<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12700" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/12700?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T20:54:07+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43672">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/9a757e459c07986fa519c0e400913594.pdf</src>
      <authentication>cbb32d4f732180fbc47d846cadcd34c0</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39823">
                  <text>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

..,.

&gt;
I:"'

~

-4

,....
0

&gt;

-4

= "',.
&lt;
t"'

0
0

VALLEY BELL

•,

~

0

-z

"CC.

"'

("')'

C'l

~

·0

'2

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 -- · -..- - ..

..

•
•

�Thursday, December 10, 1987

.C omment

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 10, 1987

.

The Daily Sentinel

J

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS·MASON AREA

~~

~~

,...,__.._.,..,r-r=d..=o

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
AsSCX'Jatlcn and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LF:M'ERS OF OPINION are: welcome They should be l~s than 300 words
long. Alll£&gt;tters are subject to editing and mu s t be signed with nanie, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wi11 be published. Letters should be in

goOO taste, addressing Issues, not

~rsonaHtles

Anti-consumer
law
___
By:::_:_Ja_c_k_A_nd_e_rs_o_n_a_nd_
Jo_se....:;;.p_h_S-=-op~ea_r
.

WASHINGTON - If an ob- sumer groups sitting In the
server knew all the players the Commerce, Consumer Protecscene that unfolded recently in a tion and Competitiveness SubHouse subcommittee hearing committee hearing, the scenario
was just o'le more bit of evidence
was unsettling.
that
leave~ them feeling like lhe
Bill Richardson, D-N.M.,
odd
man
out In the debate over a
needed an answer to a tough
bill
that
could
make It tougher for
question about the bill he sponvictims
to
sue
the makers of
sored to standi!rdlze the way
state courts decide product liabil- dangerously defective products.
Michigan Democrat John Din·
Ity lawsuits.
In those dreaded moments, a gell, chairman of the Energy and
lawmaker often turns to those Commerce Committee, where
who authored the bill for an the bill got Its start, has held the
explanation. Richardson turned · door to negotiations wide for big
to Victor Schwartz, the attorney business, while slamming It shut
for an alliance of industry groups In the faces of committee
that would be sitting pretty It members who want to temper it.
Richardson's bill is passed. A That Is uncharacteristic for
congressional aide shuffled Dlngell, who has a reputation for
Schwartz's answer back to cutting big business down to size.
Every consumer group our
Richardson.
To the re-presentatives of con- associate Stewart Harris con·

'

0

··But is it cheaper?

0

,

By DICK WEST

WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Shortly before the latest outbreak of
summitry at the White House, something called the "Pentagon
Meditation Club" Issued a news release on securlly.
At a time when new measures were being adopted in the name of
lnc:easing protectiom around the "Pentagon perimeter," it said
"about a dozen" Defense Department employes "began installing ~
spiritual sh1eld."
If you are thinking the meditators are relying on a thin reed to keep
· the Soviets at bay, keep In mind they also have propbsed a "spiritual
SDI" as a substitute for President Reagan's Strategic Defense
:lalt!ative.
·
As to whether meditation would be cheaper than the$3.9billlon the
government Is likely to earmark for "StarWars'' research this year, I
- leave It for club members to decide.
· SDI, the last time I looked, was not on the agenda at the
Sovet-Americam summit meeting here this week. So the relative
expense m1ght depend on whether "the methodology" of meditation,
, as It is called, is shared with other nations, as Reagan as promised to
·.·. sp;-ead around SDI once It becomes operational.
.• In any event, the club "exists to make available to military and
~ civilian personnel, their families and friends the principles and
practice of Peace Shield Meditatiom."
As for me, I would about as soon depend on meditation, regardless
of the cost, for my protection as I would SDI, Especially If the latter
involved autos Instead of missiles.
: We are told that "when an Individual is about to be struck by a
vehicle, the person with a narrow Peace Shield is likely to be Injured.
But a person with a wide Peace Shield has an invisible field that
·· serves to provide protection.
·
• Another news release that came to my attentiom was prepared by
• attorneys for an organization calling Itself Multinational Legal
· services, P.C. I have no idea whether its members meditate anymore
• than I could guess what the P.C. stands for
• However, It addresses "the question of whether federal employees
: ~an accept food and refreshments from the media and lobbyists."
A better question, I. submit, might deal with whether the media can
accept food and refreshments from federal employees. Particularly
• refreshments While meditating, of course.
; Tile group says federal employees ''are bei ng unfairlyy treated on
: the question of business meals." I don't know about that but I seem to
recall reading about a crackdown on their expense accounts. ·
Frankly, I never tried Ingesting a three-martin! lunch, paid for by
an unsuspecting bureaucrat, multinational or not, with my mouth full
. of meditation. But then I never tried meditatingg In only one language
either.

•

Berry's World
... WE SHALL BE LANDING

VERY SOON. I HOPE YOU
HAVE HAD AN ENJOYABLE
FUGHT. THIS MESSA6E

.

HAS 6EEN PRERECORDED
BY YOUR CAPTAlft c~,~~

.'

~~ · ·
......

•

co""'

•

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Dec. 10, the 344th day of 1987 with 21 to follow.
The moon Is waning, moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
Tbe evening stars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include Francis Gallaudet, founder of the first free school for the
deaf, In 1787; poet Emlly Dickinson in 1830; llbrarianMelvll Dewey in
1851; TV newscaster Chet Huntley in 1911; and actresses Dorothy
• Lamour In 1914 (age 73) and Susan Dey In 1952 (age 35).
On this date In history:
In 1869, the Territory of Wyoming gran ted women the right to vote.
In 1898, Spain signed a treaty officially ending the Spanish·
American War. It gave Guam, Puerto Rico and the Philippines to the
United States.
In 1936, Britain's King Edward VIII abd1cated to marry American
divorcee Wallis Warfield Simpson, His brother succeeded to the
throne as King George vr.
In 1941, Japanese troops landed on northern Luzon In the
Philippines In the early days of World War II.
In 1984, the National Science Foundation reported the discovery of
the first planet outside our solar system, orbiting a star 21 million
light years fron, Earth.
A thought tor the day: Poet Emily Dickinson wrote, "The mind
Uves on the teart
. like any parasite."

.

'

.~---·--

'

~

"

,

•

•
~

•

,

&lt;&gt;

0

•

0

d

"

•

.•

•

•

0
&lt;)

0

••

.

~

tacted told us they were excluded
frQJtl negotiations over the Unl- "
form Product Liability Act of
1987. Congressional sources confess privately that a deal was cut
with Industry behind closed
doors, and that Dlngell may be
serving his constituency, the
auto makers, who would like to
reduce their risk of lawsuits.
That makes particularly sensitive the question of who might
have helped ghostwrite the bill.
Schwartz Is a respected law
professor at Georgetown University- his students refer to him as
~~schwartz On torts'~ and
author of five books. He gays that
Richardson's bill is a version of
the Model Uniform Product
Liability Act he drafted In 1977
while working fo r the Commerce
Department. But he says law-

I
"

•
J

•

"Ah- the first snowfall."

makers l!ave made significant
changes since then.
As he is a scholar on the
subject, he says It Is only natural
that lawmakers seek advice
from him.
Advice Is one thing, but law·
makers appeared to rely on the
likeable Schwartz for more than
academic analysis, especially
considering that Industry Is paying for Schwartz's time as he slis
In committee 'hearings.
At one point In a subcommittee
hearing on the blll, Rep. Cardlss
Collins , D-Ill., suggested an
amendment that would require
manufacturers to keep documenis about their products for 26
years ~o the courts wou.ld have a
paper trail to follow if someone
sued. Manufacturers have been
known to hold shredding parties
with material that might help a
victim In a lawsuit.
Liberty Mashlglan, an associate in Schwartz's firm, was in
attendance, heard Collins'
amendment, and got a note to
Rep. Norm Lent, R·N.Y. Len!
shot down the amendment after
reading the note.
At other times during the
subcommittee hearing, Industry
lobbyists gathered comfortably
in the hearing antechamber,
traditionally off limits to all but
subcommittee staff and those
Invited by the members.
The blll would perform the
needed service of unifying how
the state courts handle product
liability suits, but it would also let
manufacturers off the hook in
significant ways. They would be
sale from punitive damages It
the Food and Drug Admlnlstra·
tion approved the product before
It went on the market. And the
manufacturers would be protected if their products were
designed with the best techno!·
ogy at the time, even If that
technology later proved
defective.

Say no to 'official English___Vinc_e_nt_Ca_rr_oll
It's been a good year for
nativists. Immigration Is down
because of new federal laws.
Five more states have declared
English their official language.
And, most recently, Cuban prisoners rioted, breathing life Into
the argument that open borders
attract human trash.
In short, resentment toward
Immigrants - or at least reluctance to, accept more of them appears on the rise.
Never mind that most veterans
of the 1980 -Marie! boatlift from
Cuba, after wrenching adjustment, finally settled down to
productive lives. To some Americans, the Marlelitos wU! always
be symbolized by that minority
with rap sheets - tough, brutal,
Intent on taking advantage of
their adopted land.
An organization calied English
First plays on these fears. It
contends that immigrants in
general, and not just Cuban
roughnecks, scorn traditional
goals.
One of English First's f\Uitl·

raising letters claims, for exam·
pie, that "Many immigrants
these days refuse to learn Eng·
l!sh! They never become produc·
tlve members of American society. They remain stuck In a
linguistic and economic ghetto,
many living off welfare ... "
English First seeks to amend
the U.S. Constitution to declare
English our offical language.
Since that prospect seems re·
mote, the group cheers on
similar efforts In individual
states.
So far, 13 states have established English as thler official
language. Mostly these are
states free of large Immigrant
enciav~s, such as Newbraska,
Kentucky and North Dakota. Yet
there are exceptions, notably
California and Illinois.
No doubt aboutit: The "official
English" movement taps a popular feeling. Over 70 percent of
California voters approved the
measure declaring English that
state's language. More than

100,000 Colorado residents have
signed petitions to hold a similar
referendum next fall. Polls in
Texas and Florida suggest at
least 65 percent of the public
favors official English In those
states as well. ·
Something serious Is obviously
going on. The simple , - and
simpleminded - explanation fa·
vored by hysterics on the left Is
that the official English move·
ment signifies resurgent Amerl·
can racism. Yet If that Is so, why
do so many Hispanics (40 percent
in one Texas poll, 21 percent in
Florida) also favor official
English?
No, the turn toward official
English is a sign of misplaced
anxiety. People witness a minor·
lty of immigrants living here for
years without mastering English
and forget that the same thing
occurred among previous waves
of newcomers. They hear a few
strident Hispanic "leaders" reject the Ideal of a melting-pot
America, and fail to appreciate
that most Spanish-speaking new·

comers harbor aspirations l!ttie
different from earlier 'Immigrants - aspirations which, If
realized, will require their eventu al assimilation.
Or the public will hear that
millions of aliens have crossed
the border Illegally and not
realize that there have been
periods In U.S. history - the
1840s, the turn of the century when new arrivals comprised an
even greater portion of the
population.
Declaring English our off!clal
language may be a fairly harm-.
less exercise, but the anxiety
behind It betokens trouble. At a
time when an lncreasl,ng number.
of our scientists are fore! gn-born,
when our society Is aging and will.
need young workers of every,
description, when the evidence Isactually growing that lmmi-.
grants boost, rather than dimnlsh, our general welfare, 11:
would be a tragic mistake to
mistake a few hundred Cuban
t hugs for the essence of
Immigration.

Tenn-Tom is a $2 billion folly_Ro:....._be_rt_Wa_lte_rs
COLUMBUS, Miss. (NEA) With the exception of a lone recrea·
tiona! motorboat skittering across
the water, no vessel Is In sight for
miles around on the TennesseeTomblgbee Waterway as It meanders through east-central Missis·
sippi.
That's not unusual for the
Tenn-Tom - but It's certainly
disappointing for a 12-year·long
construction project that costalmost $2 billion and was supposed
to produce a constant stream of
barge traffic on the 234-mlle-long
waterway.
Today, almost three years after
its completion, the Tenn-Tom
stands as a monument to the folly
of spending extravagant amounts
of federal money on massive public works projects designed to
''correct•• nature's ''mistakes.''
Although the Mississippi River
links thousands of miles of Midwestern waterways with the Gulf
of Mexico, the Tenn-Tom Is supposed to provide enhanced access to shippers In the Tennessee
and Ohio River valleys by connecting the Tennessee and Tomhigbee Rivers.
The largest project ever undertaken by the Army Corps of ·
Engineers, the Tenn-Tom required the excavation of 307 mil·
lion cubic yards of earth, fol·
lowed by the placement of 2.2
million cubic yards of concrete
and 33,000 tons of steel.
Before such projects can be
started, federal law requires a
showing that their benefits will
be at least equal their costs and the Corps of Engineers
obliged with a supposedly sclent!fl c study predicting th!' t barge

shipments of coal, grain and
other forms of bulk cargo on the
Tertn-Tom would would total27.3
million tons In Its first year of operation and would eventually In·
crease to more than 40 million
tons annually.
In mld-1985, after the waterway had been open for about half
a year, the Corps drastically
scaled back Its estimate to a
" more realistic" 14.5 million
tons annually- but even that fi gure was hopelessly optimistic.
The actual totals were 1. 7 million tons of cargo In 1985, and 3. 7
million tons 'in 1986. Local officials promoting the waterrway
expec\4 million tons.of cargo this
year but they made' a similar prediction last year.
Even those figures exaggerate
Tenn-Tom traffic because a sub·
stantial portion of the cargo has
been stone rlprap hauled in to
reinforce the canal banks.
During the original debate In
Congress on whether to proceed
with the project, the Tenn-Tom
had more than Its share of critics
who Insisted that It was a boondoggle. But they were overwhelmed by powerful regional polIticians anxious to produce a
"pork barrel" bonanza for their
constituents.
The promoters argued that the
proje~t would reduce by several .
hundred miles the voyage from '
many Midwestern cities to the j
Gulf of Mexico In comparison
with the trip on the Mississippi
River.
They failed to mention, however, that the maximum size of
a tow on the Tenn-Tom would be
eight barges· and that it would

move an average of fou r miles
per hour. On the Mississippi,
tows move twice as fast and are
four to five times as large.
The Corps of Engineers lnlttally
estimated the price of the project
at $323 million. When it was
completed, it cost more than six
times as much even though it provided neither hydropower nor
flood control benefits.
In contrast with the abysmally
low cargo traffic levels , the
Tenn· Tom Is experiencing an
unexpected boom as a haven for
all type sof pleasure craft. Wa·
terway promoters now distribute

literature touting it as "a mecca
for water enthusiasts" and "the
hot spot of the South for bass fishermen."
Plans for construction of cargo-handling facilities have been
deferred In favor of building marinas, upscale res"taurants, resort~. tennis courts and golf
courses. ~
That ' s Ideal for waterborne
travelers who can afford those
amenities, but the TennesseeTomblgbee was supposed to be
far more than a vastly overpriced fishing pole.

"The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

EMU battles San Jose State Saturday
FRESNO, Calif. (UPI) -The about its rating," said Jim
Eastern Michigan Hurons have Strel!ter, the Hurons Sports In·
gone from fighting to remain In formation Director. "Each con·
the Mid-America Conference to terence needs half its members
ruling the leagu~ .
to be over 10,()()0 In attendance to
The Hurons-:-- who meet San stay In Division I-A. In 1984, It
Jose State In Saturday's Callfor- looked like the MAC Y,(ou ld not
nia Bowl - used to be a team . reach that goal. They wanted to
other schools played to collect an drop us."
easy victory.
But EMU President John W.
EMU stumbled to a 9-51·2 Porter appealed to the NCAA and
conference record In a seven- the MAC presidents decided to
year stretch running from 1976 to allow EMU to remain a confer1983. With the mounting losses encememberforthe1984season.
came a drop In attendance,
Porter unleashed a marketing
which fell to 6,500 a game in 1983. campaign to ensure his team
The lack of fans became a source would top 10,000 per game In
of concern for the MAC, which attendance.
.
was worried It would lose Its
•'We sp:ent over $200,000 In give
Division I·A standing.
a ways," Streeter said. "We gave
"The conference was worried away 20 trips to various places
around the world . We gave away

cars. What we tried tocreatewas.
a spectacle."
Porter also hired Jim Harkema, a highly successful coach
at Grand Valley Stale Colleges,
In Allendale, Mich., to run the
Huron program. Attendance .
g"rew to 17,000 a game, but EMU
stili was Inept on the field falling
to 2-7-2.
_
Harkema started recruiting
and the next year the Hurons
Improved to 4-7 and to 6-5 last
year.
This season EMU won Its first
MAC title with a 9-2 overall mark
and 7-1 conference record. The
trip to the California Bowl is only
the school's second post-season
appearance In 95 years. In 1971,
EMU lost the Pioneer Bowl to
Loulsana Tech.

Mter all, Oklahoma is No. 1 in '87
Egad, friends! At the beginning of the season, we pegged the
Oklahoma Sooners ·as the top
college football team , Three
months and 11 games later, the
unbeaten Sooners, under coach
Barry Switzer, are still No. 1.
Though Injuries sidelines QB
Jamelle Holleway and FB Lydeil
Carr for the las t two games,
talent-rich Oklahoma ran Its
winning streak to 20 II\ a row.
In a battle for the national title,
Oklahoma will face our No. 2
team, Miami of Florida, in the
Orange Bowl on Jan. 1.
Coach Jimmy Johnson's Hu rricanes are a handful on offense
and defense. And the bigger the
game, the better they seem to
play.
In fact, Miami was the last
team to beat Oklahoma. Playing
at home, the 'Hurricanes beat the
Sooners, 28-16, on Sept. 27, 1986.
Oklahoma's record for the last
three seasons in 33-2-0. And both
defeats came at the hands of
Miami.
Here's the entire Hoople lop 20
for 1987 (with their bowl
assignments):
!.Oklahoma (Orange) 2.MI·
ami, Fla. (Orange) 3.Fiorlda
State (Fiesta) 4.Syracuse
(Sugar) 5.Nebraska (Fiesta)
6.Auburn (Sugar) 7.Loulslwta
Stale (Gator) 8.Michlgwt State
(Rose) 9.UCLA (Aloha) 10.Texas
A&amp;M (Cotton ) .
ll.South Carolina (Gator)
12.0klahoma State (Sun)
18.Ciemson (Florida Citrus)
H.Notre Dame (Cotton) 15.Ten·
nessee (Peach) 16.Southern Cal
(Rose) 17.1owa (Holiday)
18.Georgla (Liberty) 19.Pitls·
burgh (Bluebonnet) 20.Penn
Stale (Florida Citrus).
• All that separates No. 3 Florida
State from No. 2 Miami is ONE
point. That was the difference In

the thrlller won by the Hurricanes.' 26·25, when the FSU pass
for a two-point play was batted
down In the end zone. At year's
end, Bobby Bowden's FSU lads
.(10-1) were playing as good
football as any other team.
The Syracuse Orangemen, No.
4, the big surprise of the 1987,
rode to an 11-0 record. They
relied on the brains of coach Dick
MacPherson and the strong right ,.
arm of quarterback Don ·
McPherson.
For Nebrasi&lt;a, No. 5, It was a
familiar story- win them ali but
the Big Eight showdown with
Oklahoma . The Cornhuskers (10·
1) will give Florida State a tussel
In the Fiesta Bowl.
Auburn, No.6, was undefeated
in the rugged Southeastern Con·
terence. And It's a very worthy
opponent for Syracuse In the
Sugar Bowl. Auburn was 9-1-1.
The passing duel between Jeff
Burger and McPh erson will be a
crowd pleaser.
No. 7 LSU had a great season
(9-1-1) under its new, 34-year old
Mike Archer. Their lone loss was
an SEC upset by tough Alabama.
Michigan State, No. 8, went
8·2·1. It dropped two early starts
to Notre Dame afid Florida State
but came back to take !lie Big
Ten title - and earn the coveted
Rose Bowl bid.
No. 9 UCLA lost a heartstopping four-pointer to Southern
California in the Pac-10 finale.
So, it missed going to the Rose
Bowl for the fourth time in five
years. At 9·2, Terry Donahue's
forces had another banner year.
Jackie Sherlll's Texas A&amp;M,
No. 10, captured Its third straight
Southwest Conference crown.
That's a rare feat, which the
Hoople System predicted at the
beginning of the season. Texas
A&amp;M was 9·2.

Scoreboard ...
NHL results

NBA results

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAtUE
Wales Conferenc~

Patric k Dlvlllon
N\' Islanders
New Jersey
PUWlurrh

WLTPts.
I 1 J. 1 33
1~- 9 4 J.l

GF GA

99 103
100 91
R5 100
160 105

"

..

43

122

93

26

8fl 92
100 I IIi

II II

5

27

WMblngton

12 14

2

PhUadelphla
NY RangerH

10 13
9 11

t

28
2.-1

1

2~

11 3

82

i\damli IJivisinn

Montrf'al

Boston
Hartfufd
Buffalo
Quebec

18

,

7

II 11

.t

n n

2

as us

~~

II 14 &lt;I 26
II 14 I "' zs
91 lOft
Cam ,met I Conferenc:e
Norrl!l Dlvl¥1on
Deh-ull
13 10 3 29 102 85
Minnesota
II 13 4 21l
99 113

Toronto

II H

2

24

109 110

Chlca«tt

10 16

2

22

100 131

St IA!ttls

9 14 3 21
Smythe Dlvl~lon
Edmonton
17 10 2 36

Calrar)'
WIM1pe1
Vancouver

16 9 .a
12 IS I

34

8t

96

138 103
1311 110
9S 105

..

U
10 IS 3 23
lAJs !\ngt'ler;
1 1ft 4 IK 101! 145
Wednesday'(' ""'lldhi
Hartfonl5, " ' uhlngton4
~ntrul 2, f\'V Rar~~en 2 (tie)
PlttaburJh 5, Cal«ary t
St. Louis 4, Detroit 4 (tie l
New dersey %, LoA Antele&amp; 1
Hullalo 6, Chlca~~:o ~
Edmonton~ . MIIWII~I' 0
Thund~'s Game•
NY Rar~~ers at PhUadclphla , l :35 p m

",

Loll Antel es at Bo11too,.i 3Sp.m.

St . U.ul" at Mlnnuo tu., 8:35p.m
Frkl.,'ll Gamet~~
NY ISianden at Pittsburgh,

NA..TIONAL 81\SKt...'THALL "-SSOC.
" 'ednesda,y 's Re1ult.
Deaver IU, Bo!ton tl!
Philadelphia~~. Portland 86
Washlfl«ton 128, LA Laliers 112 !OTl

Oallu 1~. ~acramento 9a
Phoenix 117, Atlanta 105
Go lde n Sta te 113. Cleveland liZ
Thursday'" Games
' lndlanl\ ~tl Nfw ,JN!t!!f , 1 30 p.m
De nver at New York, 7: SO p.m
Mll"oaullee at Chicago, 8:30 p.m
Utah al llowllon, ll: lU p.m
Seattle at LA Cltppen, HI 30 p m
Friday'~; Gaml!fl
WM,hla'"on at Detroit, niKht
I..,\ Lakcrsat Bo11ton, nlw:ht
Phoenix at Hallas. night
Portland at MIIWJ1U kee, niJI: hl
Cleveland"' Sacmm eJJto, night
Atlanta at Golden Stal e, niKht

College scores

Ba"ebllll
Baltimore - Sl gaed pitchers Kevin
Hi ckey and Mark Bowden
&amp;81on - Acquired utllllyrmm Randy
Ku tchl'r from San f'rancl.!lCo &amp;o complete

a previous deal.
Clnclnnall - Slped outllelder Dave
CoiHn.111 to l•year contract .
MinneMota - Ptumu&amp;ed Bob Gebtu.nl
tu vice pre•ldent of player personnel.
Montreal - Named David Jau&amp;fl
manaser of Brandetoe lll the Gulf CoiL!II
J_,e• p (A.), nmmed Elllu SoM pttc hJns;
coach of Edmontun of the PacUJc Cuut
Le"pe (AAA): appointed Orrin Free-

man to sco utln.r starr.
Francl~teo

-

!'!lped plkher Joe

"'"''

Seattle - Tradl.'d pitcher Mike MOf'KAO
to Balllmort for plklher Mike Morgan;
traded ouUieldcr Phil BradJey and
pitcher Tim Fortus•o to PbUadelphla for
uutllelder Glenn WllliOn, pitc her Mllif:
Jac&amp;i!JOn and outfielder Dave Brunda1e.
Texa11 - Named Davey l..opes coach.

Basketball

Buckeye TraiiiiU, C.mbrJdre II

AlbanJ ' (CBA.) - Slped forward
Clinton Smith
New Jener - F1red coac h DM.\'e Wohl,
named aAsl!ltant reneral manarer Boh
MIIICKirmnnlnlerlm coac h.
New York - Actll'ated fo~ard Bob
Thornton lrom tnJurud ll•t; waived
forward fta) Tolbert.
Portland - Acquired forw~ard IUc bard
Andenon: r e leaAed" guard Kevin
Gamble.
Co Uel[t'!
1\ustln Pcay State - Named Paul
Brewtler hf'lld footbaJI coach
NCAA- Placed Cleveland SLI.te men'•
b&amp;Hketbllll prvvam on three yean
proballon tor recruitlna: 'lolatlo1111
UCLA - Aaal8tant men'8 'ballkedlall
coach Andre MeCarter rtfllcned.
Football
lndhmapolls - Placed 8alety Leonard
Coleman en lnlwoed resene.
LA Kama - Plated safety VInce
NewAOme Olt Injured r~rw: activated
Jullllack 0\lnald Evan8.
Miami - Placed center Dwl~~:ht Stephenson on lrijured reserve: re-llti'IH!d
ttc.bl end Dnld Lewlll,
NY Jett - Placed linebacker Luce
Mebl and conterbltCk Ru•ell Carter op
ln,t•red reterve.

l..elp!IIC IS, Coltmbul Grow !II
Sheridan 11, New Concord &lt;llenn $S
Union Local18, Buckeye So ItCh t8

Los Met:IH - Named Robbie Florek
cOJ!ch, re1al.ed aalll1tant Br)an Max we ll; released aa11111tlllnt PhU M,re.

Oil or• ( .. ,!!• ll&lt;' IJ~k,• fl&gt;n//H~J "" '

Ill I nrf&lt;IJII'"''* In t••rool omon l
If ~•fnf'•lluv. , rf' 11

Robert Morrt8 (P a) $1 , Kl.'nf s,,te
MlamiiJt, Evanntlle Clnd) 10!
Akron 11, Ohio Ualverslty 69
Vlf'Kinlal&amp;, O.yton 50
We~ttern Dllnolll !It, Wrl1hl st IJ7
Ashland 19, Tlftln 18
WIUeaberr 1111, Hiram 49
HeldelberJ61 , Capital 58
Detdaon 81, Martettu. &amp;7
WoMier 7f, Mount Union 68
W~es,_rr CPa) 112, Mulktnrum 67
Ohio Wtllleyan 100, ottcorbeln 80
Oberlin &amp;8, Adrian (Mich) 5t
Kenyon liS, Wllmll&amp;1on 78
Wablh n, Bhdttfla57

Girls scores
Girl• 0111(1 llo /t. l. ~d...n//J,,.~, d,.,,
H ~ l 'n ioo•oll'ro••o/niO•r llnll"""'

U ••dno•.,/11'1', IJo•r

Q

Fort Je•atap 11, Ottovttw n

(
KEEPING COOL - EB!;Iern Coach, Dennis Eichinger, has
rallied the rebuUdlng and youthful Eastern Eagles to a 2-2 season
and possible league contender. The Veteran Coach Eichinger
found one way to "beat the heat" In Southern's hot and sultry
gymnasium as he donned this loose fitting tropical attire. Southern
furnaces hav e been knowp to burn more coal on Game Nights, but
this time at least one person was "keeping cool". Elchlng_er donned
the attire In jest to spark his young te11m.

Popular Tandy® 1000 HX

U. S.-Soviet hockey
series begins tonight

~::: 599~ r;:::~'6=H~=~y~

By United Press International

The Team USA hockey contingent begins an eight-city exhibi·
lion tour against the Soviet
Union's Select squad with a pair
of games In Ohio this week.
Tonight, they will play In the
Richfield Coliseum south of
Cleveland and, on Saturday, at
Riverfront Coliseum In
Cincinnati.
Team USA. which will repres·
ent the United States In the
Winter Olympics In Calgary,
Alberta, next February, began
playing In August after coach
Dave Peterson and his staff
whittled a group of 400 candidates down to the current 25
players.
"This a strong team and a
bunch of really hard workers,"
said Peterson, 56, who was an
assistant to Lou Valro on the 1984
U.S. Olympic team that finished
a disappointing seventh in Sarajevo, Yugoslavia , after a surprising gold-medal victory in the
1980 Games at Lake Placid, N.Y.
· "We've had a long schedule so
·far and there's more to go, but
that's the way to learn how to
play as a team."
The team Is 22-12-4 since
beginning their exhibition schedule with nine games against
NHL teams. Peterson said the
team will play 21 more games
before the Olympics.
The current series with the
Soviets wl!l also visit Uniondale,
N.Y., St. Louis, Bloomington,
"Minn., Detroit, Indianapolis and
Lake Placid.
Peterson says he Is not certain
just which players are on the
Soviet team, but It is thought at
least th"ree have played In the
Canada Cup against the NHL
All-Stars and may well be on the
Olympic team in Calgary.

699 .00

Low As $30 Per Month*

Buolt-on MS-DOS woth
Personal DeskMate" 2
software. #25-1053

Save
•&amp;195

MS·OOS/TM M1crosoft Corp

Low As $15 Per Month •

P1cture-per1ect gift the whole family can enjoy Features 14-day/6-event auto-record t1mer. HQ Improves
picture detaiL Wireless remote Cable-ready ItOchannel tuner. #16-508

~emote battenes

Monitor

save Even More When

Purchased"WIIh a

CM·5 Color Mo~1 \or

Save
5150

84895

extra

Rack System With Remote
System 1000 by Real1st1c

699~.90
Reg. 999.00

40 1130

42-1130

COLO~

COMPUTER

'
Low As $15 Per Month •
TV extra

Low As 535 Per Month •

Complete w1th 100-watt"
amp, digital tuner, 3-way
speakers. 7-band EO, dual·
cassette deck, turn table w1th
cartridge , remote control
and rack.
By Tandy

Save
5 30

Rack System

6995 6995

System 100

HALF

PRICE

39!!

Reg. 99.95
Switchable Touch-Tone/
pulse dialong 1 "43-547

Reg. 99.95
Wode monitor shell,
space for computer,
printer and work #26-1350

-Ch.
PR0-55 by Realistic

Reg.79.95

14995

13-1228

Save
5 30

,:.~~

8995 11~~~5
Mo,nit&lt;lr poloce, fore and
#20-124

Low As $15 Per Month •

Ballenas extra
Measured d1agonaUy #16-108

CD Wit,h AM/FM Stereo Cassette

Save s120

co-3300 by Realistic

Hockey

249~!

Reg, 139.95

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-960)
A Dl\'lSion of Multlmedlil. Inc:.

They'll never dnve "alone" aga1n! Flip a sw1tch tomstantiy go to Highway-Emergency Channel 9 Includes moke and mounting hardware #21·1539

TVIFM Stereo

Published every afternoon, Monday
through Friday. 111 Court St.. Pom eroh Ohio, by the Ohio Valley Publishing Co mpany / Multimedi a, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio ~5769 , Ph. 992·2156. Se·
cond class posta ge paid at Pomeroy ,

Member: UnUm Press International,
Jni and Dally Press Association and th e
Ohio Newspaper Assrelallon National

Records personal cassettes from compact dig1tai
discs, FM stereo, AM or "love" w1th oploonai mokes
Dual 2-way speakers AC/battery operation . #14·525
Bauenes metra

Personal Phone
ET·t20 by Radoo Shack

1295Reg.

SPECIAL PURCHASE

5995:9~~5 aaoo ~

Advertlstng ·Representatlve, Branham
Newspa per Sales 733 Third Avenue,
New York . New York 10017

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier or Motor Route

369.95

Low As $15 Per Month•

Dual-Powered
Calculator

Ohio

POSTMASTER: Send address chan ges
to The Dally SenUnel, 111 Court Sl.,
Pomeroy,.Ohio 45769.

Reg. Separate
Items 998.95

25·1023 25-10S3
Low As $43 Per

Transactions

San
Philadelphia at Detrull, night
Cala:ary at New Jersl!y, nl~tht
Qu ebee a~ Wlnnlper. ntsht
Vancou\'tr at Edmo,ton, ol,;ht

The real surprises in our
second 10 are South Carolina,
Pittsburgh and Notre. Dame.
S.C.'s Gamecocks and Pitt's
Panthers got little or no mention
In the pre-season ranklngs except for the Hoople selections.
Notre Dame, playing eight
bowl-bound teams on one of the
most difficult schedules of all
lime, rang up an 8-3 record. Now
they' ll play another bowl team:
Texas A&amp;M, In the Cotton Bowl.
'Twas an interesting year, to
say the least. And there's more to
come. .Keep an eye out for my
bowl forecasts .

The Hurons are led by quarte)'·
back Ron Adams and cornerback
Charles Gordon. Adams holds
three career passing marks at
EMU and completed 100 of 190
passes thisseasonfor1,427yards
and five touchdowns. He also
rushed the ball -86 times .for 382
yards and six touchdowns.
"I think his (Adams) running
ability Is one of the big fears we
have coming Into this .game,"
said San Jose State Coach Claude
Gilbert. "He could be a running
back. He's big and strong. He'll
certainly put pressure on our
outside people."
Gordon gives the Hurons both
an outstanding punt returner and
hard-hitting defensive back. He
has collected 66 tackles this year
and picked off five passes. As a
punt returner, Gordon has aver aged 12.25 yards per return .
"Gordon is a "speedy kid,"
Gilbert said. "He looks outstand·
ing returning punts. At corner. he
plays like a West Coast cornerback. He can run and cover a guy
man -to-rna n . Mldwes tern
corners usually are muscular
and better against the run. "

Receoves 6-tB MHz SW,
VHF HI-Lo, UHF, FM,
AM . #12-779

19.95

Touch-redial.
Pulse d1along•.
Whole, #43-501
Brown, #43-502

With headphones,
batteries. #16-1300

Battenes e11tra

One Week .. ... .....
..... .. ...... $1 2$
· One Month .. .
. .
.. ,, $5 45
One Year ............... ... ....... $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally ....... ,, .......... .. ......... 25·Cent s

Subscribers not des lr lngt opay the car
rler may remit In advance direct to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basis-. Credit will bt•glven carrier each
week

No subscrlptionll' b;y mall permitted in
areas where hom C' carrier service Is

STEREO-MATE®

42% Off

21!~
37.95
Batteries extra

4495
10% Reg.
Cut

Really sharp"
g1M I N61 2795
Batter res extra

49

95

availabl e.

•

Mall Stllx!crlptions
Inside Meigs County
13 Weeks ... . ...... ............. ......... 111 29
26 weeks . .. ... ...
.... .. $34 00
52 Weeks ............... ................ $66 56
Outside Melp County
~JWeeks ........... ........... $18.20
26 Weeks .. . ........... .... .... . ...... $35.10
52 weeks. . ,. .......
·'" . $67 60

Check Your Phone Book for !he llldllt IIIHk Store or Dealer Nearest You
rswtTCHABLE TOUCH·TONE/PUlSE ~hones wcrk on bo th tone and pulse lines Therefore, rn areas
havmg only pulse (rotary·dlal) Nnes. you can Still use seNices reQulnng tone s, like the new
tong distance systems and computenzed serv1ces PULSE·SIGNALING phones work on both rotary
d1al and tone lines . but do not proouce tones FCCreg1s1eted Not for party lines We seMce what we
seH

'

PRICES "PPL'I' AT AARTICIP~TING STORtS ANO DEALERS

re..o~v~ng cre1111
may ~ary oeO£no ng
11:ooum Mlai'IC!

• Railto Snack
Paymem
upon

Most Major
Credit Cards
Accepted

�•
~mber 10, 1987

Ohio

I ..akers lose fourth
time in .five outings
.
.

floor April 6, 1979.
?6ers 94, Trail Blazers 86
At Philadelphia, Charles Bark·
ley scored a game·hlgh 38 points .
and grabbed 24 rebounds and
Cliff Robinson added 11 of his 13
points In the final period to spark
the 76frs; Clyde Drexler led
· Portland with 24 points and
Jerome Kersey added 20 as
Portland dropped its second
game after winning nine In a row.
Maverlckli 125, Kings 98
At Dallas, Mark Aguirre
scored 28 points and Rolando
Balckman added 25 to help the
Mavericks hand Sacramento its
sixth straight loss. Dallas won for
the sixth tlme in seven games .

but It's going to take son1e "This is a big confidence booster
By United Press International
to help us get out of our own
When~ team with arguably the · atutude changing."
most talent In the NBA sutlers · The Lakers trailed 86-71 in the . slump."
In other games, Denver topped
through a two·week slump, the third quarter and 97-87 midway
answers to the problem lie In the through the fourth quarter before Boston 124·119, Philadelphia
non-physical aspects (&gt;f. the rallying to catch the Bullets dumped Portland 94·86, Dallas
104-104 on a Magic Johnson downed Sacramento 125-98: Phogame.
The Los Angeles Lakers are fastbreak layup with 1:09 left in enlx defeated Atlanta 117-105 and
,
Golden State trimmed Cleveland
searching for a new mental regulation.
approach after dropping a 120"
"We Just have to start playing 113-112.
Nuggets 124, Celtlcs 119
112 overtime decision to the 'better when it's winning tlme,"
. At Boston, Michael Adams
Washington Bullets .Wednesday salt! Johnson, who led the Lakers
night In Landover, Md., the with 30 points, 14 assists, four scored a career-high 31 points to
fourth loss In five games for the rebounds and four steals. "The enable Denver to snap t)le
defending NBA champs.
guys have to understand it's a big Celtlcs' 34-game regular-season
"It's the same old story," Los game every night."
winning streak at Boston
Angeles Coach Pat Riley said
Moses Malone, who had only Garden. The Nuggets entered the
after his team, which started 8-0, five points and three rebounds In game with a seven-game. losing
slumped to 11-6. "We've had four the first half, scored six of his 26 streak at Boston. Denver posted
games where we've rushed to get
points in overtime. Reserve John r~it~s~l~a~st=v~i~c~to~ry~o~n~th~e;;;p~a~r~q~ue~t~;;;;;;;;;;;;~;iijiijiriii!iiiiiii
back In It after falling behind by Wl!Uams
also scored six of his 14
double digits, but we can'tget the points in the extra period , including back-to-back jumpers that
job done when It counts.
"We're · in a struggle. It's gave Washington a 116-110 lead
definitely going to be a rougher with 32 seconds left.
rlde than we anticipated. I still
"It feels great to beat the world
believe we can be a great team, champions," Williams said.

Parker says Reds
will lose without him

GRABS REBOUND- Denver Nuggets' center Danny Schayes,
right, rips down a rebound from Celtlcs' forward Kevin McHale In
fourth-quarter action Wednesday night In Boston Garden. The
Nuggets won the game 124-119. ( UPl)

JYGAA places CSU
on 3 yeqrs probation
CLEVELAND (UP!)- Cleveland State University says It will
appeal Wednesday's decision by
the NCAA to place the school's
basketball program on probation
lor three years for alleged
recruiting violations during the
1983-84 season.
• The probation includes two
years with sanctions. meaning
that the Vikings wlll be kept out
of NCAA post-season tournaments this season and next
season and head coach Kevin
Mackey wlll not be allowed to
recruit off campus lor an unspecified period of time.
The prpbation, resulting from
a two-year investigation by the
NCAA 's Committee on Infrac·
tions, a lso means the team Is
banned from appearing on live
television for one year.
CSU, which. has 15 days to
appeal, denied the charges.
The NCAA commitee refused
to name the players Involved in
the recruiting violations, but said
CSU "recruited and transported
to the campus from a foreign
country two prospective studentathletes, one of whom was of
extra-ordinary height. "
During the 1984 season Mackey
recruited Manute Bal. a 7-foot-6
center, now' y;ith the Washington
Bullets, from the Sudan. Bo1
could not spea k English and did
not meet CSU's academic standards. He never played for the
Vikings. .
·
, The report said one of the
students "lacked English language skills" and the university
staff "participated in arrangements that resulted in the payment o(lhe.expenses " for special
English instruction. Approximately $6,101 was paid lor the
lessons.
The report ?Bid the recruits
were given "automobile trans.
portatlon, ~eals and ~ntertain­
ment at no cosl to the young men
In Boston , Mass . while en route
to the university's campus. "
Without disclosing names , the
report said the team's head
coach, an assis tant basketball
coach and a.n assistant to the
director of athletics , who also
serves as a sports information
director, failed to recognize
"standards normally associated
with the conduct and administration of intercollegiate athletics."
The report said the head coach
arranged for men to be flown to
Cleveland to enroll In the univer sl ty and also arranged, from May
23, 1983, through June 17,1983, for
the prospective student-athletes
lo have "lodging and meals at a
)lotel by signing for them."
The report also accused the
- head coach of using . $1,221.02
from the university development
foundati on to spend on prospec·
live recruits.
Mackey, who became head
coach during the 1983-84 season,
refused to com ment on the
Charges, saying only, "l don't
·uke to hide behind the 'no
comment' -but I think everyone
can understand that pending the
appeal It's the university policy
and r su pport it 100 percent."

CSU' s ·a-thletic director, Robert
Busbey, said the program wlil
adjust to the sanctions.
"Any penalties create .problems, " said Busbey. "(But)
Kevin (Mackey) is very resourceful and I'm sure he'll
make whatever adjustments ne- ·
cessary. The program will go on
and I'm sure It will be successful.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Dave
Parker, the newest member of
the Oakland Athletics, said the
Cincinnati Reds will finish fourth
or fifth without him.
Parker was traded to the A's
Tuesday for pitching prospects
Jose Rljo, 22, and Tim Birtsas ,
27. Parker's departure from
Cincinnati had been rumored
for weeks.
"It's the Reds loss and' the A's
gain," Parker said. "I don't like
·to blow my own. horn, but the
Reds are going to finish fourth or
fifth without me."
New Reds General Manager
Murray Cook said the reason for
the deal was to aaqulre more
pitching and give two young
outfielders - Tracy Jones and
Paul O'Neill - more playing
· time. Parker, 36, saw it a
different way.
"I think this is a case of
dumping salary," said Parker, .
Who wlll make $1.2 million this
coming year. "The word was that
they wanted their payroll under
$11 million. Whatbetterwaytodo
that than (trade) the player with
the second·hlghest salary on the
team?
"But I don't think the Reds are
going to find someone as productive as I've been for the same
'price. I kind of categorize what

they're trying to do as having 'K
mart' talent and trying to get
Saks Fifth Avenue results."
Parker, a native of Cincinnati,
batted .253 (the lowest average of
his career) with 26 home runs
and 97 RBI in 1987. In his four
seasons with the Reds, he was by
far their most productive player.
He underwent knee surgery after
this past season.
Parker bristled at manager
Pete Rose's hints that Parker
didn't provide enough leadership
this year. Speaking at the winter
meeting In Dallas, Rose said,
"I'm not going to say he was a
negative influence, bit I'm not
going ·to tell you he was a great
team leader, either."
"I respected Pete Rose to the
end even though the indications
are that he started the rumors
about the 'negative leadership'
thing," Parker said. "Ali I did
was bust my butt and play."
Parker said he was happy to be
headed to Oakland.
"I'm healthy, my famlly's
healthy. I'm going to ·Oakland to
be a DH and play right field on
occasion. Why shouldn't I be
happy?"

DO

THE
HOLIDAY
HUSTLE.
1·

Delta Force AC

S4995

lake it to court this holiday season.

•REGISTER FOR SHOPPING SPREE
•FREE PARKING IN MIDDLEPORT Til CHRISTMAS
•LAYAWAYS WELCOME
•GIFT CERTIFICATES AVAILABLE

COOPER

Chrysler•Plymouth•Dodge, Inc.

• Factory Official Cars •
PER MONTH

. • Quality Used Vehicles • ·

\

COME -IN AND CHECK OUT
THE AREA'S LARGEST
SELECTION OF

*

'

NEW RELEASES

*

PER MONTH

85
85
84
84
84
85
84
84
85
87

PLYMOUTH VOYAGER ....,....... 5231.39
DODGE D150 PICKUP .......... $205.67
OLDS. DELTA 88 .................... 5231.39
'
FORD RANGER PICKUP
............ $99.76
OLDS. CUTLASS SUPERME ......S 187.66
PLYMOUTH VOYAGER SE ......,$238.10
DODGE 600 SE ..:.................. 5120.78
FORD ESCORT WAGON ........ J$102.77
VOYAGER SE ......................... 5231.39
FORD TEMPO ......................... 5176.62

ALL PAYMENTS BASED ON LOWEST FINANCE
RATES AVAILABLE THROUGH CHRYSLER CREDIT
CORP. OR LOCAL BANKS AT THEIR TERMS TO
QUALIFIED BUYERS.
SEE MARK OR CAROL

COOPER.

Chrysler•Plymouth•Dodge, Inc.
(614) 992·6421

~~:;;;;L..3:99:S:·~Th:..:~ir:d~S:rr:e:e:t-··:M~id:d~'l:epo:r:r~,O~h:io~_4!~~7~6~0~
'

$1
50
EVERYDAY! ·
. .

MOVIES ·

Thursday, D&amp;C61iiber'1 0, 1987

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Virginia -Tech upsets Georgetown five, . 87--82; nu·k e romps
By United Press International
Vlrginlli Tech, with a·n interim
coach and no chance of winning
the national championship,
played with post-season Intensity
to stop a team with NCAA title
hopes.
Wally Lancaster sank a shot in
the lane to break a tie with 1:55
remaining Wednesday night and
lead VIrginia Tech to an 87-82
victory over No. 11 Georgetown .
"Our players had to come out

and attack," VIrginia Tech
Lancaster finished with a
Coach Frankie Allen said. ''The
game-high 30 points, hitting 10 of
kids wanted it. You could see It in
16 from the field, including 4 of 7
their eyes.
from 3-point range. Coles added
"They tquched my heart in · 25 points, Tim Anderson 11 and
places I didn't know existed," he
Eric ~anders 10 for the Hokies.
McDonald scored 18 to lead
said of his team. "I'm as proud of
them as If they're my own kids."
Georgetown, 3-1 . Jaren Jackson
The Hokies, 4-1, are barred
and Tiilrrion added 13 each and

because
of recruiting
violations
from
NCAA
Tournament.
play
under former coach Charlie
Molr, who resigned under !Ire
after last season.
·
The Hokies employed varying
defenses and pressures against
the Hoyas . "We didn't want
Georgetown to get Into a
. rhythm," Allen explained. "so
we didn't giVe them a steady diet
of any one defense."
· NEW YORK (UP!) -Thel987
Georgetown tied the score at
United Press International All- 79·79 on a short hook by Perry
America college football team, McDonald with 2:50 remaining.
.listing position, naine, school, After the teams traded missed
: hometown, height, weight and shots, Lancaster scored off an
class for first team:
assist from Bimbo Coles on a fast
First Team
break.
Offense
Coles increased Tech's lead to

Charles Smith finished with 11.
In the only other game in.volv·
lng a ranked team Wednesday,
No. 9 Duke ripped Davidson
105-71.
In another "game of interest,
DePaul stopped Western Michl·
gan 94-64. Arkansas-Little Rock
beat Sam Houston State 87-58 and

Texas-El Paso clobbered Morehead State 83-52 In the first round
of the T C BY T 1p. 0 ff
Tournament.
At Charlotte, N.C., Ala a Abdelnaby scored 19 points and Kevin
~tr'ckland added 18 to lead Ouke.
1 e '3lue Devils, 4-0, led by 30
points at halftime. They have

fp;;ii;i;ii;ijiijij·········~i;iji;ij;i'j;i'jiiij..r.==============~========

POMEROY CHRISTMAS
LIGHTING CONTEST

UPI's 1987

.All-American
Dream Team

N~~~6~%~(D!\~s~~~~~i95,

~::n~~ \:f~.'~:eu~~;:s~~~~s!~

senior; Wendell Davis, Louis!ana State (Shreveport, La.) ,
6-0, 186, senior.
Tight end - Keith Jackson,
Oklahoma (Little Rock, Ark.),
6-3, 242, senior.

the gap on a 3·pointer by Mark
Tlllrrion with 15 seconds remain·
lng, but the Hokies received a
pair of free throws from Lanoas·
ter at with 13 seconds remaining
and two more from Coles wlth
four seconds left.
"I thl n k F ran kl e s h ou ld renegotiate his contract r Ig h t now, "
Georgetown Coach John Thompson .said . "He, s better than just
h
an Inter I•m hea dt coac
b tt·
t
Th
I
t
f
I
th
than a o o peop e
aught
they'd have."

ga~ac(t~e:e R;~:~n~~~~: ~.i~~::

6-7,· 306, senior·, Dave Cadigan,
Southern Cal (Newport Beach,
Ca !if .), 6·5• 280 • ~en lor .
Gua rds _Randall McDaniel,
Arizona State (Avondale, Fla.),
6 4 274
Oklahoma (Fort Smith, Ark.),
·. , 280 , senior·,
Mark Hutson,
'.,.4,
, sen 1or.
Center - Nacho Albergamo,
Louisiana State (Marrero, La.).
6-2, 257, senior.
Quarterback - Don McPherson, Syracuse (West Hempstead,
N.Y.), 6-2, 195, senior.
Running backs - Lorenzo
White, Michigan State (Fort
Lauderdale, Fla.), 5-11, 211,
senio·r: Craig Heyward , Pitts- .
burgh (Passaic, N.J. ), 6-0, 265,
junior.
Kicker - David Treadwell,
Clemson (Jacksonville, Fla.),
6-1, 165, senior.
Defense
Defensive linemen - Danny
Stubbs, Miami (Red Bank, N.J.),
6-4, 260, -senior; Tracy Rocker,
Auburn (Atlanta), 6-3, 258, jun·
lor: Chad Hennings, Air Force
(Elberon, Iowa), 6-5, 250, senior;
Ted Gregory, Syracuse (East
Islip, N.Y.), 6·1, 260, senior.
l,inebackers - Chris Spielman, Ohio State (Massilon,
Ohio), 6-2, 242, senior: Aundray
Bruce, Auburn (Montgomery,
Ala.), 6·6 , 236, senior; K~
Norton Jr ., UCLA (Los Angeles).
,-· 6-2, 231, senior.
Defensive backs - Bennie
: Blades, Miami (Fort Lauder.• dale, Fla.), 6-0, 215, senior; De ion
·- Sanders, Florida State (Fort
: · Myers, Fla.), 6·0, 190, junior;
Rickey Dixon, Oklahoma (Dal'• las), 5·10, 187, senior; Chuck
:· Cecil, Arizona (Hanford , Calif.),
. 6-0, 190, senior.
; . · Punter - Tom Tupa, Ohio
:. State (Brecksvilie, Ohio), 6-5,
:. 216, -\en lor.

won 41 of their last 45 non - conference games. Davidson,
2-2, was led by Maurice Gray
with 17 points.
At Rosemont , DI,, Rod Strick·
land scored 21 points and Kevin ·
Edwards added 16 to pate ·
DePaul, 3-1. Strickland was
making his first appearance

LEVI WHITEWASHED
.
LEE FRO STED
CHIC AND SUNSEA'T
BLUE
M.

'

•

Name -------------------------------Address ------'-------------------

DIAMOND WASHED
. BOYS, GIRLS AND LADIES

Category _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

Mail to 20 Oak St.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Sweats,
Sweats,
Sweats
CREW .NECK, HOODED AND PANTS

.. ..•
•

..

IN MANY CO,LORS

•.

CUSTOM DECALS AND LEnERING

"Largelt Selection In the_ Area"
OPEN SUNDAY 1• 5
MON •"fll • 9• 8
UNTIL 5 ON SATURDAYS

CHRISTMAS LIGHTING CONTEST - A Christmas lighting ::
contest will be staged ln .Pomeroy by the Pomeroy Chamber of :
Commerce and the Winding Trail Garden Club. First and second ·,
prizes will he awarded to the best displays In the religious· ~
category;
h overall, entry or door and a first place prize, plus· :•
several
onorable
mentions, will be awarded In the commercial
t
WhU
. •'
ca egory.
e registration Is not required since attempts will be
made to visit all streets of the community, It Is suggested that
reSidents complete lhe accompanying fohn. Judging wlll begin at
6:30p.m. on Dec. 21 with judges to be from outside the community.
ar ..c pants may also call ut
oore at 992-2029.

~~·~·~e;y~v~e~go~~a:e~e~r~e~a:m~J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~f~~~~~~d~~::":~:::~:-=:~:~~::_:::~--'---_:_

r

With the NIKE Delta Force AC and

hBEST DEALS
AROUND"
.

87 DODGE ARIES WAGON ..........$194.25
87 CHRYSLER LeBARON 4 DR ..... S196.26
87 PLYMOUTH CARAVELL£.......... 5190.37
87 DODGE SHADOW ................... 5176.62
87 PLYM.OUTH SUNDANCE .......... 5176.62
86 LeBARON GTS..................... 5219.45
86 LeBARON GTS ....................... $213.41

•

NEW RELEASES

$250

COLD DAYS •• .,

DEALS!

SYLVANIA
40·Month

9
'Sylvania

50-Month

Zerex

Giant Sure

Antifreeze

Sealed Beam
Headlights

Protect• ell cooling
ay...., met.la, Including
elumlnum, lromcorroelon. Limit 2.

Price good wtlh ••change.

Do-lt

~===========----Tip
Yourself
=

;· 1SVAC standings I

Thoroughly clean and
inspect your battery and
cables every 6 months.

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Southern .............. 4 0 356 228
: ' Hannan Trace ..... ~ 1 305 229
OakHlll ....... .. ..... 3 1 297 226
North Gallia ... : .... 3 1 264 257
Eastern ............... 2 2 241 288
Symmes Valley ... 1 2 177 268
Kyger Creek ........ O 3 217 193
:;nuthwestern ....... 0 4 237 324
SVACONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern .............. 3 0 288 160
Oak Hill .............. 3 0 247 173
Hannan Trace .. ... 2 1 219 178
North Gallia ........ 2 1 200 208
Eastern , .............. 1 2 181 234
Symmes Valley .. .1 2 177 268
Southwestern ....... 0 3 195 250
;: Kyger Creek ........ O 3 158 193
• TOTALS
12 12 16fl5 16&amp;5
·SVAC
(Reserves)
,. "TEI\M
W L
P OP
:: · Southern .............. 3 0 182 112
Hannan Trace ... ,.3 0 154 90
Eastern ............... l 2 125 152
Southwestern ....... ! 1 124 145
·· Oak Hill .............. 2 1 120 127
Symmes Valley .. .1 2 115 176
North Gallia ........ 1 2 147 157
Kyger Creek ........ 0 3 113 154
TOTALS
12 12 1107 1107 ·
Tuesday's results
(Varsity)
Hannan Trace 92, Southwestern
57
North Gallia 62, Kyger Creek 52
Oak Hili 86, Symmes Valley 47
Southern 90, Eastern 51
(Reserves)
Hannan Trace 51, Southwestern
37
North Gall1a 46, Kyger Creek 41
Oak Hill 46, Symmes Valley 44
Southern 65, Eastern 37
Friday's games:
Eastern at Hannan Trace
Southwestern at Kyger Creek
Symmes Valley at North Gallla
Oak Hill at Southern
Saturday's games:
North Gallia at Unloto

Start Batteries

60-Month

2%-Ton
Gc: :-age Jack
~

. .-

.--._......

3.49 ..te price
mlr's rebete
you
- " " " buy2
~when

Pylon
Snow Blades
Prevent Ice end
tnow bulld·up
which can lnterlere
with moving parts
ol a conventional
blade.

__

Car Stereo

,Speakers

• 4,000·lb. capacity
• Steel cbaters for easy
poaitio~ing

,

Car Male
Deluxe Tachometer
with Vollmeter
• UUtl·modtl'n llytlngcompllmenta interior of any ur

• Convenient I witch-over to voltmeter !unction ICCUtllely

• Steetllll • •gaalldlewith
360-de!ll de swivel

monlio,.blltel'y oulputlrom 10·18 volts f/CT61

Arrowhead
Remanufactured
• Tl'ltf'molttllu!ly control'-&lt;! MaW• will thaw
pi pel. pllfVI. draiAI 'toclll
• POI'tlblt, IIM:IItllkl'l IMgl'lfl 10 !Mfll
• Requ1r•nol0011fotlnllllllllon fMH · I. MH ·2

1488·

Starters

,,

lnterdynamics Hot
Air Blower Rear Window
Defroster/,Defogger
CDmpieWKCHiorlelloreiiJ&amp;MCu~lnstaP~km

Universal Engine Heater

Sale &amp; aHordable way to heat engines

...,,.,

•·Defogs 6 mettaanow llcet111 tor perfect visibility In Ill wt11htt

•

Mastermolive

Mastermotive Flexible
Dipstick Healer

IIBD-1

• Healacrent:cueoll &amp; elrtor lnstantlubriutlon In cold

• Fltslntaeaolant•&gt;t•tem between
hnter hon&amp; block dr•ln plug
• ThermoatltlcaltycontroUedtormall·

• E•tendtd, lltliblt heating element prevents hotspot•

mum ..ftty 6 energy elllclenty
• Designed lor taat&amp; e ..yinatallatlon

IIWA1012010

OPEN 7 DAYS A 'WEEK
Store hours 9:00a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through
Friday,9:00 a .m. to 6:00p.m. Saturday, and 10:00 a.m.
to 5:00p.m. Sunday.

3·YEAR WARRANTY
Forcars&amp; ,
tight trucks ,
domestic &amp; imo1ort

600 -Wall

N UH-6

' speciticalions
Allstarteratested to pertprm to OEM
or better. Prk:e good with ••change.

Gallipolis
209 Upper River Road

(614) 446 4103

Sale prices in eltect December 10 through December 16, 1987
Reg prices ma~ vary due to local competitiOn

..

' ·~

We reserve the right to limit uantiUea.

I

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

I

]u'ry...

Area deaths

~eorge

'

Darst

George Dayton Darst. 88. Lanc~ster. former Meigs County
resident, died Wednesday at the ·
Ci'es tview Nursing Home In
Lancaster.
Surviving are his wife. Rosie
Neil; three sons and daughtersin-law, Darrell and Thelma
Darst, Baltimore. Ohio, and
Drexell and Elsie Darst and
Doyle and Betty Darst, all of
Lancaster; a daughter and sonin-law, Mae and Fred Rentzel,
Columbus, 16 grandchildren and
19 great-grandchildren.
Services will be held at 10: 30
a.m. Saturday at the New Life
Christian Church in Lancaster
with the Rev. Michael Fitzgerald
officiating. Burial and graveside
services wlll be held at 3 p.m.
Saturday at the Miles Cemetery
in Rutland with .the Rev. Robert
E. Smith officiati ng. Friends
may call at the Sheridan Funeral
Home in Lancaster from 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday.
~athan

surviving are 19 grandchildren.
Besides his parents, Mr. Hysell
was preceded In death by three
b~thers, a sister and an Infant
grandson.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Saturday at tile Ewing Funeral
Home with Mr. Paul Taylor and
Mr. Leland Haley offlclat!nr
Burial wlll be In Bradford Cemetery with graveside military
rites to be conducted by FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion. Friends may call at the
funeral home after 7 this evening
and from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Friday.

Hysell

• Nathan Hysell. 59, Route 1,
f!.utla nd, died Wednesday at the
Ht&gt;lzer Medical Center.
· A retired coal miner, Mr .
H'yseU was born April 11, 1928 In
Rutland, a son of the late .James
Walter a nd Mary Searles Hysell .
. He was a member of the Rutland
Freewill Baptist Church. He was
aveteran of the Korean Conflict.
• Surviving are his wife, Charlotte Schaefer Hysell; his stepmother, Margaret Hysell. Pomeroy; seven so ns and
daughters-In -law, David and Di·
ana Hysell, Reedsville; Mike and
Joy Hysell, Middleport; Ronald
a'nd Linda Hysell, Roxboro, N.
C.; Randy and Genia Hysell,
Rutland; LarrY and Pam Hysell,
Columbus; Steve and Joyce
Hysell. Pomeroy; Paul Hysell, at
home; four daughters and sonsin Haw. Kathy and Roger Roush,
Pomeroy; Karen and Dean
Schrock, Rutland ; Mary and
Rick Caruthers, Pomeroy: Janet
and Kenneth McKnight, MiddleP&lt;&gt;rt; six sisters, Cora Woodard,
Pomeroy; Rosa Longerbone, Co·
.lumbus; Ann Carswell, Pome;roy; Betty Johnson, Middleport:
-Bonnie Arnold and Lena Napper ,
:both of Pomeroy; lour brothers.
'Elmer Hysell , Pomeroy; Nor·. man Hysell, Long Bottom;
James Hysell, Columbus, and
John Hysell of Indiana. Also

Marjorie BaD
Marjorie M. Ball, 75.
Middleport, died Tuesday In
Veteran's Memorial Hospital..
She was born July 30, 1912 In
Leon to the late James Robert
and Abbie G. Steele Chattin.
She was preceded In death by
her husband, Arnold T. Ball, who
died In 1955; f!IIUr brothers, John,
Oris, Harold and Robert Chattin.
She was a retired postmaster
In Otsego, W.Va.
Surviving are a daughter and
son-In-law, Patricia A. and Patrick Johnson, Middleport; a son
and daughter-in-law, Robert H.
and Shirley Ball, Toledo, Ohio; a
sister, Dorothy Burris, Columbus; six grandchildren; 10 greatgrandchildren.
The funeral wlll be Saturday at
1 p.m. at the Foglesong Funeral
Home with the Rev. George
Hoschar and Rev. Robert H. Ball
officiating. Burial wlll follow In
Suncrest Cemetery In Point
Pleasant.
Friends may call from 2 to 4
p.m. and 7-9 p.m. Friday at the
funeral home.
In lieu of flowers. the family has
requested that contributions be
made to the Trilby United
Methodist Church Memorial
Fund, 5918 Secor Road, Toledo,
Ohio, 43623.

The Daily Sentinei-Pege- 7

Thursday, December 10, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport •.Ohio

Cain sentenced :

Continued from page 1

from the house. Whereupon, firearm. He charged that the
Little continued, Mrs. Wolfe was situation at the Wolfes' was
questioned by Kane and Snyder accelerated by the law enforceas to whether she was GarY ment oltlcers, and that Pauline
Wolfe's mother and where was Wolfe feared for the safety of her
Gary?
son, and ·Gary Wolfe feared for
Little said when Mrs. Wolfe the safety or his mother.
finally determined why author!·
"What would any parent or son
ties were there, she told, them If do In that situation? " Little
they'&lt;! .round marijuana to go ... asked the jurors. "Why did they
ahead and get lt.
(the authorities) not eradicate
Although several other law the" marijuana? Why did Officer
.enforcement authorities arrived Klein not Immediately seize
on the scene by vehicle shortly Pauline Wolfe after her all,eged
after the copter's landing, Little assault Instead or permitting her
said that no authorities, to the to return to her house?" he
knowledge of the defendants, concluded .
ever pulled any marijuana from
Vinton County Cour.t Judge
near the home. Little said that Warren Lotz, who presided over
witnesses for the prosecution
the trlalln place of Meigs Judge
testified they were uncertain how . Patrick O'Brien; who stepped
far away from the Wolfe home
down, scheduled sentencing In
the marijuana was actually
the matter for 9 a.m. Dec. 30.
located.
Little pointed out although
Gary Wolle was alleged to have
Dally stock prices
been wielding a loaded gun, no
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
cha~ges were filed regarding a
Bryce and Mark Smith
of
Blunt Ellls &amp; Loewl
Man cited by patrol
Am Electric Power ...... ....... 25%
AT&amp;T .................... ......... ..... 28
A Wilkesville man was cited In
Ashland 011 ........................ 54%
an accident ·Tuesday, at 4:20
Bob Evans ................... .. ...... 15
p.m., In Salem Township on S.R.
Charming Shoppes ............... 9%
124, near Salem Center, accordCity Holding Co ................... 34
Ing to the Gallla·Meigs Post of
Federal Mogul ..................... 30
the State Highway Patrol.
Goodyear T&amp;R ...................52*
Glen H. Litman, 50, was cited
Heck's Inc ........................... 1%
for making an Improper left turn
after his 1986 Ford Bronco hit a . Key Centurion ....................35'4
Lands' End ......................... 16%
1977 Jeep Cherokee owned by
Limited Inc......................... 17
HenrY Vanmeter, 33, of Mason,
W.Va.
.
Multlmedill Inc ................... 44~
Rax Restaurants ....................3
Litman and Vanmeter were
Robbins &amp; Myers ....... . :........ 6~
driving easi when Vanmeter
Shoney
's Inc .......................19¥,
lrled to pass Litman. Litman
Wendy's Inti ....................... .4')8
tried to turn left when his Bronco
_ Worthington Ind ................. .16%
hit Vanmeter's Cherokee.

Stocks'

David Paul Cain, 46, of near
Albany, was sentenced Wednes- .
day morning by Meigs Common
Pleas Judge Charles Knight to a
six month determinate sentence
In the Orient Reception Center,
Orient, reported Paul Gerard;
Investigator for Meigs Prosecu- .
tor Fred Crow III. The sentence
was the result of an earlier court
appearance in which Cain entered a plea of guilty to cultivation of marijuana. Cain was also
fined $2,000.
Attorney Herman Carson, re·
presenting the defendant, told
.the court that a Federal forte!·
lure proceeding against Cain as
the result of the marijuana .
Incident has been resolved, al·
though local parties have not
received official notification on
the finalization or the forfeiture'.
Carson said Cain has paid
$30,000 to the Federal government and has forfeited two
vehicles, a custom-built truck
and a four-wheel-drive. A portion
of the $30,000 wlll be returned to
Meigs COUI!ty.

I Court news I
· Sixteen cases were processed
Tuesday night In the court of
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler.
Forfeiting bonds were Clifford
Murray, Middleport, $52; JerrY
Searles, Albany, $47; Janet Carnahan, Reedsville, $47; Marvin
Jeffers, Pomeroy, $46; Debra
Burke, Pomeroy, .S5o; Garland
Nalstetler, Portland_,$44; Gerald
Geiger, Pennsylvania, $46;
Jimmy Graham," Harttord, w.
Va,., $46, all posted on speeding
charges; Timothy Hill, Massillon, $375, reckless operation, and
$49 speeding.
Fined were Cynthia Stanley,
Mason, W. Va., $48 and costs,
speeding; Kathryn Deskins,
Pomeroy, $46 and costs, speed·
Jng; Jeffrey Basham, Coolville,
$63 and costs, traffic light viola·
iion; Eugene Phillips, Jr., AI·
bany, $46 and costs, speeding;
Earl Wines, Cheshire, $375 and
costs, driving while Intoxicated~
Sheri Foster, Galllpolls, $49 and
costs, speeding; Matthew Dll·
lard, Rutland, $63 and costs,
driving under suspension. ,.

We're

featuring
PHABMAC.Y

AM-~ PM
MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 AM· 9 PM

SUNDAY 11

992-3462 .
271'12 N. SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

CCJII'fllete With Bals,
Rack. Cue Sticks,
(halt

S7999

WII'H Rm TOBOGGAN
AND MATO.G SCRAF

The AquaTank"''_,,
LIGHT DESK

$8~9
"-·- -~

CHRISTMAS

WRUTHS
_t:Nfld 1/ll:

-

--=~-...;:.==

(Crosley.] 1.99
52-ln. 3-Speed Reversible Ceiling Fan
Happy Holidays CaSIIelte or Album

w~h anlique
brass finish, mounts close to ceiling. Use year-round. CF205rn!

_,Choice

-

'

'r = -

-

- -

.

HEXAGON TOUCH AND GLOW
ACCENT LAMP

4.19
Fluorescent Lantern

399.Cf1na1ost

ca~ltlco

1J8

15.99

V•·HP Chain·Drive Garage Door Opener wl 20-ln. Structural Foam Toolbox has a removai:lle Inner
security lock, auto. light and sturdy steel T-rail.

sscrrv

5.19

s.-rvifi.

POMD AmFICIAL
POINSEnA
PLANTS .
FOR
CHRISIMAS

with drop-lorged stee l blades.

hli'A and 1-in. chisels.

1

2.99

9155

\ralue:Srighi'

75or 150watls Clear, weathe•·
proof construclton.

C)C)9S

#64602

19C

Rocker ....tlf

11.99-

2 Phillips sc rewdrivers.

~~

wtlh 9 SIOited, 5 Phillips, 2 torx-1ip screwdrivers.

ELECTRIC
CANDLE.

UGHT
tt'SnB&amp;decJ
• Made
ol aura"bto. ltgnlwl!ught ptast1c ior
rugg&amp;d use a"'d lo ng trio.
• Pro~ l de ~ one nour 's rUn ttme on a srn gla
charga - enough tor emergeneuu or
common ho usehold 10bs

CASCADE
GARLAND

$'1 6"
~

7.91
Reg. 54"'
SAlE

S399

LUMBER

The on·the·go
beauty organizers
Reg. '2"
SAlE
'

'

$199

Batta-y Operated.

IN
COLORS
GALORE

High Perform111ce
Cyclists And You
C111tral The Action

$

·

1499

HAND PAINTm

"MELODY IN MOnON"

LARGE PORCELAIN
FIGURINES
"MB.ODY IN MOTION"
WnH VARIOUS PARTS THAT MOVE

51999

O'DELL 7i«e

RACERS SO

' $299

S1199

SAlE

TWIN

Qu;lted holfl liN iog •

'

$199

P£ACH Reg. '14"'
SAlE ·

WIITI'
&amp; PEACH
Reg. '24"'

saooo
SS9'5 .... p&lt;.

$899

GARLAND

If you've got oodiea of stuff, you need a Caboodle- To take it all
with you. On trips, to slumber parties. anyplace. There are big
Caboodtes and little Caboodlea. with handles on lop and latcha·
ble _lids. So anywhere you go, your Caboodle goes. Bring them.
Swmg them. Take them along. Tuck them away . In 7 aizoand California colora. Everyone neada at teat one Caboodle!

SAVE

TO

REG. 189.95

Hot water olo..loyt
immedlo!el't' OYOI!C~
lor teo. hOt chOc:~ote.
soup. cooking. bOII.ng.
WhO! a c::onvenlence.

6 PLY-3" FULL
#'1359

• Stonts m tis own cnargrng tuu• 10 tt'$
alwl't'S fillS'!' to find. ready wnen'

o••P•••• you

UP

$299

SPOnllER JR.
'
RECHARGEABLE

$299
6-Pc. Precision Screwdriver Set 1ncl. 4 slotted and 16-Pc. Profeaslonal Screwdriver Set

hOI. deiiCIOu, cottee

BONUS FEATURE.

BIACK&amp;DECKER .,

LAMP

'

Beautiful
Wooden

PIRFICT· IREW.
Prolenk;mol blewrng ol

dt~
nutcncbll

Sensor-Lite" turns itsett on Floodlighl.n yourchorceol

at dusk and off at da wn . Solid·
tray. It's weatherprool, with rust-reSIStant plated tid latches. 8200 state circuitry.
~

.oeeo or

0~011'\ef.

OAK LOOK NUT BOWL
6 PLY-1 S FEET
SET
S.utitutly
0111 look
rut bowt incladts
PWSH
llld 4 plcb .l'llcliCilllld PnltiY
·BANDED

RICUNIIS
TruGuard

Twice the

WONDERFUL .
XYLOPHONE

2 MAllETS
AND MUSIC SIIET

$799
--~-

your h111d.
W""f bult indudld,

FASTEST.

'i

DEWXE

+•;r.n•+

0

,,

II

COM'lm WITH

c

&amp;-in. slip, 1Q-in. groo.oe joint. nss

Stoinleu sleei iOI'II cop

pet tl.blrtg ood ~i ii to
reolly lost

I
II
'j
.

20"

5j1Viii
3-Pt. Slip and Groove 3-Pc. Wood Chisel Set

Rugged housing delies any weatller! Includes 2 0 batts.

TOP QUALITY.

I

12 ·runes

0&gt;

Workhorse ' Flashlight offers krypton bulb lor brighter light. Joint Pliers Set Incl. 6 &amp;

Brtn9aYou
the Finest Brewer
tor the Home

i

Tum an and off
with a taulh of

$1

r1
U9

"

!

3

NOW

.~1/

I,

$

is volume 22 '" 6·Pk. Heavy-Duty C or 0 Batteries.
the collector's series, featuring your laY"Orite recording artists. 'o0..2'Z 4-Pk. Heevy-Ou~y AA Bldterltl. n144f2

~

' ·,.,.I I
...,_ vi

\

.18" SIZE

2 FREE banerles
with each pack!

4.99

.

~'

.

BUNN COFFEEMAKER

i

'2 TUNf.~

PIM'

non

25 UGHT OUTDOOR
LIGHT SO

OR TABLE TOP
AQUARIUM

All

lor
camping or Indoor/outdoor
work . fN batt. not incl.
!i20G

$19995

''SNOWFLAKE''
THE FRUTH PLUSH
CHRISTMAS BEAR

WITH

December 12, 1987 10:00 a.m. at
105 Union Avenue, Pomeroy, Ohio.
1983 FORD RANGER XL; 1984 FORD TEMPO
4 DR., automatic, PS, PB, air;
1985 FORD BRONCO II XLT 4X4 Overdrive,
automatic, PS, PB, air. ·
For information contact Scott Shank, 992·3293.

Curio
Cabinets

And BMh

A Great Gift For Students Room
Den, Office, Kitchen or Famiy Room

Veterans Memorial
Wednesday Admissions - Ro·
sle Searls, Middleport; Beulah
Bradford, Racine;. Dwight
Sprague, Dexter.
Wednesday Discharges- Pauline Atkins, Esta Roberts, Robert
White, Ernestine Lambert.

GET ONE IHE ___...,

...

'\.~'

DARil WOOD FRAME· GREEN ffiT TOP
WEBBED POCKm • SCREW ON LEGS

.Hospital news

2 FOil
BUY ONE HCIMEI

at Bud.9et Pri(eJ

TABLE TOP POOL TABLE

I

FOR PUBLIC SALE BY THE FARMERS
BANK AND SAVINGS CO.:

liMY UIIQUl MD
DlflEIIJT GifT IIIW

3 FEET LONG X 19'12'' WIDE

THE
VIDEO TOUCH
OPEN

AJGIWSMIIICS.

786 N. SECOND STREET
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

EMS has 4 calls
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Servkes reports four
calls Wednesday; Racine at 1:46
a.m. to Portland for Franklin
Lemley to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 2:55a.m.
to Union Ave. for Ron Plumley to
Veterans Memorial Hospital,
later to Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal; Rutland at 4: 52 p.m. to Hill
St. for Carl Denison to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 9 p.m.
to Letart for Fred Stlnart to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.

&amp;lf1S FIOII FIII1II'S

Just likt actresses
·and models ust

*Beautifully Detailed
*Great Sc11nid From A
. Battery Operated Tape PlayaSold In Gift

Shops

CLARINET CLOWN Item No. 07056
Plays the tune "The Entertainer"

Nationwide For $J2000 And Up

Gift Boxed
'
In S Differlht
Styles
•

�-1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pega 8-The Daily Seutiuel

Meigs steer weigh-in January 2
All 4-H and FFA members - and dehorned prior towelgh-ln. It
planning to exhibit a steer Is also recommended that your
project at the 1988 Meigs County steer weigh a minimum of 500 ,
Fair are reminded that the steer pounds at welgh-ln, although this
welgh-ln wlll be held on Satur- Is not a requirement. In order to.
day, Jan. 2. The welgh-ln will be eligible for lndlvldual sale at
take place from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. fair time, steers must weigh 90Q
at the Meigs County Fairgrounds pounds or more and must have
In the show arena. All steers gained at least 300 pounds from
must be weighed In and ldentl1!ed time of weigh-In on January 2nd.
at this time.
All steers must be under the
Members should also bring direct care of the 4-H or FFA
$8.00 to pay for their pictures for member.
1988. Ralgro wUl be available
If you need more Information
free of charge If you so desire. regarding this weigh-In, please ·
Please know the blr'th date of contact the Meigs County Extenyour steer.
sion Offlce at 992-6696.
All steers must be casterated

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
· 30s early Saturday and ranging
Partly cloudy today, with highs from the upper 20s to the lower
between 50 and 55. Variable 30s Sunday and Monday
cloudiness tonight, with a low mornings.
between 30 and 35. Variable
cloudiness Friday, with a chance
of showers and highs In the mid Lott~ry
50s.
CLEVELAND (UPI} - Wed·
The probability of prec!plla·
nesday's
winning Ohio Lottery
tlon Is near zero today and
numbers:
tonight and 30 percent Friday.
Dally Number
Winds will be from the west
near 10 mph today and from the
229.
'
Ticket sales totaled
southwest at five to 15 mph
$1,417,390.50, with·a payoff due of
tonight.
$842,361.50.
Ohio Extended Forecast
PICK-4
Satanlay through Monday
3463.
A chance_ of rain or snow
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
Saturday and Sunday, with
$221,842,
with a payoff due of
mostly fair weather on Monday.
$100,161.
Highs will be In the low or mld 40s
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
Saturday and In the mid 30s
$4,488.
PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
Sunday and Monday. -overnight
$374.
.
lows will be In the, fDld or upper

numbers

'

-,

Thurilday, December 10, 1987

Wind, snow continue in northwest states
By Vatted Press International
Rain extended across the Paclflc Northwest as another tn a
series of storm systems left wet
and windy weather on a march
across Washington, Oregon and
the northern coast of California.
Rain continued early today In
northwest Montana the Idaho
Panhandle, Washington, western
Oregon and northwest Callfornla, the National Weather Service reported. Rain changed to
snow In the mountains and rain
also was scattered over northern
lower Michigan and upper Michigan. Snow extend~ over north·
ern Maine.
Heavy rainfall during the six
hours ending at 1 a.m. EST
yielded more than 1.19 Inches at .
Eugene, Ore., and .92atTacoina,

One person has all
6 jackpot numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI} - One
player picked all slx numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wednesday night to become eligible
to claim the $3 mllllon jackpot.
The name of the player will be
announced after the winning
ticket Is validated at a regional
tottery office, a lottery commls·
s!on spokesman said today. The
winning numbers were 16, 26. 29,
36, 39 and 41.
·
The player wlll receive the
winnings In 20 annual payments
of $120,000, the spokesman said.'
In llddltlon to the jackpot
winner, 116 players picked live of
the numbers to wln $1,000 each,

wash.
warnings were posted and roads lots · ~~ signals out due to the
Early morning temperatures were blocked.
wind, said state pollee dls·
around the nation ranged from 20
Strong southerly winds pushed patcher Debbie Boyd In
at Bismarck, N.D., and Sioux a moist and unseasonably warm Portland.
Falls, S.D., to 73 at West Palm alr mass across the state. Storm
In central Oregon, 18 cars of a
Beach, F1a.
warnings were Issued once again 53-car Southern Pacific freight
· warnings of galtt·force winds, for Oregon's coastal waters and a
train derailed Wednesday mor~s·
today remained along the north· high wind warning was posted for .Ing In a remote area some
ern and central Paclf!c Coast, the coastal valleys, where winds miles south of Gllc~rl~t, fn(j
with warnings of high winds overnight Tuesday gusted to 80 heavy snow ham pe~ t ~o~;~f
across western Oregon. High mph In places.
nup of more than • ga
wind warnings _also were fore·
"There's lots of high water and sulfuric acid.
cast over a portion of north
NATIONAL W-EATHER SERVICE FORSCAST TO 7 AM EST 12·11·87
central Wyoming and the eastern
30
slopes of the Rockies In Montana.
Wind advisories were posted
over the Panhandle through
western Idaho and Washington.
High wind watches today have 40
been posted over the southeast
quarter of Wyoming and the
northeast quarter of Colorado.
Warnings of gale-force winds
were posted over eastern Lake
Superior.
, S11ow advisories through the
morning have been posted over
the Olympics and Cascades
mountains In Washington, the
' mountains of northern Idaho and
the mountains of western
Montana.
Flood warnings were posied
for the Nehalem, Siletz and
Wilson" rivers In northwest
Oregon. Recent heavy rains will
cause flooding near Foss, Tllla·
mock and Siletz today.
WEATHER MAP - Rain showers will extend over the norther!'
The latest In a series of Intense
Pacific
Coast and the northern Plateau Into the upper Ml!18ourl
storms swept across Oregon
valley,
wllb
rain becoming snow In the higher elevations. Rain will
Wednesday with buffeting winds
also
extend
over
upper Michigan. Rain over norlheast New York
of up to 80 mph, heavy mountain
slate
wUI
change
to snow across northern Maine. Winds will be
snows and nearly 5 Inches of rain
strong and gusty over the Rockies.
In the coast range, where flood

13

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio

Thursday, December 10, 1987

Beat of the bend

What's the
By BOB HOEFLICH
Somewhere In this wonderland
land of agencies and bureaus,
there must be
someone who
can enlighten
some Middleport rest dents
who are feeling
the results of
what seems to
be a huge underground blast
between 4 and 4:30p.m.
Residents complain that the
blast shakes their homes and
windows jar. It's one giant blast
and then allis quiet again.
No one seems to know what Is
happening but there are fears
that some foundations are going
to be damaged--let alone what
else.
So far, the complaints seem to
be confined to buildings and
homes near the business section
of the town.
,
Apparently, It Is also happenIng In the area of Clifton, W.Va.
The vibration Is so great In one
home that It nearly causes a table
lamp to fall to the floor.
I'm told that the blast happens
Monday through Friday--has not
been noticed on Saturday and
Sunday and has been occur!ng
regularly for about two months.
But so far , If anyone knows,
there has been. no lnforma tlon
forthc;om!ng on just what Is
taking place.
There are some Mlddleport
residents who would like to know.
A great amount of preparation
has gone Into the VIctorian
Christmas display at the Meigs
Museum this holiday season.
Open house wlll be held from 1
to 4 p.m. on both Saturday and
Sund~y . And to add to the
attraction, Santa will be on hand
to vlslt with kids from 2 to 4 on

SHOrAT PAT HILL FORD

b~sting

He ·Will Save Y

Saturday.
Middleport merchants are an nouncing their first two winners
In their annual Christmas give
away program.
Winner of $100 In gift certlfl·
cates was Grace Abbott of
Pomeroy and Opal Biggs · of
Middleport won $200 worth of gift
certlflca tes.
Operallng the canteen at blood·
mobile vlslts Is very Important
and Marlon Ebersbach on behalf
of the Meigs County Blood
Program Issues this statement:
''The success of the bloodmo·
bile operation In Meigs County
not only depends on blood donors
but also on volunteer workers .
And one very Important part of
tl)e volunteer help Is In serving
the canteen. In the past, organ!·
zatlons of the county have
volunteered to serve the canteen
and we hope they wlll continue to
do this.
"The following are the dates
the bloodmobile will be In Meigs
County In 1988: February 10;
Aprll27; June 22; August 17; Oct.
19 and December 14.
"If your organization wlll
serve the canteen on one of'the
a hove dates, call Peggy Harris a\
9921-7569. Don't walt for her to
call you."
Meantime, the next bloodmobile vlslt wlll be at the Meigs
Senior Citizens Center In Pomeroy from 1 to 5:30p.m. Wednesday. Into the bargain, as a donor
you will be given a certificate
which you can trade for chicken '
lltlles at Crew's Family
Restaurant.

The Daily

.

----

'

STOP IN AND SEE:

Ric:k Tolliver; Pat Hill or Jay Hill

1988
f·SERIES PICKUP

SAVE UP TO

SAVE UP10

$2024°0

$3756°0

·You'll Sa~e
Plenty
On These!

"',....,m

t:ffj:;J

You'll Sa~e
Plenty
On T~ese!

SAVE UP TO

$2579°0

After much deliberation, I've
decided that I'm the · human
counterpart of Rudolph, the Red
Nosed Reindeer. Do keep
smlllng.

1988 .
iRONCO II

Eastern's menu announced
The menu for Eastern Local
-School District cafeterias for the
week of Dec. 14 Is announced:
Monday: sloppy joe, french
fries, fruit. milk.
1\lesday: chicken patty, green
beans. fruit, milk.
Wednesday:' grilled cheese,

tomato soup. stuffed celery with
peanut butter; fruit, milk . .
Thursday: p!zzaburger, corn,
fruit, mill\,
Friday: turkey, ro)l, butter,
mashed potatOes, gravy, eake,
lee cream, milk.

SAVE UP TO

$292300

Chester·PTO has meeting
1986 PONtiAC GRAND AM '
StQCI. #77$81, 2·ctr, 4-wt. driw. 6 cvt ~ng. hK:t
lllr cond, 5-JP t111n1, l'f•trlnt, p-.-tng.
p-btlbl. p-wlndOwt, podoor loeb. llh l'f· .....,eel,
cr-«~ntrol. em-fm. Ill"'*'.,_, Ndlel•. wh-WIIIII.
but*• •••· r-Wncbw ct.f

FORD F·SERIES

SALE PRICE

Stock #84341. 4-dr, fr-whool drive,

4 cyl eng. fact. air cond, auto. tnono,
p.llteering, p-brakes, cr-eontrol. amfm. stereo· tape. radials, buckal

-··sa 995

FORD TAURUS

SALE PRICE

$13,995
1987 FORD TfMPO

1986 FORD F-1 SO 4X4

Stock #11560, 4-dr, 4 cyleng. fact.
air oond, auto. trans., p-steering.
p-brakos, ill ol·whool, am-1m radio,
radllla, buckat ......

SALE PRICE

s7,999

Stock ·#84291, 4-wh drive, 6 cyl
eng. aUto. trans., p·staering. p..
bfllk;IJI, am-fm, radials; Y2 ton
pickup, lh-....,aal bella.
SALE PRICE

Several purchases for the
school by the Chester PTO were
displayed and reported on at a
recent meeting of the group at
the school.
It was noted that new kitchen
curtains have been provided,
that science equipment has been
purchased f9r the primary
teachers, a counter for the
kindergarten a· television cart!or
the sixth grade, and pull-down
maps for the fifth grade.

An allotment of funds· was
given to the school for art
supplies and each teacher was
given money to spend on Christmas treats.
The kindergarten morning
class won the room count. First
grade teacher, Becky Eddwards,
thanked the PTO for the money
she rec!eved last month for
winning the room count and
reported on how she spent it .

Fireman's Auxiliary has meeting

S1 0 700

Annual Christmas dinner and
party of the Ladles Auxiliary of
the Chester Firemen was held
recently at the home of Cleo
Smith.
A steak dinner was served by
Mrs. Smith with Clara Conroy -and Jnzy Newell as co-hostesses.
The members enjoyed a gift
exchange and games during the
evening spent at the Smith home

=====

which was attractively deco·
rated for the season.
Others attending were Erma
Cleland, Betty Newell, Bonnie
Landers, Dorothy Hawk, Susan
Cleland, Goldie Krackolm·
berger, Paula Wood, Marcia
Keller, Elizabeth Hayes, Opal
Eichinger, LauraMaeNlce, Opal
Wickham, Ethel Orr, Lora,
Damewood, and Opal Hollon.

.
Chester community notes
,.

Stock #11691, 2-dr. 4 cyl ong. auto.

tran1., P·steering. am-fm. st•eo

Stock #76706, 2-dr coupe, 6 cyl
eng. fact . air cond .. outo. tnono..

18Pa, radials, wh-wello, buckol .,....

p-staaring. p-bfal&lt;eo, om-fm. -eo.

SALE PRICE

radillt, wh·wolls, bucfcols 10011.

SALE PRICE

$2,995

FORD

FINAL
CLOSEOU

Discounted Up To

$3500.

S5,995

1983 FORD F·1 SO

1984 CHEVY SilVERADO

Stodc ;,11291 , 2-df, v-8 Mg. flt!t. Air oond,
auto. nns. p-_.lng, p-br*-, •m-fm.
r.tlsll. wtt-wtlll. 1111 ton pickup, long wldl btd.
'"" .., b!.irt1*, g.,~ .
SALE PRIC£

-eo.

Stock NB3871 ...... a eng. fm . •ir cond. .u~o.
ti'Mt. P---ing, p-br. . .. p-~t, J)'«-

$750. REBATE*

ladcs, tn • -"""-l cr-oonttol. .,...fm, --.o
tlpt. lid!*. '1.1 1M Pdcup, ,.. liSp bumper,

....fuel whk.
SALE PRICE

gM~gS~.

sa 995
1984 AMC EAGLE '
Stock #83941, 4-dr sedan, 4-wh
drive, 8 cyl eng, fact. air cond, vinyl
roof, .,to. trana ., p-steerhlg, ,P·
bnlkee, am-fm, radiftls.

SALE PRICE

$5,890

1980 VOWWAGEN PIO&lt;.t!P
Stock #77183. lr-wh-drive, 4 cyl.
ong. 4-~p lnlno .. am radio. 111dilla, r
buclcol ......

SALE PRICE .

1988 RENAULT MEDALLION
*Applies To Sedan or Wagon, Only 3 In Stock
Offer Expires Jan. 31, 1988.

By Clarice Allen
Thomas and Gloria Illenlck,
Girard, were recent visitors of
Opal Eichinger and Mr. and Mrs.
Tom Nice.
Mr \ and Mrs. Don Eichinger,
Tiffany and Justin, Opal Eichinger and Laura Mae Nice spent a
recent weekend In Loulsvllle, Ky.
with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Hartung and daughters .
Mr. and Mrs . Kenneth DeLong,
Salem, were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Lando Clay.
Thanksgiving dinner guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Gaul were
David Gaul, Athens, Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Ours, Mr. and Mrs.
Mark Hall, and Opal Wickham.
Dr. and Mrs. Bll!y Allen, Katie
and Bobby, Westerville, were
guests of Mr . and Mrs. Clayton
Allen, Thanksgiving week.
Kenneth Newell, Columbia, S.

C., spent Thanksgiving week
with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Newell. Other guests forThanksglv·
!ng dinner were Mr. and Mrs.
Steve Meek, and children, M~.
Sterling, Ky.: Mr. and Mrs . .
James Newell, Cincinnati;
Kadthy Newell, Gallipolis; Mr._
and Mrs . Blaine Newell, The
Plains; Randy Dudding, Syracuse, and Helen Nelson, local.
Mrs. Ethel Orr has returned
from a week's vlslt with her
sister, Allee Hlll, Rockledge. Fla.
Thanksglvng dinner guests of
Opal Eichinger were Mr. and
Mrs. Dwayne Fisher , Laura
Eichinger, Jeff Horton, Col urn·
bus; Mr. and Mr. Charles E!chln·
ger and Su~!e, Pickerington: Mr .
and Mrs. Don Elchlgner, Tiffany
and Justin, Riggs crest; Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Eichinger, Reedsvllle, called in tbe afternoon.

Christmas party is held .·
The annual holiday dinner
party of the Ohio Eta Ph! Chapter
of Beta Sigma Phl Sorority was
· held Tuesday nlghtat the home of
Charlene Hoeflich, sponsor.
A gift exchange by secret
slst_e rs was held. Tree ornaments
were displayed and exchanged
during the evening. Members
brought toys which will go to
needy children.
'

Attending were Teresa
Kennedy, president, Sherry Wll·
cox, Betsy Jones, Susan Clark,
Debbie Evans, Ginger Pratt, Joyce Douglas, Jan Haynes,
Judy Cowen, Becky Triplett,
Tammy Bachner, Pam Diddle,
Judy Williams, Rand! Hill,
Marty Ferguson , Cathy Johnson,
Rhonda
Davis, and Linda
Jones.
.
·,,

SUPER

Rememherf

SA~INOS

Santa

SAVE UP TO

$143200

ON SUPER
WHEELS!

Shops At

Pat Hill For•r
H E
·END ·SA
SON ALL OUR
: ·QUALITY USED CARS '&amp; TRUCKS!!!

'

Come in :and ·Check Out Out PrJces and Big Discounts
.Low financing lates ,4vqilable.;.: (~n the Spot Financing)

1985 FORD F·150

1985 FORD F-250

302 engine, automatic overdrive,
XlT Lariat package. Air, cruise,
power locks and windows, tilt
wheels, styled
steel wheels.

351 engine. automatic transmis·
sion, AM/FM. dual tank, 7700 lb.

AM/FM/Cassette.

1985 .F-150
FORD 414

1985 GMC 112 TON
PICKUP SIERRA CLASSIC

V-B · engine, alJ!o. transmission, air ·

conditioning,

cruise

control,

tilt

wheel, power locks and windows.

1987. E-1 50

gvw.

CLUB WAGON

V-8 auto. overdrive trans., qu_ad captain
chairs. sofa bed. cruise control, -dual air
and heat, powar windows and locks. running boards. roof rack. ladder. aluminum
wheals .

6 cylinder, 4 speed. Low
mileage. AM/FM

1987 ESCORT GT
560, air conditioning, cassette,
sunroof.

1986 R~NGER
PICKUP ·
V-6, 5 speed, AM/FM, power
steeri
brakes.
bed.

(2) TAURUS LX 1916
V-6, automatic transmission.
cruise, tilt, air, power windows,
power locks.

1984 MERCURY
COUGAR
V-6, Air conditioning, AM / FM,
rear defrost.

NOW AVAILABLE AT
PAT'S MUFFLER SHOP

. Shock Absorbers by Cabriel
HEAVY SHOCKS .......................... $11 95 per shock
Installed Price SJ6 u par shock

YOUR COMPLETE EXHAUST
AND SHOCK ABSORBER
SERVICE CENTER ....
ASK FOR PHIL HOOD TODAY.

, GAS SHOCKS .............................. $1

,.

875-per shock

Installed Price 51875 per shock

FOI AU DOMESTIC CliS AND TIUCIIS

•
'...

�The Oai

December 10, 1987

flage-1Q-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middle

'

, Ohio

In the spotlight

Holidays can be a stresfful time fo_r .people
By Cindy s. Oliveri
County Extension Agent

The holiday season Is upon us;
a time for famlly get togethers,
parties, shopping, entertaining,
home decorating and the list goes
on forever. 'For many people It
can also be a stres~ful time,
because of the eKtra demands
placed upon our already busy
s£hedules. This week, In the
Spotlight takes a look at stress,
and·some coping mechanisms for
the busy days ahead. ·
To be al!ve Is to experience
stress. However when stress Is
Intense or relentlessly persistent
it can become detrimental to our
physical and psychological
health. Stress arises when people
think that they can't cope effectively with all the demands
placed upon them. This can be
i&gt;artlcularly true during · the
hQllday season.
When someone perceives an
event as a stressor, a series of
about 1,500 physical reactions
begjn In his or her body. These
reactions vary greatly In different people and In the same person
in different situations.
Sometimes, stress responses
can trigger headaches, irritabilIty or other stress related dis·

orders such as ulcers and
asthma. Each individual has one
or more weak organ systems
which become targets for development of physlcai or psychological disease when stress Is
present.
•
Recent studies have shown
that people who are aggressive,
extremely competitive, impatient and Irritable have an
Increase&lt;;! risk of developing
heart disease.
·
Although at risk, these people
can learn to cope with stress and
stay healthy. Most common
coping techniques In-clude exer·
clse, good nutrition plenty of
. sleep and avoidance of alcohol,
drugs and tobacco.
However, stress experts say ·
people can cope better with
stress if they believe that change
Implies challenge rather than
threat and that they have coping
resources within themselves.
Another important key to suc. cessfully coping with stress Is
social and family relationships.
These relationships are especially Important during the holidays. They provide us with
physical, economic and emotional support.
Relieving some of the stress
during the holidays can best be

noted. Schedule certain days for
done by getting the whole family
cookies,
housecleaning, etc. and
Involved In each of the activities.
Trying to do everything yourself be sure to get the whole family
Involved. Everybody can pitch in
Is one way to end up feeling very
stressed and maybe even physi- together to make the jobs easier.
cally sick with a cold or flu when These times can be real positive
the holiday season gets in full times for family communicaswing. The following are some tions too!
Plan easy 't!.,eals, maybe make
ideas to help you and your family
a double batch. Of a·, favorite
work together.
Sit down as a family and come casserole, and put it In the
up with a list of all the things that freeser for a quick dinner after a
need to be done; include everday busy day.
Allow time fo r yourself each
routliles such as meals .housecleaning, etc. plus special holi- day whether It's relaxing in a
day activities such as gift buying, warm bath, reading a book, or
card signing, etc.
taking a nap. Don't try to go
·
Have each famlly member nonstop 16-18 hours a day for the
volunteer for certain projects. entire month of December and
Remember that a package expect to feel terrific for the
wrapped by seven year old Susie Christmas and New Year's
may not look at all like one you festivities.
Take a look at past holiday
wrapped yourself, but a tag
saying Handwrapped by Susie activities . Are there things you
will explain to' the recelplent the do but doh't really enjoy? If so,
reason for the extra tape or give yourself permission not to
tattered edges! Chances are the do them this year whether it
person receiving the gift will means having a less than spot·
enjoy a youngsters work as much less house or less elegant holiday
meal.
'
as a fancy job done by an adult.
Let family members help with · The holidays are a great time
the Christmas cards by gluing on of the year. Work together with
stamps. Older family members your family .t o make them even
more enjoyable by sharing the
can help sign cards.
Put up a December calender load qnd working together this
with the dates of all activities ~eason.

Thursd8y, December 10, 1987

a few pennies spent here
comes back folding money

•

CUT-YOUR OWN-AT

II
I

1
1

Long Bottom communitY happenings report

992 •2156

r··ciiiiiSiMisTRiis--1
I'
I
I

BRADFOU'S GROVE
PRE-CUT TREES AVAILABLE
SCOTCH AND WHITE PINE

Located on Cherry Ridge, turn east at Darwin on Rt. 681, 4 miles,
turn south on Gravel road I Yz miles to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGN$ 7 Hours 10:00 Til Dark

·-------------~---------

I
, .

1
I
I

I

By Melody Roberts
• Thanksgiving dinner guests of
:Mr. and Mrs . John Newlun were
Scott Starcher, Five Points, and
·.Kenneth Rtggs, Tuppers Plains.
;After the dinner Christy Newlun,
•Riggs and Austin joined other
· :.m embers of the Riggs family for
, supp~r at the home of Lois
Leonard in Belpre. Tina Newlun

and Starcher sent the afternoon
wth Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Starcher, Fjve Points. ·
Mrs. Mae McPeek sJ1nt
Thanksgiving wl th Mrs. IXda
Bissell and Kenneth and also
visited the Mike Bissell family .
Mr. and Mrs. Mike Andrews
and family· of Columbus were
holiday guests of ~ary Andrews.

:s&amp;40 Salon meeting held
Holiday projects of remember· ing children with respiratory
diseases were reported on at the
Monday night meeting of Meigs
County Salon 710, Eight and
· Forty, held at the Drew Webster
' Post 39 home In Pomeroy follow ~ lng a Christmas dinner at Crows.
. It was noted that gifts, clo·
; thing, toys and food had been
· laken to four chlldren, one with
: cystic fibrosis. Funds were also
; donated to assist with the eK' pense of transporting a child to
~ Children's Hospital.
~ Catherine Welsh, chapeau.
.• opened the meeting and wei; corned Mary Martin back to into
: the group. For the past several
. months she has been living in

Texas.
· Florence Richards, le secre·
ta lre, reported that the salon
needs dues from nine more
partners to reach ,goal. Pecans
and cashews have arrived and
are for sale by the group. They
may be purchased by calling
992-2446 or 992-2226.
· Gifts and cards were ex changed. NeKt meeting will be
held on Jan. 4, the place to be
announced. Veda . Davis and
Loretta Tiemeyer served re·
freshments to those named and
Eunie Brinker, Pearl Knapp,
Julia Hysell, Lula Hampton,
Rhoda Hackett, Iva Powell, .
Marjorie Fetty, and Ruby
Marshall.

DIAMOND SO LIT AIRE
--SPECIALSRing or Pendant

'==========================
Community calendar

THURSDAY
POMEROY ~ Annual open
, CHESHIRE ..,. Gallia-Melgs ·house of the M'eigs Museum will
: Community Action Agency's free be held this weekend. 1 to 4:30
:, clothing day , for low-income p.m. each day. Theme Is a
• persons w111 be held Thursday, 10 VIctorian Christmas.
; a.m. to 12 noon, in the old high
~·school building at Cheshire.
Concert
•.
RACINE - Southern High
~ MIDDLEPORT
The School Choir and Band wiil ·
··Womens ' Association of Middle· present a combine~ concert on
-: port First Presbyterian Church Sunday at 2 p.m. at the school.
. will meet 7:30p.m. on Thursday Student art projects will also be
· at the church. Group I will be on display . Thepublicls welcome
~ hostesses . Group II will present to attend.
~ the program . DevotiOns by Faye
· Williams.
·
Shooi
'
POMEROY - The Ken Ams·
'
; POMEROY - Reservations bary Chapter of. the Izaak Walton
·• must be m by Thursday for the League is sponsoring muzzle·
~ DA V and DAV Auxiliary Christloading shoots on Sundays start·
. mas dinner to be held Monday at lng Dec. 13 and COjltlnuing
; 7 p.m . Call992-2636 or 992-2272 to through Jan. 3. All shoots,
: make reservations .
consisting of free hand and bench
rest events at various distances,
. POMEROY - Rock Springs begin at 1 p.m. Open sites and
,. Grange will meet at 6:30 p.m. scopes will not be shot in th'l
Thursday at the hall. There wlll same category. Various prizes of
: be a potluck dinner, and a white meats and money will be
~ elephant gift eKchange.
awarded.

~-Boosters
RACINE will

Southern Band
meet Thursday ,
7:30p.m., in the high s&lt;;.hool band
room. Parents of all band stu·
. dents In the district are urged to
·;attend.
.

Stop in soon
and view
these
· beautiful
loose
diamonds .
We'll set your
choice in
either a ring
O( a pendant
at no extra
charge.
OPEN SUNDAY 12 to S

Clark's Jewelry •

•Visa •Mastercard
•Discover •Layaway

113 COURT, POMEROY
. 992-2054

Private Viewing
By AJIIIIOin·tment ,.,.vo•7

•-----~------L--=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--1

·Fried
Now,
If
You
Want.~ This,
Fish Filet or Ribeye Steak or Fned Ch1cken Breast

..

;: CHESTER- Open installation
··:of district education offlcers and
:: officers of Shade River Lodge 453
:· will be held Thursday, starting
· with dinner at 6:30 p.m., at the
·. Chester Masonic Temple. All
:., master masons , their families
&gt; and Invited guests welcome. A
, · special program for chlldren will
:; be held .
'
&gt;
FRIDA};'
'~ POMEROY - The Willing
: Workers Class of Enterprise
: · United Methodist Church will
·; meet Friday. 7: 30 p.m., at the
. : nome of Marjorie Bowen.

.

.-

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

••

&lt;

LONG BOTTOM - Public
:: square dance, 8 to llp.m. Frid~y
· at the Long Bottom Commumty
Building .
MIDDLEPORT- Retur.n Jon·
a than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at 1 p.m. at Heath
United Methodist Church, Middleport. Dr. Marjorie Malone
will have a program. Memories to;::=~~
•• in Music. Members are reminded [
: · to take gifts for the veterans ar
•. the Chillicothe V.A. Hospital.
• Hoste~ses wlll be Mrs. Nan
: Moore, Mrs. Arthur Skinner.
Mrs. Larry Wiley , Mrs. Roscoe
· Wise, and Mrs. Daniel Thomas.
~

·•..
··
··
··

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Evangeline Chapter Order of
Eastern Star will have open
installation of officers on Friday
at 7:30p.m. Members are asked
to bring two covered dishes .
Meat, pie and cake will . be
furnished.
PurticipultiiJ.! Srttak!Jrm s e.~

:

.

POMEROY - Round and
square dancing will be featured
~. Friday night from 8 to 11 p.m . at
the Senior Citizens Center In
• Pomeroy. Music by Larry l:lub. · bard and True Country Band.
·~ Admission $1.50. Bring snacks .

·· rdifll't

312 GIFTS IN ONE
GIVE A YEAR'S GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SENTINEL
TO THAT SPECIAL PERSON ON YOUR SHOPPING LIST.

1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION ..... :................ Only •57.20
· We will send a gift subscription card with your name telling of
. ,
your special gift.

THE"Your
DAILY
SENTINEL
Hometown Newspaper"
·.-

Sentinei- Page- 11

..

SATURDAY
HOBSON - There will be a
• hymn sing on Saturday night
" starting at 7 p.m. at the Hobson
Church of Christ in Christian
; Union. Everyone welcome.
"

~
POMEROY - The Belles and
;' Beaus Western Square Dance
·' Club wlll have a dance at the
~ Senior Citizens Center Saturday
; from 8 to 11 p.m. Ail western
' square dancers are invited to
7: a ttend . Kent Hall of Marietta will
7· be the cdller .

"-

'.
i'

SUNDAY

. . . . . . ..

.

I

.

You · ·Have To$ Pay.A Little Less.
99
Bring the family :md enjoy a feast
at Ponderosa. For one smallprice,
you·n get a complete Ribcye Steak.
Fried Chicken Breast or Frleli Fish
Filet dinner. And, every dinner

comes complete wllh a potato
and our all-you-can-eat
Salad Buffet and Hot Spar~ There
you 'll find a vanety of vegetable&gt;.
pastas, sauces, soup~ . rolls
and more!

Introducing the Ponderosa Value line
d!

=po=NDER=-=-os=A·
There's a family.feeling at PonderoSa:·
Upper Rl"er Rd.
(acrou (rom the Airpon)

r

I

,.

BERKLINE WALLAWAY RECLINERS
LADIES' WINTER GOWNS
MEN'S SWEATERS
NURSERY FURNISHINGS
TIMEX WATCHES
LITTLE BOYS' PANTS
MEN'S TIES
GIRLS' DRESSES
. RUSS SPORTSWEAR
FLOOR LAMPS
BOXED CHRISTMAS CARDS
LADIES' NIGHTSHIRTS
MEN'S WESTERN SHIRTS
BOYS' SWEATERS
GRANDFATHER CLOCKS
MEN'S -JEANS
.RCA COLOR TELEVISIONS
MEN'S VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS
LitTLE GIRLS' SPORTSWEAR
MEN'S WINTER JACKETS
MICROWAVE OVENS
PRE-TEEN SWEATERS
MEN'S FLANNEL SHIRTS
BOYS' SHIRTS
LADIES' PAJAMAS
ALL OCCASION TABLES
MEN'S DRESS TROUSERS
GIRLS' SLEEPWEAR
CHILDREN'S COATS &amp; SNOWSUITS
MISSES SPORTSWEAR
EXTRA SIZE SPORTSWEAR
DINING ROOM FURNITURE
HASSOCKS
CD PLAYER
MEN'S COVERALLS
SWIVEL ROCKERS
GUN CABINETS
MEN'S BELTS
CURIO CABINETS
TOWELS
DESKS
THROW RUGS
BLANKETS
VINYL FLOOR COVERING
MEN'S KNIT SHIRTS
BERKLINE ROCKER/RECLINERS
FALL JEWELRY
LADIES' THERMAL UNDERWEAR
RCA VCR'S
MEN'S WALLETS
CASSETTE TAPES
WOOD ROCKERS
LADIES' WINTER ROBES
CHRISTMAS GIFT WRAP
WOMEN'S JEANS
BOOK SHELVES
CHILDREN'S JEANS
ALL WHIRLPOOL APPLIANCES
RADIOS
TAPE DECKS
BEDROOM SUITES
SOFAS
LOVES EATS
SLEEPER /SOFAS

Free
Parking

Elherfelds
POMEROY

992-3671

Open Sunday

12 to 5

�Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

•

•

Korean president- supporters not

Nobel Peace Prize award
to Costa Rican President
By ROLF SODERLIND
OSLO, Norway (UPI ) -Costa
Rican President Oscar Arias
Sa nchez accepted the 1987 Nobel
Peace Prize today , passionately
Imploring the world ' s superpow
ers to send strife-ridden Central
Americans " plowshares instead

''To receive this Nobel Prize on
the lOth of December IS for me a
marvellous coincidence, My son
Oscar Felipe, here present , is 8
years old today. I say to him, and
through him to all the children of
my country, that we shall never
resort to violence, we shall never
support mllltary solutions to the
problems of Central America"
The son sat in the audience
with his sister Sylvia Eugenia,
12, and mother, Margarita
Penon
Anas received the prize from
Egil AarVIk, chair man of the
Nobel committee, who called
him the "pnncipal force behind
the work for peace In Central
America " Aarvik said the
award is a recogmt!On of an
achieved result- the peace plan
- as well as a moral support lor
the future
Later today, the eight winners
of the Nobel prizes for physics,
chemistry, medicine, literature
and economics were to receive
their awards from Sweden's
King Carl XVI Gustaf in a
separate ceremony 1n
Stockholm
Alfred Nobel, the Swedish
chemist who endowed the Nobel
Prizes In his will, stipulated that

of swords "

Arias, at 46 one of the youngest
winners m the 86 year history of
the prestigious prize, received
the Nobel gold medal and dl·
ploma In a solemn hourlong
ceremony In Oslo's Unlver~lty
Grand Hall attended by Nor·
way's royal family .
In an impassioned acceptance
speech, Anas said the Norwe·
glan Nobel Committee. was
"enhancmg the poss1biht1es of
success" by awarding h1m the
pnze
He told the world's superpow·
ers, "Let Central Amencans
dec1de the future of Central
America.
"Leave the mterpretatlon and
implementation of our peace
plan to us Support the eflorts for
peace Instead of the forces of war
in our regiOn Send our people
plowshares mstead of swords,
prunmg hooks instead of spears

the peace prize be awarded In
Oslo and the other prizes in
Stockholm. Norway and Sweden
were In a political union when
Nobel wrote his will in 1895, the
year before he died
Arias earlier said his award Is
a tribute to Costa Rica, a
democracy that abolished Its
armed forces in 1948, and to the
Central American presidents
who " let rationality pervade
over madness." Arias said, how·
ever, he was getting impatient
over a general "Intransigence"
slowing the peace process
"I don't think we have lost
momentum," he said "The ball
is still rolling, but perhaps I am
complaining that it is not rolling
fast enough."
The soft-spoken Arias noted he
had asked Reagan three times to
cut all aid to the Contras
He said Reagan "knows that as
long as he supports the Contras it
will be much more difficult to
comply with the Guatemala
accord." As long as there is
aggression, the Nicaraguan go·
vernment will u8e 11t as an excuse
for not advancing Its democrat!·
zatlon In line with the peace
accord, Anas said

ByC.Y. LEE
CHONJU , South Korea (UPl)
- Supporters of presidential
candidate Kim DaeJung clashed
with riot police today. trading
rocks and tear gas grenades as
they disrupted a rally for ruling
party nominee Rob Tae·woo deep
in Kim 's political stronghold.
At an earlier Roh rally In the
city of Kunsan, news reports said
explosives
possibly fire·
crackers or small bombs- were
thrown at Roh and that several
youths carrying footlong knives
were arrested The reports could
not be immediately confirmed.
Rob, the hand-picked candl·
date of President Chun Doo
Hwan, Is facing a stiff challenge
in next Wednesday's election
from Kim Dae Jung and Kim
Young-sam However, opposi·
tion leaders fear the Klms will
split the vote and hand the
election to the ruling party.
In Seoul, hundreds of youths
occupied oppositiOn party head·
quarters for the third straight
day demanding Kim Dae Jung
and Kl m Young-sam agree on a
smgle candidate
Kim Young-sam met with
Paek K1 wan, an independent
candidate who commands con·
siderable support among dissl

dent students, and agreed to hold
an "emergency ]lQiitlcal confer·
ence" with Kim Dae Jung, Paek
and others today.
In an apparent attempt to
avoid a vCite split that could lead 1
to Roh's election, Kim Young·
sam and Paek said the meeting
would concentrate on formmg a
"democratic coalition govern·
men!" to be installed following
the election
Earlier, Kim Young sam's
party issued a statement charg·
lng Kim Dae Jung with splitting
opposition ranks. A spokesman
lor Kim Dae Jung renewed a
proposal the two men stage a
joint campaign and decide who
should be the opposition candl·
date based on crowd support.
The rally for Roh had drawn
about 20,000 people to the the
Chonju railroad station, about
125 miles south of Seoul, but most
fled when the clash between
students and pollee began.
About 1,000 people battled riot
pollee for two hours, burned four
effigies of Roh, smashed 10
loudspeakers and torched Roh
campaign placards Pollee
tossed rocks, tear-gas grenades
and fired rlfle·launched tear-gas
canisters Into the crowd. Ten
people, including several ruling

Japan 1odu,es protest
0

Democratic Justice Party (DJP)
members, were Injured during
the melee.
The fighting broke out before
the rally was scheduled to start
and several . DJP lawmakers
attempted to calm the crowd,
saying "when you sh()ut ' Kim
Dae Jung' once, one million votes
go away from him so please
behave, stop throwing rocks."
At an earlier rally , about 10
tear gas grenades exploded after
scuffling broke out between
supporters of Kim Dae Jung and
Roh. It was not Immediately
clear who !Ired the tear gas but
witnesses said they were thrown
by plainclothes policemen In the
crowd.
· One of Rob's bodyguards was
hit In the head and three others
were Injured Two foreign cor·
respondents, including a United
Press International reporter,
were slightly Injured when
struck by rocks
Roh accused the two Klms of
scheming to foment unres I if one
of them Is not elected In the Dec.
16 balloting.
"If either of the two Klms gets
elected, leftists and radicals will
carry the day Immediately,"
Roh said. "If I am elected, I can
stpp student demonstrations
through sohd reforms and insure
stablllty and prosperity for the
natJon."

Increase from $407 to $66() a
month
Rodrigues said the Increase
was based on the mcomes of
Subejano and a home aide who
was living in his apartment. and
that he would lower the rent to
$480 If the a1de agreed to move
out
But Rodngues said Subejano
came to his office last Friday and
threatened to kill him. the home
aide and himself
·'He informed me very calmly,
very low toned thijlt last Fnday
he had made up his mind and he
had decided that he was going to
kill me," Rodrigues said. "HE
stated that kllllng meant nothing
to h1m "

Rodrigues also testified that m
Apnl, Subejano showed him
what he called a German Luger,
a semiautomatic pistol, and said
he had taken it from a soldier he
kilied during the war
A building maintenance
worker testified SubeJano once
told him his home aide was
taking money from him and,
pulling a small gun and bullets
from his coat, said that he would
" take care of her "
The lawyer representing build
ing management said Subejano
also possessed a derringer and
another pistol and that police
searchmg his apartment after
the threats were made found
ammunition
Lawyer David Pahotti asked
the judge to authorize a warrant

allowing pollee to conllscate the
weapons
"He was a sniper In World War
II," Pallottl said "I sincerely
believe that If he wants to take
Mr Rodrigues' life or his own
life, he has the ability to do so."
Subejano's lawyer. John Gal·
vln, said the veteran was "not a
threat to anyone "
"If this request for a temporary restraining order Is granted
here today, he's .homeless,"
Galvin said. "He has no other
surviving relatives "
Galvin said the home aide no
longer lived with Subejano. that
the guns had been placed in safe
deposit and till!! he was In legal
possession of the weapons
Subejano's only income is a
government pension.
' 'I'm an old man, but he
(Rodrigues) don't care and he
don't want to know that," he said.
"All he wants Is money
Subejano was arraigned Monday in Brighton District Court on
criminal charges for allegedly
threatening Rodngues His case
was continued to Dec. 22
The 5-foot 2, 120-pound former
Army sniper Is credited by the
Veterans of Foreign Wars with
killing some 400 German sold!·
ers He once single handedly
made his way through grenade
and machine-gun fire to capture
a German factory, killing six and
capturing 37, officials said
Subejano received 17medalsIncluding the Silver Star- for his
heroism during the war

U.S. Navy plane wing caught snow ·
WELLI NGTON, New Zealand
!UP!) - The crash of a US
Navy C-130 transport plane that
claimed the lives of two Amen
can servicemen in Antarctica
was caused when . a wingtip
struck snow on a makeshift
runway. officials reported.
Nine other servicemen were
injured m Tuesday's crash,
which came dunng a mission to
salvage the 16 vear old wreck·
age of another C-130
The Hercules aircraft crashed
about 750 miles northwest of
McMurdo Station , the coastal
US base on Antarctica, 'fhiie
attempting to land on skis at a
makeshift airstnp, sa id the U S
Embassy in Wellington
" It appeared to observers on
the ground that the aircraft
caught a wingtip m the snow as It
was landing and veered off of the
skiwa y and caught fire," Cmdr
J im Mi tchell, a Pacific Flee t
spokesman m Honolulu . said
Wednesda y
The dead were Identifi ed as Lt
Cmdr Bruce Balley, 45, of San
Diego, the squad ron ma in te·
nance officer, a ~d Petty Offic er
2nd Class Donald M Beatty, 24,
of La uderdale Lakes, Fla , a
supply officer
Lt Cmdr Emar "Ernie" Corel h, 45, of Bremer ton, Wash ,
suffered a "serious" leg injury
and wa s ta ken by plane to
Christchu rch, New Zealand .
All three were statiOned at
Pomt Mugu Naval Air Station in
So uthern Californi a, a Pomt
Mugu spokes man said
Eigh t others aboard the plane
sustamed m inor injures and
"ere treated at the Navy base at
McCurdo So und Naval Station
Ali those aboa rd the Hercules
were Navy personne l attac hed to
umts in An tarctica, Mi tchell
said. Earlier reports that one
civilian was aboard the plane
were not cor rect, he said. •
U S Anta rctic activities named Oper ation Deeplreeze are based in New Zea land and the
four-engine turboprop aircraft
was opera ted by the Nayy for the

Nauonal Science Foundation
Mitchell said the aircraft was
flying to the area as part of a
project to excavate another C·130
that crashed durmg takeoff Dec
4, 1971.
The accident 16 years ago
Involved a Hercules from the
US Antarctica Development
Squadron VXE-6 based at Pomt
Mugu during a supply operation
for a geological survey party
The C 130 involved in the latest
crash also was attached to

11'"'"
w
w
w

Antarctica Development Squad·
ron 6
In the 1971 crash, the plane was
taking off after unloading Its
cargo when two bottles used to
provide more takeoff power
broke loose and struck an engine,
causing the plane to crash
Late last year. a team of Navy
experts surveyed the plane,
which was buried up to Its rudder
in Ice. and decided it could be
salvaged and returned to
service.

By DAVID BUTTS
TOKYO (UP!) - The Japa·
nese government lodged a strong
protest today over the VIOlation
of national airspace by a Soviet
bomber repelled by warning
shots from a Japanese fighter.
Soviet Ambassador to Japan
Nikolai Solovlev said the Soviet
bomber was probably off course,
perhaps due to a mechamcal
failure, a Foreign Ministry spo·
kesman said.
Two Japanese Mltsubishl F·
4EJ fighters scrambled to inter·
cept the bomber near the south·
ern Island of Okinawa and fired
the f1rst Japanese warning shots
smce World War II when the
Soviet Tu-16 medium-range
bomber failed to heed several
warnmgs, the rore1gn Mmistry
said
"The (Japanese) plane
reacted in a calm manner,"
Kazutoshi Hasegawa, a high
Foreign Mmistry official, told
the Soviet ambassador after
calling him to the Foreign
Ministry office to protest
"If this happened m another
country, the plane might have
been shot down,'' Hasegawa was
quoted as saying by a Foreign
Ministry spokesman
"I think it was done unintentionally," Solovlev responded,
the spokesman said.
"In the past there were mel·
dents caused by the plane's
failure or mismanagement," the
ambassador said, adding he
would relay the protest to
Moscow
"The words we appreciate, but
the words must be supported by
action, " Hasegawa said, n'oting
that the Soviets explained 'a
similar violation in August as a
p!lot error and promised not to let
It happen again
The Soviets have Intruded Into

~

CHIC - BUY 1 ITEM, GET SS
REBATE, BUY 2 ITEMS, GET AN
$11 REBATE

SALE CONTINUES UNTIL DEC. 24
A Cas~ and Credit Card Purchases Only
~
Dqes Not Apply To Layaways

Holiday .Gift
Ideas Begin
With The
Help Of
Village
p
•

w

w
~
~ Visit with Santa... Bring Your Camera or for
LAST DAY'

w

~

w
w

9 .. . ... .
. ... ... .. .. .. ... .... 7 00 TO
14 ........ .... ........... .... .. .. .. .... 7:00 TO
17 .. .. ............ ... .. .. ... .. .... 7:00 TO
19 .... ... ....... ..... ........... .. ...... 2:00 TO
22 ........ .... ... .. ... ......... 7:00 TO

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

W

iw DECEMBER 8. .. ... .. .. . ........ .......
i
i

~

DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECeMBER

DE~EMBER

. .. .
11 ............ .. ... ..... ...... ..
13 ........ ............. .. .... ..... ... ..
16 .. . .. .. ... ... ... .. .... . .. ..
21 ......... . .... ..... ...............

'

7:00
7:00
2:00
7:00
7:00

TO
TO
TO
TO
TO

8:30
B:30
4:00
8:30
8:30

L~~~~~~~~ww~~~~~~~~'""~~~

NORELCO • CHIC

CHRISTMAS TREE
ORNAMENTS

CURLING-WAND

ceued. the unknown hetrs,
devisees, legatees, admtnlstrators. executors. and/ or
uaigns of Mary Matlack,
deceased:
"" TLACK, deceased, the unknown hens. devtsa&amp;s, lega~
teas. administrators,
executors. and/or asSigns of
Richard Aubert Matlack,
deceeaed:

SAMUEL LONG . tllivtng
address unknown, tf deceased. the unknown hetrs
devi188S, legatees, adm1n11·
trators, eKecutors. and/ or
auigns p:f Samuel Long,
daceeaed:

JOSEPHINE B WHITE
deceased, the unknown
helrt. devisees, legatees,
administrators executors.
and/or assigns of Josephme
8 Whate, deceased

SOLON LONG , tl hvtng,
address unknown; 1f de·
ceased, the unknown he.rs,
dev11881, legatees, admtnil
trator1. executors, and/or
assigns ol Solon Long,
deceaed,
WILLIAM S. LONG, if
livmg, address unknown, if
deceeaed. the unknown
heua, dav11ees. legaten,
adminiStrators, executors.
and/or us~gns of Wtlliam S
long, deceased:

I!

BEULAH CLONCH LONG.
tf living. addr811 unknown. 11
deceased, the unknown
hetn, devisees, legatees,
admtntstrators. executors,
and/or asstgns of Beulah
Clonch Long. deceased.
You are hereby notifntd
that you have been named
Defendants in a legal actton
entitled Jamn W Suttle, at
al • Platnttffl. vs W. H.
Berdine, at al , Defendants
Ih11 action hal been asstgnl!ld Case No 83-CV 2
and Is pend1ng 1n the Com·
mon Piau Court of Metgs

~

1
~

M

I
I
I

NOW

2

~

~

TRIPLE HEAD RAZOR

NOW

I

.
•
.'

271 N. SECOND

ery 30, t899 , Volume BB.

NOTICE OF SALE

Pages 372-373, and cont1101ng 66 acres, more 0 '
less
The prayer 11 that the od.
gas and other mmerals un~
derlymg the above descnbed
real eatata be partitioned,
that their interest be set off
to them and 1f that ts not
feasible, that the entire
tnterest in the oil, gas and
other mmerals be sold and
the Plaintiffs patd thetr share
along w1th payment to all of
the Defendants according to
their 1ntere1t tn 111d oil. gas
and other mmerals, that the
lnterest of the partteS be
determined and that titte to
said real estate be quieted as
agamst all Defendants; that
all of satd proceedtngs be In
accordancewiththelawand
that Plaintiffs' attorney fees
be paid from the proceeds of
sa1d sale and included '" the
costs of th11 action; that all
taxes against the 011. gas and
other minerals be paid and
that the costs of thiS action
be pa1d from the proceeds of
said sale; and that the
Defendants be requ1red to
set forth any Interest or
defense whtch they may
have or be forever barred
therefrom
You are requued to
answer the Complaint
wrth1n twtinty etght days
after the lnt publlcatk&gt;n ol
th11 notice wh1ch will be
published once each week
for six consecutiVe weeki.
The last pubhcatton will be
made on January 14, 1987,
and the twenty etght days
for answer w1ll commence
on\'i't hat date
In case of your failure to
answer or otherwtse respond as requtred by the
Oh10 Rules of Ctvll Proce~
dura. JUdgment by default
wtll be rendered against you

By virtue of an Order of
Sale 1ssued out of the
Common Pleas Court of
Meigs County. Oh1o. m the
case of Diamond Savings &amp;
loan Company. Plamtllf. vs
Ch•rln Humphreys, et aJ
Defendants, upon 8 JUdgment therein rendered, be
tng Case No 87 ~CV-68 10
sa1d Court, 1 w1ll offer for
sale at the front door of the
Courthou 18 in Pomeroy.
Melga County, Ohio, on the
8thdayofJanuary,1988, at
10·15 AM. the followmg
lands and tenements, located at the corner of F1rst
Avenue and Walnut Street,
Mtddleport, Qh 1o 45780,
Walnut Street Ilea South,
first Avenue has East, Se
cond Avenue has West and
Rutland Street has North of
the real estate, a more
complete descrtptlon of sa1d
real estate 18 as follows •
Situated m the County of
Meigs, 10 the State ol OhiO
and 10 the Village of Mtddle
port and bounded and descrtbed as follows
Bemg Lot number Four.
corner of Front and Walnut
Streets '" said Vtllage and
betng formerly known as the
Commerc1al Hotel property
and the Grand V1ew Hotel
property, known now as the
Hotel Ohio, and bemg the
same real estate conveY.ed in
deeds recorded tn Volume
168, Page 809, and Volume
193, Page 341, M11gs
County Deed Records.
Reference Deed. Volume
256, P(Uie 733, Volume
292, Page 989 and Volume
292, Page 991, Me1gs
County Deed Racords
A p p R A 1 E 0 AT ·
$6,000 00 The real estate
cannot be sold for less than
two-thtrds the appratsed
value

for the relief domanded tn

TERMS OF SALE Cash

1987
Larry E Spencer,
Clerk of Courts,
Metgs County Common
Piau Court
By Marlene Harrison,

s

d t
f d d
e tvery 0
ee
Howard E Frank,
Shentt of
Me1g1 County, Ohio
(12) 3, 10. 17. 3tc

on

2

ORDI~ANCE

L.r===~=====;-r;::::::::::;:::::;:::;======ri
~
Televtsion listening Devices
HOUSE FOR RENT
Dependable +tearing Aid Sales &amp; ~•t'Vir.l
107 LOCUST ST.
Cl Hearmc Evaluatoons For All Ages
POMEROY--985-3561
~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
KEN'S APPUANCE

992-2156

Business

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

'

Be tt ordaaned by the
Council of the Village of
Mtddleport as follows:
Sec 1 That the 1987
appropriations for the Vtl ~
lage of M1ddloport be mcraased as follows
Swimmmg Pool Fund mcrease by $3700 from

817.300 to S21 .000.
Publtc Transportatton
Fund Increase by
$68,886 from $106, 115 to

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Revenue Sharmg Fund Increase by $262 69 from

5412 31 to $675 00.

Sewage Fund -

IS FOR SALE

Increase

$112,000

'

Sec II That th1s ordinance
tS hereby declared to be on
emergency m order that the
VIllage can meet tts lmanc1al
obligations for 1987 and ts
necessary to prov1de for the
safety and welfare of VIllage
res1dents
Sec Ill Thts Ordtnance
shall take effect and be m
Ioree from and after Nov

23, 1987
Passed the 23rd day of
November, 1987
Attest Jon P Buck, Deputy
Dewey M Horton,
Prestdent of Counctl

DEC 3. 10, 2tc
Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE 11 hereby g1ven
that on Saturday, December

If interested stop by.

1f2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE 8o BAKITS, ETC

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

12,1987, ot 10.00 am., a

E.O.H.

public sale w1ll be held at
106 Umon Avenue, Pomeroy, Oh1o, to sell for cash the
follow1ng collateral
1983 Ford Ranger XL Serial

992-3711

# 1FT8R10ABDUB07652
1984 Ford Tempo 4 dr.
Automatic PS, PB, Air con·
dtt10n1ng

Sertal

The Farmers Ba11k and
Savmgs Company, Pomeroy, Ohio, reservn the nght
to btd at thta sale, end to
withdraw the above coRat eral prtor to sale. Further,
The Farmers Bank 1nd SavIngs Company reserves the
rtght to r&amp;Ject any or all bids
subm1Hed
Further. the above collateral wtll be sold tn the
condition tt is tn wrth no
eKpreased or 1mphed warren·
tiel g1van

HEATING &amp;
COOUNG
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

MARCUM
CONTRACTING I
1

CHRISTMAS BAKING
SEASON }S HERE
WE HAVL ..
COOKIE CUnERS, CHRISTMAS CUPCAKE
PICKS, CAKE SUPPLIES, CANDY MOLDS
and SUPPLIES.

Fondant Special .................. Sl.SO
Dates .....................:............ 52.25

lb.
lb.

•
•

OHIO VALLEY BULK FOODS
5141AST MAIII

~
,

992-6910

Wt ACOlpt

foedSt_,.

!
1

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS BATHS
•ROO FINO
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK
Phone Day or hettb1gs

'185·41tl

GINEIAL CONIIACTOIS
References

We have all your fruit cake
ingredients ....
CHERRIES, red and green
SUPREME FRUIT MIX
FRUIT MIX with CITRON

POMIIOY, OHIO

CHESTER OHIO

•HOME BUILDING

11 3 ttn

.:,
IJ .

'

· ~~

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home &amp; Auto
t614) 992 -37t8
Add on m&gt;n&gt; fuel computer
ln~tant

system F1ts any (:ar

mtles per gallon readout
Know your fuel consumptt.on

from one block lo hundreds of
m1les
Commercial
Store to Job Cost
Tax I Service
Before and after auto lune up

(Compaoatoo) ftll up your
!.ank, and watch ot subtract and
dtsplay luel consumed

UNDER '90
'Monitors for MCF·CCF used
for furnaees call bratod to

your liS meter. •

Mtddleport- Col ~

Ohto

11 !! B71mo

•Hohdav Partt•
•Weddmgs
•School &amp; Church Programa
•Sportmg Events
•Annlversarl•
•Record Valuables,
Documents
•Tran&amp;fer Photo Albums to
VHS Tape
•Transfer 8mm and Super 8
MoviM 10 Video Tape
•Create Training Ftlms for
Students and Emplovees

REASONABLE RATES
CAU FOR FREE ESTIMATE

992-7632

ll/16/ '87 1 mo d

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Built

"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls
J·ll·tfn

Announce 111 ents
3 Announcements
KUPID S NEST Off•t two
kinds of dat1ng aenuce. write
P 0 Box 619. Ironton OH
45638 16061 836 274&amp;

Cakedec:oratmg Spec1alllohdl!l'f
cak• S10 and up Call 614-

992·3903
Home Decorating Open House
Fr1 l!lnd Sat, Dl!lc. 11th and
12th 10 00 am 9 00 pm each
diiV Gloria 01hw. St. Rt 326,
Langav1lle, Ohio 614-742
2076 N1ce door prmetl Eve·
ryone welcome

•

No Hunting on Gill R1dge on
propert•• of C R Gill Mitchell

Cullen

Georg• Gtll without

4

Giveaway

wfltten permiSsion.
will be pro1ecuted

V1ol11tora

8 Pupp1e, · Part Coli•• Part
Garman Sheperd Cell before 3
PM 614 2415 9131

Call For

PAT HILL FORD

Information

992-2196
Middleport, Ohto

1-13 tic

CHRISTMAS
TREES

"At Reasonable Prices"

Tag Your Tree
Early
For Christmas

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Harley Haning
Residence
35975 Flatwoods Rd.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS

21Jr

Pon~era1v.
miles

Ohio

416861fn

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

Bashom Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke
12 Gouge Shotguns Only

$5.00 Extra
For Skinning

Those Special
Ouasions on VHS
Tape

*VINYL SIDING
"ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Advanced Students

BISSELL
BUILDERS

11·3· 1 mo. pd

~ecj!rd

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 9'1:Z-:l7__7:

d

I 24· 87· 1 mo pd

742-2035

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

12·4·'87·1 mo

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

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

WHITE Hill RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

1l·27·'17 l mo. pd.

FREE ESTIMATE!

CALL 742-2315

a~­

Teaching Thompson,
Schaum. Bastten

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734

WIDE
SELECTION
Ml MAKES AND
MODELS

CAll

You·, Neru T11 Old
To Lu,l/

BUltNISS PHON!

S2SOO

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Wmdows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofmg

PIANO LESSONS

Cable Btlls Here

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIOING

Two small do_p male&amp; female
lh Cttlhuahua'?''IJ FGJIII Temer Has
had same shots C•ll 814-256

Pay Your Phone

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

PARTS

ONe away to good home Reg
female Cocker Spanutl Call
614-246-9120

16141 992-6510

J&amp;L
INSULATION

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

Middleport
lnsurtd/Uunstd
12-7-'87 tfn

Mtddleport, Ohto 45760

1614) 992·

v.w.

992·6U6

New Lo,a11on:
1b8 Norlh Second

RISIDENCI PHON!

JOHN TEAFORD
CHESnR.

Ron Diles or
Gary Cummins

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

and

Shoes

Dogs

D&amp;C ELECTRIC

(12)9, 10, 11, 3tc

CHARLES K.
SPENCER

Sh~rts ~

•Trophies · Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags for

DON'T LET YOLII Elf(.
TIICAL PROBlEMS IE·
COME A SHOCK TO YOU!

..

•Golf Clubs

NEW AND USED

11-23-'17 1 mo. pd.

#

Sale"

10·9 tfn

1 2-2-'87-1 mo

FOR RENT

~-~~~
\L._,/

"Chrl1tmac

RACINE, OHIO

Middleport, Ohio

from $17.935 to $21 ,000

by $6700 from $105,300 to

Buy~ ng

10. 7-tln

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-

AOdons and remodeling
Rootmg and gutter worlc
Concrete Work
Plumbing and electrical
work

[Free Esttmates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

4i5'861c

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ol!to

AUTO &amp;'TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto 1tlntllllulu
PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6·17·tfc

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine.

WEBER FARM
Rutland, Ohio

742-2143

12·3·87·1 mo

1343

Kitten• litter trelhed Call 814742 2153
7 m~J~;ed breed pupp1e1 to good
I'IOme C•II614-949·Z996
Free pupp1•, half German Sh•
pherd. half Doberman. 304676 4312
K•ttens litter trained 304 676

3158

Windows e•ly 1900 vmtago
304-98 2-2024

6

•R,OOFING
•GUTTERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREE ElTIMA TEl

CALL 949·2969

11 23 '87·1 mo

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVIlLE, OHIO

1&gt;14-1&gt;62-3821
Authorized John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equtpmenl
Ooaler

F1r1t1 E•ulp11 ..1
Ptrll &amp; Senl~•

1·3· 86tfc

Farmers

8•nk Deposit

envelope conuunmg 881 lost

Frtdey De c. 4 between Farmers
Bank and Mam St P1na Any
1nformat1on call614 992· 5663

Lost - 1 1h yr old male Stamesa
cat, M1dway DriVe New Haven
Answers to Coco. Reward
304 882-3394

7

Yard Sale

"Gallipolis· · · ...
&amp; Vicinity
Galt1pohs Flaa Merlcet · Former
Thalar Garage- Rtt 35 &amp; 160
Open Fr~days
Saturdavt .
Sundeys 9 5

· .....PfPieiisaiif ....
&amp; Vicinity
~-· ·

HOSKINS
IIOME MAINTENANCE

Lost and Found

LOST 5 month old yellow
female Retmr..•er puppy R1o
Granda area Reward area Call
614 246 9679

lost

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

Chnstmas Sale on /Lucas Lane
fron now till Chrlltr'nl!lt therew1ll
b8 a sign to follow Come1n and
see Marie Ha111

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cah for lata model clun

uMd c••
Jim M1nlc Chw -Old• Inc
Bill GeneJohn•on
6t4-U6·3672
TOP CASH paM for '83 model
and newer u•d
Smith
Buick Pontiac:. t91 1 Eastern
Ave, GalllpoUa C.ll 814-448

c••

2282
WANTED TO BUY Used wood
&amp; eo-' !')U'Ierl Swain's Furni·
ture, 3rd &amp; Olrve St Gallipolis
Call lt4 446 3159
Good
ch~d Oalc Barn Sid
mg C.ll 814 448 1592 or
446·82t7 •fter 6 PM

w..

Wanta:t to buy- St•ndlngtlmber
Call 814-379-2768
Good u~ed tho ... Sa mandolin
Call 8t4-448-21S15

QUILTS

Hlih prlon peld for pre-1960
quittt Appllque, pit¢«1, any
condiUon C•ll814 -992-2101

"'814-992-6657

d11tv gold, 11lver co mt,

lt~Wiing

nngs, )ewelrv.
old..
coma,
lerge curren~ were
Top pr
ceo Ed Bu•••n s.rber Shop
2nd Ave Middleport Oh 614

992-347s

Raw fur bee1 and deer h1dn
Gyn Smg ¥"d Yellow root We
he~e
wheit and nite htes
Trapp1ng IUPPhel for Nil !Buy·
ing u11d treps) O.orge Buckle'(
Hourt 12· 9 614·864· 4781

Employment
Services

KOUNTRY CLUB

RACINE
GUN CLUB

THE DABBLE SHOP

Econom1c Development
Fund - Increase by $3065

We Carry F1shlng Supphes

Services

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

$165,000

SALES &amp; SERVICE
we

-

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

Wanted To Buy

11

An Ordmance to Provide
Add1t1onal Approprtat1ons

The Family Of
words cannot tell
Her brtght. hapi)V face
that we loved so well
God took her home, 1t
was H 11 will,
But m our hearts she is
with us still
Ttme may heal, but it
never can mend,
For our heart1will be broken until the end
And the load you helped
us carry always patient, true and ktnd,
But everything shall be
for God' a will must be
done
What a beautiful mem ~
ory she left behmd
Sadly mtasod 11nd loved by
Mommy, Gramps, aunts,
und•. cou•ns. friends,

z

All Makes

2FABP22R3EB124819
1985 FORD BRONCO It
XLT 4•4 Overdrtvt, Serial #
1 FMCU14SXFUC88867.

In Memoriam

~

•Washers •Dtshwashers
•Ranges •Refngerators
•Dryers •Freezers

NO 1189·87

for 1987

a: Ucensed Clinical Audiologist

SERVICE
985-3561

WE SELL USED APPlilAN~:El

Public Notice

Deputy
(12) 10, 17, 24, 31, (1) 7,
14. 6tc
'

Baby Swiss Wheels ................ S2.95 lb.
Holiday Cheese Trays .!!~~!~~.~!.. S12.95
Roseville Pottery and Spice
Wheels Make Great Gift Ideas!

110 • 3Smm &amp; DISC FILM

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Public Notice

Chme Lore11 On Yo" Lin?

$35

992·6669

{12l3 1o 17 Jtc

15 acreo

the Complaint
Dated December 10,

FIDUCIARY
On November 27. 1987.
1n the Meigs County Probate
Court, Cose No 26697,
Charles E Fn,ey, Jr. P 0
Box 256 Mmto, N 0 ,
58261 was appomted Elilec·
utor of Charles E . Frtley,
deceased, late of 1716
Chaster Road, Pomeroy ,
Metgs County, OhiO 46769
Robert E Buck ,
Probate Judge
Lena K Nesselroad , Clerk

1·23·'87·1 mo

'

Pharmaey

SHOP fOR HIM 1&gt;1 THE CLA~Sr£OS

PH. 992-2772

"Now In Stock"

~illage

MA.K£ CMD FE.£L L/1(£ A KN;.

whtch was deeded to Wm
Oun by Henry Oura, Janu·

In Memortam

acknowledges woth
deep appreciation
your kind
expressions of
sympathy. Our
sincere thanks to
our families,
friends and former
neighbors for their
support through
cards, phone calls.
flowers and most
of all the many
prayers we have
felt especially over
the past year.

$4,00

Reg. S49.88

••cepttng

JL-----:c--:-:'--::-:-:-....11

9

Business Services

From Beg1nners to

Reg. $5.99

NORELCO ROTATRACT

fUJI FILM

MATLACK. do·

deco•ed.
MARY MATLACK, de·

9 DO Pll RATE D {R )

8 00
8.30
8:30
4:00
8:00

C

ceued, the unknown heirs.
devisees, legatee&amp;. admti'ustratorl, &amp;Kecutors, and / or
a11ignt of I C Matlack

"TEEN WOLF TOO"
7 15 &amp; 9 15 RJ\TED { PG)
"THE RUNNING MAN"

POINT PLEASANT STORE
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

FANTASY DECOR '

$159

w $3.00 We Will Take Your Picture For You.

w

addrua unknown, If de~
ceued, the unknown heirs,
deviseea, legatees, admlnu~
tratora. eteecutors. and / or
&amp;lsigns of Nona Long.
decaaed;

'
-~--~~~--~-----------~~-·

'

12 ... . . . . ...... ... .. .... .. . 2.00 TO 4·00
15 .. .... ... .. .. .. .. .... ... .. .. .. ... . 7:00 TO 8:30
18 .. ... .. .. . ... ... .. .. ~ ... ... .... .. 7:00TO 8:30
20 .... . .. . ... .. ............ 2:00 TO 4:00

dece•ed.
NONA LONG, tl hvtng,

a

~

DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

devieeet, legateea, admtnis~
tratora. eteecutora. and / or
&amp;latgns of Flam Long,

I

~

i
i
i
IJ

FLEM LONG. tf living,
addrua unknown, If de~
caa1ed, the unknown hetrs.

~ 129 MILL STREET
MIDDLEPORT ~
~
OPEN DAILY 10:00 TO 5:30
I
FRIDAY UNTIL 8:00 P.M.
!
I
SUNDAY 1:00·5:00

BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $1.99

W DECEMBER 10... . ..... .. . ... .. ... .. ... . . . 7:00 TO 8:30

and/or 1111gns of Jennie
Berdine. deceased;

House Plants
Ltve 8o Cut Chrtotmas Trees
Candle Arrangements
Grave Blankets
Monument Sprays
OPEN DAILY 9·6
SUNDAY 1·5
SYRACUSE
992·6776

$60 to $99.99 ••••••••• 15°/o OFF
$100 to $149.99 ••••• 20°/o OFF
$1 50 UP•••••••••••••••••• 2 5°/o OFF

SATURDAY I SUNDAY MATINEES
ALL SEATS $2 50

GALLIPOLIS STORE

administrators, executors.

I

plamt II a partition ac:tion
concerning thd 011, gil and
other mineralt underlymg
tha followtng described real
estate·
Sttuated in Meigs County,
Tow111hlp of lebanon. State
of Ohto, be1ng tn Sect1on 26,
Town 3, Range 11 ol1he
Oh1o Company ' s Purchase,
known as the Henry Ours
Farm, and being all of the
Iouth half of the southeast
quarter of Section 26; save

executors. ond

1ng, addrRSs unknown, 1f
dace11ad. the unkno)Nn
heirs, devtsen, legatees,

Chrtstmas Cactus

~

w
w

••t rat ors.

Berd•na, deceased:
JENNIE BERDINE, If ltv·

Po1nsatt1as

to

~

W

ad min

and/or 1111gns of W . H

I PURCHASE:
~
I $1 $49.99 ••••••.•••• 10°/o OFF I

531 JACKSON ptME RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446·4524

SANTA CLAUS AT

hv1ng. addrBis unknown. 1f
deceased, the unknown
he1ra. dev•&amp;aal, legatees,

~ CORNER COLLECTIONS ~

I
I

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

CASE NO '83-CV-2
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO: W H BERDINE, tl

t,iangong Baskets

AT

M

County, Ohto.
The object of the com·

~ oetendanu

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON

i CHRISTMAS SA~INOS

~

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
JAMES W. SUTTLE. et at..
Pial ntiffs

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

I

Public Notice

- vaW H BERDINE. ot al .,

Hubbards Greenhouse

Japanese air space 20 times since
1967, but Wednesday was the first
time the Soviets failed to respond
to repeated warnings and had to
be chased off with gunfire
"The Japanese side several
times gave a warning to the
plane, but the plane violated
Japanese territory twice," Ha·
segawa said

~

Public Notice

13

The Daily

Ohio

Public Notice

RICHARD ROBERT MA·

W arhero fights eviction, courts over Soviets bomber
By DEffiDRE WILSON
BOSTON (UPI) - A judge
ordered a psychiatric exam for
an elderly World War II hero
before he decides whether to bar
the man from his apartment
bulldmg for allegedly threaten·
lng to kill the manager over a 62
. percent rent hike.
Ramon Subejano, 82, has de
nied the charges that he vowed to
kill the manager, a home aide
and himself
"I'm a nice guy," Subejano
said " I'm the only one left (Of my
family ) In the whole universe
But J am a friend to the world "
Boston Housing Court Judge E
George Daher ordered the eva·
luatwn to determine If Subejano
was " competent or a danger to
himself or others" after hearing
testimony Wednesday that he
kept guns and ammunition in his
apartment and had made death
threats before
Subeja no. who survived the
mvaswn Of Normandy and four
otlier major World War 11 battles
and IS credited with killing 400
German soldiers, WilS to be
evaluated by a psychiatrist to·
day. After the exam Daher
planned to rule on a motion to
temporarily bar him from his
apartment building
Peter Rodrigues , manager of
the Babcock Tower apartment
building m Boston's Brighton
sectiOn , testified Subejano threa
tened h1m last Friday after he
· told the veteran his rent would

December 10, 1987

Thursday, December 10, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Help Wanted

Pharm1c11t

Four store mde-

pendent pharm.cv Athens •rea
h.w tmmed1att operung for ttaff
ph.,maclst 44 hour work weelc
Competitive .._1..-y bMed upon
e.~eperlenc:e Ben-ltJ package
Send resurne with reterences
Medical Centar Pharmacy 400
E State St
Athen1, Oh10
45701 AU Eric Ru;;harda RPh
B1ddmg elosn Dec 16th
TEXAS OIL COMPANY needt
mature peraon for short trips
1urrounding Gellipollt Contact
customers We t1111m Write T J
01cketton. Pr" , Southwettern
Petroleum, Bo• 961005, Ft
Worth. Tx 76181

Someone to enter mto contract
for a now r~mowl Call 814

797 4S69
General Farm Work
reqUired long
lll'lrm employment for a qualified
person Home &amp; utllitl• pro
vtded Must hve on farm An
older expenenced per~on preferred Wag•&amp;beneflttnegotl·
•ble. Call or write R1ch•d In nil
Roihng Acr• farm, Rt 2 Bo• 86
W•aeman Rd. Patr~ot Ohio
46859 614 379 2297
Someexper~enee

GET PAID for ntadtng bookl l
$100 00 per t1tle Write ACE
33E. 181 S Lincolnway N
Aurora II 60642

MAINTENANCE
SUPERVISOR
The Goodyear Tire and Rubber
Company Is seelclng
Bggru
111ve M•lnt8flance SuperviSor for
pl.cement 1n our polye•ter ma
nufacturmg fecdrtv In Apple
Grow W Va ApphCIInts should
h•a backgrounds wht eh include
direct supfll'vllory rnpon11bil ..
tina ~ m ml!lnufactunng plant
BJipei'IBnCB In repatrt prtl'tlentllle
m•tnten~~nc. and work ..::hedul
mg E~tp ... lenc. m m•lntenance
tramlng programs would also be
benf1ael If you are seeking a
challenging posrtion where you
cen be en 1ntegral member ofthe
loc.l bu11ness team submit your

•n

resume to
Mtnh1811 H•rnngton
lndu1tnal Relat10na Dept
The Goodyesr

T~re

Co

•nd Rubber

St Rt 2 Apple Grove W VA

25502
Equal Opportunity Employer
Oowmment Jobs S16.040
$59 230 yr Now h1r1ng Vour
•rea 806-687·8000 Ext R
9806 for eurrent repo federal
hat
Earn e~tceilant mon&amp;y an home
anembly work. Jewelry, toyt
and others. FT &amp; PT avatl Cell
tod~l 1·518·469-3636 ltoll
refund.t&gt;lel EXT 81622 24

houra

The Metgt local School D1str1ct
epphcat10ns for
substitute teachara Substitutes
are nMded m all certif1catton
are.u The dally rate ol PlY·
t126 Oh1o Certified Teachers
willing to cross a pldcet hne
111 •cceptmg

should 1mmed1ateiy contact
Me1gs Local School Superin
tendent's off•ce. 621 South
Th1rd Avenue. Middleport, Ohto
46760 614·992-2153

Wantad Full time employment
tn your own home a• 1 Home
Serv1cet WOfker with Buckeve
CommumtyServtce We provide
ul.-y plus benef1ta end a di!IJiy
room and bollrd r•tt You
provide a home, guidance end
friendship in • family atmos·
phere ReqUires ablhty to teach
personal hv~ng sldlla and a
commrtmant to the growth and
d81fe!opment of an Individual
wtth severe mental re'llllrdatlon
Contact Sytv .. Day at 814 446
7109 after 5 00 p m Equal
opportunity employer
Pl!lrt time IFrtdey and Sat mornIngs only} Dent•l hygan11t
wanted for Melg1 Health Dept
Dental School based tealant
program Begm1 mtd January
thru Dec 88 Contract. onty C.ll

Norma Torres at 614-992
8626
AVON • All areas Call Mantyn
WerNer 304 882 2846
AVON all areas Sh1rlay Speart.
304 676-1429

Green Acres Reg1onal Center
Remedial teecher. mimmum
qual1flcatian teact·ung eertifl·
cBte Contact 762 2!122 EOE
MOM AND DAD Let tha Army
Nat tonal Guard hetp pay for your
child's college educatton Call
304 676-3960 or 1 -800·642
3619
MILITARY SERVICE;
meansext1111 mon~ for member•

PRIOR

of the Anny Nat1ona! Guard C&amp;lt
304 676 3950 Ot 1 -800 642

3619

12

Situations
Wanted

· ICChlldcau 24 hours Rusonl!lble
ratas all tgaa Mula furn11hed
614 -99 : 2468

-~===
~ Insurance

Ca!l us for your mobile home
'"'"'nnce Miller lnsurence,
3' 4 · 882 Z146 Also auto.
l-ome hfe health

18 Wanted to Do
Mother of 2 will care lor your
children dunng the holiday IM·
tNihlll Evanmgt, weekends or
dunng the school vacl!lt1on
Canvenlent klcet10n re81onable
rl!ltes Call 614-446-0066
Lollll"'9 mam and prevtaus pre
school teacher Willing to watch
vour ch1ld W1ll provide teaching
erath 11ngmg Wllhngtobatiiy 1rt
any11me Plene Cell 814·367·

7288

HOUDAY HElP Let us help you
get your home looking good ior
tht Hohdl!l'ft Call DomMtlc
Cleaning Servt ce 614 992 ·
6379

,,

�Page-14-The Daily Sentinel
Fin~nwl

21

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .• Gallipolla.
NEW· 8 pc. wood group- $399.
Living room auitn· f199 - f&amp;99 .
Bunk beda with bedding- f199 .
Full size rnll'ttr•• • foundation
•tntlng. t99 . Recliners
starting· t99.
USED · Beds, drH•ra. bedroom
suite•. e199· f299 . Detka,
wringM wether, a complete line
of uaed furniture.
NEW· Waatern boot• t30. •
Workboots t18 &amp;. up. [Steal &amp;
10ft toe} . C•lll14-446· 31159.

~

1 NOTICE I
THE nHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ·

lNG CO. recommends that you
do bu1ine~1 with people you
know, and NOT to tend monw
through the mail until yOu· kwe
inwsrigated th• offering.

23

Professional
Services

County Appliance, Inc. Good
u..d appliances and TV 18tl.
Open lAM to 6PM. Mon thru

Sat. B14-44e-1e99. e21 3rd.

Bob Cline Taxidermy, Member
W . Va. Tax.idermy Auoc. Rt . 2
Box 782, Poi nt Pleasant W. Va.

Aw . Gallipolil, OH .

Bring your Doe to Joe. We will
skin, cut, quic:k freeze 1nd w,.p

cL7l~J!s.a - ......... ,..

120.0 0. Harry Joe Smith, Rt. 1 ,
Lata,rt, W . Va. 304-882 -3268.

,o

all

"Geel they

look so inno-

Cent When they

....,.

're asleep."

41

44

Homes for Rent

Apartment
. r Rent

614-245-9486 .

Girls 20 " bike. Livht bi~M~ with
b•ket. Excel. cond. t46. Call
6·1 4-258-1156 .

to

4 BFt , fireplace. full banment. 3
mi. to. of Gallipolis. U4,900.
Calf Days-61 4-448- 1 616, after
5 :00· 446-1244.

Nicely furnished small house.
Adults only. Rei. required . No

Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolia ·
Locks on Rt. 7 . 2 car garage, nice
lot. Immediate pos~&amp;~slon . Will
con tider trade i n of Mobile
home, prope,-ty, etc. Bargain
priced. Cell 614 -446-8038 .

_P_.,_•_
· c_o_l_le_1_4_._u_e_._o_338_._ _
2 BR . home- recentty remodeled. ST.RT. 279 . 01k Hill 6
Rio Gnmde. No children or peta.
Call 6 14·245·9315.

Apartment-, 136 2nd., GallipOlis. 2 BR . Stove • rtfrig.
furnished. t186. Water paid.
Call 814-446-4418 after 7 PM.

2

2 8A . hou11 In Rlo Grande. Cell

Furni•hed upltairs- 1 BR . Util~
ti• paid. t220 e mo. &amp;76 dep.
94 locust St. Call 614-4461340 or 446-3870.

BR .

house

with

g-:ege.
Ca rpete~ . dnpefiu, dit ·
tlwasher, re1rig•ator. 105 ,C.ineon Dr. N e .. then'f'Jilcitypool.

Caii614-44S-4347 .
3 BR , ranch-Country Aire E•·
tat ... George's Ck. Rd. 2/ 3 aere
lot. Above ground pool. Very
reasonsble . Call 614 · 448 -

2108.

614-245-9170 .. 445-1323.

Large 2-3 8R . house. Plenty of
storage. Henderson area. Call
614-446-7026.
2 or 3 8R unfurnithed ha. Yard.
city tehools, 1275 mo. plua
utiiiti81 &amp; deposit. Call 614446 -2615.

3 BR . Ranch. Attached g•aga.
In town. Good loca~ion . low
'40 ' s. Call after 6 :30PM. 814-

3 BR., doubfe car li•age. 111nge.
refrig. dishwaaher. $350. Dep.
required. Call 814·44&amp;-1, 34.

2 bedroom, 2 b at h1, 2 car

Furni1hed Two 1mall hou••· 3
rooms each. Nice and clean,
Aduttaonty. No P••· Rat. dap.
CJII 614-446 -2543.

446·1 406 .

garage. level lot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, satellta. clo.e
to Meigs High. Call 614-992-

3264.
Five lots Ofl corner with 4
bedroom hou98. Carpeted, full
btllement, centml heat. fire·
place, garage. Call 304-882·

a

New extr11 nlce 2 BR . duplex.
furnished kh:chen. Low udllti•.
No pets. Dep. • rlf. required.
Call614-446-1250.

2, 3. ar 4 bedroom hau. . and
apt. in Pomeroy area. Pty own
. ut~iti•. d8P01it required . Call
For sale on lend contract, houll8 . 614-992-5113, 814·992·8723
en d garage apartment on 2 or 614-992-2609 . Call after
6:00, piNM.
acres. Call 814-992·2862 .

2776.

.•

613 Third A.w.- 1 BR . Oapotit
required . Call 614-44fi-4345
between 5:00PM &amp; 10:00 PM

5 rooms, birth, enclosed porch.
forced air furnace, 1nsulatednaw
roof, new carpet. Upper Mason.
W. Ve. 814-992-2813.

4

room f.ouse with all utilitiBI,
f'e•cock St. Pomeroy. 1100. per
month 86600. Call 614-9922720 or 614 -992-3589
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
$1 .00 ( U replir) foreciOIUf8S,
repos,' tax deliquent propertiet.
Now selling your ar8a. Call
1 -315-738 -7367 ext. 2P-WV-H
far curren l "st. 24 HAS.
Three bedroom, brick home,
large living room, possible loan
assumption, close to Point Pleasant, 304-676 -6306.
11h story, newfy equlpped kit·
chen, large famity room, alr
cond. co nviant location, 304·
675 -6027.

Unfurni1had house for rent.
Newty r.decor~ted, c•pet. Call
614-992-3090.
Nice 3 bedroom houl8. Family
room, garage, basement,
forced-air heat 6 wooded acr-.
bern. 1276. per month. f100.
depotit. No Inside pets. 10 Eatt
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio 614·423·
6289 .
Completely renovated. 3 bedroom. plenty y1rd and gordon
space, be .. tiful home. Alletectric. h..t pump, central air. 4
mil• from RIVenswood . Portland~ Oh. 614 - ~43- 6309.
3 bedroom hou• for rant . No
pets or kids. Depo1it required .
Call814-992-3169 . .
3 bedroom hou.a. Basement. 2
rt01aga buildings, u•age, stove
furnished. f260 per month.
Oepotl1 nqulred. 814 -94$ -

3027.

32

Mobile Homes
tor Sale

New 1988 Prestige14x70 total
el ac., 3 BR .. 2 baths. furniahed.
Anchors. skirting. Loaded with
Ptras. $14,500·. KanlliUga Mobile Homes· 61 4-446 -9662.
1983 14x56 Fairmont mobile
homo. 2 bedrooms. wuh•·
dryer hook-up . In excellent conditkm. Call 614·367-7242.
Trailer for. Sale61 4-389 -8294 .

81t60. Call

1 acre. 12x66 trailwwith 12x24
addition. New porch, f urnished.
61 ... 742-2975 .
14x70 Wlndsar with 14x30
addition. 3 bedrooms. approximaraly 3 acras, black top roiKI .
S~Ne ral out-buildings and pond.
GRIIipolis Ferry. 304·876-6930.
1973 Fairmont moblla home.

03,000. 304-675-1970.

Would like to provkte nice home
fOf elderly P•sona. lndapend·
ence. privacy, full maintainence. ·
Cali 614-949-2969.

3 'bedroom, furnished

unfurnished . Good. clean condttion. 1
child, no pets. New Haven, W .
Va. 304-882 -2468 .
Of'

Business
Buildings

3 bedroom, 12x66. furnithed.
Washer and dryer. $210 month
plus deposit and utilitiM. 814-

J bedroom, 1% bath, 14x70
Mobile home in Middleport.
New carpet, very nice. 614-992-

6868.

Two bed rooms. Upper River
Road, will accept working person or famity with 2 children,
614-446-0608.
Mobile homes furnished
118&amp;.00 plus utilitiea. t76.00
depotit, call after 6:00 pm,
304·676· 6612.

44

1537.

For ref1t apa11ment, nil•: furnished. unfurniahed. Woodburninll fireplace. Water, aewage
pa1d. Claan. Quilt. Foster' s
Mobile Hom,_! Park. 446-1602.
2 BR. Honey-.uckle Hilla. Gat
heat, private patio•. Water,
aewer, tr..h ...-vice furnlahlld.
Rent ltart· 8220. Call614-446·
3344 or..,&amp;-1134. Equal Hou.lng Opportunity.
Luxury Tara Apartments. El•
gant, 2 Br. 2 floor, 'fultv
c•petad, CA 1nd hNt. Private
ent111noe, encloMd pltio, pool &amp;
playground . Start- •299 per
month. Utilitl• not Included.
Call 814 -317-78150.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 badroom ap-artmentl at VIllage
Manor and Rivartlde A~n­
menh In Middleport. From
f215. including utiliti•. C.ll
614·992·7787 . EOH .
Nice apt. Hudd approved . New
c•pet. c:lun. Pt. Pleuant. 814-

992-6868.

2 bedroom apt . and 1 bedroom
house for rent In Pomeroy.

814-992-8216.

304-8B2-26ee.

749 Thi rd Ave Prasentty The
Glf1 Snop 1600 sq. ft. Commerci al or warahouse . Parkihg on
1ide. Adj acen1 to Th1rd &amp; Pine St.
Call 614 - 446 · 2362 for
ap polntment .

2686.

3 bedroom unfurnithed apt,
304-876-3106 or 676-6536.

.45

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent, dav. week.
month . Gallia Hotel. Call 814446-9880. Rent BiloW as t120
month.
Furnilhed room. f7&amp; . Utilitlel
paid. Sh&amp;re bath. Single male.
919 Second. OalllpoUa. Call
448-4418 attar 7pm.
I have room for eld•lv patient.
Re•onable: 6,4-992-7204 or
814· 992·3963.

46 Space for Rent

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

2 Buildlng lon· 11h acres each
w lth county water. Jerrv• Run
Rd. Apple Grove. W. Va. Call

Office Space for rent . Excel.
downtown Galllpolla location.
lnquirl• call 6,4-448 -4222.
.Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or 181 a.
920 4th., Gallipol~a . t76. Weter
paid. C•ll614-448-4418 after?

PM.

304-576-2383.
2 building loti Gllllipolia Ferry.
treil• on one. Phone 304-876-

3964.

•
41

AH

Furniatled apt. ne~tl to tlbrarv.
One profe~aional aduh only.
Parking. Cell 814-448·0338.

3073 .

Downtown- Modern 1 BR ..
complete kitchen, cerpllt, air,
electric hellt. Call 114 -448·
4383-days. 448 -0139 -ev•n. &amp;.
weekends.
Furnistled: 4 rooms 6: bll'th.
Cia., , Nopeta. Adutiaonty . Ref.
&amp;: dep. raquired . Call 814 ·441-

New wood 6 pe. living rt;tom
suites, 8399 .96: chest of
drawer•4 drawer, t4S; twin
mattrnaes. t96 set; microwave
oven standi .

THE WORKIN&lt;l

MAN' S FRIEND
Hide-a-bed Sleeper Simons and
green couch. Ca11614-448 1107.
Gold hatNy duty washer &amp; dryer.
Very good cond. t160 set. Call

e14-246-63e3.

Brown 10 pieceaectlonal. Original price 11200. Call 614·446-

e691 .

Upright frostleu freezer - 16
cu.ft. White. Ew;:al. cond. 8150.
Call 614-446·7885 .
IC.enmor• Microwave Oven. E•celt.,t condition. Call814-992·

7143.

Brown. flowered couch. rock•.
chair and end tabl•. 8200 .
Good condition, Call 614-985 -

3&amp;10.
Roll-awev ·bad. table and 8
chain. Solid oek round lamp
tabla. Call after 3:30 pm 614-

992-31 11.

Picken• Used Furniture ·
Dinettes. sofas. chaira, end
tabl•. Iampi, beds, dreuert,
desk, glusware. 304 -&amp;76-

1460.

Beige 6 piece pit group, smoked
glua coffee and end tabl• end
lamps, Earty American couch
and chair. King waterbed double
1helf headboard . 304 -6 76 -

1226.

ANTIQUES, Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques . 1124 East Main
St. Pomeroy . Houra; Mon.Tues.-Wed. 10 a.m. to 6 p,m ,
Sun.- 1 p.m.· 6 p.m. Bvchaoce
or appointment. Ruu Moore
614-992-2626.
Antique dr•sar with m•ble
intert . Mirrow. 3 large drawer~
with woodgrtin tlnish. Call

614-367-7260.

54 Misc. Merchandise

GE cook stov-a, $95. R•frig .,
4125. Both good ahape. lnquir•
33 Coun St.

Arts &amp; Craft - Tant S1le: Toys.
tools, Mexican gift items. Open
Daily - Noon to 8 . Chillicothe
Mall Shopping Cent•.· ,
Tre. •

Stump remove!. fire~ood . Heap vouchers accepted.
Live white pine Chrlttmaa trees,
837.60. Ctll 614-448-9646.

Christmu Trees for •le-fiS .OO t10.00. Rodnav lit Bidwell Rd,
Call 614·245·6248, Richard
Flscher.
'
'
Satellite repaired- all makes. Call

Homes for Rent

3 BA . houau 8t g..-age. A -1 Real
EaUite. Carol Ye eg•· Broker.

304-575-6104

Modern 1 BR apartment. Call
6 14- 446 -0390.
ltenawly redecorated . Very nioa
apartment• In downtown G•lltpolit. 1 &amp;. 2 BR ,· unfurnlthed,
second floqr, from t1715· •225.
Oep. S. retai'encei required . can
ave. 614-446 -2326 or 4A6·

4249.

.

~

1117 ""'"~' '""

I_!;:;;:;;:;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;::;;:;;;:;;;:;;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;;:W

7860.

8 MM Movie Camera. projector,
screen. 81rely usad, 8200.
Lad!• Seiko w1tch, uMd once,
$76. Call814-387. 7860.
Walnut aewing ma'Chlnectbinet.
Very good cond. Call614·268·

66

62 Wanted to Buy

Pets tor Sale ·

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All br•edt ... AII
ltyl81. lams Pet Food Deal•.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-441-0231 .
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennal.
CFA Hlmalil'yan, P.,-aian and
Slam... lduena. AKC Chow
· puppl•. N8'N klttent: Perslana.
Call 6,4-448-3844 afler ?PM.

'

6662,

Boxer puppi•. Riedy tor Christ·
m11. Call614-266-6309.

Mixed h•dwoodslabt. •12 per
bundle. Containing 1pprox. 1 11.1
ton. FOB . Ohio Palltt Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 614-992-8461 .

New arrivals for Chril.m..sRegiatered AKC Chow puppi•.
C..I8,4-38B-8801.

1861 Arm1pon Navy R•b black
power 44 revolver. Never fired .
Also 1 2 guage pump Eastfield .
Caii814-992·6320.

AKC Regitter.t Brittany Spaniel
puppies. Liver &amp; whhe . 6 wka.
old. Will hold for Chriltmaa. Call

Firewood for •I e. All hardwood.
IPIIt end delivered, $35. Al10
1977 LTD. C.ll 614-992-6619
or 814-992-3662.

Two femala Rag. B11gle puP•·
11 wkl. old. On• tri-color.
on•lernon color. •eo eaeh. Call

Flrewood for •Ia. Mixed hardwood. Split and delivered. f31 .
per pic:kup lgad. C•ll614-992-

AKC SiMian Huaky puppi ...
Blue eyed baMAtlll. t125. Will
hold far Chrittmat. Cell 81 4·

614·eB2-7&amp;49.

Now buying shell corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotea. River
City Farm Suppty, 614 -446·

2986-

63

Livestock

8 Vi . -Old Reg' ad Sorrell Quarter
Mare. 115 · 3 hands. t860. New
Shoe uddle. 11100 v-alue- for
&amp;886 . Call 814-286-6&amp;22.
3 .,.. old Arabi .. Horse tor •••Also Simmental Bull. C1ll 614985·3649 after 6 :00 pm.

73

Van&amp;

even1. &amp; weekendt .

Tr~nsportat1o11

Motorcycles

All Chrittmu Trees 812 .. Come
early before cold wulher. 1ag
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm , mile above M1son
on Hanging Rock Rd. 304-7736371 or 882-2886.
MUted firewood, 880.00 dump
truck loMI, delivered, 304-678·
Firewood detlvered, atacked,
t36.00. Maan Countl•. Gallipolis other are• within reason at
our discretion, 304-895·3441!1.
SURPLUS ARMY, DENIM ,
RENTAL, CARHART CLO .JHING. Original army camou fl"'e. H. 0 . "Sam" Som•
rville ' s , Old Rt . 21
Ealt·Ravens.wood. Fri, Slit, Sun,
noon-8 :00pm. 304-273-6866.
Insulated c:amouflage cowrall1
826 .00. Sleek -White snow
camouflage.
NEW CREDIT CARD -No one
refuted I Major Credit C~rds and
M.ora. Get yDt.lr card today I Clll
1-&amp;18-4&amp;9 -3734 ellt C-2284
hours 24 ..

Marlin 12 gauge over and under,
Model SO. $276.00. Winch•ter
22 Magum pump Model 27&amp;.
S100.00. 304·675· 6944 .
Chrlltmas trees, tag, cut or dig.
Whhe and Scotch. any aile
116.00. Rt. 2 North. 7 Mil•
from Point Pleasant, 304-8715·
6773.
SIGNS: Lighted Arrow Sign
$299: Non-Arrow 8289 ; unlighted •199. Free delivery letters
till Dec. 11, W .Va. 1·800·842-

old. Ft~ncis

e57-3a68.

Ben«&lt;um.

1971 Toyota Corona. t350.
1989 Opal , ,... nice, S360. Call

3 UKC Revistered male Walk.Coon Hound pupt. Sire is Grand
Nite Champion. Mother it Nile
Champion. t100. eKh. 16
weft• old. Call814-992-3992.
AKC _ Regi•tar.t Pom•anian
puppe•. 4 mtle. 1 famale. 8
weekt~d . I,ISO.C.III14-887-

e758.

Meip Co. Humane Socltty now
h• a lovely _.ectlon ot cats and
kitiens readY for adoption . Some
already epayed and neuta..-d. All
shots up to deta. Adoption fae
r,equired. C1ll for more information about our lowly pets
614-992·6605 or 6,4-992·

3028.

Pure bred Cock-A -Poo'a. 6 wkt.
old. Ready for Chriltmas. 4
mala. White and Buff in color.

8126. e14-378·e27B.

&amp;6 gal fish aquarium, comphrte

set up, 3P4-BB2·2016 .
Chrlttmaa puppie~, AKC regi.tered Mlnlture Schn•zer• Shih
luis, Codr.s Sp•nlelt, Mehe...
Swelter and c:ap with each
puppy. Shots wormed also
health record . 304-676·2193.

~=6=14:-:3:7:9:-2:8:6:0:.=====J~3:0:4-:7:7:3:-:6:23:4=.=====~

614-986-4317.

67

Five place drum

e14-949-256D.

Farm Supplir.s
&amp; LIVI:stock

114-441-9391'

*4500. Call814-446-4841.

1980 Dat1un 3,0, 5 speed, in
good shape. 814-742-246, .

.

U.S . 35 Wast, Jeck.Jon Ohio.

814-281-6481.

'

Mas.ey Ferguaon, New Holland,
Buah Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Ov-ar
.CO uMd trsctora to cflooae from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment. larg81t Mlection in
S .E. Ohio.
Utility building 1pi: 27'A38'x8'
1-13'x8' alidlng door, 1-3' Mr:
vice door· t4444. Iron Hor•
Blckt. Call 614 -332-9746 .
2 Min tob1cco stripper &amp;
pnev-matlc baler combo . Also
power tobacco stick puller. Call

.

1980 Cadillac: Sedan DeVIlle
DeiNI. Show room condition.
All power. 11.000 milea on nii'W
motor. 30 mi. per gat This is a
lteel at onty $3200 . 614 -992 -

31e7_

1986 Daytona 'Turbo Z, red Jilvtn, Ieath• Interior, nw 1ire1,
loldad, t8,750 .00 con•ld• pertill trade. 304-87&amp; -6308.

poop.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

-··

81

EEK
IAJHAi.S "M. F1Sf-l
Of 11-\£. DAY ?

Unconditional litetlma guarantee. Local rllferenc• furniahed.
Free estimates . Call collect ,
1-814· 237-0488, day or night.
R ogaraBasemen t ·
Waterproofing.

446 -0294.

RON'S Television Service .
House calli on RCA, Quaztr,
GE . Spec:ialing in Zentth. Call
304-676-2398 or 614 -446 2464.
.

c.
MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal . Call 304·676-1331 .
Rotary or ceble tool drilling.
Moat wells campleled semeday .
Pump salea and urvice. 304-

WELL ,
CHRISTMAS

896-3802

WILL-eo::JN
BE HERE-

Starka Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn care, landsc•ping, ttump
removal , 304· 676-2842 or
676-2903.
'

··'

... ...

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
·Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipoli1, 0 hio
Phone 614-446 -3888 or 614 -

~

BUY WHOLESALE, White fonn
Trac:tort 1t whol ...le Invoice
plus frliflht, Compare the price
end quality. Modttla from 18 to
180 hp, Luting available. Off•
good through Dec. 31 . Sldert
Equipment Co., US 35, Hend•·
IOn, W. Va. 304·175-7421 . ,
lnternatlonll 1050 Grinder
Mixer, exc cond 304-273 -

4216 .

'

'72 ChiNy Impala, nice ur,

304-67S-2467.

72

Trucks for Sale

1!l69 Ch~Ny., &amp;JtceUent condition, t2100. 1989 Cht~~~y. body
rough, good engine. f428 . Call

614-3e7-neo .

,

KNOO&lt;ED OVER MY

&gt;.~
I r,

~

...

LOWEEZY-I CAME .
OVER TO·UH--

Electrical
Refrigeration

!KNOW
'IOU

CAME OVER
FER, ELVINEY II

BORRY, BORRY,
BORRY 11 \
THAT'S ALL YOU

r CAME OVER
TO RETURN

YORE TEACUP

KNOW

""....'

~eaident ial or commercial wirn~g .

New IBrvice or repairs.
L•censed electrician. Ettimate
free. Ridenour Electrical 304876- 1786.
•

85

General Hauling

R &amp; R Water Service. HOme
clatera, wells, pools filled . For·
merfy Jam• Boys Waters.Call

NOl' -rn1s
WIHTER...
!l-INEA
j.\EADAC\.IE, ..

"'

304-e7&amp;-e370.

Wanerson '• W1ter Hauling
reuonable rate•. lmmediat.8
2,000 gl!lllon deliv-ery, ci1tern1,
pools. well , etc. call 304-676 2919 .
I

n3-69BB.

HEWASL.A6TYEAR.

TV ANTENNA ,

BARNEY

446-4477

'76 Chryller Cordoba, AC , PS. 4
new tlr81. Nnsgood, little rust.
304-882· 2019 or 882· 2326.

1979 vw Rabbit saoo.oo. cell
304-773-9128 If no answer call

LA6T CHRI617MS HE

Plumbing

Paul Ritpe, Jr. Water Service ,
Pools. ciuarns, wens. Call6,4~~
448-3111 .

t1.2oo.ao. 304-175-2382.

a

I HOPE5ANTAWILLBE
MORE Q\RE:FUL THAN

&amp; Heating

1971 No'tla, 2 door, VB , relly
wheele , 4660 .00. 304· 576 -

Now till Dec:. '3 , all Zeetor
tractors in stoc:k 10 percent OY\IIIr
con No trad•ln . Morrit Equip,
ment, Rutland, Ohio. 614·742·

SARDI/JE.
FILLETS

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, parta, and supplltt. Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Gaorgea Creek Ad. Call 814-

&amp;

~

m

Tour of Duty Pvt .
Baker'$ identical twin brother
visi1s Bravo Company. 1:;1
I!J) Christmas wHh Luciano
P8veronl From Notre Dame
Ca1hedral in Paris, this
program of seasonal music
fea1ures L-es Disciples de

P!.l&gt;t,JtJII&lt;JG!

BASEMENT
WATEAPRDDFIN&lt;l

84

rn

g 1111!21

...YOU STI&gt;Y HERE WHILE I 60
INTO TH 1 LEMMIAhl CI&gt;PITAL AN'
SEE WHAT I CAAI FIND OUT
jOJj()UT lHIS INVASION lU1-IK IS

Home
Improvements

' 82

Cheers
M'A'S'H
7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:30 II rn Hollywood Squares
(l) Newlywed Game
mrn Judge
®J Wheel of Fortune 1:;1
t!ll Crossfire {0:30)
Ill 1!21 ® Jeopardy! 1:;1
@ Barney Miller
_
fl!l CD WKAP In Cincinnati
7:35 CD Sanford and Son
8:00
Hell Town
II CD (!1) The Coaby Show
Theo's concemed abou1
Vanessa's reputation with
one ol his buddies. 1:;1
(l)
Cll Sledge Hemmert
Dori is smitten with
anti·terrorlst 1 and Sledge
feels like quitlin'. C
Cil Adams Chronicles
Charles Francis Adams ' son
Henry becomes a historian.

Massenet, the Canadian

J &amp;. J Water Service. Swimrninn
pools. cisterns. wults. Ph. 814245 -9286 .

1980 Chtl'llette runs good, new
paint job, 4 speed, asking

CI'"' "'I'ILO.. "'"

Serv ices

1981 VW Rabbitt excellent
running condition. e.lltm sot
at~dded lnow tires, 82.000
m11e1, e860. Firm, 304 - 372 ~

2192.

THAYE.S 11: 10

-

•"" • , .

RQckwell standard front ule,'
hub brakea. springs and wheela
from auto c• tractor. Auto-car
power ttefll'ing bo11 wit~ slave
cylinder and bracketa. 2 Addle
links. 80 to 100 gallon•. A-C
type T-562 dirt and water
,.,over. C1ll 614-949-2228 ,

Dillard Water Servi ce: Pool1, :
Ciaternt, Walls, Delivery Anytime. Call 614· 446-7404-No
Sundsv calls.

1988 Mercury Cougar. axe
cond, loaded wl1h extras ,
88,800.00. 304-876-6339.

I,

ALLEY OOP

304-676-4230.

1987 Chevy Astro van . 304·
882-3886 or 675-6300.

666e.

NoW ANP

THAi'.$' CAi

Budge'l Transmissions: Uaed end
rebuilt, all types. Guarantee 30
dava. Call 614 -379-2220 or

614-992-3992 .

CROSS &amp; SONS

2456.

Velcro makes sheep r~ s1.1ing a breeze.

1984 Cadillac Eldortdo. hcell.
cond. Whh:e with blue top. blue
lnterior, small gu V-8 . Call

1981 Dodge Omni. e900 . Also
1981 Dodge 024 , t900 . C1ll

e622 .

66,000 BTU. LP a• heater

76

ETtiNIC

THEN--

304-773-6e 16.

3600 Ford with plows. disc, 2
row Ford planter, IS ft . buth hog- .
Nice. t6960. Call 614-288 -·

61 Household Goods

*3600. Call e14-3aB-9098.

1987 Olds Cut! .., Supreme.
Top shape. Assume loan. Fiberglall tapper for El Camino. Call
evenings 304 -773-6911 or

8622.

Men:h~nrltse

1982 Pontiac Tran•· AM. PS.
PB, T-top, AC. AM·FM-Call.

2179.

lnternattonal 668 Oi8lellractor.
.4360. 2010 J .D ., PS -Iive
power, 133&amp;0. Cell 614· 286-

.

1978 Buick Century Cultom. 4
dr., V-8·306. Good cond. Call
61 4-446·0646.

1981 Ford Escort station
wagon. Sunroof, newly rebllllt
tran1., and final drive. 614 -949-

1987 Long 60 HP Sulldo..r, 20
hours on tllc:k. Nka new. Internal tonal lnduatri•l trae;tor with
I~M~dtr. Call 814-288 -8522 .

1400 sq. ft. commetclal tpaca
suitable lor offlon. retailing, or
serviceJ , Prime location-corner
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in GaiUpolit.
Ample parking In rear .' f360 per
month. Call 814· 446-4249 or

Sh.-p 1983 Toyota Supra .
loaded. Sport pack-.;~e. powar
slearing- brakea- windows. au·
tomatlc climate control. All
performance rtems. A'V'arag• mtleage. 5 1pead. Mechaniealty
perfect. Metlculoualy maintained. Gorgeous! Call 814 446-2417 Ev•nings.

5,30,

set. Scott

/ MEAL.

3382.

1977 Chewette • Lawton gM
stove. Call614·246·6&amp;20.

1985 Ptymouth Reliance K.
Auto, PS. PB, AM-FM radio, AC,
fuel injection. Excellent condi·
tlon. Call 614-992 -6084 after

Musical
Instruments

e1 4-379-2424.

For Lease

1982 Olda. 98 . AU power. Very
dean. &amp;9,000 mil•. Di•el.
137&amp;0. Call 614·448 ·0767 at·
ter 8 PM.

1986 Chwette. Very clean.
Su.nderd •hift. 1 &amp;,000 mil ea.

61 Farm Equipment

Ready mix concrete and all
concrete auppliet. Call us Vallev
Brook Cement and Suppli81,

1982 Ford Eteort. 4 spd .. air.
f1699. John't Auto Sal•.
billow the Halid8'tlnn, kenauaa.
Rt. 7 .
'

Be..,tlful buff Codl• Sp1nlel
female puppl•, 10 weeki old.
reg up to dete shots. Call
evenlngt 614 -992-3393 or

Building Supplies

delivery . Mason und. G•llipolis
Block Co., 123% Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614·446·
2783 .

*460. Call61 4-367-7298.

1976 Bonneville. $200, Call
61 4-448·2971 .

Dr.

Conc:rm.e blodl• allaiz•• yaf d or

1980 ChfrJette. Runa good.

Brtttany Spaniel.

For Sale: Maytag portlble
washer 860.; Adjualable drMa
form 1.10. 2952 Meadowbrook

Building Material•
BloeM, bric;k, Hwer pipeJ, windows. lintel•. etc. Claude Win·
ten. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614·
246-6121.'

e1 4-379·2666-

$2&amp;.00. 304·e76-7436.

Reglaterad

2434, Ohio 1-800·633·3463.

Wanted To Buy: Dlne«e or
dining room suh. 304 -875·

1988 Ford LTD II. Like new.
12.900 mi .. auto.• AC. PS, PB.
tilt, ~ cruiM . . •&amp;BOO. Call 814-

1979 Pinto. •600. Call 611&amp;•48-4913 after 4 PM.

614·

HE: Llf&lt;'f.&gt; AN

3-Wheeler ATV·Kawuakl 200.
Good cond . Cell 614-446 -

7026 .

388-8240.

1 AKC Bas1ett puppy 1-'1:. &amp; w1cs.

iEll CD

875-3427.

Pure brad Siam•e kittens.
Be•ded Colli•. 'Call evening•

949-295e.

'

1979 Jeep Wagoneer, VI. 'b11iler•
hi1ch. AM -FM, CB radio. air
cond, cruise, t2,600.00. 304·

31 Remington Pump Shot Gun.
12 auage. 28 indt b.-rei, t22&amp; .
Alao 31 Remington 12 guage
Shot Gun. 32 Inch b.-rei. t300 .

Mater111s for aale 'from tOfn
down building. New and old
2.t4'J, paneling. new water
h eeter, plywood, doors, carp...
e1c. Pentico1tal Church 873
3rd., Middleport. Oh.

YOU '!JAY 'ZZZ"!

50J.\W~ A'i&gt;I.~Ef~

C-10. e14-992-73e7.

1986 Vamahl 80';' 3 wheeler.'
good cond, t300 .00. 304-882-

Golden Retri..,er puppi•. Be
ready for Christmas. Call 814-

f&gt;ECAU% WHI&gt;N 'tOO :,l~

•

1978 Raltv Sport Camara. LT
350, T -top, air, spokemagt, dual
exhaust. c:ruite. SHARP! No
tred•. •2795, Neg. Call 614·
448·6176.

Coli e14 -S92-3992.

ALWAY'!:&gt; PUT 'ZZZ" TO 5HC1tl

1982 Ch..,y conWriion

Femala Vorklhire Terri• puppy.
Loves children. Beautlful dog.
Will hold til Chrlttmu. Call

e1 4·949·2290.

~~~H~~X~~~D~
.,W-HV-00--~~W~

1980 Jeep Renegade. Good ,
cond. S1750 . Call 814-4468189 or 446-6826.

Eieetronic exerciae bike, cost
1140, tell t76. 1984 Hondacycle. V 86 Sabre, 4800 mll•.
M·C, 82000. 814-387-0849.

614-367-0869.

ARLO AND JANIS

614·44e·4383 dovo. 445-0139

71 Auto's For Sale

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

(!) Nightly Bualn11a·Report
Ill liZ CBS News
l!ll Rockschool
t!ll lnalde Politics '18
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
fl!l CD Too Cloae for Comlort
8:35 CIJ Carol Burnett
7:00 (]) Remington Steele
II (I) PM Magazine
(!) College Basketball
(l) Entertainment Tonight
mCll.People'a Court
Cil l!lJ MacNeil/lehrer
NewaHour {1:00)
I]J) News
t!ll Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs.-{0:30)
1111!21 ® Wheel of Fortune

Boys Choir and L-uciano
Pavarotti.
I!]) Prlmenewa Wrap ups ol
the day's world news and in
dep1h lea1Ure reports. (1 :00)
@ MOVIE: The Other Side
ol the Mountain (PG) {1 :41)
fJl (!) MOVIE: Brainstorm
(PG) {1 :46)
8:05 CD MOVIE: Something Big
(PG) {1 :48)
8:30 II (aJ (!1) A Different Worid
Denise develops a crush on
her attractive geology
professor.
(l) mCll The Charmlngs
Gentle Eric, zapped by
lillian, becomes a slick ,
obnoxious salesman. Q
9:00 CD 700 Club
IJ (I) d1J Chaers
I]) College Basketball
(l) 0 (I) MOVIE: 'Beat
Dalanae' ABC Thursday
Night Movie (R) {1 :34) C
Ill l!ll Mystery! Miss Marple
is bequeathed a tour with a
stipulation attached. C
®J Ill liZ Simon and !limon
Rick is hired by a former
lover he now consider~ a
schemer .
ii]J Larry King l-ivel In depth
interviews with top
news~akers and celebrities .
9:30 1J (aJ ® Night Court A
madman threatens to des1roy
an original draft of the
Constitution.
tO:OO(I) Straight Talk
II (I) ® L.A. Law A 1errilied
Brackmcln fears the results
from hos blood 1es1 lor AIDS .
Ill Kanawha County on the
Line
®1 Ill liZ Kno1s Landing
Laura left behind personal
videotape messages for each
ol her friends. 1:;1
l!lJ ll]) News
[JJ Evening Nowa A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ah'ead to tomorrow's news
stories. {1 :00)
1!1 (!) Benny Hill
10:05 CIJ Nobel Peace Prize
Awards The 67th Nobel Prize
Ceremonies
10:30 ill Greet American Outdoors
{0:30)
11J1 Adams Chronicles
Adams· plan for a powerful
central government leads to
his defeat. Q
1!1 Cll Hogan's Heroea
11:00 (I) Remington Steele

· e rn rn mrn

I]J)

m

Upholstery
1

1M MAKING OUT
R &amp; M Custom Couches and
Reuphol stery, St. At . 7, Crown
City, Ott 614 -266 -1470 Evu
6_
1 4·446· 3438. Open dai.Y 9 t~•
4 .30, Sat. 9 :30 ,to 1:30 . Old S.
ntrW Uphostered.
Mowrey's Upholstering serving
trl countyarea22 year 1. Thebe•t
in furniture upholuerlng C 11
30.4 - 675 - 4164 f o r ' fra
est1mat e1.
ee

M'&lt;

CHRI5TMA5

LISL

I' LL PUT DOWN '
... I
IKN(JW HOW TO SPELL TflAT..

{A)

Ill !II M'A'S'H
12:00 (I) Bumo and Allen

\

wliZ

1151 News
•
(!) Speadweek {T)
(!) Sign Off
.
I!]) Moneyllne Current
reports on world economiCS
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs . (0:30)
ll]) Jelferoona
fJl CD Love Connection
1t:3011(I) (!1) Tonight Show
(!) SportsCenter {l-)
(l) Cheerl
Cll Nlghtllna 1:;1
I]J) Magnum, P.l .
l!lJ Sign Off
II]J Sporta Tonight A,ction
packed sports highlights with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
{0:3Q)
Ill liZ 'Night Heel' CBS Lata
Night One ol Giambone's
basketball players Is
Implicated in gang murder.

St1AKAD

I

I

PLUMY

f-T-1.:;-:1:...;,;1,.....:.:1~---l

l

i

~

-;K::._:R~I...;.B_:S;_..jl :-·
s

I I

\

1

First teen: "II 1 lost a few
pounds I'd lcok better." Second
teen : "Just cutout deserts_ Don 't
even think about th~m- " First

~

I

M0 L T E E
teen: " That's -as-."
f--r,.:....:TI6~,,..:_.::1r,7~T"~_,..j 0 Complete the chuckle quoted

I

_ , l__;,-.J_L--.1---'-1---L--.J-

L.

8
0

I]J)

Butcharlng hog, 42¢ lb. live
w.lght. 304-875 -1824.

e14-245-9678.

I

@Winner'• Circle (T)
(l) mCll ABC News r:;l

&amp; 4W.D .

446-5927.

55

WEO DOI&lt;J'T BLAME
'IOU 6EitJG SKE~TICAL
THAT I'IE'ftE F:.cALLY
MA~FtiCIO 'S FftiEI&lt;JD$,

1982 Dodge 250 RJm. Cu.. om
conver~ion. Trallar ready . call

74

THURS., DEC. 10 •

8:00 (]) Crazy Llko a Fox
11 rn rn m (IJ I]J) 111 liZ
®Newa
C!l Sportslook (T)
(!)Dr. Who
I!] Square One TV Q
.:liZ ShowBiz Today News ol
the en1ertainmen1 world is
a.Fithored live from New
Vorl&lt; . {0:30)
!B) Facts of Life
,
Ill CD One Day at a Time
8:05 (I) Allee
8:30. (2) ® NBC Nlghlly News

10WH

302 stand•d, good radial tires.
$,200. A.lao 1981 D1t1un
Truck. 6 speed. 1ir, tun roof,
eurtom fiber gl•• topper. r~~dial
draa. 54,000 mil•· f2300. Call
814 -992- 3992. ·

e847.

1076.

•100. Call614-446-2971.

=

1988 Suzuki Quadrager 260.'
4-wheeler. Call 614·742-2806.:

1619.

Rentals ,.

1uto., ~ton, S665. Both looka&amp;
run• grett. call 448 -1912 or

WOlD
GAM I

EVENING

1976 Ford pickup. ShOn bed.

Sturdy wooden crib with mattr•a. bumper pad, mltchlng
shHt. $100. Gasoline weed
WICker, •eo. Clll 614-367 -

Trailer apace~ for rant, Rt. 1
lor;:uat Road. back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home Park, 304-176-

446-2325.

aJTOF

1978 Plymouth 4x4 , Auto, air,
AM-FM , good condition. No
mechanical problem1. over
hauled. •1600. 114· 986 ·4318.

Coli 614-38&amp; -&amp;376.

Spacious mobfle home Iota for
rent. Famllv Pride Mobile Home
Park, Gallipolis Ferry, 304-076-

49

1974 Ford pickup , •uto . , ~

1984 Ford Ranger. Take oVer
payments. C.ll814-446· 0602.

1642.

Callahan 's Used TireS hop. Over
1.000 tirw. liJ.es12. 13. 14. 16,
16. 16.5. 8 mil• out Rt. 218 .
Call 614-266-6261 .

=

/MIL

1980 Dodge pickup, :l'18, 3
1peed. New paint. sliding gl•s,
vi1or. white 'tpoket, ttrH, ex hauat . Call 814-446-.C482 .

6 pe , drum set, make offer. 3 pc.
bedroom tuh:e t130.00. 304675-3763 .

Antiques

•

lOCAL

36B-9a73-

Electric wheel chair, like n6'N
cond.. used vary little. Adult
potty chair. C•ll814-441 -0848 .

2903.

814-3e7-0ee9 .

hook· ups:
Also effidsu:y
rooma,
alfC.b4
ande. cllble.
Mllon,
W .Va. Call304 -773-6661 .

pri\late apt: Quiet. Ne•
HMC . One adult only. No peu.
Stove . rllfrig ., drapea. ,U21 a
mo. Ref. required . C•ll 114448- 4782.

PARSON'S FURNITURE

Quality firewood. all hardwded.
far sale. $26 a pick-up loed. Call

2 BR . apta. 6 closet1, khchenappl. furnlshed, Wuher- Dryer
hook-up, ww carpm., newtv
painted. dec:k. Re"Mtcy, Inc.
Apta. Cali 304·676-7738 or
676· 6104.

Ni~

Carpet Prlce• Starting at:
Commercial · t4 a yd .,
Sc:ulptur•86 a yd .. Pluah-$7 a
yd. Lot• of room rements In
rtock . Financing available. Mol·
lohan Fur'niture. Upper River Rd.
- 614-448-7444.

53

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 and 2
room lurni1h.t apts. private
beths, utilitlea paid, 304-882-

Space for small trailers.
Commercial buildings for lease.
Oownt i)Wn Pt. Pleasant . Stores,
otficos. A -One Real Estate.
Cftrol Yeager. Broker. Call 304~
875 -6104.
'

Vaiii!Pf Furniture
New and u~ed fumh:ure and
applicanc:es . Call 61 4- 448 ·
7672. Hours 9-6.

Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,
2 bedroom furnithed apt utlitl• .-id, "'farence~and d~oalt.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rantal trailers. Cali 814·992·
7479 .

Apartment
for Rent

0322.

Upstair. unfurriilhed apartment.
Utiliti81 paid. No
chil•en or pet1. Call 614·446·

6024.

2 BA . MobileHomefor rent. Call
after 2 PM -614-446-0827.

cradlt. 3 Mil• out
Bul•ille Rd. Open Sam to 5pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph. 614-446·

Carp•~ -

42

992-7479.,

34

Furni•ha:l apartment· 4 rooma&amp;
bath. 1 or 2 adults. No pets. Rat.
&amp; Sec. dep. required . Cell
114-446-0444.

2 bedroom furni ..d 1pt, ref and
deposit. New Haven, W . Ve.,
304-882-3287 or 304-773 -

1 2x65 Shultz, acr e ground,
furnished or unfurni1hed with or
wit hout satelite system. pr ice
nego,tiable. 304-576 ·2,92.

land co ntract . 6.96 acras. bern,
chicken coop. pony tlhed. workshop and 3 bedroom house.
$25 00 down and · t356.90
month 15 yrs or cash price of
$26.000. Call 614-992-2143
8 ;30 t o 4 :30. Ask for micttael.
614 -992-6373.

3997. E.O.H'.

APARTMENTS, mobile hom•.
hou•s. Pt. Pl . .ant and Gallipolis. 814·446-8221.

1984 Skyline. 14x70, central
air, underpenning, dedtl. new
carpet, kitchen appliances. set
up on rented lot , k &amp; K. Point
Pl eesant, $16.600. Call we•
kends Of after 5 weekdays.
304-676- ,294 .

Farms for Sale

SON ESTATES, &amp;38 J•ckson
Pike from t 183 a mo. Walk to
shop and inoviM . 614·446-

Two bedroom hou• hllf mile
out Jericho Road, call aftM
6 :00pm, 304-676 -8483.

2 bedroom mobile home 3'11
mila. south of Middleport. Rt. 7 .
1 child accepted. No pets.
drunka or dope. Raf•ence. Call
814-367-0611 .

33

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT

BUDGET PRICES AT JACK-

2 bedroom apartment on lincoln
Hill, Pomeroy. Call 614·9928&amp;39 or 614-992-3489.

2 BR . trailer. $150 a mo. No
psta. Ref. reQuired. Call after 6
PM, 367-0181 or387·0121 .

90 Days

···-----····
ume as cash with

appro~~ed

2 8R. apt. Stove &amp;. rllfrig.
turniahtd. Ne• Go Mart. Call
814-448-7026 .

Hou• for rent. 3 bedroom,
g.-age, deposit ,.quired. 614992-6668.

Mobile Homes
for Rent

Hutch81 e400 and up. Bunk
bed• complete w -mattreaaes
U95 and up to t396. Baby bad•
,, 10. MaHresMa or box springs
full or twin tl!l8, firm t78, and
t88. Queen MIS 8226, King
t350, 4 drawerch•t f69. Gun
clbln•• 6 gun. Gas or ei!K:trlc
rsnge $375. llabv mettrHIIt
f36 &amp; t46. Bed tram• e2o.
130 a. King frame t60. Good
selection . 'Of bedroom suites.
metal cabtnets. headboards •30
tnd up to t66.

~II

81200. 1973 GMC V1110 , 350

r
e oo.

Wood ublo w·6 chaira S2e6 to
$796_Ooak • 1oo up to t376 .

Television
Viewing

1977 Chevy piekup . Body
rough . Runs good, tl500 or be• t
offer. Call 814 -388 -9714.

6 Gun Cherry Wood Gun Ca binet. e110. Good cond. Call

-='=--,.,,----,-~~,-31 Homes for. Sale ~;;::::;;~~~;:::::;;:=.:~r;:;=:;;:~:;;=;;:==1 u1s.

Trucks for Sele

PJckup bad -1979 GMC·
steel. Ca11614·3&amp;7· 0102.

114-441-2311.

Bicycl• 10•pd,, $&amp;&amp;. 2· 236:16
GOOD USED APPUANCES mud, 1tuds on Ford Rima, f411S .
dryers, refrigerators,
Hond• Blg Red. C1ll 614-446ranges . Skaggs Appliances. · 70191.
UppM' River Rd. b81ide Stone
Crest Motel . 614· 446-7398 .
Se•s combination atereo tape
player • rJdio. ' Call 614-448 LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
486, .
King wood &amp;. coal at-w•h
..,_
Sol• lnd ch•ra .,;cod from
1396 to t996. Tabl• t60 end blower. Like new, Call - eve.
up to tUB. H;de-e-bodo t390
to f595 . Redlners f2.2S to ~~-1~4--2,4_6_-9_1_2_0_.-----,--8 fl . Satellite, compl ....' e400.
1973 Je...,, good cond., 1
tamp•
82a
to
t1215
.
Dlnottn *109and up to t496.

. Ohio

1987

1887 Ford R1ngar 4x4 . Fuel
Injection. Low mileaga. Call
114·246 ·1529• .

Muzzle loading Suppll_. Prlcaa
h.,• been rtducad. Shop going
out of butln•s. lolbe('a, Mlll
Creek Rd. Hrs.- Mon., Wad. , Fri.6-8 PM. Sat.- 1-6 PM . Phone

W•h••·

30. ·676-1448.

Real Estate

·

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

51 Household Goods

LAFF-A-DAY

Business ,
Opportunity

Thursday. December 10, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

by f 1ll ing In 1he mi~ ing words
you develop from step No. 3 below .

T 1'

PRINT NUMB ERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS
FQR ANSWER

I I

S!:RAM·LETS

•

3

s

I'

I I I

II

ANSWERS

'· "

Nlmbw - Junto - Exile.- Script - RUSTIN'
Old farme[ to another.' "Ever.slnce my neighbor retired from

Ianning, he e juat been elttlng around RUSTIN' out"

BRIDGE

NORTH
tz.l0-87
+AK 10962

Second hand
rose

.752
+9 8 5

.

+6

EAST
+J85
.KJ10964

WEST
+Q 3

By James Jacoby

--'

Why didn't North rebid three spades
over two no-trump? Perhaps he
feared that South might pass, and with
his A-Khe felt he had enough for South
to make three no-trump_ Although
four spades is not an unreasonable
contract, it would be quickly set with a
heart lead. (Heart ruff, back to East's
ace of diamonds, another heart ruff
with the spade queen, and East would
still get his spade jack lor a certain
one-trick set.) But South found himself
in three no-trump, and the play be·
came a serious matter when West, not
having a heart, led his diamond suit.
East played the ace and returned the
10, and declarer was confronted with
having to bring in the spade suit.
He played a low spade, intending to
put in dummy's nine and hoping that
East would win the trick and not have
any diamonds left. That would have
been well and good, but West recognized that this was a defensive situation in which the rule •second hand
low" needed to be violated. So he put
up · his spade queen smartly. Now
what? Looking at all the cards, we can
see that declarer simply has to take

+A 10

+Q764 32
+QJ942

+ 75

SOUTH
+ 74
• A Q6 3

+KJ

+AK10 83

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
Wesl

North

SGutb

Easl

1+

2NT

Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead: + 4
his beating, but South was m the blind.
He won dummy's ace ol spades, took a
heart finesse and then played a spade
to dummy's 10. (Alter all, it was possible that West had started wilh Q-J-3 of
spades.) East won the jack and poor
declarer went set three tricks.
.•
Maybe South would have been bet·
ter off if he had doubled two hear~ . .
That would have been + 800, quite an
improvement over -300.

~-~tid'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
1 Rearward

39 Neighbor
of Eng.

4 Epic tale

DOWN

8 Scottish

1 Rich

hillside
9 Skilled
11 Parched
12 Coun-

tapestry
2 One's
favorite
3 Newsman

sellor's
concern

Koppel "
4 Tribal

14 Exclude

chief
Yesterday's Answer
15 ·-kingdom 1'1 "-at the
"
Races"
18 Jar or pot 28 Not a soul
0
16 ~:~~·her
(1937 film)21 !art .
29 Merriment
17 Beached
6 Muffm
22 Moulm
31 Roman
19 Greek
7 Sycophant
Rouge" star
highway
letter
8 Polish
23 "Mondo
34 Actress,
20 Turkish
cake
Cane" song
Maryam
flag ·
10 Wobble
24 Prophet
d' 21 Raced
13 Highway 211 Quit a
35 Bombay
22 Dossier
11'1 Corner
party
title

23 Heath

~4 "Evening"

in Catania
2~

Bless my

-!
26 Before
27 Going

wrong
30 Shrewmouse

31 Rink
covering

32 Musical
note
33 Refund
3~ Wheel

drag
36Garbed

37Descartes

38Ancient
' times

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It:

f21IO

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGfELLOW

' stands for another. In this sample A is used
One letter
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.
CRYfTOQUOTE

12-10

IF M R

R F X

GU

Y0 P X

KUB

I F U

E M T

XPXQKRFOTY,
RFX

I U EM T

IF U

X P X Q K R F 0 T Y

?

u

RU
F M J

Q-

R U

QXRBQTJ
J U B Q Z X

UAJZBQX
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: ALTER THE GOLDEN
RULE: WHAT YOU DO NOT UKE DONE TO YOURSELF
DO NOT DO TO OTHERS- - WILLIAM OSLER

�Ohio Lottery
Christmas
countdown

Daily Number
251
Pick 4
1961

•

at y

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 11. 1987

Vol. 38, No, 160
Copyriglrted 1987

Cloudy tonight. Chance of
showers. Low in mid 30s.
c;Joudy Saturday. Highs in the ·
upper 40s .

2 Sections, 16 Paget 25 Cents
A Multimedia lne. Newspaper

Two Ohioans killed in
Mason County · wreck

PR

ENTiRE S7i

MERcH~~~~AE;~~;~~~
0
1iALLp"f:wRou'ANcE
116~
KED
Dow~·
0
0IT/Q SLy IVI,;;;I
H
rRO .
_IY
SORRy No R~~~~~:Afi~~~A~~o~;~~: ~EcffroRE: . .

t

AM/FM/FM-stereo rece.iver with built-in program'mable clock/timer,
graphic equalizer, dual
casseue decks, semi-automatic record player, tower
speakers, and custom component rack. . Regu.l ar
259.97

(Editor's note: Tuesday ;.,arks bridge collapsed, but the entire
the date 20 years ago this area 1, 750-foot long span . from shore
was shocked by the collapse of to shore. Vehicles and people
· the ~liver Bridge. Coverage or Its cascaded with tons of steel.
Impact on the area will be . tumbling 100 feet through the air
continued in the Sunday Tlmes- before plunging into the cold,
40-foot deep river. The death toll
Sentlne1)
was 46.
"I walked down to the river.
By RICK VANSANT
looked
up and boy,lt was gone,"
United Press International
·recalls
Blii \V amsley. "I looked
GALLIPOLIS- Twenty years
later, the collapse of the Silver down the river and there was a
Bridge remains a vivid horror Mack truck floating down the
story for one generation, but only river."
Wamsley, 40, says the 'lmages
a misty legend for a new
that click into his mind from that
generation.
The dividing line is 5 p.m ., night 20 years ago are just as
Friday, Dec. 15, 1967. lf you were vivid as when he saw them. His
around this southern· Ohio com- generation wlli never forget.
And yet, the generation now
munity then, 20 years ago is like
coming
of age, the people who
last night. If you weren't, 20
soon
will
dominate the 'Commun·
years ls like 200.
lty,
have
no memory of the
On that chlily night jusl10days
landmark event in the town's
before Christmas, the bridge history.
nearly six football fields long The bridge that fell was so huge
collapsed. l! was the only'bridge
for 50 miles across the quarter· that a lot of youngsters mistakmile-wide Ohio River and it was enly assume that It was a nearby
smaller bridge that fell ln.
packed with cars and trucks.
"For some reason, until a few
Not just one section of the

169.

Kidde®

Fire

Extinguisher

All .

costume
·Jewelry

Portable
AM/FM

ssette
Pia r

Ajay®

Ergofl1eter

Exercise
Bike

.

~

~

'

Dust
B·uster·
Plus

All

Pet
Foods
&lt;Excluding Pet

Knapsack

or

Roll Bag

HECKS
10W·40

Motor
Oil

Treats!

Metro

Nylon

Teacher~

A nightmare to some, but
j~~t a misty legend to others

Rack Stereo
system

Black &amp; Decker®

site for the new four-lane structure was chosen.
After 79 calendar days of hearings, land
acquisitions, fi/lancing and contracting maneuvers, initial construction began on May 13, 1968.
The brigde was "jacked shut" (last connecting
member of main superstructure was made) on
Aug. 6, 1969. It was dedicated on Dec. 15, 1969.
' (UPI)
.

Bridge collapse 20 years ago:

SON CLEARAN SAVE FOR CHORE.
soundeslgn®
CE ITEMs.
RISTMAS!

Soundeslgn ®

SILVER MEMORIAL BRIDGE - The Silver
Memorial Bridge, spanning the Ohio River at
Gaillpolis, Ohio and Point Pleasant, W.Va., will be
18 years old on Tuesday. It replaced the structure
thai collapsed on December 13, 1961, during
rusb·hour traffic, killing 46 people. Initial
planning began on the $14.5 million structure on
Dec. 18, 1967. Sixty-seven days later, Feb. 23, 1968,

stock

Pots
Qt.,
Qt.

8
12
16 Qt. or 20 Qt.

HECKS
Car
Batteries
40 Month car
Truck/Van

Holiday
Paper Towels
or 120 Count
Napkins

Oak

2-Drawer
File
.,

deny statement
issued by Supt. · Dan Morris

Tbe Meigs Local Teachers ideas were explored on how to Local Teachers' Association at
the mediation session on De·
Association negotiating team to- resolve contract problems but cember
7 came as a total surprise -·
daydeAled:&lt;! statemen~lssued by was emphatic In his statement
to the Association.
years ago, I always thought It
Meigs Local Superintendent Dan that no official offer was made to
"This offer was never preswas the 01~ Blue Bridge (across
E . Morris Thursday In regard to the teachers association nego- ented to any member of the
the Kanawha R'tver in West
a contract offer which Morris tiating team on Monday.
Association team. The Board of
Virginia) that fell," says Amy
says was made at a Dec. 7 . The negotiating team of the Education continues to misreteachers . association this mornRoderick, 16, a high school
negotiating session.
Ing
issued the following state- present their offers,' and in this
junior .. "Not the Silver Bridge.
Federal Mediator David Thor·
instance, has claimed theA.ssoci·
You look at the Silver Bridge (the ley, senior mediator for the State ment in answer to Thursday's ation negotiators turned down a
18-year old replacement bridge) of Ohio from the Federal Media· published report from Supt. proposal that was never made.
and you think, there's no way
lion and Concillatlon service, Morris.
"The statements from the The only reason for making such
that could fall."
who presided over the Dec. 7
an outlandish statement i~ to try
That's what a lot of people negotiating session held in . Meigs Local Board of Education to undermine and discredit the ·
thought about the original Silver Athens. also stated this morning that were released by Supt. ML TA negotiators.
Bridge, named for its shiny
that no official offer was ex· . Morris on Dec. 10 about a · "The release of their state· .
.aluminum paint.
tended by the Board of Education contract offer allegedly given to ment to the local paper further
Called an "engineering mar- • at Monday's se~slon. He said that the bargaining team of the Meigs highlights the fact that the Board .
vel" when It was dedicated In ·
does not now and has not
1928, the bridge featured a unique
bargained with the MLTA team,
heat-treated !-bar chain suspenand makes it clear that they
sion system. Unfortunately, one
would rather continue to negoWASHINGTON (UPI) - The government's producer price
of those marvelous !·bars
tiate through the press. Once
index, usually the harbinger of future consumer prices, was
cracked less than 40 ¥ears later,
again the Board has violated the
unchanged from October to November, suggesting Inflation will
investigators determined.
request
of the mediator that a
continue to be moderate, the Labor Department said today.
Stoplights at each end of the
negotiations
news blac~out reWholesale consumer food prices rose 0.3 percent during the
U.S. 35 span to Point Pleasant,
In
effect.
..
main
month, but were offset by a 0.2 percent drop in aU other
W.Va., had backed up heavy
"MLTA
Is
ready
to
negotiate
at
consumer products, the government said. .
traffic - Including numerous
any
time.
but
they
wish
to
do
so
at
Prices of finished durable consumer goods, those expected to
tractor-trailer . rigs - on the
the bargaining table with the
last
three or more years, fell for the second straight month,
bridge that horrible night. The
mediator present and not by
dropping 0.1 percent. Non-durable consumer goods fell 0.2
bridge, recalled witness Paul
exch;lnging
proposals in the
percent during the month.
Scott, simply began "shaking."
newsl&gt;aper."
"It went to the left," he said.
"Then, to the right. And then 11
never came back. It just kept

Price index does not change

going."

60 Month car
.60 Month

coronet®
.

injured, the report stated.
Volunteer Fire Department, the
By MATT ROBERTSON
Point Pleasant Emergency Med·
OVP News Stall
POINT PLEASANT - Two
The driver of the Freightliner, . leal Services and HealthNet
personnel, authorities said. The
Carslile, Ohio. residents died Michael D. Fluty, 31, Akron,
Thursday on U.S. Route 35, near Ohio, was transported by Point accident is still under
Southside, at about 8:40 p.m. , Pleasant Emergency Medical investigation.
In other reports, an accident on
according to the Mason County Services to Pleasant Valley Hos·
Tuesday near the intersection of
Sheriff's Department.
pitai. He was treated and re·
Route 2 and Secondary Route 16
The accident, a head-on colli· leased, authorities said.
slon between a 1985 Dodge
Victoria Swan was pronounced at 12:26 p.m. slightly damaged a
.Daytona Turbo-Z, a 1986 'F ord . dead at the scene and Ernie Mason County Sheriff's Depart·
L-9000 tractor-tralier, a 1982 Swain was pronounced dead ment cruiser, an accident report
Kenworlh tractor tralier and a' enroute · to Cabell-Huntington sal\1.
The cruiser, a 1980' Ford,
1986 Frelgh(liner tractor-trailer, Hospital iri the HealthNet heiic·
driven by Robert Edwin Fruth II,
fatally injured VIctoria Swain, 4 opter, authorities said.
months old, and Ernie Swain, 25.
The Kenworth, driven by 19, Point Pleasant. sustalned$600
A seccnd passenger in the car, Jackie Roger Christian, 47, Plea· · in damages. Fruth was driving
Loraine Swain, was transported san! Grove, N.C., sustained dam - south on Route 2 when a 1986
by the Point Pleasant EMS to age to both the tractor and Buick apparently pulled out in
Holzer Medical Center. Her trailer. but no estimate on front o{ the cruiser, Lauthorlties
condition was not known Friday damage was available. The said.
The Buick, which sustained
morning. The Injuries were a Frelghtllner sustained $6,000
result of beth the Impact and damage to the tractor. according $1,500 in damages. was driven by
from being thrown from the to the report. Both the Dodge Enabelle See, 63, Point Pleasant.
In one other accident, a 1980
vehicle after Impact, according Daytona and the Ford L-9000
Ford,
driven by Mary Leu Peck.
to the report.
were declared a total loss.
40,
Leon,
sustained $250 In
Assisting the Mason County
The Ford L-9000 was driven by
damages
when
it struck a deer
Floyd Charles Gibby ,46, Lincoln· Shel'iff's Department at the
ton, S.C., according to the she· scene were the West Virginia - Thursday, at 5:30p.m. on Route
riff's department. Gibby was not State Pollee, the Point Pleasant . 62, three miles north of Leon. ,-

G"RBAGE DUMPED - A tractor-trailer carrying trash from
Pennsylvania, traveling south on Route 7, overturned In a curve
near Five Points aboulll: 15 a.m. Thursday. The truck was driven
by John D. Holsinger, 41, of Duncansville, Pa. According to
Trooper Robert Justus of the State Highway Patrol, Holsinger was
traveling too fast around the curve, lost control, hit the guard rail
and overturned. Garbage spe)l'ed from the trailer to the roadside.
Environmental Protection Agency officials were notified of the
garbage spiU, as Is standard procedure In such accidents, although
Justus said he did not believe the debris contained any
contaminated materials. Holslpger was cited for failure to control.
He was transported by Syracuse EMS to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was treated for minor Injuries and released.
One·lane traffic was main~ined u,ntll the truck was uprlghted and
removed by Curtis.Towing of Athens.
.

'•

Blil Needham sat in his truck
as it was tossed off the heaving
bridge.
"We hit the water'and the truck
sank like a rock," said Needham,
who was able to push down a
cracked window, scramble out of
the truck, rise to the surface and
find ~ piece of floating debris to
cling to until he was rescued.
But46 others perished.
The replacement Silver Memorial Bridge, built a quarter-mile
downstream from its predecessor and dedicated on Dec. 15,1969
- the second anniversary of the
collapse - has become part of
the everyday ll(e of the community. Just like the old Sliver Bridge
did:
.
"As a kid, I walked across that
bridge many a time," recalls
Wamsley , now athletic director
at Galila Academy High School.
"I remember standlqg in the
middle of it and those tractortnliler trucks would come across
and you'd feel that bridge
bounce. I'm no expert on bridge
construction, but I never felt it
was kept In good repair. It was
sort of neglected.''
bridge 13-01
Wamsley added, " Until that
bridge collapsed, I think people
took bridges for granted. They're
there and you really don't have to
worry about them. I think the
collapse of our bridge has prompted a lot more concern for bridge
Continued on page 7
•

SAVED BY THE BELT- Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State
Highway patrol pr«isented Regina A. Bolen of
Dexter with the "Saved By The Belt" Award after
she escaped Injury In an accident that occurred
Oct. 24, on Bowles Road In Meigs County. Bolen
was eastbound when she lost control of her pickup

•

while negotiating a left-hand curve. Slldin1 off the
lelt side of the roadway, the pickup •truck an
embankment and overturned. While the truck
was hea\llly dllffiaged In· the accident, Bolen
escaped uninJured because she was wearing a
safety belt.

·--·---r·--- -

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="221">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2811">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="39825">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39824">
              <text>December 10, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="323">
      <name>ball</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="3473">
      <name>chattin</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="476">
      <name>darst</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="29">
      <name>hysell</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
