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                  <text>Pomeroy- Middleport-Galli~lis, Ohio- Poin~ Pieasant, W. Va .

. ·•Page- D-B-Sunday limes-Sentinel

Predict cold weekend for Ohioans

December 6, 1987

Ohio Lottery

PICK-4

Lottery numbers

Christlnas .
countdown

Daily Number

526
Pick 4
4313
Supe~:- Louo

Rain likely tonight. IDgh
near 50. Low near 40. Rain
Tuesday.

17-26-24-2-34-39

..

•

'

ELBERFELD$
\

b·:·..1SNOW
I

'
I
I
I

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'.

\

I•

;•
I

. FRONTS:

II Warm

"Cold

OPEN SUND4Y

~SHOWERS

-RAIN

. . Static . . Occluded

WEATHER MAP - Snowshowers will extend from northwest
New England across the lower Great Lakes Into the !Jpper Ohio
Valley. Snow over the mountains of Arizona and New Mexico wiD
become ralnshowers over the lower elevations of the two stales.
Rain will extend from northwest California across western Oregon
and Washington, .changing to snow In the mountains of ·
Washington. Winds will be strong and gosty along the eastern
slopes of the northern rockies. IDgh temperatures will be In the 20s
and 30s from New England across New Jersey. ( UPI)
Monday through Wednesday
Chance of rain Monday and
Tuesday with fa ir weather WedSouth Central Oblo
nesday. Highs throughout the
Sunday, Increasing clouds. period will be in the40s with a low
IDgh near 45.
ranging from near 30 to !he mid
Extended Forecast
30s.

12 NOON
The Ultimate

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Sole price includes shampoo,
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Appointments are not always
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through December 26. 1987.
(Not vohd wiftl anv otOO" offer)

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GALLIPOLIS, OHIO
PHONE 446-3353

BRIZE NORTON ROYAL AIR extra joy for the peoples of the
FORCE BASE, England (UP!) world ... and a promise of more
- Soviet leader Mikhail Gorba· progress to come."'
Upon his arrival In England,
chev met briefly today with
British Prime Minister Margaret Gorbachev grinned as be strode
Thatcher and then departed for down the steps from his Dyushln
Wasblngton:' taking with him j etllner at the air base 60 miles
Thatcher's. endorsement oL a west of London. He then went to
nuclear arms treaty as "a source · the brief talks and a wor-king
of extra security and extra joy_." lunch of grilled salmon with
Gorbacbev, who stopped over Thatcher.
Just before the two-hour Soviet
for two bours ' at the Royal Air
stopover
on the way to the
Force base on bls way to the
summit
with
President Reagan.
Washington summit, said be
Thatcher
said
the talks would
hoped his trip to the United States
will move forward a "restructur· concentrate on arms control
ing" of International relations "because that Is right In the
"to a better and deeper coopera- forefront and we'll discuss the
tion and mutual understanding." way ahead In arms controL"
Gorbachev and his wife, Ralsa,
Gorbachev and Thatcher held
wearing
a whitish fur coat, were
a working lunch at the base's
welcomed
In colorful ceremonies
officers mess and then spoke to
at
the
base
by Thatcher and
the media before Gorbachev
British
Foreign
Secretary Sir
departed.
Geoffrey
Howe
In bright
"We have bad excellent talks,"
sunshine.
Thatcher said. "We are living In
historic times and the treaty
Then Thatcher and Gorbachev
which Mr. Gorbachev is going to ·
who have developed a cordial
sign Is an historic treaty . It
relationshipplunged Into their
comes toward Christmas and
towards the New Year. It will be talks, taking their places In beige
a source of extra security and easy chairs In a room In the
base's officers mess.

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Logan Monument Co.
Logan, Ohio
0 Please send me FREE booklets
showing memorials printed In full
color wilh sizes and prices listed.
0 Kindly have an authorized logan
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at my home.
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or Town ___ __ ___
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Ten die on
Ohio highways
By United Press International
Three teenagers killed In a two-car accident In Wood County
Saturday were among the at least 10 people who died In traffic
accidents this past weekend, the State Highway Patrol said
today.
The count shows one death Friday night, seven Saturday and
two Sunday. One of the victims was a pedestrian.
VIctims Include:
Friday
Cleveland: James Lane, 41, Cleveland, killed when struck by
a car on a Cleveland city street .
Saturday
Fremont: Gary W. Scott,,J2, Fremont, killed when his car
struck a bridge abutment on a Sandusky County road .
Bryan: Jody S. Godfrey, 18, Edon, killed when the car In
which be was riding struck a utility pole along Ohio Route 341n
Williams County.
· '
Bowling Green: Patrick Church, 16, Holland, and his
passengers Dean Roberts, 18, and Becky S.,Burkett. 17. both of
Gibsonville, killed when Church's car apparently went through
a stop sign and collided with a pickup truck on U.S. Route 20 In
Wood County.
Toledo: Marc L. Raczkowski. 17, Toledo, killed In a
three-vehicle accident on a city-street In Toledo.
Ravenna: Melissa M. Strasser, 14, Rootstown, killed In a
one-car accident on Interstate 76 In Portage County.
Sunday
Akron: James R. Ewing, 26, Akron, killed In a one-car
accident on an Akron citY street.
Canton: Debra A. Cosgrave. 33, Waynesburg, killed- In a
one-vehicle accident on Ohio 43 In Stark County.

Pearl Harbor bombed
46 years ag~ today

SUNDAY SAVINGS/
CHRISTMAS
GIFT WRAP

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•4 ROLL PACK •40 SQ. FT.

$239

ELBERFELDS
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· 1 Sacdon, 10 ~ Pagas 26 Centa
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Gorbachev, Thacher condu~t
brief talks; · due in U. ·s. later

MEN'S

1ow MomiJ ,.,...111.

reg. s3s

Copyrlghtod 1987

5:00P.M.

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Monday, December 7, 1987

Vol.38, No.146

SPECIAL/

In Design ... Wotkmanshlp ... Ouallty

Weather

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MON.-S£1.

WASHINGTON (UPI) - Mlk·
ball Gorbachev comes to Washington on the 46th anniversary
of "a date . that will live In
Infamy'"- the day lhe Japanese
bombed Pearl Harbor and threw
the United States Into World War
II.
For the Soviet Union, It was
also a day to remember : Pearl
Harbor meant that the Soviet
dictator, Josef Stalin; could
safely move thousands of Rus·
sian soldiers from his eastern
frontier, where they had been
guarding against a possible Jap·
anese attack, to his western
front, where the Germans were .
battering at the gates to Moscow
against a desperate Russian
defense.
,.
·Until then. there had been
speculation that the Japanese
would strike westward In their
Imperial conquests, driving from
Manchuria Into Siberia against
their old Russian enemies in
Asia.
After Pearl Harbor, with the
Japanese wholly engaged with
· the Americans, British, Dutch
and Chinese to the east and so!lth,
Russia could relax Its guard and
· rel&lt;;!ase Its eastern forces to fight
Germans threatening to drive .

.

-· '

.

the Red Army across the Ural
Mountains behind Moscow.
It's doubtful that Gorbachev,
then a 10-year-old boy living with
his family at Stravropol, 600
miles south of Moscow, rec&lt;~lls
much about the events of that
day, but be no doubt learned of
them somewhere along bls way ·
to the leadership of the Soviet
Union.
Whether young Gorbachev was
told In school about the crucial
role the Americans subsequently
playel! in saving his country from
defeat Is doubtfuL But Pearl
Harbor set off a chain of events
that helped ensure Russla"s
salvation through tons of U.S.
w"'r J;upplles shipped across .the
North Atlantic to Soviet ports In
convoys hounded by packs o!
German submarines from Ha·
llfax to Murmansk ,, Many American merchant ships and seamen
never survived the unrelenting
attacks by U-boats and the
Luftwaffe.
On the day of "Infamy," so
named by President Franklin
Roosevelt when be asked Con·
gress to declare war against
Japan, the Russians were at their
low point In World War II. The
Contlnqed on page 5

Gorbachev, who will sign a
hlsiOrlc arms accord with Rea·
gan to eliminate medium: and ·
shorter-range nuclear missiles
from Europe, was expected to
gain Thatcher's endorsement of
the pact during the two-hour
mini-summit.
Ralsa Gorbacbev was to make
a 45-minute visit to a nearby
British grade school to attend a
traditional Christmas natlvlty
play.
On the eve of Gorbachev's
departure, Soviet pollee man·
handled a group of Jewish
protesters demanding the right
to emigrate and detained CNN
television correspondent Peter
Arnett lor four hours after
hauling him from the demonstration in a park In front of the Soviet
Foreign Ministry.
In Washington. about 200,000
Jews marched Sunday down
Constitution Avenue calling on
Gorbachev to allow Soviet Jews
to emigrate. Jewish activists say
400,000 want to leave.
The Communist Party dally
Pravda carried a dispatch from
Washington today headlined
"Great Expectations" and ac-

companied by portraits or Reagan and Gorbachev. A Pravda
commentary noted It was the
third summit between the two
leaders In less than two years and
said Soviets . were looking for ward to a Reagan trip to Moscow
In 1988.
''On the eve of Important talks
In the U.S. capital, one wants to
be an opllmist and to hope that
the talks between Mikhail Gorba-.
cbev and Ronald Reagan In
Washington will pave the way to
a success of their fo!lrth. the
Moscow summit, which will have
a greater share of warmth and
light and not only because It Is
planned for spring or summer
months." Pravda wrote.
Gorbachev, 56. will bold five
separate meetings with Reagan
during the summit. It will be the
Soviet leader's first visit to the
United States .
Diplomats have forecast an.
hi tense summit, with discussions
for the next arms accord treaty
high on the agenda. That pact
WO!lld reduce the strategic offensive nuclear arsenals of both
countries by 50 percent.

GORBACHEV LEAVES MOSCOW - .Soviet leader MlkhaU
Gorbachev and his wile Balsa wave during the ·departure
ceremony Ia Moscow today. Gorbachev lelt Moscow for London,
where be met wltb Prime Mlulster Margaret Thatcher before
flytng on to Washington, where he will meet with Presldea&amp;Reagan
later today. (UPI)

Missile strikes barge in Kuwaiti waters
Sunday's two Iranian gunboat northern Persian Gulf, where
devw;tating of the three successMANAMA, Bahrain (UP!) attacks,
the first on Jndependeilt u.s. warships are escorting
ful
SUkwormstrlkes
on
Kuwa-It
In
An Iranlan-ftred Silkworm mls·
shipping
In the gulf In 10 days, American-flag vessels and work.
Octbber.
slle slammed l!l(o an empty
appeared
to be In retaliation for a Ing to clear the vital sea lanes of
The
barge
struck
by
the
barge off Kuwait today In waters
series
of
Iraqi air strikes on Iranian-sown mines.
Silkworm
today
was
sitting
about
where the U.S. Navy plans to
On Nov. 26. the crew of the USS
tankers
serving
Iran's vital coasa
mile
from
the
vital
terminal,
establish a barge base to support
Richmond
K. Turner scrambledtal
oll
facilities
In
the
northern
Indicating
that
the
Iranians
escort and mine-sweeping operato
the
highest
state of alert and
Persian
Gulf.
might
have
been
trying
to
score
a
tions In the Persian Gulf.
trained
its
An
Iraqi
jet
fighter
accidenanti-aircraft
missiles
The official Kuwaiti News second devastlng strike on It, the
on
three
Iraqi
warplanes
skimtally
fired
an
Exocet
missile
Into
Agency, quoting a spokesman for shipping sources said.
a
Saudi
Arabian
Island
early
ming
over
the
sea
toward
the
The altack came as the United
the KuW.altl Ministry of Defense,
Friday
during
anattackonlran's
vessel
In
a
"ship
attack
profile"
reported that Iranian forces fired _ States. which has placed 11
a Silkworm missile toward Ku- Kuwaiti oil tankers under U.S. Fa-rsi Island, senior shipping below radar covet , Navy offl·
clals said.
wait at 7: 53 a.m. and said the registry and protection In the officials said Sunday .
In the Strait of Hormuz, three
The Iraqi strike on AIArablyah
missile did not hit.its target and gulf, Is. considering establishing
plunged harmlessly Into the sea, a barge base In Kuwaiti waters to Island, similar to the accidental Iranian gunboats raced toward
causl!lg no casualties or support Its naval operations In -Iraqi attack on the USS Stark the Singapore-registered tanker
the northern gulf, A U.S. official May 17 that left 37 American Norman Atlantic Sunday afierdamages.
In
Kuwait said the attack today · seamen dead and helped usher In . noon and sent rocket -propelled ·
But shipping sources who
the massive U.S. naval presence grenades ripping Into Its tanks
would
not affect plans.
spoke on condition they not ·be
In the gulf, killed several Saudi laden with volatile naphtha taken
The
strike
on
the
eve
of
the
Identified said the sea servicemen.
shlppping offlc'lals on In Saudi Arabia.
In
Washingsuperpower
summit
skimming, winged Silkworm
" I have been attacked by ·
slammed Into an unmanned ton that Is expected to deal with repoited.
Both
Iraq
and
Saudi
Arabia
Iranian
gunboats and my vessel
barge 1 mile from shore and tension In the gulf.- came a day
acknowledged
that
an
Iraqi
air·
is
on
fire,"
the frantic Norwegian
about 18 miles south of the city of after Iranian gunboats attacked
two tankers In the southern gulf, craft staged a mistaken attack on captain of the Norman Atlantic
Kuwait.
The Silkworm missile was the killing a Danish crewman aboard AI Arlblyah Island on Friday. screamed on ship-to-shore radio
first launched at Kuwait by Iran one and Igniting a raging blaze But Saudi Arabia. a supporter of as the ship burned out of control
Iraq In Its war with Iran, said the and his 33 crewmen spilled over
aboard the second vessel.
since Oct. 22, when a mlssle fired
altack caused no damage or the side Into lifebOats.
A
helicopter
sent
Sunday
to
the
from Iranian batteries In south·
"I am sorry to hear til at,
cas!lalties.
50,000-ton
Estelle
Maersk
to
ern Iraq crippled-Kuwait's prim·
The
official
Saud
I
Press
Olsen," a radioman In
Captain
evacuate
a
seriously
wounded
ary offshore oil terminal at. Sea
Agency
said
both
co!lntrles
cons
I:
the
United
Arab Emirates port of
Italian
crewman
and
a
Dane,
Islattd.
Dubal
replied
in a calm voice.
dered
the
matter
closed.
Western diplomats said It who later died, crashed on
"Are
conthere
casualties?
The
attack
reflected
the
appeared the Iranians might landing when Its rotor blade
"The crew Is abandoning ship
have been gunning for Sea Island struck deck equipment, shipping tinued dariger of accidental
strikes
and
all are safe," Olsen said.
on
friendly
targets
In
the
again. That attack was the most officials said.
J'

Help could be available for those heating -bills
Help could be available for
residents who are having difficulty paying winter heating bills.
The lfome Energency · Assist·
ance Program helps low-Income
Ohioans meet tile blgh cost of
home beating ·bills for the winter
months.
HEAP Is a. federally-funded
program which assists households at or below 150 percent of
the federal poverty leveL The
program's two components, regular HEAP and emergency
HEAP. follow the same eligibilIty guidelines.
Regular HEAP pays a portion
of eligible households' beating
biUs for December, January and
February . The amount of assist·
ance received Is determined by
the total household Income, the
number of people In the housebold, and the type, of beating fuel
used.
Applications for regular HEAP
are available throughout both
Gallla and Meigs Co!lnties at all
Gallla·Melgs Comm!lnlty Action
Offices, Senior Citizens Centers,
fuel companies, utilities, post
offices and other community
organl7.atlons ,.nd many business

places.
Emergency HEAP provides
assistance
households face
that ·
have utilitiestodisconnected,
the threat of disconnection or
have a 10 day or less supply of
l;lUlk fuel. The program allows a
one-time payment of !IP to $200
per heating season to restore or
retain home heating services.

the Gall! a-Meigs Community Aclion Agency at 446-9611 or 367-

•----~------------------­

Stocks higher, trading moderate

Households applying for emer.gency HEAP mu~t provlcde total
household Income for the past
three O( 12 months for all persons
18 year~· of age of older.
Applications for the emer·
gency assistance program require a face- to-face Interview with Community Action HEAP
staff.
Applications will be taken from
8 until 12 noon and from 1 to 4
Monday through Friday at the
Gallla County O!ltreach Office.
220 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis, and
the Meigs Co!lnty Outreach Offlee at 3935 Union Ave., Pomeroy.
The Central Office In Cheshire
will accept applications Monday
through Thursday . Applications
will be taken on a ftrst-come,
fil'st·served basis.
For more lnformatlon' contact

73411n Gallla County and992-5605
or ~92·6629 In Meigs County.

! ·

NEW YORK (UPI) - The stock market staged a modest
advance In moderate early trading today, lighting the
overwhelmingly bearish sentiment that threatened to drag
prices down to the lower levels established after the October
plun1e.
Tbe Dow Jones Industrial average, which felll43. 74 last week,
was up 9.12 10 1775.86 at 10 a.m.
Advances led declines IIU-474 among the 1,589 Issues crossing
the New York Stock Exchange tape. Volume was moderate,
amo!lDting to abnt 19.75 million shares during the first 30
minutes of trading.
A.C. Moore, director of technical research at Argue Research
p.rp. ln New York, said he was cautiously optimistic the
market could avoid a dip below the lows established on Oct. 19,
wben the Dow cl0119d al1738.74.
''The markets are very oversold ... Important technical
Indicators are oversold," Moore said. "The tape Is taking on a
slightly firmer tone. There Is cash on the- sidelines and stock
walling to be bought.
.
"Anytime Investors are negative, they are usually on the
sidelines and have sold the stock they Intended to sell. That
could mean a move the other way."
Moore said the market could 1et a boost from the October
data on the U.S. merchandl8e trade deficit, set for release
Th!lnday. He said the Oetoher deficit should narrow lei aro!lnd
$1S.8 biDion from SlU biDioa In September.
,
'This would be positive," Moore Aid. "AI times of high
pessimism, positive events are generally not discounted In
advance."
•

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�Pomero~-Middleport,

.,

·-

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

~th
ts:
m~ .......__..__-r-,....., o:::l •.=.
~v

..

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Associatlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OP(NION are welcome. They should be Jess than 300 words
long. All letters aresubj ect toediling and must be signed wlt h name, address and
telephone numbf'r. No unsigned lf!\ters wUI be published: L~lters shoul,d be In

good taste. addressing Issues. not personalities.

The Nikita 'watch, 1.959
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- "Your assignment," the boss said (not adding
"s hould you choose to accept it"), "is to cover Khrushchev ... at
night."
· So It was, In September 1959, that my brief career as a superpower
summit sidewalk reporter was launched. Mercifully, it also ended the
same month.
The job was to stake out Blair House, the White House guest
residence, while the Soviet boss was In town. The shlft.started at 11
p.m. and ran through sunrise of the next day.
In those Innocent days, the print media had such assignments to
themselves. UPI and AP had terephones bolted to the fence of the Old
Executive Office Bu!!d!ng directly across Pennsylvania Avenue from
Blair House. Both stationed reporters there to observe the Soviet
leader's comings and goings.
·
·There was no cluster of television cameras and except for several
local cops to keep traffic moving, no unusual sign of security either at
the White House or Blair House.
As a junior staff, member, I drew the "overnight" watch. I expected
to be joined by an AP man of simUar status, but it turned out to be
Endre Marton, a seasoned foreign correspondent who had fled
Hungary during the 1956 revolution. Marton was not visibly thr!lled to
be pounding the pavement all night.
·
In the two nights we spent outside Blair House, we saw Khrushchev
arrive home from social funci!ons twice. He didn't see .us, or at least
so I chose to believe when he walked briskly from his limousine and
cl!mbed the stairs into the Blair House wlth&lt;Jut a glance at the
assembled world press across the street.
; washington stil l is not, in the words of Frank Sinatra's tribute to
New York, "open all night," but 28 years ago the capital definitely
was still a "sleepy Southern town" during the day and simply asleep
alter 11 p.m. LaFayette Square then was known more as an After-dark rendezvous for homosexuals than as the stage for all
manner of protesters, and about the only other people we saw were
o~uislng homosexuals.
·
'The big excitement on the second night was what seemed to be the
suspiciously slow passage of a huge tank truck past Blair House. Its
contents were marked on the side, but neither of us knew what
•!anhydrous ammonia " was If noi a potential blockbuster bomb.Jt
was, as we learned later, farm fert!llzer.
· As It turned out, we missed the big story of the Blair House stakeout.
Not long after we were'relieved the second day, Khrushchev came out
the front door in his shirt sleeves , took a big gulp of the cool autumn
air, stretched, waved and went back Indoors. It was bulletin material.
Perhaps the best story I had a part in during that Khrushchev visit
&lt;jidn't happen in Washington. During his West Coast tour,
Khrushchev took a train between Los Angeles and San Francisco.
After he departed, a competi ng news operation quoted the Soviet
leader as favoring an anniversary meetlng of the United Nations In
S~n Francisco, where It was founded.
·
L!Pl reporters and editors tried desperately to match the story, but
It appeared we would have to walt several hours untl! the train
reached its destination. Then, someone got the Inspired Idea to call
Tass, th~ official Soviet news agency.
The situation was explained to Oleg or Vladimir or whoever
a nswered the Tass phone a nd the question put to him: "What can you
tell us about a U.N. meeting In San Francisco?"
The reply was unhesitating: "Well, If It's OK with Nik!ta, Jt's OK
with me."

Letters to -editor
Regarding Meigs school situation ...
Dear Editor:
I am writing to address some
'
points regarding the Meigs Local
school situation.
The policy of 'hiring substitutes should be ended . immed!'ateiy. Parents won't send their
kids to school either because they
fear teacher retaliation agai nst
tHeir ch!ldren or they feel that
these substitutes are not qual!·
fled. It sounds like a lot of money
td: spend on empty classrooms.
·2. The board should not be
forced to negotiate !tsel f into the
state emergency loan fund . This
fund is only used if the district
was put In a financial emerg!mcy, not because teachers
want a raise. The board shouldnGt promise money that Isn't
there or might not be there In
three years.
'·
'3. The need for higher teacher
salaries Is very legitimate, and a
problem that is nationwide . In
order to ~!tract and retain more
q\la!lfied people, salaries. to the
profess ion as a whole must be

Reagan's ·small
WASHINGTON - The compromise reached last week between Congress and the _White
House over development of PresIdent Reagan's cherished "Star
wars" program was a modest
victory for Sen. Sam N.unn, D-Ga.
The a dministration agreed not
to'take any action durlngthenext
fiscal year on the Strategic
Defense Initiative that would do
violence to a traditional interpretation - Nunn' s view - of the
1972 U.S.-Sov!et Antiballistic
Mlss!le Treaty . The White House
claims that a broader Interpretation of the ABM Treaty would
allow the United States to. develop ABM weapons and · test
them In space, contrary to the
traditional - more restrictiveview.
Actually, the state of SDI

,.,

E'~@J9t1 fORI'~ ~11\lt·Tf'\&amp;-!Z.IWAo-.!!....

HULM(
N£1'

.

"These people are hysterical. They ~an't tell the difference between a
president who's asleep at the switch and one who can get the job done
with his eyes closed."

Reagan, the great strategtst
Before long now, Comrade Gorbachev will be here, and in due course an
lNF treaty will be signed. If the usual
Beltway rumor mills are to be credited, there may also be an announcement that agreement has been
reached on the broad outlines· of a
treaty reducing the superpowers'
strategic nuclear weapons by half,
and maybe even a further declaration
that the Soviet Union is prepared to
pull its forces out of Afghanistan on
some terms or other.
Various players of the Washington
game are busy positioning themselves
to cope with these developments. If
we may take CBS's Lesley Stahl as
representative of liberal opinion, the
liberals aren't nearly as interested in
the developments themselves as in us-.
ing them to prove that President Reagan has reversed himself.
On "Face the Nation" recently .
Stahl insisted that Reagan's interest
in a treaty with the Soviet Union contradicts his earlier description ol that
country as "the locus ol evil in the
modern world." She also wondered

Today in history

how the president, having :'ccused _the
Soviets ol cheating on earher trealtes,
can now contend "that they can be
trusted "

the INF treaty in a desperate elf.ort to
restore their credentials as strategists after their disastrous experiments with detente, the problem is
how to explain the impressive support
for the treaty. You say that our NATO
allies all endorse it• Ah, but President
Reagan and Secretary Shultz •twisted
their arms": Privately they oppose tt.
And what about the imposing array
of witnesses who will appear before
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in support of the treaty? Well,
argues my colleague Bill Buckley,
"You will not be getting from witnesses, in many cases, an accurate tran scription of their thought. ... We wiU
be hearing from generals, admirals,
ambassadors, disarmament specialists and technicians who will be praising an arms agreement they do not
believe in." Though why there should
be this sudden outbreak of mass dishonesty is unclear.

President Reagan, however, knows
that it may at times be necessary to
negotiate with a profoundly evil regime, even though he still regards the
Soviet Union as precisely that. Just
the day before the "Face the Nation"
program he had warned Americans in
his weekly radio broadcast: "Make no
mistake. The Soviets are and will continue to be our adversaries, the adversaries indeed of all who believe in human lil!erty." Hardly the words of an
anti-communist going soft'
And where did Lesley Stahl ever get
the idea that the president now thinks
that the Soviets "can be trusted"? On
the contrary, he has insisted on the
most drastic verification system ever
devised precisely because he does not
(repeal: not) trust them.
Meanwhile, the Knights of the Hard
Over in the camp of the MachiavelRight
are strapping on their armor.
'lians. whom Messrs. Nixon and Kissinger have led into open opposition to Their concern - or at any rate Pat

•

..

NUL results

Ko_,•

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Wale.C01teruee
Pa&amp;rte• DlviiiiO•

W L T PI" GF GA
17 7 I SS Ill ,.
New Jeney
14 I 4 st
II 87
WMbJDatOD
lt II l II
.. 81
PIUeltlll'lla
11 II I !S
.. 111
Pll U.delpbla
t 13 1 n
M N
II lOS
NY Ruaer•
t 14 S !I
AdUMIH\'blloa
Moatreal
1'1 7 I 48 U1 8t
lktstoa
17 1(1 t 38 113 lot
Bulflllo
10 14 4 !4
fW 114
Quebec
t1 U 1 ZS
13 . liM
lbrtford
I 11 4 n
111 84
Campbell ConfereMe
NY Islaaden

N"" Or&amp;eq1 14, Tampa •Y :u
Ouwr II, New Ellllaad %0
LA Ral6era St, Butt&amp;lo II
O.klap •• M.IIIDelotll.f
MoDday'a Game
NV Jeta a~ MJunl, t p.m.

8uDIIay, Dec. II
Allallta at LA Rams, I p.m.
Bullalo al lndl~U~Apolla, 1 p.m.
Clntlaaatl at Clenlud, I
Dallu at WMhlqton, 1 p.m.
Detrult at Tam~~a Bay, 4 p.m.
Houtonal New Orleua, U p.m .
LA Halden at Kaau.a City; 3 p.m.
Miami at PhUadelpllla, I p.m .
Minnesota u. Gr. Bay (MIIw.),l2p.m.
NY Gluts at st. Lout., I p.m.
NV .let. at New Eapand, I p.m .
Pltiabura:h at San IHep, J pm .
Denwr at Seattle, I p.m.
· Mo11b)' , Dec. U
Oalras• at San Francl.co, 1 p.m.

,.m.

........

ISIZtsi411
10 II 4 II
Ill Ill
10 14 z %Z liH 101
IOISZZI
HUI
ti4ZH8112
Sm)'the DIYIIIon
F..dmlllllon
II 10 1 M Ill 101
Calpl'f
II I! I h
Ill 101
Wtnalpe1
U 1! I Sl
II Its
Vanccnn-er
19 II ll U
t4 Ill
Loa ADceae.
1 17 1 18 un Ita
Saturda,'•-Reaulls
Boston 1, ar.lcaao s
Hartford Z, Bullalo I
Quebec I, New Jutey Z

Dl,a.kln I
Cln Prlnr.elon 14, BoiU'dm.a 1

Dl\'a.lo•ll

PltWiura:••. Vancouver S

Akrnn Buchtel2t, Steubenyllle 14
DIYUton Ill
l'OIIDC Mnoney SO, Shierldan 1

Edmonrlen I, 'l'eronco t
Molltreal I, Los An1eles I
. MhtiiMol.a 4, C..lrary I (lie I
NV Raap ... 3, st. Loula Z

DIVIelori IV
C91 A~ademy 21, Gatea Milt. Hawken 0
Dlvl•lon V
Newark Catholic II, Mocadore 13

SuDda,'• Rendtl

Vancnuwr I, BuHalt 1
New .Jerlle)' I, Philadelphia l(llet
Waablaltn lit, Loa M,eles3
Edmonton 10. M1ue11ota 4
Mollday'l Gsme
Ddrott at Toroato, 7:15p.m.

This week's games
Ohio Collece Ba~~kethall Scheduk!

'llteHQ'I Games
Bo81onal Phua•elphla. nlaht
Hartford al Quebec, nlcht
Monlreal a&amp; NY blaaden, nllht
cal pry a1 WMhlq\on, alrhl
MinMIWia at Vuoouyer, nlrtat

Today, De c. 1
Marshall at Ohio Unl\1
Robert ManiA at Miron
Wrl1hi St at WIAcoDIIn-Green Ba)'
Mar~lta at WIUeaber1
Musldnpm at Ke•yon
Ohio DomlnJciUl at Wllmlnston
Oaldan4 CU)' at Rio Grande
'l\lellday, Dec. II
Au~tln Pea, at Tok!do
Delaware Stat X,avler
Grove Cit)' (Pa) at Bllldwln·Wallace
Findlay at Maloae
Urbana at Dedance
Wednellday, Dec; 9
Ke •t St at &amp;bert Morrb.
E\I&amp;Divllle at Miami
Ohio Unhf at All;roa
Day&amp;o• at Vlrllllla
Wrl1ht 81 at Western Dllnol11
Hiram at WIUe.be'rx
CapKal at Heldelber11
Denison llt MarlettM
Waosier at Mo1111i Union
Mallklnpm at W-.yn~ul"l (Pa)
otterbein at Ohio We1k-yan
Keii)'On al Wlbnlncto•
A.drlan ( Mich l at Obt&gt;rlln
Tiffin al Ashland
" 'al!lh at Bhlffton
Thurldllf , Dec. 10
Boston Unl\' at Bowlln1 Gret&gt;n
HA!nluck)' O.r ..lllln at Rlu Grande
Dyke at Indiana (Pil)
Friday, Dec. II
Case llti!Hlrw at New \'ork UniY
Oberlin al Mount Vtornon
Cedanllle at 1\uburn·Montremery
Tuuraey
Tiffin at Aqulni'M (Mich) To arne)'
Salunl-.y, Sat. U
Wrl11ht St at Bolwlng Green
Alron •I Kent 8t
Xa\'ler tU MllliDI
Hollon UniY at Olllo Unh
OeYeland Stat Falrlel1h Dlcldrwo~
Duqunne at Dll)'lon
Men:yhun~l

Norrt. Dt\'lllon

Mt...Toro...
Cblcap
8t. Louts

Pft'p playoft.
At Ohio Stadhun, Colwnbu•

NATION.U. BASKETBALL ASSOC.
Sal..-dti,Y'I Re•ultl
Seallle liS, Wuhlftlien 99
Cleveland 97, LA Laken Q '
Dallal 1DD, De:awr 118
HotWon 121, Golden Slale 96
San Antonio 110, 0\lcaro 101

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Several members of the Indianapolis
defensive secondary succumbed
to temptation Sunday whlle trotting off the Cleveland Stadium
field.
''We know Cleveland's defense
ls nicknamed the 'Dawgs,' so we
did a lltt!e barking ourselves at
the fans,'' said Colts' free safety
Mike Prior. "It was allln fun."
Not really. The Colts' 9-7
victory over the Browns, a
decision buoyed by Dean Btasucci's three second-quarter field
goals and Prior's key recovery of
an Earnest Byner fumble, was .
the result of a steady defense that
gave the Colts their first Cle~e '
land Stadium triumph In 25
years.
Cleveland entered the game
averaging 347 offensive yards
per game and leading the AFC
with 302 poln ts scored. The
Btowns managed just 247 yards
ln their lowest offensive output
since a 20-7loss to Dallas on Sept.
22, 1985.
"(The Colts') defensive gameplan was excellent. They did a
good job .bottl!ng us up,'' said
Cleveland quarterback Bernie
Kosar. "We had a chance to wln
but didn't get the job done."
Ind!anapol!s, 7-5, moved onehalf game In front of the New

,J

Portlan• 133. Phoenix 115
Utah IJI. Sacramento ll1
Handa)''• Result11

PhDenlx 11, L-' Clippers II
Portland 111. New Vorlll&amp;
Moaday'll Games

No tames acheduled
Tuetlday'a Gamet
LA La ken a&amp; New Jersey. 1: 3t p.m.
Wallltlftllon at Ntw York, 7: 30p.m.
Portlud at Detroit, 7:30p.m.
Milwaukee at Indlaaa, 7:30p.m.
Sacnmtn&amp;O al H01111oa, 8 p.m .
Phllalklphla atChlcap, 8:30p.m.
Uab a&amp; San An&amp;ordo , 8: JCI p.m.
Atlanta at LAOippers, 10:30 p.m .
Cle\'eland at Sealde. 10: 30 p.m.

Ohio cage scores

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Former Ohio State football coach
Earle Bruce bid farewell to his
players S.unday afternoon at a
private awards banquet and told
them he'd be rooting for them
next season.
Bruce, fired from his job of
nine years Nov. 16 by OSU
President Edward Jennings, five
days prior to the final game of the
season against Michigan, cancelled. the annual appreciation

I

Dco5
Davld!lon 18. Bowllna: Green '11l
Jame11 MadlliOn 53. ~nl Sll\le 51

Clndnna1l Ill, Mlaml8t
Toledo II&amp;, Del rfiM &amp;8
Dayton 118, Northern IOWII ISS
Mar"'"f!tle tl7, Xavier fl
H'rllhl State 11, Pace lNYI 70
Wllmlnclon H , Marlena 12
Wltlenber1 11, Kenyon H
~pltal98. Ohla Wesle)'aa 87
Oblo Northern. 67, Htlde1berl 41
Mount Uakln 12, Adrian (MI!;!h) 6&amp;

Case Re.en" at Rochester
Denlao• at Hiram
KenJOn at WMh A..Jeff ~r• J
Findlay at Oh'- We•&amp;eyan
Grrne City ( Pa) •I Wooster
Walllh at Malo.e
Bluffton at Mount Veraon
Ohto Dominican at Goshf'n (lnd)
Rio Grande at Drfluce

Ashland 11. Hiram 4t
Rio Gnnele tt. Cln Bible 41
Walsh ac Polat Park (Pa), ppd
Oakland (Mil' h) 87, Defhutce 81
Cornll1111ker Clau6c

At Unculn Neb
Ohio State 72, Nebr1111k8 63, ch

Junior high girls win openers
Teather South led all scorers
Meigs ' Junior High Gold
squad, and the Maroon squad, with 26 and Angle Russe!l added
both opened their season with 12 for the losers.
Other members of the Maroon
wins over Albany and Waterloo
unit are Tara Gerlach, Melanie
in last week's action .
The Maroon squad posted a Qualls, Mary Cremeans, Valerie
come from behind victory over a Wllson and Reva Mullen.
Leading by only four, 10-6, at
tough AlbaJIY team by a 51-44
the
end of the first half of play,
score. The charges of Coach Rick
The
Gold team opened up In the
Ash never had a lead In the first
second
half to chalk up a38-16 win
two quarters of play and trailed ·
over Waterloo at New Marsh23-29 at the intermission.
The second half was an entirely field .
A ball hawking defense, led by
different story, however, as the
Little Marauderettes opened the Verena Compston and Missy
third stanza with a ten point Sisson, put the pressure on the
surge and never trailed from that opposition forcing numerous turpoint. outscoring the Red Devils novers which the Marauders
converted to field goals.
15-4 during the that period.
Compston led the scoring for
Meigs was led by Trlcla Baer Meigs with 18 points . The reand Kim Hanning, both returning mainder of the scoring was
starters from last year's 14-2 balanced with Sisson hitting for
team, as they hit for 19 and 18 six and Yvette Young, Katrina
points respectively . Chrissy Turner and Elizabeth Downie all
Weaver accounted for 10 points, canning four points each.
eight of which came. during the
Other team members are
second half comeback bid . Love Courtney Midkiff, Carrie Bar'
Batey . and Misty Butcher tels, Megan Bartels and Anna
chipped In with two points each.
Chapman.

Admit it folks: Ronald Reagan's

combinatio~ of patience, toughness

and strategic vision is on the v_erge of
making such grand strate~tsts as
Richard Nixon and Henry Ktssmger,
Jet alone Cyrus Vance, look like
they're still playing with rubber ducks
in their batlttubs.

operations by agencies of the
U.S. government.
This w!ll, of course, not stop a
president determined to break
the law , but It will, at least, make
it imposs\ble for such actions to
be funded by Congress.
That Is a step toward constitutional government and a revival
of credibility and respect for our
standing In the world.

Stop In and Check Out Our New Store
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Middleport

~~
1987 by
Inc ? ;.
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NE~ .

" I'd rather not talk about my feelings. W/ly
don't we talk about the $2.3 trillion debt? "

Good 12/7/17 thru U/11/87

·I

•

•

992-3481

\\~~~Tofs - TOYS - TOYS - TOYS - TOYS

COKE, SPRITE, DIET COKE

Schottenhelmer. "We wasted too
"'\any opportunities. We must go
back and get ready for Cincinnati
next week.
"the Colts did an excellent job
of disguising coverages. They
clearly bel!eve they can win.
They made It evident they're a
good defensive team."
Kosar completed 16 of 35
passe~ for 178 yards as he was
"This win really means a lot pressured by the Indianapolis
because we belleve we're a gopd defense, an'tl rookie kicker Jeff
team and we're proving just Jaeger missed a 38-yard field
that," said Blasucc!. "We played goal In the third quarter .
"We didn't use the techniques
well in all _phases of the game."
The Colts' previous victory we have and didn't do the little
· over the Browns was a 21-7 things," said Cleveland tight end
decision at Baltimore on Nov. 2, Ozz!e Newsome, who extended
his pass-catching streak to 124
197.5..
"We're thrllled with this vic- games. "We were flat and didn't
tory. Our defense played magnif- cash In our chances."
Trudeau, subbing for the Inicently," said Indianapolis
Coach Ron Meyer, who ls 10-5 jured Gary Hogeboom, comsince joining a then 0-13 Colts pleted 20 of 34 passes for 192
team on Dec. 1, 1986: "The yards and Bill Brooks caught
offense did the job, with Jack seven passes for 85 yards. Colts
(Trudeau) providing a good running back Erlc Dickerson had
his streak of 100-yard games
mixture. He did a marvelous
snapped
at four as he notched 98
job."
yards on 27. carries.
Cleveland, 7-5, dropped into a
Kevin Mack led Cleveland
tie wlih Houston and Pittsburgh
rushers with 16 carries for 61
for first place In theAFC Central.
The Browns were held to Kosar's
yards.
Indianapolis led 9-0 at halftime
19-yard touchdown pass to Brian
on B!asucci' s three field goals
Bren.n an in the third-quarter.
"We are obviously disap- before a crowd of 70,661. On the
Colts' opening possession of the
pointed as hell In the outcome,"
second half, Carl Hairston recosald Cleveland Coach Marty

Bruce bids OSU players farewell

Ohlo coue,e Basketball 8core8

(Pa) at AMhland

York Jets and one game ahead of
Buffalo In the AFC East. The
B!lls and- Colts meet at the
Hoosier Dome next week.
The Colts ended a six-game
losing streak to the Browns,
winning in Cleveland for the first
time since a 36-14 triumph on Oct.
14, 1962, when the franchise was
based In Baltimore.

vered a Dickerson fumble but
Jaeger shanked a 38-yard attern pt wide left . The rookie has
missed four of his last seven
efforts.
Cleveland then cut to lead to9-7
at 11: 22 of the 'third quarter on
Kosar's 19-yard pass to Brennan
after· Herman Fontenot blocked
Rohn Stark's punt .
On their next possession, the
Browns drove 66 ·yards to the
Colts 4, where Byner fumbled In a
stackup and Prior recovered.
There was no scoring In the
fourth quarter .
"I let the team dciwn," said
Byner.·"That's the bottom Jlne."

The Daily Sentinel
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A Dl.vlslon of MuiUmedla. Inc.
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NBA results

Baldwln·W .. lllceo at Marietta
Capital at Muunt Union
Muslllqum Ill Ohio Northern
Wlltenberalll Otterbein

While I would certainly want to
study any such agreement before deciding whether to support it, I fail to
see what is inherently so offensive
about the idea. Our land-based ICBMs
. have been vulnerable to a Soviet first
strike lor years. What would we stand
to lose by trading some of them
away?

stand Into and emotional, propaganda exercise for his own
glorification.
The final report na!ls North ,
his associates and the president
for their roles In violating constitutional government.
What Is lacking In the report
that Congress can now correct Is
a solid, constructive move to
make !llegal any future covert

· Su.ciQ, Dec. 1S
Yo•ptowa 8t .t Cle\leland 8t

8u J'ruelleo 0, GreeD Bay It
PUiiiMII"Kb IS, SeaiUe I
Wlllhlnpoa Sf, 8&amp;. Lo.a. 17

Make covert .acts illegal ____Ge_or_ge_M_cG_ove_r_n
observed: ''We are going to try to
expose convert action. We 're
going to try to get It legally
banned because we can find no
reason, no justification for convert action on the part of the U.S.
government In the name of the
American people."
Looking at the ll!egal arms
deals, the secret bank accounts
and the private military operations carried on by Oliver North,
John Poindexter, Richard Secord and others, David MacM!chae.J, former -CIA analyst for .
Central America said: "These
guys ought to be punished and
these actions ought to be stopped,
and we think somebody \)ught to
do it. I ~an tell you who ought to .
do it. It Is indeed the Congress. II
they want to stop It, lt can be
sto pped. "
"
MacMichael Is right to call on
Congress to do what former
President Harry Truman came
to believe necessary: to limit the
CIA a nd other !ntel!lgence or
se.cur!ty agencies strictly to the
gathering of intelligence.
'Setting up mercenary armies,
mining International harbors,
assassinating foreign officials,
using arms dealers to violate our
laws and our announced foreign
po!!cy -all of this and scores of
other such activities of the past
four decades should now be
terminated by Congress.
The congressional committees
Investigating the Iran-contra network, which was set up secretly
by the Reagan admlnlstratlon,
did a better job in their final
report than they dld In lnterroga t!ng the witnesses.
Oliver North, for exa:mple, was
allowed to turn his time on the

Tlftln at Aqlkl-.a Tounw)'

NY Glue..U, Plllladel~all (OT)
Atlanta It, Oallu II
bull ..apollr. I, Oeveland 1'
ctDCI..WI.,Ilauu.CUJI1' (O'f.)
LA Rarrw J'J, Detroit Jl
a, 8u IMeao 11

William Rusher
Buchanan's, if he is typical - is not so
much the INF treaty as a ,possible
agreement to reduce the number of
strategic weapons. The INF treaty
debate, Buchanan warns, will be "a
dinner-party discussion compared to
the brawl that is coming if the presi·
dent brings home an agreement to
slice in half the U.S. nuclear arsenaL"

........

No\TION.U FOOTBALL LEAGUE
S.DII-.r'sllellults

Weinberger told the president
that the "Alpha" hydrogenfluoride laser . under development ·by TRW since 1980 was the
best bet for an early testing of an
exotic Strategic Defense Initiative weapon.
Reagan note&lt;) that the Zenith
Star program would eventually
violate the ASM Treaty as he
understood lt. The key section of
the treaty Is Article V, which .
states that neither signatory w!l!
"develop, test or deploy ABM
systems or components which
are sea-based, air-based, spacebased or mob!le land-based."
Despite this seemingly unambiguous language, the president
ordered Abrahamson to proceed
anyway.
Our sources say Abrahamson
recommended that Zenith Star
"should be done openly" and that
in effect the Soviets should be
given the six-months' · notice
required by the treaty If either
side Intends to abrogate lt.
Reagan rejected the general's
suggestion that Zenith Star be
made publ!c. He explained that
Congress was already at his
throat over the Iran/ contra arms
scandal, and the political price
he would pay for endangering the
ABM Treaty "would be too
high." ,As for notifying Moscow,
Reagan tabled the recommenda·
tion for later conslder!ltion.
Meanwhlle, he ordered that
Zenith Star be a "black" or
super-secret project, which meant that Congress would not be
kept Informed of either Its goal or
Its progress.
Abrahamson did as he was
told, and the first phase of Zenith
Star, a five-month study by
Lockheed, Martin Marietta and
Rockwell, was begun last January. The current, second phase In
a three-month, $10.8 million
effort to des.!gn a fu!ly Integrated
space-based laser weapon. The
contract announcements carefu !ly disguised the true nature of
the ;&gt;:en!th Star compon~nt
programs.

•

raised. But along with higher
sa laries must come tougher
One of the most hopeful develrequirements In co llege for prosopments In Washington recently
pective teachers.
Is the for mation of a group of
4. The pr imary responsibility
former officials of _the CIA, and
of the district is the education of
others with experience In the spy
students, therefore the teachers
business, who want to end
s t~ou!d immediately return to the
convert, operations by the United
classroom without lhe raise.
.
5. An Intensive lobbying effort States.
Few steps could better strengmust be put forth by both
then America's position In the
teachers and the board to pass a
schoo l levy to finance a pay raise. world than termination of the
Board members should be re- dirty, self-defeating tactics overquired In the teacher's contract seas that come cunder the label of
to work for this levy in order to convert ~ctivitles .
No one can read the generally
justify the teachers return to
report of the congresexcellent
work without a raise. Also to
sional
committees
Investigating
raise money, a little administrathe
sordid
Iran
-contra
mess
tion fa t might be trimmed. I think
without
rea!!zlng
that
secretive
that these suggestions might
prove to be helpful, If not maybe operations abroad that violate
American values and laws do not
the teachers and the board
serve our security Interests.
should be locked In a room unt!l
Instead, they confuse our allies
they come up with a solution.
and
anger the American people.
Sincerely,
Congress, h aving given us a
Scott Pu ll ins
Pomeroy, OR 45769 good analysts of the "secrecy,
deception and disdain for the
law" Involved in our dea!!ngs
with Iran and Nicaragua, should
look carefully at whether such
shabby tactics can ever serve our
Interests.
The new group of former
Intelligence agents Is headed by
By United Press Inlernalional
John Stockwell, who ra n t he
,Today Is Monday, Dec. 7, the 341st day of 19Q7 with 24 to follow. ·
CIA's operations in Angola in
The moon is waning, moving toward its last quarter.
1975.
'The morning stars are Mercury a nd Mars.
·
Speaking for the organization,
The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
which Is called the Association
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
for Responsible Dissent, Stockinclude Italian sculptor G!an Lorenzo Bernini In 1598; wa~works
well says, "Seven presidents
museum founder Marie Tussaud In 1761; German physiOlogist
since World War II have seen
Theodor Schwann, co-orlglnor of the eel! theory and the fir£ to use the
their administrations destroyed
term, in 1810; novel!st Willa Cather in 1876; composer RudOlph Fr!ml
utterly or deeply embarrassed
('~Indian Love Ca!!" ) In 1879; actor El! Wal!ach In 1915 (age72); actor
and the country discredited by
Ted Knight In 1923; linguist Noam Chomsky In 1928 (age 59); actress · convert action. "
Ellen Burstyn in 1932 (age 55), and rock -folksinger Harry Chapin In
Another former Intelligence
1942.
official, Philip C. Roett!nger ;

:1.

ahead with dev!opment - and
testing - of a chemical laser
weapon. The hush-hush project
was given the code name Zenith
Star.
As we reported. Reagan himself !nltlally accepted the traditional Interpretation of the 1972
agreement: that developing such
a weapon, and particularly test·
lng It In space, would constitute a
violation. But in an Oval Office
meeting last Dec. 17 wlth Defense Secretary Caopar Weln·
berger . and Lt: · Gen. James
Abrahamson, head of the SDI
program, Reagan ordered "Full
speed ahead!" on the chemical
I aser weapon, which would be
able to shoot down Incoming
Soviet missles before they
reached American air space.
According to reliable accounts.

wtlmlltctta ai Urbaaa
Ced•rvlle at Aubur•· M9ntaomur

NFL results

~Ompro""iSe A~derson and VanAtta

research and development Is
such that no tests could possibly
be held before the end of
Reagan's term. So the White
House wasn' t giving up very
much In Its compromise
agreement.
In the long run, though, the
compromise may prove to have
given decisive support to the
narrow Interpretation of the
ABM Treaty. According to this
view, espoused by Nunn, who Is
chairman of the Armed Services
Committee, testing of new weapons In space could not be carried
out by either side without abrogating the pact.
Nunn's "strict contruction" of
the ABM Treaty was reinforced,
according to our sources, by the
series of columns we wrote on
Reagan's secret decision to go

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Cleveland drops 9-7 defensive struggle

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, December 7, 1987

Commentary

Ohio

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'

�Page 4 The Dat'y Senttnel

----~alnews----~

Bengals ·end streak with 30-27 triumph

RITTINGER SCORES- R•o's Ron Rlttinger slips inside for two
points m Rio Grande's v1clory Saturday mght Lookmg on IS Rob
Jackson (52) Defender lor Cincmnati Bible Co ll ege is Steve
Thomas (32)

Rio Grande rips
foe 92-49; play
Oakland City next

CINCINNATI (UPll - The
wayward Cincinnati Bengals
have finally wander,ed home
Cincinnati, which hadn't won
at home in nearly a year and had
lost a club record six straight
Riverfront Stadium games this
season, managed to nlp'the lowly
Kansas City Chiefs 30 27 In
overtime Sunday
Although there were signs
saying · Bring Pro Football Back
to Cincy" and fans wearing bags
over thei r heads, Cincinnati
quarterback Boomer Eslason
said he • actually heard a few
cheers from our fans "
"This Is the happiest I've been
In a long tune,' Eslason said
after passing for 368 yards and
mas terlully directing a 16 play.
79 yard march in overtime that
set up Jim Breech s gamewinning 32 yard field goal with
5 16 left
Eslason, who completed 28 of
44 throws w! th two touchdowns
and no interceptions keyed the
seven minute decisive drive by
hitting five of seven pressure
passes for 50 yards and running
nine yards
We have an offense that can
chew up a lot of ground and a lot
of ttme • sa1d Eslason " We
needed a drive like that one to
finally make somethmg go right
for us '
Cmclnnal1, a dJsappolntlng 4 8,
had been ellmmated from the
playoffs before Sunday s game
• The best thing about this year
Is that It will be over m three
weeks, • declared Estason Our
playoff game wtll have to be
against (arch rival) Cleveland
next week'
Kansas City Is m even worse
shape than Cincinnati The
Chiefs 2 10 have lost 10 of their
last 11 games
With seven minutes left ln
regulation Kansas City took lts
only lead of the game 24 20 when
Bill Maas blocked a 28 yard field
goal try by Breech and Kevin
Ross returned It 65 yards for a
touchdown
Breech, who just one week ago

Vehicles damaged in wreck

'
•

Negotiations are underway

UPENDED - The Chiefs' Stephone Paige,
center, Is upended the Bengals' Ray Horton, right,
and Lewis BLUups, left, following Paige's
had a field goal blocked and
returned 67 yards by the New
York Jets Rich Miano lor a
game winning TD, was wonder
lng if fate was against hlm just
before he kicked Sunday s game
winner
"When I went out there I was
praying It wouldn't be blocked
and that I would hltlt well, 'said
Breech 'My Une did a great job
blocking and the field goal unit
got a reprieve "
Just two minutes after the
Chiefs had grabbed a 24 20 lead
on Breech's blocked held goal ,
Eslason fired passes of 19 yards
to S~anford Jennings, 24 yards to
Eddie Brown and 23 yards to
James Brooks for a TD to give
Cincinnati a 27 24 advantage

reception in the th1rd quarter of Sunday's game In
CIDcmnati The Bengals won 30-27 in overtime
(UPI)

Kansas Ci ty s Ntck Lowe1y
kicked a 33 yard fteld goal on the
last play of regulatiOn to send the
game In to overt1me
'What really helped us was the
way we came back after that
blocked field goal to score a quick
touchdown ' satd Cincinnati
coach Sam Wyche
'That was one of our biggest
drives of the season, ' noted
Eslason The way thmgs have
been collapsing fM us all season,
I felt I had to take the pressure off
our offense before we went out
there I told everybody , 'Hey,
let s have some fun Let's have
some laughs on th1s drive "
Kansas Ctty coach Frank
Gansz said Eslason was a master
at work ln the clutch

J

'Boomer can be as good as
anybody " said Gansz "He was
absolutely exceptional today,
doing everything he had to do '
The way things have been
going for Kansas City all year
Gansz even found plenty of
positive things for the Chiefs in a
30 27 overtime defeat
'I'm very proud of the way our
team played,' said Gansz 'I
thought our offense was better
today We moved the ball when
we had to do ltandwemadesome
big plays on special teams I
think we accounted for ourselves
well out there
B1ll Kenney who threw the
lOOth touchdown pass of hls
career completed 19 of 39 pa~ses
for 229 yards

Princeton
Division I
state champ

OS U tops Nebraska, 72-63

Suns get first road victory

Datyon advances

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GENERAL ALLERGIST
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3•2 s

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Negotiations were underway Monday morning between the
teams of the Meigs Local Board of Education and the Meigs
Local Teachers Assoclalton
The approximate 150 teachers of the district have been on
strike since 12 01 a m on Nov 6
The last offer of the board made dunng an earlier negotiating
session was rejected unanimou sly by tile teachers on Sunday
evening, Nov 29

&lt;

I

Area deaths

John Roush

Cora Bonecutter

John Curtis Roush 55, West
Columbia, died Saturday ln
Holzer Medical Center Hospital
Born Aug 27 1932 at Kay long,
(near West Columbia ), he was a
son ofthe late Lewis C and Hallie
hell Roush
s also preceded in death
y
daughter , Clnd~Kay
Roush, who died ln 1982
He was a certified welder at the
Kyger Creek Plant, a member of
the Point Pleasant Presbyterian
Church, was an elder and choir
member of the church, a
member of Credit Union at the
Kyger Creek Plant and a 1950
graduate of Wahama High
School where he played football,
basketball and baseball
Surviving are his wife, Wanda
Lee Roush, West Columbia, one
daughter and son-In law James
and Carolyn S Buckley, Repub
lie, Ohio, two sons and
daughters in law, Curtis L and
Connie Roush, West Columbia,
Chester L and Bridget Roush,
Brighton, Mlch , one sister and
brother ln law, Earl and Sally
Lou Clark, West Columbia and
seven grandchildren
Servtces will be Tuesday at 2
p m at the Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church with the
Rev Malcolm C Mciver III
officiating Burial will follow In
the Suncrest Cemetery
Friends may call Monday from
3 to 5 and 7 9 p m and one hour
prior to services at the cl\urch
Tuesday
In Ueu of flowers the family
has requested that contributions
be made to the Point Pleasant
Presbyterian Church organ fund

Serv1ces for Cora E Bonecut
ter 83, Pomt Pleasant, who died
Saturday at Pleasant Valley
Hospital after a long illness, will
be Tuesday at 1 30 p m In
Wilcoxen Funeral Home The
Rev
Wtlllam Banks wlll
officiate
Bunal w11l follow in the the
Lone Oak Cemetery
Friends may cail after 7 p m
Monday

Allan Jones
Allan L Jones, form erly of
Pomeroy, died unexpectedly Frl
day at his home ln Santa Anna
Calli
Mr Jones was the son of the
late Stanley and Anna Jones of
Pomeroy and was retired from
the space division of Rockwell
International He was a graduate
of Pomeroy High School and Ohio
State University where he re
celved a degree in mechanical
engineering
He is survived by hls wife,
Jane, a son and daughter In law,
Jeffrey and Ilana Jones of
washington, D C , a daughter
and son in-Jaw, Leslle and Dan
Kaplan of San Jose, Calif . two
grandchildren, Danlelle Jones
and Robin Kaplan, a brother and
sister in Jaw, Ernest A and Allee
- ' L Jones, Columbus
Private services were held in
California

Bernice Randolph
Bernice I Randolph, 76, Reeds
ville. died Saturday night at St
Joseph's Hospital ln Parkers
burg, wva
Mrs Randolph was bo rn June
17, 191lin Reedsv1lle, a daughter
of the late Algla and Anna Mllls
She was a member of the
Reedsvtlle Methodist Church
Survivors include one son
Alfred Randolph ot Reedsville,
one daughter, Betty Ruble of
Parkersburg, W Va , four grand
sons, four granddaughters, one
sister, Pearl Baker of Reeds
ville, and one niece, Donna Jean
Best of VIrginia
She was preceded. In death by
her husband, Alfred Randolph
Servtce~ will be Wednesday. 11
a.m., at White Funeral Home ln
Coolville Rev Roy Deeter will
officiate Burial will be in the
Reedsville Cemetery Friends
may call at the funeral home
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 on Tuesday

High winds forced the Alpine
Meadows ski resort at Tahoe City
to close most of lts chalrllfts,
resort spokesman Dan Nourse
said
It's very, very wet snow Its
not nearly what we were hoping
for," he said "It's also very
windy We've been te1l!ng people
exactly what to expect and If they
Usten to us, they don't bu y
tickets "
Winter storm warnings were
posted for Washington's Shasta

'

The following names of 50
Meigs County residents have
been selected for possible Grand
Jury duty during the January
1988 term, as released by Meigs
County Clerk of Courts Larry
Spencer
George Douglas Lowther AI
bany; Donald E Vaughan,
Pomeroy, Dewey Ray Birch
field, Middleport, Mary LucUle
Haggerty, Middleport, WUllam
P Rizer, Racine Ellen E
Showalter, Long Bottom, George
W Burkey, Dexter, Barbara M
Dugan, Racine, Mary Jane Tal
bolt Tuppers Plains Shirley
Ann Wlllls, Syracuse, Susan
Marie Baer, Middleport, Linda
V Smith, Langsvtlle
WllUam Cecil Gaddis Reeds
vllle, Betty R Mattox , Albany,
Burl Leon Putman Sr , Coolvtlle,
Hobart F Crump Pomeroy,
Jeffrey E Haning, Albany, Mae
Vineyard Reedsvllle, Marcy G
• McCue, Albany, Rose Barrows,
Pomeroy, John C Welsh, Dex
ter· Thomas B Stobart, Racine,

Miles Dowling
Miles 'Tex" Dowling, 87, Pol"t
Pleasant d1ed Saturday , in r,lea
sant Valley Hospital after a long
Illness
He was born Feb 20, 1900, ln
Orange Texas to the late Jolin
and No ra Egan Dowling He
moved to Point Pleasant in 1942
to work as a ship building
mspector at the Marietta Manu
facturmg Company He retired
as the bu siness agent for the
Carpenter's Local 1159 in Point
Pleasant
He Is survtved by a friend, Mrs
Ruby G Ake, Point Pleasant
Services wlll be Tuesday at 11
a m In Wilcoxen Funeral Home
with the Rev John McGinnity
officiating Burial will follow in
Kirkland Memorial Gardens
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 6 p m Monday

Fredrick Schultz
Fredrick "Fred" Schultz 88,
Mtlledgeville Ga formerly of
Pomt Pleasant, dted Sunday
morning at the home of his
daughter after a sudden 1llness
He was born Aug 8, 1899 at
Elmwood, Mason County, a son
of the late August Fredrick and
Thelma Mana Cain Schultz
He retired from the Wes t
Virginia Department o! High
ways in Mason County after 42
years of service
He ls survived by one daugh
ter, Avelene Haislip Milledge
vll!e, 13 grandchildren, and 20
great grandchildren
He was preceded In death by
his wife, Bessie Jane Schultz in
1973 and two sons, Fredrick Elmo
Schultz and Reevls Schultz
Services wlil be Wednesday at
11 a m In Wilcoxen Funeral
Home w1th the Rev. Russell
Downs officiating Burial wlll
follow ln the Suncrest Cemetery
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 p,m Tuesday

Nora P. McKean
Nora Porter McKean, 104, of
il41 Second Ave died Sunday at
Holzer Medical Center
She was a retired employee of
Galllpolls Developmental Center
and she and her late husband
farmed in Gailla County
Born Aug 2, 1883 In Thlevner,
Ohio, she was a daughter of the
late Rev John L Porter and
Rosetta Gillingham Porter
Survlvmg are daughters Jewel
Caldwell, Reta Sheets Juanita
Saunders all of GaiUpolls, Rhoda
Briggs of Cheshire and Lucllle
Haggerty of Middleport, sons
John McKean of GaJllpolls and
Stanley McKean of Zanesville, 17
grandchllqren, 38 great grand
children, and 4 great great
grandchildren
She was preceded in death by
her husband, Charle s M
McKean who died In 1960, two
sons, Porter McKean and Mar
cus McKean two brothers,
Chancey Porter and Homer
Porter
She was a member of Bailey
Chapel Church
Services will be conducted 1 30
p m, Wednesday, at Waugh
Halley Wood Funeral Home

lines 12 mlles south of Palestine
Texas
We've had about six houses
destroyed some barns blown
away and power llnes and trees
down, but no injuries,'' Anderson
Coun ty sheriff's dispatcher Troy
A high wind watch was posted· Freeman said
The unstable low pressure
over northern and central Nev
ada, where wind gusts around 50 system lingering over the region
mph were clocked Sunday after also was responsible for two
noon at Pocatello Boise, Idaho tornadoes In southwest Louis!
also recorded 50 mph winds
ana tlle National Weather Se~
Winter weather advtsorles for vice said
The first Louisiana twl$ter hit
a combination of rain, freezing
rain, sleet and snow were Issued early Sunday afternoon near a
for parts of Ohio, and snow wildlife refuge, causing no dam·
advisories were posted for much age Fifteen minutes later and 15
af south central and southeast mlles away the second touched
Wisconsin, where six inches of down west of Lake Charles,
new snow was reported at destroying one travel trailer,
ripping the roof off a mobile
Madison
A mixture of Ught rain, freez home and knocking several off
!ng drizzle, sleet and snow their foundations
A flood and flash floOd watch
stretched across Minnesota and
was
posted this morning lor
Wisconsin
Powerful thunderstorms raked extreme southeast Texas, where
eastern Texas and western Lout 3 to 5 inches of rain Sunday
slana Sunday, spinning off a drenched parts of Polk County,
tornado that destroyed six floOding streets and several
houses and knocked down power houses at Longview

Siskiyou region the northern
Sierra and higher elevations of
the Lake Tahoe Basi n Stro ng
winds and heavy snow in the
Lake Tahoe region combined to
create near blizzard conditions

Meigs County Grand
Jury names selected

Moderate damages were incurred to two vehicles and a driver
was cited as the result of an accident on W Main St , Sunday.
Pomeroy Pollee report
Pollee said a car driven by Tammy Fry Rutland struck the
rear of a car driven by Steve VanMeter, Middleport who was in
the Jane of tracfflc attempting to make a left turn Fry was cited
on an assured clear distance charge

Sports journalist visits Rio campus

•

By United Press Intematlonal
Another in a series of P aciflc
storms lashed the coast with rain
and high winds tOday and
dumped wet, heavy srtow on the
nortllern Sierra Nevada, chasing
away • skiers from at least one
resort
Rain stretched early today
from western Washington and
Oregon soutll as far as Santa
Barbara, €aUf Six Inches of new
snow fell in the Sierra Nevada
with six more Inches on the way,
forecasters said

Meigs County Emergency Medical Servtces reports seven
calls over the weekenci; two Saturday and five Sunday
Saturday at 6 36 p m , Middleport to the Middleport Lunch
Room for Raymond Little to Veterans Memorial Hospital,
Pomeroy at 11 19 p m to Long Hollow Road for Esta Roberts to
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Sunday at 12 39 am , Middleport to South Second Ave. lor
Roy Priddy to Veterans Memorial Hospital. later to Holier
Medical Center. Pomeroy at 3 45 am to Butternut Ave lor
Cheryl Hysell to Veterans Memorial Hospital, Syracuse at 2 11
p m. to Welshtown Hill for Anna Partlow to Holzer Medical
Center, Pomeroy at 4 02 p m to 145 Butternut Ave for Jer ry
Lewis to Veterans Memortal Hospital, Rutland at 6 09 p m to
County Road 1 for )'laney Chapman to Holzer Medical Center

Rio Gr ande s Ron R1ttm ger Thad Htll each addmg to t h~
and Ray Smgleton each exploded has ts ' scormg rush
R1ttmger was the top pomt
for more than 20 pomts Saturday
man fat the game wtth 22 points
to help shut down vlsltmg C!ncm
na fl Bible College and hand the while Smglelon - who netted 25
of RIO Grande s 58 pomts m last
Golden Eagles a 92 49 loss
Tuesday s win agamst Ttffm The v1ctory bnngs the Red
men s record to 7 2 as they enter 1ecot ded 21 Jackson a 6 6
tomght s game w1tb Oakland sophomore forward / center from
C! ty (Ind ) College Ctncmna II Spnngfteld , had 14
The Golden Eagles coached by
Bible wh1ch fel190 75las1 Thurs
dav to Urba na Umverslty 1s 7 3 veteran J 1m Corrona were led ln
Redmen Coach John Lawhorn scoring by Hudson a 6 1 Junior
was pleased w1th the smooth guard/ forward from Independ
perfor mances of h1s players tn ence Kv , who had 15 Wllkmson
added 8 and Cordrey had 7 1n
Sa turday's game
whatever happened to Bevo
people need to be remmded of
A noted sports JOurnalist was
addition
to the game s smgle on the Rw Grande College and
Smgleton came out and
Francis?'
Francis accomplishments whUe
played we ll and that set the tone 3 pomt held goal The vtsltors Community College campus re
he played basketball at Rto
Franct s set coilegtate sconng
early Lawhorn sa1d
(Rob) sank 14 of 22 attempts at the free cently as part of hts research for Grande between 1952 and 1954
records that have yet to be
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI)
throw line for 64 percent, while an article on Rio Grande blfsket
J ackson also played very well
The article appeared in the topped dunng hts career w1th the Lamont Calhoun s 3 yard touch
Ou r guards made very good R10 Grande was 55 percent on 12 ball legend Clarence ' Bevo'
Dec 7 tssue of The Basketball Redmen, lncludmg an mdtvtdual down run wl th 2 24 left In the
of 22 tnes
deC ISIOnS
game h1gh of 116 points against game gave Cmclnnati Princeton
Ttmes
Francis
The Redmen are back m action
De fense co upled w1th h1gh
'I was ratsed In northwes tern
Ashland ( Ky ) Co1Jege m 1953 He a 14 7 victory over Boardman
Larry Donald, edttor and pub
;;cormg were the key factor s in ton ight at 7 30 when they host Usher of the DetrOit based Bas
Ohio and I did kind of remember is now employed by Goodyear Saturday night at Ohio Stadium
the win Although the Redmen Oakland City
him being here, Donald ex
Ttre &amp; Rubber Co m Akron
ketball Ttmes,lntervtewed Fran
In the championship game of the
"We 11 have a test Monday, ' cis and gathered addtllonal data
took cont rol of the scoreboard
plalned • Last winter, I was ln
Donald sa td he proceeded to do Division I state high school
fi rst , CBC was a contmumg Lawhorn satd Saturday night dunng the Bevo Francis Classic my office thumbing through a research on Francts mcludmg
football playoffs
threa t th1 oughout the frrst 10 about the Mtghty Oaks who Nov 20 21
NAIA record book when I came background materials a nd mter
Calhoun's touchdown run
defeated Rio Grande 105 82 last
m mu tes of t he opening ha lf
Donald who says he constders to the section on seasonal scoring views with some of his team
capped
a short, 26 yard drive for
year at Oakland City 'We'll be Francis to be a 'lost legend" in records and saw the entry on mates and opponents
Go lden Eagles Chad Hudson
the
Vikings,
set up by a 33 yard
Rob Cordrey and Chuck Souder playing one of the better clubs basketball history feels that Bevo Franc1s I then wondered,
"A lot of Bevo s teammates punt return by Craig Thompson
hammered 8\' ay at tile R1o we ll have this season "
really underh ned the thought of
After a scoreless first half,
Tomght ts also the first Booster
Grande lead but thmgs meshed
him being a lost legend. 'Donald Boardman whtch finished 10 3,
for the hos ts m the half s las t 10 N1ght at Lyne Center, hononng
said 'I thmk I have struck a took a 7 0 lead early In the third
m mutes RIO Grande established Jackson msurance agenc1es who
chord w1th hts peers
quarter on a 1-yard run by Jason
a strong defense through gu ards have contnbuted to the athletic
"1 hope my story wtll remind
booster fund at RIO Grand e
AnthOn; Ray more, J1m Kearns
By United Press International
Ohio Umverstty seven years people of hi s unbelievable Marucct That score came after a
RIO GRANDE (92)- Anthony
Brian Watkms and M•ke Ttdwell
Xavter guard Byron Larkin Is before coming to Nebraska last achievements ' he contmued 'I fumble by Princeton quarter
back Garrick Berkhalter on the
controlled the floo r and led at the Ra; mm e, 2 0 2 4 Jtm Kearns. putting hls name into the books
season
think people need to be V1kmg 30 which was recovered
3 2 0 8 Ray Smgleton, 10 1 2 21
In other games Saturday night, remmded'
Saturday mght he scored 24
hitlf 47 22
by th e Spartans' Dave Lowry
The Go lden Eagles suffermg Ron Rltlm ger, 10 2 2 22 Rob points, In Xavter's 67 61 loss to Jeff Himes scored 23 points at
Dona ld sa1d he apprectated the
ot!ensJvely due to the loss of 6 3 J ackson 7 0 1 14, Doug Fogt. Marquette but he passed the Charlotte, N C to lead Davidson assistance he received from Nita
Marucci ran four consecutive
2,000 point mark He has 2 008 to a 76 70 v1ctory over Bowling Dalley asststant professor of
JUniOr center Ttm Wnght to a n 3 0 1 6 Brian Watkms 1 4 1 6
times
for 23, 5, 1 and 1 for the
InJury in the Urba na game took Mtke T1dwe11, 0 1 4 1, John points In his career, the 200th Green Claude Ferdinand scored commun tcattons at Rio Grande,
score
up t~e slack w1t h tmpresstve Lambcke, 2 0 0 4 Marc Goth ard, player in NCAA Division I 17pointsatHarrlsonburg Va, to who has a lso researched and
It took Princeton just 29
lead James Madison to a 53 51 written on Francts career
performances by Hudson a nd 2 0 0 4 Thad H11l 0 2 1 2 To- htstory to do that
seconds
to gel even, however,
His efforts have put Xavter's wln over Kent State, Roger
sophomore Michael Wtlkmson TALS 411-12-19·92
Born In Dayton Donald stu
wtth
Berkhalter
and Marcus
CINCINNATI BIBLE (49) all time leadmg scorer in '1lfth McClendon scored 33 points to died journahsm at Bowling
But they were una ble to cont am
lead Clnclnnah to an 84 82 wln Green State University and Thomas combining on a 75 yard
the RIO Grande onslaught wht ch Rob Cordt ey 1(1 ) 2 3 7, Jeff place m the Midwestern CoJie
touchdown play Berkhalter
over Miami and Ketth Wade hit worked on newspapers tn Fosto
at one point had the hosts Ieadmg Taylot, :l 0 1 6, Chad Hudson, gtate Conference's ail time scar
rolled
right for 15 yards, then
mg ftst He passed fo rmer
for 18 points at Detroit to give ria and Detroit before he pur
by more than 40 pomts Wit h the 4 7 2 15 Chuc k So uder 2 1 55
to Thomas who raced the
pitched
Toledo a 58 49 dectswn over chased The Basketba11 T1mes tn
lead firmly in ha nd Lawhorn Mtchael Wll kmson, 3 2 3 8, Greg players Ed Smallwood of Evans
final
60
yards
to tle lt 7 7
In regular season 1980 The publtcat!On, now boast
brought hts benc h mto play with Z1mmerer, 0 1 01, Sam Stowe, ville and Dave DeBusschere of Detroit
that way unlll
The
game
stayed
games Dayton edged Northern
Detrmt
JUntorMarc Gothard sophomore 2 1 1 5 Steve Thomas 1 0 1 2
tng a circulation of what Donald Thompson s 33 yard punt return
Larkin crossed the 2,000 point Iowa 88 83, Wright State got by called 20 000 hard core basket
John Lambcke and fres hm an 'IOTALS 16(1) 14 2149
from the Princeton 41 to the
plateau three minutes into the
Pace (N Y ) 71 70 Wilmington
ball guys ' was 2 years old when Boardman 26 set up the winning
beat Marietta 90 82, Wittenberg Donald boughllt
second half of the game Xavier
TD
has won back to back MCC titles edged Kenyon 57 56, Capital
"I've always found that no one
and compiled a 62 32 mark downed Ohio Wesleyan 98 87 thing In journa11sm was consum
Phoemx wen t a he'ad 97 91 when dunng Larkin s career
By BlLL WOLLE
despite Scott Tedder's 40 points
mg enough for me, ' he said I
Alvan Ada ms h1 t back to back
UPJ Sports Writer
Ohio Northern rolled over Heidel
In the CornhuskE;f Classic at
never could be satistfted with just
baskets fo r til e Suns final pomts
The Phoemx Suns fmally found
Lmcoln, Neb , Ohto State's Jay
berg 6741 Mount Union defeated writing a colum n I guess my job
DAYTON, Ohio (UP!) -Day
Los Angeles rece1ved baskets by Burson sealed most valuable Adrian (Mlch ) 72 66, Ashland fit s my personahty
pol1te hosts
ton
tailback Da vtd Jones could be
M1chael
Cage
and
Benm
t
Ben
Larry Nance scored 26 pomts
player honors with hts 28 pomts ln
had an easy time with Hiram
considered
a beginning typist, at
Jamm
to
move
wtt
hm
97
95
with
and gt abbed 11 rebou nds and
the 72 63 wm over Nebraska in
73 49, Rlo Grande ran away with
Local bowling
least
the
wa
y h1s coach looks at
47
seconds
t
ema
mlng
James Edwards added 11 pomts
Cincinnati Bible 92 47, Oakland
the title game
YOUTH 80\\IING LEAGt.:E RESULTS
Cage
wt1o
pulled
down
a
h1m
Sunday mght hetpmg the Suns
~at urtl ny !'iunr l:-. r Ynut h Lc&gt;ugu - \\ c1 kofOtt
(Mlch ) defeated Defiance 97 87
' Too slow Jones ts wha t we
game h1gh 19 rebounds bu t
'J ay deserved tt, sa1d Ohio Cedarvllle downed Findlay 87 81 2 1111
notch the1r ftrst road vJctot y of
m1ssed
8
of
12
free
throws
call
h1m, sa td Dayton coach
State Coach Gary Wll11ams
\\ Lt
the season with a 97 96 triu m ph
and Daeman (N Y ) topped Dyke TPam
Team
5
comerted
the
second
of
two
foul
Mike
Kel ly after J ones scored
19 '
whose team went to 4 0 'He was 72·68 The game between Walsh Tl'am ~
over the Los Angeles Clt pper s
13 II
three touchd owns Saturday af
shots to ma ke 1t 97 96 "tth 25 the best player here Hls team
I~
I ;!
'I c-am I
Hope full} "e are over that
and Point Park (Pa ) was post
12 p
Team I
seconds to go
ternoon to lead the Flyers to a
mates look for him and that poned because of a time differ
w1nless on the road fceltn g
'II llltl I
1 he Clippers had an opportun
34 0 win over Ce ntra l Iowa In the
Team lll ~ h Srrlu&lt; r un I 111 5 ret.un 6~ 7fl'i"
really helps him open up his ence on the two schedules
suns Coach Jo hn Wetzel sa1d
I I a ni 21111 Ttl\lli I 1~1
tty to wi n when wtth 10 seconds game and get the good shot "
NCAA DIVISIOn lll semifinals
after Phoenix won away fr om
Team III Jth Game r , 1m :t 1119 Tiam !J '!91
remaining Jay Humphreys
'He's not too fast but just hunts
Tcmn
1
290
After watching Burson a sllm
home lor the first t1me alter fl\ e
In t01rrnaments Western Ill!
lntl lv ld uu\ 111 ~ 1 S1 rio;
mtssed a pa1r of !tee throws
and
picks hts way through '
6 foot, 158 pound JUnior, hit 10 of nols beat host Akron In the
road losses it had gotten to th e
Flm P t ICr!lon 366
Woodson rebounded and the 15 shots from the perimeter, McDonald s Classic 77 73 after
Jotm lMd~on 2 U~ l a~o n R~an 211 I,A&gt;e { lillian
After a stow first quarter, in
potnt whe1e "e couldn t help bu t
Ul t nudv lle n!&gt;IC) 'J9 ltu.t hclll L ~l&lt;') 23-1
C!tppers called , l1me out befo re Nebraska Coach Danny Nee U S International edged Rice
which Dayton managed a 30 yard
wonder Now r hope we w11l put
lncllvlduul ll lgh Oa m ~ Tim llltr su n
Woodson
missed
the
!mal
shot
136-116111
I.A
e
Gillilan
111104
Cund)
field goal from Mike Duvlc,
agreed wit h Williams
tha t behmd us
82 81, Youngstown State got by
llen:.ll )' 103
Los
Angeles
m
tssed
15
of
40
Jones !malty found hls mche
The Cltppers whose two game
assesment
Southeas~ Louisiana 54 51 ln the
free
throws
for
the
game
wmnlng streak was snapped
· Now you know why Jay consolation game of the Marshall
'Wl ccJtalnly had proble ms at Burson is the all time leading Memorial Invitationa l tourna
"ere ted by M1ke Woodson who
the foul ltne, C!tppers Coach scorer ln Ohio high school his
scored 30 pomts and Larry
ment
Gene
Shue said ' It was clearly tory, ' said Nee who coached at
Drew who added 17 pomls and a
the differe nce In the game If you
game htgh 11 asststs Woodson
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
don
t ge t your free throws it's
however missed a 22 foot shot
YOU CAN EAT '
trouble It was such a negative
with three seconds rema mlng
tonight
We made the key shots we
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
FOR JUST
In Sund ay s only other game,
needed In the end ' said Na nce
Pottland rout ed New York 117
(Dtnmg
Room
Onl~)
VETERANS MEMOR1AL HOSPITAL
who mtssed theft, st 10 ga mes of
99
Served wtth wh1pped pot~toes chtcken gravj cole
slaw hot roll butter and coff ee Sorry no su bst1
the season with a broken bo ne m
tutes except beverage w1th add1l10nai pr1ce
his right hand
Now we ve
Transactions
finally got a win on the road It
NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS
8Mt.'hnl1
has been a l eally tough year wl th
Uontr aJ - 'li ,unPd Alan &amp;nnhk'r
Injuries '
m~nng• r of th{'lr ltl)cldo rd affllla lt In tile
HA~E
M ldw..st l..e6i.(lle (A ) appointed Mike
Mtss!ng from the Suns lineup
Parrvtt a nd (,• rw, Glynn io the Rockford
Sunday was their top scorer ,
CALL (614) 992-2104
f!GaChlng slalf
PH. 992-5432
POMEROY, OH.
Oakh•nd - ~ r .. NI lo terms with
Walter Davis, whose !Jack ls
l r1 c-a l{elll c aichPr lto n QaJJ !Ie)'
Feuturong Kentucky Froed Chtcken •
(304)
675-1244
alll ng

"WE

More Pacific stornts .r ock West Coast

EMS has 7 weekend calls

I

The Dally Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Monday, December 7. 1987

Monday, December 7, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Elizabeth Maude Burkett, Mid·
dleport, Margaret Lawson,
Albany
Ivan L VanMatre, Pomeroy
Lola F Sanders, Reedsville,
Elaine J Smith Portland
Joanne E Clem, Long Bottom,
Forest Summers, Racine Daisy
M Sayre, Racine, K~lth F
Allen, Racine, Pamela A Riffle
Rac ine, Darren Hayes, Pome
roy Rhonda L Ml111ron, Reeds
ville, Caryl Emma Pooler,
Pomeroy
Larry W Bunce, Middleport,
Millard Swartz, Coolvllle, David
C Flagg, Syracuse Charles E
Boso, Portland, Pauline M Cun
nlngham, Pomeroy, Gene Ar
thur Davis, Rutland David
Miller, Pomeroy, Frederick C
Brown, Pomeroy, Warren M
Haning, Middleport Wililam Ed
ward Swisher, Middleport, John
TheOdore Grueser, Mlnersvllle,
Cathy J Hart, Pomeroy, How
ard David Barr, Rutland , Leora
Mae Young, Racine, Vida May
Green. Vinton

from_
page _
1
__
_ _ __
Pearl ... _Continued
Germans had reached the out
skirts of Moscow and likely
wout&lt;i h~" e taken it had not
Stalin's erstwhile partner ln
conquest, Adolf Hitler, switched
his main attack to the southern
Russian front
Russia's own " day of Infamy"
had come seven months earller
when Hitler turned on Stalin and
sent his Panzers smashing
across the Soviet border on June
22, 1941 - a blltzkrieg that
surprised the Russians even
more than the Pearl Harbor
a ttaclt' surprised the Americans
Stalin, who had joined the
non aggression pact with Hitler
In August 1939 that set the stage
for Germany to start the war by
invading Poland was stunned
England warned Stalin the Ger
man invasion was lmmlment,
but he could not believe that
Hitler who generously agreed to
give him as part of the pact the
eastern half of vanquished Po·
land, would attack his co
conspirator

But even Pearl Harbor did not
align Washington and Moscow as
allles in war It took a curious act
by Hitler to accomplish that
Congress, at Roosevelt's re
quest, declared war on Japan
Dec 8 There was no mention of
doing likewise against Germany
and Russia was not about to
create for Itself a two front war
by declaring war on Japan
But Hitler, In one of his
monumental blunders, lnexpllca·
bly declared war against the
United States on Dec 11, thus
allying the United States, Soviet
Union and Great Britain against
Germany

Court news
John H Ridgway , Pomeroy,
has filed in Meigs County Com
man Pleas Court a money action
for $6,370 from Stephen Eyen,
Columbus

-----Announcements----Racine council meets
Racme Village Council will
meet in regular sesson tonight,
Monday, 7 p m at council
chambers at the Shrine Club
Park Building
Trustees tonight
Letart Township Tr ustees will
meet tonight, Monday, 6 p m • at
the town building
Water committe me eta
Rutland Vlllage Water Com
mlttee Is meeting tonight, Man
day , 7 p m , at the civic center
Council to meet
Rutland Village Council will
meet Tuesday at the civic center
Lodge to meet
Open lnstali&lt;i'tlon of district
education officers and officers of
Shade River Lodge No 453 wlll be
held Thursday at the Chester
Masonic Temple All master
masons, their families and Invited guests are welcome to
a !tend the dinner at 6 30 p m A

Licences issued
Marriage licenses have been
issued In Meigs County Probate
Court to Michael Todd Hubbard
19, Pomeroy, and Shannon Marie
McCarty , 19, Pomeroy , George
Hastftnan, 46, Belmont, W Va ,
and Allee Faye Curtis, 41,
Tuppers Plains
Rev Charles Lusher and Rev
Alvis Pollard officiating Burial
follows In Mound Hill Cemetery
Friends may call at the funeral
home 6 to 9 p m on Tuesday
Pallbearers wlll be Bill Pegg,
Robert Pegg, Maurice McKean,
Julian Caldwell, Richard Cald·
well, Jim Caldwell, Dan Cald·
" ell, F Warren Sheets, Charles
McKean, Danny McKean, Rl
chard Haggerty, David (Chip)
Haggerty, John Mark Haggerty ,
Ron a ld Saunders, Brent
Saunders
I

special program for the children
will be held following the
installation
Band boosters meet
Southern Band Boosters will
meet Thursday, 7 30 p m , In the
high school band room Parents
of all band students in the district
are urged to attend
Plan hymn sing
Hobson Church of Christ In
Christian Union wlll be having a
hymn sing on Saturday starting
at 7 p m Singers will be Dan
Hayman and the Faitll Trio,
Dennis Weaver and Joe Guinn,
Jerry Frederick and \he McDa
niel Trio Everyone welcome
Racine masonic
Racine Masonic Lodge 461 ,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7 30 p m
Tuesday at the temple Installa
tlon of officers for the organlza
tlon has been set for Dec 15
Pomeroy chapter
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal
Arch Masons, and Bosworth
Councll 46, Royal and Select
Masons wlll meet at 7 30 p m
Wednesday at the Middleport
Masonic Temple
Meigs future farmers
Fruit sold by the Meigs Future
Farmers of America wlll arrive
Wednesday Students who sold
tile fruit should pick up their
orders at the home of Everett
Holcomb, across from the Salls·
bury Elementary School Wed
nesday afternoon or evening

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Janet
Hemline, Shade; Cecil Karman,
Pomeroy
Saturday Discharges - Karen
Thalin, Brian Friend, Dorothy
Roush
Sunday Admissions - Esta
Roberts , Pomeroy; Chilton Ca
die, Rutland, Judy Reiter,
Middleport
Sunday Discharges - None

~SNOW

-RAIN
~ SHOWERS
FRONTS "
Warm " C old
. . Stattc . . Occluded
Map shows mnlmum temperatu res At least SO% ol any shaded area JS forecast
to rece•ve prectp ·auon indJcaled
UPI

WEATHER MAP - Rain will extend from the lower Great
Lakes across the Ohio and Tennessee valleys and the southem
Appalachians to the central Gulf of Mexico coast. Thundentormll
wlU be scattered along the central OuU Coast. Ralnshowen, with
snowshowers In the higher elevations, will reach from the PacUic
Coast across Idaho and northern Nevada into the northem and
central Rockies Light rain and freezing light rain will extend over
North Dakota, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Winds will be stron1 and
gusty over the north ern and central Rockies

------Weather-----Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
By United Press International
Chance of rain Wednesday,
cloudy Thursday and a chance of
rain or snow Friday Highs will
be In the 40s and lows In the 30s
South Central Ohio:
Rain Likely today and tonight
with a high near 50 and a low near
40

One ticket matches
Super Lotto numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI)- Chris t
mas came early for one Super
Lotto player who has a ti cket
from Saturday night's drawmg
with the numbers 2 17 24, 26 34
and 39
Ohto Lot tery offi~la Is said
Sunday the holder of that ticket
can redeem lt and become
eligible for the $3 mllllon jackpot
which wl11 be awarded In 20
annual before taxes payments of
$150,000
Lottery officials said 116
tickets have five of the numbers
and are wortll $1 ,000 while 4 605
tickets have four of the numbers
and are worth $94
Wednesday's jackpot will be$3
mUllan

Rain likely again Tuesday and
windy with a high near 50

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power
AT&amp;T
Ashland 011
Bob Evans
Charming Shoppes
City Holding Co
Federal Mogul
Goodyear T&amp;R
Heck's Inc
Key Centurion
Lands End
Li mited Inc
Multimedia Inc
Rax Restaurants
Ro bblns &amp; Myers
Shoney s Inc
Wendy's Inti
Worthington Ind

25U,
26%

53%
. 15

9h
34

30%

50%
1~
34~

16%
16%
42
3%
....... ..207
.4~

16%

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•

,•

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, December 7, 1987

.
•
s
•
B ·_s_I_n_,·e_s_s___.~e:--r_v"'t_c_e_s__...., ~;:~.-~~:r,p.:::::~.';'h·;R·~~
==================:;======= +----u_
MONDAY
VINTON - North Gallla Band
Boosters meet Monday, 7: 30p.m.
at the bandroom.

Literary Club meets
New ofllcers were elected at
the·recent meellng of the Middleport Literary Club held at the
home of Mrs. Chester Erwin.
Elected were Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter. pretsden t; Mrs.
George Hackett, Jr., vice presi·
dent; Mrs. Chester Erwin, treasurer; and Mrs. Dwight Wallace,
secretary.
Mrs. Carpenter presided at the
meeting welcoming three guets,
Mrs. Danny Thomas, Mrs. Wil·
bur Perrin, and Mrs. Dwight
Anderson.
Mrs. Carpenter reviewed the
book, "Lake Woebegone Days"
by Garrison Kelllor. She played a

tape of one of his talks. Mrs.
Carpenter said that Keillor was a
talk show host on radio and his
show was "A Prarle Home
Companion.'' Lake Woebegone
was a mythical town of small
town characters, where the philo·
sophy was "we are what we are
and why smart does not count for
much." He was called America's
tallest radio humorist who
leaned over a radio microphone
and spun his home town humorist
tales.
For roll call members gave a
small town remembrance. The
hostess served candy, nuts, and '
crackers. J

room.
·CHESTER - Chester PTO will
meet Monday, 7 p.m ., at the
school.
REEDSVILLE
Orange
Township Trustees will meet in
regular session Monday, 7 p.m.,
at.,the home of Dorothy Calloway,
clexk.

LEADERS INVESTED ,... A candlelight investiture and
rededleatlon ceremony was beld Thursday night at Pomeroy
UnUed Methodist Church for Girl Scout le~&amp;ders throughout Meigs
Collllty. Present for the ceremony were, seated I to r, Connie
CoiUns of the Syracuse Brownies; Shirley Smith, Middleport
Janlora; Pam Burch, Middleport Cadettes; Beth Theiss, Racine
BI'OWIIIea; b~k row, I tor, Shirley Cogar, service unit dlre,ctor for
B11 Bend Eailt; Barbara Lawrence, Syracuse ·Juniors; Gladys
Tbomaa, Reedsville Juniors; Faye Clifford, Salisbury Brownies

~uxiliacy

and Juniors; Dreama Knlgbt, Middleport Brownies; Deborah
Cooke, Chester Brownies; Anna McCoy, Chester Brownies; Nancy
Yoacham, Racine Brownies; and Katby Price, Big Bend West
service unit director. The ceremony was conducted by the service
unit directors and Dee Lawrence, mack Diamond Girl Scount
Council field director, Athens. ·Other Girl Scout leaders In the
county Include Teresa Evans, April Harmon, Mary IDnzman,
Debbie Smith, Ann Chapman, Joy Hysell, Tammy Daniels, Sarah
Johnson, Barbara Cotfi)rllJ and Pat Bissell.

. More than 1,500 persons attended the Pomeroy Flower Shop
open house held Saturday and
Sunday at their Butterput Ave.
shop. Winner of the grand prize in
a drawing was Edith Spencer,
Middleport. Other winners were
Leslie Carr, Neva McElroy, and
Barb Mullen, on Saturday, and
Irene Parker, Sharon Cotterill,
and Linda Turley, on Su.nday.

meeting conducted at~ hospital _____

Hospital holiday decorations
were discussed at the recent
meeting of the Wokmen's AuxilIary of , ,Veterans Memorial
Hospital. ··
Sunday the group took the tree
arid trimmings to the hospital
anci Monday will meet there to do
the decorating. Tuesday at 6:30

the Auxiliary will bave its
Christmas party in the cafeteria.
Turkey and dressing · will be
furnished and members are to
take a covered dish and a $4 gift
for the exchange
The bid from Francis Florist to
furnish fresh flowers and a
refrigerator at the hospital was

for boys 12 and under are needed.
A request from a family with a
child who has cerebral palsy
asking for a dona lion for the
purchase of a wheelchair and
highchair was noted. Members
took copies of the request to their
respective churches where the
need will be prEl&gt;elt te•d.

the meeting with the Auxiliary
prayer. Officers' reports were
given by Mary Folmer and
Carrie Kennedy. Mary Dimond
gave a report on the Vera Egln
Leadership meeting held In Columbus recently.
Mildred Fry · served refresh·
ments. Clara Burris was a
contributing hostess.

Friendly
Gardeners
meeting held

'I
PLANNING FOR .'FUNDING - Additional
funding for Meigs County's Alzhelmers Disease
and Related Disorders programs to expand
1'811plte care services and caregiver training has
been received, Eleanor Thomas, left, executive
djreclor of the Meigs County Council on Aging,
aanounced at Friday's meeting of the AD·RD

) /J..

j

Advlsiory Bolard. Ali additional Sll,OOO has been
put into the state funded program and more
money Is anticipated In early 1988. Here with Mrs.
Thomas reviewing the program is Pam Garretson
of the Area Council on Aging and chftlrman of
Advisory Council, center, and Sandy While, local
coordinator of the AD·RD program.

Meigs County school honor rolls
The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Chester
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
·named to the roll were:
·
Third Grade: Patsy Aeiker,
Meredith Crow, Eric ....,, ..a,

Mar la Frecker, Tract Heines ,
Shanna Machir , Les lie Parker.
F ourth Grade: C ha d Barker ,
Meli ss a Dempse y, Jennifer
Mora , Nicole Nelson, Brandi
Re eves , Lauren Young.
F ifth Grade: J e sSica ChevaJamie

Ord,' Stacy Woolard, David
Fetty, Sara Machir, Victor Van
Meter, Todd Michael, Ryan
Buckley.
Sll\lh Grade: .Tyson Rose,
Penny Aelker, Andrea Dillard,
Andy Wolf, Amber Well.
The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above in all their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
Third Grade: Desiree Beaumont, Laur~ Buckley, Sherry
Burk'e, Angle Chaney, Laura
Eastman, Amber Fortney, BU!y
Francis, Randy Koehler, Raquei
Maddux, Katy Manlcke, Sean
Maxey, Christina Moore, Erin
Sexton, Chance Watson.
Fourth .Grade: Jonathan Avis ,
Michael Barnett, Brian Bowen,
. Mike Laughery, Ginger Nutter.
Fifth Grade: Janet McDonald.
Sixth Grade: Jaime Wlison,
Ajnlta Calaway, Randy Kaylor,
Dawayne Wilson.
The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Riverview Elementary. School has
been announced. Making a grade
of B or above In all their subjects
to be named to the roll were:
Third Grade: Angela Bissell,
David Baker, Carrie Newlun,
Martie Holter, Amanda Milhoan,
Christina Grossnickle.
Fourth Grade: Rebecca
Evans, Candy Mays, Jeanie
Cline, Connie Pooler.
., Filth Grade: Heidi Nelson,
Brandy Barber.
Sixth Grade : Amanda
. Barringer,.

A demonstration on making a
tissue collage was given by
Margaret Bishop at the recent
meeting of the Rutland Friendly
Gardeners held ·at the home of
Lori Barnes.
Mrs. Bishop used layers of
tissue paper, one on top of
another, 'put together with white
glue to create the tree and then
finished It off with a layer of the
glue used like a wash to make it
translucent. Her backing was a
piece o~.paneling.
Sandy Titus presented gardening tips on little bulbs which give
lots of color. She noted that
snowdrops produce the first
flower of the new year blooming
In February and March, that blue
scilla brings electric blue which
in combination of low ground
covers such as creeping mrytle
makes a striking picture. She
said they are best planted In
groups and in unexpected places
to. surprise and delight viewers.
Plans for the observance of
Christmas were discussed and
refreshments were served.

THE
VIDEO TOUCH
OPEN
SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM

ELIZABETll A. A.BDELLA

Alxiella birthday
Elizabeth Ann Abdella cele·
bra ted her first birthday recently
with a party at the home of her
parents, John an.d Vicky Abdella.
Mt. Gilead.
A clown theme was carried out.
Attending from this area were
her grandparents, Dallas and
Janice DeBord, Pomeroy, and
William and Mary Abdella,
Chauncey. Others there were
Susie and Whitney Allen, John
and Joan Keenes of Athens. and
Tammie DeBord, Columbus..

Hubbards Greenhouse
NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
Poinsettias
Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus
House Plants

Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees
Candle Arrangements

Grave Blankets
' Monumant Sprays
OPEN DAILY 9-5
SUNDAY 1 · 5
SYRACUSE
992-5776

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 AM • 9 PM

992-3462

271112 N. 'SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

\

~:~~~&gt;
U05ED SUNDAY

.. . . ....-

...... o... .. ... _ - - ............

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lOUI
IOA¥1
IQDA¥1
IJIOOH110

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C0f' OlAD"to l

MI)NCIU ~-H:~

lUtiOU IAOU

•• o.... o... .... .
lHUftiCA•UHR
·~ • on •v1~

OliJOOU

our~

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992-3711

OA"

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,

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··----··---·:-4-·-.. .......-':.....-:. .,----1'_ ... ....
~~.~:::r::.~
~-~-

G oll o

Howard L Writesel

ROOFING

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

949-2263
or 949-2168

4·22·17-ttn

..

.
_
__

C!J
~

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~~-~···-·
·~·--

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U - M - .. l -

2

In Memoriam

In Loving .Memory·

of

a -f"ew p~nnies spent here
comes back folding money

SHERMAN ROBERTS

. E. Main

POMEROY,O.
992·2259
HERE is a restaurant for
sale! All equipment 1n place,
includes building plus a ren·
tal house- Business ready
to go. $25,000.00 for the
whole thing'
OWNER MUST HAVE SALE!
Really nice 3 bedroom
newer rancb type house on
a level lot 2 car garage, fire ·
place, swimming pool, sate!·
lite dish. Reduced to steal
price at $44,900.00.
HERE IS A BAR &amp; Restau ·
1ant for sale. Building &amp; all
equipment complete and in
operation. Call for details.

RUTlAND - Nice ran ch'
style home with central air,
garage, low utilities, fronl
and rear porch, 3 bedrooms:
large living room, big level
lol. REDUCED, $38,500.00.
PRICE REDUCED - Real~
nice ranch with a gorgeous
kitcben, huge lamily room. big
living room wlfireplace, plus a
trailer hookup. 20 acres appx.
ONLY $49,900.00. MAKE OFFER.
SR 7 - SILVER RIDGE Apprx. 19.80 acres, all mi·
nerals and royalties from ex·
!sting well. Appx. 15/ mo. 2
springs for development.

$ii.ooo: ·

HENIIY l ClElAND. JR..... 992-6191
JEAN numu ............ 949· 2660
DOITIE TUINIA ........... 992-5692
'TRACYIIIFrlE .............. 949· 3080
, OFFICI .................. ,. ...... 992· 22l9

~way.

Sadly missed by wife, Dorothy; children, grandchil·
dren and ereat-grandchil·
dren.

Srwon

1/· ~

~-

:: :::

..

~

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home &amp; Auto
1614)992-371-8

Add on mini fuel computer
system. Fits any car. Instant
miles per gallon readout.
Know your ful!r consumption
from one block to hundreds of

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
1-16·86-lfn

UNDER '90
Monitors lor MCf.CCF used
far furnaces, calibrated to
meter.

display fuel consumed.

On December 1. 1987. in
the Mei91 County Probate
Court. Cate No. 25703. DA·

niel J. Buchanan, &amp;2856
State Route 681. Reedavlto.

GUN SHOOT

Ohio 46772, was appointed
Executor of tho eolate of Me·
doline Faye Such...,, dttceooed, Iota of 52856 State

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Ne..elroed, Clerk
(12)7, 14,21 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FID\!CIAR'(
On November 17, 1987,
in the Meigs County Probate
26692,

Earie lee Wood, 39604
White Oak Road. Pomeroy,

Ohio 46769, woe appointed
Executor of the estate of
Ernest Wood, deceased. late
of 39624 landoker Rood,
Bedford Township, Pome·
roy. Meigs County, Ohio.

RObert E. Buck,

Probate Judge
Lena ll. Nesselroad, Clerk
111)23. 30; (12)7, 3tc

Basham Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

"Free Esti'm ates"

PH. 949-2860

Doller

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

nHiln

Middleport, Ohio

IS FOR SALE
If interested stop by.

v.w.

1f2 PRICE SALE
GOINJ; ON NOW

PARTS

NEW AND USED

· WIDE

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODUS
CALL 742·2315
d.

Public Notice
Public Notice ·
NOTICE OF
utor of the estate of Alvin S .
APPOINTMENT OF
Reed deceased, late of
FIDUCIARY
On November 17, 1987, Olive' Township •. Reedsville.
in the Meig1 County Probate Meigs County, Ohio.
Robart E,. Buck,
Court. Case No. 26691.

Probate Judge
Lena K. Nauelroad, Clerk
111123, 30; (12)7, 3tc

PlASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC.
1 2·2· '87-1 mo pd

of :

General. Store.

Keep .

money, return papers. No quet"" •
1iona eelced. Cell 304 · 675 ~ ·
1898.

9

DON'T lET YOUR ElECTRICAl PROBLEMS BECOME A SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL

--a~

~

D&amp;C ELECTRIC
Ron Diles or

Gary Cummins

•

. Wanted To

Buy

..

~·

We pay cuh for late model clean

'

used cws.
·
' '"
Jim Mink ChtW.·Oid• Inc.
Bill Gene Johnaon
614-446 -3672

'

==-:-:7~-:-:--::-::---:-;·

985-3561

Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine.

•Washers •Dishwashers

WEBER FARM.

WE SELl USED APPLIANCES

on .VHS
Tape

!AGLIS CLU8-POMlROT, OH.
THURU PM-II 6o4l

New location:
168 North Se&lt;ond

20 Hard (a,d Gomt•
S SO pf'r qamr

Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

We Carry Fishing Supplies

Pay Your Phone

and Cable Bills Here

•Holiday Partilfl
•Wedding•
•School &amp; Church Programs
•Sporting Eventl
•AnniVersaries
•Record Valuable&amp;,
Oocumants
•Tret~lfer Photo Albums to
VHS Tape
•Tranafar Bmm and Super 8
Movies to Video Tape
•Create Training Filma for
Students and Employees

REASONABlE RATES
CAlL fOR fREt ESTIMATE

ALL
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

992-7632

·INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772

1-13-'87-1 mo.

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Tag Your Tree
Early
For Christmas

Harley Honing
Residence
3S97S Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohia
211'1 miles from fiYe PaintJ.
11·23-'17 I MO.

PIANO LESSONS
You'll New Too Old
To Lu,p/
Teaching Thompson.
Schaum, Bastian
. From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For lnformotion

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

Good Weathered ·oak Bern Sid•
ing. Call 614-446-81592 or
446·8217 after 6 PM .

Coll614-379-2758.

•

Buying daily gold. silver coins,
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins. 1.-ge currency. Top prl·
c... Ed Burkett Barb.- Sho» .. 2nd. Ave. Middleprm. Oh. 614 .

992-3476.

Gyn Sing and Yellow root. We ~
hiVe wheat end nita lite~.
Trapping auppli81 for ule. (Buying ueed traps}. George Bucklrlf. ~
Houra12-9 . 614-664-476~ . ·' '·

Antique glauwere, old coins. • •
old j.-., rings, picturu, any "":".glass, Fenton, Imperial. C111C.. 1
Brian lee 814-385-5099.
... ...

QUILTS
:
High prices paid tor pr&amp;-1950.
quilta. Applique, pieced. any ..-'lo
condition. Call 614·992-2101 :
or 814-992-6867.
.:_ ~

.••.

Good used electric typewriter."'
Ph. 304-675-6000 or 1 87"'
1320. A•k for Barb.
·
.....

f mploym ent
ServtcP.s

OYEII 110 P!OPl£

$6 S p~r qom'
(~'"' AI

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

onduAIHI '" ol.rJn-,,,,.,

2 Hard (arrh fiiH
with thi' nd onrJ pur(hmf
af min•mum po(~oqt
l1 mll 1 pt'r w•lomt' ptr

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Bongo nuion.
lie. JII)(IJ .Ol h,.

•Insulation

u1t/t1 .

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

PUBLIC

JAMES KEESEE
PH. ~92·2772

YOUNG'S ·
CARPENTER .
SERVICE

11·23·'87-1 mo.

- Addons" and -remodeling
• - Roofing and guner work
- Concrete work
work
l Free Estirllatesl

DENNY CO~GO
WILL HAUL
JUST CAll!

V. C. YOUNG Ill

99'2-3410

.992-621 S or 992-7314

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL Dl RT

- Plumbing end electrical

Pomeroy, Ohio
4·15·'86·1c

10·8-tfc

MARCUM
CONTRACTING I

1

CHESTER. OHIO

Announcemenls

I

•HOME BUILDING

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS ·BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS

SEPTIC

SYSTEMS 8o
BACK HOE WORK
Phane Day or h"inp

985-4141

GENilll(ONTIACTOlS
References

11 · 3·tfn

RADIATOR
SER"ICE

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiator$, We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middleport. ()hio
1 -13-tfc

1·24·'87·1 mo. pd.

"

Rew fur, beef 1nd deer hides'.: :

Ill 16/' 87 1 mo. d.

FREE ESTIMATES

J&amp;L

Body towed away. Call 814!
246·9264 or 682 ·67tp0.

Good used alto IlK &amp; mandolin.
Ca11 .61 4·446-251 5 .

Oe~asions

12·3·87-1 mo.

4-5·1lc

Junk cars 126 paid tor com pi Me.

lnlurtd/Li,tnsed

Record Those Speciol

Rutland, Ohio
742-2143

&amp; coat heetet"l. Swain't Furni·,.
ture. 3rd. 6 Olive St. Gallipolis.
Cell614-.-46-3159.

Wanted to buy- Standing timber.'

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

2282.
: ..
_W_A_N-TE""D_T_o=-=-au"'v-,"'u-,ed-:-w-o..:od·~

992-6226
Middleport

3-ll·tfn

THE DABBLE SHOP

fo&lt;lory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-7-lfn

12·4· '87-1 mo.

SIDING CO.

New Homes Built

..

TOP CASH paid tor '83 modaj
and newer used cars . Smitb
Buick-Pontiac. 191 1 Eastern

No Sunday Calls

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

46772.

BISSELl

· or 949-2801

Commercial:
Store to Job Cost
Taxi Service

Public Notice

Route 681, Reedovlle. Ohio

*VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

30~ - 676-1566 .

downtown Gallipolis area. ne• _

WHIT£ HILL RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO
742-2035
11·3· 1 mo. pd.

or 949-2860

•

Before and after auto tune-up.
(Comparalor) FiJI up your
tank, and watch it subtract and

N~ .

PH. 949-2.801

16141 992-7754

miles .

Thr f,r OHJi r You )rrA Is t ht
S n~o n t~ You'll fmd In lhr

Court, Case

"At Reasonable Prices"

RI!IOENCE PHONE

s1ness Services

t ion1 Pl ... a call 814· 266- 1 &amp;1t:" '

. Loat : S.ige purae in \licinity

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

1128/thl

It's been five long years
since you went away;
The pain grows deeper
with each passing day;
We didn't want to lose
you, but who were we
to say,
You close~ , your eyes.
and slowly slipped

Clm ll{lrt1

CUSTOM BUILT

(614) 992-USO

1982.

608

BUSINESS

~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992·2104

8U!INE!! PHONE

who was called home
on December 7,

m•• CClonhound, was hunting· •
ThelittleBullakin area. lntorma· •

Answart to Coco. Reward.
304-882·3394.

OPEt4 FOR

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Pl- -·-

,UII.IUTICH

·~·"""'
, _, • . . , I - IOU

BISSELL
BUILDERS

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

•Refrigoratms
•Dryers •Freezers

.

LOST: Reward . Treeing Walk• ,

yr old male Siamel!!
cat, Mldwev Drive. New Havan;..o-

Television Listening Devices
Dependable 'Hearing Aid Sales &amp;Sen1icl!l
Hearing Evaluations For Ail Ages

•Ranges

__,... ,
,._
,. ,_ ...,.,,_,
n-•-..,-,. ,_ ... ,

Lost and Found

Aw., Gallipolis . Call 614·441t"..,

All Makes

"~-~-·-·

6

lost - 1VJ:

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

.................
..·. _,... ..._
...................

PuPpie~. Lib and Oobermen. All
black, ll'lok like Ubs. Free to
good home. 614 - 949-2382.

Collie puppi• to givuway. Cllill
814-949-2906 .

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734
11 · 27·' 17 1 mo. pd,

6-17-tfc

Full size mattreu &amp; box lfltlngs.
Call 614-446· 2996.

.

. PQNIROY -915-3561

11 00 AM UlUOOAY
J 00 • N .,OHDAY

.........
Joo•N ..,o,.uc....-

$5.00 Extra
For Skinning

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

11-23·' 17 I mo. pd.

HOUSE. FOR RENT

I

:11----1'.._ .....

foltowin~

c·~.o.
... .....! ...... .... ....,

'"

.,

CluJ•Ified pa~J COller I he
1elephone e:u:hunse• ...

M,.,, AOo

41!772, was appointed Exec·

.,

,.,

1- l f &gt; -

O~QII

Maurice Reed. Poet Office
Box, Reedaville. Ohio

'

Now is che cime for g+r-r-&lt;!01
buys in che classif~ds

._

~~
OIOQII
OIIGII

Ol.ootoowolr••-"''"'••o._,..,,...,. .........~

-· ·· ~ """""

HERE is a substantial home
in good condition witb a
great view of the r~ver.
Owner wants a sale NOW.
ASKING $23,90000

Kodi Blythe lj:awlt celebrated
his third birthday recently with a
party at the home of his parent's,
Kelly and Lynn Hawk, Letart.
Kodi's older broher, Derek,
assisted in opening the gifts.
Cake and Ice cream were served
to Gregg and Robin Gibbs, Kodi' s
grandparents, Robert and Ramora Hawk and Gerald and Emma
Lee Kearns.
Sending cards and gifts were
his great-grandmother, Bernice
Hawk, Paul, Sheila and Ashley
Regan, Ron, Connie, Sam and
Beth Thompson, Leota Smith,
David, Dianna, Aaron and
Amber Eades, and Cynthia
Kearns .

__
..__·
t-··----·-·
---·•-w-.....
,_.,..·,.

RATES

. . . ...........'" ......,.. .,.
....... .,'"''...............
.....__ .....
-.~

E.O.H.

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

12·7·'87 tfn

to•~oo~

"""

2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. Laundry
facilities avoilable.

DEER CUT&amp; .
WRAPPED
S25oo

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

CHESTER - Eastern Band
Boosters will meet at 7: 30 Tues-

__. -.. _ -.............. ...- .... _........

••
- ................."
.,···l•- ....
, .......
........
·-·- -..........
•t-·..
.., .. ,.,,....,.,,.,.,
,..... _ , ~ .. .......
... 1ooo
' ""'"'" 0 10 · K - .. Ml ....., .. - ..to
. . ... . ~.
Cl , . ... ., ..,.,, ....... . .. , . - . , .... . ...,. . .

..... . . . .

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS

Roger Hysell
Garage

-Z 417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

CLASSIFIED ADS

TO Pl.AU IN AD CAll t'9'1-71S6 .
MONDAY thr"' FRlDU I A.M. to S P.M.
I Ul Until NOON SATURDAY
I'Ol iC!tl

FOR RENT

I 07 LOCUST ST.

POOR FOLKS! Uvea~e older
hom~ equippal kdchen ready
to go. Want $8.500.00 but
MMIE OFFER.

Hawk birthday

HARRISONVILLE - Harrl·
sonville Senior Citizens Club will
hold a blood pressure clinic on
Tuesday, from 10 a.m. to 12 noon,
at the townhouse. A business
meeting will be held for
members at 1 p.m. The public is
invited.

CARPENTER Columbia
Township Board of Trustees
meeting, 7:30p.m. Monday at the

SO YOU 01 DN1 GET A
DEER! Maybe you need Ibis
secluded cabin on 70+
acres of jround smack in
lhe middle ol deer country.
ONLY $29,900.00.

KODIB. HAWK

POMEROY - The annual
Christmas party of the Women's
Auxiliary of Veterans Memorial
Hospital will be held Tuesday at
the hospital c!i'feterla. There will
be a$4 gift exchange. Turkey and
dressing will be furnished and
those attending are to take a
covered dish.

POMEROY - Meigs County
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, will
meet Monday at 6:30 p.m. at
Crows Steak House for a Christmas dinner .. Following that they
will go to Drew Webster Post
home for a party. Members are
asked to take hi food for a basket
which will be prepared for a
needy family.

•

Janet Jeffers and Nancy Gil·
Iesple were the October and
November queens of TOPS 570
and were recognize(! at a recent
. meeting of the club held at the
Coonhunters building on the
Rock Springs Fairgrounds. _
Jane Lavender was welcomed
as a new · member, and two
former members were rein·
stated. Best loser oftheweekwas
Peggy Vlnipg with Sylvia Neece
as runner-up . Donna Williamson
was winner of the fruit basket.
Miss Gillispie was the contest
winner with Sylvia Neece as
.runner-up. · Weighin time was
changed to from 5 to 6 p.m. when
the meetings start for the winter
months.

POMEROY
Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce meeting,
noon Tuesday at Trinity Church
with Kay Atkins !rom Planned
Parenthood of Southeast Ohio as
speaker.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Monday,
7:30 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Bulldlng.

Open house held

Jeffers and Gillespie
are TOPS queens

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Merchants Assn. meeting 8 a .m .,
Tuesday at Bank One.

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Garden Club Will meet for dinner
on Monday at 6 p.m. at the new
American Legion Hall, followed
· by a meeting at 7:30 at the home
of Mrs. William Morris.

with red bows.
Maurisha Nelson presided at
the meeting. It was noted by the
ways and means committee that ·
Kelly Shears, Vienna, W.Va. was
the winner in a fund raiser.
Carolyn CoiUns gave the cultu·
ral program on bow making 1:j'ith
Susie Baercommentingon symptoms and signs of stress.
Mrs. Shuler and Mrs Baer ..
served refreshments. Donna
Byer .was auctioneer for the
do-your-own-thing auetlon.

MIDDLEPORT -The Middleport Child Conservation League
wil hold its annual Christmas
party at the Holiday Inn, GaiUpolls, Tuesday , 6:30p.m.

Christmas party
TUESDAY
.
. RACINE - The American
POMEROY - Annual Chris t· Legion Auxiliary, Ra cine Post,
mas dinner of Tops 570 will be will have its annual Christmas
held at 6 p.m. Tuesday at the party at the Kountry Kitchen in
Coonhunters building on the Racine at 6: 30p.m. Wednesday.
Meigs County fairgrounds . There will be a $5 gift exchange.
Weigh-In time will be from 5 to 6
p.m. Members are to take their
December TOPS books.

POMEROY - Meigs Band
Boosters will meet Monday, 7
p.m., In the Meigs High band

Giveaway

Llasa . Call 614· 388-9602.

- --:-

RACINE -Racine Chapter 134
Order of Eastern Star will hold
installation of officers at the
regular meeting on Monday at
7: 30 p.m. Refreshments will be
served.

room.

4

day In the band room.

_!...__

VINTON - Parent-Teacher
Club meets Monday, 7 p.m. ,
Vinton Elementary, In the art

·xi Gamma Mu meets
Projects of remembering oth·
ers during the holiday season
were planned at the recen'l
meetjng of Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, held at the home of Lynn
Shuler In Middleport.
It was noted that food will be
taken to another needy family
and that they will also be
remembered at Chrlstmastlme.
Plans were also made to help
some children.
The annual gift exchange party
was announced for Dec. 15 at the
home of Annie Chapman, 7 p.m.
with the members to wrap
exchanged gifts In white paper

fi re station.

Sentinei-Page-7~

The Daily

Ohio

Community calendar

Monday, December 7, 1987
, Page-6

-

Pomeroy-M

3 Announcements
A

different kind of dating
service. For informaUon write,
Kupid'a Nell· P.O .Box &amp;19,
Ironton, Ohio 46838 or call

606·836-2745.
KUPID'S NEST. Offoro two
kind&amp; ot dating service, write
P.O. Box 519. Ironton. OH
46638 . 16061 836· 2745.
Ladi• and girls f•hion and
snow boots •7-$12. Men&amp; Hikers •1 9.96 . Simon• Pick·A·Pair,
Pomeroy.

No Hunting on Gill Ridge on
properti• of C . R . QUI, Mitchell
Cullen, George Gill without
written pwmiaaion. Violltora
will ba prosecuted.

11

Help Wanted

Anention Beauticiana-Tired of
working for someone elae1' Rent
a ltation from u1 end be your
own bon. E Jrtra large shop in a
good locetion. Call for d!Mails,
614-446-3703.
Ph.-maciat: Four store independent pharmacy Athena area
has immedi.te opening for lbllff
ph.-macltt. 44 hour work week.
Competitive sal.-y b••d upon
exp.-lence. Benefits· p.ckage.
Send r.sume with refer.-.ceaMedical Center Phermacy, 400
E. State St.. Athens. Ohio
46701- Attl EricRich•ds-RPh.
Bidding close&amp; Dec. 16th.
• •t
The Village of Rio Grande is nOw•·
accepting reaume't end !etten of intere1t for the pu.ition Dl
Clerk of Courtt. lnteretted pe(~
sons muat be a village resident
and must be bondable. Lett.,.
end rwume'1 can be tent to:
VitlageofRiq: Grande. c / o Angre
Seagraves. Clwk. P.O . Box 34-3,
Rio Grande. Ohio 46674. Must'
be recefved by December 31,

1987.

Easy Work! Excellent Payl Asnmble products at home. Call
for Information: 312-741·840t'&gt;

Eo&lt;t. A'313.

., ,

SomiJOne to enter Into contract'
for snow removal. Call 814..,_

797·4859.

Government Job&amp;. $18,040 J•
a69 ,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
area. 806-887 -8000 Ext. A·
9806 for current repo federal
list.
Earn excellent money in honie

euembly work. Jewelrv, toys
and others. FT &amp; PT avail. Call
todayl 1-618·469 ·363&amp; {toll
retundablel EXT. 81622 24hours.

The Meigs local School District
is accepting application&amp; foi
substitute teach••· Subttitut"
are needed in til certifiCIII:l6n
areas. The daily tate of paV- '
$126. Ohio Certified Teach••
willing to cross 1 picket line
should immediately contact
Meigt Local School Superln·
ten dent's office. 621 South
Third A\ol&amp;nue, Middleport. Ohio

45760. 614· 992-2153.

4

Giveaway

Half Elk Hound, half S1moa
female dog. 18 montha old. Call

'

AVON · All areas. Call MaritV'n •
WeiNer 304-882·2845 .

AVON all areas. Shirlav Speart,
304-675-1429 .

814-985-4421 .

MONEY FOR COLLEGE is .Wail·"'
4 cute part collie puppiea, 2 · able to indtvidualt who becomt.,
mal•. 2 · femal81 . 304-676- members of the Army Nation•
7883.
Guard. Call 304-676- 3960 Of\
1-800- 642·;1619.

Retri.Wer. Bltek·2 yeers old. All

THE
KOUNTRY
"Christmas
Sale"

CLUB
t ""7"'11 i"

m-'11]

,\ ; .

•Golf Clubs
L.;:,.
Shirts · Shoes
•Trophies · Plaques
Badges
oName Tags for
Dogs.

JOHN TEAFORD
CHISm. OHIO 45720
· 11-20-'87-1 mo.

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUnERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
All TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
fREE ESTIMATES

CALL 949·2969

Ll-23-'87·1mo.

BOGGS :

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U.

S. .RT. SO EAST

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authoriud John D111re,
New Hollond, Bush Hog
farm Equipment
Dooltr

FUM

E••IPIII. tnt

P1rfl &amp; Setrvle

304-876-2104-.

Get paid for reading boo~l
•100.00 per title. Write: ACi-

Kitten1, grey tnd black. 304-

Aurora. Ill . 6054-2 .

shots. tPaved. Good watch dog.

6170 , 161

875·3776.

Beagle and German Sheph•d
puppies;

&amp;· male,

3 · female.

304p458· 1904.
Half

Blue

N,
..

Get paid for reading . boo kit·
$100 .00 per title. Write: ACE ,.

6170, 161 S. llncolnwav. N •
Auroro, Ill . 80642 .

Healer puppiea. 304·

676-2443.

Two standing tree• for fir Mood.
304-876-3188 weekda.,.a. A•k
for Bill.
Cook Stove. oneburn~rdo• not

w••"- othm . ••·

s. llnc:olnwety,

304·875-

~--~------• -~1 · 1 _1_91_._._____________

:.

VETERANS: l81 ua help pay your
Chrlstmu bills. Army Nation.,W
Guerd· ·pan -time jobs-full time
benefits. 304·675 -3960 or1 ·

800-642·3819.

-

Green Acr• Regional Centei.
Remedial teacher, minimum
quellfrcetion, teaching certifl·
crte . Contact 782· 2622 EOE.

t'

�"'

'

.,

Page-8-The Dally Sentinel
12

Situations
Wanted

LAFF-A-DAY

·!c.Child
24 houfl. R••on.t)le
rat-. all ag•. Meal• turniahed.
81 4-992· 245B .

c••

13

Furnished Rooms

Room• for rant, day. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614446·9680. Rent at low" • 120
month.

46

Space for Rent

Insurance
Office Space for 'rent. Excel.
downtown Galllpolil location.
lnquiri81 eall 6 ·1• ·•4&amp;~.4222 . ,

Call Ul for your mobile home
ln1uren c.e : Mll l1r lnaurance,
304· 882 -2146 . Al1o: auto.
hom .. life. health.

18

45

Mobile Home lot. ISO ·f t. or leu.
920 4th ., Gallipolil. 175. Water
paid. Call814·•48-4416 after 7
PM.
'
Trail• spac::e for rent. Aural
water, garden area. Loc:llted on
180. t80 a 111o. Cell 814· 3889364.

Wanted to Do

Qualrty child cera by young
motl'l• in clean enviroment.
Le•nlng act tvtti•. Qualified dav
ewe teach•. 114-992-&amp;HUS.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Parle.
~oute 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trellen. Call 814-992·

Loving mom and prevk)ut pr8lchool teach8f' willing to watc::h
your child. Will provide teaching
craft•, singing. WilllngtobatJV•it
anytime. Pta.e Call 614· 38772BB.

Spac::a tor tmali trait••· All
hook-ups. Cable. Alao efficiency
room•. air and cable. M11on,
W.Va. Call304-773-6161 .

Do you really want to take your
ch_ildren ChrilitmeJ thopping
wHh you 1 For a rail able attter to
c::oma to your home cell 114992· 2428.
1 wll take care ofeld•lv women
In private nur.lng home. preftr
womon who ora not bod la~t.
Will provldo3 hot moolo pluowill
taka24 hour•• day cilre. Can be
reached between 15:00 and
10,00 PM at 304-937·2577 .

Will do houae work or c•• fot
•derty In their hom11. 304-n35p02.
Do you need extra houM cleeo·
lng for the Holiday" h•e
r.t.-.ncw pteue call 304-8757584.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . n!lcamm.,ch that you
do bu1in•• with people you
know, and NOT to ..nd mon._,
through the mall untH you h.,e
iftvaatlgatad the qfferlng.
Attllf'ltion Be.utlci111..Tirad of
working for .omeona elae7 Rent
a ltetion from ua and be your
bo... Extra lerga 1hop in a good
location. Call for detaila-814·
448· 3703.

23

Profe11ionel
Services

7~79.
.;

~-··"~
...,... ,.... ......... _......,._.... ,,_
.,

"My choice for President?
Well, I don1t know! Who's
running this week?"
~;:;:=::;;=~=====-r;;;:;;;~:;;;:;~:;:::-j
34

42

Business

Buildings
Comm•ci.J bu ilding~ for l. .a.
Downtown Pt. Ple•ant. Storti,
offlcea. A·One R..l Ea11ta.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 30•·
675-5104.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR . Mabile Hom• Rt. 160.
8260. Oepo1it required. Call
614-388·8319.

44

35

Lots

&amp;

Apartment
for Rent

Acreage

2 BR . aptt. 6 closet•. kltehenIn Gallipolia on Pine St. Vacant lppl. furnithed, Walh8f-0ryer
lot with water and twaage. No hook-up. ww C::lfPet. newty
mobile homes permitted . painur:l, dedi: . Regency. Inc.
$6,000. Call af1ar 5,00 PM · · Apt1. Call 30•·676· 7738 or
614-594-3833.
876-5104.
For tale: 90JC110 lot In Twin
Ced• addition, New Haven,
W.Vi. t4600. firm. 304-882·
3206 .
1 acre lot home
814-992-2271 .

lite~ .

$5000.

2 Building lots- 11h ac::r11 e~~c::h
with county watM. Jerry1 Run
Rd. Apple Grove , w. Va. Cell
304· 676-23B3.

Rent~ls

41

Homes for Rent

3 BR . hou1e &amp; garage. A·1 Re II
Estate, Carol Veager· Broker.

304-875-6104 .

furnilhed apt. n•n to library,
One profe11ton• adult only.
Parking. Call 81•·4-16-0338 .
Nice privata apt. Quiet. Ne•
HMC. One adult onty. No pet•.
Stove. refrig.. drap•. t225 a
mo. Ref. required. Cali 814·
448 -4782.
'Downtown· Mod•n 1 BR .•
complete lcltc::h.,, c•pet. air,
· electric heM. Call 814-448·
4383-dl"fl. 448-01 39-even. &amp;.
weekendl.
Furnllhed: 4 rooma &amp; bath.
Clean. No pet1. Adult• onft. Ref.
&amp; dep. tequired. Call 614·4461519.
Modern 1 BR apartment. Cell
614·446-0390.
Renew~

Bob Cline Taxidermy. Member

W. Va. Tu ld•IT1J Ataoc. Rt. 2
llax 782. Point Pl . . . nt. W. V1.
304-876-1.WB.
irtng your Doe to Joe. We wHI
akin. cut. quid!: freeze and wrap
820.00. Harry Joe Smith, Rt. 1,
letart, W . V a. 304-882-3268.

Real Est ate
31

Homes for Sale

4 SR ., fireplace. full basement. 3
mi. 10. of Galllpoli1. 834,900.

Nicety furnished 1rnall haute.
Adult• onty. Ref. required. No
poto. con 814-448-0338.
House-3 BR. with woodburn•.
New c•pet. Low bill1. Carport.
No P-'•· Dap, &amp; ref. CaU
814-448-0905.
2 BR . hom• recently remo. doled. ST.RT. 279. Ook Hill &amp;
Rio Grande. No children or pau

redecorated. Vflf'Y nice
apartments In downtown Galli·
polia. 1 &amp; 2 BR .· unfurnithed.
aecond floor, from t1715-t22&amp;.
Oep. It refetence~ required. CaH
eve. 814·•46-2-325 or 4464249 .
613 Third Ave.· 1 SR. Depoatt
required. Call 614-448·4346
between 6:00 PM It 1 O:OD PM

Apanment - 1131 2nd .. Gatlipoli• . 2 BR . Stove &amp; retrig.
Call 614-246-9316 .
furnished. t186. Water paid.
2 BA . houte in Rio Grande. CIH ' Cell 814·448-4411 aft.- 7 PM.
614-245-9170 or 448-1323.
Furniahed upttain- 1 BR . Utili3 DR ., 1 1h bet: tit, g•age. Cal( till paid. 1220 a mo. t76 dep.
379-2628 or 448-8808 ask for 94 Locust St. Call 814·446Ruth.
13~0 or 448· 3870.

Large 2-3 BR . houlll!. Plenty of
ttorage. Hendenon eree. Call
814-448· 7025 .

Stove a . refrig.
furni1hed. Na• Go Mart. Call
814-44e-7025.

2 or 3 BR unfurnished ht. Yard,
city tchoola, 1276 mo. plut
utiliti11 &amp;. depoatt. Call 614conaldar trade in ot· Mobile . 446-2616 .
home, property. etc. Bargeln
prieed. Call 614-446-8038.
2. 3. or 4 bedroom houMa and
apt. In Pom•oy area. Pay own
2 SR . house wi'lh g•agti.
utilitiet. deposit required. Call
Carpeted , draperies. dis·
614-992-61,3 . 614-992-6723
hwuher, refri gerator. 106 Kl·
OJ 614-992-2609. Call after
n eon Dr. Na• thenWNcity pool.
6;00, pie••·
Call814-446-4347 .
3 bedroom haute for .rent 1200
3 BR . ranCh-Country Aire b .·
per month. Mulberry Ave. Porn•
tatas. George'•Ck. Rd. 2/ Jacre roy. 614-992-5587 or 614lot. Abo'l&amp; ground pool. Very 992-7450 .
reaa Qna bte . Cell 614 - 448 ·
2108.
Unfurnished haute for rent.
Newly redet:e(ated. c.-pet. Call
2 bedroo m. 2 births, 2 car 614-992 -3090.
g•age. leY a! lot on. Rt. 33.
Swimming pool. utalita, elou Nice 3 bedroom houu. Famity
to Meigs High. Call 614-992- room , garage, ba1ement ,
forced -eir heat. IS wooded acre~.
3264.
barn. 1275. per month. 1100.
Fllva lots on · corner with 4
dep01it. No inaida pet1. 10 East
bedroom ~ouse. ~arpeted, full St., Pomeroy, Ohio. 614-423balernent, central heat. fir• 8289.
pl al!e. garage. Call 304-8822776 .
Two bedroom houM with O•·
age. No Pet1. 304-876-1400.
For aale on land co nt ract, hou ..
and g• age apartm&amp;nt on 2 Two bedroom hou1e half mile
~~;r ... Call 8'14·992· 2862 ..
out Jericho Rotd. call after
5 '00pm, 304-675-6483.
GOV ERNMENT HOMES r.o,m
11 ,00 { U repair) foredoturM, Two room c::otblge furnithed,
repot , te • deliquent propenl11. utilitiet paid. 1156.00 week,
Now t elling your eraa. Call t ingle person. call 304-6761-3 1 5· 7 3&amp;· 7367 e1t. 2P-WV· H 3100 00875· 5609.
fo r current lil t ~ 4 HRS ,
2003 N. Mtin Street. 3 bed·
Three bedroom. brick homa. room1. garden 1pac::e, 304-676large ttvlng room, pouible loan 2707.
auumpdon, clote to Po int Pia•
pnt, 304-t175-5306 .

Tara Townhouse Apta. · iBRS.,
1 'h bltht, AC . Start t299 a mo.
Utilh:let not Included. Call614·
367·7B50.

Call Deyt-114-446-1615, after
5:00- 446-1244.
Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolil
Lodls"on Rt. 7 . 2carg•age. nice
lot. Immediate po118Uion. Will

32

42
Mobile Homes
for Sale

New 1988 Prertlge14A70 total
elec.. 3 BR .. 2 baths. furnithed .
Anchon . tkirt lng. Loaded wilh
ax1ra1. $14,600. Kanauga Mobile Hom•- 814-448-9662.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Nice 14x65 2 Br. trail•· Call
614 · 379 ~ 2409 , if no antwer446-9727.
66 ft . mobile home on private
lot. Adultt only. Oap. &amp; ref. No
pets . Call 814•367·7743.

1983 14x68 Ftlrmont mobile
2 bedrooml, weth•·
dryer hook-up. In aAcell.,t con·
dit ion. Call 814-387·7242.

2 BR mobile home. t160 mo.
Reference &amp; depo11t required.
Northup Rd . Call 61• · 448·
1900.

14x70 Windaor wit h r4x30
additiOn . 3 bedroo iTll, approxl·
metely 3 ecrll, blectc top road.
sweral out·bul)dlngt and pond.
Galllpollt Ferry. 304-676 ·6930.

Would Iiila to prO\IIde nice home
for elderly pertons. lndap .. d·
en ee. privacy, full malntainence.
Cell 814-949.2989 .

home.

197 3. 12x60 Holty Park mobile
home in Point Pla•ant. price
negot itble, phon a 304-468 1059 .

2 bedroom, furnlahed, waaher
and dryer, air. t19&amp;. p• month
plu• dapoait and utilitiea. 814·
992-7479 .

1973 Fairmont mobile home.
o3 .ooo. 304-e75-1970.

2 bedroom. 12x66..1nSyracuH.
Partly furnithed . 1176 plus
depotit. Call 814-992·15694.

1884 Skyline. 14x70. central
3 bedroom. fur"ithed or unfurair. underpennlng, deck•. n""" nithed
. Good. clean condition. 1
c ..-ptt, kitchen appliance~. Mt child, no
p!Jtl. New Haven. W.
up on rented lot. K &amp; K. Point v • . 304-882-2466.
Pl..,ant, 116,600. Gall we•
kendt or after 6 wellkd.,.J. ·2 bedroom mobUa home 3 'h
304-875-1294.
mil II lOUth of Middleport. At, 7 .
1 child accepted. No p.ta.
drunkl or dope. Reference. C111
Business
34
614-367-0611 .
Bu ildings
Two bed roomt, Upper River
Road, w ll l accept working per.
10n or family with 2 chlldr.,,
749 Third Ave. PrMently The 8, 4-.48-0608 .
Qtft Shop. 1 800 ~q. ft. Comm•·
cl lll or warehoull. Parking on Mobile home• furnlahed
•181.00 plua utlllli•. •76.00
t ide. Adjaa.nt to Thlrd6 PlnaSI.
Calf 81 • · 4 41 - 2 38 2 for depoait, e ll! att• 8 :00 pm,
304-875·8612.
1ppolntment .

2 BR . apt.

New 2 SR . ~uipped kitchen,
low utili1111. con\lanient location. No pet1. Ref. &amp; dep. Call
614-448-1260.
Furnished efficiency apt. Carpet
thru aut. Prtvate &amp;: quiet. Single
working perton only . Call 614446·4607 or 446·2602.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES, 636 Jeckaon
Pike from 1183 a mo. Walk to
thop and mo\li81. 614-446·
3997 . E.O.H.
Furnithed apartment- 4 room ala
bath. 1 or 2 edulu. No pm:a. Ref.
&amp; See dep. required. Call
614-446-0444.
Upttairs unfurnilhed apartment.
Carpeted. Utilities paid. No
children or pets. Call 614-446·
1637.
New one BR . apt. furnished or
unfurnithed. Wooded lot ne•
Meigs HS-Pomery, Ohio. Call
814· 446-8B9B.
For rent apartment, t111iler: fur·
nlshed, unfurni1hed. WOodburning fireplace. Water. sewage
paid. Cleen. Quiet . Foater' •
Mobile Home Park, 448-1602.
Graeious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartmentJ at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
ments in Middleport . From
$215. Including utilities. Call
614-992·77B7. EOH .
Ni~ apt . Hudd appro\led. New
carpet. clean. Pt. Pleasant. 614·
992· 585B.

3 room apt. for rent Partly
furnithll!ld . 614-992-15908.

3 room apt. Partly furniahed .
614-992· 6908.

2 bedroom furnitad apt, ref and
depotit, New Haven, W. Va.,
304-8B2· 3287 or 304-773·
5024.
Beech Stra.t, Middleport, Ohio,
2 bedroom furnlthed apt. utili·
tiaa peld, ref•.,c:ettnddepotit,
304-882· 2568.

Spacloua mobile home lot• tor
rent. family Pride MobUe _Home
Park. Galllpoli1 ferry . 304-6763073.
Trailer spee&amp;s for rent, At. 1
Loeuat Road, back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home · Park. 304-675-

-;;;:=::;;::=:;:::=====
1076.
c

49

For Lease

1400 tq. ft. eommercial apaea
tuitable for office'~, rateiling. or
tervice~ . Prime loc::atton-c::orner
or 2nd. &amp;: Pine in Gallipolll.
Ample parking in rear. 1350 pet
month. Call 814·448·4249 or
448-2325.

Merchandise

61

Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipollt.
NEW- 8 pc . wood group. 1399.
Uvlng room 1ultet· 1199-1699.
Bunk bedt with bedding- 1199.
Full 1iza mattren &amp; foundation
ttarting - t99 . Recllnen
darting· t99.
USED· Beds, dres•••· bedroom
•~it••· t199 - t299 . Oeakt,
wringer waaher. a complete line
of Uted furniture.
NEW- Western boot.. 130.
Workboo~1 118 &amp; up. (St8el&amp;
1oft toe) . Call 614-446-3169.

51

Household Goods

G.E. Wath• toraale. Awcado.
Edra nloa. t126. Willtaketr~~da.
Coil a14-387·0322.

18B2 GMC 816, 6 oyl.. 4 opd.
Excell.,t c:ondtUon. •2100. Call
814· 448-8750.

Four twivel teat wooden bar
stool•. E)((:au.,t condi11on. Call
614-367-0536 after 8;00 pm.

1977 Chevy % ton 2 wheel.
1979 Ford F350 four wheel
dr.... 304-878-1825 .

Pielcen• Uae·d Furniture ·
Oinettn. aof•. chalr1. end
tabl•. la"1.P•· bedt, dr•••·
dettc. gleuware. J04-67!S ·
1450.

73

PARSON'S FURNITURE
New , wood 6 pc. INing room
1uitet, 8399 .96 ; chnt of
drawers-4 drawer, 148; twin
mattrelleJ, t95 set; mierowave
oven 1tend1.
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND
Beige 6 piece pit group. smoked
glatt coffee end end teblea and
lampa, Early An'leric::an t:ouc::h
end chair. King waterbed double
Jhelf headboard. 304 -676 ·
1226.

ANTIQUES. Buy or Sell. Riverine AnUqu•. 1124 East M aln
St. Pomeroy. Houri: Mon.·
Tuea.-Wed. 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sun.- 1 p.m. - 8 p .m. Bycl'!ance
or appointment. Ruu Moore
614· 992-2528.

l\

THEN HOW DO
YOU PROPOS&amp; WE
PUT MAURICIO I!ACK
IN POW~R~

1987 Ford BrOnco plc*up. e t:yl. .
atd . 815,000 actual mi. Above
average t:ond. *2000. Firm. Call
814· 448-1809.

"":;-;;T.:-::-;~:::-:c;:-::-:;:--:c
1-;;::i=-;~;:=;iT.=::i:=:=:ir:=:T";:~;:::::;;:~::=~=i
54 Misc. Merchandise I 54 Ml'sc. Merchand •
111

Satellite repaired - all maket. Ctll
614-379-2880.
Moving· Homellta c::hlli" uw,
like new , S100. Aobetun
11 ,000 BTU hellt• fkero.j,llkt
new. •so. Furnace blower with
motor. 840. Fib•gl•s Ia 1lum.
g•age door. t60. Antique Oak
library table. $276. Wooden
porch twlng. 17. 1976 Opll
Manta 11 i1. 1973 Toyotll
pickup-(partt) . Athley wood·
burner stove, 185. Can be Hen
evening or week·tndt at 1111
houae on 688 in Rodney.
Matching couc::h It love aeat,
chilcll d .. k. chlldl oak t:hairt.
Beautrtul Appalooaa pony· De·
liver for Chriltmes. Wettarn
uddl•. harn111 &amp;: thow halter.
Call 814-448·2222.
Mi•ed h•d wood tlebt. 112 p•
bundle. Containing approx. 1 Yt
ton. FO 8 . Ohio PaiiM Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. 814-992-6461.
Exarciu jogging mec::hine. Ma·
nuel. t75. Call 614-986-4418.
Electric Lowery Organ like n8'1N.
$700. Electric built in ovan
1100. New 24x4B braaa gl••
fire Jcreen . $40. 614-992·
~271 ,

1861 . Armtport Navy Reb black
power 44 revolver. Never fired .
Alto 12 .guage pump Eattfield.
Call 614-992-6320.

Golf irons; New computer btl·
anced ~;:uttom bllt irons 3 thru
PW. 304-876· 1604.
Afghan• for sale. 181 •t 2023
·Jeffer1on Ave, Point Pla111nt.

w. va.

Couch and chair, re•onably
good cond, call after 8 :00.
304-875-7328 .
NEW CREDIT CARD-No one
refused! Major Credit Ctrdl and
Mora. Gat your card todavl Call
1-618·469·3734 ext C-228•
hourt 24.

Callahan'• Uud Tire Shop. Over
1,000tlr-. aizea12, 13. 14, 1 6i,
18, 18.5 . B mil• out Rt. 218.
Co11814·268-8251.
Pl•llc cittarn atate tpproved,
platic 11ptic tankl, plaatlc
culvert" mot c::utverta. RON
EVAN&amp; ENTERPRISE&amp;. J•clc·
son, Oh. 61•·281·6930.
Quality firewood, all hardwood,
for 11le. t25 • pick-up load. Call
614-387·0669 .
Art1 • Craft · Tent Sele: Toy1.
toolt. Mexican gift itema. Op.,
Daily - Noon to 8. Chillicothe
Mall Shopping Cent•.
Firewood- AU h•dwood. t20
pick-up load. Call 814-2681870.
Trel~· &amp;. Slump removal. fire·
wood. Heap vouch•• accepted.
Live white pine Chriatme1 trMI,
U7.50. Co11814·448·9848.

Chriltfl'llll Tr... tor •1•115.00·
110.00. Rodn.,. Bl..tw.ll Rd .
Coli 814-246-5248, Rlcllord
Flach•.

Homemade quiht for 11le. Call
614-258·1922.
His end Her~ mltchlng Se••
12-tpHd 27 incft bik•. Like
new. Call814·448·8141 .
15 cu. ft. che11 tr. .er. Good
cond. Ladi• knit aultaa-alra
22Yt. Call 614·448· 1 319.

'

Nice no-frOJt refrig .. bedroom
tulta, couch, cheir, ch•ler
draweu. box apringt &amp; mat·
treu. Call 814-441-3224.

55

Building Supplies

Building Meteriala
Block. brick. tewer pip•. win·
dow" lintel•. ate. Claude Win·
ten. Rio Granda. 0 . C.U 614·
245-5121.
.
Concr ... blodl• all tirel yard or
delivery. Mason und. Oelllpolil
Blodl Co., 123'12 Pine St .•
Golllpollo, Ohio Coil 814·448·
27B3.
Reidy mbc concrete and all
conc:r.te auppli•· Call ua Yall.,
Brook Cament end Suppll•.
304-773-5234.

· 56

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breada ... AII
atvl•. lama Pet Food Deaflf,
Julia Webb Ph. 614-4..S-0231 .
Oragonwynd CattlfV Kennel.
CFA Hlmalaven. Persl., and
Slam_. ktuana. AKC Chow
puppl•. New kitten•; Per1i1111.
Coil 614-446-3844 of1"' 7PM.
Mounts Kennel- Bordenlng-'
Large run area. Call 614-388·
9364.
Boxer puppiM. R. .dy for Chrilt·
m11. Cell 614-266·0309.
AKC Miniature Schnauzer
puppy. Male. 6 wka. old on Dee.
6th. t200 . Call 814·446·•880.
Wanted: M1tureCoclterSpanlel.
Call 814· 245-6236.
Pure bred Siamne kitten1.
Be•ded Colll11. Cell eveninp
614-949-2290.
AKC regittered lh•a Apto
male. tolid black. born Jan. 15,
19B7. axe with chUdran, named
Chewy Bear. will 1811 for
8200.00. eU-367-7757.
Getman ahort hair pointer. excellent bird dog. 30•· 676·
2159.

I &lt;I rill

Suppltt~s

/1, LiVI!S(OCk

Now buying ahell corn or ••

corf1. Call for lat"t quotes. Ri"•r
City Farm Supply. 814-448·
29B5 .

63

Livestock

Ouroc Bora• for better rtte of
gain. Rog• Benti.,.· 613-5B•·
2398, Fabina, Ohio.
Grtin Feed Fraa~er Beef. Call
814· 446-2586.
8 Yr. old Aeg'•d Sorrell Quarter
Mara, 16-3 hand•. t850. New

Shoa uddle, 11100 value· for
8886. Coil 814·288-8622.

Transporlat1on

1987 Long 60 HP Bulldozer. 20
hourt on tack, like new. Intern•
tlonal lnduttrial tractor with
loodor. Coll614-288·8522 .
lnternatk)nal 868 Of.,l tractor.
14360. 2010 J .D.. PS·IIve
poWer. t3360. C.ll 814-211e522.

BUY WHOLESALE. Whlto form
Tractora It whol . .le Invoice
plu1 freight. Compare the prlca
and quality. Modalt tram 11 to
180 hp. le•ing_ avallllble. Pff•
good through Dec. 31 . Sldw1
Equl)tmant Co .• US 311, Hend•·
•on. w. va . .lo•-175-7421.

'!

,.
-*

ARLO AND JANIS

Motorcycles

1983 Honda ShMiow 6QO . NeW
cond. 700 mil• o~y. ldelll
Chrlatmat gift. UOOO. Call
814·446·1 B22.

i

Cheers
Ell(!) M'A'S'.H
7:05 (I) Leave II To Beaver
7:30 U (]) Hollywood Square•
(!) NFL Monday Night Match
Up New York Jets at Miami
Dolphins (T)
·(I) Newlywed Game
0 (()Judge
®) Wheel of Fortune Q
liZ Crostllre (0:30)
liZ l!1l Jeopandyl Q
(!!) Bamey Millar
fl) (!) WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00 CD Father Murphy
U (]) 1!1) ALF The Tanners
put ALF on trial when he's
accused of breaking a
window. Q
(!)Tennis
Cll 0 (]) MscGyver
MacGyver becomes pawn in
Soviet plot to steal a Chinese
artifact. (R) D •
(!) liD The True Gilt of
Chrlstmao International
skating superstars
dramatically portray the
myths, magic, music and
folklore of Christmas on .the
Road to Every Christmas.
®l II) 1!21 Kate l Allie Kate
dates two men because she
can't decide between them.

3-Wh ... er ATV-Kaw11eki 200.
Good eond. Call 814-441·
7025.

19B7 Hond• 260X .. ~ monthl
warranty left. *1660. 814-742·
2798.
1886 Suzuki Quadrager 2110,
4-wheelor. 198e Hondo 250
fortrac, •-wheel•. C1ll 151··
742-2806.

WHOA! •r• tv'JO~e

ATV or utility trail•. 304-675-

5u~PR15E~

2159.

78

m

5rc:&gt;e:

Auto Parts

et:oNOMICSII

&amp; Accessories

'.

.

ALLEY OOP

1971 Cam•o 360, 4 epd .•
intake. header1, c::hrome. E,.;el.
~~~~.Beat offer.. Call e1•·t1919B3 Dodge Cl'l•a•· Auto.
trant•• nfiiN tlr•. AM -FM atereo.
buc:kat: 1eats. Priced to aelll
81600. Call aft.- 8 PM. 814·
246-6028.
1979 Mtllbu CIMtic. Runt
good. Will c::ontkter trade. Can
814-387-0861 of1or 8 PM.
1978 ' Ralty Sport Cam•o. LT
360, T·top.atr.tpOkamag•. dual
exhautt, c:rulae. SHARPt No
trad•. 12791. Nag. Cell 114448-6175.
198&amp; Ford Ecort. 22,000 mA-.
5 opel. t3200. Call 814-446·
8B9B.
198!S Ford LTD II , Uke new.
12,900 mi., auto.. AC. PS. PB.
tilt, crul11. 16800. Call 814·
388-8240.
11 It true you can buy Jeep• for
••• through the U.S. go\tern·
ment7 Oet the facta today! Call
1· 312-742-1142 E.n. 4089.

8

81

RON'S Telewition Servlea.
HouH call• on RCA. Quazar,
GE . Speci .. ing in Zenith. Call
304-578-2398 or 814-441·
2464.

1986 Plymouth Aeli.-.ce K.
Auto. PS, PB, AM -FM radio. AC.
fuel injection . Excellen1 condition. Call ,614-992-5084 aft•
6'30.

Sttrkl Tree and Lawn Service.
lawn cere, landtc:tping, .. ump
removal, 304·678·2842 or
578-2903.

1980 Datsun 310. 6 apeed. in
good thape. 61,·742·2•51 .

82

1982 Citation. 2 dr., 4 apMd, air
c::ond. Good condition. •1.000.
Call 61•·992-3881 .
19B6 Oaytone Turbo Z, red·
tltver. IIIIth• Interior. nw ttres,
\o.ted, t8,760.00 conaidw pir·
tlal ,,.d .. 304·876-6308.

30•-

YES, AND HE!:&gt;

l'iAANDf7&lt;11HEI&lt;

DRIVI I\G MY

STILL VISITINI:I
'\'VL.J?

MOTHEI&lt;Llf'

AFTER HE GiET6 L.lP HE
CRACKS HIS KNUCKLE5
RJR TW~TY MINL1TE5 .

WELL, AT LEA5T
HE'TRIE6TO
KEEP ACTIVE .

THE WALL.

84

_&amp;

newsmakers and celebrities.
9:30 ®l II) 1!21 Designing Women
Suzanne is forced by a
blizzard to share a motel
room with Anthony.
10:00 CD Straight Talk
1!Q1 II) 1!21 Cagney &amp; Lacey
Samuels is in the dark about
the big award hit is about to
·
receive. (R) D
@ Evening folews A wrap up
· of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories.j1 :00)
fl) (!) Benny Hill
10:20 Cil MOVIE: Blossoms In the
Dust [1 :40)
10:30 Cil Courtship of Eddie's
Father
Ell(!) Hogan's Heroes
11:00 CD Remington Steele

Electrical
Refrigeration

Residential or commercial wiring. New Mrvice or repeln.
Uc::ented electridan. Eatimate
free. Rldanour Electrical. 304·
676 ·1786.

85

D

General Hauling

J &amp; J W81er Service. Swimming
pool•, elaternt, walla. Ph. 814·
246 -9285.

rn

®l liD 1111!21 il5l

Newo
(!) Magic Years In Sporll
1975: Arthur Ashe (A)
(!) To Establish Justice
Freed Press, Free Trial
@ Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ell (!) Love Connection
11:15® News
11:30Dt:ll 1!1) Tonight Show
(!) SportsConler (L)
®J MagnuiT!, P.l.
liD Thla Old Houoe Exterior
painting and insulation needs
lor the house are discussed.

IZZWELLS®
f'l..ORA ..')OU'VE. 601iA QUIT
GOU-Io 10 6ARA6E
'5A\.E~..

R a R Water Serviee. Home
clstei'J, well1. poola flli'ed . Formertv Jam• Boy• Watara.Call
304-875-8370.
Paul Rtipe. Jr. Water Service,
Poolt, claternt, well1. Call 614·
448 -3171 ."
Watterton ' a Water Hauling,
re11onable rat11, immediate
2.000 gallon dell\lery, clatern1.
pools, well. etc. eall 304-578·
2919 .
.

87

Wanting to per1orm for a
favorite teacher, Willie
plagiarizes a poem. 1:;1
®) 1111!21 Frank's PI- Big
Arthur fights a rival chef
who's accused of stealing his
recipes.
9:00 CD 700 Club
U (]) 1!1) MOVIE: 'Eye on
lha Sparrow' NBC Monday
Night at the Movlao Q
, (I) f!J (() AIIC Monday Night
Football Q
(!) liD Breakthrough at
Reykjavik Marvin Kalb hosts
this live special tracing the
history of previous summits
and examining the style and
substance of super~power
summitry.
®l II) 1!21 Newhart Joanna
recruits Dick to write her
speech for historical
presentations. C
@ Larry King Lfvel In depth
Interviews with top

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth 1nd Pine
Gallipoli1, Ohio
Phone 814·448-3888 or 614·
448, 4477

'79 Zephw nead1 works mllkean
. offor. 304-875-2885.

2- 1979 Ford Pickup•: on•
c::uttom 100, on• Lari.t 160,
TroHor Spoclol. Call 814 ·448·
0394.

IS YOUR

Plumbing
Heating

1980 Oataun 310 GX. can be
Man Shady w..era Camping
Ground, 304-578· 2987.

Trucks for Sale

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

&amp;

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
CiJternt, Wellt. Delivery Any·
time. Call 814-448·740•-No
Sundl"f calla.

72

·&amp;:30 U (]) 1151 Valeria's FamUy
r-

SWEEPER and aewlng machine
repair, parts, and tuppll•. Pick
up and deUvery, Davl1 Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mila up
Goorg• Creek Rd. Call 81 4·
448· 294.

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Molt well• completed 11med-v.
Pump Ill• and 1arvlce. 304896-3802

1977 Thund•blrd. Good m•
chanica! condition, body rutt.
Call 614-387-0536 after e,oo
pm.

(1:~)

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lit.tlme guaran·
tee. Local referencw furnithed.
·Free ntlmMes. Cell collect
1· 114·237·0488, day or night.
AogertBaaement
Waterproofing.

1976 Hurtt Old1mobila W-30,
nt~~Wenglne, eJChMJit, brak111nd
Interior. PS, PI, AC, tih wheel•
n.wtir•. 814-986-4163.

1981 Oldo Cutluo Colalo. VB.
auto. PS. AC, loaded. t3496.
614-992-15886 or 614-7422798.

Primenewl Wrap ups of
the day's world news and in
depth feature reports. [1 :00)
@ fl) (!) MOVIE: AmadeUs
(PG) (2:38)
8:05 CIJ MOVIE: Back Street

Homa
Improvements

Fetty Tree Trimmlnu. ltump
removal. Coil 304-875·1331.

I

the

, . . - -.........__,":"......._

be-

v,L A G u R

~-:-I,+(_,NI...;..;.N+(-T.rl~:-iji
t

Newt

(}) SporiiTalk (R)
•
(I) f!J (() ABC Ntiwo Q
(!) Nlgh~y Buoln"l Report
®l lllll2l CBS Newa
liD Coloreoundo
liZ Inside Politics '88
IBl WKRP In Clnclnnotl
fl) (!)Too Clos~ for Comfort
6:35 (I) Leave It To Beaver
7:00 (I) Remington StMII
D (]) PM Magarlne
@ SportaCanter (L)
(I) Entertainment Tonight
f!J (() People's Court
(!) liD MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewsHour (1 :00)
1!Q1 News
@ Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
QJ 1!21 1!1) Wheel of Fortune

Auto's For Sale

1981 VW Rabbitt, excellant
running condition, extra ' set
atuddad anow tifn, 82.000
. mhl, t850. Firm, 304-3726858,

COMPANY '

ABOUT"~'

1978 Ford Van t1. 000. 304'
45B·1588.

Budgtt Tran1mi11iona: Utlld and
rebuilt, 111 tvP•· Guarantee 30
doyo. Call 814-379-2220 or
1986 300 ZX Turbo. 23,000 ' 304-875-4230.
mil•. Auto., T-top. Black over
Four 1• Inch x 7 Inch Applian~;:t
gold. Mine cond. Call 814-441t:hrome .te-a apoked wheela.
8128.
Fita GM. 2 wkl Old. t200.
19B5 Ford Eacort. 4 apd. Sh•pl 814-992·6886 or 814-742·
t2999. John'a Auto Sale~. . 2798.
below Holldat'lnn, k.an~~t.~ge. Rt. Two 70x16 .. ·studded snow tir•
7.
mounted on Ford wheela.
•8o.oo. 304-675-2366.
1983 Ch..,y Citation. AM radio.
89,000 mil•. 11700. Can be
WradtMI 1980 model Chevy
s,..n at the Galllpolie: DtUy
Tribu'ne or for more Information truck tor perta, lp4-8715·2884,
after 8 p.r'n . 304·876-1030.
coli 814-441·2342.

71

\'IIHO ~AID
ANY1'HING

Wantad to Buy

1981 Ch.wy Ch...,ette. 2 door,
AC, AM · FM 1tereq o•eett, lh:C:
oond, phone 304-871·4123 .

RABBITS FOOT

so many magjclans?"

62

1981 Jeep Sc::rambl•4••· good
cond. •4.200. 304·6715-1 ~811 .

74

1978 Mercury Monarch . Run•
good, looka good. Automatic
wl1h air. 1spo. 304· 876-8947
OJ 875 -764~ .
'

ACMe

" Do any of you know why we hire

81~-448 - 9777 .

1997 Chevy A11ro van .
882· 3686 or 875·8300,

30 gal. Hot water tank. gM
range, double tink and cabinet,
cut iron table. 304-773-6586.

Furnished room. 176. Utilitl•
paid. Sh•• beth. Single mala.
919 Second. G•lllpoiiJ . Call
"tl-4416 lfter 7pm.

Farm Equipment

JIM'S FARM EOUIPMENT
30 uted t,.ctors to chooM from.
Fr•h load I', 7', 8' rear bl.:t11.
Buy naw before J~n . 1~Prlt:e
incre••· 36 welt- Galhpollt.

Fir-..ood tor aal•all hardwood.
865 a cord. Co11814-379-2834.

lintel and Mrs . Santa ere
eoming. Chrl1tma1 Clown-0Gramt, Tri-(:ounty area, 304882·2048 or 882· 3866.

Furnished Rooms

61

1972 Chevy ona ton va,n.
10.000 original mil•. Extr1
wklo. No ruot. t2500. Call
e14-992·8253.

•

(!)Dr. Who
liD Square One TV D
liZ Showllr Today f'lews of
the entertainment wo~d is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30~
IBl Facia of Life
Ill (!) One Day at a Time
6:05 (I) Allee
6:30. (]) il5l NBC Nlgh~y Ne~t

CAPTAIN EASY

1979 OMC 8 petung• Van.
Low mile.ge. air, PS. PB . Eacel.
cond. Cai1814-44fi.0173.
·

......

lAIII I

ldllod by CLAY I ., f'OLLAN

low to form four simple words .

mSportaLook (T)

W.O.

1980 Ford Bronco Rang• XLT.
••4 . Call 614 · 4•&amp; · 15 1 z

Antiques

Apartment• In Hander1on. . W.
Va. call 304-675-1972 aftet'
5,00 pm.

Sla.plhg roomt. 3 men. Privati
entrance. otf·ltr.-t parking. Call
614,-992-7791 .

&amp;4

WOlD

Rearrange letters of
0 four
Krambled words

Dl]) &lt;Il II(() ®l III.!IZ

Evening~ .

53

EVENING

S©\\.ct\lA- "t.trS*

6:00 (I) trezy Lice I FOK

1982 Dodge 2110 Ram. Cuttom
conwraion. Trail• Nady. Call
814-448·43B3 doyo. 448·0139
evena. • week .. dl.

Stereo AM -FM tape player.
tu~ntabta IPeak•• and ttand,
$125 .00. 304-876· 3688.

In Middleport. Ohio, 1 and 2
room furnlahed apt1. privata
b~hl, utilltl• paid. 304· 8822688.

46

•

MON., DEC. 7

I!))

Vans

T::~:~:~y

Television
Viewipg

Trucka for Sale

1989 Chwy.. •eallent condtllon. t2100. 1989 Ch..,y. body
rough, good ongln• t428. Coil
814· 387-7780.

••tv

Tappan stove with 2 oven• and
Wettinghoute refrigerator. Call
614-266-1768.

72

Dinette set for Ill e. Ha• 4
chairt and tabla with leaf. t35.
Co11814-992· 3415.

County .Appliance. Inc. Good
uaed appliancea and TV 1et1.
Firewood for Ill e. All hardwGOd.
Open . BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
1plit and delivered, 135. Alto
Sat. 814-446-1899 , 627 3rd. , 1977 LTD. Coil 614-992-5619
Ave. Gallipolis. OH .
or 614-992-3852 .
GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Firewood tor tale. MiJCed hard·
Wahett, dryer•. refrigerators,
wood. Split and delivered. *36.
ranges . Skaggs Appliances.
per pickup lold. Call 614-992Upp• River Ad. b•ide Stone 6847.
Crtat M01el . 614-446-7398.
All Chrilitma• Tr"' 112 .. Come
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
before c::old woathar. 1ag
your tree at Newell' I Chriatmu
Sofa and chain priced from
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
1396 to t996. TabiM 160 end
on Hanging Rock Rd. 304·773·
up to t126. Hid•a·beds 1390
5371 or 882-2888.
to t69&amp;. Recliner• $2215 to
1376. Lamp• t28 to t126.
FiriWIIOod 136.00 load, delivered '
Dinette• t109 and up to 1496.
Muon County 1nd Gallipolit.
Wood table w-6 chairs 1286 to
Custom c::ut and ruth ordMt
1796. Detk $100 up to t376.
$40.00. Call 304-B96-3.46.
Hutchet 8400 and up. Bunk
bedl complete w·mattretJel
MiJCad fir~~~Yood, $80.00 dump
1296 and up tof396. Baby bedt
truc::k load, delivered, 304·67.8$110. MattraMI or box aprlngt
2903.
full or twin tea. firm t78, and
t88. Quaen aett t226, King
Firewood· delivered, •tacked, .
1360. 4 drawer ehett *69 . Gun
S36 .00. Mason Countiea, Galli·
cabln.tJ 6 gun. a.. or electric
polla other areet within reeaonat
range $376. Baby manretsal
our discretion, 304-895-3446.
t36 &amp;: 146. Bed framet 120,
t30 &amp; King frame 160. Good
Zenith tehwltion, 25 inch, con·
telec::tion of bedroom tuites,
sole. good con d. S126.00. Ktrometal cabin eta. headboard• t30
Jin8 heater built in blower
and up to $86.
variable heat. $100.00. 304675-2680.
90 Dav• tame •• cuh wh:h
approved credit. 3 Milas out
SURPLUS A~MY, DENIM ,
Bulevill&amp; Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
RENTAL . CARHART CLO·
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 614-448 - TMING . Original army camou•
0322.
flage, H. 0 . "Sam" Som•
rville : J , . Old Rt . 21
Valley Furniture
Eut-Aaventwood. Fri, Sat, Sun,
New and uaed furniture and
noon · 8 :00pm. 304-273-66155 .
applic::ancea . Call 814 · 446 lnaulated camouflage coveralls
7672. Hours 9-5 .
S26 .00 . Black·Whita tnow
camouflage.
Carpet Pricet Startin.g at ;
Commercial - 14 a yd ..
WOod burning ltove $100;
Sculpture-16 a yd .. Plu•h-$7 a
Coueh &amp; IDV&amp;Ieat aJO. set.
yd. loti of room rementt in
304-458·1666.
Jtock. Financing available. Mollohan Furniture, Upp8f Ri\ler Rd.
Bunkb&amp;ttl 1110; Oinnen.. t66;
. 614-448-7444.
Chairs &amp; Sofas 130. &amp; up.
Pickens Used Furniture . 304like new ooueh &amp; loveseat. Call
675-1460.
614-446-7307 after 5 PM .
2 end tebl81 glen top; . 1
3 Pc. Bedroom auit, guitar1, 10
rectangular; one octagon coffee
ap. bike. kitehen table. Call
table, ext:. cond. $160. Call after
614-446-0556 .
4'00. 304-876-6787.
Be11att crib bed. Complete with
Portable Maytag· wether and
mat1re11, 860. Call 614-446dryer. Good c::ond. 1200. 3043142 .
675-6208.
Sofe-94 in . long-gold brocade,
5200 . 2-club chairs-green. $76
each. 1-Gold &amp; green auipe
\lelveteen ehelr. t86. All good
cond. Call 614-446-1618.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 7, 1987

Monday, December 7, 1987

Pom81oy-Middleport, Ohio

8

Upholstery

[KNEW
IT MUST BE

1987 Ford Aangw 4JC4 . Fuel
inJ•tan. Low mlle-ae. Call
814-245-5284.

A &amp; M Cultom Couch• and
· Raupholltery. St. Rt. 7 ; Crown
Clt,y, Oh. 614-2615-1.70, Eve.
1978 Chwrolet pickup, YJ ton.
814·446-3438. Open deity 9 to
t700. Coil e14-367-0541 .
4 ,30, Sat. 9 ,30 to 1 '30 . Old •
new Uphoaterett .
1978 GMC four whael drlwe.
Exc•ll~t ahape. •3200. Call
Mowrey' a Uphol1terlng aervlng
814-742· 2421 .
.
trlc::ountyarn22ya•a. The beet
International 1010 Grinder ~974 GMC plclcup. PS ond PB,
in furnhure upholeterlng. Cell
Mlur, uc cond, 304-273· • auto. wry good condHion. Call
304 · 875 · •1&amp;4 ror free
4216 .
•tlmatll.
e14·94t· 2Z37,

SUPPERTIME

I COULD

HEAR 'f'OU
STARING .. .

\

•
I

.k,

Sports Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
NiCk Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:301
Ill @ CBS News Special
Report Coverage of the
U.S.jSovlet Summh
til (ZJ M'A'S'H
12:00 CD Bums and Allen
(!) NFL'I Greateat Momenta
Best of Football Follies (RJ
(i) II(() News •
C!l liD Sign on
liZ NewoNighl Live news
with Patrick Emory and
Kirsten Lindquist. (1 :00)

I;

E W0 R C
1--r,;:._rl...;...,l"s
...,..,-I :.

I
I

L--L-....IL-....11.-....1~

OWEDOD

My 9S-year-okl mom took pride
In her appearance. One day wltlle
looking In the mirror She moaned,
~· gracloua, I look like I'm a

I

~-. -r,:_:;,r=:.,:~~i-,,...:;_11'7rl G)

CompleJo the ch uckle quoled
~Y filling in the missing word5
L.-..L.-.1.--L.......I-...L-.J you develop from step No. 3 below.
•

•

R

•

A UNSCRAMIIlE lETTUS TO

11111111

GET ANSWER

V

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
ReluN - Obele - We/ah - QullltZ - SO FAST
P1of111 ~to his physlca ciua: "I've always felt that the trou-

ble with

making mental noteei8that the ink lades SO FAST."

BRIDGE

.J

1!-~87

NORTH

+s

8
.10742
+AKQ1064

James Jacoby

Good bidding
turns sour

~

WEST
+Q !0 8
.Q432
• AKQJ 9
+7

By James Jacoby

Even long-time partnerships fail to
discuss many of the nuances of .bid·
ding. In a bit-or-miss rubber bridge
game, !here is often confusion as to
which bids are forcing. Normally, af·
ter partner has made an overcall, the
bid of a new suit Is not forcing. But a
jump in a new suit would compel an·
other bid from the overcaller. What
about a cue-bid? That is of course
forcing, but not necessarily all the
way to game. However, after an ove~­
caller's partner has cue-b1d, a new su1t
bid by the cue-bidder would be (orcing,
unless the partnership was already at
game-level. This should help explain
the bidding of today's deal, particular·
ly North's raise of three hearts to four
with only the J-8 of hearts for support.
Defender West cashed two high dia·
monds and then led his singleton club.
Declarer won, led back to his spade
ace and ruffed a spade, ruffed a diamond back to his hand, ruffed another
spade and returned to his hand with
another diamond ruff. Now the play of
the A-K of hearts revealed that West
bad started w~tb four to the qu~en. Un-

+J.9712

•sus

+J9832

SOUTH
+AK63
.AK10975
• 63

+s

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: W,est
Eaol

Well

Pass
Pass
Pass

It

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

+K

fortunately the king of spades could no
longer live. When declarer tried to
cash it, West made his little trump.
Was there an anawer?
South, with a wealth of attractive
spots in the trump suit, should quickly
cash out both his high spades before
embarking upon a crossruff. Although
West could then ruff the fourth round
of spades with his queen, that would be
the only trick be could take, and 10
tricks would be easy lor declarer.

~~~t£(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS
1

1 Endure

Poet

2 Knightly

Teasdale

gear

II Sortie
9 City
in N.Y.
10"-in

3Comy
music

·4 Scottish
county
II Wise. ·

Paris"
12 Cupid
13 Bequiled
Ill Negative
16 Half-way

citY

1'1'- trice
18 Eng.

Yesterday's Auwer

8 Footless 14 Fruits
30 Foreanimal
16 Apportion
caster's
7 Retirement
19 Villa-,
aid
Italy
31 Plato's
plan
20 Rabbit fur
market·

poet

laureate
20 Latvian
21 Head (Fr.)

8 ~"!'~r.)
Orleans

23

Di~ney

.

place

character 33 Hebrew
specialty 24 Laurels
lyre
11 Quadra- 25 Rebuff
36 The gums
r.-~~~;2:_:7 Agree
37 For shame!

22Toward

shelter
23 Picked

25Reaches
across
26 Plunder .

271celandic
measure
28 Price
paid

29 Actress
Dee

32 Decay
33 Snake
34 Toothlike

projection
311 Stimulate

37 Port. song
or dance
38 Wise
legislator
39Moslem
garment

40 Pungent
41 Poet
Pound

DAILY CRYPI'OQUM'ES-Here's bow to work It:

1217

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's,· etc. Single letters,
apoatrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
12·7
XPH
ELJWM
JWM

XPQMV

VHGX
UWM

EPL

XPQ MV

VQDH

P W G

W

XPH

H D H C B

QG-HMULFCWVH

J H M X ..

W. M L M B J L F G
Ye.terd&amp;J'I CI')'Jttoquote: LET US NOT BE TOO

PARTICULAR: IT IS BE'l'I'ER TO HAVE OLD SECONDHAND DIAMONDS THAN NONE AT ALL, -

TWAIN
L

�.,..

Monday. December 7, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. BAUM

·I

Ohio Lottery

&lt;lM.-2!8 I

A GIEAT PlAQ
FOI .EAIFASI
. lUNCH &amp; DINNII

THIS
EE 'SCAMES

Featuring

* Great Hamburgers

*Roast Beef on a
Croissant * Stuffed Baked'
Potatoes Taco Salads ·
* Salad Bar

*

* Real lee Cream *

-Dining • C,arry Out •
Drive-Thru
lun.-Thurs. 6 A.M.·10 P.'M·.
flri. • Sat. 6 A.M.-12 P.M.
118 W, Main Street, Poft..eroy

~15-3301

CHESTER, OH.

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

Vol.38. No. 147

ttJCanv....j

n...,_

DEC. 7-YINTON CO.- HOME
DEC. 10-TIIMil£ - HOME
DEC. 14-lflPRE - AWAY

WASHINGTON (UPI) - President Reagan
welcomed Soviet leader Mikhall Gorbachev to the
White House today to sign a historic treaty
sacking Intermediate-range nuclear missiles and
to open ~lks that could result in even more
significant reductions In long-range strategic
arsenals.
In an informal welcome of sorts on the eve of
today's official White House ceremony, the
president said his third summit with Gorbachev
offers ''hopes of promoting peace for our peoples
and all the peoples of the Earth."
Gorbachev, expressing slmllar cautious optimism as he arrived at sundown Monday on his first
visit to the United States, suggested the
treaty-signing summit could start the su.perpowers down the road to nuclear disarmament.
"The visit has begun, so let's hoiJe. May God
help us," he told Secretary of State George Shultz
after delivering a brief arrival statement at
Andrews Air Force Base, Md.

BOYS BASKETBALL

AWM Rd;~
1HE AliA'S MOST .
COIIPLETE ATIILI11C
·· fOOTWEAI STOIEI

. OF

GilLS BASKETBALL

r....r

'•

DEC. 7-SOUTHEIN- HOME
DEC. 10-HANNAN TRACE - HOME
DEC. 14-•LER - HOME

FURNITURE

SOUTHERN

Buf More for

BOYS BASIITBALL

Less at

DEC. I-EASTERN - HCNIE
DEC. 11-0AI Hill - HOME
DEC. II-HANNAN TRACE- AWAY

EMPIRE
FURNITURE
POMEROY, OHIO

992-5627 •

GII~S BASKETBALl
DEC. 7-EASTEIN- AWAY
DEC. 10....,.01.1 Hill - AWAY
DEC. 14-NOITH GAI.UA - AWAY

MIDDLEPORT

'

Christmas shoppers In Pomeroy won't have to worry about
change for the parking meters starting next Monday. Pomeroy
VIllage Council voted at last night's regular meeting to free the
meters for the holiday season from Dec. 14 through Dec. 31.
An ordinance to give hoUday bonuses to the v!Uage's 27
fulltlme and three partllme employees was passed by council, a
total cost to the village of about $1,500. "I just wish It could be
more," said Councilman Bruce Reed.
In other business, a resolution was passed to transfer $5,~
from the generul fund to the cemetery account, and $4,000 from '
the utllllles account to the permissive tax fund.
An additional $24,000, as certified by the county budget
commission, was appropriated Into tbe general fund.
Finally, the mayor's report of $3,761.50 In fines and fees for the
month of November was approved.
Present for last night's meeting In addition to Councilman
Reed were. Mayor Rickard Seyler, Councllmernbers Betty
Baronlck, John Anderson, Bill Young, Henry Werry, and
Clerk-Treasurer Jane W11lton. Councilman Larry Wehrung was
absent.

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE .ALWAYS"
Ben H. Ewing-Directer

PH. 992-2121
108 MUlBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

.
r.1EIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBAll

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

'

Dec. 1-Trimble ..........:..................... Away

Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
DH.

Jan. S-Federal Hod!ing ................. Away

Dec. 8-Southern ............................ Away
DH. 11-Honnan Trace .................. Away
Der. li-Parkersburg Cath. 16:1Sl ... Away
Der. 22-North Gallia (6:00) ...;........ Home
Jon. 8-Symmes Valley ..... ;............. Home
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek ...................... Home

Jon. 8-Miller ................................... Home

Jan. 15-0ak Hill ............................ Away

Jan. 12-Nelsonville-York ..;........... Away
jon. IS-Vinton County ~................ ,Home

Jon. 19-Federal Hocking ................ Home
Jan. 22 -Southern ........................... Home
Jan. 29-North Gallia .................... Away

Jan. 8-Southwestern ..................... HOII!e
Jan. 12 -North Galli a ..................... Home
Jan. 15-Symmes Vallef................. Home

Jan. 22-Eastern ............................ Away

Feb. 2-Miller ........•.....•.............•....-.Away

Jan. 29-Kyger Creek ...................... Home

Feb. S-Hannon T"e ........................ Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath ............ Away
Feb.19-Symmes Volley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Away

Jan. 30-Miller ..........·...................... Home

Dec. 11-Belpre ....................,_,._,... HCMne

Dec. 1S-Aiexander ......... - .. _. .. _ .. Away
Dec. 19-Logan ................................ Home
Dec. 22-Wellston .......................... Away

.

Jon. 19-Trimmbl'e ...........................
Home
.
Jan. 22-lelpre .............................. Away
Jan. 26-Aiexandtr .......................... Hortte
len. 30-Paint Pleasant ................. Away

F•• 2-Warren ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Wellston ..............................HonM
F•• t.:....Athens ............................. - ....... H-

8--'Eastern ................................ Home
11-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
18-Hannan Trace .................. Away
22 -Kyger Creek.. ................... Away
Dec. 29-lndian Valley So.... Convo. Cent•

DOWNiNG-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE

Jan. 2-$outheastern ..................... Away

FEb. S-Oak Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Federal Hocking ................. Away
Feb. 12 -Hannan Trace ................... Home
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away

.

111 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

CALL 992-3381 or
992-2342

"HOME BANK

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

FOR

HOME PEOPLE"

USED CARS

Nnrcm

USED CARS

Dec. 7-Vinton County .................... Home
Dec. 10-Trimble ............................. llemt

TIUCIS

~.

.COMPLETE RADIATOR SEAVic£

•MAJOA REPAIRS
tCOMPLETE WHEEL AliGNMENT

&amp; BALANCE
•MOST MAJOR CREDIT C"ROS
-

ACC EPTED

PAT
HIU FORD, Inc.
. .
BODY WOIW
·I NSU RA liCE
CLAIMS
WELCOME

14-lelpre ............................... Away
Dec. 17-Alexander .........................Horne
Dtc. 23-Eastern ............................. Away
Jon. 4-Wellston .............................. Homt
Jill. 7-Federal Hocking .................. H Jan. 9-Miller ................................... Homt
Jan. 14-Nelsonville·York ............... Homt
Jon. 18-Vinton Count ................... Away

....... 21-Trimble ............................ Away
Jaft. 25-lelpre ...:...........................HtftM
J111. 28:.....Aiexander ....................... Aw.y

Fila. 4-Wellston ............... -............ Aw.ay
F.. 1-Fecleral HCKking ................. Away

461 3RO AVE., MIDDLEPORT, 011.

De&lt;.
DH.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

7 -Southern ............................. Home
10-Hannan Trace ................... Home ·
14-Miller .............. :................. Home
17 -Southwestern ................... Home
19-Federal Hocking .............. Away
21-North Gallia .................... Away

De&lt;a 23-Meigs ................................ Home
Jan. 7-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jon. 11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away

Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ........~ ................... Home
Jan.
Jon.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

21-Southern .......................... Away
2 8-North Gallia ..................... Home
!-Symmes Vlaley ................... ~~~me
4-Hannan Trace .................... Away
11-Sauthwestern .................. Away
14-Federal Hocking ................ Home

F.... 13-Southern .......- ..................HOtnt

Der. 7-Eastern ............................... Away
DH.l 0-0ak Hill ............................. Away
Der. 14-North Gallia .................... Away
DH. 17 -Hannan Trace ................... Home
Deo:. 19-Aieander .......................... Away
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ........................ Home
Jon. 7-Southwestern .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia ..................... Home
Jon. 14-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................... Away
Jan. 21-Eastern ............................. Home
Jan. 28-Kyger Creek .....r. .............. Away
Feb. !-Southwestern ..................... Home

949-2210

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

Rawllat~

Coat•
Blower
funeral

Ho••

PH. 992-2136

iTiii.

MIODLEPOIT, OHIO
- 614-992-5141

~· -·"'"·~·c-•-

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'+--- -...-.-. . . . . --.. . .- . _
~

. ,

•

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Chnrolet•Oidsmobile
•Cadillac, Inc.

TRUST

PHARMACY

"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"

"3 Registered.
Pharmacists
To Serve You"

•·

Open Till 9:00

'7 •· 2ND mEn
.DDUPOIT

992·6661
LOANS

992-3007

POWELL'S

Jim Cobb

CENTRAL
COMPANY

99Z-6333

Feb. 11-Hannan Trace .................. Away

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

THE

Fs

SYRACUSE OFFICE
RACINE OFFICE

"COME GROW
WITH US"

MEMBER FDIC

Feb. 4-0ok Hiii .............................. Home

. Every Night

.

Sales &amp; Service
EAS1' MAIN ST.
. POMEROY

STORE HOURS:

s~~Y 11-~

992-6491786 N. 2nd St.
Middleport, OH.

•

MON.-SAT.
8 A.M.-1 0 P,.M,
SUNDAY .
10 A.M.· 10 P.M.

-

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc, Newspaper

Reagan wins a Senate ratification fight with some
of his fellow Republicans.
Several arch-conservatives have criticized the
president for embracing a pact they fear Is not
tough .enough with the government they blame for
cheating on virtually all of seven previous nuclear
arms accords,
·
· In gross numbers, however, the Soviets would
lose more mlsslles under the INF treaty- about
2,000 to roughly 350 on the American side. One key ·
difference Is that the U.S. missiles can reach the
Soviet Union Itself from bases In Western Europe,
while most of the Soviet missiles are aimed at U.S.
allies.
'
Gorbachev said that by signing the pact after
six years of negotiations, he and Reagan would be
"completing work on the question which all ofthe
peoples, all of the nations of the world have been
looking to us to do ,"
That statement may be tested by the Issues that

triggered the collapse of the last ReaganGorbachev summit, 14 months ago In Reykjavik,
Iceland. Disputes ·over limitations on "Star
Wars," the president's Strategic Defense Initiative, tolled the framework of an agreement on
longer-range strategic nuclear arms,
That longer-range agreement, the next step In
arms control, Is a goal both leaders have espoused
- and a primary focus of their five meetings this
week wUI be to set the stage for a treaty that might
even be signed In Moscow next year making a 50
percent cut In overall strategic arsenals.
A last-minute hitch over a photograph of a
Soviet SS-20 missile was resolved after Gorba:
chev's arrival Monday, averting any delay In
today's treaty-signing ceremony. The State
Department said the Soviets had produced an
unsatisfactory photo of the SS-20 and It was
pointed out that a clear picture would be needed to
define the weapon for both sides. The Soviets
promised a clearer photo.

SEMINAR - Slate Highway Department
employees received Instruction Monday afternoon In snow and Ice removal and equipment
operation. The two-hour seminar was presented
by Tim Wald, pictured, of the Ohio Department of
Transportation's Bureau of Equipment Manage·
ment, Columbus. One of the primary purposes of
t"e such seminars, said Don Johnson, of ODOT's
District 10 office, Marietta, js to discuss state

directives, pollcy and safety procedures. The
highway department uses salt and cinders in snow
and Ice removal on first, second and third priorty
roads. Routes 7 and 33 and the Appalachian
Wghway are first priority In Meigs County. Route
124 from the Vinton County line to Route 7 Is
second priority and all other remaining routes,
Including Route 338, are third priority, Johnson
said.

Board
•
reJects
proposal

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio- The state
Controlling Board has turned
down a proposal to farm out 15
percent of the state lottery
advertising budget to a minority·
firm because some members
viewed It as a way to "use" black
consumers.
The board voted 3-3 Monday on
a $1.5 million contract with the
Advertising Connection, Inc,,
Cleveland, to promote lottery
games . It required a minimum of
four votes to pass.
Ronald L. Nabakowski, director of the Ohio Lottery Commis·
slon, said the commission Is
required by law to set aside 15
percent of Its advertising for
minority firms . .
In the past, he said, Marcus
Advertising of Cleveland has
been sub-contracting the minor·
played .
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii
lty portion but he was advised to
"As we stand here today award the contract directly.
(UPI) - The Navy solemnly
honoring these fallen heros, let us
marked the 46th anniversary of
Edward Hughes, an assistant
not forget their legacy. a legacy to Nabakowskl, said Advertising
the Japanese attack on . Pearl
best described by a need for Connection was "by far" the best
Harbor Monday wltli prayers.
military preparedness," said of six firms which applied for the
. silence, gunfire and a call by the
Adm.
Ronald Hays, commander work.
U.S. Pacl!lc commander for
In chief of the U.S. Pac!!lc
But Rep. Wllllam E. Hlnlg,
eternal vigilance.
Command.
0-New Philadelphia, comA hush fell over Pearl Harbor
Hays ended his keynote speech plained about a section of the
as servicemen, shipyard
saying the attack on Pearl conimlsslon's proposal which
workers and pa rticipants In
Harbor •'served to remind us that said Advertising Connection was
cermonles aboard the USS Ariz·
the price of freedom Is eternal better able to communicate with
ona Memorial obsen'fjd a mo·
vigilance."
the minority population than
ment of silence at 7:55a.m., the
Veterans and community other firms.
exact moment of the attack.
groups presented funeral . "It ' looks · to me like you're
At Arlington National Ceme·
wreaths, and members dropped trying to use minority consutary, near the nation 's capital,
flowers one' by one Into the oily mers," said Hlnlg,
top officials of the American
waters above the sunken battle·
"The minority Is going to end
Veterans of World War II, Korea
ship In which the bodies of 1,100 up throwing more money away
and VIetnam placed a wreath of
crew members lie entombed.
red, white and blue carnations at
on the lottery," said Rep. Robert
E. Hickey, D-Dayton.
the Tomb of the Unknowns.
- The memorial service com·
"We have no Intention of going
Aboard the USS Arizona Mem·
memorating the exact minute of after any subject population,"
aria!, about 150 people paid
the Japanese attack on Dec. 7, responded Nabakowskl. "We're
patriotic tribute to the 2,409
1941,
also Included prayers, not targeting those areas. We
Americans killed and 1,178
wreath
presentations, a gun don't target our advertising to
wounded on the "date which will
salute and the Marine Corps any particular group."
live In Infamy."
Buglers playing taps.
Nabakowskl said Advertising
Participants stood in silence
The Arizona ls the only Navy
Connection
"has a better feel tor
with only the sounds of the water
ship
not
In
commission
stlll
the
minority
community ... and
lapping against the rusting hulk
al!owed
to
fly
the
U.S
,
flag
by
we would certainly not want to
of the USS Arizona and stiff
special permission of the Secre· put anything In our adv.ertlsing
winds ripping through the opentary or the Navy.
copy that would turn them
air memorial.
Ninety-six ships lined the har· (minority people) off."
Seconds later, the sile nce was
broken by the roar of F-15 jets bqr that sleepy Sunday morning
4~.years ago when the Hawaiian
"Sometimes Marcus (Adverthundering directly overhead,
skies suddenly blackened with tising) would run stuff in the
one veering off In missing man
Japanese aircraft storming over (Cleveland) Call and Post that
·
formation.
the horizon.
looked like It belonged In the New
A salute also came from the
Japanese submarines quietly York Times," the lottery dlrec·
USS Worden, a guided missile
cruiser, which passed hy the · had maneveured within striking tor told reporters .
Nabakowskl said the commls·
memorial slowly with Its men In distance of many U.S.
battleships.
slon
will rework the proposal,
white dress lining the deck
"In exact accordance with a and that It is doubtful Advertis·
standing at attention.
thoroughly worked-out plan pre· lng Connection will get the ·
Offlclals then hoisted the flag
Continued on page 5
contract.
while the national anthem

Talks break _o ff Mf?nday as
strike continues at Meigs
Attempts to settle a teachers
strike In the Meigs Local School
District failed again Monday.
A federal mediator had set the
Monday session between the
negotiating teams of the district's board of education and the
teachers association. The mediation began Monday morning .but
by late aft&lt;!rnoon negotiations
broke down and the session was
halted.
Teachers who went on strike at

J

(Photos on page 6)
Meigs County residents have
the opportunity to enjoy a Uve
N'atlvlty scene this year. celebrating a different aspect of the
Christmas season .
Meigs High School's Junior
Clvltan Club Is presenting thee
live Nativity on the courthouse
lawn In Pomeroy. Entlt!ed
"Freedom to Celebrate the Sea·
son," the nativity figures are
backed by Junior Clvltans
r

12:01 a.m . Nov. 6 were on the
picket lines at the school today
since no settlement appears to be
In the offing. Another negotiating
session has not been set.
Meantime, it was reported that
the striking teachers will receive
their final paychecks tor accrued
time this Friday. Insurance
coverages have also been discontinued by the board of education.
However, the teachers can continue the coverages pay person-

nally payi ng the premiums
Involved,
There are approximately 150
teachers In the district-and about
2500 st udents affected by the
strike.
Recently the district's board of
education voted to advertise for
substitute teachers and reopen
the schools. However, no date for
thr reopening has been set at this
time.
Continued on page 5

Offer tips for safe holidays
.

Junior Civitans to present live. Nativity

298 S~COND ST .
POMEROY. OH.

Your Detler 011
The Rlftr'

2 Sections, 34 Pages

Ceremonies mark
Pearl Harbor Day

'

Ftb. 12 -Federal Horking ...............H -

GIRLS SCHEDULE

With the red hammer and sickle fluttering
beside the Stars and Stripes along Pennsylvania
Avenue, m!Utary fanfare on the White House
south lawn awaited ,. the start of the first
Washington summit In 14 years.
Joined only by Interpreters and notetakers,
Reagan, 76, and Gorbachev, 56, arranged to open
three days of meetings with a one-on-one session
In the Oval Office before signing the Intermediate
Nuclear Forces pact In the East Room.
The INF treaty, the first superpower arms
accord to eliminate an entire class of nuclear
weapons, provides for unprecedented reciprocal
on-sUe Inspections at missile factories to make
sure neither side cheats.
Under the agreement, all U.S. and Soviet
missiles with ranges of 300 to 3,000 m.lles would be
destroyed or dismantled during a three-year
period. That means about 2,500 missiles and 3,500
warheads destined for the scrap heap, assuming

Pomeroy to free
meters Dec. 14-3l

BOYS SCHEDULE

.EWING
FUNERAL
HOME

enttne

Summit opens; historic treaty signing today

EASTERN
DEC. I-SOUTHERN - AWAY
DEC. 11-HANNN TRACT- AWAY
DEC. 15-PAIIEISIUIG CATH. - AWAY

Chance of rain, low near 45
tonight. Cloudy, windy Wed·
nesday. Wghs near 55.

•

. Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, December 8, 1987

Copyrighted 1 987

COMPLUE
-SELECTION

GIRLS BASKETBALL

Pick 4
1736 ·

at y

and HUNTING SUPPLIES

DEC. 1-TRIMil£ - AWAY
DEC. '11-IRPI£ - HOME
DEC. 1.5-AtEXANDER - AWAY

Daily Number
862

•

MUZZLE LOADING '

BOYS BASKETBALL

,_.
.... Lud

"Your luiWi"'l Material Market """"

MEIGS

992-2067

Retirement
insert today

HARDWARE

•

Amanda Musser, Tracie Richdressed In uniforms depleting the
mond, Aimee Rope, Chris Hut·
country's armed forces.
ton, Blil Gllkey, J.R. Blackwell,
The project Is sponsored by the
Pete Brlckles, Ryan Jeffers and
county commissioners and Val·
ley Lumber, O'Dell Lumber, Ace • Debbie Musser, advisor tor the
Junior Clvltan group.
Hardware and Middleport Tro·
Untll further notice, hours at
phies have made donations . The
the
scene wlll be 12 to 3 and 4 to 5
encasement was constructed by
dally.
Charles Faulkner, Paul Mussar
Junior C!vltans dressed as
and Chris Hutton.
clowns and dolls will also be on
Participating In the event will
the street!VtO'.glve out treats to
be Chris Richmond, Amy Broth·
youngsters.
ers, Marty Hutton, Beth Pierce,

,..-·. -.

.;

A Christmas tree can be a
symbol of' beauty, joy, and
religious. significance for the
whole family during the holiday
season ..... or If not handled properly can lose Its beauty and.
worse yet, become a possible
source of tragedy,
To safeguard your family and
yourself, the following tips have
been offered by Gregory Passe·
wltz, state extension specialist of
Ohio State.
First of all when selecting a
tree be sure that It Is freshly cut.
Generally speaking the fresher
the tree, the fewer needles will
dry and drop off during the
season.
To petermlne freshness of a cut
tree, the extension specialist
suggests bending a needle on the
tree. If It's resilient, the tree Is
fresh. Next bump the base of the
tree hard on the ground. If the
needles. do not fall , tne tree IS

fresh. Finally feel the bottom of
the stump and If It feels sappy
and-moist, then the tree Is freshly
cut.
Once you've found one that's
just right, take It home and
Immediately put It In a bucket of
water. Keep It in a cool shaded
area sheltered from the wind.
like a garage or an enclosed back
porch until you're ready to put It
up.
Passewltz suggests that just
before putting the tree lntq its
stand, cut off an Inch or two of the
trunk at a slight angle which will
allow the tree to take up water
more easily,
The tree stand should be kepi
!!lied with water which will help
prevent the needles from dropping off and also Increase the
tree's fire resistance. Or you can
use a bucket of wet sand for a tree
stand imd this w111 help keep the
tree fresh .

For further safety. he says the
tree should not be decorated with
cotton, paper, or other materials
that can burn easily, Wax candles and other types of openflame devices should be strictly
avoided.
Also the tree should be well
supported artd placed away from
!!replaces, wood stoves, radla·
tors and other sources of heat.
Electric lights should be Inspected ofte n and carefully for
any wom or cracked spots In
wiring or bul~ receptacles (with
the wires unplugged, of course.)
Every receptacle should be
filled with a bulb and the circuits
should not be overloaded, Passewltz concludes.
Observing these points of care
and safety , families should be
able to relax and enjoy the
beauty of their Christmas tree all
through the holidays .

...

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