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                  <text>Pomeroy-

,.age- 1o- 1ne Ually Sentinel

Wednesday, December 1

Ohio

Ohio Lottery

MERRY
CHRISTMAS

We Reserve The Right To
limit Quantities

E•tra ~alues
E•tra Sa~h•g•
E•tra Coupons

STORE HOURS

Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

•

I

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

~--------------.
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.
I
PRICE SAYER
'
I
I GRANULATED SUGAR

I

II ..:..,.!!~

TOMATO JUICE

•

CHICKEN

46

Leg Quarters ••• ~~~ •• 39 &lt;
BUCKET
99
Cube Steak ....~...... $1
HORMEL SLICED

oz. 99&lt;
Pep.peroni •••••••••••••
3.5

16-22 LB. AVG.

Tom Turkey ••••••!'o•• 79&lt;
WILSON'S CORN KING-

6-8 LB. AVG.

$

Boneless Hams •• !B•·

oz. 49(

I

I
I
I
I
I
1
,1

limii 1 With C.,..on and
15.00 Purchase
•
Goad thru Saturday, Dec. 19, 1917 I

______________

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, December 17, 1987

.

WASHINGTON (UP!) - World leaders must
take immediate and determined actlon to reduce
trade and budget imbalances or face the most
severe worldwide economic downturn 'since the
Great Deptession, top economists from 13
countries say.
The most necessary step would be for the United
States to erase its huge budget and trade deficits
within four to five years, said lhe 33 economists
Wednesday in releasing a report and recommendations through the Institute of Internalionai
Economics.
Large trade surpluses In Japan and other Asian
countries also must be ellmlnated, according to
the experts, Including American Nobel Prize
winners Lawrence Klein of the University of
Pennsylvania and Franco Modigiiani of the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.

The economists are from all major industrial
nations, including Japan and West Germany, as
well as from Canada, Mexico, Australia and
developing Asian countri~s. Despite many
differences, they were virtually unanimous on
what is needed to avert th e worst economic
downturn since the Great bepression, they said.
"This statement is really calling for leadership," said C. Fred Bergsten, director of the
Institute for International Economics, which
sponsored the report, ''Resolving the Global
Economic Crisis: Aller Wall Street."
Noting the sharp decllne in the U.S. bond
market in early 1987 a nd the stock market crash in
October, including the 50!\-point decllne Oct. 19 in
the Dow Jones indu-strial average, Bergsten ,said,
"The need for action is very urgent (because) the
next hit could be very severe."

The most critical requirement to ease the world
economic crisis, according to the report issued
simultaneously in eight countries, is for the
United States to hold domestic spendipg to 1.5
.percent belpw the growth of output until'the early
· 1990s. That would free resources .to expand
exports and ease the U.S. trade deficit, which is
running at $160 billion In 1987,
·
For example, the proposal would allow the U.S.
gross national product to continue growing at 2.5
percent, but domestic demand could grow at only
about 1 percent, instead of the current 4 percent.
It also would require countries to slash trade
surpluses over four years, includihg reductions of
$70 billion to $100 billion by Japan, $50 billion to $70
billion by European nations, and $30 billion by
Asian exporters such as South Korea, Taiwan and
Singapore. ·

GOLD MEDAL FLOUR

I

SLB.59(

:

limit I With Coupon and
15.00 Puochase

II

L~-~~~':.ot:!~:·-2!:.~!!1

199
-

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

LB. $129
Chuck Roast ••••••••
•

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$ 99
Smk. Sausage ••• !~. 1

i

HILLSHIRE FARMS

.

I HYLAND DOG FOOD

!
I

20

!

LB. $1 99 ,

limit I With (oupOII and
1
15.00 Puochaso
I
Good thru Saturday, Dt&lt;. 19, 1917

I

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I

I CRISPY SERVE BACON I
II
49&lt;LB.
II

RED or WHITE

1

Grapes •••••.••••• ~••..•. 99&lt; I

I

limit I With Coupon and

1
•5.00 Purchaso
1
_______________
Goad thru Saturday, Dec. 19, 1987 JI

BROUGHTON

2% Milk ••••••••:~..... $129
PARKAY JUMB~ SPREAD
$ 09
Margarme •••• ;.•:.'!'~.. 1
DAIRY LA.NE

COLE'S

Bread ••••••••••••••••• 4f$1
Dog Food ••••••••••• '4I $1
16 OZ.

LOAF

SUNSHINE

1.S

oz.

1

15.5-

•

CAMPBELL'S

PRIC£ SAVER

CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP

BLEACH

10.75
Con

Oz.3 f$1

limit 3 Per Cu•tomer
Good Only At Powoll's Supermarket
Offer Go6d Thru Sot., Dec. 19, 1917

GAL.

69&lt;

limit 1 Ptr C111tamer
Good Only At Powoll's Supormarktt
Offer Good Thru
Dt&lt;. 19, 1917

I
• I

Ice Cream •••••• :~~!L... 99&lt;
FROZEN-Cheese, Pep., Supreme Sl S
·
p•
9
Tony s 1zza ••• ~~:!·.
I

SURF .DETERGENT
147

oz.

$499-

limit 1 Per C111tomer
Good Only AI Pawoll's Supormarktl
Offer Good Thru Sot., Dec. 19, 1987

MAXWELL HOUSE

•
•
•
•
•
•

COFFEE
3 LB.
CAN

$599

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I
89&lt; s LB. BAG I
limit 1 With Coupon and
I
Purchaso
I
Good lhru Saturday, Dt&lt;. 19, 1987 I
FLORIDA ORANGES
15.00

~-------------'

Our Money
·Back
Promotion
,Paid
*6521°0
6ash to Our
Customers.

r

The only way for the United States to slow
domestic spending is to eliminate the federal
budget deficit, the economists said, by S40'biliion
per year for four years.
The $76 billion two-year budget reduction
agreement reached last month between President
Reagan and Congress is "grossly Inadequate, ..
the report said, urging "the administration and
the Congress to go back w · the drawing board,
especially for Fiscal Year 1989, on which
decisions must be made over the next few
months."
Countries with . trade surpluses also must
stimulate their economies, the economists said.
Unless these proposals are enacted by world
leaders, the value of the dollar will continue to
plunge, the report said.

.

.

Meigs board takes action
to reopen schools Monday

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25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

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~-.

2 .Sections, 16 .Pages

Action sought to avert worldwide recesston

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STOKELY

enttne

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Whole Chicken •• ~~·•• 39&lt;

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t _Eood_'!_ru_So.!urdaJ•-~...:.."~ '-'·:;.:...o •

GRADE A

Clear tonight. Low In 20s.
·cloudy Friday. Highs near tO.
Chance of rain 0 percent
Friday. '

Vol.je·. N.o. 164
Co ri hted 1987

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15,00 '"""""

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at y

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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., DEC. 19, 1987

BUTTERBALL -

Daily Number
198
Pick 4
5648
Super Lotto:
18-19-25-36-38-42

Christmas
countdown

and
auxiliary members, and those over 80. See
additional pholo and story on page 10 today.

Bloodmobile obtains 87 units
• e
of blood during Thursday VISit
. Ninety-four residents reported
to an American Red Cross
Bloodmobile at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center in Pomeroy Wednesday to give 87 pints of
blood.
Twenty-one of those reporting
gave blood in appreication fo r
blood received by relatives and
friends. During the visit Stephen
H. Nease became a two gallon
donor: Mary L. Voss, a three
gallon donor; Donna M. Davidson, an eight gallon donor and
Sarah J. Fowler, a 10 gallon
donors.
· Dr. James Witherell and Dr.
Wilma Mansfield were medical
supervisors for the visit and
nurses were Lenora Leifheit,
Beulah Ward and Naomi Londan .
Wanda Imboden represented
EMS ·personnel and clerical
workers were Mary Nease,
Wanda Fetty, .Joan Corder. Jean
Nease. Brian Reed, Jeanette
Radford and Frances Imboden.
Workers from the Retired Senior
Citizens Volunteer Program
were Virginia Buchanan. Dorothy Long, Luia Hampton,
Esther Harden, William Hoback,
Joyce Hoback, Philomena Follrod. Florence Richards. Faye

Wildermuth, Gerald Wildermuth
and Jack and Joan Sorden.
Serving the canteen were Marion
Ebersbach, Eliza beth Cu tier, ·
Polly Eichinger, Helen Fisher.
Marge Reuter , Isabelle Wolfe
and Jackie Hildebrand .
Donors by community were:
Pomeroy - Donald A. May.
Susana Heck, Raymond Jewell,
Lenora 'McKnight, Helen Blackston, Brenda Cunningham, Dan
Follrod. Loretta Brown, Debra
Mora, April .Smith, Brenda Morris, Janet Peavley. Audrey C:
Kinzel, Rick. McKnight. Mary
VanMeter, Harold W. Brinker , .
Penny L. Brinker, William W.
Radford, Walter R. Couch, David
M. King, Cyndi D. King , Phyllis
Bearhs, Virgil K. Windon, Frederick Thompson, Gerald Rought.
John F. Snyder, Laurence D.
Leonard, Judy Werry. Jay F .
Evans, Phyllis N. May, Opal
Grueser, Patricia Barton, Ca·
rolyn A. Charles, Gloria K
Kloes, Bunny Kuhl, Geoffrey A.
Wilson, Marsha Barnhart,
Wilma A. Mansfield, Albert -E;.
Parker, Paul F. Marr, Jean A.
Durst, Brian S. Shank, Kelly
Ginther, Paul A. Rice.
Middleport - Reif Herman,
Allen L. King, Kathryn D.

Johnson, George L Harris, Jr .,
Patricia F. Kitchen, Angela S.
Sellers, Ida M. Martin, David G.
Dodson , Jr.,· Patricia K. Logan.
Rhonda R. Rathburn, Sarah J.
Fowler, Charlene Doszi, Beverly
Ho.lly, Gloria J. Peavley, Mary
Sorden, Gerald .Anthony, Ti·
mothy E. Smith.
.
Long Boltom - Henry Bahr,
Vanessa Sidwell, Harlan A. Ballard, Kathy S. McDaniel , Roger
E.
penter, Laura L Hawley,
Bruc Hawley.
R cine--Virginia Bland, Dora y M. Sayre, Jeanette M.
dford. William H. Hoback,
arbara Beegle.
Langsville- Patricia Morgan,
Alva Clark, Karen Clark, Ellis E.
Myers.
· Syracuse - David Lawson,
James R. Hili, Darla Thomas.
Debra L. Offenberger, Dennis R.
Wolfe.
" Nease.
Portland - Stephen
Rutland- Mary E. Davidson,
Donna M. Davidson, Michelle. R.
Barr. John E. Donahue, Marty
Dugan, Jackiyn B. Searls, Marta
Blackwood, Dinah M. Stewart,
Gregory M. Stewart.
Minersville - Mary L. Voss.
Mason, w. Va. - Teresa
Covert.

Racine Council buys dump truck
Racilje Village Counc il
adopted a resolution at Monday
night 's special meeting declaring an emergency and waiving
the bidding processs for a used
dump truck for the village street
department. With 7,900miles , the
truck is being offered to the
· village for $16,000. '
Council authorized the clerk to
finalize the purchase of the 1984
truck from Herb Gibson of the
Racine Gas and Service Com·
pany. Council also authorized the
clerk to make necessary
transfers within village funds In
order to pay for the truck .

The Board of Pu tilic -Affairs land also ·reported he has the
contributed $2.000 on the pur- permit application for the double
chase and It was noted that th ~ wide.
Meeting with Cleland for the
village will not have to borrow
money to make the payment: special session were Clerk Jane
Some surface rust on the bed and Beegle and Street Commissioner
frame wlll be taken care of Glenn Rizer, Councilmen Rober t
before the truck is put into Beegle, Carroll Teaford, Larry
Wolfe. Scott Wolfe and Richard
service, it was reported.
Council President Frank Cle· Wamsley. It was noted that
land reported that he checked on Wamsley was also present at the
the double wide trailer that was Dec. 7 council meeting but hls
being lnslalled too close to a · name was unitentionally omitted
neighboring property within the from the newspaper account.
Council wili rneet again Mon,
village. The owner wlll move the
double wide to conform to the day, 6 p.m., for a short recessed
village trailer ordinance. Cle- session. ·

Schools in Meigs Local District
have been closed to students
since early November when
teachers went on strike. As a
result' of the strike situation,
Meigs Local Board of Education
took action at Tuesday night's
regular meetlhg to reopen
schools for students tl;lls coming
Monday, using substitute
teachers. To explain to parents
what may be expected when
schools reopen, the Board has
issued the following statement.
"The Meigs Local Board of
Education has made numerous
offers to the 'negotiating team of
the Meigs Local Teachers Association in att~mpts to avoid and to
settle the strike situation which
now exists. All of the offers would
have malntaiqed some sense of
financial stability in the district.
The MLTA negotiating team has
refused to move in its position.
"The Board Is quite aware that
parents and especially students
have been placed in the position
of being the people who have
really suffered in this situation.
The Board apologizes to the
students and parents for its part
in this .matter, but it knows that
giving· what the ML TA negotiating team is demanding wlll
definitely affect the quality of
education that could be offered in
future years.
" The Board has hesifated to
.open schools because it held out
. the hope that the ML TA negotia t-

hours the schools will be in
ing team would consider the
session.
needs of the district in its
"Bradbury: Will not be open.
bargaining ' procedures . The
All
regular fifth and sixth g!'ade
Board also knew that opening
students
will attend classes at
schools gives parents and stuMiddleport
Elementary. School
dents another decision to make
hours
for
these
students will be
as to whether or not to attend.
from
8
a.m.
to
2:30p.m.
Special
For many, this is a decision not
Education
students
will
attend
easily reached, and the Board
Pomeroy Elementary.
recognizes and respects this."
''Harrisonville: Will be open.
In regard· to the actual reopen·
School
hours for these students
ing of schools and transportation
will
be
from
9:30a.m. to3: 45p.m.
of students, the statement
"Middleport:
Will be open.
continues:
Students
from
Bradbury
wlll aslo
· Opening, Transportation
attend.
Hours
will
be
from
8 a.m.
"The plans of the Board of
to
2:30p.m.
Education are to OJ:len schools on
· "Pomeroy: Wlll be open .
Dec. 21 for students. The Board
Hours
will be from 8:45 a.q~. to
does not plan to open all schools
3:45p.m.
on that date because it does not
"Rutland : Will be open. Hours
believe that student attendance
w111.9e
from 8:20a.m. to2: 35 p.m.
for the whole district will war- .
"Salem
Center: Will not be
rant the opening of all buildings.
open.
All
students
from Salem
As attendance demands, other
Center
wlll
be
transported
to
buildings will be opened .
Harrisonvllle."
School
hours
for
"Transportation will be prothese students will be from 9: 45
vided for all students to and from
the open schools. All students will a.m. to 3:45p.m. "Salisbury: Will not be open.
be picked up and delivered on
Students
from Salisbury will
their regular bus routes. The
·
Pomeroy
Elementary.
attend
Board apologizes · for the inconHours
for
these
students
will be
veniences to students, and to the
from
8:45a.m.
to
3
p.m.
,
parents of those students who
"Kindergarten
at
Harrisonwill have to ride to another school
until student attendance war- ville, Rutland and Pomeroy will
rants the reopening of additional maintain regular hours.
"Junior High : WJII be open.
schools.
Hours
from 8:30a.m. to 3 p.m ..
"Listed below are the schools
School: Will · be· open.
High
and whetner or not they will be
Hours
from
8:25a.m. to3 : 15 p.m .
open. And if not open, where the
continued on page 7
students will attend and the

Northern Ohio blanketed by snow
secondary roads, weather officials said.

By United Press International
overflowing the banks would pool
A late fall storm moved across in low-lying areas and along
Ohio Wednesday and early today , dumping up to a foot of snow
in the northeastern part of the
state.
The Snow Eel! area east of,
Cleveland received 6 to 12 inches
of snow. with the heaviest accum·
uiatio~n area bounded· by a
line from Ashtabula to Chardon
to Peninsula to Warren, National
Weather Service officials said,
Other areas of northeast Ohio got
one to four inches of snow.
Snow accumulation was generally limited to the area north and
east of a line from Lorain to
Wooster to Steubenville. The rest
of the state got only a dusting of
snow.

Several public school systems
in Portage County canceled
classes today due to the snow.
Strong winds blew and drifted
snow and hindered travel Wed·
nesday. Freezing rain created
ice on Interstate 90 alolhg the
Lake Erie shoreline from Cleveland eastward, with trafflc·mov,·
ing around 5 mlies an hour puring
the afternoon rush hOur. ,
Snow flurries were forecast for
parts of northeast Ohio today, but .
drier air expected to move Into
the state by tonight. Snow and
rain In the past two weeks have .
saturated th e ground. Most of the
precipitation this mont!l was
recorded Mond ay and.Tuesday of
this week .
Flood warnings were issued
through today for the Tiffln and
St. Joseph rivers in northwestern
Ohio. The Sf. Joseph Rive&lt; was
DffiECT HIT - Lillie Michelle Shraener, 6, Is a picture of
expected to crest atflood stage of
impending
doom as a snowhallls Inches away from a direct hit as
12 feet at Montpelier today.
she
tries
to
return fire Wednesday during a snowball fight at her
The Tiffin River at Stryker hit
,
Lancaster,
Calif.,
front yard. An Intense Pacific storm dumped
flood stage of 11 ~eet Wednesday
snow
from
Malibu
on
the coast to l,.ancaster, which is In the desert
and was expected to crest at 12
75
mUes
northeast
of
Los
Angeles: (UPI)
feet. this afternoon. Any water

•

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�The Daily Sentinel Page- 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Comment

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 17, 1987

Et lU, Dingell?_____B_::_y_J._ac_k_A_nde_rs_on_an_d_J.---'o~'--ep_h_S_p__ea_r

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street .

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON 4-J'EA

~!h.

~:::: m~

~v

•

"""-' ...._""T'",!"T"E&gt;=I.....

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER o!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LE1TERS OF OPINlON are welcome They should be less than 300 words
long All letters are subject toedttlng and must be signed wtth name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUl be published Letters should be Jn
good taste, addressing issues, not personalities.

Hl. gher educati"on, should
• rmage:
•
Senate pane)
• h ItS
. IIS
po
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS- Colleges have been asked to initiate' some creative
steps toward changing education methods in view of the public's
uncertain perception about whether they are offering quality
teaching at a fair price.
A special Ohio Senate conference on higher.educatlon Monday also
leaned !ft1 colleges to cooperate more with lower schools and with
business and Industry to help Ohio's economy.
"The biggest energy source for development is not nuclear power
or electricity," said Dennis Shere, publisher of the Dayton Daily
News. "It's brainpower."
"Shere participated in a panel on public perceptlons of higher
e!lucation in Ohio, moderated by Gene Maerof!, a senior fellow with
the Carnegie Foundatwn for the Advancement of Teaching and a
former education editor with the New York Times.
''I think higher education should be a llttle worried about its tmage
today," said Maeroff. adding that higher education is hurt by the fact
that tuition, room and board has risen by 26 percent at public colleges
since 1980, while the rate of inflation has been only 15 per cent
This has been compounded, he said, by the news .that one-sixth of
the $9 billion in federal guaranteed student loans are defaulted.
Kenner Bush, publisher of the Athens Messenger, sounded a more
positive note, saying "the perception of higher education is more
positive and supportive "than at any time m the last 25 years.
"The message is getting through that higher education Is Important
to each of us as individuals, and a~ a region and state," Bush said.
· Shere said one of Ohio's weaknesses , according to a survey of
Dayton area corporations, is in the quality of baste research at
universities, and in the doctoral programs for scientists and
engineers.
Gary Robinson, president and general manager of WCMH-TV,
Columbus, said an informal survey of public service and business
officials showed that young entrants to the job market want to "start
at the top, .liP very little work and m~ke a lot of money."
"There are precious few real thinkers coming out of college," satd
Robinson. "There is little tolerance for others' views. It's ' agree wit I)
me, your thought doesn't matter , I know It all."'
Ralph Schey. chairman of the board of Scott Fetzer Co., said
colleges need to teach skills such as accounting and computer
science; human relations, communications and psychology; and
intellectual curiosity.
"We teach them how to run busmesses, but not how to grow
, businesses," said Schey. "An entrepreneur must have a strategy to
develop a business, not just to develop a product. "

Most boring awards
of the year
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -While I was out having a bowling ball
bored, a couple of my favorite organizations wetghted in wtth their
people-of- the-year awards.
Remember how nice and convenient it was when only males were
eligible and organizations could refer to them as "man of the year"
awards wtth impumty?
·
It was even OK to recognize a woman of the year as long as the
awards were kept separate.
Nowadays, as you have noticed, any ol' sex is likely to win and some
donors present awards to more than one person. So, to be on the safe
side, we reporters are obliged to call them people of the year awards.
Ironically , or perhaps merely coincidentally, the first award I wish
to recognize was bestowed by NOT-SAFE, a California-based safety
organization
If I learned anything in Miss Pringle's English class it was thai
Irony , used sparingly, fs more striking.
Later. a bowling instructor tried to make the same point, but I
rather doubt he had irony in mind. But then I never paid as close
attention to bowling instructions as I did in Miss Pringle's English
c lass.
That's only part of the problem, of course. A bigger hurdle for her
ex-students was a shortage of female nomenclature.
Suppose Mtss Pring-le had been married. Even though they may be
bachelors, bowling instructors, men of the year. etc., can be
identified as "Mr." But " Ms" never caught on.
'
Anyway, NOT-SAFE has announced it has chosen Peter
Baghdasarian of Uxbridge, Mass. , for this year's "Stir The Pot"
award .
What• You never heard of Baghdasarian before•
Neither, frankly, did I. NOT-SAFE, however, identifies him as a
"do It yourself" plumber, and that's good enough for me. '
The safety organization adds that " after notifying authorities that
he Intended to Install his own plumbing (in the house he was
building) ," Baghdasanan wa s told he would be violating all sorts of
laws.
·
"By challenging the monopolistic and Intimidating Ma ssachusetts
plumbing laws," it says, "Mr. Baghdasa rian has Inspired" others
and won the 1987 "Stir The Pot" award.
NOT-SAFE, Incidentally, endeared Itself to me by adopting as a
motto: " Protecting Everyone From Everything - At Any Cost."·
Another "people of the year" award I wish to commend is a list of
"The Most Boring Celebrities,'' released by The Boring Ins titute of
· Maplewood, N. J .
This year's lis t is headed by evangelists J im a nd Tammy Bakker,
who, the lnstltu te assures us. "can cry on cue." ·
Others on its lis t Include Vanna White, Lt. Col. Oliver North, Donna
Rice, Oral Roberts, John McEnroe and Max Headroom.
can only a dd my endorsement of both group's ·;people of the

:r

year."

Today in history
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Dec. 17, the 351st day or 1987 with 14 to follow.
The nioon is waning, moving tpward its new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include American Revolutionary War soidier.Deborah Sampson, who
rought as a man under the alias Robert Shurtleff, in 1760; poet John
Greenleaf WhIt tier in 1807; conductor Atthur Fiedler In 1894; novelist
Erskine Caldwell tn 1903, and si nger-actor Tommy Steele In 1936 (age
51).

Florida Ga-ors rout Buckeyes, 102-69

•

WASHINGTON - Rep. John
D!ngell' shearing room Is littered
with the corporate ghosts of those·
who try io doubl e-cross the
consumer or gouge the Pentagon. So It was a surprise when
we learned that the caustic
chairman of the House Energy
and Commerce Committee Is
pushing a bill opposed by every
consumer group we contacteda bill that would make It tougher
for those Injured by dangerous
products to sue · the
manufacturers.
Fearing the wrath of the
Michigan Democrat - the second most powerful member of
the House of Representa lives congressional Insiders, speak
about Dlngell's bill reluctantly
and only on background. Here Is
what they told our associate
Stewart Harris about the bill,
which Is expected to reac~ the
full committee thts week.
Liberal New Mexico Democrat
William Richardson Is fronting

companies and medical device
for Dlngell as sponsor of the bill,
manufacturers from punitive
the Uniform Product Safety Act
damages If they got Food and
or 198'7. It is supposed to standDrug Administration approval
ardize how state courts handle
before going to market. That
product liability lawsuits - the
dause puzzles several Dlngell
suit you file when your gas tank
watchers who remember 1984
explodes in a rear-endd collision
hearings when Dlngell and his
or your child's pa-jamas catch
aggressive band of Investigators
fire.
pounced on the FDA and the
· Dlngell's aides make a persuapacemaker industry for allowing
sive case for a federal law to
doctors to continue Implanting
smooth out the wrinkles between
defective pacemakers that had
the states. After all, they say, 70
been apprO'Ved by the FDA.
percent of the products made In
Another provision of Dingell's
this country are sold across state
bill
establishes a "state-of-art"
llnes. Lobbyists for industries
defense,
letting the manufacstung by product !lability suits
turer
off
the
hook If the defective
argue that the only real winners
product
was
designed with the
In the lawsuits are lawyers, You ·
best
technology
available at the
are the one picking up the tab for
time.
high damage awards, In the form
That would create a dangerous
of higher prices. they say.
But consumer groups fear that standard. according to Gene
· Kimmelm'an of the Consumer
DlngeU's bill goes too far.
Federation of America. He says
·Among other things, It establishes airtight defenses that the person who was injured may
have to prove that a better design
manufacturers can use ln court.
One · protects pharmaceutical existed when the product was

made. Proponents argue that the
state will decide who carries the
burden"of proof on this Issue.
Some observers say Dlngell is
merely serving a major constltutent , theFordMotorCo.Fordhas
been pestered with product liability suits over the last decade. The
car maker is headquartered In
Dearborn, Mich., the heart of
Dlngell' s district.
As If constituency Is not enough
to wed him to the auto Industry,
Dlngell is married to former
General Motors lobbyist Debra
Insley, who subsequently curtailed her official lobbying activities and now works as an
admlnist,rator in GM's governmental affairs office. ,
Dlngell's team on this bill
includes consumer advocate and
chairman of the Consumer Protection and Competitiveness Subcommittee James Florio, D-N.J.
Those close to Florio say he is
awkward in his role as handmalden to Industry, but when he
realized Dlngell was going to
push the bill through to the floor
of the House, Florio decided to
ride along to do damage control.
Another representative who
can usually be counted on to
defend the consumer hali felt the
sting of public concern over
Dtngell's bill. Rep. Dennis Eckart, D-Ohlo, found himself fending off questions from the Cleveland Plain Dealer about his
participation In a Dingell hunting
party to Texas this fall with
industry lobbyists who were
pushing the product safety bill.
Apparently Eckart was not
bothered enough by the attention
to back off from the bill. On Nov.
19, In the subcommittee hearing
to make adjustments to the bill,
Rep. James Scheuer, D-N.Y.,
stalled the bill by Invoking the
"five-minute rule," which stops
aU committee business unless
the whole House unanimously
agrees to let the hearings continue . .
It was Eckart who ran to the
floor of the House to ask for
unanimous consent.
He failed, but committee business resumed when the House
recessed for the day.

-

PICKS OFF PASS- University of Cleveland's Herb Dixon (44)
picks off a pass from surprised Louisville forward Avery Marshall
(33) during Wednesday night's contest in Louisville, Ky. (UPI)

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS. Ohto (UP!!
Bexley running ba ck Brent Johnson a nd Cincinnali Forest Park
tight end Marcus Evans head the
1987 Untted Press ln te mationai
Divis&gt;on Ill All-Oh io football
team
John son, a 6-foot -2, 208-pound
senior, and the 6-foot -3, 230- ·
· pound Evans were voted the back
and lineman of the year, respec-

Division III All-Ohio Team
( Ul..l;' MHUS, Ohio (liP)) - Th r 19X1
Unih•tl l'rf'S.. lnit•r natlon..&amp;l 01\ lslon Ill
,\II Uhlo tooth al l lf'nm
t nun· 1'EAI'!f
0111 'ft'&gt;l'

international center of scientific
excellence for the SSC."
The recent "Mississippi sse
Symposium" here was dominated by dry, semi-technical
speeches of physicists from
throughout the country and hyperboll~ rhetonc of polltlcans
from across the region.
But the final speaker, scientist,
Hermann A. Grunder, briefly
turned the somber event into a
lively pep rally when he persuaded the crowd to cheer for Its
chances of bringing the sse to
east-central Mlsslsslpp(.
More than cheering is required, however. Mississippi has
retained three public relations
agencies - one In the state
capital of Jackson, another In
Washington and a third in New
York -;- to present Its case to
anybody who will listen.
Not to be outdone, California
has budgeted $1.2 million for
public relations while other
states also have hired highpriced promoters. "All the well
known PR firms went early and
went for big bucks," says an
accou nt execu tlve at one leading

Spill t• nl1 -

PR agency.
Illinois has been campaigning
for the sse for the pastfouryears
and has spent $4.5 million in that
effort. Arizona has paid a Washington lobbyist $290,000 for six
months"work.
When the deadline arrived In
early September for all states to
deliver their sse proposals to
DOE, the gover nors of Ohio,
Louisiana and Colorado flew to
Washington to accompany their
states' submissions.
Colorado also recently convened a day-long sse conference. 1t has spent $4 million on
preliminary sse work in the past
four years -Including more than
$500,000 on publicity and
promotion.
Nationally, DOE estimates
that • exploration for suitable ·
sites , preparation of fOrmal
proposals, elaborate public relations campaigns and other expenses already have cost the
states $22 million.
Texas has conducted media
tours of its two state-authorized
sites, near Dallas and Amarillo.
Meanwhile, entrepreneurs have

cartoons~·---'-v==in=ce.:.:.:.nt__;;;:C~ar-'-"'ro~ll

If Jerry Falwell prevails ~t the
Supreme Court In his lawsuit
against Hustler publisher Larry
Flynt, the most immediate loser
- after Flynt himself - will be
an American satiric staple: the
political cartoon.
·
Far more often than writers,
cartoonists tread the edges of
excess. Through their eyes, public figures become buffoons,
scoundrels or worse. Some cartoonists s lip words In the mouths
of their victims - stupid or
callous words that resemble
nothing actually said.
By such means, cartoonists do
more than make us smile. They
shuck layers of pretense a,nd
immobilizing complexity from
issu"es. They function !Ike the kid
who points out the emperor has
no clothes.
Do we really want to throttle
this tradition?
Although most of us probably
don't , cartoonists' victims
might. And if the Supreme Court
rules in favor of Falwell, they'll
have a new tool to turn on their
tormentors.
' The tool Is new · because It
doesn't Involve libel. Hustler's
des picable parody of Falwell (it
described a drunken, Incestuous
encounter with his mother)
wasn't meant to betaken its fact,
and a jury agred that Hustler
readers hadn't done so. Thus the
basis of libel was ellmlnated. Yet

ble satire? Meanwhile, how
many cartoonists will riSk findi ng out?
To be fair, public figures are
understandably frustrated by the
impunity of the press these days.
Judges (with · most journalists

in an apparently unprecedented
move, a lowet· court ordered
Flynt to pay damages anyway
"for the intentional infliction of
emotional distress."
Consld~r for a moment how far
that reasoning might travel.
After all, Flynt lsn' t the first to
hurt the feelings of public figures . Some politicians have been
hounded by Individual journalists all their lives.
Take Richard Nixon. Almost
from the outset.of his career, the
pollltlcan who became our 37th
president endured relentless attack from Washington Post cartoonist Herblock. In Herblock' s
view , Nixon was a sewer·
dwelling, mud - and brickslinging McCarthylte. By the
summer of 1954, Pat Nixon
couldn't bear this treatment any
longer. She canceled her family's
Post subscription rather than
permit her daughters to see
Herblock's cartoons.
Should Richard Nixon have
been able to collect damages
because he, his wife and children
were wounded by those drawings? If not, why should Falwell
collect from Flynt?
It's not enough to say that
Hustler's parody was more outrageous. Of course it was. Yet to
this day, Herblock's cartoons are
more savage than those of some
cartoonists. Where wlil future
juries draw the line of permlssi-

'

Ouve llh·llns kl. Gurfltld

II~K;~; e:T,:;:~~;~,~·~~~~~~\~:~~~:~Int lnrutll

submitted proposals to DOE for
two other sites, near El Paso and
Odessa, that are not sanctioned
by the state.
Two Texas polltl€ians who
normally cannot abide ·each
other, Republican Sen. Phil
Gramm and Democratic Rep.
Jack Brooks, staged a joint press
conference to proclaim the bipartisan glories of Texas' sites.
Like most other states, Mississippi Is' propslng only one potential location. It does, however,
boast a unique advantage co-sponsorship of its proposal by
two neighboring states, Alabama
and Arkansas.
sse promoters here candidly
acknowledge that Mississippi In
earlier years was "pubilclzed
only for racial division" and
" dismissed as a non-competitor
in the technology field."
But they offer compefl!ng
arguments that the state now is
as progressiv as any other- and
Its razzle-dazzle performance in
the part-public relations, partshow business, part-politics com:
petition for the sse supports
t heir claims.'

Don't limit political

lively. by Division Ill coaches
from around the state.
Joh nson, being recruited by
the likes of Ohio State, Michigan
State, Pitt, Kentucky and Louisville, ru shed for 1,962 yards in 10
games and scored 23touchdowns
the pa s t ·season· for the Lions of
Coach Tha ne Hecox. He was over
100 yards in all 10 games with a
high of 302 against Dublin
"He's the best I've ever been
around,"' said Hecox, a former

F'ol"f'l'it l' .lrk !i-:1. 225, S1•nlor.
(iuartls - Ed [.('"I' lien , M.tVl!'Vllle, (i.3 ,
250, St•nlor ; DliH' T11hnka. \'oun~~h•Wil
Cardinal i\1ount•y . fl ·:J 200, Se nior
Tuc kle"" - Kip Lt•wl~ . Columhu~
Wht&gt;t!iiORI', ti-4 , 23 ~, St•nlor, P J Wo ods
Ht•llalrt'. 6-~. U5, Sl' nlor
ft•ntrr - AI Thlgp 1• n. Warrt•n
Kl'IIIH'dy. 6 .1. 2,10, Se nior
~~~Jartrrhurk - Hl'vln o\lt•ger , Thorn
\llllt• Slwrldun . 6-1. 17!1. !oit•nlor,
!funning hat li.s - Hrc nt John~n
Ht•llll•y, fi-2, :!!»!, St•mur, ·l tll' ltuo"'
8r)1Ul , 6-t 2fl:i SN1Iur , l' a rrl;~ \\' a.,llln~~; ·
1\m Uuwr , G !, 221l, St nlor
l'lut:ekirkl&gt;r - Ty k·rSht•dtl . ( 'lndllnat I
t'o l't• ~ l P:trk 5 9, 111l, St:nlor
l)efi'RM'

t: nds -,John tit'r.lk, Sl rulht•r,., 6 5, 210,
St&gt;nlur: ( hrts Vt• ee hltt ll(', Voune:~town
( ardln;ll Mount'\' , 6 -1 , 210. SL•nlor.
llo~n ll nemrn \\&gt;llllu.m Norri~.
\' itUn~town Ur~ullrH' 1).2 :! til. St•nlur,
8oh Arnold . Sprlngl lt•ld NorlhWI'"'i.t'rn
6-3, 'l70 Slnlor, SI P\\' firt •l cht•n,l\1arllns
Fo•rrv, I10 !lll Stn~ur
JJne hndtt•r s - .lud .d1 llo•rtnlul , Ch~ ·
grin t'all" Ht·n ~llln , 6 -~. HO. S1•nlur ('Ia)
Tipton, Ornllh• 6 0 '.! 10, St'nior Sl:t'l'l'
Rlankt ·n~hl p. 1\ronk\1 1111', fi 0, .!00 S••nlur
Btu•k.., - Johnnv Ruhhln.o;, U:tyton
Nurthr ldgc. 6 o, \li 5, Se niur. Rohl.' tl
Jk,Jurnt'tti' Colum ms Rrt.:~:~. ~ - 10 . lti5
St•nlnr, Uauo 1\lantiNinr. f aniUn {t• ntrul
Uathull1 li-!1 1;0 Senior
l'untJ•r - Urad St huh~&gt;tl, lklit'VIIf'. ti· ~
1110, Sl'!lil!r
SEf'Ol\.'0 T F.AI\1
Offt•ll'Of'
Split t•nd- lt ya o Hlh•) , PauldinK &amp;.J
11 5, St•nlur.
Tl£111 t•nd - ltt1dd Turlwrt, 1Jdd n,11
\' ldlt'y , 6-1. 195, St• nlor.
(.iu u rd ~ - Doug Nt•wntun, Kro nlnr., G·A,
?!5, SE• nlo r. \ ' lc P t·rlnl, \\ lckllfft•, It 0 1115
St•ninr
Taddt•!l _ IA' nn\' llarlm,,n, Leavitt ..
lmrg l.t•l•at•,li .1 ,'~65, Sl· nl~r . DanKr lk•y,
t,' Jyrla ( atlu1llt . 6 I, '!l'\, St•nlor
• ( NIU•r _ 't'r 1t vh Ku Pnnlng . f&lt;lt Mary.;
J\1e morlal . 6-1, ! 15. ~t nl o r
,
Quarlt'rhat k - f\sulrt' W:tllact•, Clndn·
nuti t'ort•~t l'nrll. 5 II , 110. !Se nior
Kunnlnll hudt" Cllnlon Lynd1
\'ounji;Sio"n l luullnr, 5 II. IHfl ,funlur
1\11! \\'ltht' rtl", \' iUl \\'Nl. 5 11 , 16!1
!\o•nlur. Rohhy 1\rlc t•, lrnnlon. 6- fl, lfl$,
St•nlur '
l 'hu•f'lo:ld.:('r _ F.rln St ruh le. l.lnm
Kat h. 5-lll IHU .Jttnlur
Ot•fcnst•
F:nlt" _ Mlk(' nar t1·11, ( O!ihur ton 5·,11,
~ 1 5, St•nlur , ·f ill 'l'ot\IJ\. I.IItlc Mllnnl.l:i·l .
~ t!t. S••nlor

cheering them on ) have virtually
obliterated the Seventh Amendment's right to a jury trial for
victims of alleged libel. Time and
again courts have simply reversed a jury verdict agains t the
media.

llnwn lirK•mc n -

l'"t Danku. WIU'ri'l'l

Senlur. Oun lu lw:r.
l'ul11nd, 6-ll. ~0.5. ~cniur; ,John 1\lurUn, Sl.
.'VIar)'!l Ml'morlul, 6 I, &lt;.!05, l'irnlur.
Lhwha.t kf'rl l - Buster ( rtthtret•, \\'uv·

Kt•nnt&gt;dy , ti a,

e r ly, G-4.

~"iO .

~ 35.

f'laluvlllr 8-11,

St&gt;.Uur; Mall lle nry, !'II .
~110.

Senlnr, RiiiiUgllng ,

In other games, Princeton
tripped Seton Hall 61 -59. Louis ·
Ville downed Cleveland State
93-79 and DePaul th ras hed
Weber State 88-65.
At Princeton, N..J .. Bob Scrabis sank 2 free throws with 16
seco nd s left and Kit Mull er
scored with six seconds to go to
lift Princeton over Seton }(a ll .
The Tigers, 4-2, managed to
defeat In -state rivals Rutgers
and Seton Hall in the same
season for the fir st lime in 10
years. The Pirates tell to 8-2.
At Loui svi lle , Ky., Herbert

Crook scored 24 points a nd
Pcrvis Ellison added 22 to power
Loui sville past Cleveland Sta tC'
Louisvill!' won for the firs t time
in thn'&lt;' gamps_ The Vtkings, 3 2,
committed 2f. turnovers and
trailed by 30 points before
raliying in th&lt;' closing mtnutes.
At Ogden. t;tah. Kevin Edwards scored 25 poi nts and •
DePaul forced 2:1 turnovers as
the Blue Demons stomped Weber
State . DePaul. '&gt; 1, oominated
play at both ends of the floor a nd
led by as many as 35 pom ts with
16 minutes remaining in the
'ga me Weber StatC' f••ll to 1-5.

SO Watt Remote Control
'

Holzer Clinic to
sponsor tilt Jan. 5
Holzer Clinic will be the third
Booster Night sponsor for Rio
Grande's Red men when they
host Malone on January 5, at 7:30
p.m . In Lyne Center.
Tickets for the game can be
obtained free of charge at any of
Holzer Clinic's locations, Including the main branch on Jackson
Pike, the Sycamore ' Street
branch In Gallipolis and at its
Middleport office.
"Rio Grande College appreciates the support shown for
athletics by Holzer Clmic," sa id
Redmen coach and athletic director John Lawhorn. "Their
interest will continue the promotion of Rio Grande athletics
through a variety of activities,
including the establishment of
athietlc scholarships."
The clinic has recently completed a 60-percent addition to Its
main branch, aiiowlng for expansion of all of its existing departments and programs, including
its sports, industrial and rehabilitative program.

Bexley's Johnso~, Forest Park's
Evans head All-Ohio Division III

Super proposals collide ___'__Ro_b_ert_~_a_lte_rs
.STARKVILLE, Miss. (NEA)
- When more than 1,000 people
recently converged on Mississippi State University's ilthletic
field house, they didn't expect to
' see a Bulldog basketball game or
other sports event.
Instead, they came to hear
physicists and politicians extol
the virtues of the Superconducting Super Colllder, a particle
accelerator that will be the
world's most expensiv,e research
tool when it goes into opet·auon in
the late 1990s.
Because the entire cost of the
sse ($4.4 billion in current
dollars but $6 billion If expected
Inflation Is included) will be
borne by the U.S. Department of
Energy, haifofthe50states have
entered the furious competition
to have the project sited Inside
their borders.
·
Mississ ippi, arguably among
the more serious contenders, Is
the only state to place advertisements In the New York Times,
Washington Post, Wall Street
Journal and other major newspapers, promoting itself as committed to becoming "a true

Baltimore County 89-59 and No
17 Missouri bested VIrginia Tech
105-96.
At Tucson, Ariz., Steve Kerr
and Tom Tolbert scored 15 points
apiece and Arizona connected on
a school-record 75 ·percent of Its
first-half shots In whipping
Arkansas-Little Rock . Arizona
finished with 65 percent accuracy from the field to Improve to
8-0. UALR dropped to 4-2.
At Landover, Md., Mark Til·
lmon scored 15 poln ts and Perry
McDonald contributed 14 points
and 13 rebounds to power Georgeto\l(.n over Maryland-Baltimore
County. Georgetown Improved to
5-l. The Retrievers, In their
second year or Division I play,
dropped to 3-3.
At Columbia. Mo., Derrick
Chlevous scored a career-high 42
points to lead Mlssoun over
VIrginia Tech. Chlevous, a senior
forward, recorded the fourth best single-game scoring mark In
school history. He also putled
down 12 rebounds . Missouri
Improved to 4-1 and Virginia
Tech fell to 5-2.

By United Press International
The additlcl'n of a wide fresh man may ensure No. 11 Florida a
longer season.
Livingston Chatman, a 6-foot -8
forward who packs a good deal of
his 230 pounds In his hind ·
quarters. struck for 18 points
Wednesday night to help the
Gators rout Ohio State 102-69.
Chatman gives Florida the
consistent inside offensive threat
missing last year and may help
the Gators advance even farther
In this season's NCAA Tournament. Because 7-2 center
Dwayne Schlntzlus likes to work
the high post, lit leaves the low
post to Chatman and his Adrian
Dantley-llke body.
"Chatman has a combinatlon
of quick feet and a good body,"
Ohio State forward Tony White
said. "He's a player with his
future In his own hands "
Pat Lawrence hit a pair of
3-po)nters to trigger an early 16-2
spurt and Vernon Maxwell
scored 25 points as the Gators
won for the 25th time In their last
26 home games.
''I'm shocked," Sloan said. "It
certainly wasn't the type of game
I expected. We just had it going
tonight and this was as complete
a game as we've played on both
ends .of t)]e floor this year."
Lawrence finished with 20
points for Florida. 6-L Jay
Burson scored 20 to lead Ohio
State, 4-1.
Elsewhere In the Top 20, No. 2
Arizona pounded Arkansas L'ittle Rock 77-53, No. 16 Georgetown ripped Maryland -

Upper Arlington assistant.
"Physically, he's the model of
what yoq'd want in a great
running back. He was ttmed in 4. 7
in the 40, but he plays qutcker
than that."
Hecox said Johnson , who carried the ball 312 times, worked
hard on the weights during the
past off-season. Increasing his
bench press to 275 pounds.
"People who know Brent personally know this is just the tip of
the iceberg for him," said Hecox .
"He's still growing and maturing
as an athlete. He can be a lot
bigger and a lot more dominant. I
think this season brought that
into fo.cus for him. "
Hecox feels Johnson could play
several positions in college.

System 8700 Features:

0 50-watt per channel amplifi er with
built-in 5-band graphic equalizer
0 Dual cassette deck (for convenient
cassette-t&lt;KaSSette recording) WJth
Dolby'" Noise Reduction and
high-speed dubbmg
0 Quartz digital AMIFM stereo tuner
with 24 station presets.
(6AM+l8FM)

0 Semt-at•+omattc turntable with
low mass toneann
0 3-way 10" speakers with magnetic
field compensabon
0 Component cabinet with heightadJustable casters

$469.95

llumlllon Radin, &amp;.2 215, ,lunior
Back.-.- Nl ckfoc: hran , Glrurrl 6-2, IH5,
Sl·nlur; Craig St'hrlnf:;, llannlblll Riwr,
8-I, 1611, Senior, Rlt-M Frr,~~"li!OOrJ , Oak
llarl1ur, tJ· 9, 160 St:nlur
Punter - Dt•rrt•n Ku1th Culwnhu ..
lhtmllton Township, 5- 10, II'!S, St" niur.
8a&lt;'IH1f tht")'Par - Brl'nl luhn1111n,
Bl'xh•y .
Urwman of ihr-yenr - 1\larcusEvans,
(Inc l nnnt l forl' ~ l Park
( onch·ullht'-yc ar - Luu ( \'llkar, Cln
clnnatl t 'nrl'sl Park
IUINOII.J.\RU. MENTION 8 ,\CK:'i
\'It • R11rkhart UIIIP 1\tlaml : Derrk
Ballt•y , Jt.. !&gt;!ifonl u,t, . ll.trrr"'" II• 'll'
Rryan Cook \'om,;11fown Ur.. ulint' Max
•:urld PallldlnK, Tudd Frey, Uppt'r
Sandu~ky, Andn• GueKI!, Rl~~; \\' alnul,
( .lrltun t;r'.ly, Clndnnatl Fure11t Park,
Ed llayn i!K, fkoii('VUl•; Mull Uni{O ,
Coshocton: Tim Miller. Ca nfie ld , Roll
l\1ar!ihnll. Strutht"rs: OllH MeCrary,
"a.~hlngton ('ourt llou.~: JUt hlr Moody ,
Hrnok\lllf'

U1tVI' l're)ll• rrn. \\l cldlff(', ,Jim Rohln1'hornvlllr Sheridan. DIIIIWhiJL..on,
" 'lllurd. Mlkt&gt; St humne her, G~trfif'ld
llt• l~;hl~ Trinity, Kl' n !oO"'bh1•r, "'~ k&gt;rn
1\ro"'n , To ll y St uhh!&lt;&gt;, \'oun~:dowu
Ra)'l'n , Scutt Sch.lmo;t•r, St \b.rY"
1\tf'naUrlal ; Karl Sharp!!, Co hunhusWhc l·
i'ttfJm', Laklfrllha "allact•, Akron Hohan;
BriHn Wtx.rtn~. Coshocton
110!\00Ri\81.1'~ MENTION LINEMEN
Roll Andt•rson. &lt;lydt•, ntakl' Argo,
N11rth llf'ndTaylur. Erh· Cumc run. l'ttlll1n
lo::dl:-10n : Barr)' Carney, Ironton. Janw10
Urown J"ahtf'~vill1• llarW')', Jon Hair~.
Cill('hmutl For('!il P llrlrl ; Knln Hro"'n ·
G.. nou, Bmd Raxtt&gt;r , Uma Ralh , Andy
t'luwt'rl!, Hamilton Radin, Kelvin Ford ,
lrtmlnn; Phillip Grl•Cil, Bellnlre, Marty
Golnit'k, Oak Harhur. Aarun Httrpr~•r ,
May,.vllle; llrc nl Hank'!, 011\l'r ,
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Lur;an Elm, Tom ,JackSOn, Rossford;
G('tw Klln~tu . KPntvn: ,Jason Klinefelter ,
ranton t\•ntrul ( uthullc; tl\rlo; K('ll) ,
l.owlantl: Gl en Mt Farlantl, '' uun~~:stown
l l nmlln~• : l 'url i\1( MlllfUl . Uppt•r San
t:il•"~ky , lt&lt;•~tt•r 1\h·ngerlnk, \ ' an Wert;
Ml '-:1' J\t1•ngPs, U nion Lutal. Matl
ML"( ' Iurt• , Bryun , Cral~t Mnurr, Clndn·
nutll'ttdl&gt;llt holll!l , .lot" Puhlan. Sl OaiNi·
vlllt•: Mark Pelni'Vn, C•1hunhu .. Brl~tf!:" ;
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Mlkt• Zrttler, lk•xlr;v
~on .

''"'K

MIKE BARTRUM, outstanding Meigs quarterback,
was named Ho'nonable Menlion Division IJI All-Ohio today by United Pres s
Inlernalional.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS lf5-960)
A Division of Multimedia, rnc.
Publi s hed every afl £&gt;r noon, Monduy

through F rida y, 111 Court St , Po·
merov. Ohio. by !h e Ohio Valley Put&gt;
\lsh \ng Co mpany/ Multimedia, In c,

Pomeroy. Ohto 45769, Ph 992 2156. Se-

· Forest Park coach
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COLUM BUS, OhiO (UP!)
Lou Cynkar , who gutded Cincinnati Forest Pa rk to a 10-0 regular
season. has been voted the
United Press Inter national Division Ill coac h of the year.
Cynkar was selected in ba iloing by Division []] coaches from
a round the sta te. edging out
Thorn vi ll e Sherida n' s Paul
Cu lver.

"/wonder what Ivana and Don Trump are do-

cond class postage paid at Pomeroy,
Ohio
•

Other coac hes receiving votes
were Don Bucc i of YoungstoWn
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Skip Baughman of St. Marys
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Craig Turner of Brookville and
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Height s Trinit y.

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JIM COBB

CHEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•CADILLAC
Your Dealer On The River
308 E. Main Street 614-992-6614 Pome

�•

Thursday. December 17. 1987

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

76ers blast Spurs;

Chicago Blackhawks snap· I5~gam~ winless road streak
lly United Press International
The Chicago Blackhawks took
advantage of a team struggllng
at home to snap their road slump.
Denis Savard's goal midway
through the third period Wednes·
day night broke a tie and lifted
Chicago to a 4·2 victory over the
North Stars, ending the Black·
hawks · 15-game road wi nless
streak.
•'I would like to say we have]l't
been as bad as our road record
indicates. but we have," Savard
said. " We have really struggled
but this might turn us around .
When you get into a streak like
we've been ln. players start
pressing and Ithlnk that has been
a big part of our problem.
Savard scored his 16th goal of
the season, at 12:06 of the third

perlo&lt;l, when he slipped away
from the North Stars defense and
converted frpm close range ..The ·
loss was the third straight at
home for the North Stars and
dropped their record at the Met
C~~ter to 5·10·1 this season.
We have been having troubles
on the road; they have . ~een
having troubles at home, Savard said.
The Blackhawks won on the
road Oct. 21 when they beat
Detroit 5·1. then went 0-14-1
be,fore beating the North Stars.
'Playing away from the Sta·
dlum has been very frustratmg
lor us this year," Chicago Coach
Bob Murdoch said. " I kept
thinking things couldn 'I get
worse ~nd things did keep getting
worst.

The North Stars outshot Chi·
cago 18-11 in the tllird period but
goalle Darren Pang denied Minnesota a nd finished the game
with 36 saves .
"We had plenty of chances to
win it in third but they got some
outstanding goal tending and the
puck just wouldn't bounce for
us," Mi11nesota Coach Herb
Brooks said.
Elsewhere. Montreal held off
Quebec 5·4, Detroit dumped
Washington 6-1, the New York
Rangers pounded New Jersey
9-3, Calgary trimmed Winnipeg
5·4 and Los Angeles downed
Edmonton 7-5.

Canadiens 5, Nordlques 4 •
At Montreal, Ryan Walter
scored two goals and Stephane
Richer had a goal a nd two assists ·
to extend the Canadiens' un·
beaten streak to eight games.
Montreal has also not lost In 14
consecutive home ~games. Trail·
ing 5·1 after two periods, Quebec
erupted for three goals in the
third, including Michel Goulet's
second of the game.
.
Red Wings 6, Capitals 1
At Detroit, Petr Klima col·
lected two goals and two assists
and John Chabot added a goal
and four assists helping the Red
Wings record their first victory

In six games. Washington has
won only once in its last five
outings. Detroit defenseman
Mike O'Connell ret1,1rned from an
eight-game suspension and
scored a goal.
Rangers 9, Devils 3
At New York, Kelly Klsio
scored two goals and had two
assists and Michel Petit added
two goals and an assist, a nd the
Rangers used a five-goal second
period to rout New Jersey. Alain
Chevrier replaced Bob Sauve In
goal for the Devils to start the
third period.
Flames 5 Jets 4
At Calgary. 'Alberta. Joe
··

Mullen's power-play goa l with
just over four minutes to play
helped the Flames Improve to
8-l •J. In their last 10 games. Joe
Nleuwendyk scored a · short·
handed goal, his 20th goal of the
season and the F lames' league·
leading 11th short-handed score·.
Kl ngs 7, Oilers 5
At Inglewood , Calif., Mark
Hardy scored a power-play goal
to snap a tie with 5:27 to play and
help Los Angeles halt a sevengame losing streak. The Kings
had an 0·8·1 record since beating
Chicago Nov . 25. The Oilers had
their five-game winning streak
snapped.

Even Hopson wouldn't
have helped Buckeyes
By United Press International
Even Dennis Hopson wouldn 't
have made enough of a
difference.
Ohio State's all-time lea ding
scorer is playing for the NBA 's
New Jersey Nets after leading
the Buckeyes to the NCAA
Tourname nt last season. Despite
Hopson's departure, the Buck·
eyes ventured into ·Gainesvilie,
Fla., Wednesday night unbeaten
in their first four games.
T hey wobbled out of SEC
country looking for a place to
land.
Pat Lawrence hit a pair of
3-point shots to trigger an early
16·2 spurt and Vernon Maxwell
scored 25 points in lea ding
11th-ranked Florida to a 102-69
romp.
Elsewhere in Ohio college
basketball action Wednesday
night, Day ton n pped Rollins
(Fla.), 106-74, and Louisville
whipped Cleveland State, 93-79.
En route to the 25th victory In
their last 26 home games. the '
Florida Gators outmu scled the
smaller and slower Buckeyes
a nd took command just seven
minutes into the game
"J.'m shocked," sa id Florida

coach Norm Sloan. " It certainly
was n' t the type of game I
expected We just had it going
tonight and this was as complete
a gam e as we've played on both
ends of the floor this year."
Lawrence finished with 20
points and freshman Livingston
Chatma n 18 for Florida, 6·1,
which led 50-33 at the half. Jay
Burson scored 20 points for Ohio
State and fellow guard Curtis
Wilson added 18, but the Buck·
eyes rarely got inside and were
outrebounded 51·33.
•'They showed they are one of
the top five teams in the coun·
try," said Ohio State forward
Tony White. "Chatman has a
combination of quick feet and a
good body. He's a player with his
fu lure in his own hands."
With the Gators leading 8-7.
Lawrence fired in a pa tr of
3- poin ters and added two free
throws in a 50-second span a nd
Florida pulled ahead 24·9 on
Maxwell's layup with 13:19 left in
the ha lf. Maxwell hit on 6 of 8
shots from the field . befo re
intermission and the Gators
swept the defe nsive boards In
limiting Ohio State to one shot
per possessl~n.

699!.!
Reg. 999.00

TUESD&lt;\Y MORNING STI\N DINGS
ll-03-87
TEAM

Vil lage Pln.a. 219 555 Ha zel Marcum;
Peopi('S, 179-500 Jo Greathouse: Citizens.

WON LOST •

V! ! l a ~('

Pit w Inn .. , . .
.. . 56
P('Oples Bank . ..
. . .. .. 52
Citizens Na tional Bank ... , .... 52

16
20
20

Donelll's Pizza
Dodson and Company
Thomp!:ionS Applw.n ce Repair
Mills ForagC' Equ1pmen t .. . . .,

31

41
. 39
34
. 30

R T Si gn Company .................... ,. 20

3.3
JB
42
52

Car l's ShO(' StorP
. .. ... . ... 18
TurnpJk&lt;' of Gal l lpo h ~ .. .. ..
. 18

M
54

VI! Ia~&lt;' Pizza . 189 469 Hazel Mart·um,
203 Phyll ts Ferguson, 535 Jo
Gre at house; CJt izens, 197 Linda Reynolds.
514 F r ona Call. Done!I J's, 200 Darlln
Thornloo. 51 7 Hazel Lewis, Dods on,
177-443 Lin da Dav is; Thompsons, 167Tet rl
Gre&lt;'nlet"- sub: 446 P auli n e Knmm; Mi!!s.
Peopl~.

190.470 Bar ba ra Mills; R T . Stgn 170 Je an
Ar nold , 429 f3(o r tha Stover , Ca r l's, 1 ~5
.Jnn r t Brown. 355 J udy Cl ark-s ub, TurnplkC' \4 1.171 Ca thy Lin ch.
Splits co nveJ·trd . .J Gr ea thouse, B .
Ber nard 3 10. J Stratt 5-10: M Stiff6-7-JO.
TU&amp;'iO~Y MORNING STANDINGS

l:l-01·87
TEI\M

WON LOST

VIllage Pizza Jnn. ..

.. ...... 78

26

Peopl es Bank ................
. . . 74
Citizens Natio nal Bank ........... 70
DonC'lll's Pizza . . ...................... 63
Dodson and Company .. .......... 59
Thompsons AppliancE? Repair .. . 44
Mills Fora!ZP Equl!)mt&gt;nl
~~
R.T . Sl to:n Compa ny...... .
..
34
Car l' s Shot' Stor&lt;; . . ..... ... · ... 28
... .. .... 26
Turnp ike of Galltp olls

...

30
34
41
45
60
60

~0

6
78

I

178 Linda Reynolds- Marcia Ntbert: 489
Linda Reynolds; Donelll's. 173-465 Hazel

Lewis:

Dodson, 160-448 Linda Dav is;
M1lls, 193-492 Bar bara Mills: Thompsons.
17 3 Pauline Krlmm, 470 Edna Thompson.

R.T . Sign, 157-453 Su e Holl ey-sub. Carl's.
177-434 Judy Strait, T urn pike, 159-440
Cat hy Linch.
Splits Converted ' L Davis. P . Ferguson
5-6, B. Allen 4-5 a nd 2-7: R . Hall. L Mlll s.
3-10.
TUESDAY MORNING STANDINGS
11·24-87
TEAM

WON LOST
Vi llage Pizza Inn , .
.. ,. .. .. . 72 24
Peoples Bank ......... .......... 72 24
Citizen s National Bank
. .. 64
32
Donelll's Pizza .
61 35
Dodson and Company . .... ....... 57 39
Thompsons Appliance Repair ..... 42 5'1
Mill s Forage Equ ipment
........ JS 58
R T . Sign Company
.. 2R fi8
Car l's Shoe StorE' . .
26 70
Turnpike of Galli polis ,,
.......... 20 76
VIllage .pJzza. 215·594 Hazel Marcum ·
Peoples, 215-5:10 Vaif'l'ie 13Prnan\.sub:
C1t lzens, 205-505 Frona Call; Do nelll's',
168-470 Cllnedda Aust in -sub, Dodson,
178-455 Linda Davis, Thompsons. 180·485
Edna Thompson , Mills, 216-462 Ba1·bara
Mtlls: R T s ign, 164·443 Sue Holl cv -sub
Car l' s 148Janet Brown, Mar~· Adkiils 407
Judy Linder; Turn pik e, 136 369 Ve'!ma
Pallerson .
Spl!1 S C'Onv£&gt;riC'd' V Ber nard, D Davis
5-10; 8 Baisden. 8 Watter son 2·7
'

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"Any injury of this nature Is
career-threatening. It usua ily
happens to people failing off
motorcycles . I don't think he'll be
ready for mini-camp - the
regular camp (lnJuty) is a better
·
target date."
Bergfeld said the real worry Is
lhe limitation of motion In th e
wrist.
" Mike's cast will of! in a
month. and replaced by a nother
one for four more weeks ." added
Bergfeld. "This is a very stress·
lui situation for him. It's the first
time he 's ever had a real injury.
He's under the microscope, being
a number one pi ck."
Trey Junkin said his brother
was to ld he wou ld lose flexibility
and movement In his wrist and
that he faced the possibility of
further damaging the joint " if he
takes any kind of Iunny blow."

Motor

7Reg.

TV extra

- --

BEREA , Ohio (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns' team physl·
cla n says Mike J unkin , the cl ub's
first-round dra!t pick in 1987, Is
expected to recover t ully from
wrist surgery but admitted the
rookie linebacker may not be
ready lor mini-camp next vear .
· f'r John Bergfeld said Wed·
nes · a ~ · that Junkin and his older
brother Trey, a tight end wl th the
Los Angeles Raiders, misunderstoo&lt;l the diagnosis of the Injury.
Trey Junkin told the Cleveland
Plai n Dealer that his brother 's
surgery involved repairing
tendons.
"No tendons were cut. just
li gaments. We wa nt to set the
record straight," said Be.rgfeld,
who brought charts and an
overhead projector to a news
conference.

.CIO(

12""5

·

R io Grande's Redwomen bas·
ketbail team will again confron t
Carson Newman this weekend In
a tou rnam ent sponsored by the
Lady Eagles.
Coach Cheryl Fielitz's club
plays Carson Newman at 8 p.m .
Friday in Jefferson City. Tenn.
The Redwomen edged lhe Lady
Eagles 78-75 to win the women 's
division c hampionship of the
Bevo Francis Classic on Nov. 21.
Probable starters for Rio
Grande - 7·3 following Tues·
day's 85-47 loss to Shawnee State
in Portsmouth - will be senior
Renee Halley as shOoting guard,
freshmen Beth Coil or Marlo
Kistler as point guard and
s ophomore Angela P ackard as
center. Juniors Holly Hastings
and Lea Ann Mulllns are ex ·
pected to repea t as power for· ·
ward and small forward,
respectively.
The Redwomen defeated Ken·
tucky Cllrlsllan 73-33 at Lyne
Center on Dec. 10 and added
another victory to their list on
Dec. 12 when they slipped past
Mount St . Joseph 64-61.
Eddie Carter's Carson New·
m a n squad , 7-3 entering Wednesday's game with Bristol (Ten n.)
College, expec~s to field junior
Vickie Mlller as' shooting g uard.
freshman Karen Cook on point
guard position and se nior Tract
Inman at center . Power forward
will be junior Lynnette Hayden
a nd senior Corean Wells will
again be s(llall forward.
Prior to the Rio Grande-Carson
Newman m atchup, North Georgia College of Dahlonega, Ga.,
faces Wingate (N.C.) College.
North Georgia. 3·5 after Tues·
day's 75·70 overtime loss to the
College of Charleston , will have a
job on Its hands conta ining
Winga te, which is 10.0 under
Johnny Jacumin's stewardship .
Wingate bested High Poin t
(N.C.) 83-72 on Dec, 12.

----np
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Friday,9:00 a .m . to 6 :00p.m. Saturday, and 10:00 a .m .
to 5 :00 p.m. Sunday.
Sate prices in ellect December 17 through December 23,1987 .

5

Junkin will recover- doctor

thump Jazz

apiece 'tor Denver . Alex English
By t lnlted Press' International
added 25.
Houston debut of Eric " Sleepy"
a nd Blair Rasmussen each had
David Wingate's best game of
Nuggets 132, Rockets 113
Floyd and Joe Barry Carroll.
20. World B. Free led the Rockets
the year and a rouUne effort by
Floyd scored 14 points and
At Denver. Michael Adams
with 15 points.
Charles Barkley proved a win· scored 24 points and four other
Carroll had 9 Lafayette Lever
ning combination for the Phila· Nugge ts had at least 20 to ruin the
and Jav Vincent added 21 points
delphia 76ers .
Wingate, a second-year pro,
tied his career high with 28 points
and Barkley contributed 32 Wed·
nesday night to help Philadelphia
to a 114·102 victory over the San
Antonio Spurs .
Wingate sank 10 of 15 shots
overall and scored 16polnts in the
first half as the 76ers took a 57-37
lead and n ever let San Antonio
get closer than 10 points
thereafter.
"David h ad a terrific game,"
Philadelphia Coach Matt Guokas
said . "He looked nice and re·
!axed. His shot looked good, his
drive looked good and he at·
tacked the trap well. It was his
fi nest game of the year."
Barkley, who averages more
than 2q points a game, scored 22
points in the first · half and
finished with a game-high 14
rebOunds. Cliff Robinson added
· 23 points for the 76ers.
San Antonio play ed witho ut
guard Johnny Dawkins. out with
an ankle injury. Leon Wood ted
the Spurs with 24 points and
Walter Berry added 23.
The Spurs cut Philadelphia 's
lead to 89· 79 on a dunk by Greg
Anderson with 9:22 to play but
the 76ers took a 100·83
a dvantage on a dunk by
CHASE LOOSE BALL - Marc Iavaroni of the second quarter of Wednesday night's game In
Wingate with 5: 45 to go.
" The coaches told )lle if I have
Utah Jazz, left, and the Celtics' Roliert Parish go Boston Garden. The Celtlcs beat Utah 121-ltl .
a shot, shoot It ," Wingate said.
after the loose ball during rebound action In the (UPI) ·
•'They just told me not to take
a ny bad shots. "
San Antonio closed to 67-57 on 2
free throws by Alvin Robertson
with 5: 38 to go in the third
quarter but Robertson was called
for two technical louis and
ejected from the game seven
seconds Ia ter . A 3-point shOt by
Wingate put Philadelphia up
76-59 and the 76ers led 84-7I a t the
e nd of the period.
"I complained about a ca ll and
M'aximum
I slammed the ball in my hands ,"
Halogen
Robertson said. "The ball went
peotection against
through' my hands and the ref
Headlamps
both viecoeity and
thought I slammed it to the floor .
• Burn brighter
I tried to get an explanation fo r
Oil
• last longer
why I was ejected . I don't think it
The alandlrd of per·
• Dramatically Increase
was fair."
for11111rice, engineered
nlghtvlslon
Phliadelphia's Roy Hinson
for """'lier cora.
scored 8 po ints in return ing to
H5001 H4651 H4701 H6024 H6054
action for the fi rst time si nce
PART#
H4666
H4703
dislocating a finger three weeks
ago.
STYLE
Elsewhere, Boston topped
Utah 121-111. Denver crushed
SALE SALE SALE
Houston 132-113 and Dallas
6.88 6.88 8.88
Umlt12
·• 109·105
sli pped past New Jersey
-2.111 -2.111 -2.111
In overtime .
REBATE REBATE REBATE
Celtics 121, Jazz Ill
PRICES
At Boston, Larry Bird scored 9
of his game-high 38 points during
AFTER AFTER AFTER
5W30
a key stretch at the end of the
REBATE
REBATE
Umlt12
third quarter and Kevin McHale
had 20 points, powering the
Cel tlcs. The Jazz franchise has
never won in Bost on Garden In 18
tries. Kar 1 Malone led the Jazz
with 31 points and Thuri Bailey

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The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. December 17. 1987

Gallipolis
209 Upper River Road

(614) 446-4103

·

'

_.

�•
Page

Thursday, December 17.' 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

6

I

Meigs drops 55-52 overtime battle Hannan·Trace to host SHS
~~:rA~e~m-r~!~~~:~~~e~h~~ ~;~:c~~~e~nw~~~~alb~;~h~e:~~ !~?:1::~:.~~~t~ft~s;~p:~~~~~~ m
~ SVAC
. h'eadl.·ner Fn·day
rW.~1 n'

1

Scoreboard ...
NHL. results

Junior WeUerwelrhls
N~w

wa...

U n
10 11
3 2tJ

Wlnnl J)('J:"
\'anc o u\'l~ r

lAs

An ~:el es

.

HuvyweiJhb
Ntow York- Michael Dokes u . K.P .

L T Ph. GF GA
U4 93
1112 107
102 Ill

Q.'

2 26
4 :U
4 . 20

Buddy Mc:Girt va. John

Slnep]

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAG UE
Walt¥! Confe~nl' e
P uhic k Dlvl~ lo n
NY l s land(&gt;rs Ul 9 2 38
New J e rsey
15 12 4 3~
Phila delphi a
1a 1:1 5 31
rut.. .b•u·gh
12 n 11 \lB
hl ngton
13 16 2 . 211
,NY R anJ:t&gt;rli
I I 16 4 2'
Ad ams Divis ion
20 7 1 '11
Muntrt'al
18 II 3 39
&amp; ston
Ha r tfnnl
12 12 5 29
11 14 5 n
Buffal o
12 15 2 2&amp;
Qlll'bt•c
Cam ph ell CO nfe ~nce
Norris Dl\•lslon
1412 -1 n
lk't rolt
Tomnt o
13 Ill 2 28
St. Loul"
II 14 4 '~li
(lliCaKIJ
12 1"1 ~ 26
M l n ~sota
II 16 .t 26
Smythe Dl vb!ion
f11Jga ry
19 9 ·I -12
Edmo nton
19 II 2 40

Vorll -

Porcer

Soccer

Major Indoor Soccer

Lt'a~

No gam eM IICheduled

1119 117
JOG 103

119 120
132 IPt
122 Ill

"'

..

liN

Ohio scores
Dec. li

126

109 117

m

98

119 I'll

Ill )1).1
liD 1311

r11s m

155
149
10$
102

Florida St 102, Ohio Slate 88
Lolllsv1lle 93, Cle\'eland Stale lB
Daylon 10., RoUins 74
Marlena 74. Otlerbeln fl,.1
Ohio Northem Iii, Mount Union GS
MuU;Inpm 82, WltteOOerg 61
Bluffton ~7, Tlft'in n

I

116
llf
117
11-1

ue m

" 'edne!ld ay 's KesultA

NY Ra ngtn !l, New J er sey 3
Munirelll 5, Qut:be c 4
De l roll 6, " ' 115hlngton I

Scores
Girls Ohio Hij~h School Basketball
By United P.-• International
Wedaesday, Dec. 18

Ol·le.ago 4, MIMI!so ta 2
Ca lgar y 5, " 'l nn!pr g 4
Lo!i r\n~e [l'l! 1. Edm onton 5

Thlll"sday '!i Gamel!
N\ ' (,.Iand en a! Philad elphia, 7: 35 p.m .
Vaneouver at 5oSio n, i : :15 p.m .

Ashl HariNlr Sl, Conneaut 16 CZoU
Buckll')'ll' Trail 52, BarnesviUe 43
Palnes Rlwrslde SS, Ashtabula 39
Paints Harwr 11, .Uht Edpwood :19
SheridiUI60. M'arsaw Rlwr VIew 53

St. l.A uls 111 Ha rtfO rd , 1: 35 p.m .
Pii L.:;hu r~h

at New J erser, 7:15 p.m .
F rlday'!li GamE'S
Montrt!ld nt Buffalo. night
Turon\1,1 at W!Uihlngton, nl~~:ht
Mi nnesota :~tlkltm lt , nl~rht
Wl nnlpt" gut Edmonton. night
NATI0~ 1\ L

RA.SKE-TBA.LL ASSOC .

\\'t•dnt'.!id ay 'll Ke!!i lllls

Bo!!IIJR 121, Uta h Ill

D:11las lOB, ~ e w Jersey 1115 (O'f l
Phi.ladclphln Ill, San An to nio
Df&gt;O\' f'r

11\2,

IJO U!i t ()n

Tl1ur ~ ay 'H

10'~

ll!f
Gam t"!&gt;

Phlla dd phiu 11.1 .'riew l'o rk , 7: Jil p .m .

Jndl una at Wa.'ihl ngton, i: 30 p.m .
at r hiC'llftO, ~ : :-KI p.m .
,Ua u'O ionat I. A Cl lp(W'n , 10: 30 p.m .
A.A L altf'r~at G old ~nSt a l e , 10: 30 p.m .
Sac r.t,n cnlo a t Se~t ttle, 10:30 p. m .
C l l' ~tll l a nd

Friday 's Ga mes
Nt'\1- Je rsey IU Cl eve lu nd . niglll

Sunday's Games

Philadelphia at NY Je\s, l p.m .
Minnesota at DelroU, I p.m.
Ne w E)]S(and at Bullalo, I p.m.
Ne w Orleamaat Clnd ...all, I p.m .
Pltt8burJh at HoUlton, I p.m .
Sealtle at Chlcap, I p.m.
Sa~~ Franclll()oat AUaa&amp;a, 1 p.m.
Sf: , Louis al TamJll Bay, t p.m.
Clevelal'll;t at LA RaJder~~ , t p.m.
lnllfanap&amp;llaat8an Dlep, 4·p .m .
M'Mhln«to• at Miami, 8 p.m .
Monday',. Game
D111las at LA Rams, I p.m.
Saharcla)', Dec. 26
Cleve land at Pllt8bUJ'Ih, 12: ~~ p.m.

De n\·e r at S un An lunlu, nig ht
Allanta at Mi lwuu k ee, n]Jt:h\
Po nln nd at Phoe nix , nig ht

Calendar
Bo xi ng

WWin(too at Minnesota, -1 p.m .

Molday, Dec. !II

Mi dd h · .,~·~ l gt~u

1\o ll dmcl Ol a jid&lt;' "'" ·

SVAC standings

the season when the Bobcats hO st
the 1·3 Ea stern Eagles , who have
lost three straight and whose

New lilgtaDd at Miami, 9 p.m .

fr an kl c Qy, ,•ns

•PEPPERONI
•SAUSAGE

Rutland man injured in .wreck
A Rutland man was Injured in an accident Wednesday,at8: 25
a.m., In Salisbury Township on S.R, 124, at the Intersection of
County Road 5, according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the State
Highway Patrol.
· Marty D. Hart, 18. was taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital
by the Meigs County Rescue Squad, He was treated and
released.
Hart, who was driving east, was in the process of making a left
turn when his car was hit by a car driven by Walter A. Ellls, 26,
of Pomeroy. Ellis was passing Hart as .Hart was turning.
Ellis was cited for passing within an intersection .

••
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24-26 Oz.

69

$

••
•
'
•
••
••
•

-·-'
••'

ODLAN

•.

'

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James Ashley

"

James E. Ashley, 58, Obetz,
formerly of Middleport. died
Wednesday morning at Univer·
sity Hospital in Columbus.
Mr. Ashley was a retired
transportation manager for the
Coca Cola Bottling Co. He wa s a
1946 graduate of Middleport High
SchooL
Surviving are his wife, Mary .
Anna; two sons, David G. Ashley.
Belpre, and James F. Ashley of
Lancaster; two daughters, Myra
M. Kearney and Cressa A.
Duncan, both of Coca Beach,
Fla.; his. parents, Mr. and Mrs .
Wilbur Ashley of Middleport ; a
brother, Robert G. Ashley, Mid· ·
dleport; a sister, Marilyn Jean
Shamblin of Chester and several
nieces and nephews
The family will receive friends
at the Graumlich Funeral Home,
1351 South High St., Columbus,
from2 to4 and 7 to9 this evening.
Services will be held at I p.m ,
Friday at the funeral home with
the Rev , David Boggs officiating.
Burial will be In Glen Rest
Cemetery,

MIDDLEPORT TROPHIES
..

.Personalize '!Jour (itfts
Brin&amp; us your Photo-Loto..,.Drawinf.
We can now DYE it in COLORS into

''

CAPS-:JACKETS-TEE SHIRTS-SWEATS
PATCHES-PLAQUES-SIGNS-DECALS
.fls A Dy-. .!t's

.PQrmanQnl,

~,

St$- SuhlimtJ.Ilon

.'
.

Extra Sweet &amp; Fresh Florida Navel Oranges
Price

Size (Count Per Box)

BOM
80 Size

5for 99' .

176Count
120 Count

39' Ea.

111.00 Box

Harold W ritesel, Sr.

EMS has one call

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl

$13.00
S13.0Q
$13.00

Only one call was answered
Wednesda y, the Meigs County
Emergency Medical Service reports. At 8: 31 a.m., Middleport
went to the scene of an auto
accident at Route 124 and County
Road 5. Marty Hart was taken
from the scene to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Am Electric Power.. ... ..... ... 26~
AT&amp;T .................... ..... ,. ......28% '
Ashland 011 .... ...... ........... ... 59%
Bob Evans .. .. ..... ... .. ... : .. .. .. .. , 15
Charming Shoppes .. . , ..........12'Vs
City Holding Co ..... ... .. .. .... ... 29
Federal Mogul... ..... . " .. .... ... 32 Y.
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .. ,.,......... ,,, 60
Veterans Memorial
Heck's Inc ... .............. .... ..... . 1~
Admitted
- Louise Posey,
Key Centurion .. ... ... ............ 36~
Reedsville;
Emerson Well .
Lands' End ...... ,......... .. ...... .19 Y.
Pomeroy;
Laura Scott.
Limited Inc . ..... ........ .... .... . .17%
Middleport.
Multimedia Inc.......... ... ..... .44 Y.
Discharged -Thoma s Grady.
Rax Restaurants ... .. .. ...... .... , 3 ~
John
McKe,nzie, Clara Powell,
Robbins &amp; Myers.. .... ... ... .. ... 7111
Beatrice
Ralrden, Linda Cozart ,
Shoney·s Inc ....... ..,.. .... ........ 21 ¥.
Shilton
Cadle. Mary Smith,
Wendy 's Inti. ,. ,....... .. .. .. ..... .... 5
Golda
Smith
, Lillian Gardner.
Worthington Ind ....... .. , ....... .16 %

Continued fr om pa ge I
teachers wi ll be as follows:
"June 9 for Pomeroy Elemen·
tary a nd Salisbu ry E leme ntary.
" June 10 for Har risonville
E lementary, Rutla nd Elemen·
tary an d Salem Ce nter
E le mentary .
" June 13 for Middleport
Elementary.
"June 15 for Meigs High.
" June 16 for Brad bury
Elementary.
"Julie 20 for Meigs J unior
High,
' 'The different dism issal dates
are because of the days various ·
schools were dosed beca use of
bomb threats, whic h have to be
made up.
'
'"(he reason for the adoption of
this calendar Is that the Board
had a choice between going until

Health ~epartment receives grant

I

sltvde nealth habits .
The grant was awarded by the
Ohio Department or Health

Gov . Richard F . Celeste today
announced an award of $5,500 to
the Meigs County Health Depart·
ment to fund community operated health promotion programs
focused on attacking the leading
causes of deaths and disabilities
in Ohio.
"Promoting good health prac·
!ices and reducing · the risks of
premature deaths and dlsablll·
ties will help avoid needless
s uffering and also reduce health
care expenses·. Keeping health
care costs down Is essential In
protecting Ohioans' pocket·
books," the Governor said.

Most premature deaths aiid
disabilities are due to heart
disease, cancer, stroke and ac·
cidental Injury. Evidence lndi·
cates that Individual lifestyle is a
major contributing factor to the
number of premature deaths and
disabilities. Individuals can sig·
nificantly influence personal
health status by adopting po·

Market•report
~THENS

I

LIVESTOCK SALES

December 12, 1987

CATTLE PRICES:

Feeder Steen:

'( Good and Choice) SOo-500 lbs, 67,00.81.00;
501-700 lb8, 16.00-"l&amp;.OO; Feeder Heifers:
(Good aod Choice) 31()-500 lbs, 71.0()-17.00:
sot-700 lbo 511.1()-111.00: Feed..- Bulb:
(Good and Choice) 31()-11410 lbo. 65.10-79.00;
sot-700 lbo, ilt.II0-74,00: Slaughter Bulb:
(over JtoO 11:18) 48.l5-49.75; Slaupter
Cow1: UIUitlea, 42.0G-4$.2S; Canntn-.and

Cutters, 36.00-44.00i Sprln1er Cow8: (By
the Head) S.SO.oo-405.00; Vem: (Choice
and Prime) 10.00.81.00: Baby Calveo: (By

the Head) 31.00-82.00; Baby Calves: (By
I he Pound) 61.00.102.00.
HOG PRICES: Jlop: (Barr(M's and
Gilts) 201).230 lb8{ 38.00-42.00; ButeheiSows, 29.M-31.M; ~Butcher Boars, 25.2529.00; Feeder Pip: (By the Head)

t3.01HO,OO.

SHEEP PRICES:

Old Sheep, 20.00.

30.00; Slaughter Lambs, 62.00.67-(lO; Goata
by the Head,

2:S.OO.".oo.

11.19Doz. .

114.98Box

5 for 99'

117.00

Box

Extra Fancy Washington

Red Delicious Allples
"·

through the federal Preve ntive
Health and Health Services
Block Grant program.

w'

f?..?B

------Weather------.--------.----.South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy this afternoon,
with highs between 30 and 35.
Becoming clear tonight, with a
low near 20. Increasing cloud!·
ness Friday, with highs near 40.
The probability of preciplta·
lion Is 20 percent this afternoon
and near zero tonight and
Friday .
Winds will be from the northw-

SIHi ol Olloo. Otp.~ ~T~e~~t o1 1n1vranca Ct~rf'Cll~ 01 Co'l'pi~I'Ce-Tht .m.
S.;~e~uYtnotr~lliii'ISu•afiCll CJ!the SIJtt CJI Qro10 11r111111 ten~'" N
BEMEFIT TRUST LIFE INS CO CJI CN:•iiD· Sl!l!t ti llro1 na1 unrpbd ..~n
th• Ius ~ 1 1"111 Stllll l ppli(IDte 10 rt arro •l lluthOIIl~ ~uMg the eu&lt;r&amp;nl ~
to transact m lin !tall ill ·~P•OP&lt;~•IIl bu~·~ess ol n1u•••1~ 01 11~ n.r~ual f&gt;l~n
lit h" llrOIItorHU rllll rl ll\owrl by •ts l nnua\Jtatement l0h~1 !Jeeoo u IQ!IDW!i
o~ Oru..,brr )I ti !-5 ,t,(lm.neo llltl! $2181116e2 00 L o lo~'t•n
S23BJ IO2-CBOO. Surplos. S3!J01,434 1Xl lnrorno! J23t ~8!&lt;7800 ftpMJIJ't'l
$217.3~ 61S 00. IN WlfNESS W .~E REOf l ha"' M&lt;t•niO lubscr·tiHI m1 M"'~
·i!r"l t i ll~"''' !eaiiJ N III~Jetl at COIUII'OUI On•o, IP1tl ~~~ ~~0 Olle Get~r~
Floe. SuPI el lnlu•ance ol Oh.o jill!)
Slate 01Ooe 0ep.Jfl'l'!fn! ol lnlu•a~~CD r.-Mut~ ol ComQI,arrc..-Tne....,.

est at 10 to 15 mph today and light
and variable tonight.

Gefl91K

Ohio Extended Forecast
Saturday through Monday
Rain or snow likely Saturday,
with a chance of rain or snow
Sunday. and fair Monday , Highs
will range from the mid 30s to the
mid 40s each day, with overnight
lows wlil be in the 20s,

~ ~entofL'IWII!I(tOitntSiiltiJPC)IIo./lt'libf'ft~'-e$1111

co.IBINlD INSUMNCECDOF AMERICA ofChrcq.r Slo•~oiii~~~Qos na1 com• prietl " '' ~ me laws oiiNJ State app'IC!Itlll 10 llen6 os &amp;ulho rr!eC 0u11n9 the (Ur·
rent )'1'1&lt;10 nu,.Cl •n111 Wile nt aJ!Ilropron o~s nes1 otr1Su•l!l(e lis t~1r.coal
t o-no t:OIIrls '»rrn byrtllrnufl !tl •tmft1tlll na•ab€'"' ulolo~an oecem~ '
l l 1916 Al)'llllledlllriS ~~~Jii tDS2'J!iOO lllt1'•11tl Slll8.31ill1:UOO Sv
pliJs !J69.S~.99!00. 1n:001t '98 t.l40.E~oo E..peMVts. ~u.520.moo

Nl!l8S51!1 i SlH!r.&gt;ll!o&amp;lOO. C~pul $,28.JJ.8!)&amp;700

PRICES GOOD

DRIVE A LITTLE,

THRU DEC. 24TH

SAVE A LOT!

Open 8 a.m.· 8 p .m.; Christmas Eve, Open 8 'a .m.-4 p .m.

Boa's
U.S. Rt. 33

MARKET

Mason, W. Va.
••
(304) n3-5721

comes complete .~viii:. a potal&lt;l
and our all -you · tun ·c.~l ' .
Salad Buffet and Hot Spor, 1 here
you'll find a varu: ty ofvegct:ll,b ,
pastas, sauces, ,oups. ro lb
and more!

Bring !he family and enjoy a feast
at Po nderosa. For one small price,
you'll ~et a complete Ribeye s~eak ,
fri ed Chicken Breast or Fried Fish
Fild d inner. And. ~-very dinner

Introducing the Ponderosa Value ~ne

,,,

=po:;o;;;NDER=os=A·
Upper Ri•tr Rd.
(1eros1

·•

fro~

lhe 4.irpM1)

$11 7?6.69000.\ncome l:r!OOl99800 E•fii'J'O:lrloJe&gt; lXIBti,S2l00 NIIU!tl!

, l&gt;IUJ1 731100, C1pott1 $1.(1(1(1.00000 IN WITfiESS WH£REOr I ~l&gt;e fl@leulllo
SU~S( II~ rnyo ~nll! IIIII t:IIUWJ

CEDAR BAR
&amp; LOUNGE

"

••
•

•

PRESENTS

•
•'

C.HARLIE
LILLY
AND

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•

.,•
•

..

i)ll l hr~to

l l(;oumiJ...:;, Oh'O !n 1

OrliiiYLANO INSUIUIICE CO ol 'hrlo~n SiltnfWtKOI'II, naHo~pl«t ~~~~
tilt lawS ci"IM SIIIG llll Pirtlb!e 10 III!Hl PI !~tr.Jrrlfll a"'"~ lhtt qrreN ~ar
I~ I!IMIC I ~ lhll Sli lt ~IIJlP'Q~I~It ll\ll "&amp;$1 Ol ~~lllllr(~ (ll rftOC•ol Ctnll
J,on lfli'!Ool~ by .u lllnal illil@... ~l1lon havw I)Hft n ~ o~ Dtce'l\btt 31
19ef ilodf"'ot'f(i81$111 $tlii5Jl26~00 lratlrioHI Sllh19J1500 Su'PI•I
SI&amp;Jle~OO. lrallllll s.26.2 .4'1112JOO E10tMI"~ 520261~ 16JOO Net a.
~~~ Slii1DW400 C1po!al 52 1ell.OOOOO tN WTI4ESS W11Ei!EOf 1riM,
Mttu"!o svb~trrl)e!l n·1na,.,e and tav&amp;ed my s•~ltolle ollroE!Il ot Cclu'!lous
Oll&gt;o tn r1 ~i! anc 011~ Gnte flOe, S•P' o• l•sv•!rct o• On•l (YZ\121
Stille ol at.. O.partme'll CJII~'u••rw;, C.,trlrtlll! of Corlrpjrll!fe -lilt ••·
ae~ Suoenrlle'16M l)j l11$1.1•!:~&lt;:t l)j tile Swt Ill Cllloo. Oe&lt;M!y t~l.tl 1n11
f ORETHOUOIITLIFEIN SCO ~t 8a lt!&gt;l,llt! Stille ollfld.ana ~,Gom~IM.,,
Jne ~ of tn~ Sillii ii'P!rcoolll 1(1 11 1~0 •I 3~1,0!1l!!d d~o 1 ng thO ~"''0"1 lUI
I O I 'Iftl~ rniM iUI!I rl fi UO!'OPII I\!Ikl.lr~~UO' •"St. If"&gt;;! ltsl,l!\1: ~I CO,dr
ton •I 511010n Ill' 111 •""~-' Slil~..,en110 "a•e ~Hn ~ foliJ..sonfl.kem~ 31
~ Mm•lld i~ SIOIIi »&gt;iOO LliD•I.es "ltiii2JOO SurOios.

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

•

S3 4S~67JOO.I ~rr.e Slt221&amp;.»00 f •pl!ndnu..s 5'5~69300 Neia.ISfll!
$~ ~5S~7J OO, C~t~&lt; l•l , l2 !10000000 IN WIT NESS WHEPWF I n~•elle•e~ot g
S&lt;!t!IC IIbod m1 n~mtintl CIUUll '"Y J.UI I~De.4l'•&lt;l!ll !I ColumbY5, Qtuo lhr§

oa, and a•• Gecr~ rabt Sua: Dlln~ulltnct ol o.,~ !•ffll
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S!llt e! CWioC lltNotrMn! olln$ll•arrce Certr~cateol Contpiruc-.bt ~r.
fltf1rgnold Sup!'ntn0ent ol10116anc:t oltr&gt;~~ Stale cJ1 O!iro.l!eltt', eert ~~ mat
IND1.1.N,1, IHS UR.I.NtE CO ol l'lllltn•t•JII! Slitt olln:ll!ll~ nu tom;~&lt;•l!ll wt~
lhe la M Ollhl$ State appllc:! ble kl •t antlriiiUI~~·•reC d"""~ t'lflcun'" ytl~&lt;
10 ltann ctrn IIlii Sll ltlll lp~pflllll b~III!OII OIII'IS!Jrai\Ct lll'lllnG&lt; IIcond.
ton,, w~n ~ols t ~null illll!,.tn11C ~~a•tbetn n ~on Ot'cllflt)t• Jl
1986 Mnlillfll at5ell 5267i7Uii00 lrallllt•~l lliiU11.ln00 Sl.t~M
$7i JO.I 1 8300,1~ Sl!WJJO,OI~OO Eoptlld¢u•t$ S11U72~600 ~ils­
S!Ilt SW'l'21,.1121l0 Cap1111 S2,000,DOOOO (N WITNESS WHEREOF 1 U•t
~r &amp;urlo t~b!I:IIIHHI m1 nem11od Cikl!lft1 111y !e•lto bs iq,.~ ~~ Colu'I'~U'
oruo
oa~ 1'1!1 oatt G&lt;!'0 19&amp; fabt s~~ ol ".!&lt;I'&amp;P"£e o1 0mo 1•3.loSi
Sr:111 Dl l'lhlll b~ri'Tiflll .,rii&gt;!U!Jntt Ctrtl'(ilte otCo"'~e-lnt un·
der$1!J1111l SuJle'flllletOCI"' ol hs..•ara o1 U.. Slate ol Or-.e /lfltoy ten 1e 1n~1
~EW l ORII LIFE IN$ CO Ol New Wlr1 51~1~ ol Ne.. ill·~ ~~~ rompllflt wnn
r n~ 11105 nr tnr1 S1~1 e !ppl~tD19 10 • ~ro 1 ILilnorrz~ ~u11ng tMt cune11 yNf
10 11ar.nct )1 I ~ I \181e •IU~ oalebor!ont~HI ' "'"'InCH~ t~e I'UI~II ~
liS ~~I'INI COntl~IOtl "t!lOwn b-; •lHn""tltllltftlel1!10 11iwe Mo!!n a.! foiklws
(Ill Oer:!!m~ ll
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l28032243.WOO S"rlll•t S11fi).'l83fo!l9 00 ~~ tl1Jiit:!93:1200 E•
tll!lld 'llirtS. 5~'7' l'l'il. ?5~00 IN' 1\HNESS WHfRECf I •ove rere\l"fo
suOSCI'rD.o m1 !lime ano ~a.s~ mv~oeal t~be allu~ ill Cclu'IHI•l (lrloc 1r 1
&lt;lay~ .., Oalt Geor9" r~bt SJpt o' ~~~~••nee 1)1 Otlo (•~12t
Stilt Ill Otto. [)ep&amp;1"1tot 0 11 M• ·~oce CeotJotect~ .. pra-w;t-ll't,...
OEnognfll. SIIPI !IIll~ OIIPII•ra~~tt 0 rllt Stl't ol Qr., ~ of&lt;N;es tnll
Pfi(WID(Nl l .fE ~ ACt INS CO ctC~IU~ Sti'C o!TMnrne.! ~~tc.m
pi red "' th 1~e la ..s o! l~l!l Stor~ &lt;cpk•nl~ IQ " ''~ 11 &lt;111~"!fiJ our·~~ 1~e ( Ill
teM !U' lO lransact r 1~11 51a~IISaPPillP'olltborllnmol """''ott 1~ •'II"ICil
concnoonllsnovrn DY •••~~~ ~ 'wt~t~l to ha•e ~~on fo ~~, Ctttr'll!!'
31 I!!Bii Adii'IIUIHI l!.j,tll S~ 9';)1';7 7lol 00 c ~~ '.ft S. OB81J~ 01JIXJ 5_,
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N[SS WHEREOF I nue nen&gt;unw lUC'K' De(! l"o'l "iMt ~1~ Cll~o;ec f'!y ~~I
lObe llihlHet ~~-~ 0~0 11 I la, !I'C dale GOGQ,. ~l:&gt;e S-;~1 ~' 'I'

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ar&gt;ef cr 0rwo 1•!9el
State 01 Orool. Oepivlme'll 01 ,,W'I"~f C!•tl&gt;ca!a O' to~p• t"tt-'•e ,r
otrs.gl'!t1l ~rntelll:ltnl oii~SUJJ'II.tJ••e S1~tt o1 Oro nnov~t•l ·~· 1'1.11
OUI"'C'f MUTW.L FIRE INS CO ol 0,-'1(, Slol!e ill Mam(hU&lt;OI\) ··•~ , ~"'
piBO Wtl h lhtli WI ot l' I State-~~~ ~~11 t: •I II,~·~ ao~I'ID /eGC~· '~ I~• ( o'
1111 ytat 111 lrinuct , ~~~~~!I ole''\ d(WCIO~&lt;iJPt ~"' 'lf\1 ot ~lu J'ot ~· •

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GIVE A YEAR'S GIFT SUBSCRIPTION OF THE DAILY SI:;NTINEL
TO THAT SPECIAL PERSON ON YOUR SHOPPING LIST.

1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTIQN ...................... Only *57..20
We will send a gift subscription card with your name telling ·of
your specia I gift.

-

NO COVER CHARGE
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

I

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SATURDAY, DECEMBER 19TH

•

,.lll lhf!l"" ol 111,1 Sta•t ttJPio&lt;:alll 11; li'IC ·I a..IID.rl'l.l ~··•1g '"~ -•"t"'
,.., ro trtnlll(llll nil' Ill 111 ·~· 1•0 lll4f1MIIIi
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31, 1986 Ml'll•ril!d 111~11 $6 f.ll65~ 2161)() l• iiD•M~ 14 439 ll&amp;9d?t!l: 5,,
plul U2U,OIHUCQ ~tO ..e ~46hll321S~O E·~~~P'&gt;"I
S3.68ll'&amp;SI!KIOO Nt11 \l.etl 12 NI~1S21&gt;901) Clj)oc11 S&lt;'llOJQOOX ·'I 'II'
NESS WHEREOf hl"f \r!•e&gt;o"lll•~·btol11 li.l"'t '"" (J.,I"'Q ,.,, ~
ICotlrtllll"Col\.r&gt;~.S (lilt 1'11D~VJ 0 0CiatP C'.eor~FA!JII S.r!ll
onr;;, o1 Oh10 1•6121
State It! Ot.o Deoar•m•"l rllt'" •nrf
1 'nil! ot Com(ll ,,: , ··~
dtrs.g,tcl S..,prr.nter&gt;dt'I'O r~··1"&gt;:•crtneS'dea!CX.o:&gt;llo!'I!Oyt:•,.'h''JI
STlJ( Iiiii AII GE ~E"--l iNSllllli!CE COI!il'rl.tll 01!'001"1 'liT&gt; :·."~ 11
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d~••PI!I U\t Coltlllll 111• 10 1 1 1~ ~ I~ S !'-'t 111~1\1111"1'1 bus•~fil o• '11u
111e1 lli ~" ant'lll cono tocn •• snt'lln c~ II~Mual m' tmll!'ll l~ ~··~ lll'on 111
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ST,IrTE fARM LIFE INi CO o•ltoofo ~111M SreJtof!ijr.;ol ~n tO"'ppll!d ,., 1 ~
1r., IIWJolll•~ Sttle IP!JIItiOII Mlrl ~Jill 'IIL.I,Cirlld ~or,~ lhl! tu"tnr jtlf
I~ UA ni A~ ~I~!$ tim oii!Oji&lt;Opr\1'~ ~u1 nt~l ~~ ~1'-11~1 II I Ml"(oa\ Clll'll•
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STATE FAAWRAE6 CAS CO o' B~'lg!M 51;11t ~ t ,'1QII h..,(~"'P' ~

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S (l!~ 01 Qhr~ O~~~~menl of 1•~-·~11(! (;~~ 'KIIIl ~~ 'o"'p,,fn,~, '·~ "
ll ln~u'lll\e~t' 1~1 Stale Ol 0~ ~ '\l!'fbl ~~1' PI 1' ,,

.,

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 18TH

••

I "-•e ~e•t"N~$ur!L'rbwm, .,..,.,,
Ill\ t.$1110 Mat' rtll .1' COI.I'!IOol Qr. 0 (h,l ~lr I"C r.••• c;,.,.9"
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!~.220.&amp;aa00 I N WI'NE S5W~EA~CF

THE POORSIDE

••

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my OUIICJ

di J and dlle (jeorge ; l lle S&lt;.pr at Jn~u·oocP. ot ~ t•TIIll
State ol ()lro Dfr1anl'la'll Olhwrlr..:t Cl!l1r'rea•t Ill ~•I'&gt;C!!-IIIf uft·
Nf1&gt;9M0 So.lper, _ l / lr'llo.&lt;l rlee at ln.&amp; Slat~ Gl 0/lo ller~ r;erto!ll!1 r~..

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.... IT~ESS WMEAE!J'

~~~""on0tumoer 31 t91lll Ao.Jmt'fllassets 5\17~11100 lo~ll~•
!56,!&gt;22~00
ST:&gt;1111204oo r1m"'• S·•.liH&lt;loo E!re•at,.·es

4

There's afamily feeling at Ponderosa:·

1.~

Ihl •e llere~P'IIo '"~libtd m; ~lr'!e ! lid eaul!d my ~~I ro oo d"ea a• Co•utt~
~Ui, On"J lh ll ~a y~nCilllt GecJr geFa!lt ~ o'l~~~~~~(tCIIOhc (o1Mi.
Slit!~ ol Otr~ iltptnmero ct lrl!ltra•u Cen 1'1:~11 01 Cll"''lfr¥rC~-tP1tl un
dt•srg~ 5ui!Ef.nter.»''l GI~~U&lt;rr.n:e of !he Stare ol O'&gt;OJ ,.~ an,r..; I'll!
C ~SOLIIMTED INSURAN CE CO Ol ii'O oa,!lllCihs. Still! ollndrana hn COf"'
pireC wrlh the IJws ot tnrs Slot~ •PL&gt;IC ' tlle ICJ 11~M " l J'II&lt;illlecl ~urrt.g lht c.~•
rent )'IIlli 10 t•an00111 1hr1 Sl ~ lt u IIPI)optrile ~umeSllul '"~"'~fiLll l!lll•~an~·~
tonct•&lt;l~ 1 5fla¥o O&amp;)' II IMUII SlaletnMI !o h••t been U ~liows on 0ocl!l'lltooo
31 19116 Mm11fll rMMI $'&amp;.10113900 lllltdolrts., '-ll.9Jio.l900 S~11)1u1

ll'lul\lllfllltlltsilrli&gt;~taleo,'!(lr~ ssoo~ •~Y t;a"Ml'lt.ll.....-.tmr3W'~H"

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Youll Have To$ Pay9ALittle l.ess.
9

Announce program
Morning Star Unite d Methodist
Chu rch will hold its annua l
Christmas program on Monday
a,t 7:30p .m.
Caroling slated
Ch ristmas carolers are to meet
Wednesday, Dec. 23 , 7 p.m ., at
Bethany Church. a nd then move
thro11gh the Carme l and Sutto n
areas, ending at Morning Star
Church for refreshements.

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Plan dance
A sq uare dance will be he ld
Friday , 8 to 11 p.m., at the Lo ng
Bottom · Comm unit y Buildin g,
The public Is invited.

To hold program
Calvary P ilgrim Chapel, on
Route 143, will prese nt a Chris t·
mas program on Tuesday, Dec,
22, 7: 30 p.m . There will be a
special children's progra m, special Christmas mu sic , and a play
entitled "Angels' Desire." Pastor Dewey Ki ng invites the
public.
Advanc e ticket s
Advance sale tickets to the
public for th e Southern High
School-Hannah Trace boys bas·
ketball game to be played Friday
nlghtatHa nnan·Trace wlllgoon
sale after the Sou thern girls
game, about 7:30 this evening, a t
the Southern High Sc hool offi ce.
Any tickets rema ining after
tonight' s advance sale will be
~SNOW
-RAIN
SHOWERS
sold at the school office on
FRONTS:
~arm "Cold
Static . . Occluded Friday, There are only 200 ·
Map shows mirimum temperatures. At least 50% of any shaded area is forecast advance ticket s available for the
to receive precipitadon indicated
UPI Friday night boys' ga me and a
maximum of four tickets will be
WEATHER MAP - Snowshowers will be 84!attered over New
sold to one person ..
York state into western New ·E ngland. Snow will also extend over
the Rockies, changing to rain from the southern Plateau across
Singers to appear
Southern CaiHomla. High temperatures will be in the 20s to near 30
The Harmonaires of Ga lllpolls
degrees from the northern two thirds of New England across the
Ferry, W, Va.: wlll be si ng ing at
Great Lakes, the upper half of the Mississippi Valley, the central
the Ash St. Freewlll Bapti st
Missouri Valley, the northern Plains, the northern Rock¥!s and the
Church In Middle port at 7! 30
northern 'plateau .
·
p.m . Saturday , The public is
Invited.

11

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June 30 or of going on Saturdays,
If the Board chose to go un til
June 30, the ,J unior High Sc hool
would still ha ve had to go on one
Saturday, a nd we wou ld have had
no allowance for ma king up
possible s now days ;r we should
have a bad winter."

-. Announcements

Hospital news

Zipper Skin Tangerines

113.00 Box

Indian River Pink Grapefruit
36 Size

-'

415 Bushel Box

2179¢
2/70¢
4 for 98¢
5/99¢

36JUMBO
48 EXTRA LARGE
64LARGE

band, Frank Johnston.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Saturday at the Ewing Funeral
Home where friends may call
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m . on
Friday . Burial will be in Beech
Grove Cern tery ,

Harold D. Writesel Sr ., 63, of
Route 3 Bidwell (Porter com·
munlty), died Wednesday at
Holzer Medical Center following
an extended Illness. He was a
retired tool grinder with General
Motors plant in Clark, N.J. ·
Born Oct. 28, 1924 in Columbus,
he was a son of the late Henry
Franklin and Clara Bricker
WrlteseL
,
He was a member of the United
Auto Workers, and a former
resident of Sayreville, N.J .,
moving to Gallla County six
years ago,
Surviving are· hls wife, Ada
Nease Wrltesel; two daughter,
Beverley Writesel of Bidwell and
Cathy Writesel, at home; seven
sons, Jay Writesel of Pontiac.
Mich. , Harold D. Wrltesel II,
Henry Writesel, Bill Wrltesel,
Arthur Writesel and George
Writesel,
all of Porter, and Earl
Dorothy Johnston
Wrltesel, Norfolk, Va.; three
Mrs. Dorothy Johnston, 67, sisters, Mary Rolland of Colum·
217¥, E. Second St .. Pomeroy, bus, Norma Collins of Florida
died Thursday at Veterans Mem· and Margie Brickmeyer of Pa·
taskala , Ohio; five brothers,
orlal Hospital.
·
John
Wrltesel and Blll Wrilesel of
. Mrs . Johnston was a retired
Eddie Writesel of
Columbus,
director of the Meigs, County
Florida,
Howard
Writesel of
Board of Elections where she
Racine
and
Dick
Writesel of
was employed for many. years .
Gahanna,
Ohio;
and nine
She was born Feb, 12, 1920 at
grandchildren
.·
Carpenter, a daughter of the late
He was preceded in death by
A. D. and Carrie Mace Morrison.
two
brothers and one sister.
Surviving are a sister, Audrey
Services
will be conducted
Swett, Pomeroy; a sister and
Saturday
10
a.m .. at Cremeens
brother-In -law, Wanetta and
Funeral
Chapel,
Rev. Jake Fry
George A. Radekln, Alb,any; a
offlclallng.
Burial
follows Cente·
nephew , Arlin Radekin, Albany;
nary
Cemetery
.
Friends may
two nlec,e s , Avanel Holliday,
call
at
the
chapel
,
2
to4 p.m. and 7
Dexter, and Tina Murphy,
to
9
p.m.
on
Friday.
Hamden, and six great nieces .
and great nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her hus-

50 RIVERVIEW DRIVE

992 6128

Area deaths

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 7

" Once again, the Board r e· a cquainting substitute teache rs
gre ts any Inconve niences c ause d with their schools and their
and the fac t that parents and as signments. This day will be
students are forced to make used on Friday, De c. 18.
decisions which they should not
ha ve to make. The Board will
''Schools will be open for
o~n other schools as atte ndance
s tudents on Monday, Dec, 21s t,
allows: The purpose of opening 22nd and 23rd. Tliey will also be
schools In this manner is affected open on Dec. 28th, 29th and 30th.
by projected attendance , and by
" In January , schools will be
the fact that we want to meet the open as scheduled, w'ith th e
standards of the State. "
addition of Martin Luther King
In regard to the school ca· Day and the Saturdays of Jan.
lendar, the statement says:
16th and 30th,
Calendar
"February will have added to
"The Board of Education it the Saturdays of the 13th and
adopted a school calander for the 27th,
remainder or t he 1987-88 school
"Saturdays of March 12th and
year . The Board changed the last · 26th are added a s are the 9th and
teachers' day on the cale ndar to 23rd in April. The Spring Break
an inservlce day to be used for has been eliminated.
"Last day for students and

Me igs Cooperative Parish wfll sponsor a government
commodities dlstrlbuttlon on Wednesday, bee. 22. from 10 a .m.
to ·2 p.m .
'
Distribution center s wfll be the Rac ine Ame rican Legion Hall,
Tuppers Plains Fire House , Scipio Tonwshlp Hall, and the
grange hall at the Meigs County Fair Grounds .
Only yellow C.A.A. cards from Meigs County will be accepted.
Cards may be obta ined from the Cheshire office ofGallia·Melgs
·
C.A.A.
Those needing commodities are asked to br ing bags or boxes
for Items. Distribution Is expected to Include cheese, butter,
honey and rice.

CORRECTION

2 PAK

Me ...;gS...

Parish to distribute c~rnmodities

GIVE A GIFT OF FRUIT FRoM BoB's MARKET
:

~---Local news----~

•

•
only win was a 60··59 squeaker
over Kyger Creek on December
l.

·N
ow,
If
You
Want
All
This,
Fried Fish Filet or Ribeye Steak or Fned Ch1cken Breast

NY Jets at NY Glau&amp;s, I p.m .
BulfaJo at Philadelphia, I p .m . "'
Clndnnallal HOII!IIon, I p.m.
Del roll al Atlanta, I p.m .
Gree.i1 Ba)' al New Orleans,.l p.m .
Sf. . Loula "' Dalbu!, I p.m.
Seattle at ltaMU Clly, t p.m.
Tampa Bay a&amp; lndluapolts. 1 p.m .
Chkaso at LA Raklel'tl, 4 p.m .
Sa• Dh.•go at Denver, 4 p.m .
Ll\ Ranl11lt San Fraaclaco, I p.m .

Utah at I ndiana, night

:\'' "' \ '!l rk -

NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEA.GUE
Saturd~'s Ganws
Green Bay at NYGianb, 12: 30p. m .
KaMas CUll at Denver, 4 p.m.

Sunday, Dec. 2i

Oallw. ut l)ct rolt. night

Me igs then attempted to score
by driving the base line, missed
the shot .-a nd the Spar tan s
Howie Ca ldwell's unbea ten
grabbed the rebo1.1nd. After a
Southern Tornadoes will tra vel
time out , Whitlatch hit a fie ld south to face Mike Je nkins'
goal and Al ex was up by one with
Ha nnan Trace Wildcats In what
seconds
re
ma
ining.
o
n
the
looks
to be the toughes l battle on
11
ensuing play, Bartrum was
the Friday night 's SVAC slate.
fq,uled but missed the front of the
These two tea ms are virtual
one and one. Jarvi s , bringing the mirror Images of each other, as
ball down court, was hacked, the Tornadoes a nd the Wildcats
went to the line and sank two free have quick players who have
throws tha t sealed the Ma raud· dri ven their re spective league
ers fate as the Spartans Jed 55·52 opponents off the floor tcir a
with four seconds left.
gra nd total of seve n wins a nd one
Box score:
.
loss. If Je nk ins' cheetahs can
MEIGS _ Barfrum 8·! · 7·26;
stay awa y from t)le cold shooting
Bissell 2. 0.1.5; Smith 1_0,3.5 ;
s treak that cost them their only
Burdette Q-1·0-3; Snyder 3-0·2-8;
loss of the year , a 74·561oss to Oak
Neigler 0.1.0.3; P owe ll l ·0·0-2;
Hlll,.they can take some of the
Durst 0-0·0·0,
wind out of the Torn ado attack,
ALEXANDER _ Jarvis 2-o.4. which is capable of driving
8; Martin 2-0-0-4 ; Whitlatch 4-0·1· quickly Ins ide for eas y layups
9 ; Chapman 6·1·8-23; Kei ter a nd scori ng from three-point
range.
2.1. 0_7; Costello 2·0·0·4,
Scoring by quarters:
· A win by the Me rcerville (lve
Meigs ........... ,... ... . 5 19 29 47 52
will put them in a tie for the
Al exander' ............ 8 26 .37 10 55
league lead, while a loss wl11 put
In the reserve con tes t, Eddie
therrt in a third-place tie with the
Crooks three .pointer opened the
winner of F riday's North Gallla ·
scoring to give Meigs the le ad but
Oak Hlll game.
it was short lived as the Spartans . The Pi ra tes won three straight
hit two quick field goals to go
league con tests , including a 77-76
ahead with two minutes gon e.
thriller against Symmes Valley
The Marauders grabbed a one
last Fr iday night before dropping
poin t lead with the first quarte ~ a 67-54 game to non -league
nearly expired but could not hold
opponent Un loto Saturday night.
Th ey will try for their fourth loop
it, They managed to stay c lose
wi n in fi ve trie s against host Oak
for the remainder of the contest.
actually tieing it at 39 all in the
Hill , wh o is looking to do the
same. The Oaks , led by 6-3 senior
fourth . but It wa s to no avail at
the Spartans posted a 52-45
forward Mike Ha le and 6-8 junior
vi~tory.
pivot J edd Rawlins . dropped
Scoring for Me igs was Bet zing
their first league decision to
with 13. Crooks 11, Doug Stewa r t
Southern last Friday night , 94 -62.
9, Chris Stewart 6, Cleland 4 and
Kyger Creek, who won Its first
Barton 2,
SVAG ga!IIe against winless
Brian Skinner and Steve Ha wk
Southwes tern 78-52 last Friday
night , will try to imp rove on Its
led the Spartans with 14 and 8
respectively.
1·3league mark a gainst Symmes
Valley in Willow Wood. The
'Vikings a realso1 -3 lnconference
competition .
The Hi ghla nders will continue
ALL GAMES
their
quest for their fir st win of
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Southern ....... ..... .. 5 0 450 290
Hannan Trace .. ... 5 1 388 293
Tuesday's result:
North Gal\ia ....... .4 2 395 400
Oak Hill 57, Minford 54
Oak Hill ..... .. ,..... .4 2 416 374
Pa rkersbu rg Catholic 80, East·
Eastern .......... ... .. 2 4 369 451 er n 64
Kyger Creek ..... ... 1 3 295 245
Friday's games:
Symmes Valley ... 1 3 253 345 Southern at Ha nnan Trace
Southwestern ....... O 5 289 402 North Ga llia at Oa k Hill
SVAC ONLY
Kyger Creek a t Symmes Valley
(Varsity)
Eas tern at Southwes tern
TEAM
W L
P OP
Saturday's games:
Southern .. " " ... ,." .4 0 382 222
Waha ma at Kyger Creek
Hannan Trace .. ... 3 1 302 293 Coal Grove a t Symmes Valley
North Gallla ..... .. .3 1 277 284
Oak Hill .......... .... 3 1 309 320
Eastern ...... .... .. ... ! 3 245 317
Kyger Creek ... ,.. ,. ! 3 236 245
Symmes Valley ... 1 3 253 345
Southwestern .... ... O 4 247 328
TOTALS
16 16 2251 2251
SVAC
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L P OP
Southern ..... ... ... ... 4 0 230 148
Hannan Trace .. .. .4 0 226 113
Southwestern, ... , ,2 1 167 183
North Gallia ...... .. 2 2 211 211
Oak Hill .... .. ...... .. 2 2 156 175
Symmes Valley ... 1 3 169 240
Eastern ... ..... .. .. .. .l 3 148 224
Kyger Creek ........ o 4 15l 197
TOTALS
16 16 1501 !530

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

••

.

as the. Meigs Marauders and
committed, numerous fouls a nd
t
th
f
~ rnovers In e next our ~ nd one
Alexa nder Sparta ns hooked up in
a TVC match. Col d shooting and
half mmutes when Smi th hit on
one ?f two attempts fro.m the
sloppy ball ha ndllng plus poor
shot se lectiion on the par t of both
ch~nty line .. Joe Sn~ er ~ five
squads resulted in a most unin·
pomts was high for Me rgs m thl •
teres ling ga me for.t hree and one . quarter·
.
. .
ha lf quarters as Me igs dropped a
Things seemed to liven up 10
55·52 overti me decision to the
the fourth a s the Mar auders
Spartans,
managed to outscore the opposi·
The first quarter ended with
_lion 18 to 9 a nd .the score was
Alex lea ding 8 to 5 after boih knotted at 47 all with Meigs In
t~ams, comb ined, ca nned only 5 possessiOn a nd nine seconds le ft
of 29 from the field 1including 5 m regulation play, · Bartrum 's
sho t from the s ide was short and
three point a ttempts) and Me igs
hill ing on one of two free throw
BiSsell, In the pain t. missed the
attempts. The Spartans then
follow -up on the rebound and
expa nded the lead to seven at the
tiJere wa s anothe r three minutes
half wit h Mike Cha pman ca nning to play·
nine and Mike Ba rt rum match·
Two charity tosses and a two
ing him wit h nine of his own. pointer by Bart~um gave the
Smith and Burdette picked up locals a four pomt edge until
five between them in the second Doug Keiter cut it to two on a
fra me.
good steal at the 1:09 mark of the
The thir d stanza , for the mos t overtime period. Smith then hi t
part, was a bout as exciting a s the front end of a one and one but
kiss ing your 95 year pld cousin . the Marauders fou~ed Denn~
The Spar tan s Bill Whitla tch Jarvis who went to I e lne an

Thursday, December 17, 1987

~

..

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~

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b"'

THE"Your
DAILY
SENTINEL
Hometown Newspaper"

"'"''I"'" 01

1,-ij

STATE l'oi.~ M IIUTU.l l AUT0\1108 U IHS C0 o!Jl'ol0.,·"~' ~tlle~llll 'IO•S
hu tom~•e4 wth 1M lion oft~ 1 Sl••~ approu~ll! ta ~ ~"CC -., au~ro~ 11 d tfur "'I
11'11\ euntnt rtf l ~ lt&amp;n,.CI I~ 111•1111111 I• !PP'l\ll'lfl O"'M,I )I '"I"'I"C~
"'ul~ll ~1ft ~~ ''"11'1'·11 er:n;t 1'0" ·llllow, ~ th,•ull Sl~ienlf~llD
llnt.DNnulolwsmDec..,..l•
1,4-..~ea-~ S2U1'9illi!H00
lii~ II~ U 1 11 ~ 15,!61~23 ,0 S~•pM I I~UJSIDli!I!O~ ~cc....,
.$13,&amp;SU67mOO f•peMioi••M SHQ5J6!.3 i"&lt;!!OO t~WITN£SS MIEREOf·
I ~•tlll!!II\I,.,!UbfC 11 tltll"Y rt,U&lt;\Cl ~IJr,ed lhlj wltoi:Jet~'oee ji[A'"'
b~l Ol'ioO l~ol ~.han~ tlllf llerq• t11&gt;t Sur r! lo!o'~OCI ~· C·
•6 1

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Thursday; December 17. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

MILLER ADDRESSES ASSEMBLY- Congressman Clarence
E. Miller ( R-Lancaster) addresses an assembly viewing the
SP,ruce tree cut from thll,. Wayne National Forest In Lawrence
County. The tree was lighted on the lawn ol the Capitol in
Washington,' D.C., to mark the official start of the Christmas ·
season. The tree was transported to Washington D.C. lrom
Marietta as part of the observance of the bicentennial of the
Northwest Ordinance.

of others wi thout wri tten per mis.sion, $25 and costs; Lillian L.
Maynard, Racine, as su red clear
distance, $10 and costs; He rber t
T. Maynard, Point Pleasant , W.
Va., speeding, $21 and costs;
Delores VanMeter, Pomeroy,
speeding, $24 and costs; Dennis
Hysell, Pomeroy, speeding, $25
and costs; Sherman Hawk, Sr .,
Chlillcothe, following too close,
$20 and costs; Mitchell D. Barringer , Reedsville, no seat belt,
passenger, $15 and costs; Kelly
J. Clar k. Syracuse, following too
close, $10 and costs; Kenneth
Green, Rutland, driving while
intoxicated , $250 and costs, three
days in jail and 60 day license
suspension; Christopher Burke,
Ra cine, speeding, $22 and costs;
James Hicks, New Haven, W.
Va., hunting on land without
written permission, $50 and
costs; taking more than one deer,
$200 and costs, 30 days in jail ··
suspended, one year probation;
procuring Ohio resident hunting
license by false statement or
misreprese ntation , $75 and
costs!; taking an anterless deer,
$200 and costs, 30 days in jail ·
suspended, one year probation
and forfeiture of firearm; How-·

clear distance, $10 and costs;
James Gray, Columbus, hunting
deer after sunset, $25 and costs;
Tom Harman, Columbus, hun ting deer after sunset, $25 and

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The state's financial responsibility law· relating to insurance for
motor vehicles has been upheld
as constitutional by the Ohio
Supreme Court.

" /,

Chapman
birthday
A party was held recently at
the h.ome of Jim and Vlkl Payne
in observance of the third birthday of their niece, Jenny Lee
Chapman, daughter of'Jim Chapman; who hosted the affair.
Refreshments were served and
games were played with each
child attending receiving •a gift.
Others at the party were Jenny's
grandmother, Marcella Chapman, Grace Welch, Emill and
Lacl Payne, Brent, t athy, Jason,
Jessie and Jamie Chapman,
Brenda Fry, Ci'ndy Lewis , Faye
Steinmetz, Dougie Brevik, and
Bob Chapman. Mary Young and
Chuck Anthony sent gifts.

'

'l
'i

J

"'
REBECCA TAYLOR

Taylor birthday
RAM CHARGER

sr

Stock H83891. 2 d""'- stabO&lt;I W11!DM, lwhe&lt;l cliv~

2 To Choose From- 4 OOors, 4 cyl, air oond,auto.
~~m.. PS. Pa II .tleo, MVFM rado. odial trl!l.
bucket sem.
SAL£ PRICE

FORD F·SERIES

IXlW8" OOor bcks, M wheel, cruise oontrol. AMifM

steroo tape. OOI!IIir15. buck a S8ills. rear wiukM
defut
SAL£ PRICE
r~io.

$7999.

$11,799.

985 FORD LTD

1986 MERCURY

1148S1BP2fC!J~cyl,

S1nck #
air rood. \fly I
roof. auto tr.m&lt;. PS Pa """"' win- """' dooi
locks, till ..tleel, cruise cootrol, .eM/ FM radio, stereo
tape, radi!l ties. l'lt!Ke walt, Jeal' winmw detlg.
SAL£ PRICE

~-

V-8. air rond., auto. 1roms., PS. PB. ~ winOOws.

$6699.

FORD TAURUS

UlfbJ!i'U

Stock H 11l71.
IT; nt v.!le&lt;l clive;
cyl, air ci:md., 5 speed, ~nd. trans., PS, PB, cruise
control, M1 / FM radio, s!erm tape, mdii!ltfa buckB
~ts. rear ~n&lt;klw defc&amp; QaU3!$.
SAL£ PRICE

$7799.

Rebecca Taylor recently cele·
.bra ted her second birthday at the
home of her parents. Marvin and
Shelia Taylor. Chester.
A Cabbage Patch doll cake and
ice cream were served . Presenting gifts were Beverly and Jim
Bailey , grandparents; Brende
and Paul Holsinger, Lena and
Chuck Bailey, and Heather and
Samantha. and the honoree's
broher, Michael. Sending gifts
were Sherrie and Joe Rosen and
sons, Cincinnati, and R-ink and ·
Liise Linthecum , Webster ,
Masss. ; Charlotte and Gary
Smith and daughters and Ruth
Taylor. Chester.

Chatter Club meets
A holiday dinner party was
enjoyed by members of the
Chatter Club recently at Sebas·
tians in Parkersburg.
At an earlter meeting held at
the home of Brenda Bolin in
Rutland· with Lola Harrison as
co-hostess, plans for the Christmas season were discussed.
Games were played with prizes
going to Dorothy . Roach, Cindy
Hutton, Doris Wilt, .Janice Fetty ,
Delores Whitlock, and Linda
Hubbard. Mrs. Bolin and Mrs .
Harrison received an annlver ·
sary gift from her secret pal.

1985 OIEVROLET

1986 OIEVROlET.

S-1 0 PlatUP

C-10 PlatUP

Stocl N 83351. 6 cyl , auto"'"' · PS. Pa Ill. radio.
radillfes. ~ton pickup, mrt wheet tase, rear step
btlii'I&gt;O'

NAL
CLOSEOUT

SAL£ PIIICE

$6499.

$8499.

1985 AUDI 5000 S

1984 OIEVROLET

Stodc N 73531. !l!lill,

ITo~

pow.- ""- paw.- dOO' ~ cruise oorlroi.III.IFM
ratio. sta-m tape, rctchl ti""5
SAL£ PRICE

'*""

$750. REBATE*

!l!lill, ITo~ wheEl ~we, 4cyl.

white wa~

b uc k~

s&amp;1ts, rea- willcbw defog

SAL£ PRICE

$3999.

1984 OIMOLET

1980 OIEVROlET

""'"'door

auto 1rans., PS, Pa IDW"' win&lt;l&gt;w•
lodts.
tift wheel, cruSe oontrol, !ta'«&lt; tape, rea- wincilw detlg
SALE PRICE

~5699.

S1nck H841 23. 2 &lt;1m. 6cyl., air .,d., a ~o h ilS.,PS,
PB. tit whef:!!, cruise control. "MIIIFM radia. OOialtira,
we~~ seat.
SAlt PRICE

$1999.

The annual Christmas party of
Xi Gamma Epsilon Chapter,
Beta Sigma Phi Sorority, was
held Tuesday night at the home of
Phyllis Hackett, sponsor.
· Members exchanged gifts and
ornaments and also brought
items for needy families. At last
week 's meeting the chapter held
a going-away party for Kaye
Walker . Sharon Stewart had the
cultural report displaying homemade crafts.

·MusetUn hours

MONI'E CARLO

Stocl&lt; N78381. 4 door\ !1!101\ V-11. •ir IDtd, &gt;iny l mol

1987 v. w.

StocU 11541. 4

MERCURY COUGAR

air mnct., auto. trans., PS, PB, Nd!FM radiO, rad•allifeS,

$10,799.
CAPRIa

Expires
December 31, 1

CAVAUER

v.!leet drile 5 cyl, air

oond. 5 """"· md tr..._ PS, Pa powo- wi100...

Xi Gamma Mu
has meeting

· Slocl H84311, V~. auto. trOt&lt;. liS,Pa Ill. ro!o, radtal
tir5, ~ km pidlup, long wKJe too. re• step OOITfliY.
••
SAL£ PRICE

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

Thursday. December 17, 1987
"
Page- 9

The Meigs County Museum
will be maintain special hours for
the holiday season . The museum
will be open on Monday and
Tuesday evenings, Dec. 21 and
22, from 7 to9p.m . Regular hours
are Tuesda y through Saturd ay, 1
to 4:30p.m.
.
The Victorian Christmas ex·
hibit will be on display throughout the holiday season . Meigs
County History, Volume II. has
arrived and can be picked up or
purchased at the museum , Butternut Ave. , Pomeroy.

Mark and Jaye Harrison .of
Union Ave .. P omeroy, enter·
tained recently with a pa r ty in
observa nce of the second· birth·
day of their son, Justin Al an.
Attending the party were his
grandparen ts, Mr . and Mrs.
Herman Roberts and· Joey, Mr.
and Mrs. Howard Harrison and .
Gregg, Mrs . Sherry French,
Myles, Mitchell and Misty Pain·
ter, Mrs. Ann Miller. Laurie,
Lacy , Lance and Lindsey , Mrs.
Kim Martin, Bryon and Bran·
don, Mrs . Cindy Park, Adam and
Davis, Mr8' Carol Fitch , Ca ndy
and Cheryl , Mrs . Ca rol Lee
Gause and Jonathan. Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Boggess and Donnie,
Mrs. Sheena La thy , Mrs. Ma rgie
Wheaton, &lt;;oilia and Kendra,
Mrs . Marie Wheaton, Mrs. Sara

JUSTIN HARRISON
Hobbs J a inmie and Joshu a.
Sendi~g gift s were Mrs. Dessie
Boggess and Mrs. Dorothy
Roberts.

J oshua Broderick, son of Martin and Na ncy Broderick, wa s
hon ored recently with a party on
his sixth birthday.
Games were played with prizes
going to the winners. Cupcakes,
ice crea m. chips a nd pop were
served. At tending and sendin g
gifts were· Holly Broderick, Jo shua Sorden, Joseph McCall ,
Luke · Grueser, Ryan Pratt,
Amber Gardn er, Vic ki and Tra vis Adams, Patrick and P atsy
Ae iker, David and Am and a
Fetty, and Joshua Will .
A second party was held at his
home with a Ghostbusters
theme. Attend ing were Holly
Broderick. Janic e Evans, Emma
Broderic k, Da ve, Jeremy, and
Jami Buskirk, Nancy and Karen
Burns, Christine Grueser, Bee ky
and J amie Broderick, Carol.

Community c~lendar
THURSDAY .
RACINE - Racine Elemen·
tary School wlll present a Christ·
mas program on Thursday a t 7
p.m . at the Racine First Baptist
Churc h. Everyone is welcome to
attend .
ROCK SPRINGS Rock
Springs Better Health Club will
meet at the Rock Springs Church
at 12: 30 p.m. on Thursday for a
potluck Christmas dinner. There
will be a gift exchange. Candy
and cookie trays will be made.

Masons are invi ted . Refr eshments will be served.
SUNDAY
RACINE- The annu al Christmas program of the Mt. Moriah
Church of God, Racine, will be
· held at 7 p.m. Sunday.
'

_

_,_ _

SYRACUSE - Santa
make his annu al visit at
Syracu se Fire Station
youngstrs of th e community
p.m. Sunday.

will
the
for
at 2

HEMLOCK GROVE- A play,
RACINE - Racine Elemen- · "The Gifts of Christmas" will be
tary School will present a Christ- presented at the Hemlock Gove
mas program on Thursday at 7 · Church at 7 p.m. Sunday. Done in
p.m. at the Racine First Baptist three scenes, the play will
Church. Everyone welcome.
feature a cast of all ages.
Following the play, Santa will
POMEROY - Christmas fel· visit. The regular morning serlowship covered dish dinner will vice will be held at 9: 30 a.m.
be held at the Senior Citizens Sunday with children to prese nt a
Center, Thursday, December 19 short program.
at 7: 30 p.m . The Rev. Herbert
lliscoe invites the public at
HOBSON - Hobson Christian
attend.
Church in Christian Union will
present a Christmas program
FRIDAY
Sunday at 7 p.m . The Rev .
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Theron Durham will be the
Lodge 363 F&amp;AM will meet in speaker .
special session Friday , De'
cember 18, at 7:·30 p.m. for the
purpose of installing new officers. Installing officers wlll be R.
W. Brother, Tom DeLay and R ..
· W. Brother, Wayne White, dlstri&lt;!t deputies of the 12th Masonic
District . Open installation for

Cos fights AIDS

HARRISONVILLE - Mt. Union Baptist Church will present a
Christmas program Sunday at
6:30 p.m . The church is located
on county road 10 off SR 143,
between Harrisonville and Ca r·
penter. Pastor is the Rev. Noel
Russell and superintendent is
Joe Sayre.

Cancelled
POMEROY - The Dece!I)ber
meeting of the Meigs County
Democratic Executive Commit·
tee has been cancelled . The next
meeting will be on Thursday,
Janua ry 3, 1988.

LONG BOTTOM - Long Bottom United Methodist Church
will present a Christmas progr~m Sundayat7p.m. The public
is invited to attend.

r

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) -Bill
Cosby returned to his alma
ma ier, Temple University in
Philadelphia, Tuesday night for
a black-tie dinner to benefit
children stricke n with AIDS.
Almost 700 people paid $250 each
to join Cosby for dinner after
going a cross the street to a
theater to see his new movie.

~~~~~~B:I'!EI::'~~fj::!~~~~~~~IEIO(fj::!B=t;IEIO(WOI

vouR JEANS HEADQUARTERS
Open 9-8 thru Dec. 23rd
9-5 Saturday and 9·1 Sunday

W

TEXAS COMMUNITY - An· W
nual Christmas program will be ,
presented at the _Mt. Herman
U.B. Church, Texas Community
?l
Sunday at 7: 30 p.m .

W

1
VI

l

I

W

SYRACUSE - A Christmas
program will be presented at the
Syracuse Presbyterian Church
Sunday at 7 p.m. The public is
invited to attend.

.

I

I

?l

VI
~

,
290 N. 2nd MIDDLEPORT

'

·Beautiful
Wooden

LIGHTED

CURIO
CABINET

Rocker~

REG. 1279.00

$12995

NOW

TO

$24995_.

$199 95

SAVE UP
TO S80.00

SAVE sao.oo

6 Gun

Gun
Cabinet
REG. S249.95

5 DRAWER
CHEST

$199 95

REG . '84 .00

SAVE

iamonds

$5995

sso.oo

SAVE '25.00

RECLINERS

FOR LESS!

2 FOR 1

BUT ONE RECliNER
GET ONE FlEE

All Are

25°/o Off
For Christmas Gifts

1/2 CARAT

1/4 CARAT

579500

5295~ 0
White or Yellow Gold

NEW 2 PC. E.A. '

LIV. RM. SUITE
REG. 8319.1!0

95
$189
'130
SAVE

FOR SALE by Public
Auction by The
Farmers Bank and
Savings Co. December
19th, 1987 at 10:00
a.m. at 105 Union
Avenue, Pomeroy,
Ohio: 1987 Dodge
1250 Van, 6496
miles, damaged front
end, loaded. For more
information please
contact Scott Shank
992•3293,
1

NEW 1 PC. WOOD

DINETTE SET

95
$299
SAVE 1120
NEW S PC. WOOD

DINEnE SET
COMPARE TO 1269.00'

• Watch Repair • Jewelry Repair • Engraving

113 COURT
POMEROY
9'12·2054

a::(j ..1•. tel~£
·
,\I/~

-v-

((}((JJ7rl} . @;?./~

95
$199
SAVE 169 ·

342 2ND
GALLIPOLIS
446-2691

OPEN SUNDAYS 12-5

·oPEN EVENINGS 'Ill 8

FREE GIFT WRAP

FREE

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•

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i

-~~~-IEIO(~-IEIO(~IEIO(IEIO(~=~-IEI0(!£1::(!£1::'~-1!10(1!10(~

MIDDLEPORT - A Christmas program will be. presented
at the First Baptist Church.
Middleport, Sunday at 7 p.m . The
pul:illc is invited to attend.

"Your Professional Full
Service Jewelers"

UMW has
Christmas
gathering

Worship through music wlll be
featur_ed at 10:30 a.m. Sunday at
Heath Un ited Methodist Church
in Mi ddleport.
The chu rc h choir will do
severa l num be rs including'
" Hark ~ A Thrilling Voice Is
So unding" ; "Rejoice, Rejoice!' '
and "Come, 0 Come To Us, We
Pray" . The children's choir wil l.
present a selection and vocal
solos will be presented by Gay
Pippe rt, the chu rch choir director , and so nny Zuniga, pastor of
the chu rc h. Donna Jenkins will
per for m severa l organ
JOSHUA BRODERICK
selections.
The public is invi ted to the
Matthew and Ty Ault , Frank , '
Linda and Vincent Broderick, service as we ll as to the child·
Mr. and Mrs . Sherman Buskirk , ren's Christmas program to be,
given at 7 Sunday evening. The
Mike, Beth and Ryan Buskirk.
annual Christmas Eve candlelight service will be at 7 p.m. on
Thursday, Dec. 24 . ·

.•

Clark's~

The annual Christmas dinner
party of the Reedsville United
Methodist Women was held re·
cently in the church basement.
For devotions the Christmas
story was given in pantomlne by
the group. Mrs. Barbara Masters
gave the opening prayer which
was followed by carol singing,
devotions by Sandy Cowdery,
and prayer by Sue Douglas.
Cards were signed for shutin
friends and plans were made to
provide Christmas gifts for two
needy families. Final plans were
made for a visit to the Meigs
County Infirmary. Gifts wer~
exchanged by the membrs and
guests and several door prizes
were awarded .
Attending were · Violet Satter·
field, Mrs. Cowdery, Pat Martin,
Barbara Henderson, Tam! Putman, Sandy West and Dennis.
Linda Putman, Tammy
Cowdery, Dolly Reed, Angie and
Autumn Reed, Peggy Sams, Neil
Wilson. Emma Durst, Erika
Boring, Verna Rose, Vivian
Humphrey , Karen Humphrey
and Jennifer . Mamie Buckley,
Barbara Mas ters, Pearl Baker,
Robin Putman , Judy E lkins, Sue
Douglas, Mary Alice Bi se, Marlene Putman, Virginia Walton,
and Lillian P ickens.

Worship in
music planned
at church

Broderick
birthday

Harrison
birthday

JENNY CHAPMAN

The court Wednesday reversed
a !)ecision of Lucas County Court
of Appeals, which had held the
taw unconstltutlonal, saying it
gran ted appellate powers to the
state registrar of motor vehicles.

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

burg, speeding, $25 and costs;
John !hie. Ra cine . failure to stop
for stop sign, $10 and costs;
Timothy Wilcox, Huntington , W.
Va., speeding, $24 and costs. I

Responsibility law upheld by court

'•

'

Court news---------------------------------------ard Evans, . Groveport. assured costs; Ginger P it ts, Parkers-

•. Twenty-seven cases were pro·
cessed in the Meigs County Court
of Judge Patrick O'Brien.
Forfeiting bonds were Laura
· G. Marshall, Charleston , W. Va .,
$50, speeding; Robert Johnson.
New Marshfield, ficticious license plates , $50; Naomi F.
Hawley , Cheshire, defective exhaust, $50; Ivan Faske, Athens,
speeding, $55, and Terry John 'son, II, failure to yield at
Intersection, $50.
Other cases processed in the
court include: Michael R. Fla ·
h~rty , Columbus, hunting upon
lands of another without written
permission, $20 and costs; Rodney Roush, 9allipolis. possession
of a loaded weapon in the field
· while coming from hunting deer
after sunset, $25 and costs; Glen
H. Litman, Wilkesville, improper left 'turn, $10 and costs;
Dennis K. Baker, Columbus,
hunting deer upon lands of
another without written permission, $20 and costs; Jeffrey A.
Snyder, Gallaway, hunting deer
upon lands of .another without
written permission, $50 and
costs; Tim J . Smith, West
Jefferson, hunting upon the lands

)

�Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Legion
members
brighten
Christmas

Fm ChtiJfmll! /~1;.• Bom
MEN 'S

KNIT SHIRTS

Christmas !or members of
Feeney-Bennett P ost 128, American Le~ion, and Its Auxlllary
means remember ing the elderly
and infirm.
Wednesday a s a · part of that
project more than 250 poinsettias
wer·e taken to area nursing
- homes, elderly housing facllltles,
the Meigs County Infirmary, and
to post and. auxiliary members
who are shutins or over 80.
It Is the fifth year for the
project.
Gerry Parsons has headed up
th e project this year and was
joined by Albert Roush, Virgil
Parsons, Larry Flowers,__ J ohn
and Katheryn Metzger, Jean
Gllmore, Grace Welsh, Gail
Perry, Phylls Blake, EilE!i!n
Snyder, Etta Will, Dennis Little,
Becky and Charlie Tyree, and
Justin . and Jason · Roush for
delivery.
.
At the Meigs County Infirmary,
The Maples, the Extended
MR. and MRS. TOM DARST
Care Factuty of Veterans Memorial Hospital, Americare Nursing Facility Arcadia of Coolville,
Elim H:o use, Riverview Home of
Clifton, and Stonewood of MiddleThe silver wedding an niver- ma r ried on Dec. 19, 1962 a t the por t, each resident was pressary of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dar st F irestone P a r k Meth odi s t ented with a poinsettia by some
will be observed Sund ay from 2 to Churc h in Akron. The Rev. member of the auxiliary or
4 p.m. with an open house at their · Howard Pa trick officia ted. Darst legion .
home 442 S. Sixth Ave., Is the son of Beulah White,
In addition, residents of all of
Middleport.
Middleport , a nd his wHe is the the facilities except Amerlcare
The celebration is bei ng hosted daughter of Avane lle Pettit, and Arcadia where cases of fruit
by their son, Craig Darst, as - Pomeroy., a nd the late Albert were provided received lndividsisted by Mrs. Je ffrey Darst. Petti t.
Friends a nd rela tives are corDa rst is employed at Gavin,
dially invited to attend.
• currently on disa bility, and his
wife is emploued a t Hudnall's
Mr. a nd Mrs. Dars t were Plumbing and Hea ting.

Jeans, shirts
knits distrtss
dressy looks.
Fine -s-eleCtion.

REDUCED

•

•

-' ~

;l '
I

TIMEX
WATCH SALE

~

"

~ -

Jo hn Prater and Da ughter
Lana, New Ellenton, S.C., were
guests recently of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Abels, Long Bottom,
a nd visi ted fr ien ds in t his
community.
Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Icen hour ,
Eas t Liverpool, visited relatives
in the area during the ThanksgivIng weekend.
Mr ..and Mrs. Roge r Taylor and
family have moved to Colu mbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Greg Cooper,
Heat her and Corey, Ravenswood, and Mr. and Mrs. Eric
Cooper and Chris, Cottageville,
were Than ksgiving Day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Cooper.
Mrs. Maril yn Beall and Mark,
Columbus, Emma Lee Brewer,
Tls ha Simeral and Gary Droun,
Rey noldsbu rg, Mr . and Mrs.
Clyde Close, Wa terford. and

1nd silver . Q uartJ:

electric and mar• ·
thon styles .

ChrlAlmaA Sa le

S7U to S4]96
(

RAG DOLL'l - Popular with some female
residents of nursing homes are dolls. These rag
do Us were taken to Arcadia where several of the
women had asked lor a doD for Christmas. Gerry

Parsons, who has headed up the Christmas
project lor the Auxiliary and Legion, displays
those going to Arcadia.

ua l bags of frui t.
Baskets of fruit were also
taken Wednesday afternoon to
Ca rle ton School and the ChUdren's Home at G~ lllpolis.
Also taken to Arcadia were a
quantity of rag dolls for several

of the .female patients who have
expressed a particular interest in
.
having dolls ,
Cost of the annual project this
year was over $1,00Q, . raised
through projects conducted during 1987.

long and short IIGWM and robos, pai-IK and
llally dols. Soft w•m fabrla In a c-loto rango

of wom111' 1 silas.
log. 112.00
to '52.00 SAlE

$95CJ to $415CJ

FlEE CHIIS1MAS GIFT BOXES

Gin SALE!

OIFT SALE!

.N'S

80YS

SWEATERS

•

12.9tlo·

Solid rolors and patterni, sHpover crow n1&lt;k styles and vests.
Sites 8 to 20.
111.95 Sweaters ...... S9.50
117.9 5 Sweaters .•.. 114.30
119.95 Sweaters .... I1S.90
122.95 Sweaters ..•. 518.30

••

FRANKLIN'S AGE HIGH
INCOME FUND

0.
'
'

If a mAD&amp;ged portfoUo of highyield corporate bonds appeals to
you, call for a prospectus contain·
'mg more complete information,
including charges ud expenses.
Read it carefully before investing
or sending money.
·
Yield and share price will vary.
For example, on 00/00186 the net
assetvalue per .share was $0.00
and on 00/00/87 it was $0.00 .

WESTERN SHIRTS

Authonti&lt; Wtltorn·styio with snap front, double yoko, snap wrist and 2-snap flop pockets.
Sittl S, M, L and XL plut tall sit01 and bigs.
Choose poly &lt;Olton bltnds or &lt;olorful piaill
flannols. "C)

11$.95 Western Shirts ....;S12.70

SJ8.9S Western Shirts ..... S15.1 0
122.9S Western Shirts ..... s18.30
S24.9S Western Shirts ..... 519.90

RCA 12" diago ...t black &amp; l!Yhite

COMPACT .l2" TV

BOXED

-RCA COMPACT bla&lt;k &amp; whito TV
makes the perfect 11S«ond set" for
any room· in the hou1e.

LADIES' REG. $6.00

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR

CHRISTMAS
CARDS
SALE PRICED

'Buedon fDA T E Jolferiacprieundan
annaallu.t.IMI of the Fund'1 11101t recent
monthly dividend. The Fund 111e1 &amp; generally
aceepted ACCOJUitinl principle tnv.rn u
equal.4ution. The value of your illvett.ment &amp;t
redemption may be more or len than }'Oilf

loid
...S
d ""'"
in
silts
to XL

FROM ONLY

5~ocoHon,

SO'Io pelyiSitr.

SALE

•,.

""!.

$479

REG. $89.00
67J.t S. Coun St. • Athtna, Ohio 45701

Sc"ll WriKht
o92-IIJ39

FREE CHRISTMAS GIFT BOXES

HOO 3 3R 77113

SALE!

WOMEN'S JEANS

PRETTY POINSETTIAS - More than 250
poinsettias were delivered to area nurslqg homes,
· the sick and shutins of the community. Auxiliary
members of the Feeney-Bennett Post 128,

Stock up now on your favorite
styles.
· lee ond Wronger
Junior Sizes 3 / 4 to 16/ 16
Misses Sizes 6 to 20
EJ&lt;tra Sizes 32 to 44

American Legion, annually carry out the project
of making the rooms and h&lt;1mes of the Infirm
more attractive by adding a poinsettia.

SALE

H;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j

~;.sLi~t~:~~nc~ein~~pps and ram- ~

ft
~U:s~~~~ ~~~~~~~b~tsRiverside ft
Mr. and M.rs. Victor Durst a nd ft
fam ily, The Plains, and Mr. and ftW

REG.

$29 99

VILLAGE PHARMACY

·'

Ch r1s
• tmas VI
A • It ld
I
I
eas.
·Shop

GIFT SALE!

Us

CHILDREN'S

DRESS TROUSERS

WINTER

Slacks ....
Slacks .. ..
Slacks ....
Sleeks ....

' 15 .87
' 18.87
' 23.87
' 27.67

rRE£ CHRISIMAS GIFT BOXES

First!

LITTLE GIRLS'

DRESS SALE
Sitos: 3 months to 24 months
and 2 to 4 yoors.

Vou'll Flld More
Throughout Our
Store ....

Rag . 110.00 Dresses
Sale .................... S7.99
Rg. $16.00 Dreses
Sale ................. S12-.H
Rag. $28.00 Dresses
Sal .................. S22.39
Reg. $36.00 Dresses
Sale ................. S28.79

'

Chrlctmas
Sulngc
Are

Playtex·

found

20°/o

Hare I

Off Mfr. Sugg. Retail!

Entire Stock of
Playtex Underfashions
•

&lt;

j

Choose from Super Look •briefs,18 Hour," No Body's Perfecf,' Living:•
Cross Your Heart~Thank Goodness it Fits~ Support Can Be
Beautiful' bras, I Can't Believe It's A Girdle• and many more styles.

CHRISTMAS CANDY SALE

~illage
271 N. SECOND

992-6669

MiDDLEPORT, OHIO

COAT SALE

2 5°/00FF
AU Children's Coats &amp;

CHRISTMAS
SALE PRICES:
Grandfather Clocks
Curio Cabinets
Desks
Book Shelves
Gun Cabinets
Hall Trees
Pie Safes
Quilt Racks
Secret.ary Desks

•Holiday Mix
eMalted Milk Snowballs
•Old Time Mix
•Christmas Nougats
•Vintage Nut Asst.

•European ~tyle
Chocolates
•Vintage Chocolate
•Special Collection
•Gloria mix

LOW SALE PRICES
-

$1 70

Phartnaev

SAVE sao.oo

.CANDIES OF QUALITY by Brachs

GET YOUR LORANN OILS FLAVORING
FOR CHRISTMAS CANDY MAKING
12 Different Fla.,ors...........

29900

MEN'S

•19.95
'22.95
'29.95
'34.!l5

With

$

RCA Video Cassette
Recorder

Rtgula- siJ:ts 29 to 42 piUs extra
sizes 44 to 50. St•on' s most popular
,ofors. H:ubbard slac:ks are induded.

e

Mrs. Tom Du rs t, Columbus,
visited Mr. and Mrs. Rober t
Durst during the Thankgivlng ft
week-end.
ft
Mrs. Fannie Du rs t visited Mr. W..-~
and Mrs. Jo hn Ca usey, Reeds- W
ville, on Tuesday.
Leota Birch attended the fun- i
era! of her brother-in-law, J oe i
Lipps at the Decat ur Chapel, W
Litt le Hoc king, on Tuesday.
W

non
sm.oo

S15''
TO

Leota Birch spent Monday and 1 -t!l:ft!l:f
, ~:=!
David.
Tuesday wi th her sis ter, Mr. and II

Mrs. Daisy Van Meter is a

'•
•

LADIES SLEEPWEAR

$2 31
Swivel Rockers ......................... •• low A1 S18 3
Wall-Away Recliners ............ A• low A1 S311

Again this yea r Santa will be at
the Legion hall on Christmas Eve
from 5 to 7 p.m. to pass out treats
to ch)ldren of the area. Legionna ires will meet at the hall on
Dec. 23 to assist in getting the
treats ready.

'

•

FREE DEUVERY
Rtdinen ...................................... A• low ~~

The Holly Hi lls Inn of Pome- members, and guests , Mrs. Roy
roy, ex tensively decora ted for Hannum, Kila Young, and Ja n
the holiday seaso n. was the . Koehler.
setting for the Chris tmas dinner
Gi fts were exchanged around a
party of the River view Garden lighted t r~. For roll · ca ll
Club of Reedsville.
members related Chr istmas meMembers were gree ted by the mories. Mrs. Connolly gave the
Inn keepers, the Fu ltz fam ily, scriptura l story of Chris tm as and
who served hot spiced elder to the spoke on the true meaning of
gues ts as they arrived. The Christmas followed by a carol
family also served a turkey . sing led by Mrs. Whi tehead .
dinner with all of the trimmings.
A reading, '"Twas the Bike
At the dinner par ty were Mrs . Before Chri$tmas'', was given by
Okay Connolly, president; Mrs. Mrs. Weber. Mrs. Grossnickle
Frank Bise, Mrs. Cu rt Ca uthorn, a nd Mrs.Pu tman conducted a
Mrs. Ter ry Cline, Mrs. Ronnie , game wit h everyone receiving a
Cowder y, Mrs . Harlis Frank, prize. Favors were miniature red
Mrs. Herman Grossn ickle, Mrs. and green baskets filled will)
Ronald Osborne, Mrs. Donald holly and goodies . Punch was
Putman, Mrs. Thomas Spencer, enjoyed duri ng the social hour.
Mrs. Pa ul Thomas, Mrs. Denver
Members and gues ts then
Weber, Mrs. Er nes t Whitehead, toured the Holly Hill Inn to see
Mrs. Ray Young, Mrs. Lyle , the antique collec tions and
Balderson, Mrs. Claremon t Har- di splays.
ris, Mrs . Do nald Myers,

Harold Brewer, Lo ng Bottom,
were recent visi tors at the home
of Mrs. Audrey Brewer and

Men, w oman and
youth styles in gold

IE'nlltlll • swtvn IIOCI!n • •ou.o-loUNGIIS
Mmy beCIJtiful Clld tllrubto a&gt;ven of hercu- ·,,_
ion Clld nylol\ Ai10 o good ultrtion of
. rinyk.

Riverview Garden Club
&lt;::onducts holiday meeting

By Freda Car penter

CHRIST
SALE

G iYe a ,.. alc h 1h i1

Chrilnma8:

Darst open house pf4nned

Stiversville notes

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

INGELS

FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY

106' North Second ave.

.

Middleport, Ohio 45760

(6111) 992-2635

LAY

y

OPEN NIGHTS
TIL 8

FREE
PARKING

ELBERFELDS
POMEROY

Elberfeldt
~ 'l Ol l ~ n •

·~~ ·

li"' IO

~1~ l \ 1 1

�Thursday, December 17, 1987

Ohio

Contras welcome holiday giftof a Christmas cease fire
.

By DOUGLAS TWEEDALE
for peace," Ortega said."
MANAGUA. Nicaragua (UPil
He said indirect peace negotia-The U.S.-backed Contra rebels tions mediated by Obando y
welcomed the declaration of a Bravo will resume Monday In
Christmas cease-fire by Nicara- Santo Domingo , the capital o! the
guan President Daniel Ortega; Dominican Republic , under a
who also announced indirect compromise arrangement in
peace talks between the two sides which technical advisers from
will resume Monday in the both sides will meet lace-to-face.
Dominican Republic.
The resumption of peace negoA Contra spokeswoman ' in tiations in Santo Domingo would ·
Miami said Wednesday the reb- mark the second round of ceaseels · "are happy Ortega has fire talks since a Central Ameriaccepted our proposal for a can peace plan calling fo r a truce
cease-fire.
in the region's guerrilla wars
Earlier this month, the Contras went into effect Nov. 5.
said they unilaterally would
The first round was held Dec.
observe a call by Roman Cat holic 3-4 In the Dominican Republic, a
Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo compromise site suggested by ·
lor a truce Dec. 7-8 and Dec. 24-25 Obando y Bravo to end weeks of
to mark the church holid ays of arguments over where they
the Immacu la te Conception and · should take place.
Chri stmas.
The second round originally
Ortega said Wednesday his was scheduled to be held Dec. 14,
Sandlnista forces will cease but Ortega asked for a lastoffens ive operations in the field minute postponement to resolve
over the holidays, but would differences over the format of the
repel attacks "by the mercenary talks .
forces against our troops a nd the . Obando y Bravo repeatedly
civilian population.
has called lor face-to-face meet "We want to be receptive," ings between the two sides.
Ortega said after a meeting with saying that is . the only way a
Obando y Bravo, the mediator1n
peace tal ks With the Contras.
The card inal termed the ceasefire offer "posillve."
"We are going to decree a
cease-lire Dec. 24 and 25, days
which we all know have great
religious and spiritual significance and remind us of the need

I

II

• TRUCE -Jn . ~anagua today , President Daniel
Ortega (R) and Cardinal Miguel Obando y Bravo
met and announced a two day Christmas truce in
the war between the government and the u.s.

hacked contras. After the
the two
Nicaraguan leaders spoke separately to reporters
arid said tlie second round of indirect negotiations
lor a cease fire will be next week in the Dominican
Republic.

Court orders Union Carbide
to pay $269 million·for leak

..

By MAZHAR ULLAH
evidence tha t the responsibility
:BHOPAL, India (UPI). - A for the disaster lies with an
·jtidge · ordet;ed Union Carbide employee who sabotaged a tank
_
Corp. today in a pre-trial ruling at the plant.
to pay $269 million to victims of
"Given strong evidence that
the 1984 Bhopal gas leak that the tragedy was caused by
killed nearly 3,000 people in the em ployee sabotage at a plant
world's worst industrial disaster. owned by Union Ca rb ide India
As a group of victims a ttending Ltd., in which the government of
th!" proceedings wept with joy, India is a significan t sha re·
B hopal District Court J udge holder," Berzok said. "liability
M. W. Deo ordered the transna - for Bhopal is indeed In serious
tional firm based in Danbury. dispute and has not been
Conn., to deposit the amount with determined."
I he ·court within two months.
A pre-tri al ruling forcing Union
"The court hopes that th e Ca rbide to pay interim compen·
amount may be so utilized and sation challenges the principle
harnessed as to achieve disper- that a party ha s no lia pillty until
sal of substantial interim com- proven guilty.
pensation, heal th care and creaThe Indian government last
l ion of employmentopportunities
m onth fil ed cha rges of "culpable
lor gas (leak) victims," the homicide" against Union .Carjudge said in a 17-page ruling.
bide, its Indian subsidl,&lt;iry and 10
In New York, a spokesma n lor executives.
Union Carbide Corp. maintained
The court proceedings are
today the court order for the likely to go on lor years and
company to pay interim compen- Unio n Carbide normally should
sation amou nts to awarding not be paying any liability uniil a
damages without a tria l - a final verdict is reached.
practice that runs counter to the
But victims have put pressure
laws of India and other on the government and Deo to
democracies .
obtain some much needed com"Although we are deeply con- pensation before the long trial.
l'erned lor the victims ," said ·
Deo himself ra ised the quescompany spokesman Rober t tion of whether Union Carbide
Berzok, " interim col'l)pensation should pay interim relief to
has never been a llowed where victims during an April 2 hearthe evidence with respect to ing, but he deferred a .ruling on
liability is in dispute."
the issue until today .
But in issuing his ruling , Deo
Deo admitted he was setting a
rejected Union Carbide claims legal precedent and expla ined he
tha t an order to pay interim relief did because o! the victims'
to victims of the Dec. 3, 1984, leak plight.
of poisonous gas from its now "Inherent powers are born
defu nct Bhopal pesticide plant with the creation of this court li ke
would a~ount to a verdict bn the pulsating life coming from a
lia billty wit hout a trial. The child born into this world," he
disaster eventually was blamed • said. " Without Inherent powers,
for near ly 3,000 deaths and about the court would be llke a stillborn
200,000 injuries .
child ."
The poisonou s gas - methyl
The spokesman also stressed
isocyanate - escaped through a that the U.S. firm and its Indian
ru ptured valve, killing area subsidiary were prepared to face
residents as they slept. Most of lengthy court proceedings, a !act
the dead were children and that has ca used major co ncern
elderly people crowded into among the victims who said they
sha nty towns around the plant.
urgently need relief.
Union Ca rbide and the Indian
"The only alternative to settle·
government who represents ment is years of court proceedabout 500,000 people whose life ings, which we believe will
was affected by the disaster ha d ultimately confirm that the
failed last month to reach a n tragedy was caused by employee
oul -of·courl settleme nt. New sa botage, " the spokesman said.
Delhi claims the company's. " In that event, neither UCC nor
negligence caused the mis hap Union Carbide India Ltd . should
a nd is seeking $3 billion.
be found liable lor dama ges."
The Union Carbide spokesman
But Deo defended his ruling,
also reiterated that the firm has saying it "shall naturally be

Christmas Hours
At
Mason Furniture Co.
Friday, December 18th • 9 a.m.· 7 p.m.
Saturday, December 19th· 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Monday, December 21st· 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
Tuesday, December 22nd • 9 a.m.· 7 p.m.
Wednesqay, December 23rd. 9 a.m.-7 p.m.
Thursday, December 24th ~ 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

MASON FURNITURE CO.
(304) 773-5592
2nd Street
Mason, W. Va.

without prejudice to the rights
and defenses of the parties ."
An attorney for Union Carbide
said the company 's legal experts
would have to study the decision
before "we decide to take any

I

r

Consumer council may appeal
Business Services
allowance of Perry's costs
~~:::~.=~o==N.::~!=srs=o~==:==ds,m=H=OM=E:::~=:.~=~:=E~=AN=CE=rrr=:D~~::=NIN::::L~~~=g=:~~~o:=nr;::::~;'=:

=.. =
..

TD lutn/

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Ohio's . consJlmer watchdog
agency says that customers of
!he Cleveland Electric llluminat·
tng Co. and Toledo Edison Co. ,
could have received rate cuts if
the.._lltllitles' expenses for the
PerrrNuclear Power P lant had
been treated properly.
The Ohio Co nsumers' Counsel
may ask the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio to rehear a
portion of the rate case decided
Wednesday on grounds the Perry
expenses were Improper since
the controversial nuclear facUlty
was not operational at the time.
The PUCO authorized rate
increases of $17 million a year lor
CEI and $3.97 million for Toledo

Ed ison, effective in about a week
when new tariffs are filed .
Toledo Edison also was allowed to continue emergency
rate Increases totaling $65.7
million.
In figuring the new rates, the
commission allowed CEI $82
million worth of operating and
maintenance expenses on the
controversial Perry nuc lear
power plant . Toledo Edison was
permitted $77 million for expenses on Perry.
"The commission, we ·felt , bent
the rules to ailow them to collect
these operating expen~s," said
·Steve Ostrander· of the Consumers' Counsel. "It was outside
the test year (for figuring 'the
rate base) . If the commission
Lottery numbers
had not given them this money,·
we'd be looking at rate
CLEVELAND (UP! ) - Wed- decreases."
Ostrander said the Consumers'
nesday's winning OhliJ Lottery
numbers:
Counsel could ask for a rehearing
Daily Number
198.
Tlcke·t sa l es t ota l ed
CLEVELAND {UPI) - The
$1,523,362.50 , with a payoff due of
top prize in Ohio's Super Lotto
$2,008,835.
drawing went unclaimed Wed·
PICK-4
nesday night, Inc reasi ng the
5648.
jackpot to $9 mill ion for Sat~r ­
PICJ&lt; + ticket sales totaled
$221,441, with a payoff dQe of day's game.
There were no tickets sold for
$99,823.
the midweek drawing that listed
PICK-4 $1 straight be t pays
$4,872 . PICK-4 $1 box bet pays the six winning numbers ofl8, 19,
25, 36, 38 a nd 42, a lottery
$203.
comm
ission spokesman said
Super Lotto
today.
18, 19, 25, 36, 38 and 42
That m eans "the $6 million
Super Lotto ticket sales totaled
jackpot
will be carried over to
$4,287,879.

or it could talie an appeal lo th e
Ohio Supreme Court. He said a
similar appeal to the Supreme
Court was successful in an Ohio
Bell Telephone Co. case.
The Perry plant, oper ating.o!!
a nd on, has been the object of
continued protests by nearby
residents who contend sa fety
precautions and emergency eva·
cuatlon plans are Inadequate.
' 'The commission de term lned
that those expendilures should be
permitted ," sa id Thomas
Chema, chairman of the PUCO.
"This plant has been in operation
and has produced millions of
kilowatt hours of electricity."
Chema said a future rate case
will determine whether tlie util ities- iwo of the five that own the
Perry plant - will be allowed to
be reimbursed lor capital expenditures on the $5.6 billion Lake
Cou nty facility.

Teaching Thompsoti.
Schaum, Bastien
F10m Beginners to
Advanced Students
Call For lnformatt' on

•RooFtNG
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•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
All TYPES 0 ~ HOME
REPAIR&amp;

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949-2890
1 24-'87 1
·

·

IMPROVEMENTS

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CALL 949·2969

$2500
$5.00 Extra
For Skinning

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

KEN'S APPLIANCE
SERVICE

614-662·3821
Authorized John Deere,

New Holland, lu1h Hog
Form Equipment
Pooler

fum Equlp11ent

Parts

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~··~

MAKEOliO FW lii(E 4 KNG
SHOP FOR HIM N THE CLAS5f/EDS.

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Gauge Shotguns Only
10· 7-tfn

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- Concrete worlt
- Plumbing and electrical

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(free Estimates)

Public Notice

rzAI~
SPECIAL EDITION
FRIGIDAIRE FLAIR.
CLASSIC FRIGIDAIRE
ELEGANCE, STATE·
OF-ART CONVENIENCE.
•18 Cu. Ft .. 100%
Frost· Proof
•Fully Adju&amp;table
Glas s Shelves
•S tylish Textu red
Steel Doors
•Improved Meter
Miser Compressor
•Full Service Dept .

S599
INGELS FURNITURE &amp; JEWELRY INC.

Middleport
Open Evening1 till 8 P.M.

VISA • IIIASIEICAID
CIIDIT IEIMS

"2·2635
1-800·426-5511

MPORTRAI'IS

PAY-OFF YOUR
CHRISTMAS CARDS
'

Save up th~se department store credit card bills as they
arrive. Then, see us about a "Christmas clean-up" loan!

You'll save each month in two ways:

1(8xl0j, 2(5x7s), •
and 10 wallets for only .

You'll only have one payment to make, instead of several.
Also,'department store credit cards have high financ.e-'
. charges. Our loans cost less, so you pay less!

S•tUng Fee $2 00 -

APPLY AT ANY OF OUR TH'REE
CONVENIENT LOCATIONS!

PEOPLES BANK

Member F.D.I.C.
5th Street 2212 Jackson Av~. Second Street
New Haven Point Pleasant
Mason
882·2135
675·1121
773·5514

@

NO! 1nctuded 1n pr1ce ot advert1scd spec1al

AdvertiSed spec•a1 Is only 1n blue and brown backgrounds
-Advert1sed spec1al 1s ·in two {2) poses- our selec tion
Additional ad ... erl•sed packages are ava ilable at regular price.
Add111onal charge for groups and scen1c backgrounds.

·,:·

·•

43 41300 LAUREL CLIFF
POMEROY I OHIO
FRIDU, DEC. 18 &amp; SATURDAY, DEC. 19
FRI.: 10·2, 3·8
.
SAl. 10-2, 3-6

Public Notice

ORDINANCE #669
NOTICE OF
An Ordinance to provide
APPOINTMENT Of
additional compensation for
FIDUCIARY
Village employeeo tor 1987 .
On November 27 , 1987,
Be It Ordained by the in the Meiga County Probate
Council of the Village of Court, Case No. 25697.
Pomeroy, two-thirds of all Charles E. frilty; Jr., P. 0 .
members concurring Box 266. Minto, N . 0 .,
thereto:
58261 was appointed ExecSection 1: That for the year utpr of Charles E. Friley,
1987 tho Village shall pay · deceased. late of 1716
each full and part time Chester Road, Pomerov .
employee in active employ· Meigs County, Ohio 45769 .
ment at of December 15.
Robert E. Buck,
1987 in addition to all other
Probate Judge
salary and fringe benefits
lena K. Nesselroad , Clark
heretofore provided the sum 11213. 10, 17, 3tc
ot Iitty dollars l$60.001 ao
additionalulary.
Public Notice
Section 11: That thio Ordi·
· nance i1 hereby declared to
be an emergency in order
IN THE
that employees may be paid
COMMON
PLEAS COURT
this additional compenaa~
,
Of
tion before Chrittmas and
MEIGS
COUNTY.
OHIO
inadequate meetings are
JAMES
W.
SUTILE.
at at .,
scheduled to pass this Ordi·
Plaintiffs
nance by normal
-vsprocedures.
Section Ill: This Ordinance W. H . HEROINE, et at.,
Defendants
shall take effect and be in
CASE NO. 83-CV -2
force from and after DeNOTICE BY
cember 15. 1987.
PUBLICATION
PASSED: 12-7 -87.
TO: W, H. BERDINE , if
ATIEST: Jane Welton,
living. addreu unknown; if
Clerk~ Treasurer
Richard D . Seyler, Mayor deceated, the unknown
John Anderson. heirs, devisees, legatee•.
Council President administrators. executors,
and / or utigns of W. H.
1121 17, 24 , 2tc
Berdina. deceased:
JENNIE BERDINE. it liv·
ing. addrest unknown; if
Public Notice
deceased, the unknown
heirs, devisees, legatees,
RESOLUTION No . 12-7 -87
adminittrators. executors,
BE IT RESOLVEO BY THE and / or assigns of Jennie
COUNCIL OF THE VILLAGE Berdine. deceased ;
OF POMEROY, ell members
FLEM LONG, if living,
thereto concurring :
address unknown; if de·
THAT the Clerk / Treasurer ceased. the unknown heirs,
of the Village of Pomeroy, devisees , legateet. adminis·
transfer 't he sum of traton. executors, and/ or
$6000.00 from the General astigns of Flem Long ,
Fund to the Cemetery and deceued;
$4000.00 !rom the utility
NONA LONG, it living,
fund to th8 permissive tax address unknown; if· de·
fund.
cealed, the unknown heirs,
Jane Watton. Clak TnM•urer devitaes, legatees, admlnls·
Richard Seyler, Mayor trators, .e xecutors, and/ or
John Anderson, assigns of Nona long ,
Council President deceued;
{12117. 11c
I. C. MATLACK. de·
ceased: the unknown hairs,
devisees , &amp;egataes. administrators, executors, and/ or
Public Notice
anign&amp; of. I. C. Matlack.
deceased;
MARY MATLACK, de ·
PUBLIC NOTICE
NOTICE is hereby given ceased; the unknown .heirs,
that on Saturday, December devisees, legatees, adminis19th, 1987. at10 :00a .m .. a trators, executors, and/ or
public sale will be held at oulgno of Mary Matlack ,
105 Union Avenue, Pome- deceased;
RICHARO ROBERT MA·
roy, Ohio, to sell for cash thB
following collateral ;
· TLACK. decaaoed; the un1987 . Dodge 8260 Van known heirs. deviseet, legatees . admini1trators ,
o#2B6HB23T3HK26B186,
executors,
and/ or aaaigna of
6,496
mlloo, !damaged
Richard Robart Matlock,
front end) .
The Farman Bank and deceased:
SAMUEL LONG, if living ,
Sa"vings Company, Pome~
roy, Ohio, reserve• the right addreu unknown; If deto bid at this sale, and to ceased, the unknown hairs,
withdraw the above cotlat· devisees , htgateea. adminis' eral prior to sale. Further. trators. executora. and/ or
The f•rmers Bank and Sav- autgna of Samuel iong ,
ings Company rnerve~ the deceued;
JOSEPHINE B. WHITE ,
right to reject any or all bids
decea-ad ; the unknown
submitted.
Funher. the above collet~ hein, devisees. legatee•.
eral will be sold in' the admini1trator1, executora,
condition it it in with no and / or .. olgno of Jooephlno
exprMted or impllad warren - B . Whllo. doce ....,.
SOLON LONG, if living,
. tiel given.
addreu unknown; If de1211t8, 17. 18. 3tc

Public Notice

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Public Notice

ceased, the unknown heirs. for answer will commence
dovlseaa. legatees. adminis- on that date.
In case of your failure to
trators. e"ecutors. and / or
assigns of Solon Long. answer or otherwise re~
spond ae required by the
deceased;
WILLIAM S. LONG, if Ohio Rules of Civil Proce~
lh!ing. address unknown; if dura, r' judgment by ' default
deceased, the unknown will be rendered against you
heirs, devisees, legatees, for the relief demanded in
administrators, execUtors, the Complaint.
Dated December 10,
and / or astigns of WilliamS .
1987
long, deceased;
larry E. Spencer.
BEULAH CLONCH LONG,
Clerk of Courts,
If living, address unknown; if
Meigs County Common
deceased , the unknown
Pleas Court
heirs, devisees, legatees.
administrators, executors, By Marlene Harrison,
and/ or autgns of Beulah Deputy
112110, 17, 24. 31 ; 111 7.
Clonch long. deceased;
You are hereby notified 14, 6tc
that you have been named
Public Notice
Defendants in a legal action
entftled James W. Suttle, et
al.. Plaintiffs, VI. W. H,
NOTICE OF SALE
Berdine. at el .• Defendanta.
By virtue of an Order of
This action has been as·
signed Case No. 83 -CV-2 Sale issued out of the
and. is pending in the Com - Common Pleas Court of
mon Pleas Court of Meigs Meigs County, Ohio. in the
case of Diamond Savings &amp;
COunty. Ohio.
The object of the com- loan Company, Plaintiff, vs.
plaint Is a partition action Charles Humphreys. at al.,
concerning the oil, gas and Defendanta, upon a judgother minerals undertying ment therein rendered, be·
the following described real ing Case No . 87-CV-68 in
said Court, I will offer for
estate;
Situated in Meigs County. sale at the front door of the
Township of lebanon, State Courthouse in Pomeroy.
of Ohio, being in Section 26, Meigs Cou11tv. Ohio, on the
Town 3 , Range 11 of the 8th day of January , 1988, at
Ohio Company'• Purcha1e. 10:15 A .M ., the following
known aa the Henry Ours lands and tenements, lo·
Farm, and being aU of the catad at the corner of First
Avenue and Walnut Street.
south half of the southeast
Middleport, Ohio 45760 ;
quarter of Section 26; save
Walnut Street lies South
and excepting . 16 acres
First Avenue lies East, sa:
which was deeded to Wm.
cond Avenue lies West and
Ours by Henry Ours, Janu ·
Rutland Street 1ies North of
ary 30, t899, Volume ·as.
the real estate, a more
Pages 372~ 373. and con·
taining 65 acres, more or co mplete description ot said
real estate is as follow s:
less.
Situated in the County of
The prayer is that the oil,
Meigs, in the State of Ohio
gas and other minerals un ·
and in th e Village of Middlederiving the above described
real estate be partitioned; port and bounded and desthat their interest be set off cribed as follows:
Being lot number Four,
to them and if that is not
feasible, that the entire .corner of Front and Walnut
interest in the oil, gas and Streets in said Village and
other minerals be told and being formerly known as the
the Plaintiff• paid their share Commercial Hotel property
along with payment to all of and the Grand View Hotel
the Defendants according to property, known now as the
their interest in Said oil. gas Hotel Ohio, and being the
and other minerals; that the same real estate conveyed in
intereat of the parties be deeds recorded in Volume
determined and that title to 158, Page 609, and Volume
said real estate be quieted a• 193, Page 34t, Meigs
against all Defendants; that County Deed Records.
Reference Deed : Volume
all of said proceedings be in
accordance with the law and 256, PQAe 733; Volume
that Plaintiffs' attorney fees 292, Page 989 and Volum e
be paid from the proceeds of 292 , Page 99t, Maigs
seid sale and included in the Cpunty Deed Records.
APP. RAISED AT :
costa of this action; that all
taxes against the oil, gas and $6 ,000.00 . The real eolote
other minerals be paid and cannot be sold for leu than
.that the coata of thia action two -thirds the appraised
be paid from the proceeds of value .
TERMS OF SALE: Cash
said sale; , and that the
Defendants be required to on delivery of dead.
Howard E. Frank,
set fonh any Interest or
Shariff ot
defense which they may
Meigs County, Ohio
have or be forever barred
1121 3, 10. 17,. 3tc
therefrom .
You are required to
answer the Complaint
within twenty-eight days
after the last publication of
thi1 notice which will be
Ill Till
published once each week
for tix conteeutive wetkt.
The l..t publication wKI be
mode on January 14, 1988 .
and the tWenty eight day s

~-

e

992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

. •

MARCUM .
CONTRACTING
CHESTER. OHIO

•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK
Phone Day or Ennilllgs

.985-4141

11 ·3·ttn

Rt. 124. Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121
6· 17 -tic

BISSELL
BUILDERS

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

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-ttn

FREE ESTIMATES

992-2772
l-23-'87-1

' J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Wi ~tlows
•New Roofing

. FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772
ll-13-'87-1

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

Middleport, Ohio

742-2035

. 11 ·3· 1 mo. p-d.

1 -13-tlc

Dogs.

JOHN TEAFOID
CHES111, OHIO ~5720
ll-20- 87-1 mo.

I.O.H.

7 Puppies - 1f2 Husky- Y2 German
Shepherd. 6 wks . old. Ca ll

Mon .- Fri. be-

1 female kitten. Stripped tabby .
Call614-446-7137 after 6 PM.

992-3711

. 11 -23- ' 81 I mo. pd.

Female

English

Setter.

Hn

pape,.. Call814 -446-4827 .

A

BE·

PROBlEMS
SHOCK TO

YOUI

Small pup, approx . 4 mqs. old.
Good with children. Verv playful . Call 814-446 -6316 . .

2 year old male German Shepherd. Full blood, ail shots. To
good home without children .
Good guard dog. Cail614 -_992 6671 .

6

12·7- '87 tfn

Lost and Found

LOST: In K rog~ ·s on Oec. 6th~
Whi1e gold ring with Ruby
setting with 6 amall diamonds.
Reward. If found call 614- 4462669 .
FOUND: Fridav - Small Benji
type dog . Downtown area. Cali
and ident ify, 614-379·2697.

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TiEES

FOUND: Puppy,- SA· Kanauga,
light bJown &amp; while. Call'
614·446 -1602.

LOST: Ladles watch. Se.- 1 .
Silver Bridge Plara . Saturday,
Dee. 1 2. Reward . Call614·446 8046.

Scotch and
White Pine.

FOUND: Black dog. Appr ox. 6
.lb . wearing flea type collar. Part
Dachshund . M al e. Chesh ire
area. Call 614 -367· 7681 .

WEBER FARM
Rutland, Ohio

742-2143
12-3-87-1 mo.

FOUND: Female Brittany Spa · '
niet Rio Grande vlcinlty . Cali
614-246-6046.

v.w.

Lost: mala Pug . Tan color, last
seen in Big Wh eel area. Call

PARTS

LOST mala Blue Tick Coon·
hound- on Mill Creek Rd. RE WARD. 304 -676-2799 .

614-992-3026.

NEW AND USED

WIDE

7

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND

MODELS

Yard Sale

- ·--·Gallipolis________ _
&amp; Vicinity

'

CALL 742-2315
12-4-' 87-1 mo.

d.

THE DABBLE SHOP
Middleport, Ohio

Gallipolis Flea Market· Formet
Thaler Garage- FUs . 35 &amp; 160 .

Open Fridays - Saturdays

CHRISTMAS

TREES

Tog Your Tree
Eorly
For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
2'11

Pomeroy, Ohio
milt• from Fivo Poinll.
11-23-' 87 1 mo.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

IS FOR SALE
If interested stop

by.

1/2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS. ETC.
12.~ 2 ·' 87 · 1

~ ~

•Name Tags for

mo.

Female Black Labt'ador. Call
614-266 -9332 .

Sund8YS. 9 -5 .

992-2196

Badges

mo.

Giveaway

1 irish setter. female. Hause
broken. Registered, pap• in·
eluded. Call 614-367·7670 .

Home Grown

•FURNACES
•AIR CONOITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

3 Announcements

Black mother cat &amp; 2 kittens, 7
wkl . ald. Healthv. litter trained &amp; '
be8Utiful. Call 614 · 446 ~7904 .

Middleport

· HEATING &amp;
COOLING

WHITE HILl RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

•Golf Clubs
~
Shirts • Shoes
•Trophies • Plaques

2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furni5hed. Laundry
facilities available.

lnsurtd/Uctnstd

... J&amp;L
INSULATION

Announc emenl s

614-446~ 6387 ,

992-6226

No Sunday Calls

ll/16/'87 1mo_ d.

fora 6 PM. a1k for Eleanor.

Diles or
Gary Cummins

or 949-2801

PAT HILL FORD

\ ;

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS

Ron

PH. 949-2860

992-7632

4

..,~'it­
D&amp;C ElECTRIC

"Free Estimates"

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

Sale"

REASONABLE RATES
CAll FOR FREE ESTIMATE

10·9-tfn

CAll

New Homes Built

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

"Chrl1t1nas \~ -"1]

Movies to Video Tape
•Create Training Films for
Studants and Employees

45638 . (6 06) 836· 2746.

RACINE, OHIO

COAlE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

YHS Tepe:

•Tr ans fer Bmm and Supar 8

KUPID 'S NEST. Offers two
kinds of dating service. wrhe
P.O. Box 619. Ironton, OH

DON'T lET YOUR ElEC·

*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

PH~

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

TRICAl

3· 11-lfn

Roger Hysell
Garage

Documents

•Transfer Photo Albums to

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

4-15-'B6·fc

*VINYl SIDING

GINEIAL CONTUCTOIS
References

•Anniv ersaries
•Record Valuables,

FOR RENT

- Addons and remodeling
- Rooting and gutter work

~

•Wedd inQs
•School &amp;: Church ProQrams
•Sport ing E llftnts

12/ 14/ 1 mo.

.. ,.,_oA
..... ,...._ ,
11
13 [,.,, ..., ,

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

614·74~-2355

CARPENTER
SERVICE

..

c'"'"'"' • ....,,., .....,

Those Special
Ouasions on VHS
Tape
•Holiday Parties

RUTLAND

YOUNG'S

'"""
,., """
~~ .. • owo,

.. &lt;: .......

"U U",.,..."'"o'"""
"1... .... ......
. ,
""' .,.. .......~.

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

,.

(6141

Record

At. 124 Across from
Happy Hollow Rd .

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT ·
6:30 P.M.

-, "'"'"'
a•.,, • ""
..,,.,,"' " ' "'

11

@MW!ijM

~1

n
1a

RESIOINCI PHONE

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

OPEN 1 to 9 P.M.

Basham Building

10 • .......
•••• p.,,~.••« ........
17

,.ow

..............
. .. .....""-

"

"'"'- oo luo

. All Makes

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOAOING
SUPPLIES

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

BUSINESS PHONE

985·3561 ·

4·5-tlc

GUN SHOOT

(6141 992-6550

~-

•• ~ .. ~o .. n
ee , _ • ••~ •~ "

. . . . . . . . . . . . . M ..

TVIo~

•• •·-• o-'"""'

.,

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., '"''. ' " ''ll'

)0

P~-

" .......c.

l l ... ..,. ""~ ...

I)

,, ..................
.. .
........
_.

ll

,1 · 1&gt;·87· 1 mo

WE SEll USED APPLIANCES

&amp; !l•••l•l

or at
Veterans Memorial Hospjtal
Mulberry Hgts, PQmeroy, Ohio

Pay Your Phone
Cable Bills Here

Home &amp; Auto
16141 992-371.8
"Md on mini fuel computer
system , Fits anj car. Instant
mitesperrallonreadout.
Know your fuel consumption
lrom one block to hundreds of
miles.
Commercial :
StQre to Job Cost
Taxi Service
Before and after -auto tune-up.
{Comparator! fill up your
tank, and watch it subtract and
display fuei consumed.
UNDER 090
Monitors for MCF -CCF used
for furnaces, calibrated to
your gas meter.
Middleport-Col, Ohio

•Walsher s •Dishwashers
•Ranges •R efr igerators
•Dryers •Freezers

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

ST.

POMEROY- 985·35.61 .

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
J: (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104

PLUMBING &amp; HEATING

10·8-tfc

SALES &amp; SERVICE

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

-

TOP SOIL
Fl LL Dl RT
I 07 LOCUST

i
Dep•endabll Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Sen1icel
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

z

Ll M[STON [
GRAVEL --SAND
.

HOUSE FOR RENT

BOGGS

II

Saturday's game and Increased
by the lottery commission's $3
million minimum for eac h draw ing, making a $9 million pot
available for weekend players.
So me 117 players picked five of
the numbers drawn Wednesday
night to win $1,000 each, a nd 5,372
plaY,er's chose lour of the
numbers to win $92 ap iece.
Ticket sales for Wednesday 's
drawing totaled $4,287,879, with
the prize payout totaling $611,224.

992-3410

·

= ;:;:;£;:§:;

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

JUST CALL!

11·23· '87- 1 mo.

We Carry Fishing Supplies
TO PtA(( AN AD UU ~46-2347
MONDAl lfml ~ ATUIIOAY I A.M. to 5 P.M.
''""'~~
UOSED ~UNDAY
{\,.,.. "'"'"""
' ., '"'"" "'"~
"'''
.
"'""' •~&lt;................... ..... ....

ESTIM~TES

· pd.

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

No one claims top · super lotto pr1ze

action or make any comm ent. "

According to the government,
almost 3,000 people were killed
and about 200,000 Injured when40
tons of methyl isocyanate vaporized and spewed from a tank at
the plant and covered large areas
of Bhopal, 375 miles south o! New
Delhi, in a choking, eye-searing
cloud of poison.
Uno!!lcial estimates put the
death toll at 8,000.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

New Location:
1b8 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 4S7 60

EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

J

cease-tire can be achieved. Ortega steadfastly has refused to
engage In direct talks with the
Contras, saying the rebels are
merely puppets of the Reagan
administration.
For the first set o! talks, both
the government and the Contras
sent a team of negotiators . B\,lt
the two sides never convened
face-to-lace and instead met
alternately with Obandoy Bravo.
The meeting failed to produce
results , and the card inal stepped
up the pressure for direct talks.
Wednesday, Ortega announced
a compromise had been reached.
Insteiid of . the two delegations
meeting face-to-lace, each side
would name a commission of
technical advisers who will meet
to work out the details of a
cease-fi re.
Ortega said Nicaragua would
name foreigners to the technical
commission and said " these
teams of advisers will meet
face-to-face in Santo Domingo."
Other sources said Nica ragua
would seek to name Americans to
represent It at the cease-fire
talks .

Thursday, December 17. 1987

mo pd

Inside Flea Mkt, old Arbuckle
Fu rniture Store. Sat and Sun,
sellers welcome.

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash fo'r leta mo.del clean
used cars.
Jim Mink ChCN .·Oids Inc.

Bill Gene Johnson
614-446 -3672

FIREWOOD

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and n &amp;w"er used cars . Smith
Buidt·Pontiac, 1911 Eastern
Aw .• Gallipolis. Call 614 -446.
2282

SJSOO

WANTED TO BUY : Used wood
&amp; coal heat8fs. Swain's Furniture. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipoli1.
Call614-446 -3169.

Locust, Oak, Cherry

Per Pickup Load

Delivered
BILl SLACK

614-992-2269

Wanted to buy- Standing timber.
Ca11614-379-2768.
Junk can. S26 ' for complete
cars. Body' s 1owed away . Call
614-246 -9264 or 682-6760 .
Wanted: Young or puppy female
Pomeranian . Call 814 -26&amp;-·

t322.

�•

(

Page- 14~The
9

Wanted To Buy

LAFF-A-DAY

44

Apartment
for Rent

coi ns. large currency. Top pri-

Nice apt . Hudd approved. New
carpet, clean. Pl. Pleasant. 614·

oeJ. Ed BlJrket1 Barber Shop.

992· 6B5B .

2nd A IIIII Middleport. Oh. 6,4-

992-3476.

2 bedroom apt. and 1 bedroom
house tor rent In Pomeroy.
61&lt;4-992-6216.

Raw rur. beet and deer hides.
Gyn Sing and Yellow root. We

wheat

and

nite

lit••·

2 bedroom apartment on lincoln
Hill. Pomeroy. Call 614 -992 6539 or 614·992-3489

Trapping suppliet for sale. (Buving used trapsl. George Buckley.

Hours12-9 614-664-4761 .
One bedroom unturnil hed apanment for rent. All utllitiea pa1d by
landlord except electric. 614·

QUILTS

High prices paid tor pre- 1950
quilt,. Applique, pieced, anv
co ndition. Catl614-992-21 01
0 1 614 -992· 6667

992-2094.
APARTMENTS , mobile homes,
houses. Pt. Pla•ant and Gallipo-

· Call 614-992-7764. Ralph P.

2 bedroom furnised apt, ref and
depoait. New Haven. W . Va.,
304 - 8B2 ·3267 Olj 304·773·
602&lt;4.

Kern.

11

Help Wanted

TEXAS OI L COMPANY need1

mature person for short trips
surrounding Gallipolis. Contac1
customers. We train. Wrhe P.B
D ickerson . .Pres.. Southwestern
Petroleum. Box 961005. Ft.
Worth. T~ . 76101 ,
Applications being taken now
for full time AN Excellent salary
&amp; benefits. Apply at Scen1c Hills
Nursing Center, 536 Buckridge
Ad , Gallipolis.
" Friends Retail Corp" of Gallipolis. Ohio seeks a competent
sales person to w ork in Child·
ren's Clothing Store. Must be
h1ghly motivated and LOVE
w o rking with children Sand
resume to! Friends Retail Corp.•
P.O . Box 981. Gallipolis, Ohio
45 631
OWNERS

- OPERATORS
NEEDED
With dependable late m odel
eQu ipment also TEAM and SIN ·
GLE drNOrs for small fleet
owners and limited number of
company .trucks. Pull vans. flat.
and drop decks. Plenty of work
now. i f you can qualify. MIN ·
IMU M REQUIREMENTS: 23
minimum age, 1 yea.- in last 2
0 -T-R axpenenco. Good drrving
and w or k record .
MELTON TRUCK LINE
THE RUNNING RABBIT FLEET
Gary Garner w1ll be at the
laQuinta East, 2447 Brice Rd
(off 1-70) Columbus, 1 PM -7
PM · Fr1day, 9 AM · 3 PM·
Saturday or call Rick St'!aw

Beech Street. Middlepor1. Ohto.
2 bedroom furnished apt, ut1li·
ties paid, references and depot i1.

"Living beyond our means
sounds so ordinary, Harley.
Why not live beyond our
wildest dreams?"
18

41

Wanted to Do

Would like to do babysitting in
my home Cell 614-446-9640.

F1nancial
21

liS\·
Job hunting? Need a sktll? We
train pwple for jobs u auto
mechaniCs. ca rpenten~. electri·
erans. fOod ser.~ice workers.
electronic:5 tech[ll ci ans. mdus-u l al maintenance workers, nurs·
tng assistants and orderlies,
machinists. and welders. Register now for ciBSses beginning
January 4th. Call Tri-County
Vocet1on&amp;l Adult Centar at 763·
3511 ext 14 . A vanety of
tunding sources to pay for
tratn ing are avatlabla tor those
eligtble
Bwld for your futur~. learn both
rbugh &amp;nd f1ni.sh carpentry skills
at the Adult Education Center··
Tri-County Vocational School
The Adult ca rpentry program
will provide you with tr&amp;ining to
become a carpenter. Carpentry
ski lls are so imponant and
versatile that c&amp;rpe nters m&amp;ke
up the l argest group of building
trade workers. To register for
classes beg~nrung January 4th,
ca ll 753 -3511 e110t. 14 Ask
about our vanety of funding
sour ces available •to pay for
traming ..

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE I

THE OHIO VALLEV PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommends thl1 you
do busin•s with people you
know. and NOT to send money
through the m1U until you haYe
investigated the offaring.

23

Professional
Services

VETERA ~S . le t u.s help pay your
Christmas bills, Army National
Guard-- pnrt -time jobs full time
benefits. 30 4 -675-3950 or 1-

800-642 -3619 .
Need depend able woman to set
w it h 80 year old lady fo r week
du nn g Chnstmas, refrences reQU!r8'1:1. ca lls will be accepted
onlv 12 :00 -4:00 pm M on thru
Fr t, 30 4 -675· 1349.
Telep hone canvuser , expe·
rience preferred , male or female.
304 -075 -5252 . 10 '00 tO 4 ,00 .

304-676-1448.

12x80 mobile home. furnished,
washer-dryer hookup. 2 mil•
from Gallipolis 820011 mo. plus
deposit. Call 814-446-2390.

31

Homes for Sale

4 BR ., fireplace, full b.. ement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. $34,900.
Call Days-614-446 -1616. after
6 .00· 446-1244
~rand new 3 BR . near Gallipolil

t.oclc.s on Rt 7 . 2 car garage, nice
lot. tmmedi•e posMSsion. Will
consider trade in of Mobile
home. property, etc. Berga~n
priced Call 614-446w8038
2 bedroom. 2 bathl, 2 car
g•age, I~Wel tot on Rt. 33.
Swimming pool, satelite. close
to Meigs High Call 614- 992·
3254.
Furnished home in Middleport. 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms. 2 l•gelot s,
2 blocks to Jhopping. churchM,
boatlng. fishing, swimming. Call
614-992-6304 before 8a.m.
After 6p . m . Price under

$15.000.
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
$1 .00 !U repairl toreclosurM.
repos. 11!1X dellquent proper1iet.
Now selling your area. Cell
1·315-736-7367 ext. 2P-WV- M
for current lilt, 24 HAS,

32 Mobile Homes

Situations
Wanted

Lady would like middle-aged
lady to l'hltr e npanment and

~"':P::'"'::._::'~"':_:·_:C:_:':"_6__1_4_·4_4...6,--:..:_
0386 .

·lcChild carA. exper ief'lced mother,
all hours, illl ag~ welcome.
SupAtvls od actlv1ties Meals furmshed Ca1161 4 -992-2458 .

Call

304-675· 1294.

33

Farms for Sale

200 aae farm located offRt. 82,
3 milel on Man ali Ridge Road.
Putnam County. Mmeral rights
included, $65,000 .00 own•
Will fmance wtth 86.000.00
down. 304·937-3383 before
8 :00am or after 8.00 pm.

34

Business
Buildings

Commarcial buildings for le•e.
Downtown Pt . Pleasam. Stores.
offices. A -One Real Estate
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304-

675-5104

35 Lots 8o Acreage
2 Bwlding lots· 1 1h acres each
with county water Jarrys Run
Rd . Apple Grove, W Va . Call
304 -576-2383.

. Insurance

Call ua for yl)ur mobile home
.nsurance : Miller Insurance .
30 4 - 882 - 2 145 . Al1o ; autO,
home. llf.e, health

18 Wanted to Do

41

Homes for Runt

3 BR house &amp; gerage. A · 1 Real
Estate, C.rol V,eager-Broyr.

304-676-6104.
Nicely furnish.d small house.
Adults only. Ref. required . No
pets. Call 614· 446 -0338.
Large 2-3 BR . houiSIIJ, Plenty ot
st orage. Hend.-son area. Call
614- 446·7026
2 or 3 BR unfurn11hed hs. Yard.
city schools. 1276 mo. plus
utilities &amp; deposit. Call 6143 SR . home in Centenary on Rt.
141 . Ret. &amp; Sec, dep. req.,.ired .
Available in January . Call 614·

446· 6666.
N ice 4 BR . houae downtown
Gallipolis. C.ntralt't' k&gt;cated for
tchools S. shoppong. 8350 a
mo. Call 814· 0162 -dav. 446·
1291 af1er5 PM .

2 8A . house unfurnished. Full
besement N o Pets Ca ll atle; 6
Moth6r of 2 W.rl Cf!re for' your
PM. 614- 388- 8121 .
children du ring tho holidaY fes· , --~-------­
tivitiea. Evenings. weeken!1s, or
Jan. 1· 3 BR . home in country.
during th&amp; school vacation .
Vinton area. Water &amp; 1r11sh
Conveltifllflt location. reasonable fu rniJhed. 1200 monthly . 1100
rli19S Cat1 614 -446 00 66
Oep Call 51&lt;4· 388· 9686.

•

Mobile home 84x14, 2 bath1, 3
bedrooms, ell eleCiru:. children
but no pets, 304-468·1887.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 BR . aptl. 6 closets, krtchenappl furnished, Washer-Dryer
hook-up, ww carpet, newty
painted, dack
Regency. Inc.
Apts Call 304-675· 7738 or

676-5104.
furnishad apt. n..:t to librarY,.
One prof•sionaf aduh only.
Parking. Call 614-448-0338 .
Nice 1 8R . apt . Near HM C . No
pats. Stove, refrig., drapes.
8226 a mo. Ref. required. Call
614-446-4782 .
Downtown - . Modern 1 BA .,
complffte kllchen. carpet. air.
electric heat. Cell 814 -446 4383-dl'{s. 446 -0139 -aven. &amp;
weekends.

Modttrn 1 8R apartment. Cell

614-446-0390 .
Ranewty redecOrated . Vflly nice
apartments in downtown Galli·
polis. 1 &amp; 2 BR .• unfurnished.
second floor, from 81 75 -1226
Dep . &amp; references required Call
eve. 814-446 -2326 or 446·

4249 .
Furnished upstairs· 1 BR . Utilitiel paid. $210 a mo. Oep . 94
Locust St . Cell 614-446 -1340
or 446 -3870.
2 BR . apt. Stowe &amp; refrig
furnished . Ne• Go Mart . Call

614-446-7025 .
BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES. 538 Jackson
Pike from 8183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movie~ . 614-4463997 . E O .H
Upstairs unfurnished apartment.
Carpeted. Utilities paid. No
chtldren or patJ. Call 614-446·

1637.
For rent apartment. trailer. fur·
nished, unfurnished Woodburning tlreplace . Water. sewage
pa1d. Clean . OUiet. Falter's
Mobile Home Perk, 446-1802.
luxury Tare Apartments . Elegant 2 Br. 2 floor. fulty
carpeted , CA .and heat: . Private
antra nee, enclosed patio, pool &amp;
playground . Start • 8299 per
month. Utiliti• not induded.

Call 614· 367-7850.

Rentals

304· B82· 2666 .

PM .
SWAIN
AUCTIOft.l &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis .
~E:-v- 6 pc. w ood group- 1399.
Lrv1ng room suites· 8199 -1699.
Bunk .b eds with bedding- $199.
Futt 11ze mattress &amp; fou'ndat lon
starting - $99 . Re c liners
starting. 899.
USED - Beds, dressers, bedroom
•u!tes , 8199 · 8299 . Casks,
wr1nger washer , e complete 1m a
of used furniture.
NEW- Western bootJ· '1 30.
Workboou 818 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toe) . Call 614-448- 3169

Modern nice 2 BR . apt. Located
It 641 4th. Ave. Adults only.
$225 per mo. Call 614 -4462300.

1979 F100 New shOcks. new
dual exhaust, wiper motor, :
~··· thermo111t. oil filtet",
l"ntt-IJeeze. Excellilnt conditkln. '

$3360 . Call614-949·3003.

~

•
•

Cl

,~ 81 ~~~E•

Furniahed room. $75. Utiltties
paid. Sh•• bath. Single mel e.
919 Second. Gallipoli1. Call
446-4416 after 7pm.

46 Space for Rent
Ot1ice Space for rent . Excel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call 614--446 -4222.
Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or less.
920 41h .• Gallipolis 875 . Water
paid . Ca11614-446-4416 after 7

PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. Nonh of Pomeroy.
R~~ntat trailers. Call 614 ·992·
7479 .
Space tor small trailers . All
hook· ups. Cable Also efficiency
roomJ, air and cable. Mason,
W.Va . Call304· 773 -6651 .
Spacious mobile home lots for
rent. ,f ,,mily Pride Mobile Home
Park. Gallipoha Ferry. 304-675 -

3073.
Trail• spaces for rent, Rt. 1
locust Road. back of K &amp; K
Mobile Home Park, 304w675-

1076.

49

For Lea·se

446· 2326.

Merchandise

·'

51 Household Goods

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers. refrigerators,
ranges . _Skaggs Appliances ,
Upper Rrver Rd . b&amp;~ide Stone
Crest Motel. 614 -446 -739B
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
8395 to S995 Table~ $50 and
up to $126. Hide-a -beds $390
to 8695. Reclmers $225 to
8~76 . lamps S28 to $125.
Omettes 8109 and up to $496.
Wood table w -6 che1rs G286 to
8796 Desk 8100 up to 8375.
Hutches 8400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w -mattresses
8295 and up to S395. Baby beds
G1 10. Mattresses or bolll sPrings
full or twin $68. firm $78. and
$88. Queen sets S225, King
13~0 . 4 drawer chest $69 . Gun
cab1nets 6 gun. Gas or electric
range 1375 Baby mattresses
836 &amp; 845 . Bed frames $20
S30 &amp; King frame $50 . Good
selec11on of bedroom surtes
metal cabinets. headboards $30
.and up to 865 .
90 Days same as cas h with
lpproved credit. 3 Mile&amp; out
8ul....-ille Rd. Open Bam to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. Ph. 614 -4460322
Valley Furniture
New and used furniture and
applicances . Celt 614 -446 767 2 , Hours 9-5 .
PARSON"S FURNITURE
New .wood 6 pc living room
suites, 8399 .95; chest of
drawers-4 drawer. $48 ; tw1n
manresses, 595 set; microwave
oven standi.
THE WORKING
MAN 'S FRIEND

3800 Ford with plows, disc. 2
row Ford planter. 5 ft. buah hog·
Nice. 15960. Call 614-286·

23 inch color TV $160.00. 18

6522.

676-2343.

Now till Dec. 31 all Zeator
stock 10 percent over
cost No trad•in. Morris Equipment Rutland, Oh1o. 614 -742 ·
tract~rs in

U Haul trucka and traders for
rent. 304-676· 7&lt;421 .

~

Motorcycles

2456.

Roll bar &amp; off road lighu for
short bed pickup. Call614-4460352 or 446· 7303.

1982 Honda-XR 80 dirt bike
1981 Honda 400 Jtreet bike. ,•
1979 Honda XR 260 dirt bike '
1979 Vamahe VZ 80 dirt bike •·
All good eond. S160-$660. C1ll
• 614-266-1924

1-Solid cast iron woodburner,
$100. 1-dinette set with 2
chairs. S15 . Call 614 -3677670 .
Woodsplitter- 3 point hookup,
B"l beam. Set of14'' alu,m . mag
alot rims. Call614· 246 -6198 or
446 -38 16 ask for Mike.
l"'ying • Pullets · Fryers ,
Ceramic- trees, lights, bisque
greenware-Nativity sets. sports
coats. pants, sweeper. Call
614-446-4656 .
Utility Trailers- 1 single axle
hesvy duty with electric brakes
and 36 in. high sidea- tires
760x15. 10 ply. split rims, 14ft.
bed 1 ~mgleaxlehght duty 6ft.
bed-1u1table for riding • lawn
mower or four wheeler. Can be
aeen at Ewington· on St. Rt .
160.
Seasoned Oak &amp; Ash fir8'Nood .
Seasoned on e year . large load a.
Split &amp; del. $40. Call 614 -266·
1340 or 256-9303. anytime.
Mans~ercoat , like neW, size
40. beige, $25 . White wedding
dress. Victorian atyle, size 9 Call

Tree &amp; stump, firewood. Heap
Vouchers accepted live balled
Christmas trees, $37 .60 . Don' I
Landscapes, 614-446-9646.

7025.

Chr~stmu trees for aale. 3 mil•

out Send Hill Road on Left,
UO.OO each.
Solid maple bunk beds, good
con d. Full size bed. matching 8
drawer dressar with mirrow.
304-675-3816 f!Nenings .

62

Wanted to Buy

Seasoned oak fire wood. spltt
and delivered, 304-675· 1 761 or
304-896-30&lt;45 .

63

742-2675.

55 Building Supplies

Baby rabbits. 86.00 each. Tur·
key1. t12.60 each. Call 814·
246-6631 .

Building Materials
Block. brick. HWer pipes. windows, lmtals, etc. Claude Win·
tars. Rio Grande, 0. Call 614-

245-6121 .

Conaete blocks all sizes yard or
delivery. Mason nnd. Gallipolil
Block Co., 123% Pine St .,
Gallipolis. Ohio Call 614-446-

27B3.
Ready mix concrete end all
conaate supplies. Call usVaiiiJ,f
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304-773·6234 .

56

Pets for Sale

Livestock

Hog 521to 660 lbs. Ready for
butcher. See on farm . 1226. Can

614·266·6609
Dec. 19th- 1:00PM. We will be
holding a special feeder calf sale.
All breeds Including Holateins.
Cattle will be accepted starting
at &lt;4:00PM, Fri .. Dec 18th up to
1·00 PM, Sat., Dec. 19th.
Hauling available. Athena Livestock Sal•· 1 mile east of Albany
on St. RT. 60. Call Stock
vard-814- 692 -2322 or 698 ·
3631 , Evenings.
Aegiatered Paint Filly Palimano
and white registered Quarter
Horta. 6 yr old Buckskin mere
real nice, 304w675-6789 .
'

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Grooming . All breeds .. All
styles lams Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph . 614-448-0231 .

Mixed hardwood slabs. $12p8f
bundle. Containing approJC. 11.7
ton . FOB . Ohio Pallet Co
Pomeroy, Ohio. 614· 992·6461 .

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Himaleyan, Penian and
Siam•e kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. Call 614-446 -3844
after 7PM

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

New arrivals for Christmes Regtstered AKC Chow puppies.

1976 Ford LTO . Call 614-446·

Mixed hay f or sale. Call 614 742 -2716
FirB'NOOd for sale. M ixed hard·
w oods. Split and delivered, 836 .

Call 614-992-6847.
1978 Honda ATV-70 three
wt,eeter. 1S77 Honda XR75 trail
bike. $250 . each or 8450. tor
both Phone 614·949 -2328 evenings. f978 Buick Skylark231
V6
Runs good, good tires .
5300 CBII 614 ·-949-2328
8\/enings
Wurl1tzer Spinet Piano. Good
shape SBSO 2 Huffy Bicycles.
One, 20 inch and oth8f 24 inch.
3 speed . Call 614 -843·5126 .
Gas floor furnace. 65, 000
S.T.U . S150 . 2 x4 ' s. 8ft ., S 75
el!tch. 1 x6 T and G flooring
Rough oak lumber. Fred Sayre
Racine, Ohio.
'
All Christmas Trees S 12 .. Come
early betore co ld weather. tag
your tree at Newell 's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 m1le above Mason
on Hanging Rock Rd . 304-773 5371 or 882;-2886 .
Mixed fireYYo od. SBO .OO dump
tru ck load, deliv ered. 304 -5762903
firewood delivered, stacked
535 00 Mason Counti86, Galli ~
polia other areas within reason at
our di scretmn. 304 -895- 3446 .
SURPLUS ARMY . DENIM
RENTAL . CARHART CLO :
THING. Ortg1nal army camou ·
flage, H. 0 . " Sam " Somervill e 's . Old Rt . 21
East-Ravenswood Fri. Sat. Sun.
noon · 8 00 pm. 304-273 -5656.
Insulated camouflage coveralla
526 .00 . Black -White snow
camou flage.
Antique wh1ekar furniture 304 676 -5 617

Couch, rock8f, &amp; large coffee
table. $76 Call 614-446 -0516
attar 5 PM
New Magic Chef Almond
Range. Never used S276 Call

Transportation ·

Complete ham1ters set- up with
hamster. $6 .00 each. Baby
parakeets, $8 &amp; 10 each. Baby
rabbits, $1 .50 each. Baby hams·
ten. S1 26 each, Call 448 -

1983 Z-28 Cam.-o. 40,000
mil•. e6196. Call532-2613 or

Baby guinea pigs for sale
Bidwell Cash Feed Store. 814-

3BB-9688.
At(C Registered Pomeranian
P.UPPiO:!I. 1 male. 1 female. B
waaks old. 8150 . Cell614 -667·
6768.
Redhne model RL20, pro style
free style bicycle S300.00.

304-676-29B8. 9:30 to 7oOO.
Master Card -Visa accepted.
Siamese kinens. 6 weeks old
litter trained. phone 304-676~
5043.
6ne female Aottweiller puppy,
AK~. temperment tested. show
quality guaranteed, resonably
priced. 304 -576 -2919 .
:4KC registered puppiee, Mlnnure Schnaizert 8225.00 Black
Cocker 1200.00. Blond Cock.8260.00. grand champ sired.
Shik Tzis S260.00. 304-6752193.

57

Musical
Instruments

632-0040.
1977 T-8ird . 361 auto., PS, PB ,
atr , AM - FM - Cau player .
Chrome wheels Excel. Cond
$900-wal asking $1100. Call

614-246-9667.
1983 Chevy . Citation. Am radio,
69.000 mil111. $1700. Can be
seen at the Gallipolis Daily
Tribune or for more information
call 814 -448-2342 .
fiberglas•

topper-EI

Camino.

1976 Chev 4WD truck . 1980
Ch811' MonEe, 4 cyl., 4 spd. Call
614-446-2668. mornings or
evenings.
1982 Old1 Cutlaas. V-6 , auto ..
tilt . Good shape. $3476 . Call
1984lynx. 1983Escort 11ation·
wagon. 1982 KawaJak-1, 660
ltd. for sale or trade. Call
614·266-1270.
19B7 Oldl Cutlaas Supreme.
Top ahape Assume loan . Fiberglas topper for El Camino. Call
evenings 304 -773 - 6911 or
30&lt;4· 773·6616.

2676.
1_981 Chevette 4 cyl., 4 speed,
a1r, good condition . 8800. Call
614--992 -2764.
1976 Cordoba. 8800. 2 door.
good condition. Call 614 ·992·
1978· Pontiac Phoenix Motor
and body not good. Good tires .
Many other good pans. 1100.
614-992·6692.

614-379-2791

787lincoln Town Car; 78 Mark
V ; 77 Cadillac Sedan DeVille.
Good Condit ion . 304 · 773 ·

6840.
1986 Dodge Shelby Charger. 2
door. H .OOO.OO or take over
payments. 304 -675·6706 .

aft" 7 rM .

1985 Special Edition ChiiWy
C&amp;l.wier, fuel injected, 4 cyl, 4
speed, air, sharp little car.
$4,296.00. Phone 304 -876 6768 or 676- 2563

~--~---------1
Furni1hed apartment . $210 .
Utilities paid. 1 BR , 701 Fourth
Ave . Gallipolis . Call &lt;446 -44 16
after 7pm.
15Court - 28R . bath&amp; lh , Y( / w
carpet. 1.-ge modern kitchen,
8350 plus utilttlea.
11 Court • large apartment , 2
8R .. 2 baths, w / w c.-p8t,
complete kitchen, $326 plus

Farm Supplies
&amp; Livestock

ut~iUel .

238 F1rst · River view· 1 BR ., 1
bath, no children. $176 plus
utllitiel. All epartments-Dep. &amp;
ref. No pets. Call 614-448·
4926.

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 West, Jackson Oh 10
'
614-286-6461 .
'
Massey Ferguson. New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Over
40 used tractor• to choose from
&amp; complete line of nBW &amp; used
Bqutpment LargeJt IOiedlon In
S .E. Ohio .

~ew brick 2 BR ., equipped
krtchen , IM~ndry room. Private
perking. No pets. Rat. &amp; dep.

Caii614-446· 1250.
3 room private apar1ment for
rant. Call 614 -446·3366 .

·- - - - - ··surely you have more to say after trymg
to embezzle $25,000,000 than just
"Beam me up, Scally!'""
·

1 973 666 lnt'l Di•el. wide
front, S3960. late model 2400
lnt'l round baler, Nical 13960.
1986 60 HP bulldozer, low
hours. Own• will finance. Call

614· 286·6522 .

WOU/...1) APMlj
THAr.

$400.00. Call 304-676-2BB4
aft"' 6o00 pm 304·676·1030.
GO INSIDE WHERE WE
CAN DISCUSS THINGS

$100.00. 304-675-2835 .

A.- .LITTLE M~E

2 0 liter, 4 cycle motor out of
1983 Ford Ranger, can hear run, :
8200.00. 304· 676·6644 .

PRIVATELY!

Front fender. completefrontand •:
for ' 78 Monte Carlo 2 door good
cond. 304-676-2868.

•

New studded snow tires, G78- , '
16, two for 880.00. 304-675;.t'i':
7771 .
'Ill.

'

Serv1ccs

EEK
MEEK
1-lDW 00 trCXJ MMJN3£

Home
Improvements

10 Sff*tl SO SPU lfV

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local referanc81 furnished .
Free estimate~. Call collect
1-614-237-0488 , day or night.
A ogeraBasement
Waterproofing.

I JUST k£E.P .

/v\OJ(I.JG ...

SIXH ACRAIY LOORLO ?

RON'S Television Service .
House cells on RCA . Que:rer,
GE . Speeialing In Zenith. Call
304· 676-2398 or 614-446·

2464.

-=---:------'___;__ _ ~
Fetty~ Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304 -676 -1331 .

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
r-----------~~--------~

WHA.TDIDCINDY
G-IVE "YCXJ FOI&lt;.

YaJR BIRTHDA-Y":?

A SECTOi= "BABY
DEAR' DOU:S

CLOTHES.

THAT5 A 5rJ&lt;;AN6E
PRESENT TO 6{/\IE

TOA eoY.

I THINK 9-\E WAS
f-JOPfNEr l'D THROW
TH5M AT Hs;2 .

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells completed samedav.
Pump salea and service. 304-

B95-3802
Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn care, landJcaplng. 11ump
removal , 304 -676 -2842 or

576-2903.

82

Plumbing
8o Heating

1969 Plymouth Fury 1400.00.
1979 Chwette $600.00 . Phone
304· 896-3427 or 304·676 ·

6606.
' 69 Firebird, new motor, 4
speed. tilt wheal. factory air.
body need• restored, hwe new
quarters, fenders, new factory
tac, full springs, trunk lid,
12,600 00 304-676 -2884 af·
1er 6 .00 pm 304-676 -1030.
'75 Chfyslar Cordova. PS. PB.
AC , 2 new tires, runs good.
8400.00. 304·882-2019 or

882-2326

.

1979 Renault Gordini 1port
inodel 2 door, convenalble top,
6 spaed, fuel inJected. 4 cyl, 30
mpg. runa great, 8600.00 . 304·

CARTER"S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolir, Ohio
,
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446 -4477

84

8o

Electrical
Refrigeration

A FEMALE THAT

AN' THEN SAIRY
SAYS TO ME-SHE SAYS·-

TO GOSSIP
AS MUCH
AS MAW

LOVED

General Hauling
Pools.''

.
Dillard

Wat8f Sarvlce:
Cisternl, Wells. Delivery Any·'
time. Call 614· 446 -7404 -No
Sundl'{ calla.
J ~ J Water Service Swimming
pools, cisterns. well1. Ph 1 614-

246-9286.

R &amp; A Water Ser\llce, Home
cisters. walla. pools f1lled . For·
marly Jam911 Boys Waters . Call

304-675-6370.

Rl

l'M~W,
~AWL
MA~OTOY...

UI(E 1111$

~r.Aeo m~..._

TO iOUGI-I~N

UPM'f SON

2919.

Upholstery

M_owrey's Upholstering serving 1
bast ·
In furnlt.ure upho111ering. Call
304 · 676 - 4 16 4 for free
estima1as
~r1 coun~yerea 2 2 years. The

\

'

.

PEANUTS
1

1LL JUST PUT
DOWN ''I-lEI~."

NORTH

''B 65
+K Q664

/ilm

Percell goes AWOL after
mistakenly shootinli
Vietnamese youth.
I!] Chriatmae with e
Mormon Tabemecle Choir
tl2l Primenewa Wrap ups of
the day·s world news and in
depth feature reports. (1 :DO)
~ MOVIE: Chrletmae In
c-onnecticut (NA) (1 :41)
Ill ClJ MOYIE: Babes In
Toyland (NR) (1 :451
8:05 Cil MOVIE: Flrecreak (NR)
(1 :44)
8:30 D crJ 9l A Different World
Whitley"s father plans for
them to spend Chnstmas
wi1h h1s girlfriend
Ill Ill ()) The Charming•
After claiming there is no
Santa Claus. Lillian has
strange encounter. 1;1
9:00 CIJ 700 Club
(2) 9l Cheers Rebecca
uses gifts 10 soften 1he blow
for those working on
Christmas.
Ill U ()) MOVIE: 'The Three
Kings' ABC Thursday Night
MovleC
(!i Myoferyl Miss Marple
uncovers tong-hidden
secrets. t;!
®I Ill tl2l Simon and Simon
·'
Rtck"s book Inspires a
would-be private eye, who
inspires heroism.
I!] Frontline Explore
anempts by the government
to change and internal
divisions. C
l!1l Larry Kfng Llvel tn depth
Interviews with top
newsmakars and celebrities.
9:30 D (2) 9J Night Coull A
blizzard forces the staff to
spend Christmas Eve with
defendants.
ill College Batketbalt
10:00 CIJ Straight Talk
D (2) 9J L.A. Law The
defense in a shoot1ng death
Is a labor of love to
Sifuentes.
(I) Frontline Discussion with
South Afncans about the
future ol their country. 1;1
®I Ill tl2l Knots Landing
Charles Scott wages a new
campaign to w1n back Abby .

....

• 42

By James Jacoby
South relied on his opponents' bidding to show all the heart honors.
When he used Blackwood to ask for
aces and kings, he found out his partner had no ace, but be was confident
that the two kings in the North hand
would be in spades and diamonds. So
he bid the grand slam.
· The play looked easy enough for a
while. Declarer ruffed the opening
lead of the heart ace and played a
spade honor from his band. East
showed out of trumps. That was not
necessarily a problem. If South could
win two club tricks without mishap he
could then play his good club tricks 'until West had to ruff in. Dummy's king
could overruff and then trumps could
be drawn. So declarer played A-K of
clubs and then continued with' the
queen. West" discarded a diamond. As
South continued playing good clubs.
West threw three hearts away. Eventually declarer had to play a diamond
and West ruffed to set the grand slam~
Declarer's plan was right, but he
carelessly overlooked the necessary
play of cashing one high diamond be~

Ill Sledge Hammerl
SuspeC1 contaminated with
deadly military nerve disease
infects all.
(I) Adame Chronlclaa
Charles Francis II loses the
battta 10 control Union Pacific

1!·17·87

+K 62

The missing
ingredient

EAST

WEST
+87 543
.A974 3
+7

+as

.

'KQJ10 2
+J 10 9 3 2
10 53

+

SOUTH

+AQ J109

-.+A';

+AKQ J97

Vulnerabl e· Ne~ther
Dealer: South

3. 3.

Wesl

Nortb

Pass

••

4•
5+

Pass
Pass
Pass

6•

Pass

East

Soulb

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+
3+
4 NT
&gt;NT
7+

Pass·

Opening lead· • A

fore playing on the good club su it. If
declarer takes that preca ution, the
slam Will make without incident since
declarer ~an simply throw all of dummy's diamonds away if West continues
to discard hearts.

6Luikt*td'
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
3 Budget item
1 Medit.
4 "A Chorus
tree
Line"
6 "I- an
number
arrow ...'"
5 Nasty
10 Stadium
guy (sl.)
11 Risible
6 Tea cake
13 Worked
7 - -o'-my
under-thumb
ground
8 Foreshadow
14 Meyerheer 9 Radial,
output
e .g.
1_5 Sen.
12 Abyssinian ,
Moynihan
for one
16 Football's 17 Unclose
27
Shula
(poet.)
18 Capture
19 Burn
29
19 .Just great! 20 Less cooked
21 .0pt
21 Smidgen
24 Encourage 22 Lord (Heb .) 31
28 Unaided
23 Inmate
33
29 Ribier
25 Belfry
or muscat
denizen
34
30 Cherry
26 Spire
variety
ornament

Detective
(s l.)
Whit ehHt
.,
wearer ·
Favonng
European
river
Police
charge
(sl.)

35 Joie de
vivre
36 Compu ter
fodder
38 Network
39 Molding
style
40 Divulge
42 H ebrew
letter
44 Gold (Sp.)

31 Lyrical
32 Blunder
34 Roulette
color
37 Coal
scuttle
38 Contracted
41 Texas
landmark
43 Overfill
45 Eucharist
plate
46 Milton"s
archangel
4 7 Designate
48 Sing, in
the Tyrol
DOWN
1 David ,
for one
2 Opera
highlight
12/1;

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW

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

DS K

U M

~

446-3171 .

87

BRIDGE

7:05 Cil Andy Qrllflth
7:30 D (1) Hollywood Squaree
(!) College Basketball
(iJ Newlywed Game ·
Ill()) Judge
®I Wheel of Fortune 1;1
l!1l Croaaflra (0:30) ·
Ill tl2l 9l Jeopardy! 1;1
~ Bamay Miller
II) ClJ WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 Cll Sanford and Son
8:00 CIJ Hell Town
D (1) 9l Tha Cosby Show

Dobbs. (0:30)
Jefferson•
II) (l) love Connection
11 :30 Ill(]) 9l TonlghtShow
(!) Spor!ICentar (L)
Ill Chaera
U (J) Ntghrtlna 1;1
®J Magnum, P.i .
I!] An American Chriotmae
Actor Pater Graves hosts this
special , featuring the Singing
Sergeants and the U.S. Air
Force Symphony Orchestra.
Traces Xmas customs and
traditions .
l!1l Sportl Tonight Action
packed sports highlights wi1h
Nick Charles and Jtm Huber.

II IIII

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Bygont - Afoot - Penny - Eunuch - FUNNY BONE o
One old time comic to another: "The best things people can
have up their sleeves Ia a FUNNY BONE."

and financial news with lou

11JCk€R...

-

Complete the chuck.le quoted
by f1Hing in the mi~smg words
you develop from $t~p No . 3 belpw

UNSCRAMBLE A80VE LETIERS
TO GET ANSWER

reports on world economics

Paul Aupe. Jr. Water Service, '
Pools, cisterna, walla. Call 614-

Wattanon ' s Water Hauling,
reasonable rates, immediatl!t
2 ,000 gallon delivery, cisterns,
pools. well. etc. call 304 -576 -

1: J

PRINT NUMBERED LEITERS IN
THESE SQUARES

•

of today •s news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1:00)
Ell ClJ Benny Hill
10:20 (I) MOVIE: The Fao1eat Gun
Alive (NR) ( 1:32)
t0:30 CIJ Great American OU1doora
(0:30)
I!] Myateryl Miss Marple
uncovers long-hidden
secrets . 1;1 .
II) ClJ Regional Newt
Conference
11 :00 CIJ Remington Steele
. . (]) (iJ llJ (J) ®I Cll tl2l
aJ) New1
(I) Sign Off
l!1l Moneyllne Current

676-1786 .

85

8

3l!1l Evening
~News
Newa A wrap up

~esidentiaf o r commercial wirmg. New service or repairs.
Llcen18d el ectr1cian Estimate
free Rldenour ElectriCal, 304 -

676-2919.
1987 Escort, 4 door, 3.900
milea. PS, automatic transmission. AM -FM radio, 17,200.00
304-773-6108.

BALLS 0' FIRE!!
-I NEVER SEEN r·

.

1·-.J'--1--L--'--L-.J.

e

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, P4MJ. -and supplies. Pick
up and delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
George~ Creek Rd. C1ll 614446-029&lt;4.

" I'd like a wake up call for 7:00
a.m.," I announced to the hotel
clerk . He handed ma an alarm
clock and smiled, "Use this, we
don 't get here unti l -."

l--.,,r....:;.l....:.::.l,.:..._:;l.,5.::_.,....-l

Railroad. C
COME,MY DEAR! LET'S

.

N UK

11m Ill tl2l tour of Duty Cpl.

Standard 6 Dodge engine, ,.
stand•d transmission for ule

81

I .I

•

1

~

.

c

' BO Chevy truck cab, 54.000
milea rear end end rally wheels.

1980 Pontiac Grand Prix. Good
condition. Four 15x7 Chf!Ny
Rally Wheels. Call 614.742-

Farfisa Fiar Precamp and Farfise
Transicord 1600 00 . Conn double keyboard consol Of911"1
8400.00. 304 -675- 1431 or
675-4145 .

Fruit
Vegetables

•

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

TEL.f:V15ION

304-676· 2700 .

7B08.

8o

76

A MIND IS"
A TERRlgLE
l'HIN~ TO
WASTE ..

$400 . Call614 · 3&amp;7-n&amp;o.

Bundy Trombone. Excel. cond
Call 614·446-2177.

58

•

$31500. Call 614· 38B-909B .
8034.

AKC Cocker Spaniel pups, Reg .
Am. Eskimo Spits pups. Shots&amp;
wormed . $160 each. Ready for
Christmas. Cell 614·388-8890
or 448-8308 -weekends.

~

9B6-3816.

71 Auto's For Sale

Coii614-38B-8801 .

1354.

1986 Suzuki Quadrunner 230
Utility. 11600. firm. Call 614-

GEE, ·you
WOUL.ON'i THINfc::

!

1 - _,.G:. . .:A.;. . ;R.;_I.,:N,:. .-Y.:. -. ~1 :!
T
Ie
I
.

BCheers

•

1981 Harlev Davidson Super- ·•
glide. Good condition . Call614·

r. I I' I I .

....,;:.I....:.M;...P:....,.::.u....::o~~ :

"fl)(l) M"A"S'H

G .W.R .R . A Meeting: Ohio
Chap. C-1, Galliaand Surround·
ing counti•· December 20th-- .•
Shoney' s. Pt . Pleeunt. 9 :30
AM . For intor. call 614-446·

064B.

Firewood 820 .00 pickup load.
no deliveries, 304-675-7771 .

1· model 12 Winchester 30"
full. 1 wmodel 48 Remington 30
" full . 1- model 31 Remmgton
32" full . 1- Valiant 32" full solid
rib . Call614 -446 -3348 .

992· 6205

''

Now buying 1hell corn or e.corn. Call for latest quotas. R lver
City Farm Supply. 614 · 446·
2986,

Ill (J) ®I Ill tl2l

i!1)1nolda Polldco '88
~ WKAP In Cincinnati
II) ClJ Too Close lor Comfort
6:35 (I) Coral Bumett
7:00 CIJ Aamtng1on Steele
D crJ PM Magazine
m Sportseenter (LJ
(l) Entertainment Tonlght
Dill People'a Court
(I) I!] MacNeil/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1 :00)
®I Newa
l!1l Moneyllne Curren1
reports on world economics
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
Ill~ 9J Wheel of Fortune

614-446-4383 dovo. 446·0139 ·

74

(1) (iJ

®I Ill tl2l CBS News

1982 Dodge 260 Ram. Cust:om
conversion . Trail• ready . Call• •
evan1. &amp; weekends.

DEC. 17 •

I!] Aockochool

W.O .
- -Vans
---··

3-Wheeler ATV -Kawasaki 200
Good cond . Call 814 -446 -

Satellite System tor sale. Cost
$1500 .. sell S599 Call 614 County Appliance, Inc. Good
used appliances 'and TV sets.
Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614- 446-1699, 627 3rd
Ave . Gallipolis. OH

Firswood, 120 .00 load, $36.00
delivered. 304· 676 -2264.

R•arrgnge letters of 1he
four Krambled words below to form four simple words.

(J)
(I) Nightly Bualnaoa Report

,.

Remingtol) 1100 12 ga., auto.
Rifled slug barrel. Call614-4467076 .

514' 3B8-9809.

1400 sq. ft. commercial space
luitable for offices. retailing. or
services. Pnme location· corner
of 2nd. 8t Pine in Gallipolis.
Ample parking In rear . $360 per
month. Call 614-446 -4249 or

Farm Equipment

0

li\ Winner'•ABCCircle
(TJ
Ill U
Newa Q

wheel drive. $1 ,600.00. 304-..,.

-=;

Inch BMX bike $46.00. 304-

CAPTAIN EASY

-:-:-----------"
1970 International pickup, (''

InC.

S@\\~lA-~t.trs® ::!~

_ _ _ _ _;__;:;: Edllod by CLAY I . ,OILAN - - - - - - - - -

9l Newa
(!) SportoLook (TJ
(I) Dr. Who
I!] Square One TV Q
l!1l ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world Is
anchored live from New
York . (0:30)
~ Facte of Lifo
Ill ClJ One Day al a Time
8:05 (I) Allee
6:30 D (1) 9l NBC Nighdy Newa

1982 Ford F150 long bed, 36 h
engine. auto, power stesring:
power brakM. trailer towing, ~
AM ·FM radio. new tirel , XlS r
Pkg., camp• •l•o available if.;
wanted . Call614-742·2289. ,.

~~c==:~·~

THURS.,

•

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tirea , sizBJ 12, 1 J, 14. 1 6.
18, 16.5 . 8 miltll!l out At. 218 .

Rooms for rent. dey . week .
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 814446- 9680. Rent as low as$ 120
month

•

614-446·2151 .

Misc. Merchandise

Muule loading Supplies· Prices
have been reduced . Shop going
out of business. Koebat's, Mill
Creek Rd . Mra.· Man . Wed .. Fri .
5-8 PM . Sat.· 1 ·6 PM. Phone
614-446-2316.

IT.

TIIAT DAILY
PUZZLU

6:00 CIJ Cruy&lt;Uke a Fox

One bedroom furnished apt, very
el88n and nice. adultl only, no
pats, phone 304· 675-1386.

Furnished Rooms

1-\~V~

~?T_INA"TClZ.!

I~~;;~~;:~:::;~~;;~~~~~~~~~! _767;36~·=28~3;5=-==~:;;;~:j~.-,
--~-------------64
61
&amp; 4
~-

45

IT OIIU., WT
WI

1979 Ford Corrier· 8700. Call

Fu rnil had Effic1en cy . 11 60 .
Utilities paid. 607 2nd. Gallip~&gt;
lis, Sh•e b11h. C.ll 446 -4416

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor and Rl'llerside Aper1·
menta In Middleport. From
1216. lndudlng utllitllll. Call
&amp;U-992-7787 . EOH .

A
6RE.AT

'(Ot)'~

614-446-6460.

{

Television
Viewing

~DE'f:e.D l]i:'(lll&amp;

198&lt;4 Custom deluxe Ch..,V
pickup, 18600 or best offer. Call

54 Misc. Merchandise

Call 614-266-6251.

~E'(, I. HEAR.

1979 Ford 160 Rang• Sup•
Cab, V-8. autometlc. PPS . PB .
Cab hal no rust· Bed has some.
81600. Ca11614-693-6836 .

Antiques

ANTIQUES, Buy or Sell. Rive·
rine Antiques , 1124 East Main
St . Pomeroy . Hours: Mon.·
Tues -Wed. 10 a.m. to 6 p .m .
Sun · 1 p.m .· 6 p.m . By chance
or appointment. Russ Moore
614-992-2626.

l'li NEAL SOUM\1511, Til' WEW MAIL

The Daily Sentinel- Psge- 15

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

BORN LOSER

Trucks- for Sale ·

1985 Dodge D -100, 4 1pd.
Sherpl 86494 . John'l Auto
Sal• below HolidiV Inn in
Kanauga, Oh. Rt . 7 .

Call 614 -446 -7307 after 5

53

'

Thursday, December 17, 1987

In Middleport, Ohio. 1 and 2
room furnished apta. pr,ivate
bathl. utilitiOI paid, 304-882·
2686 .

304-273·6666.

1519.
8x60.

446-2616 .

13

Trailer tor rent cheap . 68
Burdlrtte Addn, Point Ple...nt.
private lot, u1ed rental ctothing.

Furnished: 4 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean. No pats Adutt1onty . Ref
&amp; dep . required . Call 614-446·

for Sale

4o00. 304-675 -6252

12

for Rent
1 mile from H .M .C . . 2 BR ,
trail•. Call 614-246·5682.

Real Eslate

ExpMiencod si ding and w indow
inst&amp;llers. must be availab l e for
work immediately , call 9 ·30 to
Wanted baby sitter in my home,
dtfferent hours, 304 -675 -7733

Two bedroom houre half mile
out Jericho Road, call after

Bob Chne Taxidermy, Member
W Va . Taxidermy Auoc. Rt . 2
Box 782, Point Pleaent, W . Va .

1984 Skyline. 14x70, central
a~r , underpanning. decka, new
carpet. k.itchen appliances. set
up on rented lot, K &amp; K, Point
Pleasant. $16.600 . Call weekends or ef1er 5 weekd&amp;'fS.

MONEY FOR COLlEGEiUvl!til·
pble t o Individuals who become
membef5 of th e Army National
Guard. Call 30 4-675 -3950 or
, · 800-642 -3619.

2 bedrooms, partly 'turnished,
cable. tf'lsh. 1150. Plf month,
1100. deposit. l'ljo drunks or
dopa . 660 Osborne St. ,
Pomeroy.

42 Mobile Homes

Maintenance person tor rental
property Experience In carpen·
try, plUmbing and wiring Refer:
ences required . Send resume to
lhe Daily Sentinel. BoJC 729W,
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769.

AVON all areas Shirlev Spears,
• 304 -675 -1429 .

apt. in Pomwoy area. Pay own
utilttlea, deposit reQuired . Call
614w992•6113, 614•992-6723
or 61 4-99,2· 2609. Call' after
6 :00, ple•e.

6o00pm. 304-675-6483.

Trailer for Sale614- 388 -8294.

AVON w All areas. Call Marilyn
Wetrr~er 304 -882 -2646 .

2. 3, or 4 bedroom hoUS8J and

62B9.

Get paed for reeding booksl
$100 .00 per trtle Write: ACE
1536, 161 S. lincolnwav, N
Au rora. II. 60542.

Need eXpet'ienced heating, cool·
ing person to w ork w1th local gas
co mpany Sand resume to Ttle
Dally Sentinel , Box 729G ,
Pomeroy. Ohio 46769 .

Homes for Rent

Nice 3 bedroQm house Family
room, garage, baument.
forced· air heat. 6 wooded acra..
bern. 1275 per month. $100.
deposit. No inside pets. 10 East
St.. Pomeroy, Ohio. 614 -423·

1-800-561 -8925 .
Government J obs. $16,040 ·
$69,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
earea. 805 -687-6000 EKt. R 9805 tor current repo federal

72

lla. 614-446-8221 .

In desperate need of coal furnace. Must be very rea!IOn!'llble

Emplovment
Servi ces

51 HousBhold Goods

- - - - - - - - - - - 1Uke n.w couch a. lovekeat.

Buying da•ly 9old. silver coins,
rm gs, J&amp;welry, Jterlmg ware, old

have

Thursday, December 17, 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Daily Sentinel

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MERCY I TO OTHERS .SHOW THAT MERCY SHOW TO
ME. -ALEXANDER •POPE

�Ohio Lottery
Christmas
countdown

Daily Number
'}
664
Pick 4
9619

Cloudy tonight. Chance ol
rain. Low In mid 30s. Rain
Ukely Saturday. Hlgbs near
!10.

•·

at y
Vol.38, No.155
Copyrighted 1987

•

•

enttne

2 Sections, 16 Pages

'·

25 Cent•

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Friday, December 18, 1987

.,

Entrances to Meigs High blocked·early today
The Meigs Local Teachers
strike took on more serious
aspects tod;IY as the district's
board of education and the
administration took steps to open
most of the schools Monday
.morl!lng using substitute
teachers.
·
Entrances to Meigs High
School were blocked off by cars
as the striking teachers attemp·
ted to keep the substitutes who
were to have an lnservlce session
at the high school from entering

the parking lot and school
building. ·
·
Meigs Sheriff Howard Frank
said that he had six deputies 'at
the scene late ·Friday morning
and the deputies were to main·
lain order In case of any physical
action. However, he said that his
deputies reported that cars a-t·
tempting to enter the parking lot
were being spray painted and
scratched. Deputies were mak·
lng no arrests for any such
offenses, he said.

Shertif Frank indicated that Prosecutor Frederick W. Crow did vote to hire the · substitute
only harassm~nt was taking III Friday mornlngon what steps teachers preparatory to attempt·
place and that his hands were can be taken to limit pickets and ing to open the schools on
tiecj because of the lack of any handle other .aspects of their Monday. The board did vote .
court order Involving the strike · attempt to reopen most of the recently to reopen the schools
and pickets at the school. He did schools on Monday. However, and agreed to pay substitutes
indicate, however, that he has Meigs Common Pleas Court $125 a day for the duration of the
requested additional support un· Judge Charles Knight had not strike.
According to plans, all of the
its from surrounding counties to received any legal documents to
schools
will open Monday morn·
at
11
review
and
possibly
sign
come Into the county to assist In
•tng
with
the exception of Brad·
a.m.
Friday.
case of any violence.
bury,
Salem
Center and Salis·
Meeting
in
special
session
Meantime, It was reported that
bury.
Students
at these schools
Thursday
evening,
members
of
officials of the board of education
wlll
be
transferred
to otber
the
district
's
board
of
education
were In conference with Meigs

schools for classes . All are
elementary schools .
Teachers have been on strike
since Nov . 6. Negotiation ses·
slons with a federal mediator
have failed to bring aboqt 'a
settlement. Following the last
stsslon, the Meigs Local
Teachers filed an unfair labor
practices action on the charge
that the administration arid
board published in The Dally
Sentinel details of a contract
offer which they allege was not
made.
·

Barley trial ends in hung jury
The four-day Meigs County
Common Pleas Court trial of
Charles Barley , 48, Pomeroy,
ended in a hung jury. The hung
jury was declared when jurors
remained deadlocked after over
tour hours of deliberation and the
jury foreman sa ld there was no
chance of reaching agreement.
Barley stQOd trial on three
charges of felonious assault with
. firearm specifications, as a resultof a shooting incident on May
23 at the Cove Bar on Route 7 near
Pomeroy, in which David Talbott, 21, of Racine, was Injured in
the legs.
At the close of the prosecution's case, Judge Charles
Knight granted a motion from
the defense to dismiss two of the
three charges against the defend·
ant, finding that they arose from
one event.
Throughout the trial and dur·
lng 'Enlstng argument, defense
attorney Steve Story maintained
that -his c llerit acted in self·
defense during the shooting.
Story said Barley fired ,shots at
Talbott's legs because · "he was
scared" and felt himself to be In

Small electrical appliarn:es from Hamilton Beach
Norelco and Proctor Silex.

Norelco
Ultra-Light
Sprtf &amp; Steam

Iron
Model 1861

·

'

CoHee maker
Model A600

tlnued this morning across Arlzo·
' By United Press lnternallonal
A Pacific storm that raked na's rim country and White
Southern California with 100 mph Mountains . Seven inches of snow
winds and heavy snow agd has was on the ground at Flagstaff.
been blamed for at least' seven while up to 6 inches blanketed
deaths moved inland today, Show Low.
Snowshowers also dusted the
pounding the Southwest with
mountains
of New Mexico this
heavy rain and mountain snow.
morning,
with
as much as 3
An advisory for up to4 inches of
,inches
reported
at Carlsbad,
snow remained in effect across
Roswell
and
Clovis.
A winter
northern and eastern Arizona.
storm
warning
for
4
or more
while over the state's lower
elevations, more than 2 inches of inches of snow continued for the
rain was reported at Lake state's south-central mountains.
Havasu. Nearly 1 ~ inches of A foot of snow fell Thursday at
Mount Charleston in southern
rain fell at Phoenix .
Snow, heavy at times, con- Nevada , 8 inches piled up in the

Hamilton Beach

7 Speea Blender

Selected

Microwave
Accessories

Entire Stock
Of

Bath

aernz-0-Matlc

Planter's

Microwa~e

Propane

Torch
Kit

Rowing

xerciser
ISimilar to model
shown on TVI

Rubber oueen®
oenle®
6 Oallon

wet/Dry

vac

Black &amp; Decker

Dust
Buster

them '(the jury) that Talbott was
swinging a pool cue at Barley,
then they (the defense) have won
the case. "Not possibly" swing·
lng a pool cue, Crow said, but
definitely. Crow pointed out that
not all the prosecution's wit·
nesses were friends ot Talbott's,
and that one woman witness was
employed by Barley at the Cove.
Crow aske.d for a verdict of guilty
from the jury .
Although the jury w~s hung,
the one lndlctmen't against Bar·
ley is still pending and Is subject
to retrial. ·
Pjlul Gerard, Investigator for
the prosecutor' said that Crow
plans to retry Barley on the
charge but no date has been set.
Story said he was pleased with
, the outcome of the triaJ: "Any
time a client Is not found gull ty It
is a victory, since the law still
presumes innocence until guilt is
proven. Our position was that
Barley was acting in self defense
and was consistent wl th the
present State of Ohio law which
says that a person assaulted In
his own home or business bas no
duty to retreat," Story stated.

Blame stonns for at least 7
deaths; warnings are issued

Proctor Slle•
12 c..
I

Immediate danger because Tal·
batt was going to strike him with
. a pool cue. "He honestly believed·
he was going to be attacked,"
said Story.
The bar was actually a private
club, Story said, and Talbott had
been barred from the club on two ·
prior occasions. Barley asked
Talbott to leave the club on the
night of the shooting, an&lt;t when
he did so, said Story, Talbott
challenged him with the poo\cue.
Although the defense called at
least two witnesses wpo corroborated Barley's story regarding
the alleged attack with the pool
cue, witnesses for the proseCU·
(ion did not see Talbott go after
Barley with the cue. Story
pointed out In closing that most of
the prosecution's witnesses were
friends of Talbott.
"He (Barley) did shoot him
(Talbott), but why did he shoot
him?" Story ask;ed, and admon-!shed the jury to consider the
same question and find the
defendant not gullty.
Prosecuting Attorney Fred
Crow III in closing told jurors
that if the defense had proven to

consolette
snack &amp;
Litter
Basket
combo
Assorted COIOI'$

Weight
Bench
With Removable
Leg Lift

'

Cherries
8 oz. Box

·cabinet

in flscal1989.
Under . their plan, a major
source of the new funds would be
the three-year extension of the 3
percent , telephone excise tax,
projected to raise $1.3 billion In
fiscal 1988. Many of the other
r~commendations involve a wide
range of taxes on businesses, and
probably would not be felt by the
average taxpayer.
·
"I think we're well on our way
to doing something ... about the
deficit," said Rep. Dan Rosten kowskl, D-lll., chairman of the
House Ways and Means
Committee.
"I'm pleased with what we've
been able to work out," agreed
Chairman Lloyd Bentsen, D·
Conti nued on page 7

Inflation up 0.3 percent last
month;' energy costs blamed

Radio

Roller
Tool ·
Chest

how to handle a provision to send
$9 million In humanitarian aid to
Contra rebels fighting the MarK·
·lSI Nicaraguan government.
That panel also planned to
meet again today.
The two bllls are the last major
tasks facing Congress this year
and the chief obstacles to
adjournment.
Together, the measures are
designed to Implement a twoyear' $76 billion deficit reduction
plan worked out last month by
congressional leaders and the
White House.
· Using that blueprint, the
House-Senate negotiators put
together the required plan to
raise $9 bllilon in new taxes in
flscal1988 and another $14 blllion

~~in

•

6'
••

Homak®

Dark &amp; Milk
Chocolate

building In an eHort to keep substitute teachers
from attending an lnservlce session preparatory
to opening most schools of the district on Monday.

Endorse $23 billion tax plan

WASHINGTON (UPI)
House-Senate negotiators ,
scrambling to reach a comp'romise on tax and spending Issues,
~edar Breaks area ef Utah, and 5
have agreed on a $23 billion tax
inches was dumped in Grants, plan .but are stymied by a
N .M ..
•
.. contr9versial move to give mil·
Rain was scattered as far east ·· uons of dollars to aid the
as western and southern Texas. Nicaraguan Contras.
Light snow also was reported
Negotiators Informally en·
across southern and central dorsed the two-year tax package
Minnesota and the northern half Thursday night and planned to
of Washington state.
meet again today to discuss
The storm hit the California spending cuts that also are their
coast earlier this week with responslblllty .
considerable intensity, and has
A separate House-Senate
been blamed for at least seve n panel, working on a $606 billion
deaths.
appropriations blll intended to
Three divers on a pleasure boat finance the government until the
were reported missing and pre· end of fiscal 1988 next Sept. 30,
sumed · dead after the craft was unable Thursday to decide

Headphone
AM/FM
Weather Band
RadiO ..... 9.96
AMIFM Stereo
Radio ... ,2.18

STRIKE SCENE -This was the scene at 9 a.m.
this morning at the Meigs JUgh School where
striking teachers had blocked the entrances to the

LOOKING FORWARD TO CHRISTMAS
Pictured are three of the residents of the Meigs
County Inflnnary who are lookllll forward to
Christmas moralng as they stand with the weU
decorated tree at the home: This year there are
seven women and five men residing at the
inllrmary and they are de!"lndent upon the pu~llc

lor Christmas remembrances since county funds
• cannot be spent for Christmas presents. The
resldeuts can use and appreciate about any Item
and Individuals, groups or businesses wishing to
help with the Christmas observ11nce at the
Institution may call992-5469.
·

WASHINGTON (UPI) - An vember, the department said.
Prices were up 1.1 percent for
. increase in energy prices helped
fuel
on, 2.5 percetlt for electricity
push inflation up0.3 percent from
and
0.3 percent for gasoline.
October to November, the Labor
However, charges for natural
Department said today.
Prices also rose to a smaller gas declined for the third straight
extent for shelter, food, apparel, month.
The Index for food and bevertransportation, medical care and
ages
rose .0.1 percent. Grocery
entertainment.
store
prices were unchanged
The increase ·in the Consumer
following
a 0.3 percent increase
Price lnde* last month, which
tn
October.
Increases in indexes
was 3.5 percent when figured on
for
fruits
and
vegetables jumped
an annual basis, was smaller
1.1
percent
while cereal and
than the 0.4 percent hike In
bakery
products
rose 0.5 percent.
October.
For the first 11 months of 1987, That offset a 0.9 percent decline
consumer prices have risen an in the index for meats, poultry,
annual rate of 4.7 percent, · fish and eggs.
Due to shortages caused by
accord lng to the department's
insects,
disease and bad
Bureau of Labor Statistics.
weather,
lettuce
prices soared
In 1986, falling energy prices
23.8
percent
and
toma,to
prices
helped keep inflation down to 1.1
skyrocket,ed
22.8
percent
In
No·
percent.
vember,
the
department
said.
All figures were adjusted for
Pork prices fell2.5 percent and
seasonal variations.
From January through No· poultry prices declined 3.5 per·
vember of this year, energy costs cent. Beef prices dropped
jumped at a 10.2 percent rate. slightly .
Shelter costs rose 0.3 percent
Shelter costs were up 4.7 percent
last
month following a0 .2 percent
and fQOd prices increased 3.3
decline
in October.
percent.
Energy
prices accounted for
Energy prices. which declined
much
of
the
Increase . Renters '
In September and October, led
the advance in prices in No· and homeowners' costs each rose

0.2 percent while maintenance
and repair costs advanced 0.6
percent.
Transportation costs jumped
0.5 percen t, matching the October Increase.
New car prices rose 0.4 per·
cent, down slightly from October . Car financing charges
increased 3.4 percent following a
5.8 percent jump in October.
Public transportation costs
were up 0.6 percent after dec lin·
ing 0.7 percent in October . Used
car prices declined lor the third
consecutive month, down 0.2
percent.
Prlaes for apparel rose 0.5
percent in November, the third
straight monthly increa se, and
have advanced at an annual rate
of 6.6 pe~cent from January to
November.
Medical cos ts increased .0 .4
percent last month and h'ave
risen an a nnua l rate of 5.9
percent so far this year .
Entertainment costs rose 0.3
percent in November following a
0.6 percent hike In October .
Before seasonal adju stment,
$100 in consumer goods In 1967
cost $345 .80 in November. the
department sa ld.

•

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