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                  <text>Page- 10-The Daily Sentinel .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DC-9 crashes in Denver, 26 killed
DENVER (UPI) - Aviation
officials say they have no reason
to blame a heavy snowstorm .for
the crash of Conlinental A)rlines
Flight 1713, which Upped and
yawed as II tried to take of!, then
flipped over, skidded for a
quarter-mile and broke apart.
Twenty·six of the 82 passengers a,td crew aboard the
DC-9 died i'll Sunday's disaster at
Stapleton International Airport,
Including the pilot and co·ptiot.
The jetliner's "black box"
flight recorder was retrieved
Sunday for examination, and
Investigators from the National·
Transportation Safety Board
planned to begin searching the
snow-shrouded wreckage tod!IY
for clues.
Passenger Libby Smoot of
Ketchum, Idaho, who was sitting
near the rear of the DC-9 at the
time of the crash, said she felt the
plane shudder as it struggled to
take off. Screams. filled the cabin
and mud poured into the plane as
the torn fuselage skimmed I he
ground, she said.
·"The plane took off, tipped
right , then tipped lelt," Smoot
said. " We knew exactly what was
happening. We knew we were in
trouble. It was terrible. A lot of
people were screaming, and on
the other side a ball of flame went
right by."
But for some .reason the
fuselage did not burst into
flames , although some survivors
were treated for smoke inh aJa ·
Uon and one s uffered extensive
burns.
Several witnesses 'said the

plane Upped to the right, then to
the left, then flipped over on its
top, skidding a quarter-mile on
the dir t to the side ot Runway
35-Left. The left wing, the tail and
the cockpit broke from the main
fusela ge.
"That flight lasted five seconds , maybe six:·· said Navy Lt .
Curtis Re nfro, an aviation main·
. tenance officer on ·another flight
land ing on a runway parallel to
35· Left when the plane crashed
about 2:15p.m.
He said slush on the r unway
might have created a s uction on
' the plane's left wheels .
"The last time I saw the plane,
it was grossly til ted. He was
totally up on his starboard
wing, " Renfro sajd. "When that
happens, the pilot tries to fllp to
the right to correct. He may have
overcompensated. "
·The pilot, Capt. Frank Zvonke.
43, of Carlsbad, Calif., was a
18-year veteran of Continental
with 12,000 hours of flying; hi s
co-pilot , Lee Brucher , 26, joined
the airline in July and Is an
FAA-licensed fligh t instructor.
Airport officials said 6 inches
of snow had fallen on the area by
the time of the crash, but only an
eighth of an inch of snow was on
the runway . not unusual during a
snowstorm at Stapleton.
" .,. Wha t we had was limited
visibility but we certainly didn't
have bad runway conditions,''
airpo r t spokesman · Richard
Boulware sa id. " Alt.hough we
had delays, we did not have any
lndica.tion of eve r doing anything

about closing the airport."
A few passengers, includi ng
Smoot, walked away from the
wreckage with minor injuries.
Most of the 77 passengers and
fi ve crew were pulled out
quickly, but seven were trapped
for several hours as rescuers
used a crane, metal saws and
hydraulic " jaws of life" to pull
apart the wreckage.
One of those irapped was a
woman hanging .upside-down in
the overturned plane. She fell in
and out of consciousness during
the rescue effort, but died before
she could be removed. airport
officials said. The las t bodies
were removed six hours after the
crash.
Flight 1713, which originated in
Oklahoma City with a stop in
Kansas City, landed jn De nver
before noon and was schedUled·to
lake off about 12:30 p.m . for
Boise, Idaho. but delays caused
primarily by the snowstorm.
with winds piling up deep drift s,
pushed the departure time to
about 2:15 p .m.
Visibility was three-eighths of
a mile at the time of the crash,
the National Weather Service
sa id, with north-northeast winds
gustin g to 21 mph.
Ice was removed from the
21-year-old DC-9 minutes before
takeoff, Contin ental spokesman
Bruce Hic ks said . The plane had
undergone what Hicks called a
heavy maintenance check within
the last month.
One of the injured passe nger s,
Douglas ~el f of Kenewlck,
Wash., was found on the ground

I'm certainly optimistic," said
Rep. Dan Rostenkowski of illi·
nols , the Democratic chairman
of the House Ways and Means
Committee.
'
" I think it is imperative. We
just have to ," agreed House
Republican leader Robert Mi·
chei. also of Illinois, who joined·
Rostenkowski on NBC's " Meet
the Press" Sunday.
Botti lawmakers' conceded,
however. that with every House
seat up fo r election next year,
politically se nsitive measures
cou ld be killed on the House floor.
"Quite frankly, tha t's what I
think the down side of this las t

week was, when we were very

euphoric," explained Michel.
" We were on the verge of
agreem ent and the letdown was
aft er we went back and touched
signals with some of our res pective people."
He added, ' 'Everybody ha s got
to give in t.his thing. It won't be a
unanimous vote. It's going to be
split on both sides."
Rostenkowski echoed those
sentiments, saying, "You've go t
to go ou t there and convince your
colleagues. a nd the climate isn' t·
too conducive for that."
Negotiators, entering th eir
fourth week of ta lks today, are

ance from U.S. Navy vessels in

the area, yelling, ''American
warship, American warship. " a
Dubal shipping source said.
There was no response, the
source,sa id.
Because the U.S.·managed
tankers are not American·
registered, they are outside the
protection of the U.S nava l fo'rce
escorting U.S.·flagged vessels
through the · Perisan Gulf to
shield them from the crossfire of
the Iran-Iraq war.
Iranian gunboats Nov. 6 a t·
tacked the U.S.- m a na ge d ,
Panamanian-registered tanker
Grand Wisdom off. the coast of
the United Arab Emirat es but
there was no U.S. retaliation.
No crewmen were believed
wounded and little damage done
in the Iranian attack on the Esse
Freeport; which entered the gulf
Wednesday on the coattails of a
French warship and was steam·
ing through the Strait of Ho r mu z
at full spe.e d under her own power
today , the shipping sources sa id .
Today's attacks were the fir st
Iranian strike on ind epe ndent
shipping In the Persian Gulf
since Noy. 11, when gunboats
attacked the J apanese-owned
tanker Liquid Bulk Explorer 36
miles from a U.S. -escorted
Iranian President Ali1Khame·
nei met with Cabinet ministers
and senior defense officials Sun·
day to draw up battle plans, two
days alter Ir anian leader Ayatol·
lah Ruholiah Khomeini ca lled for
a concentrat ion of resources into
the war effort to achieve "fin al
victory" over Iraq.
Military ex perts in the reg ion
said Iran is expected to attempt
to take Basra and to launc h a

Agent Orange by Dow Chemical.
Monsanto and other chemi ca l
makers, were sea ted by the court
as the case progressed. The ca,se
was settled before trial in 1984
but a variety of groups, including
veterans organizations and the
media, argued the documents
should be made available to the
public.
Federa l cou rts, including the
2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Ap·
peals, agreed and ordered most
of the documents released.
Dow and the other chemical
comp~nles challenged the r ul·
lngs c alling t h em
unprecedented.

'.

998

•

at y

·-

.~

•

enttne
,.._,

.....

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, November 17. 1987

Vol.37, No .134
Copyrighted 1987

1 Section, 10 Pagtts

25 Cents

A Multimedia InC. Newspaper

Shields: 'Project requires full cooperation'

-·
CRASH SITE - Firelighters and rescue
workers surround the twisted remains · of a
Continental Airlines DC·9· which slid off the

runway a:nd flipped during takeoff Sunday.
Twenty-six people are believed to have died In th'
snowy crash. (UP I)

~

abo ut 50 yards fro m the wreck·
age, still strapped in his seat.
Others ref(la ined In th e
wreckage.
" We had to cut all the seats out
of the aircraft to get to them,"
said Joe Ci pri, a De nver fire
rescue worker. "We had to go
row by row, You have to cut the
seats out piec&lt;;&gt; by piece."
Among the passengers were
e ight Future Farmers of Amer·

lea from Melba , Idaho, and their
c haperones, two teachers from
Melba High School. They had
been attending an FFA conven·
1
lion in Kansa s City and were on
their wa y back home. Relatives
in Boise indicated at least five
FFA members survived the
crash.
About two doze n survivors
were taken to Denver General
Hospital. one of 10 'hospitals

where survivors were taken ,
aboard a Continental bus. Ali but
four of them were treated at the
hospital an(! released .~A passenger, Fred H. Helpen·
steli, 56, of Nampa, Idaho ,
recalling his two hours trapped in
the wreckage,. said, "I re·
member thinking I'm going to
die, this is It - and then I
wondered what's it going to feel
like."

trying to beat a Friday deadline
in which the government will
have to make across-the-board
cu ts of $23 billion under the
revised balanced· budget law .
Reagan . in his weekly national
radio ad dres' Satu rday. said he
was confident a compromise
could be reached for as much as
$30 bill ion in sav ings for fiscal
1988 and for S50 billion in 1989.
Fiscall988 began Oct. I.
The president' s spokesman ,
however. fixed the blame firmly
on Democrat s last week for
holdin g up the negotiating pro·
cess. and Rostcnkowski thus
a ppeared ca utious in assessing

.

the spirit of bipartisanship ap· will be a multi -year package ...
and the principal components of
preaching this week.
"I think we' re going to have it will have a multi-year effect.
our peaks and valleys" in dis · · not just a one~ year shot."
Michel said negotiators were
c ussing cuts in defense money
"no
more than a haif-b!llion
a nd ·entitlement progra ms a s
dollars
apart" on reductions In
well as new taxes, he, said.
" We're going to have revenues in defe nse spending, but the controthe mix . I think that 's very versial issue of cost-of-.iiving
adjustments for Social Security
important."
House Democratic leader Tom recipients was stili off the table .
The Republican leader would
Foley of Washington, another
budget negotiator .. also spoke of not rule out the possibility that
revenues on ABC's "This Week Social Security COLAs could be
brought up as a last resort, but he
with David Brinkley" Sunday.
" II will Include increased re- said it would be "just about nigh
venues, including taxes ," Foley impossible politically" to pass
sa id of any plan tl]at emerges . "It any such measure in the House.

that tue b Iran's war m achine.
left the targets in flame s, the
news agency said.
Bombs from Iraqi warplanes
also rained down on the villa ge
of Vermhang near the distri ct
capital of Kamyaran, about 50
miles east of the Iraqi bo rder,
sta te- run Teh ra n radi o said . .
The radio said seven people
were killed in the ·I raqi attack
and 16 wounded, many of th em
women and c hild ren.
Seven lrania n civilian s were
wounded in an Iniqi a ir strike
Saturday over Kohkiluye-Boyer
Ahmad province.
Ira n said three Iraqi war- .
planes were shot down during
attempts to bomb other civilian
areas Io southwestern Iran. but

I raq saicl .only onC&gt; aircraft wa s

missing.

Iran has frequently re taliated
for Iraqi strikes on civilian
targets by firing ionge-range
missiles into Baghdad. The last
Iranian mis sile attack on the
Ir aqi capital, only 78 miles from
the border, was Nov . 8. Ten
people were killed and 100
wounded in that attack.
The Iraqi News Agency said
Iranian long- ra nge artillery
pounded Basra and Qasa ba Sir·

wan overnight, killing lO civil!·
ans, including a child, and
wounding nine others.
In Kuwait, the target of three
destructive Iranian Silkworm
missile attacks since Oct. 12, a
delegation of Egyptian military
officers met with Defense Minister Sheik Salam al Sabah to
discuss military cooperation be·
twe~n the two countries. .

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel News Staff
As long as any state funding would be shared
50-50 between Pomeroy and Middleport, Pomeroy
Vlllage Council wishes to start the wheels turning
on a grant proposal for a bicycle path between the
,
two villages.
A letter to Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler,
from Kim Shields, Meigs County economic
development director , explaining what might be
expected when the two villages pursue the Ohio
Department of Transportation funding, was read
by Councilman Larry Wehrung at Monday night's
regular council meeting.
Shields reiterated in his letter that cooperation
from both villages will be required on the project
and even then, federal regulations arid state
policy may prevent eligiblilty.
According· to Shields' letter, ODOT's program
currently offers 100 percent funding to project
sponsors for site acquisition, engineering design

and construction of bicycle paths used for public
transportation purposes of regional significance.
However, it the total project is financed by the
state, project complet)on could take up to five
years and would require a construction cost of not
less than $250,000.
··
If part of the project were funded locally, the
time frame could be lessened to approximately
two years from inception to completion, Sheilds
wrote.
To meet federal standards, Shields noted, the
path must have a·wldth of 10 feet with a buffer of
two additional feet on each side. Although this
requirement could present a problem in certain
areas where the river and highway may prohibit
14 feet of easement, Shields offered to work with
vlllage officials in preparing the Initial letter of
intent to ODOT to determine project feasibility.
After discu~sing aspects of the Jetter, council·
members determined to work with Shields and
Middleport officials to obtain the state funding on ·

said.
MANAMA, Bahrain tUPI) The Iraqi account of the
Iraqi warplanes attacked an
incident
suggested the Iraqi
unfinished nuclear power plant
on Iran's Persian Gulf coast warplanes might have attacl!.ed
today, killing several employees the nuclear power plant by
and damaging the facility , the mistake. The Iranian news
agency said Iraqi jets last
Iranian news agency said .
. The Islamic Republic News attacked · an Iranian nuclear
Agency reported Iraqi war· power plant in March 24, 1985.
The Iraqi strike Oll the facility
planes bombed the facility in
came
the day after Iranian
Bushehr on Ira n' s northern Pergunboats
ambushed an Exxon·
sian Gulf coast at 11 : 45 a.m.
owned
tanker
and a Greek ship in
The Iranian report but did not
the
southern
Persian
Gulf within
provide any details of the deaths
said.
two
hours,
shipping
sources
or whether there was any raThe
attacks
occurred
a
day
dioactive material at the plant.
after
another
U.S.
-owned
tanker
The attack was described by
the agency as a "blatant" was hit by Iranian forces.
"American ~arship, Ameri·,
violation of International law .
can
warship," the captain of the
Iraqi military officials des·
crlbed the target of the attack as 260,831-ton, Bahamian·fiagged
a petrochemical complex and Esso Freeport frantically rasaid warplanes fired several dioed Monday as he watched the
missiles Into the facility, setting two Iranian boats race toward
him, then fire four or five
it ablaze, the Iraqi News Agency

NEW YORK (UPI) - Stock
prices moved sharply lower in
· moderate early trading today
amid signs that participants in
the deficit -reduction talks in
Washington are struggling to
reach an accord.
The Dow Jones industrial aver·
age, which rose 14.09 Monday,
was down 30.83 to 1918.27 at 10
a.m.
Declines led advances 900-230
among the 1,523 issues crossing

the New 'York Stock Exchange
tape. Volume was mOderate,
amounting to about 23.61 million
shares during the first30 minutes
of trading.
Budget negotiators conceded
that Monday 's session, which
marked the start of a fourth week
of private talks between the
administration and Congress,
pushed them only slightly closer
to agreement.
. "We didn't make any pro·

Family Night Specials
Adults

.

$2.29 Kids 10 and Under

Kid's Night Specials

KIDS EAT FREE

PRESENTED ROTARY · AWARD - Middleport-Pomeroy
Rotary Club member Lee. McComas, at left, was speechless at
Monday night's meeting of the· organization when he was
presented with one of Rotary's highest awards, the Paul Harris
Fellowship. Presenting the award to McComas was Ponney Cisco
of Jackson, respresentative for Rotary District 669. the
presentation of the Harris Fellowship to McComas was described
ds a11 honor to him for his longstanding de~Jcatlon to Rotary, and
an honor to the local club. On behalf of McComas, the local club has
donated $1,000 to Rotary Internatlonlll's Polio Plus Program to
assist in the worldwide elimination of the disease. Over the next
five years, Rotary International's goal Is to raise $120 mllllo11 for
polio.

Ages 10 and Under
Special hmited "time olfer at participating Steak houses only.

,,,

=po=NDER~
OS~A

RAIN HELPS QUELL BRUSH FffiES T!lday's rain will hopefuUy give local firelighters
a reprieve from the wave of brush tires that have
plagued Meigs County in recent weeks. Approxi·

mately 4: 30 yesterday afternoon, the Syracuse
Fire Department was called to a brush lire in
Minersville. Pictured here, the Syracuse tanker
and EMS unit make their way to the fire scene.

gress," Rep. Pat Williams, D·
Mont., said glumly, "except
we're 24 hour. closer to the
guillotine," alluding to the Friday deadline for agreement on a
plan to trim at least $23 billion
from the deficit for fiscal 1988,
which began Oct. I.
The stock market staged a
final-hour rally Monday to close
at higher levels despite the
inability of Congress and the
White House to provide a defi~ t­
reductlon agreement.
"The tape has an improved
tone overall, and it appears to
want to trend higher," said A,C.
Moore of Argus Research Corp.
in New York. "Progress on the
deficit will probably be the
requisite !or a sustained move '
upward."
The Dow surged nearly 35

points In the opening minutes but
then fell a few points into
negative territory by mid ·
afternoon before the final runup.
Moore said the lack of a budget
agreement, profit taking and a
slippage in the dollar fr om ItS
highs contributed to the iempor. ary afternoon slump.
In the absence of a final budget
agreement, President Reagan
Monday sought to comfort Wall
Street by declaring his faith in
the economy .
"Yes, financial market gyrations are a reality," Reagan told
the annual meeting of the Ameri· .
can .Council of Life Insurance.
"But this is reality, too: our
underlying economy Is strong
and getting stronger."
"This is a very volatile and
nervous market ," Moore sa id.

"And with the Dow losing a
30-point gain, investors .do get

ner vous. However, you have to
Co ntinued on page 10

SV AC preview is set this weekend
The SVAC boys' and girls'
basketball preview will start
Friday, from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m.,
and will conclude Saturday, from
6 p.m. to 10 p.m. , at Kyger Creek
High School.
There will be two qu~rters of
play Jn· each contest.
In Friday night's action, the
girls' teams from Hannan Trace
and North Gallia will battle at 6
p.m., followed by the boys' teams
lrom those tw,o schools at 7 p.m.

At R p.m. the girls' teams from
Symmes Valley and Eastern will
play , Jollowed by the boys' teams
from those schools at 9 p.m.
Saturday's slate features
Southern against Southwestern,
with the girls playing at 6 p.m .
and the boys at 1 p.m. Oak Hlll
and Kyger Creek will conclude
the preview, with the girls
starting at 8 p.m. and the boys
playing at 9 p.m.

University of Toledo
issues flu warning

SAVE20%
•

rocket .propelled grenades at his
ship. ··
·
The vessel, laden with Saudi
Arabian crude, was reported
steaming at full speed out of the
gulf after coming under attack
off the United Arab Emirates,
the shipping insurer Lloyd's of
London said. No assistance was
required, Lloyd's added, indica!·
ing minor damage to the super·
tanker and no injuries .
u·.s. warships routinely patrol
the southern gulf, but under
Navy rules of engagement they
are prohibited from interceding
in attacks on ships not flying the
Stars and Stripes. It was. not
known whether U.S. Navy ships ·
heard the distress call or were in
the vicinity .
•
Two hours later, Iranian gunboats attacked the Gree k tanker
Filikon L., shipping sources said.
Continued on page 10

Early stock prices move sharply; trading moderate today

Seniors Double Discount

$3 99

exte nd their own sewage line to the site, as they
did when Pizza Hut moved into the village. ODOD
funded the sewage line extension to Pizza Hut
beca use the restaurant would create jobs.
It has already bee n estima ted by Middleport
officials that the two new businesses could create
40 jobs. Because of this, Anderson believes
Pomeroy could again qualify for state fu nds.
Anderson said he would begin checking Into the
feasibllty of the venture, noting that letters of
committment from the two businesses. as well as_
support from the county commissioners, State
Representative Jolynn Boster, D·Galhpolis, and
State Senator Jan Long, D-Chiliicothe, would be
necess.ary .
Finally, council reappo inted Councilmem~&gt;&lt;:rs
Biil Young and Betty Baronick, Firemen Jim
Sisson and Don Thoma s, and Pomeroy resident
Homer Ba'x ter, as members to the Volunteer
Fir efighters' Dependency Board.

\

Every Monday through Thursday we11 treat a
different member of your family to a specially priced meal!

Includes
SundaeBar

a 50-50 basis.
Again discussed by council was Middleport's
request to annex property in . the lower end of
Pomeroy where two bu si nesses are interested in
locating, pending the availability of sewage
service. Pomeroy however, takes the stand that
rather than. allow the property to be annexed,
Middleport could just as easily extend their
sewage line frorrt the Sears store to the property in
ques lion, with the new businesses to pay sewage
ra tes to Middleport .
But Middleport officials have stated that legal
problems could arise if they extend their sewage
line into Pomeroy . Pomeroy on the other hand,
after conducting their own researc!l· into the
matter, SaYS that extending the Middleport line
Into Pomeroy .Is not an illegal procedure.
· Since officials from the two villages have
apparently reached impasse on the situation,
Pomeroy has decided to investigate the possiblity
of an Ohio Department of Development grant to

Iran warplanes strike back
after heavy Iraqi air attacks

Weeknight
.
Specials
•'

Cloudy, windy , with 30 per·
cent chance of rain tonight.
Low in 40s. Cloudy Wednes·
day.

Pirk 4

PONDEROSA PRESENTS

convoy.

Court keeps documents open
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
Supreme Court today let. stand a
ruling that will open to the public
documents about the develop·
ment of Agent Orange.
The court refused to hear the
case brought by manufacturers
seeking to keep secret the infor·
mation about the chemical defol·
lar1t widely used in Vietnam.
At issue in the controversy was
whether documents gathered for
a lawsuit brough t by Vietnam
vNerans and their families who
alleged Injuries due to exposure
to the herbicide should be made
public.
- I'
The documents, relating to the
devolpment and production of

seco nd fron t to di vid&lt;' thc Iraq i
defenses .
The Iranian attacks came.after
one of I he heaviest rounds of
Iraqi air st rikes on ships calling
at Iranian oil ports.
·
A s pokes ma n for the Iraqi
ar med forces said Iraqi war·
planes attacked two oil tankers
off Iran's northern Persian Gulf
coastline Sunday night, Baghdad
radio re ported .
An Iraqi spokesman iti Baghdad said Iraqi warplanes attacked oil refineries at Gachsa·
ran in the southwestern province
of Khuzesta n and in western
Bakhtaran province, the official
Iraqi News Agency reported.
The Iraqi attacks, aimed at
crippling the vital oil industry

steps down

·Daily Number

Page 5

Iran attacks two U.S.-managed tankers
MANAMA, Bahrain tUPI ) Iranian gunboats fired rocket
grenades at a U.S.-managed ,
supertanker in the Persian Gulf
tod ay - the second strike on a
u.s .. managed ship in two daysand , also attacked a Greek
ta nker .
Two Iranian gunboats at·
tacked the 260,83I~ton Esso Free·
port, owned by Exxon Corp. of
New York, early today as it
steamed off t.he coast of Dubai
toward the Straight of Hormuz,
shipping sources said .
Two hours later, Irania n gun·
boats attacked the Greek tanker
Fiiikon L., the sources said. The
ship was believed to be about 25
miles north of the United Arab
Emira tes port of Ras AI Khai·
mah and sent a May Day dis tress
signal, the shipping insurer
Lloyd's of Londo n reported.
The first attack on a U.S.·
managed tan ker came Su nday
when Iranian gu nboats struck
the Llberia n·registered motor
tanker I..ucy before dawn in the
Strait of Hormuz off the UAE,
Lloyd's said.
The 36,512-ton oil ta nker, man aged by Maritime Overseas
Corp. of New York, a nchored off
Dubal today, the shipping sources said. She was attacked by
three Iranian speedboats and
s ustained damage to her star·
board engi ne room .
Gunboats today fired rocket
grenades at the Bahamla.n ~
registered Esso Freeport at 11: 35
a.m., the sources said. It was
loaded with cr ude oil t aken on at
Ras Tanura In Saudi Arabia, an
ally of Iraq in its 7-year-oid war
with Iran.
As the Iranian grenades
s lammed into the Esso Freeport,
the captai n pleaded for assist·

Ohio Lottery

1785

fate
in
Congress
Budget
compromise
faces
uncertain
.
..
WASHINGTON iUPI) -Con ~
gressional budget negotiators
say their bottom line is the
"i mperative" to .. meet 'th is
week's deadline for a plan that
cuts $23 billion from the deficit
and that both their colleagues
and President Reagan will buy .
Assessing the situation before
talks with the administration
were expected to resume today.
Democrats and Republicans
leading the congressional de legation expressed co nfidence that a
setback suffered las t week cou l.d
be overcome.
"We are going to be able to
work out a budget deal this week.

OSU fires
Bruce; Bay

Clll&lt;k the whHo pages

tor the toe.ltton nearest vou.

There's a family feeling at Ponderosa:·

'·

. '

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - A flu
virus that can lead to pneumonia
and death has been diagnosed In
12 University of Toledo students,
prompting officials to Issue a
health advisory .
Health Director Dr. Richard L.
Scpafer said Monday death may
result if the Ann ArborLeningrad-Taiwan flu strain
goes without proper treatment.
A 21-year-old female studen t
who contracted pneumonia is
among the 12 cases lha t were
diagnosed last week.
The strain was first isolated in
Ann Arbor, Mich., In addition to
Leningrad and Taiwan, Schafer
said. It is similar to the Asian flu,
which spread through the United
States two years ago, he said.
The symptoms include fever ,
sweating, chills, a cough, sore
throat, fatigue , and soreness and
aches in back arms and legs.
Normally healthy students do not
run a high risk of catching the flu ,
he said.
The recent periods of cold
weather, followed by warm
temperatures, have led to more
cases on campus recent, Schaf~•

said.
.
Schafer said he te lls students to
seek medical Attention and to
avoid dehydration by drinking
plenty of fluid s If they contract
the virus. He said two-to-three
days of bed rest are also
recommended.
"In 1918, Influenza swept
across the county and six million
peopte·" were killed," Schafer
said . "Those people did not die
directly from the flu, but from
the pneumonia th at followed."
Foreign students fro m rural
areas are often m ore susceptible
because they do no t have an
Immunity to the disease that
most people living in the United
States do; Schafer said.
Dormitory students also run a
higher ri sk of catching the virus '
because they live in close quar·
ters . The flu season run s through
April and the vir us Is often
spread through sneezing or
coughing, an Ohio Department of
Health official said.
An immunization effort is
under way on tne Toledo campus
ahd a lim! ted number of flu shots
are available , Sc hafer said .

GREAT AMERICAN SMOKEOUT THURSili\Y - Meigs
Countians are being requested to take part in Thursday's Great
American Smokeout. Sponsored by the Ameri can Cancer Society,
the smokeout Is designed to encourage cigarct smokers to refrain
fr~m smoking for a 24 hour period on Thur&gt;iday with the idea,
perhaps, that they will concentrate more on quitting the habit.
Lillian Moore, executive director ol the Meigs Count y Chapter of
the Cancer Society, holds a promotional pusicr for 'l 'hursday's
event.
·
·
·

�..

•
..

Commentary

'

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio •
Tuesday, November 17, 1987

I Living off fat of taxpayers'--_
--.___an__d .::__Jos__._ep__
h S_._pe_ar

lll CtHir1 StrN•t
Punwro~· .

Ohiu
llF.HlTEll TO TilE l'OTF.IIES'I'S OF Til F. '1EIGS-'I \SO'O \1\F. \

.
' ~~

.

.

-

sm~ ,.,..,__,L---,-,~d~~

~v

ROBERT 1•. Wll'iG ETT
Pulllisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
,\:-.,~i~tant Puhlislwr / font rollrr
;\ :'1.1 F !\11HF. R r.j T tH \_. n 11

(I

BOB HOEFLICH
Gf'm•ral Manag-f•r

r : {'"'·" l nh ·t n . t1Jfln,t L In Ltr.d D Ii I\

p , (''- "

.\ ...... o t i. tliror &lt;HHI th C' t\tn t'liL H' :"t ' \~c., p ; qJ I' I P u b Ji &lt;, ht 'l"" A" '- f •f·l ;t tl on .

! I " I TF ! ~ ~ OF 0 1'1 '\10'\ 1' 11 t"i t • 11 .1 T ht ·• -.hl •t.!d h1 \, ... ... t t·,) p :!til 11 1 i( l'\ t.f (,Il l I'- , I U •.u i•H ·II II •! d l '!'~.' ii' CI 01 11'- l i l t •!;.! Il l d \1 ilh IJ , t!I H II IIII o " , ltH I
' t·l •pl•• l'l nttrrh t ' '· li fi "L: I' Iflh•l: 'l ' 11 1' ! h t pL t•lt'- h t ll L ct ll •t o..-..h rotd rl 111 it·
1p

WASHINGTON __ A small
number of Western ranchers are
gelling a financial break on lheir
grazlngoperat ionsat thetaxpayers' -expense, and a battle over
conlinua lion of the subs idy is
shaping up in Congress.
The Bureau of Land Management and the U.S. Forest Service
manage livestock grazing on 307
million acres of land in 16
Western states. They make recommendations for grazing fees,
based on estimates of-how much
an animal eats.
But while other federal agencies charge $4.50 to $16 per
a nimal per month, BLM and the
Forest Service collect only $1.35.
Revenue from the fees pays Ior

only about 35 percenl of . Jhe
program's cost, and the difference is made up by the taxpay ers. The sullsidy has totaled
more than $200 million In the last
· the
five years. according to
National Wildlife Federation.
One thing that bothers critics
of the cut-rate grazing fees Is that
many permit holders - which
include oil companies, land speculalors and investors as well as
·
ranchers -sublet lheir grazmg
rights at signincantly higher
prices.
The current fee formula was
set up under lhe Public Rang€'lands Improvement Act of 1978.
When the law expired in _1985,
Reagan exten de d lhe
·
President

formula with a $1.35 mmtmum.
ELM spokesman Joe Zilincar
said that without the minimum,
grazing fees ;_ based on a
compl icated formu Ia - wou ld
h ave droppe d b e 1ow $1 . Bo th
agencies pointed out that the low
fees keep many · ranchers In
business. As for the subleases,
they said, in mosl cases Ihey
include buildings and other private properly , nol ju st the
· permt•t s.
grazmg
"I understand all the arguments, but il's a political issue
· a 1ways h as been, .. R o bert
an d tt
W 1'I I.mmson, F oresl s ervice
range management direclor,
told our reporter Tanya l sch·.
R eps. M'k
' e synar. D -Okl a ..

Opposition to school
.clinics offering birth
control urged
By DAVID E. ANDERSON
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - Roman Catholic bishops are finding
fhemselves torn between !heir distaste for another national passing
. of lhe :c ollection plate and the needs of a growing group of aging and
impoverished nuns.
Moving today toward the halfway point of a four-day annual
meeting, some 300 members of the National Conference of Catholic
.Bishops were asked to decide whether to institute a national
collection to help meet the retiremenl fund red ink of rel.fgious orders
that one survey has put al more than $2 billion.
"The financial burden and retirement deficits of one group in the
church's family - its sisters, brothers and religious priesls provides an opporlunily to give a concrete example of the meaning of
church as 'people of God,"' said a reporl to the conference by a
commiltee of bishops and members of men's and women's religious
communities.

· Bul while bishops.appear unanimous in acknowledging the.needs of
their aging sisters, caught in the demographic dilemma of large
,numbers of nuns reaching retirement age wilh much smaller
numbers entering religi0us orders, Ihey seem reluctant lo add a 12th
annual special collection to the church's work.
The relircment issue is jusJ dne of the items on this week's agenda;
: bishOps spent most of Monday hearing presentations on the most
important mailers- including a Central America policy statement,
a condemnation of school-based health clinics and procedures for
-resolving disputes with theologians.
Among the reports expected to draw the most interest is from a
commiltee led by Cardinal Joseph Bernardin of Chicago that has
studied whether President Reagan's arms control policies meet
criteria for moral acceptability.
The commit tee , however, has asked to delay releasing Its report
• , because of an expected treaty-signing at the Dec. 7 summit in
Washington between Reagan and Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev
· that could change the bishops' evaluation.
" The principal reason for seeking an extension is that several
dimensions of the negotiations should be made clear in the next six
monlhs." Bernardin told his colleagues.
Prompted by peace activist Thomas Gumbleton, the auxiliary
bishop of Detroit, the committee will meet again Dec. 11 to evaluate
administration policies.
The bishops used a 1983 pastoral leiter, "The Challenge of Peace."
to declare thai a policy of nuclear delcrrence would be morallyl'lcable
under only a limited set of conditio ns. Gumbleton and other bishops
have questioned whether Reagan 's administration is living up to
those criteria.
Monday, Bernardin urged Ihe bishops to adopt a statement strongly
objecting to Ihe development of health clinics In public schools that
would provide conlraceptives or abortion couns.e ling as a way to
reduce leenage pregnancy.
·'To the ex lent that school-based clinics are part of a program for a
more efficient promotion of contraceptives and abortion-related
services to minors. they are pari of the problem rather than the key to
a solution." the Chicago conservative argued.

CAPITAL. C: ITY
TeMPoRF\Rl' S~RVIC€S
SPE'(IALil iN0 IN :
, &amp;vPReNE cr. Jll!iTIC'llS

'~s

0

o ~ Bl
o

DIRecToRS

ere.

~~·

He ha s been Carlucci' s deputy
and Weinberger's top military
aide. He has been a White Hou~e
fellow and a student at the
National War College. He has
commman ded

~n

Army corps in

West Germany and a brigade of
live branch of government. It' s the 101st Airborne. He served two
the posl from which Henry tours In Vietnam.
Kissinger gained status as a
Oh, by the way, he is black.
world-class power broker. Tt's
In fact, he will probably be thtfrom wh€'nce ZbignieW Brze· most powerful black official In
zinski rose to fame.
American history.
Originally, the Reagan admin A protocol ch~rt might tell you
Istration Intended to downgrade that Secretary of Housin g and
Ihe post. Bul as we saw from Ihe Urban Development Samuel
Iran-co ntra r~velarions aboullhe Pierce.· a black, outranks Gen.
ro les of NSC advisers Robert Powell. Or that former U.N.
McFarlane and John Poindexter. Ambassador Andrew Young fil's a hard post ro downgrade . ranked him (t he U.N. job had.
The adviser is located in the Cabi net rank). But those are jus I
White House and in direct con - lines on a chart. The U.N . job
lac! wilh I he presidenl.
typically has lots of visibilily bul
America will soon have a new little power. Powell will be
nat ion a I securl ly adviser. When powerful and visible.
Frank Carlucci leaves I he advisThere has been little public
er 's role at the NSC to replace commenl .about the fact that
Casper Weinberger as secretary Powell is black . There are some
of defense, Carlucci will be refreshing reason s for Ihis. First.
succeeded by Ll. Gen. Colin the military has becomethemosl
Powell. By every standard, Po- int egrated institution In Amerwell is the right man for the job. ica. About 20 percent of the U.S .

most powerful men in th e execu-

o

KALISPELL, Mont. (NEAl-

By United Press International
Today is T uesday , Now 17. the 32Jst day of 1987 wilh 44 lo follow.

Th e moon is waning. mov ing toward its new phase.
The morning s tars a re Me rcury and Mars.
The even ing star s ar e Venu s, Jupiter and Saturn .

Those born on this date are und er the sign of Scorpio . They include
Kin g Loui s XVIII Fran ce In 1755: qerman astronomermathematician August Mobius, who first described the Mobius Sirlp.
in 1790; social reformer Grace Abbolt in 1878; British Army Field
Ma rshal Berna rd Montgomery in 1887; drama teacherLeeStrasberg
In 1901 ; ac tor Rock Hudson in 1925; film director Martin Scorsese in
19.42 1age 451 , and ba lladeer Gordon Lightfoot in 1938 Iage 49 ).

·anJh is date in his tory:
Jn 1800. Congr ess co nvened in Washington. D.C., for the flrst time.
In 1869 . the Suez Canal In Egypl wa s opened, linking the Red Sea
and I he Mediterra nea n .
In 1881. Sa muel Gompers organ ized Ihe Federal ion of Organized
T rades a nd La bor Unions. fOrerunner of lhe American Federation of
Labor .
In 1969. the strateg ic arms limila ti on talks (SALT ) between the
U ~il ed States and the Soviet Union began in Helsinki, Finland.
In 1985, lhe E nv ironmental P rotection Agency named 403 !oxic
c he micals a s potentia l public dangers in any plant accidenl.
A rhoug hl fo r the day: King Loui s XVIII of F rance said, .
"Pu ncl ua Iity is I he polit eness of ki ngs."
f

came for the big job, it was not

much news - because it fell'
naturally right. This was not
Jesse Jackson running a surelose presidential candidacy but
becomi'i-fg famous because he

was black. It was not Geraldine
Ferraro. select ed as vice presi dential nomin ee bec ause she was
a woman, and becoming a

sensltlion because of it.
The appoin tment did not make
Co lin Powell immediately lam·
ous becaus e it was based on

merit, not race or gender or
polit'cs. That is the way a soclely
Ihal sal utes equality of oppo"lun·
lty is supposed lo work.
There is a certain irony and
paradox to all this. Ronald
Reagan did the appoinling. •You
remember Reagan, don't you?

He's lhe president lhe liberal
black leadership denounces for
racial insen sitivity. Democrats

limited numbers in three areas.
the wolves turned on those
They are northwestern Wyoma n imals for food, they became -

~~~~---~~~~~~
""'&lt;&gt;&lt;'"""' """"'· often
publtc relations campa1gn ts
viewed as a so lution 10 a ll
~,a_-~~I!D---------:problems, few creatures are

Today in history

military Is black. About '10
percent of Army officers are
black. Of the active Army
generals, 7 percent are black.
So as Powell rose lhrough the
ranks, he was no that unusual. He
was only excellent . When his turn

have been counting on using I he
race issue against the
Republicans.
It may not work. Having made
a highly principled decision ,
Reagan and the Republicans will
organieally gain lactical political advanlage from it. Those are
the rules of lhe road. Thus,
Powell will be tryi ng to gain
support for a foreign policy thai .
is In trouble. He Is a very
articulate man. The fact that he
is black, an d a remarkable
prrs9nal success slory , may w.ell
help him mak e lhe administralion's case. particularly Jo liber al politicians. He may also
become a highly prized symbol
for Republicans on the civil
righls issue.
Will he be a "token"? No way:
paradoxically, he'll be a n lmporJanl black man because he's
importanl, . not beca use he's
black. Accordingly, Powell may
also turn out lobe an important
role model for blacks. He can be
all of these things because he
reached power the old-fashioned
way, he earned il .

Afraid of the big bad wolfe._ _R_obe_rt_Wa_lte_rs

0'14Hlf~;' · ~In a n era when the h igh - p~wered

"'

and George D'!rden, D-Ga .. have
introduced legislation to raise
the grazing fees, while Rep. Ron
Marlenee, R-Mont. , has counte red with a bill that would keep
the fee formula the way- It is.
A Marlenee aide said critics
often don't consider that holders
of grazing permits must make
improvements, such as digging
wells and maintaining fences. A
fee increase would lead some
ranchers Jo drop their leases, he
said.
"Our opponents would like
Ihat •"the aide said. "They would
love Ia push ranchers off the land
and make more room for
wildlife."
Cr itics point oul that only 2
percenl of all . U.S. livestock
producers use public grazing
lands. and only 7 percent in the 16
Western states. Synar wrote last
year In a committee report, " II
Congress decided to subsidize all
American (livestock) producers
lo lhe same extent, the subsidy
would cost more lhan $2 billion
annually."
Besides questioning - why a
favored lew ranchers should be
gett ing subsidies, Synar and
other opponents of the current
setup have never been convinced
lhal ELM Director Robert Burford should be involved In
. grazing·fee policy, even Indirectly. In 1981, when he was
appoinled, Burford owned land
th at had grazi ng permits attached to it. He sold the property
to his sons before assuming his
official dulles. .
Before he was confirmed, ·
Burford signed a stalement recusing himself from making "any
decisions which directly affect
Bureau , of Land Ma:1agement
grazing permits which I now
own." Gabe Paone, deputy ethics
officer for lhe Interior Department, of which Bi.M Is a part,
said: "I guess every reasonable
person would have to say yes,
there's an appearance of co nfiicl
of interesl. But it's the significance lhal is important, and we
don' I think il's significant."

No token he,______--=_ _ _ _ _Be_n_W:_a_u_en_b_e_rg
Paradox in politics:
Consider the job of national
security adviser to lhe president.
The person in that job also runs
the National Security Council. HE'
is almost invariably one of the

the object of fhe ranchers' hatred ,
and vengeance.
Generous bounties fu eled a
in need of aPR effort than campaign thai almost wiped our
wolves.
the species in this cou nt ry. In
Mosl of us begin to fear wolves Montana a lone. more than 80,000
in ear ly childhood, when we are were killed between 1883 and ·
laid slories about Ihe beasts wi1o 1918.
blew down the Three Little Pigs'
Wolves are nol cute, cuddl y
flimsy homes in a vain quesl for pets but neither are they savage
porcine prey, and who ·devoured beasts. The best evidence of I heir
Lilli~ Red Riding Hood's grand·
behavlor comes from the only
mother and almost consumed the place in the contiguous 48 sta les
young lady as well.
were substantial numbers still
Older youngsters hear spine- exis l - northeastern Minnesota
tin -gling !ales of bloodthirsty around the community of Elv.
marauders howling al the moon
Approximately 1,200 roam the
a nd of a terrifying phenomenon sparsely populated 30,000-square
known as lycanthropy - the mile regio n, as do almost 250,000
purported trans!ormat ion of peo- cat tle and 90,000 sheep- bul only
pie into werewolves.
about 75 ranch animals are lost in
Thus, II is hardly surprising verified wolf attacks every year
that the ' Interior Departmenl' s because the wolves ~refer to feed
Northern Rocky Mountain Wolf on wild prey.
Recovery Plan, a proposal to
Thte region's most remote
rei ntroduce wolves lnlo three sector Is the Boundary Waters
states, has nol received over- National Canoe Area. Thousands
whelming public acclairn.
of vacationers visit It every
For hundreds of years, the summer, but none tias ever been
species known as the gray wolfll'r attacked by a wolf.
limber wolf roamed atmosl the __ Indeed, there is ho record of a
entire nation (excepl the sou- · wild, healt hy wolf ever injuring a
theastern states and southern person in an unprovoked attack
California) preying upon deer, anywhere In North America . The
elk, moose and bison.
.. , .shy animals avoid human conThe West's ear ly European tact it at a li possible.
settlers decimated those animals
Bul because of fear and superto satisfy their own hunting · stltion, the wolf , Is the on)y
requiremenls, then rep laced missing link in the West's natural
I hem with domestic livestock, ecosystem- a void that would be
nolably cattle and sheep. W,hen filled by reln'•onuclng It in

ing, in and around Yellowstone

National Pr.rk: centra l Idaho,
near the Selway-Bilterroot and
River of No Return wilderness
areas ; and northwestern Montana, In and around Glacier
Nalional Park.

J

Although Nalional Park Service Director William Penn Mott

Jr. en thusiastically supports the
ret urn of wolves lo the Yellowstone area, the plan is in limbo
because of oppostion from
Wyoming's three-member con·
gressiona l de legal ion.

~~------~----------·

Berry's World ·

Broncos slip past Chicago Bears, 31-29
Plltsburwh at

UPI ratings
NE\\.' fORK I UPI ) - Th4' Unkl'dl'rea"

lniPrl\lltiOnal Board of ColtL' ~' Top ~0
cuUt&gt;C'' loothall nutn.:t~. with flr~-plll.{' f"
votn llnd r~ord In iJ'lrenthto~. lutal
polntli (hw;ed on 15polnls for first plau·t&gt;,
U flir M·cond, f'l.c . ), and lui wetok'"
rankl~ :

Tt•am
I. Sf'hnt~ku (!1) (1·0)
2. Oklahoma Ifil l HJ.Ol

t"tllnts.

3. Mlllml(l) (11-0)

84!1 3

4. Florida Sl~th! (9·1)
~.

Clncl~~~~&amp;tl,

I p.m.

St. Louis at Phlladrlphh•, I p.m .

illl

z

fl7

I

590 I

... '

UCLA. f!H )

SanFranci&gt;M:o •tTampa Bay,! p.m.
De•wr at Lt\ Raldf.n. f p.m.
NY Glaab al New Orleant~ • .t p .m .
Slln Die~ Itt Sn.tUe, 4 p.m .
Mlaml11t Dalla&amp;, il p.m .
Monda,r, Nov. 0:3
LA Rams at Washln«lon, t p.m .

NBA results
NA1'10NAL BAAKETBALI. ASSOC

Mondll.y'!l

6. SynacuJ;e (I) I 10-0)
J. Notn• Dame {Il- l )
K. l'lemson t&amp;--1)

519 6
n.a 7
3541 9

9. A.uhurn (IH · IJ ,..
10. LouiMIII.na St . 111-1 ·0

3.111 II

32~

11. Mlchlgaa Sttue- !1-2·1 1
27'l 13
12. South Carulhw (7-Z)
13. Oklahoma State {11-2)
J35 17

No

Game~~

gam~ ~~eheduled

TueedltY'fl Game•
N'e wlerlll!y, ",1: SO p.m.
&amp;!!loin at Cln,!i!land, S p.m .
·

tinut~tonat

l 'l

\\' IWblnrtQn IU Chl&lt;'lllOo 8:30 p,Ril
Golden SlaiP•ilt Milwaukee. 8:

rro u

1-1. T£&gt;xas /\AM IHI

1UO
II 19

..

I~ .

TPnrleS!it'f' (7·2· 11
16. Gt!urxla (7·31
17. Pltlsbur«h (HI
I H. Southf'rn Cal {1·3 )
19. Alabama \HI

"31" '
16 10

211. Iowa (11-3)

13 '
:t.·unrankt!d ~
Others r ecel\'lnK \'oteM: ArkanMII.lt,
Colorado. florida, lnlllaM, Mlt:hiKIIID,
Pt'nn &amp;lite, San ,Jo~e Sl ..le-, Wyomln(l:.

:m p.m.

LA Cllppcn 11.t San Antonio. 8:30p.m.
Denver at Ut~~oh, 9:30p.m.
PonlaDd at L.\ Lllkerll, 10:30 p.m.
bidhLna a1 Sacramenta. IO:s• p.m .
Wednelldq '11 Gameti
New York a1 Bos&amp;on, nlcht
Chlca&amp;o at W •blftllon, ntchl
Goklen State al Allllnta, nl1hl
_P IIU..delphla at Detroit , nl&amp;bt
LA Cllppt!n al Dallal, nl&amp;hl

Indiana at Deawr, nl1hl
Utah at Phoenix, nlgbt
Portla,nd at Seattle, nl.-ht
NATION.\L HOC"E\' LEAGUE

Monday's Re~ull
llartford 3, Moatreal S (tiel

Tuetlday's Gamu
Detmlt

NFL resuhs

Bulfalo
Miami
New England

PlltlobUrJb

Cloo!nnatl

'

' 0

•

' 0

.tu tu

3 '

3

I 0

II

LAHakh~ r,;

'3

ru y

.81~

tall 131

.887

~23

1M3

Transactions

.151i6 117 115
.li:I:J 154 188

Chlca~to

.1189 192 na
.687 232 1111

I ll

6 3 0
~ 3 I

Dt!n~r

211

.444 186 191

' • n
Ctontral
'

.611

6 0

2~

.111 U2 26a ·

Nl:' Glanltrl
St. Loul!l

ChkaKO
Mlnnel!lola
TamP" Say
Grf'en Ray

OhloSI11te- Fired ftiOlballcoacll ~a riP
Bruce, eltectl\'£&gt; tbc end ol the. selltllon:
AibleUC JMredor Rick &amp;y re~&gt;lgned.
Football
LA Rams - Acquired llj!:hl end Grf'K
Baly on waiver.: placed ll1ht end Jon
Embrey on lnlured rtsene.
Horkf'y
Detroit -Called up defenseman Doua:
Hall:! a from Adirondack of the 1\merkan

W L T Pet . PF PA
, '! 0 .'TJtl 224 U2

PhUildelph\a

S I 0
I 0 0
! ' 0
! ' •
Central

.!'156 =oR 202

7 I 0

.Till t&lt;l6 16t
. M6 193 191
.4U 299 18!

3

.3tl9 180 IIIII

.444 189 \!33
.333 160 202
.333

.

'' ' '0
5 I

toe t35

! , 0 22'l 159 ~!0
Wf'sl
, 't ll .Till 250 200
San Fran.
6 3 0 .8&amp;7 237 161
New Orleans
2 'I 0 .tll! 130 flO
Allan~
2 , 0 .222 161 ~~9
LA Ram."Sunday',; Result111
NY ,Jet~ 16, Kllii!IAM City B
Clevcl11nd :n, Bulfa.lo U
Dalla,; t3, NPW England 1710T)
W~~Hhln~on 'lO, [h!lrvlt 13
llo~U~ton :e3, PltiAiwl'll:h 3

Hockey Ltque.

Dctrolt

lndiUUipoliK 40, Miami 21
LA- Rani• 27, St. IAuJ~ zt
Mlnne!!Ota U, Tampl Bay li
~ N't' Gtanttt20, PhUadelphlal7

Nf'w Ork&gt;anrt28. SaaFrancl!it'O :!.f

Cfnci..WI16, Allantlli 10
SeaUtr 24, Greea Bay 13
S11n Dlt!IV II, LA Halderli 14
MondltJ'S Result
Den\'f!r :n, U!lcap;o 2fl
SUndi&amp;Y'II Gantt'!&gt;!
1\illlnlll at Mlnnt'l!OI.II, I p .m.
Buffalo ai NY .J.-b, I p .m.
Clt'nland at Houston, I p.m .
Detroit 1d Chlca~~;o, I p.m .
Green Bay at K~tniiiiK City, I p.m .
Indianapolis at Nrw En ttland. I p.m.

8a11ketha.ll
Waived lorwtLrd Geltf'

Colle~tf'

National Conlerene~
E1111t

Dallll:&lt;t

-

Ranb.
Nl'w York __, , \hlwd .-uard Gl!ndd
Hender!Kin: claimed ' guard Tony White
off WQI\'CrK.

1119

.333 1113 11\.,

1 Ao

\\' llShlnKtun

p.m .

Wedft('Rd&amp;)' 'l Games

Pet . PF PA
.-5,8 !11 1116
.~e Its 140
....... 164 !24

\\'e~~ t

San Dlf'Jtl
Se ... tl£&gt;

·

•' 0
0

' ''
' ''

flf"veland
Houston

Kan!ti!l

•'

7:35

NY blander• Ill Montr.al , nlgtM
BMU&amp;Io at Hardord. nl1h1
st. Loula llt Toronto, nl&amp;fll
Philadelphia ad New Jentey, niJht
MlaneAOia at Ch teaco, alcbt
Boi!IWn ad Wln~~lpeJ, nl1ht
Quebec at f.dmonton, niJht

Eool
N\' Jets
· lndlanapoiiM

M' asblqton,

Los An!fele!i at NY Islanders, II: 05'p,m.
Boston Ill Calsary, ~: 35 p .m.
PUtlfburxh at V ancou¥er, 10: !U p.m.

By United P~s blternatlon~~~l
N.\TIONAL FOOTBi\LL LEAGUE
Amerkan Confer-ence
"' L T

a.t

MIMCSOUl - Recallf'd rl(lll winK Mitc h
Me!IIAier and df'ff'OM£&gt;man !:lhawn
Cluunben from KaiMmazoo of tbc
laternatloMI HoCke,r Lea1UE'; ~nt riJht
win&amp; Larry IJ.t,Pallllll to Kalamazoo.
Nl:' Har~~l'rs - Sent cenlf'r Ull Dahlen
to Colorado of the lnternatlnru&amp;l Rockey
teap and ddeawman D~~ove Ptchf'tle 10
Ne\otl H~~oven of the American Hod~oey
Lup.
PhUadelphla - RPcalled «Mile Wen·
dt!ll Younl{, center Dun Nachb~tur and
defensemlln dell ChychrW1 from Her~ey
of ibf' 1\merk:IUI llockey ~lll(lW : !!lent
JlQIIUe Mark LaFore!lt 'o Hershf'y for
eondttlonlnl.: purp&amp;se!J .

DENVER (UPI) - .John El ·
way and Jim McMahon both did
what they do best Monday night.
Elway put on a dazzling
display before lhe home crowd
and brought his team from
behind twice for a much-needed
·victory.
McMahon. meanwhile,
touched off a eontroversy, just as
he has done so often in his
flam boy ani career. ·
Elway threw for 341 yards and
had three scoring passes on a
chilly · evening, overcoming 14at\d 8·point deHcils lo bring the
Broncos a 31-29 victory that kept
them in the playoff chase.
Denver improved to 5-3-1 while
Chicago dropped to 7-2.
"I have to let it sink in." Eiway
said. "This was a tremendous
game ror us. This puts us back in
the hunt and Is a big, big
confidence bullder."
Denver, however. was helped
along by a !;!range turn of events
mid·way lhrough the second
quarter that a1tered thecomplexio.n of the rest of the evening.
McMahon enjoyed the most
productive game of his career,
completing a personal-high 311
yards worth of passes, throwing
for three touchdowns and running for another.
But wllh his team poised on the
Denver goal line in the second
period, about to go up by two
louchdowns, McMahon decided
to change a play sent In by Coach
Mike Ditka :
William "Refrigerator" Perry
had been sent In as a decoy on the
third-down play, but McMahon
decided to hand Perry the ball
instead.
.
Perry fumbled, Denver's Mark
Haynes recovered and his return
to the Broncos' 24-yard line set up
a game-tying touchdown.
Thai decision brought a sharp
rebuke from Ditka after the
game.
"We're a very undisciplined
football team ," Dilka said. "I've
never ·been this dlsappoinled
before. It's hard to win when you
have no discipline. A coach can 't
give a learn discipline. The guys
won't sacrifice. We have a lot of ..
tr9uble and I'm not just talking
smoke.
"Perry was never supposed to
touch . the ball. The play was
changed at the line of

touchdowns coming on Elway
pas ses of .22 yards to Vance
Johnson, .22 yards 10 Mark
Jackson and 35 yards to Ricky
Nattie!. Thelasttwopassescame

inside the two· minute warning.
Chicago reclaimed the lead in
the third quarter with 15 points,
McMahon throwing a 26-yard
scoring pass to Gault and diving
over from the 1-yard line for
another touchdown before Kevin
Butler kicked a 42-yard field
scrimmage.''
Calendar
goal. The Bears. however,
McMahon
admitted
his
Sut:cPr
botched both extra points in the
MI8L
mistake.
Dalla» Ill Balllmorf", 7: 3S p.m .
"I
screwed
up
...
he
said
.
"!
third quarter.
Tacoma at Mtnnt'solll.. 11:35 p.m .
Tel\nl!l
Denver then rallied agaIn on a
thought he could ~core, but I
Nrw \'urk - 11 million Vlralnlot SllmK
27-yard
field goal by Rich Karlis
never
should
have
handed
him
Championships
wiih . 12:20 left a-nd a 4-yard,
the ball. If we had scored there it
game-winning touchdcown by
would have been 21-7 and a
Steve Sewell with 4:58 to go.
different ballgame. ·'
The last touchdown was set
The Bears drove 90 and 86
yards the first lwo limes they had · when McMahon threw an inter·
the ball and went ahead, 14-0, on
ception deep in Denver ter r itory.
McMahon touchdown throws of
51 yards to Willie Gault and 6
The Daily Sentinel
as Mike McPhee scored twice in yards to Cap Boso .
a five-minute span In the second
Thanks in part to the Perry
(USPS 145-960)
period. McPhee, who had 18 fumble, Denver scored three
1\ Dh·lsion of Multlmt'dia, lnt~.
goals last year, already has nine -·times in the second quarter to
Publishro f'\' f'r~· afl r&gt;r noon . Monda.v
this season.
take the halftime lead. the
thrnu gll Friday , 111 Court St .. Po·
"I don't lhink Wayne Gretzky
m('rO'r', Ohi o. bv thl' Ohio V :_
I I]('V Pub·
l i!:o hln'g Comp..in:--·IMullimC'dia ." Inc ,
has anything to fear," McPhee
PomC'rov. Ohi o ·1576!"1. Ph. 992·2156, SP·
said. "but even I am surprised at
cond clas s p ns ta~r ptlid at Pom&lt;•r o~·.
_ my start. I am a defensive player
Ohio .
and I know that they don't expect
' r rn J tional.
M f' mbPI' ; Unit r d Press l nt
that much offense from me. So I
Inland Dail y Prr ss Assotia l!on and thr
guess it is a pleasant surprise.
Ohio Nco w spapl'r Associnllon. Nat iona!
Advf'r tlslng RPprrsrnt ativc . Branham
Montreal grabbed a 3-0 lead at
NC'wspupC'r Suit·~. 7:13 Third Av('n ur.
10:18 of the second when Chris
TOLEDO, Ohio tUP ii - Ball .
N(•w York, NC'"-' York 10017.
Nilan scored as he was left
Stale lailback Bernie Parmalee
PO~MA STER : Send a drlri"Ss change':'i
unguarded in !rani of goalie Mike and Eastern Michigan cornerto Thf' Oall.v Sl&gt;nlinC'I. 111 Cou rl St..
Llut.
Po mC'I'O~ . Ohio ~5769.
back Charles Gordon were se" They should ijave never lected the Mid-American ConferSUBSCRIPTION RATES
counted that goaL" Llut said.
ence offensive and defen sive
Ry Carril•r or Motor Route
Onr Wf'f'k . . ... ... ..... .. ....... . .... .. ... . .. $1 . 2~
"Just before Montreal was on a
players of the week Monday.
Onl' Mo nlh . ... ........ .. ........ ... ... ... . . $5.-1 5
power play and they1 iced the
Parmalee, a freshman from
On r Y C'&lt;\r . ..
. .. $65.00
puck. The linesmen should have
Jersey Cily. N.J., rushed 33
SINGLF. COPY
called the play back but they
PRICt:
times for 211 yards and scored
,
Dally
...
...
......
.
didn't."
.
four touchdowns in Ball State's
Roy, who shut oul the Chicago
Sub scrlbPr s not &lt;IPs ir ing to p .t~' tllC' rar ·
31-17 victory over Ohio Univer·
r\('r muv r emit in ad v:.t ncr di f ('(·t to
Blackhawks Saturday night in
sity Saturday. He scored on a
Th C' Oal iv Srn1 inC'I on o :1. r, or· 12 m onth
his first game back alter sitting
!our-yard r'un , a pair of one-yard
ba sis. Cr.N.III will tH• ,e lvrn (•art·lrr f' 1l (' h
out an eight-game suspension,
" 'C'('k .
runs and a 23-yard pass.
~llowed a goal by Mike Millarat
Gordon, a sophomore from
Nu subsl· r ipt lo ns ~, m.lil p&lt;'r ml!l &lt;'d In
arf'~l !'i w he n" ho m f' na rrii'T' SC'r ViCf' i"
14:55 of the second.
East Lansing, Mich., made l4
a \;ai la bl e .
Millar, just called up from
tackles, including nine solos. in
Binghamton of the American
Mail Suhsl·ription"
Eastern's title -c linching 38-18
Inside M!"lgs Coun1y
Hockey League, lifted a high shot
win over Bowling Green . He also ·
1:1W c f'k ~ .. .
.. ...... Sli.29
under Ihe cross bar to narrow the
intercepted a pass which he
26 Wc&lt;'k S.....
. ........... $34.00
~2 Wr t•k •L.............................. $!ifi.51i
lead to 3·1.
returned. 70 yards for a touch·
Out!-ildt• Mt'lg.., Counl:~o·
S'rent Peterson cui the margin
down and returned a punt 47
t:l W&lt;•Pks .. .................. . .. .... Slll20
to 3-2 by scoring an unassisted
yards (o sel up another score.
2'1 \oV ('('k ~ .. .
. ..... :S:\~ . 10
~ 2 W('cks ..
. ... . 1.. ,. Sti7. 60
goal at 13:21 of the final period.

Whalers rally, tie Canadiens
MONTREAL (UP!) - The
Hartford Whalers are hopeful a
lucky bounce will change their
luck :
Stewart Gavin scored a short·
handed goal with 37 seconds
remaining in regulation Monday
night to lift the struggling Whal ers to a 3-3 tie with I he MontrealCanadiens.
With the Whalers playing
short-handed, Dave Babych shot
the puck into the Montreal zone.
Sylvain Cole took the puck
behind the Canadiens' net and
fed Gavin, who bounced a shot
past goalie Patrick Roy for the
tying goaL
"So far this season, we haven't
had tthose lucky bounces, "
Gavin said. "Luckily, It hapt pened . We gol a big poinl in lhis
building and this game is going to
help us turn the corner."
The Whalers, last in the Adams
• Division, are0·3-3in their last six
games while theCanadiens, atop
the Adams with an NHL-best 27
points, have lost only one of Iheir
last 11 games, going 6-1-4 over
thai span.
"It was a-lucky goal," Roy
said. "Gavin stood in front of me
and whacked al the puck. I don 't
know if !I hit somebody, but
somehow it went ln. To lose two
points when we were up 3-0 is
very disheartening."
The Canadlens ~roke ahead 270

~
@ 1987b)NEA , Ir\C II· ~

fJ;s,.ud .ftme
(6141 992 -5141
MIDDLEPORT. OHIO

-

a ball picked off by KC. Clark,
one of the few rep lacement
players .slill in the Deriver camp.
Sacks by Rulon Jones and Karl
Mecklenburg
Denver's

lead in the final minutes and
when the Bears got the ball back
with 45 seconds remaining,
McMahon promptly went to the
sidelines with a slightly injured

I~~~~~~~~~~~~::::;::::::::::;;;;;:;;::;
APPEARING

AT

GLOECKNER'S
11 0 EAST MAIN, POMEROY
WED, NOV. 18
4 P.M. to 8 P.M.
CINCINNATI REDS PITCHER

JEFF .MONTGOMERY
FORMER WELLSTON AND
MARSHALL STAR
BIING THE KIDS IN TO VISIT WITH JEFF AND GET HIS AUTOGRAPH

1

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WE

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on Your Size.
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The sentiment which the flowers repr·~es~;'"!~h~a~n ~tr~a~;·,~· ::I~
vel further than the funeral. Floral ~
may be taken to the grav11ite or to lhe church.
Many hospitals ami rest homes will CKcept gifts of
flowers for their residents and patients.
J·.~::.....:;-.,-_,;-_::.
_ _.._:_..;;;----'-'-~
·Or flowers given by friends in honor of the de· · • .-.-&lt;tosed may be given to guests, as a fragrant
reminder of a life that has passed and of the value of their own lim.
Many llorisls have developed special floral arrangements for funerals. We also can answer
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neral services. Please call if you would like more
t614(667-3110
COOLVIL~E . OHIO
informatio_n.

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(UPI)

Name MAC top
players of week

The beauty and fragrance. of flowers serve as a
reminder that funeral servi&lt;es are for the living.
Colorful, tasteful floral arrangements are generally
..,t by those who mmot be presMt but wish to ex·
tend ti.ir condolences. These floral piKes help the
bereaved to CKcept that life con~nues, though
loved one is no longer pr15111t to share in it. As such,
flowers serve both to honor the deceased and to·
reaHinn the valuo of life itself.
•',,

down In the first quarter of Monday night's
contest in Denver. The Broncos overcame an
early 14-0 Bears lead to beat the visitors 31-29 .

ELWAY LOOKS FOR RECEIVER- Broncos
quarterback dohn Elway (7) looks for a receiver
as Chicago defensive end Richard Dent (95) bears

WHAT HAPPENS TO THE FLOWERS?

t

The Daily Sentinei - Page-3

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

By Jack Anderson

The Daily Sentinel

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•

�•
'

Tuesday, November 17, 1987

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The loaded gun pointed at the
head of Ohio State football coach
Earle Bruce th'i' past several
years r!nally went off Monday
afternoon.
Ohio State President Edward
Jennings, saying he was "under
pressure to make a coaching
change," ordered the .firing of
Bruce, but had Athletic Director
Rick Bay, a staunch Bruce
supporter, make the announce·
ment · at an afternoon news
conference.
"Earle Bruce, after the game
• against Michigan , will no longer
· be the head football coach here at
· Ohio State," Bay said. then
promptly announced his own
resignatio n.
"I told the president earlier,
• when we were discussing all
these rumors, that I could not be
· a part of that," Bay said, "so, I
have resigned as athletic
director."
The firing came just a few
hours after Bruce, accompanied
by his wife, Jean, told his weekly
media luncheon he planned to
; stay at Ohio State through the
final year of his three·year
contract.
" I don't have much to say,
damn . It," Bruce said Moilday
eve ning as he left the new $10.6
million multisports practice fa.
cility which. ironically. he helped
dedicate just last Friday. Hew as
escorted by two university police
officers.
"They have the right to fire a
person," Bruce said after agree·
ing to talk briefly with the
members of the media who had
gathered ou tside the guarded
, door, "but I think it 's very poor
timing, right before the Michigan
game. the most important game
on our schedu le . I don't think
' that's quite fair to our players."
·'I'm a Buckeye." said Bruce.
"So are most pf my coaching
staff. I'm kind of proud of what
I've done here, not only wh&lt;it I've.
done on the football field. but also
in the classroom, with kids
getting an education. I worked
hard at my job and I'm loyal to
Ohio Slate." ,
This year's Buckeye team.
favored to win the Big Ten and
' ranked No.3 In the nation in the
pre·season ratings, sta nds 5·4·1
overall and 3-4 in the conference.
They have lost three in row, the
last two by two points each.
Ba)', who became ath.letic
director at OhioSiatelhree years
ago, said he could never under·
stand the criticism aimed at
Bruce, the winningest eoach In
the Big Ten the past eight years.
"It's been a mystery to me,"

said Bay, "that coach Bruce has
been under fire at one point or
another all the time I've been
hpre. I know that he has not been
totally popular In some quarters,
but I think that would be true of
anybody who is here.
"I think he 's done a whale of a
job. He has won 75 percent of his
games. His record is among the
very best in the country.
"Furthermore and most lm·
portant," added Bay, "he's done
it with integrity. I don't know
what more you can ask of any
coach. My heart goes out to
Coach Bruce and the entire staff.
It's iJ. dark day for Ohio State."
Going Into Saturday's game at
Michigan, Bruce has an 80·26·1
record, but a loss to the Wolve·
rines would mark the first. time
since 1943 an Ohio State team has
lost four in a row.
Bay said despite the outcome
of Saturday's game against
Michigan, Ohio State will not
play in a 15owl game this season.
It will snap a string of 15
consec u live bowl appearances
for the Buckeyes.
Jennings, In a one-page release
distributed at the news confer·
ence, said Bay will be replaced
Immediately by senior associate
director of athletics James
Jones. Bay, however, will stay
with the university until the end
of June on sjlecial assignment to
the president's office.
Bruce took over the Ohio State
team following the firing of
Woody Hayes on NewYear'sDay
1979. Hayes, another strong supporter of Br uce, one of his former
assistants, died last March.
Bruce returned, to Ohio State
from Iowa State. where, in six
years he revived the Cyclone
football fortunes with a 36·32
record. Prior to that, he coached
one year at the Unlversly of
Tampa (10·2, and served six
years under Hayes at Ohio State.
Following last January's Cot·
ton Bowl win overTexasA&amp;M, he
turned down a lucrative multiyear offer from the Unlverslty of
Arizona, deciding, at Bay's urging, to remain at Ohio State.
"That decision was the right
decision for me and my family, "
he said at his media luncheon
Mo.nday. "We thought we would
h ave a good football team and a
good season. Some things have
happened that have made it a
little longer than you'd expect."
Hi s problems started with the
disclosure that Ali·Amerlcan
- wide receiver Cris Carter had
accepted money from an agent.
Carter was declared ineligible
a·nd Ohio State declined to appeal
to the NCAA, reportedly over

Bruce's objections.

Coaches condemn
,Bruce's firing
By United Press International
The firing of Ohio State Univer.
sity football coach Earle Bruce
drew some criticis m from fellow
members of the fraternity, espe·
cially Bruce' s final oppof1ent as
· • OSU coach.
'
Bruce's firing Monday by OSv
President Edward Jennings will
Pe effective after the Buckeyes'
final game against Michigan in
Ann Arbor Saturday.
Michigan 's Bo Schembechler,
who split his eight games with
Bruce, called it " a sad day for
college football. "
"Earle Bruce r oa ched with
, honesty and integrit y. His record
speaks for itself. Th is will not

..

detracr from his reputatio n as an

outstanding coach ."
At his weekly news conference
earlier in the .da y, asked about

rumors that Bruer was in trou ·
.~

-'
.-

'•
'

ble,

he

sentiment

said

against Ohio State Is 2·5.
"Jack Nick laus or (Arnoldi
Palmer or the great baseball
players or the boxers or anybody
e lse have bad years or have one
day game. That's just human
nature, •· he added. ·'They've got
a real fine football team and
things just haven' t gone right,
but Earl Bruce Is every bit as
much of an outstanding coach as
he's ever been."
OSU Athletic Director Rick
Bay, who resigned in protest at
-13ruce' s firing, ha s been mentioned as a possible candidate to
replace Michigan AD Don Canham, who is retiring this year.
Bay said he had talked with
Michigan officials In the past, but
had no immediate plans for
another job after his tenure at
Ohio State ends in June.

the anti· Brucc

" makt:'s

Columbu s

look pretty darn bad."
Michigan State's George Pe·
rles. who won the Big Ten title
that most had awarded to rhe
Buckeyes in preseason si zeups.
said he was surprised .
"I heard about it wh ile we were
on the field f practicing), " Perles
s aid . . ·; 1 think the good thing
about it is he has a good record
and he'll. get a nice job.
" It 's definit&lt;&gt;l y a dark day for
him and for the school. "
£qua lly defe nsive of Bruce
was Iowa coa c h Hayden Fry .
whose Hawkeyes de fea ted Ohio
Stat e in the lasr seconds
Saturday .
' 'I personally just think that
It 's r idiculous that anybody could
ha ve any thing but good things to
say a bout the man, " Fry said
before lea rning of Bruce's firing.
''He's a class fellow, he's a
gentleman a nd a real credit to
the game.
" He·s the best aoach in the Big
Ten and al l you 've got to do Is
loo k at our reco rd against Ohio
Sta te," said Fry, whose s lat e

The Daily Sentinel

.,

Bruce.fired by
Ohio State; Bay,
AD, steps down

a

...

BO UPSET

Buckeyes have four starters
back; Wilson is top ret~rttee _

EARLE BRUCE

Honor. Palmer, Szanto
TOLEDO, Ohio tUPI) -Mus·
klngum quarterback Tim
Palmer and Capital defensive
back Keith Szanto were selected
the Ohio Athletic Conference
offensive and defensive players
of the week Monday.
Palmer, a senior from Colum·
bus, playing his final collegiate
game, completed 17 of 26 passes
for 221 yards and one touchdown
and rushed 12 times for 100 yards
In Muskingum's 36-32 victory
over Ohio Northern . ·
Szanto, a senior from Akron,
made three finasslsted tackles
and intercepted two passes in
Ca pital's 16·14 win over Baldwin·
Wallace to win the OAC
championship.

By GENE CADDES
along with Hopson. John Ander· Buckeyes didn ' t have a year ago.
·•we should · be a stronger
UPI Sports Wrlt~r
son .&lt;tarred 31 .
rebounding
team wlth John And·
COLUMBUS, Ohio IUPII
erson,
Grady
Mateen. Jerry
Ohio State basketball Coach
To help offset the loss 9f
Francis
and
Perry
Carter," sa id
Gary Williams finds out this Hopson. Williams adds 6·fooHl
season about life without Dennis forward Grady Mateen , a Williams : " This will reduce
Hopson.
transfer from Georgetown; 6· s econd and· third shots. but we
Hopson, the Big T\'n player·Of· foot ·5 guard Randy Doss, a 1986 still ha ve to put more pressure on
the·year and the conference's recruit who was a victim of the the ball and make it harder fo r
leading scorer at better than 29 NCAA, 's Proposition 48 !which teams to g!'t the first shot."
As it .was last season, depth
points a game. led the Buckeye"s makes players with bad grades
again
will be a problem for
to a 20·13 overall record, a sixth . Ineligible); and 6·foot·8 fresh ·
Williams.
whose pr~slng style of
place finished In the conference man Perry Carter. a 230·pounder
play
call
s forj\fr e quent
at 9·9 and a berth In the NCAA who figures to add instant muscle
substitutions.
tournament in Williams' first to the Buckeyes.
Ohio Stale will start the season
year.
Other key contributor s could
Hopson Is gone, a flr&lt;t·round
be 6·foot·7 junior Tony White, with only nine eligible scholar·
draft choice of tile New Jersey another much improved player a ship players . When the winter
Nets, bu t Williams has four othet year ogo who was the first front quarter begins In January. 6-foot
starters returning, along with a
court replacement and averaged guard James Bradley, a
trio of talented newcomers.
4.5 points a game. and 6·foot·4 transfer. and 6·foot ·9 forward
Leading the way is senior point
senior guard Scott Anderson . . Joe Dumas become eligibiP.
Bradley first enrolled at Miami
guard Curtis Wilson, who aver·
whose game time a year ago
aged 14.3 points and 4.9 assists a
1
Oh
io), but spent only two weeks
came most often when the
game a year ago. Wllson scored
there
before transfering to Ohio
Buckeyes needed outside shoot·
in double figures In 26 of the 33
·State.
A good outside shooter, he
ing but is expected to be counted
games, with a high of 30 agains t
averaged
31 points per game as a
on more this season.
Indiana.
"The loss· of Hopson affects high .school senior.
Two other highly regarded
Two other double figure scor·
each player," Williams said .
ers also return in 6·foot junior
"We'll havl' to get better balance recruits- 6· foot ·8 forward Treg
guard Jay Burson (12.5) a nd
in our scori ng. 1! our point Lee and fi. foot·"l E li Brewster6·foot ·5 junior forw ard Jerry
production drops off some, and it failed to make grade this year
Francis fll.2), along with 6-loot·
may, we have to play better under Proposition 48.
9 senior center John Anderson
Ohio State, even without Hop·
defense · to make sure our oppo·
(6.9) . probably the team's most
nents score less. I believe we can son, may be better !han a year
improved player a year ago.
ago come · January. But a big
do this."
Wilson, Burson and Francis
The addition of Carter and j ump In the standin!(S In the
started all 33 games la st year , · Mateen. both shot blockers. will tough Big Ten wo uld be
add that dimension which the surprising.

Bengals offensive
Nebraska takes over
line adds to reputation . top spot in UPI poll

CINCINNATI fUPI) - The
Bengals' offe,nslve line has been
gaining a reputation as being
among the NFL's best. Its
performance In Sunday's 16·10
victory over Atlanta will only add
to that perception.
The ~ngals rushed for 270
yards behind a line that was
battered by Injuries. Tackle
Anthony Munoz played the entire
game with a sore shoulder,
center David Douglas was
hobbled by a shaky knee and
guard Bruce Reimers was still
feeling the effects of an ear
infection .
But that didn't lower the
expectations of the line 's
members or coach.
"We expected tto play well),"
said Reimers . "It comes from
Jimmy (McNally),ourcoach. He
expects us to do that kind of stuff.
We like to get the chance to show
what we can do, especially with
the running game."
"W hen somebody gets hurt,"
McNally said, "we just put the
next guy In and tell him to do it. I
don't really think what we did
was inspirational. I'm not trying
to be hard·nosed about it, but we

just did what we were supposed
to do."
Coach Sam Wyche and other
team members were left to
praise the line.
"The first thing I said to the
line was how proud I was of
them," Wyche said. ·'I know a lot
of them played under circum·
stances when they might not
have played otherwise. But this
was that kind of football game,
that important a game to this
team, that they played and help
us come out a winner."
Running back Stanford Jen ·
nlngs, subbing for the Injured
James Brooks, carried 12 times
lor 91 yards and fullback Larry
Kinnebrew amassed 100 yards on
27 rushes. Even quarterback
Boomer Eslason got in on the
running game, carrying 10 times
for 77 yards.
"The yards I gal, I got because
of them," Jennings sa id of his
career·hlgh rushing total.
" There were gaping holes, and
for me, it was just a malter of
hitting them."
With the Bengals' passi ng
attack still sputtering, it was left
to the running game to produce
any points.

Hairston: 'I've always tried
to be a consistent performer'
BEREA, Ohio IUPJ) - Carl
Hairston created a stir when he
became the first Cleveland
Browns player to cross the picket
line during the 24-day player
strike,
Now, Hairston is back to
charging through a different sort
of line- opponents' offenses.
In Sunday's 27·21 victory over
Buffalo, the 12·year veteran
defensive end sacked Bills quar·
terback Jim Kelly twice and
added five tackles.
Hairston has compiled six
sac ks and 33 tackles on the
season, and Browns coach Martv
Schottenheimer says he "Is hav·
ing an absolutely outstanding
season and playing better than
when he was a Pro Bowler with
the Eagles i after th e 1979
season) . ·
·
"I've always tried to be con·
sis tent," says Hairston, who
turns 35 on Dec. 15. "I think the
whole line and secondary has
played well. We wouldn't be one
of the top·rated defenses In the
league if It wasn't for steady
play ..
"I don't know how much the
strike hurt us . Right now, I think
we're back to playing very well. 1
don't know how much longer I
will play, sol regard 'e very game
as Important. The only goal Is to
help ' the Browns play winning
football."
Hairston's heady play may be
needed to help overcome yet
another injury to the defense.
. Schottenheimer said defensive
end Reggje Camp would have an
arthrogram today on an ailing
left knee. The tes.t Involves
Injecting dye into the joint. If
arthroscopic surgery Is needed,
Camp, a five· year vetera n, may
miss as many as three weeks.
Schottenhelmer also ex ·
pressed concern over the fact the
Incurred 10 penalties for the third
time this season.
The Browns also had 10 penal·
ties against Pittsburgh on Sept.
20 and at San Diego on Nov. l. In
the Chargers game, a penally
nulllfied Bernie Kosar's 50-yard
scori ng pass to Webster

Slaughter.
Sunday, a 73-yard punt return
by Gerald McNeil for a touchdown was ca lled back because of
a illegal block by He'rman
Fontenot.
Schottenhelmer said after the
game that there were "too many
damn penalties ... and they are
going to be corrected."
Monday, Schottenheimer soltened his stance somewhat.
"Penalties In untimely situalions are what disturbs· me." he
said. "That (Fontenot:s penally)
was an aggreslve attempt to
block a guy.'vou're going to have
penalties like that, that's not the
type of penally that concerns me.
" Herman blocked him early
and well, and came back and got
him high."
The coach. rather, is con.
cerned with penalties that turn
success. Into drawbacks.
"When It s fourth down and two
(yards) and you've got them
stopped, then you have offsetting
foul s to negate matters," said
Schottenhelmer. "Or ll's third
and forever and you get called for
holding or roughing the passer.
"Those are things that are a bit
troubling, but they can be
corrected."
Rookie linebacker Mike Jun.
kin, the Browns top pick In 1987,
is expected to lJ'! released from
the Cleveland Clinic today follow·
lng wrist surgery last Friday.
Junkin is expected to be ready
for th e 1988 minl·camp.
·
"I spoke to him on Saturday,"
said the coach. "He and I need to
sit down and talk.
'
·'There Is no concern that this
is a career·threatenlng Injury.
(Team physician) John Bergfeld
Is very optimistic."
Kicker Jeff Jaeger has a stiff
back, but will play In Houston .
Schottenhelmer Indicated
George Winslow would continue
to handle punting chores.
Winslow has punted just three
Urnes In twa games, averaging
39.7 yards.
.
' 'The offense has played so
Well, I haven't had much work,"
he said . "I'm n~t complaining;"

NEW YORK fUP]) - The
Nebraska Cornhuskers, who
have been second . to No. 1
Oklahoma since the preseason.
today edged the Sooners by one
point to clai m the top spot in
United Press International's
Board of Coaches rankings.
The razor·thin margin set the
stage for th e biggest college
football game of the season
Saturday in Lincoln, Neb .. when
the two schools pla y for the Big
Eight title and an aptomatic
berth in the Orange Bowl.
The Cornhuskers earned 718
points and 21 first·place votes in
voting by the 50 coaches . Okla·
homa, which has struggled the
last two weeks, had 717 points
and 27 No . l tallies.
" I don't fee l being elevated to
number one in a poll will make
a ny difference in the outcome of
the football game." Nebraska
Coach Tom Osborne said. ''The
matter will be settled on the field,
not In the advance hype."
Despite the change up top, the
next five teams stayed put with
Miami at No. 3. foll owed . by
Florida State, UCLA, Syracuse
and Notre Dame.
Clemson moved up a spot 10
l"ighth, Auburn jumped three
positions to No. 9 and Louisiana
State moved up a notch to lOth.
No. 11 Mlc"higan State and No.
12 South Carolina each improved
two positions, Michigan State
leaped four places to 13th, No . 14
Texas A&amp;M made the largest
move up, six positions, and No. 15
Tennessee bettered itself by four .
No. 16 Georgia ,sa nk eight
places and 19th· ranked Alabama
plummeted nine. No. 17 Pitts..
burgh, No. 18 Southern Cal and
No. 20 Iowa, all ear ly·season
visitors- to th e rankings,
returned.
Indiana, which lost its Big Ten
title showdown to Michigan
State; Arkansas, a loser in a key
Southwestern Conference clash
to Texas A&amp;M; and Penn State,
de feated by Pittsburgh, all
dropped from the Top 20.
In the last five seasons, the two

top·ranked teams have been
within 10 points only twice, both
times in 1985. In Week 1 of the '85
season Ok lahoma held a three·
point edge over Aubucn, and in
Week 6, Iowa had a .three· point
lead over Oklah oma.
Nebras ka started the season
187 points behind Oklahoma and
has whittled that margin all
year, trailing the Sooners by 32
points last week .
"All season we have just
concentrated on playing the best
we ca n and let the polls do their
thing," Osborne said. ·'However,
we're . pleased that the coaches.
have confidence In our team. But
we still have to do it on
Saturday."
Nebraska. 9·0, was idle Satur·
day. Among the Cornhuskers
first four opponents this season
were UCLA. South Caroli na and
Arizona State. Victories over
that impressive trio helped Ne·
braska build a solid foundation of
admirers.
Meanwhile, Oklahoma's non·
league schedule featured such
soft spots as 1'\orth Texas State.
Texas and Tulsa . Nebraska will
represent the first 1986 bowl·
winning team on the Sooners'
schedule.
Tr:o weeks ago, the Sooners
los t starting quarterback Ja·
melle Hol ieway . and fullba ck
Lydell Carr for the season to knee
Injuries and had to rally to defeat
Oklahoma State, 29·10. Saturday,
against a weak Missouri team.
Oklahoma struggled to a 17·13
triumph.
"We haven't played well
enough In the la st t,wo weeks to be
nurriber one," Oklahoma Coach
Barry Switzer said.

.

..

By The Bend

Harrisonville Eastern Star holds
installation for new .officers
Bernice and Dan a Hol'fman

,were insta lied as wor1 hy ma 1ron
and worthy patron of Harr-ison·
ville Chapt e r 255, Order of the
East&lt;':rn Sta r, at in stallation
ceremonies held Friday night at
the Masonic Temple.
Others Ins talled · Wl' re Betty
Bishop, associate matron; Uoug
Biship, ass'?ciat e pat ron; GraCie
Wilson, seC'rtary; Donnn Nelson,
treasurer ; Kim Nelson. condu c-

tress; Pat Arnold .. associ ate c on·
ductress; Golda Reed , chaplain;
Larry Well , marsha.ll; .Jane
Wise, organist; Pearle Canaday,
Adah: Lois Wya nt, Ruih; Pau ·
line lltkins, E sther·: NPva Nichol ·
son, Martha; ·Brenda Kennedy,
EJecta ; Ruth Erlewine . warder.
and Norman Will, sentinel.
Martha and Don M. ~ se wc rc the
installing offieer.l UJld were a s·
sisted by LPanna Adkins, mar·
shall , Elsie Schoenlan . chaplain;
Katherine Shenefield: organist;
Bertha Crow. warde r . and Le wis
Crow, sen tlnel.
Introduced and welcomed
were Emm a Polen, gra nd r·epre:
sentat lvc of Ois trct 25 and of
Nova Scotia; Martha Porter,
deputy grsand matron; worthy

matrons and patrons or other
cltpters , all past matrons and pat
patrons . and the past matron s
and patrons of Harris onville
Chapter, along with, honored
masons and those havmg grand
appointments .
Al so introduced were Bell y
Bi shop, president of District 2:\,
vi ce president of District 2;&gt;:
Luann Adkins, secrPtary of Di s·
trict 25 ; Margar·t McNatib and
Ann Price. treas urer of District

Approximately 75 persons at ·
tended an open house held
following the November PTO
me!'ting at the Riverview School
In observance of American Edu ·
cation Week. Parents visited the
classroom to enjoy students '
work as well as confer with
teachers.
During the bu siness meeting
thanks were extended by SuP
Suttle , president, to all who
helped with the successful school

Se lecting th e "Best Ever·.
greens" and "Hedges" were
lopics presented by Martha
Chapman and Anna Ogdin 01 the
recent meeting of Star Garde n
Club h~ld at the home of Debbi e
A tor.
· The two s uggested th at ever·
g recns suitable lor pian ling nPa r
buildings are junipers that gr ow
two feet tall and arborvita e
which grows to about three fe el.
Taller e\'ergrcens ar·c spruce
which grows to about five feet
and yew a bout 10 feel. Some
hedges mentioned were spread·
ing Japanese quince and forsy .
thia. The two also talked a bout
lilac and flowering quince and
noted that a Iter the lilacs bloom,
all seed should be removed.
Mrs. Ogdl n suggested that
bayberry and sumac attact
birds . All evergreens they
pointed out grow best in rich

"Daily Life on the First Front ·
ier" was the theme of Friday's
meeting of Return .Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution he ld
in the old courthouse in Chester.
Severa l came attired in his tori ·
cal dress , wearing mostly items
of their ancestors. ,S peaker for
the afternoon was David R.
Meder! of the Sons of the
American Revolution , Albany ,
who talked about one of hi s
anceslors, Edward Hand, born in
Ireland in 1744, whose home in
Rock Ford P lantation , Lancas·
ter, Pa. is now open for public
tours.
Medert in pioneer costume
related th e story of Hand's life in
America. He s tudied medicine at
Trinity College in Dublin before
coming to America in 1767 as a
s~rgeon's mate in the Royal Iri s h
of Foot. He was commissioned an
ensign in the British Army and in
1772 was stationed at Fort Pitt.
When the fort was abandoned in
1774, Medert said that Hand left
the army and set up a medica l
practice In Lancaster Pa. He
married Katherine Ewing, a
member of a prominenfiLancas·

the Meigs County fair flower
well·drained soil.
All members answered roll . show and las t year's county
coli by giv ing suggestions for Christmas show.
Mrs. Ator rPad the 24t h Psalm
winter protection for your
garden. Neva Nicholson and for devotions. The December
Stella Atkins displayed broad leaf meeting will be at the Harvest
evergreens. The club discussed House Restaurant at Albany. A
the flower show held over the program and gift exchange will
be · held. Refreshments were
weekend . It was reported that
superio r awards were given for served by the hostess.

Wolfe Pen happenings
Weekend guests df Mr . and
Mr s . Charley Smith were Mrs.
Daniel Worley. Stacy and Daniel.
of Danie ls . W.Va., Mr. and Mrs .
Doyle Knapp, Kalt Knapp,
Langsville. Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knapp, Michelle and Amy. Ra·
ci ne. and Mrs . Ann Lambert.
Hemlock Grove.
Mr. and Mrs. Charley Smith

l__!!GVEMBER 13 lhru 1!_j

were Sunday eveing visitors of
Mr. and Mr. Roy 0. Smith of
Rock Spr ngs Road, and Mrs.
Mildred Arnold.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank,
Sarah and Matthew of Texas
Road were Sunday visitors of Mr.
a nd Mr. Eugene Haning, Ronald
and Gladys Tuckerman.

Church seminar planned
A church growth and teachers '
seminar will be conducted by
Scott Carter Friday and Satur·
day at the Rutland Church ol
Christ.
There is no charge for· the
seminar which· will begin at i
p.m. on Friday and extend
through 10 10 a.m . on Saturday .
According to R. Rill Carte r,
pastor of the host church. the
seminar is for anyone interested
n church growth as well a s
learning to leach and develop
their own skil ls and spiritual
g ifts. He r ited the lack of
qualified tea cher s in Bible
schools a s lhr re a son for the
attend ance dPc line.
Scott Carter, the instru c tor .

holds a master 's in Christian
education from the Cincinnati
Christian Semin ary, is certi fied
by the International Center for
Learning, is promotional coordl·
nator for the Confere nce on
Biblcal Exposition, has been a
Bible College l(•cturcr and con·
terence teacher, and ha s 12 years
experience in Chri stian educa·
tion. He also attended Rutland
High school prior to moiling to
North Caroli na In 1966 ..
Those attending arc to take a
pencil and notebook as oth er
materials will be furnished. A
free ·wi ll offering will be rect&gt;ived
to help cover cost. Further
information may be obtained by
calling 742·2895.

Gallia Count y Pomona Grange
members wer0 gurst s at

thC'

recen t meet in!: of tM · Meigs
County Pomona Gr·ange held at

~

RNER~~

sura nee Services

FRIDAY thru THURSDAY!

214 EAST MAIN

.· POM.EROY

992-6687 .
Slate &amp;u1o
lntur-•
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.

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OPEN : 8-6 MON.·SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
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PH. 742-3088
Maotar Card and Visa Welcome

DAY ORSERVED- Through the efforts of the Racine American
Legion Post 602, Veterans Day was observed al Portland, Letart
Falls and Racine Elementary Schools. The students of the
respective schools participated In the observance by giving the
Pledge of Allegiance to the flag. Legion members W.D. Stewart
presented a talk on the flag, showing the proper method of handling
.and folding the flag; Charles Norris spoke on freedom and war
while Carroll Teaford talked nbout the lcglonalrcs . The program
close d with the playing of "Taps" by Southern Hlg~ School
students Lee Spa un and Loretta Smith.

,speaker, were left, Mary Jane Wise and Caryl
Cook, pictured here with Evelyn Knight who had
the hest hat , over a hundred years old, and Meder!
of near Albany.

~pioneer

ter family.
When war broke out in 1775,
Hand sided with th e Americans
and was appointed seco nd In
command of the First Penrisylva ·
nia regiment, the speaker said.
He noted that within a few
months his ancestor became
commander a nd fought in many
of the major battles including
Yorktown. According to Medert,
he was promoted to brigadier
general after the battle of Tren·
ton. the younges\ such officer in
the Continental Army .
He was a close friend and
confidant of General George
Washington and was appointed
his · adjutant general in 1781.
Hand was commissioned major
general in 1783 and did not leave
the military until after the treaty
was signed in 1783, servi ng in the
capacity of Washington·~ a ide.
Mederlsaid that alter the war.
Hand re·established hi s medical
practice in Lancaster a nd became active ln. poli tics. He
represented Pennsylvania in the
Continental Congress. In 1798 he
was recommissionerd major
ge neral in the U. S. Army

fashion'

preparatory io a possible war
with France. Hand died a t Rock
Ford Planta tion .
The meeting opened in rltualis·
tic form with a message on
Thanksgiving . from Betsy Wol·
!layer, state chaplain, being
read. Hel en Knight Will and
Kathleen Morris were guests.
Officers' reports were give n and
a thank you note was read from
Mrs. Smith for a gift.
Thanks were exte nd ed to Mr.
and Mrs. John Rose and Peggy
Moore for cleaning the room at
the old courthouse where the
meeting was held. An article on
old Chester ,written by Elma
Smi th Reuter, a member of the
chapter living in Akron, was read
by Mrs. A. R. Knight from the
first volume of the Meigs County
History Book.
The eleven members in histori·
cal garb were recognized . Mrs .
Joe Cooke gave the benediction.
Cookies, sandw iches, coifee and
tea were served by hostesses,
Mrs . George Hackett. Jr., Mrs.
Eileen Buck, Mrs. Clyde Ingles.
Mrs . Ever~tt Hayes, and Mrs.
Wilson Carpenter .

Apple Grove UMW conducts meeting
Plans for a Thanksgiving
dinner ' Sunday, Nov. 22, at the
church were discussed a t the
recent meeting of the Apple
Grove United Me thodist Women.
The dinner will be served at '
p.m . with the turkey to be
furnished. Remainder of the
meal is to be potluck with those

Persona1 OOte

SCOTT 'C ARTER

Pomona Grange meeting held

GAN

BEST COSTUMED - Judged the best cos·
turned for Friday's program on "Dally LifP. on the
First Frontier" where David R. Meder! of the
Sons of the American Revolution was the guest

DAR meets in

Phone 446 -4524

BARGAIN NI GHT TUESDAY Sl.99

carnival The first grade won the
attendance award for having the
highest percentage of parents In
attendan ce.
Grace Weber, head teacher,
announced candy sales which
will begin soo n at the school. It
was also an nounced that notices
will be sent home about parentteacher conferences as well as
the Thanksgiving vacation. Refreshments were served by' the
fourth grade mothers.

·Star Garden Club topic hedges

!'131 JACKSON PIKE - RT.35 WESl'

AL L' SEATS 52. 50

25.
The junior past matron. Ava·
nell George. received a gift from
the chapter which was presented
by Pearle Canaday and · the
junior past patron, Dana Hof·
!man, received a gift from the
chapter presented by Gracie
Wilson .
Po tluck refreshments were
served at the conclusion of the
meeting to the nearly a hundred
members and guests attending.

Riverview ·Elementary PTO
conducts recent open house

r--------------1

SATURDAY &amp;SUNDAY MATI NE ES

Tuesday. November 17, 1987
Page- 5

th e hall on the Rocksprings
fairgrounds . . A potluck dinner
preceded the meeting.
Gallia County deputies, Bob
and Vicky Powell. were lntro·
duced with Mrs. Powell present ·
ing the program , "Brid ge to Life
and Beauty." She displayed a
cornucopia and as members
presented poems or readings,
they added the harvest .
Meigs County Pomona Master
Pauline Atki ns presided at the
business meeting. It was noted
that Rose ' A. Barrows of Colum·
bia Grange, won first in the state
with her three piece baby set.
Her entry will go inlo natio;mal
judging now.
Eldon Barrows, legislative
agent , gave his report and
stressed the issw:s which
members should be concerned
about and direct letters to the ir
legisiators. Chester King, dele·
gate to the state grange conven·
tlon , Hudson, gave his report.
Grange officers conference was
held recently at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall with Arthur Crabtree presiding. Representatives
from the six granges in' the
county attended. Plans were
flnallze,d .tor next year.
Ir was announced !hat Racine
Gra nge will have its community
Thanksgiving dinner Friday at
6: 30p.m. at the hall. The turkey
and ham will be fur~lshed and
l!ach one attending Is to take a
covered dish and their own table
service. There will be a pig In the
poke auc tion ~fter the dinner.
Star Grange will also have a
ThanksgiVIng dinner Saturday at
the grange hall.

Lt. Co l. Ret. James M. Roller
and Ida Lee, sons, Jam es Roller
and Mark, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Jacko and Paul II and James,
have returned to their home In
Waldorf. Md. after spending the
weekend here with Mrs . Dorothy
Roller and th e Richard Owen
family.
The visit was a surprise to Mrs.
Roller on her 84th birthday.
On Monday evening the gro up
was entenained a t the Richard
Roller home in Belpre. Also
attending were Mr•. and Mrs .
Richard Gress. Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Cale and Jessica. Mid·
dleport. and Mr . and Mrs .
Raymond Andrews. Cheste r.

Cub ScoutS
derby held
Cub Scout Pack 246 of Salis·
bury recently held a li t e engi ne
derby ·at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. Scouts winning
first, second and third place in
each age group were: in the
Bobcats, Vincent BroderiGk.
fir st; Michael Leifheit, second,
and Jeremy King, third; Bears,
Jeremy Russell, first : Adam
White, second: Daniel Russell.
third; Webelos, John Jeffers,
first; Patrick Young , second;·
and Matthew Morris, third.
Jeremy Russell al so won Best
Over·All.
Other cub scouts taking part
were Reggie Pratt , Chris Ball,
Jamie Broderick. James Geiger,
Timmy Peavley. Steve Hyse_ll,
Josh Witherell, Mfchael fry,mer·
yer and Brent Whaley.
Adult leaders assisting in the
derby were Danny White, cub
master: Mick Young , Frank
BrQderlck, Jeannie Witherell,
Linda Broderick, Jane Russell,
Adell White and Becky
. Broderick.

,,
- -~ ·- ~~---------~

---

attending to tak~ a covered dish .
The Chris tm as dinner was set
for Dec. Sat 6 p.m .at the home of
Donna Hill. It will a lso be a
potluck affair . Mrs. Hill presided
at the meeting with Edith Manuel
giv ing the prayer. Secretary and
trea,urer's reports were given
by Vicki Abe ls . Notes were read
from recent speakers th anking
the UMW for a donation. A note
was read by Donna Hill lrom

(:ood Wo rks thanking the Apple
(,rov&lt;::. Church for food and
coffee ..
Mon ey was collected for dues
and sacral conc~rns and ca.rds
":ere s ent to the s rck and shutms .
Edrth Manu e l read scripture
from. Psalms 118 and 100. The
mectmg ~as rloscd by repeating
the Lord s Pr ayer. Brenda And·
er son and Sue Grace served
refreshment s.

FREE
(With A Qualifying Deposit)

WEST VIRGINIA
.MOUNTAINEER
or
OHIO STATE

BUCKEYE
BLANKET
Call or Stop In For Details!

PEOPLES
BANK
"The Better Bank"
Second S!reet
Mason, W. Va
773-5514

2212 Jackson Ave.
Point Pleasant, w. va.
675·1121

Member F.D.I.C.

Fifth Street
New Haven, w. Va.
882·2135

�-

•

Page- 6 -The Daily Sentinel

..--

_

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, November 17, 1987

Community calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY - The Fraternal
Order of Eagles ' Auxiliary. Area
2171, will hold nominations for
vice-president at the regular
" meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m. All
member s are asked to a ttend,
MIDDLEPORT - Group 2 of
the Middleport P res byterian
Church will meet Tuesday at 6:30
at the American Legion hall in
Middleport lor a Thanksgiving
dinner. Mrs . Wllllam MatTis wili
have Chapter 7 of the stuqy book
·and Mrs. Paul Haptpnstall will
give devotions .

•

l

..

'

CHESTER - The Chester
Bowhunters Club will me~ I Tues: day at 7:30 p.m. to discuss
change of by- law s and indoor
leagues . All members are asked
to attend.
POMEROY - The Fraternal
Order of Eagles Auxiliary. Area
2171. will hold nominations for
vice-president at their regular
:: meeting on Tuesday at 7 p.m . All
• m embers are a sked to attend .

E\'eryone welcome.

-WEDNESDAY,
P"OMEROV - ' Wildw ood
Garden Club will meet Wednesday. ,7:30 p.m .. a t the home of
Hilda Yeauger . Cindy Oli veri
will b~· g ues t speaker.
HARRISONVILLE
Rev.
Charles Be nning ton of Arizona
will be guest spea ker at HatTlsonvllle Holi ness Chapel o n Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. Pu bli c
invited.
MIDDLEPORT - The Meigs
County Fire F!ghters Association will meet Wednesday. 7:30
p.m .. at the Middleport F ire
Station.

Public Notice
Peggy Harri s. 7: :lO p.m . Helen
Blackston will' have d~votions
a nd the t rave ling prize .
Members are to take baby i! em~
which will be used in a county
pre- nata 1progra m . Hostcses will
be Linda Broderick and Becky
Broderick.

Flame fellowship
GALLIPOLIS
Galllpolis
F lame Fellowship Chap ter will .
Meet Friday, 6:30p. m .. at Dale's
Smorgasbord . Speaker · will be
Bdb Shackleford from Delaware.
SYRACUSE -The Third Wed - Ohio.
·
nesday Homemakers Club wll l
mee t Wednesday a t roa.m. at the
Revival underway
Syracuse VIllage hall. Members
SYRACUSE ~ A rev iva l Is
are to ta ke plasllc canvas. four
underway through Sunday a 1
ply yarn and patterns.
Syracuse Church of the Nazarene. Evangellst Is Rev. Ron
Roth. Services begin at 7 p.m.
nightly through Saturday . Sunday servic es will be a t 10:30 a.m.
and 6 p .m .

..

glected and dependent child,
on June 26, 1987, will take

notice ttlat a Motion (Complaint! has been filed in the Juvenile Court of M eigs County,

Pomeroy, Ohto by the M eigs

County Department of Human
SeNices, formerly the M eigs

County Wf!lfare Department,
Children' !I . Services, requesting an order of the Court that
Infant Male Doe be committed
to the. permanent custody of
said Meigs County . Department of Human Services,
The said unknown parents

the schools and also to churches asking the
congregations be advised of the proj ect and being
asked to submit names of children In need of
coats. The coats will be stored at the Rutland
Church of Christ. More Information may be
obtained from Ms. Stewart, pictured, at the
Rutland office, 742·2888.

are hereby notified that if the
demand in the Motion (Com plaint) for permanent cus·
tody is granted that the unknown Parent s will be per~
manendy dives'ted of a ll pa rental rights and privileges
with respect to said child,
Infant Male Doe. and the
child. Infant Mal e Doe, may
th en b e placed for adoption
without their consent. The
said unknown p~rents are entitled to ,C ounsel and if the
unknown par ents are with out funds to hire an attorney,
an attorney will be appointed
to represent them without
any costs to the said un.known parents.
The unknown parents are

Hawley and "A Thanksgivng
P rayer" by Margaret Butcher .
Round-robin cards were signed
for Nora Rice and Ken McElhin ney. bo th patients at Mt . Carmel
East Hospi ta l in Columbus. Oth ers on the praye r llst were Patty
Lou Roush , -Georgia We hrung,
Nicki Duckett, Brad Shuler, and
Delcle For th.
If was a nnounced tha t the
Meigs County Women's Fellowship will be held Thursday at the
Hemlock Grove Ch urch of Christ.
11 was not ed that there will be
no meeting In December but th at
the group will join others oi) he

church for a Christmas party on
Dec. 3.
A readi ng "A Little Mixed Up"
was given by Mrs. Riley a nd the
meeting closed with the
benediction.
A "somet hing Christmas" auction wa s held followin g the
m eeting with Betty MLKlnley In
c harge. Regina Sw ift, Grace
Hawley. Margaret Butcher a nd
Mable Walburn were hostesses
with Helen Reynolds contribut ing. Others attending the meeting were Bea Stewart, Lula Mae
Qulvey, Mary Sa lley , a nd Dorothy Baker.

'.

Christened
Robert Thom as Mullen. infa~t
son of Charles and Debbie
Mullen. was christened recently
at the home of his grandpa
renls.Mr. a nd Mr s. Harry Lee
Bailey , by the Rev. Ralph C.
Zundel. for mer pas tor of th e
Pomeroy Baptist Church . Others
attending were Ian Mullen.
Brenda Hyse ll and Ke ith Bailey ,
Pensacola. Fla.

Robert E. Buck.
Judge and Ex Officio
of the Juvenile Court
11 0 113, 20. 27; tt 113. 10, 17

PUBLIC NOTICE
Public Wuter suppl ies are
required by State Regula ·
tion. Rul e 3745-81 -21 .
Ohio Administrative Code.
to routinei¥ monitor the
microbiological quality of
the drinking water in their
distribution system in order
to in sure that sa f e wa.ter is
being
su ppli ed
to the
consu mer.

Public Notice
The village of Rutland is
req uired to coll ect 8nd exami n e a minimum of one p )
m icrobiol ogical samples
each month . _N o ~am~!f!~
were collec,ed and analyzed
for th e month-of September,
The water department has
taken steps to insure that
adequate monitorin" will be
performed in the futur e.
111 1 16. 17, 18, 3cc

·s

~:::---------1-----------1

us1ness

enrices

~=========;1r:=========~
1.
DON'T l£T YOUR ElECTRICAl PROBlEMS BECOME A
SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL

FIREWOOD
Locust,

~:
'.....

I

Oak, Cherry

$3500

~

Per Pickup Load
Delivered

D&amp;C
ELECTRIC

BILL SLACK

Ron Diles or
Gary Cummins

614-992-2269

9-92-6226
MiddlePort
Insured / licensed

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Evenings

THUR5.:7 PM - U

OYER 1 I 0 PlOPU
S6S p~r game
[owtr.AII 1nclvd.d in Admo&amp;uon

2 Hard (anh FREE
with thi1 ort ond puHhcne
of minimum pcukagr.

lim1t I_ ptr cuttomlr per
B1nqo nu 1on.

'

GENERAL CONTRACTOR!
References

loc.

11 -3- tf n

SLUG SHOOT
EVERY SUNDAY
IN NOVEMBER
1:00 P.M.
AT THE
KEN ·AMSBARY
IZAAK WALTON
lEAGUE
FACTORY CHOKES
10/29/ t mo.
Things are buzzln' iri the

WANT ADS

~00~ · 01

' 1:- ..' ' ' -'

(... '

.

'.

.•

'!.

.

Video View:

miles per gallon readout.
Kn ow your f uel consumption

from one block to hundreds of
miles .
Commercial :
Store to Job Cost
Taxi Service
Before and at~er auto tune-up .

(ComparatOr) Fill up your
tank, and watch it subtract and
di$ play fuel consumed .
UNDER '90

Monitors for MCF -CCF used
for furnaces. calibrated to

your gas meter.

OR CALL 992-2104, EXT. 213

Middleport -Coi'J Ohio
11 -o-87· 1 mo

By ,Jeff Hill eary

my pe rsona l favorite. a s tory

Stephen King, in hi s book.
Skel ~ton Crew, cal ls a short story
" a kiss in Ihe dark from a s trang~r
and in this col umn , I offer you,
gentle rea de r; a pa ss in g flirta ·
lion in thP realm of 1he anthology
m ovies wit h two very good films
th a t never fa il to deliver on their
prom ises of terror.
Crccpshow 2 1 Nrw Wor ld Vi deo, ~2 minutes. rated Ri is a

ca lled The Hitchhiker. whic h
ma v have oecn over viole nt but
e njoyable nonethe less.'
ls a seq uel better t11a n the
orig inal? Sometimes the sequels

retu r n

collaboration

b~:.•tween

• c;;eorge Ro mera a nd the aforement io ned Stephen King. Using
!he EC style framing of the first
Creeps how film, three stories are
arlfu lly presented, running the
gamut from an animated wooden
Indian,. to four collegr kids on a
raft bPing me paced by a monster
that resembles an oil slick, Then ,

was

rt?presen t Pxper imen ta t ion on
!he part ·of the staff respo nsible
for the film s. Other times,
howeve r , , the films become al most repetitious and annoyingly
boring. Tf you don ' t be li eve m e
examine' the Star Wars films a nd
com pare them with the Friday,.
the 13th series and draw your
own conc lusion s.
Creepshow 2 ha s some violence, sex ual situations and
objectionable language but Is
stil l very e nt ertaining.
Remember the old fairy ta les
of your chil dhood , those wonder-

fully amusing a nd often chilling
anecdotes of heroes a nd vil.lains
that q u.i te often told Indi rect
lesso ns on human foibles and
faili ngs?
A word of warning: Deadtime
Stories Is not meant for kid s.
· It is three stories Intercon nected by an uncle who tells hl s
ow n versions of the old staples
and tur ns them In to stories of
horror a nd humar. There are
so me very good performances In
this and some mas terful special
effec ts which jus t manage to put
Deadtime Storay tConllnen tal,
83 mln.utes, R rating) In my 30
favorite horror movie list. There
is some vio laence,' sexual situations and rough la ng uage. Wa tc h
th is wi th the ghoul you love.
Tim,e to
but l'll see you soon.

go

6 . ........ . . ... .
7 . .. ....................... .
8 .. .............................
9.
10.

$300

11. -·--· ..... ----. -·--··--·
1 2. . . . .. •· . . ...
13.· .................... .
14.
15.

FREE

•CANDY CANES

WHIU QU ANTITIIS LAST

YOU BELONG AT
0

r

The
Daily - ·Sentinel

992-2156

Wanted To Buy

WepaycoshlodatemodeCcloan.

BISSELl

·
We Car~-. F:,hing Supp lies
· Pay ' ) U. Phone

Yar.d Man mowers. Echo
trimmers. saws. blowers
- Snowoff blowers, Oregon saw parts.
Winter Specials: push mowers. picked up and tuned and
returned '20.00.
Parts &amp; Service on all
Makes.

PH . 949-2969
11 / 2 / 871 mo .

RADIATOR
SERV16E

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196

Middleport, Ohio

RACINE

6:30 P.M.

PH. 949-2801

or 949-2860.

.BOGGS

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

614-662·3821
Authorized John Deere,
Form Equipment

farm Eq•litie~t
Parlt &amp; Service .

l-3-'86tfc

DENNY CONGO

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL-DIRT

10-15-1 mo.

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315

10-8-tlc

Roger Hysell
Garage ·
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also J rtatlllisslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

10-16-1 mo. d.

Howord L Writesel

ROOFING

6-17-tlc

WE'RE STILL ALIVE!

Guarontud the Same for
·

FOR FUllER BRUSH
PRODUCTS

Gutters

DR 10 BE A REPRESENTATIVE

949-2263
or 949·2168

4-22-87-tto

ELIM HOME

Room &amp; Board For
Senio{ Citiuns and
Handirappid

Good R at es

T.LC: .
25 Vrs. Exp.

CALL

SUSAN COlEMAN
742-2171

or
SHIRlEY COlEMAN
742-2125

"It '.&lt; A Great Fund
Rai .~er ' '

1012&amp;/ 1 mo.

HOUSE FOR RENT
1 0 7 lOCUST ST.

POWROY-985-3561

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

Reforences

992·11873
Joe or P.ouley Bowland
209 South 41h St.
Middleport, Oh.
"LOW INCOME HOME"

Students and Employee•

REASONAil£ RAllS
CAll FOR FRH ESTIMATE

992-7632

Ill 16/'87 I mo. d.

Announcements
3 Announcements
MASTERCARD / VISA! ~ogard­
le~s of credit history. Also. new
credit card. No one refused! For
information call... 1 -31 6· 7336062 E.11t . N -2768.
A diftennt kind of dating
servie11. For information .write.
Kupid's Nest : P.O. Bo:.. 619,

Ironton, OH 45638

Piano lenons . Now accepting
students. Baginn•• through advanced . Call 814 ·949-2890
wening1.

No Hunting on Gill Ridge on
proper1ies of C . R. Gill, Mitchel!

Cullen. George Gill without
wrinen permission. Violators
will be prosecuted .
No Hunting or Treupassing on
my farm, if caught will be
prosecuted by law or my gun .
NO DOGS . Jim Stewart.

Giveaway

4

Old PiM o. Call 614- 446-0485
after 6pm.
FOUND : Friendly blaCk· grey
stripped female cat . Sunse1 Dr.,
between Second Ave . &amp; Golf

Course. Call614-446 -8607.
FOUND : Black Labfador ·Retriever on Kemper Hollow Rd.
Call 614-446-2823 aher 4 PM.

Roosters to give away .· Call
614 -99-2 -6122 .
Three month old. mostly BB&amp;gle

female puppy 10 give away .
Wormed, some puppy thoh,
housebroken . Call 614;742 -

2680.
5 month old kittens. Male and
female. Young female dog.
614-985-3884,

Gray, black, gold and tabby
kittens. 3 months old . Give to
good home only . 614 -8435445 .

6

Lost and Found

FOUND: set of key a on Blessing
Rd. Identify at Tribune Office.

~ LISA M. KOCH. M.S.
a: licensed Clinical Audiologist
~ (614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
l: 417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Z Gallipolis; ·Ohio 45631
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy, Ohio

3169

•

Wanted to buy· ttanding tiinbe{.
Caii614 -379-275B.
Buying daily gold. silver cofns.
r.ings, jewelry. sterling ware, old
cains, large currency. Top pri·
eea. Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. A w . Middleporl. Oh. ~14992-3476,
Cash for standing timber. We
buv veneer while oak and
walnut , Call }.1 Tro mm. 614·
742-2328 .

Wanted: John D..re 420 dOtM
for parts. Call ~U- 992- 7789 .

Wanted. Manifold lind Carbora·
tor for H Far mall tractor. 614843-6120.

Raw fur. beef and deer hides.
Gyn Sing and Yallow root. We
h.,e wheat and nita litet.
Trapping suppli• for Nle. (Buying used trap1) . George Bucklfl'i .
Hours 12-9. 614-664-4761 .

Employ men!
Services

11

Help Wanted

Experi&amp;nced body man needed.
to stay part -time with

elderly lady. Mu$1 be locel. Call
614·256· 6613 .

GET PAID for read ing books!
$100.00 pet title. Wrhe: ACE 33D , 161 S. lincolnway. N.
Aurora , II . 60542.
Musiciant wanted for Gospel
Band. Call 614-246 -9281 or
246-5564.

Chri•tmas around the corner and
no monev7 Sell Avon &amp;. earn
money &amp; pr ices. Call 614-446·
2166.
TEXAS

REFINERY CORP .
needs mature porson no.w in

Aggressive Marketing E atp. &amp; CL ·
lab. Background qualitias you
for this position. Sal ary-Comm .
Company c•. Send resume &amp;
ref. to: Box 33 Gallipolis, Oh io
4663'1 .
lab. Manager with previous
ekpMincas in Bench Work, O .C.,
equip. maintenance. etc . Send
resume &amp; ref. to : Box 33 ,
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631 .
Needed : Social Service Direct or
lor a 100 bed SNF-ICF Nursing
facility located In Gallipolis. OH .
hcellent salary and benefltt.
License &amp; BSW recommended.
Apply with raume to ; Scenic
Hills Nursing Center. 636 Buckridge Rd . Gallipolis. 0 H
Government Jobs. t16.040 S59,230 yr. Now hiring. Your
area. 805-687-6000 Ext. R9806 for current repo f"edoral
list.
SomBOne to llell jowelry and a
line of other products . &lt;!all
614-992 ·3703 .
~ailable,

Immediate position•

People with good communication skills, neat in appMrance.
and a positive mental altitude

w ill

land this admlnlatrative

opening. No experience necet·
sary , complete profeuional
training provided. Become pert
of a team that is uaed to above
average income and fun to be
wrth. For a confidential interview , contact Mr . Anthony at
614 -992-6488. Mon., Tues ..
and Wed. 9 :00 am-4:00 pm.

AVON · All areae. Call Marilyn
Weaver 304·882-2645 .
Herdsman. Jefferson County,
W. Va.J to milk 200 cows on ce a
dav an d feed 8 dBYt par weatc.
Mu st have references, exc hou sing and pay. 304-725-8308
between 8 :00-9:00.
Part time talephone marketing

position. evenings, 18 hours
we.ek, 304· 676· 3398 . E.O.E.
Experienced plumber with
W.Va. license. Apply Orman
Hall Inc., 1317 Ohio St. Pqint
Plo811ant .

Insurance

.13
Call

Ul

for your mobile home

in t uran ce; M illar lnturanca,
304· 8~2 - 2146 . Also : auto,
home, hfe. health.

Lost in Burlln.d ham area, short
huaky female Pit Bull. 2 yeers
old. Brindle with bleck stripBB
with white spot on ch•t .
Reward . Call 614-992-6 442.

Welding classes starting November 17 lor 10 weeks. Arc.
Mig, Gas . Tw in City M achine
Shop. 61 4· 992-3768.

Lost between St. At. 554 and
Storya Run , a m ale Walker.
Mottly white and tan head, bl.::k
and tan body. Wearing collar.

18 Wanted to Do

Call 614-992·6986 or 614867-6676.
Black and White male kitten , 6
month old . Travels under vehl·
cis and could be anywhere from
SR 143 to Pomeroy or Athen s.
Call 614-992 ·6321 .

Yard Sale

----·--aanri)ons-··------&amp; Vicinity

4·5-tfc

-Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swi111 Molds - Interpreting SeJVices

•

15

WE SEll USED APPliANCES

10- 16- 1 mo .

•

Lost : Compound bow. along
road in Addiaon strip mine.
ApprO.It. 6 :00 11 · 13 -87, Call
61 4. 446-8847-Ask for Carl.

•Washers •Dishwashers
•Ranges ..Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

'

training , write D.L. Hopkins. Box
711, Ft. Worth, Tx . 76101 .

7

All Makes

ture. lrd. 6 Olive St . Gallipolis.

c 8 11 6"4 446

Gallipolis area . Regwdleu of

81 Voars

NEW- REPAIR
Downspouts
Gutter Cleaning
Painting
FREE ESTIMATES

Mo11in to Vidao Tap e
•Create Trairiing Films for

RACINE, OHIO

Dealer

PARTS

VHS TaJJe
•Transfer Smm ond Sup9f 8

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
10-9-lfn

WANTED TO BUY : Uood wood
&amp; coal hea\81'1· Swain'• Furni-

Lady

•Transfer Photo Albums to

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

Ave .• Gallipolis . Call 614-446 ·
2282.

•Weddings
•School &amp; Church Programs

Documents

4-16-86- lfn

TOP CASH paid. for '83 OJO~eC
and nuwer used cars. Smkh
Buid&lt;-PonC iO&lt;:, 1911 Eutam

Call 614-388 -9615 .

•Anniversaries
•Re cord Valuables,

NO SUNDAY CALLS

••4-446 -3672

•Hol iday Parties

•Sporting Events

Day or Night

HOURS : Tuas .- Sat.
10amto5pm

v.w.

Record Those Special
Occasions on VHS
Tape

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Discount on Selected Items

HOURS

FREE LANCE
VIDEO

"At Reasonable Prices"

Ne.., Holland, Bush Hog

Mon.:sat. 2 to 9 P.M .
Sunday 5 to 9 P.M.

LO- 7-tfn

CUSTOM BUILT

Basket Suppliel
20% Off

614-664·4761

Factory Choke
12 Gouge Shotguns Only

BISSELL
BUILDERS

SALE
Cross Stitrh Supplies
SO% Off

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

11 -3-1 mo. pd.

BERRY BASKET
SIXTH ST., SYRACUSE, OH.

FIRE DEPT.
Basham Building

747-2035

1-13 -tfc

Country Gifts
and Decor

. 11 _6 _1 mo.
-

GUN SHOOT

WHITE HILL RD.
RUTLAND, OHIO

located half way between Rt. 7 and Bashan.

614-7 4'1.2:155

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

3-11 -tfn

9 P.M.

RUTLAND

lf28/rtn

No Sunday Calls

1 10

Rt . 124 A c ross from
Happy Hollow R~ .

16141 992- 6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
(6141 992- 7754

PH. 949-2860
or 949-2801

EAGLE RIDGE SMALL
ENGINE CENTER

SUPPLIES

OPEN

and Cable Bills. Here
~ BUIINEII PHONE

"F'ree Estimates''

'Jiiew Homes Built

•GUNS

•MUlZLELOADING

·

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

SIDING CO.

•S LUGS
•ANIMO

SALES &amp; SERVICE

*VINYl SIDING
*AlUMINUM SIDING
*BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

GEORGE BUCKLEY

~-----------------------~-----------•

- Conc.ot e work
-- Plumbing and electricel
wor~

Buying Roots,
Beef Hides and
Deer Hides

GOOD FOR ADS PURCHASED THROUGH NOV. 30, 1987

1:00 P.M.
•COLORING BOOKS

- Rooting and gu tt er work

TRAPPING SUPPLIES
NITE-LIGHTS
WHEATE LIGHTS

1 . '·""" . . ... .... . ...........
2. ............................
3 .. ... . . .. : .... .
4 .......................... ······
5, :·...............................

SAT., NOV. 21

- A: d~ons and rempdeling

New location:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760

10127/1 mo.

Only

9

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

PLUMBING &amp;- HEATING

614·992-5082

•3 DAYS
•3 LINES (15 Words)
•3 NEWSPAPERS (Gallia, Meigs &amp; Mason)

For your favorite ghoul

CARPENTER
SERVICE

system. Fits any car. Instant

ALL ADS MUST BE PAID IN ADVANCE

stud ent hody. In the-top photograph are, from left,
Stevie Tripplelt, Jamie Smith and ,Jeremy
ltaymond . In the lower pict ure are.Chrlsti Cooper .
.Jcssika Codner and Leah Matson.

:-L.J=;

Add on mini fuel co mp uter

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

SCHOOL ROYALTY - Stevie Tripp\etl was
chosen Kiqg and Christi Cooper Queen at this
year's annual P11rt1a nd Elementary Sc hool Fall
Ca rnival. The Kin g and Queen are chosen hy the

• ,....,
- , • • ... .,

16141 992 -3;18

Sell, Buy, Rent - Find and Give
Notice, Too! lour feast of bargains will be falling
right in - iust call our classified
department staffers if you need help.

'

-~

Home &amp; Auto

"SA~IN8S"

ive

r
r

__
. _

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS

Plentv·of Thanksgiving

•

hp. 2 119117

PUBliC lt.lVITED.

COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

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6 : ~S

20 Hard Card Gomn
$SO per gam•

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS - BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING S.
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HO E WORK
Phone Day or Ev•nlngs

985-4141

10· 19·87

EAGLES CLUB-POMEROY, OH.

CHESTER , OHIO
•HOME BUILDING

SEND RESUME TO :
RHONDA DAILEY, R, N.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
115 EAST MEMORIAL DRIVE
POMEROY, OHIO 45769

YOUNG

992 ·6215 or 992 -7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4· 15CBG·Ic

B •

services
· •

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 7

Jim
M ink Chw. ·Oidl Inc.
used
cars.
hr::::;~~;;:;::::;rr:::~~~~;:;~::;:::;1-;:========::;~
'S
D ALL
e iiiGono Johnoon

V. (. YOUNG Ill

11 -4 -1 mo.

992-2156

•
B USiness

thee EsCimates)

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN IV A LICENSED HEARING AID SPECIAUST.
An~one wllollat .,_.. llurliiQ ot ..,..,.,,landing con"'"'ton ta ln•lled to
ha.,. alrH llurlng '"' to -II thla p&lt;ablern con be l\ltpeclt llltno 11111 CCIOIPDft
with ~ou 101 rout FREE HEARING TEST ol &amp;50 value. Adulta onr,. PleaM.

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'.'

DR. RANKIN PICKEN'S OFFICE
509 SOUTH THIRD AYE., MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19
FROM 9:00-12:00 (NOON)

meroy,
Oli.O on
the 17th
day
of December.
1987,
at 10;00
a.m . Failure to appear mav result ~n a contempt citation being issued wherein the said unknown parents could be put in
jail for ten (1 01 days or
fined One Thousand
Dollars ($1 ,000,00) or both.
Witnes'S mv hand 'and the
seal of this Court this 9th
dav of October, 1987.

lmmed.i ate opening for full time and
part time R . N .'s to work in areas of
•Special Care
•Emergency Room
•Skilled Nursing Facility
•Medical. Surgical Units
Salary comparable with experience.
Excellent Fringe Benefits

'' '

FrH Electrontca MIIIIIQ Iaiii will 1M! gt- II, Beltorle Hearing Aiel Cent .. el

:~~:.r:.~,::~~ ~,"'rn:

REGISTERED NURSES

..

COUPON
HEARING TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

It is funher Ordered that the

Public Noti ce

ci-1•1-;-H;-e-:-lp""'W~a-nt:-ed-;--

'

,,

rents' consent.

~48, whose date of birth is

Plans were made for serving a
Christmas dinner to the Loyal
Men and Women 's Class of the
Middleport Church of Christ
when th e Phllathea Women mel
there recently .
The dinner will be held on Dec.
10 at 12:30 p.m .wlth kitchen
workers to be Phlllis Gilkey,
Dorothy Roach. Farle Cole,
Colleen Van Mete r and Clyda
Allensworth. Betty McKinley
will be in charge of t.ables.
Mildred Riley pres ided at the
meeting which opened with the
Philathea song and prayer. Officer s' reports were iven by Dorothy Roach, FarleCole.and Mrs.
Riley, Theme for devotions wa s
"Thanksgiving" wllh scriptures
from Psalms, Phlippians, and
Revelat ion being read by Regina
Swift. A reading "Thankful for
this day" was g ive n by Grace

..

Meigs County on State Route

June 21 ' 1987 and who was
heretofore adjudged a rnr

Philathea Women hold meet.ing
•

the back of a pickup truck in

cannot be ascertained, and
_w ho are lhe parents .o f lnfnat
Mal" Doe, who was found in

COATS FOR KIDS --, Again this year Bank One
is sponsoring "Project Coats lor Needy Kids ."
Kathy Stewart of the Rutland Office is chairman
of the project. Boxes have been placed in the
Rutland and Pomeroy o!lices of the bank and
residents are urged to make donations of good
used coats which can be distributed to needy
children In the county. Letters have been sent to

requi red

to answer the
Motion iCotnplaintl within
twenty-eight (2 8 ) days after
the last publication of this
notice. whl~h_ wilL.b..D gyb.-_
lished once each week for
siK (6) successive weeks,
and the last publication will
~eon November 17, 1987.
In case of your f ailure to appear On D ecember 17, 1987
to Answer or to othet'INise res pond befof'.e Dece-mber 17.
1987, the unknown parents
will be permatientty div85ted
of the parental righ ts and privileges with resp ect to said Infant Male child. dob June 21.
1.987, and the Infant Male
Child. dob June 21. 1 987.
may then be placed for adoption without the unknown pa·

whose names and addresses

MIDDLEPORT- The Middlepor t Literary Club wlll meet at
the home of Mrs. George Hoschar Jr. on Wednesday at 2 p.m .

• " MIDDLEPORT - Slides of
Israel wjJ! be show n by Pastor
: Ralph Zundel at ML Moriah
• Baptist Church in Middleport .
THURSDAY
: (South Fourth and Main) on
POMEROY -The Middleport
- Tuesdayat 7p.m.Hewlll a tsote ll Child Co nservation teague will
... of hls visit to the Holy La nd . meet Thursday a t the home of

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON
PLEAS CO URT
JUVENILE DIVISION OF
MEIGS COUNTY . OHIO
lllll:HE MATIEB OF :
INFANT MALE DOE
dob 6 - 21 -87 .
CASE NO . 25553
Alleged N.e glected and
Dependent Child
NOTI CE
T-0: THE UNKNOWN PA RENTS OF INFANT MAL E
DOE , dob 6 -21 - 87, WHOSE
NAME S A !liD ADDRESSES
ARE UNKNOWN '
The unknown
parents,

MGM DINNER
MIDDLEPORT - MCM District . Boy Scouts of America.
recogn ition dinner wlll be held on
Dec . 3 at the new America n
Legan Hall In Middlepor t
Reservations are to be made
by Nov . 27 with Lisa Roush , 3317S
Bailey Run Road. Pomeroy,
45769, or by ca lling 992-3486. All
reservations or $6.50 must be
paid In advance.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·······-·-···············-·-·· -- -·
3 family , Centenary Townhouse.
t 7 - 18, uereos. tepeplayer ,

Hou se Cleaning or office clean -

ing by day. Can give reference.
Immaculata cleaner. call 614.
446· 8105 .
Will baby sit in my home. Hot

m eals &amp; lov ing cara . By hour.
day or week. Very raaaonable.
Call Darlene- 614 -266 .6786.

Will carefqr your child whil a.,ou
c.hristmas shop, .attend holldav
dm ~ets or pa~101, or during

Chr1atmas vacation. Convenient
location. experienced mothar.
~~~- 614·446 -0065 after 6!00
Carpl!"ter work. $8 a hr or bv
the JOb . Panell~ng. pl!linting ,
drywall, remodehng. Call 614.
446-637 7.

,-

dlshn. clothn, dolls , mis~.

Fi nancial

Antique, dishBI; furnltur&amp;,. home
Interior, quilts. electric stove,
o~dl-endl . 402 HedgBWood Or.
Wed., 18th.

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

. Schools

I nstru ctior.

21

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE !

Rick Paarton Auctioneer II·
tente'd in Ohio and Wat Vlrgl.
nia .• Estate, antique. f•m. liquidatiOn sales, 3 04· 773 -67815 .

THE OHIO VALlEY PUBLISH ·
lNG CO .. racommend• that yo
do busim•• with people '1o~
lcnow, and NOT to ltnd mon
~hr ou(!h the mail ·Until you h ...
•nve\t•gated the offering,

0:

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�•

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21

Business
Opportunity

51 Household Goods

LAFFlA·DAY

LaSalle Galler)~ , M•ddleport. Establlttled Turn-Key Operation.
F01 appointnumt, call 614-992752 1 Fllnncl ang evlllable.
l ease or buy buildin g.

County ApPh•n ce, Inc. Good
I

'

u1ad apphancBt and TV sets

•

I I I
~ -- r-"---1

Open SAM to &amp;PM . Mon thru
Set 614-446-1699 , 62T3rd
Ave, Gallipolis, OH

- r -j

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
WBshers. dryers. f8frlgeraton.
range1 . Skaggs Appliances ,
Upper Rrver Rd bes1de Stone

22 Money to loan

Crest Motel 614;4-&amp;6-7398

Esta blish credit . Get credit
cards Get low interest loans.
Details Money aid- 8749 Hwy
172 w. Lib~~trty, Ky. 41472 .

23

I

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

-

ProfessiOnal
Services

•

CALl
HUSTO NS WE LDING
&amp; FAB
(Cart ifi.:l)
For any weld1ngrepoir or fabrica
tion work NO job too small or
too large. Alumlnum-weldmg, a
5peciahy. We give quality and
qu1ck urvlct Ple .. a call 614682-7 1 22 for e1t1mate

"It's a cashless society... we

Real Estat e
31

all have to adjust."

Homes for Sale

Will t.elp finance or land contract 10 . yr. old hou.a. 3 Br.,
Patr1ot V1llage. Call 614· 446·

t 340. 446-3870.

4 BR , f•utplace, full basement 3
mi. so. of Gallipolis. $34.900
Call Days-614-446-1615, after
5 :00- 446-1244
Brand new 3 BA. near Gallipolis
~cks on Rt . 7 2 car garage, nice
lat. Immediate possession. Will
dortsid8f ~ade in of Mobile
home, pJOPerty, etc Barga1n
Priced Call 614.446-8038 .
Neat, clean ranch Restricted
.tu bdiv11ion Hannan Trace
Sohools. Payments lciwer than
rent. Beautiful view Call 614·
266·6200

2yr. old· 4 BR . house. 2 baths.
aU electric. 2 decks. outbuilding.
pond. •E.IItra troller spot. Rur1l
Water. 2· 5 a«:rea 3 mil81 from
¥ercerv1lle Call 614 · 256 ·
6867.

2 bedroom in city, pncad reesonable. Call 614-446· 0897.

41

Homes for Rent

3 SR . home on At 141 1n
Centenary. Dap. &amp; ref. Ctll

6t4-446-6566.

2 BR hou.a. Stove &amp; refrig.
turn. Localed 192BY:z Chestnut
St. S176 mo. &amp;76 dap. Call
614-446-3870.
2 BR . large hvmg raom, stave.
washer Ne.- town . No pela.
Oep. &amp; ref. Call814-448-1617.

for Sale ·
1984 Triumph II 14x70 custom
made Exce shape. All electriC
$9.000 Call 614· 596-4429 .
1974 Indy 12x65, 2 OR • AC.
tatalelec Very nice 65500 Call
614-669-3091
1979 Bayview 1 4x70 With 24x7
eden. Front porch, «:arpon.
enclosed back porch or shop
area, woodburner on 1 4 acres
s 15000 or best offer Near
Crown C ity &amp; Mercer'olille. Call
614 446-7602 or 256· 1538.
1981 Shultl14 K52 Quail Creek
Mobile Par k Call 614-245-

9438.

1970. 1 2lt65, 3 bedroom. Tipout sto ve, refugerator, under·
plnn m g $4000 , 614· 99 2·
7479
1974 H1llcrest 12 " 60 fur·
mshed 4 m1IM out Rt 143 Turn
onto Wolfe Pen Ad 1 2 m1los.
S2500 614·992-2265
121166 Mob1le Homew1th 1 2K24
add-on with e~ttra lot . 304-6757669
14~t70

Wm dsor with 14~t30
addit1on 3 bedrooms, apprOKI•
matl'tly 3 acres, black top road
Several out-bu ildings and pand
GallipohsFBny 304· 675·6930.
1974 Froodom deluKe trall9f,
12d5, 5 room&amp; and bath, halt
acr e land , ell electric, 8~t30 fr ont
porc h. out buildmg and cis tern,
$8 , 000 00 . Palestme C reek
Road , Asht on W Va 304-676·
223 1

33

Farms for Sale

25 acres. home. satellite ou tbuil dings . $25,000 Ca ll 614·
742-2938 or 614-992-6057
150 acre farm, 1 mile back New
Haven, W \Ia phone 304 -882·

2666
34

Business
Buildings

New 2 BR equipped kitchen.
Excel. locttion. No plrls. Ref. &amp;
tec. dep. Cell 814· 446·1260

6t4-446-3949. 448-24 t 9.

In Chesh1re Village Deposit
required. 1180 month. C•U
614-446·04B6 aher &amp;pm.
5 room house-Firl1 Ave., G•llipoliJ, Off street parking. No
pet1. Ret. &amp; Dep. Ctll 614-2561529

6t 4-992·5t 13. 6t4-992-6723
or 614-992-2509 . Call after
5 ·00, please.

Unfurmshed house far rent 1n
PomMoy Storm window• and
doors. insulated. a11 ntrW paint .
Depos1t required Call614-992·

3090.

2 bedroom house for rent. Fully
carpeted. lincoln Heighta In
Pomeroy. References required.
Call 614-992-2270 after 5 00
pm

For rent or le•e 3 bedroom, 2
baths, stave and refrigerator,
gas heat, Cl!lf1tr11t air, carport,
large y..-d. near Middleport
•chool, perk and 1hopping. 1226
ntonth, plu~oait . can 814992-7055 "ilter 6 ;00 p m. for
Two bed room hou 18 in Point
Pleaaant, NO PETS, 304-675·
1386.
Two room eottage furnished
ut1ht1es paid, &amp;66 .00 week.
11ngle parson. call 304-6753100 or 675-6509

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
Furmshed Cable. ideal for one
man. New carpet. Cleen. Foster' s Mobile Home Park. 614-

446-t602

Furmshed 2 Sr mob1le home
located on Eastern Ave. 11Bti
manth, $126 deposit. Call 614-

749 Third Ave Presentty The
Gift Shop 1600 sq ft . Com morcial o r warehouse Parkmg on
sade. Ad1acent to Tt.~rd&amp; Pin eSt
C all 614 - 446 - 2362 lor
appointment

35 Lots &amp; Ac reage
2 Building lots - 1 1f2 a.«=res each
with count y waC!llr Jerry I Ru n
Ad Apple Gr ove , W Va Cllll

304-576·2383

Rentals
41

Homes for Rent

2 mobile homes on one acre.
Rural water. Bla«:ktop road 2112
miles from Mercerville !near
Hannen Trace) Ref. &amp; dep
requ1red . Call 614-266-8343 .
2 bedroam, furnished, washer
and dryer, air, awning. $195 . per
month plua deposit. Call 81499 2'- 7479

----------------- 1
2 bedroom in Syracuse. 1160.
per mon1h plus deposit and
reference. Call 614· 992-7680
or 992-6236

2 bedrooms. furn11hed mobile
home, Kanau9a. Ohio, reference
required. 304-676-6196
Mobil e home tor rant, 14•70, 2
bedrooms, la cated Henderson.
call 304-675-3643 .

44

Apartment
for Rent

1 and 2 bedroom apartmenls for
rent . 8as1c rant for 1 bdr ..
S183 00, 2bdr., $219 .00 . Al1o
required a S200 00 security
deposit. CONTACT : Jackson
Estat es Dept, Ph 446-3997
Equal Hous1ng Oppo rtunity
2 8R aph. 6 ~;losets. kitchen ·
appl fur nished, Walhet· Drver
hook up. ww carpet, newly
painted , de~ . Regency. In c.
Apts. Call 304-675·773B or
Furmshed apt next to library,
One profess1onal adult only
Parkmg Call 614-446-0338
Nice private apl Quiet Ne•
HMC . One adult only. No pats
Stove. refng., drapes. 1 22&amp; 1
mo. Aet. requ~rad . Call 614-

446-4782

15 Court. 2 br., 1 '/~ bath large
liv ing area. w -w c arpal: new
kitchen , d11hw11her, wirad for
phone &amp; tv Ga• hut Parking
S350 -mo. plus utiliti es . Dap &amp;
Ref Ca ll 614-446-4926 .
Downtown Modern 1 BR ,
compl ete kit chen, CBI' plrl, air,
electnc heat Call 614-446·
4383·d8"ft. 446-0139-even. &amp;
weehonds.
Brook8:1de Apartment•· Lal)lle
country knchen, nove &amp; refrigerator Unfurnished. 1 BR . bath,
qu1et area Ca ll 614-446-1932 .

Nice 2 BR . apt . Sto'ole, refr lg.
tyrnished. Water &amp; garbage
3 br , CA .. basemen t. gwage. paid. Near Skyline lanes, Call
patio, carpet. 1 cut stono e14-448-7025 .
f~replace, &amp; 1 brick fireplace.
!nground pool. Ref. A· 1 Ae.tl ' Fl io Grand~ N1 ce '2 8R Stove,
refrigerator fur,.;thed . 1226 No
Estate . Carol Yeager-broker
pets. Call 614-446-8038
. . 304 675 5 104

--.-

Renawly redeoorttad. Very nice
•partments in downtown Galli·
polis. 1 &amp; 2 BR . unfurnilhed,
Jecond floor, from &amp;175-&amp;22&amp;.
DeP. &amp; references required C•ll
eve. 614-448-2326 or 446·

•249

Great location Newly remodetect 2 BR . Upatairs. Partty
furnished apt. Utlliti111 paid Call
aft• 3:30PM, 614-446· 1457.
2 BR furnished apt. Adults only .
Ni~;;e locMion. Call 614-446·
2404

Sofas and &lt;:hairs priced from
S396 to $996 Table~ $50 and
up to $125 H1de-a -beds 8390
to 8696. Recliners $225 to
1376 Lamps f28 to •125 .
DinMt&amp;l 6109 and up to 6496
Wood table w -6 chain S286 to
tl796 Desk 8100 up to 6375 .
Hutches $400 and up. Bunk
beds complete w -mntresses
S295 and up to 1396 Baby beds
8110 Manreueaorbax 1prlng1
iull or twin $88, firm 878, and
888. Queer"! 1811 U26, King
$360 4 drawer ch•t 869 . Gun
«:abinuta 6 gun. G.. Of , electric
range 83715. Baby maUre..es
&amp;35 &amp; &amp;45 Bed frames 120.
UO &amp; King frame $60. Good
select1on of bedroom tuhet.
m8'1al cab1net1. headboard• 830
and up to $66.

0322.

PARSON 'S FURNITURE
Just arrived - 3 truck lo.ds- New
IN1ng room su1tea; new wood 6
pc Uvmg wood 1ulta1, $399 96;
ch11t of drawan; twin mattresses, 195 •et microwave
oven stands.
THE WORKING
MAN ' S FRIEND
Valley Furnnure
New and used furniture and
applleanees . Call 614-446 7572. Hours 9 -6 .
Like new· 5 eub1c ft chett
heez:ar like new G1bson electric
dryer. Traditional sofa. 6 ft.
porct. glider, white baby bed
With mettntu . Corbin &amp; Snyder
Furniture Co. 956 2nd Ave.
Galhpohs, 614-446-1 ,71 ,
Carpet

Prices

Starting at :
$4 a yd ..
Sculpture-16 a yd , Plush· $7 a
yd. lots of room remant• in
stoc:k. Fmancing available. Mollohan Furniture, UJ!pet River Rd .
. 614 -446-7444
Commer~;11l-

Used

refngeraton and uted
electr~c range Mollohan Furniture. Upper River Ad . 614-4467444.
Maple frame couch with blue
cushions. Good cond. Call after
4 PM. 614-367·7800

Gracioua IN10g 1 and 2 bedroom apartments at V1llage
Manor and Riverside Apartments in Middleport from
$215 mcludlng utilit1e1. Call
614· 992-7787. EOH

6t4-446-8t05

EJCtra «:lean, new carpet Nice for
working lady or gl!lf1tleman Pt.
Plaaunt. Call 614-992·6868

30 inch elactr.c range. Harvest
Gold $100. Ca11304-773-691 1
after 4 p.m

Apartments for rent in Pameroy.
1 and 2 bedrooms. 614-9928215
New, furnished, 2 bedroom
apartment near Meigs H1gh
School. Call 614·446-8898 or
614-992-6304.
In Pomerov. 2 bedroom, partly
furnithed .apt Off Spung Ava.
Recently .-modeled. CJII alter
6 .00 pm, 614-992-6886.
2 bedroom, 2 bath. Mid~eport .
Oepotit. S 140 month. 'conv• .
niant. 614-992-2679.
APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
house.: Pt Pleasant and Gallipolis. 614-446-8221 .
2 bedroom furniJad apt, ret and
depo1it. New Haven. W. Va .,

304-882·3267 ., 304-7735024.

Two bedroom apartment Gallipotit Ferry, 304-675·2548
For rent 1 br apt . with laundry
room. air cond.. ceiling fans,
water &amp; trash 11a1d. Yard ~;ared
for No Pat•. No Children
Reference Required . 1 -2 Adults
304-B82-2827 or 773-5362 .

China· service for 10- never
bean used Carnival glua· green
Ba amber. Ant~que dishes Cell

Singer Sewing Machine with
cabinet. Never been uaed , t300.
1 coffee table and 2 and tables,
t7~:. Call614 - 992 - 6111

~New)

queen-Sized water bed.
Nevat bean used Mirrowed
headboard w1th all acceuorias.
2 refrigerators. Good. S90
each 2 g• cook stoves, natural
gas, good . teo. each Cell
614-992·2866 .
One large Norge tip- lOp electric
cooking range $86. 614-9925612 after 6p m
Solid maplt~ dining table with
four capt1en1 chain, 8250 00.
Cell anytime 304-675-2605
Pickens Used Furniture Dinettes, sofas, cha1rs, end
tabt•. lamps. beds, dressers,
desk, glassware. 304·675 1450.

53

Antiques

6975.

In Middleport, Ohio, 1 and 2
room furnished apartments Pnvate baths, utilities pa1d 304-

Callahan's Used T~re Shop Over
1,000tiret,IIZ8S12,13, 14, 16,
16. 16.5. 8 milea out At 218 .
Call614-266-6251 .

Furnished Rooms

Plastic cister_n state approved,
plastic septiC tanks, plast1c
culverts, metal ~;ulverts . FION
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Ja ckson. Oh 614 - 286 · 69~{)

45

Rooms for rent, day week.
month. Gall ia Hotel. Call 614446-9580. Rent a1 low as $120
month.
Furn11hed room $75 Utilities
pa1d Shere bath Single male.
919 Seoond. Gallipo\1s. Call
446· 4416 after 7Jim,

46 Space for Rent
Office Space lor rent Excel.
downtowl'l Gallipolis location.
Inquiries c all 614-446-4222.
Mob1le Home lot 60ft or lau.
920 4th .. Gallipolis. $75. Water
paid . Call 614 -446-4416 after 7

PM

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33, Narth of Pomeroy
Rental tra1I0JS Call 614-992-

7479.

Space for small tr11lers All
hook-ups Cable. Also efficiency
rooms. air and cable. Mason,
W.Va. Call304·773-6651

49

See~oned one year large
_jjplit ~ dell \lerad- 8 3'L__Call

256·t340

o•

256-9303.

Quality firewood, all hardwood ,
for sale. $26 a p1ch -up load Call

6t4·367-0669.

Big Dakota Farm Home- built on
your lot only $12,996 &amp; up. Call
614-886·7311 .

load.
614·

2306

1972 Chwvy 4 wheeil drive truck
for sale. ~t. ton . 614-992-6276

CAPTAIN EASY

1970 Dodge ptckup truck . 6 cyl.
54, 240 actual mil•. Easy on
g11 . tJOO. Ca\1614-843-5185

Tr.a I 1tump removal. firewood
120 dump k)ad , HEAP voucher•
accepted. Uve Christmal tre11 .
Oon' a landtcapn, 614 -4489646
Bed, che~t drawers, entet1aln·
ment tenter, dehUmidifier, Eu·
reka 1waeper. tree trimm•.
ro~ing love 1eat. Call61 4-446·
2857

SOUTH
ATL.ANT!C ...

IN THE

(I)

&lt;1l Nlghlly Butlne11 Report
®l Ill Q2l CBS News

Soapbo• with Tom Collie
Teenagers consider their

I[J)

Vans&amp;. 4 W .O.

73

goals and fantas1es about
the ruture .

1979ChrNyluv4K4 . Uftkit, roll
bar. tonneeu cover Good cond
Sflarp. $2260 Call 814-379-

I!J)

2262.

Catalytic canvartar•. only
$89.96 . Moat models. Install•
t1on also Jvailable Muffl• Man,
9 Stimp1on Ave • A1hen•. Ohio.

Building Material•
Block. brick. sewer pipee. windows, lintel•. etc Claude WmUtn, Rio Granda. 0 . ,Call 614-

t -800·843·3767.

246 · ~12t .

Mixed h•dwood slabs. &amp;12 per
bundle. Containing ' approx 1 Yz
ton. FOB . Ohio PeiiUI Co.
Pameroy, Ohio 614-992-6461 .

Con crate blocks all size• yard or
delivery. Mason sand Gallipolis
Block Co.. 123 1/a Pine St..
Gallipolis, Oh1o Call 614·4462783.

50 Caliber Hawkins Muzzle
loader. Scope and sling. Like
new Ctll 614-742-3056.
4 new236 " 15 allweath• radial
tlf&amp;S With wheels and hub capt
from 1988 Ford. Call 614· 985·

4339.

Grave Blankets, 810 and 116
Also wreaths. Call 614-9492115

6'00PM.

Ready mix concrete and elf
!!Oncrate supplies Call us Vallfl(
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304-773·5234.

56

Pets for Sale

E~tercise

Firewood tor nte. Hardwood.
835 pickup load. delivt!lred. Call
614-949-2660. ask tor Scott

Oragonwynd C~ttery Kennel.
CFA H1malav•n, Perti.. and
Slamase kittens AKC Chow
puppies. New kittens; Peraians.
Cell 614-448-3B44 aher ?PM .

S••

For sale Hardwood Split.
soned 825 per load Delivered
8351oad. Call614-949-2069
Stereo. AM-FM ,8 track Good
condition. Asking $75. For ule
or trade double kevboard organ.
1979 Trans Am Runs good.
low mlleaga. Asking 83000 .

Chow Chow puppies- 4
males, 3 lemal• Cute Mother
AKC reg. $26 each. Call 614446-2108.

F~rewood

Pure Bred Sla~t~esa kittens Call
evening• 814-949-2290.

anyt1me

Buy 6 Tomng Tables and re«:eive
a free Suntan bed Offer good
unt1l Dec 30, 1987. Call Caribbean Tans, Inc., 304· 422-4200.
Sohd wood b•. made in Ghana
we,t Afriu, call 304-882·
3562

AKC Dalamation pups8160 00.
1 male patch eye. 1 tamale,
phone 304-937-2368
3 ye• old male Be'e gle UO.OO
Phone 304-675-6941 .
Christmas Pupp181 AKC regiStered buff colored Cocker Spamttts. 304-773-6492.

S1gn1 portabte lightf:WJ 1ign with ' ;~==::;;=:;::=;===
leners, 8299. Free delivery.
We~t Virginia 800-642-2434, ., 57
Musical
Onoo 800·533-3453.
Instruments ·.
All Chrlstmu TraM 612 Come
earty before «:old weather, tag
your tree at Newell' 1 Christmas
Tree Farm 1 m•le above Maton
on Hangmg Rock Rd. 304-7735371 Of 882-2B86 .
Pioneer stareo receiver 80W-ch
8200 .00, equalizer S&amp;6 .00.
DBX f11ter 820 00, D11c camera
$18.00. 23 chanel CB 815 .00.
Fuzzbuster S20.00 Phone 304675·5968 after 6 :00PM

Maple table, 4 chairs, hutch.
S75.00. Early American chair ~
axe cond &amp;35.00 304-6762672 aher 5 00 PM
Tappan gas range, brown, new,
$80.00 or best offer 250 gal
fuel tank with 70 gal fuel
S150 00 304· 675· 2899 .

4 piece Slingerland Drums tor
sale. With eccessor•• 8200
Call 614 -949-2680. ask tor
Scott,

Beauty shop equipment, , wet
stolion, 1 all purpose hydraulic
chair, 2 dryers and chairs. 1
s hampoo ch•r. e~tc cond, phone
aher S·OO, 304-675 · 5115
Two tickets, round trip a1r. '
Colu mbus, Oh1o t o M1ami. Fla.
depart Nov. 23. return Nov 30
Call 304· 675 · 1390 after 6 :00

H1y for sale. large round btl as
614· 6B2·7277.
Good

mi~ted

hay for sale. Call

6t4·949-2237

Transportalion
71 Auto's For Sale

1969. Camato- 327, nuw body
-parts. new t1res Blue with 1ilvar
str1pes. Good cond $2600 Call

74

•wtiROO ~ACt J®K..!

Farm Supplie s
&amp; Live stock
61 Farm Equipment
U.S

CROSS &amp; SONS
35 West, Jackson Ohio.

6t4-286·646t

Massey Ferguson, New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal• &amp; Service Over
40 used tractors to chaose from
&amp; complete line ol new &amp; used
equipment largest ~~election m
S E Ohio
Utility building spl 27'11.36 ' ~t8',
1-13 ' x8' sliding door, 1 ·3 ' service door· $4444 . Iron Hone
Bldrs. Call 614-332-9745.
4020 JD traetor with 4 row no
till corn planter- $5960 . T0 -30
MF tractor. plows, disc &amp;
cultlvator-$2600 Call 614-

286·6522.

All equ1pment In stock Zeator
Tractors. manure-lime spreader,
rotary mower 10 perct~nt over
cost . Morril Equipment. Ru tland. Ohio, 45 776 Phone
614-742-2456.

Int er nat io nal 1060 grinder
mjJI:er. New Holland 7 ft hay
bind, both in good cond. 304-

273·•2t6.

Buy bar chain and sprocket. for
any •w get second chain free.
offer good till Dee. 1. Siders
Equipment Co . Phone 304.6757421 .

62 Wanted to Buy

NewoHour (t ·OO)

IIIl Moneyline Current

reports on world econom1cs
and financ1al news with Lou
Dobbs. (0.30)
Ill Q2l 1m Wheel of Fortune

1981 Honda XR -80. Good con·
d1t!on 8200. Runs goad Call
614-446 0290.

Auto Parts
&amp;. Accessories

76

FRANK AND ERNEST

Budget Transmissions Used and
rebuilt, ell types . GUarantee 30
d.,a. Cell 814- 379 -2220 or
304-676-4230.
: - - , - - - - - - - - - - - ·lcDual exhaust kits, 899.96 in·
stalled. Mo11 Ford1. Chevy
trucks, Vans, 4x4' s. Mufti er
Ma_n. 9 St1mpson Ave , Athent.
Ohto. 1-800-843-3767.

.....
•

~"'

l

1983 Ford Rlr'lget. 4 cyl, 4
Jpeed, parts. call after 6:00,
304· 676· 3073.

I

i

!'

..

Auto Repair

77

•

icheerc
Ell ill M'A•s•H
7'05,00 An,dy Griffith
7:30 IJ ill Hollywood Squares
@ NHL Hockey
Cll Newlywed Game
Q(J) Judge
®l Wheel of Fortune 1:;1
I!J) Croufire (0:30)
Ill Q2l 1m Jeopardy! 1:;1
@ Berney Miller
fl) CD WKRP In Cincinnall
7:35 CD Sanford and Son
8:00 Cil Crooabow
IJ ill 1m 'Poor Little Rich
Girl: Barbara Hutton Story,
Pt. 2' NBC Movie of the
WeekC
Cll CiJ (J) Who's tho Boss?

New motor home. 2700 mile~
Trade tor truck &amp; camp&amp;r. Must
be nice. Ca\1614- 266 ·6813.

temporarily confines Tony to
a wheelchair. 0
&lt;1l I[J) Nova Travel to the

ALLEY OOP

Struts. $119.95 pair, 1nstalled.
Most modell Muffler Man 9
Stimpson Aw. Athens. Oh1o
1· 800· 843-3767.

197B Dodge Coh Wagon AM ·
FM stentO. 6 spd .. good Interior,
body good shape, new a~theuat
system. Good workc,r. &amp;375 Of
best off•. Cell614-379· 2507

Sovret Un1on for a look at

scoence, technology Ieday. 1:;1
®l Ill Q2l Houston Knights
Search for mlss1ng man

leads the cops into lhe world
of the homeless. 1:;1

@ Prlmenews Wrap ups of

the day' s world news and tn
depth feature reports (1 :00)
~ ALLEY ACTS

1971 Chsvatte Call 614-3792409 after 6 ·00 PM.

THREE
CONFIOOI'RATE SOLDIERS AWAY

SP.rvices

614·245-5t20

'

81

Home
Improvements

1977 Ford Thunderbird AM FM -Cau. heel. cond. Silver.
Call 614-246-9657.
1983 Dodge Cf11rger. 4 cyl ,
•uto .. AM -FM radio. new tires.
light brown. Call 614· 245·
5028 after 6:00PM

1983 Dodge Aris Wagon. Small
down peyment-1Zike aver payments. Call 614· 38B-8487.

New Information! Jeeps. Cars.
4x4"s stuzed 1n drug rtids Buy
from $100. Call for facts todeyl
1213) 531 · 1201 &amp;Jilt. 6466.
1977 LTD Good conditiOn
mechanicalty end body Fo~
details, call 614-992-5619 or

6t4-992-3662

1987 Oldlmobile Cutlass Su ~
preme. loaded . &amp;12 ,000. Call
304-773- 5911 after 4 p m ·
1976 Plymouth Valiatt. 1977
Plymouth Volarle 61 4-992 ·

3888.

1977 Camaro, 305 1uto, PS ,
PB . AM- FM cassen. black, mag
wheels and ~T ad i al t~ras ,
&amp;1,596 0~ 304-B82-344B.
197B Trans Am , T-tap , auto
V·8, &amp;2,800 00. Phone 304:
676· 6716 '
1983 Lincoln 4 doorContlnental
Mark VI , like new, 304-676-

4384

1979 Ford Pint o. good cand, 4
speed. 8BOO 00 304-676·

3t t8

72

Trucks for Sale

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
UnconditionJI lifetime guaran·
tee. Local raferenc:es furnished
Free estimates. Call collect
1-614-237-0488, day cr night
Rogers8atement
Waterproofing.
·

Cll CiJ (J) Moonlighting

Conv1ct's elaborate Identity
swap finds Davrd work1ng on

a chain·gangii:;J
(!) (!]) Tho Ring of Truth
Electron microscopes have

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair , partJ, and suppi1• . Pick
up and delrvary , Davis Va cuum
Cleaner. one half mile up
Georges Creek Rd C&amp;ll 614·
446· 0294

helpod scientists prove the
atom exists r:;J
®l Ill Q2l Jake and the
Fatman Jake and McCabe

flush oul a dishonest cop,
the son of McCabe's tnend.

FION'S Television Service
House calls on ACA . Quuar.
GE Spe~;:1aling m Zenith Call
304- 576-2398 or 614· 446 ·

I!J)

Fatty Tree Trimming. stump
removal . Call 304-676-1331

1979 Datsun truck Runs good.
S600. Call 614 446-0924
1980 DatJun pidlup, In good
shape. King co al &amp; wood burner,
sell cheap. Call 814-388-8437
anytime
'

4~.8- 7602 .

ThanksgiVI~ are tnterrupted

friends 1;1
The Story of English
Trace the spread of English
through British Colomalism
@I 111112l Tha Law and Harry
by

/

(!)

McGraw When Harry is shot

at close range, hQ w•nds up
a vtctim of amnesia

82

l!ll

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

'(ES'M--DOC'S TREATIN'
HIM F~R·-UH-­
CHECKERITIS

Electrical
&amp;. F,lefrigeration

ahead to tomorrow 's news
sto.,es. (1 :00)
fl) CD Benny Hill
10:20 (l) MOVIE: Death Wish II(R)

(1 ·33)
10:30 (]) Celebrity

fll CD Hogan's Heroes
t t :00 CIJ Remington Steele

II (]) Cll CiJ (J) ®l Ill Q2l
1m News
@ SportsCenter (L)
&lt;1l Sign Ofl
I[J) House For All Seasons
I!J) Moneyllne Current
reports on world economiCS
and financial news with Lou
Dobbs (0.30)
crJl Jefferson&amp;

General Hauling

Ell CD Lova Conneclion
11:30 IJ CIJ 1m Tonight Show
@ Amateur Baskelball
Cll Cheers
Q (J) Nlghtllne 1:;1
®J Magnum, P.l.
I[J) Only One Earth Aonce

0 !\lard Wat er S erv lt;:tl " Pools,
Cisterns , Wells DeliVery Any tim e Call 614 -446-7404-No
Sunday calls.
J &amp; J Wat er Serv1ce. Swimming
pools, cu11erns , well s Ph 614-

246-9286.

destroyed desert area in
northern Kenya has been

R &amp; A Water Service Home
clsters. we lls. p ools filled For·
merly J am es 8'oys Waters Call
304-675-6370

restored
Sports Tonight Aclion
packed sports highlighls with
Nick Charles and Jim Huber.

Q2l

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

T:~~:~:~y ~@~4.\1A-~t.tr~~~

letters of
0 foRearrange
ur scramb led words

PEANUTS
M'{ POOR D06 ! I
WONDER WKAT
~APPENED TO 1-41M .

Upholstery

A &amp; M CLJstom Couches and
St Rt 7 , Crown
C1ty. Oh 614 -266-1470, Eve.
61 4 -446-3438 Op011 de1ly 9 to
4·30 , Sat 9 :30 to l "30 Old &amp;
new Uphostered .
R~uph oluery,

M_ow rey ' 1 Up~olsterm g serving
countyAre8 22 veers. The bes t
in fUrniture upholstering. Call
31) 4 - 675 · 41 54 for free
estlml'ltfls
tr~

Magnum, P.l. Man from
Marseilles
fi!CD M•A•S'H
12:00 Cil Bums and Allan
Cll NlghUine 1:;1
Q (J)l'all Guy
illl Sign 011
I!)) NewtNight Live news
with Palrlck Emory and
Kirsten Lindquist (1 :00)
fl) CD Star Trek
12:20 (I) MOVIE: 'Marooned (G)
@

IT'S TERRIBLE TO
BE L'f'ING IN THE
EMERGENCY ROOM
ALL B't' YOURSELF!

I WONDER WHAT KE'S
TI·UNKING 1\IGHT NOW ...

.

•,

(21'14)

GAM I

the

be-

low to fo cm four s1mple Words

I

GILMEN

I!

I

RUJRO

I

NI GC I

I

NAy D I T

2 :...,:..:-1=...--ll
l----rl.:......;.;,;l

I';'

J

!

My friend had been sharing
~~~f:h~~n~h~~.s.:~i:.'::t hi! ~i!~

~-TI.:.....;:.:Il~..l~::-;1---4
r-----------, vacuum

I
:.....:;lr-rl__, 0

~,.5 -rl.:....;:;l"''..:....,:l
..

.

cleaner he inqUired il
there was a - one.

•

Complete the chuckle quoted
~y t dl1n.g m the m15s1ng word~

L_JL-J-.L_.J.._JL-...J you develop from slep No. 3 below.
A PRINT NUMIIEREO lETTERS IN
'1::1'
THESE SQUARES

I I" I I

UNSCRAMBlE ABOVE lETTERS
10 GET ANSWER
•

A
V

•

.

•

SCRAM·LElS ANSWERS
Grower - Quota - Exert - Bonsai - IN a ROW
"Your sign says ¥ou're open 24 hours, so why are xou closing?" we ar9,ued w1th the store manager. "Yep, that s r.ght,"
he replied, 'but not all IN a ROW!"
.·

BRIDGE

NORTH
+An
•6 43
+A 106 4
+KH

Delaying
a discard

.KJ 5

Sorry, but I would open the bidding
w1th the North hand. North has prime
cards, two and a half quick tricks, and
12 high·card points with a 10-spot for
a kicker. But North did compensate
for his original pass With strong subsequent biddmg I particularly like t~e
four-spade cue-bid to tell partner not
only that he had lirst-round control of
spades but that he had passed a hand
that many.players would have opened.
Sl!ll that's not the problem here. You
get to five clubs, and West leads the
spade queen. Blot out the actual EastWest cards from your mind and plan
the play.
It's tempting to shed a heart on the
spade ace right away and then rely on
the diamond suit behavmg. Unfortu·
nately that approach founders because the location of the diamond honors favors the defenders. But you can
combine all your chances. Trump the
opening lead, keeping the spade ace
for later. Then play a low diamond toward dummy. When West plays low ,
insert the 10. Maybe that will force the
king. But East wins the jack and returns a heart. Take the heart ace, cash

+K 9 5

.

+2

U-IHl

EAST
+K 8 6 2
.Q 9 8 2
+J81
+&amp;6

WEST
+QJI0943

By James Jacoby

SOUTH

---

.A 10 7
• Q 32
+AQI097 ~ 3

Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: North
West

Nortb
Pass

East
Pass

I+

2NT

3+

Pass

Pass

4+

Pass
Pass

Pass

Opening lead· + Q
two clubs (leaving a trulhp entry in
dummy) and then play a diamond to
dummy's ace. When the kmg does not
pop up, play the spade ace and throw
your diamond queen away You can

now r·ufl a diamond, and lo and behold,
the diamonds are 3-3. You return to
dummy with a club to pitch a heart
loser on the long diamond, and you
have taken 11 tncks and made your
contract.

~-~by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Sodium
1 Disappear
chloride
6 Catch
40 Cross
one's
home plate
breath
41 Ait
9 Egyptian 4Z Present
deity
43 Gaze
10 Bistro
DOWN
.11 Castle
1 Noted
ditch
Z "Love"
1Z Downright
to Loren
14 Sea bird
3 Turn around
15 Work unit 4 Within
16 Skater
(comb.
Babilonia
ronn}
17 Goddess
5 Overfill
(Lat.)
6 Melody
18 Wrath
7 Present
19 Airport
a brief
abbr.
8 Roman
20 Deadly
household
harm
gods
2Z Certain
South
Afrifi:an
Z3 Road sign
25 Vase
handle
Z6 Tightly
strung
Z7 Load
weight
Z9 Young
pig
30"-kingdom

10 Da!Jcer's
. practice
rail
13 Headpiece
15 One (Ger.)
Zl Likely
Z2 Exclude
Z3 Horse
24 Somewhat
high

27 Subject
28 Scottish
county
30 Yonder
3Z Gennan
city
33 Step in
38 June
beetle
39 Drink

come"
31 Haggard
novel
34 Sprite
35 "Leave
--to
Heaven"
36Is able to
37 Crown
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES- Here's how to work it:

•

wn

AXYDLBAAXR

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

WT

match w1t s w1th a corrupt

funeral parlor owner

WORD

- - - - - - ' - - - Ed ittd b~ ClAY I . ,OllAN

(0:30)

Ill Q2l 'Diamonds• CBS Lata
Night Mike and Christina

29 t9

87

Chefs

@ Inside tho PGA Tour (T)
(!]) Tony Brown's Journal

Res1dent1al or co mmercial wir mg. New service or repa1rs
l• censed electrician. Estimate
' fr ee. Ridenour Electn cal, 3046?6 1786

85

Newt

of loday's news and a look

II 11

446-4477

84

@

(]]) Evening News A wrap up

CARTER'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth end Pin a
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614 ·446-3888 or 614·

Wa tt erson's Water Ha u ling,
reasonable rates, lmmediatu
2,000 gallon delivery , cisterns,
pools, well , etc. coli 304-576-

PM

'

10:00 CIJ Straight Talk
(I) thirtysomething Hope's
plans for a quiet

Starks Tree end lawn Serv1ce.
lawn care. lands«:aping. stump
re moval. 304-576· 2842 or
576-2903

1979 F100 pick- up. V-8, standard $760 . Call aher 8 PM
1984 Dodge Ram pickup. New
radials 5 spd Topper 86000.
Call 614-446-0276 after 6 :00

. SNEE&lt;ZE' UNTIL YOU'VE
H5'\I&lt;D A FROG- 5N E&lt;E:Z.E .

CLEANER YESTERDAY.

Paul Flupe. Jr Water Serv1 ce
Poo ls. CISterns, wells . Ctll 614
446 -3171

6t4-256-9364

'rOU HAVEN'T HE;ARD A

MY MOM ACC IDENTALLY SLJo&lt;ED
UP MY FR06; IN 11-lE VACUUM

I

Larry King Llvel In depth

Interviews wiJh top
newsmakers and celebrities .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTlfROP

2454.

1987 ChrNy Silver&amp;drQ Loaded.
8.000 milea. $600 down and
take over payment1. Cell 614-

446-8894

HE CAN ESCAPE IN THE SKIFF!

(1.49)
f11 CD MOVIE' Por1&lt;y's (A)
(t :34) 1:;1
8:05 00 NBA Basketball
8:30 Cil Butterfly leland
(I) CiJ (J) Growing Pains
Ourmg hiS tonsillectomy , Ben

6 PM.

Stamleu steel exhaust systems.
NDw custom made hh your
truck. motor homeorclaatiCCar.
W1th hfe-time warranty . Muffler
Man. 9 St1mpson Ave , Athent.
Oh io. 1-800-843-3767.

FROM LIEUTENANT CUSHING SO

Lampoon's Animal House (A)

has an out of body
experjence . E;1
g,oo (ll 100 Club

1976 Dodge Cuttomizad Van
318, auto Sharp. $1400or best
affer Call 614·446 ·7354 after
1974 Ouster Good cond $450.
Call 614 -388· 9325

.

1!!1 MOVIE: National •

I&gt;S

A OEC()Y TO DRAW THE

1978 Marcurt Monarch. Autp..
PS, PB , AC Good canct Call

Now buying shall corn or ear 1982 Ford F100. Low mileage
corn. Call forlateJt quotes. River heel ~;Ond. $4100 or belt
City Farm Supply, 614·446- oHer. Cell 614-446-0644 or

2986

CiJ (J) People's Court
&lt;1l l!ll MacNeil/ Lehrer

Motorcycles

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Dunrovtn Fru1t Farm mil close
for the seasan November 25th
St. At. 681 southeast afAibany
Another load lake Ontano large
apples. newcropNavaiOranges,
Ruby Red Grapefruit. nuts.
candy, bananas Jacks Fru1t
Mkt .. At . 36. Hend•aon, W Va

SportsCenter (L)

®l News

6t4-446-9370.

1983 Oat1un 280-lX cou pe,
eKcellant condition, 42,000 1o1i
loaded. IJ9600. 19fl3 JEEP
CJS, lair condit•on, enyineunas
sembled. $550 Call 614·379·
2510 before 6 :00 am or after
6 00 pm.

614-698-6298.

@

Cil Entertainment Tonight

A series of acc1dents

1976 Pinto, reliable, $176 •or
be1t off111. 1972 Nova . fair
_condiUon, 8360 , reliable. Call
614-388-8647

1977 Camaro Z-28 T-to p, 360
LT1 4spd 81600,orbestoffer
Call 614-446-1096.

2823.

"A set of ma tc hing luggage ... make sure
you scuff It all up the same way."

WEU.., '{OU WA~~D HI~
/tii~D Off 1'11~1'

1983 Dodge Ram conversion
van. low m1leage, eKc cond
304-676· 4046.

Hay &amp;. Grain

Fruit
&amp;. Vegetables

$10,000.00 firm, will see or
trade lor smatlar doler. Only
aerious call• only 304- 576-

51 Household Goods

614-288-8522.

58

oe Caterpillar dozer , &amp;KC cond,

Merchandise

Show Saddle with sliver he.:l
stall &amp; breast straps. Reg11teted
Sorrell mar•borned J1n . 25.
1979. 16 hands 3 ". 1850. Call

1983 Plymouth Horizon. Good
running eond Call 614· 4468440 or 367-0607

Coil

6:35 (I) Carol Burnett
7:00 Cil Remington 'Steele
IJ CIJ PM Magazine

922 • .

Kimbel piano . e~ec cond ,
t800 .00 Phone 304-6761645 .

100 par cent oak f~rewood , 130
Pickup loitd delivered. 304 -8963568 ah~~tr Spm
..
8 MM Camcorder with VCR
S800 00 Living room suite
$360 00 1988 Chev p1clc-up
4K4 , 304-676-6674

·l e19B5 Niuen 4x4 King Cab
pidt-up. 43,000 mil•, good
tlraJ , priced to sell. Phone
614.992-6486 and ask for John
E During d., t1me.

1h

Pure bred Australian Shepherd
pups. $26 a piece. 4 wka. old . 1
male Doberman, 1 yr. old $40.
Free part Collie. Good homes
pleast~ . 614-742-2192.

3446.

For sale regittered Tamworth
8Der. Call after lpm. 814 246·

AKC Reg English Spnnger
Spaniel pupa 7 moa. old.
Excaltent hunting stock . C•ll
614-446 -1393

Remmgton Model 742, 30-06
ADl 3x9 Weaver Windfield
sling, nse. 3Y:z boxes Ammo:
Excellent condition. 8325. 304675-2395 ar 614-992-2683.
for sale. Dehvered
8 30 00 304-896-

Reg1nared Oltlrtar horses. Call
614· 448-01B3 .
I ~--,;_,;_;_:_
_____

64
Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groommg All breeds . All
1tyl... lams Pet Food Dealer.
Juhe Webb Ph 614: 446· 0231 .

treadmill for sale. 876.
Cr011 bow with arrowJ, $40.
Cell 614· 986·4418

Reg Am•lcan Saddle Bred
HorJes lor ule Good bloodline.
Re•oneble pr1ce1. Ctll 814448-8317 or 2156-8461 aftlltf

ShowBiz Today News of

the entertainment world IS
anchored live from New
York. (0.30)
(!!) WKRP in Cincinnati
fl) CD Too Close for Comfort

1976 CJ7. Bent frame Running
gews good. 6 cyl . t600. Firm.
Call after 6 Pm 614- 266- 93~4

liv!latock

•

IE NBA
Today (T)
Q (J) ABC Newo 0

~OMEWHEI&lt;:E

19B7 510 pid-up PS, PB. 4
speed Long bad. Very renona ·
bla. 114-992-6676.

TUES., NOV. 17

EVENING
6:00 Cil Cruy Like a Fo•
o rn Cll o rn ®J 111 «2l
1m News
@ SporttLook In
(!) Dr. Who
I[J) Square One TV C
I!Jl Inside Polllics •aa
@ Facts of Life
fll CD One Dey at a Time
6:05 m Alice
.
6:30 IJ Cil 1m NBC Nlghlly News

1961 Chevy 1fJ ton INith 154. 6
cy l. full pr81ture motor. Runs
well 3 spd. tran1. DriVen 20
mll111 dally New king pln1 &amp;
good tirH t860 Ca\1614-446-

New Holland end of nason 'hay
tool sale. All hav tools at delaer
cost plus interest lree financif)g
until June1 , 1988 With normal
down payment. Two 461 . 3 pt, 7
ft mowen $2,100.00. One311 ,
3 joint PTO, standard tlr•
regular p1ckup, $8,600 00. One
472, 7 ft h~bine. 16.900 .00,
One 474 , 7 ft h•ybine ,
$6, 400.00 Keefers Sef\lic e
Center. St. Rt. B7. Leon, W Va.
Phone 304·896-3874 .

.

•

1986 S -10 Chevy . PS, PB.
Call •nytime, 614· 246·
5626 or 614· 448-9613.

MUZZLELOAOING item•- Black
powder, capt, ball, fla1ka,
capp&amp;rs. meuureu. patehet,
lightning loaders. molds. etc.
Price~ drast lcally redu-'ed for
gomg-out of bu1iness sale. Ko•
bel 's Mill Creek Rd . Hra.-Mon..
Wed., Fri.· 6·8 PM. Sat. 1-6 PM .
Phone 814-446-2316

Atari with 33 games &amp; super
charg8f. $140 Call 614-446- ' pm
9700 ash tor Joe
Twin beds, mattress. b ox
Firewood- $20 pick-up load 3
s prings, like new, 304-676point hit:«:t. hydraulic wood spilt73t5
tor Ci ll 614-246·51 14
Remmgton 7600 ADl pump
Firewood - . Hardwood . Sea30-06, 3 to 9 Bushnell scope,
soned. split, stacked, &amp; dltli·
1 1,.) boK •hells. $325 00 304·
vered promptty 835 'Very large 675-4616
load . Call 614-446-7993
AVON, all Arfl&amp;l. Shirley Spears
20.8 deep freeze , portable V~A
304·676-t 429 .
.
&amp; camera . .$860. Call 614 -4463299 betwaem 11 AM ·B PM.
Sears LP gas wall furnace,
24.000 btu, thermos ta1 conBen Franklin wood or coal
trolled, UJ4Jd. for two seasons,
burning stove. Good cond
goodcond. $160 00 304-576 ·
t150 . Call614-388·9930.
2203

.

I~TO WHfE:I..It-l6 11'1.YA.~

EKtr~s

Buick tor winler. In Gallipotis
area Call614-446 · 2016.

1400 sq ft. commercial tpace
suit~ble for _offices. retailing. or
serv1ce1 . Pnme location-«:orner
or 2nd &amp; Pma m Galhpolit
Ample perking m rear. 1360 per
month. Call 614-446-4249 or
446-2326.

~

00 'jW FL'(

Television
Viewing

'"'I

72~6 .

WANTED Pl~~ee to store 1966

For Leese

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St., Gallipolis.
NEW- 8 p c. wood group- 1399.
Uving room t uites - 11 99-*699 .
Bunh beds wit h bedding- 8199 .
Full size mattreJ I &amp; taundatton
ltarting · t99 . Flacliners
starting- &amp;99.
U~ED- Beds, dreuen, bedroom
I UII81 , $199 - $299 0aJkl,
wnnger washer, e complete line
of 1.11ed furnitu re .
NEW- Western boots· sJo
Workboot s t 1 B &amp; up (Steal &amp;
soft toe] Call 614-448-3169

""

Trucks for Sale

1972 Ford truck. 1460. Good
running truck . Call 614 · 367-

Seasoned Oak &amp; Ash firewood·

675·t38~

1920's 9~t12 wool rug with
matching 3~t6 runner . $126 . Call
614-992-3955 or 614· 992 ·

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Lllrry Wright

1964 Shasta camper, 2 pc
brown living room suite, 304-

54 Misc. Mercha'n dise

882-2566.

54 Misc. Merchandise

90 Day,• same as caah w•th
approved credit. 3 Mll8!1 out
Bulav1lle Rd . Open 9am to &amp;pm
Man thru S&amp;t. Ph 614-446-

266-tt87.

676·6t04.

Commercial buildings for lease
Downtown Pt. Pleasant. Stores,
offices. A-One. Reel Estate
Carol Yeager Brok13r Call 304675-6104

s:,
·

Coil

appt

32 Mobile Homes

Mad.rn 1 BR apartment. Call
614-446-0390.

Unfurnished, 2 BR. Lower Second Aw. No pets. NiC'e. 2· 3
aduhs. Ref. &amp; Dep required.

Newly renovated. all electric
With heat pump and central air 3
bedrooms. plenty yard and
garden space m PortiMd. Ohio,
~ miles from Raven1wood, W
Va. Call614-843-5309.

House, 2 bedroo ms, famity
roo m. full basement. central
heat and a1r cond, vmyl Siding,
storm w1ndows erid doors, large
lot, garden space, 304-6763119 after 4 .00 pm.

Furnithed· 4 rooms &amp; bath.
Clean. No pBts Aduhsonly. Ref.
&amp; dep required . Call 61&lt;t-446·
1519

Furmshed Efficiency . 701 4th.
Ava. Gallipolis. t175. Utllttl111
paid. Ca\1446-4418 after 7 PM .

!-;louse for sale, Rt 33 level lot,
2 BRS .. 2 baths. 2 car g.-age.
swimming pool. aatilite. Close to
Salisbury &amp; Meigs H1gh . Call
6}4-992 -3254.

HOuse fo r sale, 2126 Lincoln
Ave , phone 304-675-3475.

Apartment
for Rent

3 BR , 21ft baths. 2 fireplaees.
Split l811el. In country. $400 plu1
deposit Call 614-446-4614

2. 3, or 4 bedroom houses and
apt in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilities, d•ollit requked . Call

:t~ bedroom, 7 room one floor
hprp e in Middlep9rt. 200x200
lot Bob Haggerty 614. 9926304. Priced und• S14,000.

44

2 BR . apt · Honw•ckl• Hillt.
Water, tewer, trath
&amp;
kitchen appllancaa tu Pi
•
Gas heat. Rent st8rt· $22 , all
614-446·3344 or 446· 1134.
Equal Housing Opportunity.

3 BR , bath&amp; halt. kitchen, living
room-fireplace. dining area Att·
ached gBrage. basement . Good
condition Will sell- land contract First St west- HolzatJ.
Call 6t4-446·360t .

Government homes ffom $1 (U
repa~r) . Dfllinquenttax propeny .
Repossess ions. Call 805 -6B76000 Elrt . GH -9805 fon:!urrent
repo hst

Tuesday, Noliember 17, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel

.'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Tuesday, November 17, 1987

.

CRYPI'OQUOTE
EZYK
BJFE

FJEWRFO

EZY

GYJUY

OZRLPI

GWFGCWUHO

GCYUY!Y

J NR WI

E ZJ E

U J F F R F

OZREO
FJGRPYRF
Yeaterday'a Cryptoquote: HE WHO DOES NOT
PUNISH EVIl, COMMANDS IT TO BE DONE.
LEONARDO l)A VINCI

�I

.

.

l
Pomeroy Middleport. Ohio

· Page 10-The Daily Sentinel

.

..

Tuesday. November 17. 1987

•

r---Local news----. Storms weaken a bit, move north 'today
Negotiations slated Wednesday

By United Press International
A storm system that spun off a
barrage of tornadoes killing 11
people In two days In Texas and
Louisiana simmered a bit today
as it moved across Alabama a,nd
F lorida, but carried some of its
"real p~nch" north as It extended to the Great Lakes,
weather officials said.
"There is still a severe !hunderstorm watch in effect for
parts of Georgia 4ntil 8 a·.m.
(EST) ... with a chance for severe
thunderstorms and tornadoes
across Florida. Georgia and
South Carolina ," said National
Weather Service forecaster
Hugh Crowther. "There's a
lesser threat of a few thunder·
storms - not reaching severe
levels - extending up into the
lower Great Lakes . Some of the
rea 1 punch is movIng
northwards."
The death toll from a rare
onslaught. of November torna·
does Sunday and Monday stood
at 11, all in Texas and Louisiana,
but damage. was s~ severe in

A negotiating session between teams representating the
Meigs Local School District Board of Education and the Meigs
Loca l Teachers Association - the first since a teachers strike
began at 12:01 a.m. on Friday, Nov. 6- will be held at 4 p.m.
Wednesday .
.
Meigs Local Superintendent Dan E. Morris said that he has
been notified that the session will be conducted by Federal
Mediator Joseph Crowe who was working with the two groups
prior to the strike.
Teachers of the district have establlshed picket lines at the
schpols of the district since the strike began but no negotiating
sessions have taken place.
Meantime, efforts are underway to hold a public meeting
Wednesday evening at the Civic Center In Rutland. A promoter
of the meeting said that the Idea was to have the board of
education and the teachers association represented and they
were to explain their positions In relation to the strike. State
representatives also had been invited. However, with the
negotiations resuming on Wednesday ,It was not known today if
plans would continue for the Wednesday night session.

Fire units help fight blazes
Tuesday's tatn is expected to provide reiief for local fire units
whO were .plagued with brush fires In various locations of the
county on Monday , the Meigs County Emergency Medical
.Services reports.
Monday calls included: Middleport at 9: 18a.m. to Park St.!or ·
Kim Armstrong. taken to Holzer Medical Center: Pomeroy at
10:06 a.m . to Railroad St. for Dorothy Roush, treated but not
transported; Middleport to Bradbury at 12:35 p.m. for a brush
fire at the rear of Radio Station WMPO. with firemen not being
able to return to their station unti15: 38 p.m.; Salem to Danville
at 12: 35 p.m. for a structure fire at the Anthony Cardillo
residence with Rutland assisting; Pomeroy at 1:20 p.m . to
Bradbury to assist Middleport with a brush fire; Tuppers Plains
at 2:25 p.m. answered a call to· Success Road for an auto
accident with Richard Allen being taken to Camden-Clark
Hospital in Parkersburg, W. Va.; Pomeroy at 2:33p.m. to Long
Hollow Road, the scene of a . motorcycle accident, taking
William Stnlth to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 2:43
p.m., to the New Lama Road for a brush flre near the Larry
Johnson residence, returning to station at 3:20p.m.: Pomeroy
to Bailey Run Road at 4:24p.m. for a brush fire returning to the
station at 6:41p.m.; Syracuse to Minersville at 4:31 for a brush
fire returning to their station at 6:50p.m.; Middleport to Park
St. at 8:32 p.m. taking Barb Bolin to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 8:50p.m. to Stonewood Apartments for
Shirley Frazier, taken to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Turkey dinner postponed
The annual public turkey dinner of the Rutland Fire
Department scheduled for Thursday evening at the Rutland
Elementary School has been postponed until February or
March due to the Meigs Local teachers strike. While there were
no objections to proceeding with the dln.n er from the teachers or
the administration to going ahead with the event, the
postponement came about because some of the department
members did not wish to cross a picket line at the school, it was
reported.

Democrat executives to meet
The Meigs County Democrat Executive Committee will hold
Its regular meeting Thursday evening at the Carpenters Union
Hall, E. Main St., Pomeroy. All interested Democrats are
Invited to attend.

Dogs involved in accident
A West Virginia man was Injured In an acc,ldent Monday. at
2:20p.m .. in Olive Township on County Road 46, one.mile from
Ohio 7, according to the Gallia-Meigs Post of the State Highway
Patrol.
Richard Allen, 37, of Parkersburg, W.Va., was taken by the
Meigs EMS to Camden-Clark Hospital In Parkersburg after
ending his travels in a ditch. Allen was admitted for a fractured
left arm. At last report he was listed in fair condition.
The report stated that Allen was driving west when he
swerved to avoid hitting a dog In the road. He lost control. went
off the right side of the road and Into a ditch.
The accident Is currently under lnve.stlgation by the patrol.
A Kentucky man was cited in a motorcycle accident Monday.
at 2:17 p.m., in Sallsb~ry Township on Township Road 27A,
about a mile and a quarter south of U.S. 33 .
William Smith, 69, of Catlettsburg, Ky., was cited for not
having valid registration after his motorcycle went down on the
The report said that Smith, who was riding north, swerved to
miss a dog. As he did so, he lost control and went dowJ\ on the
road.

Continued from page 1
Early.···-----==.:.:..._~-­
give this market a lot of tolerance. If it goes up or down 20or 30
points, that is not a real indica ·
lion of very much. "
Rodd Anderson, vice president
In equity trad ing at Shearson
Lehman Brothers Inc., said the

I

market .was anxiously awaiting
news from Capitol Hill.
"The longer we don't hear
anything,. If It goes to Thursday
or Friday, whatever the numbers
are, people here are going to be
more concerned," Anderson
said.

Charles Gotschall

Charles V. Gotschall, 83, Bra·
denton, Fla., formerly of Meigs
Oounty, died Sunday In Bradenton. Fla.
A retired ca rpenter, Mr . Gotschall was born in Harrisonville,
a son of the late Charles Addison
and Emma Carpenter Gotschall.
Surviving are three daughters ,
Juanita Clark and Nancy K.
Merrill, both of Baltimore, Md.,
and Janet Grimes, Bradenton,
Fla .. 11 grandchildren and seven
great-grandchildren.
. Arra ngements will be an nounced by the Ewing Funeral
Home.

Lula Wheeler

The grange hall on the Rock
Springs Fairgrounds will be the ·
one and only location for a
special distribution of food ftom
10 a.m . to 4 p.m . Thursday, the
Gallla-Meigs Community Action
Agency announces.
Cheese, cornmeal, honey and
rice will be given out at the
grange hall . in only the one
location this time due to the need
to register for new food cards.
Qualfled persons may register
before Thursday at the C.A.A.
office at Cheshire. Persons also
may fill out applications at the
fairgrounds location on
Thursday.
Those filling out applications
must take their blue commodity
card along with proof of toncome
to update records and receive
new cards.
Applications are also available
through Methodist pastors of
Meigs County. Anyone needing
further Information may call the
· C.A.A. at 992-6629.

I Stocks

Area deaths

raised, Charles W. Wheeler,
West Columbia and several nie·
ces and nephews.
Services will be Thursday at
1:30 p.m . at the West Columbia
United '1.'Jethodist Church of
which she was a member, with
the Rev·: Bennie Stevens·and the
Rev . Terry Alva rez officiating.
Burial will be at Graham
Cemetery.
Friends may call on Wednesday from 2 to4.pm. and 7·9 p.m. at
the Foglesong Funeral Home,
and one hour prior to services at
the church on Thursday .

Public meeting
postponed

through the gulf today. U.S.
officials said.
The convoy, which left Kuwait
at 6:30a.m. Sunday, included the
80,000-ton Kuwaiti product carr!·
ers Surf City and Chesapeake
City, and the frigates Thach,
based In San Diego, CaiU., and
the Carr, based In Charleston,
s.c . .

Lottery numbers
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Monday's winning Ohio Lottery
numbers:
Daily Number
998.
Ticket sales totaled $1,230,977,
with a payoff due of $298,515.
PICK-4
1785.
PICK-4 ticket sales totaled
$197,358.50, with a payoff due of
$88,847.
PICK-4 $1 straight bet pays
$5,448. PICK-4 $1 boX bet pays
$227.

this morning for parts of Minnesota, and winter storm watches
were up for northwest Minnesota
and extreme northwest Wlscon·
sin where up to 6 Inches of snow

was possible. the weather service said.
Gale warnings remained up
i hls morning ovE&gt;r all five Great
Lakes.

Dally stock prices
(As of 10:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
of Blunt Ellis &amp; Lru!wl
Am Electric Power .. ........... 25%
AT&amp;T .................................. 29
Ashland 011 ................ ........ 52')4
Bob Evans .......................... 15')4
Charming Shoppes ............. .12%
City Holding Co ..... .............. 34
Federal Mogul. ............... ..... 31
Goodyear T&amp;R .................. .48'Vs
Heck's Inc ............ ,.............. 2'4
Key Centurion .................... 36\!z
Lands' End ................ .. .... ... 14'4
Limited Inc . ....................... 19%
Multimedia Inc .......... ... ...... . 46
Rax Restaurants .................. 3%
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 6%
Shoney 's Inc..................... ,20%
Wendy's Inti. ............... ..... .... .6
Worthington Il'\d .... .... .......... 16%

A public meeting for parents,
Lula B. "Pi nk" Wheeler, 80, teachers, administrators and
West Columbia, died Monday In board of education members
Pleasant Valley Hospital.
which had been set for WednesBorn July 7. 1907, in Clifton, she day evening at the Rutland Ci.vic
was a daughter of the late Center · to discuss details of a
William and Addie Tate Wheeler. teac hers strike In the Meigs .
She was also preceded in dea lh Local School District has beerr
Veterans Hospital
by two sisters and five brothers. postponed.
Admitted
- Peggy Hartman,
She was a seamstress for the
The meeting will be resche· Pomeroy; Linda Hawley, Mid·
Yonkers
M·a n u I act
urI n g duled when needed. The post'
.
.
dleport; Ja cq ueline Jewell, Ma·
Company.
ponement was brought about by son, W. Va.; Shirley Frazier
Surviving are one brother. an announcement that negotia. Middleport.
'
Charles S. Wheeler, West. Colum· !Ions between Meigs Local
Discharged
Beatrice
Dobla; one sister, Mrs . Jap1es Teac.hers ahd the Meigs Local
nahue, J essie , Palmer, Leah
Elizabeth Roush , West Colum- Board of Education will resume Williams, Robert Boling.
bia; one nephew whom she .Wednesday,

Hospital news

~Major

~~

Hoople's·
selections

Daily Number
001
Pick 4

•

8331

a1 y
Vol .37, No .135
Copyrighted 1987

en tine

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio. Wednesday, November 18. 1987

Partly cloudy tonlgh1. LOw
mid 30s. Cloudy ThurSday.'
Highs in mid 40s.

'•

2 Section$. 16 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc , Newspaper

Powell resigns ·f rom ·M_eigs school board
r:r.1

~SNO

FRONTS:

11

W
Warm

~
RAIN ;.....&amp;.
.
8'0'J SHOWERS
~
"'f::old

r

Static . .. Occluded

WEATHER MAP- Rain and thunderstorms will be widespread
from the Great Lakes thtough the Ohio Valley, the Appalachians
and the southern Atlantic Coast Into the Florida Panhandle. Rain Is
likely across the upper Great Lakes and the central Appalachians
wllh the strongest thunderstorms to occur over Alabama, much of
Georgia and the Florida Panhandle. Rain showers will also be
scattered from the central PacUic Coast Into the Great Basin.
Showers will be most numerous from southwest Oregon Into
central CaiUomla. Snow is likely acr0118 the upper Mississippi
Valley with the heaviest acr0118 nortbe.a st Minnesota. Snow
showers will be scattered throushOut much of the northern and
central Rockies. IDgh temperatures wlll be In the !lOs or 60s acr0118
much of the nation.

Weather
South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy and windy today, with scattered showers and
thunderstorms and highs near 65.
Partly cloudy and windy tonight,
with a chance of showers and a
low in the low 40s. Mostly cloudy
Wednesday , with a chance of
showers and highs between 45
and 50.
·The probability of preclplta·
tlon Is 80 percent today and 30
percent tonight and Wednesday .
Winds will be from the soutti at

20 to 30 mph with higher gusts
today and from the southwest at
20 to 30 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Partly cloudy Thursday, with a
chance of snow flurries Friday ,
and fair weather on Saturt;lay .
Highs will be between 35 and 40
eacli day. Overnight lows will be
between 25 and 30 early Thurs·
day and in the 20s Friday and
Saturday mornings.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel News Staff
The resignation · of Pomeroy
Businessman La rry Powell from
the board was accepted Tuesday
night wnen the Meigs Local
Board of · Education met in
regular session at the Central
Office in Middleport.
Powe ll was appointed to serve
on the board in February, 1979,
replacing Wendell Hoover who
resigned in December, 1978.
Powell did not file for reelection
to the board this year. His term of
office ,e xpires next month.
AbOut 30 people attended last
night's board meeting and during
a public participation . sec tion
questioned the board of ed ucation on aspects of a teac hers
strike which began al12: 01 a.m.
on Nov. 6. The discussion was
orderly except with only one
parent, 1va Session, being declared out of order by Board
President when she ques tio ned
administrat ive salary increases
as the discu ssion moved along.
One parent said that she feels
the board of education and the
teachers are not thinkin g of. the
' kids at this poin t in tim e. She
charged that the kids and the

parents are "getting the shaft"
as she asked why it has taken so
long for the board and the
teac hers to res ume negotiations.
President Snowden ex plained
that the negotiations were in the
hands of a federal mediator when
the s trike began and that the
board had to wait until that
negotiator al,lowed what he
called a "cooling off period" to
pass before he again got the two
groups together. Snowden also
expla ined tha t negoliations be·
gan in the summer bui were '
slowed because the teachers'
fi nancia l person was not avilable
at vatious times.
Snowd.,n reco mmended that
parents attending last night's
meeting talk to the teachers as
well as the board of education.
Upon questioning, he pointed out
that the board has Stated that
there would be no layoffs of
teach ers for two years and the
offer was re jected by the
teachers. He said that the board
has not disc ussed cutting the
staff even though the budget is
has been reduced to the "bare
bone".
Sisson suggested excessive ad'
ministrative costs to which

Snowden replied that everyone
could be cut a nd school discontinued. Board Member Robert
Bar t.on sa id that the Meigs
District covers a wide area in
ma,ny directions and that administrators are needed. Board ·
Member Larry Rupecorrimented
that all of the ad ministrators
could be cut and the savi ngs
would not be enough to meet the
demands of the teachers.
Another parent said that she is
employed and knows that when
there is not enough money to
maintain a busi ness, budget cuts
mus I be made.
"They are going to have to
understand that there must be
cuts and there are people out
there who want jobs." she
commented.
The question of administrative
salary increases arose and the
board said at no time have
administrators been given two
raises In a time slot where other
employees go t one. The board did
acknowledge that administrators have been given r.aises when
teachers sa laries have been
increaged so · they 'would be
making more money a rrd "those
they are administering". There

will be no administrative raises
for the next two years, Snowden
said.
. Parents attending the meeting
were urged to co ntact the state to
let the state gover nment know
that there is not enough money to
meet the needs of school districts
these days .
. Another parent said she would
be happy to work towards the
passage of a new tax levy in the
district. She expressed concern
over the amount of time being
missed during the strike.
Snowden said that a five .mill
levy, if passed, would only bring
in only half of the money asked by
teachers and indicated that the
board had promised duri ng negotiations to place a levy before
voters of the district. Snowden
said that the Meigs Local District
is now paying teachers $800
above the state minimum requirement for new teachers and
$5,000 more a year over the state
minimum for those at the top
level pay scale.
Parents expressed concern
that the entire school year mi ght
be lost if the strike is not ended.
However , Snowden sa id that the

time out could go to the first of the
A dlsussion was held on one
year and the 180 required days class at the Harrisonville Eieco uld be met if Satu rdays and . mentary School which has 35
other time slots were used as students and the teacher Is
makeup days. Asst. Supt. James
unable to cope with problems and
Carpenter indicated that there is is unable to provide a gOO(!
a lot of flexibility invo lved but ed ucational situation. Supt. Dan
that the 180 days of sc hool must E. Morris said that he is aware of
be completed by June 30. Accordthe problem and Is working
ing to the last contract with the towards solutions In creating a
teachers, Saturday classes are better learning classroom for the
subject to the approval of students.
teachers. It was reported that the
The board accepted the resig•
State Department of Education nation of Patricia Parker as a
does not interfere In strikes substitute teacher in the district
unless time is r unning out so that a nd accepted Lisa Lynn Pridea district can complete a schOol more as a tuiti on student. A level
three, formal grlevanee was:
year.
.
Some of the parents last night ta bled at the request of thE&gt;
pushed for a joint meeting with Individual Involve.
:
the board and the teachers so
The board moved Into execu&gt;
they could '' know what 's happen- tive session to discuss personnel;
ing". However, the board con- finances and negotiations and
tended that it has been publishing then recessed until 8 Wednl!sday
the facts in tne newspa pers and evening. At 4 p.m. this afternoon
the teachers have taken no action nego tiations resumed betweert
to contradicate the board's state· the teac hers and the board
ments. Snowden pointed out that through a federal mediator.
records of the Treasurer Jane
Attending last night's meeting
Fry are available to the public so were board members, Snowden,
that people can look into any Rupe, Richard Vaughan, and
matter on which they have Barton and Morris, Fry and
1
questions.
~rpen~r.

Mine subsidence insurance
available in Meigs, Gallia
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
. Property owners in Meigs and
Gallla Counties. and in 37 other
Ohio counties. now have · the
option of bu ying additional insurance to protect their homes
agai nst losses caused by mine
subsidence.
'
Mine subs idence means loss to
a structu re caused only by the
collapse of underground manmade mines.
Mine subsidence coverage has
been ava ilable s ince October 21
and is made possi ble by state
legisla tion which provided for
establishment of the Mine Subsidence Insurance ·Underwriting
Association (MSIUA). Al l Ohio
Ins urance agents who insure
property are mandatorily
members of MSTUA.
MSIUA encourages property
owners livin!( in the 39 counties

where mine subidence insurance
is available, to consider the new
coverage. The annual premiutn
is $20 for coverage up to $50,000 .
Funding for the subsidence
coverage is made ,available by
the Mine Subsidence Fund which
is comprised of moneys from the
state and from the Federal
Special Revenue Fund. The program is intended to be self·
sustaining and the see~ funds are
to be paid back within five years.
The program account is overseen
by the state treasurer.
For convenience sake, local
insurance agents are ta king
applications fo r the additional
coverage, ~o ll,ec ting premiums
and receiving claim notices.
The coverage Is for personal
dwellings only a nd not commercia l properties . New policy
holders, as Well as existi ng policy
holders, are eligible for the
coverage which is written by

attaching an additional form to
home, farm and mobile home
owners policies.
The actual administrative and
claims handling for the mine
subsidence insurance will be
handled by the Ohio FAIR Plan,
which Pomeroy insurance agent
Bill Quickel says is " the state·
r un Insurance."
With mine subsidence coverage, if a claim · occurs, the
policyholder will report it to the
local agent. who then notifies the
FAIR Plan of the cIa im and
confirms the coverage. The
FAIR Plan will then proceed with
fi nalization of the claim.
To determin e if mine subsl·
dence coverage would be a good
addition to your property insurance policy, con tact your local
insurance agent for more infor·
mation and to make application
for the optional coverage.

Cold ,. front moves toward east
RECEIVES SUPPORT - The Columbia
Township Volunteer Fire De11,artment recently
received some financial support from Southern
Ohio Coal Company's Meigs Division. A check for
$450 was presented to Jim Gaston, center, fire
chief, by Ray Llevin~:, left, mine superintendent

'

We Ah~tays Knew People
From Meigs County Were
Above Average!

Rhonda Lyons is the new clerk
of Racine Village - maybe.
Lyons received 182 votes for
election to the office in the
unofficial tally at the Nov. c3
election with her oppo ne nt , inf'Cm11lltmt , .Jane Beegl~. rece iving
!81 votes.
Tuesday , the Meigs Count y
Board of Elections held its
official tallyoftheNov .3election
an d Lyons and Beegle ca me out
of that count each with 182 votes.
The board of elec tions placed th.::

Survey data shows 71% of Ohioans read a daily newspaper in the past week. •

Our survey shows more than 83% of the people in Meigs
County read The Daily Sentinel. **

two names In a hat and Lyons
name was drawn from the hat
and she was declared the winner .
However, on Monday the board
will co nduct a mandatory recount of votes cas t for the office.
WhOever gets the most votes in
the recount will be the winner.
However, should a tie again
result, Lyons will be nam ed to
serve in the post since she w;:~s
selected by lottery in the recount
on Tuesday when the originai tie
developed.

_AT&amp;T proposes 3.6 percent rate cut

The Daily Sentinel

WASHINGTON I UP I I - Longdis tance telephone rates for
American Telephone &amp; Tele·
graph cus tomers wou ld fa ll by 3.6
percent on Ja n. 1 under a plan
submitted to the Federa I Communications Commission.
·The rat e cuts, proposed Tues·
' da y, would mean savings of $800
million overall for AT&amp;T's custo·
mers, with the biggest savings on
calls inade during th e day. The
average home phone long·
·dis tan ce bill would drop by 2.6
percent a nd business bills would
f~ll by about the same amount,
the company said·.
"Jlhe company sa id the exact
amount of the price cuts, subject
to approva l by the FCC, hinges on .
an FCC review of the fees that

We Deliver
For Subscription or Advertising Informati_o n .

Call992-2156
• Source: Market Opinion Research
•• Telephone survey of 2,000 Meigs county resid~nls laken November 1986
through January 1987.

0

lor ,the company's Meigs No. 2 mine, and Fred
Zirkle, right, administration manager. The
volunteer fire department Is responsible for the
area that incorporates the Meigs Division's
general office and Meigs No. 2 mine, Zirkle said.

Rhonda Lyons new
village clerk -. maybe

~

.

•

Ohio Lottery

.

•

,,

'.

;)

Food distribution
site is announced

.

~-

Mississippi that Gov. Bill Allaln
declared a state of emergency
Monday night. More than 250
people were Injured in the three
sta tes. No 's erious injuries were
reported in Mississippi.
The storm system left Mlsslssippi and moved across Alabama
and the Florida Panhandle early
today with strong winds that
blew out windows, damaged
roofs and overturned trucks . But
NWS spokesman Dan McCarthy
said the thunderstorms were
losing strength.
" It Is starling to simmer down
a little bit," he said.
Showers and thunderstorms
early today stretched-from southern Indiana and western Kentucky across the central Gulf
Coast, Crowther said. Wldes:
p.read rain was reported across
the middle and upper Mississippi
Valley and the western Great
Lakes states, with snow and.sleet
stretching from north central
K11nsas · across Iowa in to
Minnesota.
A snow advisory was in effect

I ran strikes ...___..:c.:.:on=u=nu=ed:.:..:.:fr-=om:.:.:..!:p::!ag:.::e-=1_ _
The ship was believed to be about
25 miles north of the United Arab
Emirates port of Ras AI Khaimah and was sending a May Day
distress signal during the attack,
Lloyd's reported.
Shipping sources said the at.tac k on the Esso Freeport owned by Exxon Corp. of New
York but flying a Bahamian flag
- followed an ambush at 3 a.m.
Sunday on the Libei'ianregistered motor tanker Lucy In
the same area.
The 36,512· ton oil tanker, which
is managed Marltlme 01/erseas
Corp. of New York, anchored off
Dubai Monday morning, · the
shipping sources said. She was
attacked by three Iranian speedboats and sustained damage to
her starboard engine room, the
·
sources said.
The ,a ttacks came after one of
the heaviest rounds of Iraqi air
strikes on shipping in the service
of Iran in weeks. The attacks are
aimed at choking the flow of
Iranian oil, Tehran's main
sourCe of foreign exchange to
'fund the war with Iraq.
A spokesman for the Iraqi
armed forces said Iraqi warplanes attacked two oil tankers
off Iran's northern Persian Gulf
coastline at 9:54 p.m. Sunday,
· Baghdad radio reported Monday
morning. There was no lndepend·
ent confirmation of the attacks.
The 18th convoy ' of u .s. Navy
ships and Kuwaiti tankers flying
the American flag steamed south

•

local phone compa nies charge
long -distance firms for their
hookup to local networks .
. The local compa nies have
proposed cutting AT&amp;T's access
charges by $200 million on New
Yea r 's Day, but AT&amp;T, in a
compla int filed last month, said
the fees still would be $1 .15 billion
too high.
•
AT&amp;T is requ ired to pass any
reductions in its access charges
along to Its customers, dollar for
dollar.
AT&amp;T spokeswoman Ed ie Her·
man sa id the compan y believes
the $SOO million figure Is "conser·
vative," but Is prepared to revise
the cuts in Dece mber after the
FCC finis hes rev iewi ng the pro·
posed local char~es.

Litter grants
awarded
State Rep. Joly nn Boster and
State Sen. Jan Michae l Lo ng
a nnounced today thai Gov. Richard F. Celeste has awarded
liter prevention and recycling
grants for Athens, Meigs and
Gallla Counties .
Accordi ng to Boster a nd Long,
tht&gt;se three cou nties are among ·
83 recipients receiving a co m.
bined tota l of more than $4.5
million for litter prevention and
recyling programs. Long and
Boster report that $70,717 will be
awarded to Athens County;
$62,334 to Gallia Cou nty. a nd
$76,713 to Meigs Coun ty.
The Ohio Department of Na tu ral Resources awards the funds,
which are administered by the
Division of Litter Preve ntion and
Recycling. The local programs
see k to address the litter problem
by combinin g se veral approaches such as litter and
recyc ling educatio n, public
awareness, law enforcement,
containment, collection and Increased recycling opportunities.
Boster and Long added that $44
million In grants have been
awarded for litter prevention and
reclycling since the es tablish,
menl of the Divlson olf Litter
Prevention and Recycling in
1980. The grants, Boster and
Long concluded, are part of an
effort to establish self-sufficient
local programs throughout the
state.

By United Press International
A cold fro nt crept toward the
rai ny Eastern Seaboard today as
a killer storm system that raked
the Gulf Coast headed out to sea.
The storm system that left in
its wake deat h. destru ct ion and a
major clean up job across the
Gu lf Coast sta tes Sunday and
Monday a nd soa ked F lorida with
more than

4 inches

of ~

ra in

Tuesday moved off the Atlantic
Coas t ea rly today.
Rainshowers lingered ahead of
the cold front over Maine and
some of the rema'ining coastal
sections of New E ngland. Showers and a few thunderstorms
were reported over coastal North
Caroli na and south F lorida.
Elsewhere, a few li gh t rain and
snow showers dotted the upper
Great Lakes region, parts of
souther~ Kansas, western Okla·
homa and northwest Texas. Up to
3 inches of s now was measured in
north-central Wisconsin.
Ga le warnings remained in
effect for lakes Erie, Ontario and
Michigan a nd eas tern Lake Superior because of strong gusty
winds.
The cold .front headed for the

East Coast extended across
western New York to northwest
Florida and curved a bit over
western sections of Virginia.
"It's moving east and by early
Thursday it will have pushed on
off much of the Atlantic Coast ,"
said National Weather Service
forecaster Hugh Crowther.
Pre-dawn. temperatures in
areas east of the creeping front
remained above 50 today , with
readings in the 60s and 70s along
much of the AUantlc CCoast,
Crowther said.
On Tuesday, parts of the Eas t
Coast enjoyed unseasonably
warm weather. The temperature·

climbed to 72 degrees Tuesday 111
Philadelphia, less tha n a week
after a s torm dumped up to· 4
inches of snow in parts of
s 0 utheas(ern Pen nsylva nia.
.
ln . the West, readings dipped
into the si ngle digits and even
dropped below zero over parts of
the Rocky Mountain region.
Heavy snow that blanketed
parts of the centra l a nd northern
Rockies dtmlnishep overnight,
a nd all snow advisories for the
region were ca nceled. As much
as 13 inches of snow Tuesday
plied up at the Monarch ski area
in the Co l ora~o moun tains.

County board business routine
The Meigs County Board of Education conduc ted the
following business In its Tuesday night meet in g:
Approved the minutes of the Oct. 13 meeting.
Approved the treas urer's financial report.
Approved payment of the monthly bills .
Approved a school bus driver certificat e for Don Smith of
Southern Local.
Passed a , resolution to participaJe in the COG -SEOVEC
Computer Program.
Scheduled the next meeting for Dec. 8.

.Middleport, Pomeroy ~ill
combine Christmas parades
Middleport and Pomeroy wi ll
join han'ds in welcoming in the
Christm as season.
Representatives of the Pomeroy and Middleport Chambers of
Co mme rce met Tuesday a nd
agreed that the two tow.ns will
'combine their annual parades

,

in to one ven ture on Sunday, Nov.
29.
.
The parade will begin in
Middleport forming on South
Second Ave., at 12:30 p.m. The
parade will move through Mid·
dleport at l p.m., dlsmantiP at
the Sears parking lot and reform

•

behind the Pomeroy Fire
Department .
The parade units will then
moV.e through Pomeroy at 2 p.m.
In Pomeroy, the parade will
move from th e fire department .
out Buttemut ave ., onto Main St.,
Continued on page 7

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