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                  <text>Page-14-The

12.1987

Sentinel

Raising good cholesterol
lowers heart attack risk
By ROB STEIN
UPI Science Writer
BOSTON (UP! )
Researchers have produced the
first direct evidence that IncreasIng the amount of "good cholesterol" In the blood can help
preirent heart attacks. ·
"This Is a very Important
study," said Dr. Juss! K. Huttunen, director general of the
Finland's National Public Health
Institute In Helsinki, who helped
conduct the Helsinki Heart
S!udy.
"I feel It wllllnfiuence treat. ment In your country and elsewhere," Huttunen said Wednesday In a telephone Interview.
About 40 million Americans
are believed to have high blood
cholesterol levels . Cholesterol
accumulations Inside blood vessels leading to the heart set the
stage for heart attacks - the
nation's leading -killer. .
A type of cholesterol known as
high-density lipoprotein (HDL)
Is known as good chOlesterol
because It Is believed to help
remove fats from the blood.
Studies have found high HDL
.levels appeared to reduce· the
heart disease risk, but none had
shown directly that Increasing
HDL levels could protect against
heart disease.
In the study, 2,051 men were
given the drug gemf!brozll while
2,000 men received a fake substitute twice a day for five years.
The drug decreased by an
average of 8 percent the levels of
low-density lipoprotein· (LDL),
which Is known as "bad cholesterol" because It accumulates
Inside heart arteries. The drug
also Increased HDL levels an
average of 10 percenL
In the gemf!broz!l group, the
overall rate of fatal and non-fatal
heart attacks was 34 percent
lower and the overat risk for
heart attack death was 26 percent lower.
·
When the researchers looked
at the last three years of the
study alone, the drug reduced the
risk by almost 50 percent, indicating the benefits took a while to
take effect, Huttenen said.
Dr . .Basil M. Rlfklnd, chief of
the lipid metabolism and ather osclerosis branch of the N~tlonal

Heart, Lung and11lood Institute,
called the findlng.s Important In
an editorial accompanying the
study Wednesaay In The New
England Journal of Medicine.
"I'd call the study a landmark
study In that It expands . the
existing evidence of the potentllil
and posslblllt!es of Intervention ," added Dr. Robert L Levy,
a professor of medicine at
Columbia · University In New
York In a telephone Interview.
"This Is good news for the
American public."
The. findings should provide
added Incentive for people to
diet, exercise and quit smoking
In order to try to lower "bad
cholesterol" levels and raise
"good cholesterol" levels, . the
researchers said;
11 those efforts fall, the study
also shows that the drug used In
the study - gernflbrozll - Is an
apparently safe and effective
alternative for treating patients
who cannot achieve optimam
blood cholesterol Ieve Is on their
own, they said.
Th.e drug caused no significant
adverse side effects, although
the study Indicated It might
Increase the Incidence of
gallstones.
In a separate discovery called
"dramatic"
by Nobel prize·
winners, a team . of American
scientists reported that they may
have found the mechanism by
which cholesterol plaque builds
up In the ar~r!es of the heart.
Scientists from Genentech Inc.
of San Francisco and the University of Chicago said they discovered that a single cholesterol·
associated protein Is temarkably
similar to another protein Involved In blood clotting.
''These d~amatic findings may
provide the long-sought !Ink
between lipoproteins , and the
clotting system," said Nobel
laureates Michael Brown and
· Joseph Goldstein In a commentary In the British science
journal Nature, which published
the results of the study.
In the second study, the scientIsts theorized the protein apo(a) ·
binds lipoproteins to tiny blood
clots In the arteries, starting a
chain reaction build-up of choles- .
terol plaque thaI hardens the
arteries and leads to heart
'lllsease.

Court rejects school challenge
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The U.S. Supreme Court has
rejected a Columbiana County couple's challenge to Ohio's
compulsory school attendance law.
The appeal, rejected without comment this week, originated
from a 1984 lawsuit filed by Richard and Pamela Schmidt
against Superintendent Roger Stiller of the Columbiana School
District.
The Schmldts were challenging Stiller's refusal to let them
teach their daughter Sara at home, using a correspOndence
currlculull) from the Winchester Christian Academy, a private,
non-chartered school in Canal Winchester, Ohio.
Ohio's law general'ly requires all children 6 to 18 to attend a
private or public school but allows home Instruction with a
superintendent's permission.
The Schmldts said their Christian beliefs required them to
educate their daughter at home and forbade them Irom seeking
Stiller's permission to do so.
,
In 1985, Columbiana County Common Pleas Court rejected
the Schmldts' challenge, as did the Ohio Supreme Court in 1986.

.

WINTER TIME

FINAL

2 ·DAYS .

DIET PLAN
SPECIAL

SALE/

I

$199 $229
REG. 53.99

Our entire
selection included.
Sizes S, M.L and XL
Good Selection of
styles tind colors.
•

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WASHINGTON IUPI) - The nation's wholesale Inflation rate, an Indicator of future Inflation
at the retail level. d~opped 0.2 percent in October,
the first month-to-month decline since July 1986,
the government reported today.
The drop In the Labor Department's Producer
Price Index followed a 0.3 percent Increase In
September and no Increase In August. It put the
annual wholesale Inflation rate at 3.6 percent for
the year.
,
The decline was seen In wholesale sectors

'

I

. . , .' Wlllfll'll

across the board led by a 0.4 percent decrease in
capital equipment costs , a 0,1 percent drop In
consumer food prices and a 0.2 percent drop in
consumer goods as a whole.
Wholesale prices of durable goods --Items such
as automobiles designed to last three years or
more - fell 0.2 percent while non-durable goods
prices fell 0.3 percent.
All figures are adjusted to ·compensate for
seasonal factors that affect prices.

KNIT SHIRTS and
SPORT SHIRTS
Siz!HI 8 to 20. The season's
best styles in colors you'll
like. See all the new looks for ·
fall1987.

SALE PRICES

Regularly priced at 19.95 and '22.95
Sizes S (28-30), M (32-34), L (36-38)
and XL (40-42) and waist sizes 29 to 38.
SELECT YOUR FAVORITE COLOR

REG. *19.95 SLACKS .... SALE 1 15.99
REG. *22.95 SLACKS ... SALE $18.39

stilrts ,·

regulars plus student sizes.
Suspender Slacks. 0 !stress
·. Dyed Styles, Pleated Dress
Slacks.

SAVE

SPECIAL GRID AWARDS- Members of the
Eastern High Football team rece!vlnir awar.ds
were, front, 1-r, Steve Horner - Best Uneman
(Wide receiver); Allen Tripp, Most Improved;

QOI
/0

and Kyle Davis-Guts and Glory. Back row-Mark
Griffin-Best B11ck and Jeff Johnson, Best
Defensive Award. (See page 3 for story and
additional photos of Thursday's banquet).

2
.

LADIES WINTER

WOMEN'S

LONG GOWNS

PAJAMA
SALE
•Flannel
Pajamas
•Brushed Tricot
Pajamas
•Thermal Knit
Pajamas
•Nylon
Pajamas
SIZES 3 2 to 48
SALE PRICED FROM ONLY

AND ROBES
SALE

Flannel, Brushed
Tri-cot and Nylon .
Size'! IS. M. L, XL.
XXL.
GOWNS SALE

~:~~00NLY

CHILDREN'S

$879

ROBES SALE
PRICED
FROM ONLY S2Q79

WINTER COAT SALE

25°/o OFF
ALL CHILDREN'S COATS &amp; SNOWSUITS

Lavawav

WOMEN'S PROFESSIONAL

Now For

UNIFORM

Christmas!

NIGHTSHIRTS
Long and short styles
in flannel, knit and
sweatshirt knit.
SIZES S, M, L

$J69

Reg. $15.00 .... Sale 111.99
Reg. '19.00 .... Sals $15.19

REG. 53.19

Reg. '24.00 ..... Sale '19.19
'

VOLLEYBALL SPECIAL HONORS went to
this trio at the Eastern lfigh sports banquet
Thursday as Junior Amy Hager, left, received the
HBest Serving Percentage" award and ~~M~st

SALE
Dresses, Pant Suits,
,Lab Jackets, Slacks
and Skirts.
Sizes 6 to 20 and
14112 to 26112
Reg. •g to *36

Points Scored" award. Trlsh Spencer was
awarded "Best Spiker" and Amy Berkhlmer,
right, was named "Most Improved."

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Educators need to make major
changes In the way public school
students are taught, says Albert
Shanker, president of the American Federation of Teachers.
Shanker, who addressed the
annual meeting of the Ohio
Schqol Boards Association earHer this week. said students
should be encouraged to learn by
doing and by research rather
than just sitting In a classroom
and listening to a lecture.
Too often, pupils who just listen
leave the class without knowing
what the lecture was about he
said.
'
· America's future Is In doubt!!
Its educators do not revolutionize
how schools teach. Shanker said.
If major changes aren't made,
Shanker predicts politicians will
revive the voucher plan. Under
it, parents would get vouchers
worth certain sums from the
federal government and could
use them to send their children to
whatever schools parent s
choose .
'·
That would end public educa-'
tjon apd spawn a host of private
s~hools, Shanker said. He beqeves thos.e schools would polarIze the country and end the

Sale P1J~ed
$7l 9 TO
$2879

~..

\

TOLEDO, Ohio IUPI ) - A
proposal to allow a hazardous
waste dump in Oregon, Ohio, to
accept nearly 400 kinds of toxic
waste Is drawing a chorus of
protests against an "assault on
the environment" throughout-ofstate wastes.
But the operator told the
Hazardous Waste Facility Board
Thursday Envlrosafe Services of
Oh lo Inc. has a safe record and
can alleviate the nation's growIng problem with disposing ha zardous wastes .
Those assurances did not sa tisfy the Wood County Board of
Cclmmlssloners, which joined
physlcans and residents In ob·
jecting to the proposal.
"The dense populations of
Toledo, Oregon, and northern
. Wood County .do not deservE:·...
this
'

as sault on the environment."
Commissioner Marilyn Baker
said .
" We object to using our home
arP.a as a dumping ground for the
East Coasl, " she said.
.
Allowing the company to accept 392 J;.:pes of toxic wastes
poses a health threat to the
community, particularly since
Toledo's ra)l' water supply lines
run through the site, opponents
said .
"We:re proud of our track
record .over the past six years,
under the close scrutiny by the
state and federal EPA 's and In
the full glare of public scrutiny,"
said Raymond Chestnut, Envlrosafe' s vice president and general
manager.
Chestnut said expanding the
site to contain 3.9 million cubic

melting pot that nas made
America strong.
"Every day, we do a great deal
of damage to the children in our
classrooms. and we don't even
realize It," he said, citing - the
following examples:
-Young children are publicly
humiliated each day when
teachers call on them for
· answers they do not know. "Then
most of them say , 'I'm not even
going, to try; I'm not even in the
game,' after they're humlllated
in front of their peers."
-High school students who
drop out early in the year
because they have fallen behind
cannot get back Into school until
the beginning of the next year .
-Students of all ages lose their
Innate curiosity by listening to
teachers lecturing hour after
hour, year after year. ·
Shanker said such educational
stumbling blocks can be eliminated by reorganizing classroom
operations. Teachers should stop
lecturing and stop asking students questions with the whole
class listening.
Instead', he said, teachers
should be supervisors. They
should help children learn on
their own or with the help of a
peer or a volunteer. Children

should learn by doing, observing
or researching, rather than by
being told about something.
"We've got to start thinking
about what makes kids tick, what
gives them a better Image of
themselves," he said.
He cited a recent report by the
National· Assessment of Educational Progress, a federally
funded organization .
The report concluded that only
20 percent of students about to
graduate from high school can
write a simple letter to a
prospective employer, only 4.9
percen t can understand a bus or
train schedule, and only 27
percent can do a simple two-step
math problem .
He said such Ignorance cannol
be eliminated by current popular
reform proposals. such as reduc ing class size, paying teachers
more and Increasing teacher job
satisfaction.
"We are not close -to succeed·
ing;" he said. "Does anyone
really think we can go from 20
percent to the 70 or 80 percent
level by having smaller classes
or paying teacliers more?" he
asked. "If you do, you have to
have a lot of faith lo the tooth fair
as well. "

OBES!eased $5.2 million worth Commu:tications Inc.\, Brook
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) .
of
telephone equipment without Park, a firm shown to have
Gov. Richard F . Celeste and the
competitive
bidding from TeleContinued on page 7
Ohio General Assembly should
"move Immediately" to Institute
competitive bidding on all acqui,,
sitions of telecommunications
equipment for the state, accord·
The Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce and Bend Area
yards of solid waste, and to begin lng to state Auditor Thomas E.
Merchants
Association will stage Its annual welcome to the
handling up to 180,000 gallons of Ferguson.
holiday
season
on Sunday, Nov. :19.
The auditor made the recomliquid wastes, along with 49,000
The
two
organizations
are extending an Invitation to all are11
gallons stored In drums, will mendation Thursday In releasing
groups
Including
clubs,
churches, organizations, businesses
present "no Increased risk to the results of his survey on
and
Individuals
to
take
part
In a parade which will be a pari of
p u·b II c · he a I t h o r the ' telecommunications equipment
the activities.
In state offices.
environment ."
The parade will be held at 2 p.m. through Pomeroy and the
''The obviously lax procedures
Opponents of the dump said the
theme
for the observance will be · ~Home for the Holiday".
presence of the water mains at for acquiring equipment by state
Bands,
majorettes, dance groups, commercial and nonthe dump Is reason enough to entitles, as revealed by the
commercial
floats, antique and hot rod cars, equestrians and
survey, prompted me to recomdeny the permit.
novelty
entries
will take part. Application forms and any
"Certainly anyol)e with any mend that both the governor and
addltiunal
Information
for participants can be secured by
sense of logic would not locate a the Ohio General Assembly move
contacting
the
chamber
office, 992-5005, or Parade Chairman
toxic waste facUlty within 50 feet Immediately to correct the situa992-6371.
Paul
Gerard,
of the water lines," said Dr. tion," said Ferguson.
The two sponsoring organizations are encouraging residents
The survey was conducted In
Jonathon Ross.
to
look to their hometown merchants llrst for the holiday gift
The Toledo physician said the the wake of reports of Irregularigiving needs and an old fashlolled hometown Christmas.
danager of Increased exposure to ties regarding the leasing of
Radio Station WMPO will do a live remote from Court St. on 1
toxic chemicals will be greater telecommunications equipment
parade day, and Santa. will be on hand to distribute treats
p.m.,
because Envl,rosafe wants to by several state agencies, chiefly
to
youngsters.
Parade applications may be .plcked up at WMPO,
accept more chemicals , Includ- the Ch!o Bureau of Employment
Farmers
8a~k.
.
,
Bank
I
and
Ing those that have proven lethal Services, the state government's
lar,g_est telephone user.
,
Continued on page 7

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

There have been no negotiating
sessions between the board and
the teachers since the .s trike
began a I 12: 01 a .m. on Nov·. 6.
However, District Supt. Dan E .
Morris Indicated that he believes
a federal mediator will be
contacting both groups on reestablishing negotiations since negotiations were In the hands of a
federal mediator when the strike
began.
· Meantime, Dr . Phillis contacted Friday morning at this
office In Columbus, said that he
has at no time Indicated that the
three year contract plan Is
"feasible" . Dr. Phillis said that It
has said It wduld "legal" in his
opinion but that the "feas!bllty"
aspect Is a local matter which
would have to be studied based on
the Meigs Local School District's
income and expenses for the
period Involve~.

Ferguson asks assembly to
institute competitive bidding

Plan to expand Ohio waste dump ,draws fire

e,SE OUR FREE
PAlliNG LOTS
.

manufacturing.
,
Economists had expected a sligh t Increase In
wholesale prices during October .
''The general trend In commodities is for prices
to stay level or go down," said Sandra Shaber, an
analyst with The Futures Group, a Washington
economic consulting concern .
"The major i!sk for Inflation over the next six
months to a year Is In imports, which are affected
by the drop In the dollar," she said .

AFf head says educators
need to make major changes

DRESS &amp; '
CASUAL SLACKS
Sizes 8 to 16 in slims and

Fot Thl1 S•le

.

.Overall, wholesale prices were 2.6 percent
higher than In October 1986,
The drop in consumer food prices and durable
goods prices followed sharp jumps of 1.1 percent
and 1.5 percent respectively during September.
Energy prices continued to fall with I he price of
crude petrole\Jm faliing 1.8 percent on the heels of
a 5.1 percent drop In September.
The only bad news In the report was an 0.5
pel115ent Increase in the price of intermediate
-naterlals, supplies and components used In

Teachers of the Meigs Local claimed earlier.
School District were on picket
"We agree that the proposal is
lines as the various schools of the not a permanent solution to
district today as , their strike budget problems, but it does
moved into Its sixth day.
afford the Board time to get Its
· The association did Issue a fiscal house in order and it
statement this morning which provides a financial commitment to our teachers.
reads :
•
"The Meigs Local Teachers'
"We believe that any reduction
Association concurs with state- In programs or the number of
ments made by Dr. William teachers at Meigs Local would
Phillis, Assistant Superintendent have a detrimental effect on the
of the State Department of education of our pupils. We want
Education to enter Into a three· a negotiateed contract that gives
year contract as proposed by job security and that shows some
commitment to ali members of
MLTA.
"His statements make It clear the teaching staff.
"The Association has not prethat the Board may legally enter
into an agreement that provides viously responded to news repay raises In the third fiscal year. leases from the Board of Educaas proposed by MLTA, and that tion because we believe that
school officials and Board nego(lating at the bargaining
members are not subject to fines table, not In the news media, Is
and other penalties as they have the only way to end the strike."

BOYS'

CASUAL SLACKS

25 Cents

Meigs strike enters sixth day

*liirsmfloyi TuiM Sodg '
•YIIId!Mitl Ortn Shirts
...,,, Drtss Trolisen
"hyf'BotlcJtans
~ Swlllten
*Min'•·Dttlim Wtsttl'!l Shirts

MEN'S DISTRESS DYED

2 Sections. 16 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

.

"'·"'Qtt.,t..

BOYS'

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 13, 1987

',_ •MIN'S 'AND toYS'
·• DIPAITIMNT . ..
...... Nldctltt .,2"'~
.• .f!99

sAL~r

Clear tonl~;ht . Low near ~­
Sunny Saturday. lfighs near
60.

•

•

.

. ";lA VEl." ;.

SALE!
COFFEE
FILTERS

•

Natioit's wholesale prices up; inflation down

Bug Now For Ch1lnm•tl_
SAVE

•

Q!lily Number ,
983
Pick 40225

. '

sizes up to 4 XL and tall• in Sizes
L, XL and XXL.
•
Includes all poly-cotton blend
hanging shirts, all sport flannels.
plus our LeTigre and J. J .
Cochrane folded shirts ..

REG. 52.90

Koopedote
8 oz.

Vol. 37, No.132
Copyrighted 1987

MEN'S SPORT
SHIRTS
Reg. Sizes S, M, L, XL plus big

ME-N'S WINTER
JACKETS

oz.

SPECIAL

'Page 6

FRIDAY, NOV. 13th &amp; SATURDAY, NOV. 14th

Mylanta
12

Church
•
notices
•

123rd ANNI~ERSARV SALE

SA~INOS

JUST ONE PElt DAY

Ohio Lottery

·,

Yule event set Nov. 29

-·

�I

,

COmme.n t ary
The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy, Ohio
HE VOTED TO TilE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS- !\I .~SON .~REA

ROBERT L. WINGET'.f
Puhllsher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant ~uhlish_er/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General l\Janagl'r

A MF.MRER nf The• l'niH•cl Prr-s~ rnh·rnatinna l. ln land Da il;. Pr0 ... ~
1\~srwint ln n and \hf' J\mr1 1C': 1n ~f'WspapC'r Publ ishf'J~ 1\:-S'nc·Lllinn .
l • · rl~· All 11'1l l·r~ ,Ill' ~uhir • 1 1 11 1t·dl ' i n (.! :1ntl mU '- 1 h1• ~lgnrillt it h n.1m• · ;1(hln •"s :1n1l
lf'lt·phon•· rum h• 1 t\r • un-.l!:! nl"'l' l h ·l lt 'l " ~ill I&gt;~ · pu h li'-h1·d ! .f'!l!•r'- ~twult l h t• in
!'• ••d 1,•'-l t•, H!iln ·"-"i n g i"'- lli ''- 111 &gt;\ pt •t•..,r,na l ll ir•!- .

·Reagan accepting
•
compromise
over
confrontation

Letters to the· editor-

Harvest Moon Festival · ·

.

and the Southern Band once
again marched down the streets
of Racine and a fine group they
are, our thanks once again goes
to the student body for the
election of our Queen . Now our
own. fire dept., Legion, Auxs.
·Emergency Squad, Jr. Firemen.
Churches, P .T.O., P .T.A. and
craftsmen of all kinds. we wish to
thank each and everyone of them
lor without them we couldn' t
have done it. And of course tlie
town council and street dept for
their help, and your own Nancy
Yoachom. The festival ended
with a band more to the liking of
the younger group, The Annex.
Our thanks to all who helped in
anyway .

Racine Merch. Assoc.
Mrs. Joan McLain, Pres.

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

'&lt;:om passion!

: Dogs have proven to be Man' s
; Best Friend, they stick with, and
'-love you through sickness. and
health, and never, deser t you!
' I too' have los t a beloved dog
receniiy . A heavy truck literally
tore her apart. My only consolatio n is In knowing she Is now at
peace, and sale, in the Animal
Kingdom .
Also, my bea utiful German
Shepherd was hit by a truck
which ran out of the road to hit
her! And, never even stopped to
help me carry her out of the road.
So (TIUCh for the so/ called,

-.

•

fund. and th ere is no limit on the
amount s th at can be dona ted.
The possibilities for corruption
in this system worry some
members of the Senate Governmental Affairs Commit tee. The
fear is that a corporation, a labor
union or a wealthy Individual
could secretly "buy" a Cabinet
post or other posi tion of Influence
in Washington - and the public
would never fi nd out, because of
the lack of accountability In
transition finan ci ng.
Until 1968-69, transition expenses were paid by the political
parties. That year, Congress
allocated a relatively modest
$900,000 - half for the incoming ·
Nixon administration and half
for the outgoing Johnson admln.istratlon. Since 1976, new presl-

f

(

I

'

.

\

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Brian Sharp. Completing the list of 13 seniors
were back; Charles Cleland,Steve Horner,Mark
Griffin,Jefl Johnson,Jeremy Barber,and James
Myers.Absent was Ron Maxson.

GRID SENIORS - Members of the 6-4 EHS
football squad, finishing second In the SVAC were
seniors, Front row,l-r,Steve Welch, Tony Hendrix,AIIen Tripp,Kyle Davis,Terry Newsome,and

MAC title
at stake
Saturday

Poor America~-~----~-~--·_v_in_ce_n_t_C_a_rr_o_ll
Poor America. It just can't
compete anymore, can It? The
July trade deficit reached a
record $16.5 billion, and the
figure for August was not much
better. Frightened Investors aren't sure what to do.
Meanwhile, ever-vigilant Congress has whomped up legislation to protect us from those
clever foreigners who make so
many things we can't seem to
stop ourselves from buying.
Where can a good patriot turn
for solace?
Well, a trip abroad helps put
matters in perspective. A few
days after the year's worst trade
figures were released. I happened to be strolling down a
commercial s tree! in Singapore.
Just for sport, I started counting.
Here to my left was a Denny's
restaurant, there a Burger King,
now a MacDonald's, a Kentucky
Fried Chicken, Hardee's, and
two- yes, two- 7-Elevens.
I could take a break at Pizza

Hut, Swensons or Orange Julius.
I could rent a car from Hertz or
Avis. I could shop at J.C. Penny's
and Toys R Us, do business at
Chase Manhattan, Bank America or American Express, see a
Hollywood movie, sleep at a
Holiday Inn, Hyatt or Hilton.
Up above, billboards heralded
Kodak film. Firestone tires,
Sunklst oranges and even Marvel
Comics.
Back in my hotel, the refrigerator opened to Budweiser, Coca
Cola. Pepsi and 7-Up, among
other beverages stocked by the
staff. I hit the button on the TV
and on came "Matlock."
Singapore, believe it or not.. is
one of those hard-working Pacific Rim countries that runs a
trade_ surplus with us - an
example to alarmed members of
Co ngress of the competition we
should fear .
Whatever should the people of
Singapore fear, do you suppose?
Or Is It only Americans who must

not allow their society to become
polluted with foreign products?
Sometimes we forget how
dominant our 7ompanles 90n·
tlnue to excel across the world.
American trade names are no
less ubiquitous in Japan ..inclden·
tally, despite our large trade gap
with that country.
This is not to trivialize the
trade deficit or to downplay
obstacles to selling our products
in some coun tries. It is merely to
insist that the trade problem
depicted. Many successful countries easily endure trade deficits .
Singapore has run an overall
deficit every year of this decade.
Even fabulou sly dynamic Hong
Kong recorded a deficit from 1980
through 1984, and is curren tly
steaming toward another.
Britain will be one of the
fastest-growing countries In Europe this year. It will also run up
one of Europe's larger trade
deficits.
There is simply no historical

evidence tying trade deficits to
poor · economic performance. A
fast-growing economy is as likely
to run a deficit .as not. In
comparison with many of our
trading parlners, U.S. growth
has been Impress lve In recent
years. Meanwhile, our economy
has created millions of net new
jobs - hardly a sign of terminal
anemia.
Even so, politicians seem determined to foster the impression
we can't compete. Rather than
attack real problems lor which
they are responsible, such as the
federal budget deficit, they toy
with protectionist legislation.
A House bill even . dictates
labor standards In other countries, as well as threatens higher
tariffs and tighter quotas. Almost offhandedly, it mandates
retaliation against "excessive"
surpluses, as If the phenomenon
co uld be defined.
Poor America, Indeed. To be
governed by such as these.

Census Bureau.playing politics

that it will not adjust Its U.S. tally
In 1990 to take Into consideration
expensive surgery, and tender
undercountlng of population
lovlng care, she is now on the subgroups.
mend .
Many are charging that the
Which brings to mind the decision is politically motivated.
presenl la te of the "Pit Bull" .
The accuracy of the population
They were trained to fight and count - which Is required every
kill. Now, are being killed for 10 years under the Constitutiondoing what they were taught to Is of much more than academic
·do! Ju stice? Yes, and then some!
interest.
I live iri the country, In the
The Census Bureau's findings
middle of a 2 acre wooded -Jot, but
are used to redraw congressional
now my animals mu st be con- and state representative district
fined . to a~ chain for the rest of -lines In accord with population
their lives, for protection from changes. The new district boun·~ Mo rons "!
daries then stay in effect for a
I am very familiar with Ro- decade.
mans; 12: 19, 20, 21. So, ... we do
Additionally, billions of dollars
have the consolation, that even- in federal funds under hundreds
tually these un-civilized people of population- based programs
will be punished , se.Jerely! They . are distributed according to the
will reap what they sow! There IS census totals.
a just God!
New York Oty estimates that
An Animal Lover,
since 1980 It has lost almost $100
Margaret Gaiter million because of undercounting. Over 50 lawsuits alleging
undercounts were filed after the
1980 census, many by cities and
minority organizations . At least
25
are still pending.
stole these articles have to be the
In the 1980 census, an under·
most low individuals In existcount occurred mainly In urban
ence. There Is nothing lower.
These articles are not the only areas, especially In the !riner
thing that has been stolen in our cities. These are predominately
cemeteries. Grave Blankets , Democratic areas . Because of
Urns, Vases, Flowers and etc. this, congressional district lines
were drawn that gave disproporhave been r eported stolen.
Anyone having any Informa- tionately high representation to
tion on !he above, please do your sub-urban and rural areas, which
duty and report tt to your taw are predominately Republican.
Therefore, Democrats argue,
officials.
the
GOP has a vested Interest In
Mr. Denver Curtis
Service Officer seeing that figures in the 1990
Disabled American Veteran census will not be adjusted.
"We won't play with the
Pomeroy. Ohio
numbers," said Rober t Ortner,
Human Race! However, with

.'II
''

THIS
RoOM UNTIL WE
l&lt;NoW WHo ...

Census Bureau's announcement

Grave robbers
Editor. The Sentinel:
Today I received some very
sad and disturbing news. Some
person or persons have been
stealing the flag holders off
Veterans graves in surrounding
cemet eries.
Some of these markers are
bronze and some are cast steeL
The Veterans Orga ni zatio ns
. spent a lot or' time and money
placing these mar kers.
These markers were•placed by
. the Veterans Organizations out
or respect for our departed
brothers who gave their li.ves.
The Person or Persons who

Honor Eastern's .fall athletes

No~V ~EAVES

WASHINGTON (NEAl - A
debate Is ·raging here over the

Responds to letter

Mr. &amp; Mrs. Young,
, . Regarding the vicious murder
· of your be-loved Pet, by some
: sadistic pervert, and probably
: o.ne who never had a child,
• therefore. incapable of knowing
; the mea nin g of the word Love, or

_

-

ONE: r,y oNE!

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON 1UP!) - As his days dwindle down in •the White
House, President Reagan is being forced more and more to
compromise on domestic and'foreign policy issues!
The budget defici t is more than a case In point. For months the
president had shied away, or ignored requests for a budget "summit"
with congressional leaders to find a way out of the debt morass.
Only when the stock market collapsed on "black Monday" did he
realize that he could no longer sit on the sidelines. His own
.constituency. the nation 's business leaders and major investors, were
·clamoring for him to "do something" and to show "leadership,"
:although that term was ill defined and clearly they did not know what
·they wanted Reagan to do other than to cut the deficit.
He :is feeling the backlash of his Pentagon pump priming. the
·largest mllitary expenditures In peacetime history, and at the same
.lime reducing Treasury coffers with tax cu,ts across the board.
· : So he has decided that compromise instead of confrontation is the
:~ay to go or his administralion, the Republican Party and the nation
·.will be in deeper trouble.
·. : On another front the president has flatly refused to negotiate with
:the Sandinistas for the past few years. He insisted that Managua's
leftist-led government had to negotiate with the Nicaraguan rebels ,
:or Contras, who are uniformed, supplied, armed and generally run by
·the United States.
: But last September, the president, seeing the handwriting ~n the
wall with time running out , agreed to a peace plan with Speaker Jim
'wright, which laid down conditions for a cease-fire and
.
:democratization of Nicaragua.
• At the same time, the Central American leaders, headed by Costa
:Rica's Oscar Arias, came up with their own softer plan to end the
:fighting in Nicaragua. For that Arias won the Nobel Peace Prize.

Dear Mr. Editor,
Well, the "Harvest Moon Festival'.' is once again a thing of the
past. All went well, we had a ·
beautiful Day . Now once again
comes the thank you's. First
Alisia Williford " Miss Harvest
Moon Queen" and her attendants
Donette Talbott, June Beegle.
Tracy Beegle. Then there is
Frances Florist lor the flowers
they donated to the girls who
la ter in the day gave them to the3
oldest senior ladles of Sulton
Twp. So the ir flowers were very
much enjoyed. Then there was
Sue Hager who worked so hard
with us. And Vic Brown who gave
a history on Sutton Twp. Howard
Writzel Band and the Bend Riv er
iloys. furnished mu sic as did
~a thy and Jan, also Debbie
Powell accompanied by her son,

-

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, 0__ hio
Friday, November 13, 1987

Sct!EoNE: IS
l&lt;IL!.ING tJS oFF
'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Pomeroy 1\niddleport. Ohio

WASHINGTON- MostAmeri·
In practical political terms, of
cans probably figure a presiden- course, the main funclon of the
tial "transition" involves pack· winner's teams is to hunt for
ing up the outgoing president's party loyalists to fill the top jobs
belongings and moving the new in th e new administration. And
one's Into the White House. That possibly with this In mind, many
may have been true in Coolidge's patriotic Americans dona te big
day (when, according to a bucks to help pay the expenses of
famous New Yorker cartoon, a presidential transition. Some of
Silent Cal refused to leave until them - or their friends .:...
his other rubber was found).
undo~btedly wind up with InBut the transition process is a fluential or high-paying jobs in
.
lot more complicated - and ,the new administration.
No one can be sure, because
costly - these days. The major
part of the operation consists ·at there Is no accountability revarious "teams" or the new quired for private fupds donated
president's sta !warts planning to a presidential transition - in
their takeover of the various contrast t 0 the strict accounting
federal agencies and coordinat- of campaign donations. Also
Ing with the lame-duck adminis- unlike the rules on campaign
tration's top bureaucrats. In contributions, corporations can
theory this Is to assure a smooth donate directly to a transition
transition.

Ill Court Street

·-.

undersecretary of the Commerce
Depar tmen t, the Census Bureau's parent organization. He
rejected any call to adju st the
figures alter the1990count: "The
department does not Intend to
adjust. .. for purported under - ·
count and overcount of population subgroups . .. adjustment
wou !d create more probl ems '
than it solves and would divert
needed resources."
However, there Is general
agreement among the experts
that the 1980 census probably
missed about 2 percent of th e
total population. The undercount
was particularly high among
minority groups.
The House census subcommit tee estimates there was a 5.9
percent undercount of all blacks,
and a 7.5 percent undercount of
black males In 1980. In 'New York
City alone, experts estimate,
over a hall·mlllion minority
group members wer e no t
counted in 1980.
One problem is that while most
experts agree there has been an
undercount, they are sharply
spilt over how to correct it.
One suggestion has been to
wait until after the 1990 count and
then flood selected areas with
census takers to obtain an
especially accurate count. Both
figures for the s elected areas
would be subsequently compared ·
and adjustments would then be
made nationally for other areas
with similar characteristics.
Rep. Mervyn Dymally, DCallf., chairman of the census
subcommittee, . introduced legislation recently that would re·
quire the Bureau of the Census to
conduct this "post-enumeration
survey ." Such a survey would
probably consist of a statistical

random sample of 300,000 households, a subcommittee staffer
said.
But many statisticians and
demographers believe \his would
be at least as Inaccurate as the
current counting method, and
perhaps even more so. Popula- .
tlon experts believe that any
secondary ~ '!rvey - being a
smaller sample of. people than
the eensus itself - would , by
definition, be less accurate.
Rep . Charles Schumer , D-

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
The Mid-A merican Co nference
football title could be decided
Saturday when Bowling Green
v.lsits Eastern Michigan . Then
again, it' might take ye t another
week to sort out a champion and
determine the lea gue's represen tative to th e California Bowl.
One thing is fo r sure- Eastern
Michigan already has at leas t a
share of th e championship all
locked up and a win or tie by the
Hurons against BG Saturday
would give them the outright title
and the Cal Bowl dat e against
San Jose State.
That's where all th e "ils" come
in .
If Bowling Green win s Satur·
day, it will keep the Fa Icons alive

for a title share and the bowl
berth as they close out the season
the following week at home
against Central Mi chi gan.
A pair of BG wins, coupled with
a Kent State win over Miami
Saturday. also would put the
Falcons in the bowl ga me.
If Miami and BG both win this
week. that also would give a
piece of th e championship to the
Redsklns, although they have no
chance for 'th e bowl trip.
Bes ides the BG-Eastern and
Miami-Kent games. other MAC
encounters this week find Toledo
at Central Michigan and Ohio
University at Bail State .
Eastern Mi chigan brings an 8-2
overall record and a 6-J MAC
mark into Sa turday's big game
against BG . The Falcons are 4·5
and 4-2.
Eastern, led by th e pa 5s1ng of
Ron Adams and the running of
Gary Patton. ha s won four in a
row since a 16-6 loss at Central
Michigan a month ago .
The Hurons, coming off a 38-9
win over Toledo in a week ago
Thursda y night TV game. have n't beaten BG si nce 1980.
Bowling Gree n, behind Rich
Da c kln 's thr ee touchdown
passes, whipped Kent State 30-20
las tweek. rebounding from a loss

Robert Wagman

N.Y., who is among the leading
proponents of adjustment,
scoffed at the bureau's decision
not to adjust the count.
"The Census Bureau if forgetting that the numbers they don't
want to tamper with are wrong,"
Schumer said. "I can't believe
that they would perpetuate a
procedure that disenfranchises
hundreds of thousands of people
and deprives local governments
of millions of dollars In ald."

Berry's World

SENIOR NETTERS - Senior members of the Eastern
Volleyball squad honored at Thursday night's banquet at the
School were; Melanie Mankin, Lori Burke, and Amy Berkhlmer.

.

•.

ID 1981 DV NEA Inc

" How about taxing the COCAINE business?"

..

games hurt, rushing 58
times lor 248 ya rds and catc hing
20 passes for 196 yards and two
touc hdowns.
Jeff Johnson , won "The Stick"
award for best defense, leading
the tea m with 128 tack les a nd
hard hits.
t t lf ." /'1) 1 11 1-1-Ul.l~ liH~ ft"' Donna
c:urtis, Larissa Long, Ruth Nutk&gt;r, Ay
Mont , Jayne Ritchie, Amy Murphy, and

l&gt;e"bhie Brooks.
Jl \It !It I IU ..., /'1 r CIH·." f.'HJ f·." W HH... ~
Tara Morri s, Melissa flensley, Melinda
W1•Us, Angle Murphy, Am)' Metzger, and
Kyrn Mcintyre.
l•, tr, IITU (,U IIJI-.'- Cu.rrie Gillian, Amy
" 't•ll. Monicu /\dams, Tina Conpolly,
Michelle l..aught•r)', and .Julie KifD e.
·
.,,. I 1-.'\ T U (,H t/W - Susie FranCII,'
Lt•litla 11o lsin~er, Chastldy Mlllhone, and
'rnlcy Murphy .
J I H~I'IT J 01.1.1~ ) 111/.1. - Lori Burke,
Melanie Mankin.- Amy BerkhlmCr, 'frlsh~
Spenser, Amy Hager , Lisa Drlus.
Jleuther Flnlaw , Amher Short, Carrie
Ber nard, Angle Chapman, Lori'(' Baker,
Ma ndie llarris, Edna Drlns. and Toby
JUII and Manager Shw-on Baker.
Jl \ 10H tlft;Jfl OJ .u-: \ " ·11.1. - MaryJo
Rcl'd, Lee Gillian, Andrea RockhQid,
1\.lvena VanM eter, J amie Brannon, Jenny
Deem , St e phanie Otto, Carrie Morrissey,
Lil'la Hoffman. KeUI Ridenour, and Ml·
c helle Met;,;g er. Manager Brhm Holtman.

1 1 \IOH lfU: II f."OOHJ.I/.1: Wes
Holter, Mike Newland, Jay Swain, Ttm
Bl s!WII, Mike Hoffman, Brad Powell, Rod
Nu~·s om c, Mi chael Smith, Je(f Durst,

l'hlllip Woods, Danny Shorl, ,Jercy Hay·
man. James McD11nlel, Tim Michael,
Sh•v1•n Barrett , Chad Savoy, .Jameti
P!\rker, Cha rley Franch;, J cre m;v Cline,
Brian LonR. Ri cks Causey. Brent Bally,
'fodd Marcinko. .Joe Marelnko, Scott
Burke, Erk Pow1•ll, 'fom Wilson, Robby
Calaway. and Kevin Cline. M1mager Scott .
Bak er .
! 1/f.'fTl 1-m rm 11,1. -· Mike Weber,
'l'im Nculilina. Chad Sinclair, Howard
Lawrence, Jay Reynulds, Ken Hi ckman,
,Jason Ha~ter , Paul Erwin, /\lien Tripp,
Mark Griffin, Kyle Davis, Tony Hrndrbt,
·fl·remy fiarher, .leU. Johnson. Charles
&lt;.: lda nd. UunMa:.:son,Stev e Homer, Terry
Nt•wsom c, Brian Sharp, . Steve Mlelch,
,filmic Mye rs, Scott Phillips, Bille Wells,
.Jl•U llorner, Kemp Beaumont, Derek ;
l 'onk er, Dan 1'ripp, Jerrod Barber. and ,
Duu.u; Mi llt•r. ~1anager!i Tyson Rose,
Micah OHn, DanM otto, und Eric Hill!

CINCINNATI (UP!) - The
Cincinnati Reds Thursday hired
Chicago Cubs assistant general manager John Cox and named
him director of scouting.
Cox, 44, replaces Larry
Doughty, who quit near the end of
last season after a budget fight
with Reds' owner Marge Schott.
Cox, a minor league infielder .
has spent the past 13 years in -the
Cubs front office, serving as
farm director, traveling secretary and working in the scouting
de~artment.

Regua Cab SWB 4x

America~
VARSITY SENIOR CIIEERLEADERS- Left, Ruth Nutter and
Larissa Long, right, were honored as senior cheerleaders
Thursday at the EHS Fall Sports banquet. Nutter has cheered for
live years and Long for six. Not available for the picture was
Donna Curtis.
Mich . ·
Ohio Univ ers ity takes a
number of losi ng strea ks into it s
ga me at Ball Stat e.
The Bobcats, 1-8 and 0·6, have
lost seve n in a row this season,16
consec ut ive MAC games and 12
straight on the road. A year ago
In Muncie, Bail State won 30-9.
ln other key games Saturday,
Ci nci nn ati hos ts Austin Peay .
Akron is a Nor ther n lllinois and
Morehead State ·plays a night
game at Youngstown State, the
Ohio Valley Co nference coleader.

DEER HUNTER'S PARADISE
Real Estate located on SR 248, Long
Bottom. Ohio, containing a double-wide
and 6 acres of land, will be offered at
public sale, by the Farmers Bank and
Savings Company, at the above
mentioned residence on Saturday,
November 21, 1987; at 10:00 a.m.
Information may be obtained by
contacting Scott Shank at 992-3293.
Property will be opened for public
viewing at 9:00 a.m. prior to the sale.
•

. I

s~ver al

·'88 FORD
RANGERXLT

I

•

ing award with 51 spikes and 76
perce nt accuracy.
The Eastern Junior High squad
was honored for its perfec t 8-0
record and SVAC championship
under Coach Dennis Eichinger.
Assisting with the squad was
Coach Jim Hayman .
· Coach Arch Rose, along with
assistants Don Eichinger and
Ron !!ill, presented awards to
members of this year's second
place SVAC gricl tea m , which
fini shed 6-4 overall.
Senior players honored were
Allen Tr ipp, Mark Grlffin.,Kyle
Davls,Tony Hendrix .. Jeremy
Barber .. Jeff Johnson , Charles
Clela nd ., Ron Max so n ,Steve
Horner ..Terry Newsome,Bria n
Sharp, Steve Welch and Jamie
Myers.
Mar k Griffin, dubbed as
"'hear t and soul " of the offense
by Coach Arc)l Rose , was
awarded the best back award.
Griffin passed for 1·,000 ya rds,
hitting 78 of 152 passes fo r 11
touclj_downs. He was a lso 41-166
rushing.
Steve Horner received the best
lineman award 1wide receiver )
as he had 36 receptions for 639
yards and 17 to uchd owns .
Allen Tripp was na med most
improved In his first year on the
grid to earn tll'e second num her of
tackles op the team and ha ving 13
QB sacks.
The annual "guts a nd glory"
award for aggressiveness and
enthusiasm as well as co nsistency went to Kyle Davis, Eastern's "Mr. Co nsistency" , who
did a grea t job a t severa l
positions offensively a nd defensively. Davis was one of Eastern' s hard hit ters and played

Reds employee Cox

at Miami the prev ious wee k.

Miami, the defending MAC
champion. is coming off a 54-3
lacing at the hands of3rd-ranked
Miami !Fla.) , a game which the
Redskins played without quar·
terback Mike Bates, who sa t out
the contest with two fractured
ribs.
Miami is o-5 overa ll and &gt;·2 in
the confe rence. Kent State Is 6-3
and 4-3 aft er its loss to BG las t
week.
Toledo has lost two in a row and
takes 3-6 and 3-4 ma rks into its
game at Centra l Michi ga n. 5-4
and 3-3. The Rocket s won 26-14
last year at Mount Pleasant,

By SCOT!' WOLFE
Sentinel Staff Wrlt.e r
EAST MEIGS - An excellen t
a wards banquet and ensuing
ceremonies were held Thursday
evening at Eastern High School
where members of Eas tern's
various fall sports teams. cheerleaders, and coac hes were
honored.
A potluck style dlnnner greeted
the overflow crowd. The Eastern
Athletic Boosters provided the
meat for the banquet.
Principal Charl es Moore
served as master of ceremonies
and gave the welcoming address,
while Dr. Daniel Apling, superl n·
tendent, provided the invocation .
Junior high cheerleadlng
awards were presented by Mrs.
Doris Well, advisor.
Varsity and junior varsity
cheerleaders presentations were
given by Maida Long, high sc hool
advisor. Donna Curtis, Larissa
Long, Ruth Nutter, and Melissa
Hensley were recognized as
senior cheerleaders.
Next junior high volleyball
awards were distributed by Don
Jackson, coach. Jackson also
filled In for Varsity Coach Pam
Douthitt, whO was ill, a nd presented Varsity honors. Senior
netters included Lori Burke,
Melanie Mankin, A:my and
Berkhlmer.
Amy Hager was honored as the
best server with 81 percent
accuracy and 5.3 per match,
while also gaining most points
scored honors with 91. Senior
Amy Berkhlmer, First Team
All-SVAC and District All-Star,
received the most improved
award. Trlsh Spencer , Pistrict13
·honoree, received th e best splk·

\

The Daily Sentinel
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By Carri er or Motor Route

a bull flemll:

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~lull

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1~ Wf'l'kS .' '.' ' '.' .. '' ... '.' ....... ''.' . ' ' . $17.29

16 WC'Pks ................................ S,14.00

fl2 WC'C'ks ....................... .. .. ....... $66.56
Outside Me iKS County
l:l W('C'kS ........................... ... . ... $18.20

:!6 W r&gt;~•ks ............... ..... .............. S:\5.10
:.2 Wf'rks .............................. ... . $67.00

••••

Ford Dealers
J

�;

Fnday, November 13, 1987."

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

High school ~id
,playoffs ·begin
in Ohio tonight

Clippers lose 111.,82 battle to Lakers

..

"';A.TIONi\L F'UOTBALL U:Atlt'E
,\tnf'rit:lill f oniPI't"lk"
f:illll

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Ruffalo

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I 0
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0

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( t!ntru.l
I
' 0
' 0
'.! '6 0
M'l'lil
1 I 0

Clt&gt;Vl'ht.nd
Houston
Pltt'ihurgh
Cincinnati

•'

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I'd

PF

119

:100
..0

:na m

1..

193 Iii

S~:i ~II

1111

.iU tOO 1..
6'!~ IH 17~
.250

' "' ...'"
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San Olej!:o

Seutlle

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lk'nwr
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LA Raiders
I 0
Ku.nsa."i Cit v
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&lt;'t.&gt;nlnd
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4 4 0
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Detroit

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Nf'W Orlean;;
Atlanla
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.5110 \ill 180
SDO 19! U9

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2 60
Wt•MI

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~ndll,l !&lt; t1amt'l'
NV ,Jci:o~ul Kansa~t fhy. I p m
Bufralo 11.t ('ll'Whmd . I p 111

Dalla.•; at N(',._ F.llj!IUnd I p m

Detruit ac Ww;hln«f,on. I p m
llowolon ut Piltsbura:h. I p m
lndlan11po11 .. at Miami, I p m
LA Ram!ltU Sl . LoWs. 1 p m
Tampa Bu} at Ml nnl'!itOla, I p m
N\' Gi~~onl!itlt.l Philadl'lphht., I p m
Nt•,., Orleu.nsal SiinFtMnd!Olu,l p m
Clntlnrudl :1! Atlanta ~ p m
Gref'n Rl.ly 111 Sl'attlt•. 4 p rn
LA R11ldt&gt;rs at Sa11 l&gt;h•a;o, II p m
~
Monday'" Ganw
(."hkaio al ~·nVI r. 9 p m .

UPI

ratings

NE\\' l ' ORK! Ul'l )- ThrUn ltrdPro..,~
lnll'rnutlonul !Soard of Cuat•hes' Top Zll
tulle.l{t' toulhall rullrtW" with flr~l · plac;t•
\Oit•" IU!d rt•cord In parl.'nthl' ..t&gt;s, lotal
polntli ( hil.'il'd un I~ pomt .. fur first plate,
I~ tor !'lt'l!Ond, ;•It• ), und la,.f \loN!k'"
rnnldn~t:

Team

Puml~

I Ol.:l:~homa r.l~l (9 fh
~ Nt•hru .. k:~ ( 10 ) {!I 0)
:1 Miami tiJ 17 111
-1 F1orlda Slat1• ( ~ I 1
5 l!f'I.A (II· I)

7a~

1

7oa 2
lri5! :i
&amp;U:I I
~:tl

7
5%ii II
.a:tt !

6 Syrnt:Uli(' Ill (9 0}
7. Notre Dllmt• t 7-1 )
!I UI'OI'Jtia (H)
!101111
\t. (It M(&gt;IOft (Il-l)
10 •\Jahwnal1 :!J
'.!-15 j;j
II Lo uislan11 !olt j"J I I )
t:r. 5
I ~ Auburn i7 1· 1)
232 ti
13. Mh•hlJ'an 1'51/lh• [6-2 I )
Ulll
I&gt;&amp; Soulh ( arnlina ( 6-2)
IIll 14
1!5. Indiana fi U
il 1"1
IIi Penn Sial•• ("i 2J
Ulli
1"1. Oklahoma !i;talt• 17· ~ )
51) l'l
IB 1\rkani&gt;Ms (7 2)
211 Ill
19 Tt&gt;nne ...M'e (fi.t-1)
ZfJ Tt•xu~ A&amp;M (6-~)
zunncnkl'd
Och er" rt&gt;cl'lvln~t 11utes, 1011'11, Mic hl·
~~:an. PllL'ihU11;h, Sun.Jo ..e Slaio•, SouChem
Cal, Wrurnln~~: .

"""

"""''

This week's games
Thl~

\\t•l'k '.o

Ohio Collrgr foathull !olchedult
sl&amp;turdii) Nov U
Iowa at Oh lo Stalt•
Ohio Unh at Ball Slat••
Bowlin~~: c&gt;rel'n 111 Ea .. tt•rn Mit h
To~lkl at Cl!ntntl Mlch
Miami ll.t lhl nl Stahl
A.uioilln P I': a) ttl Cloclnnall
Morehead St IIi l 'oungslo\tn Sl tn)
Akron at Northt-rn llllnul ~
f'apll11l at Raldwln Walhu 1•
WICtcnhcr~: a1 Ht•ldl'lher~~:

Marlt•llli al :.1o11nl Urtlon
Mll!}klnKUnl at Ohio Nortllt'rn
Kt•nyon at Oltt•rtwlll
..,.,Kttcht&gt;!&lt;ik'r (N , ' ) at De nl!jo n
Hiram at Olwrlln
\'alptualsct llod) Ml Ashland
Blurtt on al \\'llmlnKtort
&lt;entrul sa at NE Missouri Sl
llhata (N\') at Payton
Andl'rson {lnd) al Della01 t•
Tiffin 111 Cumberland tK)'I
Urhan:t at \\e~l Ubt&gt;rty 1\t. Va)
n-nl,l:"hl II:IUH&lt;'

NBA results
NATIONI\L BASKETBI\I.L i\~S()(

rhunoday'" Rc•s ulh
San •\nh,nlo lt3, St•ldth• 111'1
Dt•nvtr I~G Pnrthtnd 113
I.A l.alwrs Ill , I. \ ('Jippt'r,. Kt
lluu~tnn 1111. Sac•ramt•nto Ill
f'rld.ly''&gt; Gann'!t
( ' h'\'t•land ~· Ro~lurt, i
p Ill
P,.troll at PhUadclphla , 7 30 p 111

ao

Nt&gt;" l ' ork at Wa.,.hhiKiun,ll p 111
St•.IHir at Oallu,. , II p m
/'t;t'\lo l•ro;;•ytH(hlcagn R .IOpm
PIIOI' nl' .11 t:tuh 9. 3IJ p m
(,.tldt•u"'l,tlo 111 Lt\ ( ' lipj)j'rs, 10 ~1111 m .
Snl urda.}' 's Ganws

Mll\1-ankt•t• al Nl'l' \ llrk, nl,;ht
Phllad••lphla at t\llanla. nl~tbl
0. troll 111 ( II \l'lllnd, nl~hl
lndlan.t at ( ltlu.~~:~~ . nlg:hl
Purtland at D11lla ... nl~~:hl
t 'tah v.l Hou!;ton nl~~:ht
Sacr.mn•nlu al Ot•nwr. nh:ht

NHL results
N,\TJ0:\' ,\1 IIOl 1\t. l ' U~ M·l E
Rn~lon

Thursd11y s HI'•UII•

I, :\lnntn•iil J ,
Phllnd••lphht $ I'Jit,.hurgh 'l
\\umllll'lt I, Nt•ll h rsr~ I (lit )
N, l ~ l r ln&lt;lt r .. l. St l o~ll ti ~ I
Frld l) S {; IIIII'~
Mlnnr .. ol.t .tC Huff.tlo 'l 33 p m
l.oK ,\n gt•h•sv.Ualgary.9 .!.ip l'n
Qut•ht • t:d\'an~Ou\l•r 10 . ~5 pm .
Sat urd ay., Gnm;·~

Toronto at Phlludrlpltlu
Prlruit at N; w .fHI'I'l
\\lnniiK' K ·•• N\

l~ hlntl• r~

night

Ha rlfonl al Kostun, olghl
N\ lt;angl'r,. ,lt I' IIC,.hur~:h, night
Ml nnt•sota at " .~~l tinj(lnn , nl,;ht

C'hllagu at Montrt•al . niJ!;hl
Ed1111mlon 111 St l.otd~o, niJ(ht
Qlu ht 1 al J.o~ ,\n)\'tlt•~o Dt)t;hl

Sot•t Pr
l'tt~or Indoor Sut ct•r LAlapH'
Dallll." al !oil Loul" II' M p m
~
"Kiln~ Cit) 111 Let:-. &lt;\ngela;, 11. 35 pIll
Tt!rtnli!i

...

13~

••"'''' ••
"'
171
'"
'
"'
'" '"

t\'ashlngtnn
Oaltw,
PhUi!.dt'lphiu
Sl Louis
NY Gll&amp;IUS

&amp; .. llnj[
( hkago- S!OO.OOit Rruns,.,lt ki\1t•m or
l,tl \\nrlll Ov•·n
La, . \t•){a.'&gt; St•' - f.Hiti.OOO Sum"
Tn'An N"'\OMII'ro \m
(:uu
Ka!JI'Illt, Ha,., lul - S8()Q 000 Kaplllua
l.ntermdiooaii'GA t11urrutnwnt
Mclhournr na - S~OO.CMJII :i\untnot•
St!nlor ( l w.sk
llot lu&gt;)
MIIIAI.,ota ut 8Uifi1IO, "i 33 p m .
l,.us Anlu·l~s at C11l"ury, 9 a3 p m
Qtilf"ht&gt;t at Vantou,er, 11·3/i p nl .

C'htca~o
C'oiG~tne

-

l15~,11l0 \ 111;1 nla Slim;;
Ml';; l German, - SII7,1101J

&lt;Jrl\nd l&gt;rlx
l . nndnn- U6l!i ttOOKirand l'rlx

Transactions
Busrhall
(' In~ lnnatl - Sanwd John ( ox ltl outing
dln •ttnr
Htloslon - t\ddl d lu m-man ru~l;•r
ttulfit ld,•r• ( amcrun IJr"". luhn 1-'lst•hrl
and 8rr1 lluntt•r llrl!ol hu..,.•man Ml kt•
Simms, uuthl'r Mark Ballt&gt;y, and
plh ht•rs Blat:ot" ll~&gt;lt·~ ond ft•rry \\ ;• lis
Mlnnr~oota 1\ddc&gt;d tCJ tht• tO·man
rosh•r uutflddt•r ftr.td Rli•rl;•y and
pllt hl'r.. Paul ,\hhOit, l..tl Bumgarnrr,
!oltt&gt;Vt' Ga:o;Sl'rt' r 1 Jrff !&gt;ial:dnfi!:t rand ,JJm
ll11\ In;;, walwd pltchrr .Jt•ff Rltll~r
untrl~&gt;:ht ~d CJulfh ld1 •r Larry Bhu~ kwt•ll.
:"'i1'Y! \orll. !AI. ) - Purdw.,.t'd ~h;
player;; fru111 ( 'ulwnhus of thr lntrrna
IIIIDIII Li&gt;llll"\11' cat• lll'r Mltl•h L}dt•n
uutfleldrr Oar~n Rl'ed, third hiUit'llllln
lhr~ Ahare;o: 11nd pllthrrs t\mliUo
( urnontt, 'I'rO)I Ever;; :mel ~l;· vt• Frt')'
~la;~ d pitch er ~Ilk .. Kinnunen to a
mlnor·lt'II.J:Ut' cunt nu 1
Nrv. , 'urk INL) - Add;&gt;d lo &gt;10 m11n
ruslt•r plcc•hrrs Todd Wt&gt;lhorn and Rlt h
Kodrl~tu_..L , ilutfh•ldt•r Joaquin C'onlrf&gt;rus
and lllll' IH•r Chris ,Jt· ll~
Pllt~hur~~:h - \\'.u.lvcll p•to her Logan
F.usk•y uddt•d lu 10-man rosa.er• nul
Jlcld~ r Ton) f'hance, pilth~r ~ltlw l 'urk.
lnflt•ldt•r lim Rl'holik't unci , aldwr
Ruh; n Rvdrltjlll:'il.
Tt&gt;:u.s - Addt•d Jour pla) t'f!O to ~0-mun
r~J .. h r ~ah )lt'r (had Krf'Ut1•r pilclk'r~
Kf•nn)' fto,l:"t r .. and ,JuS~ ( f'~ 't'na llnd
u ultl rldr-r ,Ja m t&gt;s !&lt;iiN•I... ll".o;l!l nt•d
plhbtr,. Scull Auder~on 11od Dt•\\ •:vn••
\ auxltn toOk ~1/wmu City ul tht• \1~~rl
tan ,\~sm:iatlon

Prep ratings
101.ht8UI\ Ohloil'PII-Tht•fil\ltl
19.ili l nll••d Prt·s~ lnlt•rnutluru.tl Uhlu
Jll«h Sthoul llourd of fiMtlll',. fnothult
r111lnJt- twlth llrsl plat•t' \Oil's and
v.on-ln~t rt•t•nni., 1n p~n·nlht'M'")
ni\ls lnn I
Ttam
Points
I . ( lt•whuul ~ lu ....·ph ( '~!)till II]
~6.~
! foubanftlll.if1!uln t I) 11 0·0)
lt!l
,I ( lnlinRIIIII"tlnU1on I!) Ol II

'"

10!

I F--'11'1id I Ill IIJ
:i Tokdo "hllmt•r lfHJ
II Tuh•duC~nlrlll(tllhullt t!J.Il
i Uayton R'ayn r lll..Ol

9!\
!I~

K~

II Bruns" h k 110.111
!I ('hlllhulht• 410.11)

116

(li-~ )

G;l
St

Ill ;\llddll:'htwn

~I

Set'&lt;md tt•n
11
CltKim~;ltl
Xonh•r ~"1. I t Mt•uwr l~ 1:1 r ...•gun
Ill 1&lt;1 Rnardman I~ U ZIUW•s\lllt•
10: lti (lndnnatl Mut•lk•r II, 11
( lm lmmll ( 'oh rdln 1. Ul {oro\1 pori
MadJ.,on H 111 (I ll•) Trotwoml :Uadlsctn
and Sundusk\. ~ t•ach
Ul"~lun II
I Tllllnf'olwnhlunt12Jti00J
1~1
~

\11nl'r\a {5J IIIJ.tl)

171

I tnlumhu .. Miffllnl111·0 )

1~11

~

!1.1

Mtubon\llllt•/911
3 ( olumhu~ ~!&lt;!alt.,. [!I I !
6 SprinJ!;IIt•ltl !&lt;ihnwno-.•1 Ill tl)

!U

"

7 l rhanll. 1!1· 1)
II I lr\'o•land ~·nt•tti&lt; tlnr I i ! J

"

!I ,\krultBtnhlti(2J(~I
IOHoarrlson ili'!J

~:;

)

'il
!II

St t uiJd lt•n II. Co lumh•~o, "' uU~·r!OiOn
23: I~ Mk•" ,\ ftKinlt•y U 13. (lit• )
\4' hllt•hou."t 1\nlhony " a;,; n• and \~h
land 10 o•at:h, U, (lHi.rdnn II, llj
IA.'1tlngtunti 10 fl•&gt;e")folwuhusFranklln
Ht•i,;htsa ndC'Intlnrw.ll Pul'lrll M11rhtn
2 t&gt;at h, 19 ltlt• ) Franklin
M1 Ut ring- .\IU&gt;r I ••at h UJVI sion Ill
I Orf\llle ill) (10-0 1
1!1
! , n~~~otutot.n !\tuurK'J 13) 111-11

and

1&lt;2
:i lruntun!lt (111)

I.U
I IIi
96
!ll
Kt

4 Thn\lllk Sht•rida n (\0 0 1
:'i . (t,trUI'Icl Hfi!:l ~ Trlnll ¥ t I t ( Ill 0)
6 CluFuf\'~tl•ark {lli lfltJ J
; C.O'ihotlon ( 1\ ( 10 0)
"· l&gt;ovrr n 1 (!I· I )
fl Sirullwrli{91)
IG GlrJrd IK·2)

i~
~7

H
!olt•tond lt•n. II Si C'lalr~\lllc Ill, H
\\11 kllfft• 1~. 13. tth) ( urtlnnd Lakt'\ It"'
and Rt II( \'Uj', ~ 1'141 h, IJ fill Rossfnrtl
and Uo king \'all!•.)', 7 t"llt h 10 111t-1
C ,\PF. Bt•llal.-.• and t:lyrht Lll hollt 6
t•ut h ! II Urouh 1111 ]
Ul\l~ion

IV

I C'uhunhus ,\ tadt•myll!'i) 1 111·11 )
~.

'"

(,auo;; l'tfllls lfuwk; u t:l) 19· 1 )

1711
17~

I At l! hbu ld t !J f 10 Ill
I H.allilllol'l'liht•rh l nlun ill) II)

'"

; "ln.,•hr,.hnr,tl!ll l
111
8 llnrnn ( 11 !!l· lJ
Jb~
7. Ch.t~~:rln 1-' ulls l ~ .II
~~~
II Or~•·ll(;rand\' a/lty!"'"!l
u
9 fo)'f'munt St JoM!)Iit t !I-ll
II
10 lt·ff~rso nl nion(K:!)
,lj
S.•t nJM.I h•n II. Pt•tt•ri'ihiii'J:' Sp rtngflt•ld
~. H l'nnlol{un3 CH ~ot1 Kll !!, IJ Hit)
"'"'' ll'lft•rson and l.l~hun Andt r,;un ~ I
l i l~·lprt 17, I' Bllc\flls" ynlurd Uo, l7

Vt rsa.lll""', I;J lit fl"l h•nhu~ llotrth ')' I!
I !I
Pt'fr\ Ill
21!
(tio) \ \m~tnd,!
l lt•,1ri n t•k 11nd -\Ill n t:al'it 6 1 tu h

Sr. Joe, Tiffin Orrville,

evNybody why . I 1hmk anybody
would be excited about playing a
team like the Lakers ,"
Worthy scored 12 points, Green
had 8 and Magic Johnson 6
asstsls in the first period as the
Lakers raced to a 30-19 advantage. They· were never 1n trouble
agam, leading 55-36 at halftime
and 84-58 entering the final
quarter
"To te~t you the truth ,, I don't
think they played as well as they
can," Dailey said ''They kmd of
coasted through the game after
the lirsl quarter."
Milt Wagner's 3-polnt basket
with 2:15 remaining gave the
Lakcrs their largest lead at
!08-75. Byron Scott chipped In 14
pomls and Kareem Abdul Jabbar added 13 for the Lakers.
"We have so many problems
wtth our offense, too many
players coming In and out,"
Clippers Coach Gene Sh ue satd.
"Our players don't know the
plays yet."
Elsewhere, San Antonio
stopped Seattle 123-118, Denver
dumped Portland 126113, and
Houston dumped Sacramento
116-114.
Spurs 123, SuperSonics liS
At San Antonio, Texas, Johnny
Dawkins lied his career high with
28 points to boost the Spurs
Dawkins had 15 points in th e
second half as San AntoniO held
off a late charge by theSuperSon1cs. Seattle was paced by Xavier
McDamei's 23 points
Nuggets 126, Blazers 113
AI Denver, Alex English
scored 14 of hts 24 points in the
third quarter to gmde the Nug-

By United Press International
Only two of last year's cham) Ions, the Cincin nah Academy of
Phystcal Education a nd Newark
8athollc, are back to defend their
titles as the state high school
f9otball playoffs begin Friday
night with first round regional
games.
CAPE, which just made into
this year's tournament with a 6·4
record, opens defense of Its
Dlvtston liJ IItle against c;Incinnatl Forest Park (10·0) Friday
night at Lockland Memorial
Stadium
Newark Cathohc. seeking as
third consecutive Division v
championship and fifth overall
puts its 10-0 record up agalnsi
East Knox (9-1) Saturday night
at 7:30 at Newark's White Field.
It marks the eighth year m a row
NC has qualified for the playoffs
The defendmg champs In the
other three divisions, Fairfield in
I, Cincinnati Purcell Marian In lJ
and Columbus Hartley in IV,
dtdn't make this year's playoff
f1eid.
All eight Dtvlsion I games will
be played Saturday night, including No I ranked Cleveland St
Joseph agamst Lakewood St.
Edward at Berea's Flnme
Stadium
The DiVISIOn I games also
mclude Gahanna Lincoln against
Chillicothe, both with 10-0, at
Dublin High School, Cincinnati
St. Xavte" (8·21 at Cincinnati
Princeton 18-1) and Dayton
Wayne 110-0) against Middle
town 18-2) at Dayton's Welcome
Stadium, in a 7· 30 contest. Alit he
rest begin at 7.

..
KIKI LOSES BALL
Portland forward Klki Vandeweghe
looses control of the bail during first-hall action against the Denver
Nuggets Thursday night in Denver. The Nuggets be11t the
Trailblazers 126-113. (Nuggets' photo)
gest. Enghsh connected on 6 of 7
shots from the field in the third
period. Portland, paced by 26
points from Clyde Drexler, lost
for the lOth straight time· m
Denver
Rockets ll6, Kings II4
At Sacramento, Calif. , Reggie
Theus missed an 18-foot jumper

Columbu.~ AcadeTJly, Newark

for the Kings with three seconds
remamlng World Free registered a game-high 37. points for
the Rockets Free scored 19
pomts and the Rockets shot 75
percent from the field in the
fourth quarter. Ralph Sampson
contributed 31 P,olnts for
Houston.

lop polls

UPI crowns 5 1987 prep grid champions
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUP!i Wanttoknowwhothlsyear's!ive
state htgh school footballdtviSIOn
champions will be? Umted Press
International's Ohio High School
Boards of Coaches have picked
Cleveland St. Joseph, Tiffm
Columbtan. Orrville, Columbus
Academy and Newark Catholic .
Those fi ver all of whom. fin
ished with 10-0 recordS, were No
1 choice of the coaches headmg
into this week's first round of
regional playoff games.
St Joseph was the top-heavy
favonle in Di vision I. Tiffin in
Division fl, Orrville in !11,
Academy 1n IV and Newark
Ca tholic m V, as the Green Wave
go for th etr thlfd consecutive
small school lttle.
St. Joe, whtch capped a perfect
regular season with a 26-13 wm
over Lake Catholic Saturday,
cla1med 22 of the 27 first place
votes from the Division I coaches
and were second on th e other five
for 265 out of a posstble 270 points.
That gave the Vikings a 66·
pomt spread over the 199 for
ru nnerup Ga hanna Lincoln.
whtc'h also wound up 10·0 with a
12-7 victory over Westervtlle
South. Clncmnatl Princeton.
which ftmshed regular season
play a week earlier at 8-1, wound
up third with 189.
'
TherestoftheDivislonltop10

fu·st place votes to five for
Minerva.
Columbus Mifflin 110-0) ad·
vanced from sixth to third the
!mal week and Steubenville from
seventh to fourth as the Division
II list underwent a sha keup after
Urbana and Cleveland Benedictine. third and fourth a week ago,
both lost
·
Columbus DeSales finished
fl!th, followed by Springfield
Shawnee, Urbana, Benedictine
a nd two newcomers, Akron
Buchtel and Harri son
Orrv11le, a 21 -10 winner over
neighboring Wooster Friday
night, l!mshed wtth a 191-172
margin over Youngstown Card!nal Mooney (8-1) m Dtvtsion III
The Red Riders also had a 13-3
margin In first place votes.
The th 1rd spot in III went to
Ironton , which advanced one
position from a week ago, and
following the Tigers were Thorn
ville Sheridan and Garfield
Hetghl s 1n fourth a nd firth.
Roundmg ou t them list were
Cincinnati Forest Park, which
tumbled from third to sixt h
deSpite a :n-7 win over Goshen,
Coshocton, Dover, Struthers and
Gu·ard.
Columbus Academy , which
took over as No. 1 in Division IV
three weeks ago when Gates
Mills Hawken lost f01 the first

Included Euclid m fourth, followed by Toledo Whitmer ,
Toledo Central Cathohc, Dayton
Wayne, Brunswick, Chillicothe
a nd Middletown.
In DtvtsJOn 1!, Tiffm Colum bian wound upw1th a 181 l73edge
over second place Minerva 110-01
m the last of the etght weeks ot
ballot1ng Co lumbian rece1ved 12

time, fi nished with a 198-178
mar'g'in over the runneruJ"
Hawks, with a 15-.1 edge m first
place votes
Academy wound up 11s perfect
regular season 'Friday mght wllh
a 21-7 victory over Grandview
Hetghl s.
Archbold , second las t week,
finished the season in third place.

just four points behind Hawken,
their season finales, Newark
and was followed In order by
Catholic with a 28-0 win over
Baltimore Liberty Umon, WheeGranvtlle and Jefferson a 48-0
iersburg, Huron, Chagnn Falls, , deCISIOn over Spencerville
Orwell Crand Valley, Fremont
Mogadore, which has owned
St, Joseph and Jefferson
the No 3 spot in Division v all
The yea r -long Division V battle year, fmished right there with 181
between Newark Catholic and
points, followed by Portsmouth
Delphos Jefferson (]0-0) finished
Notre Dame in fourth, Ayersville
JUS! about as it began, with th e
fifth, Monroeville sixth , ArlingIrish holding a 210-200 margin
ton seventh and Cincinnati Counover the Wildcats and a 12-7 edge
try Day etg hlh, all with 10-0
in first place votes.
records.
Both teams were tmpressive in
Rounding out the V list were
McDonald and Minster. both 9-1.

Ttffln Columbian 110-0) , the
top.rated Division II team, beg-

CHICAGO (UPii
Don
Zimmer. has emerged as the
leading candidate tp serve as the
new manager of the Chicago
Cu bs m 1988 under newly appointed club boss Jim Frey.
Ztmmer, a close personal
friend of Frey, currently is third
base coach for the San Francisco
Giants. He was Frey's third base
coach when the Cubs won the 1984
National League Eastern Division title and was also fired on
the same d'ay Frey was dis missed in June, 1986
Frey, hired by the Cubs Wednesday to succeed Dallas Green
who quit, said he would like to
name a manager in the next week
to 10 days and conceded Zimmer
was on the list.
"Zim's on the list along with
several other people," Frey said
"Zim's a friend and I 've got a
great deal of respect for h1m. But
I haven't talked to him in qmte a
wh1Ie."
'
Zimmer said managmg in
,Chicago "would be a great job for
anyone" but said he didn't think
it was his PQSitlon to call Frey at
!his time
".Jtm's a great friend and his
appointment was a great thing
for the Cubs , " Zimmer said.
Frey also is expected to mtervi,ew some of the other people
Green intervt ewed before I he
former Cubs' prestdent abruptly
quit lat e last month .
Among the names considered
were former Cleveland and Phi-

Ohio Hunting season in full swing Monday
Hunlmg season for raccoon,
opossum. skunk and weasel
opens statew ide on Monday and
extends to mtdnighl, January 30,
1988.
Whtle there is no restrictiOn on
huntmg hours lor sku nk and
weasel. hunting for raccoon and
opposum ts restricted to6 p.m. to
6 a m.
The dally bag hm1t for rae coons is four, and the possesswn
limit is four raccoons wh1le
hunting or traveling to or from
huntmg. There IS no daily bag
hmit or possession limit for
opposum. skunk or weasel.
Trappmg season for raccoon,
mink and muskrat opens state wide Monday and runs until
January 31, 1988. There 1s no

limit or possession limit.
For more mformation on hunt mg a nd trapping regulations,
wrlte the Wildlife District Four
office at 360 E. State St , Athens,
Ohio 45701 or calll-594-2211.

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WED, NOV. 18
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CINCINNATI
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JEFF MONTGOMERY
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POMEROY, OHIO

LOS ANGELES i UPli - Los
Angeles Dodgers first baseman
Pedro Guerrero, who returned
from a serious knee injury to hit
Ins tis quest for the playoff title
338 and slug 27 home runs ,
by hos!lng Whitehouse Anthony Thursday was na~ Umted
Wayne (9-1) Friday at 7:30p.m., Press International's National
while No. 2 Minerva (10-0) takes League Comeback Player of the
on Chardon (8-2) at Warren's Year.
Mollenkopf Stadium.
Guerrero received seven votes
Besides the CAPE-Forest Park from a panel of 20 baseball
game In Division Ill, top-ranked correspondents . Pitcher Dennis
Orrville (10·0) takes on Struthers Martinez of the Montreal Expos
at Struthers and No. 2 Young- was second with three votes
stown Cardinal Mooney 18-1)
First baseman Jack Clark and
plays Wickliffe (8-2) at Young- outfielder Willie McGee of the NL
stown State's Stambaugh Sia· champion St. Louis Cardinals,
dium, both Fnday at 7• 30 p.m.
pitcher R1ck Sutcliffe and outIn Division IV, Columbus fielder Andre Dawson of the
Academy's top-ranked Vikings Chicago Cubs. and San Franctsco
I 10-0) open the playoffs against
pllcher A!lee Hammaker had
Richmond Jefferson Union 18·2)
fwo votes eac h.
in a 7 30 Friday game at
Guerrero sulfered a ruptured
Cambridge.
tendon below hts left knee m a
Other Division IV games in - poor ~!ide during spring traming
volving unbeaten teams include
m 1986. He underwent surgery
Archbold (10-0) against Tonto- and lVas not reactivated until
gany Otsego 19-1) at Napoleon' s July 30. The s lugger was disabled
Loose Field and Baltimore Lib·
again 12 days later and did not
erty Union (10-0) against Belpre
come back until Sept. 3. The
(8-2) at The Plains' Rutter Field, · eight -year veteran finished with
near Athens.
a career low 246 batting average
Division V, which has six other with 5 homers and 10 RBI In 31
perfect record teams besid9s
games
Newark Catholic, has one game
In 1987, Guerrero played in a ll
matching 10-0 teams - No. 2 but two of the Dodgers' games.
ranked Delphos Jefferson
His batting average was second
against No. 5 Ayersvllle. 7 p.m.
In th e league behind the .370
Saturday night at Lima Stadtum
mark established by San-Diego's
The Divis ion V games also Tony Gwynn. Guerrero had 184
Include No. 3 Mogadore against
hits and 89 RBI, both team htghs,
No.9 McDonald (9-1) at Canton's
and was a member of the NL
Fawcett Stadium and No. 4 All -Star team.
Portsmouth Notre Dame against
"What can you say about his
Grandview Heights (8-2) at
contributiOns to the team?" sa1d
Portsmouth's Spartan Stadium.
Dodgers Manager Tom Lasorda
Of the 80 teams that qualified
"He played all year after being
for the playoffs, 25 are unbeaten . hurt the entire season No one
Winners of this weekend's games
thought he could come back m
advance to the regional finals
that form and be as productive as
next week en route to champ!On - he was Hts contr1but10n was
shtp finals Dec 4-5 at OhiO very important. He dtd a lot for
Stadium.
our ballclub
"He did a lot of work. put m
endless hours to gel back. I never
had any doubts I believed 11 ail
along ."
Guerrero, a bnghl spot In the
Dodgers' dismal season, had a
celebrated feud with teammate
Mike Marshall . The two fre!adelphia manager Pat Corrales,
quently had words about Marformer major league infielder
shall's repeated absences from
Denis Menke. Cubs Coach Billy
the lineup. Guerrero and then
Wilhams and former Cubs coach
other Dodgers accused Marshall
John Vukovich.
of mahngenng.
"I've got an tdea of the
First base Is one of the
direction I'd like to go but right
positwns team management is
now that's a secret," Frey added
addressing this winter
The
Vukovtch, who also served as a
candidates for next season incoach under Frey , was believed
etude Guerr~ro, Franldtn
to be Green's top choice but when
Stubbs. Mickey Hateher and
Green resigned last month ,
S!eve Garvey. 1f he signs as a free
signed as bullpen coach of the
agent
Ph lilies.
Martinez was ll-4 with a 3.30
Williams said earlier th1 s
ERA for the Expos Hts 733
month he wasn't Interested In
winnmg percentage was best in
coachmg the club's lop farm
the NL
tea m 1n Iowa because of the flap
surrounding the departure of
Green
Zimmer has managed with
three major league teams, the
Texas Rangers (1981-82). Boston
Red Sox (1976-79) and San Dlego
Padres (1972-73).
Zimmer, 56, also has served as
MIAMI I UP! I -Orange Bowl
a third base coach with Montreal
ofl!ctals
refused comment on
and the New York Yankees In
published
reports Thursday that
add! lion to the Cubs.
attempts
to work out a deal
said
"To me, there is no better
with
another
major bowl had
baseball fans In the world than
and
that
the third-ranked
failed
the ones in Chicago," Zimmer
M1ami
Hurncanes
would play
said. "Both my wife and myself
the B1g Eight c hampion New
really enjoyed our stay there."
Year's night.
Zimmer has a career majorThe Orange Bowl 1s trv10g to
league managing record of 620·
work out a deal that would match
600 He played for the Dodgers
the wmncr of the Nov 21
between 1954 and 1959 before
Oklahoma-Nebraska game
being dealt to the Cubs. where he
against the next·highest ranked
pl~yed two seasons. He also
team . The Orange Bowl cooperplayed with the Mets, Cincinnati
ated with the Fiesta Bowl last
Reds and Washington Senators
year and the result was the
M1ami Penn State matchup for
the national collegiate champion·
sh ip Oklahoma ts th e country's
No I team , and Nebraska Is No.
11980) and w1de receiver Wtllis
2.
The Fort Lauderdale NewsAdams t 1979) were unproductive
Sun
Sentinel reported that the
and both subsequently were
Orange
Bowl comm1ttee voted
re leased
Wednesday night to Invite Miamt
Browns Coach Marly Schotlenif the Hurricanes win their next
heimer does not deny tha t recent
two ga m&lt;'S, agains t Virginta
drafts have been disappointfng
Tech and Toledo. Mtami has two
But he maintains tha t any
ga mes after the Nov 21 bowl
evaluations must wait until a
invitation date, playing No 7
player ha s two or three years 10
Notre Dame and 14th·ranked
the NFL.
South Carolina .
Selec tion committee chairman
Pete Williams said he would not
comment on the report, which
said attempts to work out a deal
with the Sugar or Cotton Bowls
were unsuccessful The Miami
Plans have been completed for
Herald reported that the Cotton
the fourth Annual Rival Cla ssic
Bowl. which Is anxious to invite
Football Game between the
Notre Dame1rejected a deal w1th
alumni of Eastern High School
the Orange Bowl, 10 part because
and the Kyger Creek Alumni.
oj a potential rematch between
Due to equipment problems the
Miami and Arkansas.
Southern High School Alumni
The HurFJcanes routed the
will not be partlclpatlng In this
Razorbacks 51-7 in September.
years co ntest and Kyger Creek"If that was the case, !couldn' t
has opted to fill the vacant
make any comment on 11 today
position.
Proceeds from the
anyway ," Williams said. "!try to
game wtll be going to the
be very carefu l at thts t1me of
atheletlc boosters of both
year to npt disclose anything that
schools. "
may or may not hav~ happened
The event will take place
that may or may not violate any
November 21 at 2:00 pm at
rules.
Eastern High Schooi.The game
"A vote wouldn't violate any
s hould be interesting and exctt·
rules , but an announcement
lng so plan to attend and help
would be contrary (o what th e
support these two area schoo ls .
NCI),A would want

Orange Bowl
officials mum
on big deal

J·.mker's streak of bad luck continues

lti

~I'I.'Utld h•n

II '-llddlt•Cotot.ll Ft•n\tlt •k
.!6 I~ l&lt;u~lon~ !oil \\ ~· •Jd••lln !I , 13 (th 1
l ... tntln ( lo·.~nit w and Eu~t Knu1t 111
t•at h, 15 A~lnai1ul.t ~I Juhrt 9, It!
I .Jho•rtv C't•nh•r II. li Eu:oil ( .1nlun ; , Ill
I I It l Ho ttllli\ Ill• (lrr1ud111~·w llt•ljflll ~ami
\lln•mcl IUd~:t• I 1'111 h

Each 25 lb. block will treat eight 1,000 lb. cattle.
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Pomeroy, ·Ohio,

399 W. Main St.

992·2164
Tht Stort With "AIIlinds Of Stull"
Far Ptll, Stoblot, Lorgt &amp; Small Animals, Lawns &amp; Gardens

•

Geurrero
'comeback'
honoree

'

'

BEREA, Ohio I UP II - The
season-end10g injury to rookie
llnebacker Mike Junkm continues an unlucky streak that has .
affect&lt;'d recent Cleveland
Browns' top draft picks
Junkin suffered a chip fracture
and a severe dislocation In his
left elbow when he was blocked to
the ground two weeks ago by San
D1ego ti ght end Pete Holohan He
w111 have surgery Friday at the
Cleve land Clim e.
Wide receiver Webster Slaughter, the top pick in 1986, has
progressed well but 1985 selection Greg Allen no longer is in
football. Allen. a star running
back from Florida State, played
spar ingly unl!l knee surgery
ended his Browns tenure.
Cocaine intoxication claimed
the life of safety Don Rogers. I he
Browns' top p1ck In 1984 Wtde
recetver Ron Brown, drafted In
1!183, c hose not to report to
Clevela nd. Linebacker Chip
Banks developed into a Pro Bowl
linebacker from his 1982 debut,
but fe uding with management
via holdouts event ually Jed to his
trade to San Diego. Ironically,
th~ draft pick that landed Junkin
was involved m that transaction.
Hanford Dixon, the lop 1981
draftee, 1s considered one of the
top cornerbacks In the NFL. but
running back Char les White

Complete plans for
annual rival classic

Sentinel-Page-S

TAYLOR NISSAN:
.

r

Pick-A-Payment Sale
We Have The Car To Fit Your:

•BUDGET
•GARAGE
• PERSONALITY

•
•

1986 PLYMOUTH CARAVELLE
1985 OLDS CUTLASS CALAIS
Crutse, AM/FM , automatic, a1r, blue with blue Maroon with maroon cloth interior, double
power, AM/FM cassetle, 4 door, tilt wheel, air
cloth Interior, floor mats.
SALE ................ : ..... $8495 condtliOned
PER MONTH ............ $186.41 * SALE ...................... $6995

~----~-r--------~
·1981 OLDS CUTLASS
Green mrnt &amp; malchtng Interior, P,M/FM, atr, automatic.

SALE ............... 11995
PIR·MONTH ""134,00

SALE . . . . 11995
PER MONTH .... 134.00

. .. $3995
PER MONTH .... $84.50
SALE. .

•

GL, white with red in·
tenor , double power,

SALE . . . . . . $3995
PER MONTH .... $84.50

SALE ..... ,.
Pll MOII1II ,';: ........

•

back. AM/ FM 4 speed, do
uble power

speed

apeedc,
clock, double

I

198I PLYMOllrH CHAMP
Light Silver, 2 door hatch

AM rad io, a1r, 4 door, 4

blue tnterlor

•

. ...... $149.65*

White w1th blue l ntenor,

19 83 FORD ESCORT
m1sslon, a1r, blue with

PER MONTH .

1983 CHEVY CHEVmE

Wagon , automatiC trans·

Zimmer may be Cubs
•
new manager m
1988

Uhl.,lun V
I Sr v. .trk ( Ut hollo (I!) Jill II )

To The Voters Of
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
Thc;mk You For Your Support.
and Votes in the Election.
HARRY RICHARD

'~

By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
Perhaps Donald Sierling
s hould move his team to another
division.
Stelling 's Lo s Angeles
Clippers lost to the Los Angeles
Lakers for the seventh straight
ume Thursday night 111 82. Sterling moved the Clippers from
San Diego to Los Angeles three
years ago Unfortunately they
remained In the Pacific DivisiOn
where the Lakers reign supreme.
The Lakers have won 21 of the
last 2o meetings between the two
clubs, Including seven straight.
The Lakers have also captured 18
consecutive games at the Forum.
The Clippers had the worst
record in the NBA last year,
posting just 12 victories The
Lakers won the N BA Iitle over
the Boston Ceitics.
James Worthy scored 20 points
and A.C. Green added 17 to help
the Lakers continue their mas tery of the Clippers. ·
"He Just keeps going and
working," Lakers Coach• Pat
Rtley said of Green. "He's come
a long way and he'll continue to
gel better "
The Clippers, 1-3 on the year ,
were led by Quintm Da1ley w1th
17 points and fellow reserve
Reggie Williams w!lh 10. M1ke
Woodson also had 10 for Los
Angeles, which has lost 1ts three
games by margins of 46,25 and 29
pomls.
"The Lakers are a great team,.
they have been for years," said
.Wtlhams, a rookte from Georgetown. "Tonight they showed

The

Ohio

'

•

AMIFM cassette
SALE ... . ... $4495
PEl MONTH ... $128.11

•

1981 TOYOTA COIOLLA

1983 DODGE 400

While , 5 speed, 2 door,
good gas mileage car
SALE •...... $1995
PER MONTH .... $34.00

Double powe r, AMIFM,
automatiC, 4 door, dark
pewter w1th maroon mteror

. . . . $5995
PER MONTH ... $140.92

SALE

•
•

•
••

••
·'

...'
.

'~

'

1983 OLDS CUTLASS
Maroon With maroon cloth interior. double
power, atr, AM/FM, tilt wheel.
SALE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $5995

1985 NISSAN 4x4 KING CAB
Blue mist, 5 speed, rear bumper, AM/FM
cassette , sport stnpes.
SALE ...................... $8995

PER .MONTH ............ $140.92"

PER MONTH ........•... $199.58*

1987 NISSAN 300ZX

1981 NISSAN KING CAB
Blue

Turbo, AMIFM cassette,

5 speed

a•r, &gt;double power, full

AMIFM

gauges, loaded!

SALE ....... 13995
PER MONTH ... $109.78

SALE .... . .... $17,995

1980 FORD FAIRMONT

1985 CHEVY CAPRICE

Dark blue w1th blue cloth
power, a1r, n1ce one .

Gold ftn!sh , double power,
aut'Jmatlc , AM/FM, air, ttlf
wheel, low m11es

SALE . . . .. . $1995
PER MONTH . . . $34.00

SALE ....... '8995
PER MONTH .. $199.58

mterlor, AMIFM, double

1984 FORI) TEMPO

1984 PONTIAC FIERO

1985 NISSAN PICKUP

4 oyllnder, -4 &lt;100r, air, dou·
bte power, automatic,
AMIFM.

Black w1th brown interior,
double power, automattc,
AM!FM cassette

SALE ....... $4995
Pll MONTH •• , $112.71

SALE ... . , . , $6995
PER MONTH ... $169.13

Tan, sport stnpes, AMIFM
cassene , 5 speed,
bumper, mud flaps .
SALE ....... '5995

•

1983 FORD ESCORT

198'6 . . _ S'IANU

Great

4xll Yf~n. light pewter,

Little

AMifM &amp;tlffllo, fold·uR
reat seat, rear wl~~&amp;t.
'

Car

SALE . ..... . $3995
PER MONTH . . . , $84.50

SALE ....••. $9$95

1985 NISSAN,,STANZ~

1986 PONTIAC

Po

**"' ...

$224.01

X.E, blue with blue Interlor, dt"~'Q\.O'wer, 4
door,
.
AMIFM
cassette.

Grand Arn , maroon w1th

SALE, .... .. $7495
I'IR MONTH • •. $162.13

SALE . ...... $9495
PER MONTH .. . $211.37

gray cloth Interior, double
AMIFM,

power,
automat1c

PER MONTH ... $124.69

1979 TOYOTA 4x4

••
•

•
1981 NISSAN PICIIUP

AMFM cassette
SALE · . . .... . '3495
PIA MONTH ... . $91.46

4 sj)€ed, orange, AMIFM
cassette, mud flaps, rear
bumper, pin stripes.
SALE . .....• 13995
PIR MONTH •.. $109.71

1913 NJSSAN PIQUP

1986 NISSAN PICKUP

Wh1te, long bed , sport
wheels, bru sh guards ,

•

Blue w1th blue Iotertor,
A!IIIFM cnaette, bed
coYer, rear ~bi.Jmper, 5
~peed, low miles,

SALE

' SALE • .. . • .. '4995

PEAMONTH . . $124.69

•

Red , 5 speed, AMIFM
cassette rear bumper,
mud flap3
'

'

'

' 5995

PEl MONTH .•• $112.71

•
·Payments figured wrth down payment of $1000 cash or trade plus tax~ ti1ie 88-87to r 60 mo ,
86-85 for 54 mo .. 84-83 for 48 mos , 82 &amp; older for 36 mo

NISSAN
DAT UN

'••

•

~

1200 E. STATE ST.
ATHENS 594·3528

•

•.

'
L...................;;;.....................................................~ .·:

�Page 6 The Dally Sentmel

Pomeroy

M~ddleport

...

Fnday November 13 1987

Oh1o

c

n

7 ~fxrERIENCE THE JOY Of RELIGION

.•"

\
(
a
't

992-5432

BOOK stORE

~~~~! ~It

Me•g~ Cm~ nt\ ~~:

01 1~ ~t Fl r ~
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY OHIO 45769
614 / 992 2644

Servtng Famthes

264 S 2nd Middleport

J"'"('t lon nf Lois Burt

POMEROY CHURCH OF TilE NAZA

RENE Comer Union and Mu berry RE'\i

Thomas G en McClung pastor Norman Pres
ev S

Sundav School !f.ll am
momlng worship lO::Kl am evenlngservke6
p m mid-week service Wednesday 7 p m
~

Supt

GRACE EPISCOPAL CHURCH 326 E

Pomerov &amp;inday servtces Hoy
communion on he first &amp;mda) of each month
and combined with morrung prayer on tOO
\.hlrd Sunday Mo ning prayer and se-rmon on
Main S

all o her Sundays of he month Cllurch Schoo
and NUI'Sf"!'Y care provided Cof'f['(&gt; hoW' n hP
Partsh Ha unmed a ely following he service

POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST 212 W

Main S Leo Nash evangt=&gt; ~1 Bible School
9 .lJ a rn Mornlngworshlp JO .]) a m You h

11'\l"E'tings 6 00 p m Evening worship 7 00 p.
m Wednesday nigh! praver meeting and B be

sudv 700pm
TilE SALVATION ARMY 115 Bu tPrnu
Ave Pomeroy Mrs ~ra W nlng in chargp
Surxlay hollness mee utg 10 a m Sunday
Schoo 10: :II a m SuOOay School, YPSM
Eloise Adams leader 7 l) p m Salvallon
mee1 ng varloll'i speakers and mU'ik.' sp;'Cials
Thursday 11 3.) a m to 2 p m Ladles Home
League lllE'ffibers n charg(' a women
Invited 6 l5 p m Thursda,} Corps Cadel
Classs (Young People-Bib)(&gt;) 7 l) p m Bib e
Sludy and Prayer mre ng opt."JJ o he pub lc
POMEROY WES'l'SIDE CHURCH OF
CHRlST 33226 ChiiC'lren s Home Road (County
Road 76 ~ 5235 Vocal mus c SUnday Wo
shp10am BlbeStudyl111m Worsh.lp 6p
m Wedne;day B be S udy 7 p m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISI1AN
CHURCH Alvin CUM Is pas or Linda Swan
SUPt Sunday Schoo 9 .}) a m preaching Sf'l'
vtces flrsl and third Sundey followin~ Sunda,v
School Youth meeting 7 ]) p m every SUn
day

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GRAHAM
UNITED METMODIST
Preach ng 9 30 a m f rs and second Sun
da ys of each month th d and rou tl Sun
day each mon h wo ship servIces at 7 30 p
m Wednesday evenings at 7 30 p m
Prayer and B ble S udy
SEVENTH DAY ADVENTIST Mu
berry He gh s Road Pomeroy Pas o
John Swt&gt;lgart Sabba h SC'hOQI Super n
endt&gt;nt Da I ne Stewart Sabba h School
beg ns a 2 p m on Saturday arternoon
"hwos hlpQervcefo o\l.ngat315pm
Evervonf' welcome
RUTLAND FIRST BAP1 1ST CHURCH
- Sis er Harr e&gt;ll Warner Sup Sunday
Schoo 9 30 a m Morn ng Worship 10 45
am
POMEROY F1RST BAPTJST Lvston
Ha ley m n s e
Sa urday evt'nln~
evangelist c services open o pub lc 7 p
m Sunday Church !;ehool 9 30 a m
Morning Worship 10 30 a rn
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST Po
me oy P kE' E Lama 0 Bry&lt;~. nt pastor
Jack NE'PdS Sunday School Director Sun
da y Schoo 9 30 a m Morn n~ Worship
10 45 l'Vening won;h p 7 00 p m D S T
&amp; 7 JO E S T
Wednt&gt;sda y P aye SE&gt;r
vic~.; 7 OOpm DST )&amp;7 30PM E5
T ) Mi ssion F lends ages 2 6 Roya
Ambassador~ bo~ s af!es 618 and G rls
n Af'l on ages 6-18 on Wcclnesdays 7 p
m D Sf &amp; 7 30 p m EST Tuesday
Vlslta on 6 30 p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Ba
ley Run Road R['V Emme t Rawson pas
tor Handl('y Dunn sup Sunday Schoo
lOam Sundayevf'n ngser Ice 7 30p m
Bib e each ng 7 30 p m Thursday
SYRACLSE MISS ON Cherry S S
racusl' Sr&gt;rv C('S 10 a m Sunday Ev('n ng
se vicE's Su nda v and WL'dnesdav at 7 OOp
m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
IN CHR STIAN UNION Dwlgh Haley
firs ddcr Wanda Moh c Sunday School
Sup1 Sunday SchOol 9 30 a m Mornfn~
• Worsh p JO 30 a m Even ng: Worship 7 30
p m WC'dnl'sday prave meeting 7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Racine Rf'V James Sa erfleld pas or
F' eeman Will a ms Sup Sunda&gt; Schqol
9 45 a m Sunday and Wednesday ev~ n
lng St'rv ces 7 p m
MIDDLEPORT FtRSI BAPTIST
Corne S xth and Pa me Et~rl Eden Pas
tor Bob Parkf&gt;r S S Sup Ca hv R ggs
Ao;s Sup Sunda School 9 15 a m
Morn ng \\ orsh p 10 1 am Sunday
Even nJ:( se v ce 7 p m P ayer mP(' ng
and B ble Sludy WNinP~day f'Vl'n ng 7 p
m Ch drC'n s cho r praclice Wednes
day 7 p m Adu choir pract ce Wed 8
r, m
Radio program WMPO Sundav I
0

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CNITED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTIIY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev Charles Tal boU

••

HARRISONVILLE PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH - Sunday Worship Services
9 00 a m Church School 10 15 a m
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTERIAN
Sunday School 9 a m Church service
)0 15 a m

J

Rutland Oh o4S715
Bitl Brown Owner
Phone (6141742 2717

wm

FlOWER! FOR IVERY OCCASION
(b 14 )992 2039 or

(6141992 5721

786 NORTH SECOND AVE

1Ob Butternul An Pomeroy Oh

'

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,. aooo

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

WAID CROSS
SONS SIORE
Enter mto hiS gateS
woth thanksg v ng be
thankful unto htm and
bless h1S name
- Psalm 100:4

GrocenesGeneral Merchand1se
Rae ne 949 2SSO

CHAPMAN SHOES

•• •
POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

.~-------..&amp;or
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
TN CHRIST CHURCH Loca E'd In Texas
Community off Cl Rt 82 Rev Robe
Sanders pastor Jeff Ho f! lay leader
Ed Roush Sunday SchOo Sup Sunda}
SchOo 9 30 a m morning y, orshlp and
ch dren s church 10 30 a m even ng
preaching !'ierv ce I rst hree Sundays
7 10 p m Special •ervtce founh Sunday
even ng 7 30 p m WC'dnesdav Pravet
Me-Ning BibleS udy and Youth Fe o"

Pommy r QNflty $•H Slm
I 04 E MAIN ST , POMfROY

992 2815

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
TERIAN - Sunday Schoo 10 a m
Chu rch se&gt; v ce 11 15 am
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOO Pastor
John Evans Sunda} School 10 00 am
Su nday Mo n ng Worsh p 11 00 a m Chll
d en s Church 11 am Sunday Evening
Serv ce 7 00 p m Wed 6 p m Youn~ La
des Auxl ary WE'dnesday 7 p m Fam
y Worship
HAZEL COMMUNIT\ CHURCH Off
Rt 124 3m les rrom Port and Long Bot
tcm Edse Hart pastor Sunda} School
9 30 a m
Sunda&gt; morning peaching
10 30 a n Sunday even ng services 7 30

f.

Pometoy Flowe~ $bop

1HESE MERCHANTS URGE You To
ATTEND YOUR CHOSEN HOUSE OF
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MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH Cornf' Ash and Plum ~oe
Herrmann pastor Sunday SchoollO OOa
m Morn ng Worship 11 00 a m Wed
nesday and Sa urday Evening Services a
7 30 P m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Re\ Don Archer
Rev Roy Deeter
Rev Seldon Jobaa;on
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 am
Worshp llam UMYF630p m UMW
Th rd Tuesday
30 p m Communion

rlrs Sunday Arche
CHESTER - Worship 9 am Church
Schoo lOam B b eS udy Thu sday 7p
m UMW firs Thursda~ 1 p m Com
mun on flr~t Sunday A cher
JOPPA
Worsh p 9 30 am Church
School10 30 a m B ble Study Wednesday
7 30 p m John!ion
LONG BOTTOM Chu ch Sc&gt;hoo 9 30
a m Wor5h p 7 p m B ble S udy Wed
nesday 7 30 p rn UMYF We-dnesday
6 00 p m Communion F st Sunday
A cher
REEDS\ JLLE Chu ch Schoo 9 30 a
m Worsh p S&lt;orv Ce 11 00 a m (Deeter}
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Chu rch School 9 a m Worship 10 a m
B b e S ud} Tuesday 7 30 p m UMW
Thl r;J Tuesday 7 30 p m Communion
First Sunda} (Arche&gt;
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev James E Corbitt
Rev Kandy Burch

Rev Melvin Franklin
Rev Clemenle S Zuniga Jr
Re' Robert Mussman

ASBURY (Sy a('USfl - Worsh p 11 a m
Chu ch Schoo 9 45 a m Cha ge Bib e
Study Wednesday 7 30 p m UMW f st
1 uesday 7 30 p m Cho Rehearsal
Wednesday 6 30 p m UMW four h Sun
day 6 30 p m Bu ch
ENTERPR JSE - Wo ship 9 a m
Church School10 a m B blC' Study Tues
day 7 30 p m UMW F' st Monday 7 30
p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m Cho r Re
hl'arsal 6 30 p rn Wednf'sday Frank in
FLATWOODS- Church School lOam
Worsh p 11 a m B be S udy Thurs
day 7 p m UMYF Sunday 6 p m
F ankl n
FOREST RUN - Wo ship 9 a m
Chu ch Schoo lU A M Chp prac ice
Tuesday 6 JO p m UMW f rs TuE'sday
7 30 p m Burch
H£ATH M dd f'por
Chu ch School
9 30 a m Mo n nl'! Wo ship 10 30 a m
You h Group 4 p m Wednesda} Chu ch
Chol
eh arsa
7 pm
Thursday
Prayer Sf'rv f'£' 6 10 p m Bib e S udy 7
p m Zuniga
MINERSVILLE - Wo ship Se v ce 10
a m Church School 11 am UM'w\ th rd
Wednesdav 1 p m Cho r p ac1 ce Mon
dav 7 ~0 p m Burch
PEARL CHAPEL
Worsh p Ser. ce
9 JO a m Chu ch Schoo 10 15 a m
UMW Second Tuesda 7 30 p m Muss
man
POMERO\ ChuiTh Schoo 9 15 a m
Worship 0 30 a m Choi rehca sal
Wednesda)' 7 30 p m UMW second
Tuesday 7 30p m UMYFSunday 6p m
Corbit )
ROCK SPRINGS- Chu Schoo 9 15
a m Worsh p 10 a m Bib e S Ud} Wed
nf'sday 7 30 p m UMYF' Senors Sun
da y 5 p m Jun ors (' f'rv o hf' S n
da v 6 p m F ank In
RUTLAND - Chu ch Schoo 10 a m
Wo sh p 11 a m UMV. FI s Monday
7 JO p m

SALE M CENTER Ch urch School9 15
a m Wo h p 10 15 p m tMussman
SNOWV LLE - Wo sh p 9 00 a m
ehu ch schoo 9 45 a m (Mussman
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Re\'1 Roger Grace

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHR ST
5 h and Main AI Ha son mlnls er
R chard Du~se Associat e Pas o M kP
Ge Jach Su nday Sctmol Super n endent
8 biP SchOol 9 30 a m Morning Worsh p
10 30 a m Evening Worship 7 00 p m
Wednesday 7 00 p m Pra yer meE't ng
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE PASTOR Fred Penhorwood
B 1 White Sunday Schoo Sup Sunday
Schoo 9 30 a m Morn ng Worsh p 10 4J
a m E ange st c mee1 ng 7 00 p m
Wednf'Sday 7 00 p m Prayer meet ng

IJ04 w Ma1n
992 2318 Pomeroy

992 9921

214 E Maon
9'12 5130 Pomeroy

Rev Paul McGuire

••

ofColumbus 0

~........_

992-5141
TRINITY CHURCH Rev Jotm l Iff pasto
Debbie Buck Sunday Schoo Sup Church
Schoo 9: 15 a m Worship SeMe 10: l:l a m
Cholr rehearsa Thes.1ay 7 lJ p m under d

Nattonwtde Ins Co

Rev Kelt h Rader
APPLE GROVE -Chu rch School 9 30
am Worship 10 00 a m (f rst and third
Sundays B ble st-udy every Sunday 6 p
m UMW Second Tuesday 7 00 p m
P a&gt;E' meet n~ WMnesday 6 p m
G ace
BETHANY ~ Worship 9 am Churc h
School to am Bib eStudy Wednesday
JO a m Dorcas Women s Fe owsh p
Wednesday 11 m (McGuire
CARMEL - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship 10 45 a m Second and Fourth
Sundays Fe owsh p dinner witl1 Sutt(l'l
th rd Thursday 6 30 p m McGuire)
EAST LETART ChurchSchoal9a m
Wor.shlp 10 a m second and fourth Sundays UMW l rsl Tuesday 7 lJ p m
G ace)
LEfARl FALLS- Worsh p 9 am
Church SChoollO a m Grace)
MORNING STAR- Worship 9 45 a m
Church Schoo 10 30 a m Bib c STudy
Thu sday 7 30 p m (Rader)
RACINE WESLEY AN - Church School
10 a m Worshfp 11 a m UMW fourth Mon

day a 7 :l&gt; p m

Mens Prayer Breakfast
Wednesday 7 a m Crace)
SUTTON - Church School 9 30 a m
Morning Worship 10 45 a m firs and hlrd
Sunda} s Fellowship dinner with Carmel
hird Thursday 6 30 p m McGuire~
K F.NO CHl Rc"H OF ( HR ST
non
E 1 1.,. m n
0
sv.
Sund
h
School• s
P £' ch nn,. . q {j rJ: m r
SuHossoN CHR1STJAN UNION nmr
·~n Ou ham } pastor Sunday service
m ....
9 30 a m
e ening serv ce 7 30 p m
Prayf'r mN'ting Wednl'Ciay 7 30 P m
BEAR \'VA( 1 0\\ RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST J o &lt;'Ph B Hosk n"' P o; or B b 1.'
C1 s ~ ll m Morn ng V. 0 h P
(
m I n n \.
h P li ;o m Thu
R h S uri t; ~ P m
r'\E\\ STT\ F.RS\ 11 L F. COMML!\IT}
CHURCH Sunda Schoo "'(' &lt;'E' l :15 a
m
\\o hp
Sl'r f' 10 :tO .am
E on~f'l s c Sc CC' :m, p m \\ ('( n('S
da
p a 0 ffi('(' ng7 ~Upm rhu dav
7.10N CHURCH OF' CHRIST Pam ro
H r son C' Rd Rob!' Pur f'i m n
rr s (' s an ('V ~ s Sup R 1 M E
~
Supl Su dJ Schno 9 S( m
\\ or h p f' C&lt;' 1 30 m f cnlng 0
h p Sund
p m nd \\ Nin~""d v p.n
s r JO HN LUTHF RAN CHURCH p nc
G n (' Th(' R
\\II am M ddl
h
p;. or Chu r-h (' C&lt;'9 30 &lt;.i m Sun ta v
&amp;hoo 10 30 a m
BRADBUR\ CHURC H OF CHR!S1
lohn \\ gh 11 "'
sun 1 Sch I~"~
rr L: r Hv n -.s S S Sup M n ng
\1
I p Hl 30 m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE 1'\AZA
-tEN E RC' L o d n r. mm r pas o
Or B ss Ch man of hP Ro rd or Ch
1 n L r Sunda School 9 \0 m Mo n
in!Z v.o sh p I 30 m &lt;' ung&lt;'l s c Sr
C'C' 7 K P m \\ C'dnMd v rr. C'l' 7 p m
!BERTY CHRISTI/\\! CHLRCH [)(&gt;x
r \\oo 1 Cu I p o S(' C'C'S Sund
Pm
1 ll m and 7 p m Wf'dn '!'ida

RACINE FIRST BAPTIST Sf! e
Deaver Pastor Mike Sw ge Sunday
Schoo Sup Sunday Schoo 9 30 a m
Morn ng worsh p 10 40 a m Sunday
even ng worsh p 7 30 P m Wednesday
even ng B ble study 7 30 P m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHUROI
Burl ngham Ray LaudermU pasto Robert Cozart asslstan pastor Sunday School
10 am worship 1 P m WE'dnesday 6 P m
you hmeetlng; Wed 7pm churrhservict'S
PINEGROVEHOL!NESSCHURCH 1\
m eoffR 325 Rev BenJ Wat s pasto
Rober Searles S S Sup Sunday Schoo
9 30 am Morning Worship 10 30 am
Sundav evening servlc~ 7 30 ~ m Wed
nesr1ay serv ce 7 30 P m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST Bll L t e
pastor Stevt" Ut le S S Sup Sunday
School 10 a m Morning worslp 11 a n
Sunday even ng worsh p 7 30 p m Ptayt&gt;r
meet ng and Bible study Wednesda 7 30
pm YouhmeetngWednesdaya 7pm
REJOJCJNG LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
383 N 2nd Ave M ddleport Sunday
SchoollO a m Sunday even ng 7 00 p m
Mdweekservce Wed pm
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
Robert E Musser pas or Sunday School
9 30 am Paul Musser supt Mo n n~
worsh p )0 30 am Sunda) e-.cnlng ser
v ce 7 p m mid week service Wednes
da~ 7 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Re Glenn McMI an pastor
Mar} Jan ce Lavender Sunday SChool
Supt Sunday Schoo 9 30 a m Morning
worship 10 30 a m E an~clls c service
6 p m Praye1 and Praise Wednesday 7p
m Youthmeetng 7pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST £ den R Blake pas or Sunday
Schoo 10 a m Gary Reed Lay eade
Morning sermon 11 am Sunday night
se v ces Chr stlan End eavor 7 30 p m
Song service 8 p m Preach ng 8 30 p m
M d week pra yer ml'f' lng Wednesday t'
pm
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN A:og
er Watscrt pastor Crensoo Prat Sunday
School Supt Morning Worsh p 9 30 am
Sunday School 10 30 a m Evening ser
vice 7 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST Donald Shue
pastor Joe Sayre Sunday School Sup!
Sunday Schoo 9 45 a m Evening wor
ship 6 30 p m Prayer Meeting 6 30 p m
Wednesday
TUPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Prentice minister Deryl
Wells Supt Church School 9 a m Wor
sh p Service 9 ~!5 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Herbert Gra e past or
Frank R ff e supt Sunday School9 30 a
m Worship service 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wednesday 7 p m Prayer meet:
ng

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH Davld Be pastor Robert E
B&lt;trtoo Director of Christian Education
Steve Eb In assist an Sunday School9 30
a m Morning worship 10 30 a m Teens
n Action 6 p m Even ngWorshlp 7 OOp
m Wednesday evening prayer and Bible
study 7 OOp m Choir ptactlce Thursday
7pm

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Charles Russell Sr minis er Rick Ma
comber supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wotship service 10 30 am Bible study

Tuesday 7 30 P m
REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SA[NTS Por
land Racine Road WI Ham Roush past or
Linda Evans church schoo director
Church school9 30a m Morningwor!!hlp
10 J0 a m Wednesday even ng prayer
serv ces 7 30 P m
SETHLEHEM BAPT1ST Rev Ear
Shuler pas or Worsh 1P ser 1ce 9 30 a m
Sunday SchoollO JO a m Bib eS udy and
praver serv ce Thursday 7 30 p m
CARLETON INTERDENOMIN'AT10N
AL CHURCH Kingsbury Road Rev
Clyde W Henderson pasror Sunday
SChool9 JO a m Ral ph Car Sup1 Eun
lng worship 7 00 p m Prayur meeting
Wednesday 7 00 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN Vernon
Eldridge pastor wa1 ace 0 amew ood S
S Supt Sunday Schoo 9 30a m Worsh p
Service 10 30 am
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Car pastor SundaySchoola19 30a
m Morning 1,\.0 ship a 10 30 am Sun
day even ngservicea 7 30p m Thursday
serv ces a 7 30 P m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Ba d
Knob loca t!d on County Road 31 Rev
Lawrence G uesencamp past or Rev
Roger Wll ford a~s pastor Preaching
servlcesSunday7 JOp m P ayermecttng
Wednesday 7 30 p m Gary Griffith
loodcr Youth groups Sunday evening a
6 30 P m W th Roger and VIole Wlllfo U
eaders Communion service firs Sundav
each month
WHITES
CHAPEL
WESI EVAN
CHURCH- CoolvUieRD Rev Ph111 p R
denour pas to Sunday School 9 30 a m
worship .service- 10 :JIJ a m B b e sludy
and worsh p se v ce \\ ednesday 7 p m
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST
Bl I Car e pasto Sunday School 9 30 a
m Morning Worship and Communion
10 ~0 a m
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos
111 s pas f)r Sonn\ Hudson supt SundRy
School9 30 am Morning wo ship 10 30
am Sunday even ng serv ice 7 00 p n
Wednesday serv ce 7 p m WMPO program 9 am each Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Samuel Basye pas o Sunday
School9 :lJ am Worship service 10 30a
m
Young peop e s serv ce 6 p m
E\ a ng~l st lc serviC£&gt;6 30 p m WMnesday
serv ce 7 P m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST Ml er
So Masoo W \a SundayBbteStudyiO
am "orshpllam
andlpm Wednn
.,-,
day Blb e S ud y oca mus c 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOO Dud
ding Lane Mason W Va J N Thacker
pastor Evening serv ce 7 30 p m Wo
mens Ministry Thursday 9 30 am
Wednesday Prayer flnd BibleS udy 7 )5
pm

HARTfORD CHURCH OF CHRIST N
CHR S'TIA N UNION The Rev Davd
McMan paso Sunda y Schoo 9 30 am
Sunday morn n~ sPr !C(' 11 am Sun
da nl~&lt;:h serv ce 7 30 Wednesay jr8yPr
mN' n~ 30pm
FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH Le arl
\\ \a R 1 James Lewis paslor Wur
sh p servlcf's 9 30 am Sunday School U
a m EvE'nlnj2; worsh p 7 30 p m I uesda}
c01 age prayt'r mee lng and B b e Stud;
9 30 am Wo sh p serv Cl" Wednesday
7 30 p m
OUR Si\V JO UR LU rHERAN CHURCH
Walnu and Henr; S s Rav('nswood W
Va Thf' R('v George C Wr: ck pus or
Sunda SChool 9 30 a m Sunday~ o sh p
1l am
CALVARYBIBLECHURCH Jorotetlon
Pomerov P kc Countv Road '!inca Fla
"ood s Rr Black\\. ood pas o Se v .:: s
on Sunda y a 10 30 a m and 7 31 p m w h
Sunday Schoo 9 30 a m Biblt' Study V.cd
ni.'Sdav 7 30 p m
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHR IST S R 338 An iqu ty Rev
Frank In 0 ckens pastor Su nday morn
lng 10 am Sunday t'Vt'flln~ 7 10 p m
Thursd y even ng 7 :10 p m
STIVERSVfLLE COMMUNTTY BAP
TIS'I CHURCH
Sundav Schoo 10 a rn
am Sunday evening servtce.7:
Y,at,Zandt and
lames Mil e pastor Sunday Schoo
0 30 am Worsh p S~rv ce Sunday 7 30
p m Blb (!Study WMnesday 7 30 p m
POMEROY WESLE\ AN HOLINESS
~a rlsonvllle Road Rev Dewey K ng
as o C Inion Faulk Sunday Schoo
upt Sunday Schoo 9 30 am mo n ng
vorshlp l1 am Sunday f'venln,g service&gt;
~0 p m P aye Meeting Wednesda:,.
/30 pm
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOD
on Pen f'COs AI Y.orship service Sunda}
Ill em Sunday Schoo lJ am Evening
..vo stiip service 7 00 p m Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 00 p m

Attenu The
Church Of
Your Choice

GOD OF PROPHECY
Located on 0 J Wh e&gt; Road of Highway
160 Pa Henson paSior Sunday Sbhoo 10
a m Classes fo a ll ages Jun or Chu ch 11
am Morning worsh p 11 am Adu I
Choir pracllce 6 P rn Sunday Young Pf'ople s Chl1dren s Church and Adul Bible
Study Wednesday a 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL 570 GranJ
St M ddleporl AU atcd ~ h Sou h£&gt;rn
Baptist ConvC"nt on Oav d Bryan S Ml
nlst(&gt;r Sunday School 10 a m Mo n ng
worship L1 am Even ng wo ship 7 p m
Wednesday evenln2 B be s udy and
prayer meet ng 7 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRTSf S
R1 12~ and Co Rd 5 Mark Seevers m n s
ter Sunda} Schoo Supt Harrv Hen
drlcks Sunday School9 30 a m Marn ng
Y\o o ship 10 30 a m Even ng "'o Ship 7 p
m Wednesday" orshlp 7 p r'n
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corne Svclimore and Second SIS Po
meroy Th e Rev WUiiam M dd es•u r
pastor Sunda~ SchOo 9 45 a m Church
ser Ice 11 a m
SACRED HEART CHURCH Msgr
Anlhony G annamor&lt;&gt; Ph 992 5898 Sa ur
day Even ng Mass 7 JO p m Sunday
Mass 8 am and 10 a m Confess ons one
ha ( hou befor(' each Mass CCD classes
11 am Sunday
V1C1 ORY BAP'fJS1 525 N 2nd St
MlddJt&gt;nr.r Jamt's E Kces('e p s or
~ ...-~
Sunda~ morning wo ship 10 am E en
ng ser Ice 7 p m Wednesday even Jig
wor~h p 7 p m Vis. at on Thu rsday 6 :tOp
m

MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH D vd
Curfma n paslo Sunday Schoo lOa n
wo sh p ser Ice 11 am Suntla\ n gh
worship servicf' 7 30 p m M dwcck
p ayer srrvic(&gt; Wednesday 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH o( M ddlepm In c 75 Pea IS
Rev I an M f' s paso Rogt"r Manlpy
Sr Sunda) School Sup Sunda~ School
9 30 am Morning Worsh p 0 30 a m
E en ng Worship 7 30 p m WednC'$day
E'V£'n i g Bible stud y p ay..: and pra se
se vice 7 30 p m
LIVING \\ORO CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer pas or Sun
day School 9 30 am Mo n ng scr ce
10 OOa m Sunday £'V('ning s.£'rv ce 7 00 p
m Mid week p uye ser Ice Wednesday
7pm
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
La~ renee Bush pas or Max F'olmf' s 1
Sup Sunday Schoo and Morn ng Wo ~h p
9 30 a m Sunday evening service 7p m
You h m('letlng and BibleS udy \\ednoo
day 7 p m
UNJTED FAITH CHURCH R 7on Po
meroy By Pass Rev Dav d w s~ man Sr
pastor Melvin 0 ake g s Sup Su nday
School 9 30 am Morn ng Worsh p 10 30
Evening Worship 7 30 p m Wednf'!;dav
Prayer Serv CP 7 30 p n
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH Rail ad
St Mason Sunday SchoollOa m Mo n
ing worship H a m Even ng scrv ce 6 p
m Prayer mee ing and B be Study Wed
nesday 7p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyte
Borden pasto CornE&gt; Ius Bunch sup
Sunday School 9 30 a m St:cond and
rour h Sundays wo ship s('r ce 11 2 30 p
m

ond Ruth

Ann Fox

Veterans
Memonal Hosp1tal
11 S E Memorool Dr

Pomoroy

992 2104

am
OFC HR Sr
Hosk ns evange lst Sunday
B~;;t~;;~~'1~i
Worship lOam Sun
da&gt;
serv ce 6 p n Wednesd 1y
evening serv c 7 p m
,.
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Ra cin e
R 124 WI 1 am Hoback pastor Sunday
S&lt; hoo 10 a m Sunda} even ng srr ler- 7
p m W(&gt;dnesc;ia} evening ser ce 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Chead e
Sup Sunday SchOo 9 30 a m Mo n n~:t
Wo ship 10 30 a m Prayer scJTVIce a e n
ate Sundays
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC fAITH - Ne~ L rna Rd
nex o For1 Me gs Park Ru land Rob
Rlcha ds pas or Services u1 7 p m on
W('dn('Sdavs and Sund ys
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP
TER or the Wes eyan Ho ness Church
Rev David Ferre pas o Henry f:bl n
Sunda} School Sup1 Sunday School JO a
m Morning Worship 11 a m Even ng
sc lcr 7 30 p m "Pdnesdu y even ng ser
vi('{' 7 30 p m
STtVERSV Ll E WORD OF F"A!TH
Hary Holt£&gt;r pas or Sunday sr-r let-s 9 30
an and7pm Mdw(&gt;ekS(' vee 7 30p
m Thursda}
MIDDLEPORTPEN1ECOSIAL lh t
A £' R('V C a k Buk£' r pa~ or CA No
11 njjtham Sun lay SehMI Sup Sun v
SchOo 10 a m ~ h classf'S fo a a!-(1'5
E rn ng S£'1 v !;' a 6 p m W('dn s lav Bl
b s udv &lt;t 7 30 p m J ou h ~r vic ~ F' I
da
7 30 p m
ECCLES A F El OWSH P I 8 M S
M d I por B o hP Chu k M Phf' so
pa o Sunctu S oo 0 m Su Itt
f' nn!Zs(' vcr a 7pm a ct\\('dnf'!) cla
VC'&lt;'~
7 pm
ANT lQl 11Y RAPTTST K nnl"th~m h
pH o Sundav Sc-hoo 9 :1 0 a m ~.:hu h
rv 7 :lOp n uu hfe ov. h p6 :lOp
n Bbl(' lui lhurs a 7 J(Jp m
fUlL GOSPEL UGHTHOUSF. ~3045
H 11 I Ro &lt;:~fl PomC'ro Tom Kf'
p!!.s
o 0 nnv Lamll('rl S S Su1t Sunrla
mo n nl=! Sl r I u 10 a m Sun lay f'vf'n
n~.: M'
ic('
0p m
-sday and I hu n,
1 S r c:&lt;' a
30 p m
f'EW HAVEN CHURC'I OF THf. NA
Z RE':N £ Rt' G endon S roud pa s r
~un
~hool9 30a m Yl o sh p l"rvlc
\0 I a m You h s£'r lc Sun Ia I ~ p
m Sun l v &lt;'V&lt;'n ng "NV C&lt;' i.JO p m \\ I
n ~ lay Pra r Ml"'f' ng n I B hi S ud
7 iO p m
NEASE SE'IT EMENTCHl!RCH ~u
v :lf c-rnoon ~(I u.-s a 2 :W 1hu sd:.v
(' &lt;'n 11-"t S(' v

&lt;'~

The Dally Sentrnei - Page-7

Middleport, Oh10

•

Squad has four calls Thursday

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equ1pment ~~~~· :;d

~ER~

E

FUNERAL HOME

Complete
~
Automot ve
serv ce
Locust &amp; Beech Street

Pomerov

URNI~~~L!RDWAR:tI
Rowhngs-Coats-Biower

m

ELLIS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Prescnpt•ons

RIDENOUR

Homehte Saws

992 3315

Pomeroy

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

FRANCIS FLORIST

Pomeroy

John F Fultz Mgr
Ph ,92 2101

MIDDLEPORT
Churcti &amp; Office Supplies
GIFTS
99 Mtll St
Middleport

116S second

Pomeroy

,.---Local news-----.. Early winter stonn heads on out to sea

The Interested Businesses-L-isted On This P-ag€. -TEAFORD REALTY
P J. PAULEY, AGENT

This Message and Churcn
MEIGS nRE
(row's family Restaurant
Ftthm•s /(,.trdlcy Frl•d Chlckew
" \ CENTER, INC.
228 W Mcun St, Pomeroy

Fnday November 13 1987

a 7 0

I S1 BAP1 1$T CHURtH M '\01"' \\
V P s 1or B Mu pt ~ ~un uvSrtooll
u m Su duv C&gt;vC'nina lO p n P vr
f'f' ln ~a nl8b ('s udy ~l' n('Sd v 7 ~
n Evcrvont'
com&lt;'
RUl LAND FRF E \\ T L BAP fi ~T S
rm S Rf'v P u Tav o p 1ar Sun I v
'choo110 am Su dd Vf' C' nln~ OOp n
~l'dn&lt;&gt;s.da
rvl'n n~ p r m&lt;'c g 7 00
m

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMEN
Cl URCH S £' R dJ! DuiJ.nP Svd n
I kP p o Sun li.I V School 9 a
Vo sh p Sf' &lt;: 0 am Su nd v t' &lt;'nlng
Cl' 7 00 m W(ldnr da n gh B b
s udy 7 00 p m

SERMONETTE

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11 14 87
By Unlled Press International
Coast across to lhe ce ntral Gulf
The second of IWO East Coast
Coast with readings dlppmg Into
Meogs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
snowstorms blamed for at least
the 20s as far sourh as North
1 hu1 sda) M ddlepori at 6 56 a m to Fourlh St for Burwell
21 deaths drtrted to sea with
Carolina sa1d NWS forecaster
McKmney to Velerans Memonal HospiTal Racine atl2 33p m
Harry Gordon
warmer temperatures In Its
10 Trouble Creek Road for Mary Kearns w)lo was treared but not
w~m ~w Eng!ana too
- -nrrsclillly a111he way downlotransported: Pomeroy at 2 13 p m to Rock St for Mary Ann
"hole cold OhiO Valley air drove
lhe southern Appalachians
Mtchael to Velerans Memonal Hosp1tal Pomeroy at 9 13 p m
pre dawn North Carolina read
Gordon said early toda y pred ct
transpoo ted Ph1ll p Jones and Jose Scott from an auio accident
mgs below freezing forecasters
lng the region would warm up as
on Route 33 to Veterans Memonal Hospital
circulation patterns returned to 'IUI"'fo._
said
Clear to partly cloudy skies
normal today
d~-Splay
were forecast over much of the
Gale force wtnd warnongs were
eastern
half
of
lh~
nation
today
In
effect this morning along the
Res1den1s of I he area "til have an opportunity to view the
as
the
most
recenl
of
the
two
northern
Pacific Coast a nd sno"
scale model of the new Galhpohs Locks and Dam renovation
storms
moved
out
to
sea
off
the
advisories
were posted over the
project from now until Saturday November 21 In the main
coast
of
Maine
National
Cascades In the Pactfic Northw
lobby a l the Ohio Valley Bank In Gallipolis
Weather Service forecasler Lyle
est and the mountains of Utah
The model which measures six feet by three feet will be on
Alexander said
On Thursday New England
d1splay durmg regular banking hours Groundbreaking for the
The storms Wednesday and
was hit by a storm lhal dumped
replacement project recenliy offlctally started the task of
Thursday dumped snow from
up to a foot of hea\ y wet snow
updatmg the Galllpolls facility The two new locks and the
Mame to VIrginia - mcludlng a
beforg dawn lp some areas
lwo mile long bypass ca nal are vl\tdly detailed by lhe scale
record 151nches in the area of the
closed two airports forced wl
model along the exlsllng locks and dam constructed in the
nat JOn s capital - closed air
despread school cancellations
1930s
ports
and
were
blamed
for
at
and
was blamed for numerous
The scale mode l was obtamed by an arrangement with the
least
21
traffic
and
hypotherll)ia
traffic
accidents
Huntmgton Dtstnct of the US Army Corps of Engmeers
~SNOW
BRAIN
~SHOWERS
deaths
Twelve
inches fell on southern
according lo executive vice presldenl Jeffrey E Smith of OVB
Temperatures In the 40s were
Vermont and Middleboro Mass
FRONTS . . Warm "
Cold
. . Sial c
Occluded
Were extremely apptecla!Jve lo have this opportunity made
forecast
today
from
North
Da
and 10 mches was recorded at
possible by the Corps to give the ctttzens of the area a chance to
Map ::.haws m n mum tempe atures At eas 50% of anv shaded area Is torecast
kota across the northern Great
PoughkeepSie N Y and easteon
see th1s project firsthand Smith satd
o ece ve p ec pIa on nd1cated
UPI
Lakes
and
rrom
northeast
New
Connecticut
Our ng the peak time of the project as many as 500 people will
York state Into northern New
\\ EATHER MAP - Ram will extend from the northern h •If of
The 7 Inches thai pUed up at
be employed with approxtma tel~ 80 percent of those jobs fllled
England
with
30
degree
read
the
Pactflc Coast across the northern hail of the plateau with ram
Boston
s
Logan
In
terna
llonal
by local workers The proJeCt to be done m two phases wlll
mgs
forecast
for
northern
Mame
hecommg
s now In the mountams Rain showers woll he scattered
Atrport
was
the
mosl
ever
for
so
contmue Into the 1990s and cost an esttmated $217 million
The temperatures are going
over southeast rexas \\ lnds will he strong and gusty over the
early In the season and foo ced the
to be warming and the sun is
Pac1hc Northwest High temperatures woll be m the 50s or 60s
airport 10 close for eight hours
m~-Shap
going to be shining and pretty
during the early morning Brad
across much of the nat10n
soon the roads are going to be
ley Internatoonal Alrporl tn
An Athens man was charged and cued m an accident
closed Thu sday except for es
The \\ ashmgron DC
area
warm and dry Vermont High
Windsor Locks
Conn
was
Thursday al8 30p m mBedfordTownshiponU S 33 onem1le
senual
use
way Department spokesman
cleared a record 15 mches of
closed during the storm
The
dealh
toll from lhe foul
south of the Meigs Athens county lme accordmg to the
snow thai fell m some areas the
M tke Morissette sa ld
The snow from the New Eng
Gall a Meigs Post of the State Hlghway Patrol
weather
s
tood
at 21 Thursday
day before and removed scores
Highs In the 70s were expected
land storm ended Thurs d av
Phtlllp M Jones Jr 30 was charged with DV\1 after his car
Wealher
related
traffic accl
of abandoned cars from the
from Florida through most of
evening m Eastport Mame on
denls
k
lied
f1"e
people
10 Vlrgl
"enl off lhe rlghl side of the road and mto a dttch He was
streets The storm had dumped
Kansas
Oklahoma and
the state s southern tip after 8
ma
four
in
P
e
nnsylvama
lhree
drtvmg wesl when the accident occurred
15 nches n suburban Dls tncl
Arkansas
mches fell tn some paris
each In Maryland and New
Heights Md and 12 mches at
Cold air movmg south and east
weather officials said There
Jersey lwo in New York and one
Wash ngton s NatiOna l Aorport in
out of lhe Ohio Valley sent
were no other reports ol stgnlf i
nearb:, Arlington Va fore ng tt each m Delaware and Massachu
temperatures plummeting early
cant snowfall Thursday after
sells Hypothermia was blamed
closed
until Thursday mmnmg
today along the southern Atlantic
noon Alexander sa d
for one death n Atlanta and
Andre"' s AIr Force Base m
mended for patients wtth a
\\ ASHINGTON t UP II - The
another In Aiexandr a Va
suburban Maryland remained
FDA comm1sstoner gave !mal
htstory of stroke hemorrhage
approva l loday to a heart drug
bleedmg disorders unconlrolled
est at 10 to 20 mph today and
South Central Ohio
that dissolves blood clols whtch
h1gh blood pressure or who have
tonoght
Sunny 1oday With highs near
cause 80 percent of the I 5 million
ac11ve bleedmg from mjury or
"tll be furmshed Brmg a co
Ftre fighters lo Meet
Ohio Extended Forecast
60 Clear tonoght with a low near
heart aT lacks that slrlke Amen
surgery
\ered d sh and table serv1ce A
Me1gs
Count)
F
re
Fighters
Sunday
through
Tuesday
35 Sunny Saturday w1th highs
cans each year - the natoon s No
An mdependent advisory com
p g m a poke auct on" 111 be held
Assoc atlon will meet V. ednes
Partly cloudy Sunday w1th
near 60
mlttee last May declined to
I ktller
followmg lhe dmner Members
day
7
30
p
m
at
the
Middleport
rain likely Monday and Tuesday
The probabJlily of preclptla
The genettcaliy eng neered
recommend approval for TPA
a re also asked to brln~; un
F
re
Stalton
Hoghs moslty will be In the 50s
!JOn os near zero through
drug known as !Issue plasmlno
unttl the company submitted
wrapped g fl s for the AI hen s
each day wlth overnoghl lows
Saturday
gen act1vator 01 TPA is made by
data on further studies Genen
Mental
Ho sp ital
Everyone
Retued
teachers
Mecl
ranging from 35 lo 45
Winds wtll be from the southw
lech completed those sludtes and
Genentech Inc of South San
~elcome
The Meigs County Retired
F ranctsco Calif
and Is ex
lhe FDA has been reviewing
Teachers Assoctailon wtll meel
peeled 1o be the fir~! blockbus ter
Ihem during the past few months
SARto Meet
on Saturday Nov 21 12 30 p m
producl of gene!Jc eng neenng
The approval of TPA comes
The Ewmgs Chapter of the
101
a
luncheon
at
the
Mtddlepor
t
conducl Brtan K Batley Reeds
TPA h as been shown to
just days after the approval of
The following cases were pro
Sons
of Ihe Amertcan Revolut on
Masomc Temple If not con
, Ue stx months probation res
d &lt;"olve clols m about 70 percent
Intravenous mjectlon of slreptok
cessed th1s week m Meigs Counly
"Ill
mecl on Thursdav at the
taclcd call 742 2251 for resNva
trammg order tssued costs
of pat enls when tl is mjected
nase an older drug that dts
Courr by Judge Patnck 0 Brien
Meigs
Counly Museum n Pome
toons Brmg p rog ram booklcl lo
dtsorderly conduct
Rand y
wnhm s tx hours of the onsel of solves clots Earlier ways of
Fmed were Robert Btssell
ro) There wtll be a catered
lhe meetmg
Smtth Pomeroy six months
symptoms wtth improved
admlmsterlng that drug we1 e
Long Bottom $300 and costs SIX
d nner at 6 30 p m Cost per
probatton
restrammg order
hea1 t functiOn demonstt a led tf
very time consuming and stu
months n jail suspended down to
person IS $6 CiO Mal e and female
To Host Club
1ssued disorderly conduct stx
admtmstered wtthin four hours
dies showed that Tmmedtale
30 days one year license suspen
The Middleport Ltterar y Club guests are welcome Reserva
months proballon and costs for
admintstratwn of thl' drug after
said Dr Frank Young commts
swn one year probation DWI
rtons for the dlnm r are du e by
w1ll meet at the home of Mr s
restst ng arrest
the
onset
of
heart
attack
symp
sloner of the Food and Drug
sox months tn jail suspended to 30
No' 17 to Ke th Ashley 34465
George Hacke!t II on WednPs
toms could cui
deaths
days concurrent costs no opera
Elbert Wtlson Siewart $23 and
Admmtstrallon
day a t 2 p m MIS Hackett wtll Crew Road Pomerov 45769
11 ts only f you get help fast
dramatiCally
lor s license
costs only for
costs overload Joseph Rife
re' tew
Le s M serables
b~ 1 c lephone reser,atlons w 11 be
The cost of TPA treatment IS
and not wait- 1f yo u don I waste
failure to dtm Thomas Stover
Mtddleport $25 and costs fa1led
\ 1ctor Hu go a nd roll call w II be acrepted at 992 7874 A busmess
Jr Albany $250 and costs wtlh
lime hopmg agamst hope Ihat the expected lo be more I han $2 000
to display highway use tax
To name another book about meeting wtll follow the meal at
pam Will go away- thai doctors and If just a small porlton of lhe
$225 of the fine suspended upon
sttcker Tammy Fetty Langs
7 30 The program will be show
SOCial JUSI Ce
can use TPA or orher melhodolo
hearl anack sufferers get the
completwn of residential drivmg
\llle $20 and costs fa1lure to
and tell Each member os asked
gtes to mc1 ease I he chances that
drug It could earn $400 m1lhon
school 60 day license suspen
conrrol $5 and costs expired
to br tng some 1cm of h sloncal
Plan Donner
per year for Genentech Some
ston OWl Sammy Maynard Jr
you wtll cont nue to I 'e an
regtsrration Slanlev Burns Eli
s
tgmflcancp which may or ma v
TheRaconc( range1 hanksg
act ve producllve life
Young analysts have estimated sa les
W1lkesv11le $75 and costs three
zabeth W Va $10 and costs
nor
be of The revoluuo na ry era 1o
ng dtnner "til be held Fnda;
could
be
as
htgh
as
$1
billion
per
days
m
Jatl
suspended
six
fatled to y1eld James V. G1bbs
sa1d
6 ~0 p m al The grange hall on tPI about
TPA s produced naturally tn
monThs probation no dnveo s
year
Pomero\ $5 and costs unsafe
CounT' Road~~ Turkev and ham
The human body but n quantities
TPA ts not Genentech s f rst
1 cense $20 and cosls for failure
'eh1cle
too mmute to extract for d ug genetically engmeered producl
to yteld right of way
Don
Fmed for speedmg were John
Con lllUPd from page 1
p oduct on Genentech used ge
approved for marketing al
Tanner Vincent 30 days m Jail R Lentes Pomerov $10 and
nel c engone!'nng to tsola te rhe lhough I IS expected to be lhe
suspended to 1 me served s x costs Pam H)sell Rutland $20
he purchasmg requ rcmenls fo
pol t cal conneci!ODS to
gene rhat codes fo human TPA larges t Thecompan ya lsoprodu
months probattoon costs petty and cosls Steven Sarver Coo l
governo 1
compel t \P b dd ng or Control
theft costs only for disorderly v1lle $22 and costs Curus N
and msert I Into ba cteria !hat ces human lnsultn
alpha
The Celes e adm n slrat on
ltng Board app 0\ a l
onlerferon for trealln g a type of
also
has
The
rna
oe
u
1e1
Ce leste ssued an executive
mass p oduce th e prolem
Helm1ck Parketsburg W Va
order
la s I mon h 1equ rong slate
leukemia
and
hum
an
growth
mvesngat on
The company found thai the
$25 and costs Jeffre) L Bable
Seek dtvorces
agenc
tes
to sol c t at leas! three
hormone
Ferg oson s s un ev snowed tha
drug dossolves clots that obsrruct
Racme $28 and cosls Thomas
proposals
"here ava table and
TCI held 18lease coni! acts vtth
coronary artet es that it tm
K1entz
Sharonville $29 a nd
Dawn Gayette Mel z Pomeroy
approprlale
when leasmg
se,e n state ent I les onvol\ ng
proves the funchom g of the
costs Regina Rode1 Shade $24
has !tied for a divorce m Metgs
cqu
pmenl
and
suppltes
annual pa,menls of $1 4 m1lloon
hear! and 1 educes the me dence
County Common Pleas Court
and costs
A spokesman for Ferguson
COLUMBUS
Ohoo
!U
P!)
Its b gges1 conoracl ~A as "''h
Bonds
were
forfe
ted
by
'A
lll1e
of congesttve hearT fatlure
from Dennos Paul Metz Sr
sa
1d rhe aud tor s recommenda
OBES
\\e th nk thts lhetapy offers One man was fatallv shot and
B Tooles Columbu s $5&gt; speed
Parkersburg w Va
t
o
n s s1 o ng c o Than lh s and
another .. as arresTed Thursday
mg Trevo1 Peavtt Po nr Plea
Under currPnl rogulanons
new hope fot heaol allack \~C
Thomas L Dorsi Pomeroy
calls
for stnct compet otl\e btd
after they robbed a bank and
sant w \a $50 speed ng Gan
leased cqu pmenl dops no ha\ e
ums
the compa ny sad m a
has filed for a dl\ oo ce from
d ng for a II acquts t ons of
apparentlY grabbed some mone1
Craft Mansfield $55 speedmg
lobe compel II \~1\ btd and sla te
Arlene Marie Dorst no address
news release
relecommunlcal ons equipmenT
fl
om
an
armored
cao
Carol
Hager
Parma
S45
failed
e
lected
offic
tal
s
a
nn
leg1slat
\C
The 1b 1 ty 10 dtssol\e c lots
g1ven
Andre\\
White
34
Co
lumbu
s
ro dtm headl ghts \\ Jlliam Bt r_o_f_fi_c_es_a_•_e_ e_x_
em_.:.p_l _
fr_o_m_s_t_a_te_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
also causes bleedmg as a s tde
John R Jeffers Pomeroy and
d ed severa l hou1 s afler rhe
shop Delawat e S35 passenger
Robm Annette Jeffe rs Pomeroy
effecl bur the compan1 sa 1d th s
robbery n Rl\erstde MeThodtSI
have filed for a dissolution of
not wearing seat belt
JS usually mmor and easy 10
HospiTal
of a gunshol "ound In
conlrol
At Ihe 1ecommended
!heir marnage
lhe head His a lleged accom
Granted a dtssolutlon were
dose of JOO m llograms 0 4
pioce Mtcheal L Hicks 39 a Iso
Fhonda Chadwell and James L
percent of pat tents had bleedmg
of Columbu s was arresled fol
m the bram whtrh occurs dunng
Chad" ell
lowing a h g h speed chase and
Dally stock prices
su okcs
Jailed
on
an
aggravaled
robbery
(As ol 10 30 a m )
Because of the s de effecl the
charge
pollee
officials
sa
d
Bryce
and Mark Smtih
compan1 sa1d TPA s not1ecom
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loe\H
A marnage llcense has bee n
1ssued In Me1gs County Probate
Am Electric Power
26 1 ,
Court to Den nls Lee Roush 39
AT&amp;T
......... .... 29~,
Porlland
and Susan Louise
Ashland
Otl
53
brolher William Patrtck Pal I Casto 37 Parkersburg \\ Va
Elizabeth Chase
Bob
Evans
16
Lochary Pomeroy a stster
34
Charmmg
Shoppes
13
Helen A Lochary Pomeroy two
E l za beth Lochary Chase 87
Ctty Holdmg Co
331,
nephews James Lochary of
380 Spnngboro Ptke Dayton
Federal
Mogul
30'h
former Pomeroy restdent d1ed Centen ille and Charles Lo
38
Goodyear
T&amp;R
49
Vererans Memorial
Wednesday at !he Sycamore chary 01 v ta Ill a brolher tn
Heck s Inc
2'h
Medtcal Center In Mtamisburg la w J Allen Chase Leesburg
Key
Ceniunon
36
4 dr PB PS atr V 6 htgh moleage looks &amp; runs good
Fla and a sister n law Phyllis
Thursday Admissions - Sue
f~llowmg a month long Illness
Lands End
16
Russell also of Leesburg
\\ atson Pomero) Bryan Hoi
Mrs Chase \\aS born m Po me
Ltmlted
Inc
21
~
Precedmg her in dealh besides
!man
Mtddleport
Burwell
roy In 1900 a daughter of lhe late
Multimedia
Inc
45
~
2 dr runs &amp; looks good 4 sp
McKmney Middleport
Joyce
Mr
and Mrs
John Hays her parent~ was her husband
3,
Rax
Restauranls
3
Glenn Edmond Chase
Manuel Racine
Locha•y
Robbms &amp; Myers
6 1,
Servtces w111 be held at 3 p m
Thursday Discharges -Lando
She was a m mber of Ihe
Shoney
s
Inc
21
)IJ
Clay Janice Salser Flora Win
Ep tscopal Church and during her Sunda y at Grace EpJScapal
4 dr auto PS
Wendy
s
Inti
6~
grove Brenda Watson Robert
res dency here had been active Church m Pomeroy Bunal Will
Worth mgt on lnd
16%
Waldnlg Sue Watson
w th the Meigs Counly Senior be m Beech Grove Cemter)
#
Fnends may call at the Ewing
Cil zens
2 dr low moleage auto
She is s u1 vlved by a son John Funeral Home from 7 to 9 this
L rJackl Chase Dayton
a evening and rrom 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p m Sarurday
2 dr outo PS V 8
Co ntmued irom page 1

Locks &amp; Dam model on

ft

Athens man ctted after

FDA approves heart drug

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

Meigs County Court news

Ferguson ...

Bank robber shot

Stocks

Issued hcenses

Friends once asked a man who was facmg some grave
problems on hts hie what the ou look was The man readily
replied that whtle the oullook mlghl be dark he cou ld assure
them that the uplook was wonderful 1 his lhe attitude a person
can have only through the belief that Jesus Chnst the authm
and fmosher of our faith Is gong to be w th them and susta n
them m every experience We who are believers a1 e not to look
ahead of us behind us about us or even wlrhln us We a re
instead to look to the face of Jesus Christ who asscred us 1n a
very personal tangible way of the love of God 1n him we find
peace In a II oubled world forgiveness for the burdens of sin
uplift from past dlfftcullles and hope for the unknow n future
One of the greatest problems people have today ts their la ck of
confidence whtch Is rooted In their la ck of con! dence In God
If we ta ke God at his word we can believe \\e a1e people of
worth and we are the redeemed of God by Ihe power of Jes s
Christ and we are being sustained through the presence or his
Holy Spirit When we loose that confidence we are easily blown
10 and fro by every s lrong force that confronts us
A writer once noted thar a numuer or grea vlollnlsls felt they
cou ld not play their best unless lhey had lhelr own violins m
hand In contrast one of the worlds most outstanding vtollnlsl
states that he Is able to play any violin and make It s uperb Thts
Is the way God works In us He can play beaullful melocllcs out of
every life placed In his hands But we must open our li\PS to him
so that our confidence Is In him
When you are In Christ God hears you loves you answers
and sustains you

-----Announcements-----

3

I

Area deaths

DR.lYE

HOM

I

Hospital news

1984 Ford LTD .................. S2995

1982 Pontiac Phoenix ...... $169 S

1982 Buick Skylark ......•... 5149 S

1980 Chevrolet Chevette ..... S129 5

THANKS!

Plan ... ---~--:-:-.:---:--::-::-::=­ I appreciate your support in the
election on Nov. 3rd for Meigs
feet
County Board of Education.

or cancer causing 10 humans
Envtrosafe said new landfill
c~ls wlll be buill al least 40
from the lines whtch w11l be
marked to pre\ ent accidental
damage lh ecompan~saldt here
has not been any leaks in the twu
decades a landfill has been
operated at lhe site

chestnut said the water moves
unde1 pressure and any break tn
the pipe will force water out and
would not .. uo"' rontamlnents
mto th e system
The board had scheduled three
public hearing s before It will
decide if Envlrosafe expand the
fo rmer Fondessy landfill

Pd Pol Ad by Cand

ORIS L. SMITH

1977 Mustang ....•.•.............• $895

19 80 Datsun Pickup ........... $8 9 S

�The Daity Sentinel

By The Bend

Friday, November 13, 1987
Page-S

'

Revival planned

Beat of the bend

Show~being dedicat~a

accompaniment along with elec·
By BOB HOEFLICH
tronic drums to be played by Tim
Varieties of '87 being staged by
the Big Bend Minstrel Associa- Glaze. Aardvark. headed by Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Gilmore and •
tion under the
Glaze, will be doing the show
sponsorship of
audio so you'll be able to hear
the Meigs Local
well. Long-time veteran master
Athletic Boosof
ceremonies, Joe Struble, will
ters and the
again
be handling the movement
Pomeroy
of
the
production.
C hamb er of
By
the
way, for the second
Commerce will
consecutive
year, the association
be dedicated to two former cast
has
a
quartet
together and you're
members.
going
to
like
it.
Members are AI
This year's musical, to be
Hartson,
Earl
McKinley, Ron
staged at Meigs High School. will
be · dedicated to the tate B.ill Ash and Desi Jeffers. They'll be
Clark, talented banjo player who . making a couple appearances
contributed so much to the during the show.
Advance tickets for the '87
group's musicals over the years ,
and to Kathryn (Katie) Crow . show will be going on sale any
long-time performer with the day now and you can save 50
group and the first and only cPnts a ticket by purchasing in
advance.
association president.
Following trad ition. the shOw
The Syracuse Fire Departhas been set for the Saturday
ment
will be staging a Christmas
evening following Thanksgiving .
auction
this Saturday beginning
And why? Well--it is the thinking
at
7
at
the
fire station with Dan
that former residents returning
Smith
serving
as auctioneer. A
to Meigs County for the Thanksvariety
of
new
items will be
giving weekend need an outlet -offered
for
sale.
, and the show not only provides
And down Middleport way, The
e ntertainment but, by chance,
they will have an opportunity to LaSalle Gallery in the LaSalle
Hotel lobby is geared up for the
see friends attending:
Incidentally, several pecpie Christmas season. The Gallery
have asked if the teachers' strike was originally in that location.
would be a problem in staging the moved to Athens, and then back
show at the Meigs High School to Middleport last July .
Auditorium.
Mr. and Mrs. Lester (Pete)
The cast is moving into the
Russell
will observe their 53rd
final two weeks of rehearsing.
wedding
anniversary at their
Special rehearsals of one group
Spring
Ave.,
home in Pomeroy
or another are taking place about
Monday.
The
Russells were
every night. However, soloists
married
in
Clifton,
W. Va. They
will practice next Monday and
h~ve
two
children,
Mrs . Paul
Thursday evenings from 7 to 9
(Betty)'
Reid
of
Westerville,
and
and on Saturday, beginning at 1
H.
Russell
of
Holcomb,
John
p.m .. the first full-scale rehear ·
sal will be held at the Pomeroy Kansas, seven grandchildren, 10
great-grandch ildrena and four
Village Hall auditorium.
step grandchildren .
The Saturday full-cast meeting
The Pomeroy-Middleport
will give everyone a chance to
check their cues and lineup in the Lions Club hangs right in there
Nov. 28 production and will make with the placement of American
them more knowledgeable when flags - through Pomeroy on the
they move into the Meigs Hi gh seven spec ial days of the year.
School auditorium to begin stag- Very dependable, the Lions
ing the show. Those staging brave a ll sorts of cold and bad
times will be on Tuesday even- weather to carry out their flag
ing, Nov. 24 and on Saturday placement project. The 80 flags
afternoon, Nov. 28 from 1 to 3 are placed from the J. &amp; R. Shop
on East Main to Sears in upper
p.m.
"
JennifEr Sheets is again piano Middleport and of course, on
accompanist for this year's show Second St. And like what goes up
and she will be joined by a band must come down, the flags once
for the production. A brand new put out must be taken in.
keyboard which has many instruDo keep smiling.
mental sounds will be used in the

•

Book revtews ... - - By Ruth Powers
Librarian
GLITTERING IMAGES .... bv
Susan Howatch:
A novel of sacred and profane
love, of worldly and spiritual
strivi ng, and of the delicate
balance between reality and
illusion. Charles Ashworth , a
youn g widowed, intellectually
curious and spiritually driven
Anglican clergyman, sent by
Canterbury to observe a potentially explosive menage involv·
ing the Bishop, comes to recognize his own wanton behavior and
is pushed to the brink of despair.
In an .attempt to exorcise hi s
sp iritual demons. Ashwor th unravels the mysteries of his own
life and of the Bishop' s as well.
THE NANNY .... b y Dan
Greenburg:
Phil Pressman and Julie Stavenson are the ultimate Yuppie
couple. He's an advertising co·
pywriter; she's an interior decor-

ator. Wh,en baby Harry comes
a long, chaos enters the couple's
tightly run life. Faced with .the
choice fa being driven bonkers by
their colicky newborn or inviting

an outsider into their lives. Phil
and Julie sanely decide to find a
nanny. But when they hire Luci
Redman , a well recommended
Brit i~h nurse and nanny, they
Invite a very peculiar . some
might say "unearthly" brand-of
trouble into their lives.
VEIL: ' the secret .wars of the
CIA .... by Bob Woodward :
By now everyone knows how
&amp;&gt;b Woodward sneaked into CIA
director William Casey's hasp!·
tal room and coaxed a deathbed
confession from him concern ing
his role in the Iran -Contra affair.
The curio us lack of quotat ion
marks in the text around a ll of
Woodward's queries durin this
unverified conversation m a kes It

Honor rolls
T he first nine weeks grading
period honor roll at the Word of
Life Christian Academy has been
announced . Making a graM of B
or above in all their subject s to be
named to the roll we re:
Timothy Jones, De lwon Lau·
dermllt, Sherry Laudermilt ,
Jake Saltsman, Tim Saltsman ,.
Karen Saltsman , Robert Salts·
man, Andy Vance, Steven Vance.

difficult to know just what the
reporter said. Though Woodward
was the initiator of the conversations, why would Casey be so
disarmingly frank? It might also
have been interesting to know
who the' au thor' s sources were,
but Woodward begs off naming
names on the grounds that the
material Is too sensitive. Despite
one's qualms about the book's
accuracy, it makes for fasci nat.
ing reading as Woodward ex·
poses the CIA's modus operandi,
and tells tales about Sadat,
Reagan, Quaddafl and Kho·
meini. Ali the ingredients are
here for a good spy book,
~specially that sense of never
knowing for sure where the truth
lies.

Attends wedding
Mrs. Dorothy Bryan has return.e d from Ronulus, Mich.
where she went for the wedding
of her granddaughter, , Amy
Clark, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
S t anley Bryan, to Greg
Mooradian.
The bride's father, John Clark,
and his family of Springfield
were also present for the wed·
ding which took place on Oct. 17
with 280 guests attending.
Before returning home Mrs.
Brya n also visited her husband's
stepmot her, Thelma Bryan of
Farmington, Mich. and his
sister-in-law, Mrs . James Bryan,
Lincoln Park, Mich.

Sorority to meet
Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter,
!;leta Sigma Phi Sorority, will
met in the upper parking Lot in
Pome roy at 6 p.m. Tuesday to
begin a progressive dinner. The
first s top will be at the home of
De bbie Jones at 6:30p.m.

Rev iva 1servlceswnnw ITI!Io·at- - the Syracuse Nazarene Church
beginning Tuesday and contlnu·
lng through Sunday, Nov. 22.
Weeknight services will be. held
at 7 p.m. with the Su nday
services at 10:30 a.m and 6 p.m.
Rev. Ron Roth will be the
evangelist with special mu~ic
each evening. Pastor Glenn B.
McMillen invites the public.

#

.,

• '
&lt;

. "
•

"' ~~ '

-446-4524

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
All S[}ITS $1.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 11.99

[NOVEMBER 13 thru
FRIDAY tnru THURSDAY!

!!_j

-Ill

TOYS- Three truckloads of new and good used
·· toys were coUected Saturday by Meigs bikers and
bikers from surrounding counties In their annual
ride . . Several Meigs billers are pictured with
personnel of the local Salvation Anny in Pomeroy

Mill

&lt;&gt;

as the toys were delivered
headquarters this week. The toys will be
distributed to underprivileged children of the
county during the Christmas season.

Teaching seminar is scheduled
A church growth and teachers
Scott Carter will be the· reacher Christian Education. He atseminar will be held at the for the seminar. He has a
tended Rutland Hi gh School prior
Rutland Church of Christ on masters in Christian Education to moving to North Carolina in
Friday, Nov. 20, at 7 p.IJl. , from the Cincinnati Christian 1966.
continuing through Nov. 21 at 10 Seminary, and is certified by the
The seminar is for anyone
a.m.
.
lnternatlnal Center for Learn·
regardless of denominational
The seminar Is free to anyone ing, promotional coordinator for
preference. Those attending
interested in church growth as the Conference on Biblical Expo· to take a pencil and noteboo.k
well as learning to teach and sition, has been a Bible college with all other materials to be
develop their own skills and lecturer and conference teacher: provided . A free-will offering will
spiritual gifts. Lack of qualified . and 'has 12 years experience in be received to help cover costs .•
teachers in Bible schools has r-:;;;;;~;;;~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:caused many youth as well as
adults to drop out of Bible School,
according to R. Bill Carter,
pastor of the host church, who
feels that good teaching will
rectify the problem.

are

Club meeting

What are you in the market for?

Weight Club Overeaters Vic·
torious will meet Monday at 7:30
p.m· at the home of Mary Daily,
Carpenter Road, Portland. Ms.
Daily won the fruit basket for the
most weight loss this week.

Slinderell meets
Kay · Morris received her 20
pound weight loss ribbon at
Monday night's Five Points class
of Sl!nderella. Roberta Dill was
the top loser of the week with
Linda Foster as the runner-up. At
the Tuesday morning Five Points
class Louise Chaffee lost the
mos t weight and Tracey O'Dell
was runner-up. At the Tuesday
night Mason class. Mona Legg '
lost the most weight and was
accepted into the slim-n·trim
program foir successfully reaching her goal weight and Melissa
lloffman was the runner-up . Jo
Ann Newsome is lecturer.

·By Ruth Powers

THANK YOU
To The Voters ·of Southern Local
School District. Thank _you for
your support on November 3rd.
CHARLES
S~ NORRIS
Pd. Pol. Ad. b Cand. P. 0. Box 740 Racine Ohio

Riley birthday
- Ted Riley, Sr., 240 Mill Street,
Middleport, · was honored recently on his83rd birthday with a
dinner at the home of his
daughter, Patty Roush, Mason.
Attending were Mr. and Mrs.
Roush, Sr., Mr. and Mrs.
Ted Riley, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Carson, Mr. and Mrs.
John P. Riley, Jason and Jami n,
Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Roush, Jr.,
Matthew and Molly, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas Roush, Saily and
Katie, Jeff Walburn·, and Guy la
Roush, granddaughter of Riley,
observing her 30th birthday.

TED RILEY SR.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - A 22·
year-old woman is recovering
from what physicians are calling
a "breakthrough" type of brain
surgery.
Leslie Hokaj had a large blood
c lot removed from her brain
stem Nov . 6 by neurosllrgeons
using a special laser at the the
University of Ci nc innati
Hopsital. •
The surgeo ns said that without
the laser, they could not have
reached the Clot, which was 4
inches deep inside her brain.
They also removed the knot of
tangled. blood Vessels that could
have caused future
hemmorrha es.

MIDDLEPORT- Youth rally
will be held 8 p.m . Friday at the
United Pentecostal Church in
Middleport. Rev. and Mrs. Steve
Piercy will speak and sing. Rev.
Clark Baker, pastor, invites the
public.
HARRISONVILLE - The annual installation of Harrisonville
Chapter 25Q, Order of Eastern
Star, will be held at 7:30 p.m.
Friday at the Harrisonville Ma·
sonic Hall; all OES members are
invited .

gravy, green beans. cole slaw,
rolls and butter, Qevereage, pie
or cake. Admission is $4,25.
POINT PLEASANT - Gospel
sing, 7 p.m., Saturday at Gospel
Lighthouse Church, Neal Road,
Point Pleasant featuring The
Singing Renners of Orlando, Ky.,
Reflections and other groups.
SUNDAY
POMEROY
Carleton
Church on Kingsbury Road will
have rally day on Sunday beginning with the 9:30a.m. service.
Denise Bonecutter and Margaret
Fellure will be featured. The
public is Invited by Rev . Clyde V.
Henderson.

POINT PLEASANT, W.VA.The new Ohio Chapter of the Gold
Wing Road Riders Association
· (GWRRA), which includes
Meigs and Ga lila Counties and
. SATURDAY
the surrounding areas, will meet
PORTLAND - Hazel Com·
9
a.m. Sunday at the banquet
mimity Church, on Route 124
room
at Shoney's in Point Pleabetween Portland and Long
sant,
W.Va.
Bottom is having a hymn sing on
Saturday starting at 7:30 p.m.
RACINE -The Southern JunSingers will be Sunrise. Speaker
ior
High Football Banquet will be
will be Linda Damewood. Pastor
held
Saturday, 6:30p.m., at the
Edsel Hart invites the public.
high school.
LONG BOTTOM - The Long
, SYRACUSE - Syracuse As·
Bottom Community Association
tiury
Methodist Church is having
will stage a spaghetti supper
dinner to honor Marcia
a
potluck
beginning at 5 p.m . Saturday at
Karr
on
3unday
followin g the J!
the Long Bottom Community
a.m.
service.
Building_ The menu includes
· spaghetti, sauce, salad, roll, pie
MONDAY
and beverage. Admission is $3.50
MIDDLEPORT
- Big Bend
for adults and $2 for children; hot
Civitah
Club
will
meet
Monday,
.
dogs with sauce will also be sold.
7:30 p.m., at the old American
Legion Hall on 4th St.. in
TUPPERS PLAINS -Turkey
Middleport .
supper at the fire house in
Tuppers Plains, Saturday start·
RUTLAND- Rutland Village
ing at 4 p.m. under the sponsorPolice Committee will meet
ship of the Ladies Auxiliary of the
Monday, 6:30p.m., a t the civic
Orange Township Volunteer Fire
center.
Department. The menu includes
turkey and dressing, homemade
POMEROY - Meigs County
noodles, mashed potatoes and

Churches of Christ Mens' Fellowship will have their Thanksgiving
Dinner on Monday at6p. m. at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ.
Speaker will be Bro. Lash.

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby gill.., tnat

on Saturday, November 14.
1987. at 10:00 a.m., a public
sale will be held at 105 Union
Avenue. Pomerov. Ohio, to
sell for cash the following ool-

Petitioners filed their Peti·

tion to Annex with th~ Meigs
Count¥ Board of Commissioners and the Meigs County

Auditor's Office on October
29. 1987. Tf1e Meigs County

Board of Commissioners hal

latfl'al:

scheduled a public hearir'lg on

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix
2J37AA2510569
The Farmers Bank and

30th day of December, 1987

Savings Co,pany, Pomeroy, Ohio, reserves the right
to bid at this sale. and to
withdraw the above collateral Prior to sale. Further.
The Farmer&amp; Bank and Savings Comany reserve s the
right to reject any or all bids
submitted.

Further, the above collateral will be sold in the con·
dition it is in with no OJ&gt;·
pressed or imPlied warran ties given .
(11) 11, 12. 13 Jtc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HEARING
Bruce J. Reed and Rita J .
Reed, husband and wife. and
Petitioners. have filed a Petition to Anne'! approx.imatelv
.346 acres within the Village
of Pomeroy. Said property is
now situated in Meigs/ Sut·
ton Township and is within
the Meigs Local School District.

the Petition to AnneK for the

commencing at 1:00 p.m. at
the Commissioners Office located in the Meigs County
Courthouse. Pomeroy. Ohio.
All interested parties are

welcome to attend .

{11!6. t3,

When it comes to a buying decision for automobiles
more than 92% of Ohioans use daily newspapers. *

The Daily Sentinel
We Deliver
For Subscription or Advertising Information

Call 992~2156
• When questioned if they had read a daily or Sunday newspaper in the pust week

92% of those who had purchased an automobile within the past 2 y.ears said :'Yes"
Source: Market Opinion Research

By BILL LOIIMANN
UPI Feature Writer
It's baaaacccckkkk.
Like a bad movie in reruns,
Friday the 13th returns for the
third time thi s year, a calendar·
ial record we have been assured
will be matched occasionally but
never broken as long as 30 days
hath September.
Friday, Nov.13, 1987. Big deal?
You bet, expecialiy for .people
with a thing about black cats and
s idewalk cracks.
But Friday the 13ths - the
widely dreaded days of bad luck,
not the widely dreaded film flick s
of the sa me name- even appeal
to casual phobics, transforming
them into part -time triskaidekaphobics. In plain English, folk s
who have a real problem with the
number 13.
ArJ that mean s trouble.
In . :~\rms of s heer pa'nic, it
me. J many normally rational
hu - .• n beings will stay home,
po; ;~ , _J \\'n the shades, pull up the
cov ~ cs and wait hyster ically for
Satu:·c ••y the 14th. And three
tim~.i in one yea •· is enough to
give eve n the most informal
believer the wi'lies.
TGIF does not apply here.
"The numb er 13 is culturally
connected with a lack of luck, and
Friday the 13th has sig nificance
culturally as an unlucky date , "
said Dr. David Charney, m edical
. director of the Roundhouse Phobia Trea tment Center In Alexan·
dria, Va. "Eve n though we ilke to
think of ourse Ives as a ra ti 0 na I
society ... and this seems so silly
and trivial, it can be quite
disabling for sbmeon&lt;i really
hooked on this sort of thing."
For a nyone hooked on the evil
date. this is a bad news-good
new s-bad news story . ·
The bad news is three Friday
the 13ths this year !February and
March produced the . other two),
which might be enough to dri ve
so meone off the de~p end. But the
good news is such a triple
whammy will not happen again
until 1998. But the bad news Is a
13-year-old English schoolboy
re'cently donned his thinking cap
and in an article In the "Ma·
the.;,atical Gazette," !igured out
the 13th of the month fails on a
Friday more often than any other
day.
•

Gee, thanks kid.
-Friday the 13th is a mar riage of
two superstitions.
For centuries, Friday has been
regarded as a rather unlucky day
for the most superstitious in
Christendom because of Good
Friday, the anniversary of the
crucifixion of Christ.
The number 13 derives its lofty
position in superstitious circles
from several sources. including
the betrayal of Christ at the Las t
Supper, where he gathered with
his 12 Disciples, and Greek
mythology, in which 13 gods
attended a banqu e t and one was
killed.
To this day , some superstitious
people will not attend a dinner
that include a total of 13 gueststhat belief haunted the likes of

I

20,27 4tc

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN that on October 1,
1987, the United States of
America. as Plaintiff, filed an
action in rem in the Uilited
States 0 istrict Court for the
Southern District of Ohio,
East~rn Division, at Colum·
bus, Ohio. being Civil Action
No. C2-87-1 196. against
certain property, to wit:
Real Property situated in
Meigs County, Ohio and
described as: Beginning at
the Northeast corner of
section 18, thence South
about one hundred and
fifteen (115 } rods to the
Northeast corner of lands
owned by Eli Reeves; thence

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

West eighty {80) •ods; duly executed process thetheoco North one hundred reon. and seized, arrested
and fifteen j 1 1 5) rods; and holds in his custody said
thence East eighty (80) rods Defendant Property; that
to the place of beginning. any person claiming to have
Containing siJ&gt;ty-one and any interest in and to said
one-third (61 and 1 / 3) Defendant Property shall file
acres. more or less. with the with the Clerk of this Court
assurance of en outlet his claim within ten 110)
staked through said land to days following this notice in
the public highway, and conformity with the require~~
Beginning at the Northwest ment&amp; o-f Rule C ot the
corner of the Northeast Supplemental Rules forCer~
quarter of seCtion 18. tain Admiralty and Maritime
thence East eighty !80) rods. Claims of the Fodaral Rules
thence South eighty ( 80) of Civil Procedure, an~ shall
rods. thence West e~ghtv thereafter serve his answer ·
{80) rods. thence North to plaintiffs complaint ancL
eighty (80) rods to the Place aoswers to anv interroga·
of beginning, containing tories relating to plaintiff' a'
forty (40) acres; and All complaint within twen·ty
Appurtenances and lm· (201 days following the filing
of his claim, as required by
provements Thereon;
and in conformity with said ,
.and
One 1980 Plymouth Truck. Rule C.
ROBERT W. FOSTER ,
VIN OJP4WAY5041 17.
United States Marshal •
and appurtenances;
For the Southern District
and
of Ohio
One 1984 Honda TRX -200,
APPROVED :
All Terrain Vehicle. VIN
0 . MICHAEL CRITES
JH3TE0308EC001657 and
United States Attorney
appurtenances,
BARBARA J. BERAN
all of which said property
was originally seized by' the Assistant United States Attorney, 85 Marconi BCHJie·
Federal Bureau of Investigavard. Ro'om 200. U. · S.
tion on February 25, 1987,
Courthouse. Columbus,
from David P. Cain; that on
Ohio 43215, !6141 469or about October 27, 1987,
5115.
"
the United States M orshall
11 1) 13, 1tc

MIDDLEPORT
The
Middleport-Pomeroy Rotary
Club will meet at .6 p.m. at the
Heath United Methodist Church
In Middleport.
POMEROY- The Bend 0' the L _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ j __ _ _ _ _ _ _ __L_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _.!,__ _ _ _ _ _ __
River Garden Club will meet at 7
p.m. Monday at teh home of Opal
Diddle with Louise Stewart as
co-hostess. Guest speaker will be
Pauline Atkins.

Side impact. crash test demonstrated

POMEROY - The Mothers of
Twins Club will meet at 7 p.m.
monday at the Pomeroy United
Methodisl Church.

.

BY JAN A. ZVERINA
UPI Auto Writer

EAST LIBERTY, Ohio (UPT)
--; A European-made dummy is
being used by the- Motor Vehicle
Manufacturers Association in
POMEROY A hunters'
31.5 mph side impact crash tests
safety course w111 be held Mon - which the government could soon
day through Thursday next week
adopt to develop standards for ail
from 6 to 9 p.m. on the second
cars sold in the United States.
floor of the Pomeroy Village
The association, which represHall.
ents most car and truck makers
Joh~ Riebel, Jr., will be chief
building vehicles in !he United
instructor, al)d the class size will
States, demonstrated the tes t
be iimiled to 30 st udents. StuThursday at the Transportation
dents will be accepted on a first
Research Center in Logan
come, firs t served basis and may
County, using a new type of test
register on Monday.
dummy built primarily by TNO,
a Dutch firm.
TUESDAY
The MVMA has been running a
POMEROY - The Fraternal
series of side impact tests to
Order of Eagles' Auxiliary, Area · determine whether the European
2171, will hold nominations for
dummy, called Eurosid, more
vice-president a t the regular
effectively gathers tes t data than
meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. All
the dummy used by the National
members are asked to attend.
Highway Transportation Safety
Agency .
Relocated
The government agency could
MIDDLEPORT - Big Bend
a nnounce within the next month
Civitan Club ha s relocated to the
or so whether it will adopt a s ide
basement of the old American
impact crash test as part of its
Legion Hall , 1th St., Middleport.
ca r eva luation procedures, and
The organ!zation ·meets the first
which standards it will requ ire
and third Monday of each month.
for carmakers to follow.
The first meeting at the 11ew
Standards for light trucks and
location will be 7: 30 p.m. on
minivans could follow by JanuMonday, Nov. 1S.
ary of next year.
"Our purpose is to develop a
good test pro.toco l, " MVMA spa·
kesman Fred Bowditch said
following a demonstartlon using
one of the association's 28
1985-model Ford LTDs pur·
chased fo r the tests. "We are not
saying what the s tandards should
Napoleon, J. Paul Getty, Herbert
be, but we need lo develop a s ide
Hoover and Franklin Delano impact -test to predict the kind of
Roosevelt, according to " Dis·
results in actua l accidents."
cover" magazine in its NoBowditch said the current
vember edition. In that same
frontal impact tests used by the
vein, many buildings do not have
government in determining
a 13th floor and some neighbor - crashworthiness of a car do not
hoods do not allow an address
reflec t real world accidents.
that includes a 13.
"N HTSA is not denying that."
So, combine a 13 and a Friday
he said, adding "that the high
... and, well, it's in old story.
degree of inconsistency found in
On Friday the 13th, true
those tests are the reason the two
believers go out o( their way to
organizations are working toavoid everyt hing tha t mi gh t
ward a more relia ble side crash
mean trouble, Including mar ·
sta ndard.
riage, shopping and even .work.
"But so far, we have not come
According to ·'Discover," fear of
up with a better one, (for front
that date costs U.S. busi ness a
impact tests)," l)owd itch
billion dollars a year in a ilsenteelsm, cancellations and reduced
commerce on tile li th of a month.

Why fear a Friday the 13th?

Library Lines
The American Library Associat ion and the National Commis·
s ian on Libraries and Informa tion Science has kicked o!f a
national library card campaign.
The purpose is that every child
should obtain a library card and use it .
The Meigs County Library will
be going to the sc hools in the
county to regist er students for
their cards. We will be kicking off
Childr en's Book Week Nov. 16th
through the 21st. with a visit to
the Riverview School in Reeds·
ville and the Racine Elementary
School. The plan is to visit every
sc hool in the county during the
sc hool year, Including Head
Start, Pre-School Centers and
Christian Schools. Parenting
Clubs will also be approached for
registering children. By the end
of 1988 we hope to have the
majority of Meigs County child·
ren registered for a library card·.
Remember "The Best Gift You ' ll
Ever Give Your Child is a
Library Card".
The 16mm films are now at the
library and ready for check out.
Come In and look over the group.

. Surgery breakthrottgh

FRIDAY
POMEROY Round and
square dance, Friday, 8 to 11
p.m. at Pomeroy Senior Citizens
Center. Music by True Country;
admission, $1.50 and those attending are to take snacks for
snack table.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Community calendar
!531 JACKSON PIKE · RT.J5

-

Friday, November 13, 1987

uota A. Guinther

r-;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;'~';:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1-11

Christmas Au.ction
SYRACUSE FIRE STATION
BY SYRACUSE FIRE DEPT.

SATURDAY NOV. 14
7:00 P.M.

, DAN SMITH: AUCTIONEER
ROGER SMITH WILL PROVIDE THE
MERCHANDISE
TOYS, TOOLS, LAMPS, PICTURES

Your Support Is Greatly Appreciated

SHIRLEY JOHNSON
Pd. Pol. Ad . by Candidate

This Week's

S~ecials

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13Th
CHUCKWAGON SANDWICH PLAnER ••••_.: ....... $2,1~5

Alarge Juicy Yeaf Pat_tit on a Giont Saucer Bun Served with Dehc1ous Hot Deep Fned
Mushrooms and Your Choi&lt;e of Homemade Cole Slaw, Mauroni Salad, or Potato Salad
or Bah ed Beom.
•

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 15TH
BAKED SALISBURY STEAK DINNER ................ S4.32.

A Genwous Portion of Delicious Baked Stec*. Simmeftd in a Cremny Mudroom GrU¥y, Sernd
wtth Mashed Potatoes and Homemade Gravy, Drllicioul Green ltCI'II and Mutll'ooms und
Your Choi(t'Of a Hot Buttered RoU or Homtmadt Binuit, MaxweU KouM CoffH or Sanko Oecalfoinalod, Bolh Freslly lrewed lA Small Drink "' Hot loa May Bo S..blt~utodl.

SALISBURY STEAK SANDWICH ,ALONE ................. $2.69
lUNDA. YS ONLY - Every Sunday, ettjoy our waiter I waitress tobie service with your
meals.

Served

on chino plates, and drink your coffee or too from (hlno cups.

NEW HOURS: 10·8, 7 DAYS A WEEK

z

i~l!rbuugl(u

of ffil1rntrr

RESTAURA~T

ROUTE 7

.

Injury Criteria value (HIC)
equals less tha n 1,000, it is
assumed the occupants will es,
cape serious injury or most
probably death.
NHTSA has also been conduct·
ing 35-mph frontal crash tests, ,
but has not ruled that automak-.
ers adopt them.

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

•

which measures critica l dimen -

sions of chest crush during a
broadside collision, costs about
S80,000 each.
Ron Wasko, a technica l direr·
tor for the MVMA, said the
Euros id dummy has about 14
accelerometers or devices which
measure the degree of impact on
Its body to duplicate that of
passengers. The NHTSA dummy
only has six suc h devices.
Th e test demonstrated was a
90-degree angie tes t using a
2,000-.pound ro lling barrier
s lammed into the side of a
stationary car at 31.5 mph. The
test, done this way in Europe, Is
very simi lar to NHTSA's prop·
osal. which will most probably be
a 3,000-pou nd rolling bar rier
smashed in to the car from a
slight angle to simul a te the
vehicle bei ng struck moving at
about 15 mph.
Currently. U.S. carmakers are
only req uired to meet a minimal
side crush s tandarg, which is
done us ing a hydraul!c push at an
extremely slow speed. New
sta ndards would be formulated
after the government an nounces
which new side impact testing
procedure it will adopt.
Light trucks, minivans and
sp&lt;;&gt;rt utility veh icles cu rre ntly
are not subject to any front or
side impac t sta nda rds, a !though
cars are required to meet suc h
s tandards during a 30-mph front
barrier test, which the MVMA
says is equiva lent to a 60-mphb
collision.
In those tests .. if the Head

TO THE VOTERS OF
LEBANON TOWNSHIP
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR .
RE-ELECTING ME CLERK OF
LEBANON TOWNSHIP.

Area deaths

Mary Lee Stephens of Gallipolis;
two sons, William D. Davis and
Leota Ann Gunlther, 62, of 16t)l
L.A. Guinther, both of Gallipolis;
Chatham /we., Gallipolis died
five gran dchildre n, two great
Friday at Hol zer Medical Cen ter gra ndchildren.
following an ex ten ded illness.
She was a member of the
She is a retired 32-year em· Gailipoil~ Emb lem Cl ub and the
ployee of Gallipolis Developmen- Women of the Moose.
tal Center.
Services will be cond ucted
Born Dec.19.1924 in Gallipolis , Sunday at 1 p.m., from Waughs he was the daugther of the la te . Halley -Wood Funeral Home,
Lee Walker and Grace Roush Rev. Alfred Holley officiating.
Fadeley.
Burial follows in Pine Street
She was preceded in death by Cemetery.
her hu sband Bernard Guinther in
Freinds m ay call at the funeral
1981 .
home on Sa turday from 6 to 9
Surviving are one daughter, p.m.

admitted.
About one-third of ail collisions
resulting in severe injury or
death are sid e impact accidents.
About one·half are frontal collisions, with the rest being rear
end and roll -over accidents.
"You can't repeal the laws of
physics," Bowditch sa id when
as ked whether a large car IS still
safer th an a sma ll one in an
accident. ' 'Ygu'll always be safer
in a larger, heavier car."
The association has spent
about $1 million since 1982 on the
development ol side impact
tests. Each test costs aboul
Sll,OOO to run, not' counting th e
cost of the vehicle. A full y
instrumented Eurosid dummy,

985·3832

WE GIVE SENIOR CITIZENS 10% DISCOUNT.

•

CHESTER

' '
'

~'

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�Pubhc Notoce

leona d Jewe Adm n st a
tor w th heW II Anne~ted of
the Estate of Leg and G b
ble aka L G G bble de

ceased

PLA NTIFF
VS

El zabetll Shephe d whose
known

add ess was

ce on November 20

1987
The date of the hear ng on
t h 5 compla nt 5 sc heduled
for Decembe 21 1987 at
1 1 00 AM at t he Probate
Court Me gs Coun ty Po
meroy Oh o If you fa I to
appea and defend yourse f
JUdgment by default w II be
taken aga nst you for the rei
ef demanded n the co m
t

Docket 8 Page 251

ast

pia nt

Pubhc Notoce

Mulbe ry He gilts Pomeroy

MUST USE COUNTY BID
FORM
The Boa d of County Com
m ss one s may accept the
lowest b d o the l)est b d f o r
the ntended purpose and

DEFE NDANTS
El z.abeth Shephe d whose
ast known add ess or res
dence was 6005 Boeing
Place Los Ange es Celifom a

Th e t ont of the envelope
enclos ng the b d must be

marked
SEALED BID
EMERGENCY AMBU
LANCE VEHICLE
8 dder

why the compl81nt should not
be granted should appea and
nform the Court The CQUn IS
located
at Metgs County

11

Courthouse Pomeroy Ohoo
Robert E Buck Judge
of the Probate Court
Me gs County Oh o

geles Ca torn a 90045 e

al

Oh o 45769
Veh c le to be one 1) 1988
Type Ill C ass I Emergency
Ambulance P ce w II be
w th no trade n veh cle

Public Notoce

and the unknown h81rs at law

m n strators and asSigns

f

any of
1 E zabeth Shephe d de
ceased and
2 Ursula G bb e aka U
sula H G bb e deceased
and
3 Ve ev Hauck aka Ve I e
Hauck deceassed and
4

E ratfii'th Hauck

de

ceased
are he eb) not fed that on

Septembe 29 19B7 tha
leona d Jewe Adm n st a
to of theW annexed of t he
esta e of Leg and G bble
aka L G G bb e deceased
has f ed a Comp ant n
Common P eas Cou rt P o
bate D v son Me gs Coun
tv Oh o to he date m na
t on of the pe sons ent t ed
to decedent s Legrand G b
b e aka L G G bb el p op
erty bv ~fle laws of ntes t ate
success on
Each of the defendants
named here n may have
some cia m o nte est n the
esta e of Legrand G bb e
aka l G G bb e decea sed
You a e equ ed to f lean
answe on o before twenty
e ght 28 days after the last
pub cat on of the l ega No

2

In Memoroam

In Lov ng Memory
Of
CLAUDE OLIN
REITMIRE
Who passed away
s x years ago on
thos day
Nov 13 1981
Sadly mossed by
w fe Kathern
children Jeff
Peggy Loretta and
~
Geor e

8

Publ c Sale
&amp; Auctoon

NOTICE TO
AMBULANCE
DEALERS
n accordance w th Sec
ton 307 86 of the Oh1o
Rev sed Code sealed b ds
w I be ece ved by the Me gs
Cour-tv Boa d of Comm s
$lOners n the r off ce located
a the Courthouse Pome
oy Oh o 45769 untl 12
noon on November 25
1987 The b ds w II be
opened at 2 p m on No
vembe 25 1987 end read
aloud for the follow ng veh
c e Each b d to meet the
c ond t ons and spec I ca
t ons as fol ows
Spec f cat ons may be ob
ta ned from the Me gs
County Emergency Med cal
Serv ce OH ce located at

U S RT SO EAST
GUYSVILLE OHIO

608

E Man

Author ud John Deere
New Holland Bush Hog

POMEROY 0
992 2259

farm Equ pment

Dealer

NEW LISTING- Really n ce
3 bedroom ranch type
home P ced to sell man y
lea u es Just $47 900 00

Farm Equlpmut
Parts &amp;

*VINYl SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BRADBURY - Close n bu
ou o lown Ga den area 3
bedroom s outbu d ng
some new ca pet equ pped
kI chen One lh d down on
Land Co ni act $21 000 00

Free Est mates

PH 949 2860
ar 949·2801

Paru &amp;. Serv

s3500

SYRACUSE - 2sto y home
wlh 4 5 bedrooms 2 baths
ktchen w/ br eaklasl nook
fuI basemen! arge neat
ac e ot 2 car ga age Much
More $6290000

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALLI
992 3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

v.w.

MIDDLEPORT - Remo
deed home n a n ce
ne ghbo hoo d WB F P
o g na woodwork 2 bed
ooms new bal h new
ktchen basement Musl
see ASK NG $32 000 00

PARTS
NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742 2315

RUTlAND - Ranch ty pe
home ocaled on appx 2
acres ol gou nd fu I base
menl 3 bed ooms and only
12 y
od WANT
$29 500 00

qcn f.t 91

EAN TRUSSH
DO l E UR'NER

94q 2660
9'i7 5692

TRACY RFfU
OH CE

949 3080
997 22S&lt;i

New Lorat on

F ee Est mates}

V C YOUNG Ill
992 6215 or 992 7314
Pomeroy Ohoo
415861c

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
AI

Reasonable Pnces

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Doy or Noghl

NO SUNDAY CALLS

416861fn

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your Phone

Cable Bolls Here
BUSINESS PHON!
1~141

j

007.77'&lt;4

I 07 LOCUST ST

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
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•Washers •D shwashers
•Ranges •Refr gerators
•0 ye s •Freezers

WE SELl USED APPliANCES

Oh o

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
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Ill so rransmlsslon
PH 992·5682
or 992-7121
6 17 tic

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and Decor
SIXTH ST SYIACUSf, OH

SALE
Cross Stolch Supploes

SO% Off

Basket Supphes
20% Off
Ooscounl on Selected llems
HOURS Tues Sat

bl4 992 5082

10271mo

R ck Pu ton Auct onee I
censed n Oh o and Wet V g
n a Estate enttque f•m qu
dat on 11 • 304 773 678!5

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay CMh fo ate model c aan
uud cart
J m M nk Chew 0 da nc
B Gene Johnaon

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

•

2 IRS 2 baths 2 c• gwage.
IWimmlng poo aatHne Cloaeto
Salltbury • Meigs H gh Call
114 992 3264

Govornment hom•lrom $1 IU
epa ) De nquent tax p operty

Repo1•11 ona Cal 8015 887
1000 Ext OH 98015 for current
epo hat

Sotuatoons
Wanted

Faclory Choke
12 .Gauge Sholguns Only
10 7tfn

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home &amp; Auto
(614) 992 371B

BuYJng daily go d alva co nt
ngs JMWI y ste IM1g WI 8 o d
co.ns arge currency Top p tees Ed Bu ken Ba ber Shop
2nd Ave M ddleport Oh 614
992 3471!1

QU lTS
H gh p cea pad fo p e-1960
qu h1 Appl que p eced any
conditiOn Ca 614 992 2101
Of 614 992 6667

Add on mm fuel computer

Ca1h fo ttand ng t mber We
buy ven aer wh te oak en~
walnut Ca AI Tromm 614

Know your fue consumption

742 2328

from one b ock to hund eds of

•o gal weter storage tank Ca

system F ts any car Instant
mles pe calion eadout

Wented John Deere 420 dozer
lo parta Call 614 992 7789

Emplovmenl

d splay fuel consumed

Serv1ces

RUTLAND OHIO
742 203S

11

Help Wanted

Announcemenls
3 Announcements

P 1no enon1 Now acc!tpt ng
atud8f'ltl Beg nnera th ough ad
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even nga
Attant on
f ee wate
ton testa
even ng1

Home Ownll"t Fa
hardness and poilu
c a 614 949 2269
between 8 00 and

9 00

TLC
25 V s E~~:p
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mo

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CHESTER OH 0
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BATH S

REMOOE NG &amp;
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Phone Day 0 I Ytn ne•

985 4T41
GINIUI (0N11AC101S
Refe ence1
1 l tfn

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h gh energy persona fo the
Gall po 1 a ee Pou b e further
management opportun.ty Pert
t me. fu t me. base and com
muon Call 9 5 304 767

4

Goveaway

Ma a Hama e
446 1354

free Ce

1 K I en to give away
614 446 7100

AUTOMOBILE CLUB OF SOU
THEASTER N OHIO AAA
If you a a nte •tad n a alii ng
c•eerntheGallaCoun ya ee
why not eonside AAA Send ua
some nformet on abou you Mlf
and you work h 1 ory We w
contact you for an ntennew
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P 0 Box371 Portamou h Oh o
46662 Att Bob Batet

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for hand cepped Call 6 4 992
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Ch d care n mv home ActN
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put a F ou aupervito 1 Ha ~
aonvlle a ea 614 992 2579

13

Insurance

32 Mob1le Homes

3 bedroom unfu nilhld houaa n
M ddleport Depoait •••·urad

for Sale
1981 N .. hua 14X86 All tlect
ric. untu n shed 2 bedroom•
with oom for a thi d. aw
condhlan• stove refr gntor
erge dedi and storage build ng
nduded Park Lane Court. cia•
to hotprtal end Spr ng Vall.,
thopp ng Cal 814 44ft-73&amp;&amp;
or 814 448 7374 etta 6pm

8t4 992 2808 or 6t4 992
6983

3 btdroom hou111 fo rant t200
per month Mulba'ryAw Pom•
roy Oh o 814 992 5687 or

6t4192 7450
FORECLOSURE HOMES From
t1 00 on up end loca taX
del nquent prop.ti• Ca 1
800 134 7247 A 10 open
evennga

c.

Pr•ownad Hom a Sale. Yet W•
h•e 45 Tax • trtle down F,..
dehvlfV we finance C1ll today
fo belt ..aect on ELSEA Home
Centere 1 800.826 0762 Oh o

Wott
197• Concord 14x70 3 BR
tote • ec new ce p&amp;t Extrt
n ce th ough out t6900 Call

446 0175

2 bedroom house !1'.1 mile out
Jer cho Rd Ca after 6 PM

15

Scl)ools
lnstructoon

Wed ng c asses start ng November 17 for 10 weekt A c
M g Gaa Tw n C tv Mach na
Shop 614 992 3768

1 8 Wanted to Do
Sept c tank pump ng n dent 1
!&amp; commarical $80 per o-.:1
Ron EvanaEnterp sea Jackson
Oh o Ca 814 286 6930

Two room cottage furnkhed
utilit •
p11d t65 00 Wltk.
s ng e perton cal 304 8715
31 00 Of 175 5608

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1 2x66 Mob eHomewh:h 1 2x24
add on w th e:~ua lot 304 876

Alo Grand• 2 BR unn No P••
Adults prefer ed
Ref•encea
end d_,gstt equk'td Cal 814
448 1430
New 2 bedroom located in
Her lionville Schoo Dlt Country eett ng 4 m • •o of A blr'ly
Oh o $250 par month CaH

6t4 198 7245

Busoness
Buddongs

Ca

La geColl eDog Nhdahoma n
count ry E11.cel antwth ch den
1 v old Ca 614 446 1444

304 578 2383

Rentals
Financial
41
21

Busoness
Opportunoty

Ruumet being accepted for a
fu 1 me Ma ntenance Techn
clan Mua have at leut 5 yra
e11.per ence In general ma nt•
nanca We offer g oup 111urance
and pe d vacet on Send etume
to Bo»\ C a 1 1 1 c o Ga lpo s
Da y T bun• 826 2nd Aw
Ga polt Oh o 46631

Pupp et to giveaway 8 wkl o d
Call 614 446 4477
TEXAS 0 L COMPANY nead1
metu e person lo thort tnp•
su ound ng Gal pol 1 Contact
cu atomert We tra n W te K M
D ckerson P ea Soutttweatern
Pet a eum Box 961005 F1
Worth T:~ 76101

Homes for Rent

3 bf CA b11emtnt gM'IQ&amp;.
pel o carpet
1 cut stone
1 replace. &amp; 1 b c:k f eptace.
ng ound pool Ref A 1 Rail
Eatate C1rol Yeege b oker
304 875 6104

Executwe Secretary E•per ence
necn • y Send eaume o Box
Ca 110 c oGellpoh Dalv
T bone 826 Th d Ave Gal pol 0110 .5631

614

2 Bu d ng lott 1 !1'.1 acres each
with county water Je rya Run
Rd App e G ove W Va Cell

3 BR home on Rt 141 n
Centen•rv Dep &amp; ef Ca

6t4 448 6581
Nice 3 bedroom hom• U76 per
month Allf • aec deposil
required Ctl814 446 6189

22 Money to Loan
Et ab sh c ed
Ge c ad
c•d• Get ow nte est oan 1
Data a Monsv aid 8749 Hwy
172 w l barty Ky 41472

2 bedroom In Syrtcu se 8180
per month plua deposit and
reference Cell 814 992 7880
0 992 6238
2 bach'oom mob e home fu
n ahed •200 00 per montl'l plue
175 00 depo1tt Phone 304
876 8612 or contact Ethel
Bur •
&amp; J I

a

44

Real Eslale
31

3 BA 2V2 bBiht 2 f aplaces
Sp iC evet In country $400 pus
deposit Cal 814 448 4614

Homes for Sale

Home fo Sa e by Owner
G aenb er Est 3BR b wei
on 2 4 ac es AC W B F P we
ba 2 ca gtwage Ph Sel o 8
4 OOPM 614 446 4009 Af 8
4PM Ph 304 676 3816

Unfu n ahed 2 BA Low. S•
eond Ava No pete. N ct 2 3
adu ts. Ref &amp; DIP eqmred
Cell14 448 3949 4412419

(

1 end 2 bedroom apartment• to
rent
811 c rent fo 1 bdr
$183 00 2bdr t219 00 Also
requ ed ~ t200 00 tecurlty
depotit CONTACT Jackson
Ettatas Dept Ph 4•8 3997
Equa Hout ng Opport~.tnity
2 BR aptt 8 cloteta lch:chen
app furmahad. Waaher Orye
hook up ww CII'Pal newly
pe nttd dec*
Regency Inc
Apta Ce 304-875 7738 or
675 5104
Fu mstted apt n•t to brarv
One prof•atonal eduh on y
Pa kng Ca 814 446 0338
1 b

apt ne• HMC Stove
g drep• furn shed *226 a
mo Dep Ref
equired Ca
614 446 4782
r~

16 Court 2 br 1 VII b.. h large
llv ng area w w carp«. ni'N
kitchen d ahwnh• w ed to
phone 6 tv Gas h•• Pa Icing.
t350 mo p ua ut t 81 Dep &amp;
Rtl C1 614 448 4920

N ce 2 BR apt Stov• efrlg
tu ruthed Water • garfJ19e
pi d Ne• Sky nt Lan• Ca I

814-448 7025
Elct a nice 2 BR apt 1 blodt
from shooo a Adults onlv 1221
permo Ce 814 448 2300

I

814 992 5304

e062 E&gt;&lt;t M2786

73
LR ttyleWarm Morn ngWaod
bu n• excel ent cond tton No
blower 1226 fl m Grav f1i
SnowBiadewithrunnll"• used3
t mes $160 firm Se oua cal a
onty 114 992 5720

445 6602
1983 Dodge Ram conve a on
van ow m eage. exc co nd
304 676 4046

~~~=~~~~~;;;:=r~~;;~;·~N~~;-;~~~ 74

Carpet P cea Start ng at
Commercial
t4 a yd
Scu6ptlft'•*8 e yd P uth 87 a
yd lote of oom ementt n
stock F ntnang we llble Mo
lohW'I Fu n lu e. Upper R ve Rd
614 446 7444

4new236x15allwaatllerred 11
t•et with wheela and hub capa
from 1988 Fo d Ca 614 986
4339

304 882 2e27

0

773 5362

lMI eiWid Apartments Gto ge
St New Haven WV 2 bed oom
c•p-.d al e ectr e. For mo e
nf call 304 882 3718

Bleck&amp;whitepony Very gent a
With tadd e S260 Ca 614
245 9 67

71 Auto s For Sale
1973 Buck leSabra end Jeep
Both n good unn ng cond t10n
Call 614 266 1439
1976 P nto e able. $176 or
bett offer 1972 Nova fa
conditton U60 rei ab e. Ca I

Cameo dar Sharp VHS auc
monlhl new ste eo auto focus
many extr111 deposit w hod
until Ch atm81 Mo e nfo me
1 on phone 304 676 51 19

Pu e b ed Auat a an Sheph8fd
pupa 826 1 pace 4 wka old 1
mae Doberman 1 y o d 840
F ee part Co e Good homes
please 614 742 2192

AKC eg ttered Cock• Span el
pupp ea Buff t160 00 each

304 773 5492
AKC eg sterad CockeJ Span al
lema a buff colo
Shots &amp;
wo med 8 weeks After 6 ca
773 5150

57

Bedroom au te Double bad
triple dr11aer wn:h m ro n gtn:
etand A excellent cond ton
Ce I 814 986 44•2 d~a o
814 985 4282 wen nga

atmas t eea Tag
cut o d g
Whrte P ne and
Scotch S16 00 Spruce 825 7
m e North of Pt P aaaant an At
2 atttgn 30• 675 6n3

Fo Sale: Sp net Conale P ano
Be ge n Wan ed Rnpona b a
pert to t1ke ow ow monthly
pey_ment• on Sp net P ano See
ocefty M Wh te 800 327
3345 Ext 102

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livcslock

Beauty Shop equipment fo aa e
1 complete h• dryer unit
UGO 3 h• drye ch• a t5
each 304 8 76 6220

CROSS. SONS

8 g Ollkota Farm Hom• bu It on
vourlotonty $12996&amp;up Call
81. 888 7311
Atar wh:h 33 games 6 tuper
ch•u• t140 Call 814 448
8700 ak fo Joe.

Fo sale 79 XR2&amp;0 1400 he

Cond 304 875 1685

76

1969 Came o- 327 new' body
pert a newt • B u1 with a ve
It tpaa Good cond 82&amp;00 Cal
614 446 9370
1983 Buck Rogal SW 6 C:V
auto t4300 Ca
614 446

Zen th Space Commend 25
floo model TV Remote coni o
c1b a eady Bought Dec. 1986
uaed very I ttle Pad $799 Sell
fo $660 304 882 3264
SURPLUS ARMY DENIM
RENTAL CLOTH NG (Carherts
10 percent ove coat) 0 tV nil
A my Clmoull~ge H 0
Sam
Somerv e 1 Old AI 21 Eaat
Set Sun
Rl\lanawood F
Noon
8 00 pm Other d~s
after 6 pm 3o• 273 6656
lnau ated camouflage cove e a

1981 Turbo T ana AM Real
thii"P Ca 614 379 2820
1978 Dodga Coh Wagon AM
FM sta eo 6 apd good nter o
body good shape. niiW Phatlt
tyatem Goodwo kc• $376 Ot'
beat offer c.n 614 379 2607

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessoroes

U S 3&amp; Wett Jackson Oh o
614 288 8451
M11aey Farguaon N.w Ho and
Busf1 Hog 5alaa 6 Serv ce Ove
40 uaN 1 acto a to chooae from
&amp; compl«e ne ol new &amp; uaed
aqu pment La geat .., eet on n
S E Oh o

Oua exh..lt k ta. S99 95 n• ailed Moat fo da Chevy
t uckt Yens 4x4 1 Muffler
Man 9 St mp1on Ave Athena
Oh o 1 800 843 3787

77

Auto Repaor

St uts $119 96 p•
natl ed
Moat models Muffl8f Man 9
St mpson Ava Athent Oh o
1 BOO 843 3767

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers
New rnoto home 2700 m •
T ade lo ruck &amp; camp• Must
ben ce Ca 614 256 6613

Musocal
Instruments

61 Farm Equopment
Ca ahan • Used TinS hop Ove
1 ODOt•• azea12 13 14 16
18 116 lm •outRt 218
Ca 614 268 62&amp;1

1986 Honda TRX 125 Fou
Wheeler Very good cond 1996
Ca 614 446 9391

c-

3599

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahara. drye a etrlgeraton
anget Skaggs Appl ancaa
Upper RNa Rd beskle Stone
e1t Motet 614 446 7398

Motorcycles

-----------

614 388 8647
AKC Reg Eng ah Sp
Span 81 pupa 7 mot
Excel ent hu11t ng stock
614 446 1393

Buy6Ton ngTableund ecerve
a f ee Suntan bed Offer good
untW Dec. 30 1987 Cal Ca lbba., lana Inc. 304 422 4200

Tw n t undle bed wrth matiCh ng
druaar n ght stand and mat
t ' " " exc cond 304 896

Fu n11hed apt for rent Utilfl •
Pad Call 304 876 3420
Fo rent 1 b apt with la~ndry
oom air cond cei ng fans
water &amp; trash pad Va d c•ed
fo
No P.ta No Chllc*'en
Reference Aequ ed 1 2 Adults.

Pets for Sale

3249 445 1338 448 1626

c

6024

56

1-------- - - -

Ukt new Lazy Boy eel ner
Mauve Ro• t160 Call 614

2•6 5439

1976 CJ7 Bent frame Runn ng
ge.-a 90od 6 cyl $600 F m
Ca efter6 Pm 614 266 9364

1977DodgeVan Butlt ncouch
&amp; ab e. Moon w ndowa c•pet
ng paneled Rune good Needs
body work. 81000 Ce &amp;14

7230
Uke new &amp; cub c ft cttaat
fr••• lkenewGbaonelect c
drya
Tr1d ttone aofa. 6 It
porch gl der white beby bed
with men eas Co bin &amp; Snyder
Furniture Co 955 2nd All&amp;
Oallpo a 114 4461171

Vans &amp; 4 W D

446 4044

Copper noaed Beag e pupa. 2
12 gu shot guna 1 1148
Remington 1 68 Rem ngton
1978 Honda Ca 614 367

THE WORKING
MANS FRIEND

304 875

1979 Fo d F 250 4x4 Needs
mno body' wok &amp; pan eel
$2850 C1 614 446 1482 or

992 5583

1977 Chevy Chwe a Ma bu
Good runn ng ca $?00 Cl

1973 Sta etaft cempll" 23 ft
telf cont1 ned 304 676 3427

Services

6t4 446 2297
1978 Ma cury Monarch Auto
PS PB AC Good cond Ca

814 245 5120

1983 Dodge Cherger 4 cy
auto AM FM radio new 1 r•
Ught brown Cal 614 246
&amp;026 after 6 00 PM
Stan aaa tteel exhiUIIIYttema
Now cuttom m edt to vou
tuck moto homeorcl•• cce
Wnh I f&amp;-t me war anty MuH •
Man 9 St mpaan Aw Athena.
Oh o 1 BOO 843 3767
1988 Chryller LeBt on GTS
turbo AM FM C811etfl c uiSe
AC PS PB Cal 6 U 992
7722

81

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Uncondit ona
let me guaran
tte Local references furn•had
Free ett mates
Ca
co act
1 614-237 0488 dlt{o nght
Rog• tSatement
Wete p oof ng
SWEEPER and sew ng mach ne
rep•r parts. and suppl• P dt
up and delwury Davia Vacuum
C eane
one half m 1 up
Geo g• C eek Rd CaH 814
4.6 0294

19n LTD Good
mechen cally and body Fa
decals ca 614992&amp;619 o

6t4 992 3852

126 00

1985 Plymouth Ro ance AM
FM rad o AC PB PS E:~ceUent
condhlon $3850 Ca 814

Fo •• e sheep manu e You
oad end hau
1 304 773

992 5084

6698
Remington 760 pump 3006
e11c cond scope. prvot mount
4 boxes ahells $276 00 304-

937 2343

45 Furnoshed Rooms
Roo'!'• tor rent day week
month G1llla Hotel Ca 614
441 9180 Aent11low11 t120
month
Fu r'lllhtd oom $76 Ut it •
paid Sh•e beth S ng e mile
919 Seoond Ga po is Ce
448 4416 after 7pm

~78

F IWOOd $20 p ck up load 3
pont tlnch hyd eulic wOod apl t
ter Call 614 246 6114
F rewood Hardwood Sea
toned split ttacka:l &amp; del
w ed promptly $3&amp; Very Ia ge
011d Ca 814 448 7993

46 Space for Rent

20 8 deep ftHre portable VCR
&amp; cem•a 8860 Ca 614 446
3299 bllfWeem 11 AM 8 PM

OH ce Space fo
ent Exce
downtown Gal po a ocatlon
lnqu las ca 614 446 4222

Ben Frank n wood or coa
bu n ng stove Oood cond
$160 c. 614 388 9930
Se11oned Oak &amp; A th fi ewood
Se•oned one ve• Le ge old
Split &amp; delwered 136 Cal 614
2&amp;6 1340 0 258 9303

COUNTAV MOIILEHomaPa k.
Route 33 North of Pom•oy
Rental t a I ere C1 614 992

7479

49

For Lease

1400 aq h comm•cu•• apace
au tab a fo ofl ces rete ng o
serv CH P lma locat on corner
o 2nd &amp; Pne n Ge lpola
Amp a pa king n ear $360 per
month Call 614 446 4249 o

448 2326

Merchanrlise

Sta kll T ae and lawn Se v ce
awn care. andacap,ng. stump
remove
304 576 2842 o

55 Buoldmg S upploes

WANTED place to 1to a 1966
Bu ck lo w ntlf In Ga pol a
area Call61• 446 201&amp;
MUZ2LElOAD NG tema Slack
powda
cap• ba
fleaks
capp•a. meetu e 1 PI ch11
llghtn ng oedera. mo dt etc
Pr cas: dratt cally educed fo
gong out of but naaa 11 e. Ko~
bel 1 M C e.-c Rd Hr1 Mon
Wed F i 6 8 PM Sat 1 &amp;PM
Phone 614 446 2316

Bu ld r,g Mate als
Blo'* br ck aewe PIPet w n
dow1. nlala e c C aude W n
tert R o G ande 0 Ca 614
246 6121

Ready m .. concrete and •
conaetesupplas Ca usYa ~
B cok CemMt and Supp et

304 773 5234

56

Pets for Sale

G oom end Supply Shop Pet
0 oom ng A b eeda AI
sty • lams Pat Food Dealer
Ju eWtbb Ph 614 446 0231
Drat~~onwynd

Cattery Kennel
CFA H malavan Pe sen and
S emeae khtena AKC Cl'low
pupp • New khtena Pe a an•
C1 614 446 3844 after 7PM

New Hoi and and of ataaon hay
too u e A hey toola at delaer
coat p ua nte eat free t nanong
unt June 1 1988 wnh no me
down payment Two451 3pt 7
hmowe1t210000 Ona311
3 o nt PTO atande d t •
ragul• p ckup 16 600 00 One
472 7 ft hayb ne. 86 900 00
One 474 7 ft hayb ne
$6 400 0() Keefera Sa viCe
Cente St Rt 87 leon W Va
Phone 304 896 3874
D8 C1te p er doze axe cond
t10 000 00 f m w
aee Of
t ade fo smal• doze Onty
18 oua calla only 304 576

r-----------....1.__________. . ,
SNAFU®

Bruce Beattte

CARTERS PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Co Founh end P ne
Ga pol11 Oho
Phone 614 448 3888 o 814
446 4477

1976 Nove V 8 4 d at ps pb
a c n ce c ean ce 304 676
1224

77 Plymouth Fury 72 878
m 181 itt e u.-: good WOfkce
dependab e. noo 304 676
6758 after 6 p m

1978 Ford "' ton 4WD lockout
hubs 429 eng ne. ol b• 3 n
It kit New pent Much mo e
$6 000 FIRM CAll 614 245

&amp;021

Lovestock

Rag at&amp;fed Ou1rttr ho sa So
el Geld ng Born May 11
1915 Whta blaze w 3 white
feet 30 davs p ofeu10nal t an
lng 1860 Ca 814 288 8622

448 8387 or 258 848t a11e
5 00 PM

1984 N uen p ell up 5 tpd
Exce cond Re•onabtv' pnced
614 367 7671 Dr 367
Ca

Electncal
&amp; Refngeratoon

Res dent al o comm•c e1 w
ng New serv ce o repa a
Ucensed e uct a., Eat mate
f ee R denour Electr cal 304
675 1786

85

General Hauhng

Hay for 11 e La ge ound bal•

614 882 7277
Good miJled hay fo •Ia. Cell

814 949 2237

1ronspor!;JIIon

0 ad Wet&amp; Serv ce Poo s
C ate n! Wei s De rvery Any
me Cal 614 446 7404 No
Sunday ca s

1986 Che¥y Custom Deluxe h
ton PS PB 41 000 m ea
Asking $6 &amp;00 Vll"'l/ goodcond
Ca 614 379 2391

R &amp; R Water Se v ce Hornt
c s e s we s poo 1 1 ed Fo
rnerly James Soya Wate s C.
304 675 6370

1987 Ch...-y S /ve 1d o Loeded
I 000 m •
$1500 down and
take ove peymenta Cal 6U

Peul Aupe Jr Wata Strv ce
Pools c starns. wei 1 Cal 614446 3171

1979 FtOO p ck up V 8 stand
a d •760 Cal afte 6 PM
114 266 9364

I know this great joke about amnesia
If onlv I could remember the punchllne

84

7580

448 8894

0 rve St Ge polla
NEW I pc woDd g oup- 1399
living oom surtea 1199 *699
Bunk beda with bedding- t199
Fu aile mattreaa &amp; toundlt on
1ta t ng
t99
Recliners
ltartlng t89
USED Bedt d • ..,., bemoom
au tes
t199 t289 Deakt
wrlngw WllhM' a comp ate ne
of uled furniture
NEW Wt1tem boot... UO
Wo kboou *18 &amp; up 1Stee4 &amp;
soft toet Ce 814 446 3169

E ect c sewe c een ng g•
wate &amp; aewer 18 v en For a
you p umbing needt eat the
PLUMB NG DOCTOR 1 882
6663 24 HOUR SERVICES

76 Muatang f11 cond t10n
$200 l04 773 5843

Trucks for Sale

Plumbong
&amp; Heatong

2986

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 62

N.w and u11d furnhu e and
appllcancea Ca I 814 •46
7572 Hoy s9 &amp;

1978 T •n• Am T top auto
V 8 52 BOO 00 Phone 304
675 6716

62 Wanted to Buy

Reg Amer can Sadd • Bred
Horaaa fo • • Good bloodl ne
Re•onable p lce1 Call 814

51 Household Goods

82

72

Now buy ng 1hel corn o ••
corn Ca fo ataat quota• R vttr
Cny Fa m Supply 814 448

2903

1977 Cerna o 305 auto PS
PB AM FM Catlett black mag
whee 1 and radial t ret
$1 596 00 304 882 3448

2823

63

v.u.,. Furnnure

Modltf'n 1 BA apertment Cal
814 446 0390

)

St• 10 Component Syltem wrth
•ae IPNk•s H11 AM FM
stereo 1d o 8 track andclltetta
tape p.,. tndtu ntab e. 6 band
graph c equal z:a Comet with
own cab nit for tto age of tapes
and record• t200 Cal 614
992 6293 oftor 8 00

Load•
and al ng
L kee
so cal Scope
ber Hawkins
Mun
new Ce 814 742 3056

Trucks for Sale

1976 Fo d 1,4 ton p dtup V 8
auto PI tOPP• good thape
1996 197 Chevy Nov. V 8
good moto &amp; bod'( f200 adta
&amp; tpon wh"'• t686 1982
Honda moto cycle XL 1255
t396 304 678 2211

lk:f '&gt; WAle:+! ~I Ni:l
t:\.1,10 I M1\ £a&gt; Cf
llMU~4\0NS

APARTMENTS mobile hom•
houses Pt Ple•antand Gall poll• 614 441 8221
2 bed oom tu niaad apt ret and
depoert New Heven W Ya
304 882 32187 or 304 773

72

1967 Chevy 1 ton
1769

Matt•e•d VIII Regard •• of
c edh hiatory A 10 new c edit
c•d No one .tuaed For
mfa met on cal 1 316 733

County AppiiM'Ice, nc Good
uNCI appl 1ncet and TV 1111
Opll'l SAM to IPM Mon tt.u
Sat 114 44e 1099 127 3rd
Ave Gall polis OH

Very cllln 3 Br ow utllh: et
'300amo Ctv ocatlon R1t 6
dep Ca 11• •41 0105
P cturetque home 3 ml • touth
of Oe poll• R t 7 Adultt
preferred Ref•enctt • deposit
required C•ll814 446 9430

New fu n shed 2 bad oom
tPartment na• Me gs H gh
Schoof C11t 614 448 8898 o

Apartment
for Rent

2 8R houae Stove &amp; retr g
tun Located 1928V2 Ch11tnut
St •176 mo $76 dep Cal
81 • • 46 3870
2 BR arg• 1v ng oom atov•
washer Na• town No P••
Dtp &amp; ef Ca 814 441 1117

o010n """"'

Two bedroom epertment G1
po I Ferry 304 8715 2548

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
meals &amp; ov ng ca 11 By ttou
day o week Very reasonab e
Call Da lene- 614 266 6786

chill of d ewer~; tw n met
trHtM t96 set; m crowavt

Wanted to buy Used furnrtu e
Uaedfu nitureandg ••w• efo
sele. P ckens Fu n tu e 304
876 1460

One bedroom fu n shed apt
Extra clean and nice Adults
Onty No Pett 304 676 1386

2 BR tra • 1140 permo '76
deposit See M s Anderson.
Mond..., et tre er located
acroaa from post office In
Patr ot

W II babySit n my home Ho

Ext ac ttn newcerpet N cefo
wo Icing ldy or gentleman Pt
P NNnt Call 814 992 6868

304 675 285t

Mobl e home1978 Wlndao al
e eel lc. 3 bed ooma centrJI 11
bultt n m aoweve and ster'ao
fu n thed phone 304 876
6360 tfte &amp; 00

esently The
ft Commer
Pa ldng on
d &amp; P neSt
2362 fo

Grac oua tving 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at V ~ge
Mano and River• de Apart
mentt n M ddleporl F om
tZ.115 nctud ng ut it.. Ce
814 992 7787 EOH

KIT N CARLYLE ®by Larry Wroght

Mbted h•d wood 1 abt t1 2 pll"
bundle. Conte n ng app ox 1
ton FOB Oh o P1 Ill Co
Pom•oy Oh o 614 992 8461

e

Renewtv redeoo attd Very n ce
apartments n downtown Ge lipo 1 1 &amp; 2 BR untumtahed
second floor from t17&amp; *22&amp;
Dap 6 eference~ requ red Ca
ave 814 448 232&amp; o 441

82t6

2 14:~70Tral . . fou.m Excel
cond CaH 814 448 1211

749 Th d Ave P
0 ft Shop 1100 tq
c a1 or wa ehou..
aide Ad1ecent toTh
Ca 1 614 446
eppo ntment

New 2 BR equ pped krtchen
Excel ocM on No pitt Rtf &amp;
tac dep Call614 448 1260

Mt Vernon Ave 2 btdroom
houaa unfu 1111had b•ement
g• furnac.. 1 o 2 ch drtn No
peta Ret•ence end Deposit.

V ctor an mob t home. PC
cond g•den tub den f apt ace
1 2x 18 foot deck. pt ae reduced
30. 675 1317

Cammerc ai bu dingalor •••
Downtown Pt P e11ent Storll
off "" A One Reel Estate
Carol Yeager 8 olcer Ca 304

2 BR apt Honevaiddes H 1
Wet• sewer trash serv 01 !&amp;
khchen •pptl .. c• fu mehtd
Gal heat Rent al.trt t220 Ca
1144403344 0 4411134
Equ1 Housing Opportunity

Apartmllflta to Mit n Pomeroy
1 1nd 2 bed ooms 814 992

2053

34

d..-

304 876 8483

Living roam aofa. Must •a to
appreculte C.l814 441-1423 1 12x80 2 BR Mobile home In
Eve g een 2 mi trom Holrtr
Ho1plta Calll14 448 3697
1971 Kent mob le home
10x36 Good eond C1 614-

14x70 Wlndao with 14x30
1dd tion 3 ba•ooma app oximately 3 teres b tck top oad
Seve el out bu ld nga end pond
Ga I po 1 Ferry 304 675 6930

Downtown Mo'dern 1 BR
comp tta k tchen cerpet. at
etctrc hel!l Ca 814448
•383
a. 446 0139 evan &amp;
weekends

Ju.t a N&amp;d 3 truck oada Naw
NII'IU room aurtat new wood
pc ev 111 g wood aurt• t398 9&amp;

4249

1984 T umph 14x70cullom
made Exce thape A I elect c.
t9 000
814 598 4429

7689

Expll" anced body man needed
Ce 1614 388 9616

D shii"Waaher Sa Ba Tender
needed Apply n person onty at
TheDownUnderRattau ant No
phon a cal • P eMe

992 11873
Mddleporl Oh
lOW INCOME HOME

Newty enovated ell eltc;t ic
wrthhlllpumpandcent a el 3
bedroom• plenty yard and
g•dtn 1pac1 n Ponlend. Oh 0
6 ml 11 from R wentwood W
Va Call614 843 5309

78at
MASTERCARD V SA Reg•d
011 ot c adi1 h atory Also new
c edit c•d No one &amp;fused Fo
nfo mat on ca
1 316 733
6062 Ext N 2768

Good Rate s

209 South 41h St

102 Horton St Mason. WV
Hou .. earn• of Horton &amp; 2nd.
W betodatpub cauctt0n1t1
p m Wedn•dJY Nov 18th. on
tha Counhouae atepe Te ms
C1sh Ettate of G etchen
Yeav•

675 5104

11 3 1 mo pd

Joe or Pauley Bowland

2 3 o 4 bedroom houset 1nd
apt n Pom..oy area. Pay own
utllrt et deposit required Call

1988 K lcwood 2 b...oom•
366 E Mtln Pom•oy lmmed •e pot . .a on t3000 Cal
814 992 7314 0 614 7•2

614 992 3010

tank and watch 1t subtract and

Room &amp; Board For
Senoor Cot1zens and
HandO&lt;ap.ed

Unfurn shed hou1e for rent n
Pomeroy Storm wendowt and
doors neu Bled al new paint
Depo1il aqutred Cell614 992
3090

54 Mosc Merthandose

Dally SentiOei- Page- 11

G a 26 nch 10 IPeed b ka
Excel.-rt condit on lookl new
Seldom used $60 Call 614

PARSONS FURNITURE

~;:";;:;:~::::;::::;:;::;:::l':;;:;;:::;;:::::::::=====-1
I
41 Homes for Rent
44 Apartment
f
R
or ent

448 8890

(Comparalo ) F II up you

ELIM HOME

"I WlSh you wouldn't
call me
A
f"
at the office, gnes

304 675 6027

1978 BayVIIM 14x70 with24x7
extll'l F ont po ch carport.
endos.t bade porch o thop
a ... woodburn• on 1 4 acres
t16000 o batt off• Ne•
C own City • MerciW\111 e. Cal
614 448 7602 Of 251 11538

ct v

0322

6t• 992 5113 6,4 982 6723
or 814 982 2509 Cal aher
600 pleeaa

~14

TOP CASH pad to 83 modM
and newer used c•• Smith
Buick Pont ac 1911 Eastern
Ave G..l po I Ca 614 446

WHIT( HILL RD

•KITCHENS
•ROOF N G

Exper enced 11 es people
wanted pert &amp; fu t me petitions Male o feme a Sal..,
plus Comm u on 304 676
6513 Alk fo M Ma a o M
Hand cks

mn

Commarcal
Store to Job Cost
Tu.1 Servu:::e
Belo e and afte auto tune up

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

Of16 1

p_, t me elephone market ng
poan on even ngs 18 hou 1
WDOk 304 876 3398 E 0 E

2282

mtles

11 6 1 mo

Pomeroy

Pubhc Sale
&amp; Auctoon

He daman Jefferson County
W Ve tom k200cowaoncta
d-r and leed 6 dayt per week
Must heve eferencn PC hou•
ng end PlY 304 726 8308
between 8 00 9 00

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

All Makes

614 71J7 l!l55

Rt 124

...

Speoal arge ¥a d u e npt to
S dera Jawe ty Ga pol 1 Fe y
Nov 12 to 14 Everyth ng half

REPS NEEDED
fo bus naaaacoounts Fu T me
$60 000 t80 000 Pat T me
S12 000 $18 000 No Sel ng
epeat but neu. Set you own
hou a T an ng provided Ca
1 612 938 1870 M F Sam to
6pm (Central Standard T m~

8t4 448 3872

RUTLAND

10amto6pm

APPLY IN PERSON ••. MONDAY THROUGH.FRIDAY ... 9:00 A.M.-3:00 P.M.

16141

Rt 124 Acrou from
Happy Hollow Rd

Roger Hysell
Garage

AN EXCITING NEW OPPORTUNITY FOR SHO~PING AND
WORKING 15 COMING TO MIDDLEPORT VAUGHAN S
CARDINAl SUPERMARKn IS NOW HIIING TO flU.. FUU
AND PART Tin'! POStnoriS FOR OUR EXPANDED
STORE
FUll AND ,ART
BEN(FITS
TIME POSITION&gt;
I GROWING COMPANY
(ASHIIRS
2 FAMILY ORIENTED
SERVI(E (l(RKS
3 FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE
HOCK CI£RKS
PROOU(£ (l£RKS 4 ENJOY ABLE FUlFilLING WORK
S HEAlTH INSURANCE
OELI ClERKS
6
PERIODIC PAY IN(REASES
BAKERY nERKS
7 VACATIONS

992 6550

OPEN 1 to 9 PM

Sunday 5 to 9 P M
10151mo

•

HOUSE FOR RENT

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

Man Sat 2 Ia 9 P M

Houoolo .... At 33 love ot

oom house 2110 N Man
Street UPPM' 20 a. 304 468

Basham Bulldong

Buyong Roots
Beef Hodes and
Deer Hodes

HOURS

&amp; VICJnlty

8

We Ce y F sh ng Supp 81

...

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

ca

Pt Pleasant

90 Daye ume aa cash wrtf1
approved crad I 3 M let out
Bulw Ia Rd Open 9em to &amp;pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 814 446

18S7

I

Exce ant Weget fo apa at me
euemb y wo k: electron ca
c eftl Other nfo mat on
1604)641 0091 ext3667 Open
7 dlfla Ca now I

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

2 y old- 4 BR houae 2 b.rha.
1 I elect ic. 2 d.clta outbu ding.
pond Extra tre .. apot Au al
w•ter 2 5 acrea 3 m • from
M•rcervll e Cal 814 256

1 ~ story newly equ~pped len
ch., l•ga fam ty room •
cond
convan M1t ocM on

Mnldleporl Ohoo 45760

FACTORY (HOKES

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

405 PEARL 5T
CARDINAL
MIDDLEPORT
SUPERMARKET
OHIO
SOON TO BE OPENING
A MAJOR EXPANSION ~

FRONT END MANAGER
ASSISTANT FRONT END MANAGER
DEll/BAKERY MANAGER
ASSIST.!NT OW/BAKERY MANAGER

168 Norlh Setond

TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NITE LIGHTS
WHEAT£ LIGHTS

3 Announcements

0 19 87

AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE

POMEROY -98S 3561

Cone ete wo k

266 6200

bachelo 1 deg u from an acaedited p og am or Th•apaut c
Rec:natlon Speaalst f om an
acaed ted p ogram; o a certj..
fed tlhlb ltalt on couiUelor
Each d tc p ne must hwe tpecuhzed tr~~ n ng or one yell/

Yard Sale

Prceo

1 00 PM

SERVICE
P umb ng and e ec
wok

Soc Ill Worker with

Lane. C JY twp bu d ng Be
tween Rt 7 6 218 8 6 low

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

Addons and emode ng
Roof ng and gu e wo k

GEORGE BUCKLEY
614-664 4761

AW

MANAG(MENT POSITIONS

SLUG SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER

Insured L1censed
4 mo

10 16 I mo d

NEW LISTING 3 bed oom
2soyhome n Mddepo l
N ce k tchen &amp; WBFP
PR CE O TO SE LL
$1750000
HENRY E ( ElAND JR

Evemngs

992 6226
M ddleport

CARP~NTER

o

Gove.-nment Jobs •16 040
S69 230 y Now h ng Yf.
area 806 687 6000 Ext
9806 fo ctJ rent repa fed a

BILL SLACK
614 992 2269

Ron Diles or
Gary Cumm1ns

YOUNG'S

ton

614 446 1883

7

Sof11 and chai a p ctd from
t396 to t996 Tab • $60 end
up to t126 Hid•• beda t390
to 11595 Redinera t22&amp; D
t376 lamp• •21 to $126
DinettM t101 and up to t496
Wood tab • w I chlh's a2815 to
$796 D11k t100 up to t376
Hutches *400 a11d up Bunk
beds comp eta w mattr1111s
$295enduptot3915 Babvbedl
$110 Malt IHIIO boJIIpringa
full o tw n eea 11 m t78 and
$88 Queen aets $22&amp; K ng
t360 4 d IWIH' ch•t *69 Gun
cab n•• 6 gun Oaa or elect c
r1nge •371 Baby matt • • •
t3&amp; II t45 Bed ham• t20
t30 &amp; K ng frame $60 Good
at4ection of bedroom suitea
mete cabinet• haldboarda •3o
end up to $66

NaM clean anch R•tnded
aubd v slon Hennen Tnce
Sc;hool• Payments lowe thiR
rent 8eBUtiful vlew Call 01•

Educllo with degree In educ•

W nter Sa • Thu a-Sun love •

Per Pockup Load
Delivered

D&amp;C
ELECTRIC

4 21 87 tlo

cea fo gere~~t e. menta ly re
ta ded Qua f cat on• Phy~o~co

Locust Oak Cherry

DON T LET YOUR ElECTRI
CAl PROBlEMS 8£COME A
SHOCK TO YOUI
CALL

949-2263
or 949-2168

parv• ng and coo d nat ng the
mp em entation oftra n ng ur-t

FIREWOOD

1 13 tfc

-~~

lo au

1876

RESIDENCE PHON!

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleanmg
Paontmg
FREE ESTIMATES

ala dat on

Blpona~le

It

112 871mo

Howard L Wrotesel

NEW- REPAIR

profa11 on a

on Salary t18 600 per year
good benet ta Contact Oh o
Job Serv ee Gal pol a Oh o-

ce on ell

LAYNE S FURNITURE

Brand new 3 IR n. . Gal poles
Locka on At 7 2 c• g•ege. n ct
Sot lmm.tl•• pot ....ion W
cona dllr trade In of Mobi a
home. p operty etc. Ia gain
pr Cld Call 814 448 1038

exper enca n mental ••• d•

Makes

We can repa1r and re
core radoators and
heater cores We can
also acod b01l and rod
out radoators We also
repa1r Gas Tanks

ROOFING

8t4 992 6589

II) tc;:e,

c.

og 11 w th mutert degree o

PH 949 2969

10 29 1 mo

LEADING CREEK ROAD Beaullul b ck anch on
appx 3 acres C A 2
bed ooms sa ell te d sh
lam y oom w/s d ng doo
Rea pat o fenced ya d
$60 000 00

3016

lnmmers saws blowers
- Snowoff blowers Ore
&amp;on saw parts
Winter Specoals push mowers p eked up and tuned and
returned 120 00

RADIATOR
SERVICE

10 9 In

LOST Dog B ua Chow puppy
.bout 9 w.eks old bah nd
SoutheMte n Equ pment Judy
Bennett Reward Cal 614 446

51 Household Goods

LAFF·A·DAY

Nice dean home large khch'"
IPP WICII AC utility room 3
BR ca petth u-out. m•ter8R
ceiling f1n FJnilhed g•age
Price •37 500 Rtducld &amp; neg
114 441 13158

Gospel

814 246 9281 o

6 Lost and Found

Yard Man mowers Echo

New Homes Buolt

Band C•
246:..515&amp;4

Tho

Pomeroy- Moddlaport Ohoo

full b••m•t 3
m 10 of G1 poh t34 900
Call Oaya 114 U8 161&amp; tft•
15 oo 44e n•4

tub 304 6715

Located half way bet
ween At 7 1nd B11hen

BISSELl
SIDING CO.

Mus (:1.,.1 wanted fu

13 1987

Homes for Sale

4 BR f

Au o a I 60642

Qua f ad menta

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

3 II tfn

RACINE OHIO

31

Help Wanted

2t04

Set of G M keva on Awn lcB'f
r ng Found on Rt 7 Cal

No Sunday Calls

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
'

Concretela~ndry

Ltcensed Chmcal Audtologtst

PAT HILL FORD

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MIDDLEPORT - 1 ~ s o y
b ck ho me on appx 12
acres of g ound 4 bed
rooms fA F0 heat p us a
woodbu ne
PR VACY
MAKE OFFER $27 000 00

'

a:

992 2196
Moddleport Ohoo

RUTlAND - Nce 10 yr od
b ck anch home Ove I
ac eo gorund 3 bed ooms
2 baths lull basement
equ pped k tchen large
pat o MAKE OFFER
$39 900 00

'• '1 ,

~ LISA M KOCH M S

Help Wanted

BOGGS

PI•••

304 675 3626

::t: 417 Second Avenue Box 1213
~ Gallipolis Ohoo 45631
or at
Veterans Memonal Hospotal
Pomeroy Ohoo

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

Fnday November

GET PA 0 fo r. .d ng boob
$100 00
tie. W 11e ACE
330 161 S L ncolnway N

fem-'• JMrt ah~ dog•
take or the¥ go to C ty Pound

~ (614) 446 7619 or (614) 992 2104

SEND RESUME TO
RHONDA DAILEY R N
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
11 S EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY OHIO 45769
OR CAll
EXT 213

11

Goveawav

2

{11)6 13 2tc

lmmedoate opemng for full tome and
part tome R N s to work m areas of
•Specoal Care
•Emergency Room
•Skolled Nursong Facohty
•Medtcal Surgocal Unots
Salary comparable woth expenence
Excellent Frmge Benefots

4

13 1987

p_.

eserve the ght to &amp;Ject
any or all b ds and o any per1
1hereof

REGISTERED NURSES

110) 16 23 30
i1 1)613206te

otherw se unknown

next of k n egatees dev sees
d stnbutees
executors ad

Business Services

Pe~nskn~nganyreeson

60CJ5 Boe ng Place los An

90045

Publ c Notoce

Publoc Notoce

COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY OH 0
ESTATE OF
LeGRAND GR BBLE
ah L G GR IBBLE
Deceased
Case Number 1663 1

Fnday November

Pomerov- MJddleport Ohoo

Page- 1 0 - The Dally Sentmel

1984 Dodge Ram p clcup New
red ala 6 1pd Topp• $&amp;000
Call 814 446 0276 after 5 00
PM
1985 N aaen 4x• K ng Cab
p ck up 43 000 m 11 good
t es. p ced 10 te
Phone
814 992 6481!1andstlcfo John
E Du ngdiVtma
83 Chevy Cu.tom De ux• truck
306 eng n&amp; 36 000 m t• new
f bl g au toppe
unnlng
bo•da ah•p d•k blue g ev
$6

000 00 304 676 5664 el

71 Auto s For Sale

te 4 00

1983 o 11. 98 fl•o.,cv EJCCet
cond 74 000 m loaded Call
614 446 079&amp;

1962 Ford on• ton t uck 1977
JeepWagonHr 30. 895 3416
1fter 6 00 p m

We te son s Wate Hau ng
reasonab e at"
mmed ••
2 000 ga on de rvery c sterna..
pools we etc call 304 578
2919

87

Upholstery

R &amp; M Custom Couches el\d
Reupho stery St Rt 7 C own
Ctty Oh 614 2&amp;6 1470 Eve
814 446 3438 Open daly 9 to
430 Sat 930to130 Od&amp;
new Uphoata ed
Mow f!l'( s Upholate ng serv.,g
t cou ntye ea22 veart The best
n fu nitu e upholatt ng C:•
304 875 4154 1o
f •e
.., mates

�'
Page-12~ The

Daily Sentinel

.

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

,

Friday. November 13. 1981

Judge b~ocks order freeing
homeless woman in New York

''

against her will at Bellevue for15 reflexes."
And the judge criticized the
days. The woman, who Identifies
NEW YORK (UPI) - Declar· herself as Billie Boggs, was city's response to the problems of
the homeless.
·
)Jlg that homelessness In Itself Is picked up by city officials from
•'Who among us Is not famlllar
not proof of mental Illness, a · her home on a sidewalk next to a
state court ruled that a woman restaurant heat vent Oct. 28 with the tattered, filthy, malo·
picked up under New York City's under a controversial new policy· . dorous presence of the wretcljed
homeless," he said. " The tired,
controversial sweep of street to treat homeless people deemed
people must be released, but her mentally Ill.
poor, huddled masses need no
freedom has been blocked by an
Acting state Supreme Court longer be Invited to our shores.
appellate judge.
Our society has created them at
Justice Robert Lippmann on
home. The blame and shame
Justice George Bundy Smith, Thursday had ordered Brown
at a hearing In the Appellate released, saying she Is "physi- · must attach to us, not to them."
But Koch lambasted L!p·
'Division of stale Supreme Court cally fit" and "not unable to care
Thursday, stayed the lower court for her central needs."
pmann's ruling.
ruling earlier that day freeing
" If something happens to that
' 'I am aware her mode of
Joyce Brown. He ordered she be existence does not conform to woman, God forbid, the blood of
kept at Bellevue Hospital unpl conventional standards, that Ills
that woman Is on that judge's
the full appellate panel could an offense to aesthetic senses ,"
hands," Koch said. "The pro·
hear the arguments, either today Lippmann said. But, " It cannot gram goes on! The program goes
or Monday, on whether she be reasoned that because Joyce
on!"
· shOuld remain free pending tlie Brown is homeless she Is men·
·Lippmann's decision followed
city's appeal of the lower court tally 111."
three days of hearings, during
ruling.
which Brown testified she Is a
Brown was the first homeless
Smith ordered the appeal person plucked off the city
"professional" at living on the
heard on an expedited basis In streets under . a new" policy
street and disputed claims she Is
early December.
endangering herself and others.
devised by Miiyor Edl"ard
Brown, 40, ha s been held Koch's administration to deal
The city argued for ·her hospl·
with the city's growing homeless·
tallzatlon, citing her erratic
nes s problem.
behavior that allegedly Included
burning money In the streets and
Under the program, roving
·
abusing pedestrians.
Norman Siegel, executive dl·
rector of the New York Civil
Llberltes Union, which Is repres·
mentally ill are Involuntarily
hospitalized.
enting Browri, said of Smith's
Lippmann praised )3rown, say·
decision, ••A couple of hours ago,
BALTIMORE (UP!)
she
thought she had her freedom.
ing
she
"displayed
a
sense
of
Former Maryland ·Gov. Marvin
humor,
pride,
a
fierce
IndependNow
she's In a van on her way
Ma ndel, whose 1977 mail fraud
to Bellevue."
back
ence
of
spirit,
quick
mental
and racketeering convictions
were thrown out by a federal
judge, said "just being accused
of wrongdoing was the· worst
part" of his decade-long ordeal.
U.S. District .Judge Frederick
Smalkin ruled Thursday that
Enjoy the very finest In home dyle
Mandel was convicted and pun·
cooking at the very best prices around I
ished for acts no longer crimes
under a Supreme Court ruling In
MONDAY
$
a Kentucky case that narrowed
. Hot Roast Beef Sandwich ................... 349
the federal mall fraud statute.
The high court ruled 7·2 in the
TUESDAY
.
$
Kentucky case that the federal
Ham &amp; Scalloped Potatoes ................ 349
mail fraud statute protects only
WEDNESDAY
rights in money and property and
49
cannot be used to prosecute
public officials for defrauding
THURSDAY
citizens of their -"Intangible
Chicken &amp; Noodles ............................. $349
rights" to honest government.
Mandel, 67, was convicted of
FRIDAY
"'
•
$
help ing five associates get extra
Meat loaf ••••.•.•...••.•••.••.•...•••••••.•••••••••• 349
horse racing days for a track
SATURDAY
.
they secretly owned and recelv·
ing from them money, jewelry
Chili &amp; Grilled Cheese .......................... 99
and financial help in a divorce
HOURS: MON. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.-8:00P.M.
settlement.
No direct link between the
992-7833
$350,000 in gifts Mandel received
MIDDLEPORT
and his help on the racing dates
was ever proven, however.

Sunday

so cents

Block
making
modernization

By ESTHER PESSIN

;

COLLISION - A rail official looks over
damaged commuter trains that collided in an

underground tunnel in Boston's Back Bay section,
Thursday. The accident Injured about 100 uf the
1,000 passengers. (UPI)

a

'investigators would probe all who was not Injured . "The !)ext
potential causes including track thing I knew we just htt some·
signals, track conditions, brakes thing. People were flying down
and human error.
the aisle. People were getting
The two engineers and five very upset. We couldn't get the
conductors from the trains were door opened."
tested for evidence of drug and
Police said 20 people were
alcohol use, as is standard taken by ambulance to several
procedure In rail 'accident city hospitals and another 14
investigations.
were transported by city buses .
·Amtrak controls all track
Officials said those taken to
operations, Including signaling, hospitals complained of back and
in the area.
neck injuries. The mote se·
Although there was no
rlously hurt sustained broken
Indication that the crash was
bones. Those suffering the most
related to an autumn storm
serious injuries had been stand ·
that dumped more than 7
lng, officials said.
inches of snow In Boston,
None of the Injuries a ppeared
Carbona said. "It's being
life threatening, but three people
investigated ."
sustained significant trauma:
The two trains were removed rescue workers said. Most of the
from the tracks late Thursday injured passengers were in the
afternoon and officials im· first two cars of the second train.
pounded a section of track.
. The engineer of the coach that
Seriously ill
rammed the stopped train,
James Corcoran, 39, of Norton,
Stelios Kyriakides, the Greek·
was In stable condition at Boston
Cypriot who won the fi rst post·
Ci ly Hospital suffering from a
war Boston Marathon in 1946, Is
broken leg.
seriously ill with a heart and
Passeggers said the moving
train hit with a loud crash and · lungs aliment at a n Athens
host! tal. Kyria kides was 36 when
stopped aburptly. Commuters
he flew for 50 hours to get to
said there was no warning and no
Boston fo r the·.J946 race.
sign the engineer tried to stop the
train before the impact.
The locomotive on the station·
ary train absorbed the blow with
minor damage, but the head
coach on the moving train
sustained heavy damage and
"looked like. an accordlan," a
witness sa ld.
"The train just jammed ," said
Mark Chittim of Barrington, R.I.
"There were sol')'le screams and
tears, but. people, overall, re·
mained calm. There were a lot of
people standing" prior to the
crash.
"I normally stand up - I sat ·
down today for some reason ,"
said Robin L;mdry of Stoughton,

Mourners jam

ch~l!!'s

NEW YORK (UP!) - Child
abuse victim Elizabeth Stein·
berg was buried after hundreds
of mourners jammed a funeral
home to pray the 6-year-old
schoolgirl finds "peace in

mourne rs who jammed the fun·
era l home. Lau nders, 26, an
insurance company secretary,
stood alone in a moment of
silence before the casket.
Rabbi Dennis Math of The
Village Temple, who co·
officiated the ceremony, urged
mourners to take action If they
suspec·t cases of abuse similar to
the one that claimed Llsa'a life.
"Perhaps our respect for our
neighbor's privacy should not be
as important as other concerns.
" May Lisa's death help save
the lives of other children. Then
her life will be sa nctified and her
name remembered as a blessIng," he said.

heaven ."

The red-haired girl's natural
, mother, Michelle Launders. sat
with her head bowed Thursday
during the joint Catholic and
Jewish ceremony he ld in Green·
wlch VIllage just blocks from
where Elizabeth, known as Lisa,
lived with the couple who
claimed to have adopted her,
Joel· Steinberg a nd Hedda
Nussbaum.
After the brief ceremony,
by muffled sobs from

Baked Steak.......................................

3

1

WILLIAMS DINER

..

Vol. 22 f\lo. 39

M

Friday, November 13th
AND

Saturday, November 14th

and Taylor Nissan will give you from

.

TO

Spend the cash back anyway you
want, for Christmas. gifts, or to help
you with Wall Street losses or for your
down payment.

Cedar Jlar &amp; Lounge
PRESENTS

"STONED ON COUNTRY"
FIRST TIME IN THIS AREA
S PIECE COUNTRY ROCK BAND .

NISSAN
1200 E. State St.
Athens, Ohio 594-3528

DANCING AND FOOD
"NO COVER CHARGE"
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
.....,:. .,;'·--

'

SO CLOSE AND YET SO FAR- Wahama's
Brad Bumgarner and . Moorefield defender
Lincoln Shirk both go after a Sean Gibbs pass In
the White Falcons 30·7 loss to the Yellow Jackeis

Saturday at Sanders Memorial Field In Point
pleasant In the 1987 Class A State West Virginia
High School grid playoffs. '(See additional P.icture
on C·l. ) (Photo By Matt Robertson).

Moorefield ousts WHS, 30-7
By MATT ROBERTSON
OVP Stall Writer
POINT PLEASANT - The
Wahama White Falcons over·
came many obstacles this season
according to Coach Donnie VanMeter; but 176 points !Robbie
Grimm and Chris Jewel1) ·sittl ng ·
injured on the bench Saturday
afternoon was too much ·to
overcome. a nd the White Falcons
fell in the fi rst round of the 1987
'Class A State Football Pla yoffs to
the Moorefield Yellow Jacket s.
30·7,
"We couldn't get on Ihe tra ck
offensively ,"
VanMeter sa id .
"Their team did a good job," h e
added. VanMeter sa id he was
glad they were able to get Rick
Kearns able· to play, but tH ey
were unable to get Grimm able to
play . Grimm saw only one play.

How It Went
Wahama won the coin toss and
elected to receive. Billy Zuspan
returned It to the 28-yard·line.
Four plays later, Wahama had to
punt the ball. Moorefield was
able to keep the ball for only six
It from th e
pla ys, moving
34-yard·line to the 45·yard·line .
Wahama and M.o orefield
traded posessions a· few mo te
times until. with: 24 remaining in
the first quarter , Melvin Eye
crashed over from the Whit e
Falcon one. A penalty was called
on the fir st attempted PAT.
Moorefield mi ssed the second
attempt and lead 6·0 at the end of
the fi rst quarter .
Both teams were able to
generate little offense in the
second quarter, but late in the
second quarter Eye broke off a

long run trom the Moorefield
44-yard-line to the Wahama 22.
Six plays later, with 2:08 remain·
ing In the half, R.T. Liggett ran it
over from four yards out. Moore·
field went for the conversion on a
fake field goal. The attempt
failed . Wahama trailed 12·0 dur ing the halftime intermissio n.
Second Half
The Wahama offense, lacking- "
Grimm and Jewell, was unable to
mount any sustained drives In
the third quarter and the strain
started to show on the defense.
With 3:10 rem aining In the third
quarter, Eye ran another one in
from the five. The point after wa s
no good good. Moorefield led 18·0.
The next Wahama drive was
stopped aft er four plays when
Moorefield inte rc epted a Sean
Continued on C·1

Workfare assists trainees
with experience, opportunity

training ·and work experience,

Cash Back For Christmas Expenses

Ch•mco~J

A

.

for Bureau move being made

By MARGARET CALDWELL .
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS - Three new
w01: k progra ms a nd a trai ning
program ha ve entered the Gallia
Co un ty Depar tment of Human
Services which are beneficial not
only to those In the program , but
Jo the Gallipolis community and
Callia County .
Gallia County recipients of Aid
to Dependent Children (ADC)
and General Relief (CiR) who are
considered employab le will be
assigned to participa te in Job
Club, Subsidized Employment
Program or Community Work
Experience Program .
The primary goal ofthesework
progra ms is to expa nd employ ·
ment opportunities for recipients
of public assistance throug h

Buy Any New
1987 Nlssan In Stock
For '49.00 Down (Willi Approved Cretlit)

i;jun ny. Hlghs ne ar 65.
of rain zero percent.

8; Sections, 52 Pages

15, 1987

•

funeral

Weather

tmes·

Delicious Dishes!
$

Along the River .: .. .... B-1-8
Business ...... ....... ......... D-1
Comics·TV .... .. ..... , .. Insert .
Classlfleds ................ 0 ·3-7
Deaths .............. ....... ... A-4
Editorial ..................... A-2
. Sports ...................... C·1·8

C-1

•

Two
trains
crash
inside
tunnel
Judge dism~ses - ~~r~:~!~~t~IE=~::::J~s~~~1
.
Mandel sconvictions
BOSTON (UP!) - Federal
Investigators are trying to deter·
mine if a curve in the tracks may
have contributed to the rush· hour
cras h of two commuter trai ns
.that sent 34 people to hospitals,
officials said.
Officials of the Na tional Trans·
portation Safety Board in Wa·
shington, D.C. and the Federal
Railroad Administration In Cam·
bridge will head the probe of the
Thursday crash that occurred
when one commuter train
rammed another inside a tunnel
at the city's Back Bay station.
Officials said as many as 100
people were Injured in the crash,
most with minor cuts and bruises
that did not re qu i re
hospitalization.
Five members of the NTSB
arrived in Boston late Thursday
to assist Investigators who had
been on the scene since shortly
after the 8 a.m. mishap.
There were 1,500 people on the
two trains, which originated in
Attleboro a nd were heade.d for
the city's South Station. The
trains , both pushed by diesel
locomotives, were about 10 to 15
minutes be hind schedule.
The Massachusetts Bay Tr ans·
portation Authority - the agency
that contracts commuter r11il
service to Amtrak - refused to
speculate on the ca use of the
crash, but one official said a
curve in the tunnel could have
pla yed a role.
Vicen te Carbona, an MBTA
spokesman. said a seven-car
train was stopped at the sta tion
just at the end of level, gra dual
right turn. A six ·car train ,
traveling between 5 and 10 mph,
ca me ar ound the corner and
rammed the id led train.
·'The . engi neer could have
·conceivably come around the
turn and not seen the other
train," said Carbona. He said

lnsidt'

Utility costs going down
Beat of the Bend - B-8
Rio Grande to host annual Classic
Sports C-4

Page B-1

Pag~

College football results

state officials said. The pro·
grams are funded through the
state. ·
The training programs of edu·
catio n ~ vocationa l training, or
rehabilitation aim to imporvethe
employability po te nllal of the
recipient.
Job Club is a work· lra lning
program Jo help ADC and GR
recipients learn the skills a nd
.s trategies needed to fi nd a job,
said Fred Childers, work pro·
gram and social services su per·
visor. In a classroom surround·
ing, the recipients aretau~ht. how
to put a resume together, how to
have a successful Interview and
other job·find ing techniques.
In the Subsidized Employment
Program (SEP ), an ADC or CR
recipient Is employed by a
private employer. The employer
r~celves the state and local funds
and the recipient r~ceives wages
d lrectly from hi s employer. This
program gives participa tes the
opportunity to use th eir existing
skills and to learn new ones .
Community Work Experience

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

Program t CWEP) stresses train·
ing. Recipients in this program
are placed in useful public
service jobs where they are given
the opportunity to learn th rough
train ing and work e.x perience,
expanding the availability of
public .services In Ohio, state
officials said.
Under CWEP is the Gallia
Count y Work and Trai ning Pro·
gram, or special proj ects crew.
This crew works for any non·
profit or government
organization.
Ernie Meadows , labor crew
leader for the special projects
crew, said that although welfare
has a bad reputation, these
programs and doing work for the
community has res tored prid e to
many of th e workers . ·
"You do better work when you
have pride; no matter what
you're doing ," Meadows said.
Meadows said some of the
projects the crew has worked on
were painting the Guyan Town·
ship Townhouse, cleaning the
landscape at Mount Cemetery ,
mowing at the Gallla· Meigs
Metropolitan Airport, and ·work
at the children's home. The crew
also helped the fire department
in the brush !Ires.
Among these projects, the
crew Is presently working on the
Gallla County Chamber of Com·
merce building, repairing win·
dows, drain spouts, painting, and
brick and mortar work.
Thelma Elliot, executive se·
cretary of the Chambe r of
Commerce, said she .Js satisfied
with the work th e crew has done
so far .
" I've been very pleased . with
the quality of work. I've kept
track of how things are looking
and It looks good,." Elliot said.
"This Is a special program. It's a
learning process and they are
willing to lear n .'~

Training is emphasized In the
special projects crew, Meadows
said . When they helped with !he
brush fire s, they had se minars by
the fire department. The crew
~ill have a first aid class also In
the near future .
Meadows said there is also
shared training within the crew .
Particlpan ts who are skilled
share their knowledge with other
crew members. This expands the
number of skllls a participant.
has, Increasing the participants
employment opportunities .
·
Sam Rodgers, a participant in
the special projects crew, said
the program · has given back
some of his pride and gotten him
out of the house. He said he has
learned quiet a bit and feels he
has a better opportunities for
fu ture employment.
"You work In the different
places and people see how well
you work," Rodgers said. "When
there is a place to flU (for
employment), the employers can
call on us for jobs. What a better
way to find someone who knows
what they're doing."
Meadows said he 'wants . more
organizations to know about the
programs so there will be more
work . for the ADC and · GR
recipients. The more organlza·
!Ions thai use the program, the
more recipients work and are
given job opportunities .
Meadows said he encourages
any non·proflt' or government
organization that needs painting
done, mowing, landscaping, remodeling, or just about anything,
to contact the department of
human services.
Callla County Is oite of 30
counties In Ohio with the pro·
grams, Including Pike, Sciota,
Franklin, Athens, Morrow and
Knox counties, Childers said.
Within Gallla Co unty, there are
44 worksltes , or work crews.

POMEROY - The move of the
Meigs County Bureau of Support
from the courthou~e to the
Department of Human Services
Is nearing as the county commls·
stoners opened !)ids on Friday for
office space and computer equip·
ment for the agency.
The commissioners received
bids from Yvonne Scally fo r
office space 'on Race St. in
Middleport across from the De·
partment of Human Services
building, and from Maxine Gas·
kell for space in the upstairs of
the same building on North
Second Ave. in Middleport where
additional offices of the Depart ·
ment of Human Services are
already located.
Both bids were for two·year
contracts, with options to renew.

at $400 per month rent not
including utlltites. Scally's bid
also included an optional $550 per
month ren t which included utili·
ties. The Gaskell bid also gave
the county a 60·day cancellation
no ti ce.
Both bids were nearly the
same, the commissioners and
Human Services Director Mi·
chael Swisher commented, with
the exception that an alarm
sys tem must be Installed at the
Scally building.
Bids for computer equipment
came from Cards Inc .. Elida,
Ohio and ATEK of Canton, at
$23,810 and $45,575 respectively.
Swisher , after reviewing the
bids, reported to the commission·
ers th at both specifications t;&gt;ut
that ATEK's bid exceeded

specifications .
Swi sher is to review the bids
for office space and computers at
length and It is hoped that the
contracts will then be awarded at
th e commissioners' regular
meeting on Wednesday.
The commissioners announce\~
that their office and all other
offices and agencies under their
control will be open the regular
hours of 8:30a.m. to 4:30p.m. on
Friday following Thanksgiving.
Those offices under the commls·
stoners Include the landfill, the
plat map office and the county
infirmary . The commissioners
said they have also been advised
tha t the county treasurer's office
will be open that day, but that
they could not speak for other
(See BIDS, A4)

Meigs _Local School Board issues
statement to teachers on strike
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs are no anticipated increases in
Local School District Board of revenue over that currently
Education Friday verified its projec ted for the next two fiscal
position on a teachers strike years. The State Legislature's
which began at 12:01 a.m. on budget (state money ) is more-orless fixed until July of 1989. At
Friday , Nov. 6.
A statement issued on behalf of that time a new two year state
budget is expected to be In place.
the board reads:
stale school monies will
Whether
"The Meigs Local Teachers
Association tMLTA) Initiated a be Increased Is an unknown until
strike in the Meigs Local School that time.
"It was necessary for the
District on Nov. 6, 1987. The
strike is currently in Its sixth Board of Education to borrow
school day. The Board and some $225,000 from a Spending
A:dmlnistrallon kept schools Reserve ·to · make Its financial
open on Nov. 6 but due to a lack of commitments during the 1986-87
sufficient certificated staff to year. To complete the 1987-88
Instruct and to safely supervise school year and to meet Its
the children in attendance, it was projected expenditures without
necessary to send the children any negotiated or un.expected
home and subsequently to close cost Increases, the Board will
again have to borrow from the
the schools.
"The Board of Education and Reserve. The Board is borrowing
the MLTA bega n negotiations on to the maximum from this fund
a new contract on May 26, 1987. (actually borrowing from nex t ·
There were four negotia lion year's tax settlement),
"At the last mediation session
sessions held between that date
and August 26, 1987, at which prior to the strike, the ML TA 's
time the MLTA declared an demands were: a three year
Impasse. There were then four contract; a guaranteed $3,000
impasse meetings held .with increase in the base salary
fed eral mediators from the Fed· effective July 1, 1989; a one· time
eral Mediation a nd ConCiliation bonus of $1,000·$2,o0o for each
Service.
teacher depending upon years of
"The Board of Education was experience If no new moneys are
served a 10 day strike notice by received in the next two years;
the MLTA announcing its intent removlnt: financial reasons fo~
to strike the schools with the Reduction in Force (R!F·a layoff
procedure; and all other MLTA
strike set for November 6, 1987.
"Throughout the negolatlons proposals-demands were still to
and mediation sessions, the rna· be negotiated. The salary de·
jor issue discussed was money . mand along Is projected to cos tin
The Board 's positio n is that there excess of $1,000,000.

''The Board of Education's
proposal at the las t mediation
session was: a contract of two
years in length; current contract
language In all other articles; a
reopener on wages any time In
the two year contract if new
moneys are received along with
the right to strike over wages; an
agreement that during the 1987·
sa and the 1988·89 school year that
the Board would not apply the
Reduction In Force article In the
contract; and an agreement that
the Board would place an opera!·
ing levy . (the amount to be
deter min ed by the Board ) on the
ballot no later tha n the May
Primary Election of1988.
"The mediator returned to the
Board after presenting this proposal to the ML TA negotiating
team and staied their response
was 'No Cash· No Contract". The
MLTA went on strike on Nov. 6.
" The Board of educ ation does
not feel tha t It can in good faith
and conscience negotiate a settle·
m ent that requires a financial
commitment thai calls for mo·
neys that it does not know it will
have. · The Board wants the
distr ict to remain financially
solvent and will work to that goal.
"The Board has not met with
the MLTA since the strike. The
negotiations are under the control of the federal mediator. The
Board Is awaiting the mediator's
calllng the groups back to the
negotiating table · to seek a
solution to the crisis."

·"'
'

SCHOLARSHIP DRIVE SUfPORT - John
Smith, left, and Todd Comer, center, team
members of U.S. Marine Power In Gallipolis,
present a check to Richard Owens, vice president
for development at Rio Grande College. The

'
check represents a gift from the Brunswick
Foundation to the college's scholarship' endow·
ment campaign. U.S. Marine Power Is a
subsidiary of the Brunswick Corporation.

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