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. •·

December 11. 1988

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

Page E-6-Sunday Times-Sentinel

Ohio Lottery

13 more
days 'til
Christmas

.SUPER AMERICA®

Daily Number
056
Pick4
1785
Super .Lotto

15-16-20-22-27-32

DIVISION OF ASHLAND Oil, INC.
&lt;

.

Credit Cards May Be Used
For All Purchases
. Excluding Lottery
We Reserve T)le Right
To Limit Quantities ·

' ....

,.

.~ ·

~; -

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Vol.39, No.162
1988

Development seminar
attracts .50 residents

2 Liter

One Of Six
Turkeys
'

Register to win One of Six Turkeys at theSuperAmerica stores
listed below. Registration is December 9 thr.ough noon
December 23, 1988. The drawings will be held at noon December
23, 1988. One turkey per store will be given away. No purchase
necessary. You need not be present to win. Approximate retail
value of each Turkey is $20.00. See drawing can inside store for
.
detai Is.

Lay's
Potato Chips

SAVE 30C

STP Gas
Treatment

NOT EASY TO GET A
LOAN- Kevin Carney, (lop)
of the Ohio Department of
Development's·Office of Local
Government Services, warns
prospective borrowers that
II' s not easy to gel a )oan of
CDBG funds, but It can be
done If requirements can be
met. (Bottom) Local bankers
Manning Kloes, of Central
Trust, Middleport,. and Tom
Wolle, of Home National,
Racine, were among several
Melp County bank ofllclals
who attended . last week's
seminar on economic development. The seminar was held
at the Senior Citizens Center
In Pomeroy.

'

Brown Jersey. Gloves·
.
.

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•

8 Oz.

?V2 Oz.

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Dozen
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Record low temperatures are
set in Midwest over weekend

'

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20C

Bear Paw
Sheepskin
Scraper

Kodak
Video
Cassette

SAVE
$2.40

Everyday Low Price

T-120

Bic
Lighters

•

Cashews
•

PORTSMOUTH, Ohio (UPil The city or Portsmouth, in
southern Ohio along the Ohio
River. is trying to strengthen its
ties with a city in England by the
same name.
For the past three years
Portsmouth, Ohio, has been
gearing its holiday activities to a
Charles Dickens theme, encou·
raging tourism with the motto
"Have a Dickens of a time In
Portsmouth."
Response to the activities,
which continue through· the end
of the year, has been great , says
Shirley Adams, who heads up the
city's Visitors and Convention
Bureau.

g

_,

SAVE
SAVE 90C

Now Available

40C

SAVE 20C

Route 7&amp;35, Kanauga, OH ·
801 2nd Ave., Gallipolis, OH , ·
Great Gas1
509 Jackson Pk., ·Gallipolis, OH
Good Goods1
Every Night
497 Gen. Hartinger Pky., Middleport, OH
1n Day
279 West Main St., Pomeroy, OH
28th St. &amp;Jackson Ave., Point Pleasant, WV

By MICHAEL MOLINSKI
United Press International
A bitter arctic cold front
tightened its grip on the East and
Midwest early Monday , setting
record low temperatures in seyeral cities, while storms and a
tornado damaged homes arid
flipped a boat in a yard in
Florida.
Temperatures · were expected
to be 15 or more degrees below
normal for this time of year from
New England and the lower
Great Lakes across the central
Gulf Coast and northern Florida,
NatiOnal Weather Service fore-

caster Brian Smith said.
date of 9 degrees .
Record low ' temperatures for
The New York City Health
the date fell at numerous loca- Department declared a cold
tions In the East. The tempera· weather emergency Sunday .
ture was still plunging in Albany, There were at least 9,800 homeN.Y., at 2 a.m. when the mercury less people in shelters, which
hit 7 below zero and set a new ·were filled to capacity.
record. Record lows had also
"It's a cold weather emer·
fallen In Binghamton. N.Y., at 7 gency, but what Is sad is it's a
below; Buffalo, N.Y., at 5 below chronic emergency," said Ro·
and Allentown, Penn., at 5 bert Hayes, head of New York's
Coalition for the Homeless .•
degrees.
The temperature in New
Temperatu~s were between
York's Central Park plunged toG 15 and 25degrees below zero over
degrees at 5 a.m. , with a wind much of Vermont and eastern
chill of minus 22 degrees, break· New York state, the NWS said.
lng the 1960 record low for the The high temperature Sunday in
St. Johnsbury, Vermont, never
rose above zero.
Snow was falling in eastern
.
Oklahoma early Monday and
was expected to move Into
Arkansas Ia ter ln the day.
In Michigan early Monday, the
warmest
spot in the state was in
Another theatrical presenta·
single
digits9 at Muskegon.
lion for the season was "The Best
EST,
the tempera·
At1
:
20a.m.
Christmas Pageant Ever." a
ture
dropped
to
2-above at
story of some rowdy low·lncome
Detroit
Metropolitan
Airport,
children who decide they are snapping . the 1960 mark
of
going to play the lead roles In the
4·above,
the
NWS
said.
usual Christmas pageant at
As In many cities, the homeless
church, and portray their roles in
in Detroit knew the cold was
terms that they understand. This
life-threatening.
story, which has been adapted
"Anyplace heats staying out
for a seasonal television pro·
there In the cold," said Randy
gram, was written by a Ports·
O'Neal, 33, who went to the
mouth native, Barbara
Detroit Shelter for the Homeless,
Robinson,
rather than crawl into a vacant
• Visitors to Portsmouth this
house with a loaf of bread and a
holldayh season can visit the
chunk of bologna as he normally
Southern Ohio Museum which
does. ·'It feels like being in a deep
displays a toy exhibit and shows
freeze, like the way they freeze
a doctor's office.
meat."
Music groups from schools In
David Sherrard, director of the
the area present Christmas
homeless
shelter, said 98 people
music In the lobbies of banks over
came In after it opened its doors
the noon hour.
Saturday afternoon.' He said
A Boarshead Feast, served In
about 115 people came In Sunday
the Olde English tradition, will
night.
he served Dec.l9 at the Wesleyan
Showers continued over Flor·
United Methodist Church.
ida Monday, where windy storms
Vlsltors . are also given direc- ·shattered windows and flipped a
tions to Rudd's Christmas Dis·
boat In a yard In St. Petersburg
play about 25 miles west of the
Sunday afternoon. and a tornado
city, near Blue Creek In neigh·
damaged the roofs of 15 and
boring Adams County.
.
uprooted trees at Treasure Is·
This walk-through display that
land, Fla., the NWS said.
covers two hills and a valley
The storms were expected to
contains some 190,000 lights and
move
into South and North
150 figurines depicting the Christ·
Carolina
late Monday or Tues·
mas story. This display can be
day,
possibly
dumping snow
viewed nightly through the end of
Continue!!
on'
page 12
the year.

Portsmouth
ties into
.
Charles Dickens theme

12 Oz. Bag

Each

2 Sectiona, 12 Pages
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomefoy-Middleport, Ollio, Monday, December 12, .1988

pee als .Good December 9 Through December 23

PEPSI

Many of the decorations In
Portsmouth still portray a tradl·
Uonal Christmas, Adams said.
But some do carry out the
Dickens th~me.
There are Dickens banners on
every street corner, she said. But
when new decorations are
needed, they are in the Dickens
theme.
"T took for It to grow," she said.
One thing· associated with
Chr lstmas and Dickens, the
English author, Is the story "A
Christmas Carol."
And It · just wouldn 't he a
Dickensian Christmas without it.
The play will he presented Dec.
19 at Portsmouth High School.

SUPERAMERICA ®
DIVISION OF ASHLAND OIL, INC.

learn their business as much as business at a low interest rate.
· By NANCY YOACHAM
possible, but actually learning it The loan is paid back to the local
Sentinel News Staff
POMEROY - More than 50 is the client's responslblllty," government entity, and the money stays with that entity to be
Meigs County residents with Wright added.
Carney explained the Com· used to finance other local loans.
interests in economic developThe major crux of the CDBG
ment attended last week's eco- munlty Development Block
nomic development semtnar Grant program which provides program Is job creation, Carney
which was sponsored jointly by ·money for public sector projects. explained. Also, "our funds are
the Meigs County Commission- The Ohio Department of Oevel· not foreveryone,"headded. "We
ers, the Ohio Department of opment has been operating this are the last resort · after a
Development, and the Ohio Unl· program since 1982, under strlc) prospective business person has
used all of his own money and
verslt,Y Small Business Develop- federal guidelines, Carney said.
borrowed as much from the baljk .
The
state
received
approxl·
ment Center. The seminar was
or
prlva te individuals as possl·
mately
$36
million
ln
this
CDBG
held at the Senior Citizens Center
ble."
Carney described CDBG as
program
last
year,
and
expects
in Pomeroy.
a
lending
program to fill a
to
receive
about
the
same
for
the
Information presented at the
financial
gap
in a development
next
couple
of
years.
About
45
to
seminar ranged from the lmpor·
project.
He
also
pointed out that
50
projects
around
the
state
can
tance of research and carelul
because
CDBG
dollars
are tax,·
financial planning before enter· be funded each year with this
Carney
and
the
payers'
dollars,
there
are
stringmoney.
said
lng a business endeavor. to
procedures necessary in secur· average amount of CDBG fund· ent requirements and review
processes which must be met to
lng Community Development ing to a project Is $750,000.
Although many types of pro· qualify for funding . "It's not
Block Grants for the public
jects are eligible for CDBG easy, Carney warned.
sector.
Speakers for the seminar were funding. the actual application
However, he did encourage
Scott Wright. of the Small Busl· for funds must be made through
those
at the meeting to consider
the
county,
city.
·
v
illage
or
ness Development Center. and
CDBG
funds, because the state
township
government.
The
grant
Kevin Carney, of the Ohio Dewants
to
fund more projects in
is
then
made
to
the
local
partment of .Development's Of.
government
entity,
which
In
Appalachian
Ohio, which in·
flee of Local Government
turn,
loans
the
money
to
the
eludes
Meigs
County.
Services.
Wright's presentation was an ·
introduction to finance and an
explanation of the type Information required by banks in busl·
ness loan situations. "Person·
ally, banks will look at your past
. credit history. Professionally.
they want to know yourquallflca·
tlons to operate a business,"
Wright said.
Sometimes the Small Business
Center "has to discourage peoand the only way ·that will happen
ple" from attemptjng a business
By GLENN McCASLAND·
is for Mr. Bush to realize the need
venture, Wright said, when the
OVPStatr
and
support legislation pumping
venture looks like a poor
funding
into the commission's
POINT PLEASANT, W.Va. investment.
operations,"
Byrd said. "Without
U.S. Sen. Robert C. Byrd, D-W.Va.,
"The major part of our respon·
the
administration's
backing, the
plans a one-on-one visit with Presislblllty (the Small Business Cen·
dent-elect George Bush to urge the ARC will continue to be zero
ter) Is to make the clinet more
rebirth
of the Appalachian Regional budgeted and West Virginia will be
aware of his or her business. We
Commission
in a bid to aid West the loser."
will impress upon a client to
Byrd said he plans to request a
Virginia's economic and transportameeting with Bush "as soon as postion prospects.
And Byrd warns that while sible" on the ARC and other mat·
America needs to work closley with ters, including the giant deficit and
Soviet Leader Mikhail S. Gor- the continued wanning of relations
bachev, "we must do so with cau- between the U.S. and Russia.
"I think what Mr. Gorbachev has
tion and not be taken in by words
said
is fine, but, you know, if the
and promises."
milil31)'
is cut in the Eastern Bloc
Those were key points made by
countries,
I would like to know
Byrd during an interview with the
By United Press International
Point Pleasant Register from his what kind of tanks are moved At least10 people were killed In home near WashingtOn. D.C., as he are the old or new tanks? And even
eight traffic accidents across the prepares to become the chainnan of with these cutbacks, we must realBuckeye State during the wee- the powerful Seruue Appropriations ize that they still have more
kend, Ohio Highway Patrol offl· Committee next month.
milil31)' power there than we do,"
clals said.
Byrd also said he will continue Byrd said. "I think we should pur·
Two m\lltlple·fatallty accl·
to ' seek funding for the Gallipolis sue this thawing of the Soviets, but
dents occurred Sunday - one
Locks and Dam project and the with extreme care."
when a truck went out of
Byrd said that Bush should move
clean coal leehnology project at the
control at a high rate of speed
American Electric Power Co.'s quickly to seek additional meetings
in Akron taking the lives of two
with Gorbachev to keep the current
Philip Sporn power plant.
people an,d another double
He tied the growth of West Vlf- relationship alive with the Soviet
fatality crash west of Dayton In
president.
ginia to the ARC.
Montgomery County.The
"But we need to maintain a
"If West Virginia is to grow, then
fatal ties:
Continued on page 12
we must have a rebirth of the ARC
Friday Night
Cincinnati: Eddie Rogers, 28,
Cincinnati, when his car hit a
utility pole along U.S. 27 in
Hamilton County.
Streetsboro: Susan Gonia, 30,
Kingston, R.I., when hit by a car
on Ohio Route 14 In Portage
Two Pomeroy residents were injured in a one- truck accident
County.
Saturday at 7:20p.m. in Chester Township onS .R. 7, according
Saturday
to the Gallla·Melgs Post of the State Highway Pat rol.
Upper Sandusky: Julia Walter,
Raybon R. Wallace. 62, of 33790 Hiland Rd., and his
19, of Carey, when her car riving
passenger. Leona E. Wallace, 67, also of 33790 Hiland Rd., were
collided with a tractor·traller on
taken by the Meigs County EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Ohio Route 199 in Wyandot
Leona Wallace was admlttl;d for treatment of possible
County.
internal Injuries. At last report she was listed in stable
Norwalk: Sandra J . Middleton,
condition. Raybon Wallace was treated and released for cuts
46, Willard, when the car she was
and scrapes .
riding in slid on snow-covered
Raybon Wallace, driving a 1983 Chevrolet Blaze(, was
Ohio 61 in Huron County and
heading south when he struck a patch o!lceand lost controL The
. collided with another vehicle.
Blazer struck a guardrail and overturned.
· Columbus: Gregory Swanson,
30, Madison, Ala., In a one-car
accld_ent Qn a Columubs city
street.
A LangsvUle woman, Charlotte E . Jacks, Is confined to
Sunday
Veterans Memorial Hospital as the result of injuries received
aeveland: Ralph Culotta, 25,
when she was struck by a truck on E . Main St. , about 3:18p.m .
Cleveland, when another driver
Saturday.
ignored a red traffic signal on a
Pomeroy pollee said Jacks had loaded packages into a parked
city street,
vehicle
on E. Main St: and then turned and started back across
Dayton: Raymond and Audrey
the
street
when she ran Into the path of the truck driven by
Dillon, ofMongtomeryCounty, In
Robert
Salser,
Racine. Pollee said Jacks stated she did not see
a two-car crash on a rural road
the Salser vehicle.
west of Dayton.
Jacks was taken to the hospital by the Pomeroy Emergency
Akron: Donald Kellybrew, 17,
Squad.
No charges were filed against the driver.
and Edward Johnspon, 20., both
Continued on. page 12
of Akron, In a one·vehlcle crash
,[ on a city street.

Sen. Byrd· plans
visit with Bush
on ARC programs

At least 10
Ohioans killed
on highways

Local news

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briefs~___,

Two injured in Saturday wreck

Woman hit by truck, hospitalized

G1vu A Gilt Sullscription To The Daily Sentinel This Holicl~y Se~son -- Call ~92 2156
•

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•

CREDIT CARDS

-·:·" ........ '

Lows tonight In mid teens.
Chance of snow 50 percent.
Tuesday, cloudy, chance of
snow . Highs In mid 30s.
Chance of snow 50 percent.

..

�.,
Monday, December 12, 1988
Page-2-The Daily Senti~
Pomaoy-Middteport. OhiO
Monday. December 12. 1988

Commentary

Redmen

•

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street

Pomeroy, Ohio
· DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
_..,~

~m~ ,....,...,__,.'-"""'r'~=~~
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

AMEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

Americans must curb .cocaine appetite
WASHINGTON - When the
Reagan administration tried to
pressure Colombia earlier this
year to crack down on .the
cocaine Industry, then-Attorney
General Edwin Meese personally
delivered the message to Colombia's President Virgilio Barco.
The Colombian leader listened
politely and then cited the
terrible price Colombia has paid
In human life to fight the drug
cartel. "This Is what Colombia
has sacrificed In the fight against
drugs," Barco said quietly.
"What has the United States
sacrificed?"

The answer was unspoken. To unraveled the social fabric of
date, many AmeriCans have not Colombia. What has happened In
been w!lllllg to sacrifice their that embattled country, we
appetite for cocaine. As Barco warned, is beginning to occur in
told Meese, the Medellin drug the United States.
cartel of Colombia Is kept In
The people who are not getting
business by the U.S. citizens, who enough credit are the thousands
buy SO percent of the cartel's _ of Colombian ofticals who have
cocaine. The depressing truth is put their lives on the line, who
that the American people put up have rejected the fat bribes and
most or the cash that the Medellin have risked retributiOn to fight
cartel uses to corrupt govern- allalnst the deadly drug cartel.
ments, hire assassins and underHundreds have paid the ultimine law enforcement throughmate price. At this writing, the
out the Western Hemisphere.
In a series of columns, we have toll of Colombian murder victims
exposed how the cartel 1has is 57 judges and supreme court

LETTERS OF OP.IN10N are welcome. They should be less than 300 won:s

long. All letters are subj ect toe~Htlng and m\.lst be signed wtth nam~. address and
telept10ne num ber No unslgnOO let ters '1:-'tll be published. Letters sboukt 'bE' In

good taste, addressing issues, not peorsCJ'lallt\es.

~J)~SI~NTS CHANG~•.•

-

Telephone deregulation:
an enigma at the Statehouse

I

By LEE LEONt\RD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UPI) -A so-called telephone deregulation bill.
now on the brink of enactment, has raised more questions than it
answers about the way business is done around the Statehouse.
The bill. drafted by the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio In · --~
concert with the telephone industry, cleared the Ohio General
Assembly last week. It had the overwhelming approval of state
legislators, and Gov. Richard Celeste has promised to slgillt.
Suspic10ns have been raised by the stridenMppo~it!on of consumer
lobby organizations, which normally line up with the governor. They
are asking him to veto the bill, but he has refused.
On the surtace, the bill's purpose seems laudable. The PUCO says
telecommunications technology is changing so rapidly and is so
highly competitive that the free marketplace- supply and demand
- should regulate the rates for certain business telephone services.
And in the case of basic local telephone service- a monopoly- the
:Commission says it should have the flexibility to devise new
J-atemaking methods rather than being stuck with the traditional
:tengthy and costly hearings where ut!l!ties prove their case based on
costs.
The clinker Is, according to the Ohio Consumers' Counsel and the
Ohio Public Interest Center, that if the PUCO proposes an alternative
raremaking met hod and the phone company doesn't like it, Ma Bell
can veto 11.
" Thomas Chema, chairman of the PUCO. vigorously defended the
proposal last week and pointed out that under Celeste, the PUCO has
been a dedicated defender and protector of the consumer.
The chief sponsor ol the legislation, Rep . Dean Conley,
D-Columbus, says the consumer groups' charges that the bill will
guarantee telephone rate hikes are "absolutely and totally
Somewhere In the open bush
ludicrou s."
country of southeastern Angola,
Consumers' Counsel William Spratley sees a pattern. He sees
a brave black anti-communist
Ameritech, as it did in other Midwest states with flexible ratemak!ng,
leader is watching developments
coming 10 and di sarming the PUCO for residential rate hikes.
in his country- and in WashingThose s uspicions are fueled by these observations:
ton - with growing concern.
-Though telephone ratemaking was discussed for 18 months, the
Jonas Savlmbl, leader of the
final version only crystallized in September and then was pushed
National Union for the Total
through with minimal ohange. It went so fast In the Senate that
Independence of Angola (known
procedures were violated in the Senate and had to be corrected
as UN.ITA) , has been fighting the
retrOactively last week.
communist puppet regime in
_.Conley, one of only two sponsors, is a fomeremployee of the Ohio
Luanda since the mid-19705. His
Bell Telephone Co. Normally on major refom bills, legislators want
forces move freely around much
to jump on the bandwagon to claim credit. This time, none wanted to,
ofthe country, and are estimated
or they weren't allowed.
to be In effective control of about
-Some of the most high-powered lobbyists in the Statehouse were
a third of it.
retamed by the telephone industry to assemble the bill and sell it.
In recent years, Savimbl has
They contribute thousands of dollars to legislative leaders' campaign
been able to count on important
-funds each year.
help from the Reagan Adminis-Normally, if there Is a snag on a major bill at the end of a session,
tration in the torm of ground-toit Is held over and run through early in the following session. Not this
air missiles, which have brought
time.
down an Impressive number of
Most legislators apparently decided to put their suspicions aside
the attack helicopters that Mosand cast their faith with Chema, Conle:( and the PUCO.
cow has given to the Angolan
Chema assured all concerned that even if the phone ratemak!ng
communists. In addition, when
method Is changed, the PUCO wlll be the final arbiter in rate hike
Castro sent scores of thousands
requests, opponents will be heard and t~e appeal process will be
of Cuban troops to stiffen the
intact.
military back-bone of the Luanda
Also, Chema Is a potential candidate-for attorney general and
Conley is regarded as a future prospect forHousespeaker.lt would do
neither any good to violate consumers' trust.
As for Celeste, he' s crossed swords with the consumer groups
before, and this time he cast his lot with Chema, his appointee.
The governor conceded there Is nothing in the legis,Jatlon to prevent
a rate hike. just as under the current setup.
WASHINGTON (NEA) - We
"I think, frankly, we're going to see that the Increased competition
are now In that period of political
In the marketplace, as this technology develops very rapidly, will
Umbo called the presidential
benefit all of the telephone consumers," he said. That's about what
transition: the two and a half
they said when the AT&amp;T monopoly on long-distance service was
months between election and
dismantled.
InauguratiOn.
During this time the presidentelect starts putting together his
government so he can begin
functioning effectively after takIng the oath of ot!!ce.
But it Is also a timeofworryfor
many constitutional sch~ars.
There Is nothing In the Cons itut!on, or In the law, to deal wit the
unthinkable - a president-elect
dying or becoming incapacitated
before laking office.
·From the moment Michael
Dukakls conceded defeat on
election night, Nov. 8, George
Bush has commonly been referred to as "president-elect."
That is untrue. Bush does not
oll!cially be&lt;;ome president-elect
until the afternoon of ~c. 19
when the Electoral College
meets in Washington to cast It
ballots.
Until that time, Bush Is more
correctly
''president•
designate." Some would even
argue that he continues as
president-designate untll the
House of Representatives meets
on Jan. 9 to count the electoral
votes and officially certify the
winner.
This doesn't seem terribly
Important untll you ask what
would happen If Bush, or lor that
matter his running mate Dan
Quayle, met with some tragedy
in the next few weeks.
The tact Is that nowhere In the
COIUilltutlon
- or In the two
C&gt; tHI by NEA, One
amendments cover!Dg presiden"How 'bout that RJR Nabisco deaf, eh?"
tial succession, the 12th and the
20th - Is the period between
'
election and Inauguration co-

Angola's Savinibi needs

Jack Anderson
justices, one attorney general,
one minister of justlc, 250 journalists and more than 1,000
mayors, city council members
and drug enforcement officers.
Yet, Incredibly, te~ ·of them
have taken the cartel s money.
Their refusal not only endangers
their own Jives, but puts their
families at risk. The cartel's
enforcement squads don' t hesitate to gun down anyone who
stands In the way. The chief
enforcement goons lor t)le cartel,
Jose ROdriguez and Pablo Escobar, would just as soon k!ll a
person as swat a fiy.
Yet the drug officers continue
to press the battle against the
cocaine kingpins. Already this
year, they have destroyed more
than 600 cocaine labs and seized
more than 15 tons of the drug.
The underequlpped Colombian
army Is desperately trying to
keep up the pressure on the
cartel. But the multi-billiondollar drug consortium can affql'd to buy thelatestcomrnunicatlons equipment, transportation
and weapons from suppliers In
the United States, and the poor
army is no match for that
With no military radar and lew
helicopters, the Colombian air
Ioree Is no match either for the
narco-traffickers who hide out In
the mountains and jungles. The
government has Issued warrants
for the arrest of Escobar and
Rodriguez, but the two killers
have eluded the dragnet
The United States has contributed a paltry $11 million to help
the Colombians who are at the
front Jines against the drug
combine. What the Colombians
need Is more assistance and
fewer lectures.

help~_W_il_lia_m_Ru_sh_er

calculate that It is a "managea- behind, that w!ll leave 30,000
regime, South Africa sent troops
ble peru·: -I.e., that UNITA wlll Cubans lor Savlmbi to contend
Into Angola to fight beside
survive, and that once the Cuban with, even alter Cuba's
Sav!mbl.
troops are withdrawn Savlmbl "withdrawal."
· But under the terms of a
These contentions are disputed
multilateral agreement just will be able to force the Luanda
regime to negotiate with him or by American officials, who prereached concerning independdict that Cuba will find withdraence for Na10lbla (or South-West face total overthrow.
Not everybody shares this wal a hard process to stop once It
Africa, which borders Angola on
the south), South Africa has .optimism. Jeremias Chltunda, has begun. But whoever Is right
withdrawn Its forces from An- vice president of UNITA, is about the Cuban troops, one point
gola. Cuba Is obligated to do ' currently In Y{ashlngton, and he , Is crystal clear and will require
likewise, but on a much more . takes sharp Issue with the Idea the early attention of Presidentleisurely schedule: The 50,000 that the Cubans will really elect Bush and his nominee for
soldiers It admits to havlllg In withdraw from Angola alto- secretary of state, James Baker.
As a matter of fact, this matter
Angola have two years In which gether. In the first 11_lace, he
contends that there are 60,000 may well become a sort of litmus
to withdraw.
It doesn't take a mUltary Cubans presently in Angola, test of the basic attitude of
expert to see that those next two rather that 50,000, so the withdra- Secretary-designate Baker. If he
years are going to be a time of wal of even 50,000 will leave Intends to keep on supporting
freedom's friends around the
peril for Jonas Savlmbl, during 10,000 there.
In addition, according to Chi- world, Angola would be a splenwhich the Angolan communists
and their Cuban friends can lunda, about 20,000 of the Cuban did place to demonstrate that
.
launch heavy attacks against the troops In Angola are "black fact.
And for that matter, if Mikhail
UNITA forces without running Cubans" -ethnic blacks who are
into South African troops sup- being given Angolan citizenship Gorbachev really means to .
and simply blended Into the local change the spots on the Soviet
porting the freedom fighters.
armed forces, where they wUI be leopard, making sure that the
High American officials pri- Indistinguishable from native Cubans in fact leave Angola
vately acknowledge the perU, but Angolans. II they too remain would be a good place to start.

What if lhe president-elect dies Robert Wagman

Berry's World

.

~~

I

•

---·----•

..

~..

-.

vered. Should something happen
to the newly elected president
before ·his Inauguration, the
natloll could face an unprecedented constitutional crisis.

mid-December, but before the
vote count was made and certified by the House In early
January.
Under the 12th Amendement,
the House must certify as winner
of the election the person receivIng a majority of the 538electoral
votes - at least 270. II no one
receives a majority, the new
president Is chosen by a vote of
the House with each state receiving one vote.

It · is unclear whitt would
happen if, by the time the House
met, the person receiving the
majority was no longer able to
hold office.
Some experts argue that the
electiOn could stU! be certified. In
other words a dead man could be
elected president, allowing the
20th Amendment to take effect
and Initiating a4orderly succession In which the vice president·
elect would take over.

II a president-designate were
to die or become Incapacitated
between Election Day and the
Monday In December when the
Electoral College meets, the
political party of the winner
would probably designate who
should be chosen. Since almost
all electors are party functionarIes, they could be expected to go
along with the choice.
How the party would choose
the person Is another question
entirely. One can Imagine the
political donnybrook that might
By Unlled Press International
ensue. Then too, If a party were .
Today is Monday, Dec. 12, the 347th day of 1988 with 19 to follow.
dominated by one of Its more
The moon is waxing, approaching its first quarter.
doctrllla!re wings, It might make
The morning star Is Venus.
a choice totally unacceptable to
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn.
the country as a whole.
Those horn on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Similarly, If a president-elect Include John Jay, first chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, In 1745,
died alter his election by the
abolitionist William Lloyd GarriSon in 1805, French novelist Gustave
Electoral College had been offiFlaubert In 1821, Norwegian painter Edvard Munch in 1863, actor
cially certified by the House, It Is Edward G. Robinson In 1893, singer Frank Sinatra in1915 (age73), TV
almost certain that the 20th game show host Bob Barker In 1923 (age 65), New York Mayor
Amendment would control the Edward Koch in 1924 (age64), and slllgersConn!e Francis in 1938 (age
situation. The vice president· 50) and Dionne Warwick in 1941 (age 47).
·
elect would become president·
elect, and a new vice pr1!5ldent
On this date In history:
would be chosen by him, to be
In 1901, a radio message was transmitted across the Atlantic Ocean
confirmed by the Senate after the for the first time.
president-elect took the oath of
In 1937, Japanese planes bombed and sank the U.S. gunboat Panay
office.
In the Yangize river north of Nanking, China. Japan later said It was a
One has to say "almost" mistake.
certain because the 20th AmendIn 1975, Sara Jane Moore said she willfully tried to kill President
ment does not specify anything Gerald Ford. She Is serving a life sentence In prison.
about the period between certifiIn 1981, martial law was imposed In Poland.
cation and Inauguration. But It
In 1985, the crash of an Arrow Air DC-8 military charter on takeoff
could easily be stretched to cover from Gapder, Newfoundland, k!lled all256 aboard Including 248 u.S.
·
this eventuality.
soldiers.
'
The most vexing question Is
what would happen If a
A thought for the day: Author Gustave Flaubert said, "Our
president-designate died after igno,rance of history causes us to slander our own times."
the Electoral College met in
I

Today in history

•

.-

•

Plagued by cold shooting and a
stiffened Rio Grande defense,
vlsitlllg Defiance was unable to
score for lour minutes In the
second period Saturday - long
enough to help the Redmen on to
a 75-65 defeat of the defending
District 22 champion.
"I thought that we had it under
control until midway Into the
second half, " Yellow Jackets
mentor Marv Hohenberger commented. "At the nine-minute
mark, we misse(j a couple of
close-end shots ani:l we appeared
to be nonchalant about it. After
that, it was never the same ball
game again."
Mike Tidwell's field goal at
9:43 put the Redmen to within

Funnan is
in finals
GREENVILLE, S.C. iUPI) John Bagwell rushed for 81 yards
and a touchdown and Furman
scored 21 points In the third
quarter Saturday to roll into the
NCAA Div. I -AA final with a 38-7
rout of Idaha.
Furman will face Georgia
Southerri, the winningest team In
the 1-AA since 1985, In the
championship game next
Saturday.
Bagwell's performance, which
included the !!rst touchdown of
the game, put the tailback in fifth
place on the Paladins' all-time
rushing list with 2,116 yards.
Glen Connally's 37-yard field
goal in the second quarter put
Furman ahead 10-0 at the half
before breaking the game open in
the third quarter.
Furman scored in the third
period on a 12-yard run by Bobby
Daughtery, a 13-yard run by Billy
Stockdale and a 1-yard pass from
Frankie DeBusk to Greg Key to
lead 31-0 entering the fourth
quarter.
Furman's Richie Harris ran I
yard for the team's flnal touchdown at 7:57 in the final quarter.
Idaho's Rene Barton ran·7 yards
in with 20 seconds left to give the
Vandals their only touchdown.

rally~

three (54-51) and spar~ed a
comeback that saw Rio take the
lead at 6:33 158-56) and hold onto
It for the remainder of the game.
Prior to that, it looked as if
Defiance was on Its way to a
long-sought victory after three
straight losses.
Coach John Lawhorn felt the
Redmen played well in spurts,
but came together In the closing
minutes.
"At the end, we were a very
good team," Lawhorn said. "We
boarded well late in the game,
and that was a key. Also, we
didn't turn the ball over as
much. "

Keyed by effective offense
from Doug Prigge, Keith Wischmeyer and Terry Morman, Defiance jumped to an 11-2 advantage at 14:37 in the first period.
Good rebounding, combined with
some helpful 3-point shots by
Brian Watkins, brougght Rio
back to within one on several

occasions
..
The hosts were down 27&lt;25 at
2:59 when Jim Harris sank a
three-point shot for Defiance.
Morman . and Rod Bowersock
then !Ired in two baskets to lead
Rio by nine (34 -25) . Ki r k Seemann added two more at the foul
line. Watkins' 3-pointer at 1:34,
coupled with a set of free throws
by Brad Schubert and a lastsecond bucket by John Lambcke,
left Rio down 36-32 at the buzzer.
The game stayed tight until
15:14 when Morman's field goa l
opened the Defiance lead to eight
146-38), as the Yellow Jackets'
offense broke open to lead the
Redmen 50-39 with 13: 37 remain ing. Defiance got ahead on two
Morman foul shots, but a set of
buckets by Lambcke and ·Marc
Gothard - and strong Redmen
rebounding - sliced the margin
Watkins then fired In a 3pointer to trail by three (52-49) .
· Pngge sank a basket, but Tid-

well's two points to again dog the
Yellow Jackets by three sPt the
stage for Jimmy Kea rns to si nk
two (56-541 and Tldwe!i to tie it up
at 7: 5L Larry Benning then
broke through the defen se to give
Rio the lead for the first time
since 3:28 in the first period.
Prigge's foul sho ts at 5:54 put
Defiance behind 60-58, but from
there the Redmen advanced by
nine points. Defiance didn't score
again until 1: 43 on a Bowersock
bucket, but sar~k only two more
field goa Is before the end .
The Joss dropped Defiance to
3-5 on' ,the season, while the
Redmen Improve to 8-2.
Statistically, Rio connected on
27 of 1ts 59 field goal attempts for
45.8 percent and was successful
on 18 of 25 free throws for 72

Snyder attends Cincinnati Bible College
JoE Snyder, a Meigs H.igh
graduate, Is currently attending
Cincinnati BiBle College where
he i,s participating in the basketball program.
Snyder, who was an aggressive
player as a guard for the
Marauders In court action and
also participated In the baseball ···
program, Is a member of the
varsity squad at CBC but does not
see much actiOn due to the
abundance of upperclassmen.
However, Joey is a starter on
the junior varsity squad. The JV

unit played their first contest of
the season against Kentucky
Christian College and Snyder
garnered seven points in the win
and was also credited with an
outstanding defensive game.
Joey states the practices are
long and tiring but credits the
excellent coaching he received
during his high school career in
helping him cope with the strict
regimen.
Joey is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
James E, Snyder of 37860 SR 124,
Pomeroy.

WILBERFORCE, Ohio- Turnovers and a 31 -po!nt performance from Central State's
Evelyh W!ll!ams boosted the
Lady Marauders to their eighth
consecutive !"in of the season
Saturday. 93-41 over the visiting
Rio Grande Redwomen.
The loss dropped the Redwomen's record to 3-4 overall.
Central State w!ll play Dyke on
Tuesday. while Rio Grande is
scheduled to host Lake Erie at
5:30p.m. Tuesday.
Box score:
CENTRAL STATE (93) Dylenc Childs, 1-1-3; Tric!a Harris, 6-0-12: Evelyn Williams,
i 5-1-31; Trona Logan, 2-0-4; Alice
Hill, 3-2-8; CheyryWilks, 3-4-0-18;
LaSanya Brown. 1-0-2; Helen
Bradley, 4-0-8; Va)ar!e W!ll!ams,
0-1-1; Jackie Sessoms, 2-2-6.
TOTALS·SH-7-93.
RIO GRANDE (41) - Holly
Hastings, 7-2-16; Lea Ann Mullins, 3-3-9; Beth Coil, 0-3-3; Tina
Azbell, 1-0-2; Ann Barn!tz, 3-0-6;
Betsy Bergdoll. 2-1-5. TOTALS
111-9-41.

percenl. Defiance was 41.5 p&lt;?rcent from the [ie!d (22 53) and
sa nk l7 of 20 foul shots for R5
percent. The Redmen recorded
40 rebounds to Defiance's 31. and
were equal on assists 111 each).
Th e Yellow Jacket s will hos t
Malone on-Tuesday , Lake Erie is
schedu led to meet the RedmPn at
Lyne Center Tuesday at 7:30
p.m.
Box score:
RIO GRt\NDE (75) -Anthon y
Ra y more, 6·3- 15; Jimmy
Kearns. 0-1-3-6: Mike Tidwell,
5'-0-10; Larry Benn!ng;-1 -2-4:
Marc Gothard. 5-4-14; Brian
Watkins, 4·2-2-16; Brad Schuber't, 0-2-2, Scott Slusser, 0-2-2,
John Lambcke, 3-0-6_. TOTALS
24-3-15-71).
DEFIANCE (65) Doug

Prigge. 10-8-28; Keith Wischmeyer, 2-1 -0-7; Terry Morman,
3-5-11; Jim Harris. 0·2 ·2-8: Kirk
Seema nn , 3-2-8: Rod Bowersock,
0-1-0-3. TOTALS 18+17-65.

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TO THE MANY VOTERS WHO
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YOUR VOTE AND SUPPORT
WAS GREATLY APPRECIATED.
D. MICHAEL MULLEN

Pd. Pol. Ad ~y Candidate, lOS East Second, Pomeroy, Ohio

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SANTA'S SUPER

Hot

Lady .Marauders
defeat Rio, 93-41

'

defeat District 22 champion

-Sports briefs-Soccer
Nac!onal de Montevideo Uru·
guay defeated PSV Eindhoven of
Holland on penalty kicks to wm
the world club title In Tokyo. The
score after regulation was 2-2....
Yugoslavia defeated Cyprus 4-0
at Belgrade in a World Cup
European Group Five qualifying
match. Yugoslavia leads ~e
group with five points in three
games. .. . Carmel Busuttil
scored his second goal of the
game in the last minute to earn
Malta a 2-2 draw against Hungary In a World Cup European
qualifying match In Group Six at
Valletta. ... Internazionaie
bounced back from its UEFA
Cup elimination to. defeat rival
AC Milan 1-0 and retain its
two-point lead over Napoli In the
Italian League. Juventus, Sampdor!a and Atalanta are tied for
third. _.. Real Madrid took over
first place in the Spanish League
by beating Cadiz 2-0 while
Barcelona Jell 3-2 to Athletic
Bilbao.
Skiing
Italy's Alberto Tomba won a
men's World Cup slalom at
Madonna d! Camp!gl!o, Italy.
Marc Girardelll of Luxembourg
was second and Austrian MIchael Trltscher was third. .. .
Gunde Svan skied the last 10
kilometer leg to lead the Swedish
A team to victory · in the first
World Cup 4 x 10km classic style
race at Ramsau, Austria. Norway's top squad was second ....
Edith Thys, the U.S. ski team's
top super giant slalom racer,
returned to the United States to
treat her broken ankle.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

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�(
Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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Ell!itwood 7~. Norltl~~o·ood ;o
EaM Lh· ~&gt;rpool C'hr 71, Akron Chr ~7
Fostot'l~ i~. N('W Rl &lt;"rcl50
·· rontlt't' :II, H~~on nlhal Kh·pr :"
Gt&gt;nUil i!. Etm ..·ood ~loti
Glhtionhurr il l. Woodmnl'l' ';II
Huron ,:l, SanduM!Iy !oil M lln- :t!l
Lo«an 3fi, Zanl':'vf11t&gt; ~~
Lu ~._·• villt• , .. , Porl!moulh ND 6t
M.aast Pr tf'rs 111, 8ud1ey ff'nt H
Mlll'l(lrrtiltt 5J, Milan Edl,.on ~
Mas~ " 'llllh
MarllnK4on ill
MJ lf'd c;udlnal &amp;0. Grand \ ' itlll'~
Minford 511, Porbmouth E 5t
Mo.rOf'vlllt&gt; 86, Colli.,; W!&gt;n Rl'!'i tl
Napoii"'n !\8, OttMwa·GiiUidorf n !oil
Nr~~o' Ro&gt;~lon K1. N Adam, 7~
Nev.• Phi Ia 63. Ma.o~M Pt•r r,\' fi I
N~· London 73. Nor~~o'8lk Paut62
Nll~!i 116, Rrooldlt'lrt u .
Ort'gon CIMY 46, Pt·r,.;yhu!Jt: II}

.ii61' 10 I :1~;
t1 .su Ul '!27
D .:!ii ~G :lt7

PA
27i
:I t t

:172
, $61 :1~ :16i
.ton :!SK :UII

t

.1100 til:t IK7
. ~7 :J:'l'lt 2011
.267 210 tilt
.'!61 !'II !J'O
.000 tu '..'914

n.

.lifi7 :t a:1 2~6
.llOO j69 27'?
.1100 ;tO! ~71
,;,:ta l!::t:t :m:.

3 10 o
x·t'lltk'htd dl\'lslon tlllt•
r~ ·ll..-:hM pbt,·on IM-rth
Saturd14,Y's Kt--.uk s
N\" .Jru H. lnllwwpoll!lo 16

AII~U~ta

S Crnl nd 1'12.

Plltlad••IPhla '!a, Phumh. 17
Sunday's Kfos ull s
N\' GIMI~ ~. K~t.nllllsCIIy 12
Hou~o•lt. Clndn-ti 6
Oall• t-1, Wll!ihln~ton n
fhlt•llfO 13. Df'trott I'!
Ruffalo ;n, LA Raltk·r ... tl
Grt&gt;t'fl Bu.v II!, Mlnlfto«A 6
•
New England II . Tampa ~Y 7 101'1
LA ~ams ~- i\tlunta "1
Sun t"r:oanlii'Wo ~. Nt•w Orll'anN 1':
San 01&lt;'11;0. ~. Pitl!itu rp;h U
Sfoatllf' 1!. Dlonwr 1-1
Mondl.l· ·~

Danht~n· 2'!

Sandll8ky IIi, Elyrta i~
Slow ti.. . Akr Kt&gt;nlllllrt' 11
Stow M' illsh Jtlsutt ll. 1\kr Sl \llncrnt 7:1
Ttlfln Columbian :W, Ga.llon 19
Tot Scotl 7)1, E a" Shaw I!
Tul Bo..-·foihpr 11:1, DI'IIM(l(l 59
To! " 'alit&gt; 68. Sy.l North\•It'll· ti5
Tusla"' til, Kl dron U
UnktNo¥&gt;·n Lllkt' 112, N Canton XO
Uppt'r Slftduslr)· 72. l'ior"alk 1m
Vlnct&gt;t~t M'lll'ren Gt. Bdprt' an
" 'upakoll'llt n Grt'('nvillt' il6
Warn•n Hardln,;911, Erll' ll'al'l'o•o•h :19
M't"llslon 6-1 , .Jacbon ~')
\\'hff'lt'l'!ixl rp; 35. fh t'r'IIP&lt;'akt" ;i;t
Willard 1H, Btu:yru.o;lil
WoO!!Ur '1'7, Mau -l;tt-k... .;n C-1
\ 'uu lJ r~ulinl' 3-1, Salt•m 30
ZIUif'!l Rost&gt;cr1Lns 511, L~o~n t a.~t. · r Fl.-.hrr

Gamt'

Clf'\•tland Ill MIIUT'II, 9 p.m .. t~T
'
Saiurd,q Dt&gt;(·. n
"' arillln~on at Clnclnrutl, 1:!'::10 p.rn .

Monday, December 12. 1988

In girl's action last week the
varsity and reserve
squads posted wins over So uthern's Lady Tornadoes by scores
of 84-51 and 39-27, respectively.
Marauder Missy Woods led all
scorers in the varsity affair as
she burned the nets for 27 points.
She had a lot of hel p from
teammates both defen s ively a nd
o{fensively, however, with three
other Meigs players finishing in
double figures, Jody Taylor,
Beth Ewing and Kelly Smith.
Every Marauder saw court action during the contest.
Tracie Beegle was the to gun
for !he Tornadoes as she ca nned
seven field goals and was a
perfect four for four at the
cha•·lly stripe fo1· 18 points.
The Marauders hi! 36 of 87
al!empts fr om !he fi eld for an
average of 41.3 and Southern shot
a 26.1 average as they connected
on 18 of 69 field goals. No stats
were available on charily tosses.
Meigs was called follr 23 infrac·
I ions and the Tornadoes were
whistled for 29 violations. Wine·
brenner and Dudding were lost
by the Tornadoes during the
co ntes t via the foul route.
Box score:
MEIGS- Woods 24-3-27; Jody
Taylor lQ-2-1 2; B. Ewing 12-3-15;
Smith 10-1-11; Jennifer Taylo r
8-1-19; Carr 0·1-1; Newsome
Maraud~r

0·3·0-3; King 4--0-4; Kloes 0-0-0;
Haggy . 0-0-0; Nelson 0-0-0;
Wagner 2-0-2; Rouse 0-0-0.
SOUTHERN- B. Evans 1-1-3;
Greathouse 1-2-4; Johnson 2-3-49; Winebrenner 6-1-7; Dudding
2·1-3; T. Beegle 14-4-18; Neutzli ng 0-0-0; J. Beegle 4·0-4; Hlll
2-1-3; Engels 0-0-0; Jones 0-0-0;
Wolfe 0-0-0.
Score by quarters:
Meigs: ..................... 22 48 66 84
Southern ........... .. ..... 11 25 36 51
In reserve action, Meigs
jumped out to a 17 point first
quarter lead and never looked
back with Marauder Amy
Wagner leading all scorers with
ten to be the only player to reach
double figures .
Again all
Lady Marauders
saw action against a very game
but outmanned Southern JV
squad. Tlie Marauders hit on 17
of 50 field goal attempts for a 33
percent average. No shooting
stats were available at press
limemfor Southern.
Scoring !or the Tornadoes
were: · Tonya Ingels with 7;
Wendy Wolfe ·2; Marcy Hilf 6;
Sarah Duhl 8 and Junie Beegle 4.
Mira Wolfe and Jenny Varney
also saw act ion lor Southern.
Marauders in the scoring column were, In addition I to
Wagner: Amy Rouse 8; Kim
Ewing 3; Mary Butcher 1; M
Cremeans 2; M. Nelson 5; K.

Bengals have bad day in Astrodome
By RICHARO LUNA
UPI Sports Writer
HOUSTON - Mike Rozier
rushed for 126 yards and three
touchdowns and Warl'E'n Moon
threw two scoring passes Sunday , leading the Houston Oilers
to 41-6 victory over Cincinnati
that kept the Bengals from
clinching.the AFC Central title.
Rozier carried 22 times and
scored on runs of 13, 15 and 3
yards as the Oilers, 10-5, remained In contention for a
playoff berth.
Moon completed 14 of 25 passes
for 254 yards and threw TDs
strikes of 13 yards to Curtis
Duncan and 33 yards to Drew
Hill. Tony Zendejas kicked field
goals of 43 and 48 yards .
Cincinnati, 11-4, has Clinched a
playoff spot but needs a victory
over Washington next weekend
to win its first division title since
1981.
The Bengals, who entered with
the NFL's top-ranked offense,
was limited to a pair of Jim

UMCM fOI $3.7'
l'fP\CAl fASlBUf()QRGfll!f1l\lS &amp; 01\MK.
\MClUDlS:
'
.

vs.

the

Buckeyes romp, 84-62

Humphreys, C. Weaver, _M. NI cholson and K. Bla~k.

Hanning 6 · and T. Baer 4.
ontrlbuting to the win were T.

Surd~·. Ott•. IH
Ruffaloatlndianapott.... I p .m .
Oft roll at Tam~ Bay . I p. m .
Hou~oa:at Clt.&gt;\l'lartd, 1 p.m.
Millll'll at f'llt!!llu..,;l• . I p.m .
N\' fifillllli Itt N\' ,J.-b, I p. rn.
Philaidl'lphia Iii D~t.lla.._, I p .m .
.4.tlanU. ar NtwOrlean .. , l : :•IJl.m .
6rt&gt;••n RaJ 11..1 Phoi'Jll!r. . I p.rn.
li:aniiiUIC!tyatlolanDit•rfO, I p.m .
&amp;'MIIr iU LA Raidrrs. I p.m .
I.A Rams .-.1 San Frllfld"'-·••. ~p.m.
MoiKIIIY, Dt1 ·. 19
Chlc~o 1n Mlnn&gt;soca. !:1 p. m .

· Ohio C'nlll'llt{' Ba.-.ll.•lhall ~tOn•"
I'l-l, Lalayelt1• 6'!
Mlt'lll.-ar~ Sl ~9. Bowing Grt'l'n i'!
Ohlo~IMit'

Aitron 711, Kt•nl Slalt' IHI
Mlamllitl, Xa\' k&gt;r Gi
ToiPdo Mi, Oet roll 1:i

Cll'\'t'IMd Sl tt:, You~town St !MI
Loulnillt" 9$. Dlly lon 1111

,.

t\lhlon IMh-h\92, OhNiin fj'i
Gron• f/1~ (P~o~l i1, WouJootl•r 3C
&lt;'l' dll'\illr 143, Ct•ntml statt• n
~aloW' 11:1. " 'at.-.h li!l
Nhawo.•t• St lllj, Mou_. Vl'roon 'i!t
A11hland l!t, Ohio Domlnlun iii

NBA scores ,
N,\TJONAL Bi\SKETRAI. L i\.'iSOC
Saturdi\Y'.., Kt'!&gt;ult ..
Nt&gt;w \ 'urk l '.! t , ~aeram4'nto Ill
1\t•'A' ,Jfr~·y Iii, Ch IU'Iot W II!! (O'rl
l~'nvl'r t:l:J, Atlulll 1:18
IMruH 106, Phlladt•lphla 100

Rio Grandi- 7:l, Of-liM~ · •• ti:i
Hanowr9tl, 1Uulrton17
'
Falrmonl ~ittt' IWVal 101. ()ykf' Ill
'l'lllh Tnur~~~tnll'nl
af Mt"dlonl. MIUili
Champjonshlp
Wltltnht"r.- !II, Tulh 6ii

L,\ Lakrr:. 112. In dluaa Ill
ChiUfi:O Ill , oWl ami )lil
H"u!llon 110, l:!l'ailh• 91
Clf'\'tlllnd 102. Dallas !UI
utah 110, LA Cllpp•r!&lt; 1112
Gt.ldt&gt;n ~Calf' 119, Wl&amp;'iNn"'on 10'!

Su .Say 's Rt'suft,
Portland 12H, .~t&amp; n i\nluniu lt:l
Mllw•u kt't' 9~. I.A Lakt•rs 9 ..
~lllnday 's

Gamt&gt;

Miami at l i l11h, t. :1{1 p .m . l:."T
Tuf'!:id-.\''!i f.l&amp;rtH'S
!VIII"I&amp;Uiu't' al Phlllldl'lphla.. nl~~;ht

Bostolllll ~· asllln~on. nl,eN
LA l.alu..-.;; at ('lnt&gt;land, ni~l
&lt;11¥lotlt• at ·lndlan11 , nldlt
l'i~ ·IPr~y ut New l'ork. nl~t
Atlanta al Chh:ajl;u, n l~~; hl
Goldl·n !'~.tat'" at Dalla.o,; , nl rhl
Hou.'itonat Dcnw•r , n!Jthl
Phul'nh 1111 St·aHk•, night
Sun Antonio at ~~~t·ram('nto. nlltht

L,\ f'llppt'rs at Portland, nlxht

NHL results
...1\TIONAL HOCKE"I' LEAGl' E

Saturd:u's 1\e!.ult~
•

Phlllldt•lphla 6, CblcaKD -l
Jlri\' Ranll'l'fli I, Bo"ton I (iit•)
Uls i\n~t'I('S -l, NV lsllln dt'r.. ;t
H~~ortford

I.

Citl~ry

I

l'oiM!o' ·lt•r!oii'Y I, Ph lshu rl[h I (Ill')
\tl&amp;.;hln~on \1, Mnntn•all ( lit" I
Dlotrolt K, Toronto 2
\tlln,.pPJ 7, Edmonton fi
st. IAUI,_ :t, Mhu•!lool.a I

Sunlity ',o; IW!iuh ...

\\ar;Wn1Cfon6,

Buffalo~

('hJ..:Il,I;O 3, J:;;J . LolliS 2
\ ' anco11wr II, Wlnnipf'l( 6

Monda,\' ' s Gaml':ol
Lo.'l Anp;el~al N\' RW~~n . 1::13 p.m.
Bo!ICOn IU Montn-al, 7: :13 p.m .
CaiRJI.ry .-.1 Toronlo , 1:a~ p.m.
Tuf'i(lay ' ,o; Gamt"'
M'!i!!hing&amp;on at Qurbf'c. night
Mln ...s(l(a Ill Ul'lroll , nighl
Sl. Louis at Nt"w ·lf'r!lf'y, nil(hl

This week's games
'fhl!&lt; \h•t•k's
Ohio follt'.l!:t' Bali kt'thall St•hf'du k•
Mondll.)' , lll' c. I!

M11hw al Toledo
Ohio Northern at ft ('J Ciel hl'r,1;
f.t'!lrgl'lown (Kylat fPdar\111;•
• Boothl'l at Urh!Wa
TllP!od~· .

Orl'. 1:1

Kr.n)'on 111t Hiram
MlliOJJ' .t Dt-llanc••
La~ I' Erlt' ul Rio Grandi•
St. Frant~. . !Nl' lnt Wrl,~;hl St
\\'t"dn&lt;Nda.,v . Or e. 1-1
Ndnsb at Ohio Sl
Oh ltl V a1 Marshall
Tnll'dD at Houlllon
Ornhnd Stat Easu.&gt;rn Mlch
Bal d'A'Irt-\l' Wlat:t' at r'llp Ita. I
Oll erbt&gt;ln at \l'Ulf'nher~
Bluth on at Ttldn
~haWIM'f' St

lbi1M1a·M aUMCl' 7~. Mll'it'l&amp;a 01
i!l, Ohio " 'P,.Il'yan 611
Mou_. Unlon69, Ht&gt;idrrlhl:..-p;ftK (oil
Ohio Norlht-rn .. 7, OUt&gt;rhein l7
Dt-nL'iDn 110. mram 5.\
\tr' RJd~njlton and ·l••lft..-!;un i5, K1•n}'on
c ·~ p!WI

Girls Ohio HI 11th St~hool111L.., ktihaJI
t\rt·irldlll H. FtL&lt;~Iorla 21
Bud•cy(' S\\' 90, Sallni'YIIIt' Southt•r n I !I
C'unaJ Fullon NW 37. Alr:r Cown111· '!JI
C'h llf1tln F111lbo 31, Had,.on :11
('Ill)' to• Northmonl K , T£'t.'llmlll'h 29
('o!Jiot.1on II, Uhrlrch!Htll~&gt; l"IS.)·mont S:l
C'Ol'llllltiOn 4M, MIIMill E 2f
Dfol{l'llf Rlvt'8ldt&gt; ill, Mt•t·hanlcstm rg 3;\
' DrMf'n Tri-Valley til , Shf'l'ldM .U
Fremonl Sl •lot' 56. N BaUirno"' U
G~tlll,ia U, Grl'(ltlflt'ld McLain~
Houliton ti7. •ad lord U
In diu Villl&lt;f'l' 116, Nl'wo:onwrftlown Ill
Kf'nliton 5:1, ~hllkf'f' HIH U
Mt'ado•iuook ~- Rlc~«rwood .. II
Milton Union U, Vt"r•ll""" 3!1
Mora1111 811, Crookntllr .'SII
NI'W Lexln«t;on 65, M"-~!Willt U
Philo l\1, Nt'w Conrenl til
Sildhy til, lk-IIPVIr li
Si~y :tt, Troy 35
!Iii dnt&gt;y l.t hman 57, ~P rlnjri Ct• :t&amp;
S,rln~~: S -1~. ('ol Llndf'n U
SprlnJ~: Grl'f'non SM. D~q· !ilt&gt;httln~o U
Tlfftn fG iumhlan 6t Gallon 39
W MusWnrum t:l. \4'ar!!lt."' Rlw•r \ ' IMI·

"

MioO!!&amp;t'r U. ,\ f ass .JackHon :111
Zant&gt;S\'111(' 5\i, Nt'•'ar" IIi
Zant&gt;M Ro"" t'ran!lo GO, Dan ...tilt' :17

College scores
Sillurdll)''&gt;~ t ;ntlf'J:f' Ba.-. ll!thall Jtto,. ""'"
Toun~~~mt•nls

Olwnplon Hollda)' Cla..'ish·
l 'hamplon!ihJp
St. P1•lt'f's 71 , Monblna ti7
Co nsolat.lon
\'Jllpuai!&lt;!oRI, C..ntenary lit
fou~~:lll' Classlt•
fhampiOnshlp
St . MIU'y'!. (Calli. ) 70, 8\'U 19
ConsolaUon
Pl'nnSIII t" Iii, T~ lU· Arl!uaton 6.1
Elllrlv Season Tour.ammc
fhlrlmplo!Vrihip
Hlll"'all ~t OreKQn 70
Corwolallon
Bo~tOflll , II~. Tf'nA. Tl't'h 62

F1orida AI.M ln~ltlllllo•l
Ch amploMhip
tlortda A&amp;.M !1-1, Sa"an rah St . H
Coh!iolalion
FAward Wait' riO n, florida Allllntk· 01
Hf'r lta~t" Clw...it·
ChiUllplo.V.Ip
GPil rtl a SOUiht'rn 511, Dru.k f' ~
fo~l'!i~Mallon

Gt'(lr~· .1\ta~;o n

98, \rli'rt~~:hl !'II!Uf' !IS

[20'f\

Con!lolatio•
Soulbern Cal 91, Duq..,'l111:' 11:1

l•dlana Clu!lilc
Champlo111hlp
Indiana i-t, Santi! Clara -lt

Thuf!lday, IWc. I ~
\ 'uul!ptown St at frntNI Mlrh
Ohio \lt'!i ryan at Musldn~U~nl

D.\'kl' V'l Vrhllflll ( ftif'hflf'ld foiN•um1
Lakf' Erlf' 111 Salrm (W \ ' 11..1
Friday, O.O c. lfi
8owllll~ GrPf'll at KPftllrlrr:y In\ t1
Ohio U a! Show· M('-{'1M!!lc ( Mil 1

Wri,PI Statto l'la~,o;lc
f 't'dll'vlllf' a1 Llnoln Mt•morlaJ Tourht!y
Salunhcy, Oo•t·. n
Ohio Sl at Da}' ton
Of'\'dand lSI JU Kl'nt St
f 'lnclllMIIIlt Miami
Tult&gt;do at Pit tshu 11th
VoutWS(ownSiat Norehnn lo"a
1\!ihland alllfotlanniPI! ( ~ I
R~t.l ttwln·W IIIIIMCt' at Ottt"rllt-ln
Caplalat \\'ltk'nbt'rl(
HrldtlherAal Milrldta
Muldnpm llol Ohio Nnrahern
1Jreni8Mial M'll minllon
Rlu Grandr!o at Shawnt't' S l
D)'kf' Ill Tl ffln
Rluftt(llllll MadoniUl
FlnthY al Hunfl•gton ( In d )
Hiram AI Wf'!ilhnln!W!r I Pal
llowlnK Grt'fllal Ke nlur'ky ln"tl
Oltio l' .a Shvw·MP-CIMilil' ,
M'r!Jtl SC CIIIISHk
C4"danlllto 1111 Lincoln Mt"morlal
T~urney

Saturday's
cage scores
Ohio M'nmm '11 ColleA"e S('O~
• Cindruall U , Ohio S tat!'~~~
Mlr.IU.-an Sf 114. Bow Bar Gr('t'n ~
Nlq.,. ~~. l"riPt St 48

Day ten H. Lotdsvlle It
Hel*lbrrAA, Moll Ill Union U
M'u~tldll . .rn

8t. Capbl 5%

Marteua 83. 11&amp;1 dwtn·Walla.:r &amp;II
.lo•n Carrolll.'l, Kt-nfon-15
Defl.t~N:e 88, Ohio Dvmlnkan M
Akron 7-1, We~~ I Vlr!Cinla 815
\'ounptown SIIIH, Cll'\'eland S t '8
o\mana·Han,•kf'YI' Clusl c
At Iowa Cit)' . Jowa
Flr.'ll Roud
Iowa U . Miami 14
WHtren~Jira'\'l/lJino\1

AI Sprln ..lcld

., 1988
Pondero5a, Inc.
PrKts may vart··

UPPER RIVER ROAD
(ACROSS FROM THE AIRPORT)

r • •MNVS ctVN•• • T • •MNVS COUPO. • • ,
:ALL•YOUoCAN•DRINK
,~.~~m;r ,~,:
Save
•1.00
:
~
I ON ANY STEAK, CHICKEN, I
I

HURRY! COUPON EXPIRES 11/28/88

HURIIY! COUPON EXPIR~ 12/28188

I
I IJYDMI
I II AM.-4 PM Monday ttlru Saturday I

"E.ach mtiH irw:ludn All • You" Can • E.1

I

I
I

~ --

t.JIJn

1

1.L
•
hllllnt we beer, winr, juict or rrult..

PER PERSON PER .VISIT.
c.l/MITONECOUPON
nnt.lf he INd w11h uthtt ducuunlt. Tn nnr 1ncludrd.
,

,_.
. .
'
•
vi 1lUI If pc&amp;rhCl!*'t~ X:lfl&lt;-..s.

I

I

OR SEAFOOD ENTREE.
Gnnd 8ufkt anti S.~ed ~\auto.
t
LIMIT ONE COUPON PER PERSON PER VISIT
Donne&gt;! br lM\1 wi1h tlllhcr ditcnunr$. Tn nut ii'ICiudcd.
"·!
d
· '
·
n 1 al p:!UK:If&gt;"lln)l ouuu1u.
·

•

I
I
I
I

1

L•• PONDEROSA ~ ~ .L..;. PONDEROSA :'~·.1
2

NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UP!)Don Nehlen, who directed West
Virginia to.an undefeated season
this year, Saturday was named
"Coach of the Year" by the
Walter Camp Football
Foundation. •
Nehlen will receive the award
at the Walter Camp All-America
award dinner scheduled for Feb.
11 at. Yale University, foundation
President Ernie WIIUams said.
It's the second national "Coach
of the Year" award for the
former Bowling Green quarterback and coach. On ThanksgivIng weekend, he was chosen the
nation's No. 1 coach by ScrippsHoward News Service.
Nehlen, 52, became head coach
at West VIrginia In 1980 season
and has a record of 69-35-1 with
the Mountaineers. He ranks
· among the top 20 active football
coaches In the number of wins.
Nehlen Is preparing third ranked West Virginia fortheJan.
2 Fiesta Bowl against unbeaten,
BAD DAY AT DOME - Cincinnati quarterback Boomer
top-rated Notre Dame, which Is
Eslason (7) was 10 ol 22 lor 131 yards agalllllt the Oilers in Houston
coached by West Virginia native
Sunday, his lowest output In three years. He was Intercepted once
Lou Holtz, who won the Camp
and sacked three tbnes as Houston remained alive for the AFC
coaching award In 1977 while at
Central Division title wUhan easy 41-6 victory. (UPI).
the University of Arkansas.
In his ninth season, Nehlen has
helped the Mountaineers gain six
Kareem Abdui-Jabbar, the for questions for approximately bowl berths. Nehlen's first WVU
veteran center of the Los Angeles 30 minutes. The Lakers make team went 6-6, his team a year
Lakers who is re!lring afler this their lone visit to play the ago went 6-6 and two years ago
season, will hold a news confer- Cavaliers at the Richfield Coli- the Mountaineers' 4-7 was their
only losing record under him.
ence Monday ' at the Sheratort· seum Tuesday night,.
Hopkins Airport hotel, beginning
For further Information, Bob When the team started l-3 last
at 1: 15 p.m. In the Oliver Twist Price or Bob Zink of the Cavali- year on the heels of the 4-7 mark,
room.
ers may be contacted Sunday at many fans got -panicky but
Nehlen asked for patience, espeAbdui-Jabbar will be accom- 216-659-2261 .
panied by Lakers' publlc relations director Josh Rosenfeld ,
1
and Is expected to be available

THAT'S
NEW
EVERY
DAY

week concentrating on exams.

The Dail Sentine

JEFF
· MONTGOMERY

. ,,

....

7 Wins, 2 Losses
1 Save, 3.45 ERA
'
WIU BE AT

'

-~

~

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

1 YEAR GIFT SUBSCRIPTION ........................ Only '66.56

GLOECKNER'S

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

110 EASY MAIII, PO..IOY

WED., DEC. 14,

~m
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4 PM to 7 PM FOR
AUTOGRAPHS AND

"Your Hometown Newspaper"

PICTURES

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WILL BE AT HORNER
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4 PM TO 7 PM
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With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and good che,er as we cherish the blessings we've shared
this past year. For us it means saying "thanks" .to'you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind supp'o rt we'll always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP
992-6669

Wish all your customers and ·
friends a very Merry -Chrisimas in
our Christmas Greeting Edition on
Decem6er 23rd.
•

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE

992-2156

MIDDLEPOIT, OliO

271 NOITH SECOND

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MEMBER OF THE 1988
BASEBALL DIGEST
ROOKIE AU-STAR TEAM

REPLACEMENT CONTACT LEN'S SERVICE

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MONTGOMERY .

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TWIN CITY MACHINE AND WELDING
"~OUR WELDING SUPPt~
ANO REPAIR CENTER"
• CHRISTMAS GIVEAWAY •

9\K.Hf.R

~

1:00-5:30

cially for new quarterback Maj'Or
Harris.
Harris Improved steadily and
this season was fifth In the voting .
for the Heisman Award.
Under Nehlen , t6e Mountai- .tJI'l '!jO!fjli 901l&lt;:!""" l&lt;:!""" S::S:l&lt;:! 1.::1~"""""" B:\1 f""'- B:11901111¥ fj;ll;::(fll¥1~
.a
neers have won the Peach Bowl,
W:
Hall of Fame Bowl and Blu- ~
ebonnet Bowl and lost in the
Gator Bowl and Sun Bowl.
. Nehlen always has lauded his
coaching staff, and this year's
group may be his best, he has
said.
"Over the years, we have had
as fine a staff as I think you wlll
find anywhere In college football," Nehlen said in the preseason, "and this year, I truly
DRAWING DECEMBER 22ND, 1:00 p.M.
feel we may have the most
effective combination we have ·•
No Purchase Necessary-Need Not Be Present to Win
111
u.
put together yet here at West
Virginia.
"I don't think there is any
doubt that we have put together a W 17 COLE
~92-3768
POMEROY, OHIO
great group to work together for
~~B:\!~~~f""'f""'I;::(S::S:~~~"""~~"""~-fll¥1;::(~~~
Mountaineer football."

actt tAO"'gotnct

~

POMEROY SENIOR CITIZEN CENTER

Moon fired a 36-yard pass to
Duncan, who made a fing er-lip
catch at the 2. Two plays later ,
Rozier ran right, was cut off by
David Fulcher. then reversed
direction and ran in untouched
for a 3-yard touchdown 8 seconds
Into the final quarter , Rozier' s
third TD gave the Oilers a :l4·6
lead.
On Ci ncinnati' s next posses•
s.ion, Eugene Seale Intercepted .
an Esiason pass and returned It
46 yards to the Cincinnati 35.
Two plays later, Moon fired a
33-yard scoring strike to Hill.
who was behind three defenders
In the end zone, to increase the
Oilers' lead to 41-6 with 10: 06 to
play.
The Oilers struck late in the
firs! quarter to open a 7-0 lead .
Moon fired a 19-yard pass to
Ernest Givins to the Bengals 13.
On the next play , Rozier cut
through the right s id e, ran over
Solomon Wilcots at !he 5 and into
!he end zone with 2: 32 showing.
Houston stayed on the ground
for Its next score. The Oilers took
over on their 45 after a Bengals
punt with 13 seconds left In the
first quarter . Rozier carr ied

twice for 23 yards, and then Moon
connected with Gl v Ins for a
9-yard gain to the 23 .
Rozier rushed for 8 yards. then
broke through the middle for a
15-yard tou chdown run 1:31 Into
, he second quarter, Zendejas'
ex tra point gave Houston a 14-0
. lea d .
Cincinna ti' s only score of the .
ha lf, a 45.yard field goal by'
Breech. came after Carl Zander
Intercepted a Moon pass a t the
Hous ton 41. The field goal with
9: 26 left pulled the Ben gals
within 14-3.
But Moon completed a 19-yard
pass to Hlll on the ensuing
possession. then went long to
Haywood Jefflres, who reached
over defender .Daryl Smith and
caught the ball as he was falling
for a 42-yard gain to the Cl ncln·
nati 13. Jeffires had lleen on
Injured reserve all season.
Three plays later, Moon faked
a pitch to Allen Pinkeltand threw
to Duncan In the corner of the end
zone. The 13-yard scoring pass
gave Houston a 21-3 lead with
2: 58 left in the half.
Zendejas added a 43-yard field
goal with 9 seconds left, giving
the Oilers a 24-3 lead at halftime.
Eslason completed 5 of 13for44
yards and' was sacked three
times for 37 yards In the fir s! half.

JEFF

Golf
Saburo Fujiki of Japan shot a
2-under-par 70 to win the$570,000
Dalkyo Open at Naha, Japan, by
one stroke over David Ishll of the
United States, Graham Marsh of
Australla and Motomasa Aokl of
Japan .... Alko Takasu of Japan,
despite two bogeys and a triple
bogey, shot a 2-under-par 70 to
win the $246,000 Homan Dogo
Open, the last tournament on the ·
Japan LPGA Tour this season.
Taiwan's Cheng Mel-chi and
Japanese Inroml Kobayashi
shared second place In the event
In Matsuyama, southwestern
Japan.

m

KANSAS CITY ROYAL
ROOKIE ALL-STAR

KANSAS CITY
ROYAL PITCHER

~ Contact Lens

DON'T BE A SCROOGE ABOUT
GIVING BLOOD
COME TO THE BLOODMOBILE
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 14 ·

being hit by Johnny Meads. and
Patrick Allen reco vered a t the
Cincinna!l 38.

-Jahbar to hold news conference today

--Sports briefs--

game.''
Burson led Ohio Stale with 21
points, while Perry Carter added
16, along with 10 rebounds, Tony
While had 15 and freshman Chris
Jent carne o!f the bench with 10.
Lafayette, which dropped to
4-2 , was led by Otis Ellis with 19.
Williams said he looked at the
game as a test for his player's,
who. had spent most of the last

Breech field goals. Boomer Esiason, the league's top-rated quarterback, completed · 10 of 22
passes for 131 yards, his lowest
output. in three seasons. He was
intercepted once and sacked
three times for 37 yards .
Rozier rushed for 103 yards and
two touchdowns· in the first half,
and Cincinnati was held to 44
yards as Houston opened a 24-3
lead. Moon threw for 164 yards
and one touchdown, and the
Oilers finished the half with 270
yards.
Cincinnati took the opening
drive of the second half 55 yards
for a 27-yard field goal by
Breech, cutting Houston's lead to
24-6 with 8:10 showing.
But Houston countered with a
49-yard . drive, setting up a
48-yard field goal by Zendejas to
boost the lead to27-6wlth2: 431eft
In the period.
·
Houston put the contest away •
early In the final period. Esiason
completed a 9-yard pass to Cris
Collinsworth, who fumbled after

Nehlen wins Camp award

'

should have been fresh and flying
around. We didn ' t do that until
!he second half."
Elsewhere, Miami snapped
Xavier's 26-game home winning
streak, the longest in the nation
In Division I, with a 68-61 victory
over the Musketeers.
Miami broke a 58-58 tie with 10
unanswered points. in the final
three minutes , with Jamie Mercurio scoring six of those points.
Jim Paul led Miami with 17
points, Mercurio added 15 and
Karlton Clayborne 13. Xavier
shot just 28.6 percent from he
field In the second half and hit
only four of its last 18 field goal
attempts.
Tyrone. Hlll paced the Musketeers with 24 points and 15
rebounds.
"We made them play a slow,
dellberate game," said Miami
Coach Jerry Peirson. "We
couldn't run with Xavier."
Xavier's Pete Gillen also
pointed to Miami's ability to slow
down the tempo of the game.
"We like to run and get the
score up In the 80s," said Glllen.
"We didn't and we lost. But they
made us lose. They played an
excellent zone defense and made
our big guys shoot from the
outside.''

"This was a lest for us to see
how we could mentally come out
after all of that," said Williams.
"I didn' t expect us to run good
offense and things like that , but I
expected us to play hard. We
hadn't played for a week so we

Ollnl l;laHMit•
ChMmplonship
Oil nolo; IOl. Ark.· LitUr• RlH' k M

at U rbru~a

A~andatlndl~~napuU~

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
Ohio Slate wound up exam
week Satur!lay . night wl!h an
84-62 win ov~r Lafayette, but got
less than passing grades from
bas ketball professor Gar y
Williams.
Williams was disappointed In
both the patience and effort
I urned by his Buckeyes. who won
their fourth In a row after losing
to Oklahoma in the first round o'f
the Maul Classic two weeks ago.
"They did a good job of
bothering us with thcird~fense , "
Williams said of the undersized
Leopards. "They really packed
in their zone. What we did against
it was exactly what they wanted
us to. We shot the ball quickly and
did not have patience in our half
court offense."
Ohio State jumped to a quick
6-0iead, but it was just27-25after ·
a layup by Lafayene' s Bruce
Stankavage with 2: 13 left in the
half.
Thai's when Ohio State's Jay
Burson went to work, scoring
nine of his 15 first -half points to
spark an 11-0 run and a 38-25
Buckeye lead.
"When you have more depth , It
usually shows in the last four or
five minutes of .the half," said
Williams. "That's what hap·
pened and Jay sank some shots to
help us."
Lafayette Coach John Leone
agreed.
''1 felt the last couple of
minutes of the first half was the
real key," said Leone. "Until
then, we were playing well and
with confidence. After a TV
timeout, we had some turnovers
and it changed the tide of the

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

Lady Marauders d feat Southern five

Oil

Nh· t:n,ll:llllld 11..1 Dt'n,... r , .. p.n1,

Monday, December 12. 1988

.

-·+ ........

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" el

Jim Cobb
Chevrolete()ldsmobile
e&lt;:adillac, Inc.

Sales &amp; Service
EAST IUIN ST.
POIIEIOY

.·Your Dealer on
Tha ·River
992-6144

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

VALLEY
LUMBER

Tbi1
Week'1
Osme1

555 PARK ST.

MIDDLEPORT
992-6611

BOYS
· Dec. 13-At IIIIIs.· I ork
Dec. 16-Wtlsto•
Dec. 20-At Vlnttn County

COMPLETE
·SELECTION

GIRLS
Dec. 12-NthonYIIt·York
Dec. 15-At Wellton
Dec. 19-Yiaton County

FOR BREAKFAST
LUNCH &amp; DINNER .
Featuring: ·
Great Hamburgers
*Roast Beef on Croissant
* Stuffed Baked Potatoes
* Taco Salads
Real Ice Cream

*

*

*

Dining • Carry Out •

Drive-Thru
Mon.-Thurs. 8 A.M.-11 P.M.
Fri. Ill Sat. 8 A.M.-12 P.M.
Sunday 7 A.M.-11 P.M.
698 W. Main Straat, Pomeroy

BOYS
Dec. 13-At Kyger Cr..k
Dec. 16-llannan Tract
Dec. 17-At Faderal Hocking

GIRLS

Bur Mora for

Dec. 12-lyl"' Cr..k
Dec. 15-At Hannaa Tract
Dec. 17-Ftdtral Hocking

Lett tt

SOUTHERN
BOYS
992-3307
POMEROY, OliO

Dec. 13-North Golia
Dec. 16-At Oak Hill
Dec. 20-llannan Tract
Dec. 15-0ak Hill
Dec. 19-At Hannan Trace
Dec. 22-Aitxallller

BAUM

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HARDWARE

"Your luHolng Mat•iaiMarkll PI-"

CHESTER, OH.

MUZZLE LOADING
and HUNTING SUPPliS

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

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

·PH. 992-2121
108 MULIERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

;

1988·B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 25-Athens .......................... Away
Dec. 2-Miller ............................ Home .
Dec. 9-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 13-Nelsonville·York ............ Away
Dec. 16-Wellston ...................... Home
Dec. 20-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Dec. 23-Athens ......................... Home
Dec. 30-Loaan ............................ A)fay
Jan. 3-Belpre ............................ Home
Jan. &amp;-Alexander ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Federal Hocking ............. Away
Jan. 13--;;-Miller ............................ Away
Jan. 17-Warren ......................... Home
Jan. 20-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 24-Nelsonville-York ............. home
Jan. 27-Wellston ....... ,................ Away
Jan. 31-Vinton Co ...................... Home
Feb. 3-Belpre ............................. Away
Feb. 7-Aiexander ···:··:······--·--···-- Home
Feb. 10-F'ederal Hockmg ............ Home

NEW CAIS

:-~

MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
19B8-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. ~-Miller ............................. Away
Dec. 5-Southern ........................ Home
Dec. ·a-Trimble ........................... Away
Dec. 12-Nelsonville-York ........... Home
Dec. 15-Wellston ....................... Away
Dec. 19-Vinton Co..................... Home
Dec. 21-Eastern ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Belpre .............................. Away
Jan. 5-Aiexander ....................... Home
Jan. 9-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 12-Miller ........................... Home
· Jan. 19-Trimble ......................... Home
Jan. 23-Nelsonville-York ............. Away
Jan. 26-Wellston ....................... Home
Jan. 30-Vinton Co ...................... Away
Feb. 2-Belpre ............................ Home
Feb. 6-A lexander ........................ Away
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ............... Away
Feb. 11-Southern ....................... Away

HOME PEOPLE"
MEMIER FDIC

19B8-89 BOYS BASKETBALL

1988-B9 BOYS BASKETBALL

Nov. 2?.,.-Miller ........................... Away
Nov. 29-Southern ..................... ; Home
Dec. 2-North Gallia .................... Away
Dec. 9-0ak Hill ......................... Home
Dec. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Dec. 16-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 17-Federal Hockihg ............. Away
Dec. 20-Southwestern ............... Home
Jan. 3-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Jan. 6-Symmes Valley ................. Away
Jan. 10-Southern ....................... Away
Jan. 13-North Galli a.................. Home
Jan. 14-Parkersburg Cath .......... Home
Jan. 20-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 24-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Jan. ,27-Hannan Trace ................. Away
Jan. 28-Miller ........................... Home
Feb. 3-Southwestern .................. Away
· Feb. 10-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Feb,- 14-Parkersburg tath........... Away

No. 26-Aiexander ...................... Home.
Nov. 29-Eastern ......................... Away
Dec. 2-Kyger Creek... ................. Home
Dec. 9-Symmes Val_ley ................ Away
Dec. 13-North Galha ................. Home
Dec. 16-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Dec. 20-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Dec. 23-Southeastern ................ Home
Dec. 27-Green ............................ Away
Jan. 6-Southwestern ................... Away
Jan. 7-Gallipolis ........................ Away
Jan. 10-Eastern ......................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 20-Symmes Valley .............. Home
Jan. 21-Ravenswood ................... Away
Jan. 24-North Gallia................... Away
Jan. 27-0ak Hill. ....................... Home
Feb. 3-Hannan Trace .................. Away
Feb. 4-Federal Hocking .............. Home
Feb. 10-Southwestern ................ Home

EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 22-Meigs ........................... Away
Nov. 28-Southern ....................... Away
Dec. 1-North Gallia ................... Home
Dec. 7-Trimble .......................... Home
Dec. 8-0ak Hill .......................... Away
Dec. 12-Kyger Creek .................. Home
Dec. 15-Hannan Trace ................ Away'
Dec. 17-Federal Hocking ............ Home
Dec. 19-Southwestern ................ Away
Dec. 21-Meigs ........................... Home
Jan. 5-Symmes Valley ................ Home
Jan. 9-Southern ........................ Home
Jan. 11-Trimble .......................... Away
Jan. 12-North Gallia ................... Away
Jan. 19-0ak Hill. ....................... Home
Jan. 23-Kyger Creek ................... Away
Jan. 26-Hannan Trace ................ Home
Feb. 2-Southwestern ................. Home
Feb. &amp;-Symmes Valley ................ Away

THE
·CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
"Your Finatieial

•COMP&amp;nE RAOI~?OII 8EIIVICE
oMAJOII REPAIIII
oCOMP&amp;nl WttiiL AUGNMENT

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ACCIII'flll

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MULLEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE
111 SECOND AVE.

POMEROY

CALL 992-3381 or
.. . 992-2342

"COME GlOW
WITH US

IRLSSCHEDULE-----------------

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•••taorr, 0110
"';."''

SYUCUSE OFFICI
H2-6333
RACINE OFFICE
949-2210-

SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL
1988-89 GIRLS BASKETBALL

Nov. 21-Aiexander ...................... Away
nov. 28-Eastern ........................ Home
Dec. 1-Kyger Creek ..................... Away
Dec. 5-Meigs ............................. Away
Dec. 8-Symmes Valley ............... Home
Dec. 12-North Gallia .................. Away
Dec. 15-0ak Hill ....................... Home
Dec. 19-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Dec. 22-Aiexander ..................... Home
Jan. 5-Southwestern .................. Home
Jan. 9-Eastern .......................... Home
Jan. 2-Kyger Creek .................... Home
Ja'n. 14-Waterford ...................... Away
Jan. 19-Symmes Valley ............... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ......................... Away
Jan. 3D-Waterford ..................... Home
Feb. 2-Hannan Trace ................. Home
Feb. 6-Southwestern .................. Away
Feb. 11-Meigs ........................... Home

Z&lt;V

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.fARMERS
BANK

&amp;.SAVIN(;$ CO.
POMEROY, OH.
•

992·2136

992-2137

1

TUPPERS PlAINS, OH.
.
985-3315
667-3161

II!I
POWELL'S

llnLE DAN

EXXON

· •••ll•t•·
c••••

FOOD STORE
EAST MAIN ST.

MONDAY
RACINE - An informational
meeting on establishing a Farm
Business Planning and Analysis
program for farmers of Meigs
County will be held Monday, 2
p.m., in the vo-ag room at
Southern High School, Racine.
The meeting will be repeated
again at 7:30p.m., same day and
location, to permit farmers an
option of attending.

Auxlllary will hold their regular
meeting Monday, 7 p.m., at the
hall. at 124 Butternut Ave.,
Pomeroy. A Christmas dinner
will be served. Men are to bring a
$3 gift for men and the ladles a $3
gift for ladles.

POMEROY - The Disabled
American Veterans and Ladles

RUTLAND - The Rutland
Garden Club's annual Christmas

;, tHuntlftiiJCenae

owa DAN SIDWEll
992-9907.
.

.

DARWIN - Bedford Township
Trustees will meet In regular
monthly session Monday, 7 p.m.,
at the town hall.

Star Grange meeting conducted
Plans for going caroling and
delivering fruit baskets on Dec.
22 were made when the Star
Junior Grange met recently with
Crystal Vaughan, master,
presiding.
The Christmas party and
dinner to be ·held at the Salem
Township Fire Department of
State Route 124 In Salem Center
on Dec. 17 was discussed. The
potluck dinner will beat 6: 30with
Santa to make an appearance.

Members voted to have a $5 gift
exchange.
For the caroling party,
members are asked to meet at
the Midkiff home around 4 p.m.
The group finished making
pine cone Christmas decorations. Junior Grangers extend an
invitation to the public to attend
the Christmas party and dinner
and learn what Grange Is all
about.

Landers

Ruth Erwin winning first In the
religious category, and Bety
Dean first In secular design.
Guests, Roberta Ridenour, Jane
Ann Karr, Debbie Wood Beegle,
Melanie Stethem, Rosemary
Keller, and Mrs. Roger Toney,
judged the wrappings. Altona
Karr, an honorary member, was
present for the party.

named to ·

Who's Who

Don Rog~r Smith Jr .. son of
A!tending were Faye Hose! ton, . Mr. and Mrs. Don Roger Smith
Iva Shutts, Belle Prairie Council,
Sr .• Rutland, has been named to
Belpre; BettyWolfe, Perry CounWho's Who Among Students In
cil, New Lexington; Bob Harden,
American Universities and ColEsther Harden, Margaret Cotte·
leges and wjll be included In the
rlll,
Janice Lawson. Eileen
1989 edlllon of the book.
Clark, Guiding Star Council,
A student · at Rio Grande
Syracuse.
College where he is a communiMildred Lowery, Margaret
cations major, Smith is an officer
Kistler, Sylvia Bownes, Kathleen
with Alpha Sigma Phi and serves
Trowbridge, Faye Trowbridge,
as president of the All Greek
Violet Darnell, Logan Council,
Council. He Is also the assistant
Logan; Ihla Fae Kimes, Thelma
chairman of the Student ProMcMannis, Erma Cleland, Mary
gramming Board at Rio. chairK. Holter, Marcia Keller, Betty
man of Parent's Weekend, a
Roush, Paullne Ridenour, Faye
member of the Grande Chorale,
Kirkhart. Doris Grueser, Dochairman of tbe Muscular Dysrothy Ritchie, Esther Smith.
trophy Association Super Dance.
Lora Damewood, Opal Hollon,
·appeared In the play, Oklahoma
Zelda Weber, and Elizabeth
was emcee and a participant In
Hayes.
the Rio Grande talent show, and
is a memblir of the Coalition for
Handicapped College Students.
He Is a member of the Rejoicing
Life Baptist-Church. Middleport.
and has been employed with the
party will be held at 6 p.m Econo Lodge Corporation as well
Monday at Crow's Steak House. as working as a switchboard
From there the group will go to operator and band camp counsethe home of Mrs . Vernon Weber, lor at Rio.
Rutland, for a regular meeting .

TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - A free
blood pressure clinic will be held
Tuesday, 10 a.m. to 12 noon, at
the Harrisonville Town Hall. A
business meeting for Harrisonville Senior Citizens will be held
following lunch.

DOMINO'S
.PIZZA

DEliVERS
FREE.
Wost Main

~t.

992-2124

STORE HOURS:
MON.-SAT.
8 A.M.-10 P.M.
SUNDAY .
10 A.M.-10 P.M.

The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Southern
Junior High School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above in all their subjects to be
named to· the roll were:
Seventh Grade: Jason Carpenter. Marcy Mathews, Aimee
Mills, Ryan Adams. Beth Clark.
Trenton Cleland, Christy Cooper,
Aar.on Drummer , Andrew
Fields, Rachael Hensler. Jennl
Hill, Ryan Holter, Brian Knopp,
Brandl Mallory, Fred Matson,
Michael McKelvey, Amy Moore,
Jerem~ Northup. Raschel Rowe,
Stephanie Sayre, James Smith.
Eighth Grade: Nick Adams,

,
-0

REEDSVILLE - The River·
view Garden Club wUl meet at
the home of Mrs. Denver Weber
on Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. Mrs.
Paul Thomas will co-hostess.
Members are to bring fruit for
fruit baskets.

Umltod Dotlnty
Area

DINNER FOR TWO
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MIDDLEPORT - Mrs . Harry
S. Moore, Sr., Middleport, and
Mr. and Mrs. Ferman Moore,
Pomeroy, were in· Ashland, Ky.
recently for the funeral service of
Mrs. Doreen Moore, who died
Nov. 29 at Kings Daughters
Medical Center following a short
Illness. She was the widow of
Harry S. Moore, Jr., wh? died in
1983, and a retired employe of
Blue Cross-Blue Shield of Kentucky . She was a member of
Calvary Episcopal Church. Burtal was in Ashland Cemetery.

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YOU'LL FIND GIFTS FOR
EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY
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"FREE DELIVERY AREAS"
Middleport, Pomeroy, Btadbury, Minersville,
Rutland. Syrecuae. Meson. W Ve.

DINNER FOR FOUR

The second six weeks grading
period honor roll at the Syracuse
Elementary School has been
announced. Making a grade of B
or above In all their subjects to
named to the roll were: ·
First Grade: Adam Cumings,
Joshua Davis .. Courtney Haines,
Tiffany Hickei, .Michelle Lonas,
Donnie Proffitt, Jonathan Smith,
Au'tumn Thomas , Lee Williams.
Second Grade: Bridget Cross,
Ashll Davis, Amy Johnson, Tara
Knighting, Sonya Litchfield, Ellcia Rltchhart, Stephen Roberts,
Kim Sayre.
Third Grade: Erica Arnott,
Mick Barr, Cynthia Caldwell.
Jennifer Friend. Lisa Russell,
Evan Struble, Billy Young.
•
Fourth Grade: Brian Allen,
Anita Collins, · Philip Hamm,
Jason Lawrence, Travis Lisle.
Amber Thomas.
Fifth Grade: Ryan Hill, Rochelle Jenkins. Jennifer Law rence. Jay McKelvey, Sammi ,
Sisson, Rayan Young.
Sixth Grade: Brian Anderson.
Randy Bing, Mason Fisher, Beth
Hysell, Andrea Moore, Matt
Morrow, Amy Weaver, Ryan
Williams.

Rutland man

Chester Garden Club has meeting.
CHESTER - The annual hall·
day dinner party of the C!lester
Garden Club was held Wednesday night In the Vintage Room of
the Down Under Restaurant in
Gallipolis.
Maye Mora had devotions with
Dorothy Karr giving a Christmas
reading.
Before the exchange of gifts,
the wrappings were judged with

Kevin . Arnott, Bethany Bass,
Nicole Beegle, '!'odd Grace, Tam- '
ara Hayman. Heather McPhail • .
Geoff Porter. Darrell Sayre,
Kelly Snider. Michelle Stollar!,
Kerl Whitaker, Kyle Wickline,
Shawn Wolfe, Kim Cremeans.
Wend! Harmon, Ray Proffitt, Jr.,
Rachael Rose, Raberta Caldwell, Julie Hill, Angie Swiger.

The second six weeks grading Danyel Smith.
Fifth Grade: . Jason Barnett,
period honor roll at the Letart
Jason
Shuler, Marlon Snider.
Falls ·Elementary S~hool has
ANN LANDERSe
Sixth
Grade: Tracy Pickett,
been announced. Making a grade
.. 1911. W. Anpls
Karen
Saltsman
.
of B or above in all their subj eels
Tim,. Syndi('Jd.e tnd
trulon Syndh••f' "' .
to be named to the roll were:
Second Grade: Jane Hill, Ja·
The second six weeks grading
son Imboden, Mike Johnson, · period honor roll at the Racine
Jerry Lewis, Carrie Stobart, Tim Elementary School has been
Wickersham, Rebecca Wolfe.
announced. Making a grade of B
Third Grade: Wesley Hall. or abOve In all their subjects to be
godsend to people like me. We need ·
Jennifer Roush, Hillary Turley. named to the roll were:
to make closed captions mandatoRanetta Wheeler.
ry, Demand them, folks! Please!!
First Grade: James Boso,
Fourth Grade: Adam Roush. Sarah Brauer, Jesse Huddleston,
Bangor, Me.: Can anyone tell me
Kimberly Roush, Jessica Sayre, Kim Ihle, Stacy Lyons, Amber
why hearing aids are not covered
Lora Sayre, Vanessa Shuler, Maynard, Kyle Norris, Chris
by Medicare? The same goes for
Randolph. Tara Rose . Dena
eyeglasses. This is outrageous. With
Sayre, Brandon . Wolfe. Lena
all the ripping off that goes on in
Yoacham.
·
Washington, why can't we get .
Second Grade: Jennifer · Calegitimate he I p, for heaven's sake?
rleton, Joshua Ervin, Suzanne
Evans, Josle Jarrell, Jeremla)l
Fort Worth, Tex.: Please tell your
Johnson , Kara King, Jesse Little,
readers"that the best "hearing aid"
Jessica Smith. Teresa Vollmar.
is a thoughtful person who will
Tommy
Smith. Steven Boso.
look directly at you. speak slowly,
Third Grade: Chad Clark. Matt
pronounce ~h word distinctly
Dill. Tyson Evans, Ryan Grace,
and stop at the end of a sentence for
Kristen Hill, Matt Hill, Nicole
a slight pause. Although my hearing
Hill, John Matson, Danny Sayre,
is less than SO percent I can hear
Amanda Theiss.
every word my dear wife says
Fou·r th. Grade: timmy Gheen,
because she is a considerate. kind.
Kristen Hensler. Joe Kirby,
Jesse Maynard. Tonla Nazarethoughtful person. God does· indeed
.
wyc:, Ryan Norris, Jennie Scargive with one hand and take with
berry , Bobby Wrltesel, Camilla
the other.
Yoacham.
Planning a wedding? :What's
Fifth Grade: John Card, Paul
right? What's wrong? "The Ann
Ihle, Cl\anda Mulford, Karyn
lAnders Guide for Brides" will re!il!l'e ·
Thompson, Craig Knight. Chris
DON ROGER SMITH JR.
your anxiety. To receive a copy, send
Gilbride, Jasop Hudson.
$3 plus a selfaddressed, stamped
Sixth Grade: Grant Circle,
business-size enlltlope (45 cents postChristy Dill. Jason Ervin, Shannon Morarity, Kendra Norris,
agt) to Ann lAnders, P.O. Box 1/562,
Courtney Roush .
Chicago, Ill. 6a51!.0562.

·Community calendar

298 SECOND ST.
· poMEROY, OH.

tlelf1erva Gaa

~an:·

Meigs Couf)ty honor rolls

nn

ORDERS MUST BE PHONED IN BEFORE 3 P.M.

PO•lOY

Blower
ral

if they can catch a sucker three
times, good for them.
Hutchiruion, Kan .: Why are peopie so bloomin' ignorant? l'v~ _had
at least a dozen well-meaning
friends say to me "turn your
hearing aid up. " · What they don't
realize is that the aid magnifies all
sounds, and in noisy settings when
you turn the aid up all you get is
louder background noise. When a
bartender is pouring a glass of soda,
it sounds like Niagnra Falls.
Caracas. Venezuela: I was all set
to spend S900 on ·a hearing aid
whe11 a friend asked, "When did
you last get your ears flushed?" I
told her I had never heard of it. She
made an appointment for me with
the doctor and I went the very next
week. Ann, I was amazed! Suddenly
my hearing was better than it had
been in years. I could not believe
the improvement. Please tell your
readers about this.
Dear Caracas: I'd be happy to. I
also would like to tell them something else. Don't try to flush out
your ears at home. Wax build-up is
tricky to remove. This procedure
should be done by a phy~ician.
Huntington Beach. Calif.: I have
S3,1XXl worth of hearing aids in my
drawer, and I still can't watch TV.
Want to know why? Because the
"mood"' music played during the
dramatic part of the film is &gt;mnli·
lied by the aid and it drowns out
the dialogue. Oosed captions are a

the closing and sale of the
The annual Christmas dinner
National Home at Tiffin due to
party of the Dls trict Deputies and
prohibitive cost of operating it. A
Past Councilors Club of District
13, Daughters of America. was members' support fund is being
held recently at the Western created, she said, to be used for
the purpose of benefiting aged
Slzzlin' Steak House, Athens.
and infirm members oftheOrder
Members were seated at decorated tables. Favors were made In all states. The orphan fund will
by Thelma White, who also read . also continue. she reported.
The spring meeting and dinner
St. Luke 2 for devotions. The
Lord's Prayer and pledge were will be held at the Chester lodge
given in unison before Esther hall on April 30 at 1:30 p.m. with
Harden, District 13 deputy. gave the convention committee io
the blessing. For roll call serve the dinner.
The meeting closed with
members commentejl 0n what
members
holding hands as Mrs.
they like the most about
White
read
An Evening Prayer,
Chrismas.
Prizes
went
to Mae McPeek of
By-laws were read and ap·
Long
Bottom,
Shirley Simmons
proved during the business meet·
of
Middleport,
Janice
Lawson of
lng. Mrs. Harden reported on the
Syracuse,
and
Sylvia
Bownes
of
changes made at the national
session Including Information on Logan.

AND

LOANS
992-1077
'
;

. ._ . . _ . . _ t _..

How to help friends
who can't hear.well

Daughters of America hold meeting

.

TAKE CARE OF
ALL ·YOUR
-----------------BOYS SCHEDULE----------------INSURANCE
II
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL
EASTERN HIGH SCHOOL
SOUTHERN HIGH SCHOOL

"HOME BANK

1992-219~

OF
FURNITURE! .

GIRLS

.

985-3301

EASTERN

Monday, December 12. 1988
Page-7

..

Dear Ann Landers: May I put in
my two cents" worth concerning the
woman from La Porte, . Ind., and
herhard-of·hearing mother-in-law?
My mother was hard of hearing
and I remember how impatient 1
was. She would say, "Please stop
mumbling" and I would blow up. '
My dad used to holler at her from
the next room and she couldn't
hear a word. Naturally it was
annoying and then there would be
a fight.
Mom has been dead 10 years and
I have inherited her hearing problem. (Mine started at the same age
hers did , 50). How I wish she was ·
around so I could apologize for my
sharp tongue and lack of understanding. Not being able to hear is
plain hell and no one can understand it completely until it happens
to them~ MASON CITY. IOWA
DEAR MASON: Thanks for tell·
ing it like it is. So did thousands of
others.
From StLouis, Mo: Look, dumbbell, stop telling people to get a
hearing aid. I have three in my
drawer and not one of them is
worth a hoot. When I took the last
one in to be fixed I was told that my
hearin·g problem cannot be heiped
with an aid. What I want to know
is why they sold me three wiih the
promise that they would "open a
whole new world'" to me. I guess I
shouldn't be mad at them. They are
in business to sell hearing aids, and

MEIGS

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend.
-

'

Free Delivery On All Preacrlptlons. If You Don't Need A
PrNCrlptlon We Will Deliver Anything In Store FREE On
A •&amp;.bo Minimum Ordar.
.

STORE HOURS: MON.-FRI. 9 A.M.-6 P.M.
SAT. 9 A.M.-3 P.M.

POll £ROY

3

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0

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Umited to 4. Not valid with any othe• discounts
Good thru

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271 N. SICOND • MIDDLEPOU, OH.

-·

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Dec . 30. 1988 . .

--Coupon • • ,
BACON N' EGG RISER
AND COFFEE (reg. size)

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Save over 65¢

11011 ONLI

PRESCRIPTION
SHOP
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992·6669

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Limited to 2. Not valid with any other ·discounts

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Oec 30. 1988

'

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"

Monday, December 12. 1988

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

Monday, December 12. 1988

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Twas the night before...-__, Television shoppmg beats the

Classified

ABC-TV White House correspondent Sam Congressional Club annual Christmas brunch for
Donaldson reads Clement Clark Moore's classis memebers of Congress ud their famUies. (UPI)
"T'wllll the Nil{ht Before Christmas," during the

·Remote Eskimo

·i~land

gets phones

from animal skins and furs) and Now we have water. There was
ANCHORAGE, Alaska tUPI)
treat it like money," he said. no village power. We have power.
- AmeriCa's most remote com·"Ivory
is just like money. 1We Now we have telephones. I'm not
munity just got a little closer.
ship It to shops all over the sure what's going to come next."
Little Diomede Island - a
Mall still arrives once a week
speck of land sticking out of the state.''
Blodgett said Mukluk spent by helicopter -weather permit. Bering Strait between Asia and
$100,000 to install Diomede's ting - · and - provides the only
·. North America just 2 ~ miles
- from the Soviet Island ol Big phone · system, and he charges summer transportation - space
Diomede - now has something $135 for a hook-up, $15.20 permitting. In winter, when the
monthly, not counting long dis- sea freezes, small passenger
'm ost Americans take for
planes can land on the ice.
tance calls.
·granted.
Until
now,
Diomede
got
by
with
It · used to be that when
Telephones.
a
single
phone
America
went to the polls to vote,
in
the
village
Little Diomede Is home to 176
-Little
Diomede's
ballots were
building.
Lines
formed
to
use
It
people, most of them Alaska
and
It
often
went
dead.
When
among
the
last
to
be tallied.
.. Eskimos, who live In a village
·
someone
received
a
call,
the
Election
results
went
out
by mall
· that faces west toward the Soviet
Diomede
city
and
were
phoned
out
clerk
paged
the
If
the
lone
· Union. In winter, when the
person
using
an
intercom-type
phone
worked.
In
November's
Bering Strait freezes, it is possisystem wired Into people's televi· general election, Diomede reble to walk across the International Dateline to Siberia. But slon sets so residents often kept ported its vote election night,
thanks to the brand new phones.
their TV s on.
only' now has it \lecome possible,
Several other villages in
Now half the homes have
'from the comfort of your Little
Diomede home, to pick up the phOnes, said Howard Ozenna, the Alaska remain one-telephone
towns, and there are tiny settletelephone and call another Amer- local Mukluk agent.
"I'm
real
happy
about
it,"
said
ments with no phones.
Ican city.
.
What's next for Little DioRoger Kunayak Sr., village store
"I called my sister-in-law long
clerk.
''Now
we
don't
have
to
mede?
Ahkinga is thinking ofties
distance in Cooper Landing (an
walt
to
nearby
Soviet territory, now
in
line
2
or
3
hours
to
order
Alaska town south ol Anchorfood
.
We
can
keep
the
store
that
the
"ice
curtain" border
a~e) ," said Dora Ahkinga, who
seems
to
be
thawingincluding
better
supplied."
made the first call using Little
Some
Diomede
residents
have
a
telephone
link
to
Big
Diomede
Diomede's new telephone
mixed
feelings
about
the
phone
or
beyond.
system.
"I hope so," she said. "Maybe
system.
"She was surprised to hear
they
can even hear us now."
"Answer
lng
the
phone
takes
from me," Ahkinga said in a
away
from
my
teaching
If
you
telephone interview from Little
Diomede. "I told her I was
want to know the truth," said
high school teacher Larry
calling from home, from my own
Preszler. "But communication ..._/"\
house. I call other places, too."
Marsalis said he decided to
between us -and the school
NEW YORK (UP!) -TrumpeThe Inupiaq-speaklng Eskiassist
the outreach program
distrlct is better. And I suppose ter Wynton Marsalis and his
mos of Little Diomede live in a
It makes a s lgnlflcant
because
that since every school in Amer- sextet perform Dec. 16 at the
virtually cash-free -economy and
in providing free
contrlbutlon
lea has a telephone that we ought Brooklyn Academy of Music's
survive by hunting walrus and
music
education
to public school
to have a telephone."
Opera House in a benefit for ·the
polar bear and other sea creachildren
who
might
otherwise
' Preszler figures technical
Roosa School of Music commun·
tures, and some expect to pay
never
learn
a
bou
tmuslc
's beauty
problems..:. lines heavy with ice ity program for disadvantaged
their telephone bills by barter and importance.
trading walrus ivory carvings to knocking out service - will be children.
worked
out,
but
he's
not
so
sure
Mukluk Telephone Co. president
about cultural problems.
. Bob Blodgett as payment.
"Thls is a subsistence econBlodgett - who calls himself
omy,
and people are getting into
"the white trader at Teller," an
trouble
with their bills already,"
Alaska mainland village on the
he
said.
''People really wanted to
Bering Sea coast - said he has
PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAL .
have
telephones,
and they've
long wanted to expand his small
been
coming
to
me
for
help.
I
was
- telephone company to Diomede.
buying ivory and loaning money
Mukluk provides telephone and doing all kinds of things to
service to 13 western Alaska allow people to get phones
Eskimo villages, places like hooked up."
Elim. Golovin, Koyuk, ShishSince the school provides rare
HA~E
maref, Shaktoollk and Wales .
cash jobs on the island, Diomede
,. "We're bringing a touch of Eskimos In need of money often
(3041 675-1244
'modern America to those people approach teachers to buy ivory.
in remote Little Diomede," Blod- Preszler said the traditional
' ,.
. get! said.
subsistence culture may collide
Blodgett, 68,1eft Union County, with America's cash economy
Iowa, to come to Alaska In 1946, over the telephone system, des serving in the first state legisla- pite Blodgett's promise to barter.
ture in 1959. He has lived in Teller
But telephones are just the
33 years, running the store and latest change on Diomede.
the u till ties and serving as the
"When I first came here,"
local "white trader."
Preszler said, "there was no
333 N. SECOND AVE.
.. "We've taken furs, Ivory carv- satellite television. Now we have
MIDDLEPORT. OH. 46760
. ings and mukluks (boots made it. There was no water system.

"We've also increased the
number of products availableand the number of stores,"
Walters said. "We've got everything from contact lenses to
condominiums."
Condominiums?
"Yeah, really. I used It myself.
It's a tlme-sbaring thing," Wal·
ters said. "And Nieman· Marcus
l• showing $10,000 mink coats."
The service has been In development for eight years. Telaction

1 DAY
3 DAYS
6 DAYS
10 DAYS
1 MONTH

wo~os

sa .oo

S13.00
$33.00

Til-COUNTY
RECYCLING
Paying today
Dec. 12, 1988
ISubject to Change
Withaut Notice I

#1 COPPER "•• uc lb.

OPEN DAllY 9 AM·S PM
SUNDAY 1 PM·S PM

HUBBARD'S GREENHOUSE
992-5776-SYIACUSE, OH.

~

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CLEAN ALUMINUM
SHEETS ""'""" 40c lb.
CLEAN ALUMINUM
CAST ............ 35c 111.
AlUMINUM
CANS ........... 42c 111.

992-5114

Located 0 ff Bypass
At Jet. of Rta. 7 &amp;
33, Pomeroy, Oh.

12-11-88·1 mo.

10 US
J.~ DEVELOPING
YOU'LL
.
O'FFER
GET ONE clfo~~~!
OF THESE -f.ir~;\Al;.---:-JV=~::-:S::::E::-:CO:::.N~D-;;;.;:

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''Deception of a Generation"
Wednesday, December 14th at 7:00 p.m.

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OR DISC

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ONLY

TUPPERS PlAINS - Very
neat 3 bedroom ranch wrth an
attached garage. I acre level
lot. FMHA approved. Call fur
app~ntment. $39,000.00.
RT. 33 -M1inteuncelrH
- well insulated, new wir·
in&amp; excellent condition. The
work~ dane. You move in! 2
bedrooms, hill basement,
modern kKchen with bar,
nice storage shed and 1 car
garage. Look at this one'

$35,000.00.
lETAIIT -like new inside and
out! Completely remodeled 4
bedrOOfll hom~ gMag~ new
rool, new siding fireplace. dr~
p-1n range $27,500.00. Malle
offer.
SYRACUSE - Really nice
ranch type, hom~ 3 bed·
rooms, equipped kitchen and
a yard fur the kids. Garag~
st&lt;Jage buil&lt;ing and many
other leatures. $45,000.00.

EACH ROll
WITH COUPON

MIDDlEPORT- Recently remodeioo, induding k~chen. 3
bedrooms, I 'h blfhs, part ba·
semen~ st&lt;Jage building and
much mare! $32.500.00.
Henry E. Cleland

992·6191
Je.. Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692

BLACK AND WHITE FILM

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Jo Hill .............. 98~6

Olfict................ 992·2259
NEW liSTINGS NEEDEDWe hM bu}'lrl for Meip

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PRESCRIPTION SHOP

991-6669
271 N. SECOND
.DDUPOIT, OliO

•

in115 Road - Beaut~ul ranch
type house in the country.
3.98 acres wKh scenic ~ew.
Two W.B.F.P., fuH basemenl
garage, many other features.
ASKING $84,900.00.

MIDDLEPORT- 1978 modular home sitting on 21ots
1n town. 2 car gaara~e. N.G.
FA. heat, garden area. Also
has self contained A/C unit.
Many other nice features.
ASKING $39,500 00.

J_;, --

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POMEROY. OH.
992-2269
NEW liSTING - Rock Spr·

$34,500.00.

of ~Y,x5"
PRINTS

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t.-.. ·'to 4" PRO-:SI2:EI

101
E. Meln

POMEROY - Really nice
1982 doublewide, 3 bed·
rooms, 2 baths, decking and
many olher leatures. All in
good
condition. WANTS

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949-- Ractne
742- Rutland
667--'- Coolville
Mason Co., WV
Area Code 304

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UMITED EDITION

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12-11·18·1 mo.

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New Ho- BUilt

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PH; 949-2801
or Res. 949·2860
NO SUNDAY CAllS

896- letart

Noell

937- Butralo

RIVERINE ANTIQUES

p~:,:~!~·

'~

LHsa M. Murphey
frM·Lanct Writer ·
Speeches,
Computer Graphics,
Public Relations,
Advertising ~

Phone:
-~
614·992 ·3643

HARLEY HANING
RESIDENCE
35975 Flatwoods Rd.
Pomeroy, Ohio
2 miles from At. 7 an
County Road 26
11-25-'88-1 mo.

LINDA'S
PAINTING
INTEIIOI·EDDIOI
FREE ESTIMATES
Takt the pain out of
painting. Let 11111 do

It f-: you.
VERY REISONAILE
HAVE IEFEREICES

614-985-4180

11-19-'88 I mo. d.

·.,,.

BOOKCASES
CROtKS
WASHSTANDS
DRESERS
LAMPS

CUPBOARDS
BEDS
PIE SAFES
PRIMITIVES
TABLES

"The Gijl! Thai Nev('r Stop Giving"

BINGO

1124 E. MAIN

992-2526 POMEROY1 OHIO
11-21-'18'-1 mo.

POMEROY -EAGLES CLUB
224 E. MAIN ST. - 992-9976
THURS. E.B. 6:4 S P.M.
SUN. E.B. 1:45 P.M.
DOOR PRIZE

Lie . #005·32

SYRACUSE, OHIO
Most Foreign and
Domestic Vehicles
A/ C Service
All Major &amp; Minor
Repairs
NIASE CertHied Mechanic

CALL 992-6756
"DOC" VAUGHN

"At Reosonable Prices"

PH. 949·2801
or Res. 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

Mastic &amp; Certainteed"·
Vinyl Siding
Roofing

Seamless Gutter

Replacement Windows

Blown

Insulation

Storm Doors &amp;

Windows

Free Estimates
Call 992-2772

1115/ Hn

SPECIAL
OCCASION CAKES
Birthdays, Holidays
Specializing in
character and novelty
cakes

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

or at

11-3-'88-1 mo.

~LATEST
DJII.&amp;MISSY
fASIIONS,
HAIR STYUNG &amp; TANNING
GREAT CIIIIISTIW GIFTS
GREAT PIICEI - GIFT
CERTIFICATES

~

WELCOME'fO
CHRISTMAS
AT

STEWART'S GUN
&amp;

GIFT SHOP

Come see our
Christmas Selections.
for your shopping conwtni·
enct we will be optn on Sundays from 1 to 5 p.m. ttwu
Doc. II, 1911.

742,2421
Smith Run Rd. Rutland, Oh.
11-21-'811-1 mo.

BOGGS

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

Authorized John
Deere. New Holland.

6:30P.M.

Equipment Dealer

•Wrecker Service

•Junk Yard Business

WANT TO IUY WRECKED OR
IUNK CARS OR TRUCKS
-FlEE ESTIMATES-

For any of lhosuwvkes &lt;ott

614-742-2617
Between 9 a.m.-6 p.m.

. or l.awe •:.s,~BB- Ifn

Bush Hog Firm
Ftrtr~

Equlp111enl

Par11 &amp; Stt~lea

1·3- '8i-ll&lt;

CARTER'S
PLUMBING
&amp; HEATING 992-62&amp;2
319 So. 2nd Ave.
Middleport, Ohio
1-28-'88-tln

~c~ol:l6::1:4·=9~92~-~~~;•a;·::;::==

•12 Years Experience

&amp; Vicinity
.. -........ -.- --- ...... ---... -·.-Moving Salc12-6 thru 12-12.
New range. w &amp; D, liv.
bedt-oom suites. guns. tools,
ladd••· Call 61 4·268-8566.

a.

Fealuring: Consolidated, Dutch
West, Brunco, A8hley
LOWEST PRICES .

WE TRADE

CARPENTER, OHIO (Off St. Rt. 143)

698-6121
EAGLE RIDGE
SMALL ENGINE
PH. 949-2969

Deoler for
YARDMAN &amp; ECHO

located Halfway
between At . 7 &amp; Bas hen.

NEW &amp; USED MOWERS
Sorvi&lt;e Cent.or far Ryan
Products
8 . 7 Financing on Yardman
Service on All Makes

- -

9·1-88-lln

~0.

HILLSIDE MUZZLE
LOADING

CARPENTER
SERVICE

AND

- Addon1 end remodeling
-Roofing 1nd gu1ter work
-Concn1e work

-Plumbing end etectrl'*
w .. k

(FREE ESTIMATES)

V. C. YOUNG Ill'

.

P-roy, Ohio

ll-14-'88-tfn

SER~ICE

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heo ler cores. We con
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT IILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport,

MODERN GUN

SUPPLIES
Munltloadint Supplies
Madtrn Gun s,.plies
Guns - Amma • Slugs 22 Ammo
·
124 East of Rutland
Across Happy Hollow Rd.
Ph. 614·742-2355

GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

FACTORY CHOKE
12. GAUGE SHOTGUNS
ONLY

.9-19-11 tfn

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF

FIDUCIARY

On Novomber 22, 198B,

In the Molgl County Proboto

Court. Cue No. 211,048,

Helen L. Soxton, 774 Olen-

wood Drlve, Logon, Ohio
43138 oppolntod Exe-

cutrill of the •tote of Oornet

wuu.,.on.

de-ed, t.te
of llolom Stroot, lluttond,

Ohio 411775.
Robert E. Buck,
Problte Judge
leno K. Nn ..road. Clerk

(11)2B; 11215. t2

fice. Full time, temporary b•i1
for 2 or 3 months. Elq)etiM'Ice
helpful but not nece11ary. Send
reaumeto P.O . Bo•468. Racine.
Ohio.
AVON . Le•n while you earnl
Free training. Insurance availa·
ble. Fl•ible hours. Reword and
recognition for ul• succ•s.
Want to know more7 Call Avon
District Menegar at 614-898-

71 11 .

•

304·875-1429.

Eatatl!l, antique. f•m. liquida-

tion t~lw. 304-773-5185.

Billing Clerk. Avers Family
Health is 11eking en energetic
individuel for pan time posltkln
of billing cl•k. knowlege of
medieal ttNminology a must,
uperiance preferred. 304-1756016, Ayers Family He8tth will
be located in Galllpolit Ferry:.
W.Va.

TOP CASH paid for '83 modal
and new-er u..d c••· Smith
Buic*-Pomlac. 1911 Eaatern
Ave., G111ipolls . Call 614-446·

2282.

Compltlle houaeholds of furnitura S. antiques. Also wood &amp;
coal hutera. Swain's Ftnniture
&amp; Au01i6n, Third •
Olive,

81 4-446-3155.

motors. Call Larry

Sal• Agents - Photogrepher
with 36 mm c1mara needed for
commiuion ulee eenitory. Mu.t
know Gallipolll, Middleport.
Oakhill and Pt. Ple-.ant well,
mu1t be able to 91/ark well With
people end work without super·
vision &amp; under a deadline
preuure. For interview appointm.-.t caU Gregg, 1 -800-366·
3326 .

without

liv~ ·61 4-

388-9303.

Wented lady to 1tay at nightwrth
eldarly lady. no work. phone

304·876-6610 .

Furniture •nd tppliMces

bot tt\e

piece or entire hou•hold. Fair
prices being peld. Call 614·448-

.3HB.
Sttnding Timbao. Calt61 4-379-

2758.

Used furniture by the piace or
an1lre houMhold alto selling.

614-742-2455.

Wanted to buy ltlnding timber.

Attention: eJtctllant income ior
home IIHmbiV work. Info. can
604-846-1700 Capt . P 2303
ANYONE CAN APPLY!
Guaunued Visa · M C . us
Ch•ge. Even with bad credit.
No one tl!llfu•d. Call 213-926·

9908 .... u 2608 .

12

Situations
Wanted

30•·676 -5328.

Need Money? Needed male or
female for llve· ln attendant
helping the handicap in mv
home-St . Rt. 160, Vinton7d,. s
a week. Call 614· 388-8666 or

~ IIlii IIIV II II' Ill

St;rviCI!S

GUN SHOOT
1:00 P.M.
RACINE

949-2369.

AVON all areull Shirl8'f Spe•s,

Rick Pe•aon Auctioneer. U·
cen•d Ohio. and Wnt Virginia.

"20/ tfrt I me. .....

EVERY SUNDAY

Taat:her at Meigs Junior H'igh
needs babysitter for baby . Mu11
supply ref•ences, be a nonsmok•. and live in Middlaport·
Pomeroy . Cell Suzanne; 814·

We~Wet 30~· 882·2846 .

Public Sale
!!&lt; Auction

8

Junlt Cart wllh or

YOUNG'S

992-621 s

Get Your
Holiday Goodie
Orders In Now.
AUNT TE'S
992-5119
TERRI POWELL
12-6-'18-t

, 0 lldi81 need ad lor telephone
work. Must read wall: 2 shifts
available; 9 :00 am -2 :30 pm;
4:00·9 :00 pm. Good hourly
wage; paid weekly; apply after
10:00 am Thuradlll'f, Dee. 1 at
1 041/z I upstairs} Main 91. ,
Pom8foy.

AVON - All ar811 . Cilll Marilyn

10/ 13/ 88/2 mo.

HOME BAKED
GOODIES

SKILL IS POWER . BRIGHTEN
YOUR JOB OUTLOOK . We train
people for jobs as. electrici.-.s.
Heating. lighting, power, air·
conditioning snd refrigeration
components all oper81e through
electrical •vstamt that are in·
stalled and wired b"f eleetrici.,s.
Cl•ses for tha Adult Eleetrichv
program at Tri-County Vocational School begin January 3rd.
To ragiat~tt or for more inform~~ ·
tio,n ca11753 -3611 M1. "14. You
ml!ly be elighible 1or monl• to
pay for your training, a1 k about
our financial aid toinces.

Certified Medical Assiatent for
Family Practice PhyliciM' I .of.

Yard Sale

----··-Galli"iiolis···--·----

·45 DIFFERENT WOOD
STOVES, INSERTS AND
FURNA(ES

111 Wtst S.C. P-ay
I 2·5·88- I mo.

'"'O·

N WOOD STOVES

DESIGNER BOUTIQUE

992-6720

Pom•oy. 1 .., of kava on

3 11
• ========:::======·=s:-l:: :n; 7

AND

Basham Building

•Dozer &amp; Backhoe Work
•Will Do Hauling With
Dump Truck

Giveaway

Found: Wed. Det:. 7 In front of
Brogan Werner lnsur1nce ,

Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts, Pomeroy. Ohio

TOP OF THE STAIRS

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614·662-3821

TRIPLE P
EXCAVATING

U· Haul'a For Rent. Sid.-sEquipment Co. U.S. At. 36. Henderson,WV .
·

LOST: Chihuohuo· 166 Mulb..-rr
Aw. Cell 614· 992-8836.

417 Second Avenue. Box
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631

742-2~35

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Fa&lt;tory Choke
12 Gaup Shatg101s Only
Stri&lt;tly lnflfctd
10-7-tln

814·992-3891 .

6 Lost and Found

Licensed Clinical Audiologist
(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
1213

It, 1, lax lU, Vinton

RACINE

FIRE DEPT.

JOB t4UNTING7 NEED A SKILU
WE TRAIN PEOPl£ FOR JOBS
AS AU1o Mechanics, Cerptn•
tars, Coimetologists. Diversified Medical Workers, Eleciricianl, food Servit:e Worltara,
Elec1ronics Tedmiciant, lndw..:
trial Maintenance Workars,
Nursing A11istants and Order·
li•. Mechinittl, Otfiea Work..-s
and Welders. Register now for
class• beginning January 3rd.
Cell Tri-CountyVocattonal Adu It
Centar at 763-3611 u:t, 14. A
vaJietv qf funding sources to pay
for tr~~ining are available for
tho11 eligible.

9 mo. old mbted Blue Tidt
Hound. Spayed, temlle. Good
with children. Call 814-448·
2338 after 5 :30PM .

We Honor MC/Disc/Visa

GUN SHOOT

We will hMJI coal for em.-gencv
HEAP, Meiga County Oep1. of
Humtn Services. and HEAP
vouchers. We can give you
prompt deUveri•. Exc~stor Satt
Workl. Inc. Pomeroy. Ohio.

by Donna

4·16·86-tfn

J&amp;l
INSULATION

Qovernment Jobs. •18,040 t69,230 yr. Now hiring. (all
1 -806-887-6000 Bitt, R - 9~6
for current f&amp;derallilt.

CAKES

5-25-tfn

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Don't ap. . d the Holidave alone!
Eligible men &amp; women want 10
m• .you. Wrtte: Heart Se•ch.
Bo• 6846. Alhens, Ohio 46701 .

JUST OPENED

Certified LicenSed Shop

BISSELL
BUILDERS

Vlsa-Mut..-cerd US Charge
guaranteed ragardl•s of credit
r81ing . Call OO)NI \21 3) 926·
9906 ext. U 6466.

2 Doberman•- niale&amp; femaiiHo
good home onty. Call between 9
AM· 9 PM. 614·266 ·1443.

1 2-1 1 -tin

VAUGHN'S
AUTO &amp; DIESEL
SERVICE

3 Announcements

4

2 H.D. FREE with coupon and purchae of min.
H.C. Package. Limit 1 coupon par customer per
bingo session.
WE PAY 850.00 PER GAME
OVER 110 PEOPLE '65.00 PER GAME

11·71 mo.

FOR SALE
CARISTMAS
TREES

GLASS
WICKER
QUILTS
CLOCKS
CHAIRS

Need babystnet in my homa-4or
3 yr. old. Must h..., I referene'eS.
Call 614 -446-8832.

11-6-'88

An no u11 c~ IIIP. nIs

Shop
Where
Santa
Shops!

Birthday

773- Mason
882 - New H•ven

992-6461 .

614-99U?~d pd.

Ha~~Y

Part· time MLT for fully equipped
Physician's Office LaboratOfy.
Apply in person to Th• Medical
Piau, 203 Jackson Pike JJ•
tween 8 :30-4:30.
_

POMEROY, OHIO

SECURITY

l.t:-2-'81-1 mo.

576 - Applt! Grove

3-11-tfn

/'~

COMPANY

614-992-7301

458 - Leon

TEXAS REFINERY CORP .
needs mature P••on now ' in
Ga~llpolit area. Reg.-dless . of
lraming. Write: F.G . Hopkins,
Ba• 711 , Ft. Worth. h . 78101

HUNTER

MIDDliPOII, 01!10

•

OHIO
PALLET

D. J.'S TRADING POST

675 - Pt . PleHant

DRIVERED TO

·•Residential
•Commercial
10 Years Experience

With Approved Crodit
No Payment or lnt•est
'Til July 1, 1989

843- Portland

CHERRY
PER LOAD
DELIVERED

ALARM
SYSTEMS

NOW
PAY
LATER

Meigs County
Area Code 614

OAK. LOCUST.

$3 s

S14 PEl TON

367- Cheshite

FIREWOOD

•VINYL SIDING
•A~UMtNUM SIDING
•BLC\WN tN
INSULATION

Fl P

~--

18,000 hornet.

18·26 WORDS

$4 ,00
$5.00

•POINSmiAS • POINSmiA
HANQINO BASKETS ottOLLY TREES
•AFRICAN VIOLETS ofOUAGE
PLANTS • BASKETS oMONUMENT
SPRAYS
•CEMETERY VASES
.WREATHS ond GRAVE BlANKETS
oLIVE. CUT CHRIS'1111AS TREES

WHEN YOU
BRING YOUR

80% of all cartooM are directly Inked to
tho occult.
40% of all toys are directly linked to tho

'

0· 15

. 446 -, Gallipolis

985 ·- Cflt~ster

ES

OPEN 7 DAYS
9AM-7PM

12 EXP •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S3.29
15 DISC-••••••••••• ~ ••••••••••••••••••• S4.49
24 EIP •••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S5.99
36 EXP••••••~••••••••••••••••••••••••• S8.49

Yerd Sales

O'J8r

Happy Ads

5

Area Codf 614

992- Middleporl
Pomeroy

H"PPY Ads

"A classified advertlaement pi Reed in The DAily Sent in~ (ell ·
cept ~ ciBSslfied dlsplny. Business Card nnd legal notices)
will elso appear in the Pl. Pleasant Register and the Galli-

polis Daily Tribune. reaching

Galli&amp; County
.

WANTED: Full-time employ ·
m~nt in your own home 11 •
Home ServicM WOfker with
Buck.,.e Comnlunity Servicet.
We prwld&amp; salary plu-. banfit s
and • daily room end board rerh'
You provide a home, guidanc a
and friendship in a hn\ily
atmoaphMe. Requires abiltty" to
teach personal HYing •kill• and a
commitment to the growth and
d..,eopnlent Qf •n iodividueljs)
with mer\tal retardation. Con·
tact Sylvia Oay It 446-7109
after 6 :00 PM. Applicants mult
reside in Gellia County. Eqa;al
Opportunity Employer.
•

MAXIMUM
DIAMETER 14
INCHES ON.
LARGEST END

following IPil'plwrw ('xclia11ges ...

Business Services

FACTS .

•

Card of Thanks
In Memoriam

BRING YOUR FILM IN TO
US FOR PROCESSING.

PRESENTS

Pastor ~lchael J. Panglo ·

. POLICIES
•Adl outside Meigs, Gallia or Ma~on counties must lle pre·
paid.
•Receive 1.50 discount tor ads paid In ed~o~e.nce.
•Ftee ads - Giveaway and Found ads und!llf 15 words will be
run J. d•s at no ch•ge.
*Price of ad for ell capit11lletters is double price of ad cost.
"1 point line type only used.
"Sentinel is nat reaponsible for errors aher first d.,. . (Chad!
lor enors first diiY ad runs In paper!. Call bttfore 2:00p .m.
d.., eft If public.tion to mak~ correction.
• Ads thlt must b11 paid In edvanee •re

Now Open For The
Christmas Season.

THIS IS THE SEASON
FOR TAKING
PICTURES!

':

Are roa •••re of wll1t f••r e~n•re• 1re
w1tehl•1 ••• pllfl•l wltlt1

..

TO PLACE AN AD CAll 992-2156
MONDAY thru FRIDAY · 8 A.M. to S P.M.
8 A.M. until NOON SATURDAY
CLOSED SUNDAY

Rat .. are for consecutive runs. broken upd~switl be chlfged
fnr e11r:h It~ 1111 aeparatft ad!t.

.~~-------------------··t

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
"WE
HEARING AIDS"

Avideo with an inclepth look at the rise of the occult
and pagan religion within the cartoon and toy in·
dustries and how this, in turn, affects our children.

"You can't see what your
neighbor ' Is getting," · Walters
said. "But if you turn on the
system and it is in use, the
system will ·call you back when
the other shopper Is done."
Walters said Touche-Ross projects interactive shqpplng sales
at $3 billion by 1992, compared
with $60 billion to $70 billion for
catalog and other mall order
sales.

Since the introduction, the
service has been changed In
response to consumer requests.
Walters said Telactlon has added
a bargain basement where consumers can look lor sale and
seasonal Items. Also added were
a merchandise directory wh,ere
consumers can spot which stores
carry a particular kind of merchandise and a Ticketron that
shows seating diagrams as well
as music and pictures from
productions.

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc:

614-992-6249

•

Help Wanted

...

• The Area's Number 1 Market lace

Maclntlre and his colleagues
concluded straight videotext services would be unable to' sustllln •·
consumer attention, in part,
because of the quality of the
computer-generated Images that
are part of such a service,
Walters said. Penney's, the largest retailer of women's apparel
in the country, bought th_eproject'
from First Bank five or six years
ago, she said.
Telactlon uses pictures 'of the
actual merchandise, which
makes It more like a traditlonal
catalog service. The system Is
designed to handle as many as
500,000 households. Fifteen-to 20
.households share a line. ·

"I've even done all my Christ·
mas shopping. It's wonderful! "
Walters said the service . cur·
rently Is In use In eight Chicagoarea suburbs, mostly middleand upper-mlddle&lt;lass. She said
Telactlon will expand in the area
through the end of 1989 and then
nationally and possibly
internationally.
The service started in February and "we've been evaluating
how people use It," Walters said.
About 70 percent or the households wired for the service are
using It, she said.

-----Brooklyn benefit------

REJOICING LIFE
CHURCH

president Stuart Maclntire and a
number of co-workers at First
Bank, Minneapolis, came up with
the Idea as an outgrowth of the
videotext projec~ they were
•
developing.

''Then one day we received a
little introductory grocery bag
and Instructions on how to
enroll," she said. "I investigated
and was really happy with it.
"I commute one-and•a-half
hour each way and with two kids
It's hard to find time to go to the
grocery store. I'm completely
satisfied.

11

Business Services

in-store holiday buying frenzy
CHICAGO (UPI) - 'Tis the
season to bead for the mall and
battle the masses for the atten·
tlon of the lone sales clerk on
duty;-t'ight?
It's enough to turn anyone into
Scrooge.
Well fear not, Intrepid shopper.
Help is as near as your cable TV
system: Telactlon, an lnterac·
tjve shopping service developed
by J.C. Penney, enables
shoppers to browse 35 stores !Ike
Penney's, Nleman·Marcus,
Sears - even the corner grocery
store - without leaving all the
comforts of home.
"This is the only service of Its
kind In the world," said Mary
Dale Walters, a spokesman for
Telactlon. "There's never been
anything like this before.' •
All one needs is a cable system
carrying the service, a touchtone telephone and a fistful of
credit cards. The only charge In
addition to the merchandise
putchased Is a local phone calL
"First you turn on your TV and
turn to the right channel,"
Walters said. "You call the
number on the screen. An automated voice comes on and thanks
you for calling and then directs
you to input your ID number.
"You are then directed to put
your receiver down, but don't
hang up. You use the telephone
keypad for the rest. Next you'll
see a list of stores on the screen
with a two-digit number next to
each. You pick the store you want
and punch that number ln. Then
you get a directory of depart·
ments - again each has a
two-digit code.
Within the department, the
service shows the shopper pictures of individual Items.
· "And you just keep following
the directories and do your
shopping. There's no advertisIng, no preaching -you just see
the merchandise.''
As the shopper finds Items,
those items are put Into an
electronic cart. All Items are
paid for as the shopper electronically exits a store.
"It's just like going to the
mall," Walters said. "You can go
from store to store. But this way
you avoid the crowds. Holiday
season Is such a horrendous time
to get things done."
. Susan · Espenschied, 36, of
Napervlllf, said Telactlon allows
her to do her shopping from bed.
"I do my grocery shopping on
Monday nights while my husband watches football,.. the
phone service billing analyst
said. "I just go back to my room,
turn it on and go shopping."
Espenschied said she first
round out about Telactlon when it
suddenly appeared on channel 33
of her cable system.

The Daily Sentinel Page- 9

388-8711 .

11

Help Wanted

Loving care for ald•ly and
h.ndlcapped . t500 plus. Call

814· 992-6873 .
VISA / MASTERCARD
US CHARGE Guo .. moed
Rea•dl•• ofCrecllt Rating. Call

Nowl 1213) 92&amp;·9806, ext. u
2524.

PfOfMeiORIII long hiiUI dflvtrtSam Tankal'f TruClklng il now

hiring Ill ...-ienctd over the r01d
drhlart. W• nMCI first. MCOnd. &amp;
team dJiven. E ~•11.,1 bentfht
&amp; weekly ,_y checks. Call tod.,.

15

Schools
Instruction

AE .fRAIN NOWI
SOUTHEASTERN BUSINESS
COLLEGE , 629 Jackson Pike.
Ce11446 ·4367. Reg. No. 88-1 1
10668.

304-512-&amp;552 •• 1-800-&amp;27-

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

OWNER: GREG I. IOUSII
~•
· GENERAl
CONTRACTORS
RES IDENT IAL
COIMERCI

•'U'•'

tCUITOM KITCHEN&amp;• lATHS
•EXTENINE REMODEUNG
.VINYL BIDING. ROORND
.UETAL IUILDINOI

HOUI... O. APT. PROJECfl

SINCE 19r.9

DISD St., SYUCIISI

992-7611

11-21-88-tfn

WANTED

DEAD OR AUYE
•Waahen •Dryers
•Ranges •Freezers
•Refrigerators
"Must It Repairable"

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
We Service All Make•

~--~~~1~
1 1~V~U1~ 1

HUDNAlL
PlUMBING &amp; HEA nNG :
161 North SHond
Middltporl, Ohia 457110

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We.:arrv Flohing Suppll
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bill• Here
• IUIINIS! PHONE
(614) "2-6550
IISIDENCE PHONE ' '
1614) ·9!-7714 '

SMALL ENG NE

JlEPAII
Authoriud S.rvi&lt;o
&amp; Parts
Briggs &amp; Stranon
Taaum1eh
Weed Eetar
Homelite
'

Jacobsen

VALLEY LUMBER
&amp; SUPPLy
........

0

MI..., !port' hio
992-·61,

~~~-.--~~
~ ~~~~~~~·~ L~~--~~~l~~1~7~tm~

aam. Subject
E.O.E.

to drug ecreen &amp;
.

18 Wanted to Do

Up to •115 hour proc•slng m1ll

wtHtf . ChP guerantMd, free

detella, wrh1 SO 1057 w.
Phll.te4phla Suite 239·00, On·
tarlo, CALIF 11712.

8444 .

B•bV•tn• needed weeltdiV•

Will do babysitting in my home.
Welkd..,, II weekends An
thift. Call 814·446-8&amp;47.
Y

in

our home. Holler Hotphll ....
S•d ,..um1 to: Box Cit 183.
c/oOalllpolll DollyT•Ibuno. 821
Third Ave., Gtlllpolll, Ohio
4ee31.

LI~Mn..d Phylical Th•eplat 11
Veterens Memorial Hotphel.
Coli 114-882-2104 Olk for

Den lie.

Cakea by Rhea. Cell 614 · 388

.

McDaniel Custom Buteh•lng
open 6 d av• wuk., ceu 304-882:

3224.

.

Babysitter •nilebll, ii•Uile
hourt, full or ~rt tim .. behind
Ordnance S.;:hool.
ref•en304-676 ·2784

h.,,

c•.

•

'

�...

..
e.

r

•

Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

LAFF-A-DAY

llfldiiCid l

53

51 Household Goods
SWAIN

·21

AUCTION •

NEW- I pe, wood grou~ 1399.
LNtng room auh:n- t199 -•&amp;99.
8unk btdt with bedding- $249.
Full sire m.tt... l &amp; f dundlll:ion
tttrt ing . t99 . Re ~li neu
ltlrling· 19!t.
USED· S.dl, dr•Hrt, bedroom
IUit • . D.. kt, Wrino• With•, I

I NOTICE I
THE Of;iiO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recommtJndl th.t' rou
do buain•• with people rou
know, end NOT to end mon.,
through the mail u · y
hwe

NEW-

toft toet . Call 114-441-3159.

tome

County Applitnc._ In c. Good
used applilf'ICM ll"'d TV Mtl.
Open BAM to IPM. Man thru
Set. &amp;14-446-1899. 627 3rd.
Aft. G•lllpolia, OH.

fDicahdnotiona . WIItelltll far

16000. Call 114-985-3909
614-985-4202 .

Of

H•ir S•lon. high 1raffic high
volume Jh:op. Reduc~ for qui c.*
..,.. 304-A26 -3065 Of' 304·
523-7277.

GOOD USED APPUANCES
W•h••· dryara, refrig . .tau,
r•nge1 . Sk1gg1 Appll•nc••·
Upp• River Rd. b•Nfe Stone
Cr•t Motel. 114-446-7398.

e•• •.,. , _ ,.... ..., '*-'- .... __,

"·Last year she adopted a
Cabbage Patch doll ... now
she wants a SURROGATE
doll!"

M•ry Luc•·Pi.,o &amp; orglf1 I•·

31

Or'

Homes for Sale

Vr; •ttrtctiv• bricM 4 bedroom.
2 bMh. temity room wtch fir•
plaa&amp; forrNI dining. l•geiNing
room. 30ft. custom oek kitchen
cllbin••· oM woailwork. finilh
2 c• g•ege. l.,el
Lendec..,ed lot. 4 mil• from
Holler Ho1piull off At. 31·
'orterbrDGk S ubdN ilion. C."
.14-448-4189 .

b•em•.

4

lA .. ful b•..,ent • gwag ..
(•om• n....,), Cjty
_schooll. Utlliti• low. Woodburn•. N.cunll g• furMce.
Priced to Mil. Cell 814·448·
0278 af'ler 6 PM. weak.,.
futly c•p«ed

~nytima.

3

BR . hou•. d-'uu, AC, Ill
pooi-S.,aorTreda. 4 Bft houH.
good locllion. C•ll .304·676·
8104.
Hou• for •le. Ponibl• llf1d
cont ... ct. 822 J•cbon St. Vift..
t.o n. OH 114-318-9310.

3 bedroom. 2 b•h•. full flnslhed

beaement. n.w furnac• •nd
c.m,.IM. v--ue. f.nctd yard.
2414 Mt. V.-non Aw ., Pt. Ptt.,
prll:*l on ln1per:tian, 304-875·
1774.

41

Homes for Rant

3 bedroom home On Rt. 141.
n. . GrMn Elem. 1300 plus
depotlt. c.u 114-441-11511.
Hou• for rent. 1300 mo. plus
MG.
822 J•ck•on St.
Vinton, OH C•l1114·388-9310.

d..,.

Nice tpltt lw... 2 flreplee•. 2
cer g•qe. In CO\Intry. U90

plus dep01it. Call 614·448·
4114.
Hou• with b.. h. Ne• R1dne.
Nice v•rd, g•den tpece. C.ll
11~·992 - 5888 :

3 bedroom hou• in Middl..,ot·t
A.C .. buih· in kilch.,:" t2~15 .
plu• deposit. C•ll 614-9923169.

Full b•ament. one end hllf
story, quite loc.tion . . 8 mU•
north of Poim Pl•unt. 304·
676-1076.
House for rant 1150.00 month.
no kids, no pets. clll 304·1757443 1fler 6 :00 PM .

2 badroom. four room ept,
1110.00. 2 bedroom smell
hou ... 1200.00 or wih aell on •
llf'ld contn~ct . 304-175-2722.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

42

Mobile Homes
for Rent

1.988 New Moon 12x&amp;O. 2 BR .
.1900. C•ll61•· «6·0390.
1970 12a80 Monerch mobile
home. 2 BR . C.ll 814· 388·
8114.
191B Fl ... wood. 1 2x154, bottle
v• heat •rtd hot water. 13000.
Cell 614-843-15310 Of 114843-6401 •nvtlme. Ask lor
Danny .
Double wide mobile hom•. on
foundation. epprox. 2
clo" to town end tchoolt, lg.
ldtch.,, leundry. 3 b•~ooms. 2
b.-hs. new c•pet. eoncret•
porch•WIIka, b•ck deckl, pMio,
reflnlthed cell•r. pump. •calltnt condhion. L•rg• b•n wilh
conorate floor. 114·992· 3218
ev•ningl efler 6 : 30 or
....k.,dl.

•cr••·

Mobile Hom• far rent. In
K•n•ug• arM. Conatn.~ctlon
workert welcome. Cell 614·
446·0608.
Newly decor•ted, 2 BR ., fully
c•p«•d. Sec. dep. requif'ed.
C•ll 114-446-8658 or 4484756.
2 BR mobMehome1t Evarguen.
No Sundav cells pi-a. C•ll
614-379-267e.
Fr• rent umll J•nu•rv 1st. . 2.
bedroom. 2 beth. City echools.
Ref•ene• •nd dapotit. Call
614-441-8890.
14x66 2 BR . 1260 1 mo. Call
814-261-1293.

· Furnished 2 BR. be•tiful river
1977 Schuttz1•x60 on 2 •cres. vi4M'. Cable available. Folta,..
Just outside R•cin• Wil •••· Mobile Hom• Park. 614· 448ate. Cell 814-949· 3087
1802.
&amp;p.m .
3 bedrooms. central Wr, all
2 bedroom 121160. t1900. electric. fully c•peted. Nice
304-675-2722.
. neighborhood in Mlckleport.
Cell 814-992· 6868.
1979 Bayview mobile home,
14x70 whh 7~~:2~ •pendo, 3 bedrooms. no pets. mutt hwe
phon• 304-876·8141 .
ref.-enc•. 304·458· 1B87.

•h"

1978 Liberty 14x70. 3 bedroom, •7.900.00 . 304·676·
1671 and 676· 1783.
2 bedroom. 10xl50 mobile home
in good thepe. t990 .00 c•h or
own• will fin•nce. 304-8752722.
Mobilt for Nl• 1973 Ub.,y.
12x80, ••king 13,800. 304·
676 -8489.

36

lots

8t.

Homettead Realty, •leOr rent,
tr•iler, 4 Iota , more .
113,500.00. Nancy C•ntar·
burv. 304-675·6640.

44

Apartment
for Rent

Acreage

Meigs county, 315 •cr• v•clr'lt
lend EJlC .. Ient hunting, good
hom'• srt•. 1 mile from Ohio
Rtver. 117.600. Thelm• Mont·
gom-v R. .lty •t 814· 386·
7-419. Collect c ..lsecceptltd.
Ashton BNutiful l•ga bulclng
Iota. Mobita ho~TW permined.
Pubtic water. Allo rN• lots. Q,&lt;de
a -. Jr. 304-676-2336.

2 bedroom Apts. for rent.
C•rpetad. Nice Httlng. leundry
hciliti• avlilebla. C•ll 814992-~711 . EOH .
One Month Free Rent
Qualified rent•r• pay 1200
dep01i1 end no r.n for the
month. Nowmb• or Do·
comb• only. Vill~~ge M•nor
•nd Riverside A~rtment 1 in
Middleport. From t182 .
814-992-7797. EOH.
New effic:i•cy 1 or 2 bedroom
ap11. in Mlddl..,art. Fumi1hed ~r
unfurnished . C•ll 814 ·992·
530' or 614·992-2778 .

Renlals
41

Tr•il . .. unfurnNihed. coupl•
•m•ll children eccepted, Rt. 1.
locutt RoM, Pt.PII, b.tlind
K&amp;K. 304-875-107e.

Homes for Rent

Nicely furnishtd 1rnall houu.
Adults only. Ret. required. No
p.CI. Cell 614·441·0338.

2 bedroom •ptrtmant in Middl•
port, ,.centty ,.modeled- L•rt•
rooms. 1185. 1M' month, depOiit requited. Dey 114· 992·
2381 or night 814·992· 2609.

Houl8· 7 roomt, ·unfurnlshad.
•225. 21 Nail Aw .. G•llipollt.
448·44 18 ett• 1 PM .

c.n

5 Court:2 living•••· 31R .. 1 Yt
beth on on . .ida. 1 BR . &amp; b•hon
ot h•. Both ldtehtns furnished.
ld•al tor fllftlly with gr•ndp•r·
ant . Overlookll.-rk• riv•r. W1lk
to tchoola. Dowrrtown. 1375 •
mo. plu• ulilitl•. O.po1it &amp;
ref.-enc. . Celll14-446-4921.
3 BA . double. Eire... con d.
.A.cros1 from G•lli• Ac..t.,.,.,.
e250 p• mo. C1ll 814·448·
0041 or week.,dl 1fter a PM .
In Ch•hiro. Ohio, 3 IR.. 2
blthl, ell el-=trlc. AC. Deposit
required. Celll14· 317· 7617 0#
703·388· 1109 .•

Now accepting eppllel'tiont for
2 bedroom a,..-tments. fulty
c.pet~. epplienc•. wat• 1nd
tr•sh picMupl prcwidad. Malntenenca fre• living cloM to shoP""
ping. b~nkl •nd schools. For
mor• information c•U 304· 882·
3715. E.O.H.
Unturnith~

•pt. one bedroom.
•U $1aetrlc. ni'N c•pet. nMN
peint. ' " 1t Oit~o's Piu1,
Mdon, W.Va.
Furnleh.t 1 Br. moct•n ept,
Dep. • ref. No p.Cs. 960 First
........ C•II614-M8-1079.

3 SR wa•hw/ dryar hook up, 1
c• i~•v•· 300 • mo. t 1
diiP· RodnS¥ Village II. Call
81'4· 448-4131.

eo

3 BR .·&amp; Court Sl. Khchen wtth
ttov• • r.rrig. f260 plusdep. &amp;
rill. No pett. Call 614-•41·
4928.

2 Hou . . for rent. 1 8R .-t171•
mo. 6 2 BR .- t131 • mo. In
Crown City. AM'. C•ll814·448~

1 8r.·7 Court. Kitchen whh
ltov• • rtfrig. I 176 plus dtp. a
rllf. No p .... C.U 814· 448·
4928.

.

2 BR . apts. I clo1eta, kilchen~1. furnished, Weah.--Dry•r
hook-up, n.w plush c•pet. tPa
pMnt.
Nie1 good locetion.
Regency. Inc. Apts. Clll 304875-1104, ori 1715-5381 or
875-7738.
N•w completely furnished
..,.rtmenl &amp; mobile hom• in
city. Adutts ontv. P•king. C•ll
614-446-0338.
BE'AUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK SON ESTATES. 638 JadttOn
Pih from • 183 a mo. W•lk to
thop end movi•. '61 4-4462568. E.O.H.
T•e Townhouse ep•rtmi'M'Itl· 2
8Rs., 1 1h 'baths. CA., di1·
hwe1h•. dilpoAI, pri¥1t• en·
dosed petio, pool, pleyground.
Wtt•r. sewer, &amp; tra1h included.
St•rting et t289 per mo. C•ll
614-367·78150.
Furni1hed ._,t, Na• HMC. 1 BR .
1236. Utiliti• peid. Cell 448·
4416 efter 7 PM,
Ap•rtm.-.t• end hou"•· Cell
304-&amp;75-5104.
Ap1rtment• for the Eld•lv·
Gallit M•nor Apertm~ts . 855
Buhl Monon Roed. D••igned far
the .Senior Chizen {82 &amp; oltt.r)
and H~~ndl~ped panons. Equll
housing opportunity. Appllc•
tlons m.,. bepidta:l·up at Spring
V•ll.,. Plua. 529 J•cban Pika
or c•lll14-44l-4839.
Modern 1 BR. downtown, complele kitchen, •ir, c•pet. Oap·
olit, no 'Petl. Cell 814-446·
0139 ll'tlentnp. •h., 1-.
821 '!.! Sec. E JCel. cond., 2 BR.,
equipped khch..,,
Awiltble
Nov. 1st. 1221 plu1 dep. Cell
614·448·0803 or ot46·2168 .

•lr.

Nice-2 BR . •p1 . 4'h niH• from
GallipoN1. Stove. refrig. &amp; w•ter
furnilhed. 122fi • mo. No pets.
Coli 814-445-8038.
1 &amp; 2 8R apllrtment. &amp;300
month. lnduda •II utilhi•.
Adultt only, no pets. d..,.
required. Cell 614·446·4222
bMween 9&amp;6 .
Nielfy furnished 1 ·2 BR . Water
&amp; g•b•ge paid. Private 'perking.
Depoalt required. C•ll814-4464346 1fler 6 PM .
Pomeroy -2 BR . remodeled
•partment ofl Spring Aw. Sec.
dep. &amp; ret. C11t sft•r 6 PM,
614-992-8886.
Furnished downttaln. 3 rooms
&amp; b .. h. Clean . No pets. Adults.
Ret. &amp; dep. Off street perk.ing-1

e•r. Call814-448· 1619.
Unfurnished 2 BR gwegeapart·
ment. In town . C.rpllted. Adultt
only . No pets. Cell 614-446 ·
4661 .
Furnishad 3 room apt. 1225 per
mo. 176 dep. Utlliti• p1id. No
children. 9• locutt. Cell 614448-1340, 441-3870.
663 Third."
BR . up•iu,
c•. w•sher &amp;
'260 plus dep.
9695.
lerge 1 room efficiency •pt. with
beth. All utliti• paid . C•ll
61'4 -245-8223 .
Newtv remodeled 1 BR . apt.
Appl. furnilhed. ldeallocatlon-1
block from dowmown. C111
614-446·4639 .

46

Furnished Rooms

Furnished room-919 Seoond
A1111 .. G•lllpolis. t76 • mo.
Utiliti• peid. Single mala. Sh•e
beth. C•ll446·4416 •fter7 PM .
Room• tor rent· week or month.
St•rttng et •120 1 mo. G1ll ia
Hotel-614-448-9680.

46

Space for Rent

Sot• •nd ch1irl priotd from
t396 to t996. T•~• t50 •nd
up to *121 . Hid••·bedl U90
to t5915. A•dln•• t221 to
t3715. L..mp1 128 to 1126.
Dln.net t109 •nd up to IU6.
Wood table w·8 chllir• *28&amp; to
t795. Duk t100 up to 1375.
Hutoh• t400 •nd up. Bunk
btdl eomplel• w· mlttr•t2915•nduptol396. B•b¥bedl
t110. M.nr--orbo~~: ~prlnge.
fuM Of twin 118, firm *78, •nd
sea. Queen .... 1250 • up;
Kini t310. 4 dr1wer ch•t t89.
Gun er.bine11 e. 8 &amp; 10 gun.
B1by m•ttmHI 136 • t 4&amp; ,
B•d fr.m• UO, 130 &amp; King
fteme tiSO. Good Hlectlon of
bedroom IUit•. me1.e cebineta.
hudbo•dl t30 •d up to 186.

Bundy Fhlte. Good •h••· Ind.
mueie ttand. Excel. for
beginn•s. Call 814-448-2886
or 441·9335 esk for Kim.
&lt;*8 •

~14

k•• gold diamond clu1Uir'
cocktail ring. 1 c•at total
wsight· 'h k••t matching e•·
rinp. Taglllh•,. eep . .te. C•ll
81 .. ·446·0718 for d8blls.

Whirlpool .. eetric ttow, l•ge
•ewing Mt, wer.obe. pl.yl*l.
Siem... kmen. Cell 814-448·
0085.
Mllt•d h•d wood 1lab1. I 1 2 P•
bundle. Conuinlng approx. 1 y,_
ton. Ohio P..lel Co., Pom•oy.
Ohio. 814·992·8411 ,
CHRISTMAS TREE 'S
HomeQrown Chriltm.. TrH'I.
Scotch and White Pine.
Watt.' • F•rm in Rutland.
614-742-2143.

PICKENS USED FURNITIJ.,RE
Compl•• houtahold furnith·
lngs. 'h mile out Jerricho.
304·676~ 1460.

Firewood tor •Ia. 131. pickup
truak load. Delhler.:l. HE~P
vouch . . ecciPied. C•ll 814·
949-2087 eft• 6 :00 p.m.

For low prie11 on Qu•Hty C.rp•
&amp; Furniture come to Mollohan
Furniture--Upp• River Ad., 614·
446-7444.

Queen· lize ar ..dmoth•' I F•n
quitt. H•nd crocheled stol•·
782 High St .. Mlddlsport. C.ll
614-99}-7888.
•

VIRA't FURNITURE AND
APPUANCES
Open D1ily Mon.·S•t.. 9 AM -5
PM
Sun., 12 Noon.&amp; PM
Open •fter hourt by

M•ple upright plano. 1476. Ga
doubl•oven caokttow, copp•·
tone, t100. C•ll 814·992·
3159 .

•PP~ntm..,t

Firewood. UO. sm.ll pickup.
12&amp;. reaul• pickup. No deliver·
1•.114-742-3112.

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS ·
Bentwood rockers , S49 .96.
He.,y duty rustle bunk bedl.
*229-compll!llle. 4 pc. bedroom
tulle with triple dr•••r. t489.
Aultic4 dr. wood ctl•t. 189.4
dr. ch•t. 144.96. 5 dr. ch•t.
1154.915. Sof•• ch*· reg. $699
now •269 . V•ughn tofel. chair,
reg. t2400 now 1899. 8 pc.
wood group, r-.g. e&amp;99 now
t389. Vaughn &amp;..lett w•ll
hugg• r.cllnw1, &amp;199. Aultic
country 18ble. 3 chein &amp; bench.
t289 with matching hutch I 660
for both pitcll.

SURPLUS ARMY. DENIM.
CARHART, R•nt.l clothing,
&amp;moll Army Equlpmont Accoooorl•- &amp;AM SOMERVILLE'S.
OUO ROUTE 21, NEW ERA
304-273-111615. Noon-8 PM.
Nov. Dec. llntut.l:.d Cowrella
127.60), Jungl_• loots U.S.A ..
Original Army clothing. Nonmilitary c•mfltuge puts
t12.00.
All ChrilltJNI tra• t12.00,
come early before cold we•h•
and tag your tMe. Newells
Chridmes Tr.. Farm. on• mila
ebow M111on on H•nging Rock
Ro•d. 304-773-15371 or 304·
682-2888 .

Chri1trnu toys and gen.-el
meJChWidise 11 ditcoum prices.
4ft. Santi, &amp;29 .96 . Bicycles &amp;
triCI(CIM st•ning at &amp;19.96 . 14
K gold ducks. 17.49 •••· Mr. &amp;
Mn. Cleus, t14.96 • ..t . Iron
Stone
114.96 Child' s
oak rocking
t5.99. Pogo
bell•. •7.99 .
&amp; r•dlo
controlled o•s
doll•. S14.95. 1
d..-, &amp; •cene
t..v•way nn~oo~w~~:..,c~,;~~,,~,~
Op•9-5ol
Centen.ry· V• mile on
Pika. 614·446-3168 .

1150
2018.

·c...

T

Equipment. 60 Sari• ditch
witch. 1983 Fill Alliada~•. like
nsw. clll after 6 :00, 304·273·
31815 or 273-3036 .

Good Ulld floor "modul 1nd

55

port•ble color tv's for s.~~le.. Call

Building SuppliBS

614· 448-1149.

WHtinghou• washer, 176 .
Whirlpool wu)'t•. t9&amp; . ken·
more dryer , ,t96. Refrig. lrostfrae, 196. Refrig. tid•bv· lide
coppertane. 1175. Kenmore
w••her·like new, t176 . Electr je
rang• 30". '160. Ga1 rtnUtt
•7&amp; . G .E. dishwasher. $75,
Skagg1 Appllanc81-Up pflr Rivftr
Rd., 614·446-7398.

Building M..eri.ts
Block, brick, Nwer pip•. win·
d~o~w s. linte(t. etc . CIIUd• Winten, Rio Gr1nda. 0 . C1ll 114·
245-6121 .

.. ....
66

Holldav Spfleial•
WESTERN RED CEDAR
'" Ch~nnel Rustle
and Bavtl.t L•p Siding
• D•ck M•t•lllt
Gu1rantalld Clueltty
CETIQE, INC ., Athanl· 614·
69,·3678

56

May rag wring• w•th•. good
cond .. 6 gelvenized squ•re tub
w / drain. Call814· 379-2201 .

Pats for Sale

Fish l ·•nk. 2413 J•cbon Ave.
Point Pl .... nt, 304-176·2083.
10gelset upl1,.99end10g ..
complete •43.25.

for ule. 6 piece wood ltving
room suite. asking *75. In fair
condition. C111 614·367·721 5 .

Chrlstm.. puppl•. AKC reui•
t•Ml. Pom•i.,,, M•ltl-. $hiltShu, Sl'beritn Hulk8fl, Poodl•.
deposit will hold your choice till
Dac. 24. 30•·876·21 93.

Uud Iewing machln•. Priced
from •49.95 . The Fabric Shop,
Pom•ov. Ohio. C•ll 614·992·
2284.

Will hold untM Chrilllrnlll Norwegl.-. Elkhound puppi• UO.OO .
2 mele Beeglet running. 304·
4&amp;8· 1818 tf1• 7 :00PM.

Whirlpool dryer. Rul nice.
workl good. U6 . C•tl814-367·
0595. .

Pets for Sale

Tr .111~porl ollilll

Groom •nd Supply &amp;hop-Pet
Grooming. All br .. dl . .. All
ltyl•. l1m1 Pet Food Dell•.
Juli•W•bb Ph. 014·441·0231.

71

AKC Cock• Sp•nlel pups,
meiH· t150 , tamel•·t200.
T•ing dtpOeh. for Clwiltmes.
Coll814-381· 8890.

GowrnrMnt Seized Vehhi•
hom •100. Ford1, Meroed• •
corwtte1. Ch.vr•· Surplus.
luyors Guido. I I 105-887·
1000. ••· S·1018t.

WMI Hlghl..d Whit• T•nl••·
AkC puppl•. A Chrlltme1 Gift
..... wll loot. Coli 814-387.0824.

19B2 f'lr'mouth Art• K . nlee01185. 1181 Chwy Pickup
truc:O. V•l,outa, P8, PB. 01995 .
Coli 614-288-8522.

Reg. Ret Terri• puppi•. 171
e•ch. 1 male. 1 lemeleleft. C.U
814-448-1354.

1978 Ford LTD ll,euto., PS, Pl.
air, low miiMiil•· Clll61,·251·
1529.

2 Pure BlOOd Dachlt.md fem.te
pupt whh shot1. t 126 ..ch. C.ll
814-448-4048.

1981 Buick. 4 dr. On• own•·
81,000 mi-. AC . Excel. cond.
N - - AM-FM . • 1815. Coli
814-448-0122.

For Seit Dog hou .... 1'12 mil•
out Rt. 141. C.el 81,·448·
Ollil3, w_,ne ShoamM•.
AKC Minl•ture Schneuaer
puppy,fomolo.8-. ajd.&amp;olt•
PIPP•- S~oto. UOO. Colll14441-4810.
CFA Ragiltered Creem Point
Himeley1n lchMn, Mila Shott.
• wormed. UttertnMned. 1200.
Coli 814·388-8110.
D~rllng, cuddty
puppl•'-4 Chow.

b••

t•ddy

•so.Wond•·

Auto'• For Sale

1984 Ch.,y Cheve«e. Automellfilo AM redlo, •lmQ• new
thl. 18,000 mHa R•• • •
needl replectd. 11000. For
mor• lnforiMtlon ull Pllll' -'
114-MI·2342. May b• •en at
The G•IUpolla Deity Trlbun., 8·6
.....kdiiYS.

Ortgonwynd C•tt.erv Kannel.
CFA P•1ien •nd Slern. . kit·
ten1. AKC Chow puppiM . New
Hlm•lltfen tttt.na. ·e.u 814445-3844 ohor 7 PM.

1186 Ch011otto, 12800. 1978
Chwmo, t700. Colll14·218·
1270.

Ford Bronco Wagon. C•ll 81 4·
218-81118.

1---------1982 bl•ck TrllftloAM, loedH.

Yorkshire T•ri"•. 8 moa. old.

Low mil•· Excel. cand. C.ll
114-448-1711.

e14-445-7882.

1----------C•dtllec Sw Me. loMI~ . Fie. c•·

AKC Aeailtered B•11ett pypt. 8
-·old. S125. Coll814·887·
8758.

814-258·8819.
1.:.
_ __:__:._____

m .. e. AH ahota. 1226. Cell

No tua. Trad•dump truck,
AKC Chit.u.hua pupa. I wka. pickup. 1182 Etcort. *1200.
CoU _
114·448-7019.
old. Coll814-448-7785.
I_;_
_ _ __
1117 Ford St .. ton Wqon. 0•11
1181 Motor Hom•Onty 4 ,100
mii•Hke new Toyote 21 ft ..
euiOIMtlc tran1., all ..n contalned. b81h room wtth lhawer.
I . l•cooll ..ow,g•or~ark:
refrig .• roof air, ...,..., a. Will ...
outriGht ar 1Me1 AUTOMOBILE
IN ON A TRADE . Coli dov
114-441·7199, wenlnga 114·
448·9531 . Trnal when you
Wllnt to.

AKC reoiat ...ed mil• hegia. 7
'"onths old. Good pros~.
eso. 814·949· 2143.
Pure bred m•l• Pomerenlan.
Now 10ody. Cllll814-742-2810.

·67

Mu1ical
I nstru menta

1188 Red lroc C.m•o. heel.
cond. C•Uatter7 PM, 814-3792436.

Lowry Enoore orgen w/rn.gic
G•ni• Excel. cond. Compla
w/bwlch. Must Mil. 1350. C•ll
814-245·8117 . •

four sc rambled wo rds be-

Epllodoo

1981 Wurtiiaer organ. Model
545. noo.CIIII814-J92-20II4.
lndMdulll guhar l•eon•. b•
ginn•s.
gulllrlet. Bruic•dil Mulic. 114-441-0887,
Jaff W•m•IIIV inltructor. 814441-8077. Limited openings.

••lou•

Two Kimbell coniOie pi.,o•.
rapot. .sions. tah O'lef low
monthty peyemenu, clll 30._..
483-1153.

·

/', IIVI~,III:.k

61 Farm Equ1pment
UTILITY BLDG . &amp;PL. ,
30'1140' x8'8 " Cl•••nce, 1·
u·.a· track doOf, 1·3' walk
door: 14898 ERECTED . .Iron
Hor• Bldr•. Call814·332·9741
Collect.

For• grMtd••on•n•oru•d
c•, truckorwn, ••K•nnyBaae
•• Jim Mink Chevrolet Oidamobil&amp; 614·4•6·3672 or
304-n3-51:14 .

66 MF tractor. NICI. w/ MF
Dyne Bounce mowing m•chlne.
late model No. 12 hi¥' bal•.
U715. a..te model 12&amp;0 OUver
tractor PI 315 HP, 127115. New 3
pt. hitch wood 1p1tn•. e399.
Own• wll finence. C.U 1142e8-6522.

1981 8uldl; L• Sebre, one
own•. eJtc cond. t3,!500 .00.
304-878-3030, 875-4232 •nd
175-3431.
18BO Cutl•• Supr...,e. 1'78
M011nte Carlo. 1979 PontiK
ltm•ns, 1976 Pontiac Conn•
ville, 1979 Melibu Wqon. 30•·
878-7888.

F•rm Equlpm.m. ZelorTrectors.
How•rd Rota¥atorl, Bl•d•.
F•H• Ring~ . Buying old batter·
I•. Morril Equlpmtm, Rutland.
Ohio 814-742-2411.
.

1984 Buidl Sky Htwk. pb. ac,
em-fm, new brelc•. tlrat •
ellh&amp;~st. P.l . 41.000 mH•.
14.000 negotlllbl., Ptrtl sh•p
cw. 304-882-3281 .

1980 W208 CMe•rtlcul ..ild, 4
WD. loeded with cab, locat:eclln
Point Ple•a•nt, w.v • .
025,000.00 0 .8.0. 913·1162·
0084 Mond.., Wu Friday-.

'78 Monze, 4 spetd. 304· 8761374.
1818 Chrysler L••er .
15,000.00. phon• 304-875·
4480.

1182 Pont6ec Bonnwll&amp; big
V·8 •"gin .. tuto. PS, PB, PW. P
wnt1. 4 door. nice cl..., c•.
U.750.00. 304-878-8788.

Livestock

New .how •ddtawllh !)lid. helld
lUll, • br. .c .. ,.,, M•d• by
Sitver Royal. *1100 ..,.lu• now
1895. Coli 814-28o-ee 2 2 .

72

18 ft. OOOH neck 1tod. trail•.
•1000. Thorouthbrad r•c.
hor. .. All•g•. c.tle1•·. . • ·
2107 · doyo. 388 - 1804 avenlnga.

51 Household Goods

MOLLOHAN FURNITURE
..Complel:•lin•of e•pel. congo-J•m. vinyl• •nd c•Pt~t remt.
C•rp• In •oak onty. Vlny ..
ttertlng 11 13.11 Ytlrd In 1tock
only. Fr•• Qtlm ..... no job to
l•g• or ~m~~ll. Two loc.tiont.
1 22 Vi.,d Str•
Point Pl . . .nt, w.v•.
304-875-8498

U82 F· 1&amp;0 2 WD, ald . t,.ne.
Runs good. *29915. C•ll •ft• 7 ,
614-441-2019 .

10 Holttetn lprlnti•H•if. . due
to """''" in J•. • F•b·

•eoo

olllll. Coli 814-448-4053.

64

Upper Rlv•r Ao.t
O•lllpollt, Ohio
814 -448-7444.

"All I want Is a hacksaw so I can escape
from debtor's prison ... "

T ftJ c1c s f or Sa Ie

Hay 8t. G111in

BUDGET TRANSMISSION Ussd • r•bulit •" types .
W•nv-30 days. Prlc. tit •
up. Uaed &amp; rebuitt torgu•
(ll)fMf'l•rs. Sttnd_.d clutch•.
pr•tu,. pi••· • ttwow out
. be•lng. W•r11nty·12 moe. CVC
iolnt. .ll typoo. Coli 814-3792220 or 304-875-8788.
1917 Chwy Ven, 121500. 1972
Hi ,_ o\02 Big Lock Ch.,y
enfln., *1200. 410 Poatn1c
re• end. 111150. 814·892-7807.

•

-

'

SWEEPER end sewing m.chine
repelr, ,_,. .. end suppll•. Pick
up 1nd deltvery. Dwia V•cuum
Cluner, on• h•lf mil• up
Georg• Creek Ad. Ctll 814·
446-0214.
Pliming: ln••tor &amp; hterlor.
Free •timMM. C.ll 114-4488344.
CtrpMter WorJt.by hour or job.
Paneling. Plllnting. dry'MII , re·
modtllno. C1il Fred Cox. 514·
448-7943.

RON'S APPUANCE SERVICE,
haute cllll servicing GE, Hot
Point. wa1her1, dry•,. •nd
ltowo. 304-&amp;78-2398.

·a Crook ond Ch81a
7:05 (J) Anelr·Glfffllh
7:30 e C2J Family Feud

_.i

MAleE JIIE.

IIl NFl Mandoy Night

THe ONE • tfuN'*eP
pot.t.AR CtLL.

AN oFFE[&lt; -.......:::
~ - CAN 1i
~t: F'U$ E

E~Nif HAS

IN
tfiS $H0Ef

!

,•

8 Ill USA Todly
Ill •11:11 llll Jeopardy! Q

1D IDl M•A•S•H
dJ Crollflre

18 Night Court

a

VlciiOCountry

.....

1:00 (J) MOVIE: Onlonhead (NR)

\HAVE$

., .............

11. ·I'L

EEK &amp; MEEK
"THAT'S~

(1 :50)

• C2J

IIJ) ALF When ALF

lri8S to learn magic, he
accidentally makee Brian
disappear. Q
(I) NFL Moliday Night Match
Up Cleveland vs Miami
CIJ e Cll MecQrver
MacGyver drives In a
championship race and
confronla a racing enemy. 1;1
(l) llclnu from La lloheme:
A Pava10111 Cellbrltlan
(f) SCI,_ from Ll Boheme
1111 • C Newhart Stephanie
Iinde horseH attracted to a
~oung, virile stonemason. Q
m IDl MOVIE: Mirecle on
34th 8Wet (NR) (1 :36)
d) PtlmaNewa
® MOYIE: The Bmurfa and
tho Magic Flum1Gi(1:14)
ID Murder, She Wrote
aD Nelli- Now
B:DSID MOYIE: Amadeus (PG)

(2:38)
8:30 • C2J IIJ) The Hogan Family

Rl.JRTH &amp;ER ...

~

NFL Trivia Game
1111 • C Kate Allie Allie
and Bob find Hiwaii a
honeymoon hell; Kate Is
down In the dumps. Q
8:00. (21 IIJ) MOVIE: 'I'll h
Home for Chrittmas• NBC
Mondor Night at tho Movleo

a

~ CoUege Balketball

i
HA5 ANYONE E:VER
TOLD 'IOU THAT

WELL, YOU CAN TAKE
THS:iR WORD li::IR IT.

YOLJ'RE CUTE'?-

CIJ • Ill Monday Nfgllt
Football Q
11J (!) Fht Eden Look at
the creating of the
Medllerranean Sea and the
Ianda around lt. Q
1111
1121 Murphy Brown
Murphy realizes her time Is
running out ariQ decides to
hava a baby. C

e

iiJ LallY Klng.llvel
ID .,_ TIIH Wreollng

Ron' a Chimnt¥ Sweep, tpeciel
thru O.c•mber t39 .915 . Call
304-773-5348 "' n3-5uo.
Ronnie Nell.

8:30 Gil •1121 Dlllanlng women

G. Green ·~dson•ConcrMeend
Contrectlng. lntertor 1nd •••·
rlor painting. cerpent.,-y •l'ld
m•onry.
C•pteln Sten• CleW~.-s.gtlt 2
averege slu room• c•rpet
cl.nad t18.00 uc~. with thll
ad, 304-875-229&amp; .

Magazine
·
(I) E-lnment Tonight

7:35 (J) hnlord and Son

All.., Tree Trimming and Stump
Removal. Free Mtimstas . Call
304-878-7121.

Mary Jo's wlndlall
lnher~ance could make big
difference In her lila. 1;1
aD New Country
10:00 (I) 700 Club
I1J ®Newt
(!) Unclerllre
!Ill ell:ll Almoot Orown

11.-l l-

BARNEY
&amp;REAT N!WS,
SNUFFY!! ·

Suzie and Norman look

YI!P-·IT

SHORE WAS,

Plumbing
8t. Heating

PARSON!!

1 WON TWO

forward to a holiday visit with
old friends .
181Dl Iamey Millar
d) Evening Newt
121 Crook and Chaoe
10:30 11J l!alll!ncllra A continuing
chronicle of the lives of
resldantaln london's Easl
End. (0:30)
(!) Portrait of on Aullollc
Man
181Dl Odd Couple
Ill VklloCountry
1t :00 (I) R-inaton Steele A
Steele al Any Price

DOLLERS

LAST
NIGHT PLAYIN'
. POKER!!

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HE-TING
Cnr. Fourth end Pine
Gelllpolis. Ohio
Phon• 614-446·3888 or 614448·4477

Electrical
Refrigeration

• C2J IIIII .11:11 llll N_.
(I) All American Pulling

R811dential or commercial wiring. New Mrvic• or repeirs.
Ucan ..d electrician. Estimate
frM. Ridenour Elee1ricel. 304·
675-1788.

General Hauling

Bernice Bede Osol

'Your

I

cTT H

.

.

.

.

Campleoe the chuckle quoted
by fi!l1ng .in the missi ng words
you develop from st ep No. 3 below.

.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

@)

UNSCRAMB LE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

J &amp; J Weier S•vice. Swimming
pools, cisterns, well1. Ph. 114245-9286.
R • R Wet•r S•vice. Pool1,
cisterns, wells. lmmediate1,000 or 2 ,000 gallon• de!Nery,
C11l 304· 675·8370.

AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob. It) Don 't sit
around waiUng for what you want 10

Doc. 12, 1988
In the year ahead you will have greater
il)ltlalive and courage. This will enable

fr••

co,npetllive elements. Instead of taking

a back seat, go lor lhe gold.
LEO (Julr 23-Aug. 22) A partnership ar-

rangement shoukl work out rather sue·

you to make changes lhal will creale

their fullest advantage. You have all you

conditions more to your liking.

need for success.

you .

SAGITI ARIUS (Nov. 23-Doc. 21) In or-

ARIEl (March 21·Aprll 19) You may
soon gel Involved In a new prolecllhal
you'll find extremely s11muiatlng. How-

VIRGO (Aug. 23-hpl. 22) Mosl ol your

der to further your personal ambitions

today, you mlghl have to use bolder
tactics than usual. Be daring where nec1188ry, bul don't be reckless. Major
changes are ahead for Saglllarlusln the
· coming· year. Send for your AstraGraph predicllons today. Mall $1to As·
Box 91428. Cleveland, OH 44101·3428.

Mowrey' I Uphol• . . lng serving
trl countylre•23ye. .. Theb•t
In furn~ure uphol11ering. C..U
304 · 811 · 41 54 far
tstimat ...

come to you today. If lhings aren'l de·
veloplng fas1 enough to sul1 you, take
direct action .
PIICEB (Fto!&gt;- 20-Morclt 20) Much can
be done at this time to improve your po~
sillon In life If you use your talenls 10

CANCER (~uno · 21:Juty 22) Your old
fight and determination should surface
today In career siluallons lhal have

cesafully loday, provided your counter- '
psrt Is equally as bold and assertive as

tro-Graph , c/o this newspaper, P .O.

Upholstery

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
Alkali - Sandy - Range - Optics - SPEAKING
"You were on the phone for a long time and didn't say a
word,' ' commented lhe mom . " Yeah ," sighed the girl, " it was
my boyfriend, and we're not SPEAKI NG ."

Be sure to state your zodiac sign.
CAPRICORN (Die. 22.Jan. 18) Ar·
rangementa th•t are meaningful to you
financially ahould bt given top priority
1oday. You 're In a forlunale trend for
producing protttable bottom lines.

From Louisville, Kentucky (T)
(l) EallEncllra A continuing
chronicle of the IIvas of
residents In London's East
End. (0:30)
tiJ Sign Off

ever, you might not be able to give It the

?.£~~:.~~~~ ~~~~~~~i{~~~~;

property, you will derlva beneflls.
time and dedlcallon II deserves.
TAURUI (Aprii20-Mor 20) ll ·mighl be , UBRA (lepL 23-0ct. 23) You have a
eaoler 10 get a business associa1e to do . loyallrlend walling In the wings who lsln ·
a favor for you today rather than later In ' a pollllon to help you advance your In- ·
the week . Don't walt loo long btfore ' tereots today. It will bt up 10 you lo
make thla friend aware of your
making your request.
QEMIHI (May 21-Juno 20) Try to put . lnlenttone.
Into practice lmmedlalely new know!· ICOIIPIO (Oat.-· 22) Your finanedge you acquire at this time. Through cial prOiptCtllook extremely encourIts use you'U develop skills and sell-aa- aging at thle lima, 11peclally In altuslions where your primary concern Ia to,
suran~e more rapidly.
try to provide more lor thoee you love.

llllloloMyllne
® Talea from tho Darkoldl ,
II! Miami Ylcl
Ill You Can
a lltar
1t :30 • C2J 1111 Tonight Show

a.

1Illlport8Cenbtr

(l) European Joumol (0:30)

1111 USA Today

"'1wad Game
I f.'::n.:f'ras Lall
e!Dl

Night Pianist 16 paralyzed by
fear When a convict vows to

:=r~.JR~
Ill Amattcan Magazine
11:35(1) Nlllonat Geographic
· l!lqllonr Thll ball IICienllflc,
travat; aCIVentilre and" ·
hlatortcal documentlrles.
12:00 (I) P8per ChaN T1nure Ia

D8nlad
(I) Hlalorr of P10 Football

.(JJ-.

(I)
(l)llgnott

ill Magnum, P.L
•IDl Twltlglt1 z-

_1111 Naw~Nighl

r--------.,

BRIDGE

NORTH

11-IZ-81

+A K81
• AKI
• QJ 1071
+A

Sharing
the benefits

...

WEST

EAST

+10 53
• 762
• 85

By James J~coby
Avid tournament players are quick
to try out new ideas in bidding, but
what about social and rubber bridge
players? One reader writes that in his

. ,QJI08~

tA9632
+Q63

+ KI0952

SOUTH
+QJ9 762

•s s

game, any suggestions for new uses

IK

for bids are branded as " high fal uting
nonsense suitable only for duplica te
nuts.• Of course bridge is a fascinating
game even at the basic level. But suppose I can show the players in your
regular game a useful bi d they can un·
derstand and remember? Cut this arti·
cle out and show it to your friends.
The recommendation is called a
splinter bid, and here's how it works.
After you have opened the bidding and
your partner has responded, a double
jump in a new suit by you (the opener)
shows a singleton or a void in that suit.
It also shows four-card support for re·
sponder's suit and a hand strong
enough to insist upon playing game.
Obviously responder must bid at least
game in the agreed suit.
In today's deal the jump to four
clubs was a splinter bid. Although responder's hand was not powerful, he
knew that opener's hand was very

+JB71

l•••. I'

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: West

Wesl

Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass

Norlb

Baal

Soulb

It

I NT

Pass
Pass

Pass

Pass

s+

t+

s+

Pass
•splinter bid

Opening lead: ., 7

strong, so along the way to four spades
it cost him nothing to show that he bad
a uselul card In the opener's diamond
suit. That was all that was needed for
North to ask for aces and bid the cold

small slam .

CROSSWORD
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

2 Anvil sitp'l
B eseec h
4 Stitch

I
4

3

Ohst'rv&lt;'
Caplurl'
7 F'kl.iona l
Sll'uth
8 Uussian
Sf' a
10 Progrl'ss
display
11 Put
togeth e r,

5 Cnmmon

vrrh fnr111
6 Stadium

"·

e mployee
7 nurn
9 Wollish
10 Top off
12 Com edian,

B8 a tent
13 Swiss river
14 Lab animal

-

Lee

Yesterday's Answer

15 C lassilied
· n otices
16 Spirt&gt;
18 Ipswich,
ornamPnt
e.g.
17 Go before 21 Target
19 60 sees.
for Magi c
20 - Cruces ,
Johnson
N . Mex.
22 Vamoose!
21 Aaron of
23 Drive

base hall

•

24

KiiiPr
' snake
25 "The Worker"
(1962 film)
27 After ess
29 Fixed look
30 Incense d

31
32
37

Garfield
and
others
United
Turhan

39 Actor
Scheider

22 Youn11ste r
25 It doesn't
grow on
sprees?
26 Stuff
27 Uncle (Sp .)
28 lll'cay
29 Pacino

lilm

33 Likely
34 Tsia , e .g .
35 Managed

36 Aust.
soprano

38 Jalopy
40 Certain
look

41 Great deal
42 N .Y. dty
43 Watrh
DOWN

1

I Partici-

pate

12112

DAILY CRYPrOQUOTES- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

181Dl Low Connection

'Birthday

w.,

Dillard
Service: Pools,
Cistern,, Wells. Delivery Any·
t im•. c.n 114·4•1· 7404--No
Sund.y ellis.

Co•l •nd ~llm•tone dethtery
phone 30'·175-3190 .
·

304-871-

II! Mlolml Vice

Home
Improvement•

1t84 Chwy C·30, V·l, PB. Pl.
4 spc:l., Q ,OOO •ct•l mH•.
11700. Colll14-448-4083 .

I t87 GMC pick up 8 -18 whh
topp•r. 24 , 000 mll••·
18 , 000 .00. Coli 304-871 ·
1297.

(l) (JJ MICNoll/lehrer
N-Hour (1 :00)
IIAI e1121 9J Wheel ot
Fortune Q
181Dl Three'• Company

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFINCI
Unconcldon• Ufttlme gu.,entae. Loc.a ref•tncat turnilhlld.
Frt• ntlmllet. C1ll collect
1·114-237·0488, d.,- or night.
RogersB•sem•n1
Waterproofing.

87

.

8

IIl SportaCanter

ALLEY OOP

W•n•rson · s W•t•r H•uling.
r-om~bl• ratn, volum• dit·
counts. 2,000 to 4,000 cepaehy. cistern•. ~~~. wellt, etc.
304-&amp;78 -2919.

1981 four whMI drkra D•teun
pick-up. Runoaood,- lOUgh.
1178. Colli14-882·ZU8 oftor
&amp;:00 p.m .

.

Ill • Cll Current Affair

St:rmt·~,

86

I

VIew

. POOR IOYS 'IIRES
Moving to Rt. 31 . ...,.d•ton.
W.V1. Into new bldg, bv Dec.
Ulh. Coli 304-675-3331.

8t.

HA

lhe cost of living is
h igh," said one old gent , "bul
I for one think it~s - it. "

f-__,:1:;.
5 ..:,1;....::.-rl.....:,.1_:_:_,1,..-l Q

a Sbtr

1111 Moneyttne

1978 Ford 4x4 short bed ,t.p
•Ide. Too meny • t... to lial.
Edra sh•p. t3100 ftrm. C.ll
befafe 2 PM or .rter 10 PM
514-448-8124 .

Ground 1h.. •e.oo I* 100 lb,
tlfiW e1 .10, Alfelft 13.00,
028.00, 8 :00 til
Morgen• Wa~
38, Pliny, W.Vo.

You Can h

IIJ Cheero

8'\

r

e C2J PM MagaZine

.Auto Parts
Accessories

82

"Sur~

---------,

6:35()). to 5
7:00 (}) Our Houae A Point of

8t.

1171 Ford Futura. 6 cyl.. naw
...die! lirM, eood condition.
1450. CAll 514-986-4473.

..... No rud. 114-182-2440.

. I' I I I . =

1111 ShowBI&amp; Todiy
i1J WKRP Clnclnotl

At 311 Cycle S•l•. Southeid'
WV. Ph. 1 · 304·8715· 4130. Now
Selling New Pol•ll 4 whHI•s
•nd uead 4 whMI••·

Rotlry or Clbl• tool drilling.
Mottwell•compl•.ctum•dev.
Pump nt• 1nd service. 304-696-3802

1an Ford LTD . Ukanewluth•

~- l. . .,.;. r. ;:u;. .:s: .· .:-E.:;R~~ ;

(l) Body Electrtc
(JJ Nightly Bualneea Report
IIAI 181121 CBB Newt
181Dl 'IIIKRP In Cincinnati

a

Fetty Tr•• Trimming. stump
rtmOVIII . C•ll 304·875·1331 .

19n Cher.~y Monte Ceria. Good
condhkln. seoo. Call 814-742·
2237.

.:;-HI

3

J

Monster
181Dl Heppr Dar•
g Facto of l.lfe
II! FBI Albin
llll;andengo
8:05 (J) One Day at a Time.
1:30 8 C2J 9J NBC Nlghdy Newt

~ BportraiU (A)
Ill e Ill AIC Newo 1;1

1981 Hond•.260 4 TrtJI , h•dtv
utrtd. l•t off•. C•ll 114 -4461 1 20 w..-ings.

81

2

II! Cartoon Exprtee

1881 01• Om,&amp; Crulee co•
trot. tit wheal, M·FM ttereo.
814-148-2585.

1978 Ford Pinto. 2 door, nice,
C•ll 11.-·985-3934 ...,., 8 :00
p.m.

I Mill Supplll'c

63

M1: r 1: h~ nli 1s1:

TAILGATE PART'(?

Motorcycles

1981 Olclo.-o Coho 88.
Royal• BrouQhwn. Auto. Good
condition. f1 410. 11 4·141·
2585.

1971 Subutben 464. Auto.
1850. 1970 El Comlno SS .
13000. Coii814-949-3003.

For lease

Commarcill Building for INte.
Pt. Ple . .nt. ~Ill 304-875·
6104.

~ow COMe: we:
NEvER !-lAve: A

TORRAY

I I' I I I
'"
r.-J-r(--;j.,..::o+-t -~J ~

II5J News

1971 GMC , 4x4CRd•slc. 400
CID engine. TS, TB. •ir. PW. P
lockl, eutomatic nMCII t ... ns,
workl•nd boct( work. 1760,.00 .
.
304-878-1259.

76

I

IIl Sportalook
(!) Power of Choice 1;1

7888 .

74

low to form four simple word5

•

1:00 (}) Bonenza: The loot

1187 Ch.,y Altro Van, full
loeded. bc.l. cond. C•ll •f1•r 5
PM, 114·288· 1091.

RON'S T•levlslon Service.
Hou• c•• on RCA , Oueur,
GE. Spedlflng In Zenith. Cell
304-576-2398 or 514-4462454.

1180 Volkswlgon Duh• di•
1el, good cond, t1,000.00 .
:104-171-2135.

Hide • Wllf bed .~.. jult like
n.w, wry good cond. *150.00,
304-871-8129.

&amp; 4 W .O .

1---------1tet Chrvol• lmporlol. 1988

1185 Oodg• 100 com..rtible.
03,800.00. :104-875·4480 .

49

Vans

1977ChwyC.m..-Van, *850.
1173· 01.... 98. 1375. C•ll
814-317·015•1 .

ful Clvlotmoo gift. Coli 814448-9382.

•iz••·

Concrete blodul· all
yerd
or delivery. Mil on Mnd. Gallipolis Blade Co .. 123¥.1 Pine St .•
G111ipolie. Ohto. Call 814-446·
27e3.

C•c.t• chfllt, d•kl. Cr•danze.
wood dinnette1, full white po•
ter bed. 4 pc. bedroom tuite.
complece line of beds. bedding
twin-full &amp; king, day bed,
hid .... l ·bad. ch•tl. drM .... s,
aof•. chein. redln••· M•nv
more items. PI cleans Uted Furni·
ture. 304 -676-1460. evneings
614-38e-9773.

73

MON .. DEC.12
EVENING

1978 J•ep Chwokee C_hiaf.
1177 Ch., F·W·D •uto, 1978
Dactge 318 . •uto. 30,-676-

dour. 304-937-

Snow aWs 1 .,.Jr K-2, 180's.
with size 10 mensboota• pol•.
1 Pr. K2 160' 1. with tile B
wom- boots &amp;: pal•. 304·
675-5908 .

Moving S•le-12· 8 thru 12-12.
N•w range. W &amp; D .. liv . 6
bedroom tuitea. gun1, tools,
llldden. C•ll814-266 ·6666.

.•

1178 Ch•rol.r: Sup side. 400
molor, •uto .. PS, PB, AM -FM·
Ca111ttt. Runs P&lt;:al. 11400.
Cell 114·388-9107 •fter 5:30
PM.

WOIO
T~~~:t:~T S©"R~lv\-~t!fS®
GUll
Edited b)' CLAY R. POLLAN_..;__ _ _ __
0 Rearrang e letters of the

(JJ Df. Who The Time

Elec. trllln • · Awi 2100 &amp; 115
uem•. H•· Man toys. elec. cord
org•. C•ll 614-258·13B5.

1416 E1stern Aw.
4 drawer ehMt, S48. 6 dr•wer
chMI, t54.95. 5 pc. wooden
dinnette MtL 1189.95.

~S. l!UNAPPLe!

Television
, Viewing

1987 Ch.,y Attro Van . 9.800
·mil•. t12 .IOO. Cell 114-448·
1420.

~;;~=~==~:;;::;=:-r-::::::::::j

J. S fURNITURE

IT'S 6Rl!TIJ5, C,LAOf5 ...
'(iUATfOW:;;

FirM"QOd for •I• t30 pickup,
deiW•r•. e25 U·hMII. RacOOGn
Rd. C11l 814·441-4982.

Sok»ft•.
like niW',t700
•II anachment• included.
firm. 1
Kor•-• hooror. "'eoi. cond.
090 . Coli 814 -448 - 1120
•venlnge,.

V•lltr Furniture
New end uaed furniture Md
•pplic•nc•• · c.n 614-4467672. Houu9-6 .

... BiJf l.Ef Mf. '51'E'AK 1D

8 C2J Ill Ill Ill IIAI Ill Q2l

191n. calor tv•nd 13 in. color tv.
Good cond. Good piature. C•ll
814-448-7453.

90 Deys .. me e1 c•h wieh
-..proved credit. 3 Mil• out
Bui•HI• Ad. Open S.m to 15pm
Mon. thru Set. Ph. 814·4480322.

for Sale

1974fi.ardwlndowwn. 2uMI,
302 V-8 enQin., eutom~~tic '
tr•ns, AC. E 260. 88,000 •ctual
mHw. Coli 814-258-8539 .

Beech Slrt-'o Middleport. Ohio,
2 b•ckoom furnl1had epartment,
utilili• .,-ld. ret•.nc•. Phone
304-8e2-2688.

Nice hou• • e•ev• on St. Rt.
7. UIO a mo. PINie c•l
114-448-0038.

1811 or 218-8810.

'

1 bedroom •pt. in Syracuse.
t126. p• month plus deposh .
Cell 61 4 -992·6732 or 614992-3812.

SHADY LAWN APT&amp;· 729
Stoond Ave. Furnl1had eflld..,...
ol .. IUirt&amp;ng at •175 1 mo.
Including Wilt• &amp; g•bave.
Sing!• •duM• only , C•ll 814·
448·4807 or 446-2602.

•

Apartment
for Rant

SIMPing rooms with cooking.
Also Trail• space. All hook· ups.
CAll after 2p.m. 304-7736861 . M•son WV.

3 BA .. AC, c•pet. 'pool. e••ge.
2 fireplac•. fern:• Good loc•
lion. Call A· 1 R..l Est.. e
Broker. 304-875·6104.
Plent1 Sub.· 4 BR ., ful b••
ment. c.-p-. gM r•nge. city
schools. Adutt• only· on• child.
No pet1. Dep. &amp; Rsf. raquir~.
S326 P• mo. C1l1 814-446·
0276 •f1• &amp; PM. weakands
•nytime.

44

lAYNE 'S FURNITURE

TN cks

Sentinei- Page-11

The

Whelch.W•n.w or u..t. 3
whMied eledric scoot••· C1ll
Roe•• Mobilty collect, 1 ·11"'
870-9181 .
. .

WHITE'S METAL DETECTORS
Ron Allllon, 1210 Second Ave.
Oollipol;o, OH 614-448-4335.

11 ·1l

Professional
Services

10n1. C.ll 814-441·97B7
448-4428.

.: 'fof:
''I'

boot1- f36 .
&amp; up, lSI ... &amp;.

72

1983 Ford"fteng• v-e. 4 spd.
ovardrtva, AC. topper. A-1 condillon. t2398 . Coli 514-2588889 .

54 Misc. Merchandise

. or

f..,..ic. -'top. Aleo

23

W•c.rn

WIN'~ I 118

Poma oy- Middleport, Ohio

Mondli'y, December 12. 1988

KIT N' CARLYLE® bY larry Wrlpt

Antiques

compl•• line of ulltd furnfture.

in

Tabt• and ditpl~

oil!

Buy or Sllll. AN• ine Antiques,
1124 E. Main Strel!lll, Pom•oy.
Hour1: M,T,W 101.m. to8p.m.,
Sund., 1 to &amp;p.m. 614·912·
2526.

FURNITURE 82

Qt;ye S~.. Gallipolis.

Business
Opportunity

inveatigM~ Jhe off

• ,.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation or the words a'i'e all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES
12-12

EVSTYLSTE
S V H T

G H V S

THHVHE
'J L H Y 0 T E

BT

YKMF
-

K .

S MN
M

WTMHF

S M F

G H VS

.E

K L E

WVFAGTWWVB

· lesterdar's Cryptoquote: I WONT EAT ANY'1111NG
THAT HAS INTELLIGENT IJFE BUT I'D GLADLY EAT A
NETWORK EXECUTIVE OR A POLITICIAN. - MARTY
FELDMAN

.

'·

�Monday. December 12, 1988

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Page 12 The Daily Sentinel

.--- Local news briefs ...
Contlnued from page 1
In another weekend accident, pollee said a vehicle driven by
Gerl S. Matson, Pomeroy, and stopped at the traffic llght on W.
Main St. , was struck in the rear by a vehicle driven by Sandra K.
Scott, Cheshire. There were llght damages to the Matson
vehicle and moderate to the Scon vehicle. No charges were
flied.

EMS has 13 weekend calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 13 calls
over the weekend, 11 on Saturday and lwo on Sunday . .
Saturday at 12:56 a.m., Pomeroy to Five Points ror ·Karl
Krautter to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 1:49
a.m. to Railr0ad St. for Lewis Taylor to Veterans Memorial
Hospital: Pomeroy at 8:57a.m. to Rose Hill for Don Betztng to
Veterans Memorial »ospttal; Racine at 9: 59.a.m. to Pine Grove
Road for Go ldie Roberts to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 12:54 p.m. to Dock St. for Helen Boyd who was
treated but not transported: Pomeroy at 3:20p.m. to East Main
St . for Char lotte Jacks to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 5:14 p.m . to a trailer fire at the Howard Lockhart
res idence on Landaker Road: Pomeroy was called back to the
Lockhart residence at 7:15 p.m.; Syracuse at 6:18 p.m. to
Chester lor Murl Ours to Holzer Medical Center: Chester Fire
Department, Tuppers Plains and Pomeroy at 7: 23 p.m.
transported Leona and Ray bond Wallace !rom an auto accident
on on State Route 7: Rutland at 10:05 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. 1
lor Douglas Kitchen toO'Bienness Memorial Hospital; Rutland
at 10:56 p.m. to Meigs Mine No. lforEtson Munn toO'Bienness
Memorial Hospital.
Sunday a t 10:58 a .m ., Pomeroy to Pomer!&gt;Y Cliffs Apts. for
Evely n Spencer to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
12:44 p.m . to Ra ilroad St. for Lewis Taylor to Veterans
Memorial Hospital.

Plan dinner party

Sen ..Byrd... _c_on_u_n_ue_d_f_ro_m_p_a_g_e_1--~------------strong posture while we talk," Byrd
said.
The senator, who recently won
another six-year term in the Con'
gress, said he felt by moving to the

Hospital news ·
Veterans Memorial
Sat~rday Admissions- Goldie
Roberts, Rac ine; Charlotte
·Jacks. Langsvllle; Leona Wal·
, lace, Pomeroy.
Sa turda y Discharges
Carden Randolph , Jessie Jarrell,
Elza La rkins , Charles Blake.
Sunday Admissions - Flossie
Moeller, Gallipolis: Orner Dal·
ley, Racine; Evelyn Spencer,
Pomeroy; Lewis Taylor ,
Middleport .
Sunday Discharges - Addle
Cummins .

Racine American Legflln AuxIliary wlll have a Christma s
dinner and party on Thursday. at
6 p.m., at the Racine United
Methodist Church basement.
There wm be a gift exchange.

appropriations
committee.
he build the various ARC highway
would be able to help West Virginia corridors in the state, Byrd said in·
fusion of funds to revive the commore than as Majority Leader.
· "I will have something to say ' mission is necessary.
"I plan to suppot:t legislation to
about projects that will have impact
on !he state's economy, busi ness, do just thaL I think it is a must to
education, transportation and olher our economy and to have better
transportation," Byrd said. .
.
matters," Byro said.
1ssue
facmg
Con·
But
the
major
The ARC is one or Byrd's top
priority items in the next Congress. gress this coming year, Byrd said.
Pointing out that ''$15 million here wiU be the deficit and how 10 cor·
and $3 million !here" isn 'I going 10 reel the problem.

Ohio Lottery

•

12 more
·days 'til

Daily Number
467
Pick4
5076

Christmas

Meeting tonight
Racine Board ol Public Affairs
will meet tonight (Monday),. 7
p.m .. at Star Mlll Park._

•
.
.
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday. December 13, 1988

Co ntinued from page 1
there, as well as in Maryiand,
Delaware. Washington, D.C . and
the Vtrgtnlas.
"This is pretty much the
season's first cold wave caused
by arctic air from Canada
pushing across the United
States." NWS meteorologist
Hugh Crowther said.

Survivors Include her husband,
daughter of the late Ira Brawley
Frost, Thornville; two
Kenneth
and Bessie Alice Brawley. of
sisters,
Ada
Hoce, Pomeroy . and
Charlotte M. Jones, 65, Akron, Coolville, who survives. She was
Ruth
Thivener,
of Gallipolis; one
Ohio died Saturday, Dec. I 0, 1988, employed by the K-Mart Corpobrother, Donald West, cH Somin th~ Akron City Hospital.
ration, Vienna, W.Va., and was a
merville, S.C.; and several n)e·
Born March 25, 1923 in Mason, member . of the Grace United
ces and nephews.
she was a daughter or the late John Brethren Church.
She was preceded In death by
H. and Minnie R. Vandall Ord.
In addition to her mother, she
her parents, three sisters and one
Also preceding her in death was is survived by her husband, Dale
brother.
her husband, Otho.
Rockhold; two daughters, An·
Services wtll be Tuesday, 2
Surviving are a son and drea and Heat her; and one son.
p.m., at the Sheridan Funeral
daughter-in-Jaw, Doyle W. and Walter, all at home; flve sisters,
Home, 222 South Columbus St.,
Shirley Jones, Stow, Oh10; three Mrs. Junior (Irene ) Blake, of
Lancaster. with Rev. Jerry Neal
brothers, Wilbur H. and John A. Reedsville, Mrs. Jim (Kathy)
officiating. Burial will be in St .
Ord both or Akron, Doyle W. Ord, Bobo, of Missouri, Mrs. Bob
Mary's Cemetery, Lancaster.
Ma;on:
several
nieces and (Patty) Franklin, of Ashley,
Friends may call at the funeral
nephews.
Mrs. Charles (Terril Modesitt
home on Monday from 7 to 9 and
The fun eral will be Wednesday and Mrs. Roy (Donna) Welch.
at 10 a.m. at the Foglesong Funeral both of Coolville; and three Tuesday until the time of
Home with the Rev. Andrew M. brothers, Walter Brawley, of services.
Hoover officiating. Butial will fol- Dayton. and David and Danny
low in the Suncrcst Cemetery, Point Brawley, both of Coolville.
Pleasant.
·Besides her father. she was
Friends may call Tuesday, from 7 preceded in death by a sister,
Dally stock prices
to 9 p.m.utthe funeral home.
Nancy Fleming.
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Services
will
be
Wednesday.
1
Bryce
and Mark Smith
Chlorus Grimm
p.m.. at th'e White Funeral
ol Blunt, Ellis &amp; Loewl
Chlorus Grimm. 85. Route 2. !;lome, with Rev. George Horner
Am Electric Power. ............ 27 14
Racine. a retired Meigs County officiating. Burial will be In the
AT&amp;T, ................................ 29 o/s
school teacher. died Sunday at Coolvllle Cemetery. Friends
Ashland Oil ...... ..... ............. 33~
Veterans Memorial Hospital fol· may call at the funeral home
after 3:30p.m. on Tuesday.·
· Bob Evans .......... .. ...... ..... ... 15 ~
lowing an extended illness. ·
Charming Shoppes ...... ........ 12 %
Mrs . Grimm was born May 16,
Bernice Frost
-City Holding Co .................. 31~
1903 in Racine, a daughter of the
Federal Mogui.. ................. .48'A,
late Oliver and Louellen Priddy
Meigs
County
native,
Bernice
Goodyear
T&amp;R ............. ...... 47o/s
Coe. She wa s a gracjuate of Rio.
M.
Frost,
81.
of7820Pieasantvtlle
Heck's
............
...... .......... ..... %
Grande College and also took
Road,
Thornville,
formerly
of
Key
Centurion
....................
15~
post graduate courses at Ohio
Mt.
Vernon,
died
Saturday
morn·
Lands'
End
........................
;-271,1,
University over the years. She
Limited Inc ......................... 27
was a graduate of Racine High lng at the Heartland-Fairfield
Care
Center,
Thornville,
Multimedia Inc .. .'................ 70~
School and a member of the
Born
May
30,
1907
In
Meigs
Rax Restaurants .................. 3~
Letart Falls United Methodist
County,
she
was
a
daughter
of
Robbins &amp; Myers ................ 12V.
Chu rch. She belonged to the
Mr
.
and
Mrs.
W.T.
West
and
was
Shoney's
Inc ........................ 7%
Racine Chapter 134, Order o!
member
of
the
Amerian
Legion
a
Wendy's Intl.. ............... ... .... 53f.
Eastern Sta r; the Bend o' the
Worthington Ind ................. . 22
River Carden Club and the Auxiliary, Harrisburg, Pa.
United Methodist Church
Women.
Surviving are her husband,
Bert L. Grimm, Pomeroy; two
sons, Robert Grimm, Columbus,
and Ru ssell Crimm, St. Clalrs·
v ille; a s isier, Dorothy McKenzie, Racine: five grandchildren,
six great -grandchildren and several nieces a nd nephews.
Besides her parents, she was
COMPLETE PAYROLL
preceded In death by seven
brothers. three sisters, and an
PROCESSING AND
infant son, Freddy .
Services will be held at 10:30
PAYROLL CHECK
a.m. Tuesday at the Ewing
F unera l Home with the Rev.
WRinNG.
Roger Grace officiating. Burial
OIL A. IEILII Ill, CPA
will be in Letart Falls Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 7 to 9 this evening.
Friends may make contributions ·
to the Letart Falls Cemetery In
992-7270
her memory .

Charlotte Jones

:-1·

Stocks

PHARMACY IN NEW LOCATION- Rite Aid
Pharmacy has moved Into this brand new
quarters onE . Main St. and Is open lor business In
the new location. The store had been located onE.

'

By CHARLES A. MASON
•· '()VPStafr
.

~. ..

POINT PLEASANT, W.Va.
Kaiser's Ravenswood Works will
be sold. The buyer is a new com·
pany 10 be formed by an apparent
domestic · investment
group,
officials announced today.
The
aluminum
production
facility employs about 400 Mason
countians as weU as a large number
or Meigs and Gallia countians. The
sale is expected to be concluded
during the first quarter or next year,

SILVER

ICICLES

CHRISTIIAS CARDS
#

IIIZKI'-tw:KABE OF If
WITH EIMUJI'ES

tw:KABE OF

.

MEIIIEII

OLD

BRACER

OR SPORT llUC
3.5 OZ. SIZE OR

BRUT 33
SI'Wif.DII
UITIDII
3.5 oz. llllE

AR'EBSHAVE
umtJII
liES., LEATHEII OR

CONDITIOffiNO
4.25 OZ. SIZE

/~

611 East Main StrHt, Pomeroy, Ohio

liU·•

ALL
MANUFACTURERS'
COUPONS

4 P.M. to 11 P.M.
Every Monday and

Two injured in Monday wreck

POPCORN·
4.5 OZ. BAG

LARGE PEPPERONI
and CHEESE PIZZA

75&lt;

$499

SAVINGS EVERY
DAY IN EVERY
AISLE AT RITE AID!

flflltEI EFFECTWE DEC. IZ 7111111 11ft II, lUI • WE RUEIFE THE - T TO 1/IIIT GUAinTIE$ • lOT REmflllll FOR Tmlf/IANICAI. E/1110111

Additional topping 90'

Jlece•sary)
IPICIC UP1or EAT Ill ONLY ON THIS OFFER I
(No Coupon

INO OIHII DISCOUNTS APPLY)

RITE

'

CALL 992·2228 or 992-9922

MAIN STREET
PIZZA
992 •2228
Pomeroy
216 East •1•
992-9922
t

L ft

We Are Your Hometown Place
t l tf t. tf t t t Jt t I L1st t d t I Lf t l
.

.

t

t

(

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

~
.,

'.

...

'

about the agreement to sell Mondiy
morning: A meeting is seheduled
ror Dec. 20 between the union
officials and the International
United Steelworkers officials. he
said.
There are 2,000 members of
USW Local No. 5668.
Stidham said the sale could put
on hold Kaiser's plans in February
10 open another potline at the smcl·
ter, causing the possible loss of 100
new jobs. There are currently three
potlines runninJt at the smelter and
Continued on page 10

Study reveals Ohio's poverty
rate has fallen to 13.6 %

Local news briefs-.. . .

HEll'S

Tuesday In December

.

Allee Diane Rockhold, 37, of
Reedsvtlle, died ,Sunday at
Camden-Clark Memdrtal Hospl·
tal, Parkersburg, W.Va. ,afteran
extended tllness.
Born Feb. 11, 1951, she was a

I\~ i i #I ACCEPTS

Customer Appreciation
Christmas Special.

officials said.
"It (the sale) is consistent with
our strategy of setling selec~ assets while, 81 the same ume,
preserving our competitive role as a
fully
· integrated
aluminum
producer," said James S. Pasman
Jr., Kaiser Aluminum chairman and
chief executive officer.
"Next week we are 10 meet with
. representatives of .the new ovmer·
ship," said Dan Sudham, pres1dent
of the United Steelworkers Local
No. 5668 in Ravenswood. The
union official said he first heard

CLEVELAND (UP!)- Ohio's only 10.9 percent In 1980 and 9.8
percent tn 1970.
poverty rate has fallen for a
A family of four with an Income
fourth-consecu tlve year, but
there are sttll 285,472 more of less than $11,650 a year.
Ohioans tn poverty now than including cash !lnanclal assist·
there were In 1980, a study ance but excluding non-cash
financial assistance such as food
released Monday said.
Ohio Poverty Indicators, pub- stamps, Is con£ldered to be living
lished by the Council for Eco- In poverty. A single person with
. nomic Opportunities !n Greater an income of less than $5,770 Is In
Cleveland, said 1,464,647 poverty . ··
Twenty-one counties, lnclud·
Ohioans, or 13.6 percent of the
population; are living tn pov{&gt;rty. tng 19 along or near the Ohio
Ohio's poverty rate was 13.8 River from near Steubenville to
percent In 1987, 14 percent In 1986, east of Cincinnati, have a poverty
14.2 percent In 1985 and 14.6 rate of at least20 percent. Twelve
percent In 1984, the study said. · counties have rates In the 15
However, the poverty rate was percent to 20 percent range, and

KElLER BUSINESS SERVICES

Ali~ Rockhold

Main St., In what Is known tn the community as the
Stark Building. A grand opening celebration will
be held later.

Kaiser Ravenswood Works to
be sold to investment group

ISN'T IT
f'B0Ul
TIME.

Clara Bell Thomas, 78, Route l,
Ches hire, died Sunday at Vete·
rans Memorial Hospital.
A homemaker, Mrs. Thpmas
was born March 18, 1910 In
Middleport, a daughter of the
late George and Julia B. Bodkins.
:'ihe was a member of the
Ches hire Baptist Church.
Survivi ng are a daughter and
so n-in-law , Haroldlne and John
Oiler, Hollywood, Fla.,; four
grandsons, Johnny, Joey and
' ' Tommy Oiler, all of Hollywood,
Fla. , and Michael Beaver.
Cheshire.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband. Harold Eugene Thomas; a
daughter, Myrna Beaver, a sis·
ter and a brother.
Memorial services wlll be held
at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Cheshire
Baptist Church with Mr. Stewart
Jamison oftlciatlng. Burial will
be tn Gravel Hill Cemetery at
Cheshire. The Rawlings-CoatsBlower Funeral Home Is In
charge of arrangements.

1 Section, 10 Pages

26 Cents

A Muttimedia Inc. Newtp8ptr

Funds approved for
continued taxi senrice

Record...

-----Area deaths-----

Clara Thomas

Partly cloudy tonight. Low
In mid 20s. Wednesday , partly
cloudy. Highs In mid 40s.

Both drivers were Injured In a two car accident at 12:50 p.m.
Monday at the junction of CR. 25 and CR. 26, near Pomeroy tn
Sutton Township.
Troopers said a car driven by Tracy Green, 18, Rutland,
slowed for a right turn and her car was hit from behind by
another vehicle driven by Debra Burke. 30, Pomeroy. Damage
was moderate to both vehicles.
Both drivers suffered minor vltslble injuries and were taken
to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
The patrol cited Burke for failure to stop within the as sured
distance.

Gallia judge denies request
Gallia County Common Pleas Court Judge Donald A. Cox
dented a request Monday for a preliminary injunction In the
Trt-Star Cleaners case filed by Dave · Vance, 750 First Ave.,
Gallipolis against Ellis Hunt, 1034 Second Ave., Gallipolis.
Vance sued Hunt and another defendant, John Doe, doing
business as Mr. Vacuum, W.Va., for $200,000 damages jointly
permanent
and severally, and sought preliminary and
lnj.t'nctlons to stop Hunt from advertising Trl-Star vacuum
cleaners.
Vance, a representative of Trt-Star Cleaners for the Calltpolts
area, flied the suit, alleging that Hunt was advertising a
Continued on page 10
·
·

55 counties have poverty rates
below 15 percent.
The lowest two poverty rates of
4.4 percent tn GeaugaCounty and
4.6 percent In Lake County are
just to the east of Clevelimd.
Th~ highest rates of 35.2
percent tn Adams County and
30.9 percent In Vinton County are
tn southern Ohio.
"There was very different
regional performance across the
state," said George Zeller, sen tor
researcher for the group. "We' re
not only measuring poverty, but
we' re also measuring economic
performances.
"The Ohio Valley has been
clobbered. In a lot of those areas,
the poverty has doubled and In
Harrison County (In eastern
Ohio) , the poverty has nearly
tripled In the 1980s."
Poverty has been less severe In
·central Ohio and In the !arm
' areas of northwest Ohio, he said.
Twelve counties have seen
Increases of at least 75 percent
since 1980, and eight of those
counties -Columbiana, Carroll.
Jefferson, Harrison, Guernsey,
Belmont, Noble and Moriroe are clustered together In eastern
Ohio.
The other counties with Increases of at least 75 percent are
Vinton and Gallla in southern
Ohlo, Hardin In northwest Ohio
and Ashtabula In extreme , northeast Ohio.
During the same elght·year
period, 11 Ohio counties have
experienced a de&lt;;rease In poverty. Seven of the counties Franklin, Madison, Union,
Champaign, Clark, Greene and
Warren - are clustered from
Columbus west and southwest.
The others are Wood, Erie and
Wyandot In northwest Ohio and
Portage just east of Akron.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Stall
State and federal funds total·
ing $152,278 have been approved
for continuance of the
Middleport-Pomeroy taxi ser·
vice operations In 1989.
This was reported Monday
night by Middleport Mayor Fred
Hoffman when Middleport Vtl·
!age Council met In regular
·
sessiori.
Mayor Hoffman read a com·
munlcat ion from the Ohio De·
partment of Transportation indl·
eating that . $46,186 In federal
funds and $68,067 in state funds
have been approved by the Ohio
Department of Transportation
and the Urban-rural Mass Trans·
portation System for contlnu·
ance of the system which is
operating tn Meigs County under
the name of the Blue Streak Cab
Co.
In addition, Mayor Hoffman
reported that $38,025 was ap·
proved earlier for the elderly and
handicapped to bring the grand
total funds alloted to the $152,000
figure.
Council approved a fire con·
tract with Cheshire Township for
1989. The contri'ct provides for a
flat payment of $4,650 for the
year plus $75 for each call.
Council also approved the report
of Mayor Hoffman showing re·
celpts of $3,898 In fines and fees
for the month of November. _
A list of village workers to
receive Christmas bonuses was
approved and Clerk-Treasurer
Jon Buck was au thorlzed to make
necessary lund transfers within
the budget to balance accounts
by the end of the year.

Mayor Hoffman read a letter ary. Mayor Hoffll)an reported
from the Attorney General's that approximately 150 other
office calling for a meeting for communlltes In Ohio were also
Dec. 16 at 10 a.m . because the cited for not complying by the
· village was not In compliance July 1 date.
The mayor reported that no
with EPA requirements In re·
word
has been received from the
gard to the sewage disposal
system last July 1. However, state on the town's applications
Mayor Hoffman pointed out that for funds to provide Improvethe problem was not with the ments at the Dave Diles Park
village or the contractor but was through the Division of Waterdue to the !act that . chlorine ways. However, council dispumps needed in the project cussed the lack of proper signs at
were difficult to obtain. A repre· the park and that will be taken
sen ta tlve from Floyd G. Browne care of regardless of the outcome
and Assocll!les will attend the of the grant appllcatlon. Mayor
Dec. 16 meeting and the matter ts Hoffman thanked Council Prest·
Continued on page 10
expected to be cleared by Janu·

Celeste calls for
more school taxes
.

- -·

and 84 percent said the voters
COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) rather than the General AssemSaying baste and higher educa·
bly should decide on a tax hike.
tton are the cornerstone of Ohio's
"I am very respectful of the
future, Gov. Richard Celeste
people of this state," said the
called Monday for a public vote
governor, adding that he sees a
In mtd-1989 on a tax Increase for
ballotlssue on taxes as "kind of a
both primary and secondary
referendum on the future of
schools, 'and colleges and
Ohio. ''
universities.
Although Celeste has hinted for
At the same time, the state
Board of Education recom- weeks about the need for a public
referendum on a tax Increase, It
mended that the state personal
was the first time he has publicly
Income tax rates be rolled back
adyocated .going to the ba'llot,
·to their 1985 levels - about 22
and the first time he has said
percent higher than they are now
colleges and untversltles ought to
- and that an extra $1.62 btlllon
be Included.
be spent on primary and seconThe governor told the board he
dary educat ton In the next two
,
Is
convinced by legislative lead·
years.
ers
that there Is no mood In the
"Everybody who cares about
General
Assembly to pass a tax
teaching and learning and about
Increase, chiefly because Senate
the future wants the best solution
Republicans used an anti -tax
to the question of what can be
message last fall to defeat one
done to improve education," said
Democrat and retain 12 out of
F'Tanklin Walter, state superln·
their 12 seats up for election.
tendent of public Instruction.
·'The only way we have a
"The state board's package of
realistic chance (Of Increasing
recommend a lions ts the
revenues to fund education)," he
answer."
. The recommendations wtll be . said. "Is to put It on the ballot,
especially tf we want equity In
forwarded to Celeste for consld·
BETHESDA, Md. (UP!) school funding."
eration In proposing the 1990-91
Martin Marietta Corp. said Mon· state budget. which he plans to
The governor said higher eduday the Department of Energy release In late January .
cation should be Included In the
has announced Its Intention to
ballot Issue as part of an ovE:rall.
"We cannot meet the bottnm
extend by five years contracts line of what you are proposing
idea that colleges should work In
with Martin Mar letta Energy here today without more re·
concert with public schools to
Systems Inc. to operate . five venues," Celeste told the state
improve education.
factlttles.
Board of Education.
"I think there Is a growing
The original Martin Marietta
He said a Gallup Poll commls·
sentiment that education needs
contract, which would · expire stoned by his administration last
to be a single piece of ·cloth," he
Sept. 30, 1989, will be extended to month shows that 67 percent of
sat d.
Sept. 30, 1994, to operate faclllttes the people of Ohio would support
Wt!Uam Napier, vice chancel·
In Oak Ridge, Tenn., Paducah, a tax Increase tf It were demon- lor of the Ohio Board of Regents,
Ky ., and Portsmouth. Ohio, offl· strated to go for a good purpose,
Continued on page 10
clals said.
Under the contracts, Martin
Marietta Energy Systems will
manage and operate the Department of Energy Oak Ridge
facllttles, Including Oak Ridge
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP)) National Laboratory and the
her In a letter the new law "Is an
Celeste
signed
Gov.
Richard
early and the best Christmas
nuclear components plant, com·
legislation Monday permitting present I ever got."
pany officials said.
' 'This ts a great step forward,"
The contracts also call ·for victims of drunken driving accl·
· Martlh Marietta to manage and dents to be compensated for the said Dorothy Taylor, state chairoperate two uran tum enrichment first time under the state's crime man of Mothers Against Drunken
Driving. "It sends a clear mesplants at Paducah and Ports· victim reparations progr,am.
The legislation, which takes sage that ihe state of Ohio
mouth, officials said.
A change tn the scope of the effect next March 14, also dou- considers drunken drtvlng a
contracts will place the Paducah bles the maximum award to violent crime."
crime victims from $25,000 to
Celeste and William Denihan, ·· ·
and Portsmouth gaseous dlffu·
$50,000,
and
gives
victims
two
director
of the Ohio Department
ston facilities under one contract
years
Instead
of
one
to
apply
for
of
Highway
Safety, used the
so that officials can focus man·
Officials
said
this
Is
money.
occasion to urge Ohio motoris ts
agement attenUon on the ura·
possible because the fund, fueled 19 refrain from drinking and
nlum enrichment enterprise.
by an assessment charged those driving during the holidays.
The Oak Ridge Gaseous Dlffu·
ap~arlng In court, Is sound.
"Celebrate the holiday In a
slon Plant, on standby as a
Although the blll was spon· responsible ;"aY," said Den than ,
uranium enrichment plant, prosored by Sen. David Hobson,
"don't drink and drive." He said
, vjdes business and technical
R-Sprtngtleld, the drunken driv- 795 J:M10Ple were killed In alcoholservices and supports the ura·
Ing portion was originally au- related traffic accidents In Ohio
nlum enrichment program. The
thored by Rep. Marte Tansey, tn 1987, and 31,000 others were
plant also develops and demon·
R-Vermllton.
injured.
strates the Atomic Vapor Laser
"This legislation Is vitally
The new law also Will increase
Isotope Separation process to
important,"
said
Celeste
at
a
$75 to$100 the fee a motorist
from
enrich uranium.
bill-signing ceremony In the mus't pay to retrieve his or her
The federal government will
Statehouse rotunda. "It ensures driver's license after It Is susfinance about $10 million toward
that.. victims of drunken or pended for an alcohol-related
the operation and maintenance
drugged driving are eligible lor offense.
of the plants over the five-year
Celeste also signed a bill,
period covered by the contracts, ·compensation."
Tansey said the legislation was effective March 14, establishing
ofllclals said.
Inspired by a Sandusky woman state licensing requirements lor
Martin ·Marietta Energy Sys.
who lost a daughter five years respiratory therapists. One year
terns receives an annual lee
ago In an accident caused by a later, all respiratory therapists
based on its performance. The
drunken driver.
practicing In Ohio will have to be
five facilities employ about
Tansey
said
the
woman
told
licensed.
18,800 people'

Contracts
.extended
by DOE

Govemor signs legislation
for drunken driving victims

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