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                  <text>.LAST

WEEK
FOR OUR
MONEY

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 'PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY; OH.

BACK.
CARDS

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., NOV. 21, 1987
! '

-

'

We Will
Double
Punch
CRISPY SERVE
Your
Bacon ••••••••••••••• ~~••••
&lt;
Cards
. ....
. ~~••• $139 With Each
·1',4 por.k Lo1n
Purchase.
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS
$
•

79

9
8
Rump Roast ••••• ~... 1 ·

HOMEMADE·

Pork Sausage •• ~••• $129

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

Tur key .•...••...•....•••. 79&lt;
TOMS 16-22 AVG. LB

----

Chuck Roast ••.••• !~.

$50.00
G. Schneider, Syracuse
,, Louise Siders, Middleport

FRYER

Leg Quarters •••••••• 39&lt;

520.00

LB.

Dorothy Johnson, Racine
Fay Steinmetz, 'Pomeroy
Helen Davis, Pomeroy

CHICKEN

Drumsticks •••••••• !~ .• 89~.·.

510.00
Rosemary Randolph, Long
Bottom
Mary King, Long Bottom
Zelma Hawley, Syracuse
S. Battey, Pomeroy
Jill Davis, Hartford, WV
Ada Titus, Syracuse
VIda Davis, Pomeroy
Mary Bussell, Pomeroy
Barb Colmer, Pomeroy
Brenda Hayes, Pomeroy
Allee Knapp, New Haven
Texanna Well, Pomeroy
Cathy Wilson, Pomeroy
Pam Ghee, Racine
Irene Klein, Pomeroy

..

·Cranberries •••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

ss.oo

BROUGHTON

2°/o Milk ••••••••••••••
GAL.

FLAVORITE

Margarine •••••••••• 3/Sl
LB.

BIRDS-EYE
LITTLE DEBBIE

Cool Whip ••••:.-:•••••• 69&lt;

Snack Cakes ••••••••• 59&lt;.· LLOYD HARRISS PUMPKIN OR
GOLD MEDAL
$-119
Apple
Pie
•••••.
•
••
~.~z~.
.
8
9
(
Fl OIJ r •••••••••••••••••••••
'·

12 PAK

•

S LB. BAG

1

DOMINO SUGAR
,

S LB. BAG

$149
limit 1 Pfr Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Nov. 21, 1917 .

· . •. ''''
... •,• •·····couPON·······
••
·····couP&lt;W·······• •• ••..'.••.. cou:pm
•
DOWNY
•

•••••
••

• •••••

"

•

•••

$1 9'9

.WHITE CLOUD

•

TOILET .TISSUE
Roll
••• 4PKG.

\'

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supe&lt;morket
Offer Good Thru Nov. 21, 1917

• •

•

:• FABRIC SOFTENER
: b4 oz.
: BTL.

NO NEW CARDS
ISSUED
MONEY BACK
WINNERS

USDA CHOICE BONELESS

..
i

EXAMPLE:
S14 Purchase
S28 Punched

•

•••••••

• CRISCO SHORTENING :•
3 LB. CAN
•

•
•
••

89&lt;

:
Limit 1 Per C111tomer _
• Good Only ·At Powell's Suposmarktt
o, Offer Good Thru Nov. 21, 1987

• •••••

•

. ,•

• • • • • .• • • • Iii • • • • • • • ·• ·• ••

limit 1 Per Cuttomer
Good Only At Powell's Supermorkot
Offer Good Thru t~G•· 21, 1917

•

.-.............•.......

•-

0

Carol Oliver, Racine
Iva Upton, ReedsvUie
Paul Nease, Pomeroy
Peggy Westle, Pomeroy·
Linda Broderick, Pomeroy
Gladis Chaney, Pomeroy
1 Reba Northup, Clllton
N. Neutzllng, Middleport
Viola Shoemaker, Middleport
Lelia Baggy, Pomeroy
L. Patterson, Pomeroy
Betty Donovan, Syracuse
M. Wingett, Racine
Linda Holter, Racine
Nellie Hatfield, Dexter
Shelba Wickline, Racine
Ann Bing, Long Bottom
Sharon Folmer, Pomeroy
Gloria Fowler, Mil!dleport
P. Barrett, Rutland
K. Turley, Racine
Anna Greene, Pomeroy
Florence Musser, Pomeroy
Becky Pearson, MaSon
V. ~rown, Pomeroy
Beatrice Blake, Syracuse
Avanelle Bass, Pomeroy
Cora Woodard, Pomeroy
C. lfoudashelt, Pomeroy
S. Mattox, Pomeroy
Wanda Eblin, Pomeroy
Diana Knapp, West Columbia
Joseph Wolfe, Middleport
Joan Tiemeyer, Pomeroy
Donna Davis, Middleport
Marie Hawk, Pomeroy
Carolyn Roush, Syracuse
Joan Tuttle, Racine
Leola Wolle, Racine

Ohio Lottery

Pairings
for fifth .·
Bevo Classic
.

.

Daiiy' Number
679
Pick 4
0321
Su~r Lotto
4-7 -13-21}.32-39

Page 3

e

Vol. 37. No. t36
Copyright~d 1987

•

at y

Cloudy tonight. Low in mid
20s. Partly cloudy Friday.
,Highs in mid 30s. _

entine

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, November 19, 1987

2 Sections. 16 Pages

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

COmmissioners award office, computer bids
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Bids for office space and a computer system for
the Meigs County Bureau ·or Support were
awarded Wednesday by the Meigs Co un ty
Commissioners. Starting Dec. 1, the Bureau of
Support will become a part of the Meigs County
Department of Human Services and will no longer
be under the jurisdicltion of the Common Pleas
Court.
Before making their final decisions, the
commissioners reviewed the bids with _Michael
Swisher, human se~vlces director.
.
Two bids were received last week for office
space In Middleport. One bid was for space on
Race St. across from the main Department of
· . HumanServlces building. Theotherwasforspace
in the same building on North Second Ave. in
Middleport where additional offlcess of the
Dejlartment of Human Services are already
located.
·

Both bids were nearly the same - two-year
contracts, with options to renew, $400 per month
rent not including utilities. However, the Race St.
•building did not have an alarm system •and the
alarm system at the North -Second Ave. building
would have to be expanded to Include the
additional space.
After checking Into the costs of the alarm ·
systems, and also the installation ·or telephone
systems, Swisher reported that it would cost
approximately $2000 more to Install the services
at the Race St. building. The reason for the
difference in costs Is that new .systems must be
installed on Race St:. whereas the systems in the
North Second Ave. building would be continuations of existing systems, Swisher said.
Swisher also pointed out !hat the necessary
installations In the Race St. building could not be
guarant eed by the Dec. 1 deadline.
Based upon this Information and the recomm endation of Swisher, the commissioners accepted a

Tripp, Kostival families also honored

.

bid from Maxine Gaskell for the office space on
North Second Ave.
Two 'bids for computer equipment were also
received last week. Both bids met specifications,
Swisher said, but !he high bid exceeded
specifications. He said the reason for this Is that
the high bid of $45,575 was for a completely new
computer system, while the low bid of$23,810 was
an add ition to the department's existing computer
system. Based upon Swisher's recommendation,
the low bid from Cards Inc., of Elida, Ohio, was
accepted by the commissioners.
In related discussion, Swisher repor ted that all
necessa"y arrangements for the D.ec. ·1 move of
the support bureau should be finalized by the
deadline. He said the office, which will then be
called the Meigs Ccu)lty Child Suppo rt Enforcement Agency, will definitely open In Middleport
on the Dec. 1 date. Office hours will be 8 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. and employees will rec~ive one-half
hour for lunch and 10 paid holidays . He said the
office will remain open during the lunch hours. .

County Engineer Philip Roberts reported that
be has advised Scipio Township officials to make
changes at the intersection of Township Road 11
and State Route 689. Roberts said the Intersection
is dangerous and would necessitate some earth
moving to alleviate the problem. Roberts said the
la ndowner has offered to give the township the
right-of-way to make the changes and that the
county highway department will assist with the
project as much as possible.
Roberts also reported that the highway
department Is replacing steel and the deck on a
bridge in Lebanon Township.
Clerk Mary Hobstetter reported that Blair
Windon has been hired by the Soil Conservation
Service as district technician, replacing David
Burt who resigned the position to take a job
outside the county .
Finally, Interdepartmental transfers wer~
approved for the commissioners, the board of
elections and probate court.
-J

GOODYEAR HONOREES- Dave Doblnsky,
left, representing the Goodyear Tire and Rubber

.Co., presents the Goodyear Farmer of the Year
Award to Dale and Joanne Kautz and BID and Usa
Kautz.

Kautz families 1987
farm conservation honorees
The Dale and Bill Kautz
families were presented the
Goodyear Conservation Farm
Award at the annual Meigs Sol!
and Water Conservation District
dinner meeting held at Eastern
High SchooL
The award was presented by
Dave Dobinsky, reperesentlng
the Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Co., and is presented each year to
a farmer in the county who has
practiced good conservtlon over
the past several years.
The Alvin Tripp and Jan
Kostlval families received the
Outstanding Farm Family
awards lor conservation effort
practices on their farms over the
past two years. Both Tripp and
Kostival are enrolled In the long
term agreement program
through the agriculture stabilization and conservation Office and
(he Soil Conservation Service.
Charles Ray Hartis received
the Wildlife Conservation Award
from Larry Johnson, wildlife
biologist, representing the Ohio
Department of Natural Resour-

Rubbish
niay have
been cause ·
of blaze

ces, Division of Wildlife. Harris presented to the Southern FFA,
has been active In the food plot first place team. High scoring
and other wildlife programs over individuals were David Custer,
the past several years.
first place; Benny Dailey, seRex Shenefield was presented cond, and Kevin Grueser, third.
a plaque for 26 ye&gt;ars service as a The fourth member of the team Is
supervisor of the Meigs Soil and James l,.angwelL
Affilliate membership certifiWater Conservation District.
Shenefield has served as director cates were presented to busifor Area 6 South, of which Meigs nesses which became members
County Is a part, for approxi- · over the past year artd went to
mately 20 of those 26 years. He is Agracon, Inc .; Bank One of
retiring from the board at the end Athens NA; Bill's Tire Service; ·
of December.
Central Trust Co.; Chester AgriThomas Theiss was reelected Servlce; D. R. Rotrsh's Body
to a three year term on the board Shop; D. V. Weber Construction;
and Marvlene Beegle was Dairy Valley; Facemyer
elected to a three year term. The Lumber Co.; Farmers Bank and
terms begin Jan. 1, 1988.
Savings Co.; Ferrellgas; G. and
Soil judging awards were pres- J. Auto Parts; Gibson Beauty
ented to Meigs Future Farmers Shop; Greenup Reclamation;
of America for being the first Harris Farm and Greenhouse;
place team in the agriculture Home National Bank; J. D.
judging contest. High individuals Drilling Co.; Jaymar Coal Co.;
receiving cash awards were Keefers Service Center; MGM
Frank Parker, first place; Roger Farm City; Montgomery Trailer
Fraley, second, and Bill Scarbo- Sales; Ohio Pallet Co.; Peoples
rough, third, The fourth member Bank; Quality Print Shop; South·
of the team Is Jeff Parker. In the ern Ohio Coal Co., and 3-R
urban contest, a trophy was Industries .

Meigs Local teache~s fringe
benefits cancelled tomorrow
Fringe benefits of Meigs Loc.al
School District te ac hers were
cancelled as of tomorrow , Frl- .
day, Nov. 20, when the district's
board of education met In recessed sessio n Wednesday night.
Negotiations between the
teachers, whO went on strike
Nov. 6, and the board of education were resumed at 4 p.m.
Wednesday with Federal Mediator Joe Crowe and continued until
7:45p.m.
·
:The negotiation session, the

fir st since the strike began, did At the present time the board is
not bring an end to the strike, but paying $202.29 per month In
at least another session between · insurance costs, 100 percent, for
the two groups was set for 1 p.m. each teacher with the family
next Tuesday. Meantime, Crowe Insurance plan. It was repo~ted
asked both groups to consider not this morning that teachers will
releasing any public statements have the opportunity to continue
on the strike at this time.
thfse fringe benefits at their own
The board then met lor Its expense.
recessed session taking the ac·
As an indication of Increasing
tion to cancel the fringe benefits costs in the district, Asst. Supt.
of teachers which Includes lnsu· James Carpenter said that the
ranees- hos pitalization, dental, distric t has been notified that
optical, major medical and life.
(Continued on Page 9)

LONDON (UPI) - A fire
turned a bustling subway station
50 feet below ground into an
inferno of heat and blinding
smoke, killing at least 30 people,
and authorities said today the
blaze spread suspiciously fast.
The fire broke out Wednesday
A "cleara nce sale" was autho- se niors. The resignation of Patri- teac her at Tuppers Plains for a
night In a wooden escalator at
rized Wednesday night when the cia Parker as a subslltute leave without pay arrangement
King's Cross "underground" sta:
Eastern I,.ocal School District teacher was accepted and because of a. family medical
tion. London's busiest, and
Board of Education met In Theresa Marcinko was named a problem was approved. The
caused a s tampede among thouregular session .
substitute cook for the rest of the board set Monday, r:iec. 14, at 7
sands of commuters, survivors
The board authorized Supt. Dr. current sc hool year.
p.m. for a special meeting to
said. The beat was so Intense it
Dan Apiing to hold the clearance
Approval was give n to an work on the 1988-89 budget and
cracked concrete.
sa le to dispose of outdated and no appropriation modification Monday, Dec. 21. 7 p.m. lor the
Police and fire officials gave
longer useful textbooks and transferlng $2,000 from library . next regulai· meeting: Both sesconflicting casualty figures but
equipment that. due to its condi- books and materials to regular sions will be held at the high
Scotland Yard said today it .,
tion, age and state of non - instruction. supplies . The re- sc hool.
OUTSTANDING FARM FAMILY- Rodney Chevalier, Meigs
appeared the toll was 30dead and
repairability, is of no use to the vised Chapter II application for
The board met In executive
SWCD supervisor, left, presents the Outstanding Farm Family
21 Injured.
which
there
is
no
board
and
for
year
waqs
the
current
school
session
to di scuss financial mat Award to Jan Kosllval. Alvin Tripp also received the same award.
"We are rat her mystified at
longer any storage space accepted and approved.
ters
relative
to the 1988-89 budget
th e moment about why at the end
available.
A
special'
exception
to
Mrs.
and
to
hear
a
grievance filed bv
of the rush hour with lots of a brlc!lng early today .
Some witnesses described the
The board set Sunday, May 29, Cind y Linton, kindergarten OAPSE Chapter 448.
.
people about. a relatively small
One' of the first theories put star.t of the fire as a "flash" and
at 6:30p.m. for the graduation of
fire ca n accelerare and cause forward about the cause of the . survivor Andrew Lee spoke of a
suc h horrendous damage and
fire was that it began in rubbish " sheet of flame."
injuries In such a short space of accumulated under the esca la·
The fire gutted the escalator.
time," divisional fire officer Phil tor. But authorities later dis- believed to date back to World
Lloyd said today.
counted it .
The Ohio Departp-~ent of Natu- ·constitution.
Local ' DAR chapters may set
War II, a nearby ticket office and
Fire Department officials said
The Ohio Nurseryman's Asso- up ceremonies for their respec Lloyd said Investigators had most of the concourse for the raJ ResourcE's and the Daughters
they were not ruling out any
methods "to Identify acceler- underground station. Bodies of the American Revolution, In elation bas agreed to donate two tive counties. and the Ohio Board
possible cause pending compleants, explosives or any other we~e found scattered under- conjunction and cooperation with trees per county lor each county of Education Is · also being contion of their investigation.
terrorist or fire accelerants that grob nd In train tunnels and in the the Northwest Ordinance and In the state. Although no specific tacted for ass istance in involving
One of the dead was a firefigh- may have been used by person or concourse.
United State Bicentennial Com- tree variety was mentioned In the yo uth in t)le dedication
ter and two more were among the
perso11s u'nknown."
,.
mission,
are planning a state- letter, all trees are to be programs,
"It was a devastating scene,"
seriously injured when some
Pollee first put the death toll at firefighter Brian Cla r k said.
wide
program
to honor the U.S. approximately six feet htgh and
Plaques will be made availa ·
firefighters raced Into the 32 and said at least 33 others were
Constituton In each of Ohio's 88 either balled in burlap or In a ble, at no cost. ·to eac h county, to
The !jre broke out on tile
smoke-fill ed tunnels to rescue !hissing. But after searching escalator leading up from the
.
counties . The Meigs County container.
Signify that the county· participeople without waiting for the subway tunnels four times , they popular Piccadilly Line. which
Commissioners were apprised
The 1rees will be transporte'd to pated In "Plant a Living
arrival of their oxygen tanks at
said 30 people were killed and all serves Piccadilly Circus.
Wednesday, by letter, of the the Civilian Conservation Camps Legacy ."
the station on London's north side others were accounted for. PoThe first passengers on the
program, called "Plant a Living In the state, the closest to Meigs
Counties will be asked to select
irl the world's oldest subway
lice said as many as 100 people escalator did not know about the
Legacy." The Ohio program Is - ' County being Zaleski, for pick up where the trees should be planted
system.
were treated at the scene for · fire untll ' th~ smoke and flames
modeled after the national · by county representatives. The and where the plaques should be
"Everybody who went down
smoke inhalation .
broke through the steps at their · "Plant a Living Legacy" pro- · trees ·are to be obtained in early placed.
that first flight of steps went into
Queen Elizabeth II said she feet.
gram which encourages Amerl· ' April and planting is being
The ~onimissioners said they
,
.
.
the unknown," Assistant Chief was "deeply shocked" by the
"The fire started and It ap- cans to plant trees In honor of the . recommended during Arbor look forward to participating In
Fire Officer Joe Kennedy said In
fire.
Conlinued on page 9
the program .
I)lcentenniai of the U.S. WeeK, April 25·29, 1988.

Board authorizes 'clearance sale'

Meigs to participate iri-- program

�Commentary
.

The Daily- Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA
I

~~

rs: m~

r"'T"'l......'--r-1 F""T""e!dt ~

'q:Jv
ROBERT L. WINGE'M'
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A ~ER of Tbe A...oclated Pres~, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long, All letters are subjed to editing and must be signed with
name, address ~nd telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters should be in good taste, addressing issues, not personali·

lies.

.Greath American Smokeout:
-fun, horseplay, and fidgets
By PATRICIA McCORMACK
UPI Senior Editor
. NEW YORK (UP!) -Fun and horseplay, laced with straight talk
about hea lth, was aimed yesterday at recruiting millions of smokers
. for a 24-hour nicotine fas11oda y, th~ Amencan Cancer Soc1ety's 11th
_Great American Smokeout day.
Led by the cast of the body-swaying, foot-1humping, ear-splitting
rock musical "Starlight Express," other entertainers and Mr. Potato
Head, the biggest-ever Smokeoff kick -off was staged in a revival
almosphere in a Broadway Theatre.
It was rung in literally by Terry Mayer, designer of bell jewelry and
president of the Metropolitan f)ell Association, who pealed a giant
bell .
It featured the premiere of an original Smokeout song, "Don't Let
Your Life Go Up in Smoke," by Bernie Wayne, composer of "Blue
Velvet" and "There She She Goes, Miss America."
Manlyn Sokol crooned it to the costumed cast of "Stariigh1
Express," belting out- "Live it up now! Stop now! You don't need
one more puff! Stop Now! And say you've had enough! Take a bow!
Stop now! Let's go for broke! Don't let your life go up m s moke!''
Sokol aimed the melodious lyrics at the actress who plays the role of
"Ashley, Ihe Smoking Car" in the show. At the end of the serenade,
"Ashley, Ihe Smoking, Car," turned the "Smoking &lt;;ar" sign she
wears in Ihe musical around and declared herself and the "Starlight
Express Smoke-free!"
·
In 'hospitals around the country, thousands of newborns were given
ACS T·shirts printed with "I'm a Born Nonsmoker" and the
American Cancer Sociely logo.
Dr. Harmon J . Eyre, ACS president, said:
"ll's never too soon 1o begin thinking about gooa health. We hope
the shirts will send the message to parents and other ad ults, so that
those who smoke will consider quitting.
"Smokeout is a highly successful event thai focuses on the benefils
of quitting 1n a friendly, peaceful and non-threatening way, without
placing heavy emphasis on the health hazards of smoking."
Irving Rimer, vice president of the ACS, said 23 million joined the
Smokeout last year and 20 million are expected !his time around
because there are fewer smokers this year - 50 million versus 54
million last year
The Tobacco Institute reports Americans smoked 584 bllilon
clgareltes last year, down 10 billion from 1985. Ten years agci,
Americans puffed 613.5 billion weeds. Between 1976 and 1981,
consumption advanced, · peaking a1 640 billion in '81. Between thai
year and 1986, consumption dropped 64 biltion cigarettes.
: The ACS says smo king causes the deaths of 320,000 people in the
l!J nited Slates annually and cos ls between $38 and $95 billion in heal1h
care costs. lost productivity, cleaning and other expenses.
Trends show 1hat the number of Americans who smoke has
declined from more than 40 percent in the 1960s to about 32 percent
rnday.
: Last yea r , Americans spent $33.7 billion on tobacco products ~1.8 billion on cigareltes and the remainder for snuff, cigars, pipe
1Dbacco, chewing 1obacco and roll-your-own tobacco.

~etailers

optimistic

: .}'ie1a1 1ers across Ohio are optimistic about consumer spending
&lt;tu ring the Christmas season despite 1he recent plunge in 1he stock
market.
John C. Maha ney Jr .. presiden t of 1he Ohio Council of Retail
Merchants, said Tuesday a recent survey of council members
indicates th ey are ex pectine; moderate sales increases during the
holida y season.
• "Our members are going mto the Important holid ay season
confident Ihal the stock market decline will have a minimal impact on
&lt;$nsumption," Mahaney sa id
• The survey of the council's l,!W5 members showed they have
·~inventorl~s equal 10 or above last year and that 1he number of
part ·tlme workers they hired will equal or exceed the exira personnel
added in 1986
Generally, reta ilers believe a strong economic foundation
C!Jntinues to prov1dc a healthy backdrop for consumer confidence m
tile fourth quarter of this year a nd into 1988, the retailers said.
:Disposable personal income gains from accelerated wages, higher
it)terest income and the full impact of lax cuts should create a
tavorable environmen1 for· customers, they said.
: Although th e sales of durable goods are expected to be down,
apparel sa les are expected 10 increase, retailers said.
: "Given the relative strength of the nation's economy, we have
eyery reason to believe Ihat. wilh a stabilizing of financial markets,
i:pnsumer co nfidence will be maintained through the Chris tma s
SEason, .. said Howard Goldfeder, chairman of the Cincinnati-based
r..edeqted Department Stores.

ffoday in history
•,
By Uni ted Press International
; Today is Thursday, Nov. 19, the 323rd day of 1987 with 42 to follow .
• The moon is wanmg, moving toward its new phase.
: The morning stars a·re Mercury and Mars.
:· The evening stars are Ve nus . Jupiler and Saturn.
; Those born on this dale are und er the s1gn of Scorp10. They include
English King Charles l in 1600, frontier military leader George
Rogers Clark in 1752; James Abram Garfi eld, 20th president or the
J,Jnlled States, in 1831: relig ious revivalist Billy Sunday in 1862;
e)&lt;plorer Hiram Bingham, discoverer of the Inca city of Machu
~lcchu. in 1875; actor Clifton Webb in 1896; bandleader Tommy
porsey in 1905; Indian Prime Mimster Indira Gandhi In 1917;
pntertainer Dick Cavett in 1936 (age 51 l, and actress J odie Foster In
1962 (age ,25l .
:. On !his date in history:
· In 1863, Preslden1 Abraham L!ncoln delivered the Ge lt ysb urg
Address on a Civil War battlefield in Pennsylvania.
.: In 1919, theSenalerejected 1heTrca1yofVersa illes drawQupbythe
Paris peace conference at the e nd of World War I.
• 'In 1977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat began a historic visit to
Israeli-occupied Jerusalem in pursuit of Arab-Israeli peace.
: In 1985, a Houston jury ruled Texaco must pay $10.5 billion dollars,
tM largest damage award in U.S. history, to Pennzoll Co. for
Texaco's 1984 acquisition of Ge1ty Oil Compa ny. Texaco has appealed
(he ruling to the Supreme Court.
~

--

...

Thursday, November 19, 1987

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, November 19, 1987

•

VOiCe of America ___._B.:__y=la~~=k_A_n_·d_e_rs_on_a_nd_Jo_s.:__ep.:__h_Sp_e_a~r.

e.m

wo~~~ Rll!:l'

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-..oRn-&lt; {Ti&gt;P- ~lEcSI&lt;A......._

HULt.\E II· !3

RIO GRANDE - The fifth
Bevo Francis Classic will be held
thts· weekend at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
Women's games will be played
In the afternoon and men's
games In Ihe evening, according
to college official§.
Thomas More College of Cres1·
view Hills, Ky ., will face Waynes·
burg (Pa.) College in 1he first
men'sgame at 7 p.m. Friday . Rio
Grande is paired with Spring
Arbor (Mich.) College at 9 p.m .
The winners of those two
contests will pair off in a
championship game at 9 p.m.
Saturday. The ioser.s enter the

picketing to protest what it
be made involving personnel in
c laimed were "widespread
order to get Radio Marti on the
abuse and harassment," said it
air and running." But the report
lost before the labor board
said no evidence was found to
because employees were too
support the union' s charges of
intimidated to testify.
harassment, intimidation and
Perhaps the most explosive
sexual discr imination.
The Investigation was autho- part of the controversy was the
rized after 19 VOA employees · union's charge that some male
complained a year ago about VOA employees who were recep"administrative Irregularities. "
tive to the homosexual overtures
The employees' petition asking of a supervisor were rewarded
for an lnvestlgatlop did not with favors and promotions,
include specifics; union officials while those who resisted the
told us that ·more -ef11ployees supervisor's advances got nega·
would have signed it if not for tive job evaluations. The union
management lntimldatlon.
also charged that women em·
Last August, the Federal La- ployees were not promoted bebor Relations Authority ruled cause !hey didn't interest the
that the union's charges of supervisor in question. Thr union
intimidation were unfounded.
identified the supervisor and
The union, which had been submitted two affidavits support·
ing its allegations .
Carlson, the VOA director,
called the charges false and "the
lowest form of character assassl·
nation." Management said that
an employee who signed the
affidavit alleging sexual disc rim·
ination was fired because of
inadequate job performance that
predat'ed the alleged sexual
overture by the supervisor.
VOA marw.gement was em bar·
rassed last ' June by the revel a·
tion •that two supervisors were
conducting a private gold-selling
business on government time,
using VOA phones for overseas
calls. The matter Is under
investigation by the Justice
Department.
Other union-management
bones of contention include a
Radio Marti interview with Pres·
!dent Reagan using ques_llons
and answers written by -the
National Security Council staff;
a controversy over a Radio Marti
reporter who asked the president
a question at a news conference;
required testing of employees for
AIDS; and a $1.3 billion modernization program that Is far behind
schedule and millions of dollars
over budget.

C~ncress

got both . Four years later he
unveiled his "morning in America" theme, which is to say he ran·
on nothing in particular, and his
record of achievement stalled.
Most candidates this time are
serv in g up a goulash of generali·
1les and evas.lons on the major
economic issue of the day.
Democrats don't wan1 to cut
spe nding - with the exception of
the Pentagon- but only former
Gov. Bruce Babbitt admits that
he and his colleagues will be
forced to raise taxes lftheydon't.
Republican Rep. Jack Kemp
says we can trim the deficit
through growth alone, as 1f
anyone were against the 1dea. He
seems·even less interested in the
deficit than the Democrats are.
The programs of Dole and Vice
President George Bush are no
mor~ decipherable.
The two

BEREA Ohio (UPI) _ The
Cleveland ' Browns may have
been busier off the field Wednesday than they were during the
usualy prolonged midweek
workout.
,
on Wednesday, the Browns'
released veteran punter Jeff
Gossett and pinned their hopes
for the rest of the season on
rookie George Winslow.
Coach Marty Schottenheimer
also announced that five-year
defensive end Reggie Camp will
miss at least the next four games
after undergoing arthroscopic
surgery on his left knee.
Sam Clancy wlll fill Camp's
role at left defensive end and

'

Berry's World

and Jim Kearns (6-1) as gua rds,
with Brian Watkin~ 15·10) to
come off the bench first. Forwards will be Ron Riltinger (6-6)
and Mike Tidwell (6·3), and
probable center will either be
Doug Fogt (6-7) or Rob Jackson
(6·6 ). Spring Arbor's probable
lineup includes guards Trent
Allen 15-9) and Larry DeSim·
plare (6·0), forwards Bryan
Snyder (6·2) and Scott Cain (6·3).
Center will probably be Dave
Gardella (6-7).
Women's Competition
In the women's competition,
Carson Newman College of Jefferson City, Tenn .. will face West

Virgmia State at 2 p.m . Friday .
The Rio Grande Redwomen
confron t Georgian Co uri of Lake·
wood, N.J., at 4 p.m. T~ewinners
will play each other at 4 p.m .
Saturday and the consolation
game is set for 2 p.m .
On Friday. Carson Newman is
expected to star! Karen Cook
15·4) as point guard, Vickie
Miller (5-7) as shooting guard,
Corean Wells (5·8) as sma ll
forward, Lynnette Hayden (5·10)
as power forward and Traci
Inman (6-0) as center. West
Virginia State's probable starters are point guard Sarah

guard, Carol Walters (5·6) as
small forward, Tabitha Romans
(5·10) as power forward and
Kristen Andersen (6·0) at the
post.
A highlight oft he classic will be
the presentation of awards on
Saturday to this year's Rio
Grar.de Hall of Fame inductees
- Robert Lawson (class of 1972)
and Perri Martin (1981). The
presentation will be made at 7
p.m .. prior to the men 's consolation game.
Admission is $3 lor the public
and $1 for students. Rio Grande
Booster passes wlll be honored .

Donnahoe (5-6!, shooting guard
Maria Ba11ie (5-9), small forward Lane Painter (5·9), power
forwa rd Regina Marshall 15·9)
and Willie Mae Thomas (5·9) at
the post.
The Redwomen's probable
starters for Friday include Beth
Coil (5-6) as point guard, Renee
Halley (5·5) as shoot ing guard,
Lea Ann Mullins 15·7) as small
forward, Holly Haslings (5-9) as
power forward and Angela Pack·
ard (5-8) as center. Georgian
Courrs lineup includes Eileen
Baynes (5-5) as pomt guard,
Linda Brophy (5·8) as shooting

Thundll,Y'II GIUllefl

NATIONAL HOCKE\' LEAGUE
Wlde!i Conferencto
Pal li ck Dlvl'llon
W L T Pt!i. &lt;iF GA
Nl' lslllnd('U 13 5 I 2"1
113 59
Nl'!w Jrrsey
II 5 Z t4
66 55
WuhlnJhm
8 9 I 17
$11 ,,2
l"lttsburgh
i 9 3 17
Gi 72

NY

Ran~~:tn

13

73

Ill

Phlladt&gt;lphl•
5 12 ~ 13
/\dams Dlvlslon

5 II

l

!i2

79

Montreal

I!

5

5

29

~2

61

BO!ilon
Bul.. lo
Quebct'
Hartford

II
II

7 'i!
K 4

24
20

77
"1'1

9

~

I

19

7~

70
fl3
69

8

7

4

16

M

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Cam~ll

('hica.co
Detroit

f'onlef't'nee
Norr!H Dlv\11km
911:t2080110

Toronto
Minne.!lllta
St. LoWs

lli:tiiiS557
9 9 0 Ill
19 Tl
6 10 3 15
12 ,,

6 Ul I 13
Smythe DI\\Jdon
Edmnnton
II 6 '! t4
C~ll(ary
9 R 2 'Ztl
WhUJI~k

9

M I

19

Vdeouwr
IA11 An111ele!l

6 10 2 14
5 II 2 12
Wednesday'M Re11ult11
Montreld 5, NY lt~lnnders 2
H.artlord 9, Buflalo I
&amp;. L,uaJ ~ t. Toronto 3
_
Ne"

Ill

115

110

lA

IW

Ill

62

64

li
59

78
83

,a,.,...,.,. 4, Phllll.delphla3

CIIIC'IllfO 5, Minnesota 2
Bo!Jt(ln 4, Wlnnlpejt 3

Edmonton 4, Quehrc 1
Thunod1ty'11 (iamf'll
Ln11 AnKelett at Pblladrlphlu. i: 35 p.m.

J.holf'(llt, '2::l5p.m
NV Ranger!&gt; at Mlnnesol.ll, K. ~ p.m .

\'MCOU\It'flll

TorMtfl at St. Louis, K: 35 p.m .
('a iK~&amp;ry, 9. :IG p m

Quebec at

Friday's Gam!'M
W11!1hlnrtea ut Buflalo. nla:ht
O.k'a11o 11.1 New ,Jer~~ey, night
N¥ H anA:t' fM at Wlnnlpi!K, nljlli:ht . ~
PltL'lhurJ~:hat Edmonlvn, niJI,hl ......

NBA results
NAT IONAl. RASKETBA.LL LEAGUE
\\'ediM'!td ay's ReMulls

New Vork at New .Jer~~ey, 1':30 p m
Houston al Cleveland, 7:31p.m.
Milwaukee at Sacramento, 10:30 p.m.
Frklay'sGamCM
llo!llon at Philadelphia, night
• fOold.-nState ill Detmlt, nl,lbl
t\llanta al Chicago, night
San t\ntonlo at De n\er, ntxht
Ill diana at lltah, niKht
L.4 Cllpptm; .a Phoenix, •lghl
Dalla.!! at LA Laker-. Dllfht
Washln«ton at Portland , nlghl
Milwaukef' at Se1dlle, nll(ht

with the Browns in 1983.
Schottenheimer said wide re ceiver Clarence Weathers·would
be the backup punter.
, Winslow, 24, has punted just
three times in two · games,
averaging 39.7 yards with two
touchbacks and one punt inside
the opponent's 20-yard line.
"I feel George can help us be
better," said Schottenheimer .
"George has emerged as the
winner in the competition, and
I'm comfortable with this."
Winslow, a Vlilanova product,
went on injured reserve with

·

Camp, a five-year veteran, had
an arthrogram Tuesday and the
dye i9St revealed a partial
cartilage tear in his left kne!!.
The arthroscope repaired the
lear and also smoothed out some
rough surfaces, sal.d Brow.ns
spokeswoman Francine Lubera.
Dressel, a Stanford product,
was Houston's third-round pick
in 1983 and caught 75 passes for
711 yards and seven touchdowns
in three years. He was traded ~o
Washington and cut this past
summer before playing in three
replacement games with San
Francisco.

PARTS

Ba!iehall

Baltlmorr - Sl pd c..tc:her Jamie
Nl'I!Wn lv 1.:oatrad with Roc~r of lht•

lnl~rnatlonal

back spasms following the pre·
season, but now is healthy .
"I feel good," he said. "My
back is bothering me at all. I'm
glad I'm being given the chance
to prove what I can do.
"This has been a tough lime for
both Jeff and myself. I know
sitting out Ihe last two games has
been difficult for him ."
The Browns now have three
rookies and one vetera~ on the!r
placement team. Wmsiow 1s
jojned by kicker Jeff Jaeger and
long-snapper Frank Winters
while backup quarterback Gary
Danielson is the holder.

USE.LITY

Transactions
Leap. (AAI\J. :

Clt•veland - Signed /llaraa:er Doc
Edwards te one-year contract .
Oakland Added lnUekler Lane~
Blankenllhlp and pttc:hen Kirk McDonald , .kH Shaver, Wally Wtiltellunl and
R"l!IM! Lambert to _.man roster

THERE'S NO

Basketball

Mn".. ukee - Traded forward ChiU'le!i
Davl&lt;l to San i\ntonln for forward l.arr)'
KrysUcowlak.

Collexe
East CArolina - Athletic Director Ken
Karr rel!llttned
Fnothllll
Clf'velud - Rele~t~red punter ,Je ll
GontU; pla.ced d~fenlih~ end Reule
(amp on Injured l'eflerve: signed tight
~nd Olrkl Drcue l
Kan!IIU Cily- Placed defenslvl' ta c~
Pel!' Koch ud lh•eb~~.Cker KenM cAIIder
on InJured re!ll'ne: siA:ned def!!rutiVl'
linemen Jell Tup~r and Ray Woodard .
M1nnHota -

TO OUR

SELECTION

Sl(Md A:UIIniA Chrb

Fook' and Mldaael Dai'N'U.,., •nd IIDI'·
backer S~&amp;m Anno; placfll con~ertuwk
Rentt" &amp;Uand on lnJ•red ruerw;
rele~~~~ed a:uard Wayne Jones.

Calendar.
Golf
Tht World Clip of Golf

8oMICin 111, New \:'ark 109 (!lOT)

Gym.,..stlcs
Tok)o- Chunlchl Cup

O.IU.(D IU, \htUIIJ!Itoa ll~
Atlunla t5, Gc.ldl'n stall' 9!
Phlladf'lphla 119. Detroit 109
DallM 97, LA l ' llp~r M 11'2

JohanM'!Ibar,-. So\Kh Alrka- $315,001
South African Open
NIP" Vorl!; - $1 mllllorl Vlrtlnla Sllmr.~

Indi ana 111, lh'n\'r.r 106

route to a 27-24 victory over
Cleveland on Nov. 1.
"(Gossett's release) is really
the product of our confidence in
George," said Schottenheimer.
·'I think Jeff Gossett is a quality
kicker despite what some people
in this community would think.
and I'm sure he'll be kicking Jn
the NFL in a very short time."
Gossett, an Eastern Illinois
product, was signed as a free
agent in 1985 after two years in
the U.S. Football League with
Chicago and Portland. He played
for Kansas City in 1981-82 and

·

·wAY

Phoenb: at, VIall 8t
Seattle IZfl, Portland 114

NHL results

Well, if du Pont represents
kookery, perhaps we should ail
retire to an asylum . Anyone who
1hlnks America can solve its.
long-term budgetary problems
without tackllng entitlements, ·
from Social Security toagricultu·
ral subsidies, is ensconced in a
reatlty-proof cocoon.
It may be' true, admittedly,
!hat most Americans don't yet
want to bite the bu?getary bullet.
Over the years , a majority has
consistently told pollsters they
oppose both higher taxes and
cuts in federal programs. Yet
that's where leadership is supposed to assert itself. .
Someone other than du Pont
who for ali his impressive spec!:
flcity seems to be going nowhere
in the Repubtlcan field, needs to
come forward and leiJ Amerl·
cans the trut h about the deficit .

dangerlng fish and wildlife.
House officials have warned that
When the measure reached the President Reagan Js likely to
House floor, challenges to the veto almost any blti that
Interior Commitlee's illegal emerges.
procedure were summarily diS·
Thus, It's possible that much of
missed while legislators added the legislators' mischief will be
even more wa1er and power · ·neutrallzed - but they stili
projects to the biii.
apparently don't understand the
A House-Senate conference logical rationale for the bureau's
committee now must reconcile reorganization: "Publlc values
the differences between the two have changed over the years."
disparale bills - and White

Darryl Sims will be activated for
next Sunday's visit Houston, but
another player will be added by
Ihe weekend.
.
Cleveland also signed freeagent tight e nd Chris Dressel, a
five 'year veteran who has played
with Houston and San Francisco.
Gossett, 30, a six-year veteran,
was Cleveland's regular punter
the last two seasons until losing
his job to Winslow two weeks ago.
Gossett averaged 40.5 yards in 19
punts, but was criticized for his
erratic efforts.
Ironically , Gossett's last punt
gave San Diego good field posi·
lion and the Chargers were able
to tied the game in regulation en

Scoreboard ...

fights for pork._______R_ob_er_t~_a_lte_rs

The legislation origi nated in
DENVER (NEAl -Although
Ihe Interior Department is phas- the Senate, where it was a thinly
ing ou1 ils construction of extrav- disguised private relief bill sponagant wa1er projects, politicians sored by North Dakota's two
aren't about stop promoting senators 10 allow I he community
public works boondoggles that of Dickinson, N.D ., todefaul1 on a
pliice more emphasis on plumb- legitimale debt.
ing than policy.
The measure, as passed by the
The department's Bureau of Se nate, waived repayment of
Reclamation announced Ias1
more than $1 mlilion that Dickln·
month 1ha1 i1 plans to virtually
son owed the Bureau of Reclamaabando n the pr.imary mission of tion to compensate for cos1
its flrs1 85 years - irrigating 1he overruns associated with a mu·
arid West by constructing dam s,
niclpal water supply project bullt
aqueducts, canals and olher
by the agency.
massive pubtlc works projects.
In the House, interior commitln~ tead , 1he bureau will con·
tee rules require that a majority
cenlrate on assuring water qual- of its 41 members be presen1
ity, promoling waler conserva- when it conducts any official
tion and advancing other
business- but only eight were Jr,
environm ental causes - a dra s- attendance on the day the Senate
tic change for an agency that
bill was considered-.
harnessed the Colorado, Colum·
Without a quorum and wlthou1
bi a, Missoun and other rivers
any hear ings, the committee
1hroughout 1he West.
proceeded to load the Senate bill
(The bureau will conclude wilh members' favorite projects.
work on Ihe two maj or initiatives Two examples:
no1 scheduled to be finished untll
- An addition to the Oroville
well into the 1990s, the Central Tonasket lrrlgat ion Project in
Arizona Pfo]ec t and the Central Washington state. The bureau
Utah Project. )
eariler add!'d pumps to a gravily·
As part of Its far -reaching fed system of irrigation canals,
reorganization, the agency plans only to discover that river silt left
1o move its headquarters from the pumps inoperable.
Wa s hington, D.C. to Denver. AI
The $17 million needed to
the same time, Ihe bureau's slaff remedy the problem will bring
of 8,000 will be slashed to 4,000.
the total cost of the project 10$88
Belatedly acknowledging the million.
end of an era in which the
- A 25-year ex tension of th e
Hoover, Grand Cou lee, Shasta contract governing the bureau's
and other huge dams were buill, Grand Valley Reclamaiion ProIhe bureau says it now recognizes jeCt in Colorado, perpetuating a
that such projects "are becom- dubious arrangement between
ing increasingly dl!flcul1 to jus· two irrigatio n districts and the
tlfy from an economic, budge- Pubtlc Service Company of Colotar y and environmental rado, a privately owned ullllty.
pers pec! ive.," But politicians are
The reclamation project di·
far more resista nt 1o rellnqulsh- verts more than 770,000 acre-feet
lng their "pork barrel" preroga· ' of water from the Colorado River
tives, as illustrated by the every year to irrigate crops. As a
odyssey of the Water and Power result, a 15-miie s tretch of the
Au1horiza1lon Ac1 of 1987.
river dries up periodically, en-

..

Republlcan's simply flaunt their
experience in 1he evident belief
that Americans have wearied of
specific promises and yearn to
turn the country over to a
competent manager.
If there's an exception to this
dreary roil caiJ, it's form er Gov.
Pierre "Pete" du Pont. Seem·
ingly alone among the candl·
dates, he prescribes botd action.
Two examples: He'd phase out
commodity price supports over
five years ($26 biiliq,n insavings )
and lac!' up to the unsustainable
burden that Baby Boomers eventually wlil place on Social Secur·
ity, supple-menting the system
with a variant of the Indlviduat
Retirement Account'.
Unfortunately, all ,clu Pont has
earned for his candor and vision
is a 2 percent rating in the polls
and brutal dismissal as a kook by
The Washington Post .

consolation round a1 7 p.m.
Probable starters for Thomas
More In Friday's game are Dan
Aibrink 16·2) and Tim Hardin
(6·0) as guards, with Greg
Batsehe (6·1) and Steve Butcher
(6·5) serving as forwards. Center
will be Brian Clapp (6-41. For
Waynesburg, the probable starters are guards kevin Lee (5-11)
and Shawn McCallister (5-10),
forwards Harold Hamlin (6· 7)
and Darrin Walls (6·3) and,
c11her Rob Montgomery {6·4) or
Ron Moore (6-3) as cent!'r.
Rio Grande is expected Friday
to field Anthony Raymore 15-11)

Browns release veteran punter Jack Gossett; Camp out

Only -d u Pont details ide,_aa...z.S___Vt_·nc_en_t_ca_rr~oll
If a person can be judged by the
quallty of his enemies, how are
weEo
ju ge political leaders who
ref
to Irritate anyone at all?
arne an interest group thai
Sen. Bob Dole, the recently
announced presidential contender, has deliberately risked
offending in promising to bal·
ance the federal budget. Now do
the same for the ot h er
candidales
If these men won't tell Amerl·
cans what they're going to do
when !hey reach the White
House, how can they except to
muster support for dlfficul1 dec!·
sions afterward? The gridlock
afflict ing high- level Washington
is not likely to evaporate with an
adminlslrat ion led by one of
1hese co ntenders.
President Reagan ran his 1980
campaign on 1he issues of a
defen se buildup and lax cuts. He

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

Announce pairings for fifth annual Bevo Francis Classic

.

WASHINGTON- The Voice of "internal VOA report on alleged
America tells the wbrld what's irregularities at Radio Marti, the
going o.n In the United Stales, but station that is beamed at Cuba.
the radio network's management The report was generally laud a·
and employees can't agree on tory of VOA management. but
has been labeled by the union as
what's going on inside VOA.
Faced with this standoff, the "a coverup."
The internal VOA report last
House Foreign Affairs s ubcommittee that supervises VOA May praised the agency's man·
brought in an umpire: the agement and staff for getting
General Accounting Office. It Radio Marti In operation so
has beep ordered to investigate quickly after 1t was authorized by
VOA management practices and Co ngress, but said that more
employees' grievances.
attention should be paid to
Our reporter Gary Clouser personnel matters. The report
reviewed the mutual recrimina- described Radio Marti as a
tions with VOA Director Richard "broadcasting miracle" for be·
Carlson and Norman Painter, lng on the air wilh 14 ~ hours of
president of the American Feder· programming only 18 months
allan of Governmental Em· after lts creation.
ployees loc al at the agency.
The internal report said that
As it happens, the GAO inves tl· "considerable sacrifices had to
gat ion comes on the heels of an

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tennl!l

&lt;:hampion5hips

Beitgals' Do~glas
used to anonymity
i

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Offensive linemen are. by nature, an
anonymous Jot, making David
Douglas of the Bengals perhaps
one of the least-k nown players in
Ihe league.
Part of th e reason for that is his
versatility; · it's hard to keep
track of just where he is playing.
Douglas is Us ted as a tackle on
the Bengals roster, but he plays
more at guard, and he has
started a1 center lor the injured
Dave Rimington the last three
games. He will be there again
Sunday wh&lt;:n 1he Bengals host
the Pltlsburgh Steelers .

Tells Your Pas~ Present &amp; Future.
Gives Advice On All Affaire Of UfeSuch As Love, Marriage &amp; Buainess. All
Readings Confldential. ,
Ctjl Ad And Save $5. Off Any Palm or
Card Reading.
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Call 675· 7889

2217

J.ac~'on

AYe

Po.nt

Plf~·.1n1,

.. ·:·:·:-:.:
...
....
..............

. . .. . .

WV

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 14.. 0001
A I)Jylslon of Multimedia, In c.
PubllshNI C'\l£'f\' afternoon . Monday
th rough F'r lda y , 11) Court S!.. Po-

qz.·.~
I/ C

~ !U7 !IY NEA, In~

"If the parents become too violent, please
stop the game, OK!?"

.•
•,

"I've done some things well,
and I've done·some things badly"
the 6-foot4, 280-pound Douglas
said. "! 'm g lad I got Ihe opportunity 1o play, but I'm not glad
Dave got hurt. As soon as he
comes back. I'll be in a backup
role again , I'm sure. T hat's no
problem ."
But it's obvious Douglas has
impressed line coach Jim
McNally w1th his play.
"I'm not sayi ng Rimington 's
job is in jeopardy, but there's
very li11le difference when rDou ·
gias) Js in the game," McNally
said. "One (Douglas) has a little
more range, and the other
( Rimington) has a little more
power !1's almost to -the point
where it's more competitive than
most people would tbink."
Douglas is used to playing in
ttfe shadows of his teammates, In
fact, he had to walk on to make
his college team, Tennessee. The
Bengais drafted him in the eighth
ro\md in 1986.
"I knew the Bengals had one of
the best lines in the business, if
not the best," Douglas said. ••I
knew I would have an uphill
battle to (flake the team."

mf'ro:~o , Ohio, by 1h£' Ohi o Valley Pub.ltshlng Compo.ny !MulttmNila. Inc..

Pomeroy , Ohio 4576.q Ph 992-2]56 Se--

cond rlass postagl' paid at Pomrroy.
,Ohio

Member • UnU M PrffiS rntrrnu llonal.
In land Dally Press AssoclatlfJn and th(l
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�Thursday, November 19, 1987

Ankney won't take OSU job

·Celeste retreats 1from Bruce speculation
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) i(Overnor.
•
"l should have stuck to being
Conceding it was wrong of him t&lt;
'Ttall&lt;ed to I Obi a State Pres!·
governor." said Celeste.
speculate on the reasons Ohio dent) Ed Jennings this morning,
The governor said his own
Sta te football coach Earle Bruce and I have resigned as Monday
speculation ·Included Bruce's
was fired , Gov. Richard F. morning quar.terback of the Ohio
handling of the gambling habit ot
Celes te said Wednesday he did · State Buckeyes, the athletl\; former quarterback Art Schllch
not know about the dismissa l.. department and lh&lt;' university.'.'
ter and the report that "stronv
ahead of time.
said the governor.
supporters of the Buckeye&lt;
The governor told reporters at
A spokesman said telephone · thought that Earle Bruce was '·
an j mpromptu press conference callers to the governor's office good football coach but that it
he never said the firing resulted have suggested that Celeste was time for a new personality. "
in partfromBruce'sassociations " keep hi s nose out of this." The
Jennings, who Issued Bruce's
with horse race ,gambling, as spokesman said the volume of dismissal, has been roundly
reported In the Des Moines ca lls Is the heaviest for any issue criticized . far it, especially the
Register.
,
this year.
timing right before Saturday's
Celeste sa id his speculation
Celeste said his luncheon com· game with Michigan.
was done in ''cas ual co n versa· pan ions In Des Moines asked him
Celeste declined to reveal hhls
tion " over lunch , and that the about Bruce's firing Monday and conversation with Jennings , ex·
report was pieced together by a
"I did what every one of you did cept that the OSU president
reporter from second· hand infor· - I speculated about what I ·'thought 1 did a real good job of
matlon. ·'The guy that wrote the
thought might be factors behind taking attention off of him" with
st.orr wasn't
'' sa id the it."

the story out at Iowa."
The Columbus Dispatch, In a
lengthy editorial Wednesday,
called the (Iring "proper" and
said Bruce had (ailed consist·
ently to "engender good will for
the lnstltutlon ... subjugate his
personal interests to those of the
unlverslty ... (and) develop civic
ties that would enable hlin to
extend the university's influence
In constructive ways Into many
segments o! the community."
The editorial said Bruce
"failed to appreciate the unlver·
slty's goals or to realize what the
university expected of him." It
said he was supposed to "show by
word and deed what Ohio State Is,
to articulate its goals and give
voice to its Ideals."

DEFENDER LEAVES HIS FEET - AS Philadelphia 76er
Maurice Cheeks, 'light, goes up to guard Detr()il Piston Adrian
Dantley, Danlley fires a pass through his legs In the first quarter of
Wednesday night's game in Detroit. (UPI)

the momentum away from us
and brought It to their side."
Ainge credited the Celtic de·
fense fo r reviv ing Boston's le·
tharglc offense. Boston forced 17
of the Knicks' 24 turnovers after
halftime.
t•Qur defense won it for us in

the second half," said Ainge.
"Our defense caused a lot of easy
baskets."
New York led 82-70entering the
fqurth quarter. but mi ssed 12 of
its 14 field-goal attempts in the
period. Boston opened the quarter with an 11·3 run. Ainge hitting
a pair of 3· pointers within 27
seconds to· pull Boston within
85·81 with 5:03 left .
"Good defense got us the
IE:ad ," said Pitino. "A nd as good
as we were in the first half. we
~re tha t poor in th e second
h~ If "
AJ.'nge's third 'J.pointer of the
fourth quarter,. with 46 seconds
left. tied the score at 93-93 and
forced the firs t overtime . Jo hn ·
son's 3·polnt play with l : 09 left
c9mpleled the scoring in the first

~lores

overtime and tied it 99· 99.
The Knicks took their biggest
lead at 64-36 on Patrick Ewing's
3-point play to open the third
quarter. Ewing led New York
with 26 points.
Elsewhere, Chicago edged Wa·
shington 84-82, · Atlanta beat
Golden State 95-92, Philadelphia
defeated Delrolt 113·109, Dallas
dumped the Los Angeles Clippers
97·87. Phoenix topped Utah 90·80,
Indiana downed. Denver 117·106
and Seattle stopped Portland
120·114.
Bulls 84, Bullets 82
At Landover, Md., Charles
Oakley grabbed 24 rebounds and
scored 19 points and Michael
Jordan scored 30 points to lead
Chicago.
·Hawks 95, \\'arriors 92
At Atlanta, Dominique Wilkins
scored 22 points to help the
Hawks hand the Warriors their
fourth straight loss.
Slxers 113, Pistons 109
At Pontiac, Mich.. Maurice
Cheeks scored 11 of his 25 points
in the final period to propel
Philadelphia.
Mavericks 97, Clippers 87
At Dallas, Mark Aguirre
scored 31 points and Roy Tarpley
helped repel a Los Angeles
challenge in the lourth quarter
with a steal, an assist and a pair
of offensive rebounds.
Suns 90, Jazz 80
At Phoenix, Walter Davis
scored 34 points for the Suns.
Pacers 117, Nuggets 106
At Denver, Vern Fleming
scored a career-high 30 points to
guide Indiana to Its third straight
road victory.
Soules 120, Blazers 114
At Seattle, Xavier McDaniel
scored 32 points , including a go·
ahead st uff with 2:17 left. as
Portland dropped lts fifth
straig ht.

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can't fault team's losing str.eak

LOS AN GELES 1 U P I I - Los
Angeles Rai ders Coa ch Tom
Flores said Wednesday he can't
tau It his· team's effort during its
lon gest losi ng streak in 2.&gt; years.
• "Wf&gt; played hard last week,
with a lot of emotion ," Flores
said a t a news conference. "The
guys were fired upcoming out for
the warmups. We played hard.
liut we weren ' t good enough to
win ."
; The 16·14 loss to San Diego
Jmnded the Raiders lhelr sixth
sira ight de/ea t. Their3·6 r ecord
has left th e m all but el iminated
· from playoff cont ent ion. Lo s
· Angeles plays Denver S unday~~
t~e Coliseum.
"This is a big game for us ,"
F'.lores said. "It's a divisional
g~me and we're fighting to get
back. "
The Raid ~r regu lar s have
scored a total of one touchdown in
'

.

the fi r&lt; t quarter of s ix games .
'· J;m concerned about the
whole team," Flores sa id . "As a
team. we have to play four
quarters of football. My major
concer n right now is scoring
more points. "
Flores is sticking with vetera n
Marc Wilson at quarterback.
Wilson, making his first start of
the season. was ineffective last
week until the fourth quarter
when h&lt;' threw •fo r two
touchdowns .
The Raiders were slowed by a
team · record 186 yards in
penalties.
·'Every time we turned
around , there was a flag on th e
ground." Flores said. "Tt was
amazing. We came up so many
times with firs t and 20 and second
a nd 20. The offense was in such a
bind and It was al mos t too much
to over-come.

1.

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Scratch !_3owling Green's Moe
Ankney as a candidate for the
vacant football coaching job at
Ohio State.
.
Ankney, a native Ohioan now In
his second year at BG, blasted
Ohio State President Edward
Jennings Tuesday for hi s firing of
Buckeye Coach Earle Bruce,
calling It "a very cowardly act. "
"What happened in Columbus
Is a disgrace to college athlet·
lcs," said Ankney. "I'm embarrassed to be a part of It.
'Tthlnk the people In charge in
Columbus buckled under to pressure from the oulside, which has
nothing to do with the job Earle
Bruce did in coaching his team. 1
thought It was a very cowardly
act."
.
Jennings, citing "pressure" he
was receiving from unnamed
sources, ended Bruce's nine-year
reign as Ohio State coach Manday, causlng ·a storrr\ of controversy, .,Particularly from those
who knew Bruce and tl;lose in the
coaching fraternity. ·
Ankney wasn't the only coach
to lash out at the firing of Bruce.
Michigan's Bo Schembechler,
who coached underWoodyHayes
at Ohio State when Bruce was
thereasaplayer ,c hosehisword s
"
more carefully than
Ankney, but
still got his message across. .
"Eafle has done everything at
Oblo State a great football coach
can do," said Schembechler. " In
1951, when I came to Ohio State
with Woody Hayes, they called it
the graveyard of coaches. Woody
changed that. He was Iough. He
stood up to them and made it the
great job it is today."

A da y after his dismissal, with
the season finale against Michl·
gan Saturaay at Ann Arbor,
Bruce said he was still having
trouble unders\anding why he
was fired.
"It's st.ill a little tough to
comprehend." sald Bruce. "!
think I have a fine record
(80-26·1). I've done a good job of
running a high integrity progra m
I was left by Coach Hayes . ·
"l.'m not satisfied with this
year, but other coaches have had
bad seasons and made it through
the year. I don't understand Why
we didn ' t."
Uhlo State, which never had
been worse than 9-3 in Bruce's
previous eight years, will take a
5·4·1 record Into the game at Ann
Arbor Saturday and has lost
three in a row by a total of 10
points.
Bruce's firing also cost Ohio
State its athletic director. Rick
Bay, after announced Jennings·
firing of Bruce, said he was
stepping down in protest.
Ankney praised Bay's action,
saying, "I think what Rick Bay
did was great. He has all my
admiration. I hope and pray all
athletic directors have the same
kind of courage and intestinal
fortitude he has, but I'm afraid
they don't."
Jennings, who avoided Mon day's press conference, said
Tuesday Bruce's firing was •·a
personnel issue."
· "We thought, in our judgment ,
it was time to make a change,"
said Jennings. ' 'I was dlsap ·
pointed Mr. Bay didn't agree
with that and resigned, but it was

The Daily Sentinel- Page - S

Indiana · has~ tools to repeat

a judgmental call to make a
By RANDY MINKOFF
the outside.
change.' '
UPI Sports Writer
Purdue, which shared the Big
Jennings wouldn't say sp&lt;&gt;cifi· ·
Defending champion Indiana- Ten title with the Hoosl'ers last
cally from where the pressure on
has all the tools to repeat as a
year , also return s !our key
him Ia fire · Bruce ·had· come,
Final Four team and possibly people, Including Troy Lewis ,
adding It wasn't from some of the
win ·a· second straight national · Everette Stephens, Todd Mit·
school's big money co ntributors. champ ionship.
chell and Melvin McCants. ·
" I don 't think contril:&gt;utlons
But because the Big Ten is so
That 'quar tet was responsible ,
had a nything to do with It," said
deep again this season, !he for 59 points per game. The
Jennings. "I think there are as
Hoosiers may have a strugg le to Boilermakers may not ha ve as
many people who contribute to
finish in the top four teams in the strong a bench as last year's 25·5
!he university opposed to this as
league.
club .
there are contributors in favor.
The Big Ten is again loaded
"The Big Ten is going to be .
"We're sorry this had to
this yea r with a ny one of five
happen ," J en nings added, "but teams capable of winning the tough again : !don 't know that the
. league has ever been down but
let's support t~e next coach ...
conference title. The league sent you can't measure that simply on
Ohio. State, under its newl y
six teams to the NCAA last year what was done in terms of the
named athletic directo r , Jim
and a II but Illinois won at least NCAA tournament," Keady
Jones, now mus t s tart putting its
one game In the tournament.
adds.
football program back together
''Tlie league Is as tough as ever
Iowa also is deep, strong and
by hiring a new coach.
and even with the clubs that may physical. Roy Marble and B. J
With the recruiting season. In
not be considered for the title, it's Armstrong return from a team
fvll swing and this considered a
a rough go to try to win at their that won 30 games last year and
year of exceptional high school
place, " says Purdue coach Gene nearly knocked out top-ranked
talent In the Buckeye State, the
Keady .
UNLV.
school figure s to move fairly
For india na, the departure of
"We'rE&gt; going to miss a Brad
swiftly In finding Bruce's
All-America ·guard Steve Alford Lohaus in the middle but we thl~k
replacement.
may be all that separates last with AI Lorenzen, we've got
Among those being mentioned
year's club and this year's team. so meone who helped Brad last
as possible- candidates ;~re Bos·
Tl)e Hoos iers stiH have Final year and who can give us some
ton College's Jack Bicknell,
Four MVP Keith Smart, Ricky st re.n gth.:' said Iowa coach Tom
Howard Schnellenberger, for·
Calloway, Dean Garrett and Davis. whose club led the nation
merly of Miami of Florida and
Steve Eyl back from last year.
in rebouding in · Davis's first
now al Louisville, Bill Mallory of
"I don't know if you repla~e a season last year.
Indiana. West Virginlji 'S Don
Steve Alford," said Indiana
Jeff Moe will move from his
Neh len and Pitt's Mike Gottfried.
coach Bobby Knight. "What we sixt h man ro le into the starting
Mallory, Nehlen and Gottfried
ha~e
to do is make some lineup and lorward Ed Horton
all are Ohio natives.
adjustments to what , we are will be looked toward for more
Former Ohio State assistants
doing offensively."
scoring and rebounding.
who might be considered include
Indiana should be more of a
Illinois and Michigan both
Marshall 's George Chaump;
power club than the one at went have outstanding young talent
Glen Mason of Kent State; Dave
30-4 last year. With Alford gone,
Adolph, now with the Cleveland . the scoring load will switch to the but may both be stronger come
tournament time than at the
Browns: and Mark Duffner of
frontcourt with Garrett and beginning ·of the year.
Holy Cross, a pari time assistant
Calloway. Smart should give the
Illinois loses top scorer Ken
under Hayes ·in the mid 1970s.
Hoosiers enough firepower from Norman bul welcomes transfer .

Kenny Battle from Northern
Dlinols..
•
" People are asl&lt;tng me to
com pare him to Michael Jordan, :
which is a little silly," said Illlni
coac h Lou Henson . "He nePds to
sharpen his defense and ball •
handling but he could be a real ·•
·'
player for us ."
••
Michlgancameofftwos traight : ·;:
Big Ten title seasons last year · ~
with 20 wins In a rebuilding year . •
The Wolverines may hav e the
league's premiere player in
guard Gary Grant and an out·
standing recruiting class.
··we are counting on our ~
veterans to give our · newer
players time. If we get that. we'll
be OK," said Michigan coach Bill
Frieder .
Rumeal Robinson and Terry. .
Mills, forced to sit out last year, •
could develop as to two top top
players in the league by season's
end.
· Ohio State also made the.
tourney last year bu t loses th~· .
league's top scorer in Dennis ·
Hopson. The Buckeyes have their
other four starters returning
under second-year coach Gary
Williams.
Wisconsin won 14 games last
ypar and could challenge for_ •
seventh. Michigan State won ·:::
only 11 last year and also i~ : · :
rebuilding. Carlton Valentine, • •
who averaged 11 polntslastyear: :. :
is MSU 's top returning scorer . • : .;:
Both Northwestern and Minne- : :•
sota, which starts the year with a •
16-game losing streak, won only
two games each in the league last:
year.

Dawson
topNL
player

Ainge fills in for
injured Larry Bird;
nets 33 in Celts win
By United Press International
With Larry Bird limping and
unable to play on two sore ankles,
Danny · Ainge filled the void for
the Boston Celtics Wednesday
night.
Ainge scored a game·high 33
points, including six :!·pointers,
to, help the Celtics to a 111 ·109
double-overtime victory over the
New York Knicks. Bird, suffer·
lng from mild tendinitis in both
ankles, 1\'ent through pre·game
warm-ups but sat out th.e game.
The marathon ended with no
time left! in the second overtime
a~ Darren Daye, who replaced
Bird in the starting lineup, tipped
In' Dennis Johnson's missed sbot..
The Celtics played poorly in the
first hal!, going 0 for 19 from the
field in the second quarter. It got
so bad that Bird deserted the
Boston Garden at halftime.
;"He joined the stampede and
left," Celtics Coach K.C . Jones
said.··
Ainge took over after inlermis·
sion and his long-ra nge shooting
helped the Celtlcs overcome a
28-point deficit.
:"Danny Ainge is the definltion
of clutch," New York Coach Rick
Pltino said. "His 3· pointers took

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CHICAGO (UPI) - Chicago
Cubs outfielder Andre Dawson
had the best of seasons lor the
worst of teams.
Dawson slugg~d 49 home runs
and drove In 137 runs, both
major-league highs. in his. first
season with the Cubs. His performance earned him his first
National League Most Valuable
Player awa-rd after two previous
secorid·place finishes.
Dawson, 33, won the award
despite the Cubs' sixth-place
finish in the NL East. He is the
first MVP from a last -place team
since the award was first pres ·
en ted In 1931.
"This will be a moment that
will be cherished, despite a
prett y dismal season by the
· ballclub, .. Dawson said Wednes·
· day after the announcement of
the ·voting by the Baseball
· Writers' Association of America.
"It was well worth the walt.''
Dawson joined the Cubs this
year as a free agent after 10
years with the Montreal Expos.
He accepted a drastic pay cut
because he wanted to play mostly
day baseball on a grass field. His
career statistics reflected better
performance In day games and
his ailing .knees ached less on ·
grass .
"I was Ln an entirely new
frame of mind," Dawson said of
· his performance In Chicago. ·
:'ThIs Is a new home for me. I
don't lhlnk I would have enjoyed
playing as . much anywhere else.
The grass played a big part.! was
healthy all sea.s on."
Dawson r eceived 11 first-place
votes and 269 points from 24
voting members of the BBWAA,
two from each NL city. St. Louis
shortstop Ozzle Smith was se·
cond with nine flrst·P.lace votes
'
· and 193 points.
Cardinals first bl!seman Jack
Clark, who missed much of the
second half of th e season because
of Injuries; finished third, lol·
lowed by Montreal third base·
man Tim Wallach and San
Francisco first baseman Will
Clark .
Jack Clark received three
first-place mentions and Wallach
gar'n ered one. Dawson and the
two Clarks were the only players
named on all 24 ballots.
Rounding out the top 10 vote·
getters were New York out:
fielder Darryl Strawberry. Mont·
real outfielder Tim Raines, San
Diego ()Utfielder Tony Gwynn,
Cincinnati outfielder Eric Davis
and New York third baseman
Howard Johnson.
Dawson twice before finished
second in the MVP voting, in 1981
to Philadelphia third baseman
Mike Schmidt and in 1983 to
Atlanta outfielder Dale Murphy.
"When I had speeches pre·
pared I finished runner-up,"
D(!wson said.
Dawson's previous best year
was 1983, when he hit 32 homers
and drove in 113 runs. Hi s
statistics slipped over the next
three years and he hit just 20
homers and drove in 78 runs in

1§86.

POMEROY' ·
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In th e strike-shortened season
of 1981, Dawson hll .302 with 24
home runs and 64 RBI.
·This s'ijson; Dawson shared
Con(inued on page 6

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Thursday, November 19, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Canadiens end Islanders-five
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•

By United Press International
The last four years, the only
fruits the New York Islanders
have reaped from their efforts at
the Forum in Montreal have been
rotten.
Stephane Richer scored two
goals Wednesday night to power
the Can;ldiens to a 5-2 victory
over the Islanders, snapping .
New York's five-game winning
streak and keeping New York
winless at the Forum since Oct. 6,
1983.

"We have a good club but we
Jack rna turlty," Islanders Coach
Terry Simpson said. "We have
been able to keep pace with the
rest of the teams but maybe
Montreal is just that much better
than the rest of the league tlils
year.
"Tonight I guess it was a case
of mixing apples with oranges.
Some of our younger players-just
didn't react the way they
should."
The game was a battle between

pike

the two top teams in the NHL,
Blues 6, Maple Leafs 3
who both entered the contest with
At Toronto, Mark Hunter
·27 points. The victory helped the scored twice and Doug Gilmour
Canadiens improve to 7-1-4 in added a goal and two assists to
their lasJ 12 games.
pace St. Louis. The Blues broke a
"I am feeling a lot more 3·3, third-period tie with three
comfortable this season," said unanswered goals. Rob Whistle
the 21-year-old Richer, who last scored the game-winner.
year fell into disfavor with
Devils 4, Flyers 3
Montreal Coach Jean Perron and
At East Rutherford, N.J., Pat
w~s sent to the minors in the
Verbeek scored a IX;lwer-play
mtddle of ,lhe season.
goal with 2:56 remalmng to lift
"This year Jean has confl- New Jersey. Claude Loiselle,
dence in me and I think It Is Jack O'Callahan and Kirk Muller
beginning to show In the way that also scored for the Devils, who
I play."
pulled within three points of the
Montreal defenseman Larry first -place
Islan~e(s In the
Robinson, who suffered a broken . Patrick Division.
leg In August while playing polo, , - - - - - - - - - - - played for the first time this
season.
In other games, -St. Louis
downed Toronto 6-3, New Jersey
edged Philadelphia 4-3; Hartford
crushed Buffalo 9-1, Chicago
dumped Minnesota 5-2, Boston
nipped Winnipeg 4-3 and Edmonton toppled Quebec"4-1.

f.
+&lt;

Giants' Rosen top exc.utive.

BLOCKS VIEW - The Philadelphia Flyers'
Dave Poulin (23) blocks the view of New Jersey
Devil goalie Alain Chevrier as the Flyers' Derrick

Smith puts the puck between the legs of Chevrier
for a goal In the first period of Wednesday night's .
action at Byrne Arena In East Rutherford, N.J.
I
.
(UPI)

Lockbaum makes TV debut
By CHARLIE McCARTHY
UPI Sp0 rts Writer
Gordie Lockbaum, the Heis·
·. man Trophy contender from
Holy. Cross, makes his debut on
national television Thursday
night. Next year's voters get a
sneak preview of another

Dawson ....
Continued from page 5
the major-league lead in lwmers
with Oakland rookie Mark
McGwire . The -49 homers were
the most hit in the majors since
George Foster clouted 52 with
Cincinnati in 1977.
Smith added increased hitting

assists.
But despite the numbers, Lockbaum might have to share the
candidate.
team's Most Valuable Player
Holy Cross, 10-0, concludes its . honor with quarterback Jeff
season Thursday night at Vlllan- Wiley. The two have fueled an
ova, 6-3. As theiop-rated Division offense that has outscored oppo1-AA team , the Crusaders have nents 472-104.
no bowl to look forward too- just
Wiley , a 5-foot-10, I75-pound
Thursday's game IESPN, 8 p.m. junior from Celina, Ohio, leads'
EST.)
the nation In passing efficiency,
Lockbaum is part of a vanish- having completed 236 of 355
ing breed, a two-way player who passes for 3,296 yards, 32 touchplays wide receiver and corner- downs and 15 interceptions. He
back. Last year, he finished fifth tossed 7 TD passes against
in the Reisman balloting. This Lehigh Sept. 26 and threw for 438
season, he has 1, 782 all-purpose . yards against Massachusetts
yards plus 11 tackles and 5 Oct. 31.

SAN FRANCISCO !UP!)- AI
Rosen, whose delicate trading
touch catapulted the San Francisco Giants to their first Nationa! League West title In 16
years, Wednesday was named
major-league baseball's Executive of the Year by United Press
International.
Rosen received 15 of the 20
votes cast by UPI's panel of
baseball correspondents' to cap·
ture the award for the first time.
Minnesota General Manager
Andy MacPhail and Detroit
General Manager Blll LaJoie
each received 2 voles and Toronto's Pat Gillick 1.
,
"It's very flattering," said
Rosen, the team's president and
generallmanager. "It's outstand• ing to be recognized, but a
general manager is only as good
as the people he has with him.
I'm fortunate to have a group of
excellentbaseballpeopletowork
with."
When Rosen joined the Giants
the club was recovering from. its
first 100-loss season. In just two
years, Rosen and Manager
Roger Cr'lig transformed the
Giants Into a club that came
within one game of winning the
National League pennant.
"We've come a long way in a

hurry," Rosen said . "But ·we're
really just beginning. I feel real
satisfaction with our success this
season, but I can'i wait for spring
training to begin. I shouldn't say
that, I'm nearly 64 and it seems
like I'm wishing my llfe away."
The Giants struggled at the
beginning of the season because
of injuries to Robby Thompson,
Candy Maldonado, Jose Uribe,
Chris Brown and Jefferey
Leonard.
At the halfway mark, the
Giants were 39-40 and Rosen had
seen enough. He traded Brown.
Mark Davis, Keith Comstock and
Mark Grant to San Diego for
pitchers Dave Dravecky and
Craig Lefferts and third baseman Kevin Mitchell. Within a
month, Rosen would also get
reliever Don Robinson and star·
ter Rick 'Reuschel from
Pittsburgh.
"I think we were fortunate to
make the trades we did this
year," Rosen said. "San Diego
got off to a horrible start and
knowing Jack McKeon, I knew he
would make some changes. Also
knowing Syd (Thrift, the Pittsburgh General Manager), I knew
he was going to' do something. It
proved to be a perfect fit for both
teams."

1980 VOLKSWAGEN
PICK-UP
Stock i 771811 doors. kDIII wr..1 drive. 4 cyl.. 4
speed trans., :\tand. tmns.. Mhadia, r.rlial tins.
b.Jcket seats

SAl£ PRICE

\

$1750.
1987 FORD F-250
Slock ~ 83671. 2 doors. 4 wheel drive. V-8 di$8 eng.,
4 s~ trans.. PS. PB. radial !Ires. 1Aton piclwp. kmg
wide tot rear step bu~Tlf)!r. au~ . Ill!! lank gaJg£5.

SAL£ PRICE

''THREE"
AT RO KY'S IN RAVENSWOOD
NOV. , ,
&amp;

~~rt::d d~i~e~!~ve~ ~~~~i~~~tc~~~

(

'VV'

,

-

ll!&lt;lr winOOw delo~

$
1985 FORD RANGER
Slock No. 83881. 4 cyl. 4 speed. st01d tans..
AMIFM radio. :\teroo tape, ~ -Mde ~ . re&lt;r step
ti.Jrf'4)er. ~idinR ren ~~

SAl£ PRICE

Fried Fish Filet or Ribeye Steak or Fried Chicken Breast

Bank Personnel From Citizens National, Commercial
&amp; Savings, Central Trust &amp; Ohio Valley Bank Will Be
Available And On Site To Approve Your Deal!'

WE'RE SHOOTIN'
DOWN PRICES
AT TURNPIKE!

No Payments 'Til February 1988

TOP 40 - -COUNTRY - ROCK &amp; ROLL
SO's &amp; 60's

winOOws. !)Ower door lctks. cruise control. AM/ FM
r~Uo. &amp;ereo tape, radial tires.

SAl£ PRIC!

$10,800.

BY YOUR

1987 FORD TEMPO

INVESTMENT
OPTIONS?

TAKE ME

HOME!

TURKEY!
WITH PURCHASE
ON ANY NEW
OR
USED CAR
OR
TRUCK!

NO-RISK, HIGH-YIELD
INSURED INVESTMENTS

.· :·

OF DEPOSIT
*MoNEY MARKET AccouNTs
*CERTIFICATES

iJI P11r1 icipa l fiiR .\"lt'tiA•IJr llfSt•.&lt;~

•

,.

CALL OUR NEW ACCOUNTS

PEOPLES ' BANK
'The Better Bank''
New Haven, W. Va.
882-2135

2212 Jackson Avenue
Point Pleasant, w. Va.
673-1121

You'll Have To$ Pay ALittle Less.
99
Bring the family and enjoy a feast
at Ponderosa. For one small price.
you' ll get a complete Ribcyc Steak ,
Fried Chicken llrcast or Fried Fish
Fikt dinner And , every dinner

DEPARTMENT FOR DETAILS

5th Street

comt'S complet&lt;' with ;t pntatn
and our all-you -can-cat
· Salad lluffct and lim Sp6t'!' Thcrc
you'lllind a variety of\'cgclahks.
sauces. soups , rolls

P""""'·

anti more!

Introducing the Ponderosa Value line
iii

Second Street
Mason, w. Va •.
773-5514

p=o=NDER~os=-=-A.
There's a fanUiy feeling at Ponderosa:·
. Upper Rlv.-r Rd.

Substantial Penalty Fo.r Eaily Withdrawal

(at:rOi!lll from lhe Airporl)

,.

FREE

II
I

1987 FORD TEMPO

Stock II 11560. 4 OOors. 4 cyl.. 3ir amd .auto IJans..
PS. PB. ~~ Wleel, AMIFM radkl, radial tres. b.tcket

Stock U 11550. 4 doors. !!dan, trort wheel dOle. 4
cyl., air cor1&lt;l.. auto. tans .. PS, iH wheel. Nvt/FM

SAl£ PRICE

SALE PRICf

smts.

WE HAVE SOLUTIONS!

*IRA's

s

Stock# 73531. 4 dom. !&lt;dan. rro~ wh.O """ 5
· cyl., air cond.. 5 speej stand tans.. PS, PB. IJlWl'l'

PUZZLED

$

..

~ats.

'

18 19 20 21
10 P.M. fO 2 A.M.

$

Member F.D.I.C.

walls, buckEt

Noit'IT Jf \lOuW.ant All This

5000

$
$

wtlee( drive. 4
cyl.. air cond., 5spea:ltrans. ~and. trailS., PS:PB. bl:
wheel, AM/ FM ntdh :\terro tape. radial t~ei. .....tl~e

rr~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;il-.....:.::..:...::..:...~:;~~:...::.::L..~~~~~---;V7----:-~;-:i1!,Ti1~;-:~----

Gloves. He was eighth in the
league in hitting with a .303
average. He also knocked in 75
runs without hitting a homer.
"I don 't feel bad at ail finishing
second," Smit h said. "I re_aily
hadn 't given it much thought. r
' can't be disappointed. Baseball
has always been an offenseoriented game."

.$

1985 HONDA
CIVIC
Stock It 72561. 4 doors. !8fan. rront

saooo~
1987 FORD TEMPO
Slock! 11530. 4 dOOrS, hard lop, front wheEl d'..,, 4
cyl. a•r corid.. auto. tran'-. PS, Pa ll)Wef mirrors. ~It
wheet. PMIFM radii. radial lin~. bucke: !Eats. rear
w1nOOw defog.
SAl£ PRICE

· .· .,~8000.

radio. radial tres. bucket SJ:!ats.

.s8ooo.
1985 FORD
LTD
Stock It n381, 4 dooo. hard top, 6 eyl . ar oond_,
auto. trans.. PS. PR radial ti'es. .....,~e walls.
SAl! PRIC!

$6800.

SAVE ON DEMO'S
!Stock No.
Was
Now
nn 1987 TOPAZ .......................$10,986.... s9450oo
7474 1987 TEMPO ...................... 11,656..... 10,25000
7400 1987 TOPAZ ....................... 11,543..... 10,15000
7413 1987 RANGER 4X4 .............. 13,538.... 11,99000
7441 1987. RANGER 4X4 .............. 12,153. ... 10,65000
n99 1987 COUGAR XR-7 ............ .17,961. ... 15.45000
8317 1988 RANGER 4X2 .............. 10.689........ 9850 00
8318 1988 RANGER 4X4 STX ........ 15,156..... 13,65000
8349 1988 F-150 4X2 ................. .16,450 ..... 13,99000
7559 1987 AER_
OSTAR ................. 17,438.... 15,57500

During
Our Big
Pre-Holiday
Sale!

�Th~da~Nov~ber19,

1987

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.-----Local news----. · Arkansas has snow; rain falls on Gulf Coast
EMS receives four calls
r Meigs County Emergency-Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday; Syracuse Fire Department at 8: 04 .a.m. to
Minersville Hill where a small (ire rekindled: Middleport at
8:35 a, iiL_lo.R ~Ilroa d St . for Lewis Taylor to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 9:15 a.m. to Pearl St. fo r Clara Riley
who was treated but not transported; Rutland at 5: 06p.m . .to
Swick Road for Edna Swick to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Pomeroy village fund total released
- All Pomeroy Village funds a s
of October 31 totaled $191-,923.84,
Village Clerk-Treasurer Jane
Walton reports.
Receipts, disbursements and
the end of the month balance,
respectively, in each of the funds
making up the total Include:
general, $21,160.40, $22,723.66,
$36,697.33; safety. $200, $480.44,
· $8,395.17; street, $10,999.92,
$26,146.29, $14,557.98: state highway, $249.09, no dlsb rsements ,'
$810.03; !Ire, $843.71, $1,307.10,
$382.89; cemetery, $511.90,
$1,688.82. $-2,571.46;
ter,
$23,380.85, $22,885.65, $74,12 . ;
sewer, $8,440.94, $14,034.64,
$5,109.93; guaranty meter, $~25 ,
$624.25, $13,110.87: utility, no
receipts, $2,677.20, $23,357.02;

sale or building, $382.45, $382.45 ,
$.19; perpetual care, no receipts .
no disbursement s, $4,869 .77;
cemetery endowment. no receip ts, no d is bu rsements,
$17 ,825.16; police pensio n, no
receipts, no disbursements ,
$'1,535.23; build ing fund. $117.55 ,
no disbursements, $1,436.75; recreation, $35, no di sbursements,
$1,436.75: permis sive tax,
$666.&amp;1, $830.05 , $3,215.49; bond
retirement. no rec eipts. no dis bursements, $10,375 .21; fire
truck, no receipts, no disbursements, $23,690.63: West Ma in St.,
no receipts, no disbursements ,
$500.
Receipts for the month tota led
$67, 15~.64 while disbursements
amounted to $93,780.55.

Rubbish.. , _c_o_n_u_nu_e_d_f_ro_m_:p_a:.ge_l_ _ _ _ _ __

PR1

ONLY! ltii8ER 21

AL

·147 -ounce

PREVIOUSLY MARKED DOWN

CLOTHING I·TEMS.

peared to have spread very
quickly and engulfed the people
In the vicinity," Pollee Superintendent David Fitzsimmon~ said.
The heat became intense and
black, su!focatlng and blinding
smoke sent scores of panicking
commuters dashing through the
ma ze of tunnels and
passageways .
"! just grabbed my girlfriend
and ran," said survivor Ron
Healy , 20, of London. "It seemed
like we were running for ages .
We managed to get on a train. It
was only when we sat down that
we both started shaking."
Five people survived by running into a nearby toilet and
closing the door against the
Intense heat. Kennedy said.
Most of those who died were
believed to have suffered from
the heat and smoke Inhalation
rather than burns.
''With fires underground, especially where they are enclosed by
concrete, there Is a tremendous
buildup of heat, which Is retained," Kennedy said.
About 150 firefighters . wearing
breathing apparatus, descended
Into the network of subway
platforms serving five "Underground" lines to fight the blaze,
which took more than two hours
to control.
Many of the hundreds of people
who saw the fire were traveling
on trains that passed through the
station without stopping.
"As the train pulled Into the
station It hit a cloud of smoke. I
could hear people screaming and
running In every direction In the
station. T.he train carried on and
did not stop, " said Leroy Bigby,
23, who got off at the next station
and walked back to King's Cross.
" ! could see smoke billowing

Announcements
Singing
Special singing by the VIctory
Singers and Ru ssell Spencer will
be featured Sunday evening, 7
p.m .. at Chester Church of God.

C.E. ® &amp; ITT®

outdoor
security
Lights .

All
Mugs

6

Plan hymn sing
A hymn sing will be held at the
Fellowship Church in Racine at 7
p.m . Saturday. Singers will be
Russell Spencer's Victory_
Quartet. Pastor Charles Bush
Invites. the public.

ounce

Bright
Eyes
cat

save big and add safety

All

McCulloch
Chain
saws

Rugged, dependable
chain saws from a name

M&amp;M's
Plain
or

'All

·shelf &amp;
Contact
Paper

Plan dance
The Belles and Beaus Western
Square Dance Club will have a
dance Saturday night at the
Senior Citizens Ce nter In Pome·
rov from B to 11 p.m . Homer
Magnet of Minford will be caller
and all western square dancers_
are Invited to attend.
Square dance slated
A public sq uare dar\ce will be
held Friday from 8 to 11 p.m . a t
the Long Bottom Community
Building .

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

All Wood
Shelving

Folding

&amp;

Bed

Brackets
Choose from a. selection
of oak and Walnut
finished shelving in an
assortment ·of sizes
Available in · our · Hard·

.

.

·Portable. compact
' folding bed with foam
mattress rolls easily on
casters. Easv to store.

I

All
Ball
Gloves
Select a quality baseball
or softball glove from
our entire in -stock
ChOose from
brand

•

ounce
Tip Top
Kitchen
Klenzer
14

Electric
Boat
Motors
Receive tremendous
savings and great value
when you select· a
quality electric boat
motor from Shake·
speare or Minnkota

All
Closet
storage
Boxes

use .''

Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher expressed her condolences to the families or the dead,
saying, "I'm absolutely horrified
by this dreadful fire."
London Underground Chairman Sir Keith Bright, who
described the fire as "horrific,"
said the transit system had been
in the process of converting all its
wooden escalators to aluminum.
Paul Medland, who escaped
safely, was In the subway station
when the blaze erupted and said
hundreds of passengers fought
their way in a stampede from the
smoke.
" It was chaos," he said.
"People were panicking and just
running everywhere and tread·
lng on each other. It was awfuL "
King's Cross subway station Is
the largest In London, with five of
the city's "tube" lines IntersectIng under a sprawling British
Rail train station that Is one of
London's major .rail depots servIng points north .
The blaze was the worst
"Underground" tragedy since 43
people were killed Feb. 28, 1975,
when a London subway train
slammed Into the end of a tunnel.

Lottery numbers ·
CLEVELAND I UP!) - Wednesday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
679.
Ticket sa les totaled
$1,290,195.50. with a payoff due of
$3,953,688.50.
PICK-4
0321.
PlCK-4 ticket sales totaled
$211,515, with a payoff due of
$95,199.
PlCK-4 $1 straigh t bet pays
$3,744. PlCK·4 $1 box bet pays
'$156.
Super Lotto
4. 7, 13, 20, 32 and 39.

Gulf Coast,

whil€' snow was

.

and Louisiana. in Texas around
the Rio Grandl' Va lley and across
Florida .

expected across- no rthern Idaho
and parts or Montana and Nort h
Dakota; th rough the upper Mls-

Ra in and snow showers were

repor ted in Arkansas, a nd forecast acro~s much o! lower
temperatures dipped below ' Michigan, western New York
freezing over the Rockies and th e s t ate a nd northwest
norther n Pla ins and fell near Pennsylvani a.
zero In Colorado.
Pre -da wn temperatures
A ba nd of early-morning show- dropped to be tow freezing today
ers extended today from nor- across much or the Rocky Moun·
theastern Texas, across Okla- talns and northern Plains and
homa and into Arkansas. where parts or the middle Mississippi
light snow was reported at higher and lower Ohio valleys. Readings SO
e leva tions. National Weather in the teens were reported over
Serv ice forecast er Hugh parts of Colorado, Wyoming and
Crowther said .
Nebra ska. The merc ury at
Rain and scattered showers Craig, Colo., early today droppeq
were reported over southern to 8 degrees.
oortions of Alabama, Mississippi
Readings In tne 30s were

I

Emma Jean Daljo, 79, Largo,
Fla ., former resident of poth
Pomeroy and Middleport, died

Mel"gs board

Wednesday evening al the Lake
Seminole Hospital In Florida.
Arrangements are being made
by the Rawlings-Coats-Blower
Funera l Home In Middleport.

... __

effective In February of 1988,
cos ts of one phase of the insurance will increase 75 percent.
This, he said, will Increase the
family plan paid by the district
from the $202.29 a month figure
for the family plan to $294 .ffi per
month.
The Meigs Local Board Is
required to walt 10 days before

__

(Continued from
Paget)
__;_____::__:

naming a rep)acement to the
board, _created Tuesday night by
the resignation of Pomeroy Businessman Larry Powell, whose
term of office expires on Dec. 31,
this year. If a replacement Is not
named within a 30 day time span,
then the Meigs Cou nty Board of
Education names a replace!llent
to fill the vaca ncy.

'
One person has super lotto ticket
CLEVELAND (UP!) - One
ticket was sold for Ohio's Super
Lotto d1:awtng Wednesday night
that matched the six winning
numbers, making the holder
eligible to claim the $6 million
jackpot.
The identity of the ticketholder
will be announced after the
winning ticket Is validated at a
regional lottery office. a lottery
commission spokesman said to day. The winning numbers were
4, 7, 13, 20, 32 and 39.
The jackpot winner will receive the winnings in 20 annual
pre-tax payments of$300,000, the

Correction
An accident report published in
the Wednesday edition of The
Dally Sentlene"! was In error, the
Ohio State Patrol reports.
According to the corrected
report, an auto driven by Mona
P. Knapp, 40, Pomeroy, was
traveling north on County Road
261n SalisburyTownshipand was
struck by a vehicle driven by
Floyd K. Rupe, 25, Rutland. The
Patrol said that Rupe, traveling
west on county Road 25. failed to
yield the right of· way. Rupe was
cited on a charge of falling to
yield the right of way .

NATIONAL WEATHER
SERVICE FOREcAST TO 7 AM EST 11-2o-&amp;7
~

I

Area deaths

Emma Dabo

sisslppi Valley and Into the
northern Great Lakes sta tes ,
Crowther sa id.

spokesman said.
In addition to the top prize
winner.131 players picked five of
the numbers to win $1,000 each .
Also, 6,899 players chose four of
the numbers to win $79 apiece.
Ticket sales for the midweek
drawing totaled $4,738,062, while
the total prize payout was
$6,676,021. The estimated jackpot
for Saturday's drawing Is $3
million.

f;•. :lsNOW

-RAIN

~SHOWERS

FRONTS: "
Warm "Cold
. . Static . . . Occluded
Map snows mirimum tempe~tures . At ie~ SO% ot ltr'f shaded atea is,,...,...,..,
to receive ;:tteefpitalion incliealed
WEATHER MAP - Rain showers will' be scattered along the
Gulf of Mexico Coast Into the southern Atlantic Coast states and
Florida. Showers will be most numerous across the Florida
Panhandle and northern third of the state. Rain and snow showers
will be scattered across much of lower Michigan and western New
York state Into northwest Pennsylvania. Snow showers will be
scattered across eastern Minnesota and northern Wisconsin early
In the day. Snow showers will be likely throughout upper ,
Michigan. The rest of the nation will have mostly sunny or partly
cloudy skies. High temperatures will be In the 40s and 50s across
much of the nation.

- - - - - -.......-Weather-----Ohio Extended Forecast
South Central Ohio
Saturday through Monday
Increasing cloudiness this afFair Saturday and Monday,
ternoon, with highs near 50. with a chance of showers mainly
Variable cloudiness to night, with in the northern part of the state
a low between 25 and 30. Partly on Su"nday. Highs will range from
cloudy Friday, with highs In the · the upper 20s to the 30s Saturday
·
mid 30s.
and mostly In the 40s Sunday and
The probability of precipita- Monday . Overnight !ows wlll
tion is near zero through Friday. range from the mid teens to the
Winds will be from the southw- mid 20s early Saturday and from
est at 15 to 25 mph this afternoon the mid 20s to the mid 30s Sunday
and from the west at 10 to 20 mph and Monday mornings.
·
tonight.

What are you in the mcirket for?

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions - TImothy Baker, Middleport : Jack
Braley Sr., Reedsville: Edna
Swick, Rutland.
Wednesday Disc harges -.·
Linda Hawley, Shirley Frazier,
Burwell McK inney.

MIDDLEPORT DEPT. STORE
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT 'TIL 8:00
Registtr 5 ·8 For FREE Turkeys
SALE PRICES. GOOD .THURS.-FRI.-SAT.
~

Stocks

'

out of the tunnels," Bigby said. "!
came across firemen desper ately trying to revive a man . His
face was all blackened. They
tried three times -but It wa s no

By L'nlted Press International
· Scattered rain showers were
reported early today along the

Am Electric Power ........ ...... 26
AT&amp;T ... ......... .... .. . .. .... ........ 29\i.
Ashland 011 .......... : ..... ...... .. :52
Bob Evans ....... .. .... .......... ... 15 ~
Charming Shoppes .. ...... .. .. .. 13\1.
City Holding Co .. ................. 34
Federal Mogui .. ........... .. .... .32V.
Goodyear T&amp;R ........ ,......... .4911.
Heck's Inc ........................... 2'1.
Key Centurion ..................... 36
Lands' End ....... ...... ....... .. ... 14~
Llmlted' Inc........................ 19 ~
M\IItlmedla Int ............... ..... 46
Rax Restaurants .................. 3~
Robbins &amp; Myers .... .... ..... .. .. 7~
Shoney's Inc....................... 20ji
Wendy's Inti. .... ................... 5~
Worthington Ind .................. 16%

BLANKET SLEEPERS
SIZES
6-Mo. to

3 Yrs.
MEN'S POPULAR

FLEECE
SHIRTS
Silos S, M, Xl
~

Blue, Grey, White, Burgondy

DEVON &amp;
CRICKET LANE

1
UP TO . /2

OFF

When it comes to a buying decision for automobiles
more than 92% of OhioanS use daily newspapert'. *

LADIES WRANGLER

BLOUSEs·
Sizes
S, M, L

$988
·

WRANGLER INSULATED-Olive &amp; Navy

3 588

COVERALLS •••••••••• ~.~,.~,.~~!~·.~!~ ......
WRANGlER INSUL1ED-Z~p Leg
$4188

CAMO. COVERALLS....................

.

Corne In Friday Night, S to 8 p.rn., and
Register for a FREE Turkey. Just In
Time For Thankagi•ing. . .

The Daily Sentinel
We Deliver
For Subscription or Advertising Information

Call 992-2156

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

• When qu estio ned if they had read a daily or Sunday newspaper in th e

fJJ St

week

92% of tho se who had purchased an automobile within the past 2 years said "Yes"
'

.

Source: Markei Opinion Research

~=====~========~ -.

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Page-10-The

,.

;Holiday workshop set
~.Monday in Pomeroy
~ · A holiday happening tradi -

tional with the Meigs County
Exte_nslon Service, this year
called" 'Home for the Holidays" ,
will take place Monday from 7 to
9 p.m. at St. Paul Lutheran
Church In Pomeroy.
· Open to the public the program
will feature Ideas for holiday
cele,ratlons, gift giving and
.:'- [amlly actlviles.
Speakers will include Becky
•
: Culbertson, Gallia CountyExten.• slon Agent, Home Economics,
~ Ann Lambert of the Fabric Shop,
.• Peggy Crane of Bulk Foods
·• Store. and Cindl Oliveri, Meigs
:; County Extension Agent.
:·
Among the spesial activities to
( be included will be a candy
'·.• making demonstration, fabric
~ gift
Ideas, family traditions ,
'• welcome wreaths and entertain·
• ing ideas.
Following the program there
will be a dessert potluck and each
person attending is asked to take .
• a favorite dessert and serving
~ utensil. Cost is $2 to cover door
~ prizes, room renta l and supplies.

..
•

"Microwave Magic for the
Holidays". a demonstral;!on on
quick and easy Ideas for family
meals. entertaining and gift
giving during the·holid ay season,
has been scheduled by the
extension agent for Dec. 1, 7 to 9
p.m. at the Senior Citizens Center
on Mulberry H'eights.
Mrs . Oliveri wlll be joined by
Betty Reese, Athens County
Extension Agent and the two will
share te~hnlques for making
quick and easy appetizers, main
dishes, and desserts and sweet
trea ts in the. microwave oven.
Cost for the class is $3. A
tas ting session will follow the
prese ntation . Residents are
asked to register for the class at
the Meigs County Extension
Office.
This week three " make-it,
take-It" holiday workshops were
held at the extension office.
Scented Qrnaments, angel repli·
cas, miniature wreathes, and
scandia wheat free form designs
were created by each of those
enrolled.

_;.....__Poet's corner---

.,

We know that he was born down In

And wllh his parents wPnt to Nazareth.
to grow up theft' wl1 h them
·~
then he was oft times called the Man of
~

•• GalliJE"E.'
but the one most rPmembffed
., place called Calvary .

·~

•.
•.

~
\

•
·::
\

.

wa~

a

H was !here he proved his fr iendship
with a love that
k.n~· no oounds while on cross sus·
pended. and on hls braw a tho rny crown
Ye1 In hi s heart th ere was no mali ce
hang1ng then•
b(&gt;lween two thel.ves pra yln~ to his
Heavt&gt;nly fat her to fo rgive his enerni£&gt;S.
" His Name Is Jesus' '

He said that · he-'d forgive our sins and
~~ bl ock them from all vi N.'.
..
And lik e anN· born baby we could sta rt
'- our lives a new
"
It was lor this vrl'y reason he died upon
'· thP Cross, But
·
::
praises be to him nbovr. t'w as our gai n
and not our iO!lS
'oo;

did atone. and soon he-'s co m ing Dack

again to claim us
for his own. He said if I be lifted up, I'll
brln~ all men
to me. Oh nel ghOO r do not turn away

from such a dest iny .
Th e joy of k nowin g one day with him we
can asc end
to dwell wlth hi m foreveT with this very
special friend

"His Name Is Je-sus"

Thursday, November 19, 1987 ·

. Page- 11

( -

THE BOOT YOU'll
BEG TO WEAR

r

Keblers attend taX convention recently ,

Whenloo!W90r bolo:s this goc.o. feels
this greer. and IJ/Ye5 evervthrng in
your closet p wi"'Oie new rtle rrs no
W'Ofldet vou'd beg to g9t It oo yoor
leg Get togen'IEif wun QOOd
leotnet rr\ Blad or Palommo

htritagt hOU$t

••

'

with values

rnw ,

SHOE PLACE

Harrisonville
happenings

CHRISTMAS WORKSHOP - Holiday workshops were held by
Cindy Oliveri, Mei~:S County Extension Service, this week, the first
of three·special Christmas programs to be held by that agency.
Here Vickie Fink and Carolyn Nicholson work on their angel
replicas, one of three projects completed during the day.
1 will you m y peacE'
Though you don' t -understand
You're an heir of salva1io n
By my nail scared hand

1 bequeat h you goOO health
By my st ripes you are hE'al ed
To all of my children
ProsperUy I've willed

"TilE NEW TESTAAIENT"
This Is th£&gt; last wUJ and testament
of Chrl.st the Lord
My beloved broth ers an d sisters
I bequeath you all m y love
T have ascen ded t o m y Fat her
up above
·

I will you Jifp fo rever
more abundant ly
Any man wh&lt;l comes t o mris 1ruly fre t:&gt;

Is Holy and tru e
Jts the word of my Father
His will I m us1 do
I am the New Tes1a m e-n t
.Jesus Christ, Lord and Kin g
The word &lt;lf life
I did humbly bring
For all that bellevP th&lt;:~t
1'm God's onl y Son
ForE'ver and evl'r .
His ba11 1~ are won
I will them vlc1 ory ov('r death
In 1he grave
It' s m )' F ather' s power
For the life that I gav&lt;'

I givl' you fo rgiveness
of all you r sins
T o you I bequeath
My everl asting Commandm ents
of Ten

PIE'aSC' take&gt; my Testa ment
I Christ madE' for you
.. Keep 11 m y childre n
For Its worQs or e t r ue
Barbara E . James

J bequeath you the
will power 1o ta cf:'
each neW .day
Forget not my beneflts
Please don' t forget to pray

"SEE \\'HAT GOD'S DONE"'
H ave .v ou

eyer seen

a rainbow

As It fleptJnglv spans 1he sky ..
It f ('lll [nds u s"Clf Cod's prQmlse
He' ll come back
God does not lie .. .

TOYS FOR TOTS - Meigs County Grange
Women traditionally make and present toys to
Vetera"s Memorial Hospital to be given to
hospitalized children. This year, tenth for the
project sponsored by the Fairfield Processing
.Company and the National Grange, 43 toys were
give" to the hospital. Here Rhonda Dailey, R. N. ,
director of nursing, accepts a toy from Weslina

When I se-c a buucrfly !hats
pl aying In th e bf(l("le.
1 know that Gqd Is wa1chlng us ..
And alllhE'Se- things hf' sN&gt;s

The birds they sin !'! their swl'el. sweet
song..
So sof1 Jy In our C'ar
We llstPn .. Oh so s il ently ..
Their m elody to hear..

Tlrl• prla lru:iluh•

all .,.,cud optltnU

full-,··

&amp; custom fr•lwml
(txrtpl dillm&lt;JIIIIs lit

ThC' trf't'S so tall
Sleep m ountains hl,l:lh
and gr{'('n, grE'en grass bt'low ..
God SC'nds 1he sunshlnC' ond th e ra in
To mak e our g-ardens gr ow..

OH"' GI"M'd Ur.tl Novwmblf 30. tl87

pre-natal program. Hosteses will
THURSDAY
REEDSVILLE - Riverview be Linda Broderick and Becky
Garden Clu b will hold a Christ- Broderick.
mas Workshop at 7:30 p.m.
FRIDAY
Thursday at the Reedsville
GALLIPOLIS
Gallipolis
Ch urch of Christ. Members are to
t,ake gifts for the Athens Mental · Flame Fellowship Chapter will
Meet Friday, 6:30p.m. , at Dale's
Health Center.
Smorgas bord. Speaker will be
POMEROY - The Middleport Bob Shackleford from Delaware,
Child Co nservation League will Ohio.
meet Thursday at the home or
SYRACUSE - A revival is
Peggy Harris, 7:30 p.l'l). Hele n
underway
through Sunday at
Blackston will have devotions
Syracuse
Church
of the Nazaand the traveling prize.
rene.
Evangelist
is Rev. Ron
Members are to take baby items
Roth.
Services
begin
at 7 p.m.
which will be used in a county

ORDERS MUST BE PLACED BY
NOV. 27, 1987 FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY

Th e li111e frog sits qui vering
&lt;I! 1h(' Nlgl' of an ol d farm pond ..
Look on that hil l o'rr yondrr
You may s('(' a litt le fawn ..

There arc&gt; m a ny, many wond ers
God has made hert' In our land ..
Whar a wond£'rful, wonderful God
HP is
That Holds us in His Hand.

ers

E. MAIN. POMEROY

Barbara Jam t:'S

Crabtree of Columbia Grange, chairman of the
project. Other grange representatives, pictured
left to right , are Sarah Cullums, Hemlock,
Barbara Fry, Rock Springs, Emma Adams and
Mary Virginia Easterday, Racine; Ruby Lam·
bert and Bernice MldkHI, Star. Children pictured
are Chelsia Pratt, Eric and Chelsea
Montgomeroy.

Community calendar

OFFERED EXCLUSIVELY BY R. JOHNS,

God's fl owprs In bl oom
are benu1ifu l..
ThC'H'. OdflrS arp SO Swf"let
and h&lt;~ VP you f'ver notlcC'd It
His flpld's ol soft strewn whl'al

Alfred community .notes

,,'

Sunday School attendance November 1 was 22; church attend·
ance, 21. On November 8 Sunday
School attendance was 23;
church attendance, 20.
Mr. and Mrs. Hobart Swartz
visited Katie Swartz at Kimes
Rest Home, Athens.
On November 10 Mr. and Mrs.
Keith Weber and Nellie Parker
completed the JOeweek Old Testa ·
men! Bible Study held at Tuppers
Plains UMC under the leaders hip
of Rev. Don Archer.
Erica Lamb. stud ent at Ohio
University. visited her aunt and
famil y, Mr. and Mrs . Sammie
Brown, Aaron a nd Alex, No·
vember 7 and 8. She also visited
her. grandparents. Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Spencer, and ot)ler rela·
tives in the area.
Jusy Avis was hostess at a
Home Interior Gift party at her
hom e November 6. Pat Marks
from Belpre was the demonstra·
tor . PrPsent were Susan Pullins,
Tina Spencer, Martha Poole,
Mary Lou Spencer, and Nellie
Parker.
Dorothy Robinson returned

Revival underway
Revival service will be held
Friday night at 7:30 p.m. at the
Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center.
Evangelist Herbert Inscoe will
be the eva ngelist and music will
be by the United Gospel Si ngers.
The public is invit.e d.

home from University Hospit al
on November 6. She is making a
satisfactory recovery.
Sandee Wright and Jane
Reeves presented an open housE'
of Runin' Brier Crafts at Sandee's home on November 7 and 8.
A large crowd attended and
viewed the many beautiful
crafts.
Lester Keaton received word
!hat his sister is in the hospital at
Marietta; Mrs. Keaton' s sister is
in a Cleveland hospital. .

nightly through Saturday. Sun·
day services will be at 10: 30 a.m.
and 6 p.m.
POMEROY - Revival servi·
ces will be conducted Friday,
7:30 p.m. at the Senior Citizen
Center In Pomeroy. Evangelist
will be Herbert Inscoe and music
will be by the United Gospel
Singers. The public is invited.

TYLENOL

EXTRA STRENGTH
CAPLETS

Stella Atkins and Ruby Diehl
entertained the Lend-a-Hand Society at their home recently with
sixteen members and guests
attended.
Nellie Lowe recently visited
her sons and daughters -in-law,
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lowe, Columbus, and Mr. and Mrs. Pa-t-Lowe,
Akron. While there she attended
a layette shower lor her 20th
great-grandchild.
M.r. and Mrs. Duane Stanley
spent a week visiting relatives In
Iowa.
Mrs. Bessie Graham has re·
turned from a three week vis it in
South Carolina with her two
daughters and her son and their
families.
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
had as guest,s three deer ·hunters
!om Somerset, I&lt;Y. One bagged
an eight point deer.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Patterson
had relatives from Indiana as
gues Is over the weekend.
Mrs. Faye Cotterill is in
Florida visiting her parents and
other relatives .

'

Learning how to write out a
check and prepare a receipt was
a part of the activity of the
Pomeroy girl scout troop meet ·
ing this week at the home of Ann
Chapman. leader.
The pledge and girl scout
promise opened the meeting.
Dues were collected and attend·
ance taken. The scouts then
looked at the leaves they had
collected and· pressed at the last
meeting. The leaves were Ironed
between waxed paper, cut out
and th en glued onto co ns.tructlon
paper' before being put into an
ldenttficalion bllOk on leaves.
Also at the meeting the girls
melted down chocolate, molded
trlnto forms,let it harden and ate
It for refreshments at the conclu·
sion of the meeting. Group
singing of "Day Is Done" and a
frl end.shlp hand squeeze ~on­
eluded the meeting.

•

..

enttne

We Wo,k Foi You Dsl/g..... You Csn Depend On If/
•

,,,.

•

...

$389
2 BOTTLES OF 50

WHITMAN'S

MINIATURE CHOCOLATE
SAMPLER

53C
oz.

NOW
II/!

lEG. 75&lt;

FROM OUR
MACHINE

FRESH

NUTS

BUY 4 OZ. GET
2 oz. FREE

MGMDINNER
MIDDLEPORT· - MGM Dis· .
tr.tct. Boy Scouts of America,
recognition dinner will be held on
Tickets for the Beta Sigma Phi
Dec. 3 at the new American Christmas buffet dinner and
Legon Hall in Middleport.
dance to be held on Dec. 5 at the
Reservations are to be made Senior Citizens Center arc now on
by Nov : 27 with Lisa Roush, 33178 sale and may be obtained from ·
. Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy, officers of the four chapters. A
45769, or by calling 992-3486. All social hour from 7 to 8 p.m. will
reservations of $6.50 must be be held preceding the dance with
paid in advance.
Mick Childs as disc jockey. The
tickets are $8 for singles and $16
TICKETS
for couples . The dance is being
POMEROY - Ticketes for the hos ted by the 'Ohio Eta Phi
Beta Sigma Phil Christmas Cha pter.
buffet and dance are on sale from
club officers and chapter
members . The event will be Dec.
5, at the Senior Citizen Center in You'll be floating on a cloud.with
Pomeroy. Social hour is 7 to 8
the buys you'll find in the
p.m. Tickets are $8 for singles
and $16 for couples. It will be
dassifieds.
hosted by Ohio Eta Phi C.hapte·r.

Dance slated

FOREVER KRYSTLE
CONCENTRATED
COLOGNE SPRAY

$588

SJO.OO
VAlUE ONlY

CHRISTMAS COLORING AND.
.
STICKER BOOKS
REG. 99' ONLY 69&lt;

HURRY!
Place your

..

-.
.,

'

•

$339

.•

•

REG. SS.99

.

JOVAN COLOGNES
9
NOW $2~
3/s OZ.

.

...

FQR MEN

advertising
·' •
message 'n
our

REG. S4.50

••
•

..
..
•

.. '

.....
.

PIERCED EARRINGS
BUY· l PAIR
GET 2 PAIRS OF
EQUALOR LESS
VALUE- FREE

ristmas

'

..

.....

CIGARETTES
REG . &amp; MINGS
lOO's

$995 CTN.

$10 28 CTN.

Plus FREE Scipto
Disposable
Lighter

GIFT GUIDE EDITION
Wednesday,· November 25th

.• .
•

•

· OFFER GOOD THRU 11 /23/ 87
.•

SWISHER LOHSE

COPY DEADLINE FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20th
'

·and ask for display advertising

..
•".

DELUXE HOLIDAY
ASSORTMENT
BY AMERICAN GREEnNGS
NOW
BOX 32

Call THE DAILY SENTINEL 992-2156

•'

..
·.

CHRISTMAS CARDS

I·

Scouts learn
about money

tlon .and . record keeping books
can be obtained from the local
office, Kebler noted.

Karl and Mary Kebler. local gate how the far reaching tax
H&amp;R Block owner-managers, · changes of the Tax Re form Act of
attended the annual H&amp;R Block 1986 will · affec t them . In forma ·
Sat~.lllte Owners' co nvention
held in Columbus last week .
The convention was held for 260
franchise operations in Ohio,
West Virginia and Kentucky.
Also attending were manage. men! training specialists, Thomas Zimmerman, regional di·
rector and Clara L, Gustina,
regional satellite franchise direr·
tor. The directors hosted the
convention which was developed
to include the latest in tax
changes as well as management
topics and marketing strategies.
Taxpayers are being encouraged to organize tax related
materials early and to Invest!- .

!l,. .
.)'

'r:hls T esta ment I give you

Mrs. Alpha L . Douglas

" His Name is J£&gt;sus"

•. St&gt;t hrlham

•.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

ou r transgressions

• De-ar neighbor le-t me tnt.roduce a very
• • spedal fr iend.
·~
Whom I have knoWn for marly ~ars and
... can highly rf&gt;tO mm~d .
...
You'll never find another so Joyal an d so
•• dear.
;~
No matter what besets you, he will never
J~ disappear
for he&gt; promised 10 be ultth us 10 1he'· world ' s en d
so now I pre-sent t o you this very special
., frl~d
·~

I'

His death. buria l and resurrection for

"HIS NAME IS JESUS"

'·

I

Thursday, November 19, 1987

Ohio

(

Pharmacy

..
.'
•.~•

Knnnuth M ~:C ~&lt; 110ugh . R Pk
Ch11rlf'S R11flc A Ph
Ronalrl Hanin g. R Ph

Mon thtu Sat 8 00 AM IO 9 P M
Sunday 10:00 AM . 10 4:00PM
PRESCfl.lPTIONS
PH 992 2955
Friendly S111111C~
Po mfii OV, 01"1
E M11in
Open N1ghts toll 9

'

.'
•

'

�Page- 12- The

Sentinel

Quirks

Thursday, November 19. 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei - Page-13

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

&gt;

'

0

lfl

Business Services
TO PUU AN AD Ull 992 -21 56;
IIIONDAT fhru fi»U I A.M. lo .S P,M. ' I A.M. Until NOON SATW:DAY
nouo SUNDAY

"'I OfOOPI
IDAOI

1&amp; 00

&gt;D•ol

0500

• - .:-~-

U •100001 II.WOIIO.
. . Cit
01DII
OI Cit
1\I DII

-

...

lloiO'ITM

&gt;»110

-

1111111

1~ Y-~

.....

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

·~...-"'"'
••• ...
..,.....,.....,""
or•""'~
......''....
...... _"''""'"''
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...............
..... - ·
&lt;.........
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.. _ .......
.. ..........
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.......
. ..'"'""' ......

'"'~
,~

.••-c-.
,_
_. _
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.
.,..........
....
.
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··--"·' "'.
MI - Q.. _

ouuu ...

c o~•
MO~Ob

. . ••

111110~1
·~···
IHII
. . OUfOOI•
f~11M Y,~'I~

ouooo ....0[ .

&gt;"" ••"'... ••10••
....

'

Office,

111 VJ

. Stroot, Pomerov. Ohio 45769.

a~bsequent to publication of

Insured / licensed

CHESTER. OHIO

~SO pH qamt

OYER 110 P£0PlE
SbS pu qomt
(o•~·-AII molurt•tl on Admonoe~n

2 Hard Cards fRH

wit~ thit. od ond purrhme

of mtMimum podo:oge.
lrmtf 1 prr (\11;1Dmtr p!r

915-4141

992-2156

re51de~ add

sales tax.)

Send lrl:
Reidel IIIII

The Daily Sentinel
6UII Noohm llhd., WJa d11di:
NY 11377. Prine Nlmt, AddltM,
lip, Size, Pattern IUnber.

Bingo senion.

GINIIII CONTUUOIS
References
1 1-3-ttn

liL J&lt;lOS ·CI hp. 'l/19/17

FACTORY CHOKES

PUBLIC INVITED . ·--

5

Help Wanted

10-IU7

SLUG SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER
1:00 P.M.
AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE

10 Hord Card Gomrs

SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
8ACK HO E WORK
Pflon1 Day or henintp

(N y

Evenings

THURU PM-18 6•41

REPAIRS

included . Cape has a
coal look because of
buttoned cuff detail.
Each pattern $3.25 plus
75e postagelhand~ng .

BILL SLACK
614-992-2269

BINGO

•ROOM AOOITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
BE MODELING &amp;

(8·10). M (12·14), L
(1 6-1 8) and XL (20-22)

Per Pickup load
Delivered

EAGLES UUB - POMEROY, OH.

I

Oak, Cherry

$J500

11 · 4 -1 mo .

•HOME BUILDING

4011--Misses Sizes S

Locust,

992-11873
Joe or Pouley Bowland
209 South 4th St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"

MARCUM .
CONTRACTING :

11

FIREWOOD

25 Yrs. Exp .
References

Middleport

thia notice.
(111 18, 19, 20, 22. 23, 24.
26, 7tc

1012"1 mo.

Happy Ads

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Immediate opening for full time and
part time R. N .'s to work in areas .of
•Special Care
•Emergency Room
•Skilled Nursing Facility
•Medical, Surgical Units
Salary comparable with experience.
Excellent Fringe Benefits

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10· 7·tfn
ThingS arebuzzln' in the

tPY

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

10-9-lfn

WE'RE STILL ALIVE!
Gueiranteell the Same For

'"'"
FOR 81
FUlLER
IRUSH
PRODUCTS

OR 10 BE A R!PRESfNTATIV!
CALL

SUSAN COLEMAN
742-2778
Dr

SHIRLEY COLEMAN
742-2125
" /r ·., A Great Funi:l
Raiser"
L0/ 28/ 1 mo.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

We can repair and re ·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil. and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

'

Howard L Writesel

Sis!

Lo~e.

NEW- REPAIR
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4· 22·17-tfn

Plenty of Thanksgiving

"SA~IN8S"

PHONE 9n-9200

Gulf 1ervice
SALE PRICES
lOUT£ #124

IICINI, OHIO

GOOD THIU MON, NOV. 23

Sell, Buy, Rent - Find ·and Give,
Notice, Too!
Your feast of b~rgains will be falling
right in - iust call our classified
department staffers if you need help.

4165: Misses Slzea S
(8·10), M (12·14), L
(16-18), XL (20·22).
Easy-to-sew top and
elasticized pants to mix
.and match.
Each pattern $3.25 plus
75e postage/handling.
(NV residents add sales llllr.)
SIIIIIID:

NO UINCHIUS

ST. LOUIS HI\WKI':N RIFLES

Rudlr IIIII

24 CAN CASE

The Daily Sentinel

50 Caliber Percussion

ALL POP
~minglon.

lot. '139.95

62-GIIIalllln lllwd., Woodlltll,
NY 11377. Prtnt Nlllt, AddltM,
~. Sia, l'lttlm Number.

$12.4 95
!AYE '15 .00

ONLY

FREE OFFER
3 Craft Bool&lt;s (value $8.85)
when you order one of the ',
$2.95 books listed baiOw.
119-M of FlOwe&lt; Crochat ,,
121-f'iltow Show Offs
127--Aighans and DoilieS
129-0uick/Easy Transfers

~-

HUNTERS'
VESTS

"CANOE"

ssos

2-BLADE

$2 800

s

Add 1.05

MINI-MAG COMDO
EXPRI-.."::S MAGNUM

28 GA.
410GA.
20 GA.
16 GA.
12 GA.

$725
Plu1 To1

RACINE VILLAGE

1 9-0006 1. 000 Carpen·
tar. Spencer, 9 W. Add ..
$309.39.
1 9 · 00052 .000 Carpen-

r--~~iiiiion.--1
Deer Slugs

[

12, 16, 20, 410 gauge

I
I

1

I

5209
bg. ~1.89

s Pack

wuh Co upnn

.

(Clip Coupon)

ter, Spencer, Pt. of Lot 3 W.

Add., U6 .71 .

lt--------------i

l
~

ANTI-FREEZE

Single Shot
Shoigun

$385

12 &amp; 20 Gauge

I
1
I

1

t------------------~

GAl .

'6995

.
FASHION

P A T T E A NS

SOUTHERN

'

tor poslogo.llandlng.

1 9·00053.000 Carponter. . Spencer, 4 W. Add.,
$29.19 .
1 9· 00054 .000 Carpenter. Spencer. Pt. of lot 8 W.
Add., t28.14.
19-00677.000 Carpon·
ter, Spencer 8o Cheryl, SE

Pt. Lot 2 James M. Weldon

Add., $2 .90 . .

1 9 · 001 57.000 Gheen,
Car! Vincent, 40 All Except
30' E End, t1 59.08 .
19-00168.000 Gheen ,

C:arl

Vincent , 29 Tri. W . Pt.

ol 28' Front N &amp; 80', $8.95.
19·00220 .000 Hudson,

WH0-0-0-0
can help
you?
CLASSIFIED
ADS

-

-

.

r------~-----------------------------1
ALL ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE
I
.

~

I

Record Those Special
Occasions an VHS
T',lpe
•Holidll'f ' ''l"ti.., ·
•Waddint,:
"•S chool 8t Church Programs
•Sporting Events
•Anniversaries
•A aeor d Valuab l as.
Documents
•Transfer Photo Albums to
VHS Tape
•Transfer 8mm and Super 8
Movi&amp;s to Video Tape
•Create Train~ng Films tor
Students and Employees

1.~
..

$3 00

•3 DAYS
•3 LINES (15 Words)
•3 NEWSPAPERS IGollio, Meigs &amp; Mosanl Only
.
1 .. ............................... 6 . ......... ... ,....... .. 11.
2. .......... ....... 7 . ...........!.. ....... 12 . .... .......... . ······

3 ................................. . 8 .......................... ..... 13 . ............... ......... ... .
4. ············ .................... 9 . ......................... . 14 . .......................... ..
5 ................................. . 1 0 .
15 .
GOOD FOR ADS PURCHASED THROUGH NOV . 30, 1987

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

The

Daily
Sentinel

Locatud half way bet-

Yard Man mowers, Echo
trimmers, saws, blowers
- Snowoff blowers, Ore·
gon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push mow·
ers picked up and tuned and
returned 120.00.
Parts &amp; Service on all
Makes.

PH . 949-2969
11 / 2 / 871 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rl. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR
Also Ira nsml ttl on
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-lfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reosonoble Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
~

4·16-86 -lfn

TOP CASH paid -tor '83 model and newer used cars . Smtth
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Entern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614 -446·
2282.

SYSEMS
Home &amp; Auto

(61 41 992-3718

Add on mini fuel

co~1puler

system. Fits any ear .

I

miles per ga.lon readout.
Know your fuel consumption
fr.om one block to h,undreds of
miles.
Store to Job Cost
TaJ~:i

Service
Before and after auto tune·up .
(Comparator) fill up your
tank . and watch it subtract and

display fuel consumed.

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

0

Authoriled John Deere,

New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Farm Equipment
Parts 8. Ser~lee

or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

U -' 861fc

4-15·' 86-lc

HILLSIDE
MUZILELOADING
GUN SHOP

v.w~

PARTS

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

•SLUGS
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOAOING

SUPPLIES

OPEN I to 9 P.M.
Happv Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND

614-747-'USS
·

11 · 6~ 1

mo.

BERRY BASKET
Country Gifts
·and Decor
SIXTH ST., SJIACUSI, OH.

SALE

BISSELl

Cross Stitch Supplies
SO% Off
Basket Supplies .

SIDING CO.
New Homes Built

20% Off

" Free Estimate.s "

Discount on Selected Items
HOURS : Tueo.- Sat .
10amto5pm

614-992-5082

No Sunday

10/ 27/l mo .

Announcemenls

992-3410
liMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

3 Announcements
MASTER C ARD / VISAI Regardlas's of credh historv . Also. new
credit card. No one refused! For
information call .. . 1·31 5 -733 6062 Ewt. N -2758.

A diflerent kind of dating
service. For information write,
Kupid 's Nest. P.O. Box 519,
Ironton, OH 45638
No Hunting on Gill Ridge on
properties of C . R. Gill, Mitc hell
Cullen. George Gill witl]out
written P&amp;l"mission. Violators
will be proaecuted.
No Hunting or Tresspassing on
my farm. if c aught will be
prosecuted by law or my gun.
NO DOGS. Jim Stewart.

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER
WHITE HIU RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

4

Giveaway

TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NITE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS
Buying Roots,
Beef Hides and
Deer Hides

GEORGE BUCKLEY
614-664-4761
HOURS
Mon .·Sat. 2 to 9 P.M .
Sunday 5 to 9 P.M.
10-15·1 mo.

ALL
PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
New locatipn:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Carry Fishing Supplies

, P~y Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hero
BUSINISS PHONE
(6141 991-6510

RISIOENCE PHONE
(6141 992-7754
ll?a/tln

Services
11

Help Wanted

ladV to stay part-time with
eM&amp;rly lady. Must be local. Call

614-266·6613 .
Christmas around the corner and
nO monEJy ? Se ll Avon &amp; earn
money &amp; prices . Cell 614 - 446 2156 .
Aggret~sive

Marketing Exp. &amp;,.CI.

Lab. Backgrou nd qualities you

for thi s position. Saiary·Comm.
Companv car. Send resume &amp;
ref . r(): Bo• 33 Gallipolis. Ohio
Lab. Manager with prevtous
expBI' incas in Bench Work, Q .C .,
equip. maintertanca. etc . Send
resume 8a ret . to : Box 33,
Gallipolis, Ohio 4563 1 .
Needed: Social Service Director
for a 100 bad SNF·ICF Nuraing
facility located in Gallipolia. OH.
Excellent salary and benefits.
Li cense &amp; BSW recommended.
Apply !Nith res ume' to : Scenic
Hills Nuraing Center. 636 Buckridge Rd . Gallipolis. 0 H

Government Jobs. $16 ,040 659,230 yr. Now Miring. Your
area. 806 -687 -6000 En A9805 for current rapo fed&amp;fal
l ist.
AVON • All areas. Ca ll Marityn
Weaver 304-882-2646 .
'

Experienced p lumber with
W.Va . license . Apply Orman
Hall Inc .. 1317 Ohio S t . Point
Pleasant.
Baby sinar 6 :00 a.m. to 1 :00
p.m . Monday thru Friday, 9
miles N. Pt. Pl. long Hollow Rd .
Non Smoker. 304 -896-3823.

13

7 mos. old male dog. Gt. Shep. &amp;
Blue heeler. Black &amp; tan co lor.
C•ll614-245-9578.
Retrig .. washer &amp; 2 elec. stoves.
All need repair . Mu st take all .
Call614·446-0770 anytime.

To a good Mome-2 small house
type puppiea-h alf Pekingeta,
h81f Corgey . Call 614-446 2046 .

6

Lost and Found

FOUND: Mad. size Collie-Male.
Brown &amp; white- wearing brOWil
collar. On Rou sh lane-Cheshire.
Call 304 -676-7423.
LOST: Black &amp; white Tov
Poodle. Vicinity of Sun Valley
Dr. Answers to " Peanut " . Wesring rad collar with bel ~. Reward .
Call 614-446 -2079.

18 Wanted to Do
Septic tank Pumping, residential
&amp; co mmericel. $80 per load.
Ro n Evans Enterprises. Jackaon,
Ohio. Call 614-286-5930

Will care for your child while vou
Chriatmas shop. attend holidev
dinniHs or pert iea, or during
Christmas vacation. Convenient
location. experienced mother.
Call 614 -446 -0065 afler S:OO

PM .

Carpenter work, $6 a hr.' or bv
the job. Panelling, painting,
drvWIIII, remodeling. Call 614446 -6377.

Hou se Cleaning - Point Pleasant
and surrounding areas . 304·

895·3035 .

Financial
21

Black and white mate kitten , 6
mont-h old . TravtNs under vetli·
cles and could b e any wherefrom
SR 143 to Pomaroy or Athena.
Call 614-992 -6321 .

lOST· AEWARO . large black
Lab. with white 1pot on c hest
wearing yallow collar. 304-876 3999 OJ 675 -6037.

Business
Opportunity

J NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAl lEY PUBLISHING CO . reco mmanda that v'ou
do bueiness with pBDple you
know, and NOT to send mon(l'r'
thr ou gh t he mail until you h ~e
investigated t he offering .

L•Salle Gallf!IIV, Middleport. £!;.
tabliahed Turn-Kev Operetiof'l.
For appointment. ca ll614 -99~7521 , Financiang eveilable.
lease or buy building.

22 Money to Loan
•

Establ ish credit , Get credi t
c•ds. Get low interest loan's.
Details. Money aid· 8749 Hw)
172 w. Liberty. Ky. 41472.
j

23

FOUND : Friendly black- grey
stripped femal e cat . Sunset Dr.,
between Se«:ond Ave. &amp; Golt
Course . Cal\6 14-446 -8607.
FOUND: Bl ack labrador Ret riever on Kemper Hollow Rd .
Cell 614· 446·2 823 after 4 PM .

Insurance

Call us for your mobile home
insurance: M iller In suran ce.
304 -88 2-2 145 . Also: 8JJIO,
home. life. health.

Puppies to gNa away t o good
home. Call 614 -367 -0229.

One B wk . old kitten to gi\le
away. Call614-446 -7100.

742-2035
1 1-3· 1 mo. pd.

Ern ploym enl

Rt . 124 Across from

*VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Raw fur, beef and deer hides.
Gyn Sing" and Yellow roqt . We
hsve wheat and nite lites.
Trapping supplies for sale. (Buy·
ing used traps) . George Buckley.
Hoyrs12-9 . 614-864-4761 .

45831 .

•AMMO

10· 16· 1 mo. "d.

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy, Ohio

coi'n s . large currency. Top prices. Ed Burkett 811rb8f Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh . 614·
992·3476 .

614-662 -3821

992 -6715

417 Secood Av111ue, Box 1213
~ Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at

Buving daily gold, ailver coi ns.
rings . jOONelry, sterling ware, okl

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter wo rk
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates)

l: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

Wanted to buv· staridingtimber.
Call 614 -379· 2'75S .

742· 2328.

YOUNG'S

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Caii614-446 -31S9 .

Cash tor atanding timber . We
buy van eer white oak and
wa lnut. Call AI Tromm. 614·

IVI6/'87, I mo. d.

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
&amp; coaJ heatera ._ Swain ' I. Furni·
ture, 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis .

Commercial :

listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senlicel . 8
(!! Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~

~

992-7632

EAGL-E RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

ween Rt. 7 and Bashan .

..; "

REASONABlE RATES
&lt;All FOR FREE ESTIMATE

CARPENTER
SERVICE .

Wanted To Buy

We pay c ash for latemodet clean
t.Ji ed cars.
Jim Mink CheY.-Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614-445 -3672

CONSUMER MONITOR

ROOFING.
Gutters
Downspouts

OPEN: MON.-SAT.
1&gt;:00 A.M-B:OO P.M.

.
FREE LANCE
VIDEO

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

WANT ADS

~trthday,

OR CALL 992-2104, EXT. 213

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerato_rs

GUN SHOOT

REGISTERED NURSES

SEND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAILEY, R. N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

All Makes

4·5·11C

T.L.C .

9·92 ·6226

985-3561

•Dryers •Freezors

Good Rate&amp;

Ron Diles or
Garv Cummins

during l'egul• "buainass hours
for a pa-iod of 180 days

~ -.~

., -c ~•-·~-

KEN'S .APPUANCE
SERVICE

WE SEll USED APPLIANCES

Room &amp; Board For
Senior Citizens and

D&amp;C
ELECTRIC

W. SeCX'&gt;nd

"'"

~-

ELIM HOME

-~

1986, for the Kibbla Founda-

tK&gt;n, Bernard V. Futtz, Trustee.
is evaillbla for public inspectton at Bernard V. Fultz Law

::::r:..~":.-;:.

u-t:.,•-• .,.._
.........

1:1-I'M-··-

1- - ~-·

DON'T LET YOUR ELECTRI·
CAL PROBLEMS BECOME A
SHOU TO YOU!
CALL

PUBUC NOTICE
The annual report Form
990PF for December 31 .

u _,
_.........,- .

u -·--~

~ ....

---·--........__.

l'l ~ t ............

.,

N7 ~-·

Public Notice

,._
._,
..........
,._
__
.,._
,
____
.....~~-··-··
. . . .. ..,,..,

_..

___ ,_ ...
· --··-

Ht- • • l l &lt; -

I 0)11 0 ...... ONOU

1001 .. 1Ut,O.or
&gt;Go 1 .. ""Oh'fii&gt;O•
·~v•so ..

___ _

··-~-. "'. t l
11 - --TIOo

&amp;fto ,..., . , .

h_,

M l-C -~o

I U.. lUl10~
11t1CJOM UtU•IlO&gt;'

•- c•-

IN- MIH-

••-v,.,,
........,...,o••

O.OrJIJ~f

o&amp;oi •
TUf:IOOYtAOU

...

u--•• ''-"'
............
... _
,,_,..,......,_,

jo llm~Ji n g td~ph Oitt• f!xc:hQill!t!' J ,,,

POMEROY-985-3561

JI - R............. .

......

CloJsi/ied p«gu cover lht:

~

·-··. __
................. .
..... . .-··---·. ..

..,

_
· -·--·-·
,.

107 LOCUST ST. -

··-"-""'
a.!_,_
... ,_

. . w........ . ...

I

HOUSE FOR RENT

N
-.. ..,.
;&gt;&lt;-----.

_

~- ._,___,_
.... lolo- lo .. _

.~~~~: .~~: :a: :;::
.. ................................ ... ...........

·~= ~ ~;-.:~:::.:• "'-0 ••• .....,., I,,..,.., ~·• ..
:f;:.~ .:,~ '.~~·-=·~'.11'"''" ..,............ .. "'•'

·--

....
,_.
..,_,
,_
_
.
--"-...... _.

RATES

"""'""
.....
. ._. . . -0&lt;"'·-·-·. . . . . . ,.
.=....... "'"'"'-"' ... '" ..............

I

9

Professional
Services
CALL
HU STO NS WELDING
&amp; ~A8 .
(Certified~

•

For any welding repair or fabrication work. No job too 1mall or
too l arge. Aluminum welding. a
specialty . Wo give quality and
quick tervice. Please call 61~682·71 22 for estimate.
..

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 BR .• fireptace, full baument. 3

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auctioneer li·
cansed in Ohio and West Virgi nia. Estate, antique, l •m. liqui·
dation aaln. 304-773-6786.
Christmaa Auction Sunday,
Nov. 22 . 1987. Hanford Community Bldg. Hartford, WV.
Toys. Jewelry, Christrnu gifts
for whole familv . E~~ervone
Welcome. Auctioneer Aiehard
Revnoids. 301 -$7

mi . so. of Gallipolis . 834,900.
Call Oays-614-446-1615, aftet
6.;00 - 446-1244.
..
Brand n ew 3 BR ·. near Gallipol'ts
locks on Rt . 7 . 2 car garage, nloe
lot. Immediate possession. Will
consider tJade in of Mobile
ttome. property, etc. B•rgein
priced. Call 614-4 46- 8038 .
N_e llt. clean ranch . Raatricted
subdivision . Hannan Treoe
S chools. Payments lower th.,
rent . Buutifut view. Call 614-

256-6200.
2 bedroom In cit v. priced reas~
nable,pAII 614 -446 - 0897.

�'
November 19, 1987

'
Pa

-14-The Daily Sentinel

31

Homes for Sale

51 Household Goods

LAFF-A-DAY

3 BR ., bathli half. kitchen, living
room-firtiPI.ca, dining aru, Anached g•age. buem..t . Good
condition. Will Mil· ·land conttact. Firtt St. west· HolterL
Call 614-•46-3.601 ,

Thursday, November 19, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PARSON'S FURNITURE
Juat aniYed· 3 truck loldt· NeW
living room tuitet; new wood 6
pe. living wood suitea, *399.95;
ch Mt Of drawers; tWinmattrenea, e95
set; microwave
oven, stlnds.
·
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIEND

Modern 3 BR . hou•. Patriot.
Ohio. Will help finance. Cell
614-446-1340, 446-3870.

54

Misc. Merchandise

60

Ctlibar

Hawkins

6000 Ext. GH -9805 for currerrt

repo list.
·3 bedroom. 7 room one floor
bome in Middll!tPort. ?.OOX200

lot.

Hou~e for sale. 2126 Lincoln

Aw .. phone 304-676-3476.

jJ. j,

otorJn wlndowo and doon, Iorge

"M aybe we ought t 0 t urn the
d f
WOfld 0Vef tO the ki S Of a

3119 ....r 4:oopm.

few years ...I'm sure they'd

HouM,

2

bedrooms,

famlty

room, full boooment, cant&lt;al

heat and ail!' cond, vif1YI aiding.
lot, gerden tpace.

l

'L

G04-675·

1y

·

ed k'

hand I't back."

condition,
convenient
location. .,.
304-175-5027
.

• ' -::

32 Mobile Homes

41

Homes for Rent

44

Apartment
for Rant

for Sale
1974 Indy 12d5, 2 BR .. AC,
totalelec. Very nice. &amp;6500. Call
814-669 -3091 .

.

1979 S.yvlew 14x70 with 24x7
exten. Front porch, carport
enclosed back porch or ahop
are,, wopdburner on 1.4 acres.
816000 or best offer. Ne•
Crown City &amp; MercervYia Cell

2 bedroom all elac:. Reference~&amp;
Deposit. Call I'Yeningt 304·
676-2214 after 6 :00.
Nice 3 br home, 2 b.tlw. famitv
room, g•aga, large lot. f350.
month. Home~teed Realty. 304·
676-6640 or 304-882-2406.
Two badroom houaa with u•·
age. No Peta. 304-676 -1400.

614-446-7&amp;02 or 25&amp;-1538.

::::.e

1981 Stn.1tb: 14x52. 0UIIi1Creek
Par~ . . Call 61 4-~46-

14x70 Concord 1974 3 BR ..
total elec. New carpllt , Extra
nice through out. 86900. can
614-446-0175.
1970 New Moon, 12x60 w / expando, 1Ox1 3 addition. Completely furni1hed . w / wood dburner &amp; fuel furnace . Call

114-446-1428.

1970, 12x66, 3 bedroom. Tipout. stove. refrigerator, underpinning. $4000 . 814 -992 -

7479.
1 2x66 MobileHomewith 1 2x24
add-on with extra lot. 304-676-

7869.

.

1 4x70 Windtor with 14x30
addition. 3 bedrooms. approximetely 3 aeres. black top road .
· SeYeral out-buildings and pond'.
Gallipolis Ferry. 304-676 -6930.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Furnished 2 Br mobile home
located on Eastern Ave. 8186
month, *125 depolit. C.ll814-

256-1187,

2 mobile hom• on one acre.
Rural wattt. Blacktop roacl. 2Y:!
milea from Mer..vllle (n . .
Hannan Trace). Ref. &amp; diiP·
required . Call 614 -266·6343.
2 Mobile hom• for rent : 14x70
w / expendo. 2 IRS. 1 2~e.6&amp;, 2
BRS . Both total .. ect. Good
cond. Location- Rt. 7 below
Eureka. Call 614-448-1211 or

258-1420.
2 Br. treiltr·c:able. Ba.,tlful river
view. Foster't Mobile Home
Park. Call814-446 -1102.
2 bedrooma.' fUrnished mobile
home. Ken-..gL Ohio, reference
required , 304-675-6198.

1983 N .. hue, expando, 2
porches, saptic. 4 1h acr• lend.
many axtraa. BetWeen 6-10 p .m .
call 304-675 -6628 .

Mobile home for rent, 14x70. 2
bedroom•, located Henderaon,
call 304-676 -3643.

For Sale or Rent
304-676-7271 .

2 bedroom furnished trail•
t185. month. $76. Deposit plua
tome utillti81. 304-576-6612.

33

·

trailer.

Farms for Sale ·

150 acre farm, 1 mile back New
Hav8fl, W . Va. phone 304 -8822666.

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for II!NIIS·e.
Downtown Pt. Ple•ant. Stores,
offices. A-One Re.r Estate.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304676-5104 .
749 Third Ave. Presently The
Gift Shop. 1600 sq. ft . Commer·
cia! or warehoute. Parking on
side. Adjacent to Third&amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appointment.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

44

Apartment
for Rent

Renlals
41

Homes for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent .
B11ic rent far 1 bdr••
8183.00; 2bdr., $219 .00'. Also
required a t200.00 Mcuritv
deposit . CONTACT: Jadct011
E:ttetet Dept Ph 446-3997
Equal Housing Opponunity.
2 BR . aptt. 6 clonts. kitc:hanappl. turnillhed, Washer-Dryer
hook: up, ww c•pet. newty
painted, dedc. Rq.-u:y, Inc.
Apt1. Call 304-676· 7738 or
676 -5104.
~urnithed apt. R•t to library.
One prof•lional aduh only.
Parking. Cell 614-446-0338 .

Nice private apt. Quiet. Ne•
HMC. One adutt only. No p~s .
Stove, refrig .. drapM. *225 a
mo. Ref. required . Call 114·
16 Court: 2 br.• 1 'II bath, large
11\/ing area. w-w carpet. new
kitchen, dlshw111h•. wffed for
phone S. tv. G11 heat. Parking.
S350 -mo. plus utiliti81. D8p. 6
Ref. Call614-446· 4926.

Downtown - Modern 1 BR ..
comphrle kitchen. c•pet. air,
electric heat. Call 614- 446·
4383·d8VI. 446·0139-even. 6
weekends.

614-446 ·3870.

Brookside Apartment•· Large
country kitchen, ttove a. refriQerator. Unfurnished. 1 SA, bath.
q~let area. Call 814-448-1932.

Unturniahed, 2 BR . Lower Second AYII. No peta. Nice. 2-3
adulta. Rei. &amp; Oep. requtred.
Call 814-446-3949, 446-2419.

Nice 2 BA . apt. Stove. refrig.
furnithed. Water •
glf'bage
paid. Ne• Skyline lan•. Call
614-446-7025.

In Ch81hire Vlltage. Deposit
required. t 180 month. Call
614-446-0486 after 5pm.

Ala Grand• Nice 2 BR . Stove.
refrigerator furnished . &amp;226. No
pets. Call 61:4-446-8038 .

2 BR . house. Sto\le &amp; refrig,
furn . located 1928 1.1! Chestnut
St. $175 mo. 875 dep. Call

6 room houlf!-First ·A va .. Gallipolit. 01f ttraet parking. No
pets. Ref. &amp; Dep. Call614-256-

1529.
3 BR ., wdbr., carpon. low
utiltties:. Very clean. Ref. &amp; dep.
$300 a mo, Ca1161 4-446·0906.

Furnithad: 4 · rooms &amp; bath.
Clean. No pets. Aduht only . Ref.
&amp; dap. required. Call 614-4461619.
Modern 1 BR apartment. Call

614-448-0390 .

I

Furnished Efficiency . 701 4th.
2 BR .. l•ge living. room , at ova. , Ave . Gallipolia. 8175. Utllitiea
washer. Near town. No pert. paid. Cetl448 -4418 efter7 PM.
Oep. &amp; ret. Call 614 - 446 - ~ 617.
Renti'V'¥tv redecorated . Vety nice
3 BR . houn &amp; gerage. A -1 Real apertmenta in downtown GalliEtt8te, · Carol Yeager-Broker. polis. 1 &amp; 2 BR .- unfurnished,
second Hoar. from *171 -8226.
304·675-61 04.
Oep . &amp; referances required . Call
3 BR , woodburner• .tove. refrig· eYe . 614·446-2326 or 446·
erator. new cll'pet, Centenerv 4249.
area. $260/ mo. plus deposit.
Call 614 -446 -7014 or 379 - Great location. Newly ramodeled. 2 BR. Upstain. Partly
2248 .
turnithed apt, Utiliti• Plid. Call
2, 3, or 4 bedroom housM and att8r 3 :30PM, 614-446-1467.
api:. in Pomerov area. Pay own
utiliti81, deposit requtred . Call 2 BR . furniahed apt. Adult a only.
614·992-6 113, 61 4-992·6723 Nice location. Call 614 -446·
or 614-992- 2509. Call 11fter 2404.
6 :00. pleaae.
613 Third Ave.· 1 SR . Deposit
Newtv renovated , all electric requir.t . Call 614-446-43415
wh:h heat pump and central .Wr. 3 between 6 :00PM &amp; 10:00 PM
bedroomt. plenty ytrd a~d
gwden 1 pace·in Portland. Oh1o, Gracioul living. 1 and 2 bed·
5 miles from Ravenswood. W · room apartmenta at Village
Manor and Aiveraide Apart·
va. Cell614 -84l-5309.
ments in Middleport. From
Unfurnished houae for rent in U15. including utilitiea. Call
Pomeroy. Storm window• ~nd 814·992·7787. EOH .
doort, insulated. all new paint.
Deposit required . Call 814-99.2- Extra ct..,.., new carpll'l. Nice for
worldng lady or gentleman, Pt.
3090.
Pl ...anl. Call 614-992-6868.
2 bedroom houae for rent. Fui!Y
carpeted. Linooln Height~ •n Naw. furni1hed . 2 bedroom
Pomeroy. References requtred . 1partment near MelgJ High
Cail 614-992 -2270 after 6:00 School. Call 614 -446· 8898 or

pm.
FO( rent or le... : 3 bedroom, 2
baths. stove and r~rigerltOr',
hea1, centr81 " '· c:arport.
large yard. nur MiildltPOrt
.chool, perlcl!lnds~pplng. t225
month, plus depotit. Call 614·
992-7056 after 6 :00 p.m . for
appt

a•

614-992-5304,

, In Pomerpy, 2 bedroom, part tv
furniahed apt. Off Spring AYII.
Recently remodeled. Call after
6:00pm. 814.992-6888.

2 bedroom, 2 bath. Mldthport.
Depotit. IMO month. Convenient. 614·992· 2679,

APARTMENTS, mobile hom•.
houaes. Pt. PINiantand Gallipdlis. 614 -446-822.1 .
2 bedroom furnised apt, ref and
deposit, New Haven, W . Va.,
304-882-3267 or 304-7736024.
Beech StrMt. Middleport. Ohio,
2 bedroom 1urnithed apartment.
utilltiea paid. Aefer.,oe &amp; Oepo&amp;it, 304-8.82-2566.
In Middleport Ohio, 1 and 2
room furniahed apartmentt. Pri·
vate bathe, utllitiel paid. J«M.
882-2686.
Modern one bedroom apart·
ment. Very clean end nice. No
Pet a. Ph. 304-176-1386 .

46 Furnished Rooms

_4_PM__.:_,_
•1_4_·3_&amp;_7_-_7_8_oo_._ __
China· UNice for 10- nwer
been uled. Carnival gl•s- green

• ombw. Antiquo d;oh ... Coli
&amp;14·446·8105 .

Naw 2 Queen 1lze Turtle water
bed1, mlttrweea, box tprings Ia
hei'Jy dutv frame. MuR aee.
Bett offer. Cell 614-446 -4220.
Couch II ct\air &amp; foot stool.
Coffee tabla • 2 and tables·
$

100. Coli&amp;! 4-44&amp;-87&amp;1 . Rt. 1

Galllpolil, Ohio.
Weaher &amp; dryer. Good cond.

$250. Coli 814-446-3548.
Couch &amp; chllir. Good cond.
• 100.' Call 614-266 -1 186.
CNew)

quean- aized watat bed.
Never bean uled. Mirrowad
headboard with all ICCIIIOfi81.
2 retrig•atora. Good. t90.
each. 2
cook .tovet, natural
g-. good.
aach. Call
614-992-2888.

v•

•eo.

GE wather. excellent thapa.
• 125. Ch11hire 614-387 -0322.
Picken• U1ed FurnitureDinettu. tofM, chain, end
tabl•. tampa, bedt, dre11eu,
detk, glanwure. 304 -175-

1450.

Rooms for ,.,t, dav. "N8elt
month. Gallia Hotel. Cell 614·
448-9580. Rent 11 low as S120
month.
Furnished room. 876 . Utiliti81
paid. Sh•e bath. Single mala
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
448-4418 aft•7pm.

53

Antiques

46

Space for Rent

Office Space for rant . Excal.
downtown Gallipolia location.
lnquirl• cllll 614-44ti -4222 .
Mobile Hom a lot. 60 fl . or l•s·
920 4th., Gallipolis. 176. Water
paid. Call 614-448-441 8 after 7

wool rug with
runn•. 8126. Call
614-992· 39.5 5 or 614 -992·

8975.

ANTIQUES , Buy or Sell. Riv•
rine Antiques. 1 124 East Main
St. Pomeroy. Houra: Mon.·
Tues.-Wed. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sun.- 1 p.m.- 6 p.m. By chance
or appointment. Ruts Moore

814-992-2528.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Large trailer lot . Bulavilia·
Addiaon Rd. Ward't Trailer Part
Call after 4:30 PM, 614-446-

4265.
COUNTRY MOBilEHomePatk,
Route 33, North of Pomerov.
Rental trellert. Call 614-992·

7479,

Space for small trailert.- All
hook-ups. Cable. Alaoeffidency
rooms, air and cable. Ma1on,
W.Va. Call304 -n3-6861.

Celllhlll'l'l UMd TiraShop. Over
1 ,DOD tires. aizes12, 13, 14, 15,
1 6, 16.6. 8 mil• out Rt. 218 .
Call 814-256-6261.

49

For Lease

1400 sq. ft. commercial space
s~itable for offices. r.~tailing, or
tervices. Prime loceteon.cornar
or' 2nd. &amp; Plna in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear. t360 per
month. Call 614-446·4249 or
446 -2325 .

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

County Appliance. Inc. Good
used eppli .. cas and TV uts.
Open SAM to GPM. Mon thru
Sal.
6,4-446· 1699,
Ave. Gallipolit,
OH . 827 3rd.

ClOOO
w....... USED
drye...APPLIANCES
refrigerator•
ranges . Skaggs Appliancaa.
Upper River Rd. b•kje Stone
Crest Motel. 814 -446· 7398.

0322.

® Facts of Life
fl) CD One Day at a Time
6:05 ~

1979 Yamah• V~80 . For Sale or
Trade. Call 614 -448-8861 .

liJ Winner's
Circle (1)
Q CIJ ABC News 0

(1)

(!] Nightly Business Report
®I II) IW CBS News
l!ll Rockschoot
@ ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world is

2900.

.

For sale. Aeaoneble. Ster110 In
cabinet, radio, record player and
tap". 614·992-3626.
2 twin beda wfth matching
headboard•. mattreaHa and
springalncluded. 2 twirl comfor·
tara. hewt d•igna, matching
pillow ahems, dust ruffle~ andca.uulnt. All excellent condltton.

Coli 814-992-&amp;018.

For Sale: 017 Alllt Chalmers
Tractor. Widefront3 point hitch.
Outstanding condltia:n. New
floor driK JJreu. 3A HP. 8200.
firm. Call 614 -949 -2013 .
For aale: 10 inch wood planer,
Barnett Croaabow , Spottirtg
Scope. Call614-992-6229 aher
5 :00pm .
End table~ , coffeetable. chair,
baby bad, banlnetta. J .C.Pen.nev Toaater Ovan. new fibarNo\la parts. 614-992·
8941 .

ol••

Firewood for aaia Delivered
anytime. tlO.OO . 304 -896·
3446 .
Buy 6 Toning Tebl• and receive
a free Suntan bed. Offer good
until Dec. 30, 1987. Call Caribbean Ta111. Inc.. 304-422 ·4200.
All Christm.. Tre• t12 .. Come
e•ty before cold weather. tag
vour tree at Newell'• Chrlatmu
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
on Hanging Roct Rd . 30• ~ 7736371 or 882-288&amp;.
Pioneer ttereo recefver 80W-ch
$200 .00, equalizer '56.00,
OBX filtert20 .00, Discca~~tnera
*18.00. 23 chanei CB $15.00,
Fur:zbustet' t20.00. Phone304676-6968 after 5:00PM.

8 MM Camcorder with VCR
t 800.00. Ltving room auile
$3&amp;0.00. 1988 Chev. plcll:-up

4K4 , 304-676 -6674 ,

Two tickett; round trip air,
Columbus. Ohio to Miami. Fla.
depart Nov . 23. raturn No\/. 30.
Call 304-876'-1390 after 6 :00

7315.

Big Oekota .Farm Hom• built on
your lot only . $12.995 &amp; up. Call

MUZZLELOADING items- Black
powder, caps. ball . flasks.
cappeJs, me•urer•. patches.
lightning loaders. molda. etc.
Prices drastically reduced for
going-out of busin•t •I e. Ko•
bel's Mill Creek Rd. Hra.-Mon .•
Wed., Fri.· 6 · 8 PM. Sat. 1 -6 PM .
Phone614-446·231 6 .

Tree &amp; stump removal, firewood
1 20 dump load, HEAP vouchers
accepted. live Chriltma1 tren.
Con ' s landatape~, 614 -446·

9646.

Bed, ch•t draweu, entertalnm.,t center, dehumidifier. Eureka sweeper, tree trimmer.
rocking love seat. Call61 4 -446·

2867,

Jr. size winter coat with hood•iz:e 9. 16 pr. sltckt· tin 7-9.
Excelfent cond. 6 tt. green
artificial Chrlttmaa tree. Call
FUel oil heater with tank·lika
new. 3 drawer deak. Good cond,
C•ll614·448 -4053 .
Se•oned firewood. t30 pickup
load. delivered within reason.
Call614-246-6039 after 4PM.
Baby bad, electric ranga, ping
pong table. pool tabla Call

61 4-388·8738 .

King wo'Odburner. Good cond.

$200. Coli 814-256-6639 .

Catalvlic converters·. only
e89.95. Most modelt. lnatallation elso available. Muffl• Man
9 Stimpson Aw .• Athans. Ohio:
1 ·800·843 -3767.

Oraganwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Penian and
Siem... kittent. AKC Chow
puppie~. New kittena; Perai.,.a.
Call 614-448-3844 aft• 7PM.
AKC Aeg. Englid'l Spring•
Spani" iup1. 7 mo1. old.
ExceH..t huRting ttodc. Cell

&amp;14-448- 393.

Chow Chow puppi•· 4
mal•, 3 fem•l•. Cute. Mother
AKC rag. 826 each. C.ll 614lh,

448 - ~108.

AKC Bleck male Cock• Spaniel.
1 yr. old. Houae broker'~, Bought
at Petland. *150. Celll14-682 -

71&amp;4.

Pure Bred Siam,.. kittent. Call
lt\leninga 614 -948-2210.
Full blooded male Toy Poodle.
Ught c•amei color. 8 wkl. old.
H•• been wormed . •7&amp; . 614·

992·7556.

.

3 ve• o&amp;d m.!e Beagle *40.00.
Phone 304-875·6941 .
Chrl1tmea Puppl• AKC registered buff colored Cock• Spa·
nieta. 304· n l-6492 .
Ye• old lnllle Beagle, tell or
trade for pidl-up load firewood.
t28. 304 -678-6174 . Needs
trained.

57

Musical
Instruments

Piano le..ons. Allen Streit. Call
614-446·4463 or 448-0887.
Kimbel piano , e•c cond.
UOO.OO . Phone 304 ·678 -

1645.

58

· Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Dunrovin Fruit Farm will cioee
for the seuon November 26th.
St. Rt. 881 IOUtheaat of Albany .

Coii814·698-629B.

Se•a LP u• wall furnace,
24.000 btu, thermostat controlled, u11d for, two aea~ont.
good eond, 8160.00 . 304-676-

WANTED place to ftore 1965
Buict for winter. In Gallipolis
arb. Call814-448-20,6.

Groom end Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds .. . All
1tyl11. lama Pet Food Deater.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446-0231 .

pm.

·Twin beds. menreu, bo11
spring•. like new, 304 -675- .

676-4616.

Another load Lake Ontario large
apples. n..,.,crop Nevel Orang•,
Ruby Red Grapefruh, rtutt.
canctv. bananaa. J•cks Fruil
Mkt .. At. 36, Hend•aon, W. Ve.

Bob Cline Tuidermy, Member
W .Va . TMidurmy Auoc. Rt. 2
Bo~e. 782 . Pt Pl. WV. 304·87514.. 8 .
Amana freezer, Huffy bicycle,
file cabinet. untique trunk, tools,
23 chairs. 614-446-8240 .
Winch•ter Model 94, 30-30
carbine and rifle lor sale. Call
304-773-6303.
..
Captain' s Mate bunk .bed• with
mattress. 304-876-6831 .

SURPLUS ARMY , DENIM ,

F"rm
&amp;
81

Supplli!S

L1ves!oi:k

Farm Equipment
CROSS&amp; SONS

U.S. 35 Wen, JackaOfl. Ohio.

614-288-&amp;481.
Maney Farguton, New Holland.
Bush Hog Sal• • Service. Over
40 uaed tractorS to choOit ftom
&amp; complnt line ot newo u..d
equipm.-at. lara•• •lactlon in

a.

S.E. Oma.

Utility building tpl: 27'K36'ld3'.
1-13'x8' allding door, 1-3' aar·
vice door- t4.t44. Iron Horte

Bldn. Coli &amp;14-332-9745 .

4020 JO tractor with 4 row no
till corn planter-*69fii0. T0-30
MF tractor, plows, ditc &amp;
cultivator- *2600. Call 614 -

286·8622.

RENTAL CLOTHING . (Carharta • _,:..:.._:..:,::::.._ _ _ _ _ __
10 P•cent O\let cost). Original
All equipment In ttock. Zeator
army camouflage. H . 0 . "Sam"
Trectora. manure-lime spreader.
Somervllle't, Old Rt. 21 Eestrotary mower. 10 p.-cent over
Aavenawood , Fri. Sat. Sun.
cott. Morria Equipm..,t. RuNoon • 8:'00 p.m. Other deva
tland. Ohio. 46776. Phone
after 5 p.m . 304-273·68&amp;6.
614-742-2455.
Insulated camouftage coveralls
*25.00.
New Hoiland end of sa.. on hey
tool aale. All hey toola at deleer
oott plut intereat tree financing
55 Building Supplies
until June 1, 198B wfth normal
down.-ymant. Two461 , 3pt, 7
ftmowers $2,100.00. One311,
Building Material•
3 joint PTO, atand•d tires
Blade, brick, sewer pipM, winregul• pickup, t8,600.00. Ona
dowt, lintels, etc. Claude Win472. 7 ft: hl'tbina. $6,900.00.
ter•. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·
One 474 , 7 ft hayblne,
246-6121 ·.
$8,400.00 . Keefert Ser'alice
Center, St. At. 87, leon, W. Ve.
Concrete blocks all tlz:et yard or
Phone 304-896-3B74.
delivery. Ma1on aand. GaiUpolia
Block Co., 123"h Pine St.,
lnterne.tional 1050 grinder
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614·446mixer. New Holland 7 h h.,.
2783.
bind, both In good cond, 304 273-4215 .
Ready mix concrete and all
concrete auppliet. Cell ua Vallflf
Brook Cement and Suppli8l,
Buv bilu chain and aprocket for
304-773-6234 .
any •w get ttcortd chaln free.

~.:==::=======-1=======:::::::.

SNAFU®
b y 8 ruce 8 ea tt le
'
.

71 Auto's For Sale
1969 Cam•o- 327. new body
part1, new tlr•. Slue with tilver
strip•. Good cond. f2600. Call

614-446-9370.

1978 Mereury Mon•ch. Auto.,
PS, PB, AC. Good cond. Cali

61 4-245·5 1 20.

1971 Ford Thunderbird. AM FM· Call; EJI.tel. cond. Silver.
·
Call 6 ,,.. 245-9667.
1983 Dodga b.•G•· 4 cyl. ,
auto•• AM -FM ra'ifkl.o new tires .
Ught brown. Call 814·246·
6026 alter 6 :00 PM.

1983 Dodga Aria Wagon . Small
down paym.,.t·llke o\ler payments. Call 814-388-8417.
1976 Dodge ,Custombed Van .
318.auto. Bh•p. t1400orbelt
offer. Call &amp;1•-448-7364 after
6 PM .
19740utter. Good cond , $450.
Call 614-388-9326 .
19n Chryal•· Cordoba. Runt
good. Low miiM. Body fair .
*760 . Call 614-446·1021 .

1984 Mercury Topaz. White;:
Alpine. AM·FM -Caae atereo.
AC . E~e.cell. cond. *3400. Cell
614-446 -8602 after 6 :30PM .

1981 Honda Civic. 4 dr. Sedan.
Auto.. inter. wipMS, AM-FMCau., re•def.. PB. t1900 . Call
614-448 -1608.
1956 ChMty, 283. Auto, neW
p.-ts, paint. duala, Radial tires.
Sh•p. Call 614-448 -4462.
1982 Ch.,y Van 360 eng., auto.
air, PS, PB. PW, AM ·FM, new
tlret, cuetamlaed int . t6000.
1171 Fireblrd. Auto, PS, air,
302 OR~ . f1600. Co11814-2661980VW Oleael Dathartor•le.
Goqd Condhlon. t1 ,300 . Call
814· 388-8033 evenings.
Stalnl•• It eel eot haust tvatems.
Now cuttom made for your
truck, motorhomeorclllticcer.
Wfth lif•time warranty . Muffler
Man . 9 Stimpson AVI!I ., Athant,
Ohio. 1·800-843l. 3787.

Livestock

Reg. Am•ican Saddle Bred
Horaas for ala. Good bloodline.
Ae•oneble pricn. Call 614446-8367 or 256-6461 after .

5:00PM.

Regittered Quarter hor••· Call

&amp;14-448·0183.

For sale raglstared Tamworth
Bo•. C•llafter 6pm, 814-246 -

ta form fov r sirnple

I

PREVSE

I

PHEDT

words

I

I

3

i

0;.,,.:8:....rA..:...:E;.~-'I '
_,;V;.....:
. j5 · j6 I !" ..

~
-

·

·

·

-

-

" There were only 19 candles
on my birthday cake ," smiled an
office associate. One co-worker

I

R O D WA N
purred, " Were they lit on~-?"
~-.,,,07;,..;:;.1..:~~r:...::.;l_.:.;:..,.,l6;-- C) Compiete Hm chuckle quoted

I

•
•
_
_
.
• by filling In the mining words
L......J_..J.._..J.._.L....Jl.....J you develop from step No. 3 below.

"The apartment's too small for a sandl:lo• .
Go play in the ashtray by the elevator. "

Duree Bor• for better rate of
gain. Rog• Bentlll\'·513- 5842398, Febina. Ohio.
•

304·675·3073 .

77

Auto Repair

~----~----~ · L-----~--~~

FRANK
AND ERNEST'
.

Struta. t1 19.96 pair, inabllled.
Mott modelt. Muffl• Man. 9
Stlmpton A'IM . Athens, Ohio.
1 ·BOO-B43 -3767.

79

~

Motors Homes
8o Campers

.!.
;

i

i'

New motor homa. 2700 mil•.
Tr1de for truck &amp; camper. Must
be nice. Catl814- 266-8813.

•

19 ft . Lakalend travel camper.
fully contained. Sleeps B. Excel.
cond. e1400&lt; Cell 614 -3670447.

I 'T&gt;iiNK WE'RE FI'-1'ENOUGH AWAY FROM
'!liE SKIPPER NOW ...

81

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime gueran·
tee. Local references futnillhed.
Free estimatet. Call collect
1-614-237 -0488, d.y or night.
Rogert8aaement
Waterproofing.
SWEEPER and sewolng mac:hine
repair, partt, 1nd tuppli•. Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mila ·up
Georg• Cre.k Rd. Call 814446-0294.
RON'S Talevlaion Service.
Hous&amp; callt on RCA , Out~z:ar,
GE. Specialing in Zenith. Cell
304-576-2398 or 814-446 24fi4.

678-2903.

1981 Toyota C.lica. Auto .. PS .
PB. Air, tunroof, AM ·FM radio,
tih wheel. Body and interior in
-.cellem: conditkm. Good gas
mil•ge. Call 814-985 -4341 .

82

304-676-2941 .

1970 Chwella. red·blk ·atripet,
many new partt. 1972 Chwelle.
green- white stripe , both
82,000. Aher 4 p.m . 304·675·

6781 .

72

Trucks for Sale

2306.

EEK &amp; MF.
AT ll-\[ DFa:Y
OF A HAT

1987 S10 pick-up. PS. PB , 4
apeed. Long bed. Very reuoneble. 814 -992· 6676.
1982 Ford '11 ton. 3 1peed on
floor, 8 cyl. , priced to tell,
81695. Call 614-949 -3093.

i

~

Sam.

..

Ill CIJ MOVIE: 'The King
of Love' ABC Thursday
Night Movie Q
(D l!ll Mystery! Harriet
discovers disturbing event s
have plagued her old college .

.11)

_.qft,

RTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I LOVETO

WATCH
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EBE"RT. .

THE-YRE AL.WAYS

i

1985 half ton ChevvplckupV· B.
air cond, low mile. Nlc,. 304·
675-7286 evening•:

Vans

8o 4 W.O.

1-~--------­
1979 Cha~yluv4x4 . Uh kit , rull
bar. tonneau cover. Good con d.
Shwp. 12260. C1ll 614 -379-

2262 .

1977 Dodge Van. Built-in couch
8. tabl&amp; luto. PS . 1700. Call
614 -44Ji·6602.

~

tm
Wiseguy Vinnie
risks his li fe for an old friend

I WONDER
W/---\AT 'M OVIE5"

to tree his conscience .
@ Larry King Live! In depth

ARE.

interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrities.

9:30 II(!) 1!1J Night Court Harry
tries to prevent a hero from
,his youth from comm itting
... suicide .

)0:00 (I) Straight Talk ·

IJ Cil -l!ll

~.A . ~aw

Disaster

follows when Van Owen

urges a fearful witness to
testify.
C!J Tho ConatHution: That
Delicate Balance Attempts

CARTeR'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth und Pine
Gallipolit, Ohio
Phone 614-446· 3888 or 814446-4477

to redress discrimin atory
practises w ith affirmative
action. 1;1
®I II)@ Knots ~anding

Electrical

Proposals and counte r
proposa ls jar lhe Gibson
household . Q

&amp; Refrigeration

[II News
@ Evening News A wrap up
of today 's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow·s news

.~esidentiai or commercial wir·

lng . New service or repairs.
licensed el tctrician . Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical. 304675- 1786.

slories. 11 :00)
Q) (!J Benny Hill

General Hauling

10:05 (I) MOVIE: They Were
Expendable iNA I (2:15)
10:30 CD Great American Outdoors
(0 :30)
l!lJ Adams Chronicles Adams

Dillard Waler Service: Poolt,
Citterns, Wells. Delivery Any.
time. Call 614 -446-7404-No
Sunday calls.

Ooctnne. [J

u rn oo

1!11 News

614·379·2502.

Watterson' 1 Water ~aul l ng ,
rea sonable ratet, immediale
2,000 gallon delivery, cl1terna 1
pools. well, etc. call 304·676-

M,owrey ' s Upholstering •erving
tn coun~ya,ea 22 years . The beat
in furmture upholstering. Call
30 4 · 676 - 4154 for f ree
ast•n1a tes .

Q CIJ ®J m ~W

@ NFL's. Greatest Moments

Light hauling of any kind.
Moving, garages and bassments
cleaned. trash, junk, etc . Call

R &amp; M Custom Couches lmd
Reupholstery, St. Rt. 7, Cro""'n
City, Oh. 614- 261) -1470 (\/A
614 -446 -3438. Open dai~ 9 t~
4:30, Sal. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
n8W' Uphottered.

.74

+87 6_432

. 9&amp;3

Trumping partner's good trick is
not considered good form at the bridge
table . But it can be t he right play. It's
easier to execute such a pJay when
partner is mute and can't talk back to
you. When does that happen'! Yes,
you 've figured i t out - when you are
the declarer and partner is the dum ~
my. Then you have the responsi bility
of playing his cards, even if that in·
valves trumping yo ur good tri~k . An

+J 985
+Q

+K l09

SOUTH

+AK

.K QJ1085

+A

+J 8 &amp; 2
Vulnerable : Neither
Dealer: South
Wes t

Nor th

East

obvious reason for trumping a good

Pass

trick would be to create an extra e nh:y
to either hand.
Today's six~ hcart contract at first
glance seemed to depend upon the club
sui t behaving well for declarer. But
. then declarer saw a way to give him·
self an extra chance, provided he was
not squeamish about ruffing his own
winning king. He won the ace of
spades, played the ace of diamonds
and a heart to dummy's ace and ruffed
a diamond back to his hand. Then he
played his spade king and trumped it

Pass
Pass

2t
4•
5+
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

+Q

club to dummy's ace allowed him to
pitch two clubs on t he diamond king
and the good 10 of diamonds. Declarer
now gave up a club and won the last
trick with his r emaining t r ump. Thus
he made his contract without having

in dummy. Another diamond was to fall back on a favorable club

ruffed with the heart 10, and declarer division.
t he n drew the remaining t rumps. A

ACROSS
7 Shout for
1 Scarecrow a torero
material
8 Film
6 Aria, e.g.
director,
10 Crown
~"'ritz 11 Swedish
9 Formerly
12 Billy island
13 Attack
Williams
14 Enclosure t 7 Chinese
15 Vigor
dynasty
d , •-16 Chinese I9 Hindu social
Vester ay 8 n..~mwer
tea
group
26 Anger
38 On one's
18 Glory be! 20 Girl
27 German
toes
19 Diagram
· Scout
article
39 ~Vissi d'
21 Hinder
group
29 See 5 Down
"
21 Small
3I Terminus 40 Nasty
24 Foray
amount
(abbr.)
glance ,
28 Hold up!
(naut.)
22 Serpent
33 Young
29 French
temptee
Corleone 42 Tony
river
23 Caribbean 34 Exclude
Martin's
30 Stooped
vacation
35 Actor Jack
"I 31 Oklahoman souvenir? 36 Prima
Ideas"
32 Impede
25 French river
donna
44 Merkel
legally ·
34-Matrix
37 Acorn,
eventually
38 Indian
mulberry
41 Array
43 Bizarre
45 Plunder
46 Col\ioin
47 Indian
servant
48 Candle
DOWN
I Cancel, as
payment
2 Prong
3 Throat
problem
4Common
verb
5 Be careful!
6 As of now ·
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it: Jl fl9

1972 Undefeated Miami
Dophins (R)
'
C!1 Sign Off
[1) Moneyline Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
E!l en ~ove Connection
11:30 Cil 1!11 Tonight Show
I!) SportaCenter (L)
11) Cheers
Ill CIJ Nlgh_tllne Q
®I Magnum, P.l.
l!lJ ACior' s Theatre
@ Sports Tonight Action
packed spons highlights with
Nick Charles and Jlfn Huber.
(0:30)
II) 021 ' Nighl Heat' CBS ~ate
Nigh! G/ambone and O'Brien
are angry at having to
protect a hood.
@ Magnum, P.l.

u

I TALKEDTOT~E DOCTO~.
SNOOP\' .. YOU'RE GOING TO
HAVE KNEE SUR6Ef1H...

II II
..'

ANt:&gt; THEN YOU'LL BE ON
CRUTCIIE;5 FORABOUT
SIX WEEKS...

.: .. IT'S ~ARDTO
TALK TO
O~OOot
SOMEONE
WHO
....
.. . KEEPS FAINTING
A"LT~ETIME

AXYDLBAAXR

,

®News
f!) (1) Hogan's Heroes
11 :00 CD Remington Steele •

· Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools, cisterns, wells . Call 614·

Upholstery

EAST

WEST

• Q J 10 9

Treaty and the Monroe

R &amp; R Water Servi ce. Home
clsters. wells, pools filled . Form&amp;rly Jamet Boys Wateu.Call
304-675 -6370 .

87

+A 7&gt; 43

drafts the Transcontinental

J &amp; J Water Servica. Swimming
poets. cistern1. wells. Ph. 614·
246 -9285.

2919 ,

Big giveaway
reaps profit

ll-19-87

Wrap ups of

the day's world news and in
depth leature reports . ( 1:00)
@ MOVIE; The Blues
llrothers!AI (2 :13)
fll en MOVIE: Porky'a
Rovengo(AJ (1:31)
8:05 ill MOVIE: Across the
Pacific (1 :37)
8:30 1J (l) A Different World
11) Q CIJ The Charmings
Lillian 's chicken soup causes
her to lose her magical
powers. Q
9:00 CIJ 700 Club
II Cil 1!11 Cheers Rebecca
holds a charity hunk auction :
Lilith wins a weekend with

446-3171 .

1983 Dodge. 4 apd, topper,
tPort rima, new tires. $3999.
John ' t Auto Sal ea. betoW Holiday Inn. Kanaug• Rt. 7 .

NORTH

+5
• A2
+ K 10 &amp; 4 3

to- master his world , he

Plumbing
Heating

84

BRIDGE

seeks to master other
worlds. Q

8o

86

1 9n Dodge Atpen, may be
seen at 7th drivewav above the
"Y" on At . 2 North, Point
Pleasant. Eddie Black, owner.

drinking habit's ol
Anderson 's buddy. Q
l!ll First Eden As man learns

Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump
removal . Call 304-675-1331 .

304-773-861 &amp;.

1981 Ford Courriar black- white
spoke wheelt, 6 sp, overdrive,
loolct &amp; run agood . 81400. 080 .

Sledge sinks his teeth into
ghoulish case Involvi ng
bloodless corpses. Q
(!) Adams Chronicles

platoon is endangered by the

Home
Improvements

Starks Tree and Lawn Service.
lawn care, landtcaping. stump
removal , 304 -576 -2842 or

1972 Opel GT &amp; 1970 Opel GT.
•c . cond ., runt good, rebuitt
1972 engine, 2-3 restored . All
pana to finish . See at 2112
Msdiaon Ava.

liJ Collage
Footbal,l
Ill CIJ Sledge Hammer!

11)

!!J1 Primenews

1987 Oldt Cutla11 Supreme.
Top 1hape. Asaume loan. Call
evenings, 304-773-5911 or

31 lB.

7:35 (I) Sanford and Son
8:00 CD Hell Town
1J Cil 1!11 The Cosby Show
The Huxtable family goes to
the mall, but Rudy gels lost.

central government leads to
his defeat. Q
®I Ill @ Tour of Duty The

Services

89&amp;-3802

1979 Ford Pinto, good cond. 4
speed. $800 .00 . 304 -675 -

7:05 ~ Andy Griffith
7:30 II Cil Hollywood Squares
® Speedweek (T)
11) Newlywed Game
QCIJ Judge
®I Wheel of Fonune Q
@ Crossfire (0:30)
II)@ l!ll Jeopardy! Q
@ Barney Mill,er

Adams ' plan for a powerful

HOLY MACKEREL! 1 CAN'T MOYI!f!
I .... I'M STUCK IN nus STUFF!!

The old man says tha) a father is a man who expects his son
,:.:.:.NT.:...:.to:.-=B=E:....--~----.,.,.,
to be as gOOd a man as he MEA

• Q72

f!) (1) WKRP In Cincinne:ti

W'

3888 ,

73

614·286·6522 ,

!

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Unmask - Buyer - Honey - Jaunty - MEANT to BE

By James Jacoby

Cheers
Q) (!J M•A•S•H

1983 Ford A anttW. 4 c:y L 4
speed, partt, clll after 6 :00,

1976 Plymouth Valiant. 1977
Plymouth Volarie. 614-992·

9224.

Show Saddle with silver head
•tall 8. breaat ttraps. Registered
Sorrell milre-bornad Jan. 26.
1979. 16 htnd• 3". *850. Call

i

Ohio. 1-800-843-3787.

Rotarv or Cable tool drilling.
Mott wells completedtemed..,..
Pump ul·as and tervice. 304-

62 Wanted to Buy

63

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs . (0:30)
II) 1W 1!11 Wheel of Fortune

Dual exhau1t kitt, •99.95 inttalled. Moet Forde. Chevy
trucka, Vena, 4x4's. Muffler
Man. 9 Stimpton A ... .. Athena.

1978 lincoln Town car. t1BOO.
Call 614-448·1833.

19.&amp;1 ChEI'ly Y2 ton with 64, 6
cvt full prauure motor. Runt
w.ll. 3 apd. tmna. Driven 20
milea dalty . New king pins &amp;
good tiret. $860. Call814-446-

298&amp;,

reports on world economics

- - - - - - - - -lc---

1977 Titan motor home 26 '.
Dear Hunteu,Speclal- 69 Buictc· . 3&amp;00 wt generator, fully Mlf·
contained. dual g• tanks, lleeps
Wagon. No rust . AC, PS. PB,
350·VB, n50. 79 ATC 3 six. tow mi. 304-676 -8372
anythne.
wheeler, 70 cc. ttJI:cel. cond..
*300. Buy both for t900. Call
614-•48 -7367 after 4 :30PM .

oHer
good Co.
till Phone
Dec. 304-676
1. SidersEquipment
7421 .

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

BudgetTrantmiiSiona: Used and
rebu itt. ell typn. Guarantee 30
daya.' Cell 614-379-2220 or.
304-675·4230.

1977 Cam•o Z-28. T-top. 360
LT1. 4 apd. t1100, or beat offer.
Call814 -448-1096.

1986 S-10 ChtNy. PS , PB .
Extraa. Call anytime, 814-245 6626 or 61 4·446-9613.

Now buying 1hell corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotes. Al\ler
Chy Farm Supply, 614-448 -

'\I·C
0

1ronspor1a11on

8780.

2203.

Floor mo~eislereo tape player &amp;
deck;. am-tm, 3 size records
h•dlv used. lbnec guitar org.
304-676-6460 .
.

6:35 ~ Carol Burnell
7:00 CIJ Remington Steele
II Cil PM Magazine
@ SportsCente&lt; (L)
(1) Elllertalnment Tonight
Q CIJ People's Court
(D l!ll MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour ( 1:00)
®I News
@ Moneytine Current

ARLO AND JANI.rS_ _ _ ___,

Humphreys radial fire circulator.
40 BTU. Rit81onable. 614-992-

AVON. all areas, Shirley .Spe••·
304-675 -1429.

···-.

low

the
be-

York. (0 :30)

Quality firewood, all hardwo~d.
for ule. *25 • plck·up load. Call

614-666·7311 .

Allee

6;30 II (J) l!ll NBC Nightly News

Boats and
Motors for Sale

rrange leiters of
0 Rea
fou r scrambled words

'---1..1--l-.1_,__1...L--1'

[}} Inside PolitiCs 'BA

CAPT AJN EASY

GAM I

@ WKRP In Cincinnati
Q) f_z;J Too Close for Comfort

sea.

90 Days 11me as cash with
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614 -446 -

1981 Honda XR-80 . Good condition. t200. Run• good. Call
614·446-0290.

WOlD

TIII.T DAILY
PUULU

anchored live from New

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chain priced from
$395 to t995 . Tabl• eso and
up to t125. Hid•a·bads 8390
to 1&amp;96. Reeliner• t~5 to
··$376 . Lampt 128 ' to t125.
Oinettet 8109 and up to 8496.
Wood table w -6 chairt 8286 to
&amp;796 . Desk t100 up to 1375.
Hutch• UOO and up. Bunk
bedt complete w -mattrHsas
1295 and up toS395. Beby' beds
1110. Mattrnset orbo~e. apringt
full or twin
firm *78, and
188. Quean tett f226, King
8360. 4 drawer cheat t69 . Gun
cabineta 6 gul'l . Gaa or electric
range 8376. Baby matttetMt
835 &amp; t46. Sed tram• t20,
$30 &amp; King frama t60 . Good
tel ection of bedroom tuites.
metal cablnat a. headboards no
and up ~o *66 .

II Cil 11J Q CIJ ®I Ill 1W
1!11 News
® SportoLook (T)

Motorcycles

75

Remington 7600 AOL pump
30-06, 3 to 9 Bushnell scope,
1 'It box lhells, $326.00. 304-

e14·446-337B .

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St. , Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 pc. wood group- t399.
Uving room suites- t 199 - t699.
Bunk beds with b«&lt;ding· I 199.
Full size mattreu &amp; foundation
starting · t99 . Recliners
starting- 899.
USED- Bedt, dteaaen. bedroom
tultet, 5199 - 5299 . Duks.
wringer washer, a complete line
of used furniture.
NEW·· Western boon- $3D.
Workboots t18 &amp; up. lSteel &amp;
softtoe). Ce\1614-446-3169,

74

6:00 CIJ Crazy Like a Fox

C!J Dr. Who
l!lJ Square One TV C

Coll614-985:4418.

Plastic ci1tern state appro\led,
plastic septic tanlct, plastic
c ulvertL mllllal cuhlerts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jacl&lt;eon. Oh. 614-288-5930.

614 ·367-0689 .

Prof81sional couple moving to
Rio Grande-Gallipolis area January '88 . Desire 3 bedroom
country home to ront. Cat1 and
horses. no children. Phon.e405·
938-6197 between 8:00-10 :00
am. or after 7 :00 pm. or MOd
detailt to Deborah Judy, P .0.
Box 729. Shattuck. Oklahoma
73858.

/

E1C8rcite treadmill for sale, t76.
Croaa bow v,dth arrowt, t40.

1 920'• 9x12

matchlng3~e.6

PM.

446-4782.
2 Building lott· 11h acres each
with countv wat~r. Jerrys Run
Ad . Apple Gro\le, W. Va. Call
304-576 -2 38 3.

Cle.. 2 8 .R. Apt ., New Haven.
Also tpace for raataurant, aerobict. dfiVCire, furnh:ure 01 wh•
tever. 614 -992 -7481 .

Maple frame couch with blue
cuthions. Good cond. Call efter

NOV. 19 •

THURS.,

EVENING

"
77 Chev. Bluer Ch""nne. Aher
4;30 coli 304-67!-!480.

Used refrig•atora and used
electric: range. Mollohan Furni·
ture, Uppar River Rd. 614-446·
7444.

'------------.,.-----------l
--;;;=:;:;::::;::;;::::::;:;::====
,.., story.
ltqUIPP
It1•9entMI'
family
room, air
chen,

•

a.

Cerpet Pricea Starting at :'
Commercial · t4 • yd.,
Sculpture-a &amp; • yd., Pluth -$ 7 a
yd . Lots of room remenu in
1tock. Financing available. Mol·
lohan Furniture, Upp• River Rd.
" 614-448·7.. 44.

Bob Haggerty 614-992-

5304. Priced 1.1nder 814,000.

\1/ITI-l '1tlo, '(0() Ml):;f" L~Af:tJ ID
f'A'( 't:Vi!. TA)(E? W~IT~HA~~1'1

1182 Dodge 250 Ram. Custom
Trail• ready. Call
814 -441·4383 d&amp;rl, 446 -0139
even•.
w.ekends.

Loadar. Scope and sling. like

1 6:_._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Uke new· 6 cubic ft . ch81t 1__:2_1_
freezer . like new Gibton electric
dryer. Traditional 10f1. .8 ft.
porch gild•. white babv bed
with msttrHs. Corbin 6 Snyder
Furnh.ure Co. 966 2nd. A'll.
Gelllpolla:. 614· 446-1171 .

Wff; (:;() 1).1~ "lll~ r:,~y '&lt;w.

8o 4 W.O.

The Daily Seininei- Page- 15

· Television
Viewing

con~~eralon .

l -n-::.;,._c::.•::.l,_l6,_1,_4_·7,_4,_2::,·::.3::.0::.56::.._ _
4 new 235 x 16 allweath• fldial

Gove-:nment home~ trom t1 . (U

Delinquent tu property.
Repot ...siona. Call 806-887-

Vans

BORN LOSER

Muzz:le

Salisbury &amp; MeiQfi High , Call
614 -992-3264.
r~ir) .

73

Wright

Mixed h•d wood slabs. S12p•
bundle. Containing •pprox. 1 Y:t
ton. FOB. Ohio PaiiBt Co.
Pom•ov. Ohio. 814-992 -6461 .

t lru with wheelt and hub C8pl:
from 1988 Ford. Call 614-985 Vallev Furniture
433- 9,.~:_~_ _ _ _....:,_ __
New &amp;I'd u1ed furniture end 1 -::.::..
applicancee . Call 61 4 • 4 46 - Grave Blanket•. S10. and 816.
7&amp;72. Houra g . ., .
Alao wreaths. Ceil 614-949 -

'•

Hou• for ule, Rt. 33. level lot,
2 BRS ., 2 batt., 2 car garage.
swimmi ng pool, Bltilite. Close to

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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

G Q

ZJWDJU

u

J

0 B T Q

JMWCQISQC

PRUQIIPDQRU

G Y QR

0 B V Q

G Q

CQISQC

J

MW.

C JSQWQPDR . -

G P I I
V, M W B R U
Yesterday's Cryp~uote: THERE ARE NO SUCH
THINGS AS INCURABLES, THERE ARE ONLY THINGS
FOR WHICH MAN HAS NOT FOUND A CURE.
BERNARD BARUCH

'

�Page- 16-The Daily Sentinel

.

Thursday, November 19. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

VALUES IN THE
CLASSIFIED
ADS

HARVEST GOOD

CLA~~IFIED AD~

FlU THE

•
notices

SHOP
ELBERFEL
DS
..........

WOMEN'S JEANS
Stock Up Now On Your
Favorite Styles
Lee and Wrangler
JUNIOR SIZES 3/4 to 15/ 16
MISSES SIZES 6 TO 20
EXTRA SIZES 32 TO 44

MR. and MRS. WILLIS ANTHONY

Anthony anniversary noted
·

..

~

Mr. and Mrs. Willis Anthony of
Front St., Middleport, wilt ob·
serve their 60th wedding anniversary on Monday.
Married on Nov. 23. 1927 at
Circleville by her father, the
Rev. J:;.A. Tovey, they are the
parents of a son, Gerald Anthony,
Middleport.. They also have two
grandcl!ildren.
Mr. and Mrs. Anthony have
resided in Middleport since 1937
when he opened a plumbing
business. He retired from An·
thony's Plumbing Business 18
yea rs ago.
Sunday the couple was honored
at a surprise celebration at the

,.home of Mr . and Ms. Ralph
Roush and fa mily of New Haven.
Followi ng a din.n er , a decora ted
ca ke was served. Others attend·
ing were Mr. and Mrs Mike
Lievlng and famlly , New Haven;
Ja ne Zirkle and son, Mr. a nd
Mrs. Harold Young, Mason;
Judy Lievlng, Ripley, W. Va.;
Mr. and Mrs. Jay Jenkins,
daughter, Beth and her sons, and
Mr. a nd Mrs. David Jenkins and
family Portsmouth; Mr. and
Mrs. Steve Jenkins and famtly,
Rutland; Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Chase, Mr. and Mrs. Gerald
Anthony and Joe. Middleport.

Baptist Church has dinner
A Thanksgiving dinner was ley, Burton Smith, Mrs. Ellen
served by the 'Pomeroy First Couch, Mrs . Betty Mae Thomas,
Baptist Church Sunday at the Mrs.. Janice Fetty, Da vi d a nd
c hurch followed by a calle serveQ Amanda.
in observance of the birthday of
Flossie Nelson, John Nelson,
the pastor, the Rev. Lyston Mr. an d Mrs. Curley Wiles, Mary
Halley.
K. Young, Minda Harris , Janice .
Attending were Mr. and Mrs. Za harn and Liza, the fa milies of
William Ohlinger and Kim , the Ca thy and Dian Young, Debbie
pastor and his wife, Jessie Boatright, Mr. and Mrs. William
Halley, Mrs. Debbie Davis, ' Watson, Mrs. DeUUah Wright,
·Andy, Kayte and Jayne, Mrs. Daisy Ca nte r , James Marriner,
Audrey Young, Nettie Barnhart, Joyce DUJ family., Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs. Becky Kloes, Ke nd a, Herll'lan Michael, and Marla
Wendy, Sarah, Aimee, Lois Haw- Foster.

Sale

$15 99
to $29 99

Daily Number
108
·' Pick 4

Page 6

reat ~ ts at
·sale _

Ohio Lottery

Church

l

6834

•

Wrang~r

at y

u.s.

MEN'S WRANGLER
REG. $22.95

DENIM JEANS

SPECIAL/

October.
Prices for buying new cars rose 0.6 percen t
following a 0.1 percent rise In September.
Automobile financing charges rose 5.8 percent
after declining 3.7 percent In the first nine months
of 19l37, the department said. The. upsurge was
attributed to the end of auto buyer incentives.
Gasoline prices, however, declined 0.3 percent
In October In the second consecutive monthly
decline. Despite a 20.9 percentincrease In the first
10 months of 1987, the department said, gasoline
prices were 26.5 percent lower In October than In
March 1981, when gas prices peaked.
The Index lor public lransportatlon fell 0.7
percent, reflecting a downturn In airline fares.
The Index for food and beverages rost&gt; 0.3
percent last month with grocery store food prices,

MEN'S RUGBY STRIPE

KNIT

s

4~LITTLE GIRLS'
PANTIES

Sizes S, M, Land XL. Excel·
tent styles and colors by LeTigre, J. J. Cochrane and
VanHeusen. Excellent for
gifts.
'22.95 SHIRTS .. '1 8.36
Reg. '24.96 SHIRTS .. '1 9 .96
Reg. '29.95 SHIRTS .. '23.96
Reg. '34.96 SHIRTS .. '27.95

Cotton or nylon in briefs,
rhumbas and hiphuggers.
Sizes 1 to 14.

Sale Priced
From Only

9 s(

top, light support , sheer and
silky and kn!~ _highs.
Reg. '1.69 to •4.32

· $ale Meed ·
$135 TO $346

Chester council has q1eeting

SALE

'

Sl04

$5

REG. •7.32

&gt;~

'

$2995
''

.. (

EXTRA SIZ£ XXl ·

$.39.95

As Low At

COLOR
SAF(

Sl 599

up 0.6 percent In Se ptember, up 0.3 percent.
Declines In prices of meats, poultry, fish and eggs
helped offset a 0.8 percent In beef prices.
The index for fruits and vegetables Increased
1.3 percent following a 2.2 percent rise In
September. Fresh fruit prices were up sharply but
prices for fresh vegetables fell in October.
Restaurant meals rose 0.5 percent last month
while alcoholic beverages were up 0.1 percent, the
department said.
Housing costs Increased 0.2 percent in October
after no change In September. Shelter costs
jumped 0.5 percent following a 0.1 percent
Increase the month before. That offset declines In
costs for fuels, utilities and household furnishings.
Within the shelter component, homeowners '
costs soared 0.9 percent while costs for repairs

increased O.lpercenl. Renters ' costs decltned 0.2
percent.
.
Costs for apparel and upkeep jumped 1.3
percent following a u ·percent rise in September.
The Increases reflected the Int roduction of highe r
priced fall and winter merchandise, especially
women's and girls' clothing, the depar tment said;.
In the 12 months that ended last month, apparel
commodities jumped 6.2 percent.
Prices for medical care rose 0.4 percent In
October and has risen an annual rate of 6.1
percent In the first 10 months of 1987.
Entertainment costs rose 0.6 percent In
·october.
A market basket valued at '$100 in 1967 cost an
unadjusted $345.30 In October, the department
said.

WASHINGTON (UPI) .:_Congress and the adminlstrallon
apparently have reached an
1lth·hour compromise on a
. muLtlbtlllon-dollar plan to cut the
deficit, House Speaker .Jim
Wright said today.
"I think we have an agreement, " the Texas Democrat said
at a morning news conference.
White House and congressional
negotiators were to meet later
today to work out last-minute
details of the package, which
they have Indicated will trim
about $30 blllion from the federal
deficit.
Throughout their 20 days of
private talks, the bargainers
periodically have hinted an
agreement was wlihin reach, but
Wright's statement today was
the most positive Indication that
an accord was imminenl.
Nevertheless, a compromise
today Is too late for the government to avoid the Initial phases of
a $23 btlllon automatic spending
cut.
By law, President Reagan
must sign papers by midnight
ordering those cuts into effect.
The· cuts could ' have been
avoided If Congress and the
administration had managed to
put their alterna tlve in pia ce
before tonight's deadline.
"I think the summit negotiators are very close to reaching an
agreement," Rep. WnuamGray ,
D-Pa. , chairman of the House
Budget Committee said. "I
would say that the proper des·
criptlon is 'co de word
imminent. '' 1
Appearing on NBC's "Today"
program, Gray said congres·
siena! committees will need
about two weeks to work on
implementation of t he
compromise.
He characterized the auto-

matic spending cuts being forced
Into place as a "paper tiger"
unless Congress and the pres!·
dent run Into obstacles In putting
t ogether details of their
alternative.
The Jaw allows the automatic
cuts to be rescinded If Congress
and the White House take advantage pf a provision giving them
extra time to push the alternative
Into place.
"There's nothing going to be all
that Draconian about It taking
place, " House Republlcan leader
Robert Michel of , Illinois said
Thursday night, theorizing that
the specter of automatic cuts
would apply the, extra pressure
needed to wring out agreement
on a more palatable altt&gt;rnat!ve.
At the White House, a senior
administration official told re·
porters the president would direct his negotiators to work right
up to the midnight deadltne, if
necessary.
" We want to come out of this
either with a deal or 100 percent
clarity that we made every effort
to get one," the official said .~ 'But
If we don't get a deal, there's
going to be shouting in the
streets."
Some economists say an agree·
menl ts needed to calm world
financial markets tha t have been
In turmoil since thE' Oct. 19 Wall
Street crash. They say the deficit
-estimated to cltmb to between
$163 billion and $180 blllton In this
fiscal year wtthou t efforts to curb
it- was partly to blame.
Negotiators havt&gt; Indicated the
plan before them calls for about
$30 billion in deficit reduction in
fiscal 1988, which began Oct. 1.
and about $45 billion in fiscal
1989. Of this year's $30 billton,
about $10 billion would come

from unspecified tax increases
and about $5 bi!Uon each in cuts
in military spending and various
benefit programs.
The $30 billton figure exceeds
the negotiators' minimum target
for this year of at.least $23 bllllpn
In deficit reduction.
In contrast to th eir relative
optimism at day's end, lawmakers feared ear Iter Thursday that
protests by some Republtcans
might upset the negotiating
process.
Sen. Bob Packwood, R·Ore ..
said Senate Republicans signaled "overwhelming" opposl·
tion to the package because
"they think some of the savings
are phony."
Rep. Conni.e Mack, R-Fla ..
complained that the proposal is
" not a plan. It's a retrt&gt;al."
I

Michel had characterized the
mood during a ·private GOP
caucus as "cantankerous" des pite efforts by administration
officials to win support for the
compromise.
But the White House attributed
the rough going not to opposition
from Republtcans, but to "an
unwtllingness" by Democrats to
specify how they plan to ra ise
nearly $10 blllion in new revenues
this year.
If the automatic cuts were to
become perma ne n I, they would
reduce domestic spending by
about 8.5 perce nt from the sum
that otherwise would have been
spent In fiscal 1988 and defense
spending by 10.4 percent , except
in exempt programs.
Among the exempt accounts
are military salaries, pensions
for military and federal retirees ,
poverty programs, Social Security and Interest on the federal
debt. Medica re c uts are limited
to 2 percent.

LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
NOW

$1 29
WALLEJS and
KEY .CASES
Our new Chris1mas selection

COFFEE

MUGS
WITH FUNNY
SAYINGS

99
NOW $2

of
fine quality leather wallets in many
colors and s1yles.
S ave now for Chri•tmas Giving.
Reg . '8 to ' 9 ............... ... Sale '6.80
Reg . ' 13 to '14 ... .. ....... Sale '10.80
Rag . '16 to '17 ............ Sale '12.80
Rag. '17.60 to '18.60 ..... Sala $14.40
Rag . ' 26 to '27.60 ....... Sale '20.80

RCA 19"
REMOTE COLOR TV
•XL-1 00 •Walnut Finish
•Hi-Con Pictue Tube

SUPER
PRICE/

$339

•

RCA
XL-:100

POSTER WINNERS - Kenny Wiggins, dlrec·
tor of lhe MeigS County Litter Control program,
presented checks to the IIIIer control poster
contest · winners at Syracuse Elementary in a
Thursday assembly at the school. Pictured with
their posters are sixth graders, I to r, Amber
'

The Meigs County Office of
L! tter Control has completed Its

October recycling drive through
the county elementary schools
and Kenny Wiggins, litter control
program director, considers the
drive "a successful first

•

tJillage Pharmacv

·.· e~tttf••

···'*'·-t.ll ....... ,.,.

·ttli . I .

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

-·

Ohllngj!r, second place, winning $4; Aaron
Drummer, third, winning $2; and Michael
McKelvey, first place at the school and second
place In Soulhern District, winning $7. With the
students are Syracuse Principal James Law·
renee, at left, and Wiggins.

.

Poster contest. winners announced

ON THE SECOND FLOOR

271 N. SE(OND

•

PUREX

BUXTON MEN'S
PRE
CHRISTMAS
, SAVINGS

'·

Size• S, M; Land XL, Snip front, two
poaMtl, jacket In 1 00% nylon with.
warm .pile lining. NavY, Brown or-'
Bleck. Warm end Comfortable.

gular denim. Str1ight
skiris, A-lines, wraparounds.
Wrangler, Lee
Lord l.WJacs.

FIBRE
TRIM
99
NOW

'

where he was listed In satisfactory condition this
morning. The 11172 Kenworth cab was demolished
the pollee reported, and Middleport Patrolmen
Bruce Swift and Rick Johnson were on the scene
until 3 a.m. this momlng when the wreckage was
finally removed by Middleport Auto Center and
Manley's Sunoco. Pomeroy P,atrolman Thomas
Smtih assisted with traffic control at the scene.
Traffic was rerouted until the road was cleared.
Noble was not cited in the Incident.

JACKETS

DENIM
SKIRT
SALE
Stone washed or re-

100
TABLETS

WRECK SCENE- A Noble Trucklng Company
tractor· trailer loaded with logs lost Its air brakes
as It came oil the Flood Road and headed down
Mlddlep~rt Wlllnto Middleport VIllage abouiS:.40
p.m. Thursday afternoon. According to Middleport Pollee, the driver, Frederick Kellh Noble, 37,
of Albany, purposely headed the truck Into the
rock wall embankmeht to keep from going over
the hill. Noble ,sustained muJUple bruises and
lo the left leg and was taken by

1

SPEC/All MEN'S PILE·LINED .·

25 Cents

Wright thinks deficit officials
have reached an agreement

. PANTY HOSE
SALE
Regular panty hose, control

A oake walk to raise money for men ts will be served and new
the ways and mea ns committee officers will be nominated. Mar:
was held at the Tuesday night garet Tuttle, councilor, presided
meeting of Chester Co uncil 323, at the meeting following the
Daughters of America, held at ritualistic opening. Psa lms 27,
the hall. Winner was Ada Morris. verses J-4, was read. Eliza beth
It was announced tha t quar· Hayes adn Genevieve Ward were
tcrly birthdays will be held at the reported home from the hospital.
next meeting. Potluck refresh-

2. Sections, 14 Pages

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

consumer prices rise during October

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Inflation rose 0.4
percenl In October, the Labor Department
reported today, an Increase that reflected boosts
In the costs of shelter, new cars and clothing.
A decline In energy prices and smaller price
Increases In grocery store fooo prices helped
offset the October Increase, the department said.
For the first 10 months of 1987, the consumer
price Index rose 4.8 percent, according to the
department's Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Consumer prices rose 0.2 percent In September
follow.!ng Increases of 0.5 percent in Augusl and
0.2 percent In July.
All figures were adjusted for seasonal
· variations.
The· Index transportation component, up 0.2
percenl In September, jumped 0.5 percent in

New shipment in sizes 29 to 42 waist.
Pre-washed 100% cotton No-Fault
blue denim . Choose straight leg or
boot flare s1yle.

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 20, 1987

•

Cloudy, low tonight between
15 and 20. Sunny Saturday.
Highs In mid 30s. Chance of
rain ·near zero tonight and
Saturday .
·

•

'

Vot. 37. No. 137
Copyrighted 1987

'

venture."

USE OUR FREE '

.PARKING LOTS
'

I
.I--

• Students from more than half
the county's elementary schools
participated In the drive to
recyCle aluminum cans, glass
and newspapers. Many local
residents also brought In recyc·
'I

Jab it&gt; materials to the Trl·County school districts. The no. 1 school
Recycling Center, located at the in the Eastern District was
Intersection of Routes 143 and 7 In Riverview with teacher Marty
the Pomeroy area. Wiggins said Baum as their leader. Top school
the opening of a recycUng center In the Me igs District was Salem
in the county made It much more Center with Ron Drexler as
convenient and economical to get teacher in charge of the drive.
Syracu se Elementary, with
Items to market.
•
In addition to the money teacher Sandra Baer leading the
sludents raised for their respec· effort. came through to capture. ·
tlve schools, $25 cash awarils not only the top -h'o nor In Southern
were presented by the Utter · District bul also the ·$50 grand
office to the top recycltng school prize for the county.
In each of the county's three
Co ntinued on page 5
l

CHORDSMEN - This Is the 1987 Chordsmen
Quartet of the Big Bend Minstrel Association
which will be , making two appearances In the
association's "Varieties of '87" to be given at 8: 10
p.m . Saturday, Nov. 28, In lhe Meigs High School

Auditorium. Members of the group are AI
Hartson, Earl McKinley, Ron Ash and Des ( cq)
Jellers. Sponaorlng Ibis year's production are the
Pomeroy_Chamber of Commerce and the Meigs
Athletic Boosters.

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