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..

•

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY

Ohio Lottery

THIS
WEEK'S
GAMES

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"
97 N. 2ND STREET
MIDDLEPORT

992-6661
INSTALLMENT LOANS
992-3007
'

Monday, November 30, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

10 The Daily Sentinel

•

PHARMACY
·"3 Registered
.Pharmacists
To Serve You"

992-6491

'-----

GIRLS

&lt;th!!~

NOV. 23 - EASTERN - HOME
NOV. 2S - SOUTHERN - AWAY
NOV. 28 - MILLER - AWAY

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

Dining • Carry Out •
Drive-Thru

NOV. 27 -GALLIPOLIS . - HOME
DEC. I - NORTH GALLIA - AWAY

GIRLS BASKETBALL

*
*

*

l'

'\

MUZZLE LQADING
and HUNTING SUPPLIES

BOYS BA!IETBALL

HOURS:

GIRLS BASKETBALL

6 A.M :- 1Q.P.M .
8r Sat. 6 A.M. - 12 P.M.

____ _

Mon. thru Fri.
7:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
Saturday
7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

NOV. 23 - GALLIPOLIS - HOME
NOV. 2S -MEIGS -HOME
NOV. 28 -ALEXANDER- HOME

698 W. Main Street. Pomeroy

992-2057

BOYS SCHEDULE

II?~

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

(t,1cOIMIRSij

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. !-Nelsonville-York , , .............. Home
Dec. 4-Vinton County ................... Away

~BIBIKS

Dec.
Dec.
De(,
Dec.

DH. 8-Trimble ............................... Away

lb:t;J;y

Dec. 11-Belpre ............................... Home
Dec. I 5-Aiexander ........................ Away

THE AREA'S MOST
COMPLETE ATHLETIC
FObTWEAR ST()RE!

Good Luek Teams!

_____ _
992-5627

MIDDLEPORT

Dec. 19-Logan ................................ Home

Dec.
Dec.

Dec.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
jan.
Jan.

tan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jon.

22-Wellston .......................... Away
5-Federal Ho,king ................. Away
8-Miller ......:............... 1............ Home
12-Nelsonvllle-York.J............ Away
I S-Vi~ton County ..
Home
19-Tnmmble .......................... Home

i.......

!-Kyger Creek ....................... Home
4-0ak Hill ............................. Away
8-Southern ............................ Away
11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
1 S-Porkersburg Cath. (6: 15) ... Away
22-North Gallia (6:00) ............ Home
8-Symmes Valley ................... Home
12-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
15-0ak Hill ........................... Away
19-Federal Hocking ...;............ Home
72-Southern ........................... Home
29-North Gallia .................... Away

Jon. 22-Belpre .............................. Away

feb. 2-Miller .............................~ .... Away

Jan. 26-Aiexander ......................... Home
Jan. 30-Point Pleasant ................. Away
Feb. 2-Warren ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Wellston.............................. Home ·
feb.. 9:....A thens ....................................... Home
Feb. 12-Federol Ho,king ............... Home

Feb. 5-Honnan Trce ........................ Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath ............ Away
Feb.I9-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Away

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL
De(,
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
De(,
De(,

r

!-North Gollia ...................... Away
4-Symmes Valley .................. Away
8-Eastern ................................ Home
11-0ak Hill ............................ Home
18-Hannan Trace .................. Away
22-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
, Dec. 29-lndicm Valiey So .... Convo. Center
Jan. 2-Southeastern ..................... Away
Jan. 8-Sauthwestern ..................... Home
Jan. 12 -North Gallia ..................... Home
Jan. I 5-Symmes Valley ................. Home
Jan. 22 -Eastern ............................ Away
Jon. 29-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
Jan. 30-Miller ................................ Home
FEb. S-Oak Hill ....................:........ Away
Feb. 6 -Federal Ho,king ................. Away
Feb. 12-Hannan Trace ................... Home
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away

EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL
De(. 3-Nelsonville-York .. ;............. Away
Dec. 7 -Vinton County .................... Home
Dec. I 0-Trimble ............................. Home

De&lt;: 14-Belpre .............................. Away
Dec. 17 -Alexander ......................... Hom,e

Df(. 23-Eastern .........,...................Home
Jan. 4-Wellston ..............................Home

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"

Jan. 7-Federal Hocking .................. Home

Jan. 9-Miller................................... Home
Jan. 14-Nelsonville-York ............... Home
Jan. 18-Vinton Count ................... Away
Jan. 21-Trimble ............................ Away
Jan. 25-Belpre ............................... Home
Jan. 28-Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 4-Wellston ............................. Away
Feb 8-Federal ~o,king .................. Away
Feb. 13-Southern ........................... Home

H. Ewing-Director

PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.
I

-

SOUTHERNHIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL
'De(. 3-0ak Hill .............................. Home
De, , 7-Southern ............................. Home
Dec I 0-Hannan Trace ..........;........ Home
Dec. 14-Miller ................................ Home
Dec. 17 -Southwestern ................... Home
Dec. 19-Federal Ho,king .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 23-Meigs ................................ f1ome
Jan. 7 -Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11 - Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 14-0ak Hill ............................ Home
Jan. 21-Southern .......................... Away
Jan. 28-North Gallia ..................... Home
Feb. !-Symmes Vlaley ................... Home
Feb. 4-liannan Trace .................... Away
Feb. 11-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Federal Ho,king ............... Home

"COME GROW

De,. 3-Symmes Valley ................... Home
Dec. 7-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec.IO-Oak Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 17-Hannan Trale ................... Home

Dec. 19-Aieander .......................... Away
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

POWELL'S

• COMPLETE RADIATOR SeRVICE
•MAJOfl REPAIRS
• CO,M P ~ETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
&amp; BA~ANCE

•MOST MAJOR CREDIT. CARDS
ACCEPTED

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.
BODY WORK

1992 -l196j ~~~~~:NCE
•

WELCOME

461 3RD AVE., MIDDlEPORT, OH.

r

--

'

FARMERS
BANK
&amp; SAVINGS CO.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. ' 992-2136

I............ j"111G
-· (_.,.,
.,._...

Rawlings
Coate
Blo•er
Funeral

~oar

Dealer on

The River

Hollii
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992·5141

Buy More for .
Leu .at

GUTfED -The Langsville Grocery Is out of business. It was gutted by fire early Saturday
·
afternoon.

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
POMEROY, OHIO
........

~- 1

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS
DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE
Ill SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342

"HOME BANK

MEMBER FDIC

·EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

992 G144

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
STORE HOURS:
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M.-1 O·P.M
SUNDAY ,..
10 A.M.-1 Q P.M:

SYRACUSE OFFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
CJ49-2210

-··~·

'' ..

1 Section, 10 Pages 25 Cantt
A Multimedia Inc. Nttwspaper

()8.1 percent)., Cuyahoga (]7.1 percent) and
"The minimum wage (unchanged at $3.35 since
Hamilton (15 .9 percen t) have the highest poverty
1981) has had a direct effect on the people In
rates, and Stark (11.5 percent), Franklin (11.3
poverty. And we know that there are special kinds
percent) and Butler (11.2 percent) had the lowes t
of problems with unemployment and the changes
rates .
. in employment," Corcoran said. "We have begun
The poverty rates in five CQunlles, all in eastern
to try to tackle certain ·aspects of the problem."
Ohio, have gone up more than 100 percent since
She said that programs are either being used or
1980. They are Harrison (158.3 percent), Ashtab·
are being planned aimed at reforming welfare
ula (139.8 percent), Carroll (133.5 percent),
programs , keeping students In school and
Columbiana (116.3 percent) and Monroe (112.6
reducing the teen pregnancy rate, among other
percent) counties.
goa ts.
"Southwest Ohio has actually Improved in
Nearly every county in northwest Ohio,
recent
years but the eastern part of the state has
meanwhile, Is among the 24 counties with rates
seen
huge
increases In poverty rat~s ." Zeller said.
below 10 percent.
"
As
the
mills
closed and the coal mines got hit, .
The highest rates are found in Adams (36.8
.
..
some
of
the
worst
distress of the state has been in
percent). Vinton (33.7 percent) and Pike (31.4
that
area.
'
'
percent) counties in extreme southern Ohio, while
During ihe same period, the poverty rate
the two lowest rates are found in Lake (4.9
dropped
in 13 counties, including Madison (down
percent) and Geauga 15.3 percent) counties just
10.8
percent),
Erie tdown 14.9 percent) and
east of Cleveland.
Champaign (down 31.8 percent) .
Among Ohio's 10 largest counties, Mahoning

ing, totaling about $25,000, were
not insured according to William·
son. Because ownership papers
had not been finalized , Williamson was not sure if the building
itself was Insured.
Rutland had 12 firemen on the
scene and was assisted by ·six
Salem Center firemen with water
and portable pumps. Flreflgh·
. ters were on the scene approxi·
mately two and one-half hours.

Meigs Local teachers issue
statement to clarify position

HOME PEOPLE"

Sales &amp; Servi(e

14.4 percent nationally .
SEO Area Worst
The 22 counties with poverty rates of at least 20
percent are concentrated In several counties In·
the the Appalachian region extending south of
Youngstown along the Ohio River to just eas t df
Cincinnati, as well as. Ashtabula, Holmes and
Hardin counties.
In Southeastern Ohio, Meigs Cou nty's figure
stood at 26 .1 percent; Gallla 26.4; Athens 23.9;
Vinton 3s.7; Lawrence 26.0 and Jackson 21.0.
In 1986, the last year for which national
sta tistics are available, Ohio's rate was 14
percent, compared with 13.6 percent for the
nation. In 1980. Ohio's, poverty rate was 10.5
percent, compared with 13 percent nationally.
''There are a couple of phenomenon occurring
. that are making it difficult to stay ahead of the
game," said Maureen Corcoran. executive
assistant on human services to Gov. Richard
Celeste.

Despite efforts by Rutland and have been electlcal in nature,
Salem Center firemen, the Williamson said, starting in a
Langsville Grocery was des- ceiling In a back room. The fire
troyed by fire on• Saturday was discovered by Roger Carafternoon. ·
penter, who was In the process of
Rutland Fire Chief Blll Willi· . bu ying the buildi'lg from a
amson reported that the building Dexter party. Carpenter tried at
was engulfed in flames by the first to put out the flames with
lime his department arrived. fire extinguishers Williamson
Rutland rece ived the call to ·the sa id.
scene at 11:39 a.m.
The building was completely
Cause of the fire appears to gutted and contents of the build-

FOR

Chevrol"t•Oidsmobile
•Cadillac, Inc.

enttne

Langsville store ·hit by blaze

Feb. 13-Meigs ............................... Away

· Jim co.bb

WITH US"

4- Kyger Creek ........................ Home
7-Southweslern .................... Away
11-North Gallia ..................... Home
14-Symmes Valley ................ Away
2D-Gallipolis ......................... Away
21-Eastern ............................. Home
28-Kyger (reek ..................... .Away
!-Southwestern ..................... Home
4-0ak Hill .............................. Home
11 - Hannan Trace .................. Away

CLEVELAND (UP!) - One of every seven
Ohioa11s lives below the '·poverty level, a study
released Monday by th·e Council fm~ Economic
Opportunties In Greater Cleveland shows.
Ohio's poverty rate is at 13.8 percent, the lowest
level since 1982 but 32 percent higher than It was In
1980, the study shows. That means 1.5 million
. people are living below the poverty level, which is
$5,500 a year for a single person and $11,200 for a
family of four.
Income used In determining poverty ·status
includes all wages. interest and government cash
assistance, but not non-cash assistance such as
food stamps . ·
·
.
"Th.e recession we saw in the economy in the
early part of the decade, was the largest influence
in 1981, 1982 and 1983: That very large jump was
never really recovered from since," said George
Zeiler, senior researcher for the council.
Ohio's poverty rate used to be well below
national figures, but that changed in 1984, when
Ohio's rate went to 14.5 percent, compared with

OF
FURNITURE

------

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. December 1. 1987

, COMPLETE
SELECTION

•

.GIRLS SCHEDULE

Ben

CHESTER, OH.

II

SOUTHERN

~utn.-Thurs.

.__

985-3301

NOV. 24- MILLER- HOME
DEC. I - KYGER CREEK - · HOME
NOV. 23 -MEIGS- AWAY
NOV. 30. - KYGER CREEK - AWAY

.._

"Your Building. Mattri.. Market Place''

BOYS BASKETBALL

Featuring
* Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on a
Croissant Stuffed Baked"
Potatoes Taco Salads
Salad Bar
* Real Ice Cream

*

HARDWARE

EASTERN

at y

Cloudy tonight. Ch;lnce ol
snow flurries. Low In upper
20s. Cloudy Wednesday. Highs
in mid 30s.
·

Ohio's poverty rate up 32 percent since '80

BAUM

AWAY

•

e

VoL38, No .142
Copyrighted 1987

786 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH.

BOYS BASKETBALL

A GREAT PLACE

218
Pick 4
1558

Sunday 11-~

NOV. 24- ATHENS - HOME
Res,heduled for Feb. 9
NOV. 27 -MILLER -

Daily Numher

Open Till 9:00
Every Night

MEIGS

.

Christmas
countdown

-

''

Tea·c hers strike enters 16th
day; no settlement in sight
By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Wriler
A strike by the Meigs Local
Teachers Association today
moved into its 16th day with no
set tlement apparently In sight.
District Supt. Dan E. Morris
today Issued a statement on
behalf ef the Meigs Local Board
of Education reviewing the view·
point of the board and the status
of the strike situation. It reads:
"The Meigs Local Board of
Education learned today, Nov.
30, that the Meigs Local Teacher's
Association bargaining unit
turned down on Sunday, Nov. 29,
the board of education's last offer
made in a nine and one-half hour
mediation session on Nov. 24 . The
· board ' honored the mediator's
request that no public statement
be made while the offer was
being considered.
"The board's offer was as
follows: a contract of three years
in length; the board will add to
the reduction in force article that
it will not make use of the article
for the 1987-88 and 1988·89 school
year; contract language is to
remain the same In all other
articles as in the las t co ntract: in
the 1987-88 school year no in·
crease in the salary sc hedule, in
the 1987·88 school year no increase In the sala ry schedule and
In the 1988-89 school year no

increase In the salary schedule
and in lhe 1989·90 school year 63
percent of all general fund
revenue in FY90 shall be used for
salaries and fri nge benefits for
members of the MLTA bargain·
ing unit; all increases in board
costs for fringe benefits In FY88
and FY89 shall count as a part of
the 63 perce nt.
"The three year contract is
offered as the MLTA is Insisting
on a co ntrac t of that duration.
The board ha s made offers of one
and two year duration which
have been rejected. The offer of
not using the red uction in force or
lay-o ff policy for two schdols
years Is in response· to a concern
expressed by the union. The
board has not discussed the issue
of lay-offs and without · any
significant increase in expend i·
tures or negotlatied costs feels
that it can exte nd the guarantee
of no layoffs for the years cited.
During the process of negotia·
tions from May 26, 1987 to the
present, the only artic les-issues
discussed were money. and the
reductlon .ln force; therefore, the
board 's proposal that a ll other
co ntt'act articles remain as in the
last contract. The 63 percent
offer was extended as thjs
percentage is the level of expen·
diture for salary and fringes as is
currently bein·g expended for the

teaching · staff's salary and
fringes.
"The board offer cited above is
just one of several that have been
presented to the MLTA negotiating team (Rita Slavin, Don
Dixon, David Bowen, Carol Ohlinger, Ml~e Wilfong and Ben
Gerber, OEA Unlserve represen tative) and all have been
rejected.
"The board of education has
expressed its willingness to the
MLTA to negotiate over money
that it ha s or knows that It will
have. The teachers association Is
aware that moneyo certified otto
be received for the next two
years (FY88 and FY89) Is not
sufficient to justify raises or
inc(eased expenditures. They
have with the mediator and
reportedly with their own membership expressed an understanding of this fact.
"The MLTA Is Insisting upon
negotiating a three year contract
with guaranteed sa lary raises
and bonuses In the third year that
are conservatively estimated to
cost one million dollars. They are
also Insisting that the board of
education negotiate a 'no lay-off
policy' regardless of the schools'
financial situation.
"The board of education's
position on the third year guaran·
(Continued on page 4)

Meigs Local Teachers whO ·
have been on s trike since Nov. 6,
this morning issued a statement
clarifying their position in the
failure of a settlement being
reached.
Their statement reads :
Since the Meigs Loca l Board of
Education has violated the re·
quested news blackout by the
federal mediator. the Meigs
Local Teachers' Association
feel s cqmpelled to clarify further
misinformation issued by the
Board's office.
At the insistence of the Board,
a proposal made by them on
Tuesday, Nov. 24, was presented
to the certified staff.
The proposal was for a contract of three yea rs with no
increase in salary schedu les the
first or seco nd years. The third
year, sixty·three (.63) percent of
all general fund revenue in FY-90
would be used for salaries and
fringe benefits for mel')1bers of
the bargaining unit. '
All increases In Board costs for .
fringe benefits in FY-88 and ·
- FY·89 would count as part of the
sixty-three percent. Also accord·
ing to the proposal, the Board
would add to the Reduction in
Force Article that it would not
make use of the Article for the

1987·88 and 1988-89 sc hool years.
Co ntra ct la nguage would remain
the same in all other articles as in
the last contract.
On Nov. 29, the approximate
120_ ML TA members in attendance were unanimous in their
resolve that this proposal from
the Board was not a settlement
offer to end the strike.
The MLTA has repeatedly
made clear to the Board that the
two major Issues th at must be
addressed are job security and
an adequate salary commitment
to teac hers, The Board 's proposal fails to meet either of these
issues.
Teachers in the first three
ye ars of their individual con·
tracts can arbitrari ly be nonre·
newed wit hout any reasons
give n. In fiscal year 1990 the
Reduction in Force (RIF) could
be used to cut teachers and·or
programs . The MLTA does not
believe that cutting programs or
classes is the answer to the
Board' s c urrent financial diffi·
culties. The sixty-three percent
offer . in the third year would
more tha n likely result in a
salary decrease rather than a
raise after inclusion of increased
insurance costs for FY·88 and
FY-89.

f., f I

The ML TA gave the Board a
proposa I at the last negotia.tion
meeting which included a cost
containment in insurances to
help offset possible premium
•
increases.
We are willi ng to wait until the
third year for a salary increase to
allow the Board to gain financial
stability. We have consistently
indicated that our position Is
flexible and that we are ready to
reac h an equitable solution at the
negotiations table that would
bring an end to the strike, the
MLTA statement concluded.
"The strike by the teachers In
the Meigs Local Schokols Is now
in its 16th day. The days schools
are closed must be made up. The
State standards require a minimum number of days that
schools be open to receive State
monies and to be able to grant
credit and graduate students.
The Board of Education has
only the option of opening schools
using substitutes to keep our
education a I program functioning
and to allow out students to
receive credi t. The Board has
directed the administration to ·
begin preparation for the open·
ing of schools and plans are being
formulated at this time.
Continued on page 4

f

Construction pace · down ·in October
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The $334 billion, 2 percent a bove the annual rate and construction of
pace of construction spending amount for the same 'period of religious Institutions slid by $300
nationwide slowed by 0.5 percent · 1986. The rate does not take million for a $2.4 billion rate.
, in October - t.he first drop since inflation Into account.
Some of those losses were
The home building Industry made up by Increases In · the
Marc h - mainly because of
contributed nearly a third Of the annual building rates for office
cutbacks In building private
decrease by falling $600 million buildings and hospitals.
factories and shop s. the Co m·
to a $204 billion a nnual rate.
merce Department said today .
Public construction grew by
· The governmc.nt estimated the Construction .or non-resldenthil $500 million to total $76.9 billion,
buildings, meanwhile, dropped with most of the Increase cenvalue of new construction put up
. during October at a seasonally off by $900. million to total $88.2 tered on educational buildings,
adjusted annual rate of $407.9 billion .
highways, streets and conservaWithin the private non- tion work.
billion, down from September's
$409.8 billion rate. Those figures residential ca(egory, construcOctober's 0.5 percent decline
of
Industrial
plants
dropped
tion
Indicate what a year's worth of
marked the first drop In the'
cbnstructlon spending would be if $1 billion to total $13.3 billion, construction report since March,
when It fell 3.3 percent. The
every montb was like the one other commercial buildings studied and seasonal factor s mainly shopping centers- saw a construction rate rose 1.5 percent
$500 million cut to a $26.2 billion · In September and 1 percent ill
were Ignored.
Construction for the first 10 rate, hotel arid motel building fell August.
months of this year has totaled $200 million to reach a $6.7 billion

CLEANUP OPERATIONS UNDERWAYCleanup op.e ratlons began Sunday following the
'

rock slide at · the loot of the Pomeroy-Mason
Brldf!C. ~alllc was tied ll.P. lor hours alter the · .
'
·
Incident.
·

�•

Commentary
.T he Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON - The Japa·
nese government has punished
two big corporations Implicated
In the illegal sale or high·
technology machinery to the
Soviets- but only after pressure
from the Pentagon.
Tokyo was so afraid of hurting
its lucrative trade ties to the
United States that It secretly
negotiated with the Pentagcin
and agreed on the punishment of
the two Japanese firms In May to
appease the U.S. government.
The secret negotiations and
agreement are spelled out in a
Department of Defense memorandum, ttsel! classified
"secret."
The subject of the five-page
"memorandum for the record,"
dated May 8, 1987, was "Resolu·
tion of Nine-Axis Milling Ma·
chine Case." This was the $17
million sale by Toshiba Machine
Co. of sophisticated propeilermiJiing hardware that allowed
the Soviets to make their subma-

Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·~IASON AREA

~lb

....... rT""'E::;:!'d·~

Bm~ . ~'~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December 1, 1987

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The ASiOCiated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers ASiOCiation.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300
words long. All leUcrs are subJect to editing and must be s igned with
name, address and telephone number. No unsigned leUers wUI be putr

llshed. Letters should be In good taste, addressing issues, not personali-

ties.

The year of
the Skeleton

rines almost undetectable. · It
could cost the American taxpay·
ers $30 billion to overcome this
tremendous techni cal advan·
tage.
/
"After extensive negotiations
between DOD and MITT (the
Japanese Mi'lllstry of International Trade and Industry) and
the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, a
satisfactory settlement has beeri
reached," the memo begins,
adding:
"The GOJ (Government of
Japan) will be taking precedent·
breaking direct actions against
ail involved in the diversion. The
publicity surrounding GOJ ac·
!Ions, the financial losses to the
Japanese companies and the new
regulations Instituted by MIT!
shou ld insure that such a major
dlversion .. .will not happen
again."
One page in the memo is
subtilled "Sanctions Against C.
ltoh," the huge trading company

that handled the sale for Toshiba.
In a series of columns, we have
depictal C. ltoh as a culprit that
escaped with a slap on the wrist:
a three-month ban on Soviet
deals.
Through Its American repre·
sentatives, C. ltoh has protes ted
vociferously that the company
didn't know what was In the
crates Toshiba was shipping to
the Soviets. The lobbying effort
was led by Roderick Hills, who
initially described himself as a
"friend" of C. Itoh, but eve~tu·
ally felt obliged to register as a
foreign agent for the company.
Hills and his key associate at
Sears World Trade Inc. , newly
appointed Defense ·Secretary
Frank Carlucci, had worked
closely with C. Itoh on unrelated
business while the illegal sale to
the Soviets was In progress.
Hills correctly maintains that
no publicly released U. S. or
Japanese official report charges
that C. Itoh knew what was in the

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- We are approaching the season for the selec tion
of the people who made the bigges t news of the year. For 1987, this
corner nominat es The 'Skeleton In The Closet as the runaway
newsma ker or 1he year.
Before sefting down the argument for this candidate, affribution Is
called for : This idea originated with several csl leagues. including
Mike Tully, Dan Chi szar and Tom Ferraro
The foregoing may be designated as the Eiden Disclaimer. and it
also serves as a good start on introducmg the Skeleton, who came out
of the closet in man~ form s m l9R7.
For Sen. Jo~ Eiden of Delaware, it emerged in the gutse of his own
law school record a nd someone else's words. The senator was off to a
passable start as a ca ndidate for the Democratic presidential
nomination when someone noticed echoes in some of the moreeJegan1

phrases in a couple of his speeches.
Echoes they were- of the unattributed very words of British Labor
Party leader Neil Kinnock and of Robert Kennedy. As it turned out.
this was not a new Skeleton for the senator - he had the sa me
problem years before with a law school paper.
For former Sen. Gary Hart. the Skeleton stalked a townhouse on
Capitol Hill and a cabin cruiser anchored off Bimini. The odd feature
of this episode was that Hart, the consensus leader for the Democratic
nomination, invit ed reporters to poke around in his closet to disprove
oft -repeated rumors of playboyism. The~· did and what they found
sent him back to Denver

An even bigger Skeleton came our of the closet of television
evangelist Jim Bakker. This one dragged with it an aggrieved church
secretary. a nd behind her came an atr·conditioned doghouse, se\(era l
luxury cars and houses and a debt of a size to rival The Mount on
which The Sermon was delivered .
Bakker wept, but not nearly as copiously as hi s fellow TV
preachers. whose revenues followed Bakker's career down the tubes.
• One such who gave up his electronic pulpit in 1987 was Pat
Robertson, who took aim on what Theodore Rooseve lt ca lled "the
bully pulpit" of the presidency.
The Skeleton ca me off the "wild oars" shelf of his c loset, where it
developed he embarked on the road to fatherhood without first
passing through the ga te of marriage.
Douglas Ginsburg's Skeleton was smoking in the closet. always a
risky proposi tion. !f nothing else. rPveiation·o! the bearded judge's
occasional use of manjuana in the 1960s and 1970s delighted punsters ,
who went on at too much length about "t he high court" nommation
that went " to pot " or " up in smoke.
Perhaps the biggest Skeleton of them all in 1987 surfa ced in Bet rut.
bu t origmated in Ollie North's White House closet.
The congressional committees that inves tiga'ted the Iran
arms-Contra a id affair devoted 690 pages to the Hallow ee n passion
play whose props ranged from TOW. missiles to choco late cakes a nd
whose cast included the weirdest collection of characters since the
Addams Family went to reruns . This drama may not beaver: keep an
eye on independent co unse!J,awrence Walsh.
The smalles t Skeleton of 1987, in the size a nd shape of an emery
board. came out of pitcher Joe Niekro's back pocket . Joe sa id il was to
tidy his manicure; the umpires suspected it was to scuff the ba seball.
Whichever. 1t bought Joe an ear ly trip to the show er clos~t.

"Ignore your father, Leslie- he's trying to kick tobacca."

'Quickie recession'________B_e_n_~_a_tt_en_b_e-ir~
What would happen if we had a
recession and no one came?
What would happen If it 's a l·
ready happened?
The offering of such metaphys·
teal economic questions requires
little coura,ge these days. Even
an economic illiterate like me
could speculate. After all, look at
the record of the experts: How
. many learned economic analysts
told us in advance about Black
Monday?
Consider recessions. Over the
years, conservailve economists
have indicated that recessions are
good for you, or for us, or for
America; that is, they are necesary. Recessions, they 've said, are
nature's way of saying take it
easy. Recessions, it's been malnt·
ained, "purge" the economic system of excesses.
For one example, here is what
alegediy happens if the economy
gets "overheated": Unemploy·
ment goes down substantially.
Wages are bid up. Inflation en·

Veterans extend thanks
One manager, Jake J arvis , John
Rice, Clint Mullins, bavid Chad·
well
Any person caring to help th is
worthy cause can send donal ions
to Charles Carr, Rt. 2, Coolville,
Ohio 45723.
Thanks from Commander and
Board of Trus tees.
Kenneth Hager
Co mmander, Post 9053

Today in history
By United Press International
.
Today is Tuesday, Dec. 1, the 335th day of 1987 with 30 to follow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its full phase .
The mornmg s tars are Mercury and Mars.
The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include detective novelis t Rex Stout in 1886, former United Mine
Workers president W.A. "Tony" Boyle In 1904 (age 83), actress Mary
Martin In 191 3 (age 74). comedian-filmmaker Woody Alien In 1935
(age 52), soul singer Lou Rawls In 1935 (age 52), pro golfer Lee
Trevino in 1939 (age 48), comed ian -actor Richard Pryor in 1940 1age
47 ), and singer-actress Bette Mldler in 1945 (age 42 ).
On this date in history:
In 1913, the world's first drive-Jq gasoline station opened ior
bus iness in Pittsburgh.
In 1917, Father Edward Flanagan founded Boys Town near Omaha

~~

\

'

In ,1943, e nding a "Big Three" meeting in Tehran, President·
Franklin Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill and
Soviet Premier Josef Stalin pledged a concerted effort to defeat Nazi
Germany.
'
In 1955, Rosa Parks, a black woman, was arrested in Montgomery,
Ala., for refusing to give up her seat to a white man on a city bus. The
event has been called the birth of the modern civil rights movement.
In 1986, a s the Iran-Contra scandal grew, polls showed President
Reagan's public approval rating plunged 21 poin ts to46 percent in one
month, a record presidential rating decline.
A thought for the day : Woody Allen said, " I am astounded by people
who want to 'know' the universe when it's hard enough to find your
way around Chinatown."
I

/

Toshiba crates.
But Hills tries to paint the
three-month ban on deals with
t·he Soviets as strict ly a voluntary
sacrifice by C. Itoh to help the
Japanese· government out of an
"extremely embarrassing" fix.
The secret Peotagon memo
doesn't put it quite that way.
While it notes that Japanese
MIT! officials believed "that
there was no malicious intent on
behalf of this major trading
company," the memo then goes
to the heart of the matter: "C.
Itoh failed to inspect the mer·
chandise itself, even though it
acted as the formal exporter."
And instead of describing any
voluntary action by the com·
pany, the secret memo refers to
three actions to be taken
"against C. Itoh" by the Japa·
nese government alter "exten·
sive confidential negotiations."
The first penalty: "After ad·
ministering a 'heavy warning'
and a public reprimand, MITI
will prohibit exportation of all
machine tools to (Soviet blox)
countries for three months."
The second: "C, Itoh will be
Instructed to reform its internal
procedures or lace further
punishment."
The third: "C. ltoh will be
required to report" detailed
information on any machine-tool
exports during the three months'
·
ban.
"C. Itoh is one of Japan's
largest trading companies, "the
memo states, "and even a short
ban involves very large amounts
of money. ... The important
factor here is not the amount of
money, but the social disgrace
involved when C. Itoh becomes
only the fourth offender In
Japanese corporate history to
have administrative sanctions
applied to it ."
The secret May 8 memo states
that the punitive actions against
Toshiba and C. Itoh would be
"announced unilaterally" by the
Japanese government the follow·
ing Friday. The announcement
was, In fact, made In Tokyo on
,
May 15.

I

Letters to the editor
Veterans of Foreign Wars Post
9053 express their thanks to the
latest donors for their support so
we ca n Insulate the walls and
cetling of our new building and to
put coverings on the walls and
ceiling Latest donors are Fred
Crow, Carson Crow, Office of
Po r ter Little and Frecker,
County Com m tssioners Roush
Kobl e ntz a nd Jones, Sheriff
Frank, Treasurer Collins, Bank

NFL results

By Jack Anderson
and Dale Van Atta

Blame U. S. for illicit trade

sues or Is feared. Investors, ac·
cordingly, want more rent lor
their money, and interet rates go
up. Loans for houses and con·
sumer and capital goods become
more costly. People and compa·
nies then slow down their buying.
There is less demand for goods
and services. Companies pro·
duce less, sell less and earn less.
The value of their stock dim·
!shes. The Dow Jones industrial
average goes down.
Then everyone gets scared and
upset. A recession commenses.
There is less demand for labor .
Unempfoyment goes up . Wages
stop rising. Inflation Is less of a
threat. Interest rates go down.
Buying commences. The econ·
omy re-ignites without its earlier
excesses. We march forward to
the future with a new bounce in
our step.
The trouble with this purging
process is that it can take a year
or two and that lots of people get

hurt in the process. Some people
lose their jobs. Some people can't
buy a house. At best, It's not plea·
sant. At worst, It's tragic.
Consider now Black Monday a 50S-point drop in the Dow, 22 percent of its value, an all-time oneday record decline. Is It possible
that on Black Monday and durlng
the subsequent volatility we ac·
tually had a "quickie recession,"
the functional equivalent of a real
recession?
After all, It scared the hell out
of people, just what a recession is
supposed to do. It might even
have scared the Democrats into
cutting spending. It might even
have scared Ronald Reagan into
raising tax'!Js. Those, recall, are
the two responses that have been
called for by econom ists and
pundits who believe the budget
deficit is the square root of the
eve II.
Alter ali, wh,at happend? The
market investors who normally

would have spent a mlserableyeaj
watching the Dow drop 500 point~
took their medlcine In a partlcu
Iarly compressed and brutal fornn
But-the rest of the country suffere&lt;
little. (So far, anyway.) The sys•
tern was scared, and It may hav£
purged itself. Interest rates fell&gt;
Now the economy can keep orl
growing.
Under this theory, then , some
of the usual beneficial effects of
recesswn have already been
realized without most of the long·
term dtf!i·culty we usually get.
We got the gain without the pain.
We had our recession and no one
came.

It 's not a perfect theory , I'd
grant But remember that in the
land of the blind, the one-eyed
man is king. Given the recent re·
cord of this paid to predict the na;
ture of the economy, it is not unfair to note that we have been
groping blindly in the land of
economics.

The ocean as a garbage ·dump._R_o_b_er_t_~_al_te_rs
SEASIDE PARK, N.J . (NEA)
- The summer of '87 Is only a
memory now in this resort com·
munity- but the recoilections of
those warmer days cannot fade
fast enough! or the owners o!mo·
tels, restaurants and other seasonal business here.
"It was the worst disaster that
ever happened to us here in 20
years," says motel operator June
Borton. ''We can't go through
another summer llke that."
Borton's dismay is directly at·
trlbulable to Atlantic Ocean pollution so severe that state and local
public health officials ·closed the
beaches here three I imes last summer after contamlnants either
washed ashore or elevated bac·
teria counts In the water to dang·
erous levels.
Ocean pollution is hardly un·
known elsewhere in the country.
Until recently, the sludge that re·
mal ned after , sewage wastes
were processed in Los Angeles
was piped seven miles offshore,
then released Into the Pacific
Ocean.
In Boston, raw sewage and hu·
man waste that have been treated
only slightly are dumped lnto the
Atlantic. In Seattle, live or six sew·
age handling plants provide only
minimal treatment for wastes
then released Into open waters.
But nowhere is the problem as
severe as in the New York Bight
- a vast expanse of ocean off the
nation's most densely populated
metropolitan area. Lt roughly In·
eludes the portion of the Atlantic
that lies bfth south of Long Is- '
land and eat of New Jersey.

Each of a half·dozen offshore
dump sites is designated to re·
ceive a different material such
as sl'wage sludge, dredge spoils,
acid wastes, incinerato r as h and
industrial chemicals.
Every weekday, barges dump
28 tons of seweage residue and
other forms of waste at one site ·
12 miles from s hore. Large pot·
lions of the ocean floor are totally
covered with sludge. At one such
site, the ocean itself is dead and
can no longer supyort any form
of life.
That site now is being phased
out - but the open disposal of
sewage will continue. Beginning
next year, the dumping will be
transferred to a new site 106
miles offshore.
Although a 1972 federal law
prohibited ocean dumping everywhere In the country, the New
York Bight (where the practice
dates back to the 1920s) has remained exempt from those re·
qutrements.
Today, the only u:s. lo calities
that still regularly dispose of
their untreated waste at sea are
New York City, seven suburban
counties in New York and New
Jersey, and three New Jersey
communities.
"New Jersey Is the ocean dumplng capital of the world," says
Clean Ocean Action, a Sea Bright,
N.J., group seeking to halt the prac·
Uce. ·:;rwenty mlllion tons of con·
tamlnated... waste arc dumped
within 1~ ,miles of our coast each

year."

,

migrating to the coast, raising fecal coliform bacteria counts to
dangerously high levels. There
were 12 beach closings along the
New Jersey shore in 1986, although
all were relatively brief and In·
valved limited areas.

This year, however, the number
of closings increased and one was
especially memorable: In August,
a 5().mlle-Iong garbage slick came
ashore, depostlng human tissue,
hypodermic syringes and other
forms of hospital waste.
·

Berry's World
SAFE lf~th~

•

Why didn't the children of Israel
starve in the desert""
"

J
Because of the sand which is
there.

\

'

Jackson has big day in Raiders victory-

19 s . 18
t! 11
I 13 3
II
'f4 IS
Adll!tl~ Division
Monl rl'al
If l 5,
3'7 1111 Itt
Bu8ion
It 10 2
30
11 91
BllffuliJ
t I~ 4 !t 116 104
Quebec
tO II I
~~
8t 13
llarttord
R 9 4
~
71 7!
Qa mpbeU Cunfel'l! nee

Phlladt-lphla

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE

Amtrkaa

C.nlerenc~t

Eut

•

'

W L T t't1 . PF PA
It ~ 0
s.u 218 238
· 1150.S.UU4191

Buffalo
lndl•napuli!O

NV J eu

6

~lam!

New Enr;la.nd

s

M5 ~52 2't3

5 0

Clnclnnutl

•
•
.1

SJii n DlrKO

~es~,

l)en.~•r

1
7

SeatU.LA Raider'"

No"IA Division

60
435264~5%
s&amp;om.221225

!Antral
1 ' •

Clevel and
Houstun
rtttshllrxh

~

'
'

0
0
ll 0

Philadelphia

'
• 0
'
6 0
'
• 0
Central

.4n 2s2 n:s

NY Glanill
Chlc. a~~:u

'
7
•
•

Mlnneltota
Green Bay
TamPil Bay
Delrnll

•'
•
,

.455 211

1
0

San Fran.

13

s

31
30
21

m

!M

2
I

118
S3

Si
93

2

IR

80

90

&amp;0 II$

TuetldJQ''• Game!l

Edmonlonal WillhiRC10R, l:"p.m.
Toronto a1 MIIIIH!!OOia , 8. 3~ p.m.
WIMipelf at Los Anreles, lt:3S p m

n~

2..11

W edne!IIIJQ' '&amp; Games

Boston at Hartford, nl"ht
V UICOUVP r lt.l l'llonlreal, Rlll:hl
N\' l8lanclen at Pllts.buflh , night
Edmonton at Ol~rolt , night
St Louh, night

182 189 301

• 0
West
9 2 tl

95

Vanc:ouver al ~eM, 7:3:1 p.m

3M 2%2 24 1

'

8

VIUICOU\'er

.818 'ltll 180
.ti36 't61 248
.409 193 214

00

93

liS

J..u11 AnJI;eles
1 13 " 18
Monday's Results
Monlreal e, &amp;fon 4
Calgary 4, Chlcap(l

6 0 .4$5 '!50 'liS

.:m .,a

H 8
H ~
10 12

Edmonton
WhmiJM!a:

~.lZ

:m n3 zoa

21

~Jt21117884

C'..illgary

%211
t2:1
U3

"'"'' 0

3

S 1ny!he Division

t73 190 243

0 727 212
3 I
lilt 2!1 3
4 0 .&amp;:16 280
7 U .all.f. 1!37

Z!,1li7'l
2%1
94101

112~2&amp;'1

8 It

MlnfM'Rota
St. Lo11.IH

sn :ua 2:11

•

'

10

~l"'nlo

8.1&amp; 302 ' ' '
5U 25i 2'N

n.ua.

Sl. Llluls

U9
10it

DetroU
Ollcaao

Kllfll&gt;ll!OI City
' 2 D 0 .18! 17! 308
NIUional Co nference
Wtuoihlngton

~

NV Kanserl!i

Chlca~tu at

IIIII 312 234

.m
II
~IU
o .m

New Orle an ~
L,i\ Raunlil

II

3 {I

2M 191

4

7

226 2811

Atlanta

2

&amp;
Thursdo)' 's Result1

Cage ratings

:~z11

JIW

t C opyrlrhti!IH7 hy UPI )
NEW YORKC\!PI)- The United l"r~"
International Hurd of Coache!i' Tup 20
culle~~:e bat~kP.tbaJI nttlnp, with flr!ltp1ttct vote!'; u.nd rceord In parertthese8,
tu111l pulnh ( h~ed un 15, polnb for first
plllCf', H forse{'flnd, etc. 1, and ILUi I week's

KanSilS (..'lty 27, Detroit !II

Minnesota H. Dallas 31
Sunday'" KesQUt

NY .Jeh 27, ClnclnnaU 20
Cllicago 23, Green l&amp;y Ul
lndiiUlapoll~ 51, HOW!Iun 27
Buffalo 21, MIIUTIIO
Ne w Orlean¥ 'etl, PIIJ$burab II
•
PhUadelphla 34, New F.ll&amp;fD,nd 3( tOT )

n~nklnJC :

Point"

North Carolina
''""'
t 1\ rt·l )
I.

St IAuts 31, Atlanta 2 1
Wa~~hinston23, NV Giants 19

(t3) (3- 0 )

3"1~

:&amp; lndhuua. (&gt;l)(ltl)

3G'l 5

6. 1-1orlda (I) (4 ·11)

322 "'
320 1'7
312 )()

1. Arizona ( I~ l'l-tl
II Mh;!iOUrl ( 0-11\

"' '
:!~I;!

!1. Duke { ll ( 1·0)

21)t

10 IOwa ( \1) ('I OJ
11. WyumillK (1-0)
12. Geo~eti)Wn (2-tt

Kan!IRM Clty~~ot Clm:lnnalt, I p m

!I

1. Pltt:;bu orb (3) ti·OJ

:i KBntucky (~1(1 0)

Phllluklphl~~o lU NY Giants, I p.m.
Atlanta at Dalla11 , I p m .
lndlanapull8 Kl Clevchtnd , 1 p.m

"" '
.. 17 I

~. Syracu~

Denver :I I, San Di e ~ 17
LA Ram1 35, Tunl* Bllo) 3
San Francisco~. Clevt'laad %-1
Mo1M!ay'1 Re~~ult
LA RalderY 371 Seatlle 14
Sundas , Dec 6

1-1

201 12

lll!l 16

LA Ram11 at Detroit. 1 p.m.

1:1. Michigan (2-ll

114 ..

San D1.e«o at llowdun, I p.m
S11n Frand11coat GreenBily , I p.m.
Seattle at Pitt'lbtu·sh, I p m
WIU!hlnl(lon ld St : Luuls, I p.m.
Tampalkt.y al N~w Ork!anM, 4 p m .
Nl!w Dlll11nd at Denver, 4 p m .
Buffalo Ill LA R aiders, I p m.
lblcar;o at Mlnne.!l-uta, 8 pm .
MoiKlay , Dec. i
NV ,lf'tllal Miami, II p.m .

14. PUrdue ( 1·1)

172 6

..

.

• 48

!!

Temple (0.01

12 1 1:1

If! 1..oul!&gt;lvllle i&amp;-11)
li. Oklahom" (1-0)

116 11

1~ .

I ~ Nr:vada-l~a.~ V~:gn-'1

(0-0J

S2 20
19.

Kan ~

SEATTLE (UP!) - Bo Jackso n set two team records and
registered the 13th-best rushing
day in NFL history Monday
night . Not bad for a baseball
player who is moonlighting as a
running back.
Jackson rushed for 221 yards,
including the longest run in
Raiders history, an&lt;\ scored
three touchdowns in his fifth NFL
game, helping the Los Angeles
Raider~ snap a seven-game
losing streak with a 37-14 rout of
the Seattle Seahawks.
Jackson ran 91 yards for a
second-quarter touchdown, sur·
. passing Kenny King's run of 89
yards against San Diego In 1980.
Jackson also set a team singlegame rushing record, erasing the
200-yard effort by Clem Daniels
against the New York Jets In
1963.
Jackson's rushing total · on
only 18 carries . was the lOth
largest in NFL history. No. 1 on
the list is the 275 yards recorded
by Chicago's Walter Payton
against Minnesota in 1977. The
1985 Heisman Trophy winner

( 1 !)

"'

W North CarollnaaSI . (1}-0)
z-unrank••d
Others rf'l'e lvln!J votr-~: Memphis
St:ale, Dllnul!oi, Auburn , Bri!Jhllm Young,
Georcla Tech. Bradl ey, Noire Dame,
New Orlean~. Tt1Ul~ · E1 PIWI. St&gt;lon
Hall, Ala.flamll UCLA, Dehul, luwa
StRie. st .John'~t, KlrL'il:t.s State, Louisiana
Stat(', Soulhern Mhu~huolppl llnd We!!ot

NBA results
NATIONAL BASKETDJ\LL ASSOC

Monday',.; Rt-Hulis
MIIWilUkfe 16-1 , Indiana u
Philadelphia 106, Utah 100

Vlrtlnllt. .

'l'ueAday'~ Game~

OetroKatNewJer~y.7

Stpm.
BoAton at AUau.ta, i: 30 p m
Seattle Ill Nt!W l'ork, II p.m.
Den\'f'r 11ot Houswn, R:30 p.m
Chlcllgo 111 GoklenShah:, 10 :tO p . m .
LA Lake n a1 Sacramento. tO: 30 p.m.

2 Mlarnl (ll) till-D)

4

Wed.ellda,y's Game~
New ,Jerse)' iU &amp;stun, nl~r;hl
Se.U.tle at t'Jeveland, nl&amp;'hl
Milwaukee Ill Detrult, nllfht
Wuhln&amp;tnnat lndlana, nllhl
Houtonat S11n Antunle, nlrht
Sacramento at Denver, nl1hl
Chlcqu at Utah, nlrhl:

Cllppen~ ,

Team
I , Oklahoma CHJ 01 -0l

3 Florida State {16-1)

Phoenix at Ponland, 10:30 p.m.

Phuadelphla at LA

Grid ratings
Syrat";u~

( IJ (11-0)

Point!)
743 I
101 2
..... 3

5 Nebraska (16-1)

5113 •
55S $

6. o\UbUI"b [t-1-1)

419 6

7 1..6ulslana Sl (!J·I·I)
1\. MichJgan St1te (11-2-1)

.. 1!1 7

IU 8

niJ!:hl

Portland ai LA I.-lien~, niKht

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKEV I.EAGUE
Wale,. Conlerence
Patrick t:M"bikln
W.. J, T PtM. GF
N\' hlandcr!i U
7 I 31
..
New Jl'r~~ey
li:t K 3 21
81
910523
Pltbihurxh
10 II ~ ~2
14
WBKhln~un

.. ,.
GA

81

,.

10

!1. Sou&amp;h Carotin&amp; (I·:! J
10 Oklahoma Stab: (9-2)
2$&amp;12
II UCLA (9--2)

317 9

216 Ill
n . TeJUt.~~t A&amp;M {&amp;-2)
HI2U
U rlemson (9-2)
130 13
14 GeurJ(IA (8-1)
100 11
15. Notre Dame (8-3)
7G 11
18 l&lt;W)uthernCal (K·3)
70 It
11 Tenneii~Jet (t-!d)
53 16
Iii. Plt18bul'lfh ~~~J
3ft 19
19 Penn stal~ (1-3)
37 18
tle-20. In dhuaa (~)
tle-20. Io-wa (i-3)
l·unraralled.
Others Ntcflvinr 'llotes: 1\labama,
ArklUI.iatl, Brllfhllm Vo1mg, Florida, San
Staae, "romlng.

...." '

...

joined the Raiders after playing
baseball lor the Kansa's City
Royals this season.
"I'm sure glad Bo chose to play
with us and accept the chal·
lenge," Los Angeles Coach Tom
Flores said. " He is the !aswst
guy on our team since Cliff
Branch, an.d he weighs 230
pounds. He turns the corner and
he's gone. Impressive isn't It? "
"It was just an old-fashioned
butt -kicking for us," Seattle
Coach Chuck Knox said. " Bo
Jackson Is just a great football
player. He was just awesome.
His speed was something.
Awesome:''
The Raiders, 4-7, improved
their NFL· best record in Monday
night games to 25·5·1. It was also
the Raiders' first victory in the ir
last six games In Seattle.
The Seahawks, 7·4, dropped
Into third place in the AFC West,
behind S-2 San Diego and 7-3·1
Denver.
The Raiders rushed for 356
yards on 50 ·carries as Marcus
Allen added 76 yards on 18
carries. Marc Wilson threw for

The Dragons, 17-12 overall and
7-7 1n the conference last season,
enter tonight's game with a 2·3
record so far.
Rio Grande fell to Berea (Ky.)
College 90·77 in the second game
of the Muskingurn Tournament
Friday . In !he consolation round
Saturday, the Redmen defeated
another MDC rival, Ohio Domini·
can, 85-66.
Rio Grande's women enter
tonight 's game against thirdyear coach Russell Hill's Lady
Lions with a slate of 4wins and no
losses. In home court action
against West Virginia Tech last
Saturday , the Redwomen shut
down the Lady Bears' offense in
the second half. Behind the
scoring of juniors Lea Ann
Muilins a nd Holl y Hastings and
senior Renee Halley , Rio Grande
handed the visitors a 87-69 defeat.
Redwomen Coach Cheryl Fielitz will probably start freshman
Beth Coli as point guard, Halley
as shooting guard, Mullins as
small forward , Hastings as
power forward and junior Angela
Packard as post .
Conc.ord's probable starters
include senior Terry Hurley as
point guard, sophomore Karen
Browning as shooting · guard,
senior Susan Ihrig as small
forward, senior Darlene Hobbs
as power forward and junior
Le_slie Keen as center.

CJNCINNA Tl I UP!) - It's
been a struggle, but tbe Bengals
have positioned themselves
within striking distance of a
notable achievement, alt~ough a
notorious one at that.
The Bengals, 3·8 following
Sunday's 27·20 loss to the Jets,
could post the wor st record m the
club's history, a far cry from the
playoff hopes they harbored
before the season.
Should the Bengals lose their
remaining four games (Kansas
City and New Orleans at home ,
Cleveland and Houston on the
road), they would set a new mark
for futility, surpassing the 3-11
fecord compiled by the 1968
team, the tirst the Bengals
fielded.
Two Bengals teams, the 1978
and 1979 editions, finished with
4·12 records .

·'

Their current 3·8 record ts their
poorest through 11 games since
1980. Forrest Grl!gg's first team
went 3·9 that season before
winnin g three of its final four to
finish 6 ·10.
Of course, the Bengals could
have n early the reverse record.
They have lost six games by
seven points or less and have
blown four games In the final
minutes.
Sunday's loss ranks right up
' there with the last-minute losses
to San Francisco, Pittsburgh and
Houston in terms of frustration.
With less than two minutes
remaining, !he Bengals were
attempting a field goal that
would have put them ahead 23·20.
Instead, Jim Breech's kick was
blocked, and the Jets' Rich
Miano picked It up and ran 67
yards tor thewinningtoUch®wn.

could."

The Raiders added a pair of
Chris Bahr field goals- from 23
and 47 yards- for a 27· 7 halftime
lead.
Jackson's 42-yard run fueled
another long drive by the Raiders
early in the third quarter. He
ended the 75-yard march with a
2-yard run, giving the Raiders a
34-7 lead with lJ · 30 left in the
period.
Jackson ran 25 yards later in
the third quarter to set up Bahr's
23-yard field goal with 5: 19
remaining.
The Seahawks finally ended
the Raiders' run of 37 straight
points when Krieg hit Mike Tlce
on a 3-yard pass play with five
seconds left in the quarter ,
cutting th e deficit to 37-14

Falcons win opener; OU loses second contest
By United Press International
Bowling Green, Cleveland
State and Akron opened their
1987-88 basketball seasons with
victories Monday night, while
Ohio University suffered its
second straight loss.
Bowling Green defeated Find· ,
lay, 70·63; Cleveland SState
overwhelmed Clarion (Pa.), 88·
44; Akron downed Ashland, €
52; and Morehead (Ky.) State
whipped Ohio University, 99·92.
Elsewhere in Ohio college
basketball action Monday night,
Kent State thumped Cal State·
Chico. 90-66; Miami defeated
William and Marx, 78-68; and
Xavier beat St. Joseph's (Ind.),
75-68.
At Bowling Green, the Fqlcons
held Findlay scoreless for the
final 3:19 of the game to turn
back the Oilers.
The lead changed hands six
times in the !irs~al! before
Bowling Green ma aged a 35-31
margin at the half. he Falcons
led until 11: 42 to go when
Anthony Slappy's jump shot
from the base line put Findlay up
49·48. The lead then went back
and forth seven more times.
With the score tied 63·63 with
3:19 left, Todd Horman charged
into Bowling Green's Lamon
Pippin and the Falcon defense
held. Steve Martenet hit a
three-point basket and two foul

shots and Scott Kalish hit two foul
shots down the stretch.
Martenet scored 26 points and
Anthony Robinson added 13 for
the Falcons, while Findlay, 2·2,
got 23 from Brian Stadler.
At Cleveland, Ken McFadden
scored 21 points, Eric Mudd had
20 and Desmond Porter 10 for the
Vikings in their easy win over
Clarion . Cleveland State led all
the way, including 48-19 at the
half. Chris Davis had 10 points for
Clarion, now 1·2.
At Akron, the Zips got 13 points
apiece from Shawn Roberts,.Ken
Cullifer and Floyd Johnson in
beating Ashland. Jamel Smith
scored 14 to pace Ashland , now
2-1.
At Morehead, Ky., Tony Curry
scored a career-high 28 points to
lead Morehead State past Ohio
University. Morehead, 2-0,
grabbed the lead .! or good 23-22
with 10: 44 remaining In the first
half and led 51·39 at intermission.
The Bobcats, 0-2, were paced by
John Rhodes with 24 points.
At Kent, Eric Glenn scored 18
points and Bobby Meeks added 10
to pace Kent State's win over Cal
State-Chico, now 1·2. The
Flashes, 1·1, held a 43-28 advan·
tage at halftime and led by as
many as 26 points in the second
half.
At Oxford, Eric Newsome
scored 27 points to help Miami

Rio teams in action
Both basketball teams at Rio
Grande College and Community
College will see action tonight.
The men enter another Mid·
Ohio Conference game when they
face Coach Jim Hammond's
Tiffin University Dragons, while
the Redwomen host Concord
College of Athens, W.Va.
The men's game will be played
at Old Fort High School in Tiffin
at 7:30p.m., and the women are
scheduled for 5: 30 p.m. in Lyne
Center.
The Redmen , 5·2 following last
weekend's performance in the
Muskingum College Tourna·
ment, are expected to Held
senio rs Ron Rittinger and Ray
Singleton as forwards, senior
Doug Fog! as center and employ
juniors Anthony Raymore and
Jim Kearns as guards. Fresh·
man Brian Watkins Is expected
to be the first off the bench in the
guard position , according to
Coach John LawhOrn.
Hammond, in his his first year
at Tiffin, said his probable
starters will be sophomores
Steve Doss and Tyrone Trbovich,
senior Dennis Liddle as center
and juniors Skibo Sims and Scott
Morrissey as guards .
Sims, a 6·6 player from Or·
rvi lle, Ohio, was named to the
MOC second team at the end of
the 1986·87 season.

streaked into the open on the left
sideline a!wr breaking safety
Eugene Robinson' s tack!P at the
14, easily sprinting away from
the Sea hawks for the score.
"I saw the defender ('Robin·
son) had !he angle on me, "
Jackson said, "so I just threw m y
head back and ran as fa st as 1

159 yards, completing 11 of 18
attempts for two touchdowns.
Seattle quarterback Dave
Krieg completed 17 of 31 pass
attempts for 170 yards and two
touchdowns . He had two interceptions ~nd was sacked four
times for minus-40 yards .
Seattle's Steve Largent, who
had two catc hes for 25 yards, has
now caught at least one-pass·in an
NFL-record 148 games. He has
11,841 career receiving yards,
overtaking Don Maynard to
become second in NFL history to
Charlie Joiner's 12,095 yards.
The Raiders broke a 7-7 tie with
a 20-point second quarter. Jack·
son climaxed a 60-yard drive
with a 14-yard scoring pass ·from
Marc Wilson. putting Los Angeles ahead 14·7. Jackson and
safety Kenny Easley coilided at
the 1, Easley falling and Jackson
· catching the pass while wide
open In the end zone .
Ruben Rodriguez's 63-yard
punt put the Raiders at their own
5 on the next series, but Jack·
• son's 91-yard run quickly pu t the
visitors ahead 21-7. The 1985
R e isman Troph y winner
'

'*

Bengals hav·e chance at worst
record in club's brief history

.

Those wastes have devasted
ocean fishing grounds and now are

•

Scoreboard ...

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, December 1. 1987

even its record at 1·1 with a win
over William and Ma ry , 0·2. The
Redsklns held a 37-27 lead at
halftime and allowed the visitors
to get no closer than two points In
the second half.
At Cincinnati, Bryon Larkin
topped four players in double
figures with 26 points in leading

Xavier to its tnumph over St.
Joseph' s. The Musketeers led
virtually all the way in posting
their second straight victory of
the season. St. Joseph's is 2·1.
In other games, it was Allegh·
eny (Pa .) 72, Hiram 47; an.d
Florida Southern 115, Otterbein
57.

MHS girls nip Miller
HEMLOCK -Trailing most of
the game, Meigs ' Marauderettes
tightened their defense and
squeaked by Milier's Lady Fa!·
cons 54-52 m a Saturday night
affair. According to Coach Roger
Foster, the team never quit as
they broke the Miller press,
fought for every loose ball and
picked off many of the Falcon
passes.
In the crucial fourth quarter,
the defense allowed the opposi·
lion only one shot as the Maraud·
ers outscored the enemy 15 to 9 in
the final frame. The local lasses
grabbed 43 rebounds in the
·contest and committed a total of
13 turnovers.
With eight seconds left and
Meigs leading 53-52, Beth Ew·
ing went to the line and made the
front end of a one and one. On the
miss, Miller grabbed the rebound
but Meigs set up quickly on
defense and the Falcons never
got a final shot.
Meigs was assessed 16 per·
sona l fouls with Wendy Fry and
Tammy Wright exiting the game
via that route. Fry led Meigs in
scooring kwith 17 and Jody
Taylor garnered 12. Cheryl
Doughty scored 14, Carol Dodson
13 and J ody Altier 11 for Miller .
Shelly Stobart and Missy Wood s
led in rebounding wtth 11 each,
Fry and Ewing grabbed 7 apiece,
Taylor had 5 a nd Wright 2 for
Meigs.

Bergesch candidate
By United Press International
Bill Bergesch, fired last month
as Cincinnati Reds general man
ager, is the latest candidate for
the GM post of the Houston
Astros. Others being constdered
are Lee Thomas, the St. Louis
Cardinals' director of player
development, and Bill Wood, the
Astros acting general manager.

(MEIGS) - Fry 8-1·0 17; Tay lor 4·0·4·12; Wright 4·0·0·8; Ew·
ing3-0·1·7; Woods3·0·0·6; Stobart
2-0·0·4; Henderson 0-0-0 -0.
Coach Kim Adkins reserve
squad made a sweep of the night
as they topped the Falcon re·
serves 38 to 27. Jennifer Taylor
and Marsha King canned 9 each,
Shannon Newsome added 8 and
Kim Ewing, Amy Rouse and
Amy Wagner had 4 apiece.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145·960)
A. Division oll\tulllntcdla, Inc.
Publlsh('d ('V('ry afl('rnoon. Monday
through Frlduv. 111 Cour1 St. PomcJ oy. Oh io, by 1he Ohio Valley Pub1\shmll:

Company / Mulllml'dla,

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P omeroy, Ohlo 4~769, Ph. 992 2156 Se·
cond class poSii.ll! C paid at PomE&gt;rov,

Ohio .

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13 Weeks ... .
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101 no

PutaSTIHL
Under the

~Tree~_

-yy~
BOW KILL - This 14 point buck deer was bagged with a
compound bow by Rick Bolin, Route I, Rutland, helore the start of
Monday's gun deer season.

011 T Quick stop® standard

·~

STJHt:

1Tonight's games I
SAVE

Hannan Trace at Oak' Hill
Kyger Creek at Eastern
Southern at North Galli a
Symmes Valley at Southwestern
Meigs at Nelsonville· York
West at West Union
Portsmouth at Chillicothe
Athens at Lancaster
Ports ND at Chesapeake
New Phlladelphla at Marietta
Jackson at Minford

•

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•

Mueller first
cage honoree
TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!)- Cap!·
tal's Tim Mueller was selected
the season's first Ohio Athletic
Conference player of the week
Monday.
Mueller, a 6-foot-6 senior from
Toledo, s~ored 22 points in
Capital's 71·68 upset of Kent
State Saturday. In four games so
far this season, Mueller has
scored 78 points, hittin'g 30 of 49
field goal attempts and 17 of 19
ft·ee throw~':

~

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NUMBER ONE WOIII.DWIDE

�--··- ------------Page-4'--The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 1, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

,.----Local news--..... Snow slips into Northwe
Recent turkeywalk successful

By United Press International
A winter storm watch was In
Rain and snow fell in the effect over eastern Washington,
Northwest today with as much as where as much as five inches of
a foot of snow expected In the snow was forecast and Icy roads
mountains, and advisories for made driving hazardous, the
heavy s now showers and possible weather service said .
ga le-force winds were issued in
A snow advisory was a lso In
some parts of the Midwest.
effect over the Wi sconsin snowA winter storm warning was in belt along Lake Superior. Snow
effect this morning over the showers were sca ttered over the
Oregon Cascades, with snow state wwlth heavier s now sq ualls
advisories in mountains of Wa·· along the Ja ke , forecas ters said .
shington a nd hlg~er elevations in
The weat he r service issued
Idaho, the .National Weather . warnings of gale force winds this
Service said.
morning aiong the northern ha lf
As much of a foot of new snow of the Pacific Co,ast a nd over
was ex pected in the Oregon Lake Superior.
Cascades, with up to 8 inches
Late Monday and early today.
expec te d in Idaho moun ta ins.
rain extended over eastern New

A large n)lmber of participants survived blisters, aching feet,
doubling flllends a nd nat ure's elements to successfull y
complete the American Heart Association's Turkeywalk held
Oct. 17 at Meigs High School.
A total of $3,750 was raised in the event with Marie Hauch
• .,
bringing in the most - nearly $400. Elghi people, Marlyn S.
Wilcox, Terry Shain, Janet Eblin. Kathryn Hart , Donald
Jeffers, Shir ley J effers, Pauline Mayer and ·Marily n Wolfe,
collected over $200 each.
Other participants included Teresa Wilson, Juqy Wolfe, Ann.
Rupe, Joan Corder, Anna Linde man, Kathy Pullins, Joyce
Quillen, Jackie Starc her , Beck! Baloy. Rebecca Sue Ebli n, Debt
He nsley , Wanda Eblin, Ruth Graham. Mindy Hill, Juamta
Humphreys, Lois Hawley , Stacy M. Eblin, Cathy Johnson ,
Middlepott Brownie Troop 1254, Sarah Mansfield, Dr. Wtlma
Mansietd , Mary Beth Musser , Sandi Mathews and Sr. Janet
Rectenwald.
The event was chaired by Millie Midkiff.

.

Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Fair through the period. Highs
will be in the 30s Thursday and
Friday and In the 40s Saturday,
with ' overnight lows ranging
from 25 to 30.
South Central Ohio

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports fourcails
Monday; Pomeroy at 11 : 30 a .m. to Pomeroy Health Care.
Center for Hosmer Roush to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Rutland at 1: 36p.m. to Noble Summit Road forJames.Fowler ~o
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 1:45 p.m . to Story s
Run Road for Gertrude Searles to Holzer Medical Center;
Pomeroy at 3:58 p.m . to Country Home Mobile Home Park for
Paula Bowen to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Teachers ...

Jobless rate jumps to 5.8 percent

.
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I &gt;- A U.S. Labor De partment survey

(Continued from page 1)

tee Is that it ca nnot in good .faith

indicates Ohio's unem ployment rate increased to 5.8 perce~t
OctobPr. compared with 5.5 percent during September, theOhto
Bureau of Employmen t Services said.
The figures ranged from a low of 3.8 percent In Hancock
County in northwest Ohio to a high of 16.2 perce nt m Harrison
County, in eas tern.Ohio . .
Ovenill , 17 of the state's 88 counties reported unemployment
rates of less than 5 percent. Three coun ties reported rates
exceeding 10 percent.
In Gallia County, the unemployment rate stood at 8.4 percent
for October, up from the 7.8 percent mark in September and a
drop from the 9.6 percent rate in October, 1986.
In Me igs Cou nty, 7.9 percent of its labor force of 8,000 in
October was out of work. That mark was an Increase from the
7.3 percent rate in September and a drop from the 11.1 percent
. figure from October. 1986.

Two seats available
The Me igs County Senior Citizens Center has two
reserva tions still ava ilable for the County Chri stm as trip to .
Nashvi lle, Tenn., Dec. 6-8.
Cost is $239 a person for a double room at the Opryland Hotel
for two nights,· plus travel on a chartered bus, dinner . and
atte ndance to the Down Home Country Musical Ce lebrat ion. On
Monday there will be a tour of Nashville, lunch at Fountain
Square and a visit'to Barbara Mandrell Country with plenty of
time allowed also for browsing at the crafts fair he ld at the
hote l.
The center also has scheduled a day trip to King's Island to
attend Winteriest on Dec. 12. Cost of this trip is $34 for traveling
on the chartered bus and admission. King 's Island is spPcially
decorated fo r Christmas and shops are stocking holiday ite ms.
Holiday musicals will be presented. Enroute home the group
~ill stop at Rudd 's Christ mas Farm near Por tsmouth to view
thP extensive holiday lighting.
Anyone interested in making either of the two trips is asked ~o
ca ll 992-2161 for fu rther information or to make reserva tion s.

Meigs board plans special m eet
A specia l meeting of the Meigs Local Board of Education has
been set for 5 p.m. T hursday to discuss negotia tiOns and handle
any ot her busi ness which may come before the board.

Meigs wcal...
/

co ntinued from page 1

I

regarding the Board' s actions
are welcom e d a nd parental·
comm uni ty su pport is necessary
for th e schools to resume
operations."

Area deaths

James Fowler

J a mes A. Fow ler , 82. Route 1.
Middleport, died Monday a t
Veterans Me morial Hospital.
Mr. Fowler was born April12,
1905 at Chardon , a son of the late
Edw in an d Orph a Markel
Fowler. He was a retired clothing
salesman.
•
Survivi ng are his wife, Laura
Richter, whom he married on
Jan. 1, 1928; a son, Raymond
James Fow ler, Middleport; a
daughter. Janet Joan Boyles of
· Chardon; a brother, Robert
· Fowler of Florida; nin e grand·
children an d 15 great ·
gra nd child re n.
Besides his gra ndparents, he
was preceded in death by three
brothers, Harry, Hugh and Clarence F'owler .
The Hunter Funera l Home is in
charge of arra ngements . There
will be no ca lling hours. Grave·
side services wjll be he ld' later in
the week in Chardon.

Stocks
Daily stock prices
(As or 10: 30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
·of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi
Am E lectric Power ........ .... .25}4
AT&amp;T .... ..... .................... .. .. 27'h

Ashland Oi l .. .'....... .. .... .. ...... 53Y.
Bob Evans .. .... ..... .... .. .... ..... 14Y,
Charming Shop pes ... .... ....... 11 %
City Hold ing C9 ..... .. ........ . .. . 34
Federal Mogu1. ........ .. ......... 30 %
Goodyear T&amp;R .............. .... 50%
Heck's In c ........... .. ................ 2
Key Centurion ........... .......... 35
Lands' End .... .... ...... ...... ..... 16'j4 '
Lim itf'd Inc ............ ........... .18%
Multi media Inc ................. .. 42'h
Rax Restaurants ........ .. ..... ... 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers .............. ... 6')4
Shoney 's Inc ...... .. ........... .. ..18%
Wendy's Inti . ...... .. .. ...... .. ..... 4%
Worthington Ind .............. .. ... l6

tales

England as well as near San
Francisco, and snow was falling
over the Id a ho panhandle.

Rain a lso reac hed from the
lower Great Lakes across southeast lower Michigan.

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 12· 2·87

40 30

30

--------Weather---1-r_ _ __

EMS reports four calls

"The Board of Education be·
lieves that the posi tion taken is
- the correct one and wants the
•: ; : Meigs Local School Dis tri cf
publ iC to be informed. Questions

December 1, Jll8'7

Elizabeth Jordan

I

E liza beth R. Jordan, 71, 27100
Ru therford Road. Albany. died
unexpetedJy ·Monda y evening a t
the Ohio Sta te Uni versity Hospi ·
tal s in Co lumbu s. Arrangements
are being mad e by the Bigony ·
Jordan Funeral Home in Albany.

Court news
·
'
An action lo quiet title to
property has been flied in Meigs
County Commo n Pleas Court by
William E. Cray a nd Dorothy A.
Cray, both of WllkesvJlle, against
Hilah Dorothy Smith , also known
as Hllah Dorothy Vorhes, last
known address Newark, et al.
In other court matters. Judge
Charles Knigh t has stepped dow n
as the presiding authority in the
s tate's case against Gary J.
Wolfe.

and conscience
negotiate a
guara nteed amount of dollars in
incre&lt;1ses wages-fringes that It
does not know it will receive.
"Th e MLTA's position is that it
wa nt s dollar s guaran tee d
whether reve nues are there or
not. It has been reported that
they have sta ted that the district
is not likely to receive ·an
increase tha t will meet their
demands. The MLTA 's answer is
for the dis trict to negoti ate itself
into I he State Loan Fund .
" The State Loan Fund or more
appropriately the Emergency
School Advancement Fund is a
fund established by the State as
an a lterna tive for sc hools c los ing
for financial reasons. · William
Phillis. assistant state · superin·
tendent of public Instruction for
the State of Ohio, says .that 'It's
(the loan fund ) a tem porary
measure to allow a school district
to get back on it s IE'et in a
financial emergency .'
"The board feels that negoti at ·
ing a financial settlement to the
MLTA 's contract demands wi ll
create a financ ial e mergency
and will cause the district to go
into the loan fund . T he dile mma
created for the system Is in
generating addi tiona l revenues
either loca lly or from the State to
pay ba ck th e loan and to get out of
the borrowing position . If the
ML \A demands are agreed to on
removing fin a ncia l reasons from
the reduction in force art icle, the
system would face an additional
burden' in any attempt necessa ry
to reduce expenditures.
"The Board believes that It is
unreasonable if not ir rat iona l to
expect or demand that the
system spend or commit itself to
expenditures of funds that exceed Its expected revenues .
•

Announcements

Occasiona l slow changing to
rain today , with highs nea r 40.
Mostly cloudy tonight. with a
chance of snow flurries and a low
Jn the upper 20s. Mos tly cloudy
Wednesday, with highs between
35 and 40 .
T he probabilit y of precipita tion . is 90 percent today , 40
percent tonight a nd near ze ro
Wednesday.
Winds will be from the nor thw ·
e~t at 10 to 15 mph this after noon
and from the nort])west near 10
mph tonight.

I ,': _',If;~ tOW
FRONTS: "

'.'ia:m

t /'c. l RAir:
" C ~I d

...

c;::J SnOWEI1S

....

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-

.

-

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WEATHER MAP - Snowshowers will extend over upper
Michigan, the central Appalachians and the upper Ohio Valley ,
also over the higher elevations of the Pacific Northwest. Rain wiD
reach from the north ern and central Pacific Coast across the lower
elevations of the northern Plateau, over southern Florida, across
northern Maine and along the lower Great Lakes.

BAGS :BUCK - lfunters were out in full force
Monday morning, all in hOpes of bagging a deer.
One such hunter, Tim Smith of Letart Falls, was

0

Maybe it's time you had one for your
telecommunications system. .
eurostyle collec--:t CJr-l

Gifts needed
Athens Me ntal Health Ce nter is
asking for g ift s for patient s
through Pomeroy's Drew Webster Post 39 of the American
Legion. Gifts may be dropped off
in the container in the window at
Quickel's Insura nce. No glass
item s please.

LA·Z·BOY®
RECLINA-ROCKER®RECLINERS

ATA
SPECIAL PRICE!

Meeting Tonight
A regular meeting of Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will be held
tonight !Tuesday) , 7:30p.m., for
work in the EA degree. Refresh·
ments will be served following
the meeting.
~

"Charger"
·
Reel ina-Rocker® Recliner
A casual that coordinates wllh vlnually
any Interior scheme. Luxuriously lufled, SALE!

692 deer checked
Meigs County Game Protector
Keith Wood reports a first day
hunting season tot a l of 692 deer
checked in Monday in Me igs
Co unt y , and no hunting acc idents.

It features a large head roll, clean lines,
· a deeply cushioned seat and plush,
padded arms. Comfort never looked so
fashionable!
"

Meet Tonight
Chester Counci!323.Daughters
of America, wil mee t tonight at
7:30 p.m . at the ha il. Nomination
of officers will be he ld, quarterly
birthdays observed, a nd potluck
refreshments se rved .

beauty and soft comfort. With tufted
back and plush cushioning.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Monday Admissions - Sheila
Randolph , Middlepor t; Iva Cre·means , Middleport ; Hosmer
Roush, Pomeroy; Robert Rober ts, Racin e .
. Monday Discharges - Thur·
stan Stone Jr.

I magine what it would look like if a
football team decided to "wing if
out there on the fi eld without a
game plan. it would look pretty silly,
wouldn't it?
Well , that's exactiy what t;nany
companies do when it comes to
planning and designing telecommunications systems. The results
are oostiy.
That's where we come in to play.
You see we can show you the
most ~~ effective way to handle
yoor intom1atlon. No matter hoW
unusual your needs are. In fact,
we're the t~ecommunications con-

RUTLAND' TIRE SALES

"tEniNO VOU THERE SAFELV" .

LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCK TIRES
*ALIGNMENS *FRONT-END WORK
*BAnEIIES *liRE IEPAII
LOCATED: MAIN ST., RUTLAND, OHIO
OPEN: 8· 6 MON .-SAT.; 8· 8 FRI.
PH . 742-3088
Muter Card and Visa Welcome

$299.

"Suburban"
Reclina-Rocker®Recliner
This handsome casual offers versatile
SALE!

Seeks divorce
A divorce action h.a s been filed
in Meigs Co unty Common Pleas
Court by Robin Rae Hess, Mid·
dleport, against Paris 'R. Hess,
Middleport.
Barbara J ea ne tte Lanier
Cullen. Middleport, has filed for
a divorce from Terry Lynn
Cu llen, Letart, W.Va.

f)

fortunate enough to get a 17-point buck about 9
a.m.

1

'
,,

sultant to the Super Bowl and a
number of NFL teams. We provide
dozens of communication systems
that enable the press to get their
stories out, spotters to talk with
their roaches, and stadium security
to talk to each othei.
If we can do all that, just think of
what we can do for yoo.
Isn 't it time yoo had a game plan
for yoor telecommunications system~ Get in touch with us , Your
GTE Account Manager will be glad
to h~p you draw one up.
Call t-800-662-9700.
The smart business call.

(iji#J

I

$329.

''Dimension"
Reclinei·Rocker®Recliner
Softened contemporary. With pillowy
SALE!
comforting curves on the channel·
stitched back and arms. So Impeccably
tailored, So alfordably priced,

$369.

MASON '
FURNITURE
Street CO • Mason, W.Va.
(304) 773-5592

�•

.

The _Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
•

Tu~ay,

.. Page-6

:Racine -Christmas
parade Dec. 19

..
There's a bonus awaiting
t hose of you who want to give
blood dur ing a blood!)iboile vis it
on Dec. 16.
Not only wi ll yo u be giving
blood to help others - a nd I
understand the demand for blood
is greater . ove r the holiday
season r - but Craw's Family
Restaurant in he lping to promote
· the uni t's visi t wili be giving each
dono r a certifica te entltlelng
them to two Chi cke n Little
sandwiches free of charge.
Inci de nta lly, for th ose who
gave blood when the bloodmobile
was at So uthe rn a nd Eastern
High Schools and a t Kroger's, be
adv ised t hat 56 days should pass
between the time of your blood

donation before you give again.
The bloodmobile visit will be
.from 1 to 5:30 p.m . on Wednesday, Dec. 16, at the Meigs Senior
·Citizens Ce nt e r s, Mulb erry
Heights, Pomeroy.
It's bazaar time and these
baza ars are som etimes good
places to pick up gift items that
are a little different from the
usua l run .
One of the bazaars will be
staged Saturday at Heath United
Methodist Church In Middleport
- and that one 1\'!ll also Include
the serving of lunches.
A Chris tmas vll!age will be set
up at the United Pentecostal
Church In Middleport on SaturHONORED.- Two former cast members were
escort, Gerald Powell; Dehi Buck, assistant
day and features of the v!Ilage
honored
at
Saturday
night's
Varieties
of
'87
presenter; Bob Hoeflich, director; Joe Struble,
will include a bake shop, craft
master
o.f ceremonies; Mrs. Kathryn Crow,
presented at the Meigs High School Auditorium by
shop, photos with Santa, a food
'l ong-time performer with the group and assoclathe Big Bend Minstrel Assn. Pictured during the
s hop and other a ttractions. The
dedication
ceremonies
from
the
left
are
Mrs.
Ida
iion president, the second honoree, and her escort,
village will be open to the public
Bruce Wolfe. (Photo hy Dorsel Thomas).
Mae
Clark,
representing
her
husband,
the
late
Bill
from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Clark,
long-time
banjoist
with
the
group;
her
Up Syracuse way , the Syra•
cuse Volunteer Fire Department
wll! stage a Christmas auction at
.
.
7 p.m. Saturday at the fire
station. Proceeds wll! be used to
" Who Want s an Orphan Drug"
Holiday projects were planned unison . Ann Mash and Helen
purchase candy a·nd gifts to be
Blackston
gave
reports,
and
by
Violet Hyse!!; "Thanks a Lot"
given away when Santa Claus during the recent meeting of the Mrs . Blackston reported on the
by
Ann Mash; "Water Bed
Rock Springs Better Health Club
comes to town In December.
tamp
co!!ectlon
and
plans
for
s
Alert"
by Beuna Grueser; and
held at the home of Phyllis
Anyone wishing to donate mo,ney
making
cancer
pads
.
"What
Could be Easier than
.
or gifts for the community Skinner.
Readings
on
health
included
Getting
Your Calcium Out of
On Dec. 17 members w!ll meet
project . can call 992-7181 or
"New
Research
on
Ulcers"
by
Foods";
by
Nancy Grueser.
992-7775. Incidentally, Dan Smith . at the Rock Springs United
Nancy
Morris;
"Leaches
,
a
Big
Anna
Grueser
was a guest.
will be the auctioneer for Satur- Methodist Church for a party and
Refreshments were served.
gift exchange after which there come Back" by Trecie Abbott;
day night's auction .
will be trays of candies, cookies
and fruit prepared for the sick
There's Keith Woods and then
and shutlns of the communty. A
there's Keith Wood .
need for coats and clothing was
The confusion is normal, I
announced
.
suppose, but it is especially bad
Dorothy
Jeffers led in the
for the Keith Woods family.
pledge to open the meeting
You see, Keith Wood is the
fol!owing the Lord's Prayer in
county ga me protector and
Jives in the Chester area . His
phone number is 985-4400. Keith
Woods is not the game
protector but receives numerous ca lls from the public which
The a nnual Thanksgiving
think s he is . Hi s number is
dinner of Group 2 of the Middle992-3312
port Presbyterian Church was
held at the American Legion hall
Isn' t it interesting? There
recently.
Mrs. Harry Moore,
neve r seems to be enough public
c:llairman, opened the meeting
money in Ohio to operate institu«-lth two Thanksgiving meditations of learning - in order
tions.
Mrs . Paul Haptonstall had
words - schools. But Ohio State
devotions
using "These Days" , a
Universit y has $470,000 to pay
devotional
book. Mrs. Hapten Earl Bruce because he wa s fired
stall
conducted
t he least coin
before the expiration of his
and
Mrs.
William
Morris
offering
contract. Well you keep
conducted
the
Bible
study
using
.
smiling anyway .
Concern m a gazine.

Better Health Club holds meettng

Group 2 meets

COSTUME D - Dressed as pilgrims and Indians for the_Modern
Woodmen :of Americ a Thanksgiving celebration and dinner at
'Alfred we re from the left, front, Hyatt and Patrick O'Connell,
Coo lville, )\'Ii ndy Guess, Tuppe rs Plains, and Amanda Breedlove,
Belpre: and hack, Gi nger 'and Katie O'Connell, Coolville, Michelle
;.~nd Me lissa Guess, Tuppers Plains, and Shannon Breedlove,
Coolvil!e.

Mooern Wocximen host party
T ha nksgiving was obser ved at
thP Alfred United Methodi st
Church, Camp 10900. Modern
Woodmen of Ameri,a. wi th Ro·
bert Allen. sher iff of Athens
Co unty s peaki ng on " Family
Li fe."
Taking par t in the Woodme n 's
Creed cere mon y were Nina Robinson, Hobarl ·swar tz, a nd
Garner Gr iffin , Alfred , and Ro ·
be rt B. Henry, Amesvi lle. A
vi deo en titled " Bring ing the
Family Togethe r" s howing com-

munty service projects carried
out by Woodmen Camps na tionally was shown . One such project
inc!udec,l on the video was the
rbuilding of the barn on the H. L.
He nderson famil y fa rm after it
burned.
A collection was taken for
CARE and c heer plates were sent
to shutin members and frie nds.
Nexl meeting wil l be a n oyster
s upper and Christmas party,
Dec. 19 al the Coolville Elementary School.

Lorraine Newsome of Woodland Centers was guest speaker
at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Child Conservation
League held at the home of
Peggy Harris .
Mrs . Newsome talked a bout
the changes which ha ve taken
place in t he acceptance of those
in trea tment for problem s now
over lhe way it was just a few
yea rs ago. Sh·e spoke of the
advances in treatment and how
muc h more can be done for tho se
with me nta l health problems.
Hele n Blackston had devotions
with Mrs .· Ha rri s giving the
secretary's repor t. For roll call
m embers related a n eve nt of
their ch ildhood which caused
menta l a nguish.
The annual Christma s party
was set for Dec. 8 at the Holiday
Inn in Gallipolis.
Nancy Morris pres id ed a t the
meeting. Linda Broderic k a nd
Becky Broderick were hos tesses .
Bonnie Scott was a gues t and
Linda Broderick won the t ravel·
ing prize. Winner of the hos tess
gift was Mrs. Harris. AlsO
a !le ndin g were Clarice Ke nnedv .

to help decorate .
The annua l pledge servi ce was
conducted by Clara Mae Sargent.
Readings were given by Amy
Mullins , Martha Dudd.!ng, Etta
Mae Hili , Louise Stewart. Max·
lne Wingett, a nd Marlene Fisher.
Several were reported ill a nd
cards were s ig ned for them .
Re fres hments were served by
Maxine Winge t! a nd Louise Ste.
warl from a ta ble w ith a red and
white checkered tablecloth , of!
!amps and baske ts of fruit
re presentative of an old fashi oned Than ksgiving.

Church auxiliary
has meeting

TUESDAY
LONG BOTTOM - Tale nt
night will be observed at Tues day's meeting of the Flame
Fellowship Chapter meeting,
7:30 p.m . at the Mt. Olive
Community Church, Long Bottom . Those attending are invited
to sing a song, testify , or present
some other talent. Suzanne Bush,
president, Invites the public to
attend.
LETART FALLS -The Letart
Falls PTO w!ll meet Tuesday at 7
p.m. at the school. Santa's Secret
Shop will be open.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma
Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority, will met Tuesday at the
Pomeroy United Methodist
Church, 7 p .m.

Smith anniversary planned
Mr . a nd Mrs . James A. Smith
wi!! celebrate their 50th wedding
anniversary on Dec. 6 with an
open hnuse at 2 p .m . at their
home loca ted on State Route 325
in Danvtlle.
Mr. a nd Mr s . Smith, the
former Vada A. McCal!i ster,
were married on Dec. 7, 1937 In
Lincoln County, W. Va. They
cam e direc tly to Meigs County
where they have spe nt near ly ali
of their 50 years together.
They a re the par e nts of 11
c hldre n, four sons, Darrel!,
James, Jr. , Thomas IT. J .) a nd
Jerry, and seven daughters,
Wa nda Nelson. Dorothy. Smith,
Bonnie Clela nd , Betty Lambert,'
Flossie Jude, and Geraldene
Moore. They also have
gra ndch!dre n a nd seven
catgra ndchildren.
Smith, best known as "Smitty"

~lAU

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100010 ""'IIN(I0"'

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Public Notice

say "Yes" and we underline it - ~
evening visitation at the funeral home,

\

.ours or tho other fine funeral homes in our

area, can be absolutely vital to the family of
the deceased AND to the visitors as well.
Fri,an&lt;ls and realtives bring strength and supthe family when they need it most.
their love and their loyalty in a
heout-lifting way.
simply be unable to attend the funeral. They
want to express their feelings and their caring
so that a visit with you on a day before the funeral js good for them. good for you and good
for the spirit of the departed

ll w ....... ..

"' "'·-·.. .......................... · - .. , •• c............ ,..

N. SECOND AVE. '
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

MIDDLEPORT - Pomeroy
Lodge F&amp;AM will hold installation of officers Wednesday at the
Middleport Masonic Temple. Refreshments will be served and ail
master Masons are welcome.
MIDDLEPORT- The Middle-

RATES

S P.M.

,_...._...
c............ ...,.

~

ca•v 0 1 ~CtJNl

, In our workaday world, your friends may

to

I A.M. Until NOON SlTUf:DAV
UOSID SUNDAY.
~~~~'"" " " " - ""'" ioop&gt;O
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2711/2

WEDNESDAY _
RACINE- Lebanon Township
Trustees wll! meet Wednesday, 6
p.m., at the township building.

AN AD CALL 992·7156

.... . ,.,.:.vr..:::.=
...... _.......'"' ....,..,., ''" .... ....

ARE EVENING VISITATI NS IMPORTANT?

•

fO

MONDAY ri1rv FRIDAY I A.M.

.;::;,l.:oz.: ,-:;.~-.':1: ....... ~ _ ... ...,..........

992-3462

r.;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j~~==:=;:::~~~~Tr=====~;::~~~=:=~D=·;:===;
Howard L Writestl
Television Listening evtces
MARCUM
I
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sel\rltel
CONTRACTING I
ROOfiNG
(!) Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
CHESTER.
I
NEW _ REPAIR

°

port Li terar y Club will mee t at 2
p.m. Wednesday at the hbme of
Mr s. Chester Erwin. Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter will review " Lake
Woebegone Dan" by Garrison
Keillor. For roll call membrs are
to give a small town observance.
TJIURSDAY
MIDDLEP9RT - Evangeline
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
Star, will meet at the Middleport
Masonic Temple at 7:30 Thursday . A gift exchange of $3 to $5
will be held . Re freshment w!ll be
sen.:ed.. An officers practice will
be held Dec. 6 at 2 p .m . a t the
temple.
Hymn sing
RACINE Morse Chapel
Church on Racine-Portland Road
is having a hymn sing 01) Friday .
starting at 7 p.m., fea turing the
Harvest Trio of Reedsv!lle. Rev.
David Curfman invites the public
to attend.

OHIO

:~g~~~~~,!ri,0,. 5

s~:~i ~6~~~U

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER
located half way between Rt . 7 and Bashan.
Yard Man mowers, Echo
trimlfttrs, saws. blowers
- Snowoff blowers, Oregon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push mowe~ picked up and tuned and
returned 120.00.
Pans &amp; Service on all

Makes.
mo.

ALL
PLUMBING &amp;

HEATING
New locution:
I ~8 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE.
We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE

16141 992-6SSO
RESIDENCE •PHONE

1614) 992-7754

D·II . . . DI l l.aWOIII»

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111-111-foOo

HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTIERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
All TYPES OF HOME
REPAI!I &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREI ESTIMATES

CALL 949-2969
11·23·'87· 1 mo.

BINGO
EAGLES ClUB-POMEROY, OH.

rHURU PM-EI 6,45

20 Hard Card Gcmu
S SO pt'r qomr
O~ER 110 Ptof&gt;ll
$65 prr giJm~
(~o&lt; ~II

•n&lt;IOJI1~~ ,~

Ad 111 ,,.,.,,

2 Hard Cord' FREE

w11h th1s ad and pui(hu~~
of mm1mum potkoqr.

limit 1

p~r

tuHomrr prr

Bmqo 1•uian.
Li(.

•oas.ol r.p. 'iii •i u

PUIUC lflYIIltU.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

614-662-3821

Public, Notice

Public Notice

RACINE •
FIRE DEPT.

Basham Building
EVERY

6:30

..... .. ,_
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n--•-.,..

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GUN SHOOT

SAT. NIGHT

____ _

!&amp;1_ .. , _

. . h C rt
and is PI!!Jdlng In 1 8 ou
of common Pleas of Meigs
County. Ohio, 46769 · Tho
prayer of the Complaint
demands judgment against
tho Defendants, Hltah Dorothy Smith, aka Hilah
Hil 11 h
Voorfl.as Smith, aka
Vorhos Smith, aka Hltah
Dorothy VorhBI. oka Hitah
Dorothy VooohBI, Geoatd A·
Smith, .Mary E. Derry, and
the. Unknown Hairs, Next of
Kin, Administrators. Executon, Deviaeea and Assigns
or Succa11ors, if any. of
td A
Mary E. Deny, Geoa
·
Smith, and Hilah Dorothy
Smith. aka HHIIIal h 0
orot~y
Voorhea, aka ah 0 orot Y
Vorhat. Presbyterian
Church of WilknviUe, aka ·
firJt Prnbyterian Church of
Wilkaaville, the Unknown
Successors, if any, to The

~-··--­

w -~~oo•­

CJU.ifierl pop1 cover the
joJiowing 'eiephone U"cltan&amp;e• ...

~=-~·

.. ·-......
·.................
·-

Public Notice

P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-7-tfn

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

1-----------1
8 •
'
USiness
s·_.,.,...,

992-7632

j

k

:!:"-"•,.;Vr:::l

Experience
necessary to
work in clinic.
Excellent
salary and
fringe

We believe so strongly. in the therapeutic -

power of these hours that we offer an ?~an
invitation ·to attend at the wakes and VISit&amp; ·
tions for friends and relatives .
If you have any questions about visiting pro·
cedures, please stop by and talk.
.
5-T H-STREET
(614!992-51'41

(6 14 ! 667 - ~110

MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

COOLVILLE . OHIO

8\

OPHTHALMIC
ASSISTANT

BISSELl

OPEN

CHRISTMAS
TREES

FOR

BUSINESS

Tag

JERRY''S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

Tree

Early
Christmas

WHITE Hill RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

747.2035

11 -3-1 mo . pd.

614-749.9:155

Your

For
Harley Haning
Residence
3597 5 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
2'/z miles from Fin Points.
ll -23-'87 1 mo .

· 11 -6 -1 mo .

Announcements

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

3 Announcements

....

A

kind

of

datinll

606-836· 2745.

Ron Diles or
Garv Cummins

~o

9.92 -6228

Middleport
Insured/ Licensed .

tACTORY CHOKES

11 · 4 ·1 mo.

mo.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

YOUN.G'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Add ons and remodeling

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concr&amp;te work
- Plumbing and el&amp;ctrical
work

(free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-lc

PAT Hill FORD
992-2196
Middleport. Ohio
1-13-tfc

.c ,.......;p,

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

949-2801
or 949-2860

PH.

'

NO SUNDAY
WE'RE STILL ALIVE!
Guarantnd the S.me for
11 Yean

FOR FUllER BRUSH
PRODUCTS
OR TO BE A REPRESENTATIVE

SUSAN COllMAN
742-2778
or
SHIRlEY COllMAN
742-2125
"It's A Grear Fund
Raiser"

mo.

DEN NY COl'! GO
Will HAUL
JUST CAll!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

GRAVEl· SAND
TOP SOil
Fill DIRT

\~

, IJ

Sale"
·
)
•Golf Clubs
Shirts - Shoes
•Trophies · Pl!)ques
Badges
•Name Tags for
Dogs.
JOHN TEAFORD
CHESTER, OHIO 45720
. 11 -20-'87-1 mo.

U

HOUSE

FOR RENT
I 07 LOCUST Sf.
POMEROY -98S-:iS61
KEN'S APPUANCE

UIL

E. Yost

Christmas f~ea market inside.
Nov . JO , Dec. 1.2 Fourth '"d
Crook St'. Syracuse. follow
signs. New and used misc.

New Credit Card. No ohe
r&amp;fuaedl Major Credit Cards. g_et
the fact1l Call today for report

and

application . 1 - 518 -459 ·

3734 eKt. C -1822 24 hn.
Christmas Trees! Homegrown

White and Scotch Pines. Weber
Farm in Rutland. Cell 614-742-

2143.
No Hu'nting on Gill Ridge on

properties of C . A. Gill, Mit chell
Cullen, George Gill without
written permiss io n. Violato,n
will be prosecuted .
NO HUNTING or tre1paaaing on

Raymond

Smith or Mary Smith.
Lower Five Mile Road.

4

Giveaway

Great Oaoe- 2 ·yeBJs old. Bleck.&amp;
white. Call 6,14-446 - 9442 .

White rabbit.
4287.

Call

614·4116·

1 Orange&amp; white male kitten. 8
wlc.s. old. Call614 -446· 1822.
3

Doe rabbits to giveawey.

614 -992-3B44.
6 month old- male and fflmale
kittens . Black, stripped . Female
dog. Call 614 -986·3884 .

2 cute smaU puppies for good
home. Part Oech!lhund. 304·
896·3646.
Puppi81 pert Garm•n Shepherd
part Doberman, phone 304·

SERVICE

675-4312.

985-3561

All Makes

can,

Junk

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerators

•Freezers
WE SELL USEO APPliANCES
•Dryers

.11·5 tfc

PIAN

on the Charles

No huntjng or trespass•ng on my

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repa~ Gas Tanks.

"Chrlst11ac

hunt ing or trespatling, d.-y

or night
Fermi.

land. Dale L. little.

THE
KOUNYRY CLUB

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Day or Night

different

sen/Ice. For information wri'le,
Kupid't Nest· P .O. Bo11 519,
Ironton, Ohio 46638 Of' cell

LESSONS

Y1u ·~~ Nem TDD Old

To lmn/
Teaching Thompson,
Schaum, Bastien '
From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For Information
DIANAIHLE

949-2890
1-24-'87-1 mo. pd.

phone 614- 446-

0945.

6

Lost and Found

.

LOST: Black Lab. 4 mo1. old pup.
Call 614 -446 -6432 .

FOUNO: Small black &amp; brown
male dog-we•ing a choker
collar . Vicinity of Cemdus.
LOST: Ladies wrist gold watch.·
In C&amp;ptain o ·s. Tabor's, Carp•
tland, or Haffelt'sarea. Reward

Call614· 367-7689.

LOST: Reward . Tr!Ning W•lkar
male Coonhound, was huntingThe Little Bull skin area. lnforma·
tion7 Please call 614 -266· 1&amp;17

. 304-676-1666.

Lost: Large white hound dog.
Brown head . pink nose . lo 1t in
Kyger area. Valued fam1ly
member. Reward . 614- 367·
0588 .

and proper.
larry E. Spencer.
You are required to
Clerk of Courts
THE
answer the Comolaint
By
Marlene
Harrison,
' COMMONINPLEAS
COURT
within twenty-eight (28)
Deputy
:
Of ·
days after the la1t publica· (12)
Record Those Special
1 . 8 . 15, 22 , 29; (1) 5.
• MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
tlon of thii Notice. which
Btc
Occasions on VHS
• •WILLIAM E. CRAY, at at
'II b
bl' h d
h
WI
e
pu
11
e
onceaac
Tope
!'
Plaintiffs
week for six (6) succeuNe
- va.'weeks. This last publication
•H olid av Parties
l HtLAH DOROTHY SMITH .
Wilt remain on tho 6th day of
•Weddings
' aka HtlAH VOOHRES
January. t988. and the
~
•School &amp; Church Programs
I- sM t T H , aka H I LA H
twenty-eight (28) dayo for ,.
•Sporting Even($
VORHES SMIT.H, aka
answer will commence on
•Annlversariaa
0
HI L A H 0 0 R 0 T Hy
that date.
~.!:Z!:!~:.!!!~W •Record Valuabl es,
VORHES. aka HILAH DO·
In caSe of your failure to
Docu ments
ROTHY WOORHES. et al.
answer or otherwise re•Transfer Photo Albums to
VHS Tape
D.f.n -~-nts
spond as requested by the
•Transfer Bmm and Super 8
Case No. 87-CV-303
Ohio Rules of Civil ProceMovies to Video Tape
J&amp;L BLOWN
' NOTICE BY PUBLICATION
duro, judgment. by default
•Create Training FilmS for
TO: Hilah Dorothy Smith.
will be rendered against you
INSULATION
Students and Emploven
• aka Hilah Voorhes Smith.
and for the relief demanded
aka HilahVorhea Smith, aka
in the Complaint.
REASONABlE RATES
VINYL &amp;
i Hilah Dorothy Vorhes, aka
Dated thia 25th day of
CAll
FOR FREE ESTIMATE
ALUMINUM SIDING
~ Hilah Dorothy Voorhes. Ge·
November, 1987.
•Insulation
·h M
E
t1 raid
Smlttho' Unknown
ary ·
11 H e Ip Wante d
•Storm Doors
Derry.A. and
11/ 16/'87 1mo. d.
•Storm Windows
Heirs
NeJit
of
Kin,
Ad
minis·
I
r::::'~r..a~~~;
Church
of
Wil·
I;;::====~~:;:=;
•Replacement Windows
', trat~s. Executors. Devisees I"
i
aka The First Presb· .
s
yterian Church of Wilke•·
..r...n
•New Roofing
' and Auigns or uccassors, ville, begrantedtoquiettitle
•, if any. of Mary E. Derry,
d
f
0:~/1-::_r
FRf£ ESTIMATES
Gerald A. Smith, and Hilah to real estate, an coats o
Dorothy Smith. aka Hllah this action; and all other
-JAMES KEESEE
CONSUMER MONITOR
~ Dorothy Voorhel, aka Hllah relief which shall be neces·
PH.
992-2772
SYSEMS
Dorothy Vorhes, Presbyter11-23-' 87-1 mo.
Home &amp; Auto
' ian Church of Wilkesville, 2 In Memoriam
! aka Firat Presbyterian -;;;:;;=r.;;,;;;;;;;~;::,
(6t4) 992 -371-8
Add on mini fuel computer
l Church of. Wilkesville, the 1
*VINYL SIDING
. system. Fits any car. Instant
~ Unknown Succeuort, If
·
n amory
mites per 1allon readout.
*ALUMINUM SIDING
• any .to The Presbyterian
RAYMOND SNIDER
Know your fuot consumption
Ch~och of WllkosvKie. aka
Who passed away
*BLOWN IN
from one block to hundreds of
Tho First Preobyterlan
DeC&amp;f"ber 1. 1986
INSUlATION
miles.
' Church of Wilkeaville.
Dav• ot lildn- •• oomeOYer
Commercial :
: You are hereby notified
us.
Store to Job Cost
that you have be~n named
SetJ"et t•• often ftow.
~enefits.
Taxi Service
; Oefendanu in the action
Memory keeps you n•r ua
SIDING CO.
Btfooe and after auto tune-up.
, entitle William Cray, at 11..
Though you left u• two.,. ..
New Homes Built
(Comparator) fill up your
· Plalntiffa. vs. Hilah Dorothy
-...
Send resume to Box
tank. and watchil sublract and
~ Smith aka Hilah Voorhe1
You w11 n.,.. be forQOttln
"Free Estimates"
display fuel consumed.
113 c/o Gallipolis
~ Smith: aka Hilah Vorhes
Nev• wll your memorv fide.
PH. 949-2860
UNDER '90
1 Smith, aka Hltllh Dorothy
And tlnd ""' thouglolo go
Doily Tribune, 82 S
Monitors for MCF-CCF used
l Vorhes, aka Hilah Dorothy
wandlring
or 949·2801
lor furnacrs , calibrated to
' 'voorhn. at al., Defendants. Tothei)IICiwh•evou•elaid.
3rd An., Gallipolis,
your gas meter.
No Sunday Calls
This action hal been asS•dly mined· by Wife.
Middleport-Cot., Ohio
3-11-tfn
Oh.
45631
~
.
aigned Case No. 87·CV-303
Oau lnerand Sons
1Ht·87·1 mo.
Hry

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
oMUZZLELOADtNG
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.
At. 124 Across frOm
Happy Hollow Rd.
RUTLAND

1/28/ tln

HOSKINS

Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

Veterans Memort· aolrHaotspl·tal
Mulberry Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohio

949-2168
4·22- 87-"n

ar

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

W (6 14) 446 -7619 or (614) 992 -2104
J:
z 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
- Gallipolis , Ohio 45li31

949~2263

11-•·••

PH. 9~~:_?~~~~

S
....,

Downspouts
G
Cl
·
utter eanmg
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

"'••• Doy •• honing•
915·4141
GENEaAL coMTunoas

Ref•••••••

~

Gutters

•KITCHENs · BATHs
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

FarM Equlp1111nt
Part• &amp; Ser1'J~t

: ~:~·:,~
~oo ....,, ,• ., •..,,., ,...,, ,.._ e •• .., ... ,oo, ..

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
, 10 AM - 9 PM .

mean stopping care. 1f you elect
to take no treatment , you will still
be cared for. You are not
rejecting he lp or rejecting your
doctor . You are only asking for a
different kind of help .
~Choices. T make choices that
are good for you, you need
Information . First, you need to
know the benefits . It may be
scary to ask, but you'll be less
a nxious
d d you
Wh know where
t f
• h when
you re ea e ·
at percen
people improve with he proposed
treatment? We call it "response
rate." How long might the
response last? ,How long does the
average response last? What if I
choose no treatment? These are
tough questions, but you need to
know what the benetlts are
before you can dec ide if they 're
worth the price.
Now that you know the benefits, you need to know the cost to
you. Wha t are the side effects of
(he treatment? Will I be hosptl altzed? How will I feellnbetween
treatments? Once you hve these
answers, you can c hoose what
you will do. Your choice may be
differen t from your friend 's
choice, even if you have the same
problem . I didn 't expect the firs t
patie nt mentioned earlier to take
treatment. I though the price was
too high . She made a choice that
was right for he1 . I expected the
gentleman to choose surgery. He
made a good choice for his life.
Where do you get the .answers
to your questions so you ca n
make your own choices? You get
them from your doctor and his
staff. You are paying your doctor
for his service. Part of his job is
to he lp you make decisions - not
to make decisions for you. No one
can decide for you.
Remember, thi s is your life,
your cancer, your body and your
choice.

Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
.farm Equipment
. Oeoler

···-- o_..._, ___

OPEN
SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM

POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter 186, Order of Eastern Star,
will meet Tuesday, 7: 30 p.m .. at
the Chesler Masonic Lodge Hall
in Chester . Officers should wear
chapter dress . Refreshments
will be served.

POMEROY - Vice president
nominations w!ll be made when

owned a nd operated Smith 's
Garage in Danville until his
r e tirement a few years ago.
Relatives and frie nd s a re cordially invit ed to join the couple iil
the cele bration Sunda y.

THE
VIDEO TOUCH

tlie Auxiliary of Aerie 2171,
Fraternal Order of Eagles,
meets at 7 p.m . Tuesday at the
hall.

7

Business Services

Calendar

New officers were elected at a
recent meetlng of the Mt. Moriah
Church of God Ladles Auxiliary ,
held · recently at the home of
Yolan Satterfield.
Elected were Harriet Laudermllt, president; Tessie Wolfe,
vice president; Anna Wolfe,
treasurer-secretary; Ailsa Lindley, reporter, and Patsy Laudermllt, flowers. Prayer and scriptures opened the meeting. Plans
were finalized for serving meals
to the deer hunters Nov. 30 to ·
Dec. 5 at the church parsonage, .
10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Annual Christmas dinner and
gift exchange was set for Dec. 15
at 6 p.m. at the parsonage. A
Christmas play wlll be held at 7
p.m. on Dec. 20.
Next meetlng will be held on
Jan . 26 at the home of Sherry
Harris .

Mrs. Dean Barnlty, of Pomeroy, visited at the home ·of Eun.le
Brinker on Sunday afternoon.
Da 11id Young and a friend, ·
Elizabeth Nash from Sidney, .
Ohio, spent the weekend with Mr ••
and Mrs . Edson Roush.
There were 54 present for
Sunday school on Sunday, Nov.
15.

MR. and MRS. Ji\MES A. SMITH

UMW ~olds recent meeting
Several holid ay ac tivities were
planned when the Racine United
Methodis t Wom e n met at t he
c hurch
Ponse tt ias will '· be sent al
Chr istm as time to shutin s. Som e
new equipment w! I! be purcha sed
for the kit c he n. a nd a holiday
dinne r pa rty will be held at the
cpurc h on Dec. 28 at 6:30 p.m .
folloWed by a program and S3g ift
p ~c h~J n;;('
11 · was also noted thai the
annual Chris tmas program will
be held on Dec. 20. Wednesday
members will meet a t the church

Mrs. Mary Moose, Eighth
District president , was guest
speaker at the American Legion
Auxiliary, Drew Webster Post 39.
Pomeroy, for membership .night
observed Tuesday at the hall:
Elen Rought, president, conducteq the meeting with the
junior tiny-tot color guard ad -·
vanclng the colors. Mrs. Moose
conducted a candlelight ceremony initiating the new officers.
Mrs . Moose was presented with a
gift.
Past president of the unit were
recognled by Mrs . Rough and
presented gifts from the unit.
Junior members were also honored and presented gifts.
Francis Hunnell presented Jan
Jenkins with a gift from the unit
in observance of her 25th wed·
ding anniversary. Thank you
notes were read .from Mr. and
Mrs . Robert Waldnlg for a
donation to their grandson, Joey
Holman , and from Mrs. Jan
Buskirk, activity director at the
Pomeroy Health Care Center, for
the unit 's donation of hyacinth
bulbs .
.
A Thanksgiving dinner,
planned by membership chair.
man, Francis Hunnell, was
served prior to the meeting. The
traveling gift was won by Loretta
Tlemyer .
·
Next meeting will be a Christmas dinner at Crow's Steak
House, 6:30 p.m. on Dec. 22.

Carmel notes

CCL meets

It's your choice

. Helping patlents make major
patient ·1 any t reatment - " be·
treatment decisions that are cause the results are so poor" .
right for them Is one of the She died six weeks after the
challenging aspects of my life as
graduation - peacefully.
a cancer surgeon. Each of us Is a
Choices. There a re no right or
unique Individual with different. wrong ciJolces -only choices that
goals , different fears and dif!er- suit your needs. All of us have
ent needs .
bee n making choices all our
Try to Imagine the follow ing lives. We want a new car. As we
d ialogues.
shop we figure what does this car
Doctor said, " You have a very offer and how much am I willing
bad cancer. but I canglve you to pay for those benefits . The
drugs X, Y, and Z. They may exact same thought process must
make you feel bad for several be used when deciding how you
days after you take them. You want your cancer treatment.
w!ll likely lose you hair, and What are tliey offering and how
you'll have to take them every much will It cost - not In terms of
three wee ks . If they war~, you money, but In terms of such
· may Jive for several months . If things as nausea, hair loss, lime
you don't take them, you may In tlie hopsltal, feeling rundown,
only live a few weeks ." What etc. No one but yu can then decide
would you do II this were you?
whether or not you are willing to
Doctor said, "Your cancer "pay the price" for the benefits
which was previously controlled offered.
has now spread to your live r . I
All too often, I see patlents who
believe I can remove the cancer say "I have no choice. The doctor
with a big operation that re- says I ahve to take the trea tmoves part of your liver. If the ment." These people are feeling
operation Is successful, you will totally helpless . They have given
likely live at least a couple of up their power to choose. No
years, and you may be able to be wonder they are depressed and
cured. If you don't have the despairing.
surgery, you w!l! likely live
Many people seem to view
several months. But you need to choosing no treatment as "giving
know that one of every ten up" or "quitting." Nothing could
patients who have this operation be farther from the truth. Choosdo not survive the operation." Ing no treatment Is a very valid
What would you do?
choice In many situations. Such a
In fact , patient No. 1 chose to choice may require more courtake the drugs . Her reason - "My ' age and more Inner strength than
granddaughter is graduating choosing treatment. Choosing no
from high schoollo three months, treatment Is not.quitting.
I want to be there." And patient
Not only do you have the right
No. 2 chose no surgery. "I raised to choose treatment Initially but
my daughter alone- she Is having you may choose to stop treather first baby ln two months . I ment at any time. If you find that
can't take any chances until after the price you're paying is too
that."
high for the benefit you're
Are these the choices you receiving, you are totally justiwould be made? There are some fied to choose to stop treatment.
who would not have offered Stopping treatment does not

Legion Auxiliary
makes plans

The Daily

Ohio

Cancer: Myth/ Reality

December 1, 1987

====================~~~~-

Beat. of the Bend

By BOB HOEFLICJI
The Racine Merchants Association will be staging its annual
:christmas pa•rade at 3 p .m . on
Dec . 19.
Lineup of the
parade will beat
.2 p.m . at the
· junior high
:school. Anyone
:wishing to sign up for partlc!pa· tion shou ld contact Ann Layne,
949-2619; Joan McLain at 9492140, or Br uce Wolfe.
The parad e is more of less a
• community project with many
· organtza t!o ns and Individuals
involved. This year tile Ladies
Auxiliary will be si nging carols
in various locations beginning on
Dec . 19 through Christmas. On
Dec . 22, the group will sing at the
Senior Citizens Ce n te.r and
anyone wishing . to join in the
s ing ing - and you don 't have to
be a member - is invited to do so
at anytime.
Santa Claus, of course, will be
the featured celebrity in Racine
and he and Mrs. Cla us will
clstribu te treats to the c hild ren
followin g the parade. He will
• sjJend the remainder of the
holiday season in various stores
in Racine.
The parade will feat ure prizes
for the three bes t float s and
merchants will again stage their
home decorating contest with
prizes to be g iven for the best
.non-religious and religious deco"rations. To enter that event , call
949-2800 or 949-2140.

Tuesday, December 1, 1987

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

J&amp;L

INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
-

FJ:IEE ESTIMATES
PH.

FOR RENT

'
VILLAGE GREEN

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

992-3711

tt-23-'17 t mo. pd.

992-2772

1-23-'87-1 mo.

BERRY lASKEY
Country Gifts
and Decor
SIXTH ST., SYRACUSE, OH.

SALE
Cross Stitch Supplies
- 50% Off
Basket Supplies
20% O(f
Discount on Selected Items
HOURS : Tueo. -Sat .
10 .am to 6
.1

Lerga rea l fluffv ,white Samoyed .
wearing blu&amp; co llar. 304 -675·

3386.

l.OST Female Siamese cat. Gill
Ridg e- Aol li n1vil le , A&amp;ward,
phone 304 -896 -3 435.
LOST sma ll black dog, Pek A
Poo. OJicinlty of Sand H1ll Rd.
REWARD , 304-676-1664.

6 head o f crou breed heif.-s ,
suayed in the vi cinity of Camp
cbnlev and TNT area. Contact
Atmer Matheny, 3 04 -458·
1768,
LOST: Be tween Hender1on Crab
Creak &amp; Southside - Coon
Hound · Bit~ck
heed &amp; wh•l e
body, tots of little black spots ~lf
s&amp;fln pl easec•ll30 4-676 -6469.

7

Yard Sale

····· ..Gallrpolis··---··· ··
&amp; Vicinity
Inside Yard Sale: 2 18 Third A....,.,
Wed.· Dec . 2nd, Thu rs • Dec.
Jrd, Fr idS.,. - Dec. 4th. l.ou of
Christml'lis items. clothes and a

little of everything else.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy .ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
1tafltMitslofl
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
Alto

6-17-tfc

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Dec. 1, 2 . 8 :30·3 :00. Centenary
Townhouse . New crt~rts,
ctothes. Loh of goodiea.

52500

..... ,.Pt 'Piiiiisiiiif .....

$5.00 Extra
for Skinning

&amp; Vicinity

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734

.. -·····-·························
Garage sale. Big Xmas sale at the
Rummage room, Apple Grove.
1tJ off on all stuffed t oy s.
304 -676 ·2635.

Christmas Flea Marke\ in1id'e.
Nov. 30, Oec. 1·2. 1st trail If oo
lucas lane. New mdu. 9 , 1.

�•
.

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel
8

LAFF-A-DAY

44

Apartment
for Rent

61 Household Goods

Gra ciou• living. 1 and 2 bed·
room llpartmants It Village
Manor and Riverside Apartmenta in Middleport. From
f216 . inc:tuding utilities. Call

Rick Pearson Auctioneer licensed In Oh io an d Welt Vir ginia. Es tate, a ntiq ue , f wm. li qu ~
detlon sal ... 304 -773-6786.

6'1 4-992-7787. EOH.

9

Wanted To Buy

Clean 2 bedroom apt. in New
Haven. Also space f or restau·
rent. aerobiCI, day care. furnl·
tura. etc. Call814-992 -7481 .

We pay c•h for late m odel ci N n
uaed cars.
Jim M fn k Chw.-Oids Inc.
Bill G ena J ohn son

Nice llpt. Hudd llpproved. New
c..-pet. clean, Pt. Pleasant. 614-

614-446 -3672

992-6858.

TOP CAS H pai d for '83 mo del
and n BWer used can . Smjth
Buick-Porrtiac. 191 1 Eastern
Aw, Gallipolis. C&amp;ll 614-446·

2 bedroom ilpt. e135
utilities. 614-992·6732.

plus

•

2282.

3 room ept. ior n;mt Parttv
furnished . 614-992·6908 .

WANT ED T O BUY: U sed w ood

,.&amp; co•l heatara. Swam' s Furniture, 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipoli1.
Ca ll 614-446-3159.

1 and 2 bedroom ap1. Cllll
Cleland Reaty 614. 992· 2259 .

t o buy· !ta nding timber.

3 room apt . Panty furnlahed .
614· 992 -5908 .

Buyi ng daily gold, ailver c oins,

APARTMENTS, mobile homes.
houtea. Pt. PleMant and Gllllipolis. 614-446-8221 .

W an t~:~d

Coli 61 4 · 379 · 27~8 .

ri ngs, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins, large currency . Top pr j.
cos. Ed BurkM1 Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. ,Middleport. Oh. 6149 9 2-3 476 .

"Dear there's a chance of

'
rain today,
so you'd better
~ear your lightning rod."

old jars. rings, pictures. any new
glats, Fent on, Imperial. Call
Bri an l ee 614 - 385- 5099 .
Want ho od, top and w indshield
fra mtt for 1979 Jeep CJ5 .

304-675-5909.

Emplovrnenl
Services

'

11 -Help Wanted
Apply in per son - Hair Stylist.
Hair Happening- Silver Bridge
Plaza,
Attention Beaut icians-Tired of
w orking for someoneelse7 Rent
a station fro m us an d be your
ow n boss Extra large shop in a
good location. Call for details.
614 -44 6- 370 3.
Matu re lady to live in with widow
with pay . light houseWork. Ca ll
614-446- 1023.
: Governm ent J obs. $16.040 , S59,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
. area. 805- 687-6000 Ext. R9805 tor current repo federal
'list.
:Arcadia Nursing Center Is now
acceptin g applicatiOns for porttime AN 's and LPN ' s. Coni pete·
tive wages . Ex.c etlent benefit! .

Apply 9-5. 614-667-3196.

' AVON - All areas. Call Marilyn
Welfller 304 -882-2 645 .

Cottage in. Inglewood, Fla. clo1e
to btnich. Call aftw 6 :00 PM·

1-81 3·967·6944,

3 SR . Rllnch·attaehed garage. In
town . G o od loclition. Low
$40's. Call aft• 5:30 PM ,

614-446-1408.

Five lots on cornM with 4
bedroom house. Carpeted, full
bllsement. central heat, fir•
place, garage. Call 304-8S2·

2775 .

7 room brick home. Upper
Mason. Carpet stove, ref . dou·
ble g..-age. 304-773-6397.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
S 1.00 (U repair) foreclosures:
tepos. tax deUquent propertiea.
Now selling your area. Call
1·315-736 -7367 ext. 2P -WV- H
for current list. 24 HAS.
·

3855.

Pliny Truck Stop Rest., Rt. 35;
now accepting applicatiOns for
WllitreU·CO Ok. 304 -757 -835 7.
10 :00 am till 6:00pm.
Giovann i' s Pizza taking applica-tions Thursday morning 9 :00 till
11 :00. 2322 Y~ Jackson Ave ..
Point PI easant. W . V 11.

12

Situations
Wanted

Baby sitting in my home. Newborn and up. Rutland and
sur rounding ar eas. Experienced.
Call614-742 -2390 anytime.

Baby sitting in my home. any .
sh1ft or hou rs. Experienced.
304-88 2· 35 74.

13

Insurance

Call us ror. you r mobil e home
insurance : Mill er In sur an ce.
30 4 · 88 2 -2 146 . A l so: au to ,
home, lif e. health.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

.,
I NOTICE I
THE OHI O V'A LLEY PUBLI S HING CO . reco mmend s th at you
do busin ess wit h peopl e you
know . an d NOT t o send money
through t he mail until y ou hll'lle
in~o~est igated th e off ering.
Atten t ion BeautiCI&amp;n&amp;·Tir ed oi
worki ng for somoone else? Rent
a st ati on from u s lind be your
bou. Extra lar ge sho p in a good
locat ion. Call for dttta ils -614-

TAX &amp; TITLE DOWN Sale on all
used hornest Free Detivery . We
Finance. Call Todayl W8 hBYe
30 . ELSEA HOME . Centers.
614-772-1220 or Ohio Watt·
800·826 -0752.
14x66 Windsor. Excellent condition. All applicance1. woodburner , AC , large porch .

S10.000.

~oil

614-379-2768

1978 Viclorian Deluxe 67'x14' .
2 BR ., 1 bath, carpeted . Gas
heat &amp;. sto~o~e . New 42 gal.
electric water heater. Nice. Call
after 6 :00 or Fridltt' for appointment. 614· 446·2167.
1986 Flee-twood 60x14 mobile
home and lot. 2 bedroom, all
electric. underplnnin9.. Includes
16x24 ft. garage. Will consider
selling seperate. LoC8ted in
Rutland. 614 -742 -2695 or 1-

454-1380.

1973 mobile home, 2 bedroom
on rented lot. 304-876 -3783.
1973 1 2x60 Holty Pllrk in Pt.
Pleasant . $6,000 Firm. Ph.

304-458-1059.

34

Business
Buildings

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown P1 . PleBSant. Stores,
offices. A -One Real Estate.
Cllrol Yeager. Broker. Call 304-

675-6104.

749 Third Ave. Presentty The
Gift Shop. 1600 sq. ft . Commerci al or warehouse. Parking on
1ide. Adjacent to Third&amp;. PineSt.
Call 614 - 446 - 2362 for
appointment.

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

In Gallipolis on Pine St. Vacant
lot with water end sweage. No
mobile homes perm itted .
$6 ,000 . Cell after 6:00 PM-

614-694-3833 .

16 acrM for sale in Rutland. Call
T.O.Stewllrt . 614 -742-2421 .
For sale: 90x1 10 lot in Twin
Cedar addition. New Haven,
W.Va . 14600. 1irm. 304· 88232 06.

2 Building lots- 1 112 acres each

23

with county water. •Jerry• Run
Rd . Apple Gro-..e. W. Va . Call
30 4-576 -2383 .

Rentals
Bob Cline Taxidermy.~ Member
W. Va. Taxidermy Assoc. Rt . 2
Box 782, Point Pleasa nt. W . Va.
304-67 5 -1448 .

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

4 BR , firep l ace. f u ll bllsem ent. 3
mi. 10. of Gallipolis. 13 4.900,
Ca ll Dav s- 614 -44 6-1 615, after
5:00· 446· 12 44 .
Bran d n8'N 3 BR . near Gal lipolis
locks on A1 7 . 2 car garage. nice
lot. Immediate possession. Will
consider trade tn of Mobile
homfl, prop6r'ly. etc. Bargnin
pnced. Call 614 - 446~ 803~ M od ern 3 BR . hou se. Patriot•.
Oh1o. W ill help finlln ce. Call

614-446-1340. 446-3870.

1979 14x 7 0 nice mobile home.
1 .3 acr es. 2 b ath s. g ard~m tub.
f~replace. front porch. 8 14,90 0 .
Cllll 61 4·266- 670 2.
8 room house for nle. 1A a cre~
lend. 3 or 4 bedroom. 1 V2 bath.
csrport, alumirw m siding. Loclrtad m Rutland. 614 · 7 4 2·
2595 or 1 454 1380

2 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 car
gNage, lwei lfJ1 on Rt. 33 .
Sw imming pool. aatelite, clo M
to M&amp;lga H igh. Ca ll 614· 992·

3254.

Two bedroom hou 118 with garage. No Pats. 304-676 -1400.

Two bedroom house half mile
out Jericho Road. call after

41

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Homes for Rent

2 BR . house. Stove &amp; Tefr ig.
fum. locat ed 1928 112 Chest nut
St, S1 75 mo. 876 dep. Call

614-446-3870.

'

5 roo m houte-Fint Ave .. Gall~
polis. Off stree1 parking. No
pet1. Ref. &amp; Dep . Ca\1614 -266·

1629.

3 SR . house &amp; garage. A -1 Reel
Esta te, Carol Yeager- Broker.

304-675-6104.

Unfurnished 2 BR .. refr.ig, &amp;
stove . lower Second. Ref. &amp;
dep. Call 6 14 -446-3 949 or

•

2 Sr. trailer-cable. Beautiful river
view. FoSter's Mobile Home
Parle. Call 614-446 -1602.
s·pacious 2 BR . Winda.or has
dining room. 1 Va baths. Upp8f
Rt. 7 , Water paid. Call614 -246 5818 .
3 bedroom, 14x70 Mobile
Home. 1 Vz b8th. newty carpmed .
Nice. Middleport, Oh. 614·992 -

5858

2 bedroom mobile home. $150
plus utilities. 614-992 -6732.
Trailer near Big Wheel· lllurel
Clift Rd . 12x65, 2 BAS ., 1%
baths. Call 614-992 -2272 .
y-Jould like to provide nice home
for elderly peraona. Independence. privacv.full maintainence-.

Call 614·949-2969.

44

for Rent
1 and 2 bedroom apartment s for
rent.
Basic rent for l bdr.,
S 1 83.00; 2 bdr., $219.00. Also
required a S200.00 security
deposit. CONTACT: Jackson
Estates Dept. Ph 446 -3997
Equal Housing Opportunity.
2 BR . apts. 6 closets, kitchenappl. furnished. Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpst,. nttWty
painted, deck. Regency, Inc.
Apt&amp;. Call 304 -676 -773S or

675-5104.

Furnished llpt. next to librllf'(.
One pr,ofenional adult only .
. Parking. Call 614 -446 -0338 .
Nice private llpt . OuiM . Near
HMC. One adult only. No pett.
Stove, refrlg .. drape~ . $225 a
mo. Ref. required . Call 614446-4782.
15 Court: 2 br.• 1 Va bath, large
living area. JN - W carpet, new
kitcft.en, dishwasher. wired for
phone &amp; tv. Glla heat. P&amp;rklng.
$350-mo. plu1 utilities. Dap. S.

Ref. Call614-44e-4926.

Downtown· Modern 1 BR ..
complete kitc hen. carpet, llir,
electric heat. Call 614- 4464383 -davl. 446- 0139 -even . &amp;
weekendt .
Furni1hed: 4 rooms &amp; bat h.
Clean. No pets, ACiults only. Ref.
&amp; _dep. required . Call 614-446·

1519.

Modern 1 BR apartment. Call

614-446-0390.

Renewty redecorated . Very n ice
apartments in downtown Galli·
polis. 1 &amp; 2 BR .- unfurni1hed.
•econd floor, from 5176-•225 .
Dep. &amp; referenees required . Call
eve. 614-446 -2325 or 4464249 .

2 BR . furnished apt. Adultt only.
Nice loc81ion. Call 614 -446-

2404.

-~

0
0

Magnovu 25 inch flOor m'odel
cotor TV, General Electric porta ble, phone 304-676 -2816.

675-2457.

•

•e&amp;o.

Space for Rent

Office Space for rent . E ~ecel.
downtown Gallipolis loclltion.
Inquiries call614-446-4222 .

Buy 8 T~nlng Tab181 and receive
ll .,., Suntan bed. Off• good
unt'lt-Oec. 30. 1987. Call C~rib­
bean Tan1.lnc.. 304 -422 ·4200.

Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or less.
920 4th .. Gallipolis. $75 . Water
paid. Call614·446 -4416 after 7
PM .
.
'

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park."
Route 33. North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Call 614 -9927479 .
Space for small uaile.-s . All
hook- ups. Cable. Atso effi ciency
rooms. llit and cable. Mason,
W.Va . Call304-773-5651 .·
Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, 304 -675 -

3073.

47 Wanted to Rent
Wllnt to rent house in the
country, h~r~~e pets. Call Marie
after 7pm. 304 -773 -9689.
Want To Ran~ House in the
country, hawe pets . Cllll Mllri8
after 7 p.m .• 304-773 -9589,

For Lease

Merchandise
51

Household Goods

So1u and , chairs priced from
S395 to $995 . Tables 950 and
up to S 125. Hide--e·beds S390
to ·8695. Recliners S225 to
S375 . lamps $28 to $126 .
Dinettes $109 and up to $496 .
Wood table w -6 chllirs S286 to
S796. Desk S100 up to $376 .
Hutches $400 and up. Sunk
bed• complete w -mattrosses
t295 and up to $396 . Baby beds
$110 . Mattresses or box springs
full, or twin S68. firm S78, and
888 . Oueen sets S225, King
$360 . 4 drawer chest $69 . Gun
cablnots 6 gun. Gas or eiACtric
range 8375 . Baby mllttresses
836 &amp; ·845 . Bed frames S20,
$30 &amp; King frame 850. Good
selection of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets. haadboards S30
and up to S65 .
90 DaVI same as cash with
appro11ed credit . 3 Miles out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru ~at . Ph . 614 -446 -

0322.

PARSON 'S FURNITUR E
Just arrived· 3 truck loads· New
living room suites; ntrN wood 6
pc. livtngwood suites. 6399 .96;
chest of drawers; tw in mat·
t resses, S95 set; mi crowave
oven stands.

THE WORKIN G
MAN "S FRIEND

Valley- Furniture
New and used furniture and
appl i cance~ . Cal l 6 1 4 -446 7572. Hours 9 -5.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrigfll'ators,
rllnges . Skaggs Appliances,
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
CrMt M otel. 614 -446 -7398.

SURPLUS ARMY . DENIM.

53

Antiques

1- - - -- - - - - - Antique marble-slab dresser.
Ant ique oak cupboard. Both
excellent condition. Call 614-

367-7260.

ANTIQUES. Bv y or Sell. Riverine Antiques, 1124 East''Main
St. Pomeroy. Hours: Mon ..
Tuos.-Wed . 10 a.m . to 8 p.m.
Sun.· 1 p.m.· 6 p.m . Bychllnce
or appointment. Rus1 Moore

61 4-992-252e.

54

RENTAL ClOTHING (Carh.ts
10 per cent over COlt) . Original
army camoul.ge. H , 0 . "S.m"
SomttVIII e'a, Old Rt. 21 Eut
Ravanawood, Fri, Set, Sun,
Noon 8 :00 pfh. Other dav• after
5 :00pm. 304-273-6666. lnsu·
lated cemouflage coveralls

825.00.

Firewood 835.00 load. delivered
Muon County and Gallipolis.
Cu.tom cut and rush order•

040.00. Call 304·895-3448.

12' 1mokad meat CMe. ExceHent
condition. $1260. 304-676-

Misc. Merchandise

Callllhlln ' s Used TireShop. Over
1,000 tirn, aizes12, 13, 14, 15,
16, 16.6. 8 milea out Rt. 218.

Coll614·256-6251 :

Plastic cistern state approved,
plastic septic tanks, plastit
culvens. mmal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jackson, Oh. 614 -286 -5930 .
Quality firewood. all hardwood,
for sale. S25 a pick· up load . Call

1166.

Reali1tic am -fm CMsette ttareo,
876. EJCC. Cond. Se..-s 6 hp,
Go-Art. E~~:c . Cond. 1160. 304·

675-7436.

Jeep Engine 304, 8300 . complete. Jeep part1. Ca11304-676-

2635.

14x70 trailer for rant . 304-876·
7271 .
White baby bad with manr111
$20 . • White eheat of drawers
$10. Dressing table 120. 304·

614-357-0669.

882-3574.

Sears eurcise bench &amp; weight
set Hike newl, $130 . 2 Sets
weights &amp; trimming bett. Pierre
Carden space sa~o~er, stereo
system (newl. $170, won as
prize. 2 yr. old large telescope
with different eye lenses. $100like new. paid S 269 n8\o'll . Call
after 8 :00 6l4-379-2183.

Living room suite, draperia~.
metal ahelves, record pl-ver,
record1. All good condition ,
Other items. 304-176-6658.

HALF PRICEI Flashing arrow
signs 8299 1llghted, non-arrow
$2891 Unlighted $2491 Free
letters! See locally . Call todayl
Factory: 1 (800) 423·0163,
anvtlme.

23" color TV, 8160; 16" BMX
Bike, 845. 304-676·2343 .
1982 ton truck. runa good.
$200.00 . like new freezer 25 eu
ft 8300.00. Fencing suppli81
cheap . 30•-896-3856.

•ao.oo

Mixed firev.oood.
dump
truck load. delivered. 304-676-

2903.

55 Building Supplies

Sheepskin lined coat. size 42 l .
$50 . Electric heater. $30 . Call
614-643-2487. if no answer,
keep trying .

Building Materials
Block, brick, aewer pipaa. win ·
dowa, lintela. etc. Claude Win·
ten, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614 -

2905.

Cu&amp;tom deer cutting. Cut &amp;
wrapped , $26 . Over 10 yellrs
experienee. Call 614-446·
3695.

AM · FM·Eight track 1tereo
-phone and cassette converter.
Groat cond . $200 . Call 614 -

I

245 -6121 .

Will take any give away furniture
in good shape. C811 614- 256·
6732 or 446· 9640 .

Wanted

to

Buy

Now bUying shell corn or e.com . C.ll forlates1 quote•. River
City Farm Suppty, 814-446-

63

Livestock

Duroe Bores for bet1tr rate of
gain. RJg• Bentley -513 -5842398, F bina. Ohio.
Reg . Tamworth Bore. Call after
6:00 PM-614- 246 -9224.

AKC Colli• Beautiful female. 7
mot, housebroken, $200. AKC
Dachshund puppies-miniature.
8126. Small Pomeranian, f&amp;mllla., red, apayad , 2 yra. 1126.
Will hold any for Christmas. Call

About 2.000 bales mixed gra11
hBV, S1 .00abale.Call814-446-

Transportation

AKC Chlhl)ahua pupa. Call614 -

6847.

Natur al gas cook sto~o~~ 1 Works
gooQ . 614· 992 -2866. ·

Three AKC Registered German
Shepherd 1amale pups, 1150.00 .

each. .304-ee2-2077.

57

197S Rally Sport Camero. LT ·
350, T-top, air. spokemags. dual
exh .. st. cruise. SHARPI No
Trad81. 12796, neg. Call 614 -

1974 White Corvette Stingray.
Call 614· 446·1766.
1981 Honda Ctvic-- 4 dr. Sedan.
Auto.. inter. wiper1. AM -FM Cau .. reMdef.. PB. 81625. Call

614-44e-1eoe.

1985 300 2X Tu•bo. 23.000

milaa. Auto ., T -top. 81llck over
gold. Mint cond. Call 614 -446·

8126.

New ln1ormationl Jeeps, Can,
4•4' s seized In drug reidl . Buy
from 8100. Call for facts today!

Kimbel con1oleoak plano. excel·
lent condition, •1 ,600. SertoUt
inqulrl• only, 304-876- 1326.

1969 Station Wagon. Converted
to truck . 31 8 engine. Auto .
Trans. 61•· 992 -2866.

8939. .

1981 Flrebird Elpri1. Auto ..
AM·fM cauette. air. Great
condition. $3800. Firm. 814-

992-2602.

1966 Antique Ford LTD . leu
th1n 33 ,000 mllae. Call 614-

992-5938 ., 614-992·6872.

Farm Equipment

CROSS&amp;. SONS
U .S. 36 Wen Jeckaon. Ohio.

814·281·6461 .

•

Metsey Ferguson. New Holland
Bush Hog Sal• &amp;. Service. Ove;
40 used tractora to choose from
&amp;t complete line of new &amp; . used
equipment. Larget1 •taction in
S.E. Ohio.
~

" I'd like to report a missing person ...
unfortun ately, he's still here!'

Utility building spl: 27'x36'.S'
1_- 13' x8 ' sliding dOor, 1· 3 ' ..,~
vtea door· ••444. Iron Horee

el&lt;tn. Coli 114·332·9745.

We'P LI!CE Tb
opt:N A Jo!NT
AccouNT wrrH

19SI Honda CLIO, v8fy good

cond. $550.00. 304-675-8182.

1986 tour wheal.- 125 Honda
$900 .00 . Phone 304· 675-

2961 .

DoNAL.t&gt; Tf("UMP!

•..

:

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

\\

..

I'- -I
" IMI ~ HUo.N \\--o\.tw£.,S

ALLEY OOP

Budget Transmisaions: Uaed and
rebuilt, all types . Guarantee 30
d.,. • . Call 614-379·2220 or

t'M BEGINNIN' TO THINK THIS

GAilFRYI I CAN'T GET AWAY
FROM THIS DANG CRITIER!

.JOB CAN BE DANGEROUS TO

304-675-4230.

Truck topper for Chew-y short
w .b., leer Alum . 8200. Set of
full running boards $60. 304· .
675-1577 or 675 -2714 .

Serv1ces
Home
Improvements

(

· BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

EEK

Unconditional liflrtime guarantee. Local referencea furnished.
Free estimatea. Call collect

Ronou~ Allonco. 4 OR .,
Auto. trans., AM -FM radio .
approx. 32,000 mil•. $4,000.
C1ll 814-992-2892 .

19e6

WHATEVER 1-\A.PPf.U.D
lD lH£ FAMILY ..---.L..J.....
OF MAIJ1'

1·614·237·0488. diV o• nigh&lt;.

RogeraSasement
Waterproofing.

WHAT

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair. part1, and supj)li81. Pick
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum
Chpaner, ona half milt up
Georg• Cre-'c. Rd . Call 814·

FAMILY?

446 -0294.

2464.

IN THE
STOCK

MY DAD LOST
EVERY NICKELHE' HAD IN
THE WORLD.

MARKET?

NO, ON T14E 13U5.. . HE
LEFT HIS o:?LLECTION
OF OLD NICKELS THERE .

576-2903.

82

Plumbing

CARTER "S PWMeiNG
ANO HEATING

..

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wir·
1':'8· New service or repairs.'
L1cen1ed electrician . Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical 304-

AN' THEN JANE¥ iHROWED
THAT BOX OF CHAWKLET
601\1801\15 RIGHT IN OL'
CECI~S FACE

D~llard Water Service: Pools.
C1sterns, Wells. Delivery Anytime. Call 614·446-7404 -No
Sunday calls .

J &amp; J Water Servict. Swimming
pools, cisterna. well1 . Ph . 614·

245-9285.

R_ &amp; R Water Service. Hom&amp;
Cllters, wells, pools f~led . Formerly James Boys Waters.Call

cl F16

•

•

•

Ie
•

IT16 AMAZIN~ HOW
I KEEP WALkiNS

INIO TH05ETHING5.

trunk.

of today' s news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (t :00)
IHI Howl
fl) (l) Berlny Hill
10:20 III Billy Graham Cruuda
10:30 CD Celebrity Chell
(!) NHL Hockey
(!) The Story of Engllah Is
English going to be brokon
Into other languages as Latin
was?
..
Cll Hogan'e Harooa
11:00 CD Remlnglon Sleele

f\.ORA,.OOWMY~I~ 1$

100 j,lOT,., CAt-\ lOU COOl. IT ·

OFf..

Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service
Pools, cisterna, wells. Call 614:

e

446-3171 '

II aJ ill 0

Wllt1erson ' t W11 ter Htullng,
rea•oneble rates. immediate
2 ,000 gallon delivery, ci•tern 1,
pools. well. etc. call 304· 578-

2919.

Upholstery

PEANUTS
Tf.IAI-IK '(OU, MA'AM .,
WE APPRECIATE IT...

T~E'&lt;'ve CAflCELEt'
5NOOP'('s KHEE SUR&amp;ER'i'

DID THE'( 5A'( WI-W?

(J)

Complete _lho chuckle QUOiod

by ftll 1ng 1n th e m1ssmg words
you develop fr om step No. 3. below.

.

.

•

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUAlES

II I

BRIDGE

NORTH

aDI Ill il2l

Q5l News
IIJ) Nova C
11J1 Moneyline Current
repons -on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
1!J Jaffaraonl
fl) Cll Love Connection
t1:20 Cil MOVIE: A Gathering of
iragles (NRI 1I :55)
11:3011 (2) Bllkelball Kentucky
vs Clnclnnall
C1J Cheers
flt (I) Hlghtllne Q
(!) Sign· Off
IIDl I!J Magnum, P.l.
il2l S(IOIIa Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

1.1-1·11

.A32

-----=~~~-=~~---0

.7642

James Jacoby

•u

t K 9 43

Let them
ruff air

WEST

.J986S .

'J l085

• Q 10 8 8

• as 3 2

.• QJ 10 7

One of the obvious advantages of
having a trump fit is that small
trumps can be used to dispose of side·
suit losers. When the defenders'
trumps split badly for declarer, he
must be careful that the defender with
long trumps does not use them to
wreck declarer's prospects. It is par·
ticularly important that a defender
"beats the air" when he trumps in
early.
South won with dummy's ace of
"Clubs and played A-K of hearts. That
gave him the bad news that East had a
sure trump trick. He now played his
king of clubs and ruffed a club. Then
he played the ace of spades and a
spade toward his hand. East could not
'gain by now trumping in, since South
would simply play low from his hand
and claim the remaining -tricks. East
discarded and South won the king of
' spades. A diamond was played to dum·
my's king, and another spade was led
from dummy. East was in the same
spot. When he discarded again, declar-

•

EAST
.10

.9

By James Jacoby

SOUTH
.KQH
'A K Q3

tA5

.K 6 4

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

,

West

Pass
Pass

Pass

North

3.s•

Pass

'.

East
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: • Q
r won the queen of spades, led his last
spade and ruffed it in dummy. East
could overruff, but that was his only
trick.
Note the difference if declarer carelessly plays a high spade first from his
hand. Now, when he leads a spade to
the ace in dummy, East will ruff in,
and declarer will be left with an even·
tual spade loser as well as a trump
loser.

~tMMJ'Otet'
by .THOMAS JOSEPH

1

disappears from Harry 's car

THE GRIZZWELLS®

a -1"

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Admire - Flirt - Climb - Drowse - UMITECi
· I've often found that the trouble whh speaking one'o; iiilnd
Ia thai what you can lalk about Is LIMITED.
.

9:00 (]) 700 Club
II (2) Q5l The Presidency:
The Arsl Debate Originating
from tho Kennedy Cantor In
Washington, D.C., Tom
Brokaw will moderate the
debates. Democratic and
Republican candidates will
each debale for an hour. (L)
(I) flt (J) Moonlighting
Maddie"s having a baby;
mlnh Is tempered by David"s
disappearance. Q
IIDl Ill Q2l Jake and the
Fatman McCabe doubts
blindness of B woman
seeking revenge on her

The Lew and Harry
McGraw A corpse
disturbingly appears and

304·675-6370.

1 986 Monte Carlo Luxurv Sporl.
V-8, all power 1eata, windowt.
etc; 11,000 mil•, $9,000.00
fir~. 304-675 -6084 after 4 :00.

$800.00. 304-675·1247.

•

In it to pad

6 UNSCRAMBLE
ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

a

i .Ill~

General Hauling

Mowrev' • Upholstering tervlng
trlapuntyarea22years. The belt
in furniture uphol•tering. Cell
, 304 ~ 675-4164
for free
ettimat1111 .

4

T El E IF

e

overcome a creative block .

'

'75 Chev. Malibu, V·8 auto, 2
door. h•d top, good cond.

22 4
1__ __ · - - - - ' - - - - -

II

7:05{1] Andy Qriffllh
7:30 G aJ Hollywood Squeres
(!) Hooater Hyaterta 1986-87
Championship Season (R)
Ill (I) Judge
l!al Wheel of Fonune Q
il2l Crossfire (0:30)
Ill C Q5l Jeopardy! Q •
IHI Bllmey Miller
Cll WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35ill Sanford end Son
8:00 CD Croasbow
II (2) Matlock Top T.V.
producer Is accused of killing
a network"s programming
chief.
(!) College Beaketball
(J) Who's the lou? Tony
vows to get even wllh the
obnoxious kid who
rear-ended 111s van. Q
(!) MOVIE: ll's a Wonderful
Llle (NRI (2:09)
1!DJ Q5l Billy Graham
IIJ) Great Momenta from
Novo This special hits the
high points In science from
lhe past 14 years. Relive
moments such as exploding
volcanoes and clips of the
Voyagerspacecraft.Q
11J1 Prlmenews Wrap ups of
tho day"s world news and in
depth feature repona. (I :00)
Ill il2l Billy Graham Denver
Crusade
IHI Geraldo Uve Modern
Love
Ill Cll -.n Love: Scafed
Sex In America Gorajdo
Rivera examines :ehanQing
social and sexual practices
occurring In our country
Ieday. Guests include Hugh
Hefner and lhe Surgaon
Genoral. (2:00)
B:OSIII HBA Besketbell
• 8:30 CD Bunartly Island
a (J) Growing Pelna Carol is
given an A Plus grade she
knows she doosn't dosorve.

IIJI Evening Newa A wrap up

87

i

tJ72

interviews with top
newsmakars and celebrities.
9:30 IIJ) Nova Uncover the
mysteries of the oldest
shipwreck aver oxcavated. Q
10:00 (]) Streight Talk
(1) 'NCAA Fine I Four
Hlghllghta Indiana, North
Carolina, Virginia, and LSU
IT)
'
(I) flt (J) thlrtyoornothlng
Michael and Elliot struggle to

446-4477

85

I:::

1-lr---,:E=-;C~MT.Ai---:;C--1,
_,.!~ ·Spinster aunt to bikini clad
~ Is 1 :: ·niece;_: "Where did you get that
I-L.I -L.-L.- l suit? Tilers's not enough materlal
L-...L..

11J1 Larry King Llvolln cepth ·'

Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or i114-

e75-17e6,

I

r--::::-:::-:-::-:--::---,

attacker.

&amp; Heating

84

RUHYR

.__:::12:::1':::1

Q

RON'S Television Sarvica .
Hou111 call• on RCA, Ounar,
GE. Specialing In Zenith. Call
304-676· 2398 or 614·448·

R P.. M Custom Couches and
Reupholstery. St. Rt . 7 , Crown
Citv. Oh. 614 -2158 -1470. Eva.
614 -446 -3438 . O pen daily 9 to
4 :30. Set. 9 :30 to 1 :30 . Old &amp;
new Uphostered.

1979 Trllnt AM . Solid body.
Maroon. *2800. Ca11614·986-

'

··.

1984 Ford Escort. PS. PB. AC,
lluto . Excellent condition .

1977 Mercury. Running condition. Auto. 8450. 614·992-

61

1983 Honda Shadow 600. New
cond. 700 mil• only. Ideal
Christmas gift. f2000 . Call
614·446-1822 .

Starks Tree and lawn Service.
lawn care. landscaping. stump
removal. 304 -676 -2842 or

Yamllha- CP30 electric piano .
Cost 81400 new· U&amp;O . Call
614 -388 - 8637 even ., 448 ·
1968 days.

F~rm Supplies

FRANK AND ERNEST

4:30PM.

19S4 Pontiac Fireblrd. Excel.
cond. 28.000 mile~ , aunroof.
louver, 4 spd., 4 cyl ., fuel
injected, PS .. PB. 84800. Call

12131631-1201 .... 5466.

...

Honda Z60R . Auto . Like new.
Used approx. 3 ht1. Will sacrifice. Call 614 -441-4171 tfter

' Rotary or cabte tool drilling.
Most wall• completed same day .
Pump aalae and servic::e. 304895- 3802

614-446-7447.

I

(1)

•

81

1

I I I I 1

iIll Cheer•
M•A•s•H

1986 Dodge Omni. Auto, 4 dr ..
14.000 milea. Good cond. Call
614·379-2726.

$3400. Coli 614-379-2122.

Musical
Instruments

)

Motorcycles

Fetty Tree Trimming_, nump
removal. Call 304 -67111\1331 .

Mu1t see to apprecl.,• 1983
Buick Riviera . All black exterior
with vinyl top . Burgundy velour
interior. PS. PB. AC ,· In fact
power everything. 17100. Call
614-446--2297, between 10
AM &amp; 7 PM.

Mounu Kennel - Sordaning L..arge run area. Call 614·3889364 .

!! :

1982 Jeep Wagoneere, 4 wheel
drive. PS. 4 speed tranamillion.
84,300.00. 304-468· 1031 .

1979 Pinto. 1650. Call 614·
446·4913 after 4 :00PM .

Parak~~

New arrivals for ChriltmasRegittered AKC Chow puppiea.
Call 614·388- 8801 .

-::Jc(

Hay &amp; Grain

446·6175.

.

J

I

61 4-446-e927 '

1 · AKC Tov Poodle-- 11 mos.
old .. $160. 1 · P.arakeat with
large cage. 840 Call 614-446·

l"

$2200. Coli 614-379-2152 of·

1807.

1986 Ford LTD II . Ciean. 12.900
milea. Auto.. AC ., PS, PB, tilt,
cruise. Call 614-388 -S240.

Pets for Sale

~L

ter 7 PM.

76

COBHAR

Ill (J) ABC Newa t;1
(!) Nlghdy Bualneaa Repon
. aD1 Ill il2l CBS Hews
IIJ) Owl TV I;!
(!}) ShowBiz Today News of
the enlenalnment world Is
ancl)ored live from New
York . (0:30)
1!J WKRP In ClnclnneU
Ill Cll Too Cloae lor Comfon
6:351Ii Carol Burnell
7:00 (]) Remington Steele
D (2) PM Megezlne
(!) Spori.Cenler (l)
Cil a..ketball
1!1 (J) People'• Coun
(!) IIJ) MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewsHaur (1 :00)
IIDl Hews
11J1 Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill il2l Q5l Wheel of Fortune

W.O.

1977 Bronco - 4x4. 302. dual
elhiiUtt. Goodcond Runagraet.

74

•

(I)

614-446-4383 d.... 446-0139

2 -nrvice age Holstein bulls. A1
sires. dam• with OHI pap8fl,
Hamm_VaH4Pt' Ffr.ml 614 -949·
2574.
.

56

446-7766.

rt·t

4

letters of t~e
fou r scrambled w ords be·
lew to form f_our simple words .·

~ NBA Today (T)

1982 Dodge 260 Ram. Cuttom
conversion. Trailer ready. Call

2986.

614·448·8502 oft« 6:30PM.

e&amp;B3.

Exa rci!e joggin g machine. Ma ·
nuel. S76. Ca11614 -985-4418 .

62

304-773-5234.

Mi110d hard wood sJabs. $12 per
bundle. Contllining llpproJt . 1 1h
t on. FOB . Ohio Pallet Co.
Pom eroy , Ohio. 614 -992 - 6461 .

firewood for sale. Mixed, hard·
w oo d, split and delivered . 836
per pick-up load . 614 -992 ·

BUY WHOLESALE. White fwm
Trac:tors at whoiMale Invoice
plus frei"ht. Compare the price
and quahty. Mod ala from 16 to
180 hp. leMing available. Off.good through Dec. 31. Siders
Equipment Co., US 36 , Henderson, W . Va. 304-675-7421 .

198• MercurY Topa1 . WhiteAlpine. AM -FM -Cat 1 •tereo.
AC . Excell. cond . $3400 . Call

jullt off the nest. $10
each. Call 614 -446·1364.

992-6335.

lntefnatlonal R0460 u• power
unit with V belt and clutch.
$1,600.00. 304-468·1031 .

Ready" mix concrete and all
concrete auppliea. Call us Van.,.
Broolc Cement and SUppllea,

Christmas Trees for sale-$5 .00·
$10.00 Rodn~ &amp;. Bidwell Rd.
Cllll 614 - ~46 · 5246, Richard
Fischer .

Firewood split lind delivered,
S4Q. per load. Cherry, locua1.
sass yfru an d hickory. Call 614 ·

$1,050.00. 304-468-1031 .

71 Auto's For Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Kenliel.
CFA Himalevan. Persian and
Siamese khtens. AKC Chow
puppiea. New kittana; Persians.
Cali 614 -446 -3844 after 7PM.

2596.

Model 110 Massey Farguton
manure spreader with beater,

Concrete blocks all silas yard or
delivery. Mason aand. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123'h Pine 51.,
Gallipolis, Ohio Cell 614· 448 ·
2783.

Tree &amp; Stump remo~o~lll. fire·
wood . Heap vouchers accepted .
li11e white pine Chr istmas uees.
S37.60 . Call 614 -446 -9646 .
ladies ni ce co ats. Ce11614-446 -

Ona 474. 7 ft hayblne,
16,400.00. Keefers Service
Center. St. Rt. 87,leon, W. Va.
Phone 304-896·3874.

27e4.

Firewood· All hardwood. · $20
pick -up lo ad . Call 614 ·D66-

1670.

472. 7 h hiVbino. $6,900.00.

64

Groom and Supply Shop· Pet
Grooming . All breeds ... All
styles. lam• Pet Food Oealet.
Julie Webb Ph. 614- 446 -0231 .

446-3993.

New Holland end of teason hay·
tool sale. All hay tool• at detaer
cost plua intereat free financing
until June 1, 1988 with normal
down payment. Two4&amp;1, 3pt. 7
ft mowers 82,100.00. One31 1.
3 joint PTO. atand.,-d tires
regul.- pickup, 86,600.00. One

For 111le,. several butchering hog1
2209 lb. to 300 lbs. 304-676-

. You
For Sale- t;ut dry firewood_
hllul. S25 a load. Cllll 614-388·
9962 after 4 :30 PM.

Sa~o~age 22 Hornet rifle, 16
gauge, boh action shotgun.
1974 Chwy Suburban 4x4, 3,4
ton. 464 engine. Ca\1614-446 -

Vans &amp;

Q Reor range

(!J SpansLook (T)
(!)Dr. Who
IIJ) Square One TV C
,- (!}) lnalde PoHtica '88
IHI Facta of Life
Ill (l) ·one Dey el e nme
&amp;:OS III Allee
8:30 II (2) Q5) NBC Nightly Newl

CAPTAIN EASY

Trucks for Sale

73

~.

II C2l Cll II (J) IIDl Ill il2l

evens. &amp; weekend• .

&amp; Livestock

Furni•hed effi ci ency apt. Carpet
tflru out. Private &amp; qUiet. Single
worldng pe.-.on only . Call 814·

e·.

814-448-9777.

12x28 Add -a-room for mobile
home. Celt 614-446-8940 .
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

30 us.t tnu:tora to chooae from.
Fr•h load
7', 8' rear bl.tas.
Buy now before Jan. 1- price
lncreMa. 35 wa1t • Gallipolis.

EVENING

WOlD

llll Ne-

WE DON'T WANT
TO RUIN THE 8E~T
PART OF OU~
SURPRISe.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT

TUES., DEC. 1

T~~i:~:~y . S@Edllod
\\(llA"~ f}S" GAM I
CLAY R. ,OUAN _.:.__ _ _ __

1:00 (]) Crazy Uke a Fo•

76 Dodge Dart, 1200.00. 304·

72

614--446-4336.

'

"f:,l't:l'!. Ftfi~D A
'&gt;{:N"ft;~ ... ll'5€DlJ

loodod. til ,150.00. 304·676·
4480.

New 2 SR . &amp;quipped kitc hen,
low utiliUea. con11enltrnt location. No pets. Re f. &amp; dep. Cllll

.,.

~~ HAH ,I'LL'?A'(
1 C:O...

1988 Ch.,.y Beretta , like new.

0

2 BR . apt . Stove &amp; refrig .
fu rn ishast. /Qe er Go M ... t . Call

446·4807 o• 448·2802.

' 73Chf1Vy400 cu ln. tmall tMock
wi1h turbO 400, runt good.
•304· 875-2714 or 876- 1577.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

Television
Viewing

304-875·6878 or 871-1825.

1340"' 446-3e7o.

pets. Referen ce &amp; deposit. Ca ll .

•OV· 614-992-5587 ., 614·

cor~~l'!- 1€:tMMY'' !I r-H!&gt;-:-,7-m-e-~--w-oo~:..

1450.

Furnished upl tllirs· 1 BR . UtilitiS~ paid. 4220 a mo. 87 5 dep.
94 locust St. Cal l 614 -446 -

or 6 14· 992-2509
6 :00, please.

992 -7460 .

loodod. o4800. 304-876·2583.

1984 BonnavillePontlac, -4 door
1ky blue. dk blue .vinyl top.

Pi ckens Used Furniture Dinettes, sof81, chairs. end
tablfll, lamps, bedl:, drea~erL
desk. glauwara. 304· 676-

Apartment · 1136 2nd .• Gallipo-lis. 2 BR . Stove 81 refrlg .
furni1hed. 8185 . Wlrter paid .
Call614 -446 -4416 after 7 PM .

614-446·1250.

BORN LOSER

19S4 Chwrolet lmpiilll TlC.

675-7642.

614-448·7372.

513 Third Ave .· 1 BR , Deposit
required . Call 614- 446 -4345
between 5:00 PM S. 10 :00 PM

e 14-99 2-51 13, 61 • ·992-8723

3 bedro om house for rent 8200
p.-month. Mulbeny Ave . Pom&amp;-

46

:~==;;:::=;::::=====
Apartment

2 SR . gwage- apartment with
refrlg. &amp;: range. Adults onty . No

Call after

Furnished room. $75. Utiliti fll
paid. Share bath. Single male.
919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446 -4416 after 7pm.

1400 sq. ft. comme.-ciol spec a
suitable for offices, retll iling, or
services. Prime location-cprner
or 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample parking in rear. $350 per
month. Call 614-446-4249 or
446-2325.

Tara Townhou1e Apts .. 2 SRS .,
1 Vz baths, AC . Start $299 a mo.
Utilities not included. Call 8143 67· 7860 .

2. 3. or 4 bedroom hous&amp;s an d
IJpt. 1n Pom eroy area, Pay own
ut iliti81, deposit required. Call

Rooms for rent, day . week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614446-9580 . Rent as low liS $120
month .

49

2 BR . partty fu r nished. City

SR . hou se. Electrfc-- w ood
haat. 10 J'llin . fr om tow n. Call
1-6 14 -6 63· 246 3 after 8 PM .

Furnished Rooms

2 bedroom, furnished. wuher
and dryer, air. 8 195. per month
plus deposit and utititi81. 614-

614-446·7025.

3

45

Trailer space for rent . Rural
water, garden area. located on
160. SOD a mo. Call 6'14•388 9364.

446-241 9.

Deposit· 8100. S12,6 rent. No
pvt s. Ca ll 614-448- 2447.

Pome!oy- Middleport. Ohio

1978 Mercury Monarch. runs
good. lookl good .
304-

Upright freezer in good condition. 17 \1: cu . ft . f75 . Call

4 ba(hoom home for rent or sale.

992-7479.

14x70 Windsor with 14x30
llddition. 3 bedrooms, appi-oxi·
mately 3 acr1:11, black top road .
Sevet'al out -building• and pond.
Gallipolis Ferry. 304-675-6930.

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 and 2
room fur.nished apts. private
bath1, utilities paid, 304-8822566 .

614 - 992-30~0 .

32 Mobile Homes

446-370 3.

Professional
Services

nilhed. All new paint carpe1.
storm windows &amp; doors. Call

42
for Sale

Carpet Pr~cea Starting at :
Commer c ial - 14 a yd .,
S.::: ulpture-16 a yd .. Phuh-.87 a
yd . L,ots of room rementa in
atock . Financing available. Mollohan Furniture, Upp• River Rd .
- 614 -446 ....7444.

Beech Street, M iddlaport. Ohio,
2 ~adroom furniahed ept, utili·
liM paid, references and deposit,
304-882-2566 .

2 BR . house for rent . Unfur-

6'00pm, 304-676-6483.

evenings.

MONEY FOR COLLEGE is available to individuals who become
membe.-s o f the Army National
Guard . Cllll 304-675 -3950 or
1-800-642 -3619 .

3 bedroom house. Sto~o~e furnished. 8260 per month plua
utllitiBS. Deposit and reference
required. No pet:s in1ide. Call
614 -949 -3027.

3 berdrooms. large fron1 room
full size basement, one c.;
garllge, many ex1ras, 304· S96-

AVON all are as. Shirlev Spear s,
304-675- 1 4 29.

For rent 3 bedroom hou1e in
Pomeroy . Oepoalt ' required.
614-992-6666.

304-676-2130 .

Tuesday, Decemt&gt;er 1, 1987

71 Auto's For Sale

5024.

Newly renovated . ell ~ectrie
with heat pump and centrlllalr. 3
bedroom1, plenty yard and
g•den tpace in Portland, Ohio.
6 miles from R.wenawood. W .
Va . Call614 -843- 5.309.

11h 1tory houae. 3 bedrooms,
basement, haUmilefrom Shadle
Bridge, R1 . 36. 304-676 -6912 .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Lll~rlghl

304-8e2-3267 •• 304-773·

t";;':·:;~:::::;:::::::;:::r;;~:;~~~~::;~~~
41 H
f R
T"pping supplies fo• sole. jBuy· 31 Homes for Sale
omes or ent
Antiquf!l glassware, old coina.

•

2 bedroom ~rnised apt , ref and
deposit. New Haven, W. Va.,

Raw Sing
fur, beef
and deer
Gyn
and Yellow
roothides.
. We
have wheat and nite Htas.

·ing u1ed t raps) . George Buckley.
Hourt12-9 . 614 -664-4761 .

.

Tuesday, December 1, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Public Sale
&amp; Auctio n

-~

'.

ACROSS 42 Dissuade
1 Meringue 43 Cherubini
flavor
opera
6 Wild guess44 Set of
10 Idolize
three
11 QE II,
45 Strain
e.g.
DOWN
13 Subscribe 1 Zhivago's
again
love
14 Right,
2 German ·
\ for one
river
Yesterday's Answer
15 Garfunkel 3 - Cassino
16 One of
4 Change for
the Nixons a krone
17 Oklahoma 29 Greek "T"
18 Ancient
5 Jazz
city
31 Violinist
times
festival
20 Ensign,
Isaac
e.g.
32 Occupation
19 Reduce,
city
in a .way 6 Blackboard 23 Bye-bye 3~ ~erm.an
21 Cover
7 Base metal 24 Doltish
nver
22 Macaw
8 Church
25 Headpiece37 Veal,e.g.
23 A&lt;ijust,
devotion
26 Synthetic 39 Ending
as a
9 "N orrna"
fabric
for sin
fiddle
composer 27 "- for
4l Mr.
24 Meager 12 fllush
Bonzo"
Hum bard
27 Shallow
bowl
28 Clock
sound
29 Vietnamese
holiday
30 Actress,
Mary31 Mubarak's
prede. cessor
33 Winnings,
at times
34 Egyptian
king
35 Kind of
computer
storage
38 Witless
40 Muslim
tlecree
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work it: 12/ 1
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and ronnation of the words are all
for

hinLs. Each day the code letters are different .
CRYPTOQUOTE
p

~N

AE
G

N G A W

V W G K H

S E H W

0 P D W

0 E E I

N P 0 T A

C E Y
•

T P V

GK C TEQ .

QPSSPGV
VXNWW
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ONE OF THE REWARDS
OF A GOOD FRIENDSHIP IS AN AI:.MOST TOTAL
IGNORANCE OF YOUR FRIEND'S SECRETS. - BEN

HECHT

..

�•
Pege-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, D8cember 1, 1987

Pomeooy-Middleport, Ohio

Ohio Lottery

~----Peopkinthenews------------------ .Policeman has name,.
little of the glamour
'

By WU.LIAM C. TRO'n'
United Press International

·

SUPER-SUPPORT FROM REEVE: Christopher Reeve went
to Sant!ago, Chlle, Monday to join actors from the United States,
Latin America and Europe supporting 78 Chilean actors who
were threatened with death by a right-wing group.
"Our concern Is that no actor or performer should have to live
under.these. kinds of threats, " said Reeve, who felt so strongly'
that he skipped a rehearsal for Tennessee WID lams's' 'Summer
and Smoke" to fly in from New York. A group called Comando
Trlzano had threatened to kill actors of six theater companies
unless they left the country within 30 days, acc!'slng them of
being Marxist frontmen.
Reeve brought a telegram from the likes of Arthur Miller,
Mike Nichols, Martin Sheen, Gene Hackman and Don Johnson
while the British Actors Equity Union sent a letter signed by
Laurence Olivier, John Glelgud, Vanessa Redgrave, Julie
Christie and Anthony Hopkins.
COMIC STRIP BLOOMS AGAIN: Berke Breathed and his
"B loom County" fans won a partial victory In Pueblo, Colo. The
Pueblo Chieftan newspaper had dropped t])e comic strip three
weeks ago because Breathed had one of his characTers shouting
"Reagan sucks."
.
But the cancellation resulted In complaints from all segments
of the city's population and, In a lengthy editorial Monday,
Chleftan Editor Chuck Campbell said the newspaper's editors
felt If there was that much Interest In the strip, they should print
It; "Bloom County" was back In the Chleftan Monday, albelt
exiled to the classified section, next to the equally controversial
"Doonesbury."
BETTY'S BACK: Betty Ford is back home resting after

Quirks in the
Students' shook up over no-salt
policy: UXBRIDGE, Mass.
(UPI) - A zealous high school
official yanked all the salt from
cafeteria tables, shaking up
students who are stuffl.ng their
own supply of the seasoning Into
lockers and pocketbooks.
Virginia Peterson, Uxbridge
High School food service dlrec·
tor, said she removed · the salt
shakers last month "before (the
students l get problems like some
older people have. ' 1 She said she
was concerned that the sodium in
salt would raise the students'
blood pressure.
But the students say they
prefer to choose whether to
sprinkle the seasoning on
burgers and fries.
"We want to be treated. like
adults, but we don't feel like
adults If we 'can't even decide If
we can have salt," salli Kathy
LeMay,
a student
representative.
The Student Council plans to
meet with the food services
director to try and come to a salt
accord, LeMay said.
It didn't look like a deer:
ONEIDA, Wis. (UPI) - A deer
hunter got more than he bargained for .when a 1,600-pou~d
steer charged him in the woods.
It took seven shots to drop the
animal.
"What could 1 do with some·
thing that big coming at me?"
asked Tom Rasmussen, who said
he was forced to shoot the
black-and-white Holstein .
The steer was among several

quadruple heart bypass surgery on Nov. 20. Doctors originally
said the 69-year-old former first .lady would be home In time to
celebrate Thanksgiving with her family but still said her
recovery was going fine.
"She was at the hospital for 10 days, which Is actually less
than average for a heart surgery patient," said Andrew
Radoszewskl, administrator of the Heartlqstltute ott he Desert.
"She's resting comfortably now and will recover at home. We
will, of course, be In contllflial contact as she Improves." Her
husband, former President Gerald Ford, was at Betty's side
throughout.
·
,
Her recuperation should take several more weeks, after
which she Is planning to resume her usual travel and speaking
schedule.
PAPER DEBT.S: John Connally, the former Texas governor
and Nixon Cabinet membt&gt;r, has given his historical papers to
the LBJ Llbr~ry at the University of Texas but there may be
complications. Connally, who was wounded In the'llssasslnation
of John Kennedy, donated the papers shortly before he filed for
bankruptcy brought on by $93 million In debts.
There could be a legal controversy over whether Connally, 70,
had a right to give the collection to the school or If he should have
sold It to help pay the debts. His lawyer, Myron Shelnfeld, says
the law prohibits Individuals from donating paintings or other
property to a museum within 90days of filing for bank~uptcy but
that historical documents -may fall into another category.
GLIMPSES: Country singer Crystal Gayle will be honored by
an orchestra, the Nashville Symphony, Dec. 12 when she
receives the Harmony Award. Minnie Pearl and Emmylou
Harris will be on hand, too ... A 9-pound, 4·ounce girl named
Molly Elizabeth is the first child of Janies Brolin from "Hotel"
and wife Jan Smithers, formerly of "WKRP."

n~ws--------and breaking a power line that
fell across the road.
"It was quite a show out
there," deadpanned Mike
Faught, the city 's street maintenance supervisor.
"It was something else,"
added Schwartz, a retirl!d Air
Force veteran and newspaper
distributor. "We watched It all."
City officials agreed to pay for
all repairs, and by the end of the
day, power and phone service
was restored and the tree was In
Its rightful place at City Hall.
Another, larger crane from a
nearby bridge repair project was
brought In to right the toppled
crane and finish the j lnxed job.
Asked whether he was sorry he
donated the tree, Schwartz said,
"No, It's a beauti~Jree. I'm jqst
sorry that they had all the
p~oblem and the expense ."

that escaped when two tractor
In an ed,ltorlal Monday, Chieftrailers collided, the Brown taln Editor Chuck Campbell said
County Sheriff's Department the newspaper's editors felt that
said.
If there ls that much Interest In
Rasmussen was trying to drive the strip, they should print It, but
deer from the woods for six other not on the comic pages. The strip
hunters to shoot, and when he was placed In the classified
emerged from a swamp and section of the paper, next to the
entered a clearing, he came equally controversial "Doonesface-to-face with the Holstein.
bury" strip.
Chrtstmas tree, what a pain
The animal was only about 20
feet away and charged, Ras· thou be: ALBANY, Ore. (UP!)mussen said. He said he stood his A retired couple thought they
ground, tried to wave off the were doing the charitable thing
animal but was forced to shoot.
when they donated a doomed tree
Rasmussen said he was In their front yard to become the
shaken, but It didn't stop him city's official Chi'lstmas tree.
But after the disastrous turn of
from hunting again Sunday,
when he bagged what he was events that . befell Monday's
after- an eight-point buck.
removal of the 50-foot blue
Newspaper brings hack Bloom spruce, Clarence and Peggy
County: PUEBLO, Colo, (UP!) Schwartz would be excused If
- Calls and letters of protest • ' they had second thoughts.
The tree was ordered removed
from angry readers brought
"Bloom County'' back to their for a street widening project, so
town newspaper, but the contra: the couple donated lt to the city.
versial comic strip will get less But when the city came to get the
.
tree, a series events ensued that
than star billing.
The Pueblo Chieftain canceled was right out of the Keystone
Berke Breathed's Pulitzer Prize· Kops.
Clty'workers cut down the tree
winning strip three weeks ago
when the words "Reagan sucks" but as they began swinging
appeared In the strip. The around to place on a truck their
reaction was fierce with some rented crane toppled 'over
readers threatenlpg to cancel knocking a hole In a six-inch
their subscrlptlo~s, said Dan water main ·and flooding the
Thomas, news director of a town Schwartzes' garage and a neighradio station.
boring horne.
The crane qperator jumped
Thomas, who read the strip on
the air dally when the newspaper clear before the falling boom
stop~ printing It, said the
struck the side of the couple's
protest Involved everyone from garage and then hit a phone line
high school students to an organ I· as It plunged to the ground
zatlon of university professors.
knocking down a nearby pole:

WHEELING, W.Va. (UP!) Frankly Scarlett, not all the
Clark Gables In the world get to
run around with the likes of
Marilyn Monroe, Claudette Cobert and VIvian Leigh - some ·
get little more than a beat to walk
and courtroom laughter.
Just ask Clark Gable, the
Wheeling police officer.
"There's nothing worse than to
say your name In a courtroom
· and have the whole jury laugh at
you when you are supposed to be
in a serious situation," the
sergeant said.
The Sunday News-Register In
Wheeling asked area residents
with famous names what it is like
to share monikers with the rich
and famous. Some would not
discuss the subject, but others
have grown Into their names .
','I've always wondered if
that's his real name or is he just
using mine," 84-year-old Paul
Newman of Marshall County said
of the actor and race car driver .
"It really doesn't bother me,"
the elderly Newman said. "I've
had this name a Jot longer than he

has."
Don Johnson of Bellaire, Ohio,
said he gets plenty of comments
about his name, the same as the
slick co-star of television's popu ·
Jar series "Miami Vice."
"Most people just laugh and
say, 'I finally met Don
Johnson."'
He added, "I just tell them,
'Yeah, that's me' and then go
about my business."
Jimmie Stewart of Martins
Ferry, Ohio, added to his famous
name by developing an imitation
of the actor's hesitant speech. He
said the overdone jokes concerning his name have slowed down .
"It's not as bad as when I wa s
younger. Everybody usually
a$kS how much money I have,"
Stewart said.
Gable agre~.d. saying his name
was a problem during elemen·
tary school.
·'There were two new teachers

Christmas
.
.
countdown

at the school and when I told
them my name during roll call, I
was sent to the principal's office
because they didn't believe me."
Gable said he enjoyed his
well-known name but he · would
never name a child the same
way. He said his parents named
him Clark Gable at the urging of
one of his older sisters.
"And I haven't spoken to my
sister for 43 years," he joked.

Days until Christmas

TOPS holds

. -.. . : - -·

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

recent meenng

Judge intervenes in Ashtabula teachers strike

A Christmas party was
planned for Dec. 8 when the
TO?S Club 570 met recently at
the Coonhunters Club on the
Rock Springs FairgroundS.
At the Nov. 17 meeting, Nancy
Gillespie was the best loser and
also won the fruit basket, with
Pearl Knapp, runner-up, and on
Nov. 24. Phyllis Drehel was the
top loser and also won the fruit
basket, with Teresa Wood as
runner-up.

By MICHAEL O'MALLEY
United Press International
An Ashtabula County Common Pleas judge has ·
Intervened ln the Ashtabula public school
teachers' strike that has kept more than 75
percent of district's students from attending
classes .
Judge Joseph Mahoney Tuesday ordered
negotiators for the Ashtabula Area Teachers
Association and the board of education to meet at
10 a.m. today· In his chambers and resume
bargaining talks In the presence of a federal
mediator.
The order, which also limited the number of
pickets, came du ring the first day of the walkout
by the 293-member teachers union .
Because of the strike, less than 25 percent of the
district's 5,200 students attended classes co~

'I

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE
Now Open for the
Christmas Season

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

Meigs board clarifies position

Poinsettias
Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus
'
House .Plants
Live &amp; Cut Christmas

a pproplrately the Emergency
School Avancement Fund is a
fund established by the State as
an alternative for schools' closing lor financial reasons. Wil·
llam Phlllls , Assistant State
Superintendent of Public Instruc·
tlon for t he State of Ohio states
that 'it's (the loan fund) a
temporary measure to allow a
sc hool district to get back on its
feet in a financial emergency.,
"The Board feels that negotlat ·
ing a financial settle ment to the
"The Board of Education's MLTA's contract demands will
position on the third year guaran· create a financial emergency
tee Is that lt cannot In good faith and will cause the district to go
and conscience negotiate a gua· Into the loan fund . The dilemma
ranteed amount of dollars In created for the system is In
Increased wages-fringes that it generating addiltional revenues
does not know it will recieve.
either loca lly or from th e State to
"The MLTA's position Is that it pay back the Joan and to getoutof
-wants dollars guaranteed.•. the borrowing position. If the
whether the revenues are there MLTA demand s are agreed to on
or not. It has been reported that removing financial reasons from
they have stated that the district the Reduction in Force Article,
is not likely to receive · an the system would face an adctilncrease that will meet their tiona! burden In any attempt
demands.TheMLTA'sanswer is necessary to reduce
for the district to negolotiate expenditures.
"The Board believes that it is
itself into the State Loan Fund.
"The State Loan Fund or more unreasonable If not Irrational to
expect or demand that th e
The second part of a statement
relejlSed yesterday by Supt. Dan
E . Morrts on behalf of the Meigs
Local Board of Education on its
position regarding the teacher's
strike was, In error, combined
with a statement from the Meigs
Local Teachers Association.
The part of lhe Meigs Local
School Board's statement Included In with the Teachers
Association's statement, reads
as follows:

Trus

Candl.e Arrangements

Grave Blankets
Monument Spravs
Open Daily 9-5
Sundav 1-5
SYRACUSE

The deadlock in the Meigs County cont ract
dlspute ' has teachers waiting for word from a
federal mediator and school administrators
preparing to hire substitute teachers to reopen
classes.
The two primary Issues in the d.i spute are salary
and job security.
Superin tendent Dan Morris said . the 151·
member union wants the a nnua l base pay of
$15,700 increased by $3,000, a demand that can't be
guaranteed at this time because it is ' not known
how much money the district will be receiving
from the state.
.
Teachers struck Nov . 6 after a n extended
contract expired Oct. 23.
.
The last strike in the Meigs Co unty school
district occurred in 1979, lasting 39 days.

The base annual salary in the district is .$16,000.
Connie Yocum, a spokeswoman for the schools,
said the boa ~d' s attorneys sought the restraining
order to resWct the number of pickets because
striking teachers were ha rassing stud ents,
parents and employees.
"One parent called In and said her ch lldr en
were told by teachers to stay home, " said Yocum.
Richards, however, denied the harassment
charges, saying there might have been "some
words" directed toward substitute teachers , but
parents, students and school employees not in the
bargaining unit were not bothered.
Mahoney llmlted the number of pickets at
vehicle entrances to five and at pedeStrian
entrances to two.
·
The last teachers' strike in the Ashtabula
district occurred in 1978.

dueled by about 40 substitute teachers Tuesday.
Meanwhile, a strike by the Meigs Local
Teachers Association entered its 27th day today ,
keeping classrooms closed for 2,500, students in
Pomeroy, Middleport and adjacent rural commun1tles . No new talks were scheduled In that
dispute.
Members of the Ashtabula Area Teachers
Association struck at midnight Monday when a
last-minute bargaining session with a federal
mediator failed to produce an agreement.
Bill Richards, a&gt;spokesman for the union , said
both sides were far apart on salary, one of 11
Issues ln tile dispute.
The union, he said, was asking for a 10 percent
Increase each year of a two-year contract: While
the board, he said, offered 2 percent each year.

99~-m'-&gt;

system spend or commit itself to
expenditures of f~nds that ex·
ceed its expected revenues .
· "The strike by the teachers In
the Meigs Local Schools is now ln
its 16th day . The days sc hools are
closed must be made up . The
State standards require a miniumum number of days that
schools be open to receive State
monies and to be able to grant
credit and gradqate students.
"The. Board of Education. has
only the option of opening schools
using substitues to keep our
educational program functioning
and to a llow our students to
rece ive credit. The Board has
directed the administration to
begin preparation for the openIng of schools and plans are being
formulated at this time.
"The Board of Education be·
lieves that the position taken is
th e correct one and wants the
Meigs Local School District
public to be infor~ed. Questions
regarding the Board's actions
are welcomed and parental a nd
community su pport Is necessary
for the schools to resume
operations."

H·•s·paniC
• group warns Iag

merce. Mrs. Roush was presented gift certificates
and bonds wortb more than $300 by Joan Wolle of
the Pomeroy ~lerchants Assn. Tuesday.

·

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.

Te~~phone company to reduce rates in education is a bad omen

'
~

2 Sections, 14 Pages

•

.
FIRST PLACE WINNER - Sarah Roush of
Syracuse,.. right, was the first winner In the
Christmas holiday gilt give away of the Pomeroy
Merchants Association and Chamber of Com-

Fellowship makes
holiday plans

- - _#....

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 2, 1987

ti

Christmas at the Carillon His·
-Street of Shops Comes to Life
By SANDRA L. LA'I'IMER
torlcal Park In Dayton will be at the McKinley Museum, Can·
United Press International
ton, Stark County, Saturdays and
Christmas 1800s style will be observed Sunday afternoon.
·
ce lebrated Saturday at Roscoe
A Christmas Craft Workshop Sundays through Dec. 20.
-Ludlow
Falls'
Annual
Christ
Village In Coshocton, one of a
will be held Saturday at the
series of events for Ohioans to fill
Caesar Creek State Park nE'ar mas display of lights can be
their holiday calendars.
Waynesville, Warren County; viewed through the end of the .
Roscoe Village, a restored
and a Craft Demonstration will year over Ludlow Creek in
cana l town, begins Its holiday
be offered at the Pine Tree Barn Miami County.
-A Poinsettia display at the
season with a candlellgh tlng
near Wooster.
ceremony and caroling. The
Some holiday activities with Franklin Park Consevatory and
Garden Center ln Columbus Is
village has special Christmas
lengthy runs Include:
festivities through the end of the
-Santa's Christmas Fantasy offered through Jan. 11.
-The Dayton Hollday Festival
year, except for Christmas Day .
through Dec. 28 at the Bear Creek
.
The Wilderness Trail Museum
Resort Ranch near East Sparta, through Dec. 24.
-The
Children's
Wonderland
at Fort Loramie, Shelby Cou nty,
Stark County - a walk through
Is serving Colonial Williamsburg
cabins decorated In different thrqugh Dec: 31 at the Lucas
Chris tmas dinners Thursday llollday themes , with animation County Recreation Center In
through Sunday , and Dec. 11, by
and lots of lights, arts and crafts. Maumee.
-Christmas at the Center of
reservations, 513·295·2621.
-Christmas at Glllmer House
and Industry In ColumScience
Also on the Christmas
In Warren, an exhibit of Trum,_bus
through
Dec. 31.
calendar:
bull County artwork, through
-Christmas by the River at
A Dickens of a Christmas In
Dec. 23.
Portsmouth, Scioto County , in-Winteriest at Kings Island the Wolcott Museum Complex In
cludes tours of the museum,
through Dec. 31, except Dec. '24 Maumee, Lucas County, through
House of 1810,on weekends, a nd a
Dec. 31.
and 25.
-Lights at Rudd's Christmas
· variety of activities for everyone
-Christmas at Ohio VIllage,
this weekend.
Columbus, through Dec. 27, ex- Farm near Blue Creek, Adams
County, through Jan. L
Christmas Delights Is a holiday
cept Dec. 24 and 25.
-The Winter Festival at Sea
open house Sat.urday and Sunday
-A Garfield Family Christ·
World
In Aurora, through Jan. 3,
at the Garst Museum In Green·
mas, Lawnfleld In Mentor, Lake
except for Dec: 25.
ville, Darke County, which ·County, through Jan. 3.
-VIctorian Holiday Tour,
houses the Annie Oakley and
-The Olson Christmas DisHower
House In Akron .Sundays
Lowell Thomas collections.
play Is a display of lights and
and
Wednesdays
through Dec.
A Collectible and Antique Show
figurines at the Olson Farm near
and Sale will be held Saturday
20.
'
.
Mansfield thro11gh Jan. J. .
-The Festival of Lights at the
and Sunday at the Montgomery
.,..Christmas at Glendower
County Fairgrounds in Dayton.
State Memorial, Lebanon, Cincinnati Zoo through Jan . 3.
A Country Hearth Christmas at
Warren County, through Dec. 13.
the Century Village In Burton,
-Open House at the J .R.
Geauga County, Saturday and
Reeves Museum, Dover, TuscarSunday Includes tours of some of
awas County, through Dec. 13.
the buildings and electric train
-A VIctorian Christmas at the
layouts. A craft bazaar" will be
Zlminerman-Bu~y Octagon
held at the adjacent Fire Hall.
House, near Orrville, Wayne
A Victorian Christmas Show- County, Friday and Saturday
Plans for programs for 1988
Ing through Sunday at the Gay
arid Dec. 12 and 13.
·
were
·made when the officers of
90s Mansion In Barnesville, Bel·
-Butchering Day . at Hale
the
Ladles
Fellowshp of the
mont County, Is a tour of the , Farm and VIllage near Bath,
Meigs
County
Churches of Christ
mansion's 26 rooms decorated
Summit County, Saturday and
met
Tuesday
at the Rutland
for the holidays.
Dec. 19 during their Christmas
Church.
The ·· Dr. Increase Mathews
Through the Years through the
Caples of the schedule will be
House In Zanesville has a Christ- end of the year.
-Sa nta rides the Hocking made available to the various
mas Open House Saturday and
Scenic Railroad In Nelson· churches upon certification of
Valley
Sunday.
Tne Kingwood Center Christ- ville, Athens County, Saturdays· program plans. Attending were
and Sundays through Dec. 20. Pat Thoma, Ruth Underwood,
mas Open House will be held
Reservations are being taken at~leanor Hoove , Jeannette CarSaturday and . Sunday at the
513-335-0382
or 614-753-0531.
ter and Isado a Williams .
center In Mansfield.

--------·-... -- ---

at y

Vo1.38. No. 143
Copyrighted 1987

Partly cloudy tonight . Low
in upper 20s . Cloudy Thursday . Chance of rain.

•

•

'

Ohio filled with things to do
during Christmas holiday time

- ---~

Daily Number
646
Pick 4
3801

ALL TEL Western Reserve Telephone Company will soon offer
Coolville (667-378) exchange cus·
tamers a discounted calling plan
to certain telephone exchanges in
the area .
The plan, called Optional Off
Peak Calling, wlll allow customers to save an average of 50
percent on long.distance toll calls
In most areas of Athens and
Meigs Counties.
The discounted rates apply to
toll calls made to specific tele·
phone exchanges on weekdays

· from 3 p.m. to 8 a.m. the Pomeroy exchange was denied
following morning , a nd on wee- las t year.
The plan applies to the followkend s from 3 p.m. Friday to 8
a.m. Monday.
· ing exchanges: Albany (698);
There Is a minimum monthly Amesvlile, (448); Athens, ( 592,
charge of $4.15 for, the service 593, 594, and 597); Barlow, (678) ;
which applies to the first hour of Bartlett, (551); Belpre, (423);
toll calls. Additional toll calling is Chesterhill, ( 554);
Pomeroy,
$1.05 per 15 minutes or fraction (742, 992, 949); Portland, (843);
Shade, (696) ; The Plains, (797),
thereof.
The Public utilities Commis- and Watertown, 1749) .
sion of Ohio asked that ALLTEL
To participate In the plan,
Wesdtern Reserve Institute this Interested customers in Coolville
plan as an alternative when should call their local telephone
Extended Area Service to the . company business. office.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - A
Census Bureau report showing
Hispanics in America are still not
as educated as whites and blacks
- and Indeed lag further behind
blacks than they did a decade ago
- is a bad omen, ethnic leaders
warn.
"(It's) a little troubling, not
just for the Hispanic community
but fo r the country, ", asserted
Arturo Vargas, senior education
poli~y analyst for the Hispanic
advocacy group La Raza, upon
release of the census figures

Mason wreck sends man to· hospital
One person was .airlifted from
the scene to Cabell Huntington
Hospital and a second was taken
to Pleasant Valley Hospital by
the New Haven EMS following a
· wreck Tuesday at 10: 40 a.m. on.
Sand Hill Road, one mile west of
Letart School. according to the
Mason County Sheriff's Depart ment's accident report.
Shrikant K. Valdya, 37, Sand
Hill Road, Point Pleasant, Is In ·
fair condition In the intensive
care unit of Cabell Huntington
Hospital with hand injuries and a
concussion, according to a hospi ·
tal spokesperson. Vaidya was
flown from Letart Elementary
by Health Net after units from the
New Have n Volunteer Fire De·
partment, EMS a nd Point Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department
in addition to the HealthNet
registered n~rs e and !light
medlc, removed him from the
car.
A passenger in the vehicle,
Rutha Valdya, 35, Point Pleasant, Is In stable condition at
Pleasant Valley Hospital, ac·
cording , to the nur s ing
supervisor.
Apparently, the 1984 Audl was
traveling east on Sand H!URoad
when It traveled off the road In a
curve, sheared off a telephone
pole and struck a tree, the report
revealed.
A single vehicle accident on

-

With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the.blessings we've shared
th~s past year. For us it means saying "thanks" co' you, our many
fnends, old and new, whose kind support 'Ye'IJ always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!

Wish all your customers and friends
a very Merry Christmas in our
Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.
ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR. DAVE

I·,

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Secondary Route 37, at the
Intersection of Secondary Route
37/ 3, Sunday at 6:10 p.m.left two
vehicles damaged and a tra ller
totaled, according to the accident
report.
B'ruce L. Bonecutter , 45, Point
Pleasant, was traveling west in a
1973 GMC, owned by Donald
Walker, Henderson , towing a
tractor arid t railer, when a little
blue pick-up came around a
curve in Bonecult£irs lane, ac·
cording to the report .·
Bonecutter avoided left to miss

Tuesday.
"If that trend continues ,"
Vargas said, "what does that say
about the future of this country's
labor forc e a nd the future of t his
country's citizenry?"
The Census Bureau found only
61 percent of all Hispanics age 25
to 29 held a high sc hool diploma in
1985, far below t he 81 percent
showing for blacks a nd the 87
percent rate for whites
nationwide.
Hispanics were ·roughly 30
percent be hind whites and 12
percent behind blacks in high
school
rates when the

bureau began Including them In
the study in 1974. The new figures
s how that si nce then , the gap
closed slightly to 26 percent
behind whites but tumbled to 20
percent behind blacks.
·
The report contai ned two more
cheerful notes with regard to
education.
First. it suggested differences
between the sexes are almost
gone. About 86 percent of both
men and women age 25 to 29 In
1985 had high school diplomas, as
opposed to the nearly five-point
difference in 1950 - 50.6 percent
for men, 55 oer·cer11

There were no citations· issued
hitting the pick-up head on, but
In the accident, accord ing to the
the wheels on the trailer of the
truck being towed became report.
bogged down In a ditch and the
Pictures to be
trailer stopped, pulling the towed
truck Into a ditch and with it, also
picked up Thursday
Bonecutter's truck.
The little blue pick-up was not
Meigs Local individual student
damaged and did not stay at the
pictures may be picked up at the
scene, according to the report.
following schools between 10
The truck driven by Bonec'uta.m. a nd 12 noon Thursday, Dec.
ter sustained $5,000 damages In 3: '
the accide nt. The 1978 GMC,
Middleport Elementary for
owned by David A. Watterson, students from Bradbury and
Apple Grove, that was being Middleport, Harrisonville Eletowed, sustained $5,000 in dam- · mentary for students from Harriages. Th e trailer attached to the sonville and Rutland, Pomeroy
1978 GMC , a 1973 model, owned Elementary, Salem Center Eleby J.J. Waterson J r., was to· mentary, Sa11sbury Elementary
taled, accordlnl1 to the report.
and Meigs Junior High.

Name .Justus Trooper-of-Year
'

.
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TROOPER JUSTUS

Trooper RobertS. Justus of the
State Highway Patrol was recently named the 1987 Trooper of .
the Year a t the Gallla·Melgs
Post.
Justus, 43, was chosen by
fellow officers based at the post
based on demonstrations of lead·
ershlp abilities, professional
ethics, courteous treatment of
others, enthusiastic work attl·
tude, and cooperation with super·
visors , peers and the public.
Justus ls being considered for
District and Sta te Troope r of the

Year awards, to be announced at
later dates.
Justus, a native of Columbus,
Is a graduate of Franklin Heights
High School, Franklin Universlty
ln Columbus and Sinclair Unlver·
slty ln Dayton. After serving In
the Air Force, he joined the
patrol In 1971. He served at the
Xenia Post before coming to the
Gallla·Melgs Post.
Justus and his wife Marilynn
live near VInton with their
children Melissa, 16, and Matt,
14.

..
..

CLOSING IN - Southern's Shannon Riffle ( 15) closes to try
and stop the Pirates' Keith Burnette (20) from finding an open man
Inside during second-quarter action Tuesday night at North Gallla.
The 'tornadoes beat the Pirates 94-66 . See details on Page 3. (OVP
photo by G. Spencer Osborne)

•

'

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