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                  <text>December 27. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

Times-Sentinel

Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
7'Z4

MU defeats
Mountaineers

Pick 4
6542
Super Lotto
30-7 -43-34-l 0-27

•

e .. at y

.
"mACH'S SPECIAL VALUE"
LIMITED 4 OR:' •
.
SiiV
_ er ~. tit, cruile, cass!tle, etc. Factory I,St Silver, 3800 bw mill!$, power wiftd()ws &amp;locks, 4
$15,585.
_
· ldoors,AM.fMcasslite,.rflill;a.fp.factoryPriai

_ .•.•·

~0 NIW ~t2,9oo;

.·

~~ly
3.~.:W

1987 BUICK PARK AVE.

r

.

' ·

.

.

- ..

1987 PONTIAC 6000 SEDAN .~-" '1987 BUIC~ c~a
·' •mJRY

1

s''.o'1\

lkk, tilt, cruise, AM·FM, auto, 15,000 klw miles. Choose From "3" L~ Beautm, silvEJ, maroon, Super S~rp lw()otohe 1J!ack &amp;ch~rmal, V-6 eng.&amp;;,_
_&amp; It chestnut Low mtles.
. . ~"'
!oDd with paNel equi{Xllent List
" · Qlai'OJ._, gray, l
Was $9900

'

~

.
495•

·o~ivwed '·

Tax Not Included

1986 PONTIAC SUNBIRD
Q

Hatchback, navy blue, luxury trim, auto., air rond.,

4- 12,000 miles.
· was $7995

1985 BRONCO XLT 4X4
~ lock In o/ Out Hubs, auto., air cond., ca~!tle, tilt,

.I

•

0

C"')

~li'.RVIC.F

-Henry Werry, a member of
Pomeroy VIllage Council and a long-time
Pomeroy Fire Department «;:_hief, is pictured
· Sunday receiving a gift of a watch presented on

the New· 16Valve'HI·Tech
..
Qu d IV E . 1
a
.ngne
19~ CHEV:tCOtJVERSION

VANS By MMK Ill

B~, new, ~!l, siz\

y-s :~g_, ·air con d., tilt

}5. 8·9380
$·"-

' . '

)·

.,

--~-,-~....

$ ..

Ta~

'

~~·

,.VAN.'" ·~· ,., . ·

.

·

$2300 •

so·\ .
'

·

.

....

1979 CHEVROLET MALIBU

$1780

'

&gt;I

$3495.

2700.

•

-·

-

_,.,

•

.

Was $5495

0

~

$4500.

0
N

ble used Buick . Navy Blue, V-8 eng., 57,001 miles.
- $3,495
-~·•· '

~ZJ780.

NOW

1980'AMC.CONCORD .

" 1980

'

0

•·I

Auto., air: rum good, extra dean . .

Was $1495
•

RETIRING - Pomeroy Fire Chiel Charles
Legar, retiring !rom his post after having served
as chief since Jan. 1, 1973, is pictured Sunday

· AJ.illle' Strol'lg On Miles - But She's E_xtta
· , ~~ LadY,'s Trade·!~). Bejge ·- ..

,. 'lvas.ss.: .

. sggo.

Was

$2500.

c'e"SO
.
~uwner.
sz,~95:
lloo
NO .•

liJ

--

0

PLYM0 1 ~ C~LT

,

"We have sa id ail along we will
be flexible in any salary amount
even in the third year of the
contract. We realize the fi nancial
straits of Meig&amp;Local a nd went to
cooperate in a ny way possible.
"We would like to point out,
however, that most teac hers in
Southeastern Ohio will be receiving pay . Increases this year and
next, which will put Meigs
teacher s even fu rther behind.
· "Since the MLTA and the
board agree that money is an
issue, there appears to be no
reason to fur ther delay negotiations to settle this strike, which
already has gone on much too
long . The ML TA want to get back
to the table and start serious
negotiations as soo ri as possible .
"Contrary to · sta te law, the
board ol education this mor ning
is using board-owned school
buses to transport substitute
(scab) teachers through the
picket lines to the buildings.
''According to reports from the
picket lines, student attendance
this Monday after the Christmas
holiday is still weli un(jer 50
percent of normal and the
s ubstitute teachers represent
less than half of the normal
teaching staff."

receiving a plaque from Joe Struble from the fire
department in appreciation ol his outstanding
service as lire chief over the years.

At least 13 die on Ohio roads
over long Christmas weekend
By United Press International
At least 13 people. including a
teenaged pedestria n stili not
identif ied. were ki lled in traffic
accidents in Ohio this long
Christmas holiday weeke nd.
A count shows one death
· Wednesday night. fou r Thursday. two Friday, five Sa turd ay
and one Su nd ay .
Meigs and Ga ilia County escaped wilh no fatalilies .
Th e National Safety Council ,
began its holiday at 6 p.m .
Wednesday, however, the State
Mi ghway Patrol. which counts
the fata lities in Ohio, didn't begin
its count until 24 hours later . A
.UP! survey shOw s five people
killed in accidents those first 24
hours .
Only one victim was a pedestrian, ali others were killed in
vehicular accidents . The pedestrian. a teenged m ale. w.a s struck

36, East Liberty, killed in a
one-car accident on U.S. 36 east
RONALD STRONG
of Marysville, Union County.
Friday
Lancaster; Betty L. McCloud,
51, Columbus, kliied in a two -car
acc ident at the intersection ol
!
Ohio 158 a nd 204 In Fairfield
By
{Jnited
Press International
County.
.
A
winter
storm
that dumped as
Akron: Anita L. Vanriper. 46,
much
as
2
feet
of
snow In the
Akron, killed in a two-car acciGreat
Plai
ns moved
Rockies
and
dent on a street in Akron, Summit
into
Ohio
today,
with
freezing
County.
rain.
sleet
and
snow.
Saturday
The National Weather Service
Cleveland: Unidentified 15issued
a lr"eezing rain advisory
year-old male pedestrian killed
today
for
the northern third of the
when struck by an automobile on
state, with a winter storm watch
a street In Cleveland, Cuya hoga
posted for most of north central
County
Georgetown: James F . Bran- and northeast Ohio for tonight.
non, 25, Bethel. killed in a two-car . . The nasty weather made travel
accident o n U.S. 68 in Brown difficult for the morning rush
hour, with snow fa iling north of
Coun ty.
o
Lancaster: Diane S. Lane, 40, the Ohio Turnpike, from Toledo
Lancaster, killed in a two-car to Youngstown .
The only area s to escape the
accide nt on U.S. 33 in Fair!aield
wintry weat,h er so far were the
Judith A.
36, southern quarter of Ohio, where
rain has been falling th is morn·
Grand Rap1ds , Oh1o, killed m a
ing,
a nd from just northeast of
one-car acciden t on a Lucas
Cleveland
to Ashtabula where
€SS0 Coun ty road.
,
precipitation had not yet begun .
Urba na: Nora J . N1kerson, 24,
Snow was expected to begin in
Economics Professor .John Ka - Urbana. killed in a one-car
accident on Ohio 55 in ChamAs htabul a at midday.
sarda told the ClevPla nd Plain
The NWS also expressed conpaign County.
Dealer that Ohio is the leading
cern for 'the snowbelt, with a
Sunday
state In the Midwest and fourth in
New Ph il ad'elphla: Daniel C. possibility of as much as6 inches
the nation in jobs growth. He said
of lake elfect snow tonight !rom
Qtiarels, 22, Uhrlchsvi iie. killed
114,000 jobs were crea led In Ohio
near Medina lo Akron and
in
a
one-car
accident
on
a
in 1986.
Youngstown ,
Tuscarawas County road .

as he walked on a Cleveland city
street Saturday. He has not been
identified today . Vlctims
include :
Wednesday n:ghl
Lancaster: David C. Miller, 54,
Lancaster. killed when his truck
crashed on a Fa irfield Count y
road.
Thursday
'
Moun t Vernon: Donald E.
Stout. II, 19. Mount Vernon,
killed when his car crashed into a
ditch along a Knox County road .
Parma: Kenneth P. McVey.19.
Parma, killed when his car went
through a guardrai l In Parma.
Cuyahoga Count y, and landed in
a ravine.
Grafton: Daniel Fox, 21, Columbia Station, killed when his
car ran off Oh io 303 in Lorain
County and flipped over several
times .
Marysviile : Robert W. Erwin,

prosperity depends On Co~~l~do:
Oh ";o's
,
r
natr,OnU
economy· - prOJ.(
·~

CLEVELAND (UP!)- Ohio is
on the road to economic recovery
but the state's prosperity and job
growth over the next few years
depends ·on whet her the nation
can stay out of a recession, says a
University ol North Carolin a
professor.

Southern Ohio
escapes storm

~ong, _

official note today from the
Foreign Ministry in Madrid as
"repulsive, intolerable and
lamenta ble ."
Spanish authorities ha ve questioned claims that Ca talonian
separatists carried out the grenade attack Saturda y evenin15 on
the waterfront USO club and
were foc-using their investiga tion
on a possible Middle East link.
U.S. authorities sald the ships,
which arrived Friday, had been
scheduled to remain in Barcel-

ona for about another week but
declined to say where they were
now headed.
"Alii can say is th at they are
going to another European port,"
U.S. Embassy spokesman Robert Meade said in Madrid.
The body of the victim. Navy
Seaman Ronald Strong, was to be
flown to the U.S.-operated Ai r
Force base at Torre jon outside of
Madrid for repatriation to the
United States later today.
Continued on page 5

Southern releases
annual school report

C"')

LIMI1'ED

..

received no reports of any
unusual events or va ndalism
within the district over the
holiday weekend,
Teacners of the distri ct have
been on strike since Nov. 6.
Several negotiation sessions
thFOugh a federal med iator have
failed to produce a settlement.
'Teachers Issue Statement
The role of money in the
current strike by th e Meigs Local
Teachers Association was ex·
plained today in a statement
issued by Michael Wilfong, association presiden t.
The statement reads:
"We're glad to see the Meigs
Local Board of Education is
finally admitting that money is
one of th e m ai n issues in the
currll&lt;lt di spute.
" In the board 's statement to
the media Sunday, it contended
that the main unresolved issue is
money ~ nd that any pay raise for
teachers will not be forthcoming
for more than two years.
"We have already agreed that
there will be two years before
teachers will be getting any
salary increase, although Meigs
Local is a mong the lowest pa id of
any teachers In the Southeastern
The depar tment of Sheriff
Howard F rank sa id tb at it .had Ob io area.

0

1982 BUICK ELECijTM 4 DR. \. 1982 MALIBU CLASSIC 4 DR.

0'

New tires, auto. Rur!&gt; Super! A Real Bargain!

.

I

•.

rxMel

.· $4470

.

' 1979 JEEP CHEROKEE 4 WD.

.

1984 BUICK C.ENTURY

'

CLEARANCE: fl!liCED AT

·
Local Car· Silver, extra good condition. Rur!&gt; Good. White, one_ fiN~
4· Doors. ,
at a ba rga1n p.
·
Was $299'5

·•·

Local One Own~r - blue• loaded with
worth more! everything. Book Value $7,7oo.
·

..,1;,.

0

.:n•o·

NEW·VAN lRADE-IN

'

1983 BUICK PARK AVE.

~~uoo~

Was $3495

FULL --10~ P~E

. ·p.s !11.900
$if 0
~ ~~&gt; ~.; JIL'l'
•

1
1980 BUI.CK CE. NTdi
~Y 4 DR.

2,900.

" 1984 ,RAISED 6001=: FORD

.

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspap.er

While students in two of Meigs
County's school districts were
enjoying their holiday. vacation
today. stud e nts of the the Meigs
Local School Di strict returned
today to classes as attempts were
made to make up time lost by a
Meigs Local teachers strike.
Students of the Meigs District
attending six of the nine schOols
which were reopened last Mon day using substitute teachers
were In classes through Wednes day and resumed classes again
this morning. Schools will be
open through Wednesday of this
week before Meigs Local students are excused for the observance of the new year .
Meigs Local Superintendent
Dan E. Morris reported .that
resuming of classes this morning
"went smoothly". Attendance
figures will not be available until
later in the day. He said that the
teachers association was maintaining only two pickets at the
entrance of each building, in
accordance with a restraining
order issued recently by Judge
Charles Knight in the Meigs
County Common Pleas Court .

BARCELONA, Spain. (UP!)Two U.S. Navy warships
steamed out of port at dawn
today a week early with thei r
!lags at .half-mas t in mourning
for a crewman · killed in a
terrorist attack at a USO q ub.
Officials said the destroyer
USS Thorn and !riga te USS
Donald B. Beary cut short their
port 'call due to the bombing,
which also wounded nine other
American sailors.
The attack was branded in an

•

I'

Local trade-ill,
Was $3495

One owner - st-ows T.LC.
Very Solid Clean Car!

local Ooctor's Trale · ,

• ~.PER dl'SALE $~

1 Section. 1 0 Pages

u. S. ships leave port early

.

.
9,000 low IWies
' · Was $14.900
· ·

5•

'

··' ~

_'·"~

·

1986 BUICK SK¥~RK 4·DR.
LoCal one tYNner, tilt, cru~J:wire Wheel cOVI!S; Prl.

$89Q(t:·

..

.'1986 BUICK RIVIERA

8 .

'

behalf of the department by
.
Legar In appreciation of Werry's 50 years service
with the fire department.

Stop In For Your = E i l o . 1986 CHEVY C'AVAUER 4 DR.
Rlo.~.~nde Vs.,y • . , ketball
.
.
.
Game on Jan. 1f. "311·Lucky Peopte · ~STOO&lt; - 18 to 20,(XK) miles, aulD., arr,
Will Get ACb~To Win ANew
Were $7,495
~on~ae' Gfand.AI1!1~ The . ' ·
. • "Hoop Shoar
·

1988 PONTIAC .LeMAN$ ..
;.~.v AER!QUPE :. - ··

$10,200.

19811MPALA WAGON

0

Featuring ...

.

cruiSe. N1ce enough lor :fly occasion. 29 000 miles. 16,000 miles. Local One OWfur. .
Was $11,900
' .
Was $9,900
• ··-

1980 FORD T·BIRD

Iii

N

Book Value $13,500; 7,500 low miles with !-top's, · Bran4; new, 6.rW. . . . 1iijle .warr.~.rear
silviJ, auto., air cond., ca~ette.
; defogger, 4 • • f . Sharp lillie carl
ASTEAL AT
t
ONLY T LEFT Ah.·'..
Full Price Only ·. '' 1
Sales &amp; Title Extra'•f'tlfi2:

$11,500.

.

.;n.'!'

· "88'' ,GRAND·AM [E 2 DR. ·

$18,177:•. ,.,_ . ' •:{ '

1986 CHEVY CAMARO Z·28

.

' ''$15oo ·•· •· J;
FACTORY REBATE,
ON
1988 BUICK PARK AVE.

cru1~, ,,. C!!J1!a,lll,§., .~.' ••~.p,- sharp, 7 .
. pa~enger
\"";. "1~11
FACTORY..LIST
, .t,
.
. . .

$6995.

.&gt;'f&lt;

.. NQWIKSJO,K! .

. Rear defogger, AM-F.M ca~etlt&gt;, auto. trans.; air .

~·cond. &amp;$toggughts

". 'I

. THIS SAlE OfL
,,

. ~ nules.

.~.

10,895.

BRAND NEW 1988
PONTIAC SUNBIRD 4 DR.

.
. ...

988 PONTIAC GRAND AM'S ' " . EBEt'~IRCQ~~ITiON,ING
· BRAND NBY - Tilt, cruise, rear. defogger, air
'ON ALii NEW 1'88"
' cond., auto. trans., 14" aluminum wheels
'
BUICK
$
CENTURY'S &amp;LESABRES
~ ' $219.69 Par Mo. With Only $495. Down

_
.
k1900 ,

§! : · flat PliCU

.

, S.J49
-;,.' -·00'
.· , .&amp;. ·,\·'.f:-~\

$8995.

•

•. o~?.

Was 115,900 ,

enttne

Meigs students make
up for lost time; no
incidents are reported

.
' ,
miles, gold with su_nroof.· · k).llfed
. _:

·... ~~;900: ,: · .·

· ,•t•.~e&amp;$~tr;90i&gt;:

. JJV7 PONTIAC GRAND AM

' -1987 BUICK SKYLARK

1987 PONTIAC FIERO GT "·

1987 BUICK CENTURY

•

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, December 28, 1987

,;!

1987 PONTIAC BONNIVILLE

Rain tonight, 'changing to
snow, Lows in upper 20s,
Chance ol snow !lorries Tuesday.

Southern Local School District
recently mailed its annual report
for the 1986-87 school year to the
pos tal patrons of the Racine,
Syracuse a nd Portland Post
Offices.
State law requires the report.
but how the information is
presented to the public is left up
to the school district. This is
Southern's second time for the
report to be professionally
printed a nd mailed , bulk rate, to
the postal patrons.
The 1986-87 State Board of
Educatio n theme was "The Year
of Reflection : A Bicentennial
Celebratio n of P ublic E du cation." Using th is theme. Sou thern obta ined a numbe r of old
photographs a nd materials to ·
reflect how the edcuational system in the Racine-Southern area
has been promoted through the
years .
Southern Supervising Princi·
pa l Bob Beegle, who coordinated
the publication, reported that he
had more material than space for
printing.
Included among the materials
gathered by Beegle was an old
ireasurer's book from, the
Banner Separate School District
of Suttpn Township. covering
years 1869-1898. The Banner
School was pictured In the Dec.18
issue ol The Daily Sentinel and
the treasurer's book was supp·
lied by Southern Board member
Joe Thoren.
An exa mple of ttgures from the
book "are something else." Beegle said. The February settlement for 1891 reflected $178.20 in
loca l taxes for sc hool and school
house purposes, 'and a carry over
of $195.77 . The grand total for
school purposes was $458,31 and
t)le settlement was signed by

Washington Holzer. treasurer.
According to Mr. and Mrs.
Virgil Hamm, on whose Amberger Road property the
Banner School stili sta nd s, the
original property owner was
Curtis Gilmore. Gilmore donated
the land for the school on
condition that the property would
revert to the owner if and when
the school ever closed, which it
did in 1932 when students were
bused to other schools.
Some of the early names in the
sc hool included Go nder, Hobsetter , Miller , Hamm. Nease, Swearingen. Yo st, Gilmore and•
Rhodes. said Mrs . Hamm.
Early teac hers, were Blank
Holter, Estella Rose, John Ba iley, Hollis Caldwell, Leah Baer,
Helen Hobstetter and Elva
Hamm, she added. and teachers
during the years 1920-1932 included Susie Circle; Lucille Karr.
Freda Amber1(er . Carl Weese.
·Lowell Wingett . H a rol~ Frost
a nd Thelma Di II, who wa s Ihe
last teacher at Banner.
In the 1890's. accord ing to Mrs .
Hamm. a teacher at Banner
would earn a sa lary of $25 per
month. The janitor, who was
usually a student, Parned $1 a
month.
Dana Hamm , who was Virgil's
father , wor ked as a janitor while
he wa s a , student at th e sc hool.
filling the coa l a nd water
buckets, keeping the fire going
and sweeping. While Hamm was
working in thi s capacity. the
school board voted to cut the
janitor 's pa y fr om $1 to $.75 .
Hamm dec ided he was going to
' quit if his wages were cut but the
teacher made up the $.25ln order
to keep him on !he job.
Virgil Hamm also worked as a
'continued on pa g e · ~

•

�Monday, December 28, 1987

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

.·

.

~lb
rsm~ rT"\.....1'---,--·~d.o=::t

~v

ROBERT ·L. WINGE'IT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

A MEMBER of The United Pres s International , In land Daily P rPss
Association and the Amerlcan Newspa'per Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are we\ com ('. They shou ld bt&gt; less than 300 words
l ong. All letters are subJa·t toed llln ~ and must be signed wlt h name, address and
tel eph one number. No unsigned IC'1ters wUI be published, l-Nters should be In
• good taste. addresSing Issues. not pcrsonall_tl es.
·

·A real old
Washington hand
By AJtNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON iUP il - One o( the myths about the national
capital is thaI a lot of people live in Washington but it is nobod y 's home.
town. Another one Is that Washington is populated entirely by
politicians, paper -s hufflers and influence peddlers.
,
· There may have been some truth t? 'those ideas back in the days
when the District o(Columbia was a gleam in George Washington' s
eye and even as late as when Franklin D. Roosevelt brought the New
Deal to town .
But now. Washington is a real. if different. American city. complete
with its own city hail scanda ls, ethnic neighborhoods and old-timer s
who remember "the good old days."
One who saw Washington change was Charlie Haskin s, who died
last week at 78. ·Charlie lived much of his adult life within walking
distance of the White House. or more important to him. of Woodward
&amp; Lothrop. the city's biggest department s tore. where he worked for
50 years.
Charlie never worked for I he gover nment . unless you count serving
as an air raid warden for his neighborhood during World War II, and it
is likely \hat the first federal check he cashed was when he retired and
s tarted collecting Social Security.
After the developers tore down the downtown apartment building
Charlie liyed in for 40 years, he moved t0 another building near
Dupont Circle. a polyglot area of whites and blacks . Hispanics ,
Asians a nd Africans . straig hts and gays, young and old. yuppies and
\
down-and -outers.
He loved it. In all bOt the na$tiest weather. he would stand outside
his building for hours, monitoring the passing parade and favoring
anyone who stopped to c hat with his recollections of the old
Washington and pungent observations about the new one.
In 1983. I was assigned to write a story commemorating the 50th
anniversary of FDR 's first inau guration. I struck out with ·several
interview prospects and I asked Charlie if he knew anyone who had
been at the 1933 inauguration.
"You're talking to one." he replied. " I mal'ched in the inaugral

parade."

"

In his apartment he showed off a collection of political memorabilia
that would make a museum curator's mouth water. In addition to the
ina uguration program and assorted so uve n ~rs, he had several
· pre-1932 signed let ters from F'DR tha nking Charlie. then a you ng
Democratic activist . for his supporl.
Charlie also had a s pecial memory of Eleanor Roosevelt. Once
when the White House called to alert Woodies that the first lady was
coming to shop, Charlie wa s sent down to the stree t to meet the
limousine.

"There wasn't any limou sine." he sa id . "She drove up herself in her
open roadster and asked me if it was all r ig ht to park on F' Street. I
showed her in10 the star~ and she asked me a il about myself and my
family."
.
Another time, the conversa tion turned to baseball. Charlie
ex pressed a dislike for Babe Ruth , explaining that Ruth always
see med to hit his mos t prodigious home runs against Washington
Senat'ors' pit c hers.
Hi s favorite player was Walter Johnson. the fireball pitcher who. it
turned out. was a friend of th e Haskins famil y.
" I guess the grea t~st moment of my life when I was a boy was when
Walter J ohnson took me to Griffiths Stadium a nd let m e sit in the
·
dugout before a game." he said.

Letters to the editor
'

What's all the fuss about?
What' s all the fu ss about• l 'ye
watched as my son set at hom e
not getting any education at all
and T don 't see by ta xes going
down beca use of it. The School
Board says we' re broke. We ll, if
so, why not se ll off some assets
that they own. I know the Meigs
School Board has property they
can sale, like the old high school
In Rutland. Whi ch is becoming an
eye sore and look at th e old hi gh
sc hool buildin g In Pom eroy plus
the football fi eld. Th ey have a
new High School. Why have two
football field s? I should say
Meigs Loca l isn't broke yet with
prime property like this settin g
around not 'being used. So why
not sell it? And as for the
teachers on s trike, I can' t bl ame
the School Board fo r ali thi s

troubl e. You. too, have shown a
fine example of yourself over the
week s painting cars and th e lot. I
·wou ld think of bett&lt;&gt;r things to do
in front of my Meigs County
studen ts. This is wrong- not the
America n way . I can only say for
now may Peace and Happiness
come to Meigs Loca l soon before
we have no school to teach. Some
would say you better by glad to
have a job at thi s time and da y.
So let's ali get to get her and find a
way to work this mess &lt;lut at least
for our kids' sa ke. Don't anyone
care ary more about livi ng in stea d of just making another
"Big Pay Check" ?
Yours Truly
F'loyd H. Cleland
Middleport , Ohio 45760

Today in history
By United Press International
Toda y is Monday. Dec. 28. the 362nd day ol'l987 with Ihree to fo ll ow.
The moon is waxing, moving toward its full pha se.
The morning st~rs are Mars and Satu rn .
The evening-stars are Mercury , Venus and Jupiter.
Those born on th is date are under th e sign of Capri co rn . They
include Woodrow '!,Vilson, 28th presi dent of the United,States. in 1856;
j azz pianist Earl"F'atha" Hines in 1905; and actors Lew Ayres in 1908
• 1age 79), Martin Milner in 1931 (age 56) a nd Maggie Smith In 1934 I age
53).

1

On this date in his tory:
In 1832, John Calhoun. at od ds with President Andrew Ja ckson,
became the first U.S. vice-presi dent to resign .
In 18.16, Spain recognized the independence of Mexico.
·In 1945, Co nl'(ress officially recog nized th e "Pledge of Allegiance''
to the flag of the United States.
Jn J950, advancing Chinfse troops crossed the 38th Parallel.
dividi ng line between North and South Korea, to help the communist
Nor th Ko.--ea ns fight Amerlcan;ied United Nations forces
.
In 1985, warring Lebanese Mos lem and ChrtStian leaders s1gned a
peace agreement backed by Syria .

•

•

I

Price fixers _______B_y_J_ac_k_A_n_d_e_r_so_n_a_n_d_D_a_l_e_Vt_a_n_A_t_ta_
WASHINGTON - If the
Grinch spared YOI,lr Christmas ·
,. this year, just walt 12 months. Presdlent Reagan is threatening
to veto a bill that would probibit
manufacturers from dictatirfg to
retailers how much they c~n
charge to merchandise. If the bill
bites the dust, it could drive
The way it stands now. if you
s hop around from upscale department stores to downscale
factory outlets specials, you can
find m any item s on your Christmas lis t in a range of prices. But
the Justice Department thinks it
is right and legal for the manufa ctu rer to set a price for both

stores.
The practice is callj?d ''vertical
price fixing," and here's how it
works.

A higher-priced store, stung by
competition from a discounter,
runs to the manufacturer and
asks to have mandatory retail
prices set in stone. Goodbye,
suggested retail price .
If the high-priced store, stung
by competition from a discounter, runs to the manufacturer and
asks to have mandatory retail
prices set in stone. Go9dbye,
suggested retail price.
If the high-priced store moves
enough merchandise to carry
some weight with the manufaturer, the manufacturer will set
the price and take the chance of
offending the discounter. Anyone
who undersells that price is cut
off from the supply.
From 1911 until seven years
ago, when Reagan look office,
the courts held that vertical price

fixing was taboo. But under
Reagan, the Ju.s tlce Department
has persistently argued that the
arrangement Is legal, and the
courts seem to be coming around
to that point of view. Also, big
business has been lobbying Congress, trying to co nvince law makers that vertical price restraint s are one way
manufacturers have of controlling the 1\'aY their products are.
distributed and showcased, and
ought to be practiced
universally.
.
Consumer groups want a law
that bans vertical price fixing
once and for all. The practice,
they say, threatens to cheat
shoppers out of bargains . As
manufacturers lean on discounters. the discounters Increase
their prices or risk going out of

CAN'T 'tJU JU~
IMAGINe
WHAT KIND oF
INAUGURAL BALL
He'D THRJW.

bu siness because they can't
supply popular merchandise, according to Public Citizen's Congress Watch , a public interest
group founded by Raipl\ Nader.
"That's a policy that would
mak~ the Grinch proud," says
Michael Waldman of Congress
Watch. "Prices would rise and
competition would shrink."
To get an Idea of just how
expensive Christmas would be
without discount · stores, Waid·
man's group compared prices for
Christmas gifts at various stores
during late November and early
December and shared the Information with our · ass\)Ciate Ste·
wart Harris.
A game of Monopoly was $16 at
F.A .O. Schwartz and $8.96 at
K-Mart. The price for Levis 501
button-fly jeans ranged from
$18.75 to $32. Books were priced
as much as 35 percent less by a
Washington-area discounter,
and men's briefs could be had for
almost half price. Congress
Watch found that bargain hunters could save as much as 30
percent on electronic goods, toys
and games, and 36 percent on
clothing.
The bill has already passed the
House, sponsored by Peter Rodino, D-N.J., and Henry Hyde,
R-!11., and is moving to the floor
of the Senate under the sponsorship of Howard Metzenbaurn.
D-Ohio. If it passes there, It will
go to the president. along with a
recommendation from the Justiee Departmen thai he spike it.
The law.. according to the
Justice Department, would discourage the introduction of new
products and Illes in the face of a
1984 Supreme Court decision that
gave manufacturers the goahead for vertical price
restraints.
The business lobby argues that
the bill might hurt the consumer,
too.

Once again, power corrupts ___W_ill_ia_m_R_us_he_r
One nice thing about writing a
column saying a few kind words
for Mike Deaver is that you ca n
count on having the territory ali
to yourself.
For nearly 20 years .,Deaver
sedulously cultivated Ronald
Reagan and his wife, ultim ately
becoming well -nigh indispensable to both of them as well as an
extreme ly powerful man in his
own right. There is· simply no
denying tha t he ha s emp loyed his
sn ick ersnee very effectively Indeed on a great many people. (If
you doubt it, read his own recent
book listing a few of the
casua lties.)
When Deaver finally s tepped
down as deputy chief of staff at
the White Hou se in May 1985 to go
into the consu lting business, the
people eager to do him an ill turn
cou ld have formed a double line
all th e way from Cap ito l Hill to
Mount Vernon and back.
But there is a seldom-noted
streak of CJ(jrence Darrow in m e,

a nd it prompts me to r ise and say
that the var ious pieties being
uttered in the wake of Deaver's

conviction for perjury , for denying that he lobbied White House
officials less than a year after he
left, are the most sanctimonious
vat of bilge water that has
washed ove r Washington In
many a moon. ·
.
To begin with , the underlying
statute that Deaver is accused of
violating is the so-called "Ethics
in Government Act "" It is no such
thing. Ail it does is prohibit
retired employees of the executive branch from lobbying their
old agency or department for one
year after their departure.
In passing It , Congress craft Uy
exe mpted its own former
members from the prohibition.
so the Jaw has absolutely nothing
to do with the ethics (if any) of
Congress. If any retired or
defeated member of Ihe House or
Senate does, on the day after he
leaves office, what Mike Deaver
has just been convicted of deny ing he did, the only res ult is a fa t
fee.
And such fees will· be even
fatter hencefort h, now that everybody is on notice that it' s safer

-Is it OK to harvest
The year was 1976. The previous fall Karen Ann Quinlan had
become a shorthand symbol for
our new-found national awareness that life docs not necessarily
end with the cessation of natural
respirato ry

and

cardiac

functions.
Surveys showed that most
people supported the r ight . to
reject medi ca l tec hno logy th at
would only prolong dying, rather
than ex tend living. However,
there is little doubt th at an article
entitled "Ha rvest ing the Dead,"
published th at year in Harper's.
would not have garnered the
sa m e kind of support.
Written by respected psychiatri st and ethicist Willard Gayiin,
the piece suggested, in Swiftlan
"modest proposal" fashion, that
we were on the verge of creating

to hire only excongressmen to do
your lobbying for you.
If you think this is a purely
technical defect in an otherwise
splendid piece of legislation,
consider the growing scandal
over ·the behavior of House
Speaker James Wright of Texas,
who in less than a year has begun
making his predecessor, Tip
O'Neill, look like a paragon of
nonpartisan Integrity.
Wright is the most powerful
and most visible member of a
coterie of high-ranking House
Democrats who are busy demonstrating afresh Lortl Acton's
famous principle that " power
corrupts." In Wright's case, the
charges center on his alleged
efforts to derail a federal invest igation into the activities of a
bunch of loose-jointed Texas
savings-and-loan outfits. (Note,
incidentally, that Wright didn't
even wait to retire. )
Rep . Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., is
trying valiantly to force an
Investigation of the conduct of
Wright and his cronies, but thus
far has generated only horse-

orga~s?_ _ _B_.o_.c_ot___:en

of maintaining anencephalies for
organs.
use as organ donors. Should we,
"It' s incredibly close to what I
or should we not , tu rn hideously
talked about." Gayiin told me.
malformed infants into neonat al
"This thing, which was done as a
specu lative thing to get people neomorts? As Willard Gaylin
thinking about it, is now becom- - himself says, "I don ' t think truth
a nd justice necessarily lie on
ing a living reality."
eit
her side" of the debate .
What the physicians at Lorna
What
is so disturbing about the
Ll nd a hope to do is use the
estimated 2,000 anencephalic in- latest news out of Lorna Linda is
fants born each year as a source that physicians at the medical
of organs for most of the center, le!l by surgeon Leonard
approximately 2,500 infant s born
each year needing transpla nt s.
In some ways, the idea is
appealing. Alter all. a nencephalies are born without any brain

above the brain stem. They have
nothing but the most primitive
reflex functions. They cannot
see, hear . think or feel in any
way. They are devoid of any
percept Iori of th emselves or their
a nE-w class of citizens, " neeenviron ment s.
morts." who could be used as a
It has alw 0 ys been the fate of
so urce of organs for
these creatures to be lntenllontransplantation.
a liy crushed with forceps during
Gaylin "proposed'' tha t these deliv ery, to be left to die of
" new dead" be maint ai ned on
hypothermia In cold delive ry
life supports in "bloempori- rooms, or to die naturally within
ums," and th at the ir organs be
a few days or weeks after birth.
ha rves ted, one at a time , as
While there have been rare
needed.
exceptions that have existed for
The following year aut hor
months, or even years. they have
Robin Cook popularized the idea
been just that- rare exceptions.
in hls novel, " Coma /' and
For some ethicists, _and surGay lin 's idea entered the rea lm
geons, the death of these creaof popular sc i e nce
tures has been a double tragedy:
fiction / hO rror .
for the parents, who looked
Last week, Willard Gaylln's
forward to the birth of a chlld
neomorts beca me reality! as
only to discover that they had
physicians at California's Lorna . conceived a nightmarish creaLinda Universit y Medic al Center
ture; and for society, whlC'h
announced that they were planmight use potentially salvagea'
ning to deliver an anencephallc
ble orga ns that go to waste.
fetus for the ex press purpose of
A debate has been smoldering
maintaining it on a respirator
in the bloethics and surgical
until th ey could ha rvest its
communities over the propriety

laughs. Meanwhile Mike Deaver
faces up to five years In prison for
saying he can't remember talk· ·
ing to National Security Adviser
Bud McFarlane about a federal
ta~
exemption for mainland
companies with. factories )n
Puerto Rico.
And another thing. The special
prosecutor apparently didn't
think his case against Deaver for
violating the Ethics In Government Act (which would have·
involved proving a corrupt intent, ect.) was all that hot,
because he didn't even try to
indict him under it.
Instead. he hauled Deaver
before the grand jury and asked
him about specific acts which,
taken together, might have
added up to the crime (e.g.,
whether he tal ked to McFarlane). Deaver, who had a perfect
constitutional right to remain
silent, said he didn ' t remember
having done so- whereupon the
special prosecutor Indicted him
for lying!
Clever chaps, these special
prosecutors.

Bailey, have decided not to wait
for thP debate, and are instead
c harging headlong Into Willard
Gaylin's biocmporium.
So. once again, we move
toward answering difficult moral
a nd et hical question s by doing,
ra ther tha n by thinking. Such a
course of act ion does not provide
answers; it only leads to further
confusion and bitter divi sion
within society.

'Berry's World

CURRY St;OREG....:. Marshall's Tom Curry (52)
dunks lor two as the Thundering Herd drives
toward an 82-72 win over West VIrginia Sunday

afternoon, as Mountaineers Steve Berger ( 4),
Darryl Prue (24) and Wade Smith (33) watch.
(UPI)

Tornadoes ·meet Rebels -at OU
By SCO'IT WOLFE
Sentinel Stall Writer
Tomorrow evening (Tuesday (
the Southern Tornadoes, 6-1, take
on the highly reknown Indian
Valley South Rebels In Ohio
University's Convocation center
as part of a high school basketbail triple -header.
The first game of the tri -match ·
begins at 6 p.m. when Rock Hill
takes on Oak Hill of the SVAC .
The second game is slated for
approximately 7: 45, pending the
finish of the first classic, and
features Wellston against Columbus Academy .The Tornadoes
challenge the Reb els. beginning
at approximately 9:30 p.m.
Admission is one price of $3 to
see all three games.
The ''Convo" is somewhat of a
sacred name among Ohio High
School Athletics, running parallel in comparison to the Roman
Colosseum, or even more recent
as Yankee Stadium. Just mentioning a trip to the "Convo"
generates much excitment in
Tornado Territory, and at the
same tim e brings back a lot of
memories .
Tuesday's contest will be the
third meeting between Indian
Valley South and the RacineSouthern Tornadoes. ali of which
have been played appropriately
enough at the Convo. The series
record stands at 1-1, so tonight is
special as it marks the "rubber
match" between the two.
The two teams first me t In 1979
in the regionais at Athens with
JVS claiming a somewhat onesided 52~29 victory. Leading
scorers were Dave Findlay and
Jim O'Brien with six points each.
For IVS. Larry Huggin s, later
s ta rri n ~; at Ohio State, led the
Rebels with 14 points.

One highlight of that game was
that Tornado Tim Brinegar stole
the ball from Huggins, the son of
legendary IVS Coach Charlie
Huggins, on three occasions.

Kent Wolfe with 13, Johnny Davis
12, Jack Duffy 12 and Dave
Foreman 11.
Bill Elmore led IVS with 15.
Presently, IVS is lead by
three-year starter Larry LaisThat year Southern earned a ure, an all-state running back,
berth in the District on the coat . standing 6-0, 180 as a senior.
tails of District hero Jim 'Ozie' Frank Polen halls at the other
O'Brien, who In the last final 36 guard, a 5-11 junior.Forwards
seconds gunned down the Ross - are Steve Allensworth,a 6-2 se- .
Southeastern Panthers, 53-52. nior, and Doug McConnell, a 6-0
Trailing 52-46 with just 36 se- junior. At center is senior Paul
conds left. 0' Brien swished in Adam. adding to IVS height
two thirty footers, then gathered advantage at 6-5.
The Tornadoes of Coach Howie
up a scooping desperation· pass
Caldwell
will coutner with speed,
from Jonathan Rees just shy of
mid-court and pumped It through quickness. and a potent outside
shooting range. led by· senior
at the buzzer for the victory.
(Author's note: While talking guards David Amburgey and
with O'Brien the other day I Jeff Caldwell . Other starters
joked that had the three point include 6-2 Kenny Turley, David
McMillin, and Shawn Cunplay been tri effect at that time,
that he would have already one ningham, Shannon Riffle.
Other Tornadoes expecting to
the game, and would not have
see
action are Shawn Diddle,
had to face the final pressure
Shane
Simpson , Chris Stout,
packed six seconds. We both
Scott
McPhail,
Brent Shuler, and
agreed that it was more fun just
Mike Amos.
the way it happened. Oz with a
Despite a Joss at Hannan
slight grin added that he works
Trace, and several questionable
best under pressure anyway.)
calls, Southern did not play up to
Southern finished that season
par, however, has looked super
16-6.
sharp in every other outing.lf
During the seventies Indian
Southern picks up the momenValley South was dubbed as the
tum, they should be able to give
'team of the seventies', enduring
any team. big or small, a run for
several trips to the state tourna i
their money.
ment with Its great basketball
Look for a good game Tuesday.
program.
Southern was proclaimed the
'team of the eighties' earlier in
this decade, and wants to prove
The Daily Sentinel
that the statement is Indeed true.
(USI'S 145-9601
Southern and Indian Valley .
A Division ot Multimedia, Inc.
South next met in the regional
finals in 1980. This time with a
Published every afternoon, Monday
lh rough Friday, 111 Courl St., Po different outcome Southern
meroy , Ohio. by th e Ohio Valley Pubemerged the winner, 5!-50, earnlishing Company / MultlmOOi a, In c ..
ing a Irip to the state.
Pomeroy, Ohio 45769-, Ph. 992-2156. Seco nd class postag{' paid at Pom eroy,
Leading scoreres were soph.
Ohio.

Bucks drop 74-65
tilt to NM Lobos

"Hold all my calls. I'm going to play With my
Pee-'wee Herman doll for a while. "

,.
'I

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

MU rolls over 'Mountaineers
for seventh victory of season

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, December 28. 1987

discoun t stores out of business.

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UP I)
- A visiting team rarely fare s
well against New Mexico in The
Pit.
Just ask Ohio State after
Sunday night.
The Buckeyes, victors there
Saturday night. couldn't make it
two In a row, and dropped a 74 -65
decision to host New Mexico in
. the championship game of the
Lobo Class ic.
Hunter Greene scored 28 points
and Charlie Thomas added 24 to
help the host team win its 14 th
title In th e23-year event, and first
since 1983. In the consolation
game, Long Beach State defeated North Texas State, 89-88.
The Lobes, 10-3, have been
tough against non -conference
foes - 174-29 for an 86 percent
winning edge. Ohio State fell lo

6-3 with one game remaining
before opening the Big Ten
season .
New Mexico padded a 38-29
halftime lead to a 46-32 advantage early In the second half
before.OhloState came back with
Jay Burson, who led the Buckeyes with 21 points, helping cut
the margin to 48-41 with 10
minutes remaining.
The two tMms traded baskets
until Greene took control with six
minutes left. Greene scored 10 of
the next 12 Lobo points, including
two slam dunks , as New Mexico
went up 66-51 with three minutes
to go.
Ohio Stale attempted numer'
ous three-point shots but hit only
8 of 22 and could not overcome
New Mexico's expanding
margin.

Mf'mber; Un lted Pr ess I nternational ,
In land Daily P.ress Assoclallon and t hf'
OhiO Newspaper Associ at ion. Nat lona \
Advertising Representative. Branham
Newspaper Sales , 733 Thil"d Avenue ,
New York. New York 10017.

HUNTINGTON, W.Va. (UPI)
- Marshall's 82-72 conquest of
West Vlrgtnla Sunday brought
another surprise in the intrastate
riva lry - the visiting Mountaineers started the game with their
usual !lve starters on the bench
because of curfew violations.
Skip Henderson fired In 28
points and took charge down the
stretc h when the vis itors threatened before their Henderson
Center s lipped to 0-4. Marshall
has won five of the past eight
games to pull within 8-5 In the
modern se ries and 11-5 overall .
Afte r· the two-hour , televised
battle before 10,576 fans. West
Virginia coach Gale Catlett said
In a brief interview after his
radio show that he did not start
his five regulars because of
"some curfew violations." The
coach did not elaborate, but the
curfew violations reportedly
were committed by the usual five
starters Saturday night in
Huntington .
Marshall coach Rick Huckabay said the Mountaineers' all new starting lineup caught him
by surprise.
" We didn't know until we got
the matchups abbout those
changes," Huckabay said.
''Coach Catlett did what he had to
do ."
Catlett started 6-10 junior
Wade Smith at center, 6-foot-4
senior Kirk Seeley and 6-foot-7
freshman Mike Yoest at forwards and sophomore Bi·ett
Vincent and freshman Shaun
Jackson at guards .
The newcomers played until
the 14:44 mark when Steve
Berger. Herbie Brooks and Chris
Brooks entered with Marshall
leading 13-6. The biggest differ ence was 23-8 oand after Yoest's
12-foot jumper made It 23-10,
Catlett sent in usual starter
Darryl Prue and junior college
transfer Desmond Clifton.
Tyrone Shaw, West Vlrgina 's
veteran forward. was benched
the whole game.
Herbie Brooks bucketed 20
points for the Mountaineers, 4-4,
who play at home Wednesday
against George Mason.
Marshall, 7-1, also has a home
game Wednesday - against
Kent State.
Center Tom Curry scored 17
points and snared 10 rebounds for

Marshall. Rodney Holden netted
only 5 points but grabbed 15
rebounds, and forward Maurice
Bryson scored 13 points. Andy
Paul Williamson, Marshall's
freshman point guard, tallied 13
points .
Yoest scored 11 points and
Vincent 10 for WVU. Chris
Brooks finished with 10 points
and 9 rebounds .
A technical foul on Catlett for
protesting an intentional foul on
Berger halted any chance of a
comeback after the Mountai neers rallied within nss with
1:11 left. Freshman John Taft,
who had just missed two foul
shots, then swished four straight
free throws. On the -accompanying possession, Henderson's drlv·
lng layup sent the margin to 78-68
with 55 seconds left.
Catlett sharply criticized the
intentional foul on Berger. who
tried to reach around Taft and
slap the bali away .
"That' was one of the worst
fouls I've seen in the last five
years," Catlett said. "He 'back
slaps' him and he gives him a
two-shot foul.
"Ed Chambers (one of · the
officials) - i f that 's not a homer
call, I've never seen one. I don't
know if we would have won.

because Marshall was playing
well."
The three officials ali work in
the · Southern Conference, of
which Marsh aU is a member .
Catlett did point out that an
offlclating crew of the Atlantic
10, of which WVU is a member ,
worked the Mountaineers' win In
Morgantown last year.
The Thundering Herd's biggest
margin of the second half was
55-42 with 12:30 'remaining.
West Virginia pulled within
60-56 with 8: 02 remaining when
Berger stole the ball and made a
layup . Vincent's three-point shot
trimmed the margin to 64-61 with
4: 46 left.
Catlett cited missed free
·throws in road games as being
costly to the Mountaineers again ·
-11 of 26.
Using the reserves to start the
game " might be a blessing In
di sguise, " because of the experience they gained "under pressure," Catlett said. Yoest and
Vincent did good jobs , he said.
Marshall also shot poorly at the
foul line- 17 of 34.
"We just couldn't put them
away," Huckabay said. "Skip
(Henderson) did pretty well. He
took charge at the end."

SVAC standings
ALL GAMES
TIJ:AM
W L
Hannan Trace ..... 7 1
Southern .............. 6 1
Oak Hili .............. 6 2
North Galila ....... .4· 4
Eastern ... ............ 3 4
Symmes Valley ... 2 5
Kyger Creek ........ 2 5
Southwestern ....... 0 7
SVAC ONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
W L
Southern .............. 5' 1
Hannan Trace ..... 5 1
Oak Hill .............. 5 1
North Gallia ........ 3 3
Eastern ............... 3 · 3
Symmes Valley ... 2 5
Kyger Creek ........ 1 5
Southwestern ....... 0 6
TOTALS
24 24
SVAC
(Reserves)
TEAM
W L
Southern .............. 6 0
Hannan Trace ..... 5 1

P
666
601
557
515
450
448
404
397

OP
508
418
482
555
517
588
449
·530

P
533
488
449
397
386
400
344
355
3352

OP
351
388
375
439
437
511
395
456
3352

p OP
351 251
345 224

·for our Super7 Sale.
WE'RE CLEARING OUT OUR MOST
POPULAR '87 CHRYSLER$.

7.7%PLUS

GET

ANNUAL
PERCENTAGE RATE'

CHRYSLER
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-'

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CHRYSLER LEBARON
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Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.

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• Financing for qualified retail buyers through Chrysler Credit Corporat ion on new 1987 dealer stock. Other rates available as
length of contract mcreases. Dealer contribution may affect final price. See dealer tor detatls,

Hurry! Our best savings ever
·
end Dec. 31st.

c\\~"~"t~

COOPER

CHRYSLER•PLYMOUTH•DODGE, INC • .
992-6421

399 S. THIRD ST:IEET
•

I

Oak Hill .. : .......... .4 2 233 246
Southwestern ....... 3 2 263 281
)'lorth Gallia ........ 2 4 286 2%
Symmes Valley ... 2 4 269 284
Eastern ............... 2 4 254 324
Kyger Creek ........ O 6 215 310
TOTALS
24 24 2216 %218
Holiday schedule:
Tonight - North Galiia vs.
Hannan Trace, 6:30.
Kyger Creek vs. Southwestern,
8 p.m. (Gallla County Tournament at North Gallla) .
Symmes Valley In Holiday
Tournament in Fairview, Ky.
Tuesday - Consolation game;
Galli a County Tournament, 6:30
p.m.
Championship game, 8 p.m.
Symmes Valley in Holiday Tournament in Fairview, Ky.
Southern vs. Indian Valley
South in the Convocation Center
in Athens
Oak Hill vs. RockHill In Athens
. January 8 Eastern at
Symmes Valley

.

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

�,·

Monday,DBOMnber28. 1987

Monday, December 28, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

.

•

{

.

CELEBRATES SACK - Denver Bronco defensive end Rulon
Jones (75} celebrates his fourth-quarter sack of San Diego Charger
••• quarterback Mark Vlasic in Sunday's game in Denver.The
• • Broncos beat the Chargers 24-0 In a cold and snowy game in Mile
• IDgh Stadium. The Broncos clinched the AFC West title with the
win. (UPI}

Scoreboard ...
Prep scores
BoJli Ohio HIJh Schoo l Baskethall
Ry llnltcd Pres., lnk'rnatlorn\1
saauntay. Dec. 26
Akr Garfield !iO, SLn~ Wal!oh-,Je!iult $11.

A.kr Nqrth U. Tllllmlldl{t" 67
Ot.~pl'ak e 15, SOuth " 'eb!lte r Sl!

Ctn

Hu~~:hes

IIC. On CAPE 62
Col Broukha" ~ " !If, Dll)' Jcfler11on ~9
Co•voy (.'rc~t view 61, Li ncolnvlt&gt;w 16

E Cll' Sh!jiw 118, Cle E Te&lt;Jh Ill
Elida 14, ~lpho~t St ,lohn '!i 69

Cath 58,

Z~Wes Rolll! ~ nln!i

NFL results
KATIO~ ,\L FOOTBALl. U : AGliE

Ft JeMiq;s Ill, Ohio City 10
... lan Hllll!l64i. M edina 1~1 Rap 56
Lo ..ln KlPif IU, Pltl. S..:bt&gt;nley 19
Miami In ) 70, Clr St . .lo!Ot'!~ 611
N~wark

Mourn Un10n nl Otterheln
Oellan('e a t Malont•
Wilmington 111 Moml Vrmon
Ohiu Oumluit·un a t Thurnui'i 1\lo"' !Ky l
Rlj1 finutdc al ~1ndl ay
Tlflln 111 f' alnnoun 1St
Dlk l' at Crd.tr'Vi ll ~·
Frank ~ llanMn To urnt&gt;)'
Sum.hq , f un :t
Frank Sh.lnnon Tdurney

53

"-iorwalk 5!1, Kan!oa!; La kola 11

OHawa Hillli 118, Hola'ate 66
Fairview 67, ful.litwood l1

SIM! Mo~oood

Sidney Lehmaua 69, Anna 6K

St Henry !JS, Ml.stt'r 53
Tol Cent C.th 13, Fremonl ROS!i 60
Tol StJohn's H . To I "' hltm ~ r 50
Vuchdia· Buller 67, Millon- Union ~5
Willard 15, lk'Uevu~ 69

This week's games

Snturdav'l'o R e~ uJI~
{ lf' \ t•l;md I ll , l "illshurgh JJ
Wa~oh1n~to n !7. Minnesota HOT
Suoduy ·, Re~nlh.
NY Giant s !II , N\" ,J,.b 7
PIJUud(•iphl:t 17, Buffalo j
llou;;ton Zl , l '!r)l.' lnnnll 17
Dl.'t r ol l 30. o\ilanta 13
New Orlf'an,o; 33, Gree n 8ay21
Dalh~s :!1, St I..:Htl !i 16
Han!&gt;iali City I I, S('UIIIt • 20
lndlltnnpolls 2-1 , T amp11 R11y 6
Ch lc'a~to 6.
~nwr %-1

LA Rnldl'h :1
.Sno Olt•go 0

Sun trnnd S&lt;"o lit 1,,!\ Ham .. n
1\lnndll\''s Ga mt•
Nf'w •)l,~:larwl at Miami. !J p m

E ~'T

Thb " 'fek'!i
Ohio Co llt&gt;Jtt&gt; Raskt&gt;th all Sj hl'duk
lly United Press lntt&gt;rnullorual
Tonlghl. Dt-l' lll
Mhunl at Mu ,o;lc In \'lillllunal (N a,o;hvllh •l
(lj•l'eiand Slat Mllw11.ukf' l' Tnurnf'y
llowlln; Gr et&gt; n at Slt'NI Tourrwy '
Bladl"Ghllili CU y C I K.~!i l c
K"'nyon Co loni a l Tourn~•y
otterheln Cl.l&gt;i,o;lc
WHU&gt;nbe rJt Ho lid ay Tour .. ·r
,John Cu rrvll Tournt'l'
Malone- at Huntln~tl o n 1W \ ' a) rournt'.}
Urbuna W Albion (Mi t hl Tourney
'lUI' !!day, Dec '?!!
Cu nl'ilus at Xu\ ler

Millin I at

Mu10l~

In vUuUonul

Clco\'e land Sl 111 MIN.·aukff Tuurne!'
B-linlt Gret'n 111 Slenu Tourney
Rbut.,.. Gia!is ('ll y Cla!ilill'

\'ounrstown st11te

Ho liday Tourney
Kenyou Colonial Tournt•y
Olti! thf' ln ( 'llili!ih'
WlttenberJr: Holiday Tournt•v
John Carroll To urney
Malonf" n.1 HuntlnJttnn Tournf'y
Urbai'IM al i\lhlon Tourney
Ohto-fanada flllMJdc (Ca nton!
Dl'flant•e Tourney
M arlt&gt;ttA Tournt&gt;y
Cllmllllon f 11,\ Tournf'y
WoO!tiA!r Tourney
flndlay Tournt&gt;y
Tiffin al Oa lri.hlnd Tournt&gt;)
\\'al!ih at Ot.!.!•rm;ao Tourney
Wf'dftf'sday, ~·t . 30

K••nl Stat

Mar~all

Nor Cnolln;.l· \\'llmlnxton a t Ohio U
Bt&gt;lbun~( oukma.n tFht ) at 1\kron
Clndnnldl at \\)'uminK
Bradley at Dayto n
Concontha :t.t Ohio Nurttlern
YoWI.()IfO"II S4 TOLII"RI'f

tk'llanct• Tottrnf'y
M arlt&gt; lla T11urnl'y
t:a rn1tllon ( 'Uy Tournc•.)'
M'oO!'iU' r Tnurm•y
Flndla:t TouriK')'
OhilrCII.Nid il ('la.'iosl(
TiiUn at Oakland ToW'ney
Wah;h at OSk&gt;rman Tourlll'\
Thur!'ida,\' , Ot-t .11
No KlUill'l'o I'&gt;C hol•duli•d
f'rlday , olan I
No ~eames SI.' IM•dul r d
"uturd~, .Ian. '?
f e ntrul1\11c·h1Kan at Ohto St
Bowlin,~: CJn•1•n at Ch'\t' land 81
KNtl S t at X ttvlt&gt; r
Arm.} 111 Tnledo
North ('aro llna A&amp;T 111 Akron
81ulhnn Ill Ohio Unl\'
Btthunt"C uokmun IU " rlghj XI
81tldwln·Wallacc ill 1\l u,Jd n,~:um
Capittll at Marlrtla

NBA results
N1\TIONI\J. BASKETUALL 1\SSOf
Saturd a)' 'S RrNuJts
Indiana 106, £.1tlc;~r,:u 92
LA Lnkf'r~ 111, l lhth 10 9
1\tlunuaJU New \ 'urk 911

U£otrolt 110, Nt&gt;w .h ·rliey j'o
Cif'\!' land 1:!0, Pnrtlnnd 11-:
Dulla!&gt;! JOj, lluusion 100
Sa n t\ntoni u 105, [Ooldc•nSial c 96

Mllwn ukc•' Jlr!. \\a-sh lngtmJ91
n enwr 115, Seuutr. Ill
S ;lt'ro~nuonl o \I ~, J•hOI•nb

110
Uoslon IU6 , L•\ Cllppcn 97
Sunduy's R ~snlts
New Jl'r!'il'y 101 . 0l"\'elnnd 1\.3
Boston 114, Sa. •ru.me nto lot
Mo nday 's Gumcli
PhilAdelphia 111 Phoe nb , 9 :Jo p m
l&gt;e n\rr at Sfoattl r , 10

3(1 p.m .
l'III ~ II.)' 'S Gil lilt 'S

Mii\1.11 Ukt'l' a t Nt•w J ll n.ey . nl!iJht
P ort land at "e" \ ork

ll oUiilon at Del roll
Allant.a at Chlca~eo
.sw.:ra m,•nt u a t nallas
Uia h Itt Dt• nwr
l'hlludt•lph ln a t LA 1;-;~.lu&gt;rs

NHL results
N1\ TION.U. 110fKE1' LEAGU E
)~1\l urdny' s lt t&gt; ~ Ult !i

N\" ltani:&lt;'F!' 5, Ne w ,Jt• r:;t&gt;)' 3
X1' l~l~tMi cr» '.!, n.u~ tu n I
Plllshllt"f:h 6. l)l'tfllll 3
OtH•Iwt• I, Uu rlfonl ~

!lt111nt rrul I. Toronto ~
P lt llad••lphla 3. \\' M hlngt on '!
WI IUllp;•g 5, Mltu~t'"OUI I I OT)
St . l..:ml ~ li fhk'IIJ:'O I
F..dmonlon a; ( ',IIKary I
w ~ An gf'll' ~ 3. v llOCIIU\'Cr :!
Sunday',.; Rf'st•IL~
QtH'ht•c 5 ll arlford 3
l-it l ..md ~ 3, (lt lea,;u ~
3, 1\uffal n a, OT

Jlotlnncsol n 5, l)(otroll I
.\1onday'lil G11mes
" ~1.~hln~on tu Toronto, 1.3li p

m

N \ ' !.:la nd e r" nt " f' w .lf'r!&gt;f") . 1 · l ~ p . m .

Montre al ut f a lgary, !I; l5 p m .
\' iUitiJIJWr a t Edtuontnn, 'l .15 p m
"'lnn lpt' Ji: atl..o~ \ ll Jil' lf' s IO. :Ifi Jl m
Tut.-'!&gt;d a,\ '.\I Hn nws
1\o' \ ' lt itll K l' r ~&gt;~ at I'\\' l ~ la.nd P r S . nlp:ht
Roston a t rlltsbur~::h nh:h l
HOIInl o a t Qut•hcl', night
1Uontr1•al at \ ' aneOU\'I'f , night

Wyoming rips
Columbia, 92-56
figures, score d 22 pomts
By United Press International
:Fennis Dembo sparked No. 5
Elsewhere, a 1 Honolu lu, Carl
Wyoming Sunday night, helping
Nich ols and Greg Lockhar t each
the Cowboys turn a 1-polnt
scored 12 poin ts iii a second· half
halftime deficit into a rout of
rally that car ried unbeaten Mis·
Columbia In the fir s t round of the
sisslppi Sta te to a 68-55 victory
Cowboy Shoo tout.
over Hawaii in the first·round of
Dembo struck for 32 points at
the Rainbow Classic.
Casper, Wyo., to power th e
In the opener of the eight-team
Cl&gt;wboys into the final with a
tourn ament, Br ie Holloway
92-56 v1ctory over the Lions. In
scored 19 points to lead An zo na
the opening game, East ern KenSlate to a 79-73 victory ove r
tucky beat winless Detroit 67-55.
Texas A&amp;M . Loui sville wli l face
Wyoming. 8·0. and Eas ter n SMU and No r th Carolina State
Kentucky. 6-3, wtll play for the ' will take on Creighton Mo nd ay to
title Monda y ni ght
complete flrs t·roun d play.
·Wyoming trailed 32·31 at the
half but bolted m front by 30
points 10 minu tes Into the seco nd
ha lf. The Cowboys held the Lions
to 6 points during tha t span and
finished with 61 points in the
second half.
·Dembo. who hit four 3·poin1
g0ajs. was backed by Robyn
LEGI~N
Davis with 14 points and Er ic
MILL STREET
Leckner wlth 10. Matt Shannon
had 15 points for the Lions , 5·5.
DECEMBER 31, 1987
followed by Tony Chiles wlth 10.
9:00 P.M.-1 :00 A.M.
In . the first ga me, Eas tern
Kentucky Jed 40-27 a t ha lftime.
.Jeff McGill led Eastern Ke nSINGLE
tucky wit h 21 poi nt s while Tyron
' 10.00 COUPLE
Howard had 19. Detroit. 0·7. shot
AT THE DOOR
34 percent from the fleld . Marvi n
Owens. the only Ti ta n In dou ble

against a Cleveland team that
By COLLINS YEARWOOD
had won four of its last five
UP! Sports Writer
games.
New Jersey managed a rare
"I feel now with Bob MacKinvictory with a solid perfor mance
non
as coach, there's less presfrom Dwayne Washington, who
Washington said. " He has
sure,"
the Ne ts have long hoped would
more
confidence
in my ability."
lead their offense.
In
Washington's
previous three
The second-year guard from
games,
he
averaged
22.7 points
Syracuse, showed the touch that
4.3
assists.
and
earned him a first-round selec·
"Pearl's been outstanding,"
tion in the NBA draft and scored
MacKinnon
said. " He's been
24 points to lead the Nets Sunday
working on his shooting and it has
night to a 101-83 rout of the
been paying off. He makes
Cleveland Cavaliers.
opportunities on the· floor."
"We've had adversity since
last year," Washington said. "To
The opposition also has noticed
me, 1 feel it can't get an y worse. the difference in ,washington's
When you have four starters out play.
and you wi n, it feels great.
" Pearl' s always been tal New Jersey, hobbled by injur- ented," said Mark Price, Cleve·
ies and using only eight players, land's top scorer wlth 20 points.
put together one of its best games "Maybe he 's just finding out

By MIKE WElL
UP! Sports Writer
With a change on the bench and
constant shifting on the ice, the
Quebec Nordlques head out of the
Adams Division cellar.
Michel Goulet scored three
goa ls and add ed an ass ist Sunday
to lead the Nord iques to a 5-3
vtctory over the Hartford Whal·
ers tha t left th e division riva ls
wil h 32 points apiece. The Nordiques had defeated the Whalers
4·2 Saturday in th e opener of a
home-and·home series and is
5·3·1 since Ron Lapointe replaced
Andre Savard as coac h Dec. 4. ·
"I felt very good on the ice,"
Goul et said. "We were playing
wit h four lines Saturd ay and
again today and I felt no fatigue .
' 'W-e'Ve been playing good
hockey the last three weeks,"
added Goulet, who has 23 goals
this season. " We've had losses
bu t they are all by one goal. Since
Lapointe is here, we play 60
minutes of hockey and we play
wit h a lot more confidence."
Hartford dropped into a tie
with Quebec for last place,
althou gh the Nordiques have
played two fewer games and
have two more victories.
"It 's been a long time since

·-

The Dally Sentinel wlll observe an early news deadllne of 9
a.m. on Thursday , Dec. 31. The Sentinel business office Will
close as soon as all of Thursday's papers are picked up by
various carriers . The early deadline permits carriers to finish
their routes and be home In time to spend New Year's Eve with
their families and friends.
The Sentinel will not publish on New Year's Day Friday.
Normal hours of operation will res ume Saturday for publication
Qf the Sunday Times-Sentinel.

Squad has 11 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 11 calls
over the weekend; four on Saturday and seven on Sunday.
Saturday at 9:59a.m .. Pomeroy to Nye Ave. fo r Paul Garnes
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 10:47 a.m. to
South Fourth for Lela Winebrenner to Pleasant Valley
Hospital; Pomeroy at 5:-43p.m. to Brick St. for Norma Goodwin
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9; 25 p.m. to Lasley
St. for Ruth Smith to Holzer Medical Center.
Sunday at 6:24 a.m., Middleport to Village Manor for
Josephine Shanabrook to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 11:37 a.m. to Second Ave. for Ken Barnett to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 1: 04 p.m. to Story's
Run for Walter King to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 4:21 p.m. to Main St. for Edith Spencer to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 4:46 p.m . to
R.oute 7 for Elsie Wagenhals to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 8:33p.m. to Country Mob lie Home Park for Joe Dlle
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 9:49 p.m. to
Flatwoods Road for Charles Kuhl to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

Broncos 24, Chargers 0
At Denver, K.C. Clark returned a punt 71 yards for a
touchdown and Ricky Hunley
scored on a 52·yard Interception
return In a blizzard to give the
Broncos the home-field · advan·
tage during the playoffs. The
Broncos, 10·4·1, won the AFC
West. San Diego, 8-7, lost its sixth
straight.

School subsidies distributed
Meigs County's three local school districts have received
$581,821.04 In the December state school foundation subsidy
payments !or December, according to the report of State
Auditor Thomas E . Ferguson.
Amounts received by each local district after deductions for
retlrment Include: Eastern Local, $122,081.65; Meigs Local,
$335,150.59. and Southern Local, $124,588.80. In addition , the
Meigs County Board of Education received a direct allotment of
$32,913.28.

Southern ... _c_on_t_in_u_ed_f_ro_m_pa_g_e_l_ _ _ _ __
janitor while he attended
Banner.
By the 1920's, · a teacher's
salary had Increased to $100 per
month, and the janitor's salary
had Increased to $5 per month,
said Mrs. Hamm.
School took up at 9 a.m. and
dismissed at 4 p.m., she added.
Most children carried their
lunches unless they lived close
enough to walk home. Some
children walked as far as two
miles to get \O Banner School .
When Banner closed its doors,
members of the school board
Included U.S. Nease, Dana Hou·
dashelt, Vernon Nease, Earl
Holter and Dana Hamm, accord·
lng to Mrs. Hamm's records .
Until later years, board
members did not get paid. When
they dld start receiving payment, It was possibly $1 a
meeting, Mrs. Hamm said.
Some additional expenditures
listed In the old treasurer's book
from Joe Tl;10ren Includes $8.16
on &amp;!pt. 9, 1869 to D. Paulin for
repairs to Gllmore School; $37 on
June 23. 1870 to John Wolf for
Insuring school houses In
Banner; $12 on Feb. 12, 1872 to
Robert Dike for 200 bushels of
coal; $300 on Oct. 31, 1882 toE .A.
Mitchel !or bulldlng a school
house In the district; $6.50 on
Sept. 17. 1886 to S.S. Nease for
painting school houses; $19.15 on
Sept. 18, 1886 to John Epple for
paint for the district; $7.30 on
March 9, 1888 to Washington
Holter for lumber and privy at
school; $1 on Sept. 18,1897 to Ora
Bailey for cleaning Morning Star
School.
Although the district was
named Banner Separate School
District of Sutton Township,
there were other schools In·
eluded In the district, Beegle
pointed out. Thls accounts for the
notations In the treasurer's book
on Gilr;nore and Morning Star

DAUGHERTY DRIVES - The Cavaliers' Brad Daugherty
drives around the Nets' Mike Gmlnskl for two points In the first
quarter In East Rt~therford, N.J., Sunday. (UPI)

what he can do."
Saturday night. the Nets had
been humiliated 110-75 by the
Detroit Pistons at the Silver·
dome. The point total was the
Nets' lowest since 1977.
Washington was backed by
Mlke Gminski, with 23 points,
and Ben Coleman, with 22 plus 11
rebounds. as New Jersey
claimed its most one·slded vic·
tory this season. The Nets won
for only the third time in their
last 18 gamesl The Cavaliers shot
40 percent from the field and
matched their season low for
points .
.
"It's great to have a win
because we played so poorly last
night," MacKinnon said. "The
guard play was very good and
Coleman was terrific. "

we've had two straight victories
bu t we couldn't have asked fo r
better timing, especially against
our division riva ls," Lapointe
said.
With his team leading 4·3ln the
third period, Goulet completed
his second hat trick of the season
with a wrist shot from th e edge of
th e circle that went off goalie
Mike Liut's glove.
"We came back to make It
close but Quebec's fifth goal was
a killer," Hartford Coach Jack
Evans said.
Elsewhere In the NHL, Buffalo
and Pittsburgh skated to a 3-3 tie,
the New York Rangers routed
Boston 4·1, St. Louis edged
Chicago 3-2 a nd Minnesota beat
Detroit 5-4 .
Sabres 3, Penguins 3
At Buffalo, N.Y., Randy Hillier
scored at 12:50 of the third period
to lift Pittsburgh into a tie. Dave
Andreychuk had given the Sabres a 3-2 lead on a power play
early In the period . Buffalo goalie

Tom Barrasso stopped 42 shots.
Rang~rs 4, Bruins 1
.
At New York, Walt Poddubny
scored two goals a nd ad ded ' a,l
assist to lead the Rangers to their
second stl'aight victory . Tomas
Sandstrom and John Ogrodnick
also scored for New York :Boston
Coach Terry O'Reilly received a
gross misconduct penalty and
was ejected for throwing a water
bottle at referee Denis Morel.
Blues 3, Blackhawks 2
At Chicago, Doug Gilmour
scored two goals and Rob Ramage added three assists to carry
St. Louis, which improved to
15·15·5 and reached .500 for the
first time this season. All three
St. Louis goa ls ca me on power
plays.
North Stars 5, Red Wings 4
At Bloomington. Mlnn .. Brfan
MacLellan deflected In a shot
from the point midway through
the second period to spark the
North Stars, who ended an
.eigh t·game winless streak.

The Nets got off to a quick start
and the Ca vallers never
recovered.
"We were real flat," Cavaliers
Coach Lenny Wilkins. said. "We
came off like we ~¥ere running in
sand."

In the only other NBA game
Sunday night, Boston defeated
Sacramento 114-102.
Celtlcs 114, Kings 102
At Sacramento, Calif., Larry
Bird scored 35 points to power
Boston to Its seventh straight
victory. Kevin McHale contributed 25 points, Including 16 In:
fourth quarter, as the Ceitlcs shot
59 percent frro~ the floor and
Improved their record to 17-8.
Dennis Johnson added 16 points
for Boston.

,--------------,
GET

-S.MA.RJ.

SCHEDUlED MAINIEr-M::E AT REGU.AA MS

'

I

.---------------------------------~1
~

S1895
S2195

Opal L. Randolph, 70, of
Reedsville. died Saturday at
Camden·Clark Memorial Hospital following an extended Illness.
A homemaker, Mrs . Randolph
was born In Athens County, a
daughter of the late Warren E.
Baker and Martha Kibble Baker
Hauber. She was a member of the
Gospel Baptist Church, Torch.
Survivors include two broth·
ers. Charles Hauber of Reed s·
ville and Paul Hauber Jr. of Long
Bottom; three sisters, Mrs. Ray
(Leoma) Hall of Coolville, Mrs.
Lawrence (Louise} Gluesenc~mp of Portland, and Mrs.
Bernard (Betty} Forshey of
Marietta; and several nieces and
nephews.
Besides her parents. Mrs.
Randolph was preceded In death
by her husband, Carroll H,
Randolph; an Infant son; a
sister, Edith Young; and a
brotller. Warren Baker.
Services will be I p.m. Tuesday
at White Funeral Home with
Pastor Jerry Wilson officiating.
· Burial will be in Randolph
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral horne today (Man·
day} from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9.

4 Cyl.
Cars
6 &amp; 8 Cyl.
Cars &amp; Trucks .

• New oil
to 5 qts cars/6 qts trucks)
• New Mopot oil filter
• Check fluid levels
• Check battery
• Vehicles req uiring special/
extra oil and diesel filters
slightly higher
[up

I

I

("See our SeMce AdviSOI for detail&lt;]

lOOPER

:hrysler -Plymouth-Dodge

1I

992-6421
399 S . Third Street
Middleport, Ohio

I

BUFFET .TABLE

·SET

ICE, SOFT DRINKS
AVAILABLE

iI '
I

:••:me~··

Donald Robinson

1----~!. ___ :: ___ _.

Schools, and for Mrs. Hamm's
lnformatimi that classes at the
actual Banner School started ln
the 1880's.
Additional copies of Southern's
Annual Report, which Includes
Information on Banner and other
of the old schools which paved the
way tor today's Southern Local
School District, are available at
the high school.

Donald A. Robinson, 80, died

By ROBERT J. MURPHY
By United Press International
A winter storm that closed
airports and Interstate highways
In an assault on the western
Plains surged Into the Midwest
today, leaving behind up to 2 feet
of snow and thousands of
stra nded holiday travelers.
The slow-moving storm Is part
of a massive system that un·
leashed downpours In the midSouth during the 'holidays and
forced thousands from their
homes In Arkansas and Tennessee. The storms have been
blamed for at least 26 deaths
since Tuesday .
More raln fell across the
flood·ravaged lower Mississippi
and Ohio valleys Sunday, but It
was light enough to allow floodwaters to recede and let many
residents return home to begin
cleaning up.
About 1,250 people remained
out of their homes In West
Memphis, Ark., where floodwat·
ers were still 3 to 4 feet deep.
Advisories for snow and blow·
ing snow were posted through'
this morning over southeast
Wyoming and the northeast third
of Colorado. Advisories for snow,
sleet and freezing rain stretched
as far east as Minnesota, Wiscon·
sln and Illinois .
Snow late Sunday reached
from Colorado across southeast
Wyoming, South Dakota, Ne·
braska, northwest Kansas, west·
ern through central Iowa and
southern Minnesota. ·snow was
mixed with rain and freezing raln
over the southeast third of Iowa
Into northwest Illinois.
Rain stretched over parts of
Missouri, Arkansas, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi. Tennessee,
Illinois, Indiana, Ohio, Ken·
tucky, VIrginia, Georgia and the
Carolinas. Rain also dotted west ern Oregon, Washington state
and northwest California, wlth
sleet and snow In the higher
elevations.
Up to 6 inches of snow was
forecast for the Chicago area by
the morning rush hour.
Near·blizzard conditions
sacked northern Colorado, fore -

u. s. shipS.. •

Stocks
Dally stock prices
(As of 10: 30 a;m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power .......... ... 25%
AT&amp;T ................................. 26%
Ashland Oll ........................ 51~
Bob Evans .......................... 15J.2
Charming Shoppes .............. 12~
City Holding Co .............. .. ... 29
Federal Mogul ..................... 33
Goodyear T&amp;R .......... .........60%
Heck's Inc............. ,. ............ 1'%
Key Centurion ..................... 37
Lands' End ......................... 19'%
Limited Inc ........................ 17%
Multimedia Inc .................... 51
Rax Restaurants ....................3
Robbins &amp; Myers ............ .. .. . 717
Shoney 's Inc ....................... 21%
Wendy's Inti ........................ 5%
Worthington Ind ....... .... ... .... 16\7

No one has number
CLEVELAND lUPI} - Wed·
nesday's Ohio Super Lotto jackpot was set at $9 million after no
players correctly chose the
numbers drawn Saturday.
The numbers 7,10, 27, 30,34 and
43 made up the winning combination. but none of the 4,005.754
tickets sold bore thOse digits.
· There were, however. 136
tickets sold with five of the six
numbers. Each Is worth $1,000.
The 6,101 tickets that have four of
the numbers are worth $75
dollars each.

Area deaths

Opal Randolph

OFFER EXPIRES 2 / 28/ 88

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BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY $1 .99

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MIDDLEPORT AMERICAN
ANNEX

WRITE ONES BAND

List Sentinel holiday hours

Chiefs 41, Seahawks 20
At Kansas City, Mo., Bill
Kenney threw three touchdown
passes to lead Kansas City and
deny Seattle the home·fleld ad·
vantage in the playoffs. Seattle
ended the season 9·6, behind
Denver In the AFC West. Kansas
City, 4-11, avoided a franchiserecord tying 12 losses. Seattle's
Steve Largent became the NFL'S
all-time leading receiver surpassing the mark of 750 career
receptions set by San Diego's
Charlle Joiner.

Nets rout Cavs, 101-83; Celtics triumph

NEW YEAR'S EVE
DANCE

•a·.oo

Dickerson ran tor 196 yards,
the second-best rushing day in
Colts' history, and scored two
touchdowns to lead Indianapolis
over Tampa Bay 24-6 and Into the
playoffs as AFC East champion.
Dickerson came to Indianapolis
Oct. 10 in a three-way deal with
the Los Angeles Rams and
Buffalo.
"He would make any team in
football a contender wlth just his
presence and the things he can
do," Tampa Bay Coach Ray
Perkins said of Dickerson. " He
ca n cut on a dime and be full
speed. He's just a great football
player."
Highsmith scored his first two
NFL touchdowns to lead the
Oilers to a 21-17 victory over the
Cincinnati Bengals In Houston.
Highsmith, the Oilers' No.1 draft
pick out of Miami, held out until
late October. He rushed for 61
yards In his fourth start. Houston's Warren Moon completed 14
of 25 passes ,for 280 yards.
Highsmith caught a 33-yard
touchdown pass and scored from
a yard out on fourth down to help
Houston, 9-6, secure a spot In the
AFC wild-card game against
Seattle, 9-6. The game will be
played next Sunday In the
Astrodome.•
Indianapolis, which will have a
week of! during which time its
pljiyoff opponent will be decided
via the wlld·card game, finished
9-6 after going 3-131ast year. The
Buccaneers fell to 4-11, losing
their eighth straight game. Cincinnati also finished at 4-11.
Elsewhere, It was: ~hiladel ·
phla 17, Buffalo 7; Detroit 30,
Atlanta 13; Dallas 21, St. Louis
16; Kansas City 41 SeaTtle 20;
Denver 24. San Diego 0; Chicago
6, Los Angeles Raiders 3, and San
Francisco 48. Rams 0.
Eagles 17, Bllls 7
At Phlladelphla, Anthony To-

ney scored twice and Keith Byars
ran for 102 yards to power the
Eagles past Buffalo. The Eagles
and Bills finished at 7-8. Philadel phia defensive end Reggie White
sacked Bills quarterback Jim
Kelly twice, giving him 21 sacks
on the season, one short of the
NFL record.
Lions 30, Falcons 13
At · Atlanta, reserye fullback
' Gary Ellerson ran for two
touchdowns and Eddie Murray
kicked three field goa ls to lead
Detroit. The Falcons, 3·12, fin·
!shed with the league's worst
record and gained the No. 1 pick
In next year's draft. The Lions
closed at 4·11 .
Cowboys 21, Cardinals 16
AI Irving, Texas, Herschel
Walker scored twice and Dallas'
defense thw arted a St. Louis
comeba ck bid as the Cowboys
knocked the Cardinals !rom the
playoff race&lt; The St. Louis loss
allowed Minnesota to quallfy as
an the NFC's second wild card.

Nordiques hand Whalers setback

;'lro'\' Uan~ers I, RUston I
J•it t~hurgh

the playoffs Sunday.
The Colts needed to win to
make the playoffs for the first
time since 1977. The Ollers had to
win to qualify for their first
playoff berth since 1980. Those
years marked lhe last winning
seasons for both teams.

The Daily Sentinel P.-6
.

..---Local news-.- - Winter stortn moves into Midwest today=

Regular NFL season ends; playoffs. next
By IAN LOVE
UPI Sports Writer
The regular season has ended,
disrupted by a strike that the
defending Super Bowl champion
New York Giants can't resist
blammg for their demise and the
New Orlans Saints refuse to
credit !or their emergence.
New Orleans won Its ninth
straight game Sunday, 33-24 over
the Green Bay Packers, and
qualified for the postseason for
first time since . the franchise
began In 1967. The Saints, 12-3,
will meet the Minnesota Vikings
next week in the NFC wild-card
game at the Superdome.
"They are as good as any team
in the lea gue right now." said
Green Bay Coach Forrest Gregg,
whose learn fin ished 5·9-1.
The Saints posted their second
straight come·!rom·behlnd vic·
tory. Last week in Cincinnati,
New Orleans trailed 24·3 before
rallying for 38 unanswered points
and a 41·24 .victory . Sunday, the
Saints spotted Green Bay a 14·3
lead in the first quarter before
outscoring th e Packers 30·10.
New Orleans battled San Francisco into the last week of the
· season !or the NF C West Division
crown, and lost.out only after the
49ers routed the Los Angeles
Rams 48-0 Sunday night. San
Francisco ri va ls the Saints as the
hottest team entering the
playoffs, owning a six-ga me
winning streak.
At East Rutherford, N.J., the·
Giants completed their dismal
season with a 20-7 victory llver
their area rival New York Jets.
Both teams ended at 6-9. The
Giants came b~ck from the strike
0-5 and were never in contention.
The- J ets lost their final four
games to !all from the AFC East
race.
,
Other developmen ts of th~
bizarre seaso n included the Indi·
anapolis Colts and Houston Oil·
ers - who last year tota led 10
victories between them - each
quahfy ing !or the playoffs after
long droughts.
The Colts' E ric Dickerson and
the Oilers' Alonzo Hi ghsmith,
mid ~seaso n
arrivals to their
teams, carried the.i r clubs into

Pomeroy-,-Middleport, Ohio

Continued from

Meade sald that lt was still not
clear If the body would be burled
at Arlington National Cemetery
In Washington or in his
hometown.
Strong, 20, of Reeders, Pa.,
died from extensive Internal
wounds 10 hours after the attack
in which one or more Individuals
threw two grenades Into the
doorway of the club In the
Mediterranean port 400. miles
northeast of Madrid.
Madrid newspapers Monday
said one witness apparently
heard someone yell "Viva 'Lebanon" before the grenades were
thrown but national ,pollee spakesman Manalo Jimenez was
unable to confirm the report.
"No witness has come forward
to tell us this," he said, adding it
was still unclear If one or more
Individuals carried out the
attack.
Other witnesses haVe told
pollee a man of apparent Middle

Announcements
Lebanon trustees
Lebanon
Township 6Trustees
will
meet Wednesday,
p.m. , at
the township building .
New Years Eve services
A New Years Eve service will
be held Thursday , starting at
7:30 p.m .. at Sliver Run Baptist
Church In Cheshire.

I

lng Denver's Stapleton Air port-to
close at about 12:30 p.m. Sunday
until 6 a.m. today. The closing
was the airport's first since the
Thanksgiving blizzard of 1983
and left weary holiday trave)ers
stuck overnight.
"There are several thousand
people still stranded at the
airport." spokesman Richard
Boulware said. "The Red Cross
and the Denver pollee will be on
hand to make their stay more
co mfortable," with food ,
blankets and other necessltles.
The Colorailo front range was
burled under more than a foot of
snow, whlle accmnulatlon In the
foothills was significantly
higher. Mar tin Marietta reported 30 Inches of new snow,
Golden 29 Inches, Horsetooth
Reservoir 24 Inches and Boulder
191nches. Winds gusted to 36 mph
at Stapleton Airport, and wind
chills dropped to 15 below zero.
The Colorado State Patrol
closed several major highways
because of the near-blizzard
conditions, Including Interstate
70 east of Denver to the Kansas
line and Interstate 25 most of the
way from Colorado Springs to
benver, and from Loveland to
the Wyoming border.
Blizzard condl !Ions shut down
much of southeast Wyoming,
where up to a foot of snow was
blown around by 45 mph wind
gusts and formed into drifts 4 feet
high . Wind chill readings
plunged to as low as 25 degrees
below zero.
Interstate 80 remained closed
from Cheyenne, Wyo.. to the
Nebraska border, and many
other roads in the region through
Iowa and South Dakota also were
closed.
"it's white. VIsibility Is poor.
It's very miserable," said Peggy
Teers at the Husky Terminal
truck stop west of Cheyenne,
which was packed Sunday with
truckers and travelers wailing
out the storm.
The Cheyenne airport was
closed untll further notice be·
cause of blowing and drifting
snow. Flights at the Sioux Falls,
S.D. , airport were delayed be·

East~rn origin fled the scene of
the bombing but Jimenez said
there was "nothing new so far as
the identity" of the suspects.
Jimenez said the choice of a
USO club full of U.S. sailors as a
target also indicated "Arab or
Middle East groups" were
responsible.
"We are lnvestlg'atlng lndividuals from that area," he said.
In April 1985. 18 Spaniards
were killed by a bomb blast at a
Madrid steakhouse frequented
by U.S. serxicemen. The bomblng w,as attributed to the Islamic
Jl had organlza tion.
A government spokesman said
Sunday the grenades used were
either Italian- or U.S.-made,
leading pollee to believe the
attack was linked to what he
c a II e d ' ' l n t e r n a t'l on a I
terrorism."
The statement cast doubt on a
claim by the Catalonlan Red
Army of Liberation that It was
responsible for the attack, which
witnesses said was carried out by
a dark·halred young man with a
heavy, non-Spanish accent.

l

rain.

~

Leon McGoogan, director of
the Arkansas Office of Emer·
gency 5jervlces, said 1,250 people
stayed out of their homes ln West
Memphis, although the "water Is
receding somewhat." West
Memphis Mayor Keith Ingram
said it might be another day or
two before many people can
return home.

.'
~.. 40

fm

~SNOW

60

-RAIN
SHOWERS
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
~.Static . . Occluded
Map shows mirimum temperatures. At least 50% or any shaded area is ktrecast

II

to receove precipotallon indiCated

UPI

WEATHER MAP - Snow will be scattered from southeast
through northwest Pennsylvania, northern Ohio, northem
Indiana, southern lower Michigan, southern Wlsconsln,the
northern half of Illinois, southeast Minnesota, Iowa, eastern
Nebraska and northern Missouri. Rain will extend over wet~tern
portions of the Pacific states with rain changing to snow over
higher elevations.

------Weather-----South Central Ohio
Occasional rain today with a
high In the mid 40s. Rain likely
tonight, changing to snow late.
Lows will be In the upper 20s.
Partly cloudy Tuesday with a
chance of snow flurries and a
high in the upper 20s .
The outlook for New Years Day
is'for a chance of rain and a high
in the mid 40s.
The probability of precipitation Is near 100 percent today, 70
percent to:light and 40 percent
Tuesday .Winds will be from the

east around 10 miles an hour
today and from the north at 10 to
15 miles an hour tonight.
Ohio Extended Foreclll!t
Wednesday through· Friday
By United Press Intematlonal
Fair Wednesday and Thursday
wlth a chance of raln Thursday
night and Friday. Highs will be In
the 30s Wednesday, ln the 40s
Thursday and the mid 40s Friday. Lows wlll be In the 20s
Wednesday and In the 30s Thursday and Friday.

~~~~~~~~~ ~

NOTICE

WE WILL BE CHANGING OUR HOURS
'
OUR NEW HOURS:
CLOSED MON.-THURS.
OPEN FRI. &amp; SAT. 10·5
AND SUN. 2-5

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Thank You and Happy Holiday•

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1 mile north of fairgrounds on old State Ro11te 33

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Flash flood watches continued
today over much of Kentucky
and the eastern tWO·thlrds of
Tennessee.
Floodwaters began to recede
Sunday in food· ravaged Marion ,
Ark., and Millington, Tenn ..
despite a fourth straight day of

~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~; ,

Watch night services will be
held Thursday starting at 7:30
p.m. at Wesleyan Bible Holiness
Church , 75 Pearl St., Middleport.
Special singing will be featured,
as well as speaking by Rev.
Raymond Rice and Rev. Greg
Thacker. Pastor Ivan Myers
welcom!?s the public.

Sunday evening at his home in
Coolville.
Mr. Robinson was born Aug.
20, 1907 In Wick, W.Va .. a son of
the late Wilbur Erwin and
Samantha Glover Robinson. He
Rutland Freewlll Baptist
was a worker In oil field produc·
Church
will have watch night
tion and was a farmer . He was a
services
Thursday starting at 7
member of the Guysville · Ma p.m.
Different
speakers will be
sonic Lodge.
Surviving are his wife, Ger· featured. The public is invited.
trude Stalnaker Robinson; a son
A New Years Eve service will
and daughter-In-law, Rex and
be
held at Mt. Hermon Church In
Wilma Robinson, Coolville; a
the
Texas Community starting at
stepson and his wife, William and
9
p.m
. on Thursday. Everyone
Diane Calaway, Coolville; two
welcome
.
stepdaughters and their hus·
bands, Dorothy and Earl Cox,
Coolville, and Jamie and Jerry
Roof; four grandchlldren, Rex ,
J r., Pamela Yost, James Robin·
Veterans Memorial
son, all of Coolville, a nd Jean
Saturday Admissions - Ro·
LaComb, Marietta; six step·
bert Caruthers, Middleport;
Paul Garnes, Pomeroy; Roger
grandchildren; four great ·
grandchildren, and a brother, Williams, The Plains; Norma
Goodwin, Pomeroy; Peggy Tay·
Glen Robinson. Coolville.
lor, Pomeroy.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by his wife,
Saturday Discharges - Kat·
hleen Anthony.
Margaret June Robinson , and a
Sunday Admissions - Julie
brother. Clair.
Wandling, Albany; Josephine
Services will be held at 2 p.m .
Shanabrook, Middleport; KenWednesday at the White Funeral
neth Barnett, Middleport; Wal·
Home In Coolville wlth the Rev.
ter King, Albany; Edith Spencer,
Donald Archer officiating. Bur·
Middleport; Ann Wagenhals,
lal will be In Tuppers Plains
New Haven, W.Va.
Cemetery. Friends may call at
Sunday Discharges - Joan
the funeral home from 5to9p.m.
Childs , Robert Caruthers, Tracy
Tuesday with Masonic rites to be
Eblin.
held there at 7 p.m. on Tuesday.

page~

cause of the weather, and many
holiday travelers were stranded
at the Des Moines , Iowa, Munlcl·
pal Airport, where only three
flights were allowed to take off
over 14 hours Su nday.
Other snowfall amounts by late
Sunday njght Included 6 inches
over eas tern, Central and south·
central South Dakota and at
Luverne, Minn.
In Atlanta. a fog-shrouded
Hartsfield In ternational Airport
Sunday caused delays for weary
travelers. Ticket agents wi th
both Delta Airlines and Eastern
Air Lines reported some delays
on departing and Incoming
fllght s. ·

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POMEROY
DAILY
SENTINEL

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Thy ·Daily Sentinel

By The Bend·

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Winning
names are
announced

Wolfe Pen happenings

Carmel area

happenings
Mr. Elva Dean Barnitz of
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. Barney
O'Brien of Junction City, and
Dave and Dorothy Sayre of
Antiquity were recent visitors of
Eunle Brinker.
William Carleton of Racine
spent Tuesday afternoon with
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Earl
Johnson.

Mrs . J . R. Murphy and her
granddaugher, Mlrlnda, were
the recent guests of Robert
Murphy and his family . The
birthday of Murphy was
observed. .
.
Mr. and Mrs. Les11e Frank,
Sarah and Matthew were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs . Eugene
Haning, Ronnie and Gladys
Tuckerman.

Harrisonville scouts deliver fruit
Fruit baskets for the residents
of the Meigs County Infirmary
were made and delivered there
recently by the Harrisonville
Girl Scouts.
The scouts met recently for a
party and gift exchange. Other
holiday activities have Included
participation In the MiddleportPomeroy parade with Megan
Swearingen, Susan Cotterill, Tabitha Swearingen. Michell Bissell and Denise Cotterill as

SELECTING WINNERS - Tlflany Priddy,
four-year-old granddaughter of Jlerbert Grate,
pictured here, drew the winning tickets In a
Christmas promotion give away from Rutland

BATH. Ohio (UP!) - A local
philanthropist who died earlier
this year has enriched the Bath
Township coffer by $1 million.
Township trustees are trying to
decide what to do with the
Inheritance tax windfall left by
the estate of Russell Dancey, a
benefactor unknown to most of

"GLASNOST" SEEKS ROCKERS FOR RIGHTS: Soviet
human rights activists are appealing to Paul Simon. Bruce
Springsteen, Billy Joel and other Western stars for help. The
rights group faces repression and Is running out of money to
continue Its work for reform, including producing the journal
"Glasnost," said Lev Tlmofeyev, editor of the publication
named for the new Russian policy of openness.
So the dissidents, mostly ex-political prisoners, decided to
: appeal to stars "who have aleady stood up for human rights" to
hold fund-raising concerts In thE' Soviet Union. Joel performed'
in Moscow last year, and Simon and Springsteen have strongly
supported worldwide human rights efforts.
"We don't want to put them in a difficult situation, but their
support would be very valuable for us," Tlmofeyev said. "This
act wlll be In the spirit of the new thinking and will demonstrate
· the power of people's diplomacy."
•
MAYOR-FOR-LIFE CLINT? Clint Eastwood is sounding like
a candidate again. With four months left in his rookie 1erm as
mayor of scenic Carmel. th~-actor has for the first lime said
he'll likely seek re-election. "I probably will run again."
Eastwood said. "I haven't even thought about it that much."
The movie tough guy. pledging "old-fashioned civility," was
elected mayor of his longtime hometown in April 1986 by a
landslide. Eastwood's venture into politics was seen as a
bizzare novelty by many but. true to his "Dirty Harry" image,
he gained a reputation among many voters as a swift-moving,
decisive administrator who acts while others debate .
His critics, however. blame Eastwood for attracting even
more tourists to the Monterey peninsula village. Others accuse
him of using the job as a stepping stone to higher office- an
ambition Eastwood consistently denies.
HOPE GROUNDED BUT FEISTY: The ~how went on.
although the plane carrying Bob Hope and his troupe on a global
tour to entertain U.S. servicemen was diverted because of high
winds. The plane en route to Lejos Air Base in the Azores had to
turn back to Rota. Spain, where Hope, Barbara Eden, Connie
Stevens. Lee Greenwood, Miss USA Michele Royer and the
Super Bowl Dancers staged their show at the naval air
Installation.
Hope told of an article in which a Soviet newspaper noted his
tour and called him "the Pentagon's boy" who was taking belly
dancers to entertain sailors in the Persian Gulf, saying: "The
Russian reporter must have been looking through the wrong end
of his spyglass when he saw our Superbowl Dancers. It wasn't
their bellies the men were looking at."
,
DEFENSELESS CAP MISSES JOB: Caspar ' Weinberger
says he misses his old job as secretary of defense. Asked by
reporter Sam Donaldson on ABC's "This Week with David
Brinkley" whether he still missed the job, Weinberger said , "I
always enjoyed It thoroughly. partlculary the really wonderful
people I had the privilege of working with. That was the
happiest part of the position. Obviously I miss that, of course."
Weinberger. 70, resigned last month because of his wife' s
declining health.
FICKLE FAME FOR Dl: Princess Diana has slipped behind
her "best friend ," Sarah, duchess of York, in popularity with
the British public, a new poll found .
The Sunday Express newspaper said Its poll during
Chris tmas week put the red-haired "Fergie" In fifth place. 1
percentage pOint ahead of Di. A similar poll taken two weeks
earlier put Diana in second place in the popularity stakes.
behind only her mother-in-law, Queen Elizabeth II. Sarah
ranked No . 6 in that poll . The surprising No . 2 this time was
Princess Anne, who was near the bottom when the po ll was las t
taken In 1981. The youthful Prince Edward , 23, ranked at the
bottom of both this year's Christmas polis. And apparently if
there will' always be an England, there will always be royalty.
Asked "Would Britain be better or worse off without the
roya Is, " more than three-quarter s - 77 percent - said worse ·
off.
THE BIG LIE: U.S. pollsters also have been at work. At leas t
70 percent of . Washington .rea residents surveyed by Th e
Washington Post believe Jim Bakker . Gary Har t. Dis trict of
Columbia Mayor Marion Barry and Pres ident Reagan have a ll
told a very serious lie in the pas t year.
Eighty percent told the 'Pos t they believe Bakker and Ha rt
ha ve lied, 77 percent said Bar ry ~ as told a fat lib a nd 72 perce nt
feel Regg an has told a ':"hopper m the pas t yea r .

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Furniture Store. A totai of $8,000 In merchandise
was given away during the customer promotion.
(Sentinel photo)

Township reaps inheritance tax windfall

By CONNIE MAXWELL
United Press International

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costumed symbols of Christmas.
At an earlier meeting. the girls
painted ornaments and shared
cookies which they have made.
They sewed together squares to
make a patch quilt lor a family
whose home had been destroyed
by fire.
. Meetings of the troop started in
October, and have been held each
week with various crafts and
special holiday activities taking
place.

Amateur Gardeners meet

People in the news

•

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reeves an
family of Chester were Sunday
visitors of Mrs. Dorothy Reeves
and Bryan. They also visited with
Mrs. Gladys Tuckerman and Mr.
and Mrs. Eugene Haning and
Ronald.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Johnson
and Mason, W. Va. were recent
visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Harley
Johnson and Tammy.

''

the area's residents.
Dancey died in February at the
age of 82.
The $1 mltlion sum represents
40 percent of the township's
anticipated revenues for 1988 and
is 'the largest amount ever
received by the township from a
single estate.
"We just don't know what
we're going to do (with the .
money) at this point in time,"
said Trustee President Gloria
Drennon.
Traditionally, Drennon said,
inheritance tax revenues have ·
gone toward capital equipment
and expenditures. Because such
taxes are unanticipated revenues. they usually do not go
toward operating expenses, she
said.
Dancey founded a potato chip
company In Michigan that eventually became the Frlto-Lay Inc.
snack food empire. In Michigan.
he helped more than 200 young
ministers pay their seminary
bills. contributed money to colleges and established a special
scholarship fund.
He moved to Bath, a suburb of
Akron, In 1982 to live near
relatives.
He continued his philanthropic
ways in Ohio, yet most of his
neighbors were unaware of the
numerous donations he made to
local charities and foundations ..
trustees said.
"! would kind of guess that not
many people in the township
knew Dancey lived in Bath." said
trustee C .J. Alameda, who added
that while he knew Dancey was
wealthy, he was unsure of how

Dancey·had made his fortune.
Dancey's daughter, Beth Goddard of Bath, said her father
established his residency In Bath
for a reason . .
"He wanted to make sure that
Bath Township would receive the
benefits of his passing," Goddard
said.

. Yonice Miller was the guest
reader for the .annual Christmas
dinner and meeting of th'e Middleport Amateur Gardeners held
recently at the Trinity Church.
Pomeroy.
Mrs. Miller read from a
sermon by Peter Marshall _entitled "Let's Keep Christmas" .
She spoke of the beauty, tradition
and love of the season and urged
those attending to remember the
real meaning of Christmas . .
Following the dinner and welcome by the club _president,
Elizabeth Burkett. Marjorie
Fetty read the verse of the
month, "Cradle and Cross" from
Ideals.

The news Item, "Christmas
Crafter Through the Centuries"
was read by Elizabeth Lohse.
The traveling prize brought by
Mrs. Fetty was won by Jennifer
Sheets. Mrs. Fetty dlstrlliuted
program books for 1988.
The annual Middleport Christmas lighting contest held last
week was discussed. It was
jointly sponsored by the two
Middleport clubs.
Package wrappings were
"judged by Jeanette Thomas and
Mrs. Miller with prizes going to
Bernice Ann Durst and Mrs.
Burkett followed by the gift
exchange.

Business Services

•

•

on

~n1versary

PESHAWAR , Pakistan (UP! )
- Afghan guerrillas attacked a
convoy trying to reach a besieged
Soviet garrison and cut power
lines In the capital as world
leaders condemned the eighth
anniversary of the Soviet Invasion of Afghanistan.
Moscow remained silent Sunday on the anniversary, but
lodged an official protest with
Tehran over an assault . by
Afghans on a Soviet diplomatic
mission in Iran.
Several Afghans were Injured
and arrested when they stormed
the Soviet Consulate in the
central Iranian city of Isfahan,
Soviet and Iranian news reports
said. Iranian security personnel
also were Injured and the diplomatic building was damaged.,the
reports said .
Agency Afghan Press said
Afghan rebels launched raids
throughout Afghanistan and triggered a blackout In the Afghan
capital of Kabul. The ~ebel news
service also reported fierce fight ing on a supply road to an
encircled Soviet garrison at
Khost. 20 miles from the Pakistan border .
Radio Kabul, however, said
that Soviet and Afghan govern ment forces have secured the
road to Khost.
The news reports could not be
conllrmed. Western diplomats
said about 50,000 Soviet and
Afghan troops have tried for
three weeks to break through to
Khost in one of the largest
offensives of the 8-y~ar-old war.
Afghan President Najibullah
has said guerrillas equipped with
U.S-produced Stinger and
British-made Blowpipe antiaircraft missiles forced the suspension of daytime flights Into
.Khost. meaning supplies could
arrive only at night.
Diplomats say the shoulderfired rockets undermined Soviet
air dominance. forcing them to
bomb from higher altitudes at a
cost of accuracy. They say . the

of invasion

battle for Khost Is a major test of
the credibility of the • Kabul
regime.
Soviet troops entered AfghanIstan on Dec. 27,1979, to support a
communist government beset by
Internal feuds and a civil war
with Moslem rebels.
What Initially began as a short
stay to wipe out Western-backed
rebels became a military stalemate, an endless drain on Soviet
funds and an embarassment to
Moscow's troops lighting In unfamiliar mountain ranges. It has
become known as Moscow· s
Vietnam War.
Western analysts say the rebels control the mountains and
many roads while the Soviet and
Afghan army remain in garrisons and cities.
President Reagan urged Moscow to "end once and for all its
brutal occupation."
He denounced the Soviet Invasion as "an unprovoked and
blatant affront to both human
decency and international law"
and declared ''the Afghan people
will not be conquered.''
Washington gives millions of
dollars in mUitary aid to the
Afghan reMls, who also are
assisted by Iran and China and
largely based in Pakistan.
"Afghanlst,a n is tan ) important test of Soviet good faith,"
British Foreign Secretary Sir
Geoffrey Howe said. "We in the
European Community and the
rest of the world look to the Soviet
Union to withdraw all their
troops in 1988 according to an
agreed timetable. Only this can
end the misery of Afghanistan."
"The Soviet leadership can be
happy the war crimes laws they
helped draft at Nuremberg won't
be applied to them," said Juergen Todenhoefer, a political ally
of West German Chancellor
Helmut Kohl and visitor to
Afghanistan in 1980 and 1984.
"Mikhail Gorbachev talks a lot
about peace. but even under
Gorbachev, Afhganistan is a

hell." he s aid.
The rebels say 1.2 milll,pn
Afghans have died and a halfmillion disabled during the Soviet occupation. U.S. officials
estimate 12.000 Soviet troops
have died In the rugged. moun tainous terrain of Afghanistan .
and another 18,000 were killed by
disease and accidents.
· In Islamabad, 1,000 Afghans,
some maimed and in wheelchairs shouting "down with Gorbachev," marched on the Soviet
Embassy and while 150 Afghan
women raised anti-Soviet
banners in front of the Foreign
Ministry. Pollee contained the
demonstrations and stopped one
protestor from setting herself on
fire .
Protests also were held in the
Pakistan cities of Lahore and
Karachi and thee U.N. border
camps housing 3.~ million refugees who fled to Pakistan to
escape the fighting and warravaged economy.
In New Delhi, about 1,000
Afghans rallied near Parliament. "While one Russian remains In Afghanis tan, we wlll not
end our struggle," said Malyer
Mohammed, one of the
organizers,
Protesters in London marched
on the Soviet Embassy. They
were stopped by pollee. but
witnesses said the demonstra tors set a Soviet flag afire.
Japan called on Moscow to
withdraw its troops, respect
Afghanistan's right to self·
determination 'and allow refu·
gees to return home safely.
During a visit to Washington
this month. Gorbachev told Reagan Soviet troops would with·
draw over a 12-month period if
the United States stops supplying
arms to the rebels. A withdrawal
would begin after the establishment of a "national unity govern ment," the Soviet-backed
Afghan regime said.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
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PARTS PLUS AUTOSTORES COUNCIL PARTICIPANTS- Members of the Jobber Advisory
Council for Parts Plus Autostores who met In
Gallipolis recently are, first row, left to right,
Mick Burlingame, sales manager, Eastern
Division; Lowell Davls,.Ciarksburg, W. Va; Don
Crabtree, advertising manager, Gallipolis Parts
Warehouse; Ken Workman, Lancaster; Ed
Neumeister, Upper Sandusky and Anita Russell,

marketing sectelary, GPW. Rear - Don Earl,
Gahanna; Carl Beaver, Gallipolis; John IIJD,
Spencer, W. Va.; Joe Burford, sales mana8'er,
Western Division; BIU Sbugar, Jr., Maysville,
Ky; . Wayne Rees, Marysville, and Frank
Clemens, general manager, (compally-&lt;&gt;wned
stores). Not pictured - John Co melt, president,
GPW and Mike Bolyard, Fal'?"ont, W.Va.

summit." said organizer Charles
Richman . "We consider a well·
dressed man as one who has a
tuxedo when he travels."
President Reagan retained his
spot on the list lor the fourth
consecutive year.
The foundation compiled Its
lis-t rating the attire of stars of
screen. sports. government and
international politics by polling
100 designers and tailors. One of
those on the list is a Columbiana
County, Ohio, doctor.
Canadian Prime Minister
Brian Mulroney was chosen top

fashion plate among International honchos ana Spain's King
Juan Carlos set the style among
society figures, his "attire enabling him to blend with the
populace - a plus when he
visited Brooklyp."
Domestic fashion mavens include Lt. Col. Oliver North,
whose television appearance before a Congressional committee
. investigating the Iran-Contra
affair was lauded by the experts.
"Even In the colorful Marine
uniform, his Individuality came
through - the end result sought
be every tailor, his carriage a

--------Quirks in the news·-_- - - - - Wrong gift, wrong place:
said.
WINDSOR. Conn. (UJ:&gt;I) - PoPatterson was caught by prilice say they caught a man trying son guards inside the fences at
to smuggle some Christmas . Camp Hartell in Windsor carrycheer to a friend serving time for ing the gift for his friend. who
drunken driving.
was not named.
Mark Patterson, of Bristol,
Patterson was charged with
R.I .. was arrested Christmas third-degree criminal trespassDay while trying deliver a bottle Ing, conveying contraband to a
of liquor to a friend who had to prison and failure to submit to
spend the holiday In jail on a fingerprints. Bond was set at
drunken driving charge, pollee $1,500.

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAl: ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEARINO AIDS"
CALL(614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

Man says gift bracelet saved
hand: TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) - ·
Benito Torres Is crediting a
Christmas gift with saving his
hand from getting chopped off.
Torres, 34, said a gold ID
bracelet he received from his
wife, Shariffa, was all that saved

his right hand when he was hit
with a machete during. an argu ment with his sister's friend
Christmas evening.
The attacker. Rosario Na varro, 22, of Trenton. swung the
machete at Torres' head during
an argument

TUESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
YOU CAN EAT

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
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Served w1th whippetfpotatoes. chicken gravy. cote
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CROW'S FAMILY REST AU RANT

PH.

992-5432

POMEROY, OH.
Fried Chicken ·

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Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

tj\1 THE COURT OF
COMMON PLEAS
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO

an Iron pin; thence South 57

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT
PROBATE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
IN THE MATTER OF
SETTLEMENT OF
ACCOUNTS
PROBATE COURT
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO

Any penon interested
may fila written exceptions
to said accounts or to
manera pertaining to the
execution of the trust, not
less than five day a prior to
the date Mt for hearing.
Robert E. Buck, Judge
Common Pleas Coun
Probate Division
Meiga County, Ohio

Western Credit

Union. Inc.

vs.

dog. 54' 45" Woat o dis-

tance of 740.98 feet to an
iron pin; thane• South 44
dag. 07' 19" Wast a dis-

Plaintiff tance of 208.92 feet to a
point on the centerline of

CASE NO. 87-CV-144
NOTICE OF SALE

By virtue of an Order of
Sale issued out of Common
Pleas Court of Meigs
County, Ohio, in the case of
Western Credit Union Inc.,
Plaintiff, against John D.
Wilson, Sr. et al., Defend·
ants. upon a judgement
therein rendered. baing Ca•e

said Township Road. paasing an Iron pin at 168.92
feet thence North 88 dea.

53' 08" Welt a dl•tonce of

394.15 feet to the place of
beginning. 1ubject to the
r:ight of way of nid Township Road and of aeid
County Road. and contain-

Ing 13.2979 ocros.
REFERENCE: Votumo
261. pogo 4·17. Meigs

County Deed Recorda.

EXHIBIT 8; TRACT
No. 87-CV-144, in said
FOUR,
10.2018 ACRES.
Court. I will offer for sal a, at
Situated in tha town1hip
the front door of the Court
House in Pomeroy. Meigs of Scipio, County of Mlliga,
County, Ohio, on the 15th
day of January, 1988 •I
10 :30 a .m. the following
lands and tenements, to wit:
Described and 181 fortti in
Exhibit A and 8, which are
attached hsretoand incorporated herein.

and State of Ohio and
bounded and described as
follows:
Being part of Section

Number Thirty 130), Township Sovon (7) North. Ronge
Fourteen (14) Woot of Tho
Ohio River Survey, and more

EXHIBIT A. TRACT FIVE particularly descrlbad
follows;
13.2979 acres.

Situated in the Township
of Scipio, County of Meigs,
and State of Ohio and
bounded and described as
. follows:
Being part of Section

Number Thirty [30), Town·

ship Seven (7) North, Range

Fourteen (t4) Well of the
Ohio River Survey, and more
particularly de1cribed as
follows:
Commencing at a post at '
the Southwest corner of uid
Section Thirty, which post is
on the centerline of the
Township Road: thence ·
along said Township Road
the following courses and
distances: North 37 deg. 33'
1 O" Eaat a distance of
243.41 feet to apolnt and

South 86 dog 53' 08" Eoota

diatance of 568.37 fHt to a
point, which point i1 the true
point of beginning of this
turvey; thence leaving said

road North 25 dog . 34'11"

Wast a distance of 563.68
feat to an iron pin; paaaing
an iron pin at 40.00 feet:
thence North 86 dag. 38'
30 ' ' East a distance of
633.04 feet to an iron pin;
thence North 76 dag .
· 49'13" East a diatanca of
863.62 feet to a point on the
centerline of said County

Road,South 17 dog, 45' 13"
East a diatonco of 239.90

feet to a point; thence
leaving aeid Countv Road

South 88 dog, 68'44" Wost
t1 diatance of 32.38 feat to

11

Commencing et • post at

the Southwoet cor nor of oald
Section Thirty, which poot lo
on the centerline of the
Township Road; thence
along the w..t line of uid

Section Thirty North 00
dog., 00' 00" East • dla·
tonco of 1018.51 foot to on

iron pin; thence North 80

doo. 06' 33" E..t o dittonco
of 284.91 f - to on Iron pin;

thence South 215 dau. 34'
11'' Ent a diatenca of
1003.63 teet io a point in
the centerline of aeld Town·
1hip Road. pa..ing iron pina

ot 439.95 foot and at

983.63 feet; thence Rlong
the centerline of 1aid Town-

ship Rood tho following

course• and di1tances:

Nonh 86 dog. 53' 08" Wast
a diotonco of 681.37 foot to
a point and South 37 dag.

Accounts and vouchers of
the following named fidu·
ciaries have bean filed in the
Probate Court. Meigs
County, Ohio, for approval
and settlement:

ESTATE NO. 25421 -

Public Notice

Final and Di•tributive Account of George l. Harrit.
Sr .. Executor of the Estate of
lewis E. Harris. Deceased.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

ESTATE NO. 26820 -

29. Atbany, Ohio 45710.

count of Harry Miller. Execu-

waa appo'inted Exacutor of
the
estate of Wandell
Hooper. deceased. late of

ESTATE NO. 25609 Fino! end Diatrlbutlvo Ac-

tor of tho Estoto of Gtodyo L.
Miller, Decea•ed.

ESTATE NO. 25236 -

Final and Distributive Ac·
count of Mary Jordan and
John H. Knotts, Co-

Exocuton of the Eatote of

aotd for lou then two-thlrdo
of the appral1ed value.

Howard E. Fronk.
Shorlfl of
Meigs County, Ohio
(12) 14, 21, 28, Jtc

I

' '

112)21, 28: (114. Jtc

Public Notice

Firlt and Final Account of
Jon P. Karschnik, Guardian
of the Estate of Marion A.

Hall.
.
ESTATE NO. 25808 -

Final and Distributive Account of ClariceJ. Kennedy,
Administratrix of the Estate

of Clifford S. Konnady,
Oeceued.

ESTATE NO. 22493 -

Final and Distributive Ac·
count of Charles Stanley,
Sr., Executor of the Estate pf
Purl E. Stanley, Dec:eued.

ESTATE NO, 2&amp;491 fino! and Diatributlve Ac·

count of Retha Day, Administratrix With the Will Annexed, of the Estate of Vlna
Bailey, Deceaaed.
•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 8. 1987, in
the Meigs County Probate

Court, Coso No. 25709,
John C. Rico, 61429 Rico

Run Road. Reedaville, Ohio
45772 wu appointed Executor of the eatate of Nora
Rice. deceaaed. lata of
61429 Rice Run Road.
Reedsville, Meigs County,

Ohio, 46772.

-

Robert E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nnaelroad. Clerk

(12)14, 21. 28, Jtc

ESTATE NO. 26196 -

of Ruby.Rus•ll. Deceaod.
ESTATE NO. 24789 -

Terma of Sale: Cash.
The real 11tate can not be

Charles H. Knight,
Acting Probate Judge
lena K Ne11elroad. Clerk

ESTATE NO. 26543 -

beginning, subject to the
right of way of the Town1hip
Road and containing

.4.600.00.

37611 Fradorick Road. Atbonv. Ohio 45710 .

ld'il E. Denl•on, Oecaaaad.

count of Willi&amp; C. Blower.

Said parcels apprai1ed at

On December 14, 1987,
in the Meigs County Prof) bate
Court, Case No. 25715, Ro·
nald Hooper, Route 1, Box

Final lnd Di1tributive Account of Sheila Carl8y,
Administratrix of the Estate
of Jack L. Clark, Decened.

33' 10" Woot a diotonco of
243.41 feet to .tho place of
10.2018 ocroo.
REFERENCE : Volume
261 , Pogo 417 Molga
County Dead Recorda.

(121 28, 1tc

Fin•l and Distributive Ac·

Administrator of the Estate

Final and Distributive Account of loretta Oouglaa,
Administratrix of the Estate

of Helen M. Sinclair,

Decaa1ed.
Unless exceptions are filed
thereto, said accounts will
be for hearing before said

Court on tho 29th day of

January, 1988, at which
time uld accounts will be
consktered and continued
from day to day un1il finally

diapoaod of.

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PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801
No Sunday Calls
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Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy .

,

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EVERY
SUNDAY

MARCUM
CONTRACTING '

CHESTER. OHIO
•HOME BUilDING
IIROOM ·ADOITIONS
•KITCHENS • BATHS

•ROOFING

REMODELING &amp;

1:00 P.M.
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GUN CLUB

REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS&amp;.
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We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators'. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

985-4141

992-2196

GENIIAl CONTIACTOIS

RACINE, OHIO
10-9-tfn

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References

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Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc
_,

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HOUSE FOR RENT
107 lOCUST ST.

POMEROY--985-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

DEER CUT &amp;
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All Makes

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges •Ftafrigerators

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Per Pickup load
Delivered
BILL SLACK

614-992-2269
Evenings
12/14/87 I mo.
Public Notice

Saaled proposals wilt be
received by the Village of
Middleport, Meigs County,
Ohio in the office of the
Mayor, Village Hall, Middle·
port, Ohio, until 2:30P.M.,
January 7, 1988, and then
publicly opened and raad
aloud for

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Teaching Thompson,

Basham Building

Schaum, Bastien
From Beginners to

For Skinning

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

Advanced Students
Call For Information

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

949-2734

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INSULATION

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTTERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS
FREE !STIMATES
CALL 949-2969
lt-23-'81-1 mo.

ificationS and Contract documents mey be obtained or
examined at the office of the

Mayor. Village Hall. ·Middle-

port. Ohio, 46760 and at
Floyd Browne Associates.·
Inc .. Consulting Engineers •
Planners, 181 South Main
Street, Marion. Ohio 1

43302.
A ton dollar ($10.00}

daposit (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 tpacial construction regulations included tlareln relative to
special requirements tor procurement of labor, the spacial information given in the
Information to Bidder, to the
Special Requirements for
wage rates, the hours of
employment aa ascertained
and determined by the Department of Industrial Relations and provided for in the
laws of the State of Ohio.
Proposal a must be submitted on the Propoul Forms
obtained tn the Contract
documents. The Proposal
must be accomranied by a
bid guaranty as required by
Suction 163.64 of the Ohio
Revised Code . The bid gua·
ranty shall be either in the
form of a Bid Guaranty Bond
for the fu llamou nt of the bid
or a Certified Check, Cashi·
er' s Check, or letter of
Credit, pursuant to Chapter

1305 of tho Ohio Revised

Code, in an amount equal to
ten percent of the bid. In the
event one of the latter three
forma of bid guaranty is
submitted. lhen a Contrac1
Performance Bond equal to
the amount of the Contract
must be provided atthatlma
of entering the Contract.
Succesful bidder must be
an Equal Employment Opportunity Employer, which
prohibits discrimination because of race. creed. color,
national origin, 18X, age,
handicap, political affiliation
or beliefs. The Village of
Middleport Ia an Equal Employment Opportunity
Employer.
The Owner reserves the
right to rejoct any or all
proposals and to waive any
informalities or irregularities
in the propoaalfl received.

VILLAGE OF
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
Fred Hoffman, Mayor

1121 21 , 28: Jan. 4. 3tc

''

__, ~

Middleport, Ohio

· IS FOR SALE

ALUMINUM SIDING

If interested stop

•Insulation

by•

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
• Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

1f2 PRICE SALE ;,
GOING ON NOW

FREE ESTIMATES

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

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

11-23-'87-1 mo.

1 2·2-'87-1 mo pd

BINGO

.,

~

•

!
'

BOGGS

EAGlES CLUB-POMEROY, OH.
THURU PM-£1US

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYS VILLE, OHIO

SANITARY SEWERAGE
IMPROVEMENTS
DIVERSION MANHOLE
CONTRACT NO. 13

11,000.00.
Copiea of Drawings. Spec-

;

THE DABBLE SHOP

VINYL &amp;

Real Estate General

·'
.'

Fa&lt;tory Choke'
12 Gouge Shotguns Only
10-7-tfn

1-24-'87-1 mo. pd.

11·27-'17 I mo. pd.

Lo&lt;ust, Oak, Cherry

$3500

GUN SHOOT

PIANO LESSONS

$5.00 Extra

The proposed work In this
Contract consists of constructing a new diversion
manhole and connecting
pipe between and existing
storm drain and sanitary
sewer, with all apunenant
work.
The estimated construction cost for thi• Contract is

Public Notice

John D . Wilson. et al
Defendants

tailor's dream," Richman said.
New York Mets pitcher Dwight
Gooden was named best-dressed
athlete.
"Dwight Gooden looked very
good in his white dress when he
got married, although we don't
know If It was hired.'' Richman
said. Dr. Allan O'Brien, the chief of
staff at City" Hospital In East
Liverpool, Ohio, was cited
among health professionals because his "soft. tailored look
presents assurance lor bedside
visits, calming to the patient."

·--·-

110ao
... ...
.. .
1110•

flllll
111 .111
NIOD

~',"'o'!'.:r.::.: ':.",:~.,:"::.:": :~·:,:;,:"'• o.o"

CO ..

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.........

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filA TEa

!DAn
• JOAn
IDA..
WO.O.yt
lot(llfTI!

"VINYL SIDING
• AlUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUlATION

•

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS

Ron among top dressed; Mikhail washes _out
NEW YORK (UP!) - Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev may
be Time magazine 's Man of the
Year. but the Fashion Foundation of America says he is
definitely not among the best
dressed men of the year.
The foundation announced Sunday it has dropped Gorbachev
from its list of best-dressed men
because he spurned a tuxedo In
favor of a business suit at the
superpower summit In Washington D.C. this month.
"Apparently Gorbachev didn't
have a tuxedo with him for the

The Daily sfmtinei-Page-7

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mghan guerillas attack co

Monday, December 28, 1987

Page-6

RUTLAND- Winners in an an
over $8,000 Christmas give-away
at the Rutland 'Furnltul'€ Store
were announced today .
No purchase was required to
participate ln the drawing which
took place Wednesday afternoon.
The winners were Robert Sar. gent, Rutland, VCR and a breakfast set; Lois Wyatt. Pomeroy, a
recllner; Dale Hysell, Middleport, reclining love seat; Dwane
Casey, Gallipolls Ferry, W, Va ..
a love seat; Aaron Sayre, Racine, a love seat; Denise Manuel,
Racine. a love seat; Ronald
Searles, Rutland, a breakfast
set; Randy Brown. Galllpols, a
breakfast set and a curio cabinet; Everett Rayburn, Ka nauga, a wall unit; Eber Lewis,
four bar stools.
·
Gary Hysell, Pomeroy, three
mirrors; Glen Thomas, Long
Bottom, a bar stool, Roy Miller.
Chester, a bar stool, Terry Shain,
Racine. a curio; Ferndora Story,
Pomeroy, and Joanne Fetty.
Rutland, each . a three piece
breakfast set.
'

Monday, December 28, 1987

614-662-3821

Authoriud John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog
Farm Equipment

Dealer .

POMEROY, 0.

firM Eqalp111ent
Parts &amp; Servlee

992·2259
RACINE AREA - Approximately 26 acres ol vacant
ground. Realty nice building
sites. $13,000.00.

1·3-'86 tic

New location:

161 North Second
Midcleport, Ohio 45760

2 Bedroom,

Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. Laundry
facilities available.
E.O.H.

992-3711
11·23·' 17 1 mo. pd.

MIDDlEPORT- l \7 story
bnck home on appx. i2
acres ol ground. 4 bed·
room ~. F.A.f.O. neat plus a
woodburner PRIVACY.
MAKE OFFER. $27,000.00

SALES &amp; SERVICE.
We

a

1n81!1n

CARP.ENTER
SERVICE

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

- Addons and remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

REPAIR

- Plumbing and r;tlectncal ·
work

Also frmmlssion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

I
•
l

''

•

i

(Free Estimates)

•'

V. C. YOUNG Ill

•

••
•
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-1 5-' 86-lc ••

992-6215 or 992-7314

6-17-tlc

SYRACUSE- 2 story home
'With 4-5 bedrooms, ·2 baths,
kitchen w/ breakfast nook,
lull basement, large neat
acre lot, 2 car garage Much
more! $62.900.00.

BUSINESS PHONE
16141 992-6550
RESIDENU PHON!
1614] 992-77S4

•

••••
•

YOUNG'S

Garage

POMEROY - 1'h lots w1th
an older home. Lots lay
pretty nice. $10,000.00.

Cerrv Fishing SupPILes

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Here

Roger Hysell

RUTlAND- Nice 10 yr. old
bnck ranch home. Over 1.
acre of ground. 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, full basement.
equipped kitchen. large
patio . MAKE OFFER .
$39,900.00.

l

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG ,•

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS

MINERSVIllE Small
house at a small pr1ce. Good
rental property. Elec .. BB
heat, 1 bedroom, equipped
kitchen, front deckoverlookIng the r~ver. $8,500.00.

•
HILLSIDE
MUIILELOADtNG
GUN SHOP

MIDDLEPORT - Remodeled home in a nice
neig.. borhood. WBFP, original woodwork, 2 bedrooms,
new bath, new k~chen .
basement Mu st see! ASK1
ING $32,000.00.

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
O'P EN .l to 9 P.M.
Rt. 124 Across from
Happy Hollow Rd .

RUTlAND - Ranch type
home located on approx . 2
acres ol ground. Full basement. 3 bedroom s, and only
12 yr. old . WANT
$29,500.00.

RUTLAND

614·742-2355

12/14/ 1 mo.

MICDLEPORT- 3 'bedroom

BISSELL
BUILDERS

2 story home 1n Middleport.
Nice kitchen and wblp,
PRICED TO SELL
$17.500.00.
ti:MIY l CLELAND, IL .•. 992·6191
JEAN TRUSSlU .. .... ...... 94q. 26t&gt;0
DOTT!I TURNIR "'"""" 992-S692
lUCY RIFFlE .... ,..( ....... 94q. 3'080
OFFICI .,,,,,, ............. 992-22SI

ALL

FOR RENT

BRADBURY- Close 1n, but
out of town. Garden area, 3
bedrooms, outbuilding,
some new carpet, equipped
kitchen. One third down on
land contract. $21 ,000 00.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
I

DON'T lET YOUR £lE(.
TRICAl PROBLEMS IECOME A SHOCK TO YOU!

CALL

- :ts: ';§:

D&amp;C ELECTRIC
Ron Dileo or
Gary Cummins

992-6226
Middlepon

lnsurtd/Lirtn~td

, 2-7- '87 tfn

.... '

r--:::-~-

v.w.

PARTS

•

NEW AND USED

,_At Reasonable Prices "

WIDE

PH. 949 -280 1
or 949-2860
Day or Night

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS .

NO SUNDAY CALLS

CALL 742·2315

4-16-86-tfn

!

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

'

.•.
'

•I.

�:

l"'age-ts- 1ne uany :,ent1ne1

Announcements
3

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcement s

31

JC;UPID'S NEST . Offtn two
klnds of dating sarvice. w rite
P0
Bo11 619. Ironton. O H

46638 . (606)

4

836-27~5.

Giveaway

Brand new 3 BR . near Gallipolis
l o cks on Rt. 7 . 2 car garage. nice
lot. lmmedillle po11esaion. Will ·
cona idM trade in of Mobile
home, property, etc. Bargain
pr iced. Catl 614-446-8038 .

Free to good home. 1 v•ar old
male Collie. Playful, goo d with
people. 614,992·7147 .

By Owner· Off 141 &amp; Neighbor·
hood Rd . Ni ce 3 bedroom,
enclosed br,ezeway, attached
garege. Call614-797·.2441 .

Large t'louse door .. Gieu. 26x 47 .

Call 614-949-2272.

2 bedroom, 2 baths, 2 cl!ir
o•age, I«Nel lot on Rt. 33 .
Swimming pool. satelito._&lt;: lose
t o Meigs Higtt. Ca ll 614·992·
3264.

Two standing trees for fir i)Wood.
304-676 -3168 weekdays. A sk
for BilL
~ost

an d Fo und ·

LOST : Weight WatchEHs Key
Ring with several keys.· Call
614-446 - 2222 .

8

Pubii c Sale
&amp; A uction

"Worst winter I've ever
seen!" ~

Government Homes for $ 1 . ~U
rpair). Delinquenl tax property.
Repossessions. Call 806 -687·
6000 EKt. GH -9806 tor c urrent
repo list.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

9

Inside Flee Mkt, old Arbuckle
Furniture Store. Sat and 'Sun.
sellers wel4;00m8.

9

Homes for Sale

4 BR ., flreplac:e. full basement. 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis . &amp;34,900.
Call Day s-614-446 -1 61 6 , att ar
5 :0 0 - 446-1 244.

2 Poles to give away to person on
Roush lane. Cheshire. Pleastil
call614-367-7261.

6

Real Estate

Wanted T o Buy

Wanted To Buy

QUILTS
High pr ices paid for pre- 1950
quilts. Applique . pieced. any
condition. Call 614·992 -2101
or 614-992-5657.

Employment
Serv1ces

We pay cash fo r late model clean
usod cau.
Jim Mink Chev.-Oid&amp; In c.
. Bill Gene Johnsen
614 -4 46· 3672

TOP CASH paid tor '83 mo del
and newer uaod cars , Smith
Buick-Pontiac, 1911 Ea stern
Ave ., Gallipolis. Call 6 14- 4462282.
WANTED TO BUY: Used w ood
&amp; coal heaterS. Swain's Furni·
tuJe, 3rd. &amp; Olive 5 1. Gallipoli s.
C.all 61.4-446- 3159.
Buying daily gold, silver coins,
rings. jewelry. sterling war e, old
coin s, large cu rrency, Top prices. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave . Middlepor t, Oh. 614992-3476.
Raw fur, beet and deer hides .
Gyn Sing and Yellow root. W e
h nve wheat and nite lit es.
Trapping suppli85 for sa le. {Buy·
i11g used 1raps). George Buckl ey
Hours 12-9. 614-664- 47 6 1.

11 •Help_Wanted

11

•

Help Wanted

The Vill age o f Ri o Grande is now
accepting resu me's .and lfrtters
of interest f or the posit ion of
Clerk of Courts. Interested per·
Sons must ba a village resident
and mu st be bondabl e. letters
lind resume's Can b e sent to :
Vill age of Rio Grande. c/ o Angie
Seagraves, Clerk. P.O. 8oM343,
Rio Grande, Ohio 45674. Must
be received by De cember 31 .
19B7.
R.C. 8ouling Co. of Pt. Pl easant
is now interviewing for eKperlen ced salem&amp;n . Also part-time
secretary.
Accountin g instructor needed .
Minimum requirements. BA degr ee. Call 6 14-446-4124.

For t una 50 Marketing
Opport unit Y• Galli polis a rea .
Part - time/ full t ime. Good in·
come opportunity. Eatabllshed
custom8f base. Offi ce equip·
ment field .. Send letter or resume
to: c/ o Box Cla -120 Gallipolis
Oaity Tribune 825 Third Ave.,
Gallipolis. Ol'lio •6631 .
Job hunting] Need a skill7 We
train people for jobs aa aut o
mechanics. carpenlers. electricians. food service workers,
ei9Ctronics techniciana . indu strial maintenance workBfs, nursing assistant s and orderlies.
machinists. and welders. Register now for classes beginning
January 4ti'J. Call Tri -County
Vocational Adult Center at 753- .
3511 e11t. 14. A variety of
funding sources to pay for
naining are available tor those
eligible.
Go th e way of the hi -tech future.
The Electronics Servicing program at the A~ull Educat ion
Center --Tri-County Vocational
School w ill train you for j obs in
servicing and maintenance of
electronic equipm&amp;nt. We have
monies available t o pay for
training 'for aliglble applicants.
Call 753 -3511 ext. 14 t o
register for classes beginning
January 4th.
'
Gov.e rnment J o bs . 516 ,040 $69.230 year. Now Hiring. Your
Area. 805 -687 -6000 Ext. R9805 for current Federal list .

BABY DOLL
WARDROBE

The Meigs Local Sc t'tool District
is accepting sppli cations for
substitute· teat:hers. Substjt:ules
are needed in all certification
areas. The daily rate of pay
$126. Schools are open and a
1emporary restrtining order ill in
effect. Ohio' Cenlfiad Teachers
willing to cross a picket line
should immediatley cont ac t
Meigs Local School Superintendents offiee, 621 South Third
Ave . Middleport. Oh io. 46760.
614-992 -2153.
Need ride to Hocking Tech .
Winter quarter. Mon.- Fri. 614986·4106 .
AVON - All areas . Call Marilyn
Weaver 304·B82 ·2646 .
MOM AND DAD: let Ute Army
National Guard help pay for your
child' s collage education . Call
304-675 -3950 or 1-800 -642-

3619.

~R10R MILITARY SERVICE
means extra mon(!'f for member s
of the Army National Gu&amp;rd . Call
304-675 -3950 or 1·800 -6423619 .

Recovery Room Staff Nurse
Immediate opening for R egistered Staff Nurse In rec'overy
room. P.R.N. basis. Salary commensurate with e•peri en ce .
Contact GeoH Polen. Director of
Personnel . Pltasftnt Valley Hospital. Valley Drive. Point Pleasant. W .V. 26550. 304 -676' 4340 ex t. 307, AA -EOE .

cJ?#{
ro· w

5500: Sm (13-14"), Md (15-16") or Lg (17-18").

A complete wardrobe of 58\lerl different outfits

Gat pald for reading booltsl
$100. PElf title. WrRe : ACE 517E, 161 S . lincolnway, N.
Au rora. IL69642 .

for 13" through 18' dolls. Slate Sm, Md or
Lg when ordering.
FREE OFFER 3 Craft Booic.s (value 8.85) when
you order 1 ot the $2 .95 books lt sted below.
119-M ol FlOwer Croehel 127- Aighans and Dothes
121- Pl!low Show Ofl's 121- 0 utckiEasy Transfers

13

Insurance

Md $1 OS !or postag&amp; ltlandltng

Call us for your mobil e hom e
i nsurance: Mill er In surance.
304 -88 2- 2145 . Als o: auto.
home. life. health.

$3 25 101 eacl"l patlefn Add 75e each paftern for postage
ana Mndhng Seno 10 Pauerns . Dept 6315. Bok 4000
Ntles MI .. 49120-4000

119-Art of Flower Crochel
t 21- Pillow Show Oils
127- Aighans and Doilies
129-0uick!Easy Tran~lers
Add S1 .051at postage/handling.

P

FASHION
A T T E R N

S

1 8 Wanted to Do
Mother of 2 will care for your
children during th e holiday fes ·
tivities. Even lnga, w eekendl, or
rl uring the school vacatK)n,
Convenient location, reasonable
rates Call 614- 446 -0065.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEV PUBLI SH·
lNG CO . recom mends th at you
do busi nes1 w ith people you
know , and NOT t o send m onev
t hr ough lhe mail until you h ave
investigated the off ering,

4117: Mosses Sizes 10 lo
24. Comfortable pullover
dress has an elaslic
waisl and comes in lwo
sleeve lengthsAdea! In a
striped polyesler blend .

1973 12x65 Freedom3 BR., gas
, furnace with central &amp;ir, waai'IM~
dryer, all kitchen appliqnces,
dinette set. underpinning, block
&amp; porches. Call 614-367 -0683 .
1976 Bayview. 2 BR .• front den.
AC . porch &amp; awning. Call
614-266-1774.
, Flamingo 12" 66 with porch.
Good co ndition . Call 614-2561607.
Mobile home for sale. 12x60.
Call 614-992-3150.
For sale or rent : 4 mobile hom es.
One 3 bedroom , three 2 bedrooms. 614-742-3033. No pet s.
New 1988 Country Villa .
141172. All eleclric. Already set
up on River front lOt. 614-9 92·
3348.
1975 12x60 Ga s heated mobil e
home. A-1 condition. Washer
and dryer. Air condition er in
kitchen . 614·667-6339 .

34

Business

Buildings
Comm ercial buildings for le fl9e .
Downtown Pt. Pleasant . Stor es.
offices. A -One Real Estat e.
Carol Ye ager, Broker. Call 30 4·
675 -5 104.

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
60• 100 tt. lot, 4th St. , Syre' cuse . Water. gas. sewer, suitabl e
trallw or house. 814 -992-3686
or w rite P.O . box 1 14. Syracu se.
One acre lot wRh all utilitiea and
h ook ups, out buildin gs,
$6,500.00. 304-576-2192 .

Rentals
41

Homes for Rent

3 BR . hou se &amp; gara ge. A · 1 Real
Estate, Carol Yeeger· BrokM.
304-675 -5104.
Nicely furnished small hou se.
Adults only. Ref. required . No
pats. Call614-446-0338 .
Large 2-3 BR . house. Plenty of
storag e. Hendttr5on area. Call
614 -446-7025 .
3 BR . house near Patriot. Call
6, 4 -3 79 -2 6 78 .
Large 2 BR . house with stove.
refrig . Full basement. S2 26 a
mo. t100 deposit, Vint on, Oh 614-388 -8121 .
Furnished · 2 small houses, 3
rooms &amp; bath each. Gal1ipolh1.
Ni ce &amp; clean. Adults . N o pet s.
~:~3&amp; deposit. Call 614-4462. 3, or 4 bedroom hou ses and
apt. in Pomeroy area. Pay ow n
utilities, deposft required . Cell
614 -992-61 13, 614 -99 2-6723
or 614·992 -2509 . Call aher
5 :00, please.
Nice 3 bedroom house. Family
r o om , garag e, ba s em ent,
forced-air heal. 6 wood ed acres.
barn . S276 . per month. 5 100.
deposit. N o in side pet s. 10 East
St., Pomeroy. Ohio . 614·4236289.
.
Unfurnished 2 bedroom house
for rent. Energy efficient, ni ce
and clean. Carpet. Call 614-

992·3090.

6 room duplax, ba sement. g ar·
age. privatlf. nice location. 304 676 -376 3.

42 Mobile Home s
for Rent
N ice 3 bedroom trail er, living
room e11 panda. l arg e yard. Ka·
nauga. Call 614 -446· 7473.
3 b edroom furnished or unfurni shed. Good clean condit ion. 1
child, no pets. New Haven .

304·882-2466.
Mobile home 64x14, 2 b ath s, 3
bedrooms. all electr ic. children
but no pets, 304·468· 1887

44

lu x.urv Tara Apartments . Eliagant, 2 Br. 2 floor, fully
carpeted . CA and heat. Private
entrance, enclosed patio, pool&amp;
pl&amp;yground. Start- 5299 per
month. Utilities not indu.ded.
Call 614 -367-7850.
·
Furnished Efficiency. S1 60.
Utilities paid. 607 2nd. Gallipolis. Share bath. Call 446-4416
aher 7 PM .
Furnished apartment. $210.
U t iliti&amp;~ paid. 1 BR , 701 Fourth
A ve . Gallipolis. Call 446-4416
ah er 7pm .
Nice 1 BA . apt . Range and refrig.
furn ished. Water &amp; garbage
paid . Deposit required . Call
614-446 -4 3 46 after 5 PM .

1 1 Courl • Large apai-tmenl. 2
BR ., 2 baths. Wl w carpet,
complete kitct'len. $326 plus
utilities.
2 38 First- River view · 1 BR ., 1
balh. no children. e1"75 plus
utilities. All apartments-Dep. 6
ref. No pets. t.all 614-446-

4926.

Garage -.pt.- Furnished· 1 BR .
29'h Nell, Gallipolis. $225 utilities paid. Cell446- 4416 after7
PM .
1 BR . 960 First Ave . Ref. &amp; dep.
Call 614 ~446 - 1079 .
Gracious ~ving . 1 and 2 bedroom apartmel"jtl at Village
Marior and Rive,.ide ApaTIm ents In Middleport. From
$215 . inclu~ing utilities. Call
6 14-992 -7787. EOH .
Nice apt. Hudd approved. New
c arpet, clean, Pt. Pleasant . 614992 -5851! .
APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
house s. Pt. Ple111antand Gallipolis. 614-446 -8221 .
2 bedroom furnited apt, ref .and
deposit. New Haven. W. Va ..
304· 882-3267 or 304 -77350 24 .
Beech Street, Middleport, Ohio,
2 bedroom furnished apt. utilities paid, referencetanddeposit.

304·882·2666.

45 Furnished Rooms
Rooms for rent. day. week.
month. Galli a Hotel. Call 614446 -9580. Rent as low as S120
month.
Furnished room. S75. Utiliti•
paid. Share bath. Single male.
91 9 Second. Gallipolis. Cell
446 -441 6 after 7pm.

46 Space for Rent
Office Space lor rent . Excel.
downtown Gallipolis locatK)n .
Inquiries c all 614-446 -4222.
M obile Horne lo1 . 60ft. or leu.
9 20 4th .. Gallipoli s. $76 . Water
paid. Call614-446-4416 after 7
PM.

7479.

Spac e for small trailers . All
hook-ups. Cable. Also efficiency
rooms, air and cable. Mason.
W.V a. Call 304 -773·6651 .
Trailer apacea f or rent, Rt. 1
Locust Road. back of K &amp; K
Mobil e Hom e Park, 304 -676·
1076.

49

1400 sq. ft. commercial space
suitable for offices, retailing. or
..rvice1 . Prime location-corner
of 2nd. &amp;: Pine In Gallipolis.
Ample parking In rear. t360 per
month. Call 114-446-4249 or
446 -2326 .

Merch~r1111se

61 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTIPN &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW· 6 pc. WOQd gr'oup- 8399.
Uvlng room suites - 8199 - t599.
Bunk beds with bedding· $199.
Full sire m8ttreu 6 foundation
starting· t99 . Recliner s
stlrting -· 199.
USED• Beds, drMten. bedroom
suites. t199 - t299 . D61ks,
wringer washer, a complete line
of used furniture.
·NEW· Western boot• t30.
Workboots t 1B a. up. ISleel •
soft toe) . Call &amp;1•·446-3169.
County Applianc.. Inc. Good
used appliances and TV sets.
Open BAM to 8PM. Mon thru
Sat. 614-446-1699, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .
GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Wuhan, dryers, refrig.,.tors.

range• . Skaggs Appliances.
Upper River Rd. b•kl• Stone
Crest Motel. 614-448-7398.

" No, Mons ieur, !hal's how much it costs
lo insure the ring ."

.I

Se•oned Oak &amp;. A1h firewood.
Se•on.:t on• year. large loads.
Split&amp;. del. t36. Cell814· 266·
. 1340 or 266·9303, anytime.
Firewood- Se•oned Oak · aplit',
delivered and stacked . t35 a
very large lo.ct. Call 814 -446·
Dna bh:ycl•berci.. • one
roll• exerciu. Both for 8100.
Like new. Call614 -268-1267.
Junk c•s, 82!5 for complete
cars. Body.' • towed away. Call
614-245-9284 or 882-6760 .
Kinderwoodbutning stove , Gan~
erel Electric range. 1977 4a4
Chwy pidt· up. Call 614· 379·
2798 or 614-266-1257.

55 Building Supplies
Building Materials
Blodt, bridt. sewer pipM, win·
dowL lintels, etc. Claude Win ters, Rio Grande, 0 . Cell 614 245 -6121 .
, Concrete blodla all sizes yard or
· delivery. Mason tand. Gellipolis
Block Co.. 123¥2 Pine St.,
Gallipolil. Otlio Call 814 -448 2783.
Ready mix concrete and all
conaete auppli81. Call ua Valley
Brook Cement and Suppll•.

304·773-5234.

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofa~

and cheirs priced from
t396 to t996. Tabt• t60 and
up to t12&amp;. Hid•a-beda t390
· to t596. Rectiner• t226 to
t37&amp;. Lampa t28 to t126.
Din.-tes t109 and up to t4915 .
Wood table w -6 chair~ t28&amp; to
t79&amp;. Dttk t100 up to t375.
Hutch• t400 and up. Bunk
beda complete w · mllttrnan
t2~&amp;endupto139&amp; . Baby beda
81 10. Mattrwlft or box tpringa
full or twin tl8, firm 178, and
t88. Queen ••• 1226, King
t3&amp;0. 4 drawer ch•t tl9. Gun
cabinet• 6 gun. Gaa or electric
r~nge 1371. Baby mettreuea
835 &amp; •46 , Bed frame~ t20.
t30 &amp; King fnlme 150. Good
sehtction of bedroom auit",
metal clbineta, headbo•ds t30
and up to I 66.
90 Oaya aame a• c•h wh:h
approved credit . 3 Mil• out
luiBVille Rd . Open 9am to &amp;pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 614-441 -

66

Vallev Furniture
New and uaed furniture and
applicences . Call 814 - 4467672. Hours 9 ·5.
PARSON 'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc. living room
suites, e399 .95; chest of
drawers-4 drawer, t48 ; twin
mattreases. $96 set microwave
oven standa.
THE WORKING
MAN ' S FRIENO
30" elec:. rang .. white. 876.
30" elec. range. coppertone.
196. 36" elec. range. white.
176. 30" g• range, ...,-oCIMio.
$75. Kenmore wash.- &amp; dryer
·set, 8190. Kenmore waaher,
896. Whirlpool hewy du1y
w.ather, 896 . G .E. WUhlr, like
new , •176. Rafrlgeretor.
frost-free. cooppertone, 8160,
Refrigerator. 2 door. as&amp;.
Skagg1 Appliances
669 Upper River Rd.· 614-446-

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan. PM1ian and
Siam.. kittans. AKC Chow
puppi81. Call 814-446·384•
after 7PM.

304-898-39118.

•

Wonderful Christmas Present.
Upright piano in good condition.
Only · t200 . Call Pltz.t Dan's at

e14-742-2089.

FNit
&amp; Vegetables

By owner, 125,000.00: 2%
miles from Gallipolia Locks a.
Dam . Mlllttone Rd . 12x80
trail.- plus 5 rooma furn ... one
acre, washer S. dryer, air cond .,
woodburner. 88 ' porch , lfJ acre
fenced with pond. 2 outbuildings. 2 c.-portl, wood •tatd.
304·576-2684 or 576-2826.

F&lt;1r rrr Suppl1es
&amp; L1vestuek

CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S. 35 W•t. Jackaon, Ohio.

PICKENS USED FURNITURE Sofa' a. chelrs, lampt, recliners,
diah81, dinnette, bedding. hide.a -bed, glauware S. misc. 304·

M•sev F..-guson, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal• S. Service. Over
40 uted tractors to chooae from
&amp; complete line of new- &amp;. used
equipment. Largest telection in
S.E. Ohio.

Mixed hard wood slabs. 812 per
bundle. Containing approx. 1 Y:z
ton . FOB. Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. 814 -992 -6461 .

19B4 Black Ford dual 'wt1e811,
F-360. 6.9 International di•el
eng. 33,000 mil•, New running
bo~rds , AM ·FM stereo. New C8
• Urea. Truck tool box to mlltch.
Must an to appreciate. Slfioul
lnquiri• onty. Carl Beaver 814256·120 1 or 446 -1347.

THfY

If

'

"'

l-OST MY

HAPPENED(

/

"

1982 Oodge260 Ram. Custom
converaion. Trailer reedy.. Call
614-446-4383 d..... 448 -0139 .
evens . &amp; weekends .

1:1

;;

8AJ..ANC~.

i!:
!'

•
•

!
'.

74 Jeep CJ5. 304 motor, nPJW U
joint• tie rods, bodv good.
304-876-7375 .

NOW T'OPEN THIS CAGE AN'
WORK ~y WAY ACROSS ON

THAT

PO~E!

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessories

the magic of the box of

i

t

depth feature reports. (1 :00)
11!1 MOYIE: The Prince and
the Pauper (NR) (2:00)
cr5J A~F A~F's bad behavior
prompts the Tanners to
banish him to garage. (AI l;l
Ell !!l MOVIE: High Anxiety
(PG) (1 :34)
8:05 Cll MOYIE: The Beastm111ter
iPG) [1 :58)
8:30 (il NF~ Monday Night
Magazine (T)
· ~ Ill ll2l Frank's Place

4 wheels with good tlr• for a
Sub•u. 304 -17&amp;-8984.

••
N

•

~

Home

81

614·286·6451 .

•••

1973 666 lnl' l Dieael. wkle
front t3960. late model 2400
lnt' l round baler, Nice! t3950 .
1986 60 HP bulldozer, low
hours. Own• will finance. Call
814-286-8622 .
BUY WHOLESALE. White farm
Tractors at wholeule invoice
plua freight . Compare the price
and quality . Model• from 18 to
180 hp. Luting av1lllble. Offer
good through Dec. 31 . Siders
E~uipment Co.. US 35. Henderson, W, Va. 304 -675· 7421 ,

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditionll lifetime guarantea. Local ref.-ences furnished .
Free estimate•. Call collect
1·114· 237-04B8. dey or rtight .
RogersBaaement
Waterproofing.

cr5J Valerie's Family Sandy

'

MY MOM MAKES M E GO TD
BED 50 EARLY THAT I M ISS
A LL THE GOOD TV 5HOIN5 .

WHAT "F.ANIILY TIES''
15 RetiL LY A ea.JT:. .

I THOUGHT IT W/&gt;6 ABOUTA

IM&lt;'JM·ANIJ - ~:l'

NEQc:WEAI&lt; BHOP.

Celebration Sir Georg Solti's
with

Plumbing

newsmakers and ce lebrities.

&amp; Heating

@ MOVIE: 'Terms of

WHAT DO YOU
WANT ME TO
DO ABOUT
IT, MISS
PRUNELLY

CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614 -448-3881! or 614446-4477

I BETTER

TAKE

TH' FIFTH

ON

THAT ONE

~

676·1786.

R &amp; A. Water Service. Home
clltera. wells, poole filled . Formerly James Boys Watera.Call
304-675.6370 .

742-2716.

Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools, cisterns, walls. Call 614-

THE GRIZZWELLS®
R.WA. YOU ~OOLJI.P
I

General Hauling

6~ A1RA~H
COMI'ACiO~

DIP

WAS IT A
C!-11&lt;?$\MAS

245-9286.

·•

44&amp;-3171 .

PEANUTS

Watterson ' s Water Hauling,
rsuoneble rat e1, imm edi ate
2,000 gallon delivery. cilterns,
pools, wall. etc. call 304 -576-

DON'T TALK TO ME,.
I'M I-lAVlNG

2919.

71 Auto's For Sale

POSHI-\RISTMAS
87

lllll2l Oesignlng Woman

Contest winner wants his

Residential or co·rnmercial wil-ing. New service or repa irs.
Ucensed electrician. Estimate
free. Ridenour Electrical, 304 ·

Mixed hay, good grade. 300 bale
lot, 81 .25 per bale. Call 614446 -0871 .

Endearment' NBC Sunday .
Night at tho Movies (PGI
(2:12) l;l
9:30 0 ~ Valerie's Family Sandy
mislakenly thinks her secret
admirer at school is the
principal. C

Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration

Firewood delivered, 1t1cked,
$3&amp; .00. Maton Countlea. Galli·
polls other ereaa within reason at
our discretion, 304 -896· 3446.

the

Domingo and others.
~ Ill ll2l Newhart
Teenager 's crush .on Joanna
gets an unexpected reaction .
from Dick. (R) C
I!)) Larry Kin~ ~lvel In depth
interviews with top

676-2903.

Hay S. Grain

a gala concert from

maj9Stic Orchestra Hall in
Chocago featuring Placido

Starks Tree and Lawn Service,
lawn care. landscaping, stump
removal, 304 -676 -2842 or

84

Series Beneath 1he Sea •
The Galapagos (R)
(J) 0 (I) ABC Monday Night
Football C
IE I!]) Solti a175: A
75th birthday is celebrated

896-3802

64

245·5239.

iJNTlL YOU TOLD ME

(!) Spirit of Adventure

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most well a completed umedll'f.
Pump sales and service. 304-

J 6 J Water Service. Swimming
pools, cisterns. wells . Ph. 614-

1978 Ford l TO. Good tlrea. new
battery , · air. $700. Call 614·

Tanners to banish him 10
g__arage. (R) C

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
ramoval . Call 304-676- 1331 ,

Milled firewood, tBO.OO dump
truck load. delivered. 304-576-"

614·245·9698.

p&lt;incipal. l;l
·
9:00 (2) 700 Club
8 (2) ALF ALF' s bad

'

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

2454.

2885.

1981 Dodg e Arlea K atatlon
wa!JOn. AM ·FM atereo-casa.,
cfuiaa control. Good co nd. Call

mistakenly thinks her secret
admirer at school is the

behavior prompts the

RON ' S Televition Serv ice .
Hou• calla on RCA. Ouazar.
GE . Specialing in Zenith. C1ll
304 -576- 2398 or 614 -446 -

Dlllard Water Servi ce: Pools,
Citterns. Watts. Delivery Anytime. Call 614-446-7404-No .,.
Sunday calla.

Transportation

about. (AI

448·0294.

Now buying theU corn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotes. River
City Farm Supply, 614 -44&amp;-

--------·lcMixed hey for lil t. Call 614·

Frank visits a men 's club
with a past he soon learns

SWEEPER and -.wing machine
repair, parta, and auppliea. Pidt
up and delivery. Davis Vacuum
Cleaner , one half mile. up
GeorgM Creek Rd. Call 814-

82

Prlmanews Wrap ups of

the. day's world news and in

t

Upholstery

M ow r.,y's Upholatering ae~ving
trl county ate&amp; 22 yeara. Thebe• t
!n furniture uptlolstaring. Call
304 · 676 - 4164 for 'tree
est imates.

!

JUST WANTED TO
TJ.1ANK YOU AGAIN ·FOR
TI-l E WONDERFUL PRE5;ENTI
'f'OU GAVE ME ,.IT WAS
JUST WI-IAT I WANTED.,.

U)f(l{ DO '(OU ALWA'fS

I-lAVE TO SA'&lt;
· 50METf(ING NICE?

dilapidated gas station
remodeled. (R)
10:00 rn Stralghl Talk
00 American Muscle ·
Magazine (T)
IE To Eatabllah Justice
Judicial Appointment
~ lllll2l Cagney • ~acoy
~acey aids a battered wife
and is charged with abuse of
authority. lA) l;l
I!]) 11!1 News
@ Evening News A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow's news
stories. (1 :00)
Ill (I) ~llequut The Fighting
Edge
10:30 (2) American Snapshota
I!]) This Old House Work
starts on the deck railings:
the new addlllon Is Insulated.
l;l
10:35 Cll MOVIE: Houto of Wax
(NR) (1 :28)
11:00 CD Remington Steele
8 (2) ~ Ill ll2l cr5l Newo
@ BIINards 3rd Annual 9 Ball
Championship from Atlantic
City, NJ: Fran Crimi .vs Jean
Balukas (A)
IE Sign OH
I!]) Only One Earth .
Converting to commerlcal
organic farming Isn 't an easy
task .
I!)) Moneyllne Current
reports on world econom ics

and 11nanclal news

,·

I

TA N NET

1 I I I ll
2

'

r. I' 1 I I . ·
5

~

~~
I

_;.D_O:,_Y:_;.O:....:G:,..._~~ !

6

.

I

The elderly l.ibrarian kepi alllhe
leans in line by looking at them
,.
. _ sternly and saying, "If you're
'
good even when nobody ' s look'·
I NE
ing, lhat 's :·

1 1 1 17
j_ A T

;

I

~--T:~a:--:.:,1....:...,:1....:.·;_1-::9=-T"I-1 G)
. .....I.
L_J.L.....l._..I.L-....1..- ..l.
.:'11 P.RINT NUMBERED I'
~ LE TT ERS
•
A

V

UNSCRAMB LE FORI
ANSW ER
•

t~e chuckle quoted
by ldl1ng in the miss~r~g words
you develop lrom step No . 3 below .
Comp le1e

I' 1 I' I' 1· I' I' 1· I
I I III I I II
3

SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS
Fi/Jbar- Bilge - Round- Nirn/Jus - ROBBING it IN
A high school teacher laugh! me a valuable lesson . She
always said lhat lacl was erasing out another's mistake instead
of RUBBING il IN ,
NORTH

BRIDGE
Since opener's jump to lour hearts

'I' K 8 4 2
+ AQ

+ AK7

EAST
+ J963

WEST
+Q7
'I'Q 90

'1' 7
t6 432

.J10 9 8 7
+JS4

• 8. 3 2

SOUTH

+A U

'I'AJt0 63

.K 5

+Q to 9

Vulnerable: Nor th-South
Dealer: North
East

West

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Pass
Pass
Pass

Opening lead: + J
lor him without any guesswork. All he
needs is for West to hold only two
spades. So South cashes out the A•K of
spades and the minor-suit winners,
and then puts West on lead with a
trump. With nothing left but dia·
moods, West must give declarer a
sluff and a ruff and his contract.

~1"-111 VJtsf
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
DOWN

1 Cockscomb
6 Belt
11 Be wafted
12 Michel~
angelo
work
13 Chew the
scenery
14Hen
15Cartoon

1 Baby
bird's
' comment
2 Mr.
Montague
3 Elicit
4 Ready
5 Palm
civet

Yesterday's Answer
23 Child's
33 Bonbons
fright word
7 Aunt
card
34- and
16Ransom
(Sp.)
game
kicking
-Olds
8
Alejandro
24
Ceremony
35
Challenger
18 "The Gold
26 Tie cloth 36 Conmdum
Bug"
9 Ingested 27 Tokyo's 39 Blushing
author
10
Course
old
40 Wing
19 Dupe
name
(Lat)
score
24Actor
28 Wire
41Mr,
17-of
. Aldo
Cliburn
measure
the
land
215 Soda
29Hoot
42
Terminus
20 Beat it!
flavor
31 Needle- «Billy21 Soda
26Pay
fiSh
Williams
22 Brew
29 Prank
30Redact
31 Gun (sl.)
32 Red-eyed
ferret
34Top of
a suit
37 Circle
segment
38 Actor
Herbert
39 Bird for
18 Across
43 "Brother,
Can You
Spare - ?"
415 African
antelope
46 Fulcrum
partner
47Fop
48 Suspicious

6 Banar)a

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

lsLONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another, In this sample A is used
for the three L's X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes the

iength and fonnation of the words a[e all

hints. Each day the code letters are diffe'rent.
·cliYrioQUOTES

12·28

MG

A U G T

R.JCHUY

-

XJIL

H

T J U M

T R Q U

H 'O

MRJM

HW

IE H U A

J

I G U ' M

H

EQJWGU

MRQ

M H 0 Q .

YGGI

JWMGE

Yesterday'• CI')'Jitoqaote: WE WISH YOU, OUR

READERS, A JOYOUS HOUDAY SEASON, WITH LOVE
AND PEA..(:~ YOUR MOST PRECIOUS GIFI'S. -

·PUZZLE FittENDS

.
I

- -l.

lZ·ZS-87

+ K ·!O 85

showed 19 or 20 points in support of.
South's
one-heart response, South
Dobbs. [0:30)
quickly asked for aces and bid a small
Ill 112) cr5) Wheel of Fortune
slam, North and South had plenty of
11!1 Cheers
.
high cards between them, but th~ir
Ell (II M'A'S"H
major-suit
holdings looked a blt ltke
7:05 (II Andy GriHith
Swiss cheese. South won the opemng
7:30 0 ~ Hollywood Squareo
diamond lead ~nd played king and ace
@ NFL Monday Night
of hearts. Since West was left with a
Memories (T)
trump trick, declarer had to find a
·rn Newlywed Game
way_ to avoid a spade loser. He
0(1) Judge
stripped out his minor-suit Y(inners
~ Wheel of Fortunol;l
and gave West his trump trick. Back
I!)J Crossllra (0:30)
Ill ll2l cr5J Jeopardy! l;l
came the queen of spades, and South
11!1 Bamey Miner
could not avoid the loss of a spade
Ell (I) WKRP In Cincinnati
trick.
7:35 (II Sanford and Son •
Declarer's play was not best AI·
though
there are spade combinations
8:00 (I) Father Murphy
West could have that might allow the
0 (I) Collage Baoketball
@ NF~ Monday Night Match
slam to make with the throw-in, West ·
Up New England Patriots at ,.
can prevail with many of those combi·
Miami Dolphins (T)
nations. For example, if West is
(I) U (I) ABC Newa Spacial
thrown in and his spade holding is Q·9·
x or J-9-x, he can exit with his spade
/jl The Making ol a
honor, and declarer cannot avoid losContinent Catastrophic
ing ano(ner trick. And if West holds Q·
floods and a giant
J-x of spades, he can lead a low card
earthquake formed the
Mlssissippi.l;l
away from the Q·J, and declarer will
~ Ill ll2l Kate &amp; Allie Tired
be unlikely to do anything other than
of being taken 1or granted ,
put in dummy's eight-spot.
Allie strikes from family
Declarer is better off playing lor a
chores.(A) l;l
distribution
that will make the slam
I!]) Wonderworks Kay uses
delights to rescue his friends.

Uud &amp; rebuilt tnmsmistions. All
internally inspectl8d &amp; guarnteed . Call 614-446 -0916. We
buy junk uensminlona.

85

642·2434. Ohio 1-800-6333463'.

WHAT

Vans &amp; 4 W .O.

62 Wanted to Buy

Sign - Portable lighted sign,
e299. Explr•
Jan. 2 . Fru
Delivery - letters. WV 1-B00-

FRANK AND ERNF.'-oT

I mprovaments
Musical
Instruments

Relrigerator, waaher &amp;. dryer.
$50 each. Cell814 -2•6 -9617.

Girls 20 inch Schwinn 3 spd.
bicycle. 145. Sulid oak flat top
deak whh swivel chair. t75. Call
614-446 -4209 lftet' 8.

1982 Ford F-250 King Cab. Sit.
bed, auto.. air, red &amp; grav.
e6200. tau 614· 311"8-9831 or
446-6579.

For ule AKC male Pomeranian
pup 10 weeks old. 1 ye• old
Yorklhire T_-rrier male AKC .

61 Farm Equipment

Half Price! Flashing arrow aigna.
$2991 Lighted, non-arrow 82B91
Unlighted $2491 Free letteral
See locally. Call today! Factory:
1 -800-423 -0163, anytime.

Trucks for Sale

AKC Reg. Chihuahua pUppiw
for sale. Call 814-388 -8481 .

58

reports on world.economlcs
and financial news with Lou

6'00.

"II

and $upply Shop-Pet
Grooming.
breeds ... All
aty&amp;ea. lama Pel Food Deater.
Julie Webb Ph. 614 -448 -0231 .

67

(I) ABC Nowa 1:;1
IE Nightly Buolnen Report
~ Ill 112) CBS News
I!]) Coloreoundt
cr1J Inside Politico '88
11!1 WKRP In Cincinnati
Ell (I) Too Cloae for Comfort
6:35 (II ~eave It To Beaver
7:00 rn Remington Steele
0 (2) PM Magazine
® SportsCentar [~)
(I) Entertainment Tonight
0 (J) People's Court
IE I!]) MacNel1/ Lehrer
NawsHour [1 :00)
·
~ Newo
I!)) Moneyline Current

1966 Chfllty, 17,000 aetual
mill!ll. 2 door sedan. 1983 Chevy
lruck , 304-675 -6143 after

GAM I

four scrambled words below to form four simple words

......;..T...:.:R;.;I:....;..D...:.
Y...--11

fi, Surfer Magazine (AI

.

WOlD

~

111 112l

&lt;Il U

614-992-8692.

73

(I) ~

York. [0:30)
11!1 Facts of ~lie
Ell mOne Day at a nme
6:05 (II Allee
6:30 I) (2) cr5) NBC Nl~htly News

1978 Pontiac Phoenix . Motor
and body not good. Good tires .
Many other good p&amp;rts. t100.

72

0

a Fox

anchored live from New

1983 Ford LTO II, PS, PB. AC . 4
door, t3,000. ·1979 Ford Pinto
. stltlon wagon, good condit;on,
new ty-rod ends, ti&amp;O. 1977
Ford Granade, t450. Alii•
Chalm•• trector with belly
mower. Call614-441-2644, 12
PM to 1 PM or? AM to8 :30 in
the mornings.

76

'
, Groom

7398.

676-1460.

8303.

~lko

r- trs"

T~~~:~:~' S© "-~ lA- ~
_ _ _ _...:;__:; Ed ited by CLAY R. POLLAN
0 Reorronge leners of the
L

IE Dr. Who
I!]) Square One TV l;l
cr1J ShowBiz Today News of
the entertainment world Is

1982 2800 cc engine &amp; auto.
tran1. 1979 Plymouth Arrow
t ruck, 21500 c c, 6 apeed, run1
good, rough bo~ . 1987 Hond1
700 cc lnt..-cept.-. 1980 Herltrt
1000 cc Sportatar. Many new
cycle pans S. ace. Stapl•on's
Cycla. Eureka Stir Aoute. Box
188-A , Gallipolis. 814 - 266-

Pets for Sale

0322.

U Haul truckl and traders for
rent, 304·675· 7421·.

3 Crafl Books (value $8.8?)
when you order one ol the
$2.95 tooks lisled below.

Callahan' • Uaal Tire Shop. Over
1.0001irea, tize112, 13, 14, 16,
18, 16.6 . 8 mil• out At. 218 .
Call614-266-6261 .

7993.

SURPLUS ARMY . DENIM .
RENTAL , CARHART CLO ·
THING . Original armv camouflage, H. 0 . " Sam" Som•
rv l lle 'a, Old Rt . 21
East-Ravenswood. Frl, Sat , Sun,
noon · 8 :00pm. 304-273-6856.
Insulated camoufltga coverall t~
82&amp; .00 . Black -Wtlite anow
c amouflage.

J(

se

For Lease

(2) (J)

cr5J News

448-6679.

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

•

@ Sports~ook (T)

CAPTAIN EASY

1916 Pontiac 8000. Black
w / gray inter., auto.. air, 4 cyl.
t6300. Cell 614 -3B8-9631 or

2903.

HARVEST

0

tieJ.T '{E'At::.

1986 Ch8Vrolet Cavali• Stationwagon. Auto., air, red, black
inlerlor. Nicet t3800. Ca113889631 or 446-667B .

All Christmu Trees 812 .. Come
earty befqre cold weMher, leg
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile &amp;bove Maaon
on Hanging Rock Rd . 304-7736371 or 882 -2888 .

Read the
CLASSIFIED RDS

6:00 rn Crazy

~/.}&amp;

9831 ... 448-8679.

MON .• DEC. 28
EVENING

"'---r b~~~~bS

1983 Ford EKort. 4 dr.. auto ..
air cond. t2300. Caiii14· 38B·

54 Mise , Merchandise
COYNTRY MOBIL E Home Park.
Rou te 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental t railes:,s. Call 814·992·

•

TOM&amp;! %€

tF-lll~'( e£r
CHI'!\STMAS

388·9831 .

Modern 1 BR apart~ent ~ Cill
614 -446-0390.

Upsta irs unfurnished apartment.
Carpeted. UtilltiM paid . No
children or pels. Call 614-44616 37 .
.

tO~ Io$

1984 Trtnl AM . Blue, auto., air,
T-top , V8 . t7900. Call 614-

Furni1hed: 4 rOoms &amp; bath.
Clean. No pets. Adults only. Ret,
&amp; dep. requ ired. Call 614-44516 19.

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK·
SON ESTATES. 636 Jackson
Pike from $183 a mo. Walk to
shop and movies. 61 4-446·
3997. E.O.H.

I. ~T C,A,W-; 10
MD DIDN'T ~D

814-448-8179.

Oownlown- Modern 1 BR ••
complete kitchen , c•pwt. air.
electric heat. Call 614-446"
43B3-deys, 448-0139-even . 6
weekends.

Television
Viewing

I'MLI'5THJf:&gt; ~V~Glle""'

1984 Cam•o Z 28. Black. auto ..
eir; VB. Sh•pl t7400. Call

Nice 1 BR . apt. Ne• HMC. No
pet.. Stove, refrig., drapl!ll.
$226 a mo. Ref. required. Call
614-446 -4782.

2 BR . apt. Stove &amp; refrig.
furnished . Near Go Mert. Call
614 -446-7026 .

BORN LOSER

8594.

Furni sh&amp;d apt. next to library.
One proftnional adutt only.
Parking. Catl 614 -446-0338 .

Furnished upstairs- 1 BR . Utili·
t ies paid . 8210 a mo. Dep. 94
locust St. Call 614-446-1340
or 446 -3870 .

Auto's For Sale

The Daily... Sentinet-Page9
. .
..
...

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

now. f8600. Call 814-448-

675-5104.

Reader Mail

''

~MIN!&gt; ~Nil

Apu . Call 304-676-7738

Bo• 4000, Nites M I , 49120. ~
4000 Print Name. Address,
Ztp. Slle, Paltern Number.
' '

WDUt.Cl

Monday, December 28, 1987

1988 Oldl Firetua. Auto. , AM ·
FM-Cau, air, 18,000mi1M. llka

)t&gt;OR t.AUI'IDR'f IS~ W!ltl:!e' ?
1H10 a.f HAIR. OM '#.. WfHE~
Cwti'J up 01! 1!. E'f.IUI 1'/1\t::Nf.

2 BR , apts. 6 clout., kitchenappl. furniahed, Washer-Dryer
hook-up. ww carput, newlry
pa inted, deck. Ragencv. Inc.

Each pall ern $3,25 plus
75~ postage/ handling.
,NY &amp; M1 resKienls add gles Ia. I
Send to :

'I

71

•'·

Apartment
for Rent

Renewty redecorated
. VeryGallinice
.apartments
in downtown
polis. 1 S. 2 SR .- unfurnished.
second floor, from $175-8225.
Dep. &amp; ref•ences required . Call
eve. 614-446 -2325 or 4484249.

•.

December 28. 1987

t'omeroy- Middleport. Ohio

YOUR

�Monday, December' 28. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

"HOMEIAMK

Ohio I.ottery

FOR

·HOME PEOPLE"

·UstD Clllt •

I[ICAft

unoeus -

ME·MBER FDtt

~

!. . .

'*

Patriots
defeat Miami

Daily Number

829
Clearing tonight. Low b&lt;&gt;"
tween mid-teens. Sunny Wed·
nesday. Highs mld·30'

Pick 4
4703

~·-

'

oC(I!fi'UTe RADIATOR SERVICE
•MAJOII REPAtltS

!COIIPUTE 1'/HUI. "l.iGNMEiff
.. B"I.ANCI! .
•cc~neo

e

PAT Hiu FORD,~
BODY WoRK

·

j992-2196l ~~~=leE
'·

·

WELCQ£

''.,

461, 3RD AYE., MIDDI,fPOIT, OH,

"- ,-

,.,

•

•

•!I()St MAJO~ CREDIT C"ROI

'

Vol.38. No.161
Copyrighted 1987

MEIGS

By United Press Internatl~nal

A winter storm moved across
northern Ohio Monday, dumping .
up to four inches of snow in some
areas and causing hazardous
driving conditions that were
blamed for at least one fatal
accident.
The storm, which dumped as
much as two feet of snow in the
Rocky Mountains and Great
Plains. moved eastinto the Great
Lakes region and was expected
to reach the New England states .
The National Weather Service
issued a winter storm warning .
for the northern quarter of Ohio. ·
!'lith snow accumulations of up to
six Inches expected in some
areas.
Snow flurries and squalls were
expected to continue in Ohio's
Snow Belt east of Cleveland
through today, bringing add!·
· tiona! accumulations to that
area.
. Gusty north winds and colder
air were expected to cause

BOYS BA.SKETBALL
JAN. I-SYMMES VAllEY - HOME

GIRlS BASKETBALL
JAN. 7- SYMMES VAllEY- AWAY

SOUTHERN
BOYS BASKETBALL
DEC. 29-INDIAN YAllEl' SOUTH
At Ohio Uni••lity Convocation Contor

JAN. 2-ROSS SOUTHEASTERN- AWAY

PH. 992-2136

GIRlS BASKETBALL
,,;

:;

JAN. 4-IYGER CREEK - HOME
JAN. 7-SOUTHWESTERN - AWAY

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

!+

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

blowing and drifting ol snow.
was amputated . Mohamed Alu·
By early today, three to four mulla, 40. suffered head and
Inches of snow was on Ihe ground facial injuries and Mohamed
in northwestern and northeast· Mikkl. 27, facial injuries. All
ern Ohio, while north central three were in serious condition
Ohio had tess than two inches. early today.
Ashtabula County In northeast
Patrol officials charged A.A .
Ohio and In Williams County In Alhribi. 22. Syracuse. with a
the northwestern part of the state misdemeanor count of vehicular
both had four inches of snow.
homicide. He posted bond and
Less than an inch of snow was was scheduled to appear in
forecast today for the remainder Mansfield Municipal Court Jan.
of the state. where rain or drizzle 4.
fell Monday.
"The Highway Patrol said they
The Ohio Highway Patrol said were within the speed limit, but
a former Clevelander was killed · were traveling too fast for road
Monday when a van carrying 11 conditions," the spokeswoman
people from Syracuse, N.y.. said. No other ·vehicles were
went out of control on Interstate involved in the accident.
71 near Mansfield.
Around The Nation
The victim was identified as
A winter storm blamed for at
Bllal Kalaoun. 21. Syracuse.
least 40 deaths swept from the
A spokeswoman for Mansfield Midwest into the Northeast today
General Hospital said three of with heavy snow that has snarled
thevan'spassengerswereadmit· travel by land and air across
ted and four were treated and much of the nation in a weeklong
released.
onslaught.
An arm of Shjhaler Goizanl.l9.
;&gt;now by early today stretched

from Arkansas and Missouri
through the Mississippi Valley to
New York and Pennsylvania.
·Winter storm warnings for
heavy snow were posted from
lower Michigan, already buried
under nearly 10 inches to Cape
Cod~ Mass. Advisories 'for snow
stretched from Illinois to New
England south to to North
Carolina.
Meanwhile, a new Pacific
storm dumped heavy snow In
higher elevations of the West.
Fifteen inches of new snow piled
up at Mammoth Lakes Calif.
The Midwest storm d~mped as
much as 22 inches of snow in
Valentine, Neb., 20 inches in
southern Minnesota and 14
inches in southern Wisconsin
forcing General Mitchell Inter:
national Airport in Milwaukee to
close for two hours.
Road&amp; across the Midwest
were snowed under drifts 4 feet
high. as motorists huddled in
roadside cafes and motels to

Dec. 1-Southern ~ ........................... Away

De&lt;. 11-Belpre .................." ........... Home

Dec. 1-Eastern ................................ Home

Dec. 22-Wellston .......................... Away
Jan. 5-Federal Hocking ................. Away

Dec. 11-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. IS-Parkersburg Cat6. I6:15) ••• Away
Dec. 22-North Gallia (6:001 ............ Home
Jan. 8-Symmes VaHey -·················Home
Jan. 12-Kyger Creek ...................... Home

Jan. 8-Miller ................................... Home

Jan. 1S-Oak Hill ........................... Away

Jan. 12-Nelson•ille-York .........•.••• Away
jan. I 5-Vinton County ••...•••••••...••• Home
Jon. 19-Trimmble .......................... Home

Jan. 19-Federal Hocking ....... ~ ........ Home
Jan. 22 -Southern ...........................Home
Jan. 29-North Gallia .................... Away

Dec. 11-0ak Hiii ....................•••....• Home
Dec. 18-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Dec. 22-Kyger Creek .........•........... Away
Dec. 29-lndian Valley So•..• Convo. Center
Jan. 2-Southeastern ..................... Away
Jon. 8-Southwestern ....••••.•.•••••••••• Home
Jan. 12 -North Gollia ..................... Home
Jan. 1S -Symmes Valley .•••.••.••••••••• Home
Jan. 22-Eastern ............................ Away
Jan. 29-Kyger Creek •.••.••.•••••••••••••• Home
Jan. 30-Miller ................................. Home
FEb. S-Oak Hill ............................. Away
Feb. 6-Federol Hocking ................. Away
Feb. 12-Hannon Trace •.•....•.•••••.•.•• Home
Feb 19-Southwestern ...........•.•..... Away

Dec. 19-Logan ••••...•••••....••••••....•.••.. Home

Blower ·n·
·funeral ·
Hom.•.. "·

~h'

Jan. 22-Belpre .............................. Away

Feb. 2-Miller .................................. Away

Jan. 26-Aiexander ......................... Home
Jan. 30-Point Pleasant ••...•..•.......• Away

Feb. S-Hannon Trce ........................ Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern ................... Home
Feb. 16-Parkersburg Cath............ Awoy
Feb.19-Symmes Valley .................. Awoy
Feb. 20-Federal Hocking ............... Awoy

Feb. 2-Warren ............................... Away

MIDDlEPORT, OHIO

Feb. 5-Wellston .............................. Home
Feb. 9:_A thens •..................................•..• Home
Feb. 12-Fedenil Hocking •..•••...•••••. Home

614:992-5141

Dollar
•
rematns
down

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec~ 8-Trimble .......... ~ .................... Away

Dec. IS-Alexander ......................:. Away

.Coal•

By United Press International

DIGGING OUT - Two feet of snow on the
Denver side streets, where city snow plows have
yet to reach, made passage all bul impossible

GIRLS SCHEDULE

THE

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS BASKETBAlL

CENTRAL
TRUST

COMPANY
"YOUR FINANCIAL
CENTER"
97 N. 2ND STREET

MIDDLEPORT
'992-6661

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRlS BASKETBALL
Dec. 7-Southern ............................. Home

Dec. 10-Trimble .••....•..................•.• Home
Dec. 14-Belpre .............................. Away

D.ec. 10-Hannan Trace ................... Home

De,, 7-Eastern ............................... Away

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

Dec. 17 -Alexander ......................... Home
Dec. 23-Eastern ............................ Away

Dec. 17-Southwestern ................... Home
Dec. 19-Federal Hocking .............. Away
Dec. 21-North Gallio .................... Away

Dec.l 0-0ak Hill... .......................... Away
Dec. 14-North Gollia .................... Away
Dec. 17 -Hannon Trace ....... :.•...• ,•••• Home
Dec. 19-Aieonder •.......•..•..•.....•.•••• Away
Jon. 4-Kyger Creek ........................ Home
Jon. 7 -Southwestern .................... Away
Jon. 11-North Gallia •............•.••.••. Home
Jon. 14-Symmes Volley ................ Away
Jon. 20-Gollipolis ......................... Away
Jan. 21-Eastern ............................. Home
Jon. 28-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Feb. !-Southwestern ••••.••.•..•.•.•.••.. Home
Feb. 4-0ok Hiii •••.••..•.••....••...••.•..... Home
F;~_b. 11-Honnan Trace ..•.........•••••. Away
.feb. 13-Meigs .........••••...•:~-; .••....••••• Awoy

Jan. 4. Wellston .............................. Home
Jan. 7-.Federal Hocking .................. Home

Dec. 23-Meigs ................................ Home
Jan.
Jan.
Jan.
Jon.
Jan.
Feb.
Feb.
feb.
Feb.

Jan. 9-Miller ...................................Home
Jan. 14-Nelsonville-York ............... Home
Jan. IS-Vinton Count ................... Away
Jan. 21--Trimble ............................ Away

992-3007

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

7 -Symmes Valley .................. Away
11-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
14-0ak Hill ............................ Home
21-Southern .••••.••••...•••.....•.••• Away
28-North Galli a ..................... Home
1-Symmes Vlaley ••..•••••...•.....• Home
4-Honnon Trace .................... Away
11-Southweitern ....•...........•. Away
14· Federal Hocking ............... Home

.,

"There is no education taking of 2.552. About 75 hired substl·
lutes (scabs), many of whom
place In Meigs Local. and it is up
were
housed at Meigs Local High
to the Board of Education to
School.
y;ere present out of a
·recognize that schools should be
.
regular
staff
of 150.
closed until this strike is settled, "
"Out
of
the
few
students
who
do
Michael Wilfong. president of the
show up, many leave lmme·
Meigs Local Teachers Associa·
dlately. Reliable witnesses said ·
lion. said today.
In reference to the present that more than 100 students left
situation in the district which has the high school building yestersix out of nine schools open for day between 9 and 11 a.m.
"Parents know that teachers
classes being taught by substi·
are
not in school, and many have
tute teachers. Wilfong stated:
responded
by refusing to send
"Less than 50 percent of the
their
children.
They are hearing
students are being sent to school
things
such
as
children
watching
during the first five days schools
television
every
day
with no
have · been officially open and
teacher
present.
when they do show up. they are
"There are teacher aides head·
finding classrooms without regu · ing classes with no certified
lar teachers.
"It's tragic for this community teachers anywhere in the vicin·
to have the Meigs Local School ity, There also have been reports
Board and Administration ignore of children hanging out windows
the fact that instruction Is just with no one about to establish
control.
not taking place.
"To put it bluntly. there can be
"MLTA reports show that only
no
education going on in this
1.186 students 'reported to the
circus
atmosphere. Schools
buildings Monday. less than 50
should
be
closed and negotiations
percent of the normal enrollment

A GREAT PLACE

FOR BREAKfAST
~UNCH &amp; DINNER
Featuring ·
Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on a
Croissant Stuffed Baked '
Potatoes * Taco Salads
* Salad Bar
Real lee Cream

*

*

*

Dining • C,arry Out •
Drive•Thru
Sun.-Thurs. 6 A.l\4.·10 P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 6 A.M.-12 P.M.
698 W, Main Stroot. Pomeroy ·

992· 2057

should resume to end this crisis."
Meigs Local Statement
·The Meigs Local School Dis·
trict Board of Education today
took issue with statements made
by the district's striking teachers
in regard to money issues in the
current strike.
The statement reads:
"The unresolved money Issue
is more than just a disagreement
over dollars. It is true that the
final amount will be translated
into dollars, but the disagree·
men! now IS one in which it must
be determined how to arrive at
the dollars.
"The MLTA demands bonuses
of $1;ooo · $2,000 at the end of two
years. They say this amount Is
for going two years without a
raise. So, in effect, they expect
raises during the first two years
of the contract. They jlfst have to
walt on it.
"The ML TA Is also demanding
a raise of $3.000 on the base
salary for the third year of the
Continued on page 6

Board plans special meetings

·

*

early Monday morning. Two major snow storms
settled over the Rocky Mountain reglqn this past
weekend, leaving more than 24 Inches of snow in
!heir wake. (UPI)

Wilfong says schools should
be closed until strike is over

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1987-88 GIRLS. BASKETBALL

Dec. 7 -Vinton County ••••••••••..•...•..• Home

Jan. 25-Belpre ............................... Home

INSTALLMENT LOAI\IS

1 Section, 10 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio. Tuesday, December 29, 1987

BOYS SCHEDULE

;: Ra~lligl .

enttne

2&amp; Cents

• A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Blame weather on at least one Ohio fatality

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

EASTERN

POMIIO'f,, OH.

at y

•

!.

' DtGNITY ·AND-,'·
SERVICE 'ALWAYS"'

:&amp; MOZZLE LOAiliNG

~-·

!

1

and HUNTING SUPPLIES

PH.
992-2121
' .
·-"*"".

:i•: '

10. MUI.IERIIY AYE.'
POM,JOY, JlH• ..

,'.!"

r,&gt;

..

CALL 992·3,.81
'

j

'

992~2312
. ·' &lt;t' /'

.

·lit

·•

HOURS:

· Mori. thru Fri,
7:30 t~,m. to 5:00 p.m.
'·

J:30

~.~.t~~ ·,:m.

Specia I meeti~gs of the Meigs
Local Board of Education, sub·
ject to cancellation. were set for
4: 30 p.m. this evening through
Thursday, when the board met in
special session Monday evening,
In addltiori, the board hired
additional substitute teachers to
work In the six out of nine schools
of the district which were openeq
for clas.~es on Monday, Dec. 21,
after having been closed on Nov.
6 when the Meigs Local Teachers
Association went on strike.
Schools _are open for classes for
~

three days again this week chase additional video equippreceding the time off for the ment. tapes and materials.
observance of New Year 's. The
The board th en moved into
administration reported that stu· executive session . All five board
dent attendance at classes yes· members were present for the
terday was 55 percent.
special meeting.
During the open part of the · Meantime, this morning Supt.
meeting, the board passed a Dan E. Morris reported tha i'
resolution providing · that stu· everything went well at the six
dents participating .in athletic schools where classes are being
and·or open gym must be in held. Teachers of the district are
attendance of classes io practice obeying provisions of a restrain·
or to play athletics. A second lng order which allows them to
resolution was passed authorlZ· have two pickets at the entrance
lng the administration to pur· . of each school, it was reported .

The U.S. dollar remained almost .unchanged against the
Japanese yen in Tokyo today
with the help of the Bank of
Japan, which Intervened for the
second day in a row to prop up the
greenback. dealers said.
The central bank said the
dollar closed the day at a new
postwar low of 123.50 yen. down
0.05 yen from Monday's 123.55
yen which was the previous low.
After opening lower at 123.38
yen, the dollar sank to a low of
123.30 yen before the central
bank stepped in to support the
unit.
The dollar hit a high of 123.65
yen. The range compared with
Monday's narrow 123.30-95 yen
range.
The central trading rate stood
at 123.60 yen. unchanged from
Monday,
Trading was slow, with spot
turnover totaling $2.827 billion
against $5.584 billion Monday.
The dealers said market play.
ers stayed oil the sidelines,
waiting for a U.S . report on the
November trade balance.
White House spokesm•n Mar·
lin Fitzwater's statement that
the United States wants to see the
stabilization of the dollar helped
strengthen the greenback
against the yen. they said.
In New York Monday. the
dollar closed at 123.55 yen, down
from 126 yen on Thursday, the
first time it has closed below 125
yen in U.S. trading since World
War IL There was no currency
trading in New York on Friday,
Christmas Day. Gold and silver
rose.
The dollar ended at 1. 5990 West
German marks In New York
Monday, do.wn from 1.6285 Thurs·
day . Earlier in Frankfurt. it
closed at 1.5950 West German
marks, a post-World War II low
and down from 1. 6390 marks
Wednesday, the last day West
German banks traded before
Christmas.
Traveling with President Rea gan in Los Angeles, Fitzwater
said, •'The United States wants to
• see stablllty in the dollar. We feel
strongly that any decline or
excessive fluctuation could be
coun terprod uctlve."
Fitzwater was unable to explain why the dollar has dropped
in recent months, say.lngg, "It's
hard to discuss market forces.
It's pretty hard to predict."
He said Treasury Secretary
James Baker is In dally touch
with allied leaders over the
currency and added Reagan met
with Federal Reserve Board
Chairman Alan Greenspan last
week on monetary matters.
In recent months , many
market observers have quest!·
oned whether the president is
silently encoura~lng the curren·
cy's devaluation as a means of
reducing the U.S. trade deficit.
· ~,

ecape winter's,worst so far.
· about 25 percent of its scheduled
"I think all the motels were full arrivals and departures were
... , " Mary Parkhurst, owner of canceled. Only flurries lingered
Dunes Motel just east of Valen· in the area late Monday.
tine, Neb., said Monday. "I'm not
In the surrounding Chicago
sure but I know I was by 4 o'clock area, Lake Villa, IlL, was socked
in the afternoon."
with 13 inches of snow , much of it
For the last week. the massive falling before t)le early morning
and widespread storm system rush hour. Police across north·
has produced a combination of ern Illinois reported many traffic
torrential downpours that accidents because of the slick
flooded the mid-South and snow pavement.
and freezing rain from coast' tO·
Northern Iowa also was socked
coast.
with heavy snow, with accumula. In Chicago Monday, nearly 8 lions reaching 12 inches at
mches of heavy, wet snow burled Postville. The snow was coupled
O'Hare International Airport, with freezing rain and sleet that
forcing commercial airline carr!- fell most of Sunday, turning
ers to cancel many flights. By highways into sheets of lee.
Monday night, four runways
In Michigan, more than 9
were open at the world's busiest inches fell in Hastings. Slnches in
airport, with delays of up to two Kalamazoo and 7 inches in the
hours reported. An airport spo· Detroit area. The weather was
keswoman said air travel was not blamed for a 20-car pileup on U.S.
expected to return to normal 23 about 60 miles west of Detroit
until today.
during the afternoon. The chain·
Midway Airport on Chicago's reaction pileup closed the free·
South Side reported Monday that
ConUnued on page 6

Retired sergeant
kills seven people
RUSSELLVILLE, Ark. (Ul=&gt;I)
- A retired Air Force sergeant
who killed seven people went on
the rampage after one victim
spurned his romantic advances,
and his wife, four children and
granddaughter are missing and
feared dead in the massacre.
police said.
Authorities said Gene Sim·
mons killed at least five family
members at his backwoods
home. then shot to death two
people and wounded four in a
25-minute shooting spree through
four businesses Monday in the
Ozark Mountain town of
Russellville.
The violence ended at a freight
company where Pollee Chief
Herb Johnston quietly asked
Simmons, 47, to release a has·
!age. lay down his two .22 caliber
handguns and surrender.
"He opened the door and just
handed me the guns. That was
it," Johnston said. "He was very
calm."
Pollee said they still were
searching for six members of
Simmons' family who were miss·
ing from the home where the
bodies of five relatives were
found. Pope County Sheriff
James Bolin said authorities will
drag a small pond 200 feet from
Simmons· home for his missing
wife, four children and 18· to
22-month-old grandson.
.
"AI this point, I fear thai the
rest of his family have also been

murdered and the bodies done away with, " Bolin said.
Police said they were not sure
what triggered the killings, but
townspeople said the husky,
gray-bearded Simmons was ob·
sessed with a co-worker. Kathy
Kendrick. 24, who was killed and
was the first of six people shot In
Russellville. Kendrick , who
worked with Simmons a year ago
at the freight company, rejected
his repeated adl(ances. co·
workers said.
"He had an amorous lnfatua·
tion with her ... said Robert Wood,
a supervisor · at the freight
company.
Simmons, a retired Air Force
master sergeant who quit his job
as a convenience store clerk Dec.
18 saying his pay was too low.
was held at the Pope County Ja11
until arraignment today on
charges of capital murder and
attempted murder. He refused to
give a statement, police said.
Johnston said the shootings
were methodical and Simmons
changed !rom a black cowboy hat
to a white baseball cap during the
spree, apparently to try to
disguise himself.
"It wasn't random shooting,"
the police chief said. "He knew
exactly where he was going."
Simmons first opened fire in
Russellville Monday morning at
the Peel and Eddy law office.
where Kendrick was working as
Continued on page 6
·

==-=-=. .
.

_
::==-::"' ~...,....,

...

.,.

- .•.

SUSPECT ARRESTED -In Ru8SeUville, Ark., Monday, JWnald
Gene Simmons, 47, or Dover; Ark., at left, was arrested In a
shooting spree that left seven dead and four wounded In
Russellvllle and Dover. (l!PI)
,

4

'

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            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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