<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12703" 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/12703?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-11T16:06:26+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43675">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/1539767c49833a91d436cf72c372542f.pdf</src>
      <authentication>31507e4022e81157024b06a995f424a2</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="39832">
                  <text>'

•

December 13, 1987

Ohio-Point Pleeaant, W.Va. ·

Times-Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

HOP. T PAT HILL FORD

Christmas
countdown

He Will Save Yo

Daily Number
063

Pick 4 ·
2058
Super Lotto

•·

25-~9-39-19-7-35

STOP IN AND SEE:
Rick Tolliver, Pat Hill or Jci'y Hill

,.

CHO..DERS HONORED - Howard Childers, left, of Childers
Saw Supply In VInton, receives the Oulsl~tUJdillg Performance
AwRI'd from Bob Crawford, territory manager lor Rahrig Sales,
Inc., of IJma, for the salil of Echo Products at his store.

ttr;-e~

"These are nasty guys," Tew
SlJys. "All of a sudden the varroa
are here and having a very
negative impact and we're· not
sure how to deal with them.
These parasites knocked out
about halt of the Israeli bee
Industry and have done similar
damage everywhere they .have
shown up."
Honey bees are a $150 mllllon
.Industry in the United States. In
addition, beekeepers provide an
estimated $20 billion in polllna·
tlon services to the nation's
farmers. Ohio has more beekeepers than any other state.
Tew says varroa migrated to
the United States from Central
and South America. Asian bees
have been plagued by them for
centuries and have adapted. But
the European honey bee found In
the United States has notadallted
to the varroa mite.
·
Tew says It will be hundreds of
years before the bees get use&lt;) to
the mites.
.
Varroa are tortoise·shaped so
bees can't rub them off the way
they do other mites. They are an
·external parasite and feed on the
blood of both developing a'hd
adult bees. One mite multiplies to
10 within a year.

,.

$3756°0

You'n ·sa~e

Plenty ·
On These!

Plenty _
On These!

20 \'EARS TUESDA \'-Once a prominent part of the land•cape
of lhe Gallipolis-Point Pleasant arf'a, the Silver Bridge, shown in this

1918
IIONCO II

HUGE YEAR-END SAVINGS ON All OUR
QUALITY USED CARS &amp;TRUCKS!!! . ·· .Come· in and Checl~ Out Our Prices and Big Discounts
Low Financing·Rates Available •••• (On the Spot Financing)

302 engrne, automatic overdrive.
XLT Lariat package. Air, cruise,
power locks and windows. tilt
wheels, styled
steel wheels.
AM/FM/Cassette.

1985 GMC 112 TON
PICKUP SIERRA CLASSIC

V-8 engine, auto. transmission, air
conditioning, cruise control, , tilt
wheel, power locks and windows.

1987 E- ~50

CLUB WAGON

V-8 auto. overdrive trans .• quad captain
chairs., sola bed, cruise control, dual air
and heat, power windows and locks, run·
ning boards, roof rack, ladder, aluminum
wheels .

1,985 FORD F-250
351 engine, automatic

1986 RANGER
PICKUP

t~ansmis-

sion, AM/FM, dual tank, 7700 lb.

gvw.

1985 F-150
FORD 414
6 cylinder, 4 speed. Low
mileage. AM/FM

V-6, 5 speed. AM/FM, power
brakes. long bed.

(2) TAURUS LX 1986
V-6, automatic transmission,
cruise •. tilt, air, power windows.
power locks.

560, air conditioning, cassette,
sunroof.

NEW BUS FACILITY- A new bus garage Is

- of

"It (the Senate plan) specifies
that part of the (cuts) will come
from the opera tlng budget and
part simply from reducing the
commitment to ca pital invest·
ment and equipment," said
Hooblng.
''It also specifies that in no way
can the Postal Service increase
rates -(to cover the $1.7 billion in
new costs), nor can they add to
their borrowing - so that's why
it forces (the agency) into the
channel of the operations budget
and capital investment commitments," he said.

Parts of Southwest
get 4 feet of snow
By PETER ROWE
United Press International
The first major snowstorm of
the season from the Southwest
paralyzed parts 'or the southern
Rockies and Plains 1,mder as
much as 4 feet of snow today,
knocking out power, stranding
motorists and killing at least
three people.
New Mexico and Texas were
the hardes t hit today. Four feet of
snow was rep_orted in Torrance
County, N.M ., and more than 2
feet of snow piled up at Guadalupe Pass, Texas.
A record 16 Inches buried El
Paso, Texas, where the lnterna·
tiona! airport was closed for
about an hour la te Sunday. The
snowfall total more than doubled
the city's previous record fo r a
24-hour period.
·New Mexico Gov. Ga r-rey Ca r ·
ruthers sent four units of the
National Guard to Torrance
County Sunday alterri'oon to help
state pollee with stranded motorIs ts. Officials said the heavy
snow in the area forced some 200
to 300 cars off the road.
Eleven Inches fell at Amarillo ,
Texas, where schools a nd roads
were closed and authorities
worked to rescue s tranded .

motorists.
"It 's a mess," Amarlllo police
dispatcher Rodney Ford said
today . "It's been snowing for 28
hours straight. We have an
average of 3 to 4 feel (of snow
and) drifts up to 5 to 6 feet.
"We are at a standstllL
Wreckers are stuck, four·wheel·
drives are stucl&lt;;. We are having
major problems. The city is
paralyzed."
On Sunday the storm had
burled New Mexico, piling 19
Inches of snow on Ruidoso, and
triggered a 70·vehlcle pileup on a
Denver interstate. Winds accompanied by heavy snow hlt AlbU·
querque, N.M., at 71 mph before
the storm pushed on to Texas.
In terstate 40 west of Amarillo
to Albuquerque was closed
toda y.
"We're telling people not to
drive at all, but some people
don 't listen," Ford said. " ...
People are ask1 ng for help and
there's. no one to help them ...
Once we start digging out, we're
afraid of what we may find."
Some El Paso school districts
delayed the start of Classes for a
few hours, while others canceled
them for the day .

;---r~~fj:"'&lt;;T'TTJO""--,

underway at Southern High School. Occupancy Is
e"pected In six-to-eight weeks.

Southern Local School District conslruct(on were ·prepared by for mechanics to work on two
Is having a new bus garage architect Don Glenn. Rose Exca- buses , Southern officials report. ·
Southern Board of Education Is
constructed 9n school property ' vatlng of Racine prepared ihe
currently
renting space that Is
'
site
and
constt:ucted
the
new
behind the high school football
jnadequate
and located in the ·
to
the
new
garage.
roadway
field .
high
water
area.
Besides
meeting
health
and·
B&amp;L Utility Contractors of
Proper maintenance of the bus
South Point were low bidders on safety codes, the new facility will
fleet
for safety of students is a
be more efficient In that it will
the $85,000 project.
high
priority
at Southern, school
Design speclllcations to meet have adequate storage and room
officials
say
.
state codes for safety, health and

V-6, - A ir conditioning, AM/FM,
rear defrost. '

Racine Council to purchase new dump truck

Shock. Absorbers by Cabriel t
HEAVY SHOCKS ................: ......... $11 9 5 per shock

After deciding It Is no longer
prudent to put money Into truck
repairs, Racine VIllage Council
at their most recent session
discussed steps to get another
dutpp truck for the .village.
It · was reported that several
councUmembers have . begun
making phone calls to ou t·ofcounty dealers, In hopes of
locating an SO's model l'h ·2 ton
truck. A special meeting to
discuss further plans for a truck
purchase has been scheduled lor
tonight (Monday) at 6:15p .m.
Mike Warner of Brogan·
Warner Insurance was present at
the meeting to advise that
council's liability Insurance will
be going up about $1,600, and that

Installed _Price '16" per shock

GAS SHOCKS ••••• .-......................... $1 8 75 per shock
Installed Price S1175 per shock

FOI ALL DOIIISnC CAIS AND TIUCKS

ON THE SPOT BANK FINANCING AVAILABLE

··~.

laws, but praised the nominee lor
will be painless."
a
decision chastlzlng pollee who
In his prepared remarks, Sen.
bribed
a 5·year-old child to tell
·
Howard Metzenbaum, D·Ohlo,
them
where
his parents had
said he was concerned over some
hidden drugs .
of Kennedy's past civil rights
Kennedy,· 51, a Sacramento,
rulings and for belonging to
Calif., federal appeals judge,
private clubs that excluded
women or blacks from member· faced little announced opposition
on hls first day before a Senate
ship. He said Kennedy "would
panel that will consider whether
not be my Ideal nom inee ... but
he shOuld be confirmed for a
the signs are that he Is an
Supreme
Court seat vacant since
acceptable nominee ."
June.
Sen. Ed)Vard Kennedy, D·
The nominee's testimony was
Mass.. said he, too, was con·
expected
to last two days. Thirty·
cerned over Kennedy's "n;u:rJ)w
two other witnesses have signed
clvll -rlghts"
up to tes tlfy , with the hearing
expected to last no more than live
days. In contrast, the heariJngfor
President Reagan's first high
cour\,llominee, Robert Bork, who
was rejected 58·42 by the Senate
In October, lasted 12 days and
drew 112 witnesses.
Kennedy, a judge on the 9th
. U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals
si nce 1975, was nominated Nov.
11. A 2onservatlve, he is Presi·
dent Reagan's third - and, so
far , least controversial- choice
to succeed retired Justice Lewis
Powell, a moderate.
Bark, 60, was widely de·
nounced by senators and libera l
organizations that contended his
conservative writings and
speeches lndlcatetl he would turn
back the clock on civil rights and
clvllllbertles gains of the last 30
years if he were eleva ted to the
high court .
Reagan's next selection. Douglas Ginsburg, 41 , another conservative, withdrew his nomination last month after admitting to
smoking marijuana as a college
student and later as a law
professor. Both Bork and Ginsburg are judges On the U.S.
·Circuit Court of Appeals for the
District of Columbia.

will be one of \he subjects of a
House-Senate conference com·
mlttee this week.
• In addition to cuts in service,
the agency would h&amp;ve to slow
down automation of Its operations and halt construction pro·
jects across the country, including those In the states of
Callforn i·a, Florida , New York
and Texas , and In the cities of
Atlanta, Chicago, Cincinnati,
Cleveland, Dallas. Houston and
Minnesota .

WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
U.S. Postal Servlcemlght have to
eliminate Saturday service and
trim lobby window service at
post offices under a Senate plan
to cut deficits, an agenc)1 spokes·
man said today .
The Senate plan would shift
$1.7 billion In expenditures from
the federal government to the
independent agency during 1988
and 1989, but the agenGy would
not be permitted to raise postal
rates to cover the costs, said
postal spokesman Bob Hoobing.
The delicit·reduction proposal
would turn over $1.7 billion in
payments or health benefits and
cost·of·iiving increases received
by federal retirees who left the
postal service before it became
an independent agency in 1972,
Hooblng said.
Postmaster General Preston
Tisch and Deputy PPostmaster
General Michael Coughlin are
scheduled to hold a news conf,er·
ence on the agency's concerns
la ter today.
The postal l:uts are not included in Hou ~e leglsla lion and

New Southern bus garage under construction

NOW AVAILABLE AT
PAT'S MUFFLER SHOP

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

~

.

1984 MERCURY
COUGAR

1987 ESCORT 'GT

aerial photo taken by the Army Corps of Engineers, collapsed on Decemher 15, 1967, killing 46 people. (Photo courtesy of City Ice &amp; Fuel
Co.)
·

Supreme Court nominee draws praise
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The ' Kennedy realizes that justice
con firma lion hearing for Su· requires not simply protection of
pre me Court nominee Anthony the accused's rights but· "deKennedy opened today wrth his mands the protection of . those
~·
allies praising him as a conserva- harmed.'~ ·
tive model ef judicial restraint
Committee Chairman Joseph
Who would be tough on crline Elden, D·Del., told the nominee
while protecting the rights of the the comm~ttee would conduct a
thorough inquiry Into his civil
accused.
Introducing Kennedy to the rights and civil liberties views.
Senate Judiciary Committee, But Indicative of the general
Sen. Pete Wilson, R·Callf., ~aid friendliness by Democrats to
Ke.nnedy "subscribes to the Kennedy, Elden, in greeting
conervatlve principles which the Kennedy 's family before the
told the nomlframers of our Constitution hearing
's wife,
"This
a'dopted . years a·go. " -He said

198_5 FORD _F-150

25 pents ·

Pt Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Postal service
may -c ut .~ut
Saturday mail

RANGER PICKUPS

~ou'll Sa~e

2 Sections, 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, December 14, 1987

Process 44 cases
in Meigs court
POMEROY
Forty·four costs; Patrick C. Riehl, Bradner,
cases were processed In the hunting without written perm Is·
Meigs County Court of Judge sian of landowner, $20_and costs;
Patrick O'Brien.
Carroll Coy, Mt. Gilead, possessForfeiting bonds in the court Ing deer without having attached
were Tondalaya Hartman, Jack, temporary tag, $100 and costs;
sonvlllt:; . Fla. $55; Gary Albert Baker, Pomeroy, possess·
Mayeau•x, Denham Springs. La.:
lng two deer taken during gun
$55; Marshall Eubanks. Jackson, season, said deer untagged, $50
$55; Thomas Everett, The and costs; George Parker,
Plalns, •$75; Mark Staufeer, Point Pomeroy, failure to wear hunter
Pleasant, $45, David Mann, orange ·while hunting deer, $25
Pomeroy, $55, a II posted on and costs; Jim 'Logan, Dayton,
speeding charges, and · Robert possessing a loaded firearm In
Whitely . Cu~ah ga Falls, $125, the field after 5 p.m. $25 and
possession of a deer without costs; Robert L. Price, Mary·
checking a an official deer ville, Tenn .. attempt to take deer
check ing station.
(rom motor vehicle, $75 a nd
Fined on speeding cha rges costs; attempt to takedeerwith a
were Diana L. Aleshire, Syra- .22 magnum rifle, $75 and costs;
cuse. S22 and costs: Timothy C. Dudley M. Price, Wharton, W.
Tackett, Langsville, $21 a nd Va., attempting to take deer
costs; David · R. Roush, Pome- from motor vehicle, $75 " and
roy, $20 and costs; Timothy W. costs. attempt to take deer with
Braley, Middleport , $22 a nd .22 magnum rifle, $75 and costs;
costs; Gary McDonald. Mil- Paul J. Jones, Racine, taking or
lwood , W. Va .. $24 and costs;
possessing a deer without immeMichael McCort, Logan, $20 a nd diately placing temporary tag,
costs; Michael Fain , Lafayette, $50 and costs, checking a dee r at
Ind., $27 and costs; ~le Gar. a -permanent checking station
land, Hamllton , $23"'3.n&lt;\ costs: with no legal entitlement, $50 and
Kenneth E . Smith, Athens. $23 costs; Paul Hlll, Jr., Racine,
and costs; Alexander. Couladis
failure to tag deer with tempor:
Athens, $22 and costs: Jame~ ary tag where deer was killed
Boyer, Pomeroy, $23 and· costs; $25 and costs; Charles Muihot'
Robert Nelson, Pomeroy, $30 and land, Wilkesville, hunting deer
costs; Norman Schafer, Gallipo- upon lands of another without
lis, $33 and costs.
written permission, $20 and
costs;
James Smith, Hamllton,
Other cases processed In the
passenger
failed to wear seat
court Include: Jotm Roush, Ra·
cine, hunting on land of another belt, $10 and costs; PhUllpJones,
without written permission, $25 Jr ., Athens, reckless operation,
and costs; Jerry Haning, Albany, $100 and costs, expired reglstra.
domestic violence, six months lion, $100 and costs; Duane
jail, suspended to 10 days, six .Jones, Middleport, no operator's
months probation, restraining license, $75; Eric R. Mitchell
order Issued and costs; Dale E. Rutland, speeding, $42 and '
Flaherty, Columbus, hunting costs; reckless operation, $50
upon lands of another without and costs; no operator's license
written permission. $20 and $75' and costs, 30 days jail
costs; Fred J. Neace, Pomeroy, suspended, unsafe vehicle, costs
taking possession of a deer and only; Larry Grimm, Sr., Mason,
not immediately tagging where W. Va ., domestic violence, 10
fell with temporary tag, $25 and da s jali, suspended to time
costs; Brian· K: Bowling, Reeds· se ved, six months probation, ..
ville, no valid license, $100 with re training order issued , costs:
$75 suspended and costs; resist· J rome K. Howard, Pomeroy,
edlng-, $20 and costs· no
lng arrest, $100, ten days In jail
' In
perator ' s license , $75, 30days
suspended, six. months proba·
tlon, costs; ' Debbie Young, jail suspended, one year proba·
Reedsvflle, falslflcatrion, 30 tlon and costs; Sue E. Geog,
days jail sentence suspended, Albany, driving while intoxl·
restitution 'order and .costs; La- cated, $250, three days In jail, 60
man E. Riehl, Fremont, hunting days suspension of Ohio license
on property without written and costs, failure to control
'
permission of landowner, $20 and costs. .

enttne

SAVE UP TO

Ohio's bekeepers are
facing major problem
COLUMBUS, Ohio' (UP!) Pancake lovers and crop
farmers ~r.eabout -to get stung by
a cu,stly problem that could wipe
out half the country's beekeeping
Industry , Increase the cost of
honey and elimlna te crop
pollination.
The varroa mite Is one nasty
critter, says James E. Tew, Ohio
Extension bee specialist and
national Extension apiculturist
for the USDA. The pencil pointsized parasites can destroy a bee
colony in three years and there's
not much a beekeeper can do
about it.
No pesticides that kill the mite
are approved for use on bees.
About seven states, Including
Ohio, have the mite. Florida and
several other southern s\lltes are
heavily Infested. Tew says the
United States' borders wlll prob·
ably bf closed to bee trade since
foreign beekeepers don 't want to
risk brjnglng In the mites.
The Ohio Department of Agriculture · will decide In early
·January whether to quarantine
bee movement in and out of Ohio.
Tew says the state \s, In effect,
already quarantined since com·
mercia! beekeepers don't want to
risk bringing varroa into their
colonies.
•

•

1988

F-SERIES PICKUP
'

at y

.

Vol.38, No .151
Copyrighted 1987

,.,•./

•

e

,.

1988

Rain tonight. Lows In low
40s. Rain, wind Tuesday.

~··

CQSts for property Insurance will
decrease slightly. Warner also
reported that inland marine
insurance lor various lire depart·
ment Items has also Increased.
The finance committee reminded council members that
even though the village has
several large ba lances In funds,
after the first of the year a lite
truck payment, with Interest,
insurance premiums, etc., will
be due. It was also noted that
some of t~e moneys _have been
pledged In funds for truck re·
placement, pollee car replace·
111ent, and to a water department
contingency fund.
Council declared a former
emergency squad vehicle, a 1974

Chevrolet van, as excess prop·
er ty and authorized the village
clerk to adverstlse .for sealed
bids. Bids will be opened at 7:30
p.m . on Monday, Jan.4, and must
be received by 6 p.m. that same
evening. Council Is reserving the
right to reject any and all bids.
It was reported that a new
double-wide Is bei1Jg moved into
the village, allegedly without a
permit . According toreports, the
footer for the double·wlde will be
too close to another property, in
violation of the village trailer
ordinance. Council President
Frank Cleland reported he would
check on the matter.
Continued on page 6

EQUIPMENT - The ~llddleport Fire
Department recently purchased a hydraunc
spreader and cutter oulflt manufactured by
Amkos .Rescue Systems. The unit cost Sl2,000 and
was purchased from Howell Co. Inc. Fire and
Rescue Equipment Specialist. The equipment Is

used to free victims from auto accidents. The
equipment Is being paid lor by donations and fire
deparhnent fund raising activities. Pictured with
the rescue tool are L-R Bob Byer, Eric Davis ol
Howell Co, Frank Epple and David Hoffman.

'

�•

·'

Monday, December 14, 1987
'

Commentary
.v
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

.

15: ffiR!

,.-.__,L-ro..-r"ei:doo=o

~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'M' .
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

.BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, In land Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
'
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than 300 words
long. Al1 letters are subject to edit lng and. must be signed with name, address and
telepho'n e number. No un signOO letters will be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

McEwen saved
a hassle by exiting. race

Page-2.- The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday. December 14, 1987

'

S~preme effo~

By Jack Anderson and Joseph Spear

our economy Intensifies.
officials what they should be lnsprlrlng even 45 years later.
I
But where are the leaders who
(
doing to make sure America Isn't
The hardest hit will be our .
can galvanize a nation to make
caught short In 20 or 30 years.
Without exception, these futu· such a supreme effort, partlcu- cities and the people who live In
rlsts tell us that the United States lary when the goal is as dry a nd ,them, the futurists predict. Bus!Is already ln. the grip fo a \lnlnspiring as ec?nomlc IJrO· .miss people are already realizing
that goods can be produced more
gress, rather than the blood·
" trans-Industrial revolution" in rural locations, and
cheaply
stirring
hope
of
military
victory?
a volatile period of transition
will grow as
this
awareness
It
will
be
a
r
emarkable
president
·
from smokestacks to communi·
communications
te c hnology
Indeed
who
can
strike
responsive
cations, from manufacturing to
erases
the
main
disadvantage
of
of
patriotism
and
cooperchords
Information. And they warn that
·resettling
away
from
the
clUes.
ation
by
playing
the
theme
of
we (or, to be accurate, our
grandchildren) are In for rough economic survival. Persuading
times If we don't produce the Americans to work together In
Tremendous new capital inwartime Is easier than creating a
leadership to meet the threat vestment
will be needed for the
and the opportunity - of this united effort for· prosperity. The
plants,
equipment,
research, deeconomic and social revolution business world has never been
velopment
and
worker
retrainknown for the buddy system that
head-on.
Ing
that
can
ass~re
America's
To meet this formidable chal- fuels and ennobles military
survival In the high-tech age. But
lenge, the experts say, will achievement.
the cold reality Is that both
Even the wisest of policies
require a concerted national·
business and government will
effort ·even greater than the won' t protect everyone fr om
have less discretionary funqs
massive mobilization In World : hard times. Difflcu !ties are Inevavailable. One big reason for this
. War II - a!l Industrial and Itable for many Institutions and
Is the enormous and stlll·growlng
sociological miracle that Is awe· Individuals as the dislocation' of
national debt, which drains away
billions of dollars in debt service
that could be better spents on
productive Investment.
Wll.TC!;IN(; Tf'IEl ~MQ(AATS

WASHINGTON - ·Arguments
and recriminations over the past
are the red meat that exc.ltes the
political appetite, of Washington.
The future Is usually descr ibed n
vague but oplmistlc terms such as Ronald Reagan's "shinIng city on a hill."
Unfortunately, the politicians'
rosy view of America's future,
while it Invariably gets votes, Is
as far removed from reality as
some of the tv.:tsted Interpretations given to past history. The.
future Is going to be challenging
and tough; to ~ompete In the
high-technology revolution that
Is dictating the course of world
events, the United States will
have to pull its socks up and get to
work.
This Is the theme emphasized
repeatedly · by "futurists" . those multi-faceted experts who
make their living advising busi·
ness people and government

.

• By LEE LEONARD
IS t..IK~ WATCKING .
UPI Statehouse Reporter ·
GILL.I(;AN'S I&amp;L~ND •..
COLUMBUS- Dec. 7, 1987, the 46th anniversary of the bombing of
YOU WOND€1R IF . -. .
Pearl Harbor, was a day that will live In infamy for Sen. Howard
Metzenbaum, D-Ohio, according to Terry Casey, executive director
TKE?Y'LL
&lt;:;@T
of the Franklin County Republican party.
OFF THP..i
· "That was probably the saddes t day of Howard Metzenbaum's
life," said Casey.
What happefied that day was that Rep. ·Bob McEwen, R-Ohio,
dropped out of the race for the Senate and presented Cleveland Mayor
George Voinovich with a clear field to challenge Metzenbajlm next
fall.
McEwen, of Hillsboro, and Voinovich figured to spend about $3
million of Republicans' money fighting each other next spring for the
Republican nomination.
Now, much of that money can be funneled toward Voinoyich to be
used against the feisty 70-year old two-term senator.
Political observers had looked forward to a fierce contest between
McEwen and Voinovich.
McEwen was carryi ng the standard of President Reagan into battle
and supposedly bringing new vigor into the Republican party, while
Voinovich, a moderat.e with a proven track record in Democratic
territory, represented the establishment in the patty.
But it was not to be. McEwen called a press conference on the
afternoon of Dec. 7, dropped out and embraced Voinovlch's
candidacy. He said to make the fight would require too much
spending and wouta divide the party .
What he meant was that he could not get his hands on enough oJ the
Alongside the immortal "Man
morning of Creation that secremoney to compete. The electio n, In fact, had already been held, not Bites Dog" and such more taries of the interior are bound to
with votes but withi&gt;eople's pocketbooks, and Volnovlch had wrapped co ntemporary but equally Im- Irritate the more aggressive
It up without a struggle.
plausible headlines as "Cuomo sorts of environmentalists, and
"A lot of people out there were voti ng with their checkbooks," said Too Busy to Seek Presidency"
Don Hodel has been no exception
Casey. "They could agree with Bob's philosophy, but they are hungry and "Gorbachev Endorses
to that Iron rule. He takes
for a win."
Kemp," we must now place seriously, for example, his obll·
And apparently, they didn 't buy McEwen's idea that Metzenbaum
"Sierra Club Salutes Hodel. " The gallon, as the chief official
will be beaten, no t in his hometown of Cleveland, but in the areas
only difference is that this time,
custodian of America's natural
outside major metropolitan areas in southern and central Ohio, · beiJeve It or not; the headlln\0&gt; Is ' resources, to encourage their
where McEwen is strong.
'
development where necessary
.true.
Neither, apparently did the contributors subscribe to the complaint
Interior Secretary Donald
and approrlate, as well as to
heard among Republicans in the Statehouse. notably from
Hodel has long been tagged by
protect and preserve our
legislators, that Voinovich does n't deserve the nomination because
perceptive observers as one of .. heritage.
he wouldn't answ_er the call in 1986 to run against a vulnerable
the major assets of the Reagan
Good examples of the former
Democratic Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
administration and a likely fu·
are his support for oil rigs off the
. Although some conservatives were miffed at McEwen for failing to
ture leader of the conservative California coast and for the
slick it out for the good of the cause, most of them will come around to
movement. Harvard-educated opening of new oil fields ·on
support Voinovich. "Howard Metzenbaum is the man the
but rooted In his native Oregon,
Alaska's North 'Slope, both of
conservatives love to hale," said Casey .
· Hodel, at 52, has already built a which he insists are necessary If
Most annoyed was state Se n. H. Cooper Snyder. a fellow Republicim
solid record of public service as we are to avoid ' dangerous
(rom McEwen's hometown of Hillsboro. Snyder covets McEwen's
administrator of the BonnevUie dependency on foreign sources.
~ea t in Congress and was told it could be his when the congressman
Power Administration, underse- Never! respond the environmenvacated .
cretary of the Interior, secretary tal lobbyists, fearing for the flsh
·. When McEwen. changed ,his mind, Snyder accused him of the
of energy, and (since_ 1985)
and the caribou - though Hodel
"betrayal of a commitment" and said he is still going to run for the 6th
secretary of the interior. Always patiently points out that "A
D,istrict House seat.
most comfortable In jeans, boots single (oil) platform can harbor
Some moderates believe McEwen should have seen the
and a cotton shirt, he personifies 20 to 50 times more fish than do
handwriting on the wall long ago and never announced his candidacy.
the rugged Wes tern kind of nearby areas with mud or sand
That could have saved another $3 million, already spent, and some · co nser va tism for which he bottoms."
harsh words .
stands: individualistic, born. But McEwen left plenty of time for Voinovich to recover, and by
again, outdoorsy, good-natured.
But recently the Sierra Club
getting out early, he gave him self a chance to pursue statewide office
But it was written on the first
nearly passed out cold when
at some future time.

One certainty In the flight from
the cities is a housing boom In
rural areas. But the experts
predict th at this one will be
different from earlier 'housing
booms. They foresee most of
these homes . being built with
flexible modular components.
Japan and Western Europe are
already producing sophisticated
modular hOusing units , and If
• U.S. Industry doesn't wake up,
the next century could see a flood
of imported housing much like ·
the foreign car boom In recent
years.
'

eveR

l&lt;E?E?F.

IWO OF OUR ~E'SIVENTI AL CAN'iii?AT£6 WILL NOT 1?£ 1\ERE'
10 'VESAIE 11116 EVENING .... 601fl A~ 605'1 ?EALING
WITt\ VOIEN111\LL'f EM\l~~R/1.~51~ EI'ISOPES fROM THE
f'A';T.. 'IOUTf\FUL IN?ISCREiiON&lt;; ALLEGE\? TO INI/OL'IE'
"-1' i&gt;-.'k MURPH! I&gt;- NV 11\E RE:MO~AL Or A MANUF/&gt;.CTURER'5
TA6 FRO!V\ A tv'IATiRESS. "

,

'

... ~

is thrilled !&amp;fit Secretary Hodel
has opened.The door to restora·
tion of Hetch Het chy to Yosemite l
Nat iona! Park.' '
Predictably , San Francisco
Mayor Dianne Feinstein takes a
much bleaker view of the prop·
osal. She stresses the purity of
Hetch Hetchy's w·ater, but
equally pure water troll\' the
same river Is obtainable by
expanding other reservoir s in the
same system. So the suspicion
arises that what she rea,lly has
her eye on is the electric power
the dam produces- a byproduct
whose sale brings about $30 ·
million a year Into San Francis·
co's treasury.
. Stressing his hope that the
Retch Hetchy canyon, once
drained and refollated, will be
left untouched by the lodges,
stores and cars that now dlsflg.
ure neighboring Yosemite Valley , Hodel Is pressing the project.
If It succeeds, he will deserve an
honored place among those who
have not only saved but restored
an Important part of the bea uty
of the American West.

How to judge a judge _____G_eo_rg_eM_c_G_ov_er_n

The New York Bar opposed
With President Reagan's third
Supreme Court nominee now Bark's nomination on grounds
before the Senate, It may be that his judicial philosophy ran
wor thwhile to consider why the counter to "many of the Iunde·
president's first choice, Judge mental rights and liberties pro·
BOrk, was' so sharply rejected by tected by the Constitution."
Brennan did not mention Bark,
the Senate.
-"
but
he told the. lawyers that
Early In the confirmation
Justice
Cardozo has "awakened
hearings of Judge Bark my
daughter wrote me that If she America to the human reality oi
·were a sena tor, she wottld vote the judicial process. From him
against Bork because "he had no we learned that judging could not
properly be characterized · as
feeling for people. "
Several weeks later the last simply the application of pure
senator to publicly announce his reason to legal problems, nor, at
.
positio n just before the Senate the other extreme, as the applica, roll call vote was Republican tion of the personal will or
e-h,' Sen. John Warner of VIrginia, . passion of the judge."
Brennan said that for a judge
GMI,-. """'" ,,.. .... ~ 1\U~Mi who voted against Bor k on
"sensitivity to one's intuitive and
precisely those grounds.
He told the Senate that as a . passionate responses and awareyou ng lawyer when he was nes s of the range of human
working as a clerk for Judge experience" Is "not only an
Barrett Prettyman, the judge Inevitable but a desirable part of
By United Press International
was faced with a tough decision. the judicial process." Only by
'!'oday is Monday, Dec. 14, the 348th day of 1987 with 17 to follow .
being open to the "concrete
It Involved a group of low-Income
IJ'he moon is waning, moving toward Its new phase.
fa milies who refused to abandon human realities" can a judge
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
"come to understand the com·
their houses In the face of an
The evening stars are Venus, Jupiter apd Saturn.
order designed to clear the way ples human meaning of a rich .,
Those 'born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
for new governmef\1 project. term such as 'liberty."'
Include French astrologer and prophet Nostradamus in 1503, Danish
Judges obsessed wlth...:'abstrat
Judge Prettyman, on the day
astronomer and mathemetlclan Tycho Brahe In 1546, World War II ·before the decision, took his rationality'' said Brenna'it, fall to
air ace .James Doolittle in 1896, former Senator Margaret Chase
young clerk out to v!sltthe people understand that "reliance on
Smith of Maine in 1897 (age 90) , slapstick band leader Spike Jones In
who lived In the strnple homes. formal rules alone" is never
1911, comedian Morey Amsterdam In 1914 (age 73) ,noveust Shirley
The next day he ruled that the sufficient "to be faithful to the
Jackson In 1919, cour•ry singer Charlie Rich In 1932 (age 55), and
houses should stay because of the vision of the framers."
actresses Lee Remlc, 1935 (age 52) and Patty Duke in 1946 (age41).
Testifying against Judge
deep human attachments of the
Bark's
confirmation, Shirley
men and women who had
On this date in history:
£truggled to purchase and main· Hofstadler - a former federal
Jn f542. King James V die~!. His daughter, Mary Stuart, ascended to
court of appeals judge- spoke of
taln those homes ..
the throne of Scotland, less than one week after she was born.
I do not believe that Bark Bark's "quest for certitudes" in
Jn· l799, Gedrge Washington, first president of the United States,
understands this human side of the Constitution as a way to avoid
died at his Mount Vernon home in VIrginia.
" having to confront the grief and
the law .
t'n 1911, Norwegian explorer Roald Amundsen became the first
Writing In the Was!Jington Post untldln'ess of the human
person to reach the South Pole .
o
of Oct. 11, 1987, Nat Hentoff co ndition. "
In 1984, bank robbers killed four custome~s and wounded 'three comments on a speech by Justice
When Sen. Alan Simpson asked
others to grab $17,000 in Geronimo, Ok la,. Two suspects were arrested William Brennan to the New Bark why he wanted to be A
In Sa n Fra ncisco three da ys later.
·
•
York Bar Assocl~tion .
Supreme Court Justice h~ ans-

Today in history

Hodel. tur ning to the other half of
his job, announced Investigate
the feasibility of draining the
Hetch Hetchy Reservoir and
restoring the natural splendor of
California's He tc h Hetchy
canyon.
Hetch Hetchy is a valley In
Yosemite National Park, which
John Muir and other early
naturalists considered one of the
park's glories. In 1913, however,
after a losing .bat fie by Muir and
other founders of the Sierra Club,
Congress voted to dam the
Tuolumne River where It flows
through the valley and dedicate
the resulting water and electric
power to the city of San Fran·
cisco. The dam remains to this
day the only significant one In
any of our national parks.
So the board of directors of the
Sierra Club, s)'lallowlng hard,
adopted a resolution: "Acknowl·
edging ·our many and serious
disagreements with Secretary
Hodel and with this administration, we salute this Initiative."
And Sierra- Club chal~man Mi·
chael McCloskey was even more
enthusiastic In a letter to the Wall
S'treet Journal: "The Sierra Club

a ted to us a vision of rulers, and
ruled united by a sense of their
common numanlty. In this vision, the essence of th e relationship beiween state and citizen Is
the relationship .between one
human being a nd another ... .
lt is encouraging that the
Senate stood up and was counted
for a concept of law and justice
tha t best serves human ity.

DEFIANCE - . Rio Grande
dogged Defiance's steps all the
way through Saturday's game
here, but the Yellow Jackets
pulled away post a.79-71 win over
the visitors.
The Redmen are now 9-3 and
play · Oakland City (Ind.) , who
they defeated 87-78 at Lyne
Center Dec. 7, tonight at 7: 30 .at
Oakland City's Johnson Center.
Marv Hohenberger's Defiance
club improves its record to 5·3.
Both teams played closely,
with senior RedmEm forward Ron
Rittlnger effectively llmltlng 6-6
Defiance center Dennis Bostleman to 2 points by the halftime-.
The Yellow Jackets held the lead
at the half, 37-31.
"The Redmen came back in the
second period to narrow Defian·
ce's lead, which" reached Its
height at 17 (63-46) with 8mlnutes
remaining. At 1:45, the Red men
were within 5 points of the hosts
and had possession of the bali,
but turned It over to Defiance
before a round of foul shooting
began. The ha'M a !so saw 5-10
Redmen guard Brian Watkins,
usually the first off the bench and
one of R(o Grande's top players
this season, suffer a sprained
ankle, making questionable his
participation in tonight's Oak·
.land City game.
·
·
Bostleman, who scored a tota l

OUE TO l~PSES IN
h\MNTENANGE AND REPAIRS.
THE PLANE \S FALLltiG,
APART. WE ARE SORRY FOR
THE tNCONVEtUENCE ...

~~

of 19 points, became a factor In
the second half, as did Defiance
starters Terry Norman, Kirk
Seeman and Jim Harris, who
combined to keep the Redmen
press at bay.
For Rio Grande , lunlor gl\ard
Jim Kearns posted 19 points,
while ju,nlor guard Anthony Ray·
rnore added 18, seni.or forward
Ray Singleton had'17 and Rlttin·
ger pumped In 13. The Redmen
were 44 percent on field goals and
64 percent Qn 3-polnt field goals.
They were 78 percent on free
throws, sinking 7 of 9 attempts.
Norman, a sophomore, led all
scorers for the game with 26
points, while Harris, a freshman,
added 16 and sophomore Seeman
had 12. The Yellow Jackets were
56 percent from the field, 80
percent on 3-polnters (a ll by
Norman) and netted 13 of 17 tries
at the free throw line for 76
percent.
RIO GRANDE (71)- Anthony
Raymore, 6(2) -2·18; Jim Kearns,
5(2)-3-19; Ray Singleton. 7(2)-017; Ron Rittinger , 6-1-13; Rob
Jack son, 2·1·5: Brian Watkins,
2(1)-3-9. TOTALS 28(7)-7-71.
DEFIANCE (79) - Dennis
Bostleman, 8-3-19; Terry Norman, 5(4)-4-26: Kirk Seeman,
5-2-12; Do11g Prigge, 4-0-8; Keith
Wischmeyer, 2-0-4; Jim Harris ,
7-2-16. TOTALS .31(4)·13·79.

By Dt\VE RAFFO
UPI Sports Writer
With two weeks left ln th e
season, l1 of the 14 AFC teams
are battling for division titles and
six of them have.at least a share
of first place.
Indianapolis lost sole possession of first place In theAFC Eas t
Sunday, falling Into a three-way
tie with Buffalo and Miami.
Houston. fell off the AFC Central
lead. dropping a game behind
co-leaders Cleveland and Pitts·
burgh. In the AFC West, Denver
maintained its lead but the
Broncos' loss to Seattle put two
teams within a half-game oi the
lead.
The Bills belted the Colts 27-3 at
Indianapolis. putting both teams
at 7-6. The Dolphins' 28-10 rout of
Philadelphia moved them to 7-6.
New England and the New York
Jets 'a re right behind at 6-7.
San Francisco, Chic ago, Wa·
shlngton and New Orleans have
clinched playot( spots In the
NFC.
.
At Indianapolis , Bills quarterback Jim Kelly threw two touch·
down passes and Buffalo's young
linebackers helped shackle Colts

Scoreboard ...
NFL results
fii'ATIONA.L FOOTBALL U : A.C.UE
Sunday's Resulh
BuUalo 'Z7, lndlanapotl!l 3

Moltday 's Game
Detroit at NV Rangers, 7::u, p.m.
Tuesday's Gw.me1
VlUICuuverat Hartford, nir;ht
Phlladelphlu ai: Flltsburgh. night
WMhl..,unatToronlo, night

I'IJ&gt;\' Ciand 3S, C1 nclnnall U
WwohlnMiun 2-t, Ualla."' 2(1

st. l.Gul!l at Nl' Ill landers,

New Orleun~ 2-1, HoU!Ilon 10
Mlumi 2X, Phlladl•lphlu 10
Gree n Bay 16, Mlnne!!lotA 10
New f)!Riand 12, Nl' Jet s W

This .week's games

Detrull 20, Tumpa H:'y 10
" St. l.GuiM 21, NV Gl~tnis :&amp;4
Plttsl1urah 20, San Dlt•go 16
Kan!lllt~ Cit)' 16, LA Raiders 10
Seattlt! !M, Uen\'f'T 21
Mond11 y'e Gamt'
Chicago at San Frand!it~ o. 9 p .m .
S~~ohu·day's Gamf'li
'Green&amp;)' Ill NY Giants, U:30 p.m .
Ka n!illo" City at l)(on,· j ~ r . -1 p .m.
·
&amp;mda.v'l'l G~~..nes
PIIUadt'lflhla aJ Nl' Jets, I p.m .
Minnesota at Detroit, I p.m .
New En glarwl ut Buffalo, I p .m .
"'e~· Orlt&gt;ansaf Cl~lnnatl.l p.m.
l'lt l'ih ur~th a l Jlo w;ton, 1 p.m .
Seattle at t 'htj·ago. I p,m ,
St . Louis at Tampu Ra)·, ·I p.m.
Atlanta nlSan Franc lseo, 4 p.m .
Cleve land at LA Raide rs. ltt.m,
ll}dlanapulls al San Dle~~:u. 4 f! ,m .
\\lashlngtun at Miami, fl p.m.
.. l'tluoby, D&lt;'l:· ~~
Dnlls..'i at LA R"'rl!l, 9 p .m .

College scores .
Ohio ( 'ullt' ll:t' Ru~kf'l bull "'co...,~
Uy Lnllt'd Press ln tc rnal lunul
UN·.

I~

1\owllng Gr rf'n r.tl, \\'rlr;hl Ht 63
Kt•nt Sl:tl t' 9Z, ,\krun 7-1
X.a\·lcr !II , Ml tunl13
Roston Unh R9, Ohio UniviU
Farlrlgh·Dkkln sn n II'!, f ir St!IO
l):t.l' tun 90 , Huquf'SIH' 16
1\."ihlnnd f!O, l\oh•rt'yhuNI1 Pa) tiO
l'tbrif'lla a. Baldwin Wallace 7-1
1\-luunt UltiQn Kl , fapllll.IIIO (Ot )
Ohio Northe rn 6t Mu,.lllngum ~:1
\\'lctconhrrp; l!li, Ottcrht•ll• G9
IWI'h CSI.N (NV) !Hi, C n!tt' !II'...C f\'1' 61

1

Dcnlo;on fill. turum 51
K en}~ m 00, \\'••-'•h &amp; ,Jtoff 16
OhiQ W f'~ lt· ~'!ID M, t 'l ndiU.l' 7!.1
\\'oo~tf'r :~9. t:rt"'' f 'lly 5l
U' alslt 5K. lUulont• 5~
M '\HUII v.. rnnn l llii. Rlntrtun ~ ~~
Ohiu Ou ml nkun 91 , Go ..lwn ( tn d)O!i
Ddlunf't' t!l. IU 11G rant11• il
\\' llmln~~: lun 99, l'rh ;ltl.;t M
';\
o\uhum-,\ l ont.:-on w r.t ' Tt~urnunwnt
At )lunl fl'nmrr ,~ . ,\Ia .
fhUIIIJIIOII!'oli iJI
,\ulo u rn·l\1fln tg-mry i 5. C\• darvtll•· 73
1\tllllna,., Tourn:tmt•nl
,\t Gram! Ratlld ~. il-l h ·h.
Ttlfh1 Ii-I, 1\ allunar.on (lti, 1'011 ~

NHL results
~ ~\TIO ~ \ I . UOr Kt-:Y LE1\Gut:

Rulfaht

:t. Huston :Still;')

N\' l sltuuh•r:OO: 5, I\01•W olf1r!lf.'Y ~
ll llr llunl :l, l.u~o Altlll'll'~ 2
\\' :~whil~J,'htn 2, Chk"lt(l l
Toronto -1 , N\' Rnngt•r" l
Muutreal ~. l)(' t roll l
1-;dmq ntOilli, Vant•nuvr r 3
(~wber fl. l\tlnm ~ula 0
81. Luul" 5, I'IIL&lt;;hul'(h 'Z

Su nday'.,llP!mlts
rnhtur)'

t, 8ullld o I

l'hiladvlphla -1, \\'lnnlll('lt :1
fltk ilj:O 3. Torn11tv I

nl~~:ht

Thl~ WP.f"k'-'
Ohio Cll lll! ltt' &amp;!iketball Sc!t.' duie
By United Pre~lt Jnacrwllunal
Tonight
Toltdo at Florida lnlernatlonal
" 'limington al ThomWi Mure IK)' l
Klu Grandt' at Oaklit.nd City (lnd )
Tuesda,y, Dec. U
Ohio Unl\' all' oungstuwn St
Ceotrnl St at ~fiance
( :upilal al Bethany {W Va)
Hi ram at Kf'nyon
C("da rvllle at KenneMw Hi-a)
H.o!if'· Hulman find) at Ohio Dominican
w.. dnesday, Dec. 16
Ohio St at Florldll
Cleveland Stll.t Louis viii~
l(u\lins (Fla) at Dayton
Ottcrlu:ln at Marietta ~
Ohio Northern at Mount Union
Wlttenber1 at Musklngum ·
TIUin Ill Hhdflon
Th•rHdll.y, Du e. 17
\'oltllsstown St 111 Ce ntral Ml c h
&amp;tuthern Indiana al Urbana
Genrgetown (Kl-'1 at Wllmlrur;tun
Frida)·, Dec. IH
Wllmllt(ton at W ulsll
Miami at Ke ntuc ky lnvUatlonul
WltteJibe rK tU Derauw ( In d ) In \1ta tlunul
81ufrton at Manchester t lnd) Tournf'y
Wrlghl Slate lnvttatlonal
Suturday, Dec. 19
Day tnn at Olllo Stale
Bow linK Green at Ellstnn Kcntul" k)l
Kent Sl al Cleveland St
Ohio Univ al Vandcrllllt
Colorudo Sl at Toledo
Ci~W;Innati al Loyola till )
TenneliM'e Sta t l ' ounft;st.own St
~~~hland ut G11.nnon (Pal
Dyke at F1 nrtda lntcrna.Cional
Hunttn~~:t n n (\\' Vll) at t 'lndiay
Htldl' thcrg- ut Bllldwln·Wullace
Ohio Nurthern td Ullpl ta l
Wilmingto n at ~ounl Unlun
l'tfu s kln~ntm lll Olti!rhel n
Ohio \\'e sleyun at Mon&gt;ht&gt;il d ( Ky)

winning shot.''

Dayton bows in
Division III finale
PHENIX
(UP!)' Greg
KovarCITY,
threw Ala.
for 301
yards
and two touchdown s this weekend to help Wagner defeat
Dayton 19-3 i.n the Alonzo Stagg
Bowl, the NCAA Division Ill
national championship.
Kovar completed 18 .of 30
passes Saturday lor Wagner.
13-1, which had not won a
postseason game before the 1987
playoffs. He hit two-way player
John Chaney for a 23-yard
to uchdown with 1: 56 remaining
in the first quartet lo give
Wagner a 7-0 lead.
Kovar, operating out of a newly
installed shotgun alignment,
found Keith John son In the e nd
zone fo r a 22-yard touchdown that
gave the Seahaw ks a 19-0 lead
with 20 seconds remaining in the
first half.
"This is jus I a great feeling ,"
said Wagner Coach Walt Harne·
line. "! don't want lo sound like
th at old coach's cliche , t:iut we
really did ta ke them one game at
a time. We really did. I think
that's how we ended up getting
the job done today ."
Dayton, 11-3, which dominated
the third quarter and ga ined ~10
yards on its first two dr·lves of the
second half, received a 39-yard
fie ld goal from Mike Duvic.

Tiffin al WaynP St 11\ti&lt;'hl

C~~o lo.•ndtU"

Snccl'r
Majur Indoor N:lt•r r r Lrar;ut•
Nn g1m1 c~ M!hcd ulrd

NBA results
Saturday'!i R c!! Ult ~

Dt&gt;n\·er 131, Philadelphl i!. 121
( 'hit'ar;o 112. Kou~ t o n 103
P\JrtluntiiOR, lntliunu 101
W11.~hlnr;1 o n 12~, New Jerllll(;fJ 01
J)elroll I'M, SNI' Yurk ~6
San Anto nio 1'!9. PIIO('nl~ I Ill
Utah 121, Go ld t• n State 9J
St&gt;attle JIG, Li\ Clippers 95
Sundu.v.!b lte li ull ~
Dalhu ll:l , Milwaukee 98
,\llanta 106, Sacnl mt'nlo 100
LA I.akers 119, CIC\'Cland tl9
Monday'M Oame
StatUe lU Ulah, 9:30p .m.
Tuetld ay's C. ames
Sa.n t\nlonloal New Jtncy , night
,\f\IW11okre at Ne w l 'o rk, nl~~:llt
Bo!tlun a t Wa..odlln.:lon. nlrhl

.

'

"TON/6HT"
MONDAY, DECEMBER' 14th
AND

JUESDA Y, DECEMBER 1 5th
-'

15 INCH LARGE

Pepperoni Pizza

$5 00

4:00 P.M.- 11 :00 P.M.

phia and the Dolphins finish at
opportunities we had ."
home
against Washington and
•·we were very, very soundly
beaten," Colts Coach Ron Meyer · New England .
Pittsburgh, a 20-16 winner Of
s~id . "Their offensive line doml·
San
Diego, and the Browns, 38-21
nated our defensive line. It was
winners over Ci ncinnati, are 8-5.
just a struggling uphill battle."
Houston lost 24-10 to New Orleans
and
fell to 7-6.
' .t Philadelphia, Dan Marino
The
Steelers ca n control their
tr• ~w for 376 yards and three
fate
with
games at Houston and
touchdowns and gave the Dol·
home
against
Cleveland . The
phlns a share of first. However, ·
at
the Los Angeles
Browns
play
Miami would lose a tie-breaker
.
Raiders
next
week,
but say they
against either the Colts or the
tur.
n
ed
things
around
Sunday
Bills so the Dolphins would have
after
two
straight
losses
.
.
to win the division outright to
make lhe playofls .
" We have to be pleased about
· "Things obviously went well ·
it." Marino said. "We do have a
chance. If we get help from other for us," said Browns quarterback Bernie Kosar , who threw
people and do the things we have
to do, we might be able to slide for a career-high four TDs. "We
. regrouped (after losing two
into the playoffs."
straight games) , we concen- .
Marino, who completed 25 of 39
!rated and we made very few .
passes, threw touchdown passes
mental mistakes . The line pro- ·
of 11 .and 20 yards to Mark
vided
excellent coverage and
Clayton and connected with
everybody
worked hard.
Mark Duper for a 20-yard
we're.
on top of our
','When
touchdown.
.
game,
It's
hard
to
stop us. The
The Colts play at San Diego
enthusiasm
was
excellent."
next week and finish at home ·
Three of Kosar's TD passes
against Tampa Bay. The Bills
came
during a club-record 28are hOme against New England
point
fourth
quarter.
next week, then play In Phlladel-

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS IU·960 )
A Division of Multlmedl i, In c.

'

Published every afternoon, Mon day
through Fr,lday, 1111 Court St .. Pomeroy, Ohio, by the Ohio Va ll ey Pub·
Us hlng Company/ Multimedia, Inc.,
. Pomeroy, Ohio 457&amp;9 , Ph . 992-2156. Seco nd class postage paid at Pom eroy.
· Ohio.

Morrison . who hit one of two free shots from the floor .
Miami. another Mid-American
throws apd then stole the ball for
Conference
tea m, lost 91· 73 at
a layup to trim a 65-61 Wright
home to Xavier as J.D. Barnett
State lead to 65·64.
"We got off to a good start then and Byron Larkin combined for
became complacent In the first 51 points, Barnett getting 28 and
half," said Larranaga, whose Larkin 23.
team led 14-8 early. " We lost our
xavier, 4-1, led 47-36 at half·
concentration and, as a result , time and scored the first 15 points
lost our momentum. "
Wright State's Ralph Underhill of the second half to open up a
62·36 bulge. Miami, now 2-4,
felt his team let one slip through never got closer than 15 the rest
its fingers . "It's a little dishear- · of the way. Eric Newsome led the
tening to let it get away," said
Underhill. "It was the kind of Redskins with 23 points.
Davton ran its record to 4-1
game we felt we were in th~ with ·a 90-76 win over Duquesne.
MC k
groove .''
The BG win left both teams
Sophomore T~oy
c rae en
with 2-3 records.
scored a career-high 20 points
Ohio University continued to and Negele Knight added 18 to
stumble, losing for the fifth time pace · the Flyers, who trailed
in six games, 89-81 to Boston twice in the first half by as many
University.
as 9 points.
The Bobcats' task doesn't get
any easier the next 10 days with
Kent State got 25 points from
games at Youngstown State, Eric Glenn and 25 from Reggie
vanderbilt and Tennessee.
Adams in downing Akron 92-74.
Paul "Snoopy" Graham led
The Golden F2llashdes, ~;·
OU with 19 points, although he jumped out to a 20· ea over e
and Dave Jamerson, who scored Zips and never led by less than 5
12, hit only a combined 12 of 36 therestofthe'-":ay .

Member: United Press In ternational ,
Inland Daily Press Associat io n and the
Ohio Newspaper Ass ociation. National
AdvertiSing Representativ e, Branham
N('Wspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
N~· York, New York 10017.
POSTMASTER: Send address changes
to The Dally Sentinel. 111 Court St.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrter or Motor Route
One v.reek .. .... ... ... .................. ..... $1.25
One Month .. ... .. .... ......... ............. $5A5
One Yea r ......... .................. ...... $65.00
SINGLE COPY
J&gt;RICE
Daily ........... ............ ..... ..... 25 Ce nts
Subscribers n&lt;Jt desiring to pay t he car.
rler may remit in advance direct to
The Dally Sent inel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
basts. Credit will be given carrier each
week.
No sub scriptions by m ail permitted In
areas where hOmE' car rier service Is
available.

Mall Subscriptions
Inside Meigs County
13

weeks ...... ....... ..................... $17 .29

;;~~:t~ ::: . :

..

:

:~

Outside Meigs county

n Weeks .. ...... .. ... .............. ....... $18,20

;~~:~t~ ::::: : :: : :::::

m:i.'l .

T~~~~~~~~;;~;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;~~;;;:;;;;;;,;;;;~

CHRISTMAS .TREES
5 FT. TO 8FT.
FRASER FIR
WHITE PINE
WHITE SPRUCE
BLUE SPRUCE
SCOTCH PINE

S1J50 TO S2800
.READY TO PLANT TREES
5 FT. TO 6FT.
WHITE PINE, WHITE SPRUCE
DOUGLAS FIR

FRUIT
BASKETS
Full Y2 Bushel

'$1450
OTHER SIZES
AVAILABLE

S30 TO S36
Wide Variety Of
Christmas Presents
PEPSI, RC
Cypress Clocks
and COKE
PRODUCTS
Poins•ttias
$596
F(ORIDA CITRUS
\ 6 Pack $1 49
Ca11.

plus tax

plus tax

ORANGES, TANGELOS
$2 99 plus tax
· TANGERINES and GRAPEFRUIT
2 littrl 9 9 '""' ...... tax
..,
BAGGED

12 Pack

BULK ·

APPLES

CANDY

99&lt;.

19 VARIETIES TO
CHOOSE FROM

WE HAVE GIFT CERTIFICATES

STAR
CHOCOLATES

AVAILABLE IN ANY AMOUNT

by Bloomer

RED DELICIOUS APPLES

Sl ooo BUSHEL
~

(Q"VENI~N(E

~--

'I

·

' Kizer's heroics were set up by
another freshman, 6-foot -6 Brad

.. n·l~o llvlll,. at Wu.J"h
Miami at Kl'ntuc ky Jnvhutlonal
WltWnhe rg at Dcl'auw ln,1tutlunal
Rlulfton at Manchcl!tl'r Tourno.•y

"ORDER EARLY"
EAT IN OR CARRY
OUT ONLY!

running back 'Er ick DickersOh .
Cornelius Bennett and Shane
Conlan led the Bills ' defense,
along with defensive end Bruce
Smith , who tied Bennett for the
club lead with five tackles and
recovered a " f\Jmble for a
touchdown.
Dickerson , the AFC's leading
rusher, managed only 19 yards
on 11 carries. He came to the
Colts from tile Rams In a
mid-season trade that sent Ben·
nett, at the time unsigned, from
Indianapolis to Buffalo.
"Dickerson Is a ~utback
ru nner. If you cut that off, you
take away half of his game."
Smith said .
"What can you say? They
played magnificent ," Bills
Coach- Marv Levy said of a
defense that forced six turnovers, recovered a fumble for a
touchdown and held the Colts to
130 total yards .
"Bruce Smith was magnlfl·
cent. Corneliu s Bennett and
Shane Conlan played very well.
The secondary played their best
g'ame of tlie season. And the best
part is how we played after we
didn't capitalize on some of the

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Bowling Green freshman
Derek Kizer may be In line for
some more playing time based on
his 35 seconds of work Saturday
against Wright State.
Kizer, a 6-foot-4 guard-forward
out of Toledo Bowsher High
School, rode the bench· for more
than 39 minutes Saturday before
being called on by Coach Jim
Larranaga .
With 15 seconds left, he hit the
winning jumper in BG's 66-65 win
over the Raiders .
"I tried to get Derek into the
game earlier," said Larranaga.
"W hen he got'i n, he played well
on defense on two possessions
and it was good to see he was
mentally ready to handle the

~

'--

The Daily Sentinei -' Page- 3

Falcons edge Raiders; Miami
drops non-loop tilt to .Xavier

lET US COOl&lt; FOR YOU

Berry's.·World

.

•

Satard tl~·· -. l( i"~ tdl s

wered that he had spent his life
"In intellictual persuits of the
law': and that to be on ttie
Supreme Court "would be an
!ntellectul feast."
This Is not enough hor law and
justice: It Is not enough to
discharge what we owe to our
fellow humans.
As Brennan told the New York
lawyers: " The framers beque!·

'

Eleven teams still alive in· AFC chase
Defiance edge~
Rio Grande, 79-71

L1\ Rams 3:1, Atlani.B 0

The latest headlines ______w_ill_iam_Ru_sh_er

.

,·Pomeroy- _Middleport, Ohio

I '

~

STORE· Pomeroy~·

�,.
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

!

• Monday, Deeember 14, 1987

Pomeroy-'- Middleport. Ohio .

Mon

Bengals Coach Sam Wyche .
agreed, noting the Matthews
interception was a !actor.
"He made a great play that
turned three or seven points for
us into seven· points for Cleveland," said Wyche. "It was the
turning point. "
. Jim s,eech's 20-yard field goal
gave Cincinnati a 3-0 lead at 7:55
of the first quarter, but the
Browns came back with an
84-yard drive capped by Kosar's
22-yard scoring pass to Slaughter
at 2:17 of the second quarter.
Cincinnati' s ensuing drive
fizzled on its own 6, and a wobbly
Scott Fulhage punt gave· the
Browns strong field position at
the visitors' 30.
Two plays and 13 seconds Ia tee
Mack thundered 22 yards
through left tackle to boost the
lead to 14-3 at 5:12,
Kosar then climaxed a nineplay drive with a two-yard
touchdown toss to Mack at 10: 11.
Esiason drove Cincinnati to the
Cleveland 7, but hls pass was
picked off by Matthews at the 4.
The linebacker returned the
interception 36 yards before
lateralling to Hairston at the .
Cleveland 40 .
Two plays la ter, Ko sar
whipped a two-yard scoring pass
to rookie Derek Tennell at 14:14
for a 28-3 halftime bulge .
Esiason found Martin down the
left sidelines for the 54-yard
scoring bomb at 2:48 of the third
quarter, c utting the lead to28-10.
K'Osar answered with an 18-yard
touchdown pass to Slaughter at
11:06.
Kinnebrew brought Cincinnati

to within 35-24 with a two-ya!'ll
plunge three seconds into the
four th quarter and a 1-yard run
at 8:15. Cleveland's Malt Bahr,
activated Friday, capped the
scoring with a 27-yard 'field goal

with 52 seconds remaining.
Browns tight end Ozzie Newsome extended hls pass -catching
streak to 125 games, third longest
In NFL history.

Prep scores
/, .,-/. 1/J, ,,. 1/ , "" -,. f,,.,.J /1.,, f., ..J, 10 /I

! rUi o·d /'ro •" /r1 ll 'r lll!l "'"''/

/h

~,, ,,.,,,, ' {~ · ··-

1:

tkr ftr \\sn R6 55. Lishu n -t&lt;

B!.H:k•'.l't' Trail

~6.

Wt!lll'YIIIt• 15

( 'amhrld,;lc' ~ I . Mark&gt;lta :JR
(TNI!lk.•nillt' fi l , ~torxan It

Danvit h• U, Zant•!nllli•

Ru~uans

E lyria Opt&gt;n Uoor li, n,• 1\.a.pt 2K
Ft l..oramlt· Ii-I. Nrw Knun·lflr 21i
Clara way -1~ , Bcrllrtd Hiland U
l nd \ ' al S fl1, ,\fllht•rn :lll

H

Indians 11111.. 56. 1Uiron C.br -ll
,Ja,·ksull ~filion ~1. l'urfaJl' SE S3
511, lnd \ ' 141 N 51

t...~••la nd

M;u;~llion .Jack.'&gt;l!n
Ma,v!l viJI~· Ii-1, Nt&gt;w

:r;

ilil. fa n Timkf' n ;JX
Lo.•.d n,ltun :i5
M••adowhrnok 57, Cul'lto!ilon ~2
r-.· Ca nton Hoovr-r 66. 1\ lllun cr U
Nt&gt;M' Phllu ·19, Loul~\·lltc 3-1
N.,w C'u!&lt;llt• (ru) .:J1, Lllwellv!lk 34
Nf'w {'onNlrd Glenn 57, Phll u II,, ~ut)
Orr.,.llle 56, Na.,.arrf' Falrlt'!&lt;S :1~
Rid,~;t' M' ood H9 , ·'•' ""l'ti..Sl'lu 17
.~ht&gt;lhy r.. Wlllnrd 51
Spri nx: S H, {'ul lindt• n '!9
SprlnJ;" ('ath 41, !'ldnt•y Lehman :r.
Slrubt• n ( '( ' 56, M.a rUn ~ Ff'rry 5ll
Tt•cumst•h 61, Gn•t•n\·Hit• 1·1
Trl·\ ' a llt·.t ~9. Sht•ridan .17
Triad 10:1, W f ,i hf'ri~· Sltit•m .JJ
Tu .'it' ff 61 . Nt'" t•omc r~tuwn 22
"ar~ w H.ivt•r Vit•w 53. W Mu s kin~u m

AB

/1..,

Ooo• luek Tea111tf
992-5627 MIDDLEPORT

'

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS'i
Ben. H. Ewing-Director

108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.
Intrastate rival Cincinnati. It was Bahr's IOOth
field goal for the Browns and the first one for hlm
since December 23, 1986. (UPI)

t: G~

S ' vk•w

~I.

POMEROY, OHIO

DEC, 14-BELPRE - AWAY
DEC. 17-ALEXANDER - HOME
DE(, 23-USTERN - AWAY

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
All YOUR
I'NSURANCE
.NEEDS

EASTERN
BOYS BASKETBALL

GIRLS BASKETBALL
DEC. 14-MILLER - HOME
DEC. 17 -SOUTHWESTERN - HOME
DEC. 19-FED.-HOCKING - AWAY

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE

SOUTHERN

111 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

lOTS BASKETBALL
BOYS BASKETBALL
DEC. 18-HANNAN TRACE -AWAY .
DEC. 22-KYGER CREEK -AWAY

CALL 992-3.381 or
992-2342

GIRLS BASKETBALL
DEC. 14-NORTH GALLIA- AWAY
DEC. 17-HANNAN TRACE - AWAY
DEC. 19- ALEXANDER - AWAY

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

•COMPLETE RADIATOR SERVICE
•MAJOR REPAIR$

•COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT
Itt BALANCE
•MOST MAJOR CREDIT CARDS

ACC EPTED

PAT HILL FORD, Inc.
·1992-21961

BOOV WORK
INSURANCE
CLAIMS
WELCOME

461 3RD AVE,, MIDDLEPORT, OH.

FOR

Dec. 8-Trimbla ............................... Away
Dec. 11-Belpreo..... ,........................ Home
Dec. 1S-Aiexander ........................ Away
Dec. 19-logan ................................ Home
Dec. 22 -Wellston .................,... ,.... Away·
Jan. S-Federal Hocking ................. Away
Jan. 8-Miller ........................ ,.:,........ Home
Jan. 12-"elsonville-York ............., Away
jan. 1S-Vinton County .................. Home
Jan. 19-Trimmble .......................... Home "
Jon. 22-Belpre ......................... Away
Jan. 26-Alexander ......................... Home
Jan. 30-Point Pleasant ................. Away
Feb. 2-Warren ............................... Away
Feb. 5-Wellston ........................... ~..Home
Feb. 9 ~Athens ....... ;... , .......................... Home
Feb. 12-Federoi Hocking ............... Home
u

...

Dec. 8-Southern ......~ ..................... Away
Dec. 11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 1S-Parkersburg Catlt. (6:1 S) ... Away
Dec. 22-North Gallia (6:00) .....;...... Home
Jan.-8-Symmes Valley ...................Home
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
Jan. 1S-Oak Hill ........................... Away
Jan. 19-Federal Hocking .....:..........Home
Jon. 22-Southern ........................... Home
Jan. 29-North Gallia .................... Away
Feb. 2-Miller ................................. , Away
Feb. S-Hannon Trce ........................ Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ...................Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath............ Away
Feb.19-Symmes Valley ............._..... Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Away·

Dec. 8-Eastarn ................................ Home
Dec. 11-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Dec. 18-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 22-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Dec. 29-lndian Valley So.... Convo. Center
Jan. 2-Southeastarn ..................... Away
Jan. 1-Southwestern ... , ................ "ome
Jan. 12-North Gallia .....................Home
Jan. 1S-Symmes Valley ................. Home
Jan. 22-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
Jan. 30-Miller ................................ Home
FEb. S-Oak Hill ............................. Awqy
Feb. 6-Federal Hacking ...............:. Away
Feb. 12':....Hannan Trace ................... Home
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away

PEOPLE~'

MEMBER FDIC

*\LI~~,
SYRACUSE OfftCE
992-6333
RACINE OFFICE
949-2210

.

"COME GROW
WITH US"

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

fl-.

GIRLS SCHEDULE
-

'

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

POWELL'S

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

.

Dec. 7-Southern ............................. Home
Dec. 10-Hannan Trace ................... Home
De(. 14-Miller .................................. Home
Dec. 17 -Southwestern ................... Home
Dec. 19...;;ftderal Hocking .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec; 23-Meigs ................................ Home
Jan. 7-Symmes Valley .............;...._Away
Jan. 11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Jan. 14-0ak Hiii ............................ Home
Jan. 21-Southern .......................... Away
Jan. 28-North Gallio ..................... Home
Feb. 1-Symmes Vlaley ...................Home
Feb. 4-Hannan Trace .................... Away
Feb. 11-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hocking ............... Home

J)ec. 7-Vinton County ....................Home
Dec. I 0-Trimble .............................Home
Dec. 14-Belpre .............................. Away
Dec. 17-Aiexander ......................... Home
Dec. 23-Eastern ............................ A~ay
Jan. 4-Wellston .............................. Home
Jan. 7- Federal Hocking ................ ,. Home
Jan. 9-Miller ................................... Home
'
Jan. 14-"elsonville-York
............... Home
Jan. 18-Vinton Count ................... Away
Jan. 21-Trimble ............................ Away
Jan. 2S-Belpre ............................... Home
Jan.' 28 - Aiexander ........................ Away
Feb. 4-Wellston ............................. Away
Feb 8-Federal Hocking .................. Away
Feb. 13-Southern ...........................Home

'
Dec. 7-Eastern ............................... Away
Dec.lO-Oak Hill ...............,............. Away
Dec. 14-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec:. 17-Hannan Trace ......:............ Home
Dec. 19-Aleander .......................... Away
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek ........................ Home
Jan. 7-· Southwestern .................... Away
Jan. 11-North Gallia ..................... Home
Jan. 14-5ymmes Valley ..............,. Away
Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................... Away
Jan. 21-Eastern ............................. Home
Jan. 28-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Feb. !,-Southwestern ..................... Home
Feb. 4-0ak Hiii .......................... ,... Home
Feb. 11-Hannan Tr~e .................. Away
.Feb
•. 13-Meigs ............................... Away
.

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY. OH.
STORE HOURS:

.

MON.-SAT.
8 ·A.M.-1 0 P.M.
SUNDAY
10 A.M.-1 o•p.M.

• Ilich Returns. Experienced securities analysts carefully
•

~:esearch and select high yielding corporate bonds for the
Fund's portfolio:
.
A Diveraified Portfolio:· You can have an interest in
over liS corporations representing 17 different
industries.

• Molltbly Dividenda.
Your yield a nd share price wli i vary-:-For
example, the next asset value per share on
12/ 10/ 87 was
·

,~
t!l'.:i

'~~'·-.,

$3.22 a nd on
.
- - - - - '~1218/ 87 it was . ~Q
Scou Wright
$3.67. Ask for a '8,1 l l t...... ,.,..,. *'""""
Inc
592· 1039
free prospectus
67~ S, C..n Sc • A"""' · Oh~ 45701 SOQ_

Clrl.d \8:
tfJ

today!

*Ra8Pd ''" /2! 10/ 8 i
o/fving priu an(f on
ann11aliJOrlon of the

Fundt 111011 r«mt

rrwnthJv diuidmd, The

Rawlings
c·oats
Blow&amp;t
funeral
Home

338 7703

Yn! Twoulrf /ilt.ttJjur prtnptfflU Mflllltning mau
r:omplt/t lriformarirm on F'ronlt.tin~ AOE High

.

IMomt F~nr!, fnduding c horr;~ ond tx~r!St$ . I will
ttad it cartfuii!J /:JtfMt I inUotSI or und money.

Nam&lt;- - - - - - - - - - -

f-i'und uus agtMrQI/f

«U/llttl fi«&lt;Olnting Prilt
r:ip/t Anot~m 01
tqualllctfon.. Tile
1.10/ut ofN"llf in~~at·
mmt ot rtfkmption

6t mort or leis
/han toll'r cos/.

ma~

Phone _ _ _ _ _ _ __

FRANK UN

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
614-992-5141

'for " 'allr II

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"
97 N. 2ND STREET

BAUM

A GREAT PLACE .
FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER

*•Roast
Great Hamburgers
Beef on a ·
Croissant * Stuffed Baked'
Potato.es * Taco Salads
* Salad Bar

* Real lee Cream *

992-6661

Dining • C.arrv Out •
Drive·Thru
Sun.-Thurl. 6 A.M .-10 P:M.

992-3007

Fri. &amp; Sat. 8 A.M.·12 P.M.
6~8

W, Main Street, Pomeroy

992·Z067 .

•

i

Jim Cobb

e-~~

Chevrolet•Oidsmobile
•Cadillac, Inc.

HARDWARE

"Your luikfing

915.3 301

Mat~riol

Marktl Ploct"

CHESTER, OH.

Featuring

MIDDLEPORT

INSTALLMENT LOANS

'

.

•
'•,

•,
~

PH. 992-2136

I

"HOME BANK

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

HOME

FRANKLIN'S AGE
HIGH INCOME FUND

Kn u~ 6~.

~vlva n la

EMPIRE
FURNITURE

BOYS SCHEDULE

Fo

Ul'lpftl!~

UIK'tlin W U

Lese at

DEC. 15-PARK. CATH.- AWAY
DEC. IS-SOUTHWESTERN- AWAY
DEC. 22 -NORTH GALLIA - HOME

HOME

( 'a nln' Mo · ~inlo','' 7;, M!L"s ·hlt·k.••o.m !ill
l't•durvlllt· 61. na .~ nar 57
&lt;'l'ltkrhur~ 71, Wurihln ~un C'hr ~
lol ...,ql . ln1St(h tu. G5
( nl Norttllund 1!!1. ~hnsfh • ld ~111.1 11:1 (o i l
('ulli n• \\lin ltt•r. :ill, i\1onrt.H'\IIII~ J,j
Colollt' ll ra"''fl!rd X6, ( ' n•,..illnt• "!
CnntlrM'ntal Iii, Unt· lllnvh• ~~o· 1:1

('It,&gt;

Buy More for

MEIGS

EWING
FUNERAL

Ca n Cil('/lOak Ji, Akr ll ohun 11'1
l'tt nfl ~· lol jli, Urooklio•ld fil

Plltua 11, K'aptlkonf'lll IJJ
J'lymuuth ~~~ . l\hplt•t on 5ii
J'Y"o•l)lo• ~ haWftf'(' 66, Nnllonal'l'rall61
Hldg1'Wood Kl, ( 'onotWn VIt-I ~~~
RldKf'JilOIII tn, M~trlnn t; t~n n
f{hrr Valll'y 1'l, Oll•nlaniO' 1.11
!'i ('hWi ~E !1~. fo'a lrt)~tnkll 35
Sttnd u .;ky P••rkl n"' lj(l, 4'i)dlc' Ill ,
S h t•rld~o~n lit, Trt \ a llry ;,!1
Sh1•rwomrt ta lr\lf'W TJ , " uu"'''!n l i
"ildno•y fo'Birl;\11 n ~".!, \l•·dJ;Ullo ~hur~ 5'!
"iprlni{IKJrv ,.~. Hlllf:'"' II
SprhlK Nl\ Iii, ~l'rln,l( NE l'l
SprlnJ; !'lilawnf'r i'!. Urb~t nu liS
Sprln~ G n •f' mm .59, Ke nton RldA:P 46
( vi i
St Hf' nry 6:1, (;rr•l' n\111(' 3t
!'il \111or)'!'l itiJ, o~f'W ftrf'ffll'fl olti
l'il uw \\'all!ih ,ft· ~~dt &amp;1, i\kr ."il \ R~

OF
FURNITURE

GIRLS BASKETBALL

271 1/2 N. SECOND AYE.
MIDDLEPORT OHIO

'"'""'"'
·'"'" ~ ~
--- --

l'nf,l' 00.

THIS
EEK'S
GAMES

992-3462

,)~, "' If,~-;:-:;:;:...,/ /1,., I,•,I "'II

Sl ,l.,lm.; Ill. ( 'o•liua ~j
ll:ln\'lllt• !i;
Eatun 106, 1'ri' ('uunty N 31
f:dll:&lt;'rtun 56, \l n ntp~• l i&lt;- r ~ ~
Falrtwrn ~fi. Ro'llhrnnll ltl
f'o r1 ,Jo•nnlu~~:.; 70, Sp('nco•rvllil' 59
_f ·rauldln Monr&lt;&gt;~ ' K:l. C'nvlni(Lnn li
Frunllc r i:J. lliH r Lno•tllli-1
Ct• nua Kl , lli SJ:'KU iii toll
Hr an ,ilh• :&gt;5, l Un Sl
llt•uth ll:i, lll'ttrttn l .akl'"'uvtl51
ll oh:~ah• fi7, Kalida 62
,
Jlururt li5. Sandu"'kl lit Mar,yfi l
,Jiu-btln i\tlltun ll"j, Porta ~~: •· s t: .-.:~
, jplft •r~(J n \ 'niun 60 , Huo•k"Y'' ,&gt;~3;'1
Kf' nl K:i. Akron lo•n· IIO\ol'r ~I
l.t•.dnt~;tun lt6, ,\Junqflo•ld l\1 u ru~un .\:~
IJma Bath ~1 . 1\da 5!1
Uma { '( ' li t. K••nlun 41
Llma1'!'hawm•t• li t , FlruUa ,\ :i t
l .o.:an $11, 7.~~.rtl''l \llh • ii i
1.....11:an f~ lm 70, (' l rdo•\·ill•• ti~
l .ornl n £'u lh 1111, Oht•rlln 5(
, Mld' ~ o w.· n fo' t•nwh'k 66. Dd.\' ( urll~ t• ' 11
Man.~rio • lrl i I, l,ural n 63
1\lan~th •ld l 'hr :'.:1, i\11 (;lll•;ld 10
Mansf St Pt• t('r.; 00. Tu:.ky f(' 51'1
;\olurlln111on ~9, UnlunluM-n l.a kt• :17
\h•lld!Jwt'trDOII 116, n . ~h'&gt;l' l"n Hll
\l hunl Tr:ll'l' 1111. \\. ('M iaJ IIi'l
,\ fl d' lown Chr lit, C lu~ht&gt;n ( ltr 61
M l ddh•to ~o~-n !IH, Kf'lt 1\llf' r tk
M i la n FA I.~un 91, MarJtllri•ll.ll 6G
l\tllh•r ( 'ity 61, \ ' an fturt'n !19
1\&gt;ll !l !d~'h~;~wa Val 81 , Vt•rsnlllt&gt;ll 86
N ( '&lt;to tlnon-rr 116, l'(f'w Phil11 Si
Nr•w l .o ndon 116, Norwulk ~~Paul fi'l
Nf'W 1\lbany 9(1, .l11hn!!lown N'rld11t&gt; 78
Nor"'u Ik i't l.J pptr Sandu .~ k ,\· till
(lttaw.· ~t fH11ndarf IIH, Sapoi('(ln 62 (ol )

.

DEC. l'S-ALEXANDER - AWAY
DEC. 19-LOGAN - HOME . ·
DEC. 22 - WQLSTON -AWAY

MONDAY THRU SATURDAY
10 AM. 9 PM

1\lh•n F. 16, Ptl.ndor:.t ·f.Oilhmto -1;1
,\nna !i~, lndiun l.ukt• U
,\n~ M-('rp a!:l. lh•lpltus ·••·II 511 (0t )
\rllngtun 12, WI\\'Dt' \' lllt• Ill
,\shland C' r p.; tvh•w 6(1 , IU LII'II Rlvt~ r fiR
1\ )'t'f-"\"lll•· 7~. Edun II
ftj•llf'\111' 6:1, Sht&gt;h l ,~ 5!:1
~·llt•fonlalll(' /!fl. Sl Parts (0raham4R
Rla•" :hl&gt;sl.-r b'i, Lillh • Miami 66
Hmtrdman 6.~. III L·kor.v ( l'a l G~
Rrunswkli. 5ii. 1\-kdl na Ru.-lwyo• $11
Rn·:•n ~1. ~ &lt;'••ntr.d l«&lt; full
l'un s ~II. t\llliu•~ · · 7~
l 'll. n n 75. fiartiW.ll )' 5I}

f:

COMPLETE
SELECTION

, BOYS BASKETBALL

OPEN
SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM

II' I " ,,, ,J I 'ro·, , /,. '' , "" ' ", ..,,/

Oii,V N'rld~dll , i\1\umi

fb:t~

THE AREA'S MOST
COMPUTE ATHLniC
. FOOTWEAR STORE!

THE
VIDEO TOUCH

\ ' uu \1tw nl'y !\.'i,1'i l rutht • r~~o n
7.ani'S \'Uit' 6t Nf'"'ark6U {Ill)

'

,,,,,.,

PH. 992-2121

big 18 point lead by half-time. In
the third quarter the Defenders
began the march down the
comeback traiL The Defenders
were able to by-pass the press
and attack the basket. Inside
baskets were the-result as well as
Cross Lanes foul trouble. This
trend continued Into the fourth
quarter. Ohio Valley trimmed
the lead down , to 8 points, but
never got any closer as the final
score was 71-63. Cross Lanes was
led by Senior forward Corbin who
scored 22 points and controlled
the Cross Lanes offense. Junior
guard Raines added 15 and
sophomore guard O'Dell pumped
in another 10. The Defenders
were lead by junior forward John
Keenan who scored 31 points and
gr abbed 8 rebounds. Junior
guard Shannon Gilliam added 12
points and senior guard Chris
Patterson was abl e to score 9
points. The Defenders playe d

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 5

(rJCGIMirtH)"

Barefoot punter Lee Johnson,
who replaced the released
George Winslow, averaged 44.3
yards on three punts lhat ln·
eluded a 66-yarder in the third
quarter .

OVCS drops 71-63 cage tilt to Cross Lanes
The Ohio Valley Christian
Defenders hosted the Warriors
from Cross Lanes Christian
Fr iday night. The ga m e was a
defensive s truggle at the star t as
the first quarter final score was
only 10-8 In favor of Cross Lanes.
In the second quarter, Cross
Lanes put on the press and Ohio
Valley momentarily lapsed and
allowed the warriors to build a

.'

Pomeroy-Midd"'port, Ohio

lfl?y

Browns cnish Bengals, .38-24;·remain tied for division lead
Cleveland, 8-5, remained tied
By ROBERTO DlAS
with Pittsburgh for first place In
UPI Sports Writer
the AFC Central and both teams
CLEV)":LANO tUPI) - Norare one game ahead of Houston
mally, .lust the thought of playing
with two games remaining on the
the Clnclnnail Bengals Is more
than enough incentive for the • schedule. The Browns visit the
Los Angeles Raiders next week
Cleveland Browns. ·
·
belore a potentially decisive
Sunday, though, the Browns
regular-season
finale lt.
had goals that went beyond any
Pittsburgh.
.
intrastate rivalry.
"We
needed
to
get
things
"We needed to' avoid the
headed
ln
the
right
direction,
"
mental mistakes that really hurt
said Cleveland ·Coach Marty
us the past two weeks," said
Schottenhelmer. " I told the
quarterback Bernie Kosar. "Of·
sq uad we didn't want perfect
fenslvely. we took advantage of
execution, just perfect effort :We
opportunities. Defensively, we
got perfect eC!ort."
ca me together.' '
The Browns produced Impres sive individual. statistics In a
And Mack believed the ollen38-24 victory over the Bengals.
slve line provided just. that,
Kosar completed 17 of 26 passed
saying "I'm going to have to do
for 241 yards arid a career-high
something for those g uys."
four touchdowns, three in a
Cincinnati, which fell to4·9, got
team -record 28-point second
a 54-yard scori ng pass !rom
quarter, extending his touchBoomer Esiason to Mike Martin,
down streak to 15 games and his
the first time in slx seasons a
season total to 19. Wide recelter
Bengals wideout has scored a
touchdown against Cleveland .
Webster Slaughter had five receptions for ll9 yards and two
"Field position was the key
touchdowns .
part of the game," said Esiason,
Running back Kevin Mack had
who complete d 21 of 39 passes for
133 yards and one touchdown on
361 yards a nd two interceptions.
27 carries. Linebacker Clay
"W hen the opposing offense has
Matthews ran an interception of about 50 or 60 yards to m arch for
Boomer Esiason back for 36 a touchdown, it's tough lor a ny
yards before lateralling to defen- defense to sit there and hold
sive end Carl "Big Daddy"
them."
Hairston for another 40, and the
Tim McGee had four catches
Browns scored on four straight lor 117 yards . Larry Kinnebrew
seconp-quarter possessions be- ran for two touchdowns in the
fore 77,331 a t Cleveland Stadium . fourth quarter.
" I t hlnk we were very well
"The Browns cornerbacks
prepared, and we executed our were right down our throats,"
game plan well," said Matthews. said McGee. "They're more
•·we have to do thls the rest of the aggressive than anyone else we
play."
way."

r 14 1987

.•

MUZZLE LOADING
and HUNTING SUPPLI

HOURS:

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

S

PHARMACY
"3 Registered
PharmaCists
To Serve You"
Open Till 9:00

Sales &amp; Service
EAST MAIN ST.
POMEROY

1our Dealer on
The River

.Every Night.
S~nday 11·~

992-6491
992-6144

716 N. 2nd St.
OH •

.

'

.'
i

�....
Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Racine Council...
Council elected Larry Wolfe
and Robert Beegle to serve wtth
firemen Robert Johnson and
Doug Rees as members of the
Firemen's Dependency Board.
The four members will select the
fifth member.
Council also conducted the
following other business.
Authorized the clerk to make
two transfers in funds to keep th'e
accounts from being overdrawn.
Authorized the Board of Public

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As oll0:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt EIUs &amp; Loewl

.

Am Electric Power ............. 25%
AT&amp;T ................................. 27%
Ashland Oil ........................ 56'!ii
Bob Evans .......................... l4'J4
Charming Shoppes .............. 10%
· Cl ty Holding Co ................... 34
Federal Mogul.. .................. 30%
Goodyear T&amp;R ................... 53~
Heck's Inc, ................... ... .... 1%
Key Ce11turton ..................... 36
Lands' End, ......, ........... : ..... 17%
Limited Inc ........................ 17\4
Multimedia Inc .................... 44
Rax Restaurants .................. 2%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................... 7
Shoney's Inc ....................... 21\4
Wendy 's Intl. ...... ................. 4%
Worthington Ind .................. 15%

.·

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio
continued from page 1

Woman cited by.
patrol after wreck

No one hurt in
- - - - - Announ~ements----meet Wednesday, 2 p.m., at the
to meet
weekend accidents Cbuncll
home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
Racine Village Co uncil will

f

Qy The Bend

Affairs to contract with a firm to
Members will present a seasonal
meet in special session tonight,
service the No. 2 well pump. As
No Injuries were reported a6
A
Gallipolis
woman
was
cited
·
stpry or poem and roolcall will be
6:15 p.m., at the Shrine Park
required by ordinance, the BPA
the result of a hlt·sklp and a two
In
an
accident
Saturday,
at
4:43
a Christmas recipe.
building, to take action on a truck.
must request permission before
p.m., In Salisbury Township on . car accident lnvesUgated by the · purchase.
expending large sums. ·
Pomeroy Pollee Department on
History books arrive
Authorized the clerk to Inform S.R. 7, about a mile north of the
Friday and Saturday It was
Gallia·Melgs.
County
Line,
ac·
Meigs County History Volume
the Racine Gas anll Service Co.
Literary club
reported.
,.
cording
to
the
Gallla·Melgs
Post
II
has arrived and may be picked
· Middleport Literary Club will
that the village wishes to reduce
of
the
State
Highway
Patrol.
up
at the Meigs County Museum,
the budget payment amount for
At
11:30
p
.m.
a
car
owned
by
Rebecca
L.
Clark,
20,
was
cited
Tuesday
through Saturday, from
the monthly gas for the fire
was
struck
Ron
Ash,
Racine,
for
!allure
to
control
alter
she,
•
1
to
4:
30
p.m., or on Tuesday,
'
station.
while
parkedattheparklnglotat
who
was
heading
north
on
S.R.
7,
Wednesday
and Thursday even·
Three
emergency
runs
were
Attending the council meeting
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital
.
lost
control
on
a
curve,
went
off
lngs,
this
week
only, from 7 to 9
made by local units Saturday and
were members Robert Beegle,
causing
moderate
damage.
The
the
left
side
of
the
road
and
hit
a
p.m.
Books
maypej:JUrchased1or
five runs Sunday the Meigs
Frank Cleland, Carroll Teaford,
Incident Is under Investigation.
$49, plus $3 if mAiled.
County Emergency Medical Ser·
Larry Wolfe, Scott Wolfe and storage tank owned by Ohio Oil
Gathering
Corporation
of
vice reported.
member·electDuke Bentz, Clerk
Change trustees' meet ,
Saturday at 12:08 p.m. Daniel
Saturday at 3:58a.m. Tuppers
Jane Beegle, Street Commls· Fraleyburg.
The regular meeting of the
A Rutland area man was
DePue, Pomeroy was traveling . Plains to Eden Ridge for Forrest
stoner Glenn Rizer, Fire Chief
Salem Township Trustees has
east on West Main and was
Baker, to ·camden Clark Hospl·
Rober"t Johnson. Bond Clerk charged In an accident Sunday,
been changed to Dec. 31, 9:30
at
1:40
a.m.,
In
Salisbury
Town·
attemplng to make a left turn
tal; at 9:28a.m. Tuppersl'latns
Peggy Kirby, Marshal Joe Kirby
a.m. The meeting will be held at
and Craton Wolfe. Mayor Cha· s.hip on Union Avenue, a quarter w11en struck In the rear by a car to SR 681 for Carl Findling, to
the Salem lire house.
' of a mile west of S.R. 7.
driven by Cleve Mullins, Racine . Veterans Memorial Hospital; at
rles Pyles was absent.
• Kenneth E. Green, 22, of Rt. 1,
Mullins was cited to court on a
4:45 p.m. Middleport Fire De·
Rutland, was charged with DWI
charge of assured clear distance.
partment to auto accident on SR
South Central Ohio:
after he lost control of his car,
There was light damage to the 7, treated Rebecca Clark, no
Snow
today will accumulate
Barley trial begins
went off the left side of the road
DePue vehicle and heavy to the
transport .
.
about an inch, but snow should
and hlt liD embankment.
Mullins car.
Sunday at 1: 14 a.m. Middleport
change to rainby afternoon.
Jury selection In the Meigs
to Railroad Strreet for Dorothy
Highs will be In the mid 40s.
County Common Pleas Court
Roush, to Holzer Medical Cen·
Oc~asional rain tonight with lows
trial of Charles Barley, 48. of
ter;
at
12:28
p.m
.
Pomeroy
to
·
the low 40s.
in
Cunningham.
Pomeroy, charged with felonious
Veterans Memorlaf
Mulberry
Ave.,
for
Katie
Guth,
Rain
likely and wlpdy Tues·
Sunday admissions - John
Saturday admissions: - Carl
assault wl th a firearm speclflca·
taken
to
Veterans
Memorial.
day.
Highs
will ranbge betwewen
tlon, began early Monday Findling, Reedsville; Lillian · McKenzie, Pomeroy; Esta
At
1:16
p.m.
,
Middleport
to
45
and
50.
Gardner, West Columbia; VIrgie Roush, Ravenswood; Doris Park Street for Barb Bolin,
morning.
The probability of preclplta'
Haynes, Middleport; Clara Po·
Burford,
Rutland; Ivory Bush,
Charges against Barley stem
treated
not
transported;
at
6:35
tlon
Is 60 percent today, near 100
well, Racine; Katie Guth, Pome·
from a shooting incident at the Middleport.
p.m.
Pomeroy
to
Forest
Run
for
percent
tonight and GO percent
Cove Bar, located on Route 7 just
Saturday discharges: - Ha- roy; Robert DeLong, Pomeroy;
Harry
Yourig,
to
Veterans
Mem·
Tuesday.
outside Pomeroy, on May 23, In rold Jeffers, Helen Sams. Jack Harry Young, Pomeroy.
orial; at 6:51p.m. Middleport to
Winds will be light and varia·
Sunday
discharges
Auburn
which David Talbott, 21, of Ward. Russell Cullums, Henry
Railroad Street for Dorothy
ble
today and from the east at 10
Meddows.
Racine, was injured .
Turner, Laura Fowler, Pauline
Roush, to Holzer Medical Center.
to 20 miles an hou r tonight

- -:·

Weather

Hospital news _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

'lbp Of '11te Stairs

said Susan Reynolds, a spokesman lor Sinatra, who Is playing In •
Atlantic City, N.J. Reynolds said she would arrange lor Sinatra
to send a check for "enough money to ensure that her children
have a good holiday season."
THIEF LIFTS FELLINI WALLET: One of Rome's Infamous
pickpockets dipped Into Federico Felllnl's pocket and made oll
with the director's wallet. Fellin! was riding home from his
office In a crowded city bus with his wallet In a pants' pocket
under his jacket and topcoat. He (lidn't realize he had been
victimized until he reached his apartment near the Spanish
Steps and then reported the theft to the police.
The wallet contained a check for $7,500, a small amount of
cash and Fel)inl's driver:s license.
. FAMD..Y AFFAm: Dann Rogers has a beef against his uncle ,
country·pop singer Kenny Rogers. Dann Is trying to ma'ke it in
the country music business in Nashville and has an album out
but says he's still having a hard time.
"l'm having incredible financial difficulties," he said. "I ·
came here with money but I put a lot of It Into my career. l'm
broke. I'm looking for a job. To be hOnest with you, that's really
the real truth of the' matter."
Dann says Uncle Kenriy hasn't given him any support-' 'just
a lot of criticism a nd a lot of flak." He 'thinks he may know the
root of the problem. ' 'My mother said, 'The problem with you
and Kenny is that you lollk so much alike that wwhenever he
looks at you he sees a younger version of himself,' Dann said.
"And for some reason, he doesn't like that."

A holiday party for the vete· ·
rans at the Athens'Mental Health
Center was held there.Jhursday
by the American Legion AuxilIary district un its.
Mary Moose, dlstrlcl presi·
dent, several members of June·
lion City and Wilkesville auxil·
iary units. and Loretta
Tiemeyer, Iva Powell, Catherine
Welsh, Mary Martin, Pearl
Knapp, Julia Hysell, and Veda
Davis, along with a guest, Adam
Martin, represented the Pomeroy unit at the party . .
Wrapped packages were given
to each of the 15 attending and
taken to eight others on the
wards. Fruit, cigaretes. homemade cookies and candies,
cheese, crackers , candies. and

Appalachian family adjusts to civilization'
SANDGAP, Ky . (UP!)- Last
June, Herman Isaacs moved his
wife and seven youngest children
from a primitive home In Appalachia's' remote Rock Lick HolloW
. · to Sand Gap, ·where they are
adjusting to electricity, phones,
roads and school.
Before moving to a house on a
paved road near Sand Gap, about
' 50 miles southeast of Lexington,
the seven youngest Isaacs child·
ren had never been to sc hoo l, had
.never been to a doctor and had no
birth certificates or Social Secur·
ity numbers. The only book they
had known was the family Bible.
Eva lssacs, 45, who raised 16
children In the backwoods of'
Appalachia, said Sunday she
lsn'l certain that modernconven. iences have Improved her life.
"I liked 'the old ways, the
kerosene lamps," she said. "It's
more hectic now than our life
was. getting up for school every
morning."
Issacs, 56, also feels the con·
stralnts of civilization.
"In some ways, I do have
regrets," he said. "I liked It
better back where we were
living. There was more freedom . .
The reason we never went to the
doctor Is we never had none sick.

Mary Powell, Owner

.
fushion·conscious men and women have fow1d Thr Of'The Stairs, located at .lll West 2nd Street
m Pomeroy, phone 992-6720, to be the mosr progressrve hair design srudio aroWld .
At Thp Of'The Stairs, tl1err experienced operators~'Eudy Mimhall, Liz Lucas and Mike RaJmlmd.READER ADS IN THIS SECTION PREPARED BY CONTRACT ADVERTISING, INC. • ALL RIGHTS RESERVED, 1987
rake rime to evaluate each person's hair type to detenninc the proper care and t~nnent. Pennanents,
nnnng and colonng are also fearured at this complete hair salon. In addition they"offer pennanent hair
removal and body wraps as well as a tanning bed, so you can have a healthy, Ye&lt;rr·roWld tan. Stop by and
browse through ~err new Designer Bout~qt~e. Here, they cany a complete line of ladies apparef ranging
Locally Owned &amp; Operated By Ed &amp; Maria Atkins
sJZe 3 m pentes to w&lt;?me~ SJZe 44. Choose from their designer line ofjJ Htmii" and Sunny £Juth
yvith the co~ of movie entertairunent on the rise, more and more people are ruming to video dubs fashions now ft"aumng therr WIJ1ter.Lryna.rry Collection as well as a large selection of other clothing and
·
and VIdeo rental centers. Backstreet Video features one of the best selections of video movies in the area. holiday fushions.
There are few invesrrnents you can make for your total in1age tl1at will provide more exciting yet
Converuently located at 113 West 2nd Street in Pomeroy, phone 992-5895; and their new location
affordable
results than a visit.to Thp Of'The Stairs. They are open Monday tiu:ough Sarurday from 9:00
at 320 N~rth 2nd Avenue m. Middleport, phone 992-5636, they have on display an extensive library of
n~ ~~VIC ~dvfrom which to makedie your selectio11 Atailable in VHS format, Backsb:u..t Video has am. to 5:00 E_m. and everungs by appomnnent Merry Chnsrrnas &amp; happy holidays to -all iium rhe
·
eve•yuw1g . . a enrures to com es to dramas. If your own VCR is not working properly, they can · employees at 1bp Of The Stairs.
refer you to thetr qualified techru&lt;;JanS who can repair it quickly and ineXpensively.
··
~· Backstreet Video, therr ~ourteous ~rsonncl are ~ways available to assist you with your
Over 6 Years Experience
selecnons and can answer any quesuons concerrung the!f moVJe. dub membership. Conveniently open 7
A contra.ctor wi0 a fine .reputation in this area for quality ~xcavating work is Roses' Excavatiltg,
days a week, they are available whenever you want to rent or return a movie. If you are interested in an
affordable altemanve to today's inflated costs of movie entertainment, visit Backstreet Video. The locared .at the mtcrsecnon of Pine Grove. Road and Route 124 m Racine, phone 949..2493. Having bot:h
the eqwpment and the necessary eX?Crnse, they arc prepared to rackle any size job.
employees at Backstn:et l1deo w.mt to WJsh you and yo~ a very safe &amp; happr holiday season
Land cleanng, levelmg, cxcavanng, trenching and Site.preparation are all provided by this professional
finn. In addinon, they also handle log hauling and heavy equipment hauling and offer complete dump
~umbing
truck seMces. Th~ can be depended upon for accurate and precise work when it comes to providing the
Many Amencans h~ve learned to enjoy ~eir leisure hours working aroWld the house on do-it· exalt slppe for drainage or sewer and water lme work. Xou'U fin~ that their equipment will ~ delivered
yourself proJects such as. installing new pl!!ffibmg fixmres and the like. Not only is it an enjoyable and to your stte when pronuscd, and the JOb complcr~ on nn1e.' avotding costly delays. In addition to these
creanve way to ~nd off_~ours, but ~y domg the work yourself and buymg the fixtures and supplies at many seMces, this ~ompany can be called 011 to insiall septlc tanks or construct ponds and lakes. They
Cuter Plumbmg Electric &amp;: Heating, you can save plenty.
·
also offer the finest m concrete and block work of all types. .
.
.
Carter P~bing El~c &amp; Heating is located at 5310 Hebbardsville Road in Athens, phone
They have built thc!f reputanon through years of dedicated, safe, profesSional work offered at
594-4259. ;rus finn ts well liked by the pcopl~ of this area for th.eir efforts to sell high-quality products, compennve ra~es. Roses'. Excavating has. come to be relied on by builders, developers and others
backed by v. arranty, .at rea~nablc p~ces. You. will also find that therr sales people are very accorrunodating throughout this commll!uty, and they are licensed, bonded and insured for your protection. The entire
and can expertly assist you m choosmg the nght merchandise for the job.
crew at Roses' Excarntmg w.mrs to wrsh all the people of the area happy holidays.
. They ft"arure such famous brand names including ~. The extra measure of quality built into
thru fixtures, ptpcs1 valves and nuscellaneous supplies along With the fine service they render will make
fun Monis, Manager
your pltunbmg proJelt a breeze.
.
You'll be home at the Colonial Village Thwnhomes, located on North Ritchie Street in Ravens·
'Nhether yo;.r're merely interested in replacing a faucet or are a professional pltunbing contractor
you'll find tt all at Carter Plumbing Electric &amp;: Heati.ng.
' wood. Ph9ne them at (3~). 273-3344 for rental infonnation. Today, many people are ruming to the
to~'llhome for lu:runous liVJng and convcruence. By rennng instead of owning, you can eliminate
mar_ntenance e~nse, real estate tax and other homeowner problems. Renting is often a better financial .
~dge
John K. Bentz, Owner &amp; Mechanic
opnon tl1an buymg.
·
. No car will nm forever withol!t propercare and maintenance. At some rime or other, we must all
The buildings and groWlds of the Co~o~ Village 'J?wnh~es are professionally managed and
drive our.car m to be setvic~d In this area, v.~se motonsts go straight to the experienced professionals at well·mamramed at all nmes. ~street parking 1s proVIded m well lit areas for your safety and security.
Eagle Ri~e Auto Repair, located at 33930 Bentz Road m Raane, phQrie 949..2756. Here, their These t?wnhomes are converuently located near area businesses, schools and shopping areas, and are
reputanon ts b_ack~d by many yc;ars of expenencc and many satisfied customers.
·
HUD·approved housmg. They offer you a real sense 9f pnvacy as well as convern~nce. The Colonial
Eagle Ridge Auto Reprur fearures complete repairing on all makes of em and trucks. They have ~e 'lbwnhomesfearures 3 and 4 bedroom rownhomcs \VIth wall·to-waU carpenng and the latest in
become known as a complete, fuU-semce auto repatr cente£ The mechanics here have had years of kitchen appliances.
·
expenence m the automo~ve repair field and use only the latest factory approved techniques. An)'thing
. Ifyou would like worry·frec living in a mcxlcm, luxurious atmosphere, look to the Colonial Village
from a rune·up, to a brakC·JOb, to a complete ove~ul will be capably handled by their knowlegeable staff. 1bwnhomes for more than JUST a roof over your head. Gtvc them a call soon. Season's Greetings to
With thm cxpemse and today's technology, they will be able to add years to the life of your ou:
everyone from the management of Colonial Wlage 1bMJlwmes.
·
.
.
Today's auromobil.c ts. a maJOr mvestment Protect your investment by making sure only well-qualified
people arc en~ed With Its care.•ror the finest .m automotive repair and service, take youi car in to the
~~ !':!e~
Repah: Mcny Chpsrmas livm all rhe fiiendly, dependa.ble people at Eagle
•. Most people hayc ·fon? memories of the caring treanne~t thl')' received from tl1eir family aoctor.
:&amp;om brok~n ?one.s to rouru1c chcck·ups, he was always there when you needed medical attentJOil The
Holzer Clinic snwes to mamtam the combmatJon of old·fushioned skill and care.v.~th modem state·ofthe·art knowledge and technology.
Public accoWlting, as well as many other aspects of our present society, has changed dramatically in
Emergcnaes suc.h ~ bums1 cuts or broken bonC!i can happen quickly. Viruses, including colds and
the .last decade. A good accountant must now be many things to ~s clie~~cle-a manasement advisor, a .
influ~r:za, often reqwre uru;u;diate attennon. That's ~en you need tl1e reliable services of a family
bus~ consultant, a fi.nanaal.planner and an mvestment counselor m addinon to providing the traditional
phys1aan. The Holzer Clink provtdes prompt, protesstonal ·treatment for minor emergencies and
audit, accounnng and tax sctvices.
complete fumily. medical. care:' They can qwckly ~t anything from infections to sprained ankles as well
. Kenneth E. Rus.sell believes it is his responsibility to provide each and every one of these services
as pqforrn rounne medical check-ups. With tl1c1r recently expar1ded fucilities, they arc prepared to serve
m order tofulf).ll the t'Vcr changmg needs of tl1e busmesses and private individuals. He provides 'ust the
nghr C?mbmanon of finanaal sctviccs and accounnng skills. His office can be fOWld at 2 South dn
· you even better
Conveniently l?CJted at 150 Mill Street in Middlcpott, phone 992-7271, their office is open
Street m Athens, phone 5948223. Kenneth E. Russell has always been dedicated to personal attc~
Monday through Friday from 8:30a.m..to 5:00p.m. and on Sarurday from 8:30a.m. to 11:30 am. When
and quality standards of SCIVKc.
.
_
net-d cm~rgency treannent or regular rounne medical care, it's t~ce to know tl1at there is a skilled
Usinff, mcxlem compurer technology and the latest accoWlting techriiques, he fills an ever widenin you
physraan available to rake care of~otlf nc~ds. May your holidays be happy, sa!C ;md peaceful from the
range. of c ent needs. ~~:;Jou own a large or small business or'Simply n&lt;;_ed some personal financi~
profcssronals ar The Holzer Clinic.
planrun.g~ Kenneth E.
Is the accmmnng professronal to see. He will put his years of experienee
:!a=~ ~C::l~.~&amp;!i{ you and yo~ have peace, love and joy all throughout this holiday

fran:

Roses' Exava1;ing, Inc.

Electric &amp; Heating

MONDAY
ALFRED- The Orange Town·
ship Trustees will meet in special
session Monday, 7 p.m. at the ·
borne of Dorothy Calaway, clerk.
REEDSVILLE- The Eastern
Local Board of Education will
meet In special session ,Monday.
7 p .m at the high school.

Auto.Repair

Auto

The Holzer Clinic

Kenneth E. RusseD

COOner qhrysler Plymouth Dodge, Inc.

Great Bend Electric

Raymond E. Proffitt, President

Ii:Jr the finest in residc~tial or commercial electrical contracting, the people to call in this area are
those at Great Bend Electric located on Route 124 in Racine, phone 949..2438.
. These contractor.; are well ~ogmzed for their high standar&lt;\s of work and their ability to complete
the Job m the. shortest nme posstble. No matter what tjpe of electrical work is needed, these contractors
have had £reviOUS expenences wrth It and can assure~u of a first rare.job a.t.reasonable prices. Th hire
only br'J:d personnel t~ ass1sr ~~m and they are . licensed, bonded and insured for your p~on.
.
~ El~c speaalizes. m all phaseS o elccrncal ~ontracting. Regardless of whether it's a
new msrallal:!&lt;?n, a rewmng JOb1 elccrnc hear or emergency repm, they have the experience n.
to
~omplete tl1e JOb m a most cffiaent manne[ They make It a pomt to provide expert electrical w~ch
IS always firushed as qwckly and carefully as possrble.
~en you have a job th~t demands. an electrical contractor, contact the professionals at Great Bend
Elcdr!C. Regardless of the s1ze ~f the JOb, if you want it done right these are the people to call. The
cmployc:es ar Great Bend EliXtnc would like to extend thor w.mnest wishes for a happy holiday season·
.

"Yok~Ifo-it.AU Dealer"

. Thi~ progressive dealership is considered by many t6 be the most outstanding car and truck dealer
m the cnnre ~·Cooper Chrysler PlymoutbDodge, located at 399 South 3rd m Middlepott, phone
992-6421, IS your autl1onzed dealer and sen:ce headguarters for the famolts Cm-pler ~lymouth and
Dodge cars and nucks. Here, you \Vlll find a umt best SUited to your driving needs, a!ld they can ~pccial
order a car or nuck built to yollf exact tcqUJrements.
·
.The ~~ement at Cooper ChrySlct: Plymo~.Dodgc h~s made it a point to hire only fiilly
qualified techniaans who can handle any SCtviCC or repatr JOb. You will find that tht')' have one of the best
semce departments an)'Where, and keep a compk;te mventory of patts and accessories on hand for your
converuence.
·
Nowadats, v.~th so many firms offering cars ar1d trucks for sale, it is hard to select a dealer wl1o you
know to be re abl~. Smart buyer.; have leamc~ dmt they can depend upon Cooper Chrysler :Plymouth
Dodge _for all thc!f automc:uve needs. If you re m the market for a new 1988 car or truck or a quality
reconditioned vehicle, drop m soon ;tnd meet the friendly folks at Cooper. Chrysler Plymouth Dodge.
They are sure tO have Just what you re looking for. Tlus finn WO(Ud also like to C.&gt;.1end season's greetings
ro you and yo~m.
·
·
•

We've got real healthy kids. All
our kids were born at home."
Isaacs's health prqmpted him
to move from the hollow , where
they walked nearly a mile up a
steep mountain to reach a
narrow track that snaked its way
back and forth across a creek for
another mlle to the nearest
blacktop road.
''I'm getting up In years, and
we have to have some money to
get by," said Isaacs, whd now
works as a tobacco stripper in
Lexington.
"Where we lived. we had to
walk. When we had an automo·
bile, we had to park 1ton the top of
a mountain and walk up the creek
to it. And we had this big old
swinging bridge across the
creek. We ain't got that to worry
about no more."
Sending the youngest children
-ranging In age from 5 to 15- to
sc hool was especially hard on
Issacs and his wile.
"After we send the kids to
school, we're by ourselves," she
said. "It's the first time that's
ever happened. We sure like to
see that school bu s come back In
the afternoon."
As the Isaa cs children grew up
and moved away, they began

brooms.
wanting an education.
....
"Now I've got a vacuum
Brenda Isaacs Walker, 27. the
cleaner,''
Eva Isaacs said.
couple's eldest d.a ughter, was the
Herman
Issacs said the family
first in the family to finish high
"
ha
s
not
changed
all that much
school, winning a graduate equiso
(ar."
valency diploma early this year.
"We stili plan to raise inost of
"They came to my . gnidua·
our
food and do our canning," he
tiion" she said. "Things had
"Really, we ain't got
said.
changed that much from when 1
adjusted to It yet."
,
started."
The couple married in 1956
Isaacs said the children are
after Isaacs was drafted into the
adjusting to school.
"School was new to them lor a Army and sent to Baltimore,
while,'' Isaacs said, " but they're where he met Eva, then a high
getting used to it. l ain't heard no school student. She dropped out
.complaints, they all like it. Estes, · after the lOth grade and moved
my oldest boy going to school, with him to the mountains .
Most of Isaacs's brothers and
just shook his head he doesn't,
sisters.
never went to school. His .
but I think he does."
father
went
to jall frequently for
Eva, Isaacs ' wife, agreed.
keepi
ng
his
chlldren out of
"Estes says he doesn't like it
too good, but he's doing well, so school.
" He kept with It un til they ~at
he must like it all right,' ' she said
tired
of keeping him," said
of her 14·year-old son. ''Since our
oldest girl got her 1diploma ), we Isaacs, who perm itted only one
decided the others could get an book - the Bible - In the house
education. They like being out until recently .
"We knew :when we moved out
here on the road too, they can get
we'd
have to send them to school
out more."
During more tha n 30 years oi to keep from causing trouble,"
marriage, the Isaacs have lived Eva Isaa:cs said. ''I'd teach them
far from grocery stores. They at h'ome more than I did before
grew all their own food; putting because they really. want to
up almost 1,500 jars every year, learn. But I wouldn't send them if
and made their own soap and I didn ' t have to. "

Community calendar

Colonial Vdlage 'lb-wnhomes

to~

Veteran's party coriducted .·

'

Backstreet Video

'.

Page-7

..

By WILLIAM C. TROTr
United Press International
•
FOOD AND FIGHTING: Bob Geldol Is .waiting to see if
anyone heeds his call for a cease·flre in Ethiopia. The
famlne·llghtlng rock singer returned to London Sunday after a
12·day tour of Ethiopia and Mozambique and warned of another
famine. "We may see again those horrendous pictures and
believe me If you do see them your conscience w111 be twinged."
' he said. Relief organizations, such as Geldof's own Band·Aid,
are frustrated because wars In both nations have blocked
efforts to get food to the starving.
"Both rebel groups have claimed they will attack convoys of
food and the Ethiopian authorities close the roads because they
can't make them secure, so nothing can move," he said. "Band
Aid trucks were fully loaded and ready to go buf there was no
security clearance at the last minute." Geldof says he asked lor
a cease·fire the day he left Ethiopia. ''I am still asking although
I'm told by every person on the planet that It Is not possible," he
said. "But of course It is possible if you want it. Neither side
wants it."
SANTA SINATRA: Frank Sinatra is offering to play Santa
Claus to a Miami mother &lt;tnd her four kids. Sinatra read a
· newspaper story about the plight of unemployed secretary
Emella Coleman, the president of a Crime Watch chapter who
was burglarized' by thieves who took the Christmas presents
Intended fo'r her kids.
·
"He wanted to make sure that her kids have a good holiday ,"

Squad has five run

. )~USINESS REVIEW

Eagle

Monday,. December 14, 1987

People in the .news

&gt;

&lt;Arter

The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 14, 1987

BEDFORD - The Bedford
Township Trustees will meet In
regular session, 7 p.m. Mon'day
at the town hall.

.I

RA,!=JNE - The Board of
Public Affars will meet Monday
at 7 p.m. at the Shrine Park
building in Racine.

p.m. at the high school cafeteria.
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. will meet Tuesday at the
home of Anne Chapman, High
St., 7 p.m. Members are to take
gifts wrapped In white paper and
·
a red bow.
MIPDLEPORT - A special
meeting of Middleport Lodge 363,
F&amp;AM will be held Tu esday, 7
p.m . at the hall. Work In the
fellowcraft degree will be exem·
plified. Refreshments will be
served.

RACINE - Racine Lodge 461,
F&amp;AM will meet in special
session Tuesday , 7: 30 p.m. for
MIDDLEPORT - Heath Uni- the purpose of installing new
ted Methodist Women will meet . officers. A fish fry will follow . All
Monday at the home of Pauline masons are invited.
Horton, 7:30 p.m.
:---

TUESDAY
RAC !NE - Regular meeting
of the Southern Local School
Bard will be held Tuesday at 7

MIDDLEPORT- Group II.of
the Mldd leport Prsesbyterian
Church will meet Tuesday at the
church, 7:30 p.m. Mrs. Harry

Moore · wlll have the Christmas
program and the thank offering
will be taken. In lieu of a gift
exchange, members will coin·
tribute to a needy family. Mrs.
Moore, Kathryn Hysell. and Mrs.
Eddie Burkett will be hostesses.

holidays. Offices will reopen on
Jan . 4 at 8:30a.m.
School program
RACINE - Racine Elemen·
tary School will present a Christmas program on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
Church. Everyone is welcome to
attend.
Bloodmobile
POMEROY -The Red Cross
Bloodmobile will be at the Senior
Citizens Center in Pomeroy on
Wednesday from 1 to 5:30 p.m.
Blood Is urgently needed.
,

POMEROY ~ Fraternal
Order of the Eagles Ladies
Auxiliary 2171 will met Tuesday
at 7 p.m at th{' hall. There will be

~~~~~~rs ?~r:a re%~~d~~~~dt~~~ '
Items for the Christm as baskets.
Planned parenthood
POMEROY - Planned Par·
enthood of Southeast Ohio patient
services offices will close Dec. 23
at 5 p.m . In observance of the

Phoio, fund raiser
SALISBURY- Salisbury Ele·
mentary students may pick up
their pictures and fund raiser gift
items at the school on Monday
from 6: 30 to 8 p.m. If you a r_e
unable to pick up the items on
Monday you may pick them up at
the school any day until 2. Pleas
call the school at 992·3404 if you
have any questions. All back·
orders have arrived.

NEW YORK ( UPI) -A unique
Salvation Army program that
gives homeless people a high
school education and a chance at
a new life has produced 40
graduates wha t have gone on to
jobs, technical schOols and uni·
verst ties, a spokesman said. Seven of the most recent
graduates, men who before the
program were living In Grand
Central Terminal , gathered Sun·
day to collect tbe high sc hool
equivalency diplomas they
earned in the program.
The program provides parlici·
pants with a place to live and with '
classes l.n English, mathematics,
social 's tudies and religion so they
can pass state examinations for
th e General Eq ui va lenc y
Diploma.
Participants are required to .
give up drugs and a lcohol to join
the program, said Capt. Sven
Ljungholm, head of the SalvatiGn
Army's Manhattan center.
Ljungholm said the program
was the first of its kind In the
country. Forty men have earned
their diplomas since the program
began, 'he said .

and taught classes three nights a
week , he said.
Before receiving his diploma,
valedictorian J11mes Godwin, 33,
of Queens, thanked the group for
helping him and his c lassma tes.
"It took a tremendous amount
offortltude and self·b elleving to
reach this special event iii our
lives,' ' he said.
All seven graduates joined the
Salvation APmy .
One of the two new graduates
unable to attend the ceremony
had returned to his wife and

family, Ljungholm said, adding
that many of the program's
graduates have renewed ties
with their families.
Four of the men who graduated
in June .were accepted to Ford·
ham University, he said.

• SPECIAL SAVINGS •

POLYESTER QUILT BAniNG •••••S250
SHEETING
QUILTING THREAD .......................... 3/Sl oo

EASTERN HILL FABRIC SHOP·

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
·

. Poinsettias

Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus
House Plants ,
Live &amp; Cut Christmas Trees
Candle Arrangements
Grave Blankets
Monument Sprays
OPEN DAILV 9· 5
SUNDAY 1·5
SYRACUSE
992-5776

Diet Pills Sweeping U.S.

has party
for members

Doctors Invent
'Lazy Way' to
Lose Weight

The annual Christmas dinner
party of the American Legion
Auxi liary, Lewis Manley Post
263, was held at Bob Evans Steak
Hou se in Gallipolis. Annette
New 'Fat Magnet' Diet Pill
Johnson, chaplain, had the table
Guarantees Fast Weight Loss
grace.
BEVERLY HILLS, CA (Special)Members ihen went to the
An
amazing new weight loss pill called
o.ecorated home of Dorothy Ca·
"fat-magnet"
has recently been
sey for a social hour and gilt
and
perfected
by two prom- .
developed
exchange. There was singing of
inent
doctors at aworld ftunous hospilal
"Joy to the World" led by
in Los Angeles that reportedly
Margaret Bowles and prayer by
"guarantees" that you will easily lose
Mrs. Johnson.
fat by simply taking their tested and
Virginia Stahlworth won the
proven new pill.
door prize. Ice cream, cake,
No Dieting-Eat Normally
punch, eggnog, candies an
Best
of ali, "you cnn continue to eat
Christmas mix were served by
·
all
of
your
favorite foods and you don't
the hostess .
have to change your nonnal eating
habits. You will start losing fat from
the very first day, until you achieve the.
ideal weight and Jigure you desire."·
There has never been anything like
. it before. It is a totally new major
medical breakthrough for weight loss
(worldwide patent pending).
Flushes Fat Out ot Body
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The new pill is appropriately called
Kristen Green is a champion
the "fat-magnet" pill because it breaks_
among her fellow students at
into thousands of particles, each act·
Columbus DeSales High School
ing like a tiny magnet. "attracting" and
today.
trapping many times its size in fat parti·
The .i7·year·old senior told the
cles. Then, all that trapped fat is
stud ents at the Catholic school
naturally'&gt;'flushed" right out of your
about seeing an elderly man
body because it cannot be digested.
' come Into a community kitchen
Within 2 days you will notice a
to get a free meal beGause his
change in the color of your stool as
wife was IlL Kristen urged the
the fat particles are being eliminated.
students to donate cans of food to
"Pills Do All the Work"
help stock the pantry at the
According
to the doctors, the fat·
kitchen.
magnet pills do all the work while you
.. Co llecting canned food during
quickly
lose fat with no starvation diet
the Advent season is an annual
menus
to
follow, no calorie counting,
event at the schOol in an affluent
no
e&lt;ercising,
and no hunger pangs.
section of the capital city that ha s
It
is
100%
safe.
You simply take the
aboul 1,000 students . Last year ,
pills
with
a
glass
of
water before meals.
the students gathered 4,000 cans .
The fat-magnet pills have just been
" I said, 'Why don't we have a
offered to the American public and are
goal of 10.000 cans? If we don 't hit
already sweeping the country with
10,000 ca ns, at least we'd get
record sales and reports of dramatic
more than last year," Kristen
weight loss. It's the "lazy way" to lose
said In reference to her speech to
weight for people who enj,oy eating.
students at a pep rally.
Now Available to Public
Kristen Is one of about 25
If
you
need to lose 20, 50, 100 pounds
students who spend one day ,a
or
more,
you can order your supply
week helping serve free meals to
of
these
new
highly successful fat·
the needy at the kitchen In a
magnet
pills
(now
available from the
low·income section of the city.
dcx;tor's
exclusive
manufac!'Jrer by
"Everyone took il lightly at
mail
or
phone
order
only) by sending
first. and then Kristen told us
$20
for
a
90
pill
supply
( +$2 hand·
what it was like at the commun·
ling),
or
$35
fora
ISOpillsupply(+$3
ity kitchen," said junior Dan
handling), cash, checkormoneyorder
Sprout.
to: Fat-Maonet, 9016 Wilshire Blvd.,
The drive picked up. Student
Dept. W705, Beverly Hills, CA 90211 .
groups began competition to see
(
Uncondilional nwney-btu:k gruii'IUI•
which one could bring in the most
lee
if not 100-k salisfied.) Visa
cans. The school also offered an
Master&lt;:ard
and American E~pres~ ·
incentive, allowing any student
·OK.
(Send
card
number, expire date,
who brought in ld 'cans to wear
and
signature.)
For
fastest service for
regular clot~es to schOol·one day
credit
card
orders
ONLY
call anytime
In lieu of the traditional Uniform.
24
hours,
toll
.
free
1(800)527-&lt;rmO,
Students will deliver 17,299
ttlFIH•4agnc• 1981
cans of food today to the kitchen .. ext.· W705,

Senior inspires
students to
collect food
for the needy

St ublis sa id he had lived at the
railway terminal for about a
week "as a last hope" before
joining the program at a Salva·
tton Army building in
Manhattan.
He blamed his lack of responsi·
bility for his homelessness, ex·
plalnlng, "That's why a lot of
people are on the streets."
Stubbs said he was born in the r--------------------------1
Bahamas and came to New York
five years ago to work odd Jobs at
restaurants. He said he studied ·
with the Salvation Army for slx
90"
yd,
months and went otf to a
Manhattan business Institute,
90"
In White &amp; Natural ................ $425 yd.
where he graduated earlier this
month. He plans to work as a
computer operator.
"I have two job Interviews this
·LARGE SUPPLY OF QUILTING STENCILS
week," he said,
Participants In the Salvation
Army program are given jackets
985-3909
and ties, allowed to live In the
Located 6 Milas North of Chester on State Rt.7
church's basement, given food

Fatten yoll Hallet ·
with awant Rd

Hubbards Greenhouse

Auxiliary

Program to ·educate homeless graduates
"I heard about It 1the pro·
gram) from somebody else off
the streets," said Jeffrey Stubbs,
28. who received his diploma at
the ceremony Sunday.

other items were given to the
veterans who were served re·
freshments a! the party.
.
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners.

JOHN A: WADE, M.D. ·Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENE~AL ALLERGIST
"VIE HA'IE HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992·21 04
(304) 675-1244

TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL

,

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
YOU CAN EAT
COMBINATION DINNER ONLY .
(Dining Room 011ly I
Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy. cole
slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry, no substr·.
tutes except beverage with additional price.

FOR JUST

s·
2

$·3 '
•

NOW FEATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5432
POMEROY, OH.
Featuring Kentucky Fried Chicken •

�•
Page,--8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Monday. December

CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio
(UPI) - Rex Humbard Is
plannlqg to return as a television
evangelist, but does not intend to
become the permanent pastor of
the Cathedral of Tomorrow,
according to his son.
Humbard's son and business
manager, Rex Humbard Jr., said
his father does not Intend to
become pastor of the church
where he delivered the sermon
Sunday after the regular pastor
had been fired.
Humbard, who founded the
church 34 years ago, was called
on to preach Sunday to "help the
congregation," said Jerry Wear,
acting chairman of the church's
board of trustees.

floodwall at Pt Pleasant, W.Va. In the photograph above, a small plaque was placed on a little
brick wall marking the spot were the bridge once
stood In Pt. Pleasant. ( OVP photos by Lee Ann
Welch)

property adjacent to the church,

IN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
Western Credit
\)nion. Inc.

Plaintiff

vs

John 0 . Wilson, et al
Defendants

CASE NO. 87-CV-144
NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of an Order of
Sale 1ssued out of Common
Pleat Court of M
County, Ohio, .in the case
Weatern Credit Union Inc.,
Plaintiff, against John 0

Commencing at a post at
the Southwest corner of said
Section Thirty, which post
on the centerline of the
Township Road; thence
along said Township Road
the following courses and
di1tances: North 37 deg 33'
10" Eaat a distance of
243.41 feet to apolnt and

South 88 dog 53' 08" Eaota

dlttanca of !88 37 feet to a
point, which point it the true
point of beginning of thla
survey, thence leaving said

road North 25 dog. 34'11"
W•t a distilnce of 563 68

Wilson, Sr ot at., Defend· feet to an iron pin; passing
antt, upon a judgement
therein rendered. being Case

an Iron pin at 40.00 feat;

Court. I will offer for sale, at
the front door of the Court
Hou• in Pomeroy, Meigs

633.04 feat to an iron pin;

thence North 86 dog. 38'

No. 87-CV-144, In 10ld 30'' Eatt

County, Ohio, on tho 16th
day of January, 1988 at
1 0 ·30 a m the following
Ianda and tenements. to wit:

Described and aet forth
Exhibit A and 8, which

a

distance of

thence North 75 deg .
49'13" East a distance of
863.62 feet to a point on the
centerline of aaid County

Rottd.South 17 dog. 45' 13"
Eat a distance of 239.90
feet to a point; thence
laavlna said Countv Road

attached hereto and incorpo- South 88 dog . 68'44" Weot
rated h•eln.

EXHIBIT A; TRACT FIVE
13.2979 acroo.
Situated in tho To'wnohit~ I
of ScipiO, County
end

Authorities search for former Ohioan

The death remained a complete mystery until a story
recappmg the puzzling events
appeared In ' this month's Reader' s D1gest. A Wyoming family
saw possible connections between their former foster child
and the discovery of "Li ttle Boy
Bl ue, ·• as the umdentified boy
had come to be known.
Fam1iy members told Thayer
County Sher iff Gary Young that
D~n ny Stut zman had been their
foster child until he was picked
up by his fa ther in December
1985 They se nt Young a photograph of Danny that resembled
"Little Boy Blue "
When E l1 Stutzman Jr visited
OhiOin 1986, Danny was not seen
with him , Werner sa id.
The elder Stutzman was born
to a n Amis h couple near Dalton,
Ohio, but left the conservative
order after his wife died in a barn
fire in 1977
Wern er said a uthorities
''firmly believe" Danny is the
boy found near Chester and that
El1 Stutzman has co nnections In
the area .
" We be lieve tha t we k1 v
where he has been very recently
· and we are actively pursuing him
at this time," Werner sa id. " We
hope to have him in custody very
soon, but how soon is matter of
s peculation "
Authorities are awa1 t1ng labor
a tory results to co nfir m whether
Danny is L1 ttle Boy Blue.
"At this point, I have to say we
• haven :t confirmed that (Id e_n-

tlty) through laboratory re·
suits," Werner said. "However,
based upon the picture, based
upon numerous physical characteristics, there appears to be a
resemblance between Danny and
the boy found in Chester - that
he Is one and the same person.
"I can confirm that people who
'knew Danny most recently have
said that they feel 1t 's the same
boy ~··

Werner dechned to confirm
reports the fugi !Jve was seen last
m the Da lias area, saymg confir-

matlon would jeopardize the
Investigation and arrest
Young said he planned over the
holidays to visit Ohio residents
who knew the Stutzmans.
Wayne County (Ohio) Sheriff
Loran Alexander said Young
asked him to be on the lookout for
Stutzman.
·"We have a good working
relationship with the Amish, so If
(Stutzman's) around, sooner or
later we'll probably hear about
it I understand he's traveling,"
Alexander said.

State

of

bounded and datlcrtbed
follows
Be1ng

part

of

Sect1on

a distance of 32 38 feet to
an Iron pin: thence South 67

dog. 64' 46" West a dll·

tanca of 740.98 teet to an
iron pin; thence South 44

dog. 07' 19" Wast a d••·

tance of 208 92 feet to a
paint on the 1 centerline of
aid Township Road. Palling an iron pin at 168.92
feat; thence North 86 dea

Number Thirty (30!, Town·
ship Seven (71 North, Range
Fourteen (14! Watt of tho 53' 08" Wnt a distance of
Ohio River Survey, and more
partiCularly described 11
follows:

a landmark In Cuyahoga Falls.

POMEROY
MERCHANTS
ARE OPEN
TONIGHT
TILL
8:00p.m.

Public Notice

394 16 feet to the place of
beginning, subject to the
right of way of •aid Town-

Public Notice
ship Road and of said
County Road, and contain·

ing 13.2979 acres
REFERENCE. Volume
281, page 417, Meigs

County Deed Recorda.

EXHIBIT B, TRACT
FOUR, 10.201 B ACRES.

Situated in the township
of Scipio, County of Meigs,

and Sta1o of Ohio and

bounded and dncribed as
follows:
Being part of Section

Number Thirty (30), Townahip Sovon (7) North, Range
Fourteen (14) West of Tho

Ohio River Survey, and more
part1cularly described as
followa;
Commencing at a post at
the Southwest corner of said
Section Thirty, which pott Is
on the centerline of tht\
Township Road ; thence
along the Wast line of said

Section Thirty North 00
dog., 00' 00"- Eaot a dlotance of 1018 61 feet to an
iron pin; thence North 80
dea. 06' 33" Eut &amp;]distance
of 284 96 feet to an iron pin;
thence South 26 deg 34·
11" Eaat a diltaf'IC&amp; of
1003 63 feet 'to 111 point in
the centerline of taid Town·
ship Road. passing tron pins
at 439 95 feet and at
963.83 feet; thence along
the centerline of said Township Road the following
couraea and distances:

North 86 dog. 53' 08" West
a distance of 566.37 feet to
a p01n1 and South 37 deg
33' 10" Wast a distance of

1

243 41 feat to the place of
beginning, subject to the
rtght of way of the Township
Road and containing

10.2018 acres
REFERENCE; Volume
261, Page 417 Maig•
County Deed Recorda.
Said parcel• appraised at.

64,600 00.

Termt of Sale: Cash.
The real estate cannot be
sold for laSJ than two-thirds
of the appraised value.
Howard E Frank.

Shariff of
Meigs County, Ohio
(12) 14, 21, 28, 3tc

•
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 1, 1987, in
tho Meigs County I'Jobllle
Court. Case No 26703 Daniel J

Public Notice

RUTLAND VILLAGE
WATER DEPARTMENT•
RATES AND
. REGULATIONS

his / her own line, service will
be discontinued upon dll·
covary aftd not ra·inatalled
until the check valve hal
bean put in
4 . 81!11 and notices relet·
1ng to the conduct of busl·
ness of the Village w111 be
ma1led to the customer 1t
his/ her addreas listed, un·
hbs a change of address h11
been filed in wrlttng at the
business offtce of tt,e Vii·
lage: and the Vtllage shall
not otherwiSe be responsible
for delivery of any bill or
notice, nor wdl the customer
be eltcuaed from non·
payment of a bill or from any
performance reqUired in 111d
notice
5 All melera shall be
installed. maintained, and
renewed by and at the
expense of ttye Village, and
the Village reeerves the rtght
to determine the size and
type of meter uted
5a After signalure of
agreement. Village will have
the npht to 1natall a service
line and meter on said
property
6 . Where a meier haa
ceased to reg1tter. or meter
readmg could not be ob·
tamed, the quanttty of water
consumed for billing pur·
posea wdl be based upon an
average of the prior IlK
months consumption, and
the conditions of water
service preva1hng during the
period tn whtch the meter
failed 10 register.

regulations of the State
Board of Health Piptng from
the V1tlage water meter and
User's other system (1f used)
1s-not to merely be separated
by \lalvea which can be
turned off or on to atop or
stan water flow Systems
must be twodlatinctty separated sets of piping.· Water
service can be discontinued
1f these standards ere not
met.
13 If any loss or dama'ga
to the property of the V1llage
or any acc1dent or injury to
persons qr property is
cautBd by or results from the
nagli'gance or wrongful act
of the User, member of
his/ her household.. his agent
or employee, the cost of the
necesBBry repairs or replace·
menta shall be 1 paid by the
customer to the Village and
any liability otherwise result·
ing shall be that of the User.
13a. The deposit amount
for all new customers IS

••tumed- not honored for

Real Estate General

State Route 681, Roodovlto.
Oh10 46772, Will oppoinled
EM!Mor of tho -to of Ma·

deline Faye BuchiNR, d•
ceaoed, late of 52856 State

Route 681, Roadllvltlo. Oh10
45772
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge

E Main·-

POMEROY, 0.
992-2259

Lena K Nes•lroad, Clerk

(12!7, 14,21 3tc

MIDDLEPORT - N1ce gar
age apartment m town 3
bedrooms, full base ment, alf
condit ioned and all on a
level lot close lo s hoppm~
$21 ,90000

RACINE -

®

ApproXImately

3'h acres olland w1th a 3 4
bedroom home al so '"
eludes a small mob;le home
(or rental mcome ASKING
$24, 000 00

NEW
EVERY
DAY

PHARMAFACTS
By Carol N. Carson, R, Ph.

POMEROY - Frame house
with upper &amp; lower on bed
room apartments Good ren
tal '"'eslment' $300/mo
mcome potent;al ASKING
$14,900 00
IN THE COUNTRY - Over
70 acre farm w1lh older
ho me, garage and other
bu il din gs Close to Pomeroy
ASKING$4 2 500 00

CELE8R'ATE TODAY, LIVE FOR TOMORROW
DON'T DRINK AND DRIVE

•

Public Notice

HEMLOCK GROVE- PRICE
REDUCED- Country home
on I and one-third lot 3
bedrooms, new carpet, Insulated, attached garage,
cellar $30.000 00

786 N. 2nd
Middleport, Ohio
992-6491

~M

Public Notice

ratea, charges and rulea tor
the use and service of the
water syltem of Rutland
Vill_a9e pi Meigs County,
OhiO,
1 The Village shall install,
own. and maintpin at 1ts
expense that portion of the
service from\ the ;naln or
where tap was mai:le to the
lot or easement hno, lnclud·
tng the necanary meters.
tap, fittings and sh1Jt.off
valve and the customer shall
install and maintain at the
customer's own expense
that portion of the service
from the discharge s1de of
the meter saner to his/ her
premises. The village shall
determine the size and kind
of service to be installed If
plastic ptpe IS uaed. it should
not be less than 160# per
sauare tnch teat strength
and not less than 3/.t, Inch sao
pipe,
2. All taps and connac·
t1ons to the matns of the
vmaae shall be made by
and / or under the d~rection
and superv1a1on of water·
works personnel
3 ~ Water service may be
discontinued by the Village
for any \llolation of any rule.
regulation or conditiOn of
service, and '&amp;specially for
any of tho following reasons·
(a) Misrepresentation in
the application as to the
property or fixtures to be
supplied or use to be made of
water
(b) Billing is computed on
meter reading Meters are
read each month No adjust·
menu will be QI\/Bn for leaks
due to the State Auditor
Each meter is for one fam1ly
dwelling or 11ngle household
only More than oAafamllyls
not permitted unless com·
mercia! status is arranged
for through water off1ce
prior to any changes.
(c) Waste or misuse of
water. due to improper or
imperfect aerv1ce p1pes, an·
d/ or fixtures. or failure to
keep same 1n suitable state
of repatr Customer 11 to
keep h11 plumbing m goo&lt;t
repair to conserve water
(d) Tampenng with mater,
mater seal, aerv1ce, or
values. or pern\lttmg such
tampering by others Th11
also Includes damage to the
meter boK or lid
(e) Connection, cross·
connection, or perm1ttmg
same, of any separate water
supply to prem1aes wh1ch
receive water from the VII·
lege, &amp;Kcept as IS approved
by the V1llage 1n advance.
(d) If 1t IS found that a
customer has not matalled
their own check valve in

RUTlAND - N1 ce ranch type
home on a level lot 3 bedrooms, equ;ppoo krtchB~ close
to schools All m gotxl cond1

tKJn $33 500 00

'

MIDDLEPORT - This ~der 3
bedroom home features a
nver VIew &amp; a low pnce,, You
can mo'e nght m or use as a
rental Small lot $1 5,90000
LANGSVILLEAR£A -75acre
(arm, barn satellrte d~ h fenc
1ng Nice 4 bedroom home
w/country krtchen Owner may
help wrth fman ca MAI\E OFFER $48,900 00

NEW LISTING -

MIDDLE·
PORT - In one of the most
desirable n~ghborhotxls m
town 3 bedroom. 2 story
home mexcellent condrt1on I
car garaga W8 !;replace. full
basement and much more' A
MUST SEE' $54.900 00

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

1

•Remember that alcohol takes longer to g~t out of your tyttem than it
does to get in. Only time will get you sober Not fresh air Not cold
thowera Not coffee.
Fruth Pharmacy, m cooperation with Mothart Against Drunk Dr~ving
and the Ohio Department of Highway Safety will observe December 13·
19, 198?, as Natlon,al Drunk &amp; OruggeQ Drfving AwarenesaWMk. The
pharmaetsttet ~ruth 1 have prepared information packets on how we can
have a JBfe hohday aeaaon by keeping the Impaired drJver off lhe hi h·
ways Please stop by Fruth's and uk any pharmacist for your free packget.
And remember, as you enjoy this holiday saason. celebrate today but live
for tomorrow: don' t drink and drive.

NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- 4 bedroom. 2 story home
S1tt1ng room, d;nmg room,
and 'much more' ONLY

YEA~ GIFT SUBSCRIPTION ...................... Only .s57.20

$11,500 00

We will send a gift subscription card with your name telling of
your specia l gift.

HENRY E ClElAND, JR

TRUSSELl
TURNER
RIHl£,

THE"Your
DAILY
SENTINEL
Hometown Newspaper"
'

992-225~

A IJ)

•

1

.. :::::. ·:::: 94q • 308 0

rv''""' ...........

'

7. Village' s l1abihty· ·

(a) The Vtllage does not
assume the responSibility of
inspecting the User· s p1ping
or apparatus end will not be
responSible therefore
(b) The VIllage reserves the
r~ght to refuse servtce unless
the User' a lines or p1p1ng are
installed in such a manner as
to prevent cross·
connact1ons or beck flow

lei Tho Village ohall not be
hable for damage of any k1nd
whatsoever resulttng from
water or the use of water on
the User· a premises by the

VIllage. The Village shill not

be responsible for any dam·
age done or re1ult1ng from
any defects rn ptpmg, fiKturea. or appliances on the
User' s premtSea. The VIllage
shall not be respon11ble for
negligence of the th1rd per·
sons, or forces beyond the
control of the Village result·
ing in any tnterruption ot
SOJVICB.
(d) Under normal condt ·
tiona, the Users Will be
notifted of any ant1c1pated
interruptions of service
through the WMPO radio
station
(e) No adjustments are
made for water having
passed through the meter.
8 The V11lage shall make
all reasonable efforts to
eliminate interruptions of
service, and when such
interruptions occur, will an·
deavor to re· estabhsh ser·
v1ce w1th the shortest possi·
ble delay.
9. The Village shall 1n no
event be held responSible for
claim made against 11 b'/
reason of breaking of anv
main Imea or serv1ce prpe, or
by reason of any other
1nterrupt1on of the supply of
water caused by the break·
1ng of machinery or stop·
page for nacesury repairs,
and no person shall be
ent1tledto damages nor have
any portion of a payment
refunded for any mterrup·
tion of aerv1ce
10. Users having boilers
and/ or pressure \181118fs or
hot water tanks rece1v1ng a
supply of water from the
Village must have a check
valve on the water supply
line and a vacuum valve on
the steamline to pravunt
collapse m case the water
supply from the Village is
d11contmued or interrupted
for any reason. with or
without notice.
11 Pipmg on the premises
of 9 customer must be so
mstalled that connections
are conveniently located
with respect to the Village
hnes and mains. The customer shall provide a place of
metering, which 11 unobstructed and accesa1ble at all
times The customers shall
furnish and maintain a cutoff valve on his side of the
meter and the Village will
provide a like valve on Its
s1de of the meter The valva
provided by the Village is for
the VIllage employees use
only,
12 The customer's ser·
v1ca line shall be installed
and mamta1ned by thecustO·
mar at his / her own expense
m a safe and effiCient
manner and in accordance
with the Village rules and
regulat1ons and with the

$100.00. Th11 security dep-

osit amount will also be
required of all customers
who have had the1r serviCe
disconnected due to non·
payment at well 11 the
$40 00 re·connection fee
14 The VIllage w1ll COf'·
struct extanstons to its wa·
ter hnes to pomta withm its
serv1ce area. but the Village
shall not be requ~red to make
such installations Unless the
customer pays to the Village
the entue cost of
tnstallat1on
16 The VIllage may refuse
serv1ca to persons. not presently a user. when tn the
optmon of the Village the
capac1ty of the tac1htJBs wtll
not permit such service.
16. All Users are to have
shut· off valves accea11ble to
them on thatr stde of the
meter. so that there would be

NO REASON for tho User to
want to usa the Village's
shut-off valve mside the
meter pit or calhng water
VIllage employees to shut
off water ms1de meter pit.
The shut-off valve ins1de
meter pit is tor a~tclu 11\/e u58
of the Village only. Again.
the water user 11 to mstalt a
valve tor h1s/ her exclu si\le
use Any customer not now
having such a valvtt is
adv1sed to mstall one.
17. Charges to tho User
for service calls to turn off
water. either becau ae cu sto
mer has not matallad h1s/ her
own shut-off valve or does
not know where his/ her
shut·off valve is located m
the event of frozen lines or
needs to make rap•ir for
some reason, will" be a
minimum service charge of
$10 00 during work1ng
hours After 4:00p.m. Mon·
day through Friday.
Saturdays·Sundays·or Holi·
day caltt for assistance from
the VIllage employeea will be
at an overtime rete of
&amp;20.00 This ht wage if
employees are called out for
any reason after hours. Each
water user must have
his/ her own shut-off valve
after the mater so UserS may
contrdl water on their aide of
meter without removing me·
tar hd During freezing
temperatures when the me·
tar lid 11 removed. it can
cause a meter to freeze in a
very few minutes.
18. Care that any Vtllage
equipment located on a
peraon't property including
mater equipment.. p1p1ng,
tanks, boosters, pressure
reducmg stat1ons, and
valves or any device necessary~ for operat1on of water
service 11 not to be tampered
w1th or uead by anyone
except Vttlage employees. If
any of the above 1tems are
damaged or destroyed and
having to be repaired or
replaced. will be pa1d for by
persons responsible. Exam·
pies would be a delivery
truck or mowing device
getting too close to Village
items or driving over same
items. removing co..,er from
a water hna or mater expos·
ing either to damage from
freeze. or traveling Jcross
water line cauaing damage,
or if anything inside mater
pit be damaged and have to
be replaced.
19. A User having a water
mater and having a dalin·
quant account for services
performed by the Village for
a water user or his agent. or a
water user who owns a
property and rants to others,
will become subject to d1s·
continuance of water ser·
vice at tho service of any
persons or buainesaas or
combination of the same
until each account is paid
currant and '" full, including
penalties and delinquent
charges
20. Charges for checks

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-tlc

I I

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

,., Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

check

""""

not

be

- Television Listening Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; SeJvicel

honored.

a:
L'
ed
&lt;C ICeOS

same penon'. account is

not occepteblo for making
unless tho Bonk having

11bililv for making an error in
returnmg tho chock, than the
$100 oo security doposh
will bo waived. Caoh. cashi-

er'"s check or money order
would be acceptable wayt to
pick up a returned check.
Water 11 subject to inj'medlat~ d11connection ~pon
reca1pt of a returned check
to the OffiCI
21 . The customer shall
connect the serv1ce line to
the Village distribution sv•
tem and shall commence to
use water from the system
on the date the water is
made available to the Custo·
mer by the V•llage. Water
charges to the Customer
shall commence on the data
serv1ca is made available.
regardless of whether the
Customer connocts to the
system. In the event the
Customer shall breach th11
contract by refusmg or fail·
mg, without just causa, to
connect a aervice hne to the
Vtllage' a distribution system
as set forth abo\le, the
Customer agrees to pay the
VIllage a lump sum of Three

Hundred Dollars ($300.00)
as liquidated damages. It 1s
expressly understood and
agreed by the parties hereto
that the said amount is
agreed upon as liquidated
damagea 1n that a breach by
the Customer in either of the
respects set forth above
would be difficult. if not
1mpoas1ble. to prove the
amount of such damages.
The parties hereto ha\'e
computed probably actual
loss because of the difficutty
of est1mating with the exact·
ness the resulting damage.
22. Tapping pohcy and
fees:
(a} Each User, at the time
he/ she is connected with
the water work system shall
pay a charge of $360 00 or
actual construction costa

(b) If road bora and/ or
craak crossings are needed.
then UsarwJII payfullcostof
such road bore andasor
creek crossings. Each User
w1ll pay $2.00 per foot or
actual construction cost
from tap to where mater and
connection for service 11
placed Placement will be at
property line.
23 These rules may be
changed or amended
24. This resolution shall
take effect as soon as
allowed by law .
25. If water bdl ie in
arrears16 days after the due
date, a notice will be sent to
Customer notifying them of
their delinquency. If the bill
11 not paid within 6 working
days of the notice, water will
be shut off and mater will be
d1sconnected Water wtll not
be turned on until aher the
btflll pa1d 1n ful and Clerk or
Mayor haa g1ven 1 WRITTEN
not1ce to Town Maintenance
Supervisor to do so.
26. The water ratea at the
ttma of the establishment of
these rates and regulations
era as follows; $1 1.00 tor
the f1rst 2000 aallons and

$3.00 for every 1000 gallons thereafter.
Passed th1s Bth day of

December, 1987.
ATTEST. Gregory VanMeter
Clerk· Treasurer
Warren G. Black.
President of Council
Rutland Village
This maasure is deemed an
emergency and w1ll take
effect as soon as the law
allows.

(12)14, 16, 18, 3tc

Public Notice

the Meigs County Probate

Court, Case No 25709,
John C Rico, 51429 Rice
Run Road, Reedsville. Ohio
45772 wet appointed EKecutor of the estate of Nora
R1ce. deceased, late ot

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST.
POMEROY-985-35.61
KEN'S APPUANCE

WEBER FARM
Rutland, Ohio

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Refrtgerators
•Dryers •Freezers

$5.00

Extra
For Skinning

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

949-2734
11 -27·'17 1 mo. pd

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

992-3711

11· 23.111 I mo. pd.

R 1
••New
ep aeement
Roofing Wmdows

PH.

SERVICE

All Makes

WE SELl USED

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTTERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
All TV PES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FIEf f!TIMA TES

CALL

Klttena, litter trained. 304 676·
3168

PuppiM

W11i be small

304-875-7155

FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE

Lost and Found

6

992-2772

dog~

ll-23·'87· 1 mo
LOST In Kroger's on Dec, 6th·
White gold ring with Ruby

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

OPEN FOR ·
BUSINESS
JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

"Chrlthnu \(·~~j

J

Sale"
\
•Golf Clubs
~
Shirts - Shoes
•Trophies · Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags for
Dogs.
JOHN TEAFORD
CHES111, OHIO U720
11·20-'87-1 mo.

Wltll£ Hill RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

742.7035

11 -3-1 mo. pd

MARCUM
1
CONTRACTING I
CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS

I

Roger ~ysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•ROOFING

REMODELING 8o

REPAIRS

SEPTIC SYSTEMS 8o
BACK HOE WO~K
Phone Day or Enni•tt

RACINE
GUN CLUB

PH.

GPIIIAL CONTUCTOIS

DON'T LET YOUR ELEC·
TRICAL PROII.EMS 1£.
COME A SHOCk TO YOUI
CALL

... ~ '!L,_~

D&amp;C ELECTRIC

992-5682

Ron Diles or
Gary Cummins
Mlddtepon

1-23-'87-1 mo

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Rea•onable Prices"

949-2801
or 949-2860

PH.

Day or Night

GOING ON NOW
PLASTERCRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC .

v.w.
PARTS
'VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULATION

NEW AND USED

WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Hamu Built

12-4-'87-1 mo. d.

'"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls
3-ll-ttn

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

PIANO LESSONS

You't~

New Too Old
To l~~n/

PAT HILL FORD

Teaching Thompson,
Schaum, Bastien
From Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For Information

Mlddl&amp;f&gt;Ort, Oh10
1-13-tfc

H6-86-tfn

.

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

Tag Your Tree

YOUNG~S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Early

EVERY

For Christmas

SAT, NIGHT

Harley Honing
Residence

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotgun• Only
10-7-tln

DIANA IHLE

CHRISTMAS
TREES

Basham Building

6:30P.M.

35975 Flatwoods

- Addons and ramodelmg

- Roof1n9 and gutter work

Rd.

- Concrete work
- Piumb•ng and elactncal
work

Pomeroy, Ohio
2 11! mit11 from Five Point1.
II 23-'87 1 mo

" (Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill

FIREWOOD

HILLSIDE

locust, Oak, Cherry

MUZZLELOADING

$3500

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SLACK
614-992-2269

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy,

Record Those Special
Occasions on VHS
Tape
•Woddmgs
•Sc:hool 8c Church Programs
•Sportmg Events
•AnniVersanet

•ReCOfd Valuabl•.
Documen1S
•Tranafer Photo ~lbuma ta
VHS Tape
•Transf&amp;r 8mm end Super 8
MDVIBI to \11deo Tapa
•Creata Tra1n1ng Filma for
Students and Employees

REASONAILE RATES
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE

New Location:

168 North Second
M1ddleport, Oh1o 457 60

SALES &amp; SERVICl
We Carry f1sh1ng Suppl•es

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here
BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6SSO
RESIDENCE PHONE
16141 992-7754

614·742·2355

12/ 14/ 1 mo

•'

j

"]
_:j

.• '
~

1/ 8/ttn

"

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home&amp; Auto
1614!992-3718
Add on mint luel computer
system. F1ts any car. Instant
miles per &amp;alton 1eadout.
Know your fuel consumption

A11 noun r.e me nl s
3 Announcements
KUPio·s NEST Ofhn two
klndt of d.tmg tervlc:e. write
P0
Bo,. 619. Ironton. OH

from one block to hundreds of

46638. (808) 838-2745

mtles
Commercial

I wilt not be r•pons1blalor debts
other than those comracted bv
myaelf Ronald Keefer . Rt 4 1
box 79, R1pley, W Va

Store to Job Cosi
TaKI Sarv1ce

Botore and aft01 auto lune-up.
(Compara1or) F11t up your
tank, and watch 11 subtrac1and
d1$play fuel consumod
UNDER '90
Momlors for IICF-CCF used
for furnocts. calibrated to
your gas meter.
M•ddleport-Cotil Ohio
11 · ·87 1 mo

mature person for short tnpt
surrounding Galhpoha Comect
customer• Willi tratn Wrtta p a
Du;ic.•aon. Pr• , Southwestern
Petroleum, Box 961006, Ft
Worth, T• 76101

The V11tage of A to Granda it now 1
aecapttng resume'• and lettart
of mter-..1 for the poartkm of
Clllll"k of Courts lnterlltad par·
sons must ba • villege residant
and must be bondable. Letters
and resume's c:an be sent to
VIllage of R1o G rend e. c/o Angie
Seagraves, Cl•k. P 0. Box 343
R1o Grande. Ohto
Mu.i
be ,.ecerved bv December 31
1987
•.

4667'*

Gener.l Farm Work
Some eAperienco required Long
term employment for a quahf1ed '
peraon. Homo It utlllti81 prol
vlded Must hve on f•m An

older ••perienced peraon pre.

ferred W-oee. &amp;. benefrts negot~
able. Call or write. R1ch•d Innis.
Rolhng Acres Farm. Rt 2 Box 86
W1seman Rd.. Pamot, Oh1o
45668 81-·379· 2297

GET PAID for readtng boolwl.
•100.00 per title. Write ACE·
33E, 161 S lmcolnway, N
Aurora. II. 60&amp;42.

S1tter needed In my home fwe
day a • week·Muet be dependable Ca11814-446 2163 8c leave

meuage

Someone to ttay with lady from

8 PM

1414

Car~ng

8

AM

Call

614 448·

&amp; raspon11ble person to

care for lnfarn In your own home
in or nNr downtown Gallipolis
to 1tart after New Year or taoner
1f po••ble Send Info to Box Cia
1 14 c/ o Gallipohl Dilly Tt~buna
825 Third Ave. Gallipolis Oh1o

45831

'

O.try Farm. Must hav8 milking
axpenence

2790.

Call 614 - 494·

9806 for current repo federal

Happy Hollow Rd .
RUTlAND

)

TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs

list

Rt 124 Across from

'];;'._

Ph•macist. Four S1ore independent pharmacy Athana aree
h• 1mmeth11ta opamng for 111ff
pharmae11t 44 hour workweek
Comptttitiu'e Hlary b•ed upon
aper1enca Benefits· package·
Send re~ume with reference~·
Medic.- Center Pharmacv. 40ci
E State St . Athena. • Ohio
46701· Att Enc Rlcherdi·A Ph·
"
Btddmg ctoses Dec. 1&amp;th.

Government Job. 116.040 •
•69,230 v-r Now h1r1ng Your
area. 806 687·6000 Ext R-'

GUN SHOP
•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS,
•MUZZLELOADING
S!,IPPLIES
OPEN' 1 to 9 P.M .

Evenings
12/14/ 87 I mo.

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

Help Wanted

12·2·'87· 1 mo pd

NO SUNDAY CALLS

RACINE

11

992-2196

GUN tSHOOT

Raw fur, beef and dear hidet
Gyn Stng and Yellow root. Wa
h8'ole wheat and nne htea
Trapping uppliee for 181e. (Buy·
mg used trapt) Gaorge Bueklev
Hours 12·9 814-684· 4761

t lli iiio y m ~ n t
S e rvi ces

RADIATOR
SERVICE

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Buying datly gold, 11lver coma,
rings, jewelry, llarhng ware, old
coins, l•ge currency . Tqp pricet Ed Burkett Barber 'Shop.
2nd Ave Middleport. Oh 614-

lf2 PRICE SALE

&amp;

992-2772

Wanted to buy· Standmgtimber
Call 614 379·2758

QUILTS

If interested stop by.

INSULATION

PH.

Call614·446·3169

H1gh prices paid for pra.-1960
qudta Apphque, pntced. any
condition Call814·992· 2101
or 614·992·6867

IS FOR SALE

J&amp;L

COOLING
•FURNACES •AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTiMATES

tin

Middleport, Ohio

1-3 '86 tfc

HEATING

12-7-'87

&amp; coal hestera Swain' a Furm·
tura. 3rd &amp; OINa St Galhpoha

992-3476

992-6226

THE DABBLE SHOP

f1r111 Equlp111enl
Parts &amp; Serflee

We pay c:esh tor lata model clean
u•ed cars.
Jtm Mtnll. Ch8'ol Olds Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
614-446 3672

Buu::k·PDntlat, 1911 Eutarn
Aw, Galhpolts Call 614-446·

lnsurtd/ltctmtd

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614·662-3821
Authomed John Deere,
New Hoiland, Bu1h Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

9. Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY· Used wood

6-17-tfc

BOGGS

lost of stolen. Male Blue Tick,
famele Walk• Coonhound 683
Non.h Front St .. Mtddleport Oh
614; 992-6854

2282

or 992-7121

11 3 tfn

aett1ng wtth 6 amall diamo-nds.
Reward If found call .,,4· 446·
2689

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
anti newer uaed c;art Smhh

RACINE, OHIO

Also lrancmlsslon

985·4141

A aferences

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

Ohio, 45772

(12) 14, 21 , 28, 3tc

6445

•Storm Windows

Reedsville, Meigs County,
Roban E Buck.
Probate Judge
Lana K Nesl!l&amp;lroad, Clerk

K1t1en11 to good home only Gold
mate; black and gold female: 2
tabby females Call 614·843·

•ln•ulation

61429 Rico Run Road,
-

Call

•Storm Doors

Veterans Memonal Hospttal
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

FIRE DEPT.
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 8, 1987, In

crlntca
· I Au d.tOIOgl·st

z

returned
. the check will call
t ha o ff1co and accept rospon-

"v-..-.-s=-.-,.-.-.m-.-.o~g,-.---.v614-388-8449

INSULATION
VINYL &amp; _
ALUMINUM stiiNG

W
..,. (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-2104
....._ 417 Second AVenUe, 8OX 1213
_ Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
or at

good a check not honored

388 8895
-

J&amp;L BLOWN

2: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Another chock from the

•Holiday Parties

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

Giveaway

GoodChr~~;tma1g1ft,
aftlt'"9
Free pupp1• · partCall
l.llbrador
PM or all d~rt Saturd~rt 814

(paym.ont aher the due date
of that month) Will apply
any bitt that check wao to
daducted from , should

qas-3561

12-3-87-1 mo

4

per
check The
any reasonis totan
be
penalty for late payment

Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine.

742-2143

'

Business
Services
,;~1:~=~:1;:::::::;::::J:::;::::::::r.;:::::::::::16

•
s1ness
Services

$2SOO
q92-6191
949 - 2660
992·5 6'17

The Daily Sentinei'- Page- 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Public Notice

Buchanan. 528&amp;6

THAT'S

The hohday seaton has arrived and it is a time for celebration For
som_e rndtvtduala. the holiday activittes will include the use of alcohol at
parttH and get - together~. If your celebration plans include alcohol
pleas~ don't be~me another statistic on our highway a by combming '
drinkmg and dnvtng. Thts deadly combination can turn the most joyous
occaston tnto tragedy as nearly 560,000 people are inJured each year m
alcohol related crashes .
Everyone haa a responsibility to keep the person Impaired by alcohol
o~ the roads The party host and the party guest can join together to make
th1s holiday season sate by following a few common sense rules
For the party host, the decls1on to serve alco·
holic beverages carries with it a reaponaib1hty for
the welfare of each guest Hera are a few t1pa on
responsible hosting·
''
•coll&amp;et guests' car keys when they first arrive
• Always serve food wtth alcohol
•Have non-alcoholic buverages available
*Push 1snacka, not drmks
•Plan activities so that drink1ng isn't the focus
•stop servmg alcohol ~t least an hour before the
party ends
•Provide alternate mean a ot transportation or over•
night accomodattona for gueatswhoaren't
sober
The biggest responaibtllty tor dr1nking and driving reatawiththa party
gu_est The almple rule 11 1f you dnnk. don't dnve. and if you drive. don't
dr~nk Here ar, a few bpt for those party guests who plan to use alcohol
tht1 holiday season
• A* ~omeo':le In your group to be the " designated driver" for the even·
1ng. Ttus person remains sober during the party and drivea the rest
of hit or her fri8nd1 home afterwards
* Before you staft to drink, let your host know you want to be detained if
you drmk too much.
•can relatrves, fnends or a cab t.o take you home if you have been drink·
In g.
•oon't. dr1nk 1f you are taking prescription or over-the ~counter medica·

Monday, Deeember 14. 1987

A resolution establishing

SHOP
POMEROY

In a controversial move Thursday that angered many church
members, church trustees fired
the Rev. Phil Higgins. Higgins
had been pastor since 1985, after
Humbard turned the church over
to a local congregation. The
governing board of the congregation is made up of a majority of
Humbard associates.
Rex Humbard Ministries continues to solicit contributions by
mall in the A~n area and still
owns the lncompleted tower
Public Notice ·

· HEBRON, Neb (UPI) - A
felony chlld abuse charge has
been liled against a former Ohio
man whose son IS believed to be
the boy found frozen to death
along a road Christmas Eve two
years ago
Thayer County sherifl's off1
cia is filed the charge against Eli
Stutzman Jr-, formerly of Dalton, Ohio The arrest warrant
was issued Friday and bond set
at $500,000 cash, bu t County
Attorney Daniel Werner said he
has no idea where Stutzman Is
Stutzman, about 35 or 40, Is
accused of endangering the life of
h1s son, Danny Stutzman, who
would ha"'e been 8 years old at
the time a boy's frozen body was
discovered by a road near
Chester on Christmas Eve In
1985 The body has not been
identified positively
An autops y failed to determine
the cause of dea th, but authorities sa id they s uspected
suffocation.

1987

Humbard planning television
evangelist' comeback, son says

.-·

Today, no marking Is visible on the Ohio side of
the site of the Silver Bridge disaster, wlllch was 20
years ago Tuesday. From Kanauga, pictured
below, the only visible sign is a light spot In the

14.

4

Giveaway

Adorable pll"(tul Autt,.tien pup-

pill, 304-773-8898

To gtve IWIV Mixed Aootter,

304-89&amp;·38et

The Me1gs local School D•stflct
11 accepting application• for
aubstltute reachers SubstituteS&gt;
are neEided 1n all C~Jrdf1catlon
areas The da1ly rate of pay·
t125 Oh1o Certified Teach91't
wllhng to eroas 111 picket line
should 1mmed11tefy cont8ct
Mtugs local S&lt;;hool Superm·

tendent' a cff1ce, 621

South

Th1rd Avenue, Mtddleport, Oh 1o

45760 514-992-2153

Wanted Full lime employment
1n your own home as~ Home
Services Work81' with Buckave
CommunitySarv•ce Weprov1de
salflr'y plus benafits and a datly
room and board rata You
provide e home, gutdanca and
frtendsh1p m a fam•ly atmoa
phare Requires abdaty to teach
peuonal hv1ng akillt and a
commrtmant to the growth a'!d
development of an Individual
with severe mentel retardatiOn
Contact Sylvia Day at 614 446·
7109 after 6 00 p m Equal
opportunity employer.
Job hunt1ng? Need a skill? We
train people for 10ba as auto
mechan1ct. ca rpenter11 el&amp;ctri·
aans. food aerv1ce workers
electromcs technlaMs, tndu atriil ma•ntenanceworkara, nura·
ing asSistants and orderlla.
machmllta, and welders Regis·
tar now for claa&amp;ea beglnnmg
Jinuarv 4th Call Tn-County
Vocattonat Adutt Canter at
3611 t11.t 14 A variety of
fu~ding tources to pay for •
tratnmg are available for those
eligible

763·

�'.

•

· 11

.

Help Wanted

44,

LAFF-A-DAY

L•cll. the ski1117 We tr~~IR people
for jobl u mechinlltl in our
machinetradM program. Ne•lv
every prodllet ot ln dul'try, from
cornflak• to turbin•. i1 made
IIIith• us ing machine toolt or

chine tool.s . In the machine

trades program you will learn
how to UIB various types of
machinerv auch .. : l_.he, drill

prasa. milling maehina. grinding
machfne and punch pre... We

h·ave a v•riety of fundingsoun:es
svaillble tor eligible applicants.
Call the Adult Education C znter·

-Tri-County JVS at 763-3611
eat. 14. Winter quanar begins
•·

Taxu Oil Company needs m•
ture

person

for

short

trips

surrounding Middlepon. Pom•
roy . Contact customers. We
train. Write N.J . Dick•aon,
Pres .• Southwestern Petrol .. m.
So• 961006 , Ft. Worth. Tex...

76101 .

Modern 1 iJA apartment. Call
614 -446-0~9 ·

Get paid for reading books!
$100.00 per ' title. Write: ACE
1536. 161 S. Uneolnway, N .
Aurora. II. 60542.

"I don't have any trouble
accepting alimony.. .! think of
.it as severance pay!"

AVON - All are•. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304-882-2646 .
AVON all are•. Shirlev Spears,

304-676·1429.
M OM AND CAD : Let the Army
National Guard help pq for your
child' s college education. Call

304-67&amp;-3960 or 1-Boo-e42·

I~:;;::;;::;:;;=;,:====l~;::::;~~~:;.~~~~~
·
f R
1 H
32 Mobile Homes

3819 .
Substitute teach•• for the Ma·
son County Board of Education,
Fill Elil:abeth Mattox at 304 676 -4640.

Plains area. Call614 -667 -8677.

- - - - - - - - - -lcChi~d care. expet'lenced mother,

all hours. · 411 ages wei came.
Supervised actNities. Mula furnished. Call614- 992-2468 .

13

Insurance

1 B W11nted to Do

Mother of 2 will cere for your
children during the holidav fa&amp;·
tNities. Evenings. weekenda, or
~uril"'g the school vacation.
Convenient bcation, reaaonable
ratea. Call 614-446·00r5·
Would like to do office &amp; house
cleani~Q. Pteaae call 614-387 7633 or 367-7696.
Would like to do babys;rtlng in
my home. ·Cell 614-446-9640.

Financial

Trail.- for

Sal•

8•60.

614-3BB-B294.

Call

1 acre. 12x85 tl'lilerwii:h 12x24
addition. Naw porch, tt.trnished.

614·742-2976.
198" Skyline. 14•70, eentral
air. underpenning, dacks. new
carpet, kitehen appllencn. set
ujl on rented lot. K &amp;t K. Point
Pleasant. &amp;16,600. Call wa•
kanda or after 6 waekdl'fl,
304-6716-1294.

33

Farms for Sale

ServiCes

Land contract. 6 .96 ac:ra. barn,
chicken coop. pony lhed, work·
ahop and 3 bedroom house.
•$2600 down and 1358.90
month 16 yrs. or c11h pi'loe of
826,000. Cell 814-992-2143
8 :30 to 4:30. Ask for miehl81.
614-992-8373.

34

Business
Buildings

&amp;,OOpm, 304-875-6483.

42 Mobile Homes
'tor Rent
2 BR . tmiler. 8150 a mo. No
pets. Ref. required . Call after 6

PM. 387-0181 or 367·0121 .

2 SR . Mo~ileHomefor rent. Call

4 BR ,, fireplace. full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. 834,900.
Call Days -614 -446 -1615, after

s,oo. 446·1244.
Branif new 3 SR . n•ar Gallipolis
lodts on Rt. 7 , 2 ear g•aga. nice
lot. lmmedi.r:e possauion. Will
consider trade in of Mobile
hOI'!"&amp;. properly, etc. Bargain
priced . Call 614-446 -803S .
3 SR . Ranch . Attached g•age.
In town . Good location. Low
40 ' s. Cell after 5 :30 PM. 614446· 1406.

•

9 room house- 2 full baths &amp;
basement. 3 room apt. &amp; bath on
same property. Moving out of
county. Will sacr ifica . 554.500.
642 5th. Ave . Call 61 4-446·

1607.
By owner- 3 BR . home in
Kanauga. Fenced yard. car pon,
county water, new mng&amp;-refrig.·
water heater. $32,600 Negot iabl&amp;. Call 614-379-2441 .
2 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 cat
garage, level lo·t on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool. utelite, close
to Meigs High. Call 614 -992·
3254,
Five lou on Corner wh:h 4
bedroom hou l!l8. Carpeted. tull
basement. central heat, fir•
place. garage. Call 304 -S82 2776 .
6 rooms. beth. ' enclosed porch,
forced air furnace, insul ated new
. roof, new carplrl:. Upper Mason,
W. Va. 614 -992 · 2813.
Furnished homa in Middleport. 7
rooms, 3 bedrooms, 2-largelots,
2 blockl to shopping, chu r ch•,
boating, fishing. swimming. Call
614- 992-5304 before t 8a.m.
After 8p .m . P'rice
nd8r

.

GOVERN MENT HOMES from
S1 .00 IU r&amp;pairl foreclosures.
repos, Ut• deliquent propiM"tie~ .
Now selling your area. Call
1-3 16-736-7367eltt. 2P -WV -H
for eurrent list. 24 HAS,
Three bedroom, brick home.
la rg ~ living r oom. pouib!e loan
auump1ion, clo se to Point Plea$8nt, 304 - 675 · 5306.

Mobile Homes
for Sale

2 BR . Mobile Home for rent.
Adult1. Ref. Ia dep. No pets. Call

1

1 mile from H.M.C. - 2 SR .
lrall.-. Call 614.245·6682.
3 bedraom, 12•66, furnished.
Washer and dryer. 8210 month
plu1 deposit and utilitiee. 814 -

992-7479.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Furni~ed

upstairs- 1 BR . Utiliti• paid. t210 a mo. Dep. 94
Locu1t St. Call 614.446·1340
or 446-3870.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·

~6 lots

SON ESTATES . 636 Jackson
Pike from $183 1 mo. Walk to
shop and moviet. 614-446-

&amp;

Acreage

2 building lots Gallipolis F..-ry,
trail• on one. Phone 304-6?639~4 .

41

32

Two bedroom house half mile
out Jerid'lo Road , call after

749 Third Ave: w.Pr...ntly The
Gift Shop. 1600 sq. ft. Commer·
ci a1 or warehouae. Parking on
side. Adjacentto Third&amp; Pine St.
Call 114 · 446-2362 for
appointment.

2 BR . apt. Stove &amp;: refrig .
furnished. N•• Go Man . Call

Homes for Rent

3 BR . house &amp; garage. A ·1 Real
Estate. Carol Ve&amp;gar-Broker.
304-676-5104 .
Nicely furnished small house.
' Adult• only . Ref. required . No
pets. Call614-446·0338 .
2 BR . home- recently remo-

deled. ST.RT. 279. Oak· Hill I&lt;
Rio Grande. No children or peu.
C•ll614 -245-9316.
Large 2 -3 BR . houae. Plenty of
storage. Hend..-son area.• Call

814-448-7026 .
2 or 3 SA unfurnished ha. Yard,
city schools, 1276 mo. plua
utilitie1 8t deposit. Call 614~6 · 2616 .

3 BR., doub'ec• gartga. range,
rafrig. dishwasher. U50 . Dep.
required . Call814-446-1134.
Furnished Two tmlll hou.ea. 3
rooms eact'l. Nice and clean .
Aduha only, No pets. Fief. &amp; dep.
Call 614·446·2643.

required . CaU l 614-448-4346
batween 6 :00 ~M &amp; ,0:00PM

Rooms for rent. dav. weak.
month. Gallit Ho1el. Call 814448·96SO. Rent as low as e120
month. ·

72

rr ,., ~~ ~lti.O

1977 Chw. truck. Call eft• 5

PM - 814-448 -3243.

Antiques

I hiWe room for elderty patient.
Rea~onable. 614-992· 7204 or
814-992-39163 . '

ANTIQUES , Buy or Sell. Riverine Antiques, 1124 East Main
St. Pomeroy. Hours: Mon .Tues.-Wed . ,0 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Sun.· 1 p.m.· 6 p.m. By chance·
or appointment. Ru11 Moore
614·992-2626 .

46 Space for Rent

54 Misc. Merchandise

Office Space fOr rent. Ex'cel.
downtown Gallipolis location
lnquiriea call 614-446-4222.
Mobile Home lot. 60ft . or less.
920 4.t h .. Gallipolll . $76. Water
paid. Call 614· •46 -44 1 6 after 7

PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, Nonh of Pomeroy.
Rental trailars. Call 614-9927479.
Spece for small trailers. All
hook-ups. Cable. Also etficiBncy
rooms. air and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Call 304-773-6661 . '
Spacious mobile home lots for
fent, Family Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipolis Ferry, 304·676·

3073.

Trail.- ajMces for rent, Rt. 1
Locust Road , back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home Park, 304-676-

107$.
47 Wanted to Rent
Furnished 1 BR apartment, or
traitor . Call 614-3 79- 2556.

49

For lease

3997. E.D.H.

Furnished apartment- 4 rooms&amp;
b.th. 1 or 2 adults. No pets. Ref,
&amp; Sec. dep. required . Call
614·446-0444 .
Upltllirs unfurnished apanment.
Carpeted. Utllitlea paid. No
children or pets. ,Call 814-446For rent apartment, trail•: furnished, unfurnished. Woodburning fireplace . Witt«, sewage
paid. Clean. Quiet. Foster' 1
Mobile Home Parle. 446- 1602.
2 BA . Honeysuckle Hilla. Gas
heat. private patios. Water,
sewer, trash llf'Jice furnished .
Rent 1tan- $220. Call614-4463344 ot 446· 1 134. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Luxury Tara Apartments . Elegant. 2 Br. 2 floor., fully
carpeted, CA and heat. Prillate
entrance, enclosed patio, pool &amp;
playground . Start -1299 per
month. Utiliti• not induded.

Coli 614-3e7-7860.

Modern nice 2 BR . apt. located
at 641 4th. Ave. Aduita only .
8226 per mo. Call 614-446-

2300 . .

1 BR . new apt. furnished Or
unfurnished. Na"' Meigs High
Sehool. Call 614-441 -8898.
Furni1hed ..Efficiency. 8160 .
Utlliti" paid, 607 2nd. Gallipolis. Sill•• b.th. Call 446· 4416

after 7 PM .

Callahan's Used TireS hop. Over
1,000tirea, si:r.es12. 13,14, 16,
16, 116 .6 , 8 miles out Rt. 218.

ca11 614-266 ·8261 .

Christmas Tra81 for sale-$6 .00$10.00. Rodney &amp; Bidwell Rd .
Call 614·245 -6246, Rid'lard
Fischer.
Muzzle loading Suppli81· Pricea
ha~e been r«&lt;uced. Shop going
out of businass. Koebel' a. Mill
Creek Rd. Hrs.· Mon ., Wed., Fri.15 -8 PM . Sat.- 1-6 PM . Phone
614-4·6·2316 .
Electric wheel chair. like new
eond.. us8d very little. Adult
pottyc;hair. Ca11614-448-0648,
U1ed business machln• A .B.
Dick duplicator press and Ron eo
mimeograph machine for sale.
Call 614-446-0196 or 448-

4404 .
1978 Dodge 11~ ton pidtup,
$800. Seers wood 8t coal burner
with blower, 1250. Call 614·
446-S568 .
Mi•ed hatd wood slabs. 112 per
bundle. Containing approll. 1 1!.1
ton. FOB. Ohio Palla1 Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 61 4· 992 ·6461 .
Firewood for sale. All herdwood,
split and delivered. $36 . Alto

1977 LTD. Coli 614-992·5519
or 614 -992·3662.

1400 1q. ft. commercial space
suitable for offices, retai,ling. or
services. Prime location-corner
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample Jl\8rking in rear. 8 350 per
month. Call 614 -446·4249 or
~6 - 2326 .

1 habV beQ. good condition good
mattress, feeding tabla wtth toy
tray, baby carriage, white wicker
shelves for clolhas storage. All
S125 . 614-949 -2561 .
Satellite System for ule. Cost
$1500 .. sell 8699. Call 614·

Merchandise
51 Household Goods
SWAIN

AUCTIO'N &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399 .
living room suites- 8199 - 5699 .
Bunk beds with bedding- $199 .
Full size mattress 81 foundation
starting · 899 . Reclinen
starting- 899.
USED- Beds, dresaet's, bedroom
suites, &amp;199-1299 . Desks,
wringer wash9f, a complete line
of uaed furniture.
NEW- Western boots- 830.
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toe) . Call 614-446 -3169.

992-e206.

All Christmas Trees 812 .. Come
early before cold weather, tag
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
on Hanging Roctc Rd . 304-773 5371 or S82-2888 .
Mixed firewood. $80 .00 dump
truck load. ~elivered , 304-576·

2903.

Firewood delivered, stacked,
$35 .00 . Mason Counties, Galllpolit oth8f araas within rea1on et
our diser,tion, 304 -896-3446.
SURPLUS

ARMY ,

RENTAL . CARHART CLO ·

Tti\NG . Original prmy camou:
flage. H . 0 . "Sam " Somerville 's, Old Rt. 21
East~ Ravenswood . Fri. Sat, Sun.
noon · 8 :00pm. 304-273 -6666.
lnaulated camouflage coveralls
County Appliance. Inc. GoOd. · $25.00 . Black - White snow
used appliance~ and TV sets. c amouflage.
Open BAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614 ·446-1699 , 627 Jrd. 6 pc. drum set, make offer. 3 pc.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .
bedroom suRe $130 .00. 304-

Portable dryer Space S1111er,
890. Kenmore washer . Both
excellent ahape. 8126 . Call

614-367·0322.
3 pc. BR . suite, guitars, 10 spd.
bike, krtchen table. Cell 614·
446-0666.
Brown. flowered couch. rocker,
chair and end tablee.. 8200.
Good condition . Call 614 -9863510 .
G.E. buih -ln dishwasher. Harvest gold, 875, CoppertOf'IBCoun·
ter top range, $46 , large green
sculptured carpet. foam backect
860. All very good condition.
614-992 -6031 after 6p. m.
.VallfiV Furniture
New and used furniture and
apptleancee . Call 614 -446 7672. Hours 9-6 .

676-3763.

Marlin 12 gauge over and under,
Mode190. $276 .00. Winchester
22 Magum pump Model 275,

$100 ,00. 3Q4,676-6944 .

fr•h

56

Holstein

Halftrl.

also

D.H .1. recordl on DlmL also A .I.

Hog 626 to 550 lbl. Reedy for
butcher. See oh t.rm. •226 . Ctll

Groom and Supply · Shop-Pet
Grooming. All breeds ... All
styiM. lama Pet Food Deal.-.
Julio Webb Ph. 814-448-0231 .

New er'rillals for Chrii;tmll·
Regislered AKC Chow puppiM.
Call 814-388-BS01 .

2 year old female llua Apso
AKC Reg .• blonde. Call 614448 -4737 after 6 PM.
Golden Ret:rievar puppi•, Be
ready for Christmas. Call 814-

949-2966.

4 PM .

1986 S-10 Blutr4x4, 87,600.
1985 Ford Escon, 5 apd.,
22,000 mila&amp;, '3,200. Call

Fum SuppltP.o
&amp; Livestock

1973 2 -bedroom . 12x815 on
rented iot. S4,GOO. 304 -8715 -

3 bedroom house. las.-nent. 2
ttoraga bulldinDf. g•aie, ltOW
furnished. 1250 per month.
Oepotlt ·required . 614 -949-

3763

3027.

EEK &amp; MF.F.K

,_,assey fet'guson, New Holland.
Bush Hog Sal• &amp; Servlee. Over
&gt;40 u•ed tractor a to choose from
&amp; complete line of new &amp; used
equipment. Larg1111 aelectlon In
S .E. Ohio.

614-992-6216.

NoveLTies. Iwc.

APARTMENTS. mobile homea.
houses. Pt . Plea11nt and Oallipo-

~

Unconditional llf.time uu•antee. Loeal raf•eneet furniahed .
Free fltimatea. Call - called
1-814-237-0488. dirt or night.
R ogersBasement
W•terproofing.

RON ' S Television Service .
Housa calls on RCA, Ouaur.
GE . Spacllling in Zenith. Call

1977 T-Hird. 361 auto .• PS . P8.
air , AM-FM•Cau player .
Chrome wh ... s. bcel. Cond.
S900·'N8S asking 11100. Call

304-678-239B

lio. 814-448-8221 .

Beech Street, M iddleport, Oh~o.
2 bedroom furnished apt, utilitiel paid, references and depotit.

304-B82.-2688.

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 and 2
roo"l furniahed spts, private
brth•. utilitiet paid. 3 04--882-

42~9 .

Now till De c. 31 .all Zelltor
tractors in nock 10 percent over
cost . No lrad•in. Morri• Equip.
ment, Rutland. Ohio. 814-742BUY WHOLESALE. White farm
Tractors at whol . .le invoice
plus fraight. Compare the price
end quattty. Models from 16 to
180 hp. le•lng evallable. Offer
go~ through Dec. 31 , SldiJI
Equipment Co., US 36, Hend•·
son, W . Va. 30-4-8?11·7421 .
International 1060 Grinder
Mixer, e~c cond, 304 - 273 -

4216.

2666.

Renewtv Nde001ated. Very nice
apartm.,.ta in downtown Galllpolll, 1 &amp; 2 SR .- unfurnished,
..cond fJoor, from IH6· 1225.
Oep. 6 references required . Call
eva. 614·.446-2326 or 446·

6622.

1

5024.

62 Wanted to Buy
" The toughest pari at this business is
convincing employees they've really
been tired ,"

MY D\DS TAKING ME
TO THE HOO&lt;EY
64ME TONIGHT.

WATO-I THE EWAE
ON TV AND I 'LL
WA~AT'tOLJ/

IT BETTER NOTBEONAT
:rHE SAM!: TIME A5 'INSECT"
Lli=E IN TI-lE AAIN FORE6TS!'

B96-3802

Camino.

'

town's sole law enforcement

.

officer threa1ens to go on
strike. Q
1!J1 Larry King Llvelln depth
interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrities.
9:30 1m Cllll2l Dealgnlng Women
Howard, the obnoxious
cruise nerd, pays Mary Jo a
surprise visit.
10:00 CD Straight Talk
II~ l!5l Secreta Women
Nover Share Some of
America ·s most glamorous
women, including Joan
Collins. Shelley Long, Carol
Burne" , Brlgitle Nielsen,
Raquel Welch and Lauren
~call, share. Q ·
(1) To Establish Justice Civil
Rights
®I 11)112) Cagney a Lacey A
racial killing threatens lo
divide l'lle 141h Precinct (R)

Starks Tree and Lawn Service.
l•wn care, landleaping. stump
1982 Cutla11 Suprema Cal8is. · removal. 304 · 576 · 2842 or
V -8 : ilr. tih. crulte. PS. PB. rear
676-2903.
defrost, T-top . Call 614-3877174.

82 ·

Is it true you can buy Jeeps for
$44 through tha U.S. government? Get the facts todavl Call

Now buying 1hell corn or a•
corn. Call forlatett quota~. Rtvar

Chy Form Supply, 814-448,
2986. 1

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

1-312-742-1142 EKt. 4089 .

OH,GOODY!!

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

1985 Plymouth Reliance K.
Auto. PS. PB, AM·FM radio, AC.
fuel Injection. Excelltnt condl·
tion . Call 614·992· 6084 aftM

Cor. Fourth and Pin a
Gelllt»olis, 0 hie
Phone 614-446·3988 or 614·

5,3o .

448·4477

1987 Olds Cutla11 . Supreme.
Top shape. A11umeloan. Fiberglass topper farE! Camino. Call
evenings 304 -773-6911 or

84

~""'

E lectrica I

3.IHJ

of Ieday's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
10:20 CIJ MOVIE: Cat on a Hot Tin
Roof (NA) (1:48)
,0:30 [l) Co"rtahlp of Eddie's
Father
l!l) This Old House Norm
era"•· then installs
decorative arches over the
French doors. C
1m IZl Hogan's Heroes
11:00 CD Remington Steele
I)
®l Cllll2l Ill) News
(IJ All American Pulling
Sanaa From Bowling Green,
OH (T)
(!)Sign Oft
l!ll Only One Ea~h VIlle El
Salvador is a shanlytown In
Peru with plans tor the
future.
II}) Moneyllno Currant
reports on wo~d economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
@Jeffaraons
81,(!) Love Connecti~n
11:30 11 (lJ 1!11 Ball of Caraon
(!) SportaCenter (L)
01 Magnum, P.l.

Gene.ral Hauling

246-9285 .

.

R &amp; R Water Service. Home
clsters, wells. pools filled . For·
marty Jam• . Boys Wat8t's.Call

1987 Che'!IY Astro van . 304·
882-3888 or 876 -1300.

304-el5-6370.

1981 Mercury Coug.-. e11e
cond. loaded with extras,

Paul Rupe. Jr. Water Service.
Pool•. cisterns. walls. Cell 814 -

OB.800.00. 304-876-5339 .

'48-3171.

787llnooln Town Car; 78 Mark
V: 77 Cedlllac Sedan DeVille.
Good Condition. 30.4 - 773 -

Watterson' 1 W•ter Hauling ,
reuonable rates, immedi ate
2.000 gallon deliverY. cisterna.
pool•, well, etc. call 304·678-

5840.

rn

'TI5 THE
SEASON

ro ee

2919.

JOLLY ..
87

Upholstery

,.l_,l i

t.
3 -r('-o,_lG.;;.,l;:_E

1

1---,:.:A..:RT.,.:T-r.~:..;;W--11
5 6
I 1 1 I
-

-

.

-

I
:::.
..

A friend opened a camera
shop. He being an optimist, I was

I

surprised to see this sign on the

door: " Think-."

I

l..7r-ril'TEVNNl
j-=lj-='-rl'-'-lj-=-,lr--1 O Compl1llilete
lhe
ng

chuck le quoted

.
_
_
_
.
.
~y
in the m1ssing words
,__,.__._ _,__...__.___. you d evelop fro m step No. 3 below.

.

A PRINT NUMBERED ·
~ LETTER S IN SQUARES

6

UNSCRAMBLE fOR
ANSWER

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Muffle - Group - Veldt - Luxury - FUTURE
"Remember,'' says the elderly matron, "thai all your
memories are the keys not to the past, but to the FUTURE.''

BRIDGE
When your bidding momentum has
carried you to an outrageously higb
level, ask yourself some hard questions, such as, "What do I need to make
this contract?" Another good question
is "How did we get so high?" but you
can save that for the partnership dis-

cussion later:

NORTH
• 8 6 53

12-11-87

•Qs

+A 8 7 4
+K 10 4

WEST

EAST

.9 3 2
+Q963 2

+Q 9
. AKJI085
• J 10
+ Q65

+J 10 74

+7

Here South bid three spades i n the
SOUTH
hope that North could try three no+AK 2
trump, but South was wise enough to
• 74
go back to live clubs rather than bra+K5
zen out four spades. The defenders
+AJ 9832
quickly cashed two heart tricks, and
Vulnerable: North-South
East then switched to the jack of diaDealer: East
monds. Would you care to plan the
play, while covering up the East and
S.utb
Nortb East
West
West hands?
2+
3+
3+
Declarer's only hope is that West
Pass
Pass
4+ Pass 5+
holds four spades and live diamonds.
Pass Pass
Pass
If that is the case, poor West can be
pinched between those two suits and
Opening lead: • 2
forced to give up the game-going trick
as South plays out all the long trumps.
But note that West has already shown
the East hand. Declarer can then play
three hearts by leading the two and
out all the trumps, discarding two
playing up. Therefore, if West is to
hold the needed distribution, ~e can spades and a diamond from the North
hand. The squeeze against West then
have only one club.
So declarer should win the diamond takes place, with West forced to either
throw two spades away or unguard h!s
king, play to dummy's club king a~d
diamond
queen.
then linesse against the club queen m

,.3•

rRINCIPAL'5

OFFICE

•

I
Mowrey's Upholstering tenting
tri county area 22 years . The belt
in furnitu,. upholllarihg. Celt
304 - 876 - 4164 for free
estimates.

tZ-1+

letllli lrlt.

I

_'

ACROSS 41 Rristle

42 Short poem
1 Airdefense 43 English
cathedral
group
4 "C'asa- ·
town
blan ca"
DOWN
role
I Detection
7 Confusion devke
8 Staple,
2 Foofaraw
Yesterday's Answer
e.g.
3 Accurate 12 Weepy
25 Bridge
10 Underage 4 Meager
15 King topper
maneuver
11 Apportion 5 "- work 18 Like
27 Correct
13 "I and n~
powder
29 Cautious
, . 21 Republic 30 Rorgnine
Camera"
P,lay...
14 Sought
6 Car-buyers
of Ireland
film
election
t'Oncern
22 Fire
31 Celebes ox
16 Prior to
7 It waits
23 Brass
32 Abbess
17 Eliminate
for no man
instrument 37 Alack or
flaws ·
9 Stout
24 Portuguese
Red, e.g.
19 _loss
10 Chart
39 Morllv
20 Cuhe sturr
21 Czech
river
22 Detect ,
in a way
25 Pass ional~
26 Gardener's
need
27 Evergreen
28 Table snap
· 29 Phone eo.
employee
33 Yoko 34 English
riwr
35 Rahylonian
deity
36

~ucdnet

38 Bqxwood yielding
tree
40 Leve l
12i l4

DAILy CRYPI'OQUO'l'FS- Here's bow to work It:

•

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

Nowa

II}) Evening News A wrap up

J &amp; J Water Service. Swimming
pools, cisterns, wells. Ph. 814-

19815 Daytona Turbo Z. redsilver, leather lnteriOt, nw tires.
loaded, 19,7150.00 con1ider pllr·
ti .. tr1de, 30•·176-6308.

'72 Chovy, 376 motO&lt;, 304·
57M457 .

OVER

Dillard Water s.,vlca; Pools,
Cisterna, Wells. Delivery Any.
cime. Call 614-446-7404-No
Sunday calls .

Reily Whoolo . Cell 814-742·

'72 Buick 8kylork. h&amp;o.oo.
304-875-233B.

MUST BE

.s. Refrigeration

85

2676.

304-876-52B1 .

CfiRD GfiME

676-1786.

•

1980 Olda CuUau Brougham.
1980 Chrysler Lebaron. Both
hwe low mila, lolded. aharp.

TH'

YONDER GOES
ELVINEY RUNNIN'
OUT TO GREET
LUKEY

Residential or commercial wir·
ing. New service or repairs .
UC:ensed electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304-

1 980 Pontiac Grand Prix . Good
eondi'llon. Four ,6x7 Chevy

•
~·

RTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

Rotary or cable tool driiU,g.
Most-wells completed samedBy.
Pump sal• end service. 304-

cell 614-448-2342.

614·992-2888 .

2466.

2 bedroom furnind apt, ref and
deposit, New Haven, W . Va ..
304·882- 3-267 or 304 -773-

814-448-

Fetty Tree Trimming, atump
removal. Call 304-176· 1 331 . .,

1983 Cheuy. Cltetion. Am radio,
&amp;9,000 mil•. •1100. Can ba
aeen at the Gallipolis Deily
Tribune Of for mora Information
topper-EI

Of

2.64.

jl14-246-9867 .

614-288-6461.

3600 Ford with plows. disc, 2
row Ford planter, 6ft. buah hogNice. 16960. Call 614 ·286·

Pll.'CTIOL JOKe suPPUes
;~DING ClCWlS ,ETC.

IUJ COM£ nl£ u..x:::MAIJ
SIJAPFID &lt;raJ UP
ALRfPfJ-&lt;7
H~'1J'T

632-0040.

3187.

*

~T

SWEEPER and Mwlng machine
reptlr. pan .. and suppU•. Pldt
446-8824.
Up and delivery, Davia Vacuum
Cle1ner, one h81f mila up
1983 Z-28 Ctmaro, 40,000 ' Georg• Creek Ad . (:all 814mil ea. U195. Ctll632-2813 or
448-0294.
.

1989 Plymouth Station Wagon
converted to truck . 318 engine.
auto tranlmiatlon. cheap. Call

Completely renovated . 3 bed·
room; plenty yard and g•den
sp ace. beiiiiJtiful home. All electric. hel1 pump, central air. 4
mile~ h-om RtNenawood. Portland. Oh. 814-843 -631;)9.

Servtces

1977 Cougar XR7, mod•ata
mileage, cok»r-white over red ,
E11ceUent running condition .
11300. Sea at 766 Second
Avenue· Call &amp;14 -U6-1 671 or

4 BR , Country Home for rent.
t275 . Virginia L. Smith-Real
Estate·614·;J88· S826.

8289 .

304-468-1B98 .

1976 Ford LTD . Coli 814·4488034.

FibMgl111

Wonderworks A young
schoolboy mee1s an old man
with a magical box of
delights. (1 :00) C
II}) Prlmenewo Wrap ups of
the day's world news and in
depth IBalure reports . (t :00)
® MOVIE: A Sunohlna
Chrialmaa (NA) (1 :40)
fl) (!) MOVIE: Some Like H
Hoi (NR) (2:02)
8:05 CIJ MOVIE: BuHerll,ld 8 (NR)
(1 :49)
8:30 (!) NFL Monday Night
Magazine (T)
® Cllll2l Frank's Placa
Frank receives a surprise
vlsll from an uncle he never
knew existed.
9:00 CD 700 Club
II (lJ 01 Motown Merry
Chrlstmao Host Philip
Michael Thomas joins
Motown favorites to hail the
Christmas season in song
and dance. Guests include
Redd Foxx and The Pointer
Sisters. Q
,
(!)Rodeo PRCA National
Finals from Las Vegas, NV
(T)
(i) I) (I] ABC Monday Nlghl
Football Q
(!) l!ll Frontline Look at
British rule beginning In lhe
1830s. 0
® 11)112) Newhart The

ft Nomad camp•. phone

81

l

3

s.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

61 Farm Equipment

Somerville' s, Old Rt. 21 East,
Revenswo_od. Noon- 8 p.m . 304273 - 6666 . Insulated eamoufl&amp;ge coveralls 826 ,00 . Blackwhite snow camouflage, After
Christmal.· Fridav, Saturday,
SundRy only.

~Jokes 'N

Of

79 Motors Homes
Campers

1984 Oodg8 Charger 2 .2 .
44,000 actual. mil•· heel.
cond. Call614-379- 2410 .

446-6668 .

Nice 3 bedroom houJ8. Family
room, garage . basement .
tor"'-· air heat, 15 wooded acre~,
,b111
127&amp;. par month. 1100.
del
t . No inside peu. 10 East
St. . f"omeroy, Ohio. 614-423·

doyo. Coli 614-379-2220
304-675-4230.

Home
Improvements

3 BR . home in Centenary on Rt.
141 . Rat,. 8.. Sec. dep. required.
Available In January . Call 614-

2, 3 , or 4 bedroom hou ..s and
apt . In Pom•oy area. P-v own
utllitl•. depo1h required. Call
614-992·6113, 614-992-6723
or 614 - 992 ~ 2609 . Call after
5 :00. pt....
,

Budget Transmissions: Uted and
rebu 111. all tvP•· Guarant• 30

814-~8-4-41 .

19SO Cadillac Seden DeVille
Deisel. Show room condition.
All power, 18,000 milaa on new
motor, 30 mi. ptr gal. This Is e
ateel at onty 83200. 814- 992-

2 bed~oom apt. and 1 bedroom
house for rent in Pomaroy,

•NI..-&gt;I(,l,IOc.

ALLEY OOP

&amp; Accessories

304-773·581&amp; .

992-6B6B.

Auto Parts

~

0400. Coli 614·387-7750.

New 1.11tra nice 2 BR . duple~t ,
furnished kitchen. Low utilit le~.
No pets. Oep, 8t r.f. required.
Call614-446·1260,

Nice 4 BR:· hou• dowmown
Gallipolis: Centrally located for
schools &amp; shoppong. • 360 1
mo . Call 61•-0162 -dav. 446·
1291 after 6 PM.

76

614-448-8B98.

PARSON 'S FURNITURE

Nice apt. Hudd approved. New
carpet, clean. Pt. Pleasant. 614 -

. l1-iAVE5 12.•14
•

1982 Pontiac Trans· AM . PS,
PB, T-top, AC. AM-FM-Cau. • 21

5 Beagle Rabbit dogs. Aged 2 to
5 yrs. old. Trained . Ra•onable.

Jacks Fruit Market, Route 36 ,
HendMson. See us for all your
Christmas needa. Apple~ Navel Oranges - Bananas ~
Tangelos - All kinds nuts Candy - Grap• &amp; Tomatoe1.
&amp;eking Potato111. 60 lb. •4 .00.
Sweet Onions 26e pound
Green cabbage 20c pound .

o~
cHEC:~?

CASt-!

3382 .

Sh•p 1983 Toyota Supra.
loaded. Sport package. power
steering- brek11- wlndowa. au·
tomMie climate control . All
performance items. Averag9 mileage. 5 speed. Mechanically
perfect. Meticutou•ly m•ln·
tain.d. Gorgeous! Call 114448· 2•17 Evenings.

04500. Coli

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

.

03760. Cell 814-446-0767 ol-

676B.

58

you WANT·

198! Yamahl' 60, ' 3 whMfer.
good cond•• 300.00. 304- 882-

ler 8 PM .

1988 Chwatte. Very clean.
St•ndwd shift. 1&amp;,000 mila

$26 .00. 304-876·6479.

WHICt-1 f)o

742·2875.

614-

AKC Registered Pom•anian
puppia1 . 1: male. 1 female. 8
weeks old. 1160. Call814-617·

loving family wanted for femlile
Pomeranlen puppy. 6 months
old, not ragi1terad . Very friendly,
loves children. housebroken,

..)I

1981 Harlev Dl\lidson Super·
glide. Good condition. Call 814·

03600. Coli 814-38B-909B.

Christmas pupp-1 •, AKC registered Miniture Schnauzers, Shih
Tuis, Cod!.• Spani••· Maltau . .
Sweater and cap whh each
puppy. Shots wormed 1110
health record. 304-876-2193.

II

3-Wheeler ATV-Kawa1aki 200.
Good cond . Call 614-448·

1982 Olds. 98. All power. VfiiY
clean. 69,000 , mil11. Dl•el.

1 AKC Bessett puppy lett. 6 wks .

Coli 814·742·2521 .

7:30 II (lJ Hollywood Squarea
(!) NFL Monday NIV"t
Memories (T)
CD Newlywad Game
Cl ())Judge
1m Wheel of Fortune Q
1!J1 Crossfire (0:30)
Cllll2l 1151 Jeopardy! Q
® Berney Miller
Ill(!) WKRP In ClnclnnaU ·
7:35 CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00 Cil Father Murphy
.
II C2J 1!11 ALf ALF learns
something about the
meaning of Christmas al a
hospitaL r:;r
(!) NFL Monday Nlghl Match
Up Chicago Bears at Sen
Francisco 49ers (T)
Cil 0 (I] MecGyver
MacGyver Is coerced Into
. stealing a priceless Chinese
artifact (R) Q
(1) The Making of a
Continent ~ourney back in
time to look at what forces
buill mountains. r:;r
iW Ill ll2l Kala l Allie Kale,
Allie, Jennie, Emma and Chip
hire out as Santa's helpers.

FRANK AND ERNEST

a74 Motorcycles

s .....

f~; :J&amp;:;~• Banedum. 614·

CARHART CLOTHING . " Som"

DENIM ,

876-3427.

1982 Ford Escort. 4 tpd ., air.
$1&amp;99. John's Auto
below thaHolid.,.tnn, KanMJga.
Rt. 7 .

71e4.

, CROSS &amp; SONS
U .S. 36 W.111t, Jackson. Ohio.

ARMV ,

•soo. Call

AKC Male Cock• Spaniels. One
black. 1 yr. old . One buff, 6 mos.
old. t1 00 each. Call 614-882-

.

hitch. AM -FM. Cl radio, air
cond, erutse. •2.600.00. 304-

71 Auto's For Sale
1979 Pinto.
~8 -4913 iller

1:os CIJ Andy Griffllh

;..,...

1979 Jeep Wagoneer. V8. u;all•

7026 .

AKC Reg. female Poodle pup.
Silver. Call614-448·6976.

136.(

Call 114-992· 2018.

Transportalton

AKC Siberian Husky puppl•.
Slue eyed baiUti•. 11216. Will
hold for Christmas. Call 814446-6927 .

Complute hamsters siJI-up with
hamster. 16.00 aaeh. Baby
parakeets. t8 &amp;: 10 each. Baby
rabblta, $1 .50 each. Baby hamsters. f1 .26 each: Call 446-

1917 lnternttional Scout for

Nile. 4 Wheel Drive. •300 . 080.

Dee, 18th-1 :00PM. Wa will be
holding a speci811 fHd• cllfHie.
All brtedl including Holsteins.
Cattle wMI be accepted starting
al•:oo PM. Fri .• O.e. 18th up to
1 :00 PM, Sat., Dec. 19th.
Hauling available. Alhens Uvastock Sal• 1 milu•t of Albany
on St. AT. 60. C•ll Stock
yerd-114-692-2322 or 898 3631, Evenings.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kannel,
CFA Himalayan. Persian and
Sismaae kittens . AKC Chow
puppie~ , Call 614 -4•6-3844
after 7PM .

&amp; 4 W.O.

1982 Dodge 2150 Rsm. Cuatom
conversion. Trail• ..ady. Call
614-448-4383 d0¥1, ~11-0139
evens. • week.-ds.

Sired. We can help you with your
bull needs. Call814-286·2496.

Pets for Sale

Vans

,

NlghUy Bualnell Report.
IW 111112l CBS Newt
I!D Colonounde
I(}) Inside Polltlce '88
ll!l WKRP In Cincinnati
fll C1J Too Cloaa lor Comfort
&amp;:35 CIJ Laava H To Beaver
7:0001 Remington Steele
11 (lJ PM Magazine
I!) SportaCentar (L)
Cil Entertainment Tonight
0 (I] People'• Court
(f) l!ll MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
®News
I!Jl Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics
anQ financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill ll2l 1151 Wheel of Fortune
®Chaara
fl) (!) M•A•s•H

IWAAt ..
IWMlL

246-6831 .

2783.

2434, Ohio 1-B00-633-3463.

SURPLUS

CD C1 (I] ABC Nawa r:;1

.

(1)

bottom aklmn boat 7'1:1 hp
McCullough motor. 304·8761816.

73

latter! of rhe
words be-

.

CD IJ IJl 1m Ill@

~ Surfer Mag1111ne (R)

'72 Ch"Y pick up. 12 11 V

Baby rabbits, 16.00 each. Turk...-1, $12.60 each. Call 614·

Concrete blodls all silas yard or
deUvery. Mason sand. Gtlllpolit
Block Co., 123'1:1 Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614-448·

SIGNS: lighted Arrow Sign
$299 ; Non· Affow 8289; unlighted $ 1 99 . Free delivery letters
till De c. , , W .Va. 1·800-642New 10 speed bike 859.00 .
Redinera $46 . 8t up. Other
Christmas Gifts. Pidtens Used
Furniture. 304·676- 1460,

CAPTAIN EASY

1982 Ford F1&amp;0 long bod, 351
engine. auto, power steering,
power brsk•. trail• towtng.
AM -FM rHio, niiW' tirN, XLS
Pllg .• camp• also tvaHtble if
wanled. Call 614 -742-2289.

ShOe uddle. •1100 value- for
1696. Ca11614-288·6522.

246-6121 .

Siamese kittenS for Chrlstma1.
Litter trained . 304 -876-6043.

DENIM,

I'

03350. Coli 814-949-3003.

B'uilcUng Materials
Block, brick. sewer pipe~. win·
dowa. linlels, etc. Claude Winters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814-

CLAY l . POLLAN

low to f?rm four simple words.

(!) SportsLook (T)
(!)Dr. Who
I!D Square One TV Q
·I!Jl ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world is
anchOred live from . New
York . (0:30)
® Facta of Life
Ill (!) One Dey at a nme
6:05 CIJ Alice
&amp;:30 II (lJ 01 NBC Nightly Newa

1979 -F100 . New shOckl, new
duel eahaust. wiper motor,
ho..•. m-:mosl81, oil filter,
.ml-frMZe. Excalant condidon,

~ Mare, 115-3 hands. •860. New

~r

four Krambled

01 News

8PM.

8 Yr. old Reg'ad Sorrtll Quanar

53

I) (lJ

1985 Ch.,rolat El Camino.
Sh.-p. Topper, loaded with
e~:tNS. L_
ow mil•. ExceUant
cond. Call· 61•·448·1281 •tter

Livestock

O ~earrtlnoe

· 6:00 CD Crazy Like a Fox

1979 Ford 110 Rang• 4up•
Cab. V-8, •utomatlc. PS, PB .
Cab hal no rust· led h• some.
811ii00. Ctll 11 ..-&amp;83-88311.

63

------r lditod

wOlD
GAM I

EVENING

1985 Dodge 0 -100. 4 lpd.
Sh•PI 85494. John's Auto
Sat• below Holiday Inn In
Kan.,UI. Oh, Rt. 7 .

?l!i

T~~:~:~y S©~oU1A-~t,~S®

.M.__M:!!'O'"'-N:::o.,-=D::EC=.,__,1_,_4_ .

Pickup bad · 1979 GMC- 111

Wllol£ 9UI~tl(:f .

55 Building Supplies

PM .

Trucks for Sale

11oo1. Coli 814-387-0102.

8

- - - -- - - - Furni1hed room. 176. Utllitifll
paid . Share bath. Single male.
·919 Second. Gallipolis. Call
446·4416 after 7pm.

poymoms. 304•1175-5705.

~~~~ Wllll£ He'~ Efllil'(l:l .
11110 'fUN.I&gt;. HE ~ bOWN

rr-;::=~"-

Television
· Viewing

door, t7,000.00 or take over

1"~ 'iollfl- Clif 'fo ~cp
~1'fiN!j ON. 11\E H&lt;Sr· AIR

The Daily Sentinei- Page - 11

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

19BII Dodge Shelby Ch•a•. 2

.'

and up to .~~: .......
90 Davs same aa cash ·wtt 'h
approved aedit. 3 Mile~ out
Bulaville Rd. Open 9am to 6pm
Mon. thru ·sat. Ph. 814-448 0322 .
Uke new couch &amp; loveseat.
Cail 814·446·7307 after 5

614·446-7025 .

1637.

Real Estate
Homes for Sale

I

GOOO USED APPLIANCES

Monday. December 14. 1987

BORN

71 Auto's For Sale

51 Household Goods

614-268-6609.

614-~8-060B .

Rentals

. .

614-992-7863.

3 bedroom. 1 '12 bath. 14x70
200 acreflll'm loeatedoff Rt. 62,
Mobile home in Middleport.
3 mil• on Manali Ridge Road.
New Clltpet. very nice. 614-992Putnam County. Mineral rights
586B.
.
induded. $05,000.00 cwwn• ·
will finance wilh t6,000.00
Two bed rooms. Upp.- River
down. 304-937-3383 before
Road. wMI eccep~tWorldng per8:00 am or after 8:00 pm.
son or family with 2 children,

304·576-2383.

Bob Cline Taxidermy, Member
W. 'Va . Taxid.-my AIIOC. Rt. 2
Box 782, Point PI .. M&amp;nt, W . Va .
30 4- 675-1448.

116.000.

-loHousa tor rant in Mlddlapon. 3
bedroom. LR , Dining room.
family room. fully carPeted,
e•port •. laundry room, 1260
month plus utiliti• and deposit.
Avellabte Jan. 15 or before. Call

,·- BR. Dopos•·
513 Thl.rd A·-·
.....- 1

~

614-367-7743.

2 Building lots· 1 Yt acral each
with county water. Jerrya Run
Rd. Apple Grove, W. Va . Call

Professional

31

992·6~,8 -

m

876-6104 .

I NOTICE I
TtiE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO . recommends that you
do business with people you
know. and NOT to send money
. through the mail until you h111e
invntigated the offering.

~

New 1988 PrMiige 141170 total
elec., 3 BR ., 2 blrtttl. furnit;had .
Anchors. skirting. Loaded with
~tras . 114,600. Kan .. ga Mobile Hom•· 614· 446-9862.

Commerei811 buildings for laaae.
Downtown Pt. Ple•ant. Store1,
otfiOH. A :one Real Eatate.
Carol Veeger. B~oker. c;:au 304- ·

Business
Opportunity

23

1

ohor 2 PM-614-446·0627.

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

21

ent

House for rent. 3 badroom.
g•aga, r,:lepostt required. 614-

446-2167.[ •

Will babysit in my home.'J:'uppers

omes or

.

Must Saii-67X14 2 BR . Victorian
Deluxe. a .. heat, parttv fur·
nished. CeiL.,aftor 15 PM 814·

Situations
Wanted

12

4

for Sale

3619·
PRIOR MiliTARY SERVICE
mean a elltra monev for members
of the Army Na1 ional Guard. Call
304-676 -3960 or , ·800-642 -

Apartment
for Rent

.. Washflf's, dryers, refrigerators.
ra nges. Skaggs Appliances ,
2 BR . apts. 6 closets. kitchen· l.,lpper RivM Rd . beside Stone
appl. furhia.hed. Washer. Oryar
C~st Motel. 614 -448·739S.
hook· up. ww carpet. newtv,
painted, deck. Regency. In c.
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Apu . Call 304-876 -7738 or
676· 6104.
Sofas and chllirs priced from
8395 to 8996 . Tabl• 160 and
Furnished lpt. n81Ct to library.
up to •1215 . Hida-a·beds $390
One professional adutl only.
to 1596. Reelinera t226 to
Parking. Cal1614-446-0338.
$376. Lamps S28 to 1126.
Dinettes t 109 and up to $496.
Wood tabla )Y·6 chair• t286 10
Nice 1 BA . apt. N•ar HMC . No
p81:s. Stow, refrig ., drapes.
8796. Deak $100 up to 1376.
1226 a mo. Ref. required . Call
Hutch• 1400 and up. Bunk
614 -446-4782.
\ beds complete w -mettru.es
---------:--=::- $296 and up to 1396. Baby bed•
Downtown- Modern 1 IR .,
$110. Mattresses or box springs
full or twin &amp;68, firm 178, and
complete kiichen1 carpet, air,
electric hast. Call (;14-446889 . Queen sets · $226. King
4383 -dtl(s. 446 -0139-even. 8t
$360. 4 drawer chalt $69 . Gun
weekends .
c abinets 6 gun. Gas or electric
range 8375 , Baby mattresses
Furnished: • rooms &amp; bath.
$36 It t46. Sed frame~ $20.
Clean. No pets . Adults'onty. Ref.
83!) a. King frame 160. Good
, &amp; dep. required . Call 614- 446ulection of bedroom suh:81,
1619.
metal cabinets. headboards 130

using machine~ made with m•

January 4th.

Monday. December 14, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Page-10-The Daily Sentinel

;

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two ~·s, etc. Single letters,
· apostrophes the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe-rent.
CRYPTOQUOTES
12-14
SROE
EZY

BZRPY

E Z Y C Y

R F
'T R C Y

V R R I

E Z Y

JPP

J WF

E W S Y

K YJ C

C RLFI,

F R

TPWYO

E

X L E

s y

'

Q Y 0 E

w s

UZCWOES.) O

J 0

w

H WF

~·

....

X y

-YLVYFY

TWYPI
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE ART OF GfVING
PRESENTS IS TO GIVE SOMETHING WHICH OTHERS
CANNOT BUY FOR THEMSELVES. - AA MILNE
i&lt;

�•

Page-12-Th8 Daily Sentinel

Monday. December 14. 1987-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Consumer group: 1,000 brands · of alcohol
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - More
than 1,000 brands of alcoholic
beverages contain potentially
hazardous levels of the cancercausing chemical urethane but
the Food and Drug Administration has taken nQ action, a
consumer.group said today .
The Center for Science ln the
Publlc Interest released a 70·
page report titled "Tainted
Booze" showing that a number of

bourbons, sherries, fruit bran· tiona! Research Council said,
dies, whiskeys and table and "There Is no doubt whatsoever
dessert wines, Including some that urethane poses a real cancer
California products, contained risk to regular drinkers. My
urethane.
concern is whether regulatory
The chemical Is not an additive action will be tak_en promptly
and Is formed spontaneously, but enough to save some lives."
~o far mysteriously, In the
The consumer group said ure·
manufacture of the alcoholic thane levels In more than 100
beverages.
beverages sold In the United
Marvin Schneiderman, a States reached levels in excess of
cancer specialist with the Na- . limits set by the Canadian
government two years ago.

Soviet urges joint odyssey
going to Mars in year 200 I

coJttain~ urethane

•

The group said the FDA had products known to exceed the
not removed these products from Canadian urethane limits, an
the market and had not public· FDA spokesman said the agency
was actively working with bever!zed their names.
The group said the produc ts age Industry scientists to figure
Included certain Gallo and Chris- out specific techniques to ellmi·
tian Brothers 's herries, Almaden nate or substantially redu ce
and Paul · Masson table wines, urethane In alcoholi c beverages.
Jim Beam and Early Times The spokesman said urethane
levels in the beverages presented
bourbons, and Foster beer.
In a letter to the FDA commis- no significant risk to consumers.
John DeLuca, president of the
sioner, the group said some FDA
scientists have said the Canadian Wine Institute, said last July that
government underestimated the industry scientists were focusing
levels of urethane that are risky. on heat and levels of arginine, an
In July, when the consumer · amino acid, as possible factors In
group expanded an earlier list of the formation of urethane.

. DeLuca pointed out, "Mllllons
of people have been drinking
wine for thousands of years,"
and added the only thing that had
changed was the technology for ·
detecting minute traces of sub·
stances. He charged the consumer group "was playing a
numbers game at the expense of
Industry."
' 'People should be able to drink
without imbibing powerful carb'\ogens," countered Michael Jac·
obson, executive director of
CSPI. "The FDA Is derellct In
delaying, seemingly endless, the
protection of consumers."

. GET CHICKEN LlnLES FROM
CROW'$ FAMILY RESTAURANT
WEDNESDAy DECEMBER 16
1-5:30

SANTA CLAUS AT

Visit with Santa... Bring Your Camera or for
S3.00 We Will Take Your Picture For You.

15 EXPS. .•.II PRINll .. . WOW C»&gt;LY .•.
24 EXPS. .. .41 PRIItlS ... MOW ONlY ..• ·~••
tallfFIR 11 _, t:M JW11 PMfT C..1

.. CLEVELAND !UP I ) - Satu rday's win ning Ohio Lottery

FORMULA 44

Pick 4

7074

numbers:

Daily Numb er
063.
Ticket sa l es tota l e d
$1,694,789.50, wi th a payoff due of
$48:!,983.
2058.
PICK-4 tic ket sales tot aled
$244,389, with a payoff d u~ of
$109.975.
PICK-4 Sl straight bet pays
$2,904. PICK-4 $1 box bet pays
$121 .

4/IZ. SJZE'----'

BERKLINE CHRISTMAS SALE

GREAT SAVINGS on RECLINERS

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

f99

--~

IU!m-

- - Oft4 OR

wtm-

f'llll. Of ,.

GOOD NEWS!

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff

SWIVEL ROCKER ......................SALE
RECLINER .................................SALE
ROCK-A-LOUNGER ..................SALE
WALLAWAY RECLINER .............SALE
ELECTRIC POWER RECLINER •••• SALE

BRUT 33

SOLID Allri-I'EIISPIIIAMT
STICK OR
OEODORAIIT STICK

RITE AID
PEANUTS
DRY ROASTED
OR UNSAIIED

f49
.RITE AID .
ALKALINE
BATTERIES

f49

1 Section, 10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedi8 Inc . Newspaper

tures overnight, most of the snow
was expected to melt early today
in the northern section of ·the
state, said forecasters.
Rain will fall statewide during
the early-morning hours today ,
they said .
the national - chic ago, milwau kee airports
closed; air traffic controllers
abandon tower )
Around Tl)e Nation
By ALAN YONAN JR.
United Press International
A killer storm that rampaged
east-from the Rockies , knocking
a plane from the sky and

triggering · devastating torna·
does , swept today Into the Great
La kes region with heavy snow
and 60-mph wind gusts , shutting
down Chicago's O'Hare International Airport.
At least 13 deaths have been
blamed on the bizarre mlx of
tornadoes, cold and record snow
produced by the first major
winter storm of the season for the
central United States.
The blizzard-llke storm howled
to life in ·the southern Rockies
du ring the weekend and spread
snow Monday across the Plains
and Into the Mississippi Valley
before reaching the Great Lakes
.today.

. Air traffic controllers at
O'Hare were forced to abandon
the tower briefly early today as
wind gust at the airport broke the
60-mph mark. The airport officially shut down at 5 a.m. when
blowing snow and high winds
reduced visibility to near zero.
Seven inches of wet, heavy snow
were reported at O'Hare as of
5: 30 a .m . ·
Am erican Airlines canceled ali
of its flights Into and out of
Chicago and airport officiirls
predicted other airlines would
follow suit.
Milwaukee's Mitchell International Airport was also closed
as crews·worked to clear at

least one runway for outbound
fli ghts.
Winter storm warnings were
up for Illinois, Wisconsin, southern Michigan and Minnesota.
The Nationa l Weather Service
said cold air from the same
storm system clashed with
warmer air to the ea st Monday
night and unleashed a tornado
that sla shed through West Me mphis, Ark.
The twis ter wrecked homes
and businesses alon g 15 blocks of
a downtown street, killing at
least five people and injured 160,
including 30 who had , to be
hospitalized , authorities sa id.
A tornado demolished another

10 to 15 homes across the
Mississippi River in Memphis,
Tenn.
' ')leople have been lost from
loved ones and fri ends," said
admissions supervisor Myrna
Clark at Crittenden Memorial
Hospital in West Memphis .
" We've seen some still wandering around looking."
In Illinois, state pollee said
snow had causes scores of
highway wrecks and pileups
even before the morning rush
and state trooper Tommie Artis
urged motorist s to "just stay
home. "

Transportation Department
Continued on page 5

mediation session Dec. 7, but
which MLTA denies having
heard about until the offer was
printed ln the newspaper. as
released by the board. Morris
said Saturday the board stands
by the
statement that the
proposal was put to the federal
mediator on Dec. 7, and that the
federal mediator told them (the
board) he had discussed ele·
ments of the proposal with

members of the MLTA negotiatIng team .
Without reading the proposal
herself, Slavin could not be sure
if the proposal was the same as
the one printed in the newspaper
following the Dec. 7 meeting.
Meigs teachers have been off
the job since Nov. 6 and since that
time, proposals and counter
proposals have been offered
Morris said. The strike is in Its
26th school day today.

Morri~ said the goal of the
Board ls to reopen schools "as
soon as possible' ' using substitutes. Although the Board hopes
arrangements can be made to
resume classes this week, as yet,
''no decision has been made' ' by
the Board, he added.
The board meets In regular
session tonight (Tuesday), 7
p.m., at the administration building In Middleport.
·

facility at minimum wages; and
short and longterm maintenance
of the faclllty .
'·
In weighing the pros and cons,
council said that the size of the
course can be adapted to fit a
corner space in the park which is
not used as frequently as other
areas, and that parking is al ready a problem and will con·
tinue to be untll council takes
steps to create more parking.
As far as maintaining the
facility and supervising em· .
ployees, recreation committee
members said they would do
their best to run· the course
properly if councll did choose to
have the course constructed.

In other business, Mayor Fred
Hoffman reported that he received a letter from the Ohio
Department of Transportation
regarding funding guarantees
for the village-sponsored subsidized taxi service. Hoffman reported that the taxi-service will
operate this coming year on
nearly a $200,000 budget, including $.151,617 from state and
federal sources, $40,000 from the
sale of fare tokens and local
match money of $3,500 from the
county commissioners and $1,800
from Pomeroy Village. The fund ·
ing for the taxi-service has grown
considerably since the operation
began in 1985, Hoffman said.
Environmental Protection
Agency approval of plans and
specifications for improvements
to the village sewage system has
been received. The improvements will bring the system into
compliance with state and fed eral regula lions and construction
should begin by mid-January ln
order to finish by July 1, the
compliance deadline. Council
moved to begin advertising for
bids for reconstruction of a
manhole on Race St., part of the
sewage system update, and to
pay the firm of Floyd Brown and
Associates, of Marlon and Can ton, $30,600 for engineering costs
related to the project.

Hoffman reported that : the
state audit of village funds has
been completed. Written copies
of the audit should be available in
January Hoffman said.
Council authorized Hoffman to
ask for a one-month extension of
coverage from Blue Cross in
order to allow council t.o check on
coverage from other firms. Middleport's Blue Cross rates are
scheduled to Increase 2'3 percent
for family coverage, going from
$233 to $287 per month. Blue
Cross costs were $33,000 this
year, reported Mayor Hoffman ,
but will go to $42,000 In 1988.
Hence the decision was made to
shop a'_round for medical coverage, before committing to Blue
Cross for another year.
Council also completed the
following matters;
Made plans to meet as soon as
possible with officials in Phlllipi,
W.Va. to discuss aspects of that
community 's municipally operated cable television .
Approved end-ofCthe -year
transfers of funds to balance out
accounts.

...

And unless it becomes neces·
sa ry to meet on the next regu·
larly scheduled date of Dec. 28,
canceled that meeting, and will
not meet again until the second
Monday in January .

Barley trial gets underway in Meigs Court

COKE, DIET COKE
TAB OR SPRITE
Reg. or Caffeine Free
2 Liter Bottle

HERR'S
POPCORN
4.5 OZ', BAG

SJ83
S231
S271
S287
S499

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 15, 1987

' 1!-PP!ll.'Prs that . Mlddl~port's
Hartinger Park will be getting a
mlnature golf course sometime
· In the near future.
Middleport Village Council,
meeting Monday night, unanimously accepted a bid of $14,570
from MGI Mini,Golflnc., Jessup,
Pa ., to Install ·an 18-ho)e mlulcourse with a riverboat theme,
and to enter intoa$17 ,0001oanfor
Installation costs and a fence .
The loan with Central Trus t
would · be at two percent below
prime on a five-year basis with
repayment of $334.62 a month.
The decision by council to
Council finally voted to go with
. move ahead with the mini-course
was made following lengthy the course, with Councildiscussion with Judy Crooks and members Dewey Horton , James
John Hood, members of the Ciatworthy and Bob Gilmore all
Middleport Recreation Commit- staling they felt the course could
tee. Committee members were be successful and would appeal
invited to the mee1ing to present to people of all ages .
Christmas bonuses of $200 for
their views on the mini-course
18 full-time villa ge employees
proposal .
Points of concern to both and $100 for five . part-time
recreation committee members · employees were approved by the
and council members seemed to Board, and the third and final
coincide - the usage of much of reading of an ordinance to
the · park's remaining open increase pay to councllmembers
space; ·lnadeqate parking which from $12 a meeting to $25, to
could possibly become a safety council president from $14 to $30,
. problem; finding enough depen - and board of public affairs
dable employees 1o operate the members from $8 to $15 .

8 OZ. SIZE

REG. 5229
REG. S289
REG. S339
REG. S359
REG.·S699

By Unlled Press International
Winter storm warnings were
issued in northwestern Ohio for
Monday night by the N atlonal
Weather Service, and winter
weather advisories were in effect
for ·the northeastern portion of
the state.
Northern Ohio had 1-2 Inches of
snow on the ground late Monday
evening, and It was piling up
quickly .
Forecasters said more than 4
Inches of snow would accumulate
In the northwestern part of the
state overnight Northeastern
Ohio was expected to. get 2-3
Inches. ·
Because of rising tempera-

DISPOSABLE
RAltJIIS

THERAPEUTIC
MIIIERAL ICE

'•

enttne

Hartinger P~k · may get minature golf course

SIUETTE

"C" OR "0" CEHPKG. OF Z OR
9 WJU-&amp;IHIIIE I'MCK

'

at y

e

A formal contract proposal
was sent Monday to Meigs Local
Teachers' Association President
Mike Wilfong, according to
Meigs Superintendent Dan
Morris.
Rita Slavin, ofMLTA, reported
this morning that Wilfong did
receive a proposal by certified
maiL
Morris said the proposal is the
same one the Meigs Board of
Education says they offered at a

:&amp;!i:@

9 ......................................... 7:00 TO 8:00
14 .... .... ............. .. ................ 7:00 TO 8:30
17 ................................. : ..... 7:00 TO 8:30
19 ....................................... 2:00 TO 4:00
22 ....................................... 7:00 TO 8:00

8 .... ...... ........ .. ..................... 7:00 TO
11 ................... .. .................. 7:00 TO
13 .............................. ......... 2:00 TO
16 ....... .......... .. ......... ..... ...... 7:00 TO
21 .... .... ...... ... ....... .. .. .. ......... 7:00 TO

•

Teachers .recetve formal contract offer

COMTREX

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

•

Windy tonight. Scattered
snow flurries , Low in mid 20s.
Continued windy Wednesday.

•

OR44D

t:tiiHJH 11/XruRE

POINT PLEASANT STORE
DECEMBER
DECEMBER
QECEMBER
DECEMBER
DECEMBER

PMICUfb MY-LEFT lUI PIIICl- Oft 01 IEfOM .IM. II, . .

VICKS .

lottery numbers

FREE
DELIVERY

675

Winter stonns spread into Ohio early today

GIVE BLOOD
AI
RED CROSS BLOODMOBILE

BERKUNE

Daily Number

Vot.38, No.1 52
Cop ,· htod 1987

WASHINGTON &lt;UPI ) - On that landed on Mars in 1976 was up radioactive debris at
the heels of a U.S;-USSR space an immobile sampler, unable to Chernobyl.
agreement, a top Soviet space rove the face of the planet.
· Sagdeyev said constructing the
official has suggested the two Sagdeyev said constructing a Martian rover would probably
countries cement scientific coop· roving probe weuld probably cost $1 billion, and ·a mission to
eration with a joint manned .mean designing a "smart" veh!· return soli samples to Earth
mission to Mars in 2001.
cle that could use artificial "would probably cost less than$5
Roald Sagdeyev, the head of intelligence to solve movement billion."
the Soviet Space Research Insti· puzzles as lt encountered obstaSagdeyev, an adviser on space
tute, said Sunday a joint mission cles ln its path.
Issues to Soviet leader Mikhail
to Mars would cost " far below
Complex computer programs Gorbachev, said, "This joint
what our two countries now would have to be bullt into the space effort would not only
spend annually on nuclear rover because It would take broaden the dialogue that Is now
arms," and could be done in minutes formanlpulatlngslgnals under way between our two
stages, leading up to " the final from Earth to reach Mars, countries, but also bring a new
:stage- a major, manned expedl- Sagdeyev said ·American scient· dimension to it.
ists have more expefJence with
"If our dialogue remains based
lion to Mars."
••- Sagdeyev said this fina l stage the artificial Intelligence that on arms control, then only
''would cost $50 billion to $100 would be used, while the Soviets military aspects wlll be involved
· billion," and, "if all goes well might actually. · construct the . and we will have difficulty
with these missions,'' might be rover, using experience gained establishing the language of
achieved by the year 2001.
mak(Jlg a mobile robot to clean mutual understanding," he said . .
'That target date, he said in an 1 ------;--'--'------------------1
article in The Washington Post,
Is a "sentimental goal" for what
he called a joint "space odyssey"
to match the vision of Arthur C.
Clarke, British author of the
science fiction classic, "2001 : A
Space Odyssey." Sagdeyev said
the 70-year-old Clarke has promised he will "stay alive and in
good shape until then. "
Sagdeyev's invitation follows
I
an agreement signed Friday that
wlll lead to an exc.hange of
SENIOR CITIZENS CENTER
expertise and data. and possibly
to exchange of scientific Instruments and experiments aboard
Mars-bound propes - the 1992
U.S. Observer probe, and the 1998
Soviet Phobos probe tha t will
land on a Martian moon .
Sagdeyev said smaller steps up
to the big goal would be polit i:
cally realistic: "If Americans
are worried about transferring
sensitive military technology to
the Soviet Union , we should find
ways to work cooperatively ,short of fully integrated '
missions.
"For example, we could each
send payloads to Mars that would
.&gt;II
be launched separately from
Earth but work together on
Mars."
He said other steps might
include cooperative landing; by
GALLIPOLIS STORE
1994, of an unmanned rover that
could explore the planet, or a 1998
DECEMBER 10 .................. ..................... 7:00 TO 8:30
mission to bring Martian sam DECEMBER 12 .... .......... :................. :.. , .. . 2:00 TO 4:00
ples back to ea rth .
DECEMBER 15 ........ ; ........................ : ..... 7:00 TO 8:30
The fi:me rlcan Viking probe ·
DECEMBER 18 .... .. ........ .. ....................... 7:00 TO 8:30
DECEMBER 20 ............... :......... : ............. 2:00 TO 4:00

..

Christmas.
countdown

.

.

p '

Ohio Lottery

Defense Attorney StevenS tory
Intends to prove to a Meigs
County Common Pleas jury of 12
that Charles Barley, 48, of
Pomeroy, feared for !lis own
safety when he fired shots , at
David Talbott, 21, of Racine, in
an inclden I on May 23 at the Cove
bar on Route 7 near Pomeroy .
Story alleged ln opening remarks to the jury of six -men and

six -women that Talbott was
wielding a pool cue "in the
fa shion of a club'' ju st before the
shots were fired, and that he will
be putting two witnesses on the
stand to corroborat e that
allega lion.
Barley is charged wi th felonious assau lt with a firear m
specification in connection with

the shooting. The State's case
against Barley is being presented by Meigs County Prosecut ing Attorney Fred Crow III.
Actual testimon y ln the case ..
began about 11:30 Monday with
Crow calling, respectively, Middleport Policeman Clint Patterson, Meigs Deputy Kenny Klein ,
Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank ,
and ·Wade Connolly, 21, of Ra -

cine , who was at the bar at the
time of the shooting .
The law enforcement officers
described their own actions at
the bar following the shooting,
and Connolly desc ribed events
shortly · before and immedia t.ely
after the shooting.
Testimony ended about 4 p.m.
Monday and resumed at 9 a.m.
today.

MAJOR SNOWSTORM - Ernest Peters struggles through a
snowstorm as he pushes his shopping cart down a snow-covered
sidewalk in downtown Kansas Ctty. A major winter storm blithe
area, dumphig up to six Inches of snow, with a possible 121nches by
Tuesday morning. (UPI)

Five killed, 160 hurt
~y Arkansas tornado

WEST MEMPHIS, Ark. (UP ! )
- Rescue team s sea rched collapsed homes , bu sinesses a nd
apartme nt ~uildin gs a lon g a
short er, double sessions came 15-block pa th of des truction to·
because.. of teacher and class- day for survivors of a tornado
room shortages during World that kill ed a t least five people and
War II. This study .is to provide injured a bo ut 160.
Seve ral peop le were pulled
Information to school personnel
regarding specific outcomes of from the rubble of a truck stop
students In three option s of with only minor in juries after
being !tapped in the wreckage
kind ergarten."
The study, guided by a 29- for nearly three hours, a witness
m ember advisory team ap- said .
The twiste1· touched down a t
poin ted by Walter, is a n out9:45
p.m. Monday, skipping
growth of recommendations of
,.
along
Interstate
40 and 15 blocks
the Ohio Commission on Early
Chilahood Education in 1984. One of a downtown street in Wes t
Memphis and des troying houses
of those recommendations was
and bu sinesses in its p~t h .
tha t a child' s intellectual, social,
Another 10 to 15 ,homes were
physical, and psychological de,
demolished across the Missis ·
velopment should be monitored
si ppi River in Memphis, Tenn.
ea rly.
Abou t 160 people were treated
Students noted in the preliminary report will be monitored for . at hos pita ls and 30 remai ned
hospitalized today, Memphis
progress as th e study Corjtinues
F
ire Depar tment Lt. Bi ll Adelfor a t leas t three more years.

Full-time kindergai1en pupils perfonn better
39

MWNSE~RY~YNE~RYA5LE

SHOP YOUR NEAREST RITE AID TODAYl
RITE AID ACCEI'TS.ALL MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS

1'11/CE$ EFFECTIVE DEC. U THIIU DEC. 20, 1N7 • WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO UMIT QUANTITIES • NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR rfi'OGRAPHICAL ERRORS

RITE AID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET .
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Children who attend full-day,
every-day ·kindergarten classes
outperform their peers who. are
enrolled in either full -day,
alternate -day or half-day, every·
day sessions, a study shows.
The Ohio Department of Edu cation's PreschoolKlndergarten
Longitudinal Research Study
was presented Monday to the
State Board of Education. The
presen ta lion was a first -year
report of the f&lt;'i ur-yea r study ,
which is belleved to be the lar gest
of its kind In the nation ,
''While It Is important .to
emphasize that this prelimina ry
report is part of a long-tc•·m ,
study, these r es ul ts a re added
confirmation of the significance
of early childhood e&lt;tucation hi
Ohio," said State Superintendent
Frenklll1 B . Walter.

'

.

"The report indica tes that a lternate-day classes.
Res ults for grad es two an~
educational benefit s for kindergarteners in class five hours a three that yea r were even more
day, five days a week, outweigh , pronounced in favor of full -day,
the benefit s for those who are in " every-day programs.
class feWer hours." ·
The study of fir st grade readi·
Walter referred to two par t ~; of ness test res ults of 2,845 kinderthe three- part s tud y that report gartners in the spring of 1987
on test performances of Ohio notes that pupil s in full-day,
students.
ever y- day session s outperThe study of8 ,290chlidrcn who form ed their counterparts by
completed kindergarten between nine to 10 'per cent. The monit orMay 1982 and May 1985 examines ing of 3,675 pupils who ente red
later test perfo rmances through kind ergarten this fa ll also is pa rt
grade four.
of the study .
Test data collected in 19&amp;'i-26,
The third pa rt of the study
as an example, shows tha t grade invplves a survey, based on data
four stud ents that year who had ga th ered in the spring of 1985, of
attended full -day. every-day kin · beliefs and practices in Oh io
dergarten sessions pe rformed kindergartens.
fiv e to 11 percent higher on
' 'Th e first kindergartens in this
standa rdized t~sts that th ~lr count ry offered full-da y propeers who had attended either grams," said Patricia Smith ,
half-da y, every-da y or full-day, board pres ident. "The influx of

'

.man. sclid.

\

About 29 people were homeless
in Tennessee, but In Wes t Memphis darkn ess pre vented officials
from immedia tely assessing the
extent qf the dama ge. About 30
-people gathered at a Red Cross
shelter.
'
Herbert Hi rsc h, 40, a Thayer ,
Mo.. trucker. said he saw the
twister co mi ng_ and escaped
injury by lea ping behind the
co un ter of a truck stop where he
was drin king coffee.
"Some were trapped in there
for three hou rs." he said . " One
guy, he w.as under blocks , bricks
and s teeL It took 2% hours to get
him out He was bruised was all.''
Hirsch said there were 30 to 45
rigs at the truc kstop and all were
damaged.
"I know of four that .w ere
turned completely -over," he
said.
Downed power lines , twisted
metal a nd road signs Uttered the
ground in WPs t Memphis today.
r.
Co nrlnuev on page 5

•

�</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="39834">
            <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="39833">
              <text>December 14, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
