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Pag11 10-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaroy-Middlepori. Ohio

TUESI)AY
POMEROY - Sam and Nancy
. Davis, missionaries to Mexico,
will present a program ·on their'
work at ·7: 30 this evening at the
Calvary Pilgrim Challfl, k;lcated
on Route 143, one-balfmlleoffthe
Route 7 bypass.
CHESTER - Chester Town·
ship trustees will meet at 7:30
p.m. ·this evening at· the town
halL.
RACINE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM will meet .In regular
'· session 1)lesday for ~lectlon of
officers.

POMEROY -Boy scout Troop
249 will meet at 7 p.m. Wedries: ,
day at the American Legion hall
In Pomeroy. All boys, ages 11
through 13, Interested In scouting
are Invited to attend. ·
THURSDAY
RACINE - The American
Legion Auxiliary, Racine Post
602, will meet at 1 p.m. Thursday
at the hall.
POMEROY - Rock Springs
Grange will meet at 7:30 Thurs·
day ·night at the grange hall.
Keith Wood, game. protector, will
be the speaker.
·

-~-

RUTLAND - Rutland VIllage
Council meets Tuesday, 7 p.m. ,
civic center.
HARRlSONVILLE- Practice
for Harrlsonvllle Chapter, Order
of Eastern Star, has been
changed to Tuesday night followIng the regular meeting.

Family medicine:
By Edward Schreck, D.O.
Assistant Professor
of Family Medicine
Ohio University CoUege
of Osteopathic Medicine
Question: What's the ' difference
between
osteopathic
cine and
regular
medicine?medl·
Abswer: The answer to this
question Is not simple, but Jet's
look at some aspects of the
osteopathic approach to health
care.
Holistic medicine. the philo·
sophy that no one part oft he bod,y
c;1n malfunction without disturbIng the whole bod,y , is the basic
concept behind os teopathy.
Andrew Taylor Still, a Civil
War surgeon In the Union Army,
founded the discipline as a
profession distinct from other
healing arts, and started the first
osteopathic college at Kirksville,
Missouri, In 1892.
Still's philosophy . now followed by osteopathic physicians
throughout the world, 'was that
emphasis should be placed on the
relationship be tween the mu seu I·
oskeletal system and lntE!'nal
disease.
To do this, D.O.s use "osteopathic manipulative treatment" to
change the physiological state of
Internal organs . Osteopathic
physicians also use palpatory
diagnosis -touching the patient
and feeling lor abnormalities to detect disease In these organs
by noting subtle changes produced In the bod,y's structure.
Osteopathic manipulation Is
helpful in detecting and treating
many Illnesses, not just those of
the back or bones. But an
osteopathic doctor Is trained In
all accepted forms of medical
diagnosis and treatment, not just
manipulation.
He or she Is a complete
physician who can prescribe
drugs , perform surgery and care
for ali forms of Illness. D.O.s are
fully licensed to practice medicine and surgery in ali 50 states.
They take stringent state llcen~·
lng examinations, just as M.D.s
do.
Question: What sor t of education do csteopathlc doctors have?
Answer: Before applying for
admission to an osteopathic
medical school. students are
required to complete a bache·
lor's ct'egree from accreiltti&gt;d
rollege or university. ·
The medical education of a
D.O. takes another four years.
The first two years Include basic
training In medical biology and .
simulated clinical practice In a
classroom setting. In the third
and fourth years, students obtain
experience with patients at hospitals and outpat.ient care
fac IItties.
After receiving the D.O. de·
gree, the osteopathic physician
usually co mpletes a one-yea r
lntermhlp. Most states, In fact ,

Melissa Wells, freshman, most lmpreved flag
corps member; Tina )\lssell, a junior, outstanding
.majorette; . Melissa Hensley, a Junior, auxUiary
spirit award; Amanda Blssell,a frMhman,
auxUIIary leadership, · back, Lorre Osborne,
seventh grader, most improved mardler; .
Heather Flnlaw, sophomore, hand leadership;
David Rice, sophomore, band spirit; Susie Kimes,
eight grade, most Improved musician.

·What is osteopathy?
require M.D.s and D.Q.s to have
a one·year hos pital-based Intership before tbey can be licensed
to practice. If an osteopathic
physician chooses to be a speciallst, one to five years of additional

WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter Ill RAM and Bosworth Council 46 R&amp;SM will meet Wednesday In regular session.

.

For more Information about
the profession of osteopathic
medicine or the osteopathic
medi ca l school in Ohio, write to
the Office of Communication, 234
Grosvenor Hall, Ohio University

REEDSVILLE - Revival at
Reedsville United Methodist
Church through Nov. 15; special
singing; 7:30p.m. services, John
Gibson evangelist.
•
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
Beta Chapter of E1eta Sigma Phi
Sorority will meet Thursday,
7:30 p.m., at ' the Episcopal
Church Parish House In
Pomeroy.

clothing day . for low·lncdme
persons will be Thursday, 9 a.m.
to noqn, at tbe old high schogj
building ln Cheshire. '

-~-

FWDAY
POMEROY - Return Jonii·
thait Meigs Chapter, Daugbter,ll
of tl)e American Revolution. wll,l
meet frld,ay, at 1:30 p.m.at tbe
home of Mrs . Ronald Reyoolds,
Prospective members and gg•
ests are Invited to attend.
..u

Served with whipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitutes except btwrap . with addi-

State Allte
l~&gt;tli • •

By PAM MURPHY
United Press International
The nation's Veterans Day
parades and ceremonies honored
those who defended the country
In battles . :•you never want to
remembe r, but you never want to
forget " and paid special tribute
to women, gays and those miss·
lng In action.
President Reagan Issued a
message Tuesday saying: "Our
veterans ... are the heroes a mong
us. On this Veterans Da y, le t us
pa y them tribute. And let us
resolve to live up to their
example."
.
·
In· Atlanta, a parade was held
in honor of women who served In
the military, mostly durtng
World War II, and some felt the
recognition wwas long overdue.
"I'm an ex-Marine and the
daughter of a World War II
woman veteran. " said S¥.san
Hendrickson , a parade specta·
tor. "I wish my mother could be
here toda y. It's raining but It's
not dampening my spirits. I
guess it was a long time coming
... but I feel terrific."
At a traditlqnai parade in ·

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Mfr's. suggested pricing basad oo full-price brands.

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
Causes Lung Cancer. Heart Disease
Emphysema, And May Complicate Pr,egnancy:

Ki ngs: 10mg "Jar;' 0.8 mg nicotine- tOO's: 12 mg "tar;' 0.9mg nicotine av. percigaraua by FTC matliod.

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version of the bill passed In early September, and
send It to .the conference committee, which has
gotten a head start. :
One part of the bill penalizes frivolous lawsuits,
encourages out-of·court settlements .and changes
the v;ay damages are awarded by discounting
recovery from collateral sources and limiting
awards lor fulure and non-economic losses.
The other part gives the Ohio Department of ·
Insurance additional tools to regulate the
insurance industry, and requires Insurers to
furnish detailed Information on their claims,
payouts and reserves.
The·· Industry and Its adversaries worked out
compromises on most . of the House·passed
language, Including a major stlckhig point on how

Independent agents may be terminated.
They split their differences on maximum civil
penalty for violation of the' fair practices law,
making It $3,500 per violation with a llmll of
$35,000 for aggregate vlolatiOQS. Existing crlml ·
nal penalties will be kept.
Rep. Michael P. Stlnzlano·,- D·Columbus,
chairman qftbe House Insurance Committee, and
Sen. David L. Hobson, R-Sprlngfleld, negotiated
parts of the insurance portion.
They agreed to allow the state Insurance
commissioner t() issue emergency cease and
desist orders against harmful Insurance company
practices.
Stlnzlano and Hobson also agreed oo language. . ·
requiring advance notice, In certain cases, of an

Multi~dia

25 Cents

Inc . Newspaper

insurance company's Intent not to renew a policy.
They said nine states have such requirements .
Stlnziano and Hobson said that despite the
industry's complaints It cannot furnish advance
notice, small businesses need such ootice so they
can. seek other coverage.
The Senate Is scheduled to vote Thursday on
legislation reducing the state personallncometax
rates across the board by 8.8 percent to offset
revenue to be gained from the elimination of ·
certain federal tax exemptions.
The Senate also has pled~ed to approve
House· passed bills expanding real estate tax
relief for low -Income senior citizens and provld·
ing a state Income tax cre(llt lor child and.adult
day care.

French
hostage
reported
deceased
and the American public to honor the nation's veterans by
maintaining the military strength needed "to stay free and at
peace." Here In Melr;s County, members of Drew Webster Post ill
of the American Legion commemorated Veterans Day from the
steps of the courthouse In Pomeroy,

SOLEMN OBSERVANCE - All across America yesterday,
small groups and large groups assembled lo oommemorate
Veterans Day. In remarks at Arlington National Cemetery In
Virginia, Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger urged Congress
Providence, R.l., a VIetnam
veteran, who wished to remain
anonymous , said: " This is a day
to salute us . We '!Jelieved In this
country . We fought for lt . You
never want to remember, but you
never want to ·lorget. "
; .The parade began at City Hall
and concluded at the Wotld War I
monument In Memorial Square
at precisely 11:11 a.m., the
moment the Nov . 11 , 1918, armlst·
ice ending World War I was
signed In Complegne , France .
Armistice Day became Veterans
Day In 1954.
In New York, for the first time,

A Korean War vetE!'al, Cha·
homosexual veterans joined the
American Legion parade and rles Hyder. fasted In front of the
marched In the rold, driving rain White House to communicate his
under· their own banner. John · "profound rejection oft hat In tim·
Paine, a memrer of the Gay !dating and growing nuclear
·
Veterans Association, missed the threat."
About
a
half
-mile
away,
Brig. '
parade because he ran aft'er an
antagonist wbo had slasted the Gen. Patrick Brady, chief of staff
banner with a knife and held him of the 1st Army, ended rains wept
ceremonies at the Vietnam Vete·
until pollee officers arrived .
Still, Paine said, It was "a rans Memorial by inserti ng a
single red rose Into a 15-by-:!5 foot
fantastic day for all veterans."
Protesters briefly Interrupted flag of flowers on top of the black
ceremonies alter tbe parade to granite structure. Each of the
decry the Vietnam War and 58,132 flowers tucked Into tte flag
attack Veterans Day as a glorlll· represented tbe VIetnam War
dead and missing.
cation of battle.

· The missing In actio n In
Southeast Asia were not forgot ·
ten . There were protests and
arrests at the memorial over the
MIA issue on the eve of Ve terans
Day, and actor Chuck Norris,
who atlended cerernonles Tues·
day at the memorial. said:
"We've got to get these people
back home. Whether they 're
alive or they're dead, let's get
them back home. That's all that
.
rna tters."
In Connecticut , 108 towns flew
black flags next to stars and
stripes to honor the missing from
the Vietnam War.

Union, civic leaders will fight Goodyear takeover
i

'I

A

Nation
salutes
veterans

992-6687

I

•.•.,.

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, November 12. 1986

.

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

(ROW'S FAMILJ RESTAURANT
POMEROY, OH.

~.~ ·

•

3 Sections. 20 Pages

Vol.36. No.134
, Copvrighted 1986

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPII - The Ohio General
Assembly was to reconvene today for a two-week
post-election session finishing business for'l986.
The Senate and House were to meet at 1:30 p.m.
Meanwhile, a Senate-House conference com·
mlttee met Tuesday and Informally ironed out '
most of the Insurance language In a civil justice
and Insurance reform bill . .
The six-member panel was to continue today to
amend the House-pa~sed version of the leglsla·
tion, which Is designed to provide commercial
!lability insurance at reasonable cost to bus!·
nesses and local governments.
The Senate still inust officially reject the House

PH. 992 •5u 2

. '

2881

Partly cloudy tonight, with
a &lt;hance ofsnow flurries and a
low between 20 and :M. Mostly
sunny Thursday, with highs
near 30. The probability of
prec ipitation Is ~ percent
lonlgbt and near zero Thurs·
day.

Panel irons out refonn measure's language

0 Phi lip Morris Inc. 1986

j

Pa~Q ~

298
PICK-4

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after the Internship. s·~n~ec=e=ss=a~ry~-Co~l~le:g~e~o~f~O~st~eo~p~at~h~lc~M=ed~l~c~ln~e~,
Athens , Ohio 45701.

..

'Daily .N umber

•

Bazaar
,
. HA.RRISONVIJ..LE - . Harrl·
sonvUle Brownie Troop 1116 wtjl.
have a Cbr~tmas bazaar at II\!!
Athens Mall Friday, Nov.14 and
15, from 9 a.m to 5 p.m.
•~

FOR JUST

$3•25

Wahama
·will
'
face Pineville
in playoff.s
-

CHESHIRE - Gallla-Melgs
Community Action Agency 's free

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY .
DINING ROOM ONLY

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Tuesday, November 11. 1988

·community
caler,.d4r
/area happenings
.
.

SPECIAL HONORS- These eight memrers of
the Eastern High School Marchio&amp; Band were
· presented special engraved plaques Friday nlr;ht
when a banquet was hel!l for mardllng band
members. The band has earned a place In !tate
CGmpetitlon and tbe band received a rating of
excellent. William Hall Is the new director.
Pictured with their awards are: .front, from left,

'

•

. AKRON IUP!) - Civic and
.union leaders. ready to tackle the
Reagan administration to save
Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co.,
say the threatened takeover of
Goodyear is comparable to rape
and " an act of war."
Representatives of 36 United
Rubber Workers locals in the
United States and Canada ga·
thcred In Akron Tuesday to
discuss ways of combating a
Goodyear takeover attempt by
British -French industriali st
James Goldsmith.
In a n Oct. 31 filing with the
Securities and Exchange Com-

mission, Goldsmith claimed to
have acquired at least 11.5
percent of Goodyear's stock.
The union leaders, joined by
local politicians, vowed to seek
nationwide support to force fed ·
era! protection for Goodyear .
. Goodyear Chairman Robert E.
Mercer told the emotionally
charged crowd that government
regulation often delays friendly
mergers for months, yei hostile
takedvers are tr ~ated with
Indifference.
"It can re months before a
merger betwee n consenting
adults can take place, but In the

case of a hostile takeover, there moral - and one that , II it were cr even for the country as a
Is nothing done, really," he said. carried out by a nallen sta te, wbole."
"We must bring press ure to
"The · government Investigates would be viewed as an act of
and legislates marriage, but war," hesald. "The thr eat to this bear on (memrers of) the Rea·
gan administration to use some
totally Ignores rape."
.. country is just as great."
of
the legislative power they
Akron Mayor Tom Sawyer,
Sawyer,.who was to appear on
recently elected to Congress, the CBS Morning News today ID already have," said Selrerllng, a
said he ~ organizing a nation· discuss the takeover attempt, former Goodyear employee
wide teleconference scheduled called It an ·~exinrt of profit" whose grandfather founded the
for 2 p.m. Thursday, by which he that would contribute to the company. "We must demand
action now by the administration
hope s to reach city, county, state foreign trade Imbalance.
Rep. John Seiberling, D·Ohlo, to block this takeover and others
and federal leaders to achieve a .
broad·based pressure on the addressed the group by tele· like It"
Rea~an administration.
phone !rom Was hington , calling . Mercer, Sawyer and URW
. "I view this (takeover bid) as a Goldsmith a foreign corporate leaders agreed that the economic
predatory act - one that Is raider "who has no co ncern for Impact of a Goodyear takeover
obscene, despicable and lm· the employees. the communities, would be far-reaching.

White House briefing laWmakers on~ release deal
WASHINGTON (UP)) - Ad·
ministration briefings to select
members of Congress a bout a
secret deal with Iran to free
American · hostages have not
strayed far from President Rea·
gart's decision not to divulge
details of the operation, an
administration official said.
The official, sp!'aklng on condl·
tlon of anonymity , said Tuesda y
that national security adviser
John Poindexter had Informed
key members of Congress about
the hostage deal,, but In general
terms only, and stressed a need
lor continued secrecy in the
matter.
The New York Times reported.
today that Reagan has decided to
persevere with Iranian contacts
lor at least another week In the
lace of criticism, because he was
advised there Is still some hope ·
that Americans Terry Anderson
and Thomas Sutherland may be
freed soon by the pro-Iranian
group holding them.
Reagan , who remained Inside
th~ White House during Veterans
Day ceremonies, has no lmme·
diate plans to speak publicly. He
plans to meet Saturday with
British Prime Minister Margaret
Thatcher at Camp David, Md.,

I rim In exchan~e for the bostages
held by the pro-Iranian Islamic
Jihad In Lebanon.
"IPolridexter) explained that
appropriate congressional com·
mlttees will be briefed In full
later," the administration off!.
clal said. " But at present', the
very sensitive nature of the
channels being used prevents us
from providing details.
"The welfare of the hostages,
as well as our efforts to free
them, would be jeopanlzed If
what we told Congress were to
become public," he added .
In addition to Anderson and
Sutherland, Americans believed
being be ld hostage In Belru t
Include Joseph Clclpplo, Frank
Reed ·and Edward Austin Tracy.
Another Amer.lcan, William
Buckley, was reported killed by
his captors last year.
Congressional leaders have
where they are expected to
criticized
tbe administration's
review results of the "Ic'eland
failure
to
keep
key commlltees
summit and allied attemptS to
Informed of the rontacts that led ,
curb terrorism •
to last week's 'release of bostage '
The Poindexter briefings were
David
Jacobsen after 17 months
aimed at putting a lid on a furor
In
captlv
lty.
touched off by. dl~losures, first
to~ continued
The
argument
In a pro-Syrlan magazine and .
secrecy,
and
the
lmpllclt
plea lor
then from the Iranian governCongress not to Interfere, came
ment , that the administration
one day after Reagan
offered military hardware to
. . met with

I

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top advisers to assess fallout
!rom revelations abou t the IranIan dealings.
One result of that meeting was
a presidential admonition,
echoed by White House spokes·
man Lrrry Speakes, that "speculative stories" of behind-the·
scenes moves to free the
hostages "may put them and
others at risk."
But while tre exposure of a
secret visit to Tehran by former
national security adviser Rorer!
McFarlane brought the opera·
tlon to a temporary halt, officials
Indicated the Iranian connection
could still prove useful If tte
current uproar subsides.
Administration officials said
Poindexter did· not mention the
McFarlane, mission In briefings
to Congress about the White
House program, which had met
with objections from Secretary
of State George Shultz and
Defense Secretary Caspar
. Welnrer.ger.
They also Insisted the dec~lon
to run the operation out of the
National Security Council designed for maximum secrecy
- Instead of out of the CIA was
not Intended to bypass req u(re·
ments that Congress be Informed
I

I.

of CIA activities .
"Nothing ha s been done lor the
purpose of circumventing Congress," one official asserted .
"All appropriate agencl~s have
ll?en Involved In the efforts to
tree the hostages."
But The New York Times also
reported today that White House
counsel Peter Walllson was not
consulted In thf operation and
ha s begun In the last lew days an
examination Into the legal Issues
Involved In the arms· for ·
hostages deal.
His questions Include whether
arms shipments to Iran would
violate the Arms Export Control
Act or an executive order ban·
nlng such shipments that was
Issued In 1979 by Presjdent
Carter after the SEizure of the
U.S. Embassy In ·Tehran -and
was rimej&gt;ed by Reagan.
lrt addition, Reagan has vowed
on repeated occasions to neither
bargain with terrorists nor give
In to demands concerning re lease of the hostages In Lebanon.
One unidentified White House
offlclill told the Times that
Attorney General Edwin Meese
had provided a legal opinion
's upporting the Iranian
q&gt;er ~tion.

PARIS !UP)) - One of two
Frenchmen freed unharmed by
Le banese militant s In Beirut said
he was told another French
hostage. Michel Seurat, died a
natural death in Lebanon as a
captive of the pro-Iranian Is·
Iamie Jihad.
Marcel Coudari, 55, who ar·
rived in Paris from Damascus,
Syria, Tuesday night with Ca· .
mille Sonta~. 85, expressed op·
tlmlsm more hostages In Beirut
would be freed soon.
·
"I can tell you there are things
that are gqing to happen soon,"
he said . .Coudarl said he was told
that Seurat, who the Islamic
Jihad said It executed March 5 to
protest French expulsions of two
Iraqi dissidents , was dead . The
group produced a picture of him
at the ttme but his body has never
been recovered.
"According to what I learmid
from an official source, a credl·
ble source, Michel Seurat Indeed
died a natural de ath," Coudari
said. There was no Immediate
comment from the' government.
Seurat. 39, a Belrut·b·ased
sociologist. was kidnapped May
22, 1985, with French journalist
Jean-Paul Kauffmann, wiD re·
mains a hostage along with two
French diplomats and two
memll?rs of a French television
crew.
Asked If he was held with any of
seven American hostages. Cou:
darlsald, "Yes, buticouldn 'tsee .
them . I don't know who tbey
were. I couldn't talk to them."
The two men, smiling and
bear ded, appeared in good health
on their arrival. Sontag was
swept Into the arms of his wile,
Blanche, 84 , on tte airport
tarmac . He had been held cap·
tlve six months , Coudarl nine.
Prime Minister ,Jacques
Chlrac, who met ihem at · the
plane, told reporters the govern·
ment "Is do ing all It can" to
obtaln the release of more
hostages.
"I would like to thank tho se
wiD permitted this llll?rat ion,
Including th&lt;.' gover nme nt s. the
authorities of Syria . Saudi Ara·
bla and Algeria. " Ch lrac said .
It was the first time Saudi
Arabia had b?en mentioned a~ an
Intermediary In the hostage
cr~ls and Chi rae did not ex plain
how Riyadh helped .
·
French Foreign Minister Jean·
Bernard Ra imond said Tuesda y
"no deal" was struck with Syria
for Its help In the freedom for the
Frenchmen and. said France had
engaged In no negotiation.~ with
terrorists .
When American David Ja·
cobsl!lll\'as frel'd Nov . 2, reports
emerged that the United States
was furn is hing military spare
parts to Iran in exchange lor Its
help In seeking frledom fo r
American hostages.
.
Syrian Foreign Minister Farouk AI Sharaa told a Damascus
news conference French policies
In the Middle East had played an
Important role in securing the
releases and Damascus "will
continue efforts to secure the
freedom of foreign hostages held
In Lebanon."

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Commentary
Ill C~urt Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
.DEVQTED TO THE INTEREsTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~

l:!:m~ I"Tl---'---r'I"T"''!5!do =

:~v

&lt;,

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
AssL•tant Publisher/ Conlroller

So then. what have we learned
It:om 'the recent experienCP at the
polls? Waal. said the wise I'll art ·
reflecting on it all - nothing.
That 's right, nothing. Deomocracv. the late Max Eastman
poin ted out. is most valuable as a
nega tive instrument. liM;' oppor-

tunity' for the. voters to tell their terms of voters. who didn't go to
gQvernors to get out of town '¥!d t_he polls' motivated bv whom
send In a new set of people: No they wish to see organizin g the
such thing was done laSt 'lUes- Senate. They went .to the polls to
day. A shift of 10 p'ercent in the vote for this man or the othe r,
Senate has melodramatic crinse· and it happened that the sum
quences in terms of Senate ·total of votes for Democratic
·leadership. but none at all In senators exceeded voters for

' A MEMBER of The United Press Interna tional, Inland·Datly Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LETTERS OF OP INIO N ar~ welcome. Th ey should bE&gt; less tha n 300 words
long. Alll cnprs l\_.r esu bject,toed iting and mu st be signEd with name, addr ess and
telephone. number. No Un s.ignOO. letrers wlll be- published. Letters should be In
goOd tastt&gt;, add ressing Issues, nol personalities.
'

The Lighter Si.de

· Another election

.

.

Wha t th 0 world ma y need now is some ~ind of term that would size
yp 'the economic si tuation the way "negal iw" appears to describe
~urrent domes tic poli tica l condillom .
: Ma_,. ! 'suggest "prosperscssion?"
• Thai ~uphem i s m is what comes of conjoining " prosperit y,"
mea ning a fina ncially sucrrs sfu I condition. with its opposite number.
" depress ion ," meaning a pPr iod during which all the eeonomic
indi('ator., decline.
Or maybe prospersess ion sounds to yo u a bit too much like
stagflation.
.
. If so. _,·ou co uld be groping for a nPw euphemism more like
· n ega ti v~. " In whi ch case. I would sugges t "contradictory"
e.tonomir!' .

·

·

· On second 1hough!. that might not cover the situation either. But if
you arc losing money a II the wo y to the bank. don 't blame me. Blame
_vour friendly neighborhood politician .

Letters to the Editor
'

"

,.

Republican sena\Ql'S. Adding up to?'
But here is what pundits will
·try (are trying) .to makeofit ; The
very _day after the elect ion,
Democrat.ic front -runner Gary
Han had a piece ready ~or The
New· York Times, In a sin gle
-paragraph he lists the com- :
plaints of the people, whom he
·tacitly identifies as backers of
the Democratic Pany. "First .
we must ac know) edge the dark
side of Reaganm:nics' legacy: ,·
California's Silicon and Pennsylvania' s Monongahela valleys are
both reeling from a quadrupled
t~ade debt. Steel ernployinen t
has been cut to half. Farm .
fo rec losures areal tecbrdlevels . ·
The march toward energy Inde pendence is in chaotic retreat,
with net oil imports upli pe·cent
in one year. Bulging bank debts
threaten Latin American democ rac ies and U.S. fin an ~i a l in stitutions from the oil patch to ·the ,
Farm Belt ."
,
So there are problems. Our
high -tec h people are losing out in
their romp~tilive struggle with
South Korean s an d J apanese.
Well. Reaganomics is as much to
bl arne for that as Ha'lley's comet .
The problem of American com· .
pel ilion is a problem of productivity. Produclivitv Is hampered
bv over hi' ad. Over hNd Is wha t
h·appens when thPrr is a substan - ·
tial differrnCP between the cost ; ·
of hiring labor and t hr earnings ·

Twenty area high school footFirst' Team Defensive honors
ball players in three area confer· werit. to Todd Holstein , North
ences .(Trl-Valley, Southeastern Gallia, Tim GordOJI, · Kyger
and Southern V&lt;tlley) were · Creek. Woody Foster. Symmes
na'f\ed to the 1986 Class .'), AA Valley, Chris Hampton, Southwand AAA All-District Teams estern and Donnie Craft,
Tuesday by • the . Associated Symmes Valley.
•
Press.
· Southern's Scott Burris was
In AA circles, Meigs' J .. R. named to the Second Team
Kitchen and Huey Eason were· Deiense by the AP. '
named to the jf'irst- .Team Of.
In Class /).AA, !:)EOAL chamfense. Jason Bush was named ro pion Gallipolis landed lour playthe First Team Defense.
ers on the First Team Offense.
Chris Newberry, Belpre, was and Defense, anq Brent Saumjers
voted AA l, lneman of the Year. ·.was named District Coach-of-.
Oak_ Hill's Mike Hale was the·Year.
.named Second Team Offense
Andy Howard, was nam!!(l
All-District. ·
First Teani Defense and the
In Class A: Hannan Trace's Distrlct,'s "Lineman . of th~
Steve Jarrell was named First Year".
• Team All -District Defense.
Bo Smith and Kirk Jackson
F.irs t Team Offense honors
were named 'First Team Dewent to:
fense. First team offensive
Steve MeA vena. North Gallla:
honors went to Ga~Harrison. _
Bert Aldridge, Symmes Valley;
Tom Waugh, Kyger Creek ; Ri chard Hurt, North Gallia and
Andy Haislop, Squthwestern.
.

WASHINGTON - American
agriculture ls . going through a
ter rible time, as droughts. floods
a-nd foreclosures destro y
hundreds of farm families. And
in Washington , the Agriculture
Department Is so short of monev
it had to order manageme~l
personnel to "volunteer" for
menial manual labor like run ning .elevators and pushing
freight doll ies.
Some of the paper shufflers
wPre not happy over their callu sthreatening temporary duty as
stock boys. But their boss ex plained it wa s necessary because ·
I here was no money left to have
hired help do the ,io.b. Her e's the
heart-wringing story:
The depart ment hired a pri·
vale contractor to consolidate its
rrferenCP librarv branch in
downtown Was hi~gton with the
main library in nearby Bellsville . Md . But the $70.000 bud . geled for the movewasn ' tenough
· to cover packing the books and
journals In Washington and putting them on the shelves in
Beltsvi ll e.
In a memo obtained bv our
associate Corky Johnson. the
chief of the 'public services
divisio n. Keith Rus sell. ex plained the situation: "Origl, nal ly, we had plan ned for the
entire project to be done bv
contractors. The cost, howevEr,
has made that impossible. and
National Agricultural Library

staff will have to do part of the
Ul..STER NIGHTMARE: Relishift."
gious bigotry and three centuries
When the move began in June, ·of mutual hostility make an
library employees were initially early. peaceful solution to the
scheduled for eight hou'rs of book civil strife in Northren Ireland
pac king , But In September they unlikely , if n91impossible. Thi s is
were asked to ;·vl)lunteer" addi- the grim conclusion that our
tional time.
associate ·Jon Lee Anderson ha s
"Persons who volunteered to reac hed after an intensive inveshelp' In June/ July. but could not tigation , in which he interviewed
be scheduled for various reasons,
dozens of Catholics and Protes twill be contacted first," another ants. militants and lnnoCPnt
Russell memo said, "but this civ Ill an s.
on ly amounts to about 10 percent
Most Americans have no idea
of the hours needed . . ConsP. of the degree to whi ch Ulster ha s
quent ly, we ask your assistance become an armed camp. Like
In lde;ntifying staff who are Berlin. it Is separatC'd by physiwilling to help and can be spared cal barriers: brick or metal walls
for four hours to help."
topped with barbed wir(' and
The amount of finger-pointing known, with unconscious Irony.
and buck · p~ssing this led to can as "peace lines, " separating the
be imagined. especially since the var ious Catholic and Protestant
tasks Included " operating the neighborhoods. Like Beirut.
freight elevator" and "pushing gangs of heavily armed militants
book trucks." One 'disgruntled _jealously guard the wretched.
employee complained that using bullel ·scarrf&gt;d urban battlemanagement-level employees ground . ready to terrorize or
for such common chores was even murderanyonerashenou gh
undignified 'and a "waste of to enter their 'turf who is
profess ional staff." But the ~uspected of loya lt y t9 the other
200.000 volumes had to be moved. side.
'Adding to the discontmt was
Only in downtown Belfast. ttl!'
the revelation t hat n0 one seemed beleaguered capital. do the two
to, know where the monev had sectarian factions mingle wi t h
di~ppeared to. Library acquisi- any degree of civility- and that
tions chief Victoria A. Reich only because downtown has a
assigned an employee to re- fenCPd "security perimeter " and
search the problem. "Her assign- a beavy -police presence. But ta xi
mentis to determine why we are service between lhr city center
out of money ." Reich explained and the neighborhoods Is rigidly
in a memo.
sectarian. The Irish Republican

'

'

'

HUEY EASON

SI':OTT BURRIS

'

Tigers favored to win -OAC 'cage title·-----------'--_.__ _._-:coLuMBus. Ohio (UP!) _
Wittenberg Is the choice of both
the Ohio Athletic Conference
c_oaches imdmembers oftheOAC
news media to win this year's
conference championship.

· The Tigers of •Coach .. Lar-ry
Hunter were the pick of eight of
the 'n ine league eoa0hes an,d
received~ points on the basis of ·
10 points for a first place vote,
n(ne for second, etc..

'

Wittenberg also got 20 of 28
first place votes In the media
.balloting and 228 of a possible 260
]Xlints.
Otter be ill finis bed second in
_ooth polls. The Cardinals re-

ceived the only other first place
vote from the coaches and 71
points and also got the otber six
first place votes fi··a m the media
and 212 points.

:
.
;
'
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3 DAYS ONLY

Nov. 13, 14, 1S
Thurs., .9·5
Friday 9-7
Sat. 9-4

8TH ANNUAL 1I 2 PRICE

DIAMOND REPRESENTATIVE SALE

Army !Catho licl and Ulster
Freedom Fighters (Protestanti
control their own taxi compan· .
ies. whi~h carry passengers to
and from their homes without
croosing into enemy territory.
Like ·· the Mafia . the underground paramilita ry organiza tions gel substantial income for
their&gt;' terroris t activities from
'legitimate enterprises. Tn Bel fas t, it 's the pubs.
The wartime atmosphere is
pervasive. Government build- :
ing$ and pubs are shielded from
the st'reet 1aitd car bombers! by ·
hugh steel -mes h enclosures
topped with barbed wirr. Closed circuit sur veill ance cameras .o
rover tbe sidewalk approaches . ·
Gray armored Land Rovers and ·
pPrsonnel carrie rs . mannPd by
Ir is h ]Xllice or British " pea cekl2('ping" troo ps. pat rol the
streets in co nvoys.
Thi&gt; sectarian' enmity extends
even to sport s : Catholic nationai Lsts support the Critics soccer .
team; Protestant loy alists cheer
for the Rangers. When 1he two ··
teams pl ay, fans leavi ng a game
In enemy .Ierritory are shepherded out of harm '" wav bv
dozens of heavil.v armed poi ice:
Though the Iris h.liveuptothl'ir ·
reputation as a hospitable, gregarious people where visitors are .
con('l'r ned . the religious · bigot ry
thry ·reserve for each other is
almost palpable -

NL HONOREE - ~like
Scott of Houston was ' named
the National League Cy Young
Award winner hy the Baseball
Writers As.,oc\alion of Amer·
lea Tuesday. St-ott was the
major league strikeout king
who plll-hed the Astros to the
.western Dt.lslon title. (UPI) '

Rose off Reds
winter· roster
CINCINNATI (IJPII - As a
player. Pete Rose always hated
to come out of the lineup. But as a
manager, Rose felt obligated to
take his name off the roster to
protect a prospecJ .
So. at age 4&gt; and wlthmor&lt;:' hits
than anyone in ba seball 14,256) ,
Rose decided Tuesday to remove
himself from the club's 40-man
winter roster·, meaning )le won't
b&lt;' eligible to play un til May 1&gt;
next season.

"This is not a retirement ,"
emphasized Red s General Manager Bill Bergesc h. "Maybe
wr're not secing the end of Pete
Rose at al l. l hope not."
Baseball rules state that If a
club chooses not to place one of
its players on the 40-man winter
roster, that player can't ret urn to
the ac tive roster until at least
Ma)' 1.1.
Had hr chosPn to retire -and
!hen co m~ out of retirement nex t
smson. he wouldn't have- been
c,ligible to play for the Reds until
6() da.vs Into the 1987 season .
"Prt c will parllcipat el n sprinl!
training as a player and will he
eligible to play in tbe regular
srason ilnytime after May 15,"
said Reds spokesman .Jon
Braudr. "But . by taking himself
off the wintPr ros ter, he permits
the clu b to protec t a yo ung
player."

tr aded on the open ma r ket.
Indeed. · tlr popular use of
"declining block " pricing encourages unn ecessary COJ'L~ ump - .
tion because unit cos ts decrease
as usage increases.''
Water's unrrali slically low
price lead s to waste throu ghout ·
ttl!' region. Higher costs would ·
hardly be wildly acclaimed, but
they would go a long wdy to
conserving the precious natural
resource that is in danger· of -.
becoming sea rce . .

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&amp; Ill NNE R RINGS , ll t II M 0 N ll W II 1 C II [ S.

~~

••

••

No subSrrlpttons by mall permUted In
areas where homf' ['8rrler service ·Is
available.
Mall Sublcrtptlflll
Inside Melp County
13 WN'kS'" " " '''' "" '' """'' ' '""'' ' $17.29

26 Wooks .................................. $34.06
52 w._..ks .................................. 166.56

"HI, sir/ Cere to participate in the company
dru9·testlng program today?"

,JASON BUSH

J ..R. KITCHEN
•' .

!Ingels FurnitUre &amp; Jewelry's I

True price of water _______R_o_be_rt_~_a_Lte_r.~ '
ing grea ter distan CPs for ma r~
water.
'
Limited curtailment of de mand can be achieved by convincing tbe public to reduce its
consumption. especially by limit ing non -essentia l uses of wa trrbut the time Is a ppro~chlng for
realistic pricing of water to deter
waste.
Consumer,s t r~ ditionally have
been provided with cheap w,ater
because It is allocated by governm~nt
agencies ratlx'r tha'n

.

JUST IN TIMEFOR CHRISTMAS

for a job well done

')'oday in history

.

'

Hard labor _________ Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear

(Second of two related t'Oiumns) Owens River.
LOS ANGELES- Far north of
In the 1940s. a second aqueduct
this city, In the foothills of the
ThP Pomeroy Ele mentary altributed to a ll the fine people
was
constructed , and today LoS
Sierra Nevada Mountains east of
PTO wis hes to thank evcrvonc who worked and supported our
Ange
les diverts more than 175
Yosemite National Park. lies
who contributed to our -· rail efforts .
billion
ga llons of water yearlyMono Lake, once a proud body of
car niva l. The gcm•rosity of our
Many thanks from the Pomewater that sprawled across 85 almost four-fifths of its total
local businesses and merch ant s roy Elementary PTO and
annual consumption - from the
squ a re miles.
helped our carniva l to excel in officers .
Today, Mono Lake ha s Owens Valley and Mono Lake
l'~ er)' aspect.
Robin Tattcrson
dw indled in size and covers fewer Basin ..
Also all the children and the ir
Rhonda Hoover
Because tlial far exceeds the
I han 60 square miles. Moreover,
parents who dona ted and su pamount
of water produced by
Susi Heck
the Los Angeles Department of
ported our efforts are to he
Marsha Radabaugh
Water and Power says it will rainfall and the melting of the
commend&lt;:'d .
Becky 'JTiplett
continue to shrln,k throughout the mountain snow pack,_ tbe . re•Our succ ess can only be
comi'ng century and eventually serves of wafer ·Jn the rurai
wlll cover fewer than 40 square areas' aquefers are being sys miles -less than half Its original tematically depleted - while
Prai.~e
size.
•
many LADWP customers rQIJ Iinely
squander the precious
The LADWP Is unusually
Thr people in Middlep'ort think know it's hard to have a job like
on car washing, lawn
resource
knowledgeable about a body of
that the Middlepor t Police don 't tha t ' and ll 's got to be hard on
water situated in a high de'serl wat ering and other non -essential
their family _
do their job. Well. thry are
valley 265 miles north of this cily us es. ~
I think the chief. the mayor and
v,!ro ng. the police dot heir jo b and
Los Angeles consumes - and
because IJ ha s been sys tematithey are good at it; and they are everyone In Middleport should be
cally dr ainin g Mono Lake for the wastes - more water than any
glad to hav-e them . Their job Is
good about savi ng liws..
last 45 years to slake Los otber city In the West b~caus e of
violent and stressful too; but they
'
Angeles' thirst.
the size of its population. But
in
do
It
anyway.
Everyone
otber
cities are equally profli1 know because, every tim e you
The tale Is one of superlatives.
Middleport
shou
ld
bless
these
The LADWP , the country's larg- gate. In Denver, for example,
look. you see a police car
boys for doing their job. So
es t municipally-owned utility, lawn watering accounts for 51
patrolling . In my book, we have
Danny Wiseman. John King and
draws approximately 32.6 billion percent of all use.
three good co ps. Everywhere Igo
Bruce Swift , keep on doing a good
If those practices continue,
ga llons of water every year from
somebodv is putting tbe pollee
job. May God bless yoo .
Mono Lake as part of the most many areas In the naturally arid
down . They are out there to do
Sincerely,
ambitious continuous out-of- West ' would face sever'e water
tHeir job and to see that the cit y
Mary
Wall
ace
ba sin water diversion project shortages in the coming decades.
ani! tbe people are protected. I.
"Evidence of pressure on water
anywhere In the nation.
Early In the century. Los Is everywhere," warns the World
Angeles officials identified the Resources Institute.
"Use exceeds streamflow In
Owens Valley in distant, rerriote
lnyo County near the California- nearly ev~ry Western subregion,
Today is Wednesday. Nov. 12. the 316th day of 1986 with 49 to follow.
Nevada border as a likely source and the deficits are being offset
';he moon Is moving toward its lull phase.
.'
with groundwater and Imported
of water for their city.
;chc mor'nlng star Is Venu~.
·
The city's voracious demand water from adjoining basins,"
The evening stars a rc Mercury , Mars . .Jupiter and Saturn.
for water, hauled 234 miles from the Washington, D.C. organizaThose born on this da te are under the sign of Scorpio. They Include
the Owens Valley In a specially- tion not es In a recent report titled
,French phys icist Jacques Cliarles In 1746: Chinese nationalist and
constructed aqueduct, trans· "Troubled Wat ers: New Policies
revolutiona ry Sun Yat-sen In 1866; acfress Kim Hunter Itt 1922 (age
for med Owens Lake from a body for Managing Water in the
64).; Prjncess Grace ·of Monaco. the former American movie star
of water once as large as Mono American West"
"The future of water use,"
Lake to a dry bed.
Grace Kelly, in 1929; actress Stephanie PowerS In 1943 (age 43). and
ro~k musician Neil Young in 1945 (age 411 .
In the 1930s, the aqueduct was suggests the study , "lies In
On thi s date in hi story:
extended to enable the city to conservation, improved effiIn 1 ~92, the first professional football game wa s .played in 'draw water froni Mono Lake and ciency and -reallocation of supp·
Pittsburgh. featuring the . Allegheny Athlet ic Association and the
fou r of Its seven tributaries, just lies" rather than In perpetuating
Pittsburgh ~ ttl leti c Club.
beyond the headwaters of the the practice of QOnstantly reach·

Thank.5 for carnival's succe.5.5

.'

William F. Buckley Jr. ·

. DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

reach a conclusion.

AP All-District

'

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

By DICK WEST
: WASHJNr.TON iUPli ,- Poli!lcians who long ago added the word
"m ud slinging" to the voca bulary have come UP. with a new
euphemism to ex plain what happened in this year's elec Tion - the
" negat ive" ca mpaign.
. ·We heard a lot in post -election analyses about "negative"
advert is ing.
.Some pundits. explai nin g why cer rai n ca ndidates lost. said
·'negative" ads. particularly on television. were counteqroductive.
Bu t other analy sts, explaining why certain candidates emerged
vic tor ious, said a little nega tivism not onlv was necessary but
beheficial.
·
If mone.v is truly, as the old saying has it. "the mother' s milk of
poli tics ... vo ters have a right to as k why the candidates spent so
much .
According to Common Ca use. a self-s tyled citizen's lobby. overall
ex]l('nditures tota led $286.74".280, a 24 percent increase over the
prrvious campaign.
·Inves tigation surely wcu ld show that a sizeable portion of that sum
was spenl on " nega tive" commercials on televis ion . In fact. there is
room to believe a large number of vo ters made up their minds about
the ca ndidat es solely on the bas is of "nega tive" commercials .
Would these same voters buy a used car from a certain dealer
simply becau se a riva l' s co mmercials play down the advantages of
strik ing such a dea l"
:Not bloody likely. Most viewers ar e more sop histicated than that.
Ye t we are to ld rhat manv vot ers embraced a non -negative candidate
for no more substantial a rea son .
One more concern: What if televised negativism looks in two
directions at once?
The term "stagflation" was coinC'd to cover one such anamolv the spectacle of econo mic st agnation and inflation only co-existing
hut comp lem ~ nting eac h other. 13ut stagflation may be nothing
comparC'd with whar the economy is doing now.
"We have a boom and a bust ~per a ling si mult aneously." ex plained
onr erono mi s1 rrcPntly.
·
·
, R~ally now. The picture of a boom and a bu st operating
s imullan~ou s l y may be ~ n ough to boggle the average mind . It
certainly did min~ . And I am as aware as anyone of the old saw that if
a ll th~ Pconom is ts in the wor ld were laid end to end. they wou ldn ' t

Area gridders -_

·- Page..:..2-,-Thtl Daily Senti~!ll
~ Pomeroy-Middleport. OhiO . ·
_-. Wednesday, _November 12. 1986

So what?

The Daily Sentinel

1986

.

Monthly

Outtlde Melp County

Credit Terms

13 w... k, ........ .. ............... ......... $18.20
26 weeks .................................. $35.10
52 w..k, .......... ..... :.. ................ $67.60

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~1/

I

�IWII:IIUIIGDUcly, 1'4UW111Utn

I L, · I :100

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Big Bend

DOUBLE COUPONS

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES &gt;PRICES EFFECTIVE
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER, I THRU SATURDAY.&amp;. NOVEMBER 15, 1Ne •USDA FOOD STAMPS
ACCEPTED •NOT AESPON:»IBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL
OR ~ICT~ L ERRORS.

ALL WEEK

.WI

LOCALLY AND INDEPENDENTLY OWNED

I

~OOREU:
~ I TY '.ST UE I ZIP: '""7.:.__ __ _..;__ _~

N!

TELEPHONE NQ , , .

LIVE UKE AliNG PRQMOTION .
· GRAND PRIZE: 19" Gf color TV
2nd PRIZE: SlOO.OO in FREE Groceries
3rd PRIZE: 4 Armour Canned Hams to

,

4 Luclly

RASK E TB A LL
Ai&lt;SO!'.
Easit•rn ('onlf'I'M'Ict•

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10 lBS.

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89

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Flour

Prime Chkken
Leg Quarters

TENDERBEST

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CHOICE

Ol~

Boneless '

$

PLEASE

•

CAROLINA

·a·acon

Chuck Roast

LIMIT 2

5 LB.
BAG

12

FOOIM.AND TOMATO, VEG., or ·.

oz.

PKG.

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I

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FRESH lEAN

GROUND CHUCK

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101/4

$ S9lB.

CANS

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TENDERBEST -"'"'~"'"'

Mt. Dew, Pepsi Free
Diet or Regular

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Pork ChoP•
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5· 7

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Non·T~rnablt

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6-16 OZ.

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ans.

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Bottles

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RED SwEET

Head Lettuce

e-.

DETAILS , .......,

CHOPS

39

$.]99

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STORE

BlueBonnet

peror Grapes

••• •
'

•

Food land

Bread .

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..•

LB.

SACRAM ENTO. Ca lif. 1UPI1
• - The rooki es and I he guys who ·.
usually r ide the bench were. lhe
stars when l he· Sacr am ento
Kings oulla sl ed l he Clev eland
Ca valiers . 119·114. Tu es day
night.
For instance, Brook Sieppe:
who is pl aying for injured Kings
backcour t., ace Reggie Theus.
sco1·ed 10 Of his 14 points in the
last quar ter, including I he ba sket
· w ith 90 seconds lo pla y Ihal pul
Sacr amenlo ahead to slay.
• ·Sieppe injured lwo f i ngers on
his right, shool i ng hand in pre·
season pla y and has played the
regula r season wi1h lhe fin gers
·
taped togelher .
" Up unlll now r had been
press ing and try in g 10 force
lhings," Steppe said. " In I ha l
last quarter, I fe ll good. I am a
shooler and I jusl wanled lhr
, bali. Res ides , coac h ! Phil John·
son ! lold me I hal C' levelan d was
collapsing on F.ddie Johnson so
Ihat l should shooI mor e."
Then ther e was Haro ld Pr es·
ley, I he r oo kie who lt&gt;d V ill anova
lo ils storied win over (;porge ·
town in I he 19R5 NCA A fin als. He
had 12 Sacramcnlo poinl s in IH
minut es of playing lime. Presle;·
is als o a guy who a lw ay~ grins
when he pla ys.
" 1 alwa;•s smile when I'm
playin g," he said. "M;· co ach
ll~ed to bawl me oul in high
school, bul I jusl love pl aying."
He said he is always co nfidenl on
the courl !Uld l hal hi s biggest
adj ust menI as a pro 'is "lea rning
llr plays."
.Johnny Rowrs from UC I r·
vine. slill anot her K ings r oo ki e.
also looked sha·rp wtl h eighl
Jl)inl s in his hrirf limC' on l lr
floor.
II was Slf'll fX''s 10-fool jumper
and 1hen Roge rs buck et from I he
co rnN lhal gave lhr Kings tho
SlepfX''s shol ca mr l&lt;•il h I he
Kings tr ai lin g lH ·u:l wilh J::\0
lefl in lh&lt;' gam e.
Clevdand rooki e Bruct Da ugh·
ertv missed lwo fo ul sho ls thai
wou ld havr pul lhe Cavs ahead
and Roge rs hil his clinc hing
corner shol wil ho.&lt;l sf:t'onds logo .
Two fiw t brows by .John son
ended tlr Kin gs ' s('()ring.
The Cavs werr ctown b~· !l poiniS
allhe sl arl oflhc four thquarlcr.
bul sco r ed ~ sl raight. including a
:l-rn in lei· bv gu ar d Ron Harperwho wou nd up wilh a gamC' -high
:wpo inls.
" I fell we had the shots. bul
Jhrv j usl di dn' l fall, " sai d Ca r s'
('()ach Len nic· Wil kin s. '' I also felt··
I hal down l hP sl rr l rh. w(',j usl did
no I gel .the ra lls."
HowPvrr. he also sal ui r&lt;l l hr
Kings' shorter fi·ont line for il s 2'i
rebounds co mpar e:! to j usI 10 for
his tram.
"The K ings did an au isl andi ng
job on I he offensive ho arcts
lonighl and thai mad e a big
dl ffer ena.'." he sa id .
In fac t. w hcn Kin·gs cenl er
LaSalle T hom pson gr abbed ni ne

..•

CHILLED •REG. •COUNTRY STYLE

Local

'
f'

· ~wling

(how.
'

'

t

Minute .Maid
Orange Jui~e

Dog

'

'•

ST~NilfM'•'

" '

t~ '""" /'

:,.J
~
:~

Am h· Shop
Pln.a ... . :...

. •.

:~

:t!
AIIJilrt'fm. InC' .... .......... ............ . .ll
.lont:m \.: • ~' SPtTI •·•' .. ....... ... ....... :fl
('fl(·hr : w ·.~ E:o;on .. .. ................. ..li
,,,.,..(\ lin . Ar t.' ·· .................. ..... :11
nurtand Mlnr Supply . .... ...... ..... Jt
.Jnnbn C:r&gt;1 S t•n lt'l'. J ;m rf

Corhran's Exxon .

I,

.

'

WinniP~~:
'LOs i\rtKt&gt;l

10 ti I 21 74 3tl
9 i 0 HI 3lt !iK
K 6 I 17 00 311

3 HI I II ~9 72
t tO 2 lfl lli ~-1
Tut'!"duy's Ht."Sulbi
Edmonton :J, Nl ' lslandt•r!'i 2( &lt;JI' t
\\'uNhil~eton ':l, Mlnnt&gt;Sota '! ( &lt;Jf I
f ahcary 5, VanoouV••r 3
Lol'i ,\ngdtos "· M'lnnlp t.,; :1

Vantovr

Sh(' ll ~·

of his game-high 17 rebounds in
lhe Hrsl quarter. he set a tea m
record for rebound s in a sin gle
quar ter.
Der ek Smith wo,und up with a
lea rn -high 2'i Jl) ints for I he Kin gs,
who survived fi ve goal- lending
ca lls.

fa vorites holding the No. 2 Class
A ra nking and lhe nine game
wlpntng sl reak . Pinevil le fi n·
ished 11&gt;2 regu lar sea son ra n ked
sev(f) th in Class A.
Ti ck els are $4 for a dulls and $3
lor students in advana&gt; and may
be purchase:! at Wahama H igh
School du ri ng school hours Wed·
nesday, Thursday and Friday or
at Point Pleasant High School
from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m . Thurs day
and Friday.

!)1\C f\\.tlo

The Pacer s said Kellogg, innis·
fifth season with tre tea m, wtll be
replaced on tt.&gt; roster by gu ard
Kyle Macy , who missed tt.&gt; first
five gam es with a broken rib .
In a stalem ent , the Pacer s said
Kellogg was release:! to travel to
Clevelan d wher e he would tal k to
his own phys ician. He already'
has undergo ne surgery IWice on
the injured left knee .
A fo r mer sl ar at Ohio Stat e.
Kellogg had tt.&gt; first opera-t ion i n
Oclober 1984 and anothe r last
Decem be r , Pacers spokesm en
sa id.

QOf~

:;d~~

. s~~" .~ .
~ C\.~
cf('lst~

SAVES FUEL

, f\.E1-\6\.E

Keeps out cold, holds in heat.

Easy to cut, lasting. Ma.ke· your own
porch enclosures, storm windows and doorsl
· Reduce your heat bills. DRAFT FREE PROTECTION lor your
home. Winter com~ort at a low, low cost.

Only

73! ,

WARP BROS. ChQgo, 60651. Pioneers in Plastics s1nce 1924
TBke lhis ad 10 you r Lumber or Hardware Dealer. Be sure ,
you get lull we igh!, long lasting, top Quality FLEX -0 -GLASS.
Accept no substitutes.

J6" WldC

Also 26", 48 ",

54" w•dlhs

.

THIS IS.

s

~ACARE:SMM

BY COMPLE'f.E
HEALTH CARE.COVERAGE
PHYSIC-IAN SERVIC-ES- - - - - · - --

----·-----

.:-:.-

·-A-:::D:-:
VAo-C
::cA-:::R-:::
E-:::C-:::
O::
VE=R:-:A:::
GE'- -

EMERGENCY CARE

.

' Within service area, care at AdvaCare facility
provided for life· threatening emergencies or other
emergency requiring immediate medical aHention __

Rouline office visits
Covered in lull
·----::::·=:..::.:..:::::--' . _ Specia_!ists' ~fflce vi sits_ _
Covered in full
Consultations

-

Covered in full

----. ---·----· -·--- - - - - -:==.c;-:=
Covered in full

--

·---- - -· ----- --

Ann ual physical exam •
-~- -~·

·~

ln ~~~e~t physician se~~--

_

.......--

Out of service area, care at any available medical

.

_ _ __::
C.:c
ov:..:e:::re:..:d:.;i:.:.
n.:.:
lu::;ll_ ·- -~

... S~!.!l!'..'Y .B.':'d re_lated se~ices _ _ _ .
. ~ nest.!!..~ ----- ·-

Covered In full
Covered in full

Well-96by care

IN-~ENT SERVICE~

lacility, provided lor lite·lluaatening emergencies
or other emergency requiring immediate .
medical anention
Ambulance service in cases of life-threatening
or other emergenc~. ---·---- ---·--·- _
---.
-URGENT CARE
Within service area, care at AdvaCare facility _ __
Out of service area, care at any available medical facility

.

Covered in full
Unlimiled

•

1

when m~dica lly nece_ssary
Surgery and related services
·- ---------------Anesthesia

Covered in full

MATERNITY SERVICES
Prenatal and postnatal care

Covered.in full
Covered in full

Drugs._lrledicines, an d_rel a~d supp"-'l':.e-:.
::s - - - - - --=
C.:.
Ov:.:•::.:r•:..:d:-;in"-:=
fu':ll
~ ~ysic~a~_!erv_~es
Covered in lull
Co\lered In full

Consultations

·--L~~oral ~ry_!esls,_ EKG, EEG. etc.
-

--

-

Covered in lull

----1

Di."Q-'2~.!1£a_12d therap~:'!t servl~es ·------=
C.:.
ov:.:•c.:red
~i"'
n~
lu':ll__
General nu~ i l)g ~rvi~es,___
Special duty nursing services

·-Short-term
--·- . --·inlervention physical therapy and
.__ inhalail"!' lherapy

Covered in full

Covered in full

and oc.cupallonal

---

- - · - - - - - - - - ··

. C~rdiqv!s.cu lar s tudle~-· ---·---

Covered in
Covered in

lull
lull

Covered in full

Related anesthesia services

Covered in lull

Laboratory exams an~ u~raso~.d

Covered in fu11

Consullalions
Newborn nursery care

Covered in fu ll

Covered in full
K aiSer--.---

prescription
drug program

- - - --·

Covered in full

-

7

Covered in fult
Covered in lull

EXTENDED CARE
Physician care
100 days per calendar year skilled nursing !Jicility --·-· - -- --HOME HEALTH·CARE
Physician and nursing servk:es

i'

-

----1

Pul!f~o~a~ fu n~ion.!!~~e_
s . -·- . -,...---::--:-~-...:C:.:o:ov:e:r.:c
ed:.::;
inc.:f:u:l:.~.
l
Short-term intervention physical and occupational
~-th_
erap
_~~eh.a_bili ~t~o~ se~v ices :C::·::::== = = = = =C=:o::v::
er::;ed
: :=
in=:l::
ui:C
I
MENtAL HEALTH- HOSPITAUZA TION

=

~lal

~

(Maximum combined total of 30 ctavs.j

---lnpalienl drug deto•ilicatlon progr..,a:::
mc__ _ _ _ _

Covered in full

Covered in full

innoculations

( ThiS i~ly" jMrl_
lill I1st&lt;!.! l_o.,_u _nd__!l_rOCflf!U:_:
" o,
" ::.:":.:'':.:":::
''·::_
l - - - --::---c-,..-:-,--~-r~-~1&lt;-G_,E_E~-·a_n_dE_lh_ec_dia.:
gn_,oc:st;:.:iC:.:S
ol:u::.:d::.:ie:s:c...__ _ _ co::cv:.:e:..:
red
= in
= lu::-.ll___j_,_
1

Laboratory tests

Covered in lull
AdvaCare must be
notified within 72 hours

Immunizations, allergy and chemOtheraPhY----.-·-

OUTPATIENT SERVICES

&gt;

Covered in lull

Delivery in hospital, normal an~ caesar~n
Complications

PRESCRIPTION DRUGS
Prescripjon drugs

-··-~'.....-~----....C::
C~
ov::,e::,:red
::=..:i::,
n _,fu~ll_~

· I · S~ort-term inlervention physical
therapy reha!&gt;i litatio~~ervlce~_

.

1

services as authorized

Covered in lull
Covered in tull

j

Covered in lull
Covered in lull

ADDmONAL BENEFITS

1r-:A
:..n:::.
nu::a::.lh:::e=
ar,i n"g:.:•::.
nd=;e"'ye
c:-;-ec:
xa:;:m-'s:-:~--

__,C::.:o::.:v::er~
ed
-:.::_
in:.:t::
ul,_
l -----,

in full
-- Covered
Covered in full

Family planning and cot.inseling services
Health and education classes
Nutrition counseling and eoocation

_____ 5&lt;&gt;':!':'!!n lull
_Covered
_ in full

in lull
-Covered
Covered In lull

Taassure understand;ng of the arrangements and locations In wh;ch setvices are covered by
AdvaCare. applicants will be offered a Statement 01Understanding fo sign thai re ·emphastzes ·
the program's requirements.

...

. $5 co-paymenl per visit

I.

1~

• •

:w
:1.1

:1.1
4/'1

42
-t!

4:!
-t4
+I

Gnblr. ~ 10 :

OPEN HOUSE FOR KAISER EMPLOYEES
•

(HOLZER MAIN CLINIC)
)unction of Rt. 35 &amp; 160
Gallipolis, Ohio
6:00 p.m.-8:00 p,m.

I

......

· .r,1 ·

.

• • '
"'~ " ...
•• '

..

AdvaCare~

November 13th, 18th, &amp; 20th .

Mathflny, 319 :

.Jnp Cain. A1! ~' .. Pal .J o h n s! ~ . r1'l.1:
Al~ •r ron, l nt ·.. I.N'H rad shaw. 4~A: Plant s
E~ rm . Hazrl Marmm . !l~!t: Clovanni' s
Pll.t:IC c:rnP\':1 l\clk ln .~ .l"m: 1 Rurl rt nd Mln r' '
Supptv. Linda Pr'lr'I'SOO . 429 :

Elt'(:ldt•

Mnlor Sc•rylcc•. R~Kh C'l Whi lf'hal r. 467:
Memory's .So&lt;l.v !"i hop, J~rr Mooney. 4R.1:
~a . Vonda .Jorda n. 400.

'

•

Covered in full

----

~-·-

ADVACARE COVERAGE

AdvaCare must be
noUiied within 72 hours

Semi-pri\late roo m; intensive care or pri vate room

Group lherapy

'l'f'lUll

Mn11 n c '.v· ~

b4 oz.
CTN.

Edmntn
C'al~e~u-~·

opener.
The Minulemen bring a 7·3
reco rd i nto Sa tur day' s clas h and
have be aten two playoff tea ms in
Van 116·10) and Gil bert 121·14)•.
Two of Pineville's lhr e? b sses
have come against playoff t ea ms
In Mullins 17·61 and Independ·
ence {23-7) . Ptnev ille'sdefenstve
unit has held l heit opponents 10
only 10.2 points per game.
Donnie VanMeter's Whit e Falcons com e i nto the cool es t as

0 uts\de
·ns\d8···
fOr.'
.

I NDI ANA Pd LI S (UP! )
Vel eran NBA forward Cl ark
Kellogg has been placed on tt.&gt;
s\J spended l jsl by the Indiana
Pacer s so he c&amp;n seek additional
medical consulta t ion on a nag·
glng kn ee Injur y .

Smylhf' Dlv l-i k_)n

__ l~_dividu·-.1 t,...he_r_apy--~-----------;$:;:2;;0 "'
co=-.-:c
pa:-:
yment per visit

Elt'f'l r il' M111 nr S1•n· h·p

2S lB.
BAG

~ K 2 12 l7 60
' t 9 3 II 32 69

(Maximuri'J .comflirl&amp;d tolal of 30 sessions.1

SWINH F. R.~

fi l n\' : mnl'~

•

•

THl iRSIM\'

Plan! !! F\.-...:nn . . .......... .... ... ....

99

( 'hh"KkO

Kellogg placed
on suspended list

~~M~E~N~T~Al~H~EA
~LT~H~-~O~U§.TP~A§T~IE~NT~======================~

ANot Ot1nht•r :•. 19KH

.

~ " :1 l:l II -17
ti 7 II~ .. ~ 51
.t 9 2 10 ·oo ~~
('a mp~ll £'onh.•ren11•
Norri" Uivfiion
W L T Pt ~ r.t&lt; (i A
Toronto
7 -t 3 17 "6 -U
Dt•lroU
7 6 I 15 :lfl ;~
St. Loo~
l 3 I II 12 l:l

-lnpalienl alcoh ol delo•iflcaJion program
Nervous and mental conditions

•
I

Purina

Adnm s Dlvbdon
7 ii .. · IKf)i M
l\1ontnal
7 ii :1 17 :iK M ·

Quf'ht•t•

Mlnnt~ o4a

I •7311 -

win.

Pepsi-Colo

II

PORK SHOULDER STEAKS u .

oz.

Nt•w ,Jt•rsf'y
Nl' Rungcrs

Kings oudast .Cavs

.t • ~·

12 Oz. Bag

3

C'hll'agn 11 2, i'Uhmtu 1111
Mlll\·aukrt• 102, lndlunu !1.&amp; '
UtUh HU. Dtlllas 10 :1

"!

Chocolate
Morsels

;,

l:lolden Slall•
:t :1 .0011 I
Scatllc•
3 :1 .:1111 : 1
LA ( 'llppt'l's
:1 3 . ~UI i
Phomlx
~ -1 .:CI:I , t
Portland
2 !i ,:?86 !!•..
Tutosda)"!&gt; Ktosttll~
' •
1'\t•w ,Jt•nu•)•_114, Bostoo 110
1'\ (• WYqrk IJJ; · Phott~lx IO!i
ft.Juslnn 1111, san 1\nlunlo 91)

..·
..

NESTLE
SEMI-SWEET

;; .2:116

Washlngq,

BUNton
BulfaiO

Padfh· Dh· ~ io n

Pop-Up
lB.

~

San i\nttl'llu

!\'\' bd uridrs

\\' lf.. T Pts.G F G1\
• 10 3.1 I I 59 32 .
9 . -1 t 2CI fi.J a:1
K 6 I 17' :19 46
7 7 2 IG ii~ 6"
6 i I I:J lU 66
·a i " io 5:162

Hartford

W L Ptl . G8
-1 I .MOO +3 2 .tiOfl , I
:1 :1 .310 J · ~ ·!
:1 :J .000 )1 ,,
~ .J .33:i r .~

Dnvt•r

Turkey
Breasts '

e.

Pittsburgh

a

llouston

FRESH FROZEN

AND UP!

Phll•dl'lph

·Mtdwl-Ntl&gt;i\• IP~ion

WITH $10 OR MORE ADDITIONAL PURCHASE EXCLUDING
TOBACCO PRODUCTS. ADDITIONAL PURCHASES $2.29.

Turkeys

31tt

POI NT PLE ASANT - The sla ted'for 1: 30.p.m.
Waham a White ·Falcons and
The White Falcons are·comlng
Pineville. Minu tem en will lock . ·ln riding a nine-gam e winning
horns Satur day aft ern oon in lhe streak and have held four of I heir
opening round of l he Class A 1986 opponents scorel£&gt;ss, allow·
WE&gt;s t Virginia State football tng rio more t han one t ouchdown
playoffs In what could be a tightly in those gam e where opponents
conl ested defensive m atchup.
did scor e. •
•
Game lime forthequ art erftnal
The Bend Area defensive unit
mat chup at Point' Pleasant's . held t re oPposition lo 51 'points for
Sanders Memori al St adium Is a per -game ave- ~ e of 5. 1 point s.
The Falcons ' only lo ss ca me to
Kyger Cree k in tt.&gt; season

W~tltJ!!i C:oldcrt'llc~ t·
Patrl~ Division

'·

5 1 .ICCi 5 I . ICJ:~ .....:
il 2 .7 U
~~ 1
iJ :i .300 2
:l
. :100~ 2
IMroll
2 :1 .l .IMI 1'1
' Wt.osh'f'n fonft•rt .. t.'l'
·,

Crisco
Shortening

.

NATION!\L Hor{ E Y L E&lt;\GUE

Oh· i~t un

Atlant a
( ' hlcagn
1\otllwaukf'
f lt'\'C iand
Indiana

•REGULAR •BUTTER FLAVOR

Tenderbest

NHL resul~

1\thmtlc Dlv..,lon
" ' L Pt•t. GR
Phlladt•lphla
:i 2 .7ll Bost.-...
3 '! .tKHI I

fl'ntrul

3LB.
CAN

· ~hll'r amento 119, Clen hnd IU
Port hind 12~. (;ol~ en · Sl ath• IUK
Phlladelphhl. 121, 'f ' t"llttlt• II"

~A TIO N AL

Peo~

.

L.\ CHppers 115, Denvrr 112

..

.

NO I'IIIICHAII NICIIIAIIY · II YIAOI OROVER
'NO IIICH~I~L Rll'tiODUCTIONI ACCEPTEOI

.

\

·NBA res1,1lts

\\'ashlnktn

GRAE 'A' BASTED

Wahama White Falcons will
meet Pineville in 'A' playoffs

------'"7--..,.-----'--

SEE STORE FOR DETAILS

Sentiriei- Page....:s

I

I

&gt;

�'·

P&amp;ge-6--'The Daily Sentinel

p

·

··

L==~==:=:::.::~~ihe";~;m,;~;~;o:-fiv~';;;;;:H.;:o;m~181:ro~y=M=idd~le~po;rt~
- ,~O~h~io==:-:==-:::--:---~-~~W~ed:ne!:!sda~y.~N~o~l(eiTI~':be~r2_12~.~1~9~8!6i
allow the rploNltlon or sale of the fivey"ears. HowevPr, thesalew
. as d
iReport
says
club In 1992, The Cleveland Plain .
urlng a telepho!!e, In terview Coun ty commissioners said the make a lo n~-t erm commitment •
do
negotiatl'd by India ns Cl\alrman fro m Califor nia .
Dealer reported today. ·
Patrick J . O'Neill, who controls
s e
es not · guara ntfl(' the to keep the ;ndlans In C~vel an ll;
fi
ian_s
The
newspaper
said
tJie
sal£'
to
the
majority
of
the
club.
.
Wh!m
David
E.
LeFevre
proclu
b'S
long,~erm
stay In Cleve"I don't knoW that anyone '
I d
'"This Is a bombshell ," Latch posed to b1,1y the I ndians In 1984, land, hopes to build a. domed wou14 try "'o b"ulld ·a do m~ .
Richa.'d E. and David H. JacobS.
If

a1

' le-.a·J'Iows
Sa

who have built or own ·'0
•
shopping ma lls. w
_il l be ·co m-.
pleted Thursday .
The Jacobs brothers could not
be reached for comment.
Minority owner Walter Latch,
CLEVELAND IUPII - The who wlll be forced to surren ~r
""
·$34 mil lion purchase of the · his portion of the club, said any
Cleveland Indians baseball team ·agreement should bi nd the Indl·
by shopping mall developers wilt' ans to Cleveiimd for longer than

team to move

/ the, ~ rchase agree ment said the stadium co uld end : A thi rd kno \\1ng_tha~, \he J acobs brothe~s ,.
· 1oca t""
'
"'"an chiS
. ' e· could not· be re
~~
oomm 1ssloner said the siadlum
would be allowed. after, five •
for· ·15 years ·
·
ld
till
b
b
1
•
'
cou s
e ul t.
years, to possi bly· sell to some!.
. "But this looks more and more
"This absolutely stuns me," · body out of til€ community,".:
"The ' whole thincr~ is very . like an out · of·town ""al
"
L
·
h
""' , · a1c
sa Jd n mothy Hagan, president . Hagan said,.~
·. .~
strange. When I made a bid to said · " It's one of the reasons· 1 'of t he county commissioners.
. A do m'"''' stadium, however ,- •,
buy, the tea m (In 1984), O'Neill wanted to (retain mlnorltY ow- " I' m sure It also stuns a lot of co uld induce
""
the bu yers tci'
req uired at least a 15-year nershlp •' ' to keep an ey e on peo p1e wit h t he domed stadium remain In CJeveland, said DenniS:
commitment. I tho ught · that things . I don't kn ow 'what wi ll co
t'
· ho
commitment remained firm ,"
rpora Io n w were operating Lafferty, e?&lt;ecutlve direc tor ·of·
Laich told The Plain Dealer happen no w.'' .
un~er the premise that the the Grea ter Cleveland Domed .
Two of the thr ee Cuyahoga Jaco bs brothers were willing to Stadium C&lt;jrp.

i\DVEIITlRDmM POI.EV

,

purclllted

1986 · THE KAOGER CO . ITEM S AND PRICES GOOD SUNDAY . NOV. 9,

THROUGH SATURDAY, NO'V. 15, 1996, IN

I

'·

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'

The Daily Se.1ltinel

By The Bend

'•

said of the sale agreement . "I
thin k . wha t they're doing is
terrible.

E~ch of !hH~ advertisid Items •s reQUi fed to be read1f~ available l or Hie 1n 111ct1 Kroger
SlOrtl , n cept ~· spec ihca ll ~ rioted 1n this &amp;d. If we do run out of en adverti.-d item . we
w~ l ofle1 vou vou r cho1ce ol 11 COrT!flllr&amp;ble •t11m . ....t1eo avaUable, rt~Mct in g the n me
savtnQs or a lll rnc~clo. wh ich w•l tt"l•tle you to purchase the t dveniMd item at !he
tdvert•sed pnce Wflh~n XI dli~s . Onl~ one vendor couPOn w l l be accepted per item

COP Y~IGHT

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"

Wednesday,

'

November 12, 1986
. Pilge-7

Bctat ofth e.bend

·,

'

;Adult education classes
h
ld
'a1iv be"n'g e. "n-.. v

County Christmas flower .show announced '

Eighteen artistic arrange- everegreen branches.
- sarUy have to be 'a blu e ribbon paint ;natenals be palmed 0 1
ments .classes have been m''Slivery Garlands and Gew· winner.
dyed .
.
1
1
eluded In the annual Chr istmas gaws of Gold", a . Chr istmas
Artistic arrangNnents must be
Only one entry per exhibitor is
'/J .'
'alll'/')a flower show, " The ABC's of swag, for indoor or outdoor.
the W!&gt;rk oft he .ex li bltor. Painted permitted in each artistic class. :
I'
1f
'Christmas" to be held Nov. 22 ·
an d dyed pl an t materials may be Baubles, glitter, soow, back- . •
,
and ·23 at the Senior Citizens
.: 'His for Holly Wreaths Deck· used only in classes !or modern gro unds, and accessories are .
Center.
'
lng'
the Ha lls and Hemlock arrange ments if arrangers so permit ted in all classes prov'lded .
He Is still confined to the ICU at
By BOB HOEFLICH
Eleven of the 18 are designated Boughs Hung on the Liv In gRoom des ire. In no class shall the fres h they add distinction tot he design.·
the hospital. . ·· · ' ·
,
Sentinel Shlfl Writer
for
· arrange ments fro m Meigs Walls" , a Christmas wreath,
Ri
chard
is
served
15
years
In
• Adult Bllslc Education classes
County
Ga rden Cl ub members Indoor or out .
.
the
Air
Force.
He
and
his
wife,
are being held in
while
four
are
open
to
·
"I
is
for
I~e
Ska
ters Rac ing
only,
Nay, and two children res ide at
, Pom ero y on
and
three
are
for
junior
Toge
ther",
an
abstrac
t design.
anyone
18758 Washington Court, La ngley
Tuesday, . Wedex
hibitors
only.
"J
is.
for
Jewel-colored
Jellies
Air Force . Base . Va. 23665 .
: nesday a nd
The classes for club members and Jams ", a Christmas dinner
Richard was born and rea req
: Thursday .evenare as follows:
table setting for one.
•
only
here
and
is
a
Meigs
High
School
ings from 5: 30 to
"A
Is
for
Angels
Appea
ring
on
The
four
invit
ational
cl
asses,
graduate,
•
: 9 p. m. and
High",
a
stamobile.
open
for
exhibit
by·
anyone,
are:
·• anyo ne Inter"B
is
(orBalthaza
r,BiackK!n
g
"
K
Is
for
Kris
Krlngle,
Whose
• ested is inVIted to drop by and see
The Meigs Count y Boar d of from Afar. and Kaspar and Cheeks are. Uke Cherries", fea: "\'hat is being offered.- ·
JUST'IN TIME FOR BASKETBALL
.; , . · Instructors are Avonell Aie 1 Elections ·wm be holding Its Melchoir Led by a Star", an lured red .
interpretation.
"L
Is
ilr
Logs
That
Are
Laid
on
cdunt
of
your
Nov.
4
·
official
. · shire and 'r!na Green and the
"C 's for the Child Born that the Hearth" , fea turing treasured
: ~lasses are heid' tn the Coinmun- general election ballots at ·1 p.m.
Chr istmlis Day", a tradi- wood.
First
Saturday
at
the
lxl
ar
do!fice.
The
: ; Uy Action, JTPA building, 117 W..
tiona!
design using the Christmas
" M Is for Misty-eyed Maidens
- Second St., in Pomeroy - and ballots were secured ~cause of
Madonna.
·
and
Mis'ses" , a small design not
: that's right next door to the G&amp; J ihe closeness between Ja n Long
"A
nd
Laid
in
a
Cradle
on
over
10 Inches.
· Auto Parts.
an d incum bent Oakley Collins,
Cushions
of
Hay"
,
modern
usin
g
"N
Is for Nuts with a Nut·
• You're welcome to attend even for the state senate race.
the Chris tmas Madonna.
crac ker Handy", a miniature
: if you just wa nt to brush up on
It will be nice to get the offic ial
for
the
Dolls
of
Which
design
In a nuts he ll oot to exceed
"
D's
-::; some basics like math. English, count wrapped up. Nothing in the
Li
ttle
Girls
Dream"
,
a
design
in
five
Inches.
·:; his tory, .science and writing ~ way of recounting - siD ul d one
Several spec ia-l award; wlll be
. • and if you don' t wa nt to go alone . be req u~s ted - ca n take place the Japanese manner.
"E
is
for
Eggnog
with
Nutmeg
presented
td ex tibltors In the
~~ tak.e a friend,or relative along.
until after the official tall y, of
and
Cream",
a
dried
arrangeartistic
arrangements
classes .
•:· . Na tional Ed ucat ion Week is co urse.
'
A best of show, resB"ve best of
ment usin g a monochromatic
; be ing observed and a .student In
scheme.
sho
w and cr ootiv!ty award wlll
color
·~ the
program writes of her
.An apology is In order on my
"F'
is
for
Fir
Tree,.
Made
be
given.
The rules note t'hat the
:i s.attsfaction:
11art tot he senio r girls ofailt hroc.
B
r
ig
~
t"
lncludlrtp;
crea
tivity
award does not necesFestive
and
• " My name is Debra Krautter. I co unty high schools· wiD have
..
• am an Ad ult Basic Ecuca tion been In rehearsal for dance lines
: .. student.
. in the Big Bend Va rleiles of '00 .
The first night I started I dicjn't
Somehow anothe r even t was
kn ow what I was gett ing into. I slated on the sa me wee kend , . later round out that I was getting Thanksgiving -' wi th the sa me
TIIURSDA\'
Middleport Libra ry .
Into a great thin g. The people are girls for the most part participatPOMEROY
Rock
Spr
in
gs
. ~ hice. 1 never thought I Would ever Ing. As a result the girls beca me
F~IDAY
learn algebra. bill I did . I can · over-committed and would have Gra ~ ge will meet at 7: 30 ThursPOMEROY - Return Jona• study anything I wa nt In the three been unable the fi nal week before day nigh t at the grange haiL
than Meigs Chapter. Daughters
and a half hours that I am there. " the va rieties to work on sta ge Keith Wood, game protector, will
be
I
he
speaker.
'
of
the Amer ican Revolution, wlil
with other members of the cast.
meet
Friday, at 1: 30 p.m.at the
·':,; Gene Hudson of Mlddlrport is a
It seemed to me to add up to too
REEDSVILLE
Rev
ival
at
home of Mrs. Ronald Rey nolds.
• , patient at Un iversit y Hos pital in mu ch press ure on everyone.
Reedsvill e Unit ed Met hodis t Prospective members a'n d gu:
' Columbus. You ca n send cards to especially the gi rls.
him at Rhodes Hall . Room S1178.
So alter a sleepless 'night over Church throu gh Nov. 15; special ests are invit ed to at tend .
• Bed B.. Columbus, Ohio 43210.
the (X'O blem since that last week singi ng; 7:30 p.m. services . .John
POMEROY- Delmar Hamm ,
· And - Donley Reibel of Pome- Is so cr ucia:t, the line was ' Gi bson evangelist.
So
uth Webster, will be at the
• roy, who suffered a ~cart attack sc~ap ped . &amp;~ ky Ande_rson and
POMEROY
Preceptor
Bet
a
Mor
ning Star United Methodist
• recently, has bflf" n moved from Bette Kraw.sczyn had done a nice
Beta
Chapter
of
Beta
Sigma
Ph
i
Church basement Friday ar 7:30
intensive ca re into a Room 511-B jo b In 1ralning the. line.
Soror ity will mee t Thurs day.
to display his woodworki ng
at Holzer Medica l Center In
'Ga llipolis.•
For-t he first time In several 7:30 p.m.. at the Episcopa l crafts. The public is inviie to
years, as I recall , a Ch ris tmas Churc h Paris h House in at tend .
•
:· Meanwhile , SSgt. Richar d hoin(•-lighting contest will be · Pomeroy.
bean, son of John and Virgi nia held in Pomeroy.
RUTLAN D - There will be a
Dea n, Wolf Pen Ro ad, Pomeroy,
CHESHIRE
Gaiiia-Meigs
dance
Friday, 8 to 11 p.m., at
The "revival" is spansored by
•• und erwent . major .Jhead surge ry the Pomeroy Chambe r of Com- Communit y Action Agency's free Rutl and Civic Center. Music by
·· .a t Po,r tsmouth Naval Hospit al In merce and . the Winding Trai l clothin g da)· for low-Income Music Express. Ad mission $2
NEXT TO ELBERFELD$ IN POMEROY
Portsmouth, Va .. F riday , Nov. 7. Garden Club with Addalou Lewis persons. will be Thu rsday, 9 a. m. sl n ~:l e. $3 cou ple. Everyo ne
and Alice i'~ompson as co- to ·noon, ut rhe old hig h school welcome.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
building in Ches hire .
chairmen.
·
POMEROY - Meigs County
SQ ."'7 I wantect to tell you now so
senior
citizens are havi ng a
that ygu'd h~v e time to ·ge t your
MIDDLEPORT- F'il m strips.
dance
Friday,
Xto II p.m., at the
'act toge ther.
stories and craft s ure a part of
senior
cit
izen
center
on Mulberry
There will be first an d seco nd the fun go irig at the Meigs County
Prizes awa rded In religio us, Llbra-y ,tory hour for pre- Heights, Pomero.1·. Admiss ion
overall. entry or door categories schoolers evQ'y Thursday at 2 $1.!11. Music by String Dus ters.
plus a firs t place and honorable p.m. at the Pomero)' Li brary and
ment'io ns in tht' co mmercia l t'\'ery Friday ul 2 p.m . at the
SATURDAY
category.
RACINE
- The EastrrnThere are a couple of tlilngs to .
Sout
he
rn
alumni
foo tba ll game
rem&lt;•mber. You don't mix Sant a,
wlll
be
pl
ayed
Sa
turday,
7 p. m..
his rei ndeer. and othe r sim ilar
at
the
Sout
he
rn
High
field .
symbols of the holiday with
religious symlxlls - judges
Lunch mrnus for the Meigs Tickets may be pu rchased a I
frown on that. And they do judge · Loca l School District, the same Southe rn High CJ' at the ga te.
on neatness.
in all schools due to the uniform t-- -- -- - - - -- --1
•
Yo
u
will
have
until
Dec.
20
to
luncheon
program, . has. been
•
submit your ent ry and The Dally ·announced for Nov. 17-21.
•
Sen tinel will publish a rcgls traMo nday the mmu wil l be
'
tlon
.
form
in
the
nea
r
fut
ure.
sloppy
J oE's, peas, cookie, fr uit
f
However. it is no t absolutely and milk; Tu esday, chalupa,
Tu ... d • r.... utlfull•
'i' necessary to register· becauspali
corn fr uit and milk; Wednesday,
do-. t,nrd '"""'"' ·
homes will be judged .
beefaroni, hot rolis and ·butter.
""" "'::~!·1 /" ~ " 11
If you do Hve on an ou t of the apples wee and mil k; Thursda y,
POMEROY
way str eet, however , it woul d be chill an d crackers, pea nut butter
FLOWER SHOP
The new golf course next to the airport in ·
• good to advise the cham her or sandwich, puddinrr
pop.
and
"'
• Hto · II
~m1'r'l11t ,'i,•lltl!o t,,.,.,.·
..

•

THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp;. SATURDAY

WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . NONE SOLD TO DEALER S.

20°/o OFF

BASKETBALL HIGH.TOPS

Help Kroger help
the hungry by supporting

• '

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1

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.

See Store For Details

Calendar / happenings

Holiday

Dinner ~
- ~

•10-12-lb. Cooked Turkey
•2-lbs. Dressing
•2-lbs. Giblet Gravy
•2-lbs. Yams
·•12 Dinner Rolls
•1-lb. Cranberry Sauce

Mrs. Filbert's Golden
Margarine Quarters~ .................. ..

HOT TO GO

s27ss ·

.

.. ... .. .. ... ....... ............ Each

CHAPMAN SHOES

'.
.

"'

Lunch menu
set tor week

U.S.O .

c

Frozen~

.Young Turkeys ............................. ..
LIMIT 1 WITH $10.00 ADDITIO

Kroger
Flour

IN THE DELl-PASTRY SHOPPE

Fresh Baked
Pumpkin Pie ............. ~ .......................

lb .
FOOD P.UR CHASE

8lnch For

..
~------------~ ·

..

NON RETURNABLE 16-0Z. BOTTLES
. PEPSI FREE,
'

Diet Pepsi or
Pepsi Cola

CHUNK UGHf
TUNA~~

5-lb. Bag

c

$

REMEMBER
WITH fLOWERS'

Gallipolis, Cliffside, is a reality. During this .
r;m~!~ik;;~a~nd~Fr~l~da~y;,~C;OO~k;s;'C;h~o~!c~e~.~~~~;~~~~~~~ construction phase, over $1,000,000 - in ·
pledges and donations have been mode, and
the course will open in May of 1988.

'·

You maymen
ca ll !ll2-2J2l
!1:12-3216
CO-chair
Of · yourorlocation.
.
Amber Nicole Fisher
also to enter.
Judging, by out of tow n people,
will begin at 6::10 p. m. on Dec . 'n .
Hey! it's not that far off.
• David C. and Cheryl A. Fisher
Do keep smiling.
: ' arE' announcing tto' b,irt h of their ·
r.----~--------1
• first child, Amber Nicole ,
• BCJ·n on Oct. 22 at P leasant
.; Va lley Hospi tal. W.Va., thP In :~ ran t weighed six pounds, 12
:· ou nces and was 19 Inches kl ng.
··Paternal gra ndpar ents are Bes·
.
: sle Fisher and ·Roy Do~eii , and
materna l grandp arEn tS arc Carol)' n and Char les Neutzling.
111 Seconll St., Pomeroy
Pate · nal grea t-grandparrn ts are
, Mvrllc Qullien and the late
YOUI INDEPENDENT
. Georw Quillen and Sylvia Cook·
AGENTS SERVING
and Leo nard Dowell. Mater na l
MEIGS COUNTY
• grea t-grandparro ts are Mad a·

~-

Fisher·birth

IDOW.NING' CHILDS

6-Pak

Kroger
una .................. .

$
6.5-oz

2

ALL WEEK

DOUBLE
Manufacturer's

'

,

COUPONS
Aorida
Tangelos ....·.... ...Each

Thfa week.your mt nufecturtd products "cent• off" coupon1 ere worth double et
Kroger With $1 0.00 or .more purchtte . Limited to manufactured product•
coupens worth up to and including 60C Off. CoupOns worth more thin soc 1,,
r~med at face 'Value only, Limit one c~upon for each product purChased.
ltmit one coffn coupon. No beer, wine or c.garette coupons will be double Not
• va lid o n free coupons, Kroger ~upons or retell food • to re c oupons. The am~un t
refunded ~nnot exceed the pnce of the hem. You muat purchase product in
~.lzn apec~ied on the coupon , Thil offer. 011es only to manuftctur ed produ cls
cents oH coupons for Jtem1 we carry. To auure productallt ilabilit y for anour
~ u •!ome,rs, only one coupon per shopping family, will be doubled on eny brand
111m duF!ng uch store visit,
.

--Kroger
-- $

0.5% Milk ....... Gal.

,.

SEALTEST SKIM MILK GA L. .. $1

•

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1

WINTER COoliNG SYSTEM SPECIAL
·
I G£T YOUI GM VEHKIE IEADY FIJI THE tONG WtNTfl HAYE
1
I Test coolant. Dlessure check entire system for leaks, d11in and fill 1
I coolin&amp; system if needed with aenuint GM coolant, check hoses, 1
_1 clamps and d1iwt belts.
!All Added Labor &amp; P_orto Extral
1
1

I REGIIAR PRKE. . • TAX Special Price

$ 295

1 IWith Coupool
•TAX

:

1

l

I
GOOD THRU t:lEC .' 1. 1986
L-- -------- --COUPON·- -~---- --- -1
I
I
OIL AND FILTEl
I
.
drain oilalllrtpiKt fitter using Mr. Goedwrenclt · I
oil and AC filter. In Ibis special we Insist on using quality M1. Good· I
!'lench oil and It filters. This.is an honest to aoocltttssspecilll on qual· I
1ty GM parts. No substitue for quality. Limit 5 quarts oil.
.
.

:r:

'

125 SIZE

r------------COUPON-------------1

1

, : (RKammondod at 24 month or 24,000 nilo intorvakl

WITH $10.00 PURCHASE

)

These Special 'Apply to GM. Owners Only

INSURANCE

·;rancls·and
Fien~e~a~n:_:d~B~e,.!.·n~a~
rd~N~eu~tz~h~·n:....g_a_nd~-===:SI:N:C~I=I:I:6:8===-ll
Art hur Ro ush.

I~ .-

CAll JACK COLLINS or DAVE PEARSON

MULLEN MUSSER

IN OIL OR WATER
CHUNK LIGHT

WHY JOIN NOW? ·

(tiEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

JI(GULAR~ • TAX

Special Price

,.--..

49

.

GOOD THRU DEC. 1, 1986
I

$1IWIItt
595 TU
c-."1
+

l

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I
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I

l-------------~-----~---~---·

1. Price increases after November 16, 1986.
Full membership now
- $12 SO.OO
When course opens
- $2000.00
2. Easy payment plan (We will work with you monthly, quarterly, yearly!)

•

•

•
•

DID YOU KNOW?
1. Members can leave their membership to· a de . signaled heir in their will. (One generation only.)
2. Members receive preferential treatment for tee· :
off times on weekends and holidays.
3. Members will hove exclusive use of planned ~
swimming pool and tennis courts.
4. If you move from the area, there is a process to:
. sell back your membership. (There is a $200
transfer fee.)
S. You can switch membership dues (single, fa'mily,
social) from year to year.
·
6. If you don't play golf, !here are social member·
ships available.
7. "Business" memberships con' also name ultimate
owners (children, church, etc.l
8. Donations and business memberships may have
positive implications under the new tux lows.

.,

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p'age-8-The

Sentinel .

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Ohio

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Wednesday, November 12, 1986

Wednesday. November 12. 198_6..._

·Last Man's Club
continues tradition-.
.

The Plant Parlor In Middleport
was t.he setting for the recent
meeting of the Wildwood Garden
Club hosted by Kathryn Miller
and Debbie Ball.
Randy Osborne, who owns the
Parlor, gave a demon stration for
the group on how to attach
staghorn fern onto. a piece ·of
wood for a wall hanging . He also
explained the pr!Jeedure of preserv ing leaves by mixin g equal
parts of varnish and. paint
thinner and either dip or paint the
leaves.
Plans were made for a visit to
the Gallipolis Developmental
Center for a therapy program
this week. Also announced was
the county Christmas flower
show to he held on Nov. 22 and23
at the Senior Citizens Center with
the Wildwood Garden Club to
make the class name cards.
Doris Grueser had devotions
using the poem, "Oetober's
Bright Blue Weather" and two
readings, " Thanks Demands No
Taxes" and "Indian Summer."
Kathryn Miller was in charge
of the meeting with Mary Nease
giving a report on the callendula .
Members read I he saying of the
month in unison to open the
meeting. Refreshments were
served and members browsed
.around the store.

We Reserve The Right To ·
' Limit Quantities

· STORE.HOURS
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM-10 PM

298 SECOND
ST.
'
.
POMEROY, OH, .
PRICES EFFECTVE THRU SATURDAY, NO~. 15, 1986

~ ROUNDUP- Ranchers work lo round up cattle
'!and horse,s hi the path of a brush lire In the hills
~ north

19
Chuck ·Roast •••'!~ ••• S1

Roger and Jean Theiss, Ra cine. and Lawren"ce and Jean
· Theiss, Bidwell, have returned
· !rom a tripintotbeAmishCounty
In Lancaster County, Pa . The
rouple enroute stopped at the
quaint village of HelveHa, W.
Va., visited the old Bedford
VIllage in Bedford. Pa .; and
. toured the Wilbur Chocolate
Plant at -Lititz, Pa., and the
Sturgis Pretzel House. where
. they made their own pretzels .

Fund-raiser
&amp;

·bean·bath
TORONTO t UPl1 - A man
who raised :; million pennies to
h&lt;&gt;lp f&lt;'&lt;'d th&lt;' clt~· ·s hungry is
going for the world rpcord for
sit ting In a bathtub filled with
more than 26 gallons of pork and
beans.
" It 's just disgus ting. " Bill
Mole said Tuesda)- as he poked
his toes up through 240 tin s ~ .360 ounr&lt;'S- of stale bl&gt;ans and
pork dumped Inside the tub
outside a downtown cafe.

Fryer Parts ... ~a~ ••••••

l

49(:

GRADE AWHOLE

$ 29
.Steak/Roast........ ·1
FRESH MADE PORK
$ 29
Sausage............... 1
HORMEL SLICED
.
oz. 9
' 9
. (
. Pepperoni •••••••••••••
FRESH P'i&gt;RK BUTT

.

"'

Chickens ••.•••• ~~a~ ••••••

lB.

---

r: MINNEAPOLJS (UPII - A
2R-ycar-old woman becamr the
fourth female artificial heart
recipient when the first doctor to
lnstall a mini Jarvik-7 dPvlcc in a
·woman Implanted the manmade
·organ in h€'r chest during a
~%-hour opPration.
. "She . Is alive," an Abbott 11/orthwcst&lt;'rn Hospital spokes-roman said follow in!( the operat~n Tuesday
night on the
~nidcnl!fled woman from Minot.
N.D.
The surgery hPaded by Dr.
Lyle Joy&lt;"!' began at 6 p.m. and
was completed at 11:30 p.m ..
hospital spokesman Mark Dixon
~ald. He said the·artificial heart
was intended as a bridge until a
s~llable human h&lt;'art could be
obtained.
•;Dixon declined to comment

.COLUMBIA

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••• 89&lt;
12 OZ. PKG.

Bananas •..•...• ~·~ .•.•.•

••

NOVIIIUII 7 lhrv 13
fRIOoll' tiii'\J Hl\JRSOoiY !

fu'r ther on the woman 's condition
and said additional Information
would he given at a press briefing
today at the hospitaL
·
'Joyce, who was on the surgical
team that implanted lhP first
pPrmanent artificial heart, also
was chief surgeon for Mary
Lund, the first woman kept alive
with the device. Lund received a
mini Jarvlk -7 Dec . 18, 1985, at the
same hospitaL
Of three women who had
received artificial hearts before
Tu£&gt;sday night's implant, Lund
survived the longest with the
pump, nParly 13 months . She
received a human heart In
January and died on Oct.14 at the ·
age of 40.
Joycr sai d Lund's life proved
artificial hearts could success-

BROUGHTON'S

Co~tage
'

.

: CAMBRIDGE, Mass. IUPII- g1um. found a form of gamma
two new studies have produced lnterfpron decrea sed joint stif·
cncouragcmPnt for the USC Of a !ness In 26 patlrnts suffPrlng
fdrm of gamma Interferon to from the disease.
In addition. a preliminary
l.;t'Bt the crippling disease rheu analysis of another study con·
matoid art hrilis. .
,:-Officials at the biotechnology ducted In the United States
f)rm Biogen said Tuesday a slx- Involving more than 100 patients
m,~'~:~. study conducted at Unl· found the substance appeared to
~'
Hospital In Ghent, Bel· produce some positive effe.cts in
....;.__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __.__:..__ _ _ _----.

24 OZ. CTN.

Cheese ••••

BROUGHTON

$

·

59
2% Milk .......:~~.... 1 .

BANQUET FAMILY ENTREE

dinners·
.........
!!~~·
... $12 9
Downy ...........:!:!~. $179
MR. P FROZEN
GOLD MEDAL
· oz.
Flour ...••••...•... :.l:·•••• 89&lt; P.1·zza •••••••••••••••••••••

,.

..,

.
j/

SlB.

BAG

$149

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarht
fxpires November lS, 1986 S

:-INSTANT COFFEE
12

oz.

JAR

$499

·Umlt 1 Ptr Customer

Good ~lr At PowoU's S..trmor1c~t
bj11111 Now....., 15, 1986 S

j:

PAROLEO-.JackMurphy, 1
Murph the Surf, wa,; paroled
Tuesday, afh•r serving time T
for armed robbery and i
murder. Murphy spoke to
reporters at a {'hristian Prl·
son ministry halfway house,
where he has heen for almost '
two years. Murphy gainl'd
world wide attention in 19&amp;1
when he stole the 56:!-carat
Star of India !rom the Mu- scum of Natural History In
New York. (VPI)

MAXWEU HOUSE

CLOROX

COFFEE

GAL .

69(

Limit I Ptr Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket

Erpires Navtmbtr 15, 1916 S
•

3lB. ,

$799

•
•
•

several naturally occurring proteins that stimulate the Immune
sys tem.
-.
, Researchers began to suspect
It might he useful for treating
rheumatoid arthritis after it had
a positive impact on cancer
patients who also had rheuma·
told arthrllis. .
The company conducted the
two new studies. In which the
patlen\s were not told whether
they were receiving gamma
Interferon or a dummy drug .

BULLOIN

I

1

r'

. L.:'-=-==:-:::;;

FOR THE TAX .REFORM ACT OF 1986

'Monday, Nov. 17, 1986- 7:00P.M.
At Senior Citizens •dg., Pemeroy, Oh.

Miniaturts, Crystal lalls,

,.Spon•ored hy:

limit 1 Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's l141ermorket

"MONEY"
Limited engagement while
promoting their all ....
FRI 8t SAT. ONLY

43 COURT ST.
PRESENTS:
Austrian &amp; 'German Crystal,

The Public Is Invited
For Mare lnfor•tlon Cal 992-2133

PRESENTS

SPECIAlTY SHOP

SPEAKERS:
Karl &amp; Mary K~ler . from H&amp;R Block and
Karl A. Kibler ll C.P.A. from Kebler Business Services

Figuri111s, Prisms, Pendants,

Prr ...ils. Pewter

Colltctwlts, Mathology,

Wildlife Slrits, llinls af
North, lluman Ciluations,
llnkorns, Almost ·Anrthitg.
Join aur Crrstal Earring Club•
Wt do c•tom ardtrs I
layaways.
Dec. 24th, 5:00 Drawing: 7"

It Pays
·ro Advertise
CALl
992-21-56

Crystal Unorn.
614·446-0131, Galipolil, Cll •

Erpirts Nov.ember 15, 1986 I

. ,.

••

'' "-

CASEY'S

SlEZAK &amp;MUER
ASSOC.
,',

ARD

.
'

EASTERN HILL
fABRIC SHOP

se1·ere viral. illness that attacked
her heart and II'll it able to pump
ooly a third oft he oormal volume
of blood .
Joycp said th" virus that
attacked Lund's heart also had
caused "Insurmountable dam age to hPr other crgans." inctud ing the brain. kidneys, lungs,
stomach and intestines. He said
her bodv ne\'er rejected the
human hea rt.

'·

•··

; ',

S miles north of Chester, Ohio

SEWING NOTIONS
QUILTING SUPPLIES
HANDMADE CRAFTS

PO

''

,.

",

UNO GOODS

OP£N MON. -FRI. 10 A.M.·S P.M.
SAT. 10-2

·

.

'

~=---~==::::::=:::::::::::.".

,i

..

ADOLPH'S
DAIRY VALLEY

"lt the End of the
POMEROY, OH.

Po~~~eroy-Masen

Brldgt
PH. 992·2556

oo+ ..___••••o .,
·,

Danny Westmoreland, D.O.
Physician and Surgeor

"' -

'·

FRESH SCENT

treating the disease, officials
said .
"We'e definitely excited," said
company spokesman Robl'rt GotUeb, who stressed larger studie s
are needed to confirm the
findings.
·
About 7 million Americans
suffer from· rheumatoid arthrltis. a painful, crippling disease
caused when the body' s Immune
system malfunctions and attacks
joints.
.
Gamma Interferon Is one of

FABRIC SOFTENER

MAXWEU HOUSE

The mini .Jarvik -7. whieh is
fully be used as bridges until a
sca
led down to fit the smaller
human heart becomes available .
frame, also was _ imfemale
He said last month that Abbott·
Northwestern Hospital would planted In Bernadette Chayrez,
continue to perform s uch 40 , the first person to receive two
artificia l hearts.
operations.
"We would do II again. and we
~hayrez died Oct. 11 at Unlver ~
will do it again," Joyce said after sity Medical Center In Tucson,
Arlz., when a donor heart failed
Lund died.
, Joyce attended Dr. Barney shortly after It replaced the
Clark, a Seattle-area dentist who plastic one that had kept her
became the first person to alive since Feb. 9.
tecelve a permanent artificial
heart Dec . 2, 1982. Clark lived 112
The other female recipient was
days until March 23. 1983, at the an unidentified woman who reUnlverslty of Utah Medical Cen - celved a Jarvik -7 on Oct. 7 at
ter in Salt Lake City.
Prest:yterlan Hospital in Pltts·Belore Tuesday night's lm- burgh. She received a natural
plant, 26 people were known to ·. hear t transplant the next da y and
have received artificial hearts died eight hours later.
sin€&lt;' 1969, either permanently or
Lund, a secretary In a senior
to keep them alive when their citizens home until her sudden
Illness. had suffered from a
natural heart s failed.

_-..terferon has promise in rheumatoid arthritis
•

DOMINO SUGAR

.'·

serving 16 years of a li fc
sentence, said he will remain in
the Orlando area where he spenl
the last 23 months ·living and
working at a halfway hou se
operated by Christian Prison
Ministries.
He said he has incorporated
himself, plans to market his
wildlife paintings and would like
to start his own non- denom inational church.
Asked how he wHI rES JXl nd to
those who may doubt his religious conversion. Murphy said.
"I say the same thing !Watergat£' flguret Chuck Colson said
when he came out of prison just watch me."
Murphy said he will parlicipate next month In the National
Prison Invasion - an effort bv
30,000 Christian laymen go to ~~0
prisons to preach.
"We 'll he saturating tbe prisons with the voice of J&lt;&gt;sus
Christ. who changt&gt;d m)· way of
life,'' he said.
Murphy, who played violin as a
youngster with the Pitl.s burgh
Symphony, was accused of robbing and pistol -w hipping actress
Eva Gabor, but she refused to
tesllfy and the case was dropped .
Under terms of Murphy's pa ·
role, he agreed to be searched for
drugs at any time. is banned
from Dade or Broward co unties
and mu st pay $2 ..'il0 to a SPnlor
citizens Meals on Wh&lt;'els program .

fotirih woman receiVes implant of artificial heart

9.5

BAR&amp;m MATINEES SA1\JRDAY I
SUNDAY - AH SEATS 12.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

s~med several crange and lemon
groves, fire spokeswoman Pam
Greenway said.
One resident said the fire
scorched a row of trees only 20
yards tom his house.
Citrus grower Steve Hammer
said the fire department "had a
truck ·right here- there was one
for everybody's house."
Officials said the fire started
Monday morning when a ·power
poiP somehow toppled to the
ground. snapping lines on the
southeastern face of South Mounfain, which separates the cities of
Camarillo and Santa Paula .
The fire briefly threatened.
homes and ranches, but -the
flames ran out of fuel when they
reached an area on the oorthside
of the mountain thai had been
stripped of brush In a controlled
blaze set last month, Greenway
said.
The flames burned to within a
fpw feet of mountaintop COllJmunlcatlon towers, knocking one
television station off the air .
About 5,000 cable TV customers
lost service when lhP flrP melted
more than 2 miles of cable on the
mountainside.
·

By BILL WOOD
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!\- Jack
"Murph the Surf" Murphy has
lncorpora ted himself and plans
to make a college lecture tour to
share the insights he gained from
spending 21 years in prison lor
murder and jewel thefts .
The former surfing champ
with an IQ of 139 told reporters
after his parole that he will spend
his time working for God.
'Til be going on the college
lecture circuit to share some of
the Insights I've gotten In 21
. years in jail," Murphy , 49, said
Tuesday .
The lanky. graying Murphy
became a national celebrity in
1964 when hP masterminded the
theft of the golf ball-size Star of
tndla sapphire, the DeLong ruby,
the Midnight Star sapphire and
21 other gems from the American
Museum of Natural History in
New York. The jewels were
recovered an_d Murphy spent 21
months in prison.
In 1975, Robl&gt;rt Conrad portrayed Murhpy In the movie
"Murph I he Surf" that focused on
the jewel heist.
In 1969, Murphy was sentenced
to llfp for murdering Terry Rae
Frank, one of two . secr&lt;&gt;tarlrs
who were slain in south Florida
following a dispute over $400,000
in securities the women stole
from a Los Angeles brokerage
firm where they worked.
Murphy, who was paroled after

'

'

3.5

a

I

lB.

MIXED

Mole's tub Wi!S enclosed in foil
with t m healers and was lnsidc a
tcnt on the sidewalk bl&gt;cause of
Tuesda y's rain.
Mole . who climbl'd into the tub
Monday clad iq a sweatshirt and
shorts . is trying to raisc$7.:!JO b)
brC'aking the world ri'Cord of 100
hours. He plans to donate th&lt;'
money he raises to FoodShare. a
rlty-run agcr\C)' that works for
14R charities · and three food
banks it Toran to.
"Th'&lt;'re's only a couple of
people th~t think I'm a jerk. I
wouldn't oo it aga in. though."
saJ d Mole .
Thr former Canadian gO\w nmcnt Pmployt'&lt;' quit his jo bt hree
\'&lt;'ars ago to.wa lk across Ca nada
in a 111-monl h jourD&lt;'\' to ra ise
mon~v for Toronto milk store
cl&lt;'t'k who wa s k'ft par alyzcd In a
19&amp;1 holdup.
Molr . :tR: also ha s staged
s&lt;&gt;v&lt;&gt;ral oth&lt;'r charity walks and
two months ago rabed !i million
pl'nnics for FoodShare. In carl\'
Sc&gt;pt&lt;&gt;mbPr. h&lt;' sat atop a i -1',
stor)· perch for two W&lt;'&lt;'ks also to
raisP runds. ' "

MAKE IT ARULE...
USE WANT ADS. •..·. ,,{
ARANDY
TOOl

·-

$) 99_.
Round Steak........ . -

Returns home

anlmalll all were uninjured as the fires pass~ by
to the north on the McGonlglle Ranch In Ventura
County. (UPI)

:By Vnlled Press International
earlier this year helped stop the
~ Abou-t 1-,700 firefighters were
fire by denying it fuel, fire
l:)ose today to controlling two dispatcher Shonna Matthews
. (llajorCalifornlaflresthatblack- · said. ened 10,000 acres of wind- dried
Near Carmel in northern Call·
~haparralln the coastal foothills
Cornia, a brush and timber fire
!IO~thwes. t of Los Angeles and
near Big Sur was almost. surahiirred nearly 2,300 acres In the rounded by flreflghters late
ted wood country or' the Big Sur. Tuesday a:iter having charred
!Uthoritles sa,id.
2,:285 acres of wilderness pine ,
&gt;¥' Crews expected to have both brushandsomeredwoods,aU.S.
· (Ires out by this morning, offl· Forest Service official said.
~lals said.
~ The biggest 'fire burned on
Nearly 1,000 firefighters used
~uth Mountain and along th&lt;'
picks and shovels to cut fire lines
Santa Clara River bottom near in the nearly lnacces~lble forest
tamarillo, 50 miles northwest of southeast of Carmel.
t;os Angeles for morp than 24
One flreflghter needed seven
~ours before its spread was stitches when he was knocked
~topped at sundown Tuesday.
unconscious by a falling red• 'Theflre was whipped by Santa wood. and another falling tree
Ana winds of up to 50 mph on damaged a tru~k used to carry
Monday , but the winds abated on fire crews. About 2.''i firefighters
'J'Uesday . A "red flag alert" was suffered minor Injuries ranging
llticlared ,in Los AngPies County from broken fingers and lieat
bl&gt;cause ofhot, dry wpather and , exhaustion to poison oak .
li\tsty winds blowing In off the . , Cause of the six-day blaze,
Jtesert.
which has cost $900,000 to fight.
•'MorPthan700fireflghtl'rsfrom has not been determined .
t'entura· and Los Angeles counOn thP Ventura County blaze.
ties. aided by water- di-opplng trucks were stationed at scatlj{&gt;llcopters. battled thl' fire at Its tered citrus ranches, and al·
tktght. Brush abatement pro- though no structural damage
J!r:ains and contro.lled burns was . reported. the flames · con-

· songs of the war .- They drew drink the toast," added Wilkins.
applause and laughs with thP - Art)lur Lee, · 91, this . year's :,
brandy . :: ~kipper" lor the c lub, ,
refr~ln: "How are. we going to
. keep the boys down on the farm said . "The brandy is boo,tleg
after they've been to gay 'Pair- brandy tha t we got during
ree.'"
Prohibition ."
)
The
bottle.
wrapped
in
foil
and
The club once ~d 83 members
but Is now down to 11 . It was fpstooned with ribbOns of the
formed by 15 veterans woo later French tricolor. had been kept in
expanded the membership, said a bank vau It by a bank chairman
club secretary Don Douglas, the who was a club member. After ~
only one of the original 15 still the banker died and the bank was ~
torn down, 'the' tas k of guarding
·
living.
The bylaws state that thP last the bran dy fell to the "skipper," ~·
s_urvlvor will uncork a GO-year- elected .every year at thP annual ,:
old bottle of French cognac and meetl~g .
"Pretty soon we won't be able '
drink a toast to -"those who have
moved up to the last front.'' to remember where we put the
bottle. let alone drink it," joshed ·
Douglas said.
"If, of course. the last man by Wilkins. who won the Silver Star ·~
then will be able to lift the glass to as an Infantryman in World War I ~
his lips, let alone propose and and served as a judge advocate In .:·
the Air Force in World War 11. ..
Wilkins is also the last surviving judge to have served during ~
the Nuremberg trials of Nazi war ~
Grimi nals and he has writ.ten a "
b:&gt;ok about his experiPnCPS.
"
j;·

'Murph the Surf
to work for God

fwo.major fires bum in California .

USDA CHOICE

US~A CHOICE

of Camarillo, Calli., Monday. Tlwse

'

'

By TERRY FINN ··
SEATTLE (UPII ~ Five
memtx&gt;rs of the Last Man's Club
of World War I veterans joked,
sang and rem.lnlsced at . the
annual reunion ' of the group
whose flnal survivor will toast hiscomrades In arms with a glass of
bootleg cognac.
The men and their wives met
for lunch Tuesday at the exclusive Ranier Club to commemorate the Nov. 11, 1918, armistice.
The group used to gather every
year for a black-tie dinner "until
some of us decided It was· safer
for us to drive In the daylight,"
said William J. Wilkins. 89, a
retired -superior court judge.
The five veterans - Some
holding canes or chairs - stood
to sing "Over There" and other

dub meets

'1

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wildwood
·garden

.gets pork

'

""-. --

announces the opening of

WESTMORELA"D
FAMILY .CARE CENTER
IN MASON, WEST VIRGINIA
OPEN ·
Monday • Friday
I
9:00 A.M. to 5;00
., P.M.
For Appointmepts Phone
773-5·333
Walk-ins Accepted
~

I

'

'

(located nut to Wahama.r High School in the former
office of Dr. Thomas McGowan.)

'

-

't

-.

--

�•

Page- 10 - The Daily Sentinel ·

Wednesday,' November 12, 1986;

I

Patrol cites driver of truck :~~

POlNT PLEASf.NT Kermit Keith " Buck " Clary ,
convicted by a Mason Cou nty . pt1tl t jury in Octobe r of
Involuntary manslaughter In the Jan. 14 , 1986 shootin g de ath of
William Keith Brum field of Glenwood. W.Ya .. and sentence d by
Circu it Judge Clarence Wa tt to t he m aximum sentence of a year
In the Mason County J all. is free on $10,000 bo nd following a stat e
Suprem e Cour t decision.
'
Clary, 53, of Lesage, W.Va ., wa s freed Mo nday \i ft ernoon
accor di ng to M ason Cou nty Prosec uting A tt orney Damon B :
.
M orga n Jr.
Don Kingery , .cJary 's attornE&gt;y, said he had fil ed a motion In
Mason County Cir cuit Court Set'king bond pending appeal fo r his
chen!. When Judge Watt denied the motion, K ingery petit ioned
the Supreme Cour t for a · wri t of habpas corpus and
post -conv iction bond .
The Supreme Court heard arguments in the matter from bot h
K ingery and Mor gan last Thursday and on Monday gran ted
K i ngery's petit ion.
·
Kl ngE&gt;ry has served notice in the Suprem e Court that he
Intends to appea l both t he involu ntary m ansla ught er co nvic tion
and t hE&gt; sentenced Imposed by Judge Watt.

Middleport records 49 fire calls
The Middleport Fire Dep art m ent answer l'd 49 ca ll s - seven
fire r uns and 42 emergE&gt;ncies - dur ing October , Fir e Ch ief Jeff
Darst reports. All vehicles of I he department wer e driv en 930.J
miles dur ing t he month .

.

Police detail October activitv
'

Edwin H. Price
Edwin H . Price. 76, 1511.
Hebron Road, Heath. died at the
Hea th Nur sing Home Tuesday
mor ning.
Bor n In Portland on June 12,
1910, he was the son of of t he l ate
Willi am Price and Cl ara Icenhour Price. He was a self·
employed truck driver .
Surviv ing are his wi fe, Fern
Smith Price , three sons, Har old
P. Price, Hebron , Dougl as L .
Price and Dana R . Pr ice, Newar k ; a daughter. Mrs. Vernon
(Joyce) Ridenbaugh, Newark,
and eight gran de hlldren . Also
survi\'in g are a sis ter , Mrs . L ucy
L arkins, East Liverpool, a
brother, Oscar Price, Pom eroy ,
and sever al nioces and neprews.
Services will be held at 1 p.m .
Thursda y at. the Henders on, Van
Alt a and Johnston Funeral H ome
in Newar k. The RJ!V. Joseph
Harr will officiate and bu rial will
he in Wilson Cem etery . Newark.
F r iends ma y call at the funera l
hom e fi·om 2- 4 and 7-9 p.m.
Wednes da y.

Bertha F. Bowers

The M iddleport Pol ice Depar t ment made 64 arrests and
investigated nine accidents in Oc tober : Chief of Poll ee Sid Litt le
reports. All vehicles or ! he depar tment wer e driven 568.5 miles
durin g the month . There wer e 520 par kin g t ickets wri t ten and
parking meter collections tot aled $972.50. Mer chant po lice
collections amoun ted to $48.

Eastern-Southern alumni game set
T he annual alumni foot ball ga m e betwee n Easter n art d
Southern will be held thi s Saturday, 7 p.m .. at Southern High.
Tickets m ay be purchased at Souther n High or at the gate.

Senior.~ .~chedule Friday dance
A dance will be held Friday, 8 to 11 p.m .. at the M0igs Senior
Citizens Center. Ad m ission $1 .50. M usic by th e St r ing Dtsl ers.
Bring snacks for the snack bar .

Couples file for dis.m lution
F iling for dissolu tio ns of their m arriages in Meigs Count v
Common P leas Court arc James F . Bar nes. Ra cine, and Susan
D. Ba r nes. Racine; Michael Alan Baker, Dov er, F la., and Robin
Rene!' Baker, M iddlepor t.
Berdena M. Gardn er has been granted a divor ce from Marvin
K. Gardner. on ·grounds of gross neglect of du ty and ex treme
cruelty , In an ac t ion filed by Marv in K. Ga rdn er.

Bel'tha F . Tucker Bowers , 69,
Grimm s Landing , W.Va., died
Mond ay in Memorial Div ision of
Char leston Ar ea Medical Center
foll ow ing a short Illness .
She was bor n in Ma son County
on May 3. 1917, to the late Sa mu el
and Alice Whitt irtgon Tu ckE&gt;r.
H('r husband wa s the late Ted
Bowers. who died Jan. 30, 1984.
ShP was a memher of Oma
Chapel Church . Grimms Lan ding. and a member of t he Buf falo,
W.Va., Senior Cit izens.
·
Surv ivors include two daughter s. Juanita Griff if h, Long Bot :
tom , and Phy lli s M it chel l, Robertsbu rg, W.Va .; two SQns,
Thurman Bowers. Bidwell , and
Herman Bower s, ·c olumbus; a
fos ter daugh ter, Ruby Tucker
Craig, Buffalo ; t wo sister s. Syl via Dav is , Grim ms Landing, and
A i m ~ Higgin bot ham . Robert sburg ; one bro t he r. M ason
Tu cker . Am anda , W .Va.; and 13
grandchildr en and 11 gr eat gr andc hildren.
Ser vices will be T hu rsday at 2
p.m. a t Oma Chapel Chu rch, with
Re\'. Jack Gar to n offi ciati ng.
Bur ial will be In Leon Ce metery .
Friend s rn a~ cal l Raynes Fun eral Home, Buff alo , fr om 6-9
tonight.

Middleport court issues 2 fin es

Howard E. Aleshire

Fined in the cou rt of M iddlepor t Mayor F red Hoffm an
Tuesday ni ght were Dav id Sigm an. Middleport, S25 and cos ts .
disord&lt;'rly manner, and Phillip Wooten, Middleport. $25 and
costs on an open cont ainer charge . For feitin g a $.'i0 bond IX'SII'd
on a charge of improper start i ng and back ing was Tall l ha A.
Smith , Newa r k.

Howard E ldon Aleshir e. 50 .
was dead on arriv al at Veterans
Memorial Hospital Tuesday after suffering a heart atta ck at hi s
home at 108 Un ion A ve ..
Pomer oy.
Mr. A les hire was born Feb . 12 ,
1936, at Yoly n. W.Va .. a son or t re
late Harl and and Vonnie Jeffrey
Aleshire. He was a r.etlred
mac hinist and had for m erl y

EMS responds to Ji ve call.~
M iddiepor l at 1:29 a.m . transpor tN:I Tina Pet r i&lt;• fi·om till'
pollee departm0nt to Veterans Memor ial Hos pital ; Midd leport
at 11: ' 9 a.m . to Dr . Ja mes Conde's office to RPna Fit ch to St.
.Joseph's Hospita l ; Pomeroy at 12: 01 p.m . to Union Avenue for
Howard Ales hi re to Veterans Memorial Hos pit al ; Racine at
2: 17 p.m . tr ansported Fred Searberry to Vc t&lt;'rans Memorial
Hospita l ; M iddl&lt;'port at :1: 24 p.m . to Ohio 7 fot· Lro na Wallace to
Veterans Memor ia l Hospital.

Mayor's court fines 5 people

:v eterans Memorial
: Admissions- .lenni Wayland,
. ·Pom eroy: Joshu a Cremean s,
Langsv ille; Oleva Cot'terlll , Mid·
diE&gt;port; Lawrence ·Scarberry,
, Pomer oy; B obby Rupe, Rac in e;
Anna Koenig. Racine.
M ar k
D isc h a r ges
. Laudermll t.
I
·I
,'

'

Char les F . Chancey. Pom eroy,
$47. Others fo r feiting bo nds wer e
Ern est Hutton. Alba ny, $4 3,
i mproper back ing: Mike Dor st,
9i3, no oper ator 's license. and
$47. speeding, and Paula Ri fe,
Mi dd leport , $43, stop sign
violat ion.
..

tractor- tt aiiE&gt;r dr iver was · a lely ; Stumbo was .not
ci ted lly the Gallla·Melgs post of
·served as a cub scout leader in the Oh io Highway Patrol Tu esColumbus.
day for !allure to control alter his
Surviving are his wife, Avo- truck veere&lt;l off Ohio 124 In
nell , w hom he m artiE&gt;d on Aug. 2, Salem Township, striking an
1956, In West Logan , W.Va. ; two embankment and overtur ning.
Eyobrow ~inti It . .eat.
so ns and d aught er s- ln· la w, ·
Bepny R . Stumbo, 'SI, l'U. 1,
willl
t thorp - . . -. II ~tr
Rick ey Dean and Cathy Aleshire, Bidwell, .was eastbound around
tlpa tr1 ~uti, rllltw odtlo with a
Brookly n, Ohio; Chief B.T . Gar - 9: 28a.m . and lost control of ·his
nWI filt or pumictltone. ·
...
land Lee (U .S. Navy) and Shar on tractor-tr ailer, veering off lbe
Today't htll'ltYiot look . .It with
Ales hire, J acksonville, Fla.; a left side of I he road Into an
controlled, ~-••••••••••••
daught er and son-In-law, Tanya embankment and overtur ned.
Mekl en appointment to get 1
an d Norm a Repinski, Garfield The truck was damaged moderIPfCIII htlrttylt of your own .
Heights; two sisters, Ca r ol Jean
Dedication scheduled
McK enzie, Cleveland, and Christine Reed, · Pomeroy; a twin
The First Baptist Church of
br other , Harland Aleshire Jr.,
ex tends an Inv ita tion to
Racine
Pomeroy, and four gran dch!!dren, Diana, J ason, Garl and J r. attend thE&gt; dedication of a nl'w
addition to the church.
and Clay ton Ales hire.•ju II 11rrl'i('(' salnn"
The cele br ation will be Sun·
111 W.•2nd II.
,...roy. Olt.
day. fr om 2 to 4:.30 p.m ., at the
"2·6720
BesidE's his par en ts he was
HOU~: lloft.• Sot. 9:00 to 9:00
church on F i fth Str eet In Racin e.
preceded in death by a sister, ·
(oil for An Appoint1111nt
T he program w llllnc!u'de a shor t
Trulfy Marlllall, Mary !low tiL lour• , ,
Loretta Bur gess.
•
dedication service In the church
h!d, lit Lu rnt MUo la11rnuwt
Services will be held at 11 a.m .
!Siwoilo Pow•ll - TOnl'llnq f
sanctuary, to be followed by an
Frt da y at the E wing F uner al
~~:;:;~;
~,~-r
open house and refr es hments.
tfl
.;, .;.vv
'"'""'
Hom e w i t h R ev . Char l es
Sh aeffer, Cleveland, officiatin g.
BW' ial wi ll be In Beech Grove .
Ce metery . F r iends m ay ca!! at ·
--- !be fu ner al hom e from 7-9 this
evenin g and f rom 2-4 an d 7-9 p.m .
Thu rsday.

f-.

···"········

..

--·.

...

c

r------:------

DOLLAR

--- - ---

FREE ANTIFREEZE CHECK

WITH ANY OIL CHANGE SPECIAL
· OR TUNE-UP SPECIAL
'

$AVER$

nemNo

26330 tW1'·7oiJl · 1-1'.

national debt doubl ed in those
five .vea rs - aggrava ted the
sit uat ion, in creasing the fear of
fi nanci al m llapsr. Seidm an sa id.
" The great danger is that
heav y debt.levels.wlll tur.n a mild
or norm al bu siness do wnturn
in to a sever e recession," he sa id.·
" T he ·cycle 0f defa ults and
pr odu ct ion cut backs can feed on
itself an d m ak e r ecovery mu ch
mOI'P di ffl CU.JI' than it WOUld have
been with lower debt level s."
In a lat er address , Fe der al
Hom e Lo an Ba nk Board Chairm an Edwin Gray told t he hom o
loan lenders they mu st adhNe .to
t he ir cha rters and not subvert
t he in tention or Co ngr es s by
usin g t heir ttu·ift stat us as a
invented new and innovat iv(l " lice nse to opera t e inves tm ent
w~ys of ge_
t ting it s~J r in hock ,·· he company activities on the go: ·said .. "I speak of the wav&lt;' or vernment's ni ck el. us ing feder &lt;leveraged bu you ts and stock . ally lnsurro deposit s as l relr
· Tepurchase programs whi ch ha s sourCX&gt; of funds. "
:result ed In a massive substi tuThe Feder al Sav in gs and Loan
:: uon of debt for eq uit y during t he
lnsur anC&lt;' Corp. operat l'd by the
• la st fiv e years ."
Bank Board " Is faced with '
:: Changes In con sum('f att itudos u np r ~ode n tl'd problems as the
; and a dras t ic acceler ation in resull or imprudent. and yes,
:·governm ent spendin g thr· egregious be hav ior by som e in
the industry who have chosen to

Engine Tune-Up .

Reg .

~2 . 89

Pickens Hardware

fEAFORDrn
Real Estate· R£AuoR

OIL CHANGE
$1295 4 en.

TUNE-UP
$2895 4CYL.

OTHER URI !liGHTLY HIGII!I

Price includes Mopar

•New oil jup to 6 qts.
cars / 6 qta . trucks)
•New Mopar oil filter
•Check fluid levels
•Check battery •Special
or additional oil slightly
higher.

Champion opark pllugs
•Inspect emi1sion
components •Set timing
•Idle adjustment jEngines
lflulpped whh greater
thin 2-bbl. carb and
standard igjition slightly
ligher.)

'
Phone
\ 1-111 14)- 9.9 2·3325

.

''

Ch rylser•PJymourh•Dodge, Inc.
(6 14l 99U&gt;i2 1

;: ~~ S.

Thi rd

St.

m

[fifl'r\11/1 ( ( 1/f'()IIAI Q.\j
lo(NUNII''IIIT',

Mddlepo rt

. OH 45760

I

.

'

'

' ,.-:,

I

PUBliC NOTICE
The annual r eport Form
990PF fo r December 31 ,

Tho Board of Education of
East e rn Local School Dis·

1984 lort he Kibb le Founda -

'

ro nd Stree t,
Pomeroy ,
Ohio . 4 5769 during reg ula r
business hours for a period
ot 180 days s ubs equent to
publica t io n of this notice .

!11 11 2. 13 . 14. 16. t7. 18,
19 7tc

3 Announcements

NOTICE TO BIODERS

SACRED HEART
CHURCH

Mulberry Ave.. Pomeroy, OH.

BAZAAR
THURSDAY, NOV. 13
Dinner 4:30 p.m.
til 7 p.m.
Adults $3. 50,.,
Chi ldren $2.w
Crafled and Baked ~~Q ods

54 Misc . Merchandi se

Gasoline

--

These bids will be tor II 8)
eighteen months . Said
Boa rd b f Education reserves
the right to ac cept or reject
anv and all part s of any and
a ll bid s.•
BOARD OF EDUCATION
Easte rn Local Sc hoo l Dis ·

Unimproved
land For Sale
llO acres on
Rainbow Ridge in
Chester Towns hip.

tric t

38900 - SR 7
Roedsvllo. Ohio 45772
Eloi se Barton , Trea surer
t11 ) 5, t2 , 19, 26 , 4tc

Home National
Bank

•

RATE

•

RATE•

· exAMPLE: Assume a $10 ,000.00 loan lor 120
montha. The monthly payment of principal and
Interest would be $137.84. The llrst monthly
payment would be due 90 days !rom the date of
your loan. Loan Is secured by a second mortgega
on real 41state.
·
•

No matter how cold it gets
oulside, you'll be warm and cozy
inside thanks to clean, efficient
gas heat.
A gas furnace is the only
heating system you need to.main·
lain warm, even ·temperatures
whether outside temperalures are
· at 3o• above or 30° below.
G;:ts heat is more economi-

cal, too, especially with one of
today's new high-«Jiciency gas
furnaces thai cuts gas usage by
up to 30%1 Today's lower gas
costs mean even more savings.
There's really no reason why
winter should give you the shivers.
Gas heat in your home: lhere's
nothing wanner ... nothing more
economical .. .nothing better!

CLASSIFIW ADS
asuper market

Business
Senices

OLD
HEATING CO.

-~

POMEROY , O .

Satellite Sales
lnst alia tio n
Service

992-2259

Electronic Organs

NEW LISTING - MINERSVILLE ARfA - 5 room hotre
on a n1ce lot. 3 red rooms, ba·
semen!, nice woodwtrk w~h 2
ftreplaces. Carpeting and
many other features. ASKING
$24 ,9)0.00.

Mobile seNice

614-843-5248
REA!ONASlf • RfltAIL!
1

992 -6661

358 Second be., Galtipoli1
446·0902

10/l! /16/lfn

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE ·

. INS"LATION

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

•lnsul ation

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Repl acement Windows

•1\!e·w Roofil1g

"FIIEE ESTIM111S"

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-2772

11 -7-86 -1 mo.

AUTOMAnC .
TRANSMISSIONS

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND .
190 MULBERRY AVE,
POMEROY, 011.

COLUMBIA GAS

.
'

2s(

EACH

~

·USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAMP SHADES.

.

CAN BE. PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

•All Typos of

Henry E. Cltfend, Jr,
.

.

24 Hour Wrecker Service
Full lor• ~ • &amp; ~apoir .
35109 Titvs load

IUSINESS PHON!
(6141 992-6550
fiiiiiNCI PHONE
ti.14l H2·
I

B wk . old puppiea. par1 Be~gle . 4"
mt le, 3 fem~le . ·ctll 014 -367-1

0185.

Stray c:at . ~ Si~m•~ dec:l.w..t ·
• neutered . Need• Qood ho me .'
Cell614· 379-2436
·
Electric: c:ook 1tove. refrigera tor. '
box ap ringt and menreat. chair ,
fram e and l tudfo, c:ouc:h fume ,
Ph. 614-446-0321 .

- -----::-----:::- '
1

-.-- ~----,

•VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSRL
SIDING CO.

New Ho1111s Built
"Free Eatin'latas"

PH. 94.9-2801
or 949-2860

No
·

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
.

Sundoy Colis

3111 / Hn

LIMESTONE
HAULED
TROMM
EXCAVATING
742-2328

IO·S·tfc

PRINT SHOP

y,, Plilllllf Nrli•

PWS: OHict Supp6ts &amp;

Furniture, Wedding
and Gr~1luotion
Stationery, Magneti&lt;
Signs, Rullbll' Stamps,
• lusiness Farna,
Copy Stnicts, Etc.
ISS Mill St., Mi&lt;klleport
104 Mulberry b., Ptmtror

992-33453111 Hn

II · 7-86 -1 mo .

YOUNG'S
JACK'S SEniC
TANK SERVICE

6 lost and Found
:

t 100 reward · fo r retum ~ ,'
in formation leeding to t he where,

614-446-0370.

•

Found· Man 'I jtcht &amp; cep et:
Add iton townhouae on Nov. 4 .•
C ~ ll61• · 367-7734 to identi fy .~

.

lost amall Beagle childs pet. •
Reward i1 you know the WherN-'
bouts pl e u e call 814 · 388··
8734 . . .
:

-Irish-Setter,
- -·
Lott
'h Cocker "
'h

Sp..,iel, 2% ft . ttll , brown ,~
answert tO Bridg et, REWARD•
Ph 614-441 -3780 or 114-441-.
"¥Jn 11k tor Eltine MuiQ)ower.•
___;,__, ·

____

Lost- Reward: For the return o1 e..
'' Delmation" Telc.en from Plea· ·

u nt Hill School Ad . Call &amp;14-:

379-2246.

----------------·
Found : Wh ite gelding pony on·

Rocksprings Rd . Sundey mom &lt;
in g . Cell 814-992-7300 .

:

Whit e male dog lo st in vlctn ity o(

Condor St and S pring Ave . AIL.
'white with curly tail•danswer.,
to Bre ndy. F1mily pet. Anyon e'
with intormatton call 814 -982·'
2066. 860 reward.
:
LOST. short haired bltck daQ, eo:
lbs , blue co lllf, anawers to..
'' Limb urg" , 304-675 · 1373 ,

CARPENTER
SERVICE

@

Guin ea pigs, 304-876-5781 .

Loat • med · blue med lctl tn cyc -:
topecl ie, around Holzer " Ell·•
relca . If fo~nd plene ctll 814-•
2158 ·6097.
•

THE QUAUTY
AU

:

·•bouts of ma!e bleck Lt luoedort
lost in 0 .J . White road ar•. Call•

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

F~t

.

long hair Persi11n Gu in a. Pig.'•

Good ho,.,.. , 2 years old , 304·'

W Dn ted to buy free.~:er in good"

- Addona and rt modeting
- Roofing and gutter work

- Concrete work

, 40b2 5' ~t. Rt. 611

•Sewage Systems
•Water 8o Gas lines
•Water Well Drilling

:.!4 HOl 'H ~F. Il\' Jf : F.

(Free Estimatea)

614/992•7119

V. C. YOUNG IH

W. VA. Residents
Call Collett

992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomeray, Ohio

RADIATOR

SER~ICE
We can repaiT and rt"
core radrataTs and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992 ·2196
Middleport. Ohio

1· 13-tfc

- Plumbing and electrical

cond, 304-176-2927.

7

·

Yard Sale

work

Pomeroy, Ohio

4-15-'86-tc

~-

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

SERVICE
985-3561

All Meku

Bashan Building

EVElY
SAT. NIGHT

PARTS and SERVICE
4-5-lk

.. ..... Giillfpi:ilii·-------:
&amp; Vicinity
......... ... . ...... . ...... . . . . .. • 1

•

First t ime t ale Centanary Towt1 ~
house Nov. 13 &amp; 14 brand name
clo thing, toys, jewelery, new

~
l:

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Complet e Gutter Wa'l'
Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types

-z (614) 446-7619 ·or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 ·

CALL COLLECT:

. Ph. (614) 843-5425

BUILDING

GEN
REMODELING

INTERIOR

L REPAIR

9

Wanted To

Buy •

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. SHand

Middleport, Ohia

COMWRCIAL · RESIDENTIAL
- FREE ESTIMATES-

PHONE (614) 992-5009
SPECIAL/liN~

We pey cash tor late model
used Cl rs .
,
Jim Mink Chev.-Oid1 lne . •
Bill Gen e Johnson
~

.

TOP CASH Ptid lo• '8 3 mo~
and newer u sed ear~ . Smitltll
Buick ·Pontiec. 19 11 bsterR
Ave., Ga llipo lis . Call 61• · 440•
WANTED TO BU"Yd•Hd 'NOOd &amp;
coal heaters. SWAIN 'S FURNI -

TUR E. 3•d . &amp; Olive St. O.ll.,o ·
lit . Call614 -446 -31 59 .

448·0175.

Buy in g d1ily gold, silver eoina.
rin gs, Jtw•lry, stiflin g wert , dd
colnt, lerge c urrency, Top prl·
c:es . Ed. Burke n Blrber Shop.
2nd . A ve . Middleport, Oh . &amp;14 ·

IN WINDOW I. DOOR REPIAC~MENT

mo.

Wanted to buy. S tanding timber.
Colt 814-742-2328.
Helder penel. grill tn d
bo i'J'1) er, for 1981 Gran
mouth Fury. Car uu
1979- 1982 . Ch rysler
Yorker. New Port ~r Pty .
Ca ll &amp;14 -!Mil -707! .

front
Ply•
fro m
N•W
Fury.
.•

Want ed 10 Buy standing tlmb e rr
ptlcn e 304-87&amp;· 4412 , 8:006:00 PM aft er 5 :0 0 PM 304-

676-3924 Of 304-37 2-51 92.

Et'tflloymenl
St: rv tees

1Mt
271 N.

614 -441 -36 72

99 2·3476.

PAINTING EXTERIOR

1 1 · 115 ·86

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Inside. ttereo . 2 10 -cen t t ab les:
pillow pw~el s , misc. Thu u ., fri .~
&amp; Set. Herman·Northup Ad,
Centenary. .
.,

Used Mobile Homes, ca ll 1· 114 -

8-13 tfn

Worked in home ar ea

20 y01rs
" Free Estimates "

Besement Ge rage Sele McCovt
Plantz Sub. Gravely 1rector 81
Mowe r, lu rn itu re, cfuiltma~
deooret lon t &amp; gift s, dithet i
glusware. nicknacks. jewelry\
flowen, ni ce win ter coeu fi
clothes, c urtains, apreed t . Fri1
dav Nov 7 thru Sat. No v. 18 . ,

2282.

licensed Clinical Audiologist

Middleport
992-5766
OPEN :Mon. -Fri . 8 am-9pm - Sat. 8-6
2nd,

11

!-lelp Wanted

"At Reasanable Prices"

Walk -ins Welcome

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, P£RMS .. AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS

Hiring now. Paid tn in ing in
mechanica l main ten .. ee eva ila -

Debbie Meadows- Owner: lmojean Blevins
loretta Holsinger. Shelly Ohlinger
Melissa Downing, Merri Ama

do r, . Ca ll 1 - ~0 - 28 2 - 13 8• .
MondBV· Thursda y, 9am-2pm.

Day or Night

NO SUNDAY CALLS

MEC HANICS .Jl BS

4-16 -'E tfn

~ ~~ to high IChool gred . age
17 -:Jl in goa d ph ysica l co ndi ·

Make Chrlst mu money , se ll
Avon . Make 46 pereent . Ca ll

61 4-446-3358.

faclory ChGk t

N.E.C.A. CONTRACTOR

Announr.cmcnls
3 Announcements
Save you r kJ ved on n ., me of
the sorrow &amp; e• pense . Purchat·
ing memorial property before

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

In Syracwe, Ohio
"YES, Wt ARE OPEN."
THURS.-FRI.-SAT.
' 9 to 5

IIAIONAill UTIS
10-J0-'86-1 mo .

. 1·3·'86 tfc

6-17 -tfc

JO' S GIFT SHOP

Te·i
.......

fll'lll Eq11lptnut
Ptrts &amp; Se rvlee

-

GREAT BEND ELECTRIC, IrK.

DEEAS. RABBITS, DOGS .
CATS. EAGLES, VIAQIN
MARY. WHITE AN OE 1.11
ALSO LAROE BIRO BATtll

Dooltr

FREE HEARING TEstS WEDNESDAYS
CJ Co~uterized Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds · Interpreting Services

6:30P.M.

L•,.~ng
'" C4n"""'
CEMENT HORSES .

Authoriztd John Ootre,
Ntw Holland, lvsh Hog

Back porch Ru mmage Sale W ed ~
&amp; Thur. Nov. 12 , le 13 9 till ? 4&amp;!1
Llriat Drive .
~

cl..;.

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

12 Ga..,, Shotguns

Jt111 Trumll ..... Mt-26&amp;0 .

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Form E~uipm111t

•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

124, Pomoroy Ohio

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

S-LES &amp; SEIYICE

•Washers •Dishwashers

REPAIR
Also Trtmtletlon

Ph. 742 - 2592 •

GUN SHOOT

BOGGS

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USII

Roger Hysell
Garage

Middleport, Ohio

992-6191

:Dottie Turner ..... t92· 56t2 ·
JOifica... ............. t92-22St r · !

,...,, -

•Basements

AUTO

BAUMSUBDIVISION - Approx. 5 yrs. old. 3·4 bed·
room home w1th 2 bat hs,
deck, pat1p and garage. Split
toyer design all in good condillOn. Natu ral ga slarced air
heat and 1entral air. Nice
lot. $59,900.00.
.
ACREAGE tor elbow room!
App rox. 10 acres ol .lan d
near Chester with water an d
electr ic available. Perfec t
tor mobile home or building
site. Only $7,500.00.

B· 20-'86 tfn

·® C~~H~~E

OPEN DAllY 9 AM·S PM

ONLY

Tlr BankThatMakesThings Happen.
97 North 2nd, Middleport

701 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Billa Here

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

MIDDLEPORT - Fantastic
home with a gtganl ic family
room. wilh a beautiful lireplace, large living room. 3
bedrooms, 2 ~ baths, fu ll basement and app rox. i ~ acre
of ground. MAKE OFFER
$45,900.00.

SIZE 23X30X007

TRUST

.0.

I&amp;L BLOWN

RACINE , OHIO
PH. 949·2210

RACINE - One floor plan
home with 2 bedrooms, ~in ­
'ngroom , full base men t, and
a one car garage. Must see.
$1 2,000.00.

I

Giveaway

IUIO rad io.

Ttnnt trefl\tCNibll.

'

4

card

Credit C.rd.

876-6636.

Real Estate General

e.'Mi i ••~.:~:~~•

bMarMnl • • Clln help rou madlinbl ,...,

We C1rty Fishing Supplies

11 -4-86 ·1 mo.

Oecemher· 15 , 1986. and
will be opened dur ing
Regular Board M eeting ·

NEW LISTING - MINERSVILLE - Small house at a
small price. Good rental
propetty . Elec. B.B. heat, l
bedroom. equ ipped kitchen .
WANT $9.500.00.

-SALES &amp; SERVICE

At . 7
Middleport
11 -7-86 -1 mo.

Call: 742

·TVsr Antennas

.
' ..

Improve the plumbing ... tram the alii&lt; to the

0 50 %~:~:m 10 59% PE~:~~GE

JERRY
SIEGFREID

•Trucking

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Housing
Headquarters

Midditport, Ohio ,45760

SIGNS OF AU KINDS

•Landscaping

Diesel Fuel
Specrtication sheets a re
available at t he Trea su rer 's
Office .
In order to be oo nside red ,
all soo ted bids shalt be
rec eived in the Treasurer' s
Office by 2;00 P.M. on

Al~erNew

Ntw loca~on:

168 Nerfh Second

992 ~ 7460

Excavating

Motor Ott

PLUMBING

JERRY'S
SIGN SERYI(E

Fuel Ott

Real Estate General

.•

tho""""'

ABIG PUNCH!

for everything

•
'

'

mel(

trict desires to receive sealed
b ids on the following:
Fleet lnsuran oo
Tires and Tube s

64 Misc . Merchandise

675-3999

SMALL
WANT ADS

Dece mber .

•

n'I'U)...J ~

Wiltdow · Wood • Paper
Plastic • Truck
·
Silk Screening
Boat Lettering • Realty
Jackets · ,T·shirts

Bob Barton, Owner
10-17-86 -1 mo.
Public Notice

l aw office. 111 Jf7 W. Se ·

• 67ACRES - Of trac tor la nd
~ hay with al l minerals near
Sumn er.
' . 8 ROOMS - 2 story, lg. 3
BRs, 3 ba ths, gas FA
)o inace with wood unit,cook
·&amp; take units, lg. family ·rm ..
: .liteplace wood unit, immal
• tftn ing &amp; !g. yard.
: :POMEROY - 9 rms, 2 ap ts.
• :2 loi s, gas lu rnace. modern
; ·~!'chen. basement. _ga ra ge
r •..:.,. in near Kroger's.
: lACINE -:-- 6 tm.s., tull
' basement, coal furnace,
; ca rpetin g. 2 ~ar ch es, db!
ga rage on Cotner lot near
1 schools.
SALEM CENTER - 4.76
ams, 6 rm . ranch , 3 BRs.
elec. 8.8. heat. carport and
insulated. Only $32.500.
43 ACRES Eastern
Schools, 4 or 5BRs, furnace.
bu ildings. all minerals to·
settle estate.
MIDDLEPORT - Mode rn 3
BR home hid den next to the
woods. Gas F.A. furnace ,
dinmg rm .. full basement &amp;
swim. pool.
BUSINESS BUILDING Room enou gh tor 6 ren tals.
Now occup1ed by 4.
BUILDING LOT - Bau m
Sub. Oiv. Rest ncted a~ea .
SELLING PROBLEM
CALL 992 -3325

ATTORNEY AT LAW

roof, rode&gt;

Ill Ceturl St., Pomtto~. Oi ia 45769

Public Not ice

tion . Bernard V. Fultz. Trustae, is available for PJblic inspection at ~ r nard V. Futtz

· , 216 E-'.2nd St.

COOPER

GAS HEAT.
ITS AGREAT

DUNLAP

~ 1 both, repair .the

PHONE
992-2156
01 Whl t Daillr Sentinel Clm ihett Dept.

Vlti-Mas1erear,d -gM your
TODAV I

L.;:=======::;rr~;;;;:;;:~;::;Jr=:;;~;:;;i;::;;::~
NO
ONE REFUSEOl
Cot1
8·
j" 1
4&amp;9-3&amp;46
••~ C198D.
241-51
houra.,

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

----

Real Estate· General

Oil and Fiber Change

VALUABLE COUPON

For smoom . fast Oll·purpose cutting
in lromi n~ work. etc .. cutoN ripping
and miter:ng.

$1.59

misuse and abuse the thri ft
!ranchise out of sheE&gt;r gree d for
purely per son al gain," he said.
" The public policy f oundations
.. . for a sep arat e ·thr lft sys tem
ar e basl'd on and are Inextr icably
tied to tre residential mort gage
finance function," Gray s aid. ·
" Thi s is not the only role
req ulred of thrift institutions
insured by the FS U C .. . but It is
the prlnclpal .ro le."
The 99th Congr ess' s failure to
pass a measure to rec;~pi ta llze
depiE&gt;tl'd FSU C coffer s was a
m aj or topic of discu ss ion at the
convention. Gr ay bl am ed the
h0avy dra in on thrift insur ance
funds on r isky rea l estat e dea ls
and othe r forms of speculati ve
inves tm en t by a number of
Institutions.
Seidman sai d many of t he
recenDbank and thr ift fa ilures In
the agricultur al and ener gy
sectors or I he U .S. econom y were
prec ipita t ed by heavy indebt l'd·
ness, suggestin g that "there
exists a level of defaulti ng debt
that co ul d jeopar dize the stabil i ty or our fi nanci al In st itu tio ns."

3 Anl)ouncements

Business Services

PH. 992-9949

Ideo! blade for ltle homeowner or doit-yourseltet. Co n be resharpeneo by
tiling.
·

Elizabeth Bower

Point Plea

SAN FRAN CI SCO tUPl i Th e home m or tgage Industry . by
allowing some lenders to abuse
thri ft char ters, " in vent ed new
and Innovative ways of gett ing
Itself In hock, " and endanget'cd
the entire financial system , in~ustry . regulators char ge.
William Seidm an. · Federal
Deposit Insurance Corp. chairman, Wid· member s of the U.S.
League of Savin gs ' Institu tions
'f\lesday that a mount ai n of
public and pr ivate debt thr ea tens
to~ crush thei r industry, mag ni fyIn):: · th'e danger of severe
recession.
It Is, he sa id. a l and slide they
~lped trigger.
" The corporate secto r has ·

I

• ll'ull . . . . . flntsr\
• ,., ""' INafiCI

Denied the benefits you deser ve? Call a lawyer with
I'XpPrlence In handling Social
Securi ty cases . No . atrornev
fff' unless 1·our claim is
approved. F ree I nitia l
consultation.

.

Industry. regulators ·criticize
growing public, private debt

VA"'=b.

ECONOMY
CIRCUlAR
SAW BlADE
1-1Yl'

11

The

The Daily Sentinel

Social Security
DISABILITY

507 Main

November 12, 1986

....

MASON,' WY

Mrlgs County Emcrgenc.v Medical Se rv ices repor ts fi ve ca lis

Tu~ sd av .

For feiting bonds posted on
speeding char!;" S were Leonar d
Koenig Jr .• Route 3.. Pom0roy.
$50; E ire Dav idson , Par kers"burg , W .Va., $50; Gi na Pa uley.
-Pom er oy. :146: Donn a Wilson,
Pom eroy, $47; Carol Crow.
Pom eroy, $43; De bra Car~r .
' MiddlepOrt, $46; K athy ·Baker,
Middleport, $47; Terr y Sha in,
RacinE&gt;, $44; Rae A. Swlaz:(lows ky . M iddleport. $50; Robert
Ritchie J r .. RacinE&gt;, $54 ; Rodn ey
Rou sh, Pom eroy, $52; De bora
Gasp&lt;.'ns. Tuppl'rs Plains. $46;
Stanley Duck ett , Pom eroy, $46;
·J ames Whittington. f'om proy.
$47; Jarnes Schmoll , Ches hire,
$47; Lyle Sinclair, Po meroy, $4:&gt;;

..--

A

Clary freed from Mason jail

F in ed In the court wer 0 ChNy l
Ferguson, Pomeroy, ~75 and
costs, driv in g while Int oxica t ed,
and $263 and cos ts. leav ing the
scene or an accident; Debora
.Lit chfield . Syr ac use, $16 and
cos ts. S(X'eding, and $63 and
cos ts, d rlviln~ under su spensio n:
Troy Shuttleworth . Lo gan, $63'
and cos ts. pass in g on a double
yellow line: ·Sa m McCloud, Mld ·dleport . 9i3 o\n d cos ls. consuming
)l lcoholln a rilotor vehicle : Brian
- Hunt . Racln ~ : $1 and cos ts,
speeding..
·

..

'

Local Briefs:

F lvr defendant s were tined
.and 20 ot hers - 17 or them on
: s pe&lt;' d l n ~ charges forfeited
bonds In thP court or Pomeroy
M ayor Richard Seyler Thesda .v
night .

.,

..•

1

need Is just good eo mmo n t en tt.
Call now for bro chure . Ohio
Valley Memory Garden s. C.ll

114·441-3111.

Mt~l

County

Me mory Gt rd ens Celll14· 592·

8151

Recine Gun Shoot ~pon10red by
Rtcine Gun Club. Every Sunday.
b~ginn ln g e1 1:00 p.tn. F•ctory
Choke. 12 guagt shotguns

RAYMOND E. P~oFFm (MAC)

•

,Office 949·2431

RACINE, OHIO .

949-.2516

No hunting or trespau ing ,
Myntt Ft rm located Ch11tnut

Ridge.rAotd .

·

Control hung• tnd IOH weight
with nwt thlip• diM plen tnd
Hydr u Wtt er Pilla. F.ruth
PhtrmKy.

Ent huiattic - energetic person
w ith go o d co mmu nication s
lkllls ... Positlon IWtWab le to wo rk
for Southeast erl'f Oh lo' t finest
outdoor rtK:ree tJon firm. No e 11p.
neceuary. w ill train , star1 imme dit~ely . Call bttween 10 &amp; 4 ,
except Mon . &amp; Tu ea. Ca l 6 14 ·

211 6·2248.

Wll'l ted ·Pe rt t ime ldmfnil tredvt
tv~M 10 WPM
.:curately. Good v• b• l • klll l a
writt en oo mmunlcatlc n sklllt
req uired . Good fil;ng lklllt ftl ·
quirtd . Mustbelb .. toworkwell
und• pr e~ .. re . Knowledge of
s hor1hlnd , co~ uttra, &amp; word
prOC.IIOrl b.n ..idll. Job thar•
ing position . Hours are lim·
4:30pm tYtfy Monday • TUM·
dl\' &amp; ell'lfl' other Wedn ..day.
&amp;.. d r• ume to SEOEMS At 4

auis rtnt. Mut t

lo• 144 Goltl!&gt;ollt, OH 41131 ,
bV Nov. 10th
Stlttpeopl•.fuM or Plt't tin. to
tolt comotory • - " "· Cal

114-441-3111 or 114-IU8151 .
•
n

�• J

.....

-

. .•..

.

--· .:
•'·

48

All tile .. fu~t~ilhed . 2 bdr .. no
pita. ldultl 1 on~ . TV-clbla il
avellable. can 61•·367-7438.

114·21il' 1157.

Jenitorial maintenMCI, full ·
tii'M, up. prlftrted. Apply in
PlfiOft at Murphy'• Mllrt. 1 Sil~er
llridgo Plua .

12xl!. 3 badroom. fumlthed .
At Country Mobile Home Park.
1200 per month plut utlliti•
end dtpotit. C•ll 514-982·

45131

E..,.ri.. ctd overlfto rold truck
*lver. CaN lftlf 5p.m. Ph.
114-44 -1425 .
Sub I~ Driwf - mult Mid bus
driv" Nconto 0&lt; willing to
oMeifl, .,d • phylicel exam.
Selery t&amp;.OI
tmur. Conllet:

Mr. Dovkl

'*
Rttliff,

Prjndpol,

Guiding H~nd School, P.O. ao ..
14, Chnhke, OH 45620\ or cell

875-3002.

"If I told him once, I told him
a thousand tiin_es. Toomey, I
.
says, YOU .Can;t SO1Ve your
problell\S by running away
frO ffi them. 11

tiiiiiniiimiiiiiiiiiii.T:::::;::::;:::;;::::::::1
32

11141317.-0102
HELP WANTED

No eJ~perienciJ necHsary. mull
be 8\llillble tor immediate em-

31 .

Homes for Sale

pktym•t. majarmedicelbenef-

3 bdr., air, pool, 91t1ge. Nice.

itt • l*d V.Citkan . Call 614• •· 3187 101.m. 10 4p.m.

Commerci•l prop.-ty, corner
ktt1 &amp; highwav frontage. List
with ua. We hive buyers. A·One
Real Esate.:Broktr. CaU 304·

Need Bdylinflf' 2 nightuweek.
Ph . 814-388-9862.

Mobile Homes

674-6104 oi304 ·874-5388 .

for Sale

•

lng . Call 806-687-6000 ht.
R-9806.

Part· time A.N . poaition evailable
• a 100 bed tldlled long term
care facility operated by a
INding rw.1 rsing home COfPOTI ·
tlon . hccllant opportunity for
thosei who may be attending
ldlool t11 ht~e family commit·
tmtnh . Polition ideal for c:ape·
~e gerialb'ic nu~ or nur...
who would like tddhional expa·
rience in long term care. Exc:tl·
l.nt banflfhs. •lary commonaa.
rate with e1.parienca . For
. ldditiDnal iltormadon, contact
N., cy v.-. Mater, Director of
Nursing Pomeroy Health C.a

Center . 11 814 -992 - 6801 .
E.O.E.
Applic:etiona tu the position of
Activitill Directof at Pomeroy
Haahh Clre Centlt' an being
accepted . GradultH from tc·
credited td'lools majorina in
recr•tionel thtriPY 1re detirad
bJt considerations will be given
IO motivated epplic:8RtS 8XPt·
rilllcect in recr•tional .ctivitiea
who po11•1 *ive, inoVItion
and a cotq)auion for caring and
ll'ldtntandlng of lhl lklarty.
Applicationttre available •tThe
Ponwroy Htahh Care Center,
Monday throur/t Friday.

12X&amp;O · 2· bMiroom 1974 ail
electric. fully c•rpeted. excelleflt
condition, built on porch, underpinning, tie down lt(lps. One
owner. must •e to appreciate.

EverenSwern. Rt. 1LocuotRd,
Pt. Ph, Blck of K &amp; K.

t391 to t995 . Teblee •10 ond

or 304-n3-5024.
deposit t135.00 month . Water
end truh pickup&lt;included. 304675· 2247.
~;:::::;;::===;::::==
-::

44

Ph. 614-448-3005.

Apartment
for Rent

,.rt.fime . C.ll 114· 992-8873.
Avon .

OpM

t.,itories. Int.

ovtileble. 304·575-1429 .
MOM AND OAO - looking lor
coHIQt fundi for your 1011 or
d., • ..,7 The Anny NatkJnal
Gu~rd can provide f!10re than
118 , 000 il.clueation estiuance
to ~atHt.d indMdUIIIt. Senion
can ~ lilt now end begin eem·
inga 181.00 for one wHit-and
p• month ., d delay' Betic
TraininG until June 1987. For a

FREE INFORMATION PACKET.
call 1·800·1142-3819.
VETERANS · Your prior militery
III'Vlctls warthMONEY. AnE -4
in the Armt N1tionel GUird c:en
11m up to 1131 .91 tor one
• WHk·tnd par month; ttn E· 15, 141
to 1183.10. Other benefits
inctu•: 150.000 lift insur~nce .
tduet~tion f\.lndlng ntittanca,
l'l'lirement. and much more. Cell

304-175-3910 or 1-800· 11423119.
MYSTERY CUSTOMRS

or 304-875-7437.

Clayton 1982 12~~:10 2 bed·
room, totll electric. excellent
condition. Frend'l City BrokerlSI• 614-U&amp;-9340

1978 Governor Trailer 12xll5
fot ule. 2 bedroom, full bath,
living room. dining room and
kitchen combined, refr'verator,
stove and mlcrQweve oven.
Underpinning. Fronl and back
porches. Call 6, 4· 7.. 2 .. 3076
sher 5 :00 p.m. or conttct John

Nlctly fumithad mobile home
CA a h..t. ucel , locetion.
adult• only. Call81 • ·446·0338.

11345 doyo.

One Bedroom hou11 furnished,
one 1m1N child , no pits. Three
Bedraom houte untuinithed Ph.

614· 448-0321

6 room houae. 1.2acres. Double
car garage. loc...a on Ao .. Hill.
Baroein pricM 120,000. Call

814·678-2613.
4 bedroom home, 1'.&lt;\ bathl.
locetad on Gravel Hill no Ash
St. Middleport, Ohio. Cell 81•-

992-5714.

For ule: 8 room houn. 41ots. E.
Mein St. Pomeroy. Call &amp;1• ·
986· 4427 .tter 6 :00 pm.

2 br, kitch•, bathroom. with
laundry room. living room &amp;
dining room, alletac. Approa. 7
mil11 from Pl. Pl. on Rt. 62. 2
tract1epprox . 1scremoreorltlt
overlooking Kanewhe River.

t40.000. Cell 304-875-5440
between 8·30.and 4:30.
Log homo. 3-4 "'· all tleo. tully

csrpeted . finithtd baHment,
Ambrosia. 7 mU11fromPt. Pl. an
At. 6 2 . City weter, pawd
driveway a HPtic tlink, titueted
on 'h acre, overlooking Kanawh•
River. 110,000. Call 304-675·
5440 betwnn 8:30 and 4:30.
3 bedroomt , 11h berhs, formal
dining, rec . room, 2 Clf glfaga,
cen walk to town. 30•·676·

4104.
3 bedroom. one third ac:re, . ,.,
miles out Sand Hill ANd, eir
cond, kitchen appllences, 304-

576·2898.
I roofnl , beth , fulltize batement
on 410x110 lot. 31 1 22nd Street,

304-576-2110 alter 4.

WANTED ! Undercover piZII Athton , W. Va. Nice 3 bedroom
oon•nner to evaluete dtliv.ry homo lwei lot. 304-875·7500
IMI'Yicl. end product once avery 'Of 304-742-2667.
four wnka. Must Nve within the
dt""'Y .,... of our Domino ·•
Pilll 110rl located It 420 Vitnd 32 Mobile Homes
St. Point Pl111ent'. To Bec:orre 1
for Sale
MyM:ery Customer end receive •
monthtv l'lb111, piNte call toll
,,.. on Nov. 13th. 1 -800-621 ·
NEW AND USED MOBILE
»74. Dcurino't Plut. Inc .

HOMES KESSEL'S OUAUTY

12

Situations_
Wanted

WII'Uad Dirt a Aocicl for fill. Call
11•·446·4666 or 61•· 446·

'R-77.

17

Miscellaneous

Turnips &amp; Kale, 1110 firewood

31.00 T.L. coli 114-2!il·6233.

18

W1nted to Do

Septtc T~nk Purfllint. Commtr·
till a rMidentiel . 2 wucka .for
pro"1tt ...-vice. 180 per 1,1500

MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35.

PHONE 614-445-7274.

shlnglld root . Coli 614-99211305 .
Bx38 house treUtr. 1 bedroom.

8700 . Cen be teen

Cal 114-381·8813 .
fllldfll'l,jl

21

1 Business
OpPOrtunity
1 NOTICE I

'II£ OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . NCOmmertdl thll1 you
do
wtth people you
know, lftd NOT to ttnd money
lhrouth thl m1ll
vou hew

bu.,••

...,,11

lnVW11gatod tho offering .

23

Professional
Services

s..- Tr• 1nd Lawn Sarvict .
. Htdgll , thrubl , bult.h tl
trfiMIId , t.tdlcaping, MUmp

Md lelf rwnavll, 304·171-

3142 t11178 ·21110 .

Ml•rwfor •dtrty in m¥homt.
Experllnt*i, rMaOnlble Pltft.
30•· 171· 7737 . No Anewer

3114-882·3271 .

J;,

miles on

Rt. 143.
1981 Shannon Mobile Home. 2
bedroomt, 14.&amp;6, IKC. c:ond.
Many extr11 . 304-937-3214.
3 br trllltr for Ale or rent tn

M11on . 304-773&lt;5612.

762-2567 .

35

Lots &amp; Acreage

614-446-8899.

41

Housei for Rent

2 bdr. houte with g•aoe car·
peted, curtain•. dlshw1sher &amp;
refrig. NetJ new cily pool, 106

Klneon Or. Rent 1300 mo. dep.
• le11e required . Celll14-448-

4347.

3 Bedroom home In c:ountry,
panty fumilhed , bonled OM
heat, water and trath tumi1hed.
200 .00 per mo. 150.00 Dep·
otit. Children allowed, raterenee requiracl. call 814·381·

H81.

OHice ~pace . Store apace
A·One Ani Ettete Ph. 304-671·
6104
Rent with opUon to buy. Exetp·
tkJnally aood 3 bdr. home. Naw
cerpet plua many mora ex:tr~s .
City tchttolt. Under l.tO,OOO.
V.L. Smi1h. A1ahor. Call 114·

388-8828 .

1 bedroom new houst, fur·
nished , except utllhlft. Weter
furnished. t225 .00 mo . Ph.

814-441-1769

Beeutiful 3 bedroom houH In
SvracuH. Depolit and rtflfftn·
ces required . Call 114-992·

6298. 9-5, Monday through
_s_at_u_rd_1_;_Y·- - - -- - -

12

bldroom, carplted. wathtr
and dryer hook up , largt yard.

Furnithed .t'flciencv •1&amp;0 utili·
tiet p1id , thare be1h, 701 •th,
Gallipolis. C. II .U&amp;-«tl after6
pm ..
Fu'"ished 3 roomt and bath.
clean, aduhs onlv. no pet1. Clli
.Nicely furnished 2 bdr. ap1.
Aduht only. Inquire at comer
Firu &amp; Olive St. 11 Shappardl
51111 a S.rvic:e.
1 bdr. 1pt. overlooldngcltypark.
K-0 •110 per month. Call P.J 's
' 614 -441- 1819 or tvening s
Furniahed tpartment. upltlirl.
A'dul1s only. all utilities paid. Cal

Oek Aptl. now eccepting eppll·
c1tlon1 for 1 or 2 bedroom apu.
For more information Clll 61 4$82-7570 call collect if out ot
town E.H.O. M1n1ged by U.S
Shelter Corp. Call 1nytime day
or night.

ing . approx. 1 1 · c:leerence, extr1
hook up for mobile home. getdll'l
IPKt, ell this on lara• c:ornertot,
•z• 86x172. No hiUIIO mow, in
Patriot , telling bacau11 of
hNtlh . can 814-379· 2282 .

dtpolit requkld. Convenient

locotlon. Call 114-441-1558 or
"514-448-4778.
2 bdr. tullyfumilhtdeduhsonly,
util. paid . Call 814-441-•110 .

1972 New Moon 121.10 totel
111ctrlc , 2 bldrooms. neW
carpet , ·excellent condition .
Mutt ... lhia. 1...950.00 Ph.

114-441-0527 allor 2 pm.

1913 lhu~ 14•70 oilott1C1rlc. 2

In Eurlka nice tnd clean adultt
onty. No paJa, dapottt required,

51 4·441 -0175

bldroomt, 2 full baths, 2 WOOd
dldct, underpinninG. centnl Ii i
r,11.callant condition. Will alto
Mil land . 614-379-23151 .

2 bdr. in Crown City, corner lot.
CaU 114-441·7101 work, or

180.00 mo . call 814-251-1831
2 bedroom trailer located 11
Bklwal call 81 • · ....1·91159
2 bedroom trailer loCited at

114·441-1IHJO homo.

aklwol call 514-448-8881

1172 Uberty, 2 "'" ilovo •

2 Bedroom trailtr et Porter
1171.00 mo. wttar fumtthld,

rtfriQ , UnderpinninG. fuel tlnlc.

t4200. Col 114·112-1710 ..
114· 24S·92114.
lnndnM"doublawide. 3bdr., 2
bltha, turnitMd, doublt intuit·

lion. 1 - l&gt;t. U1.tOO. Cal
114-441· 3040.
Must •n 12lll61 Vindale 1 4K70
t•P· "10tal tlac:. cent. elr, dis·
hw•sher , 2 decks· awning.
woodbumer, a underpinning,
Mull IN to apprecittl. CaH

814-251-1501.

---- ---·

ldultt only, Ph. 114·318·f371
2 ltdroom fumlahtd Yl mile off
110 on 11•. 1110.00 mo. plus

depoolt. Ph. 114-381-9151

2 ledroom fully klrnithad,
adultt onty, tH udlttl• pakl
IXCept Gtl • el..mic. Own..pl'f'l wtttr, ttwiQt. mowino •
tteah pldl-up . Four ..,ths of 1
mite ftom city limltt. Ph. 11•·

448-n95.

4 Potter bed with box IPrlngs
and menress, ucaUent condl·
tion alto .,tiquet call 814-4461617 or evtnlngs 114-246·

9372.
Plcllent Used F.. niture. Good
qU1Iity ut_. fumitura . Op .. 9.,

or: cell for appo~tmen t.
304-117&amp; -8483 or 1175-1410.
6

. ..
30·-678-7
.0 . van. •110.oo,_.
.. .... t~ . :.... ~
Chevy .st..,

·•
t=========:-r;;;:;,;;:::;:;;::::;=:::1
55
82
Building Supplies

Wanted to Buy

.Building Materiall
Block, brick. teWar pip•. win ·
dowt, lintels. etc. Claude Win ten, Rio Grande, 0 . Ctll 614-

245-5121 .

.

Concrete blocks alltiz. t yard or
dellv.ery. M110n 11nd. Gallipolit
81ock Co.. 1231f.t Pine St .•
O•llipoll1, Ohio Call 11.·448-

2783.

- - - - - -lc-

· 1975 Cordova noo.oo run•
good. Ph. a14 ·441·8272 .

Dragonwynd Canerv Kennel.
CFA Hirnllayen. Perslen •d
Slam•• kittens. AIC.C Chow

puppl". Call 614-448-3844

4411 altar7pm.

48 Space for Rent

Mi1.td herdwood 1lab1. •12 . per
bundle. Contefning approx . 111~
tons. FOB Ohio Pallat Co.

"""'""'Y· Ohio.
U61 .

Half Price! Fl11hlog arrow ligns
12991 Lighted. I'IDft·aFrOW 1289!
Unlighted 12391 Frw tlttten l
s.. locally. Call today! hctory:

118001423·01&amp;3, onytlme.

AKC Reg . Dobarmen fA.tppln, 8
wes:ks old, e11ceiiMt pedigree.

*160.00 Ph . 814·2!i8-8403.
Ragietared Pit lull puppies. 11
wlu. old. Chtmp~n tired . no

-

- Call 514 -843-&amp;1&amp;4.

Wentad : Regllttrld

W..-fleld

Ph . 814-388-9303.

57

Musical _
Instruments

Ashley Wood Burner with

bl&gt;wor. t200. CoM 114-992·
3301 0&lt; 114•992-8411 .
Wood end coal IIDWI tu 1111.
011 ltOVft, fuel oil lto'va . Cell

produco. JACk 'S MAR ICET. Rl.
H~clerson .

1917 Plymouth GTX 440 lour

1$17 PontiOc. 97..000 miln .
328 auto. 'OH lilt• 1nd grn1ad .
New. blttary .. d r•r tirn.

1984 Chevy Cavail... PS. PI,
autotrlflt, Cteen. lowmiln . Call

814·992·3703.

I ar'll

lng _Open g,oo AM to 7 :00PM.
Coll304-171·4131.

Surplut reaulat ermy amou ·
ftaga, C.rhartt, o.... kn . Rente!
clothing, camouftaga oovlfalls
t30.00, H. 0 . "Sam" Soml-

rvllo, (Sgo. U.S .A. R11.J Elot at
Rev~nawood.

Fri, ht, Sun.
12:00·1 :00 PM. otherdlyaatter

1978 Murteng, excellent condl·
tiDn , 4 new radi•. 4 tpMd .

t\ I IVI'SIIICk

Kindlew0od wood buming In tan
for firapleca .nd flrewood fur
uls . Phone 304·•1-3108.
1 new RCA Modtl18 Karo..,e
heeter. 30•· 675·2806.

Suppl1r:s

.......d •lilt. 304-175-1835.

1912 Pontlec Orand Prix

81

lkou"'am •4.600.00. 1980
-tiOc 8onnovMio •2.600.00 .

Farm Equipment

CROSS l SONS
U.S. 31 WHI , Jodloon, Ohio.
814·291-11451 .
Mattty Fergueon, Hew HoUand,

a,.h Hoa Sal• &amp; Sarrice. Over

40 used 1ractofl1o dloo11 from
• oo,.,lettllnt of new &amp; uaed
aqulpmtnt. lergelt lllectM)n In

4 '00 PM. 304· 273· 115&amp;.

S.E. Ollio .

HALF PRICE I Flaohing •rrow

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 38 IN. Gaillpolil,
Ohio . Cal 814-448-9777, avo.

lkln1 12191Lightld , non·errow

12891 Unllghtod U391 Fret

lett~rsl S"H local¥'. Call todey i

Factory ' 118001423-015 3.

enytimt.

UpriGht pi1n0 mat..e offer. Wood
burnlna uove with r.n.

U25 .00. Phont~304 · 1175-2088
or 171-7147 .

. 191&amp; Eogl1 moped t:IOO.OO.
Very old claw foot blthtub
17&amp;-1131 'lh• "00.

tail1, cummerbund, lhirttndHe,
Mobil horN lots, 1m1H children , tin 40 A, ••c cond, 304·17&amp;.
.
acoeptld. At. 1. Locust Road. 1211 .
Coueh end rt•rao . good oond.

304·575-1315 ..

-

.

._r lltembty motor
for towing
n-.

IWdl Atgal lmittd en power.

Call 114·441· 3040

New and ua.d pMt tar Whltat,
01vllf1, M· M, Daub: trtc10rs .
lid oro
rNnt Co.. 304-

!"'"'
87&amp;-7421.

John Deere oonilwa whh con,

hold.,_ grain pilllorm. t1200.
304-411-1031 .

;I'

or truck, 304-773-HB5.

_,

•,

,,

•

- ..

lootc:

APPOINTMENTS fO~

j

NEXT YEAFl AL.~EAI&gt;Y ~
fJLLf:P IN.

. ,.

.,.,:---:7:-~:----'~- ' '
Home
Improvements

• ;
·

i

IF I CAN DRA.W THA.T
PERIMETER GUARD IN
HERE WITHOUT HA.VIN'

. HIM SOUND OFF. ..
'I

...........

•

WHAT TH' HECK,
I'LL GIVE IT

A Sf!OTI

'

. . .,._

- -- - - - -,:----:, -:...c- •.t}
'

BA8EMENT
' . ' •:
WATERPROOfiNG
, 1

e

Uncondilion•l lifetir'f1:a guaran~ 1 i
1ae. LOCII referenCM furnished, •· i
FrtHI •timatn. Call collftt 1-114·237 ·0488. day "' nlg~t. • 1

J

A o

oa r ~

minalat a fishing lodge in or·

~ • a • m 1 ·" ~ , . ~ ,

wa...,rooflng .

~

• ... .

der to clear a friend's son of
mur.der. (60 min.)
_
(jll G.. Porlorrnancos
Uve flam Uncoln Cen1er
Leonard Bems1ain's muai·
cal/theatre adaptation of
Voltaire's 'Candide ' is tonight's selection. (2 hrs.. 30

c----'-----------~·~:-;

tr••·

Chriltmea
stone,~· ~
grevet. coal, fir1i¥f9Qd, 131. ~i~
O.livaNd. Http vouchen K ·
cepted . Oan'slandscaping. C,M 1 _
114 -441-9648.
..~.~

•

I,

EtK' 8i MEEJ{

SWEEPER and tawing machinf
repair. par1L and tuppli•. Pff:k
up end delivery, Devil VIC"'(tn ,
Cluner. on• helt ' mile up
Geort~• Creelt Rd. Cal 1141

82

.' '

_____.....,....
Plumbing
&amp; Heeting

'

I

Cor. Fourth end Pine 1
OallipoH1, Ohio
~
· 1
Phone 61• ·440· 3888 or 1·1:'-- .. :

446-4477

CNIIHac: Coupe ·Ill VIlla, new
1rantmi11fon
loth

•aoo.oo.

1171 Pontiec Ol'lftd Prill runs
goad, body needs wortc. 304·

72

-_________________

· 1871 3 fJiarterton ford pick-up.
V· 8 .,tometlo MOO.OO.

.,PI,

Cab wHh
1875 ford
toppor. Naldo Nhlo body worll.
Run1good. Coil 814·949·2111.

:L.

1111 "

7911 .

CAN VOU

HE'S IIV BED··

SOUND ASLEEP

KEEP

A

LITTLE
SECRET?

l

.,
:

'r'

;
1

:

Coal en~ limntone delivi'ry
Mrvice. 30•·675·3190.
·

s.

""

..
•~

87

~

U pho!stery
TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
See. Aw.,

114·446·7133 or
1133 .

5~.
'

.

::
,
.

•

.•

I

A ' M Cuttom Couchet and .
Aauphol1tery, 81 . Rt. 7. Crown ,
City, Oh . 814· 216· 1470. Eve. 1

814-448-3431. Open doily "•

5, 811. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp; niW ' ·
Uphoattred.
•: 1
-::-- - - : - ::-:-:---- : - - - - -·' I

Mowrey's Upholattrino 11rving •
b'i county,,., 21 veert. The be'lt _.~
In furfthurt upho ....ring . Celt ....1'1
304 · 876 · 4164 tor h · · ·~
tltlmttll.
... ' .41

______

,_,_

\

•
•

..•"'..

Compleie lho . chuckle quot1d
by filling in. lht miNing words
you develop lrom step 1-lo. 3 below.

-"'

3

2

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS 1
IN THESE SQUARES

I"

I'

UNSCRAMBLE

'I'OU

60T

TilE SAME PAPER FROM

ME FOR A"D-MINU5 "

a

CIJ .Ieifer-•
• C!J ilnvhlde
• C1J Tlllaa qf the
l*ltM

Unex·

..
·"

I I I

FOR ANSWER

·-

·-..
'"

••

.,,

'

"'

BRIDGE

...

James Jacoby

. .-------------------------,·~

The lead gives
South a chance

NORTH

11·11-111

rl

.AQB

.KQH

-~

+Q5

By JIIDn Jutlby

+JIOB4

South got to a slam after North had
used Jacoby two no-trump as a forcing
major-suit raiBe. Although a different
lead from West could have beaten tbe
slam, declarer's play is still nole'
wortby.
South's ti~r't~Mlub bid ~boWed a sin·
gleton, and Nortb,South cue-bid their
way to alam. Of course South should
have paged four bea~, but be puabed
to a tblD slam by cue-bidding the spade

tlO 9 2

•v•au

.AQ762

.K53

+KJB71

SOUTH
.K7 32

.A6132

....
.

";\·.

•
•

I~

•

Eut

P.aas

Pass
Pass
PBIS
Pass
Pass
Pue
Pass,
Pass
Pass .
• Jacoby two no-trump
•• slngleton club

Opening lead:

..
•

.::'

Vulnerable: North·South
Dealer: East
West

..,-,

•
·.:.

•An
+9

Wes1 led the club ace and thea
switched to the diamond I 0. Declarer
mew that West would not lead away
from the diamond klnl. so be played
low from dummy and won the ace. He
tbeD played a heart to dummy's jack
and ruffed a club low. After a spade to
dummy's queen, another club ruffed
low, a 11pade to dummy's ace and tbe
1ut club ruffed with his heart ace, declarer played a low heart to dummy's
queen. Now the heart king picked up
w~·s remaining trump aa South sbed
a diamond. Thea dummy's last trump
llpteoed the aroutld Eut'a
neck. Deciarer discarded his last dia·
liiOIId and ~ Eut bad to release the
dlamoDd kiDI or Ulii1W'd the spade
llllit. Either way, the slam made.
Allhoup 1 dislike admitting It, the
bidding lhoulil have prompted West to
lead the dlamoaci!O at trick one. Now
declarer caDDOt trump out dummy's

-

EAST

WEST
.100
•to B1

kini-

'•

•
,,

•I

•

+A

L------------------' •·:;
.
clubs without first allowing Eut to ·
take tbe settln&amp; diamood Irick. Why ~
not take the cltab .ace right away?
When West knowa that South llolda a· ~
singleton, be sbould wait. IInce be may ·
be either setting up the club klq, If ..
dummy bas that card, or givinc tbe de- ·;
clarer lime to ruff some clubs,
;;

·-...

di~N-~f ,1
by THOMAS
ACROSS

"

JOSEPH

...

'

2Seragllo
I Othello,
chamber
e.g.
3 Gramps, e.g.
5 Aspect
4 Malee over
10 Loafing
5 Michel·
11 Brownish
angelo
color
work
12 Cheryl
.6 Opp&lt;isite
or Alan
or stag
13 Instructor 7 Stage group
14 Rental s1gn 8 Welcome 24 Familiar 34 Assent
16 Leathe~word
greeting 35Zola
worker s
for skiers 25 Trimming
novel
tooWid _ 9James
26Nothln~
36 - Khach17 m Y
- Carter
(Fr.)
aturian
City •
11 Fish
28 !.ate
38 Turner
for short u Loaned
Italian · 40 Luau
19 Verve _
17 Bumpkin
statesman
baking pit
· 21 Jeremiad 18 Experience 30 Ride
42 Bungle
23 Water
20 Sans
a bicyCle
things
pitcher
the chaser 32 Railroad 43 "I Did It
27 Manifest 22 Sea eagle
car
My-·
28 Muslim
religious
leader
29 Actor,

upmanship takes a serious
turn when they are trapped
in 1he elevator of a building
about to be demolished. (60
min.l
9:30 • Cil (JI) Y011 Agaln71CCI
In Stereo.
1 0:00 • Cil (JI) St. Eloewltere
(CCI John Doe steals
1
Craig 's memoirs and as-

• ClJJ Adderly Adderly sua·
pecta foul ploy w_
hen the sui·
cide of a woman he had
been protecting appears a
bit too cU1·and-dry. (70
mln.l
12:00 ill Bume Allin
(!) Auto 118d111J '88: Bar·
bar 8Mb Pnl a.rios (RI .

.'

'U

'

. Mollie - Rouse - Cleft - Inlaid - UMITS
"Filth Ia IIOUnder guide than reeaon "eta1ed lhe okl pent
"Rtu011 Clll only go to far, bUt filth hu no UMITS.'
'

Magnum and Higgins ' one-

(]) Wlnp T-erd Evereat
()I fB M~gnum, P.l.

-.

houea,
embar·

general dl. .rray of her
Mom moaned, "I'd be eo
raeaec1 111 - just - ."

YESTEIDAY'S SCIIJ~;U1S ANSWEIS

cal/theeire adaptation of
Voltaire's 'Candide' is tonight 's selection. (2 hrs., 30
min.lln Stereo.
~ •
(j}J Magnum. P.I.

e

Gt ll ipollt. 9 l

614 - 44~ -

Our kitchen
waslittered
being
remodeled,
and boxH
the
entire hou99. Otsmayed over the

I

L-..L.-..1.'-.;.L-....L._.a,_--'·

.,

.,

•"

•
'
;

.,

.,'

Bru~e-

30 Thi ck '!'JUP
31 German ·
river
33 Famous
address
34 An ecdotal

e

'.

7397 .

5 1
.I .I 1
.
.

I

ClJ

lands him in trouble. (60
min.lln Stereo.
()) D ()) Arthur Hailey's
Ho1el ICCI (60 min.l
• CIJ Odd Couple
®
I]}J Equall1er McCall
searches ltle subways for
tha members of a drug·
crazed gang before the re·
vengeful husband of a gang
victim finds them fir st . 180
min .)
(Hi Newo
10:t0 C1J MOVIE: 'Tribute to a
Bed Man'
10:30 ill American SnaplhoiS
• C!J INN N-s
(HI Newowatch
11 :00 .CilCIJII CIJ® . ~CBI
Newo
ill Har~cutle and McCar·
mlck
(!) America'• Cup Chal·
le~ge Downunder
• C!J M'A'S'H
(llllnnovo11on
1BJ The Hor,..,.,,.1111,.100"'Grtnoro
11 :30 • Cil (JI) Tonight Show
Tonight's guos1 are country
singer Janie Frickio and wri·
1er Roy 81o~nt, Jr. (60 mln.l
In S1eroo .
(!) Spor11Cen1er Live .
C1J WKRP In Cincinnati
• CIJ Tllltl
(])ABC NeWI Nlghtllne

Dlllerd's Wtter Delivery. Ctit·\·=·:
ernt. pool &amp; weN. Anytime•but. . 1
Sunday. 014 ·44&amp;-7404.
• 1

Lenl• . 304-17&amp;-1247 "'875·

. .•

••
..

•

V 0 G0 R E
~-..~-,~~,..-,.~-,.~..;;..,17.-l. G

Dr. Griffin's romantic drive

•:·:.-!

t I

2

,_..,.,....,.....,~~~--..

sumes his identity , Luther
returns to the hospital and

4,\, ........ ""'

or 114-446-1175 "'114 ·4/fl, :~,;

1183

1978 Dalaun 4 -opiOd Radio,
IOPP•Ior tl99.oo . John• Auto
8o1ft. 8 ..ovlio ' Rd. OaHipolo.
Oh.
·

Lb::;lK FORWAAD
TQMYDAILY
· ' WALr,:::5 ...

. . . . - - - - - - : - - - - - - . , r--r-------..---'-1
B!.IT NOT AT THIS TIME OF
EACH WALK 15 A
YEAR . WHEN THEY WALK
LIITLE QUIQ&lt;:ER.
ME IN COLD WEAIHE:R ...
ANDALITTLE
SHORTE:R .

• l' r
J 1me1 a.0¥1 Water Service. A(lc~
pools f1llld . Celll14·21• · 11.,,.·~

Trucks for S1le

Radio , topper. 11 , 589 .00.
..blwls Auto leln. 8ulevllte Rd .

;

• J •J

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

1t80 Dodge D-50 4-_.t:

.•

~ ! · USUALLY

'

1B;;;5,--'~'GO:en:-:e::r::;iii"Hc.-il:-ulin'g .'
'_:
' "

I
:-TN.;.. r!!_~i-~-l-~ ..~-·

~~

r.

leonard Bernstein's must-

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

BARNEY

CARTER'S PlUMBiNG" ; -,
ANDHEAnNG

-·

I. I 1 I' I .l'l.

Connection'
MOVIE: 'The Mllteoe
Fllk:on'
8:30 ())DCIJHeadoftheCiaoo
ICCI
9:00 ill 700 Club
(!) USA/USSR BukeU,.II:
Team USSR o1 G-via
Tech (2 hrs.l. Live .
()) • (]) Dynaoty (CCI (60
min.l
(]) Greo1 Performancea
IJve flam Uncoln Center
8 :06

..

304·175-11441 .. 87&amp;-5152.

·-.,..

min.) In Stereo.
@ MOVIE: 'Tho French

" '
' .
'

'71 Ford' LTD, air cond. cruise,

high miiiOfio. •1 .2110.00 . '78

Accuoed Of &amp;an.,y
&amp; Extorting Old Moon
WCHS Ad•
II(]) Judge
. (]) Mother and Son
® ll'(heel of Footune
(jj) (JI) Jaopardy
(HJ Benoon
7:35 •())The Honeymooners
8:00 D Cil (D) Highway to
HMYen tCCI Jonathan
takes a pair of feuding _cou- pies back in time to shbw
1hem whit would have hap·
paned hed they not mei one
another. 190 min,l In Stereo.
CD Bri111J 'Em a.cl&lt; Alive
()) D ()) Perfect Stran·
tl_llll' (CCI • C!J MOVIE: ' Nornuo
Roe'
(])
MacNeil-lehrer
Newohour
® (DJ N- Mike Ham·
mer Hammer repays an old
debt when he pooee as a cri·

e

••

SJ'rvJcl:~

81

•

II (]) BLACK VIGILANTE

fofi» 1987....
IT COME:$ W~nt )'QU~

•

•

' .. !' ....

I .

t;NGA&lt;SI~-MEN"\"'

..

;

ho

Coei. limattone. grtvel, etc.
Delivered 1 ton and up . Jim

814 ·245-H9B

condhlon •a .liOO.oo 1912

II

REMINDERS

.'

1979 Mercury Clprl , 30•· 871·

4041 .

114 -.t48-31592. Up •ont trao· \ 175·11112S.
tors whh wenMty over .eo ueld
•1e10rs, 1000 10o1t.

Dozer 100 uae treclil ~. oood

DAllY

~ -1

LOol&lt;, A J~ANE C&gt;I&gt;CON

1;

Campert

Wenenon · s Weter Hauling. •
reaton•ble r1taa. Immediate
2.000 gallon dtlfvary , cistern•. ~,
pools, well. etc. ctll 304-578· il'l
2919 .
~

Both exc oond . 304-•1-3820
or 885-3181 .

good ooncl, 304·1175· 1721.

Ford 9N Tractor with lolder
1 ,.,0.00.
Call '~~tar &amp;p.m.

•
,
.· : ~TATIONERV

.,...
=~=:-'-::· .
79 .........
Motors Homes
• ;

A1hby Con~ructlon . c•rp•tlf"1 , remodtfino. room lddltion,
cam~t block work, roofing.
intlt'ior and ••teriof peinting,
siding. Roofing. FrM 11timet11.

u75, 114-949 -3039.

114-992-nu.

Tony' I Gun Repatrs, hot reb lui·

- - - - - ---'-' ;

78 Buidl LallbN. He• averything . b : oond . intktt 6 out.
Mull '"to epprclatt. 11 ,000 .

7841 .

35.

Budget •en•miiiMlns. used •
rebuilt . Tool converlen · • c
tr.alfar c11•· WiU deliver Cath , •
&amp;. Cerry rx lnltltl c:all14-441· li
4870 or 114-379-2220.
'

891·3802

1980 Dattun pick-up. Auna
excellent. .1500 . Cel 614-992·

APPLES - Ptenty apples, "rge
lila, ell variety. Alt fruitt .and

•
I

114-9111-4301.

t200. Cotl 814 ·992· 2997.

FRANK AND ERNEST

•

*2.410. Ca" 114-441-077&amp; .

tpMd, al10 1976 Must•ng 2
eutomallc four cylinder. Phone

Fruit
Vegetables

•

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceaories

••pe- •

1986 Plymouth Turio.., , 6

Milton Splnnet Pl• o l:lr N it.

8t

78

t
'

.
--

-·

speed . 15,000 mll11 . Many
lllltrll. $4100. Call after 4:00

Call 614-992·8159 .

58

X, 3 wheeiM, 6 months. old '"' ~

1871 Qurvey Impala 396'-3215
HP , red with black interior, 441 -0284.
'
fende r lkirt, vary good condition
•1 .900.00 Ph . 114-24&amp; -HOB . . RON ' S Television Service .
Houte calls an RCA. Queur.
1981 Bt.icll Skytart.. po- GE . Speci•Ung in Zenith. Ceq
steering, brtk•. air condition, 304-578-2398 or 814-448front wlwel drive. 4-eylinder 2454.
t3,2!i0.00 Ph . 814-317-7.209.
Feny TrH Trimming, ttu...,
18815 Chrytler Lner. Sun roof. removal. Cell304·876· 1331 .
Turbo. A.T.,A.C ., AI opttont,
14.000 rriles. Ph. 114, .W6- RINOLES' S SERVICE.
4160 tftar &amp;p.m .
rienCid cerpantar. · elactrlcllf\. ~~· ;
mason, painter. roofing (lnclud~
19.78 Meraurv Coupr XR7. new ing hot t1r \ application! 304- ..,:,
tires, wire wh11il. very good 171-20aa .. 87&amp;-7147.
oond~ion t1 .400 .00 Ph . 614~---:-~-----:---~-'l•
446·01104.
Sterkt Tree end Lawn Service, ~
Hadgu. thrube . buthu 1
1985 Calebrity Wavon . V&amp;. 00. t rimmed , landacapino l~d
AC. C.C.. C1reo, 3 INti, stump NmGVII. laaf removal.
19.000.0) 1xeetlent conditkln 304·&amp;71-2010 or 571-2842.
Ph . 514·441-2278 .
Rottry or albia tool drllttna.
75 Dodil• Da~. IE. V8. AT. AC . Matt WIHt COR1Jittad llmt dty. , ~
CC . PS , e11 ., cond. One owner.
Puft11 111et tnd ...-vice. 304-

Cali 614-441 -0771.

Fisher Wood or Coli Stove.

eon 814-992-7479. ' Black "Ahor SiK" TUXlOO with

Mobil homo loll, Ohio River
Rold ..4Po...,.C-Routo1 .
304-175· 1071.

1211 .

1973 Oktsmobill Wagon &amp;
1976 ChevtUa 1300.00 each

614-992·1837,

Aouta 33, North of Pomeroy.)

~rgeloll.

Female ,Chihulhua &amp;mo . old

Ca11114-882 ·

.feucat includtd 1100.00 . 304-

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Plrll.

9578.

AKC ragittered Shttlend Sh•p·
dog puppy. Cocker Speniel.
Mln ietura Sc:hnauun . No
cheeks. Cell 81.--992- 2807.

- - - : - - - - - -le-

oeceptld. Coll614-742-2455 .

Fumlahld room 919 2nd, GeiN·
pollt. 1111. Utllltl• pd. Share
Hth . Sinate male. tell 446-

M"'codtt1t78 4150SEL4-- r
XX ShMp lo~ld will tr.:te
1 ·614-881-7311 .

-::--

1 bedroom 1p1rtrnent in Point
Ptettant. Unique c:arpeting. Ce ll

AooJN for rent. day. weak.
month . Galli• Hotel. Call 1144ot6 -9680. Rent nlow asl120
month.

IUu.. . t1BO. Call 614-4483128.

Roell Boaglo Hound. Call 514742-271a .

Firawood for tala. 135 pick -up
'load . Oeliverad . Htep Vouchers

0758.

1973 Plymouth Satalite. 318
Auto. trMt .. runt good, body

Firewood for ule. 135 pick •up
lold. Dllivared. Heap Vouchert
ICCepted .

daYI 814-992-2381 .

For rent Sleeping Roomt •nd
tight hou• lleeplftg roomt. Park
Centre! Hotel . Call 114-441·

126 C11h plid tor junk cen
C:0"1)1ete. Body's towed awtv.

5782.

AIC.C reg itterld female Germtn
Shephard puppy , chempkln
bkJodlin•. ~hots given Ph . 114·
446 -4211 lfter •p.m.

-::--

Furnished Room•

75 Ccirdovo, •30o. Run• good .·
call 614-448-8272.

Pole Bui lding• by Quality
Buildert. Worklhopt, carports,
enimal thehers. geragn . Free
estimates. Phone 11• · 384-

Firewood daliverwd O•k • hick ·
ory, split, HEAPvoumar, pickup

'

.,.•

t400.00. '88 Hondo ATC-2110- · -'

Call 114 -812-11750 or 814246·9254.

with cago_*71 .00 Ph . 814 -441-

2 tiedroom, pertly fum'ished 7414.
epartmant oft Spring Ave.
Pomeroy, Ohkt. lerge patio and ute tize Beertldn In OOod
ysrd . Cell 614·992·1881 •her candition. Ph. 11•·441-1941
' efter 4p,m.
6 :00p.m.

45

448-8108 enytirM .

115pc. H6ghtGioll tubwellkitt
with shaN• 129.9&amp; .

Pets for Sale

...

. _,

.....

G\4RNI
2

e

~·

Honda .)(ft.a:J, IXC COI)d,

'84

1973 Ford LTD 3150 IUtomatlc.
Nnt good 14100.00 call 814·

t3,99 oacll .

Firewood for .. ~ 130.00 PU
loat. Call Roger Mtlde, 614·

Riding lawn mower tic. Lowrey
orgen . 3 whNier. Cell61•· 446 ·

114•885-4301 .

'Autos for Sala

1982 Subllru • WD wegon, VG
cond. 13,360. Call &amp;1• ·44641•1 .

114-384-3145

388 -8417.

1914 3 wh•ter. 70 . Halmtt,
Honda thlrt. llkl ntw. 150Q.

CO.,.,ICI ~f behind

13. 4" KI"'x'l!" R. Guard Foem
Boerd Foil Face. 13.99pC .
1•. Oecaretor Wood Paneling
11.59 Saeondt M.99
15.Keyed or Bed IRI Loch

58

1881 Hondo 4-- - call
814· 387-0357
.

•••

1

E

C!J M' A'S'H

CIJ Paoplo'a Court
(]) Nighdy Buainoaa Ropoot
Iii New•
(ID
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newohour
(l}J.(DJ Wheel of Footune
(Hi &amp;.noy ~Iller
7:05 (I) Sanford and Son
7:30 8 Cil CIJ Now Newlywed
Game
C!J Auto Racing '86: Can
Phoenix 200 Coverage
from Phoenix. AZ. (90 min .l
(AI.
.
• CIJ Too Close for Com·
fort

I

p11rl1

for Nit. Call814-441-7414.

,Tow

t129 .96 Now •89 .911 .

!old 136. Cotll14-441-2223"'
814-448-3028.

175-1090.

71

D

1

a rebuilt Cyel• &amp;

&amp;

.

8D1y18to&amp; ,

EIIANS ENTERPRISES. Jock-

Grain

Tr;;nsport~IJOn

10. Ttmpeted tullted Gills
Penlfl. ¥1" T 1. 32 "W. • 78" H.
&amp;29.96 tach .
11 . Scn.~bblb le prep•ted vinyle
Will oovaring doubler oil M .99 .
12. Insulated whi1estorm dO of' 1
1'AT.K 38HWx80 " H. Reg .

Equipment

Calllhen ' t UMd Tirt Shop . ovtr
1.000tires, tlzes12, 13 , 14, 11.
11. 18.1 . 8 mil• out At. 218 .

&amp;

Lerge round bales of hly , I 1 0
each. Squart bllu. 11 .26 each.
. C•ll 81•·446-1052 after 6 .

Well..,n. Ohio

'54 Misc . Merchandise

Hay

9. V!Oodif~" 20 ' to 20 .

Clean, toomy 2 bedroom apert·
mants. New H1ven, W.Va. Ctll
814 -992-7 .. 81 . Also commar·
CiliiPICI . .

3 rooma lftd beth, ..trig•ator
and stove fumilhed, privati
~trance . all utiliti111 pakl, 304-

64

e

.

•' II

I tcl r YA 1 I

sis about their upcomtng 1n•
ternational tour .

I o, , .

Motorcycles

t1.400.00. 304-1175-251&amp;.

8150.00 161coloro.

.,n. Oh. 61•· 211· !830.

304-a95-34SO.

$850.00 firm. 304-1175-1799
alter 6'30.

7. PJefif'!;.hed Dlk flooring '-'" T
.. 2:14"W r111dom length T.G.
Gw.rtelk 1r1d natural tlnith
11 .711Q. ft .
8. 50% off Vinyl aiding trim
O.S .Corners 14.00, ln1 ide
Comers 13.00, 12 -J . C,.~nel

1 bedroom 1pt. for rtnt. Basic
rent ltlftl 1215. • month thai
inctudes all utilitiel. Deposit
required of 1200. Conttct VH·
ltge Manor Apt. Middleport.
114-992·1787. Equal Houting
Opponunlty.

1-114-992 -5858 .

6 yeer old Querter Horae.
gelding, hal been lhown 4-H .

PENN'S WAREHOUSE

1ft),.

63

Cycl11

Babv Holltein hatter calves. All
,.ed , Call 814 -388-8624 no
Sundey calli .

Building Supplin
Surplua·Cioteoutt-Buyoutl
1. Wood burning lheet metal
uovaa similar to Franklin
•s9 .H each or 2 tor t100 .00 .
2 . Steel insulated prehung
door's. no brick mold 19 .96 .
3. lnt8t"ior prahung door's all
liHIInd finishes 129 .96 Nch.
4. •2" Y•nlf";' with (8) marble top
8149.96 each.
15. 8" by 20' Whitt conwnercial
autttr .1 .00 per ft .
8. 1 .ad 2pc Fibergiua rub 't and
thow~rs white and c;olou

~

'7.2 Chevyttuee ..,anertf!"•· ~- .• ,.
whaal *ivt, rMI good eond wtth ..,
Ufrll, 11,260.00 . 304""-578- ; 2704 .
' ' •

74

Livestock

-~-.

~

City Form Supply, 614-4462985 .

.

Two Reg . BMQie male• &amp;rro .
old . also have 10m1 youngar
pupe IVIilabla Ftl . 814-245·

2 end 3 bedroom apartmants
and houtM in Pomeroy or
Middleport. Furnithed or unfur·
nished . Pay own util iti111 . Call

Now buying aheM com or ear
com. Call forlet•tqu~es. River

'"

e

:

.

.
· ---~------------~

52 CB, TV, Radio

Commldore 84 Comp~uler, Dilk
drive, key bolfd monlt• &amp;
prlntar • toftwere lor
i'lformttion Cell 814·2&amp;6 ·1989
after &amp;p.m .

CAPTU!tEP 6Y THE
,~TI!O~ &amp;OAT.

1178 Chewy 1.4 ton ~ wMel ' ,..
drive. 3&amp;0 •to . hcaiiMtcond;l·· ':...
lion. Con 514-247·3895 aftltf·. •
• :oo.p.m .
.
~ t,. ~

Plettic cittem ••te approved .
plutic teptic tenkt, llt•tic
culvert•. metal cutverts. RON

3 bedroom, lulevila Rd. Call

ba1ore 10• .m .

814.256· 1217

CAPTAIN EASY
Wtl:t.T A COINCIDENCETHAT 1 ~HOU~!I ~Iii

•.

t1o.•

Electric heat purqJ I 100.00,
Roller exerciser 146.00 Ph.

•

••

6:00 DCil(])D(])!Ei.ClJJCBI
NtWI ,
CD 181g Valley .
.
ill Muila Spomlook
• C!J Jtffer8onl
(]) 3-2-t, Contlct ICCI
® Secret Ctty
(HJ Feet&amp; of Ufe
6:06 (I) Andy ·Grtfft1h
6:30 D Cil CB1 NBC News
(!) Action OutdoOre with
Julluo 11om ' '
(l}lll CIJ ABC Newt .
CIJ Hopn'l Horoe•
(]) Doctor Who
Iii • CiiJ CBS Nowo
® Body Electric
[BJ Good Tlmoa
6:35 (I) Safe at Homo in Storoo.
7:00 D.CIJ PM Magazine
ill Hardcaotlo and McCor·
mick
·
C!J Spor1oConter
(I) En1ertainment Tonight ·
ET talks wi1h tho mombeis
of the pop/rock group G~ne·

~

'JooP lor 1111 •1 .10'0 .00 call
114-317-7803 enytl""! .
:.•

eftar 7PM,

Large Vl•nd Stl'llt apertment,
g11 end water paid, unfumithtd.
2 bdr.. all utililiM patd e11cept

1149

.

197!1 JHP 8 cylinder oood
oondhion 12.600.00 . Ph. AU'!48-4292
••

t159.95 to •199 .96 .

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

.

', ,J

E\(ENINQ

-::-:--::-:-:-----:--:::=~--:;:);! '\ ~

Modem 1 bedroom apt. convenient loe~ttion , lingle PtTMJn
prlft"ld , no pets, refarances
end ~~eurity depcnit required.
Ph. 614 ·446· 2056 eftar tlp.m .

llo. 114-441-1221 .

at.c ., tum . or unfum.. IK.

2 benchet, bedt, dreenr, wood
wardrobe. 3 milts out
Bula"llle Rd . Open 9AM to
&amp;PM. Man . lhru Stt.

Vans

.

..,

lA II

11/12/86

i
.
{
&amp; 4 W.,D.&gt;' •. •

JIU.JIIIINU 4 WI) -on. vo I I
'Co'iii['"J3,380. Coil &amp;14·448-- •
4141 .

Cont14 -2!i6-5251 .

2 bedroom, tumithad, new
Repos saued . 1983 14x70.
c.rpet. 1225. par month, DepSmall
1
bed\'oom
houte
.
Total
·
Thrae bedrooms, 2 btlhs . .
ot it end flftrerc:t requ ired.
1500.00 down take. 1235 per e4actric:. In Miner~villt bnide Glenn Bl11ell 614-949-2801 .
Bulk
Pl.,.t.
Cell
8U·992-8216.
month. Fr" delivery. We hive
ll\le rel. Mid Ohio Financlel
2 bedroom, furnished , ciHn , 1 1 bedroom 1p1 . in Middleport.
Strvice. 800 -821-0752.
All utilhtea paid. 1210 per
child . no pels. New Haven. t1 ~76
month. 1100 dtposit. 614·992·
per
month.
304·882-2466.
14x70 FleetwOOd 3bdr. 2 baths.
8111 doyo. '8 14-992-1713 evMutt ule, for more info. can
eningt.
3
room
fumithtd
apt,
2
bdr.
614-38 8-8633 lfter 4 p.m.
house. no pelt. Call 304 ~ 876 ·
New one b,droom 1pt. in
2453.
" Uted homes" L1rge setsction
Micodlopo~ . Call814 - ~92· 6304
price ntduced on all homtt,
or 814-445-1&amp;52 alter 8:00
French City Mobile Homtl Inc. New Havll\, very nice 3 bed· p.m .
room
houta,
21h
beths,
flmily
Sl 4-441-9340.
room, heet pu"ll. 2 cer giiraae.
3 room apt. tor- rant. ' Call
Fell ula, no payments til Feb. reflfenCII. Homnt1td Aeatty, 814-992-11434 · or 304 -882 ·
304-882-2405
or
30•·
675
·
1987. We will make the fiflt 3
2!i66.
montht P.vmtntl on any new 5540.
mobile homt. French City MoAPARTMENTS. mobile homes,
bile Homes, Inc. call 11•·441·
houlft. Pt. Pltllint and Gaillpo.
42 Mobile Homes

· for Rent

Used furniture : Washer &amp;
dryer, gas range, wood table &amp;

Good used color tel.,ltiont br
nla or trlde. Ctll 814 -446-

Rtf. requ ired . 814-742-2641

9340.

Dinettes 1109 and \JP to M96.
Wood t . . . w-1 d'l airs t285. .,
17915. Dttk *100 up to '376.
Hutch• *400 and up . Bw.k
bedt corrolete w·m•ttreuee
$2915 end up to $396 . Btbybedt
1110• t176. Mettr11111or~x
spring• lull or twin 163, ·tirm
173. •nd 183. Queen 1at1 t226.
King t360. 4 drewar d't11t tl6 .
DriiHf't 189. Gun cabiurts 8,
10. a 12 gun . 011 or electric
renge 8376 . Baby mettreuea
$31 lo 145. 8ld from• UO .
I~ &amp; King frame 150. Gooci
selection of bedroom ILlites,
mete! cabinets. headboard• 130
·
and up to Sll .

Furnished apt. 1 bdr. 1226
utUhiet paid . 701 4th G•ll ipolit.
Call 448-4418 after I pm.

2 bdr. newly redecorated , el
utilitiet pekl. ""' McDonald•.
Call 814-446-7025.

•

$28 ., t125.

Furnished lpt. 1225. Utillti•
paid . 1 "Bft 920 ••h. Gallipolis.
446-4416 after 7pm.

114-446-9523 .

R1:11Lils

~mpo

Wathers, dryen, refrigereton,
ranges . Sklga• Appliencet.
Upper River Rd. belidt Stone
Crut Motel. eu ..-e. 7398 .

614·448·2325 .
7 aeru. 2 btmt, 1 septic tenk
end rur1l water for 7 ,000.

*378.

814-446-0322 .

114-448-1519.

l.nage. W. Vt. Uke ntw 1984
mobile home 14x70 on two level
!ott. 30•·176-7800 or 304-

up .to 8126 . Hide-a-bach 1380
to 1196. Aeclinen 1225 to

613'12 3rd. Ave. 1 bdr. prlv1te
bath, 11•0 per mo . Deposit
required . Call 114·446·4222
batween 9 &amp; 6.

Ash.

gol . l&gt;ld . RON EVANS ENTER PRISES . Jochorl. 011 . Coli Great Buy· 121.60 2 bdr. mobila
oohe1 814 ·288-5930.
horne 24lll28 metlll pole buildTr•h hlulino. hon"t. dep4Wtdl·
lfa. "You pack it, we atKk it."

Regency Inc. 2 bdr .. kitchen.
nice , good location. furnithed,
re11onable. Call304·176· 6104

0176.

14a?O. 3 bedroom Skyline Mo·
bile Home. Houte Lap Siding.

~

Sofu end c:hlifl priced trom

2917.

In Rio Grencte, FA g11, LG kit ..
loll of cabinets. 40 gsi ..HW tank.
4 bdr., wall inaulated . e~~;trtlou .
clo .. to school. bank. • college.
Rentel potential. Celll14·2.455823 after 5:30 or 614-448·

LAYNE'S FURN!TURE

Nice 2 bedroom troiier, 1 omen

For rant 10•60 trailer $60.00

1974 12)(66 Carriage Houn, .
south of Galllpollt on Kriner · ~otal electric. 3 bedrooms. 2
Ridge Rold . firtt hou11from At. bath1. completely carpeted. very
218 . Priced togo . Ctll 1!114-446- nice &amp;5960.00 Ph.· 61•·«6·

Nice 2 bedroom horne 11 301
Wright Street, Pomeroy. Aeti·
Sacretary . tingle female, Cart'• · dence of the ltte Herben end
Auto 511... Hours 9 :00-6:00. Gladys Moore. May be teen by
S111d resume to 368•6 Sl At eppointment. Call 81•·992124, Mkldlepo~ . Or call 114- 8189 8 '30 A.M. - 4:00 P.M.
'll42-3095.
lmmadiete ucc:upency.
Help nMded in ho n-. for Seniors

73

Coun1;Y Appllan~. In~. Good
uled epplisncee and TV Htl.
Open lAM to IPM . Mon thru
Sot 114-448-1199. 127 3rd.
Ave. Galllpollt, OH .

child. ret.e·renced •nd depolit,

3000 Govarnment Jobs Lilt. · S,nall 2 bedroom NouN 6 milll

116,040· 869,230 yr . Now Hir·

.

••••

•. I

!

1974 Ft&gt;rd F 100, PS, PB. auto, ,
304-1175 · 51~0 .
'
;

SWAIN
AUCTION lo RJRNITURE 12 ·

3002 .

A~ ~'(G~OPW\A .

- 1977 Ft&gt;rd pidl·up. truck. 302
. •aina. ltandlrd .,..,, P.S. ~
•no. ea11 114-992-3713 .. 1
114-882-7841 .
i

1----------

Taking applications on four, 2 Velley Furniture, new a used .
bedroom mobile homes . . Large HCtlon of quality fuml&amp;180.00 per month plual.. a11. tura . • 1~18 Eutern Ave., ·
_;_•_II...;ip.o_u•_
_ · ~-----*.2 00.,0 0 deposit. 304-875- IG

2 -bedroom mobile home, Mid·
dleport. o. Reference with 11.
curitv
deposit. 304-882-3287

euv

. oontalnld. Call 814·742·2!in.

Household Goods

Televi-sion
Viewing

...~ STmEI!S, r ¥aii.D
·. ~ '(V
HIM

"

1t74 Prowler Cemp•. al_r.. ,.
TV' enttnna . Slaept I. &amp;Itt ~-

•it•.

Taking application• on extra
clun 3 bedroom. total eloc.
70x14 mobile home, security
depotlt required, 1300.00. 304·

f'omeroy-Middleport. Qhio

BORN
"
. LOSER

~

Oli"' St .• GeiNpolit. N• • uitd
. '
. 3 bedroorn, semi ~ furnished, wood·coalttoVes, 6 pc wood lR
cl•an obnditton, 1 child; no peU. suite 1399. bunk Melt •111.
New Hevan '175 per month . antron teeMnWI . . .. new •
304-882-2418.
ua.t bedroom
range•.
wringtr·wathen, • tho• . New
2 bedroom tflller for rent. Clote tfving(Oom IUitee 1191-*189,
to schools and·stor". CeO after •mps~ also buying coat a wood
ltoves. Ca11114 · 441 · 31~9 .
5,00 p.m.-614-992-5914,

.....,.s•

t

1986

1976 GMC .. - · 354 .,g~ne.

5024., :104-882-3287c

51

7479.

Region.. Snack Comp~ny 11
looking tor en aao,..etv• 111..
P«ton · tD cM.tribule thtir pro~ctl in 1he are~ . Eltlblithed
territor'~ tor m&gt;,. ihen thiny
.,..,. Sa&amp;• ••tMrieru:e Meet·
perton applying mutt
~ 0t be lbll to buy route vsn
Dl' equ .. . equlptNnl. Send re·
arme to Box T-&amp;OO .care of Th•
.G allpolit O.lly Tribune 825
Third Avt. GallipOlis, Ohio

175·6104.

•

2 Bedroom trailer 11315 .00 mo.,
adults only or 1 bltbv. no ptttPh.

,_., 114-441 ·11500

MtMntentnce Ptraon to lve in
lf'art,._,t COft11&amp;ex. Call 30•·

'

lulinels or Office Space for
rent. New Haven. 304-713·

n,ental., disabled adults at
Woodl81d Cen,_., IKhMor 't
cl..,.. in 10d~ work or equival·
tnt education. bper-.ce with
· duonlc mentally HI or PI\'Chllt·
ric , cUW~ta twlptul. For mare
informatiOn c;:ontact Sandra
McF•ni•d It WoociiMd Cln-

.

TNcks for Sale · ,
' - - - -- --'--

. .
.
. '· "1
The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13 ::

•• ..._.,

Wednesday, November 1

72

~

CA8E MANAGER to wort. Mlh

KIT 'N' CARLYU ®br L1rrJ Wiioht

Space for Rent

·

Mobile Homes '
·for Rent
•

·

42

LAFF-A-DAY

,

Help Wlrited .

:

11

•' ·4

.

Wednesday.
. November 12, 1986 ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-

PM~&amp;-12-llw,J Daily Sentinel

.

·.

coll~ction

37 Adored

39 Yac ht basin
41 Over again

44 Paint
45 Tiber
tributary
46 Belgian city
47 Distorted
DOWN

6--1--++-+-+-

I Wire

measure
DAU.YCRYPI'OQUOTES-Here'show to work It:

IIIII '

..

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

r,

One letter stands for anothet. In this sample A is used
for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
llpOiltr&lt;lpbes, the !ength and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each dly the code letters are different.
CKYPTOQUOTE
11-12
EAVO
YFVVO

zoo
AV

EPXA
FVJX

PJ

X W F 0 J

KVFJS O

D

FPKV

MVFODFB

V0 G L

DJJWF VB
U SF

,
"'

'

••

-.;

L SW

X ADX

X FS WMN V .

C V N XIVF

Yetoterdsy'l C17Ptoqa1&gt;te: OUR OWN. SELF-LOVE
DRAWS A THICK VEIL BETWEEN US AND OUR
FAULTS.- LORD CHESTERFIEW

"-.;'

.

:•

'.-

••
•

�I -

~-14-The Daily Sentinel

_s

.

Pomeroy-M~rt. Ohio

'.

Wednesday, November 1 ~. 198&amp;.,

' .

\

·AIJ)S researcher urges -strong PQlicy to ·. address disease
By ALISON G~ANT
field ·, said Reagan has skirted the
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio tUPI 1- Issue of AIDS, publicly addressThe United States ·needs a strong lng It only twice, and -never
national p&lt;illcy .to address the linking the risk of inf~ction by
catastrophic threat of AIDS, says hypodermic needle io the adminmedical geneticist Margery istration's strong anti-drug
Shaw.
.
campaign.
Shaw, a member of the Com" It is a-very serious problem
mlttee on a National Strategy for and we can't remain complacenf
AIDS, said development of an or disinterested," Shaw said.
anti· AIDS vaccine will take at
In addition to ~ .roo confirmed ·
least five years, and meanwhile AIDS cases, as many as 1.5
AIDS should be fought thraugh a million ltmericansaresuspected
massive_public health campaign to be carriers of the AIDS virus,
and increased federalfundinglor and the committee projected
research.
179,000 AIDS deaths in the.United
The committee, sponsored by States by 1991.
the National Academy of Scien·
Researchers studying AIDS
. ces and the Institute of Medicine, are tracking a " moving target,"
called for President Reagan to Shaw said, citing !he ever.take a strong leadership role in lengthening time the AIDS virus
the effort against AIDS, or is found to lie dormant.
·Acquired Immune Deficiency
Studies of high -risk groups
Syndrome.
'found avtr ~ge lifespans follow·
Shaw, speaking Tuesday at lng diagnosis ranged from four
Wittenberg University in Spring-

months lor .Intravenous drug
users to 14 months br homosex· ual men. But now scientists are
.finding Infection with the virus
may not result In an · actual
occurrence of AIDS lor 10 years.
and some res1;'8rchers speculate
the latency period may extend. to
ll years, she said.
AIDS afflicts men and women
equally In parts of Africa, and
gender distribution will soon
occur In .the United States and ·
. Europe, Shaw said.
AI OS was firsttound ):a'imarily
among homosexual men , Hal·
tlans and Intravenous drug us ers, but now Is spreading to the
heterosexual population in 155
ccuntrles.across the globe, Shaw
.said. It is expected t.o strike.7,000
American women and3,000 child·
ren born of Infected mothers by
1991.
"We don't have the time and
we don't have the luxury to

CINCINNATI tUPI I - A ,
threatened strike by 5.000
workers at 58 Kroger · grocery
stores In southwest Ohio was
averted Tuesda y night when
• negotiators reached a tentative
agreement on a new contract.
Members of the United Food
and Commercial Workers union
were to vote on the proposal
'today !rom 8 a.p1 to 8 p.m. ,
Details of the agreement were

Celtics _hand
126-114 loss ·
to Milwaukee
-Page 4

moralize on homosexuality,"
Shaw said.
··
The national Ams ·ccmmlttee
I.•
estimated costs of caring for the
174,000. AIDS patients projected
. l
to be alive in 1991 at $8 billion to
$16 billion In that y.::ar alone .
The committee called for a $2
billion-a-year IJ'Ogram to curb
the spread ott be diseasetlrough
a massive public awareness
ca-mpaign and increased
research :
(MANY STYLES TO
The proposoo national progt am amo.un.ts to eight times the
CHOOSE ·fROM)
current spending on AIDS reTHURS.,
SAT. ONLY
.search, and would allow for
\
public health measures ~uch as
' .
voluntary and confidential test ·
'
lng for infection, treatment and
prevention of Intravenous drug
MIDDLEPORT - ON THE T use and availability on an ex peri·
mental basis of sterile needles
and syringes for drug addicts, v
. '
Shaw said.
l.iiiiiij;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;

ALL

·Sweaters·

OINZA

-.

earn $11 an hour.
Employees also opposed Krog·
er's plans to eliminate five
holida ys and to order straight ·
time pay on Sundays for new
employees. Current employees
receive time and a half pay on
Sundays .
The ccmpany previously of·
fered several ent icements for
acceptance of the new ccntract ,
including a one-time $1,000' cash
bonus for employees taking the
biggest pay cuts and a one-time
payment of $10,000 for highest·
paid · employees • taking early
ment she included in a written
Dodd also statoo that the retir ellien t.
assignment distr ibuted to her students' . lack of respect for
Kroger vice president Wayne
lOth and 11th grade English themselves explains wey they Harris promised workers a
classes.
don't respect their teachers, "rosy" future if the concessions
The target of the parents' parrots and other adults in were approvoo, but at a union
anger was a handout directing positions of authority.
meeting that prediction was
'
the students to assess themselves
grreted
with hoots and jeers.
The parentswho attended last
in regard to enterln~ the job week's board meeting also al·
" They're very upset," Wits ken
mar 14:!1.
leged that Dodd admlnistered said of his members . "They feel
In a preface to the assignment, mooicafion to students, fre· the company doesn't care about
Dodd st atoo that If she ever qul!'lt!Y klst students' homework them."
becomes president of the United . and called the students deroga Said six-year Kroger e~t~ploy('('
·s-tates, "I will be able to say that tory names In the classroom.
Robert Co by, 25, "They've been
my experience as a teacher at
Dodd·, who did not attertd the taking stuff away from us the
East High School has prepared board ineetlng, is a first -year past few years. We can't afford to
me well for the element of my job teacher In the district.
go on strike , but we can't afford
oot to ." ·
which entails 'dealing with low

\

Vol.36 , No.135

By NANCY YOACJIAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
"When you create the problem; I think you have
a responsiblity to find a solution for. that
problem."
. This is the belief of Meigs County Commissioner·
Richard Jones, in reg~rd to the Ohio Department ·
of Transportation's reluctance to help PomeroyMiddleport secure ferry service to West Virginia
while the Pomeroy-Mason bridge is closed lor
repairs.
• Bridge repair is scheduled to begin in February,
and government officials and businessmen on
both sides of the river have been unable to
overcome financial problems which have surfaced In trying to establish a ferry operation.
ODOT maintains It cannot legally help pay ilr a
ferry service.
Jones, however, believes ODOT has more of'a
responsiblity to the people of Meigs and Mason
Counties, who depend on the Pomeroy-Mason

Phone 742 2100

PR ICES Ef-FECl iVE 1HR U SAL NOV I :J.
"' :&gt; '
&gt;.

The probability of pr{'('ipitation is .fl. percent tonight and ncar
zero Thursday.
Winds Will become northwesterly at 10 to 20 'mph tonight.
. --

.

ea
rl y Friday,
ingInInto
20s
night
lows willrisbe
thetheteens
Sat urday morning and to near :JJ
earlv Sunday.

HOMEMADE

SPECIAL HOURS ON
THURSDAY, NOV. 13th
. OPEN AT 8 A.M.
FOR OUR SPECIAL. SAVINGS
ON JAZZY SWEATERS AND
COORDINATES
'

SEE CIRCULAR IN TODAY'$ PAPER

,
.
39Q N. ~EJ;QNO..A_VE .

MIDDLEPORT

~;~========~~~~~======~~~~~
WILL YOUR
UTILITIES
(, PUT YOU IN
1
; • THE POOR
HOUSE THIS
WINTER?

For Your Holiday Fruit Cakes We Have A
·
Fres.h Sup.ply Of

Drop by

and~heckout

CONSIDER:

I

'
the r•t of our Baking Staptea
for

tlncomt guidelin•• hive rcenttv be1111 u·

OHIOYALLEY BULK FOODS

614 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

~

. ...·

.

_

•

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••II••••••• 99&lt;
ARMOUR

.

$

'2.39 LB. SH.REDDED

BOILED HAM .............l!Sfv.~.• 2.19

I ll PIKI SIVII

14 CT.

MARGARINE ...... ~nil\. 99c

HEAD LETTUCE ... ..l~t... S9c

tiOl.

IIAfT t6 !LICE

\\

VELVEETA
CHEESE ............... 11~.$1. 99

CARROTS ..............uG..lSC

14 OZ. CTII. IIIOUGHTOII'I

30 CT.

COTTAGE
CHEESE: ................. $J .49

CAUFORNIA

t6

oz. CillO rm

CELERY ...................... 69'

I LB. TASTY IIRD FRYING

.

CHICKEN
LIVERS
••••••••••••••••••••
79(
1.0 P&lt;. 2 lB. BANQUET FRIED
.
CKEN DINNER ...........~q!. S .89
26 OZ. CAMPBEll'S CHKIIEN

NOODLE SOUP·•••••••••••• l.\'1~~ ~ 1.69
16 OZ. QUAKER
·
CORN, BRAN CEREAL. ••••••••• f·1. 99 ·
320Z.
, ··
•
~
WISK DETERGENT •••••••••••••• S2 .29

tondod.

992-8910

FOR FIIITH£R DETAILS CAll TODAY

We Accept
Food Stompo

1-614-9,2-7022

. ~~eee~e
•
·- ---

.
'

..

I

I OZ. PINEAPPLE WEDGES, PINEAPPU SliCES, GREEN CHERRIES

CANDIED
·FRUIT •••••••• ;....
~'1·•• S1. 99
16 OZ. STOIIEl Y TINY WHOLE
,
PICKLED _BEETS•••••••••••••••~M ••••• 79(
41 CT. lUIZIANNE DECAFFEINAltD
TEA
B
A
GS
•••••••
~ ..... ~ ........~q~. S2.39
46 oz. JUICE IOWl
.
ORANGE
JUICE
•••••••
~ ......~~~. $1.09
1SO CT. KUENEX
SOFT TISSUES ••••••••••••••••tq~. $~1\ .1 0
240Z. ROYAl PRINCE
I,

your Holiday Needa. 1

'.

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7~'9&lt;
CHOPPED HAM LOAF •••••Y••• Sl.S9

'

Chopped Dates ............................................ •2.10 lb.
Fruit Mi~ ......................... ... .... ..... .. .. ..... ....... •2:3o lb.
Candied Pineapple ·........ ......... .............. .... .. .. '2.151b.
Candied Red 8o Green Cherries .. .. ..... ........ .... '3.00 lb.
Pineapple/Cherry Mix .... .. .... ..... ... ................ •2.90 lb.
Dark or Golden Raisins ................................ '1.49 lb.
Macaroon Coconut ........ ................. ............. 1 1.40 lb .
Afl!lel Flake C09onut ........ .... .... .................... '1.80 lb.
Mincemeat ...... ... ...................... ............ .. , .. '1.561b.
Pecan Pieces ............................................... 1 4.26 lb.
Walnut Piecas ................. ......... ...... .,............ '3.50 lb.
Nut Siftings -................................................ 11.80 lb.
Black Walnut Pieces ................. ...... ........ ...... '6.60 lb.
NEW SHIPMENT OF CANDY MOLDS
Ambrosia Chocolate
· Merckena Chocolate
\
Wo Witt Prepare Your Chaeta Trays for' Your Next Party

I.
1

ECKRICH

Ohio, area weather scene
Ohio t;)(lendlld l&lt;·orecast
Friday through Sunday
F'air Friday and Saturda y.
wIth a chance of •·a in Sunday .
Highs will be In the lls F'ridav ,
climbing Into the 40s Saturday
and ranging from the middle 40s
to the middle 50s Sunday. Over-

I~JH6

I

12 OZ. KENTUCKY BORDER PACKAGED

.

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy tonight, with a
chance of snow flurries and a low
between 20 and 25. Mostly sunny
Thursday:,wlth highs near ll.

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STORE

Clerk details \Tillage funds
'

•

•

enttne
4 Sections, 48 Pages

· f'ollleroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, November 13. 198~

YAMS
•••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••~~~. SJ~.29
oz. JET PUFF

16

I

'

MARSHMALLOWS
......... ~.~~~••••• 89(
1St/1 OZ. WHITNEYS
•
PINK SALMON ...............~~. S1. 98
..

25 Cent1

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

bridg!), than to post detour signs to bridges 20
miles east an(! west of the structure being
repaired.
..
"It's ridiculous," Jones said, and he noted that
ODOT routinely c6nstructs ternporary roads
when state highways are closed for repairs. Jones
feels ODOT should kick In some of the fln¥ling
necessary to develop ferry landings In Meigs and
Mason counties.

Chamber of Commerce, President Bill Nease
reported that Point Pleasant ferry operator Doc
McCoy Is still trying to secure private financial
backing to develop the landing at Clifton.
McCoy wants to establish his ferry between
Middleport and Clifton, rather than Pomeroy and
Mason, because he would he abte 'io operate even
· during high water.
Nease said McCoy feels he will be able to secure
about $40,000 for the landing, If merchants and
In a meeting last week which includedU .S. Rep.
businessmen will put up an additional $40.000, in
Clarence Mlller, ODOT was asked by Mlller to at
the form of advance ticket purchases, tD pay his
least take part In subsequent meetings regarding
liability insurance.
the ferry service. A meeting ·was held this past
Nease said that letters asking for pledge money
Mondi\Y in Mason, but ODOT was not
were sent to several local businesses a couple
represented.
weeks ago by both Pomeroy and Middleport
Jones also believes the U.S. Arrny Corps of chambers. Nease said the chambers received
Engineers, which operates on taxpayers' money,
total pledges somewhere in the neighborhood of
.
Is not playing as active a role as It should in $12,000.
alleviating the problem of the ferry.
He said if the chamber wants to pursue the idea
In Wednesd.ay's meeting of the Pomeroy Area of gathering pledge money to front the $40,000 for

insurance, that money would be held in escrow
until the ferry is a'ctuauy ready to go into
operation. Once the ferry is operational, the
.money would be given the operator and
businesses would receive ferry ticl\ets In return . . ·
Those tickets could then be distributed from the
respective .businesses.
·
Nease pointed out that time is an important
factor In the whole problem, because· repairs to
the landings cannot be made lin extremely bad
weather.
Businessman Greg Gibbs pointed out that local
power plants . and other Industries may l)e
interested in purchasing advance tickets which
could then be resold to employees right on the job
sit~ .. Gibbs . volunteered to follow up on his
suggestion by contacting the various industries.
Another meeting on the ferry service will likely
not be scheduled until more positive information
is available.

Bus tum
upkeep
discussed
by board

County receives
litter control grant

IN MDDLEPOO

All Middleport Village funds ·. $13,005.11J, $15,112.82 deficit; san·
totaled $385,773.56 as of Oct. 31, itary sewf.'T escrow, no rec eipts,
Village Clerk -Treasurer Jon no disbursements. $113,217.29;
Buck reports.
firehouse improvement fund ,
Receipts, expenditures for the $4.86, no di s bursements.
month, respectively , and the end $43,ffiO.:D ; water tank, no reo! the month balance include:
celpts. no disbursement s,
General. $21,186, $14,992.40, $)30,977.!il; water, $10.~0.76,
$41,818.1!); street maintenance, $12,484.81, $ll,939.~: sanitary
$4,150, $4,849.54 , $4,849.54. sewer. $7,910.&amp;1, $8,389 .22,
$3,784.3!; federal revmue shar- $28,815.18; sanitary sewer. no
lng, no receipts, no disburse- receipts, $365.91, $813 .!6 deficlt;
ments , $3,811.~; street lights, no cemetery, $1,2\9.49 , $1 ,3!7.17,
receipts, $1.!il4.!fi, :tllSS.lli de- $2,2\2.!11 deficit: water meter
licit ; street levy, no receipts, no trusts, $400. $513.91, $12,:tl0.79;
disbursements, $2,343.56; fire , economic development , $917.45,
equipment. $150 , $545.31, $1,!91.62, $9,4J3.!1l.
$4 ,lil.fll deficit: fir e tru ck. no
Receipts for the month tot aled
receipts, $2,343.44, Sl.t'i3.Zl: pub- $5!i,m4.fll while di s bursements
lie transportation. $9,195.42. amounted to $61.~ 9 . 17 .

•

_,

...... AVIH

~

. ('learlng tonighl 1 wilil a low ,
near 10. Sunny .Friday, with
highs near to. The probablllty
of precipitation is near ~ero
this afternoon through Frl·

Jones: ODOT, corps need to address problem

'

.

609
Supt&gt;r l.ouo
32-31-21-41-42-39

'

r-;·------;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!~' ..

DAN'S

Daily .Number

•

,.

Copyrighted 1986

·officials eye teacher-student dispute
; YOUNGSTOWN 1UPI I
·Youngstown City School District
:officials continued Tuesday to
:review the case of a teacher who
-referred to her students as "low
' life" and accused them of cheat · tng, stealing and lying.
. District spokesman Chuck
:zmo said Superintendent Ema nuel Catsoules met Monda y'wlth
·East High School teacher· Nlco'leen Dodd, who 'has come under
·fire for the statements she made
:about the students.
· Zillo said Catsoules will con·tinue to gather Information and
.expects to make a decision on the
Issue within the next two weeks.
· Dodd has been kept out of the life .'
"My students have shown mP
school while the matter is under howtheycancheat.lleandsteal,
· review .
how the~· can misbehave In class,
how they can fight with each
The teacher came under fire at other, how they can come to class
'tast Thursday's school board drunk, and how they can be
meeting When paretts COrn· low-down and COMivlng," the
plalned about a personal state· preface continued.

.

at y

PIR

not released. However, Kroger
Kroger clerks and meat de·
officials said .the proposed con- partment workers had votE-d to
tract contained significant im- strike at midnight Tuesday un provements over previous offers, less Kroger offeroo a new conwhich the union had said were tract in place of previous conunacceptable .
tract offers. WC)rkers 6bjected
Gene Witsken, president of the primarily to thrre proposals,
UF'CW Local 1099, said' he be- including a 72-cent per hour wage
lieved the company 's latest offer cut for top-leve employees over
was the best the union could the life of a new thrre-year
e.,pect to receive.
contract. Top-leve clerks now

Ohio Lottery

~ay.

25°/o OFF

•Kroger workers vote today-_on contra~t
'

'

'

,.

..

By NANCY YOACHI\M
Sentinel Stall Writer
The Meigs County Commissioners announced Wednesday
that Meigs County's litter grant
for next year has been approved
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources In the amount
of $79,650.
The grant application was
reduced from $83,495. The commissioners will he receiving
additional information regard· ·
. ing the funding within the next
two weeks.
The board approved a bill of
~· troih,'Melgs p.ounty Common Pl~as Court for typing of·
court transcr.ipts' In the Llnds~
Taylor appeal. Taylor, who .was
convicted of murder In Meigs.
County, appealed his case at. the
time of his sentencing. Bills for
the transcripts are to be paid out
of revenue sharing money.
In regard to overall county
finances, a letter Is to be sent
from the commission to a II
county officeholders and agen·
cies to curtail spending through·
out the remainder of the year.
"Anyone who can save .a few
bucks wlll be called upon to do
so," said Commissioner Richard
Jones.
Noted Commissioner David
Koblentz. "We'll have to tak~ a
hard look" at the budgets of the
respective offices when the over·
·all 1987 county bud~et is preparoo In tate Decemt.;&gt;r .
·
In other matters , the board
approvro paY,ment of a $500 bill
to McNelly; Patrick and Assoelates, Jackson. for insurance
consultation on behalf of. the
county with BlueCrossofCentral
Ohio. The boardalsoapproved an
agreement for continued consulfallon through Jan. J, 1988.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts has pr epar!Ii descrlp·
lions of Dixon Lane and Carmen
Road, as requested by Salisbury
Towns hlp Trustees, who wish to
havetbe roadsaddedtotownship
mileage. !loberts said the "mi:
leage man" from the state will be
In Meigs County on Tuesday.
Roberts is In favor of adding the

roads to Salisbur~ Township
mileage.
He also reported that the
ccunty highway department wlll
be assisting Columbia Township
Trustees with a problem at an
intersection on County Road 11
near Dyes ville.
The commissioners asked Ro·
berts and Ted Warner, county
highway superintendent, if the
county has sealed the entrance to
Racine's Shrine Club Park, as
part of Racine's block grant to
improve the pa~k - Warner re·
porrMthe entrante has not been
sealed, and that "it Is probably
too late" to buy the needed
materials . Clerk Mary Hobstetter notoo that a purchase order
for $988 to putchase aggregate
and asphalt for the Racine
project was sent to the highway
department on Sept. 18. Warner
said he was not aware of the
purchase order.

SALES - Plctuted are some of the 40 residents
who turned out Monday evening to get tips oo how

to become more effective salespen~ons.
meeting, held at the Senior Citizens Center,
sponsored by the Meigs County Retention
Expansion CoO)mlttee and the program

The
was

and
was

presented by Scott Wright, Jack Monda and Dr.
Dwight Pugh of the SmaU Blfilness Resource
Center in Athens. The meeting stressed that
elfecllve salesmanship can Improve sales by 15 to
20 percent and the value of knowing the (roducl
and where It Is located.

Senate to vote ·on \tax relief action today
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate was to vote today on
personal and corporate tax relief
designed to offset an upcoming
windfall in state revenues be·
cause of the elimination of
certain federal tax deductions.
Meanll(hlle, the House sche·
duled a vote on Senate-passed
legislation moving Ohio's presl·
dential primary from May to the
second week In March , to coin·
cide with the llllnols primary .
The Senate was to convene at
11 a.m. and the,House at 2 p.m.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee recommended the
tax cut bill Wednesday after
slightly reducing the break for
individuals and shifting It toward
corporations.
Meanwhile, a joint SenateRousse conference committee
made little headway In asselli·
bllng a compromise reform blll

for the civil justice system and
Insurance Industry. Final action
on that may be put ofi until next
week.
The Senate Republicans ' tax
cut bill, which originally had
promised Individuals an 11 per·
cent reduction In their income
tax rates, was amended to
IJ'OVide 7 percent next year and
another 1 percent In 1988.
The corporate tax reduction
was tailored to help the tarj:!:st
and the smallest businesses.
''We're being told that we're
ron-competitive (toward busi·
ness) with other states," said
Sen. Richard H. Finan, R·
Cincinnati, chairman ct the cern·
mittee . "These are (cuts) that
will impact on development in
the state."
'rhe committee also voted to
reduce the top bracket ln the
personal Income tax from 8
per&lt;~nt of Income to 6.9 percent.

Finan said that would help
company presidents to' brln~
their ftrms to Ohio because their
personal taxes would not be so
high.
The top corporate tax bracket
would be loweioo from 9. 2
percent to 8.9 percent. The first
$50,000 of income would be taxed
at only 5.1 percent , instead of the
. first $25,000 of income.
Total tax relief in the package
is calculated at $303 million in
fiscal 1987, which begins next
July 1, and $411 million In fiscal
1988.
If it is !DO much , the state tax
ccmmissloner Is required to
adjust the tax rates accordingly
at the endo!Junei988, subject to
the veto of a special House·
Senate panel.
"We're being cautious," said
Finan. '"This is a lot more
realistic (than the original 1)111
introduced last summer) ."
The Ways and Means Commit·

tee also reported out House·
passed legislation .Increasing
from $15,000 to $16,506 the max! ·
mum income for eligibility for
the income tax credit now
available to elderly property
owners. The added tax relief will
cost the state $3.5 million a year
starting in 1988.
The Senate Finance Commit tee reported ou t a House-passed
bill providing an income tax
crooit lor Zi per rent oft he cost of
day care for dependent children
or adults . .
Families earning less than
$30,000 a year would be eligible in
1988, costing the state $16 million
a year in tax bsses.
In floor action. the Senate
voted to establish a special task
force to evaluate the best a~ricul­
tural, commercial, recreational '
and residential uses of tllf Lake
Erie shoreline, and to produce a
20-year plan .

Gallia County man's seven-day standoff ends today
By JIM WEIDEMOYER
OVP Stall Writer
GALLIPOLIS - The man, ,
refusing to be served a court
order. who barracaded himself
within his own home for seven
days was forced out early this
mornln~ by the Gallla County
Sheriff's Department, taken Into ·
custody and transported to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Thursday, Nov. 6, sheriff
deputies went to the home of
Joseph A. Bevan. located at the
junction of Marti and Fairview
roads In Harrison Township, to
serve a Gallla County Common
Pleas Court order. Deputies were
serving the · order to obtain
clothing belonging to his wife,
Martha L. Bevan, 34,-and her two
children. His wife filed for a
divorce last month.
The order stated that, 11 Bevan
would not comply, the deputies 1
were .directed to enter the pre· 1
mlses. After meeting resistance 1
from Bevan'·s relatives, deputies !
!

Athens Mental Health Center to
be evaluated, authorities said .
Bevan was apprehended with·
out any gun Shots fired , Montgo·
mery said . The shot !!roo,
reportedly by Bevan, was the
only 'f irearm discharged
throughout the incident.
The sheriff' department llfted
Its six-day news blackout Wednesday on information pertain·
lng to the Incident. Until around
noon We!lnesday, the department had placed .a blackout on
the entire Incident, refusing to
release any Information. Author·
lUes feared news of the IJ'Oblem
would entice onlookers and possl·
bly endanger Innocent llves.
Upon arriving at the Bevan
residence last Thursday, the
department met resistance from
Deputies Immediately In· the members of Bevan's family,
formed Bevan of his lights, who were arrested and jailed for
served warrants lor his arrest . disorderly conduct and resisting
and transported him to HMC, · arrest. Arrested were Dwl.ght B.
Montgomery ~ald. It Is ex pee too · ·Bevan, 68, Rt: 1, Crown City;
that Bevan will be transpo~ted to David D. Bevan, 28, 1220 Second
were forced back by an apparent
gun shot from Inside the
residence.
The scene was secured follow·
ing the the gun shot, authorities
said. Members of the sheriff
department had been attempting
to negotiate with Bevan since
that time.
After exhausting all avenues In
attempting to convince Bevan to
surrender, Sheriff James. M.
Montgomery directed his depu·
ties to use tear gas to force Bevan
to vacate the residence around
7:30a.m. today:'
Montgomery said the use of
tear gas was to ensure a
harmless apprehension. , Bevan'
was removed from the residence
unharmed, authorities said.

Ave.; Timothy K. Beva n, 24, Rt.
1, Crown City; and Jeffr~ K.
Slone, '1/, Gallipolis.
After the altercation with the
family members, the deputies
attempted to enter !he house but
were forced back by an apparent
gun shot, !ired from the inside,
according to authorities.
Authorities ' said they had at·
tempted to communicate with
Bevan every 15-ll minutes.
'three clergymen, famlly
members, mental health author!·
ties, and thrEE certified hostage
negotiators have. made numer·
ous attempts to persuade Bevan
to surrender to authorities.
On Frtday, Nov. 7, the court
granted Montgomery's request
to order Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative Inc. of Gallipolis to
disccMect the electrical service
to the house.
Memoors·of the sheriff depart·
ment remained on the scene·
contlnlously until Bevan surren- '
dered, Montgomerv said. Fair·

,,

I.

'

view Road was block~ off.
Bevan was married to his wlf~,
for a little more than 14 years and
has two childrm , a 13-year-old
son and nine-year-ol d daughter,
through the marriage. After
weeks of threats and mental
abuse, hls wife was forced to
leave the home, according to
court records.
Mrs. Bevan signoo an affidavit
on'Oct. 9 stattngrhat he had told
her she would he punished for
what she was doing and told the
children several times ihat
"!helP mother is going to die."
The court served a restraining
order the same day and Mrs .
Bevan moved out of her marital
home, taking the children .with
her. to tempOrarily ilve with her
· mother in 'Gallipolis.
·
On Oct. 16, the court granted
Mrs. Bevan her request to obtain
the clothing belonging to herself
and the children wMch her
husband maintained In the
,· house.

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Cost problems in maintaining
school bus turn-arounds were
discussed Wednesday night when
the Eastern Local School District
Board of Education met In
regular session at the high·
school.
The board has been advlsoo
that the three townships within
the district which have been
maintaining the turn-arounds
can no longer assume full cost
responsibility because of a reduction In the funds which trustees
receive.
The board discussed a pro·
posed suggestion through which
the school board and the trustees
would split the maintenance
costs on a 50·50 basis, and will
further study that approach to
the problem . Archie Rose, transportation supervisor. will survey
the turn-arounds to determine
what work is needed.
The board hired C.D. Mcintyre
as junior high school basketball
coach . Mcintyre is a noncertified person, but there were
no applicants for the position
from the certif ied staff
members.
Jon Jacobs oft he Meigs County
Health Department met with the
board and explained that there is
a head lice problem not only in •
Meigs County but across the ~
stale. The district i&gt; nqulroo to
have a policy to deal with the ~
problem and research indicated
that the district does have an :
existing policy wti ch provides •
that a student cannot be readmit·
ted to school unt U both head lice
and knit sit uations are cleared up.

,

Bus drivers, wit h Mary RDse as": •
spokesperson, met with the. :
board In reference to activity •
trips. The board agreed that :
policy will be that a school bus • •
taken oo such a trip must remain"·'
Oil the site but that a driver ma y.: .
leave the bu s for lunch cr some •· '
other reason but should advise~ :
lhe person in charw . The boant:' -:
agreed to reimbu rse Ralp h Wi gal·~
for mileage for a trac k team trip::;
made last Ma".
:-..;
The board . agreed to ' stud)" '
whether It wishes to pu rchasl' at
$391. a guaranteed maintenance
agreement on a new copirr
recently purrhasoo. A nE'w at-:-:
hletic handbook preparoo by Don ~
Apling, high ~chool principal, ;,
Dennis Eichinger, and the at' ·
hletic cou ncil was distri buted ,:
and will be studied by bo urq ,
members . Mark E. Null, Prank· '
lin Petrie Jr. and Ronald Jutton
were added to the su~tltut~
teachers ' ilst.
,
The board moved Into exec:U- ·•
tlve session to discuss personnel'
and negldtlons which are under- .,:
•way with n on -cer tifi ed .,_
employees.
·:
Artending the meeting were' .
Apiing, Superintendent Rlcharq .
Roberts, Susie Heines, James
Ca ldwell and James Smith, :.
board members : and Elois •
BOston, treasurer.
·'·
The next r~ular meeting wilt'-:
be from 7to 9 p.m. on Nov. 21 and' ·
the next special meeting was set
for Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m.

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