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                  <text>Oecembi:ir 20. 1987

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
771
Pick 4
3969
Super Lotto
l-5-Q-25'-38-43

Christmas
countdown
Days until Christmas

•

•

••

. at y . enttne
Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, December 21, 198?

Vol.38, No .1 56

Copyrighted 1987

Clear tonight. Low between
5 and 10 tonight. Cloudy
Tuesday. Chance of rain.

2· Sections, 14 Puges

25 C&amp;,-.ts
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Schools reopen amid confusion early today
"6"

1987

OLDSMO~~~P~~TLASS

SUPREME 2 DR.

1987 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE
Bea~ti/ul li~ht burgund~ with carmine leather interior. Fully
equipped With nery aptian you would expect.

6's-V·8's, air, auto. trc•••· Rallye wheels, tilt whet!; factory program
cars, mileage range 6,000 ta 9,000. ·rao good to be true. '

SPECIALLY PRICED FOR THE YEAR END SALE

1

$998 7

SAlE

WAS SJ9,900

Officials call for
assistance from area
units to maintain order
1986 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME 4 DR.
SEDANS

~

Confusion reigned in the Meigs Local School District Monday when
schools were reopened through the use of substitute teachers as a
counter action against teachers.of the district who have been on strike
since Nov. 6.
All local law enforcement officers- Pomeroy, Middleport and the
Meigs County Sheriff's Department - were at the schools of the
district attempting to carry out provisions of a restraining order
issued in the Meigs County Common Pleas Co~rt against the teachers
on Frictay, preparatory to reopening most of the schools this morning.

factory program cars, air, auto., tilt, cruise, AM:fM stereo, mileage
range 16,000 • 25,000. family sired.

$17,49 7

WAS 59995

SALE

$8587

OUR COMPLETE ·USED CAR INVENTORY ·
SPECIALLY PRICED F. OR THIS

oliday Sale ·
THESE CARS MUST GO BEFORE JAN. 1, 1988

,.:; OUR LOSS IS YOUR GAIN
PRic;ES IN THIS .AD GOOD TILL DEC. 31, 1987

"2" 1986 CHEVROLET CAVALIERS

1982 V.W. RABBIT 4 DR.
New car trade -

Ready to sell. Runs A· 1.

SALE $2 38 7

WAS 13495 .

1986 .CHEVROLET CAMARO Z-28

II~ exterior, only 19,000 miles, air, auto., AM·fM

with cassette. Priced right.

SALE$10,987

WASS12,900

1979 CADILLAC 4 DR. SEDAN
Big Car -

Priced Right

1978 FORD LTD II

~~ bed,

SALE $188 7
·

SALE $4987

WASS6095

1985 CHEV. CHEVETTE 2 DR.
Dark blue, 4-speed, Basic need is here!

WAS $3495

-

SALE $2287

WASS5995

SALE $2 2 8 7
'

•

auto.,

AM·FM, light blue
·

SALE S3987

Dark blue, just traded this week. Very neat &amp; dean.

SALE $488 7

WASS6495

' New Olds trade,
owned, tilt, cruise, AM-fM
cassette, air, power windows, pow. door lotks,
30,467 miles.

SALE $7587

"2" 1987 CHEVROLET CAVALIERS -

1983 CHEV. CAPRICE ST. WAGON

1987 CHEVROLET BERET-TA G.T.
"Brass Hat factory Car". Red, 5-speed, pow. win·
daws, cruise, tilt, sport wheels. Compare anywhere.

WASS6995

WA$510,900

SALE $55 8 7

WAS $10,400

1985 PONTIAC FIERO
'

SALE $5887

WAS 17295

SALE$ 13,5 8 7

Sa bit brown uterior, showroom new insidt. Right
car - right options.

. SALE S6987

"ADA RnAILS6695

1985 BUICK SKYLARK 4 DR.

1983 CHEVROLET CAVALIER
Red, 4 speed, air tond. Priced to go before Jan. 1

1984 MERCURY LYNX 2 DR.
Dark blue, local car. Priced for you!! Sport striping.

WAS. ~7995

WASS5995

Locally owned. I

SALE $5387
"The 'Heartbeat

SALE $5887

•

s-O-l-Oo actual miles.

NADA RETAIL 18795

of

SALE S1787

WAS 52995

1986 CHEVROLET SPECTRUM 4 DR •.
\ ·.-'

Air, local owned. We sold it new.

SALE $5787

WAS 56995

"2" 1987 PONTIAC GRAND AM'S

SALE .

SALE .S8487

1986 CHEVROLET CAVALIER Z-24
Charcoal gray. We sold it new. L!ll!ded with equip·
1mon't. Hatchback model.

WASS9995

~

. .

SALE $8087

CHEVROLET CAVAUER ST. WGN.

Ll~hl blue, auto. trans., air &amp; AM-fM. Only 44,000

rmles.

. WAS 55995

1982 LINCOLN CONTillr'NTAL 4 DR.

4 cylinder, air, auto. trans., now Celebrity trade.

SALE $2787

WAS 13995

WASS9295

SALE $3887

.

BUICK REGAL 4 DR. SEDAN

Two-tone blue &amp; silver, air cond., auto., onfy
20,000 milts. We sold it new.

SALE S2787

WAS 53995

WAS 14995

WASS18,000

• S-1 0 LONG BED

WAS 17995

1983 FORD RANGER PICKUP
Red &amp; white, 4-speed, compare anywhere.

I-BURGUNDY, 1-WHITE
factory program cars. Air, auto., stereo; rear deck,
racks. Pri&lt;ed right far this sale.

factor.y official's car, loaded with 1111 tht options.

.

SALE $2287·

WAS 13495

Locally owned, only 44,427 milts, yellow beige with
tan interior, air, auto., priced right.

1987 OLDS DELTA 88 BROUGHAM

Silver, 5-speed, air, cruise, till, only 42,888 miles.

pnme car.

SALES9287

1983 NISSAN STANZA 4 DR.

SALE S898 7

4 Dr. Sedan, air, auto; trans., power steering, foe·
tory program &lt;ars, mileage 16,000 to 18,000.

SAlE S7087

SALE $10,587

WASS11,900

9-pass., ~ill, cruise, AM-fM stereo, locally awned,
new Capme wagon trade.

White with blue tustom doth, 9-pass., air, auto.,
12,597 low miles.

l·pass., air, lo&lt;ally owned, well cared for.

4 wheel drive, V·I, 4 speed, only 19,000 miles.

SALE $2987

Just traded, loaded with equipment. Charcoal gray
S-Biarer trade.

1979 GMC PASSENGER VAN

SALE $1587

WAS 12495

1986 CHEV. 112 TON PICKUP

1987 CHEVROLET CEIDRITY ST. WGN.

SALE $6987

SALE $6087

Light blue, good starter car. PriCed to go.

1985 MERCURY COUGAR
·WASS7995

4-wheel drive, 2 dr., alum. wheels. Lo&lt;ally awned.

1979 FORD LTD 2 DR.

1985 FORD ESCORT

WAS 13495

1982 AMC EAGLE

1986 CHEVROLET NOVA
WAS 16996

SALE $287

WAS 5995

4 dr. sedan, only 11,000 miles.. One owner, light
blue.

1984 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 4 DR.
Local trade, air,
We sold it new.

SALE $587

, WAS 11295

SALE S687

WAS 11495

1986 CHEV. S-10

£L model. ·Dark blue, fattory Sunshine

stropes.

8 pass, V·8 power, automatic transmission.

4 cylinder, 4 speed, new top. Priced to sell now.

WAS$ 3995

Good basic transportation. Warth mare.

1974 DODGE PASS. VAN

·

V-8, air, auto. trans., family sind.

Dark green 2 dr., only 40,000 actual miles. Sleeper

:;~ 52995

1978 JEEP CJ5

SALE $2487

WASI3495

1979 DODGE DIPLOMAT ST. WGN.

SALE $887

WAS 11795

Lot ofluxury here •.Local trade, full power, A·1 car.

SALE $6087

WAS$7195

1979 CHRYSLER. CORDOBA 2 DR.

1978 LINCOLN TOWN CAR

Both have air, auto. trans., mileage range14,000 to
19,000.

SALE $4 787

1985 MERCURY LYNX 2 DR.
4-speed, light blue. Just as good as a l!tW one.

WAS S399S

SALE$2987

America"

lS

Jim Mink .Che.,rolet-Oidsmobile
446·3672 .
CARS
•

1616 EASTERN AVENUE
OHIO
.'

446-2000
TRUCKS!
' l

AUTHORITIES CALLED - Authorities were called to the
Pomeroy Elementary School at about9 a.m. Monday to assure that
striking teachers upheld a restraining order Issued Friday. While.

Group lis'ts worst Medicaid programs
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Mls·
slsslppl, Wyoming and Arizona
are the worst places to live for ·
people ~ho are sick and poor, and
uniformity Is needed to eliminate
lnequltles In Medicaid services
across the nation, a consumer
group says.
Other states, however , have no
reason for complacency. the
group says, because "state Medl·
cald programs range not from
excellent down to terrible, but
from mediocre down to terrible."
In a 250·page report released
today, the Public Citizen Health
Research Group ranked the
versions of the joint federal·state
program that pays for some
medical care for qualifying poor
people In the 50 states and the
District of Columbia.
The report, which the group
said was the first comprehensive
national rating of the programs,
compared the stptes' programs
on 72 aspects of ellglblllly,
services covered, availability of
doctors .and facilities. quality of

care. and reimbursement.
"This report attempts to
answer the question, 'If I were a
poor person Jiving 'In the United
States, in which state would I
have the best chance of gaining
access to quality care through
the Medicaid program?"' the
report said, .
Medicaid. which allows states
some discretion in deciding who
will get the assistance and what
types of care will be included, ha s
given states "so much flexibility
in designing their Medicaid pro·
grams that tremendous lnequi·
ties exist across the nation,
depriving millions of people of
needed services solely because
they live in the wrong state," the
report said.
For exa mple, Idaho wifl pay
for four "well child screening
visits from birth through age 21,"
the .report said, while Ohio,
Pennsylvania and Washington
cover 25 such visits. The Ameri·
can Academy of Pediatrics re·
commends 20 of these checkups

from birth thro_ugh age 21.
According to the report, the 10
best Medicaid programs are In
Minnesota, Wisconsin, New
York, Massachusetts, Connect!·
cut, California, New Jersey,
Washington, Oregon and
Michigan.
·
Mississippi had the worst Me·
dicaid program. accordi,ng to the
report, followed by Wyoming,
Arizona, Alabama, Missouri, Ar·
kansas. South Dakota, Nevada,
Idaho and.Virginia.
The group recommended that
the federal government take
over complete financial responsl·
bility. for Medicaid and make
eligibility requirements •.covered
services, quality, accessibility
and reimbursement the same
across the nation.
Currently, the federal govern·
ment attempts to.compensatefor
the wealth of different states by
raising the percentage by which
It matches the Medicaid payments of poorer states.
"The federal government does

Rescue ·only 26 Christmas travelers
in worst ship disaster of century .
MANILA, Philippines (UP!) Rescuers today held out little
hope for most of the nearly 1,500
Christmas travelers believed to .
have perished In a fiery collision
that sent a crowded passenger
ship and an oil tanker to the
bottom of a shark-Infested chan·
nel south of Manila.
The first ship to the scene. the
passenger vessel Don Claudio,
was able to rescue only 26 people
in the Sunday night maritime
disaster, said Its skipper Capt.
Meleclo Barranco.
No reports were Immediately
available from other commercial and naval vessels that
rushed to the scene. but officials
said it was u~llkely many more
survivors would be found.
"We have no Idea the number
of people who perished," said
Phlllppine Coast Guard Cmdr.
Cipriano Luspo. "It is very hard
to estimate the number of
casualties ...
But Barranco, Interviewed on .
arrival In Manila, said his crew
had scanned the darkened wa·
ters with searchlights for 3 ~
hours before giving up the
search. He said It was possible
that no more survivors would be
found .
The' coast guard reported the
passenger vessel MV Dona Paz,
with 1,493 Manila-bound pas- .
seng&lt;!rs, collided with the tanker .,
.MT Victor. loaded&gt; with 8,800

barrels of oil, about · 10 p.m.
Sunday some 11 miles off the
Island of Marinduque.
Authorities released a list of
the 24 Dona Paz passengers and
two of the seven crewmen from
the Victor who were delivered to
port by the Don Claudio. Hospital
officials said 12 of the 26 were
admitted after Initial treatment.
most of them with serious burns.
Severino Carrion, a bus con·
ductor from Catbaiogf\1'1 on central Samar island, said the Dona
Paz was so heavily loaded with
holiday travelers that he had to
sleep on the deck while his
mother, uncle and 12-year-old
cousin slept three floors below.
"! heard a very loud explo·
slon," he said. "It woke me up
and I saw fire. Then I 1ilmped in
the water and swam for two
hours praying that a ship would

save me."

been

Cariion, who had
bringIng his relatives to Manila to
spend Christmas with a !)rather,
said the oil tanker plowed di·
rectly Into the midsection of the
passenger shiP before exploding.
There was no sign of a ny of his
family members, he sa id.
Barranco said he saw the fire
from a distance of 8 miles and
immediately began steaming
toward the scene.
"We saw blg.flames and lots of
black smoke. like a building on

fire," he said. "We got there at
10:38 p.m. and then we were sure
it was a ship . We also guessed
there was a tanker because the
water smelled of oiL"
Barranco said the Dona Paz,
which had set out from Tacloban
on the cen tral island of Leyte.
burned until shortly after midnight before sinking and the
VIctor went down about two
hours later.
The captain said four other
commercial vessels were still
scouring the waters of the
Sibuyan Sea 100 miles southeast
of Manila when he set ofJ for the
capital with the 26 survivors he
rescued. He had no Idea how
many people they had picked up.
he said .
The coast guard said two navy
patrol boats, a coast guard vessel
and an airplane had been sent to
the scene, while the navy said an
addltional .shlp and a helicopter
were also being sent. Fishing
boats were also helping and a
U.S. helicopter was standing by
at Clark Air Base.
Officials feared the incident
could become the worst marl·
time disaster .in Philippine
history.
In another shipping accident,
maritime officials In Singapore
and Jakarta, Indonesia, said
today a freighter with 55 people
aboard sank Sunday in the Java
Continued on page 7

contribute a larger perc.entage of
·expenditures in poorer states, for
example an 80 percent subsidy
instead of the 50 percent subsidy
a richer state receives, but the
actual dollar amount of federal
contributions per poor person is
lower In poor states than in rich
ones ," because the poorest states
contribute so very little to the
program, the report said.
The consumer group recom·
niended that Medicaid cover ail
persons whose Incomes fall
below t)le federal poverty line of
$9,120 income In 1986 for a family
of three.
Tlte study found that the
poorest states are spending "far
less on Medicaid per poor person
than the states with the best
programs, even when state
spending per poor person is
adjusted to account for the
economic status of each state,"
shOwing the poor states had a
" lack of commitment" as well as
lack of money, according to the
group.

Local officials were joined by
units from surrounding counties.
Contacted to send units to assist
were McArthur, Logan. Jackson ,
Vinton, Ross, Franklin, Washing·
ton, Musklngum. Gallla and
Athens County officials and at
least six of those counties had
officers on the scene today. In
· addition, a security firm hired by
the Meigs Local Board of Educa·
lion had officers on the scene
today.
Vandalism broke ou ast Frl·
day at Meigs High School when
an inservice meeting was held
for the substitute teachers who
have been employed for the
duration of the strike. It is
alleged that some 40 vehicles of
the substitutes were vandalized
by the mass pickets from the
teachers association.
The court order, among other
things, provided that the
teachers after Friday would be
permitted to have no more than
two pickets at each school and
the order provided that there
would be no harassment. vandalism. and access and egress to
each school woulq be open. It
forbid any mass picketing.
According to reports this morn·
.lng, two pickets were at each
school along with the various
police officers who were on hand
to maintain order. However, it
was also reported that a large
group of the striking teachers
was moving from schOol to school
throughout the district locating
near the buildings.
Late this morning, It was
reported that a h!llf dozen arrests
had been made and that offend·
ers were being taken to the
coun ty jail.
Attendance was not up to par
on the first day of the reopening
of the schools. At the Pomeroy
Elementary School, 93 students
out of about 240 were on hand for
classes and at Meigs High School
there were 240 students present

out of the enrollment of about 800.
Some schools reported that a
number of p~rents accompanied
their children into their respective school buildings and that
parents Indicated they would be
willing to help in any way
possible. At Middleport Elemen·
tary School a large group of
parents was on hand outside the
building ca ' ng signs reading
"P
or E cation" .
It was report
that school
!strict were
buses of the
guarded througho t the night
Sunday so they would be ready to
roll for this morning's opening of
classes. One employee of the
district reported that she has
been threatened and has filed
charges because of damages
done to her vehicle. She and her
family spent the night on guard
at their home.
It W'!S reported that Supt. Dan
.E . Morris and board of education
members were In conference
with Prosecuting Attorney Fred·
erick W. Crow III late this
morning apparently on further
actions to be taken and enforcement of earlier court actions ..
None of the officials were availa-'
ble for comment. Sheriff Howard
Frank and his. department were
at various locations and Sheriff
Frank was not available for
comment.
According to the regular sche·
dule for the Meigs Local District.
tomorrow was to have been the
last day of classes before Christ·
mas vacation. However, classes
will now be held through Wednesday before the holiday break
begins ..
Meantime, Board ofEdlJcation·
President Robert Snowden re·
ported that another negotiations
session has been set between the
board and the striking teachers
for tomorrow. Federal Mediator
David Thorley will handle that
session.

Progres~

made
on budget,
Reagan says

WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres·
ldent Reagan said today progress has been made on the
bugget. which gives the Contras
more money, but he again
pledged to veto the $606 bllllon
spending bill If it restores the
controversial ''fairness
doctrine."
Reagan's comments came at a
picture-taking session opening a
meeting with a panE:! of Senate
Republicans studying the new
arms deal with the Soviet Union
that eliminates superpower
short - a11d medium-range
missiles .
"I have said I would and I
will," Reagan said when asked if
he would veto the catch-all
spending blll if it contains language restoring the "fairness
doctrine." a r ule eliminated
earlier by the Federal Communi·
cations Commission that re·
qulred broadcasters to provide
time for all viewpoints to be
·.heard on controversial issues.
The btJI under consideration
contains that provision.
But Reagan added: "I think
progress has been made. I hope
that they can get (a spending
bill) down here that I can sign so
we ail can go home lor
Christmas."
Senate Republican leader Ro bert Dole of Kansas said alter the

, VANDALISM- This truck was one of approximately 41 vehicles
allegedly damaged when substitute teachers met at the Meigs
IDgh School Friday for an lnservlce session prior to the reopening
of schools on Monday while teachers of the district remain on
strike. A long white scrape apparently 111ade by a sharp objeotls at ·
the back of the truck's bed. SherUf Howard Frank who Iears more
vandalism to private property RS well as school buses, says arrests
will follow as a resalt ot Friday's vandalism. (Times-Sentinel
photot)
'

'

meeting that the budget summit
agreement called for elimination
of the Issue and Congress should
.
keep Its word.
think it' s foolhardy to take

. ·:r

the risk of throwing ou t all these
weeks of work over the fairness
doctrine." said Sen. Pe te Domenic!, the senior GOP member on
Continued on page 7

�•

Monday. December 21. 1987

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

~l:h

tllffiiltl
~v

.

~'--r"II"'T"'l!!!c::l, ....

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
A88lslant Publlsher/Cootroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General MaDager

A MEMBER of The Unlt"!! Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welrome. They should be less than 300 words
long. All letters aresub)eet toedltlngand must be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wlll be published. Letters shou ld be in
good taste, addressing issues, not persooalltles.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, December 21, 1987

'

WASHINGTON - The U.S.
economy has come a tong way
since the Great Depression, but
·the New Deal safety nets thrown
up to make sure it doesn 't happen
again may not be enough to stop a
recession.
Not the least of the factors
setting you up for that recession
are the $148 billion federal budget
deficit and the plunge ofthestock
market.
The first means that the
federal government will get tight
with its money and the second
means that you will get tight with
yours.
Our sources warn that the
worst scenario Is a scramble by
businesses and households to sell

their assets to raise cash, speclfl·
cally wholesale dumping of real
estate onto the market. It could
happen on the neighbOrhood level
and on an International scale.
Japanese investors, who now
finance much of the U.S. debt,
could dump their American
assets to raise cash. Assets used
as loan collateral would be sold at
deflated values and bankruptcy
would not be far behind.
The 36 percent drop In the stock.
market between Aug. 25 and Oct.
19 meant a drop of $500 billion In
household net worth. Prelimina ry government estimates
show that you and people like you
will be spending $60 bllllon to$100
bllllon less because of what you

lost In th e market. When you
don't buy the big- tl9ket Items
such as cars or home Improvements, and when business cut
back their own capital spending,
unemployment Is likely to rise.
Our sources say you ca&amp;expect
major co nfrontations between
unions and management in late
1988 and Into 1989 as workers
demand more job security. Low
wage gains and competlllon from
imports wlll mean a decline in
the power of unions.
The normal federal response to
a recession Is to increase the
money supply and lower Interest
rates. But 11 that comes In the
near future, some federal offl·
clals tell us privately that the

Letters to the edit.o r
Priorities
To the Editor:
issue entirely). What I resent Is
Prtoritles ...where do the prior· the fact that a group of educated
!ties of the Meigs Local School professionals are resorting to
District lie? That sc hool district outdated blue-collar tactics to
Includes merchant s. parents, get their way. No one suffers but
children, and significant others the children. Let 's face It, the
as well asboard members, ad- discrepancy between the MLTA
ministrators, and teachers. The and the Meigs Local Board
fact remains that the right of the should not direc tly involve our
teachers to strike is Infringing on children. There are better ways
the right of Meigs local youth to to receive funding than through
be educated. dn the other hand, if threats and Intimidation .
the teachers were forced back to
We have a unified goal.. .eduwork, the students would be cate our youth to the best of our
Infringing upon the teachers ability . We need a unified front.
right to strike. I ask you ... which The problem will not disappear
takes priority?
by dividing our forces between
I · am not against teachers pro-union and antl·unlon advomaking good money (provided cates.
Oleir salary Is c&lt;;&gt;mensurate with
Todd R. King
the quality of teaching- another
Co ncerned Parent

Today in history

,.

By United Press International
; Today is Monday, Dec. 21, the 355th day of 1987 with 10 to follow .
The moon Is waxing, moving toward its first quarter.
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 Florentine Renaissance painter Masaccio In 1401, British
statesman Benjamin Dlsraell In 1804, Soviet dictator Josef Stalin in
1879. Austrian President Kurt Waldhelm In 1918 (age 69) , talk show
host Phil Donahue In 1935 (age 52), actress Jane Fonda In 1937 (age
50), rock musician Frank Zappa In 1940 (age 47), and tennis player
Chris Evert Lloyd in 1954 (age 33).
On this date in history:
In 1620, the Pilgrims arrived at Plymouth, Mass., following a 63·day
voyage aboard the Mayflower.
In 1913, the first crossword puzzle in an American newspaper
appeared in The New York Sunday World .
In 1937, Walt Dlsney's: 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" opened
in Los Angeles, the first full·length animated feature film.
In 1942, the Supreme Court upheld the validity of six-week divorces
granted in Nevada. In 1975, six terrorists burst Into a VIenna meeting
of the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, kl)led three
people, and took 70 hostages Including 11 OPEC oil ministers.
A thought for the day: Benjamin Dlsraeli wrote, "Variety is the
mother ol En)oymen~."

o,; .

•

·.
-~­
~-

1-.A

Indians rally from 42-28 deficit to top.
Marshall 43-42 for national 1-AA crown:
•

'

POCAT-ELLO, Idaho (UPI) downs," 41-12 over James Madi- remaini ng to ·kill the Herd's
Northeast Louisiana's players,
son, 51-23 over Weber State and chances.
encouraged by previous come24-10 over top·seeded AppalachWith second-seeded Northeast
. ..
·
back victories. were confident , Ian 'State.
. trailing No. 14 Marshall by 14,
they could overcome a 14-polnt
For some, however, Northeast Humphries rallied the Indians
deficit to win the 1987 NCAA
Louisiana's title will be dimin- with a 10-yard screen pass for a
Ished by Holy Cross's refusal of a TD to Ken Johnson. Then, after a
Division I-AA title.
The Indians did just that after
tournament bid. Holy Cross Matshall punt, he engineered an
trailing Marshall 42-28 in the
(11-0) was the only unbeaten SO-yard drive fQr · the winning
fourth quarter Saturday night.
Division l-AA team and ended score.
Humphries also threw TD
They scored 15 points In the final
the season ranked No. 1.
period night to pull out a 43-42
Stan Humphries led the Indi- passes of 5 yards to Mike·
Division I-AA championship
ans, passing for 436 yards and Manzullo in the second quarter
three touchdowns. Humphries and 9 to Chris Jones In the third.
victory.
also ran 2 yards for the game- Freshman Henry Richard gave
"There's no question about lt.
tying TD with 7: 19 remaining and Northeast, 13-2, a pair of first·
We've been there before," lndi·
Teddy Garcia then kicked the hail 'I'Ds on runs of 15 and 7
ans Coach Pat Collins said.
winning extra point. '
yards .
"We've been In this situation so
Marshall Coach George
many times. I realized our
"Our players did not .gfve up,"
players wouldn't panic."
said Collins. "And, after we got Chaump said two key plays
Northeast Louisiana reached
the lead, we came up wttn the big probably decided the outcome.
On the game's first play, Bruce
the finals by beating Eastern defensive plays."
Kentucky 33-32 in the final· 14
Richard Green recovered a Hammond dropped a 40·yard
seconds and edging Northern Marshall fumble at the Indian 7 Petersen pass that could have
Iowa 44-41 in overtime.
. . with · three minutes left, and gone for an easy score. And in the
"Marshall wasn't ready for Perry Harper Intercepted Tony first half's closing seconds,
that pressure," Collins said. Petersen at midfield with :56 Humphries hit Kenneth Burton
"They won all their tournament
games by at least two touch -

policy could backfire. Declining .•
interest rates cou ld cause a drop
In the dollar, which would raise
the cost of Imported goods and
rekindle Inflation . In a vicious
circle. the Federal Reserve
Board would have to tighten lis
monetary policy and drive tip
interest rates: Then you would .
stop spending money again.
It isn 'I a pretty picture for the
Fed . As we reported earlier, an
unpredented agreement may be
In lh~ oiling between the Reagan
administration and the independent Federal Reserve Board. The
administration - would matte
budget cuts If the Fed promises
to lower interest ra tes
substantially.
One private study concluded
that even If interest rates went
down by only 2 percent, the
budget deficit would be trimmed
by $47 million simply because of
the lower tnterest payments on
the national debt.
Insiders who keep track of
these things notice disturbing
similarities between the current
eco nomy and the conditions
leading up to the Greatj)epresslon. The Depression t:t'ught us
enough to install safeguards,
such as federal deposit Insurance, but even the optimists get
nervous when the Roaring '20s
and the Soaring '80s are stacked
up side by side.

slow down the Soviet Union's charities. It certainly won't take
cruelly expensive military com- Speaker Wright and his cronies
petition with the United States,
long to forget that it was only this
we ought not to forget that he country's Impressive military
undoubtedly also anticipates ma- buildup during the Reagan ad·
jor affirmative benefits from this
ministration, and above ali the
latest exercise In summitry.
president's dogged commitment
One measure of the potential
to the concept of a space shield,
gain for Gorbachev Is all those . that brought the Russians back to
polls of American public opinion the bargaining table In a cooperashowing him with an "approval tive mood.
rating" higher than that of
And right behind the Handout
President Reagan or any other Brigade will come the greedy
American political leader, Such businessmen. Their Itch to make
statistics are no doubt deceptive, a profit easily overpowers any
of course. because those questi- scruples they may have about
oned are obviously judging Rea- doing business with dictators, or
gan and other American figures selling the Kremlin the technol·
by American standards, while ogy It so desperately needs from
instinctively comparing Gorba- the West. Only laws, rigorously
_chev (favorably) to his stolid enforced, have thus far prepredecessors who -never sm lied vented them (In many cases)
and had wives built like medium from selling the Soviets industanks.
trial secrets inqispensa ble to the
defen se of freedom.
But Congress won't need much
In that connection, incidenencouragement to decide th at, tally, President Reagan will be
with a nice fe llow like Gorbachev well advised to keep a sharp eye
running the Kremlin, this coun- on his new secretary of comtry can afford to cut back on the merce, William Verity. Verity
military budget and slu ice all has long advocated greater ·U.S.·
those billions into giveaway Soviet trade, and his departprogral!ls (o r their pet welfare ment, as luck would have it, is

TISDALE REACTS- Indiana Pacer Wayman Tisdale reacts to
running Into the defense of the Cavaliers' John Wllllams durtng the
first half of Sunday's game in Richfield Coliseum. The Cavaliers
won 127-116. (UPI)

Black Tuesday in 1929 came
about two months after the bull
market had peaked. BlackMonday on Oct. 19 occurred two
months alter a market peak in
la te August. A period of protectionism, agricu ltural depress ion,
currency !stability and speculation heralded both collapses.

primarily responsible for -enforcIng the laws against the sale of
certain ca tegories of products to
Moscow.
Above all, the American people
must resist the unstated Implication behind much that they will
be hearing, in the comi ng
months, in the media: the idea
that the United States, and the
West generally, have now .accepted the proposition•that there
Is some sort of basic moral
equivalence between the.world's ·
free nations and the slave states
of th e communist bloc. We have
done no such thing.
In one of his public comments
while in Washington, Gorbachev
re mar keB, "The president said
yesterday , 'Why don't you allow
freer emigration? Why don't you
Jet all th e people who want to
leave your country leave?' And I
asked the preside nt, 'Why do you ·
have quotas on entry into your
country? Why are tliere mac.hlne
guns on the Mexican border?'"
Gorbachev pretended that the
si tua tions were parallel, whereas In fact they are precisely
opposite. Moral eq uiva lence, my
eye.

To 'summit' up ------;-.._____G_e_or..ge_M_cG_o_ve_r_n
::::.
A year ago. while President !Ions weaken the nuclear deterReagan struggled to preserve his rent and place too much strain on
presidency after the Iran-contra
Wesr.ern conventional forces.
scandals, former President RiHowever, the proposed strachard Nixon and I were asked If tegic reductions will still leave
Reagan could retrieve his leader· each side with nearly 5,000
ship position. Each of us said this strategic nuclear warheads . could be done If Reagan held a each one much more powerful
summit with Mikhail Gorbachev than the Hiroshima bomb of 1945.
and negotiated a success arms
The only practical purpose for
agreement.
nucl ear weapons Is to deter the
Now that has happened, and other side from using. them. For
according to public ppinlon polls
this purpose 5,000 missiles are as
Reagan has climbed back to a 60 effective as 10,000. In addition,
percent approval rating with the each side retains thousands of
American people. The same . short-range nuclear missiles and
surveys show that the public ' nucl ~ar artillery weapons to say
overwhelmingly supports th e
nothing of nuclear weapons carnew arms reduction agreement.
rying aircraft.
I have always believed th e
Further, Gorbachev and Reasentiment for arms reduction
gan have already discussed
and peace Is stronger among the reductions In conventional forces
people of all nations than it Is with Gorbachev indicating that
among politicians and military
he understands th e need to adj ust
strategists. The late President
Soviet superiority In tanks and
Eisenhower, who shared this
manpower If the nuclear agreeview, once told then British
ments go forward . .
Prime Minister Harold MacmilMore Important than the exact
lan: "I believe that the people of mathematical fo rmul as worked
the world want peace so badly out In arms reduction agreethat some day their leaders had
ments is the process Itself. There
better get out of the way an d let ca n be little doubt that direct
them have it."
conversations between Gorba·
The eilmlnatlon of Intermechev and Reagan have given
diate and shorter· range missiles
each man a better understanding
from Europe as provided In the
of the fears and hopes of the
new treaty certainly Is a gain lor
other.
the United States and the West In
It Is also clear that the
that the Soviets have agreed to
extensive media coverage of the
eliminate four missiles fm· each summit offered Americans and
U.S. missile eliminated.
Russians a feeling for their
Likewise, the proposed agreeshared humanity and their comment for a mutual reduction by 50
moh concerns over survival In
percent of strategi'C missile sys·
the nuclear age.
terns to be negoNated perhaps
The major . unresolved Issue
next summer also makes good
between the .two sides turns on
sense.. Some critics worry that
the "Star Wars" SDI project,
these proposed nuclear reduc·
which the pres ident has pus hed

•

despite !he skepticism of most
scientists and arms experts and
despite Its Incredible cost.
Congress has temporarily
blocked any testing of SDI that
might vlo)ate the ABM Trea ty
until October 1988. It is possible,
on the basis of this congressional
check, that Gorbachev might
agree to the pr,oposed 50 percent
strategic reduction in 1988 even If

the pres ident continues to insist
on SDI.
II Is also possible tha t Reagan
might agree to some kind of
compromise on this Issue so that
other aspects of arms reduction
can go forward. Next year's
presidentia l election may · also
have something to say about SDI
and related issues.

Berry's World

:

with a 52-yard pass to set up :
ManztiUo's TO reception on the
next play.
"We wanted to score on that
first pl,ay, but the ball was just
dropped," said Chaump. "And :
there's no reason to let Burton :
have that catch. Those two things ·
probably hurt more than ·
anything.''
Petersen passed for 474 yards,
including third-quarter touch·
downs of 9 yards to Mike Barber,
29 to Keith Baxter and 17 to .
Hammond. He also threw a :
9-yard TO pass to Baxter In the ·
second quarter, but had three ·
interceptions .
The other first-half scores for
the Herd, 10·5, came on field ;
goals of 33 and 31 yards by Brian ·
Mitche ll , when Northeast :
sto'pped drives Inside its 15. The '
Indians also sacked backup quar·
terback Gregg Supsura for a ••
16-yard loss on a fake field goal in ·
the first period.

'

Bobcats down Falcons, .6 0-54 ~

Cavs battle back to
top Pacers, 127-116

Mter the. ball of power_ _ _ _W_il-'--lia_m_Ru_sh_er
For Amerlca~s. the most dangerous moment of any summit
comes when it's over. A summit,
with Its sense of achievement
(real or false), strikes many
people as a splendid excuse to
relax. We should be wary of that
Impulse.
It Is all the more tempting In
the present Instance because
t))ere almost certainly are real
changes going on In the Soviet
Union.lt hardly matters whether
(as President Reagan perhaps
too optimistically suggested, to
the annoyance of hard -line conservatives) Mikhail Gorbachev
has forsworn the tradditlonal
communist goal of world domination. The point Is that Gorbachev
must know he isn 't going to .
achieve it. He must realize that In
fact his country will have trouble
maintaining its rank as a superpower In the 21st century If he
doesn't manage to reinvigorate
its sclerotic Marxist economy
with infusions of free -market
principles.
But if '(it Is justifiable to
conclude tHat (iorbachev is prob·
ably In earnest, !or entirely
selfish reasons, in wanting to

The Daily Sentiriei-Page·- 3
•
•

The next depression _B_y_Ja_ck_A_n_de_rso_n_a_n_d_D_al_e_~_an_A_t_ta

GOP joy, Democratic dismay
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
.
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON- The glggl!ng you heard last Tuesday after Gary
Hart returned to the presidential race was coming from the
Republican National Committee. The moaning was from the
Democratic National Committee.
The former senator from Colorado, of course, has a perfect right to
resume his campaign for the Democratic nomination and not even the
candidates most Ukely to be hurt by his latest 180-degree turn
presumed to say otherwise.
· But It Is hard to think of anything that could help the confused
Republican presidential picture more than to further confuse the
already ttmroughly muddled Democratic presidential picture.
Entirely apart from the Issue that forced Hart out of the contest last
fall, It Is hard to understand what, other than a desire tor vindication
at best or self-Indulgence at worst, motivated Hart to re-enter the
race.
- He said himself he has no money and no organization and, as a
former candidate and campaign manager, he knows that the odds
against winning a major party nomination without them approach
the figures used in expressing the distances between planets or even
the national debt.
Certainly Hart ean run a vWI;&gt;Ie campaign in New Hampshire.
First, the circumstances of hlS withdrawal and the hunger of the
media. especially television, for excitement In what has become a
' campaign of (God forbid ) Issues guarantees .Hart will get a lot of
coverage In the crucial first weeks of his renewed campaign.
Second, he won the New Hampshire prtmary in 1984 and has the
advantage of better recognition there than any other Democrat save
Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakls.
Third, if there is any state where a candidate can go it alone, it .is
New Hampshire, whose citizens love the quadrennial attention they
g€'1 from outlanders who would be president and the media that
follows them through snowdrifts no Yankee In his right mind would
brave.
But despite New Hampshire's boast that noonewlns the presidency
without winning its primary, It also Is true that half of the winners
there never move into the White House. Some Democrats would take
a Hart victory In New Hampshire as an omen pointing to a Republican
victory in November.
But that isn' t tl)e reason for the GOP glee and the Democratic
dismay about Hart's decision. More Ukely, that is the result ot the
total lack of concern for the Democratic Party both In Hart's decision
and his statement at Concord.
Har t did not say that the other six ,candidates were falling to
represent the Democratic ideal or to propose the kind of solutlons to
national problems that set their party apart from the GOP ,
He did say the other candidates had failed to offer Gary Hart's Ideas
and that was one of the reasons he was returni'ng. He put even more
emphasis on his need to avoid the disgrace of quitting. Hart, like
Robert Bork, Insisted on playing out a lost-cause hand of cards.
Forcing the voters to render the decision that Hart made himself
last spring may be therapeutic for the man, but it doesn't do much for
the political party that embraced him for more than two decades or
for the process of selecting a president in 1988. If, as some expect,
Hart's re·entry further complicates the situation, It may prove to
have been one of the most costly ego trips since Callgula declared
himself to be a god and his horse to be a senator.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

t

.

'

Hubbard scored eight points
RICHFU:LD, Ohio (UP!) Cleveland Cavaliers coach down the stretch as Cleveland
Lenny Wilkens asked his squad to pulled away.
Ramsay was ·disappointed In
pick up Its intensity and his
starting front line stepped for- the play of his front line. "Our
inside guys aren't taking it (the
ward and took, charge.
Trailing Indiana by seven bail) to the basket," said
points at halftime. John "Hot Ramsay.
The Pacers lack of an Inside
Rod" Williams, Phil Hubbard
and Brad Daugherty began game hurt them at the free throw
hounding the Pacers' big men line, where they converted only
defensively and working the ball six of 11 attempts: none by their
Inside for a va riety·of layups and s tarting trio up front. "It's a
dunks, leading the Cavaliers to a result of us not putting the bail
inside and our post guys not doing
127-116 victory Sunday night.
The triumph was Cleveland's ·something with it."
fifth straight at the Richfield
Cleveland made 33 or 40 free
Coliseum, the Cavs' longest throws , 16 by the starting front
home winning streak since April line.
Williams led the Cavaliers with
1985.
"Our intensity picked up In the 23 points, his seasonal high , and
second half, " said Wilkens. "We Ehlo matched his best game of
became much more aggressive the year with 20. Daugh·e rty
defensively. We kept good man- a dded 19 and Hubbard scored 18.
to·man pressure and it helped
Person paced Indiana with 26
turn the game."
points, while Steve Stlpa novich
Indiana led 62-55 at halftime and John Long e\ich .scored 16.
/
because of outstanding outside
shootin g. The Pacers made 30 of
Roundup
46 field goal attempts In the first
Boston used a paralyzing dehalf (65.2 percent), with most fense Sunday to give Philadelcoming on perimeter jump shots . phia a drubbing the likes of which
Chuck Person had 17 points at the the 76ers hadn't. gotten from . the
half, and Indiana seemed in Celtics in 24 years.
control. '
Boston, which routed Philadelphia
124-87, had Its previous
"They (Pacers) shoot very
biggest
margin of victory aga inst
well from the outside," said
Philadelphia
in 1963, the year
Daugherty . "Even their big guys
Charles
Barkley
was born; a
can hit the jumper. We decided to
112-78
drubbing.
make th em shoot over us . We just
The. 76ers hold the record for
had to work them hard. "
the
bigges t rout In the rivals'
The Cava liers responded to
Wilkens' call in the thi-rd quarter. series, a 138-96 triumph in 1966.
Larry Bird and reserve Mark
With guards Mark Price and
Acres
each scored 19 points for
Greg Ehlo forcing turnovers with
th
e
Celtics,
who limited the 76ers
pressure defense, Clevela nd
to
39
percent
shooting while
star ted working the bail inside.
forcing
19
turnovers.
In the
The Cavs scored 13 straight
decisive
first
half,
Philadelphia
points to take an 81-78 lead with
5: 21"left in th e period and never shot 33 percent and trailed 73-34
at halftime.
trailed again.
," You can. think of a thousand
Daugherty scored 11 points In
excuses,
but the bottom line is
the quarter and Williams added
they
just
manhandled us, " said
10 as the Cavs led 93-90 . ·
Pacers coach Jack Ramsay Barkley, who led the 76ers with 18
also cred ited Cleveland's de- points. "There's no use making
fense for the reversal. "They excuses."
"They executed well, played
turned the juice up at the
grea
t defe~tse arid took us out of
defensive end, and I thought
our
game,"
76ers Coach Matt
Price and Elho, in particular, did
Guokas
said.
a very good job. " sald Ramsay.
Boston's biggest lead was 49
Ehlo had five steals in the second
points
midway through the
half.
quarter
. Philadelphia was
fourth
Indiana cut the lead to 95-94 on
no
closer
than
35 points In the
two stra ight baskets by Person
second
half.
early in the fourth quarter but

WINS IOOTH GAME- Mike
Jenkins, boys' head basketball coach at Hannan Trace
Jllgh School, won his JOOth
career game at Hannan Trace
Friday nlghl with an 85-77
victory over rival Southern.
Jenkins, In his eighth year as
Wildcat mentor, has 206 total
victories as a varsity coach.

Name Kelly
coach of year
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPI) Mike Kelly, who led his University of Dayton team to tile NCAA
Division Ill national finals, was
chosen by his peers as Ohio
Coach of the Year.
Ohio's football coaches voting
In the annual Columbus Dispatch
poll gave Kelly 11 first-place
votes and 41 total points. Youngstown State's Jim Tressel got six
first-place votes and 38 total
points for second place.
Results were announced in
Sunday's paper.
Dayton, 11-3, lost 19-3 to
Wagner In the title game Dec. 12
in the Amos Alonzo Stagg Bowlin
Phenix City, Ala . The Flyers'
greatest achievement during the
season was an up set of four-time
defending national champion Au gustana In the quarterfinals.
"Any chance ! . could get it
exchanged for the national championship?" he asked the news·
paper when informed of the
honor. "Call that guy at Wagner
and see If he'll trade the Ohio
Coach of the Year fort he national
title. "
Ke lly. 39, has a 63-17 record at
Dayton.
Third-'place in the balloting
when to Roger Welsh of c:;apital,
followed by Don Charlton of
Hiram, Glen Mason of Kent
State. Carlin Carpenter of Bluffton and Billy Joe of Central State
tied for sixth; Earle Bruceofohlo
STate and Mike Hallway of Ohio
Wesleyan tied for eighth and
Fred Martinelli of Ashland and
Larry Kehres of Mount Union,
last year's winner, tied for lOth.

By GARY CLARK
OVP News Stall
Poor shooting and the Inability.
to keep the opposition from
getting the high percentage shots
were the deciding factors In ·
• Coach Lewis Halls' Wahama
White Falc~ns suffering their
second con/;ecutlve hardcourt
setback Saturday evening as.the
visiting Kyger Creek Bobcats
claimed a 60-54 decision from the
Bend Area team in the Falcons
1987-88 home opener .
Wahama, after scoring an
impressive 91 points earlier In
the week against Calhoun
County, found their shooting
touch ice cold against the Bobcats with the WHS clj.gers connecting on just 21 of 76 field goal
tries for a disappointing 27.6
percent. The Bend Area team
converted '16 of 56 attempts from
two point range and five of 20
tries from behind the three point
circle.
While the White Falcons were
experiencing their offensive
troubles the visiting Bobcats
continually got the ball Inside on
the WHS defense for easy baskets
with the visitors shooting 44.2
percent from the floor on 23 of 52
endeavors . Kyger Creek connected on 21 of 47 from twp point
range and two of five from the
three point area.
Wahama trailed by just three
points after eight minutes of play
despite going the first 4:28 of the
contest without a joint. Senior
point guard Robbie Grimm hit a
15 ioot jump shot with 3:32
remaining in the period to break
the Falcons scoring drought with
Kyger Creek holding a 9-6 edge
after eight minutes.
The Bobcats, behind the scar·
ing of Chad Leach and the
rebounding strength ot Bill Love·
day tallied thefirstelghtpolntsof
the second canto to take a 17-6
lead before the Falcon cagers
began .to rally late In the half to
trim the deficit to three at 24-21
with 2:19 remaining in the half.
Kyger Creek scored the final five
points of the quarter to increase
their lead to 29-21 as the first half
came to a close.
Mike Bradbury led the Bobcats
to seven unanswered points to
begin third quarter action and
give Kyger Creek their largest
lead of the evening at 36-21 but
with just under two minutes
remaining in the stanza Robbie
G'r imm caught fire tor Wahama
and led a WHS rally that saw the
Bend Area team close to within
five at 44-39 by. the periods end .
The early moments of the

fourth quarter found each team court on Tuesday, Dec. 29, when ' ·
trading baskets back and forth
they host visiting Spencer In an
with Kyger Creek maintaining a LKC conference game. Tipoff'
four to six point advantage. With time for the preliminary contest ·
4:34 to play Grimm connected on Is 6:00 p.m. with the varsity ·
a long range three pointer to pull action following 20 minutes after
Wahama to within three at 50-47 the conclusion of the juniorbut that would be as close as the varsity action.
White Falcons would get as the
locals hit another cold streak at a
WAHAMA (54)
. Robbie
most Inopportune time and Grimm 6-5-1-28; Billy Zuspan
Kyger Creek converted from the 3-0·0-6; Bobby Kincaid 2-0-2-6; ·
charity stripe down the stretch to
Brad Bumgarner 2·0-1-5; Bart
preserve a 60-54 win.
Davis 2-0-1-5; Larry Goodnite
Individual game high scoring 1-0-1-3; Jeff Noble 0-0-1-1. TO. ·
honors went to the White Falcons TALS - ·16-5-7-54
6'1" senior point guard Robbie " KYGER CREEK (60) - Mike
Grimm. Grimm finished the Bradbury 6-0·3-15; Chad Leach
night with 28 points on six flj!ld
4-2-1-15; Bill Loveday 6-0-2-14;
goals, five three point goals and
Mike Reese 2-0·4·8; Tom Wilson ·
one of two from the llne and was
2-0-2-6; Ted Perry 1-0-0-2. TQ.'
the only Falcon to reach the TALS- 21-2-12-60
double figure plateau.
Field goals - Kyger Creek. 23
Kyger Creek placed three men
of 52,..«./&gt;ercent. Wahama, 21 of•
in double figures with Mike .76, 27 pereent.
'•
Bradbury and Chad Leach totalFoul shooting - Kyger Creek.
ing 15 markers each while Bill 12 of 28, 42 percent. Wahama, 7 of·
Loveday adqed 14.
,
13, 54 percent.
The Bobcats recorded a 50-40
Score by quarters
edge In rebounds with Loveday
Kyger Creek...... 9 20 15 16-6()
securing a game high. 15 while
Wahama ............ 6 15 18 15-54
Bradbury, Leach and Wilson
Reserve game- Waha·ma 50'
KC48
.
collected eight caroms each.
Brad Bumgarner paced the
White Falcons on the boards with
12 rebounds with Billy Zuspan
The Daily Sentinel
adding eight and Bart Davis
seven. Kyger Creek committed
(USPS 145-960)
18 turnovers while Wahama was
A Divis loll of MuUlrnedla. In c.
guilty of eight ball handling
P ublished every afternoon, Monday
miscues.
1hrough Friday, 111 Court Sl., PoAn exciting junior varsity
meroy, Ohi o, by the Ohio VuUcy Pubcontest preceded the varsity
lishing Company / Multimedia, Inc.,
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992-2156. Seaction Saturday night with Frank
co nd cl ass postage paid at Pomeroy,
Capehart's Little Falcons evenOnto.
Ing their 1987-88 slate to 1-1 on the
Member: United Pres s Int ernational,
year with a 50-48 win over the
Inland Dally Press Association and the
Bobklttens.
Ohio Newspaper Association. National
Advert tslng Represe ntative, Branham
Wahama fe.ll behind early by a
Newspaper Sales, 733 Third Avenue,
12-0 margin before·battling back
New York. New York l00l7.
late In the contest to capture the
POSTMASTER: Send address_changes
"victory. WHS sophomore Ryan
to The Dally Sentinel, 1ll Co urt St. ,
Wood set up the game winning
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.
basket with a steal and a
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
beautiful assist to freshman
By Carrier or Motor Route
.guard John Barnltz with just: 12
One Week ...... ... .......... ................ $1. 25
One Month ................ ...... .... ..... .. $5.45
sect&gt;nds remaining to give WaOne Yea r ............... ... .......... ..... $65.00
hama the victory.
SINGLE COPY
Tom McDermitt paced the
PRICE
White Falcon offense with 16
Dally ................................... 25 Cents
points followed by Barmtz with 14
Subscribers net dt'Siring to pay the car·
and Shannon Barrett with 12
rler m ay r emit In advance direct to
The Dally Sent inc! on a 3, 6 or 12 month
while Sipple and Nibert led the
basis. Credit will be given carrier each
Bobkittens with 21 and 12 points
week .
respectively.
No subscript Ions by mall permitted in
Waha rna returns to the hard·
an'a!; wh ere hom e ear rier se rvi ce Is
available.

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT A~S,
.~::
ARANDV ..·
· TOOL

Mall Suh!icrlptlonlil
Insid e Melgs County
13 Weeks .. ...... ....... .... ........... .... $17.29
26 Weeks .................................. $34.06
52 Weeks ................................. $66.56
Outside Meigs County
13 Weeks ....... ..................... ..... $18.20
26 Weeks ....................... , .......... $35.10
52 Weeks ............ ..................... 567.60 .

.::

REPEAT
PERFORMANCE
~·~

'

'

MONDAY, DECEMBER 21 ST
AND

TUESDAY( DECEMBER 22ND
15 iNCH LARGE

LATE SliOPPERS SALE

25°/o
OFF
STOREWIDE

i

I
I

II Corner Collections
I
I.

129 MILL ST.

z

MIDDLEPORT

OPEN DAily 10:00 TO 5:30
c;;;;i(\
I
FRIDAY UNTil 8:00 p.M.
\1IWif!
~-11011-Mirtl&lt;fji!MIMIMIMI _ _ _ _ _ _ rtl&lt; ... ll""l""MI""".!ES:i

.

(

•

Pepperoni Pizia

ssoo.

4:00 p.M.- 11 :00 p.M.
"ORDEI EAILY"
. EAT IN 01 CAllY

MEIGS
HUMANE SOCIETY
ONE OF .OUR MANY
NICE CATS FOR
ADOPTION. GIVE ONE
OF THESE BABIES A
GOOD HOME.
CALL· 992-3026 01
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ADDITONAL TOPPING ...... 90&lt;

OUT ONLY! .
NO DRIYUIES ON
THIS SPECIAL OFFEII

WE HAVE GIFT CERTIFICATES
AVAILABLE IN ANY AMOUNT

•

�•

Monday, Dec8mber 21, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

B~owns step away from third straigh'

AFC title; Bengals lose to New Orleans

INCOMPLETE PASS - Browns defensive lineman Carl "Big
Daddy" Hairston (78) grabs Los Angeles Raider quarterback·
Marc Wilson (6) around the waist as Wilson tried to pass during the
second quarter of Sunday's game In Los Angeles. The pass was
lncomplele. The Browns went on to defeat the Raiders 24·17. ( UPI)

This week's games
Thl~ Week'!!
Ohio Co lleKl' Ba.'ikf'thllll Sd~edul e
I'Jy Untied l'ret~~&gt; lnk&gt;rr~~~llunal
Monel~· . Dt&gt;c. 21
Uuquune at BowllllJ!'O Gretn
Charleston t \\'. Va) at Kent St

Oblo Unh at

:

Ttn~Mle

PIU.sb11rgh ut Alron
Allhland a.l Capltlll

Hddelberr Holiday Tn urney
TuNIJ~Y,

Dec. 2~

Mar)'land-BaiUmorl' Count)' al Ohio st
t:t&gt;ntral Michigan u.t \\o'rl~~:ht Jolt
Metropolitan Sl nl ClndMall

Eutern Mh:h at flel'elund St

Sundll)''s ResuHs
Philadelphia 3M, Nll' ·Mii '.!7
Mlnnesot'll D. Df&gt;troll 14
N.-w F.nxhtnd 1:1, Bufl~lo 7
Nf'"' 0rii!an.'ltl,£1nclnnat12-'
HoU'!tun21, Phl!ibui"J{h IS
Sealllr 31 1 Chicago '! I
~ an t"'randst•o ~ . 1\Uanta li
!'it . Louis 3 1, Tampu Hay 1-1
CIC\'eland 2~ . LA Rald1•n; 17
lndhlnapoll~ :!II. Nan DIPSt• 7
Mlltml 'Z3, Washington !I
Monday's G1wH'
Dalla.~ at LA RIUTl:ot, 9 p.m .
s 1t1 urdtt.y, Ike. '!li
Clt•wland nt PIUsburgh, 12 : 30 p.m .

Ohio Sl al Laho Clas!lk

" ' ll.'ihlnjtton at Mlnni'Sulll, ~p . m .
Sunduy , Oet•. 21
N\' ,leis al NY Gianl.~. I p.m .
Hulfalo t!.l l"hUadelphla, I p.m .
Cllll'lnnall at IIDIISIUn. I p.m .
Detn:oll. at t\tlanta, I p.m.
Grt•cn Bay nt Nrw Orteuns, I p.m .
Sl. l.uui~ al Dalla~ . I p.m .
S.•tt.tlJt' ILl Kansall Cl l y, I p.m.
Tampa. B11y l'llnlllanapolbi. I p.ni.
fh ltaa-u Ul L 1\ Kllldcrs, -1 p.m .
San Die~ at Den\'1.' r, -1 p.m .
L,\ Rams al San f'ralk' isco . 8 p.m .

Sundl&amp;Y, Dec. 2'1
Ohio St al Lobn f ' IO.S!!Ik

Nf'w f.ngland at l\'11uml. 9 p .m .

~a,.ler 1.1 Pro\1dence
Hl'ktelber11 Hullday To urn&lt;'~'
Mu11klngum Chrll!tma~ Tourne)'
Wt!dn~ay , Dt!t•. 2 ~
Dykt• a t Tampa

MuMkhaKUm Chrto!tma.~ Tourney
D.lloylonat (hamlnade (_'las!ik

Thuniday, Dec. :ll
Daylon_ul Cluuninade Cla'I.!I!.Frid:r.y, Dt&gt; ~. 2~
DayiDn ul ChiUllinadl' fiJIII"k

Slltun:IIIJ·, Qf&gt;&lt;', Z6

Munday , lk&gt;c.

Oc t·. ~~~

D11yton 81. Ohio Stalt&gt; ilo
Eo0n !'enha:ky 73, &amp;wiiiiR Grepn 59
Clevriand Sl 73, Kc nt .St 6li
\ltll1dert:ll1193, Ohh1 Unlv 'ii
Colorado SC 51. T~tledn 50
IA.Iyula ( lll ) 16, CIIK•in1111.tl73
You nrto"'" St llfi, Tt&gt;nrtM!I(•f' St 65

Gannon

(P~e J · 56, ~hland

411

F1ndlay 116, Huntington (\\'\ ' a) MG
H~ldt:lhcrli 87. &amp;ldwln-\\'allucr 61
ilhiu Norlhi'rn 15, ( 'apil.ltl Ill
M'llmiOJtlun '"· Mt Union i~
Mu!lklnKJlm iS, Ot*eTht&gt;ln ~
MoR&gt;t.ead !Ky ) Sl 9K, Ohio M'1•sl1•y.tn !1i

Wuynor st

i~1l c h)

10, Tiffin 53

K••ntuck.}' In vital luna!
Cun.&lt;;.Oiallun
Mlddlc Tennt'SIIl'll' Ill, Mhunl 72
\\'rl.:hl ,'it ale InvUatlunal

'7~ .

Uncoln {Mol ti·1
f'un...,llallon
( 'c ntr.IISt ~9. 1\rk.ansas- PI I'IE.' Blufi iiO
Dl•l'au w ln\ilallonal
Df&gt;Pau"' 66. Wlt!.Pnht•rg 59
Ma ..' h f'~ lP r Tourn~ · y
Kalamu"tuo 9(1, Rlufl.lun i3

Pro results
1U~SC)( -,

C"onfi'N'nt'r

,\tlanlit'

Ul v i.~Mm

W L Pt'l . {08
II II .636 - .
I I 9 .550 2
II 14 .3&amp;1 6
i 15 .318 1
~ IK . 143 101 1

8o!JlOP
PhUadelphlu
'\ \'addagton

Nr w Yorit
New ,Jer!W)"
Cl•nt,...l l

01 \l~ lon

1!1 ) i .750 lfi ti . 7 ~ 7 I$ K .6Gl! !1,1
Mll.-.·aukrr
2 9 .5'71 311
lrldl~~ona
12 II .522 4' 1
(1P.VPiand
10 I! .1;.5 li
\\'('~ t. · r n l'o nft! re ncc
MldWf'!i l Dh•Jslon

Delroll

AtlAnta
Chlt:a111u

" ' I. Pd. (J!\
H il .li31i U II .lilt
'•"~

DPnvr.r
DallW~
llo~&amp;Sinn

Utah
San Antonio
"NiiW"ral111' nlft

Padtk

II II .500

l

I I l'l .-118
10 II .-1711
5 11 .H%7

3~

11

6
M
n U
II 12
II 13
3 17
Ke! UII II

n

~altJP

Phoenix
LA CllpPt'n
Gokle nSL
Salurday ' ~

Phlloui,.Jnhlu

:11,,
I

Dl vl~on

LA Lalwrs
Portland

.'739 .6.')2 '!
.~'!2

$\-'z

AOO

71,~

.1511

\ '~' t

.:JSI

ll

U Daii!U 90

Wlllhlngton Jnt, ilhll ·llgu !16
Atlantai UO, Uliah U-1 cOT)
De nver 121 , lfnu"tnn I 17
I.A. Laker ~ 108, LA Clippt'rs 9'7

Seattlt I !II, Go ld e n Stal e Htl
Sunday 's R~!lultll
Bo,;Wn 124, Philadelphia 81
Clt!'WI11nd l'l7, lndlana 116
Portland 1111, San AntDnlo 126
Phuenh; 12t, .\ !iiCramento 109
I.•A Lakr:u 100, S eattlt! 94
Mond•y'l'l Game
ut.. ll at Nt!w .if' l'8(')' , '7 : :to p.m .
Tuesday 's Gaml'll ,
Bu.Wnat J'hUadelphla, nla;ht
Cleve land,at WMhiiJilon, nl~rht
Dallu at O.k:ap;o, nlrht
N~ York at Milwaukee. nlrht
1\lbuJtM al Holll'llun, ulp;ltt
Phoenb at Den-.f' r , nl,r;ll l
San Anlonlu 11t S 11t.rnnu•nt1J, n lll'llt

Gu ld vn RIIIh•at r u r l l.lnrl ,

Monday 's G11mt•
at Turuntu, 7; 3S p.m.
'fllf'sday's Games
Bufhdo at &amp;"ton, nl~hl

n l,~~: hl

NATIONAl,. f'OOTBi\.1 .-L LF..AG UE
S a~urtfay '~ Rei UIIs
Nl' Gtanlli!O, Gr t&gt;e n Ba)' 10
~nwor 20. Ku.u.."' C'lt y li

'
C(llii'fCC
VlrxlnJa - ltc tnslated forward Me l
Kl' nl'W'dy tu tht&gt; ha.o;lletbaiiiE'am .

Prep scores
lloy" ~lhl o HIKh Sdtool Ba"kt•lha ll
HY Unlt Pd Prf'!'&gt;S ln~ · rnallonal
S alurdtt.y , Occ. 19
Ak r f•o w ntry 57, Tu.;law 3-1
t\k r ft•n lloM·r ·19, Stow Walsh 1'7
1\kr St V·St M 92, Lc:oraln Calh 75
1\llt&gt;n E 72, Cory -R a W!Iun -Ill
,\rllnl{lun 4l7, Ululftun 61
lk mrdm11n 6.i . SltiPm 1!.0
Rowlh!Jt Hn•t•n 60, ~llanc.: e 5'7
Uryan !Iii. Shcrwuod Fa. lrvl~w 52
Ruc k.,yt• C••lll !M), S Ct•ntnt 6t!o
Uu r llf'yt&gt; \\ 15, " 'elrtun ( \\' \' a ~ Mu·
dunna 80
('"nn'l'lmlu~· n 11, Barb., rton tt.l
( 'an 1\lcKI nlc y K-1 , A.lllanec 64
Cnnfi (• ld 11·1, i.MW~h'lilt&gt; '73

Ct:! llna. 60, (; rrt' n\·111&lt;'

~;1

C1 n \hn IIIIIs Ml , l 'ln N"' '71.1
nn Wyomlntt: 61 , Lol·llland U
l'l n llugh&lt;'K 69, ful Undt&gt; n i3
C'in Cc n Bap 116. Norwood Rap liO
( 'in \\'otvlward 13, Marton ( lnd) 6~
f in Xavlt•r 61, llc nry f l11y (Kyl ~3
( 'In L!.l'iMII&lt;' 1·1, Uh:l&lt;' Hh (KJ) 41
fhl)' t.un Nurthmtml61 . i\11\ton Union 14
l:Jt• lib &amp;9 , Sha lle r Jib 611

c:lr St •.IIIII ill, W Gr aup;u 11;
C'l)'d c 611, Norwa lk St P a u160
l'"oal Gro w 77. S)' nun cs v a1 411
('ol ,\(' ftdN n y '71 , Ol l' ntanu -14

WO.tiC'r !W.ln i ll, Marino lla ntln,; 69
fold wall'r 61 , Elkta 59
( 'ntCnlln 63. fin Bal'llll l'lll
C.'11lwnbu ~ G ru ,•e G9 , Ulwrt y Br nwn 5:1
(."on VIIUI')' 60, Lllllt&gt;la nd &amp;II
C'unlhK'nWI 51, Anhn•rp U
Convoy C"r i'Sivlew 10$, l' arkway li6
&lt;'1.1 ~' fo' a \1" 5'7, 1\k r FlresiOIW' 1%

('"oJ

ALL GAMES
TEAM
W L
P
OP
Hannan Trace ..... 5 1 473 370
Southern ..............5 1 527 375
Oak Hill ... .'.......... 5 2 493 434
North Gallla ........ 4 3 455 477
Eastern ............... 3 4 434 511
Symmes Valley ... 2 4 377 487
Kyger Creek .. .. .... 2 4 420 375
Southwestern ...... .0 6 349 467
SVAC ONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern ..... .. ...... .4 1 459 308
Hannan Trace .. ... 4 1 387 317
North Gallla ........3 2 337 361
Oak Hill ............. .4 1 386 327 ·
Eastern .. .. .... ....... 2 3 308 377
Kyger Creek ........ l 4 301 321
Symmes Valley ... 2 3 329 410
Southwestern ....... 0 5 307 393
TOTALS
20 20 2814 2814
SVAC
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L
P OP
Southern .. .... .. ...... 5 0 293 210
Hannan Trace ..... 4 1 288 . 176
Southwestern .. , .... 3 1 229 242
North Gallla .. ...... 2 3 248 249
Oak Hill ........ ...... 3 2 194 212
Symmes Valley ... 2 3 221 227
Eastern .. .. ...... .... .1 4 207 286
Kyger Creek ........ o 5 174 252
TOTALS
20 20 1834 1834
Saturday's results
Kyger Creek 60, Wahama 54
Coal Grove 77, Symmes Valley 48
Tuesday's games
Hannan Trace at Symmes Valley
Southern at Kyger Creek
North Gallla at Eastern
Oak Hill at Southwestern

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
(Dining Room Only)
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy. cole
slaw, hot roll . butter and coffee. Sorry . no substi·
lutes e.cept beverage wi th add itional price.

FOR JUST

$3.25

CROW'S FAMILY RE.STAURANT
,

featuring

Williams said he felt some·
thing was wrong wi\h the clock,
but thought he must be wrong. He

wasn't.

Wilson got off a running shot
which bounced off the rim and
Ma teen was called for going over
McCracken's back.
"I've never seen a foul called
on a rebound situation like that
until somebody picks somebody
up and throws them to the line."
said Williams. "Usually that has
to be pretty obvious."
Dayton, now 6·1, led 45·44 at
halftime and the biggest lead by
both teams in the second hall was
4 points.
"We've been blessed," said
Dayton Coach Don Donoher.

"Some years they all go In
against you, some years you
make them all."
Pittman led Dayton with 18
points, Anthony Corbitt had 16
and Ray Springer 15, while Ohio
State's Jerry Francis led all
scorers with 23.
"We weren't doing a good job
against him (Francis)," said
Donoher. '' He's so competitive."
The loss was the second In a
row for Ohio State, which
dropped a 102-69 decision at
11th-ranked Florida Wednesday
night.
"I thought we played better
than down In Florida," said
Williams.

.

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22nd

AM
UNTIL 12 MIDNIGHT
9

POMEROY, OH.

Fried Chirhn

·'

.
. n Item In our store.
u1ar
PriCe
On~
_
_!d,.__
.......
.
Reg
d.d.

·

thiS weell • - -

•

O'f f NECKS Regular Price

Off NECKS Regular Price

on All

In-stock

Christmas
Toys
In stock

AM/FM Portable
Radios with
cassette Player

Does not lriclude bikes.
limited to seasonal merchandise, sorry no ralnchecl&lt;s.

Limited seasonal merchandise, sorry, no ratnc~ecks

'

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

NOW FE ATURING HOMEMADE DINNER ROLLS

PH. 992-5432

Williams cailed his final time
out.
" I was glad they called time
out," said McCracken, a sopho·
more from Greenon High School
·near Springfield. "It gave me
time to think and concentrate."
Dayton had tied the game 80·80
on a basket by Steve Pittman
with 52 seconds to play. then Ohio
State, with the 45·second clock
not In operation, held the ball lor
the final shot.
The Buckeyes calle~ time. out
with 12 seconds left on the game
clock. It was then that officials
discovered the 45-second clock
wasn't working. After consulta·
lion, they set the clock at 8
second s.

SV AC standings

Transactions

fhampion.~hlp

Ea~~· rn

l'hlladelphlil tlo, N\' hlnnd~n.A
J•IIL~hura;h 4, N\' Rangers 3
Hartford I, Edmonton 3
Ru.ltalo 2, Mo11treal I
N~w .Jtr.'ll~)' 3, Minl1('!i011l I
Ch lcagu 6, Torunto 2
Calgary ·1, Lo~~o 1\ngrlf'!l. I
Suntl~~oy ' ll Re11ul lli
St. Loul;o I, WKShlrtg!on I OT
Qut'hcc 4, l&gt;i•truli !
Pill'Ohurgll ~ . NY R:lngP rs ~
Hos tun 4, Chicago 2
\1./iMipq; •I, Se"· ,fer""')' I
Hurtlonl 3, Vanl'IIU\'t' r 3 OT
Loll An ~~;e 11 ·11 6, talgary 3

Hartford at Ca ll{nry, ni~hl
":u;hin!Pon al Qu~bt•&lt;!, nll(hl
Nl' Island e rs al Wlnllllpcg . night
Phllad-:lphla at Nl' RaU~~;Pr!l, nixht
LoN 1\ngrlt.~ at F..dmnnton , night

Cha1nploQiihlp
Wrlj;hl St ll. 1\'E Louisiana tHt
CuiiMtlalion
Florida 1\&amp;:.\1 117, Dfolawar1• st 7-'
C~ ntrnl Staw Holldas Cla~o~sk

NATIONAL 1\i\SKE:TBAI. L

2~

Mlnm~ ~oln

\\'nlsh 92. D'l' uuvlllc 51

Norfolk St

By GENE CADDES
UPJ Sports Writer .
Dayton's Troy McCracken has
his own theory on how to handle
pressure - concentrate on the
job at hand .
McCracken, Shooti ng only 57
percent from the line, hit the
front end of a 1·anii-1 free throw
situation Saturday night to lift
the Flyers to an 81·80 win over
O)llo State In St. John Arena with
most of the 13,320 on hand
cheering against him.
"Pressure Is all concentra·
tion," said the 6·foot · 9
McCracken, who was fouled by
Ohio State's Grady Mateen going
for a missed Buckeye shot. "The
more you concentrate, the less
the pressure."
Before McCracken went to the
line. Ohio State Coacli Gary

N1\TJONAL HOC'KE\' LEAG UE
Salnrday'1; Resultftl
Sl . LDHis l, Boston a

Ohkl Coli&lt;'~ Bu!ikctbali RfosuJI!i
Hy United l'ress lnC.•rnaUnmll

In other games . Sunday, New
England shaded Buffalo 13·7,
Houston clipped Pittsburgh 24·
16, St. Louis slammed Tampa
Bay 31-14 and Philadelphia
belted the New York Jets 38·27.
The Los Angeles Rams are
home against Dallas tonight.
Bills 13, Patriots 7
At Orchard Park, N.Y., Steve
Grogan threw a touchdown pass
and Reggie Dupard ran !or
another score to lead the Patriots
In a swirling 40·mph wind at Rich
Stadium. The victory kept the
defenplng AFC East division.
champion P atrlots alive In their
battle to retain the crown.
Oilers 24, Steelers 18
At Houston, Warren . Moon
threw two touchdown passes to
Drew Hill, and Allen Pinkett
scored on a 5·yard run to keep the
Oilers' postseason chances alive.
Tony Zendejas added a 34·yard
field goal for the Oilers, seeking
their first playoff berth since
1980.
Cardinals Sl, Buccaneers 14 ..
At Tampa, Fla., Neil Lomax
threw three touchdown passes
and the Cardinals stayed alive In
the playoff race. The Cardinals,
7·7, who have won four of their
last five, need a victory Sunday
In Dallas coupled with a Mione·
sola home loss to Washington and
a loss by the Rams in one of their
last two games to reach the
postseason.
Eagles 38, Jets 27
At East Rutherford, N.J., Mike
Quick caught two touchdown
passes and set up two more
scores, enabling the Eagles to
eliminate the Jets from the
playoff race with their third
straight loss.

Buckeyes drop 81-80 tilt . to Dayton five

NHL results

Ohio cage scores

13-polnt thlrd·quarter rally and
By DAVE RAFFO
Miami game will take the AFC
lift Seattle. The Bears, 10·4,
UPJ Sports Writer
East.
clinched the NFC West title three
Four of the 11 teams chasing
Seattle upset the Bears 34-211n
weeks ago but have lost two
NFL playoff spots know all tl!ey . Chicago Sunday, putting the
straight. Seattle ruined Walter
have to do Is win next weekend to
Seahawks in position to clinch the
Payton Day, commemorating
qualify for postseason berths.
playoffs with a victory In Kansas
The other contenders have to win
City Sunday . The Seahawks can the last regular season home
game for Payton, the NFL's
and hope. ,
win ti1e AFC West I! they win and
Victories by Cleveland, India·
Denver loses to · San Diego. If ' all-lime leading rusher:
At Pontiac. Mich., Wade Wil·
napolls, Seattle and Minnesota
Seattle and Denver win, the .
Sunday enabled those teams to Seahawks will host the AFC son ran 2 yards lor a touchdown
and threw a 20·yard scoring pass
control their destinies In the,lr wild·card game.
final game. Denver, which had
"A lot of people said we ' to D.J. Dozier to spark the
the day off, clinched an AFC couldn't win on the road, we
VIkings, 8-6.
playoff spot SUiiday and the New couldn't win outdoors, we
San Francisco, New Orleans
York Jets and Buffalo Bills were couldn't beat the Bears," Seattle and Washington all had playoff
eliminated .
Coach Chuck Knox said. "We did spots clinched entering Sunday.
Jerry Rice set NFL records with
Cleveland's 24-17 victory over all those things."
the Los Angeles Raiders gives
Denver clinched a playoff spot his 20th TD pass of the season and
the Browns a chance to take their when they defeated Kansas City his 12th straight game with a TO
third ~tralght A.FC Central IItle Saturday and San Diego and
reception to lift the 49ers to a 35·7
rout of Atlanta. Rice caught two
with a victory at Pittsburgh Pittsburgh lost Sunday.
touchdown passes and. ran for
Saturday.
Minnesota trimmed Detroit
"I think everyone knows the 17-14 Sunday, and the Vikings another In tire game.
meaning of next week's game," will take the final NFC wild-card
At Cincinnati, backup quarter·
Browns Coach Ma~ty Scholten· spot If they defeat Washington at ])ack Dave Wilson ignited New
helmer said. "It Involves the · home Sat.urday. If the Vikings Orleans to 38 straight points and
divisional championship. To me, lose, they can still get in the rallied the Saints to a club-record
that's what I'm in this business playoffs If they lose and St. Louis eighth straight victory, a 41·24
for- to be Involved In big games. loses to Dallas Sunday.
triumph over the Cincinnati
That's the thing that makes your
"When we get in, we'll talk Bengals.
Wilson replaced Injured star·
bloOd run hot."
about the playoffs," Minnesota
If the Browns stumble, Hous· Coach Jerry Burns said.
ter Bobby Hebertlate i!j.lhe first
half when the Saints trailed 24·3
ton can win the AFC Centra l if the
Oilers defeat Cincinnati. The
At Los Angeles, Bernie Kosar and directed New Orleans to five
Steelers are In the running for a threw for 294 yards and two touchdowns and a field goal. New
touchdowns to lead the Browns, Orleans, 11-3, enjoying Its first
wild-card spot.
Indianapolis, a 20· 7 winner in 9·5. Kosar has thr.own at least one winning season In Its 21-year
San Diego, will win the AFC East TO pass In his last 16 consecutive history, trails the 49ers by one
and ·make the playoffs for the games.
game In the NFC West.
first time In 10 years with a
At San Diego, Dean Blasuccl
At Miami, Dan Marino threw
victory at home against Tampa kicked two field goals and Eric three touchdown passes to Mark
Dickerson rushed for 115 yards to Duper. the final one with 1:07
Bay Sunday.
"It Is a week·to.week exist·
help the Colts Improve to 8·6 and left, to give Miami a 23·21 victory
ence. We are just happy to be clinch their first winning season over Washington. The victory
kept Miami ·tied for first place
here," Colts Coach Ron Meyer since 1977.
with
Indianapolis in the AFC
At
Chicago,
John
L.
Williams
said.
scored on a 75-yard screen pass East.
If the Colts lose Sunday, t'he
winner ·of the New Englanrl- from Dave Krieg to Ignite a

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

THE DAILY SENTINEL
"Your Hometown Ntlwspaper"

'

Hurry In For Best selection. No Layaways. Due To seasonal Merchandise, All Items Are Sub)er.t To Prior Sale, sorry, No Ralnchecks.

HURRY! ONLY 2 DAYS • .48 HOURS 'TIL CHRISTMAS
PRICES IN EF~ECT AT ALL HECKS LOCATIONS!
~

•

•I•

�..

··-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.EWING
FUNERAL
HOME .
"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"
Ben H. Ewing-Director
II

PH. 992-2121
108 MULBERRY AVE.

THIS
WEE 'S.,
8A ES

POMEROY, OH.

... .......

..

...

WE WILL
TAKE CARE· Of
ALL YOUR
INSURANCE
NEEDS

- ~·

All GAMES SUSPENDED
UNTIL FURTHER NOTICE
DUE TO THE LABOR
PROBLEMS IN THE .
DISTRICT.

(All 992·3381 or
" 992-2342

•COMPLETE RADIATOR SERVICE
•MAJO" REPAIRS

1 ,~

GIRLS BASKETBALL

IJ&gt;

LONG BEACH, Calif. (UPI)- faulty heater that Ignited Christ·
Authorities credited a 5-year-old mas packages In the living room
boy with saving himself and his of the duplex where he lived with
JllOther's friend from a fire tllat his mother and a man neighbors
killed the mother on his birthday. described as the woman's boyLittle Nl~holas McLellan was friend, said Mickelson.
awakened on his fifth birthday
Laura McLellan. 30, died of
Sunday by the smell of smoke, smoke Inhalation shortly after
broke a window and ran to a firefighters put out the pre-dawn
neighbor's home lor help, pollee blaze. Her friend. Paul Wilkin·
said.
son, 29, was hospitalized In
Lt. Rod Mickelson said if
serious condition at St. Mary
Nicholas had not escaped the Medical Center.
flames and gone lor help, ''they .
The boy was awakened shortly
all would have died. I don't think before 5 a .m. by smoke, Mickel·
an average 5-year-old would dp son said, and saw flames. He
that . I think It's quite a signlll· jumped out of bed, but the flames
cant accomplishment on his kept him froin reaching his
part."
mother or the telephone. He ran
Nicholas was treated at Mem- _to the front door and smashed his
orial Medical Center of Long · list through the plate glass
Beach after suffering cuts, burns window, crawled out and ran to a
and smoke Inhalation. Author!· neighbor's house.
ties said the lire was sparked by a
Joseph Devito said ihe boy did

•COMPLETE WHEEL ALIGNMENT

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GIRLS BASKETBALL
HOME
AWAY

WITH US"

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOn BASKETBALL

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-2136

------·--

-. --··· ...........--"'

Dec. 11-Be1pre ............................... Home
Dec. 15 -Aiexandet ........................ Away
Dec. 19-logon ................................Home
Dec. 22 -Wellston .......................... Away
Jan. 5-Federal Hacking ................. Away
Jan. 8-Miller ...................................Home
~·an. 12-~elsonville-York .............. Away
1an. 15-VInton County .................. Home
Jan. 19-Trimmble .......................... Home
Jan. 22-Belpre ......................... :.... Away
Jan. 26-Aiexander ......................... Hame
Jan. 30-Point Pleasant ................. Away

feb. 2-Worren ....................
Away
Feb. 5-Wellston .............................. HorY.e
t .... ......

Feb. 9:....Athens .......................... :............ Home
Feb. 12-Federal Hocking ............... Home

•

SOUTH.ERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 8-Southern ............................ Away

The holiday season Is a t~me'for
renla .may hear voices. The
giving. Orphans are given toys.
voices may make a running
the poor are given Food baskets,
commentary on everything he
people In nursing homes and
does or may tell him that others
hospitals are remembered and
want to hurt him. Sometimes the
ylstied.
voices get so loud he can't hear
Thrre Is one group who Is
what others are saying. His
generally forgotten and the gilt
thoughts may race or his thought
they need most typifies what
patterns may be so disconnected
Christmas Is about. They are the
that his thinking Is Irrational. He
seriously mentally disabled and
may be unable to sleep, communwhat they and their families need
Icate or care for his personal
Is human compassion and under'·
hygiene. As the Illness prostanding. These people are vic·
gresses, he may become more
tlms of a serious Illness which Is
and more frightened and so do
compounded by publ-Ic misunderthose around him. His relation·
standing, apathy, myths. and
ships begin to deteriorate and he
even lear, according to Dr.
becomes even more frightened
Bernard F. Nlehm, executive
and alone, Nlehm added.
director of Woodland Centers.
Schizophrenia can strike at
Serious mental Illness can
any age but 80 percent of victims
strike the most affluent or the
are 16 to 22 yeljrs of age when
most Impoverished family; no
they have their first episode.
Generally, hospitalization Is re,
one is Immune. It Is now widely
accepted that most serious menqutied and treatment Includes
medication to control the thought
tal Illnesses such as schizophredisorder, Nlehm said. ,
nia stems from biological causes.
· Other components of treat·
The person who has schlzohrenta
Is no more to blame lor his Illness
ment may Include psychother·
than the vlctlms of diabetes. One · apy and activity therapy. Stablll,
zatlon can take anywhere from a
of the most common myths Is
that if the person would just few weeks to several months.
"straighten up" or get his Once the person Is discharged
thinking In order, he could get
from the hospital, he needs
ongoing monitoring and follow'well, Nlehm said.
up, Nlehm added. Again, this Is
The person whO has schlzoph·

POWELL'S

Dec. 8-Eastern ................................ Home
Dec. 11-0ak Hiii .................~..........Home ,

Dec. 11-Hannan Trace ................,. Away
Dec. 15-Parkersburg Cath. 16:l5!'... Away .
Dec. ·2 2-Narth Gallia I6:00J ............ Hame
Jan. 8--Symmes Valley ................... Home
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek ...................... Home
Jan. 1S-Oak Hill ........................... Away
. Jan. 19-Fed,ral Hocking ................ Home
Jan. 22-Southern ........................... Home
Jan. 29-North Gahia .................... Away
Feb. 2-Miller .................................. Away
Feb. 5-Hannan Trce ........................ Home
Feb. 12-Southwesterl\ ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath............ Away
. F•b.I9-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ... ':""""" Away

Dec. 18-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 22-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Dec. 29-lndillfl Valley So.... Canvo. Center
Jan. 2-Southeastern ..................... Away
Jan. &amp;-Southwestern ..................... Home
Jan. 12-North Gallia ..................... Home
Jan. 15-Symmes Valley ................. Home
Jan. 22 -Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-Kyger Creek ...................... Hama
Jan. 30-Miller ................................ Home
FEb. 5-0ak Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Federol Hocking ................. Away
Feb. 12-Hannan Trace ................... Hama
Feb 19-Southwestern ................... Away

, 298 S,ECOND ST.

POMEROY. OH.
STORE ,HOURS:
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M.-1 0 P.M.
SUNDAY
.10 A.M.-1 0

GIRLS SCHEDULE
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Rawlings
Coats
Blower
funeral
Home
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO .
614-992-5141

-

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Dec. 7-Vinton County .................... Home
Dec. 10-Trimble ............................. Home
P"· 14-Belpre .............................. Away
Dec. 17 -Alexander ......................... Home
Dec. 23-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 4-Wellston .............................. Home
Jan. 7-Federal Hacking .................. l:lome
Jan. 9-Miller ................................... Home
Jan. 14-Nelsonville· York ............... Home
Jan. 18-Vinton Count ................... Away
.Jan. 21-Trimble ............................ Away

Jan. 25-Belpre ...............................Home
Jan. 28-Aiexander ............... :........ Away
Feb. 4-Wellston ............................. Away
Feb 8-Federal Hocking .................. Away
Feb. 13 -Southern ........................... Home

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1917 •88 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Pee. 7-Sauthern ............................. Home
Dec. 10-Hannan Trace ................... Home

Dec. 7-EOstern ............................... Away

Dec. 14-Miller ................................ Home

Dec.1 0-0ak Hill ............................. Away
Dec. 14-Narth Galli a .................... Away
Dec. 17-Hannan Trace ................... Home
Dec. 19-Aieander .......................... Away
Jan. 4-Kyger Creek .................... :••• Home
Jan. 7-Southwestern .................... Away
Jan. 11-Narth Gallia ..................... Home
Jan. 14-Symmes Valley ................ Away
Jan. 20-Gallipolis ......................... Away
Jan. 21-Eastern ............................. Home
Jon. 28-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Feb. !-Southwestern ..................... Home
Feb. 4-0ak Hill .............................. Home
Feb. 11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
.feb. 13-Meigs ............................... Away

Dec. 17 -Southwestern ................... Home
D·ec. 19-Federal Hacking .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallia .................... Away

Dec. 23-Meigs ................................ Home
Jan. 7-Symmes Valley .................. Away
Jan. 11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Jon. 14-0ak Hiii ............................ Home

Jon. 21-Southern .........................,. Away
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.
Feb.

28-North Gallia ..................... Home
1-Symmes Vlaley .. :... :............ Home
4-Hannan Trace .................... Away
11-Sauthwestern .................. Away
14-Federal Hocking ............... Home

I

Jim Cobb
·Chevrolet•Oidsmobile
•Cadillac, Inc.
I

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Sales &amp; Servic.f

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CENTRAL
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-DUPORT

992-6661
INSTALLMENT _LOANS
992:3007

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Featuring

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* Salad Bar
* Real Ice Cream *

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POMEROY '

'/our Dealer ••
The Rl~tr
''

992-6144

Sun.- Thurs. &amp; A.M .- 10 P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 6 A,M.·1Z P.M.
698 W. Main Stroot, Pomerov

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MIDDLEPORT .

'N•~)·

FURNITURE

Bav·M.te .for
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992-5627

CHESTER, OH.

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T"E AREA'S MOST
COMPUTE ATHLETIC
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PHARMACY
"3 Registered
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To Serve You"

•

Open Till 9:00
Every Night

•'

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Sunday 11~8

992-6491
786 N. 2nd St.

.r

.

.

By WILLIAM C. TROTI'
Untied Press Intematlonal

.

COMPLnE
-SELECTION .

Page-7

analogous to the diabetic who
continues to need ongoing care If
he Is to stay well and out of the
hospital. Symptoms can often by
controlled but one out of three
victims of severe mental Illness
have no hope of recovery or of an
Independent future.
In Gallla, Jackson and Meigs
County, there are approximately
400 Identified seriously mentally
disabled individuals, Nlehm
said. At some time In lhelr lives,
everyone has emotional dl!flcullles and could benefit from
counseling or other mental
health centers Is providing lor
the needs of the .. serlously men·
tally disabled .
Just as the diabetic or cancer
victim needs specialized medical
care, so does the mentally Ill
person, Nlehm. Beyond that, his
needs are the same as anyone
else's. He needs adequate food,
shelter, worthwhile activities,
community acceptance and emotional support. Perhaps most of
all he needs the community to
educate Itself about mental II·
!ness. With education comes
understanding, and with real
understanding, all else will fol ·
low, Nlehm said. This Is the gilt
the community can give the
mentally disabled, he added.

lt. 1! you walt, It will prdlably be
gone. Don't agonize and wonder If

and your wallet In an blslde pocket.
.Buy the gUt when you first see

Rutland Garden Club
conducts recent meeting
Canaday, Mrs. Erlewlne. and
Marcia Denison . Mrs. Woodard
presented each member with a
book marker. Mrs . Canaday
presented each member with a .
Christmas decoration she had
made. Calendars and pens were
given to· the members· by the
Floral Bouquet of Mason, W.Va.
owned by the Van Meters of
Rutland.
For the program, Mrs. Eriewine had an article on della robla
style holiday arrangments. Most
of those she displayed were
ceramic using fruit and flowers.
Mrs. Ward read an article on
"Why Holiday Cactus Changes
Color." She said that if the white
or yellow blooms turn pink, It is
not .In the plant but In the
conditioning. If temperatures
drop below 55 degrees alter the
bud forms, then a pinkish tint
may develop. she sa'td. Cactus
should receive bright light and be
In temperatures not below 60
degrees lor them to retain their
color, she concluded.
A gift exchange was held at the
close o! the meeting.

The anriual hoUday dinner of
the Rutland Garden Club was
held recently at Crew's Restau,
. rant followed by a party at the
home of Margaret Belle Weber. ·
Gifts were exchanged and Mrs.
Weber gave devotions reading
"Country Christmas", ''The
Story That !':lever Grows Old",
and a prayer from Ideals magazine. The creed and collect were
given In unison. For roll call
members responded by displayIng natural ornaments which
they had made lor the Pomeroy
Health Care Center.
It was voted to put poinsettias
and greenery In the planters at
the park In lower Rutland.
Ruth Erlewlne, Pearle Canaday, Mrs. Weber, Eva Robson,
and Octa Ward attended open
houses of the florists. The travel·
lng prize provided by Dorothy
Woodard was won by Mrs. Ward.
Mrs. Canaday displayed an ar·
rangement using pine cones .
It was reported that flowers
have been provided for churches
and other organizations over the
past month by Mrs. Robson, Mrs.

Catholic Women's Club meets
mosl original, and Jane Beegle.
the prize lor the prettiest.
A program on traditions in
olher countries was given with
Joseflna Myers who talked on
Mexico, Ann Colburn on Germany. and Msgr. Anttioriy Glannamore on Italy.
Games were played with prizes
being won by Esther Ward. Carol
Frecker, Elsie Sutherland, and
Nita Conde. Hostesses for Janu·
ary will be Phyllis May. Olita
Heighton, Diane Jewell. and
Marilyn Meier.

A report on fruit baskets
delivered to those over 80 and
shu tins of the congregation was
given at the recent meeting of the
'Catholic Wopmen's Club held In
the social hall.
It was noted that the junior
high _children are making gingerbread houses to give to shutlns
and elderly parishioners.
Devotions preceded the Christ·
mas potluck dinner. Gift wrap·
pings were judged with Kathleen
Wells taking the prize for the

Dinner guests announced
Jeremy and Terri Whitman,
Point Pleasant, W. Va.; Tena
Whittington, Pomeroy .
Other visitors were Leroy and
Ryan Whittington, Cheshire;
Joann Banks, Charles Smith,
Rutland; David Rupe, Stephanie
Rupe, Steve and 'Cindy Rupe,
Columbus; Richard. Teresa,
Bryson, and Preston Cook,
Pomeroy.

Leslie and Yvonne Whittington
o! Middleport entertained with a
Thanksgiving dinner at their
home.
Guests were Joe, Monna and
Rhonda Andreoni, Mlddlej)ort;
Ronald Smith, Ronnie and Mike,
Rutland; Betty Schneemann, Co·
lumbus; Sherry Tackett, John
Stobart, Shauna and Blly Tack·
ett, Johnny Ducett,-sll of'Raclne;
Loretta Atkins, Misty, Kelll,

Pomeroy UMW has

(

TANYA LIVES!: Actors and a film crew
recreated the days of Tanya the terrorist for the
sake of a new movie about Patty Hearst. A crowd
gathered on the streets of San Francisco Saturday·
as tllrector Paul Schrader, whose films Include
"American Gigolo" and "Cat People,'' led his
cast in a recreation oil he robbery at a branch of
the Bank of · America for his movie "Patty
Hearst." The star Is Natasha Richardson, 24,
daughter of Vanessa Red grave and director Tony
Richardson, who Is making her American film
debut playing Hearst.
·"Patty didn't tell me how to play It,"
Richardson said, "but I Identity with . how she
felt." The movie, which will be released next
summer, is based on Hearst's book about her
abduction and Involvement with the Symblonese
Llberation.Army In the mld -1970s.
SIMONIZED: "Saturday Night Live" featured
a special· episode or "Simon and Simon" -Paul
Simon the singer and Paul Simon the senator who
wants 10 be president. The Grammy winner was
the scheduled host and was joined at the outset by
Sen. Simon.
,
"This Is very embarraslng," singing Simon
said. "I thought they wanted me." The candidate
responded,"! just assumed they wanted me, Paul
Simon the senator. I wish someone had told me
earlier. I've been rehearsing since Thursday."
The singer asked the senator to hang around and
see the show but he declined .
"I've got to get up early tomorrow to run for
president," he said. The candidate's appearance
resulted In some criticism Sunday on "This Week
with David Brinkley." Simon said Gary Hart's
return to the campaign was a ''trlvlalizatlon'' and
Sam Donaldson countered by saying Simon's
"SNL" appearance could be considered In the
same light.
"You have to have a little .exposure," Simon
said, "and that wa~sure. It's not a
trlvlallzatlon In that It dn't detract fr(\lll the
issues. I think what ary Hart Is doing · Is
detracting from the Issues."
·
.
HOEDOWN: The Country Music Association

will celebrate Its 30th anniversary with~ two-hour
television special that will Include just about
everyone In the field. For Instance: Randy Travis,
Tanya Tucker. Hank WIUiams Jr., Tammy
Wynelle, Dwight Yoakam, Ricky Skaggs, Buck
Owens, Ray Price, Charley Pride, The Oak Ridge
Boys, Loretta Lynn, Barbara Mandrell. Reba
McEntire, Ronnie Milsap, The Judds, Merle
Haggard, Emmylou Harris, Rosanne Cash. Roy
Acuff and Alabama.
The spectacular will be taped as a live concert
from the Grand Ole Opry House before a live
audience on Jan. 7 and will be aired on CBS Jan.
23,
•I
OF CARS AND CANDIDATES: Don't look for
Pat Robertson to get the United Auto Workers
endorsement for president. The Republican
candidate's wife, Dede, spoke In San Antonio
earlier this month and told a luncheon that she
"would rather drive a Japanese car than an
American car because the Japanese cars work."
Robertson himself had offended the UAW In
November when he said that 25 percent of U.S.
auto workers are drug users. UAW President
Owen Bieber responded by saying, ''Following on
the ·heels of her husband's recent statement
alleging widespread substan-ce abuse by autoworkers, Mrs. Robertson's comments suggest
that Ignorance about hard,worklng auto workers
extends to the entire family."
ADMIRED BRITS: So'llet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev and British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher have been voted by Britons the most
admired man and woman In the world, according
to a Gallup poll.
The poll, conducted for the Sunday Telegraph
newspaper, put pop star and anti -hunger
campaigner Bob Geldol In second place after
Gorbachev, followed by Terry Walle, the Church
o! England hostage kidnapped In Lebanon last
January . The most-admired women after
Thatcher were Queen Elizabeth II and her
· daughter, Prince~~~~ Aane.
For further Insights Into British thinking,
"Crocodile Dundee" was chosen as the movie of
the year and snooker champ Steve Davlll and race
car driver Nigel Mansell ~led !or sportsman of the
year.

'•

.

·

me~ting

from St. Luke and a meditation,
"The Real Meaning of Christmas" as devotions for the
evening.
Marie c;hapman gave a poem
entitled "No Sign of Santa" with •
Allee Struble giving a Christmas
thought. Prayer pals were re·
vealed and new names drawn.

Members donated to the
church outreach food gift certlfl·
cate at their annual Christmas
dinner party of the Pomeroy
United Methodist Women held at
the church.
Martha Hoover presided at the
meeting with Dorothy Downie
reading the Christmas story

---Poet's
.-----People in the news---...,

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

not say anything about a fire, but
because he was bloody, Devito
ran down the street to the
McLellan house and saw the fire.
After falling to get Inside because
of the Intense heat, -he woke up
other neighbors who called the
!Ire department.
While firefighters pulled his
mother and Wilkinson from the
smoke-filled duplex, the neigh·
bors and pollee comforted the
boy, who was In shock with scalp
burns, cuts and smoke
Inhalation.
Officer Hollace Page said
when he picked up the pajama·
c lij.d boy, "The kid had a death
grip on me."
Nine fire companies extin·
gu!shed the blaze about 5:15
a .m .. fire officials said. The lire
caused $6,000 to $10,000 In
damage.

Understanding is key to mental health

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987 ·88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 8-Trimble ..........:..~·................. Away

&amp; SAVINGS CO.

AACINE . OHIO 45171

BOYS SCHEDULE

"COME GROW

FARMERS
BANK

i&lt;

SYRACUSE OFFICE
992-6333
RACINE OFfiCE
949-2210

DEC. 22-KYGER CREEK - AWAY
DEC.· 29-INDIAN VAtlEY SOUTH
At Ohio University Convocation Center
JAN. 2-ROSS SOUTHEASTERN_ AWAY
JAN. 4-KYGER CREEK JAN. 7-SOUTHWESTERN -

MEMBER FDIC

;.,··TtiE:

DEC. 21-NORTH GALUA - HOME
JAN. 7- SYMMES VALLEY- AWAY

Know where the departments for
these Items are.
Start your shopping as early as
possible; next year, try to s(art the
first week In November.
Shop early In the day; most
stores oll'er extended holiday
hours. Try to avcid sbopp!ng at
lunch hour ( 12 . to 2 p.m. 1 or
Saturday at 1 p.m.
·O'owds tend to be tighter
mid-week (Tuesday or
Wednesday).
·
·Take a largl! shopping bag to
put all your purchases ln.
·Keep your purse close to you

5-year-old credited with saving friend

:.: HOME PEOPLE'.

BOYS BASKETBALL ·

Monday. December 21. 1987

:1

·ment stores 111Jlglng fr(l'll K Mart
to Saks Fifth Avenue tor their
'Tts the seasm for eggnog and shopping. They provide the largest
selection - and the most congesmlstletoe--"·and shopping frenzy
and crowds and .panic.
tion; It's easy to feel overwhelmed
Some people are so organized by the sheer expanse and the
that they buy Chrlstmas wrapping crowds.
Dec. 26 and purchase glass eggs bl
But despte the hazards of
July to give to everyone on their holiday crowds, most people still
list. For the rest-of us, Cbrlstmas brave the melee when It comes lo
shopping can be stressful and selecting a gUt. 'For !hoSt) bardy
arudety-proouc!ng.
sruls, Mary Jane Hoerter, a
What to do? Some sensible tips . service representative at Marshall
fr(l'll those In the know should
Field In Ollcago, makes the
make Christmas shopping tun of following suggestions:
ho ho ho Instead of no 'no nq.
·Have a list. Write down sizes,
Many people head to depart· favorite colors, name brands.

FOR

DEC. 22-NORTH GALUS .- HOME
JAN. I-SYMMES VAllEY - HOME ,

·•

By Evan Levine

."HOME BANK

EASTERN

.

By The Jlend

Tips from th~ pros help ·wrap lJP yearly Christmas shopping

111 $E(ONQ AYE.
POMEROY

. ii

The Daily Sentinel

';]

DOWNING-CHILDS
MULLEN,•· MUSSER
INSURANCE

MEIGS

..

~orner---

The Sliver Bridge Dlaster
The fifteenth of December.
Just before the close of day.
Forty-six people lost their lives.
God called them home that day.

The 15th of December, Nineteen hundred sixty seven. Their
work upon this earth was done.
God called them home to
Heaven.

It's just a lonely tragic scene.
Where the Silver 'Bridge once
stood. It crashed Into the River
that day. Only God, he knew It
would.

Composed by:
Bud McKinney 1·3·68
P .O. Box 16
Middleport, Ohio 45760

It spanned the Great Ohio. It
reached from town to town. Our
loved ones had to loose their
lives. When the Silver Bridge
went down.
They knew that they were
going to die and leave the ones
they loved. They only had a
moments time, to pray to God
above .
They were trapped In their
cars and trucks. By tons of
t w Is I ed s tee I. They were
smashed Into the River . bed. I
guess It was God's will.

you'll find something better.
-Have a budget and stick to it.
Susan PolettL. a personal
shopper at FUene's In Boston,
suggest shopping by category: For
Instance, buy all the children's
Items In one trip. Break the task
Into manageable chunks. and the
shopping will seem less
overwhelming.
1! you're shopping In a more
expensive department store such as Bloomingdale's In New
York City or Saks Fifth Avenue,
Bush adds that the ~rvlce Is
free and there's no obligation to
buy' the l~s that are selected.
Clients can participate as much as
they please: Some go around the
store with the shopper; others read
their Hst over the pbone and never
even see the Items. The service Is
available to anyone, and there'sno
minimum price. All the client must
do Is provide a list; for those wbo
find even this daunting, a shopper
wUl even come up with gift Ideas.
"A lot of anxiety comes !rem
choosing the right gift," comments
Dianne GranvUie, an account
executive at Altman's, In New
York City.

Gates birth
Mr. and Mrs . John Gates. the
former Sherrie Starcher, Kitzin·
gen, West Germany, are an·
nouncing the birth of a son. Justin
Shane. Dec. 3. He weighed seven ·
pounds, 15 ounces, and was 20~
Inches long.
·
Grandparents are Mrs. Ada
' Starcher of Pomeroy and Mr.
and Mrs. James Gates, Wetumpka, Ala. Mr. and Mrs. Gates
have a son, Michael. and a
daughter, Mlndte.

Friendly
Circle meets
December meeting of Friendly
Circle. Trinity Church, featured
a holiday dinner at the church
social room.
Grace was by Jessie Iliff and
Mary Virginia Reibel presented
the program. Handcrafted Santa .
ornaments by Diane Hawley
were at each place and program
books lor 198&amp; prepared by
Norma Louise Jewell were distributed. Brief reports on Christ·
mas projects were made. A
Christmas card from Greg and
Melissa Morris ""as noted .
For the program Miss Reibel
included scripture and a talk on
symbols and memories of Christmas. She told the story of "Away
in a Manger" by Loel Liltke and
gave oriental figure ornaments
to each member. A scrambled
word pertaining to Chris tmas
contest was won by Gay Perrin.
Members enjoyed a gift ex Change around a lighted tree.

Fernwood Garden
Club has meeting
Fernwood Garden Club
members traveled to Galilpolis
Tuesday lor dinner at the new
Bob Evans Restaurant and then
toured the community to see the
Christmas lights. An ornament
exchange was held. Attending
were Suzanne Warner, Evelyn
Thoma, Ida Murphy. Marjorie
Purtell. Thelma Giles, Helen
Eblin, Kathryn Johnson, Wllo·
vene Bailey, and a guest, Peggy
Murphy.
,

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"liE HA~E HEARING AIDS"
CALL (614) 992-2104
(lO ) 675 1244
4
•
~====:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~

Take warning from this
tragedy. Get on your knees and
pray. You know not when your
time will come. It's a debt we all
must pay .

NATINEES DAILY · ALL SEATS $2 .50
BARGAIN NIG~T TUESDAY $1 .99
531

JACKSoN

PIKE-RT 35

WEST .

They showed the pictures on
T.V. They flashed from coast to
coast. It told about the lives were
lost. The ones that we loved most.
The bridge was filled from end
to end. The load was just to great.
And It went down with a crashing
sound. They met a terrible fate.

It was on one Friday evening.
Just before the close of day. The
mighty Sliver Bridge went down.
God called them home to stay.

. ..... . ..

�\

•

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 21, 1987

..
'•

8- The Daily Sentinel .

''BRAND N

Monday, December 21. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

FOR CHRIS
.

JUST .IN TIME
FOR SANTA

The Daily Sentinei-Page-:-9

GIVING'~ ·
(~GIFTS

T"e
USl·

NYOU

•24 Button Video Remote
Control
•1 52 Channel Capability
•Sleep Timer ·
· •Electronic Volume Control
•Cable Ready

Weller

MODEL NO. 59601AI

8-Pc.

26 INCH REMOTE

Unlvers•l
Soldering
Gun Kit.
Includes soldering_gun
. with tips, brush,
: soldering aid tool and
solder. (12-51) (8200PK)

sssa ·

•

AMITY

WITH TRADE .

After
Christmas
Sale
Before
Christmas!

BILLFOLDS
AND WALLETS

JEWELRY

1/2 PRICE

1/2 PRICE

NAPIER

6F

t

ASSORTMENT
OF

·BRASS
FINISH
HALL.

STUFFED
ANIMALS

TREE

1/2 PRICE

I

8 Hoolcs For Coats,
Caps, Jackets, Hat$ «
Umbr•a.

STOCKING STOFFERS
AT REDUCED PRICES
FROM SOC TO $200

NO NEED TO WAIT TILL AFTER
CHRISTMAS TO GET THOSE GREAT
SAVINGS••••
Great Selections Still
Available....

BUY 10, GET A STOCKING FREE
VALUE OF 51.69

,

EVERY GIRL WILL WANT ONE!

REGULAR 514.99

.

SALE

G~

$6 99

. IDEA

'

ALL CLOTHING REDUCED

20°/o-50°/o OFF

4 BIG STUFFED ITEMS

GIRLs 0-14 BOYS 0-7

$7 99

BUnONS AND BOWS·
220 EAST MAIN

992·5177

VERY HUGGABLE,
SOFT AND CUDDLEY

POMEROY,, OHIO

GIFT DEPARTMENT
ITEMS

LARGE ·PLUSH

·ANIMALS

EACH .

"FRRI"
The Griuly Beor

"NIKKI"
The Dog

"RICCO"
The Raccoon

BUY 3 OF ANY ITEM,
GET THE 4TH FREE

35mm

Concord

Sll

806

$1999

•Built-in Elctronic Flash •Lens
Cover/Shatter Lock •Film View
•Wrist Strap

CHRISTMAS
ITEMS

1/2
PRICE .
TRIM
&amp;

·DECORATIONS,
WRAPPING PAPER,
BOWS &amp; TAGS ·

'

'

PHARMACY
.

�Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 21. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Super Lotto ticket
worth $9 million
CLEVELAND (UPI) -Christ·
rrlas came early lor the holder ol
, the Super Lotto ticket · with
numbers 1, 5, 6, 25, 38 and 43
drawn Saturday night.
The ticket Is worth $9 million.
Ohio Lottery otrlclals said that
out ol the 5,967,658 tickets sold,
161 o! them had live ol the
numbers, giving their holders
each $1,000. Another 7,826 have
lour numbers. each worth $88.
The drawing lor Wednesday
night will be $3 mllllon.

.·

..

..¥"

HOLIDAY MUSIC- Songs o! the season were

played by Southern HighSchool's Marching Band
during Saturday's Christmas parade In Racine.

JOLLY OLD ELF - Santa Claus smUed and waved from the
window In his float In Saturday's Racine Christmas Parade.
FoUowlng the parade, Santa visited with many of his young friends
from the Racine area.

Monday, December 21. 1987

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Pomeroy-Middleport,. Ohio

Community calendar
MIDDLEPORT- Oh Kan Coin
.
MONDAY
SYRACUSE - Syracuse EleClub will hold Its Christmas
mentary School will present a
meeting and party, Monday
Christmas pageant on Monday at
evening at the Burkett Barber
7 p.m. Admission wlll 'be one can
Shop In Middleport. There will be
o! food per family, to be used for . a social hour and sales session at
the needy.
7 p.m . along with a coin auction.
MORNING STAR - Morning
Star United Methodist Church
Christmas program, Dec. 21 at
7: 30p.m.

I

POMEROY - A Christmas
program, Tuesday, 7 p.m ., at
Flatwoods United Methodist
Church.

Liftoff names winners

Operation Liftoff o{ Ohio, a
non-pro!lt wish granting organization, completed their 2nd annual Christmas raffle. The draw Ing was held Dec. 1, at the Down
Under restauran t.
The winner of the first place
prize of $200 was given to Lee
Burchem of Gallipolis, second
prize of $100 given to Mike Repas
of Columbus, and third pr ize of
$50 was given to Sue Lulk o! Oak
Hills.
,
Operation · Liftoff gran ts
wishes to children between 3.and
18 years of age who are seriously
Ill with a life threatening disease.
The organization has given away

.I

trips, to such places as Disney
World, and Is trying to make
other wishes come true.
Future fund-raising events Include a jazzerthon In January or
February, and the annual spring
dinner sponsored by the Gallipolis Rotary .
Anyone Interested In volun·
leering theli"' time, donating
money or children 's gifts, or
wanting mor e information
sho.uld contact Jay Mullins, 4465500 or 245-9535, Jerry Davis,
256-6006, or write Operation L!!to!f of Ohio . .P.O. Box 1094,
Gallipolis.

Business Services

POMEROY - Calvay Pilgrim
Chapel Christmas program and
play, featuring special attrac·
Uons lor children, on Tuesday at
7:30p.m.
TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Cheshire Chap·
ter OES meets Tuesday, 7:30
p.m .; potluck; gift exchange.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY -J.A.M. of Pomeroy Church of Christ will present
a Christmas play "The Best
Christmas Ever." on Wednesday
at 7:30p.m.
RACINE -Carolers will leave
from Bethany Church at 7 p.m.
on Wednesday, and visit homes
in the Carmel and Sutton areas,
before ending at Morning Star
Church for refreshments.

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addo ns •nd remodeling
- Roofi"g and gutter wruk
- Concrete work

-'" Plumbing Rhd electrical
work

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

992-6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

THURS-! 7 PM- £1 61U . -

RATES
O.IO WOOIDa 1··-WOOIIII II ··WGfllll
OQAOO

OO(I(J

01 11:1

1711:1

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100.0.! '

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Public Notice

Public Notic.e

tN THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

the Southwest corner of said
Sect ton Thirty, which pott is
on the centMiine of the

Westtm .Credit
Union. Inc.

vs.

FANTASY FIGURES- Walt Disney Christmas, featuring Snow
White, the handsome prince, and the seven dwarfs, was depleted In
a float at Saturday's Racine Christmas Parade. The float was
sponsored by the Ladies Auxiliary of the Racine Fire Department.
SNOW FUN - The same snow people that
entertained parade goers jqst a few weeks ag'o In
Pomeroy and Middleport, were on hand Saturday

~~~INt

TOY TESTERS - Members of Racine's
Brownie and Daisy Girl Scout Troops claimed to
be excellen! "toy testers" as they made their way

TIST CHURCH
CHURCH FLOAT - Memhers of the Racine First Baptist
Church built a float lor Saturday's Racine Christmas parade to
remind spectators lliat "Jesus Is The Reason For The Season."
...

Iraqi forces on alert
MANAMA, Bahrain iUPl ) - ·
Iraqi forces were on lull alert
today alter two brigades of
Iranian troops swa r med over
mine fie Ids north of the be lea·
guered porto! Basra In a surprise
atlack that sparked a 12-hour
·
battle, diplomats said.
Both sides claimed to have
killed 1,500 enemy soldiers.
Iraq's new ?rmy chief of staff,
Field Marshal Nlzar AbdulKarim AI-K hazrajy, ordered the
alert beca use of suspicions the
Iranians might make another
limited probing operation on a
different part of the front,
Western diplomats sa id.
The Iraqi General Command
said two brigades of Iranian
sold iers su pported by elite special forces , tanks and artillery
took part In the pusn·to try and
test defenses close to the town of
Zoba!dat, 120 mlles northeast of
Basra Saturday night.
But by 10: 20a .m. Sunday, Iraqi
troops !rom the 4th Army backed
by Soviet-made . tanks, heavy
artillery and special forces had
beaten back the "Persian
hordes" and 'killed most to end a

12-hour battle. the statement
said.
"The situation ·Is completely
stabilized In the favor o! our
troops," It said.
Iran claimed Its forces killed or
wounded at least 1,500 Iraqi
soldiers - roughly the sa me
number of Iranians the Iraqis
said they wiped out.
"Iran' s Moslem forces broke
th ro ugh numerous bo obytrappl'!d ·obstacles and mine
fields last night, attacking Iraqi
positions a nd Inflicting subs tant!al losses In men and equipment," an Iranian military commun ique said.
The fighting was the first
Iranian attack on the southern
warfront In the7-year war since a
"human wave" attack .on Basra
fizzled out In February. Diplomatic sources said It was much
·smaller than the big winter
offensive Iran Is expec ted to
launch soon to try and take the
strategic port.
The outcome of the fierce
overnight battle seemed to co nfirm the prediction voiced by the
State Department this year

for Racine's Christmas Parade. Not surprising,
since the float Is sponsored by the Racine firm of
J.D. Drilling.

down Saturday's
Racine.

Township

Road;

thence

along the Wnt line of said
Plaint rtf

John D. Wilson, et al
Defendants
CASE NO. 87-CV-144
NOTICE OF SALE
Bv virtue of an Order of
Sale isaued out of Common
Pleu Court Of Meigs
County, Ohio, In the case of
We~tern Credit Union Inc.,
Plllintiff, against John 0 .
Wilson. Sr. et al .. Defend·
ants. upon · a judgement
thar•n rendered. being Case
No. 87-CV- 144, In oaid
Court, I will offer for sale, at
the front door of the Court
Hou• in Pomeroy, Meigs
County, Ohio, on the 15th
day of January, 1988 at
10 :30 a.m. tho following
lands and tan aments. to wh :
DesCribed and set forth in
Exhibit A and 8. which are
attached hereto ..nd incorpo·
rated h. .ln.
EXHIBIT A: TRACT FIVE
13.2979 acrn.
Situated in the Township
of Scipio. County of Meigs,
and State of Ohio and
· bounded and described 11
fotlowo:
Being part of Section
Number Thirty !301. Townohlp Seven 171 North, Range
Fourteen (141 W01t of tho
Ohio River Survey, and more
particularly described as
follows;
Commencing at a poll at
the Southwest corner of aaid
Section Thirty, which port is
on the centerline of the
Township Road ; thence
along i.old Township Road
the following c::ourees and
dlotonc•: North 37 dog. 33'
10" Ealt a distance · of
243.41 feet to apoint and
South 88 dog 63' 08" Eaota
distance of 666 .37 feet to a
point, which point islhe true
point of beginning of this
survey; thence leaving said
rood North 25 dog. 34'11"
W•t a di1t11nce of 663.68
feet to an iron pin; passing
an iron pin at 40.00 feet;
thence North 88 dog. 38'
· 30" Ea•t a distance of
&amp;33.04 feet to an iron pin;
thence North 76 deg .
49'13" East 1 disttnce of
183.52 feet to a point on the
oenterline of uid County
Road,South 17 deg. 45'13"
East 1 distance of 239 .90
feet to a point; then.ce
leavinQ aid County Road
South 88 dog. 68'44" Wool
a distllnce of 32.38 feet to
an iron pin; thence South 67
dog. 54' 46" Woot a dlst•nce of 740.98 feat to an
iron pin; thenee South 44
dog. 07' 19" Woot a dioianca of 208.92 _feat to a
point on the centerline of
Rid Town•hlp Road, passIng on Iron pin at 188 .92
ftet: thence North 86 dea .
63' 08" Wool 1 dlotenco of
394.15 feet to tho place of
beginning. subject to the
right of wav of oald Township · Road and of told
County Road, •nd contain·
lng 13.2979 acres.
REFERENCE : Volume
281, pogo 417 , Meigs
County Deed Records.
EXHIBIT 8 ; TRACT
FOUR , 10.2018 ACRfS .
B;tuated in the town•hip
of Scipio, County of Molg~~,
and Stoto of Ohio Ind.
bounded end d01crlbod os

foH-o:

tieing port of SoCiion
Number Thirty 1301. Townohlp Sovon 171 North, Rongo
Fourt- 1141 W01t of Tho

Ohio River Surv-v, and more
p•rtlculerly deacrlbed 11
follow a:
Commenelng at a post et

Section Thirty North 00
deg., 00' 00" East a distance of 1018.61 teet to an
iron pin; thence North 80
deo. 06' 33" Eut n distance
of 284.96 feet to an iron pin;
thence South 26 dag. 34'

11" Eatt a distance of
1003.83 feat to a point in
the centerline of said Township Road. passing Iron pins
at 439 .96 feet and at
983.83 foot: thence otong
the centerline of said Townohip Rood . tho fotlowing
coureet and distances:
North 88 dog. 53' 08" Woot
o distance of 566.37 foot to
a point and South 37 deg.

33' 10" Wut a distance of
243.41 feet to tho ploco of
beginning, subject to the
right of way of the Townthlp
Road

and

containing

10.2018 acres .
REFERENCE : Volume
·261. Page 417 Meigs

CountY Deed Records .
Said parcels appraised at
$4,500.00 .
Terms of Sale: Cash.
The real estate cannot be
sold for leu than two-thirds
of the appraised value.
Howard E. Frank,
Sheriff of
Meigs County, Ohio
112114, 21 , 28. 3tc
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 8, 1987, in

the Meigs. County Probate
Court. Case No. 26709.
John C . Rice, 61429 Rice
A un Road. Reedsville. Otlio
46772 was appointed Executor of the estate of Nora
Rice. deceued. late of
51429 Rica Run Road ;
Reedsville. Meigs County,
Ohio, 46772 .
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
lena K . Nesselroad, Clerk
(12114 . 21. 28. 3tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF ·
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December . 14, 1987,

in the Maiga County Probate
Court, Casa No. 25715, Ro·
nald Hooper, Route 1 , Box
29, Albany , Ohio 45710,
waa appointed Executor of
the
estate of
Wendell
Hooper, deceased. late of
37511 Frederick Road, AI·
banv. Ohio 46710 .
Charles H . Knight.
Acting Probate Judge
lena K. Nasselroad. Clerk
112121, 28; Ill 4 , 3tc

1---::--:-:::--::---::---Public Notice

1---------NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 1, 1987. in

the Mags County Probste
Court. Cal&amp; No. 26703. Daniel J . Buchanan, 62866
State Route 681 , Roecliltilo.
Ohio 46772, woo appoimed
Executa.' of the estate of Ma deline Faye Buchanan, deceased, leta of 52856 State
Route 681. Reedsville, Ohio
45772.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nouelroad. Clark
(121 7, 14, 21 3tc

_
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WEBER FARM
Rutland, Ohio

Sealed proposal• will be
received. by the Village of
Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohio in the office of the
Mayor, Village Hall, Middleport, Ohio, until 2:30 P.M ..
January 7 , 1988, and than
publicly opened and read
aloud for
SANITARY SEWERAGE
IMPROVEMENTS
DIVERSION MANHOLE
CONTRACT NO. 13
The proposed work in this
Contract consists of coh·
structing a new diversion
manhole and connecting
pipe between and existing
storm drain and sanitary
sewer, with all apurtenant
work.
The estimated construe·
tion cost tor this Contract is
811 ,000.00 .
Copies of Drawings, Specifications and Contract doc·
uments may be obtained or
examined at the office of the
Mayor, Village Hall, Middleport, Ohio. 45760 and at
Floyd Browne Associates.
Inc., Consulting Engineers .
Planners. 181 South Main
Street. Marion, Ohio
43302.
A ton dotter ($10.001
deposit (non · refundable)
will be required for each set
of Drawings, Specifications
and Contract documents
taken from· the above
offices.
Checks shall be made
payable to the Village of
Middleport, Ohio.
Attention of the Bidder is
directed to the special construction regulations in cluded herein relative to
special requirements for procurement of labor, the special information given in the
Information to Bidder, to the
Special Requirements for
wage rates, the hours of
employment as ascertained
and determined by the De·
partment of Industrial Relations and provided for in the
laws of the State of Ohio .
Proposals must be submit·
ted on the Proposal Forms
obtained in the Contract .
documents. The Proposal
must be accompanied by a
bid guaranty as required by
Section 153.64 of the Ohio
Revised Code . The bid gua·
ranty shall be either in the
form of a Bid Guaranty Bond
for the full amount of the bid
or a Certified Check, Cashier's Check, or Letter of
Credit, pursuant to Chapter
1306 Of the Ohio Revisud
Coda. in an amount equal to
ten percent ofthe bid. lnthe
event one of the latter three
forms of bid guaranty 's
submitted, then a Contract
Performance Bond equal to
the amoun1 of the Contract
mUst be provided at the tirne
of anter.ing the Contract.
Succnful bidder must be
an Equal Employment Op·
portunity Employer. which
prohibits discrimination ba·
cause of race, creed, color,
national origin . sex. age,
handicap, political affiliation
or beliefs. The Village of
Middleport is an Equal Employment Opportunity
Employer.
The Owner reserves the
right to reject any or all
proposals and to waive any
informalities or irregularities
in the ·proposals received.
VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO
Fred Hoffman, Mayor
(1 21 21 , 28: Jan. 4, 3tc

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

992-3711

10-7-tfn

HOUSE OVERFLOWING?
ClEAN UP WITH
CLASSIFIED ADS f';

E.O.H.

11·23-' 17 I mo. pd.

HOME MAINTENANCE
New location:
168 North Second
Middleport; Ohio 45760

-~
·

' IS

BUSINESS PHONJ

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

!6141 992-bSSO:

FR!f £SnMATES

RISIDINU PHON!

CALL 949-2969

!6141 992-7754

ll-23·'87-1 mo.

l/28/tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

•

RIGGS CREST SUBDIVISION - Really Nice! Split
loyer··home with. 4-5 bedrooms all in excellent conditio n. Garage, ni ce lol W.B.
hook-up. $54,900.00.
POMEROY - Trailer on~. in
good cond~jn. 1973 12'x60'
plus under)inning and new
front porch. WANT $4,900.00.
MIDDLEP( RT - PRICE
REDUCED - 2 bedrooms,
large lot. bath, front porch,
all on one lloor. OWNER
WANTS SALE! $14,000.00.
POMEROY - Older 2 stay
home w/gorgrous woodwa~
fireplace and nice ca ~nels. 3
bedrooms, huge !ami~ room
equipped k~chen . Much More! .
$39,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT- Nicely re·
modeled I ~ story home on a
quiet street 3 bedrooms,
front porch, storage building. Must See! $19,900.00.
ST. RT. 33- Aboul4 miles
to County Road 14. Appro•.
25 acres ol ol vacant
ground. Approx. B acres
pasture. Good building ~ it e.
WANT $11,000.00.
STORY'S RUN ROAD - 3
bedroom ranch ho me wrrh a
12'x65' 3 bedroom mobile
home that rents lor $210/ mo.
Garage workshop most~ fin·
ished. 2&gt;7 acres. $35,000.00.
lETART- 3 b~droom frame
home wrrh aluminum siding.
lar ge rooms. workshop, car·
port. Close to schools. Nice
lot. Garden area. ASKING
$23,00000
CREW ROAD ...: POMEROY
- Really nice split Ioyer
home. 3-4 bedrooms in a
great . neighborhood . Finished basement on a large
1\! acre lot $49,500.00.
tiNRY l CLI1AND, .IA ..... 992-t.191
JUN TRUSSEll ............ 94'1· 2~60

,DOITIE TURNER ........... CJIJ2-SM2
TRACY Rlffl! """'"""' 949-3080
·Ofrf(( ......................... 997-22SI

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIM£STONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
Now Homes Built
''Free Estim a"tes''

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

10-8-tlc

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or

Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS
4-16-86-tln

Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
The following were received·'
/ prepared bv The Ohio Environmental Protection
Agency IOEPAI last week.
Effective dates of final ac·
lions and issuance dates of
proposed actions are stated .
Final actions may be appealed, in writing. within 30
days of the date of this
notice, to The Environmen·
tal Board of Review. Rm .
300, 236 E. Town St.,
Columbus. OH .. 43215 . Notice of any appeal shall be
filed with the director within
3 days, Proposed actions
will become final unless a
wrjtten adjudication hearing
request is submitted within
30 days of the issuance date;
or the director revises / with·
draws the proposed action.
Any person may aubmit
comments and/ or request a
meeting regarding any nonfinal action within 30 days of
the date indicated. "Ac·
tion", as used above does
not include receipt of a
verified complaint . If s ignificant public interest exists, a
public meeting may be held.
Aa to anv action. including
receipt of verified com·
plaints, any person may
obtain notice of further
actions, and additional infor·
mation. Unless otherwise
provided in notices of particular actions, all communica·
tiona shall be sent to:
Hearing Ctork, O~PA , P. 0 .
Box 1049, Columbus, OH.,
43288 -0149, PH . (6141
481 -2116 . Consult ORC
Chap . 3746 ond OAC
Chops. 3745-47 and 37466 for requirements.
Final issuance of permit to
install : Mayor and CounCil,
Middleport, Ohio . Effective
Date: 12/ 08/ 87; Facility
Description: Wastewater;
Application No. 06-2031.
Thia final action nOt preceded by proposed action
and Ia app01labla to EBR .
Treatment Plant and Collection System Improvements.
t12i21,1tc

CHECK THE

We can repair and re-

core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiatot1. We also
repair Gas tanks.

Ron Dileo or
Gary Cummins

PAT HILL FORD

992-6226

992-2196

Middleport
lnsuriii/Uunsld

12·7· '87 tfn

HOSKINS

Pay Your Phone
Cable Bills Here

992·2259
RUTlAND - 2 bedroom
home on a level lot. Rental
investment as it is now
rented or a nice cozy home.
Walking distance to shoppin&amp; $13,900 00

*VINYL SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

FOR RENT
2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. Laundry
facilities available.

and

POMEROY, 0.

Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy, Ohio

RADIATOR
SERVICE

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS

Wa Carry Fishing Supplies

E.Maio•WMI

or at
Veterans Mamorial Hospital

3·11-ttn

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

-

12-3-87-1 mo .

==~·-=-

Public Notice

(614) 446·7619 or (614} 992-2104
417 Second Avt~~ue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

No Sunday Calls

742 ~2143

N~. TVI·-~--

11---~-

FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES
Home Grown
Scotch and
White Pine.

Cancelled
POMEROY ~ The December
meeting of the Meigs Co unty
Democratic Executive Committee has been cancelled. The next
m eeting will be on Thursday,
January 3, 1988.

~

z

6-17-tfc

4· 15·'86-lc

!AGLES &lt;LUB-POM!ROT, OH.

z LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Television listeninc Devices
Dependable Hearing Aid Sales &amp; ~rviool
Hearin&amp; Evaluations For All Aces

J

124, Pomeroy Ohio

Also Jrau111lul ..

Basham Building
a &amp;.Ill Until NOON mu•o.n

Rl .

(free Estimates!

GUN SHOOT

lO PiAU AN AD CAll99MH6
MONOU thr1.1 fRIDAY I A.M. to S P.M.

Roger Hysell
Garage

PIANO LESSONS
Yt~ 'n

Nnu Teo Old
To lutnl

Teaching Thompson,

Schaum, Bastien
From Beginners to
Advanced Students

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

JERRY'S ·

CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

RACINE
GUN CLUB

WlliTE Hill RD. '
RUTLAND, OHIO
742-2035

RACINE, OHIO

)1-3-1 mo. pd .

10-9-tfn

v.w.

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB

"Christmas
Sale"

PARTS
NEW AND USED

Clubs
Shirts - Shoes

•Golf

WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS

•Trophies - Plaques
Badges

•Name Tags lor
Dogs.

JOHN TEAFORD

CHESlER, ~~fo.faWg,_

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

Call For Information

DIANA IHLE

FIREWOOD

949-2890
1-24·'87-1 mo. pd.

Locust, Oak, Cherry

$3500

VINYL &amp;

Per Pickup load
Delivered
BILL SLACK

ALUMINUM SIDING

.614-992-2269

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION
•lntulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772
11·23-'87-1 mo.

J&amp;L

INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING

RUTLAND

IIIARCUM
CONTRACTING t

1

CHESTER. OHIO
I
•HOME BUILDING
•ROOM ADD ITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS ~
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS 81
BACK HOE WORK

Phont Day or IYMIIRtp

•as-4141

GEIIU&amp;l COIITI&amp;CTOIS
1 1 ·3· ttn

THE DABBLE SHOP
Middleport, Ohio

PH. 992-2772

IS FOR SALE

mo.

If interested stop by.

1/2 PRICE SALE
DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED
$2500
$5.00 Extra
For Skinning

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

GOING ON NOW
PLASTERCRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKtTS, ETC.
12· 2·'87· 1 mo pd

12/14/1 mo.

HOUSE FOR RENT
I 07 LOCUST ST.

PMROY-985"35.61

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

All Maku ·

•Washers •Oishwa•hers
•Ranges •Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezer•

WE

sm· USED APPliANCES

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614·662-3821
Authoriud John Deere,
Now Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment
Dealer

CHRISTMAS
TREES
Tag Your Tree

Early
For Christmas
Harley Haning
Residence
3S9 7S Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy,

Ohio

2'1• milts from Fin Points.

11-23-'117 1 mo.

•

FREE LANCE
. VIDEO

Record Those Special

Occasions

on

VHS

Tape

P•rt• &amp; s.,,~~~~

614-742-2355

12/14/ 871 mo.

FREE ESTIMATES

Fu• Eq•lp1mt

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADINO
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to .9 P.M.
Rt. 124 Acrou from
Happy Hollow Rd.

4-5-ffc

•FURNACES
•AtR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS

1-23-'87-1

HILLSIDE
MUIZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

Evenings

Referencl!ll

d.

•Holid.., Peril•
•Weddings
•School Br Church Program•
•Sporting Event•
•Annive... er\1!11

•Raoord ValuabiiB,
Documentl
•Tren1fer Photo Albums to
VHS T•pe

•Trensfer 8mm and Super 8
Movies to Video T•pe
•Create Tralnil"'g Films for
Students and Employees

REASONABLE RATES
CALL FOR FR!f ESnMA TE

992-7632

11116/'17 J mo. d.

:J;. .•I:]

. ~·~

CONSUMER MONITOR

·SYSEMS

Home&amp; Auto
(61 41 992-371.8

Add on mini 1uef co..,puter
system . Fils 1ny c1r. lnst1nt

miles per gallon readout.
Know your fuel consumption
from one block lo hundreds of
miles.

Commercial:
Store to Job Cost
Taxi Service
Before and after auto tune-up.
(Comparator! Fill up your
tank. and watch it subtract and
display fuel consumed.
UNDER '90
Monitors for MCF-CCF used
for . furnaces, tolib11tod to
~our gas meter.
,
Middleport-Col , Ohio
11 · 1)·17· 1 "'0.

''

�!

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
3 Announcements

P.O. Box 519, Ironton, OH
45838. (508} 836-2745.

2 b.ctroom mobile home. Syrecuee. t145 p.- month plu t
utiliti•. a1 4-992-5732.

Cakedecoratin\). Sp.c;lal holidav

44

cahl $10. and up. Ca ll 614-

Apartment
for Rant

9,92-3903.

Giveaway

4

2 BR . apts. 8 cloaeta. kitchenappl. furnished, Wether-Dryer
hoak-up, ww urpat. niFNtv
painted, dac:k. Regencv. Inc.
Aptt. Call 304-87ft,n3B or

Mel a brown puppy needs good

home. C:all614- 446·8196 att•
6 PM .

87&amp;-&amp;104.

6 cute &amp; adorable pupp'l•. 8
weelllt old. Greet Chriatm.u gift.
Call 614 -367-05&amp;8.

Furnished apt. n•t to Ubrary.
One professional adutt only.
Parking. Call 614-446-0338 .

2 tamale. 3 male Collie pupa . 7

Nice 1 SR . apt. Near HMC. No
pets. Stave . refrlg.. drap•622li a ma. Ref. required. Call
614-448-4782.

wB&amp;ks old. Cell 614-992-7871 .

"It hurts when I wake up."
Adorable puppies for Christmas.
Mlx&amp;d breed. 614 -742-2717 .

3femala.1 malapartlrishSettet
and pan Golden Retriaver. Call
614-992-3614.

To a good home in country •
Garman Shepherd &amp; kittens.
304-675-7764.
2 atanding_ trees for firewood.
Call 304-675-3 168 weekdfiVI
ask for B!ll.

Vt Dalmatian, 1ft German Shepherd. 304-743-3398 or 676-

2709.

One Australi.-. Shepherd 8
week-old pup, female. cute and
loves children , 304-773-6696.

6

Lost and Found

LOST: In Kroger' s on Oac. 6th·
White gold ring with Ruby
setting with 6 small dianionds.
Reward . It fo und'call 614-446-

2689 ..

Lost: beige knit scarf. Lost
Tuelldlr'/, Dec. 16 on Second St.,
Pam.-oy. Call 814-992-6689.
Found: Rockaprings Rd . area.
amall puppy male Beagle-Bird
dog milt. 12 weeka old. SeerY\1 to
be hou.e braken. 614-9927300.
lost : black and tan male and
female Coon Hounds. Ne.Rutland. Reward for informa·
tlan. Call614-742·2521 .
Faund: coin pur11 in Pomeroy
Fridav afterrioon. Brought to
Sentine( Office.

Lost Hickory Ch&amp;pel area, llt:tle
long-haired dOIJ, beige, Bengl.
$60 rewar&lt;l . Jim Barnett. 304676-3538.
Found- gray long haired cat with
clipped leg. 304-676-3647.

B

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

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

9

Wanted To Buv

WANTED TO BUY: Uaed wood
&amp; coal heaters. Swain' a Furniture. 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipolis.
Call 61 4 -446· 3169.
Junk cars. S25 for complete
cars. Body 's towed away. Call
614-245-9264 or 6B2-8750 .
Buying daily go ld, silver coins,
rings, jewelry. sterling ware. old
coins, lar!:Je cu rrency. Top pri·
~ - Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. A-...a. Middleport. Oh. 614·

992-3476.

Raw fur. beef and deer hides.
Gyn Sing and Ye llow root . We
have wheat and nita lltea.
Trapping supplies for sale. (Buying used traps) . Geor9a Buckley
Hours 12-9 . 614-664-4761 .
QUILTS
High prices paid for pre-1960
qulh s. Applique. pieced. any
co ndition. Call 614-992-2101
or 614, 992-5657.

Help Wanted

$kill is power. Brighten your job
outlook. We train people for )Oba

•• etectriciena. Heating, lighting,
pow•r, air-conditioning and re frigeration component a all op•·
ate through electrical ayltema
thJ~t are lnatalled and wired by
electricians. ClaaaM for the
Adult Electricity program at
Tri·County Vocational School
begin January 4th. To regiater or
for more information call 7533611 aKt. 14 . You may be
eligible for monies to pay for
vour training, ask about our
financial ,aid sources.
Part time inaurance clerkreceptionist for busy medical
office. Send rnume to TheDalty
Sentine(, Box 729M , Pom.-ay,
Ohio 46769.
Teaching position opening. lm·
mediete opening for tchoolage
Instructor In per-vocational
class, working with 8 atudents
ages 18-11b Full time ul..,.
$15.300 · f24.832 . Must be
ourtified or eligible for certilicate
in M.S .P.R.·M.H. Call614-992·
6681 . Meigs Co. Board of
MRDO . Att. Kathleen Luebbert
P.O. Box 307, Syracut8. Oh.
Government Jobs. 8;16,040$69,230 year. Now Hiring. Your
Aru. 806-887-8000 Ext. R9805 for current Federal list.
AVON • All areu. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304 · 88:Z~ 264li .
AVON all areas. Shlrlav Speau,
304-676-1429 .
MONEY FOR COLLEGE Is available to Individual• who become
membara of the Army Natlanal
Guard. Call 304-676-3960 or

1-800-842-3819 .

VETERAN$ ; let us help payvour
Christmas bitla, Army National
Guard--part- time jobs tun time
benefits, 304-675·3950 or 1·
Secretary receptionist far doctort office. Send resume Box
C-16. Care of Pt. Pl . Regl•ltr.
200 Main St. Pt. Pl ., WV
·
Baby- srtter in my homa. Differ·
ent houn. Rahlf'1111ce raquir..t.

,,

Help Wanted

The Village of Rio Grande is now
accept ing resume's and letters
of interest f9r the position of
Clerk of Courts. Interested persons must ba a village re&amp;ident
and must be llondabl e. Letters
. and resume's can be sent to:
Village of Rio Grande. c/ o Angie
Seagraves. Cle;k. P .O. Box 343,
Rio Gran de. Ohio 45674. Mutt
be received by December 31 ,
1987.
'

3254.

..

Government Homa for t1 . (U
rpeir) . Delinquent tax property.
Repo11e11iona. Clll 806-6876000 Ext. GH -9806 for current
repo 'llll
GOVERNMENT HOMES from
S1 .00 (U rlpeir) fpreelosurea.
rapoa, •• dellquent properties.
Now tailing your ar• Call
1-318-738-7357aKt. 2P-WV-H
for current ~It 24 HRS.
3 bedroom, 2 b.. h. full finished
baement, naw f\lrntc:e &amp; central air. g..-age,. fenced yard, low
60' s. 2414 Mt. Vernon Ave.
304-876-1774.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
14x66 Windaor. Excellent con d.
Lots at e11ttres. 19000. Will
consider Plrtial trade. Call 6143.7 9-2768 Eve.
Fairmont Bayview 1981·,
14x70, 3 BA. , 11h bath, large LA
with FP, Good con d. Call
814-446-6213 after 4 PM.
Lovely 4 BR. mobile home. 2 lull
baths, WBFP in LR, l•g• kit·
chen, 2 added on rms. 2atorage
bldgt. Much mora. Virginia L.
Smith Real Estate, 614-388-

8826 .

Mobile home tor sale. 12•60.
Cail 814-992-3160.

34

Business
Buildings

Comm•cial building• for 1. .e.
Downtown Pt. Ple•ant. Stores,
officet. A·One R..l Ettlite,
Carol Veag..-, Broker. Ctll 304·
67li-6104.

12

60 acr11 · Cauntv water. lots of
timber. Beat offer. Call 614·
446-6980 .

Situations
Wanted

Rentals
Will do babysitting in my hame.
Have 15 ya•• e~tperienca and
have reference if needed. 304676 ·3774.

13

Insurance

Call u1 for your mobile home
insurance: Miller lnaurance,
304-882-2146 . Alao : auta,
home, life, health.

1 B Wanted to Do
Mothlf of 2 will care for your
children during tha holiday f•·
tiviti11. Evenings, weekends, or
during the acflool vacation.
Conveniern locetlon, reasonable
rates. Cell 614-446-0085.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

1 NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommends that you
do business with people you
know. and NOT to send monev
tt.rough t he mail until you t.we
in vestigated the offering.

International Metal Building Ma·
nufact urer Selecting builder/ deal.- inaomeopenareas. High
potential profit in our growth
indust ry. (303) 759 -3200 Ext.
2403.
Steel building deal..-ship with
major manufacturer-Sale&amp; and
EngineMing support. Startltl' ads
furniahed . •SOme areas taken.
Callt303)769-3200 axt .2401 ,

Eaty Workl ExceiiMt Pay! A•aamble produ cts at home. Call
for im lormation. 312 -741 -8400
Ext. A-313
.

23

Applications being taken 'tlow
for tu llt ime AN . E.._cellent salary
&amp; benefite. Applv at S ceni c Hill a
Nurs ing Center. 536 Buckridge
Rd ., Gallipolis.

Bob Cline Taxidarmv, Mem ber
W. Va. Tuidermy A11oc, At. 2
Box 782. Point PleBSa nt , W. Va.

Professional
Services

304-676-1448.

Rea l Estate

Furniahed: 4 room• &amp; beth.
Clean. No pets. Aduhsonly .Ref.
&amp; dep . required. Call 614-448-

2 bedroom, 2 beths, 2 car
g.-age, level lot on At . 33. _
1:-&amp;_1_9_.- , - - - - - - Swimming pool, aetelite, cioN : to Meigs High. Call 814-992- Modern 1 BR apanment. Call

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

" Friends Retail corp' ' of Gallipolis. Ohio seekl a co mpetent
aales penort to work fn Child,
ren' • Clothing Store. Mutt be
highly motivated end LOVE
Homes for Sale
working with children. Send - 31
reau me tO: Friend• Retail Corp ..
P.O. BO• 981 , Gallipolia, Ohio 4 8R ., fireplace. full buement. 3
45831 .. - - mi. so. of Galllpolla . 834,900.
Ca ll Daya-614-448-1616, after
Job hunting? Need • alcill7 We 6 :00- 446-1244.
train people ton' lob' es auto
m achanlcs, earpl!iinera. electri- Brand new 3 BR . n11ar Gallipolis
cians, food service workers , locks on At. 7 . 2 c ar g•age, nice
lot. Immediate poue11ion. Will
electronics technicians. indus·
tr ial maintenance w orker .-. nun· con1ider trade in of Mobile
ing assistanu .and orderlies, home. property. etc. Bargain
machinists, end wefders. Regis- priced. Call614· 446 -8038.
ter now for chwsll tutginning
January 4th. Call Tri-C ounty 9 room house· 2 full bath. &amp; ,
Vocational Adult Center at 753· basement. 3 roQm ept. &amp; brthon
351 1 e.lltt. 14. A variety of same ' property. Mov ing out of
funding saurees to pay for county. Will lletifiee. •64,500.
training ere available for t hose 642 5th. Ave . Call 614-446·
1607.
eligible.

•

Homes for Sale

304-676-6132.

Employment
Services

31

800-642-3619.

We pay cash for late model clean
used cars.
Jim Mink Chev.·Oids Inc.
Blll GeneJohnlort
614-446·3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used cars. Smith
Buick- Pontiac, 1911 Ea1tern
Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 814-4482282.

Downtown- Modern 1 BR ..
complete kitchen, carpet. air.
electric heat. Call 814-448·

Ir-:;;=;;;;;::;;;::;~==r-;;:~;:::=;:::;;:;=:l4383-d...,
weekends... .446-0139-evan. &amp;
11

41

Homes for Rent

3 DR . house &amp; 9arage. A-1 Real
Estate, C.rol Yaager-Brok.-.
304-875-5104.
Nicely furnished tmell houta.
Adutta only. Ref, required. No
pets. Call 614-448·0338 .
large 2·3 BR . hou.e. Plenty of
atorage. Henderson area. Call
61.4-448-7026 .
2 or 3 BR unfurnished ha. Yard,
city achoolt, t276 mo. plus
utiliti81 &amp; depoait. Call 614446-2516.

614-446-0390.

4249.

Furniahed upstaln· 1 BR . Utilitiel paid. *210 a mo. Oep. 94
Locutt St. Call 814-446-1340
OJ 446-3870 ,
2 BR . apt . Stove &amp; refrig.
furnilhed . Near Go Mart. Call
614-446-7025 .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·
SON ESTATES . 638 Jacksan
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movin. 614-4463997. E.O.H.

Nice 3 bedroom house. Family
room, gar&amp;ge . b aseme nt .
forced -air heat, 6 w ooded &amp;cres,
barn. t276 , per month. S100.
deposit. No inside pBte. 10 Easl
St.. Pomeroy. Ohio. 614-4236289.

- - - - - - - - -1&lt;&gt;-

2 · bedrooms, partly furnlahed,
cable, trash. t150 . par month,
8100. deposit. No drunk• or
dope. 650 Osborne St., Pomeray . Call 614-992-3122 .

Space for smtll trailers. A,ll
haok-ups. Cebla. Alsoeffloienev
rooms. air and c~e. M•son,
W.Va. Call .304-173-511151 .

Nice 1 BR.ept. Rangeandrsfrig.
furnlsh.ct. Wat• &amp;. garbage
paid. Deposit: required . Call
814· 446-4346 aftet" 5 PM.
16 Court · 2BR .. beth&amp; 1h, w / w
CIII'Pet.-, l•ge mod81'n kitchen,
$3li0 plua utMiti...
11 Court • Large aptrt!T'Ient, 2
BR ., 2 bethl, w/ w carpet.
complete kitch,n. t326 plus
utilities.
2311 Firat - River view- 1 BR .. 1
bath, no children, t176 plua
utilitl•. All apanmanta-Oep. &amp;
ref. No peta.' Call 814-446-

4928.

New bridr; 2 BR .. equipped
kitchen, laundry room. Private
parking. No pets. Ref. &amp; dep.
can 614-448· 1250.
New furnished or unfurnished 1
BR . apt. ne.- Meiga H.S . Call
614-446-8898 OJ 992·6304.
Garage apt.· 'furnished- 1 BR .
29112 Neil, Geltipollt. 8226 utlitl• paid. Call446-4418after7
PM.
Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at Village
Manor and Riverside Apart·
menta in Middleport. From
$216. induding utilities. Cell
614-992-7787. EOH.
•

992-5868.

992-2094.

APARTMENTS. mobile tlom111.
housn. Pt. Plea~entand Gallipolis. 614-446-8221 .
2 bedroom furniled apt, ref end
dapotit, New Haven, W. Va .•
304-882 ·3267 or 304· 773-

5024.

Beech Street, Mlddlepon, Ohio,
2 bedraam furnished apl , utliti• paid, references and deposit,

304-882-2&amp;86.

One bedroom furnlthedapt, very
clean end nice, adult• only. rJO
pata. phon a 304· 675· 1 386.

Furnished Rooms

Rooms for rent. day . week.
month. Gailia Hotat. Call 814·
446-9680. Rent a a low aa t120
month .
Furnished room. 876 . Utiliti•
paid. Share bath. Single mtle.
919 Secof'ld. Gallipolis. Call
446-4416 after 7pm.

liD Square One TV t;1
iiJJ ShowBiz Today News of
the ontertainmon1 word Is

~

CAPTAIN EASY

anchored live from New

York. (0:30)
® Facto of Life
em One Day at a Time
&amp;:05 (lJ Alice
6:30 8 (]) Ol NBC Nightly Newo

PILOT, We AK&amp; JUS.T ABOUT TO

THI" II' A

MAK~

llEAUTIFLIL

DAY FOR A
SOMI51NC'i•
I~N'T ITf

HI!SoTOftY, AND NOT JLI!5-T

INDF:PF:NPE-WCIAN HI!5-TORV-

~ Surter Mag"zlno (R)

----:c------- ~~~;~~;~;~;r.======•:·~:·:•:':"':·::~ and
.not
good,
Good tirel:~
1978body
Pont
iac
Phoenb
Many
other
good
partt.. Mot~
•1·o&lt;t•
49

For Lease

·1400 ••· 11. eommorel~

spec•

suitable for offiCIS. retailing. or
urvieet. Prime location-earn•
of 2nd. &amp; Pine in Galllpolia.
Ample ptrldng in rear. t3li0 P•
manth. Call 814-446·4249 or
446-2326.

Callllhen's Used TireS hop. Over
1.000 tlr•. alze•12 , 13. 14. 16,
b:il

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION llo FURNITURE 62
Olfve St .. Gallipolis .
NEW· 6 pc. wood grouJ&gt; e399.
Livipg room suites- •199-e599.
Bunk beds with bedding- 8199.
Full size m.n:r•• &amp; foundation
starting · *99 , Reclinera
118Ming· S99.
USED- Beds, dr•~rs. bedroOm
IUitel , 1199-1299 . Delkl,
wringer' washer, • complete line
of uaed furnjture.
NEW- Western boots- 130.
Workboota S1B &amp;. up . (Steel&amp;.
aofttoet. Call814-446-3159 .

Sot• end chairs priced from
8395 to 8996. Tebl81 t60 and
up tOo S126 . Hid•a-beds S390
to t696 . Radin•• *226 tOo
*375. Umpa S2B to t12S .
Dinettes $109 and up to 1496.
Wood table w-6 chaira $285 to
t79&amp;. Detk e100 up to t37&amp;.
Hutches t400 and up. Bunk
bM1 complete w·mettrau•
$296 and up to t396 . Beb'(btdl
e110 . M1ttreaaes or box springs
full or twin $88, flrm t78, and
188. Q.,.en seta 8226, King
8350. 4 drawer ch•t t89 . Gun
cabinets 8 gun. Gil or e4ectrlc
range 1375. Baby mettreuu
S315 &amp; t45 . Bee$ tram• S20,
*30 • KII\Q frame tBO. Good
selactlon at bedraom suhes,
matelc.blnets, headboards UO
and up to t86 .
90 Dave same 11 c•h with
approved credit. 3 Mil• out
Bulwille Rd. Open Bam to 6pm
Mon . thru Sat. Ph. 814-«6-

0322.

Valley .=urniture
New and uaed furniture and
applicancas. Call 814 -4487672. Houn 9-&amp;.
PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc. living room
suit••· e399.96; chest ot
drawera-4 drawer, *48; twin
mattretMt, *95 tat; microwave
oven stands.
THE WORKING
MAN'S FRIENO
New Magic Chef Almond

Range. Navar used. e27B. Call

814-379-2791 .

Uaed reconditioned washers •
drven, with guarantees. Call

Muule loading Suppliet· Prion
hllie been reduced. Shop going
out of butin••· Koebal'a, Mill
Cr88k Rd. Hrs.- Mon., Wed .. Fri.6 -8 PM. Sat .- 1 -15 PM . Phone
614-446-2316.
WOodsplitter- 3 point hookup.
8" I betm. Set of14'' alum. mag
slot rims. Call81 4 -245-6198 or
446-3816 ask for Mike.
Se•on«&lt; Oak &amp; Ash firewood.
Sea~on«&lt; one year. L1rge IOoads.
Split &amp; del. •.co. Call814-258·
1340 or 2156-9303, envtlme.
Tree It 1tump, firewood. Heap
Voucher• accepted. Live balled
Christme1 tree.. 137.60. Don' a
lendlcap•. 614·448-9648 .
1· mode( 12 Winche~ter 30 "
full. 1- model48 Rem.ington 30
" full. 1- model 31 Remington
32" fui1.1 - Veliant32"fullsolld
rib. Call 614 -448-3346 .
Warm Morning Woodburner
with 3 spd. blower. Good con d.
Call 614 -266-6413 .
Firewood- Seaoned Oak · split,
delivered and sl8ck«&lt; . S36 a
very large loed . Call 614-446-

7993.

Se•• 28" Ught wt. 3 spd. His &amp;
Hers Free Spirit Bicycle~ . ElllCel·
lent Condition. t140 for pair.
Call 814·446· 2749 .

.

I

Mixed h•d wood slabs. e12 per
bundle. Containing appro•. 1 "h
tOon. FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pamerov. Ohio. 614-992-6461 .
Mixed hay for aale. Call 614742· 2716 .

Ce11114-992-6847.

Hand made oak china cabinet. 8
ft . bv 3 ft. 3 gl . . anclos..t
sh.,.s, 3 bottom optn ahelvet.
*135. Clll814·986-4396.
se.. oned hardwood firewooi
tor tale. 814-742-2545.
Allen Fire•m• .44 Mag 41A
· inches, Auger .41 Magnum 4~
inches Blackhawk. Phone 614-

742-2594.

Antique coal· wood ful sire cook
stove. Like naw, nake ofler.
Amrox floor modet drll pre11. %
chuck. 12 speed crank-up tlible.
l.fl HP motor. N-ever been u1ed.
S 200. 30 ton be.-ing press.
New, UOO. Call 614-949·
All Christmas Tr. . $12 .. Come
before cold weeth•. tlg
your trn at Newell' a Chriatmas
Tree Ftrm 1 mile above Maton
on Htnging Rock Rd . 304-7736371 or 882-2886.

54 Misc. Merchandiae
Sa•• comba stereo radio 1ape
plaver. e12&amp; . Call 304-8762383 after 6 p.m .
Redline modet RL20 , pro 11vle
free style bi~le 8300 .00.
304-676·29BB. 9 :30 to 7 :00.
Mester Cerd·Viu accepted.
OuaNr 19 " portable color tel•
vition, t76 . 304•11176· 281&amp; .

truck lolld, deUvered, 304-li76-

2903.

Firewood delivered, stactced,
*36.00. Mason Countiel, Galli·
polis other erNI within reaaon at
our discretion, 304-896-3446.

AKC Chihuahua . ·Call 614-4467766.
Puf&amp; bred Am..-ican Etkimo
puppla. Ready for Chrlstmea.
EJU:ellent bloodline. UO each.
Cell 614-0089.
AKC registered Collie puP1.
Mel•. •200. Heva 2 ••b4eand 2
tria. Female~, ,, 76 . 2 Nblet. All
WOt'med, hllie h ed puppy llhot •·
Reedy now· 7 wtab old. 814843.-6365.

1987 Escort. 4 door, 3.PO!)
mil•. PS, Jutomatic trenami•~
sian , AM · FM ra.dio , AC.
t7 ,200.00 . 304-773-610B . '
77 Mustang,

304-675-2467.

72

6

eyl.

Butatt puppi•. Ready to go
Christma• Eve. 4 male, 3 female.
$100. each. Call 614-7422412 . ~3234 Sidehill Rd .,
Rutland .

57

Musical
Instruments

Ovation 8 ttring non-electric.
•126 . Fender Am.-lcen-mMit
lead II, 8226. C.ll 814-742·

2694.
68

1982 Ford f1fi0 long bed, 351
engine. auto. power atearlng, ·
power brakes, trailer towing,
AM -FM radio, new tlr•. XLS
Pkg., camp• alto available H
wanted . Call ~14 - 742 - 2289 .

73

/

~~~------~----·
74 Motorcycle&amp;
•

Goncreta blocks til sizes yard or
de4ivery. Meson sand. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123YJ Pine St .
GaUipalls. Ohio Call 814 -446 ~

2783. .

A81dy ml• concrete and all
concrete: auppllea. Call us Vall~
Brook Cement and Supplles

304-773-&amp;234.

56

.

Pets for Sale

Meig1 Co . Humane Socilfty now
has a lovely .elect ion or Call and
kittens ready for adoption . Some
already spayed and neutered. All
shots up to date . Adoption faa
required . Cell for mora informa ·
tion about our lovely pats

'·

f

~

iH~EE' . MONTHS.

i

i

•

i

•

'

ALLEY OOP

7026 .
76

~

IT oNr..'&lt; L.A5"i'e:D

'
3-Wheeler ATV·Kaw11aki 200.
Good cond. Call 614 ·44e..

..
-

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceasories . ...

New atudded anow tlret, G78 ...:
16 , two for t80.00. 304-175::&gt;
7771 .
•,

'

402 Big Bloclc - Ch.,y engin~

30.·175-2883.

Jaeks Fruit MarkM, Rt . 35.
Henderson. SJe us for sll your
Chrittmes ,needl. Apple~, Nevel
~rang•. Bananas, Tangeloa, all
, k1nds nuts. cMdy, gr~p• and
tometo81. laking potatoe1. 10
lb. t4.00: Sweet onlona 26c
pound; graen cabbtga 20c lb.

f .IIIII Siippiii~S
&amp; LtVI'SIOi:k

CROSS llo SONS
U.S. 36 West, Jackaon, Ohio.

814-286-8461 .

Massey Ferguson. Naw Hollend.
Buth Hog Salet &amp; Service. Over
40 uted tracton to choose from
&amp; complete line of new • uHd
equipment. Largftt lalection in
S .E. Ohio.
1973 668 lnt'l Di•el. wide
front, t3960 . Late model 2400
lnt'l round baler, Nice! t3950.
1986 50 HP bulldozer. low
haurs. Owner will finance . Call

Homa
lmproveml!nts

-

depth feature reports. (1 :00)
(I)) MOVIE: II Hoppenld One
ChrtoltMtiNR) (I :'42)
•ilfnciii!NR)
mMOVIE: (2:16)
Pocket Full of
1:05 (1) MOVII!: ll't 1 Wonderful

I mA.DtJ'r MltJD

'

Gt\1100 lHAT A SHOT
~ A WHILE. lvlltSELf

BASEMENT
,
WATERPROOFING '
;
Unconditlon•l lifetime guaran'&gt;
t•- Local ref•enc• furnlsh.ct ..
Free "timll81. C1ll coli•
1-614-237-0488. dl¥ or niqht:'

IJfe(NRJ (2:09)

1:30 (J) NFL Mondoy Night
Mogozlnl (T)
Ol 1111121 A CfllymaUon
Chrlolmtlo Cellbrltion
Claymatlon cl1aracter9,
Including the popular

RogertBaaemen~

Watarprooflng.

'

"

Now buying ahafl corn or e•
co.rn. Call for lateat quotes. River
City Farm Supply, 614 -4462985 .

63

Livestock

Pony, Nddle and bridle for sale.
S160. Gentle with chijdren. Call
614-742-2339.

2464.

Fetty Tree Trimming, atump
removal. Cell304-676-1331 .

446-4477

.

announces he no longer
believes in Santa.
10:00 Ill Straight Tolk
8 (I) 1111 Chriolmtlt In
Woohlngton The traditional

WOULD YOU KEEP
TATER TONIGHT,
ELVINEY?

YOU AN'
SNUFFY ARE
GOIN'OFF

NOPE
HAVIN' TH'

FELLERS OVER

AN' I DON'T

WANT

TATER TO L'ARN HOW

carols and Christmas music

will be partormad by a

variety of musical talent rrom

the National Building
Museum in Washington, D.C.

. TO CUSS YET

FER CARDS

~ NHK Agure Skotlng

Champlonohipo Exhibition
from Tokyo, Japan (T)
(f) To Eotablloh JuoUco
Rallous Freedom
Ol • il2l Cagney a Lacey A
bizarre woman Is accused of

witchcraft by har neighbors.

S@ ~g{} 1A- ~ £ tfS"

Rearrange letter of
0 four
scrambled words
I.

tt:le
be-

low to form four simple words.

HAW EST

I;
I I ll 1· I j
DARHO

I;.!
I
I
I
1
I. . _ _ _
5 ROSUY 6

I

Don't you always cringe ~t ;;,e
end of a pelfectly horrid day when
someone says, "Well , at least it
couldn 't get - - ."

N UO G L E
~-..,,;:7~T~..:...,,;:,~:,.~..::...,Ir--1 Q

I

__J.__J
1--.l..-..L._J.___..L

e

Complete the ct.uckle quoted
by f1llmg in the missing words

you de~e lop from step No. 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED
I
LETTERS IN SQUARES

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Raf3! - CliNt - Quack - Grotto - · Tracks
A town eldar got up at a COIJncll meeting and stumped
everyone by staling, "You can't tell which way the train went
by iooldng at thtl TRAqKS." , .----_;__ _ _ _ __,
NORTH
tAI02 .
.AK
t8 '65 3
+AQJ7

BRIDGE
James Jacoby
Jeff Rubens, co-editor of Bridge
World magazine, wrote an imaginative series some years ago called
"Bridge in Muttropolis." focusing on
bizarre results in a big-city club. That
series is now available as a book.
Suppose you were South in today's
·· 1·····' and had to play in six clubs. How
should you proceed? You might well
win dummy's ace of spades and ruff a
spade, play a club .to dummy and ruff
another spade. Up to this point, you
would have learned that West started
with eight spades. Another club to
dummy would mark West with two
clubs, and playing the A-K of hearts .
with West following would mark bim
with two hearts. That would be 12
·cards accounted for, and now you
would be confronted with the problem
of playing tbe diamond suit for onl¥
one loser to make your slam.
The solution: Lead a diamond from
dummy and play low. West must win
the singleton queen and lead a spade.
That lets you ruff in dummy as you
shed a diamond, and you can now finesse against East's diamond king to
make your contract. So what's the
problem?
There is alsO a defender's solution to
this de~L When you lead tbe lirst small

WEST

EAST

+KQJ986 54

+7

12-ZI-17

"'JI086 542
t K 10 97

"'9 3

tQ
+ 32

+4
SOUTH

+s

· 'I'Q7
tAJ4 2

+KI0986 5
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West
We1l

s+

Nortb

East

Soutb

Dbl.

Pass
Pass

Pass

&amp;+

Pass

s+ •

Pass

Opening lead: + K

diamond from dummy, East eari-pli\
up his king and thwart your plans. Although you can take your ace and jac~,
East's remaining 10-9 will eventually
take the setting tricks.
For information about "Bridge in
Muttropoiis" and other holiday bridge
books, write The Bridge World, 39
West 94th St., New York, NY 100257124.

~'iNewo

DOWN
I Spongy
I Wild pig
cake
5 Lefty, of
2Roberts
pitching ..
3
Verdi
fame
opera
10 "Tempest".
4Johnnyrole
5 Complaint
12 Bucolic
6 Hosiery
13 Moneymishap
losing
Yesterdaf'a Anawer
7 Russian
enterprise
22 Max - ·
34 Magazine
city
115 In the
Sydow
emblem
8 Flower
style of
24
Scrap
35
·
- of the
holder
16 Spot on
Flies"
9 Different 25 Familiar
a die
verb
37 Smooth
11 Wolnike
17 Pinky'consonant
14 Trig term 26 Scout
18Tendon
group
38
Formerly
18 Burn
20 Predict
28
Adam
West
39
French
19 Anger
23 "On the
role
river
-Again" 20 Smidgen 30 Gratis
41 "Agnus - "
21
Dock27 Peerless
42 Book
worker's 32 Pallid
28 Vermont
33
Temple's
ex
(abbr.)
grp.
city
.....-...---~
29 ·-the
Drum
Slowly"
30 Make plump
3I Mars
neighbor
33 • ...and
one
for36 Noah's
first-born
(var.)
37 Actress
Myrna
400h my!
43 Sign a
contrae't
44 Present
occasion
45 French
sculptor
46 Salacious
look

ACROSS

12121

lUI Evening Newo A wrap up
of today's news and a look

General Hauling

AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

ahead to tomorrow'.s news

stories. (1 :00)
fl) mBenny Hill
10:30 (l) Courtohlp of Eddie' a
Father
liD Tl11o Old Houoe

..

Weatherbee Farm is

R &amp; R Water Service. Home
cilters. wells, pllols filled . Formertv Jamea Bay s Wateri~Oall

304-675-8370.

Upholstery

.

8

M_o wrev' • Upholtterlng tervlng
tr1 co untyarea'22 yean. The beat
In furniture upholstering .' Call
30_4 · 676 -4164 far free
flltlmates

... '•

prepared for painting; 1he
chimney Is line&lt;!. t:;1
II mHogan' a HlfOII
10:50 (lJ MOVIE: Pordnt1'11 (NR)
(1 :30)
11:00 (l) Remington
G (]) !Ill 1111121 1111 Nowo ,
(J) College Bookotball
(f) Sign Off
liD Only One Earth A once
destroyed desen area In
northern Kenya has bean
res1ored.
iiJ) Moneyllne Current

B-•

Paul Rupe. Jr. Watar Ser vice
Poolt, cisternt. wells. Call 614:
448-3171 .

B7

1988 Pontiac Fiero GT , 9,000

doctors. (R) t:;1
9:30 Ol 1111121 Dtoolgnlng Women

'.

.

72 Nova 360 4-speed. good
cond. 304-676~ 6839 .

614-992-6605 .. 614-992- mil ea. Clean. 18.000. 304 ·875·
3026.
4480.

Christmas songs.
8:00 Ill 700 Club
ct1 NHK Flglft Skating
Chemplonohlpo Woman's
Competition from Tokyo.
Japan (T)
Cil eiil AIC Monday Night
F-111;1
&lt;Il liD Evening at Popo
OJ Heort of Ohio Chrtolmlt
iiJJ Nowo from Mldlcino
Praoenta In a Heartbeat
1111121 Newhert Dick
persuades Joanna to
overcome her fear of eye

Reaidentiai or commercial wi;.
ing. New aervlce or rep•lrs&lt;.
licenaed electrician. Eatlmate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304:
675-1786 .
' ~
.'

632-0040.

1988 Ch~Wrolet Beretta , loaded,
810 , 90~- 304-675-4480.

WILDI&lt;IDIN

T-HOSE PAYS.

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration •

Watterson ' s Water Hauling t
re.uonable rates, immediat~
2,000 galla n de,ivary , ci1terni
pool1, wall. etc. call 304-578: ·
2919 . "'

1983 Z-28 Cam•o. 4o:ooo
mile~ . •&amp;196 . Call632-2813or

I WAS A PRETiY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Car. Fourth and Pine
Gall ipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-44-6-38B8 or 614'-

85

the cull\lral and

Mac.y Jo's son, Quint,

64

71 Auto's For Sala

YOI-1 CON 1T
HAVE ,ANY
CL.OTHt=:S ON.

676-2903.

J &amp; J Water ServIce. Swimming
poota, ciaterns, wells. Ph . 614246 -9285.

Tra11sportat10il

WANNA SEE A PICTURe OF
WHEN! WA5A e.&lt;\B&gt;Y'&lt;-

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most well a compllted semeday.
Pump sal• and aiiJVIct. 304·

Dillard Water Service: Poo!J.
Cisterns, Walla. DeiNery An¥time. Call 814 -448-7404-f'.lo
Sund., calls.

1 Vt plu a ec field c:orn in field.
304-876· 7397 Of 875-1247.

~rovlda

historical context of favorite

RON'S Telaviaion Service (
Hou.e calla on RCA , Quazar:
GE . Spaciallng in Zenith, Call ,
304 •!578-2388 OJ 114· 441 ·

Registered Paint Filly Palimano
and white regiuered Quarter
Horse, 6 yr old Bucktkin mare.
real nice. 304-676-8799 .

Hay&amp; Grain

California Raisins, comically

SWEEPER and aewing machlnlli
repair, pans, and aupplle1. Pldt
up end delivery, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner. one halt mile uP.
Georg• Creek Ad. Cell 814•'
448- 284-.
•. 'j

84

Son

ups of
the day's world newa -and in

---:-=--=------''
61 Farm Equipment

II mWKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 (lJ Sanford and
1:00 (l) 'Fither Murphy
8 (]) 1111 MOVIE: 'The Little
Mlteh·Girl' NIC Mondly
Night 11 the Movfll D
(J) NFL Monday Nlghl Mitch
Up Dallas Cowboys at Los
Angeles Rams (T)
Cil II (I) MICGyver Nikki
becomes 1he targe1 of a
terrorist group. Q
(f) Tl1t Meklng lit 1
Continenl see how ferocious
winds and Immense glaciers
formed the NA continent. t:;J
Ol 1111121 AGorfteld
Chrtolmel Spoc;lol Wijh great
irritation, Garfield allows
himself to be dragged out of
bad to travel to the country
with Jon and Odie lor a
traditional Christmas. 1;1
liD Wonderworko MaQIC of
the box of delights laads Kay

8 Prlmenewo Wrap

-.
B1

Cil Newlywed Game
OIIl Judge
OJ Wheel of Fortune t:;J
iiJJ Croaoftre (0:30) .
• il2l iiSl J-rdyl t:;l
lUI Berney Mllllr

'::~:~;~'

--~--=--= lolitool ~f ClAY I. I'OllAN

into a series of adventures.

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

T~ys.

Children• lamps, 10 spbika, misc. New for Chriltmas.
Pic:kent. U1ed Furniture. 304-

MF: MUST

HAVE 8EI?N DEFfeitve. ·

--------------------~·

62 Wanted to Buy

1078.

~ou GA'/E

1982 Dodg11!2&amp;0Ram. Custom: ·
conversion. Trail• ready. Call ~
814-,4 48-4383 dll'fl, 448 ·0139 ..
event . &amp; wellk.-.dt .
~

Firewood S20.00 pickup load.
no deliverill. 304-676-7771 ,

For sele gun cabinet. 1olid
walnut. handmade. hold 10
guns. double gl•• daors, bottom strap. *286. 304-46B-

THAT TH~Es YeAR LMN

11

Vans&amp;4 W.O.

S2

.

Memorill (T)

76 Ch...,y pickup. Runs good . •
esoo. 304·937-2343. . • :

BUY WHOLESALE. White f•m
Tracton at whol . .le invoice
plua freight. Compwe the price
end quality. Modell from 16 to
180 hp. leasing available. on.
good through Dec. 31 . Siders
Equipment Ca ., US 35, Hand•·
aon. W. Va. 304-676-7421 .

4679.

· Dobbs. 10:30)
• il2l iiSl Whoel of Fortune
IBl Cheora
.
em M·A·s·H .
7:05 (lJ Andy Griffilh .
7:308(]) Hollywood Squoreo
(J) NFL Monday Night

Trucks for Sale'

Gibson electric guitar with
aound affecu and amplfier
•200 .00. Compound bow with
arrows t75.00. 2 complete
Datsun pickup trucka for pant,
very good tir•.876.00 each.
Call 304-773-6692 ask for Ada.

Uaed overhead gtrage door
7 '6 " .S ' woOod. Complele whh
h•dware. 846.00 . 304-675-

reports on world economics
and financial news with .Lou

I~BQ 1

Sterka Tree and lawn Set'vice.
lawn c••· land,ceping, stump
removal. 304-676-2842 or .

Nice 2 bedroom hou1e, b••
ment, g•age, wood btJrn.-. Na
Pet a. 1100. depoai1. $260.
mont h. New Haven. 304-8823202 or 882 -2682 .

"Cheer upl Only 3.581 ,387 of these lo gol"

388·9688.

198ft Special Edition ChevY
CaiiiiJiar. fuel Injected. 4 ayl, 4
speed. air, sharp little car,
t4 .286.00. Phone 304-676 ·
6768 or BJli-2663 .

Now till Dec. 31 all Zaator
tractoraln ttock 10 percent over
coat. No trad•in. Morris Equipment. Rutland, Ohio. 814-742·
24lili .

Building Material•
Blodr;. briCk, 18'1Nar pipBI, win·
dowa, lintels. etc. Claude Winter•. Rio Grande. 0 . Call 614·
246· 5121 '

Two 2 -bedroom t'lou~e trail era: 1
ell electric; 1 fuel oil. S1 60.
month plu l utilities. 304-676- ·
4088 .

Baby guirlea pigs for ~tie.
Bidwell Calh Feed Store. 614-

Charg~: 2:

1986 Dodge Shelby
door, $7,000.00 or take oY.r:
peymertta, 304-6715-67015 .

896-3802

Two bedroom house half mile
out Jerlctlo Road, call aft•
6:00 pm, 304 ·676-6483.

Mobile home 84x14, 2 baths, 3
bedroDms, all electric. children
but no peta. 304·-458-1887.

AKC Cock• Spaniel pups, Reg.
Am. Eskimo Spits pups. Shots&amp;
wormed . t160 each. Ready for
thristmas. Call 814-38B-B890
or 448-8308 -weekends.

1981 Chwy CaPrice
station w•gon. loaded, goD~%
condition. '1400 . Call 81#-"'
247-4292.
· . :,,..

614-2e6-6522.

55 Building Supplies

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

1364.

••lv

Antiques

6.14-992-2628 .

Complete ham•t•• set-up with
hamster. t&amp; .OO each. Baby'
par•keeta. •s &amp; 10 each. Babv
Jabbits. t1 .60 each. Baby hamstara. S1 .26 each. Cell 448-

2013.

U Hau I trucka and traders for
rent, 304-676-7421 .

ANTIQUES . B~y or 8841. Riverine Antiques. 1124 Eaat Main
St. Pomeroy. Hours: · Mon .·
Tun.-Wed. 10 a.m. to 8 p.m.Sun.· 1 p.m.- 6 p.m. Bvchance
or appointment. Ruu Moore

New errivals for Christmas·
Registered AKC ChoW puppi81.
Caii814-38B-B801 .

Firewood for sale. Mixed hardwDOdt. Split and da$ivared , • 36.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE Sofa's, chairs, lamps, rectln•t
dish•. dinnette, bedding. hid.:
a-bed, gl•sware • misc. 304676-1460.

Wl'llte WfttlnghOouse waaher &amp;
dryer. E• - condition. leu th.-. 2
years old. Ctll 814-446-0343 .

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan. Peraian and
Siamete kittena. AKC Chow
pupplll. Call 614-448 -3844
efter 7PM.

eiil AIC Newo p
Nightly Buolneoo Repon
Ol •1121 CBS Newo
liD Coloroounda
1121 lnoldo Politico '18
IBl WKRP In Cincinnati
e m Too Clooe for Comfort
6:35 (lJ Leave It To Beaver
7:00 (l) Remlng10n St""lo
G (I) PM Megulne
(J) SportoCenter (L)
Cil Entertainment Tonight
0 (I) "--plo'o Court
(f) liD M1cNell/ Lehrer
NewaHour (1:00)
OJ New•
IIJ) Moneyllna Current
Cil

(f)

• .~
Cutjel.··

114-992-6892.

One Step car.eat. t20. Call

814-388-9306.

SURPLUS ARMY , DENIM ,
RENTAL. CARHART CLO THING. Original army camouflega. H. 0 . "Sam" Som•
rville ' s , Old Rt . 21
East-Ravenswood . Fri. Set. Sun,
noon-8 :00pm. 304-273-586li .
lntulated camouflege coveralls
$2li .OO. Black-White snow
camauflage.

992-3689.

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet

~~ ·::2:6~J~~1~ut At. 218. ~~f~~;~~~ ~!~ ~~~d~~··'!!~

Mix.ct flr.wood. t80 .00 dump

Bunk bad•·Crews Querters wh.h
. 2 interspring mattr81.... 8225.
Call 814-318·8201 after 6 PM
or 448 -2868 weekends.

53

p et S f or Sa Ie

56

Julie Webb Ph. 614·446· 0231 .

Merchandtsc

614-388-8481 .

64 Misc. Merchandl' se

•

(J) SpoflaLook (T)
(f) Dr. Who

1985 $ -10 Blizer, 4 spd . with
air. 17200. 1986 Etcdft. 6 tpd ..
22.000 mil•. 83200. Call814 ·

245-5239.

MON., DEC. 21

EVENING
1:00 (l) Crazy Uke 1 Fox
• (I) CIJ m IIl OJ e1121
11J1 Newa

1981 Dodge Aritl K ttatlon
w&amp;gon . AM-FM stereo-ctll.,
cruise control . Good cond . Clll
614-245-989'8 .

1978 Fof11lTO . Good tires. neW
battery, , air. •100. Call 814-

676-1460.

.,

•

1979 Firebird. 301 , auto.. t Mt,
new paint, new tirea. .,1500.
Cell 614·26 6· 6780.

1979 Chevy Malibu, V-8 , auto-·
metlc transm i11io n, new tlr•. "
good bodV and interior. *1600.
Catl614-388-9818 .
•

Trail• spac• for rant. Rt. 1
loc::utt Road , back of K &amp; K
MobHe Home Perk. 304-6761076.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Furniahad tpartment. t210 .
Utilititl peid, 1 BR, 701 Fourth
A-...a. Gallipolis. Call 448-4416
after 7pm.

Television
Viewing

446-8888.

3073.

luxurv Tara Apertmentl. Elegant. 2 Dr. 2 floor, fully
carpeted, C.l. end heat. Private
entrance, enclosed patio, pool &amp;
plevground . Start-S299 par
month. Utlliti81 not induded.
Call614-367-7850.
Utilitiei paid . 107 2nd. Gallipolia. Sh•• bath. Call 448-4416
aher 7 PM .

cg ·

'

Spaclou1 mobile ~ame · lots for
rent. Family Pride Mobile Home
. Park. Gallipolis Farry. 304-8715 -

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wash••· dryera. refrigerators.
rangaa. Skagga Appliances,
Upper River Rd. beside Stone
Cr11t Motel. 814-446·7398.

-----------------1
Furnished Efficiency. $160.

·j·
.. ,

For rent or sale. flour raom house
in Pomeroy. Furniahed. $125.
per month or will sell for $6600.
.Call 814-992-2720 or 814-

12x66 Shuhz, acre ground,
furnlthed or unfurnlthed with o'-.
without Mtelhe ay ..em, price
negotiable. 304-678-2192 .

Ohio

1984lyruc , 1983Eacortatallon-'
wagon . 1982 Kawasaki, 5!0
ltd. tor 181a or trade. Call
614-258-1270.

COUNTRY MOBILE HomeP•k.
Route 33. North of Pom•oy.
Rental trill••· Call 814-992·
7479.

For rent apartment.' trelllf: furnishttd. unfurnished. Waodburning fireplace. Weter, •wa!!e
paid. Clean. Qulat foster a
Mobile Home Perk. 448-1802 .

45

Pomeroy-

304-171-2700.

Mobile Home lot. 80ft. or I••·
920 4th .. GtllipaUa . t75. Wat•
paid. Callt14 -446-4411after7
PM.

Upataira unfurnilhed apartment.
Carpeted. Utilrties ptid. No
children or pets. Call 614· 4461637.

One bedroom unfurnished lfllrtment for rent. All utllltlfll paid bv
landlord Ncept electric. 814-

2, 3 , or 4 bedroom houaes and
apt. in Pomeroy aret. Pay own
utilities, deposit required. Call
614·992-6113, 614-992· 6723
or 614-992-2509 . Call attar
6 :00. please.

tilt . Good ahtPe. e:M71S. Cal•

County Appliance. Inc. Good
uaed appUance1 and TV seta.
Open BAM ta 8PM . Mon thru
Sat. 614·446-1899. 827 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolla, OH .

Convenient 6 room hom• one
floor. two bedrooma, in Gallipolis . t250 per month, plus
utiliti•. Call ...,.,ingt : 614446· 1890 or 446-2326.

8828.

Otti.. Space for rant. E~tc•l.
downtown Gellipolit lontion.
lnquk'i• call 614·448-4222.

v.,..,

, Renewfv redecorated.
nice
ap8rtmenll i1;1 downtoWn Gellipalil. 1 &amp; 2 BR .· unfurnished,
second floor , from ·S175-t226 .
Dep. &amp; references required . Call
eva. 814-446-232li or 448-

Nice apt. Hudd approved. New
ctrpet,. clean, Pt. Pleasant. 614·

Good 3 BR. home for rent. S2150
per mo. on Buhrville - Porter Rd .
Will alto rent with option to buy.
Virginia L. Smith &amp;H-388-

71 Auto'• For Sale

.

2 BR . house unfurnished. Full
basement. No Pets. Call after 6
PM. 814-38a-8121 .

Nice 3 SR . house. Garage. City
scho ols ~ $350 e mo. Ref. &amp; Oep.
required. Call 614 -446-1406. ,

Monday, December 21. 1987

48 Space for Rent

1982 Olda Cutlaaa. V-8. auto.,

12x80 mabllt home. furnlshiKI.
wash•·dryer hookup. 2 mil•
from Gallipolis. S200 1 mo. plua
deposit. Call 814-448-2390.

D

KUPIO 'S NEST. Off•• two
kinds of dating service, write

Monday. December 21. 19,8 7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

PEANUTS
W~l{ [10 1(01.1
BOT~I:R WITH HeR?

SHE FASCINATES ME !

reports on world economics

and financial news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
IBl Jefflraono
e CZJ Love Connection
11 :30 G (]) 1111 Ball of Coroon
OJ Magnum, P.l.
liD Circle of Plenty
i1JJ Sport• Ton_lght

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 formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are diffe"rent.
CRYPTOQUOTES

12-21

MI Z

T W H

VZWLLKF,
WFAWMN .

·x o

A W N

KCPWL

Q W 0 K

UZD

X' D

N S I A

ZE

w

AXF F
AS KL K

EWDTS ' KC

AWDNIH

SJAK

Yeetenlay'• CryptoqoOte: THE FROG TRIED TO

LOOK AS BIG AS THE ELEPHANT, AND BURST.
AFRICAN PROVERB

--~-- --~---~---------------------------~------------~r---------~·

�Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Monday, December 21, 1987
.•

---Local news--- Snow, sleet make northeast roads slick
~MS

has nine 'weekend rolls

By United Preu lnteraallenal
A messy mixture of snow, sleet
and rain sUckened roads from
the Great Lakes to the Northeast
Sunday whlle Texans began
cleaning up after a wave of
tornadoes.
The National Weather Service
posted winter weather advisories
for freezing rain and snow over
upstate New York, Vermont,
New Hampshire and Maine.
Snow also fell over upper and
northern lower Michigan and
northeast Wisconsin. Up to 6
Inches of snow fell Sunday In
northern New Hampshire. while
up to4 inches f!!illn southern New
Hampshire, southwestern Maine
and western Massachusetts.
In Michigan. 6 Inches of sn_pw
fell at Cad!Uac, while Pellston
got 3 Inches.
Ught ,rain showers ~ere scat·
tered along a cold front that
extended from lower Michigan

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
over the weeken": five Saturday and four Sunday.
•
Saturday at 3:13a.m., Rutland transported Dwight Weiss Jr.
from an auto accident on Route 684 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 3:57a.m. transported Judy Lance from the
fire station to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 8:57
a.m. to Walnut St. for Richard Lewis to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:47 p.m. to West Main St. lor Ruth
Barnitz to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 2:05p.m. to
County Road 28 for Stella Jarrell to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
·
' ,
· Sunday at 8: (}3 a.m., Middleport to Pullins Hill Road for
Maycle Searles to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Racine at 6:09p.m.
transported Ann Johnson from an auto accident on Bashan
Road to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 7:19p.m. to
Township Road 145 for Stella Oldacker to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 9:57p.m. treated but did not transport
Lana Longstreth.
.
.

Postal service cuts.
affect Ohio projects
'

I

t

'•

.

i

!
I

'

t

I

..

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Construction of U.S. Postal Ser·
vice facUlties at 37 sites in Ohio
has been suspended pending the
outcome of legislation in
Congress.
The 37 projects are among
about 600 In the nation affected
by the order, disclosed Friday by
the Postal Service, which said
the moratorium Is nationwide.
Marilyn Partee . . acting post
master at the Galltpolis Post
Office, said she has not received
any notice of a suspe~;~sion for the
Gallipolis Post Office. She said as
far as she knows, area Post
Offices will not be effected.
. Ray .Jacobs, communications
manager for the Postal Service
tn Columbus, said the morato·
rlum was Imposed pending the
outcome of legislation that would
add nearly $2 billion in costs to
the service over the next two
years. .
The moratorium wlll stop work
at projects under way for which
contracts were . soon to be
·awarded. The 37 projects total
$76 mHilon in construction costs
for this fiscal year.
House and Senate leaders were
unable to reach agreement last
week over the added costs, which
the Postal Service says could
force It to end Saturday mall
delivery and cancel construction

Continued from page 1
Sea after capsizing In rough seas .
One official said the rate of the
people, including a 15-man crew
aboard the Blnter, was not
Immediately known.
The Sinter, an Indonesian
Umber carrier, was shuttling
between Java and Kalimantan
Islands · when the accident
occurred.
In one of history's worst sea
disasters, the British White Star
liner Titanic struck an iceberg
and sank on the night of AprU 14,
1912, claiming .the lives of 1,503
people.

Marriage llcenses have been
issued in Meigs· County Probate
Court to Rodney Alan Furguson,
Long Bottom, and Patricia Diane
Mcintyre;· Long Bottom; Don E.
Rea, 67, Pomeroy, and Goldie
Marte Am burger, 68, Syracuse;
Gerald Mark Watson. 23, Reeds·
ville, and Janet Marie Prall, 17,
Reedsville; Stephen Olin Jen·
kins, 33, Racine, and Kellee Jo
Stewart, 26, West Columbia,
W.Va.; Sammy Maynard Jr., 24,
Racine, and Melissa Stover, 21,
Racine; Timothy Buckley, 24,
Parkersburg, and Paula
Frecker, 21, Reedsville.

I

~

•

r
I
•
'

,
1

call at the funeral home at
anytime.

Ruth B. Barnitz. 92, Pomeroy,
died Saturday at Veterans Mem·
orlai HospitaL
Richard Lewis
Mrs. Barnitz was born at
Richard E. Lewis, 65, of
Letart Falls on Apri117, 1895, a
Middleport,
died Saturday at
daughter of the late Alfred B. and
Veterans
Memorial
Hospital.
Kate Finney Alexander.
·
18, 1922,
He
was
born
on
March
' She was married on June 28,
son
of
the
late
Charles
and
Mae
1917 to William 0. Barnitz who
Lewis
.
He
was
a
coatminer
and
a
preceded her In death in October,
member
of
Stewart
Johnson
life
1976. They moved from Letart to
Post 9926 of the VFW in Mason,
Pomeroy in 1939. To this union
W.Va.
He was also a member of
eight children - six daughters
the American Legion Smith
and two sons - were born. They
Capehart
Post 140, New Haven,
are Mrs. Wilson (Bernice) Car·
W.Va.,
and
the Disabled Ameri·
penter, Pomeroy; Mrs. Harry
can
Veterans.
.
(Julla) Young, Galion; Mrs.
services
for Richard
Funeral
Nicholas (Thane!) Kramer,
E.
Lewis.
'
6
5,
Middleport,
who
Plainview, Texas; Mrs. Law·
died
Saturday,
wlll
be
held
at 1
renee (Wilma) Nelson, Kalama·
at
the
RawUngs·
p.m
.
Tuesday
zoo, Mich.; Mrs. Robert {El·
nora) Wells , Warsaw, Ohio; Mrs. Coats-Blower Funeral Home
Meivln (B111y Jean) Hoelscher, with the Rev. David Bryan
St. Louis, Mo.; Hayman A. officiating.
Burial will be In the Gilmore
Barnltz, Pomeroy, and Robert
Cemetery.
Friends may call at
W. Barnltz, Mason, W. Va. She Is
the
funeral
home
from 2 to 4 and 7
also survived by 32 grandchild·
to
9
p.m.
today.
Graveside
ren, 40 great-grandchildren , four
military
rites
will
be
held
..
nieces. a nephew, and Carrie
Greenburg, a very special fri end .

Oub.

I

I

Area deaths

Mrs. Barnitz graduated from
Pomeroy High School in 1914 and
taught school in Letart Fails for
three years. She was a member
of the Pomeroy United Methodist
Church and a 70 year member of
the Racine Chapter, Order of
Eastern Star. She was a member
or the Bend of the River Garden
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by a sister, two
brothers and a son·ln-law.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Tuesday at the Pomeroy United
Methodist Church with the Rev .
James Corbitt, the Rev . Robert
Wells and the Rev. Carl Hicks
officiating. Order of Eastern Star
services will be held at 7 this
· evening at the Ewing Funeral
' Hoine. Burial will be in Letart
Falls Cemetery. Friends may
•

Eleanor Stoneking
Eleanor L. Stoneking Lohse,
80, Middleport, died Sunday at
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol·
lowing a lengthy Ulness.
A retired school teacher, Mrs.
Lohse was born Jan . 23, 1907 at
Rio Grande, a daughter of the
late Raymond and Daisy Ri·
chards Stoneking.
Surviving are a stepson and
step daughter·ln·law; Harold and
Elizabeth Lohse of Pomeroy; a
step daughter·ln·law, Betty
Lohse, GaU!polls; six stepgrand·
children, Jennl1er Sheets, John
Lohse, Robert Lohse, William
Lohse, Lary Lohse and Gary
Lohse, and a step brother and his
wife, Victor and Irene Denult,
Oak Hili.
Besides her husband, Mrs.

. •'

the Senate's Budget Committee.
He noted that Reagan already
has vetoed legislation restoring
the requirement once.
The House and Senate bought .
time Sunday to work out a final
deal on the spending hill, and a
companion tax package to cut the
deficit by $76 billion over two
years, by passing a 24-hour
spending bill to carry the govern·
ment through midnight tonight.
Agreement was reached during
rare weekend talks by congres·
sional negotiators on a way to put
up $8.1 mllUon In humanitarian
aid for the Contra rebels, a pet
project of Reagan's.
Senate Democratic leader Ro·
bert Byrd sa ld there were "one or
two little things" that needed to
be resolved on the spending b111 to
keep the government bank ac·
counts filled through next Sept.
30.
Those "little things" prevent·
ing agreement Included Medl·
care and Medicaid plans for the
elderly and poor as well as the
restoration of requirements that
broadcasters cover Important
issues by alloting time for all
viewpoints.
Still, House and Senate nego·

•

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admissions - Roger
Reynolds, Middleport; Stella
Jarrell, Long Bottom.
Saturday Discharges - Rt·
chard WllUams, Helen Miller .
Sunday Admissions - Ruth
Pullins, Racine; Elvira Barr,
Syracuse.
Sunday Discharges - Alice
Bush.

Ohio Lottery

Elgin In Bastrop County, damag.
!ng one home, officials said.
Several tornadoes touched
down In Lavaca county, knock· ..
tng down utlllty poles and trees.

Christmas
countdown ·

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST12·22-87

20

30 .

40
40

0

Warm

~SHOWERS
UPI

•

~

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Becoming sunny today , with
highs in the mid 40s. Mostly clear
tonight, with a low between five
and 10 mph tonight. Cloudy
Tuesday, with a chance of rain
and highs in the mid 40s.
The probabllity of precipita·
tlon is near zero today and
tonight and 50 percent Tuesday.
Winds will be from the southw·
est at 10 to 20 mph today and from
the southwest at five to 10 mph

tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
A chance of snow flurries
Wednesday. with a chance of rain
Thursday and rain or snow
Christmas Day. Highs will be in
the 30s Wednesday and in the 40s
Thursday and Friday. Overnight.
lows wiil be in the 20s early
Wednesday and in the 30s Thurs·
day and Friday mornings.

ON DUTY - Several law enforcement units ,
were on duty throughout Monday at Harrisdnvllle
Elementary School where several teachers were
taken Into custody by Meigs County sheriff's
deputies for alleged restraining order violalions.

r.·t!ltllt!ltlls:!HII
FOR .
••
TUESDAY, DECEMBER 22
••
· ONLY!!
•lr-----~----------------

$

1 TABU AND AMBUSH
I COLc;tGNE SPRAY

I

1.7

oz. REG. sus

NOW

Pomeroy Village Council,
meeting Monday night in regular
session, reluctantly accepted the
resignation of Charles Legar as
, JI.te,_chle! &lt;1f the Pomeroy Volun·
"leer Fire Department, effective
Jan . 1. In his written resignation
to the board. Legar said he felt he
was no longer physically able to
carry out the job as needed.
Council also noted that Monday
night's meeting was the last for
Councilman Henry Werry.
' Werry has served on council for
four years bu,t chose not to run for
re-election this year. He wiH be
replac!!d on council by Brian

329

1'"----_.;....-----1
I

•I
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1.-------------------~

Am Electric Power ............. 2534
AT&amp;T ................................. 29'4
Ashland Oil ......................... 59
Bob Evans .......................... 15%
Charming Shoppes .............. 13%
City Holding Co ................... 29
Federal Mogul.. ................... 33
Goodyear T&amp;R .................... 61
Heck's Inc ........................... 1%
Key Centuriou .................. ..31%
Lands' End ......................... l9~
Limited Inc ........................ 17~
Multimedia Inc . .. ................ 47%
Rax Restaurants .................. 3Ji
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 6~
Shoney's Inc ....................... 21~
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
Worthington Ind .................. 16%

!a

AMERICAN GREETINGS
CHRISTMAS

I

NAPKINS AND PLATES

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) - A
state legislator says Ohio's 1.3
miUion veterans are being short·
changed by county officials who
are misappropriating Soldiers'
Relief money.
Rep. Michael A. Fox, R·
Hamilton, said Monday a survey
of spending by Soldiers Relief
Commissions in Ohio's 88 coun·
ties found none is spending on
veterans' programs the amount
mandated by law .
Based on a state law enacted in
the 1930s, each county except one
collects a 0.5 mlll property tax
levy to finance its Soldiers Relief
Commission.
The commissions pave two
main duties - to help veterans
and their widows obtain various
state and federal benefits to
which they are entitled, includ·
ing health benefits, education
and job-training assistance, and
to provide direct financial aid to
needy veterans and their
widows.
But, according to a survey
done lor Fox, most counties are
using the money to finance other
county agencies.

ll
'/ 2 PRICE

·----------------------J
-----------------------~--.- - ,

SUJISHER LOHSE
Pharmacy

· Kenoeth McCullouuh. R Ph .

Chlt'let Rlffl•. R.Ph

Rnoo ld Hon;oo. R P!&gt;.
Mon . thru Sat S·OO AM . to 9 PM
Sundov 10:00 AM . to 4 00 PM
PRESCRIPTIONS
PH 992 296!i
·
Friendly Sl!rv1ce
E Mam
Pomeroy . Oh
Open NightS tll\9
.

~---------·

j

REMEMBER
THESE
ARE

TUESDAY
SPECIALS
ONLY!

-----

Meeting tonlt~ht
Racine VIllage Councll will
meet tonight I Monday), 6 p.m.,
tn·a short recessed session at the
Shrine Park building.

An ·area county -by-county
breakdown of the spending on
Soldiers ReHel Commissions,
showing the approximate
amount raised by the special tax,
the amount budgeted for vete·
rans' programs and amount
actually spent, (Usted in that
order) according to .a survey
conducted for state Rep. Fox.:
Jackson - 107,701, 62,812,
63,340.
Gailla- 226,518,27,292, 29,463.
Hocking- 92,000, 50,658,38.993.
Meigs -108,490,33,160, 31,794.
Pike - 49,696, 13,024, 12,588.
Adams, 264,734, 30,954. 28,637.
VInton, 45,000. 17,786, 17,584 .

'
To meet In January
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1-800-426·5511

Shank who was elected in
November.
A. resolution was passed by the
board approving a petition from
Bruce and Rita Reed to annex
.346 acres of Sutton Township
property into Pomeroy ViHage.
The remainder c.i their property
is already within village limits. A
public hearing on the petition for
annexation will be held Dec. 30, 1
p.m., In the office of the Meigs
County Commissioners.
Phil Ramey and Gary Bates, of
General Telephone of Ohio, met
with council to discuss C":E's
request through the Public Utili·

Rep, Fox says Ohio
vets •shortchanged'

I

Dally stock prices
(As of 11:30 a.m.)
.
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt EIHs &amp; Loewl

The restraining order, !Ued last Friday, limited
pickets to two at each of the schools reopened on
Monday. Only the designated two pickets were on
duty at each of the schools today, sheriff's
department personnel reported.
·

Charles Legar to step down
·as Pomeroy fire chiej·]an. 1

Christmas Sa~ings

I

enttne

2 Sections. 1 2 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia InC: Newspaper

l\feigs attendance up;
dismiss some charges

.

WEATHER MAP - Rain will extend from the southeastern
third of Texas across the central Gulf Coast stales and the
Tennessee Valley to the southern half or the Atlantic Coast slates
with scattered thunderstonns along the central Gulf Coast to
northern Florida and southern Georgia. Rain showers will be
scattered along the northern Pacific Coast with scattered snow
~bowers over the northern Plateau llnd northern Rockies. Ught
snow will dot portions of North Dakota, upper Michigan and
northern Maine. Winds will be strong and gusty over Montana,
Wyoming and western Nebraska. Much of the nation will have high
temperatures In the 40s. or 50s.
·

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 22. 1987

"Cold

to re&lt;;,ei"Ve precipitation indicaled

Stocks

Only

at y

. . Slattc . . Occluded
Map shows minimum tem~ ratures . At least SO% or any shaded area is forecast

tiators reported Sunday night
that they had cleared perhaps the
biggest hurdle by working out
final details of a plan to continue
aiding the Contra rebels fighting
Nicaragua's Sandinista
government.
Other lawmakers said earlier
In the day that they had com·
promised on a Postal Service
spending plan that would ellml·
n~te the need for a threatened
cutoff of Saturday mall service.
"The number of areas of
disagreement are shrinking,"
Dole said late Sunday .

•Credit Terms

•

..

Vol.38, No.1 57
Copyrighted 1987

-RAIN

Clear tonight. Low between
20, 25. Partly cloudy Wednes·
day . _IDghs In mid 40s.

.·

Announcements

Lohse was preceded In death by
her husband, Herman F. Lohse.
Mrs. Lohse was a member of
the Middleport Church of Christ.
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
WedneSday at the Ewing Funeral
Home with Mr. AI Hartson
otflclatlng. Burial will be in the
West union Cem~tery In Athens.
Friends may call at the funeral
home lrom.2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m.
Tuesday.

Pick 4

0293

FRONTS: "

Tallmadge: David G. Olds, 51.
Tallmadge, when his pickup
truc.k crashed on a Tallmadge
street.
Bowling Green: John A. Long,
22, Perrysburg, in a two-car
collision on ·u.s. 20 in Wood
County.
Cleveland: Susan A. Libera·
tore, 29, Lakewood, when her car
struck a tree along a Cleveland
street.
Batavia : Carolyn R. Bowman,
33, Southgate, Ky., when her car
skidded on wet road and hit a tree
along Ohio 749 In Clermont
County.
Batavia: Donald E. Price, 38,
Georgetown, and Randel West, 7,
Bethel, in a two-car accident on
Ohio 125 in Clermont County.
Friday night
Elyria : Wallace J .. Laing, 56.
Berea, in a three-vehicle acci·
dent on the Ohio Turnpike in
Lora In County.
Mount Gilead: Ot'egory K.
Hickman, 20, Fulton, when his
car colllded with a train at a
Morrow County ra it road
crossing.

• The Meigs county Tr\lstees
and Clerks Association will meet
January 9, 7:30 p.m., at the
senior citizens building in
Pomeroy.

Daily Number
785

;i

~.·.~ISNOW

Progress ... continued rrom page 1

Licences iMued

Ruth Bamitz

Snow fell Sunday evening ln .
central and eastern Washington
state and also in northern Idaho
and northwestern Montana . ·
Strong winds hit Montana and
Wyoming Sunday evening. A·
gust reaching 66 mph was re·
ported at Livingston, Mont. , and
a gust of 52 mph was reported at
Cody, Wyo.
Frigid temperatures stretched
across Montana, Wyoming and
central Colorado. Readings were
In the single digits with some
temperatures below zero. The
coldest spot In the nation was
West Yellowstone. Mont. , where
It dipped to 15 degrees below
.
zero.
Residents In Texas were clean·
ing up from tornadoes that did
moderate damage in Houston,
Lavaca and Bastrop counties. No
serious Injuries were reported.

Two tornadoes hit Houston
County, one tearing the roof off a
barn and the other demolishing a
barn.
A tornado touched down near

Thirteen die on Ohio ,.
roads over weekend

projects.
The controversy involves de·
cidlng Mw much of the burden
the post office. should bear in
trying to reduce the federal
deficit.
Jacobs said delivery would not
By United Press International
be affected in Ohio.
Thirteen people were k111ed in
Major projects affected, Jac·
accidents on Ohio roadways
obs said,. include a $10.7 lhillion
during the weekend, the State
airmail . facUlty In Cleveland; · ··Highway Patrol reported today.
$7.2 million for two branches in
A patrol tally. showed three
Columbus; and $2 .7 mUlion for
deaths Sunday , eight Saturday
the Heatherdowns station in
and two Friday night. The
Toledo.
victims died in 11 ·accidents.
The patrol counts fatalities
The other projects halted are In that result· from accidents on the
Amherst, Chagrin Falls, Brecks· state's public roadways each
viUe, Lakewood, Strongsville, weekend between 6 p.m. Friday
Columbia Station. Cleveland. and midnight Sunday .
Twinsburg, in the Cleveland
Kllled were:
area.
Sunday
Cleveland: Richard Lamb, 63,
In the Akron area those af· Shaker Heights, 'When his car hit
fected are in Kenmore, West an abutment on a Cleveland
Akron, Aurora, Bath, Glenmont, street.
Canton: . Raymond E. Smith,
Lodl-, Mechanicstown, Charm,
73,
and Sadie I. Smith, 77, both of
East Rochester and Zoar.
Orrville,
in a one-vehicle ace!·
In the Youngstown area:
dent
on
a
Stark County road.
Blaine, Cortland, East Spring·
Saturday
1
field and North Jackson.
Cleveland:
Marlowe
R.
May
,
Others are Reynolds Corner
39,
Cleveland,
when
his
car
hit
a
and Rocky Ridge near Toledo,
Zaleski, Powell, Grand Rapids , pole along a Cleveland street.
Columbus: Randolph Mosby,
Sharonville, Beavercreek . near
Dayton, Kings Mills, Malvern, 42, Columbus, when his van
collided with another vehicle on
Rockford and West Chester.
the northeast side of Columbus.

Rescue...

,.

through Tennessee.

992-2635

,r'

li

In . Cuyahoga County, slightly
more than $7.1 mlllion was raised
by the tax . In fiscal year 1986
(ended June 30, 1986), but only

about $3.5 million was spent on
veterans. Hamilton County vete·
rans received only $337,349 of the
$4.7 million raised In that county.
Franklin County, Fox said,
was the only one in the state that
has not Implemented the special
levy. The levy would have raised
$4 ..4 million, bul Franklin County
veterans received only $296,000
for their programs .
"The state esta\'Ushed a lund·
ing mechanism to ensure that
those who gave so much for their
country would be taken care of in
Urnes of need," Fox said.
'.'I'm partleularly concerned
that veterans approaching re·
tirement can find assistance
when needed and that :Vietnam
veterans have access to pro·
grams they need to deal with the
effects of Agent Orange exposure
and other Ungering mental and
physical problems ."
But he says the chief problem
is that there has been no
systematic assessment con·
due ted by the state or counties to
det.e rmine what level of spending
is appropriate.
Since counties have grown
dependent on the tax money, he
said it would not be feasible to cut
off the counties' access to the
money . But he\.s calUng for state
and county officials to meet with
veterans' groups.
"The dlff!culty, as a practical
matter, (Is that) to deny them the
option (to use the money for other
services) would damage county
finances," he said. "Many coUn·
ties have become dependent on
this rather large chunk of
money.''
He plans to sponsor legislation
that would require a statewide
study of the situation.
"We may find that local
veterans don 't need every .dime
generated by the millage set
aside for them, but that they do
need more than Is currently
being appropriated to them by
financially stra pped county go·
vernments," Fox said.
Continued on page 6

ties Commission of Ohio to raise
rates . According to Ramey, If the
PUCO approves the rate hike
request, cost for a private llne
wau.ld Increase from $11.96 per
month to $16.94. A decision from
PUCO Is not expected untU July
at the earllest. lf·PUCO approves
the rate hike by July, the
Increases could be implemented
by August. Public hearings on
the rate hike request are ex·
pected to be scheduled by the
PUCO during May and June,
Ramey said.

Congress
approves
budg~t
WASHINGTON iUPI) - The
100th Congress approved a his·
torte economic compact with
President Reagan early today,
cutting the federal budget deficit
by $76 billion and approving a
$606 billion catch-ail spending
bi11, which included hotly dis·
puted new aid for the Contra
rebels.
.
The delicate agreement be·
tween the White House and
congressional leaders came
within one vote of defeat, how·
ever, when the House approved
the spending measure 209·208 in a
cliffhanger not decided until the
final ballot was cast.
The Senate· then quickly gave
its approval to the giant money
bill 59-30 in the windup of a
marathon session that lasted
deep into the early morning
hours on Tuesday .
·
Congress first approved the
deficit reduction plan, 237-181 in
the House and 61-28 in the Senate,
before tackling the more contro·
versial spending measure.
The companion bills were sent
to President Reagan for his
signature, and Congress, chafing
to get away for the Christmas
holiday, was ready to go home for
the year. Lawmakers planned to
return later this morning for
format adjournment.
In a surprise action, Congress
pushed through a major housing
bl11 during the night to extend
permanently the authority of the
Federal Housing Administration
to guarantee home mortgage
loans. The bl11 inaugurates sev·
era! new programs to help low·
and mlddle·income families . . Jt
has the backing of the White
House.
Despite protests of a large
number · of Uberals, incensed
because the b!ll included $8.1
miiUon for the Contra rebels In
Nicaragua. the House approved
the spending legislation.

Attendance was on the In·
crease today h1 the Meigs Local
Schools "hich reope ned Monday
with substitute teachers as the
approximate 150 teachers of the
district continued their strike
which began on Nov. 6.
Yesterday at the Pomeroy
Elementary School 93 students
out of 240 were on hand. Today
there were 146 students in
classes. At the Meigs HighSchool ·
on Monday , 240 students reported
for classes. Tuesday, attendance
was recorded at 322. Attendance
at . the Salisbury Elementary
School today was over one-third
of the enrollment of 150 students
with 56 students in class.
Meantime, it was reported that
the confusion outside the schools
of the district had calmed Tues·
day . 'Fhe number of pickets
limited to two in a restraining
order issued by Judge Charles
Knight In the Meigs County
Common Pleas Court last Friday
was being kept to thatnumberby
the striking teachers, it was
reported.
Supt. Dan E. Morris reported
that things " went very well"
insid~ all of the schools oil
Monday. Substitutes were hired
last week by the Meigs Local
Board of Education to conduct
classes beginning with Monday's
reopening of the schools. Schools
had been closed since ahout 9:30
a.m. on Nov. 6, the day the strike
by the teaehers began.
However, it was reported that
the vehicles of several substitute
teachers who reside in Athens
were vandalized overnight.
A spokesperson at the office of
Meigs County Sheriff Howard
Frank said this morning that
some of yesterday's confusion
which took place outside the
buildings of the district had gone
today. She said that school buses
are being kept under guard all
night. She also said that some of
the parents entering sohools with

their children are phoning in · A seventh teacher, Rusty Book·
complaints that they are being man, was arrested Monday at
harassed. This is in violation of Harrisonville by Deputy Sheriff
Friday's restraining order, she Kenny .Klein and charged In
sa id, a nd suggested that arrests Meigs County Court with crimi·
nai !repassing. Bookman entered
wlll be made.
' on Monday, several teachers a plea of innocent and a pre-trial
were taken Into custody at the for Bookman was scheduled for
Harrisonv!lle Elemenmtary Jan. 13 by Judge Patrick
School by deputies of Sheriff O'Brien. Bookman was released
Frank for alleged restraining upon posting bond. In Middleport
order violations. Around noon on Monday, the Middleport Police
Monday, five of them appeared Department arrested an eigbth
before Judge Knight In the teacher, Don Dixon. Police said
common pleas court. Because Dixon Is charged with disord erly
manner and his hearing is set for
their attorney, Mark Foley, from
the Ohio Education Association, Dec. 29.
Hobart Barker, husband of
was not present, Judge Knight
remanded the teachers to the teacher Jenell ,aarker, was also
custody of Sheriff Frank to give arrested at the HarrisonviUe
them time to confer with their School and charged in county
attorney. He set court appear an· court with assaulting an officer
and resisting arrest. A written
ces for 8:30a.m. this morning.
plea
of Innocent to both of those
Later Monday afternoon, the
charges
Is . to be sent to J4dge
five teachers Were released by
O'Brien,
it
was reported. Barker
Judge Knight on their own
posted
bond
on both charges a nd
recognizance.
was
released.
His pre-trial has
Reach Agreement
This morning the five along not been scMduled but Is ex·
with a sixth teacher were in the peeled to be held at 'the same
courtroom at the scheduled time, . time as Bookman's.
Meantime, at 10 a.m. this
but the judge was in conference
with attorneys of both sides. morning, representa tives of both
Following the conference, it was the Meigs Local Teachers Assn.
announced by Foley that an and the Meigs Local Board of
agreement had been reached Education were meeting In
between Jhe Meigs Local Board . Athens with Federal Mediator
of Education and the Meigs Local David Thorley to resume negoti·
Teachers Assn. to resolve the allons in another attempt to
pending contempt of court bring the strike to an end.
citations.
Terms of the agreement were ·1
that the board will dismiss the
Ohio Extended Forecast
contempt charges against Ron
Thursday through Saturday
Drexler, Jenell Barker, Connie
Rain or snow in the northern
Gilkey,. Mindy Young, Wykle
Whitley and Julia Vaughan; that ·part of the state and rain In the
MLTA members shall make a ·south Thursday, with snow flurries likely Christmas Day and
good faith effort to comply with
Saturday.
Highs will range 35 to
the restraining order, and that
45
Thursday
and be In the 30s
those six teachers and MLTA
shall release the board from any Friday and Saturday. Overnight
claims they may have against lows will be between 25 and 35
the board arising from the early Thursday and in the 20s
Friday and Saturday mornings.
contempt action.

Weather

Wilfong says district
'police state' Monday
Michael Wilfong, president of
the Meigs Local Teachers Associ·
atlon, today Issued an emphatic ,
statement charging that the
Meigs Local School District
became a "police state" Monday
when schools of the district were
reopened usingg substitute
teachers. Teachers of the district
have been on strike since Nov. 6.
Wilfong states:
"'A pollee state' Is the only
description of what took place in
Meigs Local Schools Monday as
the board attempted to reopen
schools. Pollee from at least
seven counties were armed with
attack dogs. tear gas, electric
night sticks, riot gear, mace and
guns at the entrances of Meigs
Local Schools.
"More than 118 policemen
were brought Into Meigs County
to ostensibly keep law and order
over approximately 55 teachers .
"At this time I want to
. emphasize that no teachers were
In violation of the court order at
any of the sc hools.
''However, poUce lromCoshOC·
ton County started beating and
arresting teachers who were oil
school property at Harrisonvi11e
Elementery.
"You would expect this kind of
activity in Russia but not here In
the United States. Our teachers
are not violent people. To have
two pollee officers on hand for
every teacher on the picket lines
seems to be overkill at best and
out-of-control paranoia at the
worst.
"If thi s type of behavior could
happen to the teachers of Meigs
Loca, think what could happen to
any ciUzen .
"To beat and .arrest teachers
who were obeying the law seems
tnsan&lt;•. Let's hope that such
actions wJII not be repeated ,"

OH CHRISTMAS TREE - Southern .Kindergarten student
.Kimberly lhle puts the fmlshlng touch oh the classroom tree. Each
klnderguten student painted wooden snowman ornaments with
wbich to decorate the tree. The ornaments will lje taken home
when school ends today. The wooden cutouts we.re provided by
Earl Cross. The tree was provided hy1he mother of student Jerrod
Clay.
,.

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