplemental appropriation is expected to be
mid-February on a plan to reduce carbon
used.
monoxide emissions from motor vehicles in the
The Senate may . also !pOVe quickly on a $6
Cleveland area. The U.S. Environmental Protec·
million appropriation to fund AIDS prevention
iion Agency is threatening sanctions '!gainst Ohio
and treatment programs. That entire bill was held
up In the Senate during 1988 when Celeste refused . unless something is done.
Lawmakers took care of ozone emissions in 1988
to accept any measures requiring new
with inspection programs i~cinriati and in the
expenditures.
·
three-county Cleveland area, but the EPA was not
One of the top priorities for Republicans in the
entirely satisfied .
•

the House, controlled 59-40 by Democrats - ·seven
new faces.
Two incumbents were beaten In the general
election, and one in the primary. Three others did
not seek re-election. And veteran Rep. C.J.
McLin, D-Dayton, died last week after a long
battle with cancer. His place is expected to be.
taken by his daughter, Rhine.
House Speaker Vernal Riffe Jr., DWheelersburg, will begin his elghtl,t term as
speaker, a record by far In Ohio.
"This is going to be the toughest session since
I've ·been speaker," warned Riffe, who is
considering a run for governor in 1990.
In the Senate, Republicans increased their
margin to 19-i4. There will be two new senatorsRepublicans Betty Montgomery of Wood County
and Charles Henry of Trumbull County.
Montgomery replaces Sen. Paul Gillmor,
R-Port Clinton, while Henry ousted Sen. Thomas
Carney, D-Girard.
Succeeding Gillmor as .Senate president will be

Georgia authorities hold murder suspect
NASHVILLE, Ga. (UPI) -A
man 'W;inted for murder in Ohio
and suspected of killing his
girlfriend In Georgia has turned
himself in to deputies and was
held without bond Monday in
Barrlen County.
William Earl Lynd, 33, turned
himself In about 10 p.m. Satur- ·
day, said Berrien County sheriff's dispatcher Wayne F!!nder.'
Authorities said they received a
call Saturday from Lynd's older
brother, Greg, wtvJ said the
suspect was willing to surrender.
Lynd has been charged with
murder In Lawrence County,
Ohio, for the Christmas Day
murder of Leslie Joann Starkey,
,. 42, of Detroit, said Barrlen
· County Sheriff Jerry Brogdon.
He is also being questioned about
the Dec. 22 disappearance of his
girlfriend, Virginia "Ginger"

.

Five holiday
wrecks pr-obed
by Ohio Patrol

Moore, 26, of the Nashville area,
Brogdon said.
Moore's bOdy has not been
found, but Fender said lnves tiga·
tors were given some clues by the
suspect on where IT&amp; body could
be found. The body is somewhere
in south Georgia, Fender said,
but probably not in Berrien
County. He refused to be more
specific.
· Lynd was charged by Ohio
authorities with the Dec. 25 death
of Starkey, who was shot three
times by a hitchhiker"'tn Law·
re1,1ce County, Ohio. Starkey was
traveling to Huntington, W.Va.,
to see relatives, said Lawrence
County Sherl{f Dan-Hleronimus.
Lawrence County Is just across
the Ohio River from Huntington. ,

Ohio investigators say Lynd
was visiting relatives in the
Huntington area about the time
Starkey was attacked. They say
a .32-caliber pistol believed used
in her death was recovered from
a West Virginia man who said ,
Lynd sold it to him last week.
Brogdon said Ms. Moore's car
was seen as far north as Connecticut during the past week and
was eventually recovered in Fort
Worth, Texas, Friday night.
Greg Lynd, the suspect's
brother, Is stationed at Dyess Air
Force Base, near Abilene, Texas,
and Brogdon said he is wanted on
charges of harboring a fugitive.
But he was nol In custody and
authorities think he helped convince his brother to surrender.

Ohio records 9 traffic deaths
By United Press International
At least nine people, Including
two pedestrians, were killed in
traffic acCidents across Ohio
during the 78-hour New Year's
holiday weekend, the State High·
way Patrol reported Tuesday.
The patrol's . tra.fflc fatality
count showed one death Friday
night, five Saturday and three
Sunday. There were no deaths
reported Monday.' The victims
died in separate accidents.
Two pedestrians were kllled
Saturday In separate mishaps,
and two people were killed In
separate car-train crashes. one
.~aturday and one Sunday.
The fatality count began at 6
p.m. Friday and ended at mid·
night Monday.
A traffic accident In West
Virginia also claimed the lives of
two Ohioans.
Helen Rollins, 30, and her

RETURNS AS GRAND MARSHAL - Rose Parade Graad
The Meigs-Gallia Post of the
Marshal Shirley Temple Black waves to the crowd along Colorado · · State Highway Patrol Invest!·
Boulevard In the lOOth Rose Parade In Pasadena, CaiU. She was
gauid · flye. accidents In Meigs
also Grand Marshal of the 50th Rose Parade In 1939, when was 10
County over the New Year's
years old. (UPI)
holiday weekend. Noo injuries
were reported.
Damage was moderate to the
vehicle in an accident at 1:05
a.m. Saturday In Salisbury
Township on CR. 30, 1.1 miles
east of SR. 7. Troopers said
Melvin Lee, 47, .Pomeroy, lost
ell,
a
non-profit
lobbying
~up,
control.
His car went off the road
CINCINNATI !UPI) - An
proposes
strengthening
the
fed·
and
overturned.
There was no
environmental official says a
eral
regulation
to
require
more
citation.
• new federal regulation on the
Cars driven . by Robert F.
inspection of underground gaso· monitoring and use of a doubleMoore, 53, Shade, and Robin A.
line tanks does not adequately storage system for tanks.
The Environmental Protection Dugan, 25, Pomeroy, collided at
address the threat from 100,000
such tanks scattered across Agency es tlniates that 25 percent 11:50 a.m. Monday on SR. 681, 0.2
of the nation's tanks leak, though miles east of mile post 9.
Ohio.
no count exists of the damage to
Troopers said Moore turned
"The emphasis Is on finding,
Ohio
tanks.
Into the path of the Dugan car
left
reporting and repairing leaks
Names of 250 Meigs Countlans
Bob
Ireson,
chief
of
the
Ohio
and
the vehicles collided. Daminstead of preventing them in the
have
been drawn in the office of
Bureau
of
Underground
Storage
age
was
moderate
to
the
Moore
first place,'' Steve Sedam, direc·
Meigs
County Clerk of Courts
Tank
Regulation,
said
the
bigcar and minor to the Dugan
tor of the Ohio Environmental
Larry
Spencer
for possible duty
gest
threat
from
the
tanks
Is
to
vehicle.
Council, told The. Cincinnati
grand · juries
on
the
.
pettit
or
drinking
water
systems.
Enquirer.
The patrol cited both drivers
term of
during
the
January
"It
doesn't
mean
It's
going
to
The regulation that took effect
for not wearing a seat belt and
court.
blow
up
tomorrow,
but
it
means
last week requires that tanks be •
Moore for falture to yield the
Those drawn for possible
checked once a month for leaks, · there is a threat," he said . .
right of way.
grand
jury duty include David J.
The EPA says one gallon of
fitted with anti-leak devices by
The patrol lnnvestigated an
·
Wiseman,
Rutland; Chester
1998 and .that spills of more than gasoline leaked from a tank can accident at 11 p.m. Monday In
spoil 1 milllop gallons ,of water. Olive Township, on CR. 46, 0.7 Combs, Jr., Racine; Randall H.
25 gallons be reported.
Mark Emmert, spokesman for miles east of SR. 7. According to Adkins, Pomeroy; Frances B.
the Ohio Petroleum Council, said the patrol. Donald ~Crites, 34, Adkins, Pomeroy; Wijpam E.
Some siate officials say the law
the average.cost of cleaning up a Reedsville, lost co rol. His Morris, Pomeroy; Lucy Faye
does not do enough to protect
leak is $100,000, and can reach vehicle went off the r d, strik- Donahue, Racine; Catherine Jill
against the possibility of leakS or
millions If the leak Is not quickly ing an embankment. amage Wllllams, Middleport; Belinda
· explosions that could contamidetected.
nate water systems, such as a
was heavy. The patrol cited Kay Jeffers, Pomeroy; Shirley
Sedam said underground leaks Crites for driving under the Joan Bumgardner, Middleport; ·
spill in Martinsburg that so
Emil G. Eynon, Racine; Delores
"are not flashy, Fernald-like influence.
seriously conta111inated an underground drinking water source incidents, but when you put them ·
There was no contact between Eileen Bailey, Middleport; Shlrtogether we feel It's a statewide the vehicles In lin accident at 1:50 ' ley A. Jeffers, Pomeroy; Patrithat It was abandoned.
The Ohio Environmental Coun- concern."
p.m. Monday In Scipio Township cia A. BlsselJ, Rutland; Ruth
on CR. 18, 1.5 nines east of SR. Ellen Durst, Middleport; Reva
143. Troopers said Sheila D. L. Musser, · Pomeroy; Eleanor
Patterson, 36, Pomeroy, met an Taylor Thomas, ·Pomeroy;
. CLEVELAND (UPI) -Noone game, there ·was one ticket that approaching vehicle that was left Larry C. Smith, Racine; Kimpickect all six-winning numbers in had the winning combination:
ofcenter,lostcontrol and her car berly M. Roush, Racine; Paul
Saturday's $3 million Super Lotto 165550. That ticket, purchased In went off the road, striking a tree. Eugene Harris, II, Syracuse;
Debra Lea Curfman, Syracuse;
game, meaning Wednesday's . the Cleveland suburb of Maple Damage was moderate.
jackpot will be at least$6million. Heights,.is worth $100,000.
The patrol Investigated Robert William Crow, Syracuse;
Four Kicker players picked another one-car accident at 8:35 Monty R. Proffitt, Portland;
The numbers dr4wn were: 10,
five
of the six numbers, each a.m. Sunday lil Sutton Township Milton Ray ·Roush, Pomeroy;
13, 14, 22, 25, 42.
winning
$5,000, while ~ Kicker on SR. 124 0 .2 miles east of mUee Pa~l D. Bell, Racine; Timothy
' There were 99 players who
players
picked
four bf the six post 29. Troopers said Anna Patterson, Syracuse; Debra
picked five of the numbers worth
..
$1,000, while 5;063 players picked numbers worth $1,000.
Leamond, 55, Racine, lost con- Elaine Putman, Coolville; David
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled . trol. Her car went off the road, J. Beegle, Racine; Ir~ne Parker,
lout of the sbc ·winning numbers
$3,891,780. Kicker ticket sales striking sign. Damage was Syracuse; LllHe Jean Mullins,
worth $89.
Albany; Melvlil L. Forrester,
In the accompanying · Kic~er totaled $630,59&amp;.
moderae.

·Buried l!lnks may be
environmental threat

She was flagged down by another
motorist and stopped. Hieronimus said the other driver tried to
sexually assault her, but she
burned him in the face with a
cigarette. She was then shot by
the assailant, who fled.
Starkey lived long enough to
give police a description of her
attacker. The information linked.
Lynd to the crime, and he is
suspected of stealing a car from
Ms. Moore.
Lynd has a lengthy criminal
history, Including assaults
against women, in Florida, Geor·
gla, Texas, Kentucky, West Vir·
ginla and Ohio; according to
-National Crime Information Cen·
ter records. He is a native ofWest
Virginia.

two-car accident on a Wood ·
county road.
Saturday
Findlay: EarlR. Clark';- BlQOm·
dale, in a two-car accident on
Authoriti!!S said Rollins appar- Ohio 613 In Hancocl( County.
ently lost control of her car and It ,
Norwalk: Doris Jackson, 35,
rolled over In Jackson County, Monroeville, In a one-velijcle
W.Va.
accident on a Huron County road.
·The victims killed In Ohio:
Parma: Myrtle Crowe, 80,
1
Monday
Parma, when struck by a car as
None.
she tried to cross a street in
Parma. ·
sunday
Lancaster: Daniel Needham,
Newark: Colleen Ackley, 19;
25, Baltimore. Ohio, when his car Reynoldsburg, when hit by an
collided with a tr'ain at a railroad auto as she tried t!l walk across
crossing on Ohio 256 In Fairfield U.S. 40 in Licking County.
County .
Conneaut: Floyd Benn~tt
.
Ashtabula: Garrett J . Ponto· Conneaut, when his car c ded
riero. 18, Erie, Pa. ,when the car ;.vith a train at a railroad c ossing
he was riding in collided with In Conneaut In Ashtabula County.
another auto on Interstate 90 in
Friday Night
.
Ashtabula County.
C.:mton: Dennis J. Halter, 21,
Bowling Green: Heather R.
Notth Canton, killed in a one-car
Peppers, 17, Sylvania, In a accident on a Stark County road.
7-year-old daughter, Kristy Renee, of Belpre were killed Mon·
day in a single-car crash on
Interstate 77.

Names drawn for Meigs jury duty

No one claims Super Lotto jackpot

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Racine; Tim Matthew Herdman,
Pomeroy; MarkS. Riggs, Pomeroy; Danny K. Harrison, Pomeroy; Mark C. \Varner, Pomeroy;
Thelma Dalton, Rutland; DaleS.
Thi&gt;ene, Pomeroy; Amy · C.
Wolfe, Pomeroy; Robert .Philip

Meier, Middleport; Betty j...
Stewart, Cheshire; Melvin R.
VanMeter, Jr., Pomeroy; Carol
A. Ohlinger, Pomeroy; Kenneth
Lee Calhoun, Rutland; Clarence
Spurrier, Pomeroy; Joseph An·
Continued on page~
:;,~.--

-Local news briefs_,
Gatlin man killed in

a.u~o

wreck

A Gallia County man was killed and his passenger seriously
injured in a one-car accident at 6:30a.m. Sunday on SR. 62,
about two miles north of Point Pleasant, according to the Mason
County Sheriff's Department.
The victim was identified as J~son Allen Jones, 18, Rt. 2,
Crown City. Jones was pronounced dead at Pleasant Valley
Hospital.
·
Tammy Reed, 17, also of Grown City, was Injured and taken to
Pleasant Valley Hospital where she was placed in the interi~ive
care unit . for observation. Her condition was listed as fair
Sunday night. She was taken out of lCU and was reported in
·satisfactory condition Tuesday morning.
Deputies said JoneS died when his 1986 Corvette apparently
hydroplaned on a wet highway and rolled several times. The
Ohio man apparently was attempting to pass another car and
lost control. The vehicle was demolished. Jones and Reed
apparently were thrown through the T-top roof of the car,
according to the sheriffs department.

Unoccupied cabin burns down
An unoccupied nunter's cabin on Owl Hollow Road in the
Tuppers Plains area burned down early Monday afternoon.
Continued on page 5

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C()J!lmentary
lll Court lltred"

,.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERFST!j OF THE MEIGS.MASON AREA

rz;

1'1 . ~

B.! mliil!

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r T ' - ' ' - . -• .-.-....=lol=l

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ROBl!:RT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publlsher/ControUer

BOB HOEFLICH

General Manager

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the_American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Page-2~The Daily Sentinel

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/f "•

Drug CODCe&amp;lment a •fme art __:___,__.:......Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n
Intelligence about drugs al)tl methaqualone tablets Inside
distributes It to nine federal woodell pl-;ture frames .
Wooden furniture Is also a
deparlments involved In the drug
war, Including the Drug Enforce- favorite. Eight pounds cit heroin
ment Administration and . the were f()und Inside four hand·
U.S. Customs Service. Our asso- crafted .wooden room dividers
ciate- Dale Van Alta has seen a being shipped from Thailand to
secret report from the center San Francisco. Wooden lamps
warning drug agents to expect and gaming tables from Lebanon
were shipped to San Diego with
the unexpected. ·
260
pounds of hashisb In the
Wide picture frames are used
by drug traffickers to conceal' backgammon Ia bles and 15
their drugs. U.S. Customs lnspec· pounds in the lamps.
tors at Los Angeles International
Airport once discovered 5,000
DEA agents In Seattle noticed
a crack In a wooden bust arriving
from Rio de Janeiro. · They
1l-IE'Y Af/£, ANP 1liE'I W/loi'IT 'IOU ,-0
suspected the flgilre had been cut
SE \o\1\?'I'Y. T~E M"ll.. I~ P.UNN\IIlG
In half and glued back together.
They
were rlgbt. When they
~9 T() 1 IN ~/Jt..VOR Of i'AAt&gt;)Miio
popped. open the.. bust, four
'YOU 'TO ~t: C.~EVEL~N~ INt'I' ..NS.
kilograms or cocaine fe,U out.

WASHINGTON -The Ayatol- found a market !or the ayaJol·
lah Kholiteini frowns on the use lah's face In the United States.
and prOO.u~n of drugs In Iran. They to.re the plaques apart and .
Maybe that's· why some clever · roulid more than 28 po\lnds of
drug smugglers put the frowning . opium sticks.
'·
vlsageoftheayatollahonabatch
' That kind of pollee -work
of pictures and plaques shipped · deserves to be touted, and it Is
from Iran to New York. They touted quietly among ·d rug en·
must have figUred customs offl· forcement agencies · who share
clals would never suspect the such finds so their sister agencies
plaques bad opium hidden in ..,can be on the alert for similar
their hollow backing.
smuggling techniques.
·
They figured wrong. Customs
·The El Paso Intelligence Cen·
Inspectors In New York didn't ter Is a federal Information·
buy the Idea that an Importer ha!l
sharing agency that gathers

LE'JTERS OF OPINION are weloome. They should be less than 300 woNs
long. All letters are subJ~t toedltlng and must be signal with name, address and
telephone number. No unslgne:l letters wUI be published. Letters should be in

gmxl taste, addressing Issues, not persooalUies.

..

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·Backstairs at
the White House

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:s· .

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By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Future first lady Barbara Bush Is getting
ready to name her press secretary and several applicants have been
interviewed at the transition office. ·
•
Su~ian Porter, Mrs. Bush's longtime top aide, will be her chief of
staff. But the press secretary, who -rill share the White House East
wing offices with Porter. will be fielding the barrage of. daily
telephone calls from the media.
·
Mrs. Bush Is In the throes of patking for her new life and moving out
of the vice president's mansiOn on Observatory Hill on elegant ,
Massachusetts Avenue,
Friendly and outgoing, Mrs. Bush Is expected to be her own best
spokeswoman, although she admits that she sometimes shoots from
the hip and has to later explain her remarks . "No more poet
laureate,'' she says, when reminded of the rhyme she used to describe
Democratic vice presidential candidate Geraldine Ferraro In the 1984
campaign, saying her description of her husband's rival rhymed with
While House reporters see in President-elect George Bush shades
of Lyndon Johnson, who often attended three separate church
services on .a ny given Sunday - an early morning Roman Catholic
mass near his ranch at Stonewall, Texas; an Episcopal service later
in the morning In Fredericksburg, Texas; and In the evening vesper .
TEL AVN, Israel -We have
services at the First Christian Church In Johnson City, Texas.
heard a great deal In the Middle
Bush's aides say he Is a churchgoer, and reporters and cameramen
East by Yasir Arafat' s alleged In·
are preparing to join him on Sundays wherever hE! worships.
cantatlon of "the magic words"
Bush surprised many by attending 1988 Christmas services at a
concerning Israel's existence But
black Baptist church In WaShington and members of the
one
question has been generally
congregation had to go through an alrport·style metal detector to get
abient
from the discourse: Why
Into the church.
now?
Bush also permitted photographers to enter the church and
Why, after so many years of rephotograph him and his wife in their pew at the start and end of the
sistance,
did Aralat and many
service as well as during the carol singing.
Arab
states
make the big rl!etorl·
President Reagan rarely went to church, explaining he did not want
cal
push
just
now? In the answer
to disturb other members.of the congregation who would be subjected
this
question,
it seems to me,
to
to special security precautions. ·
,
may possibly ile the essence of
In the LBJ days, there was not as great a threat of terrorism and
the Middle East's future.
such precautions were not instituted, although several Secret Service
Certain pieces of an answer, .
agents accompanied him to church. Back then, photographers were
offered in a somewhat different
forced io remain outside the church and to catch Johnson and his
context, surfaced here recently
family on his arrival and departure.
at a .conference at Tel Aviv Unlv·
ersity on "Prospects for Arab-Is·
Atl~ast two of President Reagan's cabinet members plan to leave
raell Cooperation 198-2000."
Washlngton when the new administration arrives.
~
One panelist, Prof. Ellyahu-Ka·
Energy Secretary John Herrington - proving you can go home
novslcy
of Bar Dan University,
again- has his reservations to fly back to California Jan. 19, the eve
out what the plunge In the
sketched
of the Inauguration. He seems happy about it; saying he will be
price
of
on
has meant to the Arab
returning to a place where a hundred million dollars is considered
nations. Back In 1981, oU revenues
money. When one runs. a multlbilllon·doUar federal department, that
lor Saudi Arabia were $112 bUllon,
amount may seem like peanuts.
and we were being told that the
Housing Secretary Samuel Pierce, the only member of the Reagan
world would be owned by the pecabinet who lasted eight years, probably will return to his Park
tro-prlnces. But bY 1987, Saudi on
Avenue law firm in New York.

Will Arab weakness ·yield

Several members of the Bush transition office are buying
themselves a status symbol that will become an historical memento:
Inaugural license plates. They sell for $20 and are good until the end of
,
March.
'
The clamor Is on for tickets for one of the eight inaugural balls costing $175 each - and for the special gala salute to the Bushes each costing $50.
The festivities also mark the bicentennial celebration of the
Inauguration of George Washington.
Plans have been changed to feature the portrails of President and
Mrs. Reagan on easels at the While House during the Christmas
season ..Traditionally, portralts'of former presidents and their wives
are not featured or hung on .the walls until they leave the White House.
it will be up to the new resk;lents to determlne 'where the Reagan
poj'traitswlll hang. The grand hallway is usually the top spot for the
president's portrait, but at the moment, paintings of two other
Republican presidents dominate the scene.
First lady portraits usually are relegated to the ground floor. Dolly
Madison's portrait Is an exception and hangs In the Red Room.
The Reagan paintings were done by New York artist Aaron Shll&lt;ler,
who also painted the portraits o! the John F . Kennedy and his wife,
Jacquellne.

.
First lady Nancy Reagan will take her successor Barbara Bush on a

tour of the upstairs familY, quarters o! the White House after the
holidays. And the permanent household staff will get ready to adjust
to new occupants. .
.
The staff also will have to adjust to a much Iarge_r itrst famll~
around the house. Although the Bushes' five children are gi'Own, there
are 10 grandchildren who will be paying visits to the .White House
.
during the next four year.
The large Bush clan will be taking over a block 'Of rooms In the
Jefferson · Hotel during the Inaugural periOd for the five days or
festtvl!les .
President Reagan is returning to Washington Jan. 5 and will tleupa
few loose ends ,before leavirig office.
.
'
tfe will submit his final federal budget to Congress Jan. 9. TWo days
later, Reagan will deliver a televised address t.o the nation along the
-1... !tries of a State of the Uq.ton speech, $Ummlng up the
~c):oinpllshments and goals of his administration.

'

Today"'o history
.
. , ll••• ...._ later1111Uaul
today Is Tuesday,.Jan. 3, the third day of 1989, with 362 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward its new phase.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
the evening stars are Mercury, 1\{~s and Jupiter.
'l'bose born on this date are under the klgn of Capricorn. They
Include feminist and abolitionist Lucretia Mott ln1793, British Prime
Minister ClementAttlee In 1883, J .R.R. Tolkeln,author of the fantasy
no~I "Loro of the Rings," In 1892, actor Ray Mil land, In 1908,
eniertalner Victor Borge, In 1909 (age 80), and Maxine Andrewsolthe
Andrews Sisters trio in 1918 (age 71) .

'

·
·

HARRIS INJURED - West VIrginia leam administrator Mike
Kerin (left)' checks quarterback Major Harris's pads as head
· coach Don Nehlen ·(center) looks on In the tblrd quarte~ of Monday
night's Flesta Bowl. Hatrls was Injured In lbe flrsl quarter. (UPI)

·Georgia.edges MSU
in Dooley's last tilt
JACKSOt&lt;VILLE, Fla. (UPI).
Georgia Coach VInce Dooley said
goodbye to college football Sun·
day night by saying goodbye to
his conservative style of play.
Dooley, long the proponent of
the ground game. weht to the air
for a 34·27 vlctotyo over ~lchlgan
State in the Gator Bowl. It was
the 201st victory for Dooley, who
announced last month be was
leaving as coach after the game.
"The biggest surprise of all Is
that these two ground·o'rlented
conservative football teams got
together in one of the truly great
passing classics," Dooley said.
"When I phase out, I want to
really phase out."
Quarterback Wayne Johnson
finished with 227 yards and three
touchdowns passing. had more
offense in the air than the entire
Bulldogs squad had on the
ground.
.
"I think the main weakness
was the way they pursued to the
ball," Johnson said. "We used a
lot of play actiOn passes to take
advantage of they way they
pursued.' •
Dooley , who is rumored to~
gearing for a mot at Georgia
politics, said the reality of

How da drug agents· know
where to look? They search for
anything that looks Irregular container numbers that are un·
professionally stenciled, . wood
that sounds hollow when tapped
or a commodity that Is unusual
for Its country of origin. Contain·
'e rs coming from countries where
drugs are produced are automat·
ically suspect.

''rich.''

'

revenues were doWn to $20 billion.
Today, pity, the Saudi petro·
plutocrats are running deficits,
drawing down their petro-board
and ·borrowing money. The Oil·
price drop Inflicted even greater
damage on the economies of the
Arab countries that are not large
oil producers. During most of the
fat years, Egypt, Syria and Jor·
dan got major financial aid from
the big oil producers. Their cit,
fzens went to work at good pay In ..
the oll·rlch states. No more; the
oil crunch Is on.
That's the past and the pre·
sent. U.S. Energy Secretary
John Herrington then looked to
the future for the conferees (the
Lyn Meyerhoff Conference of the .
Jeane Kirkpatrick Fo~um).
These days, there are oiJ. ana·
lysts who say on prices will be go.
ing up soon. Don't believe It, says
Herrington. When OPEC ran the
price of on up from $2 to $35 a bar·
rei, a mighty force was unleashed:
self·preservatlon via the tree mar·
~. Many non.OPEC nations went
out and d!Si:overed oll. Cars were

peace?_wa_tte_nb_erg

designed to bum less gasoline. Na· not emerged.
When the' petro-dollar was
tural gas, coal and nuclear energy
became competitive fuels In many king, the Arabs believed that
time was on their side. They
nations.
Super·efflclent ceramic auto- . would get richer jlnd stronger as
mobile engines are around the ·the years went on. Sooner or Ia·
corner. So are photovoltalc en· ter, they could overwhelm tiny
ergy sources. America u&amp;es the Israel. That was good reason not
same amount of energy today as to negotiate seriously?
it did In 1973, although our-econBut Kanovsky says they are
omy Is one-third larger! In short, Jeltlng poorer and weaker. Her·
says Herrington, there will be rlngton says things are not going
plenty of energy supply to meet . I() get better in the future. Isn't
demand, and oil prices aren't go- this one rellson for A.rafat and his
Ing to go up In the 1990s.
patrolfs-to-look tor a deal now?
Now, suppose one puts the Ka·
For the Israelis, all this poses a
novslcy and Herrington mes· problem.
They don't know
sages together. A political' truth whether Arafat said what be
emerges that offers help in an· meant or meant what he said.
swerlng that crucial quesl!on: They don't know if Arafat Is ter·
Why now? ,
rorlst or only an ex· terrorist.
Consider the Arab situation.
In the past, suicidal Arab pollt·
They have squandred their wind· lcs let the Israelis sltstlllandvalfall. They have lmportel} 42 per· ldly say there's no one serious to
cent of the world's arms In recent negotlte with. Now there may be
years! Corruption is hyper-en· . a partner 'aborning. It Is a foe
demlc. The public has been that Is weaker than before. It
bought otr with sociilllst goodies, may be a good time for the Isbut those bills can't be met now. raelis to see If the Arabs, finally,
A serious market economy has . are serious.
.

,

•

controversy, but the efforts to
transform underground· steam
and superheated water Into elec·
trlclty constitute an Important

•,

'

NCS cops 28-23 Peach
ATLANTA tUPI) - Seven
turnovers usually don't lead to a
victory. bu I North Carolina State
was just as. successful receiving
the ball as giving it away.
The Wolfpack turned the ball
over seven times in a steady rain
Saturday, but turned seven Iowa
turnovers into three touchdowns
in taking a 28-23 victory In the
Peach Bowl.
"We were terrible In terms of
protecting the ball," Wolfpack
Coach Dick Sheridan said. "But
we did enough right to Win the
game. That's what counts."
The Wolfpack, 8-3·1, lost five
fumbles and two Interceptions
and had one touchdown called
back. Iowa gave up the ball on
three fumbles and four
interceptions:
"They took advantage of our
turnovers and we took advantage
of theirs/' Sheridan said. "Fortu·
nately, we were able to hold on."
Sheridan's first bowl victory at
North C11,ro!ina State came one
week after he turned down an
offer to replace the retiring VInce
Dooley at Georgia. Sheridan's
seniors gave him the game ball;

' '

Robert Walters
experbnent that o~hl to be
allowed to proceed.

Berry's World

leaving football still hadn't sunk
,
in.
"It's still difficult to think in
terms that this is my last game,''
he said. " I know It's a fact, butlts
hard to conceive of that. Next
spring Is when I'll know It's truly
a fact."
Michigan State Coach George
. Perles said the Spartans simply
· were beaten by a better team.
"The only losers out there
tonight were our football team."
Perles said. "They played 'hard,
they got ljeat by'a better team. II
'Was a very Interesting game."
'
Perles· said he was unhappy
with some of the officials' calls,
as Michigan State was penalized
"for 102 yards.,' 'but we keep that
,In the famUy."
Rison agreed ,with his coach
about the officiating.
"I thought we got a couple of
bad calls," he said. ·~we had a
couple of big plays called back."
Offensive lineman Tony Man·
darlch said It "seemed like every
time we'd make a big play, there
was a flag."
Michigan State was led by wide
receiver Andre Rison, · ·who
caught 9 passes for 252 yards and
3 touchdowns.

;,

Hawaii fmds energy beneath the sea
HONOLULU (NEA) - Ha·
But the ocean floor at the
wall, a state heavily dependent bottom of the channel has' been
upon Imported oil, has embarked charted at depths In excess of
upn an ambitious and innovative 6,500 feet and is believed to be
program to achieve a measure of 7,000 feet deep at some places.
energy Independence through Presently, the deepest under·
the use .of Indigenous fuel water cable laid anywhere In the
world Is 1,800 feet beneath the
sources.
Hawaii's efforts rely upon water's surface between Norway
renewable resources rather than and Denmark.
the traditional - and depletable
- oil, g~s and coal.
, Critics of the Hawaiian project
note that although It IS ostensibly
Tbe renewable sources Include a private venture, Its sponsors
geothermal energy from Inside have convinced Congress to
the Islands' volcanic base, ocean appropriate $20 million to fl·
nance research and development
thermal energy, solar power,
of the undersea cable.
wlnd·powered turbines and. biomass from organic- wastes.
Hawaii currently Is more de-'
More than $5 million has gone
pendent upon oU Imports than to the Plrelll Cable Corp., the
any of Its mainland counterparts. likely supplier of !he more than.
More than 90 pellllent of the 260 miles of cable required to
state's electrtolty comes from traverse the entire route under a
generating stations with oll·flred contract that would be. worth at
boilers.
least $400 inlllion.
The most advanced alternative
Plrelll has mounted an ambi·
Is a $1.6 billion effort to harness
tious lobbying campaign In Wa·
the sub-surface geothermal
shington to obtain the federal
energy on the Island of Hawaii.
funding, but Its · efforts are
The largest and easternmost or
neither Illegal nor
the stale's Islands, It Is com·
ex!I'aordlnary.
. monly referred to as the "Big
Island."
.
·
The first successful geotherFinally, some Hawaiian na·
mal well there was completed in
tlves have opposed the geother·
1976 and now supports a small 3 mal project on the grounds that ii
. megawatt power plant that proconstitutes "the lndustrlallzatl()n
vides enough electricity to serve . of paradise" and the desecration
3,000 homes.
ol the fire goddess Pele, the most
The prospects !or future devel·
revered of all native dletles.
opment are promising because,
at a depth of 6,450 feet, the well
The natives recently placed
reached water with a tempera·
full·page
advertisements In
ture of 676 degrees, making It one
mainland
newspapers
warntng
of the hottest geothermal wells
that
tourita
would
"swim
In
anywhere In the world.
polluted
water,
breath
toxic
Industry expertl estimate that
the Big llland has thepoten\)al to fumes (and) see ugly electric
· prOduce 1,1100 megawatfs of towers" If the geothermal progeothermal electricity - equl· · Ject went forward. •
The geothermal project unvale.n t to a major nuclear·
doubtedly will continue to face
powered generating station.

By LjsA HARRIS
UPI SQorts Writer
Notre Dame emerged from the
Fiesta Bowl Monday the proba·
ble national champion and the
lone undefe~ted team in Division
I with a 34·21 1trlumph over West
Virginia, which quietly ended Its
own questJor a perfect season.
In othen • games, Michigan
defeated u!SC 22·14 at the Rose
Bowl in Pasrdena, Calif., Syracuse defeated Louisiana State
23·10 at the Hall of Fame Bowlin
Tampa, Fla,. UCLA beat Arkan·
sas 17-3 a;l "the Cotton Bowl in
Dallas, Clemson outlasted Okla·
homa 13·6 at the Citrus Bowl,
Miami tro}lnced Nebraska 23·3 1n
the Oran!je-Bowl in Miami, and
Florida State defeated Auburn
13-7 In the Sugar Bowlin New
Orleans. 1 , -.
. :
The Fiesta Bowl showdown In
Tempe, · Ariz., between the top:
ranked Fighting Irish of Notre
Dame and the No. 3 Mountal-·
neers of West Virginia was
expected to determine the nallonal champion, which will be

.
·

Traffickers will also hollow out
the frames a\ld runners of
wooden shipping crates and
pallets to conceal drugs. One load
of crates arriving In Miami from
Colombia carried 94 pounds of
cocaine. One smuggler tested
that method by hiding 43 bottles
of wine In the false floor of a ·
shipping ·crate coming from
Portugal. Customs agents foul!ll
II.
.
.

'

'

:

•'
WID

saying his decision to stay gave
them a boost heading into the
game.
" He showed us he had ·a lot of
confidence in the team, " said
safely Michael Brooks, who set a
Peach Bowl record with three
interceptions. "We wanted to
. show him we deserved · the
confidence.''
Brooks broke up eight passes to
go along with his three lntercep·
lions, a performance that earned
him the game's defensive Most
Valuable Player award.
"If (Brooks) had been a step
slower on some of the big plays he
made, it would have been a
different game," Sheridan said.
The offensive Most Valuable
Player was North Carollns State
quarterback Shane Montgomery, who came In only on
passing downs. Montgomery
completed 7 of 10 passes for 152
yards and a touchdown.
Iowa's Chuck Hartlieb, playing
on an injured knee, completed 23
of 51 passes for three touchdowns
and a Peach Bowl·record 428
yards. But Hartlieb set another
Peach· Bowl record with his four
Interceptions.

.

officially . announced . Tuesday.
The Irish COf9pleted their season
12·0 for the first time In history
while the 11·1 Mountaineers are
left to take consolation from their
first perfect regular season In 96
y~ars. ,

time this year it was blanked In a
period - and did not g~ a first
down for the game's first 24
minutes.
Quarterback Major Harris ,
West Virginia's big-play special·
is 1who averaged 213 total yards a
game, finiShed 12 of 25 passing
For No'tre ·Dame, the Iitle wlll for 1.62 yards and was contained
cap a return to national prom!· . throughout. He rushed for only ll
nence under Coach Lou Holtz,
yards on 13 ' carries and was
who needed but three .years in
sacked three times, twice by end
South Bend, IJ\d., to bring the
Frank Starns, wto was named
school Its fourth championsh ip
MVP on defense.
since 1966, butfl rstin 11 seasons.
Rice, In ·his first season as a
The crown will be the first In 19 starter, completed seven of 11
years of collegiate coaching for
passes for 213 yards. He had Tp
Holtz, a West Virginia native.
throws of 29 yards to freshman
The Irish rode junior Tony
Raghlb Ismail in ·the second
Rice's career·best passing effort
quarter and 3 yards to tight end
and held the Mountaineers to
Frank Jacobs wlth _13: 05 remain-•
their lowest scoring output of the
ing. He also rushed 13 times for. 73
season. Notre Dame held oppo·
yards· and was named Most
nents to just12.3 points a .game
Valuable Player on Offf'41se .
during the regular season while
Generally considered a poor
the Mountaineers averaged 42.9
passer and solely an option
points and almost 483 yards a
quarterback, Rice had compte·
game.
lions of 19, 23, 35, 47 and 57 yards
West Virginia did not score in
and a scramble of 31 yards -all
the first quarter - c~ly the third
of which led to scores.

LSU Tigers record fifth win ·
With that attitude, I think it hurts Rodney Monroe and Chuckle
By Un~d Presslnternatlnal
On the day the 171h·ranked · them to try a defense like tlfat." Brown each scored 23 points to
Louisiana State football squad
Jackson, who !inlsh~d with 30 pace the Wolfpack, 7·1.
Elsewhere on Monday II was:
ended Its season In disappoint· points, scored 17 of the Tigers'
ment, the Tiger basketball team !ina I 19 points to spoil a second· · South Carolina 103, Augusta 68;
tried to ease the transition of half comebac·k by Maryland.
Loyola Marymount 85, Wfs.·
sports Seasons.
"He's got great confidence and Green Bay 83; Utah 75,SanDiego
Fres~man Chris Jackson. ' a
he's a real great talent, " said 57; California 70, Colorado 54:
6·foot·li ,point guard who has John Johnson, who had the task and Seattle Pacific 117, San
alreadY scored 53 and 48 points In of defending against Jackson.
Francisco State 64.
games this season, hit a jumper
At Columbia, S.C ., Joe Rhett
Jackson hit 12 of 19 fleld·goal
with six-seconds left Monday to at tempts and 5 of 8 foul shots to scored 18 points and Terry Dozier
give USU a 79· 77 victory over keep' the Tigers, 8-3, unbeaten in added 17 to help Soutb Carolina
Maryland, the Tigers' fifth vic· ·five games on the road.
snap a two,game losing streak
19ry in as many road games. The
"I try to keep people guess· and hand Augusta its eighth
triumph 'came·on the same day ing," said Jackson, who Is the straight loss. South Carolina,
Syracuse beat LSU 23·10 In the leading freshman scorer in which dropped from the national
Hall. of Fame Bowl.
NCAA Division I with a 27.3 ran kings with consecutive losses
"I thought. Maryland did a average. "I don't think a bout to · La Salle and Princeton,
improved to 7·2.
·
pretty good job on Jackson," said scoring. I just go out and play."
At
Los
Angeles,
Enoch
Slm·
LSU Coach Dale Brown. "We've
No. 18 North Carollna State
had everything tried on us. It was the only Top 20 team In mons sank two free throws with
makes us difficult, because Chris action Monday, beating Towson two seconds remaining to lift
doesn't have the quest to score; State 83·77 at Raleigh, N.C . Loyola Marymount. The Fight·
ing Phoenix was· f!aced by
freshman Tony Bennett, who
scored 41 points and hlt 7 pf ·8
shots from 3-polnt range.
At Salt Lake City, Mitch Smith
led Utah's balanced attack with
MORGANTOWN, W .Va.
Sunnyside, where a large screen 20 points and 11 rebounds. The
tUPil -The only West Vlrglnm television flashed the final score Utes, 9-6, never trailed In win·
native• happy .with the result of and a•look of anguish crossed the nlng their eighlh ,game in their
the Fiesta Bowl likely was Notre face of several Mo11ntaineer last nine.
AI Berkeley, Calif., Califor·
Dame Coach Lou .Holtz.
faris, the West VIrginia fight song
nia's
Leonard Taylor scored 21
Holtz, a native of Follansbee, 'broke out. Others joined ln.
W.Va. , coached top·ranked No·
"In my heart they will always points and Roy Fisher and Keith
tre Dame to a 34·21 victory over be No. l," said Carol Woodward, Smith added 12 each to lead the
No. 3 West Vlrglni.a , whose fans a Fairmont, W.Va .. native now Bears, 10·3, over Colorado.
At Seattle, Twayne Rawls
accepted the defeat with quiet. living In Chapel Hill, N.C. "But
·
resignation.
the national exposure Is certainly scored' 21 points to lead Seattle
"There is no God," said Tim important. Everybody got the Pacific, which set school records
Sears, a West Virginia medical
chance to see that we are with 69 percent shootingl!'_Qm the
field and 69 points in the 5econd
student. " I'm from West Virgi- exceptional in a lot of ways."
half.
nia. I've lived my life to see this
game. And now they're playing
like something In the toilet."
Several believed Notre Dame's
experience In major contests
played a parlin the victory.
"West VIrginia just Isn't used
PL.ASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL
to the big game," Dennis Ramey
said. " Notre Dame, on the other
·hand, is used to the big game."
AI Adams, who works In
Morgantown's Sunnyside diS·
trlct , an area accustomed to the
revelry of students celebrating a
football win, echoed Ramey's
(304) 675-1244
sentiments.
'
· "We have played a great
season," he- said. "We just
couldn't get It going this game."
The area arouna the university
was quiet not only from the loss,
but by the absence students, who
won't return until next Monday.
In the back of a bar In

Holtz only West Virginia
native happy with score

.'
'

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through Friday, 111 Court St., Pomorey, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub· 1
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'·'

•

OU edges EKU
ATHENS. Ohio tUPI) -Dave
Jamerson scored 25 points and
Paul "Snoopy" Graham 23 to
lead Ohio University to an easy
96·77 win over Eastern Kentucky
Saturday afternoon.
· "
The Bobcats, now 5·4, broke a
13-13. tie with a 14·4 run a nd by ·•
halftime had extended their lead
to 60·40 over the Colonels.
Eastern, led in scoring by Kirk
Greathouse with 15 points, never
was able to cut intotbeOU lead in
the second half. The Bobcats
twice held margins of 25 points
during the final 20 minutes, the
las t at 84-59 with 8:36 remaining. ··
Three other OU play&lt;"rs scored
in double figures . Nate Craig had
12, Dennis Whitaker 11 and John
Beauford 10. Darrin O'Bryant
tailed 13, Mlke Smith ll and Mike
Davis 10 for Eastern.
OU connected on 10 ofl5 3·polnt
field goal attempts, including a
school record-tying fi ve of seven
by Jamerson. Eastern was only
two of four on 3·polnters.

''

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Gilliam had 28 points and
Eddie Johnson added 23 for the .
Suns;wh&lt;i nave won six of their
last seven games . .
Washington · was paced by
Bernard King's 27 points, none of
which came In the fourth quar'
ter. ·Malone l:lad 26,and Catledge
21.
·The last lime tile two · teams
met, Phoenix blewoutthe Bullets
130·92' Dec. 6, the Suns' widest
margin of victory ever over
Washington.

Save 35% to 65o/o

, I

'

A pair of Chambers' free
throws and a Tyrone Corbl n
basket gave the Suns a ll:'t·llO
advanta~e .
John Williams
scored for W. ashlngton to make it
115·112 with 3:.07 to play, but
Chambers came back with a
15·foot jumper and Eddie John·
son scored inside to push the
margin to 7.
Washington rallied within 124·
122 with 15 seconds left ·on
3-polnters by Je!f Malone and
Mark Alarie, but Armon Gilliam
made one of two foul shots for
Phoenix and Jtff Malone's 3·
pointer that would have forced
overtime fell short.

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points in the . 'fourtl) quarter
Monday nlgbt, helping the Pho·
enlx Suns hold off Washington .
125·122 before a Bullets' season·
low crowd of 3, 129.
,
The score was tied flvetlmes In
the fourth quarter before the
Suns took the lead for good when
Eddie Johnson converted a tech- .
nlcal foul shot called on Terry
Ca tledge to ·give Phoenix a
111·110 lead wllh .4:30 to pl_ay .

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The Daily Sentinel

"By golly, this new laptop computer is a little
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Th&amp;"Daily Sentinel -~-3

Irish roll over Mountaineers·~ Suns hold
· •
•
·
.·
·
.
' . off_ Bu~lets
Miami thumps Nebraska, 23~3 To~~a~"!~~sc~!di~:r~,.29

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, Januay 3,1989

.

The Daily Sentinel

PonMiroy- Micfdleport, Ohio

'I

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
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Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

•

~9ers .wm;

Bills,

in division finals

a wild-card team and defeated
By United Press International
The Buffalo Bills needed just 60 . Cleveland 24-23 last week.
" Unfortunately, our very good
minutes to end a drought of 22
football team ls not going to play
years. ·
anymore.'· Houston Coach Jerry
· Thurman Thomas and Robb
Glanville said. "Thls football
Riddick ran for touchdowns and
team had a plan and wedidn' tget
the defense made them stand up
Sunday. sending the Bills to their U done.
·'The problem with the playoffs
first AFC title game wit)l a 17-10
ls ·it'sgreat to get in but it hurts so
victory over the Houston Oilers.
much when you get pushed out."
At San Francisco, Joe Montana
Riddick scored from the 14:25
threw tbree touchdown passes to
Into th,e second quarter and
Jerry Rice and the49ersavenged
last year's postseason loss to Thomas ran 11 yards for a 14-3
lead with 2:58 lett· In the third
Minnesota with a 34-9 rout of the
quarter.
Scott NorwOOd added a
Vikings.
fourth·qua)'ier
field 11:oal.
27-yard
. The 49ers. humiliated by Min·
nesota 36-24 on the same Candles·
Buffalo's'.defense, tanked No.I
in the AFC, held the Oilers
tick Park fiel'd last January , will
play the Bears next Sunday in without a touchdown until Mlke
Chicago for the NFC ·title and•·a
Rozier's ! -yard run with 5: 12left.
spot in Super. Bowl XXIII.
Houston also scored on a 3!&gt;-yard
The Bills, 13-4, who won their Tony Zendejas field goal . with
first AFC East title since 19&amp;1and 4: 32 left in the half.
Buffalo's struggling of!ense
last made the playoffs ln 1981 ,
play at Clrlcinnatl next week in
picked up late In the third quarter
the AFC Championship Game. It when Jlrn Kelly hit Chris Burkett
will mark Buffalo's first title for . 26 yards to open a six-play ,
59-y&amp;rd drive capped by Thomas'
game since a 31-7 Joss to Kansas
City for the American Football
TD.
League championship 22 years
Thomas scored on a pitch right
one play after Kelly scrambled 10
ago.
"We've been like-a seesaw, up
yards for a first down and a
10-yard facemask penalty was
and down. up and down," Buffalo
tacked on against defensive end
safetv Leonard Smith said. "But
Sean Jones .
we believP in ourselves. It 's a
, Kelly completed a 55-yard pass
new year and right now we're
1·0,"
.
to Andre Reed to the 4 on
Buffalo's next possession, but the
Buffalo lost35-21to the Bengals
Oilers stopped Riddick on four
at Cincinnati Nov. 27. The Oilers,
straight plays. The Bills had
11·7, qualified for the playof!s as

This week's games

Hiram ac .\llf'I'MDY T11unwJ'
Cutr:».l Slat .-'rk·Pinr Blurt Toumey

Ohio follra:f' Ba.~kf'4hall &amp;-hf'duii&gt;
By l nUrd PrM~ lntrrmtional
""-"'"d~,

Pro results

·lan. 3

By l'alled Pl'f'Salnternuio•t

.'llu .. t.":ln,:um a1 Btldwtlt-~· allarp
Wllmln&lt;{on at Dl'liliiiCf'

NATION.lL RASNETB.U.LASSOC.

t.rbana"' C4'dar,111,.

M:olllla.Y'Ii Ren..
Ph~ Ill:

IU, M' ashi•Ktoo 1!2
Tu~ay't~ Gam"
NPWJPr!!e)' at Cb•loCif'-, j;JI p.m .
DPtrok at Ailanta, 1:30p.m .
l.nllanaatCit\'elaad. 7:31p.m. :
BOAton at Nf'w Vorki'll p.m .
LA Cllp~raa&amp; Chlcaa-o. H: 30 r.m.
Uta h lot Ho••on.ll: 30 p.m.
Dt"nwr at San Ant oolo, 8:.10 p.m.

RIG Gl'luldP all'tl a lolll'

Ohio Domhdc iUI at Mt \ 'trnon N!U
1111lh at \\alsh
\h&gt;dnt!'oday, -lltll . t
Ohio SIIUf' at In dian•
X a' 1...- at l.eyol.a-}tarymoum
Sl; ,

I.A.lul!&gt; Ml

\'ou~tuwn

SCalf'

,\kron a1 Brooklyn
fapltn l al Mlllrl.tblo
Rilll'ni:H'rs:at Hf'ldlolh&gt;rl
Moul'!llnlonat Ollt'rtwln
Ohlo.'lturthrrnat Flndlll..)'
f~t-lol' IWlwrW' at.Ob.-.tUn
lh•nl&lt;oon 111 Kf'nyon 0

Ll\ Laktf'S
Dalla.

Ml.nl

al

at S.allf', 10 P·R'l·
Sacnmn~to,

ar. Pordud,

11::&amp;0

p .m . .

10:30 p.m .

w.. ~~'iGam"

Ph081X al 8081011, nllht

Ohio M'Kil&gt;)·•n al M'oo~trr
Thursd»,)' .-llin . l

Sf'W Vorkat NewJrr!IP)', nlpt
Ch.-loU.t•llt "' •Wn~rSon.nltt;hl
Atlanla Ill Indiana, nl1hl
LA ClippE'U at Mltwau IIPf'. nlpt

" 'rj,;hl Slkl• Ill 1foward

ll. PC·Ft Mll.lnl' at .\shland
Andt'rMon (lndt at RluRton
!'tlalolll'lal M'ht'f'llnJ: (" \' a)
Sha"'f\H SCatr 111 Ohln DominiC' an
Frida)' , .Jan. t
l.akt&gt; Erlf' at o\tt \ '•rnon Naz
Hiram at Allrtt;hf'ti)' TOumt')·
ff'ntml St at ;\rk· Pinf' Blufl Toul"ftf'}'
Salurday, Ju.;
MIL..:~ m-In ai Ohlo.Sialf'
Kt-nl Stalf' ..t Cf' ntrul Mit·h
Miami at 'Aall&gt;rnMl l'h
Ball Slat• at Ohio l!nl\
Tolrdo at Ea..~wrn :\Itch
Rm•rllnl crrPen at ~roil
M r l~~;hl Slah• 1.1 Brooldyn
lht.yton at Lc!ynla [lilt
\' alparal~o (lndl at X1u 1t-r
\ 'nu"'''fi"R N al Tf'IUil'S!IM' :'\1:

•

Pertland al LA La.k~ . niJhl:
Mlwnlat Oolclrn Slah•, nilht

Cage sc~es
Oh.lo Collt'&amp;f' Buk&gt;4ball
.Tolf'do 81. Au.tln Pl'JW to

~ttos•~

Clnctn•tl Ilk. S Carolina 11-i
Ohio Unl\' N , F.an Kl'alt~;ky 7i
" 'rla:ht St 10$, U brrl)' ( \ 'a! 7i
Ohio 't\' r.!i~yan HI , Ohio O.Omlok'an 7%

Bruins nudge Blues, 8-7
By United Press lnleroational
ln his first e;rrn~back after an
eight-game
nee, rookie
Craig Janney reminded the Bos·
ton Bruins of how much they
missed hlm.
'·
Janney assisted on four goals
Monday. Including a pair ln the
first 3:04, to help the Bruins to an
8·7 victory over the St. Louis
.
Blues.
"That's my way of contriblit·
ing,' • said Janney, who now leads
the team with 23 assists. "It's
nice to be back; and especially
winning."
The return of Janney·. who was
out with a groin injury, was
timely for Boston, which had
been ~truggling offensively. The
Bru!ns have scored 14 goals In
their last two games, but only 29
in the previous 14.
"Craig Is a blg part of our·
hockey team." said Boston defenseman G)en Wesley, who had
.,. goal and two assists. "He adds
a lot of offense to (linemates)
Ca m Neely and Bob Joyce."
CUff Ronning had a goal and
·
two assists for the I;ilues.
After falling behirld 7·3, the
Blues erupted fqr four goals in
the last nine minutes of the game.
Joyce's goal at 15:53 of the third
~riod gave Boston ~n 8-6 lead.
· Joyce tucked in his own rebound
after taking a lead pass from
Janney, who picked up hisfourth
assist on the play.
St. Louis rlghtwlngToddEwen
made ir 8-7 with 40 seconds left in
•

HrldPI hH'J: at Mu~t.:ln8lJm
at Ohlo~orthrrn
\\'ittf'lthtrJ: Ill :n ounr
Ohr Rl"!o*'ru• at Ohio " 'f'!&gt;k&gt;yan
Otwrlln 1111 Mooswr
Rlufll Ml at MllminKton
A"hland at ~lppt'rJ· Rork {Pat
Df'ftiW'H'f' II D)'tlf'
" ahJPh ( lnd)llt rlndla,·
Lakr Erlr at Shav.ltt'r Statt·
Otlionnmlnluft at l'rdarvlll4'
Tlflln •• ,'flalont&gt;
IUD Gra11dr IU Mt \ 'nnon NILl
" '1tl,.h at UrbMa

Capitals 8, Penguins 0
At Landover, Md., Beilgt Gus·
tafsson scored twice during a
flve-goal second period by Washington. Pete Peeters recorded
his 16th career shutout and the
llrst of the season for Washington, which extended lis home
unbeaten streak to eight.

Edmo..-oa 3, MlanHota:!
Tuf'SdlQ' '!i Gam"

PhlbdMphla at Nl' blaadru, l : 85p.m.
Qllf'i)et. Mot Calpry,I:.U p.m .
•
WtcMrMIQ' 'sGam""
WMhlnA'!onal~'\' Rucf.rs.nlpt
Hartr11rd a&amp; BuHalo, nlpe
.
St. LouM Ill DHroil, ollht
Vu_c ouwr at " 'ln•ptr. nlpt
Quf'hf'r Ill Edmo•ora. aiPt

AS LOW AS

TUNE-UPS
a en.

END OF BUSINESS SALE
Pillow Panels &amp; Matching Material ................... 53.00 Per Yd.
Calico Material •••••••••..•.-:..................................... s3.00 Per Yd.
Assorted Fabric ....................................... sl.OO-S1.S9 '"Yd.
l!JCI &amp; Eyelets_............................................ 2 Ylk For S1.00

$3895 6 cT. $3495 4 CTL S2795

SATISFACTION GUARANTEED
LICEN~ED SHOP
NIASE CERTIFIED

YAIIIWI'S 1111'0 &amp;

Patterns ...................................................................... 25&lt; E•h
Ribbon .................................................................... 25' Per Ytl.
Located on Sl 7-5 Miles W. of Ch..tw, Ohio.

•

lent and very affordable.

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214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992·6617

•PATIOLL

~ STATE AU1'0

, . ; ) !nwlllCe~
Speclll , .... _

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For Specl•l People

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FOR ALL YOUR HOLIDAY
PICTURES••• BRING YOUR FILM)N
~ TO US FOR PROCESSING.
12 EXP.·•••~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S3.29
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24 EXP•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 55.99
36 EXP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S8.49

KAOPECTATE
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TO US
PHOTO
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12 OZ. - Reg. $5.95
NOW

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of 3V.x5"
PAINTS

PRINTS

1 DAY
SERVICE

GET A COUPON for

GUARANTE£D

.rl~3-· 8x1 0
t.:.--

is pleased to announce
the establishment of his
·· private medical practice
·in-New Haven, West Virginia

DR. JAMES P. CONDE· REGRETFULLY
ANNOUNCES THAT DR. EDWARD ISAACS
WILL NOT BE ASSUMING HIS MEDICAL
PRACTICE AS.WAS PREVIOUSLY
ANNOUNCED. PATIENTS DESIRING THEIR
MEDICAL RECORDS TRANSFERRED
SHOULD SIGN A RECORD RELEASE FORM
-WITH THE DOCTOR OF THEIR CHOICE.

Appointments and Walk-Ins Welcome after Jan. 3
9 a.m.- 5 p.m.
Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday
9 a.m. ~· Noon
Wednesday

PRESCRIPTION SHOP

R. Trent, D.O.

Family Practice

,992-6669

New Haven, West Virginia+ (304) 882-3134
Formerly Bend Area Medical Center•

271 N. S.Cond, Mlddl1port, OH.
i

DoMINO'S
PIZZA
P-roy, OH.
WHI Mai• ~I.

PIESCIIPTION SHOP
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PWS 2 · t6 o,z . Softdrinks

$6.17

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DINNER FOR FOUR
L&amp;RGI! I I ' 11-ITIM PIZZA
'' Whhltep.-onl ••., .... MutllfOOMI, .,

* NEW EXPANDED SERVICE *
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TO THESE AREAS ·
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MIDDUPOIT, POMEIOY, IIADI..Y, MINEISYILLE,
IU'n.AND, SYIACUSE, MASON, W.VA.

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FHE DEUVEIY ON ALl PIESCIIniONS, IF TOU DON'T
NEED A PIESCIIPnON WE WILl DEUVEI ANnHING IN
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12' 1 IT... PIZZA

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SEIYI(E

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Road to close

OIDIIS MUST. PIONED llllf0113 P.M.

BLACK AND WHITE
'·filM- ONE DAY.
Dani~l

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$199

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AEROBIC DANCE CLASS

12 OZ.-Reg. S4.90
NOW

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Dr.. Dan Trent

•

.--Local news briefs ... __

, ,.,~·~ut'·GRADE

Prescription op
·Flu Season Special!

·A. Hubbard, Syracuse; Rea
drew Wolle, Racine; Joseph Stivers, Pomeroy; Walter C.
Joseph E. Thompson
Roush , Pomeroy ; ' Janet Sue
Bryan Wilcox, Middleport; Prls· McDaniel, Middleport; Harold
Hilda Coler
Barnhart, Tuppers Plains; Su· ·
cllla C. Schu,ler, Rutland; Mabel F. Erlewlne, Jr., Dexter; James
Joseph
E.
Thompson,
69,
Rt.
1,
R.Hupp.Raclne:
BetryE.Klser.
s'an
Renee Burns, Racine; Mag·
F
.
Waddell,
Middleport;
Lisa
Funeral services for Hilda Mae
Cheshire,
died,
Saturday
at
Racine;
James
E
.
Hall,
Racine;
gle
N.
Winebrenner, Syracuse;
Dawn
Rider,
Middleport:
Harry
Coler, 62, Coolville, who died
Holzer
Medical
Center
following
Perry
K.
Hill,
Racine;
Judy
M.
Sadie
M.
Thuener. Syracuse;
W.
Stover,
Middleport;
MarSaturday morning at Selby Genan
extended
lllness.
He
was
a
Free,
Pomeroy;
Dorothy
Louise
Winnie
E
.
Neal,
Pomeroy; Tina
garet Lynn Bookman, Pomeroy.
rai .Hospltal In Marietta followdairy
and
grain
farmer.
Long,
Porperoy;
Barbara
Kay
Louise
Pierce.
Syracuse; Do·
Names drawn lor possible duty
Ing a brief Illness, were held at 1 · Reva M. Cardwell
Born
March
1,
1919
in
Addison
Lawrence,
Syracuse;
Paul
J
.
rothy
Louise
Long,
Middleport;
on the pettlt jury are Nita Jane
p.m. today at the White Funeral
Township,.
he
was
a
son
of
the
late
Huston,
Syracuse;
Delbert
W.
Jeffrey
Brent
Shank,
· Pomeroy;
Reva Murrell Cardwell, 55, of
Brown. Pomeroy; Thomas R.
h~me at Coolville.
George
Clyde
Thompson
and
Teaford,
Syracuse;
Mary
PauEdward
E
.
Kitchen,
Jr
.. Middle- .
The Plains. died at her residence
Darst. Middleport; Rhonda R.
Mrs. Coler was born ln Melg5
Amelia
Ruth·
Frederick
Syr~se;
David
port
atld
Harold
Dana
Brown,
line
Morarity,
following a lengthy lllness.
Hannahs, Pomeroy; James E .
County, · a daughter of the late
Thompson.
C.
Flagg,
Syracuse;
Orville
B.
Pomerov.
Cremeans, Rutland; John M.
She was born on July 9, 1933ln
Albert and Helen Reed Blake.
He
ls
survived
by
his
wile,.
Ida
Elizabeth Ann Hemsley, SyraWilliams, Middleport; Kathleen Sayre, Syracuse; Sandra S.
Galli
a
County.
daughter
of
the
A homemaker, Mrs. Coler Is
Mae
Hardlngs
Thompson,
whom
Cobb,
Syracuse;
Allee
Marie
cuse;
Nancy E. Gilmore, PorneA. Jacks, Pomeroy; Nellie Inez
survived by' her husband, Her· , late Clyde and Levina Coy.
be
married
Mari;ll
2.
1940
In
Houdashell:
Syracuse;
Jeffrey
·
roy;
FrederiCk
0 . Brown. PomePierce, Ruiland; Martel Jean
She was a member of the First
bert; a son, Donald or Guysville; ·
Cheshire
township.
Also
survlv·
Frlend,
Racine;
Belinda
Gaye
roy
;
Eva
Mae
Christian,'
Will, Pomeroy; Gregory Todd
Baptist Church of Athens .
two daughters, c;arolyn ChrisPomeroy; Edith Ann Leach,
Sfie was preceded In death by . lng are one son, Joseph Lynn · Sheets, Pomeroy; Clair A. Mar· Warden, Racine; David L.
topher of CoolvUle, and Barbara
Thompson
of
Cheshire;
two
Nance,
Racine:
Larry
M.
Bissell,
Pomeroy: Herbert D. · Pugh.
rls,
Silvers
ville;
Judith
J
.
one
sister.
· Chevalier of Reedsvllle; a
daughters.
Donna
Waugh
and
Long
Bottom;
Carole
M.
Dailey,
Minersville;
Cathy A. Hudson.
TI:tompson,
Albany;
Jerry
E
.
Survivors
incluude
her
husbrotlrH, Alvin Blake, Hocking·
Ruth
Barr
of
Gallipolis;
11
Becky
Ann
Kimes.
•
Pomeroy;
Drexel
C. Vance,
LongBottom;
Carpenter,
Pomeroy;
Thelma
band,
Ivan
J.
Cardwell,
whom
port; three sisters, Edith Shields,
grandchildren;
four
great
grand·
Emn'la
O!(athryn
Pomeroy;
Larry
David
Tucker,
Long
Bottom;
Irerie
Giles,
Pomeroy;
Mary
R.
she married on May 4. 1953 in
Hockingport; Opal Dunfee of
children;
two
brothers,
Fred
Owens,
Pomeroy;
•
'Katherine
Pomeroy
and
Lewis
0
.
Pickett,
Burton,
Middleport;
Kathleen
Vinton; one son .- David Cardwell
Stewart; Jean Gaylor of CharlesThompson
of
Cheshire
and
Ro·
Marion
Jacobs,
Pomeroy;
JoE
.
Racine.
Pomeroy;
Teresa
Elaine
Lehew,
of Honolulu, Hawaii; two brothton, W. Va.; 11 grandchildren
Ruth Elizabeth. Taylor, RaVarian. Rutland; Daniel Living- Wlll, Middleport; Helen L. Mul- ers, William Coy of The Plains bert Thorn pson of Pomeroy; and
and a great-grandchild.
one
sister;
Mrs.
Patricia
Holler
ford,
Cheshire;
Patrick
Soulsby;
cine;
Rodney Elden Pierce, Long_
ston, Rutland; Charlene A. Patt-'
and Carroll Coy of Marion; one
Besides her parents, she was
of
Pomeroy
.
Lydia
Viola
Haning,
Pomeroy
;
Bottom;
Elizabeth A. Lonterson, Rutland; Janice Yvonne
half-sister, Lucille Foy ot Pompreceded In death by a son, a
One
sister
and
one
brother
.
Randy
Lee
Williams,
Langsville;
genet
te.
Long
Bottom; Melissa
Jlaggy , Pomeroy; Sampson Hall,
ona. CalU., and two extra-special
grandchild and a brothers.
preceded
him
In
death.
·
Roger
Lee
Stobart,
Pomeroy;
Lynn
Hensley,
Long Bottom;
Syracuse; Martin Jq_e Chapman,
Offlclatlng at today's service nieces;·carol Coy of Marlon and
He
·was
a
member
of
Little
VIncent
Laudermllt,
Pomeroy;
Guy
T.
Hannum,
Long Bottom;
l'tllddleport; Troy Joseph Dud.
was Mr. Robert W. Markley. Cheryl Coy of Gallon.
Kyger
Congregational
Church;
Iles
Struble,
PomeroyBarbara
Ann
Hannum,
Long
Joseph
ding, Rac-Ine; Mitchell Charles
Services will be Wednesday at
Burial was . In · the Coolville
member
and
past
master
of
;Marvin
Wendell
Jeffers
,
Pome-·
Bottom;
Eyvonne
M.
Driggs,
!l:oUey. Middleport; Leonard L.
1 p.m. at the McCoy-Moore
Cemetery.
"LongBottom; Beatrice!!;. Blake.
Bass, Syracuse; Leta Eveiyn roy; Martha L. King, Pome~oy;
Funeral _Home In VInton. The Siloam Masonic Lodge; Ches.hlre
Chapter
Order
of
the
Eastern
Doris
Jean
Nease.
Racine;
VerSyracuse;
Marie E. Thomas,
Feity,
Langsville;
Beatrice
Rev.
Robert
Colvin
will
officiate.
Mary Poole .
Star;
master
of
Little
Kyger
non
J.
Evans,
Pomeroy;
Sandra
Pomeroy;
Kathleen
M. Cleland,
Irene
Wood,
Rutland;
~uth
AI·
Burial will be In Vinton Memorial
Grange.
He
served
on
the
Gallia
Kay
Wright,
Pomeroy;
Tim
Racine;
Douglas
Gregory
Jen·
teen
Anderson,
Middleport;
Park.
Mary Ann Poole of Stow, Ohio,
G(bson,
County
Soil
Conservation
Board,
Pomeroy;
James
Mason
klns,
Pomeroy;
Harry
Schwab,
·
Nancy
Jane
Clark,
Pomeroy;
Friends may call 'the funeral
illed Dec. 22.
Smith,
and
i;erved
several
years
on
the
Racine;
William
Alan
Pomeroy;
Mary
Louise
Birch·
Russell
J.
Seymor,
Dexter;
home Tuesday from 2 to 4 p.m.
She was born ln Middleport on
field , Middleport; James M.
Gallla County Junior Fair Board.
Teresa Dianne Garnes, Langs- BlackwOOd, Rutland; Charlsse
and
from 6 to 8 p.m.
Oct. 20, 1909, the daughter of the
P. Knight, Racine; Clara L.
Reed, Middleport; Henry T.
· Services were conducted 11
ville;
George
C.
Stout,
Albany
late William F:rederlck and Mary
a.m.
Tuesday
at
the
Waugh-·
Sayre,
Pomeroy;
Shirley
Sue
Carsey,
Middleport; Jeffrey
and James Reed Koenig,
Sarah Wheeler
Ann Jenklnso11 Ohlinger. She had
Mitchell, Pomeroy; Mildred EllDavid Howell, Pomeroy; Robert
Halley-Wood Funeral Home. the
Middleport.
Uved In the Stow area for over 50
zabeth Squier, Racine; Myron
L. Wingett, Syracuse; Hartwell
Rev. Richard VInson and the
Sarah Wheeler, 7§.- Rt. 1,
years and was a· member of The
Charles
(..usher
offlclatlng.
,.._
Gladtes
~ullin~,
~xter;
Ethel
Rev.
Rex
Miller,
Pomeroy;
Helen
A.
B. Curd, Pomeroy; Marilyn H.
Langsville, died Sunday , at
Church In the Falls at Stow,
·
Burial
followed
In
Gravel
Hill
Mae
Koemg,
Mtddleport,
John
Rlghthouse.
Pomeroy;
Donald
.
Poulin, Middleport; Sandra Lee
Holzer Medical Center.
She Is survived by her hus,
cemetery.
Craig Nlclnsky, Middleport; Inez
M.
Geary
III.
Middleport;
Myr'
Henderson.
Pomeroy; Virgil R.
She was born on July 15,1910 In
band, Howard~ a daughter, Ju- ·
Masonic
servi~es
were
held
Ash,
Racine;
Frances
A
.
.
Hot. tle VIolet Imboden, Middleport;
Lee, Pomeroy; Raymond Lee
VInton County, daughter of the
dllhJ. FeldmanofMonrlleFalis;
Monday by Cheshl.re Lodge.
!man, Middleport; Rhonda
Nora M. Jordan, Middleport;
Cole, Pomeroy, Merle Louise
late
Leonard
E.
and
Grace
A.
a sister, C.a narsle Stlnard o! Stow
Pallbearers were RobeFt Elaine Sayre, Mtddleport; Nina
Viola M. -Moon, · Middleport;
Evans, Portland.
Shlsslet Freeman.
and several grandchildren.
Waugh,
Tom
Waugh,
Steve
K
Yates,
Pomeroy
;
Allee
L.
Lorene
D.
Goggins.
Middleport;
Preceding her in death were
Relatives In Meigs County
Waugh, .Tim Barr, Terry Barr . Mtl!s, Middleport; Or anna. Barbara Lynn Payne, .Middleher
.husband; John Wheeler, whO
surviving Include nieces, Martha
and Al Thompson.
perry, Albany; Audrey P. Swett.
Salisbury Township TrusteeS:
port; Terry M: Barrett, Vinton;
Middleport; Donald L. Young,
Vennarland Mildred Bailey, plus died in 1972; two brothers and!
Greta
M.
Sutton,
Long
Bottom;
will
meet Thursday, 7 p.m.,at the
two sisters.
Middleport; Lois E. McElhinny,
a number of cousins.
G.
Arnott,
Middleport;
township
hall.
Allen
Jason
J?nes
Survivors include a niece, Mrs.
Middleport; Louis J. Ellis. Mld·
Jack
K.
Spires,
Middleport;
Clyde Stollings of Rt. 2, Vinton;· a
Kenneth Kimes
Jason (Jake) Jones, IS, of Rt. 2, dleport; Robert 0 . Willis, Syra·
Ronald K. Cowan, Middleport;
'
sister-In-law,
Mildred Freeman
Kenneth Henry Douglas Kimes,
Crown City, died Sunday at cuse; Dorothy!. Pierce, MiddleIsabella
R.
Powell,
Middleport;
The regular stated meeting of
82, of Hanford died Sunday, Dec. of Rt. 1, Langsville; and the Ross Pleasant Valley Hospital. He was port; Kathryn L, Feller , Judy Lynn Mattea, Middleport; Pomeroy L.pdge 164 will be held:
31, 1988, . at Pleasam Valley Schuler family. friends with a senior at Logan Elm High Mldddleport; Lee W. McComas, Wallace Fetty, Middleport;
Wednesday, Jan. 4. 7:30p.m .. at:
whom she made her home.
School In Circleville. He also Middleport; Angela Sue Sellers.
Hospital.
Nancy
N.
Beaver,
Middleport:
the Middleport Temple. Wor~·
Services will be Thursday at 11
Born Oct. 15, 1906, in Chester,worked on the family farm .
Middleport; Bryan Russell Dal·
Samantha Ann Roush, Middlewill be In the EA Degree.
Ohio, he was the. son of the late a.m. jj,t the McCoy-Moore FunBorn Nov. 2, 1970 In Gallipolis. ley, Portland; Barbara Jeanne
por.t;
Worthy
Bright,
Langsville;
Refreshments will be served'
Dwight Montague and Victoria eral flome o! Vinton. The Rev.
he was a son of Thomas E. and Barber, Reedsville; La rry E.
Brian
K.
Well,
Middleport:
Rofollowing
the meeting.
A ~B. Maloy will officiate. Burial
Caroline Kidder Kimes.
Clara Chaney Jones· of Crown Byer, Middleport; Twlia L.
bert
F
.
Brown.
Langsville;
Ro·
He was a retired employee of the wlll be In Vinton Memorial Park.
City, who survive.
Trader, Albany) Maurice Verlon
nald E. Atkins, Racine; Teena
Council lo meel
Friends may call the funeral
Also surviving is a grand· Reed, Reedsville; Robert Black,
Clements Tree Nursery at Lakin.
Renee
Rose,
Middleport;
John
Survivors include his wife, home :.Vednesday from 5to 8 p.m. ' father, Raymond ·Chaney of Portland; Patricia Thompson W. VanMeter, Syracuse; Barry
Racine Village Council wilL
Helen F. Kimes of Hartford; three
Albany, Ohio.
Holter, Pomeroy; Donna V.
Wayne McCoy, Syracuse: James meet at 7 this evening for if$
sons, Thomas Montague Kimes and
He was preceded in death by a Larkins, Portland; Virginia
annual organizational session:
A. Riffle , Syracuse; Job\\ Wil·
William Thural Kimes. both of . Lillie Dyke
brother ~ard. and grandpar- Eleanor Pratt , Long Bottom;
!lam Davis, Jr., Syracuse; Julle plus a regul~r business meeting.
Racine, dhio; Dennis Eugene
ents, Trimble and Minnie Gate· Candy S. Phillips, Racine; Do·
Kimes of Hartford; a daughter,
Lillie Williilms Dyke, 85, South
wood Jones and Janie Chaney . · nald S. Mohler. Pomeroy; Kelly
Stella Louise O'Bryan of Mason;
He was active in football, Jean Pickens, Portland; Douglas
Front St., Middleport, died Mon·
;12 grandchildren and three great- day at Veterans Memorial Hospl·
basketball and track at high Edward Duvall, Portland: CarContinued from page 1.
tal following an extended Illness. school.
• ,,
roll Eugene Clelanc;l, Middleport;
vandchildren. .
Tuppers t'lalns Fire Department was called 't o the scene at 2:56
He was preceded in death by a
There will be no visitAtiOn, and Ida Margaret Holter, Portland;
A homemaker, Mrs. Dyke was
p.m. The structure was engulf,ed In flames whe(i firemen •
brother, Arthur Kimes, and a sister, born April 6, 1903 at Carter
private funeral service and bur· Earl C. Wilson. Shade; Trennla
arrived
but the fire wa s contained tO the cabin and did not
Golda Hoschar.
County, Ky., a daughter of the
lal will be held at a later time.
Gay Harris, Long Bottom; Debspread to the nearby woods.
: Services will be Wednesday at II late George and Julia McGuire .
bie Lynn Cundiff, Racine;
The structure is believed to have been owned by a group of
Sharon Ann Pooler, Pomeroy; .
·a.m. in the Foglesong Funeral Harris. She was a member of the
out-of-county
Individuals. Origin of the fire is unknown.
·Home with Rev. George Hoschar Middleport First Baptist Church.
XI Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta j Gladys Vida Dillon. Reedsville;
Taken from the scene to St. Joseph's Hospital In Parkersburg
.and Rev. Everett Delaney officiatSurviving are two daughters Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
Eleanor Jean Douglas, Coolvtlle;
was
Firemen Brian Bissell who was injured when a beam fell
and sons-in-law. Mabel and Len· tonight, Tuesday. 7, 30 p.m., at
Sandra Ehzabeth Codner, Paring.
near
the main entrance. Bissell was admitted to the hospital for
Burial will follow in the Union ville Harman. Rutland, and Judy the home of Annie Chapman .
·tland; Helen M. Bartimus,
treatment.
Bob
Caruthers,
Middleport;
,
Reedsville;
Lelia
R.
Blake,
and
Cemetery of New Haven.
Reedsville; Homer Earl Hysell.
Friends may· call from 7 to 9 three sons and daughters-In-law ,
·
Pomeroy; Clero M. Baker, MidRay and Iris Williams, P.ome· •
·p.m. Tuesday at tlte funeral home ..
roy; Mick and Joanne Williams.
-The Middleport Literary Club · dleport; Don Mitchell Anderson,
Salisbury Township. Road 78. Willow Creek Road, will be
Syracuse; Ron and Wanda Willi· will meet Wednesday. 2- p.m., at , Pomeroy; Richard A .. Fridley,
William E. Naa,s
closed
Wednesday, Jan. 4, at 9 a.m., to allow for installation of a
·11
Is
·
1
the
home
zf
Mrs.,
Dwight
Wal·
Middleport·,
Kathert·ne
Kuaff,
·
•
ams, L angsvt e; as ter· tn· aw,
new cu !vert. The road wlll be closed approximately _two hours.
Mary Wllllams. Artie, W.Va.;
lace. Mrs. arrest Bachtel will
Middleport; Lois N. Burt, PorneWllliam E. Naas. ·77, Rt. 1,
roy; Debra Jo McCall, Shad'e;
daughter-in.-law. Jane Williams • .. review "P etry of Emily Dlckln·
Ewlngton, died Monday at
son" and Mrs. Richard Owen will
Homer Hysell, PomerQy·, Mag'.
Langsville; a stepdaughter,
T
H
"
Holzer Medical Center.
review " he Hesitant eart. · · nolla M. Nltz, Pomeroy; Jack J .
W
E
M
od
ary- o rum, non; a· step· Roll call will be art original verse.
He was borri on June 28, 1911 in
son, John Dyke, Fairborn. 11nd
Dayton, son of the late Jacob and
several nieces and nephews. Also
Catherine Kirchner Naas.
CARLETON .SCHOOL, SYRACUSE. OHIO"
surviving
are 21 grandchildren,
He attended the University of
32
great-grandchildren
and
two
Dayton Prep School before work9 WEEK WINTER SESSION-18 CLASSES $3900
grear-great -grandchildren.
ing for the Borden Company's
CLASSES BEGIN JANUARY 9. 1989
Besides her parents, she was
sales division, from which he
In
death
by
her
first
preceded
MONDAY-WEDNESDAY 7 P.M.-8 P.M.
retired after 42 years of service.
Elbert
Williams
ln
husband,
TUESDAY-THURSDAY
5:30 P.M.-6:30P.M.
He was past president of Toast1949;
her
second
husband,
Sam
FOR REGISTRATION CALL...
•
masters 401 of Dayton.
JOY KING, INSTRUCTOR 992-3794
Survivors include . his wife, · Dyke in 1968; two saris; Floyd
(Jim) and Elbert Williams Jr.;
JEANNIE OWEN, ASST. INSTRU£IDR 992-6893
Winifred Huston Naas; two sons,
two
grandchildren;
a
great·
OR YOU MAY REGISTER AT ~ST CLASS
Michael Naas of Murraysvllle,
grandchild,
five
brothers
and
W.Va .. and Dan Naas of Alpherthree sisters.
atta, Ga.; and · two grandsons.
•
Services
will
be
held
at
1
p.m.
Ben and Matt Naas.
' ,
Graveside committal services Thursday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Cecil Wise
will be conducted at the convenBurial will be ln.Miles
offlclatlng.
Ience of the family In Geer
Cemetery, and there wlll be no Cemetery at Ru !land. Friends
may call at the funeral home
visitation. In lieu of flowers,
from
2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.
donations may be made to The
Wednes!lay.
Humane Socletv of the United
States. 2100 L Street NW. Wa·
shlngton, D.C. 20037·9974.
Arrangements are under· the
dlre.c tion of the McCoy-Moore
Funeral Home of Vinton.

Lodge to

RNER~

•ACCOUNTING
•BOOICIIEEPING
•FINANCIAL STATEMENTS
•TAXES
•

ELECTRONIC ENGINE ANALYSIS

EASTERN HILL FABRIC SHOP

tractors. Simple. conven· ·

oGAN

co ntinued from page 1

Trustees to meet

medium-size artisan con-

992-7270

OTHERS SLIGHTY HIGHER
ROTORS TURNED EXTRA

.

traciOrs Policy . .packaged
protection lor small to

. 618 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY. OHIO

NameS;,,

Page 5

.

·It's the Series,Ono Con·

IorlA. Kllller Ill, CPA

\

$1500

.
· touchdown and three lntercep·
tions before leaving the game
with a bruised left shoulder late
in the third· quarter. It was the
same shoulder he separated last
month.
At Cincinnati, rookie Jckey
· Woods rushed for 126 yards to
· spearhead a 254-yard running
attack for the Bengals. Seattle
managed a feeble I!f-yard rush·
. o!ng output.
Cincinnati will host the AFC
Championship game Jan. 8
against Buffalo, a 17-10 winner
over Houston Sunday. The Ben·
gals beat both the Bills and Oilers
in Cincinnati -during the rego!ar
season.
The Bengals rolled up 165
rushing yards In the first half
while Seattle, wh\ch bases most
of Its offense on the running
punch of John L. Williams and
. Curt Warner, had zero. At ·
halftime, the Ben gals had 16 first
downs. the Seahawks had three.

KElLER
BUSINESS SERVICE

Rangers 5, Whalers 4.
At New · York. defenseman
David Shaw scored two power·
play goals Monday night , the
second breaking a third-period
tie, to lift the Rangers .. The
Rangers, 3-0-1 in their last four
games, had lost their last two
games to Hartford. New York
moved within two points of
first-place Pittsburgh in the
Patrick Division.

S39 9 5 FRONT $3775 ~Ell

.

By Jl':FF SHAIN
UPI Sports Wrller '
Both the Chicago Bears and
Cincinnati Bengals virtually won
ihelr NFL 'd ivisional playoff
games by l)_alftlme on Saturday,
but forentlrelydifferent reasons.
The Bengals jumped out to a
21-ll lead by halftime of their AFC ·
divisional playoff against Seattle
and held off a late rallytoemerge
with a 21-13 victory over the
Seahawks .
The Bears held O!llY a 17 -9lead
at halftime of their NFC div·
islonal playoff. game against
Philadelphia. But a dense fog
rolled In off Lake Michigan and
stymied both ortenses, al!pwing
Chicago to take a 20-12 victory
over the Eagles.
"I couldn't see their quarter·
back from where I was.'' Bears
Coach Mike Ditka said. "There
was a point. where visibility
downfield was not more than 10
yards."
.
The fog, which enveloped Sold·
ier Field lat.. in the second
quarter, reduced visibility to.
zero from most of the seats. But
the referees - in touch with
league officials throughout ~
allowed play to continue.
, Visibility remained poor for
the entire second half tor fans.
but players on the field could
apparently see adequately to
continue play.
Mike Tomczak completed 10 of
20 passes for 172 yards. one ·

BRAKES

8o1ton. 8, st . Loul!i 7

.

the game when his pass from
behind the net deflected in off
Wesley's skate.
"It was a wild game;" said
Wesley . "You don't see the
Bruins give up seven goals very
often and come out with a win ,
but we did dominate the first two
periods."
Janney, a former U.s: Olympian, set up Don Sweeney for a
goal at the 51-second mark and
Wesley for a power-play goal at
3:04 of the first period, giving
Boston a 2·0 lead.
Elsewhere on Monday, Washington crushed Pittsburgh 8-0,
the New York Rangers topped
Hartford 5·4 and Edmonton beat
Minnesota 3-2' in overtime._

•'

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

_ ___;,_____ Area.deaths-----:----

Bears, .Bengals, post
playoff wins Saturday

FALL SPECIALS

SATIO!\'AL HOCKE\' LEAGUE
Monday'sltfsutu
'AMNAA'!on S, PilbbtrJit n
N\' Ran lll"'rll S, Hardonl I

,\horlrib

•

Roger Craig, who gained 135
third-and-goal at the 1 but
yards
on 21 carries, capped the
Rfddlck was twice . denied the
scoring
with a 4-yard scamper
goal line trying to go over the top.
with
13:
41
to play and an 80-yard
Free safety Mark Kelso intercepted -a Warren· Mo9n pass on run. with 9:004 to go, the longest
Houstpn's next possession and run of his six-year career.
Minnesota's !tine touc)ldown
returned I~ 28 yards lo the Oiler$
18. The Interception, Buffalo's came In the th!id quarter when
first l~ five games. set up Wade Wilson, who was sacked six
NorwOOd' s 27-yard field goal with times, threw . a 5-yard pass to
Hassan Jones. Chuck Nelson,
11: 3.5 left.
After Norwood missed a 36· who had a 47-yard field !foal in the
yard field goal, the Oilers moved . first quarter, missed the. extra·
80 yards to Rozier's !-yard run. point try.
Anthony Carter of the Vikings.
Moon compjeted four of four
who
had 10 catches !or. an
passes for 65 yards In the drive.
.
NFL·
playoff
record 227 yards in
After a penalty on the extra-point
last
year's
triumph,
was held to
try, Zendejas converted from 29
three
second-half
catches
for 45
yards to make it 17-10 .
At San Francisco. Montana. yards.
Montana, 'driven from last
who had not tossed a TD pass in
consecutive first-round playoff year's game after being sackeil
defeats the last three seasons, hit four times, was sacked just once
Rice for scores from the 2, 4 and In going 16 of·27 for 178 yards.and
11. Rice had just 1three catches ane'interceptJon. Wilson finished
tor 28 yards In last season's loss 23 of 47 for 255 yards and one
lnter:ception.
to Minnesota.

NHL results

M1•mphlo; ~~ al (_ ' lnclnra~ti
1\kr on at \llddlr Tf'nN'S!'il&gt;f'
flt"\rlwtd S. at Mis!tOUrUU
Bal~ln-" all;u_"f' at Kfnyon
OUrrO.inal Cap l&amp;al

TueSday. Janu8rv 3, 1989

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

•

'

Tuesday, .January 3, 1989

Oolrv Qveen•stores ore PfOUd spon501tofthe Children's MIIOCie NetwOfk
Telethon \IJhiCI'I benefits lOco I hOspitals lor chlldten

IFOIMEILY VILLAGE PHARMACY)

• ••
0

•• !:

=

&lt;!&gt;fle9o'*•rld' Tilldtll'l'lril AAI 0 0 Corp

ClAN D 0 . Coqi.I1VIN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
NORTH SECOND ,AVE.

STOlE HOUIIS: lkln.·Fri. 9 4.M.·6 P.M~ Saturday 9 A.M.-\ P.M.

271 J101111 SECOND

992·"69

' .

.DDliPOIIt, OliO

'

'•

' .

..

:

.

·'

�'

~)?orne
roy
.

youth ·t,* ing
.
/part in exchange

: ~ver."

~·,,.Forest

.

Sarmrtus, currentiy' a gradu·
'ate student In International development and education at the
University of Minnesota, previous worked for the university's
International Study and Travel
Center as a study abroa(! advisor
and a group leader to Mexlco.
She Is also a res~ch assistant
working with hispanic youth In
' American high schools.
Sartorius most recently led
Experiment gro11ps .to Mexico
and Ireland. "It Is really great
working with high school-aged
students.'' she says. uThey're at
a very Impressionable age and
when the "experiment" works.
you see their world open up
before their eyes. It's a joyous
moment for a leader.
"My new position, as an ·
Experiment representative, al·
lows me to share some of my own
experiences with Interested
young people and to lncourage
them to develop their own global
perspectives by learning about
other cultures through Its people," Sartorius added.
The Summer Abroad program
Is designed for people between
the ages of 13 and 22. The
Experiment Is seeking students
who are mature, .·responsible,
. Intelligent. and open·mlnded;
people who are adventurous and
willing to take some risks In the
course of their education: As the ·
primary focus of their Summer
Abroad Is a Homestay, they also
seek Individuals who are looking
for more than just a touristic
experience overseas.
The Experiment Is recognized
throughout the world as a leader
In cultural exchange, language
training, and academic degree
programs In International education. Their goal has been the
same for more than 55 years: to
build International friendships
on a personal level as a foundatiOn for building understandlnfi
on a global level.
For more tnform'attov on The
Experiment lp International LivIng's Outbound E'Ciucatlonal
Travel ppportunltles, contact the
Summer Abroad Program, toll·
free at (800) 345-2929 or write to
The Experiment In International
Living, Kipling Road, · Brattle·
boro, VT 05301.

The annual holiday dinner party
of the Racine United Methodist
Women was held In the church
fellowship room on Dec. 19.
The hall and tables were
' decorated for the occasion and
the dinner was catered for the
group,
For the program, the.members
sat In ln a semi-circle around
the Christmas tree. Etta Mae
Hill, president, welcomed the
members and the program was
led by Louise Stewart. ''The
• Manger What ·tt Means Today"
· was the theme. Scripture was
· : read, carols were sung and
, readings on the meaning ol the
birth of Christ were given.

Each person was gl\&lt;en a paper
ornament on which they wrote
what they would try to do for
Christ In· 1989. These were hung
on the treeand the members had
a prayer asking for the will to
accomplish the things a bout
which they had written.
Allee Wolfe conducted games
and prizes were awarded.
Prayer partners were revealed
aqd new ones drawn forthe year,
A Christmas gift exchange was
enjoyed by the group.
' Members wre reminded to
remember the sick and lonely In
the church and communi~)' . The
UMW had taken poinsettias to
several earUer In the mohth .

'

•.

.

•Ads outside Meigs, Galli"a or Mason co unties must be pre·
paid
.
,
•
· ,.,~ . '·
·Receive $ .50 discount for ads paid tn advance.
•Free. ads - Giveaway and Found ads, under 15 words w•ll be
run 3 d~1 at no chtjll"ge.
•Price of ad for 1111 capital letters Is doub'e ptice or ad COlt . .
"7 point line type onty used .
"Senlinel is not responsible for ltt'rors aher first dav . (Chectl
for errors firsl dav a·d runs in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m.
day aher publication to make correction .
"Adt th~ must be pa\d in advance are
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads
In Memor iam
Y•d Sales

Many

finoncing Plans ~'"
Availablo

,

I

• A classtfted attvenisement placed in The Daily Sentinel lex·
cept - clauified dispiBY, Businees Card and legal noticetl

• Visa
MastwCard

wtll also appear '" the Pt . Pleasant Register and ttle Galli·
pult!l Da1ly Tribune. rt~achi ng over 18,000 homes.

catnapper. ·

FREE
DEliVERY

. NEW

INTRODUCTION

MONDAY PAPER

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNE50A't' PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
f-HIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

. FROM

"""i."l lABiiiU

-

2:00P.M . THURSDAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

•

• The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

16 -26 WORDS
$5.00. •
$8.00

0·15 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTij

$4,00
$6.00
$8.00
$13.00
$33.00

$13.00 .
$21 .00
$51.00

Ann oun cement s

26·35 WORDS

$7.00

$10.00
$15.00
$25.00

1 - Card of Thanks

$&amp;0.00

5 --- H~py Ads
6 - loU and Found
7 ..:. Yard Sale (paid in advan ce)
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auerion
9 - Wanted to Buy

Ho'rnes for S.le
Mobile Homes lor Sale '
Farms for Sale
'
Businws BuitdinVs
Lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Re,. Estate Want ed

4 - Gi\lfuwway

following u&gt;lephone exchange.L
Gallia County
Area Code 6l4

Mtu g5 County
, Area Code 6-14

446- Gallipolis

Meson Co. • WV
Area Code 304

675- Pt. PI easan1
458- Leon
576- Apple Gro"lle
773 - Mason

992 - Middleport
Pome.-oy
985 - Cha&amp;ter
.8 43- Portl. . d
247 - letart falls
949- Racine
742- Rutl.,.d

256 - "Guyan Oist.
643 - Aflbia Dist.
379-· W-'nut

8~2 - New

Haven

•

ljlijdfi111

Serv tces
11 - Help Wanted
1 2 - Situation Wanted
1 J - lnsuran ce

Trans portal ion

48 ~ Equipm&amp;nt

14 - Business Training
1 5 - Schools &amp; lmtruttion
1fl- Radio, TV &amp; CO Repair
1 7 ~ Milcellanoou.s
18 -· Wanted Tb Do

for Rent

78 - Cilmping Equipment
79 - Campers &amp; M olar Homes

Merchandise
Goods
52- Sporting Goods
53 - Antit~ues

lih6hllfill
22- Money to lofm
23- Protosstonal Services

667 - Cootville

.
'

Services

51 - HouS~~~hotd

5455 565758 59 -

.,

71 - Autos for Sale
72- Tru cks tor Sale
73- Vans &amp; 4 WD ' a
74 - Motorcycles
75 - Boat s &amp; Motors for S1le
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acc .. IOfi•
77 - Auto Repair

49 - For Le••

21 - Busineu Opportunity

B96 - letart
937 - Buffalo

61 -;-Farm Equip.men! .
62.- Wanted to Buy
63 - Livestock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
65- Seed &amp; Feniliz.er

41 - Houses for Rent
42 ...-- Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Ren1 ·
44 l... Apartment for Rent
45 - Furnished R.o om1
46 - Space for Rent
47 - Wanted to Ren1

Em ploy menl

•

&amp; Ltveslock

31 32 33 3 135 -

2 - ln ~emory

Cla.~sifi~&gt;d pa[{es cove r th&lt;'

Farm Supp lies

Re al Estate

3 - An11oucemen1s

Rates are for cunaecutive runs. broken updflyswlll be ch•ged
tor each d., as separatf! ad_s.

388- Vinton
245 - Rio Grilnde

- 2 ,00 P.M . WEDNESDAY

0

RATES

367 - ChMhire

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
_, 2 :00P .M ·. MONDAY
~ 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

Special!

81 - Home lmprowment 1
82- Piumbing &amp; Hflllting
83 - Excavating
84 - Eiectrlcal &amp; R8frig111Jatian

Misc. Merchandite
Building Supplies
Pets for Sale
Musicalln strumeflts
Frui1s &amp; Vegmabl81!1
For Sale or Trade

. BS-"Gfi nere1 Hauling
86- Mobil e Home Re(la [r
87- Upholsterv

•

I •

•c•blnet Style"

1
'

68 Ea

5

Selection
50 IN STOCK

with bni'ss accents. Your cl\olce ()!
Cocktail or Commode eod table Many
srytes ln siOdl;.

SOFA

••'!

'i99

---

Jlii:Ht aY•u•u

~CLUDE S

Ches!·BeO· Dresser •Mrrror.
N,gtJi s land

Sl59 99

SPRING AIR
ONLY

SAVE30-50%

s488

~"!premium I'JUO ~IW

Card of Thanks

Business Services

The family of Lucille Schwarz Theobald wish to thank the
many friends, neigh·
bors and relatives for
the support, . prayers
arid expressions of
sympathy in the death·
of our lovid one.
She was the grea •
test mother, wife, sister and grandmother a
family could have and
I, as her dau&amp;hter, do
tharik God for sharing
her with us for a
beautfiul 75 years.
Evayone has been so
wonderful to the family
in this ereat time of
need. Remember the
promise of eternal life.
Thank You
Marilyn, Wilbur,
Carrie &amp; Todd

Large

Contemporarydes9n In cla.ssicoa k finish r

Sprlf&gt;!l fll"

tn&amp;llres, se\ll ~~~

From

PlliCED FnOM
42" Oa~ F1nlsh anf1 Glass lal&gt;le

wilh 4 OaiJneaiiJmer cll&lt;ms
Packed 5
SCI

'

!99

.

1

299

WAJHU

HYII

'3"

'3!19

$588°0

5

RIMOTI CONTROL

...,.,.._Qnf_.....,
.,........,.._!
__
·~c.-

""'-1iafot

S299

'5

.

Cassano AEICOfder

SYLVANIA Video

Model VC4020AT

288

'=- -- ;ill_,

•-~--PI9~
1 monw:a ._,. ~ ... progra""""''

• 155 r:twvlel6got.. quat\~. rll!'ldom"~q lllllflg
• 31-b'lc:llon lrllrar..:~ remo~. Oilt*ol
• 0!1-Kt.w! lunti!OIIIIo.Spla,.

• Al.llo ICat1 lunil'lo
• On. TOUCh A-11 fOTAI"""' Sjanclt&gt;t
• K21 k.noat.Jir_.., L•dltrlg SHoen

• p-all ~,ee l

.t

•

St&gt;-- · uw~g

)11•

warranly on..._, ....aclt

,.

Jlllol'lftl MIIU'I

$28800

JEVVELRY SPECIALS
2rMI Wf'rl 10 k

Wolf Pen personal notes ·
1

400fo OFF

EVERYTHING IN STOCICI
end 14K Chains
16'

·l112D ·
DIAMOND
BLACK ONYX

18'

'1~"
16."

'17"
18'

'18"

•

·$238
-.............
.......

.,........ IMtltp

141(

::.::... s4 99

BULOVA

docaoud. lote of R.O , 1,

'

""

•
I'

1

WATCHES

Robert E. Buck,
Ptobote Judge
Lena K. Nea•lroad, Clerk ·

(12120. 27; (1! "3,

POMEROY, OH.
992-2269 '

TO .,

OHIO
PALLET
'cOMPANY

CUSTOM IJUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"At ltasanable Prices"

. PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949-2860

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6461

Day or Night ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

YOUNG'S

/

Spet&lt;hu~

Computer Graphics,
Publk Relations,
Advtrtising-l

MIDDLEPORT - GOOD
LOCATION - Older home
with a nice block garage and
workshop in good condition.
PRICED TO SELL AT

HAIR STYliNG &amp; TANNING

"

HUNTER
SECURITY

GREAT CHRISTMAS Glm
GREAT PRICB • GifT
URTIIICATIS

CARPENTER- Nice double
wide sitting on 1.86 acres in
~ country settinr. I 'h car
garage, deck, equipped kit·
chen, fenced .yard. ONLY
$32,500.00.

PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DLEPORT - Really nice
older home in town. 3 bedr
oom~ 2 baths, full basement, I car garage and a
nice b1g lot OWNER WANTS
OFFER! $42,900.00.

Henry E. Cletltld'
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Tu1118' ..... 992-5692

Jo Hill .............. 98H46&amp;·
Office................ 992·2259'

NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe hM buyers for ltlp
County Property. List with
us lor b•t rwsults.

.A JJ!

WANT TO IUY WIECKEo OR
IUNI CAA! 01 TRUm

TOP OF THE STAIRS

- fREI IITIMATI!-

AIID

Mastic &amp;Certainteed'
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation ·

$38,500.00. .

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling Wi1h
Dump Truck
·
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busine:u

Far any of th•t servi&lt;" call

614-742-2617

111 West Soc. Pomtroy

Betw•n 9 o.m.-6 p.m.
or leovo Moss0111.

992-6720

12-5-88-1 mo.

2·11r."'88-tfn

------··
GUN SHOOT

J&amp;L

INSULATION .

EVERY SUNDAY

RACINE. OHIO

Storm Doors &amp;
· Windows

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.__ _ _..;.9;;.·;.;19.;·H;.;t1:;;;•,•

Free Estimates

Call 992-2772

. 1/15/Hn

.,.•,

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays

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

.. " .

cak81
11. 1, lox 1U, Vinton

11·9·1 ,., pd.

11·3-'88-l.mo.

POMEROY ·EAGLES CLUB

H ,D. FREE with coupon and purchae of min, •
H .C . Package. Limit 1 coupon per cuttomer per ,
bingo session.
: ~
WE PAY $60.00 PER GAME
· •
OVER 110 PEOPLE '66 .00 PER GAME
' .,
Lie. #006· 32
12-11 -tfn

WOOD STOVES. ·.

•12 Years Experience ....
45 DIFFERENT WOOD · "

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

Good Rates

T.LC ,
26 Yrs. Exp.
References ·

Come see our
Chrlttmat Selections.
for your shopping &lt;onnni·
tnct wt will bt optn on Su..d-r• from 1 lo S p.m. thru
a.., 11, , ....

Joe or Pauley lowland
209 South 4th St.
Midtlloport. Oh.

742·2421

"LOW INCOME HOME"

STOVES, INSERTS AND . •
•
FURNACES
.Featuring: Con.,olidated, r.dlch • ',
. West, Brunco, Ae~hley
.. '
WE TRAD~

LOWEST PRICES

CARPENTER, 0~10 (Off St. Rt. 143J.. ,:

Smilh Run Rd, Rutland, Oh.

' 698-6121

11·21-'88·1 mo.

12 -21·1 mo .

)\ ...:

u

DOOR PRIZE

2

CHRISTMAS
AT

10/13/8812 ....:·::

1
LL ENGINE
REPAIR

•VINVL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO •.
Now H - Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160

.SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fiahing Suppll•

Pay Your Phona
and Cable Billa Here

IUSINISS PHON!
(bt4J 992-6550
IISIDIHCI PHON!
(bUJ 992-7754
1128/

RADIATOR
SERVICE

also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas.Tanln.

PAT HILL FORD

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-ll-tfc

CHESTER, OHIO

&amp; l'tlr!J

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

. Tacumaeh
Weed Eater
Homellte
Jacobsen

Ohio
992-6611

3·30- '17 tfn

·. ,

,,

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

985·4141

Middlep~~rt,

3-11-tfn

168 North.Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Authoriutl Sorvi&lt;o

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

NO SUNDAY CAllS

New, LD&lt;alion•

MARCUM CONTRACTING.:·.

Briggs It Stratton
··
..

,

We c'an repcir and rt·
core radiators and
--ll+thtater cores. We can

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

224 E. MAIN ST. ....;. 992·9n6

character and novelty

Room &amp; loard For
Senior Citlztns and
Hondicopped

.'

CAKES .
by Donna
Specializing in

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

FASIIONS.

PRICE REDUCED - Middleport - 2 untt lirick
apartment building in town.
Garage, AC unffs. good rental
income. Close lo shoppinr.

,,

·

. 11 · 71 mo.

JR. &amp; MISSY

,

·

614-992-3643

lATEST •

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

EASTERN DISTRICT- Spa·
cious living w~h privacy on a
·deadend road. Large home
w~h 4 bedrooms. family
room, dintng room, living
room with fireplace, nice
kitchen cab1nets. Many
other nice features. Call for
an appointment

Phone:

II ·WBB·Ifn

PRICE REDUCED - Middleport - A nice 14x65
mobile home in beautiful
condition. New front deck
and screened rear porch.
New carpet-vinyl, panel·
ing and celing fans. Storage
building and ' chain link
fenced yard. Nothing to do
but r(!Ove in. $26,500.00.

$24;900.00 .

'

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

,,.,,,,,,,"
Spultllrt

Ltesa M. Murphey
FrH·Lante Writer

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

'~

,/:Jer i

NEW LISTING - IIIODLEPORT - 2 story house
siHing on 2 lots, 4-5
bedrooms, 2'h baths, gas
fireplace, basement plus
attic space and garage.
ASKING $49,900.00.

$19,900.00.

Oeve Olleo, Dlreclor
of Dave Dileo

t

DELIVERED

work

3tc

Enterpri.... Inc.

$14 PER TON

(FREE ESTIMATES)

28. 1918.

(1) 3 . 10. 2tc

INCHES ON
lARGEST END

-Ad dons end remodeling·
-Roofing lnd gutter work
-Concrete work
.
-Plumbing 1nd electric.!

NOTICE OF
DISSOLUTION OF
OAYE DILES
ENTERPRISES. INC .
Notice Ia hlfobV given thot
on Deumber 24, 1188.
• D.,. Dleo Entorprioeo, Inc.,
., Ohio corporotlon. h..lng
ito princl!* offt'ce In Roclno,
Ohio, by reoolutlon of Ito
ohorohol.,o oloatod to dlo·
· - ond wind up Mo effoiro.
Mid thlt a awtlfl..,. of ouch
diUolutlon weo lllod In tho
office of tho SocrOUtry of
8t11te ol Ohio on Decem"-&lt;

106 N. SEC.
.MIDDLEPORT
992-2635

DIAMETER 14

SERVICE

Public Notice

,,
.I

tb.

MAXIMUM ,

CARPENT~R

long Bottom,· Maiga County, Ohio, 45743,

GELS Furniture &amp;·J welry.
435 2ND
GALLIPOLIS
446-8084

WELCOME TO

Real Estate General

pointed Executrix of the es·
tate of Eurane J . Thof}'lu,

25°/ooFF

-..p&lt;. • f'a i&gt;

Nc&gt;w Only ~~~-

EUM HOME

GOODIES

BINGO

JUST OPENED

ALARM
SYSTEMS

4· 1•86-tln

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Oacembet 14, 1988,
in tt,&amp; Meigs County' Probate
Court. Case No. 26104,
Charlotte Cremeens. 201
Gktnn
Drive, Gallipolis.
Ohio, 45631, woo
op·

'

v. Coral -'J~
Flootlnt H..rt
at DillmDfldl ':,;~~:!
~
-..~' \ . 1
~::.1··:~

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

Located Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;
143, Pomerov. Oh.

Public Notice

VHS HQ VCR

~--------~--------~
SAVE ·
we luncrcup

40°/o OFF

742-2235

992-51.14

• e.. Cad.gt~Audio ""- dospli~
• Supei'T~oe~~ ~H J

614·992-5952

ALUMINUM
CANS ........... 421

Immediate opening
for experienced mtdi·
cal tr-aiptioilist.
Proficient in medical
terminalagy ·, and a
good typist. Excellt"t
working conditiam
ond fringe benefits.
Send resume to Per·
sonnel Department, P.,
0. Box 344, Gallipolis,
OH. 45631.

~

5

•Residential
•Commercial ,
10 Years Experience

CAST ............ 35( lb.

liANSCRIPnO~ST

'499

Get You.r
Holiday 'Goodie
Orders In Now.
· AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI POWELL
12-6-'SH mo.

CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS.- ........ 40( lb.
CLEAN ALUMNUM

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL

·a.-- ..

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

#1 COPPER"" 13( lb.

11 Help Wanted

...... .. ·---·- ----·
288

•

HOME BAKED

!Subject to Change
Without Notice I

Thank You.
Mary E. Parker
Former Mary E.
Gilkey

~YlrT~A

• ! •• •

TRI.;COUNTY
RECYCLING
Paying today
Dec. 12, 1988

I am thanking
my customers
for tbe
•
Christmas cards
and gifts this '
Holiday.
Everything was
very
appreciated.

METAL
BED F,RAMES,

..
'

12-11-d8·1 mo.

INVEST
IH
THE
BEST

LADIIS tAll.

,.•

.

~=~

STOREWIDE SAVINGS

·

: ·Christmas Day guests or' Mr. field, Crystal of Medina, Mr. and
•and Mrs , J. R. Murphy were Mrs. Donald Russell, Mr. and
Robert Murphy, Robbie, Jenny Mrs. Ronald , Russell, Amanda
~nd Chad, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
and Michael, and Mr. and Mrs,
' Evans Tyson and Jonathan, Mrs. Steve Haggy, Stephanie and
' John l)owns, Adam. Eric · and Brad were C)lristmas guests of
Dickie, Mr. and Mrs. John E . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell.
· Murphy, and Chris. Mrs: Greg
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dummitt of
:Davis, ·Ashll, Joshua ani! Mer- Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
: lnda and Peggy Murphy.
\.if.olley, Calvlnlee and Mr. and
•
.
-tllrs. Terry Johnson were Christ' Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
mas Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp,
Harley E. Johnson.
Michelle and Amy Johnson, Iva
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith;
.fohrison and Kall Knapp and
Iva Johnson, Mr. and • Mrs.
ilarbara Hatfield and Mr. and
Charles Knapp, Wolf Pen, Mr.
Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tyson and
and Mrs. K~vln Knapp, Michelle
.fonathan were visitors of Mr.
and Amy, ar Syracuse, and Kall
and Mrs. Charley Smith on
Knapp were Monday guests o!
Christmas Day.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom SummerLangsvUle.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 9cJ2-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. ·until NOON ·SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Jsnus1g Cl1111n"

Run UMW meets

UMW .meeting held

'

Classifie

' 992~2635 .

The Daily -~ntinel Page~7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

GALLIPOLIS·MIDDLEPORT
446-8084'

'

Tu•day, Janu.y 3, 1989

INGELS·Furniture &amp; Jewelry

,. Children's. recitations. carol herald, Jenny Varney, Mary;
·: singing and a pageant hlghllgh-. Johh Chaney, Joseph; Kelly
•.ted the annual Christmas pro- Erwin, an angel; Celena and
; gram ol the Forest Run United Chas!ty Dillard and Brlttany
• Methodist Church.
Hauber, small angels; Chris
. • Dan Nease had prayer follow- Hamm, the Innkeeper; Jason
· •lng the opening song, Oh Come . Erwin, Chris Ball and Ryan
:An Ye Faithful.
Hollon, the shepher!ls; Joshua
: The nursery-kindergarten Smith, King Herod; Phllllp
· children. who . gave re\:ltatlons Hamm, Rabbi, Megan· Clark,
' and then sang several songs were . Chamberlon; Kim Sayre and
· Sara Ball, Chaslty Dlllard, Ml· Amy Varney, guards; and Mary
dam Eldabaja, Brittany Chaney. Rochelle Jenkins, and
· Hauber. Sara Hawley, Stacie Amy Mills, the wlsemen.
: Mills, and Katie Sayre.
There was special music durCh!ldren of the older classes lng the pageant by Roy Jenkins, a
giving recitations were Chris duet by Roma Sayre and Rose
• Ball, Mary Chaney, Megan . Ann Jenkins, and a men's group
: Clark, Jerry Clark, Celena Dll· of Kenny .Wiggins, Tom Ball,
· lard, Jason Erwin, ChrtsHamm, Alfred Yeauger, Rick Hauber
: Ryan Hollon, Rochelle Jenkins, and Jenkins.
: Jerod Mills, Carrie Pugh, Della
The pastor and his wife were
Pugh, Klm Sayre, Joshua Smith, presented a gift and this was
Amy Varney, BrJdget Varney. followed by a visit from Santa.
The children san~ Children Go
Faith Varney had charge oft he
Where I Send Thee and program with Rose Ann Jenkins.arranging the music; Chairmen
, Drummer Boy.
· Taking roles ln the Christmas of refreshments Were Carolyn
Salser and Marybelle Warner. /"
pageant were Klm Jenkins, the

-~ ~;:tcine

Tuesday, January 3, 1989

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pege 6-The Deily Sentinel'

: .• POMEROY - The Expert. ment In International Living; a
iaonproflt International education and citizen exchange organ!·
zatlon, has a new representatiVe,
•Mary Jo Sartorius, to serve the ·
: Pomeroy area. Sartorius will be
: vlliltlng schools and communities
• around Pomeroy to make video
: presentations and answer questions about The Experiment's
'summer Abroad opportunities.
: The Experiment offers
~ Summer Abroad opportunities to
· 31 countries - as diverse as
: Martinique, Kenya, Australia
: and Japan - with programs
· fitting a variety of Interests.
;While some prograllJS ,highlight
learning a foreign language,
tnany of the programs have no
: language requirement Others
· feature travel or speclaltn!erest
: activities such as biking In
: ~ranee, mountaineering In Swtt' .
•Jerland, and a special week-long
: trip to. the Galapagos Island and ·
' l&gt;arwtn stations on the Ecuador
lll'!lgram.
No matter which program
participants choose, all Summer
Abroad experiences share three
• components: a group of travel
CQI!Ipanlons of similar age, an
.- orientation period, and a Homes' lay - the heart of the prOJtram.
• The Homes tay provides away
· : to learn about another culture by
; living as a member of a familY• a chance to work, play, learn.
: and share with a new family.
: There are family outings, dally
· chOres, local sightseeing, excur: slons with the group, social
get-togethers, sports activities,
. and relaxed time with new
: friends.
• Rep. Sartorius explained, "My
• own 'experiments' living with
. .tamllles In rural Mexico and
· travellilg In fourteen E~ropean
; countries has changed the way I
• think about myself as an lndlvld·
: ual. As a result of those , early
: multicultural experiences, I
· have developed a strong Identity
: as a global citizen, and disco: vered an International. career.
: The Experiment's Summer
Abroad offers young people an
opportunity to discover the world
• arid themselves - something
: that Is needed today more than

•

.

GENERAl CONTRACTORS
1 1-16·'88-tfri

Referentes

CLOWNS

Shop ·•,
·· Where

Collectors of
Emmitt Kelly .Jr.

Shops! -

Santa _: ~

,. •.&gt;"· ···

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

LIMITED EDinON

.

50°/o
TO 75°/o .

-SAVE

PH. 1-992-6822
12·11·88·1 mo.

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

BOOKCASES
CROCKS •
WASHSTANDS
ORESE~S

LAMPS
..The Gifts Thai 1\'evf'r

II 24 E. MAIN

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

992-2526

Listening
Dependable Hearing Aid. Sales &amp; Sentre•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

HILLSI"E MUZ.ZLE
LOADING ·

0
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinica I Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

Alii'

MODEIN GUN
SUPPLIES

~·

Munltlootling Suppli•
Modtrn Gun Su~li•
Guns • Ammo • Slugs

3
-

27 Ammo

417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hils. Pomeroy, Ohio

Rt, 124 Eut of Rutland
A&lt;:rooo Hoppy H- RO«&lt;

' Ph. 614·742-2355

l / 20/ dn 1 mo. pd.
'

•a.6awc

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUS~

~

PAY

OHIO · •

,LATER

Most Foreign and
DomB&amp;Iic Vehicles

With Cub C*t Financing
. UI0/,•Dawn
With Approvotl Crollit
No Paymlftt or lntwesf

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor '·
Repairs
·
NIASE Certified Mechanic

'Til July I, 1919

CALL 992-6756

.D. J.'S TRADING POST

"DOC" VAUGHN

614-992-1301

. • Certified licensed Shop
5-25- tln

MIDOliPOIT, OHIO

lt·2·'8t-l m9

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE ·
PH. 9"9-2969

. BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SIIYICE

Dealer far

U. S. IT. 50 UST
GIYSVIU, o•o

YAIINIAII &amp; ECHO

Lo-od Hellwoy
betw'""' Rt. 7 • Boohon.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Stnlct Cent• lor 1,..,
Products

8. 7 Finencing on Yardman
Service on All Makeo
We Honor M(/Dioc/Yiso
9-1-81-tfn

BUY
NOW

'14-662·3121

:

Authorized John
Dura, New Hollend,
Buoh Hog Farm
Equpmont Doallf,

ftr• E••lt••t .
Slf• &amp;l11~1u ·

1·3·'11-lfc

FIREWOOD

GUN SHOOT

OAK, LOCUST
CHERRY

FIRE DEPT.

$35

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269

1-1·'11· ~·

LINDA'S
PAINTING "
INTDIOI-IXTIIIOI '
FREE ESTIMATES

Taitt the pal• aut of
palntltlt. L8t ... do
it fer you.

VRY IIASOIIAIUtwt
-HAVIIIPIIacES,
614~915·41 10

11· 19·' 81·1 mo. pd.

RACINE

Basham Building

. EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
FD&lt;tory Chaltt
Shotguns Only
Strictly ·Enforced

12 Gaugo

10· 7-tfn

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
•

Middleport, Ohio
1·28·'88-tfn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCnON

OWNII: GUG I, IOUllt

,O:h

H

. GEN ERAI

CONIRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COIIERCIAL

.CUSTOM ICITCHENI. IATHI

IIIXliNIIVE IIEMODILING

•VINVL IIDINO 6. ROOANO
tMETAt. BUilDINGS
HOUSING a ld'T. PROJECTS

.

SINCE 196!1

..IIlii. SUAQIK

992-7611

11·21-18-ffn.

'

WANTED.:
DEAD OR ALIVE ·.
•Washers •Dryers ·
•Rangee •F.reezere
•Retrigeratore _; ,,
~' Must .. . lepair.. le": :

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561 ' ::
We Service All Makea-

1122188/tf"

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION .

...

,.

Formerly Meigs Excavating

Full Excavating and Construction
Residential 8t Commercial
Free Esti'"atea for· Resid6ntial 8t
Farm Work
Rt. 1, Vinton
\
388-8746 · .. •
Owner 8t Operator,
Tony Cardillo
11·9·1 mo.

·.

'

�'

~)?orne
roy
.

youth ·t,* ing
.
/part in exchange

: ~ver."

~·,,.Forest

.

Sarmrtus, currentiy' a gradu·
'ate student In International development and education at the
University of Minnesota, previous worked for the university's
International Study and Travel
Center as a study abroa(! advisor
and a group leader to Mexlco.
She Is also a res~ch assistant
working with hispanic youth In
' American high schools.
Sartorius most recently led
Experiment gro11ps .to Mexico
and Ireland. "It Is really great
working with high school-aged
students.'' she says. uThey're at
a very Impressionable age and
when the "experiment" works.
you see their world open up
before their eyes. It's a joyous
moment for a leader.
"My new position, as an ·
Experiment representative, al·
lows me to share some of my own
experiences with Interested
young people and to lncourage
them to develop their own global
perspectives by learning about
other cultures through Its people," Sartorius added.
The Summer Abroad program
Is designed for people between
the ages of 13 and 22. The
Experiment Is seeking students
who are mature, .·responsible,
. Intelligent. and open·mlnded;
people who are adventurous and
willing to take some risks In the
course of their education: As the ·
primary focus of their Summer
Abroad Is a Homestay, they also
seek Individuals who are looking
for more than just a touristic
experience overseas.
The Experiment Is recognized
throughout the world as a leader
In cultural exchange, language
training, and academic degree
programs In International education. Their goal has been the
same for more than 55 years: to
build International friendships
on a personal level as a foundatiOn for building understandlnfi
on a global level.
For more tnform'attov on The
Experiment lp International LivIng's Outbound E'Ciucatlonal
Travel ppportunltles, contact the
Summer Abroad Program, toll·
free at (800) 345-2929 or write to
The Experiment In International
Living, Kipling Road, · Brattle·
boro, VT 05301.

The annual holiday dinner party
of the Racine United Methodist
Women was held In the church
fellowship room on Dec. 19.
The hall and tables were
' decorated for the occasion and
the dinner was catered for the
group,
For the program, the.members
sat In ln a semi-circle around
the Christmas tree. Etta Mae
Hill, president, welcomed the
members and the program was
led by Louise Stewart. ''The
• Manger What ·tt Means Today"
· was the theme. Scripture was
· : read, carols were sung and
, readings on the meaning ol the
birth of Christ were given.

Each person was gl\&lt;en a paper
ornament on which they wrote
what they would try to do for
Christ In· 1989. These were hung
on the treeand the members had
a prayer asking for the will to
accomplish the things a bout
which they had written.
Allee Wolfe conducted games
and prizes were awarded.
Prayer partners were revealed
aqd new ones drawn forthe year,
A Christmas gift exchange was
enjoyed by the group.
' Members wre reminded to
remember the sick and lonely In
the church and communi~)' . The
UMW had taken poinsettias to
several earUer In the mohth .

'

•.

.

•Ads outside Meigs, Galli"a or Mason co unties must be pre·
paid
.
,
•
· ,.,~ . '·
·Receive $ .50 discount for ads paid tn advance.
•Free. ads - Giveaway and Found ads, under 15 words w•ll be
run 3 d~1 at no chtjll"ge.
•Price of ad for 1111 capital letters Is doub'e ptice or ad COlt . .
"7 point line type onty used .
"Senlinel is not responsible for ltt'rors aher first dav . (Chectl
for errors firsl dav a·d runs in paper). Call before 2 :00p.m.
day aher publication to make correction .
"Adt th~ must be pa\d in advance are
Card of Thanks
Happy Ads
In Memor iam
Y•d Sales

Many

finoncing Plans ~'"
Availablo

,

I

• A classtfted attvenisement placed in The Daily Sentinel lex·
cept - clauified dispiBY, Businees Card and legal noticetl

• Visa
MastwCard

wtll also appear '" the Pt . Pleasant Register and ttle Galli·
pult!l Da1ly Tribune. rt~achi ng over 18,000 homes.

catnapper. ·

FREE
DEliVERY

. NEW

INTRODUCTION

MONDAY PAPER

TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNE50A't' PAPER
THURSDAY PAPER
f-HIOAY PAPER
SUNDAY PAPER

. FROM

"""i."l lABiiiU

-

2:00P.M . THURSDAY
2 00 PM . FRIDAY

•

• The Area's Number ·1 Marketplace

16 -26 WORDS
$5.00. •
$8.00

0·15 WORDS

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTij

$4,00
$6.00
$8.00
$13.00
$33.00

$13.00 .
$21 .00
$51.00

Ann oun cement s

26·35 WORDS

$7.00

$10.00
$15.00
$25.00

1 - Card of Thanks

$&amp;0.00

5 --- H~py Ads
6 - loU and Found
7 ..:. Yard Sale (paid in advan ce)
8 - Public Sale &amp; Auerion
9 - Wanted to Buy

Ho'rnes for S.le
Mobile Homes lor Sale '
Farms for Sale
'
Businws BuitdinVs
Lots &amp; Acreage
36 - Re,. Estate Want ed

4 - Gi\lfuwway

following u&gt;lephone exchange.L
Gallia County
Area Code 6l4

Mtu g5 County
, Area Code 6-14

446- Gallipolis

Meson Co. • WV
Area Code 304

675- Pt. PI easan1
458- Leon
576- Apple Gro"lle
773 - Mason

992 - Middleport
Pome.-oy
985 - Cha&amp;ter
.8 43- Portl. . d
247 - letart falls
949- Racine
742- Rutl.,.d

256 - "Guyan Oist.
643 - Aflbia Dist.
379-· W-'nut

8~2 - New

Haven

•

ljlijdfi111

Serv tces
11 - Help Wanted
1 2 - Situation Wanted
1 J - lnsuran ce

Trans portal ion

48 ~ Equipm&amp;nt

14 - Business Training
1 5 - Schools &amp; lmtruttion
1fl- Radio, TV &amp; CO Repair
1 7 ~ Milcellanoou.s
18 -· Wanted Tb Do

for Rent

78 - Cilmping Equipment
79 - Campers &amp; M olar Homes

Merchandise
Goods
52- Sporting Goods
53 - Antit~ues

lih6hllfill
22- Money to lofm
23- Protosstonal Services

667 - Cootville

.
'

Services

51 - HouS~~~hotd

5455 565758 59 -

.,

71 - Autos for Sale
72- Tru cks tor Sale
73- Vans &amp; 4 WD ' a
74 - Motorcycles
75 - Boat s &amp; Motors for S1le
76 - Auto Parts &amp; Acc .. IOfi•
77 - Auto Repair

49 - For Le••

21 - Busineu Opportunity

B96 - letart
937 - Buffalo

61 -;-Farm Equip.men! .
62.- Wanted to Buy
63 - Livestock
64- Hay &amp; Grain
65- Seed &amp; Feniliz.er

41 - Houses for Rent
42 ...-- Mobile Homes for Rent
43 - Farms for Ren1 ·
44 l... Apartment for Rent
45 - Furnished R.o om1
46 - Space for Rent
47 - Wanted to Ren1

Em ploy menl

•

&amp; Ltveslock

31 32 33 3 135 -

2 - ln ~emory

Cla.~sifi~&gt;d pa[{es cove r th&lt;'

Farm Supp lies

Re al Estate

3 - An11oucemen1s

Rates are for cunaecutive runs. broken updflyswlll be ch•ged
tor each d., as separatf! ad_s.

388- Vinton
245 - Rio Grilnde

- 2 ,00 P.M . WEDNESDAY

0

RATES

367 - ChMhire

DAY BEFORE PUBLICATION
- 11 :00 A .M . SATURDAY
_, 2 :00P .M ·. MONDAY
~ 2 :00P .M . TUESDAY

COPY DEADLINE -

Special!

81 - Home lmprowment 1
82- Piumbing &amp; Hflllting
83 - Excavating
84 - Eiectrlcal &amp; R8frig111Jatian

Misc. Merchandite
Building Supplies
Pets for Sale
Musicalln strumeflts
Frui1s &amp; Vegmabl81!1
For Sale or Trade

. BS-"Gfi nere1 Hauling
86- Mobil e Home Re(la [r
87- Upholsterv

•

I •

•c•blnet Style"

1
'

68 Ea

5

Selection
50 IN STOCK

with bni'ss accents. Your cl\olce ()!
Cocktail or Commode eod table Many
srytes ln siOdl;.

SOFA

••'!

'i99

---

Jlii:Ht aY•u•u

~CLUDE S

Ches!·BeO· Dresser •Mrrror.
N,gtJi s land

Sl59 99

SPRING AIR
ONLY

SAVE30-50%

s488

~"!premium I'JUO ~IW

Card of Thanks

Business Services

The family of Lucille Schwarz Theobald wish to thank the
many friends, neigh·
bors and relatives for
the support, . prayers
arid expressions of
sympathy in the death·
of our lovid one.
She was the grea •
test mother, wife, sister and grandmother a
family could have and
I, as her dau&amp;hter, do
tharik God for sharing
her with us for a
beautfiul 75 years.
Evayone has been so
wonderful to the family
in this ereat time of
need. Remember the
promise of eternal life.
Thank You
Marilyn, Wilbur,
Carrie &amp; Todd

Large

Contemporarydes9n In cla.ssicoa k finish r

Sprlf&gt;!l fll"

tn&amp;llres, se\ll ~~~

From

PlliCED FnOM
42" Oa~ F1nlsh anf1 Glass lal&gt;le

wilh 4 OaiJneaiiJmer cll&lt;ms
Packed 5
SCI

'

!99

.

1

299

WAJHU

HYII

'3"

'3!19

$588°0

5

RIMOTI CONTROL

...,.,.._Qnf_.....,
.,........,.._!
__
·~c.-

""'-1iafot

S299

'5

.

Cassano AEICOfder

SYLVANIA Video

Model VC4020AT

288

'=- -- ;ill_,

•-~--PI9~
1 monw:a ._,. ~ ... progra""""''

• 155 r:twvlel6got.. quat\~. rll!'ldom"~q lllllflg
• 31-b'lc:llon lrllrar..:~ remo~. Oilt*ol
• 0!1-Kt.w! lunti!OIIIIo.Spla,.

• Al.llo ICat1 lunil'lo
• On. TOUCh A-11 fOTAI"""' Sjanclt&gt;t
• K21 k.noat.Jir_.., L•dltrlg SHoen

• p-all ~,ee l

.t

•

St&gt;-- · uw~g

)11•

warranly on..._, ....aclt

,.

Jlllol'lftl MIIU'I

$28800

JEVVELRY SPECIALS
2rMI Wf'rl 10 k

Wolf Pen personal notes ·
1

400fo OFF

EVERYTHING IN STOCICI
end 14K Chains
16'

·l112D ·
DIAMOND
BLACK ONYX

18'

'1~"
16."

'17"
18'

'18"

•

·$238
-.............
.......

.,........ IMtltp

141(

::.::... s4 99

BULOVA

docaoud. lote of R.O , 1,

'

""

•
I'

1

WATCHES

Robert E. Buck,
Ptobote Judge
Lena K. Nea•lroad, Clerk ·

(12120. 27; (1! "3,

POMEROY, OH.
992-2269 '

TO .,

OHIO
PALLET
'cOMPANY

CUSTOM IJUILT
HOMES &amp;GARAGES
"At ltasanable Prices"

. PH. 949·2101
or Its. 949-2860

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6461

Day or Night ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS

YOUNG'S

/

Spet&lt;hu~

Computer Graphics,
Publk Relations,
Advtrtising-l

MIDDLEPORT - GOOD
LOCATION - Older home
with a nice block garage and
workshop in good condition.
PRICED TO SELL AT

HAIR STYliNG &amp; TANNING

"

HUNTER
SECURITY

GREAT CHRISTMAS Glm
GREAT PRICB • GifT
URTIIICATIS

CARPENTER- Nice double
wide sitting on 1.86 acres in
~ country settinr. I 'h car
garage, deck, equipped kit·
chen, fenced .yard. ONLY
$32,500.00.

PRICE REDUCED - MID·
DLEPORT - Really nice
older home in town. 3 bedr
oom~ 2 baths, full basement, I car garage and a
nice b1g lot OWNER WANTS
OFFER! $42,900.00.

Henry E. Cletltld'
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Tu1118' ..... 992-5692

Jo Hill .............. 98H46&amp;·
Office................ 992·2259'

NEW LISTINGS NEEDEDWe hM buyers for ltlp
County Property. List with
us lor b•t rwsults.

.A JJ!

WANT TO IUY WIECKEo OR
IUNI CAA! 01 TRUm

TOP OF THE STAIRS

- fREI IITIMATI!-

AIID

Mastic &amp;Certainteed'
Vinyl Siding
Roofing
Seamless Gutter
Replacement Windows
Blown Insulation ·

$38,500.00. .

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling Wi1h
Dump Truck
·
•Wrecker Service
•Junk Yard Busine:u

Far any of th•t servi&lt;" call

614-742-2617

111 West Soc. Pomtroy

Betw•n 9 o.m.-6 p.m.
or leovo Moss0111.

992-6720

12-5-88-1 mo.

2·11r."'88-tfn

------··
GUN SHOOT

J&amp;L

INSULATION .

EVERY SUNDAY

RACINE. OHIO

Storm Doors &amp;
· Windows

FACTORY CHOKE
12 GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY
.__ _ _..;.9;;.·;.;19.;·H;.;t1:;;;•,•

Free Estimates

Call 992-2772

. 1/15/Hn

.,.•,

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays

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

.. " .

cak81
11. 1, lox 1U, Vinton

11·9·1 ,., pd.

11·3-'88-l.mo.

POMEROY ·EAGLES CLUB

H ,D. FREE with coupon and purchae of min, •
H .C . Package. Limit 1 coupon per cuttomer per ,
bingo session.
: ~
WE PAY $60.00 PER GAME
· •
OVER 110 PEOPLE '66 .00 PER GAME
' .,
Lie. #006· 32
12-11 -tfn

WOOD STOVES. ·.

•12 Years Experience ....
45 DIFFERENT WOOD · "

STEWART'S GUN
&amp; GIFT SHOP

Good Rates

T.LC ,
26 Yrs. Exp.
References ·

Come see our
Chrlttmat Selections.
for your shopping &lt;onnni·
tnct wt will bt optn on Su..d-r• from 1 lo S p.m. thru
a.., 11, , ....

Joe or Pauley lowland
209 South 4th St.
Midtlloport. Oh.

742·2421

"LOW INCOME HOME"

STOVES, INSERTS AND . •
•
FURNACES
.Featuring: Con.,olidated, r.dlch • ',
. West, Brunco, Ae~hley
.. '
WE TRAD~

LOWEST PRICES

CARPENTER, 0~10 (Off St. Rt. 143J.. ,:

Smilh Run Rd, Rutland, Oh.

' 698-6121

11·21-'88·1 mo.

12 -21·1 mo .

)\ ...:

u

DOOR PRIZE

2

CHRISTMAS
AT

10/13/8812 ....:·::

1
LL ENGINE
REPAIR

•VINVL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO •.
Now H - Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160

.SAlES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fiahing Suppll•

Pay Your Phona
and Cable Billa Here

IUSINISS PHON!
(bt4J 992-6550
IISIDIHCI PHON!
(bUJ 992-7754
1128/

RADIATOR
SERVICE

also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas.Tanln.

PAT HILL FORD

992·2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-ll-tfc

CHESTER, OHIO

&amp; l'tlr!J

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

. Tacumaeh
Weed Eater
Homellte
Jacobsen

Ohio
992-6611

3·30- '17 tfn

·. ,

,,

PHONE DAY OR EVENINGS

985·4141

Middlep~~rt,

3-11-tfn

168 North.Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

Authoriutl Sorvi&lt;o

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLY

NO SUNDAY CAllS

New, LD&lt;alion•

MARCUM CONTRACTING.:·.

Briggs It Stratton
··
..

,

We c'an repcir and rt·
core radiators and
--ll+thtater cores. We can

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

224 E. MAIN ST. ....;. 992·9n6

character and novelty

Room &amp; loard For
Senior Citlztns and
Hondicopped

.'

CAKES .
by Donna
Specializing in

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

FASIIONS.

PRICE REDUCED - Middleport - 2 untt lirick
apartment building in town.
Garage, AC unffs. good rental
income. Close lo shoppinr.

,,

·

. 11 · 71 mo.

JR. &amp; MISSY

,

·

614-992-3643

lATEST •

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

EASTERN DISTRICT- Spa·
cious living w~h privacy on a
·deadend road. Large home
w~h 4 bedrooms. family
room, dintng room, living
room with fireplace, nice
kitchen cab1nets. Many
other nice features. Call for
an appointment

Phone:

II ·WBB·Ifn

PRICE REDUCED - Middleport - A nice 14x65
mobile home in beautiful
condition. New front deck
and screened rear porch.
New carpet-vinyl, panel·
ing and celing fans. Storage
building and ' chain link
fenced yard. Nothing to do
but r(!Ove in. $26,500.00.

$24;900.00 .

'

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

,,.,,,,,,,"
Spultllrt

Ltesa M. Murphey
FrH·Lante Writer

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215

'~

,/:Jer i

NEW LISTING - IIIODLEPORT - 2 story house
siHing on 2 lots, 4-5
bedrooms, 2'h baths, gas
fireplace, basement plus
attic space and garage.
ASKING $49,900.00.

$19,900.00.

Oeve Olleo, Dlreclor
of Dave Dileo

t

DELIVERED

work

3tc

Enterpri.... Inc.

$14 PER TON

(FREE ESTIMATES)

28. 1918.

(1) 3 . 10. 2tc

INCHES ON
lARGEST END

-Ad dons end remodeling·
-Roofing lnd gutter work
-Concrete work
.
-Plumbing 1nd electric.!

NOTICE OF
DISSOLUTION OF
OAYE DILES
ENTERPRISES. INC .
Notice Ia hlfobV given thot
on Deumber 24, 1188.
• D.,. Dleo Entorprioeo, Inc.,
., Ohio corporotlon. h..lng
ito princl!* offt'ce In Roclno,
Ohio, by reoolutlon of Ito
ohorohol.,o oloatod to dlo·
· - ond wind up Mo effoiro.
Mid thlt a awtlfl..,. of ouch
diUolutlon weo lllod In tho
office of tho SocrOUtry of
8t11te ol Ohio on Decem"-&lt;

106 N. SEC.
.MIDDLEPORT
992-2635

DIAMETER 14

SERVICE

Public Notice

,,
.I

tb.

MAXIMUM ,

CARPENT~R

long Bottom,· Maiga County, Ohio, 45743,

GELS Furniture &amp;·J welry.
435 2ND
GALLIPOLIS
446-8084

WELCOME TO

Real Estate General

pointed Executrix of the es·
tate of Eurane J . Thof}'lu,

25°/ooFF

-..p&lt;. • f'a i&gt;

Nc&gt;w Only ~~~-

EUM HOME

GOODIES

BINGO

JUST OPENED

ALARM
SYSTEMS

4· 1•86-tln

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On Oacembet 14, 1988,
in tt,&amp; Meigs County' Probate
Court. Case No. 26104,
Charlotte Cremeens. 201
Gktnn
Drive, Gallipolis.
Ohio, 45631, woo
op·

'

v. Coral -'J~
Flootlnt H..rt
at DillmDfldl ':,;~~:!
~
-..~' \ . 1
~::.1··:~

BISSELL .
BUILDERS

Located Off Bypass
At Jet. of Rts. 7 &amp;
143, Pomerov. Oh.

Public Notice

VHS HQ VCR

~--------~--------~
SAVE ·
we luncrcup

40°/o OFF

742-2235

992-51.14

• e.. Cad.gt~Audio ""- dospli~
• Supei'T~oe~~ ~H J

614·992-5952

ALUMINUM
CANS ........... 421

Immediate opening
for experienced mtdi·
cal tr-aiptioilist.
Proficient in medical
terminalagy ·, and a
good typist. Excellt"t
working conditiam
ond fringe benefits.
Send resume to Per·
sonnel Department, P.,
0. Box 344, Gallipolis,
OH. 45631.

~

5

•Residential
•Commercial ,
10 Years Experience

CAST ............ 35( lb.

liANSCRIPnO~ST

'499

Get You.r
Holiday 'Goodie
Orders In Now.
· AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI POWELL
12-6-'SH mo.

CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS.- ........ 40( lb.
CLEAN ALUMNUM

EXPERIENCED
MEDICAL

·a.-- ..

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

#1 COPPER"" 13( lb.

11 Help Wanted

...... .. ·---·- ----·
288

•

HOME BAKED

!Subject to Change
Without Notice I

Thank You.
Mary E. Parker
Former Mary E.
Gilkey

~YlrT~A

• ! •• •

TRI.;COUNTY
RECYCLING
Paying today
Dec. 12, 1988

I am thanking
my customers
for tbe
•
Christmas cards
and gifts this '
Holiday.
Everything was
very
appreciated.

METAL
BED F,RAMES,

..
'

12-11-d8·1 mo.

INVEST
IH
THE
BEST

LADIIS tAll.

,.•

.

~=~

STOREWIDE SAVINGS

·

: ·Christmas Day guests or' Mr. field, Crystal of Medina, Mr. and
•and Mrs , J. R. Murphy were Mrs. Donald Russell, Mr. and
Robert Murphy, Robbie, Jenny Mrs. Ronald , Russell, Amanda
~nd Chad, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
and Michael, and Mr. and Mrs,
' Evans Tyson and Jonathan, Mrs. Steve Haggy, Stephanie and
' John l)owns, Adam. Eric · and Brad were C)lristmas guests of
Dickie, Mr. and Mrs. John E . Mr. and Mrs. Robert Russell.
· Murphy, and Chris. Mrs: Greg
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Dummitt of
:Davis, ·Ashll, Joshua ani! Mer- Middleport, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
: lnda and Peggy Murphy.
\.if.olley, Calvlnlee and Mr. and
•
.
-tllrs. Terry Johnson were Christ' Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
mas Day guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Knapp,
Harley E. Johnson.
Michelle and Amy Johnson, Iva
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith;
.fohrison and Kall Knapp and
Iva Johnson, Mr. and • Mrs.
ilarbara Hatfield and Mr. and
Charles Knapp, Wolf Pen, Mr.
Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tyson and
and Mrs. K~vln Knapp, Michelle
.fonathan were visitors of Mr.
and Amy, ar Syracuse, and Kall
and Mrs. Charley Smith on
Knapp were Monday guests o!
Christmas Day.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Mr. and Mrs. Tom SummerLangsvUle.

TO PLACE AN AD CALL 9cJ2-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
8 A.M. ·until NOON ·SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Jsnus1g Cl1111n"

Run UMW meets

UMW .meeting held

'

Classifie

' 992~2635 .

The Daily -~ntinel Page~7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

GALLIPOLIS·MIDDLEPORT
446-8084'

'

Tu•day, Janu.y 3, 1989

INGELS·Furniture &amp; Jewelry

,. Children's. recitations. carol herald, Jenny Varney, Mary;
·: singing and a pageant hlghllgh-. Johh Chaney, Joseph; Kelly
•.ted the annual Christmas pro- Erwin, an angel; Celena and
; gram ol the Forest Run United Chas!ty Dillard and Brlttany
• Methodist Church.
Hauber, small angels; Chris
. • Dan Nease had prayer follow- Hamm, the Innkeeper; Jason
· •lng the opening song, Oh Come . Erwin, Chris Ball and Ryan
:An Ye Faithful.
Hollon, the shepher!ls; Joshua
: The nursery-kindergarten Smith, King Herod; Phllllp
· children. who . gave re\:ltatlons Hamm, Rabbi, Megan· Clark,
' and then sang several songs were . Chamberlon; Kim Sayre and
· Sara Ball, Chaslty Dlllard, Ml· Amy Varney, guards; and Mary
dam Eldabaja, Brittany Chaney. Rochelle Jenkins, and
· Hauber. Sara Hawley, Stacie Amy Mills, the wlsemen.
: Mills, and Katie Sayre.
There was special music durCh!ldren of the older classes lng the pageant by Roy Jenkins, a
giving recitations were Chris duet by Roma Sayre and Rose
• Ball, Mary Chaney, Megan . Ann Jenkins, and a men's group
: Clark, Jerry Clark, Celena Dll· of Kenny .Wiggins, Tom Ball,
· lard, Jason Erwin, ChrtsHamm, Alfred Yeauger, Rick Hauber
: Ryan Hollon, Rochelle Jenkins, and Jenkins.
: Jerod Mills, Carrie Pugh, Della
The pastor and his wife were
Pugh, Klm Sayre, Joshua Smith, presented a gift and this was
Amy Varney, BrJdget Varney. followed by a visit from Santa.
The children san~ Children Go
Faith Varney had charge oft he
Where I Send Thee and program with Rose Ann Jenkins.arranging the music; Chairmen
, Drummer Boy.
· Taking roles ln the Christmas of refreshments Were Carolyn
Salser and Marybelle Warner. /"
pageant were Klm Jenkins, the

-~ ~;:tcine

Tuesday, January 3, 1989

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pege 6-The Deily Sentinel'

: .• POMEROY - The Expert. ment In International Living; a
iaonproflt International education and citizen exchange organ!·
zatlon, has a new representatiVe,
•Mary Jo Sartorius, to serve the ·
: Pomeroy area. Sartorius will be
: vlliltlng schools and communities
• around Pomeroy to make video
: presentations and answer questions about The Experiment's
'summer Abroad opportunities.
: The Experiment offers
~ Summer Abroad opportunities to
· 31 countries - as diverse as
: Martinique, Kenya, Australia
: and Japan - with programs
· fitting a variety of Interests.
;While some prograllJS ,highlight
learning a foreign language,
tnany of the programs have no
: language requirement Others
· feature travel or speclaltn!erest
: activities such as biking In
: ~ranee, mountaineering In Swtt' .
•Jerland, and a special week-long
: trip to. the Galapagos Island and ·
' l&gt;arwtn stations on the Ecuador
lll'!lgram.
No matter which program
participants choose, all Summer
Abroad experiences share three
• components: a group of travel
CQI!Ipanlons of similar age, an
.- orientation period, and a Homes' lay - the heart of the prOJtram.
• The Homes tay provides away
· : to learn about another culture by
; living as a member of a familY• a chance to work, play, learn.
: and share with a new family.
: There are family outings, dally
· chOres, local sightseeing, excur: slons with the group, social
get-togethers, sports activities,
. and relaxed time with new
: friends.
• Rep. Sartorius explained, "My
• own 'experiments' living with
. .tamllles In rural Mexico and
· travellilg In fourteen E~ropean
; countries has changed the way I
• think about myself as an lndlvld·
: ual. As a result of those , early
: multicultural experiences, I
· have developed a strong Identity
: as a global citizen, and disco: vered an International. career.
: The Experiment's Summer
Abroad offers young people an
opportunity to discover the world
• arid themselves - something
: that Is needed today more than

•

.

GENERAl CONTRACTORS
1 1-16·'88-tfri

Referentes

CLOWNS

Shop ·•,
·· Where

Collectors of
Emmitt Kelly .Jr.

Shops! -

Santa _: ~

,. •.&gt;"· ···

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

LIMITED EDinON

.

50°/o
TO 75°/o .

-SAVE

PH. 1-992-6822
12·11·88·1 mo.

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

BOOKCASES
CROCKS •
WASHSTANDS
ORESE~S

LAMPS
..The Gifts Thai 1\'evf'r

II 24 E. MAIN

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

992-2526

Listening
Dependable Hearing Aid. Sales &amp; Sentre•
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

HILLSI"E MUZ.ZLE
LOADING ·

0
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinica I Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

Alii'

MODEIN GUN
SUPPLIES

~·

Munltlootling Suppli•
Modtrn Gun Su~li•
Guns • Ammo • Slugs

3
-

27 Ammo

417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hils. Pomeroy, Ohio

Rt, 124 Eut of Rutland
A&lt;:rooo Hoppy H- RO«&lt;

' Ph. 614·742-2355

l / 20/ dn 1 mo. pd.
'

•a.6awc

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE
SYRACUS~

~

PAY

OHIO · •

,LATER

Most Foreign and
DomB&amp;Iic Vehicles

With Cub C*t Financing
. UI0/,•Dawn
With Approvotl Crollit
No Paymlftt or lntwesf

A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor '·
Repairs
·
NIASE Certified Mechanic

'Til July I, 1919

CALL 992-6756

.D. J.'S TRADING POST

"DOC" VAUGHN

614-992-1301

. • Certified licensed Shop
5-25- tln

MIDOliPOIT, OHIO

lt·2·'8t-l m9

EAGLE RIDGE
SMAU ENGINE ·
PH. 9"9-2969

. BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SIIYICE

Dealer far

U. S. IT. 50 UST
GIYSVIU, o•o

YAIINIAII &amp; ECHO

Lo-od Hellwoy
betw'""' Rt. 7 • Boohon.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Stnlct Cent• lor 1,..,
Products

8. 7 Finencing on Yardman
Service on All Makeo
We Honor M(/Dioc/Yiso
9-1-81-tfn

BUY
NOW

'14-662·3121

:

Authorized John
Dura, New Hollend,
Buoh Hog Farm
Equpmont Doallf,

ftr• E••lt••t .
Slf• &amp;l11~1u ·

1·3·'11-lfc

FIREWOOD

GUN SHOOT

OAK, LOCUST
CHERRY

FIRE DEPT.

$35

PER LOAD
DELIVERED

BILL SLACK
992-2269

1-1·'11· ~·

LINDA'S
PAINTING "
INTDIOI-IXTIIIOI '
FREE ESTIMATES

Taitt the pal• aut of
palntltlt. L8t ... do
it fer you.

VRY IIASOIIAIUtwt
-HAVIIIPIIacES,
614~915·41 10

11· 19·' 81·1 mo. pd.

RACINE

Basham Building

. EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
FD&lt;tory Chaltt
Shotguns Only
Strictly ·Enforced

12 Gaugo

10· 7-tfn

CARTER'S

PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING
992-6282
319 So. 2nd Ave.
•

Middleport, Ohio
1·28·'88-tfn

ROUSH
CONSTRUCnON

OWNII: GUG I, IOUllt

,O:h

H

. GEN ERAI

CONIRACTORS
RESIDENTIAL
COIIERCIAL

.CUSTOM ICITCHENI. IATHI

IIIXliNIIVE IIEMODILING

•VINVL IIDINO 6. ROOANO
tMETAt. BUilDINGS
HOUSING a ld'T. PROJECTS

.

SINCE 196!1

..IIlii. SUAQIK

992-7611

11·21-18-ffn.

'

WANTED.:
DEAD OR ALIVE ·.
•Washers •Dryers ·
•Rangee •F.reezere
•Retrigeratore _; ,,
~' Must .. . lepair.. le": :

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561 ' ::
We Service All Makea-

1122188/tf"

K&amp;T EXCAVATING AND
CONSTRUCTION .

...

,.

Formerly Meigs Excavating

Full Excavating and Construction
Residential 8t Commercial
Free Esti'"atea for· Resid6ntial 8t
Farm Work
Rt. 1, Vinton
\
388-8746 · .. •
Owner 8t Operator,
Tony Cardillo
11·9·1 mo.

·.

'

�..
•

.J

•

.

'

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

Page 8-lha Daily Sentinel
;, IIIII, IIIII. I' IIii~ II io

3

--

I

44

36 Lots &amp;. Acreage

LAFF-A-DAY

.

Amounc:einentil

Tueeday, Janu.-v 3, 1989

•

T-e levision
Viewing

71 Auto's For Sale ·

KIT N' CARLYLE® by Larry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Oh_ic!_

Aohton bo.,t,..l lorgo bulclng
lot&amp; mob.. ho,.,. p•mttt.t.

, public Wlltli. • ..o !Ww ~ ..

8'

. Clydo a-.._ Jr. 304-571Zlllfl.

'~:~:~~~~ '0©\\.~lA-ltf-ZNS~

&lt;WOlD
GAM I
--~-...;___; Ed;lld by CLAY R. POlLAN _.:.__.;.•- - -

0

8

TUES., JAN. 3
EVENING

1:00 (l) Bonanza: Tha ·Lost
Epltod&lt;!e

D (l) liJ
9) Nowo
41

4

IIi CIJ 1111 D ll2l

C!l Sponalook
ril ""mon• The results are

Homas for Rent

PEANUTS .·
ONE 1-\UNDRED NEW SPELLING
WORDS ? NO PROBLEM.MA'AM!
TEN PAGES OF 1-!IS.TORV' WE
CAN DO IT! LA'I IT ON US !

Aeorronge leuen of tli e
, fou r scramb led words below to form fpur simple words

I

WORK ! NOT TO WORR'I'! WE
CAN DO IT! LAY IT ON US !

Lost and F~nd

FOUND: II'DINn a. while haale
""P· Ml(ll Ad.· olf 790. lfod
aollor. Coli 114-2Be-1471

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

FOUMl: Mololleoglo. Nooon • .
~laop vlcinlly. Colt lftw 5

.... 114-. .1-&lt;1221.
Found

Thurwct.r morning. in

McC ....bor lid .. Nlcllo- Hll
•ra m.tlum lkM hound dog.
wt.tte wllh bleck .. d larown
IPOIO. - g looltw coli•

wflh ...oilon

20.19.

........ 81 4-742·

Loot: 11-* lomalo plol Coon

Hound n . .. Meig~-01111•· line.

Kat,..

~nawwt

to
Good with
c:Niot-... Aowonl. Colli 14-742·
2187.

Loot: Long holrod bl-* lh•
phord do~ Loot n Boohaii-Kno.
E1gle lltldg• •r•• Oec.20 .
An•wer• to Poo. 114-1482&lt;*3. Aowonl

Loil- 1111 PI'H8 Cl•oAingll
PPJHS. Yollc!w 1101c1. bl-* Ofl'lx.
JnMIIII sc. 304-4111-1197.

8

11

Help Wantad

HELP WANTED
5 · - • boll\ ....... _
DEVELOPMENT COORDINA- I ' WIIIII~cl-fl&lt;~!""on~ to . lv•ln 1 : cwp•
• IPPU.,c.. No' p•e.
TOR · I . I. pr...,.ed. llgnlfl.. • •
Jodo. CoM 814- en. chid
Rot. • dop. eoa
•Pirionoo In of 448-""c-::.-.:- or 441- 21111 814-..... 1"113.
p-.Oftlf .. d oar,._.s IDIIalt•
Jn
tlon. ml(ljor aifl• end •ec~ mal """' • ·
Hau• fDr ,....n. 4 or 5 bedroom.
le requlrecf.&lt;4bemonetrilld •uc124
II.. Vinton. Ohio.
ceu •d IMd. . hlp In ttw
Colll14-llfll-11310.
ochlw-t of fund-iololng 15
Schools
ao•- Donor cuiUtMkln. work
3 IR hou• for rtnt ... Adcleof\.
1118truction
wJth la.cl Wid vol"'t. . . .
OH. Bohlnd w.n.1.. 1 Grocory.
exttnahte record IJMP'"Q . , d
Coiii14-448-12B21ft• lpm.
........ lo ......... , ...1....
podlon blood In A - . Ohio.
RE-TRAIN NOWI
Nlco. 2 bo.t-oom. .... cwpotOd.
requlrM tventng/wttkend
IUSINESS ~ hill.
Roclno • ............ d lf.,ll tl'raughout SOUTHEASTERN
COLLEGE, 821 Joclaoon Plko.
~11_1_"-_"
__
n_u_.-~light
- - - Olllo _,,.. Coii448-4387.RogNo.ll-11· . __
tl•. Low 20'1. Send riiUmt.,d 1011111.
owp•ocl.
no lnlldo
l..w of
ta Koy AI-.
PilL Oopod roquhd. 114E.artlrt-eDfriOtar, Pl.,rildPar992-3080 . .
•
onthoodoiSout-llhlo, 39e
Rlchlond A_,._ A - . Qhlo
2 be*oom. four room ept,
f lllrtii Cid I
48701 .
t110.00. 2 .,._oom tm•M
hou ... •200.0C or wllull on •
FEDERAl.. STATE AND CIVIL
..,d oontrld. 304-175-2722.
I!RVJCE JD • .
NOW HIRING . Your orea. 21
Bualneu
Z be*oam houM, b•tm.m
113.150 to 188,410. IMMENlw Hava Un-..rMhld ., d
Opportunity
DIATE Op.,lngo. CAJ.L 1·3111·
close to .chool. t175. month.
73:1-5012 Ext F 271l
304-88:1-2113.
'

. Ic A1K IK NI I.m_.~
5

"""dul

For 1
on• n..- or U.O
a., tndcor'418n. ,..Kinny ..H
1t Jim Mink Chevrolet·
Oldlmoblo. 114-4411-3872 or
304-77:1-1134.

"-on

'-ft •-

lnt•_,

1.11"'"' .,..

Public Sale
&amp;. Auction

Pomeroy-2 BR . remodeled
op.,m.,. off Spring Avo. Soc.
d .... &amp; rof. Coil Ill« I PM,
814-992-1888.
Unlnnilhed 2 BA a•ID• .,...
m.n. 1n town. carpMed.. Adutta
ontv. No P'""' Coil I 14-4441-

4511.

ProfeNional

- t v docor•od. 2 BR .. Mli'
••r•«~. s!lc. dllp.
ed.
Col 1114-4411-BIU or 4414788.

Service a

1 21&lt;50. 2 8R .. c•port. Edgo of

remodllltld 1 BA .

..n.

Appl. turnithed. !dell to.-:ion- 1

blot* from downtown.
114-448-4138.

C.ll

.T

CASH pold far '83 modol
_.d
uNCI e••· Smith
luldt·P-Ioc. '9 11 Eo•wn
Avli.. Oolllpolo. Col 11 4-4412212.

n••

Comploto houooholdli of ......

.... • ontlqu•. Aloo wood 1

, F •·
00 o l -... 8 - 1 lftl...ure

Oltv•.

a

Auctkm. 1ldrd •
114-4411-3119.
JuM Con with or without
"'o-.
Coli 1.ony Llvoly-814.....- 1

Govwnrnont Jot.. 111.040 tat. 230 yr. N- hlrli)g. c.•
1-105-187-8000 •t. R-111011
for o.m.rt ftdlr .. lllt.·
JOSHUNTINOlNEEOAIKILL1
WE TRAIN PEOPU I'OR JOB8
AI Auto Moch.,lco. Corp.,_

t... eoo...olo......

prl.- - g pold.
31U.
~~-ding Timber. eo•
•1 •
2781
• ~
' •

Uood llmlture bl' tllo .._ &lt;&gt;&lt;
...... - - d olio lolling
114-7&lt;12·2411.

Miry Luc:•Pilfto • 01'111" I_.

ooow. Ooll 114-4411-1787 or
441-4428.

Dlv--

flod Moclaol - k - Eloctricl.,o. Food llorvloo Wor-J
BactroNCII Technldlftl. lncka•
trill Melnt.n . . ae Worker•.
N.,..lng Aulll-1 .,d Or-B-. Moahlnllto, OfflooWor,....
ond
-· 11ogllt•
now3rd
d•••
bo9Jnnng
Januory

•-:ill 0122.
UIO

I
814-

~1'1

11

VILl':

Help Wanted

Pon-tlmiMLTfor tlllriiJUippod
pt,y,6QI.,'• Otttoe Uborlltory.
A,. In p...., to lho Moclool
Pfele. 203 J8«*eon Pike ._.
-1:30-4:30.
UP TO 118 HOUR PROC!ISINO MAIL WEEKLY CHECK
GUARANTEED. FA EE DETAILS. WRirE. BD, 1087 W.
Pllllodolphlo. luMo2D-QO, On·
tlrio. Coif. 11712.
OOVEIINM!NT JONI N.,;.
hiring In your • • both olcllod
.. d - o d . For 1 lilt of Jo ..
.,d opplloollon. eon 1-81&amp;31:1-2127. Ext. J 813.
DIRECTOR OF TOURISM

a.,,..,,

WMit••

hou•.

IOUOHI'
AIQulr• mll'l g FQMI tlblllly
end verbll, wrttt• .,d public

""'• •••· --nd

roJ•- ••·

81cholorl or
n
tourilm holp"L e..dr-mofo:
flaaCio114. c/oOollpoJIIDoly
Trllolno. 128 lhlrd"..... 0111~
polio. Ohio 48831.

•r

3 or 4 8R. modul• home on

F-..hed or unfurnilhed. Good
ecr• of 18'1d w•h pond. VtlfY a ... oonclt6on. 1 chi'ci nop.ta.
goodooncl. Col 1,14-~111-1807. Hwon. 304-882-2411.

4 or S be*oom. 822 Jackson Tral••· unfurmhtd. ooupl-.
lt .. VInton. Ohio. Coll114-388- omoll chldrori ac:coptod, lit. 1,
UIO.
•
ID"'II Rood. Pt.Pit. behind
Kill. 304-875-1071.
2 Ill· In cou mry, VInton oroo.
ltcwe.Nfrlg..EI.a..w.t•.nuh Mobile hom11. furnl1hed,
...d. UIIO rnontNr. Dop. C•H f17&amp;.00onduppormonthplla
utlkl•. 304-171-e612or875114-llflll-9188.
3900.
Fodwol. IIIIo ond Chll - - ·
4 bedroom.
1\ ...,
-::;;:::::;==;=~===
Jo...
Now Hlrftg. Your .,...
IWJII ho,_
.. n_...
with Zbol
11ono
•13.110 tollt480.1mm.. ll"•
loll- ond tarmol 44
A psrtment
Oponlngo. Coli 1-311·733"Jtv••P-. By,..
for Rent
1082 •t. F278B.
olll. - gorogo. opprta. 1 ooro - - - - - - - - 1.. 4 1~ ml• llbave K. .
,..,..wy CUIIonw -todl
bouJJhll, ~-- Aolrlng
lkl dlrODV• p~aa oorwunw to
114-99:1-11., ""• looc:h Stroot Mlddl"""" Ohio.'
. . . . . dlllviiV• .rv6Git .. d
3p.rn.. 114-247·21, cloy, my- 2 blclroomllrnilhld ~Pwtmtnt.
uti"• paid. l'lf•ll'lc:a Phone
product ona1 .,_,four Wlllul.
304-1182-2.118.
M uot lloo wll !In thll dll~oov
AVON. Ll•n wNe you . .nl
,,.. tr.lnlnt lnau-.• . . . .
blo. F... lblo hou,.. Rowwd .,d
raao.-lon for • • . - . .•.
W..t ta ..,_ morol Cal Avun
Dlltrlct M • - It 814-19•
7111 .

•-'*
llr_,_

clnln'/••

-............ .

Now ICC4PtinD lppiiCIIk:lns for

Mlln. ,.,...,.., ONo. To
,.como • Myot...,.c ......

66

.

F~.rnll:hed IPt.. 1 BR. 807
Soconcl. Oolllpolll. 1226. U.tl~
tl• pold. Coil "1-44 11oft« 7
PM.

2 beci'oom Apta. for rtnt.
C•rptted. Nlc. lifting. Uundry
faclltl• .,.lllltble. CIA 814982-3711 . EOH .
2 bectoom epwtment i"' Mldcl•
port, f188. pa- mont!\ doDook

,.,.lrod. Coli 814-992-238 I
d•y1 and &amp;14·992 · 2509

Aenlng~.

F..,nllt&lt;ted room-919 Seoond
Ave., 0.11!folil· 175 1 mo.
Utllftl• pol . Slnalomolo. Sh••
bot I&gt; Col 441-4418oflor 7PM.

2 -oom . . .-

fultv

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

tr•h pldtupo pr0¥klocl. Molnt•
NIICI ••~~~~'"a cm.e to lllopt.'lkl 1nd ac:,hooll. For
mor•lntorrMtlon c.ll 304-8823711. E .O.H .

'*'"

AVON · AI • - · Col Mart1v n
W••• .304-ll:t-2141.

441-7~.

Serlou1

46 Space

Buy

for· Rent

Country Mobile Home ,_..

Routt 33, North of Pomwoy.
Lott, rentell,
ul•. Cal
114-992-7479.

1*1•.

antv

•tt• 8

.,.. .... ._ CAll 814-889-3711.
2 Pure Bred White Germ1n
Sh.,hwd pupploo. •100 ooch.
814-742·2911 or 114·7423100.

complete t43. 211.

Rill T.,5or pupL 150. Clll .rt•
I p.m. 304-891-3142 or 8953429.

57

Musical
Instruments

•••om. beglnneri, •rioul . . ltlrilt: BNIlndh'~ll gutt•

~Boll.

. . . . MuoiO. 1114-448-0987,
Jofl *"'•11'1 lnllructor. 114441-1077. LlmMod op.,lnll,

Rhlorlno AntJqu-.
11 ~4 E. M ..n ltr-. Pom•or·
Houro: M.T.W 10Lm. to &amp;p.m.,
1 to lp.m. 114-112·
2528.

au.-

Comm•DI~ 8 ..ding lor .....
Pt. Ploa.,., Coli 304-17.11-

Flr•ood for • • tt.rdwood
opllt. t30 pldluptruc:k dollvwy.
Coli 814-441-4812.

I dllll
•\

81 Farm

for yourself.

g

vv•

•k•
p1Jtmen1e. C1l 114448-171l

Serv1ces

.,

commotion . Q·
9:00 D (2) all In the Heal altha

. Home
Improvements

Nlghl A robbery suspect's
fatal shooting makes Vi:gil

doubt his competency. Q
(!) Top Rank lloxlng
liJ 8 (I) tltlrtysometltlng
Malissa thinks her biological

IASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconcll5on11 lt•lme guar.,.._
loCII rlfer•a. "rnilhed.
Fr• ..timll•. Cell ODied
t ...

clOck is runninq_out and

1·814-237·0488. d.. ot night.
Ao . g.-raBaaement
Wll!l•proafing.
SWEEPER ond oowlngmoc:hlnt
?P*• .,..~ ond ouJipll11. Pldl
up .nd dlllv..,-. Dnll Vea..um
Cle1ner. one .h.tf mile up
Ooorgoo Crook Rd. Coli 114448-0284.

MORTY MEEKLE AND_r-W_I_N_T_H_R...!...o_P_ __.:_~ ...-----------,
WAS THAI YOL! MAKINGTHOS~ FUNNY N015!:5
IN CL..A-55 TODAY~

OH, NO!!
YOR'N
MIGHT BE
TH' SAME

A5
INE I!

CAIITER'S PLUMIINO
ANDHEATINO
Cor. Fourth .,d Pin a
Qllllpollo. Ohio
Phone 1114-441-llfi.BB or 8144411-. .77
.

Bernice Bede Osol

-'------ ~.,..__...·--- ,......,....1 ...-~-

•••aned •• ••oM.

1111 , _ ,.,k 3 - T.141172; 181111ty ..o 2
bodroom T.oloc. 141170: 1971

Come l!p Ac~s
The Classifieds

Electrical

'Your
'Birthday

100 2 - - T. E. fiOic!:Z.

104-87.3000.

;---- J

•

.

II II: IJdll,ilillil

R •

· - 304-178-

17.

77 , ........b ........ 11
ooncl. .,,

:lfi2-\"tl..

"She said I'll die in a freak accident. That
means I don't. have 10 quit smok ing!"

·---=-----··-- ··-·- -·---- ---·~

,.

=:

.

--- -- _, ____________.._,.....________
-·

R

w....

Bwvloo. POOII,

cllternt, welte. lmmedl••
1.000 ... 2.000 -dllhiiiY
Col 304-175-BJ7o.
' .

B7

C

llll Ill 1121 MOVIE:"CBS
Tueeday Movlo
·
IIJ) Larry King Llvtl
IHl ttogano Herooa
lUI The Law end Harry
McGraw
9:30 IHl TwHight Zone
9 VldeoCountry
10:00 (l) 700 Club
D (2) all Midnight Caller .
(I) Ill (I) HoartBoat There's
much trustrallon when lhe
,medical practice is sued . Q
(D IHl Newa
..
(!) Bill Moyera• Joumal
Power of Myth
Ill Q] Bamey Miller
\!)) Evening Ntwo
flll Crook and Chaae
10:20 CD MOVIE : Young Warrior&amp;
lA) (1:43)
.10:30 (D 511111 Annuol Report of
the Secreterita of State
Rusk, William Rogers . Henry
Kissinger, Cyrus Vance,
Edmund Muskie, and
Alexander Halg discuss the
nation ·s foreign policies.
Ill Q] Odd Couple
flll New Country
11:00 C2l Remington Steele
• (2) lil miD 1111 111 a21
9) Newo
CJl SpotiiCtnter
(!)Sign OH
Q] Love Connection
1!)1 M-yllne

UphQiatery

..... Upholotorlng . . .lng
trl OOUntylrM23YMt. The belt
n ., ....... ,.
Col
304·171·4114 for froo

·-ortn•

-·"*··
'
-------- ----- L

iH) H-ymOOIIIIW

PISCES (Fob. 211-March 20) Try lo
avola an acquaintance loday whose
politics or philosophy always clashes

Jan.3, 1•9
Be appreciative of lhlngs that may
come rather easily to you In the year
ahead. If you take your' opportunities for

NMJIIIJII dlyar.lltn-•-omollo-IW,sd-d.
Auto's
For_Sala
... both 1140.
• . . . .Muoo
. oo t _71
_.__
___
_ __

P'-twoad 2 bedroom gM

10x11; 1174 Yom• Adtl-e. ~oom- 24x12; 1171Mm~

w-

her 'fo'Ork.

e

R•ldentill or aom,..clll wlrlna
or ropllr~
liceM.t
llecrriciM. EMimlte
• - Rldmour Elldrlool, 3041171-1718.

Llvfttock

Experience Eudora Welty
speaks about her past and

Former secretaries Dean

Equipment

llmothr H... •
-tor
Coiii14-J79.2711.

plokup lpod .......... _ t.111
Jo.
....,_ t30.00 olood. 1114-4BI1131 or 4fll.1721.

I

Plumbing ·
&amp; Heating

11100.

2 - - 10xll0moblollomo
In good ollop&amp; 11110.00-h or
.,. llnonoo. 304-8752722.

MY LEGi'.

"- .........

Ak••

A - Llvootoolr lola Albony·
Bolo wwy Sllu!dov· 1 PM.
U.•oolr ooeoptod ofl• 4 PM
....., Frtdll'. 1 milo • . , of
Albonv on lt. Rt. 10. Coli
81 4·112-2322. 118-3831
ev•lnga.

tlr-

1 6f&lt;E:AK

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

&amp;. Refrigeration

For lila: Oolr
Coli
304-178-2787111• 4:111 .....

LAUIS-H,

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE.
-~~ coli IWVIclng GE. Hot
Point, w•here. dry•• end
....... 304-871-2398.

84

1178 Uboltv 14x7V, 3 _.
....... t7,1100. 00. 304-8711171 . . dl~1713.

FORA

\.,..-..._

RON'S Telwlsion Service.
Houa• cllll on RCA. Quuar.
OE . Spoollllng In lon~l\ Col
304;171-2398 or 814-4412484.

82

UTILITY ILDO . IPL : :
30"x40'xl'8.. a ....oe. ,.
18'xl" tr-* door. 1-3' "'"'k
dooo: 1480 ER !CT!D. Iran
Horool- Coli 1114-332·11748
Coli oct.

83

ANYTHN6

HU H ?-

I

Polnthg: lntor!O&lt; I Ertorior.
IT• •~nwt:•. C.l 814..4488344.

Fetty Tret Trimi'ling. atump
.........1. Con 304-175-1331.

LJH-HUH ... MY FINE;ER
GOT CA.UGHT IN MY

YEAH ...
TOf./'.ORROW

(D (!) The American

granled. you are not likely to develop
their true worth.
CAP~ICOAN (Dec. 22-Jon. 11) You
could be a lrlfle susceptible today in be-.
!laving all you hear. Belore you pass any·
gossip on 10 friends, It might be wise to
double check lhe lnformallon wllh other
SOurces. KnQ~.Y where to look for romance and you'll find lt. The AllroGraph Matchmaker lnllanlly reveals
which Blgno are romanllcally perfecl for
you. Mall $2 to Matcllmalcer. c/o this
P.O. Box 91428, Cleveland,j
OH 44101-3428.
AQUARIUS (JM. 20-Feb. 11) Problems'
you may ha\oe to contend with today!
• could be ol your own making . Theyl
might be traceable to a lack ol personal
Initiative ot a failure to uaa · feasible
melhods.

"-'per,

'

LEO (July 23-AUfl. 22) A firm hand ,
lhe Iiiier will be required today If you
hope to impress those over Whom you
have authorlly. Wishy-washy behavior

wllh yours. This Individual might altempt lo draw you Into another unresol- will not inspire subordinates.
vable debale.
VIRGO (AUfl. 23-lept. 22) Usually
ARIES (March 21-April 11) Your com- you 're a person who tends to underpassion for the underdog is an ad mira- slate your role In everyday accomplish ..
ble quality, bul be car.eful II doesn 't ments . Today, however; you might be
draw you Into a sltuallon loday where just a shade loo boastful aboul what
anolher's errors become your liabilities. you've done.
TAURUS (ApriiZO..May 20) Judgments LIBRA (llept. 23-0cL 23) Where your fl·
you make today could be Influenced by . 'nanclal lnlareata are concerned today,
wishful thinking instead ol reality. If you Ws best not to delegate authority, partake this poslllon your peropectlve1 . llcularly to anyone you do not know too ·
could be severely dlstorled.
well. Indifference could lead to regrelo.
.GEMINI (Mooy 21-June 20) In an auempt SCORPIO (Oct. 14-MoY. 22) It your
to expedlle a difficult career maller Ia- mdle Is willing to make comprom- or"
day, you might make promloea you'!l conc:eoslono - • asttclcy I.-Is conknow you can'l keep. Unfortunately, ·cemed, lry to be open-minded yourself.
olhers will believe what you say.
If you're Inflexible, H will only make
· CANCER (June 21-Juty 22) Overlndul- lhlngo ........
gence could be something ot which you ,IAOrrTARIUII ( -, 23 Dec. 21) You ,
should be mlndl\ll loday. Good things' are likely to have a very clear choice towlll be doubly appreciated II you par- day bet\uun rolling up your oleiM!Iand "
take of them In smaller quanlllles.
gelling the fob don-..or m.ely resting .
on your taurellllf you chOOM the laller
the day could end up a big zero.

'

II! Miami

Vice 1;1
flll You Can Bo a Stir

• I

Complele the chuckle quote~
.-.1..
-.1..-..1.-..1.-..1
.
..-J
by tdlmg in 1he m1SS1ng words
1
you develop !rom step No . 3 below.

:...:;..1-=--ri,;.;:;.I-=--TIaM

e

..,

-

.

PRINT NUMBERED
LE TTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM-lETS ANSWERS
Oddity - Plaza - Kinley - H&amp;(lrth - PAID for TEN

"Why is the slar so upset?" asked a crew member. A friend
grinned, "She only got nine bouquets alter her perforl!l&amp;nca ,
~d she PAID lor TEN. "
.-

BRIDGE ·

· NORTH
• Q 10 8

,,

.• .
.'

1·1-11

.72

tAJ0984
tASS

JAMES
JACOBY

WEST

EAST

+A 3 2

+98 7S

"KJB43

.1096
+K?

• 62
+QJ09 .

...·''.,.

+J872

..

u

.,

SOUTH

.Long suit
is wrong suit

.,....

'-

+KJI
.AQS
tQHS

tK43
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

By James Jacoby

'

The result of this deal left declarer
in a shell-shocked state, puzzling over
what be could have done. The opening
lead went to East's heart ~ine , and de-

clarer won the queen. In a routine

West

Norlb

Eaol

Sou til

Pass

3 NT

Pass

I NT
Pass

·.......
' ...
• OJ

-••

Pass

manner, without a care, South atOpening lead: • 4
tacked his longest suit by leading the
queen of diamonds. ·East won the king
and returned the 10 of hearts. Declar- L-----------~--~-"
er let this hold the trick but had to win a spade trick by leading the king. Sure,"
the continuation . He then · cashed the West will take ~(,ce and clear t~~
arer can hold up ·
remaining diamond tricks. Although . heart suit, but
until the third round. -.:
declarer could take the ace and king of taking his
clubs, he was still one trick short, so he Then, when he takes the diamond fi.
played a spade to the king. West gob, nesse and loses to East's king, ~t .
bled up the ace and quickly took two will have no more hearts to-play, and. ·
the contract is sale. Does thi3 line ol~
more good hearts to set the contract.
For a much better chance at mak- play guarantee the contract no mat~.:
ing the contracL South must play what? No, but there is risk only if Westagainst the grai~stead of trying led from three cards in hearts, aii!f';
right away for many tricks in dia· East held live hearts originally . Not,
moods, he 9hould at once try to set up likely.
.. . , "'ill

ace

CROSSWORD
..
b~

T.. OMAS JOSEPH ·

ACROSS
39 .!tine fi,
I Byro'n poem 1944
5 Swiss .
DOWN

9 Da.•h
10 lilum
12 Morrow

.

~

a BP in a
and

Tayhack
13 Funicello 's
&lt;'O·slar
14 Nighi.

'lo

.... .

'

I Even
2 Breathing

mountain

bt&gt;ron·
Gardening
need

hurry (sl.)
4 ~ues .

"-.

and

5 Wandered
6 George's

"'

· Yesterday'• Anewer

lyricist

•

7 Speed

along ' 15 Playwright, 25 Mr . Bates'
16 Dock U!Jion 8 QuaranMossplace
17 Sugar Ray
tine
18 Ark builder 27 Cavities
· or boxing 10 N.Z..
21 Reduce·
28 Main artery
19 "Krazy - '
nal.lve
to pulp
29 Moratorium

20 Seaweed
rood
21 Apportion
22 Pulsate
23 Snack
24 Lave
2511asty
puilding
26 Weapon
27 Short-

11 Related 22 Wine type 34 Airline
mater- 23 Golf stroke
initials· ·
nally
24 Girth
· 35- -ny

..-

. ...-.
-"

-.
··-

•

tempered
person (sl.)
30 Nigerian
31 Baseball's
Mel
32 Trouble
33 Pay orr
35 "The -

. ~· ·
.
.'

from

lpanell)a"
36 Mason's

· --·•

need
37 Brazilian

'

'

tapir .

38 Coach
Parseghian
and others

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work il:

..

113 .

,. •
'

•

•

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

.....

..-.
. ...

..

_

11:30•(2) l!llleatoiCareon
CJl Cottage Beakatbltlt
[1)1:-.
.
(D Tony lrown'a Joun111

•Ill Nlahtllne Q
llll USA Today
ID IIJ) Newlywed 01m1 ,
Jl2l Sports Tonlgllt
e Jill 'Night Heat' CBS Late
Night Vlgllanle justice Is
issue wt&gt;an Combet Court
takes 10 the llreels. (R)
IHl Hll
llluaa
J:!11 AmeriCan Mapllne
12:00 !D MOYIE: The Emlg,.nta,
Peot2 (POi (2:3t)

a-

1D Nlglllllnt Q

&lt;DSijnOII

DIIJI!n'*lllnmanl Tonight

11J Magnum, P.l.
•l!ll Twlllgltl zIIJ) ,...,.Night

ODI..,at

flll Neeltvllle Nqw
12:20 CD MOVII!:lllght PaaNge
(1 :30)

. One letter stands for another. In this 8ample A is used :·· )
for the three L's, X for the two ~·s, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all ~··.•••
hints. Each day the ~e letters are different.
• •
•

-·

•

CRYPTOQUOTE
QUWNW
BY

RNW

OBGW

~~T B 0 0_ E
1

TBMMW~

QURY
GCN

..
QU~YME

ACYWZ

B ,Y E Q R Y P W

IY~YCHY
RIQUCN
Yeaterdav•• Crvptoq•ote: BETTER THAN
COUNTING YOUR YEARS IS TO MAKE YOUR
YEARS COUNT. -SOURCE UNKNOWN
.

I

•
•

•

--l

:.:!
.' •'
•
•

•

•

••

"

I

'

a

other helps you- a -."

I1--T-1

wants a baby. t;J

Tree Trlmmne.:.d Stump
Remowl. Frw _.
• · c.11
304-175-7121.
.

LIJJ~.Iii.k

8:00(1) MOVtE:,Tha Emlgrente,
Part 2 (PG) (2:31)
D (2) all MaUock Mallock
must d$fend a caustic radio
personallly . !;J ,
CJl Muscle Magazine
(I) II (J) Who'l the Boll?
Tolly tries to bolsler the
confidence ol his ne¥&lt; young
professor. Q
(D The Power ot Choice

(!) Po,.., Oome look at
defense problems and tf1e
tax dollars involved .
1111 e1121 Tour of Duty A
sacret a«ack Is planned by
the Viet Co~ during the Tet ·
cease-fire.
tB Q] MOVI : B,.zll (A) (2: tt)
1!)1 PrimeN!IW•
lUI Murder, Sht Wrote
3 NIPvllle Now . .·..
8:05 CD NBA Beaketball
1:30 [JJ Ill (J) Roo..nne
Roseanne 's blnhday bash lou
Dan creates an unexpected

PUmp -'• .nd aervloe. 3041911-3802

Slllllllln.

flll Crool&lt; end Chou
7:35 C!l sanford and Son

Discover how to learn to

int••.td. you c., r•~nce or

1J1

IIJ) Croaattre

.. make cholees thai are right

Mnt wei• compl•.ta.-ned.,-.

WMITrMie: 8ft ful1idPIIorrino
-uptrovol '*"P«fot'compor
of .,... voluo thot wll tit 1981
Ford R.,.., 8ft bod. 304-11113579. .

AVON Ill ••11-or.,_.,
304-875-1421.

2 - - 12x50.
304-875-2722.

!'

"':"'-"'- .

Rotary or cabl• tool ••nng.

59 For Sale or Tred8

54 Misc. Merct!andi1e
Trtpto.-• ........ plpa Flvo
UMd aect6ons .,d T. •110. C.l
514-317· 7114.

·~

•teriDr, red pluah lnllriar. IS
lpd.. over•w•. 11,000mil•. tf

PM

AKC rega.tered hiHtte Hound

Antiquas

F:or Lease

1104.

can.

114-441-0910.

UDDer Rlv• Rold
GOI!Ipoh, Ohio

63

49

Lwgo.,..pplos-lwkl.old.molll,
t20 each. lhota • wormed.

lor11 or omoll Two--·
122VIondltr011
Point P l - . W.Vo.
304-175-MII

CAll oft or 2p. m. 304-773Muon WV.

....._

';

Vans&amp;. 4 W.O.

JC.nnol.
Him•
Chow .. ud ....
vloo. Coll114-"l-3844oflw7
PM.
·

814-4411-7~.

~t51 .

·-. v"""
.

~

1988 I ronco II X LEdftlo" Bl-*

.. Compi. . IMeof ewpM. oongol•m. vfnyte Wid c.p.e rwntL
c..,.. In llock onJv. Vlnylo Fllh Tonk. 2413 Jockaon Avo,
"'"'~'"" ot 13.99 jlrd In llDCk . Pl&gt;lnt Pl111ont. 304-875-2093.
only. fr• ..tlmMea, no job to 10 Jill lot up f14.99ond 10gol

*'

'S &lt;("~,__

19BOF-350V' B.,glno. 4opood
tr-. o.n., •mp Hd E.: .
Cond. te.300. 304-4N·I039.
1973 HolllonFordlruclu. tiiOO.
Coli 304-468-1916 or 304175- 2019

In d

Md

PRICES SI.ASHED·Wordroborog. f148- 178. au- . .
. - . - OII·!OV- t188 now
e108. Cc:.~ntry wood tllble wah
3 oholrol bonoh-reg. fBI9 , _
t 211. Men¥ Mere Monll¥ Sw·
lngVoluoo. Rt. 141 lnContoniiY
1A ml1 on Lincoln Pika

Hotol-814- 44&amp;- 9510.

rvt,. ov

it!'
&gt; '

&lt;1

ALLEY OOP

'diu
d
d
OilY'" ..,P. 1109 oon ·
80.000mles;'771&amp;-.-...,~•
a• 000 ~. 30• . . .
· or0 ' 178-221&amp;.
~ ·
-o
2372

0-IWiiynd Cottwy
,_.lin
Siem•e
tav., tdnens.

VIRA'S FURNITURE I
APPUANCES
Op., Mon.-811. I AM-5 PM,
Sun. 12 noon-6 PM. 114-44113158.

Ro o n. fraf nnt·WMk or month.
Sl.,.ln_g at 120 1 mo. 0.11•

SIMplng I'OOI"M wtth cooking.
At.oTriM• JPK8. Afl hook-up&amp;

Pets for Sale

Groom md Suppty Shop-Pit
Grooming. All brMdt ... AII
aty..._ l1m1 Pat Food 0.11•.
JulloWobb Ph. 1114-. .1-0231.

MOLlOHAN FURNITURE

45 Furnished Rooms

AGAIN.

THAN WOMEN .. C~

'TI Ch

73

Cll'p.ted. eppiiWtC*, ...t• _,d

no's PIDIIIn;.

a..-

Mon. thN Sot. l'h. 114-4410322.

•ee.ooo.

.,d,_..,eemonttt, .-..-.
-ooolltalto•onJonuwy
4, 111· 1100-821-3174. D-.

c.h wtth

C.n.,_., •••2 SA ., wMW, For kwr price~ an OuMtrv Cerplt
ltow, • refrtg. fur,.t.d. Child • FurnttuN oome to Monot.w
welcome. No p.ca. t22&amp; 1 mo. F.,nltu,.Uppw RIMr Rd .. 814-

-•ed.

• • of our Dom6no'1 Pa.
lloroloOIIod lit 111 Nolth

Ooll'r".

•··••···•·•· ,

2 blct'aom u,....rMhed 12x10
w/d hookup. 'h mlfe pelt
ti .M.C . on Rt. 38. llol. • d.,.
roqulrod. Colll14-"l-4319 or
304-1741-9710.

PortiJr fur,.~ 3 bodrOO&lt;n.
double wklt wilh a•lfle for
,.., On St. Rt. 141 1275.
SKILLS 0!1' VOU JO •. THE . 4 1~ .. fullbooom- I g•"!!• month, dop ..~
114ADULT WliLOING PROGRAM
"" corpllod l•omo n. .l. City 982-7401.
ATTRI-COUNTY VOCATIONAL
odlooiL U•lol low. WoodICHOOL O!TS YOU IIOLLS.
NatuNI a- .,,..., 2 t.•oom. on qulel Rrtlll In
Weldera tre highly tldlted
.
P~oed
to
CoR 114-"1- Roolno. F .... hod. Nlco odd on
worMrt:. At celt• the trllnlng to 0211 llftwo.a
I PM,
ttONQe roon. t17&amp; ptua •H
bocomo thll highly okllled
lOY!udlkl•. CAIII14-982-7288.
wlldlr In I•• thin on•1•· Cel
tho Mil Edu . .lon Cont• .,
3 IR .
deluxe, AC. a 2 be*oom: turrahed, Maher
78:1-3811 ... 14torogllt.....
~ poot-S.,eorT~e. 41R . hou•. 1nd '*Yef.
aoncltla~W, •225
cl•3rcl.
You ~NV' bl •1 ble to ,.,.,.. · good locotlo~ eon 304-171- month plls dopook ond utilltll.
114-99:1-7478.
fln .. al~ •ctato
..-toryaur 6104.

our

Concrete block• Ill sir.... yerd
ordollvOfY, Muon-d.Goll~ollo Blo· -~ c o .. 1231\ Plno ..
Ohio. Coli 814-4412 78 .
W£8TERN RED CEDAR
• Ch.nnel Runic
ond
Lop Slclng
"Dock Motwloll
a -..tood Quollty
~ETIDE. ~~~ll:~h.,o-114-

BuliN .. • Rd. Optn 9lam to Spm

Col1814-441-5038.

JY Mf

c""-•_

- - ord. 3 MR11 out

o mo. Coli

far trolnlng •• ....... -oolglbl•

trlin In G- ell! .., d •k tbou1
lin .. c:lll lid sourc..

f110. Mott-orboxoprlnll
ful or twin •11. tlrm *71. Wid
.... a - t210 • up.
King t3&amp;0. 4 drMW clleat " ' ·
Oun cobln. . 8, 8 • 10 gun.
Bolli' m i l t . - tllfl I t48.
BOd ....,.. no. no • Kina
fTomo •so. Oood ooloctlon of
bedroom .ult:-. m••l ....,....,
hoodboordl •30 ond up to 181.

f('uN THAT

ATTENftON

1971 Chowy SliP Sldo PU. PI,
·PB, AM-FM.C011. oldo • Bullclna MM-'III
window, 400 motCM', 1uto.
IJod!.. brlck. - • plpoo; win- 11200flrm.Colll14-381-9107
5_'_
30_PM_
dow~ lntolo. Ole. Cl.,do Win. ..;':...__ __
tora, Rio Grondo 0 . CoM 114- 1917Ch..,yFioololdoELpldcup.
245-8121 .
'7.000. Col 814-245-9231.

21R . trill• for rem. 1 mlleirom
- · HoopMol. Coli 114-2458882 .. 245-88110.

bogln=.-.,IIY

lrlliJIIIVIII'III

W•meftflllll
1211ondup., lllfll. Bolli'~

. ..

,,,

.&gt;HO~ER .

66 Building Supplies

OOmpl«l

I

tho Cont•
II 763-31111 1111. 14. A
Fumaure ond
·~~-~~~~~~~.~
Coli Tri-CounoyVoollloniiAdult
.._or onth
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hooow. .,gino =---=--.:--:--,:;-;-holll. polol Jool&lt;. ziP 1oc:1c. - · 72
Trucks for Sale
nM oommode ••· C.U 8 f4441-2381.
1973TII1illm kla trudc. wtth 1oQ
bunkl. Col 814-258-1198. ,
oftl• d•k.

".

:~;::':'.-;'
• &lt; ·~,

·THIS AATICL.E
~
'JA'(5 MEN HAVE

T._.., torldlll, •m• doc:lc.

.

.(

"".,

...

itruu.304-17B-11 19·

10 O.ya 1111'11 •

town. No pMI. Dep. &amp; rfl. Stove

· ~-· Wanted To Buy

. . Pontile Fl•o. block. ....
cond.. new dra brlk• •

SHADY LAWN AI'TS. 721
S.condAw. Fwnlthed efflcl~
a. turtma -' t175 • mo.
ku.,..,g - · I gorboaa
am al• •cka Itt on~. Cllll • f 4•411'4107 or 441-2102.

Naw~

FRANK AND ERNEST

I0

IH S N U I

e

'77 Cl!.y lmpolo. 301 outo..
n.OOO ml•, ruM ·good. VWV
dopondoblo Moko Offor. 304.
773-11009.

.-.c:e.. •

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23

• 19720icloCud- aoodcond. 2
door, ht. · - 304-87&amp;-2487.

3 •.·5 Court St. ~ttch .. with
rtcw•&amp; ,.,..,"' t210
rol. No p ... Coli 114-441'128.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

e

Philosopher: "Don't mistake
knowledge for wisdom .. One
helps you make
living; lhe

6

1

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:7:00 (2) OUr Houaa
(2) PM MtgiZine
(J) Sportaeenter
lll D (J) Current Affair
l!l (JJ MacNall/ Loflrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
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7:30 It (2) Family Feud
(!) All l!.mert.c an Pulling
Serioa Best ot '88 Red
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(I) EnletUtlnmanl Tonight
II Ill USA Today
1111 e1121 1111 Jeopardy!
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D Cll ABC Ntwa Q
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(!) Nlghtlj llualne.. Report
1111 D1121 CBS Ntwa
tB Q] WKRP In Cincinnati
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lUI CarloOn Expoeaa
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12

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FLYOST

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dlsaslrous when Beezus
pays for her oW.. salon
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(!) MOVIE: Or. WhO: Frontier
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tB Jl]l Happy Oayo
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6:05 CD One Day at 1 Time
~:30 D (2) all NBC Highly Newa

MULTIPLIC~TION TEST? SliRE.
WE'RE READ'(! ALL IN A DA'{'S

.*

.,

�•

Pom~oy- MiddlePort,

Page-1 0-The Daily ~el
..
•'
-

.HOME
!

''DIGNITVlAND
•
SERVICE AlWAYS"
Ben H. Ewing-Director

Thi1
..
·week't
· 6sme1·

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

..
"COME GlOW
wmtus

..

•

.

EWING
FUNERAl

tuasday, January 3", 198~

Ohio

'

Seton Hall
slips past

Fs

.

..

~eorget~wn

.........
-FARMERS
.

Daily Number

315
Pick-4
4828

Page 3

, BANK

•

Ohio Lottery

&amp; SAVINGS CO.

•

~-

POM£10Y, OH.
992-2136 )
992-2137
TUPPDS PUINS; OH.
.
985-3315

MEIGS

667·3161

BOYS

Vol.39, No. 167

U.S. jets down two.
·Libyan fighter planes

GIRLS
Jan. 5-Aiexander
Jan•. 9-Ftderal Hocking
USED CAIS
NEW CAIS
USED CAIS

POWELL'S

'

EASTERN
-BOYS

FOlD

; liUOS~
•COMPLETE RADIATOR SERVICE
•MAJOR REPAIRS
. •COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
&amp; IALAIIICE ,
oMOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
ACCEPTED
'

298 SECOND ST.

GIRLS

POMEROYI :OH.-

Jan. 5 -Symmes Valley
Jan. 9-Southern
Ja,..-11-At T;imble

\992-2196\

Jan. 6-At Southwestern
Jan. 7-At Gallipolis

·."HOME BANK .

Jan. 5-Southwestem
Jan. 9-Eastern
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek

REMODELING TO BEGIN- Ph1111e I work will
begin Immediately on the fanner Royal C.rown
Bottling Co., building on Norlh Second Ave.,

STORE.HOURS:

MON.·SAT.
8 A.M.-10

BOYS

INSUIAHCE

ClAIMS
WBCOME
461 310 AVE. IIDDIEPOIT, 011.

\

•

SOUTHER"

IODY._

P.~

10 A.M.-10 '"'

GIRLS

HOME PEOPLE"

Work will begin Immediately
The building program for the building which will provide a
on the first phase of converting new future church and Christian 1,000 seat sanctuary as well as
the fanner Royal Crown Bottling · School Includes ·two phases.
areas for Sunday school classes.
Co. building, North Second Ave .. During the first phase, the front
The Rev. l\lllchael Pangia,
Middleport, in-to new quarters for part of the building wlll be
pastor, announced that work will
the Rejoicing Life Church and ·remodeled for use as a fellowship
begin Immediately on the first Christian School.
hall. youth meeting room, junior
phase portion and that blue
The Rejoicing Life Church high school class space for the . prints and permits will ano-:v
purchaaed the bulldlpg. some Christian School and restroom
oecupany of the portion of. the
time ago and received in late facilities .
bulldlng affected by that phase
December state approved blue
The second phase will include
before phase U is completed.
prints for the bu llding.
reworking the rear part of the
•

SYRACUSE 'OFFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFFI~E
949-2210

THE '
CENTRAL
TRUST

COMPANY
"Your Financial
Center" .
97 NORTH SECOND
MIDDLEPORT; OliO
992-6661

INSTALLMENT
LOANS

992-3077

Sales &amp; Service
EAST IWN ST. ·

POMEIOY

Yeiar Deller ••
River

t••

'1".

~1•11

AND

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
198B·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 2-Miller ............................ Home
Dec. 9-Trimble .. :....................... Home ·
Dec. 13-Nelsonville-York .......... ::--A~y
Dec. 16-Wellston .............. ........ Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co...................... Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
198B·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Miller :... c...................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ..................... , Home
Dec. 2-.North Gallia .........:.......... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ........................ : Home
Dec. 13-Kyger Cree_
k.............,...... Away
Dec. 16~Hannan Trace .............. :Home
Dec. 17 -Feder~l Hockihg .......... ... Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ......... .-..... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
.Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Gallia .................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath ........... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. 27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28.....:Miller ......... :... :............. Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb. 14-Parkersburg qath ........... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home
Nov. 29-Eastern .... .......,............. Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Dec. 9-Symmes Valley ....... c........ .Away
Dec. 13-North Gallia ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill .................:...... Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Greeri ............................ Away
Jan. 6-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Aw_ay
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood .................:.Away
Jan .. 24-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 27 -Oak Hill ........................ Home·
Feb. 3-Hanmin Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. HO!Jl&amp;
Feb. 10-Solithwestern ................ Home

Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home

Dec. 30-Lo&amp;an ............................ Away
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13-Miller ............................ Away
Jari. 17...,-Warren ........ ,............... , Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville· York.. ........... home
Jan. 27-Wellston ........................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co ..................... Home
Feb. 3~Belpre ............ ,................ Away
Feb. 7-Aiexander ................ ....... Home
Feb. 10-Federal Hocking ............ Home

FOOO' STORE

St~!~~.R~•rol investigate

' EAST.- ST.

.,, . . y
'~

'i'·

'~:!!''.

;

&gt;--•. '

r

'

two hit-skip accidents

. ',&gt;

· ._.f,JerveO••.
•Ohio lOttery tlcketa
•VCR R-Ia •MHk

· . ·

,•ln..d ..

•HiintfnJ Ucenae .

, OWNEib DAN SIDWELL

99.2-9907
....

IRLSSCHEDULE~-----------------~---MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB-B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastarn ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. 8-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville·York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co...................... Home
Dec. ·21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre ............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9:-Federal Hocking .............. Horne
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
Jan. 19-Trimble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York.. ........... Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home '
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ................ :..... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 6-Aiexander ........................ Away ,
Feb. 9-Federal Hockins ...............11way
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away ·
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec . .!-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble·.:........................ Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12~Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 17-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern·................ Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble.......................... Away
.Jan. 12-North.Gallia .......... :........ Away
Jan. 19-0ak H1ll ........................ Home
.Jan. 23-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Homa
Feb. 6-Symmes Valley ................ Away

BAUM

.Jim Cobb ·
Chevr:oleteGidsmobilt
e(adillat, Inc.

LIME DAN
EXXON .

-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE-------------------

WE .WILL '
TAKE CARE OF

e:-i!8
FOR IREAIFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER
ftattirina:
·*GMt 111mburprs
•ROat BMf on Croissant
Stuffed Bllltd Potatoes
TICO Slllds
* hll •• C.•

*

*

*

o~;:.,Out•
P.M.
~~;~~~~i:~'
P.M.
1 P.M. ,...,
I

'-ov

"'"~~'

INSURANCE
NEEDS

CHESTEI, OH. ,

DOWNING•CHILDS
MUlLEN,-MUSSER
. INSUWJCE.

MUZZLE LOADING
and IIUNir.G .,._5

FanaraI
Home

lfOUIS:
Men. tin Fri.

•

v

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992-5141

COMPLETE
SELECTION

.. 555 PARK ST.

MIDDUPORT
992-6611

CAll 992-1311 or

7130 a.m. to SdiO p.IIL

99t..JRl

II

Setwtllr

7:30a.m. to 4110 p.m.

I

'

.'. --- -

--'------·---·-........___-~
0

'

'

'.

'

'

~

accident at 1 p.m. Tuesday on US
35, 0.2 miles east of Mile Post 14,

where SR 160 merges westbound
with US 35. Troopers said Bonnie
S. Barton, 47, Middleport, passed
another car, that was merging
onto US 35, and collided with a
westbound truck driven by Clar·
ence J. Taylor, 47, Rt.l, Northup.
There was no damage to thetruck and minor damage to the
car. No one was tnjured.
The patrol cited Barton for
improper passing.
Violet M. Stumbo, 77, Scot·
town, was cited _for failure to
yield the right of way after •an
accident at 1: 17 p.m. Tuesday on
us 35 at the Intersection of
Buhl·Morton Road . Troopers
said Stumbo pulled onto US 35
and collided with a car driven by
Daniel L. Persons, 21, Fort
Bragg, N.C. No 0 newas Injured.
Damage was moderate.
The patrol Is Investigating a
hit-skip accident that occurred at
3:38p.m. Tuesday on Bob McCormick Road, one-halfmllesouth of
SR 160. Troopers said an unidentified vehicle went left of center
and collided with a car driven hy
Teresa L. Lewls,l7, Rt.l. VInton.
Damage was moderate. No one
was injured. The hit-skip vehicle
left the scene.

BATAVIA, Ohio (UPI) -The _pending before the Envlronmenstate says It will pursue the case · tal Board or Review.
against a Clermont County comJudge Robert Ringland, who
pany accused of puniplng con-· had said he wanted to continue
tamlnated water Into a creek that the trial that started 10 weeks
p r o v 1 des w a t e r f o r ago.' said he granted the mistrial
Wllllamsburg.
motion "with extreme reluc·
Richard Shank, director of the tance and profound disappoint. Ohio Environmental Protection ment and regret."
Agency, said Wednesday he
He granted the defense motion
would pursue a retrta~ after a for CECOS International, Its
Clermont County Common Pleas PiU'ent company, Browning FerCourt judge granted a mistrial In rts Industries Inc .. and Allan
.the case of CECOS International, Orth, fonner CECOS environ·
lis parent and two Individuals.
mental manager, but denied the
'Fhe mistrial was granted for motion for John Stlrnkorb,
the defense after the prosecution former CECOS operations
used a wrll.fen :memo. during · manager.
cross-examination of one of the
They had been named In an
defendants and the defense said SO-count Indictment charging
It knew nothing ol the memo.
them wit~... pumping ph~nol·
"Wewlllcontinuetopursuethe tainted water Into a branCh of
... case Involving numerous ha- Pleasant Run Creek; a water
zardous waste violations and we source for the community of
will continue to aggressively Williamsburg.
Closing argilments are sche·
defend our decision to deny this
facility a permit," Shank said.
duled lor March 15 .. "in the
Continued on page 5
A request' lor a permit Is

:LUMBER
OF

One person was slightly injured and two drivers were ~ited
after two cars al\d a pickup truck
coUided at 6:23 p.m. Tuesday on
SR 7, at the Intersection of Little
Kyger Road , in Addison
· Township ..
The State Highway Patrol said
Douglas E : Halfhill, 38. Cheshire,
stopped in traffic: His car was hit
from behind by a vehicle driven
by.Lisa A. Plants. 32, Henderson,
W.Va. Then, a .t ruck driven by
Delton W. Fowler, 44, Racine.
struck-the back of Ihe Plants car.
There was moderate damage to
all three vehicles. ·
Hal !hill was Injured and taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospita'l at
Point Pleasant.
The patrol cited Fowler and
Plants on charges of fallurJi' to
stop within the assured clear
distance.
The driver was injured in a
one-car accident at 11 p.m.
Tuesday on SR 554, about eight
miles west of Cheshire. Bryan
Branham, 18, Pomeroy, suffered
a minor visible injury,bu twas not
. treated. According to the patrpl,
Branham lost control on a curve.
His car went off the road, striking
a tree. Damage-was heavy to the
vehicle. There was no cltar· n.
One dr lver was cited
an

State plans to pursue
retrial of CECOS

VALLEY

ntM.AVL.

'

1----~-------~----~------~-----------------------------------~~~~-

Blowe.r ·

,..,

..

\

Rawll•.l•
Coat•

. ALL YOUR

HARDWARE
.........w..... ,.....

985-3301

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
19BB·B9 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander .................-..... Away
nov..28-Eastern ........................ Homa
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek.. ................... Away
Dec. 5-Meigs ............................. Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22 -Alexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwesterh .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Jan. 14-Waterford ........ :............. Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ......... :..... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 30-Waterford ..................... Home
. Feb. 2-Hannan Trace .....,........... 'Homt.
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 11-Meigs ........................... Home

Middleport, to convert it Into luture quarters for
the Rejoicing Ule Church and Its Christian
School.

W ~rk to begin immediately
o~ first phase of project

SUNDAY

FOR .
MEMBER FDIC

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - U.S.
""'-.(
fighter jets " acting in self~&lt;defense" on patrol over interna·
Mediterranean Soa ~tiona! waters shot down two
Li~yan MiG -23s above the Medl·
terranean Sea 'Wednesday and
0
200
returned to their aircraft carrier
milos
safely, the government said.
The Libyan pilots apparently
parachuted from their crippled
Sovlet·bullt jets after lhe F -14
Tomcats from the USS John F .
. LIBYA
Kennedy fired on them, accord· ·
ing to U.S. officials In Washing·
ton and with President Reagan in
Los Angeles.
The attack occurred at about 5
a .m. EST, about 11 a.m. local
time north of Tobruk, Libya, the f~;;a::;;;;;-;j'--\~:;;;---~
EGYPT
officials said.
The Incident, latest In a series
of clashes that Included the l).S.
·bombing of Libya In 1986, comes
amid renewed tensions over
reports that Libyan leader
l\lloamml)r· Gadhaflls building a
chemical weapons plam. Reagan
administration officials main·tained the downlngs had nothllig
to do \llith the plant. . ,
"The ' Libyan· aircraft apUPI Graphic
proached the U.S. Navy aircraft
in a hostile manner -over lnternationa I waters· and the Navy ·
aircraft, acting In s~)f· defense ,
LmY AN JETS SHOT DOWN - U.S. fighter Jets shot down two
fired air.-to-air missiles, downing
l,ibyan MIG-23s over the Mediterranean &amp;!a Wednesday,
both 1.lbyan aircraft, " a Navy
according to a Pentagon spokesman. The U.S. jets were from the
statement said.
carrier USS John F. Kennedy. (UPI)
The two Navy r-14s were
" eonductlng roUtine defensive sl"milar ena~oun te r · betwl'en foreign ·min isfry 'accuse¥ th e
patrol," said White House spo- American and Ll byan jets, had U.S. or a '' premeditated" attack·
kesman Roman Popadluk with led to sharp criticism on Capitol against the two MIG fighters.
the vacationing Reagan. The Hill and elsewhere.
Popadiuk told reporters in Los
president was awakened and
A White House spokesman said Angeles, " The F·l4s were threainformed at 3 a.m. PST, an hour President-elecl George. Bush
tened while conducting routine
after the incident, he said·.
also was awakened Wednesday operations ln International airsArmy Lt. Gen. Colin Powell. morning a1 the ylce president's
pace north of Tobruk. The F -14s
the president's national security residence in Washington. There
returned safely to 1helr ship. and
adviser, woke Reagan at his new was no Immediate reaction from
two parachutes were sighted
home in the Bel Air suburb of Los either Reagan or Bush.
from the downed Libyan airj\l)geles. Failure to wake the'
Libya n radio, monitored by the craft," indicating the Libyan
president in August 1981, after a BBC in London, said Libya's
pilots might have escaped .

{

Jan. 3-Southwestern
Jan. 6 ..... At Symmes Valley
Jan. 10-At Southern

PAT Hill FORD, Inc.

2 Sect lono, 1 2 Paget 26 Canto
A Multimedia Inc. Newopaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, January 4, 1989

Copyright«! 1989

Jan. 3-Belpre ,
Jan. 6-At· Alexander

•

at

.

'

Variable cloudiness tonight ,
Low In mid 20s. Thursday,
High In mid tes. Chance of
rain 60 percenl.

------ -•.:,---------'--1

.-

lt------....--'--- -'--·--·--i-- I ,

-

'

C()nstr,uction
spending up
0.8 percent

TUNISIA

"M·'

.+.

CHAD

SUDAN

By LYDA PHILLIPS
UPJ Business Writer
WASHINGTON - · A spurt In
single-family home building and
public projects sent 'constructlon
spending up 0.8 percent In
November, the Commerce De·
partment said Tuesday.
•
During the first 11 months of
.
1988, $370.9 billion of new construction was begun, 1 percent
above the same period of 1987, ·
the department'~ Census Bureau
reported. New construction In
By LEE LEONARD
be a tough two-year session in
November was launched at a
UPI Statehouse Reporter
terms
of solving the state's offices In the new State Offlf'e
seasonally adjusted annual rate
COLUMBUS- The 118th Ohio problems .
Tower across tHe street !\'om the
of$411.1 bllllon,0.8 percentabove
Statehouse .
General AssembiX convened
"Now the real work begins. "
the revised October estimate of
Tuesday amid spec'alation It wlll '
Chief Just!~ Thomas Moyer of
warned
House Speaker Vernal
$407.8 billion, the bureau said.
the
Ohio Supreme Court and
Riffe Jr., D-Wheelersburg, as he
.Lawrence · Chlmerlne, c hlef
associate
Justice Allee Roble
accepted nomination and elec·
economist for the W.E FA Group
In
her first day on the
Res
nick,
•
•
tlon to his record eighth term as
of econemlc forecasters In Bala
job,
swore
In
the state senators.
speaker. ·'The road between now
Cynwyd , Pa., said the Increase
Stanley
Aronoff, RSen.
and the end of 1990 will be a long
was larger than expected.
Cinclnnatl,
was
elected
Senate
and difficult one. The choices will ·
" You have to be very careful "
6~
president,
succeeding
former
not be easy. "
Interpreting the construction fig·
.
· Lawmakers are expected to Sen. Patil Glllmor, R-Port Clinures," he )Yarned, Qecause durton, now a congressman.
The Ohio Bureau of Employ· have to raise taxes to accommoIng cold months good weather
Aronoff. 56. Is a 22-year vetecan mean more construction ment annouqced today the Ohio date the demand for public
ran
or the Senate and has been In
than ·the Industry's strength County unemployment rates for services. They may ask voters
the General Assembly since 1961.
November 1987. Among the for permission to Impose a
warrants .
Sen. David Hobson, R·
"Fundamentally cons tructlon state's 88 counties , unemploy- special flat rate income-tax for Springfield. was chosen presi·
ment ranged !rom a low of ·a. 7 education.
Is not a positive force In the
dent pro tempore. Sen. Richard
percent
in Hancock County to a
Other hot issues wlll be care for
economy right now ," Chlmerlne
,Finan,
R·Cinclnnatl. Is majority
sa ill. ''Construction Is zigging high of 10.7 percent In Monroe the elderly, general health care
leader
and
Sen. Eugene Watts.
and the growing gap In the
and zagging but not really going County.
R-Columbus,
Is whip.
,
·
The comparable unemploy· Medicaid budget.
anyplace. With Interest rates
Senate
Minority
Leader
Harry
But opening day was basically
going up, that trend will continue . ment rate !or Ohio was 5.3
Meshel, D-Youngstown, took his
percent,
a
bout
the.
same
as
5.2
lighthearted,
with senators and
next year.'&lt;l.
re-election oath on crutches
DaVId Wyss, chief economist percent In October. The com par· representatives mingling with
recovering
from a broken ankl~
able U.S. rate In November was their families, photographing
for Data Resources Inc. In
sustained In a nightspot accident
and being photographed, holding
Lexington, Mass., agreed that 5.2 percent . ~
In Kansas City last month.
Ten counties had unemploy - children and grandchildren on
ihe numbers might not be as good
Democratic Sen s. Neal
ment rates at or below 4.5 their laps, even letting them vote
as they look.
Zimmers
of Dayton, Eugene
"From November to March percent In November. Three . for them. ~
Branstool
of
Utica and Michael
these numbers aren't terribly counties had unemployment . For House members, It - l~t:
White
of
Cleveland
remain on the
above 10 percent.
volved checking out their new
useful," · Wyss said. "They tell rates
party's Senate leadership team.
Among six Southeastern Ohio
you how good the weather was counties, the jobless rate for
rather than how healthy con- November remained the same
struction was. Construction's not only in Gallla and Meigs coun·
dead, but It is slightly Ill." ·
ties. There was no change !rom
Overall residential construc- October percentages. Gallla's
tion spending was up 0.7 percent rate remained at 6.4 percent and
In November; led by single· Meigs remained at ji.8 percent.
family housing, the government
Ji'aul Gerard has been appointed _by Meigs County Common
The unemployment rate rose,
reported.
·
Pleas Judge Fred W. Crow IIItotheposltions of criminal bailiff
however, In i\thens County, up
In November, speQding for 0.1 percent to 5.1 percent In
assignment commissioner and deputy sheriff. The term of
new single-family houses shot 2.3 Novewmber; Jackson County,
deputy shall be from Jan . 1, 1989 to Dec. 31, 1995: Gerard.Is to
percent above October to an up 0.4 percent to 7.4 ,percent;
receive $2,000 per year as compensatiOn for services as bailiff
annual rate of $121.5 billion, Lawrence CoiiJity, up 0.3 percent
Appointed as Meigs County, Common Pleas Court reporter~
while non·f!!Sidentlal .bu Udlng to 5.5 · percent; and . VInton
were Teresa Tyson-Drummer, Paul Gerard, Crystal Whitlatch
dropped 0.8 percent !rom Oc· County, up 0.3 to 9.4 percent, the
and Mary Gilmore.
._
Iober to a rate ol $92.3 billion, the highest among the six counties.
In other court matters, ,J .B. O'Brien, Pomeroy, has filed a
bureau said.
judgment action against Michael T. Grifllth, Pomeroy.
OBES said the work Ioree In
Public construction In No- the six county area numbered
The State of Ohio, ex rei'., the Meigs Co)lnty Commissioners
vember also did well, up to a 84,600 and 79,300 of them were
Pomeroy, have filed a complaint for necessaries to cover cost~
seasonally . adjusted annual rate employed In ·Novemher, leaving
of support, maintenance and medlcals for minor children
of $81 billion, up 4 percent from 5,300 or 6.2 unemployed In the six
'
. '
Continued on page 5
October.
counties. ·

Oh •

lawmakers expecting to
face several hot issues in '89
JO

. Meigs jobless
rate rema'tns
·
at B percent

Local news briefs-.
Gerard named to Meigs posts

•.

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