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Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Winter heating

In the spotlight:
By Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extension Agent

.I

Tuesday, November 24, 1987

Old Man Winter Ls just around
the corner, and before you know
, it the furnaces, wood stoves and
kerosene heaters will be going
once agatn. This week In the
Spotlight shares some Ideas for
proper malntalnence and opera·
tion of heating systems.
Heating equipment should be
checked before the cold weather
sets ln. If you haven' t had your
furnace or wood stove checked
here are some things you should
do:
Check the furnace when It Is
Off.
Inspect the underside of the
furnace motor bell for cracks.
Cracked belts should be re·
placed. A belt should flt snugly
around the pulleys .
Furnaces with motor lubrlca·
tlon openings should receive 5·6
drops of oil. Check the fa n
bearings for lubrication.
Check the furnace filter. Re·
place It or clean It as needed.
Clean dust, dirt and webs out of
the heating registers and the cold
air return.
Check the chimney and flue.
They must. be clean so smo!&gt;e and
gases can exit properly. If you
burn wood, check the chimney
regularly for creosote buildup.
Inspect the pipes and connec·
t!ons In your furnace or stove for
leaks, Ch1&gt;ck wood stoves for
cracks.
Inspect and clean all elbow

inside the house. This removes
pipe joints where debris may
oxygen for people to breathe
collect.
Clean dirt and dust from space which ls a problem in a well·
Insulated home. Ventilate ,the
heaters. Clean only the kerosene
a rea sllghtly by opening a
heater wick.
•
Inspect the cords on electric window or door to a n adjoining
room a bout 1 square In ch for
heaters. Use only heavy· duty
every
1,000 BTUs of kerosene
U.L. listed extension cords with
heater
capacity.
electric heaters.
Don't
try to heat your whole
Every five year s have your
house
with
a kerosene heater.
furnace c hecked , and thoroughly
They
are
designed
'to neat the
cleaned by a profess ional.
imm
ediate
space
,or
area
around
Some additional points for
them.
kerosene hea ters follow.
,
Fuel sho uld be stored carefully
Keep a kerosene beater at Least
three fe et' from ·flammable ob· in a cool, dry place out of
jects. Never place a heater in a children's reach. Do not store
fuel Inside the hou se or near a
doorway or hallway.
Don't allow the fuel to becom.r heal source . Blue and white are
conta minat ed by gasoline. Burn the suggested colors for kerosene
containers so th a t they don't get
only hlgh·quaUty, crysta l clear,
1-K kerosene. Any other fu e l can confused with. a gasoline con·
tainer. Use kerosene co ntainers
cause an ex plosion and lead to a
for
that purpose only.
fire.
refueling your kerosene
When
During use, kerosene heaters
heater,
be
sure that the heater is
give off dangerous gases such as
cool.
Fill
it
ou !doors and only fill
ca rbon monoxide, nit rogen diox It
a
bout
90
percent ·full. Th e
Ide and sulfur diox ide. High
will
expand
and fil l the
kerosene
quality fuel will have the !east
remainin
g
10
percent.
amount of pollutants. Other
Before refueling check the
things you can do to reduce the
amount of indoor pollut ion Ln-c wick . Careful, even trimming Is
elude placing the heat'er inside a required to keep a cotton wick in
fireplace (if available) and open top operating condition. Just
a damper so pollutants can remove the uneve n or brittle
esca pe. Also use the kerosene e nds with scissors.
A fiberglass wick is main·
heater for just a few hours at a
tained by " clean burning" i1.
tim e.
Take the kerosene heater to a
If you smell a kero sene odor, it
·
may be a sign that the heater is well-ventilated area, turn it on
not working proper ly. Have It a n(\ let lt run comp letely out of
(uel. After the heater cools, brush
checked betore further use.
Burning fuel uses a ir from a ny carbon deposits from the
wick. A soft wick means that the
job has been done r ight. Never
trim a fl berg1 ass wick or "clean
burn" a cotton wi ck.
Replace wicks only with the
exac t type recommended by the
manufact urer.
If you follow these suggestions
by A! P ugh, E ntens!o n Safety
Leader, you and your family will
be off to a safer s tart this healing
season.
DID YOU KNOW THAT: K er o ~
se ne heaters caused 311 fires in
Ohio in 1985 and caused $2.8
million in prop erty losses. AIL the
more reason for safe operation of
your heating system.

Woman attends camp
Cadet Johnetta K. Souther n
Kinane, daughter of Joh n and
Mary Southern. Doran. Va . and
granddaughter of E!!a Qu!!!en,
Syracuse, received practical
work In military leadership a!
the U. S. Army ROTC advanced
camp, Fort Bragg, N. C.
The six week camp attended by
cadets normally between their
third and fourth yea r of college,
inc lu des Instruction In communi·
cations, management and surv l·
val training.
Successful completion of the
advanced camp and gradu'ation
from college results in a commis·
son as a second lieutenant In
either the U. S. Army, Army
Reserve or National Guard for
the cadet.
Ki nan e is a student at the
University of Ma ryland, College
I
Park.

Community calendar

...

Accepti ng donations
SYRACUSE - Syrac use Fire
Department is accepting donations for Christmas trea ts. Donations may be sent to the fire
department at Box 706, Syracuse, or call 992 -718~ for pick up.
Toys for needy children are also
being collected. New or very
good used toys are prefered and
anyone wishing to give toys
should call 992-7181 or 992·7775.

trict, Boy Scouts of America.
recognition dinner wl!l be held on
Dec. 3 at the new American
Legan Hallin Middleport.
Reservations are to be made
~ilY Nov. 27 with Llsa Roush, 33178
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy,
45769, or by calling 992·3486. All
reservations of $6.50 mu st be
paid in advance.

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE- O.E.S. Cheshire
Cha pte r Installation, 7:30 p.m.;
Tuesday. Members . bring salad
and sandw!c/les.
POMEROY - The regular
meeti ng of the Meigs County
Litter Control Advisory Board
wil l be held a t the utter control
office at the intersection of Union
Ave: and Route 7, Pomeroy , on
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. All
members are asked to attend.

Tickets
POMEROY- Tlcketes for the
Beta Sigma P h!! Christmas
buffet and dance are on sa le from
club officers and chapter
members. The event will be Dec.
5, a t th e Senior Citizen Center In
Pome'foy. Social hour is 7 to 8
p.m. Tickets are $8 for· s ingles
and $16 for couples. It will be
hosted by Ohio Eta P hi Chapter.

PUM!o:ROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Soror·
lty, will meet Tuesday night at
7:30 at the home of Mrs. Evelyn
Knight.
MGM dinner
MIDDLEPORT - MGM Dis·

Revival
HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonville Holiness Chapel, Route
684, will be in revival from Nov.
28 th rough Dec. 6 with Sister
Nadine Fetterma n, evangelist.
Pastor David Terrell welcomes
the public.

Harriso1iville community happetJings
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hunsicker,
Akron, and Mr. and Mrs. Charles
Alki re, Ra cine , were Saturday
evening guests of Mr. a nd Mrs .
Robert Alkire.
Mr. and Mr s . Harold Ball,
Col umbu s, wa s the weekend
guest of Mrs. Frances Young.
Mr. a nd Mr s. Millard Christian
spent Saturday evening visiting
Mr . and Mrs . Ralph Christian,
Wellston, and visited on Sunday

Sa!lon, Nev . is v isttin!' two week s
here wit h his paents, Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Sl!mentz.
Mrs. ilah Hoffman, Naples,
Fla., called here by the death of
her brother , visited several da ys
with her sis ter and brother-in·
Jaw, Mr. and Mrs . Virgil King,
and her parents, Mr . a nd Mr s.
Weber Wood before returning
home.

with Mr . . and Mrs . James Har·
man and famil y, Portland .
Mrs. Martha Sayre who has
bee n in Holzer is reportedly
Improving at the home of her son
and daughter-in -law. Mr. a nd
Mrs . Joe Sayre.
Woodrow Harmon has returned home a ft er having had
surgery at Ho lzer Hospital.
Denta l Tech. Jerry Brevick,

. .

.

Retired teachers organ1zat1ons meets
Alal) a ma, So uth Carolina, and
Kentucky. She was presented a ;,
gift by the group.
Helen Smith presided at the
meeting with Ha rold Young,
sta te district repreentatlve ,
speaking to the group on Leg isla·
tion of Interest to retirees. The
current slate of officers were
na m ed for another yea r . Several
changes we re made in the
Constit ut ion. Card s were signed
for several who are ill. Next ·
meeting will be held in March .

held at the Midalepor( Masonic
Temple.
Introdu ced by Mary V. Reibel.
vice pres ide nt, Mrs. In gles noted
th ,at the schools are
located in
r,

, Mrs . Clyde Ingles ta lked on
sc h oo l ~
for underprivileged
children sponsored by the Daugh·
ters of the Amerlcari Revolution ,
at the recel1t meeting of the
Meigs Coun ty Retired Tea chers

PPSEO closing

Dinner tonight ·

Planned Parenthood· of Sou ·
theas ter n Ohio Patient Ser vices
offices will be closed Thursday in
observance of Thanksgiving but
will reopen at 8:30 a.m. on
Friday ,

The Auxiliary of Drew We bster
Post 39, American Legion, will
hold a turkey dinner at 6 this
eve ning a t the post home. A
mee~ing wi ll follow the dinner.

.,

JOHNE'ITA KINANE

.A GREAT REASOI FOR SHOPPIIG YOUR
IEIGHBORHOOD SUIDRY STORE REGULARLY!

Layette shower presented
A baby shower wa s given
recently for Ka ihy Je ffers at the
Rutla nd Church of God hosted by
Judy McDonald, Sharon Wise.
Melanie Dudding, Dee Simmons,
and Ka ren Gilkey.
.
A clown th eme was used for
decorating. Prlzes were won by
Many and J ea n Cremeans. Oth·
ers attending we re Iren e
Kennedy , Sherry and Elizabeth
Sm ith. Lydia Smlth, Carol Anne
and Sunny Folmer, Missy Longstreth, Reth'a Clonch , Shirley
Simmons, Beulah Gra te, Mildred
Jeffers, Gle nna Fet ty, P a ula
Gilkey, f a nny Miller , Barbara
Cremeans. Jean and Nicol e Cre·

mean s, Rhonda Hoove r , Mary
Wood. Vickie and Heather Ferrell , Eloise Smith, Hann ah
Queen, Rene Longstre th, Betty
Longstreth. Doris Richmond,
Barbara Smith , Becky Lemley .
Sending g ifts were Mildred
Shuster, Linda Boyles, William
and Erin Myers, Mi ssy Wood s,
Kate Cremeans, Maude Smith,
Ter essa Cremeans, E ve lyn
Leach, Nina and Delea hi Sa nd·
ers, Lily Ken nedy, Grace Welch,
Ma rga ret Cremea ri s, Mar ie
Birchfield, Mike a nd Debbie
HOlbrook, Goldie Gra ham, Kay
Hemsley, Ma r y Smi th , Mace
Carter, and Conn ie Turley.

0
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···""'"

Vol,37. No. 140
Copvrighted 1987

HOME
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·enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 25, 1987

2 Sections. 24 ' Pa981 25 Cents
A Mullimedia Inc. Newspaper

Ohioans pause, celebrate Thanksgiving
By United Press International
While the Cleveland Browns are heading
towards a championship thi s season, their wives
have performed equally well In their annual food
drive for the rieedy.
Several of the women worked Tuesd ay at
packing and distributing some 650 baskets of food
to the poor as part of the Cleveland Food Basket
Program . The, baskets are packed with fresh
turkeys and other foods.
In addition to collecting hundred s of cans
outside Cleveland Stadium .before the Browns·
Bills game Nov. 15, they also collected $6,000 in

cash. Dan!ta Pagel, wife of backup quarterback
Mike Pagel, said the money was used to buy
additional food .
Another Clevelander. Laura DeLury, today was
completing her annual cooking chore at St.
Augustine Catholic Church on the city's near west
·side - preparing 148 turkeys for the church's
annual Thanksgiving feast.
"When I get tired, I just think of the eyes of the
young a nd the old. and the homeless, who enjoy
the meal and I just feel so good helping out, " said
DeLury, who has been working the past 2 ~
weeks.

Hara Arena in Dayton wi ll be the site of the
annua l free Thanksgiving dinner for · M!am.!
Valley residen ts.
"It's fo r the poor, the lonely, whoever wan ts to
come," said Stephen Sand !Ln. publicist for the
arena.
Free tickets for the event are available at any
Elder·Beerman store, or from the United Way .
The feast is paid for by the Elder Beerman
Foundation.
Last year , 4,050 Miami Valley residents took
part in the Thanksgiving dinner , which has been
an annual event slnee 1969.
'

There wl!l be a vis it !rom Santa Claus, gifts for
children and musical entertainment, Sandlin
said. Dinner Is served from 1 to 3 p.m.
Cleveland Mayor George Voinovlch and City
Cou ncil President George Forbes donated $50,()()(1
to three hunger groups in Clevela nd Wednesday.
The pair ra ised the money for needy people last
January at a banquet they held in honorofthe late
Martin Luther King Jr.
Cleveland' s annual Chlstm as lighting on Public
Square is scheduled for Friday evening, followed
by a Christmas parade the next day.

More .hostages .are seized
to be repatriated to Cuba under
By United Press International
The Cuban government, trying an agreement reached Friday
to ease the fears of 2,400 Cuban between Havana and Washing·
convicts controlling two federal ton. The Atlanta prison was
prisons, promised " no reprisal" seized on Monday .
"The negotiation s quite
. if they are deported home, but
the pledge produced no break· frankly are at a relati ve sta nd·
through in talks to free their 122 st!l!, " Joseph Petrovsky, tne
Atlanta warden, said. ''They
· hostages.
The Cuban government's an· made demands a nd we were able
nouncement Tuesday night and a to meet those demands . But we
deportation moratorium offer by found very quickly that as soon
Attorney Genera! Edwin Me ese as you meet a set of demands,
brought no response from rebel· new leadership will take over and
l!ous inmates at Atlanta's Fe d· there are new demands.' '
Mea nwhile Cuban detainees
era! Penitentiary and the Allen
seized
25 more hostages shortly
Detention Facility at Oakdale,
after midnight by taking over the
La .
Officials at the two prisons, Msp!tal section ol the Atlanta
where the hostages are appar- prison . ·
"These were employees who
ently unhar.med, reported no
significant progress in negot!a· had been safe In a hospital area
and the inmates were able to
lions to end the uprisings, prim·
ar!!y because the Inmates cannot reach them this morning. They
were able to reach them before
unite behind a single leader .
The Oakdale prison was taken we were," said Richard Phillips ,
over on Saturday by inmates a spokesman for the U.S. Bureau
fearing they would be among of Prisons In washington.
Phillips said he had no details
about 2,500 undesirable refugees
of the l)ospital takeover but said
it brought to 94 the number of
hostages in the Atlanta prison .
The Cuban government issued
a s tatement in Washington say·
ing, " The government of Cuba
wishes to declare and assure that
It will take no reprisal what·
soever against the persons who
return to Cuba."
The Cuban government sa id
WASHINGTON (UPI) - De·
the refugees would be cleared of
mand for aircraft and motor
crimes they committed befo re
vehicles helped push the volume
leav ing the Island and would be
of new orders for America's
treated like other "Mar!el!tos"
long-lasting durable goods up 0.3
who returned In 1985, "the vast
perceni in October, the go,·ern·
majority of which are free, have
me nt said today.
joined their faml!ies and enjoy
Those new orders were worth
Garden Monday. The turkey was raised In Hinton.
f u 1 1 p o s s 1 b! 1 ! t i e s o f
PRESII)ENTIAL BIRD - President Reagan
$109.6 billion , the Com·
nearly
and
was
presented
to
the
president
by
Gordon
employment."
Va.,
reacts to a ~~·pound turkey flapping Its wlpgs
merce D~partment said. Mean·
Wahs
of
the
National
Turkey
Federation.
(UPI)
"I
want
to
emphasize
this
is
during lhe annual turkey presentation in the Rose
whl!e, the amount of unfilled
orders grew 0.4 percent to $383.3
billion while the amount of goods
s hipped slipped 0.3 percent to
$108.1 billion , the government
said. All those figures were
adjusted to reflect seasonal
factor s.
October 's increase in orders
By United Press International
Kohl's Christian Democrats, as a superpower agreement was for so-called "big ticket " items
The announcement that the
ca!!ed the agreement a step Implemented. Disposal of the 72 trailed far behind September's
United States and Soviet Union
missiles In West Ge rmany had 2.1 percent increase ,and drew
toward world disarmament.
. · had · resolved all outstanding
,"The next step must be a
been a Soviet demand in arms more strength from the Pen·
tagon, New orders from civilians
' Issues on a breakthrough inter- reliable, verifiable zero solution talks.
for
du rable goods rose 0.3 per·
Shultz
was
mediate nuclear arms treaty was
to
brief
NATO
alli
es
for ch~m!Fal weapons and era dl·
cent
in October, just like. the
on
the
outcome
of
his
Geneva
welcomed by world leaders, with
cation. ot' the Invasion abll!ty of
overa
ll number, compared with
talks
many expressing hopes it was
at
alliance
headqua
r
ters
In
the Warsaw Pact because of its
3.2
percent
Increase the month
a
only a first s tep towa r d
conventional weapons," Geiger Brussels today.
"This Is excellent news - lll e before.
disarmament.
said.
Toda y's m odes t results were
West Germany and NATO
Japanese Prime Minister No- result which the allia nce position
Secretary Genera! Lord Carr!ng·
boru Takeshita termed the and U.S. negotiating efforts were about what economists expected
ton ca lled Tuesday's announce·
agreement "a very good thing." designed to achieve," Carrington and thus were Unlikely to spark
ment In Geneva "excellent
In remarks to reporters outside said in a statement on the any major strategy changes in
his official residence, Takeshita . successful Shultz-Shevardnadze · the s tock and money markets.
news." :
The durable goods report only
German Foreign M!n~s ter
said, "It represents the actual!· meetings .
covers products bu!!t to last
Hans-Dietrich Genscher said in
zat!on of a potentiaL agreement."
several years or longer,'and thus
Bonn, the pact "gives me great
Chief Cabinet Secretary Kelzo
it counts most as a s napshot of
Kobuchi
said
the
agreement
was
sat isfaction" and Is in the Inter·
how America's major manufac·
est of Europeans and the Western
" very welcome news". and that
Japan will continue to support
turers are faring .
'alliance.
So fa r this year. new orders for
In Geneva Tuesday, Secretary
U.S. efforts to promote nuclear
COMMERCIAL
POINT,
Ohio
durable goods are running 6.8
of Sta te George Shultz and Soviet
arms control.
(UP II - Two men were ki!!ed percent higher than , they were
In Beijing, the People's Da!!y,
Foreign Minister Eduard She·
Tuesday ni ght when their single· through the first 10 months of
o(f!ctal newspaper of China's
vardnadze said they had reengine a irplane cra s hed into a 1986. Transportation equipment
solved remaining Issues. in the
Communi st Party, said Pres!·
wheat field in north ern P!ckaway more than accounted for all the
treaty for eliminating their na· . dent Ll Xiannlan "welcomes"
County.
increase In new ord er s, going up
the superpow er proposal. "This
tlons' medium· and shorter·
names
of
th
e
victims
were
The
3.7
perce nt. That was the fi rst
is
beneficial
to
a
thaw
·in
range nuclear missiles .
being
w!thlle!d
pending
notificarise
for the category since May .
East-West relations," he wa s
Their a nnouncement came af·
tion
of
relatives
.
NeW
orders for aircraft and
quoted as saying, but noted the
ter two days of meetings and
A spokeswoman for the P!cka· mbtor vehicles accoun ted for
agreement covers · only about 5
cleared the way for President
way County Sheriff's Depart· most of the gains, th e Commerce
percent of the superpower's
~eagan and Soviet leader Mlk ·
ment said a wit ness repor ted Department said. It did not
hal! Gorbachev to sign the pact
nuclear arsenals.
see ing the plane go down just provide specific figures. In other
during the Dec. 7-10 Washington
"The two countries slll! have
south of the Fra nklin County line categories, new orders for prim·
the capaci ty to destroy t he world
summit.
about 7:40p.m .
ary metals dr,opped 4.1 percent,
The agreement t'o eliminate dozens of times over," he sa !d.
"The
sheriff
found
visibiLit
y
orders
for non -e lectrical machln·
.r
'
...
:
ed
the
Soviet
Union
and
ground ·based m!ssles with
'
w
as
bad
(because
of
fog),"
ery
Increased
0.2 · percent and
ranges of from 300 m!!es to 3,000 the United States to use the INF
spokeswoman
Betty
Radc
liff
orders
for
electrical
machinery
m!!es Is the first to e liminate any agreement a s a stifrting point for
said.
''He
couldn't
see
(Into
the
fell
0.6
percent.
·
The
rise In
class of nuclear weapon . It also serious discussions in other
orders
conti
nues
a
string
unfilled
field s) from roa d a nd
marks the first time each super· areas of disarmament, Including
(sea rchers) · just star ted goi ng that began In Febr uary. That
power has agreed to permit the the scrapping of all nuclear
from field to field."
usually Is a good sign, econo·
olher side ·to monitor missile weapons.
The plane, a. four-seat Piper mists say, becau se it mean s
Early tl1ls year, Kohl c leared
sites, destruction plants and
Cherokee owned by Central Sky- businesses are getting more
some weapons production facto· away a major obstacle to negotl·
port , an avia tion rental company work than they ca n· handle and
atlons on the U.S.-Sov!et arms
r!es on their own territories.
thus might have to expand
based at Port Columbus Interna·
Michaela Geiger, foreign pol· treaty by saying he would dis ·
tiona!
Airport.
production.
ma
ntle
12
Pershing
1A
missiles
icy expert of Chance !lor Helmut

Demand
•
Increases
orders

Breakthrough on arms treaty
welcomed by world leaders

40 COUll

.---People in the news-

,..

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Mr. and Mrs . Ba ughman were
marri ed on Nov. 23, 1962 at
Phoenix, Ar iz. Th eir attend ants
were her sister and her husband ,
Mary Ellen ad Ted Spires of
Defia nce. Mrs Baughman is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil·
Lia m Fred Smith, a lso of Murray
Hill, Middleport.

By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press Inter national
PHANTOM ()F BROADWAY: Andrew Uoyd Webber:s nex t
trip to Broadway already promises to be a smas h. Despite
freez ing weather, New Yorkers sta rted queuing up at 3 a. m .
Monday to purchase tickets for "Th e Pha ntom of the Ope ra"
and by midday there were thousa nds of people in line. By
Monday. $10.3 million in tickets- which cost $30 to $50 eac h had been sold in person and by telepnone. Webber, whose
"Cals" is s till goin g strong on Broadway, composed the muslc
for " Ph a ntom" and Hal Prince direc ts . Three members of the
original London cast - Michael Crawford, Sarah Brightman
and Steve Barton - will have starri ng roles in the Broadway
version, which ope ns Ja n. 26.
THE KINDNESS OF HER BROTHER: Playwright 'fennes·
see W!lliams died four yea rs ago bu t his$1.5 million estate won't
be settled before January. Lawyers for Southeast Ban~ in
Miami, the executor of the estate, say they will ask a judge to
give Wi !!lams's re mai ning cas h to his sister, Rose, 78, who has
iived at the Stony Lodge Sanita rium Ln Ossi ning, N.Y., for 53
years . 'Williams su pported Rose well during his lifetlme a nd in
his will he asked that she be a llowed to mainta in her "usual
customary pleasures," which Include s hopping sprees in New
York. liiT)OUs!nes, cruises and Broadway shows. Rose
underwent one of the nation 's first lobotomies 50 yea rs ago.
POLLOCK FLOOR ART: The floor ·of Jackson Pollock' s
st udi o m ay qua llfy as art. A section of the floor of the barn In
East Hampton, N. Y,, where Pollock created his abstract drip
paint ings, was recently uncovered and It looked much like his
sp lashed and splotched artwork s. It w!!l be covered with
Plexlg lass as part of a plan to con vert the barn and two-story
farmhouse int o a museum for the works of Pollock, w ho died in a
, car wreck in 1956, and his late wlf~ . Lee Krasner . Meg Perlman ,
who Is hea d ing the project, hopes to have the appoi ntment-on ly
museum open in June and wants to conver t a nother building at
the Po llock home into a study center concen,rall ng on the
Po !locks and other artists in their circle !lkP Robert Motherwell
and Wille"!. de Koonlg .

Oil IL'nil4"d" lllltaUS$ PIIIT PUI TWI 2"11" PIIITI

FUJICOLOR

Anniversary observed
Lawrence a nd Bessie Bau gh·
man of Murray HI!!, Middleport,
celebrated their 25th wedding
anniversary over the weekend
with a dinner at Huntin gton.
Joining them for the occasion
were their son. Jeff. his wife,
Crystal a nd their -'son. Jeffrey
Micha el, also of Middleport.

RI•PRINT·s~

1&amp; EXPOSURES

e

.
at y

something done as a Cuban
Initiative and without any prior
contact or discussion with the
U.S. government," sa id Ramon
Sanchez-Parodi of the Cuban
Interest Section In Washington.
Sanchez-Parod! said the plan
was to return about 100Cubans a
month to their island homeland,
where he vowed "we will set
them free. "
At Oakdale, where 1,000 Cu·
bans virtually destroyed the
prison and are holding 28 hos·
tages, negotiations dragged on
Tuesday as Inmates with crude,
homemade weapons prowled the
grounds and scrawled signs
·saying "Liberty or Die" and
"Freedom or..!illood.''
"We are st!!! negotiating with
the detainees for the safe release
of the hostages ," said Luenette
Johnson of the Board of Prisons.
There was a brief skirmish
Tuesday afternoon when be·
tween 20 a nd 30 Inmates, some
carrying liquid fuel, threatened
to rush the Oakdale admln!stra·
lion building housing prison
officials.
About30SWATteammembers
rushed into the building and
shari&gt;shooters with rilles scaled
the bul!ding to turn back the
inmates; who later built make·
shlft barriers from rubble near
the adm!nistrat!oh bulld ing.
Federal offlclals, decla ring the
barricades a security threat,
ordered firefighters to wreck the
makeshift fortres ses with wa ter
cannons.
In Atlanta, more \.han 100
prisoners were driven from the
stone-walled prison late Tuesday
to Dobbins Air Force Base In
Marietta , Ga ., where a s pokesman said the prisoners left after
about an hour - not by plane.

Today's Daily Sentinel
contains Christmas guide

Two killed in
Ohio plane crash

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�Wednesday, November 25, 1987

.~_-Commentary

Pl!ge-,2- The Daily sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday. November 25; 1987

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The -Daily Sentinel

.•

lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~i:b
sm
~ ·r"T'\-...1 ~.....--;-, r-r-e:::! ~ ~
1

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Daily Press Association and the Amcrlc1111 Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long: All letters are subject to ed ltlng and .must be Signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wiJI be pub·
llshed. Letters should be in good taste; addressing Issues, not personal Ities.

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Carlucci firm linked to Jtoh _
WASHINGTON - The FBI ls
looking at the court records of a
lawsuit flied against a company
once headed by Defense
Secretary-designate Frank Carlucci. The review of the file is
part of the bureau's background
check of the veteran government
official.
Carlucci left the now-defunct
international trading company,
Sears World Trade, to replace
Adm. John Poindexter as nationa l security adviser alter the
!ran/contra arms scandal broke
last year.
Sheldon Rosenberg, a Miami
attorney whose cltent sued Sears
lor allegedly cutting him out of
the profits on an international
trade deal he arranged, toil! our
associate Stewart Harris · that
FBI agentss visited his law office
Nov. 4 to study the lawsuit

of the telex . But he said It does not
fairly represent Swaebe's relationship wlth the company.
Sears' court argument was that
Swaebe was merely a broker,
and had disqualified himself
from a share of the profits by
trying to represent both sides In
the transaction.
The judge agreed with Sears
and threw the case out before It
went to a jury. Swaebe is
appealing: his lawyers will
argue that the judge based has
dismissal on case law that
applies oni.Y to real estate
brokers.
Where does Carlucci come Into
it? As chairman and chief
executive of!lcer of Sears World
Trade, it Is highly likely that he
.knew about the multimillion·
dollar deal Swaebe was arrang·
log - and the decision to cut
Swaebe out of the profits.
In fact, the name F. Carlucci
appears under the word ~ 'Approved" on-the mlnu tes of an Oct.
4, 1984, meeting of the Sears
transaction . committee, which
normally had to give written
apprnval for such transactions:
The minutes show that the
committee decided at the meetlog to proceed wlth the Venezuelan aluminum deal.
In a pretrial deposition,
Swaebe's banker testified · that
Sears had promised to work out a
"comfort letter" that would
ho.n or Swaebe' s relationship with
any suppliers he brought to
Sears.
But Sears also began dealing·
iii!=:~ directly with an Ecuadoran businessman Swaebe had lined up.
When he found out, Swaebe
protested by telex. Sears sent his
telex message to the Ecuadoran
with the following message:
"Regret did not quote sugar/r ice as we must sort out Richard
Swaebe Inc." In business par-

records. Tbe agents had been to
the advantages of cutting
the Dade &lt;;:ounty courthouse and
Swaebe out of the deal. They
discovered that Rosenberg had
were:
just checked out the case flle.
"1) Direct contact/communi· The FBI refused to say why lt . cation with the supplier.
was looking into the lawsu_it.
"2) Do not have to deal with
The trading deal involved
Richard Swaebe Inc. as a princiSears and two Venezuelan alumipal to this transaction.
num suppliers. In a telex to
"3) Will immediately establish
Rosenberg's client, Richard
a working relationship with a
Swaebe, dated Oct. 31, 1983,
potentially very good VenezueSears World Trade ' recognized
lan company."
The memo does say that
him as the Venezueian companSwaebe would be paid a commls·
ies' export agent.
·
"Any contracts where they are
sian lor hls efforts, and the memo
writer adds that "so long as -this
suppliers wlli'be channeled thru
is handled In a proper, business·
Richard Swa,ebe Inc., a negotlat•
ing agent," the telex stated. In · like fashion, I do not anticipate
addition to the telex, Swaebe
any problems."
Both the telex and the memo
claims he received oral assuran ces to the same effect.
are In the case file.
Simeon Krlesberg, attorney
Two weeks later, however,and
for Sears World Trade at the
internal Sears memo pointed out
time, conllrmed the authenticity

~~~Agony
on
the
right
.....
""

~

By STEVE GERSTEL
• WASHINGTON IUPl ) - Judge Douglas Ginsburg, who may well
:::be a fellow traveler in thought if not in deed, really had the far right
; ·) 'noralogues squirming until he not-so-g raciously withdrew as the
~ -·Supreme Court ri6minee .
·
.
::: The little-know n jurist has returned to the relative obscurity of his
:0:Seat on the appeals bench, a certain candidate for trivia games of the
~~ future, side by side with G. HarroJd ·Carswell.
·
-~
For those not familiar with the name, Carswell, a lacklus ter federal
:• district judge in Florida, was picked for the Supreme Court by
•:•President Nixon after the Senate gunned down his first choice, the
South Carolina.
: :eminently distinguished Clement Haynswor th
: : .Simllarily, Reagan nominated Ginsburg only after the Senate
•: -rejected Robert Bork, and, as was the case with Carswell, the second
"choice was disastrous.
Ginsburg, despite his abysmal lack of experience, was the heavy
choice of the right, led by At torney Ge neral Edwin Meese and the
likes ot Sen . Jesse Helms of North Carolina, the guru of the Senate
arch conservatives .
Over opposition of the moderates in the White House, led by chief of
.staff Howard Baker, Reagan nominated Ginsburg.
· Just as the judge was making routine courtesy calls on senators,
-N-ational Public Radio disclosed that Gi nsburg had partaken of
marijuana, the illicit weed, and more than just one youthful puff.
That left the moralogues, who seerh able to forgive almost anything
in a believer, traumatized.
There was something exquisite in hea ring Helms , a se ll-appointed
keeper of a ll morals, say he was relieved because he feared that the
disclosure-of drug use concerned wcaine. not just marijuana.
And there were the sw ift protes ta tions that Ginsburg's smoking
was merely an indiscretion of youth and, as another conservative
remarked, comparable to dr inking beer In college- both of which
ring true but ~6t when s poken by arch conservalives.
•
Sen. Steve Symms. R-Jdaho, railed, " What do we want on the
Supreme Court? Do we want a bright )'(lung person, get them through
law school and lock him in a close t for 25 yea rs- pull him oul and put
him on the Supreme Court, so that there's nothing they ha ve
experience about?''
In addition to putting the conservatives on the spot. Ginsburg split
their ranks -one fac tion I hat pushed for his withdrawal, the other
that wanted him to fight, despite the marijuana disclosure.
Sen. Orrin Halch , R-Utah , went public in a news conference to
lambast the "gutless wonders" in the White House who refused to
stand by Ginsburg and said, for the first time, he could not get a
telephone call through to Reagan to urge a confirmation fight.
At the same tim e, Education Secretary William Bennett, a
doctrinaire member of the right , was the one who told Ginsburg to get
otit, claimi ng he spoke for Reagan , a version the White House does not
confirm.
As a result or · tpe Bark-Ginsburg fiascos, Reagan has now
nomina ted , as his third choice for· the Supreme Court, Judge Anthony
Kennedy, backed by Baker in the showdown with Meese on the
reasonable grounds that he was a confirmable conservative,
lt is ironic that Helms, when first faced. with the possibility that
Kennedy would bP chosen over Ginsburg. reportedly told the White
House " no way, Jose," now seem s to have developed a latent
fondness for the latest of Reagan's picks for the hig h court.

of

Berry's World

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11:) !987 by NEA , ln.;

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_.::By~Ja_ck_A_nd_ers_on

lance,

''sort out'' means

eliminate.
Footnote: Carlucci dld not
respond to our· caiis for
comment.

A female friend and 1 were
recently discussing what she
not-so-affectionately ca lls her
"long dry spell" and I, with a
similar Jack of enthusiasm, refer
to as the "dating dearth. "
(Her therapist presented it as a
" period of growth," a time when
she could work on "personal ·
goals" without having to worry
about relationships. My friend
was n 't buying that, either.)
we deliberated about what
so me of the problems might be,
so rt of in the manner of two
seventh-grade girls examining
why they dido' t make cheer·
leader. I trotted out ali the
excuses that have served me so
well for many years ln this
Midwestern town of 130,000, and
which I was so proud to be able to
present to this newcomer: This is
a town where the men marry
early, the bar scene is lousy, and
the church s ingles gro ups are
places where the unattached
gather to bemoan the lack of
acceptable members of the ~ppo·
s ite sex. It'snot us, it's the place.
But then she came up with an
idea tha t made my blood run

cold: Hey, this is the '80s,
heading into the ·'90s, and 24
years since Glo r ia Steinem
donned a Playbcy bunny suit to
expose the double standard. Why
can't we ask MEN out? I mean,
. fair's fair .
Now, I'm not sure what the
answers to the dating dilemma
are, and I have feeling mine
aren't accurate even while they
are comforling. Bui there Is one
precept I am as confident of as I
am that the sun will rise and I will
not have any stamps when It' s
time to pay bills: Men do not
delay asking women out because
they are too shy, too poor or
because they are waiting lor us to
ask THEM out.

a

I have come to this realization
despite the men who have con·
fided to me how shy they were in
high school and how they really
would have liked toaskmeoutall
those Saturday night s when I sa t
watching Gu nsmoke with my
· dad, If only they could have
gotten their Adam's apples to
work in uni son with their
tongues. It comes despite the

men ln more recent years, who
have sworn they'd LOVE to be
sought after by women, would
relish th~ thought of women
lacing the same rejection they
face.
Someone tried this on me ·tn
high school. Teachers planned
"Sadie Hawkins Day" dances
and encouraged us to prowl. My
prowling led me to three memorable social encounters:
I . The Famous Music Club
Party of 1965: I asked one
member of a set of twins to ·the
pa_rty and his father picked up the
two hapless girl$ who had chased
alter hls sons and sat us both In
the back seat. Later, the boys
told everyone In sc hool how we'd
tried to kis.s them good night even
though they thought it was the
grossest experience of their
combined 28 years.
2. The Notorious Future Homemakers of America Picnic of
1966: I asked out my best friend's
brother, who promptly took up
with ' a girl nlcknaqJed "J uicy
Lucy" at the picnic. It almost
ruined a good friendship.

3. The Misogynists' Turnabout
Dane~ of 1969: I asked a guy fn
my math class who looked
normal enough. For one brief
Intoxicating moment when he
wheeled his folks' 1966 Impala up
ln my drive and I discovered my
parents weren't home, I thought I
might actuaily get to slap a boy's
face like they did ln the teen
romance novels. Then he spent
the next hour ·in our rec room
lighting matches, watching them
explode on the tile floor and
making missile noises with his
mouth. I concluded this was not a
man who's been hiding in his
social reticence, walt lng for me
to make the first move .
, OK, so it's not 1969. I asked a
few male contemporaries how
they viewed women a~ ktng men
out. They said they'd be flattered, but that I was basically
right: If they hadn't already been
eyeing the wares, I could offer
them an ail-expenses-paid trip to
Cozumel and it wouldn't make
any difference.
So, just as I suspected. It ain't
me, it 's the place.

Companies lhat leap borders__R_ob_er_t~_a_Lte_rs
The automobile indu stry provides a striking example of that. '
Japanese automakers have es·
tabilshed or expect to open
manufacturing facilities in Ken·
tucky and Tennessee, Ohio and
Illinois .
In California, a joint venture
between Gen~ral Motors and
Toyota produces both the Chev-,
role! Nova and the Toyota FX.
Before American Motors was
purchased by Chrysler., It was
controlled by Renault, a stateowned French company.
Japan·s Isuzu, 40 percent
owned by GM, manufactures a
car marketed in this country as
the Chevrolet Spectrum. Japan's
Suzuki, 5 percent owned by GM,
produces the Chevrolet Sprint.
GM's Pontiac ,LeMans was
designed by West Germany's
Opel and ls manufactured by
South Korea Daewoo. GM's Cadillac Aliante is prGduced in
Italy, then shipped by air to this
country. Ford's Festlva is made
In South Korea, while Its Mercury Tracer comes from Mexico.
Chrysler's. Dodge Colt and
Raider are made by Japan's
Mitsubishi. Some of its Plymouth
Reilants and Dodge Aries are
produced ln Mexico.
"Behind America's staggerIng ... trade deficit, a fundamental change is taking place In how ·
trade Is conducted," says Lewis
Young, retired executive editor
of Business Week magazine.

AURORA, Colo. (NEA)
Conoco, a major domestic oil
company, has an Improbable
new partner in its petroleum
exploration program in Colorado
- the Nippon Mining .Co. Ltd.
Conoco's joint venture with a
Tokyo-based company to search
for all In the Rockies Is hardly
unique . Both Chevron and Tex·
aco have established sim ilar
partnerships with another Japanese firm, the Nippon Oil Co. Ltd.
The $135 million ConocoNippon Mining operation also
. includes gas and oil exploration
operations in Alabama, Loulsl·
· ana, Montana and Texas. At the
same time, Nippon Oil is contributing $100 million to each of its
new partnerships.
Its agreements with Chevron
and Texaco call for exploration
ln Colorado, California, Kansas,
Oklahoma, Mississippi, Montana, New Mexico , North Dakota, Texas, Utah and Wyoming.
Japanese exploration for oil in
this country may surprise many
people, but the arrangement
iilustrates the fallacy of many of
the slmpilstlc assumptions being
made In the popular debate about
trade policy,
In a world where multinational
corporations and International
joint ventures routinely transcend individual countries' boun(laries, the distinction between
"foreign" and "American" products is Increasingly is blurred.

'

"New international alliances
that ilnk corporations such as
GM and Toyota, GTE and
Siemens, AT&amp;T and Olivetti are
changing patterns of trade and
investment and relocating the
sources of supplies and the site of
manufacturing plants," Young
notes .
"General Electric boasts of
more than 100 such partner·
ships," Business Week repJ:rts.
"IBM, GM, AT&amp;T and Xerox
each have a dozen or more."
Since 1980, AT&amp;T has taken on
partners in the Netherlands,
Italy, Spain, South Korea, Taiwan and Japan. Last year,
Kodak, Merck, Motorola, Emer·
son, Corning Glass and Data
General ail purchased Japanese
companies.
Carlo De Benedetti, Olivetti's
chief executive officer, insists

that "you can find success today
only through alliances that place
you simultaneously In every
global market."
The number of corporate combinations and permutations may
be infinite. Thi s country's Ford
and West Germany's Volkswa gen have consolidated their 15
Brazilian and A'rgentine manufacturing facilities to form the·
world's 11th largest auto firm in
South America. Japanese com·
panles are establishing plants In
northern Mexico, with the outp~t
destined for the United States.
What are the Implications of
those developments? Many of the
consequences remain unforeseen, but the global economy
surely wiii produce both wei·
come benefits and severe dlsiocallons as it continues to grow.

• history
Today m
By JJnlled Press International
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 25, the 329th day of1987 with 36 to follow .
The moon ls waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those bern on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include industrialist Andrew Carnegie · in 1835; pioneer German
automoble designer Karl Benz ln 1844; social reformer Carry Nation
in 1846; German mathematician Felix Klein ln 1849; Pope John XXIII
in 1881; New York Yankees slugger Joe DiMaggio In 1914 (ag~ 73),
and actor Ricardo Montalban ln 1920 (age 67).

The Daily Sentinel

Page-3

Rio Grande Re~men bounce back to whip Bluffton, 124-8:5
With seven players scoring in
double figures Tuesday, the . Rio
Grande Redmen swamped visitIng Bluffton, shut down its
offense and glided to a 124-85 win
at Lyne Ce nter.
·
The Rcdmen, now 4-1, .,came
out and played well,, Coach John
Lawhorn said. " Within fi ve minutes, . everything fl.owed
smoothly."
Mike Barborack's Beavers 1-1
going into Tuesday's · ga;...e,
mounted a strong attack on the
hosts in the firs t lew minutes as
the lead switc hed back and forth
by as much as · a single point..
Bluffton held such an advantage
(23-22) followin g a free throw by
freshman Mark Goodman , but
Rio Grande freshman Brian
Watkins' 3-point field goal placed
the lead back into the Redmen's

hands. ,
Successive baskets by senlor
Ray Singleton, sophomore Rob
Jackson and junior Jim Kearn s
widened Rlo Grande's margin .
The Redmen were ahead 71 -37 at
the half.
Bluffton mounted a determined comeback in the second
half, breaking out for 25 points
within the-4lrst 10 minutes. But
with the Redmen ahead by as
much as 41 points (87·46) at one
poi'nt, Lawhorn inserted· junior
Marc Gothard, sophomore John
Lambcke and freshman Jeff
Warner into the game tq good
effect. Lambcke, a standout
player at Wilmington High
School, delivered for the Red men
by servi ng up 16 points.
Watkins and Kearns each

Scoreboard ...
Wednesday 's

UPI ratings

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Wa.o;hlngton at LA Clippers, 10:311 p.m .

Game
..._ Nrw ,Jersey at Sltcramcnto, night

Calendar
Auto Rat:lrt~

Ch1•s1cr,

E}q~l:md

-

RAC

Uound

Rrlllll n r.tlly

!'\1·w York ut Cle•·e lan4, 7:li0 p.m .
San i\nlo 'n io 11.1 Indiana , 'l : :10 p.m .
Atlanta at Hoston, 8 p.m .
l'blcago at Mllwaukel', 8:30p.m.
Detroh at Dallas. K:30 p.m .
llou.o;lon all'h&lt;Mt-nh:, 9::10 p.m .

1'!: Okl:tiUJIII ,\ Sh)t•· (!I·'! )

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Bo:dnfl:
NABF Hca\')'Wt'lfl:llt Tille

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Las \' eJC~, Nt'V. - L~torr y AJt&gt;xand('f VIi .
Orlln Norrl.q
Soccer

MaJor Indoor Sot:CI'r l.cagul'
Balli mOre at St. Lu u.ls, 11: 35 p.m .
San Ole~ at Wiehila , R:3~ p.m.
Minnesota at Tacoma, 1!1:35 p.m.

1.

7.-unra nkt•d
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\rkum..t)&gt;.J•1urlda, lu\\ :t , S:t!l · ln~t·~ l ;th •.
Tt•:~oa .. . " ~ ••ming.

College scores

NHL results

Ohio Co llcKC Ba,o;kt~hall Re.oulll'l

I"ATIONAL HOCK EV LF.:AfH ' f:

1\shland 'l4, Malont' 61

Walt'S Cunf~r~nct&gt;
Patrh•k IJI\ lioiltln

Phll ~dt'lpltla

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ThuNday'~&lt;

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WIL.;hl ngton
l'ittJ.hUrJ:ti
NY Ran,~::rrs

S: 30

BaskelhaJI

!l. ;-iooth C'nrHIIIW PFO

lslandt• r.~

at Mllwaukf'l',

Detroit at Dallw., 8: 30p.m .
Hou!llon at Phoenix, 9:311 p.m .

:1~11

N\'

Gamet~

at Cleveland, 7:311 p.m .

!itul Antonloallndlana. 1:30 p.m.
Atlanta at Boston, tl p.m .

t· n llt~l:l'

("1.\.pltal K9, Urhana 63
t:..&gt; dar -.'till' 95, De nl!iOn 'l7
lleflan cl' lOG. Ohio Durnlnkan 59
,John t;arroll ti:'i, ra.~e Weste rn 5')
Mnuml'nlon 9!, ThleltPa. l 67

W L T rts. GF Gi\
I~
6 1 29
G7
.12 7 2 26
·~
811
!I 10
I 1!1
63 tin
7 10 I Ill
n 110
6 12 !I 15
~0
!Ill
li 1:1 ;1 15
fl3 90

n

ltlo Grandt•l!tJ, Hlutlt on t\5

Ttmn· 73. Wllmln~on 63

\\'oo!'ICr ~ 1 . ~brlelta 711 (nt)
Northl·rn 1\}•, 96. fl."ntral Stutt' IlK

Adams Vh· l~ln n

U

,\'lo ntrl'a/
Ooi'ilon

Turnabout's fair but won't play Sarah Overstreet

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

13

Ruflulo

!I

~ebtol'

10

Hllrtford

6
i
!I
9

~

:11

2

211

~

22

I

~I

6 Jl ~
16
Cta mpht! ll Confen•nct•
Norris lll vl'llon

O IIC&lt;&amp;J{II

TonJnto
Ot-t roil

10
16

9
9

'l

'Z'l

~

'l'.!

II

9

~

Ill

Mln1111•SOIR

1 II

3

11

St. Loull'l

7 10

2

16

Edmonton
falgit.ry
Wlnnlpe11,

Smytht• Oh•J,;)on
1:! 7 '! 26

!i7

6G

g~

7!)

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ill

90
Ill

~~~

6:1

.

Transactions
Rase hal l

Baltimore - Hired Grovt&gt;r "DPacon"
.Jones a.'i ll hMllln)l: and hw;erlll!lnlnK

117

K7

in.~ truclor.

56

62

- 1\nnotmn•d ,Jut' Sparlo; will ri!lurn

,!1

1!5

&amp;7

73
lt.l' ,
71

manager lor I!IKii.
S11n Frand!!K!u- Plteher Mi kc LaCn!l!&lt;
~iglll'd 2· yt&gt;ar conll'll. t't .
Baskt'lhall
India na - Acth·ah~d furward Herb
Wllllamlllrom Injured 11 ~ 1 .
PhUadclphiLL - .Signed forward Alhcrl
King to ~yur contral't: placed ll'uard
Andre-w Toney on injured list.
rortlalld - ~noun cl•d r;uard Ronnll'

"
7~

II

li

3

2.5

IOij

10

9

I

21

69

611

Vancnuwr
7 12 2 16
,.. 11-1
loJ. All~t:elt'l'
8 . l:l :i 1.5
7l4 101
1\Jf'sday'.o; Re!&gt;iull
Toronto~. NY I~&lt; land ers 3
" 'f'dne!!(bt)' 'il c;n mcs
Toronto at NY R~nge r s, 7:3~ p.m .
c~u·h ee at Pltlo;hu~h. 7:35p.m.
Muntr1•u.lul Hartford , 1:33 p.m .
WlnniiX'K ul Detroit, 1: :Ill p.m.
Ruffalo at rhUadl'lphlu. 7: 3lip.m.
Bo:Ho n at " 'ashin,qtun, II : 05 p.m .
st. UJuls 111 Mlnnt')'IIJta, II: :15 p.m .
Nlf'w .Jr r!lll!)l &lt;&amp;I Edmuulun, 9::13 p.m .
Calgary 11.1 Vancou\'t!r , 10::15 p.m .

f'hh •ajr;o 11.1 l..cl!! An~t' lf's , II :05 p.m
Th11rsda.v'111 C.am1•
Wlrui lp·~~: at 1\oi'il(ln, niRhl

Indianapolis {American 1\!isoclatlun)
11.~

l'l1u rpny hit.."' heen sw;pc ndt•d without puy
slnct' NO\'. 1:1.

ColiC I&lt;'
North Tf'xll.i'i State- football coac h
t; orky Nelson 11grc~d to 3-yeHr contn•cl ,
Footh1t11
AtlunUL Wit.lwd ~fCI)' .Jimmy
Turner.
ll otL'iiOn

-

\\'al\'t.d

running . back

i\ndn:w -ludu;on and •·orm•rbat:k Eltrl
Allf'n; rt·-~ lgnt•d linchackl'r Eu,;('ne
S1•ah.&gt;.

N,\TIQN ,\L BASKETBALl. A!&gt;ISO('. '
'I'III'Sdll.y '"' iti'Mlill'i

lndt a napoll.~ Wai\•ed quurterback
Blair Klt•l and llnehnckt•rTimCrawtord .
Horkt•y
Ruffalo - RcCillled dt•ft'h!&gt;if'man Boh
H:~ lkldl~ fr om Rot' ht'der of th e i\merk:an

rhUallcl11hlu lOll, Clnc lum1 101

lli!t'kt ·~·

Ul'trnlt !11,

Tradl·d ct•nlf'r ( 'r alg
Slml"'on, d!•lf'n..-.mc n Chris ,Jost'ph und
Mot&gt; Mantha and left win~ Da\'e lhmnun

Den,·f&gt;r

Hmt~ lun 113
u~. ~t!w ,fl'f i'ie)'

101

Utah 100, " '•o.shington II!J

Ll\ Cllpper.o; l :z3, Go ld('n 8tall' 120

!OOTJ

, •

Portland

, Sucranwnlo 9-1

Ll'll.giH'.
Plttshorxh -

to Edmonton for di'lenseman Paul
foff&lt;'Y• J,.ft winK Da~·e Hunter and
minor· ll•a,~tlle left wing Wayn1• Van Dorp.

scored 19 points for Rio Grande,
while senior Ron Rittinger had '
18, Raymore scored 14, Singleton
13 and freshman Mike Tidwell
recorded IL
••Jt was nice to get everyone
into the ball game," Lawhorn
co mmented.
For Bluffton, junior Tim Cie"

venger had 20 points , backed up
by 18 from' sophomore Daryl
Dowdy and Goodman's 15 . The
Redmen scored on 13 of 19 fre e
throws lor 68 percent, while the
Beavers were 63 percent on 17 of
27 attempts .
''I thought they (Bluffton )
could shoot the ball well, but they

NEW YORK i UPII - The
Oklahoma Sooners regained a
solid grip on college football's
No. l ranking fo ll owed by three
major Independents with a shot
at the national title.
The Sooners earned 48 of 50
first -place votes and 748 of a
possible 750 points in voting
Monday by the United Press
International Board of Coaches.
Oklahoma had been No. I from
th e preseason to last week when
Nebraska surged, ahead. But the
Sooners defeated the Cornhu skers J7.7 Saturday at Lincoln,
Neb., to regain their top rating.
That victory gave Oklahoma
an 11-0 record for the regula r
season. the Big Eight title and an
Orange Bowl berth opposite
Miami. which moved up a spot to
No . 2. The Hurricanes join No.3
Florida State 1up one slot] and
No. 4 Syracuse lup two) as the
las I teams with legitima te opportunities to capture lhe national
championship.
Miami, 9-0. needs to win its
fin a l two reguular -season games
against No. 11 Notre Dame
Saturday an d No .9 Soulh Carolina Dec. 5 then beat the Sooners
in the Orange Bowl to gain lhe
final No. l ranking.
"We have always had the
policy of trying to -get the two
, highest- ranked team s together,"
said Larry Adams, preside nt of
the Orange Bowl. "We have tha i
now . Hopefu ll y, we'll have tha i
January first."
The lone loss lor 9-1 Florida
State was by one point to Miami
in a g&lt;~me the Seminoles dominated. Since that defeat, Florida
State arguably has been the
na tion's best team. The Seminoles , need to beat Florida
Saturday and have Miami lose at
lea st one of its final two regularseason games, then have th e
Hur r ican es beat Oklahoma.
Florida State must then defeat

Prep scores
Boy11 Ohio Hla:h School Basket hall
PetH~lillle 3"
Au!itlntown &amp;!J, Canfield iii
Bi'lpl'f' 63, Marietta 62

Antwt'rp 511,

Nebraska ln the Fiesta Bowl to be
considered for the national title.
Syracuse finished its regular
season ll -0 with a · last -~econd
32-31 triumph over West Virginia. The Orangemen also must
have Miami los s a regularseason g~me then beat Oklahoma. If that happens and
Syracuse wins the Sugar Bowl, it
would emerge as th e nation's
only undefeated team. However,
the Orangemen may also need
Florida State to get beat in the
Fiesta to get the backing for the
national championship .
Besides Nebraska, losses Sat urday by UCLA, Notre Damea.nd
Clemson e nd ed their hopes of
reaching No. 1 because they noY.C
have two defeat s ·apiece. The
Cornhu skers only have one loss,
but since Oklahoma can only end
up with one loss. it is unlikely
Nebraska would move ahead of
the Sooners.
Nebraska dropped to No . Ci.
Sixth-ranked Auburn and No. 7
Louisiana State each soa red
three positions and are leading
candidates to face Syracuse in
the Sugar Bowl.
If Auburn beats Alabama Fri·
day, it Will go to the Sugar Bowl
as Southeastern Conference
champion. Jf Alabama wins, the
Sugar Bowl will decide between
lhe Ccimson Tide and 'LSU. The
Sugar Bowl has said it probably
would take the higher-ranked
team. Alabama, which beat LSU
earlier in the season. fell from
this week's rankings .
No . 8 Michigan State (Rose
Bowl-bound) and No. 9 South
Carolina (Gator) each leaped
three places. UCLA 1Aloha )
plummeted five spots to No . 10
after being upset by Southern
Cal.
No. l1 Notre Dame sank lour
places with a loss to Penn State,
but still gained a Cotton Bowl
berth. Oklahoma State (Sun) slid
a s lot to No. 12. No . 13 Clemson,
which lost Saturday to Sout h
Carolina , fe ll live places and will'
meet Penn State in the Citrus.

Botkin~

Carll!!ll' 63, Sprinxhoro 64

Ct&gt;H"" u. r~trk.wlly 211

r~IEjiiiii~

The Daily Sentinel
· (US PS U5-960)
A Olvlsion of Multimedia, Inc.

Published l'vl'ry f\fTr-rnoon. Monda:-·
thro ugh F'ricln:-o. 111 Court St.. Po-

SATURDAr &amp;SUNDAY MATlNEES
All SEATS 11 .50
BA,.GAIN NIGHT TUESDAY !1.99

NOVEMBER 20 thru 26
FRJ DAY thrtJ THURSDAY~ - - ' 1...

ml:'roy . Ohio. by thl' Oh io Val ky Pub:
lish ing Co mpun,v t Multlrrwdia. In c.,

45769. Ph . 992-2151:\. Sc

Pom('rt[y. Ohiu

ro nd clnss
Ohio.

po~1ag&lt;'

pJ id

.:1! PomProv .

·

MC'mbr r: U n itC'd Prf'ss I nl crn~1io nal,
I n lund D&lt;t ily Prl'ss A Skoc i;Tt ion ;tnd 1h£'
Ohio NC'wsPapcr Associat-ion. Na t ion a I
Ad veri isl n,g Rrpres('n t a 1iv&lt;', Branham
NC'w.spaprr Salf's. 7.13 Third Avenue.
1\'('\\' Yol'k . !'Jew York 10017.
POSTMASTER:

Srncl uddrC'Ss rhu ngrs

!o The Dailv Sl&gt;nlinf'l , 111 ('oun St .,
Pomer o.v, Oh.iG 457119.

SUBSCRIPTION MTES
By Carri er or Mutor &amp;ut(•

OnC' Wf'C'k ......... :... ...................... $L25
OnC' Month ......... : ....................... $5.45
On(&gt; Yeur ................... .. ............ $65.00
SINfltE COPV
PRICE
Daily .... ..... ..... ..... .. .. .... ... 25 CPnt s
Subscribrrs not drosll'ing 1n puy ! hC&gt; car·
rtC'r mav remit in 1ulvJncr dirC'd to

ThC&gt; D&lt;1iiv ScntinC'l on a 3. 6 or 12 nionlh
ba sis. C t:C'd ll will bf' given carrier C'actl
Wf'E'k

.subscription s by

mail permit tNt In

arf'as whcrf' hom r-

(':tiTif'r .set·vi('C' is

No

ava\1-ablf'.

Mail Substrl!ltions
Meigs Cou nty

lnsid~

13 Wf'('k s ..... .... ......................... $17.2~
211 \'VC'eks .......... ..... .... .... ........... $3'1.00
52 \\/('('\&lt; ~

.......................... $66.56
Outs id(' Meigs County

1.1 W ec-k~ ..
2ti Wc-('k s .. ...
52 Wrrks ..

$1R.20
...... 130.10

... !67.60

The best is what you get a~ your
Chrysler-Plymouth dealer!

Champion ~6. Vieqftlt Ml&amp;lht•ws U (Oil
Cin M' I!Jnut Hills 52, Cln Sycamore 50
Col BriU!! 76, Col f&lt;Jorthland 811
Co l Brookhan·en 8'7, Col Walnut Ridge ~2
Ott ( 'f'rtlt'nn!al SD, Col Eastmoor ~'!
('ol Ea!!t 73, Col Independenn 'l3
Col Franklin His 7!1, Harnllt11n Twp iJ
Col Undt'n KS, Col Marlon-Franl! 1:1
Col Read)' til, LlckJnM Hb 51 (Oil
Col South 60, C-Ol Whetslont' 5:!
l:ol Wnt 7~. Col Bt!ech~roft 411
folrraln 611, Cln Turpin fil
DoyleHI-n 6.1, C.olo'l'nlry ;'13
Fairbank!! 7~ , Ne"· Albuny 5S
Fairfield 77, O•fonl Talawanda 5~
Fuyt&gt;tl.evllle i'l, Cln Seven Hills ~~~
Fredericktown it, DHnvllle -16
Garl't't~vllle 100. Lordstown 55
Glen E.&lt;r.le 12, Ne": Rlchmund 71
Greenville 1511, Eaton ~~
Hllllanl ~~. Duhlln ~I
Independ ent Rapt 100, Mf'ntnr Chr G!l
,Ja c k.'iGn Cenlt&gt;r 7~. Nt!w Knoxvllk• 47

PLYMOUTH RELIANT AMERICA

$7424
$157 37 ~'i&gt;~TH
Deal£'r Price. tll lc&gt;, taxes and destination
charges ex tra . Paym ents ba sed o n '7424 dl':'aler

price with 11066.66 down at 9.9',; Annual PcrcE'ntage Rat!'
For 60 l'{Jual mont hly p ayments . TitlE', taxes a nd dcslln ation
rharg€'S !'xtra .

and

CHRYSLER LE BARON COUPE

14K GOLD SALE

$11,04915

Sunday, November 29,1987
11:00 a.m. to 5:00p.m.

$234 22

ONE DAY ONLY
0FF .
RETAIL

PER

MONTH
'•

[){oal er price. T tl lr . taxes a nd destinallon
charges extra . Pay ment s basl'd on $11,049.15 deaiPr
price with S$1299.01 d own a t 9.9'ii Annual Pl'rCI"'ntuge Raw
at 60equal monthly payments. Title, taxrs and d est inat ion

charges· ex tra.

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

7-YEAR/70,000-MILE PROTECTION PLAN ,
CovtJrs 7 ymHS or 70.000 miles on lim pOW'ertrain a ml 7 years or 100,000 miles against outer bo~l y rufi t-t hnH IJ.;h St:r' n t'I~P\

Our Factory Rep. will be here one day only
with his en tire line ol 14K gold- ali at 60%
off. Layaways are welcome. This is the sale
you 've heard abQUt. Save today.

of thi s timl led Wllrranty when you visit

you r

doalr:r. Ce rtain roslrictions apply. f.xdudes 1111porb

WHEN YOU'RE LOOKING fOR THE BEST LOOK FOR

FREE DOOR PRIZES
The lirsl 12 ~ople in our store reo::·:. - · ·' . Gold

COOPER

Bracelet.

Stop by and say Hello to Joe , Susan and the Gang.

No. 17 Georgia
both
dropl)ed
a notch.(Liberty\
Penn State
rejoined the ratings at No. 18 and
Pittsburgh IBi uebonnetl slid two
positions to No. 19 .
Indiana, Tennessee's Peach
Bowl opponent, returned. 10 the
ran kings alter a week's absence.

Iowa joined Alabama in dropping
from the Top 20.
The 1988 national champion
will rece ive a $32,000 non-athletic
~c hoiarship from the GerrJts
Foundation and UPL
The 50 coaches vote for :15
teams eac h, with first place
receiving 15 pcints, second 14,
e lc.

M. ~Graff Rh·HI'!ide KO

C1-IQI0TM!\0

The 15th person receives an 18", l4K Gold Chain.
The 20th person receives a B!ackhills Gold Necklace.
AFTER THESE ARE GIVEN AWAY: MORE DOOR
,PRIZES EVERY 'IWO HOURS.
Krementz 25% off; ,Black Hills Gold 20% off;
,.Q!'•mdf'ath••r Clocks 20% off.

No. 14 Sout hern Cal shot up
lour slots and earned a Rose
Bowl berth against Michigan
State by beating UCLA. No . 15
Texa s A&amp;M, which s tep ped back
a place, plays Texas Thanskgivlng night for the. Southwest
Conference title . and a Cotton
Bowl bid against Notre Dame.
No. 16 Tennessee I Peach) and

Bow Una: Green 62, Elmwood 50

113 Court St., Pom-eroy, Ohio
Invites you to our 4th ANNUAL

60%O

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Bethel 66. NewlOn ·UI
B1•xll•y 110, Whitehall it
Bloom C11rroll 6'1', Grove City 55

. "You r Professional Full
Service Jewelers "

GOLD

a/~ep~~d~~~F~~i.~~~:Fr~:-~
College in the second round oft he
Muskingum
College
Tournament.

HJO t.lt\\111': 1 1.!1 1 - \nll wn~ Ha,\ IIIUrt',
1111 :1 !1·11 ; -lim K Pim•~ . li1 ·~11 :t- 1!; Ray ~in·
l:.lo;tun, I.-I :1 t:! ; lt1111 lt iHIAKI'r, X·"! · I 1~ 1 l&gt;,iUJ:'
1•'••1.'1.. !• 1~ '!- 1 : 'll1.1 •1'idlol 1•!1, ~- 1 · 3- 1 I; Hoolt ·l ln·k.ton,
111-:1-~:
Hrl.on " atld1'"· .l (:!J -.1- 1 1~ : -hthn
l .iunl~&lt; ' kt', It 11-1 · 1~; Man• (:.,I bard, D·I·O.l : Jdf
" IU'ftl'r. 11· 1·11· 1 Tul:th• l~(."&gt;) · l :t- :!-1 - 1:!1 .
,
fU.liFt"J'O:'\ (llitl - -l11n 1'1•rr)' , H-0.3; Todd
Kl'!u·"·" · '!-~ - 1 -fi: Tndd Km·h. 1 - l · fl..~: Kon ( 'oupt'r.
](1!.0.:1-,, : l):~ r)'l f)(II·Y•Y · 3(1 ).(}.:~- 114: ' '""SIP&gt;,..
I OJ ·!·!! ;; M!dl "hil l', 1· 11-1-'!: Tim f'lt•\t·n~l·r .
!r!H.,.-1-!0: Tum ,OPhll•r , 11-'!-&amp;-2 : T om Ro-.
11· 1·11· 1: ~lurk J: .. ndman. i'i-~·11-l:i. ToliiiJ. :?'!IIH'-Ii

Sooners regain top position in ·UPI iid poll

Clcirk's

ALL 14K

didn' ,t take care of it ," Lawhorn
said. "l thought what we did well
was 10 take them out of their
offense."

Clark's
J ewe1ry Store

CHRYSLER•PL YMOUTH•DODGE, INC.

Pomeroy

CHRYSLER
Plymoulfi

ohto

113 Court St.
1-992-2054

.'

992•6421
399 S. THIRD STREET

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�'
Wednesday, November 2ti.

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Coaches pick MTS to win ·
1987-88 cage championship
By BRIAN CONLEY
United Press International
· This year's Ohio Valley Conference basketball title race will be
tougher than last year's and will
see one new team, the last season
of another and two new coaches.
Tennessee State will join the
conference this year while
Youngstown State is playing Its
final OVC season. Al Youngstown, Tom Cleamons will replace Bill Dalley, who died of
cancer last summer. Tommy
Gaither will be in his first season
at Morehead.
In the OVC preseason coaches
poll, Middle Tennessee and Austin Peay both received four
first -place votes to place first and
second.
" Those two teams 1Peay and
Middle) will be one and two or
tied for first," said TSU coach
Larry Reid. "Eastern Kentucky
also has the opportunity to do
real welL They have a lot of size
returning. And Murray State has
a goOd chance."
Middle will be led by seven
: returning lettermen - inc luding
• three starters.

Center Dwayne Rainey and
forwards Randy Henry and Ty·
rus Baynum are the returning
starters. The trio combined last
year for an average of 48.6 points
per game.
'
The Blue Raiders lost starting
guards Duane Washington and
Andrew Tunstill - the team 's
leading scorer. However, MTSU
coach Bruce Stewart said the loss
of the pair will not effect the
team.
" Right now the veterans Chris
Rainey and Gerald Harris and
freshman Steve Rogers are play ing good," Stewart said.' "Out'of
that miX we wlll be able to come
up with somebOdy."
Although Austin Peay lost four
starters, the rest of the OVC
coaches say the Governors are
better than last year_
"Austin Peay won the tourna ment last year and they will be
better this year," Reid said.
Kelly lost potent inside-force
Darryl Bedford, who had a 44.8
3-point percentage, shooter Lawrenee Mitchell (22.9 points per
game) , Mike Hicks and Riehle
Continued on page 5

Buckeye ·coach has four starters back
By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
Ohio State basketball coach Gary
Wiillams finds out this season
about life without Dennis
Hopson.
Hopson, the Big Ten player-ofthe-year and the conference's
leading scorer at better than 29
points a game, led the Buckeyes
to a 20-13 overall record, a sixth
place finished In the conference
at 9-9 and a berth in the NCAA
tournament In Williams' first
year.
_ Hopson Is gone, a first-round ·
draft choice of the New Jersey
Nets, but Williams has four other
starters returning, along with a
trio of talented newcomers.
Leading the way is senior point
guard Curtis Wilson, who averaged 14.3 point~ and 4.9 assists a
game a year ago. Wilson scored
in double figures in 26 of the 33
games, with a high of 30 against
Indiana.
Two other double figure scor. ers also return In 6-foot junior
guard Jay Burson (12.5) and
6-foot-5 junior forward Jerry
Francis (11.2), along with 6-foot -

.

stayed even with Indiana at
home but fell way behind In the
second half. Haskins said his
young players did not have the
sta mina to last an entire game
against such an experienced
team.
The Gophers already are down
two injured players. The nonconference season begins in Jess
than a week on Nov. 23 with
Brandon of Canada visiting
Minnesota .
Forward Willie Burton will be
out three weeks to a month for a
knee in,.Iry. "We will s tart
Melvin Newbern in place of
Burton. If we don't start him, we
will start Tim Hanson."
Newbern Is a non-lettering
returning player. Hanson, a
se nior. will normally be the sixth

Purdue, Iowa, Illinois and Indi·
ana also could make the postseason playoffs.
"We have five teams that will
·be iq the top 20." Haskins said.
"You ask alJout my chances of
winning? We'll get there. We'll
take a year or two."
Haskins came from Western
Kentucky where he compiled a
101-73 record. Little noted .
though, was a rebuilding period
after the club moved to the
tougher Sun Belt Conference in
the 1982-83 season when he went
12-16.
"We had a couple of tough
years. We had to puttogether two
great years of recruiting. That
club went 29-4lastyear," he said.
Haskins said he will be relying
on freshmen and sophomores
again this year.
"In time they will grow. These
guys will win. But we have to add
one or two key people," Haskins
said.

man.

Sophomore Richard Coffey,
6-foot-6, will start at one power
forward , Haskins said, and Jim
Shikenjanski, 6-9, will star t at
center.
"We're going in there taking no
Terence Williams will get
playing time at the point position.
back seat. We'll have a positive
attitude. If we can stay inju ry
Another guard, Cornell Lewis.
twisted his · knee. He will be out
free, and if the chemistry is right.
we could suprise a few people."
another week or two. Mario
The Gophers gave Big Ten
Green, another sophomore, will
co-champion Indiana a scare last
likely get the spot.
year on the road, losing 72-70
Haskins is dipping even deeper
after a hard -fought game. The . into the inexperienced ranks by
Gophers dropped a 72-71 heartdeveloping his freshmen.
breaker a\ Northwestern.
He is trying to convert 6-5
In another game, Minnesota

Other key contributors could
be 6-foot-7 junior Tony White,
another much improved player a
year ago who was the first front
court replacement and averaged
4.5 points a game, and 6-foot-4
senior guard Scott Anderson,
whose game time a year ago
came most often when the
Buckeyes needed outside shoot·
ing but is expected to be counted
on more this season.
"The loss of Hopson affects

.

ward~. Taylor
Sean Higgins
a nd guard
Chris
Seter
Is the third
· with Ca lip Pxpected to provide
three-point shot he lp but Hi ggins
has had problems adj usting to
the physical sty le of play in the
Big Ten .
.
"I'm concerned a bout two
things - our guard play and our
inside play," Frieder said.
"Good tea ms ha ve great guards
- anq we've only got one guard
that 's ever played a minu te of
ba,ketball for mP.
"If Ga t y gets hutt , or gets in
foul II oub!P o r n&lt;'&lt;'d' a rest, we' vc
got problem,. It's a big concern
of mine. until some of these
y6ung gua rds come a long It 'S
go mg to take some ttme."
Anot her of Frieder's co ncerns
is defense. It 's o ne of his
trademar ks and "we've already'

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weather is more conducive to

winter workouts . He spent the
previous· offseason in Kansas
City and did not work out unt il
spring tra ining. That led to the
arm problems of 1986. he said.
Saberhagen sa id he worked
hard last offseason a nd plans to
foll ow a si m tlar progra m thi s
year. He sa id he Is currentl y
"getting out of s hape so I ca n get
back in shape," spendin g time
wtth his famil y.
)~ext week, he will start a
weight program for h!&gt; pitching
arm and some rlii1ning. By

•

mid -January , SabNhagen ex
pec ts to be throwing fivP or stx
days a week and runn ing ne arly
every day .
" You figure you'reworki ngout

10 months ou t of the yea r , instead
of the usual seven, or eight lf you .
mak e the playoffs ." SabPrhagen
said . "Yo u' re working out more
than people think P eople thi nk
it's just a six -months thmg. I
have to get my legs strong and
my arm strong goi ng into spring
trainin g. All ballpl ayers now
have to be ready goi ng into
spring.

returning players, we hope to
have that mark erased."
The Racers also have .Jeff
Martin returning. Martin led the
teafl1 with 21.2 points per game
last season.
The 1987-88 Morehead State
basketball program will have
several new· looks - including
first -year coach Gaither.
Morehead lost four sen iors ,
including 6-foot 9-inch center Bob
McCann, the OVC 's player of the
year, who averaged 18.6 potnts
per game and finished sixth in
the nation in rebounding (11.3
rpg). •
"You don't just go out and find
someone to fill the shoes of a
player like Bob McCann, " ·
Gaither said. " But, we have
signed some fine recruits that we
feel fit into our style 6! play and
will compliment a good nucleus
of players returning."
Morehead returns six letter men and three starters, including 6-4 guard Bo Rivers who was
second on the team in both
scoring (11'.4 ppg ) a nd rebounding (7.0 rpg) .

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continued from page 4

'

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HARDWARE
MASON, WV

.

"I n '86 1 knew something was
wrong; it was my hea lth." he
sa id. "My arm was hampering
me. I had people crlticiztng m e,
sa y ing that was 1 wasn't hurt,
that I was afraid 10 go out there
and pitch.
" 1 think people look at me a nd
say. 'Is Bret Saberhagen real or a
phony? After '85 and '86, which
was the true one?' After last
year, people are going to realize
w hich is the true one.'·
To rtnd his true pttchin g self.
Sa berha gen spent la st offseason
in Southern Cali fornia, where the

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wha t I did and came out in '87 and
had a pretty good year."
~a ber h age n won his firs t six
decisions and wa s 12-1 when he
earned a spot as the American
League's starting pit cher in the
Ali -Star Game. He fin ished the
year with an 18-10 record, 15
co mplete ga mes and a 3.36
'
ear ned run average.
The right -handed pitcher was
20-6 in 1985 bu t dropped to 7-12 in
1986, mainly due to a n arm injury
th~t Saber hagen attributes more
to being out of shape than
anyt)ling else.

.,

614-992-6614

Have a happy holiday.

season .
Saberhagen was nam ed on 13
of 20 ballots from UP! baseball

correspondents across the
coun try .
Oakland pitcher Dave Stewart
was second with three votes,
followed by New York Yankees
pitcher Tommy John with two
votes and Milwaukee designated
hitter Paul Molitor and Chicago
White Sox outfielder Ivan Cal deron. each named on one ballot
"I never really pictured being
23 years old and being named the
comeback player of the year ,"
Sa berhagen said in a telephone
conversation from Southern Ca iifornla. "B ut it' s definitely a nice
award.
"11 shows that I wen! out and
worked hard In the offseason to
get myself in shape and keep
myself in shape. That' s exactly

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KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) Bret Sa ber hagen, who recovered
from inju nes that hampered him
throughout 1986 to star t the 1987
Ali-Sta r Game and win l8games,
was named Tuesday as UP!
American · League Comeback
Player of the Year.
In th ree major league seasons,
Saberhagen has gone from the
height s of 1985, when he won the
Cy Youn g Awa rd and was named
Most Valuable Player in the
World Se ries, loa dismal. injuryfilled 1986 a nd back to a dominant
role in th e American League
during the fir st half of the 1987

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Pomeroy, Ohio

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Saberhage~ named 1987 Comeback Player of the Year

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R&amp;G FEED &amp; SUPPLY CO.
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The Daily Sentinel

Middleport. Ohio

BEAT THE HIGH COST OF BEING
STRANDED ON A WINTER'S NIGHT

Michigan has lots of expenence
the season at the Great Alaska
Shootoul but will.then return to a
soft home December sc hedule
before going to the South Florida
tournament at the end of the
month.
The Big Ten, because of
television, has adopted a scattersho t schedule that will have
teams playing every day of the
week . but Tuesday . "We' re only
going to miss five days of classes
That's not bad. But It does make
you make more trips
"You can't turn down
$750,000," Frieder said. "The
money will help y9ur- program
pius you need the exposure for
recruiting ." 'The Big Ten is also on the eve of
adopting a post-season tournament. "It looks like it 's commg,"
Frieder said. "The coaches basically are for it -providing they
cut the schedule from 18 to 14
games.
"The disadvanta-ges are you
don ' t have a true. ~onlerence
champion and you won't have the
great home crowds You lose
some of those conference games
that were played to full houses. "
The tournament is not in place
for •this season, when it might be
of benefit for an inexperienced
Michigan team that might be a potent outfit by late season. The
lllp side of that, of course, ts that
next year all those inexperienced
good Michigan players will be
good experienced players.

10 GALLON

freshman Kevm Lynch to a
second guard. "We feel in time he
will become a good guard for us,''
Haskins said. "Erik Wilson will
get a lot of playing time as a
freshman. He really has good
skills. He passes the ball well but
needs maturity and strength."
Freshmen Marlon Maxey and
Walter Bond both have good
skills. "Bond will play quite a bit
before the year is over." Haskins
said.
Even though the freshmen and
sophomores will be the base in
his rebuilding program, Haskins
is still looking for more players.
"We have to add to it. It takes
five years to build a program. We
need two more great recrui•ting
years back to back. We have to
graduate a class, the Shlkenjanskls and Burtons. We got to add a
point guard and a post man.
"We signed Bob Martin of
Apple Valley, Minn. At 7-1, we
feel he is in the same mold as a
post man . We're really excited
abOut him. We need them to
really play and go out and win
some basketball games," Haskins said.

•

ANN ARBOR, Mtch. (UP!) spent more time in four weeks
There's no substitute for good
than any other first lour weeks
experienced players going into a
since I've been here. The good
Big Ten season but Michigan
thing is that Gary will key our
coach Bill Frieder has the next
defense."
bes t thing- good inexperienced
Michigan should have good
rebounding with Rice, MiUs and
players.
The Wolvermes will add a
either Mark Hughes (6-foot-8
half-dozen new players, tncludjunior) or Loy Vaught (6-foot-9 ).
mg NCAA Rule 48 casualties
Rice has a silky smooth jump
Terry Mills and Rumeal Robin- shot but has problems If he has to
put the bail on the floor. Hughes
son, to a roster that includes the
lop two scorers from last season.
and Vaught both are limited
"I'm concerned abOut our
distance shooters.
youth," Michigan coach Bill
Mills has always played with
Frieder said. "A t least three of
the bail but has never had to go
our new players will be among
inside despite his size. He'll have
pur top six or seven."
to prove he can.
Senior guard Gary Grant was
"Last year we were a perimethe Big Ten's defeQsivc player of
ter team. We did not have an
the year last seaso n and an
inside game," Frieder said. "We
AII-Big Ten performer. He led
think Vaught and Hughes will be
Michigan in scoring with a 22.4
better. But we s till have to prove
average.
we can do it.
Junior forward Glen Rtce, a
"We're a lot like our football
spr ingy 6-foot-7. was No 2 on the
team . They had a new quarterteam in scoring wtth a 16.9
back who had talent but he had to
average and second in the Btg
get experie nce and prove himTen in ·rebounding with a 9.1
self. Now he's pretty good."
average.
Michigan was 20-12 last season
To this Mtchigan will add
Including 10-8 in the Big Ten,
~enter Mills , a n excellent 6-foot finishing fifth .
10 bail-handier and outside
It is not far-fetched to liken this
group of newcomers to the five
shooter, plus guard Robinson, a
good defender and play maker.
Frieder recruited In 1982 who led
Michigan to the NIT title in 1984
Both missed last season because
their e ntrance scores weren't
then to consecutive first -place
high enou gh .
conference finishes in 1985 and
The Wolverines a lso have four
1986.
freshmen . gu ards Kirk Taylor
Michigan' s newcomers will get
and Demetri\J s Calip plus fora slap in lhr fa ce w11en they open

each player." Williams said . substi tutions.
Ohio State will start the season
"We'll have to get better balance
with
only nine eligible scholarin our scoring. If our point
ship
players . When the winter
production drops off some, and it
quarter
begins in January, 6-f~ot
may , we have to play better
~
uard
James Bradley, a
defense to make sure our oppo·
transfer,
and 6-foot-9 forward
nents score less. I believe we can
Joe
Dumas
become eligible.
do this."
Bradley
first
enrolled at Miami
The addition of Carter and
(Ohio),
but
spent
only two weeks
Mateen, both shot blockers, will
there
befor~
transferlng
to Ohio
add that dimension which the
State.
A
good
outside
shooter,
he
Buckeyes didn't have a year ago .
averaged
31
points
per
game
as
a
"We should be a stronger
rebOunding team with John And- high school senior.
Two other highly regarded
erson, Grady Mateen, Jerry
recruits
- 6-foot-S'forward Treg
Francis and Perry Carter," said
Lee
and
6-foot•3, Eli Brewster Williams . "This wlll reduce
failed
to
make grade --this year
second and third shots, but we
under
Propostlion
48.
,
still have to put more pressure on
State,
even
without
HopOhio
the ball and make it harder for
son,
may
be
better
than
a
year
teams to get the first shot."
ago
come
January.
But
a
big
As It was last season, depth
·
jump
in
the
standings
in
the
again will be a problem for
Williams, whose pressing styJe of tough Big Ten would be
play calls for frequent surprising.

9 senior center John Anderson
(6.9), probably the team 's most
Improved player a year ago .
WilSon, Burson and Francis
started all 33 games last year ,
along with Hopson. John Anderson started 31.
To help offset the loss of
Hopson, Wllllams adds 6-foot-11
forward Grady Mateen, a
transfer from Georgetown; 6foot-5 guard Ra ndy Doss, a 1986
recruit who was a victim of the
NCAA's Proposition 48 (which
makes players with bad grades
ineligible); and 6-foot-8 freshman Perry Carter, a 230-pounder
who figures to add Instant muscle
to the Buckeyes.

Gophers look for · sophomore help
MINNEAPOLIS (UP!) - Uni·
: verslty of Mi nnnesota coach
: Clem Haskins says Big Ten
: basketball teams are so powerful
· four of them could end up in the
Final Four.
," I'm trying to be realistic in
evaluating the season," Haskins
said in an interview. "We are
prepared to win. We have to play
• abOve our head to obtain that
: goal."
Haskins is looking at a string of
sophomores and freshmen to
·rebuild the basketball program
torn apart by a sex scandal two
: years ago at Madison, Wis. Those
: charged were acquitted but they
• had already left or had been
: bOoted off the team
Six sophomores are ret urning
as lettermen to Minnesota, which
finished 2-16 in the Big Ten and
9-19 overall last year under
Haskins in his first year. The
returning players include three
' seniors and one junior.
"The Big Ten will be even
stronger than last year," Has kins said. "We have four teams
that could make the Final Four.
!Michigan Is - one of the finest
teams on paper. Coac h Bill
Frieder has guys like (Gary)
Grant who will be player of the
· year with ( Rumgal) Robinson
opposite him."
Frieder will start five players
who will be first -round NBA draft
c hoices, Haskins said. He said

Wednesday, November 25, 1987

Poineroy.,-Middleport, Ohio

Pomeroy

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Page- 6- The Daily Sentinel

Kaff-kaff

Watch the Irish stonn. into Miami

By Maj. Amns B. Hoople
1\.rkey Taster Deluxe

Egad , friends! There are some
tasty· treats fo the Thanksgiving
hoi!davs.
The .premier auractlon of the
long weekend is highly rated
Miami vs . · high -flying Notre
Pame on Saturdi\y (Nov. 28 ) In
th e Orange Bowl (o n CBS-TV).
Jimmy Johnson' s Hurricanes
have virtually breezed through
their schedule. Their closest
game was a thriller against
florida State when Miami had to
come tram behind to win. 26·25.
' Notre Dame signified they
were on the way back as a
football power early in the season
with Impressive wins over Michl·
gan and Rose Bowl-bound Michl·
gan State.
The trip to Miami Is Important
··for Notre Dame and coach Lou
;·Holtz. Some members oft he Irish
; learns .a re stil l simmering from
, their last visit to the Orange Bowl
~ in 198j, It was Gerry Faust's last

.

the Hoople nod to topple Flori;
da's Gators. 38-28, lri thei r 30th
meeting.
ln.far away Tokyo, the Japan
Bowl features California vs.
Washington State. Califordia will
win this Pa c-10 clas.h, 32-20.
Also In the Pac-10, Arizona will
down Arizona State, 28-18 (on
ABC -TV) .
THURSDAY, NOV . 26
Texas A&amp;M 21 Texa s 17
FRIDAY, NOV ." 'n

Auburn 24 Alabama 21
SATU RDAY , NOV . 28

Arlzonta 2R Arlzonia Stat e- 18
Arkansas 42 New MPxlco 12
Ca li for ni a 32 Washingt on Stat e 20

Florida Statr as Florida 28
Georgia 35 Grorgla Tt ~ch 14
Houston 44 Rice 24
Nebraska 43 Colorado 26
Notre Damr 34 Miam i tFlorlda )27
SQ Mississippi 22 SW Loulslanu

lfi

Tenncs.see 49 Vanderblll 20
Wyoming 41 Hawa ii 20

Sutcliff wins
Gerbig award

OXFORD, Ohio (UP I ) - Chi·
cago Cubs pitcher Rick Sutcliffe
Is the 33rd winner of I he Lou
Gehrig Memorial Award, given
by Phi Delta The ta national
"
! HO USTON tUPil -Ohio State ball linem en based o n voti ng by a
hurt in the seven th game, and the co lleg iate fraternity.
The award is given annually to
~ linebacker Chris Spielman, Syra- 221 -member national selection tea m has dropped to No. 14
a major league player voted to
without him.
cuse nose guard Ted Gregory, committee of coaches, sportswrlDespite injuries, Gregor y is b86t fit the Image and c haracter
: Auburn defens ive tackle Tracy ter.s and sportscas ters.
The 40-pound -granite Lom:RockH and Oklahoma tight end
second on the team with 38 of the Hall.ofFame first baseman
· Kf'ith Jack•on wf're selected as bardi Award. named for former , unassisted tackles in 1987. His of t he New York Yankees, who
was a member of the fraternity
fl nollst' T uPsda y for the 198i pro footba ll coach Vi nce Lam·
car.e er statistics Include 242 tot al
bard!,
will
be
presented
In
at Columbia University.
L.umh,H -~1 Collf'1!(' Li neman of
tackles. including 151 solo and 91
Houston
Dec.
3.
th•• Yt•.u J\Wo..trd
assis ts.
Sutcliffe, who won the National
Gregory, 6-foot -1 and 260
Jackson, 6-3, 248, was a consen- League Cy Young Award in 1984 .
. . p11 lmJn w ' &lt;l finalist last
\hll f ... 'h1 ndtional award. pounds, is credited by Syracuse
s us All-America tight e nd In 1986
made a strong com eback from
; Hoc kt ··~ ~~ 1un10r, whi le this as the biggest sing le reason the
and was a unanimous · Allarm and s houlder proble ms this
_._).hu· oth• r 1Jn...all~l~a reseniors. Orangemen have gone from a
Co nference choice for the second
season, compiling an 18-10
v Thi • fnut piJ\('n Wf're se lec ted tow of 105th against the r un in
record.
straig ht year. Jackson combines
a' tht• tx·'t JI!M7 t•olleglate foot - 1986 to No. 1 earlier this year.
speed a nd steady hands to
"We are delighted to acknowlGregory, o! East Islip , N.Y .. was
function both as a powe rful
edge Sutcliffe as a fine at hlete
but even more so as ~ n outs tandIng humanitari an," sa id Robert
J . Miller, executive president of
the fraternity a t its national
In the reserve contes t, Amy hea dquarters in Oxford, Ohio.
with Stobart lead ing the way with
' Fi ve players hit double ligures
Rouse and Kelly Smith each
11 as Woods grabbed nine and
, · at the Meigs Girls Varsity sq uad
Sutcliffe has become a force In
contributed
eight points to lead Chicago socia l and charitable
· raced past the Eastern Eagles 68 Ewing a nd Lesley Ca r r picked up
seven eac h. Fry. Kelly Smith, the Marauders to a 38 to 11 win . c ircles with the Rick Sutc liffe
:~: ro 16 to open the 1987-88
Taylor, Audra Houdashelt , El!se Smith was the leading rebounder Foundation. It awards 10 college
;: basketball ca mpaign.
Meier and Dee He nderso n hit the with live while Kristin Stanley scholarships annually to disad•: • Beth Ewing pumped ln eight
boards for the rem ai nder of the with six and Taylor with live led , va ntaged youth. If they maintain
'; , points in the opening quarter as
In steals.
•..- the defense shut out the Ea- rebounds .
grades, the $2,000 year ly stipe nd
In the theft depart me nt, the
The Marauders were whistled carries throug h to th e ir
:-· glettes. With Shelly Stobart adMarauders had 22 steals with lor nine fouls and missed on the gra duation.
: : ding four. Jody Taylor three and
Dee He nderson lea ding the pack few opportulnites they had at the
· . Wendy Fry and Tammy Wright
Sutcliffe ha s donated $100,000
with seve n. Meigs went to the free throw line.
~· !WO each, the Lady Marauders
to the foundat ion every year
free throw line · eight times
Scoring: · Rouse 4-0-0-8;
- had build a 19-0 lead at the e nd
since Its Inception In 1981. It
canning
ha
lf
of
their
tries
and
the
Smith
4-0-0-8; Newsome provides 50 tickets to every Cubs
:: of the fi rst stanza.
Eagles hit on four of six from the 3-0-0-6; J . Taylor 2-0-0-4; · home game for boys c lubs and
• : Behi nd the play of Jenny
charity stripe.
Stanley 2-0-0-4; Ha ggy other soc ia l se rvices. It a lso is
· Cowdery. the Eagles posted ten
Scoring:
Stobart
6-0-0-12;
1-0-0-2;
King 1-0-0-2 .
. · points In the. second frame but
involved In supporting shelters
Taylor
6-0-1-13;
Fry
Hensley 1-0-1-3; Baker and food ban ks.
.: they were offset by the s hoo ting
1-0-3-5;
H.e nd e r so n 0-0-1-1; Bauer 0-1-0-3;
: or Missy Woods who canned four
1-0-0-2;
Ewing
6-0-0-12; . Gardner 1-0-0-2; Malhotra
• (ield goals to match Ewing' s first
Wright 1-0-0-2; Woods 1-0-0-2.
·. quarter total. At the ha lftime
7-00-0-14 ; Houdashelt
The Marauder win extends
: intermission. Meigs he ld a com 1-0-0-2; Carr 2-0-0-4; their home-court streak to 39
~ 111anding 31 to 10 lead.
Meier 0-0-0-0; Smith games. Meigs travels to South·
Things wNe no better In the
1-0-0-2.
ern tonight to take on the Lady
; second ha lf for the visitors as the
Cowdery
3-0-4-10;
Ritchie
Tornadoes
and will open TVC
· Marauders outscored them 37 to
1-0-0-2;
Clay
1-0-0-2;
M.
play
against
the Miller Falcons
·' 6. Meigs co ntrolled the boards as •
Parker
1-0-0-2.
at
Hemlock
on
Sa turday evening .
• they pull e&lt;;l dow n 51 rebounds

..

~ Name

'

Lombardi · finalists

~ Meigs girls

I

game 'as head coach ot the Irish, ence. Jackie Sherill's Aggles
and they were humiliated by the have won the title for the past two
years, and they were oor preHurricanes. 58-7.
Holtz'S last trip to Miami. on season choice to make It three In
Jan . 2, 1978, for the Orange Bowl a row. We see them doing just'
classic, resulted In one ·of his that: It's Texas A&amp;M, 21-17.
Auburn and Alabama will slug
greatest victories. Holtz's Arkansas team was a 14-polnt underdog It out for the 52nd time In their
to Big Eight champ Oklahoma, Southeastern Conference battle
rated No. 2 In the polls. Arkansas · at Birmingham, Ala. (on CBSTV). In another squeaker, Auwon convinci ngly, 31-6.
burn QB Jeff Burger will lead the
That triumph, incidentally,
War
Eagles to a 24-21 victory.
enabled Notre Dame to win the
Nebraska's
powerful Corn national title by defeating-No. 1
huskers
end
their
regu lar season
Texas. 38-10. in the Cotton Bowl
game the same day . That was in a Big Eight clash with
Notre Dame's last national Co lorado in Boulder, Colo. The
Buffaloes surprised Nebraska
crown.
Both N.D . anci Miami have last year, 20-10. That won't
size, speed, depth and experience happen this time around. Make lt
.:.. so they are evenly matched. In Nebraska, 43-26.
In a pair of gray-beard meet a f' lassic struggle, the Hoople
System sees the "Luck of the ings, Georgia will take Georgia
lrlsh" prevailing as Notre Da me Tech, 35-14, In their 84th meeting,
and Tennessee will romp over
wins 34-27.
The Turkey Day pairing of the Vanderbilt, 49-20, In their 81st
Texas Longhorns an d Texas game.
ln a fierce Intra-s tate rivalry,
A&amp;M ton ESPN -TVl Is for all the
the
Florida State Seminoles get
marbles In the Southwest Confer-

wallop Eastern, 68-18

Wednesday, November 25, 1987

Wed.nesday, November 25, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

~

By JIM LUTI'RELL
UP I Sports Writer
The Sea tile SuperSonics, swept
by the Los Angeles Lakers in the
Western Co nference final last
sea~on, showed the NBA cham pions things could change this
year . Xavier McDaniel sco red 34
points Tuesday night and the
Sanies withstood a fierce Los
Angeles comeback in the third
per illd to score a 103-85 victory
over the Lakers at the Coliseum .
The Lakers, bothered by a
pressure defense. made only 38
percent of thelt; shot s and committed 24 turno vers.
"We didn't try to shoot
poorly," Lakers Coac h Pat Riley
said. "They had a lot todowlthlt .
But it was a thorough butt kicking that l saw tonight. They
were more physical and played
harder."
The loss was the second
straight for Los Angeles after the

over the Browns .
" Init ially we dl&lt;;i it with the
Bear defense (to s top the run)
because of I he problems we had
in New Orleans, Then, we ex pande d on it," Schottenhcimer
·said. "This game evolves all the
tl me:"
De fensive cap tain Carl Hairs ton , :14, leads Cleve la nd linemen
with :n tackles and 5 !-{ sacks.
''The key point Is that we' re
playing with a Ia! of confl denc~
and we' re p lay in g aggres sive,
Ha irston sa id. "The way you
practice is the way yo u play on
Sunday ."
While the Browns ' quarterbac k sack total is not partic ularly high at 27, th;o Browns have
forced opposing quarterbacks to
throw under pressure.
"We've put somewhere in the
neighborhood of 20 to 22 hils on
the quarterba c ks in the las t th.r.ee
games ," Al Baker said.
The hits have Impressed
Scholten helm er.

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~. Miami, CMU dominate All-MAC
·' TOLEDO. Ohio t UP]) - MI • ami and Cl' ni ra l Michigan each
had live players selec ted and
:: J::a,tern Mi c higan four to the
•: ):I ll-Mid -Amer ican Co nference
• footbail tea m pic ked by the
: ·IPa,l:!uC' eooc hes t~nd announced

· !oday .
' . Two of Miam i' s picks- punter
• Chu ck Konrad and placekicker
Gary Gus!:lma n - wen" among
, ' thC' five unan imou s choices for
·• the squad. Th e othe r three were
Eastern Mich igan quar terba ck
Ron Ada ms, Ke nt State runni ng

back Er ic Wi lkerson a nd Bowling G reen out side lin ebacke r
John Hunter.
Bowling Green and Kent State
each had three players named to
the team and Ball Statq, Toledo
and Western Michigan two eac h.
Oh io Unive rsity had none picked
on the first team and only one on
the second .
Five pla yers, Including Hun ter, were named to the firs t tea m

tor th€' second consec utive year.
The others were Ball State tight

end Ro n Duncan, Eastern Michi gan running back Gary Patton,
Miami defe nsive tackle Andrew
Marlatt and Miami defensive
back Sheldon White.
Ball Sta te's Craig Kanter was a
first team gua rd S.!'~ct ion. He
was a second tea m pick last year
anci a first team selection in 198.1.
Central Michigan, with 11. had
the most players honored - five
on the first team, fo ur on the
seco nd and two hono rab le
mentions.

Basketball is the thing at Wyoming
LARI\ MIE , Wy o.

tUP I) -

Coach GC&gt;nny DeeS is i n a bit of D

,· squeC'zC". pven in a place where

' · ca ttle outnumber people.
The Uni versi ty of Wyoming Is
·
the o nly four-yea r co ll ~gc· in the
state. About one out of 25 s tate
residents wi ll be ot ea ct1 home
gam&lt;'. Basketba ll mean s some·
thing 10 these people. It did ba ck
whe n OPes graduated from
Wyoming in 1958.
"One old cowboy told me the
on ly way I could live up to what
fo lks wen• expecting thi s yea r is
to win mon? games than we
plo~v," sa id Dees, who regularly
s ays s uc h things a nd laughs right
along with a nyone lis te ning.
"Spor ts Tllustrated had a gu y
spe nd five days here , lik e they
wrr~ ·going to pick us up rea l
high . But I to ld people that
doesn ' t mean much. Sports Il lus trated pi c ked th e Cleveland

Ind ians to win the American

!.&lt;'ague pe nna nt. "
The Cowboys are a bet tPr bet.
They not on ly can sco re . th ey
figure to be -pretty good at
s topping peop le, particularly if
rhev catch on to the man -to-man
defense Dees prefers .
·
Wyo ming won 24 games last
season a nd ha s a ll starters tmck.
includi ng All-Ame r iCa candl ·
dates Fennis Dembo a nd Eric
Lerkner. NBA scouts rate bot h
Dfmbo and Leckn e r probable
first round pic ks.
Despite a promising team.
Coach .Jim Brand enburg took off
for San Diego .S tatc, a riva l in the

Wes tern Athletic Confe re nce.
and opened !he door for Dee~.
who was glad to return.
"The only ti me I'd been here
si nce 1 graduated was three
years ago when I was a n
ass istant at Alabama a nd we
played in Denver." Dees said. " I
re nt ed a car and drove (two
hours) up here. The place hasn' t
c han ged but the facilitie s s ure
ha\!e. "
Wyoming's facillli es are com parable to any. The ba sketball
.program has first dibs on
every,t hing . .
Dees had no hesitation in
leav ing New Orleans, which won
26 games and had eve ry key
player returning .
' 'I wanted to coach at a schoo l
that ·had dorms,'' he sa id. " Those
commuters are hard to get back
a t nig ht. They leave just like
carrying that lunch pail. If they
go home at 5 o'clock, they ain't
comi ng back."
·
Wyoming' students are a more
ca ptive audience . There Is no
Bourbon Street in Laram ie.
· Maybe thai keeps some players
from even visiting Wyoming, but
Dees thinks the facilities , support and Interest outweigh the
location.
" When 1 say this is a good job,
It's not an easy job," he said.
"But we're one of those schools
that when a player visits us, we
get stronger. Coming out here on
t he prairie, you'd never expec t to
find these facilities a nd the
ent hu sias m ' they have · for
baske tball."
·
Dees ' e nt.hus la sm for basket ball has never wavered, th ough \

his opportunllles to coach it has.
He was head coach a nd athletic
director at Virginia Common wealth for two years In the late
1960s, then was an assista nt at
Western Kentucky unti11973. He
le ft coac hing to farm a nd be a
tigh school principal. He didn't
return untlll97i, when he joined
Georgia Tech's pwgram just as
It was going into the Atlantic
Coast Co nference.
"I never thought I'd ever go
back In," Dees said. "But when I
farmed, it never rained for four
years. 1 lost my rear end. Then
Georgia Tech asked me back to
help with recr ui ti ng. -1 said,
'Well, you're never going to be
rich a nyway, yo u might as well
do something you e njoy."'
, Dees still ow ns a 250-acre farm
In Montgomery County, Georgia ,
near where he was born.
His background- his first wife
died of ca ncer when he was -at
Georgia Tech - makes a ny ta lk
of pressure silly. Having a Top 20
team isn't exac tly hard times .
though It does mean Wyoming
won't sneak up on anybody,
especia lly not ln the WAC .
"With all the hype we're
getting, they're going to be
coming out for the Cowboys,"
Dees said. "B ut our kids so far
have handled It, and if we're
going to have any kind of succ.ess
at ail, we've got to keep some of
that hype away from them . If we
star t looking at the overall
glitter, we're goi ng to be gone.
"As old as a clic he'a s It, may be,
If we don ' t play !hat thing about
one at a lime. we're not going to
make it."

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40-footer and beat Wreggett !rom
the slot. At 8:51 , Brent Sutler
passed out from the corner to
defenseman Jonsson. who scored
into the open side from eight feet
oht, tying the score.
Desp ite being outshot 15-5, the
Islanders got the only goa l of the
first period when Sutter tipped a
35-footer by Mikko Makela past
Wreggett during a power play at
5:21.
In the second period, Leeman's
20-footer beat Smith at 3:37.
Olczyk put Toronto a head 2-1
with a power-play goal at 13: 25.
deflecti ng a Dale Degray point
shot through Smith's legs. With
75 seconds remaining In the
period, Leeman's soft back·
hander eluded Smith . .

co nsecutive loss. Benoit Ben·
jamln hit Il of 12 s hots and
finished with 26 points for Los
Angeles. Rod Higgi ns , who hit 13
straight s hots al one point and
finished 15 of 17,led the Warriors
wit h a career-hig h 33 points.

"Happy
Thanksgiving"

.

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Brophy: " We can play just llke to give Toronto a 3-1 lead.
this at home, too. It 's a matter of
Toronto outshot New York
discipline. We shut them down 30-13 through two periods, but the
pretty good a nd deserved to win !s la nders, who ca me from three
t he game."
goa ls behind to win Saturday
Iafrate 's shot from the right against Philadelphia, unleashed
side deflected off Islanders de- a 16-shol barrage at goa lie Ken
fenseman Ken Morrow and be- Wreggett in the final period.
hind goalie Billy Smith for his
" We were nonexistent ln the
1~1h goal of the season.
fi rs t two periods, " Islanders
"I s uppose when things are Coach Terry Simpson said .
·s uppo se d to happen, th ey
"Billy Smith kept us a live un til
happen ," New York defenseman what happened at the end. It's
Denis Potvin sa id. "That was a
unfortunat e he has to take a loss
typical win nin g goal. bouncing in . like that."
off someo ne ."
Smith played for the fi rst ti me
Third-period goals by Pat s ince Nov. 7, when he suffered an
LaFontaine and Tomas Jonsson ankle Injury.
pulled New York even 3-3. Gary
LaFontaine reduced the m ar gin
to 3-2 at 5:32 when he picked
Leeman scored twice a nd Ed
Olczyk once in th e second period up the rebound of a Ken Leiter

Dowler, the daughter of Clifford H. Dow ler Jr. of Jackson,
was the only Rio Grande cross
coun t ry run ner to qualify !or the
nationals after !he men 's and
women 's tea ms competed in the
NAJA District 22 a nd Mid-Ohio
Co nference finals at Defiance
College on Oct. 31.
P r ior to joining the w9men 's
team. Dowler played on Rio
Grande 's softball team. During
the past cross country season.
she consistently finished first for
Rio Grande In all competit ions
she participated in and was the

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had 18 as Utah rema ined unbeaten In six games at home this
season. The Jazz outscored Washington 26-13 in the fourth
quarter, holding the Bulle ts
scoreless for the first 7: 12 of t he
period . Moses Malone had 17
points to pa ce Washington.
Trail Blazers 9R, Kings 94
At Portland, . Ore ., Clyde
Drexler had 32 points and con·
verted a bloc ked shot into a
breakway dunk with nine seconds left to lead the Tr a il
Blazers. The Kings , loser s of
three straight , missed their first
11 shots of the second half. Otis
Thorpe's 21 points and 14 rebounds led Sacramento.
Clippers 123, Warriors 120, 2 OT.
At Oakland, Calif .. Mike Wood son scored 31 poin ts to send
Golden State to its seventh

ra n."

iant

'•

and Craig Ehl o 17.
Pistons 97, Rocke ts 83
AI Houston, Vinnie Johnson
scored 14 of hi s 26 points t'n the
fourth quarter to I.e ad the Pistons
to their third stra ~g ht victory
despite los ing Islah Thomas to a
leg Injury in the first quarter .
Akeem Olajuwon totaled 21
points and 15 rebounds to pace
Houston. Detroit built a 56-.12
halftime lead.
Nuggets 132, Nets 104
At Denver, Lafayette Lever
scored 21 points, handed out 14
assists and grabbed 13 rebounds
- his second straight tripledouble- to power the Nuggets to
their third consecutive t r iumph .
Lever, who shot 9 of 11 Irani the
floor, also had eight steals . Buck
Wil)!ams led New Jersey with 15
points and 16 rebounds.
Jazz 100, Bullets 83
At Salt Lake City;!{arl Malone
scored 22 points and Thurl Bailey

Mary Dowler of the Rio Grande
women's cross country team
pla ced in the top third of t he
runne r s who finis hed in the NA lA
Cross Country Na tionals las t
Sat urday.
Dowler finished 130th from a
fi e ld of 333 r unners wi th a time of
19:51. The top , wome n's runner
fini shed with a time of 16:59.
A junior majoring In ele m e n·
tary education at Rio Grande,
Dowler ra n for the first time on
the co llegiate level this season
alter men's cross country coac h
Bob Willey formed a women's
team. '
"I thi nk It's outsla ndln g for
anyone to fin is h in the top thi rd,"
Willey said. "The other coaches
at the nationals were asto unded
that this was the firs t tim e s he

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY
"At the End

~.

UNIONDALE, N.Y. (UPT) Forget .about Home Sweet Home.
The Toro nto Maple Leafs are
better on the road.
AI Iafrate scored with 1: 40
remaining Tuesday nig ht to lift
the Maple Leafs to a 4-3 victory
over the New York Isla nder s.
Toronto Is 5-4-1 on the road and
5-5-1 at home.
,
. "We're ,5(]() now at home and
above .5()0 on the road." Iafrat e
said. " I guara ntee this is a r eal
big win against the Is landers and
I guarantee we'll get better at
home from here on."
Said Toronto Coach John

OPEN '
SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM

.,

on the shooting of Michael
Cooper and Magic .Johnson, who
led Los Angeles with 23 points.
Nate McMillan drove for a
b asket, however , and Dale Ellis
hit two straight field goals, and
the Lakers couldn' t get closer
than 10 points during the last
e ight mlhutes of the game.
In other games, Philadelphia
edge&lt;;! Cleveland 108-104, Detroit
thumped Houston 97-83, Denver
routed New Jersey 132-104, Utah
stomped Washington 100-83, Portland trimmed Sacramento98-94,
and the . Los Angeles Clippers
outlasted Golden State 123-120 In
double overtime.
76ers 108, Cavaliers lOt
· At Philadelphia, Charles Barkley scored 14 of his 22 points In the
fourth quarter, including Phlla·
delphia's !inaiiO points, Maurice
Cheeks scored 22 points a no Roy
Hinson 21 for the Sixers. Brad
Daugherty led Cleveland with 23 .
points, John Williams added 18

.

THE
VIDEO TOUCH

Special of th~ Week

La ke rs opened the season 8-0.
" We played the game awfully
well and the Lakers are strug·gllng a little right now, '' Seattle
Coach Bernie Bickerstaff said.
''But they are sti ll the elite INm
intheNBA. "
'
McDaniel scored 10 points to
help the SuperSonics turn a 55-40
halftime advan tage Into a 68-44
lead four minutes into the third
quarter .
'' I've become more offensiveminded , aggressive, going to the
hole, " sa id McDaniel , who aver aged 30 polnls ln three games las t
week . " Earlier in the year I was
shooti ng more from the outside.
Right now I've got It going."
Seattle expanded Its lead !o
73-46 before the Lakers ran off 10 ·
straight poi nts in building a 20-4
run that brought them within '
i7-66 e ntering the final period.
The Lakers sliced the So nics'
lead to seven ear ly in !he fourth

Toronto wins fifth contest on. road, 4-3

~+~. +0·0

t

The Datly Sentinei - Page- 7

-McDaniel nets 34 as Sonics hand. Lakers I 03-85 defeat

Browns. defense
best in the NFL
BEREA , Ohio iUPll - The
only significant per so nnel
c hange in the Cleveland Browns'
defense this year Is the absence
o! Pro Bowl linebacker Chip
Banks, but Cleveland ha s
emerged as the NFL's top
defensive team.
Through 10 games, Clev~land
ranks first In points allowed
(138) , first in pass defense (1,606
yards) a nd third in run defense
t969 yards). despite the fact that
Banks was traded to San Diego
for the rights to draft Mike
Junkin. who played little before
suffering a season-ending injury .
Muc h of this season's success
has been altribuled tot he use of a
va riety of defenses.
Against Houston Sunday , for
example, the Brow ns used at
leas t seve n defensive fronts,
including what is known as the
"Bear" -a n aggr~ss i ve defense
patterned after th e Chicago
Bears with eight pla yers ncar t he
line of scriinmagc.
"Up unt il this year, defe nsively I think It was c har ac terized 'by more than one opposing
coach that il was not very
complica ted," Coach Mart y
Schottenheimer said. " That 's the
kind way of sayi ng they were
vanilla. Essentia lly we were
vanilla. But, out of necessi ty this
year. we went to some diffe rent
things a nd had some success with
those."
The trend toward c han ge
star ted after Rucben Mayes
ru shed for 147 ya rds in New
Orleans ' openi ng day victory

Pome.;oy- Middleport, Ohio

as the Vint on Co unt y Vikings '
g ir ls ba s ketball team beat the
Bobcats 67-56 Tuesday night.
The Vikings' Runyon. who
finis hed the night with 24 points
to lead her teammates, scored
six of the Vik ings' 1i fi rs t-quarte r
point s to put them a head of the
Bobcats tiy five . The Bobcats'
Renee Ward scored eight of th e 12
points the Bobcats would pick up
in t he open ing fram e. AI the e nd
of t he first half. the Bobcats
c lOsed to within three at 33-29
with eight points from Re nee
Ward, who finish ed the nig ht with
22 points.
The Bobcats stayed th ree
poin ts behind at the e nd of the
third period. as Drummond
scored eight points ·to make the
score 47-44 . Howeve r . in the fina l
quarter. the Vil•ings outscored
. Kyger Creek 20-12 to reg fsler the
victory. ,
VlNTO N COUNTY (fi7 ) Runyon 10-0-4-2-24; C.rouse 9-0-2·
3-20· Caudill 4-0-2-2-10; Prat er
4-0-0-1-8; Fa in 2·0·0·1 -4; Reid
0-0-1-4·1; Cr~wey 0·0'0-1-0
KYGER CREEK t56)- Drummond 12-0-3-27; Ward )1·0-0-1-22;
Brown 1-0-1-2-.1; Cn rroii1-0-0·3-2:
Kitchen 1-0-o-n

YOUMAKE49
PAYMENTS ...THE

50th IS ON ·
You Will Enjoy These
Beautiful And Practical
Gifts For Years
To Come!

PEOPLES B.ANK
OF POINT PLEASANT, MASON,
NEW HAVEN
The Better Bank'.'
11

Member

F.D.I.C'

'&gt;
\

..

I

•Substantial Penlty
For Early Withdraw!.

�-'

Page- S-The Daily ·Sentinel

Wednesday, November

Ohio

1987
'

** * * a Great American Holiday ** * *

- -·

.

.

The Daily Sentinel:.

By The Bend

.

Wednesday. November 25, 1987
Page- 9 :

•

-

•

Big Bend Va~ieties '87 dedicated to former cast members
Love'' with Shirley Quickel, Lori the Christmas holiday season on
Russell and Kristen Slawter Sun«jay, the day after the show,
stepping out on a fast-moving the musical wi ll close with a
dance number, "If My Friends Christmas medley and the ap Could See Me Now". Bruce Wolfe pearance of·Santa and h is elves.
will sing "The Old Piano Roll
Joe Struble, long time master
Blues wl th Bob and Debt Buck, • of ceremon ies f6r Big Bend
vetera ns of the loca l production , productions, will again be keep
doing " By the Sea".
. the show moving a nd sound wil l
A clogging trio to "Sunflower" be by Aardvar k of Pomeroy.
will feature Paulette Ha r rison ,
A house band will not only
Kay Hemsley and Holly Willi- accompa ny the show but will
ams, Jennifer Sheets, show ac- present a program o! music
companist, and her son, Jared , preceding the presentation. Makwho scored well with last year's Ing up the group are Jennifer
a udience on a ragtime piano Sheets, keyboa&gt;:d and sam pler;
duet, will make an appearance Jared Sheets, synthesizer, Roger
this year doin g "Sunburst Rag". Gilmore, guitar; Ga ry Dunfee,
A love song of the World War II bass; Tim Glaze, drums ; Mary
era, "You'll NeverKnow"willbe Gilmore, percussion, with Sally
the vocal solo o! Peggy Brickles. Radford ha ndlin g vocals for the
A teen dance line, Sweet Georgia group.
·
Brown,
tr
ained
by
DeblBuckand
Ro ger and Susie Abbott are in
The Chordsmen, a vocal
Cindy
Soulsby,
will
include
Amy
charge
o! spo tlight operations
quartet ~o mpose d of AI Hartso n,
Epple,
Barbie
Anderson,
Lee'a
and
Bill
Nease is In charge o!
Earl McKinley. Des Jeffers an
JuliJohnson,
Jennifer
Buck,
lighting.
Members of the
stage
Ron Ash wili do "Coney Island
anne
Buck,
Kelly
Douglas
and
'
Pomeroy
Chambe
r of Comm erce
Baby" with vocalist, a newcomer
Heather
Davenport.
and
the
Me
igs
Athletic
Boosters,
to the show , Jean Trussell doing
Kathy
McCreedy
as
"Rose"
of
the
production
,
co-sponsors
"Crazy" and returning Ia ter in
wi
ll
do
comedy
along
with
her
Saturday
night
to
will
be
on
hand
the show to sing "Your Cheatin'
Heart" backed by members of vocal "Personalit:{' and Cindy handle vario us det ails of staging
the South ern High School Choir So ulsby ;Gig Po well, Jayne Hoe- and lighti ng.
directed by Roberta Maidens. flich, Bob Hoeflich, Paulette
The choir members will be Harrison and Bruce Wolfe will do
taking part In several acts, the traditional old soft shoe.
backing veteran voca list, Jim
Members of a pre- teen line
Soulsby, on his "Are You Lone· dancing to "When My Sugar
some To night? and in a medley . Walks Down the Str eet, are Kelly
from the long- playi ng Broadway Satt erfield , Linda Chapman,
musical and the movie, " Music Megan Bartels. Heath FranckoMan" . Forty-Second Street will wiak, Emily Shane, Kelly Doidge
be th e music for a fast moving and Stephanie Price. Cathy Price
tap numb er by Mayla Yoacham has trained the group. Vocal
and Shelly Winebrenner wiih soloist, tenor AI Hartso n will be
Gerald and Mary Powell chang- doing "When Irish Eyes are
ing the dance tempo .and beat Smiling" and the annual "Comwith' th eir Latin number, "Yet- mittee" number will be by
Carolyn Thomas, Bob and Debi
low Bird" .
• Jayne Lee Hoefl ich will be Buck, Jim and Susie Soulsby,
feat ured vocally on "What Do Linda Mayer, Charlene and Bob
You Want to Make Those Eyes at Hoeflich, Jayne Hoeflich and
Me For?" and the Shady River George Boerger.
.
The Music Man medley will
Shufflers whic h i nclud~s the
opening backup dancers pius include the Chordsmen Quartet, TODDLER gets big-girl look with em·
Richard Brown and Gary Willi· the Souther n High Choir, and broidered-top sweater with pulled
ams will da nce to " Ragtime soloists Adam Sheets, Bcuce sleeves and gathered shoulder. PleatAnnie".
Wolfe, Ron Ash and Peggy ed skirt picks up dominant color of
Veteran performer Linda Brickles. Since both Pomeroy embroidery, by Bull Frog Knits in
Mayer will sing "l Wish You and Middleport will welcome in Creslan for $29 to $38.

•
1re
Thanksgiving Is A Day Of _
Brotherhood and
Togetherness; Share It
With Those Yon Love and Give Thanks For Our Rich
Bounty.· ·
May All Be Blessed On This
Great American Holiday! ! !
THIS PAGE SPONSORED BY THESE MANY FINE BUSINESSESS .....

RIDENOUR SUPPLY

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES-&amp; SERVICE

992-6491

./ 985-3308

992 -2975

POMEROY, OHIO

CHESTER, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

FRUTH PHARMACY

.

'

HERITAGE HOUSE/LOCKER 219

SWISHER-LOHSE PHARMACY

FABRIC SHOP

992-5627

992-2955

992-2284

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

FARMERS·' BANK

RA

·~

-

•

MIDDLEPORT -POMEROY, OHIO

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA
Atl1ena, Ohio Mtmbtr

ACE HARDWARE.

HOME NATIONAL BANK

992-3785

992-3662

949-2210

992-6333

POMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

RACINE, OHIO

SYRACUSE, OHIO

CHESTER, OHIO

lOK GOLD
GEMSTONE
&amp; DIAMOND

•

ONLY

~IGGS

USED CARS
985-4100

992-2039

992-6685

PMEROY, OHIO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

.

POMEROY, OHIO

7

ONLy

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

992-3639

A

- 992-2t96

992-2104

MARGUERITE SHOES
G&amp;J AUTO PARTS

INSURANCE AGENCY

992-2139

992 - 23 ~2

446-2691

'MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES

GALLIPOLIS
OHIO

992-6128

EWING FUNERAL HOME

VILLAGE PHARMACY

992 -212 1

992-6669

POMEROY, OHIO
'.

r·

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

MA.IN STREET PIZZA

991-2174

992-2228 or 992-9922
216 EAST MAIN

...
•

•

•.
••.
•
•

DANCE TRIO - This fast stepping dance trio
will be a featured act in Saturday night' s Varieties
of '87 at the Meigs High School Auditorium.

Dancing to "Sunflower" the group includes from :
the left Paulette Harrison, Holly Williams and •
Kay Hemsley.

•

s e·

.-'

EVERYDAY
TILL 'CHRISTMAS

~

~·

-

- ....

$ 7995. A4v!:~~:~:

992-6661

POMEROY, OHIO

•

RING

ONLY

LY $179 95

$1139

$14995 .

PANDA COIN REPLICA
NECKLACE AVAILABLE

...

14K GOLD DIAMOND EARRINGS

NOW

$19 95 PE
DIAMONDS
SAPPHIRES

»j..---..

8 BEAUTIFUL DI4MONDS

ONli~ $2 89 95
MAKES ANY SOLITAIRE LOOK NEW AGAIN

$199

30°/o O~F

18K GOLD

NEW SELECTION

14K GOLD ADD-A-BEADS

RINGS • EARRINGS ALL AT

s

CHEV.-OLDS.-CAD.

4:,:~:,~ 2~~/o

ALL

2

QjO OFF

FILIGREE • COLORED • DIAMOND CUT • ONYX

Origin al Black Hills Gold Crccnions®

. 992-6614

POMEROY, OHIO

CLARK'S JEWELRY
GALLIPOLIS

446-2691

POMEROY

992-2054

.
•
•
•

.•.
'

•

-HAIR CHAIN-

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

JIM COBB

:

-VERY SPECIAL-

20°/o OFF-

4K GOLD DIAMOND GUARD

,..,..,,.. me

.

''

992-6611

CENTRAL TRUST
CE:. The funk That Makes Things Happen.

7 DIAMOND .:
ANTIQUE .•'
STYLE

DIAMOND
COJN

DIAMOND LADIES
CARAVELL WATCH

VALLEY LUMBER &amp; SUPPLY CO.
. MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

19K GOLD

TOTAL
WEIGHT

MAGNIFICENT BRILLIANT DIAMONDS

BULOVA • SEIKO • PULSAR

-

SMITH-NElSON MOTORS
POMEROY, OHIO

•

ONLY

BULOVA'
'IT'S AMERIC/\S TIME

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

POMEROY, OHIO

.•

DIAMOND RING

$229

-ALL

DOWNING-CHILDS-MULLEN-MUSSER

'•

- SPECIAL PURCHASE -

PAT HILL FORD

VETE.RANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

CHESTER, OHIO

...

1· Carat

95
y
Olamondf For Him!

$119 95

MIKE SWIGER STATE FARM INSURANCE

POMEROY FLOWER SHOP
.

I

•

IMPORTANT NOTICE -

lOK
GOLD
DIAMOND

RUBY • EMERALD • SAPPHIRE

985 -3301

•

For over 40 years our aim has always b.een to satisfy our customers. and give the in the best
quality at the very best prices.
.
Other jewelers often try to imitate us and try to undercut our prices, but this is done at the
expense of you the customer. So beware of those that always seem ·to offer the same items for a
lower price. THERE IS A DIFFERENCE. At Clark's we will never sacrifice quality for price. . .
Our Best Holiday Wishes!
Joe and Susan ·

992-3345

fifteen thousand people w.~o catF:

BAUM LUMBER

-

.
•
.•'

QUALITY PRINT SHOP

BANK.=L&gt;NE:~

POMEROY, OHIO

•
•
•
•

POMEROY, OHIO

OHIO

K&amp;C JEWELERS

'•

Clark's Jewelry

992-5177

992-5141

POMEROY, OHIO

992 -2556

•

•

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •GALLIPOLIS
POMEROY
•
•'

BUTTONS &amp; BOWS

FUNERAL HOME

992-2136

ADOLPH'S DAIRY VALLEY

•

Dedicated to two form er cas t
members, the 24-act Varletie·s of
'87 will be presented at 8:10p.m .
Saturday In the Meigs · High
School Auditori um. · ·
This year 's production by the
Big Bend Minstrel Association is
dedicated to Mrs . Kathryn Crow,
performer a nd first and only
president of the association, and
to the late Bill Clark. banjois t and
vocalist with the association for
many years.
Bruce Wolfe vocalizing, "Let
Us Entertai n You" backed by
dancers , .J anet Brown, Debbie
Burns, Donna Grate, Paulette
Harrison, Kay Hemsley, Ta mmy
Moore, Diana Sprouse, Holly
Williams, Linda Young and
Rhoda Hannahs will open this
years show.

NOVEMBER 26, ·1987

•

-

•DISCOVER
•VISA
•MASTER CARD .
•TERMS

OPEN EVERY SUNDAY
• FREE GIFT WRAP •
• FREE ENGRAVING · •
• FREE RING SIZING •
I

'

.

•
•

�Page-1 0- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, November 25, 1987

· Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING''

Model 330 (3.3 cu. ln.)
1 Power

tip, gas welded and

sprock&amp;l )ip guide bars,
16"-24".

• Vibration isolation.
• Automatic chain oiling .
• Professional style lront and

\

PHILCO
COLOR

TV'S
AS LOW AS

rear handguards.
• CD ignition.
• Multi-chamber Softone"'
muffler.

o Aaker Ill" series 38
chromed chain.

o SAFE-T-TIP• anlikickback deviCe.

$28995

$19800

Pomeroy- Middleport. ~hio'

Wednesday, November 25, 1987

Eastern E.agles defeat ·Miller, 60-54, in season· opener
EAST MEIGS- Flying on the the break. The lall(!r tMft came
horizon of success, the new look on a great Griffin-Horner-Griffin
Eastern Eagles of veleran Coac h pass comblnai!On lhat brought
Dennis Eichinger won the season the EHS crowd to Its feat, thus
opener for ,all area schools as draining the Fal cons of nearly al l
they rolled to a non-league 60·54 life, the score now 55-48 with L 3o
triumph over Tri-Valley Confer- left.
ence {or Miller here Tuesday
Miller scored at the buzzer to
evening.
make It closer. butEHS swooped
The season cage opener left down for the win.
,
Eastern perfect at 1-0, while
In the early going EHS looked ·. .
Miller dropped to 0-1.
hard to beat as they quickly
In a game in which all Eagles sprinted to a 13-2 lead, but then
contrlbuled wllh a strong-bench hit a bitter co ld streak that left
effort, the Eagles gol their main lhem with a narrow 13-10 lead .
offensive punch from Its starlers.
The hot and co ld Eagles
Junior center Michael Marlin floundered through another cool
supercharged ·lhe attack to lead streak in the second canto,
all scorers with a hefly twenty com pounded by the absence of
point efforl and greata Inside Hendrix and Martin who got in
game. Senior speedster Mark four trouble early In the frame.
Griffin weighed In with 17 Miller came back fo r a 24-22
markers and great defensive halftime lead.
efforl. while senior Steve Hor ner
A solid second half allowed
canned nine, and seniors Tony Eastern lo come back as good
Hendrix and Allen Tripp each tea m work allowed the welladded 5.
coached Eagles of Coach Dennis
Three Falcons reached double Eichinger to climb back to the
figures, led by John Edwards · top.
with 14, Tom Dutiel with 12, and
Mark Griffin had a great floor
Jeff McCafferly with 10.
ga m e and defens ive effort,
In a game In which the three claiming 10 of 19 Eastern steals.
point play did not play a great Martin had super inside offenpari overall it dld make a sive game desp ite playing in foul
difference ln swayi ng the mo- troubl e much of the second half.
mentum late In the game. Each
Eastern hit 21-50 from the floor
team can11ed 21 field goals, but and 12-21 at the line, while hitting
the winni ng edge came as East- 2-6 three point tries. Miller
ern hit two thr ee-point ers to canned 21-50 and 9-16 with 1·5
Miller's one and also hit three three pointers.
more free throw s (12·9) . With
EHS had 19 steals, 9 ass ists, 20 ·
5:04 left In the game Eastern •
trailed 47·41, however, two Bout may 'be
straight three pointers by guard declared invalid
Tony Hendrix and Mar k Griffin
By United Press International
cu i the score to 48-47 , Miller's
favor.
The Dec. 19 bout in Sicily
· Eastern lurned up the pressure
between WBA jun ior lighlweig hl
cooker defensively, forci ng sev- champ ion Brian Mitchell of
eral Miller violations and bad South Africa and Italian Sa lva·
shots, selling the stage for key tore Curcetti could be ln danger.
goals by Griffin and Martin that Mitchell' s managers sa id they
gave EHS a 51-48 lead .
are petitioning· lo have the bout
The clincher came soo n after- declared inva lid because they
wards wh en Griffin and Hendrix believe I he ir man is obligated to
teamed up for steals, allowing first fight Jean-Baptiste Mendy
Grif!ln_to ca n two field goals off of France.

lurnovers, and ' 15 fouls . Miller
had 11 steals, 9 assis ts, 40
turnovers (compli men ts of Easter n's tough press) and 19 fo uls.
Miller won the reserve contes t
58-24 led by_Albert Siemer with 10

a nd Todd Fulk with· 8. Kenny
Caldwell had 6, while Jeff
Horner, Mark Murphy, and Dan
Tripp all had 4 apiece.
Eastern plays Kyger Creek at
home next Tuesday In the SVAC

'

!l!dan, V-8, air cond .
vinyl roof. aulo. trans..P&amp;Pa IXJWer win&lt;IJw•
power sea\ power door klcks, tift wt...l,cruise
control. AMIFM rad~. ~ereo tapa radiallir~
whrte walls. ~r wildow defog
SALE PRICE

saooo.

'87 FORD TEMPOS

~ock H82221, 2 doom. 4 wll!el dr... V·B, ~r
cond..~ulo. trans.. PS. Pa AM/ FM rad~. rad~al

tires.

HORNER SHOOTS - Eastern's Steve Horner (21) puts up the
shot from the baseline over MiUer's Jeff McCafferty (51) in
Tuesday night's co ntests In Reedsville. The Eagles won 60-54.

Sale Priced for This
81ft CIVing Season.
OPEN: MONDAY-FRIDAY 8 A.M.-9 P.M.
,SATURDAY 8 A.M.-6 P.M.
'

THE ADDED TOUCH

INGELS Furniture
CREDIT TERMS or LAY-AWAYS
Middleport

.$4400.

ESCORT

Slock H 74441, 4 door• !I! dan. fronl v.lleel ·
drive. 4 cyl., air cond.. auto. trans.. PS, PB.
AMifMrad~. stereo !aPe. radial tires. buck~
s"'ts. rear win&lt;IJw defog
SALE PRICE

$7700•

Middleport,
Ohio

Deer season starts Nov. 30
Gun season fo r deer begi ns
Monday, November"30, and ends
on Saturday, December 5, according to the Ohio Depa rtm ent
of Na lural Resources.

Longbow and crossbow season
for deer of both sexes, which
started on October 5, will tempor·
arily end during gun season. It
will resume on December 5 and
will continue until Ja nuary ·30,

La ndowners and tenants who
take deer on th eir lan d and other
perso ns no I requ ired to purchase
a deer perm II mu st lmmedla lely
attac h to the deer a tag with I heir
name, address and da te and time
in which the deer was klll ed. Such
persons must provide their own
deer lags .

1988.

The limit is one deer per year,
regardless of the !(let hod used to
killolhe animal.
Locally, in Lawrence, Scioto
and Vinton Counties, antlerless
permits are required lor individuals desiring to hunt does as well
as bucks.

C-10 PICK-UP
Stocl&lt; " 84271. 2 doors, hard top. 6 cyl.. aulo
tran•. AM/FMrad1u sterootapa ~ lonpickuA
long wide OOd, ~r slep bumper, gal!ges.
SALE PRICE

$43'00.

SALE PRICE

Sloe!&lt; # 75124, 2 doors h.-d top. V-8, ar
con&lt;!. vilyl root. aulo trans.. PS, PB, power
win&lt;IJws. IXJWer seat power ooor ilcks. tin
wheel, cruoe rnnlrol. AM/FM radio, slerm
tape, radial tires, white walls, reM wint:bti
defog
SALE PRICE

$6000.

$5700.

white walls. rear winOOw defog

•DIFFERENT COLORS
•ONE SIZE FITS AU ·

S24400

SALE PRICE

•

Sloe!&lt; H83091. 4 doors, !l!dan, V·B, air oond..
vinyl roof, auto. trans.. PS.Pa IXJwer win&lt;IJw•
power seat lllW" door locks, tin v.tle~ . cruise
contr~. AM/ FM radio. stereo tapa radiallires.

THEY FEEL AS GREAT
AS THEY LOOK.

ONLY

Slod&lt; H 7755 I. 4 door~ !l!dan. fronl whe!!l
dlive. 6 cyl., air cond .. aulo. trans.. PS, Pa
power win&lt;IJw~ power sea\ power &lt;bl&lt; klcks, .
lift v.lleel, cruise oontrol. AM/ FM radil, ~"""'
tapa radial Ires, •Me w~ls, buck~ seals. tear
wincbw defog. sun roof.
SALE PRICE .

$

Stocl&lt; # 74073. 4 doom. !l!dan. 6cyt., air oond..
auto trans., PS. PB. AM/ FM radio, &lt;~eroo tapa

51800.

•Au"' On-Off-Rewind

Your
Choice

BRONCO

SALE PRICE

1986 MERCURY
SABLE LS

Fully Equipped, Only 5To Choose From

GRANADA
radial tires.

•14 F•Jnction Wirele11 Remote
•6 Event 14 Day Timer
•11 0 Channel Cable Ready

Box ScGre:
MILLER (54)-Jo hn Edwards, 4-6-14:

Chuck Dutleloi-0-8: Jeff McCafferty 5-0..10;

Tom DuUeU-2- 12; Dau Halleld 3 (1).0..8; -.
Jim Dishon 0.1-1. TOTALS 21 (1)- 1-54.
...
EASTERN (60)1Steve Horner 3-3-9; ...
Mar• GrlfDn 7 ())-(~17: Tony Hendtlx 1 •
( l).Jf-5; AU.., Tripp l ·H; Michael MIU"IIA •
8-4·20; Shawn Savoy0·2-!; Chad Slndalr 1- ;
0·2. TOT .USn (2!-12-60.

.

~ock "84551. 4 doors,

992-5766

opener for both clubs.
Meigs plays at Miller Friday .•
Score by quarters:
Eastern 13 9 · 14 23-60
Mlller 10 14 17 13-54

The Coach Says "Bruno"
And The Turnpike Boys
Did Such A Tremendous
.
Job During The Pre-Holiday
Sale That Our Used Car
·Department Is Loaded
With Savings For You!

I

1984 BUICK
PARK AVE.

2711h North
Second Ave_

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11 .

S-10 BLAZER

Stocl&lt; H73042, station wagon 4 wheel droe, 6
cyl.. a~r rnnd.. 4speed, stand trans .. PS, PB, litl
wheel, cru oe rontrol, AM/FMrad~. radial tires.
wh~e walls. bucket !l!als
SALE PRICE

Sloe!&lt; H83351, 6 cyl., auto trans., PS. Pa AM
radio, rad i~ lte&gt; ~ ton pcku ~ short whe!!l
base. rear ~"' b!Jmper.
SALE PRICE

Sloe!&lt; H11371, 2 doors, h.-d IDA fronl wheel
driva 4 cyl., air cond.. 5 speetl stand trans.,
PS, PB. cruise ronlrol. AM/ FM rad~. steroo
lapa radio t&lt;10. bucket seals, rear .win&lt;IJw
derog, gauges.. SALE PRICE

Sloe!&lt; H74411.2 doors. COUJ&gt;!. V·B. air oond.,
auto trans., PS, Pa tilt wheel, AM/ FM rad~.
steroo tapa radial tires. buck~ seals, gauges..
SALE PRICE

$6500.
. F-150 4X4

Slo ck # 83221. 4 wheel dr•e. V·8, air cond..
auto. trans., PS, PB, ~wer winc)Jw s, PQ\"'er
door klcks, in wheel, cruise conlro, AM/ FM
rad~.

sleroo t&gt;pa short wide bed.
SALE PRICE

SCI ROCCO

Slock H78121. 2 do~ fronl wheel drive. 4
cyl., air cond, 5 speed, stand tran.. PS, Pa
AM/ FM radio, sleroo lapa radialtir~ bucket
seats. rear wndow defog
SALE PRICE

T-BIRD

Stod&lt; # 84531.2 ttoor., hard lo~ rnuJ&gt;!, V·B,
air cond., auln trans.. PS, P8, power w~&lt;IJw s.
power sea\ power ~oor locks, tin wheel, cruise
contro. AM/ FM radil, ~eroo tapa radial tires.
gauge&gt; bw mil~

GRAND AM
Stocl&lt; H 84341. 4 doors, Iron! wheel drive, 4
cyl., air cond , auto. trans., PS, P8. cruise

corrtm, AM/ fM ro:l&lt;J, stereo lape
SALE PRICE

�Page-. 12-The Daily Sentinel

•

Slinderella meets

How do you ·cook turkey?
Just ask you children...

Kay Morris lost the most
weekly weight and Melissa Fos·
ter was runner-up at the Monday
night . meeting of Slinderella
Diet-Exercise Class. At theTues·
day night Mason class, Joan
Vaughan lost the most weight.
New members are always welcome. Jo Ann Newsome Is the
lecturer.
•

By BOB KOEFqCH
I know! You're a whale of a
cook and you don ' t need any of
my suggestions on how to prepare Thanksgiving dinner .
However. I have some tips that
I just can't resist passing O&gt;;I to
you- please try them, howe.(ler,
at your own risk.
You might feel some consola·
lion In knowing that these tips
aren't exactly from me. Nope! I
borrowed them from the kinder·
gar ten kids at the Tuppers Plains
Elementary" School, taught by
Cmdy Linton. The class does a lot
()f work In cooking and discussing
nutrition and the kids do Jove
preparing foods. They prepared
their own cookbook for Thanksgiving and following are some
excerpts.
Of course. turkey is the "biggie' • for your Thanksgiving table
and here Is the recipe:
Ingredients: JOOpound turkey;
1 spoon flour; 10 potatoes: 10
spoons salt; 3 spoons pepper; 1
cup butter.
Mix all up and pour on the
turkey. Set the oven on 10 degrees
for 50 minutes. This Is what my
mommy does. Take out of the
oven and let it sit for awhile.
Feeds 3 people.
And noodles wtil enhance that
big dinner so here is the recipe:
Ingredients: 1 pound flour; 6
onions: 6 boxes ice cream; 3 lbs.
sugar; 1 bread.
Cut the on tons up. Stir the flour .
Shake the tee cream. Cut the
bread in half. Putthe sugar in the
refrigera-tor. Then mix all to·
gether and make noodles. Cook
a I 5 degrees for 6 minutes . ,R eady
to eat. Makes 17 noodles.
And how about mashed pota·
toes? The recipe:
Ingredients: not much salt; not
much pepper; 5 spoons milk; not
very much butter. Mix these one
at a time. Cook on the stove for

Riverview
Garden meets
A holiday workshop was held
recently by the Riverview
Garden Club at the Reedsville
Church of Christ.
Mrs. Gene Wilson and Mrs.
Lyle Balderson had charge of the
workshop with members and
guests making an angel using·
lace and ribbon and a doll head.
For devotions, Mrs. Donald
Myers presented a Thankgiving

Wednesday, Noilember 25. 1987

• Ohio

Beat of the bend

three minutes. Take off the stove
and eat it. Add butter to them.
Feeds six people.
And the ·dressing .. .
Ingredients: 2 smashed toma·
toes; I spoon cake cream; 3 oz.
milk; 2 eggs; 3 Ibs. sugar.
Smash the tomatoes and stir
everything else- in. B11ke in the
Attacting and feeding birds
oven at 40 degrees forGO minutes.
Then you put the icing on the top was the theme of a program
presented by Crystal Bolin at last
and stir. Feeds 100 people.
week's
meeting of the Friends
For tradition too, you will need
and
Flowers
Garden Club held at
cranberry sauce.
the
home
of
RUth
Dugan.
Ingredients: 84 eggs. 60 lbs.
Mrs.
Bolin
talked
about atsugar. 60 gallons milk, 64 spoons
tracting
birds
by
planting
·trees
red icing.
and
shrubs
In
protective
areas
as
Mix all together and put in the
well
as
some
flowers
to
shelter
refrigerator. Leave for 60 hours .
birds. She also suggested using a
Ready to eat. Feeds 60 peopile.
bird bath, and feeding sunflower
You might want another veget·
seeds,
cracked - corn, peanut
able - say green beans.
·
butter.
or
suet which is a quick
Ingredients: 60 pieces meat,
source
of
heat
and energy serv1,000 spoons water; 1 gallon salt;
ing
as
a
substitute
for insects.
1 gallon pepper; 60 gallons
She
recommended
locating
bird
mashed potatoes.
Stir ail this together. Bake at 1 feeders on the south side of the
house near shrubbery.
··
degree for 5 minutes. Take out
Diane Ash presided at the
and cool. Feeds 5 people.
·
meeting
.which opened with a
If you'd like to throw in a fruit
poem
entitled
"Thanksgiving".
salad, here's how you do it.
Donna
Knapp
was
welcomed as a
Ingredients: 5 cherries; not too
new
member.
and
Lily Kennedy
much sugar (2 shakes); quite a
made
a
flower
arrangement
with
lot milk.
members
making
comments
and
Take ail this stuff and mix
asking
questions
for
roll
call.
together. Put in the refrigerator
Mrs. Kennedy also had the
· for 2 minutes. Then you eat it.
"hart
short", on gardening in- ·
Feeds 3 pi!(lple.
doors
noting
that most any flower
The tradltonal dessert. of
or
plant
which
can be grown
course, Is pumpkin pie. And
outdoors
can
be
grown
Indoors.
here's how one kindergarten
She
said
a
clay
pot
with
a
screen
student says to do it:
in
the
bottom
for
drainage
is
best.
Ingredients: 1 cup salt; 1 lb.
The
holiday
dinner
party
was
sugar; 2 lbs. butter: 1 lb.
announced for Dec. 17 with
vinegar; 2 Ibs., milk.
members to meet at the Kennedy
Mix it and pour into two pans.
home at 5:45p.m. and leave from
Cook at 7 degrees for 2 seconds.
there
for Crows. Afterwards the
Get It out and eat it. Put whipped
group
wlll return to the Kennedy
cream on top to make It taste
home
for a dessert and gift
better. Makes 2 pies.
exchange.
Club members are to
But then Instead of pumpkin
take
small
for residents of
pie, perhaps you might want to
the
Met,
g
s
Ctounty
Jn,firrnorv
opt for chocolate cake . .If so,
here's the recipe:
Ingredients: 1 can chocolate
icing; lcupflour,2lbs.sait,3lbs.
bread; 3 eggs; 1 chicken.
Mix ail but the Icing together.
Bake at 2 degrees for15 minutes.
Take out and cool. Put the Icing
on the cake. Makes 3 cakes.
These are only a part of the
recipes Included in the class
.cookbook. I hope you enjoy them
as I did.
tbelr on
Do have a great Thanksgiving er-Prlce PXL %000 camcorder (tliO)
- remember it's not the turkey sometimes ha•e a ~rd time coa•fncthat gets you - it's "ali the lag Mom aDd Dad that lt'a just for
trimmins". Do keep smlllng.
kids. The omll Is designed especially
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __:l:or~8-~l~o~l.Z~-y~e~a~r-&lt;~&gt;l~ds~.----_j

The Daily Se.ntinei- Page-13

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, Noilember 25, 1987

Your Independently Owned
Low-Priced Supermarket

Carpenter
•

community

happenings

Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree
and Mrs. Paul Gaston spent a day
In Coumbus with their broher-in.law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Rutan.
Mr. and Mr. Wilbur Smith,
Johnstown, Mrs. James Foster,
South Charleston, and Lawrence ·
Woodyard, Columbus, v-isited
Ida Cheadle and other relatives
In this area recently .
Beulai) Crabtree has been a
medical patient at the O'Bleness

Memorial Hospital. Athens .
Nancy Prather, Kettering. and
Oleva Smith, Edison. have been
guests of their mother, Freda
Smith. Mrs. Smith is now a
patient at Riversid~ Hospital,
Columbus where she is report·
edly recovering following hear\
surgery .
Minnie Wooten and a friend of
Athens were Thursday visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Mendal Jordan.

Community calendar
paid in advance.
MGM dinner
MIDDLEPORT - MGM DisTickets
trict, Boy Scouts of America
POMEROY - Ticketes for the
recognition dinner will be held o~
Dec. 3 at the new American Beta Sigma Phil Christmas
buffet and dance are on sale from
Legon Hallin Middleport.
Reservations are to be made , club officers and chapter
by Nov. 27 with Lisa Roush. 33178 members. The event will be Dec.
Bailey Run Road. Pomeroy , 5, at the Senior Citizen Center in
45769, or by calling 992·3486. Ail Pomeroy. Social hour is 7 to 8
reservations of $6.50 must be p.m. Tickets are $8 for singles

Your Friendly Ohio Volley
and Pt. Pleasant Foodlonds
Will Be Open
9:oa A.M.-8:00 P.M.

-

Pepsi-Cola

8

· Item~ &amp; Prices Good Thursday, Friday &amp; Saturday

U.S . GOV'TGRADED CHOICE
GRAIN FED BEEF

.Cube
Steak

160Z.
BTLS.

Bear
Each

Pound

Diet or Reg.

SEVEN-UP

8 BnS. $149
Plus Oeposrt
1&amp;01.

NO ADDITIONAL PURCHASE NECESSARY

~

~D.

'

·~

'

/

.

---~- - .

\
\

lOW

FAT
MILK

---

;.• /

HONEY, REGULAR CRACKED
OR 100% WHOLE

'

FRESH LEAN

BROUGHTON'S LITE 1% OR

GROUND-BEEF

DAIRY LANE

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

2°/o MILK

Springd~le

Fresh Made
Glazed
Donuts
.
I

Kroger · ~
Wheat Bread

2% Milk
Gallon

Dozen

16-oz.

39

8.8

0

BROUGHTON

EGGNOG
$ 29

PLASTIC .

GALLON
HAMBURGER

9:00 AM-5:00 PM

Plans for a Christmas potluck
on De€. 12at6:30p. m . were made
when the Reedsville Community
Builders Club met recently at the
hoine of Mr. and Mr. Denver
Weber . Preceding the meeting,
members had dinner at a
restaurant.
Ernest Whitehead presided at
the meeting with several com·
munity projects being discussed.
A pumpkin torte was served by
the hostess to Mr . and Mrs .
Donald Myers, Mr. and Mrs.
Ronald_.Osborne, Mr . and Mrs.
Warren Pickens. · and Mr. and
Mrs. Ernest Whitehead.

•

Mountain Dew, Pepsi-Free
Diet or Regular

SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 28th
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29th

Community Builders
condua meeting

'•

•

CHRISTMAS
OPEN -HOUSE

FOODLAND
BUNS

COTTAGE
CHEESE

For
-'

REGULAR OR RIPPLE

Country ~ven
$
Potato Chaps ................................................... 16-az .

a

CT.

IN THE MEAT DEPT.

PKG.

Pepperoni or Deluxe ..
Morna Rosa Pizzas ........ :............................ .
DIAMOND

PURINA

SHELLED PECANS

DOG CHOW

$
10

0

oz.

'

BAG

NESTLE

SEMI-SWEET
MORSELS

'

1OW30 e 1OW40

VALVOLINE
MOTOR OIL

0

Diet Coke .
or Coca Cola

69

$
16-oz.

'

.2-qter

c

Shelled
Pecan Halves
Pound

$

88

Cost Cutter
White Bread ................... 16-az.
INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED SLICES

Kroger American
16-Ct.
Ch eese FOJ) d................... 12-oz.
NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE.

Big K
Soft Drinks12-PAK
.....................
2-Ltr.
12-0Z. CANS $1.97
.

GRAND PRIZE: Cut Flower Arrangement
Each Month For One Year (Local Delivery Only)
Plan to he with us for our "Opening" of the
Christmas Season ·

992-2039

25c
ggc
sgc

.

.

ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY

Each of these advenised items is required to be readily available for
sale in each Kroger Store, except as spedfic;allv noted in this ad . If
we do run out of an advenlsed it era, we will otter you your choice
of a comparable iteni , when available, reflecting the same savings
or a raincheck which will entitle you to purchase the advertised
item at the advertised price within 30 days . Only one vendor
coupon will be accepted per item purchased .

..

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP
.106 Butternut

0

Each

Vac Pack
Kroger Coffee ............... . c'"$499

NON RETURNABLE BOTTLE,
CAFFEINE FREE COKE, CAFFEINE
.FREE DIET COKE,

99

Cleo Jumbo
Gift Wrap

3 DOOR PRIZES EACH DAY

--·-·
-------------·-·
---- ·-·.. -·-·~-- --~-

Revival
HARRISONVILLE
Harrisonville Hollness Chapel, Route
684, will be in revival from Nov.
28 through Dec. 6 with Sister
Nadine Fetterman, evangelist.
Pastor David 'Ferrell welcomes
the public .

Garden Club
ha5 meeting

reading and poem. Rolt call was lhr-••·1!!11£:1111!1111111111111111lllll!!llll!llll!llll•t•l!•!ll•li•lll•li•lll•lllliiKWI••
answered by a Bi bie verse of
thanks. Mrs. Okey Connolly
YOU'RE INVITED TO OUR 28TH ANNUAL
welcomed the guests. Mrs. David
Weber. Mrs. Jay Long, and Janet
Spencer.
lt was voted to contribute
money to buy miniature tree
lights for the ocmmunity tree.
The annual tree lighting was set
for Dec. 7 at 6:30p.m. Plans were
made to decotate the tree on Nov .
29 at 2 p.m. The annua l Christmas .dinner party was set for
Dec. "10 at 6· 30 p.m.at the Holly
Hilt Inn·. Each member is to take
a gift for an exchange.
Others attending were Mrs.
Claremont Harris , Mrs. Ernest
*DOOR PRIZES*FREE GIFTS*REFRESHMENTS
Whitehead. Mrs. Denver Weber.
Mr•. Paul Thomas. Mrs. Thomas
Spencer, Mrs. Donald Putman,
Mrs. Herman Grossnickle, Mrs.
Harlis Frank, Mrs. Ronald
Cowdery, Mrs. Terry Cline, Mrs.
Curti s Cauthorn, and Mrs. Frank
Btse.
Members brought gifts for
"Operation Santa Claus" for the
Athens Mental Health Center.

ICE
is a favorite American
desoerl. This waffle cone maker Is
pari of lbe Waffle Cone Sboppe set
from Toastmaster. !I Includes a cone
sbaper, ice cream scoop · and two
packages of batter mix for $74.9ii.

and $16 for couples. It will be
hosted by Ohio Eta Phi ~hapter .

With Additional
Purchase '
Q

COPYRIGHT 1987 • THE KROGER CO . ITEMS AND PRICES
GOOD THURSDAY. NOV. 26. THROUGH SATURDAY, NOV .
28, 1987, IN GALliPOliS AIIO POMEtOY STOlES

I

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLO
TO DEALERS .

Pomeroy, Ohio

We Accept All Major Credit Cards &amp; Wise Floworo

~vorywhara

I
___.........-_....
........ r~-._;_,_,_...__.,...
----···----·----------.- ------=-..:·..:··;:;_=-=·-:..·-:;;·-::·:.....::··:.:.··:;·::===--=·:::·-·::·.::·:;:.-:::·=--=··-- - -. -·-

�..
Page-14-The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

November is. 1987

•

•
•

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

.•'

our gifts glow with

.

••

•

•
•

•

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

OFFER GOOD

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH .

FRIDAY, NOV. 27

•

•

TALKIN' TURKEY -While these turkeys on a
Pasedena, Md., farm await their thanksgiving
late, 25 luckier t.urkeys in Maryland and four
• other states will find permanent homes resulting

~Thanksgiving

SHOP WITH US ••••

from the efforts of Farm Sanctuary, a Delaware
based animal rights group which Is sponsoring Its
second Adopt-A-Turkey drive. (UPI)

. g_e_r.

: Revival services

0
0

rf.

o

0

ORIGINAL 2111 oz.$
LEATHER
MUSK
ONLY

$3 77

6

Coupons
MIXED

MINIATURE-LIGHT SET
INDOOR
OR
OUTDOOR

SET
OF '
50 REG. 54.79

•

PKG. OF 10

$1299
80 STRENGTH 2 oz. S1249
REG. SJ7.00
NOW

.

100 STRENGTH 23/a OZ.
REG. SJ8.QO
NOW

'

·..
,:
'

I

I

$:It 79

1/2

r-----------------"""!"'----.
f.todecorateyourhomefortheholidays.;. ~ SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1987 ONLY!!!

,f

'1102 Viand St.

675-7947
•Parki~g OnS!de~

•~~~t;t.-D..O.~.~~. ~~ - -.v~ .

-~~-'1)"~·~ ·- • ·

$4.99

Children
under12
just $1.99

IN BOXES

.

:·

W

----'~

•
Cranberry
Sauce
Toasted Dinner
Bread

~~~L:~~t~
Mashed
:-:
Potatoes
:;--lllglilt Cornbread Dressing
!'itan your holida)' off right wirh our Breakfast

13Jr. It's open tW 11:30 a.m. Thanksgiving Day.

328 VINE STREET
PT. PLEASANT, W. VA.

5
fi
fi
~

·w

Phone~ •.•••••.•••••• ~•••••••••••••••....•..••..•.•..•••
•

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

•·------------------------------FREE
! ~-------------SWISHER LOHSE
Ken neth

I(

w

Need Not Be Present To Win

No Purchase Necessary -

1I
II!

29
Loin
••••••••••
~
••
$1
·
Pork
USDA CHOICE BONELESS
Chuck Roast ..... ~•. $159
HILLSHIRE FARMS SMOKED.
$
199
Sausage •••.•••••••• ~••

GIFT WRAPPING

Pharmacy

McCullo:::~~=-~~~lng, R. ~~•rlll'l

Aifflil, R.Ph .

Moo . &gt;hw S" 800 AM •• 9P M
Sunda~ 10 00 AM lo4 ·00 PM

PRESCR IPTIONS

' ' ''""' ' ' " ' "

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0

0

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·-·-·-·---

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EXTRA LARGE

PH . 992·2955

OPEN

J

·

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29th
10·00 AM S 00 p M

.

=======America's Dinner Tabler======= WL.....
o,. "''"" ""' ••m""'·o•.
·! --- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' - -- - - - - l ,' L~~-;;;~;;-~~:;;;_-;;;~~l:c:t~: !IQC~:c:t•!~~"B*•B*•I'!:::&lt;•!""'B:II&lt;I·Sl:!~IB:in•s::~. ~~c:ti'QtB:~~J

'

Eggs ..............•••~:... S9&lt;

.

'
••

2
I
$1
.
Sugar ••e••············
(
89

BIRDS--EYE

Cool Whip •••• ~ ••••!~;. 69&lt;

DOMINO lOX, LT. OR DARK BROWN
LB. BOX

.
'
•.
"

DRAWING SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1987- 4:30P.M.

W
'

n

&gt;
t""

'·

Address ···········.···························~········

STOVER UTILE
AMBASSADORS

~

ct
Ill
; ..

&lt;!!'!

.

SAMPLER

· W •1 POUND RUSSELL

t"" .

'

tiCIIIItt •••••••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••

STOVER ASSORT ·
ED CHOCOLATES

=

t"l'

0

~
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....
0

;::

=
&lt;
z

a

0

2

PRICE

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE CANDY GIVEAWAY

•2 POUND R!JSSELL

&gt;

2

0

5~----------------r---------J·
·---------------------------- I

W •3 POUND WHITMAN'S ·

Fn:e Punipkin Pie

AMITY BILlFOLDS ... 1/2

/2

REGISTER .
Y.O WIN!!

.""'

....

· COMPLETE STOCK '

1 PRICE

w

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Tha nksgiving Day, beginning 11:00 a.m.
All you care to eat frofu our better than ever
Soup, Salad and Fruit Bar

, I

CARDS

I

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w
w
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Ground

1/2 PRICE

CHRISTMAS

w
w

KSGMNG DINNER

PRICE

CHRISTMAS
WRAPPING PAPER

COMPLETE STOCK

~
~ Point Plel)sant J W

You re invited to an oldfashioned

Buttered Peas
Tepl//c, Sliced
T~key
Carryout service is available.

..

'

40°/o OFF

'

-.. -~

JEWELRY ................ 1V2

,ft.

~

•.

·Z
•C:

TURKEY

'.

COMPLETE STOCK

TIMEX
WATCHES

JGI~i;~iREAD HOUSE OF GIFTS I~

i

Sliced Bacon ••••••••• 79(
.
.
'
33(
Drumsticks
••••••••
~•••
(
Beef ....L:·•••• 99

'

2~

10-6 p.m. MON.-SAT.,

'

'

f
f

·;

I

During the Christmas Open House» W
there will be $25.00 Gift Certificates~ ~
';given away, balloons for the kids, and Jw
f.l 0% off selected items storewide.
Ji
j.
.
I remain $incerely, J ~
f
HOURS:
.Donna Thompson, OWne.r J w

"'
0
•

QUARTER

r----::_=-~~~===:=:;;::!

I ::. $41 9

FRONTIER

.-•.

.

"---------J

f

&gt;
t""

LB.

ClARA
COLOGNES

$1599
' $1 6 s

&lt;!!'!

49(
Whole
Fryers
••••
~
•••
.

."

INSULIN SYRINGE
&amp; NEEDLE
BOX OF 100

Fryer Parts •.•..••~•.• 39&lt;

'

.

ONLY

·BECTON-DICKINSON
U-1 00 DISPOSABLE

I
1
I
'. Ii
.J i
IJ ~w

limit
20 .

29

f I would like to request the pleasure of 1
HEAVEN
THE
WET AND WILD
'your company at the christmas Open · 1
SCENT
SOUNDS OF
MAKEUP and ·
rHoUse ofth:e Gingerbread House of Gifts .
EAU DE PARFUM
CHRISTMAS
ron November 27, 28 &amp; 29, 1987.
j i
NATURAL SPRAY
CASSETIE
NAIL POLISH
r This unique house will feature -hand! i 2 MIST
14 SONGS
crafted items such as: country baskets, j,
$6.50
:~~9
PRICE
fornaments, flower arrangements,i i
ONLY
ONLY '6.
Cwreaths, country dolls, woods,. hand- J i .,__ _ _ _ ___, .__________.
carved santas, shelves and much more. l
~ You will enjoy enjoy the Christmas J W THE ABOVE SPECIALS GOOD THRU BOVEMBER 30. 1987
•roomjull of the Seasons Magical SpiritJ i

:; Revival services at the Ash
: Street Freewill Baptist Church in
• Middleport will begin Monday
and continue through Dec . 5, 7:30
each eve ning.
The Rev . Nadine Fetterman of
; Summerhill, Pa. will be holding
• revival services at the Harrison·
; ville Holiness Cha pel, State
: Route 684. Harrisonville, Saturday through Dec. 6. There will be
special singing each evening at
the services which will star t at
7:30 p.m. The Rev. David Fer·
: rei!. pastor, invites the publ ic.

•

.

OLD SPICE COLOGNE
ASSORTED GIFT SET

CHOCOLATES
1 POUND
Reg. 54.95 ONLY

SATURDAY, NOV. 28

"•

J

Christmas
Open
-· House

i:UMW meets
;: A Thanksgiving potluck was
&lt;enjoyed by the Rock Springs
: United Methodist Women re·
: cently at the home of Dorothy
Jeffers.
·
: Violet Hysell had table grace
:with devotions by Violet Hysell.
•: She read "The Old Altar Bench"
: written by Gladys Atkinson Ken·
• field. Each member related the
: many things for which they are
: thankful for this season and the
• Rev. Mel Franklin shared with
: the group information on the
' Bethany Mountain Mlsson.
·. Prayer was by Sharon. Folmer.
•· Betty Will presided at the
business meeting with officers '
- reports being given. Donations
: were made to Sine-Care, Be·
: thany Mountai n Mission, a nd the
• church building fund. Necklaces
and calendars to be sold were
distributed to the members.
Next meeting will be held on
~ Dec. 8 wi th a Ch ristmas potluck
; and a white elephant gilt
• exc hange.
: Attending besides !hose named
were Thelma Jeffers. Frances
, Geoglein, Betty Dill and Linda
Foster .

"a"y"s".··.;...•·

-

RUSSELL STOVER
ASSORTED

AND ·

PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., NOV. 28, 1987

'

'

•
gle comes out clean.
· By United Press International
PUMPKIN PIE
LEAN PIE CRUST
Thanksgiving is one day most
2 eggs, slightly beaten; 1
\&lt;l cup sifted unbleached white
;. Americans allow themselves to 16-ounce can pureed pumpkin;
flour; y. tsp salt; V. tsp double·
; cast aside caloric guilt and enjoy . 12 packets artificial sweetener
acting baking powder; V. cup .
· But for diabetics and others (equal to ¥., cup sugar) ; \&lt;l tsp
diet margarine at room
: restricted to special diets. partie· salt; 1 tsp ground cinnamon: ¥.,
: • ularly children, it can be a trying tsp ground ginger; ¥., tsp
temperature.
Stir flour , salt and baking
• time.
·
ground cloves: 1 tsp vanilla
powder
together In bowl. Cut In
•. One mother of a diabetic extract; 1 12-ounce can
margarine
with fork . or pastry
· :: youngster, actress Gloria. Loring evaporated skim milk; 1 9-inch
blender and continue mixing
:- of day-time televis ion's " Days of unbaked Lean Pie Crust (recipe
until no pastry sticks to the sides
·: Our Lives, " decided to create a follows) or frozen pie shell.
, ; cookbook that would include
Preheat oven to 425 degrees . of the bowl. Shape into a ball.
, • safe, healthy meals that satisfy Combine filling ingreplents in Wrap and refrigerate for an hour
·· not only hunger, bu t a child's order given. Pour lnto'ple shell.
or more .
Roll the dough out on a floured
;. desire to have all the " normal"
Bake 15 minutes . Reduce oven
board. If prebaklng, heat oven to
temperature to 350 degrees and
: foods.
: Loring's book, " Kids, Food and bake an additional 45 minutes or 425 degrees and bake about 12
minutes or until golden.
&lt; Diabetes " (Contemporary until knife inserted near center of
; Books) , also includes nu tri tiqnal r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;"';;u;;;;;;~~~~
• and coping tips for the parents of I ' ...
-l~n
·b~::e·a~-d"B"o"'!!y--s
·
-~J.·.'
,
.; diabetic children. Here is her
1
; recipe for Easy Sugarless Pump·
'
,
• kin Pie.
:
EASY SUGARLESS

-a
·

.'

Swisher
&amp; Lohse Pharmacy
.

on a special diet

Sentinel- Page-15

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

•

WAGNER'S ORANGE or

Grape Drink •• ::~:...

·

•The total value of the double coupon may not exceed

$1 ,00
•Any manufacturer's coupon greater than 51 C will be
redeemed at face 11alue
only.
•Only , one manufacturer's
coupon per· item.
•The total value of the do.;.
ble manufacturer's coupon
cannot exceed the purchase
price of the item . Money
will not be refunded . '
· •This offer does not apply to
Powell's Super Valu Coupons. free coupons, or any
competitor's coupons.
•This offer excludes cigarettes. or any other items
prohibited by law .

•

~ 18B~~z. 3
:

0

J$2

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru No•. 28, 1987

•

••
••
••
•

•Offer i~ only good for product on , haDd . No Rain.checks .
•Thera is a limit of 20 .cou1)0ne-you may redeem .

I

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�r

,

..

.·
Page-16-The

Da~y

Sentinel

Wednesday, November 25, 1987
Wednesday, November 25, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Interactive toys sap ·imaginations
should be around by the following
Chris tmas.
'
"Ours is different !rom Cap·
tain Power ," Lacey sa id.
" Mattei's signal in Captain
Power is one you can see. The
(l ight ) signal is the back end of a
rocket or the eye of a monster.
" With ours, a light invisible to
the viewer wtll activate a device
with a microchip. The device
with the microchip will be a ble to
read the signal and make the toy
do something- say zap bad guys
and keep score.
" We have to overlook the fact
that wha t we have now Is the fir st
phase of intera!!tlve televis ion.
We ca n expect far more. We are
f110ving into ~dult lines , games,
education.
''I can see the day that a book Is
included and interacts with television. The .educational value
would be that the kid s tu rn the
pages as instructed and look lor
an A when they are told to 'look

By PATRICIA McCORMACK

UPI Senior Edllor
Talkative pla ythings and toys
switched on by televis ion a re fun
for kids of all ages.
But the tre,ndy high-tech toys,
some costing over $100, also are
controversial, according to the
American Academy of Pediatrics, Yale University experts,
edu c~ tors, and crusading Peggy
Char ren , president and a founder
of Action for Children's Te levis ion, Cambridge, Mass.
The toys tend to sap kid s'
imaginations and rob them of
play that nurtures proper devei·
opmen t, according to experts
·who nixed the so-called interactive toys.
Uncle Sam is in on the
controversy,
The Federal Communica tions
Commission, ·in fact, recently
au thorized hearings 0n many
aspects of children's TV, includIng TV· toy inteeractton.
Interactive toys causing excitement in playland Include:
-Captain Power and the Soldiers of the Future (switched on by
a special TV show , by video ·
ve rsions of the episodes. or by
one another) .
-Dolls and plush anim als th at
talk, direc t play , engage playmates in riddles and other
games, sense light and dark , sing
; ~olo or duet, and chat with one
another.
: All this is due to innards
packed with sensors, microchips, audio tapes, batteries and
other high-tech goodies, much of
It secret and patented .
Mattei's Captain Power and
the Soldiers of the Future are the
first to make the toy-TV show
nook up. The especially designed
Captain Power show hit television in September .
Already, the three Captain
Power toys - at around $30 that interact with the show are In
(•sold out" situations, according
(o a Mattei spokesman,
• At certain times during the
episodes , toys pick up a " power
on" signaL Lights flash to the
accompaniment of a chorus of
electronic wah-wah·wahs .
Once energized the toy, a plane
in one case, shoots at the enemy,
plane tha t keeps coming at the
viewer as the show rolls on. The
bad guy scores when the playmate on the other side of the TV
screen misses the TV target.
All this is tracked by an ,
electronic counter. making the
play similar to a video game.
: Another TV Interactive toy line
Is in the wings. It is being
designed to hook up electron! ·
cally with the action in "Saber
Rider and the Star Sheriffs, " a
show from World Events Productions of St. Louis. That hit TV In
September, too.
Brian Lacey , vice president
and general manager, said Saber
Rider Is 'In syndication In 70
markets in the United States . II
has been sold to broadcasters In
40 countries. In , addition to
E nglish, th e audio is In Spanish,
Fre nch , Italian, Chin e se,
Portugesc.
World Even ts brought you
Voltron, the number one kid TV
show in 1984 and 1985. Lacey
ex ~c t s the interactive toy prototypes to be ready In the spring of
1988. The "Saber Rider" toys

forA' ."

"Saber Rider and the Star
Sheriffs" is
kind of Western
fantas y, Lacey said.

a

"I think interactive TV Is a
great thing bu~ the programming
upsets me, " said Dr. Dorothy
Singer, co-director of the Yale
University Family Television
Project and a University of
Bridgeport p sy chology
professor .
Dr. Jerome Singer and also
project co-director. Is her hus.
band and a professor of psychology at Yale In New Haven , Conn.
Supported by Foundation grants, .
the Singers have turned out
landmark reports about TV and
kids.
Topics have ranged from the
effects of TV violence on kids to
the passivity TV Induces in kids
who sit and stare hours on end
like .pint-sized couch potatoes .
Dorothy Singer doesn 't think
shooting at the TV screen, which
is what happens in the Captain
Power show, is a kid TV
Improvement.
Kids playing Captain Power ,
interacting with one of three
Interactive video cassettes or the
TV episodes, simply shoot at a
screen, blasting something, Singer said.
' 'I don't believe If you shoot at
the screen. then you don't do it
outside. If the reward Is the guy
conks out, then that reinforces
the need to do it again - blast,
shoot.
"I would like to see this
technology used with an open-

a

Government
lists unsafe
kids toys
By TI\MARA HENRY

Boston.
"Imagination is on the block,"
he sa id.
"The toy structures the play by
being programmed. That is a
real concern . These toys increase passivit y and reduce use
of imaglnat!on."- - ACT prE&gt;sldent Charren
claims the educational value of
Captain Power igt!"ractlve toys
Is limited to making a shooting
gallery out of TV sets. But kids
who don 't have the toy that can
link up with the signal 'in the
show 's track can't play, she
contends .
"This makes two classes of
viewers," she said, " the haves
and the have nots."
The day Captain Power was
introduced at the International
Toy Fair in New York early this
year , Charren' s group went to
court, asking the Federal Commun ications Commission to
schedule an inquiry ,Into that
development and.other problems
ACT claims face children's TV
programming.
The FCC recently ordered such
an Inquiry. Charren said It will
include a ·period of comment
from the public a nd vested
interests - the Industry's, the
CQild's.
"I would suggest that everyone
who cares about TV service for
children let the FCC know It Is
inappropriate to turri their programs into commercials and to
make two classes of viewers
through interactive television,''
she said.
"The vested interest In the
Industry will comment. The
important thing Is that people
should. speak out on behalf of the
vested interests of children.
"l think interactive programming makes a tighter connection :
between program and the product. To play with the pr6gram
you have to buy the product.
"I think eventually the TV set
wlll come wi th something that
wlll make it interactive for
everyone. In the computer lingo,
there would be something like a
'mouse ' or 'joystick' to make
every TV set capable of being a
part of the interactivlty.
"Then, I think, all will be
better. We will not have two
classes of viewers - those who
have the gizmo and those who
don't ."

ended story. The vi&lt;'w&lt;'r would
put on the ending or move
something that turns the story
around. Something like a magic
wand that could cause change
and also draw. on children 's
norm~! developmental capa cities. That Is preferred to an
activity that capitalizes on feel·
tngs we have wheri angry."
She suggested lnteractlvlty
with TV that might turn lh&lt;' frog
In a show based on the classic
fairy tale into a prince via an
electronic touch or magic wand .
"I think Wat would be fun for
kids," Singer said.
·
"I could see books combined
with this ."
But Mattei thinks Captain
Power is already "an excellent
toy, " If only a first step In
Interactive play, according to
Mark Beat, director of the
company's promotion dE&gt;V&lt;'lopment and public relations.
"The whole play pattern Is a
technology breakthrough in the
program and Its interactive
phase, " Beat said. "This Is a first
si&lt;'P Into the future and there are
plans for dramatic expansion
into the areas of family education
and children's entertainment.
"This Is one thing that transform s television from a pass! ve
to an act ive medium. Captain
Power is on the forefront Qf
technology using interactive
television .
"We 've heard from a lot of
people that they love it."--Dr. William Dietz, chairman
of the American Academy of
Pediatrics Subcommitte on
Children and Television, com menting on interactive toys and
the toy -TV linkage, said:
"The more a toy can do the less
a child does. And there also Is the
fact that emphasis on realism
erodes the use of imagination, an
important · ingredient In child's
play and development.
"In a child's world, I think
Interactive toys are a nuisance.
And I think that toys that interact
with TV . toys such as Captain
Power, make it possible to have
gunfights, shooting at the TV
enemy force. This teaches re!Jexlve .aggression and violence.
"This shooting at the TV
screen perpetrates violence.
"Kids uon't just sit by. They
become part of it. I see this as
damaging."
Neither do interactive toys, the
talky dolls and plush animals
with electronic Insides , get high
marks from Dietz, a professor at
Tufts University Medical School,

r~~~~~--------------~--,
WELCOME
~

I
IW
I
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OPEN

HOUSE

CHRISTMAS SALE

20°/o-50°/o

. "'SPRINGDALE. Ark. I UP!) ditches. In town, the ste nch of
· Poultry is to nort hwest Arka nsas
s la ughterhouse hangs in the air .
what egg is to nag.
Ca rgill will kill about 225
Arkan sas prod uces more
million pounds of turkeys th is
• chicken l.l.roiler-friers than any year, said Ron Phlllips, director
ot!!_e r sta te, with an output of 3.2
of sales and ma rketing for
bill ion pound s las t year, 16 Cargill poultry produc ts.
• perce nt of the national total.
The compa ny has three turkey
:
It ranks fo urth in egg produ cs la ughterhouses, one in Califo r: tion, with 3.73 billion eggs, and ni a, Mo. , another In Ozark, Arl&lt; .,
• four th in turkey production, and its biggest In Springdale.
' prov iding U.S. co nsumt-rs with 18
Ninety-million pounds of . turmill ion bi rds, nearly 8 percent of key Is processed annually at Its
the nationa l to tal.
Springdale complex, said Gary
Around this time_ ol year.
Yee, who oversees the plant, the
~ attention shifts to the region's
company's contract growers and
other big bi rd: the tu rkey .
the mill that produces 130,000
Arkansas is home of two of the tons of feed each yea r for the
! n,l!tion's three top tur key produc- bi rds.
. e'l's , hosti ng Swift -Ec kric h,
The plant employs 650 people
: m aker of the Butte rb a ll , the
who,
when working at their peak,
• bes t-selilng premium turkey In
· ·the country, and Cargill, which can kill 2,500 tom turkeys or 3, 500
produ ces th e Honeys uckle Wh ite, hens (which are smaller and
·· the No. 2 premium . Premium easier to handle) per hour, said
: birds surpass minimum gover n- Yee.
The turkeys processed In
: ment sta ndards and are popular
• des pite higher prices because ·Springdale are owned by Carglll
but raised by contract growers .
: they have more breas t meat.'
Sprin gdal e, a town of 23 ,000, Is Growers feed the birds compan y.
. home to Cargill's tur key division, grain and minerals, then ship
, as well as Tyson Foods Inc., the them off to the processing plant
·' No.. 1 chicken processor in the a fter about four months.
The average live weight for
, country.
toms
is about 23 pounds, while
· For miles outsid e the city,
chicken and turkey leathers, hens tip the scales at about 14'
' blown off birds be ing driv.en to pounds. Once proces sed, tom s
: processing plant s, line th e average 18 to 21 pounds, hens

OFF

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~

FRIENDS

I
1
w
1

._Betty Bstket
Country Gifts and Decor

Sixth StrHt -

Syracuse, Ohio

Hours thru Christmas-lues. thru Sat. 10-8
Carolyn McCoy
614-992-5082

1 .

~,.,'I" i19

Now,
If
You
Want
All
This,
Fried Fish Filet or Ribeye Steak or Fried Chicken Breast

~

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i

~
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1

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~ -~~~~------------~------­

WASHI NGTON (UP!) - The I -~--~AII¥1!11¥11¥f;::&lt;I!II¥1!11¥WRWf;::&lt;W!&lt;=If;::&lt;WI'QI:f;::&lt;l!ll¥f;::&lt;"
government. war ning dea th or 1
I
in
jury awaits
children
of W
i
unwary
parents,the
Tuesda
y listed
tl
law n dar t sets, certain skate- I
:
boards and most cr ib toys as
$25 00 VALUE
II
dangerous items th at coutd des- ll!
troy the joy of Christmas.
II
11
In reiea&gt;ing ii s lis t of sa fe and
ill!
un safe toys, the Consumer Pr o· 11
It
duct Sa fety Commission also 1
announc ed the completi on of ll
"Operatio n Toy la nd " in whi ch II
·
"'
.
commission officials and the U.S.
II!
Customs Service co nfisca ted 70
II
shipmentsoft oys -rromo ver seas. ll!
va lued a t more than $2.5 million. II
11
for sa fety violat ions.
ll!
"The las t thing anyone wan ts is I
K
for the joy of holida y gt tt -g iving
to tur"' int o sorrow resulting from
.11/30 to 12/15

FREE 81FT

1

!

5
i1

~t'~ ~gic~~~~~re~~~·~sai~ ~~~~~s~

Scan ion.
Lawn dart ga mes , in wh tch
la rge. metal-tipped darts are
tossed at targets laid ou t on th e
gro und. top the list of dangerous
items. The commission said lawn
ctarts are for adults a nd ca nnot be
sold tn toy stores or In depart·
ment_ stores dea ling predomina nt ly in toys or other children·,
ar ticles.
Many crib toys a lso are listed
· as dangerous beca use of incl· •
dents where ba bies beca me
e'ltangled ih the gadgets and
were . stra ngled or suffoca ted.

5
1I

!

TO THE FIRS.T 60 PEOPLE TO
REGISTER AT SUNDAY'S

!

Chr;stmas Open House 1•
12•.00·5•.00
CHOOSE YOUR DISCOUNT ON ANY
PAID PURCHASE
.
00
HAl RC UTS

$1 5

SPECIAL 15 TANS ONLY

K

$3 500

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DESIGNER BOUTIQ
. UE !
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TOP Of AND THE.
~~~~~~~~~~l;:~~~ut:ce:a:~annoJ !
THE S_TAIR,OSMEROY ~~
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used wit h ca re, said the commls- 11
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Sfj;ll s-I'QI: WI'QI: s-I'QI: ~ GtB¥ ~B¥!!lit: l!l:lfi'QI:I!I:If~ I'QI:II!IIt:~ li&lt;:li':QI muF

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99
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comes complete with a potato

·

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and our'all-you -can-cat

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you'll find a vorict.y ofvcgctahics,

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pastas, sauces: soups.

roll .~

and more!

Introducing the Ponderosa Value line

=='''
PONDEROSA' '
There's a family feeling at Ponderosa~·
Uppt·1· Rh:t&gt;r Rd.
(1wruss from tlw Airpo rt )

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 17

Bird is word in northwest Arkansas as holidays approach

Nov. 27, 28, 29
10 A.M. to 8 P.M. ~

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

...

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•

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roug hly 12 pou nds , said Phillips.
This year. the who lesale per
pound price of turkeys has fallen
sharply, said Charles Anderson,
vice presiden t of Ca rgill's pou ltry products divisto·n .
"'Last year at th is time, it was
77 cen ts. This year it's in the 50s,"
he said. Prices are a bout 55 cents
per .pound for Grade A hens and
52 cents a pound for toms
delivered to the Eas t Coas-t .
Despite the markup a t sto res,
which frequentl y boost the price

to well above $1 a pound , Phillips
said, " I th ink it would be fair to
say retailers don 't make money
on t ur keys ."
He said with the cos t of interest
and storage, superma rket s consistently take a loss on turkeys at
ho liday time.
" It 's a price war, almost like
the · old gas stations," said
'Phillips.
Cargill has bee n processing
turkeys since 1975. when It was
bought Its t urkey facilities and

the Honeysuckle la bel from Ral ston Purina Co.
The turkey division makes up a
tiny part of Cargill, the giant
Minnetonka, Minn .. agriculture
cong lomerate with an nua l revenues of approxima tely $30
billion. But it is Ol\f' of the biggest
turkey processors in the nation.
Of the tota l of turkey meat
processed in the l.'n ited States, it
accounts for eigh t perce nt, says
Anderso n.

··or turkey that goes into bags,
we're about IS percen t," he said.
Bagged birds are the who le
birds, like those that end up on
Thanksgiving and Christmas
tables.
Swift-Eckrich this year will kill
an estimated 310 million pounds
of live birds , mak ing it No. 2,
Turkey World magazine reported. Lo uis Rich rank s flrst at ·
350 million pounds, but muc h of
its meat is used in processed
products.
·
'

Mid-November car sales off 12 percent
DETROIT (UP! ) - The nation's automakers Tuesday re·
ported a 12 percent drop in new
car· sales for the Nov . 11-.20
period, a It hough sales of domesti cally m a nu fac tured l ig ht
trucks rose 19 percent fr om
levels a year ago.
Tlie eight co mpanies - Ge n·
eral Motors Corp., Ford Motor
Co., Chrys ler Cor p., Ho nda Motor Corp., Volkswagen of America, Nlssan Motor Ma nufa'c tu r·
ing U.S.A., Toyota Motor Sales
U.S.A. and Mazda Mo tor Manufacturing (USA) Corp. - re·
por ted comb ined sales of 172,552
ca rs in the United States during

the lates t period.
This co mpares wit h 196.159
unit s sold in the year-ago period
when Toyota was acce lerating
produ ction of its U.S. -madecars.
Mazda bega n produc ing its domestic ca rs at its new assembly
piant just outside of Detroit.
Light truck sales amounted to
109,625 uni ts, up 19 percent from
a year·ago. GM, Ford, Chrysler
and Nlssa n all build such ve hi·
ctes domes tically.
The da ily selling ra te of 19,172
cars compares wi th 21,795 for the
same period last year, a nd was
the slowes t selling ra te for
mid-November s ince 1981. There

were nine selli ng days th is yea r
and nine last year.
The annual rate for the industry during the period was 5.7
million cars, compared wit h 6.2
million last year. So far in 1987.
the companies have sold near ly
6.36 mill ion cars, downH perce nt
from the a lmos t 7.4 million units
sold in the ·co mparable 1986
period .
Analysts say the industry has
shown sta bility following the Oct.
19 stock market crash and tha t
much of the sa les dec li nes are
evident among the higher priced
cars. most notably those made by
GM.

··But we still believe th e data is
stili not clean because many cars
now being delivered were or·
dered before the crash,'' sa id
Michael M. Luckey, of Shearon
L,ehman Bros . in New Yo rk .
''We'll have to wai t for De·
cem ber before we ca n tell. "
But Luckey called the a nnua l
selli ng rate for the period "a
lousy nu rnber which shoWs a'n
environmen t of a recession.
"Things must improve in the
under lying amount of dema nd,' :
he said.
o
- For the period, GM's U.S.·
made car sates decli ned 18
percent on a daily seiling rate
bas ts.

�Page-18-The Daily Sentinel

•

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

Wlidnesday. November 25, 1987

r----Local briefs--:----. Rain, snow mars travel conditions for some
Process five court cases

By United Press International
Heavy rain soaked the Plains
today. while snow fell across th e
upper Great Lakes and In the.·
mountains of the Northwest and
the Northeast.
.
Thunderstorms were conflned
to Arkansas and northeast Texas
In a storm system that was
slowly diminishing, meteorologist Lyle Alexander, of the
National Weather Service. said.
Thunderstorms Tuesday a!teroon were widespread from
Illinois to the Gulf Coast, triggering minor flooding, hall and a

Five cases were processed in the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night.
.
Fined ,were Cindy Hayes, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, no
operator s hcen se; Randall Russell, Reedsvllle, $49 and costs,
speeding; Terry Watson, Pomeroy, $113 and costs, intoxication; Todd Goode, Pomeroy, $63 and costs, no opera tor's license
and $375 a nd costs, driving under the Influence. Charles
Sulllvan, West Columbia, W. Va ., forfeited a $43 bond posted on
ass ured clear distance charges.

Strike continues at Meigs

•

Meigs Local Sc hool District teachers were still on picj(et lines
at the schools in the district Wednesday morning following a
nine hour session between the negotiating teams of the board of
education and the teac hers association Tuesday.
The teams moved into negotiations with Federal Mediator
Joe Crowe at 1 p.m . Tuesday afternoon and the session went on
until10 p.m. Tuesday night. The session was held in quarters at
Pomeroy Village Hall.
No statements were issued by either team on any progress
made Tuesday night towards a settlement since Crowe had
requested a.t his last visit here that both sides refrain from
issuing statement s to the media at this time.
Teachers of the dis trict went on strik e at 12: OJ a.m. on Frid11y,
November 6.
·
Last week the board of education c ut off fringe benefits of the
teacc hers in the area of Insurance coverage. Meantime, at the
request of the Athens High School a boys' baskettball game
schedu led for Tuesday night between Athens and Meigs was
pos !paned until February.

EMS has six calls Tuesday
Six ca lls for assistance were answered by units of the Meigs
County Eme rgency Me(!ical Service Tuesday.
. ,
At 5: 16 a.m. the Tuppers P lains unit transported James
Catlett 10 Camden Clark l:!ospital in Parkersburg; at 11 : 30 a.m
the . Rutland unit took June Cremeans from her home to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 12: 01 p.m . the Pomeroy
transported Lillian Napper to the Holzer Medical Center; at
3: 12 p.m . the Sy racuse took Earl Summerfield to St. Joseph
Hospital; at 9: 13p.m. the Pomeroy unit answered a call to the
Forest Run home of George Folmer who was taken to the Holzer
Medical Center. and at 10:34 p.m . the Rutland unit was called to
Sa lem Center for Lesta Thomas who was taken to Veterans
Memorial Hosp ital.

Middleport offices to close
All Midd leport village offices will be closed Thursday and
Friday fo r the Th anksgiv ing holiday.

No paper Thursday
The Daily Sentinel will not be published Thursdav in order to
per mit ·emptoyees to observe the Thanksgiving hoiiday .

Area deaths
J
: Edna Reibel

Orville Milliron

TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) _ Ten·
tatlve contracts have been
reached with Toledo firefighters
and a second pollee union, but
details of the contracts were not
released Tuesday because of a
news blackout.
Union members will vote next
week on the contracts, which
cover nearly 500 members of
Local 92 of the Toledo Fireflghters Union and 160 members of
the Toledo Pollee Command
Officers Association.
"What it demonstrates is that
both sides were willing to address some very complicated
issues and move toward a settlement," said Toledo City Manager Philip Hawkey. "I think It
sets the stage for a good working
relationship In providing services to the community."
Hawkey said he Is confident
about how negotiations have
gone so far. Earlier this week the
police patrolmen's union ratified
an agreement granting a nearly
16-percent Increase during the
life of a three-year contract.
There are three other unions
that the city Is negotiating with
covering about 13,075 workers .
"It does set some guidelines,
but each (set of) negotiations
deal with unique issues," he said.
·'As we deal with the Teamsters
for example or with the
AFSCME, there 'a re particular
concerns that they have that they
want to talk to us about ... So
those "are separate negotiations
. and separate Issues."

I

Billy Jean McClary

. · · , Edna Logan Reibel. 93, Plea·
sa nt Ridge, Pomeroy, died Wed:nesday at the Extended Care
·. Facility of Veterans Memorial
;. Hospital following a long illnes s.
Bprn in Harrisonville, she was
't he daug hter of the la te Francis
Donley and Mary Margaret
Logan. She was a member of the
Tr inity Church a nd the Daugh·
ters of America Lodge.
. She is s urvived by a daughter,
· Althea Strong , Wilkesville; a
· : daug htPr·in -law , Betty Reibel,
· Ppmeroy: five grandchildren ,
· seven great-gra_n dchildren. a sis·
· ter. Erma Bradford , Marysvil le;
ilnd a sister-In-law, Roslean
Logan, Gallipolis .
: She was preceded in d eath by
. her hu sba nd , Henry Reibel, a son
• Donley, who died Nov. 14 , 1987,
: two da ughter s. a son -iii -law,
Har ley Strong, fou r brothers and
~a sister.
Services will be held Saturday
at l p.m. at the Ewing Funera l
Home in Pomeroy wi th the Rev .
: John Iliff officiating .
· Burial will be in Beech Grove
: cemetery.
Friends may call at anytime
Friday at the funeral hom e.

Reach agreement

Billy Jean McClary, 56, Apple
Grove, died Tuesday in Pleasant
Valley Hospital of a short Illness.
He was a -laborer for Houdaille
Industries, Huntington, for 17
years .
He is suvived by his wife, Ruby
Elizabeth Saunders McCI~ry;
three sons, Billy R. McClary,
Samuel McClary and Daniel
McNeely, all of Apple Grove;
three daughters, Bonnie McNeeley , McGuire Air Force Base,
N.J ., Candy Ferguson, Olustte,
Okla .. Wilma Bird, Apple Grove;
two brothers, Bobby, Mlland, 111.
a nd William McClary Jr ., Ohio;
mother Olive Little. Huntington
and e ight grandchildren.
Services will be held Friday, 2
p.m., at theCastoFuneralHome,
Evans, with th e Re v. Jerry Reed
offi cia ting . Burial will follow In
the Cres ton Cemetery.
F riends ma y call at the funeral
home from 11 a .m. until services
time Friday.

Seeks divorce

tornado.
A late season tornado tou clied
down harmlessly in north central
Texas nearValleyvlew late Tuesday afternoon . Quarter size hall
pelted southwest Oklahoma In
the Temple area. However , flash
flood watches throughout the
. area were canceled Tuesday
afternoon .
However . between 3 and 7 40
Inches of rain reported as of early
today In some areas of the lower
Mississippi Valley was causing
some floodin g, and a flood
Warning was In effect early today
for several rivers In south centra I
and eastern Oklahoma, Alex ander said. A flash flood watch
was also In effect until surirlse for
north Texas.
· Rainfall totals as of early today
included over 6 inches at Hal ltown, Mo., nearly 4 inches at
Bartlett, Kansas , and 3 ~ Inches
In Springfield , Mo.
Winter storm watches were
posted today for Vermont , northeast New York state, and lower
Michigan . Six Inches of snow was
forecast in the Northeast and 4
inches in Michigan .
A snow advisory was In effect
for southern Wisconsi n with 2 to 5 .
Inches predicted. •

Snow advisories were also in
effect for the Cascade mountain
range in Oregon and Washington,
where a half foot or m ore was
expected .

5463.
PICK-4 ticket sa les totaled
$202,024.50, with a payoff-due of
$91,364.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$4;128. PICK -4 $1 box bet pays
$172.

Licences issued

An action for divorce has been
filed in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court by Carla C.
Wallace , Syracuse, against Thomas J. Wallace, Springfield . She
charges gross neglect of duty and
extreme cruelty.

Marriage licenses ha ve been
Issued to David Hayes Mora , 36,
Pomeroy , and Sarah Bailey
Brown, 42, Pomeroy; and Steven
Andrew Riffle, 24. Pomeroy, and
Carol Ann Burnem. 18. Racine.

4D

L··. ;.·JsNow.

Wi$1RAIN

U

ft

Cold
. . Static
Occluded
1'.1ap shows m1rimum t9m~eratu;es. At iecist 50% of any shad~d area is lorec:lst

FRONTS : "

Warm

"

SHOWERS

to rece~·. e prec:,e1ta::on 1r:c:cated
UP'I
WEATHER MAP- Rain will be widespread from south Texas
across the ~lfsslsslppl and Ohio valleys, the Great Lakes and New
England Into the mid atlantic states . Scattered thunderstorms will
occur across southern and eastern Texas and the lower Mississippi
Valley. Snow will fall across parts ol Wisconsin and northern
Mic higan and late In the day through northeast New York state and
northern New England.

I

percent tonight and near zero
Thursday.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of rain each day.
Highs will range from the mid 40s
to the mid 50s each day , with
overnight lows in the 30s or near
40.

Court news

Several ac"t ion s for money
have been fil ed in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court.
Bluefield Distributing Co. and
Mason -Dixon Distribution have
filed an action for $45.404 .54
againsr Jam es l.. Ridenour, dba
Ridenour TV' a nd Appliance of
Chesler. ThP plaintiffs c h arge
th at the a mount is due on
appliances sold on account. .
Centra l Trust Co. of Southea stern Ohio, Ga llipoli s', has filed an
action again st Daryl L. Sawyers,
Middleport. for $1.804.15due on a
promissory note. Al so filing an
action for money in th e court wa s
The Peoples Bank of Poi nt
Pleasant again st Judy L. MeDer·
mitt , Racine, in th e amount of

$4.8:!0.
Filing for d isso lution of their
marriage was LaDonna J f?a n

~earws

and

Searles.
Gra nted divorces according to
the cpurt records were Alfonso L.
Th ompson from Betty Jo Thomp·
so n. Karen J . Peck from Roy
Roger Peck, Robert Charles
Chappelear from Kris Lisa Chappelear, Norma Coleman from
Burl Coleman, Cheri Lynn
Wawro from Richard E . Wawro,
and Rhonda Pierce from Michael
Pierce.
Granted dissolutions of their ·
m ar riages were Cathy E. Baldwin and Stephen L. Baldwin,
Tina E. Green and Kenneth E .
G r een. ·
In tfie action of James
Starcher, et al, against David N .
Riggs, e t al. the cause of action
against Redman Homes. Inc . has
been-dismissed.

.

: Orvil le Milliron, ·66, former
:Meigs Cou nt y resident, died
•Monday night at his home in
Reynoldsburg.
He was a retired carpenter
with the State oi Ohio and had
formerly worked with Rockwell
International In Columbus. He
was a veteran of World War JT.
• Born on Aug. 24, 1921 in Meigs
· County. he was the so n o! Marie
: Milliron and _th e la te Henry
Milliron. Besides his father he
: wa s preceded in deat h by a so n.
"Jerry, a nd a sister, Belva
Mohler.
Survivors in add ition to his
. mother are his wife, Mildred
; Oiler Milliron. two daughter s a nd
sons -in-law, Rosemary and Bob
Edwards, Rey nold s burg, and
: Roxie and Buck Brown, Colum . bus. and a son and daughter-i nlaw , Larry and Rosemary Mi lliro n , Re y noldsburg, 11
· gra ndchildren. and six great·
Vete rans Memorial
Tuesday Adm iss ions - June
; grandchild ren.
Cre means, Middleport; Dorothy
Also surviving are a sister.
Proffi tt. Racine; Clara Howard,
: Alice Jacobs , Racine: four brorhRutland ; Nara Hartman, Long
, ers, Delbert a nd Norma n. RaBottom ; Carol Bush. RAcine,
. cine; Marvin, Middleport, and
a nd James Werry, J;l.aclne.
Mel vi n !D ic k ) Milli ron,
Discharged - Leah Williams,
.Gallipolis.
Norm • n Terrell, Charles ~ayne,
• Funeral services will beheld at
a na t..lnd a Ba rker.
: 1 p.m. Friday at the Cotners
Funera l Ho me in Reyno ldsburg.
Licenses issued
: Buria l will be in Arlington
. Cemetery, · ca nal Winchester.
Marriage lic enses have been
Friends may call at the funeral
issued
in Meigs County Probate
· hpmP from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9
Court
to
Bruce Eldon Davis, 30,
p.m. Thursday.
Albany,
\
and
Moha Jean Perry,
• In lieu of flowers, friends may
27, Albany; a nd Daimy Lee Will,
·donat e to the Ca ncer Clinic, 65
28, Pomeroy, and Linda Carroll,
Ceramic Drive, Co lumbus, Ohio
Carpenter, 39, Middleport.
4.1214 .

Hospital news

Buy great toys for less than $1 0 each

"Take the basic crib mobile, for example. For years you'd find this nursery staple attached to every baby's
crib waiting to be wound up or turned
SAFETY DEVICES are ideal glfts for pareats witb infants or small children.
on.
,Hands
Off Alarm Is light-sensitive and sounds alarm wben drawer or medicine
"Our 'My First Musical Mobile' has
cabinets
are opened.
gone one step further ," he.continues.
"This battery-operated mobile · is
voice-activated to play a soothing WNToys . .
feet away. And to "keep little ones
tune when baby starts to cry, then
Lately, toy manufacturers have away from potentially dangerous
automatically turns itself off after also begun to apply their. high-tech items that might be found in drawers
one minute of p)ay. Sometimes that's know-how to child safety. These days, or medicine cabinets, there's Nasta's
all , it takes for a fussy baby to fall parents can choose from a wealth of Hands Off Alarm, which sounds a
back to sleep."
sophisticated products that help them warning signal when a ·drawer or
Other toy manufacturers have also keep track of their children. Ideal's medicine cabinet js opened.
·
updated favorite toys of the past with El~tronic Child M!!nitoring Line, for
Other high-tech safety products
state-of-the-art features. Interactive example, enables parents to commu- from Nasta include the Safe-T-Guard
plush dolls that talk back to their own- nicate wltb their children and monitor Tub Alarm, which helps prevent bath·
ers (or even talk with each other) have them both indoors and out.
tub overflows by sounding an alarm
begun to take the place of yesterday's
T~hnological advances help pro- ' when bath water fills too bigh; and the
popular stuffed animal. Teddy Rux- t~t children and give parents a break Safety Mat, a oolorful vinyl mat that
pin, the talking teddy bear from from constant watching. Portable in- sounds an alarm when stepped or
Worlds of Wooder, broke new ground tercom systems such as Nasta's Baby crawled on, warning parents that
two years ago and led the way for MOnder let parents hear any sound their youngster is up and about.
manufacturers such as Axton and coming from baby's room up to 300

Holiday trends ·

What's the latest in fun and games?

Sel~ct Group of Jewelry &amp; Gifts

20%

to

50%

Savings

' SUNDAY ONLY FREE JAR OF CONNOISSEURS JEWELRY
CLEANER WITH THE Pl)RCHASEOF $10.00 OR MORE.

Stop in at our Chritmas Open House Sun., Nov. 29, I to 5 p .m .

&amp;(j91
~~~l~meroy
· CENTER FOR QUALITY DIA MONDS FOR O.Vt:R 25 YEARS

models weigh less than 12 pounds, are
battery operated and are small
e nough

tO fi t

into a briefcase.

portable "gy m in a bag" mcludes rub- but sound normal. Through advanced
berized exercise bands, which com·

rnicro·circuitry , the user controls the

bine the principles of a pulley system speed and pitch of the tape to mainand free weights for a comple_te work- tain intelligible sound .
out. A. jump rope is also a handy way
Wine connoisseurs tired of twisting
to work out on the road.
and tuggmg a manual corkscrew may
welcome a powerful electric model.
If your big wheel is more into spec- They are available in a variety of
tator sports. he or she would probably pri ce ranges, a nd some models inappreciate a good pair of binoculars. clude wine thermometers with proper
For the executive who wants to cut tem peratures inscribed on the tip.
the time it takes to transcribe notes
When shopping for the jaded busifrom business meetings, the GE Fas- nessman Qr woman, remember that a
trac tape r~order plays back r~ord­ really good gift is something useful.
ed material .at up to twice the normal And that's something that will earn
speed. The voices aren 't ~c h i p~ you a broad smile at unwrapping
munky," ~ither ; they're fast-paced, time.

an executive conduct business from

home. Previously available on(y on
commercial equipment, features like .

electronic hold, two-line capability
and conferencing are now increasing·

ly availabl~ on home telephone
products.
The

GREAT GIFTS can be games to learn by. Feeling Fit and Shopping are two
new preschool entries in tbe Games for Growing collection from International
Games. In Feeling Fit, children learn about good eating babits and exercise.
Shopping gives educatiooal information about earotng, saving and speodiog
moaey. Games retail for $11.
For adults, Conrad notes a d~line
in strategy games such as backgammon , Pente and Kensington .
"That whole trend bas diminished,"

he notes . "Adults are more interested
in social-party games like Pictionary , where people draw pictures of
things aod teammates are required to
identify them."
Spotting trends is important to
game companies, but Conrad says
that trends don 't n~essarily result
from the influx of new game
designers.
"The designing of games is a very
specified discipline, and new industrial designers don't flock to that field,"
says Conrad.
You don't have to be a professional
game designer to come up with a winner, however. Skip-Bo, today's most
popular card game among the 55-plus
crowd, was designed by a woman in
her 50s from LubbOfk, Texas. According to Conrad, she invented the game
to take her family's mind off her father-in-law 's illness.

party gfimes, television series or

movies, murder·mystery entertain ment software adds a new dimension
for budding Ham!'flers and Marples: It
can be played by a single person at
anytime, and the outcome depends on
player input.
Now any closet detective can live
on the edge at the touch of a bu\ton!

Dr. Randall A. Taylor, D.C.
TAYLOR CHIROPRACTIC CLINIC
715 Main Street,
Point Pleasant, W.Va. 25550
Dr. Randlfl Toylor, D.C.

Call Now: [304] 675·1380

M•1nv mild whiplash injuries cannot be felt
mrnediiat•ety . Sometimes hours , weeks or even
ths go by before any symptoms surface . In
cases of mild whiplash , the pain and other
;y.mptoms appear immediately after the injury and then
Accolade, Inc, had added its own ')'f'e~;setn with the passage of time. Much later, however ,
unique variety of murder-mystery
severe reactions may reappear . caused
software. "Killed Until Dead" re·
by the long term effects of the injury.,
A more severe whiplash can usually
quires the player to use his or her
"sleuthing' capabilities to prevent a
be detected immediately after the inllltlrder rather than solve one. Incorjury . It may result in many of the same
porating Agatha Christie-sty!~ plotS,
"Killed Until Dead" offers the myssymptoms as mild whiplash , as well as
tery buff a fresh ,approach to the
severe headaches, neck and shoulder
crime scene.
pain, dizziness . blurred vision and
\ "Killed Until Dead" features the
"Murder Club," five mystery writers L.i:i:::~d~is~o~ri:e~n~ta~t~io~n~._ _ _ _ _ _ _.,;;!~~;;;;;;;;;;;..J
~-

er! Housed in the ir own plaslic cubes,

. no two "Bugs" are alike. Perf~! for
anyone whose life has ever been
bugged by computers!
YOMEGA (Caffrey, Inc,. $9.95).
The yo-yo is back. But this time it's
better. The Yomega features a patented clutch that makes it spin longer
than regular yo-yos and returns it to
the hand automatically. Tough tricks

A multi·feature telephone will let

The obsession with mystery-solving
• Jtas trickled down to home computers
as well. Recently , several home-entertainment sOitware developers
have
designed
murder-mystery
games'for use on personal computers.
Several soltware publishers have
released murder-mystery games in
the form of "whodunit" adventures
where the player acts as a private eye
and attempts to solve a murder. Activlsion' s "Murder on the Mississippi"
and Mlndscape's "Deja Vu" begin with
a murder; using the clues prro.v.ided ,
the plare r must decide who killed the
victim and why .

-·-

Somewhere between a yellow paisley tie and a partridge in a pear tree
is a variety of thoughtful gifts that
will delight the executive who has
everything.
The large assortment of gifts to

home or during a commute. Some

Wrole," focus on solving crimes.

..

"guarantees' ;o .keep away all other
bugs arid glitches from your comput-

Give executives something useful

The executive with a penchant for

sion shows, such as "Magnum, P.l .,"
"Moonlighting" and "Murde r, S h e , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - !

__

KIDS age 5 to 12 can add new collectibles to their Transformer collectioa.
Six Auiobots by Hasbro convert from
cars to robots, and feature lransform·
able weapons that change to mini robot sidekicks.

like "walk the dog" a nd "rock tbe
baby" are .now easily mastered by
even the most inexperienced yo-yoer.
GRANDMA'S TRUNK (Hoyle
Products, $4.99). This fun memory
game comes with its own sturdy plastic red trunk a nd 40 playing cards each with a different colorful illustration. The obj~t: To discard and then
remember the correct order of all the
cards found ·in Grandma's Trunk.
SKITTLE BOWLING (Preoama•
Toy Corp., $9.99). Skittles returns Ibis
year with Skittle Bowling. Players
try to knock down pins with a ball
that's attached to the Skittle pole. Ge
for a strike! Go for a spare! ·
MR. &amp; MRS. POTATO HEAD (Hasbro. $6 each). The comical duo are
back, now with bendable arms and poseable bodies!
·
LEGO BASIC BUILDING SET
(Lego, $9.99). Get kids started with
this classic building toy in a basic set
of 99 colorful, interlocking pieces.
!'IEWBQRN POUND PUPPIES
(Tonka, $6.99). Those cute 'n' cuddly
adoptable plush pups are even more
adorable ln their new •newborn" size.
Put them all together and you have
10 great gilts for a total of Jess then
$75 - guaranteed to brighten your
holiday season without breaking the
bank.

ideas

bringing work home from the office
will appreciate gifts that make the
easy transition from desk to den. A
portable computer can be used at .

Murder~mys tery adventures are who meet annually at the Gargoyle
· taking gamesters by storm.
Hotel. One of the paperback sleuths is
From VCR mystery games. such as trying to commit the perlect murder.
Clue and Agatha Christie's Behind the The player's task is to prevent it by
Screen , to home "murder parties," collecting clues and solving the myssolving mysteries is the latest rage . tery before midnight; actual playing
Television shows and movies are time , however, is approximately 24
. also a large part ol this phenomenon. minutes.
Unlike any- o( the VCR, board or
Many of today 's most popular televi-

- - __ ,

~oliday

wide price range, should please gift
givers as well.

again. Today's crafts, however, are
activity products that offer instant
gratification, rather than projects
that require numerous steps and lots
of time.
For example, Stampos Activity
Sets, by International Games. let children create scenes and pictures using
self-inking rubber stampers. Conrad
says that parents and children want to
create something and see the result -

U the only holiday jingle you've
heard lately is the sound of the cash
register. ringing up high prices, take
heart! Here are 10 terrific toys for
Santa's sleigh that should fit an ell's
budget:
WIN BY A NOSE GAME (Pressman Toy Corp., $9.99). Mr. Nose is a
new dice randomizer that gives kids
(and adults) a fun new way to "pop"
the dice . Players pull on Mr. Nose and
move their ·nose-shaped playing
pieces around the three-dimensional
board in a fast-paced race to com·
plete the face and win!
SPORTFREAKS (HG Toys Corp.,
$2.49 and $6). These colorful, collectable vinyl characters are perfect lor
the sports aficionados on your list.
Stick Horse, one tough hockey"hombre; Stilts, a long-legged basketball
bully; Rob N. Steal, a fast-footed baseball player; and Hold M. Tight from
the gridiron are among the coll~­
tion's 2~ and 7-inch zany figures .
WEIRD WATCHES (Nasta Industries, $7.99). They're the weirdest
watches to ever tell time! Bite Fright,
Retread Fred and Blob Slob watches
have three-dimensional rotating
heads that can be twisted in any dir~­
tion and opened to reveal an LED
readout of the time and date .
THE
BUGABOO
(Downtime,
$4 .95). Made of genuine defective
computer parts, the tiny Bugaboo

choose from , available in an equally

, If you're thinking about buying a
' game or toy lor a child or adult, Jeff
' Conrad can tell you what's in and
what's out. He's the game designer lor
International Games, Inc., manufacturer of the best-selling card game
UNO and other family and children's
games and toys.
"The toy industry works like a pendulum. It's cyclical," Conrad comments. "I compare it to the fashion in- 'dustry. The length of a woman's skirt
and the width of a man's tie change
every year , but they always end up repeating themselves."
Conrad, a game designer for 17
years, says that a 1970s trend is back,
with a little twist: Crafts are popular

Games for adults offer happy twists

IT@

19

'Tis the· season for high-t~ch tots

Holiday spirits?

Come see our fabulous collection of jewelry: rings, earrings,
necklaces, pendants and bracelets. With diamonds. pearls &amp; gemstones
of every color and description. If you haven't seen our Tsavorite
.-----....or Rhodolite garnets, you're missing out on the season's hottest
·. news. Love rubies. emeralds, sapphires &amp; diamonds?
· ~
•. We have a huge selection. For her, for him ... forever.
C?ur finest jewelry is on sale, specially priced tor holiday giving

Page

Santti's helper

now!
"The older crafts, such as threading
a needle through a cardboard picture and is designed to teach children num· of an animal, took time. Today's ac- bers and the alphabet.
Panosh Place's soft toy products
tivity sets give children immediate
for toddlers also have an educational
results," Conrad explains.
Several activity toys have ~orne purpose. Its First Curves toy uses col: popular with children. With Magna ored panels of fabric and interesting
Doodle, by the Ideal Co., children use graphics to help develop a child's vi·
a· s~ial tool to draw pictures on a sua! perception.
International Games has added two
screen filled with a metallic sub. stance. This material is attracted to unique floor games to its Games for
·the tool and brought to the surface of Growing collection, educational pre' the screen. The resultis a picture that school games designed to grow with a
can be erased immediately. The Etch- child's changing skill levels. In "Feela-Sketch Animator, by Ohio Art, uses ing Fit" and "Shopping," preschoolers
a screen on which a child draws a doz- have fun learning about good eating
en pictures. When the screens are "an· habits, exercise and the values associimated n in sequence, they create a ated with earning, saving and spending money .
· moving picture.
·
Conrad alsQ sees a strong trend in
Another buzz word this year is education, says Conrad. Parents are very three-dimensional m~hanical-action
interested in offering infants and pre- games such as Milton Bradley's
schoolers "productive stimulation, Hungry Hippos and Pig Pong, in
which children m~nipulate levers or
not just pacifying play."
Video T~hnology manufactures squeeze game pieces to win the game.
el~tronic teaching devices for the Sophisticated el~tronic games, such
preschoolers, including the talking as the Cookie Monster Cookie Counter
Whiz Kid. This learning computer op- by Fisher Price, are also for young
erates with 50 software study cards children. ·

Wanda Donaldson
Wanda Donaldson, 48, Findlay,
form er · Meigs resident , died
Monday in Findlay.
She was born Feb. 6, 1939 at
Bald Knob, the daughter of the
late Charles Bernard. and Minnie
Ours Carroll Flemming .
Childre n survi ving are Charlene Wallbrown, Portland; Mike
Flemming, Columbus; Ronald
Donaldson , Long Bottom; Steve
Donaldson , Long Bottom . Also
surviving are three sisters. Kathleen Coursin, East Liverpool;
Jose phine Stephe ns, Parkers burg, W. Va., and Cindy Fitch ,
Portland . and six grandchildren .
Bes ides her pare nts, she wa s
preceded in deat h by a brother.
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
Sat urday a l the Ewi ng Funeral
Home with the Rev. Bill Hoback
officiating . Burial will be In the
Bald Knob Ceme tery . Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 te 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . Friday.

I

Randall Eugene

The Daily Sentinel

Babes at play

el~tronics.

South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy today , with a
c hance of showers and highs in
th e mid 60s. Showers likely
tonight, with a low between 45
and 50: Mostly cloudy Thursday,
with highs in the low 50s.
The probability of preci pita tio n is 50 percent toda y, 70

"

I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, , Move over, plastic rattles. Here
comes the high-t~h baby!
You 'lllind the tot of the '80s nestled
among a vast assortment of sophisti·
cated toys and state-of-the-art el~­
. Ironic safety products. Today 's manu" facturers offer a futuristic array of
highly styled toys and t~hnologically
advanced gadgetry designed to keep
youngsters safe.
"Our years of experience in this
business have enabled us to create
products that are a glant leap for ward in terms of ~hnology," says
Norman Spiegel, president of Nasta
Industries, a New York-based toy
manufacturer
specializing
in

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

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Tu esday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Dally Number
707.
Ticket sales to ta l e d
$1,311 ,978.50, with a payoff due of
$384.131.
PICK-4

'

'" NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11 ·26-87

,.,--....._30 20

Wednesday, November 25. 1987

--

--~-

fitness· conscious

executive

will enjoy an exercise bicycle that
electronically displays time, speed,
distance and pulse. For the exec who
is already pedaling indoors, videocassettes are available that simulate cycling through steaming geyser basins,
along Lake Yellowstone or through
the Grand Tetons.
To help the traveler stay in shape, a

HfliNJI&gt;MAUit; deluxe attacbe case by
Davidoff of Geneva comes with re·
movable humidor for cigar smokers. STUFF a stocking witb a Howard
Miller pocket-size alarm clock.
And a hefty price: $6,100.

�Page-20-The Daily Sentinel

1987 ,

~~~~~~~P~o~m~e~r~o~y===M=iddl~e~p~o~rt~.~O~hi~o~--------------------------~T~h~e~O~a~il!y~S~e~n~t~in~~~~~~1~-

Kids' fashions are g·r owing up fast

Fashionable choices

Trying to find the right gift for a man
Buying clothes for the men on your
holiday gift list used to mean white
shirts, blue ties and navy sweaters.
Practical, yes; exciting, no.
This season, the Men's Fashion Association reportS that gift options in
men's wear will make giving as much
fun as receiving.
"There is more variety in styling,
color and pattern than ever before,"
says Chip Tolbert, MFA fashion director. "Whether you are shopping for the
. conservative dresser, the fashion
trend-setter or the sports-minded individual, there are choices priced for
every budget.' ·
This holiday season - besides the
Ubiquitous robe-and-pajamas ensemble - think loungewear. Options include kimono or shawl-collar wraJr
style robes with coordinating boxers,
knee-length sborts or ·cuffed pants.
.Fabrics range from cotton and rayon
: to silk, wool challis and vel vet to easycare blends. Prices start at $50, and
the sky is the limit for items in a luxu-

Wednesday, November 25.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$100 for hand-knits and luxury yarns. $4.50 a pair ·for the basics to $16-plus

Accessories make g•eat stocking lor the fancies .
stullers or stand alone as personal
New styles in underwear include
holiday gifts. In neckwear, consider knitted briefs and bikinis with vtvtdly
one of the new .wider ties to comple- colored prints, stripes and polka dots.
ment this season's wider-lapel suit Box~r styles in brights and pastels are
jackets and spread-collar shirts. Reg- avatlable m ever.ythlng from flannel
imental stripes in offbeat color com- . to stlk; Cutesy prmts - bananas.. ants
binations (like teal and red), spaced and atrplanes - are sure to b~mg a
paisleys and oversize medaUions will smtle. There ts a lot of vanety 10 the
give him the edge in the board room. $8 to $15 range , but plan on spendmg
.
.
Prices for pure silk start at about $12 more for stlks.
and climb to around $85 for imported
,Another fun accessory IS the sport
silk-screened styles.
watch. Pnces range from $50 .to $150 ·
Suspenders and braces are the cur- and there are colorS and destgns lor
rent favorites for fashion-conscious all ages and tastes.

Manufacturers of children's wear
are adapting new adult fashions i9tc
their lines more and more quickly
these days. That means youngsters
don't have to wait to dress like mom
and dad.
In fact, the traditional one-year
gap between the debut of adult lashions and their impact on chlldren's
garments is virtually non-existent today. Only the age of the child determines the color, fabric, pattern and
cut of a garment.
Most children's fashions are manufactored in machine-washable, stayfresh, no-iron fabrics. One of the most
popular is fleece. Favored among
adults for after-hours ~nd even officewear, fleece is ideal lor play,
school and semi-dress-up lor children.

Designers choose fleece lor its suitability to virtually any silhouette and
ability to take most colors and prints.
Today, fleece is recognized as the
foremost lifestyle fabric of the '80s.
Knit accessories are perfect Christmas gifts for infants and toddlers. •
Shop for a classic Io~k . Updated versions are knitted animal, snowflake
and geometric patterns with little
whimsical touches. These basics are
joined by more creative graphic inspirations in the larger sizes . that
more closely resemble ·adult
acce~sories.
. Color is a key to toddler fashion this
holiday season. The choices run the
gamut from brights and jewel tones to
pastels and the new Australian and
African browns.

, Business Services

Look lor infant and toddler apparel
lor little girls in soft pastels .. Ltttle
boys' items run in bright, prtmary
colors. As a chlld grows tow~rd the
teen years, the color selecllon becomes wider and more closely paralleis adult preferences.
·
Popular screen and pull prints ~re
also available in all age categones.
The difference is in the choice of subject and the scale of the i~print.
Adults favor animal prmts, hke dynamic tigers, and bold graphics, ineluding slogans and sports symbols.
Toddler and infant prints run to pan·
das , teddy bears, kittens and other
symbols that kids can eaSily
understand.

MOHPAY thru F-IDAY I A.M. to S P.M.
I A.M. Utltil NOON SAJUIDAY
ClOSID SUNDAY
P'(IUCIU
, ,

........................ ...____...

I

. . . . --;
o......
. . .-.. . ...",_
....................
0:.••
..
. . ..

....,,,.... .. _ _ ..,...,.,, ,.,,.,,.,.,.. ,c;""f"
,,..,..,, ,.. ,,.. ,. ,,.., ., _
-~

o1100A
••• • •oM•li A'""'
'u•oo~
1W~IIAY
IOOO M MOIIDU
IOO OM 1 W[SO. .
I 00 0 M M II... SIIA•

•I oo00 •' M •••o••

l N U&lt;~IPoto•

3 DAYS

available at the Jreasurer's
oHice . .
In order to be considered.
all sealed bids shall be re·
calved In the Treasurer's of·

lice by: 2:00 P.M. on Decomber 10, 198'1, and will
be acted on during·the regu-

FRIDA Y-SATURDA Y-SUNDA Y

lar December board meet·

lng.

The bids will be for the

1 988 calendar year. Said

Board of Education re1erves
the right to accept or reject
any and all parts of any and
all bids.

SAVE S144 ON PAIR

BOARD OF EDUCATION
EASTERN LOCAL
SCHOOL DISTRICT
38900 SA 7
REEDSVILLE , OHIO
45772

011\'ER

SAMSUNG
13"
COLOR TV

REG. S359

AUmMATI~

"' line of sweaters is from $15 to $30.

$167

W4SHER-

compact convenience and
big capacity in a freezer thai
f its almost anywhere

$367

textured lid, lifl-out basket,
adjustable oold control.

19"
COLOR TV

'

REG. S41 9

$277

SHARR
RCA

nations of pattern and color in cot· and nylon - cashmere, angora , silk
tons, wools and luxury blends. Prices and even chinchilla ~ are as festive
.start at $25, but expect to pay over as the season . Prices range from

XL-100

,M ake holiday dreams
.even sweeter

fabric.

Gowns are the most-purchased and
received item of lingerie, and the
choices accent luxury , beauty and
softness. Made from fabrics in Allied
Fibers' Creme de Captiva collection.
they are sparked with feminine details - rich lace, trapunto stitching,
floral appliques, tucking, tatting and
colorfu l embroidery.
Willow Creek offers a perfec t example of this intricate detailing - a
rich. lull-length Victorian gown in
light blue or ivory with a high, lacetopped collar. A diamond-shaped applique of fine lace tatting accents. a

Gown and robe combinations are
daywear-styled stunner from Miss
Dior. The dro pped-waist gown with ·
squ are rose-embroidered neckHne,

full skirt and wide, pleated shoulder
straps matches a collarless wraprobe that also has a neckline panel of
rose embroidery. This gown is avail-

$499

REG. 599

w/REMOTE

less, lloor-length gown with a sequined lace yoke. The matching A-line
robe also has the 2lamorous lace voke

cassettes

REG.S999

REG. $499

For the ultimate in versatility, Fernando Sanch ez offers a moire-pat.
terncd line of matched separates, in-

REG. $599

pants

12" B&amp;W

TELEVISION
REG.

$79

WIRELESS REMOTE

REG. $299

1 P.M.
RCII

••

..... .

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___

~woo

~.14

.,,
_,_.._
.,.
••-•-K-

. m....:co._
··-¥- ··...--e-.
...-.-

...
:Ml ,..C- ·

,.._ ... 11•-

··-- ~~·

IU- - o .. 1- W -

llll - 111.........

~-.

Jot ............

··-

til

5 P.M.

.....

l:t:. t.::.o;r_

,, ..,,_
n-''"""'"",.
n-""""'""'
•
n--•••
:ot-c-o•-·-

.._
.......
:::::-:.:.:,:··---·

107 LOCUST ST.
POI'iiROY - 985-3561

Public Notice

ground mining.
The application is on file at
the offices of the Meigs
County Recorder, Me!.Qs
County Court Houae, S'e·
cond Street, Pomeroy, Ohio

45769 ond the Vinton
County Recorder, Vinton
County Court House, Main
Street,

Help Wanted

We Would Like To Wish
Everyone A
Happy Thanksgiving!

-SPECIALSFONDANT ..................... 51.50 lb. ·
WHOLE DATES .............. 52.25 lb.
SPICE WHEELS ................... 59,95
. For That Special Christmas Giftl

...:.thw ProductsDIETETIC COOKIES
CHRISTMAS BOXES
CHRISTMAS COOKIE
CUTTERS

We would like ·to take this
·opportunity to inv ite you to our
Christmas Open !-!::::.:::
DECEMBER 4(h and 5th - 9 to 5
Stop In For Some Christmas
Cheer!

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
"
~"' " -

992·6910
. Wo lccopt
Food Sto"'P'

992-3410

Pomeroy, Ohio
ml.s from FiVe Points.

PIANO LESSONS
PLUMBING. &amp; HEATING
168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

BOGGS

POMEROY - PRICE RE DUCED on this nice 3 bedroom home. Beautiful mo·
dern kitchen, lull basement,
ni ce woodwork. Lots of closet space. $42,900.00.
SYRACUSE- Remodeled two
stay home Features 3-4 bedrooms l'h baths basement.
garage and an older barn.
Appx. I acre $39,900.00. '
RUTlAND - 3 bedr0001
home newly remodeled w~h
. central air, elec. he~ garage
WIJksil:tp, conCI'ete pat~. fll lly
insulated $32,000.00.
TUPPERS PlAINS- Brick
ranch w/ 3 bedrooms, 1\\
baths, "'"' room, full basement. 2 car garage, oak trim,
qual ity work. MANY MORE
FEATURES. $68,000.00.
tiNilY l ClElAND.' JA ....... 2-0191
JEAN TRUSSHl ............ 949· 2b60
DOmE TURNER ........... qq7. Sb92
TRACY RIFflE .. ............ 949-3010
OFFICE ......................... 992-2219

IAi;L£1 &lt;LUB-POMIROY, OH.
THURU PM- El 0,45
20 Hard Card Gomt1
SSO per gomf'
OVER II 0 PlOPU
S6S prr gomr
( o.,.r All '"tlllritcl rn Adn""' " "

2 Hunt Card1 FRH
wiln thi1 ad onrt purd1m r
ol mtmmum pa,kage

lim11 I per &lt;uslomtr P"
Bingo session.
lK. D00).111 hp, 2/ i t/17 •

PUill( I

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELl
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"
PH. 949·2B60
l)r

949·2801 .

No Sunday

Happy 20th
Birthday, Little
Brother!
love Ya,
&amp; Charlie
"Our Baby is 30 on
Thanksgiving Day.
It 's time to break
out the Oil of
Ol ay./"

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm

EquiPment

Dealer

FREE ESnMATES

Farm Equipment
Partr &amp; Ser-lce

JAMES KEESEE
PH• .,.,:r-z

l-3-' 86tfc

FOR RENT

OPEN FOR

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS
2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. Laundry
facilities available.

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

BUSINESS ?"

· E.O.H.

742-2035

992-3711
'
11. 2].'17 I mo. pd.

11 -3-1 mo. pd.

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

Jeann e Ash
WagKoner , from the

Over The Hill

Business
Services
FREE LANCE
VIDEO
Record Those Special
Occasions an VHS
Tope
•Holiday Pert in
•Weddings

•School &amp; Church Programs
•Sporting Event•
•Anniversaries
•Record Valuabllltl,
Doc:umlltl\ts
•Transfer Photo Albums to

REASONABLE RATES
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE

992-7632

ll/16/'87 1 mo. d.

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home &amp; Auto
(614) 992-371·8

Add on fnini fuel computer
system. fit S any car. Instant

miles per gallon readout.

Know your fuel consumption

half way bet·
ween Rt. 7 and Bashan .

Yard Man mowers, Echo
trimmers, saws, blowers
- Snowoff blowers, Oregon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push mowers picked up and tuned and
returned •20.00.
Parts &amp; Service on all ·
Makes.
PH . 949-2969
11 /2 / 871 mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPA'IR
Also lra•smlsslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and recore 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

WE'RE

STILL

ALIVE!

Guarai'lt•ed tha Sam• For

81 , ...,.

FOR FULLER IRUSH
PRODUCTS
,
OR ro 81 ARIPRISENTAnYE

Before and after auto luna-up.

SUSAN COlEMAN

Fill up your
· subtract and

NfW- REPAIR

.

Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting ·
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

v•oo·v~

Country Gifts
and Decor

SIXTH ST., SYIACUSI, OH.

SALE
Cross Stitch Supplies
50% Off
· Basket Supplies
20% Off
Discount on Selected Items
HOURS : Tues.-Sat.
10amto5pm

6 I 4-992··50112

KOUNTRY
CLUB
•
.
r ....,jo{l'',
"Chrlttmu ~ -~~~
Sale"
\ )

CHESlER,

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

4-22-87-tfn

YOUNG'S
1

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATH S

I

•ROOFING

REMODEliNG &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK
Phone Day or Innings

985-4141

GIIIIUt CONTUCTOIS
~eferencet

11 · 3·dn

ULL

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reosonoble Prices''

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tfn

DON'T UT YOUR EL!CTRIPROBLEMS BECOME A
SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL
C~L

-- ~-D&amp;C~

-

742-2771

ELECTRIC

742 -2125

Ron Dileo or
Gerv Cummins
992-6228
Middleport
lns\.tred / licenaed

or
SHIRLEY COLEMAN
ult "s A Grea t Fund
Raiser"

10/ 21/ t mo.

'

11 ·

night, Five Points and Tuaadl¥
night, Malon. Call Jo Ann

Newsome at 614·992-3382.
Reward offered for information
o n the person who took e
package out of a blue Celebrity
parked at tho church at s . 4th or
Fruths Sat. evening 7p.m. 814·

No Hunting on Gill Ridge on
properti• of C . R . Gill, Mitchell
Cullen. George Gill without
written permi11ion. Violalors
will be prosecuted .

4

Giveaway

Kittens. Call 614-446· 7100.
Poles to give awav. Call 614·

367-7261 .

Free Cats to give away lo golltd
home. Call 614·379·2421 . +

Small male Poodle type dolJ:
Mixed breed. Curtv.t.alr. Appro x.
1 yr. Very playful. Call61•·446·
2646.

Black Cock-a-poo to good home.
6 months old. Call 614-986·
4488

FACTORY CHOKES

MARCUM
CONTRACTING :

Slindarlllla diet cla11e1 Monday

RACINE
GUN CLUB

Puppi81 to giveaway. P1rt Blue Healer. Call 614·446·4477.

Dalmation. female dog to give
away. Friendly. 10 months old.

Call 614.742-210;J anytime.

To nice home w it h childrS}.
Shepherd·Collia rpix , male
brown and black. Housebroken,
1 yr. old. 614·992·7020 . Lori.

8 month old male black and
white dog, 304-468-1896.
Real pretty female white c8t
wit" some c:olor on back with
bag cat food and flea coli•.
304-675-2637.
Half Blue Heel e.- puppies, 304-

675-2443.

6

Lost and Found

LOST: Bl.oklab. 4 mos. old pup.
Call 614·446·6432 .

LOST: 2 Steen· Wt . . 1400
pounds each. ·1- black. white
face. 1· red, white flee with
horns. Call 614-388-9991 .
Found: buff colored Cock..
Spaniet near Pomeroy Poit
Office. fem'We wearing collar.
Collet 4-742-2384.
Lost : male Beagle around Noble

Summit Rd .. Rutland. Last seen
Nov . 19. Wearing collar ,

answers to Rudy . Call614·992-

3989.

Found at Derwin. female Beagl a
we•ing fle1 coli• and ragul•
coli•. Call614 ·992·3182.
Found at Kyger Creek High
S chool yellow male kitten. Ca.JI
Shannon at 614·992·3710,

Large real ft¥fly whiteSamovad,
wearing blue collar. 304.6753385.
'

.

LOST 30-30 Marlin gun around
g&amp;te Butch Brown Farm, At. 1.
letart. Cell 304-882 · 2292 or
882·3413.

7

Yard Sale

- - - - -.

···--- Galliiiolis·-·· ··---- .
&amp; Vicinity
.........-........ -·- .. -.--- . . --.-.
Mo~o~ing. 35 Neil Ave. Furniture,
houHhold, mis c.

CARPENTER

....... P'fPieasaiif .....

SERVICE

&amp; Vicinity

- Addons and rem odeling
- Roofing and gutter work

- Concr ete work
-. Plumbing and electrical
work

jFI'ee Estima1 es1

V. C. YOUNG Ill
9n -6 21 s or 992 -7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15-' 86-lc

6-17-tfc

from one blockto hund reds of
miles. •
.Commercial:
Store to Job Coat
T•,.;i Service

ROOFING

located

VHS Tape

•Transfer 8mm and Super 8
Mov ies to Video Tape
•Create Trainin g Films for
, Students and Emp loyees

Howard L Writesel

No hunting or trespauing. d-v
or night on the Ch•l• E. Yost
Farma.

Black &amp; while female c•.
Gontle. Not full grown. GOQd
with kids. Call61 4·446· 4152 or
446-4987.
•

•Golf Clubs
~
Shirts - Shoes
•TI-ophies - Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags for
Dogs.
JOHN TEAFORD

WHITE HILl RD.
RUTlAND, OHIO

No trespaning on Stepp·• farm
without permiulon.

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

BERRY BASKET

VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation

Circle Dece-mber 61 St . louit
Church Chrittmes Creh Bazaar.

992-6580 .

I

RACINE,

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

614-662-3821

SYRACUSE - Brick &amp;
frame ranch type ho111e
w/basement. 1 car garage,
3 bedrooms on level large
lot. Fenced rear play area.
CALL FOR APPOINTMENT
$39,500.00.

RUTlAND - Mini Farm Approximately 6 acres w/a
3 bedroom home. Elec. 8.8.
heal plus a woodburner.
Barn, shed, much more.
$29,500.00.

A d ifferent kind of dating
urvice. For information write.
Kupid's Nest. P.O. Box 619,
Ironton, OH 45838

1n811ln

Meigs County, Ohio

RIGGS CREST - Really
Nice' Split Ioyer hom e wilh
4-5 bedrooms all in excellent condition. Garage, nice
lot. W.B. hookup, blinds &amp;
shutters. $54,900.00.

DIANA IHLE
.949-2890

lb 14) 992-7754

Office of

MIDDLEPORT- This 2 story
home shows the work has
been done. N1ce kitchen. 3
bedrooms, 1 an d one-th~rd
baths, level lot, storage building $33,900.00.

Schaum. Bastien

From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Coli For Information

(6141 992-6550

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

RUTlAND - A l'h stor-,.
home w/3 bedrooms, enclosed lront porch, equipped
krtchen, storage building and
part basement $21,000.00.

Teaching Thompson.

RISIOINCE PHON!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NEW LISTING- LETART- 3
bedroom frame home w~h aluminum siding Lar&amp;e rooms,
wiJksil:tp, carport. Nice lot
ASKING $23,000.00.

Vou 'n Neru 1oo Old ·
To Lut,f

New Location:

NOTICE OF

992-2259

10-8-tlc

11·23·'87 1 mo.

I.

BUSINESS PHON!

DRAWING OF JURORS

POMEROY, 0.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

Public Notice

e. M•iin••

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Jurors.

Send resume to Box
113 c/o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 825
3rd Awe., Gallipolis,
Oh. 45631.

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

We Carry Fishing S1,.1pplies

Commiasioners of

OPHTHALMIC
ASSISTANT

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

35975 Flatwoods Rd.

'leur

LISA P,'l . KOCH. M.S.

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTTERS .
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•COlli CRETE WORK
All TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR.&amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREE ESTIMA lES
CALL 949.294~9

Early
' For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence

Look who's thirty!
Jea .. le A~h
Ytlauoner
Happy Birthday!

Television· Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~•n•icel
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

!In

J&amp;L
INSULATION

2112

WANT ADS

or at .
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy. Ohio

Tag Your free

McArthur, Ohio

November 25. 1987
To All Whom 11 May
Concefi'l:
o·n Thurodoy, the 3rd day

-

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Rang·es •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

$4,700.00.
Terma of Sale: Caah.

The real estate cannot be
sold for leu than two-thirds
of the appraised value.
Howard E. Frank.

~z

WE SELL USED APPLIANCES

~:::::;..:-.:=·

Thtngolft buZZtn'tn the

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

All Makec

CHRISTMAS ,
TREES

1984, and recorded in Vo·
lume 294, Page 21 , Meigs
County Dead Record-_.
Said parcel appraiSed at

C!l
~

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

PH. 992-2772
1-23-'87-1 mo.

OR CALL 992-2104, EXT. 213

514 EAST MAIN
POMDOf

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HOUSE FOR RENT

of December. 1987, •! 8:30
,----=-------I o'clock A.M., at the office of
.-:
the Commissioners of· Jutenements, to· wit:
Vinton County. Vinton
Ohl
o.
Situated in the Township Townlhip, Sactiona2, 7 and rora of Meigs County.
of Orange, County of Meigs B. The proposed under~ Jurors will be publicly drawn
the January 1988 Term
and State of Ohio, bounded ground minig areal encom- for
of the Common Pleas Court
and described as follows:
pan 815.6 acres. and are of said County,
Lot No. 3 in the town of located on the Wilkesville
Wallace Bradford,
Martinsville, and recorded and VaiM Mills 7"/a Minute U.
I. 0 . M c coy,
I maps,
as such in Volume 1 in the S · G ·S · qua d range
Commissioners of Jurors
Book of Plats for said approximately one· half mile
) 26, 1tc
County at Pages 16 &amp; 17. north to 6.3 miles northeast 111
REFERENCE io mode to of Wilkkville, Ohio. The
deed from Edna Lamp to application proposes to ex- 5. · Happy Ads
Ricky Murphy and Connie pand the are~~s for the room
Murphy, dated August 13, and pillar method of under·

SIND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAilEY, R. N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAl
II S EAST MEMORIAl DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

MARSHMALLOWS
WILTON PRODUCTS

....,

,

.,_.,
•·---o••
.. ...,.

10-01-

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

NECCO WAFERS

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171 - 1"11~

54 Misc. Merchandise

Sunday

SAVE

S57 ssoo

VCR

Open

C6LOR
TELEVISION

cluding an overs iz~d man-tailored
shirt, sleek camisole and s lim -le~

,

,

Clchi/ied pare• oover 1he
followi~J le/ephonf! ur:hana~•· ··
o-.:-...
- c.""'

REGISTERED NURSES

'

REMOTE

45"

brushed-back satin fabric.

--

$397

$897.

wear over · long, loose . pants ' in

DRESSY gilt idea is a jersey tOP. witb
glitter spray to wear.witb floral-pat- . KNIT flowing-leaf paneraed scarf
teraed coordinated skirt by Tour has coordinated funnel hood aad
gauntlet glove by Hansen.
Time.

a nice
blrthdav Nu. 26.
We all 1m voa!

SHARPe

'

.......

. Experience
necessar~ to .
work in clinic.
Excellent
salary and
fringe lienefits.

REG. $239 ·

RCA ProWonder

'":. ~··

11

SOUND

COLOR TV

~·- ·-----

,

~,_
., .,.
::=...-,......

-·

County, Wilkesville TownSections 6 and 12;

Isn't It nlftv to
be {lftvl

25"
• Uses standard VHS tape

Happy Ads

An ThoMas,

REG. S599

RGII~

Barbizon offers a jewel of a set
wi th a striking , winter-white, sleeve-

...

ship,

RCA 25 ·~!agonal
XL-100 Color TV

able in brilliant peach or ivory.

with long, rulfled. lace-trimmed
sleeves.
Breaking away from the soft pastels that dominate even winter sleepwear, Eve Stillman styles a balletlength robe. The Oriental-inspired
silhouette, in rich aqua or fiery red,
has a neck-to-hem button-front
closure.
Nightshirts are also popular, and
most show the strong influence of
men's-wear sty ling. Lady Lynne offers a lighthearted little charmer
with an uneven sltirttail hem, trapunto-stitched shoulder pads. notched
collar and cuffed sleeves.
Men's-wear styling also gives ladies' pajamas strong loungewear appeal. Julie. a division of Slumbertogs,
styles the artist's smock as a pajama
top with an inverted back pleat, pointed collar and flared, cuffed sleeves to

5

Stereo turn table,
FM/ AM stereo,
integrated stereo
amr,tlifie·n, stereo
doub e canette de&lt;k,
two speaker cabinet,
audio rack.
LAYAWAY FOR CHRISTMAS

13" COLOR
TELEVISION

111 . .

tJ l aa
011 liD

36, and Fraction 35, Vinton

CENTER

Gifts for women

'"""

Township, Sections 34. 36,

$197

REG . '349

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1 10 ...

011-1111

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, -101"

Haa
01aa

Sheriff of 45651, for public viewing.
Meigs County, Ohio Wrttten comments and / or
(1 11 25; (12] 2, 9, 16, 23, requestt for an informal
5tc
conference may be eent to
the Division of Reclamation,
Eloise Boston, Treasurer
Public Notice
Fountain Square, Building
(11) 4, 11, 18,25 4tc
1 --~,;:::
B-3, Columbus, Ohio 43224
within thirty (30] days oftha
PART 1, ITEM lEI (4)
Public Notice
last date of publication of
SOUTHERN OHIO
this notice.
COAL COMPANY
(11125; 11212.9, 16. 4tc
NOTICE OF SALE
MEIGS MINE NO. 2
By virtue of an Order of
LEGAL NOTICE
Public
Sale iuued out of the
Southern Ohio Coal Com- _ _'PU:SUCiW:nceCommon Pleas Court of
NOTICE
Meigs Countv . Ohio. in the pany, Moigo Mine No. 2. P. 1
0. BoK 490. Athens, Ohio
The annual repon: Form
case of Bank One. Athens. 46701,
hao submitted on 990PF for December 31 ,
N . A ., .P laintiff, against
Ricky L Murphy, et al .. application to revise a Coal 1986, for the Kibble Founds- ·
Defendants, upon a judg· Mining and Reclamation tlon, Berrwd V. Fultz, Trustee.
Permit numbered R-0355 · il available for public inspecment therein rendered, be- 9,
to the Ohio Department of tion at Bernard V. Futtz Law
ing Case No. 87-CV·73 in
Natural Resourcea. Division Office, 111"12 w. Second
said Court. I will offer for of
Reclamation. The pro· Str~ Pomeroy, Ohio 46769.
sale, at the front door of the
Court House in Pomeroy. posed coal mining and recla- dunng regular buain•• hours
Meigs County, Ohio, on the mation operation will be in for a period of 180 deys
30th day of December. Meigs County. Columbia sublequent to publication of
Township, Sections 32. 33, this notice.
1987 at 10;00 O'Clock and34,
Froctiono23,33ond (11]18, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24,
A .M. the following lands and
34; Maig• County, S•lem 25, 7tc

ELE~TRI~

CREWNECK is updated with wrap
collar and white piping. Gitana desips it with a snowflake pattern. Tbe

also popular for sleeping and lounging. One of the prettiest sets is a

of

Specification sheets are

ae

$267

I D UI

,

Public Notice

on the foUowing:
fleet Insurance

ONLY

Mtll
. ..to

M

Public Notice

....,...,

AAUI

IDA..
I IIUI

-~

Eastern Local School District

Speed aue.Pe

lucked lace-tnmmed yoke.

~:r.~~:

det.lres to receive sealed bids

Gibson

Here comes santa Claus, and he's
laden with gilts lor that special lady'
This year, a popular item on many
gill lists is brushed-back satin sleepand loungewear. According to a nationwide survey, lingerie is second
only to flowers as the most popular
gift a woinan hopes to receive from
her husband or boyfriend.
Brushed-back satin, with its shim mering finish and soft, cuddly raised
surface, is hot this holiday season. Top
designers, incl uding Miss Dior, Eve
Stillman and Fernando Sanchez, have
created gorgeous nighties with this

...o.. '""""'

""

dance. Luxurious alternatives to wool

WARM-UP set for active sports or
lounging bas body-contoured fit and
color-blocked panels. Logo is screenprinted in Ibis lighter-weight fleece
by Runner-Up ior America&amp; Argo,_
Pant and lop are $14 each.

c o~~

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;;.;::~:.:•r.~:.;. '.":.:!. ,;·::::;::;t;·~:.·.:. o.....

and box textures are also ln a bun- ,

cotton fleece leisure suits. Catchy
, screen-printed logos, sports and outaoor emblems, and color blocking
combined with oversize silhouettes
and sophisticated colorations are perfeel for apres gym. Fleece suits can
range from $35 to $75.
- How about sweaters' The rugged
Gutdoors dominates this season1S of·
ferings. Easy, oversized machine- and
hand-knits feature colorful wildlife everything from ducks and eagles to
dogs and bears.
Thanks to computerized knitting
techniques, there are endless combi-

,

NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Board of Education

and underwear, have some fun; this

loungewear, consider one of the new

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The

season's selections are anything but
boring. In socks. weekend brights include fuchsia . turquoise, yellow and
royal blue. Irish cable knits and
martes are top choices for the bulky
look, but shaker knits, basket weaves

ry fabric·.
· '
. If your man's not quite ready for

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··-... ...-- · ·-·

TO PllU IN AD Ull "7· 71S6

men who are eager to make their own r--_::_
· ______.,:_-,-___::=:::=:..::::=:_:_:::.:_:::_:::_::::::.:::_::::_.:::_:.:;:::_::.:_::.::_::::::_~--~----------------

style statements. From the
·
a! nylon stripes and solids to the
vative fancy silks and woven~~~~~;
braces permit pants to hang
and allow pleats to establish their
proper line. A new tie and coordinating braces are th.e perfect combination gift. Plan on spending from .$12 to
$30 for a pair of braces in pure silk. I
If the man on your list needs socks

Announce 111 en Is

GUN SHOO,T
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-7-tfn

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
Rt. 124 Acro11 from
Happy Hollow Rd .
RUTLAND

614·7•'·'1355

· 11 -6·1 mo.

Chr istmu Garage Sale; All new
items-Something for everyone.
Nov. 24- 7 Just off Jerico ·Rd .
look for signs.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Rick Pearson Auctioneet licensed in Ohio and West Vlrgl•
nia. Estate. antique . farm. liqui·
dacion sales,

9

304 -773-5785.

Wanted To Buv .

W&amp;pay cash for lat&amp; model clean
used can.
Jim Mink Chw .·Oidslnc.
Bill Gene Jonnson

614,446 -3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and nB~oNer used cars. Smith
Buick-Pon1iac. 1911 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614-4462282.

WANTED TO BUY : Used wood •
&amp; coal tle81ars. Swain·s Furniture. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipoli&amp;.
Call 614 ·446·3169 .
Buying d_.tv gold, tllvet cQina,
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins. large currency . Top prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 6 14·

992 -3476.

Raw fur. be"f and deer tlid".
Gyn Sing and Yellow root .
tl8\18 w heat and nite litea.
Tra~pi ng suppli111 for ule. I Buying used 1rBpe). George Buckltl'f.
Hourt 12·9. 614-66 .. · 4761 . •

w,

Antlqua glAssware. old colna .. •
old jera. rings, picturel. 1ny "'"""'
glass. Fenton, lmperi1l. Call
Brian lee 614 -386-6099

�•

Page-22 ...:... The Daily Sentinel
9

Pomeroy

Wanted To Buy

45

Wented to buv· Nndingtimb8f .

FIIIIJI uvllle Ill
Ser vrces
11

Office Spaco for r&amp;nt. Excel.
downtow n Gallipolis location
In quiries call 614-446-4 222

list.

Mobile Home lo1 . 60 h or len.
920 4th .. Gall ipolis. 875 . Water
paid . Call614· 446-44, 6 after 7
PM

Patient Serv1ces Assistant 10
coordinate th• .. activities of
Melga County family pl•nning
chnic. Mutt hwe H.S d1ptoma
or equivalency, addl110nal eduCMion pref•red wittlauccessful
work history m related field.
RQponalble posftion for a m•
ture individual, sensitive to
riiProductive hNith needa of
women and familiM . Musl be
well orgaruzed. h•e demon-

ttrotldcompoooncow~htigur.,

andrecordkeeping Mustbeabl•
•• work under guldelinoo with
minimal supervision and h811e
IUI*'iOr verb .. co'm munication
skills... ReliM&gt;Ie
fl•lltlfty
of limatransportation,
and ability to
tr•vel locollv '"""""'· Evening.
SMurdav and weetcday hours are
to be e~tpiiCled Send r.. ume
end two emplovment referencee
to Pl..,n.t P•.,thood of Southelllt Ohio, 396 Richland
Avenue, Athens. Ohio 45701 ,
i by December 4, 1987. EOEI ESP.
1 -:-:-,-:----------

' AVON • All areM. Call Marityn
: Weaver 304-882-2645 .
PART-TIME
HELP WANTED
• Work from home. 1el8Ct you r
own hours.. Car and phone
nec••rv . Training provided.
Earn up to 8100-$500 per week;
· Gonerous bonus 1ncome
· Care and phone necessary
·Training provided
' -For intel'\l'iew call the team
' captain
; Phone (304) 875 -1090. No
, caHt after 9 p.m. please.
1

12

Situations
Wanted

I

: Babysrtting m my home. New1 born
end up Rutland and

, aurroundlng are11. Experianced.

: Clll614-742-2390 anytime.
; 13

Insurance

' Call u1 for your mobile home

: inturance: Miller Insurance,
.._!_04-882·2145 . Alec: auto.
home. lite. heatth

#

~

1B Wanted to Do

lov1ng mom &amp; pre\ltous preachooKte.cher. w.u talc e e1tcal
o.•e of your child Will provide
~.-.tv

of stimulat•on. teaching

~ 'arb II crarta. Willing to watch
your ctuld dav- night S. we•

! kend.a
-~ t~n .

Large home Conv locaPlaasecall614-367-7288

Will do baby shting in my home
Mondll't thru Sund..,. any hourt.
call 304·675-7664

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommends that you
do busm•• with peoplo you
know, and NOT to 1eod money
through the ma1i unt1i you h•e
mvettigatad the offer1ng

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Park.
Route 33. North of Pomeroy .
Rental trail•• Call 61 4-9927479.

"JUst h OW many re lat.IVeS d.1d
•
"te !Of
4'
Than k sg1VIng,
• •
you lflVI
dear?"

32 Mobl'le Homes

for Sale
TAX &amp; TITlE DOWN Sale on all
uaed ho.naal Free Delivery. We
Finance Call Todayl We h.,-e
30. ELSEA HOME Centers.
614-772-1220 or Ohio Wats800-826-0752

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

14x70 Windsot" with 14x30
addition. 3 bedrooms, approximately 3 acre•. bleck top road.
Several out-buildings and pond.
Gallipolis Ferry . 304-67&amp;-6930.
For Sale or Rent - trail•.
304-876-7271
1 2x66 Matador, 2 bedrooms.
1 'h baths, must aell, phone
304-675-5924.
2 .bedroom mobile home, par·
t1 .. ly furnished, air cond, c•·
peted. reduced to t6,500.00.
304-675-6258 or 875-4840.

2 bedroom trailer w1th lot,
304-675-7384.
1983 Nashua with Mpando,
centai air, 2 porche~. with 41J:
acres, call between 6·10 pm,
304-676-5628
33

160acref•m. 1 milebadi.New
Haven, W. Va. phone 304-882·
2866 .
34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lease
Downtown Pt. PleMant Stor81.
off1ces A-One Real Estata.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304675-5104.
749 Th1rd Ave. Pretentty The
Gift Stlop 1600 sq ft. Commercilll or warehouse. Parking on
side. Adjacent toTh~rd 8t PmeSt.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appomtment

22 Money to loan

31

Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
Locks on Rt 7. 2 car garage, mce
lot. lmmed tllte possession Will
consrder trade in ot Mobile
home. property. etc. Bargain
priced. Call 614-446-8038
Modern 3 8R . house Patnot.
Ohio Will help . finance Csll
614-446-1340. 446-3870.
1979 14~t70 nice mobile home.
1 3 aci' el, 2 batha, garden tub,
fireplace. front porch. t 14,900.
Call614-268-6702.
Cottage in Inglewood. Fla. c loae
t o beach. Call after 6 :00 PM 1 ·813-967-6944.
Government ho mes from 'J." (U
r•pair) . Delinquent tn property
Raponenions. Call 806-687&amp;000 Ext. GH -9806 for cu rrent
repo lilt.
room br~ck hom e. Upper
Me•on. Carp ... stove, ref. double garage. 304-773-6397

7

S.

Acreage

3 acres more or lest w;th 2 car
g_.age, shop, drilled well, teptic
system, ideal country sett1ng for
tra1ler or house. i2'h miles South
New Haven, terms nagot iable,
304-8e2-2895 .

Renlals
41

Homes for Rent

2 BA . house. Stove &amp; refrig.
lurn. L.ocated 1 928'12 Chustnut
St S175 mo S75 dep. Call
614-446-3870 .
6 room house-First Ave , Gallipolis. Off &amp;treat parking. No
pets Ref &amp; Dep. Cal/614-2561629
2 BR .. large living room. stove,
wa&amp;her. Near town. No pets
Oep. &amp; ref Call814·446-1617.
3 BR . house &amp; g•age. A-1 Real
Ettate. Carol VeagiK-Broker
304-676 -6104.
2 BR. house. full b•ement.
large lot, on HonevsuckleRd. 1n
Addison. 8260 a mo. plus dep.
Call 614 - 36~ 7670.
Unfurnrshed 2 BR., refrig. &amp;
stove . Lowar Second . Ref. &amp;
dep Call 614-446-3949 or
446-2419

2 , 3, or 4 bedroom houses and
apt . In Pomeroy area. Pay own
GOVERNMENT HOMES FROM utilitle~, depo•it requtred. Call
81 .00 (U- Repairl also talt deli- 614-992-6113, 614-992-6723
quent and foreclosure prop8rti• or 614'-992-2609 Call aft•
weileble now For listing. Cell 6 ·00, pl ease.
1-316 -733-6082 e.11t. G2938.
Newly remodeled. 2 bedroom.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from furnished, in Addtson Ca/1614$1 00 (U repair) foreclos ures, 992-630• or 614-446-8898,
repos, 11111 dellquent propertiel
Now selling your area Call Two bedroom house with g81'1-315· 736-7367ext. 2P-WV-M age. No Pets. 304-676-1400.
for current JiJ1. 24 MRS .
4 bedroom home for rent or sale.
Three bedroom, bridl: hom e, 304-676-2130 .
farge living room. poulble loan
assumption. close to Point Pie•
42 Mobile Homes
unt. 304 -876· 6306
for Rent

3,2

Mobile Homes
for Sale

1976 Bayviaw . 2 BR , porch &amp;
awning. Price negotiable Call
814-266-9309 or 61 4 - 2156·
e2o5 .

for Rent

Professional couple mov ing to
Rio Grande-Gallipolis ar&amp;aJanuary '88 . Desire 3 bedroom
country home to rent. Cats and
horses, no children Phone 406938-5197 between 8 ·00-10 00
am or after 7 .00 pm. Of send
detaila to Deborah Judy, P.O.
Bo~t 729. Shattuck, Oklahoma
7385e

3 BR trailer, metropolitan housIng approved. Children &amp; pets
weloome. Kyg• Creek School
system. 8200 Furnished Call
614-·46-6.,0.
Furnished trailer for renl in
Kanauga. Call 304-676 -3476 .
2 bedroom trailer for rent in
Tuppers Phlina. &amp;176. plus deposit and utilities . Call 614·6673487.

49

For Lease

Would like to rent 2 bedroom
trailer to eld•lv persona. Am . 1400 sq h comm&amp;rci&amp;l spaca
prepared to help maintain. 614- suitable for offices, retailing. or
949· 2969 .
services Prime location-corner
or 2nd &amp; Pine in Gallipolis
2 bedrooms. furnished mobile Ample parkmg 1n rear S360 per
home, Kanauga. Ohio, refurence month. Call 614-446-4249 or
required. · 304-675-61 96 .
446-2325.
2 bedroom furn1shad trails
8186 month. 875 . Depot it plus
tome utilitiBI. 304-6715 -6612.

Merchandise

51 Household Goods

2 BR apta. 6 closets, kltcheneppt. furn1shed, Waaher· Drver
hook-up. ww carpet, n8Wty
painted. deck. Regency , Inc.
Apts. Call 304- 875· 7738 or
675-6104. .

Nice private apt. Quiet Ne•
HMC One edutt only No p.. s.
Stove. refrig . drapes. e226 a
mD. Ref. required Call 614446-4782.
16 Court: 2 br.. 1 1fl bath. large
living aree. w-w carpet. new
kitchen. dishwasher, wired for
phone • tv. Gas heat. Parking
*360-mo, plut uliliti81 Dep. a
Ref. Call 614-446·4926 .
Downtown- Modern 1 BR ..
complete kitchet1. carpet air.
electr~c heat. Call 614-4464383-d..,.s, 446· 0139-even. &amp;
weekenda.
Brookside Apartments- large
country k1tchen, stove &amp; refrigerator Unfurmshed 1 BR . bath,
quiet area. Call 614-446-1932.
Furnished. 4 room• &amp; b&amp;th.
Clean . No pets. Adults only. Ref.
a dep reqwred Call 614·4461519
Modern 1 BR epanme:ru . Call
614-446-0390.

RenE!'h'ty redecorated Very nu:e
apartmen1s in downtown GalhJ'bolis. 1 &amp; 2 BR .- unfurnished,
2 Building lots- 1% acrea each ' second floor , from $176-8225.
with county water. Jerry a Run Dep &amp; references requtred . Call
Rd. Apple Grove, W. Va. Call 8\IG. 614-446-2326 or 446304-676-2383.
4249 .

Homes for Sale

4 SR .. fireplace. ho~ll buement. 3
mi. so of Gallipolis $34,900.
Call Oays-614-446-1616, att•
5 :00- 446-1244

47 Wanted to Rent

Farms for Sale

76 acres- newer houae. County
water. electric &amp; phone hooked
up. Will sell acres. Reasonable
otter accepted . Call 814-4468980

Real Estate

•
H
42 M ObiiO
ames

1 :;:;;::;;:;::=::;=:::;;:::==

1973 1•1t10 Communrty, 3 ,
bedrooma, 1 'h baths, total elect2 bedroom trail• on Sand Hill
ric. t8996.
Road. 304-676-7384.
1973 Cam•on. 12.1166. 3 bedrooms, g•. mce, $6496 .
1966 Cuto. 12x60, 3 bed. 44
Apartment
rooms, electriC. 13496.
1973 Papetla 12x815, 3 bed- ~
for Rent
rooms. total electric. $6996.
D &amp; W HOMES
[304) 875-4424
1 and 2 bedroom apanmenls for
rent. Basic rent for 1 bdr ,
I 183.00, 2 bdr .. 8219.00 . AlsD
1984 Skyline 14x70, e.11celtent
required a S200.00 security
condition, central air, und•pendeposit CONTACT· Jackson
nlng, rented lot, many extras.
Estates Dept Ph 446-3997
304 - 675 - 1294 evenings .
Equal Houting Opportunity
weekends.

35 lots

30 gal. aquarium with stand and
all ac cessories, $150.00 take~
all, 304-675-6724

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Fomily ProdeMoblleHome
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, 304-6753073 .

~~;~;;;;:;~:;:~==-r:;;;:::;:;:;:;;:::;;::::::::

LaSalle Gall.-y, Middleport . e.tablithed Turn· Key Operation.
For appomtment. call 614-9 92 7521 Flnanciang available.
laMe or buy building

Es tablish credit . Get credit
c ard1 Get low interest loans.
Details. Money a1d- 8749 Hwy
172 w. Liberty, Ky. 41472

Space for small trail ers. All
hook-ups. Cable. Also effie~eo.cv
rooms, air and cable. Mason,
W Va Cal/304-7'73-5651 .

\

Floor model RCA. XL100, color
lV, good cond. $100.00 304-

67_5· 2183.

PARSON'S FURNITURE
Just arrived - 3 truck loads- New
lwing room suites, new wood 6
pc living wood suites, S399 .95;
chesl of drawers, twtn mattresses. $96 set; microwa ve
oven stands.
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND

2 BR . furnished apt. Adults only.
Nt ce location. Call 614 -4462404.
513 Third Aw - 1 BR . Depostt
required. Call 614 -446-4346
between 5 .00 PM &amp; 10 .00 PM

&gt;

62 Wanted to Buy

QualitY frrewood, all hardwood.
lor ale. 826 a pick· up laid. Call
814-387-0669 .

delivery Maaon sand. Gallipolis
Block Co., 1 23'h Pine St .
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 114-4482783.

Registered Quarter horsas Call
614-446· 0183

Ready mix concrtrte and all
concrete suppllea. Call us V•ll-v
Brook Cement end Suppli•.
304-773-6234.

Show Saddle whh sliver head
111111 &amp; breast straps. Registered
Sorratl mere-born..t Jan. 26.
1979. 15 h.,ds 3" . f860. Call
614-286-6622.

56

Duroc Bor• lor better rate ot
gain. Rog• Bentlev-613-58•2398, Fabina, Ohio

17.2 fro&amp;t-tree G.E. rlrlrig. with
rcemaker, $400 Body shop
compressor, *400 Furniture 8t
misc . Call614-446-6944.
Seasonllild Oak &amp; Ath firtrWoodSeaaoned one year. Larga load.
Split &amp; d&amp;livered -&amp;36 Call614266 - 1340 or 256 - 9303,
anytime.

~

64

Hay

S.

About 2 .000 bal• mixed grass
hay. 81 .00a bale. C.ll614-4462784 .

l-:

Tr onsporl"lron

Vans

&amp;

74

1980VW Dl•el Dash• for sale.
Good ConditiOn. *1.300 Call
614-388-9033 evening~~.

•

1984 Ford Tempo, 6 spd., air
Sharp. $3299. John'• Auto
Sales, Holld.,.lnn, Kanaug• Rt.

7.
1982ToyotaTercef 2dr., 4spd .
Call 614-268·1629

1981 Pinto. New tires, battery,
belts. hoaas. Engine runs good.
Body fair Cell 814- 266 -1778,
Evenings.

Tandy 64K CCllor computer 11;
dis k drive, printer mouse. joystick, cartridges, paper, disks,
manual. 614-9e6-4288

Musical
Instruments

Yamah• CP30 electric piano.
Cost e1400 new- 8360. Call
814-388 -8637 even .. 448 1968 days.
For Salw. Electric Guitar &amp; Amp.
Good for beginner ReMonably
priced . Call 814-261-1778.
Evenings.

I::W:.u:_ri_:_ot_:z:_er~D-ou_b_lo_K_rt_bo_o_rd-0-r·

1
1 A
gan or sa e. sklng 8300 ., will
negot1ate. Call 614-742-2103
anytime

1 -=~~~~;::;;:=:;=:;=

8 h dish with Lo-Com, 304676 -2326.

===========-~$;10~0~-~0~0~3~0~4~·~57~e~·~2~7~2B~;;;;;J

59 For Sale or Trade

1973 Chev . C60 Dump truck
with cat1le ricks. ni!M' tires,
Bx12 bed -all metal. 1979
Mercury Marquis, 4 dr.. one
owner, 84,710 mile~, nti'IN tires
Call 814-44e -2767.

F ~ r rn

Supp lr es
&amp; Lrv es tuc k

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS • SONS
U S . 36 W"t, Jackson , Ohio .
614-288 -6461 .
Mas•ev Ferguson, New Holland,
Bush HOg Sal• &amp; Service OviH
o40usedtractorstochoosefrom
&amp; complete lint of new • used
aquipment. L.argest lelec:tion in
S .E. Ohio.
Utility
27'x38'x8',
1-13'.118building
' slidingspl.
door,
1 -3' Mr·
vica door- t444•. Iron Horse
81drs. Call 614-332-9746
4020 JD tractor with 4 row no
till corn planter-t6950. T0-30
MF tract:or, plows. disc 6
cultivator-f2600 Call 81428e-8622 .
·
Trattor, lnt'llow Hoy w/ 6 foot
mower deck t1800 . Call 614448· 434e.
New HoiiMld end of se•on hav
tool Nle. Ail hiV toola at delaer
0011 plus interest frM financing
until June 1, 1988 w1th normal
down payment Two461 , 3pt, 7
ft mowers 82,100 .00. One31 1
3 joint PTO, stand•d tir~
reguhw p1dtup, e6,600.00. One
472. 7 ft hartblne,. *6.900.00
One 474 , 7 ft haybine .
*6,,.00 .00. Keefers Service
Center, St. Rt. 87, Leon, W Va .
Phon a 30•· 896· 3874 .
lntarnational 1060 gr inder
mixar, NrN Holland 7 ft hll't'
bind, both In good cond, 304273·4215.
Buy bar chain and sprocket for
any •w gM 18COnd ctllin fr•
Offill' good till Dec. 1. Sider~
Equipment Co. Phone304.676 ~
7421 .

1986 Ford LTD II. Clean. 12 ,900
mile~. Auto .. AC , PS. PB. lilt,
cruise . Call 114-388-8240 .
1979 Pinto. e650. Call 614446-491 3 after 4 :00 PM
19815 Dodge Omni. Auto. 4 dr ..
14,000 miles. Good cond. Call
6t4-379·212e.
1
•1984 Pontiac Firebird Excel.
cond 28 ,000 miles, tunroof.
louwr. 4 apd.. 4 cyl .. fuel.
injected. PS .. PB. 84800. Call
614·446-7447.
1978 Rally Spon Cam•o LT
360. T-top. air, spoke mags, dual
uhautt. cruise. SHARPI No
Trad .. 83000, neg. Call 6144•6·6176
Must see to appreciate- 1983
Buick RiviiH'a. All black uterior
wtth vinyl lop, Burgundy velour
interior PS. PH, AC,· In fact
power everythmg. $7100. Call
614-446-2297, between 10
AM &amp; 7 PM .
Stalnlees steel eKheust systems.
Now custom mftde for your
truck, motor homeorcl•s1ccar.
With llf•tlme warranty. Muffl•
Man. 9 Stimpson Ave .. Athans.
Ohio . 1 -800-843 -3767 .
1987 Olds Gutlass Supreme.
Top shape. Assume loan. Call
evening•. 304-773 -6911 or
304-773-6615.

om

NOTHING LIKE A
LITTLE MOONLIGHT
!'&gt;WI,. , r5 THt;RE'

Iii Ill Cll

NBA Today (T)
(ll
ABC Nawa 1:;1
(!) Nightly Bualneoa Report
®I 111112l CBS Nawa
liD Degraaal Junior High
Tough guy Rick 1akes an
Interest in Environmental
Action Committee . (NAJI:;I
ll2l ShowBiz Today News o1
1he entenaonmen1 world IS
anchored hve from New
York. (0:30)
IHJ WKRP In Cincinnati
fl) (!) Too Cloae lor Comfort

6:35 ill Carol Burnell
7:00 I]) Remington Steele
PM Magazine
@ SportaCenler (L)
(ll Entertainment Tonight
lit Cll People's Court
(!) iiJ) MocNall/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
®I News
ll2l ·Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and ftnanctal news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
111 fl2l 1m Wheel ol Fonune

um

19815 Suzuki Outd Sport Good
conditiOn. 81000. 080 . C.ll
614-742· 3166 aft• 5:30p.m.

Auto Parts
S. Accassories

Budget Transmissions: Used and
rebuilt, ell types. Guarantee 30
days. C.ll 614-379~2220 or
304· 675-4230.

E-MPLOYMENT

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

~PLi

Dual exhauat kits, •99.96 In·
1t1lled. Mo11 Fords, ChiiiiV
truck•. Vans, 4x4 's. Muffl•
Man. 9 StlmpsOR" Ave • Athens.
OhiO 1-800·8·3· 3787 .

5

1_\
--,,,,,.,.

White fiberglass truck topp• for
Ch..,yS -10, cal1304-676· 7831
or676 -1311 .

'·I

I..ET~

/

''MAIN

SEE, Now,
CA~SSF!

og'JcCiiVE?''...
To GET 1T OV/i~
WITH, I: GUE55:

Auto Repair

"'!81&gt;o,ll(.o.. .,.

Struts, t119 .96 pa1r. installed
Mo1t models. Muffl• Man. 9
Stimpson Ave Athena. Ohio
1 -e00·843-3767 .

\H.t&gt;.Vt£..5

•ll-2.$

ALLEY OOP
CAN Y'BEI&gt;.T THI&gt;.T?
HE TOOK ONE LQOI(.
AT,DS "'NO HEI&gt;J&gt;EW
IN TH' OTHER DIRECTION!

Service s
Home
Improvements

•

5
I'"~"-r-(. :.A;. ;I: . =.1~. :;E1~1 J ~~~ '"..:: ;::
-

·

-

~lng to cuatomera. ~reed:

I

"Buy One, Get - -:·

I

OVNIKE
~__,:;~,__:,...~:.:_,.;1,. :.;. :1::..,. .1-1 Q
•.-.J..._J.._.J..
__J.__.J...--'
•

Compleoe rhe chuck le quoled
~y flll.ng in the mtssmg words
you deve lop from step No. 3 below.

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Cobweb - Ditto - Awolle - Funnel - KNOWN
There Ia a converse relattonahlp between archeology and

YOU uncover the unl&lt;noil(n. In
diplomacy you cover lhil&lt;NOWN . ,_---------------diplomacy.

In

archeology

BRIDGE

'

U-U-!1

..

32

..

NORTH

.AQ IQJI7
.4 2
+J75
.1086

Beware opponents
be~ring gifts

.J4
•sa

EAST

WEST

.75

• 65

By James Jacoby

Longtime readers of the Jacoby col·
umn may remember Hard Luck Joe
and Generous George, whose exploits
Chearo
were recounted by my father for
f11 aJ M'A'S'H
many years. Today's deal finds Hard
7:05 (II Andy Grlfll1h
Luclf Joe in six hearts. Generous
George (G.G.) was his right·hand
7:30 0 I]) Hollywood Squares
@ Scholaltlc Sporta
opponent.
America (T)
Joe trumped the opening lead and
(ll Newlywed Game
contemplated his chances. ·There
Ill Cll Judge
would be no trouble of the club honors
®I Wheel of Fortune 1:;1
split. provided he could get to dummy
ll2l Croaollre (0.30)
twice to lead clubs. That would give
Ill a2l 1m Jeopardy! 0
him a 75 percent play for the contract.
IHJ Barney Millar
He
has two entries in spades if he
f11 aJ WKRP In Cincinnati
overtakes
his spade king with dum7:35 (II Sanford and Son
my's ace, but that play gives up the
8:00 I]) Second Honeymoon
chance to run the spade suit if the jack
U (2) 1m Highway to
comes down on the third round of
Heaven Jonathan and Mark
spades. Suddenly Joe saw an extra
lock horns wtth the warden
possibility. What if he drew trumps
over prtson reforms. C
and then played the spade nine, over·
@ WKA Karate From 'Tulsa:
OK (R)
takmg with dummy's 10? If that lost to
(ll Ill Cll Perfect Strangel'll
the jack, he could next take the king
In a dream sequence. 40
with the ace and run the spades to shed
years have passed and Larry three clubs and make 12 tricks. And
has regrets. 1:;1
that is exactly what Joe did .
(!) IIJ)llorman Rockwell, An
So how did Hard "Luck Joe go set?
American Ponralt Chronicles
Easy.
Remember who was sitting
Rockwell's work and h is
East? Generous George. G.G. had just
astounding popular success
enough sense to realize that Joe would
over a 60 year period as he

+A9862

+KQI043
+KQ42

.

•5 3

SOUTH

.,

.K9
.AKQJID98

---

.A J 9 7

Vulnerable:·East-West
Deater: South
West

Nortb

East

Pass
Pass

2•

Pass

4•
5

Pass
Pass

+

Pass

Pass

Pass

...

Pass

Opening lead:

+K

hardly be presenting him with • a
chance to win the jack of spades unless
taking it was going to solve declarer's
problems. So George lived up to his
name by Jetting dummy's 10 of spad~s
win tbe trick.
Joe had hard luck for sure wlieo
both club honors were wrong, but tijpt
wouldn't have mattered if George had
carelessly taken the jack of spades
when Joe first played llle' suit.
,

.

Ike and Tony try to
de1ermone why L1. Zaga is
under surveillance. 1:;1
1!11 Primenawa Wrap ups of
the day's world news and in
dep1h fea1ure reports. (1 :00)
1HJ MOVIE: Porky'a Revenge
(RI(1 :31)
fll C!1 MOVIE: Urban Cowboy
(PG) (2:15)
8:05 ill NBA Basketball
8:30 I]) Last Frontier
(ll Ill Cll Hoad ol the Claaa
A psychologlslles1s lhe
class' emottonal stability . Q
9:00 I]) 700 Club
0 (2) 1m A Year in the Lila
A blackout on Thanksgiving
~nerates Gardner ingenuio/.

I'D SURE LIKE T'KNOW
WHO THOSE TIW GUYS
~E YELLIN' AT!

I. ....

RON'S Television Service.
House caJis on RCA. Quazar,
QE. Speclallng in Zenith. Call
304-676-2398 or 614-446 ~
2464.
Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
removal. Ca/1304-676-1331 .
Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most walls compleced samedav.
Pump sal• and tM"'ict 304-e96-3802
Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn c•e. landscaping, stump
removal, 304-676 -2842 or
676-2903.
B2

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

~------------~~~·--•
'
:
•

DO YOLJ L-IKE: THE
TEACHER YOU 1-V'.VE
THIS TE'RM &lt;'

A TEACHER IS
A TEACHER IS
A TEACHER.

~~--------~~------------~~,
WH05AID

THAT"'

I THINK IT WAS
EITHER taERTRUDE &amp;TE'IN
OR ..rACK IE MA60N .

Plumbing
Heating

S.

CARTER'S PWMBING
ANDMEATING
Cor. Fount! and Pine
Gallipo1it. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614448-•477
84

S.

Electrical
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring . New aerv1ce or repa1ra.
Ucensed electrician. Estimate
free Ridenour Electrical, 30• ·
676-1786.
B5

BARNEY _------~~"
I SEE YOU HAD ONE OF
THEM DAYS. ELWJEY··
EVER'THING'S GONE

HAYWIRE !!

Paul Rup e, Jr. Water' 'Service.
Poola, ciatern&amp;,eJis Call 614•46-3171

1981 Chevy Station Wagon, exe
cond, 12B . OOO mllaa ,
*1 .70000. Phone 304-88228153 9 :00-3 00 or after 6 .00
304-773-5867

Ught hauling ' of any kind.
Movmg, garage~ and basementa
cleaned, trash, junk. liltC. Call
614-379· 2502.

ro U Cll

Top Rank Boxing
(ll
Hoopennan Harry
rescues a beau11ful bored
princess after she gives him
1hs slip. C
(!) Even the Heavens Weep:
The W. VIrginia Mine Wars
®I liD il2l MOVIE: 'Gandhi,
Part I' CBS Spacial Movie
(PGii;J
liD Buster Keaton: A Hard
Act to Follow The conclusion
of this 1WO pen specie!
focuses on the comedian's
dazzling comeback In
television in the 1950s and
early 1960s. Q
ll2l Larry King Llvel In depth
interviews wtth top
newsmakers and celebnties.

9:30 (ll lit Cll Slap Maxwell
Story Slap recognizes a
prospective buyer of the
Ledger as a con artist 1:;1
10;00 I]) Stralgh1 Talk
0 (}] 1m Jay Lano'o Family
Comedy Hour This comedy
salute to the American fam1ly
will spotligh1 Leno in a

LOWEEZY-!!
YO'RE A
BODACIOUS

MIND·READER !!

I(

humorous monologue about
real and fictional tam1hes.
Guest stars include Bea•

General Hauling

1977 Mercury Running condition Auto. ••so. 614 -9928939 .

Anhur, Corbin Bernsen, Dick
Van Patten , Berbara
Bolhngsley, Rochard Dysan
and olhers.
(ll Ill Cll Dynasty Sean
searches for damaging

informat1on about the

Carnngtons. 0
(!) Monongah!

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reupholstery, St Rt . 7 , Crown
City, Oh 614-266- 1470, Eve
614-448-3438 Open daily 9 t o
4. 30, Sat. 9 :30 to 1 ·30 . Otd &amp;
new Uphoslered.
Mowrey's Upholstering serving •
trlcountvarea22yaats. Thebesl
m furniture upholtterina Call
30,4 · 675 - 4164 f or;r free
estimates
•

2 Steve1 "Blueberry dore's

ACROSS
n

.

.'

part

30War
goddess
32 Building
material
33 Teach
or Kidd
36 News piece
40 Ragged
41 Not hind
42 Document
43 Civil
wrong

DOWN

1 Like
an oven
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

HOSPITAL WAITING ROOMS
ARE DESIGNED Tf\15 WAif..

[!I Tho Weave111: Woan•t
That a Time
·
fii(Il Hogon'a Herooo

11:00 (I) Remington Steele

o w rn mCll rm

1m Nawo

111112l

@ NHL Hockey
(!)Sign Off
ll2l Moneyllne Current

reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
® Jafferaona

'

11125

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW ·

ahead to tomorrow 's news
s tories . (t :00)
10:20@ MOVIE: Car Wash (PG)
(1 :37)
10:30 I]) American Snapshots
(!) Joan Baez Baez's quick
wit and searching
intelligence , her undiminished
passion and sxac11ng
honesty show as she talks
candidly about a number ,of

union

3 Sass
5 Cold
4 Be ashamed
and
5
Pro
bare
football's
10 Potpourri
George11 Casual
6 Instant
look
camera
12 Army
.
Yesterday's Answer
inventor
lullaby?
7 Finis
13 Ashore
8 Ungettable 17 Type type 31 "Harold - "
14 Fix a
18 Couch
32 Except
serve , in
text
19
Boxing
s1te
33
Wee seal
tennis
16 Fight for
9 Sheep tick 20 Saucy
34 O~e.IS Drop
11
Secluded
•
21
Withered
m1lhon
the bait
valley
23
Cosmetic
35
Ascot
21 Gannet
surgery
fabric
22 Blazing 15 Chess
pieces
27
Substance
37
Besides
"..
24 On a
16
Sneezy's
28
"Ain't
38
Misdo
grand
f;.:ri:.:.en:.:,d;;....,.,..~-- Swee.;:t?~''.,.:;-39:...,.;;C~o.,nr;ve.;.n"Te:-d-;
scale
25 Allege
26 Bibhcal
juniper
tree
28 Few
29 Potato

liD IHJ Nowa

Issues.
Upholstery

•

1!)1 Evening Newa A wrap up
of today's news and a lo9k

Wa tteraon 's Witter Haul ing ,
reaaonable ra tea, 1mmechate
2.qoo gallon delivery, cisterns.
pools, well , etc c all 304-157629'19 .
B7

'

®I 111112l T~e Oldest Rookie

SWEEPER ud sewing machine
repair, pant, and suppli•. Pick
up and deltvary, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Qeorgea Craek Rd. Call 814·
446-0294.

R &amp; R Water Service Home
cisters, wells, pools filled. Formerly James Boys Wat•t.Call
304-675-6370

1986 Daytona Turbo Z, redtllver, le.. her interiOf, new tires,
loaded. *8,960.00. Consid•
partial trade, 304-876-15306.

-

painted life as he wanted ot

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local ref•IWicas furnilhed .
Free astlmMet. Call coiled
1-114-237-0488. dev or night.
RogersBasement
Watel"proofing

19B6 YJ Ford Eacort 22,000
miles . Excellent condition.
*3760. Call 614-992-5306 or
e14-448· 8e98 .

1986 Monte Carlo Lu11urySport,
V-8, all poWer seats, windows.
etc: 17.000 mil•. t9,000.00
firm. 304-67&amp;-&amp;084 after 4 :00.

iTnrrrrrrn.,..,:

I

ALNETY

••

to be . (NA) 0

1972 Buick Electra. Good condition. 8400 Ce11614-992 -2676.

'715 ChtN Malibu, V-8 auto. 2
door, hard top, good cond,
0800.00. 304-175· 1247.

the

be-

i

FRANK AND ERNEST

Chevette engine, 4 cyl. &amp;. some
parts. Price negotiable.. ~ Call
614-.46-7.39.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools, cisterns, wells. Ph. 614·
245-9285

1980 Olds Omega. rebuilt engine. 304-676-1769.

I

tAll I

rm

6:05 (II Allee
6:30 0 (}] 1m NBC Nightly News

1984 Honda 200 TRS . 4
wheeler 81100. Call 814-9926841 .

-:-::::-:-:::-:-:------lc-

1981 Reliant "K"Car.elr.auto.,
PS, front wheel drive. 4 cyl ..
60, 000 miles G ood buy,
e1 ,900 304-676 -2663 or 6766768.

•

6:00 CD Crazy Like a Fox
(ll Ill Cll
111112l
1m Newa
@ Sportalook (T)
(!)Dr. Who •
liD Square One TV 0
112llnalde PoiHica '88
IHJ Facta ol Lila
fll aJ One Day al a Time

4 W . O.

Dillard Water Serv1ce Pools
~istorns . Wells DeiNery Anv:
t1me Call 614-446·7•04-No
Sundav call1.

19~· Chevrolet 360 Impala lor
sale. Call814 -992-2042.

WED., NOV. 25

WOlD

EVENING

Motorcycles

81

Rearrange 19»en of
0 four
scrambled words

~LD..

3 -Wheeler ATV - Kawankl200.
Good cond . Can 614-446·
7026 .

76

~~~~:~' '0©\\~~-~r.;,s·
Edltod br CLAY l . roLLAN
low to form four simple words

-;;;-;;-~-;--:---:co:c::---

' 1984 Mercury Topaz. WhiteAlpine AM ·FM -CIIII 1111'80,
AC . Excell cand. •3400. Call
614·446 -8602 ofle&lt; e .30 PM .

57

" I know it' s Illegal to -yell • i ! h e re, but
what about 'Thanksgiving!!"'

TI1~M!

MA'4;

71 Auto's For Sale

l1ke new, Bassett Baby Bed iHld
24 mont h boys 2 p1ece snow
suit . Call 614-992-7110 .

Sears console humidifier. like
nMN, 660 00 AKC mm. Collie

•

1982 oo'd ge 21i0 Ram . Cuttom
conver1ion. Trail• reedy . Call
81 4-4·8·4383 dfiiS, 441-0139
evens. • weettiWids .

77

4- 230x16 Midlelin tires . 2-LR
7816-st.udded O..,tona Radill
Snow Tiraa Call 614 ·446228e.

All Christmas Tre01 $12. Come
early betore cold weather, tag
your tr ee at N&amp;well's Christmaa
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
on HanQing Rock Rd. 304- 773~
6371 or 882-2886.

o~~OF

TO

Grain

All white Eskimo Sp1tz pupp1•.
ttme for Christmas, 304-676·
330e.

Beech Sttaet. Middleport, Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished apartment.
utilities paid. Referen ce &amp; Deposit, 304-882-2666.

Moder n one bedroom apartment. Very claan and nice. No
Pets Ph 304· 676· 1386

Fatting hogs, all size ponies.
304-676-2038.

Firewood split and 't:leiNered,
$40 . per load. Cherrv. locust
sassYfras and hidl.ory Call 614:
992· 6335

2 bedroOf't' furntsed apt, ref and
dep9sit, New Haven, W. Va ..
304-ee2-3267 or 304-7736024.

Sallt· Rant.. 18R . tra ii•10J~.46at
EtJreka. Ref. &amp; dap. No pets. Ca ll
61 4 -266· , 529 .

ReQ. Tamwonh Bore. Call after
6;00 I'M-814-246-9224.

83 Nlssan. 83 Horizon. 83
Honda. 78 LTD II. 81 Leli1nt. 84
Pontiac T 1000. 77 MOB. Low
mil• • new paint. Call 61 •·
. . 6·6980.

APA"RTMENTS, mobile homea.
houtea. Pt. Pla1111ant and Gallipolis. 614-446-8221

"'ew.

Livestock

3026
Collie pups, AKC Reg1stered.
Lanie typo. Will be ready for
Santa. Call 814-843 -6365.

Nice efficiently apt MUD approved 2215 V, Mt . Vernon. Pt.
Pteaaent Call 614-992 -6868

2 Br. trailer-cable Beautlfulriver
foster's Mobile Hpme
P1rk. CeH 814-446-1802

63

1976JeepRenegade4x4 RUns
good, naw lires Che~t - type
freezer . Mavtag Dryer. e~~:celtant
cond1t1on. Call 614-742-2433.

In Pomeroy , 2 bedroom, pertly
furnished apt Oft Spring Ava.
RecentiV remodeled. Call after
6:00pm, 614-992-6886.

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 and 2
room furnished apanments Prrvate baths, utilit/81 paid 304882-2688.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
C FA H1malayan, Per1iin and
Siam•• kittens. AKC Chow
puppiea;. New kittens; Persi1111.
Call 614-446-3844 after 7PM .
lf.r Chow Chow pupp
' lea- 4
mal•. 3 lemales. ~te. Mother
AKC reg. *26 each. Call 6144 46 2
-;:-:·: ---:'::0--:8--:
. --~---­
AKC Miniature Oactlshund
pups. Good Christmas pets for
children. ht lhots &amp; wormed.
1-:C::ol-:16--:14_·_3::7-9---:2-2_7-:3:__ __
AKC Reg. Cock• Spaniel pups.
8160 each. Ca11614-388-8890.

Catalyhc converters, only AKC Reg. Boston Terri•. Male.
$89 95 Most models. Install a- t :' :2o,_o__,
c,...•l_l_6_14_·_4_4_&amp;_
·3_8_4__5_
. __
tion also available.. Muffl• Man,
9 Stimp$on Aw .. Athens. Ohio. Maiga County Humena Soc1ety
1-800-e43-3767,
ha Catl for adoption. Some
1payed and neutered . Ra.ty to
Mliced hard wood slabs. s 12 per go. All shots up to date.
bundle. Containing approx. 1 'h Adoption lee required Call for
ton. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co. more information about ourcett
p
0
and come vish or volunte•.
orneroy, hio. 614-992 -6461
614-992· 6605 or 614 -992-

Tara Townhouse Apts - 2 HRS .
1 112 baths, AC Start $299 a mo.
UtiUt ies not Included Call 614387-7e60.
Gracious II'Ying 1 and 2 bedroom apanments at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apartmenta in Middleport. From
$215 . including utilitin. Call
814-992-7787 EOH .
""'

Pats for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pat
Grooming. All breeds ... AII
styles. lams Pet Food De.t.-.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446-0231 .

L1ve Turkeys· Call 614-3792166

Pi c ken 1 Us e d Furnitur eDinettes, sofas, chairs, end
tables, tamps, beds, drenen.
des k, glassware 30 4 · 676 1460

Furnished upstairs- 1 8R UtilitiM paid. $220 a mo. $76 dep.
94 Locutt St. Call 614 -4461 340 or 446-3870

Now buying 1hell corn or ear
corn. Call tor latest quotes. River
City Farm Supply. 814-4482985.

1::---:-:-:----Concrete blocks allsiz81 yard or

2 BR apt. Stove &amp; refrig.
furnis hed. Near Go Man . Call
614-448-7026 .

New 2 BR . equ 1pped k1tchen,
low utilili81, conven1ent location. No pets. Ref. &amp; dep Call
6,4-446-1250.

Building Mat•lals
Block, brick, MW8f p1p .. , wmdowa.. lintels, Me. Claude Winters. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 814246 -6121 .

Piutic ci&amp;tern state approved,
pl~ttic septic tanka,
plastic
culvens, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
son, Oh. 614-2B6-B930.

Buy 6 Tonmg Tables and recetve
a free Su ntan bed. Ofhw good
until Dec 30, 19B7 Call Caribbeoo Tans, Inc , 304-422 _4200
•·

ProPL~

56 Building Supplies

Callah111's Used Tir&amp;Shop Over
1,000 tlfet, ti:t:81 12. 13.14. 16.
16, 1 6.6. 8 milee out Rt. 218
Call614-2!i6-6261 .

AVON, all areas, Shirlev Spears,
ValiS¥ Furnrture
New and used furn iture and · 304·676-1 429.
appllcancea . Call 614-446Amana freeler, Huffy bicycle,
7572 Hours 9-&amp;.
file cabinet, antique'trunk. toola,
Carpet Prices Sterttng at · 23 c hairs 614-446-8240
Commercial - $4 a yd .
S culpture-$&amp; a yd .. Plush-$7 a AVON all areas. Shirley Spears.
yd . Loti of room remeots in 304-675-1429.
stock Finan cing availabl e. MolFresh Chrisunas trees for sale
lohan Furniture, Upper Rrver Ad
820 and down. Cut or d1g your
. 614-446-7444 .
choice. 1 '12 miles out Millstone
Ch1na- service for 10- never Road, Apple Grove. W. Va .. or
been used Carnival glass- green call 304-676-2233.
&amp; amber. Antique dishes. Call
Firewood $36 .00 load. delivered
614 -446-8106 .
Mas on County a nd Gallipolis
Wood 01nette Set- table &amp; 4 Custom cut and ruih orders
840 00 Call 304-896-34 46 .
chairs Call 614-379 -2 613.

Apanment - 1 1 36 2nd., Gallipolis 2 BR . Stove &amp; refrig.
furnished. $186. Water peid.
Call 614-446-4416 after 7 PM .

·:'"::·:·~~

367-7260
t • .!:=========::;=======·: ·:" :'
ANTIQUES . Buy or Sell. Rive - t
rine Antiques, 1124 Ent Main
St . Pomeroy Hours. Mon .· 54 Misc. Merchandise
61 Farm Equipment
Tuea.-Wed. 10 a.m to 6 p.m.
Sun.- 1 p.m.- 8 p.m By chance
or appointment. Russ Moore
136 Maney Fergu110n diesel
614-992-2526.
Bob Cline T11.ddermy. Member
Farmall Cub and cutthlator.
W Va Taxid•my Auoc. Rt. 2
304-Ei76-2328 or 676-2806.
Box 782, Point Pleaunt, W. Va.
~
54 Mise , Merchandise 304-875 -1448

For sal• used door and ltorm
doors. G"ood selection. Different
sizes Reasonable prtc;ea, Call
614 -742-3073 between 9a m .6p.m.

lAM NOT

U 'h Nla•n pidc.up. heel. cond.
with fiWgl11s topper Alum.
wheels. Cell after 6 PM-81 4••6-9684.

23

The

Television
Viewing

,,. ~..,

Chnstmas tpecral. White Tail
Hunter bow lots of new
accassor1es- indudes arrows. Black &amp; white pony, very gentle.
t1pa. much more. Call 614-388 - With saddle. *260. Call 614·
86, 4 .
, .2:.4:.:6:.:
·9:.:1..::6_:_7·:___ _ _ __

90 Days s•me as c ash 'with
approved credit 3 M1le1 out
BuiiNille Rd Open 9em to 6pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 614-446 0322.

Kll-lDSOF

73

Antique marble- slab dresser.
Ant~que oak cupbo•d . Both
excellent condition. Call 614·

~~~O~••onable. Cai1S14"266 -

ITTAKJ?&gt; ALL

1987 Chevy on! ton. 304-676 t7e9.

Give antiques for Christmas.
Wagon Wheel Antiques- State
Rt 21e . Optrl Week Oaya. Call
614-446-2 467 .

Wooden sofa &amp; chair, brown
flowered cushions. Good condlt1on. Call 614 -682-6876. Thurman. OH . After 6 Pm 5126
C .B. Equip.- all kind plus two
dithwashen. 1982 Kawasaki

1973 Dodge Pickup. 3 spd,
Sleot 6 *300. Firm. C.ll 614«&amp;-87e9.
·

F'
IHA~KFULL'{

1982 Ford 'h io~. 3 speed on
floOt', 6 cyl ., priced to sell,
81696. Call 814-949· 3093.

Antiques

For the athlete. OP Gympac
1600 fitness svatem. Call 614446-2236 after 6pm.

Trucks for Sale

1980 Datsun pickup, good
cond. Banjo &amp; Mandolin
Wanted to buy good Uled pool
t•bl•. Call 814 -388 -8437
anytime.

County Appltance. In c Good
used appliances and lV sets
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thru
Sat 614-446-1699, 627 3rd
Avo. Gallipolis, OH

Sofas and chairs pricad from
8395 to S995 Tablos $60 and
up to 8126. Hidtt-a-beds 8390
10 1595. Recliners 8226 to
8376 Lamps S28 to S125 .
Dinettes e109 and up to f'496 .
Wood tabla w-6 chairs t286 to
S796 Desk 8100 up to $376 .
Hutches $400 and up. Bunk
bed• complete w-mattreues
8295 and up toS395. Baby beds
S1 10. Mattresses or box aprtngs
full or twm S6B. firm $78. and
see. Queen sets S225, King
8360 4 drawer chest 869 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun Gas or electnc
range $376. Baby mllttresaes
$36 &amp; $46 . Bed frames 520 ,
830 &amp; Kmg frame 860. Good
aelectron of beckoom suita$,
"metal cilb1nets. heedboards $30
and up to $66 .

Greet location. Newly remodeled. 2 HR . Upstatrs, Partty
furntshed apt Uttlit1es pa1d. Call
after 3 :30PM , 614-446-1467.

Radio
Equipment

Mossburg 12 ga Deer Slayer &amp;
30" full barrels Call 614-2669315.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

--:---,-----

CB,TV,

25 inct. RCA remote TV with
large storage cabinet on top, 90
day guarantee, $600, Firm.
Uoyd 4 held remote control
VCR, $200, Firm Call 61 4·2469414
53

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

1987

1984 Ma1da. 4 spd., AM ·fM .
82799 . John ' s Auto SaleHolld..,. Inn. Kanauga -At. 7

SWAIN
AUCTION 81 FURNITURE 62
Oliv e St , Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc wood group- $399
living room suites- 8199-8699
Bunk beds with bedding- $199
Full size mattress &amp; foundation
starting- 599 . Re c l in e rs
start1ng- 899 .
USED - Beds, dressers, bedroom
auites, $199 -8299 Desks ,
wringer washer. a complete hne
of used furmture.
NEW- Western boots- !J.30 .
Workboou S1B; &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
softtoe) . Call614-446-3169 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Waahers. dryen, relrigerators1
rangea . Skaggs Appltances ,
Upper River Rd . basida Stone
Crest Motet 614-446-739B.

72

L.uulre o• furnace. 82,600
8TU . Citation gat range. rowinG
exercise machine. 304-87$788 3 or 676-3024.

52

Go v... nment Jobs. t18,040 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®b~ Larry Wright

61 Household Goods

46 Space for Rent

t&amp;9,230 vr. Now hiring. Your
aru. 805-687 -6000 Ellt. R98015 for current repo fed•al

'·

Furnished Rooms

Furn•shed room. t75 Utilit ies
paid. Shate bath. S1ngle male.
919 Seoond. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 attar 7pm.

Help Wanted

Wednesday, November 25. 1987

Middleport, Ohio

Rooms for rent , dfV. week.
m onth Gallia Hotel. Call 614446-9680. Rent a&amp; low a&amp;$ 120
month.

c... &amp;14-37 9· 27&amp;8 .

I

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

HRYVB
Y T R
Y W F

YWF

SLOT

KYXXV

H YVB

NTLJFRF

BKR

Z L R V

J L T X F

IS . -RXXY
J .
JEXNLA
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THERE'S ONLY ONE
THING MORE BRUTAL THAN A FOOTBALL GAME AND
THAT'S" THE PRICE OF THE TICKETS.

OBSCURE
I

SOURCE

.

�Page- 24- The Daily Sentinel-

Wednesday. N wt'mber 25,1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

ELBERFELDS ••••

•

EVERYONE'S FAVORITE FOR YOUR
CHRISTMAS GIFTS!!!
SALE STARTS FRIDAY, NOV-EMBER 27, 1987
OIFT SALE
MEN'S

VAN HEUSEN PAJAMAS

OIFT SALE!
MEN'~

Reg. S16.9S .... Sale 513.39
Reg. SJ7.9S .... Sale 514.39

DRESS1 SHIRTS
1

Neck sizes 14 11 to 17 11, siHv'
lengths 32 to 35 inches. Solid
colors, white, patterns, tapered
and fuller cut styles. Regular or
button down collars. ·

SPECIAL!
MEN'S

\i

WINTER JACKETS

519.00
122.00
s23.00
524.00

Regular siz11 S, M, land Xl - plus extra slz11 up
ta XXL. you'll like the siz11 and colors in our selection.

siz11 44 to 50. Season's mast popular colors. Hubbard slacks are indueled.'

$19.95
S22.95
S29. 95
$34.95

MEN'S VAN HEUSEN

If

DRESS
TROUSERS
Regular siz11 29 to 42 plus extra

SALEI

Sins M 131-401, l (42-441 and Xl 146-411. Solid
colars and stripes. Coat style top, button front, poly
cotton blends and flannels.

25°/o·OFF

Slacks •••.•.•• S15.87
Slacks ........ S18.87
Slacks ........ $23.87
Slacks ........ S27.67

Shirts ...1.. S15.30
Shirts ...... S17.79
Shirts ...... su.5o
Shirts ...... S19.30

SALE PRICES!

Gin SAUl

MEN'S

OIFT SALE

MEN'S HEAVY
WEIGHT

WESTERN SHIRTS

Authentic w•twn style ·with anap front, double yoke, anap wrrist and 2-snap flap pockets.
Sizes S, M, L and Xl plus tall sizes and bigs.
Choose poly cotton blends ar colorful plaid
flannels.

Flannel
Work
Shirts
Reg. sin S, M, l and XL

S15.95
S18.95
S22. 95
S2 4. 95

plus big and tails. Colorful plaids and solids. Excellent quality.

Western
Western
Western
Western

Shirts ..... S12.70
Shirts ..... s15.10
Shirts ..... s18.30
Shirts ..... 119.90

MEN'S

SWEATERS

lndu•s our entire stltction
pullowws, coat styles and
Yllts. lig selection of solid
colors and patterns. Regu.lar
size, bigs and tails.

Save20°/o

SALE PRICES

OIFT SALE!

SALE!

BOYS

SWEATERS

NIGHTSHIRTS

Solid colors and patterns, slipover crew nee~ styles and v11ts.
Sizes 8 to 20.

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

S11.95 Sw!!Citers ...... S9.50
S17. 9s·Sweaters .... S14.30 ·
S19.95 Sweaters .... S15.90
S22.95 Sweat~rs .... S18.30

Reg. $15.00 .... Sale 511.99
Reg. S19.00 .... Sale $15.19
Reg. S24.00 ..... Sale '19.19

i

I'

,j

I

I

I

I

'

I

I

1

I

r

I , .f
: I ~~\.~~~ ~
' !

CHRISTMAS GIFT SALE

LADIES SLEEPWEAR

Long and short gowns and robes, pajamas and baby dolls. Soft
warm fabrics in a complete range of women's sizes.
REG.

5 12.o~ To ss2.oo

SALE

$9 59

To·

$4159

FREE CHRISTMAS OIFT BOXES!

HOLIDAY

CHAIR SALE

BLANKET SALE

•ELECTRIC BLANKETS •THERMAL BLANKETS •SHEET BLANKETS

ALL R DUCED

20%

llCUNUS • SWIVU IOCIIIS • IOCK·O-lOUNGERS

.

Many beautiful and durable covers of herculon ana " ·

ion. Also 1 cood sele&lt;:tion ol vinyls.

"wbttf::21

Microwave
'[/"' Oven

·SPORTSWEAR·

Special rack of Michel, Ocean Pacific,
PanClora and Russ.
Sizes S, M, Land 8 to 16.

REG. ' 14.00 TO '54.00

~:~:ED

$9 79 $3 779.
to

FREE DEUVERY

• Easy set rotary controls with digital timer • De·
frost setting • 5·1evel variable cook power control
• Bi·Level Cooking Rack.

ROll
REG. S379.00

$29900

SAVE

sao.oo

DESK SALE

ROLLTOPS,
SECRtTARIES

•Infrared remote control
•Remote control 1-year/ 4-e·
vent programming with fluoreacent display
•111 -channal broadcast/cable
• FS tuning with Auto-Pro·
.
gramlng•
•High· apaad Search and Stop
Action (SLPI
•Compatible with RCA and au·
dio/ vidao ayatema

FROM ONLY

CHAIGl CUD

•

_ _ ..

----:-:::-t.~

~

.-- ---·

$7900 to $33500

Christ~as

Sale Pr1ce

$ 1·9 900

SALE PRICED

'0MUO' OHIO
IU4) ' " JUI

FR~E

REG. '99.00 TO '419.00

Sturcly construction, beautiful finish featuring Top Guard protective furnituri finish.
: Oak, Pine and Pecan finishes.

ffberleldr

USE OUR

OCCASIONAL TABLE SALE

A!filii Clwiltmas Glftl StiP in 111d M1 our CDiertlon of and tabl11.
coclctall t..W.. lamp taW-. ICifa !aiR •d chtirsitM ch.ts. SoMd
~ SCIIid -* 111d oak wan~ cherry, fruitwoOd and penn

PEDESTAL~

RCA Video Cassette
Recorder

Recliners ..................................... As low As $2 31
. Swivel Rockers ................:........ As low .As $183
Wall-Away Recliners ............ As low As $311

1

PARKING LOTS
........
-· ___

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY -

,. .---·. . . . ---· _. . . . _.

992-3691

j, -~~- ---

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

_-__.,

....

STORE HOURS

9:30-5:00 P.M.
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY

•

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