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Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
235

Pick 4
4661
Super Lotto

. Days until Christmas

1-5-6-26-29-40

•

en tine

at
Vol. 38, No. 140
Copyrighted 1987

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, November 27, 1987
.,

Meigs commissioners receive
Bids on a new ambulance for the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Services were received
Wednesday when the Meigs County Commissioners met In regular session.
Submitting bids were R.S.V.P., Toledo, $50,029;
Harton Co., Columbus, $50,085; Burgess Am burlance Sales, Loudenvllle, $51,495 with a second hid
of $53,450 and McClain, Anderson, Ind., $54,570.
Director of the services, Bob Byer, met with the
commlssloners and the bidders and bids were
turned over to Byer with the board of trustees to
study the bids on Dec. 2. The recommendation of

Occasional rain. Low tonight In mid 40s. Chance of
rain 90 percent tonight, Saturday.

2 Sections, 20 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

a~bulance

the 'board on the purchase will be made to the
and Roberts reported that some 22 or 23 miles of
commissioners on Dec. 9.
county roads have been striped. The commissionCommissioners accepted the, bid of Nick
ers· discussed with Roberts and Warner a
Grueser, Rutland, on a van used by litter control
truck-motorcycle accident In July on County
and no longer needed. There were two bids with · Road 3. An insurance carrier is attempting to
Grueser making the highest bid of $650.
blame the county for one-half of the damages,
Phil Roberts and Ted Warner of the county . about $1100, because of a "groove". In the
highway department met with the commissioners
road. The county will turn the claim over to its
and reported work that has been done on various
insurance carrier.
county roads. Plans are underway to widen
Following an executive session with Michael
County Road 26 near the Royal Oak Park Resort
Swisher, director of Meigs County Human
Services, the board voted to give Swisher

bids

authority to enter Into contracts including: with
Veterans Memorial Hospital to take blood
specimen for establishment of paternity; a
contract with National Paternity Lab in Dayton
fo_r blood testing, and a contract with the county
sheriff's department for child support enforcement services. All of the contracts start Jan. 1,
1988 and will be for one year.
Commissioners Richard Jones, David Koblentz, and Manning Roush were present along
with Clerk Mary Hobstetter.

Meigs Local teachers file suit

KICK OFF - Rev. Michael Panglo, left, and
Rev. Lee Miller on behalf of the Meigs County
Ministerial Association are kicking off a program
to provide a warmer winter for the underprlvl-

Michael Wilford, president, on
behalf of the Meigs Local
Teachers Association has filed
suit In the Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against the Meigs
Local School District Board of
Education and Jay Fry, treasurer of the district.
Wllfoog charges that the Board
of Education decided and the
treasurer implemented the decision to refuse to make regular
salary payment to the teachers
due on Nov. 27 and decided also to
dock one day of pay for the last
paycheck issued to the Meigs
Local Teachers.
Wilford charges that at all
times herein relevant, the defendant has been ·a party to a
collective bargaining agreement
with the Meigs Local Teachers
Assn. The collective bargaining
agreement expired by its terms
on Aug. 31, 1987 but was by
mutual agreement extended to
Oct. 23, 2987. I'ncluded In the
collective bargaining agreement, Wilfong charges, was a
provision which called for the
payment of annual salary in 26
equal payments.
Wilfong says that on Nov. 20.
the defendants Informed the
plaintiffs that their intention was
not to make the next regular
payroll to the Meigs Local

leged of Meigs County. Rev. Panglo Is placement
coordinator, and Rev. Miller Is general chairman
of the drive through which coats, scarves, hats,
caps, gloves and blankets will be collected. (See
story on Page 9).

'

Teachers but that they did Intend
to make a regular payroll payment to all other employees
regardness of wbether they were
working or not because of the
closure of school by the defendant. Wilfong says that In the
previous checks Issued Nov. 13,
1987, the defendants improperly
docked one day's pay from each
teacher.
The plaintiff states that all
teachers have earned sufficient
sums so that the defendants are
holding in escrow salary earned
in the amount sufficient to make
the next regular payment for all
teachers.
Wilfong also charged that the
regularly scheduled payroll
scheduled for Nov. 27, today, was
to have been made on Wednesday, Nov. 25 because Thursday .
and Friday were regularly scheduled holidays.
Judge Charles Knight issued a
temporary restraining order ordering the defendants to make
the regular salary pay.roll payment to the Meigs Local
Teachers for "so long as there
are funds earned and held In
escrow in the amount sufficient
to make payment."
Judge Knight's decision says,
the "Court finds that there is
sufficient likelihood of success on

the merits by the plaintiffs and
that the defendants were improperly withhholding monies previously earn~?d by the Meigs
Local Teachers which were held
pursuant to an escrow· agreement In the previous collective
bargaining contract of the
parties."
Actions towards reopening
Meigs Local Schools were taken
when the Meigs Local School
District Board of Education met
in special session Wednesday
evening.
The board passed an action
authorizing the administration of
the district to take necessary
steps to open schools which have
been closed since Nov. 6 when
teachers went on strike. There
was no date set for the attempts
to reopen the schools, the board
deciding that the date will be set
later.
In another action, the board
passed a resolution authorizing
the payment of $125 a day for
,substitut teachefs during the
strike period. Substitute
teachers now get $50 a day.
Tile board passed another
resolution agreeing to · continue
with extra curricular activities
during the strike as long as
coaches and sponsors are willing
Continued on page 9

Kentucky denies PyroChem incinerator try
By MATT ROBERTSON
OVP Staff
Tile Kentucky Division of
Waste Management lias announced a preliminary decision
to deny-an application by PyroChem Inc. to build a hazardous ·
waste Incinerator in Lawrence
County, Kentucky officials confirmed this week.
"The Kentucky experience
should raise more concern," said
Congresman Bob Wise, referring
to PyroChem, Inc.'s current
application in West Virginia to
build a hazardous waste incinerator In Mason County.
''The main Issue ls tile background of this particular applicant," Wise said, adding that
Kentucky officials are allowed
by law to examine that aspect of
an application, while West Virginia currently does not require
that standard.

The division based its decision
on two Issues, one of tllem a
conflict between ~he application
and a local zoning ordinance,
Brack Marquette, spokesman for
the · Kentucky Cabinet for Natural Resources, said In a published report Thursday.
He added that tlledivis!onclted
the past performance of PyroChem President James Nee!
when he headed a company that
managed and attempted to
"abandon" a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility In
Sheffield, Ill. Botll issues are
pending In court.
PyroChem Inc. has a proposal
pending before the West Virginia
Air Pollution Control Commission and West Virginia Department of Natural Resources and
the denial . of the Kentucky
application will not help It any,
said Paul Washington of the

The decision in Kentucky Is not
Wallace had traveled to Mason
tl!is for over five years," said
DNR chief Ron Potesta in a County previously to meet with final, officials there said.
''This is a preliminary decision
published report. "We were very MACE and other West Virginia
·
,
so
the opportunity for comment
environmental
groups
and
had
interested in everything Kenis
open
as of early next week.
echoed
the
same
sentiment.
tucky had gathered," Potesta
That
is
very
much according to
Nee!
was
quoted
in
the
Charlessaid.
wllat
the
law
maps out." Marton
report
as
saying
PyroChem
Nee! said he expected the
quette
said
.
.
Inc's
"constitutional
right"
was
Kentucky decision to have no
A public hearing will be Feb. 4
impact on the West Virginia trampled by the Kentucky invesat
the Lawrence County Courtapplication, In that published tigation and called the prelimihouse
In Louisa, Ky. The Cabinet
report. Nee! was not available for nary denial in that report "a
comment Friday morning, nor politically motivated decision." for Natural Resources should
Tllose comments disturbed make its decision In April,
was PyroChem rnc. spokeswoman He lena Hoi t. In the pub- Wise, who has been monitoring according to Marquette.
lished report which appeared In a the Kentucky process as It has
SO
Charleston newspaper Thurs- regarded PyroChem : Inc.'s application
there.
day, Patty Wallace of the Law"Neel's complaining about the
By United Press International
rence County Concerned citiKentucky
process; well that't the
At least nine people, Including
zens, a group critical of
PyroChem, Inc. was quoted as same as West Virginia's pro- ·an elderly woman and . her
saying, "This sends a strong cess," Wise said in referring to. daughter-in-law, were killed in
message to everyone in Ken- both states' ·public llearing pro- accidents on Ohio roadways
tucky and West Virginia that we cess. "They (PyroChem, Inc.) during the first 35 hours of the 4 r.;
don't want him," referring to seemed happy enough to come to day Thanksgiving holiday
West Virginia," Wise said .
weekend.
Nee!.

Mason Association for a Clean
Environment.
"I tlllnk tills will help us
(MACE) because it is a black
mark against PyroChem
(Inc.)," Washington said. "The
letters we received from (U ..S.
Sen. Jay) Rockefeller and Wise
asked the DNR to look at the past
record of Nee! and PyroChem
(Inc.). Our concern is not an
environmental problem as much
as It Is with management," he
said.
He said MACE is concerned,
with both.
·
Washington said he was glad to
see tile application denied. "It
just goes to prove we'r.e.not out
here saying something that Isn 't
true, there is some truth there,"
he said. "They (Kentucky)
reached the same conclusion that
we did."
"Kentucky's been looking at·'

Nine die

Ohio stores open for holiday rush
"I anticipate that we will have
By United Press-International
an excellent sa,les day, whicll will
The sounds of jIngle bells
result In an Increase In sales over
mingled with cash registers as
shoppers converged on stores in . last year," said Waina.
Ohio for the b!ggestshoppingday .
He said sales help has been
increased and hours have been
of t lie year.
extended at the mall's 200 stores,
Some stores opened as early as
five of which are major depart1,.11.m ., but others opened at more
ment stores.
tfadltional hours.
Kathy Gaston, marketing diTile Downtown,Business Council predicted Christmas sales in
rector for the newly opened
Scarborough Mall on the far east
Cleveland's downtown--retail disside of Columbus, said shoppers
trict this year will Increase 5
percent
over last year.
were waiting at the doors wllen
the mall stores opened at 9 a.m.
"I think tllat planning for the
We're excited," Gaston said of
Christmas season each year gets
her first holiday season at tile
better," S!!id the council's presimall. "Santa arrives In a 19tll
dent Bruce Campbell. "And
century Circus wagon pulled by
economic conditions in Cleve18 Percheron horses and we've
land are stronger than they were
last year."
got quite a crowd for that.
"We've got good quality merMost stores opened a llttie
earlier than usual, but some
chandise, good t&gt;rices, we've got
what they want," she said, · Ohioans goC a jump on their
holiday sllopplng by touring the
addi!lg soine stores were running
2-for-1 sales.
a!sles 'Thursday while the turke~
roasted.
·
Delmis Wa!na, genera'! man"We're busy, as busy as any
ager of Randall Park Mallin the
weekday," said a customer serdeveland suburb of North Randall, said cash registers at Ohio's
vice representative at a Meijer's
'largest shopping mall were as
store In Columbus who did not
active as they were last year on
wish to give his name. "I'm
the day -after Thanksgiving.
surprised ·to be this busy on a
.ho]lday."

•

'\

Christmas events begin Sunday

The hottest selling item for .the
day - toys, he said, not any
particular toy, just toys in
general.
The same story was told at a.
Gold Circle.
"We have been pretty busy,
especially tile first part of the
morning when we were real
busy," said a spokesman at a
Gold Circle Discount Store In the
Cleveland suburb of Parma.
"We're stock~ with mostly
everything, but we'll be receiving items right up through
Christmas ."
Tile store had a toy promotion
for Thanksgiving Day, and the
hottest selling Items In the store
seemed to be toys.
As for three Cooks store - two
in Lima and the one In Wauseon
- this Christmas season Is the
last for them.
Cooks, one of Ollio's largest
retail chains five years ago wltll
100 stores In 11 states,ls going out
of business and plans to close Its
final tllree stores at the end of tile
year.
Those three remaining Cooks
stores are planning end-ofbusiness sales as well as Christmas sales.
__,

_____

far

Pomeroy and Middleport will welcome the
Christmas holl!lay season on Sunday.
The Pomeroy and Middleport Chambers of
Commerce will stage a parade In both towns on
Sunday. ·
Une up of the parade units will be at 12:30 p.m.
Sunday In Middleport and the parade will move'
through Middleport at 1 p.m. At Sears, the par,ade
will disband and reform behind the Pomeroy Fire
Department on Butternut Avenue before moving
through Pomeroy at 2 p.m. Court St. In Pomeroy
will not be closed to traffic as announced earlier.
Any Individual, group or organization wishing

to participate In the parade but unable to register
earlier should report to the starting point at the
designated time.
·
Radio WMPO will be doing a live remote from
Main St. in Pomeroy and trophies wiD be awarded
following the paradde. Santa will be at the
mini-park In Pomeroy to visit with children or at
Pomeroy Village Hallin case of rain.
Many merchants In both towns will be open
Sunday and will be holding open house In addition
to offering special prices on merchandise to
encourage hometown shopping.

Sheriff probes two recent B&amp;Es
Two break!ngs arid enterlngs
botll occurring just after mid·
nlgllt Friday morning are under
investigation by the Department
of Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank.
Sheriff Frank reported that at
Carpenter's Grocery at Langsville, someone entered by a side ·
door, was scared off when
officers arriVed and ran Into the
woods behind the store. The only
thing found · missing was
cigarettes.

_______

.;.___

'

-

About the same time a doublewide house on Hampton Hollow
Road In Salem Township owned
by James A. Snyder was broken
into and two 22 pistols were
taken. No one was at home at the
time.
Sheriff Frank reports that the
department does have a suspect
which they believe was involved
in both breaklngs and enterlngs .
'At 3:00 a.m. Friday morning,
Brian Keith Bowling, 26, was
arrested and lodged in the Meigs.
County jail on a charge of

resisting arrest and disorderly
conduct. Bowling was alledgedly
intoxicated and was causing a
disturbance on the parking lot at
The Cove on Route 7.
Reported Wednesday was a
breaking and entering at a house
on State Route 124 with a VCR
and some money being taken.
Entrance to tile house was gained
through a basement door and the
incident remains under investigation. No name was released by
the Sheriff's Department due to
the hospitallza tion of the owner.
J

�•
The Daily

Commentary

''

Meigs girls top Southern cagers, 59-35

Page-2-The Daily Senti~el
Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiO
Friday, November 27, 1987

'Carlucci
may
have
abused
system
The Daily Sentinel
By Jack Anderson and Dale Van A tta
111 Court Street

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

rs~lb
m~
~v

rT'"'---1 ,__-,-, ~ dtF==I

.

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher;Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager ,

A MEMBER of The Associated Press; lnbwd Dally PresS Ass~
clatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETIERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less lhan 300
words long. All letters are subject to editing and must be signed with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be pub·
lis bed. Letters should be in good taste, addressing Issues, not personali·

lies.

'

Reagap expected to
pardon Poindexter, "North
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON !UP!) - Ali the betting in Washington is that
President Reagan will eventually pardon Adm. John Poindexter and
Lt. CoL Oliver North, masterminds of the clandestine arms-to-Iran
deal with sales profits going to the Ni'caraguan Contras.
Reagan has said in the past it is not "appropriate" to discuss
pardons. However. more recently he has said, "This is a subjectthat I
have not and will not discuss at this time," and what comes through in
all of his comments, as well as statements by White House spokesman
Marlin Fitzwater, Is that pardons have not been ruled out.
The president believes it would be premature to project the fate of
Poindexter and North, particularly since special prosecutor
Lawrence Walsh has not yet completed the presentation of evidence
to the federal grand jury,
Since he cannot run for re-election again, Reagan will not suffer the
post-Watergate fate of President Gerald Ford who lost his bid for the
White House in the 1976 elections after granting his predecessor,
Rlcpard Nixon. a pardon a month after Nixon's resignation,
The action was not acceptable io the electorate, and the taint of the
Watergate scandal had not disappeared when Ford moved
precipitously to give clemency to Nixon, who had not been indicted
but was named as an unindicted co-conspirator.
The special congressional investigating committee has held that
Reagan is ultimately responsible for what transpired In the
Iran-Contra scandal, and it said that If he didn 't know what was going
on, he should have. Reagan said he did not know aboutthe diversion of
funds to the Contras, and the investigators found no proof otherwise.
Despite ail the revelations in the dramatic hearings and in the
panel's 700-page report , including the usurpation of presiden·ttal
power , the bypassing of Congress and writing of deceptive reports to
Congress, the president says he knows of no Jaw that has been broken .
Some of the profits from the arms sales to Iran also wound up in the
hands of international arms profiteers.
Under immunity, both Poindexter and North described in detail the
burning and shredding of hundred s of official documents after a
government inquiry was under way.
'
With headlines focused on the upcoming superpower summit , the
newly concluded high-level negotiations on the nation 's budget deficit
and las t month's stock market crash, the president so far has been
able to avoid any persona I in-depth response to the report.
Ail·he has sa id of the panel's conclusions faulting him with failing
''to take care that the law reigned supreme'' was that: "Maybe they
labored and brought forth a mou se."
Time is on hi s-side, and the contro ll ing of access by reporters to the
president has afforded him the possibility of escaping direct
comment on the report He begged off during his announcement of the
deficit reduction compromise reached by White House a nd
congressional negotiators.
. The fact that two military men were able to promote private
American fore ign policy- Reagan's perogative- and to secretly
make arms deals and negotiate with -13 foreign countries, a t)ead of
state, some of that unbeknownst to him and he has yet to condemn
them gives one pause.
Civilia n rule is a prerequisite of American democraty . In many it is ·
unique but even George Washington, a general himself, who bad
served in the Virginia Assembly, bowed to its superiority over his
command.
The report quoted Justice Louis Brandeis as saying 50 years ago
that, ''If the governmen t becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt
for the law,, it leads to men taking the law in their own hands. It leads
to anarchy .''

There is speculation that Reagan may wait until after Walsh acts
one way or another, or the president may wait until his last days in the
White House to give pardons to North, the man he called a "national
hero" the da y he fired him, and Poindexter, who told th e world, ·'The
buck stops here," borrowing Truman's fa mou s motto for presidents .
By that time, Reagan wou ld not expect any national outrage and It
could all be in the spirit of magnanimity . Filzwater says the president
has received many letters urging him to pardon the two former
national security ai des. One such pleader is former Interior
Secretary Will iam Cl ark, who also served as Reagan's national
security advi ser a nd has been over a span of many years his close
confidante. ·
'
The president's conserva ti ve constituency, which has long pushed
the Contra cause, also wants North and Poindexter to be pardoned.
So mos t of the betting now is not whether Reagan will give the
pardons, but when.

•

Today m history
By Uhited Press International
Today is Friday , Nov. 27, the 331st day of 1987 with 34 to follow.
The moon is in its lirst quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Mercury, Jupiter and Saturn.
, Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
inc lude Anders Celsius, Swedish astronomer and inventor of the
centigrade thermometer , in 1701; American historian Charles Beard
and Israeli statesman Chaim Weizmann In 1874, and rock guitarist
Jimi Hendrix in 194,2.
On this date in his tory:
In 1901, the War Department authorized creation of the Army War
College to Instruct commissioned officers. It was built Leavenworth,
Kin .
In 1945, ,President H11-rry Truman named Gen . George Marshall his
special representative to China.
In 1956, President Dwight Eisenhower denied that differences over
the Suez Canal had weakened American-British-French accord In the
WiStern alliance-'
·
fn 1970, a man with a lmlfe attempted to injure Pope Paul VI at
Manila Airport in the Philippines.
--~

A thought for the day: Chaim Weizman n sa id, " Difflculi things take
a long time, the Impossible takes a little longer."

WASHINGTON - Now is the
and Budget, and undersecretary
time for us to tell a story we have
of the Department of Health,
b en sitting on for more than 12
Education and Welfare. In De·
years. It concerns Frank Car·
cember 1974, Carlucci's success
Iucci, President Reaga~J,'s na·
was capped when President Ford
tiona! security adviser and his · named him ambassador to
choice to replace Caspar Weln·
Portugal.
berger as defense secretary.
Over the years, Car lucci had
The story Involves Carlucci's
earned a reputation for Integrity,
personal values.- his character,
toughness a personal courage.
if you will. We have not been
Indeed, hesurvlv edastabblngas
caugilt up in the fever of moral
he was rescuing a group of
one-upmanship that has become Americans from an angry mob in
so politically trendy of late, but
the Congo (now Zaire),
we believe the story casts peril·
For ali his profess·lonal
nent light on Carlucci's attitude achievemen ts Carlucci's private
toward.the unwritten rules of the life was far from serene. By 1974,
bureaucratic system he has he was legally separated from
mas tered over the years. Here hi s wife and · was getting a
are the details:
divorce. Meanwhile, he had
By the mld·1970s, Car lucci had developed a close personal rela·
risen through the ranks of the tionshlp with an adminstrative
career Foreign Service, been assista nt he worked with at
director of the Office of Eco· HEW, Marcia Myers.
nomic Opportunity, deputy direc·
According to several sources.
tor of the O!!ice~o~f;;:~::~~~C~a~r:lu~c~ccl took Myers along when

IF H~ RE:AcH£5
FoR THE" cHEck , I'LL SA'I,
~~

No, LET ME," BUT I'LL
LET HIM TAKE IT...

he reported to Lisbon as amllassador t, January · 1975. She
became'\his special aass istarlt,
with the rank of Foreign Service
Reserve Officer, Grade 4. One of
our sources said Lisbon embassy
employees wer-e quite upset,
because Myers' appointment
"took a job from someone."
Another source told us at the time
that the embassy "had to shift
people atou.n d'' to make room for
Myers , arid "an assistant admin·
stratlve officer (was) tossed
out"

There were misgivings of a
different sort back In Washing·
ton, where State Department
officials feared the Portuguese,
among t)le most conservative
Catholics in Europe, would be
upset by the arrangement be·
tween Carlucci and his female
assistant.
Our sources. said concern was
so great in Foggy Bottom that

-------.........,:
IF HE oFFERS

FIRST, I'Ll PRoTEST
.v-JE"At&lt;L'l, THEN HE'LL ....

0
a

(j

n

senior officials asked then· ·
Secretary of State Henry Kissin·
ger to Intervene. One well-placed
source said Kissinger had at
least one conversation with Car·
Iucci about the situation.
Several months after he took
up his post In Lisbon, Carlucci's
divorce became finaL Ffe and
. Myers were married on Apri115,
1976.
Why didn't we publish this
story when we first nailed it down
in 1975? Just as we were about to,
we received urgent telephone
calls from two high government
officials whom we knew and
trusted. Tbey pleaded with us not
to send out the story, on the
grounds [ hat Carlucci's first wife
and their two children, already
traumatized by the separation
and divorce proceedings, would
suffer additional emotional
distress.
Our callers provi!)ed sufficient
detail to convince us to sit on the
story.
So we elected to sit on the story.
Carlucci has since gone on to
serve with distinction as deputy
director of the CIA, deputy
defense secretary and national
security adviser,
We believe, however, that the
manner In which professional
Foreign Service employees were
shunted around, so that Carluc·
cl' s friend could get a job that
others worked hard for, deserves
to be aired as he takes over the
biggest bureaucracy In the

13 POINT BUCK- Mike Johnson, Route 7, Pomeroy, killed this
L3 point buck with a bow and arrow. Over the years hunting in Ohio,

W. Va. and Ontario, he has killed 23 deer and four bears with his
bow and arrow. This will be his second trophy entered in tu the
Pope and Young Record Book, he reports

Scoreboard ...
NFL results
By Unltt• d l'rf'.1is Intf'rnatltlnal
~ATIONAL

FOOTBALL LEAGUE
,\merle an Conlen•nl'l'
Ea11l

~0

·NEW YORK (NEA) - New
York Yankees principal owner
George M. Steinbrenner III,
whom many people in this city
love to hate, avoided much of the
opprobrium this fail that usually
accompaples his temperam ental
change of the baseball team's
manager.
The announcement of his latest
switch was thoroughly obscured
on the samP day - the most
severe one-day stock market
plunge in history.
Steinbrenner apparently didn't
plan that coincidence, but It
certain ly benefited him by avertin g further conjecture about the
extent to which the managerial
changes reflect Steinbrenner's
arrogance , insecurit y or both.
A compulsive over achiever
who equates losing with weakness, Steinbrenner long has
engaged in a

vain ~

quest for a

championship team. The mos t
notable product of that fr ustration is his record of 14 manage·
ria l dismissals in the 15 years he
has controlled the Yankees.
That, of course, has oniyu
demoralized a 1he baseball club.

since assuming control of the

Yankees in 1973:
January 1974: Bill V!rdon hired
to replace Ralph Houk.
August 1975: Virdon fired,
BillyMartin hired.
July 1978: Martin resigned
under [ire, Bob Lemon hired.
July 1979: Lemon fired, Ma r tin
hi red.
October 1979: Martin fired,
Dick Howser hired.
November 1980 : Howser
"fired," Gene Michael hired . .
September 1981: Michael fired,
Lemon hired.
April 1982: Lemon fired , Mi·
chael hired .
August 1982: Michael fired,
Clyde King hired .
January 1983: King fired, Martin hired.

Footnote: In a 1981 interview
with out associate Dale VanAtta,
Carlucci confirmed that Myers.
had accompanied him to Portu·
gal. But he said he had not
Insisted that she be given a job at
the embassy. Carlucci's spokes·
men did not respond to our recent
requests for comment and for a
chance to speak with Mrs.
Carlucci. Kissinger told us he
can't remember the incident
and, because he can't, he doubts
that it happened .

December 1983: Martin fired, butlons of $142,000 in corporate
funds to the campaigns of Repub·
Yogi Berra hired .
April 1985: Berra fired, Mart in iican President Nixon. and sev·
era! Democrati'l§enators.
hired.
Much of the money was "!ann·
October 1985: Martin !Ired,
dered"
by transferring It from
Lou Plnieiia hired .
the
company
treasury to Stein·
October 1987: Pinieiia rebrenner's
employees.
They were
moved, Martin hired.
Thus, Steinbrenner and Martin given phony bonuses or !raudu·
are together again for the fifth lent expense reimbursements,
time, a reunion that reminded then di rected to make ostensibly
one sports columnist of Sen. Sam perso nal donations to the
Nunn' s observation about the politicians.
During the subsequent federal
political leadership In Iran:
"They're generally insane ex· Investigation, the indictment
cept for those occasional lucid charged, Steinbrenner presured·
moments when they're merely his employees to lie to both FBI
agents and the grand jury.
stupid."
Most of the counts eventually
Steinbren)ler's penchant for
were dismissed as- part of a plea
abusing his employees hardly is
bargain arrangement In which
confined to the Yankee.§,, In 1974,
a federal grand jury In "Cleveland Steinbrenner pleaded guilty to
returned a 14-count felony indict· two charges - one of which
ment against him that alleged a Involved attempting to "in!lu·
disturbing pattern of behavior in ence and intimidate" his subordl·
nat es "Into giving this false
the early 1970s, when he was
chairman of the American Ship explanation" to the grand jury.
What kind of man would
Building Co.
Steinbrenner was accu~ed of · engage in such actions? Stein·
brenner him self has answered
engaging In an Illegal conspiracy
and of obstructing justice In
that ques tion: "I would describe
myself as a difficult personality
connection with unlawful contri-

a recession.

Only the steady progres s toward a summit with Mikhail
Gorbachev , for the signing of an
INF treaty, has shown President
Reagan in a favorable light And
even that achievement has been
denounces by many of the
president's own conservative
supporters as a sellout to the left.
, In view Of a ll this, one might
expect to find the Democratic
party gravely preparing ij~~f to
assume executive responsjblity
in January 1989, and meanwhile
choos ing with care both its issues
and its style.
Instead, the Senate Democrats
howled down the nomination of a
truly distinguiShed jurist to the
sustained~ in just over a· year, two
Supreme Court by means of
heavy blows: Democratic recap- tactics that the Washington cor·
ture of , the Senate by virtue of respondent of London's Specta· ..
narrow victories in half a dozen tor described to his British
close contests, and the long readers as "sickening"; the
agony of the Iran/ contra controv- Democrats in control of the
ersy. (Not even the recer.t Governing Council of the Amerl·
release of the Investigative com- can Physical Society so mlsre·
' mil tee's report will mark the end presented the findings of an APS
of that episode: The indictments study group concerning SDI that
of CoL Oliver North, Adm. John twelve of the 17 members of the
Poindexter and others still lie study group filed a written
'
ahead.)
protest; and the Democratic·
Nor ha ve recent mon t hs speaker of the House entered Into
treated Reagan much better . The private negotiations with the
economy has held up remarkably president of Nicaragua, glibly
well, but It remains to be seen promising t.o teli the secretary of
whether the Oct. 19 crash was stale ali about it later. What
merely a healthy correctio n in an accounts for this weird amalgam
overpriced stock market or pres- of bitterness, dishonesty and

~

0

.5110 IHI 23~

~

5 0

.IW!O 193 16..

Mhm1l
Nt•w En ~;land
NV ,feb

5ii

3' '0

.IW!O 1!10 191

5 ~ II
ft•ntnil
7 ~ (I

.Sil O 'l:U !03

.$00

':s ' '
ti

1 II

0

j

'l:G~

225

.1011 '!711 1311
,600 :l3t '!~l:l
.600 ':111 '!II
170 216

.:wo

S1tn Dlt•Ku

X 2 II

.1100 U!i U19

S4•uttlf'

; ,1 0
&amp; !! I

.700 266 IKI

Denver
LA R~tld''"'

3

7 0

.G.'IO e!l2 206
.300 'WO 2011

KanSII.s City
2 9 0 .111~
Natlonltl Conft&gt;ren~· e:
F..ust
WII.Shington
7 !! I) :roo
Dallwi
.f711
Phlladclphlu
" 6 0 .100
St. Luuls
• • 0 .:100
N\' (.ilant ~
:1 7 n .:100
Cl•nlral

.

' '

\

Chl ca~n

11
1

1\-flnnt·~ola

.J

Green &amp;.t·
Tumpu Bay
J&gt;totroll

n

2

0
:1 I
~

'9 n
~'
0

m

JOII

250 1112

ztiO 266
\!1M \!64

tl7 25-1
11-1

'~25

.110 0 '!"76

no

.63 6 26 1 !-Ill

.no

111:1 191
.-100 219 'l416
. I ~! '~' ao~

We,.t
San tran .
II ~ 0 .1100 27-1 '!HI
Nt•w Orh' ans
; :1 JJ .100 260
LA Hams •
:J j 0 .300 191 '!4i5
Atlant&lt;t
2 M 0
.20 11 IU '!9.1
Thursda}''s RPsuh s
KansaN C ity 'n Del mil :!0
1\tlnnl•suta 1-1, Oalhi .~ 311
Sunday':. Giiml's
Cincinnati at N'\' .J..ts, I p.m .
Orf'rn Ra)' at ( 'htcu~to, 1 p.m .
llouston Jll In dlanapolh; , I. p.m .

m

Miami ui 'Buftalo, I p.m .
Nrw Orlf"ansull'llt"huq.;h. 1 p.m.
l'IIUadt•lphla at Nt•w t.:nl(land, 1 p .m .
St. Luul!; al ,\lluntn , I p.m .
Nl' Giants al WashiAKion , -1 p. m .
Dt&gt;nvt'r at Sun Dlt'l(o, IJMU ,

Tampo. Buy altA Ram.~. 4 p.m.
nr,·t'land at Sun Fr~&amp;ndN.:u, Mp.m .
Monday ·~

LA

outright contempt?
(correctly) that there are none:
The answer lies, I believe, in a that the old Democratic formula
look at the present condition of for snake oil - taxing and
the Democratic Party. Having sp~ ndtng -Is ali It has to peddle,
lost four of the last five preslden· and that the current popularity of
tial elections and spent several that ancient nos trum Is, to put It
years In a fruitless search for · gently, debatabl e.
"new ideas, " it has concluded

Berry's World

Gamt•

at S..~&amp;t!IP, 9 p.m.
Sunda,,., llfoc. 6

ltuld e r~

l'hllad ~&gt; lphiu. at N\' c:tant!;, I 11.111.
Atlnntullll&gt;aiLas, 1 p .m.
lndlanapoll~ at C'h•yt&gt;ht nd , I p. m .

l'o\nt~

ti. ,\uht~rn t~- 1 - I J

, ;. Luulshma !'it . 1!1-1 -11

7111 '!
li!!1

:l5M I
U-1 !I
~ll

:I~

II
!1. So ulh C'urolina (M·t)

IlL urt.A cs-tt

11 . Nutn• IJitnu• (II·~ )

n

!UI I~
"!117 ;\
~2'!

10M M
I :1. {'lt•msun ( 9-2)
1,1. Sntltlll'rn ( 'al (~· 3)
96 Ill
117 u
l :i. Tt • .\:a~ A&amp;M tM-'l)
IIi. T1 •nJll•~st'l' ( l'l --.! -1)
6M l:i
17. (:t•u rxin (7-:1)
-19 Hi
IK. l'('nn Stall' 1!i-:l t
:J:i l .
!I'! li
1!1. l'ltt:o.hurJh c~:l)
·~ 11. Indiana ( 11-31
:!~ l
l ·UIIraulwd
Oth1•rs rt•ct&gt; h• in~: \lltt•'i: ,\lahauH&amp; ,
\rkun ...:t .~. tlurid :t, lml'!l , S1ill .ln st· :o\Ullt·,
Tt·~us, \\',\'umlng .
1 MIS.f,jiON, Kan. (UPI ) - Thl' top -eo
II'IUilloi ih th1• rJnal . 1!1111 N(',\ ,\ I)Jvi~JOn ) .
,\ ,\ luutb:dl pDII, conduc\1'11 hy the
Dl vl.. lnn J.,, ,\ l''noth all {,' ommlltet: a nd ·
r.·l~· ~tM•d 1'1und~t.¥ , with tom! points ( llrstpha l-.. \"Oil'S In parl•nthl'S{'S):
Sl; hool
Points
l . ll o lyCr oss(Ma.~ts)l ll - 0)111
KO
2. ,\pJJUiadtlan Slat~· (NCJ {!).'!)

"

:1. Northel\.'lll.oubhma (&amp;.21

"

I. Norlh1·rn luw:1 (~·:.1)
~- Idaho U1·2)
ti . (~f'org-ht Southern (11·3)
7. F.u111t•rn Ken l04' ky {II·'.?)
II . ,faml'li Madis on (Val (9-'.!)
9. ,fal•kson Stall' ( Miss. 1 (11-Z· I 1
10. "'t'her Stalf' (utah) ( 9-~)
II. \\'estern Kentucky ( 7-3 )
It ArkanSils Stall' (1·3-11

""

60

"
""

;jJ

MaliK' (~~)

1-1. MarshaiiiW.Va.J n,~l
15. \'OWI~IIll,wn Slalt• {OIIio) (11·:1)

H
'

Pairings
C 'l)t.l ' MUl 1 ~.

Uhiu (' 1' 1)- l 'alri u"~ fur
\Ill' Ill! In Ill ~ It ."'l·huul t\tllll"llt• ,\ ...,..u•l:ttion
I~H!7 .,, ,,1, : M·rnlllual ft&gt;1&gt;lh ul l ph1y"rt~ :
111 \'l~iun I
( "hwlnn:•l i l'rl no·o·tun 1111-11 ' ' 1\un
tlu ~k_,, t Jlt·"!J at Day tun \\l•h 'nnw ..,;1 ;1·
dhu n . I ;:IIIJI.m. Sat urd 1&amp;y
Tull' do \\ hil1U1' r t il -It \~ lln :1r!lman
( 1'!-II J a l ,\kr ~t n Huhtw•r 1\ul'o l i p. m .
Sttturda.\
Final .. : Uo•o·. ~. j p.m . Ohin Stadium .
( 'nit till 11111&gt;
nl\· l~iun II
Kl'lll 'r lnt:: ,\ H1•r (H-!1) ,. ~ Sto•ulwll\'illt•
1 11 · 11.. .11 Clhiu St:ltllum . Cu lmnlm ~. l :.lll

C'lo•\ l' lmullk nt•dh-tilu• t !f·!l '" · .\k r un
Hul'ltll'l jlll· l ), at .\krun l{uhho•r litH\ I,
i ::l!i Jl.ut . Frldn.L
t'h~;tl~ : lh·~- - I. I f&gt;.IH .. Uf\lct Stadium .
t ' ulumhu ~
Ui\· l~lnn Ill
( "hwlnnatl fo'ur~··t l':&amp;rk 1 i ~ ll1 \.,
Thunn•lllo• S twr ldan I 1 ~- 111 . ,\\ l~a .,' ltm
Wt•it'IIIIW :olt:uliu m, i : :\11 ]&gt;.111 . l' rhlu.~
t".j,' rl tl f'uthullo • IA ·:IJ \ ':0. \ 'oun\.,""IUWII
~11111111'.\' ( I ll- I ).a t IWro•tt Fin nit• Sltulhun.
i : :m ,,_m. Friday .
f'lnal~ - 1),,,._ li, II :t.tll .. Uhlulitll.dhuH ,

f "tt lm uhu~

l)h b ltm 1\"
\ ' l' r Slllllt •,o. ( HI-'l l \' ~ ( 'ulumhu~
,\+ '!Hknt)"
t 1'!-llJ. at Oltio .' lt;tdhun .
( 'uhun hu,o., II : :JO ll.m ..'I til urda ~·
,\n•hhuhl l 1 ·~ - 0) \'S Gttlt•,; Mlllll i1wko•n
t 11 · 1), ut Ilt •n •. 1 l''lnnl•· Studlnm. ; Jl -111 .
Sut n rda_\'.
.
l&lt;.' lnaJ,. ; lh•1·. I. 1::1!1 11,11\ ., Ohlll
Uh'i ~ ~~n \ '

11'!· 11 ). at Tt~li' tlll fii;~"ll tlnl'o l, l : lll 11.111,
~:tturda,·

p.m .,

'.!0

"
12

NBA results

8uflaJn al I.A Kltidt'n , ~ p.rn .
( ' 1•1~ - uKo all\11 noosoh\, II. p.m .
l\lnnday , llt&lt;c , l
NV .lf'l.• at Mia mi, 9 p ,m .

'!::Ill

""
"

31

'

Pitl.~IIIHJCh ,

l"l1m1:-o:
llt'l'. ,;,
!'ladlmn·, C"i&gt;llllll lnh

•

Oklahum:t Stalt• t9· ~ ·,

\!0. Ot•law.arf'State ("1' -:1) ,

I p.m.
WMhlnldon at St. Louis, I p.m.
Tampu Ray 111 Nl'w Orl('a ns, f p. m .
Nt' W En ~eland at Dt•m·cr, •I p.m .

l

HI

M..'\lldtiMall Sial;&gt; (M-'!·1)

San 1&gt;11 · ~ at" llnu"'-on , 1 Jl.m .
-'iu n Frand~co :tt C.ln•l' n Buy, 1 p.m .

Kan!ilt.., fltyat t "tnrinnall, I p.m .

Ill

~

i\iii

LA lh.n1!; at Dt•trolt. I p.m.
H1~.11. ttk•

!I

&amp;1 -1 I

16. North Texas Sta ll ' 1 ~-~1
11. Rh•hmund ( \ 'a. ) (7·~1
111. lloward IDCJ (9-1 l
lB. Sam llou.'ill)n State ( 1'1' \II~)(K·3)

\lldd] I'IU ~" II f 't'llllkk (!J--:{) , .., ~1'\t.arti
I ';tt '"' 111 · ( 1'!-lll . ut Ultlu ~I allium, ('ulmu
hu .~. :l ,~.m . Sal urd .1y
lh'•h•hm; , ft'ffl'r-.t~n 11'!-0t \., ~loxmluro •

~

Tt•1trn
I. Oklahlllmt I IXJ III ·Ot
'! . Miami ('!J ( r..OJ
;1. norldu 1\lah· C!H J
I. Sl ntt' ll""' I 11-11)
~. N\'llra:o.ktt (!H J

U.

Sl:~dlum , ('olu mhu ~

VINCENT, YOU ·
WOULDN'T BELIEVE
WHAT HAPPENED!

Nt:\\' \'OKK ( tl'l )- Th~· l lnitt•d Pr1•!;s
lnh•rrml.lttttHI Um1rd ol (' o twlw~· Tnp '!II
l ' nlh·~·· lnothall r.lllnJt:o., " 'tth llr.ot · 111a ~o:••
•oh'.~ and ri'L'Onl h1 pllri'Rihi'!.I'S, lutal
pulnt:o. t h ll..•·l.'d on n po lnl " fur llr~t plal 't', •
II fur .,f'I'IHld , Nr.), :1nd la~l wt•t•k's
r:tnklnJ:

'!1111 13

JMn. l&lt;'rld ;t~

The party's getting rough ___W_il_lia_m_Ru__:_sh.:_:_er
aged a more general dr ift toward

;'j

Wt&gt;:.l

in many ways."

One of the mos t striking
as pects of the current political
scene is the exceptional savagery with which the Democrats
are wa gi ng war aga inst Presiden t Reagan and his policies. Of
course, opposition parties are
expected to oppose- that's what
they're for. But an anonymous
White House official was quoted
the other day as saying that he
could not recall, In his own
personal ex perience, any previous time when th e barrage laid
down be th e Democrats in
Congress was quit e so vicious.
Of course, the Rea gan presid·
ency was bound to enter Its
lame-duck stage sooner or later.
On top of that unavoidable ,
disability, the president has

PF P ,\

Indlanupolls

( ' lf'vt' lund
HQuston
Pltt..hur.-h
( 'lndnnatl

government.

mismanagement __R_ob_e_rt_~_al_te_rs

The team that in the past so often
captured championship titles It
routinely inspired cries of
"break up the Yankees," has not
won a World Series since 1978.
A vain, co mbative, man wiht
little regard for the dignity of
those who work for him, Stein·
brenner has compiled this sorry
record of managerial changes

" ' I. T P1·t

Ruffalo

I.

A guide

UPI ratings

Ohi11

Nov. Ui
. Oh(•rlln Tl, Ohln Northt•rn U &lt;3ut)
\\"llt.i.'nlwrg 1()'2, Ohio Wl'!iil(•yan !1-1
Falnnont St lWVLI} 1»1. Dykt• fl'l

Thur.-.da_y '.'\ Ul''i Uit
Sat·r:.•nwnlo IJ(), rt.'ew ,Jpr~·v 102
1-'r ldny 's (iumf's ·
Sl'llillf' nl no.d on. 7: 30p.m.
San All ionlu at Ol't roil , ~ ::to p.m .
,\Uanl.itatlndlan ~. 7: 34J p.m .
('ltlt· u~~:u at Oallas. l'l p. m.
IIUU.'~Ion ttl Uluh, 9: 30p.m .
!'lOt•\\' . h• rt~CY ~~ Phrw.·nlx. 9::10 p.m.
ll••n\-er !tl L ,\ La kt-r,;, 10 ; 30 p.n1.
Ll\ fllppt•rs al Portland , 10: 30 p.m .
l'hllado•ljlhiu HI GoldPn Slah•, II p.llh
Snturd:t,v's Games
( 'h'v('land at N1•w \ "nrk
Ih•trull at Washln,Ktu11, n l~~: ht
San Anlonlo ut Atlanta. niKh l

Seattlf' ut Indiana, nlgl•l
&amp;lston at Mltw-.luk et'. night _
f'hkngo at llouston , night
Dullas at DI.'D\ 'cr, night
Phllad~•lphla at Sa,·runtl' llhl,

niKht

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKE\' LEAUt.:E
ThuNII 1Q''!1 Ho•sult
llus tun !), \l'l nnlpeg 3
t' rlda_y "s Gamo'!;
l'ltt~hu.-,;llut WashinKton, i: :J3 p.m .
1\1. l..ouls at Dt'troit , 7: !13 p.n1 .
llarl!o l'l 111 Bulfalo, ': :ts p.m .
.\ l o ntreal ul 1\llnnesolll. . . It; :ts p .m.
fhl c aJ,:"o :ll Ed m onton, 9:35 p.m .
Nt•w ,Jf'r!'W'Y nl \' 11ncuuvt'r, 10;35 p . m .
Sa.turday'!j Gamel'!
Drt rttlt al Hnstnn , ni ght
ll urll,.rd 11 1 Turun\u, nlgl1l
AluntN•Ill at WlnnlpPg, nl..:-hl
l'hlladt.'lphla ul Qud~t.-.·, niJ{ht
N\' Han~"t'rs ul N\' hlundcrs, night
Wa.~hl~on all' It t.OJhur~~:lt; niJhl
l't11noesout at St . Louis , nl,ll;hl
ralg~ry at Lo .&lt;i 1\n,;t&gt;ll'ii, Jlllthl

Calendar
UOlil ng
.l'or1 of Sp:tln, Trlnld:ld - Eddh•
llavli» \S. Uonnl" l..al..ondl', 12 rollfld
'' lt~autt \\'BC 1i~t;ht hell.11J"''I'I Jt"hl tltlr
houl .
i\ilallllt• fit)', N .•l. - Gahy Canlr.alt.'S
v~. l..ouJ.~ furtl!&gt;, 12 round 1/ll CUIII USDA
hantumwel.:ht IItle bout.

,,
GymnllStlcs
lukyo - r'h uni1' hl1'11p
St.: lin~
St•slrit'rt', ltul.v- Wom e n's slalom ·
S..r.;t•r
,\1 njor Indoor Soccer IA'lllUt'
~lltlmorc at CD !~a~n. II: :1~ p. m .
. Lo11 Alls"t.'le~; at St. Low!~. 11: 35 p .m .
Minnesota al Kan~s Ctt:r. ~1: liS p. m .
WI c hUa Rt S:tn Ul lli{O, 10; 3$ p .m .
Swimming
'l'o mnto- lnlt.' rnnUonal mt•t•l

Select eight players for Harton Hill Trophy
By United Press International
Eight players, six of them
quarterbacks, have been seIPcted from a fie ld of 29 nominees
· as theflna iis ts forthe HarlonH!ll
Trophy, awarded Dec. 11 to the
tor:&gt; college footba ll player in
NCAA Division I L The players
are selected as the best in their
respective NCAA regions by the
sports lnforma tion d !rectors at
the 108 football -playing Division

,,

Racine - Coach Roger Foster
categorized it ·as a ''total team
effort"' as the Meigs Marau derettes Varsity downed the
Southern Tornadoes 58-35 Tues ·.
day night. For the second consec·
utive game ·of the season, the
Lady Marauders used their re·
bounding ability and quickness
on defense to jump out to a 14 to 8
first quarter lead. They were
never In serious trouble from
that point on as
The Meigs
coach used his bench strength to
wear down the opposing five.
Failure to make their free
throw attempts co ntributed to
the Southern downfall as they
failed on several attempts froin
th e charity stripe. )Juring the
contest, the Marauders were
whistled for 21 fouls while the
Tornadoes were hit with 19, a
complete turnaround from the
reserve game in which few
infractions were called. Wendy
Fry, Missy Wo ods and Shelly
Stobart each had four personals
with Tammy Wright and Jody
Taylor being assessed th ree
each.
Shelly Stobart led ·the scori ng ·
for Meigs with fourteen points
· followed by Taylor with eleven·
and Wright who had ten. Beth
Ewing picked -up six of her eig ht
at the free throw line for the
Marauderettes.
Stobart with 12, Wood s' 10,
Taylor 's 9 and Wright's 7 ac·
counted for most of the Marauder
rebounds. Taylor led in steals
with five and Wright had five
assists to lead in that
department.
Meigs scor ing : Stobart
7-0-0-14; Taylor 5-0-1-11;
Wright 5-0-0-10: Fry
4-0-0-8; Ewing 1-0-6-8;
Woods 1-0-2-4; Henderson
1-0-0-2; Carl" 1-0-0-2;
Meier 0-0-0-0.
Southern's leading scorers
were T. Beegle with sll, B.
Evans with 7 and D. Johnson with
6. Complete stats were not
available.
Score by quarters:
Meigs ....... ,r.": ..... 14 31 41 ~59
Southern ............ 8 20 28 - 35
The reserve contest was a low
scoring affair !with Meigs pre·
vailing by a 16 to 12 sco re . J.
Williams led the Tornadoes with
six !o their twelve points. For
Meigs, Shannon Newsome and
Jennifer Taylor each scored four
while Amy Wagner, Marsha
King, Kelly Smith and Kristi n
Stanley were credited with two
points each

li institulions: Finalists Include
running back Johnny Bailey of
Texas A&amp;I, quarterbacks Greg
Calcagno of Santa Clara; Chri s
Crawfor(l of Portla nd Sta te
tOre.), Jay DeDea of BioomsbuPg (Pa. ), Dave DenBraber of
Ferris State (Mich.), AI Niemela
of West Chester (Conn. l, and
Mike Turk of Troy State (Ala.)
and wide receiver Bernie Ford ofCentral Florida .

seoson pl_ay on Tuesda y and
60-54 score at Eas tern.
The Marauders, 19 a nd 3 last
seaso n,

Wm

return t\~.'0 s1ar1ers

-f rom that squad, Brent Bisse ll, a
6 foot 4 Senior center, and Mike
Bartrum, a 6 foot 5 forward. also
a Senior. Bisselis, first team TVC
pick last ye~r. averaged 15 points
per game and Bartrum, TVC
honorable mention, had a 13 point
average.
Lost to 'graduation wa s the
TVC's player of the year , J.R.
Kitchen , Don Becker , an outstanding guard and Huey Eason,

•

Marauders as they downed Vin·
ton Cou nt y in preview play but
felt that they missed a number
oas.v shots. Defensively, the
Marauders looked good in the
pteview win.
Meigs Roster :
\ II l ' IIHit
1'0"' Ill' 11"1' )It
00- .lohn Rurdctte ......... ... G 3-'1 150 U

5-.ltu•y S n y~er ............ . G
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5-10 135 l'l
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6- 0140 II
6- 5 215 12

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5- IU liO 12

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:H - Kt•vinOilcr .............. F G- I JGS II
33- Br(&gt;nt Dis sell ............ C 6- 4 1 8~ It

:15-Riii'Brothers ............ C . 6- 0 170 12
I:J- Todd l'owell.. ........... C G- .a 170 II
15-,John Sisson .............. C 6- 2 165 12

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Marauders Open Season
Meigs !travel s to He mlock to
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Tuesday's game was cancelled
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decision to not play was reac hed
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game has been rescheduled for
Fe bruary 9th. Miller opened

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By United Press International
Davey Allison, the only roo kie
driver in NASCAR Winston Cup
history to win two races, won
Rooki e of the Year honors for
1987, NASCAR officials an·
nounced. Aiiison, son of 1983
Win ston Cup champion Bobby
Allison, will receive $12,500 for
the ChampionSears Rooki e of the
Year Award, as we ii as $1 ,000 for
each Winston Cup event in whicH
he competes next season.

-

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S!artcrs &lt;'xpcctc·u to !ill their
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g uards Chris Smith and Joey
Snyder , botil' ballhawks . a nd
Senior fo rward Bill Brothers,
a lways a s teady player . The
Marauders have two trans fers
from oth~r di•tri cts this season
John Burdette, a junior, who w~~
a sta rter at Federa l Hocking last
year and Se nior Brya n Durst who
played on the fir• t five a t
Ea$ tern.
·
Coach Mick Child s was pleased
with the overall play of the
no tPd

ca me out on the short C'nd of a

992-6614

POMEROY

�,
Pomm:oy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pirates humble Raceland, Ky., 64-49; Highlanders beaten

Rio Grande cagers see action this weekend
The men's and women's bas ketball teams at Rio Grande
College and Community College
are scheduled to play this weekend, with the Redmen taking
part in the Musklngum College
Tournament tonight and Sat urday and the Redwomen hosUng
West Virginia Tech Saturday.
The Redmen, 4-1 after Tues·
day's 124-85 drubbing of Bluffton,
play Berea (Ky.) College at 8
tonight in the second round of
play in the Muskingum tourney.
Rio Grande defeated Berea to
advance to its second game in the
NAIA Nationals in 1985.

Sat urda y in Lvne Cc n ~&lt;·• l 'u"~h
Cheryl 'Fielit i's club is undefeated in three starts th is season,
with two of t~e wins made In the
Bevo Francis &lt;:lassie last
weekend.
· Rio Grande broke a last ·
minute deadlock with Carson
Newman on Nov . 21 to win 78-75
and cinch the women's tourna ment championship. High seer. ing· by senior Renee Halley and
juniors Lea Ann Mul!lns and
Holly Hastings paved the way to
the victory. Hastings was named
the women's tournament's most
va luable player.
Flelltz said she expects to use
'.
Hastings as power forward and
Mullins as small forward in
Saturday's game. Junior Angela
Packard will be at the center,
remembered if the Bengals lose Pittsburgh. The Bengals knew
while freshman Beth Coil w!ll be
four or live of their final' games, they had to win to retain any
point guard and Halley will be
he said, "Then we'd hav.e a realistic hopes of making the
shooting guard.
dismal season. And everybody · playoff.s, and they were soundly
The Redmen are back on the
around here would have to make beaten -on both the scoreboard · road again Tuesday.. playing
a lot of hard decisions."
and the field,
,
Tiffin for their first Mid-Ohio
The Eiengals have failed to win
Several Bengals said the atConference game. The Redwo·
a game at home in six tries, and mosphere at practice the week
men will host Concord College of
perhaps the team' s worst perfor- before the game wasn't like it
Athens, W.Va., Tuesday at 5:30
mance of the year came in usually is prior to a clash with the
p.m.
30-16 home loss to Steelers.

Coach John Lawho'rn said his
start ing lineup will probably
Include seniors Ron Rlttinger
and Ray Singleton a s forwards.
senior Doug Fogt as center and
juniors Anthony Raymore and
Jim Kearns as guards. Fresh·
man Brian Watkins , one of the
team's top scorers, will probably
be the first off the bench as
guard .
Berea coached by 15-year
vetera n ' Roland Wierwille, is
expected to start senior Charlie
Andrews and sophomore Mike
Sams as forwards, place senior
Jay Stenzel in the center position

and designate juniors Terry
Tapley and Willie Hill as guards .
Sams and Stenzel are reported
to average around 20 points per
game for the Mounta ineer s,
white Hill averages 9 assists each
game.
Berea is 1-0 entering tonight 's
contest.
Prior to that game, Muskin·
gu m will play Ohio Dominican.
The winners advance to the
champtbnship round Saturday at
3 p.m. and the consolation game
will be played at 1 p .m .
The Redwomen are to play
West Virginia Tech at 6 p.m.

Wyche doesn't fear losing job
CINClti!NATl (UPI) - Bengals coach Sam Wyche said
Tuesday he doesn't fear losing
his job despite the team 's dismal
3-7 record.
" I know what i'm doing. and I
think the people that hired me
think I know what I' m doing,"
Wyc he said at his weekly news
conference. "Do I prepare for
each game thinking this could be
my last week? No."
Wyche has a career record of
28-30 in four seasons with the
Bengals, and he has one more
year to go on his contract. But
expectat ions · were high for
Wyche and his Bengals this year,
a year that has seen only
repeated disappointments.
As Wyche himself put it: "The
ant icipation of a grea t year has
been coo ted to the point of being
eliminated."
- General Manager Paul Brown
and his son, Mike, the team's
assistant genera l manager, have
backed Wyche on severa l occa sions this season, but they have
not addressed whether Wyche
will return in 1988.
"They' re not going to do
anythl~g to hurt fhe team's
chances the rest of the season,''
Wyc he said, neatly sidestepping
t11e question of whether he has
considered the possibility of his
dismissal.
Hi s fate could rest in how the
Ben gals finish the season. Of the
five team s they play. only oneKansas City - is out of the
playoff picture , meani_ng Cinc innati could come close to matching the 4-12 records of the Homer
Rif'e regime in 1978 and 1979.
Wyche said the Bengals' 1987
season will be remembered for
one of two reasons- for several
clos~ losses in well-played games
or for a "tremendous finish even
when nothing was at slake.''
Asked how the season would be

Rio runner
places nationally
Mary Dowler of the Rio Grande
women's cross country team
placed in the top third of the
run ners who fini shed in th e NA 1A
Cross Cou ntry Nationals la s t
Sa turday.
Dowler fini shed l:lOth from a
field of 3.13 runners with a time of
19:51. The top women's runner
finished with a time of 16:59.
A junior majoring in elementary educatjon a t Rio Gra nd e,
Dowler ran for the first time on
the collegiate level th is season
after men 's cross co un try coach
Bob Willey formed a w0 men's
' ff&gt;am .

" I think it's outstand ing for
a nyone ro finish in the top third,"
Wil!,e y said . "The other coac hes
or the nationals were astounded
that __this was the first rime s he
ra n
Dowler, thr rlaug htcr of· Clifford H . Dowler Jr . ot J ackson,
was the only Rio Gra nde cross
co untry runner ro qua li fy for the
nationals after the men's and
v, omen 's IC'(::lms competed in the

I'IAIA District 22 and Mid -Ohio
Conference finals at Defiance
College on Oct. 31.
Prior to joining the women ' s
!pam , Dowler played on Rio
C r·a nde 's softbali tea m . Durin g
the past cross count ry season ,
she co nsistent ly finished fi rst for
Rio Gra nde in all co mpetitions
she participated in and was the
top wo men 's finisher in the
Morehead State lnvita t!ona l-&lt;:lJl_
Srpt. 26, .

Tonight's games
Gallipolis at Southern
Fort Frye at Warren Local
Meigs at Miller
Portsmouth at Miami Trace
Saturday' s games:
Waverly at Gallipolis
Paint VaHey at Greenfield
Piketon at Portsmouth West
Hannan Trace at Fairland

TIDWELL HITS BOARD- Rio Grande's Mike Tidwell hils the
backboard as he gets past Bluffton's Todd Koch and scores In
Tuesday night's contest In Lyne Center. The Redmen won 124-85.

North Gall!a's Pirates rolled
past Raceland, Ky ., 64-49, In the
1987-88 season opener for both
squads Wednesday night.
The contest was part of a
tr!pleheader at Rio Grande's
Lyne Center. In other games,
Rock Hill edged Oak Hill, 53-51
and Wellston defeated Southwestern, 74-42.
Coach Bruce Wllson's Pirates
jumped off to a 25·13 first period
lead. li was 36-25 during the
halftime intermission and 50-33
going Into the final canto.
The winners placed three In
double figures in scoring. led by
Keith Burnette's 21 marker s.
·Rusty Denney added 14 tallies
and Steve George chipped in with
13.
North Gallla connected on 22 of
52 field goal attempts for 42
percent, and was eight of 17 at the
foul line for 47 percent. The
Pirates had 36 rebounds, 7 each
by Denney and Don Mays.
North Gall!a was credited with
18 assists with· Greg Glassburn,
Denny and George having four
each. The Pirates committed 15

Raceland ..... l3 , 12 8 16- 49
North Gall!a 25 11 14 14 - 64

turnover s and had 13 steals,
three each by George and
13lackburn.
The Pirates were four of five
from the three-point range.
Burnette was three for three .
The Rams hit 19 of 52 field goal
attempts for 37 percent and were
11 of 20 at the line for 55 percent.
The losers had 22 rebounds, six
by Mullins; 10 assists and 18
turnovers .
'
Bonzo paced the losers with 23
points.
North Gal!ia 's next game Is
Dec. 1, at homeaga!nstSouthern
In the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference opener for both
schools .

Rockets Roll, 74-42
Wellston's Golden Rockets left
the Southwestern Highlanders In
the mist Wednesday night with a
74-42 verdict.
"We were outmanned on the
boards," Highlander head coach
Gregg Dee! said of his, players,
whose only height rested in 6-3.
sophomore pivot Shawn McNeal
and 6-1 senior sw!ngman John
DarnelL The Rockets frontcourt
of Hardee, Wheatley and Johnson had a height advantage on

the Highland ers .
chapter , as W&lt;'llsto n co"s ted for
lhe win .
"We weren't phy sical enough
on the boards. " Dee! said, citing
Well ston's Graha m, a guard ,
his reason for the Rockets'
led all scorers wi th 21, inc lud ing
victory. This was evident in pim
three from th e onlv Rocket
by the final score. but it wa s not
three-point shoi of ihe ni ght -.
McNeat_l"as thc ll ighland r rs' top
always so.
man, wtth lo point s._Highlander
The Rocket s posted an 18-13
junior Dave Mers hon hit two
lead at the end of the first
three-pointer s and junior teamquarter, and were only on top by
mate Mike Wa lker fired one .
a 40-28 count at halftime. Deel
Southwestern will play at
said "they wore us down in the
Symmes Valley 'in a SVAC tilt
second half," when the Rockets
went up 57-34 at the end of the • Tuesday,
Box score :
third period. The Highlanders
WELLSTON
(7~) - -A, Gra - were outscored 17-8 in the final
ham 9-1-0-3-21 ; R. Hardee 4-0-6-2-

By United Press International
Something's gotta glve tonight
when Cincinnati Forest Park and
Thornville Sheridan take to the
football field.
Both · teams are undefeated
goi ng into tonight's semifi nal
game in Division Ill of the Ohio
high school football playoffs.
The two 12-0 teams square off

is a win 'o ver defending division
champion Cincinnati Academy
of Physical Education in the fir st
round of th e playoffs.
Also playing tonight is three! ime defe nding champion · Newark Catholic in Division V. Tlie
Green Wave (12-0) has had a few
players suffering with (he flu this
week as they prepare for Middle-

tonight at Dayton's Wel come
Stadium with the survivor heading into th ~ "ilnals Dec. 5 in
Columbus against the winner of
tonight's other semifinaL That
other game finds Elyria Catholic
(9-3) go ing against Youngstown
Mooney (10-1) at Berea's Finnie
Stadium.
Among Forest Park's victories

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RICHFIELD. Ohio IUPI) The 7-foot-4, 500-pound Andre the
Giant pinned Bam Bam Bigelow
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World Wres iling Federa tion Survivor Series at the Coliseum
Thursday before mo re than
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he was double ·reamed by One
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Randy " Ma cho Man" Savage
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The Badgers. adjusting to
Morton's newly installed veer,
struggled to a 2-1 non-conference
start under junior Bud Keyes and
then were routed 49·0 in the Big
Ten opener by Michigan.
Morton then turned the offensive reigns over to Lowery. but
despite his obvious athletic ability, the s uburban Columbus, Ohio
product djd not exactly boost the
Badgers into the upper echelon of
the Big Ten.
With Lowery at quarterbjick.
Wisconsin's lone victory the rest
of the way was a 26-24 upset of
Ohio Slate. However, three of the
Badgers last five losses were by
three points or less.
"At first , I didn't read defenses
well, but toward the end, I began
to see things quicker." _ said
Lowery, of Groveport , Ohio. "It
really hasn't come easy. Sometimes I was ready to pack up my
bags , but the coac hes stayed
behind me a nd it made it much
easier.
"Back in August. I still thought
1 was going to be redshirted." he
said. "It just tPaches you to
prepare tor wha tever happens .'' ·

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"The award is definitely a
surprise," said Lowery, who was
a lso highly recruited as a basket ball player. "As far as awards
go, we were . just thinking of
getting (running back) Marvin
Artley and some of the senior
linemen onto first team Big

Andre the Giant
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MADISON, Wis. (UPI)
Freshman quarterback Tony
Lowery took his lumps along with
the rest of a young Wisconsin
squad, but his persistence dld not
go unnoticed around the Big Ten.
Lowery, inserted into the start·
ing lineup midway through season to add more speed to Coach
Don Morton's veer offense. today
was named United Press Internationa l's Big Ten fre shman of
the year . by the league 's head

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town Fenwick (9-3) In a game at
Oh-io Stadi um in Columbus where
all the finals will be pla yed next
·weekend.
The winner of this game will
have to wait until Saturday night
to .find out wl)o will be in the
finals. The division's other semifina l game pi ts two more 12-0
teams - Delphos J efferson and
Mogadoare at Toledo 's Glass
BowL
The two Division II semifinals
will also be played today Kettering Alter 19-3) against
Steu·benville (11-J) this afte~noon
at Ohio Stadium in Columbus and
Cleveland Benedictine (9-2)
against Akron Buchtel' (10-1) at
Akron's Rubber Bowl tonight.
In Saturday's games; ln Division ), Cincinnati Princeton
(10-1) meets Sandusky (10·2)at
'Ohio Stadium while Toledo
Whitmer (11-1) goes against
Boardma n (12-0) at Akron's
Rubber BowL
In Division IV, Versailles (102) meets Columbus Academy
(12-0) at Columbus and Archbold
(12-0) takes on Gates Mills
Haw ken (11-1) at Berea.

Lowery
honored

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Actron Timing
Light

14 ; S. Bragg 5-0-1-2-11 ; D. Wheatley 5-0-0-3-10: J.R Mi!leker
1-0-2-3-4; R . Davis 1-0-1-2-3; A.
Griffin 1-0-J-0,3; T. Johnson
1-0-0-1-2; F . Lacy 1-0-0-3-2; M.
Potts 1-0-0-0-2; F. Sc harfen berger 0-0-2-1 -2
SOUTHWESTERN (42) ·McNealS-0-3-4-15; Mers hon 2-2-02-10; Ruff 2-0-0·0-4: Bryant 1-0-10-3: Darnel! 1-0-1-1-3; Walker
0-1-0-5-3: Hively 0-0-2-0-2: White
1-0-0 -2-2
. Score by quarters:
Wellston.... 18 22 17 17 - 74
Southwester n. 13 15 6 842
.

High school grid playoffs . resume this evening

Box score:
RACELAND (49) - Roarak,
. 2·0-4; Mullins. 3-1-7; Bonzo. 8-723; Gewind, 1·0-2; Sergent, 3-0·6;
Mills, 1-0-2; Boggs, 1-3-5. ToTALS 19-11-49.
NORTH GALLIA (64) -Glassburn, 1-0-2; Burnette, 5'3- 2-21;
Denney, 7-0-14; Mays , 4·1-9;
George, 4-1-2-13; (;ilmore, 0-3-3;
Lemley, 1-0-2. TOTALS 22-4-8-64.
Score by quarters:

THERE'S NO

Tuesday's re!iriults:

Loga n 89 Nelsonville-York 66
Belpre 63 Marietta 62
Eastern 60 Miller 54
Waverly 86 Chillicothe 70
Hannan Trace 86 Ironton SJ 51
Piketon 62 Jackson 57
:-.leigs vs . Athens, postponed.
Meigs strike.
Wednesday's results:
Wellston 74 Southwestern 42
Rock Hill 53 Oak Hill 51
_
North Ga llla 64 Raceland 49

The Daily Sentinel - Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Friday, November 27, 1987

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Wrestling obsC'rvers say a
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I
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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Lions, Vikings win ThJ,trsday...

Lions snap losing spell,27 -20;
Vikings nip Cowboys. in OT

GANG TACKLED - Texas Longhorn quarterback Bret Stafford (10) Is gang-tackled by A&amp;M
. defenders John Roper (83), Sammy O'Brlent (90)

and Adam Bob (90) during the first quarter of the
Longhorns-Aggies matchup Thursday night in
Colle!re Station, Texas. The Aggies won 20-13.

Big 10
teams open ·
cage play
By RANDY MINKOFF
UPI Sports Writer
Three of the pre-season favorItes for the Big Ten title head far
west this weekend to kick off
their 1987-88 seasons with appearances in holiday tourneys. ·
Iowa, Iiiinois and Michigan are
all Involved In weekend tourna- •
ments in the first full weekend of
action. ·
The Hawkeyes, who won the
Great Alaska Shoctout last year
enroute to a 30-5 season, and the
Fighting Il!inl are both in the
Hawaiian Airlines Maui Classic
in Hawaii.
Iowa will face Stanford on
Friday while the lllini face
Baylor. On Sat urday, Iowa wil l
meet Kansas, another preseason top 20 club, while Illinois
will fa ce e ither Villanova o~
Nebraska. The tournament concludes Sunday.
"We've got a demand ing schedule right up front," said Illinois
coach Lou Henson. " We' ve got
some injuries, so we' re going to
have to overcome them in a

PONTIAC, Mich. (UP! ) - The
Kansas City Chiefs have tightened the race for the first choice
in the next National Footbali
League draft.
Kansas City had the worst
record in ihe NFL entering play
Thanksgiving Day but by edging
the Detroit Lions, 27-20, to stop a
nine-game losing streak gave
both clubs a 2-9 record .
Only one other club had two
wins entering this round of play ,
the Atlanta Falcons, and Detroit
ends its season at Atlanta.
Additionally Its next game is
against the Los Angeles Rams ,
who took three wins into Sunday 's action.
"Standing on the sidelines it
locked like our football team did
not come to play early in the
game," said Detroit coach Darryl Rogers. whose team is
looking at the possibili!Y of
getting its secpnd No. 1 ·draft
choice since finishing 2•14 to get
draft rights to Billy Sims In 1979.
"Any loss Is difficult to swallow . I've got a lot of answers, but
a Jot of things it seems there is
nothing you can do about. You
have to keep things in
perspective.
"You have to ask, 'Where are
you? What are you trying to
accomplish? Are you movin r, in
the right direction? Do you have.
··
quality players?"
The network televising the
game brought in a sports psychologist for an analysis of
losing. It didn't take a degree to
figure out lack of talent plus a
young quarterback who is learnIng the hard why are big reasons
Detroit is 2-9.
"This was a game that I
worried about right to the end,"

Vlkbigs 44 Cowboys 38
•
IRVING, Texas (UP!) -Darrin Nelson flew home to Minnesota a happy man , even though
he committed a holding penalty
that appeared to 'have cos! hi s
team a chance at victory - an
attitude symbolic of the bizarre
nature of the activities at Texas
. Stadium Thursday.
·It also was fitting that even
t~ough
Dallas quarte rback
Danny White threw four touchdown passes and twice brought
his team from behind, he wound
up claiming responsibility for the
· loss.
In a game that had almost as
many turning points as it did
plays, the Vikings downed the
Cowboys In overtime, 44 -38.
Players on both sides went from
hero to goat throughout the
afternoon- Nelson among them.
"
Nelson scored on a 52-yard run
in the second half to give the
Vikings a 28-14 lead, but was
called for holding e arly In overtime on a play that ca rried to the
Dallas 14-yard line.
Given one more chance, Nel:
son bolted 24 yards for the
winning to uc~down with 7:51
gone in overtime to push the
Vikings a step closer to the
playoffs with a 7-4 record . Dallas
all but fell out of the post-season
chase with a 5-6 mar k.
"It was a heck of a game,"
Minnesota coach Jer ry Burns
said. "! think a lot . of people
around the country saw a great
game today - ll Thanksgiving
Day. It was Thanksgiving for us

The Chiefs took the opening
kickoff and mar.c hed 67 yards to
their first offensive touchdown in
14 quarters - 212 minutes and 43
seconds. Just before the half they
got their first rushing touchdown
in 18 quarters in taking a 24-10
lead Into the second t":o
quarters .
Nick Lowery scored on field
goals of 52 and 54 yards for the
Chiefs whlle Detroit countered
with Murray field goals· of 48
yards on the last play of the half
and 37 yards In the third quarter.
Rookie free agent Karl Bernard ran for 99 yards for Detroit
including an 11-yard touchdown.
Chuck Long threw a 10-yard
touchdown to Gary Ellerson 1: 48
from the end of the game but
when the Lions got the ball back
at midfield with 1:13 to play he
was unable to generate first
down.
"I'm embarrassed," Detroit
tackle Lomas Brown said. "This
was our home, our dome, our day
Thanksgiving Day - and we got
beat. We were flat in the first
half. Then in second half the
mountain was too high to climb."
"I don't like to lose," Long
said. "It's tough to lose. This is
not a patient town - and it
should n't be. We're not meshing
as a team.
"We got inside the 20 tour or
five times but couldn't get It ln.
That's been killing us lately. We
started off kind of flat and there's
no reason for it. This was a
special day for the Lions."
And even more special for the
Chiefs, who were 10-6 a year ago
but had not won a game since
their opener.
Continued on page 7

NELSON BROUGHT DOWN - Minnesota
Viking running back Darrln Nelson (20) is taken

down in the first hall by Dallas Cowboy defenders
Bill Bates (40) and Michael Downs (26).

Aggie~

capture SWC crown
with 20"'13 victory over Texas

consecutive year and will play
No. 11 Notre Dame on New
A freshman quarterback gave
Year's Day. Tex,a s, 6-5 and 5-2,
the eyes of Texas reason to weep
wlll play No.l9 Pittsburgh in the
Thursda y night by sparking
Bluebonnet
Bowl Dec. 31 at
Texas · A&amp;M to the Southwest
Houston.
Conference crown and preventRichardson, who started four
ing the Longhorns from making
games
this season, all victories,
their first Cotton Bow l appearwas
in
on four plays, but took
ance in four years.
over for good when Stump left
Bucky Richardson , taking over
with 7:55 remaining after comfor injured Cra ig Stump, scored
on a 7-yard keeper with 4:33 left pleting a 9-yard pass to Sylvester
Morgan to the Aggies 20. Stump
to give the No . 15 Aggies a 20-13
was hit by Mark Steed and
victory over Texas and a record
third straight SWC champion- suffered a bruised knee.
ship. The game was played
Richardson gained 19 yards on
before a Kyle Field-reco rd crowd
one
keeper and Woodside broke
of 78,573 .
three
tackles for a 34-yard run to
"You have to do what your
move
the ball to the Texas 19.
personnel can do, " Aggies Coach
Three
plays later, Richardson
Jackie Sherrill sa id. " Bucky
ran
right
, then cut upfield for the
made things happen on the
deciding
score.
option. He's a very strong
"I
didn't
do anything special,"
runner . I told Lance rPav las) to
.
Richardson
said of the winning
be ready if we needed to throw
TO.
"!
could'
ve driven a truck
the ball in the fo ur th quarter."
through
tha
t
hole.
" ·
The Aggies, 9-2 overall and 6-1
Texas
first-year
Coach David
In the swc. also earned a berth in
the Cotton Bow i for th e third McWilliams said he knew "RiBy United Press lnterna!lonal

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Michiga n, led by guard Ga ry
Grant, will be the Big Ten's
representative in the Great
Alaska Shootout. The Wolverines
wlli face Miami of. Florida and
star center Tito Harford In the
first game on Frjday.
The rest of the Big Te n will
open Friday or Sat urda y.
Michigan State, picked for the
second division in the league , will
host intras tate rival Detroit
Friday night.
Sa turday, defending Big Ten
co-c hampion and NCAA champion Indiana wii) face Miami of
Ohio. Minnesota will host Drake,
Missouri-St. Louis is at Ohio
State, Washington (Mo. ) is at
Northwestern and Wisconsin visits So uth Florida.
Purdue, which began action
last week In the Big Apple NIT,
will travel to lilinois State next
Monday while Iowa opens its
home campaign wit~ intrastate
rival Drake. Also that night
Indiana will host intrastate rival
Notre. Dame, No rthern Illinois
travels to Wisconsin and Western
Michigan is at Ohio State.
The Big Ten won 71 percent of
its games outside of the league
last year a nd many coaches are
saying they can better that figure
this year because of the depth of
the league.
"!don' t think I've ever see n the
conference th is deep," said
Northwestern coac h Bill Foster,
whose star player, center Shon
Morris , has been hampered by a
lorn Achilles tendon this month .
"Even in the ACC y;e didn't have
this s trength top to bottom."
Ohio State coach Gary Wiiliams, whose cl ub lost the league's
top scorer In Dennis Hopson, said
the Big Ten appears stronger
than any conference he's see n.
' 'Looking at the league !rom
top to bottom , it's tou gh," said
)VIIliams, who formerly coached
In the .Big East with Boston
College. "When . you play a
round-robin 18-game schedule

said rookie coach Frank Gansz of
Kansas City. " It seemed like we
had control of the game. Then a
couple of turnovers and it
seemed like we lost control."
The Chiefs ,lost .four games
during their nlne·game flop In
which they had the lead In the
fourth quarter. "This week, we
kept our. presence. We won the
game."
' had two things
Kansas City
going for It- the return of Bill
Kenney to quarterback and a
switch back to the 3-4 defense
that :.vas so effectivl' for the
Chiefs last season.
Kenney fractured his wrist
after throwing four TO passes
Nov. 1 at Chicago. Against
Detroit In the first half he was 14
of 17 for 198 yards including
touchdown passes of seven yards
. to tight end Jonathan Hayes and
13 yards to backup tight end Paul
Coffman.
"Their defense didn't change
that much," Rogers said of KC's
front line alignment switch. "We
looked at it on film and it wasn't
that much different than what
they had been using."
What was different was that
Gansz used more people. In the
fourth quarter nearly ail his
defensive starters were on the
bench. The unit he used was on
the field when Eddie Murray
missed a 34-yard field goal and
when Kansas · City stopped Detroit on downs at its own 11.
"The most important thing
about the game was that instead
of getting ahead, getting conservative and losing the game, we
played aggressive the entire
game. It was important to get
some stability back in our
offense .''

COFFMAN SCORES - Kansas City Chief tight end Paul
Coffman (84) celebrates his second-quarter touchdown In the
Detroit-Kansas City game Thursday afternoon. (UPI)
lik e t\lis. it is very grue ling."
The conference, ·which doesn't
open •UP league pl~ntil Janu ar y, maybe in thelastyearofthe
18-ga me round-robin. Conference presidents wlli meet In
early December to decide
whether to ratify the coac hes and
athletic directors' recommendation to go ' to a post -season
tour nament.
The Big Ten is one of the few
holdouts for a post-season tourney. If the proposal is adopted, it
is expected the league would go

to a 14-game schedul•
possibl y split the conferer
two divisions .

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SATU~DAY,

, BEREA, Ohio (UP!) - In
. Jerry Rice, the Cleveland
Browns might not face a better
· wide receiver this season.
The San Francisco 49ers, a
definite pass-happy team, will
chardson was an option quarter - · impose some problems for the
back and would give them a Browns Sunday at 8 p.m.
Rice, who has averaged more
change of pace. It looked like we
over-pursued, especially on the than 100 yards receiving in the
touchdown. It seemed we had a last eight games, had three
lot of white (Texas ) jerseys touchdown passes against the
flying to the outside, and they Tampa Bay Buccaneers last
week. ·
could cut back. "
In a Southeastern Conference
"He would have to be consigame Friday, No. 6Auburn plays dered one of the best," said San
Alabama at Birmingham. Satur- Fran cisco hea d coach Bill Walsh.
day, No. 2 Miami hosts No. 11 "I really believe that. He has
Notre Dame, No. 3 Florida State , everything the great players
visits Gainesville to play Florida, have. One of the great assets
No. 5 Nebraska faces Colorado, Jerry has is that he concentrates
No. 17 Georgia opposes Georgia on the game. It means so much to
Tech and No. 16 Tennessee plays him.
"He doesn't have very many
Vanderbilt.
At Birmingham, Ala., two bad days, or days with errors and
state rivals will play to decide the mistakes," he said. "He is truly a
SEC title. Although the Tigers dedicated man who thrives on the
are favored to win and advance game of football. He enjoys every
to the Sugar Bowl, the last five minute in it . That may carry him
games between the schools have into a Hall-of-Fame category as a
been decided In the final minute . player. Because I don't think
"You couldn 't ask for a bigger you'll see him have those bad
game," Alabama linebacker years or off years, or things of
Randy Rockwell said, "First. it's that nature. Because if he' s
aga:tnst our biggest rival and for healthy, he'll give you all he has .
bragging rights for the whole That seems to b~ enough right
year. Secondly, it's for the SEC now to make him one of the best."
title and that's something I came
Rice, a 6-loot-2, 200-pounder
to Alabama for."
A victory by Auburn, 8-1-1 now in his third year from '
overall and 4-0-1 in the SEC, Mississippi Valley State, has 39
would give the Tigers undisputed receptions for 639 yards (16.4claim to the conference title and y ard average) and 11
a berth in the Sugar Bowl against touchdowns .
No . 4 Syracuse. An Alabama
victory would leave the Crimson
Tide, 7-3 and 4-1, tied with LSU
for the SEC crown and force the
Sugar Bowl to decide betwee n the
two.
At Miami, the Hurricanes, 9-0,
try to get past Notre Dame, 8-2,
before facing No . 9 South Carolina next week. Two Miami
victories would set up a na tiona!
championship game against No.
1 Oklahoma in the Jan. 1 Orange
Bowl'.

quarter on a 1-yard piun$e b~
White and a 3-yard touchdown
throw from White to Herscliel
Walker. The. Vikings claimed a
21·14 halftime lead on another
Kramer-to-Carter touchdown
throw of 37 yards.
Minnesota booste!l its lead
early in the second half on
Nelson's 52-yard run, but the
Cowboys fought back on a
38-yard Roger Ruzek field goa l
a nd an 8-yaril scori ng throw from
White to Renfro.
"This Was a tough game for
That· c ut Minnesota's lead to
either team to lose," Dallas 28-24, bu t the Vikings increased it
Coach Tom La ndry said. "This
to 14 points on a 33-yard field goal
type of game can stay with you a
by Chuck Ne lson and a 1-yard
long time."
sco.rlng run by Rick Fenney- set
Despite the big offensive day up by a 51-yard throw from Wade
by White, he threw three inter- Wilson to Carter.
ceptions and fumbled away the
Dallas tied it wit h touchdown
ball twice. His fi rst fumble gave throws from White to Renfro of14
the Vikings their first touchdown and 18 yards - both coming in
and his las t interception set up the las t six minutes of regulatlqn.
Nelson's win·ner .
.
Both teams had a chance to win
"I can't remember one that it late in regulation. Dallas
was personally as disappointin g turned over the ball at midfield
as this one," White said. "There on an ln.terception by Issiac Hoit
is no 'question about the fact that! · with 34 second s left, and 25
lo st this game . We had a chance seconds later a would-be winning
to win it at the end and all we had field goal try of 46yards by Chuck
to do was execute. We had some Nelson went wide right.
great plays and some great
The Vikings were foiled in their
moments, but I was poor at the first overtime possession by
end.''
Nelson's holding penalty, a nd
The Vikings .jumped to a 14-0 when ·the Cowboys took over,
lead on an 11-yard pass from they quickly moved to the Minnestarting · quarterbac·k Tommy sota 40.
Kramer to Carter (one play after
On a 2nd-and-6 situation, with
White 's first fumble) and a fullback Tim Newsome open in
}-yard run by Kramer, who later the flat for what would have been
!eft the contest with a bruised a sizeable ga in, White threw
arm.
downfield.
Dallas tied It in the second

in our locker room.
"l have nothing but respec t for
Dallas. We had them down by 14
iwice and they kept co m ing back.
There were certai nly a lot or big
plays ."
There were enough big plays to
create 879 yards offense, 184
rc ·" lvlng yards and two touchdvwns for Ml nnesota receiver
Anthony Carter and 100 yards
and three touc hdowns for Dallas
flank er Mike Renfro.

11-ll-87

Save. up to

Christmas Auction

Browns tilt
starts at 8
Sunday night

Continued from page 6

Local bowling

\

No funding for
1990 Goodwill Games
By United Ptess International
Washington Governor Booth
Gardner told orga nizers of the
internafional Goodwill Games,
scheduled for 1990 in Washington , not to expect state funding
for a proposed $19.5 million
swimming and acquatic sports
complex in Tacoma.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

Pom•oy-Middleport, Ohio

Friday, November 27, 1987

Friday, November 27, 1987

1200 E. State Street • Athens, OH
(614) 594-3528
'

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204 Condor St.
Pomeroy. OH .

New fall &amp; Winter Houu
Closed Monday
Tuesday thru Friday 9 a.m .-6 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m.- 1 p.m.

AGGms SCORE- Texas A&amp;M quarterback Bucky Richardson
(7) heads for the end zone and the Aggles' wi.! 'ning touchdown In
A&amp;M's 20-13 win over rival Texas In Thursday night's match with
l.he LonghOrns In College Station, Texas. (UPI)

~THE

GRAVELY
YS .

The
Pomeroy MerchantJ·
Wish to invite ,r;u to th~r
Open House S~nday} November 29th
·
12 noon }til 5 p.m.
.
All of the st ores are stocked with quality gifts for thiS
Christmas Season.
Special prices will be offered during this _Op en House. ~
Register to win over $3 ,000 worth of Savmgs Bonds and .
Gift Certificates.

POMEROY MERCHANTS ASSOCIATION

•

�Page- S- The Daily

Sentinei·~--.!!""'--...;._ _ _ _ _ _...;.P.;;o;.;m;.;er;;.;,oy:.,...:;M:.:,:i:::d:::d::;le~p~o:,:n;.:.;.!:O~h!!!io~----------:=====~F~n::·d::a~y~,~~~~~~tOI;,;.m~be=r~2~7;·:1~9·8~7

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For some time now you have noticed the shelves
of your favorite stores beginnmg to sparkle with
the trappings of th~ holiday season, and by now
you may be displaying them in your home.
However, you must remember that rt takes more
than colored lights, Christmas ornaments, pine
cones, tinsel or Chanukah candles to bring
happiness there. All the bghrs m the world
cannot brighten it as much as a friendly smile.
The pine branches cannot sweeten the air the
way mending a quarrel would, no matter who
was at fault. The candles won 't cast as warm a
glow as an act of kindness toward someone.
Fmally, the shiny ornaments and tinsel cannot
begin to reflect the joy of learning the origin of
your faith and its customs at your House of
Worship. So adorn your home for the holidayS,
but take time also to learn the lessons of your
faith that these decorations portray.

'
~'. 1 !,.1 "''"- 'IT\ '

Mill WorkCabinet Makrng ~~ - --1~'

Syracuse

...

992-3978
TRINITY CHURCH, Rev John IIJ.ff, pastor;
DebbiC' Buck. Sunday School Su JJ Church

SchOO 9· l'i a.m : Worship !iervte 10 ll a. m
Cllotr tl'hearsal , Tuesd;zy, 7 30 p m urder dl·
rectlon of Lois Burt

POMEROY CHU RCH OF TilE NAZARENE, Correr Union and Mullrl1)', Rev

Thomas Glen M cClu ~ , pastcr Norman Pres1~ . S S Sup: Su rrlay School, 9·.11 am ,
mornin g worship 10 lJ a m : t".'enln gserv1ce6
p m , mlrl-v.'('{-'k service. Wednes.l ay, 7 p m
GRACE EP L&lt;;COPAL CHURCH , 3'l6 E .
Main St . RomerO',' SuOOay services Holy
t"'mmuruon on ll'i' first Su rrlzy of each month,
a nd romtined with morning prayer on. the
third Surv:!aJ Morni ng prayrr and S£&gt;rm&lt;Jn on
all 01h:'r SuMavs of ttr month Church School
an d Nursery ('arc prOYitrd Coffee hoW' In the
ParL&lt;;h Hall !l'llmE'diately fo Uowlng tlE servk'l:-.
POMEROY CHU RCH OF CHR IST, 212 W.
Mal n St .. L€&lt;:l Nas h. f'\'an!,EiiSt Bille Schad
9::.ll a m , Morni ngworship, 10 XI a m : Youth
meet in ~ fi"C(I p m , Evenmg worship, 7 00 p
m Wednes£1,1Y night pr·ayer meet lngand Btble
.sru:ly 7 00 p m
THE SALVATION ARMY, 1l5 Butternut
Ave . PorTJf'rO't' Mrs Dora Wmln g in charge.
S.m :la&gt; OOlmes..o; meeting, 10 a m, SurDay
SchOO. 10 lJ a m Su OOay School, YPS.:.\1.
Elolsl' Ad ams, leader 7 XI p m Salvation
meeting vaJious S[X"ake'S and muslc s i=E'Cials
Thursday, 1J iVl a m to 2 p m Ladies HotnP
lPaguC', mcm t.•rs m c h ar~ . aU wcmen
im':lt cd. 6. 45 p. m. Titu rsd~;~,v COrp; Ca det
Clas.'i.S tYcuJlt Proplc-Bttie), 7.:Jl p,m Bible
St W.v ah d Pravet mect tng, opm to u~ public.
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHURCH OF
CHRlST, J3226 Chil dren s Home Road ((Qurtv
Road 76 J. !fl2-5235 Vocal musi c Su May Worsthp lO a m : Bl ll e~miy 1J a m . Worshi p. 6 p
m WC'dnf5dn_v. Bi bl e St\rly. 7 p m
·
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRffiTIAN
CHURCH. Alv lll Cwiis, pastoc. Lmda Swan .
Supt Surx:lay Srhool 9 .lJ a m , preac tllngser
vk:cs, firSt and third Sur.dav followin gSun:Ia,y
School Ycuth meet mg. 7 l) p m ('\'ery Sun-

day
GRA HAM
UN ITED ME THODIST,
Prru r hing 9. 30 a .m tln; t a nd seco nd , Sund a~s of each mont h. third a nd fo urth Sun
day t'ach month worsh ip serv ices a t 7 JO p
m.. Wedn esday e venl ngs a t 7· 30 p m
Praver a nd Bibl e Study
SEV E NTH DAY ADVENT T$T. Mul
b£'r:-v Hf&gt;lg ht s Roa d Po m cro~ Past ot
Jo hn S ~\ rtga rt , Sab bath Sc ho&lt;JI Superlntondl'nt. D&lt;li llnl' Ste wa r t Sa bbat h School
begms at 2 p. m. on Sat u rday a ft er noon
wit h wor!&gt;hiP ser vice folJ oy, mg a t 3 15 p m .
E' f'ryone wei co me
HUT LA ND F IRST BAPT IST CHURCH
- Sis ter Hen rt€111 Wa r nr r· Supt S u nd a ~·
Sc hool 9 30 a m , Morn mg Worship 10 4fi

am

PO ME RO Y F IRST BAPT IST Lvstoo
Hallry, m mls tcr. Sa tu rU.ry evc nmg
C'Va n ~f'hs t tr ~ eJ vtces. open to public. 7 p
m. Su nctav Chu r&lt;"h Sc hool, 9 30 a.m ,
Mo1nlng W(u ship 10 30 a n-:
F IRS'! SOUTHE R N BAP TISt. Po
m &gt;:'l ov Ptke E La m ar 0 Bry ant pastor ,
Jack 1\C't:'CI S, Sundav School Dl rff'tor Sun
cl ay School .9·10 11 m . Mor ning Wors hi p.
Hl -1 5. f'\'C' nlng wors hip. i OOp m 1D S T 1
&amp; i 30 1E S,T l W e dn~ da y P1a ye1 Ser
\'icC' 1 00 p.m 1D S.T) &amp; 7 30 PM. IE .S
T.J. Mrss wn Fm' nd:-. (agrs 2·ti), Hoya l
Am ixl !-&gt;sado r s ( bo v~ agrs 6-lB\ and G!r ts
m Act ion r a~es (j-J-81 on \o\'ed nesda ys. 7 p
m IDS T I &amp;730pm tEST. ) T uesday
Vt•H[,l! IOn. 6·30 p m
~ AJT H TA BERNA CLE CHURC H Bal
]('\ Run Ro .Jd Rpv Emml:'l1 Rav. son pas
101 H;Jndlry Dunn. s upt Su nda y S&lt;:hool
lOu m Sund.1y C'\'f'n lngS ('! VIce. 7 30p m
Bil)l{' tNc hmg. 7. 30 p m . Th u rsda y.
SYRACUSE MISS ION. Chprry St, Sy
rJt U ~ f' St;'J\ Jres lO a m Sund ay E v£&gt;mng
1&lt;'&lt;'" Su nclll\- and \\ r dnes day a t 7·00 p
m
M1D DT £PORT \ HtJRCH O F CHRIST
fN C' H RJ~TP. N UN fON. Dwight H.1l ey
ftrs1 ri der \\ andu Mu hlC'L Sunday School
Supl Su oda:-.- l.;chcml 9 30 a m . Mor ning
\.\ nr shlp HI JU J m E' cnmg Worship 7 30
p m , \\'('dn (';.d,JV p1.1, f'f m('('ll n ~ 7· 30 p m
MT MOil!,\11 CHU RCH OF GOD
R.H 1n r• Re\ .J(.lm po:: Sa tt e r field , post or
f"ll'e ma n V.. lll) um&lt;; ~ UPii Su nda y Sc hool
9 -i~ a m . Su n d .1~ a nd WC'd n csd a ~· even Ing: :-.Pr\ ICt':-., 7 p m
MIDDLeP ORT F IRST
BAPTIST
Corner ~t ;"(l h ur&gt;rl P.tlm pr Earl E den , Pas ·
!ot BoO P arJ.;('r S s Supt , Ca th y Riggs ,
A~s\ Su p! Sund,n ~c h ool , 9 15 a m ,
Mornl nJ! Y. orsh1p 10 15 a m : Su nda y
E\t" nmg ~Pr\' l rf' i p m P ra'lo'l' r m ~tln g
and Blbif' Stud\ Wrrl nesday rvcn lng. 7 p
m .. Ch tldr Pn's l'hnlr pracflC(' WednL'S·
dm "i p 111 /\ dolt c hoJr practlre, Wed , 1:!
p m .. Ra dio p 1 1~1 am WMP O. Su nd a y ,
~ JIJ ~ m.

"&lt;'' \

MID DLF PI •RT CHl'RrH OF CHRI5T,
1-th and M&lt;JUJ. ,\1 Hallson m in ister
R1c hJ1d l)uBrJ~t r\ :-.!&gt;IX:W LP Pastor. Mtk c
VNIM h, Su ndJ'&gt;' !-'{ hool Superin t cnde nt
O lb iC'~C h onl (~ 1n d m .. :vlo r nmg Wor sh ip
t il :\0 n m ~vcnm~ Worsh1p 7 00 p m ,
Wf'dn .....,d .Jy 1 nn p m Pr aver m&lt;'C'tl ng
MIDDL EP0RT C"HURCH OF T HE NAZARENE . PASTOR F" rf'd PenhO rwood
Bil l Whiff', !:iundJv S&lt; hOol Sup r Sunda y
Sc hool q 30 i.i m , Mo1nlng Wo rship 10 45
" m . F \ J ng(•it s tlc m('(&gt;\ lng i 00 p.m
W'C'dn {"'; d-('1 \ "i 00 p m ' Pra vt&gt;T' m c'('rln g •
l! N1TED PII E.') BYT.:Rt.t \N MIN ISTRY
OF iU EIGS fOUNTY
R1•v Cha. rlt ~ Talbott
HAR R ISONVILLE PRESBY TE RIAN
CHUR( H - Sunda y. WOJ shi p Services
9 011 a m. Chu rch Sc h0oll0: 15 a rn .
MrDDLEPORT P RES 13YTERIA N Sunda y ~c hoot 9 a m , Chu rch Sf' rv ic£&gt;,
10 ' 15 a m
SYR,\tUSf~ F IHST t; NITEO PRESBY
iERJA!'i - Su nd J V St hool 10 a m :
Church Sf•Jviu'. 11 15om
RUTLA:-.&lt;D OfV Jt( H OF' G OD . P.tf&gt; tnt&gt;,
J CVtn E 'Vans S und J\,: School lO OfJ u .m.
Su ntl ay Mnrnl ng Wo r ship II · 00 u. m . Chil dren· s Churr h 11 a m Sunday £ve n i n~
Ser v ice i 00 p m Wf'd , 6 p m Young La ·
di es' Au xill ary. Wffinrsday 7 p m F a m
tl y W01 Shlp
H~ZEI. COMMUN ITY CH U RCH Off
Rt. 124. 3 mi!C'\ lr om Portlan d-Lo ng Sot
tom . ,Ed ~et Ha rt , pastor Sund ay SchOol.

{M,j

-o -

Veterans
Memorial Hospital

11 S L Memorial Dr.
992-2104

Pomeroy

9. 30 a m.. Sunday mormng
10.30 a m ., Sunda y, even ing services, 7·
p ,m .
MIDDLEPORT FREEWILL BAPTIST
CHURCH . Corn er As h and Plum No el
Her rma nn , pastor Sunday School 10. 00 a
m , Mornin g Wor ship, 11 00 a m .; Wed
nl~day and Saturda y E vening: Se rv ices at
7 .30 p.m
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev . Don Archer
Rev. Roy Deeter
Rev. Seldon Johnson
ALFRED - Church Scbool 9 30 ~ m ,
Wor ship, 1l am , UMYF 6 30p m , UMW
Thi rd Tuesda y, 7·30 p m Communion.
fir st Sunday (Arc her)
CHESTER - Wors hip 9 a .m .. Chu r ch
Sr hoollO a n1 , Blble Study. Thursday . 7 p
m ., UMW, first Thur sday , 1 p.m , Co m muni on, Urst Sunday (Ar c tlerl .
JOPPA - Wot ship 9 30 am ; Chu rch
Sc hoQl 10 · 30a m Blbl eStudy Wed n esda y ,
7 &lt;JO p m (Jo nn s on J
LONG BOTTOM - Chu rc h Schoo\9 ·30
a m , Worship 7 p.m . Bible Study . Wed
nesday, 7: 30 p. m , UMYF. W{'()n es day,
6 00 p.m, Commu nion Firs t Sund ay ,
(Archer)
RE E DSVILL E - Chur ch Sc ho ol 9· 30 a
m., Wo rshlp Serv!l·e l1 ·00a m rDt:&gt;ete r l
TUPPERS PLAI NS ST P AU L Church School 9 a. m .. Wor shi p tO a m ,
Bi blC' S1udy , Tu esda y . 7. 30 p m. U MW
Thitd Tuesdav, 7. 30 p m .. Co mmunion
F it st Sunday (Arc her)
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. ,James E . Corbitt
Rev, Kand;y Burch '
Rev Melvin Franklin
Rev. Clemente S. Zuniga, ,Jr.
Rev. Robert Mussman
ASBURY l Sy racu se l -Worship 11 a m
. Chu rch Sc ho ol 9. 45 a.m , Cha rge- Bible
Study, Wedn es da y. 7. 3Q p.m , UMW , fi rs t
Tu esday, 7: 30 p m . Cho•r Re hear sa l.
Wf'dn C"Sd a y 6 30 p m ; UMW , fo u r th Sun·
day 6· 30 p m (Burc h !
E NTERPRISE - Wor ship 9 a m ,
Chu rc h School 10 a m ; B1 blf' Study . Tucs
d ay , 7· 30 p.m . UMW. F irs t Monday. 7 30
p m , UMY P. Sunda y . 6 p.m Choir R e·
hearsal, 6.30 p m WPdn esda y. (Fra nkli n)
FLATWOODS - Churc h School, 10 a m
, Wors hip, 11 am ; Bibl e S1udv . T hurs·
day , 7 p m , UMYF Sund a v, 6 p m
JF r a nklm )
F OREST RUN - tVor ship 9 a m
Chu rc h Sch ool 10 A M Chmr pra rt!Cf'
Tuesday, 6 30 p m , UMW . f1 rst TUL'Sday .
7 :m p m . (Bu1c h t
HEATH (M lddl cporll- Chu1c h Sc hool,
9 30 a m ., Mor ning Wonh tp HLIO a m ,
• You th Gr oup, 4 p.m . W('d n('Sday, Church
Choir reh earsa l 7 p m
Thu rsday ,
P rayer Senter. 6 ~0 p m : Rl bleS tud y , 7
p m {Zuni ga)
MI NE RSVILLE - Wursh1p Ser vice 10
a m. Chu rc h School 11 a m , UMW . thi rd
Wednesd ay, l p m . Choir prac11ce. Mon
d ay , 7.30 p m (Bur ch )
PEARL CHAP EL - Wors hip Service
9· 30 a m
Chu rc h Sc hoo l 10· 15 a m :
UMW Second Tuf's da y, 7 30 p m {Mu ss
man)
P OMEROY - Chu rc h School. 9 1~ a. m
: Wo!'shlp 10 30 a m . Cholr rc hPa r sa l
WCtintosday, 1· 30 p m., UM W liecond
Tues d a~. 7 30 p. m , U MYF' S u nd ay . 6~ . m
(Cor bit t)
ROCK SPRINGS- Chu rch Sc ho ol 9 15
am; Wor ship 10 am : BlblC' Stud} WPd
nf's da y, 1 30 p.m ; UMYF (S{In!O I"S l, Sun
da y, 5 p.m .. iJ unlo r s l ev e ry olh e r Su n
da)!, 6 p.m (f' r an kll nl
RUTLAND - Chu rc h School, 10 a .m .,
Worship, 11 a m . UM W F ir st Monda}'.
7.30 pm.
SALE M CE NTER - Chu rrh Sc hool9 · 15
a .m ; Worship 10 l!l p m ! Mu ss man)
SNOWVILL E - Wor ship, 9 00 a m
c hu rc h schoo1 9 45 a .m (Muss m a n l
SOUTHERN CLUSTER
Rev . Roger Grace
Re v. Paul McGuire
Rev . Keith Rader
AP PLE G ROVE - Chu rc h Scho ol 9 30
am . Wor shi p. 10 00 am ifl rst_.a nd 1h ird
Sundays ). Bibl(' s tudy every S und ay 6 p
m : U MW Seco nd Tu £' sda y, 7 00 p m ,
f'r av('r m e£'t lng, Wednesday. 6 p m.
1Cra r C'l
BET HANY - Wor ship, 9 a. m , Church
School. ]0 a m , Bibl e St ud y, WC'dn csd a y,
10 a m. , Dorcas Wom en' s F ell owship,
WC'd nt&gt;Sda y, II a m (McG uire)
CARMEL- Chu rc h School 9· 30 a m :
Wor ship lO 45 ll m Seco nd a nd Fo u rth
Su nda ys, FPllows hlp dinn er wit h Su tt m
t hird Thursd a,v 6. 30 p.m . (McGu ire ). ·
EA.&lt;.iT LETART - Chu rc h Sc hool9a .m .
Wo rs hip to a.m seco nd an d fou rth Su n
d ays, UMW fi r st Tuesday, 7 lJ p m
!Grace).
LETART F ALLS - Wor shtp 9 a m :
Chu rc h SchOol 10 a m , tGra~c l
MOR NINGSTA R - Wors hip . 9 45 a .m .
Churc h Se houl. , 10 30 a m .: Blblc STudy
Thu rsdav, 7~ 30 p m , ( Ra dert
RACINE WES LEYAN '- Chu rch School
lOa rn .; Worshl p lJ am , UMW fou n hMon·
d;zy at 7,J.I p.m .; Me n' s Pmyer Brt':lkfas l
We dn ~d ay, 7 am . (Graef:')
SUT''TON - Chu rcl1 School, 9 30 a .m ..
Morntng Wo rship 10: 45 a .m fir .sl a nd thhd
Sundays. FC'Il owshlp dinner wit h Carmel
third ThurS&lt;.Iii y. 6. 30 p.m . t McGuire )
KEN O CHURCH OF CHRIST, Ve rnon
Eldridg e, minis ter: Oliver Swain , S unday
Sc hool Su?t. Prra c hlng 9: 30 a ,m e ach
Suhda y
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UN ION. Geo r ge

FLOWIRS FOR EVElY OCCASION

992-3325

Plan fund raising event
Members of the Big Bend Ci vitan Club will 'be at th e Meigs
High Sch~ol Audltqrlum Saturday night preceding the annual
presentation of the Big Bend Minstrel Association's musical to
sell fruit cakes as a fund raising event for local projects such as
the Carleton School, Sine Cera and yout)l and senior proj ec ts.
Samples will be given and one, two, three and five pound cakes
will be available

lH
RI~LTOR

FRANCIS FLORIST

\It' ll(~ Crwnlv·..,

EMS has eight holiday calls

Oldt&gt;St Flor..i§l

352 EAST MAIN
'
POMeROY. OHIO 46769
614 / 992-2644

106r lutternut Au., Pomtroy, Oh.

204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, OH.

Anedo pas tor Sunday service. 9 30 a. m .,
e ve ning s et v'lce 7 30 p m . Pra ye r meet ing.
Wedn esday , 7 30 p.m
BEARWALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST J oseph B Hos kins . past or Bibl e
Class. 9· 30 a m .; Mo rning Wors htp 10· 30a
m Evening Wo rship , 6 30 p m Thu rsda y
Bibl e Study, 6: 30 pm
NE W STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY
CHURCH Sund a y School se.&gt;rvke, 9. 45 a .
m.. Wor ship se rvice 10 .30 a m .
Evangelistic Service 7. 30 p m Wednesday ; Pr aye r meetin g 7 30 p m Thu r sday .
ZIO N CH U RCH OF CHRIST , Pomeroy·
Ha rrls oovllle Rd R o b ~rt P u rte ll , mtn is
te1'. Ste-.e Stanley , S S Supt., Btl! MGEI
roy, Assl Supt . Sunday Sehool9: 30 a m.,
Worship ser v ice 10.30 a. m , E veni ng worship Sunday 7 p m a nd Wedn esday, 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERA N CHURCH , P in e
G r ove Th f' RPv William Mlddl es wa rth,
pas tor Chur c h sprvl cf' 9 30 a m; Sunday
Sehoul to 30 a .m .
BRADBURY CHU RCH OF CHRIST.
Jo hn Wn ght, pas tor. Sunday Sc hool9. 30a .
m . La r rv Ha y n£'S, S S Sup t. Mol nln g
worshi p 10· 30 a m
R AC INE CHURCH OF THE NAZA R EN E Rev Ll oyd D Grimm, Jr , past or
Ora Bas s, Chai r man of th e Board o f Christ ian Life Sund ay Sc ho ol 9· 30 a m : Mor n
lng y,;orsh\p 10 30 a .m .; ev ang elis ti c ser
vie£&gt; 7 00 p.m . We dn esday ser vice, 7 p m .
LIBERT Y CHRISTIAN CHU RCH , Dex
te r Wood y Ca ll, past or. Serv tc ('S Sunday
10 a m and 7 p m Wedn esd a y. 7 p m .
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRI STIAN, Ro g ·
e-r Wa tsoo . pastor Cre nson Pr al l, Sunday
SchOol Supt Mor nin g Wor ship 9 30 am.;
Sunday School 10· 30 a m Eveni ng ser
v ice, 7· .30 p m
MT. UNIO N BAPTIST. Don ald Shue,
pas t 01, Jo e Say re Sunday Sc hool Supt
Su nclay School 9 45 1:1 m , E w n lng wor
s hip 6. 30 p m , P1 aye r Meet In ~. 6 30 p m
Wed nesd ay
T UPPERS PLAI NS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Pre nt ice, m iniste r Deryl
We ll s. Supr Church Sc hool 9 a m ; Wor·
s hip Scrvtee, 9 45 p m
CHESTER CHU RCH OF TH E NAZA
RENE . Re v . He rbert G ra te, pastm
F ra nk Rlffle, s upt. Sund ay Sc hool9 30 a,
m ; Worship ser vtce, 1'1 a m . and 7 p m .
Sunda y Wedn esday , 7 p m P ra~er m ret

ln g

wors htp 10 30 a m , Sunday evening ser
v ice, 7 p m : mid -we e k servi ce, Wednes
d uy , 7 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glenn McMill an, pastor.
Ma ry J a mce La ve nder Sunday School
Sup! Sunda y School 9. 30 a m .. Morning
v. or ship 10 30 a m , Eva ngelistic se rvice,
6 p m ; Prayer and Pra ise Wednesday, 7p.
m , Youth mE'etlng, 7 p m
EDEN UNITED BRETHRE N IN
CHRIST. EldC'n R. Bla ke, pas tor. Sunday
School 10 am .. Ga ry Reed. Lay Ieadl'r.
Morning serm on. 11 a. m , Sunda y night
serv ices Christia n Endeavor 7 30 p m .,
Sonp; sen-1 ce 8 p.m . Preaching 8:30pm
Mld ·week pray er meeting, Wednesday , 7

p.m

HYSELL

Rt.il ~

HOLINESS CHURCH .

0 . H. Cart, past or Sunday School at 9 . 30a
m ; Mornmg wors111p a t 10 30 am., Sunday eve ning se rvi ce a1 7: 30 p m . Thursday
servicPs at 7• 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob, loca ted on Count y Road 31 Rev
l a wren ce Glues en ea mp , past or Rev
Roger Wltt foro. a ss t. pastor. Preaching
services Sunday 7. 30 p.m . Pra yer meellng
Wednesd ay, 7 30 p.m ., Gary Grlffllh,
leade r Youth g roups Sunday evening at
6·:«) p m wit h Rog er and Vt olet Willford,
leade r s Commu nion sPrvlcl' fir st Sunda y
e ac h m onth
WHITE 'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHU RCH - Coolv UlcRD. Rev. Phllllp Ri
den our, past CN Sund ay School 9 30 a.m ,
v. orsht p serv1 ce 10 30 a.m., Bible stud y
a nd wors htp serv ice. Wednesda y, 7 p.m .
RUTLAN D CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carler, pas tor Sunday Sch ool9 : 30a
m , Mcrmn g Wors hip a nd Communion
10 30 a m
RUTLAN D BIBLE M.ETHODTST Amo s
Till is. pas lor Sonny Hudson , supt Sunday
Sc hool 9 30 a m , Mo rning worship, 10:30
a m . Su nda y eve ning serv ice 7 00 p.m .
Wednesday service 7 p.m WMPO prog ra m 9 a m each S und av
R UTLAND CHU R CH OF THE NAZA·
R ENE Sam uel Basye, pas tor Sunday
Sc hool 9· 3() a m , Wo r s hip s ervi ce 10· 30 a
rn . Yo ung peopl e's service 6 p m
Eva ngelis t ic set v ice 6 30 p m Wednesday
ser vice 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Mill e r
St , Mas on , W Va Sunday Bible Study 10
a m . Wo rship 11 a.m. and 7 p.m Wedn esda y Bibl e Study , voca l muslc, 7 p.m
LIB E RTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD , Dud di ng La ne. Ma s on , W Va J N. Thacker,
past or E ven in g se rv tce 7·30 p m : Wo
men' s Minis tr-y, Thu rsd a y, 9 30 a m ..
Wedn esda y Prayer and Bible Study, 7: 15
p.m
HAR TF OJlD CHU RCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRI STlAN UNION Ha rtford , W Va
R C'v Dav1d McMan is, pas tor Churc h
Sc hool 9 30 n m · Su nday morning S£'r
v rcc. 11 a. m ., Sund ay evening se rvice,
7 30 p.m Wednesda y praye r m eeting, 7 30

LAUREL CLIFF F'R EE METHODIST
CHURCH Da vid Bell . pas tor Robert E
Bartoo. Direct OJ of Chnst la n Edu ca uo n,
' steve Ebli n, assistant. Su nd ay School 9 30
a m , M o rnm ~ wors hip 10. 30 a .m , Toens
inAc tl on ,6 p m E ven lng Wm shlp.7. 00p
m Wed nesd a y {'&lt;Vf"'nmg prayer and Bible
stud y , 7·00 p m ChOir pt a ctlcc, Thursd[lv.
7p m
DEX TE R CHURCH OF CHR IS T,
Cha1les Russel l Sr m ln ts le r. R1 ck Ma~
comb('r, supt Sunday School 9 30 am:
Wo r ship serv ice 10 30 a m Blbl r- s1udy ,
Tu es day , 7 30 p.m
pm
REOR C; ANIZE D CHURCH OF J ESt:S
CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS. Por t
FA IRVI EW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart,
la nd-Ra cine Ro ad Wlll ia m Ro us h pas tor
W Va , Rt 1, J a m es Lewis, past or Wor
Linda E va ns. c hu rch sc hool director
s hlp Sl'rv1ces 9 JO a .m ., Sunda y Sc hO olll
Chu rc h sc hool 9 30 a m . Mor ntng worshtp
a m ; Ev £&gt;n! ng wor s hip 7: 30 p m Tuesday
10. 30 a m , Wed nesday e\•e nl ng pray&lt;'r
co t ~tt.L."&lt;' praye r m eet ing and Bible Study
Sf'r vices, 7 30 p.m
. 30 a .m , Wor shtp ser v ice, Wednesd a y
BETHLEH E M BAPTI ST Rev. E,u 1 - . JO p.m
Sh ule r . pas t or Worship s erv ice, !L 30a m
OU R SA VIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH ,
Su nd ay Sc hool10· 30 a m Btble Stud van d
Wal nut a nd He m·y Sls .. Ravenswood , W
pra y('r SC'rv icc Thu r sda y . 7 30 p.m
Va T he Rev Geo rge C. Weirick, past or
CARLET ON INTERDENO MINAT ION
Sunda y SChool 9 30 a m , Sunda y worship
AL CHURCH , Kin gs bury Rond RC'v
11 a m
Clyde W Hr&gt;ndcr son . pas t oJ. Sunday
CALVA RY BIBLE CHURCH , locat ed on
Sc hool9. 30 a m ., Ro lph Ca r l. Supt Even
Pom e r oy Pi ke, Cou n1 y Road 25 near Flat
i ng worship 7 00 p m P r a yer m eet mg .
woo,ls Rev. Bla c kwood , past or Services
Wedn~ da y 7.00 p.m
on Su nd a yal lO 30 a .m and7 30pm. with
LONG BOTTOM CHR IST IAN , Ve1no n
Sun daySchool9. 30a m BibleStudy,Wed
El drld}:c. p as tor: Wallace Damewood, s
ncsda y , 7 30 p m.
S. Supt Sunday Sc hool B 30 a m , Worsh1p
F AITH F EL LOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
S£'rx ice, 10 . 30 a m
CHRIST, St Rt , 338, Antiquity Rev
RACINE FI RST BAPTIST, Stev. e
Frank lin Di cken s, pas tor. Sunday morn·
Deave r , P a s t 01 Mik e Sw lg £'r , Sund ay
mg 10 a m ; Sunday even ing 7 ;JO p.m
S!' hool Supt : S ~ nda v School 9 30 A m . .
Thu rsd.Iy C''l.'en ln g 7· 30 p m
:ors htp 10 40 a m
Sund ay
. Mo rnin g IA
STIVE RSVILL E COMMUNITY BAPe ve nin g worship 7 30 p m , WC'd nf'Sday
TIST CHU RCH. Pastor Rober t Byers .
e v€' nln g Bible study 7· 30 p m
Sunda y Sc hoollO a. m 1 Wors hip service 1J
BU RLI NGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH
a m , Su nday eve ning serv lce, 7' 30 p.m ..
Burlingh am. R ay LaudermUt , pastor, Ru.
\V('dnl'Sday evening service 7 30 p.m
bert Coun t. asslsllin t ~ stor. Surxlay Sc hool
M l DDLE P ORT INDEPE NDENT HOLI
10 a m : worstdp 7 p.m , WednOOay 6 p m
NESS CHUR CH, In c ., 75 Pear l St R~v .
yout h m~t lng; Wed, 7 p m . church sCrv~ccs
Ivan Myer s, act in g pas tor, Roger Manl ey,
PI NE GR OVE HOLINESS CHURCH ;,
Sr . S unday School Superintendent. Sun·
mil ~;&gt; o ff Rt. 32!i Rev &amp;?n J Wa t Is, pas t'or
d a y School 9 30 a .m ., Mo1nlng worship
ROh€'r t Sl' a r l~:•s. fi S Sup1 Su nd ay Sc hool
10. 30 a. m, evening worship 7. 30 p.m .,
9 30 a m ., Mor ning Wor sh ip 10 30 a m
Wedn esday evening Bible study, pra yer
Sunday even ing s e r·vlce 7:30 p m ,
a nd p raise service, 7 JO p.m
nl.'sday serv ice. 7: .10 p.rrr
CHU RCH OF JESUS CHRIST APOSS ILVER R UN BAPT[ST Bill Li ttJe
TO U C - Va nZa ndt a nd Ward Rd E lder
pastor })T(' V&lt;' LJ!! Ie, S S. Supt Sund aY
J am PS Mt ll f'r, pas t ot Sunday Sc hool ,
School 10 a m Mornin g wors Jp , 11 ;) m
10 . 30 a rn . Worshi p Se rv ice, Sunday. 7: 30
Su ntl ay evenin g wors hi p 7·.10 p m P rnyer
p m . Bi bl e Stu dy, Wednesday. 7: 30p.m
m eeting a nd Bi bl e s tud y Wedn es da y, 7:30
CALV AR Y PIL GRIM CHAPEL. Harrl·
p m ; You th meeting WC'd nesday a t 7 p m
s onv ill e Road R e v. Dewey King. pa stor,
REJOICING LI FE BAP TIST CHURCH
Cljnt (J'I F a ulk , Sunday School Supt; Sun- .'m.1 N 2nd Ave, Mlddl ep on Sunday
day School9•30 a m : morning worshlp, U
Sc hool lO a m Su nday eve ning 7 00 p m
a m . , Sunday eve ning service 7· 30 p m ~
Ml d -wC'ck ser v ice Wed , 7 p.m .
··
P rayer Me eting, Wednesday . 1 30 p m .
LANGSVI LLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO
Ro be l \ E . Mu sse r p as t or Sunday SP hooi
non-P e n tecos tal. w ors hip serv ice Sunday
9 ;30 a .m .. P a ul Musser, s upt., Morni ng
10 a .m; Sunday Sc hool ll a .m. Eve nln ~
9j,

wed'

OAVILY

e

992-2975

Rawlings-Coats-Blower
FUNERAL HOME
"Serving Families"
264 S. 2nd, Middltport

992-5141

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
worship service 7 00 p m Wednesday
prayer meeting 7 00 p.m
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
IN CHRIST CHURCH, Located In Texas
Community off Ct Rt. 82 Rev . Robert
Sanders. pastor . Jeff Holter, lay looder,
Ed Roush, Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 9· 30 a m., morning worship a nd
children's church 10·30 a .m; evening
preaching service fir st three Sundays,
7:30pm , Spedal service fourth Sunday
evening. 7: 30 p m. ; Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bible Study and Youth F e llow·
ship, 7 30 p.m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Lo ca t ed on 0 J White Road of Highway
16() Pat Henson, pas tor Sunday School tO
a m Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
a .m; Morning worship ll a .m Adult
Choir practice 6 p m. Sunday Young Peo·
pie's, Children's Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7 30 p.m.
,
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Granl
St , Middleport. Affiliated with Southern
Baptist Convention David Bryan, Sr, MI nister Sunday School 10 a m , Morning
wors hip 11 &amp; m., Eve ning worship 7 p.m .,
Wednesday evening Bible study and
prayer m cetlng 7 p.m.
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, Sl.
Rt. 124 and Co. Rd. 5. Mark Seevers, minister Sunday School Supt Har ry Hen dricks ; Sunday School9: 30 a m , Morning
Worship tO· 30 a m : Evening worshlp 7 p.
m Wednesday worship 7 p m
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Corner Sycamore and Second Sts, Po
meroy. The R('v , William Mlddleswart,
pastor . Sunday School 9 45 a m Church
service 11 a m .
SACRED
HEART CHURCH, Msgr .
Anthony G iannamore Ph 992·5898 Satur
day Evenin g Mass 7· 30 p m , Sunday
Mass, 8 am. and 10 am Confes!j\on s one
half )lour before each Mass CCD classes,
11 a m. Sunda y
VICTORY BAPTIST, 525 N . 2nd Sl ,
Middl eport. Jam es E . Keesre. past or.
Sunday morning wors hip 10 a .m., Even Ing service 7 p m.; Wednesday evening
worship 7 p m Vis it ati on Thursd a y 6 30 p
m
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH: David
Curfman , pastor Sunda y ScMol, 10 am ;
worship service 11 a m ; Sunday night
worship service 7· 30 p m ; Midw e ek
prayer service Wednesday 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport, Inc., 75 Pearl St ,
Rev Ivan Myers, pastor, Roger ManlE')I,
Sr , Sunday School Supt Sunda y Sc ho ol
9 30 a m ; Morn ing Worship 10:30 a m ;
Evening Worship 7·30 p m Wednesd a y
evening Bible study, prayer and pra ise
service, 7:30p.m.
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHUR CH
OF GOD- G!lbert Spencer, pas1or Sunday School 9.30 a. m , Mornin g ser vicE'
lO: OOa .m .; Sunda y !'venmgservice 7 OOp
m ; Mid-we ek prayer servi ce Wednesda y
7 p m.
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Lawrenct' Bush, pa s tor Max Folmer, Sr
Supt. Sundity School and Morning Wors hip
9. 30a m ., Sunday e ve nln!i!: S ~rvke, 7p.m ..
You th m~tlng and Bibl e Study , WC'dnes
day, 7 p m
UNITED FAITHCHtJRCH , Rt . 7 on Po·
meroy By-Pass Rev . David Wiseman, S r .
pas1or Ml'lv tn Drake, S S Supt Sunday
Sc hool 9: 30 a m. ; Mornlng Worship 10: 30;

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677
lill Quickol and Roth Ann Fox

(row's Family Restaurant
"Fulull•g l&lt;•llluk~ Ftlf4 c•l~iu" .
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432
Eve ning Worship 7:30 p.m.;
Prayer Service, 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH, Railroad
St • Mason. Sunday School. 10 a m : MornIng worship 11 a m ; Evening service 6 p'
m . Prayer meeting and Bible Study Wed·
nesday, 7 p.m.
FOREST RUN BAPTIST. Rev Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt
Sunday School 9:30 a.m.; Second and
fourth Sundays worship service at 2: 30
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST. Fourth and
Main St , Middleport Rev Gilbert Craig,
Jr , pastor Mrs. Ervin Baumgardner';
Sunday School Sup! Sunday School 9. 30a•
m .. worship Service, 10 :4a am
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Josepl1 B Hoskins , evangelist. Sunday
, Bible Study 9 a m ; Worship, 10 a m.; Sun·
day e vening service 6 p m ; Wednesda ~
evening service, 7 p m
~
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBI:..Y, Racine,
Rt . 124 . William Hoba ck, pastor. Sunday
School 10 a.m , Sunday evenlna service~
p.m . Wednesday evening service 7 p.m .
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle,
Supt Sunday School 9· 30 am Mornlng;
Worship 10· 30 a m Pra yE-r service, altern·
ale Sundays
·
r
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST:
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd
next to Fort Meigs PaTk. Rutland . Robe~J
Ri cha rds, pas tor Services at 7 p m on
Wednesdays and Sundays.
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAPTER of the Wesleyan Holiness Church
Rev David F e rrell , pas! or Henry Eblin,
Sunday School Supt.; Sunday School 10 a
m .; Morning Worship 11 a .m: Evening
service 7; 30 p m . Wednesday evening service 7. 30 p.m.
ST!VERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
Ha rry Holter, pastor Sunday services
9 30 a m and 7 p.m .; Midweek s ervice,
7 30 p.m Thursda y
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Third
Ave. Rev. Clark Bak er , pastor Carl Not·
tlngham , Sunday School Supt. Sunday
SchOol 10 a.m . with classes for all ages .
Evening services at 6 p.m . Wednesday Bli&gt;le study at 7 30 p.m Youth services Friday at 7· 30 p m ,
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP, 128 Mill 51.,
Middleport Brother Chu c k McPhersorl:
pastor. Sunday Sc hool 10 11m .; Sunday
e vening services at 7 p.m and Wedn~day
services at 7 p.m .
ANTIQUITY BAPTIST. Kenneth Smith,
paslor. Sunday School 9: 30am., c hurch
s ervice7.30pm, youthfellowshlp6· 30p.
m ; Bii&gt;le study , Thursday, 7: 30p.m .
PULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road , Pom eroy Tom Kelly , pas·
tor Danny Lambert, S S Supt. Sunda!(
morning service at 10 am; Sunday even·
lng service 7· 30 p m Tuesday and Thursday Services at7 ·30 p rn
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA ZARENE . Rev. Glendon Slroud , pastor
Sunday School 9 30a m : Worship servlce,
10: 30 a.m.; Youth service Sunday 6:15 p.
m . Sunday even\ng service7 OOp.m . Wed
nesd a y Prayer Meetin g and Bible Study
7 · 00 p m
· NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sun·
clay afternoon s ervices at 2· 30 Thursday
eve ning services at 7· 30 .
FlRST BAPTIST CHURCH , Ma s on , W 1 '
Va . Pastor. Bill Murphy Sunday School tO
a m ., Sunday evening 7 30 p m Prayer•
m('(&gt;ltng and Bible study Wednesday , 7:30
p m Eve r y one welcome
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST, Sa· ,
lC'm St R{'&lt;v Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
School lOam ; Sunday evening 7:00p.m .,
WL&gt;dnesday evenln g praye r m~llng 7:00

Albany woman injured in wreck

p;

~m .

An Albany woman and her infant daughter were injured in
pickup truck acc1dent Thursday, at 2 a.m., in Columbia
Township on Township Road 8, about two miles west of County
Road 1, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
PatroL
Maryrose Darst, 23, and her daugh ter, Rebecca M. Darst, 4
months, were taken by fri ends to O'Bieness Hospital in Athens .
The eider Darst was !reared and released for a minor cut Ia her
rlghl leg. The younger Darst was treated and released for a
scrape to her forehead.
·
The elder Darst was driving west when she went off the right
side of the road and hit a bridge before the truck rolled over and
came to a rest on Its top.
No citatiOn was Issued in the accident.

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UP! ) The former superintendent of
Scioto Vatiey Local Schools and
another man have pleaded guil!Y
to prostitution charges involviug
boys ages 12 to 17.
Sam Smith, who resigned his
superintendent's post two weeks
ago, pleaded guilly Wednesday
10 a charge of compelling prosti·
lulion, In both Scrota County and
Pike County common pleas
courts
Smith, 53, Piketon, is the
second person to enter a plea in a
four -month investigation of a
juvenile prostitution ring, said
Scioto County Prosecutor Lynn
Grimshaw.
Harry T. Spears , 62, pleaded
guilty In Scioto County Common
Pleas Court to compelling prostitution, carrying a concealed
weapon and dis semination of
matter harmful to juveniles,
authorities said. Spears Is a
former nursing home operator
from Piketon.
The two men are free on their
own recognizance pending presentence Investigations ordered
by Scioto County Judge Ralph
Mullins. Grimshaw said the investlgal10n began when two juveniles
came to his office telling him of a
pay-for -sex operation. He said
lhe boys were paid $25 for a
variety of sex acts with men, and
that most of the juveniles come
;tram families badly in need of

•

Grimshaw said the ring had
'operated for five or six years In
several counties and Involved
more than a dozen juveniles . He
'Said he has obtained confes sions

ln grade school, Thanksgiving was not a bi g holid a y at o ur

house for a big meal and family coming by. We did have the big meal

My father worked on the Railroad and so It was suppt=&gt;rtlmt=&gt;when we at E'
moslly . No, to me, Thanksgiving as a child was more the pictun.:&gt;s of
a nd Indians we found on the cover of all the magazines th a t
tod a y are gone or have Chr lstmas covers I· remember C olliers, Liberty ,
Saturday Evening Post, and Good Hou sekreptng and more

Pilgrims

Thanksgiving was lhoughiS of long ago In Pilgrim days. Today It Is more
or less family lime.

I

Hospital news

chard Vaughan and J.:arry Rupe.
Veterans Memorial
The last negotiations between
Wednesday Adm issions- Lesteams of the Meigs Local Board
of Education and the Meigs Local · ter Thomas , Langsville, Cathy
Teachers Association took place Carleton, Racine.
Wednesday Di sc har ges
lasl Tuesday night and neither
side Issued a state ment In regard Daisy Van Meter, Ella Barnilz,
to the strike at the request of Cathy Carleton, Ernes tine Willi·
Federal Mediator Joe Crowe who ams , Emma Adams.
asked both sides to refrain from
reporting statements to the
media. '
However, it Is reported that the
board team did make an offer to
the teachers team with that offer
to be taken back to the teachers
for consideration this Sunday.

to co ntinu e h a ndlin g th e
responsibilities .
The board appointed Jeff
Werry to fill a vacancy on the
board created recently by the
resignation of board member,
Larry Powell, who had only one
month remaining on his term.
Werry was elected to serve on the
board at the November election
and would have begun hls four
year term of office In January.
All actions taken at Wednesday
evening's special session was
approved by all four board
member s who are Robert
Snowden, Robert Barton, Rl-

Thursday AdmissiOns - Ronald Wood, Pomeroy; Burl Blevins, Langsville.
Thursday Discha rges- Lando
Clay, Peggy Hartman, Ma ry
Gi lkey, ly!adge Ba rr, and Carole
Bush.
'

I

THE

Cedar Bar &amp; Lounge
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .

roy and Western Auto ' In
Middleport.
Distribution of items collected
will be handled primarily from
references from agencies In the
county but others in need are also
welcome to apply.

The Meigs County Minis terlal
Association is carrying out a
"Reach Our for a Warmer
Winter to Those In Need'' project
for underprivileged children and
adults.
While the program is primarily
aimed at collecting coats,
scarves, hats, caps and gloves
for children, the sall'le apparel
for teens and adults will be
received and di s tribuled.
Blankets will also be collected
and distrlbvuted.
Residents wisning to help are
asked to leave goad, clean winter
items at their locat' participating
church! are at Krogers in Pome-

• PRESENTS •-

T.G.I.F.
COUNTRY -ROCK G.ROUP

Licenses issued

SATURDAyI NOVEMBER 28th

A marriage license has been
issued in the Meigs County
Probate Court to James Erwin
Snyder, Jr ., 21, Pomeroy, and
Norma Jean Hysell, 19,
Pomeroy.

DANCING
NO COVER CHARGE

PAT HILL FORD INC.
UP TO ~600.00
CA-SH BACK
WHEN YOU PURCHASE ONE OF THESE NEW FORD'S
,

!rom a number of adults in the
ring, and he expects further
proseculion In the nexl few
weeks.

I

~·

BRONco II

A divorce has been gra nted to
Ruth Ellen Dent . from Wayne
Alan Dent with custody of a
minor child being awarded to the
plaintiff, according to an entry
filed in the Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
In other action in the court, an
entry has been filed releasing
W1iliam Joseph Roush from
paying fu rther child support for
Terri Marie Roush who has now
reached 18 years of age; and an
initial pre-trial hearing has been
set for 11 a .m. on Feb. 29 In the
c ase of the Bluefield Distributing
Co. and Mason-Dixon Dlribution
against James Ridenour, dba as
Ridenour TV and Appliances.

•

Pork Chops &amp; Dressing ..................... .

our though Is did go back to early America and those flr sllhanksglvlngs '
wllh the Indians and Pilgrims. God has also blessed us wilh family and

WEDNESDAY

friends, home and work and many fond memories of this pas t year . God

Hot Roast Beef Sandwich ................ ..

has kept us in the faith, watched ove r us and ours and Still holds a loll
eternal life for all who profess Christ Is the Lord our redeeme1.

THURSDAY

Let us rememl::M:!r Gods boutny and girts, our family und frelnds, o ur

health and happiness, those who helped us to·grow into adulthood and

John~y

•

'•'

Marzetti .........~,......................

$ 49
3
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ON THE SPOT
BANK FINANCING,
AVAILABLE.

'

smRDAY

Megetable Soup &amp; Sandwich ..............

.

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Baked Steak ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 34

'

TAURUS

Court news

Enjoy the very finest In home etyle
cooking at th$ very best prices around I

. TUESDAY

_,

"I have talked to the investiga tors . . and Ihey a ssure me that
none of our other staff or students
are involved," Thompson said.

MONDAY

God ha~ blessed us with food . The fields, gardens , and o r chards have
yellded their bounty . Thanksgiving Dinner was over flowing and maybe

F.-SERIES

Kenny Thompson, superintendent of Pike County Schools,
said Smith walked into his office
Nov. 12, told him he was under
investigation and handed in a
resignation.

Cabbage Roll's ...... ,.............................

really should be called forth to the llghl of day once more.

RANGER

"Over the last few years, the
sexual activity was going on
almost every weekend , generally
in motels In Scioto County,"
Grimshaw said .

Delicious Dishes!

What It there to be thankful for today? F o od comes from the
supermarket, ltght comes from a switch, not kerosen e or candl{'s ,
clothes and fr uit are not from our own animals ro orc hards. Still w e do
have so much for which to be thankful. Let us no1 forg e t .
A s ong says "Count your blessings , name them o ne b y one. " All ye ar
long we can find things to be thankful for and yet loday we c a n ' t
r e member them all. Think back to January, F e bru a r y and March ,
aren ' 1 there a few things you are still thankful for m y our mind and
heart. Little klndnesses that recall good Urnes or mem o ries These m ay
be little thanksgivings we have stored away In the back of our mind th a t

Thanksgiving, truely America must be lhankful. - Pastor William H.
Mlddleswarth, 002 Sprtnc Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio" 45169.

•

Ex-superintendent pleads
guilty to prostitution charges

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH, Stiver Ridge Duane Sydenstrtcker, pastor Sunday School 9 a .m.i
Worship Service, 10 a m .. Sunday evening
s ervice, 7·00 p m Wednesday nlght Bibll•
study 7:00pm
·

what we have become that Is fine and generous and lov mg. May we
never forget things could be somuc hworsethan they are a s we look ov e r
the world as It Is today .
"
Thanksgiving Is spe&lt;:lal Let us nol forget it unrll nex l year at Ibis
time. Let us live in thankfulness every day and In every way.

_ _ __

c ontinued from page 1

---~
·

THUNDERBIRD

,money.

When I w as

• L oca [...
M ergs

Group plans project for children

Meigs emergency units were busy on Thanksgiving and the
day before with eight calls for medical assistance and two fire
alarms being answered.
On Wednesday at 5: 43 a.m. the Racine unit went to Third
Street in Racine for Cathy Carleton, who was transported to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; at 11:10 a.m. Pomeroy fire units
wenl to the Dan Zirkle residence on Peacock Ave. where
reportedly an appliance wa s emiting smoke.
AI 1:34 p.m. the Pomeroy unit went to 303 Union Terrace
where a utility pole wa s on fire; at 2:05p.m. the Rutland squad
transported Mary Birchfield from her Noble Summit Road to
the Holzer Medical Center; and at 11:16 p.m. The Tuppers
Plains unit , along wtth the fire department , joined by the
Chester firem e~ were called to State Route 248, presumabley
lhe scene of an auto accident, although II was reported no
vehicle was found .
On Thursday at 3:30 a.m. The Columbus Township unit
responded to County RMd 1 for a truck accident, but tllere were
no injuries; at 9· 04 a .m. the Tuppers Plains unit transported
Maude Gray from her home on State Route 7 to Camden Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg; at 10: 17 a .m . the Middleport unit took
Laura Scott from her home on Cole Sl. to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; at 7:48p.m. the Middleport unit went to Custer Sl. for
Tim Shane who refused treatment , and at 11: 49 p.m. the
Pomery unll transported Mary DeMoss from State Route 33 1o
Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Sermonette

'
•

219 S. Second
Pomeroy

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

12 8760 ~

John F . Fultz . Mgr
Ph 992

The televis ion section which normally a ppears In the Friday
edition of The Daily Sentinel will appear in the Sunday edition of
The Times Sentinel.
••

GRAVELY TRACtOR SALES

CENTER, INC.

f~

No television section today

T~AfOitD REA~TY

GroceriesGeneral Merchandise
Racine 949-2550

Brogan-Warner

Brown's Fire &amp;

ol Columbu s, 0 .
804 W Mam

!U

Prescnpflon!o
991 'l9SS
Pomeroy

Locu st &amp; Beech Street

Nattonwtde Ins. Co.

WAID CROSS
SONS· STORE

&amp;LOHSE

~~~~!

r

complete

Equipment

~ISHER

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

---Local briefs------..

:Rw;;inesses Listed On This Page.

and Church
ELliS &amp; SONS SOHIO

Friday, November 27, 1987

992-7833

MIDDLEPORT

992-2196

461- S. 3rd
' .

'

Inc.
Middleport, OH.
·-

�•

,.

I

Area deaths

·1

and three sisters, Laura Fleak,
Martha Fleak, ami Mabel Uh l, all
of Parkersburg; several nieces
and nephews.
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Raymond, one son.
and one daughter, one sister and
five brothers.
Funeral services wll be held at
1 p.m Sunday at the White
Funeral Home in Coolvllle. The
Rev. Roy Deeter will officiate
and burial will be in the Coolville
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home from 2 to4 and 7
to 9 p.m. Saturday.

Betty Fossen

Friday, November 27, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

R~kies,
.

'

Weather

Stocks._ _ _....,...__ _ _ __

'•

near Rifle. Colo., authorities
r--:.:....
__...:___.:__________________

"Conditions aren't all that
bad, .. he said. "We have Jlnc.~es
of snow and 1-mlle visibility.
But the FAA shut down two
malar runways because of north·
erly winds at the airport. where
28 people died In the crash of a
Continental jet during a snow·
storm Nov.15~ _ -..uucu.1..:&gt;u
planes landing·· and taking o(f
each hour. Normally, that 's 72,"
Avery said.
At least three people died
Thursday in traffic accidents on
snow-slick Colorado highways. ·
Two California brothers died
when· their car splln out of control
Into the path of a tractor-trallor
truck on I-160 near Cortez. Killed
in , the accident wo!re, Aaron
Abatlell, 21, and his 23-year-old
brother Dlno, both of Long
Beach. Krist! Kay Chadez, 21, of
Glenwood Springs, Colo., was
killed when her car ·rolled over
_ &amp; .......

14K gold rings

Our most popular diamond solitaire is this
Tiffany setting, priced at $549 with Y. ct. diamond.
Now with this special offer, the lady's matching band
IS ~'REE with your purchase. Man's 5MM matching band
.:ds only $79 when purchased at the same t ime.
Visit us. This is on excellent buy.

One has lucky ticket .
CLEVELAND IUP!) - One
player picked all six numbers in
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed·
nesday night to become eligible
to claim the $6 mllllon jackpot. 1
The winning numbers were I, 5,
6, 26, 29 and 40. The name of the I
player will be announced alter
the winning ticket is validated at
a regional lottery office, a lottery
commission spokesman said
Thursday.
The winnings will be paid in 20
annllal pre-tax payments of
$300,000, the spokesman said.
1

,

LOT OF SOLITAIRE DIAMOND RINGS IN STOCK
CHECK OUR PRICES FIRST
CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE
.
SUN., NOV. 29, 1 TO 5
CENTER FOR QUALITY DIAMONDS FOR OVER 25 YRS.

FRI. 8:30 A.M.-8:00 P.M. SAT. 8:30 A.M.-4:00 P.M. SUN.1-5:00 P.M.

Friday, November 27, 1987.
Page- 11

:1

said.

Inbound flights were delayed as
much as three hours, and out·
bound flights were departing 90
minutes late. said . spokesman
Norm Avefy.

CLEARANCE SALE

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

By The Bend

I

I

Texas p~handle get snowfall

By United Press International
Storms that spread snow over
the Rockies and as far south as
Betty L. Fossett,.59 olf Colville,
the Texas panhandle today gave
died early Thursday morning at
skiers and resort operators reaCamden Clark Hospital in Parson to be thankful but left holiday
kersburg. W. Va,
Born in Parkersburg, she was
travelers grumbling about
the daughter of the late Joseph
delays.
,
and Lucy Bennett Hall. She is
· A wintry storm cut Thanksgiving Day air traffic at Denver's
survived by two so ns, Raymond
Fossett, Coolville. and Ernest
Stapleton I!\ternatlonal Aii·port
Fossett, Parkersburg; lour
by more than half, and forecasdaughters, Mary Brooks, Bel·
ters said it could leave up to 2 feet
pre; Ruth and Janet Fossett,
of snow. in Its ·wake today. A
Coolville; and Nancy Hoffman,
separate storm blanketed the
Athens; nine grandchildren, a
Northeast with snow Thursday.
brother. Bill Hall. Parkersburg;
"There 's a lot of powder out
there and a lot of happy people,"
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 11-28-87 silid Ned Stock, manager or the
Monarch Ski Area In Colorado's
south-central mouniains. The ski
area had received a foot of snow
si nce Wednesday, and was expectlng 9 to 12 Inches of new snow
before the storm passed out of the
area.
Although centered over south·
ern Colorado, the storm spread
snow early today through much
of Wyoming, New Mextco, the
Te-xas and Oklahoma panhandles; western Kansas and Nebn!ska, the National Weather
Sevlce said.
In New Mexico, 8 inches of
snow was reported Thursday at
Red River. Wolf Canyon and
Cleveland. Snowfalls of llP to 6
Inches blanketed the Santa Fe
Ski Area.
Winter storm warnings were
~SNOW
-RAIN
·. ~SHOWERS
posted throughout the day today
!or the Texas and Oklahoma
FRONTS: . . Warm "Cold
. . Static " ' Occluded
panhandles, where between 4
Map shows minimum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast
and
8 Inches of snow was
to receive precipita~on indicated
·
11g1
expected by sundown. Up to 6
WEATHER MAP- Snow will edend from northwest Texas and
inches of snow was forecast for
northeast New Mexico across southeast Colorado and western
southwest Kansas.
Oklahoma into western Kansas and central Nebraska. Rain will
The slow moving storm
reach from the eastern tw&lt;&gt;-thlrds ol Texas to the middle
created major delays for holiday
Mississippi Valley and across tbe Ohio Valley to the middle
travelers at Stapleton, where
Atlantic Coast states, the Carolinas and Georgia. Rain will also
occur across the Pacific Northwest. Showers and thunderstorms
will be scattered over the Florida peninsula.
~
·· -

'fhe Daily Sentinel

In the spotlight

Choose ·the prqper toy for the pr&lt;?per boy (or girl)

and you can use this as a
spend more for quality.
By Cindy Oliveri
Children don't need a great guideline . Other guidelines
Meigs Extension
ma ny toys. They ma y want them, follows .
Service Agent
For children under two, select
but In the end will play with only a
If yell have youngsters on your
gift lis t this year, chances are · few favorites. This makes it sturdy rattles, brightly colored
their first req uests are for toys. especially important to select objects, rubb&lt;;&gt;r or was)1able
One problem Involved in Christ· toys that provide opportunities squeak toys and stuffed dolls and
animals. Other good choices for
mas toy buying is that most for dl~ferent kinds of play.
this age group include large
One
of
the
best
ways
to
know
parents or relatives want a child
what
toys
to
select
for
a
child
is
to
soft-colored balls , bloc~wi th
to have everything they had as a
round corners and push an pull
know
the
childbecome
aware
or
child. Or if a parent missed out on
toys.
Be careful in selectl ·g a gift
·
the
kinds
of
activities
the
child
something as a child. he or she
for
this
age group that the toy
Learn
th
e
child's
capab!U·
likes.
wants their children to have it. In
does
not
have any small pieces
ties.
What
can
the
child
do
and
today 's world, th is means multi·
such
as
buttons
or trim that culd
handle
with
satisfaction
and
pie toy after toy.
Wha
t
are
his
interests?
be
pulled
off
a
nd
swallowed.
sa{ety?
This week "In the Spotlight"
Children
ages
two
to three are
chlfdWhen
he
plays
with
other
takes a look at some suggestions
in
the
exploring
age.
They will
rens' toys , what are the choices
for the youngsters on your list.
enjoy
a
sandbox
with
bucket,
Dr. James Van Horn, exten- made?
shovel
and
..
One
prerequisite
of
a
good
toy
spoon;
large
peg
sion specialist at Pennsylvania
It'
s
·
is
that
the
child
for
whom
boards , wooden animals, cars
State University Indicates that at
chosen
will
play
with
it.
Age
can
and wagons to push, tip-proof
Christmas time, ·children tend to
as
a
general
guide
in
serve
kiddie
car s and tricycles , large
receive too much at one time. It
selection.
Many
manufacturers
crayons
and small chairs and
might be better if the gift buyer.s
label
toys
according
to
age
range
tables.
cut down on the quantity and
Youngsters ages three to four
for which they are most suited.

like to pretend. Toys that adapt to
their make believe world include
small brooms and carpet sweepers, toy telephones, dolls with
.simple wrap-around clothing,
'dishes , m iniature garden too ls.
trucks and tractors. drums,
costume clothes and building
blocks. Make sure the toys can
withstand hard play.
From four to six, children
continue to imitate adults , and
they enjoy blackboards, simple
construction toys, small toy irons
and dolls. The parents of six year
olds can start Introducing more
complicated play things such as
sewing materials and carpenter's benches. At eight years of
age children are reapy lor
bicycles, electric tra ins, musical
lnstrumen ts and · gym
equipment.
A toy !or any age child should
be strongly built to withstand
vigorous use. If the toy is made of

Some final notes ...

calendar
MGM dinner
MIDDLEPORT - MGM District, Boy Scouts of America,
recognition dinner will be held on
Dec . 3 at the new American Legon· Hall in Middleport.
Reservations are to be made
by Nov. 27with Lisa Roush, 33178
Bailey Run Road, Pomeroy ,
45769, or by calling 992-3486. All
reservations of $6.50 must be
paid in advance.
Tickets
POMEROY- Ticketes for the
Beta Sigma Phil Christmas
buffet and dance are on sale from
club office rs a nd chapter
men:ibers. The event will be Dec.
5, at the Sen ior Citizen Center in
' Pomeroy . Social hour Is 7 to 8
p.m . Tickets are $8 for singles
and $16 for couples. It will be
hosted by Ohio Eta Phi Chapter.

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

Since this. wlll be our last
colomn, we thought we'd close
. out this successful series with
some useflll Information that can
help you whether or not you
currently receive benefits.
Remember thaty your Social
Security coverage is life-long,
comprehensive family protectlon. You have Insurance on your
earnings that replaces a portlon
of those earnings lost due to
disability, retirement and In the
event of your death , for your
family. For you younger
workers, remember that protection is active and ongoing during
your working years and Is worth
hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Another important point to
remember is that Social Security
was designed to be the foundation ·
of your retirement. disability and
estate planning. As such, the
program replaces about 41 percent of the average worker's
Income. Studies indicate that a
retiree needs between 65-75 percent of pre-retirement earnings
to maintain the same standard of
living. It 's up to you to supplement the base Social Security
Dancing to "Sunflower" the group Includes from _ provides with private pensions ,
savings, insurances and other
the left Paulette Harrison, lfoUy Wllliams and ·
forms of investments. In other
Kay Hemsley.
words, you shollld be planning
now ... and re-examining your

Leukeml·a trea·tment. shows promise at OSU ··r~:n~:a~~~~~~u~r~~at ~o~:~~
1 11

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said their study produced a
relapse-free survival rate of 89
percent for standard-risk patients and a 51 percent rate for
high-risk patients .
For the study. standard-risk
patients were those either whose
acute leukemia was in remission
or who had chronic leukemia in
the chronic phase. High-risk
patients all had advanced
leukemia.
Standard-risk patients generally have survival rates of no
more than 50 percent. and
high-risk patients have a Sllrvlal
rate of 20 percent.
Researchers said that . in the
case of bone marrow trans plants , &amp;urviva l for more than
two years after transplan ts is

considered equivalent to a cure
of the leukemia, but their study
was based on three· years of
projected survival.
Tutschka said that the new
protocol was only applied to
patients who can be matched,
with their donors. as were all the
OSU patients. This would mean
that only about 40 percent of ali
leukemia patients were eligible
for this kind of a treatment. But
lor those patients , the treatment
will probably res\llt in a cure of
the disease.
At the end of the study,18of the
20 standard-r isk patients were
alive and well. One patient died
from transplant -related complications 13 months after his
transplant, another left the country 12 months following transplant and was lost to lollowup.

Two patients still showed mild
cases of chronic graft vs. hOst
disease, a common complication
following transplants in which
the transplanted bone marrow
attacks the patient.
Among the 30 high -risk patients, .15 were alive and well at
the end of 'the study. After an
initial transplant In one patient
failed to control the leukemia, a
second transplant was appar·
ently successful and the patient
is alive and well two years after
treatment.
Six other patients died after
their leukemia returned , five
died from pneumonia that developed after transplantatlon, one
each died from heart failure,
infection and graft vs . host
disease.

Security provides.
Yoll can rest assured that
Social Security will, Indeed, be a
significant part of your future.
Presently, 38 million, or one ollt
of seven Americans receive
monthly Social Secllrity benefits.
According to the annual projec-

tion of the Social Security tru s·
tees, the system Is sound
throughout the 75 yea rs of the
projection period.
That's not to say you won't see
any changes in the program In
the decades to come. Social..
Security is dynamic, not static.
The program changes to meet
the changing needs and expecta·
tions of society .. .and the eco·
nomi'C realities society faces. In
fact, Social Sec)lrity has seen a
number of changes In Its five
decades, moving from a simple
retirement program to the com·
prehensive retirementldlsabili·
ty / survivor/medical. coverage
we take for granted today.
Since Social Security affects so ·
many aspects and ages of our
lives, news headlines that mention those two words attract our
attention. Carefully read the
story behind a · sensationalistic
headline proclaiming majorcllts
in benefits or coverage, for
example . Very often, only a
proposal or the result of a study is
involvect, not a change in policy
or regulations . The story most
likely might only represent a
narrow political point of view .
Read further than the headlines
and don't allow yo urself . to .get
upset.
Most important, be alert for
companies offering Social Security services and Information at a
price. Local Social Security
offices provides Social Security
cards, pamphlet s, Information
and services for free. If you are
approached by someone or received a solicitation in the mail
asking for money, call the Social
Security office for clarification.

Retailers _prepare
for shopping rush

The same story was told at a
By United Press Iniernatlonal
Gold
Circle.
All the work that Carl Wolz and
"We
have been pretty busy,
other stock persons did Thursday
especially
the first part of the
could be undone within a few
morning
when
we were real
hours after stores open their
busy," said a spokesman at a
doors today. -~ ~~lonally the
largest shopp;e_g -.uay of the . Gold Clrcle Discount Store in the
Cleveland suburb of Parma.
season .
" We 're stocked with mostly
Wolz Is a night stock person at a
everything,
but we 'll be receivK-Mart store in the Columbus
ing
Items
right up through
suburb of Westerville. He spent
Christmas."
his Thanksgiving Day stocking
The store had a toy promotion
A spokesman for the prosecutor said the plea bargain was
shelves and pricing items · In
for
Thanksgiving Day, and the
accepted because of conflicting statements from police officers. • preparation for today's barrage
hottest
selling Items In the store
POLANSKI STILL BANNED: Despite speculation to the
of shoppers.
seemed
to be toys.
contrary, film maker Roman Polanski is still a wanted man )n
K-Mart stores in central Ohio,
As
lor
three Cooks store -two
Los Angeles. Polanski . 54 , fled to Europe. in January 1978 while
which opened ·at 7 a.m., offered
In
Lima
and the one in Wauseon
awaiting sentencing to a convictlon for unlawful sexual
specially priced Items those first
- this Christmas season Is the
interco\lrse with a 13-year-old model. Newspapers recently
few hours.
reported that the district attorney had been looking into the case
Several other stores opened last for them.
again at the behest of Los Angeles lawyer Arthur Groman.
earlier than usual.
"By law, there 's nothing the district attorney ca n do ," said AI ·
But some Ohloans~ got an early
Albergate, a spokesman for the DA. •'If he IPolanski) returns ,
jllmp on their hollday shopping
he'll have to face sentencing. The case has not changed in 10
by touring the aisles Thursday
years." Polanski also ha s no U.S visa since it was revoked by the
while the turkey roasted .
Immigration and Naturalization Service soon after he fled.
"We're busy. as busy as any
PRISCO..LA PRESSED: Priscilla Presley will have to give a
OPEN
weekday." said a customer serdeposition in the legal battle between th e Elvis Presley estate
vice ~epresentatlve at a Meijer 's
SUNDAY 11 AM·7 PM
and a man who sold Elvls women's lingerie and other
- store in Columbus who did not
MONDAY THRII SATURDAY
merchandise without permission. Sid Shaw had filed suit to
_ wish to give his name. "I'm
IOAM·9PM
have Prlse"llla. as president of Elvis Presley Enterprises,
surprised to be this busy on a
re lease record s from the Graceland tru st.
holiday ."
A federal magistrate in Memphis. Tenn .. ruled in favor of
The hottest selling item fo r the
271 tf2' N. SECOND AVE •
Shaw, des pite saying that Shaw's efforts were intended . to
day - toys, he sald. not any
embarrass and annoy Priscilla and that she was not famtl!ar
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
particular toy , just toys in
willt the fac ts of the case.
general.
REMEMBER RUDY: Rudy Vallee's widow is remarrying
soon and she is selling 40 items from his career In an auc'tlon
beginning Friday. Some of the mementos going on the block
lnclude ha ts glven to Vallee by W.C. Fldds and W!Uiam S. Hart,
top hats Vallee wore to the first lnauguratlon of Franklin D.
Roosevelt, the neon sig n that graced his VIlla Vallee nightclub
CUT-YOUR OWN-AT
in New York and a model ship given to him by John Barrymore.
Eleanor Vallee , the singer's third and final wife, said she Is
puttlng the items up for sale because she Is remarrying. "I've
enjoyed them and it's time to go on to a new life," she said.
PRE·CUT TREES AVAILABLE
" There isn't a week that goes by that we don 't hea r from
SCOTCH AND WHITE PINE
someone, som ewh ere In the country who wants an item. We
Located
on
Cherry
Rid&amp;e. turn east al Darwin on Rt. 681. 4 miles,
thought this would be a nice opportunity !o~. people to bid on
turn
soulh
on Gravel road IV. miles to grove.
some items that a re definitely one·of-a-klnd.

---.--People in the news-----------,

OF 5

12 OR 20 GAUGES

Til tschka and Edward Copelan

OF5

BOX

GUN

1987 Delta 88

COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPI) Ohio State University re searchers say a new drug treat ment. coupled with bone marrow
transplants. Is nearly tripling the
survival rate of high-risk acute
and chronic leukemia patients .
The survival rates, which were
published In the current issue of
the journal Blood, are much
higher than those of other tran splant centers and are based on a
three- year study of_ patien ts at
Ohio State University Hospitals.
In 80 percen t of patients with
leukemia. a cancer of the bloodforming organs. the disease
cannot be controlled by standard
chemotherapy. The patients' disease will recur In a form that' s
even more resistant to conventional treatments.
Ohio State resea rchers Peter

label on them . This insures safe
cons truction . Tools in a tool chest
should be of good quality and
strang enough to be used safely
without breaking.
The more opportunities a toy
has, the more interesting It will
be: Toys that can be used in mer.;&gt;
than one way, stimulate the child
to be creative and to use his
·
imagination.
After the toys are opened on
Christmas mornin g, remember
that a child's introduction to
adulthood through toys calls for
close supervision and good play
habits. Make sure you've given
the right child the right toy and
offer him guidance as he learns
to play with it.
.
The Meig~ Collnty Exte nsion
Service has other materials
related to child ·development.
For additional lnfprmation, con·
tact us at 992-6696 .

Your SocSec

Community

Revival
HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonville Holiness Chapel, Route
684, will be in revival from Nov.
28 through Dec. 6 with. Sister
Nadine Fetterman. evangelist.
Pastor David Ferrell welco'm es
the public.

plastic . be sure th e plastic Is the
"high impact " type. Then If it
breaks , there won 't be an y rough
edges.
Check all toys !or sharp edges
and corners. Screws or nails
shollld have blunt or capped
ends. In key wind'ing toys, the
spring should be enclosed in a
,cylinder that ca n stand shock if
the spring breaks.
Make sure toys are made with
non-toxic materials. Check carefully fo r leadfree paint on toy
cars and harmless pigments in
crayons.
Ask if any pa rts, especially
those of dolls or stuffed animals
are namable. If the clerk can't
tell you or the label does n't
Indicate t hat the materials are
non,flammable. anothec toy
would be a better choice.
Check electric toy s lor the
Underwriters' Laboratori es

12 GA. WITH ACCU

CHOKE II BARREL

S219'~

By WILLIAM C. TROTr
United Press International
ARNOLD RAPS SLY: How about this for a super action
movie: Sylvester Stallone, aka Rocky, aka Rambo, versus
Arnold Schwar•enegger. aka Conan th e Barbarian, aka the
Runn ing Man? In an Interview In the January Playboy,
Schwa•·zenegger says he and Stallone don't get along.
"He just )llts met he wrong way," Arnold says. " !make every
effort that is humanly possible to be fr iendly to the guy a nd he
just gives off the wrong vibrations."
.
Scharzenegger es pecially doesn't like Stallone's wardrobe.
"Seeing him dressed In his white suit, trying to look slick and hip
-that a lrea dy annoys people ," Arnold says. " And th e gold ring
and the gold cha ins that say. 'Look how rich I am.' ... It's a
shame no one taught him to be cool. He should hav e L.L. Bean
shoes and corduroy pants with a plaid shirt ... rather than that
fur coat when he directs."
On a nother fashion note, Schwarzenegger says he wea rs the
pants in his family, not wife Marla Shriver. "Neither my mother
nor Marla is allowed to go out with me In pants," he says.
"Marla would never wear pants, believe me·. "
LAWYER COPS A PLEA: As an "L .A. Law" -yer, Jimmy
Smits understa nds th e strategy of a plea qarg aln . Smits pleaded
no contest Wednesday to a charge of disturbing the peace and in
exchange prosecutors dropped charges of res isting arrest and
battery against a police officer. He was ordered to pay a $150
fine. perform 50 hours of community service and placed on
probation for 18 months.
Smits's friend, Wanda De Jesus, 29, also pleaded no contest to
dlstllrbing the peace and a charge of misidentifying herself to
pollee. Her punishment will be a $250 fine, 75 hours of
community service and 18 months on probation.
Pollee said Smits and De Jesus attacked them when they
responded to reports of a ruckus in the actor's home Allg. 10.
Smits and DeJesus Issued a statement saying, "We view the
dl s ml~sal of these charges as support of our earlier claim that
neither of us has attacked a pollee officer nor otherwise been
guilty ovesistlng a/rest."

THE
VIDEO TOUCH
992-3562

~--~--------~~----~-----,

II

II

CHJ.liSTMAS TREES '

BRADFJ)RD'S GROVE

1I ·
I

I
I
l

l

I
i

WATCH FOR SIGNS -

Hours 10:00 Til Dark

1
1

·--------------~-------•• •

I

�Friday, November 27, 1987

Page-12- The Daily Sentinel
.

New Cadette troop forms tn area
The new Girl scout cadette
troop lor girls 11 to 15 in the
Southern Local School District
will meet Tuesday at the As bu ry
United Met hod ist Church, Syni"
cuse. It was noted that the 'glrls
ca n ride the school buses to the
c hurch with their parents to

Tabath':l t~ught to say fgobble',

provide the transporta lion home.
Meetings will be held each
Monday after sc hool, 3:30 to 5
p.m . At Mond ay 's meeting
Christmas orna ments will be
made out of dough. April Harmon
Is the leader and fo r more
informa tion she may be contacted at 992-5567.

but still ,gets no turkey dinner
PITTS BURGH (U PI ) Three-year-old Tabatha Foster,
the world' s longest surviving
five-organ transplant patient,
learned "to say "gobble" for
Thanksgiving but still Isn't alldwed to eat turkey or any other
solid food , hospital officials said.
Doctors upgraded Tabatha 's
condition from "critical" to
" critical but stable' ' early Thursday. Hours later, the child sat In
bed watching a Thanksgiving
Day parade, nursing supervisor
Mary Jo Matthews said.
Children's Hospital doctors
took the Madisonville, Ky ., tot off
a respirator at 8 a.m. Thursday
after a similar effort failed
Wednesday night, hospital officials said.
"There has been no change,"

Cub Pack visits nursing home
Me mbers of De n 4 Cub scout
Pack 249 visited ih~ extended
care unit at Ve teran s Memorial
Ho.s pltal Wednesday. They presented skits a nd songs for he
p'atients.
Par ticipa ting were Matthew

Seller s, Jerod Gilmore, Michael
Klein, a nd Jerry Ha(dwick.
Angle Selle r s assisted Brenda
Neutzllng with tlie progra m .
Another visit was pla nned fo r
Dec. 17.

Dexter transferred to Penn.
Mr. and Mrs. Ted Dexter , the
former Crystal Manley of Middleport, recently moved to Pennsylvania where he has been
promoted to a manager's post-·
lion with Dominoes Pizza.
The store which he manages Is
in Way nesburg, Pa. Dexter was
formerly a manager In training

.Rutland

at the Athe ns branch. Mr s.
Dexter is the daughter of Mr . a nd
Mrs. Robert Manley, Park St.,
Middleport.
Their new address is Ted .a nd
Crys tal Dexter, Route 21, Mobile ·
Park, · Rou te 1, Bcx 62, Carmichaels, Pa . 15322.

More given

Bias birthday

Cindy P ark e nter tained at her
home recently with a party
honoring he r, son, James Adam
Lee Bias , on his first birthday.
Family members ·and several
friends attended the pa r ty wh ere
a tr ain repllca cake was served
with other refres hments.

NEW YORK (UP! ) - Singer
Madonna has served divorce
Decorations" suggesting the use papers on her hot-tempered'
of blue spruce with yucca for h,usband, actor Sean Penn, fol door swags, m agnolia and lowing two stormy years of
grandlflora.
marriage, the Daily News reBinda Diehl gave " Get Ready ported. today.
for Winter" noting that roses
Madonna was repor tedly anneed winter blan kets when gered by Penn because he went
temperatures reach 20 degrees . four days without talking to her
She suggested mounding soil and then turned up at their New
around roses and mulching per- York home expecting to spend
ennial s with leaves or s traw.
Thanksgiving with her, the News
Margaret Parsons gave hints said.
for houseplan ts no ting that they ·
"You're not having Thanksgivbenefit from moisture. Mrs. ing dinner here," she reporNicholson displayed a fresh tedldy told him.
flower arrangement.

I Wolfe Pen personal notes

M~~lm:rc;ou:f1~n, reZ;;tte and
to K~th Jetter! at a e~ gifts
shOwer yheld at the Ru~f::J

Church of God and hosted b
Judy McDonald Sharon Wls:
Melanie Duddin , Dee Slmm '
and Karen Guk!' Their n ons
were not includ.::;· in an eaaml_es
r Ier
llstingolthosepresenting lftsto
the honored guest
· g
·

Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew, Texas Road
were Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs. Eugene Haning, Ronald and
G!adys Tuckerman.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith
were Sunday visitors of Mrs.
Harley Smith, Gallipolis.
Mr . and Mrs . Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, were Saturday even- ,
ing visitors of Mr. and Mrs .

will be held Dec. 5 at the Senior
Citizens Center. It is fo r sorority
members and guests only with
tickets to be purchased from
Maurlsha Nelson, chapter president. The social hour will be held
from 7 to 8 p.m . at which time the
dinner will be served. The dance
will be from 9 to 12 p.m.
The gift exchange and dinner
party will be held on Dec. 15 at
the home of Annie Chapman, 7
with the social committee In

.,

FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27TH
COUNTRY STYLE STEAK DINNER .................;. S3.29
Trw our "Ntw" Co•lllry Stylt St111k PMtion Which Is Lightly lr.w•d On loth Sidtl and
Thtn Simnwtd In A Otlidous Momtmo4t Whitt Gravy SCIIKt
~vtd With Our Hot Tat«labin IStttlk Friftl vndYour(hoict of Homtmade Colt Sluw, Mouroni
Salctd, or Potato Sol.t, or laked learn, With A Mot Sttomy Roll or Homllllldt liuuil.

SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29TH
HOM£BAKED PORK CHOP DINNER .............." S4.29

A Largt Six Ouna, Juity Pork Chop, Prepared Fresh Rolled in. Our Sptdal StCIIOiings. Thtn
loktd. All Done In Our Own Kitchen.
Served With Mot.htd Potatoes ond Graww, Dtlidous Cauliflowtr Toppe4 With ChHit $wee, Your
Choice of a HomtmcMit liuuil or a Hot, 5ttamy Roll ond Marw.U Hou11 CoHH or S.ka Dtcaf·
finattd, loth Frts ..y lrtwtll. lA Small Drink May It Substituttd.)

The do-your-own-thing auction
was anll!'11nced for Tuesday at
the meeting to be held at the
home of Lynn ·Shuler iri Middleport. Those who do not ta ke
some thing for the a uction will be
fined $10.
Tickets on the fund raising
project are to be turned in at
Tuesday's meeting. Kathy Johnson gave the cul tural program
with Jane t Peavley and Caroly~
Thomas ser ving refreshments.

NEW HOURS: 10-7:30, 7 DAYS A WEEK

Z

il\~rbuugl(a

.. .

nf Ql4rntrr

RESTAURANT

ROUTE 7

CHESTER

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OFF
EVERYTHING
~

THE TIGHT SEAT IS HERE!
The Tight Seat is Here! The problem is solved! No
more worrying with 3 cushions moving up and down
and around. The tight seat is all one cushion with a 3
cushion look. Fastens securely in place.
.

2 piece
Early American
living Room Suite

REG.

Medicine: The Way it Was

WEDNESDAY AD SHOULD HAVE READ
MOUNTAIN DEW, PEPSI FREE, DIET OR
REGULAR PEPSI COLA

1794 to the Present

NOW ON DISPLAY
in the Main Lobby of the

99C

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LIMIT ONE WITH '10 .00 PURCHASE

EASTMAN'S Voar ladependentlv o-ed

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All lOCATIONS .

OPEN HOUSE
You Are Cordially Invited to See The
Unique History Exhibit
"Medicine : The Way It Was "

PEPSI COLA SALE

'

SAVE 5200.00

of the Christmas lights on the Country Club Plaza
Thursday In Kansas City, Mo. (UPI)

CORRECTION

16oz.ans.

5600.00

Sp ecial Monitors on Duty
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1987
2-4 PM
Refreshments Served
Books. Equipment, Furniture. and

Msmor8bilia from 1794 to the Present

385 JACKSON PIKE •

~ALLIPOLtS,

OHIO

THESE NEXT FOUR PAGES ARE PARTICIPATING MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS.

..J·.CKO.JF - - 19~87 !·!
WHEN YOU SHOP WITH YOUR HOMETOWN MERCHANTS IN
MIDDLEPORT, YOU CAN REGISTER TO WIN PART OF A
$2,00000 SHOPPING ·sPREE THAT WILL HELP MAKE THIS
•

HOLIDAY SEASON -·ALITTLE BRIGHTER!!!
GIFT CERTIFICATE BREAKDOWN
1st Prize .•.. $} ,ooooo
2nd

'

New 'Fat Magnet' Diet Pill
Guaranrees Fast Weight Loss

20°/o-50°/o

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Doctors Invent
'lazy Way' to
Lose W~ight

•

CHRISTMAS SALE

•

Diet Pills Sweeping U.S.

SUNDAYS ONlY - Ev~ Sonlay, tniO'f our waiter/waitress l&lt;l&gt;ie senia with
''"" rneoh. Servod on &lt;hina plates. and drft&lt; y... 111ffeo ,.. tea frum chino cups.

,,_.

MII,ES OF LIGHTS - Over 100,000 people·
watched as over 152,000 bulbs on 46 miles of wiring
are turned on at the an!'ual Thanksgiving

SHOP AT HOME ••••
SHOP -YOUR MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS

The newspaper quoted MMadonna , who rocketed to stardom
with her hit song, "Like a
Virgin, " as telling friends she
and Penn were "just not communicating any PlOre." ·
Penn, 27, the star of films such
as "The Falcon and' the Snowman," and Madonna, 28, were
married Aug. 16, 1985 at a
ceremony on a bluff overlooking
the Pacific Ocean In Malibu, .
Calif.
The "brat pack" actor has
been repeatedly In the headlines
for his brawl~. He was placed on
probation In 1985 for hitting a
friend of his wife. who kissed the
singer In a nlghtc lub. He then
violated the probation by hitting
an extra on a movie set and
driving recklessly and was sentenced to 60 days In j all In Los
Angeles last summer.
Penn served 33 days and was
released for good behavior.
He also has been arrested for
a ttacking two photographers
who tried to take Madonna's
picture In Nashville, Tenn", and
punching a man who spoke with
her In a Los Angeles restaurant.

Madonna then left to spend
Thanksgiving with her relatives
and Penn lett for Los Angeles.
Penn's press agent, Lois
Smith, told the News that Madonna had recently served the
divorce papers on Penn.
"! know the tendency In these
matters is to always blame him
but It is really too bad because
these two people love each
other," she said .
The actor reportedly told
friends at a New York restaurant
Wednesday of the development ,
the News said In a story by
celebrity columnist Liz Smith .

This Week's Specials

Charley Smith. ·
Robert Reeves of Chester
visited Mr. and Mrs. Eugene
Han ing, Ronald, Gladys Tuckerman a nd Dorothy Reeves
recently.
Mr. a nd Mrs . Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, were the Monday
·
· 't ors of Mr . and Mr s.
evenmgviSI
Charles Knapp, Wolf Pen.

Xi Gamma Mu chapter has meeting
Remembering others during
the holiday season will be a part
of the service project work of XI
Gamma Mu Chapter of Beta
Sigma Phi Sorority.
Meeting at the home of Evelyn
Knight , It was noted that food
items fo r the pantry are still
being ~ollected and names of
those m need are still · being
taken. A thank you note from one
of the recipients was r_ead.
Members were remmded that
the Christmas dinner and dance

Roy and Sandra Foster kept a
Thanksgiving Day vigil at at
their daughter 's bedside In Intensive care and watched her
receive the highly concentrated
intravenous feeding that keeps
her alive.
Extra medication has been
given to Tabatha to head off
possible rejection of her transplanted liver.
Tabatha Is jaundiced, which
could indicate any ot several
liver ailments, Matthews said.
Doctors were reluctant to predict
what course the child's recovery
might take or even If she will
survive.
Two people pr,~vlou sly underwent five organ transplants. One
died within hours, the other
wi thin four days. ·

Paper reports Madonna to divorce Penn

Garden Club meets

.
Holiday party plans were was noted that Mrs. Erlewln e,
made when the Rutland Garden Pearle Canaday, and Pauline
Club met recently at the home of Atkins toured the Va n Me ter
Neva Nicholson.
Floral Bouquet In Mason .
The dinner will be held at
For the program, Mrs. Weber
Craw's Steak House on Dec. 7 had a paper on fern entitled
after which members will go to "Goodbye Boston, Hello Dallas."
the home of Margaret Belle She noted that Dallas Is a new
Weber lor a program. Neva brand of fern which is only two
Nicholson gave devotions read- years old which has a decided
lng "A Prayer lor December" advantage over Bostol;l fern as it
from Guideposts . For roll call rarely sheds Its leaves and they
members reported on how they maintain their emrald green
Use gourds.
colo•.
Ruth Erlewine welcomed a
E~a Robson presented " Grow
new member, Marian Taylor. It Your Own Green for Holiday

I

. JAMES BIAS

Matthews said . " For better or for
worse, she's stable.
" She has the parade on, "
Matthews said. " She's not going
to get any turkey dinner. The
nurses taught her how to say
'gobble'. She'll say 'gobble' on _
command. But she' s not getting
anything fancy ."
Tabatha, who has never eaten
solid food, "Is almost like a
newb'orn baby, " Matthews said.
The girl received a liver, pancreas, small Intestine and parts
of a stomach and colon In the
transplant operation Nov. 1.
"You don 't want to put any thing · In there to upset her
stomach," Matthew,-; said.
The child has been getting
"tons of cards" from wellwishers, Matthews said.

BEVERLY HILLS, C/'. (Special)An amazing new weight loss pill called
"fat-magnet" has recently been
developed and perfected by two prominent doctors at a world fumous hospital
in Los Angeles that reportedly
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Best of-all, "you can continue to eat
all of your favorite foods and you don't
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habits. You will start losing fat from '
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' . There has ~ever been anything like
11 before. It IS a totally new major
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(worldwide patent pending).
Flushes Fat Out of Body
The new pill is appropriately called
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Within 2 days you will notice a
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According to the doctors, the fat magnet pills do all the wqrk while you
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The fut-magnet pills have just been
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weight for people who enjoy eating.

3 rd Prize ...... $3 oooo

Prize.~ ... $4oooo

Parade Will Begin In
Middleport on Sunday,
November 29th
at 1:00 P.M.

SAVE HERE ON
i· CHRISTMAS GIFTING
I

II Sunday, Nov.
29th..;_ 12-S P.M.
.

Ii

Treats For Th·e Pictures Taken
With Santa ·
~ Kids Given Out
By Santa
Claus By Photo
EJpress!
Claus! ·

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OFF STOREWIDE

DINGO
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HUSH PUPPY
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MasterCard and American Express
OK. (Send caid number, expire date.
and signature.) For fastest service for
credit card orders ONLY call anytime
24 hours, toll free 1(800)521-'J'iW,'
e xt W705,
CSJfiJ · M•a~~e1 19!7

SUNDAY
ONLY-SPECIAL
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I SHOP WITH US DURING THIS HOLIDAY
FOR ALL YOUR GIFT GIVING ...
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OPEN SUNDAY
NOON-5:00 P.M.
I
I Johnson's Variety Store
12

SHOE PLACE
992-5627

:1&lt;0 BIIBIII"'"'I!IOI - - - I!IOIBII"'"'I!OIIBI(-I!Oll{gll&lt;li!O&gt;&lt; !'liiiBI(I'C&lt;m.&lt;

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Santa's _•.• Elfs

992-3481
13 7 NORTH SECOND AVE.

THE

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Open
Sundays

Now Available to Public
Ifyou need to lose 20, 50, 100 pounds
or more, you can order your supply
of these new highly successful fatmagnet pills (now available from the
d()(&gt;tor's exclusive manufacturer by
· mail or phone order only) by sending
$20 for a 90 pill supply ( +$2 handling), _or $35 fpr a 180 pill supply ( +$3
handlmg), cash , checkormoneyorder
to: Fat-Magnet, 9016 Wilshire Blvd.,
Dept W705, Beverly Hills, CA 90211.

II

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NOW
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5th Prize ...... $} oooo

r·-------D·------------~

FREE PARKING 'TIL
CHRISTMAS•••• BEGINNING
NOVEMBER 30, 1987

OPEN EVENINGS
'TIL 8:00 P.M.
DECEMBER 14TH
THRU
DECEMBER 23, 1987

4th Prize ...... $20ooo

11:00 A.M.
• !XCIPOONAILY
SAl!
•lOWOPERAnNG
COSTS

Until
REGISTER NOW THROUGH DECEMBER 20,
1987 FOR OUR SHARP VCR GIVEAWAY.
NO PURCHASE NECESSARY NEED NOT BE
PRESENT TO WIN.

7:00 P.M.

-THE VIDEO
TOUCH
992-3462
211 '12 N. SECOND AVE.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

--""'·---

The pa te nted PELONIS
DISC FURNACE is the orig·
ina! oM o nly portobfe
electroc zone heater in the
country utilizing the e xclu sive honeycombed disc
hea tin g elements. Excep·
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below the c ombustion
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Providi ng instant heat and
generating a maximum
of 5200 BTU's (1500 WJ
th e Disc Furnace will heal
even the largest room in
most overage size homes
Only the Felon is offers true
Thermo·s tatic Comfort
Control of 50° to 80' Fohrenhelt In most area s of
the country, cost of opeiQ·
liOn witt be under $1 per 2-4
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992·3748

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MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

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Friday, November 27, 1987

'

Typhoon · Nina· tak~s 36.7

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$2
000°
- I

GIFT
CERTIFICATES
I

••THERAGRAN-M
•
9
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MIDDLEPORJ

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500

REG. S15.18

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•Cards •Lights •Tree Ornaments ,
•Gift Wrap •Holiday Arrangements
and Decorations

$250

. STARTING
.NOVEMBER 30, 1987

CHRISTMAS OPEN HOUSE

Merry
Christmas
from All
I Your Local
Middleport
Merchants!

SUNDAY, NOV. 29th

GIFT ITEMS ... PLUSH BEARS, BRASS,
JEWELRY, HOME ACCESSORIES

2 5°/o OFF STOREWIDE

I

OPEN: SAT. 10 A.M.-5 P.M./SUN., NOON-S P.M.
VISA·MASTER CARD

992-7521

12-5

· BOYS, GIRLS AND STUDENT

JR. &amp; GIRLS

LEE BIBS

LEE JEANS

25°/o OFF

2 5°/o _OFF

JR. &amp; MISSES

BOYS' LINED

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$800 Off

25°/o oFF

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

REGISTER FOR POMEROY AND MIDDLEPORT MERCHANTS
"SHOP AT HOME" PROMOTION.
OYER S4,000 IN MERCHANDISE TO BE GIVEN AWAY

Christmas Parade Specials
At Fruth Pharmacy
"Early Bird
Special"

BRAZIER®
"WE TREAT YOU RIGHT"

3 ROLL 30"

(HRISTMAS
1he Economical alt~n~ative to
clothilg repiCICIIIftlel'lt.

GIFT
WRAP

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100

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•Double Delight
•Banana Supreme
•Onion Rings
•Super-Dog
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•Fish
•Chicken
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•French Fries
•Single Burger
•Double Burger
•Triple Burger
•Chicken Nuggets
•Beef Nuggets
•Deep Fried Mushrooms
•Peanut Buster Parfait

wardrobe.
'Gives sweaters, coals &lt;r~d slacks a new look.
'Saves wom-out lookin1 clothes, and money.

CHRISTMAS CARDS

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GET LEAN, .
·MOT MEAN.

will release two Frenchmen
within the next 24 hours, " the
handwritten Arabic s tatement
said.
But th ere was still so sig n of the
ho stages 10 hours after the
a nnouncmen1. which sa id , "Mr.
Stephanie, present now in Beirut.
a nd the French ambassador in
Damascus s hould head to the
French Embassy to be advised
on procedures for releasing the
hostages: whi ch is esse n-tial to
co mplete the operation."
A Frenc h Embassy spokeswoman later identified the man as
Alexandre Stephanie. a se nior
official from the French Defense
Ministry.
The spokeswoman sa id French
Am bassador to Lebanon Paul
Blanc headed tc west Beirut
across the "green line'' after
midnight. stayed at the emba ssy
building for a few hour s and
re turned to east Beirut later.
She did no t explain why Blanc
ret urned to the Chr istian sid e of
the city.
Christian VoicP of Lebanon

For e'!ery
order placed
of 5 100 or
more recieve a
FREE 1 0-lb .
Turkey.

radio said Stephanie waited
a long with B!apc at the em bassy
in west Beirut and they both left
for an unknown destination.
Repor ters waiting at the gate
of the Syrian-guarded, walled
embassy building in th e C!emeceau neighborhood said Blanc
had entered th e compound in a
motorcad e of five bullet-proof

Regular Members
Will R'flceive
-

The spokeswoma n, who ear li er
said she did not know who
Stephanie was. said the Defense
Ministry official had been in
Beiru t for so me time, &lt;:turing
which ''he apparently negotiate d
with the captors. Wed idnot know
that he was in Beirut.

.

$5.00 Off.

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SATURDAY 7 A.M.-6 P.M.
, .

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788 N. 2nd, Middleport, Oh
992-2178
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Maes bend
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MIDDLEP~RT, 0~10
~~~----~~--~~~-~~~-~~~~~
271t/2

In Zurich a dealer sa id , "The
market Is simply- extremely
bearish about the do liar, " and an
Amsterdam trad er said , "People
just don' t trust Ihe dollar.''

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weaken .

The doliar c losed .in Tokyo at
133.75 yen, lowest s ince Nov. 10
when the dollar hit a record low
of 133.65. Thursday's final rate
was 1:14.75 yen.
The dollar opened at a new
fi\le-year low In London . The
pound traded at $1 .!J065 against
$1.7940.
.
The U.S. un it opened in Zur ic h
at 1.3615 Swiss francs ' against
1.3675.

I

I

Dollar
,opened to
new lows

The greenback fell c lose to new
lows in both Tokyo and Europe.
Tokyo dealer s sa id the Japa nese central bank carried out a
s mall-scale buy ing operation to
try to support th e dollar .
" There is no spec ific reason for
the dollar 's slide." one Tokyo
dea ler said. " Institutional investors are selling dollars mPrely
beca use they are co nvinced the
greenba;,k wiii co ntinue to

~

exercise program · with
futureshape and find out
how you can win one of I
these · fabulous prizes ... I
VCR, $1 SO.OO OR A,N EX·
ERCISE BIKE !your choicel
during our competition w
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- ~-

cars.

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Now through December · I
·
20, 198 7, sign up for the IW

tice Organization announces it

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#(5-1

BRAND NEW 1987
GRAND AWARD BOXED

By SAMAR KADI
BEIRUT. Lebanon (UPI )
The c landestine Revolutionary
Justice Organization, which
cla ims to have abducted two
Americans , said It will release
two French captives in response
to guarantees that Paris is
"wi llin g to cha nge Its Mideast
policy ."
The French Embassy said a
Defense Ministry officia l, who se
presence in Beirut had not
previously been a nnoun ced, had
apparently been negotiating with
the abductOrs.
In a s tatement delivered at lJ
p.m. Thursday to the wes t Beirut
o!rlces or the ind epe ndent news pa per An Na har, the group sa id it
would discuss the release with a
F renc h diplom at in Be iru t it
identified only as Mr. Step hanie
and the French ambassador in
Damascus .
"Aft er we rece ived guarantees
tha t the French governm ent is
wi tling to change its Mideast
policy, and in response to media tion e fforts a nd desires by some
frie nds, the Revolutionary Jus -

II

THE ADDED ·
"TOUCH . AND
FUTURESHAPE
WANT YOU -TO
LOOK GOOD FOR
THE -HOLIDAYS .

~

Two hostages
may he freed

LONDON iUPI) - Japan's
central bank had to In tervene
today to shore up the dollar , and
in E urope the U.S. unit tumbled
again a t the open in g of foreign
exc ha nges. The price of gold

Square Feet

BRASS ELECTRIC

~

100 TABLETS

FREE PARKIN

50°/o
oFF
ALL CHRISTMAS ITEMS

liv~s

By ANNNA MARIANO
si nce 1981.
the area from Lrgaspi, 20 miles
President COrilZOn '&lt;\qui n o ~LEGASPI, Philippines IUPI)
The roll was expected to rise a$ to !he north. -~aid effort s were cia r ed a s t~ te of &lt;'mPt'gonry
- Villagers today began the
comrnuriicallons were restored under ,way but hampered by th e Thursday, enabling aut horities
painful task of burying hund reds
to remote areas struck by . the ' tlacf( Of an airstrip in f\orsqg-o n ... to comma nd ePr.ossenti~ l relief '
of kinfolk and rebuilding th ou- storm, Which battered a string of Aid was b&lt;?ing f~rried in ' by goods and p revent the hO&lt;Jrding
sands of homes destroyed when
provinces soutl! of Manila with h~hcopter, they ~atd.
"'
_·.- of basic commodities.
-- Typhoon Nina swept across the
floods and 128 rnpl! winds.
r;====:::==;:::===:::=::;;;;:=~r::=:::;:=:;jjjiJ
Philippines "like a scourge from
Varela, in an lnlerview con· lr
God," a Roman -Catholic bishop
dueted l)y two-way .radio and
• _...,.
said.. ·
broadcast on the church-owned
''The sun Is up now in Sorsogon
Radio Veritas, issued an -urgent
and the people are starting to
appeal for help lor the survivors
rebuild thefr homes," said BiIn Sorsogon, where h&lt;' said 61
shop Jesus Varela of Sorsogon
victims w~re buried early today .
City, the capital of Sorsogon
"Many more are missing and
province, 235 miles southeast a!
we have not yet hear\! from at
Manila, which sulfered the brunt
least six towns," he said.
of Nina's wrath .'
The city has no drinkab le
" In spite of ali th e -difficulties · wate r, no e lectricity and no
... the people are full of hope," he
passa ble roads. he sa id, and
said. "You hardly hear a ny called for an airli ft of food and
whimpers of compiaint." ·
medicine to prevent the outbreak
Combined tallies from relief of disease. He said 98 percent of
a nd civic orficiais at midday .the city's buildings were dam- .
showed at least 367 people were aged and virtually all the provln·
killed a nd more than 200,000 ce's crops were destroyed .
Injured or left homeless by the
Governme nt officials. who
worst storm to hit the Philippines were organizing relief fiights to

I
"Holiday Gifts .For All"

The Daily Sentinei-Page-15

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

10 speed. Dual
!;,[de pull brakes.
34-2950 ,51

White racing mag wheels.
Red accents. 34-2778-B

99118
·MIDDLEPORT

�..
.·

•
Friday, November 27, 1987

BINGO

Hall remains ~nrepentant
after .Nicarauga arrest

our

!AGifl O UB- POMIRVY, OH.
!HURt 1 PM - £1 6:4S

EER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

~

he was captured a t the Puenta
By ALISON GRANT
DA YTON , Ohi o (UP! ) -Sam Huete air base In Nicaragua.
Ha ll, lhe Ohioan ar rested i n Hall co nlinues lo shiel d people he
Nicaragua last year, says he'll go con siders heroes, though he said
out of hi s way to do some thing for he be liev~s he's "being used as
th ~ Contra cau se.
an i nstrument of U.S. polic y ."
. Ball, on a national l our promot" The Sandi nista s exnloit ed me
Ing his autobi ography " Counter and said I was a nut and w orking
Ter :oris t'' is working a s an alone. 1 always claimed indepen·
adv1ser to a Cent ra l Am erica dency," Hall said, " whi ch wa s
country.
not true."
·
The boo k describes how Ball
The Christie Ins titute, a WaIell his life as a subur ban family shington organization that's i nm an to become a self-styled . ves tlga tlng the covert war in
freedom fi ghte r , engagin g in Central America, summoned
mercenary ex ploits throu ghout B all to t estify as pari of a federal
th~ world.
civil law suit in Miami.
His lifes tyle has taken him to
Durin g questioning by a ChrisAfr ica , t he Middle Eas t and
tic Institu te attorney in SepSouth eas t Asia and central
tember, H all said he took the
America, where he has re tur ned Fifth Amendment. repeatedly
aft er tur ning 'down offer s · to and r efu sed to Implicate retired
become a mili ta ry adviser in Army Jl:laj. Gen. John Slnglaub,
both Chad and Indonesia.
one of 28 defendants in the suit.
Ha·ll said he expect s to be held
Hall al so describes troublesome episod es, including a long in contempt · of court for his
fight with drug addi ction, two actions and spend time in jail.
In a poly graph test Hall took in
sui cid e attempt s and three
divorces.
March , however , Hall said he
The book does not say on whose proved that he was hired and
paid expenses by Singlaub, and
authoril y Hall was acting when

Rememb.er

To Do· V.our·
.

.

,.
'

.

Ch r,istrn·
a
·
s
,
.
Shopping

At Home!!!
'·

was reimbursed for expenses· by
Robert Owen, an aide to Marine
Lt. Col. Oliver Nor th. Nor th , a central fi gure in the
Iran- Contra fund s diver sio n, i s
one of the· figures who earn s
Hall's unbr idled r es pect.
In his book, Ball recalls seeing
the foPmer National Security
Council aide at a secret Contra
supply ba se in Honduras.
" It was · Oliver Nor th t hat
f inally got supplies to us . To me
he's a hero," Hall said . -"He's a
take-charge gu y."
Hall said he expects both North
and R ear Adm . John Poindexter
to be pardoned by President
Reagan of any wrongdoing In the
arms scandal. Then Reagan,
r iding the popularity of a successful summit with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbac hev, will
resign by March, Hall predicted.

...,,,,

... .........
........ ''"""' '"
.....
... ..........
~

,...;:.::~:,,.,. :·t.~::.,.,.......
. ., ..,...... ""' ....... ,.......
~: ~·::~.~;·:.::;::~;·:~:"~ '" ' '"'
11 """ "' ... . woo..
J '"' . . . . .,., . ... .

1oou• •o••

J '"' ' ..
J &lt;HIP M ' " '"-"'

I
I
1
I

PHONE .........................~····~··············· .. ••••·•••·••••••·•••••••••••·••••••••··

We Honor Golden Buckeye a nd Mountaineer Ca rds

BAHR CLOTHIERS

OffiCIAL RULES fOR ORA WING
Fill o ut entry form and drop off al any participating
merchant. Extra entry forms will he available in participating

MIDDLEPORT DEPARTMENT
~
STORE'S

~

w
~

W

R
~

MEN'S FLANNEL

PAJAMAS

sass

REGISTER FOR
MIDDLEPORT'S •
CHRISTMAS
SHOPPING SPREE

S2000
To Be Given In
Gift Certificates
.

Mystery Spec;ials For the Hunters!

~

Stop In and See!!
OPEN FRIDAY NIGHT TILL 8

w
w
~

w
w
w

w

~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~Iii
'
~~~·~=~~~~~~~~~~

ol~-

1'1'--~

t..-___-........
--0...,·..... ..,........
... ..... ..

·-·---

IJ - CI , fV I R - f. . .-

_..

11116 . 13, 20. 27 4t c

Public Notice

Public Notice

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

of the estate of Warren H . ~
Rose, deceased, IBte of 32234

On November 13. 1987. in
the Meigs, County Probate

Court. Case No. 25686, ' Pauline Rose. 32234 Boshan
Road. Racine, Ohio 45n1.
.. _,. •l'lnnintlld Administratrix

Real Estate General

tion to Annex with the Meigs
County Board of Commis ·
sioners and the Meigs County

2

1n

~o rne

Ron Diles or

19" DIA.

H.Q.

VHS VCR

COLOR TV

$244° 0

. ONLY

$19900

COMPLETE FULL LINE
JEWELRY DEPT.

COMPLETE
HOME FURNISHINGS

MAJOR APPLIANCES .
TVs &amp; VCRs

Garv. Cummins
992-6226
Middle port

Insured/ Licensed

i

LARGEST SELECTION
2 &amp; 3 PC. UVING ROOM
SOFA SLEEPERS
FREE
DINING ROOM
LAY
BEDROOM
Christmas

Delivery

Nobody But Nobody Can Sell
You Quality Jewelry for Less .

14KT GOLD CHAINS

A
WAYS

ti ~Jf

to us I ln ow.

27, 1986.

rea~:h

til! Promrsl!d !.J nd
So Mother. yoo may be &amp;llu lor now.
When we

But I know you are at

r~l .
~ ou

And wt1111rver He nas tnr

up there,

Will bt tile nrv best.
So I'll ro llfh l on thinkrnc.
And w~tewer He

h~

tor you up thert .

Will bt the we~ btsl.
So 1'1! 10 tl&amp;ht on thmt 1n1Antl dn.Jm1n1 drum~ of y1111.
And P1ay tlla! when I leave t~s nn h.
I'll hiVe .J IHlml 1 ~11 e to.

Sadly missed by daughter and
al l who loved her very much.

~
11

memory

Mother
E. Priddy
who passed away Nov.
I walk though the valley of
the shadow of death, I will
fear no ev il; for Thou art with
me; Thy roo and Th~ staff
they comfort me; Thou pr&amp;par est a table before me in
the presence of mine enemies; surely goodness and
mercy shall follow meal I the
days of
life.
Fred
and

Help Wanted

LICENSED PRACTICAL
NURSE

~FISHER"
STEREO SYSTEMS

Immediate opening for full and part time
LPN on the 3-11 shift on a 35 bed SNF/ICF
unit. Excellent benefits. Salary commensu rate with experience.
Contact: Rhonda Dailey
Director of Nursing
Apply at Veterans Memorial Hospital
·
115 East Memorial Drive
Pomeroy, Ohio
OR 'CALL 614-992 -2104, Ext. 213

RECLINERS
&amp;
SWIVEL

WASHERS ....._'\j_,..

l!lfMagicCher.~-~
DRYERS - - - - - ~
&amp;

f!_&amp;.l .::;:;. Hl=r
Ranges , ~

~___ Refrigerators
&amp;

Freezers

FULL SERVICE DEPT.
CHRISTMAS DELIVERY

,...,.,,.

'

\'~1. ·

E.O.E.

LANE

CEDAR CHESTS.
&amp;·
END TABLE
GROUPS

REGISTERED NURSES
Immediate opening for full 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
SEND RESUME TO:
RHONDA DAILEY. R.N.
01 RECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769
OR CALL 992·2104, EXT. 213
E.O.£ .

.

Sale"

MIDDLEPORT - This 2 story
ho me shows the work has
been done. Nice kitchen, 3
bedrooms. I and one-third
·bat hs, level lot. st01age bu ild$33,900.00.

"'&amp;

•Trophies -

Badges

I to 9 P.M.

Business
Services
'1-:...."'-'
L

RUTlAND- Mini FarmApproximately 6 acies w/ a
3 bedroom home. Elec. B.B.
he at Qlus a woodburner.
Barn, shed , much more.
$29,500.00.

Home &amp; Auto
16141 992-3718
Add on mini fuel compUter
system. Fits any car. Instant
miles per gallon readout.
Know your fuel consumption
fr om one block to hund reds of

•Name Tags .for

Dogs .

JOHN TEAFORD

RUTIAN D - 3 bedroom
home new~ remodele:l wrth
central air, elec. heat, garage
wcrksrop, wn crete patio, lui~
insulated. $32,000.00.
TUPPERS PlAINS - Brick
ranch w/ 3 bedroom s, I Yl
baths, rec. room, fuli basement, 2 car garage, oak tr im,
quality work. MANY MORE
FEATURES. $68,000.00.
HINR'I' (. ctEtAND, Jft .....992-6191
JEAN TRUHHL ............ 949.2600
DOfTII TURNlR ........... 992- 5692
TRACY RIFflE .............. 949- 3010

OffiCE ..........._. ............. 991-1159.

CHISTEI, OHIO 45720
11-20-'87-1 mo.

SLUG SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER

For

81 hars
FOR FULLER BRUSH
PRODUCTS
DR TO 81 A IEPIESENTATtY£

1:00 P.M.

CAll

AT THE
KEN AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
LEAGUE

SUSAN COLEMAN
742-2778
or
SHIRLEY COLEMAN
142· 2125
" II '.., A Great Fund
Raiser"
t0/28/ 1 mo.

FACTORY CHOKES
10/29/ t mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

CUSTOM BUILT

Ta~ti

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Before and after auto tune~ up .
(Comparator) Fi ll up your
tank. and watch it subtract and
display fuel -consumed.
UNDER '90

Mon itors for MCF-CCF used

for furnaces . calibrated to
your gas meter.
Middle port~ Coi'J

Ohio

11· 1:1· 81· 1 mo.

·~··

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

Record Those Special
Occasions on VHS
Tape
•HolidBV _Parties
•Weddi ngs
•School &amp; Ct'lurch Programs
•Sporting Events
•Anniversaries
•Record Valuabl ee,
Documents
•Transfer Photo Albums 10
VHS Tope
' •Transfar 8mm and Super 8
Movies tO Video Tape
•Create Training Film s for
Students and Employen

REASONABLE RATES
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE

992-7632

11!16/' 87 I ino. d.

· I 07 LOCUST ST.

POMEROY -985-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561 .

1'111 Makes
•Washers •Di shwas he r s
•R a ng es •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

WE SELL USED APPLIANCES

4·5-ilc

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Tag Your Tree
Early
For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
21f'l. miles from Five Points.
11-2:3-'87 1 mo.

StiTH Sl., !TIACUSE, DH.

SALE
Cross Sti.tch Supplies
50% Off
Basket Supplies
20% Off
Discount on Selected Items

742-2035

Hysell
Garage

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Jrairtmiuion
PH .. 992-5682
or 992-7121 .

Howard L Writes•l

·ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4·22-8,7-tfn

RADIATOR
· SERVICE

YOUNG'S

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middleport,

Ohio

1-1 3-tfc

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

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

CARPENTER
SERVICE
-

Addons and remodeling
Roofing and gutter work
Co ncrete work
Plumbing and electrical
work
(Free Estimates!

- Snowoff blowers, Oregon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push mowers picked up and tuned and
returned '20.00.
Parts

Sa Service

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITION S
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp; ·
BACK HOE WORK

Phon• Day or tvenings

985 -4141

GINIRAL CONfllClOIS
Aeteranees

1 1-J-ttn '

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Makes .
11 / 2/87 1 mo.

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

FREE ESTIMATES

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-382)
Authoriud John DHre,
New Holland, Bush Hog ·
Farm Equipment
Dealer

F11111 Eqalpltl..t

N o Hunting on Gill Ridge on
propert ies of C . A. Gill. Mitchell
Cull en. George Gill without
written Pet"miuion. Violators
will be prosecuted .

4

Giveaway

Kittens .

Call6 1 4~ 446 - 7100 .

Poles to give away. Call 614 -

367 -7261 .

Small male Poodle type dog .
M ixed breed. Curty hair. Appr ox.
1 yr. Very pl ayful. Call614 -446 2548 .

Black &amp; white female cat.
Gent!a. Not full srown. Good
whh kids . Call614 -446 -4152 or
446 -4987.
Large Sheperd ty po dog t o give
away to good home. Call 614·
446- 8107 evenings, •.
Black Coek - a ~ puo to good ho m e.
6 months o ld. Call 614 -986 4488.
To nice home with children .
Stlepherd - Collie mix . male
brown and black. H ou sebroken.
1 yr. old. 614·992 -7020 . Lori.
B month old male black and
white dog, 304-458 -1896.

12

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
New Locatio n:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S760'

and Cable Bills Here

BUSINESS PHONE
AEStDINCE PHON!
16t41 992-7754

lost and Found

6

LOST: Black lab. 4 mos. old pup.
Call6 14-446·6432.

Lost : male Beegle around Nobi s
Summit Ad ., Rutland . Las t seen
Nov . 19 . Wearing co llar ,
answers t o Rudy . Ca ll 6 14 ~ 9 9 2 3989 .

mo.

1:00 ·P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

10·9-tfn

DENNY CO~GO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Found at Darwin , female Beagle
wearing flea collar and regular
coll ar. Call 6 14-992 -3182.
Found at Kyget" Creek High
School yellow male kittan. Call
Shannon at 614 -992 -3710 .
Large real fluffy wh ite Samoyed.
we8fin{l blue collar, 304 -675 3385.
LOST 30· 30 Marlin gun around
gate Butct'l Brown Farm, Rt . 1.
letart. Call 304·882 -2292 or
882 ~ 3473 .

Yard Sale

7

992-3410

....... G.. II,..... 1........... ..

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

&amp; Vicinity

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTIERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOM E
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS

FREE ESnMAm

CALL 949·2969

ll-23-'87-1 mo.

•ALUMINUM SIDING

'BLOWN

IN

INSULATION

BISSEll
SIDING CO.

SALES &amp; SERVICE ·
We Carry Fis hing SuppUos
Pay Your Phone

Female calf co eat. 6 months old.
M usl {live aWay, moving. 304675- 3725 .

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

t-23-'87-t

New Homes Bui It
"Free Esli;.,ates"

PH. 949-2860
.or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls

3·11-tfn

IIJB/trn

l

..

Puppi es to giveaway. Pan Bl ue Healer. Call 6 14 - 446 ~ 4477 .

LOST: 2 Steen · Wt . 1400
pou nd s each. 1- 61aek, wAite
face. 1· red,. white face with
horns. Ca!l61 4 -388 -9991 .

Factory Choke
Gauge Shotguns Only
10· 7-tfn

16141 992-6550

tfc

Christmas and S enior photo cut
oft date is TuesdlfV De c. 1. Coli
Precious Memories Studio for
appointment now. 614 - 949 ~
3060.

PH. 992-2772

'VINYL SIDING

BOGGS

Parte &amp; Ser11!c

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

10-8-tft

on all

PH . 949-2969

Christmas and Senior Photo cut
off date- TuasdlfV, De e. , , Call
Precious Memory Studio for
appointment, now . 614 -949 3060.

Half Blue Heel« pupp i es. 304 676-2443.

INSULATION

992-621S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4· !5-' 86 fc

half way b a t ween Rt. 7 and Bashan .

trimmers, saws, blowers

J&amp;L

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Located

Yard Man mowers, Echo

e

10127/ 1 mo.

6-17-tfc

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

Reward offend for in formation
on tile pEn on who took a
package out of a blue Ce! obrity
park~ at tile chu rch at S. 4th or
Frutns Sat. evening 7p.m. 14 ~ .
992 -5580.

· 10amto5pm
614 -992-5082

11·3· 1 mo. pd.

4-16-86-lfn

Rog~r

Slindero!la di m classes Mondav
night. Five Poinu and Tuesday
night . Mas on. Ca ll J o Ann
Newsome at 614-992 -3382.

Free Cats t o give' away t o good
home. Call 614 -379 -2421 .

HOURS : Tues.-Sat .

11 ~ 23-'17

Service

HOUSE FOR RENT

Country Gifts
and Decor

WHRE HILL RD.

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

992-3711
I mo. jM.

Commercial :
Store to Job Cost

Advanced Students

BERRY BASKET

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

FOR RENT

'

miles . .

SYRACUSE -Remodeled two
story home Features 3-4 bed·
rooms 11h baths,' basement,
garage and an older bam
Appx . I ac1e $39,900.00.

Plaques

RUTLAND, OHIO

RIGGS CREST - Really
Nice! Split foyer home wit h
4-5 bedrooms all in excel·
lent co ndil1on. Garage, n~ce
lot. W.B. hookup, blinds &amp;
shutters. $54,900.00.

POMEROY - PRICE RE ·
DUCED on th1 s n1ce 3 bed·
room home. Beaullfu l modern k1l chen. fu ll basement,
n~ c e woodwork. loi s of clo·
s~l spa ce, $42,900.00

'2J

•Golf Clubs
Shirts · Shoes

or 949-2860

RUTlAND - A i I? sfory
home w/ 3 bedrooms, en·
closed front porch, eqmpped
~1tc hen, st01age bmld~ng and
part basement. $21.000.00.

From Beginners to

1-24-'87-1 mo. pd.

\r.

Circle D ecember 51 St . lou is
Church Christmas Cra ft Bazaar

Teaching Thompson,
Schaum, Bastien

11 -4 · 1 mo .

PH. 949-2801

Send resume to Box
113 c/o Gallipolis
Daily Tribune, 82 5
3rd Ave., Gallipolis,
Oh. 45631.

You 're Nmr Too Old
To lmnl

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

Help Wanted

SYRACUSE - Br 1ck &amp;
frame ranch type home
.w/ basement. I car garage,
3 bedroom s on level large
lot. Fenced rear play area.
CAL L FOR APPOINTMENT.
$39,500.00.

PIANO LESSONS

JAMES KEESEE
PH.

"At Reasonable Prices"

11

3 Announcements

Call For Information

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB
"Chrichnas
,~

••iu

Announcemenls

FREE ESTIMATES

Lena K. Nessalroad, Clerk
111120 , 27: (1214 3tc .

NEW LISTING - LETART- 3
bedroom frame home with aluminum siding large rooms,
wcrksoop, carport. Nice lot
ASKING $23,000.00.

POMEROY, 0.

Sui I know God a l1n1 ~ does ._.hat's best.
l'houtfl sometime we don't unders tand:
He'll mah d

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm WindoWs
•Repl aceme nt Windows
•New Roofing

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

Probate Judge

Experience
necessary to
work in clinic.
Excellent
salary and
fringe benefits.

E. Maitnl..l.

were ba d.

Bashan Road. Racine. Ohio
45771 .
Robert E. Buck.

OPHTHALMIC
ASSiSTANT

Memoriam

In Memoriam

Some •nreaood 1nd

•

.......

P...
.. ..• __ _
,._c__

OJI'- Out!-

And I eN!Ill dumm of you, •
But God saw lit IIIII day:
To e~ c han ce lor , ou , tllal bu rdened lrle.

$688

~

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,.,_.....,
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Mothtr de• . you m,Y be cone.
from al l e.ut hly peopl e's •rew:
But m m~ nurt you're !her~ to Slay.

SWEATER .VESTS

1Register S to 18 p.m. for FREE Turkey

i

11- t ... . -

~

commencing at ·1:00 p.m. at
the Commissioners Office located in the Meig s County
Courthouse, Pomeroy, Ohio.
All interested parties are
welcome to attend .

TtlpOll!r . yoo and I.

ONLY

BABY PRA.M SUITS

1 --····
N
--···N- -

trict.
Petitioners fil ed t heir Peti·

LADIES PULLOVER

Red ond
Navy .

D&amp;C
ELECTRIC

Guaront"d tht Somt

·--

_ _,,

-~ -

" ~'

Board o f Commissioners has
sch eduled a public hearing on
the Petition to Annex for the
30th day of December. 1987

l s I !~ i nk olthe limes gon e by:

$1 oss

CALL

WE'RE STILL ALIVE!

::=:.:::....

1'1-~--.·-··

.,__,_

Oh, I miss you, and ahn¥5 wrH,

Enjoy Coffee and Cookieg/

2 .
~
0°/o
OFF
i GIRLS '
! wR,ANL_EGELER _
JEAN$
W

,.,_,...,_

WHO PASSED AWAY 3 YEARS
AGO NOVEMBER 28, 1984

w

SUNDAY, NOV. 29- OPEN 1 to 5

DEVON

-

l - Y...... , _ .........

1'1- l ............

For a b!ll !I' pl u e In stay.

I OPEN HOUSE

w:-------1
~ 20°/o OFF

~

WANDA STEWART

Your One Stop
Shopping Center

'

[1\ristl\\as

Does Not Include
Men's Work Jackets

---

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

IN LOVING MEMORY ·OF

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

~

Mooo

992·2259

Hard warP~ will h;l\'e registration forms.

~

NOTIC.E OF PUBLIC
• HEARING
Bruce J . Reed and Rita J .
Reed. husband and wife. and
Petitioners, have filed a Petition to Ann e~~: approximately
. 3~6 acres within the Village
of Pomeroy. Said property is
now situated in Meigs/ Sutton Township and is within
the 'Meigs Local School Dis-

2

All winning tickets will be paid by Gift Certificate.
Thr merrhants mentioned on the previous page along with
Dairy ,Quren, Pat Hill Ford ;Va ll~y Lumber, Vaughan's and Ace

~ w

11100

'"'"'

--loH•-" •Itlo
..• -·-.
Q
. ·•

29. 1987. The M fligs County

day.

MEN &amp; BOYS'

,,110

Public Notice

Auditor' s Office on Octo ber

~e~ehants stort&gt;s . J•lrase only one en lry per s lore per person per

w

o11110

onoo

Public Notice

I

.

and JACKETS

•~ o•-.

, .. om~

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CITY ............................................. ... ~: ••• :......................................

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ALL COATS

.....
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C II "'01101 11· · """'0. II-· W D ~C.
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OIGII
0100

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ADDRESS .................... ~ •• :~ ..................................................... ~....

20°/o OFF

lOMI

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I

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

· 11 ·6 -1 mo.

C!aJsijied pqgeJ cover the
following ltd~&gt;phnnt. ezchan6P.!.. .

~::::::..:.:::;··
~::.n ~
'A &lt;loo~i .... ..,,,,.....,..,, 0'0( . . ,., "'' Do"' ''"''""'"'

J OI!• M

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

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

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOAOING
SUPPLIES

~

NAME ............,.;.:...................... ~....................... .......... ..... .......... 1

~
~

.... ~ ....

........ , ""' .........,, ''" ....., ..... ''" ... ,c ••-.
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RAT ES

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· ~·;;.':',:::,c:~:",!';!'':·:.::"•"" ...... """"' ••••• ,

•

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SUNDAY

- ~~·~~::~.::::;::;:· ,-:,::~.;.::;.·;~·~

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::::.""" '' ' "''' ' ' C:oiO.o •• " "on, .."'"'"'""'''""

NO PURCHASE NECESSARY
:.NEED NO-T.BE PR'ESENT
TO ..WJN!
. .

.

11·2l-' i11 mo.

~ ~- ~­

lk •OPS 0 1 lop. "
I~VmD

PUBU(

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pom,roy, Ohio

614-74'1-''155

MONDAY thru FRIO~Y 8 A.M. to 5 P.M.
B A.M: Until NOON SATURDAY·

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

· ~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 9" -2104
z 417 Second Avenue, Box li. .
- Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734

Happy Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND

TO ,1.1.([ AN AD CAlL 9U.215b

Television listening
Dependable Heari~g Aid Sale s &amp; Ser11i cel
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

~ licensed Clinical Audiologist

Rt . 1 24 Across frqm

SHOPPIN-G··sPREE
..

~

$5.00 Extra
For Skinning

OPEN

.

(!)

$2500

HILLSIDE
MUIILELOADING
GUN SHOP

0
$2,000°
'

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 17

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

a

1p0 IS

.

Mov ing· JS Neil Ave . Furniture
household, mis c.
'

...... Pt .Pieasaii'f. --

----

&amp; Vicin ity
----

______ .,,_, __ _

Ctlristmas Garage Sel e: Al l new
item!I -Somethin g to r ev eryone,
Nov. 24 - 1 J ust off Jen co Ad ~
Look for signs.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Ri ck

Pe ers on Auc t i on eer li -

e~nsed in Ohib . and West Vir.gi·

n1a. Estat e. antique , farm. liqui dation sales, 304-773 -6785.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash t or lat e m odel ctean
used ears .
.
' J im Mink ChEN.·Oids In c.
Bill Gene Jo hnson
614 -446 -3 672
TOP C AS H paid fo r '8 3 model
and n(Mfer used c au . -Smfth
Buick- Po ntiac, 1911 Eastern
A ve .. Gall ipolis. Ca ll 614- 446.
228 2 .
WANT ED TO BUY; Used wood

&amp;. coal h eaters. Swain ' s Furnl·
ture, Jrd . &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis
Call614 -446 -3159 .
Want ed to buy· shmdin g t imber.
Call614 -379 -2768 .
.

a

•

�~omeroy- Middleport,

Page- 18- The Daily Sentinel
9

LAFF-A,OAY

Wanted To Buy
I

coins. large cull'encv. Top pricee E"d B ur~ Barber S~p .
2nd Ave. M •ddlepOf't. Oh. 614-

Furnished room . $75 . Utihtilll
paid . Share beth. Single male.
919 Second Gallipolis. Call
446-4418 aher 7pm

992-3476.
Raw fvr, bil'ef and de• h1d81.
Gyn Sing and Yellow root We
have whe~ and ntte lites ,

Ant!que glassware, old co ma.
old 1••- nngs. pictures, any new
glass. Fen1on, Imperial. Call
Br•an le8 614-385-6099,

11

Help Wanted

·;

46 Space for Rent

l""'o""'~-,­
~

with
bonuses.
A realneal.
ly-fundepenplace
to
work.
Friendly,
dable are' the requirements. Call

!

~~

Patient Serv•ces Ass1stant to
coord•nate the actiVIties of
Meigs County family planning
dinic Must have H S . diploma
or equivalency; add1tional educatiOn preferred wrth successful
work h1story 1n related field.
Res ponsible posit io n for a mature indiVidual, sen6itive to
reproductwe health needs of
women and families Must be
well or!Jtmized; have demon
strated compahmce with f1gures
and recordkeep1ng M ust be able
to work under gu1deHnes wlth
m1n1 mBI suparvision and hMie
superiflr verba! co mmunication
skill s Ael1able transportatiOn,
fl8.'1.1b1htv of trme and ability to
trav el locally requ1red Evening,
Saturdlr( and weekday hours are
to be ell pected. Send resume
and two employment references
to Pl anned ParOf'lthood of Southeast Oh•o. 396 Ri chland
Avenue, Athons, Ohio 45701 .
by December 4, 1987. EOE·

ESP
Middleport Ch ambpr of Com·

1 Vz story, newly aquipped kitchen, large flmtly room, air
cond, convient location. 304675 -5027
Three bedroom, brick home.
large liv1ng room. pOstlble lOan
assumption. close to Point Pleasant 304-876 -6308.

~2 Mobile Homes
for Sale

1 -- - - - - - -- - 1976 Bayview, 2 BR , porch &amp;
awning. Pr~ce negotiable Call
614 -266-9309 or 61A-256-

6205 .

TAX &amp; TITLE DOW I\! Sale on all
used homet ! Free Delivery. We
Finance Call Todi'Y l We hwe
30. ELSEA HOME Center•
614-772-1220 or Ohio Wets·
800-826 -0752
14K70 Windsor """i1h 141t30
addition. 3 bedrooms. approximately 3 acree. black top road.
Several out-bu1tdmgs •nd pond.
Gallipolis Ferrv 304-675· 6930.

merce needs an indiv idual to
w or k as Santa Clause starting
Nov. 29. Weekday afternoons
and Sat. Pays m1nimum wage
614-992-514 1.

12x65 Matador, 2 bedroom a.
1 % baths, muat sell. phone
304-675-5924

AVON · AU areas . Call Mar1lyn
Weaver 304-882-2 645

2 bedroom mob1l e home. partially furnished , air cond. car·
pated, reduced to $5,500.00.
304·675-6258 or 676-4840.

12

Situations
Wanted

1973 14x70 Community, 3
bedrooms. 1 Vz baths. total elect·
_ric. 86995 .
1973 Cameron, 12x65, 3 bed·
rooms, gas, n1ce. 86495
Baby sitt1ng uf my home New- 1966 Casto. 12x60, 3 bedborn an d up Rutland and rooms. electric, 83496.
surrounding ar eas Experienced. 1973 Papella 12d5. 3 bedCall 614 742 -2 390 anytime
rooms, total electric. S5996
0 &amp; W HOMES
(304) 675-4424

13

Insurance

Call us for your mob1le tlome
1nsurance · M ill er Insuranc e,
304 -8 82-2146 Al5o . auto.
home. hfe. nealt h.

18 Wanted to Do

Septic tank pump1ng, residential
&amp; commerical. S80 per load.
Ron Evans Enterprises Jackson.
Ohio Call 614 -2&amp;6-5930
lovng mom &amp; pre vious preschool teacher. Will tak.a e:~tcel.
care of you r chil d Will provide
plenty of s11JT1Uhttlon. teachlf'IO
arts &amp; crahs. Will1 ng to watch
your child day-night &amp; weekends. large home. Conv. loca·
t!On Pleas~ ca ll614-3 67-72138 .
• Will do baby sitting in my hOme
Monday thru Sunday any hours,
call 304 -675 7664 .

Financial
21

1984 Skyline. 141t70, exccond,
central atr, underpenn1ng. rented
lot. many extras, 304 -675-1294
e-.~enings . weekends
2 bedroom trailer with lot,
304-676-7384.
1983 Nashua with expando,
cental air, 2 porches, with 4'h
acres, call between 6-10 pm,
304-676 -5628

33

Farms for Sale

150 acre farm. 1 mile back New
Haven, W . Va phone 304·882·
2666

34

NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommends th at you
do bus11'1ess Wl\.h people vou
know , -and NOT t o sen d monEl"(
through the mail until you h!!Ve
•OVBIIItlgated the o Hering .

Establi sh cr edit Get cr ech t
cards Get low in terest loans
Deta1ls. Money ard· 8749 Hwy
172 w Liber t-.,, Ky . 41472,

Real Estate
31

35 Lots

&amp; Acreage

76 acres-ne\Ner houae. County
w at er. electric 8c phone tlooked
up Will sell acres Reasonable
after accepted Call 614-446 6980
2 Building lots· 1112 acres eech
With county water. Jerrya Run
Rd Apple Grove, W. Ve Call
304 -676-2383

3 acres more or less wllh 2 car
g•age, 1hop, dr~lled well, septic
system, ideal country settmg lor
traitnr or tlouse, 2'1t m1tes South
N ew Haven, term• negotiable,
304-882 -2895.

Rental s

4 BA , f1replace, full basement 3

Brand new 3 BR near Gathpohs
Locks on Rt. 7 2 car gttrage, nice
lot. lmmedi81e possession. Will
consrder trade 1n of Mobile
home. property. etc Bargain
priced. Call 614-448 -8038 .

Mod er~ 3 BR. house. Petrlol.
Oh1 0 Will help finance Ca ll
61 4-446 · 1340, 446 -3870
1979 14~t70 mce mobile home.
. 1 3 acres, 2 ba.ths, g..-.den tub.
flnJplace, f ront porch. $ 14,900.
Call614-256-6702
Cottage in Inglewood. Fla close
to beach. Call aft er 6 00 PM 1· 813-967-6944
For Sate- 3 BA: , 2 baths,
Modular with garage. Ci ty
schools. Must See Cell 614 446 -6221 aftur 4 PM
Government home~~ from 81 . (U
repair) Oelrnquenr ta~ propeny.
Repossessions. Call 806-687·
6000 Eu. GH -9805 for c ur~ent
repo l1st
7 room brick home. Upper
· M\1on Carpe1, st0\18, ref double garage 304-773-6397.

GOVERN MENT HOMES FROM
$1.00 !U-Aepairl at1o tax detiqu entand forec losure propert ies
available now For list1ng Call
1 315 733 6062 ext G.2938

'

.

Newly ''novated, all ei&amp;Cttic
with heat pumP. andcentrfll air. 3
bedrooms, plenty yard and
garden space in Portland, Oh1o
5 milee from Ra\lenswood, W
Va . C.lll 614-843-6309
Two bedroom hmue with gar·
aga. No Pats. 304-675 -1400

41

Homes for Rent

2 8R house. Stove &amp; reirig
furn Located 1928Vz Chastnut
St. $175 mo. $76 dep . Call
6 14-446· 3870
5 room house-First Ave . Gallipoli&amp; Off street parking. No
pets Rat &amp; Dep Call614-25615 29 .

3 BA . hQuse &amp; garage. A-1 Real
Estate, Carol Yeager-Broker.
304·675· 5 104
2 BR . houaa., full basement,
large lot, on Honey auckle Rd. In
Add11on, 8250 a mo. plu s dep
Ca ll 614· 387 -7670.
Unfurnished 2 BR ., refrig. &amp;
stove. Lower Second. Ref &amp;
dep. Call 614 -446-3949 or
446-2419
2 BR • in Cheshire. Stove. refrig.
&amp; dishwasher Largey8fd, 2 · cer
car port. De, oslt required $189
a mo Cell anyt1me 614 -4460486 or 367 -0694.

2. 3. or 4 bedroom houses and
apt. in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilities, deposit required. Call
614·992-51 13, 614 -992 -6723
or 814. 992 -2509 . Call attar
6 00. please.
Newly remodeled, 2 bedroom,
furnished, in Addi1on Cell614 -..
992-6304 or 614 -446-8898

Space for small trailer1. All
hook-ups. Cable Al soetti~encv
rooma. air and cable Meson.
W.Va. Call304-773 -5661 .
Spacious mobile home lots for

CB.TV . Radio
Equipment

Pt~de

------- ,
26 inch RCA remote TV with
large storage cabinet on 1op, 90
dliV guarantee, $600. Firm.
Uoyd 4 heMI remota control
VCR , $200, Firm Call 614-246·
9414.

72

1980 Datsun pickup, good
cond . Banjo 81 M1ndolin
Wanted to buy good u•d pool
tabla . Call 614· 388 -8437
anytime.

SaliRent: 1 BR. tnuler10x46at
Eureka Ruf. &amp; dep ~o pets. Calf
614-256-1529.
3 BR . trallar- 10min. from town.
Private lot. $226 a mo Water
included. Call 614-446-0362.
2 bedroom trailer for rent 1n
Tuppers Plains $175 plus depoalt and utilit1es Catt 614 ~ 667 ·

34S7.

2 bedroom tr~uier on Send Hill
F:foad, 304-676 -7384.

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartments for
rent
Bas1c rent for 1 bdr.•
$183.00; 2bdr., $219.00. Also
required a .S 200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT. Jack1on
E1tate1 Oepl Ph 446·3997
Equal Housing Opportuntty.
2 BR . apts. 6 closllls, kitchenappl. furnished, Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newiV
painted. deck. Regency. Inc.
Apta Call 304-675 -7738 or

676-5104.
Furm1hed apt. next to library.
One professional aduh only.
Parking Call 614-446-0338 .
N1ce private apt. Quiet. Near
HMC. One adult only No pets.
Stove, refrig ., drapes 8226 8
mo. Ref. required . Call 614-

44e -4782.
15Court 2br .. 1 V2 bath.large
liVIng area w -w cerper, new
kitchen , dishwasher, w~red tor
phone &amp; tv. Gaa he&amp;t. Parking.
$350-mo ptua ut1titn,.. Dep. &amp;
Ref Call 614·446-4926
Downtown- Mod&amp;rn 1 SR .•
complme k1tctlen. carpal. air,
electric heat Call 614-4464383-dsvs.. 446 -0139 -even &amp;
weekends

Modern 1 BR &amp;partment Call

614·4.46-0390.
Renevvtv redecorated . VerY mce
apartments m downtown Galh·
polis 1 &amp; 2 BR .- unfurnished,
second floor. from $175 -t 225
Oep. Be references requ~red . Call
eve 614 -446 -2326 or 4464249.
Great location. Newly remodeled. 2 BR . Upstairs. Partly
furmlhed apt. Ut1hties paid. Call
after 3 .30 PM. 614 -446 -1457

51 Household Goods

SWAIN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE e2
Olive St, Gallipohs.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399.
Living room suites - 8199-6599.
Bunk beds with beddlng-.$199.
Full size mattress &amp; foundation
starting- $99 . Re c l1nera
stat1ing- $99
USED· Beds. dressers, bedroom
suites, $199 0 $299 . Oes~s .
wnngBf washer, a complete hne
flf Uled furmture
NEW- Western boo.11· S30.
Workboots $18 &amp; up (Stilet &amp;
soft toe) Call 614· 446 -3159
County Appliance, Inc Good
. used appliances and T.V sets
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Moo 1hru
Sat. 614-446·1899. 627 Jrd.
Ave. Galhpohl, ~H .
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Weaher1, dryers, refrigerator s.
ranges . Skaggs Applian ces,
Upper River Rd . bee1de Stone
Crest Motet. 614-446·7398.

LAYNE'S FURNifURE
Sofas a'nd ch•rs priced from
S396 to 8995 Tables sso and
up to 8125. Hid&amp;-a· beds 6390
to S696. Recliners $225 to
$376 . a..mps 828 to S126.
Ornette1 S109 and up to 8496.
Wood table w -6 chairs S28G to
$795 . Desk S100 up to 6376.
Hutchus S400 ana up. BuRk
beds complete w · mattresses
6295 and up to $395. Baby beds
81 10 Mattresses or bolt springs
full or twin $68 , f1rm $78, and
$88 . Queen sets $226. K1ng
S360 4 drawer ch81t $69 . Gun
cabinets 6 gun Gas or electric
~ range 8375 Baby mattresses
$36 &amp; 846 , Betl frames 620 ,
$30 &amp; Kmg frame &amp;60. Good
selection of bedroom suites.
metal cabinets, headboar ds S30
and up to $65
90 Days same as cash wtth
approved credit
3 M1les out
Ruleville Rd Open 9am to 5pm
Mon thru Set Ph 614 -446 -

0322.

PARSON 'S FURNITURE

Christmas special. White Tail
Hunter tJow Lots of new
acceuouea- Includes arrow•
tip-s, much more. Cat1614 -388:

a614 .

.

Sears uer&lt;:ise bench &amp; wa1ght
set (llke newt. &amp;130 2 sets
weigtlts &amp; trimming belt Pierre
Carden tpace saver, stereo
"System (new) , S170, won as
pr~ze . 2 yr. old large tel•cope
with different eye lenses. $1 oo.
hk'B new, paid $269 new Cell
aher 8 .00 614·379-2183.
Bicycle-like new Trash Compactor Call 614-446-7453

Sears console humldlti•. like
niiiW, $60.00. AKC min. Collis
8100.00. 304·678 -2728.
Bob Cline Tax1derm';'. Member
W. Va . Taxidermy Auoc. Rt. 2
Box 782, Point Ple. . nt. W. Va
304-676-, 448.
30 gal aquarium with stand and
all •ccessDri•. 1180.00 takea
all, 304-e75 -1724.
King v.,oodburn• with
t1 00. 304 -895-3936.

Building Material•
Block, br1ck, sewer pipes. windowa. lintels, etc. Claude Win·
ters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814·
245·6121 .
Concrete blodcs all aizes yard or
delivery . Maaon •arid. Gall1poll1
Block Co., 1231h Pine St ..
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614 -446-

27S3

Ready miJt concrete and all
concrete aupplies. Call
V allev
Brook Cement and Suppll•.
304-773-5234

u•

56

Pets for Sale

Catalyhc c onverters, onlv
$89 .96 . Mo&amp;t models. lnttatlation also available. Muffl..- Man,
9 Stimpson Ave , Ather11, Otlio.
1-800 -843 -3767

Oragonwynd Cattary l&lt;enntil.
CFA Hlmahrtan. Persian and
Siamese kittens. AKC ChOw
puppies. New kittens: Peraians.

hard wood slabs. 812 pM
bundle. Containing approx. 1 Yz
ton. FOB. Oh1o Paltst Co.
Pomeroy. Ohro. 614-992-6461
1976 Jeep Renegade 4Jt4. Runs
good, new tires. Ch•t· type
freezer Mevtag Dryer, excellent
conditiOn Call 614· 742-2433.
F1rewood split end delivflf'ed,
S40. per load. Cherry. locust,
sassyfres and hickory . Call 614 992 -6335
Like new, Bassett Ehlby Bed and
24 month boys 2 piece snow
SUit. Call614-992-71 10.
Tandy 64K color computer 11.
d1 sk dflve. printer mou•. joy•
, tick, cartridges, paper. disks,
manual 614-985-4288 .
For aale used door and storm
doon. Good selection. Different
s1zes. Reasonable prices Call
614-742-3073 between 9a.m .·
6_P.m

maiM, 3 femal81. Cute. Mother
AKC reg. $26 each. Call 614-

Black II white pony, very gentle.
W1th saddle 8260. Call 814 -

246-9157.

AKC Reg. Boston Terrier Male

$200 Caii614·448-3S45 .

Meigs County Humane Society
hat cau for adoption Some
spayed and neutered Ready to
go All •hots up to dllte.
Adoption tee required. Call for
more information about ourcat1
and come visit or volunteer.
614 -992 -6606 or 614· 992·

3026.

Coll1e pups, AKC Registerad.
Lass1e type. Will be ready tor
~anta Call 614-843·5356.

Carpet Pn ces Startmg at .
Commercial · 64 a yd .,
Sculpture-66 a yd . Plush- $7 e
yd . Lots of room remenu 1n
stock . Financing available. Mol·
lohan Furmture, Upper R1ver Rd.
. 614 -446 -7444.

All Christmas Trses 812 . Come
early befor&amp; cold wea1her, teg
your tree at Newell' s Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
on Hang111g Rock Rd 304·7736371 or 882-2886

Pi cke ns Us ed Fur n iture Dinettes, so fas, chairs, end
tablea, tamps, beds, dr&amp;Ssers,
desk, glassware. 304 · 675 1450.
Luuire gas furna ce. 82,500
BTU Citation gas range, rflwmg
dxercise machine. 304 -6 75 7883 or 676-3024.
Floor model RC A. XL100, co lor
TV . goodcond, $10000 30 4-

e75 ·21S3 .

SURPLUS ARMY. DENIM,
RENTAL CLOTHING (Carharts
10 per cent over cost) Original
. army camouflage. H. 0 . "Sam"
Somerville's, Old At 21 E•st
Ra\lenswood, Fri, Sat, Sun.
Noon 8 :00pm. Oth• dl'fsafl•r
6 00 pm 304. 273 -5655 . tnsu·
lated camouflage coveralls
S25 .00.
F1rev.100d $35.00 I ~ ad. delivered
Mason County and Gatlipolla.
Custom cut and rush orders

$40.00. c.u 304-S95-344e .

For Sale: Electnc Gu1tar &amp; Amp.
Good tor beginner Re•onably
priced. Call 614-256· 1778
Evenings.
'
Roland Cube- 60 watt amp.
Good cond. Haa chorus S3DO .
Call 614-446 -2 278

59 For Sale or Trade

deposit, New Haven, W Va ,
304· 882-3287 or 30 4 -773 5024
Modern one bedroom apart·
ment. Very clean and nice. No
Pets Ph 304-676- 1386.
laur&amp;land apartmenu, George
St.. New Have n. W. Va. 2
bedrooms. carputed. all electric.
for more infotmation cell 304882-37 16.

Tra nspo rtation

" It didn't work. I stayed awake wondering
if they used cancer-causing chemicals
to decaffeinate lt."

New Holland end of aeason hay
tool sale. All hay tools at delaer
COlt plua Interest free financing
until June 1, 1988 with normal
down payment. Two461 , 3pt, 7
ftmower• U . 100.00. On•31 1,
3 Joint PTO. standard tlrea
regular pickup, 81.800.00. One
472. 7 ft hlilbln• 8&amp;,900.00.
One 47.4 , 7 ft h•yblne ,
16,400 .00 , Ke•fera Sarvlc•
Center, St. Rt. 87, Leon. W . Va.
Ph.one 304-896-3874.

Al~po~T.

I

i

i'
0

BIG IS HEADIN'
IN A HUF:RYI

1-S00-843 -3767.

Serv1r.es
B1

Home
Improvements
BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

TELL IT TO THAT THII&gt;JG
BEHIND ME!!

Unconditional lifllllme guarantee local refertWicea furnistled.
Free '"timates. Cell coli~
1-614·237-0488, dl't or night.
RogersBasement
Waterproofing.
'

1982 Toyota Tercel. 2 dr., 4 apd.

Coli e14·266-1529.

83 Nl••n. 83 Hortzon 83
Honda 78 LTD II 81 Lehant. 84
Pontiac T 1000. 77 MGB. Low
mil• a. new paint. Call 814 ·

'

SWEEPER and sewing m•chlna
repair. parts. and uppliee. Pick
up and delivery, D1v11 Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Oeorgea CrHk Rd. Call 614446-0294.

446-e9ao.

4 - 230x1&amp; M1chelln tJt81. 2 -LR
7816-atudded Daytona A8diel
Snow TirH. Call 814 -446-

22ee

2454
Fatty Tree Trimming. stump
ramovel. Call 304 -676 -1331 ,

Starkl Tree and Lawn Servica,
lawn care. 1.-.dscaplng. atump
removal, 304-&amp;76 -2842 or
578 -2903.
I

614·379-2726

1984 Pontiac Firebird. Excel.
cond. 28.000 mil•. sunroot.
louver, 4 spd. , 4 cyl ., fuel
mjected, PS .. PB. $4800 Call
614· 446 -7447.

82

"

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
FOR SCWIE REA~, 1
CON'T WANT TO READ MY
HOR05COPE WCAY.

Plumbing
Heating

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
,
Phone 814-446-3888 or 614-

44e-4477
84

&amp;

SHORE, PARSON·
SHUT TH' DOOR

Electrical
Refrigeration

AN' GIVE ME

Stllinlesa steel llllhatst sy.,ems
Now custom made lor your
truck, motor home or cl•siccar.
Wittl life-time V~~arrentv Muffler
Man. 9 Stlmpton Aw .• Altl,ens
'
Ohio. 1-B00-843 -3761.

1986 Y2 Ford Escort . 22.000
mites. Excellent condition .
$37150 C1ll 614-992 -6305 or

614-446-889S

19n Mercury. Running condi·
~1on
Auto $460. 614 ·992·

6939

1981 ChevyStetlonWagon, exc
cond. 128 . 000 mllu ,
$1 ,700.00. Phone 304-8822863 9 ·00·3 00 or after 6 .00

304-773-6867

1981 Relhtnt " K"Car, eir.auto••
PS . front wtleel dnve, 4 cvt..
60.000 mllet Good buy ,
$1 ,900 304 -676 -26&amp;3or676-

86

1

1986 Monte Carlo luxury Sport,
V-8, all power a..ta, windows.
ate: 17,000 mile~. $9,000 00
firm. 304 -876-6084 aher 4 .00.

z.

1986 Daytona Turbo
red·
tllver. leather Interior, nlf'N' tlrN.
loaded. $8,960 .00. Consklw
partleltrade. 304-676-6305.

-· AN' ·ALL TH ' TIME
1 THOUGHT YOU WAS
A TEE-TOTALER!!

General Hauli.ng

iDA~

ll5l Watt Dloney
World's Celebrity Circus
From Epcot Cenler Wortd
Showcase

00 Facta of Life
0 (I) Full Houaa A recently
w1dowad sportscaster tries

to raise h1s little girls ..(RLI;I
(!) liD D.C. Wuk Rvw. 1;1
llDl Ill !Ill Beauty and the
Beaot Investigation Into a
strange poisoning death

marks Cathy for ooom .
@ Primenewa Wrap ups of
the oay·s wortd news and in
depth feature reports . (1 ·00)
® MOVIE: O.ad Men Don't
Wear Plaid (PGI (2:08)
fl) (!) It' a Howdy Doody
Time: A 40 Yaor Celebration
Join Howdy DoO&lt;Iy , Buffalo
Bob and the rest of 1he
Doodyville gang as well as
an all-star Peanut Gallery for
j-iowdy Doody's 40th
birthday. INRI
8:05 (]) NBA Baaketbell
8:30 00 0 (I) I Married Dora

Dora coaches Peter 's stster
m !aw 1n how to behave like
a Lallna C
(I) llll Will Street Week
(0:30)
9:00 I]) 700 Club
II (ll ll5l MOVIE: 'Pollca
Academy' NBC Movie of the
Week IRI (1 :35) C
00 0 (I) Mr. Belvedere
Belvedere has a secret: he

SII&amp;Aarr

Performers from New York
ano Lonoon celebrale
Gershwtn's legacy,
@ Larry King Llval In deplh
intarvlews With top
newsmakers and celebrities.
9:30 ®College Basketball
00 0 (I) The Purault of
Happlneaa Dave crashes
Margaret's dinner with a
campus Lothano. 1;1
(I) McLaughlin Group
10:00 QJ Slralght Talk
(i) 0 (J) 20/20 1;1
(I) Chllllda Explores the
work and worlo of
Internationally renowned
Basque sculptqr Eduaroo
Ch1llida , focusrng on the
artist. his sculpture and his
inspiratron . (NAI
®l Ill l!2l Falcon Creal
Lance's determination to
clear h1mself jeopardizes h1s
life 1;1
Oll Evening Newa A wrap up

of today's news'and a look
ahead to tomorrow's new~

stor1es. (1 :00)
@News
fl) Cll Benny Hill
10:20 (]) Hogan's Heorea
10:30 I]) Last Frontier
0]1 NtWI
(1J Hogan's Heroes
10:50 (]) Night Tracks: Power Play

News

(I) Sign Dll

tiD American Masters Family

Paul Rupe, Jr Water Service'.
Pools, CISterns, well1. Call 614.
446-3171 .
Watterson ' s Water ~auling
reuonable rate•. immedlat~
2 ,000 gallon delivery, ciuerns.
paols, well. etc c all 304 -67&amp;:.

2919.

Mowrev's Upholnermg serving
~ri coun~y area 22 veers The bau
•n furniture upholstering. Call
304 - 876 - 4164 for f
ast1mates.
rae

of law students are explored.

II (]) 00 Ill (I) ®l Ill !Ill

&amp; R Water Service Home
Cllters, wells. pools tilled Fo1merty James Boys Waters Call
304 -676 -6370
1

R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reuptlolstery, St Rt. 7. Crown
City, Oh. 614 -266· 1470 Eve
614· 446 -3438 Open dail'y 9 tO
4 :30. Sat 9 30 to 1·30. Old &amp;
new Upho1tered .

SUGAR!! SUGAR .•

PEANUTS
' 1 TH INK YOU SHOULD
ASK THE NURSE. CHARLES

IT'S YOUR D06 WHO 'S
HAVING TI4E 5UR6ER~ ..
60 AHEAD .. ASK HER ..

GAMI

members and friends talk
about lha man and the artist.
I]}) Moneyllne Current
reports on worlo economics
aM linanclal-news wltll Lou
Dobbs (0.30)
® Jeffer&amp;ona
fl) Cll Love Connection
1t:30 II (ll 0]1 Tonight Show
(i) Chaara
0 (I) Nlghtllne 1;1
®) Magnum, P.l.
I]}) Sporta Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
Nick Chartes eno Jim Huber.
(0:30)
.
Ill !Ill •Top ol the Papa' c;as
Lato Night
011 Magnum, P.l. Treasure of
Kalaniopu
fll(l)M'A"S•H
11:50 (]) Night Tracks: Part I
Stareo.
12:00 (]) Bums and Allen
® College Bollketball
(i) Nlghtllne 1;1 .
0(1) Fa~ _Guy

leners of ,,,

four scrambl~ words balow fo form four simple words

I

ROMMEl

I

I

1--r:-lHOLUG
~I'=-rl:....:;l--1 i

r
s
I

t

..,:M..:..,::;Er-:-V.,;O:...:;N-:-11 :
I ~~ 15 ~

I

Sign hanging above tha newly
installed computer system: "To
. . . . . .
Err II Human, AM To Blame tt On
. - - - - - - - - . . . . . , A Computer Is Even - -."

L I v AH

I0

1-....,.;;1"-T-1.:..,..;I~~,.:.:...,..~~
.

.

.

.

.

.

_

SCRAM·LETS

Comp lere !he chuckle quored
by Wi ng m the miss1ng word$

you develop from step No 3 below.

ANSWERS

NNI/y - J/fry - EaV88 - Invoke - ONE FLEA
A sign I
In the local nel~hborhood pet store gave
forftltnlng to cuatomers. It read: Buy One, Get ONE FLEA."

.-w

BRIDGE

+J 5

James Jacoby

.K Q98

NORTH

ll-!7-81

+K Q5

Making the right defensive play requires you to have confidence in your
opponents' bidding. You assume they
have bid correctly, and you try to picture the cards held by declarer. Then
you plan to develop enough tricks to
set the contract, based upon your per·
ception of declarer's holdmg. That's
the' right approach to defense at
bridge, even though declarer Will frequently have different cards from
what you anticipated.
Today East used thrs line of thinking

to come up with an unusual wmning

+A Q 10 7

EAST

WEST
+K 9 7
32
8!0643
+J2

.JS

• 84
• A 10 6
t A J2
+ 9 8643

SOUTH

.74

+AQ10632
• 987

+K5
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer . North

South
play. Declarer played dummy's heart
Norlb East
West
I NT
Pass
4+
king at trick one, and East won the
Pass
Pass
Pass
ace. Since South had simply signed off
in four spades without expressing any
Opening l ead: • 2
slam interest, East mentally placed
him with nine or 10 high-card points. If
that were the case, perhaps West had a a diamond, and the A-J took the settrump trick. Where then would the set- ting tricks
·
ting trick come from? East finally deWhy would the nine of diamonds be
cided there would be a good chance of enough in the West hand to achieve a
success if his partner bad as much as favorable result? Suppose South held
the 10 or even the nine of diamonds. So 10·8-7 instead of 9-8·7 With a diamond
he played back his two of diamonds at return at the second trick, the natura)
trick two. Declarer won the queen of card lor him to play is the seven o
diamonds m dummy and took the eight rather than the 10 Readers oj
spade finesse. West won and returned this column will now do better, nghtl

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS DOWN
1 Weight
1 Phone
measure
5Fake
2 Priest's
9 Chinese
garment
port
3
Inamorata
10 Sacred
4
Soap
.
Egypt.
ingredient
beetle
II
Con
12 Split
game
13 Tourist
(sl.)
neckwear
6
Sometimes
14 Expert
It's
111 Kind of
cured
computer
7 Small
memory
space
16 Baseball
8
Cocktail
great
10Twenty
17 Hellion
19 Illumined 11 Nutty .
20 · - Butter- 111 Fu~~tton
· milk Sky" 18 Phthp
21 Gainsay
22 Quote
24 Squirrel
monkey
211 See 16
Across
26 Tearful
27 "Able was

Efman

Yesterday's Answer
21 Trick ·
29 Haggard
'

caper
22 Contemporary
23 Repeat
24 Weight
allowance
211 "Superman"
portrayer
26 Steeple
part

of
song
30 Ordinary
language
31 Candle
33 Marine
bird
36 Emulate
PinocchiQ
37 Vitality

I - ..."
28 Give a
cue
32 Blunder
33 7-7, e.g.
34Ms.

Stein em's
concern

311 Calf '
37 Stage

device

38 Unabridged
39 Different
40 Adolescent
41 Equal
DAILY CR YPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it :

11127

AX YDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

11:00 I]) Remington Sleele

R:

Upholstery

7:05 (]) Andy Griffith
7:30 Dill Hollywood Squares
®College Baokelball
(i) Newlywed Game
0(1) Judge
®) Wheel of Fortune 1;1
Oll Cra11llre (0:30)
Ill !Ill ll5l Jeopa•dyl
® Bemey Miller
fl) (!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 @ Sanford and Son
8:00 I]) Paper Chaae The exploits

Q Rea rrange

Stereo.

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pool•. cisterns, welle. Ph. 614.
245 -9285

87

e tJ) M•A*S*H

e

Dillard Water Service: Pool:
Ciaterns, Wella. Delivery Any:
t1ma Call 614 ·448-7404-No
Sunday cells.

6758 .
1 980 Old1 Omega, rebuilt eng.ne, 304·676-1789 .

YORE CUP

Residential or comm&amp;rcial wif·
i~g . New ••vice or repairs.
llcenled electrician. Estimate
free. R 1denour Electrical, 304676 -1786.

1974 White Corvette Stingray .
Call 614-446·1766

304-773-5S15.

I WONDER IF THIS MEANS
THAT GLA5N05THA5 EiQNE
DOWN /HE TLlBE5.

CARTER'S PWM81NG
ANOHEATING

Must sea 10 appreciete· 1983
Buick Riviera. All black exterior
wrth vinyl top . Burgundy velour
tntarior PS, PB, AC .· In fact
power everyttung. $7100. Call
614- 446 -2297, between 10

1987 Olds Cutlass Supnrme.
Top ahape. Assume loan. Call
evenings, 304 -773· 69 11 or

''YOLlR DA ILYHOROSC:OPE:

8o

1978 Rally Sport Camero. LT
360. T-top , eir, spoke mags, dual
nhwst. cruise SHARPI No
Trades. 12796, neg Call 61444&amp;-6175.

Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill !Ill ll5l Wheel of Fortuna
@ Choe•a

has taken a second job. Q
(I) Currenta
®J B !Ill Dallas Furious at
Cliff. Dandy takes over Cliff's
well with a shc!gun . Q
liD Great Perlormencea

RON'S Television Service:
Hou• call• on RCA, Ou11ar,
GE . Specialing In Zenith.: Call
304 -676 -2398 or 614 -448 ,

19B1 Pinto. New tir•. bettery,
beltL hoaaa Engine run• good
Body fair. Cell 814-256· 1778.
Ewtnlngs.

286-6522

Tractor. lnt'l Low Boy w / 6 loot
mower deck. 81800. Call 614 448 -4348

I

IT SOUNDS LIKE

Auto Repair

z

61 Farm Equipment

N

ALLEY OOP

'

1973 Chev. C60 Dump truck
with cattle racks. new tlree,
7,-P_M_._ _ _ __ _
8x1 2 bed ·all metal , 1979 :A::M::::!o-:
Mercury Marquia, 4 dr., one 1982 Camaro
28 . T- top.
owner. 84.710 mllee. new tire•. Loaded SHARPl 84800. Call
Ca11614-446-2767.
614-388 -9631 or 446·6579 .

Fa rm Suppl ies
&amp; L1ves1uck

.S)

Struta. $119 95 pair, inltalled.
Most modell Muffler Man, 9
Stlmp1on Ava Amen•. Ohio.

1986 Dodge Omni. Auto, 4 dr..
14.000 mil&amp;~. Good cond. Call

4020 JD tn~ctor with 4 row no
till corn planter- $6960. T0-30
MF trector, plows, disc &amp;
eultlvator-82600. Call 814 -

2 bedroom furni1ed •pt, ref and

77

HOU~ P.ELAY

AT THE

27a4.

1979 Pinto. 1660. Call 614446·4913 after 4 :00 PM.

Yamaha- CP30 eloctric plano.
Cost 81400 new- $350. Call
814 -388 - 8637 even. 446 ·
1968deys
~

THP:E=E

ualled Most Fords, Chevy
truck•. Van•. 4•4's. Muff!•
Man , 9 Stimp1on Ave .. Athens.
Ohio. 1-800-843-37&amp;7.

About 2,000 bel• mixed grau
hart. e1 OOa bale. Call614-446-

57

SNAFU®

APARTMENTS, mobile homea.
houSBI Pt. Pleasantand Gallipolis. 614-446 -8221

---------·loOual exhaust kits, $99 96 irlWhite fiberglua truck topper for
ChwyS -10. cell304-676- 7831
or 676 -1311.

F?tMtM~eR, ~VEN

THE: !..ONGc.&gt;T JOU(?NEY
~
STA~T.S WITH A
il:
5"!NGLE • • •
fi

614-44&amp;·7439.

&amp; Grain

t1me for Christmas. 304-676-

2turmlhed
BR. aptNear
Stove
&amp; refrig.
1...----------...1.----------~
Go Mart
Call T'
CROSS&amp; SONS
614-446 -7025
• 1U S. as-west. Jackson, Ohio,
614-288 -6451
Tara Townhoute Aptl. - 2 BAS .•
Mnsay Ferguson, New Holtantb
Ph battls, AC Start 8299 a mo
Bulh Hog Sales &amp; Service Over
"
Utilities not Included Call 61440 uaed tract ora to chooae from
367-7860
&amp; complele hne of new &amp; used
equipment. Largnt select~n in
Graciou1 liVIng. 1 and 2 bed·
S.E. Ohio
room apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
Utility building spl: 27'11136 ' JC8'.
ments in Middleport. From
1· 13' x8 ' sliding door, 1-3' Hr$216 including utilities Call
vice door- 84444 Iron HoJte
614 -992 -7787 EOH
Sidra Call 614-332-9746
In Pom&amp;Joy, 2 bedroom. partly
iurnJshed apt. Olf Spring Ave
Re cently .,modeled. Call after
6 00 pm, 614 -992-8886
·

Hay

... AND

Chevette engtne. 4 cyl. &amp; aom~
parta Price negotiable. Call

Reg Tamworttl Bore Call !ft•r
6:00 PM-614-2415 -9224.

1986 Ford LTD II. Clean. 12.900
miles Auto. , AC ., PS. PB. till,
cruise. Call 614-388 -8240.

Musical
Instruments

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Budget Transmtssions: Used and
rebuilt, all typet Guarantee 30
days. Call 814-379-2220 or
304-675·4230.

Duroc Bores for batter rete ol
gain. Roger Bentl.,.-&amp;13 -684·
2398. Fabin•. Ohio.

1984 Ford Tempo, 6 spd , air.
Stl.-p. $3299. John's Auto
Sales, HolidiiV Inn, Kanauga- Rt.
7.

Buy 6 Toning Tables end receive
a frae Suntan bed Offer good
Until Dec. 30, 1987. Call Caribbean Tans, Inc , 304-422 -4200.

Apartment· 1136 2nd , Gathpolrs
2 BR Stove &amp; refrig
tur-nish&amp;d $185 Wtrte1 paid
Call814-448 -4416 aher 7 PM .

76

614·2S6-6522.

AKC Reg. Cocker Spaniel pups.
$150 each Call 814-388·8890.

Vallav Furniture
New 11nd used furmture and
applicances Cell 614 -446 7672. Hours 9-6

Fresh Chr~st mas trees lor sale
820. and down. Cut or dlg your
choice 1% mites out M1ll1tone
Road, Apple Grove, W Va., or
call 304 -576-2233.

1985 Suzuki Quad Sport Good
condition •1000. 080 . Call
614 0742· 3165 efter &amp;:30 p.m:

Show Saddle with silver head
stall It braat atraps. Registered
Sorrell mare-bornad Jen . 25,
1979. 15 hands 3" . 8860. Call

1984 Mercury Topez. WhiteAlpine AM -FM ·Cau stereo.
AC Excell cond 83400 Call
614-4415-8602 after 6:30 PM

3308.

AVON ell areas Shrrley Spears,

6641 .

Livestock •

AKC Miniatur• Dachshund
pupa Good Christmu pet1 lor
children. 111 shots &amp; wormed

Coli 814-379-pn.

.,

1984 Honda 200 TRS . 4
whHitr $1100 Cali 814-992·

29S5.

64

and financial news with Lou

7025.

Now buy1ng shflll corn or e.corn. Call tor latest quotea. River
City Farm Supply, 814-448 -

63

Motorcycles

3-Wheel• ATV- Kawasaki 200,
Good cond. Call 614-446 ·

62 Wanted to Buy

71 Auto's For Sale

or 614 -992 -3662.

304-e76-1429

74

13&amp; Masaey Ferguson diaul
Farmal Cub and cultivator
304-676-2328 or 676-2606.

446 ·210S .

MAN 'S FRIEND

China· aervice for 10- ne\ler
been used Carnival glass· groen
&amp; amber. Ant1que dishes. Call
614·4461·8105

Buy bar chain and 1prock• for
any •w gat second chain tree,
off• good till Dee. 1 Siders
Equipment Co. Phone304-876·
7421 .

'h Chow Chow puppi•· 4

~II white E1kimo Spitz puppttll,

AVON , all areas, Shirluv Spears,
304 -675-1429

anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
® WKRP In Cincinnati
G1 (!)Too Close lor Comtort
6:35 (]) Carol Burnett
7:00 I]) Remington Steele
Ill]) PM Magazlna
® SportsCentor (L)
(i) Entertainment Tonight
0 (I) People's Court
(!) liD MacNeil/ Lehr'er
NewsHour (1 :00)
®J Nowa
I]}) Moneyllne Current
reports on world econom1cs

1977 International HarveaterScout 11. Aunt great. boctv
rough , 1811 than 84,000 miles.
$800. 304-676-2570.

614-44e -9777

Call e14·446-3S44 """' 7PM.

~~~~~~: f~~~=~!e!ll ~J:w~~~~

1977 LTD . CoU e14-992 -5519

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

66 B~ilding Supplies

Groom and SuppJv Shop-Pet
GrQoming All breeds .. All
stvtes lama Pet Food DeaiBf.
Julie Webb Ph 614 -446-0231 .

Mi~ted

@ ShowBiz Today News of
the enterta inment wortd Is

1982 Oodga 250 Rom. Cuotom

30 uaed tr11ctors to choote from.
Frestl l011d 6', 7', B' rear blades.
Buv now before Jan. 1- price
Increase. 36 welt . Gelllpolls.

0

®J Ill !Ill CB!! News
liD French In Action

conversion. Trail.- r81dy, Call
614·446· 4383 di!YS. 446-0139
8\l'ens. &amp; weekenda.

~ower ,

COal stove with tan. Good
condition Call 614-446-6362.

Rough lumber 400 tt Walnut,
4000 ft . Pine and Poplar. Air
dried 4 yn. 614-992· 3921

6 pc lN1ng room su1te S185
Call 814 - 446 - 34 3 1 after
4 OOPM .

Furnished upstai rs· 1 BR . Utili·
ties paid. 8220 a mo 876 dep.
94 locust St. Call 614-448 1340 or 446-3870

Mossburg 12 ga. DeliW Slayer &amp;
30" full berrels. Call 614 -266·
9316 .

Just arrilled· 3 truck loads· New
living room su1tes: new wood 6
pc. living wood SUites, $399 .95:
chest of drawers, twin mettresses, S95 set. mn;rowave
oven stands
THE WORKING

513 Third Ave · 1 BR Deposrt
required Call 614-446-4345
belween 5:00 PM &amp; 10 00 PM

614-446·1250.

C.B Equip· all kind plus two
dishwashers 1982 Kawa11ki
660. ReMonabte Call614-266-

6 ft. d11h wi1h Lo-Com, 304·

61 . Farm Equipment

•

614-3S8-8295.

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

WOaD

E'llllatf

1979 Chevy Truck. 78,000
milee Good cond. t1800 Call

73

19

'~~:t;~· S©~~lA-~£~S*
111 CLAY I . 'OLLAN
•

(I) ABC Newa 1;1
(I) Nlgh~y Buslneu Report

'-:;;:;:;,;:;::::;,;::=;::=;;:::-r-;:;::;;:=::;;::::;:::::::::1-----------

1270.

Wood Dinette SOt - table &amp; 4
chai!S· Call 614-379·2613.

New 2 BA . equ ipped k•tchen,
low utilities. con\len lent lace·
t1on No pau. Ref &amp; dep Call

~· ~~~~ ~

plast1c
tanks. plastic
culverts, 1eptic
metal cutverts.
RON 1

Fof the athlete. OP Gvmpac
1500 lit ness system Call 614446· 2235 aft• 6pm .

~

17e9.

e76-232e

Merchandi se

CAPTAIN EASY

1967 Chevy one ton , 304-87&amp; -

49

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 Br. trail tr-cable. le&amp;Utiful river
view. Foater' s M.obite Hpme
Park ,Call 614-446 · 1602

Callatlan ' s Used Tire Shop. Over
. 1 ,000 tire• . aizes12. 13, 14. 1 &amp;,
16. 18 5 . 8 mile~ out Rt. 218 .
Call614 -256-6251 .

The Daily

6:00 I]) Crazy Like a Fox
D I]) Gl Ill (I) tml Ill !Ill
115) Newa
Cll Dr. Who
liD Squara Dna TV C
@ lnalde Politics '88
® Facta of LHe
fl) (!)One Day at o nme
6:05 (])Allee
6:30 Ill]) ll5l NBC Nightly News

1984 Mar:da. 4 . spd .. AM ·FM .
$2799 John' a Auto Sele ·
HolidiV Inn. Kanauoa -At. 7

54 Misc. Merchandise

SeBSoned Oak &amp; A all firewoodSeasoned one ve•. Large load.
Spirt &amp; delivered-836. Call 114256 · 1340 or 256 - 9303 ,
anytime

FRI., NOV. 27
EVENING

446·8664.

ANtiQUES , Buy or Sell. Riverine Ant iques. 1124 Eaet M1ln
St. Pomeroy . Houre: Mon.Tues -Wed. 10 am to 6 p.m.
Sun · 1 p.m · 8 P·!T' By chance
or appointment, Ruu Moore
614-992-2526 .

17.2 frost-free G.E. refrig with
icemaker, $400. Body shop
compressor, S400. Furniture &amp;
misc. Call 614-446-6944.

•

8616 Ni11en pid!.u~ . Exc:et cond.
with fibergl•• topper. Alum!
wheel•. Call attar 6 PM-614 -

Qualtty firewood , all hardwood,
tor sale 825 a pick-up toad. Call
614 -367 -0669

1400 sq. ft commliWcial space
sUiteble for offices. reta1ling, or
services Pr1me location-Corner
or 2nd. &amp; Plna in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear. $350 per
month Call 614 -446-4249 or
446 -2326.

Trucks for Sale

44e·S7S9 .

54 Misc. Merchandisa

For Lease

Television
Viewing

e.

Antique "'arble-llab drauer
Antique oek cupboard Both
e:~tc eltent condit ion. Call' 614367-7260

son. Oh. 814 -286-5930.

R

1973 Dodge Pickup. 3 tpd,
Slant
$300 Firm Cltl f14 ·

Antiques

. .
PI ut1c
ciStern atate approved,

BORN

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

$800.00 304-e76-1247.

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·

7_
3·_ _ _ __ _ __
_3_0_

Friday, November 27, 1981

J1 Auto's For Sale
'76 Chev. Malibu, V-8 auto, 2
door. h•d top, good cond,

ren1
Mobile Home
p ... Famity
G
ar... allipolis Ferrv, 304-675-

4 bedroom home for rent or sal a,
304-675 -2130

Furn1stled : 4 rooms &amp; bath
Clean . No pets . Adults only Ref.
&amp; dep. required . Call 614 -446 1519

Homes for Sale

mi so. ot Gallipolis. $34,900
Call Da-.,s - 614 - 446 ~ 1615 , aher
5 ·00· 446· , 244.

Homes for Rent

Commercul buildings tor lease
Downtown Pt Pleesant Stores,
offioes A -One Real Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broker. C•ll 304·

I

22 Money to Loan

41

Brookside Apartments- large
country kitcllen, st ove &amp; refrigerator Unfurnished. 1 BR , bath,
qu1e1 area Call 614·446 · 1932.

749 Th1rd Ave. Presently Tt'le
Gift Shop 1600 1q ft Commercial or warehouse. Parking on
side. Adjacent toTh.rd&amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appointment.

"by Larry Wright

KIT 'N ' CARL VLE

7479

Business
Buildings

675-5104 .

Busi ness
Opportunity

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental tra1ler1 Call 614-992-

~-;;:::;:::::::::;;:;:::-r;:=~:::::::;=::==l
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
81 00 (U repe1i-l foredosuret,
repos, 18K datlquent properties.
N ow telling your •rea, Call
1· 3, 5-736 -7367 e:~tt. 2P·WV· H
for current list. 24 HAS,

9805 for current repo federal
list

PM.

"They're all yelling 1ump,'
Sire."
Homes for Sale

c all 614-446 -4222.

Mobile Home lot. 80ft. or leu
920 4th , Gallipolis. $75 . Water
p .. d Calle 14-446-4416 aher 7

0

App!v in person - Hair Swlist .

Government Jobs. $16.040 $59, 230 vr. Now hiung Your
area 805-687-6000 Ext R-

lnquir~ee

~l_j

31

Plaza

downto~n Gattlpolie location.

n

614-2e6-6421oakfo•Sue.
Hai r Happenmg- S1lver Bridge

Office Space for rent. Excel.

1 ~~
J 0 ~
g

Tour GUides-M al e 8t F•msle.
our top people earn S800S1200 par weelc, Pleasant working conditions. Selary to uan.

52

53

l

Employment
Serv 1ces

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. dBV. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614 446-9680. Rent UIOWU $120
monttl

Buyu'lg daKy gold, Silver coins.
r1ngs, Jawelry. sterling wate, old

Trapping supplioe tor sal a. (Buying u1ed traptl George Buckl l!'V .
Hours12-9 614· 664- 4 761 .

45

Friday, November 27. 1987

Ohio

One Jetter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

CRYPTOQUOTE
11·27
UGCQOZQE
IQE'QOZQE

E VU W
J U I

HUMG

E V U W

HUMG

IQPQ OZQE
PREHWM OJ W

PREHWMOJW

E V U W

HUMG
OGUQL . - JUGULOGVW
Yeeterclay's Cryptoquote: HERE'S TO TilE DAY
WHEN THE YANKEES FIRST ACKNOWLEDGED
HEAVEN'S GOOD GIFI'S WITII THANKEES. - AN OLD
.TOAST
'

�•

Page-20-The Daily Sentinel

Friday, November 27. 1987

Pomerov. Middleoort. Ohio

•

Food, balloons ·and high stepping highlight Thanksgiving

HOOP HOOP A DOOP - Betty Hoop salls over
marchers during the 61st annual Macy's Thanks-

giving Day parade in New York City on Thursday,
(UP!) ·-

&lt;ir:
~··

"'

'

r

_,

f
j

By United Press lnlernatlonai
Thanksgiving Day began in
darkness, long before Americans
woke up and started getting their
tas te · buds set for turkey ,
Workers In New York Inflated
giant balloons, marching bands
began assemb!Jng and volunteers started cooking up turkey
for the poor and homeless,
By sunup, Thanksgiving was
official across the country, in·
eluding in ,the annual Macy's
parade in The Big Apple .
The parade stepped off on time
with brass bands and .soaring
giant balloons, bringing squeals
of delight from children amid
massive crowds who began gathering along the Manhattan route
before dawn,
Unseasonably balmy temperatures and mild breezes prevalled, unlike last year when
blustery winds buffeted the huge,
helium f!lled cartoon heroes.
Troupes of brightly dressed
clowns were Interspersed among
flotillas of festive floats and high
school bands from around the
country, while a giant Woody
Woodpecker, a huge ice cream
cone and other helium-filled
characters hovered above.
New balloons this year were
Spider-Man, Snuggle the Bear
and a revamped Snoopy, clad in
Ice skates and a scarf, Metz said.
The line of march was down
Central Park West to Columbus
Circle, then down Broadway to
Macy's at 34th Street and Herald
Square.
Those who couldn't wait until
Thanksgiving to see the 5· and
6-story balloons, which have
spent the year boxed up in a
Hoboken, N.J. warehouse, gathered Wednesday night to watch
the balloons in !Ia ted.
"It's a New York kind of thing
to do before Thanksgiving - to
watch the Inflation," parade
spokesman Robert Metz said.
"It's really become a sort of
tradition."
Salvation Army volunteers in
New Yor prepared dinner for an
expected 9,000 people throughout
the city.
In San Antonio, hundreds of
selfless families took part in
Operation Homecooking, a program in which area families
adoped homesick basic trainees
at Lackland Air Force Base for
the holiday,
President Reagan released his
Thanksvtving proclamation
Wednesday .
"Thanksgiving Day is one o!
the our most beloved holidays, an
occasion set aside by Americans
from earliest times to thank our

lll

USA

Roberts said. " We thought we
would be able to coordinate those
w)lo have with those who need.
It's just a little thing but it's
Importa nt at tbis time of year."
For the third year, more than
2,100 · volunteer .1{ mart em·
pioyees were preparing Thanksgiving meals to be distributed to
some 42,000 needy families nationwide. And in Topek;:t, Kan,
organizers prepared for an ·esti. mated 3,500 a t the 21st annual
Commun it y Thanksgiving
Dinner at Kansas Expocentre's
Exposition Ha iL

maker prayerfully and humbly
for the blessings and the care he
bestows on us and · on our
beautiful , )JounJI!ul land .
Through the decades. through
the centuries, in log cabins,
country churches, cathedrals ,
homes and halls, the American
people have paused to give
thanks to God, in times of peace
and plenty or of danger and
distress, " Reagan said in the
proclamation.
"On Thanksgiving Day ; 1987,
let us, in this unbroken chain of
observance, dedicate ourselves
to honor anew the au thor of
liberty and to publicly acknowl edge our debt to all those who
have ssacrificed so much in our
behalf. May our gratitude always
be coupled with petitions for
divine guidance and protection
for our nation and with ready
help for our neighbors in time of
need/' he said .

In Des. Moines, Iowa, Preferred Risk Insurance Group
officials warned their 600 employees not to eat possibly
co ntaminated turkeys they received from their employer as a
Thanksgiving holiday gift.
. The West Des Moines-based
insurance company, which caters to non-drinkers , Issued the
warning Wednesday when one
worker in the home office reported th e turkeys smelled of

Some of the country's leading
editorial cartoonists said they
would join homeless activist
Mitch Snyder and his orga niza tion , the Community for Creative
Non-Violence, in serving dinner
today to at least 2,000 street
people at the East Fron t of the
Capitol.
The visual sat ir ists also
pledged to commit their cartoons
for the second year in a row on
Thanksgiving to the plight of
hunger and homelessness.
For yet another year, Denver
restauranteur Daddy Br,uce Randolph and his army of volunteers
were preparing to serve 100,000
free Thanksgiving Day mea Is. of
smoked turkey, turkey and noodles or smoked ribs.
Asked how he plans dinn~r for
so many people, Bruce, who
began the Thanksgiving tradition with the help of a few friends
26 years ago, said: "I don't ever
figure out nothing. I just 'boop ...
boop' and put it in there."
Salvation Army volun teers
across the nation, along with
private and community soup
kitchens prepared th~lr an nual
Thanksgiving dinners for the
hundreds of thousands of indi·
gent people who would normally
spend the day alone.
In Trenton , N.J., Wednesday,
the Soup Kitchen and the Pen·
nington Avenue Union Baptist
Church offered free - holiday
dinners a day early to several
hundred poor and homeless people, City Social Services spokes·
woman Vivian Roberts said the
demand for Thanksgiving fooa
baskets outstretched supply by
more than four-to-one.
"There's a need out there, "

Sunday

50 cents

·Christmas
countdown

Picking your Christmas tree Charlene Hoeflich k 1

Vol. 22

No. 41

Who loves a,~_Urade?

·,·,,_
.,

THURSDAY~

GALLIPOLIS - More than
300,000 hunters will hunt Ohio's
fields and forests this fall in
pursuit of Ohio's prized big game
animal. the white-tail deer . According to the Ohio Department
of Natural Resources (QDNRL
Division of Wildlife, hunters may
expect excellent hunting with a
stable, healthy deer herd similar
to 1986.
Deer hunters have a variety of
seasons to hunt. The most popular deer season is the deer gun

113 Court St., Pomeroy, 0hio

Cl-IQI&amp;TMi\8
and

14K GOLD SALE

Sunday,Novelllber29,1987
11:00 a:m. ·to 5:00 p.m.

ONE DAY ONLY

•

OPEN HOUSE AT
" ·The Basket Weave"
HANDWOVEN BASKETS &amp;
COUNTRY GIFTS.
C6RD,LESS HandyBiender (right) is
rechargeable (about $50), A con••·
nient lood processor is th~. HandyChopper ($30). It chops, grates and
mince~J,

drawer.

and can be stored in a kitchen

Sunday, Nov. 29 from 12:00-6:00
Refreshments &amp; Door Prizes
Located on Rocksprings Rd. between Peach
Fork ·&amp; Flatwoods Road.

60%~~~Ail

CHAINS-CHARMS-BRACELETS
Over $5UO,ooo.oo in 14K gold
Our Factory Rep. will be here one day only
with his entire line oll4K gold - all at 60%
oiL Layaways are welcome. This is the sale
you've heard about Save today,

FREE DOOR PRIZES
The first 12 people in our store receive a 14K Gold
Bracelet.
The 15th persoq receives an 18", t4K Gold Chain .
The 20th person receives a Blackhills Gold Necklace.
AFTER THESE ARE GIVEN AWAY: MORE DOOR
PRIZES EVERY lWO HOURS.
Krementz 25% olf; Black Hilla Gold 20% olf·
~an,dfatther Clocka 20% olf;
'
'
Stop by and say Hello to Joe, Susan and the Gang.

;-

marching bands, horses, and, of course,
. and
Mrs, Santa Claus, Hundreds of people- the young
and young at heart - lined the parade routes,
smiling, laughing and waving to the participants.
(Tribune

season that opens Nov. 30 and
&lt;;ontinues tfirough Dec. 5. The
statewide longbow and crossbow
season started Oct. 5 and continues through Jan, 30, 1988, and
is open for deer of either sex.
Ali hunter s are reminded that
every hunter who kills a deer in
Ohio mu st atta,ch a temporary
tag to the dead deer at the place
where it falls. For those hunters
purchasing a deer tag, a temporary tag Is furnished with the
regular deer hunting permit, The

temporary tag must not be
detached from the deer hunting
permit until a deer Is kl lled.
All deer must be taken to an
official deer checking station for
inspection and final tagging.
Only the person who kills the deer
is permitted to transport that
deer to the checking sta lion for
permanent tagging .
Deer must be tagged in the
county where killed or In an
adjacent county in the same deer

Heat turned off in Atlanta
prison, temperature dropping

Invites you to our 4th ANNUAL

GOLD

Clark's
Jewelry Store
a= EJ'

Pom~roy
ohiO

c1 ·~7. .. -~,

' Ma•t.reard

~ ~&lt;...

-

11 Sections , 80 P&amp;ges
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

their positions in Iran, weJi .they
WASHINGTON (UPI) did
," he said.
Jimmy Carter says the Iran"They
got two (hostages) freed
Contra affair was worse than
and
we
were
told that two more
Watergate and Gerald Ford says
were
coming
out
wllhin 48 hours
President Reagan made a misat
the
time
that.the
whole stm·y
take ignoring advice of two
Cabinet officers to avoid the broke open t]1at this operation
arms deal; interviews disclosed was going on,'' the president
·said:
Saturday.
But Carter and Ford had
harsher
statements about the
But Reagan , as ne has in the
affair,
which
engulfed the Reapast, said selling arms to Iran
gan
presidency
in scandal when
was never intended to ran som
it
was
first
revealed
on Nov _25,
American hostages being held in
1986.
Lebanon. He also repeated his
Carter, interviewed Sept. 14,
claim that he did not ]mow who
said
the affair was "much more
got the profits from the arms
serious"
than Watergate, which
deaL
began
as
a third-rate burglary
Reagan and his two predecesand
ended
with the resignation of
sors talked about the presidency
. apd the Iran-Co ntra affair in Richard Nixon.
interviews with David Frost for a
"What we did in Iran, in the
television series called "The
most recent scandal, has not only
Next President," a joint project
encouraged additional taking of
wit.h Frost and U.S, News and
World Report, which published hostages, but it rewarded those
exerpts of the interviews this who did kidnap Americans and
who stili hold them now almost
_
week .
three years later," Carter said.
The Interview with Reagan
Ford, while sayi ng that the
was conducted Nov. 2, 16 days
Iran-Contra
affair was not as
before the final congressional
serious
as
Watergate,
said he
Iran-Contra report that said he
would
not
have
swapped
arms
for
bears ultimate responsibility for
hostages
,par.ticularly
if
his
Dethe secret sale of u.s, atms tofense Secretary and Secretary of
Iran and diversion of prqflts to
State opposed it.
the Contra rebels fighting the
Although Reagan 's Secretary
Nicaraguan government.
of
State, George Shultz, and
When asked whether :'IranDefense Secretary Caspar Weingate" was a mistake, Reagan
berger advised against it, others
said, "I did not see this as trading
in the administration supported
arms for hostages In the way in
the arms deal and Reagan
which it was done,
ultimately approved it.
"I was not doing anything for
"I would have listened to the
the kidnapper s. I figured that if
arguments
of others, but I can't
these people had any influence in

imagine overruling the two top
Cabinet officers and taking the
judgment of some individuals of
lesser responsiblity," Fo rd said
in an interview Aug. 6,
.
Reagan has yet to respond to
the final report of the congressional Iran-Contra committees
issued Nov. 18 that accused the
administration of "disdain for
the law" and assigned "ultimate
responsibility" for the affair to
Reagan.
In the interview with Frost,
Reagan said: "Now, we 've had
months and months of investigations about this, the extra money
and where did it go?
"I am 0!1 11 waiting,'' he said. "I
am the one who told the public
a nd the press that we, once this
thing was revealed, had discovered that there had been extM
money for th e shipment of t!Ie
arms .
"To this day, after all the
investigations, I'm still waiting
for an answer, " the president
said,
The congressional report said
middlemen In the scandal paid
themselves millions of dollars
while the Contras received only
$3.8 million of the $16 million In
profits generated by the arms
sales.
Th~ report uncovered no evidence that Reagan knew about
the divers·lon. He repeatedly has
denied knowing anything about
the diversion, but the report
faulted him for never condemning the lies, destruction of
evidence and breach of trust in
the crisis.

Hunters take to fields and forests In pursuit ~f deer prize

'· 1....----------J

ALL'l4K

......_,...,'

WeU, the Shrlners, for a few, The Gallipolis
Shrine Club, along with about 80 other groups In
the area, took part In the annual Christmas
parade In Gallipolis. Also in the lineup were floats,
mlnl·cars, motorcycles, trucks, baton groups,

"Your Professional Full
Service Jewelers"

had the nation's first Thanksgiving Day Parade in
1920. City ·Hail is in the background of the float,
(UPI )
.

•

Ex-presidents criticize
Reagan onfran;.Contra

~ov 27 thru DEC ~

Clark's '

AHOY MATES - A giant Popeye floats past
s pectators at the annual Thanksgiving Day
ParadP in Philadelphia Thursday . Philadelphia

Highs in mid 50s. Cl1ance of
rain 50 percent.

~~ii~~~;;;;~;;~~;;;;;;;;~November29. 1987

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATINEES
All SEATS $2.50
BA~GAJN NIGHT TUESDAY IL99

992-6720

IE

Weather

tttttS

531 JACKSON PIKE · RT. 3~ WEST
Phone 446- 4524

In Wednesday's Sentinel, Top of
the Stairs Ad Read Hair Cuts for
SJ-5.00. It Should Have Read Hair
Cuts for $5.00.

Along the River ,,.,,. B-1-8
Business,,,, ,, ,,,,, , ,,,.,,.. D-1
Comics-TV ,,,,,,,,Insert
Class!fleds , ...... "" .... D-3-7
Deaths ,. ,, , , ., , ., ....... ,A-3
Ed Ito rial .. , , , , . ,, , ,, , A-2
Sports,, ,,,,.,, ... ,, C-1-8

•

....

IPE

B-8

In Chic ago, where holiday ·
celebrations were marred by the
death of Mayor Harold Washington, the city's first black mayor,
some 2,500 South Side resident s
formed a long line outside the
P a ul Hall Boys Club Wednesday
for the annual Thanksgiving food
g ive-awa y. Organizers said people got in line as early as 5 a.m.

CORRECTION

Jn,idt·

'

Beat of the Bend - Bob Hoeflich

a mania.

FRIDAY thru

C~-1

Browns, 49ers clash tonight

•

D•SCQ ~e r

.

113 Court St.
l-992·2054

negotiations ,, we don't negothe compound carrying water
By KEN SUGAR ·
tiate by signs. They know how to
containers
trying
to
salvage
ali
United Press International
·
get
in touch with us."
the
water
still
available
te
them.
Federal oificlals Sa turday shut
Sheehan,
who would not conoff water and hea t to rebellious
In Oakdale, La., Agustin Ro- firm or deny reports of Roman's
Cuban prisoners at the Atlanta
Federal Penitentiary in hopes of man, . auxiliary bishop of the arrival, said he expects an
fo rc ing a "quick resolution " to Catholic archdiocese of Miami, agreement within '!the next 12
was en route to the federal Allen
hours."
the 5·day-old s tandoff.
Detention
Center
to
try
and
help
Sen. John Breaux, D-La . who
Justice Department spokes-old
siege
Involving
was
at Oakdale monitoring the
end
the
7-day
man Tom Stewart sa id in Atlanta
989
Cubans
holding
26
hostages.
siege,
said the Cubans had made
the wat er va lves have been
Roman,
who
was
born
in
Cuba,
new
demands
during negotlaadjusted by authorities to direct
the*
tlons
with
federal
ollicials, but he
has
worked
extensively
with
the water to the places occupied
people
and
is
a
would
not
say
what
they were.
Marie!
boat
by prison officials and away from
popular
and
respected
figure
The
inmates
stretched
out a
areas occupied by prisoners and
Cuban
emigrees.
The
sign
hand
-lettered
on
a
bed
sheet
among
hostages ,
·'I suppose it shou ld have some Cubans in Oakdale have re- saying, "America Do Not Be
effect on speeding them up and quested his presence at the Deceived, BOP (Bureau of Prinegotlations as one of the few sons) Is Oelaying Release By ,,
getting ·their negotiation powers
.
people they can trust.
Denying Archbishop San (Agus'focused," said Stewart.
MaryRoss aspokeswomanfor tin) Roman From Atesllng To
He sa id the heat in th e areas the Miami ' archdiocese, said The Agreement. Why?"
Luenette Johnson, spokeswooccupied by 1,123 Cuban inmatec Roman would try to assist in
negotiations
with
Cuban
inman
for the Bureau of Prisons,
and 94 hostages also has been
mates,
although
the
federal
said
the
minimum-security prJturned off. The prison's heating
government
has
refused
to
admit
son
wa
s
quiet
overnight despite
system was damaged when riotthird
parties
to
the
talks.
·reports
of
quarreling
among
ing Cuban prisoners burned
A newly erected sign by the inmates.
portions of the prison.
Oakdale inmates Saturrday
In Washington. Bureau of
Temperatures were expected
read: "We Will Release Eve- Prisons Director Michael Quinto drop from the mid-50s to the
ryone When Archbishop Roman lan said Saturday negotiations
~Os Saturda5' night and to the
Tells Us The Agreement Is would resume at both Institutions
mld-30s by Monday morning.
Agreed."
and )\e was hopeful of a settleStewart said the Cubans have
Justice Department Spokes- men! Within 12 hours at Oakdale,
been · tapping the pipes to drain
man Mark Sheehan said, "We But he reiterated the governthem of any water still left. He
have no plans at the present time ment's promise that no deadline
_said dozens of Cuban prisoners
to Introduce any third-party had been set.
have been seen from the back of

..

zone.
"The goal of Ohio's -deer
management program is to provide maximum recreational opportunities while minimizing
conflicts bet~een deer and people," said Bob Donahoe, a forest
game blologist ·with the Department of Natural Resources,
Division of Wildlife. "Ohio ha s
yearly hunting seasons to reduce.
any surplus population and these
seasons are essentiaL"
Hunting deer during any of the
deer gun seasons, including the
January statewide primitive
weapons season and the primitive weapons season on three
special areas, is unlawful unless
the hunter is visibly wearing a
hat, cap, vest, or jacket that is
colored hunter orange.
Successful hunters who are
assisting other hunters are required to properly flispiay their

hunting license and carry their
deer permit with them.
Hunters using shotguns are
only permitted to use 10,12, 16, or
20 gauge shotguns. Guns of 28
gauge and .410 are no longer
permitted.
Hunters may also use a revolver during the deer gun
season. Revolvers -may hold not
more than six cartridges, with a
barrel length of not less than 5
inches and not more than 11
inches, Only straight walled
cartridges of one of the following
calibers can be used: .357 magnum, .41 magnum, .44 magnum,
.45 tong colt , or .357 maximum.
Deer hunters choosing to use a
revolver must indicate at the
time they purchase their permit
their intent to use a revolver.
Legal hunting hours are one-half
hour before sunrise' to su nset.
Successful hunters are prohi-

EVENING FffiE
Valley Volunteer flre
fighters watch as a structure own~d by Earl
Sturgeon burns, The fire, reported Friday
evening, apparenlly started In the back of the
house. The house was destroyed, Point Pleasant

bited from carrying any type of ·
hunting implement while assisting other hunters,
The use of permanent type tree
stands on public hunting areas is
prohibited. Landowner's written
permission is required to use
such stands on private property.
Know the regulatlon s. Antler·
less permits ar e required in some
counties previouly open to hun tin
deer of either sex,
Obtain the landowner's written
permission and repsec t private
property when hunting. By observing the law and hunting
safely, ·ohio hunters shou ld have
a rewarding and pleasa nt huntIng trip.
Three evenly spaced shots are
a dis tress signaL The repl y is two
well spaced shots.
Rifles are not permitted for the
hunting of deer or m igratory
game birds,

Volunteer Fire Department sent two trucks and
six men to the fire to assist Valley , but was warned
against crossing the second of two wooden bridges
on the way to the scene. No one was home when the
lire broke out.(OVP Photo By 1\lalt Robertson) ·

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