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Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

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Tuesday. December B. 1987

Re~an

authorized force use
to end C_u ban inmate uprising
both parties .
•'They spoke well and gave us a
run for our money," Rosario
said. ''Both parties were getting
tired and both were getting worn

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COMMUTER PLANE - A PacHic Southwest
Airlines BAe 146 commuter jet like this one
pictured crashed Monday In a mountain range -In
San Luis Obispo County, apparently kUling all39
passengers and lour crew members aboard. PSA

fllghll771 was en route from Los Angeles to San
Francisco when radar and radio contact was lost
about 4: 15 p.m., PST. The pUot of the plane
reported smoke In the cockpit and the plane was
spotted bumlng on Its port side. (UPI)

PSA cotnmuter plane crashes;
Chevron president among d ead
·

TEMPLETON, Calif. (UPI)The pilot of a jetliner that
cras hed and killed all 44 people
aboard cried, "Gunfire!" In his
last transmission, and the FBI
searched today for evidence of
"criminal activity" that may
have caused the disaster.
Pacific Southwest Airlines
Flight 1771, en route from Los
Angeles to San Francisco, plummeted "like a rock" Into a
hillside and disintegrated In a
fireball Monday with a crew of
five and 39 passengers, Including
the president of Chevron USA
Inc·. and three other executives of
the oil company, officials said.
Moments earlier, other fliers
overheard emergency broadcasts of the pilot reporting
gunfire aboard, and FBI agents
in Santa Marla promptly were
sent to the cras h on a ranch in the
mountains just west of Templeton, about halfway between
San Francisco and Los Angeles.
They were to be followed today
by more FBI Investigators.
"We're trying to determine If
gunfire did occur and If It caused
the crash," FBI spokesman Fred
.Reagan said In Los Angeles. "We
sent special agents up there to
confirm reports of gunfire on the
plane. We have not heard If It
took place in the cockpit or the
body of the aircraft. In addition, ·
we will be looking for signs of
criminal activity, It any has
occurred."
·
A search for survivors was
called off fo ur hours after the
crash, a nd 100 law officers sealed
off the site overnight to protect
possible evidence.
Witnesses and local officials
reported that the BAe 146 broke
apart on impact, scattering debris over 10 acres. They said the
bodies of those aboard were in
pieces.
"We know that nobody survived," PSA spokesman Jeremy
James said from company headquarters in San Diego. "That's
about all at this point that we can
say for sure. Nobody lived
through it."
Among the dead were lour
Chevron exec utives, including

James Sylla, 53, president of
Chevron USA Inc., the Chevron
Corporation's matn U.S. subs!diary, Chevron spoksman Jerry
Martin said .
Gene Katz. a private pilot who
overheard radio traffic from the
PSA aircraft while flying nearby,
· said, "The PSA pilot told the
controller he had an emergency.
there was gunfire.
"He was squawking, 'Seven·
seven-zero-zero,' which Is a special (general emergency) code,"
Katz told Cable News Network.
' 'At that time the controller
said, 'Say again,' and the captain .
confirmed. He said, 'I have an
emergency, gunfire.' And that
was the last communication."
' Iri another plane, Sacramento
attorney Steve Kronick said both
he and the pilot taking him to
Paso Robles In central California
"heard the pllot say that there .
was gunfire aboard."
"That's all we heard him say,"
Kronick told the Los Angeles
Times. '"There' s gunfire on board."'
.
Drucella Anderson, a spokes- .
woman for the National Transportatlon Safety Board, acknowledged the reports of gunfire on
the plane but said, "I have no
comment on how a gun might
have gotten on,board. There is no
sense In speculating at this
point."
PSA spokesman James added:
"I have no Idea how someone
would sneak a gun on. We are
very careful about security with
all our flights .''
PSA spokesman Bill Hastings
said normal security measures
were taken before the plane left
Los Angeles International Airpor~. with passengers walking
through metal detectors and
runnlng their carry-on baggage
through an X-ray machine.
The crash was seen by Grant
Leger, who was visiting friends
at the Santa Rita ranch, where
the plane went down In a field
used to graze cattle.
"The first thlngthatcaughtmy
attention was the roar of the jet
engines," he told United Press

International. "It was about1,500
feet up and It was just going
straight down. I thought to
myself. 'That ain't supposed to
do that.'
"There were no flames, no
smoke. no nothing. When lt hit, It
was just a giant fireball."
·
Another witness, Bill Vargues,
said the plane "was going
stralghtdown-nosmokebehlnd
It - just like a rock."
Edward Williams, the San Luis
Obispo County sheriff and coroner, described the crash as a
"scene of devastation. There Is
no Identifiable human being."
Williams said the largest piece
of debris was part of an engine
about 4 feet long. He said the
point of Impact was about 200
yards up the slde of a hUI and
added that the plane, having
descended In "just about a
straight down trajectory,"
gouged a crater 10 feet deep.
"There was debris scattered
from hell to breakfast," sald
Paul Wiley, 34, whose father-Inlaw owns the 2.000-acre ranch.
" It was a mess. There must have
been a lot of business people
because there was paperwork all
over. I walked up through that;
looking for someone who was still
alive."
Tlie plane was flying In a clear
sky at about 22,000 feet when air
trafttc controllers lost radio
contact, The Federal Aviation
Administration said.
"We are golng down," the pilot
said before the crash, according
to Col. Richard Hill, a spokesman
at nearby Vandenberg Air Force
Base. He said the statement was
heard by two Air Force air traffic
controllers at the base . .
Hastings said the airline has
been uslng the BEa 146. manufactured by the British Aerospace
Corp., since 1984. He sald the
engines of the aircraft that
crashed were overhauled last
week.
.
It was the second crash in the
airline' s 39-year history. On Sept.
25, 1978, a PSA aircraft coll1ded
with a small private plane over
San Diego, killing 144 people.

ATLANTA (UPI) - An FBI
negotiator said Cuban Inmates
·who . held the Atlanta Federal
Penitentiary for 12 days knew
exactly what they wanted and
put agents through "the most down.''
Meanwhile, advocates for the
complex hostage negotiations"
Cubans
who remain .In U.S. jails ··
In the agency's history.
.
"The wor~t mista-ke we could said they hope the government
have made was to underestimate will honor an agreement to
their Intelligence," Atlanta FBI review the Cubans' cases and
special agent Dlader R.osarlo free those who have served their
told a news conference Monday. sentences.
"I certainly hope these people
"They were very Intelligent
and knew exactly what they are given the type hearing I feel
wanted and exactly where they they're entitled to and that they
have legal representation on an
wanted to go."
The White House disclosed Individual basis," said U.S. DisMonday that President Reagan trict Judge Marvin Shoob of
signed a proclamation and exec- Atlanta.
"I am hopeful they will be
utive order Nov. 24, the day after
given
a hearing that more closely
the Atlanta uprising began, that
resembles
an ordinary due proauthorized the use of federal
cess trial rather than merely
troops to qbell the rebellion.
White House spokesman Mar- another Interrogation," · Shoob
lin Fitzwater said the documents told UPI Monday.
The detainees In Atlanta a.nd
were signed by Reagan at the
time to prepare for "possible Oakdale, La., who staged an
contingencies ." The executive 8-day uprising, arrived In the
law authorized the defense secre- United States In the 1980 "Freetary to use "units and members dom Flotilla" from Cuba's port
of the armed forces" as neces- of Martel and were jailed for
sary to suppress violence at the crimes committed In the United
States or were considered danprison and restore order.
Military personnel were sent to gerous because of mental condiAtlanta to advise Justice Depart- tions or previous criminal'
ment officials and others, but no records .
Shoob said .most of the detaiassault on the . prison was
nees In both federal prisons had
attempted.
Rosario and Pedro Tolj!((o of served their time for crimes
the FBI's San Juan, Puerto Rico, committed In this country and
office represented the govern- should have been released.
An agreement, reached Dec. 4
ment In negotiations with the
Cubans during what Weldon with 1,104 detainees who seized
Kennedy, the FBI special agent the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary
In charge of the Atlanta office, and nearly 100 hostages does not
called "the most complex hos- clarify whether some of the
tage negotl.atlons we ever detainees will be deported to
Cuba, according to Carla Dudeck
handled."
Rosario said the negotiations of the Coalition to Support the
began with a plea from detainee Cuban Detainees.
"There are several questions
negotiators that all their compayou read the agreement,"
when
triots be freed Immediately and
ended more than a week later said Dudeck. "We want to know If
with an agreement that satisfied the people who have been ap-

WASHINGTON (UPli - The
naHan's armed forc es probably
will lose about 100,000 personnel
by the mld-1990s under budget
cu ts recently agreed to by the
White House and Congress. Deputy Defense Secretary William
Taft says.
The new five-year defense
budget plan fol' the years 1990 .
through 1994 will be reduced on
average about· 11 percent to 12
percent from the amounts. projected before the recent administration budget "summit " with
Congress. Taft told a Pentagon
news briefing Monday.
These cuts would cause a
reduction of 4 percent to 5
perce nt In the 2.1 millionmember armed forces. or about
100,000 men and women, he
es timated. Taft also predicted'
so me cut back In the Pentagon's
1.1 million-member civilian
workforce, bu t he could give no
estimate.
Mond ay's briefing was the first
time the Pentagon had publicly
estimated the magnl tude of the
reduction, altho ugh Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci said last
week he expected the budget cuts
would force a reduction In the
· armed forces .
Taft said the budget cuts " will
resuU In ... defense programs

Christmas
countdown '

Daily 'Number

095
Piek4
1403

at y
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Reagan and
Mlkhatl Gorbachev, not ready to view their
signing of a nuclear mlsstle agreement as " an end
In Itself,' ' agreed to turn thelr attention today
from arms control to worldwide troljblespots such
as Afgl)jlnlstan and the Persian Gulf.
"We ~annat afford to rest," theprestdentsald In
offering a champagne toast to the Soviet leader at
a Whlte House.state dinner Tuesday night . "There
Is more work to be done and time and history are·
marching on."
"Our journey toward a nuclear-free world .
cannot amount to reaching just one or two Islands
named INF and shorter-range INF ," Gorbachev
agreed, ·referring to the Intermediate Nuclear
Forces treaty they signed seven hours earlier. ''It
ls my hope that we shall promptly move ahead
toward the goal of redllclng and eliminating
strategic offensive arms."
The historic INF treaty, signed in a White House
ceremony as the centerpiece of the third
Reagan-Gorbachev summit, would eliminate all
U.S. and Soviet nuclear missiles with ranges of 300

to 3,400 miles. It Is the first superpower
agreement In the atomic age to get rld of an entire
class of weapons.
The missiles, prlmartly In Europe, are less than
5 percent of the U.S. and Soviet nuclear arsenals,
however, and both men have expressed the hope
that they can reach another agreement to slash
long-range strategic weaponry.
Today, congressional leaders went to the Soviet
Embassy to meet with Gorbachev, primarily to
discuss the prospects for ratification of the INF
treaty.
House Speaker Jim Wright, who met with the
Soviet leader In Moscow last spring, sat directly
across the green felt-covered tablejrom Gorbachev, flanked by Senate ·DemO&lt;!\-a tic leader
Robert Byrd of West Virginia and House
Democratic leader Thomas Foley of Washington.
Also In attendance were Senate Republican
leader Robert Dole.of Kansas, a 1988 presidential
candidate, Assistant Senate GOP leader Alan
Simpson of Wyoming and four other leaders.

ATl'ENTION GRABBING -Posters which will
hopefully provoke some serious thinking among
Mellis County's teenagers on some serious
projects, are being placed In the local junior and

senior high schools. Here, Jay Evans, Meigs
County Juvenile probation officer_, Is shown with
one of the drug abuse posters.

On the Soviet side with Gorbachev were his
f_orelgn minister, Eduard · Shevardnadze, and
Anatoly Dobrynin, the former ambassador to the
United States .
Administration officials said the future for
arms control already bad come up ln the first of
three days of talks between the leaders, but White
House spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the focus
at today's one scheduled Oval Office meeting
_would be regjonallssues such as Afghanistan and
the Persian Gulf.

992-3462
271112 N. SECOND AVE. I
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

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Schools display drug 51buse posters

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The Meigs County Juvenile
Court, in· cooperation with the
countys' junior and senior high
schools, has made ava ilable
various posters and poster
frames to be displayed at the
schools. Posters addressing the
Issue of drug abuse, cartoon
posters to help build enthusiasm.

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productivity and team work, and
challenge posters to communicate positive attitudes, have been
made available to the schools.
A number of the frames to hold
the 17 X 22 Inch colorful posters
have already been placed at
Meigs Hlgh. Others are on order.
The posters and subject matter

Local baseball fans are enjoyIng the appearances of Jeff
Montgomery, Cincinnati Reds
pitcher In Meigs County.
Tuesday afternoon Montgo-

mery was at Kroger's In Pomeroy chatting with visitors and
signing autographs. Earlier he
was at Sonny's and the Blue
Tartan.

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ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

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" We cannot afford to view these as faraway
brushflres." Reagan told his counterpart Tuesday .."There are differences here, (and ) ones that ·
require frankness and ca ndor."
The Soviets have hinted In recent days that they
finally may be willing to withdraw 115,000 troops
from neighboring Afghanistan, a nation they
Invaded In 1Q79. The Reagan administration ,
which aids Islamic fundamentalist rebels fighting
the Afghan regime, has called on Gorbachev to set
a "date certain."

.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Members of the Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce were
enlightened on the serious prob·
!em of.teen pregnancy when they
met Tuesday with speaker Kay
Atkins, executive director of
Planned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio, which is headquartered In Athens and covers eight
counties In the . area Including
Meigs.
According to 1985 statistics, the.
most recent avallable, Meigs
County Is the thlril highest county
In Ohio In terms of teens giving
birth. All of the top ten counties
are in Southeastern Ohio with
Vinton County at the top of the
list. Gallla County ranks 25th and
Athens County 22nd on the list.
Statistics for 19B8 will be availa·
ble In the spring, Atkins said.
Atkins says the alarming sta·
tlstics are a signal that teen
pregnancy "is not an urban
problem" and must be addressed
by communities and counties as
a whole, not just by Individuals .
With this 1 In mind, Planned
Parenthood has written a grant
proposal for $25,000 in State
funding to hire a family life
specialist to work In Meigs
County's schools ·a t the sixth,
seventh and eighth grades. Atkins said Planned Parenthood Is
targeting the middle school level
because " If you watt any longer,
you may be too late."
The funding would be ,for 18

months and would come from
$1.5 mllllon which has been
earmarked In the State budget
for projects related to the problem of teen pregnancy. Setting
aside of the funding came as a ·
result of findings from a State
Teen Pregnancy Task Force.
A $5,000 local match Is needed
for the proposed project In Meigs
County, as well as support In the
form of letters from at least four
local ~gencles. Pomer?Y
Chamber was one of the agenc1es
which agreed to write a letter of
support. The grant proposal was
submitted to the State last
Friday.
The propi&gt;sed program would
help in teaching young teens,
both male and female. that
having a baby is a great responsibility both financially and mentally for anyone, but most especially for -young teens who have
not completed their educations.
Atkins said.
Students must learn to be
responsible for themselves and
that "l.t's alright to say no,"
remarked Atkins. Students
should also be taught the nealth
risks Involved In teen pregnancy ,
both to the babies and the
mothers, she added.
She also pointed out the rela·
tlonshlp between teen pregnancy
and a hlgh number of Aid to
Dependent Ch lldren payments In
Meigs County . Overall, in
Planned Parenthood's eight
county area, 14 percent of their

approx{mately 6,000 clients receive ADC payments . Of the 500
to GOO clients In Me igs County, 21
percent receive ADC.
In final remarks, Atklnsvolced
appreciation for ·the local
Planned Parenthoods ' new office
above City Loan on East Main St.
In Pomeroy.
In Chamber business matters,
President Biil Nease reported
the escrow money which was
held In Mason County. W.Va. for
the ferry project has been
returned and allocated on a
percentage basis to the businesses which donated to the
escrow accopnt.
Nease also announced that an
evening dinner meeting and
dance has been scheduled for
.Jan. 16 at Royal Oak Park.
Tickets are being printed and
costs per couple for the steak
dinner and dance that wm follow
wm be $22. For the dance only.
the cost per couple will be $10.
The dinner will start at 7 p.m.,
followed by the dance at 8: 30 to
midnight. Music will be provided
by the band Sugar Bear .
Nease acknowledged the success of the recent Big Bend
Varieties Show, held at Meigs
High School and co-sponsored by
Chamber and the Meigs Athletic
Boosters, and the success of the
combined Pomeroy-Middleport
Christmas Parade.
Tuesday's luncheon meeting
was held at Pomeroy Trinity
Church.

Suit is filed to remove asbestos
from Mason _County courthouse

By MATT ROBERTSON
OVP News Staff·
In the poster frames will be
A
suit
seeking to require the
changed bi-weekly or more often
Mason
County
Commission to
with the three different
remove
the
asbestos
from the
programs.
courthouse
and
repair
the tlamThe programs were made
age
done
to
the
courthouse,
possible through funds to the
Juvenile Court from parties spec(flcally the courtroom, was
filed this week In Mason Cmmty
wls.hlng to remain anonymous .
Circuli Court, a~cordlng to court
documents.
The suit, calling for a writ of
mandamus, was filed on behalf of
Norma Jean Perry, Earl William
Montgomery,
a native of
Thomas and Glen E. Kingery
Wellston and a 1980 graduate of against The Mason County ComWellston High School, played
mission, and commissioners
three sports at Wellston earning · Paul Watkins, Kenton Sheline
first team All-Ohio spots In
and Thomas D. ' "Tucker"
football and baseball. In 1980 he Mayes.
was the recipient of the first
The suit alleges that state
annua) Willard Fitzpatrick statutes, rules and ,constitution
award glven to the top male
athlete In the Southeastern Ohio
Athletic League.
After graduation, he attended
Marshall University where he
played baseball. Following his
junior year, he became the ninth
round draft choice of the Clncin·
natl Reds In June, 1983.
Montgomery spent four years
In the Reds mlnor league system
compiling a record of 40-20 with
37 saves before hls July promotion to Cinlncnatl the past
summer. While with the Reds, he
po~ted a 2-2 record. His appearances are sponsored by Rlepenhoff Distributors, Jackson.
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Reds Jeff Montgomery visits area

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THE DAILY SENTINEL

2 5 Cent 1

c. Newspaper

Teen pregnancy chamber topic·

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 AM· 9 PM

992-2156

2 Sect ions, 14 Pa"gei
A Multimedlji_

Gorbachev meets with congressional leaders

SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM

Wish all your ~ustomers and friends
a very Merry Christmas in our
Christmas Greeting Edition OIJ.
December 24th.·

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Wednesday, December 9. 1987

Vot.38, No.14B
Copyrighted 1987

OPEN

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

Cloudy ljlnlght. Chance of
rain. Low In mid 40s. Cloudy
Thursday.

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THE
VIDEO TOUCH

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that would have more risks than last seven years, would be cut
we would like to see and a more deeply than weapons prosmaller, less capable force than . ductlon, which he sald had been
We would like to see."
hit relatively hard the last three
A cut in the size of the armed years.
forces Is " Inevitable ... when
He said the military services
you're looking at a five-year had been giVen two;' guiding
(budget) drought, as opposed to a principles In making their cuts:
one-year freak . And, we've told cancel weapons programs rather
(the milita ry services) you're than "stretch out" production by
looking at a five-year drought," lower -volume, more costly prohe said.
duction rates and go to ·s maller
The Army , Navy and Alr Force forces rather than " hollow" units
have been Informed of the share without a full ~complement of
they will tentatively bear of the troops.
$32.5 b!Uion cut for the 1989 fiscal
There are weapons "progra ms
year that begins next Oct. I and we are going to protect," but Taft
· the following five-year defense declined to specify which ones .
plan, Taft said.
Asked specifically about the
administration's Strategic DeCarlucci will make the final fense Initiative researc h prodecision after the service replies gram, Taft replied, "I certainly
come In this week, Taft said.
expect the SDI budget to grow"
The Army·, In particular. is a t an annual rate of between i
reluctant to cut Its 774,000-· percent and 3 percent.
member force because unlike the
Strategic nuclear forces of .
other services. It decided five services are expected to stay at
years ago to Improve the quality about 13 percent to 14 percent of
of Its units rather than Increase the tota l defense budget, Taft
their number during the budget said.
Increases of the early "Reagan
The deputy secretary defended
administration, Taft said.
the admlnlstra lion-Congress
The current army Is already budget agreement, which he sald·
the smallest In 30years, he noted. obtained $20 billion more for the
Taft Indicated weapons re- P~ntagon In the current 19B8
search and development, which fiscal year than lt would have
· has grown at a healthy rate \he gotten under automattc ·cuts

•

proved for releae under the old
review plan htive any guarantee
they won't be deported.' '
Justice Department spokesman Patrick Korten Insisted that
government officials "never
agreed to be barred from deportIng some of the Cubans. That Is a
point we would not budge on."
The U.S. Immigration and
Naturalization Service reviewed
some of the Cubans' cases under
a plan launched In June and a
handful of the detainees were
released. Others were promised
freedom under the plan, but
Dudeck and Shoob said the plan
did not offer due process and as a
result hundreds of detainees
were unfairly denied release.
Both the uprising at Atlanta,
and one at the federal Allen
Detention Center In Oakdale,
La., that began two days earlier
were prompted by a U.S.-Cuban
agreement to deport 2,500 ''undesirable" detainees back to their
· homeland.
Oakdale Inmates released all
of their remaining 26 hostages
after an eight-day Insurrection.
Detainees In the Atlanta facility
released all of their remaining 89
hostages.
·
The agreements signed by both
prisons will not hold the Cubans
responsible for the mllllons of
dollars In damage done to the
facilities.

Taft: Armed forces probably
will be red~ced by 100,000
• ·'

Ohio Lottery

require the commission to provide monies for the upkeep of the
courthouse. The suit further
alleges that the respondents have
" ... refused and/or failed and/ or
neglected to provide sufficentiy
for the mat ntence of certain
portions of the court house. "
particularly the courtroom.
The suit charges that "the
respondants failure to maintain
the courtroom facti! ty ls a
violation of the petitioners canst!·
tutional rights to due process of
law and their right to a jury trial
In a facility that emanates the
degree of dignity that should be
accorded them at thls time."
The writ would require_ the
commission to provide monies
for the lmmed Ia te rep a lr of the
court house facility.

Two engineering firms are
expected to submit bids on the
asbestos removal, to be opened
a t the Jan. 14 meeting of the
commission. The contract. according to county officials,
should be signed by Jan. 21 and
the asbestos should be removed
from the damaged areas of the
courthouse by early February.
After .the asbestos is removed,
the damage done .during the
removal and damage done by
water leaking through the old
roof wlll have to be repaired. The
repair and remodeling· will be
done . by county maintenance
personnel, according to Mayes.
If the job should prove too much ;
though, he added,. the commission would seek local help in
repairing the damage.

Probe auto mishap

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VISITS AREA- Jeri Montgomery visited wlth.Kroger shoppers
Tuesday afternoon. A member of the Cincinnati Reds ball club,
Montgomery Is pictured chatting with Debbie Whitlatch.
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Heavy damages were Incurred
to a car driven .by Mildred
Pierce, Syracuse, In a one-car
accident on West Main St.,
Pomeroy, early Tuesday evenIng. Pomeroy Police said that' a
mechanical difficulty developed
in the steering of the car and
?terce, headed east, went off the
right of the road and onto the
railroad tracks. She was unln·
jured but was cited o'n a no
financial responsibility charg~.
pollee report&lt;&gt;d.
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HAPPY
- Thlsgroupoffanaattimdlng
Tuesday . night's Southetn-Eastern game In Ka·
cine show their emotion as Senlnel cameraman

pMIIes by. Southern won, 90-51, to remain unbea·
ten In four starts. See details of this SVAC game
and others on pages 3-4!oday.

••

�•

Wednesday, December 9, 1987
•

·comment

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday. December 9. 1987

The single spy____. _B..::..y_J_ac_k_A_n_de_r_so_n_a_nd_D_al_e_Vi_an_A_tta

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA .
A~

~m~

.

,

.....................,...,..,.,c::J.....

.

·.

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manarer

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publlshers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters aresubj ect to editing and must be signed wtth name, address and

telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters should be In
~.

good taste, addressing Issues·, not personalities.

•

•

By Jack Andersoa
and Dale Van Atta
WASHINGTON -Pillow talk
can be expensive, tt can cost you
Your life, the CIA has warned Its
secret agents around the world.
The danger. of course, is AIDS.
The l,lroblem Is that, unlike
officials of other, less devious
agencies, the CIA brass bats
can't take the stralght·arrow
approach and . urge their spies:
"Just say no." The CIA is well
aware that an undercover agent
Is sometimes exactly that, ex·
tracting information from sus·
ceptible, seducible targets who
get carried away in the passion of
the moment.
Even the KGB's notorious
Delilahs must be growing a little
nervous these days as the AIDS
epidemic spreads inexorably
throughout areas of East·West

.Americans tum
.off politics
By JUDI HASSON
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The American public, as usual, signaled
·its dislike for presidential politics once again when more people tuned
In the sitcoms than the 12 presidential candidates pontificating about
.
·
the nation's future.
· It was not surprising that while the six Democratic candidates and
six Republicans spoke in earnest on national television last week,
many more viewers were watching "Moonlighting," "Thirtysome·
thing," "Jake and the Fatman" and "The Law and Harry McGraw"
on other networks.
,. Even Vice President George Bush ackowledged at one point du,ring
the debate that he was distressed about the Democrats' point of view
and he would sooner tune in "Jake and the Fatman" too.
• But as the political season intensifies, the pundits will have to
question whether interest can be sustained at allln a process that
began too early a nd won't end too soon.
·
There are some who say tbe presidential race never ends and that
certainly appears to be the case for the 1988 campaign. Months ago,
the public was treated to annoucements ofpresidentialintentlonsand
scandal soon surrounded some of the major players.
'
Gary Hart dropped out of the race last May -18 months before the
election after questions arose about his character. Joe Blden followed
him out the door in.September over the issue of plagiarism.
The wife of Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls, the Democratic
front·runner in some polls, acknowledged she had been addicted to
· drugs.
Former Arizona Gov. Bruce Babbitt, who is at the back of the pack,
confessed he had tried marijuana and so had another Democratic
cha llenger, Tennessee Sen. Albert Gore.
Democrat Jesse Jackson and Republican Marion "Pat" Robertson
made headlines, too, when it was disclosed their first child had been
conceived out of wedlock.
·while there have been numerous debates so far and many polls,
almost nothing of substance on the issues has emerged to carry the
men who would be president past prlm~tlme and into the hearts and
minds of Americans.
The state of the presidential campaign season recently prompted
·Sen. Ted Kennedy, D·Mass., a veteran of the campaign trail who has
weathered scandal himself, to chide the press for not paying attention
to the serious issues and focusing instead .on the sensa tiona!.
"A preslde11tlai election is more than a game, a melodrama or a
mini-series," Kennedy said.
"Whether we are conscious of it or not, we are in the midst.of
deciding how the most powerf11i nation on Earth will conduct itselffor
at least the next four years."
·
The real issue here is not how much scandal and titillating news the
public can take, but where are the issues and why haven't the
candidates been able to focus on them•
While the deficit, taxes, Social Security and Soviet relations were
discu'ssed ad nauseum at the most recent debate, the item that got the ·
biggest attention occurred when Babbitt stood up and challenged his
Democratic colleagues to stand up for a tax increase, too.
· And if you think things are bad on primetlme and in 9Jjur morning
newspaper, think about the folks in Iowa and New Hampshire who
have the first chance to face the presidential candidates this winter .
For months now, the candidates have been eating suppers in their
kitchens, following them to their PTA meetings, kissing their
children and courting their votes.
.
nnnois Sen. Paul Simon, seeking the Democratic nomination, h'a s
even taken an apartment in Iowa, and Rep. Richard Gephard of
'Missouri, another Democrat, has moved his mother into the state.
Stili, when all is said and done, there is a lingering echo from 1984
that remains for the voters to answer as they spend the next 11 months
considering the future of the White House- "Where's the beef?"

quarry.
Were it otherwise, 1)1e types of
Second: "Avoid any Inter·
patients seen would be
course
with high· risk Individuals
· different."
or
individuals
from hlgh·risk
So, the CIA medical bulletin
areas
of
the
world."
Following ·
explained, "while an AIDS vac·
this
sensible
precaution
would
cine or a disease cure is not yet a
place
Africa
and
mbst
of
Europe
reality, preventive measu'res are
off limits, as well as rule out gay
very effective."
men and intravenous drug users,
. The bulletin then proceeded to
historically among those deemed
offer seven specific precautions
susceptible to romantic over·
' that agents can take to protect
tures a!ldlor blackmail.
themselves from the deadly
Third: "Do not accept trans!u·
virus. How the suggested mea·
sian of blood or any blood product
sures will complicate any partie·
that has not been screened lor
uiar espionage caper is a prob·
AIDS." That's fine if the agent
iem ·hat the medics don't go Into.
needs a pint of blood in Switzer·
The first rule: "Do not partie!·
land,
but not !the's In a primitive
pate 1!1 unprotected vaginal inter·
Third
World clinic where the
course unless it is within a stable
have neither the equipdoctors
relationship; otherwise use con·
.
ment
nor
the know-how to testfor
doms and spermicide." But this
AIDS
antibodies
in the blood.
could easily rob the boudoir
Fourth:
"Do
not
accept any
opportunity of the very sponta·
treatment
involving
a needle or
neity that has disarmed the
injection unless you are certain
the facility uses s,t elle disposable
needles.'' Again, this is a bit
unrealistic In many parts of the
world - including Eastern Eu·
rope - where CIA agents
operate.
Fifth ("Avoid unprotected
anal Intercourse") and sixth
("Be aware that oral-genital
contact carries a rtsk· of trans·
mission") offer no special obsta·
cles to the clever spy, while Rule
No. 7 is merely common sense:
"In a situation where a paten·
tial sex partner may be infected,
assume they are. A test for HIV
antibody may be negative because the partner has not yet
developed the antibody. In fact,
there are rare infected lndlvldu·
als who are incapable of making
the antibody at any tlme."
In short, the CIA bulletin
warns: "Know your partner."
Well, of course, in the esplon·
age game the whole Idea is to get
to know your target well. But
asking a potential paramour to
take a test for the AIDS virus
may not be a secret agent's most
productive followup to "What's
-everyone's turning on our hero." your sign?"

confrontation. They are surely
aware that their next conquest In ·
the service of the Kremlin could
turn out to be a suicidal
dalliance.
Faced with this mission-vs·
medicine dilemma, the CIAs
Office of Medical Services has
come down on the side of
protection -but without coming
right out and saying so.
AIDS is 100 percent preventa·
ble," secret agents and other
employees were assured in a
bulletin issued in June. "Scient·
isiS who study the transmission
of disease point out that the
pattern of HIV (Human Immu·
nodeficiency VIrus, the current
name for the virus) dissemlna·
Uon has been. well Investigated,
and the virus relies entirely on
sexual contact, parenteral infu·
sion or perinatal circumstances.

"This movie's starting to get exciting

ReforiD.ers honor business.___R_o_be_rt_~_al_te__._r~
By Robert Walters
NEW '(ORK (NEA)·- Sustain·
ing a tradition that dates back to
the' muckrakers of the eatly 20th
century, contemporary social
reform ers generally confine
their observations about corporate behavior to criticizing irres·
ponsible companies.
Thus, activists like Ralph
Nader invariably eschew praise,
even of firms that share their
commitment to a progressive
agenda, preferring to emphasize
.the inadequacies they perceive in
the corporate world.
Now, however, a New York·
based public interes,t group with
nationwide influence, the Council
on Economic Priorities, is ex·
ploring a different strategy lauding corporations that "make
social responsibility a priority"
while continUing to excoriate
other firms for ethical or moral
lapses.
Founded in 1969, CEP is an
independent, non-profit organ!·
zatlon whose mission is "resear·
ching ...and publicizing the facts
behind corporate and govern·
mental programs to reveal how

they actually impact on people,
progress and profits."
Earlier this year, It organized
an elaborate New York cerem·
ony, attended by more than 1,000
people to present the . "First
Annual America's Corporate
Conscience Awards:"
General Mills, Polaroid and
Sara Lee were honored for
generous charitable contrlbu·
lions, while IBM and Amoco
were recognized for their com·
mitment to community action
programs.
Procter &amp; Gamble was cited
for "corporate programs to sup·
port the farriily concerns of Its
employees." Other firms re·
warded for corporate responsi·
bility included Johnson &amp; John·
son, Avon Products and Ford.
There also were "dishonorable
mentions" - awarded to Mobil
Oil, 1A. H. Robbins, American
Cyanamid and Litton Industries.
Mobil's citation, for unsatisfactor:~~_ corporate disclosure, illus·
trates some of the fundamental
differences between corpora·
tions and their critics.

CEP Executive Director Alice
Tepper Marlin says she seeks "to
provide an alternative to the
slick advertising that creates
product distinctions which are
trivial, artificial or just plain
meaningless."
Providing consumers informa·
!ion .a bout corporate responsibil·
1

!7~ ~~~~ ~~/:0b~tt:rh~~~~~s~i
their offices, in the supermarket
aisles and in their investment
portfolios.''
Mobil rejects that claim and
says consumers' buying dec!·
slons should be based exclusively
on product quality and price.
Indeed, when CEP sought
Information on corporate respon·
sibility issues from Mobil, it was
rudely rebuffed with the argu·
men! that such disclosure
"would not be in the best
interests of our employ ees,
shareholders, customers or the
general public."
But Mobil may be fighting a
losing battle because CEP is not
the only organization searching
for socially responsible corpora·

!Ions to praise- and to hold up as
examples to other companies.
During the past year, Sara Lee
received an award !rom Colum·
bla University, Digital Equipment was honored by the Soclai
Investment Forum, and IBM.
ARCO and Levi Strauss were
formally praised by other
groups.
CEP now has taken the concept
to a new forum, worklngw!thMs'.
magazine to develop a liSt of "2ll
Corporations . That Listen To
Woemn." An article with the list
appeared in the magazine's
November issue.
Although the analysts notes
that not ail companies are
exemplary in every category, It
cites with approval many of the
firms mentioned above as well as
Exxon, General Electric, Gen.
eral Motors, Kellogg, Pfizer,
Pillsbury, Xerox and others.
CEP also developed a ltst of
firms less sympathetic to
women's interests - Including
Northwest Airlines, Reynolds
Metals and Shell 011 - but the
determinedly upbeat magazine
article mever mentions them.

What kids do and don't knoW

Sarah Overstreet

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

By Sarah Overstreet
Some report came out re·
cently, another one of those
studies made to let us know just
how fast our kids are traveling to
heck In a handbasket.
This one measured what the
kids know about geography,
about where places are oil the
glObe and even where they
themselves are presently, trying
to find a parent to take them to
the mali. Lots of them, the report
claims, don ' t have much idea.
Some of them, when asked to
square off with a map . and a
pencil. put the • United States
down about where Brazil iS.

The news brought the expected
head-shaking from me and my
friends. We'd already invested a
good deal of words on the MTV
Generation, the horrors thereof,
and the new information played
right into our hands.
"Too much TV! " dominated
our new talks. "And they do their
homework with the dang thing on
ail the time. At our house, we had
a stricti rule: The TV went off
after Howdy Doody, and ll stayed
off until Dad checked our math
answeFs.''

The discussion continued
pretty much adults lOO" kids 0.

Today in history

;

By United Press lnterna.llonai
·
Today is Wednesday, Dec. 9, the 343rd day ot 1987 with 22 to follow ,
The moon is waning, moving away from its last quarter.
The morning stars and Mercury and Mars .
The evening stars are Venus. Jupiter and Saturn .
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sag!ttarlu\. They
include English poet John Milton in 1608; journalisl-auth&lt;Jr Joel
Cha ndler Harris ("Uncle Remus") in 1848; !ndustrtal!Jit fn•wnwr
&lt;;larence Birdseye in 1886; ,circus clown Emmett Kelly In mlb; :wVJr
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. in 1909 (age 78) ;. actor Broderick' Crawtw&lt;1 '
1911; retired Speaker of the House Thomas "Tip" O'Neill in l'tl~ 1~If.."
75) ; actor Kirk Douglas in 1918 (age 69); comedian·actor PJ-&lt;Jtl f •.n
In 1922 rage 65); actors John Cassavetes in 1929 (age 58 . ar.d p,..~
Bridges in 1941. (age 46), and singer Donny Osmond In 1!157 !age· ''I&gt;

Then it turned to the subject of
our own parents and how much
they seemed to know about
geography when we were kids.
We theorized that maybe their
impressive k11owledge came
from living through the second
world war - where different
parts of the world were featured
In every radio broadcast, carry·
ing vital information about
friends and family .
Then one kliijoy paused a
moment and mused aloud,
"Yeah, my folks seemed to know
a lot more about the world than I
do. Sometimes I wonder if I'm
not Just as dumb as we're talking
about our kids being."
tA hush fell on the crowd. A small
voice piped up from ihe .back:
"Uh, anyone know much about
Central America - I mean
really know, like, uh, for In:
stance, Nicaragua?"
A few took the bait and angrily
exchanged meaningful nouns:
"Somoza! Sandinistas! Fawn
Hall!" But after a few rounds, It
was pathetically apparent that
.although every major news meilium piasters us dally with
c·n•,ugh details that we can know
'·· ' ~r31(lla as we lias we know the
'r &gt;~ ~ · H•rb on "Hill Street
1~ ,,toft ' tr·•w of us do.
· 'lt.l- '"' 't progressed to Viet·

On this dale in history:
r.atfl . ~~. , ,,._,~ !acts dearth there
In 1793, Noah W,ebster founded the American Minerva. thto I ta
pmnnunced _even
1114 ,
dally newspaper, In New York City,
· , thtJ~J!O'I ,,.~1 ;(lfJWn up with the
In 1907, the first Christmas Seals to raise monel! to l ight · war M• M:&amp;11 jy TV broadcasts
tuberculosis went on sale at the post office ln Wilmington', Dei.
. And d•-.pll•· t.l!•: Howdy Doody

I·•• '"

on 24 hours a day until it becomes
disclaimers, we all admitted that c naturally."
I guess he did, the same way background music, and then
Walter Cronkite was on every
night in every one of our homes. kids come by marking Brazil on don't talk abol!t it. And whatever
you do,. don't read. The kids just
If we'd paid attention, we could their tests as the United States:
have had It all almost by osmosis. Take one television filled with the might see you doing It, and try it
One by one, we all admitted knowledge of the universe, turn it themselves.
that we don't read much anymore, and the plethora of teievi·
sion news we have at our eartips
24 hours a day is becoming like
elevator music. We have at our
ready disposal a link to every end
of the earth, yet our minds
wander to filling the car with
antifreeze .and stopping by the
dty cleaner.
Last year one of my former
student's names •appeared in an
Associated Press wlre story of
anti-apartheid demonstrations
at the University of Missouri·
Columbia. It came on the heels of
several years or decrying the
lack of involvement among this
generatlon of young adults, so I
called him. I asked him if he
thought the media portrayals of
his generation were accurate.
He said he honestly didn't
know. He said he could only
speak for himself, although he
wouldn't classify most of the
people he met in college as
· particularly interested In world
affairs.
I asked him how he came by his
~~
own social conscience.
ctJ 1887 br NEA Inc \ ').. "
.
''My dad was real interested in
politics and whatever was hap·
"I want you to write me a dynamite speech
pening in the world, and we
trivial/zing GREED on Wall Street."
. talked about it a lot at home," he
· said, "I guess I came by it

~

Berry's World

l
l

'

•

r

The Daily Sentinel Page

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Indiana slip~ past
Vanderbilt, 63~1

3

Marau«Jers suffer 70-53 loss to Trimble

call for a time out to regroup bi s sudd enly became a three point
By JIM SOULSBY
troops and apparently the stra· deficit as a result of the seven
Sentinel Staff Writer
JACKSONVILLE ~ The Ma- tegy worked as the hosts pulle d to polnf burst. This seemed to fire
In other games, No.2 Arizona rauders came out of the gate like within three at the four minute up the Ca ts defensive unit as the
By GERRY MONIGAN
whipped
Northern Arizona 77-59, Man·O·War to grab a 9·0 lead just ma rk of period one. They ma n- Meigs five missed on eight field
. UPI Sports Writer
No.
10
Missouri
held on for a 16·74 85 seconds Into the varsity aged to play even for the rest of goal attempts during the last half
, The Indiana Hoosiers, who four
victory
over
Drake, No , 17 contest against Trimble 's Tom· the first frame, trailing by just of quarter two.
'
days ago strained Coach Bob
Nevada·
Las
Vegas
.s
urvived
for
a
five
after
eight
minutes
of
play.
Trimble
upped
the
lead to 13 by
cats but could not keep up the
Knight's temper with a loss to
98·96
double-overtime
victory
In
th
e
second
quarter,
"field
the
end
of
quar
ter
three
as they
pace, fading in. the stretch,
Kentucky, Tuesday night came
over
Nevada·Reno,
and
No.
18.
goals
by
Bill
Brothers
and
la
yups
while
capitalized
on
easy
dropping a 70·53 decision. The
within two points of incurring his
Dame
c~ushed
Boston
Notre
Snyder
off-set
goals
by
Trimble's
their
defense
collapsed
inside
loss evens the Marauders at two
wrath against Vanderbilt.
University 74·49.
ail both in TVC and overall play Jeff Holbert and Bill Sayre and and allowed the Marauderi only
The sixth-ranked Hoosiers
At Tucson, Ariz. , Sean Elliott whtle the Cats are four and zero Meigs held a 23·19 lead at the one attempt underneath. Meigs '
·needed an unexpected lift from
14 points and Steve Kerr both ways.
scored
halfway mark . Lightning inability to hit the outside shot
,Magnus Peikowski to struggle to
13
to
lead
Arizona,
6·0
..
added
A three pointer by Mike Bar· seemed to strike at that point as and open up the middle for the
a 63-61 victory.
Mark Anderson scored 20 points !rum gave Meigs a 3·0 lead and it Marauder Coach Mick Childs, inside goal contributed tp their
"It was a gre;1t effort by
for the Lumberjacks. 0·5 . North· was quickly followed by a goal by protesting a foul against Bissell downfaii .The only bright spot for
.Peikowski, not just in the first
ern Arizona was unable to ge't a Brent Bissell and two by Joey and maybe justifiably so, was the Marauder followers came
half but throughout the game,"
rebound unt117: 39 Into the game. Snyder, one ' on a goal tending zapped with two quick when the Cats Coach Paul Pet!.t
.Knight said of his backup center;
At Des Moines, Iowa, Derrick call. This forced the Cats coach to technicals.
was zonked with a technical
· who scored 15 points off the
24
points
to
lead
Chievous
scored
Jeff
Holbert
calmly
sank
both
The fourth quarter proved no
bench. "He was the whole
3-0.
Byron
Irvin
and
Missouri,
of
the
one
and
one
for
the
e
nds
better
for the Meigs crew as
Tedder
NCAC
honoree
.difference for us."
11
points
Nathan
Buntin
added
·
[ou
t
on
Bissell
and
then
hit
three
nothing
seemed to fall for them
"Coach told me to hang in and
each
for
the
Tigers.
Eric
Berger
ol
four
of
his
shots
on
the
and
to
complicate
matters. BarCLEVELAND
(UPI)
Ohio
1work hard and my chance would ·
hit
a
3-pointer
with
three
seconds
technicals.
After
lnboundlrig
the
trum
and
Chris
Smith were
Wesleyan'
Scott
Tedder,
who
come," said Pelkowski, whose
1·3.
left
for
Drake,
Cats
scored
another
goal
ball,
the
eac h al·
assessed
a
technical
scored 112 points in three games
. ,previous career-high was 11
At
Reno,
Nev.,
Gerald
Paddio
edge
and
'
the
Meigs
four
point
though neither c. all rea lly figured
last week, ha s been selected the
•.points. "This was . the one. The
scored 30 points, including the North Coast Athletic Conference
practice has paid off."
go-ahead free throw with 48 player of the week.
Pelkowski scored eight of his
seconds
left in the second over·
Tedder, a 6-foot-2 senior guard,
points in a 14·4 run that gave
time,
.
to
lift UNL V, 4·0:. B~ron scored 50 points in a 122-115 win
Jndiana a 34-18 lead with 5: 47 left
Strachan led the Wolf Pack, i.2, over Ohio University a week ago
until halftime. Vanderbilt scored
Jenkins. though not negative
Hannan Trace senior Grady
with 21 points, but with ·live Saturday at Athens, had 22 in a
. th~ next 11 points to pull within
team·high
16
a~ut
his team's performance,
Johnson
picked
up
a
seconds
left
in
the
second
over·
72-66 win over Ohio Northern o·n
_34-29.
rebounds
Tuesday
night
as
the
satd
"
we
didn't play with high
time he missed the front end of a Wednesday and 40 in a 98-87 loss
· "Magnus played outstanding,"
Southwest·
intensity
tonight.
Improvement
Wildcats
sailed
past
one-and-one. Clint Rossum to Capital this past Saturday
.teammate Dean Garrett said.
er
n
92-57.
is
necessary."
scored seven points in the second night.
"No\Jody in the whole Assembly
Johnson, who came off the
Though the Wildcats had 11
extra period for the Rebels.
·Hail expected that. Without him,
bench
toward
the
end
of
the
first
turnovers.
they ran the ball down
At South Bend, !pd., David Boothe OAC honoree
with the spurt they had, they
quarter
to
score
on
a
layup
and
a
the
court
virtually at w!ll and
Rivers scored 19 points. to lead
;would have burled us."
jumper
within
30
seconds
of
passed
by
the slower Highlandlong
the Fighting Irish, 2·1, in their
TOLEDO, Ohio . (UPI)
· Barry Goheen hit two free
each
other,
was
responsible
for
ers
to
score
a great number of
home opener. Notre Dame out· Mount Union sophomore Andy
.throws with 4:48 remafning in the
three·
fast·break
points.
"We weren ' t
one
of
the
Wildcats'
six
.
scored the Terriers 27·6 in the Boothe has been selected the
game to give the Commodores
point shots and 15 points of his quick enough to hang with
their only lead, at 59·58. Keith · first 12: 05 after intermission and Ohio Athletic· Co nference basket·
own
as Hannarl Trace took· the them," said Highlander head
70·38
with
3:55
left.
Gary
Voce
led
ball player of the week.
Smart, who sat out the entire first
lead
and
held it.
coach Gregg Deel. "Their pres·
16
points
and
Keith
Robin·
added
Booth, a 6·foot·4 forward from
half, hit a go-ahead basket with
"Grady
did
welloffthebench,"
sure
killed us, and we didn't slow
son
pulled
down
16
rebounds
for
Painesville, scored 60 points in
2:55 to go and added a baseline
id
Wildcai
mentor
Mike
Jen·
the
game
down ."
sa
Dame.
Boston
University
Notre
Mount Union's three wins last
drive with 1: 10 left to· make it
kins,
whose
squad
improved
its
In
addition
to the run·and-gun
fell to 3·2.
week, with 14 rebounds. He hit25
62-59. •
conference
mark
to
2·1
and
has
attack,
the
Wildcats
used their
~lso, Villanova nipped Connec·
of 39 shots from the floor for a .641
Rick Calloway added a free
four.
times
in
five
attempts
quickness
and
relentless
pres·
won
ticut 63-61, . and Southwest Mis· percentage.
.throw with 16 seconds left to
overall.
sure
under
boih
boards
to
regis·
sour! needed four overtlmes. to
make it 63·59, and Will Perdue
!er 60 rebounds. Wildcat Rick
subdue Kansas State 82-80.
c losed the scoring with a layup
Swain had 11 rebounds and
At Villanova, Pa.. Mark
with four seconds remaining.
teammate Scott Rankin had
Plansky
sank
a
16·foot
baseline
Vanderbilt fouled Calloway on
nine . Such quickness and effec·
jumper
with
one
second
left
to
lift
. the·In bounds pass and he missed
.
Having
defeated
Kentucky
live
positioning gave Rankin
East
ConferVillanova
in
the
Big
College
on
Dec.
5.
the front end of a one-and-one,
men's
team
Christian
College's
enough
chances to post his
ence
opener
for
both
schools.
Guards
will
be
juniors
Anthony
-but ' a Commodore desperation
the
Rio
on
their
own
court.
team·high
18 points. Teammate
5·0,
shot
38
percent
Villanova,
Raymore
and
Jim
Kearns.
.shot with one second left failed to
Grande Redmen are gearing up Freshman Watkins will be first
Chris
Petro
followed up with 17
but
four
starters
from
the
field
·reach midcourt.
for
another
game
with
·
the
points,
including
three threeoff the bench for them, and senior
. Calloway scored 19· points to scored in double figures. Doug
at
8
p.m
.
in
Knights
Thursday
point
shots.
Swain
was
responsi·
Doug Fogt will continue as the
. pace Indiana, 3·1. Perdue scored West scored a game·high 18
Lyne
Center.
12
markers,
half
of which
ble
for
Redmen 's starting center.
· 27 points for the Commodores, points for the Wildcats. Connect!·
game
will
also
be
area
came
from
the
charity
stripe
.
The
·cut dropped to 2·2.
Kirk said he expects to start
. 3-1.
Church Booster Night.
Such
Wildcat
crowding
of
the
seniors Wall ace and Todd Layne
The Redmen edged KCC 73· 70 at forward positions. Seniors
paint was helpful in keeping
in a hard· fought game Nov.17 in Doug Piatt and Denny Ferguson
Highlander frontmen -Shawn
Grayson, Ky. Rio Grande's Ron will be guards and the post will be McNeal and John Darnell out of
the game, if not away from the
Rlttinger racked up 28 points to filled by Yates, a junior.
lead ali scorers, while teammate
boards. Darnell picked up nine
KCC is 5·3 after losing 65·49 to
points, while McNeal could only
Brian Watkins had 12. The Bryan College of Dayton, Tenn.
NBA results
NHL results
Knights'
Greg
Wallace
had
20
manage six points.
on
Dec.
4.
'
• NATIONAL 8!\.SKIETBAI.l, AS..'iOC .
NATIONAL HOCKEY LEt\GUE
points &amp;nd Craig Yates added 18.
Highlander guard Dave Mer·
Eutern C..uaJerl'iR't'
WaleM Conference
Monday's 87· 78 win over Oak·
Athanllc Dh•l•lon
Patrick Dtvlllon
The
Redmen
overcame
a
l·point
shon
led all scorers with 19
land
City
(I
nd.)
College
boosted
W L Pel. GB
W L T PI!J. GF GA
Boston
II 8 .641 halftime deficit but had to sc::ore the Redmen 's record to 8· 2.
points, including four threeNV ltJlandf'rll I'T fl I 3m 113 H2
Philadelphia
1 1 .500 :!%
93 IIi
New der~y
14 9 4 32
quickly in the final minutes to Rittlnger netted 24 points while pointers. Teammate Mt'ke
New von
5 f'! .2M 6
WPhl"~ton
12 13 % %6
,..
101
Wuhln~on
t I'! .2511 6%.
PIUabul'l(b
10 II 5 %5
come home with a win.
Mighty Oaks starter Robert Walker was the only other
85 10(1
New ,J.,r!K"Y
2 13 ,133 K
t&gt;Uadelpllla
10 13 .J 2-1
Highlander in double figures,
Redmen
Coach
John
Lawhorn,
Ccnlnt.l Ohl"'\oa
tR 1113
Norris had 25.
NY Ranaers
9 14 l 21
:, Chlc~ICO
12 0 .filii t\d am!! Dtvlslon
lw!th 12 points .
who has hailed the Knights'
:\ llanta.
II 5 .68!1 Montreal
Ill i I .J~ ItO 91
program over the years, is
Dfot rntl II 5 .6811 Boston
11 11 !! l6 115 105
MllwJ,uiiN•
10 6 .6~ I
approaching Thursday's game~--------------------------Hartford
II II ' 4 'U
83 lltl
lndlanll
10 1 .5111! 1~
Buflalo
101-142-1~114
with caution.
Cleve land
6 II ..IIIII -H~
II 14 1 %!1
!lj H19
Quebec
~..,......._
Weslt•rn Confert"nt..'ll'
Campbell Conterenc:r
"It was a 3·point game against
MldWf'!il DIVbdun
NoiTIB JMvltJion
a very good. senior-oriented
llaii!L-.
9 5 .143 Detroit
1310 2 ~8
tR IU
Dt•nwr
10 6 . 6~ II 13 4 26
t!l 113
Mlnnuota
team," Lawhorn said, reflecting
HoWIIon
Ill 1 ,5!1K
Y.,
Toronto
II 14 2 2-1 119 110
Ulah
fl II .li29 1 1.t
on their first encounter . "We had
10 15 t 2!
Sll 125
ctllca~o
St. LoulJJ
914220859!
San Antonio
~ 8 8 .500 2
to score 9 points in .the game to
Smythe Division
Sacramento
1 12 .!50 8
beat them by 3."
l'alilltl Dl v\Hion
catrary
., s
LA ~ker~
II 5 .6!18 EdmoMon
Ul 10 % 3
13t
1
"We kind of slipped up on (the
•
tS 103
WlnnlpeK
12 12 I 2
Portland
II 6 .647
~
Redmen) the last time," first·
Vancouver
10 J5 3 23
t6 IM
Seattle
9 fl .s29 2'n
Lr.t1 Anl(eles
j
li 4 HI 107 U3
Phocnb
6 8 .429 ~
year
Knight s Coach Randy Kirk
Tuellday's Results
lA UlppNA
6 10 .315 ~
l"hlladelphla 5, Boston 2
commented. "I think they'll be
Goldi-n 81.
.
2 13 .133 K~
.WITH FRIES .................... S1.J9
Harlford IJ, Quebec 1
'1).1eAday'll ReHults
ready for us."
1.1\ L~~oken 98, New Jer.v.y In
Cal1ary 1, " ' uhlqton o1
Montreal 3, NY blanderA t
New l ' ork 116, Wdhlngtorl92
Rio Grande is expecting to
Minnesota S, Vaneouver 2 '
lktroltlt1 , Portland 111
start
Rittlnger, the 6·6 senior who
Wedne.sday's Games
Indiana 103, Mllwaukf'e 101
\4't¥ihlftl(on at HPrtlord, i:~ p.m .
llou!lton 1116, SIU::ramento t7
is leading the tea m in scoring,
l"hlladelpllla 109, ('hlullftD 96
and senior Ray Singleton as
Montreal a.t NY Hangera, 7: 35p.m.
Sa n Antonio IM, Utah 100
Cal«ary at PUt.buflh, '7: 35p.m.
1\Uanl.a 91, LA Cllppt&lt;r!&lt; 79
forwards . The 6·3 Singleton, who
St. LAluls at Detroit, '7:35p.m.
Sl'uttlc 107, Clt&gt;veland 91
was Injured in the first KCC
"At the End of the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Los Anreles at New Jer!le)' ,8:05p .m.
Wed!H'I!day'!i G!'me!l
O.•n\Tr ~o~t Rmd11n, 7:311 p.ru.
Bulfalo at Chlcaco. 8:35p.m.
game,
ha
s
bounced
back
in
POMEROY, OH.
PH. 992-2SS6
t&gt;urtland at l'hlladtlphla, ):30 p.m.
Wlnnlpef a1 Edmonton. 9:3$ p.m.
recent games and scored more
Thursday's GamH
LA l.a kerll at Wauihlnxton, '7 : .30 p.m.
Lot An1eles at Boston, nlsht
than 20 points each against Tiffin
NY R~Ut~en at t&gt;hUadelphla
on Dec. 1 and Cincinnati Bible
Sl. Louis at Minnesota
Sa••r-.anwnto ul lNIIa..;, ~! 30 p.m .

in the outcome of the contest in
this point.
During the second half of play
the Marauders were cold as they
hidt on only 11 of 34 attempts
from the field while the Cats sank
15 of 24 field goals. The rebound·
lng edge went to the Marauders
by a 41 to 32 count with Bartrum
snagging 14 for Meigs . Bartrum
was the hlgh point man for the
Marauders with 14 while Bill
Sayre hit for 20 for the Tomcats .
MEIGS
- Snyder 4·0·0-8;
Bartrum 4·1·4·15: Bisselll·0-2-4;
Brothers 3-0·0-6; Smith 2-2·1·11;
Burdette 1·0·0·2·, Baker 0·0-0-0·
•/
Durst 0·0·0-0; Nelgler 1·0·0·2;
Oller 0·0·0·0; Poweli 0·0·0·0;
Sisson 2·0·1·5.
TRIMBLE -Holbert 3·0·9·15;
McClelland 2·3·2-15; Sayre 9-0·2·
20; Runyon 4·0·0·8; Koons 5·0·2·
12.
Score by Quarters:
Meigs ... ......... .......... 17.24 38 53
Trimbie ... ................ l2 29 51 70

.

IJclnnan Trace tops SW, 92-5·7

Rio, KCC meet again

Scoreboard ...

.. ..

) +Oc:&gt;

{

436m"

\

Special of the .Week .•

..

FISHTAIL

$1.24

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

oa+~••••o

,\tlanta at Ph01•nlx, 9: 311 p.m .
Cl1•vuland at Golden Stale!, 10:30 p.m.
Thul"!!d~Q"'!&lt;I GanH'llo
Indiana at NeW J.-rse,Y, nla;ht
IJ••n\'t' r 11.1 New l ' ork. night
MIIW!tukl't&gt; at ('hie ago. ntrht
Utal• at llou,.ton, nl&amp;hl
St•attll' at LA ( 'lippt"u. niJthl

College scores
Ohio Culk-Kt&gt; Bll.!iketball Rf'S ulls
By United l"rMi!!i lntl•rllll.ttonal
Tlll'!lduy, Dec. 8

Xa\'lt•r IIIII, ll4:h&amp;warl' St il
Ba hll'·ln-W !Ulat•f' 7'l. Grovl' ('It)'~ Pa ) 53
l\1alon••IIO, F1ndlay 1K
Udlant•e Ill. Urlnua j.J

Transactions
By Unllt&gt;d l'res!llnlernaUoool

BuehaJI
OIIUJO tNLI - Trwded rlght•handed
l"''llner Ler Smith to Bo11to" fur rl~ht ·
hander!l AI Nipper and Calvin Scldraldl.
Detroit -Named I"&amp; Corn&amp; leM man ·
al(er of Toledo In lht' International
l...eU!I'\M' (t\AA).
,
HUli.!IIIIP - Acqulrt•d Mln:.rblop Ratat'l
Kurnlrt".-: piU8 cash from Atbmta fur ihlrd
baseman Ed Whhed and pitcher Mike
Stoa.:er, who wert' aulrned lo DurhllD1 of
th4' Suuthern l..eapt&gt; (AAJ,
MlnnetJota -Named Bob Gebhard vlte
pre&amp;ldenl of pl•yer lf"l'IOnnel.
Oakland - Obtained o~llelder Dave
Parker trom ClnciMatl for riJht·hander
.lollll Rljo and leU-bander Tim BlrtsaH.
TeUlll - !'lllned rllhl-hahder Crall
McMurtry and MAisned him lo Okla homa City of the American Auodatlon
(Ai\Al .
Basketball
Indiana ._ Acllvaledrwrd SoottSklles
from the Injured llflt and waived forward
BrllllnKow.Om.
Foutball
Allanla - Placed Uneb11.cloer A11.run
Brown on walven; plact.d llneback«&gt;r
Buddy f'urry on ln)ul'fd restrve lor
remainder ot the ~pon.
MIIUil•llota- WaJved linebacker Peter
Najarian and sllMd p~mler Ducky
Strlbner.
St . Louls - strnedlllckerA.l Drl Gre&lt;&gt;o:
activated ~~aft&gt;ty Tim MciJonlt.ljt ; waived
linebacker Terrenc e Mack and cornerback Johnnie Holloway .
Hookey
New l'ortt Ranrera -Sentdefenseman
Dan Pichette to New Ha\'en of the
American Hockey Lea~ .

The Wildcats will face the
Eastern Eagles Friday night.
Southwestern, now 0·3 in the
SVAC and winless in four con·
tests this year, will travel .to
Cheshire to face the Kyger Creek
Bobcats.
HANNAN TRACE (92)
Rankin 9·0·0·18; Petro 4·3·0·17;
G. Johnson 5-1-2·15; R Swain
3·0·6·12; Brumfield 2·1·4-9; Stitt
3·0·2-8; Jenkins 1-1·0-5; Cre~
meens 1·0-0·2; T . Johnson 1·0·0·2;
J . . Swain 1·0·0·2. TOTALS
324·14·92

SOUTHWESTERN (57)
Mershon 2·4-3-19; Walker 4·0+
12; Darnell4·0·1·9: McNeal3·0·0·
6; Ruff 2·0·0-4; Bryant 1·0·0·2;
Cemlni 1·0·0·2; Shriver 0·0·2·2;
Hively 0·0·1·1. TOTALS -IH-21·

57
Reserve game - Hannan
Trace 51, Southwestern 37
Top scorers - Larry Jarrell
(Hannan Trace) 14 points. Chris
Metzler (Southwestern), · 12
points.
Score by quarters
Southwesterp ..... 13 18 10 16-57
Hannan Trace ... 25 21 24 22-92

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COLUMBIA GAS

I '

I

'

�Wednesday, DeCember 9, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Southern posts fourth cage win, 90-51 ·

TURLEY GRABS REBOUND- The Tornadoes' Kenny Turley
( 34) grabs the ball moments alter the Eagles' Chris Lance (15) put
up the layup, as two other players under the basket get position In
Tuesday night's confere nce match In Racine. The Tornadoes
defeated Eastern 90·51.

Pirates pressure
•
KC in 62-52 wm
who scored 13 points, ran the
Bucs' full-court press.
The Pirates w!ll take their 2-1
SVAC record Into Friday night's
game against Symmes Valley.
Kyger Creek, now 0-3 In the
"league, will host Southwestern
Friday night.
North Gallla won the reserve
game, 46-41. Terry Farley was
high for North Gallla with 14
points. John Sipple led KCHS
with 17.
Varslty box:
NORTH GALLIA (62)
Burnette 6-0-8-20;1 Denney 6-0-4"We gave them full court 16; George 6-0-1-13; Mays 3-0-0-6;
pressure, and they couldn't han- Glassburn J-0-1-3; Gllmo,re 1-0-0·
dle It," Wilson said, adding that 2; Lemley 1-0-0-2. TOTALS such pressure was responsible 24-0-14-62
KYGER CREEK (52) - Bradfor getting the Bobcat front line
of Mike Bradbury and Bill bury 7-0-0-14; Reese 6-0-0-12:
Loveday in fou l trouble. Foul Hodge 5-0-0-10; Loveday 3-0-4-10;
trouble provided Bradbury, who Denney 2-0-0-4; Leach 1-0-0-2.
was KC's top scorer with 14 TOTALS- ~-0-4-52
poi nts, an early fourth -quarter
Score by quarters
Kyger Creek ...... 12 12 12 16-52
exit.
Pirate junior guard Greg North Gallia ...... 1117 17 17-62
Glassburn had eight assists in the
Reserve game - North Ga111a
game and with Steve George, 46 Kyger Creek 41

VINTON - North Gall[a got 1l
points from senior Keith
Burnette in the fourth quarter to
get past Kyger Creek 62-52 In
league action Tuesday night.
. "Kyger Creek put pressure on
t 6-5 senior ce nter Rusty ) Denney, so we went to Burnette,"
· said Pirate head coach Bruce
Wilson. Burnette ended the night
as the high scorer , with 20 points
and seven rebounds . Denney
scored 16 points and tied
Burnette in rebounds , w'ith
seve n.

O_aks cop third cage victory
OAK HILL- Oak HIU had five
players in double figures as the
Oaks beat Symmes Valley 88-47
Tuesday night.
The Oa ks' Jedd Rawlins, the
6-8 junior cent er, led all scorers
wit h 20 points . His effort was
followed by a 14-pointeffort from
Todd Copas, and 12-point co ntributions from Eric Faye, Brandon
Morgan and Bobby Ward.
The VIkings' high man was
Dallas Tibbs, who scored 17. The
other Viking in double figures
was Tony Schneider, who
c hipped in 12.
The Oaks, who outrebounded
the Vikings 48-29, led 55-1 6 at
ha lftime before the Vikings'
offense attempted to make a
comebac k.
The Oaks, now 3-0 In the

conference and 3-1 overall, will
travel to Racine to take on
Southern Friday night . The VIkIngs, now 1-2 In league play, will
travel to Vinton Friday night and
play North Gallla.
OAK HILL (88) - Rawlins
10-0-0-20; Copas 7-0-0-14; Faye
3-1-3-12; Morgan 6-0-0-\2: Ward
6-0-0-12; Howell 2-1-1-8; Hale
3-0-0-6; Coon 1-0-0-2; Miller 0·0-22. TOTALS - 33-2-6-88
SYMMES VALLEY (47) Tibbs 7-1-0-178; Schneider 4·1-112; M111er 1-1-1-6; White 2-0-1-5;
Justice 1-0-0-2; Mootz 1-0-0-2;
Pernestl 0-0-1-1; McCarty 0-0-1-1.
TOTALS - 16-3-6-47
Score by quarters
Symmes Valley . 9 7 19 12-47
Oak Hill ............ 26 29 21 12-88
Reserve score - Oak Hlll 46,
Symmes Valley 44.

Tuesday's high school scores
Boys scores
Buy!&gt; Ohio Hl~:h Se houl Bu ~kl:th nll
By Un ite d Prl!!iS lnlf'rnathuml
TuPSday, {)1•(', It
i\lt•KUndcr 13, Hf'mlock Miller 56
t\manda tiO, l.anca~ilt'r Fl!iher M
1\llroru 67, 'l'wh\.&lt;&gt;bol'l{ 5~
t\u stlntown Filch 8-t, Vuunl(fi South 61
Bilrnt'!WII Ie til, Caldwe ll S.J
B!•llillrf' i7, Steuben\11\1{• Cath 62
Uelpn• M9, Nei!'.Onvl\1\&gt; 61
R!•rlln ftr " '-" " R!i\' 60, U!!bon SK
Rcthrl Tate 73, &amp;t.avla ~1
Hexlt'Y Jtl l , Duhlln &amp;.1
I\ loom carrolll!.4, Canal Wl ncheswr w

Bloomflf'ld 51, Pt&gt;rry U
Ruekt)'f' \\' ~•. Buckf'ye N )'!
CadiZ 1'1, Frl'e!)Ori la~wland U
Canfield Ml, Ne"·ton Fa lls 16
Cht&gt;sapellkP 1113, Port~mouth \\' ~9
l 'l n foun t r) 0&amp;)' &amp;\, ('In Snen Hilt!! 5X
('In Mocllt&gt;r H~. (' In W!i.n Hlll.'i .W
Cl n 011k Hill ~ 68, \\' C.'he8 U~ r Lakow 62
fin Pu"-' l'll rl, Cl n ;\'lc !'lilcOO\u 60
Coal (;rove i'l. f'alrvle"· (Ky ) 5'7
(u l BrookhaYf'n &amp;J, Cut Weli.t 72
( 'o l D1•Sah•!i 63, Lancll.li.tl'r 59
l'ul Ea~ tmo or 71, Co l Be t!t:hcrutt .1\
('ul Linde n 75, Collndt•pendt•nt:tJ ~7
Col Mar · Fran~ M, Co l WhetlltOJM! 47
{ ol Mifflin 70, Co l Brlgp 81
I ul North l~tnd 62, Co I Su utl1 ~7 ('tot )
( ul \\'aJnut Rldlf&gt; f8 . Col EM!il .58
{ olumblana Il l , (o!OOlblnru&amp; frt&gt;slviPw
:J:I
{ uyahOI;Il Vlli fhr M~. BMpl O!r ~

Dal' lham-,IUI5 1, Day Stebbi111'1 25
Dr1 Jodf"n Trl· \&lt;:ll 96, Philo 1'7
E l'alt'!H inP 111, Hano\·l' r tun l nltt&gt;d ~2:
ft'ort t"ryr&gt; 66, Bt•alln1\lt&gt; $3
Frunllf'r 112, " oods fleld 11!11
f,li iiOY~aY \\t''llland 18. FrJuJ idln "'""'"
Garfield Ht8 Trinity 6'7, Wl ckllfft' 60
G!lrn·tls~·m e

ll'Z, WlndiUlm 45

(;IIJ!;,onburr ~3. No rthwood 11
Girard 81. McDonald -t'l
Grand Valley ll , RriSIOI 73
Orandvlt!W ~ 1 . OlenUtn o U
llam llton Badin 62, 011:fonl T!Wawanda

H11nnan Tr~t C (" f'l, Patrtol S'we~tlem $7
Hlll!'llloro ill, ~nt• hburg Clay 8%
Howland 11, Brookfield 6:1
lndpendence 31 , Cle Luthtran W li(ot)
Ironton 15, Russell 1K)') 69
Jellt'r!Kln Unloa 69, BerJholz Sprtnc 15
Kctt Fairmont ill, Lemon-Mo11roo -19
KIIWJlan Badp:r 10, Mid' field Cardinal
$6

l..ukevlcw II'. Ra\'enna So ... h.,.,ast U
Lee!!hurt:IKi, MowrY'Jtown WhlleOak 59
Uberty U, Hubbard 31
Uberty Union 5!, Berne Union 41

Ucklnc Ht &amp;u, Millersport S3
LoiiUI Elm 73, Falrflekl Unlen 13
Lords town SJ, Jackson Mllitln 43
Lyndhwo&amp;t 8rll8h 75, Chal{rln Fllll8 11
Maumee VaJ 4C, Tol Emman~A~I &amp;pUS
May8v1Ue n, Croolulvllle .at
Medina 1&amp;1 Bapt n, Mentor Olr 60
Miami Trace 89, O!UIIoothe '19
Miami Val '1%, Xenia WI Won 4!1
Mlddl(ltown 1$, SprfDffleld S 63
Mineral Rlda:e 85, Southln,;ton 68
Minerva 1&amp;, West Branc h 5I
M011:1111 I!, New Coneonl 8J
l't.' ew Richmond It, GnJ'Ietown !19
l't.' Collea:e HilliS, Q'I Uianu'lbuf'! :i'l
Nol1h Gallla l'l, &amp;,1er Creek S'l
Oak Hlll88, S)·mmes Vllley .. ,

Ohlo ~~~~ 71. Newark PIME 50
PaineNvllle Haney 83, IOrll11.nd Sll
Peeble•il. Wt'IM!rn Brnwn 71
Plckerln~:ton 87, Col H~~rtley 6-1
Pulllod 13, SorA.b Ran1 t' S'l
Puri!lmouth 1!.7. Aahhmd ( K)·) 49
P)rmahmlns Val H, Mapll!!•·ood 61
Raci~Soulhern 90, Reed!"! Eaak!rn SJ
Sh11dyAide &amp;4 , BrldR;eport 6!
S hemndoah 85, Sllyvue 119
.'Iouth Amhent 1S, Col.-nhla 50
S.ellbenvllle U, Marlln.t Ferr)' .f8
Tallmadar SO, Nordonla -12
Tf'&amp;)'A Valh~)' 19, Hamilton Twp 53
Tnl Whitmer 7t, To! Start"'
TolletJIH.lro (Hy) 18, ManebeMter 74
Toronto 10, Ml nco :nt
Trlmhlr. 71, Mei(N U
Trotwood- MactifiOn &amp;8, IA!ntervllle lli9
Union ~c al '7%, Bellaire JohM U
Mo' arren Ouunplon 17, Nile!! 112

"
Dave Parker traded to Oakland
•

DALI.AS ( UPJ) - The Oakland Athletics, who boast two of
u,.. l;n,. 1 youJtl' powPr hitters In the majors, Tuesday obtained
·lt•r 1
I'll"'' Davf' Parker from the Cincinnati Reds In
exchange for right-hander Jose R!jo and southpaw Tim Blrlsas.
Parker, a 6-foot~ left-handed hitter, will !It snugly In the
middle of the Oakland lineup between outfielder Jose Canseco
and first baseman
Mark McGwlre, both right-handed hitters.
;
.

By SCOTT WOLFE
OVP Staff Writer
RACINE Thundering
through the h11!s with a vlolen~
rampage, the Southern Tornadoes humbled the Eastern Eagles 90-51 here Tuesday evening
In an SVAC cage contest at
Charles W. Hayman Gymnasium
·In Racine.
Southern Is now 4-0 overall and
maintains a perfect 3-0 slate In
league play while Eastern evens
out at 2-2, 1-2 In the SVAC.
Not only did the Tornadoes
literally turn up the burners, but
also Ignited a torrid offensive
tempo as well by jolting towards
an early blowout that Eastern's
hustle transformed Into a more
respectable finale.
For the fourth time In four
games the Tornadoes' unselfish
attack placed another star In the
spotlight as junior post man
David McMillin scored a game
high 22 points. J?ave Amburgey
followed with 18 markers, Ken
Turley added 16, and Jeff Caldwel112 In a well-balanced attack.
. Senior guard Mark Griffin
netted 17 markers for the Eagles
as 10 Eagles hit the scoring
column. Senior Steve Horner
tossed In six and Shaun Savoy 7.
In the first . frame Southern
turned up the wick to the tune of
Its patented shortstop press and
upbeat fastbreaklng game. Eastern · countered with Its press,
trying to maintain the SHS pace,
but after a shakey start Southern
exploded.
Mark Griffin put Eastern up 2-0
for the game's first score, but
Southern unleashed Its attack
and dug In for a 19-6 lead at one
point. The period ended at 21-9.

Perhaps Eastern found Itself
trying a little to hard in the first
half, as hustle by both clubs
hlghllghted the action packed
game.
Southern's Intense pressure on
the point and elbows made It
difficult f.o r Eastern to successfully penetrate, having to settle
for the perimeter jumper.EHS
was somewhat chilly
percentage-wise from the floor In
the opening canto's allowing SHS
to dominate the boards.
Junior Kenny Turley turned In
a super first half of 15 rebounds,
having a game-high 26 for the
duraatlon.Southern claimed a
60-32 rebounding edge,led by
Allen · Tripp .. and , Mark Griffin
with six each. David Me MUIIn
not only had a good offensive
outing, but helped control the
boards with 13 caroms for the
Tornadoes. ·
Following a 14-19 halftime
score, SHS turned on the afterburners to put the game out of
reach at 67-32,however, con·
tlnued effort by Eastern made
for a respectable finish.
Nine Southerners hit the scorIng column and p'rovlded strong
bench strength as did. Eastern's
bench as both bencheS saw much
action.
· Southern hit 31-58 for 53.4
percent from the field,. was 3-11
from the 3-po!nt range, and lofted
In 19-28 at the line.
Eastern was 22-61 for 36.9
percent. was 0-6 from 3-po!nt.
range, and n(!tted 7-15 free
throws.
. Southern had 5 steals, 10
turnovers, and 15 fouls, while
EHS had 7 steals, 17 turnovers,
and 25 personals.

Southern's reserves rolled
their fourth straight triumph,
65-37, over the Little Eagles.
Freshman Roy Johnson paced
the Southern attack with 18
points, Including three 3polnters.Chad Taylor had 11,
Brent.Shuler 8, Doug Lavendar,
Todd Grindstaff, and Chris
Murphy each 6.
For Eastern Dan Tripp poured
In 15 points and Jason Hager
added 5.
Southern hosts Oak.H111 Friday
In an SVAC showdown, while
Eastern hits the road to Hannan
Trace.
Bdx score:
Southern (90) - Chris Stout,
0-1-1; Dave Amburgey, 4-2-4-18;
Shannon Riffle, 1-0-2-4; Jeff
Caldwell, 4-0-4-12; Scott
0-0-0; Mike Amos,

•

0-0-0; Dave McMlllln, 9-0-4-22;
S~awn Cunnlngha'm, 0-1· 0;
Kenny Turley, 7-0-2-16, Shane
Simpson, 2-0-2-6; Shawn Diddle, ·
2-0-4; Brent Shuler, 2-0-4; TO·
TALS 31-3-19-90.

A strike by the approximate
150 teachers of the Meigs Local
School District continued today
with no additional negotiation
sesslo~ts set at this time.
Teachers of the district went
out on strike at 12: 01 a.m. on Nov.
6. The most recent negotiations
session with a federal mediator
was held 1n Athens Monday but
fell apart Monday afternoon with
no settlement being reaclied.
Meantime, negotiating teams
of the Meigs Local Board of
Education and the Meigs Local

EASTERN (51) - Steve
Horner, 3-0-6; Mark Griffin,
8-1-17: Tony Hendrix, 2-0-4; Allen
Tripp, 1-0-2; Mike Martin, 1-0-2;
Scott Fitch, 2-3-7; Shawn Sarey,
2-0-4; Chris Lance, 2-0-4; Wade
McQueen, 0-0-3: Chad Sinclair,
1-0-2; Jay Reynolds, 0-0-0; Kenny
Caldwell, 0-0-0; ·Tony Heaton,
0-0-0; TOTALS ~2-1-4-51.

Charles·Theiss

:·'

LOOKING FOR AN OPEN LANE - Eagle forward Steve
Horner (21) looks for an open Jane as Tomado defender Dave
Amburgey (12) tries to stop him In Tuesday night's SVAC contest
In Racine. The Tornadoes grounded the Eagles 90-51. .

Redwomen will ·play two cage tilts

Rio Grande's Redwomen , 5-1 game).
after their 92-88 victory over 1 VC, 3-5 following Monday's
West Virginia State Dec. 3, are . 84-69 loss to Morehead State, Is
scheduled for back-to-back expecting to start junior Dalna
games Wednesday and Harris as point guard, junior
Lynn Bria as shooting guard,
Thursday.
The Redwomen 'travel to the sophomore Tina Boone as power
University of Charleston Wed- ·forward, senior Vanessa Ferrell
nesday fora 7p.m. game, and are as small forward and junior
home Thursday at 6 p.m. against Regina Jeffries at the post. Linda
Bennett Is In her second year
Kentucky Christian.
coaching
the Golden Eagles.
Rio ~rande Coach Che ryl
Kentucky
Christian, defeated
Flel!tz said she expects UC to be
83-52
by
the·
Redwomen
on Nov.
strong competition. ,
17,
enters
Thursday's
game
0-5.
· " It will be a tough contest," she
The
Lady
Knights
last
played
said. "l think we can win, but t.o
do that we'll have to play better Dec. 4 against Bryan College of
Dayton, Tenn.
·
than we have been."
Coach Dale Schreiner said he
Flelltz said the offense Is expects to start sophomore Nacoming along alid noted that the ta11e Grimes as point guard and
UC game wiU be a gauge of how freshman Lynn Manges as shootwell Rio Grande can execute Its Ing guard. Freshman Lorl .Hann
will be the team's third wing,
offense.
Flelltz expects to field as her while fres hman Mlssle James
s tarters freshman Beth Coli as w111 be power forward and center
Marauders hit 9 of 20 from the point guard, and senior Renee position will be filled by junior
charity stripe for a 45 perecent Halley as shooting guard. Lea Erin Fitzpatrick.
average and the Cats canned 12 Ann Mul11ns, Halley's coof 20 for 60 percent.
captain, wiU again assume small , - - - - - - - - - - - Meigs outrebounded Trimble forward duties and junior Holly
33-19 and turned the ball over 15 Hastings wiU be power forward. ~iS:«~I'IOI!301r&lt;:fi'IOIBO&lt;BIII'IOII'l::l,
times to the Cats 17. The Center wUI be junior Angela :
The Perfect Gift II!
Marauders were whistled for 19 Packa-rd.
f.(
II
fouls·. Including two technlcals,
In six games so far this season. W
For That
W
and Trimble was assessed 17.
Halley has emerged as Rio II!
y
tl!
Doug Stewart led Meigs with13 Grande's top scorer, netting 53
oungster...
11
markers, Betzlng and Eddie field goals and 34 free throws for I(
Crooks had 9 each, Hank Cleland 121 cumulative points. Mul11ns Is
11
added 7, Jay Humphreys 6, Chris leading h\ free throws. sinking 25 11
.....--: L---;&gt;
Stewart and Brett Little had 2 of 29 attempts for 86 percent, and tl!
II!
11
1~
each and John Anderson and Hastings Is the team's top 11
,.(: :'1!' ''"
Scott Barton each had one point. rebounder with 65 110.8 per
W

MHS reserves cop SQ-36 win
Coaah·· Cii!f Kennedy's Meigs
reserves evened their seson
record at 2 and 2 by virtue of a
50-36 thrashing of the Tomcat
reserves .
Meigs drew first blood at the
4:10markofthefirstquarterona
Cary Betzlng field goal. Trimble
tied the score 30 seconds later on
a John Brammer goal but the

~~t~t~o:i!~~~~~
~;o~;lgt~apnuf1o1 eudr
.--

away by playing tough defense
and forcing the Cats 'to commit
six first quarter turnovers for a
13-4 edge after six minutes of
play .
Meigs enJoyed their biggest
lead of the first half when a Doug
Stewar.t basket made It 15-4 with
to go 10 the second. Trtmbte
cut the lead a to 25-21 with 1: 16left
In the half on a Bryan Marcum
goal. The Cats had scored eight
straight points after The Meigs
coach was hit with a technical.
Chris Stewart hit a shot at the
~~:~;li.o make tt 29-23,Meigs, at

5 '~ 8

In the third frame, Meigs held
the Cats scoreless until the 2:20
mark. 'By that time \he Maraud·
ers had bu!lt a 37-23 lead and the
quarter
ended
with Meigs out
front
by ten
points.
Meigs hit 19 of 43 two pointers
and·1 of 5 three point attempts for
an overall average of 42 percent
while the Cats connected on 9 of
29 and only2of 19 three point tries
for a coo123 percent overall. The

g

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&gt;.:

Video
"

\ COUNTY
APPLIANCES

99.2·5636

HOUIS: I A.M.-6 P.M.

,·
•

'I

··1 ToMiddleport
Install officers
Evangeline Chap-

Mrs. Patricia Kay Hawley, both
of Harrisonville, Ohio; one son,
Andrew Lee Fields, at home; one
sister, Mary Fields, McDonald,
Ohio; six brothers, Joe, Mladleport, John, Fort Worth, Texas,
James antl Andrew, both of New
Haven, Thomas a,nd George,
both from Hartford, and one
grandson.
Services wlU be Thursday at 1
p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. Clyde Fields
officiating. Burial w111 follow at
Evergreen Cemetery III Letart.
Friends may call Wednesday
from 6 to 9 p.m. at the funeral
home.

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Cabinet: 26 1h"W x 18" 0 x 32'12"H
#SSR2005,2t03G

. Meigs board to

Heck 's Inc . ... ....................... 1%
Key Centurion ....................35\4
Lands' End .........................16'\i
Llmlted Inc ... :......... ........ ... 16~
Multimedia .Inc .................... 43
Rax Restaurants .......... ....... ...3
Robbins &amp; Myers .......... : .. .. .. 6'%
Shoney's Inc ..... ............. ..... 20'1.
Wendy's Inti .............. .... ...... 4%
Worthington Ind ................. .l6%

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Weather

The annual organizational session was set for 7 p.m. on Jan. 12
when the Meigs County Board of
Education met for a regular
meeting Tuesday night.
A regular business meeting
wlll follow the organizational
session.
At last night's meeting the
board· discussed the teachers'
strike In the Meigs Local School
District and It was pointed out
that county board employees are
concentrallng their efforts In the
E11stern and Southern Local
Districts so that they can work
rriore In the Meigs Local District
after the strike Is settled.
It was voted to join the Ohio
State School Boaras Association
for 1988 and board member,
Harold Roush, was named the
group's legislative liaison person
to the association.

ter 1720 Order of Eastern Star
(As of 10: a.m.)
wUI have open Installation ·of
officers on Friday at 7:30 p.m . Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Installing officer wtll be Howard
1\m
t;lectrlc Power ............. 2:i¥,
T. Shull. Worthy Matron Elect
Teresa Canterbury has asked AT&amp;T ............................ : .... 28'1.
each member attending the Ashland 011 ......................... 5:i
meeting to bring two covered Bob Evans .......................... 15¥,
dtshes. Meat, pie and cakewUI be , Charming Shoppes .......... ..... 9Y.;
City Holding Co ........ .. ......... 34
furnished.
federal Mogu1 ......... ........... 30%
Plan dances
A round and square dance will
be held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m., at the
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy. Music by Larry Hubbard
and the True Country Band.
Admission $1 .50. Those attending
should bring snacks.

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions - Mary
Smith, Middleport; Auburn Meadows, Hartford, W.Va.; Ernestine Lambert, Langsville; Eleanor Lohse, Pomeroy; Garth
Smith, Reedsv!lle; Pauline Atkins, Rutland.
Tuesday Discharges - Evelyn
Schuler, Janet Henline.

Marjorie M. Ball, Middleport,
died Tuesday in Veteran's Memorial Hospital in Pomeroy.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Foglesong Funeral
Home.

Benjamtn Franklin Fields, 53,
Hartford, died Monday In Pleasant Valley Hospital.
He was born Jan. 11, 1934, In
Hartford.
. He was preceded In death by
hts parents, Charles E. and
Margaret E. Smith Fields, and a
sister, Mrs. Helen Conn.
He was a pot metal worker In
the Casper Foundary In Elyria,
Ohio.
Surviving are his wife, Allee
Ruth Lyons Fields, Hartford;
four daughters, Allee Doreen and
Sue Ellen Fields, both at home,
Mrs. Lisa VIrginia Lewis and
South Central Ohio
Cloudy and windy today, with
scattered showers and highs
near 60. Cloudy tonight, with a
chance of rain and a low between
40. and 45. Mostly cloudy Thursday, with highs between 45 and
50.
The probability of precipitation Is 40 percent tli&lt;\ay and
tonight and 20 percent Thursday.
Winds will be from the south at
15 to 25 mph today and from the
west at 10 to 15 mph tonight.

St kp~c-e-~------G-o_od_y_e_a_r_T_&amp;_R-..-..-..-..-.. -.. .-..-..-..5-2Dal~

Hospital news

Marjorie Ball

. Benjamin Fields

Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports five
· calls on Tuesday; Rutland atl: 44
a.m. to Higley Road for Mary
Smith to . Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 7: 56 a.m.
transported Mary Gibson to
Holzer Medical Center; Racine
at 9:24a.m. to Dorcas for Charles
Theiss who was dead on arrival;
Middleport at 1:04 p.m . to
Stonewood Apts. for Clifford
Plantz to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:36p.m.
to Country Mobile Home Park for
Jack Diles to Veterans Memorial
llospltal.

'·' ',;

,10

627 3rd An., Gallipolis
PH. ••6·1699

Charles H. "Dutchle" Theiss,
68, Racine Route 3, died Tuesday
at his home.
Mr. Theiss was born In Dorcas
on Sept. 28, 1919, the son of the
late Mike and Betty AumUier
Theiss.
He was a member of Racine
Grange, the Racine Masonic
Lodge, the Racine Gun Club, the
Odd Fellows Lodge, the Pomeroy
Eagles Aerie 2171, and the
National Farmers Organization.
He was a member of the Bethany
United Methodist Church.
Surviving are his wife, Bonnie
Wolfe Theiss; a son, Thomas
Theiss, Racine; two daughters,
Joy Morarlty, Syracuse, and
Loura Hupp, Racine; three sisters, Ethel Orr, Chester; Allee
Hill, Cocoa Beach, Fla., and
Thelma Welch, Welrwood, Va.,
and a brother, Blythe Theiss,
Dorcas. Also surviving are nine
grandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by a daughter,
Karen Johnson; a brother, Ed
Theiss and a grandchild.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with the Rev. Paul
McGuire and John and Debbie
Foster officiating. Burial will be
In Greenwood Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m,
Thursday. The family suggests
that friends may make dona lions
to the Meigs County Chapter of
the American Cancer Society in
lieu of flowers .

The Daily Sentinel ' Page 5

$31~99
~

Usa ro'!Jr SERVIS TAR.

CIW11card at
!larticiPating S!Of!S.

EMS has five calls

,.OHIO ~

GOOD .USED
WASHERS, DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS, TVt
GAS &amp; ELEC. RANGES

Hymn sing 1
Hobson Church of Christ ln.
Chapter of the ·Ohio Association
Christian
Union will be having a
of Public School Employees were
hymn
sing
on Saturday starting
to have met at 1 p.m. today In
at
7
p.m.
Singers
will be Dan
Middleport. The contract of the
Hayman
and
the
Fa! th Trio,
non-certified employees expired
Dennis
Weaver
and
Joe Guinn,
on Aug. 31 but has been extended .
the
Christian
Union·
·Quartet,
on a meeting to meeting basts.
Jerry
Frederick
and
the
McDa- ·
Negotiations between the two
groups have been on the back niel Trio. Everyone welcome.
burner for quite some time.
Today's ses!llon was scheduled Water to he off
Water In Syracuse wlll be off at
upon· the request of both the
times
during the next week and a
board and the non-certlfled emhalf
as
repairs are made to the
ployees, It was reported.
lines.

Area deaths

Score by Quarters: '
Southern 21 20 26 23 90
Eastern 9 .10 13 19 51
Reserves -Southern 65, Easter n 37.

•

-----Announcements-----·

Meigs strike continues

Alexander tops Miller;
Belpre is easy winner
In TVC action Tuesday, Alex- Marauderettes held the Vlke's
ander downed Miller 73-56 with leading scorers, Crouse and
Mike Chapman hitting five three Runyon, to just 19 points between
pointers for the Spartans and them and had the Vikings In foul
taking scoring honors with 25 trouble with Crouse exiting via
points. John Edwards was high the foul route.
On offense, Meigs successful
for M111er with 15.
drives
to the basket contributed
Andy Graham's 12 foot field
goal with four seconds left on the to the win with ShellyStobart and
clock lifted Wellston to a 62-60 Jody Taylor hitting for 15 and 11
win over Vinton County. Graham points respectively. The Maraudwas high for the Rockets with 18 ers hit on 17 of 33 free throw
markers and Scott Bragg and attempts.
Jay Palmer shared scoring hoStobart and Missy Woods led In
nors for the Vlkes with 15 each .
rebounding with 11 and 10,
Belpre remains tied with Trim- Tammy Wright had three assists
ble for the TVC lead as they and Beth Ewing made four
romped Nelsonv!lle-York 89-61, steals.
Other scorers for Meigs were
leading by as many as 30 at one
Woods
with seven, Wendy Fry
point. Scott McConkey canned 21,
with
5
Ewing 7 and Wright
Roger White 19 and Troy Stukey
contributed
6.
14 for the Golden Eagles and
Chad Savage was top gun for the
Amau Rouse and Kelly Smith
Buckeyes with 22.
chalked up six points each and
Marauder Girls Win
In girls basketball action, the Any Wagner added five and
Meigs Marauder Varsity posted Jennifer Taylor two in the
a 51-41 win over the Vinton reserve loss to the Vikings. Smith
County Vikings and the reserve led the Marauders- with resquad dropped a 29-19 tilt to the bounds; getting 14.T. Graves and
M. Graves garnered 19 points for
Viking reserves.
Playing a triangle and two, the Vinton County.

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 9, 1987

Hardware Lumber

Home Centers

We can help.

KING BUILDERS SUPPLY.
405 North Second Avenue
MIDDLEPORT

'·

•

�--·

Wednesday, December 9, 1987

Page-7

..

It' s time for the spirit

Meigs Couty property transfer~·---------i.o...-Rankin Ray Pickens, Mary
Pickens, Kenneth Hoffman,
Kathy Hoffman, Mary Ann Hoifman, John R. Hoffman, Mary
Hoffman to Dav'id L. HuddleSton,
· Mary Ann Huddl11ston, .25 acre,
Sutton. .
Stephen L. Baldwin, Cathy E.
Baldwin to Stephen L. Baldwin,
parcel, Sutton.
Warren Pickens, Lill-ian
Pickens to Charles E . Hail,
Dorothy D. Hall, 5 acres, Olive.
Elsie Conaway Williams to
. Dora Foutty, sheriff's deed, 73
acres, Lebanon.
Homer L. Bonecutter Sr. to
Bank One, Athens N.A., sheriff's
deed, Pomeroy village.
Dorothy Debra Eilts, Gary
Louis Ellis to Robert F. Powers,
June A. Powers, parcels, Pomeroy vlllage.
Charles Smlthern, JoAnn
Smithern to Leading Creek Con·
serv. Dlst., right of way,
Salisbury.
Robert A. Marcinko, Angela L.
. Marcinko to Leading Creek Con·
sev. Dis!., right of way,

And some other tips towards
The holiday splrit_is beginning
getting
that package there in
to shine through - If you don't
good
shape:
believe It, ask Rhonda Roush and
Don't use brown paper and
Robert Lewis,
·
twine
- paper teans and twine
Jr., both of
gets
tangled
in tl)e mall process·
Middleport.
tng requlpment. 1
Rhonda and
Cushion eo n tents with
Robert have
crumpled
paper, ajr picket padboth been very
ding,
styrofoan
packing pieces111 and unable to
use
padded
mall
bags.
perform their
Seal
you
parcels
wtth pressure
duties at the Imperial Electric
sentive
type,
nylon
reinforced
Co. In Middleport. TheClirlstma s
kraft
paper
or
glasss
refin·
season looked bleak to both
pressure
sensitive
formed
famlles.
cellophane
or
masking
tapes
However, out of the blue on
won't do it.
Monday co-workers appeared at
Address wtth a mudge-proof
their homes and brought each a
pen.
sizeable amount of money to help
Try to avoid sending money,
them over the holiday season.
but
if you do, use registered mall
The money came from co,
and
use registered for lrre·
workers, supervisors and the
placeable
valuables too.
: company.
• Rhonda and Robert are pretty ·
The actlve Racine Merchants
:happy people - and very
Association
will be staging a
: appreciative!
home Christmas lighting contest
again this year with prizes ; Did you know that it was more
first, second · and third - to be
• than 300 years after Marin
awarded
in both therellglousand
•Luther Initiated the use of the
securlar
categories.
tree In Christmas festivities
The con test includes not oniy
before the custom reached
Racine
Village but the· territory
merry olde England.
. The Ken· Amsbary ·Chapter of
within
a
three miie1range of the
It was not Introduced until the
the
Izaak Walton League is
communl_ty.
Deadline
for
entry
Is
reign of Queen VIctoria by her
sponsoring
muzzle loading shoots
Dec.
15
and
you
can
e
nter
at
the
husband , A German price.
on
Sundays
starting Dec. 13 and
Department
Store
or
call
Racine
This holiday season the Meigs
continuing
through
Jan. 3.' All
the
store,
949-2800,
or
at
the
County Museum will feature that
shoots,
consisting
of
free hand
Village Cut Rate Store, or call
period in hostory and has on
rest
events
at various
and
bench
that business, 949-2140.
display a Christmas tree
distances,
begin
at
1
p.m.
Open
Judging will start at 6:30 p.m.
trimmed In the VIctorian faslon .
sites and scopes will not be shot in
There will be a public open house on Dec. 19.
the same category. Various
so that residents can see the
prizes of meats and money will
Edward
Templeton,
long-ti
me
VIctorian theme exhibit from 1 to
be
awarded.
'
roofer,
painter
and
so
forth
for
4 p.m. both on Saturday and
us
over
the
years,
might
many
of
Sunday.
like to hear from 'you about now. ·
Cards
can be sent to693 S. Second
All Meigs High Civltans will be
Bulky brown paper and loose
45760.
Ave.,
Middleport,
presenting a ChrlstlllaS program
strlhg are out when It comes to
at the Amerlcare Nursing Home
wrapping holiday parcels -·
Now the incredible weather for on Monday at 10 a.m. To obtain
, proper address is in, says Pomepast two days should keep you more Information contact Stacey
the
. roy P.ostmaster Jjm Souls by.
sm
iling
.
Gibbs at 992-7774.
"The name of the game Is for
customers to address cards and rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
packages property with the com·
· plete address to used. The last
llne should have the city, state
and ZIP code- be sure to use the
ZIP. Don't forget to put your
· return address and Zl P code In
the upper left corner.
Jim also suggests writing a
parcel recipient's name and
address on a slip of paper and
putting that Inside the parcels. ·

S289?5

Shoot set
by League

6 FOOT

BRASS

FINISH

HALL
TREE

HOLIDAY
BASKET
BOUQUET

Civitan program

With 8 Hooks for Coats,
Caps, Jackets, Hats or
Umbrella

716 N.
Second St.

By The Bend

Beat of the Bend

-JUST IN TIME
FOR SANTA .

The Daily Senti_nel

Midclltport,
Ohio

•Christmas
Arrangements
·• Poinsettias
· •Grave Blankets
•
• •Sprays
•Fruit Baskets

Register For The n.ooo
Pomeroy Merchants '
Giveaway

_Fire Dept.
elects new

officers

1984 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR
_ Split seats, tilt, cruise. power locks, power ·•
windows. AM/FM Stereo . Low Miles.
·

Elected recently to serve as
1988 of!icers for Rutland Fire
Department were Bill L. Wllliamson, chief; Dave Davis and
Charles Rife, assistant chiefs;
David Williamson, captain; Jeff
Snowden and Dano King, first
lieutenant; Ted Hatfield and
Martln Spangler, second lieutenant: Dan Davis and Charles Rife,
training officers ; Rick Williamson, president: Jeff Snowden.
vice-president; Fred Williamson, secretary; Homer Parker, ·
treasurer; Ted Hatfiel'd,
reporter.

-SHARP-SHARP-SHARP
STOP IN OR CALL 992-2174

shop

"We've Oot the Key• to a Better Dul"

.*&lt;:
P~meroy,_ ,.
) ~-. ~ .. . ~- . .... ·:
v.. ~, ··

1'=:::"::

'

SMITH-NELSON MOTORS
992-2174
500 EAST MAIN
POMEIOY, OIUO

..

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I

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'
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.......
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••• .....

•

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Come In Soon!
~n-Z- Boy Recliner -Rocker '' tl&gt;e

family octi(m d&gt;o" . It', the rock er t~at doesn 't look like a rock ·
er la-Z-Boy 's exclusive comfort
•eieclor provtde• three leg re ~ • .
positions. with or .,..;thaut reclin ''"9 · Come in now &amp; select one
for your family'

~

Good news travels fast! Why spend your gift-buying"!lollars
. on gasoline? Why spend your valuable time runni_n g
around? Pomeroy's stores are loaded with great gofts.
You'll find all the1amous brands you know and trust plus
friendly. ·helpful sales people to servo you. T~e good news
about the joys of shopping loc,lly i~ spreadong fast! Get
the word and spread the word I

jl
f(

·wiLL HOLD

No need to roam~ .. the best shopping's here at home!

FOR

CHRISTMAS
DELIVERY

POMEROY
MERCHANT ASSOCIATION
•

.

.

MERCH~NTS

OPEN

SUND~ Y .12

NOON-_
5 P.M •

•

'

)

�••w-•·----1• -

.·
'-!Ja 8-The Daily Sentinel

'Museum open
house planned
(See pbotos, 10)

Museum open hOuse with pies
(3) on roll to come .. .
The traditional Christmas
open house of the Meigs Museum
on Butternut Ave. will be lteld
this weekend, Saturday and
. Sunday, from 1 to 4:30p.m. with
the public being Invited to view
the creative work of Sarah
Fisher.
Besides the extensive' decorations displayed In several rooms
of the museum, there will be

.
Low-Priced Supermarket

ac;,~

IJCIU

..;10'1 tlll

·sUPER

some of her own creations in wall which had some out of the
hangings and wreathes, deco- Stansbury home and an W'rlgQ.t
rated a live tree with handmade grand piano donated to the
Vic~orian cornlcuplas, fans, ll,llmuseum many years ago by
gels. baskets, bird nests, lace Fred and Frances Goegleln.
dollies, silk booties, put on some
Another room downstairs will
real candles, and !lnlshed It oft be decorated In a country Vlctowlth some silver beads and lace rlan theme with lots of patchribbons.
work and calico and display of
· Other things In the VIctorian , antique toys, while the upstairs
room Include antique floor can; will be done by. Mrs. Fisher In the
die holders with mauve tapers, a traditional red and green colors
crib brought' In by Louise Eden of Christmas.

OVIE RENTALS

a

•ALL THE HITS
•HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM
•NEW RELEASES

-

Help Kroger Help The Hungry By Supporting

••

••

special music by choirs of local
churches on both days.
Refreshments will be served
by Patty Parker, special events
chairman for the Meigs County
Pioneer and Historical Society,
and other active members of the
group,
Tuesday, Mrs. Fisher created
a formal VIctorian holiday room
In blue, green and mauve using
period furniture brought In by
Mrs. Rlcha·rd Seyler. She added

I I

' ' Ulltu

EASTMAN'S .. Your Independently

Wednesday; December 9, 1987

-pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

--~

•FREE MEMBERSHIP

•
oWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO

l

5TAMP5

.

Lilli! IT OU!INTITI~ES •

ACCEPTED • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL OR PICTORIAL ERRORS

...... ...

.•
-

-Mt. Dew, Pepsi-Free
Diet or Regular

'

'.

®

..

Kroger Will Donate( up to $10o,ooo1For
Kroger Brand Items Purchased
From This Ad To Your Local
Comm_unity Food-Bank

!. ~

..
_..... .

..
..
..•• '•
........"•
' •,
.,..
;."

Pepsi-Cola

Despite America 's abundant supply otfood, millions of our fellow ci t1zens suHer from hunger .
and malnutrition . Kroger believes that these problem .. can and must be solved . That is why
our company is a major supporter of SECOND HARVEST and 1ts nationa l network of
community food banks . SECOND HARVEST is a non -prof it organization ded1cated to the
efficient distribution of surplus food to needy people . This year, SECOND HARVEST,
through a nationwide network of over 200 cern ified and affiliat ed food ban~s . 1Will distribu~e
almost 100 mi lli on pounds of salvaged food to hungry Americans. Wrth mcreased publrc
· understanding and support, even more can be done . Help SECOND HARVEST with your
puchases of first quality Kroger products, and support your lo cal load bank . Through
organ izations like these, hunger is a problem we can all do something about.

TENDERBEST QUALITY

Maxwell House
Instant Coffee

,

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..
., .
.,: " tt

-.;.·

$

_,. , I

-· "

-~

U.S. GRADE A

Holly Farms
Split Breast

12-o.z._.

'

I

.

· ~·
- 2
5

8

16 oz.
BTLS •

$

Pound

88

Russet ·
Potatoes

Whole
Pork Loins

•• .r

.,...

3

U.S. NO. 1 WISCONSIN

15 LB.
BAG

j
APPLE &amp; SPICE, CINNAMON-SUGAR, PLAIN OR POWDERED
SUGAR OR COMBINATION COUNTRY OVEN DONUTS 12-CT. 79¢

'!

THIN, WHEAT, PUMPERNICKLE OR
COUNTRY OVEN

. Hearth White
Cocktail Rye Bread
·

8-oz.

BUY ONE
Armel's Original
Pocket Pita
GET ONE

',1~'

14 -0Z . WHITE , WHEAT OR ONION

POC

PITA

FREE!

For
)(ROGER REGULAR OR SOUR OOUGH ENGLISH MUFFINS
6-CT. PKG. BUY ONE GET ONE FREEl

TENDERBEST QUALITY
BOSTON STYLE

&gt;

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CRISP

40¢ OFF LABEL

California

Tide
Laundry Detergent

Florida
Tangelos

Lettuce

42-oz.

•REGULAR •ADC •EL&amp;C. PERK

Pork Shoulder
Steaks

Sliced Bacon

39

9

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4~ OFF LABEL
•SCENTED•UNSCENTED

Tide
Detergent

Folgers
Coffee

TENDERBEST BULK

99

5
42 oz.
BOX
LIMIT ONE WITH $10 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE.

Head
For

KROGER

Grade A
.large Eggs

Kroger
Christmas Bear

111-Ct

Each

BROUGHTON'S LITE 1% OR
DAIRY LANE

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Orange

\ 2°/o Milk
lOW
FAT

Juice
V2 GAL.
CTN - ·

NO AODITIONAL PUR CHASE REQU IRED

INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPEO SLICES
KROGER

NON RETURNABLE BOTILE

/;
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S~ringdale

"/'

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Gallon

l

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38

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Big K
Soft Drinks
2-Liter

sgc

1--1

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KROGER HOMOGENIZED MILK GAL . .. $1.89

99.c

•

VAC PACK

3-lb.

$499

ggc

'

Cost Cutter
White Bread
16-oz.

16-oz.

25c

sgc

••

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Beans

3

PLASTIC

GAL

BIIOUGHrON'S

Beans &amp;
Greens

OZ.

4 LB.
$

6
2
CHIP 'N' DIP.... CANS 1

BAG

Avai·lable ••••

FREE Tickets to
FOODLAND NITE

Kroger
Saltines

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REGULAR OR UNSALHD

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MILK

Nor~

24-oz.

16-Ct. 12-oz .

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Coffee

Kroger
Cottage Cheese

American
Cheese Food

ASST. VARIETIES
LUCK'S

At Rio Grande vs. Mt. Vernon Nazarene
~OODLAND
Basketball Game on .iJiiianiiiuiiiaii.r.l.y.l9ii'•1ili9ii8ili7_ _...,________ •

'

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 10 The Daily Sentinel

.·

9 1987

Wednesday, December 9. 1987

Findlay prepares for coat giveaway
FINDLAY, Ohio (UPI) :More than 10,000 coats, ranging
,from infants' jackets to sleek
·furs will be g(ven to needy people
in the Northwest Ohio city this
weekend.
The m.ountaln of coats Is the ·
'response by residents In the city
'of 33,000, who burled a volunteer
group In an avalance of styles
and sizes.
Organizers of · "Coats for
Christmas" expect 3,000 people
\O show up Saturday and Sunday
at Washington school, where the
coats will be hung on make-shift
racks.

country and a stack of letters
from a second grade class in New
York.
The money, which includes a
pledge from a Los Angeles man
to donate a dime for every coat
received, w!ll be used to buy hats,
gloves and boots , Peiffer said . .
A goal of 400 coa.ts was set
Initially because Findlay has
approximately 250 famllles that
are identified as living below the
poverty level, Peiffer said. The
response prompted organizers to
conta ct surrounding counties to
help distribute the overflow.
On Su nd ay, agencies from
"It's all on a 'no·questlons other counties will be allowed to
asked' basis . We're not going to pick up coats for distribution
, ask for na!lleS or Identification," outside of Findlay and any
said Greg Peiffer, who helped · remaining coats will be turned
organize the event.
over to the Salvation ·Army,
"This place Is going to be a Peiffer said.
.. madhouse," he said.
"I know we're going to have a
·. Peifler, who posed the idea to lot left over," he said.
, the owner of a dry cleaning firm,
Paul Kr amer, owner of City
• said the re.sponse Includes !loan· Dry Cleaning &amp; Laundry, and his
cia! donations from across the employees worked with Peiffer

PERIOD DECORATIONS
- Last weekend, Sarah
Fisher beld a·workshop at the
• museum with several assistIng In creating handmade
laos, angels, lace doiUes,
cornucopias, satin booUes and
mini-baskets wilh birds lo be
used on a tree.

•

The Daily

Ohio

Business · Services

spent in supplies alone, between

New loc:ation:'

$10,000 and $15,000," PeJffer said.
Peiffer, who is genera l man&lt;)ger of radio station WBVJ, said
the promotion was an effort to
Introduce the station.
Approximately 125 volunteers
will help hand out coats during
the weekend. Thecoatsarebeing
stored In two truck trailers until
they are placed In the school for
distribution, Peiffer said.

168 North St&lt;ond
Middleport, 9hio .4S160
SALES &amp; SERVICE..
w. Carry Fishinfsupplieo
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Billi Here
BUSINESS'PHONI
16141992-bSlO
RISIOIN(I
(6141 992-PHONE

Roger Hysell
· Garage

CHECK THE

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also lrans111isslu
PH. 992-56S2
or 992-7121

' '

1'0 PUU IN AD CAll 992· 11S6
MONDU tin FtiDU I A.M. ID 5 r.M.
•n.t.n

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Clabifie d pag~• rou~r the
following telephone e:cchanges ...

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THUR IDA¥ OUt•
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I A.M. Until NOON UTIJRDA'f
.
CLOSIP SUNDAY
OOliCIU
.... -·"" ••• Clo••• .. ... _ · -- "'"" .....

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that on Saturday, December

12. 1987, at 10:00 a.m.. a
public Hie will , be held at
roy. Ohio, Lo sell lor cosh tho

Business
Senrices
THE DABBLE SHOP

·1!183 Ford Ranger XL Serial

New Diamond Wedding Ring ... In a
Stunning Wrap-Around floral Setting

Court news ·
Three defend ants forfeited
bonds and three others were
fined in the court of Middleport
Mayor Fred Hoffmart Tuesday
night.
Forfeiting bonds were Charles
C. Malone, Athens, $450. driving
while int oxicated; David Frederick, Thornville. Ga .. $50, stop
sign violation. and . James B.

I

_I

Malcolm, Marietta. $43, speed
lng.
Fined were Nina P. Butcher,
Middleport, $15, speeding;
Brady Huffman, ·Jr. , Pomeroy,
$25 and costs, and restitution,
des tructlon of property , and
Timothy Jones, Gallipolis, $50
a nd costs, driving under
suspension.

:wJthdrew the abovtl! collat·
••I prior to Nle. Further,

106 North Second Avo.. Middleport, Oh 45760
(614) 992-21135 (Toll Free 800-426-SS81l
"FREE" Christmas
Lay-a-way

ANTA'S SPECIAL
MAKE YOUR MOVE
WHEN SHE LEAST EXPECTS IT.

$

KRiSP &amp; SERVE VACUUM PACK

SLICED BACON ••••••••••••••••L.J....... 1.19
KAHN'S
WIENERS ••••••••••••••••••••••\.~·••~!P•• S1.99
SWIFT ECKRICH
$
CHOPPED HAM LOAF ••••••L.J....... 1.39
SMITHFIELD
SHREDDED S2.29 LB.
$
COOKED HAM......................~\·. 1.99
HOMEMADE
MEAT SALAD •••••••••••••••••••L.•••••••• 89(

.

a ••

KRAR 16 s\ICE, 12 OZ. PROCESSED

AMERICAN .
CHEESE .................. $1,87
SHUR FINE LARGE DOZ.

GRADE A EGGS ......... 77&lt;

WINESAP
APPLES ......... AJJI.MG.. 99&lt;
HEAD
LEnUCE •••••••1.Ut.JIOS1.59 .
CALIFORNIA
ORANGES ......71.ta.. 3/9 7&lt;

GOLDEN FRIES ...... ~ ••••••••

PEAS

.ae••aee•e•••a•···············1.q.~~

SOLO

WOMEN'S CASUALS ,

.1/4 .
OFF

CAMPBELL'S 10'1• OZ.

BEEF NOODLE SOUP .....~·· 2f$1.19

WHITNEY

.

PINK SALMON .....~ .........!..~.PJ.. S1.79

NOTICE OF SALE

4&amp;701, has submitted an
application to revise o Coal
Mining and Reclamation
Permit numbered R-0365-

By virtue of an Order of
·Sale i11ued out of the
•Common Plea• Court of
Meigs County, Ohio. in the
caae of Bank One. Athens,
'N . A ., Plaintiff. against

9. to the Ohio Department of

lJtfendanta, upon a judg·
.4nint therein rendered. be-

and 34, Fractions 23, 33 and

r ,

Caoa No. 87-CV·73 in

'81id Court. I will offer for
:.. le, at the front door of the
&lt;;ourt House in Pomeroy.
'Meig1 County, Ohio. on the

:30th day of December,
•1987 at 10;00 O'Clock
•A.M . the following lands and
ienements. to-wit:
• . Situated in the Township

~~~~t~::·oroh~~ ~~:~:~

deed from 'Edna Lamp to
flicky Murphy and Connie

1984, and recorded in Vo·

lume 2.tl4, Page 21, Meigo
County Deed Records .
Said parcel appraited at

14.700.00.

- Terms of Sale: Cash.
The real estate cannot be
aold for leu then two-thirds
of the appraised value.
Howard E. Frank,

Sheriff of

Meigs County, Ohio

1111 26 : 1121 2. 9. 16, Z;!,
6tc
·

Natural Resources, Oiviaion
of Reclamation. The pro~
posed coal m ining and reel a~
mation operation will be in
Meigs County, Columbia
Township, Sections 32, 33,
34; Meiga County, Salem

Townahip, Sections 34, 35.
36, and Fraction 35, Vinton
County, Wilkesville Town~
ship, Sections 6 and 12;
\linton County, Vinton
Township, Sections 2, 71ind
8 . The proposed underground mlnig areas encom ·
pass 816 .6 41cras, and are
located on the Wilkesville
and Vales Mills 71/z Minute U .
S . G.S . quadrangle maps-,
approximately one-half miiB
north to 5.3 milea northeast

of Wilkesville, Ohio. the

application proposes to ex pand the areas for the room
and pillar method of under ground rflining.
The application is on file at
the offices of the Meigs
County Recorder. Meigs
County Court Hou5e, Second Street, Pomerov. Ohio
45769 and the Vinton
County Recorder. Vinton
County Gourt House. Main
Street. McArthur,. Ohi(l;
46661 , for public viewing.
Written · comments and / or
requests for an informal
conference may be sent to
the Division of Reclamation.
Fountain Square, Building

B-3, Columbus. Ohio 43224

within thirty (301 diys of the
last date of publication of
this notice.

(11) 25; (12) 2. 9 , 16, 4tc

•

2

RAVIOLI a••········e········e····1.~.q! ••••• 99 c
DEL MONTE FRENCH STYLE

1.~.~!·..

GREEN BEANS ...........

2f$1.19

16 OZ. IDAHO

MINIATURE MARSHMALLOWS ..... 59&lt;
DEL MONTE

PEAR HALVES ...........J.t.~t ..... $1.39
KELLOGG'S

POP TARTS ..............J.1..~t ..... S1.39
HI C

GRAPE DRINK .................".~.% .... 99&lt;

"{ G!XIrd Agom:lt Hgh Prl(t.J
UJt The Clossi(Pt.d 5ecti011

1

Card of Thanks

The
Landis Clays
wish to thank
everyone for their
kindness shown
during his
hospitalization.
Your prayers and
cards were
a reciated.

Real Estate Goneral

Com ~

In Memoriam

CHEF-BOY-AR-DEE

KRAFT 10112 OZ.

THE CHECKMATE COLLECTION

Public Notice

.

INSTAN.T POTATOES ............~ $1.09

JEWELERS OF INTEGRJ.TY

•.

••-.• e69~

ORANGE JUICE ..........:...\tq!. $1.39 .

Southern Ohio Coal

pany, Meigs Mine No . 2, P.
0 . Box 490, Athens, Ohio

Murphy, doted Augul) 13,

FOAM CUPS •••.•••••••••••••••s.q.~r••••• e79(

All HUSHPUPPY

1)2) 9,10, 11, 3tc
•

S1.59

MINUTE MAID

This holiday season, Glpturc ·hcr heart with a
gi ft of exquisite diamond jewelr y. Diamonds
' w ith a winning strategy. Timeless style and
brill iant si mplicity. Let us show you our
fine qualit y diamonds from the C.heckmatc
Collection , like thc·classically designed rings
shown here. l! 's your move .

ADDENDUM TO
PART 1. ITEM IE! (4)
SOUTHERN OHIO
. COAL COMPANY
MEIGS MINE NO. 2
LEGAL NOTICE

l::ounty at Pages.16 &amp; 17.
REFERENCE is made to

BIRDSEYE

ON ALL DIAMONDS IN STOCK

'Further, the ·ebove coli at·
.eral will be sold in the
·Condition it i1 in' with no
:expre11ed or implied warran,tleJ gtven.

-ef1d described a1 follows:
• .. Lot No. 3 in the town of
l.1-artln1VIIIe, end recorded
·••· such in VolUme 1 In the
Book of Plata for said

3.~.%.

M

--=---,-,.,-----Public Notice

i~g

OlE-IDA

20°/o SAVINGS

992-2156

•the Fermer• Bank and Sav)laa Company raoei'VIII the
.tight to rejoct any or ell bldo

Ricky L. Murphy, at al ..

MARGARINE ..... 1.\.IR $1.29

WOMEN'S

ClA~~IFIED AD~

•e

SHEDD~

ONE GROUP

THE

·iubmiHad.

(SOliTAIRE NOT INCLUDED)

HEATING &amp;
COOLING

992-621S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
U5·'861c

$2$00
$5.00 Extra

•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS.
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

For Skinning

MAPLEW
. QQD
LAKE
949 27 34
•

PH • 992 • 2772

1·23·'87·1 mo.

11 · 27·'11 1 mo. pd.

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER, OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS

JER•v~s

•KITCHENS · BATHS

CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

•ROOFING
REMOOELING llo
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS llo .
BACK HOE WORK

WHITE HIU RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO
742-2035
11 -3-1mo.pd.

Phone Day Gr Evenings

In Memory Of
HAROLD LEACH
Oh, what would I
give to clasp your
hand.
Your dear. kind face
to see.
Your loving smile,
your walc()ma voice
That meant so much
tome.
No one knows the
iilent heartache.
Oilly those who
have such can tell
Of the·grief that is
borne in 1ilence
·For the Dad I loved
so well.
Sadly misoed by
dau hter

608

E. Main

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

Reference•

11 -3· tfn

GUN SHOOT
RACIN~

FIRE DEPT.

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

NEW- REPAIR
Gutters
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
•
FREE ESTIMATES

$i2.1ilio~ ·

IINRY l CUliHD, .11 ..... 992-ml
· JEAN TRUSSELL- ............ 949. 2&amp;60
,DOTJIE fURN£11 ........... 9'a· S697
'TR ACY RIFFlE .............. 949· 3080
!OFFICI ......................... 9Ql. f2S9

LOST: S month · old v•llow
female Retriever puppy . Rio
Grande arH. Rewerd erM. Call
61 4·246·9679 .
Lolt : F1rmert Bank Depoah:
envelope cont•inlng •• 1. Lo.t
Fridll'f. Oec. 4 between F1rmara
Bank and Main St. Plua. Any
informa1ion call 814-992-15853.

Lo1t - 1 Y2 vr old m•l• Slwn. .
cat. Midway Drive . New Hwen.
Antwera 1o Coco. Rew1rd.

304·882·3394.
7

Yard Sale

· ..... Ganrpolis-· ·······•

&amp; Vicinity
. -.--- -· ... -·. ·----.- -- ... -.·· .. --.Gellipolia Flu Mtrket · Former
Thaler Garag• Rta. 36 r.. 180.
Open Fridava • Saturday• Sund.-;1. 9-6.

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

&amp; Vicinity

949-2263
or 949-2168
4·21·17-.tfn

You'" N~r11 1" Old
To LuMI
Teaching Thompson.
Schaum, Bastien
From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For Information
DIANA IHLE

D&amp;C ELECTRIC
Ron Diles or
Gary Cummins

992-6226
"

Middleport

949-2890

lmurod/U&lt;1Mod
12·7·'87 tfn

Chri1tmaa Sale on Luca lint
. tron now tiiiChrittrnal therawill
ba a 1lgn to 'follow . Come In •nd
1ee. Marie Heu.

1·24"'87·1 mo. pd.

PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC.

&amp; Refrigerator

12 -2-'87-1 mo pd

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS.
TREES
Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine.
WEBER FARM
Rutland, Ohio

742-2143

11-3-87-1 mo.

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTTERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREE ESTIMATES

2 Bedroom, Stove
furnished. ~undry
facilities available.
E.O.H.

992-3711

11-23·'17 I nlo. pd.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE

107 LOCUST Sf.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Makes

GRAVEL - SAND

WE SEll USED APPliANCES

TOP SOIL
Fill DIRT

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

10-8-tfc

4·5·tfc

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
1114-11112 -3B21
Authori.ztd John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

Far111 E•ul.lllent
Paris &amp; Servlee

1·3-'8611&lt;

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

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Tag Your Tree
Early ·
For Christmas

Hurley Honing
Residence
3S9 7S Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
21f• miles from Five Points.
li·2J.'87 I mo.

Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Ser.•icel
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages
(!J

BINGO
EAGlES CLUB-POMEROY, OH.
THURU PM-II US

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

~ Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~ (614) 446-7619 or 1614) 992-2104

11-23-'87-1 mo.

z

-

417 'Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
·Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts , Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSELL
New Homes Built

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sundoy Culls
J.ll·tfn

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

An nuu ncam an Is
THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

"Chrl1tmu \1......,11
Sale" · \ ;
•Golf Clubs
L.:.=,
Shirts - Shoes
•Trophies - Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags for
Dogs.

JOHN TEAFORD

CNIS'IEI, OHIO 45720

11·20-'87·1 mo..

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
e Storm

Doors

•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•NeW Roofing

FREE E5nMATES
JAMES KEESEE .
PH. 992-2772
11-13-'87-1 m~.

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

RACINE, OHIO

Record Those Specinl
Occasions on VHS
Tape

v.w.

•Holldl'( P•nle~
•Weddings
•School It Church Program•
•Sporting Ewnt1
•AnniYeruri•
•Reoord V•iuabiM,
Oocumen11
•Transfer Ph01o Albu m• to
VHS Tape
•Trtnlfer Bmm and Super 8
Movie~ to Video T•pe
•Cre&amp;~te Training Film• for
Students and Employees

ID·9-1fn

PARTS
NEW

AND USED

WIDE

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND

MODELS .

CALL 742-2315
12-4 ·'87· 1

mo. d.

We PlY c•h for lite model ctun
UMd c•t.
Jim Mink Chw.-Oid1lnc.
Bill Gena John1on

814·446·3872

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
Md n!M"er u•ld cera. Smtth
Buldt-Pontiae. 191 1 e.atem
Ava., Gallipolia . Call 814-448-

2282.

WANTED TO BUY: Uoed wood
&amp; co .. he .. erl. Sw•ln'a Furni·

ture, 3rd. &amp;.Olive St. Gallij:Jolla.
Clll 814-448-3169.

Good w..therld Oak B•rn Siding. Call 814-448·8592 or

448·8217 otter e PM .

REASONABLE RATES
CAll FOR FREE ESTIMA Tl

992-7632

11/16/'87 I mo. d,

:hf i'~l
U
.
-"
CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS ,
Home &amp; Auto
1614) 992-371.8
Add on mini fuel compu1er

system. Fits any c._r. Instant
miles per aallon readout.

Know your fuel consump1ion
loom one block 1o hundreds of
miles .

3 Announcements

Store to Job Cost

Before ond after auto tune·up.
(Compara1or) fill up your
1ank. snd watch il sub1rac1 and
display fuel consumed.
UNDER '90
·!l,~t&gt;if~:~~~l:o:;r
, MCF·CCF
II
&lt;Oiibra1edused
10

e14-379·275B.

Good u1ed atto aax &amp; m~ndolln .
Call 814·446· 2616 .
Bu.,.ng d•ily gold, ailver coins,
rings. )rNelry, ••ling w•re. old
coint. l•g• curr..ey. Top pr~
C81• Ed Burkatt BarR Shop.
2nd. Aw. Mlddl11p0n, Oh. 814-

992·3478.

, Raw fur, beet end da• hidN.

Gyn Sing end Yoellow root. Wa
h.,e wl)aat and nita Utta.
Tr•pplng 1uppli• for •I e. (BuyIng und tn1p1) . Oeorv- Budd.,,
Hour• 12-9. 814-884-4781 .

High prices paid tor pr•1850
quilt1. Applique, piteed, eny
condldon. Cell614-992-2101
or 814·992·5167.

f llllllllYilll'lll

Servll:t:o
11

Help Wanted

Ph ..-maci1t: Four store lnd•
pendent pharmacy Athena area
h• immedi ... opllning for mff
ph•mecltt. 44 hour workweek.
Competltivl ulery b•..d upon
nperienct. s.n.tlt ... package.
Send rt~ume wh:h raf•ence~·
Medic.! Canter PhertNicy, 400
E. St~e St.. Ath••· Ohio
46701- An: Eric Aich.,da-RPh.
Bidding clo1n Dec. 15th.
TEXAS OIL COMPANY n -

mature peraon for ahon trips
surrounding GellipoUa. Cont81ct
cu1tomer1. We t,.ln. Wrlle T.J.
Dicker1on. Prea., Southwettern
Pstroltum, lo• 8810011. Ft.
Worth, Tlil. 78181.
The VIII Ill&amp; of Rio Q r1nde i8 now
accepting r•ume'1 and lettert
of int•r•t for the po.tllon of
Cleric of Court1. lntemtld per·
1ona must ba • village r11ldent
•nd muat be bondable. Lenart
end re1um•"• c.., b• ..nt to:
VIllage of Rio Granda. c/ o Angie
S•agrave1, Clerk. P.O. Box 343,
Rio Grande, Ohio 41174. Mult
be received by December 31.

1987.

Someone to enter into contract
tor 1now remo'lla., Call 814-

797·4859.

A different kind of d81lng
•ervlce. For information write.
Kupid'a Nett· P.O.Bolil 619.
Ironton. Ohio 46638 or ceH
808-836-2746.
KUPID 'S NEST. Offer• two
klndt of d .. lng Mrvice, write
P.O. Box 618. Ironton. OH
46838 . (6061 836-2746 ,
Home Decorating Open Hou•
Fri. and Sat. , Dec. 11th and
12th. 10:00 am-9 :00pm . ..ch
dll'f. Glori• Ollw, St. Rt. 326 .
Leng1ville. Ohio. 1514· 742 ·
2078. Nice door prb:nt Eveiyone w.lcome.
No Hunting on Gill Ridge on
pr,o ptrti• of C. R. Gill, Mitchell
Culletl, George Gilt without
. written p•miuion. Violator~
· will be prosecuted.

4

Giveaway

8 Puppi• - Part Colli• Pert
German Sheperd. Call before 3

PM·814·248·9131 .

Giv• away 10 good home. Rag.
t..-nllle Cocker Sp1niet. C•ll

814-245-9120.

Commercial :
Taxi Sarvice

Coli

QUILTS

~"BOGGS

CALL 949-2969

"Free Estimates"

Wanted To Buy

Wented to buy· Standing timber.

POMEROY-985-35.111

SIDING CO.

SR 7 - SILVER RIDGE Apprx. 19.80 acres, all ml·
nerals and royalties from ex·
isting well. Appx. 15/mo. 2
sprin gs lor development.

Lost and Found

····· ··p·t·Pieiisan·t .... ··

PIANO LESSONS

lt~­

...

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS

POOR FOU&lt;S! Uveable older
homa equippro krtchen ready
tb go Want $8,500.00 oot
MAKE OFfER.

PRICE REDUCED - Re~~
nice ranch wnh a gorgeous
kitchen, huge family room, big
living room w/fireplace, plus a
trailer hookup. 20 acres appx.
ONLY $49,900.00. MAKE OF·
FER.

6

Basham Building

Fadory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
10-Htn

DON'T LET YOUR meTRICAL PROBLEMS BECOME A SHOCK TO YOUI
CAll

1/2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW

•vtNYl SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

RUTlAND - Nice ranch
style home with central a1r,
garage, low ulilities, fronl
and rear porch, 3 bedroo)lls,
large living room, big level
lot. REDUCED, $38.500.00.

home. p i - coli oft•
,oo o304-876-2296.
wtndowa early 1900 •lntage.
304·812·2024.

ns-4141

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pri&lt;es"

FOR RENT

SO YOU 01 ON1 GET A
DEER! Maybe you need this
seclud ed cabin on 70+
acres of grounq smack in
the middle of deer country.
ONLY $29,900.00.

HERE is a substantial home
in good condition with a
great view ol lhe river.
Owner wants a sale NOW.
ASKING $23,900.00.

All white houM cl't mull: h.ve •

good

GEMElli CONIUUORS

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HOUSE FOR RENT

If interested stop by.

:stvlngs Colhpany. Pome·
~. Ohio. reoarvao the right
'to bid ot thlo ule, and to

S225.00

INGELS FURNITURE &amp;JEWELRY

IS FOR SALE

• The Farmer• Bank and

Newest look in diamo nd wedding ri ngs. The nora! wedd'ing
ring dramatic ally wraps around your engagement diamond .. .
elegantly enhJn cing it. It blooms with countless spa rkles of
8 beautifu l diamond s. In gleaming while or yellow gold.

V. C. YOUNG Ill

DEER CUT
WRAPPED

Middleport, Ohio

:#
1 FTBR1 OABDUB07662 .
•1984 Ford Tempo 4 dr.

WELCOME WREATH -This attractive wreath of welcome In
mauve and green floral design Is one of many wall hangings made
by Sarah Fisher ,for use In the Victorian Room. Several other
rooms at the museum will be decorated for the weekeJid's open
house.

w ork

ROOFING

106 Union Avenue. Pome.following collateral:

Addons ar')d remodeling
Rooting and gutter work
Concrete work
Plumbing and olactri eal

Howard L Writ•stl

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

PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE Is hereby givan

•Automatic PS, P8, Air con·
:dltlonlng . Serial #
2FABP22R3EB124819
1886 FORD BRONCO II
XLT 4x4 Overdrive. Serial II
tFMCU14SXFUCBe867.

Giveaway

9

ll--c1. 1Vtll_l_....

~~ -

-

CARPENTER
SERVICE

(Free Estimates)

...,· -""'_____
_
.....

IT~. ACREAT DEAl

Public Notice

-.-~-···­

Jt - -

,

·· -~-. lv ·CI­

·- ......
5:£\.o.:-

.... , _

11;n-v-·
-looo···....·•

,_...

,._,.

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

YOUNG'S
staged Saturday and Sunday afternoon. Most of
the furnishings for the room are from the antique
collection of Mrs. Richard Seyler.

4

Free puppl•.
hlllf ..
Germen
Sh•
by cleaning and repairing each 1~=nai=iii=;:i~i1r::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;'Ti========:;1
:
phO&lt;d.
half Pob
man, 3044312
876
coat. Peiffer sa id coats are still
&amp; -K~-,-,n-,,
·
·
.being recelved.
.
-lit1-,,-,-,.-,ned-.-30-4--e-7-5·
PLUMBING &amp; HEATING
3168.
"Poor Paul, he's probably

6-17-tfc

VICI'ORIAN CHRISTMAS- formal Victorian
Christmas room has been created by Sarah
. Fisher lor the Meigs Museum's open house to be

11

Ktnena, litter tt11inad . C•ll Cl14-

742·2153.

7 mbt•d brted puppi• to good
home. Cell 814-949-2996 .
Two standing trees for firewoJ)d,
304-875-3168 weekdeya. A1 k
for Bill.
Cl)okStove, on•bur"•do• not
work. others ok, 304-878-

1918.

&gt;.

1-::---:-::--:-::--:----

Gan ... l Farm Work
Some experience requirlld . long
term employment tor • qu•llfied
perton . Home S. utHitl• provided . Mul1 live on term. An
older tlllperienced p•1on pr•
terred. Wag•&amp;ben8fl11negotial:Ne. Cell or write: Rid'l•d lnnlt,
Rolling Acr" F•rm, Rt. 2 Bo• 88
Wiuman Rd., Patriot. Ohio
46868 . 614-379-2297.
Earn ••ce11ent mon., in home
81nmbly work. Jewelry, toy1
and others. FT &amp; PT e¥til . C811

todoy l 1·618·469·3&amp;36 ltoll
refundable) EXT. 81822

24

hours.
The Meigs Locel School Diatrict
11 accepting applications for
IUbltituta teachers. Subatitutea
are neediKI In all centfiCMion
areu. The deity rete of pey·
$125 . Ohio CertifitJd Teachers
willing to croa1 a pidcal line
ahould imm•diately conttc1
Meigs Loc•l School Superintendent' 1 office, 82;1 South
Third Avenue, Middleport. Ohio
46700 . 814-992 -21153 .
Wantep : Full-tfme employmen1
In your own hom• •• t Home
Servlc• Worker with Buckeve
Community Service. We providt
ul.-y p4us b•n•flt• tnd • d•ly
room •nd board flte. You
provide t home. guidance tnd
friendship In • famlty •tmosph•e. RaqulrM ability to ...eh
per1onal liv ing "akill• end e
commitment to the growth and
development of •n indt\ridu•l
with aevere mMtlll rtu~rdttion.
Conttct Sylvi8 D•y at814·448 ·
7109 tfter 6 :00 p.m. Equal
opportunity emrJioyer.

�..

Page-12-The Daily_Sentinel
11

KIT 'N' CARLYL£ ®by Larry Wright

LAFF-A-DAY

Help Wanted

46

Rooms tor rent, dey. Wfiek.
month. Gslli• Hotel. Call tl1~· ·
448-9580. Rent as Iowa• $120
month.

AVON · All areas. Call Marityn
Weaver 304-882-2645.

Fumiah..:i room. 876. Utilhl•
paid. Sh1re blth. Single male.
919 Saoond. Gallipolis. Call
448-4418 aft.,. 7pm.
Steeping rooms. 3 men. Private
en1r11nce. off-dreet parking. Call
614-992-7791 .

304-676-1 t29 .

Get paid tor reading books!
S 100.00 per title. Write: ACE·
517D, 161 S . Lincolnway, N.
Aurora, Ill. 60542 .

1 have· room 10f elderly patient.

Ro•onobl&amp; 614-992-7204 or
614-992-3953 .

Green Acre• Regional Cenur.
Remedial 1eacher. minimum
qualification, teaching certifi·
cate. Contact 762-2522.-EOE.

46

MOM AND DAD: Let the Anny
National Guard help pay for your
child's college education. Call

Mobile Home lot: 80 ft. or leu.
920 •th .. Gallipolis. t76 . Water
paid. Call 614-448-4416 after 7

PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE

12

Situations
Wanted

d~dcara24

hours. Reasonable
i-atas, all agM. Meats furnished .
614-992-2458.

13

"Congratulations, Mr.
McCaudle. You didn't get the
job, but you passed our drug
and lie detector tests with
flying COIOfS."
~;;=:;;~~~;;;;;~l":;;:;;:;::;;;;::;:;::;::;:;::=l

I 33

Insurance

Farms for Sale

42

land contract. 6.96 acres, barn,
chicken coop, pony shed , work·
shop and 3 bedroom houaa.
$2500 down and t35ff.90
month 16 Yfl· or cuh price of

$26.000 . Call 614-992-2143

8 :30 to 4 :30. Ask tor michael.
614-992-6373 .

18 Wanted to Do

loving mom end previous pre. school teacher wi!Ung to watch
your child. Will provide teaching
crafts. singing. Willingtobabysrt
anytime. PI88Se Call 614·367 -

7288.
Will do house !NOrk or care for
elderly in their homes. 304-773-

5802.

34 ·

Business
Buildings .

2 bedroom mobile home 3Yt:
mil• south of Middleport. Rt . 7.
1 child accepted. No peu.
drunks or dope. Ref•ence. Call

Commercial buildings tor laue.
Dow ntown Pt . Pteaun1 . Stores.
offices. A-One Ani Estate.
Carol Yeager. Broker. Call 304676-5104.

3 bedroom, 12a86, furnlahad .
Wash• tnd dryer. t21 0 month
plua deposit and utmtles. 614-

35

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends 1ha1 you
do business with people you
know . and NOT to send monev
through thB mail until you have
investigated the offering.

Lots &amp; Acreage

In Gallipolia on Pine St. Vacant
lot 'with water and sweage. No
mobile homea permitted .
$6.000. Call after 6:00 PM614-594-3833 .

2 Bu ilding lou- 1 "h acres each
with county water. Jerrys Run
Rd. Apple Grove. W. Va . Call

Professional
Services

304-576-2383.

2

Bol'l: 782, Point Pleasant. W. Va.

304-675-1448.

T~o bed rooms. Upper ·River

61 4-446-0508.

Mobile homes furni•hed
1186.00 plu1 utiliti•. ,$7!5,00
deposit, call after 8:00 pm,

Space ior smell trailers. AM
hook-ups. Ceble. Al1oefficiency
rooms, air and cable. Muon,

W.Vo. Coll304-??3-6e61 .

Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home

;~~~-GallipoUo Ferry, 304-675-

Trail• spaces for rene, At. 1
Locust Road, back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home Par k. 304-676-

1076.

49

.

For Lease

1400 sq. ft. commercial space
suitable for oHicttS, retailing, or
lervices. Prime locatiOn-corner
or 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gell lpolil.
Ample parking in reer. 8360 per
month. CIJII 614-446-4249 or
446-2325 .

Mercllanlli se

304-876-6612.

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

44

Apartment
for Rent

Rent als
Homes for Rent

3 BR. hOuse &amp; garage. A-1 Real
Estate; Carol Yeager-Broker.

304-676-6104.

4 BR ., fireplaCe, full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. 1$34,900.
Call Oays-614-446-1615. after
5:00- 446-1244.
Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
Locks on At. 7. 2 ear garage, nice
lot. Immediate possession. Will
consider trade in of Mobile
home. property. etc. Bargain
priced. Ca ll 614-446-8038 .
3 BR . ranch-Country Aire Extates. George's Ck . Rd . 2 / 3 aoe
lot. Above ground pool. Very
reasonable . Ca ll 614 -448 ·

2108.

Nicely furnished small houu.
Aduhs only. Ref. required. No
pets. Call 814-446-0338.
2 BR . home- recently remodeled. ST.RT. 279 . Oak Hill &amp;

Rio Grande. No children or pets.
Call614-245-9315.
hou~e

2 BR.

in Rio Grande. Call

614-245-9170 or 448-1323.
Large 2-3 BR . house. Plenty of
storage. Henderson area. Call

614-445-7026 .

2 or 3 BR unfurnished h1. ·Yard,
city schools. $27!5 mo. plus
utilities &amp; deposit. Call 614-

446-2516 .

3 BR . RanCh. Attached garage. 3 BR .. double car garage. range.
In town . Good location. Low · refrig. dishwasher. t360. Dep.
..to·s. Call after 5 :3 0 Pt\1 . 614- required. Call 614-446· 1134.
446-1406.
Furnished Two •mall hou.as . 3
2 bedroom. 2 baths. 2 cer rooms each. Nice and clean.
garag e. IBVel jot on At. 33. Adults on ly . No pets. Ref. &amp; dep.
Swimming pool, satalite, close Call 614-445-2643.
to Meigs Hi gh. Call 614-9923254.
2. 3, or 4 bedroom hoUMI and
apt'. In Pomeroy area. Pay own
Five lots on corner with 4 utilitiea, deposit required . Call
bedroom house. Carpeted. full 614· 992-6113, 614-992-6723
basement. central heat, fir&amp;- or 614-992· 2509. Call after
plac e, gara ge. Call 304-882· 5 :00. please.

2775 .

For sale on land contrtllct, house
and garage 11partment on 2
acres. Call 614-99.2-2862 .
5 rooms, bath, enclosed porch,
forced 11ir furm~ce, insu1B1ud new
roof, new carpet. Uppor Mason.
w. Va . 6 14·992-2813.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
$1 .00 (U repair) foreclosures.
repos, tax daliquent properties.
Now selling vour area. Call
1-315· 736.7357 ext. 2P-WV-H
for current list. 24 HAS ,
Three 1 bedroom, brick

home,
Iento living room. possible loan
assumpt ion. close to Point Pleasant. 304·675· 5306 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NeW 1988 Prestige 14x70 tot11l
al ec .. 3 BR .." 2 b&amp;ths . furnished .
Anchors, skirting. loaded with
elttras. $14 ,500 . Kanauga Mobil e Homes· 614-446-9662 .
1983 14x56 Fairmont f'Obile
home. 2 badrooms, washetdryer hook· up. In flltCellent con·
dition. Call614· 367-724 2.
Trailer for Sal&amp;- 8x50: Call
61 4· 388-8294.
1 acre. 12x65 trailtw with 1 2x24
addition. New porch, furnished .

3 bedroom house for rent 8200
per month. Mulberry A-... Porn•
roy. 614· 992·66B7 or 614992-7460.
Unfurnished house for rent.
Newly redecorated, carpet. Call

614-992-3090.
Nice 3 bedroom h,oute. Family
room , garage , basement ,
forced-air heat. 6 wooded acres.
barn. t275 . per month. $100.
deposit. No inside pats. 10 E11t
St., Pomeroy, Ohio. 614-423-

6289.
Completely renova ted. 3 bed·
room, plenty yard and garden
space. beautiful home. All elsct·
rie. heat pump, central air. 4
miles hom Ravenswood. Por·
tla nd, Oh. 61A--B43-6309.
Two bedroom houl8 with garage. No Pets. 304·676-1400.
Two badroom houae half mile
out Jericho Road. call after

5'00pm. 304-676·8483.

Two room cotUige turniahed,
utili11es paid. 866.00 week..
aingla person, caU 304 -676·
31 00 or675 -6509.
2003 N. Main Str"t. 3 bed·
rooms, garden apace. 304-675-

2707.

Household Goods

2 BR . 1pts. 6 clotetl, kitchen·
appl. furnl1hed. Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newly
pelnted. declc . Regency, Inc.
Apts. Call 304-676· 7738 or

675-6104 .

Furnished ap1. n'axt to library.
One. professional adult only .
Parking. Call 614-446-0338.
Nice private apt. Quiet. Ne.HMC. One adult onty. No pet1.
Stove, rafrig. , drapes. 8226 a
mo: Ref. required. Call 61 4-

Furnished : 4 rooms S. bath.
Clean. No peta. Adults only . Ref.
&amp; dep. required. Call 614-446·

42

Modern 1 BR apartment. Cell
614-446-0390.
Renewtv redecorated. VtJfy nice '
apartment• In downtown GlUtpolis. 1 &amp; 2 BR .• unfurnis hed.
second floor, from t17&amp;· $226.
Oep. a. refer,nces required. Call
eve. 614·446-2326 or 446·
4249.

513 Third Ave.- 1 BR .

Depoo~

required . Call 614-'446-4346
between 5 :00PM A 10:00 PM
Apartment - 1136 2nd .. Gallipolil. 2 BR . Stove &amp; refrlg.
furniahed: t186. Water paid.

Coll614-448-4418 after? PM ,
Furnlahed upatairs- 1 BR . Utili·
tl• pt~id . $220 a mo. t76 dep.
94 LOCUit St. Call 614-448·
1340 or 448-3870.
2 BA . apt . Stove &amp; refrlg.
furnished. Ne1r Go Mart. Call
614-448-7026.

Tara Townhouse Apts.- 2 BRS ..
11f2 baths, AC . Start $299 a mo.
Utilities not included. Call 614-

387-7860.
BEAUTIFUl APARTM ENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES, 538 Jackson
Pike from t183 a mo. Walk to
ahop end moviet. 614·446·

3997.

~.O . H .

Furnilhed apartment- 4 room a &amp;
bath. 1 or 2 adults. No petl. Ret
&amp; Sec. dep. required. Call

614-448-0444.
Upstairs unfurnithed apartment.
Carpeted. Utili'lias paid. No
children or pets. Cell 614-448·

1637.

For ren1 apartment. trailerl furnished. unfurnished. Woodburning fjreplece. Water, sewage
paid. Clean. Quiet. Foster's
Mobile Home Perk. 446-1602.
2 BA . Hon..,suckle Hill•. Ga1
heat. prtvate ,patios. W81M.
sewer, truh service furnished.
Rent ltart-1220. Call614·4463344 or 448·1134. Equal Houa·
ing Opportunity.
Graeloua living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at VIllage
Manor and Riverside Apartments in Middleport. From
t21 !5. induding utilltie.:. Call

e14-992-7787. EOH.
Nice 1pt. Hudd approved. New
carpet. cleM. Pt. Plusant. 614·

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Clall!polis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- 1399.
ltving room suhes- t199-$69$.
Bunk bed• with bedding- 1199.
Full size~ mattre•s &amp; foundation
starting· t99 . Recliners
starting- 199.
USED- Beds, dre..art, bedroom
suites, $199-$299. Desks,
wringer washer, a complete line
of u•ed furniture.
NEW- Wettarn boots- $30.
Workboots f18 &amp; up. (Steal &amp;
aoft toe). Call614-448 -3159 .
County Appliance. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open SAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614-446 ·1699, 627 3rd.
Ave . Gallipolis, OH .

GOOD USED APPUANCES

Carpet Prices Starting at :
Commercial - 84 a yd ..
Sculpture-86 a yd .• Plush·S7 a
yd. lots of room rements in
stock. Financing available. Mollohan Furniture. Upper Ri'lllr Rd.
. 614-446·74.. 4.

PARSON'S FURNITU,RE
New wood 8 pc. living room
suites. 8399.96; cheat of
drawert-4 drawer. a48; twin
mattreuea, 196 set; microwave
oven stands.

THE WORKING
MAN ·s FRIEND
Gold heavy duty washer &amp;
dryer. Very good cond. 8160
set. Call 614-246-6383.
Kenmore Microwave Oven. Excellent conditton. Call 814-992-

7143.

Brown, flowered couch, ror;t(er,
chair and end tabl•. t200.
Good condition. Call 614-9B6-

Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 BR mobile home. 8 150 mo.
RefEWence &amp; dapot.tt required.
Northup -Rd . Call 614-446·
1900.

1973 Fairmont mobile home,

2 BR . 1railer. $160 a mo. Nb
pets. Ref. required. Call 1fter 6

19B4 Skyline. 14x70, central
air, underpenning, decka. new
carpet. kitchen aRpliances. let
· up on rented lot, K &amp; K , Point
Pleaunt. $16 .500 . Call weekends or ~fter .6 weekd av s..

304-675 -1294.

12x66 S MuiU, a cre ' ground,
furnished or unfurnished With' or
without 18telite system, prlee
rtegOt!able. 304-576· 2192.

' .

PM. 367-0181 or 36?-0121 .

2 BR . MobileHomeior rent. Call
after 2 PM -614·446-0527.
Would like to provide nfce home
for elderly pEWsont. lnc;lepend·
ence, privacy, fu ll maintainerlce.

1977 Chevy pickup . BodY
rough. Runs good, •eoo or belt
off•. Coli 614-388-8714.
.

t1200. 1973 GMC

388-9873.

Callahen's Used TireS hop. Over
1 .ODD tires. .Ue•12, ,3,14, 1&amp;,

16. 16.8. a mil• C!Ut Rt. 218.
,Coll614-256-82&amp;1.
Plastic cistern stlte IPprovad.
plettlc aeptlc tankl. pllltlc
culverts, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jeetson, Oh. 814-2B8-6930.

•

54

Misc. Merchandise

Christmas trees. ceg, cut or dig.
White and Scotch, any size
116 .00. At. 2 North, 7 Mil•
from Point Pl.,.nt, 304-87!5-

6773.

Quality firewood, 111 hardwood. :
for ule. 126 a piCk-up load. Call SIGNS: lighted Arrow Sign
614-3e?-0889 .
e299; Non-Arrow t289; unllgh1ed 8198. Free deltvery letters
Arte &amp; Craft - Tent Sale: ToyL till Dec. 11 . W.Va. 1· 800-642tool a, Max lcen gift items. Open 2434, Ohio 1-800-633 ·3463.
Daily • Noon to 8 . Chillicothe
Mall Shopping Centet'.
Firewood· All hardwood. 820
pick-up told . .Call 61•-2&amp;8-

Tree &amp; Stump removal , flr•
wood. Heap vouch•• accepted.
Live white pine Chri1tmas trees.
t37.60. Cell 614-446-9648 .
Chrlstma1 Tr... for •ie-t&amp;.00-

$10.00. Rodnov "Bidwell Rd.
Richard

Muzzle loading Suppli•· Prices
have been reduced. Shop going
out of busln••· loebel' s, Mill
Creek Rd. Hrs.· Mon., Wed., Fri.·
5-8 PM . Sat.· 1-5 PM. Phone

66

Building Supplies.

Building M81erials
Block, brick, sewar pipe~, wlndOWL lintels. etc. Claude Winters. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814246· 5121 .
Concrete blocks ell sizea yard or
delivery ~ Maton und. Gallipolis
Block Co .. 123'h Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio C•ll 814-448-

6 Gun Cherry Wood Gun Cabinet. t110. Good cond. Call

61 4-246-9486 .

Girls 20" bike. Light blue with
basket. Excel. cond. t46 . Call

814-268-1 16e.

Eledric wheel chair, llka new
con d .. used very little. Adu tt
potty chair. Call 61 4 ~ 446 · 0646 .
GE cook nove, 896. Aefrig ..
$125. Both good shapa. lnquire33 Court St.

56

Pats for Sale

1977 LTD . Call 614-992-5619

or 614-992-3862. ·
Firewood for ule. Mi.1ted hard wood. Split and delivered. 136.
pltf pickup loltd. Call 614-992-

e&amp;47.

-:::---:---:--:-·1&lt;&gt;-

mot. Coli 814-288-6309.
arrivals for ChristmasRegist.,.ed AKC Chow puppi•.

New

614-682-7549.

.

AKC Siberian Husky pupples.
Blue eyed beautl•. t126. Will
hold tor Christmas. Call 614446· 8927 .

1-518-469-3734 ext C-2284
hourt 24.

·

30 gal. Hot water tank. g11
range. double sink end cabinet,
cut iron table.. 304-_773· 6686 .

3610 .

Roll-away bed. tabla and B
cl'laira. Solid oak round lamp
table. Call 1ftet' 3:30 pm 614-

Marlin 12 gauge over end under,
Mode( 90, t276.00. Winchester
22 Msgum pump Model 276,

949-2956.

Christmas puppies. AKC registered Miniture Schnauzers. Shih
Tuil. Cocker Spaniels, Maltese.
Sweater and cap with each
puppy . Shot1 worm..:t also

heo~h record. 304·676-2193 .

F~ r m

Suppli1:s
&amp; L;vu sluck

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS

Auto's For Sale

milw. Auto .. T-top, Black over
gold. Mint cGnd. Call 614-448B128,

Motorcycles '

.'

3-Wheeler ATV· Kiwasakl zoo ~
Good cond. Call 814-448•
7026.
t

Scr&lt;vtct:,

$460. Coli 614-367-?296.
1982 Ford Etcort. 4 apd., air.
$1699. John'• Auto Seh11,
below the Holld., Inn. Kanauge.
At. 7 .

1982 Oldo. 98. All power. Vory
clltln. 59.000 mil•. Di8MI.
13760. Call 614-448-0767 af·
ter 8 PM.
19n Chevette &amp; law1on g•
stove. Cali 61•·245-6620.

Now till Dec. 31 irll Zeator
tractors~ stock 10 p,..cent over
coll1 . No trade-ln. Morris Equlpmern, Rutland. Ohio. 814-742211156.
·

BUY WHOLESALE. White !arm

Tractors at whol . .la Invoice
plu• freight. Compare the price
and quality. Modefa from 18 to
180 hp. LeMing av811able. Offer
good throUgh Dec. 31 . Siders
Equipment Co., US 36, Hender-

oon. W. Vo. 304-878-7421 .

4215.

.

, • ,

304· 773-5616 .

1981 Dodge Omni. t900. Also
1981 Dodge 024. t900. Cell

614-992-3992.

1986 Daytona Turbo Z. red·
silver, leather Interior, nw 1ir...
loaded, t8,7!50.00 con1ider ptr·

Rotery or Clble tool drllling.1
Most wells completed semedrt~
Pump 111• and Hrvice. 304-,

·· I D:JN'T FEEL LII&lt;E
60/NG TO SCHCOL
TDDAY

.

. •

J..OOK AT THAT /I
GAMBLIN' OUT HERE
IN BROAO

•

&amp; 'Refrigeration !.. i

'76'Chryller Cordoba. AC, PS, 4
new tire1, runs good. little ruet.
304-882-2019 or 882-2328.

1980 Ch.vette runt good. new
paint Job, 4 speed, 111dng

1979

vw Robblt

•aoo.oo. call

304-773-9128 tf no answer call

OH, THEY'RE
JEST Pt..AYIN'
FER FUNSIES,

LUKEY, WON'T TAKE 1
PAW'S I.O.U.

DAYLIGHT

I

a;:
--:::::;;~~. '·

85

ahead to tomorro w's news

General Hauling ;

stories. (1 :00)

10:051]) World of Audubon:
Dillard Water Service: Pools }
Cis1ern1, Walla. Delivery Any: ;
time. Cell 614-446 · 7404-No.•
•· .•
Sunday calla.
J &amp; J Water S&amp;r&gt;Jice. Swimmi'ng 1·
poola. cisterns. wells. Ph. 814246-9286.
...

A &amp;. R Wetar Ser&gt;Jica. Home
cistera, well1, pools filled, Formerly Jam• Boys Waters .Call

448-3171 .

~~~~--~-=~--~~~
·
Watterson' 1 Water Hauling,.'

'

'

87

Upholstery

.

' '

.

PEANUTS
I
THINK OF
AN'&lt;T111N6 MORE NOVEL

R &amp; M Custom Couchet ind ;
Raupholstery, S1. Rt. 7 Crown .

T HAT'S

-

Mowrey ' s Uphol1t1ring •erving. ._·
trl cou~yarq22years. The b.._.,,- :
ifl fUrniture uphollterlng. c•IP ·,

30_4 · 875 -4154 for t

..s.

re·~··

.. ..

,.
· --~~ ---'--------- --- · ------..~-·-

'

MORE NOVEL ..

•m

City, Oh. 614-266· 1470 ~vo
614-446-3438. Open dol~ 9 t~
4:30. Sot. 9,30 .to 1,30. Old &amp;
new Uphostered.

Whaleel Narrated by Johnny
Carson, this special presents
the first underwatar look at a
baby sperm whale nursing
from Its mother; at the
breeding of the North· Atlantic
Right Whales and unique
footage of sperm whales.
10:30 (]) Amelfcen Snapahota
(f) Circle of Plenty
!Ill Moyers: Gad end Pollllce
Upheaval In Central America
causes a theological end
political dual. Q
®Newt
Hogen'• Heroee
11:00 (])Remington StMie
D (J) Ill Ill (JJ 0! IIIIIJ
1151 News
(f) Sign Off
all Money\lne Current
repOrta on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Lo•• Connectton
11:01 (JJ Ttlevlalon'l Vtelnam: The
Impact or Media
11:30 G CJ) I!]) Tonight Show
Ill SportaCenter (L)
Ill CIIHrt
til (JJ NlghUine Q
iiJl Magnum, P.l •.
all Sport• Tonight

am

\
rea1onabte rates, immadiace ··'
2,000 gallon delivery , citferl\s, • ~
pools, well, etc. call 304-67.,8; ..
2919 .
~. ··: ..

e1t1matea.

'

m

Boxing
Ill 0 (() Slap Maxwell
Story Slap 9nthuslastlcally
takes Judy to her ten.1ear
high school reunion. Q
t 0:00 (]) Straight Tetk
G (II 1151 The eronx Zoo E;1
Ill D (() Dyn"ty Alexis
uses a costumed Old English
Fair to expose Blake. Q
!Ill New•
all Evening News A wrap up
of today·s news and a look

Residential or commercial wir- '
lng. New urvlce or repairs. :
Licensed elactricl ... Estimate ;
free. RidenOur E1ectrlcal. 304-1

8?5-1786.

political duel. Q
a2l Gremmy Lifetime
Achil-1 Award•
Beverly Sills and Dionne
Warwick CO·hOStthiS
black·tle gala honoring Roy
Acuff, Benny Carter, Ray
Charles, Fats Domino, B.B.
King and Isaac Stern.
!Ill Great Performance•
Baryshnlkov Is joined by Liza
Minnelli and Nail Carter.
all Larry King Llvel In depth
interviews with top

iiJl

9:30 Ill Top Rank

j
------------------ •'
Electrical

causes a theological and

newsmakers and celebrities.

2192,

I--,---------:--c

WHA.TS THE WRST !HAT
CAI&gt;J HAPPEN:?

COMI:CN ... .WE
DON'T WANT 70
BE !.ATE.

Plumbing
Hasting

Paul Aupe, Jr. W~ter Service. ~
Pools. cistern•. well1. Call 614- ,

1971 Nova, 2 door, VB. rally
wheela, 1660.00. 304·678-

IF I OON'TG0106CHCOL,

&amp;

84

0 (() Hooperman An

elderly shoplifter claims he
can idantij): a masked
gunman. Q
IIl Moyers: God and Polhlce
Upheaval in Central America

MO.R TY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

304-876-6370.

1986 Mercury · Cougll', eae
cond , lo1de.d with sxtraa,
t8,800.00. 304-8715-5339 .

~

Fe1ty Tree Trimming, atun)ll!t
removal. C•ll 304-675-1331. "'· ,.

1987 Chevy Attro von . 304·

6656.

8:00 (]) 700 Club
11 (J) I!]) St. Elsewhere The
hospital 's first artificial heart
recipient refuses to budge .

304-&amp;?6-2398 or 614-446-•
24!54.
j :- ...~.

BB2-3886 or 6?&amp;-8300 .
1981 VW R1bbitt excellent
running condition, extra set
duclded •now tlr•. 82.000
mil•. f860. Firm. 304-372-

troubled that Santa will pass
over their village when they
find that he's upset over a
lener stating he is a myth. Q
®College Basketball

RON"S Televi1lon Se i•ipe.~
Hou• cell• on RCA, Clulur;,
OE. Specialing In Zenith. Cf!ll&lt;

895-3802

Perfect Strengera

· citizens of Junctionville are

::-::-:-:-:-:--:::-:------;:---'

Cor. Fourth 1nd Plna ...
GaHipalla, Ohio
...
Phone 614·4•8·3888 or 814446-4477
:~

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

WL\ l OOi\J'T HAV£
AIJY 'SMA~ N'tQ'JlY...

Geor- Crook Rd. Coli 614-:
446-0294.
:

1985 Ptymouth Rllillr'lce K.
Auto, PS. PB, AM · FM radio, AC,
fuel injection. ExceUant condi-

1987 Oldt Cutlass Supreme.
Top 1hepe. Assume loan. Fibergless 1opp8f' for El Camino. Call
evenings 304-773-6911 • or

EEK &amp; MEEK

SWEEPER and48wlng mechin i
rap1lr. Plr1L 1nd tuppli • . Pic!(
up 1nd delivery, Divis Vacuum;
Cleaner,· one half mile UPr

CARTER·s PLUMBING
AND HEATING

773-6988.

'

BASEMENT

1982 Pontiac Trans· AM . PS.
PB , T-top, AC, AM-FM ·Caas.
t3500. Call 814-388-909B.

.1.200.00. 304-171-2382 .

lnternttlonel 1060 Grinder
Mixer, au cond, 304 -273-

.

WATERPROOFING • 4T
Uncondh:ional llf«lm• guaraR-•
1ee. Local rtferenoee furritlh~J
Fr.., utimatea. C1ll qoll~
1· 61 4-237-04BB, dl'( or ll'!lght.,
R o g e r s a a • e m e .n "
Waterproofing.
"
~

614. 448 •0648 ·

2179.

ALLEY OOP

Home
:· :. ·
Improvements · " ~ :
"'

(JJ

After sending a spoof story
to the publisher. Larry wants ·
it back. C
I]) !Ill oracover: Wo~d of
Selene• Investigate what
humans can learn from
dolphins. C
'·IIJ) IIIIIJ J!roety 1111
SnowmanQ
all P!lmenewo Wrap ups of
the day's world news and in
depth feature reports. (1 :00)
® Hogen's Hero. .
filii) MOVIE: White
Chrlatmea (NA) (2 :00)
8:05 C!J MOVIE: The Fa alest Gun
lllve (NA) (1 :32)
8:30 (]) Laat Frontier
Ill CJ (JJ He.od of the Clue
Charlie and Arvid meet at a
Woody Allen film festival. Q
®J II) 02) 'TWII the Night
Belote Chriltmlll The

~

82

Coli 814-992-3661 .

Ill 0

...·.--......
81

@cheera
Ill IIl M'A"S"H
7:051]) Andy Grlffllh
7:30 8 (J) Hollywood Squares
•
(!) College BoeketbaH
Ill Newlywed Game
0(() Judge
IIJ) Wheel of Fortune E;l
all Crossfire (0:30)
Ill a2l 1151 Jeopardy! Q
® eamey Miller
fiiil WKAP In Cincinnati
7:35 CIJ Sanford end Son
1:00 (]) S•cond Honeymoon
' D (J) 1151 Highway to
Heaven I;!

tonko, so to 100 glllono, A-cj

1978 Buick Cen1ury Cultom. 4
dr.. V-B-306. Good cond. Clll

tiol trod&amp; 304-67&amp;-5306 .

6522.

RockweU ltlnd•d fron1 .XI.
hub b{_ak•, springs and wheels
from auto Cll' trector. Auto-ciir
power aW•lng bo.ll wtth .a.;,,
cylinder 1nd bracktu. 2 Mdl.e1

Starkl: Tree and Lawn S~
lawn c•e. lsndtceping. ttu!A(
removal . 304-57&amp;-2842 • dtl
676·2903.
' ... ,, .It

6 24 17
-::-:-:-E-:vo:-n-l_n;:.g'-·---I-:-44-::::·-::

o~

..

I

She; p 18B3 Toyota Supra.
loaded. Sport p8ckage, power
steering· bt'ak•· windows. automatic climate control. All
performance ite(nJ. Average mileage. 6 Weed. Mechanlcalty
perfec1 . Meticulously m•ln tslned. O~fgeo'Utl Call 614-

1981 Fo·rd Escort ,ltatlofl
wagon. Sunroof. newly rlbuilt
trans.• 1nd final drive. 61•·949-

614-286- ~522 .

doyt. Coli 814-379-2220 ..
304-87&amp;-4230 .

1985 Ford LTD II. Like new.
12,900 mi., auto., AC. PS, PB,
tilt, cruise. 815800. Call 81•·

1971 Toyota Corona. 1360.
1969 Opal, real nice, t350. Call

"'

50ME-C&gt;AY?

...

• 1500. Call oft or 6 PM, 61 4·
246-5028.

1979 Pinto. 1600. C1ll 614·

"''

Budget Tranamlulona: Used snit
rebuHt. all types. Guarantee 3(»

Wreck«&lt; 1980 model Chw:)
truck for partL 304-871· 2B84.t
eft:• 8 p.m. 304-875-10:io. •

445-81?5.

you .SAY

)@E'- PAY MAIL.

Auto Parts
Accessories

1983 Oodga Ch•ger. Auto.
trans., new tires, AM· FM 1tereo,
bucket .. Its. Priced to ..111

1978 R•lly Sport Camara. LT
360. T -top. air. apotcemag1. duel
exhaust. cruise. SHARP! No
trad•. 12796, Neg. Call 614-

DIP

/

•

type T-652 dirt and watllj.
remover. Call814-848-2228 . ~

Massey Ferguson, New Hollend.
Buah Hog Sal• &amp;. Service. Over
40 u•ed tractors to choo10 from
&amp; complete line of new &amp;. used
equipment. largest eelection in
S,E. Ohio.
Utility building spl: 27'.1l36 ' JdJ' ,
1 ·13' d ' 1Hding door, 1· 3'• Mr·
vice door- 84444. Iron Horse
Bldrs. C1ll 814-332-9746.

FRANK AND ERNEST

II

&amp;

1:00 (]) Crazy Like 1 Fox
. . (J) (l) • (() 0! • a2l
1151 N-1
()) SportoLook (T)
IIl Dr. Who
.
!Ill Squllre One TV Q
a2l ShOwBiz Today News of
the entertainment world is
anchored live from New
York. (0:30)
I]JI Foell of Lifo
IIIIIl One Day at a Time
1:051]) ·.!~lice
.
8:30. (J) 1151 NBC Nightly Nowo

!I!

1988 Suzuki Quedrager 26Q.
4 -whMI•. CJII814-742 -2801.

76

Rearrange
0 four
scrambled

___ __ _______ .._ ____

WOlD
e&amp;MI
by ClAY I , ,OitAN - - - - - - - -

ldht~

letter~

•

neW$

4879.

61 4-288-8451 .

3800 Fofd whh plows, dilc, 2
row Ford planter, 5 ft. bulh hog·
Nice. t6960 . Call 614·288·

Suddenly, Fred realized why his neighbor's
Christmas tree. looked so familiar.

71

1982 Citation. 2 dr .. 4 speed, air
cond. Good condition. 81.000.

U.S . 36 West, J1ckson. Ohio.

powet', f3360 . Call 614-286·
8522.

Caii61 4-949-Z969.

675-3427.

3382.

1980 Oat1un 310, 6 spaed, in

International 666 Dl . .i tractor,
$4350. '2010 J.D.. PS-IIve

2666.

Tr ~ n s 1111r1 ii i ion

good thopt. 614-742-2461.

loodor. Coli

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 and 2
room furnished apc a. private
baths. utllltlea paid, 304.882-

'
1979.JaepW-s~on•r. VI, nll.i- •

ATV or utility tflil•. 304·876-

tion . Call 614-992-1084 altar
s,3o.

19B7 long 50 HP Bulldo1er. 20
hours on tack. like new. lnternationll lndu1trial 1rllctor with

304-882-2566.

Butchering hog. 42~ lb. Uve
weight, 304-676-1824.

1980 Ch...,.tte. Runs good.

614-379-2424 .

Saech Street, Middlepon. Ohio.
2 bedroom furnished apt, ut ili·
ties paid. ref•en ceaand deposit.

l veer oldArebienHorMiOf •te.
Al1o Simmental Bull. Call 814986-3649 after 6 :00pm.

81 4-379-2&amp;66.

R1gistered Beagles, 1 ye• old
male and pups, Dwight Baker.

~.t.DViOGO

CHIII~l'MA~~Pit-lG ~

Shoe IIddie, t1100 ~11ue- for ' - - - - - - - - - --;18B6. Call 614·288-8622.
r
&gt;:,

ee?-3868.

2 Man tobacco stripper S.
pnevmetlc bel• combo . Also
power tobacco stick puller. Call

6024.

,

_, . - .

74

1 AKC BeSien puppy left. 6wk1.
old. Francis Benedum. 614·

$100 .00. 304-6?5-5944 .

2 bedroom turni1ed apt, ref and
depo11t. New . Haven. W. Va .•
304-882-~267 or 304-773·

ARLO AND JANIS

1982 Dodge 2!50 AMI. Cudftm
eonwreion. Trail• reactv. Call

8 Yr. old fteg'•d Sorr-'1 Quarter
Mora 15-3 hondo. ueo. N-

448-4913 tl1or 4 PM.

THING . Original army camouflage, H. 0 . "Sam" Som•
rville'a. Old At . 21
Eut-RII.IIIinswood. Fri. Set. Sun,
noon- 8:00pm. 304-273-666!5.
Insulated ctmouftagl coverallt
$26 .00 . Black-White snow
camouflage.
refueedl Major Credit C1rds and
More. Oat your c•d tod"'l Call

·:

hitch, AM·FM, CB redia, eif
cond. cruise, 82,!500.00. 304,

Golden Retriaver puppias. Be
ready for Christmas. Cali 614·

oat up, 304-882-201'6.

NEW CREDIT CARD-No ono

w:o~

Ouroc Bores ior better rate of
glin. Aog• Bentii'V· !513-1842398, Fabin1. Ohio.

388-8240.

Mixed firewood. t80.00 dump I-:-;:--;-::-:---:----:truck load, delivered, 304c678- 66 gal fish aquarium comphrte

SURPLUS AR·M'f. OENIM .
RENTAL. CARHART CLO ·

8t 4

Livestock

Pure bred Slemese kittena .
Ba•ded Colli•. Cell evenings
61 4·949-2290.

304-895-3938 .

Firewood deli'olered, 1tack.t.
$36 .00. M11on Coun1las. Galli·
pol it other areaawithln reason at
our dilcretion, 304·896· 3446 .

63

1971 C•m•o 360, 4 1pd.•
,intake. headera. chrome. Excel.
cond. B11t offer. Cell 614-869·

All Chrittmas Trees 812 .. Come ; Garman short hair pointier ex·
••tv
before cold weather. tag ! cellent bird dog. 304-87&amp;+
your treat Nawell'sChrlatmas 2159.
.

2903.

Vans

event. &amp; week.,dl.

Boxer puppies. Reacty for Christ-

Call 614-446-3844 ol1e&lt; ?PM.

8?58 .

Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
·on Hanging Rock Rd. 304-7736371 or 882-2888.

73

814-446-4383 doyt, 448 ,01.3~

Oraganwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himeil'(an. Persian and
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
j)uppi•. New khtens; Persians.

Eiectronic IJiercise bike, coat 3 UKC Registered male Walk•
t140, sell t76. 1984 Honda- . Coon Hound pups. Sire it Grand
cycle. V 86 Sabra. 4600 miiM, Nite Champion . Mother ia Nhe
M-C. S2000. 614-387-0649.
Champion. $100 . each. 16·
·
weeks old. Call614·992· 3992.
31 Remington Pump Sho1 Gun.
12 guage. 26 inch b~r'rel, $226 . AKC Aegiltered Pomeranian
Also 31 Remington 12 guige puppi•. 1 m1le. 1 female. 8
Shot Gun. 32 inch b•nJI. $300. weeks old . 8160. Ca11814-887-

. Call 614-982-3992.

2985.

1983 ChMty Ckltlon. AM radio.
69,000 mil•. f1700. Can be
seen a1 the Gallipolis Oalty
Tribune or ior more information
call 814· 441-23•2.

AKC Ragl•tered Brittany Spaniet
puppi•, Liver &amp; whita, 8 wkl.
old. Will holdforChriatmea. Call

Firewood for ule. AU hardwood.
1plit and delivered. $36. Also

Now buying thell corn or ••
corn. Call forlatestquotat. River
City Farm Suppty, 61•·448 ·

·~· ::·

6!4-992,-3992.

1986 300 ZX Turbo. 23,000
Groom and Supply Shop· Pet
Gi"oomi.n g . All breads ... AII
ltylel. lam1 Pe1 Food Deller.
Julie Webb Ph. 814·446·0231 .

e14-246·9120 .

Coli 814-992-6320.

Wanted to Buy

EVEHINO

America (T)
Ill CJ (JJ ABC News !;J
IIl Nightly Bullneaa Report
iiJl Ill a2l cas Newa .
I!D Degraali Junior High
Wheels' birth father
unexpectedly appears.
Themes: adoption , family.
(NR) Q
alllnaldo Politico '88
. ® WKRP In Cincinnati
Gl IIl Too CloM lor Comfort
8:351]) Carol Burnell
7:00 (]) Remington Steale
G (J) PM Magazine
Ill SportaCanler (L)
Ill Entertainment Tonight
0 (JJ PIIOpie'o Court
IIl I!D MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
iiJl New•
all Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial
With Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
a2l 1151 Wheel of Fortune

redi~

1986 Yamaha 80, 3 wheehW:,
good cond, 1300 .00 . 304-Be~-

Call 814-388-8801 .

Pome&lt;ov. Ohio. 61 4-992-84e 1.

62

WED. 1 DEC. 9

'~~:~~' S©lt~lA-L&amp;£!fS•

______...;_....;;

of the
wards be·

low to form four simple worC:ts .

S-UMBIN
1

I I I I 1

"I. 1 I' I I Ii
'NUJOT
1

1-

-~!

IXEEL

I

I I

l

~

••

1 1

Old farmer to ano1her: "Ever
linea my neighbor retired from
farming, he' s just been sitting
around -'lout."

f---riT-'Rr.l'.;...sriP_Irl_cr.:l,-11 e

iii Scholutlc Sports

302
t1200
mnd•d.
. Alao good
1981 ~!"!'
linif:.
Truck. I apeed, 1ir, sun: "~·
euatom fiber gl•s topper,.rldifll
tirN. 64,000 mil•. t2300:" ~11

2189.

King wood &amp; coal 1tove with
blower. like new. Call eve.

APARTMENTS. mobile hom•.
houaes. Pt. PIBMant and Gallipo-

IT'!&gt; A !71\\AL.L WORLD,
I!&gt;N'T IT;

1976 Ford pickup. Short'booJj.

Ready mbt concrete tnd all
concratesuppli.,.:. Call Ul Valley
Brook Ceman1 1nd Suppli8S,
304-773-6234.

-::--=--=---:~ Ia, f adtemp

2 bedroom apt. and 1 bedroo m
house for rant in PomiJI'"oy.

FROM A RUBSER RA FT IN
TH&amp; &lt;POUTH An ANTI C. EH;

. ·'

2793 .

614-44e-2316 .

614-992-5908.

8UT THEN AI&gt; A IN,

h.. ltd. 01800 . • , 4-81&amp;-4366.

---------,,..--- ~~==========::;:=====~~,~~~·~~~"~'-~""~~

3 room apt. Partty iurnished .

6Ue!&gt;!&gt; THAT'S&gt;, A L.ONG WAY

197B Plymouth •x4. Autq. .. 1r.
AM-FM. good condlttoi\. 'No
mech•nical problems. o\ fr

•1

Misc. Merchandise

3" room apt. for rent Partly
furnished. 614-992·6808 .

WHIL! ~ll'ACHit-IC:.
INDJ&lt;Pt=NDIO&gt;lC lA'!&gt;
H.ORID !&gt;HORt=~ ...

auto.• J.4 ton, 8161!1 . Both looka,&amp;
runs gr..t , Call 1\48-1912 or

e14-387-72eo.

Call .14-246-6246,
Fiach.-.

CAPTAIN EASY

auto :~.
Von, 3~0

197• Ford pickup,

An1ique dr•nr whh m1rble
Insert. Mirrow, 3 large drawert
with woodgrain flnlth. Call

992-68&amp;8 .

Apartments in Henderson. W.
va. «!ell 304-676-1972 after
3 bedr.oom, furnlthed or unfur· • s:oo pm.
nished. Good, clean condition. 1·
chfld. no petl. New Haven. W. 3 bedroom unturniahed apt.
VIJ. 304-882·2465.
304-&amp;76-3108 Of 6715-8636 .

•

TaL Yoo!

Pickup btd -19?8 GMC- oil
:.

814-992-2528 .

lis. 614-44e -8221 .

14x7.0 Win~sor with 14x3~
addition. 3 bedrooms. apprOXImately 3 acres, black top road .
Several out-buildings and pond,
Gallipolis Forry. 304· 675 -6930 .

'lOu ~ TJ:UlH

I .,. J ..-- I

11111. Coli 814-31?· 0102.

ANTIQUES, Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques. 1124 E11t Main
St. Pomeroy. Hours: Mon.Tues.·Wed. 10 1.m. to 8 p.m.
Sun.- 1 p.m.- 8 p.m. By chance
or appointment. Ruu Moore

6 pc. drum tel, mike offer. 3 pc.
bedroom suite t130.00. 304676-3763.

992-3111 .

'(0\) KNOW

1987 Ford Ranger •x4. Fu"
injiCIIon. Low mhag• C., I

Antiques

1 B61 Armsport Navy Reb black
power 44 revolver. Nwer fired .
Also 12 guege pump Eastfield.

V"allay Furniture
New and used furniture and
applicances . Call 614-4467672. Houra 9 -6.

Trucks for Sale ,

W/&gt;6 LYifJI:&gt;,

ro~Jgh. good 1ngine. t428. Ce11
8U-387-7710.
,. ;

c6&lt;'3&gt;--.:-::;:o=:::::----

LAVNE·s FURNITURE

0322.

.,,IF I

814-24&amp;-&amp;294.

Mixed h•d wood alebs. 112 per
bundle. Containing appro~~: . 1 '112
ton. FOB. Ohio P1ll« Co.

90 Days ume at c•h whh
approved credit. 3 Mllea out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru Sat . Ph . 614-446-

I'S,6LAc¥.; ... ~T!
BEL16'/£; ME, I'M '""'·'-::/

Television
Viewing

tion. 02100. 19&amp;9 Ch .. y. body

1228.

Wuhers. · dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skagg1 Appliances.
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Crea1 Motel. 814-446-7398,

Sofll and chaira priced from
S395 to 1996 . Tabl• tSO and
up to 1126. Hld•a-beds t390
to $696. Recliners t225 to
8375. Lampl 828 to 1126.
Dinettes $109 and up to 8496 .
Wood table w -6 chair• f285 to
t795. Desk $100 up to 8376.
Hutches 1400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mettrnaes
$296 and up to 8396 . Baby beds
t110. Mattresses or bo~~: springs
full or twin see. firm 878, and
$88 . Queen seta 82215. King
$360. 4 drawer chest 869. Gun
cabinets 6 gun. Gaa or electric
range $376. Baby mattre~ses
$36 &amp; $45 . Bed "•m• •2q,
$30 &amp; King frame 160. Good
sal eetion of bedroom suites,
metal cllbinets, headbo!irdl 130
and up to 866.

72

Beige 8 piece pit group. tmoked
glua coffee and end Wbl• and
lampe. Earty Am•lcan couch
and chair. King wltlfbed double
their ht1dboard. 30• · 87!5 -

64

- -

1919 Chevy .. uceUtnt condl·

614-992-6215.

614-742-2975 .

03,000. 304-676-1970.

...

IT

1460.

Satellite repaired- ell milk•. Call

51

1619.
41

Homes for Sale

BORN

3

The Daily

Ohio

1987

Auto'• For Saftt:.

304-671-24&amp;?.

Pick8ns Uud FUrniture ·
Dinettes, aof,., chairs. end
tebl•. larhps, beds. drn•rs.
daak, glaasware. 304-875·

614-379-2860.

2 building lOts Gallipolis Farry,
trailer on one. Phone 304-675· · Downtown- Modern 1 BF.L,
3964.
complete kitchen, carpet, air,
electric heat. Cell 814-4464383-d.,t. 446-0139-even. &amp;
weekends.

Bring your Doe to Joe. We will
skin, cut, qu ick freeze and wmp
620.00. Harry Joe Smi1h. At. 1.
letart, W. Va. 304-B82-3258,

Real Esl ale

_71

Household Goods

1e?O.

446-4?82.

Bob Cline Taxidermy, Member

31 '

?479.

appointment.

Business
Opportunity

w. va. Taxidermy Assoc. At.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home P•k.
Route 33, North of Pom•oy.
Rent•l trail••· Call 814-992·

992-7479 .

Call 614 - 448 - 2362 !or

23

PM .

614-367-0811 .

Road, will accept working per·
aon or famlty with 2 children.

749 Third Ave. Preaently The
Gift Shop. 1800 sq. ft . Com merclel or warehouM. Parking on
side. Adjacent to Third• Pine St.

Financi al
21

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Call us for vour mobile home
insurance: Miller Insurance.
304 -882 -2146 . Also: auto,
home, life. health.

Spaca for Rent

OffiCe Space for rent. Excel.
downtown · Gallipolis location.
Inquiries ca11814-446-4222.

304-675-3950 or 1-800-6423619 .

3619 .

51

I .

'72 Chwy Impala. nice car, '

AVON all areas, Shirlav Spearr.

'

Furnished Rooms

Government Jobs. 116,040
$59,230 yr. Now hlrlng. Your
area. 805-687·6000 Ext. A9805 for cunent repo federal
list

means elttra monay1or membert
of the Army National Guard. Call
304·675-3950 or 1-800-642·

Wednesday, Damber 9, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

•

_

_

•

•

L-...J--'--'--..__..__.

Complete lhe chuckle quoled

by filling in the mluing words
you devE!!Iop from 'tep No. 3 below .

.,_ PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
~
THESE SQUARES
UNSCR.t~MBlE

TO

ABOVE lETTfRS

GET ANSWER

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS

Fabt;#c - Dimly -

Imply - Coerce -

PRIME RIB

Celetw.tlng their anniversary at an elegant res1aurant, the
hutband uked, "Would~ do It all again?" The wife cooed,
"VII, but next time I'd have lhe PRIME RIB."

,---------------,

BRIDGE

NORTH
• 6~4
• A K 10
• Q8 3

James Jacoby

+ 9643

Trump force

EAST

WEST

+to s 2

backfires

+AQJ9
.7 3

By James Jacoby

+o\KQ 7

• 6'4 2
• 762
10 s; 2

t!O 9 4

+

SOUTH

It was tggressive bridge for South

+K 7 3

to bid over two hearts. After the takeout double by West, North did not figure to bave as much as nine high·card
points. But South prided himself on his
dummy play, so he invited a ga!Jle by
sbowing his diamonds. Nortb had a
nat hand, but the diamond queen was
a good card, and his three-card heart
support was excellent. He bid the
game.
West led clubs and without much
tbought continued the suit. That put
declarer in control, provided that the
heart suit split 3-2 . He trumped the
second club and led a heart to dummy.
He trumped another club and returned
to dummy with a high heart. Then he
trumped the last club with his remaining heart. A diamond to dummy's
queen enabled him to pick up the last
outstanding trump with the high heart
left in dummy, and three more dia·
mood tricks gave him 10 tricks and his
contract.
·
It's not easy to see, but the club con·
tinuation by West at the second trick

.QJ 98~

+A KJ5
+J
Vulnerable: East -West
Dealer: South
Weot

Nortb

East

Obi.

2•
4•

Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

I.
South

3t

Pass

+K

gave declarer his contract. U West
simply makes a neutral play of a
trump at trick two, declarer can no
longer "reverse ' the dummy by ruffing three clubs , since he will lack the
needed entries to dummy :
Lesson: When forcing the declarer
to ruff may be helpful to him, look for
a neutral play that lets declarer do his
own work without aid lrom the
defense.

~HUW~tl"'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
l Alias

5

"Columbo"
Mike
Tyson,

e.g.
10 Lake
or

city

11 Of singing
12 Breaker
13 Blank
space
14 Put in
a diary

16 Convened
17 Stitch
19 Abhor
21 Bring out
23 Late
teen idol
27 He hit
755 home

DOWN
I Handful

2 Constellation

3 Go-getter
• 4 Perceptive
5 Diagram

6Ad7 Lily

8

Equine's

Yesterday's Answer
9Town map 22 Arrive
34 Attire
11 Fastening 24 In good 35 Asseverate
device
taste
36 Latvian
15 Svelte
25 Athena's
city
17 Hot title
38 Damsel
18 Biblical
26 Wet
40 Biblical
king
blanket
lion
20 Do a
28 Fish type 42 Harem
chamber
newsroom 30 Belief
32
Passe
43
Apiece
.
job
pride

runs

28Type
of thread
29 Film about
giant ants
30 Nervous
laugh
31 Place
of bliss
33 Underwent
34 Needle·
fish
37 Point
of view

-

39 Fly
410n
44 Deplore
45 Faction
46 Plait
47 Healing

sign &lt;:RYF~)QUcmEs~He;;:;
DAILY
Here'showtoworklt:

12i9

AXYDLBAAXR

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

12·9
RZKUF

KWU

DWRK

E G

Y G P U

KG

P G K

-

bf

y G

DVZZVRX

F C Z U;

NGZYUP

Y G

P G K

ZVQU

EGCFIUZH

K G

y G

GKWUFI.
GIZUF

Yeaterday's Cryptoquote: GENIUS MIGHT BE
· DESCRIBED AS A SUPREME CAPACITY FOR GETI'ING
ITS POSSESSORS INTO TROUBLE OF ALL KIND1

SAMUEL BUTLER

.

- -- -~--------------------------:-----:---~

�Ohio Lottery ·

Christmas
countdown

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

f

Daily Number
.229
Pick 4
3463

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday

16-26-29-36-39-41

OFFER GOOD

8 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•

ALL
WEEK

ECTIVE THRU SAT., DEC. 12 1987

Vot. 38, No. 149

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
A request has been submitted by Melg~ County
Engineer Philip Roberts to George Dougan,
deputy director of the Ohio Department of
Transportation District 10 office, Marietta. for
Federal Rural Aid Secondary funding t0 resur'
face 2.3 miles of County Road 5.
Roberts reported his plans to resurface the road
in Wednesday's meeting of the Meigs County
Commissioners.
Twenty-two miles of roadway In various parts
of Meigs County qualify for the Federal Highway
Administration funding, Roberts said, including
County Road 5:" Those roads which meet the
funding critera are determined by federal
engineers, he added.
,
The proposed resurfacing project would start at
the intersection of Route 124 and County Road 5

Coupons

Pork Steak ••••••••••
LB.

QUARTER·

Pork Loin ••••••••••••• $1 ~9
FLAVORITE ASST. .
.
$ 29
Lunch Meat ·~··~B.:~G 1
BALLARD 1-LB. ROLL or 10 OZ. LINK $
49
Sausage ••••••••••••••• 1
LB.

'

and go wes t to the Middleport corporation. Signs ,
stripes and gnardran would be included. If
approved, Roberts expects the· proJect to be
completed by next fall.
Beginning Dec. 2, materials from the county 's
gravel pit, including top soil and gravel, will be
available only to townships and villages . Roberts
said individuals will be prohibited from taking
materials from the county pit, except when excess
is on hand and notice is given that the excess
materials are available·oil a first come-first serve
bllsis.
Roberts also reported that the State' s represen·
tative to determine mileage will be at the county,
garage on Dec. 22.
·
·
Phil Lavelle, of the Athens office of the Federal
Economic Development Adminis tration , and ·
EDA employee Robin Haney , of Chicago, Ill., met
with the commissioners to conduct an appraisal of

.

.

$219

Cubed ·Steak •••••L:~. .

.

TURKEY

33&lt;
9
Sliced Bacon •••••·:~~ $1 °
Turkeys ••••••••••••••••• 79&lt;
Drumst.icks ••••••••L:~

&lt;
&gt;
I:"'

Ul =&gt; .
•
-=
0

••

~ ·

.COLUMBIA

LB.

0

t"'

..ft.

SWIFT BUTTERBALL

16-2 2 LB. AVE.

Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Develop·
men! District.
"I've only good things to say, " commented
Commissioner Richard Jones. "Buckeye Hills
has been very beneficial to its entire district, and
especiallly to Meigs County ."
Jones said it was his feeling that Buckeye Hills
has always done the best possible with available
funding. "There's only so much anyone can do,"
he added . •'The problem is to get legislators, both
state and federal, to recognize the needs of rural
areas.''
Lavelle pointed out that Buckeye H!lls is one of
the oldest EDA funded economic development
districts ln the country .'
The commissioners have· received notice from
the Ohio Department of Liquor Control of a new
application for a C-1 license for beer carry-out
from Lodwick's Market, Tuppers Plains . The
application must be submitted to the State no later

than Dec. 31. The comm issioners will receive an'y
comments on the license request un UI 12 noon on
·
Dec. 23.
At the request of the EMS Board of Trustees and
Robert Byer, Meigs County Emergency Medical
Services director, the commissioners approved a
$50,085 bid from the Horton Company, Columbus,
for a new Syracuse EMS unit.
The commissioners also approved interdepar_t·
mental transfers for the offices of Childrens'
Services, TB, the Board of Elections, Juvenile
..
Court, Soli and Water and EMS.
Finally, the time and day of next week's :
com}lllssioners' meeting has been changed to 10 ·
a.m. on Friday. Th.e meeting is being changed to
allow for end-of-the year funding transfers In the
county's various agencies, which might. be
necessary after Wednesday, the last day for
clearing bills.

Jury finds Wolfe guilty on
chai-ge, innocent on another

••

BUCKET .

2 Sections, 16 Pog• · 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. Now.- o r

Commission seeks federal funds for roads

20
SHOULDER

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 1 0, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

Limit
!,

at y

Variable cloudlneu tonlllU·
Low In mid 30s. Cloudy Frl'day, chance of showers.

~
("')

Ill

0

"'

•

~
"CC

UNUSU,U. FIND - Tuesday, willie tramping
around with DB-guns In the Forest Run area near
their homes, Danny Folmer, at left, and his
younger cousin, Todd DIU, found a bottle to shoot.
Aslt turned out, this was no ordinary bottle.Jnslde
was a note - from Cindy Savage of Nelsonville.
On the note was ,, wrlllen, hello, along with ·

0
2

.

Sava1e's name and address. Tbe boys are
glleslllng that Sava1e pul lbe note In the bottle
"Just for fun," launched U, aoil It ended up In
backwater at Forest Bun. The boys have written
to Sava1e- They did shoot tbe bottle to pieces by
the way, but after dlseoverlng the note, they glued
It bac:k together for Ibis Dally Sentinel photo.

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
The Meigs County Court trial of
Gary Wolfe and his mother
Pauline Wolfe, both of Racine.
ended Wednesday afternoon
when the jury returned to the
courtroom to find Gary ~wolfe
guilty of disorderly conduct, but
innocent of resisting arrest and
assault. Pauline Wolfe .was found
guilty of disorderly conduct and
resisting arrest, but Innocent of
assault.
The jury or eight deliberated a
little more than two hours before
re(Ufning the verdicts.
Charges against the Wolfes of
. resisting arrest and assault,
stemmed from occurances at the
Pauline Wolfe home during a
Sept: 9 marijuana eradication
effort by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department and the
Ohio Bureau of Criminallnvestl·
galion . However, no marijuanarelated charges were ever flied
against the defendants. •

Attorneys presented closing out-of-control, and that at some
arguments shortly before noon point, she struck Deputy Kenny
Wednesday, recapping for the Klein. After the alleged assault,
jury evidence that was presented Klein allowed Mrs . Wolfe and
during the testimony portion of Gary to return to her house for a ,
short period of time; Then when
the trial.
Meigs Assistant Prosecuting Officers Klein and Snyder went:
Attorney Carson Crow reminded to the house to take Mrs. Wolfe
jurors that testimony was given Into custody , Crow said a "tug-of·
in :Nhlch both defendants were war," with Mrs. Wolfe in the
described as being In fits of middle, ensued between Gary
temper wh ~n the incidents that Wolfe and the officers. At some
led to the cnarges took place. He point during this "tug-of-war,"
reminded jurors that witnesses Wolfe allegedly struck Snyder.
testified that Gary Wolfe had HandcUffs had to be called for by
arrived on the scene in an Agent Steve Kane who witnessed
agitated state and that he had a the alleged assault, Crow said . ·
gun In his possession. Other law
Defense Attorney Douglas ·Lit·
enforcement officers besides tie In refuting Crow's stateBCI Agent Steve Kane and ments, cited alleged lrregulatlles
Deputy Don Snyder, who landed in the way the marijuana eradl·
by helicopter in Pauline Wolfe's cation effort was carryed out.
yard along with the copter pilot ,
Little said that after the
were on the scene to witness the chartered helicopter carrying
Wolfes' agitated states, Crow the pilot, Agent Kane and Deputy
said.
'Snyder, landed near Mrs. Wolfe's
Crow said that Mrs . Wolfe was home, that Kane ordered her
described . during testimony as
Continu~d on page 6

Supt. Morris releases details .of latest contract offer
.

~

...

IDAHO
. .

Potatoes •••••••••••••• $139 ••
10 LB. BAG

'2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $149
GALLON

..,.

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0

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Details of the latest contract
offer to the striking Meigs Local
School District teachers, turned
down Monday by the teachers'
negotiating team, were revealed
today in a statement issued by
District Supt. Dan E. Morris :
The statement reads :
''On Monday, Dec. 7, the Meigs
Local Board of Education' s negotiating team met In mediation
with the Meigs Local Teachers
Association negotiating team ai
Ohio University Inn in Athens.
The mediation session lasted six

and one-half hours . The Federal guarantee to retain all teaching
in charge was David positions for that same period of
Thorley., senior mediator for the time; the Board would assume
State of Ohio from the Federal the expected 75 percent increase
Mediation and Conciliation 'in Blue Cross-Blue Shield insuservice.
rance premiums for the 1987-88
"The Board of Education of· and 1988-89 contract years; the
fered the following solution (s) to Board would continue to expend
the teacher strike:
63 'percent of its general opera!·
"A three year contract; no ing funds for salary and fringes
salary increase for the 1987-88 for teachers and would guaran·
and the 1988-89 contract years ; tee the same salary schedule a·s
no use of the reduction tn force present or the 63 percent, whl·
layoff policy for the 1987-88 and chever is greater .
1988-89 school years with a
"The offer by the Board cited
M~diator

COUNTRY CROCK

29
Shedd's Spread.~~~ S1

"'

FROZEN BANQUET
•

CARNATION

Evap. Milk ••••••••• 21$ 1
120Z.

1OX, LT.

o: DARK BROWN -

•

lb. box

$

Domtno Sugar ••• 21

1

•Any manufacturer's cou-.
pon greater than 51 e will be
redeemed at face !ialue
only.

Chl•cken ••••••••••••••••
BIG 60 OZ. SIZE

•

MADE FRESH DAILY

·

.

Glazed Donuts~~z::. ~ 149

•

• TIDE DETERGENT
147

s

• :

I

•
•
•
•

• 18.S OZ.
BOX

69&lt;;·

Limit 3 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell 's 5upormarket
Offer G.ood Thru Sat., D11&lt;. 12, 1987

. .............

•

'

BETTY CROCKER

CAKE MIXES

oz.$ 99

Limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell'• Supormorkot
Offer Good Thru $at., Doc. 12, 1987

.

.

~The total value of the douole manufacturer's coupon
•a,nnot eKceed the purchase
prtce. of the item. Money
will hOt be refunded, F

NORTHERN

BATHROOM TISSUE
• 4 ROLL
PKG.

79&lt;

Limit I Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru 5at., DIK. 12, 1987

BOUNTY TOWELS

J~MBO
ROLL

3/$2

•This offer d'o es not apply to
Powell's Super Valu Cou pons. free coupons. or any
competitor's coupons.

·

Limit 3 Per Cu1tomer
GOod Only At Powell 's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Sat., De&lt;. 12, 1987

•This ·offer excludes cigarettes, or any . other items
. prohibited by law .

..,.

'

•Offer is only good for pro·
duct on; hand . No Rain·
checks. 1
•Thera is a limit of .29 .coupon•yi,u may redeem . .

position that It will soon facet~
loss of the I 987-88 school year and :
the loss of state revenues. Thlllli:·
the reason the Board has au tho' ··
rlzed the opening of lts·scbOOisas
soon as possible. If the Mells
Local Teachers will not return to
the classrooms, then the only-.,
alternative is to staff the school~-·
with substitutes.
·.
•'When the schools are opened,~:
. the State Department of Educa{· .
tlon will make an inspection todetermine that State Standard&amp;
are being met. When sufflcien .
substitutes are obtained In the.
numbers and certification areas.
required to meet an lnspectlon,:the Board wlU announce the.
reopening of its school.
~
"The Board of Education sollc"'
its and needs the support of the'
school community in its efforts to
keep the schools opera tlng as the
Meigs Local School District." '

'

Delegates from Meigs County
Farm Bureau joined the nearly
300 official delegates to the Ohio
Farm Bureau Federation's 69th
annual meeting held Dec. 1·3 In
Columbus.
,
!

•

:

.

Me,igs Farm Bureau delegates take
•
state
sesston
part in 69th annual

.

.............
...
.. . . · PON..·.•.•.·.• •
·····coo

•

'

•Onlv one manufadturer's
coupon per item.

FRESH BULK CHRISTMAS CANDY ....,NOW
AVAILABLE IN .OUR
PRODUCE DEPARTMENT
....,... ,.......
.

• • • 'COUPON
•
• •••
'• '• '·'··
•• •••
•

•The total value of the dou ble coupon may not exceed
$1.00

above is an amended proposal of Increase In state monies for
a prior offer given to the teachers 1989·90 (FY90) that It would still
for consideration. The guarantee not have the money necessary 'to
of the positions and the guara·n· · meet their demands.
tee of the salary were added to
"Th~ MLTA negotiating team
ellmnlnate the objections by the (Rita Slavin, David Bowen...Don
teachers when the proposal was Dixon, Carol Ohlinger, Mike
voted on.
Wilfong · MLTA President, and
"The Board of Education has · Ben Gerber . OEA Unirserve
also expressed Its intent to representative) are quite aware
submit a tax levy to the public in of the Meigs Local School Disthe district In an attempt to
trict's flnanc!lal crisis but are
generate additional revenues .
continuing to insist on creating
"The Federal Mediator re· an even greater crisis by forcing
ported to lhe Board of Educa· borrowing.
lion 's negotiating team that the
"The Meigs Local Board and
MLTA group was not at all Administration have and are
Interested in the Board's prop· making every effort possible to
osal and was continutlng to Insis t bring an end to the school strike
on their demanqs of guarante~ in a manner that all parties, l.e.,
dollars In the third year of the the Union, the Board, the stu·
contract.
dents, parents and community
"The Mediator also informed can accept an~- can continue to
the Board's team that the MLTA function with.
•
l
group stated that if the Board
"Our school system IS In a
gave 100 percent of the projected

THESE pound puppies will no&amp; aeed a 1188 dog
· license bul your animals will. Dol llceuea In
Melp County have 10ne on aale at the Mells
County Auditor's Office and at the Thrift Shop of
the Melp Human Society In Middleport, Wednesday's through Saturdays. Uce0118s for 1988 are S4
per anbnals and kennel licenses are $20. Prices

have been doubled dnrlug lhe put year. Proceeds
from the sale go to the dog and kennel lund which
provides money&amp; for the operation of the shelter at
the Beck Sprlnp Falrll'onnds. Donna Peleraon,
coordinator for lhe Meigs Hnmane Society, and
her son, Jarred Clay, are pictured with the pound
puppies.

•,

State ·and national policies for
the coming year were determined and the policies will guide
the federation, which Is the
largest farm organization In Ohio
with 113,000 family members ,
during 1988.
During the annual meeting,
which carried the theme ,
"Framework for the Future",
delegates from the Meigs County
Farm Bureau heard various
speakers address all'iculture' s
role In both the United States a nil
world economy .
~

'...

\

\

'

DE:LE:QA,TJ!:S IN COLUMBUS - Rex Shenefield, left, Reule 1
LanpviUe, and George Holler, Racine, are pictured Ia Colomb~·
where they represented the Melp County Farm Bureau at the 8llb
annual meeting of the Ohio Farm Bureau Federation.

---.·---M- --·. --.--.. . . . . - -

.., f -- · -..- - ..

..

•
•

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