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P.t

Tuaday. November 21, 1989

PcJm.oy MicldllpOI't. Ohio

10-The Deity Sentinel

•

--Local news briefs... - - Cottncil. ..
continued from page 1

Meigs offices to close
The office of the Meigs County Board of Elections will be
closed Friday following Thanksgiving. The office remained
open on Columbus Day because of voter registration demands,
and Friday Is being taking In lieu of that legal holiday.
.

Deer, vehicle collide on SR. 7
A vehicle driven by Roger V. Athey. 35, Rt . 1, Cheshire, was
moderately damaged In a collision with a deer on SR 7 In
Salisbury Township Monday. according to the Gallla-Melgs
Post of the State Highway Patrol.
The patrol said Athey was northbound at 6: 25p.m . when the
collision occurred.

•

Middleport receives grant

The village of Middleport has been awarded a $37,226 Ohio

elderly and handicapped transit fare assistance grant, State
Senator Jan Michael Long, (D-Circleville), and State Rep.
Mary Abel, (D-Athens) announced today .
. "Public transpartation Is of vitallmpartance In Southeastern
Ohio, especially when many of our seniors and handicapped
citizens have limited transportation services available to
them." stated Long and Abel.
The grant, administered by the Ohio Department of
Transportation, will enable the village to offer reduced fares to
elderly and handicapped riders who use public transporation.
Middleport's grant was one of 50 totaling more than 2.5 million
dollars to public transit agencies throughout Ohio, It was
reported.
Middleport's public transit system is the Blue Streak Cab Co.
and, according .to Middleport Mayor Hoffman, the amount of
the grant was anticipated and taken Into consideration when
local support amounts needed from the villages of Middleport
and Pomeroy and thl&gt; Meigs County. Board of County
Comm lssloners were set.

EMS has seven Monday calls
Sev.en calls for assistance were answered on Monday by units

of the Meigs Emergency Medical Services.
At 4:58 a.m., Rutland was called to Meigs Mine No. 31 for
David Dotson to Holzer Me.d lcal Center.
Pomeroy was called at 8: 30 a.m. to Township Road 143 for
Edna Leach to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Middleport was called at 8: 57 a.m. to Bailey Run Roall for
Charles H. Gilkey who was dead on arrival.
At 3:36 p.m., Racine transparted Wilma Powell from
Antiquity to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Rutland at 3: 45p.m. was called to Route 124 for Paul Taylor to
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Middleport at 8:42p.m. went to Snort Fourth Ave. for Daniel
Shane who was treated bu I not transported.
At 10:10 p.m.• Middleport trans parted John Blake from North
Second Ave. to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Middleport offices closed
All Middleport village offices will be closed Thursday and
Friday In observance of the Thanksgiving hoUday. Normal
business hours will resume on Monday.

-_;,_Area deaths--ClaraM~ney
Meigs County native Clara
Ruth Wlse McKinney. 55, ot 2149
Watkins Road, Columbus, died
Sunday afternoon at the resl·
dence ot her daughter and
son-In-law, Debra and Sam Ferrell, 264 Cullman Ave .•
Columbus.
Born Jan. 7, 1934 at Rutland,
Mrs. McKinney was the daughter
of the late Rev. F1oyd Wise, and
Garnet Near Wise, of Columbus,
who survives.
In addition to her mother,
daughter and son-In-law, Mrs.
McKinney Is surVIved by her
husband, James E. McKinney,
another daughter, Lucy McKinney, and a son, Billy McKinney ,
all of Columbus; two grandchild·
ren; two brothers, Paul and
David Wise, and two sisters,
Dorothy Rathburn and Phyllis
Rathburn. all of Columbus; and
several nieces and nephews.
Friends may call at Woodyard
East Chapel, 2300 East Livingston Ave. , Columbus, from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 on TUesday, where
services will be held at 10 a.m .
Wednesday wil h Rev. Frank
Waters officiating. A graveside
service will be held 2 p.m.
Wednesday at Miles Cemetery ,
' Rutland.

Florence Horton
F1orence Fair Horton, 87, Middleport, formerly of Eden, N.C.,
died Monday at the Amerlcare
Nursing Center In Pomeroy.
Bo,rn in Stokes County, N.C.,
she was a homemaker and
member or the Heath United
Methodist Church. Shew as also a
former member Of the Spray
Methodist Church In Eden, N.C.
Mrs . Horton is survived by two
soms, Dewey M. Horton, Middleport; and Alva Horton, Louisville, Ky . ; and four
grandchildren.
Services will be Friday at 11
a.m. at the Fair Funeral Home
Chapel in Eden. N.C. Burial will
be in Overlook Cemetery.
Calling hours will be 7-8: 30
p.m. on Thul'!lday at the funeral
home.

Charles GUkey
Charles Hollis Gilkey, 69, of
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, died
unexpectedly on Monday at his
home.
•
Mr. Gilkey wu born Aug. 2,
1920 at Ball Run, Pon.-oy, uc1
was the son ot the late Hollis and
Rosa Denny Gilkey. He retired aa
a coal dpple ·laborer and wu an
army veteran of World War II.
He wu a member ot F~­
-Bennett Poat 128 ot the Amerl·
can LeJ)on and Pomeroy Chap-

'

ter No. 53 of the Disabled
American Veterans.
Survivors Include four sons,
Jeffrey Casto, of Columbus;
Mlcbael Gilkey, Jerry Gilkey
and Christopher Gilkey; a daugh·
ter. Mrs. Thomas (Judy) Batey;
three grandsons, Travis, Eric
and Branden Batey; and his
former wife, VIolet Riggleman,
all of Pomeroy.
In addition to his parents, Mr.
Gilkey was preceded In death by
two brothers, Eugene and Basil
Gilkey.
Services will be Friday, 3 p.m.,
at the Ewing Funeral Home with
Bill Justis officiating. Burial will
be In the Bradford Cemetery.
Friends ,may call at the funeral
home from 6 to 9on Thursday and
from 9 a.m. until the time of
services on Friday.

Stocks
Dally stock prlceti
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Sml&amp;h
of Blunt, Ellll 4 Loewl

----Meigs "announcements----

continued from page 1

Fireball Jack comlnl
begin each evening at 7 p.m .
tQrn down and cl~n-up Is under· be much less than If the village
"Fireball Jack" Stutler Is according to the Rev. Don
.way. The tearing down Of the two were forced by the Oh lo Environ· coming to town for a threeMeadows, pastor.
unslflhllY structures are In keep- mental Pro~tlon Agency to evening "Harvest for Christ" a·t
Ing with wlshrs of Council to ral11e billa to pay for mandated the J:&gt;omeroy United Methodist
The Rev . Mr. Stutler also will
remove such eyesores and clean · Improvements.
Church, Nov. 24·26 . Services will preach for the 10: 15a.m. worship
up the town.
. Ip regard to the recent repeal
service on the 26th.
A list of other problem areas by voters of the village's His tori·
has been prepared and Council cal Preservation Ordinance,
A retired United Methodist
Intends lo see that the problems, Pomeroy Councllmember Betty
POMEROY -The Meigs Com- pastor. Stutler 1$ knOWI\ for his
whatever they may be, are Baronlck said that she thinks the
mon Pleas Court cases of James enthusiastic preaching. He Is
eliminated by property owners, ordinance "was ~ iood thing, It
Kennedy against Sherry Herd· considered a master at combln·
either voluntarily or by citation, just went In the wrong direcman, formerly known as Sherry ing humor with the hard-hitting
In a timely manner.
·
tion." With or without an ordl·
Kennedy; Clay T. Ihle, dol.rig truth of the gospel, Meadows
A $280,000 State Issue II grant nance, Baronlck.said that Counto Pomeroy was expected to help cil needs to continue suppordng business as Tim !hie, against says.
pay for Improvements to the the preservation of the village's Spencer R. Carpenter, et al;
have been dismissed.
village's wastewater laboratory, hls!Drlcal past.
Now living In Edon, Ohio,
A joint notice of voluntary Stutler served several pastorates
however, reported Councilman
Bruce Reed, the $280,000, even
·It was reported that paving has • dismissal has been flied In the In the Athens and Portsmouth
when combined with a required been completed In the Lincoln case of the Stale of Ohio, ex rei, districts of the u.11ted Methodist
$28,000 10 percent match from the · Hill area, on a part of Butternut Anthony J. Celebrezze Jr .. attor- Church. He Is a former pastor at
ney general or Ohio, versus Salem Center, Wilkesville, VInvillage, does ·not begin to touch Ave., at the entrance to Veterans
the ·estimated bill for the neces- Memorial Hospital on Mulberry Murphy 011 Company, et a!.
ton and Eureka.
A stipulated notice of dismissal
sary lab Improvements. Instead, Heights, and at the entrances to
The public Is Invited and there
has been flied In the cruie of will be special music each
the money will 'be used to driveways where water lines
upgrade the wastewater treat- were recently replaced. The Judith E. Herbert, et at , against evening. A love offerlrrg will b~
Ruth E. Dent, et al. ·
ment plant, Reed said.
accepted.
•
paving cost the village approxiPomeroy was fourth on this mately' $6,000.
year's list for State Issue II
Councilman· Bill Young refunding and since only the ported that he has flied for
Avoid the holiday rush •••
$280,000 portion of the nearly technical assistance through the
three million needed by the SoUConservatlonServicetooffer
village was funded this year, advice as to possible repairs of a
Reed hopes that POmeroy red clay slip on Wylils Hill. With
"might get the whole ball of assistance from SCS, Young
wax" during next year's State believes the village may In the
Issue II granting process.
future be able to apply fora grant
At some point In the future, to possibiJ' fund repairs. Young
only$4500per night
Improvements to the wastewater said there would be no charge for
system may mean Increased SCS assistance.
November 19- December 30, 1989
costs to customers, however.
Flnal(y, Council accepted the
(Tax not Included- ..led on avaiiJbillty)
with State Issue II money coming mayor's report of$5,615collected
Close To These Shopplna Centers:
Into the village, Increases would In fines and fees during October.

Cases dismissed ·

Shop Early
and Save

Eastland Mall with 150 Stores I Consumer Square
).C. Penny Outlet I Scarborough Mall
Toys 'R Us I Children's Palace

Common Pleas Court

2124 South Hamilton Road
Columbus, Ohio 43232

'

•

'. Vol.40, No.138
: Copyrighted 1989

..

··

By CJiA:aLENE HOEFUCH
Dally Sentinel Starr
·Construction of two new build·
1ngs In the Meigs Local School
District to serve either as elementary or combination elementary and junior high schools was
. proposed at Tuesday night's
. meeting of the Meigs Local
" School District Board of
·; Education.
. The board after hearing a
· presentation by Superintendent
·· Jtmes Carpenter, passed a res a--

lution to conduct a survey of the
district to get public opinion
about such a building program.
Supt. Carpenter pointed out
that all bonded Indebtedness of
the district will be paid off In
December, 1900. He said that If
the four mms currently being
paid Is condnued, beginning In
January 1991 and extending for
23 years, over $9 mllllon will be
raised toward the building pro-gram al no Increase In taxes to
the residents of the dlltrlct.

"The district will never again rollnient Is less than 130, while In
have the opportunity to have that one building there are 370
much money at no Increase In students.
.
taxes," commented the
He said that student-teacher
superintendent.
ratio ranges everywhere from
Carpenter explained that the 15-1 to 31-1.
time Is coming when It .will be
The proposal which Carpenter
Impassible for Meigs Local to suggested be presented to the
operate all of the buildings now community calls for two new
used due to pupil population. He schools, either kindergarten
noted thai currently- there are through sixth grade. or kinderfour buildings with less than 150, . garten through eighth grade.
students, that In three buildings,
He said this would mean
excluding kindergarten, the en·
closing all of the curren~elemen-

tary schools and the junior high
school If the new schools were
kindergarten through eighth
"rade.
As for tl)e advantages of the
building program, Carpenter
said It would "level out" the
student-teacher ratio, would al·
low for full-time· art, music and
other special instructors In each
school, and would provide the
space for pre-school education
(three and four year olds) which
Carpenter said he expects to

become a mandated part of the
public school program within the
next couple of years.
Other business:
During the mel'tlng conducted
by Larry Rupe in the absence of
Richard Vaughan, president , the
question of the legality of an
elected board member contlnuing to serve while residing out of
the county and state was raised
by George Hoffman.
Hoffman commented that he
Continued on page 8
"

SHS Boosters contribute another
• • •
$3,000 for extra-curricular actlvtttes
·
Another $3,000 has been contributed by the Southern Athletic
Boos~rs to the Souihern Local
School District Board of Educa·
lion to help finance the sparts and
other extra-curricular activities
programs In the district's
schools.
The latest contribution makes
a total of $9,000 which has been
raised and donated by the volun·
teer group of school supporters.
Meeting Monday night at the ·
school, the board accepted the
resignation ox Bill Hensler as
girls reserve basketqall coach.
Hensler's resignation came after
not' enough students turned out to
participate In the program.
Approved as substitute
teachers In the district for the

remainder of the year were Lois
!hie and Michelle Mowery.
An automatic dishwasher was
approved for the home econom:.
lcs department at a costof$355. It
will be purchased through the
Ohio Power Co. with funds
fromhtwo stoves sold earller this
year.
.
· A half-hour of additional time
was approved for the secretaries
and personnel in the lunchroom
In all schools with the exception
ot the high school. The additional
half-hour will be paid through the
lunchroom funds, It was
reported.
New state requirements for
bus drivers, bus mechanics and
transportation supervisors were
reviewed and plans discussed for
the district to comply. A cqm-

mercia! driver's license Is re·
quired for any of the positions by
the first of the year or whenever
the drivers' licenses expire.
Repair of three projectors was
approved at a cost of $240.50.
Approval was given to Milford
Frederick to attend a steam
boiler operations workshop on
Dec. 4.
The board also approved programming for use of federal
funding of $3,478 received by the
school through the . Dr~g Free
School and Committee Act .
Attending were Scott Wolfe,
president, Charles Norris, vice
president; Gary Willford, John
Murphy, Denny Evans, board
members, Dennis Hill, treasurer, and Bobby Ord,
superintendent .

'

SCUEN PRIN'ftNG AVA.DABI..E - ·A aew
, • ud bmovallve illlk IICI'een prlllt!Jtl proceA .will
JllldGIIponTroplllea'lo plrGm art work to.

·-*
IIIII• (lltll11nr ef b_IIIM!ualftJ llll'lllellta In juat

mlllllllll. BIU Glbnore, screen printer for
MIM!eport Trophies, ex plaine the process wblcll
Ia completed ID jual four or five simple seeps ualng
blch-lecl•.otoo equipment.

Racine plans
'Kids' parade

The
Farmers Bank and Savings
Company, Pomeroy Office,
will close at 9:45 A.M. and
reopen at 11:00 A.M.,
L

Wednesday, November 22, 1989
so the staff can attend his

MOIIIS E.

•

servtces.

LEIAIOIJ
-- -- ---·-----~ ------~.

f

A Multimedia Inc. Newepaper

,Propose 2 new buildings for Meigs district

4)

LESLIE F. FULTZ, .DIRECTOR

Thank you for your Vote
and Support in the ·recent
Eleetion.

2 Soctlono. 24 Pagto 25 Conto

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 22. 1.989

In Honor· Of

Hospital news

'

'
'

IN MEMORIAM

Weather

---

.
.•

$20,071.48; sanitary sewer,
$12,765.09, receipt, $8811.56, disbursements, $9,529.25 balance;
swimming pool, no receipts,
$1,961.61 disbutsements, with a
deficit balance of $15,735.38.
Cemetery, $672.19, receipts,
.$1,687.49, disbursements, deficit
balance, $5,489.71; water meter
trusts, $995, receipts, $4611, diJs.
bursements, $16,1391.48; mini
golf, $143.35, receipts, $&amp;'11.88,
disbursements, deficit balance,
$3,282.29; Income tax $1,870.59
disbursements.

The total of all monies In the
various funds or Middleport
VIllage Council at the end of
October was $184,805.~. accordIng Jon Buck, clerk-treasurer.
Total receipts for the month
was $74,660.29 while total dlsbur·
sements were $77.701.70.
In the general fund receipts
were $23,669.91, disbursements,
$13,363.01, with a balance of
$52,718.72; street maintenance,
receipts, $,7140.32, disbursements, $5,798.51 with a deficit
balance of $12,594.37; !Ire equipment, no receipts, $1,070.75,
disbursements, with a· deficit
balance of $10,967.64; fire truck
balance, $62,096.65; economic
development, $1,280.02, receipts,
$883.31, disbursements, with a
balance of $3,759.89. ·
Public transportation, $12,123,
receipts, $13,475.57, disbursements, with a deficit balance of
$5,428.56; . water tank balance,
$69,886 . 81; water fund,
$15,'7871.40, receipts, $12,596.17,
disbursements. with a tialance of

---·

•

EAST .

Middleport village fmances released

Control...

---·

•

COLUMBU~fffOff.

Confirmation of sale and
Reception Center for a shock
orders for distribution of deed
probation . hearing to be held
and proceeds from the sale of Tuesday morning.
property has been flied In Meigs
In the State's case against
Common Pleas Court In a forcloMary Ann Rittle, Rltfle has been
sure action by Bank One, Athens,
granted shock probation and
against Herbert B. Miller, et al.
placed on probation for five
The . property In question was
years.
purchased for $18,200. A defi·
In other court matters, the
clency Judgment of $2,495.79 was case of Clay T. !hie, doing
awarded the plaintiff.
business as Tim Ihle, against
In a foreclosure action by Spencer R. Carpenter, et al. has
Farmers Bank and Savings Com- been dismissed.
pany against Edward H. Rambs·
A restraining order has been
burg, et at, the property In Issued against the defendant In
question was purchased f6r the CB¥ of Kathy Ann Barringer
$22,000.
against Donnie Waynl!
An amended entry confirming Barringer.
sale and ordering distribution of
Meigs Common Pleas Judge
deed and proceeds from sale has Fred W. Crow III has stepped
been filed In the case of Home down .as the presiding authority
National Bank against Willard In the cases of the State of Ohio,
Wamsley and Debra K. Wams- · De11artment of Mental Health,
ley, et al.
Reimbursement Services, verHogg and Zuspan Materials sus Esther B. Smith, et . al;
Co. Inc., has been granted a Margaret Ellen Johnson versus
$3,683 default judrment, plus Chester Jolmlon; ,Jall'letl W.
Interest, In an action against Suttle versus W.H. Berdine, eta!.
Fred Miller Jr.
The judge has stepped down due
In criminal matters, MarvlnP. to contllct of Interest resulting
Cremeans Is to be transported · from hll former family !aw
from the Orient Correctional practice or his term as Meigs
Prosecuting Attorney.

Am Electric Power ..... ........ 30~
AT&amp;T ................................ .43~
Ashland 011 ........................ 34%
Bob Evans .. ........ .................. l4
Charming Shoppes .............. lOY,
City. Holding Co ................... 15
Federal Mogul... .................. 19
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. .. ............. 44%
Heck's .................... ....... ........5
Key Centurion .................... 14l4
Lands' End ..... .... ................ 26~
Limited Inc . .......... ............. 32~
Multimedia Inc .................... 94
Rax Restaurants ............. ~ .... 2J.l .
Continued from page 1
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 14%
-Release of St.ili mfillon for
Shoney's Inc ..... ..... ..... ......... 12
the Brubaker Vocational Service
Star Bank ......... .................. 21J.l
Center at Tltfln Developmental
Wendy's Inti ..........................5
Center.
Worthington Ind ........ ... ...... .24'-'
-A $2.8 mUUon contract with
HealthPro Inc., Worcester,
Mas~., to review the use of
Soulh Cenlril Ohio
hospital
beds by Medicaid paClear Tuesday night, with a
tients,
despite
a complaint by
low between 20 and 25. Rain
Peer
Review
Systems
likely Wednesday, with highs
between40and45. Chanceofraln
Is 70 percent.
Extended Foreeul
feteraas ·Memorial
TllandiiJ lhroup SalnrdiiJ
Fair Thuraday and Saturday,
Monday admissions - Mary
and a cbance of anow on Friday. Page, Langsville.
Highs will be In the30sThursday
Monday . discharges - Louise
and the 20s Friday and Sat urdily. Burbridge.

-~· - ---

•

STUFFED CELERV - Abby llarrle bed Iter banda fall u site
parllelpaled In ll&amp;ldflar celery wltb peuul buller when the flnt
grade elasaes al Middleport Elemeataey prepared their own
ThaabJivlng feMI lut Ti!tmMIIl.·

Something new for area children Is taking place on Sunday,
Dec. 3rd, In Racine. The Racine
Merchants are spansorlng a
"Kids' Christmas Parade start·
lng at 2: 30 p.m. on that day and
all area kids -ages 12 and under
-are Invited to loin the fun .
"Decorate your little red wagons, bicycles, riding toys, or just
walk along," encourages Bev·
erly Moore, owner of Racine Cut
Rate. "Or have your moms and
dads help you dress up like toys,"
she adds.
·
However, Moore points out,
"No three-wheelers, fourwheelers or · mini-bikes will be
allowed" since parade organizers expect that many small
children will participate.
Parents are being asked to
walk along with younger children. The total walk will be two or
three blocks long, Moore says.
Anyone wishing to participate
In the "Kids' Christmas Parade"
Is asked to register at the Racine
Cui Rate, 949-2942, or the Racine
Department Store, 949:2800, by
Friday, Dec. 1.

Weather .
Soulh CeniJ'al Ohio
Occasional snow Wednesday
night, accumulating two to four
.Inches. Lows wlll'be in the mid
20s. Chance of snow 80 percent.
Mostly sunny Thursday, with
highs near 35.
Extended Forecast
Frld~~J throup Sunday
Variable cloudiness and a
chance of snow showers In the
norUteastern part of the state and
party cloudy elsewhere Friday.
A chance of rain or snow across
the state Saturday and Sunday.
High&amp; will be In the 30s Friday
and S•turday and ranging from
the low to mid 40s Sunday.
OveraJ&amp;ht lows mainly will be In
the 208.

Gift guide inside
today's Sentinel

The · Dalb a..-e~•n 11181
Cllrlettlall Otll Guide appe..-.
=•te ....,•• edltlou.

New trophy printing process
now available in Middleport
•

NANCY YOACii:AM
Dall1 Sentlllel Slart
A new and I nnovatlve silk
screen ptlntlng process will
allow Middleport Trophies to
print garments·which ~fore had .
to be ordered from companies far
removed from Meigs County. No-t
only Is this capability beneficial
to Middleport Trophies, but according to Bob Gilmore, owner of
Middleport Trophies, It could
also benefit other local businesses slnce ·hts busln~ss can now
wholesale printing to establish·
'm ents which mall-order p~lnted
garments for customers. Local
printing of specialty, silk
screened garments, will ellml·
nate · prolonged waiting periods
which can occur when such Items
mwll be ordered from out-of-area
companies.
Middleport Trophies has for
some time been able to print
garments using what Is called
"sublimation," Gilmore says,
which Is a dye process that
"works fine, uses up to nine
colors anp adapts well to computer graphics. But th!ll was all we
could do," he says. "We couldn't
offer anything else." In addition,
says Gilmore, sublimation
''lacks something when II comes
to providing darker colors." And
In an area where school colors
range from gold on maroon and
gold on purple to white on green,
white on red, and other dark, and
ltght on dark, color comblnadons, that can mean lost financial opportunity for a business
like Middleport Trophies.

So when about six weeks ago, a
brochure came In . the mall to
Gilmore describing' new equipment which speeds the process of
screen printing by eliminating
the need for a dark room.
shortening pre-press lime from
hours to minutes, and produces a
high-quality printed garment in
the bargain, Gilmore was Immediately tempted to Invest In the
equipment.
However, not one to jump at a
''pig In a poke," Gilmore laughs,
he and other members of his
family who work at Middleport
Trophies attended a two-day
seminar on the new equipment
before making their final deci·
slon to purchase the few. yet
expensive pieces of hightechnology machinery.
The new screen printing process provides Gilmore with the
capability to custom Imprint a
wide range of orders at a
reasonable cost In a short
amount of lime. "Tests show that
you can do 1,000 prints with one
screen," Gilmore notes, "and If
something should happen to the
screen, a new one can be made in
minutes ."
The new screew printing system Is revolutionary. Gilmore
says. It saves time and money
while producing single and fourcolor printing jobs of excellent
quality, In just a few simple
steps. Screens can be made In
minutes and no special training
Is required for this system which
enables the operator to go from
art work to printing product In

minutes.
It might seem like Middleport
Trophies is taking a financial
risk by purchasing such high-technology equipment, but Gil·
·more and his family have grown
used to changing with the hightech times. Their family-owned
business which began In March
1984 by making personalized belt
buckles In the guest room of their
house, grew so fast that they
were soon forced to move out of
the house Into the garage, first
taking one room In the garage,
then another. and now. Gilmore
has decided he's going to have to
purchase a building to house the
riding mower and other yard
equipment which must be moved
out to provide the business wllh
add!Uonal space. The family
vehicle has long since been
moved out-of-doors.
Middleport Trophies has
grown to include computerized
engraving, computerized gra phics, computerized inventory
and store operation control.
"I'm a 60-year·old man, " Gilmore laughs. "'It's hard lor ml' to
learn new things like computer
graphics, but our business must
change with modern tlml's or
we'll be left out. More and more.
we' re compulerlzed, high·tPch
people in th is lirtle garage of
ours."
In addition to the computer
graphics, sublimation or shirrs.
sweats, jackets and caps, and of
course, the making of trophies.
Middleport Trophies also makes
Continued on page 8

Sheriffs deputies probe 8 &amp; E
Deputies of the Meigs County
SherltrsDepartmentarelnvestl·
gating .a breaking and entering
that occurred at the Watering
Hole on Route 7 and also at the
Eastern High School.
According to the report, ·both
Incidents happened earl)' Tuesday morning and no details are
available.
Sheriff James M. Soulsby also
reports that on Tuesday evening,
Gene Fulton, Waterford, who had
wrecked hll truck load of soybeans on Route 33 on Monday,
reported that when he returned
to the scene on Tuesday to
recover the '150 bushels of soy-

'beans he found that someo.•e had
come In a loaded most of them.
Fulton had hired a vacuum outfit
and had brought It In from
Reynoldsburg to load the soybeans. Loss Is estimated at
$4,350. Fulton advised the Sheriff
Soulsby that apparently a front
end loader had been used to load
the soybeans.
According to the report, the
1988 Ford Escort that was stolen
Friday evening In Racine was
recovered Saturday evening In
Bedford Township off Route 681
at the Swimming Hole. There
apparentlY had been an attempt
to bum the vehicle. A prelim!·

nary Inves tigation revealed rhe
vehicle had not been hot wired.
The vehicle has been impounded
and the lnves ligation ts
continuing.
Eugene Robert Bowling, Rose
Hill Road. Pomeroy, was released to Seminole County, Fla.,
on Monday to be taken back to
face charges In Sanford, Fla .
Sheriff Soulsby also reports
that deputies transported 33 year
old Harvey Faw. and 33 year old
Joseph D. Nelson to the Orient
Receptioll Center to ~ serving
their sentences recently Imposed
by the Meigs County Court of
Common Pleas.

,
I

.

;

�Commen
•

WASHINGTON -Last year at
this time, the drug war In Peru
and Bolivia had run aground
because of squabbling between
U.s. agencies and Insensitivity to
the poverty that drives South
American peasants to produce
coca. But the U.s. anti-drug
agencies are wising up.
I
The State Department and the
Drug Enforcement Admlnistra·
tlon have added a new element to
the drug war - agricultural
development.
Peruvian and Bolivian officials
have long tried to convince the
United States that withOut the
money . or knowieQge to grow
legitimate crops, the peasants,
known as campeslnos. turn to

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~v

""'-'._.,...,,...,._=·"""
.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
Pt\T WIIITEHEt\D
1\sslstaat Publlsher/ ControUer

CHARLENE HOEFLICH
Getlerai Maaarer

A MEMBER ol The "-:iaiecl Press, IDiuld Dally J!iress Assodation and the American New~ Publishers ~llilon.
LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome. 'lbe;r should be Ieos than 1110
words lonr. t\U letters are ..bled 1o e&lt;lklll(ud moat be oiped wllh
name, address and telephone number. No anstcned letters wW be published. Leiters should be In rood lasle, addresslnr ..sues, nol persoaall·
ties.

A senatorial bloodletting

By SCOTI' WOLFE

RACINE - With five seniors
and seven lettermen returnln&amp; to
the lineup, the defending SVAC
champion Southern Tornadoes of
Coach Howie Caldwell should be
In a position to do some damage
in the SVAC this upcomlni
season, which begins Saturday,
Nov. 25, against Southwestern.
The lone senior graduating for
tile Tomadoes last season was
Mike A":los, who earned praise
from Coach Howle Caldweil.
Caldwell stated, "Mike will be
missed because he was our.
inspirational leader."
, Southern will be an experlenc!!(l club with everyone back
except Mike·Amos, and a couple
of players who didn 't go out.
Caldwell stated, ."We'll be
stronger than last year because
of .the weight prpgram that
followed. Practices early were
not ve~y good, but have Improved
somewaht over the last couple of

Could alternate crops· stop production?

•lll Couri S.reel

~m~
.

season Nov. 25
Southern Tornadoes open new hardwood
'

Page-2-The Daily Sutinel
Pomeroy-Mkklaport, Ohio
Wadnasdav. Novambar 22•. 1989

·The Daily Sentinel

Jack Anderson and Dale VanAtta

coca cultivation.
American anti-drug efforts Ji·
The agricultural approach to
nored that. Instead, U.S. agents
concentrated on eradicating the drug eradication will take time.
coca crop. That had little impact Some ol these crops take years to
on the flow of 'cocaine, and It bear fruit, according to a recent
encouraged the campesinos to report by Sen. Sam Nunn' s,
rely on the protection of the drug D-Ga., Governmental Affairs
lords and Communist rebels like · subcommittee.
Nonetbeless, the cost ol growthe Shining Path guerilla of Peru.
But It appears that the Stall" ing legitimate crops may become
Deparlment has finally heeded more attractive to campeslnos If
the advice ol the South Ameri- America continues to whittle
cans. At an experimental farm In away at the drug trade too.
D.EA agents working with the
the Chapate region oiBolivta,lor
example, the Agency for Interna· local mllitary and police, have
tlonal Development Is testing resumed and refocused their
strains of· black pepper plants, drug interdiction efforts In Peru
macadamia nuts, coffee and and Bolivia. The drug war In the
Upper Huallaga Valley of Peru
citrus trees.

,,

By sTEVE GERSTEL

WASHINGTON (UP!) -By the time the Senate finished bloodying
Sen. John Heinz, R-Pa., he looked like he was standing ina pool of the
family ketchup.
By tradition, the Senale is notoriously tolerant, using the loosest
leash to keep members In line.
But there are times when the patience of even the Senate reaches
the breaking point and obstinate senators are firmly set down.
One of those moments came when the Senate, pressed to appove an
ex tension of the national debt ceiling to prevent the government from
going into default, sat down hard on Heinz.
As often happens In the Senate. the leaders agreed to limit
amendments to a single one acceptable to the House, this one dealing .
with fringe benefits for employees, and shut out everyone else.
By dint of persuasion, fortified with dire warnings of calamity, the
leaders won acceptance of this agreement from many senators eager
to attach their pet amendments to one of the session's "last trains"
out of the session.
•
But Heinz, the overage preppy scion of the ketchup family, was not
impressed.
To the chagrin or the leaders, Heinz popped up to demand that the
Senate also consider his proposal: taking the surplus In the Social
Security trust fund out of the combined budget.
Although Heinz' concept has many backers, It Is considered a very
complex issue with many ramifications and is now under
consideration by committees.
Although Senate Democratic leader George Mitchell asked Heinz ·.
that " he not place this nation at risk" by objecting to tile agreement,
Heinz remained undaunted.
He was bullied in turn by Mitchell, Sen. Lloyd Bentsen, D-Texas,
chairman of the ,Senate Finance Committee. Senate Republican
WASHINGTON (NEA)- Can pro-abortion court decisions,
leader Robert Dole, Sen. Warren Rudman, R-N.JI., Sen. Phil Gramm,
a
Catholic politician remain a outlawing abortions through a
R-Texas, Sen. Paul Simon, D-IlL, and many others- some of whom
good,
practicing Catholic if he or constitutional amendment, or by
favor Heinz' proposaL
not absolutely oppose backing new restrictive laws and
she
does
Sen. John Rockefeller, D-W.Va .. even told Heinz he was hokllng
abortion?
That is the question to state and local regulations.
back on Ills amendment to help some 132,000coal miners,averageage
be faced by church leaders and These actions will be coupled
77, who are hurting on their health benefits to the point where some
many Catholic politicians now with significant new church prodoctors won't see tllem.
·that the American Catholic hier- grams providing alternatives to
Rockefeller told Heinz, he, too, could bring the process to a dead
archy has adopted a more acti- abortion and other social ser·
halt by offering his amendment but would not do so, taking into
vices lor women and children.
vist antl-abortiofi stance.
consideration the lallout.
Moreover, the bishops said, It
The National Conference of
· Thebaltlngof Heinz in public was mild and polite In comparison to a
Catholic Bishops recently de· was time tor every American
lecture delivered to him by assistant Senate Republican lea\ier Alan
cided that It was time for the Catholic to get on board. The
Simpson,
church
to take a much more ab· bishOps' statement said, "No
"!did, right here, a few feet away, assallllim at one time with the
solutist
stance on abortion. From catholic can responsibly take a
most remarkable earthy vocabulary that I had yet mustered, which is
statements
made by Influential 'pro-choice' stand when the
quite a thing in itself,'" Simpson said.
bishops,
it
appears they are 'choice' In questions Involves
Simpson noted that Heinz was "my ·fishing companion, my friend' •
ready
to
single
out for attack the taking of an Innocent human
and the Social Security proposal was "his thing. "
Catholic
politicians
who are un- life."
Bu 1he pointedly reminded Heinz that Mitchell had promised to call
The bishops rejected the Idea
wllllng to work toward restrictup the Social Security issue at some point and added, "He has kept
that
Catholics can support even a
ing
abortion
rights
.
.
every promise he has ever made, and he just made one moments ago
limited
pro-choice position. AuxIn a statement adopted unaniabout what we would do on this issue."
iliary
Bishop
Austin Vaughan ol
mously by 300 bishops, the conBy stubbornly absorbing his battering, Heinz did get some
New
York
objected to the
ference held that "At this particsatisfaction, maybe even more than lie had a right to be accorded.
ular time abortion has become church's inaction on "practicing
Although he would not be pinned to an exact date, despite
the
fundamental human rights . Catholics seen at communion
suggestions that the debate come next spring, Mitchell said, "I have
Issue for all men and women of who aggressively push the pro·
every intention of bringing this bill to the Senate as soon as I can for a
choice position."
good wilL" This marked a
lull and open debate on lt."
Vaughan and several other acchange
from'
previous
positions
Although the Senate suffered through one of tis less courteous
tivist
bishops indicated that If the
when
the
bishops
tried
to
link
interludes, the leadership gained agreement for quick passage of the
hierarchy
has decided it is time
abortion
with
other
social
issues,
debt ceiling and Heinz has Mitchell's word that his proposal wlll be
for
all
Catholics
to fall in line, it Is
such
as
opposition
to
the
death
considered.
only
natural
to
start
by demandpenalty
and
opposition
to
nuclear
And Mitchell's word is good.
weapons.
Ing that hlgh-protlle Catholic pol·
lticlans lead the way. Sens. DaThe Catholic Church, said the
niel Patrick Moynihan of New
bishops, will now c·a mpalgn to
York
and Ted Kennedy of Masban or curb all a bortlons sachusetts - both ol whom are
either by fighting to overturn

got so hot in February that the
State Department suspended .operatlons after two helicopters
wer.e shot up.
Operations resumed In September with the opening of a
heavUy fortified base at Santa
Lucia. Efforts are concentrating
on the destruction of airstrips
and hlgh,-volume laboratories
Instead of the tar flung crops and
pozo pits where coca ll"aves are
turned into paste.
The helicopters now in use by
U.S. forces are armed with M-'0
machine guns. The State Department Inspector General reported
In March that the helicopters
were easy targets and would be
hard to find II shot down because
of their random flight patterns.
Now the helicopter crews go
after specific airstrips and labs
rather than combing tile countryside looking for pozo pits.
Relations among the American
anti-drug agencies are on the
mend, too. Nunn' s lnvi"Stlgators
found that DEA aeents and
Special Forces oHicers are working more closely than they have
in the past. Earlier this year,
Special Forces had denied a
request from the DEA in Bolivia
.to share radios. But the request
has since been approved.
Likewise the Special Forces
medics and communications experts are now allowed to back up
the DEA In ).ungle operations In
Bolivia.
·
The changes reflect l'l"allty the drug war will be hard enough
to win II U.S'. agencies aon'l
cooperate and If the strategy
isn't sensitive to the needs of the
poor peasants who make their
living growing coca.

Letters to _the editor

(;onservation a must
Dear Editor:
I am a Boy Scout and I am
working on a Badge on Conservtlon. I have to write an article for
a newspaper so I would be grateful if you would publish the following:
a lot of people don't understand
why we should be conserving. A
lot of stuff we use comes from the
conservation, suh as paper, penells, furniture, food, etc. And,

green plants makes oxygen
which we breath.
Without the conservation, the
earth's surface would be dry,
like a desert. Tills is one reason
we should all be conserving- to
not Interrupt nature's cycle.
Sincerely,
Patrick Barringer
69222 SR 124,
Reedsville, OH. 45772

By Maj. Amilll B Hoople

PDrrbn Prophet
Egad, friends! This year's
Thanksgiving hOliday weekend Is
a particularly tasty ireat lor
coilege footbaillans. ·
For starters, we have, on
Saturday, "The Game of the
Year, No. 2." ·The point-happy
Miami· Hurricanes, the 1987 na·
tiona! champion, host top-rated
Notre Dame, the 1988 champion
(on CBS-TV). At stake is the 1989
national crown.
The Fighting Irish, of course,
won "TheGameofTI!eYear.No.
1,'' back In September, defeating
the Michigan Wolverines, 24-19.
Last year's N.D.-Mlami
game was also an emotional
battle. The Irish won, 31-30, on
what Hurricane fans thought was
a doubt.ful call. For coach Lou
Holtz of Notre Dame, it was a key
victory on the way to the national
crown.
Adding fuel to the !Ire thl.s

Busy time of the year
This is a very busy time of the
year for people, but it's very
heart-warming and rewarding to
know that our Meigs County peO·
pie stU! care for one another and
are always willing to help and
donate whenver we need them.
Cub Scout Pack 235 of Chester
would like to thank everyone in
the community for supporting us
while we were selling our popcorn and helping the boys to earn
the money to pay lor all the
badges and supplies needed to
keep an active Pack going.
We'd also like to thank a very
·special person In our Pack who's
always willing to help with the
Scouts and anything in the school
o~ community. Mrs. Cathy Clifford Is one of our "Importand
and Special People." Sbe was
chairwoman this year and took
care of explaining the program

and collecting all the orders and
money and making sure all the
money was turned in on time so
that the kids will get their prizes.
And her wonderful husband, Pat,
drove to Gallipolis and picked up
a sljltlonwagon full of popcorn
and brougnt It home and helped
sort all the corn and delivered It
to th eklds to be sold. This Is a terrific couple and our hats are oH
to them and to everyone who
purchased popcorn to help us
have another good year In Cub
Scouting.
Cathy Is a Webelos Leader and
Pack Commit tee chaiwornan
and is also active with Glr I
Scouts where she is a Leader.
Pat is an Assistant Cubmalter
and Assistant Webelol Leader.
Thank&amp; araln.
JoAnn Newsome,
Cubmaster, Pack 235

actively pro-choice prl·
vately mentioned several times
in the same sentence with the
word ''e:~~communlcation.''
am not one to excommunicate. I
Chicago's Cardinal Joseph Ber· would rather appeal to them."
nardin, an anti-abortion consl'r·
Already this intramural Cath·
vative whO Is among the top ollc fight has spread to the House
church spokesmen in this coun· of Representatives. Los Angeles'
try. was among those who drew Archbishop Roger Mahony has
'!P the new anti-abortion policy. sent a letter to California's 12
He acknowledged It may result in Catholic House members tellln&amp;
a clash between the church and them, in effect, It was time to get
some of Its most prominent in line on the abortion issue.
members.
Recently, Rep. Robert Dor"Wblle it is true that public of- nan, R·Callt., took the floor to
ficials should not Impose some castigate "my brother and sister
denominational belief," said Catholics," who were planning
Bernardin, "what we are talking to vote to override President
about here Is a question of funda· Bush's veto ol Medicare funding
mental human rights." He went tor abortions as a result of rape
on to say that he understood that or f!lcest. Qornan noted tbere are
"over the short run" a practical 40 CatholiCs In the House (of 120
politician might have to temper who are ·Identified as Catholic)
personal beliefs tot political pur- who regularly "vote abortion
poses. But, · said Bernardin, and pay no price for it."
"generally you should be moving
Dornan's speech brought In·
in the direction of tbe convictions stant crii"S ol oujraee from
you have."
many Catholic members, IncludOther church leaders become Ing House Speaker Tom Foley
noticeably uneasy when ques- who called It "Inappropriate."
tioned about excommunicating Foley, who Is Catholic, said he
someone like Ted Kennedy. In never noticed ·that Dornan was a
fact, Kennedy's bishop, Boston's "bishop, cardinal or pope." But ·
Cardinal Bernard Law, said Foley refused to speculate what
about applying sanctions to his response would have been 11
Catholics who are pro-choice, "I · what Dornan said had, In fact,
would prefer not to see the dis- come from a bishop, cardinal or
cussion move to that question. I the pope.

the right-to-life cow dry, he said.
He suggested that all CC members study the abortion fandango
cboreogrphed by Awesome LIzard Bush. He has had four dil·
ferent position on abortion since
1980, and he began working on
the fine points of yet another on
Election Day no less. 'We have
room in 01,1r party for people that
.feel one way, pro-life or prochoice,' AL Bush said. It IS 'so ·
personal.. .I must come down
more on the side of lite.'
"'Hails bails,' said Grand Lizard Atwater. "At man knows
how to change colors. He ain't no
Awesome Lizard for nothing.' .
"Suddenly there was a commotion from the Aspiring Lizard
section as a young man In wirerim gluses rose to protest tile

year, ex-Miami coach Jimmy
Johnson, on leaving the Hurricanes for the NFL Dallas Cowboys, told his old team: "Whip
Notre Dame for me! '' Now coach
Dennis Erickson &amp; Co. will try to
comply.
The Irish don't need any extra
incentive for this confrontation In
the Orange Bowl. In fact, the
Importance or tile game and the
amazing talent on both sides
assures outstanding
performances.
Miami's potent offense is led
by QB Craig Erickson and Gino
Torretta, RBs Leonard Conley
and Steve McGuire, and receivers Wesley Carroll and Rob
Chudzinski. The HurriCane defense Js anchored by sure-fire
All-America 11nd Greg Mark, a
6-foot-4, 254-pound senior - and
by tackle .R ussell Maryland,
along with · linebackers Maurice
Crum and Bernard Clark.
In a battle of behemoths,
possessed of extraordinary

Robert Wagman:

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lt. . . . . . . ,.".. (f.l) ............... .11117

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"GL Atwater suggested that
someone get
the protestor's
name, as the Chameleon Club
shoud not lose touch with a per·
son who had such talent for invective. The meeting was then
adjourned.
"Respectively submitted, Exalted Lizard N. Gingrich."

Nt\TJON,U I.UKBTIIALL ,.\881)('.
'l'llfldllt ~tt:t••

W.ahiftiiiHn, Mll... ke.ll
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New l'ork&amp;&amp;Cii!!t'l!tdd, 1:Jip.m.

By United Pr- lnternaUonal

. Today Is Wednesd11y, Nov. 22, the 326th day of 1989 with 39 to follow
The moon is waning, moving toward It• new phase.
'
The JI\Omlng s~ts are Mars and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mercury, Venua and Saturn.
Those bom on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include French explorer of North Amerlca!U!ne Robert de Ia Salle In
1&amp;43, Englllh novel lit George ElloUMary Ann Evans) In 1819, French
statesman and miHtary leader Charlei de Gaulle In 1890, Wiley Post,
the first pilot to. fly so!Q around the world,ln 1898. composers Hoagy
Carmichael In 1899 and Benjamin Britten in 1913, actress Geraldine
Page In 1924, actor Robert Vauahn in 1932 (age 57), tennis player
Billie Jean King In 1943 (age46) and actress Jamie Lee Curtis In 1958
(age 31).
On this date In history:
In 1950, a train wreck In New York City killed 79 people.

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Teanlll
Zina Garrison of Houston
reached a career high world
ranking of No. 4 In the new
women's ratings. Monica Seles,
the 15-year·old Yugoslavian with
a ferocious forehand, also
reached a career hlih ol No. 6.
She began tbe year ranked 86th.
Pam Shriver dropped to 17th, her
lowest ranking slncP 1980. Steftl ·
Grar retained the No. 1 ranklD&amp;
she has ·held since August, 1987.
She is roDowed by Martina
Navratllova, Gabriela . Sabatlal,
Garrison. Arantxa SanChez,
· Seles, Conchita Martinez, Helena
Sukova, Manuela Maleeva and
Chris Evert, who 11 retired.

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DOWNING CHILDS

Pro results

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1989 AMERICAN EAG .

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LA RIUIUI at Neow Orlfo*'"• K ...m .

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UPiratings

car••· 8)-taa~ar.
Tran!I8Ctions

NEW YORK iUPI ) - Pascual
SliiiSCBO'TION BATES
DATE-OPP.
LOCATION
THURSDAY , Nov. 23
B)' Carrier or Motor Route
Perez, a right-hander who was
Nov
.25·SOuthwestern
......
......................
1!
Pennsylvania 23 Cornell 17
One Week ........................... ........ $1.40
Nov.28-Kyger Creek ............................. A
9-13 with Montreal last season
West Vlrglnla 35 Syracuse 24
One Month .......................... .. .... .$6.10
Dec.oJ-Qak HilL .... ................ .............. H
and . has a history of drug
One Year ... .......................... .... $72.80
Dec. OS. North Gallta .. ,.......................... A
FRIDAY, Nov. 24
Dec.OS.Hannan Trace..................... .. .... A
prob!ems, Tuesday signed a . Texas A&amp;M 24 Arkansas 21
SINGLE COPY
1Jec.l5·Eastern. ,.. ........................ .... .... H
PRICE
three-year free agent contract
SATURDAY, Nov. 25
Daliy .. ...... ........................... 25 Cents
with the New York Yankees
Air Force 49 Utah 20
Subscribers notdeslrlngtopay the car·
Arizooa 35 Artzooa State 33
reportedly worth $5.1 million.
rler may remit in advance direct to
GOOD
USED
Brigham Young 42 San Diego State 35
The pitching-hungry Yankees
The DaUy Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
Georgia Tech 21 Bosttn Colleg'e 20
WASHEIS, DRYERS,
basis. CrEdit wUI be given carrier each
guaranteed Perez' contract. No
Hawaii 41 Oregon State 21
Houstoo 42 Texas Tech 28
weelt.
terms were disc lased but the
REFRIGEIATOIS, TVs,
OHnolS 49 Northwestern 14
No subScriptions by mall permitted In
New York Daily News reported
Indiana 28 Purdue 21
areas where home carrier service ls
GAS &amp; EUC. RANGES
t.oulstana State 44 Tulane 24
·the deal was WQrth $5.1 million.
available.
Michigan State 49 Wisconsin 21
"In getting Pascual, we are
Minnesota 321owa 22 ·
Mill S.b8crlptloa
Mlsslsslppl 31 Mississippi State 28
getting a quality pitcher.'' Yan·
Iukie Melp Counly
Notre Dame 31 Miami (Florida) 24
kees vice president George Brad13
S19.24
Oblo State 34 Michigan 30
ley said in announcing the
26 Weeks ......... ... .................. .. . $37.96
Penn State 24 Pittsburgh 21
52 WeekS ............. ..................... $74.36
San Jose St. 28 Nevada· Las Vegas 25
signing. "He will beoneofbur top
Southern Mlssisslpp\31 E . Carolina 26
627
3rd
Ave
..
Glllllfolil
starters. We are very aware of
13 Weeks ..... ............ ................ . $20.11) ·
Tennesse£" 26 Kentucky 19
PH. 446-1699
26 Weeks .......... ....... ................ . $40.30
Texas 24 Baylor 17
his past problems. However, he
Utah Stale 38 Long Beach State 21
52
Weeks ............... .. .... ,... ......... $75.40
HOUIS:
I
l.M.-6
P.M.
has been involved in a program
with the Expos that has kept him
clean and we will help him to .. ·-~----~---~-...,.,,..,_..,.,........_.....,_..._...,.,..\101111Mo\lliol"""""'~~-~remaln with that program...
Perez, a 32-year-old from the ·'J
.
DominiCan Republic, spent most
i
of spring training last season in a
;
drug rehabilitation center in
Florida for a cocaine problem.
l&gt;
The rehab stint, his third, came
-~
at the requesto!the commission- 11
4
er's office and the Expos. He i.
faces a suspension of atleastone ;!
year jfhe tests positive for drugs.
Perez also spent three months in
a Dominican RepubliC jail in 19&amp;\ t
4
for cocaine possession.
· 6
Perez was 28-21 over three
seasons with Montreal. He sat 0
out the 1986 season after the ~
~Atlanta Braves released him ·
'.
following his 1-13 record in 1985. .
,.
For his career, Perezis64-62with •
a 3'.48 ERA. He pitched for
Pittsburgh for parts of the 1980
~
and 1981 seasons, then spent!our '
.
seasons with the Braves. He was . ~15-8 with a 3.43 ERA in 1983 and • .
14-8 with a 3. 74 ERA in 1984.
,
.·
He went 7-0 for Montreal in 1987 ;
.t .
and 12-8 in 1988 but slipped last ~'
6
season. Perez started 28 games '
and pitched 191.1 innings in 1989. ' .
surrendering 178 hits. His ERA '
~3.D.
t
11
Perez' contract with the Yan- 6
o
kees gives him a huge raise from
Peoples Bank ·is pleased to offer these beautili,J.l silver and gold coins at
Ills $850,000 1989 salary with J,
th t
Montreal.
affordable prices. American Eagles are official legal tender coins issued by e t1
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Perez signs
with· Yankees

APPLIANCES

Or. . . . . U&amp;alt. 1: . . .111•

QleiiiOat ...... t:a p.m.
New .ler.,- Ill LA Olpfera, 1.. H p.m.

.al til ttl
.IU Ml

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bl._,olt" ...... 1 I I
SA' ............ 1 "'' I
NV d.t11 ............. ~ !I I
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flr-wt'IIH ...... ~ .. 1 S I
Houlll............... 1 .t I
O•la.al.......... l ~ I
PiU,.,_I'IIt .. ....... ~ I I

speed, power and desire, the
Hoople System sees this one
going to Notre Dame, 31-24.
Elsewhere, among the tradi·
tional rivalries this Saturday:
the 96th renewal for Michigan
and Ohio· State; and the 89th
repeat for Pitt and Penn State.
Sometimes called "football's
greatest rivalry," the MichiganOhio State series is a battle
where past records count lor
naught. The favored team loses

COUNTY

,.m.
.u..... ............ t .......

Deawr .a •••-- I

N

Today in history
.

a

•

Pike ............................ A
for, but will also get a look al Dec.li-Eatt«ll
Oec.22-Symm• Valloy......................... H
various zone combinations . Dec23-Soutlleutern............................. A
............................................. H
•'This club wi.ll u~~e a lot more Dec.29-A
Jan.IJII.OIIk HUI .... .. .......................... .... A
zone than in the past, because of Jan.l)6.(iaUipoUI ......... ........................ · H
Creek ............................. H
their lack of quickness. We will Jan.l2·Kyger
Jan: 19-Hannan Trace ........ ......... .......... H
just hope we will be able to ' Jan:sNonhCallla ...................... ........ H
............ .... ............ .. H
rebound from the zone," says the. Jan.21·Ravensw(l)d
Feb,02-Ealtern ... ................... .......... .... A
SHS mentor.
Feb.Ol-Federal Hocking ........ ............... A
Annually, Southern plays one Feb.09·Sou.tbwntern ............................ A
............ .. .............. A
of the toughest non-league sche- Feb.tJt.Sou.thWestern
Feb.16-Symmea Valley ......................... A
dules in the stat4! and this year Is
no exception. The non-league
80\J'OIERN
schedule has two SEOAL teams
11111-tt IIASKE'l'II.U.L ROSTER
in A.thens and Galllpolis, both
VAIISrl'Y
·
trr YR
division II schools; plays Div- ND-I'LAYEII
IO.II·CI!rll Murphy .......................... 5·8 4
Ision In Ross Southeastern and 12-J:I·An&lt;IY Baer.. ............................. 5-9 3
H·15-Mtchael KlnC21d . ..................... .S.9 3
Federal Hocking; the always 20-21-Todd
Grlndstaf! .................. , .... !l-9 3
tough Eastern-Pike, and Rival 22-U.Chad Taylor ................ ............ &amp;-9 4
24·25-John Hoback ........................... ~8 3
Ravenswood.
Lee Batley ............... .'........ 6-0 2
Concluded Caldwell. ·'As In the J0.31·RoY
32·3J.Kev1n Buraess .................. .. ..... 5·9 ~
past the schedule Is very dif!l· 34-35-Jayson Codner .........................5-5
Rose ........ ................... 6-0 3
cult. With the league as strong as 4041·Jeremy
4243-Brmt Shuier ............................ ft.O 4
it is, and the dif(iculty of the 4445-Brad Maynard ..... ........ .. , ...•.•...6-0 4
non-league schedule, wins may
RI!SEBVE
be hard to come by."
ND-PLAYEH
HT YH
shot we see.''
Can Southern face the chal· lO.ll·Jeremy Roush ......... .. .............. s-7 2
Shoults ............................ 5-4 2
Fans will see the familiar
lenge? With Southern tradition 12·13-Ertc
U·lS.Billy Da\'ls ............. ....... ....... ... S-7 2
man-to-man SHS is so famous
as strong as It is, no mountain Is 20-21-Scott Llsle ....... ............. ........... f&gt;-8 2
Codner .. .... ........ ........... 5-5 2
too high for the Tornadoes to 22-23-Joshua
24·25-Cbad Wlse .......... ... .................. 5·6 2
climb. How far they get will 32·33-Mlchael E\'ans . ,...................... ~9 1
RusseU ............... ...... ..6-2 2
depend on tl\err ability to put 34-JS.Michael
f0.4J ·JamleProHttl ......................... 5·9 2
together and Improve on those 4243-Shane Circle ... .. .... ................. 5-11 2
44-45-Russen Singleton .............. .... ... 6-1 1
areas Coach Caldwell stresses.
more often than not. And this
It doesn't seem possible, but 10
year will be no exception. The
years ago SHS made its first trip
Hoople scouts look for "The
to the state. One decade later
The Daily Sentinel .
Upset ol'89" as OllloStateshocks
perhaps a return trip Is in order . .
the Wolves , 34-30.
But as the SHS mentor puts It
(USPS IU·. .)
Pitt's Panthers trail Penn
"we'll just be playing one game
A. Dlvl.aon of Multlm«lla. lae.
State, 43-41·4 in their series, but
at a time; playing each game as
Publlsbed every afternoon, Monday
they've won the last two. It won't
hard as we can. We hope the wins
tbrtJI.I&amp;'h Friday, Ul Court St., Po·
happen tills time. In a body·
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Pub·
will take care of themselves."
bruising clash, watch for Joe
llstuna Com~ny/Multtmedla, Inc.,
Only time will tell.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. Ph. 992·2156. Se·
Paterno's Nlttany Lions to win.
Southern opens this Saturday,
cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
If's Penn State,.24-21.
Ohio. ·
Nov. 25 at home against league
In an ESPN twin bill on Turkey
foe Southwestern in Charles W.
Member : United Press International,
Day, Penn will top Cornell, 23-17,
Inland DaUy Press Assodalion and the
Hayman gymnasium in Racine.
and West Virginia will beat
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Following is a schedule and
Advertising Representative, Branham
determined Syracuse, 35-24.
team roster including the re·
Newspaper Sales. 7ll Third Avenue ,
Finally, In a battle on Friday
New York, New York 10017.
serve
club.
(CBS-TV) for SWC supremacy
POSTMASTER: Send address ch•aes
SOIJTIIERN
and the role of host in the Cotton
to The Daily Sentinel, 1l1 COun St. ,
1-IICIIIASKE'l'II.U.L
SCHEDULE
Bowl, Texas A&amp;M will slip past
Pomeroy, CJl1o 45769.
BOYS
Arkansas, 24-21. Har-rumph!

players with experience, something we had little of last year."
Caldwell added that his club
has no real size and that overall
speed, rebounding, and shooting
must be improved.
"Goals for this year are the
same as those In the past. We will
try to be competit(ve, play hard
every night, and llopefully the
wins wit! take care of them·
selves. Our expectations Inside
and outside of the le~gue are the
same: Try to play hard every
night!" ·, said Caldwell.
Southern will try to play to the
beat· of a familiar drummer as
they again prepare to set and
control the tempo with an upbeat
swing.
Said the SHS headmaster; "We
are going to ·try to play as we
have in the past...get the ball
down the court as quickly as
possible and take the first good

When asked about comments
for key play~rs to look for thi~
season, Caldwell cited that "all
players from 1·12 are Important,
but some individuals returning
are seniors and that senior
experience is invaluable.' '
Returning seniors are Chad
Taylor, Brad Maynard, Brent
Shuler, Kevin Burgess, and Chris
Murphy. Juniors returning are
Todd Grindstaff and Andy Baer.
Players · up from last year's
wlrinlng re~erve team are
Jeremy Rose , Michael Kincaid,
Jayson Codner. and John Ho·
back; a II juniors; and Roy Lee
Bailey, a sophomore.
Caldwell Indicated that the
development of his young players will play an Important part in
the upcoming season, saying .
'"We will become better as the
season continues and the juniors
gain playing tilne. All practices
· have been used to try to Improve
fundamentals . We have seven

Thanksgiving weekend features major ·rivalries

LiZ3;rds tum. purple after Election ,Day
Using
sophisticated tech"GL Atwater further noted that
niques perfected during a 20- plaques were being engraved to
year career as an Investigative honor Awesome Uzard ' George
reporter, I have obtained the mi· Bush for two of his most extraordi·
nu tes of a recent meeting of the nary campaigns - Budget Bulsecret Chameleon Club, which Is land Capital Gains Gabble - and
located near Capital Hill ln Beautified Lizard Jesse Heims for
Washington, D.C.
his roup de maiiW', Arts Farce. GL
The document, dated NOv. 14, Atwater !ben moved on quickly to
1989, is stamped CONFIDENTI- the subject that compelled the CC
EYES to call two emergency sessions:
ALICC MEMBERS'
ONLY. and reads as foliows:
the abortion issue,
"The second
post-election
"The club pollster spoke first
emergency session of the Cha- and made tile point that pro-life
meleon Club, formerly the Na· guernatorial candidates In New
tiona! Society of Sldesteppers, Jersey and Virginia who had folwas called to order at 9 a.m. by lowed the Republican Party's
Grand Lizard Lee Atwater. The anti-abortion platform to tile let·
minutes of the previous session ter had lost. That approach won't
were read by the recording se- work anymore, he said, because
cretary, Exalted Lizard Newt Its chief proponent, Most Hal·
Gingrich, and approved without lowed Lizard Ronald Reagan,
dissent.
was gone, along with the votes of
"As old business, Grand Ll·
the millions who fell for his warm
zard Atwater stated that V.P.
smile. Now CJ: candidates have
Qua)'le's application for mem· . to stress 'presentation and mesbership had been turned down sage," ~void extremist positions ·
because he isn't smartenougllto and act like they are tolerant of
equivocate. In ihe words of the opposing viewpoints.
screening committee, 'this Is a
"An offici&amp;! of the IU!publlcan
society of
temporizers. Mr. National Committee then ureed
Quayle's politiCs are acceptable, all present not to worry about
but he Is too much of a noodle· steps were being taken to defuse
head to change his colors with the Issue by the 1990 elections.
any degree of adroitness."
'We do not accept that the abor·
"Grand Lizard Atwater also
tlon issue is going to dominate,'
reported that the
National he said. In the meantime, he ad·
Liar's Hall or Fame In Omaha vised, the part was going Into a
had once again refused to permit 'political stall.' CC members
CC members to participate In its should 'lie low' and not get 'out
annual Competition. CC uiOCI- front' on the ls1ue.
Jllet are politicians, and the conGrand Lizard . Atwater tbeil
!ft! Is limited to amateurs.
took the floor. We have milked

days. At this point, we need to be
more conaistent In that we
• practice hard every day Ins II!ad ·
o1 occasstonally."
Last year Southern was 14·9
overall and 11-3 in the SVAC.
Rebounding was at the top of
the wejikneSs list lor the Torna·
doe~. whO have no player taller
than 6-0 feet tall.
Caldwell said; "Rebounding
will hurt us. Overall, team
quickness Is not what It should be
with the exception of Kevin
Burgess and Cllris Murphy. We
also have no true experience off
the bench.''
Wnat will be the key to
Southern's season? Caldwell
says that It is Important for his
club to start the season off on
positive note. Southern's first slx
games are with league
opponents.
The veteran SHS mentor also
said his club must be healthy
throughOut the season.

Har-rump~!

Pro-choice Ca~holic_ pols face attack
we"'

Tha Olily Santinei-Page- 3

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednlllflrlo Nov.nbar 22, 1989

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Wedna•dav. November 22. 1989
Ohio

Irish face showdown at ·Miami
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UP!) Notre Dame's greatest nemesis
in the past decade stands between the top-ranked Irish and a
showdown for college football's
national title.
Notre Dame's defending national champions take a 23-game
win streak into Saturday's mat • .
chop at No. 7 Miami.
The Irish are expected to
accept a bid before Saturday's
game to play No. 2 Colorado
(11-0) in theOrangeBowlonNew
Year's Day. That battle would be
for an undisputed national title
unless Miami wins, which could
give No. 3 Alabama a title chance
should they win the Southeastern
Conference crown and beat Miami in the Sugar Bowl.
"Our football team has come
an awfully long way but we've
got an awfully long· way to go,"
Irish coach Lou Holtz said. " We
haven't really done anything.
We've just put ourselves in
position. The final vote is the only
one that really counts."
Holtz credits last year's title
with his team starting the year
No. 1, but said this year ' s team
has yet to prove it deserves the
spot a head of Colorado 'Or

•I

girls varlllty team, of which o~ a few m~ben
and lbelr manarer, David Custer, could be
present for a picture, wiD enjoy the exlralftlld.
Accepting the check on behalf of the team Is Shelly
Sawyers. Hill says the Road Apple Rod~ will
become an annual event for eighth rraden who
use the proceeds to help flnaace their apriag trip
to Washington D.C. This year's horse, and the
needed space for lbe rodeo, were provided by
JenniDp Beegle, Southern Junior High principal.

CAGE WINNERS- MembersofSolithernHlrh
School's girls varsity basketball team hope
they're as lucky during regular season play as
they have been pre-season. On Monday afternoon,
Vicki Hill, standing at right, co-advisor lor
. Southern Junior High's eighth grade class,
presented to tbe team a check lor $1,0041. 'lbe
$1,000 windfall to the girls came alter they pooled
their resources to purchase a $10 ticket In the
recent eigbth·grade sponsored "Road Apple
Rodeo" in which a horse was turned loose on a
glant·slze checkerboard and allowed to "do his
thing'' (if you catch tbe drHt). Whoever guessed
on which square the horse would "do his thing,"
became the recipient of $1,000. 1n this case, the

.::.:·-·....._-..-( ··::...·--~6-f .... . .--

Pressure mounts for.
Campbell's dismissal
•

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ATLANTA (UPI ) - Marion
Campbell doesn't have to be
psychic to realize his days as
head coach of the Atlanta Falcons are coming down to a
precious rew.
The publiC pressure for his
dismissal mounts wllh each
Falcons loss and the history of
Falcons management is lui! of
cave-ins to such pressure. The
immediate questi&lt;&gt;n Is whether
Campbeli wiil be aliowed to
finish out the season. or · be
replaced before season's end as happened to him the last time
the Falcons gave him the axe.
The relationship between Marion Campbell and the Atlanta
Falcons has been unique. Hired
in 1969 as an already-proven
defensive coordinator, Campbell
got his first head coaching
assignment midway through the
1974 season when Falcons owner
Ranl&lt;ln Smith Sr. fired Norm Van
Brocklin following a 42-7 loss at
Miami.
Campbell got the same treatment in 1976 after a J.4 start, but
returned to Atlanta a decade
later in the familiar role of
defensive coordinator after being fired as head coach of the
Philadelphia Eagles following
three losing seasons.
A year later, Campbeli suddenly found himself once more
head coach in Atlanta after the
Falcons dumped Dan Henning,
now head coach in San Diego, and
CO\lldn't tal~ ~ny of the people
they really wanted Into taking
the job.
There was Campbell, who had
Indicated he wanted to stick to
what he knew best - coaching
defense, listening on the day of
his promotion to Smith, who had
fired him 11 years earlier,
saying: ·we searched ail over
the country when the man most
qualified to be our coach was
right here all along."
Three years later, It's ext·remely doubtful Smith will
Ignore the mob screaming for
Campbell's head.
Campbell, who was 6·19 in his
first stint as head coach in
Atlanta and 17-29·1 during his.
three years with the Eagles. has
won 11 of 42 games -26.2 percent
- over these past three seasons.
The current team is 3-8, so one
more loss will lock up Campbell's
ninth losing record In nine fuil .o r
partial seasons as a head coach.
Everyone agrees that Marion
Campbell is a nice guy. That, say
his critics, is one of his faults;
that, as a player-oriented coach,
he fails to drive the team to play
at the intense level it takes to win
in the NFL. Interestingly, the rap
aga inst Van Brocklin. Campbell's bOss, was that the "Dutchman" drove his players roo hard .
It used to be said that Leeman
Bennett was &lt;~too nice," but
Bennett, · former Allan Ia and

Tampa Bay coach now selling
cars and selecting Peach Bowl
teams, took the Falcons to their
third playoff in five years just
before being dumped by Smith,
who said, "We want to reach a
new plateau."
Whatever, the Falcons, in
Campbell's second run. have
gone 3-12, 5-11 and 3-8, and the
call-in shows are bombarded by
indignant football fans demand·
ing a coaching change.
"I have no control over that,"
says Campbell. "My job Is to run
this football team, to prepare as
best we can week after week for
our next game. Our guys haven't
quit. They keep playing hard,
but, as you can see, sometimes
that isn't enough."
Go into the Falcons dressing
room after a loss and the refrain
Is usually the same: forget the
past and start anew the next
week.
·
,
"We can't afford to roll over
and quit," said Falcons rushing
leader John Settle. "I feel like
we've got to use these last five
games to start preparing for the
future."
'We're playing for pride, for
our jobs," said nose tackle Tony
Casmas.

,,

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'

7

992·2556

·~~-=-::··;

Emerson
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Multi Tec:h
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Goldstar
Sam sung
Soundesign
Zenith

WITH FliES"''··················· 51,24

391 WEST MAIN STREET
.
992·3524

POMEROY, OliO

performace against Gallipolis In
the Sectional Tournaments.
In a losing cause Betzing
scored a game high 18 points as
Meigs !eli to the Blue Devils by a score of 37·33, In last week's
preview at Athens Betzing
scored 15 points in the two
_quarter scrimmage. Humph·
reys, a 6-2 senior helps give the
Marauders strenghl Inside: He
averaged 4 points a game in
limited playing time last season.
Probable starting lineups for
Meigs will be 5-9 junior Jason
Wright at point guard, 6-1 junior
Robbie Fields and Betzing at the
wings, with 6-4 junior Mike
VanMeter and Humphreys at the
post. Fields and VanMeter were

!Bengals need center
ifor game against Bills
_- CINCINNATI (UPI) - The
{ Bengals are hoping Brian Bla·
· dos, suffering from a strained
: ankle ligament, will be able to
; replace injured starting center
~ Bruce Kozerski In Sunday's
game against Buffalo.
· Biados has been fitted with a
. brace that permits enough tree: dom of movement to play, but Is
: designed to protect against twist·
' I ng movements that·could aggra: vale his Injury.
• Wyche said he would keep
• Blados out of the gam~ if there
; was any risk of further Injury to
• his ankle.
• The team is also considering
' rookie Ken Moyer, who replaced
' Kozerski Sunday when the start·
-!ng center was hit in the smali o!
'
.

the back with a knee and suffered
a fracture of the transverse
process, a small bone near the
base of the spine.
It was the same Injury that
sidelined Houston receiver Drew
Hill last Monday against the
Bengals. He missed this week's
game and may be out two more
weeks.
•
With backup center Paul Jetton on the Injured reserve Ust
with a knee injury, the Bengais
will have to use either Blados or
Moyer.
"This is Russian Roulette
now," said Bengals line coach
Jim McNaliy, who has been
shifting personnel to cover for
the injuries.

two o! the leading scores returning of! of last years reserve team.
Three talented sophomores will
be getting plenty of playing time
off the bench, 6-3 L. J. Mitch, 6-3
James Howerton and 6-1 Shawn
Hawley. Rounding out the roster
for this year's team is,5-7 juniors
Ryan Lemley and Richard Pey·
ton. and ~-9 senior Mark Conley .
Bookman feels that Belpre,
Trimble and Wellston will battle
it out for the title in theTVC, with
Alexander, Miller, Vinton
County, Nelsonville-York and
F.e deral Hocking all very much
improved. The non·league schedule for the Marauders is ·also
going to be tough with two games
with Athens, and one each with
Logan and Warren Local.
l!Qokman will be assisted once
again by Ron Drexler and Rick
Ash, with Ash to handle the
reserve. Reserve tip-off with
Athens this week Is at 6: 30 at
Larry R. MoiTison Gym. ,
MEIGS
~-· vAll8li'V
BMitEl'IIALL
BO!ITER

NO--PLAVEB
tiT YB
00-Robble Fields .. .. ...... .. .. .. ...... ...... .. 6-1 3
03-Ryan Lemley ,,; .. .. .. .. .. .... ........ .. ...:;.7 3
O&gt;-Rlchard Peylon .. ... .... .. .... ...... .. .... &gt;-7 3
ll·Cary Betzlng ........... ... .... .... .. .......G-0 4·

13-Jasm Wrtght ........ .. .... ................ .S--9 3
15-Mark Conley .......... ................. .. ... 5-9
23-L.J. Milch ........ ..... ,.. ...... ........ .. ... 6-3
33--Shawn Hawley-... .. ............... .. .... ... 6-1
41-Jay Humphreys ..... .. .. ..... ..... ...... .. &amp;-2
43-James HowertM ... .... .. .. ........ .... ... S-3
45-Mtke Van Meter .. ...... .. ... ... .... ...... 6-4

BOYS
[)ec.OS.Trlmble .......... ...................... ... . A
Dec.12-NetsonvUle--York ................. .... .. H
~c-~~-We1lstoo ...... .... ........ ...... .. ... ..... . A
c. -Vinton Co . .. .. ....... .... ... ... ... .. ..... . H
[)r(&gt;c.22·Belpre .... ..... ... ........ ........ .......... A
l&gt;ec.29-Logan .......... ....... ........ .... .......... H
Jan .05-Aiexander ........... .. .... .. .. .. .......... H
Jan .09-Federal Hocking ... ........ .. .......... H
Jan. 12-MllJer . .. .......... ...... .. .. .......... ...... H
Jan .16-Warren .... .. ..... .. .. .. .......... .... ...... A
Jan .2J.Nelsonville-York ....................... A

1:~ : it~~r~~ -

r Southwestern

thumps
; Ironton St. Joe 84-63

I

Bonanza

Track
Events Internationale of Boston and the .Moscow Sports
Committee announeed plans for
two world·class international
running events in Moscow next
August - the Moscow Interna·
tiona! Peace Marathon and the
Kremlin Mile. The Moscow International Peace Marathon and the
New York City Marathon wlil be
sister marathons and award
reciprocal trips to the events tor
select runners.

-

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· DATE-OPP.
LOCATION
Nov.24·Athens ..... ....... .. ...... ... .... ... .... .. .. H
Dec.Ol-MIIIer ... ... ..·...... .... .. ..... ..... ...... .. . A

...... ....... ............. .,....."

on .............. .......... .......... A
Feb.02,Belpre .. ... ..... .... .................. ...... H
Feb.03·A tbens ...................... .... .... ........ A
Feb.06-Alexander ............... .. ............... . A
Feb.09·Federal Hocking ... ... ... .. ..... ..... .. A

i

.

: Jrts" h

Foster to resign as Miami coach after '89-90 season
MIAMI (UPI) -University of
Miami basketball coach Bill
Foster announced MoQ&lt;Iay night
that he will resign hiS post at the
end of the •Jpcoming season.
Foster's announcement followed the Hurricanes 95-93 over·
time loss to the Westside Melbourne Saints of Australia In an
exhibition game.
"Because I won't be coming
back after this year doesn't have
anything to do with this club, ••
said Foster. "I'm looking for·
ward to this year. It's going to be
a lot of fun."
Foster has been head coach at
Miami for five seasons, posting a
65-56 record. He took the the job
after the program was reinstated
in 1985 following a 14·year hiatus.

____

.
TO ALL THE YOTEIS IN LETART ,

TOWNSHIP WHO SUPPORTED ME,
THANK YOU.
Your Vote and Support
Were

DON R. HILL

•

'

His announcement ended a
week of speculation about his
future as tbe team's head coach.

He said he would like to move to a
"highet !eve! of coaching," specifically the NBA.

If you
have diabetes, .
· get s100 for
taking better care
of yourself.

Texas A&amp;M, 7-2, remained
unchanged.
Brigham Young, 9·2, took advantage of Penn State's loss to
move up onE' position Into 16th.
No. 17 Texas Tech, 8·2, moved up
two spots, (oUowedbyOhioState,
8-2, the only newcomer to the
ratings.
"We're happy to crack back
into the Top 20." sa lei Ohio State ·
Coach John Cooper, whose learn
has won seven straight games.
"We're playing a lot better than
we were at the starlo!the season.
We started 9ff with a couple of
disastrous road losses. I'm
pleased with the recognition
we're getting."
West Virginia, 1-2-1, was idle
but Improved on~ position to 19th.
No. 20 P.ittsiJurgh, 6-2-1 coming
off a shaky 47-42 victory over
East C~oUna. dropped two
positions.

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992·2139
I
IN AND
ouR LATEsT ti~fecli'PAiisci:eANIN'sl
L!~9ll!.f!I!~!.:.:..:.~A~~~!OVED a RECENT~_INSTALLED. 1
DRUMS
AND
ROTORS

'

•'

row fram left to right are: Head Coach .Rulty
Bookmaa, LJ. Mltcb, James Howertoa, Mike
Van Meter, Jay Humphreys, Shawn Hawley aad
AaslaUant coach Ron Drexler
· ·

Notre Dame remains
No. I; OSU is 20th

However,' turnovers weren't reserved for the Flyers, as the
GaiUans were guilty of throwing
several passes that should have
waited for the halfcourt game to
NEW YORK (UP!) - Notre
develop.
Dame, one game away from
· "We have to work on our
setting up a nationalpassing, but that's what comes
championship showdown against
with the first game," said
Colorado, Monday retained its
Southwestern chief Jim Walker.
familiar position atop the United
"We were taking too many
Press International college foot·
chances (against St. Joe), but bail ratings.
against Southern (Saturday
The Fighting Irish, who ex·
night) we have to play super,
tended their nation-best winning
stay out of foul irouble and play streak to a school·record 23
hard up there, because they do a
games with a 34-23 triumph at
good job o! deny! ng the ball,·' he Penn State, have been the top
added.
selection among the UPI Board
The 'keys to such continued of Coaches for 21 consecutive
play wlil be the Highlanders' ratings. Notre Dame took overas
primary ballhandlers, off guard No. 1 Ocr. 31, 1988; beat West
Brad Bryant, who chalked up 16 Virginia for last year's national
points, and point guard Joe title and have been the top pick
Hammond, who scored 13. They throughout the 1989 season.
were the principal turnover
The Fighting Irish, 11-0, recatalysts, and with Jesse Eh- ceived 43 of 47 first-place votes
man•s passing and "making and 687 of 705 possible points to
things happen," according to lead No. 2 Colorado by 29 points.
Walker. St. Joe's solid shooting They complete their regular
came too late to stop the season Saturday at No. 7 Miami.
Highlanders.
The Buffaloes, who garnered
In the reserve game, the 658 points, completed their reguHighlanders beat the Flyers lar season at 11-0Saturday with a
50-36. Aaron McCarty led the 59-11 thrashing of Kansas State
home team with 16 points. while and await Notre Dame in the
Tim Latka paced St. Joe with a
Orange BOwl.
game-high Ill markers.
Alabama, also undefeated at
Score by quar&amp;ers
10-0, remained In third place
St. Joe ........ , .. 10' 18 18 17-63 after a 37·14 victory over South·
Southwestern .20 18 22 24-84 ern Mississippi. The Crimson
ST. JOE (83) - Mike Akers Tide complete their regular
10-0-0-20; Chuck Jones 5.()4-14; season Dec. 2 at Auburn, with a
Matt Smith 7·0·0-14; Tim Fuller Sugar Bowl bid on the line.
3·0·0-6; Rob Niese! 3·0·0·6; Tim
The rest of the top severi also
Woods ().().3-3. TOTALS- ZS.0.:7- was . unchanged. Michigan, . 9-1
63
with its only loss coming to Notre
Foul-line pet. - 7-14 (50 pet:)
Dame, remained fourth after Its
SOUTHWESTERN (84)
49-15 romp over Minnesota. The
John Ehman 13·3·0-35; Brad Wolverines wiil earn a Rose Bowl
Bryant 8-0-0-16; Joe Hammond berth with a victory Saturday
5-1-B-13; Chris Metzger 4-0·0-8;
against Ohio State.
Jesse Ehman 3-0·B-6; Bill Potter
Florida State, 8·2, remained in
3-0-0-6.. TOTALS - 38+8-84
fifth place, followed by No. 6
Fleld·palllhootlnl - 18-40 ( 45 Nebraska, 10-1, and Miami, 9-1.
pet.)
I
Southern Cal's 10·10 tie with
· FQul-llne pet.-· B-1
cross-town rival UCLA dropped
;.,
the Trojans from the eighth spot
and created some movement
Continued
from
page
4
•••--::-____;_...:....:..
among the middle positiOI)S.
Tennessee. 8'1 after a 33-21
: Irish quarterback Tony Rice
"We've got to be able to control victory over Mississippi, vaulted
, has a lot at stake as well. His . : the football," he said. "I don't
past Arkansas Into eighth. The
history of winning big games has
know if we've ever faced a front
Razorbacks, 8·1, r.emained ninth
; kept him In contention for the four ilke this. 1 would be and Auburn, 8-2. moved up o~ .
surprlsediftheyaren'tplayingin
: Reisman Trophy, but a triumph
spot to crack the Top 10 .
• overMiamiisvltal to his chances
the NFL. Defensively; the thing
Ii!lnols, 8-2, also moved up one
, or overcoming statistically bet·
that gives us a little bit of
position to 11th, followed 'bY
; ter rivals to be named college . trepidation is we didn't play our . Southern Cal, Rose Bowl-bound
, football's top player this season.
best game last week and we
at 8-2-1. No. 13 Clemson, 9·2, No.
~ "I don't think Tony Rice has a
haven't done very well against 14 Virginia, 10·2, and No. 15
teams that pass as well as
: real strong chance to win the
Heisman, but Tony Rice is the
Miami."
~ best compelltor I've been
•around." Holtz said. "We are
: where. we are because of To,ny
~ Rice. If I had the He!sman, I
• would give it to him regardless of
!whether we win at Miami."
: Defense will dominate the
• game, Holtz said, citing the great
' challenge hiS team faces rushing
;the football and some defensive
!problems In a 34-23 triumph at
Appreciated~
iPenn State last week. Miami
•leads the nation In total defense.
,.
:allowing only 213 yards a game,
4fSIS S.l. Ul, IICIII, OliO
;and scoring defense, allowing
only 9.2 points a game.

By G. SPENCER OSBORNE
Tribune Staff Writer
, An ever-harassing defense and
• a relentless up· tempo attack, not
: to mention a 35·point lesson in
, marksmanship from senior
'' guard/forward John Ehman,
\' propelled Southwestern to an .
· 84-63 kn,ockout of Ironton St. Joe
; Tuesday night In the season
; opener for both squads.
: , "We made a lot of mental
• mistakes, and because we're not
• a running team, we got out.of our
; offense," said St. Joe head coach
Jim Mains.
Southwestern, which led all the
way, played a very tight, stealoriented defense against the
, Flyers, who showed a considera·
• ble lack or concentration by
• traveling, double-dribbling and
: c.o mmittlng three-second viola• tlons on a number of occasions
throughout tlie game. The Pa\ trlot pickpockets slapped away
• and . defiected passes, grabbed
; :loose balls and tipped balls the St.
! Joe cagers handled on their way
• to starting numerous last breaks
:·that, even when theydldn'tresult
: in .baskets for the Highlanders,
l wore out the Flyers.
.
Ironton started Jo come to life
1
·after the first quarter, but even
~ though the visitors started get: ling better position under the
; bOards and shooting better !rom
• the field, they were still commit~ ling turnovers, which sQmewhat
i diluted the efforts of 6-5 junior
; Matt Smith, who opposed
; Metzger, a 6-1 junior, in the low
, p&lt;ist. Smith scored 14 points In the
~ game,
tying freshman point
l guard Chuck Jones for second on
' the team. Junior guard Mike
; Akers led St. Joe with 20.
: After taking a 38-28 lead at
• halftime, Southwestern con·
; linued to play as If they were in a ·
~ close game, which helped, as the
~ Flyers continued to shoot better
• on trips downcourt that didn't
~ result In Highlander turnovers.

19118 MEIGS MARAUDER BASKETBALL
TF;AM - Froat row from left to rlrltt: Richard
Peyton, Ryan Lemley, Cary Betzlng, Jaaon
Wright, Robbie Field&amp;, and Mark Conley. Second

In UPI ratings

·-

Spor111 briefs

•

By DAVE HARRIS
. Meigs Marauder Head Basketbali Coach Rusty Bookman welcomes back only two lettermen
from 4ast year's team that
finished at 5-16, but Coach
Bookman has hlg~ hopes tor his
young team as they open the
season at home this Friday night
at home against Athens. The
Bulldogs welcome back four
starters !rom last ·year' s cochampions in the SEOAL.
Bookman In his second year as
the Marauder coach welcomes
back lettermen Cary Betzlng and
Jay Humphreys. Betzing a 6-0
senior averaged around 11 points
a game last year and closed the
season out with an outstanding

'•

1 I! I

ELLIOTT'S
r

Repair Center

( ...

HAMBURGER

Miami-Notre Dame game. It was
Incredible," Irish coach Lou
Holtz said .. "We were lucky last
year. They had six turnovers and
things w~nt our way."
A pre-game brawl mar.red last
year's game and emotions are
expected to run high again this
time. But Holtz vowed to resign if
his players brawl again after a
tight with Southern California
players earlier this season and he
expects nothing improper
Saturday.
"I don't think we have any
bitter feelings whatsoever,"
Holtz said. "The emotions are
running high. Our team is really
excited about playing them.
We've got to play a complete
game and be a little lucky."
Continued on page 5

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• • •OilS
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•

Alabama.
"You just haven 't had a reason,
to change once someOOdy has
been ~' ~ . 1," Holtz said. "You
have a wife or a girlfriend and
you keep that wife or girlfriend
until there's a reason to change."
The Irish (11-0) have lostfiveof
their last seven games with
Miami by a combined score of
170-35, winning twice by a total of
only three points.
The Hurricanes (9-1) have won
four straight home games over
the Irish since 1977, two of them
shutouts and none closer than 20
points. Miami was ranked No. I
before losing 31-30 last year at
·
Notre Dame.
"I don't know I! I've ever seen a
better football game than last
year's

;Meigs opens cage season
at ho111:e against Athens five

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�I

•

•

Wednesday, Novemblw 22, 1989

.Miller opens ·cage season with 90-78 win over Eastern
While always a tough road game-high 33 points. All five
game to win. Tuesday evening's Miller starters hit double ligures.
seUOII opener at Miller held true followed by Gossm•n with i9,
to tradition as the mighty Miller Siemer with 15, Hettich 11, and
Falcons soared to a !1().78 often· Barrett10.
Sophomore Jell Durst led the
' slve explosion over the visiting
. Ea11es with 16 points. hittlnl six
• Eastern Eagles.
field goals, one three pointer, and
Miller Is 1.() and Eastern 0.1.
Behind a barrage of alley-oop a treethrow. Mike Wheeler followed with U, Tim Blssel110, and
type passes and deep penetl'lll lon
to the Eagle front line defense, Shaun Savoy 10. •
Defense was a primary conMiller hulled Its way to an early
• 22·2 lopsided Score In the first cern of Coach Charlie Riley In the
pre-season. and that was one
· quarter.
area that Eastern lacked In when
• Leading that assault was the
It needed a stand. The offense
: game's leading scorer Kevin
• Daughty who htt 13 field goals was there, b~t a little too late.
Although defense was lacking,
and seven free throws for a

pride and performance In the
The Eastern guards were cited
latter three quarters were not as an Important part of the EHS
lacking, as
Eas !ern showed comeback as well as EHS taking
· more than enough class to not advantage of timely free throw
only make the game close, but shooting.
Seniors Shaun Savoy and
actually pull within four at 68-64
In the fourth frame.
Kenny Caldwell teamed up with
After Eastern trailed early It sophomores Tim Bissell, Jeff
recovered to a 24-16 first period Durst, and Junior Mike Wheeler
score and 48-36 gesture a the half. · to spearhead the EHS offensive
Riley's club made adjustments • drive.
at halftime and caught the
Miller tired, but didn't fall to
Falcons In a nose dive, prompthold to the 90-78 win.
tng a time out of their own to
Eastern hit just 23 of 79 from
regroup. That's when EHS began the floor and 19-27 at the line.
their climb to within tour points,
Miller hit 32 of ~2 for a hot 60-plus
culminating early In the fourth
percentage, but hit only 19-37 at
frame at 68-64.
the line.

Redmen defeat Wiltnington ·
.: WILMINGTON ~ Brad Schu· School graduate ptay{ng before
• bert posted a t&lt;Hlate game high the home crowd, tied the score at
of 25 points and Gary Harrison 9 on a free throw.
.
contributed 24 markers to lead
From there, the Redmen were
• the University of Rio Grande In control, although Wilmington
.. men's basketball team on to a center Tim Dicke and teammate
· 107-88 rout of District 22 rival ChrisMitchellweresuccessfulln
: Wilmington Tuesday at •Her- keeping the margin to 10 at
rrnann Court In the Quakers first times. Rio Grande led 51-39 at
:· home game of the season.
halftime.
"We controlled the game
Schubert, who scored 18 of his
: early," Rio Grande Coach John game high markers on 3-polnt
:: Lawhorn, who celebrated his field goals, kept the Redmen
~ 500th coaching victory wtth this
offense going as Harrison,
· game. "The starters played well, Lambcke, Tony Ewing and Jell
and all In alii was very pleased Brown provided support. Ewing
with our team's performance."
posted 22 markers against the
While the game's outcome was Quakers, Lambcke recorded 11
· not surprising, the Quakers "are and Brown had 10. Leading
a good ball club, one that we'll scorer for Wilmington was
hear a lot more of later In the Dicke, who fouled out In the
• season," Law~orn said.
contest's final minute.
- Fritz Pllnke steam, which fell
Rio Grande .butlt Its biggest
: to 0-4, started the game vigor- lead at~ (91·66) near the game's
: ously, possessing the lead early ·end, which sparked Wllmlng• until the Redmen'S John ton's VInce Wake, Eric Sears and
; Lambcke, a Wilmington High

:~Meigs

Eastern had 36 rebounds, led
by Wheeler and Durst with seven
each and Scott Filch with five.
Miller claimed 46 caroms, led by
6-6 Daughty's 15 and Gossman's

9.
Eastern had 15 turnovers,
seven assists, and 16 team fouls.
Miller was 25, 14, and 21
respectively.
Miller won the reserve contest
54-40, spoiling Coach Zane Beegle's debut as mentor there. The
young club made some mistakeS
do to Inexperience. but their 40
points Indicated they are on the
rlgm_track. Chad Savoy led EHS

.

Mica Jones ,with 3, two apiece
from Trlcla. Wolfe, Wendy Wolfe,
and Jennifer Cross, and one byn
Junle Beegle.
Although Southern Coach Bill
Baer credited his team with
playing a good defense early, the
ceiling came tumbling In quickly
on the Inexperienced. but bustling Tornadoettes. Meigs soon
whipped out to a 16~ first period
lead.
Meigs widened Its lead to 28-8
at the halt, as Meigs substlt\lted
freely In combination with a
fairly stable SHS defense.
Coach Baer Indicated that his
young Southern gals may have
suffered from a case of the
"jitters" as most were playing
their first varsity game.
Baer said, "The girls are all

~ .Pacers

CHERRY
PIE FILLING

with 12 polns, Jason Hager had 7,
and Wes Holter six.
Score by quarters
Eastenf.. ....... 16 20 19 23-78
Mlller ............ 24 24 18 24-90
EASTERN (78)- Kenny Cald·
well 1-5· 7; Scott Fitch 2-2-6;
Shaun Savoy 1·2·3-10; Mike Frost
3-2-8; Tim Bissell 1-2-3-10; Jeff
Durst 1-6-1-16; Mark Murphy
0-2-2; Mike Wheeler 6·2·14; Jason
Hager 0-1-l. TOTALS 3-%3-211·78.
MILLER (90) - Daughty
13-7-33, Gossman 6-7-19, Hettich
5-1-11. Barrett 2-2-0-10, Slemen
6-3-15, Bartley 0-2-2. TOTALS
2-32·19-90.

We Reserve lhe Right To
limit Quantities

NEW YORK (UP!) - Kevin
Mitchell, .who led the majors In
home runs and RBI In helping the
Chris Sonneman on to a scoring
San
Francisco Giants to tbelr
spurt. While substituting freely
first
pennant In 17 years, Tueswith his primarily young team.
day
was
named winner oft he 1989
Pllnke was unable to transform
National
League Most Valuable
the last-scene rush to score Into a
Player
Award
by the Baseball
rally.
of America.
Writers
Association
, Slgnlllcantly, Lawhor.n's
Mitchell, who belled 47 home
coaching milestone occurred In
runs and had 125 RBI, easily
the area where he enjoyed some
outpolled teammate Will Clark,
of his early coaching successes .
who finished second In the
He was basketball coach at East
balloting conducted by 24
.Clinton Local High School from
BBWAA members - two from
1964 unti11969:
.
each NL city.
"It means you've been around
The 27-year-old Mitchell colfor a •long time and you've had a
lected 314 total points and 20 of a
lot of good players," Lawhorn
remarked. "It also means you've · possible 28 first-place votes.
First baseman Clark, who was
received the support of the
administration, which has pro-. voted the MVP of the National
vlded me with some opportunl- League Championship Series,
received three first place votes
ties to win."
Rio Grande, now 3-1, hosts a and 225 points. St. Louis first
winless Shawnee State on Tues- baseman Pedro Guerrero finday, Nov. 28, at 7:30 p.m. The ished third , getting the final
Quakers travel to Dayton Satur- first-place vote and 190 total
points.
day to meet Wright State.
Chicago second baseman Ryne
Sandberg finished fourth with 157·
points and New York Mets third
baseman Howard Johnson was .
flfth with 153 points. All five of the
top finishers were named on
young and Inexperienced at this every ballot.
level. We played a good defensl ve
Rounding "o ut the top 10 with '
game for most of a quarter and a
total points were: San Diego
half, but couldn't get the offense
reliever and NL Cy Young
going."
winner Mark Davis (76), Houston
Meanwhile, Coach Roger Fos- first baseman Glenn Davis (64) ,
ter's gals played aggressively San Diego right fielder Tony
and made some Impressive of- Gwynn (57), Cincinnati outfensive plays featuring a combi- fielder Edc Davis (44) and
nation of outside shooting and Chicago reliever Mitch Williams
potent driving to bury the host
(41).
'
Tornadoes.
Voting was based on 10 points
Unofficially, SHS hit just 8-36 for first, 9 for second, etc. Robin
'from the field and 3-11 at the line.
Yount of the .Milwaukee Brewers
while Meigs hit 24-40 and 8-27.
.was named the AL MVP tor the
Southern had 27 fouls and second time In bls career
Meigs 13.
Monday ..
The seeond half was academic,
This year marked the 22nd
but Meigs got to see Its bench . time that teammates have fin strength at work after the startIshed 1-2 In the MVP voting. It
Ing five warmed the floor with
was the ninth time It has
outstanding play, ending the
occtirred In the National League
game at 56-19.
and first since 1976, when Joe
Morgan and George Foster of the
Cincinnati Reds finished 1-2. Cal
Rlpken and Eddie Murray of the
Baltimore Orioles finished 1-2 In
the AL voting In 1983.
Mitchell Is the first San Francisco Giant and third overall to·
wlri the award, joining Hall of
Spurs. Terry Cummings added 19 Famers Willie McCovey, who
points and Willie Anderson 18for was named In 1969, and Willie
San· Antonio. Tom Chambers Mays who was named In 1954 and
scored 25 points to lead the Suns. 1965. Larry Doyle (1912). Bill
Terry 11930) and two-time
SuperSonics 114, Nels 84
At Seattle, Xavier McDaniel · winner Carl Hubbell (1933, 1936)
scored 10 of his 26 points In the were honored when the Giants
third quarter, during which the played In New York.
Mitchell's homer and RBI
SuperSonics outscored New Jer· .
sey 30-7 as the Nets scored an .totals were the most by a Giant
all-time club low for a quarter. since 1969 when McCovey hit 45
New Jersey equaled an NBA homers and drove In 126 runs. He
record by scoring just ~points In batted .291 for the year and led
the second half. Dale Ellis added the mators In extra base hits
25 points for Seattle.

(87). total bases (345) and
slugging percentage (.635).
Mitchell hit 31 homers In the
first half of the season and was an
All-Star selection. The Giants
finished with a 92-70 record,
winning the NL West by three
games over the San Diego
Padres. The Giants then defeated the Cubs In five games to
gain their first trip to the World
Series ~!nee 1962.
The Giants were then swept by
the American League Champion
Oakland Athletics In the World
Series highlighted by a major
earthquake that rocked Candlestick Park prior to the start of
Game3.
Mitchell played six different
positions for the 1986 World
Champion New York Mets, fin Ishing third In the NL Rookie of
the Year balloting behind St.
Louis reliever Todd Worrell

.

: By Unlletl Pres.s I•ternatlonal

- Chuck Person finally made the
walt worthwhile for Indiana
Coach Dick Versace.
The Pacers, coming off three
straight road losses, came home
Tuesday and looked to co-captain
Person tor leadership. He responded with 37 points, Including
18 In the fourth period, to lead
Indiana to a 119-111 triumph over
the Boston Celllcs.
"We've been waiting." Versace said. "I'm used to the Chuck
Person you saw tonight. This Is
the first time this year be's
gotten on fire. When he got on
.fire, all the teammates got blm
the ball."
Person hit19 points In the first
half, went scoreless In the third
period, then opened the fourth
;·quarter with ll points In a span of
4: 38 to help Indiana earn a 103-89
lead.
"The leaders have to do what It
takes to win on a road trip. 1
didn't step up," said Person of
Indiana's recent tailspin. "I
can't walt around to make things
· happen. This lsoneofthegamesl
looked to be more aggressive
offensively."
Six Boston players scored In
·double figures, led by Larry Bird
.with 25 points and Kevin McHale
with 23. Robert Parish had 16
• points and 16 rebounds.
• Six other Indiana players hit
: double figures, Including Detlet
:·Schremp! wtth 18 points. Vern
Fleming had 13 points and 13
assists.
· , Indiana took a 38-22 firstperiod lead and never trailed.
"We just had some shots tht
· didn't go In for us. Wemusthave
had five or six that went In and
· out," Aid Boston Coach Jimmy
Rodaers. "'lbey did tbe th lngs
theVhadtodotoholdpeopleoff."
Boston loststarllng guard Job.n
Bagley to a dislocated left
• lhoulder while scrambling tor a
• looae ball in the II!COnd quarter.
• HJs lhoulder will be examined
;Wednesday In Boston. ·
; Elaewbere, Atlanta tipped De·troll J03..96, Miami dumped Char. lotte 118-87, W88111qton upended
' Milwaukee 97-911, New· York
lluted H
ton 114-106 1

re. ..

~

'

overtime, Utah edged Minnesota
103·1011n overtime. San Antonio
ripped Phoenix 107-98, Seattle
crushed New Jersey 114-84,
Denver stomped Dallas 111-95,
Orlando held off Sacramento
115-113 and Portland cruised past
Chicago 121-110.
Hawks 113, Pistons 96
At Auburn Hills, Mich .. Moses
Malone scored 27 points, lncludlng two big baskets down the
stretch , to help Atlanta end a
25-game home-court winning
streak by the Pistons. !slab
Thomas scored 32 points for the
Pistons.
·
'
He&amp;&amp; 98, Hornels87
At Charlotte, N.C., Billy
Thompson scored 14 of his
season-high 23 points In the
second half and Rony Selkaly
grabbed a career-high 19 re·bounds to fuel Miami. Rex
Chapman led the Hornets with 28
points.
Bullets 87, Bucks 81
At Landover, Md., Bernard
Klngscoredflveofhis17polntsln
the last six minutes and Mel
Turpin came oft the bench to
score five points and make three
key blocks, helping Washington
end a five-game losing streak.
Jeff Malone scored 6 of his 20
points In the last.57 seconds. Fred
Robertsmatchedhlscareer-hlgh
with 26 points for Milwaukee.
Klllcb 114, Bockea 101
At New York, Patrick Ewing
bad 33 points, Including elgbt In
overtime, to lift the Knlcks. After
Akeem Olajuwon fouled out early
In overtime, Ewing took charge
and dominated. Charles Oakley
had 15 points and 16 rebounds for
New York. Mitchell Wiggins bad
~ points and Olajuwon 23 for
Houston.
~aa Ita, Tlmbet wolvea ltl
At Minneapolis, Karl Malone
scored 39 points - 31 In the
second half - and Tburl Bailey
added ~ to lift Utah. John
Stockton added 18 ullstl and 13
points. Mlune~ota aot 26 polnta
from Tyrone Corbin ·and 25 frCllll
Tony CampbelL
Spttn117, Sa• 18
At San Antonio, David Robtll·
son scored 20 polnta and pulled
down 15 rebounds to lead the

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Mitchell is named NL MVP

girls open .season with win

•
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• teams, 56-19.
· Meigs placed ten gals In the
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Pqa 8-The Dely Sa lllitMI

-Local news briefs--Official count released by board
Th~ Meigs County Board of Elections announced today that
the o!!lclal count of votes In the Nov. 7 election was completed on
Nov. 20 and there were no signl!lcant changes. The automatic
recount for election of members to the Meigs County School
board will be held at 1 p.m . on Nov. 29.

JCs plan food baskets for needy '
The Meigs County Jaycees will once again be providing
Christmas food baskets to needy families of Meigs County,
according to Brian Conde, chatrman or this year's project.
''The holiday season Is an excellent time for allot us to reach
out and help those less fortunate," Conde stated.
''The residents and businesses of Meigs County have alway•
provided our chapter with assistance, both financially and
through donations of food and toys. Without this support. we
could not run a successful project. We are placing drop boxes for
non-perishable food Items at the various grocery stores
throughout the area. We will pick up that !oQd at regular
Intervals tor packing.
·'It Is our commitment to carefully screen all applicants and
hopefully make some of those less fortunate a )lttle happier
during the holiday season . Our members are proud to provide
this service and wish all of Meigs County a safe and joyous
holiday season," Conde said.
·
Those tn need of assis lance during the upComing holiday
season are asked to complete forms which will appear in the
Dally Sentinel at a later date and send it to the Meigs County
Jaycees, P.O. Box 424, Middleport, 45760.

Driver hurt in Tuesday wreck
'.

a·

A Jackson County man was Injured in one-car accident at
5:35a.m. Tuesday on SR. 689, 0.8 of a mile north of the Vinton
County line, according to the State Highway Patrol.
Troopers said Albert D. Hall, Jr., 23, Wellston, lost control on
a curve. His 1982 Olds went off the road and overturned.
Damage was heavy.
Hall was injured and taken to Holzer Medical Center.
The patrol cited Hall for failure to maintain control.

EMS has two Tuesday calls

....
.....
,..

•

Unlls of the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service
responded to two calls on Tuesday .
At 5:50a.m the Rutland unit translX'rtedAlbert Hall Jr., from
an auto accident on Route 689 to Holzer Medical Center, and at
10:02 p.m. the unit went to Happy Hollow Road for Jessie
McKnight, who was treated but not transported .

Propose board...
felt It was not In the best Interest
of the school to have a board
member liviD&amp; In another area.
Board member Jeff Werry
acknowledged that Hollman's
comments were directed to him
and stated that he Is a temporary
resident In another area while
attending Marshall University,
that he pays out-of-state tuition,
· but that he maintains his Hem·
Joek Grove residence.
He was emphatic In stating
that he has no Intention o!
becoming a resident of West
Virginia or any other state, nor,
In fact, of any other county. He
also noted that he Is a two year
scholarship student at Marshall.
Rupe questioned Werry as to
whether he felt he can Sl!rve
Meigs County while out of the
area to which Werry said he felt
he could, and to the q ues don of
whether he has any Intention nf
resigning, Werry answered
"no.''

'

The question of ..}low he can
adequately serve the district
when he Is out of the countytor18
· months of the two year scholar·
ship period was again proposed,
this time by Ed Baer, and Werry
again affirmed that he felt he
could.
The board also voted to adver·
lise for bids for 48 computers and
a wheel alignment machine. The
purchase will be paldforwlth two
Appalachian Regional Commis·
slon grants totaling $109,000 and
about $40,000 In local funds,
representing the required 20
percent on one grant and 50
percent on the second grant.
Approval was also given for the
district to enter Into a. purchased
services agreement with Blue
Streak Cab Co. to transport a
student to Bradbury Elemen·
tary.
Danny Tillis wpo Is employed
by Degussa of Belpre, proposed

conUnued

Wednesday, November 22. 1989

rr~ page 1

to the board that a committee be
formed to work with Industry ·on
salvaging usable equipment lor
scbooll as It is r~&gt;placed by
companies.
Ttuls Tuesday morning had
pre&amp;f&gt;nted an IBM computer and
printer to thelearnlngddlsablllty
class at the Rutland Elementary
SchOol which he had secured
from hll employer, Degussa, for
that purpose.
He will meel with Supt. Carpe~Jter . to work out some plan for
organizing a commlttf&gt;e and the
two will report back to the board
at the December meeting.
Personnel employed ·
Cathy Edwards was em· .
ployed by t!le board as girls'
junior high basketball coach
and ·Gene Wise as freshman
basketball coach for the 1989·90.
Carol Ymlth and Ralph Werry
were hired as substitute teachers
for the year, and employed as
substitute bus drivers were Betty
Wilson, Carl Wilson, Donna Bentley, and Carl Muncy.
The board adopted an Ins trueIlona! supplies poUcy and set
payment requirements, entered
into a service agreement with
Executon for a phone system at
the Central office for $468 a year,
and one with E. C. Babbert to
Inspect the high school aeration
system at $75 per inspection.
After some discussion the
board voted to pay custodians a
maXImum of one hour for each
game in the elementary basket·
ball program. It was noted that
school organizations used to pay

the custodian's wage but that for
some time now the board ·has
been paying overtime hours to
the custodians creating a big
financial drain.
A field trlpforVICAstudents to
Columbus to attend a convention
was approved. Maternity leave
was granted to Rita Simmons
from Jan. 2 through Feb. 16, and
the resignation of Elaine Freeman as a suhs tltute teacher was
accepted.
The board entered Into an
agreement with Harold Graham
to tutor a student not more than
five hours a week at the rate of

~

.

·.
f

Gallia youth dies from gun wound
An 11-year-old elementary student died late Tuesday
afternoon of an apparent self-Inflicted gunshot wound,
according to the Gallla County Sheriff's Department.
OffiCials said Joshua R. Farmer, son of Kenneth and Carol
Farmer, 581 Upper River Road, died after arrival at Holzer
Medical Center. He was a sixth grader.at Addavllle Elementary
School.
Sheriff Dennis R. Salisbury said the department received a
call at 4:51 p.m., there had been a shooting at the Farmer
residence. The Gallla County Emergency Medical Services·
transported Farmer to the hospital
.
Officials said young Farmer apparently died _from a single
shot to the head from a 22·callber rifle . No reason or motive was
given. The shooting Is still under Investigation.
.
'Officers questioned several persons last night In connection
with the shooting.
Sheriff Salisbury said today that Farmer and a friend,
Nicholas Cremeans, whose mother, DebbleCremeans, works at
the Country Drive Inn &amp; Carryout, left thecarryout at 4:35p.m.
to go next door to the Farmer residence. Creemeans came back
and told his mother, something had happened, that Farmer was
bleeding around the mouth. His mother returned with him to the
residence and found the body.
A customer at the carryout, James Koons of Point pleasant,
W.Va., notified the emergency squad and the sherltrs ·
department.

Be Our Guest '
to C1ty Center Mall &amp;
Lane Ave. Center
• Champagne &amp; Bubble Bath
to warm you when you return .

ball will olfficlate and burial will
be in Nelson Cemetery, Meigs .
County.
Friends may call at the Boyd
Funeral Home in Marlon Friday
from 2 to4 and 6 to 8 p.m. In lieu of
flowers, contributions may be
made to the American Cancer
Society.

Eleanor Nelson, 70, 2308
Marion-Upper Sandusky Road,
Marlon, a former Meigs County
resident, died Tuesday morning
In Amertcare of Marlon.
Born Nov. 23, 1918 in Langsville, she was the daughter of the
late Von Miller and Genevieve
Stansbury Miller. She was a
housewife and a mem her of the
Star Grange 7781n Meigs County.
Mrs. Nelson is survived by her
husband, Clair 0. Nelson; three
sons, Donald Nelson of Malta,
Cecil Nelson ofWestChester, and
Dwight Nelson of Columbus; two
brothers, Robert Miller, Venice,
Fla.; and John Miller, Phoenix.
Arizona; a sister. Eunice Barley,
Hamllton; seven grandchildren,
and two great-grandchildren.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by one
grandson.
Funeral services will be held
Saturday atlO a .m in tile Com·
munlty United Methodist Church
In l'darlon. The Rev . Irma Kim·

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Tuesday admissions- none.
Tuesday discharges - Marie
Thomas, Dwight Spencer, Jessie
Willie, Lovle. Watson, and Cha·
rl~ Chapman.

Coul1 news
Ill the Meigs County Court of
CofDmon Pleas, Peggy Harris,
Pomeroy ,Is seeking the determi·
najlon of a right of way !rom
Mildred Francis, Newark. for 42
acres of property In Ball Run
acroos Francis' real estate.
In the call' of the State of Ohio
versus Harvey A. Faw, Faw has
been sentenced to a term of one
year of lncarceratlon for a felony
of having weapona under a
diAblllty.
•

Everett WanJ
Everett Ward, 71, of Little
Hocking, died Tuesday evening
at Camden·Clark Memorial Hospital in Parkersburg, W.Va.
Services for Mr. Ward will be 1
p.m. Saturday at the White
Funeral Home, Coolville, wllh
calling hours at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on Friday.
A complete death notice for
Mr. Ward will be forthcoming In
Friday's edition of The Dally
Sentinel.

'

•

'

SWISHER-LOHSE

PHA CY
Holiday Season
Kiek-Off Sale!

'

•KNIVES
•SOCKS

t'ali,l'f.Y., t11at -llaliiiD 1814.

35 CHRISTMAS

THE SOUNDS

UGHT. SET

CHRISTMAS

CASSETTES

14 Sol!g! _!'er Cassette

. $ 99

1

NIGHT RHYTHMS
SPRAY COLOGNES
ONlf

$279

COLOGNE and
AFTER SHAVE

Fruth Pharmacy

•

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-6491

Crow' s Family Restaurant
POMEIOY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

Adolph's l)airy Valley

OPEN 10 AM-5 PM

CHRISTMAS

.,
11. ·
PAPER............~.......... '/ 2 PRICE
,c

I
f
I

Downing-Childs-Mullen-Musser
992-2342

Thete Speeials
Oooi Sandaf,
Nove111ber 26,
t 989 Only II .

1/2 PRICE

INSURANCE AGENCY

POMEROY, OHIO

Baum Lumber

1

'

'

'

'"'""•h"'Cula~~gfl, ll.lllt.
et.ert• .. tttlt. R. Ph ..
llonllcl !liMing, R.l'h.
Mon. tlwu let. 1:00 a.m. to 1 :00 p.m.
lu~ 10:00 1.m. to 4:00p.m.
PIIUCRIPTION8
PH. 812·2188
I.fri..., .....leo
- - · OH.

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

...

IE Sill TO IIGimR
SUNDAY, NOV•m 26 FOR
OR CAllY GIVE-AWAY
. , . .. . . . . . . .ary.
,..... let le Prmnt To Win.

3 Ll. WIITIIAN SAMPLER
2 Ll. RUSSEll STOVER
ASSOmD CHOCOLATES
1

E~ing
992·2121

,,

POIIDOY, OHIO

POMIIOY, OHIO

~MElOY,

Fisher Funeral Home
992-5141

· MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

. 992-6454.
POMEROY, OHIO

.Riggs Used Cars
NEW lOCATION. STAR ROUTE 7, AIOVE EASTERN HIGH SCHOOl

985-4200

Fabric Shop
992-2284

POMEROY, OHIO

992-6472

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

KING SERVItiTAR HARDWARE
992-5020

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

"YOUR BEST BUY FOR THE LONG RUN"

POMEROY OHIO

992-2975

Veterans Memorial Hospital,
POMEROY, OHIO

992·2104

MIDDLEPORT,, OHIO

992-7075

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

992-5627

MIDDLEPORT, OliO

992-6669

.Brogan-Warner Insurance ·
OHIO

992-2039

RAWUNGS-COATS

Prescription Shop

Funeral Home

Smith-Nelson Motors
992·21

POMEROY, OHIO

992-2955

Heritage House/Locker 219

FOOD SHOP
AND CAR WASH

992·5552

S! J!r1Ht P,...LOHSE

Swisher-Lohse Pharmacy

Blue Streak ·Cab Co.

CHESTER, OHIO

985-3301

Pomeroy Flower Shop

BANK ONE. ATHENS. NAIA I'AftT OF THE CAlliNG TEAM
Alhtns. Ohio
Member FCHC

SALES and SERVICE

POMEROY, OHIO

992-3785

OFF

AMITY BILLFOLDS

Eighteen Thousand People Who Care.

~GRAVELY TRACTOR

K&amp;C Jewelers

40°/o

.

. POMEROY, OHIO

992-2556

TIMEX
WATCHES

W~PPING

BANKEONE.

R&amp;G Feed &amp; Supply Co.

30°/ooFF

Chrllfmat.Savings You'll find
This Sundav, Nove~nher 26 O•lv!
JEWELRY............ 1V2 PRICE

OPEl SllffDA Y 11.1. 4 I'll

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

'

992-5432

r-----------·
-·- --~~
COMPLETE STOCK

Mondoy-Frldey 7 A.M.-6:30 P.M
Seturdoy 7 A.M.·&amp; P.M.

290 North Second. Middleport. Ohio

THIS
PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE~ MANY FINE BUSINESSES ...
'

992-2164

"'· HOURS
992-5504

M/C • VISA • DISCOYD o LAYAWAYS

•
•

.4 OZ.-'4.95 Value

.37S OZ.-Reg. sus

S429

•

$279

· SPRAY COLOGNE
ONLY

·May All Be Blessed On This Great American Holiday!!

Reg. $3.91

Reg. S2.99

1 POUND-Reg. S5.25

COUGH SUPPRESSANT
TABLETS

634 Ecnt Main, Pomeroy

OPEJI ,.DAYS UtmL 1100 P.M.

•I

OF

INDOOR or
OUTDOOR

CHOCOLATES

O'DELL.
LUMBER COMPANY

Till flnt llriflle from tile United

..._to &lt;&gt;ana . . •••""
.,_ arflblltlDt from ~lapn

RUSSEll
S10VER
ASSORTED

12 and 20 Ga.

•LADIES WEAR
•HANDBAGS
•GLOVES

'

•
•'
•'

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1989

S219s PACK

LEE, LEVI'S CHIC, WRANGLER

•

PRICES GOOD THROUGH

RIFLED SLUGS

•CARHARn
•WESTERN BOOTS
•JEANS

f •SWEATS

614/294-4148

HAllS MENTHO-lYPTUS

''YOUR LOCAL SOURCE"
FOR GIFT IDEA

r

~N\:

328 West Lane Ave.
Columbus. Ohio

Sl S

r-------···iiiws___
E

-\\~0 ~

• Free Hotel Parking

U-1 00 DISPOSABLE INSULIN
SYRINGE AND NEEDLES
·~:ooF $165 ~~c~AGE
99

SUPER-X HOLLOW POINT

..
;

..JI'~.
-,~

·

•

*

plus tax

• Complimentary Continental
Breakfast
·

ONLY •

---Area deaths-- Elmnor Nelson

$45 00

• Free Shuttle Service

New...
Continued from page 1
plaques, magnetic and Indoor
and outdoor signs, and personal·
!zed mugs.
The family-owned business
which Includes Gilmore and his
wife, Jean; daughters Gall Ferry
and Lisa Hooten as engraver and
sublimation imprinter, respec·
lively; son, Bill Gilmore, as silk.
screen printer; and his wife,
Katie Gilmore,' as assembler.
Gilmore reports that Middle·
port Trophies now produces
awards for 23 schools, most local
and several national, civic and
corporate ellen ts, as well as the
State of Ohio.
''Our business has grown by
providing quality products and
services .at reasonable prices,"
Gilmore says.

Happy

Shop 'Til
You Drop

~

..••..

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

$11.72 per hour. Approval was
given to Anthony Rowe tor a trip
to the national convention of
VICA , Nov. 26-Dec. 2.
An executive session was held
to discuss personnel and pending
litigation. At that time the board
agreed to offer to settle a
grievance at a cost of $130
providing that there was no
precedent set nor admissio~ of
guUt on the part of either party.
Attending were Supt. Carpen·
ter , Treasurer Jane Fry, and
board members, Jeff Werry,
Robert Snowden, Robert Barton,
and Larry Rupe.

992-6617

214 EAn MAIJI

POIIIIOY, OHIO

Ingels furniture &amp; Jewelry
992-2635

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

PAT HILL

Ford-Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
992-2196

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Knight and Mullen
992-2090

AnOIJIEYS-AHAW
POMEROY, OHIO

Valley Lumber &amp; Supply Co.
992-6611

MIDDUPORTI OHIO

~
992-6661

MIDDUPORT, OHIO

Quality Print Shop
992·3345

-DLEPOIT, OHIO

------------------~----·-···------------------~----------••

�'llldnUciiY, November 22, 1989

.

.The Daily~ Sentinel

;.~

By Th_e Bend

ESKEY HDL MEMORIAL AWARD WINNER
-Lori Hayes, center, a member of the Meigs 4H
Pleaoure Riders, was selected as the recipient of
this year's Eskey Wll Memorial Award by the
. Melp County Horse Committee. The award Is

given to an Individual who has demonstrated
respect and Interest in 411. Pictured with Hayes Is
Rachael Downie, club advisor, and Eunice Hill
Jones, daughter of the late Eskey Hill. ·

American Legion .unit has meeting

'

Contributions were made to
War on Cancer, Auxiliary
Friendship Quarters, and the
Chillicothe Veterans Birthday
Party when the Lewis Manley
Unit 263 American Legion Auxil·
iary met recently at the home of
Mrs. Edith Ross !n Point Pleasant, W.Va.
Opening ceremonies were conducted by Mrs. Margar.e t Bo·
wles, president. She read a
bulletin from the 8th district
president, Mrs. Maxine Barnes,
which stated the mid winter
conference will be held in Columbus on Jan. 26 and 27.
The Chillicothe Veterans Hos -

pltal birthday party will be Dec.
21.
Mrs. Florence Richards, secretary, gave out reportforms to the
chairmen and some were filled
OUI.

Plans were made for the unit
Christmas dinner and party to bE&gt;
held Dec. 12 at the home of Mrs.
Lorrence Goggins .
Its will be collected for the box
at the Chllllcothe Veterans
Hospital.
Mrs. Richards read from the
Firing Line in regards to a news
release given out In September
by Indiana Congressman John
Myers, of the s~venth district.

The release stated that the only
way to protect the flag from
burning or other desecration
would be an amendment to the
constitution.
The singing of "America" and
prayer by the president closed
the meeting.
A salap course was served by .
Mrs. Ross.

I

Betty R. Reese of Athens has
been appointed director ·of the
, South District office of the Ohio
Cooperative Extension Service.
The office is located in Jackson. Reese will oversee extension
work and coordinate new programs In a 16-county area.
For the past 18 months Reese
has been acting director for the
South District. She previously
was chair and home economics,
community and natural resource
development agent in the AI hens

County Ex ten lson Otfice. Keese
joined the Extension Servtce in
Southern Ohio in 1974.
She holds a bachelor's degree
from Wichita State University
and a master's degree from
Michigan State University . Her
husband, Jerry, is an administrator at Ohio University. Their
daughter, Jean graduated this
year from Ohio State University
and currently serves as a second
lieutenant in tl:le U.S. Marine .
Corps.

BETI'Y R. REESE

Churches to meet
The Women's Felk&gt;wshlp of the
Meigs County Churches of Christ
will meet on Nov. 30 at 7: 30 p.m.
at the chUI~h In Dexter.

Thank.[giving Dinner
The Word of Life Church In·
Burlingham, will be serving a ·
free Thanksgiving dinner with·
turkey and trimmings on Thurs·
day at noon.
There will be a worship service·
throughout the day in the church.
Dinner will be served In the
trailer behind the church.
Pastor Ray Laudermilt Invites
the public. Meals wlll be dell·
vered to the shut ins.

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias (7 colon)
Poinsotlia Htllging Wtb and Tr•1,
Christmas Cactus, Foila!lo lasbll,
ltrriotl Holy Trws and largo Show
Plonll, live and Cut Chrislmas Tr•L
For tht Loud One's G111n llanbll,
Monumtnt Sjways, Centory

...
.

'

I

v-.

(Watch for ..,. Christmas Op., Houstl .
Open Daily 9 AM·&amp; P.M.
Sunday 1 P.M.·&amp; P.M.

HUBBARDS GREENHOUSE
992-5776

"Open Tha~klghrlng Dar"

•

servtce
scheduled

CHOOSE FROM TODAY'S TOP MOVIES
REGISTER FOR CHRISTMAS DRAWING TO BE HELD
DECEMBER 15, 1989.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY,
NOD NOT IE PIESENT TO WIN• .

I

'

1ST PIIZE-W.ELESS REMOTE VCR
2ND PRIZE-TURKEY 01 HAM
3RD PRIZE-CHRISTMAS MOUSE
4TH PIIZE-VHS TAPES (Various Titles)
BRING IN TIIS AD ON SUNDAY ALL TAPES JUST $1.00
992-5711
.DDLEPORT I OHIO
99 MILL STREET

FAMilY PACK

BONELESS

. BONELESS

CHICKEN BREAST

CHUCK ROAST

ENGLISH ROAST

99(LB.

'

$169 LB.

ive

.'-,

S169LB.

.··

POTATU Uil?'i

,.

.,

MICROWAVE POPCORN ..

Try Our
Dellelouc
H01ne•ade Soups
•VEGETABLE
•CABBAGE

'•POTATO
•CHILl

FRI., NOV. 24

1:00 P.M.

FREE

•COLORING BOOKS
•CANDY CANIS

wmi.I-&amp;WiliWUft

BANANAS•••••••~!•...

4/$ 1

C

I
GIRLS
I PULLOVER SWEATERS
s51a
I

•;

'

1

TODDLER

"

"•,

SillS

'

.,''

•.(

2-3·4

CRICKET LANE.

'

t

GIRLS~ LEE JEANS
StillS 4-14

..••

,.
••
l

't

t.,
~

992-3471

I

STUDENT D£SIS, SECIET AllES,
INEE-HOlE DESKS I IOU-TOPS
Reg. S249.00 DESKS ....................................................,......... SALE· S199

DESK SALE

S) 99

leg. '219.00 DESIS ............................................................ SAlE S239
Reg. $369.00 DESIS ............................................................ SALE S299
S419.00 DESKS ............................................................. SALE S389

,

Special furniture .
For That Special
Place In Your Home
At A'lery Special
· Price!

'ACCESSORY
SALE

BERKLINE
SALE
WAUAWAY RECUNERS, ROCK-0-lOUNGERS, and
SWIVR ROC:KERS

LAMPS, GUN CABINETS,
CEDAR CHESTS, WOOD
KNICK-KNACK STANDS,
CURIO CABINETS, HALL
TREES, CONSOLE/MIRROR
SETS AND ACCENT

n

TABLES.

'

Beautiful, yet durable, fabrics end Berkline's
famous quality conltruction

SALE PRICES YOU'lllliE!

Holiday

i -~.-· ·
~

· CARPET SALE

Saxony Carpet, Berbers. Cut Loops. Level Loop
Carpet end Sculpturad Carpet. Stainm1ater and
Stain Release Styles Included.

THERE'S PlENTY OF TIME TO HAVE YOUR CARPET
INST AUED FOR THE HOLIDAY SEASON.

r;~~:s

Sl 399

sq. yd.

lnclu•s Carpet, Pad and l.a1ler

.

f

~

"t'ltt§rLVANIA Oil your list
..

f
I

•

GIRLS KNIT TOPS
&amp; TURTLE NECKS

· ~!!~ $833

If
f

POLY-GA:i6;,t~' 20 IIOWN

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

-

.

.

·:

'

-flriltl-

•180- -irlgMQjo o400 ftl
........... Sc•n.t Ill..., oVM&amp;/0_.., ""'"'
· aOullvldlo ln.rtt•V•Wile.,clooutp.III•A.mate
CUMCiftW' CDdfglnat &lt;omb Flter eROIS A.mallt on-~ .,_,., •1 78 ch.-.NI upMJillv
•Lhlrne "CI• Vu" lenlwetrlnty.
You won't bell.,• the QullftV end SltlrPn•a
on the picture. You don't h•• tD have 1
huge room. ld• .. viMinl &lt;lltence II
8ft. to 14 fl .

S•P" Speelel
'

.

'
••I

SALE

$1 999
1

Spaelal

l

FREE

DELI~ERV

cf
tiiNintRI.. APPliANCES, 1V'S, fLOOI cov.-o

992-3671
DOWIITOWI POIFIOY, OliO

'

. I'
!

,.

$307

·'

l

.

Remote • 2 Heads
On Screen Display
VHS Format

Cable Ready·
Remote Control

Tu... -s.t.
9:30 am-11 pm

•'

SYLVANIA VCR

19" REMOTE
COLOR TV

HUGE 46 INCH SCREEN

OPEN
Mon. 9:30 •m-8 pm

I

-

I

TUBE SOCKS
3inPkg.$188PIG. ,
Size 8-11 ,

If

•DDLIPOII, OMO

SALE PRICED
FROM ONLY

SALE PRICED DEVON ~

SWEATOS .............. $17 18 JACKETS ................. $2 581
PANTS .................... $1411 $KIRTS .................... S1611
ODDS &amp; I liDS SALE lAC I" ...........................14••

~

"

$1618

C.

"'

A
Htppg

COliER OF GEIEUL IIARRtGEI
PARKWAY I PUlL mEn

Assorted styles in either soli~
·alder or sohd oak. Beautifully
upholstered seats and backs.

_. \

All DEVON . ·Ao~:NAL20°/o OFF

•

'Vtufhtn '1 Cttdlntl Would
tiki To Wl1h E~,gone

Thtnbfl~lnfl

0 OFF

· .

&lt;(

g,,,

GLIDER ROCKERS

BOYS WHITE

~::.~~~..........!~;.. s149
HAM SALAD ..... !~;.. ~ 249

tnd

Wh1t ~ Wo•derful 81ft!

.l

..•'

:~~~~.~............!~;.. $2 49

II•••• Speelals

~ INFANT SW.EATERS
~ Girls/loys lutten-Up

·'

$ 119

'81FT SALE!

C REGISTER FOI DOOR PIIIES-FRH COFFEE &amp; COOKIES

.

JL

but youml&amp;htnotwant to do It on
ThanlcJCivinl."
The Butterball Turkey TalkLine began fleldlq phOne calla
Oct. 30 and will condnue to
operate until Dec. 22. It can be
reached at 1·800-323-4848.
.

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

·~-

SUNDAY 1:00-5:00 P.M.

C

.
'
..'•
'

~

HERR'S-10112 OZ. 3 PAK

_____....._____

r;ar••• Ope•

fit RR ,

q q('

.-'-"'"

· you have to keep turnln11lt every
few minutes and remove the
drippings . And you have to brush
the turkey with a browning
sauce.
"It's a lot more work and
attention. The results are great,

HOLIDA~

ANDRE D. GHOLSON
E. Vreeland, son of Lyn K.
Army Reserve Pvt. Andre D.
Vreeland of Route 1, Gallipolis,
Gholson has completed basic
OH, has completed recruit trainIng ~t Recruit Training Comtraining at Fort Leonard Wood,
. mand, Great Lakes, Ill.
Mo.
During th~ eight-week training
During the training, students
cycle, he studied general mil·
received Instruction in drUI and
ltary subjects designed to preceremonies, weapons, map read·
· lng, tactics, military courtesy,
pare him for further academic
military justice, first aid, and
and on·the·job trahllng In one of
the Navy's 85 basic fields.
Army history and traditions.
His studies Included seamanGholson is the grandson of
ship, close order drill, Naval
Louise D. Jones of Point Plea·
history' and first ald. Persorinel
sant, W.Va.
who complete this course of
He Is a 19~9 graduate of Point
instruction are eligible for three
Pleasant High School.
hours of college credit In PhysiJO ELLEN WILL
cal Education
.
.. and Hygiene.
~avy Seaman Jo Ellen Will,
daughter of William B. and
Margaret J. Crane of 425 Rutllind
MICHAEL A. McFANN
St., Middleport, OH, has comNavy Seaman Recruit Michael
pleted recruit training at Recruit A. McFann, son of Darrell F.
Training Command, Orlando, McFann of 49 Chlllecothe Road,
Fla.
Gallipolis, OH, has completed
During the·eight-week training recruit training at Recruit Train- •
cycle, she studied general mil· lng Command, Great Lakes, Ill. ·
ltary subjects designed to pre·
During the eight-week training
pare her for further academic cycle, he studied general mil·
and on-the-job training In one of llary subjects designed to prethe Navy's 85 basic fields.
pare him for further academic
Her studies Included seaman· and on-the-job training In one of
ship, close order drUI, Naval the Navy's 85 t&gt;aslc fields.
'history and first ald. Personnel
ills studlts included seamanwho complete this course of ship, close order drUI, Naval
Instruction are eligible for three hiStory and first ald. Personnel
ho11rs of college credit In Physl- who complete this course of
Instruction are eligible for three
.cal Education and Hygiene.
A 1988 graduate of Meigs High hours of coll~ge credit in Physi·
School, she joined the Navy in cal Education and Hygiene.
Aprll1989.
A 1989 graduate of Jackson
HAROLD E. VREELAND
High School, Jackson, he joined
Navy Seaman Recruit Harold the Navy In July 1989.

HOURS: 1i A.M.-10 P.M. DAILY

Community

"Even though the ads show a
huge turkey, 12 pounds really Is
about the most you can do. You
need the space for the waves to
circulate. It takes about 2 Y.r
hours to microwave a turkey but

·
home economists don't recom·
mend Is microwaving turkeys.
"It's really not practical to do

move the thermometer to the
breast area. That should read
170. The stuffing should be 160 to
165. Youwanttomeetallofthose
temperatures for food safecy."
Schnelle recommends the open
pan method, which gives the
meat a roasted flavor. She also
said basting Is unnecessary because the liquid just rolls off the
skin and into the pan.
"It's really a waste of time,"
she said. ''JUst put a little oil on
the skin before you start baking
and that's all you need."
Not all the questions have to do
with cooking, per se.
Schnelle said the talk line has
taken calls from people who have
cleaned their turkeys with a bar
of soap and cooked the soap In the
bird.
'They want to know if the
turkey Is safe to eat," Schnelle
said. "We tell them we don't
think It would taste very good and
they certainly wouldn't enjoy the
gravy:
''Then there was the lady who
found her kitten In her turkey .
You know how cats are. They
climb into bags and boxes. Well
the cavity of a big turkey is just
like a cave. She bad left the
turkey In the sink to defrost and
when she walked back into the
kitchen .s he saw this tall hanging
out."
Schnelle said the cat woman
didn't ask for advice, she just
called to relay the story.
"Personally , I would have
thrown the turkey out. But she
didn't ask me," Schnelle said.
Schnelle said one thing her

__. .;·In
. the service--

Syr•us•, Ohio

Peoples Choice Video

The Sacred Heart Roman·
Catholic Church will host the
annual community Thanksglv·
tng service sponsored by the
Meigs County Ministerial Associ·
a lion at 7 p.m. on Wednesday .
The Rev. Don Meadows, pastor
of the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church will bring the message.
Special music will be provided by
the Methodist and Sacred Heart
choirs.
The offering will be deslgna ted
for the Ministerial Association's .
work to assist the needy in the
. area.

Reese named SE director

- CHICAGO lUPI) - The tur·
key's In the sink and the kitten's
In the turkey. What's a cook to
do?
'
The Butterball Turkey TalkLine lo the rescue.
This Is the ninth year the
Swlfi·Eckrlch Inc., based in Oak
Brook, has thrown consumers a
lifeline In the annual battle with
the Thanksgiving bird.
Jean Schnelle, director of the
ta1k line, said Tuesday her 46
home economists are being deluged by calls from people who
want to serve the perfect turkey
on Thanksgiving Day .
· "Last year was our biggest,"
said Schnelle, a home economist
for 30 years. "We got 6,000 calls.
Yesterday, though, we took 6,246
calls and another 7,520 people got
help from a taped system that
tells them how to check for
doneness and thawing ."
Schnelle said some questions
never &lt;;hange. The No. 1 Inquiry
Is how to cook the perfect looking
turkey and still lrave It taste
juicy.
"We recommend cooking It at
325," Schnelle said. "That's
gentle enough to keep the meat
juicy and make· It look picture
perfect. The typical 16·pound
turkey that's been stuffed wlll
. take four-and-a·half hours, half·
an-hour less for an unstuffed
turkey.
"You check It by using a meat
thermometer. Put It in before
putting turkey In the oven. Putlt
In the meaty part of thigh not
touching bone. It should read 185
when the turkey's done. Then

' Paga-10

WltDNESDAY
BURLINGHAM -The Word of
STIVERSVILLE -The Stl· Lite Church in Burlingham will
versville Word of Faith Church,
serve a free Thanksgiving dinner
located on County Road 31,
beginning at noon. A worship
St!versville-Baldknob, will be service wlll be conducted
having a revival through Friday . throughout the day.
at 7:30p.m. with Alton and Kathy
Dozier. Dozier Is called as a
FRIDAY
prophet and evangelist. They are
POMEROY -The Pomeroy
from Bonifay, Fla. Pastor Gary Senior Citizens Square Dance
Holter welcomes the public.
Club will have a dance on Friday
from 8-11 p.m. at the senior
RUTLAND -The Zion Church citizens center. Music will .be
of Christ, Route 143, Is presenttng provided by True Country
a Thanksgiving eve play, ''The Ramblers-and the public Is
Long Table" which Includes
Invited to attend. Those attend·
several of the congregation being . lng are to bring snacks for the
Involved In the play, directed by
snack table.
Kathryn Johnson. ·Historical
facts will be presented and
SATURDAY
woven Into the presentation with
CHESTER -The Cllester Voliumor and music. There will be a
lunteer .Fire Department will
pie fellowship following the play
have a soup supper on Saturday
which begins at 7 p.m.
beginning at 4 p.m. Vegetable or
potato soup w111 be available for
POMEROY -A special
eat In or carry out. Soup will be
Thanksgiving service will be sold by the quart and purchasers
held at the Pomeroy Church of must furnish their own
Christ on Wednesday at 7 p.m.
container.
Leo Nash, minister, Invites the
public. .
'
HARRISONVILLE -The Harrisonville Holiness Chapel will
'1'HURSDAY
have revival Saturday through
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Dec. 3 at 7:30p.m. nightly with
g;oup of A.A. and AI Anon wlll 'Rev. Nadine Fetterman as the
meet Thursday at 7 p.m. at the evangelist.
Sacred Heart Cathol!c Church.
For Information call
1-800-333-5051.

It ior Thanksgiving," she said.

.1.'

Wedna1day. November 22. 1989

Community-catendar

Ponwoy-Midclaport. Ohio

•rd
Talking turkey for the per£ect bl

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,I

S2 7S

�Pomeloy-MidrJaport. Ohio

.

Neece in
• •
competttton

SOCC participates tn
• •
grant competttton
'

Meigs County census records and
teaching students about the
1820--1910 periOd, Holcomb's
grant dealt wltb his woodcooker
project and bts plans for a foods
processing lab, Mrs . . Crow's
grant ·dealt with "Computer
Literacy-Challenge of the 21st
century" which enabled her to
purchase software for the class·
rooms for grades one through
three.
This Is the fourth year of the
I'
Partnerships In Education spon·
J
sored by Southern Ohio Coal
,
Company, Meigs Division which
ont"1i~eS
Includes schools tn the three
t;;;o "
t;;;o
• dis trlcts where their mines are
A luncheon for retired GTE operated.
Telephone operations empjoyees
Accordtnghto a report from the
living In the AthensPomeroy Southern Ohio Coal Company,
area w.a s held recently at tile teachers tn these districts were
Sportsman Restaurant In eligible to compete for mint
Athens.
·
grants totaling ~.ooo. The ~eport
Attending were Glenn Thomp- also noted that the average grant
son, Herb Noel, Everett Light· Is usually $350-$400.

The Meigs Local Schools par·
ttctpated In the annual SoutheTn
Ohio Coal Company mini grant
competition held recently.
Recipients of tbe iiTanls were
Margie Blake, Michael Gerlach,
and Everett Holcomb, all from
Meigs High School, and Pam
Crow from Ssllsbury .'
.. Mrs. Blake's grant dealt wiiJl
''Teens at Risk lor Heart Dis·
ease," Gerlach's grant dealt with

GT'E honor.'
1i

GRANT RECiPIENTS -Tb- people partkllpated In the fourth IUinual Soulbera Ohio Coal
Company mini grant competlllen beld recendy.
ftey are, 1-r; front row, Mar11e Blake, and Pam
Crow. Back row, Jim Tomp~, vice president,

seneral mua1er ·Soulbem OblO Coal Company
Melp Dlvlllon; .Jim Carpenter, Melp Loeal
Superintendent; Mike Gerlach, Everett Holcomb,
aad Jim Gerkln, human resources and staff
development mana1er, AEP Fuel Supply.

Shelba Wickline, of Racine,
has been recogniZed by Farmers
Home Administration lor super, lor performance in loan servic·
jng of. FmHA's Single Family
Housing Loan program. Her
exceptional efforts have resulted
in the highest elllciency In
housing loan collection In DIS·
trlct IV in Ohio. FmHA has
awarded her a certificate of

merit for this achievement,
which substantially exceeded the
loan servicing goals set lor the
Pomeroy County OH!ce.
FmHA provideS credit to low
and very low income families to
buy, build or improve homes in
rural areas.
For more tnlorrnatlon, contact
Farmers Home at 200 East
Second St., Pomeroy, 45769, or
call 992·6644.

\

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28-YEARAWARDS-PieaaaatVaiJeyHoapllal
employees honored for II yean of service are,
. from left, Don Fonllee, Ml!l')' Underwood and

..._... . . ._.....
.,.~

..

PhOIIp PureeD. Not -pictured are Joyce Donohew
and Louise Roush.

."Your Prolessio.nal Full
Seruice Jewelers"
· 113 Court St.; Pomeroy. Ohio
Invites you to our 5th .1\NNU..\L

CIJQI0TMA0
and

UK Gold &amp; Diamond Sale
25-YEAR AWARDS - Michael G. Sellards, left,
executive director of Pleasant Valley Hospital,
!Uid Trenton stover .Jr., president of the PVB

Sunday, November ·26, 1989
11 :00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.

Board of Trutee, poee w&amp;th Treau Turner,
secliud from left, · and Daisy WIUiams; 25 year
employees of the hospital.

ONE DAY ONLY
1

AIJ. 'l4K

GOLD

60%~AIL

CHAINS-CHARMS-BRACELETS
Over $500,000.00 in 14K gold

Satiofectlon Gu•ranteed or Money Back

...,_.,.,.,_,_,_..__•.._...,_"-_._-.,.........-...,._.._,_,_..,.,

Our Futory Rep. wiD be here one clay only
with biJ entire Une oi14K gold -Ill at 60%

...,_~ -~-~

oft. Layawaya ~ welcome. Tbia il the sale
you've helrd about. Save today.

J

f

FREE DOOR PRIZFS

Tlie lint 15 people In aur IIDre ncetve a lG&lt; Gold
Brseellt-,
.
'lbe lltll per- rectlva 1ft 18", UK Gold Cbala
.'lbel?tll per- rectJve. a Blackllllll GoldNect*e

"
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'
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:
s
.;Clark'
Jewelry Store

AFTER tKESEAREGIVENAWAY: MOREDOOR

PlUZES EVERY TWO HOURS

•

·'","

Come

'P VH presents awards

STOP IN AND SEE THESE PLUS OTHER
ITEMS FOR A SUPER Gin IDEA.

PRESIIPTION SHOP
'

.

Ill."'lf¥0Chrl
MODEL2238

SongJvfakrr"

3/8" Drive Cordless
Power Wreoch
•All metal housing
•120 RPM-both forward and reverse
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l•i• :1"' ......

- - .,.., • pldc.
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.Yalu- o o - on lllllor Mid ompiHI•
•EIHirOnlc bull· In ampHftw
•Power-On LE.D. incblllor
•Pr..crung with I rNI tulter 11rinll •llf.t¥ oparatM on 4C bltterlw
•Stage ml«-'-o wloh ldju-o
lnot
-.~

28"'·;·ir·

In_,

$34 99
786 NORTH
SECOND

MIDDLEPORT
992-6491

VALLEY
555 PARI ST.
I

LUMB~R

MIDDLEPORT
'

PaO:Ooy

Waaeh• 2Sftolf,11114Miek.,M-Colleet-

15-YEAR AWARDS- PleuantValleyBosptUII
honored for 15 years of aervlce are,
front row, from left, Aleta Weaver, JullaLon1 and

COLLEC't:ION .

.

au--. 25ft eff1 Bl.,. HUla Golcl 20ft off1

employee~~

Complete With Stage Mirophene and Speaker lox

THE BERRY BASKET
SYIICUSI, •o

Sellarda, execu.We director, Betty Love, nunlns
. . .tan&amp; In the PI-&amp; Valley Ho~pbal
Emer1ency Care Center, lim Jordan, special
projec&amp;s coordinator Ia Plant Operatlou, and
Trenton stover Jr. , president oftbe PVB Bqard of
Truatees.

Clark's

Please Add •2.00 Postage &amp; Handling
Please Make Check or MO Payable To:
Middleport Trophies &amp; Awards
50 Riverview Drive
Middleport, OH. 45760

The l(arrtsonville Holiness
Chapel wlll hold revival Satur·
day through Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m.
each evening with Rev. Nadine
Fetterman, Summerhill, Pa., as
the evangellst.

ELECTRONIC AMPLIFIED GUITAR

NOYEMIEI 26TH AND 27TH
10:00 A.M.·I:OO P.M.
SUNDAY, NOYEM•I 21TH, 1:00 P.11.·6:00 P.M.

30-YEARAWARDS- Pleasant Valley Hospital'
honored two employees, who bave been wlth &amp;he
facility since It opened Its doon to patlen&amp;llln 18118,
, when II held Us annual Employee Senlce Awardll
luncheon this week. Pictured are Michael G .

MAKE YOUR STATEMENT!

RY-1194

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY

•

Country Music Night wlll be
held at the Lottrldge Community
Center, Lottrldge Saturday night
starting at 7 p.m. All singers and
bands are welcome to partie!·
pate. Admission Is 50 cents, Food
and beverages will be sold., The
Lottrldge Community Center Is
located on Athens County Road
53 South (Lottridge Road), five
miles west of Coolvllle on State
Route 50 West.

B

a

WE INVITE YOU TO OUR
HOLIDAY OPEN HOUSE

•

Country music
night scheduled· ·

.

People in the.news

·r

\._

loot, Orin
Secoy,Fair,
LowellEverett
Patter· ' - • - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - .
son,
Lowell
Lasure, Damon Bentley, Kenley
Krinn, BUI Anderson, Billy Joe
Spencer, John Forbes, Millie
.,-.,.__...lrl.liantlill·y
. .Screen.! in .... Wlitt &amp; ....
Burnside, Joanne Tatterson,
Gladys Walker, Dorothy Jen·
klns, Winifred Frank, Helen
Swaim, Audra Bretz, Grace ·
Arnfleld; Clarys Stack, Lena
Kirkendall Hayes, Mildred Kir·
kendall, Gfortrude Mitchell, and
Frances Mabel Hess.
All combined these 25 em·
ployees represent 720 years of
telephone service.

Revival set

f"""----~

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SUBLIMATED CAPS
S4.SO

SHELBA WICKLINE

By United Press International
SHE'S BAAAACK: z:sa Z8a Gabor won't go quietly. Her
attorney , Harrlsoo E. Bull, has !lied the tnevlta ble appeal to
overturn her conviction lor slapping a Beverly Hills cop. The
appeal, rtled in Beverly Hills Municipal Court Monday, means
ZsaZsa's sentence will automatically be stayed -Including the
$13,000 tn penalties she was ordered to pay . Unless the
conviction Is overturned or the sentence altered, Gabor wlll owe
72 hours in jallllme, 120 hours of community service and must
submit to a psychiatric evaluation. Deputy District Attorney
Elden Fex says he wasn't surprised by the appeal and predicted
tlla\ "eventually, Ms. Gabor ·wlll oel'\le her time."
.
SWAN LAKE SWAN SONG: RudoU Nureyev is stepping down
as director of dance at the Parts Opera by mutual agreement,
but he's not severing his relationship with the theater. Opera
officials created a special job for Nureyev, 51, as "first
choreographer." The agreement means that Opera President
Pierre Berge can retain two Nureyev arrangements in the
winter program at the theater - renditions of "Sleeping
Beauty" and "Swan Lake." Nureyev, whosecontractexplred In
August, had been criticized by some French dance critics for
spending little time In Parts.
KITI'Y OUT: Kitty Dukakls's first public appearance since
being 1)05pital ized for drinking rubbing alcohol was the funeral
of a family friend. Dukakis and her husband, Massachusetts
Gov. Michael Dukakls, flew to Holymoke, Mass., in a helicopter
Monday to attend services for Anne McHugh, a member of the
state Board of Regents of Higher Education. "KittyDukakls felt
very, very close to Anne McHugh over a span oftwo decades," a
Dukakis spokeswoman said. "She very much wanted to be
there." Afterward, Mrs. Dukakis, who underwent alcohol
rehabilitation earlier this year, went back to the Boston hospital
where she will be going Intermittently for the next week.
Meanwhile, four psychologists are being lnves ligated by the
Massachusetts Board of Registration of Psycl!ologists because
they were quoted in newspaper stories as saying that Mrs.
Dukakis's drinking relapse could be attributed to the emotional
.
burdens In her marriage.
NEWS FROM THE WALL: Graham Nash had the perfect
song lor the Tuesday performance of Crosby, SIUis and Nash on
th·e western side of the Berlin Wall. He was going to sing
"Chipping Away," a tune he wrote about the wall two years ago
... President Bush now has his own piece or the wall. West
German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher gave him
with the brick-size chunk Tuesday as "an expression of the
strength of freedom and democracy all over Germany. ''Bush
replied: "l wlll treasure this and I would like to take this
opportunity to share this fact that the foreign minister brought
me this piece of the wall and he brought with the thanks of the
federal. chancellor to the American people and this Is a good
chance to say thank you, sir."
GLIMPSES: Formor "Dllfrent Strokes" star Todd Bridges,
24, will be retried on charges or assault with deadly weapon lor
woundihg a drug dealer during a drug binge at a Los Angeles
crack house. Bridges's first trial ended Nov. 9 with an acquittal
on an attempted murder charge and an 8-4 deadlock in favor of
acquittal on the assault charge ... Jazz legend Dizzy Gillespie
was given a Governor's Award Tuesday from New Jersey Gov.
Thomas Kean . Gillespie was on tour and missed the Statehouse
ceremony in Trenton, but Kean praised him by saying, ''Some
celebrities are instantly recognizable for some facial feature:
Jimmy Durante's nose, Farrah Fawcetls hair, PauiNewmaa's
eyes, MarUyn Monroe's birthmark. But nobody else I can think
or was ever known for his cheeks."

Amanda Faye Neece. ·daugh·
ter ·of Ed and Rhonda Neece,
Middleport, won fl;st place In the
queens category, first In hoop,
and second place In basic strut at
the NBTA Competition at Ra·
venswood High School on Nov.4.
Miss Neece Is a member of the
Rutt1es and Flourishes Baton
and Porn Porn Corps.

TEE SHIRTS
$7.00
FLEECE SWEAT SHIRTS
$13.00

Wickline is honored

Pomaoy-Middlaport. Ohio

Wednllday, November 22. 1989

Wednalllay. Nowalnber 22. 1989

'

Pleasant Valley Hospltai, cele·
bratlng Its 30th anniversary this
year; has recognized two employees for their roles in provld·
tng quality medical care to the
people of our community since
the facility opened its doors to
patients In 1959.
·
Betty Love a nursing aulstant
In the Pleasant Valley Hospital
Emergency Care Center, and
Jim Jordan, special projects
coordinator In Plant Operations,
were among 76 employees ho·
nored when the hospital held its
annual Service Awards . Luncheon Monday, Nov. 13. They
received gold watches hearing
the PVH insignia and special
congratulations from Trenton
Stover Jr., president of the Board
of Trustees, and Michael G.·
Sellards, executive director,
along with applause from their
fellow workers attending the
luncheon.
· Sellards shared with the em·
ployees the remarks of former
West VIrginia Governor Cecil
Underwood, who dedicated the
hospital in 1959, upon his return
several months ago for the 30th
anniversary celebration. Alter
touring the hospital, he said, "the
governor was exceptionally im·
pressed with what this organlza·
tton has done In 30 short years In
bringing health care to Mason
County and the surrounding

Olllce; Maudle Chadwick, NursIng Services; Kathryn Cook,
Nursing Services-Nursing Care
Center; Patricia Diamond, NursIng Services; JoAnne Durst,
Laboratory; Nei.Jle Durst, Nurs·
lng Services; Rebecca English,
Medical Records; Diane Epling,
Anesthesia-Recovery Room;
Frankie Farley, Food Services;
Jerry Fillinger, Plant Opera·
lions and Karla Forbes, ·
Laboratory.
·
Margie Grinstead, Nursing
Serviees; William HamUton,
Purchasing; Faith Harris, Bustness Office; Jettle Hendrick,
Environmental Services; Helen
Johnson, Anesthesia-Recovery
Room ; Lauri Johnson,
Anesthesia-Recovery Room: Lu·
clnda Jordan, Data Processing;
Rose Jordan, Food Services;
Paula Keefer, NursinJ! Services:
Peggy Kinnard, LaundryNursing Care Center; Erma
Leach, ' Food Services; Sandra
Lucas, llustness Office; Pamela
Michael, Nursing Services; Tina
Myers, Nursing Services; Cecil
Newell, Environmental Services
and David Norvell, Purchasing.
Velva Pierson, Nursing
Services-Nursing Care Center;
Billie Ralbusky, Cardlo·
Respiratory Services; Myrtle
Roush, Nursing Services; Phyl·
Its Russell, Nursing Services;
Judith Ry_mer, Nursing Servi·
area."
ces; Phyllis Sargent, Physical
Honore~ . In addition to Love
Therapy; Karen Sayre, Nursing
and Jordan were Tressa Turl)er Services; Mary Sayre, Food
of Environmental Services, and Services; Diana Shinn, Nursing
Daisy Williams of Nursing Servl· services; Pamela Snyder,
ces, for 25 years of service; and Cardio-Respiratory Services;
Joyce Donohe\\!, Nursing Servi·
Joy Stephens, Nursing Services;
ces, Donald Forshee, Plan tOper·
Nancy Stevens, Nursing
attons, Phillip Purcell, Nursing Services-Nursing Care Center;
Services-Nursing Care Center,
Pamela Stover, Laundry·
Louise Roush, N,urstng Services Nursing Care Center and Paula
and Mary Underwood, Business Sullivan, Nursing Services.
Office, for 20 years of service.
Clarence Vaughn, Radiology;
Also receiving service awards
Ron VIckers, Physical Therapy;
were:
Wanda Wamsley,FoodServlces;
15 YEARS- David Champer,
Vickie Wedge, Nursing Services;
Environmental Services; James Joe Whittington, Cardio·
Clark, Accounting; Brenda Ed·
Respiratory Services; Marsha
monds, Nursing Services; Diane Wilson, Pharmacy; Vi Wright,
l!':rrett, Business Office; Carol Nursing Services and Debra
Long, Cardio-Respiratory Servl· · Young, Radiology.
c~; Julia Long, Food Services·
FIVE YEARS - Rebecca
Nursing Care Center; David
Browning, Laboratory; John
Reynolds, Environmental Servl·
Craddock, Purchasing, Sue Hus·
~; Sandra Sprouse, Nursing
sell, Nursing Services; Slllly
Se~vice. ,and Aleta Weaver,
Litchfield, Nursing Services·
Environmental Services.
Nursing Care Celller; Diana
10 YEARS - M. Joan Absten,
Riddle, Nursing Services; Lillian
LB.undry-Nunlng Care Center;
Smith, Nurslag Services and
Dbnna Bec;kner, Data ProcessShan a Vanscoy, Nursing
Ing; Norma Caldwell, Business
Services.

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Early .and Save!

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Pre-Christmas
AT

MASON FURNITURE

co.

•

PRICES IN EFFECT NOW THRU SATURDAY, DEC. 23RD

WIDTE IRON DAYBED
WITH LINK SPRINGS

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.~4

•

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CURIO

CABINETS

Our Selection or Styles and
Finishes Ia Complete.
Buy Now Fbr Christmas/

PRICED FROM.

POPUP UNITS&amp;
BEDDING EXTRA

NBBDA
D.UKf

Come In IIIII 11t our
lll'llly ~ dllllb·llllleplflllstudenl
i.o ·-In ltod!.

Grmt Sdections
At
Super Stnlingsl

�'

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14-The

November 22.

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Ohio fu·m's loan
boosts landfill

~I

ANDERSON, Ind. (UPI) -A
$220,000 loan from an Ohio finn
has given new life toanAnaerson
company's fight to open a new
sanitary landfill In Madison
County.
Area residents have fought the
13-acre Mallard-Lake Landfill for
eight years because of Its proxtmlty to a school. Neighbors also
say· the landfill could pose a
threat to their well water.
The loan was made In March
by Franklintown Development
Co. Inc., an Ohio corporation, to
JM Corp., an Anderson finn
formed 11 years ago to set up the
landfill.
Mark Reed, vice president of
JM, said Tuesday that the money
has helped the company obtain
the last permlts needed to
operate the landfill.
Franklintown's o!flcers Inelude David Ehrlich and Louis D.
Paolino Jr.

•

COMP1JTER DONATION - QriRnuls came

euv for tile L.D.

Tile computer wu Bet up oa Monday lllld &amp;be kldl u-e ready to
betrbl their learalal experleaces OD tile compoter. Mn. TIDII noted
tllat lbe claas collld pt tile aeceuary prop'DIIIB whkh would atd
the children Ia specific areas. Tbnmy Erwin, seated, II one -of 15

class at &amp;lie Rlltlalld El-11117 School. Tile clus was &amp;he
reclplnl of u IBM computer wltll a laser prlDter which wu
donated by Depua Chemical Ia Belpre. DaaiQ' Tillis, who works
tor the compaay, lllld wllo Is &amp;he bubaad of Saundra TIBia, LD.
teacher Is In par&amp; reapollllble for the doaa&amp;loa, because wbea &amp;he
chemic~ company switched over to a aew compu&amp;i!r system he
sourbl penniMion &amp;o doaate oae of the old computen to the class.

students lo Mrs. Saundra Tlllll' LD. class at Rutlaad Elementary ·
who will have the chaace lo work on &amp;bls computer. Pictured wllh
Erwin, from the left, are Mrs. Tillis, Anthony Jones, and Keith
Arlx.

·

Activists demand changes
at Sea World's petting pool

•

SAN DIEGO (UPI)- Antmal
rights activists charged Tuesday
that dolphins In petting pools at
Sea World and other marine
parks are going blind from eye
irritation caused by harsh sunlight and high chlorine levels.
A coalition of animal welfare
groups said they will urge St.
Louis-based Anheuser-Busch,
the new owner of the Sea World
chain, and the U.S. Department
of Agriculture to Investigate
conditions of animals In marine
park petting pools.
The charges of abuse, which
were vehemently denied by a Sea
World official, might prompt
federal action, a USDA official
said.
"We have had no indication
that there are problems, outlf we
did, we would Investigate them,"
said Dr. Homer Malaby of the
Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service.
Jim Antrim, seniOr curator at
the Sea World San Diego park,
called the allegations "completely absurd" and said chlorine
levels at Sea World petting pools
are lower than those found in tap
water and human swlmrnlng
pools.
"Why on earth would Sea
World add chemicals to Its pools
that would harm Its animals?"
Antrim said.
At a news conference Tuesday,
Scott Trimlngham of the Sea
Shepherd Conservation Society
displayed a color photograph of
what appeared to be a shriveled
dolphin eye and said, ''These
animals' eyes, for some reason,
are. deteriorating."
' They're either blind now or
nearly so, judging by the sunken
black holes whel'f! their eyes
should be," he said. The damage
likely was caused by a combination of unrelenting sunlight and
extra chlorine added to petting
p@ls to kill off bacteria from
human hands, he said.
Richard O'Barry of the
Flbrida-based Dolphin Project
said federal regulations do not
specify optimal chlorine levels
bu,t dg.oo require that shade he
pr~vlded
over pools when

temperatures reach 85 degrees
for more than 15 minutes.
However, O'Barry said, the
government has been either
unable or unwilling to enforce
marine mammal care regulations. 'The USDA doesn't work.
They're lns~tlng hot dogs one
day and dolphins the next," he
said.
O'Barry, a formeremployeeof
the Miami. Seaquarlum, said
pet tlng pools there and at the four
Sea World parks could be retrofitted with ozone filtration systems to eliminate the need for
chlorine and with external shade
overhangs or underwater shade
coves.

However, Antrim denied that
shade Is a problem for the 16
dolphins and two pilot whales In
the 13·foot-deep petting pool In
San Diego. 'They can stay
-submerged as long as they like to
get re lieffrom sunlight," he said.
Asked If any animals have
suffered eye damage, Antrim
said, "We do have a couple of
older animals In the pool with
Impaired vision ·but . It's not
because of the chlorine."
The activists also charged
that, along with eye damage,
marine mammals In petting
pools suffer from obesity caused
by overfeeding and from psychological abuse when visitors taunt
them with food.

NOTICE

CORNER COLLECnONS, on the "T" in Middleport, will be
offering a PRE-CHRISTMAS 'SPECIAL to you
3 DAYS ONLY, NOV. 24, 25, 26.
Buy one item at regular price, get SECOND ITEM at a 2SOfo
DISCOUNT. (Does not includt clearance items.)
We offer FREE GIFT WRAPPING and LAYAWAY PlAN
with NO service charge. ·
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•

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ONE
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MEAT SALAD •••••••••~ ••• ~ ••••~••••••• 89&lt;
SWifT KDICH
JUMBO BOLOGNA •••••••••~! .. s1.29.
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POT AT(IES .........~t~P•. s1.19

lliAFT 16 SLICE PROCESS

AMERIC4N
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26Ta
12:00 NOON • s:oo P.M.
"Free Refrallments"
.f.{re Invitetf 'To Sfiop 'Witli Vs On Surufay, 9{orJ. 26'~
.flts We Xict Off'!Tit. Cliristmas Season!
ry-ou 'fi rin£ '11ilse Savings &amp; !More
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CHRISTMAS CANDLES....................................25o/o OFF
SELECTED MUSIC BOXES.............................20o/o OFF

SLUG

SEASON

Ehrlich, listed as the company 's secretary, was responsl·
ble for putting together deals for
three Indiana facilities In 1988
that now acceptlarge amounts of
out-of-state trash.
Gov. Evan Bayh and other
state officials have expressed
concern over the Influx of out-ofstate trash .lnto Indiana, saying
the . state has limited landfill
capacity for Its own trash.
Paolino, listed as Franklin·

town's president, also Is with
Joseph PaoUno and Sons Inc. of
Philadelphia.
That company Is at the center
of a controversy Involving out-of·
state garbage shipped by rail to
Center Point Landfill In Clay
County.
EhrUch at one time was
associated wlth the company
that owns Center Point Landfill.
The Indiana Department of
Environmental Management
and the Philadelphia company
are Involved In federal litigation
over the shipment ofthe garbage
In railroad boxcars.
Indiana law requires a permlt
to move garbage from railroad
boxcars to vehicles for transfer
to lal)dfllls. Nosuchpermltshave
·been Issued.
Paolino and Sons counter that
tl)e permit Is a way around a 1978 ,
U.S. Supreme Court decision that
prevents states from banning
ou!-of·state trash.
Reed said the loan for the
Mallard Lake Landfill was not
tied to an agreement 10 accept
· out-of·state trash.
"We would rather not accept II.
We are not set up for It and there
Is too much publicity about It,"
Reed said.
Reed said the Ohio. company
made the loan because "loaning
money to a landfill Is good
business."

PINTO BEANS .........J~.~~·•• 2/S 1.39
Alll1 K'"A COIIPUTE
PANCAKE MIX ............. ~?.~~. S1.79
Alit CIOCIEI US 01.
HAMBURG PIZZA BAKE ••••• S1.69
CAJF.LL'S 101ft 01. ('M•M Of
MUSHROOM SOUP ••••••••• 2/S 1.19
DlLOGG'S
40°/o BRAN FLAKES •••••~!.~~., s2.39
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DICKENS SERIE$. .................................................20% OFF
SELECTED SEIKO WATCHES ........................;..~9.00
4 ROLL
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BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS.;......................25% OFF
MUSICAL CHRISTMAS
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351M CAMERA

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PRESCRIPI10N SHOP

.......

271 NORTH SECOND
.,

omo

Wedn11day,

November 22, 1989

The Deily Sentinei-Pege-15

Pomeroy Middeport, Ohio

Energy Department ~ays Mound 'goofed' reporting tritium leak
MIAMISBURG, Ohio (UP!) The Energy Department hu told
Gov. Richard Celeste the agency
erred In not reporting In li timely
nature a leak of radioactive
tritium.
The Nov. 8 leak at the Mound
nuclear weapons faciUty In Mia·
mlsburg was the largest release
of tritium gas at the site In 20
years. Environmental officials
said publiC exposure to the gas
was well below government
safety standards.
.
However, Energy Secretary
James Watkins said there were
communications problems on
reporting the leak to the state. In
a hand-written message at the
end of a Nov.16ietter to Celeste,
Watkins said: "In a word, Dick,
we goofed and we're sorry. .. .
We'll try hard not to goof next
time."
The letter said "some c·ommunlcatlon difficulties arose between the plant's' Emerg.~n~y

gency Operations Center Is activated by the Energ y
Department .
Agency."
The operations center was not
An envlroamental manager for
EG&amp;G Mound Technology, the activated until more than an hour
company that operates Mound after the release because 'EG&amp;G
for the government, challenged and department officials were
Watkin's auessment that Mound trying to determine whether to
use the center even though the
mlaJiandlecl notifying tbe state.
''Be's talking about something release was considered minor
he doesn't have the facts to base and was not req ulred to be
reported to the state, said P·at
It on," Dick Neff said Tuesday .
Marx,
EG&amp;:G manager of emerEt&gt;&amp;G officials reported the·
gency
preparedness.
evacuation of a bul!dlng folloW"We were trying to decide
Ing the leak of ahout3.7 grams of
whether
or not the situation
tritium gas to state olflclals at
warranted
notification," Marx
9: 55 a.m., 80 minutes after the
said.
accident. The leak occurred
when two containers hold lng a
nuclear weapons component
failed during a laser-drUllng
operation.
An agreement between state
emergency management off!·
clals and Mound calls for EG&amp;G
to Inform state officials within 15
minutes after Mound's EmerOperationa Center and the Ohio
Emergeacy Management

The state also challenged the
time It took Mound to report that
some of the tritium had escaped
off·slte, saying EG&amp;G officials
did not relay this Information
until 12:10 p.m. However, Marx
contends Mound reported the
Information to the state at 11:10 ·
a.m.
Dave Shlpely , deputy director
of the Ohio Emergency Management Authority, said In a Nov .13
memo to Celeste that an Investigation showe&lt;l the communications problem occurred because
Mound officials were confused
about how to assess the Impact of
the leak and classify it .

C~rl•t•••

Ope• Houte

suaDAY, DEcm111 31D
11:00 A.LJ:OO , ...
CIICI YM S'IIIS IKIIPT
FOI •e:111 Of IISCOMI Pll PIICifASI.
1001 P11U. • MCUR -ISSAIY. MID
1101 . . . . . . . 10 ....

RACINE DEPARTMENT
STORE
949·1100
lAC- OliO

· :JID S11111 .

MAITERCRD-VIIA-GOLOEN BUCKEYE

Ex-pilot .convicted.
of .wood chipper
dis~al of wife
NORWALK, Conn. (UPI) -A killed his wife and then disposed
former airline plio! faces up to 60 her . body In a wood-chipper, a
years In prison following his power-machine Into which large
Superior Court .conviction of branch~ and twigs are fed In
murdering his flight attendant . order to shred them Into chips.
Evidence In the trial consisted
wife and shredding her remains
of body fragments, Including
in a wood-chipping machine.
Richard Crafts, 51, was con· part of a human finger and
vlcted Tuesday of killing his wife, toenail, which the state pollee
Helle, 39, In their suburban recovered from the shore of Lake
Newtown home In November Zoar in Southbury.
Crafts' Initial trial last year In
1986. He will be sentioncedonJan.
New
London ended in a mistrial ·
8. Crafts faces between 20 years
w!,len
the only juror favoring
and 60 years In prison.
acquittal
·refused to continue
It was the second trial for
after
17
days
of deliberations.
Crafts on the cha'rge and the first
testified
he was InnoCrafts
murder conviction in Connect!·
cut history without a body for cent In his first trial but did not
evidence. The retrial lasted two take the stand In the second.
months.
The jury spent four days In
He was accused of killing his
deliberallons and jury foreman Danish-hom wife after she told
John David Walton attributed the · him sbe was ending their 11-year
decision to teamwork. The jury marriage because of his
spent only eight hours actually . Infidelity.
deliberating during the entire
Helle Crafts was last seen
deliberalton period.
entering their home Nov.18,1986,
Walton, who read a statement durlnc a snowstorm. Crafts, who
on behalf of the 11 men and one reported his wife missing on Dec.
woman, said the panel was "a 1, 1986, told pollee his wife had
very bright, committed team. left and said she was going to
We all had a high regard and visit her family, In Denmark. ,
respect for one another from the
The victim's mother, Eliza·
very beginning.",
beth Nielsen, 83, testified her
"We assigned roles to all and only child told her that she no
we used a building block analysis longer trusted her husband and
to reach our decision." Walton saldshehadnotheardfromHelle
said the panel "constructed the since the night she disappeared.
situation In very great detail . During the second trial Crafts'
using key evidence and testlm· ~ brother·ln·law, David Rodgers,
ony," he said.
testified that Crafts ,said pollee
The trial was made more searching for his wife's body In
difficult as thestatewas forced to Lake' Zoar would not find any. prove not only that Crafts was thing because there was no body.
guilty, but also that a crime had
"Let them dive, there's no
been committed. .
body. It's gone," Rodgers testiThe prosecution alleged Crafts fled Crafts said.

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Night launch promises
spectacular skyshaw
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla.
(.UP I) -The shuttle Discovery's ,
planned launch Wednesday
night. only the third after-dark
shuttle liftoff ever conducted,
poses special challenges In the
event of an emergency, but
NASA officials say safety will not
be compromised.
Discovery's exact launch time
is classified. but sources have
said U!toff is planned for around
7:30 p.m. EST to kidk off a
top-secret military mission. It
will be the first night shuttle
launch since Nov. 26, 1985.
The goal of the flight also Is
classified, but the shu tile's flvemem her crew reportedly will
launch a large spy satelUte to
eavesdrop on Sevlet
communlcallons.
NASA managers ruled out
night launches and landings for
the first several post-Challenger
shuttle flights as part of a
cOnservative miSsion philosophy
aimed at minimizing risk.
· But·with six daylight launches
safely conducted ·over the past
year, NASA rnanagers felt the
rebuilt space program was more
than up to the challenges posed
by night flights.
'
Launching at night presents
sl!veral problems. For example,
darkness makes it more difficult
to monitor changes Jn launch· ·
area weather and reduces vlslbll·
tty for photo documentation,
crucial In the event of an
accident.
lil tlddlllnn: an enllne failure
after launch could force uhuttle
crew to attempt a .ntallt Iandin&amp;
on emeraency runwaJs In Flor· .
Ida, Abica or Spain. Vlslblllty lz
limited, and the zhuttle, a lOO.ton
glider duting flpal approach,
\\iOUld have only one chance to
make It to the runway.
'But In 'some cases, shuttles

.

.

--

must he launched at night for
their satellites to be placed In the
proper orbits. That apparently is
the case with Discovery, and
with six post-Challenger shuttle
flights safely accomplished,
NASA managers had no hesitation clearing Discovery for a
night launch.
..The po~Jcy has been that.
while no night launches would be
planned for the early missions
after the resumption of flight,
there Is no prohibition of night
launches and. when there Is a
payload or mission requirement,
... a night launch will be scheduled," NASA said.
NASA plans to close out the
year by launching the shuttle
Columbia at night, around Dec.
20, on a 10-day mission to put an
unclassl!led Navy communlc~­
tlons satellite in orbit and to
retrieve a science satellite
dropped off ID space In 1984.
The shuttle Challencer bias ted
off at 2: 32 a.m. EDT on Aug. 30,
1983, In the first night shuttle
launch, a spectacular flight that
began with a splash of flame
after an Intense thunderstorm.
The only other night launch
occurred Nov. 26, 1985, when the
shuttle Atlantis blasted offal 7: 29
p.rn. EST on a mlslion to launch
three· communlcatlou ~atellltes
and todem0utrate space station
construction techniques.
That launch was visible from
North Carolina to Cuba.

1.-1
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�Wednesday, Novemt. 22. 1989

The oiily Sa ldt•ti-Paga 11

Pomeeoy-Midclapoft. Ohio

November 22. 1989

belp ~ beat in 011 cold oigltb.
• Doc 1
(S27 to fU). Durable
yet lOft,~ bed for dop
or &lt;:4b can be more attractive to
them than your furniture. Nan-&lt;:t~m·
preoslble espnded pol)'llrJ"IIC bed·
ding material retains pet bOdy beat, ·
not oclon.

*

BRING lleiiUy .dleer to ••

root111

wlllt llfb .-ll u plaall, bot tullocceaarles or a teleseope. Room by Solar~•-

um-Uke containers will fascinate children and adults alike.
• Aquarium ($50 to $350). Help
someone bqiD a quiet, pleasurable
bobby -collecting and studyinl! fish
- while nature looks on.
• Floor lamp ($50 to $250). A must
for evenings, of course .
• Exerbike ($75 to $200 or more).
Daily exercise on a stationary bicycle
promotes cardiovascular bealtb. In a
sun room, it's almost like ridinJ a real
bicycle in a park - and you can exercise in all kinds of weather.
• Indoor puttina green ($50). Surrounded by the outdoors, it's just like
the course. Yet golfers can practice
the mOil eucting component of their
game during any season.
• Window quill ($150). It's a fasbIOnable energy-efficient "pull up-pull
down' textured fabric sltade tbat will
block the sun on hot summer days or

•
THIS IS HOW IT'S DONE -Bonnie Rolllll,left,
room mother, explabls to, Amanda Neeee, Coaale
WJUet, Carle Lighlfo,.e, J.C. Balllrd, aad Nicole

Evan• exactly bow lhe chicken must be prepared
tor the flrlt lt'adera TbankarJwag dlaner at
Mlddlepert Elemeat.ryb~Mt Tba~ay.

DON'T WORRY, IT WON'T HURT -Amber
Vlniilg, Derek Johnson, aild Brandl Smlth,
aeemed to 'think making homemade roDs wasn't
all it was cracked up to be. They are among the

first rrade students at Middleport Elementary
that prepared their own Thanksgiving least; The
proof of the pudding was In the eating.

Thanksgiving......- - - - - - - - By Susanne Sprouse, 17,
Middleport
.
It was ' a bummer day with
crummy weather
When a group of people got
together.
They hated England and didn 't
want to stay ·
So thelrshlpleftport and sailed
away.
They sailed through storms
and hurricanes
They saHed through sharks
and chilly rains.

Then they got all their stuff to
set up camp
But they all bummed out
because they had no lamp
Ever so glad to be off sea
They decided to start a colony
The winter to come would be a
hard one Indeed
For one good reason there was
a lack of seed.
The children would die
The mothers would cry
The dude In command would·
flip his lid
Yes, that winter a lot of them
did.
So when the spring came they
were happy to tie alive.
For a few of them actually did
survive.

commander dude. ·
So a lot of them figured that
they could, at least
Invite them all to a celebration
feast.
They had all kinds of groceries,
they all pigged ou(
Even the commander dude
stuffed his snou 1.
They were glad to be alive, so
they began to sing and shout,
For they knew what Thanksgiving .was all about.

Thanksgiving Day

Then ·one day· out of the clear
So children young and old
blue sky
listen to what I say
. Just when they thought they
To the bes 1 of my knowledge,
would all starve and die
It happened this way_
Up above the salls there sat a
And from that day forward,
guy.
.
There was Thanksgiving Day .
He looked at the dude who was
In command
Soon to come were new
And said to him calmly " I've arrivals
spotted land."
Who the people thought would
· The American Legion In Midthreaten
their survival
They hugged each other with
dleport will have Its annual New
They were weird-looking Year's Eve Ball at the annex on
sheer relief
Then starred at that land In guys with dark red skin
· Mill St. on Sunday, Dec. 31, from
Who all turned out to be 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Music will be by
disbelief
And as they Si!lled away to friendly men.
Bernard Connolly and The TraThey soon learned how to grow velers. Admission Is $10 a couple
dock
. new food
The dude In command said
and the public Is Invited to
That those red men taught the attend.
We'll cali this Plymouth Rock.

New Year} Eve baU

PUMPKIN PIE PREPARATION · -These
students, from left, Kenny Cutlip, Juon Knflht,
Heather Boyles, Muff Davidson, Brandl Smith,
and Tember Wllsoa, learned what II talles to

prepare a pumpkin pie when they parUclpated hi
the ThankarJw•l dlaaer preparatloa at Middleport Elementary for the flrstlt'ade classes.

·

Brauer's class and Mrs. Emma
Ashley's class prepared such
culinary delights as chlcken,
stuffing, baked potatoes, hot
rolls, stuffed celery, cranberry
salad, and pumpkin pies.
·

You're Invited

All of this was possible with a
great deal of held from some of
the students' mothers.
Students would travel from
station to station to take turns In
the preparation of each dish.

To Our 30th Annual Christmas

O•e• House

*DOOR PRIZES*FREE GIFTS*REFRESHMENTS
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1989
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 198.9

.glster To

w:·

Mouse P

Register at

•

~:e drawmg~~~~~~ny tune

14

.Open Sam to llpm Fri. &amp; Sat. Nov. 24th &amp; 25th

-------------------------------------------------------------'

0

ss.s1 0 OFF WARM, WINTER STYLES

Hills 21st Annual
Coloring Contest

0

0

·0

Color Nibblets To Win Prizes!
If you're 10 years old or younger, you can win
pnzes by coloring in this page with crayons.
Color it any way you want, then fill out the
official entry form. Mail or deliver the -whole
page to Hills before Saturday, December 9tli
at I1pm. Three winners per age group
(up to 5), (6-8), (9-10).

'

Shown Is just a sample of the great styles
you'll find for the entire family at Picway'
Reg. 15.99-42.99,sale pri9ed at *5,'7, •1 o off!
(a) Children's Moon Boots in blue with grey.
Srzes 11-2. Reg. 15.99, sale 10.99.
Sizes 2Y&gt;·6. Reg. 16.99, sale 11.99.
(b) Girls' Vylon Boots in pink or grey.
Sizes 9-4. Reg. 18.99, sale 11.99.
(c) Men'slnsulated Boots with tan leather
upper, brown rubber boftom . Thinsulate®
insulation. Sizes 7-1.2- Reg_29.99, sale 19.99: ··
(d) Women's Sweater Cuff Boots in black.
sizes 5-10. Reg. 21 .99, sale 14.99.

811110

0

11

..
-·

REG. 15.99

a

1st Prize:
2nd Prize:
3rdPrize:

.•

11111118

$10 merchandise gift
certificate.

$ 5 merchandise gift
certificate.

$ 3 merchandise gift
certificate.

REG. 18.99
b

Official Entry Form

11:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M.
*Yards and Yards of New Garland
*Christmas Arrangements (Live, Permanent &amp; Silk)
*Candles &amp; Candle Rings
*Door Wreaths
· *Grave Blankets and Sprays
*Poinsellias
*Polled Plants
*Potpourri Cookers *Fruit Baskets

'

Hills is Open tl":::j6p';~giving Dla;y~N~~!!Pu~~%~:p~nr;:e~~~~~t.~:;n_j

Class prepares Thanksgiving dinner
As a part of the Thanksgiving
festivities at Middleport Elementary School the first graders
prepared their own Thanksgiv- ·
ing feast last Thursday .
·
Students In Mrs. Mary Sue

slped by Zelco for use willt recltar· geable batteries or a UOV-AC adllpler; wltll -wall bracket (abllll $10;
travel pcltl&lt;b, uo~

Re .

-~e spmt of Chnstmas amves at

J-{ills wlien Santa pulls mto town
on a big fire truck with lots of free candy canes.
Have a free photo taken with Santa, too!

FOLDING travel, DIUeap or lllavlal
mirror II a budy "bY·"Iadt IJIII
wltll IWo llare-free btdbs. It's de-

Fill in the information below and return by mail, or deliver
in person to the Hills nearest you. No purchase necessary.
Wmners need not be present to win. One entry per child .
All personsem~?,loyed at Hills Department Stores and their
immediatefamtlies are ineligible. fudge's decision is finaL
All entries become the property oi HiDs.

811114 11

Nune

AE(3_ 21.99

Address

Chrithnat Oiftt For That
Har• To Bay For Perton

City

1111

3 DOOR PRIZES EACH DAY!!
"LOCAL DEUVERY ONLY"

Plan to be with us for our
"Opening" of the Christmas Season.

Zip

EROY
FLOWER SHOP

......

Ohio River Plaza (Route 7

near Hills

.

•
'•

GAWPOUS: Ohio liver Ple~za, lt. 7
Store Hours: 9:30·1 0 PM Montkly thru Saturday
11 AM·9 PM Sunday

---------------------------------------------------------------t
,
I

,

••

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f'ilgJ

Pomaov Midclaport Ohio

18-n. Deily S••tll•el

,
,
~

•

•
;:
~

':
•

!
•

·•

,_·

BI!IICb lo Lomb bave revolutionary
G-IS lenlel that· protect eyes from
pre and barmful rays.
There are plenty of flattering
framestoseleetfromdesignercollec·
tloal by Olear de Ia Renta and Dunbill
llld muufacturen illcludlDJ Seren-

~

•
'

· ~·
:

:: &amp;eli by CorDlDc Optlcl.
._
• Tbe fasbi011 mapzm. 1re talk. iDI about tbe return of the ascot.
Available in nontraditioaal patterns
like art deco prints ud uniiiWII colora"- ucots from Cecilia Metheny
aad Format are ecmomical and un-

• 1111111 lifts.

• Sbopping for a Cbristmu tie is
traclltilloal. Current stylel feature
new wider widtbl, ap to ~ incbes,
: and a smaller, tigbter kDot. Try con·
• temporary labels from Bill Robinson,
: Modules, Wemeo and otben.
·
;.
• Spread~llar sbirts are tbe new
.• alternative t1ds seuon because their
•

.. .

'IW've started your C1u'i1tmas
sbopplaa and ,aa'n loakiDI for a
lllllqae lilt for a pet · If PattiD'
011 tlle Poocll bu Ita way, JOU might
be IMIDI, "How mild! Is that Docile
Da!JI!e 1D 1M willdow"?
Tbe lnnontive company olfen lbe
ultimate )D WI
•ioel for the pampered pet: labulcMII faua jewelry for
your doc or Cit
Tbe company ..,. Ill OI'IIIJ!ltllll
- computer tecbDOJocy to produce
unique teatures.
for pets won't tate a bite out of your
• Vata are the ultimate fubiOID ac· wallet, and lbeY will leave tbe llllmal
_ , . Tbey are versatile - • to lootiJJg •paws-ltlvely" lfell. ·
be worD witl! a tuDclo or witb jeans.
Rlnlinl from $8.15to PU5, tbese
Fom11l ftl'llom bave IDtricate em· semlpreclOIII creati0111 are fubloaed
broick!ry and trlml. Plene CardiD and in 14lt f~!.,overlay. Tbey are flniabed
After Six are
in t1ds field. . and po
like fine jewelry.
Tbe predo
•t influence m
Tbe 1iDes IDclude Doc&amp;le Dulles
from the rougb· {pead•nt.a and necldaces) with matcb·
sportswear and-ready 1oob of tile Wild WHt. log Paw Cvff braceletl, llowMr Bow
Friqes ud fii!Cy li~ 011 suede balr ornamentl, collar cbarma, cbaiDs PAMPERED pets get uausual Cbrlst·
vest. from Ruff Hewa
Jotepli Ab- and jeweled Pet Protectors - tap mas gilts, lacludiDg semi-precious
boud add a aew dlmeMioo.
featuriJlllbe pet's name llld pbooe jewelry deslgas. Tbese by Pultbo' oa
Finally, many individual aporia and number sw n....ted by a cbDiee of lix tbe Poo~b in Houstoa ranee from
hobbies bave authentic gear that is Allltraltan cryatalltaneuuch u faux ,1.95 to U9.9S.
now lasbionable. Skiwear from lead- diunoada, -udl, rubiee, sap- - - - - - , - - - - IDg retaUen. includinl JC Penney, is pblres, lopaa aad oayx.
colorblocked with neon brlgbts that
Sovcea at the Manbattan Dog Mu·
Ozer, who baa an eye for oulraloot great on and off the slopes.
seum 1D New York Indicate that the geous Items that inspire trends, tees
Golf attire is also the rage. Claasic pbenomenoa of bejeweled pets dstes !be dressing of pets as 'a tremendous
separates - cardieans, polos and back to 2,8!i0 ac. Jli&amp;bly ornamented lasbion statement for 1990 aad
pants - are updated witb crests, em- pet eolian were 4eplcted In blero- be d."
·
blems ud embroidery detaUa.
· glyphics 011 an £cyptian ttng's
f:y might an owner want jewelry
monument.
to dress up a pet?
Today Bernie Ozer of the AasociatLiza Lee, president of Pullin' On
ed Mercbants Corp. In New Vert says The Pooch {a Houston-based firm),
jeweled pet aC~.'ea9ries are 101111 to says: 'Pets provide a constant source
be hot, bot, bot.
of love to millions of people, YOWII
- - - - - - - - -..· and old. They give so much and uk
for so little in return."
ROOMY,IBiisex aweats come Ia JIOPII·
Moreover, today's lifestyles affect
Jar colon aad team lmprlllts for tbe way people perceive and treat
sports olallaf"· Cllamploll detlpu tbelr animals. When pets move IDto
~ooded sblrt ( U) aad malcllilll pants
people's bomes and lives, they be(U3) wilb generot11 poacb pocket ud come a part of tbe family. Pets also
drawstrlag at wal1t ill . JO perceat offer companionship to many other•cryllc and 5G percent cotton.
wise isolated people.
It's ao wonder !bat many_animal

that captln tile flltlve !IIOOd, -=1! u
plaidl, diecb and wild ctm•IIUOII
pr1D11 from Roe lloJIIlr and lloltoa
Reptta.
• A V-aecll: IWUter l.s u NIJ' fit
and a l!lll'e-llre way to knep warm.
Gut muulac:tl!rel V-aecu with dl·

==~romC:...n:

,:t:t.

ll."eDt.
• For yuur mu'a beard, help it 1oo1&lt; SHOPPING FOR 1 ,-.Ieee? G1y1
luurloaiJ llelltby and cleu with wW Joe weariag IMkl patina ud
"~'eM' Ia Barbe, • a beard condltiooer lllarp colen, siiCIIu ill 1 m~k tvtle
awe1ter by WHtbary Sports Wear
by Roy Face Care.
• !!up 11 ,from Ray-Ball by (abo41t sze~

•

;

• &lt;=-lar ft!IDiic:al " - ' aorta

Do JQ11 DMd to buy I 111*111 ~
llllt lw I IDU IIIII Cllrilaiw1
Till MID's ,..... .woctatloa ofr.n I VIrility ol &amp;1ft icleu that WI
~ 1M llolidly - from
*-dot._ to . . llwew, from ace
lato&amp;r"""""'itema.
"1''ate II 1lmNt DO mu alive
wllole ~ppuruce and wardrobe
CID't do with I little apdltlq. ud lbe
llolidly II lbe tim&amp; to do It,"
xgnll MFA executive cUrector
NOnnaa larr.
· Here are ideal for Cbristmas
&amp;lfll for men:
• Start at the lop with Anmil maltlllriclled sbampoo. U yuur J!WI ia a
tndltlcluUst, t1ds patle sl!ampoo is
lllllde i!pldflcally fllr blm. ADd it COil·
t.a1111 1 bll!t ol that famous AnmJs

wider stance. complements lbe new
suit styles. Some of the best can be
loand 1D coUectioDs by Arrow and Van

Heusen.

• Suits? Take a look at one of the
new three-buttoa I!IOdels from Blrry
Bricten, Palm Beacb or Perry Ellis.
Tbe new suit silhouette bas soft slopID&amp; sboulden, fuller cbest and sllgbtly
tapered blps.
• llOR't forget sb-. Jolmllton &amp;
Murpby and Allen-Edmonds show
teature and styli~~&amp; in suede-finisbed
lace-ups and slip-ons in a nnge of
brown tones.
And speaking of feet, patterned hosiery illlna:peDsive and allows a man
to create new looks for the ume suit
each time that be wean it. Jockey oflen a wide selllCtioo of socks as do
E.G. Smitb and Gilbert Hosiery.

glr;.a Working to spread Christmas joy f.EI~

IHow to deck pets in holiday finery I

What to get for a man at Christmas

Ia tllt{.'"'ut-paeed world, you're
oftea
y to loi 1D IIW'Iy as many
. 11oun oa lbe job u ,ott 1n at l!ome.
Tbll Cbrlltmal, coalidel' treatiD&amp;
- - lplcl1l .to 1 &amp;lfl that can
make work a bit more pleaaunble.

Ioven waat to keep their pets looting
atyllsb.
Sales Indicate !hill trend is doins
a a c but piDg to the clop.
Uy, Macy's oponecllbe Petisree allop 111 111 Manbattan departmeat store. It decided to e1ter to
pampered pets after watchiDI sales
thrive on Madison Avenue. Bloomingdale'• illaaid to be considering a sim·

liar move.

. For eumple, ,au CID DOW make
your own lr..., bceaecl, eoffee at
work. Toa.-uter baa illtr, da t"MM a
new penonal coffee maker that

•

&lt;

•
•
•

You ·can say, 'Ho! Ho! Ho'" to the
C.E.O. ~ fir any other manager - in
your life. Traditional business cases
in soft sbapea are sure to please even
the most demanding executive.
Delsey LUggage's Syner-Tech Col·
lection, for Instance, offers stylish,
European designs. They're sturdy aad
roomy - with enougb space to transpori all the essential, whether travelIDI to tbe office or across the country.
.
Tbe long-wearing. protective coat·
• ; .inp on lhe textile ensure that the
cases maintain their shape and protect them against wear and tear.
The pewter-finished concealed lock

NEED a Jilt · lor tbe job? Compact
Coffee Break by Toastmaster brews a
.cup of coffee IDto Its OWII 10-ounce
'IDag (about UO).
. .

GIFT of llgblwelpt tote belpa yoog
traveler. TI!IJ bac by Delsey Luggage
lias pleaty of pockets and comport·
· meats for toy• and games.

1:30 PM
7 DIAMOND

FREE PARKING BEGINNING
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 24th!

CLUSTER

Shop Along The· Beautiful Ohio River In ·
Hi.storic Downtown Pomeroy This Christmas
Season! You'll Find Savings Throughout
··Every Store!!! ·
r~o;.-;;;~~;~;;;;-!

C-HRISTMAS PARADE
SUNDAY 1:30 PM

S4995

BLACK HILLS GOLD

FIH sn•G

"'"COVEll
· LAIDSTIDM'S

------'I• URAT

DIAMOND SOUTAIRE

$39500

· DIAMOND
'NECKLACES
AND

EARRINGS
-SAVE-

NEW~ SELECTION

NOW$39 95
. IOK YWOW MOUNT .

S1995

I OO'S OF STYUS

•

Suter Sa•lnge - Suter Selection!!
.

·,

..

SANTA CLAUS

Holldsg Needtl

DOME RING

SAVE

20°/oro2

I•
f

GREAT SAVINGS

25°/o OFF

SAVE
NECKLACES·- IIACELETS

ALL CONNIES
AND FOOTWORK$

WEDDING BANDS

20°/o OFF

.

'

.'

Beginning Friday
November 24th
Thru Christmas.

.

,,~MORE

ALLERGIC REACTIONS
'rO EARRINGS!

(,...o-n&lt;--~-..pts. 'Allergy-Free Diamond Earrings
are your answer
to

OFF

DRESS, FLATS and
CASUALS

NOW REDUCED

P1e-Holldeg Serlnfl

1oo·s •• sToc•

2 5°/o oFF

Look For Our
Christmas Open House
Ad In Friday's Paper.

..

25°/o OFF STOREWIDE
112 W: Main

992-2851

Pomeroy

POMEROY'S QUALITY SHOE STOlE

~Iii'''!lii-IJiioiJijoDDD!I&gt;•'ilio""""""""'-l!ia'llil-............._'llil-.....\liiaJ,

ALL CHRISTMAS PANELS
AND HOLIDAY FABRIS
lnciudes Sequins, Satin, Laces, and Velvets.
'

I

THE FABRIC SHOP

CHAPMAN SHOES

Corky's Classic

Park After the Parade••••
Plus Treats!

FREE PARKING .

I
.

NOW$2495

2.5°/o

~

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY

MEN'S RINGS

1

L~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~Y"t•'-'-~-~~~u.~~~~~~-~~~~~

f Jugf In Time Fo, Yout

I

I
I

2'0°/o

CULTUIED AND SIMULATED

FIOM Sl9.95 UP

DIAMOND
EARRINGS

'

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1989
12:00 NOON • 5:00 PM

Ic

r~~-~~IO)-~'I:IIIJ.~I!i-D..1a~~~'Cita"'-U'Ri.- . . '\lt-~C-~,

SAVE

LARGE lOK

PEARLS

250/o .

14K GOLD

Christmas Open House

-SPECIAL-

-SPECIAL-

BlACK01ONYX
OPAL RING

•
•

I

., I

In Store Refreshments
During Open House!!

2S0/o

•BLACK HILLS
20°/o
•MEN'S JEWELRY 20°/o
•ADD-A-BEADS 2S0/o
GREAT

WE ARE SORRY FOR ANY INCONVENIENCE THIS
MAY HAVE CAUSED.

,J

25°/o •KREMENTZ

30°/o
25°/o
20°/o

THE INSERT IN YESTERDAY'S NEWS
PAPER WAS INSERTED INCORRECTLl
WE REGRET THIS ERROR!!!
PRICES ARE EFFECTIVE NOVEMBER 29,
1989, WHILE SUPPLIES LAST.

LAYAWAYS ARE ALWAYS WELCOME

•ALL DIAMONDS
•ALL 14K GOLD
•ALL WATCHES
•EARRINGS

GENERAL·
STORES

CUSTOMERS!!

provides extra safety.
The case include convenient boil!·
in storage pockets for pens. pencils,
cal~ulators, business cards and
notebooks.
They come In a wide range of styles
such as one-, two- or three compartment briefcases and portfolios.

UTTLE girls caa take alo•g tllelr fa·
vorite beagle via Snoopy cross country skis by Trak/"'lgbty Mac. Saowsuit · aad earmuffs are by R&amp;R
Accessories. '

CHRIST AS s.AVINGS SALE

12 NOON ·· 5 PM

PARADE

DDLL I

FOR CHRISTMAS, aa necutive might like to receive a travel ellentlal. This
Joag-wear1D1 bualaeiS case offen storage pock~ts for calculators, aotebooka
or otloer ltems.Jt's by Delsey Luuage.

Holiday business

CLARK'S
JEWELRY
GALLIPOLIS- POMEROY

SUNDAY, NOV. 26

stereo at home.
Many worten like to display 1
Cbriltrrw, COIJIIder plantinl 101M
sona1 reminders of f1mily llle. Plio.. . cllppinp in a terraeotta pot ~
· of ..-t ncatioas, spouses and cbil· brltiliaait into 1M office wftb a biC
c1ren get tacked up here and tbere. red lioW wrapped araund tile bue..
Wby not pve a ailver or
Elgbt 11oun a day, flw diJI a week
band-paiDted frame to help preserve is a loag time to lpelld IWIJ' from 1be
memories 1D .a special w1y1
comforts of l!ome. So, take time t1ds
ADd for 1 really bomey touch. aotb· Cbriatmaa to make Ufeat wwk a little
1111 beats a catting from the plant in more fun for yourself or lbe kitcbea window. A month before 1pecill.

ATTENTION

Kick Off.Chrisfmas 1989 With Your
Po eroy Merchants.
Co111e Shop In Historic 'owntown Pomeroy Where
You'll Find Sa.,ingS For E"ervone On 'Your Gift List!!!

CHRISTMAS
OPEN HOUSE

brews IDto 11.1 own 10-ounce mu1. Just
eieht 1Dcbel taU, the Coffee Break
automatie drip co!'-t• flbo Dicely 011 a desk or iD a Rites. for buai·
ness trips.
For commuters wbo use public
tr&amp;lllpol'taUoa, radio or CUII!tte play·
en with earphoael offer aa escape
from aoile and crowds. Many of these
devices are DOW anilable with speaken, wblcb allow ,ott to set up a mini-

·

More and more, retailen are offerIng larger selections of exclusive accessories for pets. Wblch illlood news
for animal Ioven wbo are looking to
deck their dogs - or cats - in finery
for the holidays.

.

'

The Daily Sentinel-Page 19

Pomerov-MiddlaPQ'i. Ohio

Wectnaadey. November 22. 1989

Wednaadey. November 22. 1989

'*"-"""'. .!11"~'~-----....,,!iia'!ia'-"'D·'""'!Noll-

~::~~!:!~!__:"::j
,.

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•'

I

"

�hge--20-The Deily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Gift clothing has high-tech extras
(1eWq Ia blp oa nearly everybody's CbriltmU lial
lhlle~I lor ~c:tlvewear dur·
1111 tH
IJI, you're likely to notice IO!IIe of the lateet bleb-tech de. vel cjMieala ia maamade flben.
A 1111111ber of lift ouUIIa rombille
Rlltaral Joob liJid eomfort with the
raged, dvable, liptweilbt liJid
qllidt-dryill&amp;
cllaraeteristlcs of
Today's syatbetic fabrica are engineered to cbanllel penpiratioa away
from the skiD to the outer layer of
clotbin&amp; where it can evaporate, leaving the wearer dry liJid comfortable.
One of the newest developmeuts Is
Hydrofl~ the first breathable nylon
with tnie moisture transport
properties.
Forrester's Ultralight Goller's
RaiD Suit, for instaace, is lined will\
Hydrofll nylon mesh to assure maxi:
mum eomfort. A jacket is styled in
navy, burguudy, or teal with gray !IC·
cents to coordinate with matching
gray pants. The ouUit retails lor
about Sii.
For more rugged activity, ,Jansport
bas an Expedition Parka in bleb-lashion colors, with a breathable, water·
proof nyloa shell. Their Alpioa fanny
pack in rugged 4!0 denier Caprolan
nylon Is offered in solid dark liJid neon
colors.
Larger sport totes made of waterproof Caprolan nylon pack cloth are

NO MATTER bow yoa slice il, For·
rester's oltnllptgolfer's raiD salt Ia
waterproof oyloo is wearable. Its liD·
IDg of Hydrofll nylon mesh fabric Is
by Allied Fibers. Two-piece suit about
$19.
styled by Eastpak ia trendy rock-punk
prints liJid neon colors to appeal to the
young and young at heart
l'lackpacks with jldjustable, padded
shoulder straps and top carrying han·
dies are seen ir "Kool Dude" and "Hocus Pocus" checkerboard prints with
bold neon trim.

• The Area's Number 1· Marketplace
POLtCIES
""d• o"'ti!Oe Me101 Galh1 or MIIOI'I eou nttM mu tt De DU·

ua1d
·
·
"Recewe 1 .50 d•scoun1 lor 1!11 cuud '" aavancl!!
*Free ads '- G1veawav and fD"I'IO aas ul'laet 15 wl'ral w•ll ot
r11n 3 d ... • 11 no cl'l•ge
.
• Puc;e of ad tor all capna t ieueu 1s aouble prtct' of 10 cosl
· 'I ocun1 lme tyoe only u•d
"5enltnel 11 no1 '"oonatbl e tor errors after hrs1 a .. rCt-.ec•

Nike, the footwear brand, bas en·
tered the outdoor market with a new
All Conditions Gear line of jacket_&amp;
a~ pants lined In labri~ of Hydrof1l
nylon. Available in un~ses slZt!l •n
bript color combinations, the gar·
men!S feature ankle-zippered pants
and bonded tops.
For anyone who will be out of doors
in the winter for any length of time,
thermal underwear is a must.

COPV DEADLINE MONDAY PAPEFI •
TUESDAY PAPER
WEDNESDAY PAPEA
THUASOAV PAP EFt
FRIDAY PAPE~
SUNDAY PAPER

MT. DEW, PEPSI FREE

YOUNG gays siUd tall lD a trendy
dramatic two-battoa canllgaa-vesl iD
abstract pallel'll. Shoulders this sea·
son are leu exaggerated and tbe body
less baggy. It's designed by Westbury
Sports Wear (about $20).

Christmas

69

CHASE &amp; SANBORN

COFFEE

99

$.

next

dHigence be •cortainod,
you aro her..,_, notified that
you have been n.med de-

tendanllin alogol action antitled · Frodcb Houdooholl,
Adminiatr~~tor

CHRISTMAS
KICKOFF
· SATURDAY
SUNDAY
FRIDAY
9:30-5:00

Layaway for
.Christmas

.

20°/o

I

PH. 949-2101
or Res. 949·2160
NO SUNDAY

,. 0 , 0 , c-· nh

44&amp;-GalltPohi

992 - MtdDI8POr!

367 - Ch•"""
388-Vtnton

985 - Chtsler

'

245-A•o

Gr•no~o

2&amp;6-Guv-n Otsr
643 - Arlb•• OtSI
J7S - Wa•nu 1

THURSDAY

...,

A.'-•

~
Code 61'

Ar•l

~4:; - Por11.1n c
247 - L•tart Felt~

949-Rar;mt742-Rutllr'ICI

937 - ButtiiC'

Pomwro~

743. Meigo County DMd

Rec;orda. end the preyer ia

43216. NotlceohnyappMI
ohlll bo flied w~h the direc-

tor within 3 daya. PropoHd
1ction1 will become fin• unlna a written adjudication
hearing roquHt lo oubmlnod
within 30 days of the ia•uance date: or the director
revis•lwithdrews the propoNd action. Any peraon
may aybmit comments end/ or a meeting regerding any

draft action within 30 doye
of the dote lndlcotad. "Ac-

tion"·. ea uaed above does
not indude receipt of a verified complaint . If aignificent
public inter•t exiltl. •:.ub-

LIS.
OR
MORE

to any action. including receipt of verified complain11.
any peraon may obtain notice of further aCtiona, end

10/ 10/ 89tfn

..,, to:
Hearing Clerk.
OEPA, P.O. lox 1049, Columbus. DH ~ 43265-0149
Pli. 1614) 844-2115. Conoult ORC Chap. 3746 end
OAC Chapo. 3746-47 and
3748-5 tor requhrnonto.
Finlll iuu8nca of Permit to

lnotall: Tu-o Plolnt Gen-1 Store, St. Rt. 681 at St.
Rt. 7, Tuppero Plolno. Facil·

THE SHOE PLACE

.·

$

oz.

FRITOS

10 oz.
BAG

Merchandise

Fresh Hon•ay
Fruit Cake
Baklag
Supplies

&gt;

COFFEE

$169 $399

9 oz.

•

JAR

f--EAstMANosroooLiNO.s[NTRvotANK-~l
I

I

I

I

Win An S-1 0 Chevy

I

I

Pickup Truckll

!

NAME: .............. .......................................................................................................

I

•

ADDRESS:......................................................................................................

,

I CITY: ....................................................STATE: ............. ZIP; ......................
No PurchMe Necoooory. Muin be 18 Yeare or Olclor to Entor.
11
Drawlnata.be hlill S.tunloy, Doc. 23, 1911

I

I

I

I

I
1
1

~---------------------------J
. PIICIS GOOD 'III..S.,IOV. IJ·SAT., 10¥. 2Sr ltlt
I

Oh 11ol
The ltlg 4-0.
Happy Blrth.ay,
Da11 Sarra

54 Miscellaneous

INSTANT
MAXWRl HOUSE.

CORN
CHIPS

I

Gin CEmFKATE

110118, 26;
t11) 1, 8, 16. 22. 6tc

IBONus SIZE I

I

H••••••rtert

rendered aeliinat vou for1he

STAR-KIST
TUNA

!
MIDDlEPORT

Rul• ot CivH Procedure.
judgment by default wll be

•OIL •WATER

l

AND

1n1wer or othMwile r•·
pond • r-.u ired .bf the Ohio

Pie• Court

MlSTEICAU • DISCOVR

MAKE

In c•e of your f1IIL1re to

Probate Division

0

CHOPPED DATES ..................... '2.471b.
FRUIT MIX ............................... '1 .80 lb.
FANCI FRUIT MIX ..................... '1 .80 lb.
MELO FRUIT MIX ..................... '1 .80 lb.
RED CHERRIES ........... , ............ '3.50 lb .
GREEN CHERRIES .................. . '3.65 lb.
CHERRY PINEAPPLE ................ '3.40 lb.
GOLDEN RAISINS .............. ...... '2.89 lb.
DARK RAISINS ........................ '1 .78 lb.
MACAROON COCONUT ........... '1 .74 lb.
UNSWEETENED MACAROON ... "1 .40 lb.
ANGEL FLAKE COCONUT ......... '1 .86 lb.
CHIPPED COCONUT ............ .. ... "2.25 lb.
MINCE MEAT .......... ..... ........ .' ... '2.25 lb.
CANDY MAKING SUPPUES
eMIIIIIS DISUIIS, Wltlta, llarll, - · c•ro
••MICISIA .llOCI 5erll SwMt, Wltlte, . . Choc.
aMUSe - S • fO&amp;S • lOllS • PAPII CIPS
CAKE IAIOIIG &amp; DICOlATING SUPPUES

Co•feotlo•tr't Choeolate
1.79
CHOCOLATE ...................s1.99
FIIDAY &amp; SATURDAY ONLYI

CHOCOLATE...................... S

Ohio Valley Bulk Foods
514 lAST

.......,

5-17·1fn

8

111) 1, B. 16, 22, 4tc

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

SATURDAY, NOV. 25, 1989
7:00P.M.
RUTLAND FIRE SlAnON
Toys~ Tools, Furniture
Samtlthi111 for Everyone. herything new
and I 00"!. Guaranteed.
AUCTIONEER-COL.

8

u• ~ f ! ":::.:
~

.... s,.,.

NEW LISTING - IIIDDLE·
PORT - Nice I floor home
w~h 2 bedrooms, I bath.
carpet, w~ll basement and a
nice block garage. Sitting on
a double lot. $21,500.00.
PRICE REDUCED - GOOD
STREET - IIIDDLEPORT
- This nice I II story home
features 3-4 bedrooms, modern kitchen wilh dining
bar, all storms and many
other features. Includes
trailer lot. Call for appoinlment. $24,700.00.
POIIEROY - 2 story lrame
house with 2 bedrooms and
bath with wood lloors and
some vinyl covering ASK·
lNG $6,000.00.
POMEROY - 2 lots with
possibilities! Sept ic and
elec. available. lots olshade
trees. $2,500.00.
POMEROY - Spl~ entry
home sitting on 1.26 acres.
4 bedrooms, 2 baths, carpet,
electric BB heat, builtin oven
in
kit chen.
$45,000.00.
PORTlAND ROAD - 215
acres and ranch home w~h
1850 sq. ft. of living space:
Heat pump, with central air,
7 rooms, dishwasher, range
and relngerator.largeliving
room, family room fireplace.
REDUCED TO $53,500.0Q.
POMEROY - Mobile home,
12x55, 2 bedroilm w~h ITont
porch. Sitt ing on a 71xl70
lot w~h a I car garage. REDUCED $7,400.00.
_ , f. QJUND-"2-6191

JEAN 1'111S!IU-949-2660
DOTTIE 'IUIII•-nt-S692
JO lltL-915-4466
OfRU-992-USt

SELLING o Meip County
property Ilk• work. not an
Accident. Cllland RtlltJ
WOIKS to SELL yaur R•.al
Estate not lo Just putuiiD
in your y1rd.

W.

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUR.T
1HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Racfionablo Pricos"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
I

Day or Night

I NO SUNDAY CALLS

•-trey, Ohio

H2-'II-Hn

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnN'G

PubliC Sale
&amp; Auction

Now lecotion:
168 North Socond
Mioldloporf, Olio 45760

LAND AUCTION
MEIGS, ·SCIOTO and ADAMS COUNTY FARMS
341 ACRES IN TOTAL
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 25, 1989
nME: SEE IELOW
TRACT I. ADAIIS CO. FARII TO SELL AT 11:00 A.ll.:
Being 124 acres ol vacant woodland, approximately 24
acres of bottom land. lobacco base. rambling stream, r!j&gt;d
froota~e on Rl. 781, II mile off Rt 348 in Jefferson Twp.; se·
ven m1les IToni Otway. This tract will be sold on location ot
Tract 2'
TRACT 2. SCIOTO FARIIto sell immedillely followin&amp;
Traci Oni: Being a 77 acre al~around larm, approximalely
50 acres tillable and pasture land, tobacco base. woods,
pond. tronting on Big Bear Road. Plus I ~ stoty 3 bedroom
frame country home, attached garage, barns and outbuildings in Rarden Twp. locatl!!l on Big Bear Road. I II miles
from Mt. Joy off Rl. 772, appr~•imately 25 miles from Waverly.· Tract One being sold on lo.cation ol this larm'
TRACT 3: IIEIGS CO. FARII IN BEDFORD TWP. TO
SELL AT 3:00 P.ll.: Being 140 acre caltlelarm to include a
I II story farm house, barns and outbuildings. Avery pic·
turesque rolling larm with several nice tillable tields, wood
lots and excellent road frontage on 3 roads. IDEAL BUILDING
SITES HERE' OFFERED IN 3 PARCELS .... Andthen as One tract
w~h greatest dollar amount prevailing, PARCEL ONE: Approximately 90 acres w/home and buildings. PARCEl TWO:
Approximately 40 acres ol vacant land !rooting on two roads.
PARCEL THREE: Being approximately 10 acres of vacant
land Iron! on two roads. All parcels bemg sold per acre
amount, subject to survey. II sold as individual parcels, a
lour hundred dollar survey cosl shall be charged to buyer at
closing, TO LOCATE: Take old SR 33 (Pomeroy Ex~)al Athens,
go SE on.Old SR 33 to Twf. Road 18, turn left near Roadside
Par~ then proceed on to wp. Road 20, turn right, go to Twp.
Road 84, turn left. Neat villages ot Chester and Pomeroy.
Sale lim·e this tract 3:00p.m. at Old Farm House on Twp. Rd.

84.

PLAN TO AT1£ND AND BUY ONE OF THESE RARE
OFFERINGS AT YOUR PRICE!
AUCTIONEERS IIOTE: Pursuant to theAgricuHural Cred~ Act
of 1987, if two or more qualifying bids in the same amount
are received, and such bids arelhe highest received 'and one
ol the qualified bids ~ offered by the previous owner: lhe ol·
ler by the previous owner shall be accepted.
TERMS: An Earnest Money Depos~ of Ten Percent per tract
or parcel, payable to Cam Taylor Co., Realtors, with balance
due upon delivery of limrted W•ranty Deed on or befor~De­
cember 31, 1989. All properties sold subject lo occeptance
ollast bid. Possession immediate upon closing on lar!lls one
and three. Fa):lfl Two subject to tenants rights on or belore
December 31, 1989. Tues Protated to day ol closin~
SIGN POSTED: Fell frH to Inspect thoso properties on
yout awn or by appalnltnlftl.

OFRIIID IY:

CAM TAYLOI co. IUI.TOIS, C....._ Ohio.
Salt Ctttducted ly: llat1 PritciNtnl Sr. I Jr.,
Atldla111n • lulluu, A.M. 'CTC
WllOU fiR 1·100·141-6N ar 614-115·2156
614-477-1144
OWNEII FUM Clllll' .... OF I.OIISVI&amp;I

'".....,'· c••••

~~·~
·
J1 a
1

.•

RACINE
GUN CLUB
GUN SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
Beginning Sept. 17
Starts at I :00 P.M.

Factory Choked 12
Gauge OnlY.

9-6· 89-lfn

DOZER
SITEWORK ~ ROADS

l&lt;KIIhllotV. .yl....r
In llloWiopert, Oh.

PARTS AND SERVICE
For Most 2 and 4-cycle
engine~

Stock Parts for
Ho.:relite, Weedeater.
Tecumaeh, Brigp 81
Stratton.

CLEARING

NEWLAND
ENTERPRISES
DUMP TRUCK
Sand : Stone- Dirt

(6141 667-3271
Grant A. Newland

7-18-'89-dn

USED APPUANCES
90 DAY WABAIITY
WASHER$-1100 up
ORTER$-$69 up
REFRIGERATOR$-$100 up

R. L. HOLLON
TRUCKING
CHESTEI, OHIO
•GRAVEL
•LIMESTONE
•FILL DIRT
•ANYTHING
AT ALL

RANGES- Gas-Eiot.- $125 up

FREEZERS-1125 up

IIICIO OVENS-$79 up

lEN'S APPUANCE
SERVIa
992-5335 or 915-3561
Across fi'Oitt Post Office
POMIIOY, OliO
10/30/'19 tfn

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Ponwroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Tr••••lttlo•
PH. 9--2-5682
or 992-7121

985-442
UNDA'S
PliNnNG &amp; CO.
ttmiiOI EITEIIOI
Rental (leanups &amp;
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

t•• t .. paill out ef painting.
Lot .... ~for, ...
VIIY IUSONULI
HAVIIIFIIINQS
AFTER 6 P.M.

(614) 985-4110
lfifort 6 p.m. ltawt Mt1sctgt

I

11 -16-'89• 1mo.

KEITH MOLDEN

J$}*11!!2 ;;""'

NEW LISTING - MIDDLEPORT- Ranch home with 3
bedrooms, I bath, elec. BB
heat, carpet. Washer and
dryer, stove and rei. plus a
10xl2 shed. $22,900.

wll be ·made on the 22nd
doy of November, 1919.

Meigo County Common

992-5275

Probate Judge
Lena K. Neaselroad, Clerk

POMEROY, OH.
992-2259
- ·~.. -·~.. REDUCED -IIIDDLEPORT
- Grand older home
on a good street. 3 bedrooms, large front sitting
porch. PRICE REDUCED.
117,500.00.

' MOO GALLON
WATER SERVICE
UMESTONE
SPRUD
DIRT HAULED

992-2136

DIVE'S
SMALL ENGINE
REPAIR

PH.

.ALLEN"S
HAULING

PAUL KLOES OR BIUCE REED

Ohio 45741 .
Robert E. Buck,

I....D.IiaW.L.I
E.aoa
-

217 I.

CONTACT:

46719, waa appointed Exe·
cutor of the eatate of Ralph
SWin. Jr .• deceued. lite of
Dexter Road, langsville.

Rae I Eatete General

FURNACE
PARTS AND SERVICE
ALL MAKES
GAS OR ELECTRIC
liEN'S 4PPUANCE
SEIRYICE
992'-5335 or 915-3561
Across f . - Past Offlco

114 ACRES LOCATED ..N
ORANG_
E TOWNSHIP, · OFF
CHERRY RIDGE.

Box &amp;86. Pomeroy, Ohio

leaa otherwiae provkled In

ce1ion of th• notice which
, wll be publilhed once each
week tor six tucc.1ive
w..U. th8 IMt public.tion

Lena K. NnMiro-'. ·
Clerk of Court•

the Meiga County Probate
Coun, Coso No. 26393,
Douglas W. Uttlo, 211·213
Eut Second Street, P. 0.

notice ot particular actlono.

28 dayo otter tho loot publi-

ro!l.t fomandad In the comploint.
Dated: October 13. 19S9.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On October 26. 1989, in

llc mooting moy be hoi . Ao

You are raquired to anawer the complaint within

49

3

Notice

1--------E.

Environmental Board of Re·

Town St. , Columbus, Oh .,

DEER HUNT.ERS
PARADISE

.......

MASTERCHARGE
HOURS: Mon.- Fri. 9-7
Sot.9·5
Clooed Sunday
949·2969

FURNACE
FURNACE

1--pjjbik;-NiotiiCe,....;._

thedottofthll notice. to tho I

thai tho rlghto, 1 - t. and
llano of oil partioo betullydetormlnad, adjuotod and protoc:tod and that tho Plaintiff .:s_.....;.H;.:a;::pp=y-Ad,;..:.;s_ _
be ... thorirod to Nil the real

GROUND
CHUCK

1/2 PRICE

I

acribed in Volume 241 . Page

FRESH LEAN

KANGAROO
BOOTS

'tour Chrltt•••

nelectiona mey be app•led.
in writing, within 30 deya of

dobll of tho doctdont.

•CONNIE
.•DEXTER
•BUSTER BROWN
•NURSEMATES
•DEARFOAM
SLIPPERS .
•NilE •REEBOI
•CONVERSE •AYIYA 8
•BROOKS •PONY

30°/ooFF

The object of thia com-

742-2421

VISA ·

Public Notice

ell communication• Jh.al be

plaint 1o to givo the above
nomad Plaintiff tho authorIty to Nil II,. real Mota of tho
· dace-. .Loono Kohl, de-

992-7479

Rt. 33 lorth of

DAN SUVICE CEtmll
Partt I Swvico On

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
·
t· ll-lfc

895 - lt11 f~

667-Coollltilf'

Coun: of Common Pl. . of

MoigoCounly, Probate Oivlolon. Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9.

•Gravel
•Limestone
•Fill Dirt

UGLE IIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
YAIDIIAN MOWIIS
E(HO SAWS &amp; TIIMMEIIS
OIEGOI IAIS, CJIAIIS

We can r~ir and rt·
core radtators
heater coreL Wt can
also acHI boil and rod
out radiators. We alsa
repair Gas Tanks.

WV
c Odt" 304

675-PI P ltiUn &lt;
456 - l..eor.
57fi - Appl e"Growt
77:3-M .. on
182 - '-1- H•,.ttr'

lty description : Air. AppHca·
PUBLIC NOTICE
No. 06·2633. Effactivo
Tho following were rocelv- lion
Nov. 16, 1989.
od/preparod by tho Ohio Dote:
Thia finlll ac1ion not precEnvironmental Protection
by propooed action end
Agoncv tOEPA) lat week. eded
i1
appealable
to EBR . Ge·
Effective dotH ot tinol acdlopenoing facility .
tlono and loouance diiM of . ooline
propoHd actions end of NOV. 22
dreft actlono are otated. Fi·

vi-. Rm. 300. 236

•Mobile Home
Part•
•Mobile Home
Rent ala
•tot Rentals

9-20-tfn

SER~ICE

Muo n CC'

Gall•• Counn

.,... CCICIII 614

wt111e in order to PIIY the

STOREWIDE

SPORT WJES -*r tile Q r l l - tree caleb a teea'a eye widl roek·,.U
,........ eolon. Ill water,....f Capnlu ayl• by Eallpak, 1M totes
IEGiml FOI
•
........... padded ~Wer atrapo ud tep carryilll ..Min. Prices
nqe f..- U7 te SZf.
.__ _ _ _ _ __

llawH-ahlt
"Free EotimaiM"

COUNTRY
MOBILE
HOME PAll

L. W.
STEWART
TRUCKING

. 05 / d•y

s1 .30 ' aav

(ol/ou ·inp: relep hww ('Xchan .lll'-' .. .

C•• Number

21.413 and Ia pending in tho

Layaway

OFF

VISA -

15

C la .~ .~ified pa,l fe .&lt; cot ·Pr tiH '

oddltlonal Information. Un-

been ••igned

•

Small Deposit
Holds In

of the Eetate

of Leona Kohl. Plolntltt. vo.
Ruth McElroy, Et AI., Do·
tendanll. This action h•

.FRESH
HEAD.
LEnUCE

1-5

of kin ct

Leona Kohl. whoae namM
and ltddr•. . are unknown
Md cannot with r. . onable

UIJIT ONE WITH SI 0.00 ADDJnONAI. PUICHASE

ENTIIE STOCK

..

devil-. and

CAN

CAN

.y

To tM unknown heirs,

34.5 Ol.

6.5

MAGIC UY Maullli II a three-story IIGIJ lloase Fls..r-Prk:e. Tllll slxroem Vldoriatl ' - Ia part of a millilltare vUJace (about $11).

.42
.60

$9.00

• , 3.00

..

Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO ,
PROBATE DIVISION
FREDDIE HOUOASHELT,
ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
ESTATE-OF LEONA KOHL.
PlAINTIFF,
VS.
RUTH McELROY.
end
JACK McDONALD.
and
JOSEPH McDONALD,
and
GEORGE COLLINS
TREASURER,
MEIGS COUNTY
and
THE UNKNOWN HEIRS
OF LEONA KOHL,
DEFENDANTS
CASE NO. 25,413
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION

UMIT 1 WITH ADDJnONAl PURCHASE

gifts

..

16.00

~

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

fnr ••r:h """' as ND1f8UI ad•

- ·2 :00P .M FRIDAY

Public Notice

PEPSI-COLA

learn from

Nov. 26

.30

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•8LOWN IN
INSUlATION

Monthlv
15
Aates are tor contecu1111e rum;. orok.e n uc a.v s will bl!! ehl'ged

BEFORE PUBLICAltO"-'
11 :00 A .M . SATURCA V
2 .00 P .M MONDA Y
2 ·Q(J P ,M TUESDA Y
2 .00 PM WEDNESDAY

,_ 2 .00 P,M

,15

.'20

•IN STOCK•
lnOI 'IUCTORS
tN'IEISTA'IE aanntu
AUTHORIZED
ECHO-YARDMAN DEALER
WE DO SAW
REPAIR
•Saw Supplies
•Chain• •Chain Oils
MOIIIS EQUIIPMiiNT

DIET OR REGULAR

$

Christmas.
Parade
Sunday

DAV
-

.

S4.00

15

10

Ov•r 15 Words

Rate

Words

:;
6

· A classtilto acrvtntNment plactG 1r1 The D•tlv Sent mel ~·~
cep1 - cl•sii•ed dtapt~ . &amp;ultn•• Cerd •nd •ev•1 n~t•c•s
will altO app ..r '" the Pt Ple••nt Regtlttr end tne G•ll •
pohl O• ily Tr.bune. teach•ng Olt'llt' 1S .OOO home1.

Medalist's Skineties line of thermal
underwear is made of Dryline fabric
in shades of blueberry, navy or tan instead of plain old white. The twopiece gannent in crew or zip turtleneck styles is lillbtweipt and silky
and provides needed insulation.
.

9:3-5:00

Oey E1

tor errors ltrS1 c:l.v ad runs 1n paper • Call btlfor e 2 00 P m
diJII atttr publiCatiOn to mMecorrecuon
"Ada thrtt must tlol Dlild '" aav•nce are
C8rG of lh~ks
11augv Acts
In Memortam
'W' erd S•••

DAD can prance at Christmas iJI new
waterpnHif, lace-1p River boots by
Timberlaad. Lilliag is Drllex twoJODe comfort system with Hydrofll
ayloft (about $15~

Kids can

How old should your child be before
teaming bow to compete?
It's sometblag to think about if you
cboole a game for a Christmas gift.
"Game elayiag is a healthy part of
childbood, says Jeff Conrad, a designer for International Games. "But
competiti&lt;ln, by its very definitioa, requires both a winner and a looer. You
have to be sensitive to your child's victories and losses both great and
readiness to win - and to looe.•
small, and it's important to introduce
International Games has done es· childreu to that as gently as possible.
tensive research on child develop"Penalties can be devastating to a
ment, wbicb three years ago resulted child," be notes, "so when developing
iD the award-winning "Games for games lor preschool children, we've
Growing" series.
worked bard to introduce positive reMore recently, it bas led to My inforcements into the game play. Tbe
First UNO, a new game for preschool- worst thing that can happen to a
ers. This game combines the cbarac- young player in our games is that thev
ters of Sesame Street with the basics . must wait until their next turn to reo! the game UNO. Tbis Christmas, the sume play.•
product Is available in toy stores for
The complexities that make games
about ,6.
·
fun for adults often frustrate chi!·
Cmrad makes tbe distiactioa be- dreu. So, when developing My First
tween simple activities liJid games:
UNO, International Games elimlnat·
• "If you roll a ball to a toddler and ed the 'reverse~ and 'skip' cards found
be rolla it back to you, that's an activi- in UNO. They were replaced by a
ty because there Is no rompetltlon In· 'free turn' card, which adds to the
volved. Chlldreu as young as 6 months game's fun without confusing
can respond to and participate in ac- children.
tivities. But it's usually not until
"ConceptS and characters familiar
they're around 3 years old that they to children alao ease the transition
can play games.•
from activities to games," says ConVery young children have a strong · rad. "We frequently employ charac·
ego, which often translates into stub- ters from Sesame Street, as we did in
boroneSa over sharing or taking turns, My First UNO, so that cbildren feel
elemeats integral to playing games. comfortable with the game."
"One iadlcatlon that your child is
Alter the age of 3, children are
ready to start playing games is when much more capable of grasping the
his YIIQbulary shifts from 'mine, concept of sharing and are more ea·
mine, mine' iato 'ours,"' says Conrad. ger to be part of a group.
Many parents feel that the day-toSays Conrad: "Games are a wonday presliUI'e5 of life are already derful way to teach cblldreu not only
enough lor their youngsters, and the bow to handle rompetition, but alao
lall IbiD&amp; their cbllcl needs is the addi- bow to interact socially with their
tloaalatress of competition.
peers, botb vital to a child's
happiness."
But Conrad notes that life is full of

B siness· Services·

Classified

Wann dry feet are always a wlllter
must. Tlmberlaad's oew waterproof,
lace-up River Boot combiDes ruued
performance with comfort. lJiied
with Drllex ~lODe Comfort System, bued 011 Hydroflt nyloa, the tWGslded fabr•c provides a eomfort 1011e
of water-halilll fiber nest to the skiD
that stays dry in any weather COIIdl·
lions. Tbe boots in b!ICk with tan
leather trim retail lor about $t5.
And toes will stay warm in Wig·
warn's Hydro Court sock of wicltillg
Hydrolil nyloa. Tbe mid-call sock alao
features a dollbl...cusbloned sole to
protect against blistering.

IJlltHtic:a.

The Daily Sentinei - Page -21

Ohio

SALES

&amp; SERVICE

We Carry Fishing Suppli•

Your Phone

:;;~lite Bills Here
IUSINISS PHONE
1614) 992-6550
RISIDINU .PHONE

. 1614) ...:'!.'?.!
USED FURNITURE
liVING ROOM SUITES
BEDROOM SUITES
DINEM SETS
"NEW" RECliNUS
Located Behind
Tractor Deelll&lt;lhip

MORRIS
EQUIPMENT
742-2455
Salem St., lutland
11 10. '89 tfn

KOUNTRY KLUB
GOLF &amp;
TROPHY
SHOP
•New Grips

•Clubs Customized
JOHN TEAFORD
46317 Seoul Camp •oad

Chester, Ohio

L &amp; J VIDEO
RECORDING

MY-T-SHOP

Will Video Tape
Waddings,
Birthdays.
Reunions, lnte~iors
of Homes for
Insurance.

HATS
T-SHIRTS
JACKETS
CHESTER, OHIO

Call 742-2486

985-4300

After 5

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

6:30 P.M.
Factory

(hokt

12 Gaugo ShOtguns Only

Sfrictly Enforcod
10-9-Hn

CHIPWOOD
WANTED
W. Va. Chipping,
Inc.
Rocksprings Rd.
Pomeray, Ohio
PH. 992-3561
Buying Hours :
7:30-8:00
Mon. thru Fri .
7 :30-4:00
t

·•LIGHT HAULING
•FIREWOOD,

BILL SLACK
992-2269
l'VENINGS
411/ ,1/ tln

.
.I

Television Listenin&amp; Devices
·Deptndable H11ring Aid Sales &amp; ~ontir,.
&lt;!' 'Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed' Clinical Audiologist

:z:
z
-

\614)446-7619.or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, 8011 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hos1pit~l
Mulbeny Hcts. Pomeroy,

11-17-'89-1 mo.

•SHRUB &amp; TREE
TRIM and REMOVAL

I

CUSTOM SCIEEN
PIINnNG

RACINE GUN SHOP

49919 NEASI HOLLOW ID. •

IACIIIE, OHIO

GUNS· AMMO
12 Ga. DEER SLUGS ••• S2 .2 0 Box
GUITARS &amp; GUITA~ STRINGS
OPEN 9 AM-7 PM Monday-Friday ·

Saturdey 9 am-5 pm

949·2168

11-6-1 mo.

MAIN STREET
---~ .PIZZA
LOWEST PRICES
IIGHEST QUALITY
flEE LOUL DELIVERY
POIIROY AND MIDDLEPORT'S ONLY

LOCALlY OWNED PIZZA SHOP.

PiJza-Subs-Salads-Daily Specials
992-2228 11·16-'19·1 mo.

••

�Page-22- The

Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

1m' N' CARLYLE~ lay Larry Wrl&amp;ht

41 Houtet tot Rant

·-- ·--- - - ' - - - - - - ----,

Apal'lllllllt

IS 4M&gt;
~tl~ "tk61R
OWN. ~~~10 waot: Al-l~ ...

lor Rant

::=1-

- "" -...........
....

-~-...........
·-7-7JI7. ~··
lral '

....,

45

. .h op~~on ,. (IUI'DIIuo
on
111ao, 11011111 •· loll
'arunnenl, . - farwd • fur.
- . A1C ond -:o..~"..~
nor Lono, _.
loovo,_ond...,...,
- . 701 11, d = Ohio. 1 tnd oom1, fur.
,.,_,c 11 _. .,_.,
30C
-21111.

Announcements
Adaptlon:
COUDia. one tram w..t Vlralnla.
-loodopiOMot-lnlonlo

AMncl.., ......

~11'."!.-•""'"IUI'"by

~lon. Coli- 11:1-

... -....p o--.-. on
-:1,;
AQIIOOIII
Hh F11111L

,,

No

Ina

-

:f"H Hlcllol ar - ·

on
~

-r..;'~. '-' ,_

withOut

11

lonnollon co1304-lal441.

waiting room· 1 was 76."

"
.
,
.
=

;&lt;ro\'!¥:.0":u?:::r:" v~.od-.

11 Help Wanled
No hurtlna ., 1,._.,., Mo ·
·
c. Aollmlrl'o EARN -~Y 1yp1ng 11 11omo.
,
J:IC!.ooo 111
,..,_lnCOml
1101on11ot
,. wv.Sliding HIU Rood, ......11.,
7..11110 Ell!. awz.
·
Aod,_.J'DUI' ~·M · 911oPo Dill Pion onc1 E-\lotl lmmocllolo lull-limo poolllon
WOior Pllloi. A - FNh - - In o looclnt oulo
4
Giveaway
· - a borwlllo. Send , _
~,...,_:;..::;:~:_.,,...,,_\lo porl8 - . , . , P.O. Boa •
T.v, -

.... ,.......,, OH 451140.

~·~-~~~~~14~4~41~ZI~tl.~--4 .... pupplel 3 ...a. 1 .......
1oooo 1oo1g hair, 304 112

-

Business
Opportunity

1400. _ , diii~IMII!ng taicot11cttnr1- """ ..,. proporllf

,.,..,.
on loco! tor
mmoo
...rltagoiOfgiOI -roy. Togololor-

lod oiolil 11."" olort""P dolo lo
olton. Q, Lowr., - lloln .aD, Doilliury,

:.::....'""t,::.:l::i. ~ ~~

Phi..._
21 Inch -

21

ko., 1 10 : : : : , 1or a 1u11NCNI..., NCeplionW:,
lnclooda llglol lyplng,

·time

o1u1iM
llllng,

wont
-oolnt,
~~-•lng
p11cono o n d Free .. eau o:.z.oucUI•Ayou riCIInblll. Mull MM outhoi l. 11 4
'1107, 114-441- ~.::tf ~'CJ":n:.oo:
qui_... Short
• pluo.
••:o.''dmo.
Sond noumo to Box P-17 coni
0
304-171·a.
w11
• of Po4nt P.....nt Aegleter, 200
31
lloln Sl, Point Pllloon~ WV
K"'- e ond 10 old. 25510.
;!WO wllh onorklngo. JonMonl
ogo 55
-r
:-14 Ml Ot1.
·
fullllme 1 •PI»&gt;Y In ~reon Pt. Pn.
olfleo, 225 Sliolh St 110111 6 Lott &amp; Found
Doot. or Lobor guldo nrwo,
E.O.E.
FOIOid: }loa: black lomolo
1
t RI!INuu,- ..lend~, lloml&gt;arohlp .... lor • Hr"Wice
argonlzalion.
L.,....._.Join""'
loom. ..
!no;
inodlotooponl..... wortllnlho
Ad. 114- llolgo county uoo. c-r.
:ntallll.:,:,;::::;::._-...,....,.....,.....-=-..,...,.. lion. 8ond rnumo .., wortl hlo:.:Lost ..._ lorlnollo Englloh torr to: Tollmaotool, lox 171,
lui. Col . . . ..., 11 ,__ ""':=..:,.=mo=:ut:::h!.:'OH=4:::51111=z.....,....__
1llothl&lt; orono wtU . . . far :r4421.
L&lt;ool Colllo p
old child In m,r. Ill. Vomon Avo
1
..... loll rn"~..'...!....moliot.l,.;
homo, lola yo,
ovenlngo,

2011. ·

:==:----:----:-:--:--

:m.
':.::.J

..

:.,rr,:

War~

or

- '-- -II

=:.S

Allonllon
11uon
Countr
Rooldorto: A public ollering ol

~~~~~ an

="""-·
10

••

on rtoa

!rom Polnl _ , . .

Ohio ond Konowho Alnro. ,.._

...- 1or 1n,__1oo1 by mou
~. . . ..., County WaiW
Tours, Inc., P. 0. Boo 243,
Hootlord, wv 211247.
Alillol Proporty. Houoo ond 4
mobile homt•, will retwn In·
_ , . . In I JOOro. Lind COnlroct -'""'· ••, toko
mo..!!'!! homo, oulo, on

:?.:"'·
lllytlrM~'/••

304-182·2411

....,.

31

---..,Carl

I - won to woll c..,..,
*"75-!770.

rat-. rer.rence

304- ,.....

...ulllul -ntry homo on 30
A;,:un:\.J:
11y1a homo wllh good - ,
~· bomo, ""'honl. $75,000.
7Q-2011.
Brick3br 2"-lh -oo ft h
• - ·•• oq · HI
pump,
gooago,
pool, hoi! ocro,
!&gt;il,ochioolo,lt4-245-1371.

:in":.. ':!':,•

-- . •
•
ovollololo, plloOO contct Kiln
1
4..
=7fl.:..:71.::.1:..:4.:..,- - - - - 7 1 - 7 1 0 1 . : 1 0,-··c.:
7
Yard Sale
- - Holp &amp; dollvorylor oclvoonco tlckll-, i:olr lor HOUSE FOR SALE: Eoc.
.,.,...,.,_,ll4-44l.-. ·
~t'::~;o,'ll,:,r·.!t:i:.· ~•rly1
EARN MONEY lloodlng llcoolool oqulppod kllchon·l Mw loootlng
Gallipolis
130,000 yoor r . . - "'"ontlol. &amp; o1r eondllon,. oy11omo;
Dololla. (t) IQI.II7.eoGO Ell. y. _ , _ 1,. &amp;
,_4!11=z._______ - ; 11x32
-pool

o1--

,.,.-::--:.&amp;:=-:;VI.;;c;::ln;;,lty~-::-= • -:
":"':

ALL Yorol - - to Poklln
DEADLINE: 2:00 p.m.
tho doJ bo1oroo tho od 1o to
Z:OO p.m.
~ odllloft • 2:00
p.m. ...... y.

n~n.

_, -wt .

81110 llopoMortotlvo, moll ar
Roplclly oxpondlnt
flold ooiiO rop.
Tollpllono opt-.
ond
Hrs olono oyol-. EXcolllnl
,., ochodulo wH~ oommloolon.

compon,-

1oono1a.

lou-

,..........,,. Tooooda,, :r""
r.=
~ 21.plc:ur- bor 11, 1989. Aoopond I n ...,
.. P w~h oooumolo Zonlx Yldoo, 433

..-a....

lnooll, 1172 VW Kanougo.
cor, !colo 411
8
PubliC Sale

· Joclloon Plko, Qotllpollo, Ohio.
SALES SUPERVISORY FULL
TillE PPOSITIONs AVAILABLE:
Whh on Ohio 1&gt;uoc1 non - ·
&amp; AuctiOn
whoinolo compony. lncludlnt
ruu limo poolllofto oarvlelng
CHIIIITIU8 AUCTION. Hor1l&lt;lnl aourpoUo . , . gn&gt;eory olaroo.
C
l l·lal;l: t:OD p.m., No oxporlanoo
lor po~
limo w~
~-~~
•
·
~~ •
- · - - po--o
·-·
Antlg ..,.......
eend rwume to: Po.t Office

,
.
;
_.
.
,
.
=

*'

~,;;;;;:,;;,.._ _ _ _ _ _
9 Wanted to Buy

r~oe

ow.-

Dra•r270,YinWett,OH•58i1

c/o!,._,,... Doporlmort.

.;....,...;.;..:....;..:.;.,.,._....:~..., Secnll.-y, light bookknping

wk~

.lunll ooro

.., wkhoul okiUo. IIIWI bo claponclobll,
llllllor'l. Cll Larry Lively 11 4- hoMit, 1nd 11M 10 gre.c the
public.
ocoll, wtlh
-.111
"'
"'"ortlol lor odvoncomont. Will
Qulfto
bo lnlorvlowl,. Wodnoodor,
Pro 1140 qulno. An)' condhlon. NNoOvo.ionntobooNio 22, 1!18V. Roopond In
Cool! Pilei. Co11114'112-61167 or PO&lt;Oon wllh rnumo lo: Zonlx
114-112-2411.
VIdeo, 433 JICklon PIU. Oat.
UOIII
... o n o 1 - .;:11 pot=1'::.·.:.011. :.1o::.·----l'honl 114-742- 12
Situation
Wanted
UOoll -lurs by tho p1ooo ar ~-------. .lro hooc tolif Hlllng. Lic:-d
114-712Z4N
1ooon1
.P d
. 614-3792IN

Good,.,

•=• •

~wn~~

l~ndachoolli.
wlauto vacuum; c
Prlcod lor q lck oollll 11 • ·~
m oftor tp."m.
~
1

A,._ N3,100. 211111 llaplo
lhoolo Aolcln, oil
oonchor, lui lluoonanl,
gooago, llnploco, - ...,,
contool olr cond. 304-a2hQ2V
oftor 1:00 Pll.
Sconlc vlow courtoy homo.
Houoa and 5 acroo. P~co
ooducod !rom ...ooo · 10
115,000, 304-675-3011.

~Mood

32

Mobile Homes
fOr Sale

1 bedroom unfumtlhtd houM
tr11U.r, N•a•bltl priced. 3Q4.

m-6410 dor
"" 522-611111
6:ll0Pll · Ztr..
·

·

Fw - : 121110 molollo homo,
MWtr rwma child on 1.2
tot
olodgoof-...Aiooohouoo
on IM lot, In nood ol\opolro.
Uvo In 0111 ond ron1 tho alhl&lt;,
$15,1100 flmo. 114-4U233 ollor
4p.m.

1crw

~:~t!'o:':~.:7.'r."o.~:O!!:

-LPN
on •coli.
Low
•---•--- ~-rr•
-~- vt~.ea,.
7:00
p.m.
tar
rnor•
lntar~
--

H.lp W.. nted

A - I AI I ~~~~~_,
........ :10W7'1-1421.
Wll Clre tor llcllf1y In my hom•.
AWIN • .u . _ CoR llortlyn Will gl'lo ""''· kind-. ond
!iloocf CIN. 114-992-3658.

....... - •ts

Allnl lfllllll......phoM .,.
. . . ln• • " • Md ..mc:e

15

- I I ... - . . . - -

nrn.

,.... IIIII wll
EIIIIJ'IInl per
p ,.,.. Md ..,..... Rwpand

. . I . 1710 ....... PZ303.

call

=
.
on:. ===~
-tho-

- ... ,_-.u.n-.~-..- ... pnMde C
,..o
...,.

=
r.

lo tooc-

1

rr _.... .,.

18

Wanted to

Do

llcDonlol BU1choiln9 lo . - oc-lna - · CillO ond hogl,

JOWIJ-3224.

o.,

Poulo'o
Coro COnlor.
· - ·..... altlldcoN. 11-1'
.-panlor. ISolo,
I'A-10.
.. .,.... o.m. - 1:10 p.m. -

___ ..

ond - I t a 11to1 ...,....
up tho lorgnl · of loullollnt .... - - · Tio

-o.

- . , onor ochool: DrotHno
II: INI. 114 4411224.

1te2 14xS2 - . . ..
Eoc. 001111 ! " - llllndo, por1
!lolly lum~or~od~
~~~n Torooco:jj
MHP.
11
4
1
154, 1142• • - •-- 4 ...

-

•-· • - :..,.,on.

·

33 Finn. for Sal.

10 -

ohod,

ooobllo homo, born,

~ ,flldgo, "'Il 000•

Thurodoy'o o11or 11:00'
lllllllngo, -.:1471.

iirol

=z:.

AU, 10 ool. -~ Ollllpollo, 41k
Mull n11d1
repair,
.,,,100 oooh, tt4-

_,...

-on,
wfth~--•·

35 loti &amp; ACnNige
booullllol

!colo
..-wolor.
Clycla , _ , Ji. $d4-171.Z331.
bUilding
11
pu';l~
Wll -

--.

II

Ill

a

•

I'~

., " - 114-:IIIT-Mta, .. ,__,_
7721.
.

..=-homo.
..

~ " " - limo Wll ..... ..,. •

EMf work

It home,

801MC141 • • dl

Coro dop
. . . . . . . , _ - · Col ,_ only. Poloi or Oal1044ft-11'11llll. 1214 :M
Oood ,...,.. . . .
......... Jll dl .. ....,.

........

.. pocloo

I -

oil -

1--------- .-

.

,

~

Household
Goodt

lo

.:S11.1o

~...!.,'-

f:

S21,_! kil!(l , _

-·

-c!!'r...
-~

== -

'~

=7:=:--=::-:-::=:::

now,

~

-1.!'!:
·

•=II,

=

APIIII.menl for ,....,

JIM.I~

221 ..

::"-ond'~-G-uor~

1171.

Aport-.

-.

l=.i::===.::.·:,:~:,:.,::;;,.:•~:,::::::,.·___,
JEAunPUI. APAATIIENTI AT
IUOOET PAICES AT JACKIOH
ESTA'TEI. 131 I I on PIM
-- CltiDimo.
o l l l t -• • - - •

r.m.:·'
--·
lo

'

FumlohodApl.1briJujl20-h,
- l o , 112115. · lloa Pold.
114&amp;41 U11 liter 7p.m.

~
~"'. &amp;-~.
·~·
~\'r Of!ldr,:·

.,;;m::z•.

odullo,

i:::."-·_,_pd.
~11a,...7p.m.
Fumlohocl
Plloo,

Third - · ·

:104 eib
243 Joetbr, 114-

op1.

112 ·mr.

Jorotcho Rd. PI- - ·
Gill 304-171-1410.

wv,

SWAIN
AUCTION I FURNITURE. A
OII.. SI.,Cio!Npolo.-&amp;UOod
tuw~'"-·
.-.
1 ,·~·:-•-~
1'!!""'. &amp;
"'"
~YI"RAPUANITUIIE

RT~~WM'

ono1

bul~far
1171-1210
.
~,.,..,
· - .,
04

•

Houoo-'t-::~.

AENTTOOWN. · - - •
22wll.,llunkbodCDMII'IIIo·l10
w11. 8 wtvor . - . - " wk.,
dlnlllo lol, 4 choirs • 17.10 wiL
-lnor · $5 wlc. · LOW CASH
PRICES
la .. INO!Io-Coodl•• .. llo~
-.Opon lion·-•·'"·"'·
lolp.~1 SWI.12._,to5p.m.
114-4-111.
1121; doyooo ••eo;
oelrlgorolaro •110; rorogi!I.,IO;
dloll 140; hooting
~~Dollilrl
UOod
.-... 81.
r&lt;onoup; ,.._,4'1:1.
52 Sporting Goodl
~--·.,.
"h

w.-

;,j.

_,.n,._....

sw-.
w.. •

;:'::.~=· E_"·
croel

Fumlohod opl. _,.., ol
001111.,
ut1Ul._peld.614 t-..an
Fumlohod ollloloney opo- - - · 114-441- Buy • Alvorlow Anllq...,
l720oftorlp.m.
1124 I. lloln 81-. P-oar.
Qnockouo llvlnt. 1 ond 2 l!od- Holn: M.T.W. 10:00 o.m. lo I:IID
.__ opon mndonto ItA Ylllogo P. 1"·L-~.'ndoy. 1:00 II 1!00 p.m.
0
11,_ 2121.
~"rr':.:~ Top Colh polll. oid lumll'"
l'lrot _ , ron1 'ho lo · - cuboonll,
qulno,
otlonlol,
who quollly. Coli 114-112-m7. polntlll(ll, tor~. or ~;EOH;;::.;;::.;;;;::;;::;;::;;::;;::~co=II:COI::Ioei:::..30_4_5:JI.-2271-,_..,J
·
:IIIW2W854.

.::.53::-:--::~A:;,·nt::ili!qu~H~=~

1

Real Etttta
Wanted

~.ao:I.:OO"""':'' ~.':· :::
'

,.,_,
114-79,
441-7117 onytlmo.

114- '
':
-_
.... :

==

114-441-17151,114-4*"1104.

'•

•

_:104ii-6l7ii5i034ii'l~2.:wiiiiliti::m:u----!.:

-=
~

..r•
;

Golding

--·

-

-lion.

f

1

wtnt.......,'

11~iCift! '

boot--

:==:,;;:.;,:,=-=::=-::,...,-=-•

~

Roger ..... Farm. 114-143- front dlnMW, aleePI 1, wlair
. e.rf*,l14-367-7530.

1311.

!lor fGt Sola: 114-37WIIIII.
Hov. tho

'~.

a·
:

1175 c-tomon :left. compor, '
$3,500 114-367.ot4'7 '11..a7-

:::.l.!:;

~·-•- of~

Corhor1roguror

='.~~:._·t.""i!.:.-.._c: :~oo==~~~

• 00
-:
~.·oo'PII)~

~:fi~ftf;;-,ii;;:i;;;;G,-;;;;:

~ r,.n••~ob.""',r;o.,:·,

'

~~~'!.,'.··U.. •71.

:::,,4;,-.

-no.
411

etoavy. tt.llo 1, 4.11 pool, luobo

~

Home

81

..........

INc.

•ruo-

»7-7111.

"t·

~-,.-2itl

--

-

or cobla tOol *1111-.

IIIOIII:WIIeaomp'rtedi!IIMda•
Mill oorvloo,

:::T.n-

:l: :

--Yoc

Dovll

Sarvlco
Ooo~ CrHic Rd. Puto,
pllloJ pickup, ond dollvary. 114441-u214.
·
Sopllc Tonic Puonpl,. Ita~Clolllo
Co. RON EVANS INn:AP"ISU
JocUor\, OH t.-.127.,al. •
82 Plumbing &amp;

eo....

,,.

eo-··

,....6. •''

cfo.
IIIIC*ICullooollooro,AIOII; . _ ...... . _. . .t,OIIrior
till l'llrolloo Gronol Prill, _ , LOOO ....... . ..... Cal I:MII. 114 • c=
1'1MIJO.

W7

Upholttary

lis ,.,..

""'

-·-4 - ·

u...-ortna - ·

..... lrl _ ,
.....loring.
Coli"'1114-171-41114
'
tho
loir .... ollliiolloo.

;:=====-----=.:·.,,,.
''

AS'I'Ro-GRAPH

J-._

-roe -•

a.,...-

: ·'"-•middle.
but\
oJ: - .
::':;~':; ;:'.:0~o:arr.; :!.vtc;~~~ :;:..ltllt~o==-~ =.,,you wu:."':.,.":.,~~ 1
clooll. . . -*· rc- wttere It IIIOk ~~~ you' ... IICI!IIty met coul!l un-:· and able to operthl lr.deperrdtntty o1
you'M .lind n.
. .

·t o r - and

.

Tile~ .

.

. .-

~

·

·.

1,,

When playing a hand, give yourself WEST
every chance you can. North's two- +Q12
diamond response denied a lour-card .QJ109
major, and South quickly bid three no- tQ~
trump. Unfortunately he played the +Ja 7&amp;
hand just as quickly.
SOOTH
Declarer won West's heart queen
+Al064
with his king and Immediately ducked
•AK13 ·
a diamond to East. Back came a heart.
t A 72
Declarer held up once and then woa
+A2
the ace. He played A-1( of diamond!,
Vulnerable: North-South
but that suit did not split. So he now
Dealer: South
tried dummy's spade king and then the
nine, playing low from his hand. West Wetot Nortll Eul
won the queen, cashed the last heart, t •
p. .
Puo
zt
and exited with a low club. Declarer 3 NT
All poll
won his ace and hopefully cashed the
Opening lead: • Q
spade ace. Wben the jack did not fall.
there were only eipt tricks.
Declarer played his suits in the L------------1
wroog order. Jt is right to try for tlte made.
game-going trick in spades as well as Note carefully that the earlier
diamonds, but the correct approach is spade play of cashin&amp; the king and
to lead a spade to dummy's nine. De- leading the nine had little clwlce. U
' ·. ciarer can then win tbe heart return East origillally held three spades to en
and duck a diamoad. He will now honor, be !lbould CoYer the nine with
make the contract if the spade queen either lbe queen or lbe jack. thai falls under the king and ace or if dia- suring that West would make two
· monds are 3-3. . Because the spade tricks with what would in that ~ be
, queen does come down, the contract is an bonor and the el&amp;bt-.pl)t.

CROSSWORD

, by

THOMAS JOSEPH

2 Fam. rn«'tnlwr
1 "Bonanza" 3 Soul (Fr.)
4 Flavoring
brother
5 "And miles liquid
5 Small
logo
piano
before I
6 Alley
10 Teshu or 7 ShrewPanchen
mouse
11 Ancient
B Parisian
Greek city
summer
12 Eur. river 9 Golf term
11 Thumb
19 High-strung
13 Ember
over
20 "Vissl d'
14 Foolish
•
16 Froglike 15 lnsecl
18 As wrillen 16 Moroccan 21 Promonlory
· (mus.)
seaport
23 Prelude
Jeweler's
17
Sports
27
Lure
21
term
setting
28 D.C.
22 Belfry
18 Music
group
24 Sleeping
ol the
(abbr.)
25 Card game Big Ban~s 3t Appearance
26 Jury lisl
28 Tasle or
touch. e.g.
29 Greek
leiter
30Come on
stage
32 Shaw's
"-Joan"
33 False image ·h:-++--t36 Russian
river
40 Region
In Spain
. 41 Enlhuse
42.Mortlse
filling
43 Pitcher
ACROSS

DOWN
1"Cakes
and-"

DAIL)' CRVPTOQUOTES- Here's bow townrk It:

One letter sta~ for another. In this sample A is mad
·for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fDm18tlon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

OJ'A

NTVJTVH
N O.J .T

*'

x. ·J .

XR

'lloulgtll ~

C II

188

H0 PTJ

JTV AKDUVSV UXKHJ XH
0 AIG I BOJJBV DUIGVH

JTVAV

0

PX

Z XI H M

XEV

0 EJX

SVVJOEPA.

-I
NXSIE
W.O .
Yeater • .,'• Crt~~«......, "WEU ADAISlED"

!i!f'~Art-

.c:.;;MallldnO ""

·~=8
.....
,... -

11122

AXVDLBAAXR
lsLONGFEI,.LOW .

VWVHGJOSV

Vld1al*l

32 Pudding
ingredienl
33 Rich
34 Verb form
35 Pink -slip
37 Not
cooked
38 Blvd.
39 Celtic
deity

,......,..,.-..--r.--r:-'1

oVro.outyAncl

. · !!:

MEANS VOU CAN MAKE THE SAME MISTAKES
!)tiER AND OVER AGAIN. AND KEEP SMUNG. '

I '

·
\.

+K~43

E

11:30,11111111

U-1!-11

•n•
•uu

By James Jacoby

HOnor~.

othera.

NORTH
+Ka

BRIDGE

eiiD ArHnlo ....

•

.

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

GET EVEN.''

• Ill Ill • (J) «tl • 1121

are

!he chuckle quoood

in 'the missing words

SCRAM LETS ANSWERS
Lancet- Vista -I/ otlld- Eulooy- GET EVEN
I watched as my neighbor filled his driwway with all $001 ot
toys. He grinned and said, "My son drives now and I'm gorng to

Sam lesps Into the llle ol a
retarded dOCk worker. Q
Ill D CIJ Chlnl Beaelt
Corpsman Hyers lreezes
during a !Ire light. Q
(!) Newl
(Il Newpool JIIU '18 The
rich legacy or the world
tamoua Newport Jazz
Festival comes alive from
Newport, Rhode Island.
(1 :00)
IIJEvenlngN10:30 (!) Tom Peten: Thriving On
~
.I[D CrtiMWtttch Tonight
Qll On Stage
10:50 (I) MOVIE: The Blcltllndera
(1 :45)
11:00(1) ldMn
.

.Gl=-"'
......

Q ~y
Complele
fil ling

PRINT NUMBERED lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•
•

D Ill 1111 Quantum Leep

lro-Graph " Mali:limaker Instantly re- lnlantlonally provide · you wllh poor
veals which signs are romantically I*· suggestlorur.
feel far you. Mall $2 to Matchmaker, c/o TAURUS (April 20-M.J 20) What you
lhls - - · P.O. Box 91428, Cleve- do today, you are likely to do well. The
land, OH 44101-3428,
problem II you might lose your momenIAGITTARIUI (Now. 23-Dec. 211 Ex- lum when you're only hill done and not
lravaganl frlendo could have a very flnloll that which y011 alerted In good
BERNICE .
.olrong lnfluenc:e .over you thll evening. fallh.
BEDEOSOL
H you lol them call the lholo there's a GEMINI (Me)' 21-.IUM 20) USually you
chancCI everyone mey wind up apendlng are not an a-ly posseealve I*IOn,
more than they lhould.
bulloday you mlghtsrep out of chwacCAPRICORN (Dec. 112-.len. 11) Your 1er an~ be extremely demanding of
chanceo lor achieving ob~ look those you love. They'M not know ttow Ia
very good todoy. H~. lltere 11 a react.
polllblllly you mlghl do something fool- CANCER (June 21-.luiJ 112) Your lmbl·
loh out of " - Impulse that could ne- 1 UOn8 llld motlvltlon are llkoly to be
gate your pr0Qr811.
letronger early In lite day the!'! they wMI 1
AQUARIUI
20 Pelt. 11) In order be by lite lftemoon. Handle Important
to operate etee:ttvely today, lt'elmpera- 1 matters d..-lng your peak tlmea.
• live lhat you do not lose lallh In your ILIO (Julr 11-Aug. II) Guard agatnll
· own ida~. H y011 do, 1hey could be ,.1 lnetlllltlonl today to make tat-minute ,
110¥.11,11*1*1 w1111 111e COIIOIPI&amp; 01 _ _ ,. c~~angee, ..., tlllltV 1n ......,. that
The yew .n.cl'wlll be • cycle wltln tlw! lelalnglrrlaul lltMlOll·
pc runlly running IIIICOIIIIJ. Your lfter---hOIMtorooti.ThUOIId. PIICU (M, . _ . . . 20)" 1n your' allolllmlglnnol-toyourbenelll.
toundiiiGJII you• ... llkl wtt1 be bUill - C i l l dnll tglloday makun If- ¥1180 (Aitg. tl llpl Ill Ftqpclal
upon 81111 wllll , _ CQIIIItUCI wll gloM' fort to De OOtlll8nlly Mort. Tlllre'l a· · C!llldlttont could be 1 trtle uncertllr1 'toyi!u
oiiGIIII&gt;Itllllll.
wtt11 w11om you'M be· day. Tlllre- ~-·•"*• or Qllln IIICI
i1co11M0 (OIL M lilY. lit Yaur _In- lnYCIIYtd rnlghttly to CIIGII you nttpptng• •tiiiN - - ~ldiUIIOill 01181111 II
otlncll..,.. . .lll t111t1111 or • ,mMtilal! :::':~~~eWIIIII-lOU':n - . . De .., ltrilplut today,
(llllartllt .,,... 11)1rd'r;tgi ..-A
tl 1111. tl) In ordttr to

~

•

Robltloon

,up:

......

114-2411-112111.
Touck - - · "" .....

0,... •

-'"'lzlna ·

,...--::--==

~~.
lllmnl
Md

I COULD A·TOLD
YOU THAT AFORE
YOU MARRIED
TH' VARMINT!!

Aon'o TV Sarvtco,
In Zonllh oorvld,. moil
olhor lonndo. oollo,
1 olio
~--- 00:......-6'""1• •"!.f

.._ liiiil - . • • onolntolooad, IIUil loll, l drlvo. 85 Ge
-· _
.._ ... ......... limO. 114'441-1111,
neral Heullng
- - 1 1 2 -old. '
· ::11;:4:,;4:,:•::,-;:.::,.:.:,·
II&amp; 1 1 - 1orv1oo......, . . . . . Chow ltud
, . _ 114 441 M11 ...... 7

. THE 6ROLJND.•.

'

t:':.".i.c.now...:.':..,

=..

AND KeEPYQ..JR Fei::TON

FoHy Tooo Trimming, , olump ;
,.-··~col 304-175-f221.
,

-

ra;vOH.

~LD "tCl..~ i4~t.JP.I-IIGH

BASEMENT
WATERPROOI'INQ
U.-nc!Hiono_l Hletlmo -~ -,•.
·~~·-, ..
loo.~relor-fum~
F• oollmlloo. Coli cotllet 1· ·
814.:Z37-CI418, do, ar nlglol. A o ,
.. • r • I 1 • • m • n t ·, ·
w.~o.._rr
•

1':::"'..:k ·:;':

5-10 OCNI II u!llllloo IIVOIon
or Ia AI. 110
pal h p"lf, 11 ....... , .

I CON'T KNOH WHY
I SEND AWAY FCR
TJ-IE5E 'l'HING&lt;6.

'YaJR (AA.ILY t-a:IOSCDPE :

---'-:===,..-:...,_- "

2
121. - · Col 1M2 Chovat outo, 10,000 ocluol
114-112-5172.
:\'~~f.udont or worlc cor.
A.K.C. lllnloluoe . . - - . s
- · Will bo _ , "" 1M3 Coonaro, loododJ $2400;
Clwlolmoo.
.,,...3I40, 11111
col, 4opo
L
.Both D!oclgo
n1c'!o. 010.
soo .••.,200;
1101
.-.-.. -I:OIIp.m.
a..rwt01. Ciolllpollo.
AKCWll 1M3
Z-21, 205 v_. onHeating
~...:;;
gino, duo wllh ...... ~... olr,
Plumbic.
114-441·1-.
Orulae, 1111, PW, T-Topo, -571ond Hootlnll
~~::=.=.::---:--=:---=:-- 1 2311
Powth ond PTno
' AKC lloglot- C - a.. INS Fard 0.T. I opel. 4 114-4~1o, Ohio
= I ' S200 _.., ~~-- CYI,___IOW,,~ o:l.,~ good ..,_ 84
dod
~
,~ dliMon, -.~.:~134.
Electrlcll &amp;
IIW71-2741.
tMI Oldo Iloilo, • ••· blue,
Refrigeration
AKC oea1 NC1
·
- · uo. oond. You wiN bo :::::::-::i::-~;,;;;;;;;:;;,;__,:.
=-:::;;ho"!r;:o~ :;r,•:,•:.,:~~~ 114-441- Aolldortlol or 0010
-Irs.
1114 -,., , ...Colllo
a
old
-~
Jan..,...,
porlocl
lltcl~--r
~
·
,, pr1oo _ , . '1071 1n11c1o a our1 HJth ~~~~- ...,
.... , --IT••tt~.

••eo.

AND

,,

·
Improvements

:'~. =;.:d~-,:; ~,t ::,

"1

=.':'1 = ~...:.1.

MORK

__________:.

- · li.T........ run t•~~.,
- .h'-""""nco
~-·
tiiiiiiPH. 11...,
UIIHIY bod"" 3141ooo touclc;- ntra~o. $2100. 114-1111 4411 o~
171477:1.
tor I:SOp.llo.
·
s
u~AL
oe-CTOAS
1~
~ CUI''""''~ -•·1210 •----"
o5
""- . Nno Will
Aon a·~-Avo, .-a....._
wortl ~
... •-..!!.
__,
-•
••-· It•~
Clolllpollo,U11It44414331.
4424.
Wood ond _ . - . I tNt Chovlllo Scocl... now
...,_
...
••_ . . , z,ro. old, $410. · - . . .. -~~~~~· 1 14-245-aO!St .
11-7-0411 11111
1 4
•-.,.
Omn ·
-·
"'""good.
. 114-247-2111.
55
Building
1111 Orond P~x. loodlcl, AC &amp;
Supplies
- r IYII')'Ihlng, ollloo ciiOn,
wolf lOr. LOw mlloogo, 11•
ooptlooool oor, :104·773-1212 or
:~:-A"'"
~~~~~' IIOICilor
ol~, ~ :104112 »27.
·ct.-"011
Colll14...
Pe
f
'Sal
llh•fter p.m.
58
tl or
8
1M2 Iuick Conlry, 4 clr., lnr., V1AKC ~- •• oulo., air, PS, hn aarb.
T - . I wllo.
hod-·· ~-==·~~. ~1'.1;
:::" ~· 1447-4n7, , :..u;.:•.;•::_:m=•:::ft•:..:.•.!:P.::"':. ·- - "

amok. C
Ill Am.ncan Matiere
Harold Lloyd Is remembered
lor his rote In Safely Last. Q
!Ill 1111121 Garfield'•
Thankoglvlng In this
animated holiday special
Garfield is laced with
starvation on Thanksgiving
when his veterinarian place&amp;
him on a strict diet. (0:30) Q
m liD MOVIE: Rocky II lPG)
(2:30)
lUI Poim-wo
® Pollee Story The Hunters
l!J Murder, She Wrote
Lovers And Other Killers
Qll OIIIIOIICI AI ChUrch
• - Station The award
winning entartaiper performs
many of her hit songs.
' 1:05 Cil Sanlord And ~
1:30 Ill Ill (J) Heed Of '~:he Claao
Charlie uses dealhs to
· discuss the dif1erentlypes of
mourning. t;l
llull• aunny
!Ill
Th8nkoglving Diet Bugs
Bunny HIS himsell up as Dr.
Bunny 10 dish out advice and
carrots 10 his friends.
stricken with anxiety over the
gastronomic temptations.
(0:30) Q
8:35 Ill NBA BaakllbeH
' 9:00 DIll llll Night Court Harry
· and Mac aim 10 be In the
chips, marketing crunchy
taste treats. Q
(!) College Baatcllbelt
Ill II (J) Doogil HowMr,
M.D. Doogle and Wanda
decide It's time to
consummate their
relationship. t;1
(!) Ill ...,., The Public
Mind Candidates use visual
images to manipulate
campaign coverage. C
1111 D1121 Clrcu• Of The
Stare Acclaimed actor Slacy
Keach, music entertainer
Barbara Mandrell and movie
star Leslie Nielson
participates along with more
than two dozen stars. Q
lUI Larry King Uvel
liJI MOVIE: L.ll'l Gel Harry
IR) (2:00)
12!1 Naahvllle Now
9:30 D (}) iiJ) My Two Dada
Michael and Joey share
memories ol their dauglller
and past holidays. C
(j) D (I) Anything But Lova
When Marty asks Robin lo
go to a movie, aha gats the
wrong Idea . Q
1!)1 NBA Baokllbell
10:00 III 700 Club With Pot

that pessimists always take
the----- route.

F 0 NF I C
15_ _
•
_
•

you develop from step No. 3 below.

eo

~~
-eo ·-~~
~ -~ ---•- ...
~. 1m P - . Zlft. lui bdh, '

a1-.

-·'Ilion
'lU!FJ,\;'ialun

a

rn

1104-112-2137 or 0411.
=~=-.:.773-1310.::::=::..·,......:·--,-,--,.-1 =--,--.,..--,...,--,.--tmCrulooolrllolotHomo.44o.
Looge oaund bellO al
Dodao onglno, 21 II. Yory good
~"rr.t&gt;.!'.'1 ...J:l'0112.
conclltlon. 11500. nogotfolllo.
114..112-6170.
1 oo
Qll.
-••Y 1. · 304- 1171 1&amp; · go t1g1long, cant1
• ..,, Porllbloo llahlod ........
·
:::;, lu. ..
aNblo 1111or o1an ·• · Foctory
)371
F• lloiiVDIJ/Loftoro.
EoDI• tt-30.... Ploollc Hunlors Spoclll, IIIII wholl, 3e ',
$4?.10 loox. t ..OO.II33-J4I 1
ft. doluxo compor 11Hpo 4, •
lor "*Pint bogo 104- '
·Burpt•, Army,
71 AIJiotforSale
-10110.
'
·:
clolhl!!lo
loouo 11MFordOIIale,h,OOOml...,
.,
cernotllgl, lmitt 'qlliprnlftl.
"Unclo" Som -.rllo'o,. OIC wortl E.!''•-~ cond,
I

~unll
00 - -

boxer Sonny Uston. C
(j)
(J) Growing Pelrur
Free enterprise, in the form
of Mike 's paper route, runs

,...,...,.. Apflltlllllars- - · tt•-•••-•·-.
•.'
.ay. ,i:'toollonol trolnlng. 6t4---··
21t-15a2.
76 Aut p .. A &amp;
:;
0 ao,.
63
Livestock
,....,-A.;.c..:.ce..:...:,si;;.D;;.r,;.le;;.l;;,.......:·,.. :
Cron Brod Coon, &amp; Holloro, AI F. Bolo
Fan1 on-'
Olhcl, 1110 10 c - """'· gino, 2 o--' fan1 0 -~ ·
Lawoorocolunloll.ll4-245-1111. foonomlo..:;""tour 14" .;;;;;
w - far Fard 114-441-7121
~~ P1111- hoi SoddiiO ond loa¥1 .,._1 go. ·
'
· - · 304-1715-4014.
POOR mont
BOY TIRES,
304-671-•·
54
Hay&amp;GI'IIn
3111,
ond ~~Sttlll. 4 000 ~ .-M llrso. '
wolcw,~~ 01111
mlxod
"rilloly,.IOnovoporr ....il-llnoo, nowllrse.
';
1
1.
bolo. Lorge Ill, - " ' 79
Ca
.... 110:00 ooch. 304-1715.:z102
mpart &amp;
oftor 1:30 I'll.
Motor Homes
.' ·''

_;,;;;;:i;;;~;;:ii~;;;:'ii

.

'

.. rn

-·Coli . . .

In Yollom BOAtEAS: IDnnY Dol borr - l o n llololll

'

rn

·

111 44
rvw ntW kiM, oom p6cker. 1111 21DR · ~llllr, many
::..
c.:=71-:..:IP=T.:...- - - - - 1-. .1300. 114-441-4173.

r

a

'·

Motorcycles
=~,:..;..;~~~~~=-·
- - - - - - - - - 1M3 Hondo 450 11,..r Iiiia, ·
61 Finn.Equipment
wl!lol-; only 700 oolloo, IBI:·

lor-·- _

-~

lou...

'

1117 Hondo lORlA dill Ioiii~ '
Mint
(\Ill · 114-lt:rl;
7014 oft- 5p.m
'
o,
toorwpon
dloco.:::'
·
•·
~;;r !rOM
_,plckor, ...IO;
r tNT KX K-lloloo&gt;relo.:
d-.114-28MI22.
Eo-rt
Comm o ~ 11 121 ownpulor, AC WDU wlclo ••. wJIII. l i Z - oftor 4:30p.m.
dloa, - . po1rtor, I plooo hog, ptowo, c7UvotW'I,
Dnw C1oorrJ bod oa1ory hoO.- - 1 - p r 75 Boats &amp; MotOrt
111. 114-441-1771.
....... •24•; 100 Forti
for Sala
lloelolc """od olr _.h ~- hog. ~. 114-211-1=~~~~~::-:=:-.:
wlo:tng ond 1-11. 104-77:1- tm 17 I. Slorcnoft Trt-Hull '
1211.
Jlm'o Form Equl-rt, lA. 11, - · 121 HP, EvlnNcla,Enalr!,
F 8ol
.__..l.-.__ __.
w... O.IIIPDII• l14o441-tm· comptet• top, new UPI..wy.
,._._, Wldo-lonn...a-tomi CaHtt4-288-13tloftorT:GOp.m...
2or !J'p':'!'!" __
a- ""'•
' 20 - · ·
lmpllmonto.kdlluy, Z Jll Skit. 0no IMI.-sl,·,•
olilmola_,.mo.olclmoll
- •-•-I e-•oo
--~-~-~·~·4~4~41~14~1:1.':.,.,--:-:-:- - . v_, · - ' Wll .,., $2500. Olhor 1117 IOUteoo:·
:;;
. loL Ill! Noon.
Mony ollroo. 114-1112-4U5 or •
=~~ko. 24"· uo. 111""· 11 "" Meyt112Aog'odOuoolorHoroo, 114-?Q-3154.
•:

---•IICI-ofliOd"""" lo bo otao oil load or
I Br., 1oi .Floor, fum'od. opl. A~ oulloo,
-~~
colllnllo, __. o11on
tori, .,-.,,421.
._._
1M ond up 1o ..._ "" 7 = · SL
·• 1 1r. ·--- op1 ~ 10 dire • • • onh wlh liP- ..,..
, 141 8eoCMid Ave.
1••
·• r · - · · 3 onL W11 - v i i i ·11..•
114 441
-·
lid. Opon I A.IL to I P.M. lion, • ...__ .... ~-,·, . . ~
tiA un1um. orot. 11ongo a ....... t!vuiii.Coll114 411 "·
--•"'
'
·
-go, Cou
Cool _.h !on.
I. paid, Dop.'&amp; Ro1.11:..niJ Appllonco, Inc. Good Aui-lo wollooro, .-~pp~~o.-,
T.V. olio. Ooorl ~ . _ 40"-30".
1 o.m. 10 1 p.m. - ..aoot. 6t4- _ .... - n t - - · 21
I lor, ..... In
441-1~ 127 lrd. A¥0. Go!- lncll Z:.illlh. Flo-11
-·
~:I:;:IP::;"'~'";-:·
810N, Mldclllporl.
2• lwopto.""-.eor. 'GooD USED APPUANCill NICIIO--rAkoybo•d
Nliooo -Ina.
Wo-, d.,_ N!riP- 1111, .......... lko
S210.
Ill ovo-. Cill114-llf. - UA•~ggo """""114'44~-~ttl. .
81
mt EOH.
· - Aa. 11oo1c1o Sl~
-1. Col1114-4411-73111.
ovollolola Evt-ol
1 -·
100o11on,
Orophloo llurotoo, !Itt·
dopooll ond ,.
o.quhod,
olzo -orload, $51 ·• hi.M. Polnl Pluo,
104-1711-10110.
wfth
•*'oood :Mtl """"-Avo., Pt P l . - · $210. Aftor N- ~.
115 W ""' 2 ~ 1 ~• ........... 11u~1•en:c:1a'1j'i' -~·lo
....,._.. ._.,
,..., ..... houndl 10 monehl
IIOOIIY•ONellttiPPint~ Klrbv wcuum ciNner. • • old. C8tti niCIIa 1ft. ftle tang
..... ·~ -d- .
... - - 4- ......
- 4
•• ilso. .. bod Chomolol, 304-1'75-1111..
S2l5l.,_
-oil·.......
-•
11
1110.
· ·
Pl.- of ..... 100 ~ mhk
'
Uvl,. A- 8oll, Eoc. Cond. lonll, boloii ol mulch, old
3br, trllllr
z ..._~ ...
~~·
1~'14~-4~4~·~-~.:._--=,.,.
trect•. 114 111 1217.
~-~·- ~
on 1 lloglo C1oo1 gM oongo 1100. Aodlo lhock COlor Compulor
~0:..~.~·
lllc'""vo IIUo .,_ St21. "" '1\oo _.h Mit.
·
1715..124.
--•
-ardor.
QPICKENS FURNITURE
C h - gilL 1100. 114-111-

flo-·.,,__

Vans &amp; 4 WD'a
1178 et.,vy Bla-, 114-441- :

I alway_s look on lhe bright
side of things, while my

IL.=l==~=~~:i:::1=~'1
I r~:b~~ i~i~~~~y:elfo~,i~
I
II I I I

rn

73

•

C RANH

6:35
Andy Ortfflth
7:00 (}) OUr HOIIH
D (1) PM Magazine
(!) Colt.ge Baaketball
Ill
Ill Current Affair
(l) Ill MacNeil Lehrer
Newettour
!Ill • 1121 iiSI Wheel Of
Fortune Q
18® Nlglrt Coun Q
«J) Monayllno
® Cheera
liJI Miami VIce Bought And
Paid For Stereo.
a VldeoCountry
7:o5
J-raon•
7:30 D III Family Feud
Ill Enterllllnmont Tonight
D (() USA Todoy
!Ill •1121 1111 Jaopardyi .Q
ID I[D M•a•s•H
lUI Crouflre
·1!)1 Night Coun
aTop Card
7:35 Cil Sanford And Son
8:00 III MOVIE: The Clmerron Kid
(2:00)
1111 Unoolvecl
Myolorlel Look at the
bizarre death ol famous

••

• -· .

oo~pr

=

0234.

74

C1oo1n- 14" AomlnalotL $41.
24" Homolno, model tll5. •125. 1000 Food wichllll
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SOUTHEASTERN
BUSINESS
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46 Space fOr Rent

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The

Television
Viewing

1111 News

-

3

Pomaoy-Middlaport, Ohio

22, 1989

BORN LOSER

S.le

AUIOI for

---·

In . KVIIW CNoll

NOioi'IJ

Wednesday, November

0no lor, 111m. or 101Un. opl. In
IU-11C'1 ~

.... "" - . In lllo
a..MII14·3M
•11

41or, -

71

22. 1989

.f~DRGE BERGMAN

•

C) tlllltl Kona Felll!fft Svndiclle, Inc .

'

�Ohio Lottery

Shop
early; shop
lOcally

Piek-3
483
Pick
1777

~

se..

Lll!l' loaiJht Ia mid
Pll'll)&gt; elotllly ialurday. Hlp
In mid .... Chaace or rain a
percent.

•

I

No. 139
1989

~li11ei

lecttonal

in r.u•udous Velvet

2 END TABLES, SOFA,
LOVESEAT, CORNER
TABLE AND AMIFM
CASSETIE WITH
CLOCK BUILT IN!

REGULAR $2699

•m lcwnnt hl"' buill-In
Ancllnen lhllllet you laan ad! Into lu~eurlous
,...iOn.Tllil group II comp11M with • unique biurn .ora and

~~;! $1899

A.Vtlilable As

Stationary Group

0n11

IIV'II comtr ~·

Come lfKIP ~

STARTING AT

••

.

l

$699

•

'

.

,~,.-

..,

.

•

·by
...._ ·-:.
'

.
.
.
2 PIECE GROUP ..........

. $499

STARnNGAT ............

3 PIECE GROUP ....... STARnNGAT ..............~799

Santa Will Be
Visiting
Rutland Furniture
This Friday From
I 'Til 3,
And Saturday
From 10 'Til Noon.
Photos Will Be
Avaflallle With Sant~t.
STOPIHTHIS
WEEKEND!

-.
2 PIECE GROUP .....~ . .

&lt;

2 hctlon•. 16 Pog..

26 Oento

A MuttlnMdl• Inc. NewiPaper

Annexation inay be
·'within three months'

\.

'·

•

WILLIAMSBURG

l

11 yoor Iodination Ia to tn;oy comtortabla
lumltulll you wltl find gr41t1 p!Miurt owning thiS
10ft. p(..,. ~ CQ¥Iftld MCIIontl. 8oth the ont

'.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, November 24, 1989

•

,.

By NANCY YOACHAM
going discussions with the labor
Dally Sentinel Stalh
consulting firm of Clemens-Nel·
A proposed property annexason A,ssoclates,, Columbus. As
tlon In Middleport may be
explained bySwlsber,duringlast
coming within .. the next three
year's strike by De~rtment of
months. The Meigs County Com·
auman Services' employees,
missioners have passed the final
charges or unfair lal!Or practice
resolution needed to allow the were flied with the State Em·
proposed annexatiOn to take ployees Relations Board by both
place. The resolution approves
sides In the strike. The charges
"In part" theorlgtilal petition for have not yet been disposed of,
annexation and also Includes a
Swisher said.
description of the property . By
The charges of unfair labor
'•In part," the commissioners practice flied by managment
mea!l that the original petition relate to group gatherings or
was reduced In size.
striking employees outside the
A copy .of the commissioners' .homes of Swisher and Commls·
resolution.. which was passed stoner Richard Jones. Both
Wednesday dur!Jig their regular Swisher and Jones say they are
session, must be flied with only WJ!Ung to accept an admls·
Middleport's clerk-treasurer. slon rrorn the union that these
The village must then hold the gatherfnis did take place during
action lor 6p days before village the strike and will not happen.
council can pass an ordinance to again.
annex the property. All actions
Jack Erwin, Salem Center
must then be submitted to the dairy rarmer, and Meigs Dog.
secretary o( state's orflce where Warden Wayn~ Roseberry, met
the annexation Is made orrtclal . with the commissioners to disMike Swisher, director of the cuss a number or expensive
. Meigs County Department of animal kills on the Erwin rarm.
Human Services, met with the
Erwin questioned the commlscommlssloners to obtain appr,o- stoners as to pqsslble humaile
val of an agfi!f!ment between his ' measures to eliminate the probdepartment and Home National lem which to htm Is a constant
Bank, Racine, 10 redeem food sour:ce of worry. Erwin reported
stllmp cards for a two·year that !le bas seen packs ranging
petlod. Costs of transactions v.illl rrom three or four big dogs to as
be $1 per fooclltamp card.
manY, as sill. teen dogs, roaming
. Swisher also reported to the areas near his farm. Neighbors
I)OIIUD~Ieql!fS I'l!'l&amp;:l;dtng (!n· In the ,ar.~a . uld.1 a~ a•'. local

-~:

$499

STARTING AT............

3 PIECE GROUP ....... STARTING AT.:......""'~

,. S~nftte ·task
.

.

veterinarian have seen the dog$
too, Erwin said. The dogs seem to
come from and ret urn to prop.
erty own~ by Southern OhiQ
Coal Company. The attacks on
Envln' s animals come during the
day as well as at night, be
explained.
The commissioners agreed
with Erwin that the problem Is
serious, not only because of tmi
financial burden to Erwin bii l
because of the financial burden
to the county when It comes to
paying animal clatms.
,
At this time, there Is no money
Jetl In the county's dog and
kennel fund to cover anlmaj
claims, the commissioners saJ41
and there won't be any more
money In the fund until after the
first of the year.
·
The commissioners have bee!)
notified by Robert Byer, dlrectQl'
or the Meigs Emergency Medical
Services, that the EMS Board {of·
Trustees has accepted a bid froo\
. the ,Horton Company, Columbus,
ror refurbishing or an ambu; .
lance. ~he commissioners bo(d
already 1approved the bid last
week, subject to the approval by
the EMS Board.
Finally, Cler)&lt; Mary Hobstet·
ter has been given au (horlzatlon
to advertise for office space for
the Qepartment of Human Servl·
ces' Chl1d Support Enforcement
Division, with bids to be opened
1: 30 p.m, Dec. 13.

-;force .begins,

work on campaign reforms
DAYBEDS

$

STARTING AT ..................... 119

DINETIESET
In Brass, Glass And Oak

STARTING
AT

FREE

Remember the 111m of
oentmy charm o£ the gaslight eno In thlll ,warm oak
grouping - authenHailly detailed with simulated etched and leaded sJuS mlrrorlng
and marble-like shelves and case tops. A oolld bruo gallery rollac:cenll the otonge
hutch~ and storage lieadboard. Note the we of tambour doonon these pieceS.
Richly embossed and aa:ented with look-of-porcelain ond brass drawer and door
pulls. Mega-Tuff" finish glves•guaranteed prote&lt;tlon I« one~

•2YEAR
PARTS&amp;
LABOR
WARRANTY

.
PIU
4 Piece bedr\)0111 includes
dresser, storage
$
hutch mirror, door chest and storage, mirrored headboard.

door,,.,_

ATONLY

1099

Christmas Wish List ...

PRICE TAG ON
A IIAYTAGI

Cabinets............................As LOWA_s '%99
t/ Gun Calrinets.....................~ ............UPTO •zoo oFt
t/ 4 ·a nd 5 Drawer Chests............. '48 anc1 •sa
t/ Brass Headboards................. crova CBOICBJ '38
t/ Wood Rockers........................ sTARnNGAT '%~9·95
t/ Frigidaire Micro waves
t/ Entertainment Centei'S.....STARnNG AT'299

-.IIW

Deputies probe two B &amp; Es

t/ Curio

DEPEIIIA8I.E

MAYTAG

WASHERS

OAK REMEMBERED!

t/ De•eon's Bench............................. REG.'199-NOW'75
t/ OSU and WVU footstools

__ ...
--- ·--

DIII"M'

1

111MTM

DISHWASHERS
•NdbOdv ... dllnM
·Qulol~

•No dill .....

.,...,.._..

.• E..,.todNn

t1 ReeUners .....................................IPBCIA.£ J.OW n.rcur

'

Robert F. Bryant, 58, Rt . 1, Liverpool, W.Va., was seriously
Injured In a one car accident at 4:50 p .m . .Thursday In Meigs
County, on SR. 124, at mllepos!36.
·
• Bryant was taken by LlteF'Jight helicopter to Grant Medical
Center, Columbus. Hls 'condlllon was reported as serious this
morning.
_,. Troopers said .the accident occurred when Bryant's Chevrolet
Z!28 went off the left side of the snow covered road In Lebanon
Township, struck an embankment and over .turned onto Its left
side. Damage was heavy.
The accident Is still under Investigation.

MANY OTHER BEDROOM SUITES IN STOCK
AT SAVINGS UP TO 30% TO SOOA.

GeT A LOW

the Coart 81. mllll-park. Cllapmu wu assisted by
worken rrom Geor,e Carper's Nursery, Polhe·
roy VlllaJe employees, Chapman's Shoe Store
employee Dorothy Pal'IIOns, and a tall ladder. ·

Retailers see
Local news briefs-- strongs sales
Man seriously injured in wreck
' over holidays .

tiSTALLAOON
OFMAYTAG
PRODUCTS

TRDnONG THE TREE - Aaale Chapman,
president of tbe Pomeroy Merchants Aaeoelallon,
takes the buD by lbe ho.,. and the tree by the
llmbtJ u llhe places Cbrlstmaa IJcbll on a tree Ia

·rr::r::

AS
LOW
AS

&amp; END TABLES

ssgss·-

Deputies of the Meigs County Sherlfrs Department ·are
Investigating two breaking and enterlngs which occurred on
We&lt;1nesday.
The first reported Incident happened In Danville and
according to the report, !1 house owned by Paul Strausbaugh,
C?lwnbus, was entered sometime Tuesday night. Nothing was
reported missing.
The second report was received by John Keenan, Route 681,
Reedsville. He reported that his house bad been entered
sometime between 7 a.m. and 6:30p.m. on Wednesday. Various
Items were reported missing, Including a VCR, microwave, a
. receiver, three pairs or boots, two motorcycle jackets, and a
motorcycle helmet.
On Wednesday afternoon, deputies Investigated one accident
which res.ulted from the weather. According to the reporf,
Shirley Jude, VInton, was traveling east on Route 325 around 3
p.m. She went off tHe edge ,of the pavement, traveled a short
distance and struck !!large tree. Her 1986vehlcleglancedoffthe
tree, crossed the roadway striking a ditch and a GTE burled
cable junction box. The vehicle sustained heavy damage, and
the passengers In the car, Chasttty and Lucille Jude, were not
Injured. The were no citations Issued.
Sherirl James M. Souls by also reports that the office received
a call early Thursday morning from Howard Wrltesel, Neue
Hollow Road, Racine. that someone travei\Jig by his residence
had just shot his dog. An Investigation Is continuing.

Seven fined in Middleport court
Seven were fined and two others forfeited boiiiD In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Fined were John C. Hlte. Middleport, and Christopher H.·
C011tlnued on pace 5
·

By RICH EXNER
United Press International
It' s difficult to flll\1 a: Scrooge
when talking with department
store officials during the holiday
season.
"Retailers are alwaysoptlmls·
tic. You have to be. We think It's
going to be a good Christmas,"
said John Lupo, president of the
Higbee Co. , a 12·store chain
headquartered In Cleveland. "As
long as I've been In the n!lail
business, Christmas has always
been a good season."
Retailers have something to be
thankful for this year that has
nothing to do with the economy.
With ThanksglvlngbelngonNov.
23, It Is on almosttheearllestdate
the calender allows.
'This year, the way our
calender Is," Lupo said, "we ·
have a longer spread between
Thanksgiving and Chtrstmas, an
extra selling day, which Is
always ·a plus. "
The only earner Thariksgjvlng
could be Nov. 22. T)lat will
happen next year for the !lrst
time since 1973 and It will not
occur a~aln until 2001.
Stephen Thorpe, senior vice
president of the 16·store May Co.
headquartered In Cleveland, said
sales have been strone all year.
"I would anticipate It would go
thr0111h tbe Christmas season. If
It continues, as lthassofar, It will
be our best ·Christmas season In
our almoat 90 years," Thorpe
said. "I think It's true simply
becau11e the economy In this part
of the country Is still very, very
strong."
What that means Is that It will
be a typical holiday selling

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
rfpresentatlve of the Ohio Council of Churches told a state
legislative panel Wednesday the
problem of excessive election
campaign spending may never
be resolved.
But David McCoy urged an
Ohio Senate task force to try to
reduce the Inti uence of money on
elect'lons and "return political
campaigns to the people as much'
as possible. "
McCoy testified at the opening
meeting of a task force handling
a pair of House-passed bills
tightening the requirements on
those who lobby the legislative
and executive branches of go·
verrunent, and limiting contributions to various ponucal commit·
t ~ es,
Including campaign
committees for governor, other
statewide ortlces and the General
Assembly.
McCoy said regulating cam·
palgn donations and expend!·
tures Is like regulating conflictthey "can more realistically be

managed to a workable solu lion
than they can be fully resolved."
"We need to rtnd Incentives to
return political campaigns to the
people as much as possible,
knowiDg tha.t there Is no realty
'pure' solution to our dilemma, "
said McCoy.
Both bills under study cleared
the House last July under the
guidance of House Speaker Vern
Ririe, D·Wheelersbufll:,
One biU requires lobbyists to
register If they are working ror
state contracts through the exec·
utlve branch or the Controlling
Board. Currently, only lobbyists
working the Legislature must
register .
The other biU limits the
amounts that Individuals, state
and local polltlcal committees,
caucuses and political action
committees may donate tocandl·
dates and various campaign
committees during an election
cycle.
For example, an Individual

would be limited to giving $1,500
to a state legislative campaign
and $2,500 to a candidate for
statewide ortlce. However, mueh
more than that could be chan·
neled through political action
committees and state political
parties, which have higher limits ·
under the bill.
Ohio bad a limit on campaign
expenditures In the 1970s but It
was ruled unconstitutional.
·
Sen. Neal Zimmers Jr., D· :
Dayton, a member of the task :
force, said the panel will look for '
a way to legally curb spending. ·"There's a concern that these
campaigns have degenerated
Into all-out spending gprees," he
said. "We' ve gotto do something
to stop II. The public demands
that we do something."
Zimmers suggeste.d a limitation be placed, not on how much
of a candidate's personal money
could be spent, but on money
from political action groups and
other committees.

to be .U.HIIIted tllll Cltriitmaa - .. to
.-ea. were &amp;all• ..
we• • :r to the Salvation Army Ia Poaer.,.
-

aeet1y .,......._ Ia tile

111!&amp;1011.

,.

r t'

�</text>
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