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                  <text>Ohio Lottery
Christmas
countdown

Daily Number
251
Pick 4
1961

•

at y

en tine

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 11. 1987

Vol. 38, No, 160
Copyriglrted 1987

Cloudy tonight. Chance of
showers. Low in mid 30s.
c;Joudy Saturday. Highs in the ·
upper 40s .

2 Sections, 16 Paget 25 Cents
A Multimedia lne. Newspaper

Two Ohioans killed in
Mason County · wreck

PR

ENTiRE S7i

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AM/FM/FM-stereo rece.iver with built-in program'mable clock/timer,
graphic equalizer, dual
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speakers, and custom component rack. . Regu.l ar
259.97

(Editor's note: Tuesday ;.,arks bridge collapsed, but the entire
the date 20 years ago this area 1, 750-foot long span . from shore
was shocked by the collapse of to shore. Vehicles and people
· the ~liver Bridge. Coverage or Its cascaded with tons of steel.
Impact on the area will be . tumbling 100 feet through the air
continued in the Sunday Tlmes- before plunging into the cold,
40-foot deep river. The death toll
Sentlne1)
was 46.
"I walked down to the river.
By RICK VANSANT
looked
up and boy,lt was gone,"
United Press International
·recalls
Blii \V amsley. "I looked
GALLIPOLIS- Twenty years
later, the collapse of the Silver down the river and there was a
Bridge remains a vivid horror Mack truck floating down the
story for one generation, but only river."
Wamsley, 40, says the 'lmages
a misty legend for a new
that click into his mind from that
generation.
The dividing line is 5 p.m ., night 20 years ago are just as
Friday, Dec. 15, 1967. lf you were vivid as when he saw them. His
around this southern· Ohio com- generation wlli never forget.
And yet, the generation now
munity then, 20 years ago is like
coming
of age, the people who
last night. If you weren't, 20
soon
will
dominate the 'Commun·
years ls like 200.
lty,
have
no memory of the
On that chlily night jusl10days
landmark event in the town's
before Christmas, the bridge history.
nearly six football fields long The bridge that fell was so huge
collapsed. l! was the only'bridge
for 50 miles across the quarter· that a lot of youngsters mistakmile-wide Ohio River and it was enly assume that It was a nearby
smaller bridge that fell ln.
packed with cars and trucks.
"For some reason, until a few
Not just one section of the

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A nightmare to some, but
j~~t a misty legend to others

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site for the new four-lane structure was chosen.
After 79 calendar days of hearings, land
acquisitions, fi/lancing and contracting maneuvers, initial construction began on May 13, 1968.
The brigde was "jacked shut" (last connecting
member of main superstructure was made) on
Aug. 6, 1969. It was dedicated on Dec. 15, 1969.
' (UPI)
.

Bridge collapse 20 years ago:

SON CLEARAN SAVE FOR CHORE.
soundeslgn®
CE ITEMs.
RISTMAS!

Soundeslgn ®

SILVER MEMORIAL BRIDGE - The Silver
Memorial Bridge, spanning the Ohio River at
Gaillpolis, Ohio and Point Pleasant, W.Va., will be
18 years old on Tuesday. It replaced the structure
thai collapsed on December 13, 1961, during
rusb·hour traffic, killing 46 people. Initial
planning began on the $14.5 million structure on
Dec. 18, 1967. Sixty-seven days later, Feb. 23, 1968,

stock

Pots
Qt.,
Qt.

8
12
16 Qt. or 20 Qt.

HECKS
Car
Batteries
40 Month car
Truck/Van

Holiday
Paper Towels
or 120 Count
Napkins

Oak

2-Drawer
File
.,

deny statement
issued by Supt. · Dan Morris

Tbe Meigs Local Teachers ideas were explored on how to Local Teachers' Association at
the mediation session on De·
Association negotiating team to- resolve contract problems but cember
7 came as a total surprise -·
daydeAled:&lt;! statemen~lssued by was emphatic In his statement
to the Association.
years ago, I always thought It
Meigs Local Superintendent Dan that no official offer was made to
"This offer was never preswas the 01~ Blue Bridge (across
E . Morris Thursday In regard to the teachers association nego- ented to any member of the
the Kanawha R'tver in West
a contract offer which Morris tiating team on Monday.
Association team. The Board of
Virginia) that fell," says Amy
says was made at a Dec. 7 . The negotiating team of the Education continues to misreteachers . association this mornRoderick, 16, a high school
negotiating session.
Ing
issued the following state- present their offers,' and in this
junior .. "Not the Silver Bridge.
Federal Mediator David Thor·
instance, has claimed theA.ssoci·
You look at the Silver Bridge (the ley, senior mediator for the State ment in answer to Thursday's ation negotiators turned down a
18-year old replacement bridge) of Ohio from the Federal Media· published report from Supt. proposal that was never made.
and you think, there's no way
lion and Concillatlon service, Morris.
"The statements from the The only reason for making such
that could fall."
who presided over the Dec. 7
an outlandish statement i~ to try
That's what a lot of people negotiating session held in . Meigs Local Board of Education to undermine and discredit the ·
thought about the original Silver Athens. also stated this morning that were released by Supt. ML TA negotiators.
Bridge, named for its shiny
that no official offer was ex· . Morris on Dec. 10 about a · "The release of their state· .
.aluminum paint.
tended by the Board of Education contract offer allegedly given to ment to the local paper further
Called an "engineering mar- • at Monday's se~slon. He said that the bargaining team of the Meigs highlights the fact that the Board .
vel" when It was dedicated In ·
does not now and has not
1928, the bridge featured a unique
bargained with the MLTA team,
heat-treated !-bar chain suspenand makes it clear that they
sion system. Unfortunately, one
would rather continue to negoWASHINGTON (UPI) - The government's producer price
of those marvelous !·bars
tiate through the press. Once
index, usually the harbinger of future consumer prices, was
cracked less than 40 ¥ears later,
again the Board has violated the
unchanged from October to November, suggesting Inflation will
investigators determined.
request
of the mediator that a
continue to be moderate, the Labor Department said today.
Stoplights at each end of the
negotiations
news blac~out reWholesale consumer food prices rose 0.3 percent during the
U.S. 35 span to Point Pleasant,
In
effect.
..
main
month, but were offset by a 0.2 percent drop in aU other
W.Va., had backed up heavy
"MLTA
Is
ready
to
negotiate
at
consumer products, the government said. .
traffic - Including numerous
any
time.
but
they
wish
to
do
so
at
Prices of finished durable consumer goods, those expected to
tractor-trailer . rigs - on the
the bargaining table with the
last
three or more years, fell for the second straight month,
bridge that horrible night. The
mediator present and not by
dropping 0.1 percent. Non-durable consumer goods fell 0.2
bridge, recalled witness Paul
exch;lnging
proposals in the
percent during the month.
Scott, simply began "shaking."
newsl&gt;aper."
"It went to the left," he said.
"Then, to the right. And then 11
never came back. It just kept

Price index does not change

going."

60 Month car
.60 Month

coronet®
.

injured, the report stated.
Volunteer Fire Department, the
By MATT ROBERTSON
Point Pleasant Emergency Med·
OVP News Stall
POINT PLEASANT - Two
The driver of the Freightliner, . leal Services and HealthNet
personnel, authorities said. The
Carslile, Ohio. residents died Michael D. Fluty, 31, Akron,
Thursday on U.S. Route 35, near Ohio, was transported by Point accident is still under
Southside, at about 8:40 p.m. , Pleasant Emergency Medical investigation.
In other reports, an accident on
according to the Mason County Services to Pleasant Valley Hos·
Tuesday near the intersection of
Sheriff's Department.
pitai. He was treated and re·
Route 2 and Secondary Route 16
The accident, a head-on colli· leased, authorities said.
slon between a 1985 Dodge
Victoria Swan was pronounced at 12:26 p.m. slightly damaged a
.Daytona Turbo-Z, a 1986 'F ord . dead at the scene and Ernie Mason County Sheriff's Depart·
L-9000 tractor-tralier, a 1982 Swain was pronounced dead ment cruiser, an accident report
Kenworlh tractor tralier and a' enroute · to Cabell-Huntington sal\1.
The cruiser, a 1980' Ford,
1986 Frelgh(liner tractor-trailer, Hospital iri the HealthNet heiic·
driven by Robert Edwin Fruth II,
fatally injured VIctoria Swain, 4 opter, authorities said.
months old, and Ernie Swain, 25.
The Kenworth, driven by 19, Point Pleasant. sustalned$600
A seccnd passenger in the car, Jackie Roger Christian, 47, Plea· · in damages. Fruth was driving
Loraine Swain, was transported san! Grove, N.C., sustained dam - south on Route 2 when a 1986
by the Point Pleasant EMS to age to both the tractor and Buick apparently pulled out in
Holzer Medical Center. Her trailer. but no estimate on front o{ the cruiser, Lauthorlties
condition was not known Friday damage was available. The said.
The Buick, which sustained
morning. The Injuries were a Frelghtllner sustained $6,000
result of beth the Impact and damage to the tractor. according $1,500 in damages. was driven by
from being thrown from the to the report. Both the Dodge Enabelle See, 63, Point Pleasant.
In one other accident, a 1980
vehicle after Impact, according Daytona and the Ford L-9000
Ford,
driven by Mary Leu Peck.
to the report.
were declared a total loss.
40,
Leon,
sustained $250 In
Assisting the Mason County
The Ford L-9000 was driven by
damages
when
it struck a deer
Floyd Charles Gibby ,46, Lincoln· Shel'iff's Department at the
ton, S.C., according to the she· scene were the West Virginia - Thursday, at 5:30p.m. on Route
riff's department. Gibby was not State Pollee, the Point Pleasant . 62, three miles north of Leon. ,-

G"RBAGE DUMPED - A tractor-trailer carrying trash from
Pennsylvania, traveling south on Route 7, overturned In a curve
near Five Points aboulll: 15 a.m. Thursday. The truck was driven
by John D. Holsinger, 41, of Duncansville, Pa. According to
Trooper Robert Justus of the State Highway Patrol, Holsinger was
traveling too fast around the curve, lost control, hit the guard rail
and overturned. Garbage spe)l'ed from the trailer to the roadside.
Environmental Protection Agency officials were notified of the
garbage spiU, as Is standard procedure In such accidents, although
Justus said he did not believe the debris contained any
contaminated materials. Holslpger was cited for failure to control.
He was transported by Syracuse EMS to Veterans Memorial
Hospital where he was treated for minor Injuries and released.
One·lane traffic was main~ined u,ntll the truck was uprlghted and
removed by Curtis.Towing of Athens.
.

'•

Blil Needham sat in his truck
as it was tossed off the heaving
bridge.
"We hit the water'and the truck
sank like a rock," said Needham,
who was able to push down a
cracked window, scramble out of
the truck, rise to the surface and
find ~ piece of floating debris to
cling to until he was rescued.
But46 others perished.
The replacement Silver Memorial Bridge, built a quarter-mile
downstream from its predecessor and dedicated on Dec. 15,1969
- the second anniversary of the
collapse - has become part of
the everyday ll(e of the community. Just like the old Sliver Bridge
did:
.
"As a kid, I walked across that
bridge many a time," recalls
Wamsley , now athletic director
at Galila Academy High School.
"I remember standlqg in the
middle of it and those tractortnliler trucks would come across
and you'd feel that bridge
bounce. I'm no expert on bridge
construction, but I never felt it
was kept In good repair. It was
sort of neglected.''
bridge 13-01
Wamsley added, " Until that
bridge collapsed, I think people
took bridges for granted. They're
there and you really don't have to
worry about them. I think the
collapse of our bridge has prompted a lot more concern for bridge
Continued on page 7
•

SAVED BY THE BELT- Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the Gallipolis Post of the Ohio State
Highway patrol pr«isented Regina A. Bolen of
Dexter with the "Saved By The Belt" Award after
she escaped Injury In an accident that occurred
Oct. 24, on Bowles Road In Meigs County. Bolen
was eastbound when she lost control of her pickup

•

while negotiating a left-hand curve. Slldin1 off the
lelt side of the roadway, the pickup •truck an
embankment and overturned. While the truck
was hea\llly dllffiaged In· the accident, Bolen
escaped uninJured because she was wearing a
safety belt.

·--·---r·--- -

�•

'•

Page-2- The Daily sentinel .
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Friday, December 11 • 1987

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

.

~J:b

~m~ ~~'--.-.~d •.:=~~~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGE'l'l'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFI,ICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Dally Press
Association and the AmerJcan N€-wspaper Publishers Assoclatlon.
LETTERS OF OPINION are wei rome. They shou ld be less than 300 words
long. All leiTers aresubJ ect tof'ditlng and must be signed wit h name, address and
teleph one number. No unsigned l eiters wUI be published. Letters should be In

good taste,

a ddr~sstng

Rev. Pat Robertson and Rev.
Jesse Jackson, for example,
could run away with the pres!·
dootlal primaries because of
their "organ lzatlonal capacity
and the high motivation of their
supporters," the study suggests.
Robertson could win the Republl·
can nomination and current
Democratic fron t runner Jack·
son could grab his party's nom!·
nation by sweep ing the primarIes. Yet neither has a national
fo llowing greater than 15 percent
of the electorate.
Here Is the startling arithmetic
that the professors compiled lor
the Voters Caucus: Only 19
percent of the nation's eligible

WASHINGTON - A nonpaf\1·
san voting research group will
issue a pre-election warnl ng 'that
a "non-traditional candidate, "
with an "activist organization,"
could win most of the preslden·
tlal primaries and force himself
on the par ty convention. ·
This conclusion Is based on a
computerized study by the Yo·
ters Caucus, a task force of
University of Utah profess ors
with backgrounds In computer
science, political science a nd
voter survey·s. "Low voter turnout presents real possibilities to
the lesser-known, lesser-liked
and lesser-followed candidates,"
the stud y declares.

•

Reagan enjoying
,
new role of peacemaker

By GERRY MONJGAN
UPI Sports Writer
Against Florida State Thursday night, No. 16 Oklahoma
played poorly enough to
squander a 16-polnt lead, and
well enough to get lucky.
"We were fortunate against an
excellent Florida State team,"
Coach Bllly Tubbs said after his
Sooners held on for an 89-87
victory at Tallahassee, "but we
made our fortune.
"Our defense wasn't real goOd
until it needed to be. Many times ,
It doesn' t matter how you play
until the final two or three

Louisiana primary. He scored •
th is surprising lrlumph, accord·
lng to the Voters Caucaus, with a '
scant 4.3 percent of the eligible
voters.
Sources close to Jackson say he
never expec ted to win the noml·
nation In 1984. His strategy. they
say; was to use the primaries to·
establish himself as the preemh
nent black leader. But he Is now a
serious presidential contender,
with an excellent chance of
winning many of the 1988 Dem?·
cratlc primaries.
It would follow that he should
then receive the Democratic
presidential nomination. But the
unspoken truth Is that his nomination might alienate enough
white votes to Jose the general
election for the Democrats. 01!
the other hand, If they should
•
deny Jackson the nomination,
•
they could antagonize enough
"' blac k voters to Jose the election.
The Robertson candidacy presents the Republicans with a
similar dilemma. His , national
following is estimated al no more
than 10 percent of the population
and 14 percent of the voters. Yet
he has de monstrated a capacity
to generate Intense loyalty and
activate his followers . Explains
the study: "Ten percent of the
population may not seem llke a
q
major f&lt;;&gt;Jlowing in a general
~ election. However, when you
consider that only 19 percent of
the American electorate voted in
the 1984 primaries and that It
only took an average 6.8 percent
to win a primary," a dedicated
minority could capture the
prima'rles.
·
The latest Gallup Poll shows
,
Vice President George Bush as
the favor ite of 47 percent of·
Republican voters, with Sen. Bob'
Dole placing second with 22
percent. Robertson. could claim
only 7 percent.

voters turned out' for the last
presidential primaries. This tiny
percentage was split between the
two major 'parties. In the New
Yor k primary, for example, only
10.4 percent bothered to vote. '
Walter Mondale won the state's
Democratic primary with just4.7
percent of the eligible vote.
It took Jess thali 6.8 percent of
the vote to win the average
primary in 1984. Because o! this
Jaw turnou t, Jesse Jackson was
a ble to mobilize enough dedi·
cated followers to make a respec·
table showing and establish
himself as a power to be
reckoned with. He stunned party
leaders by actually winning the

minutes."

YOU

While it was clear Rio Grande ·
was In control of Thursday's
game with Kentucky Christian,
the Knights hung on io give the
Redmen one of its more physical'
encounters of the season.
· Rio Grande defeated KCC
95-77, Its second win over the
Knights, who fell 73-70 to Rio
Grande at home Nov. 17.
KCC's Craig Yates, a 6-1 junior
· center from Sclotovlile, pumped
·'
in 25 points to lead all scorers, but
his performance failed to keep
Rio Grande's press from denting
the Knights' armor.
"Hey, you have to give KenSOONER WSES CONTROL - Oklahoma center Stacey King
tucky
Christian credit," Redmen
( 33) loses control of a rebound as Florida Slate guard Tharon
Coach
John Lawhorn comMayes (22) waits below during the Soaner-Semlnole matchup
merited.
"They are an excellent
Thursday night. (UPI)
team, very solid, who hung In
there. That's ·a senior ball club
lor you."
In their final home game of
1987, the Redmen, now 9-2,
The men's and women's basThe Redwomen will face an quickly rever sed an early KCC
ketball tea ms at Rio Grande
injury-s truck Mount St. Joseph lead on a Yates basket and never
College and Comm unity College
club !hat will see some at_ its yielded. A scoring drought of
'.()IIJ be on the road this weekend.
star ters doing double duty . So. The Redmen will visit Dephomore Jerri Crowe Is expec ted
fi ance In a 3 p.m. Saturday ga me
to be the sma ll . forward and
and the Redwomen are to play
sen ior Patti Seta is set for the
RICHFIELD, Ohio (UPI) Mount St. Jose ph at 7 p.m.
power forward or center position. Stephan ie Lewis , a junior, Steve Leach, like most of his
Saturday .
The Red men, 9·2 alter Thurs will eithe r be shooting guard or teammates on the Team USA
day's 95-77 win over Kentucky
point guard, and junior Tfna hockey squad, has postponed a
Siegel may f111 In as shooting professional career to concenChristian, w111 field seniors Ron
trate on the 1988 Olympics.
Rlttlnger a nd Ray Singleton as
guard.
forward s, senior Doug Fogt as
The Lions fell to 5-.1 following
"AlotofuscouldbelntheNHL
cen ter and juniors Anthony Ray their fJr st defeat to Oakland City right now, but It's really seconmore and Jim Kearns as guards .
(Ind. ) I.ri the Hanover (Ind.) dary," says Leach, a 21-year-old
· Freshman Brian Watkins will be
Tourna ment on Dec. 5. The Lady forward who starred at the
tire first off the bench for the
Oaks edged Mount St. Joseph University of New Hampshire.
" Our sights are on Calgary and
Redmen ,
71-69.
Rio Gr.ande Is 6-2 after Thurs· this series with the Soviets. The
day's 73-33 win over Kentucky rest can watt."
Defiance may start senior
Christia n's La&lt;ty Knights. PlayClark Donatelli, Leach and
. Chuck Schroeder, junior Doug
Prigge or sophomore Keith
ing without freshman point Corey Millen each scored within
guard Beth Coil, Injured Wednes- a 2:02 span of the second ·period,
Wischmeyer as forward s.
Guards will be sophomores
da y at the University of Charles- leading Team USA to an 8-5
Terry Norman and Kirk Seeman
ton , the Redwomen are expected victory over the Soviet Selects In
to field senior Re nee Halley as the opener of an eight-game
or freshman Jim Harris.
s hooting guard, junior Lea Ann series between the two clubs .
Dennis Bostieman, the 6-6
Scott Fusco added two goals
Mull1ns as small forward, junior
Yellow Jackets senior named to
the All-District tea m last season,
Holly Ha stings as power forward and two a ssists, and Leach and
wJII be the center. Marv Hohen- and junior Angela Packard at Millen each had two goals before
center. Freshman Marlo Kistler 13, 773 at the Richfield Coliseum.
ber ger 's club Is 4-3 after Tues·
day's 84-77 defeat of Urbana .
w111 substitute for Coil.
Team USA, preparing for the
Wlnier Olympics In Calgary,
Alberta, raised its overall exhibition record to 23·12-4 ln outshooting the Soviets by a 54-19 margin.
"In 1984, we just didn't have
the
kind of offensive balance we
Ke nlon 41. Uma Shawnee 41
NFL results
have now. Corey and I were
Kenton Rld1e 38, Springlleld NW 37

Rio teams on road

COUid _____W_i_ll_iam_Ru_sh_._er ·

Imagine that you are the presi- NATO's deployment of theiRBMs
dent of the United States. When that it had war ned Moscow it
you took office in January 1981, the would deploy unless the Soviet
Soviet Union was ahead of this Union withdrew the IRBMs it had
country, and Increas ing its l~d. in unilaterally installed In the late
almost every significant military 1970s and aimed at Western Eucategory. In the U.S. Army, war· rope. Moscow was outraged, and
rant officers were quali(ying fur pulled out of the ongoing Geneva
food stamps. Thanks to a series of arms negotiations, vowing never
ill-advised and inadequately veri- to return if NATO deployed the
fiable treaties entere d into with weapons. Eu ropean and Amerithe Soviet Union by our predeces- can peaceniks protested. But you
sors during the 1970s, the United persisted, and the deployment of
States was limiting the growth the IRBMs began· late in 1982.
rate of American arms, while
Your third step was to propose
Moscow was cheer fully ~.iolatlng that the whole strategy of deterits promises and Increasing Its rence through niu tual assured
own. Meanwhile, leftists and Ji. des truction by ICBMs be re·
berals in this country and western placed by a mutual phase-In of
Europe were demanding a nuclear purely defens ive space satellites
freeze. ·
ca pable a destroY.in;: nucl ear
What to do? It would obviously missiles ("Wouldn't it be better,
be foolish to freeze nuclear wea· ' " you argued, "to save lives than
pons while the West was at a dis- to avenge them?'') The Kremlin
advantage In that category. For recoiled like Dracula before a
that matter, there was no point In crucifix , fearing the superiority
negoilailng with the Russians at of Wester n technology, and once
all until U.S. de fenses had been again our liberals echoed the
rebuilt to a point of approximate protest.
equality with theirs. Sp your first
But you pressed on. And when
step was to increase the U.S. de- lhc· limits lmposO?d by SALT II
f~nse budget sutistantially.
(which the Senate had never ratiYour second was to Insist on

.

•
history
Today m
By United Press International
.
Today is Friday, Dec. 11 , the 345th day of 1987 with 20 to !allow.
The moon is waning, mov! ng toward its last quarter.
The morning stars are Mercury and Mars.
·
The evening s tars are Venus, Jupiter and Saturn_
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
include Scottish physic ls·t and kaleidoscope inventor Dl\v ld Brewster
In 1781; French composer Hector Berlioz in 1803. German pioneer
bacteriologist Robert Koch In 1843: New York Mayor Fiorello
LaGuardia in 1882; Russian novelisl Alexa nder Solzhen!tsyn In 1918
!,age 69); actress RI &lt;a Moreno in 1931 (age 56). and si nger Brenda Lee
ip 1944 (age 43).
--~

On this date in history:
In 1941, four days after J~pan attacked Pearl Harbo r, Germany and
Italy declared war on the United Stales.
In 1972, ·Apollo-17 a'stronauts Gene Cernan and Harrison Schmitt
landed on the moon for a three-day exploration.
In 1983, 30,000 women tried to rip down fe nces around a U.S. cruise
missile base at Greenham Common, Engla nd.
In 1984, a nativity scene was displayed near the White House for the
first t lf!Je since courts ordered It removed In 1973.

..

Berry's World

rI&lt;

.

.!

'

several minutes In the first half
was snapped when junior An ·
thony Raymore sunk a 3-point
field goal to widen the margin.
Spurred by Its tenanclty at the
quarter court and a sustained
floor threat, KCC scrapped away
untU a series of baskets by
seniors Ray Singleton and Ron
R.Jttlnger and freshman Brian
Watkins put the halftime score
48-30 In the hosts' favor.
Randy Kirk''s club took advan tage of an occasionally e rratic
Rio Grande defense- .a nd a pair
of 3-polnters from seniors Rick
Stone and Denny Ferguson - ·to
take the edge off the Redmen's
20-point lead. Singleton, junior
Jini Kearns and sophomore Rob
Jackson combined forces to keep
the visitors at bay.
"We had spurts when we
played well," Lawhorn said . Rio
Grande had ' an 80 percent (20 of
25 attempts) slate on field goals
and 83 percent (5 of 6 tries)
record In the first half.

competitively."
With the score tied 2-2, Soviet
goaltender Sergey Cherkas
stopped Craig Janney's shot, but
the rebound went in off Donate!ll's skate at 1:54 of the second
period.
'·
At 2: 54, Leach picked up a puck
In the slo t and wrlsted a drive to
Cherkas's left. Sixty-two seconds
later, Millen made It 5-2 as he
scored off a pass from Tony
Granato.
"The Soviets aren't fully accllmated to playing 'here yet," said
Team USA coach Dave Peterson.
' 'But they'll get their game legs
soon enough. _
"I'm very pleased. We played
aggressively, and we're coming
together as a team very well.''
Millen made It 6-2 off a slapshot

pressure

defense 1 "

Kennedy said. "OklatJOma is one
of the quickest teams we've
played, and they've been pressuring teams Into 29 turnovers a
game.
"McCloud played a great
game. He had only one turnover.
Unfortun'ately, It was · at the
end."
In other games involving
ranked teams, No. 13 Temple
blasted St. Joseph 's 82-62, No. 15
Michigan routed Austin Peay
88-67, and No. 18 Notre Dame
whipped Prarie View A&amp;M 89-52.
At Philadelphia, Mark Macon
scored . 22· points and Howard
Evans scored 15 of his 18 points In
the firs.t half to lead Temple in an
Atlantlc 10 matchup. Temple
Improved to 3-0 overall and 2-0 in
the conference while St. Joseph's
dropped to 1-3 and 0-L
At South Bend , Ind., Keith
Robinson scored 18 points and

grabbed a season-high 17 rebounds to power Notre Dame,
3-L The Fighting Irish Jed by as
many as 49 points with 2: 23 left.
· David Rivers added 17 points for
the Irish. Reginald Jones led the
Panthers, 0-4, with 19 points.
At Ann Arbor, Mich., Gary
Grant scored 28 points and Loy
Vaught added 14 to lift Michigan.
Grant added five steals for
Michigan, 6-i, which led only
40-34 at halftime. Austin Peay.
2-3, was Jed In scoring by Indiana
transfer Andre Harris with 21
po.lnts.
.
In other games of interest,
Arkansas -Little Rock edged
Texas El-Paso 68-65 for the
TCBY Tip-Off championship, LaSalle downed Army 74'61, Maryland whipped East Carolina
75-59, Providence edged Boston
College 85-82, Wisconsin defeated
Marquette 66-55, Oklahoma State
nipped Tulsa 66-65, and San
. Francisco stopped Pacific 99-75.

" We were inconsistent in de·

tense, which we played pretty
well in the first hall and not so
well in the second ," he added.
Lawhorn also cited Singleton,
who Jed the Redmen with 9 fie ld
goals a nd 3 fr ee throws for his
third 20-p lus points game of the
season .

"Ray has been very consistent
lor us," Law horn sa id·.
Raymore added 16 points,
Kearns and Watkins 15 each and
Rittinger 13. The Redmen were
o9percent on free throws, si nking .
17 of 29 attempts.
Besides Yates, senior Todd
Layne added 12 and senior Greg
Wallace netted 10 for KCC. The
Knights, now 3-6, were 52 percent
from the charity st~ipe on 11 of 21
tries.
Rio Grande travels to Defiance
Saturday.
RIO GRANDE (95)- Anthony
Ra ymore , 5(1) -3-3- 16; Jim
Kearns, 5-5-3-15; Ray Singleton,
9-3-1-21; Ron Rlttinger. 6-1·5-13:

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lndla napolill 9, Cleveland 7
t1ncl nno.IIU, Kansali l'll y\!1 lOTI
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Housto n 33, 81111 DI PKo Ill
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Plttshurgh 13, S~·altl e 9
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Alt~tnta

GirlS Ohio HIK"h School Ba.t kethall
By Unl~e d ' J•reM!i ln&amp;ernaHonal

Thur!lday , Dec. tO
/\ lUane,. til, Canto n South 4J
RrllltOI az, Girard SO
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RIICkr)'e W e~t 61, Mingo f2
Buriun Berlll!hlre 5~. Mid ('ardiMI -Ill
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Cu)'ILhoga Fa lls &amp;3, Nunlonla 3~
Jo' ort Frye'"· Skyvue. 3~
Creenfleld 58, Wllmlnpon .f3
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We~~tBmnc h 55, Salem 32
Woodsfield 56, Beal lsvil le 51
Ohio C.llegr Ra.&lt;~liethnll Resulls

Thursday, Dec. Ill

Boston 1Jnlversttr8i, &amp;wlln,Green ll'7
Rio Gm nde 9S, Ke ntul' k:W Chris tia n n

Transactions

there, and we see the c,hange, "
s aid Fusco, who played col!e·
giately at Harvard and was a
member of the 1984 Olympfc
team.
"The Soviets didn't get going
until the third period."
Sergey Tsvetov and Alek·
sander Zybin each scored twice
for the Soviets.
"The officiating was weak,"
said Soviet coach Valery Shllov
through an interpreter. "The
game was more like American
footbalL They were shoving and
· kicking, and the pen~lties should
have been called.
·
"But Team USA is of Olympic
quality. I expect our players to
adapt quickly and perform more

Fusco and Tsvetov were
named the players of the game In
voting by the media.
The series, which end s Dec. 22,
also will vlsii St. Louis, Bloomington, Minn., Detroit, India·
napolls.and Lake Placid, N.Y.

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS tl~9tt0 )
A Division of Multimedia, In c.
Published every afternoon, Monda y

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Rob J ac kso n, 4-1-1-9; Doug Fogt,
0-1-0-1; Brian Watkins, 3(3) -0-115; Marc Gothard, 0·3·4-3; Dave
Shepherd, 1-0-0-2. TOTALS 33( 4)·
17·20-9~ .
.
KENTUCKY CHRISTIAN (71)
-Greg Wallace, 5·0·4-10; Denny
Ferguson, 1 (2)-0-5-8; Todd
Layne, 4-4-3-12; Doug Platt,
2-0-4-4; C::raig Yates, 10-5-3-25;
Rick Stone,) (2) -0-1-8; Jeff Clark,
2-0-2- 4; Jeff Kinney, 2-2-2-6. TOTALS 27(4)·11·24-77.

OPTIO~S?

·WE HAVE SOLUTIONS!

'NO-RISK, HI(jH-YIELD
INSURED INVESTMENTS

Base ball
Chadutk' (Southern League) - Named

JWman Gabrll'l pret~ld e nt.
( ltlc aKO (A L)- Traded pitche r Floyd
BllnniMif'r a nd Infielder D~ave Co&lt;;hra ne to
Kun~ Cit)' l or pltchl:!r~ Me lldo Pete:r: ,
.Jo hn Outs, Chuck Mount and Gr~1
Hibbard.
·
Daske_tball
l ndi!UI• - Wal vtod guard Cllnl
Rl ~ hardRtt n .

Mllwliukee -

Waive d A'IMrd Dudley

Rradle)'·
l'hoenl " - R emoved larward Eddie
.lnhn-'On Jrom Injured ll.l!t; plat:ed JU&amp;rd
Walter Davis on InJured 11111.
Colle1e
New Orlea1111 - AnnnouncedblUiketb 11.11
~w ingman Elden ln1 nr ha.•lr.fl *,!hool.
. I](' LA - NallW!• Ktll ,luon UIIAtlnt
men'11 bMke&amp;b~ll'u c h.

.

Cage sc9res •
'

"

.375 \!05 2:t7

Werst
\! 0

~m

Kcn l Roosevelt 38. Austintown f'ltch34
Klllli BadKfr ~. Green ville ( I• a) ~~~ {nl )
Klrlland .J6, Richmond His 3f
Lordslown '!7, N~w lun Fall-• 'tO
MIUI!IIIIon Jack !10, U nlonl own Lake 311
Meudowhrooli 54, HalUlllllt.l River 5I
Mln~~t.er ~. ~lphos St ,lnhn!t .f5
Pe rry 511, Nrwhu ry 30
Rave nm 39, Stuw :J!I (ol )
Sl llenry l'i'l, Co ldwat er -19
Tal1madgl'" 10, 1\k.r Sp rtngllekl a~
Tlpp City -17, VeNW.IIICII 40
Unio n l.(a·al M. Steuhe nvUle 411
UpJM.•r Sclutu Val Gil, flelphn!t .JI' H i l
\'icnna Matht&gt;ws iS, Uberty 35
Wadswo rth 55, Norton 30
\\.'apa ko nela l'iH, tA&gt;IIna oil
Warren Hard IOK: Sl, Co rlland La ki'VIew

at 17:40 of the session. Fusco
made it 7-2 early In the third
period, before the Soviets closed
the gap on Zybin's goals and a
slapshot by Maslov. Leach
capped the scoring with 1:26 to
play .
Team USA took a 2-0 lead on
goals by Brian Leetch a nd Fusco,
but Tsvetov's two goals tied the
game 2·2 after one period.
The series continues Saturday
in Cincinnati and Sunday In
Uniondale. N.Y.

$

$

Scoreboard ...

EllS I

They were "trouble makers," a children are disturbed, and need
" bad Influence" on the other help in the form of drugs or
According to John Coa te, children , and they belonged in co unseling, or they are choosing
Parker's attorney, " Th e psychia- reform school. In fact, ther e are
to act out, and then the parents
trists too k 14 points which define probably a good number of must share the "blame" for the •.
normal c hildhood behavior, put unruly, undi sciplined, " bad"
children' s behavior.
them toge ther a nd labeled it kids whose behavior Is hidden by
Filing suit may well be the
mental illn ess. Then, as a treat- ' pinning a psychiatric diagnos is
American way to deal with
ment, they use an extremely on them.
Unfortunately, the p&amp;rents of problems, but, unfortunately , It
dangerous and addictive drug
which can crea te genuine m ental children who "act out" cannot can't be used to treat mental
a nd phys ical problems like para- have it both ways. Either their Illness.
noia, psychottc.ep!sodes, musc le
spas ms, headaches, ep ilepsy and a 1\ost of others, including suicidal behavior.'''
Well, yes, In defining attention
deficit disorder psychiatrists
may well have Included ."14
..points which define normal child·
'
hood behavior," but that's not the
Issue Is that normal children m ay
exhibit a ll of these character is·
tics at one time or a nother, or"
few Of them at the same time. but
they don ' I ex hibit them con·
sta ntly, nor do they exhibit large
numbers of them at once.
And, yes, every thin !hat Coale
says abou t Rita lin is tr ue. But
most of those thi ngs can be said
about a large number of psy,
choactlve medications - and
that doesn't mean that those
drugs are not useful In treating
psychiatric disorders.
The sad thing here Is that
Parker does not appear to be
contending that her son exhibits
·n ormal behavior. Rather, she is
! •
arguing that s he does not want
.
him labeled mentally JJI, which
s he says- probably with justification - causes .him to be
s tlgmatlzed."
Bul what Is the alter na tive? We
used to call hyperactive childern
" I deregulated the kids today."
"bad," and simply threw them
'''
out of sc hool. They were "wild.''

as mentally ill.

''hyperactive.' '
A physician prescribed Ritalin
for young Parker because research haS show n that that dr ug,
an amphetami ne, has a paradoxical effect on hyper ac t lve
youngsters- it slows them clown
to the point wherl' !hey can
benefit from school.
According to news reports,
Parker Is outraged that her son is
being given thi s drug a nd labeled
as having a psychiatric disorder.
She Is a lso outraged that school
au thorities in Lilburn, Ga., have
told her that unl ess her son takes
his medication he will be barred
from school.
So Parker has formed her own
orga nization, C.H.l.L.D, to fight
the use of Rltailn and and similar
drugs for children with emotional problems . She has sued the
America n Psychiatric assoc iation for $125 million for creating
what she claims Is a fraudulent
d iagnosis.
Parker has been quoted as
sa;ring that she has "been contacted by hundreds of other
mothers who are angry that this
psychiatric label of mental Illness bas been hung on their
children. and we are goi ng to see
It stopped."
Parker's suit claims that being
diagnosed as having an "attentlop deficit disorder" has caused
her son to be unfairly s tigmatized

committed 10 turnovers against

excellent

Americans top Soviet Hockey team

refuse to rea ch an otherwise d&amp;
fled, and wlf!ch the Soviet Union
sirable agreement with the So· .
was systematically violating )
threatened to cripple the bal- viet Union lest some future Pre- ·
.anced development of U.S. de·
sldent Simon or President Dukakls be duped !nib giving away ·.
lenses, you simply ignored them.
Meanwhile the Soviet Union
the store?
had run through three aging geNo, of course not. You can only .
neral secretaries of the Com·
do so much. If you have streng-- ~
munlst Party and settled at last
thened this country, and forced the ·
on a relatively young one who
Soviet Union to enter Into authen- .
will probably be around for a
tic and verifiable arms-reduction ·
while. Surveying his arthritic
agreements, you cannot be held .•
empire, and noting what you
responsible. If someone who foJ-•,
have achieved In restoring the ' Jaws you In the Oval office squanWest's defenses, he has ret.urned
ders the resources and the options
to the bargaining table and
you have left him. It Is enough
agreed to a mutual withdrawal of that, In your day, you managed to •;
the IRBMs. He may be also
protect America from enemies, ,
ready to negotiate a 50 percent
who would Jove to destroy it. You · ,
reduction In Intercontinental · cannot, when you are gone, be ex- c
missiles. Should au consider nepeeled to save It forever from sui· :
gotiating such an agreement ?
clde.
There is one major problem. In
NOTE: I was shooked to 'dts- •
a democracy, there Is a real dan- cover that my syndicate recently .
ger that an agreeme nt of that
entitled a column of mine "A .
kind might induce a mood swing vote for a one-party state." It ,
in public opinion th at In tu r n was, of course, no $UCh thing, ,
might tempt some future pres !· that being the totalitarian soludent to go too far: to agree, for
tion. What I proposed was "going
example, to refrain from tes·ttng back to government by a single
or deploying space defenses.
party" - I.e., by a president and
Should you, as president today,
Congress of the same party.

Mom fights labeling of son ___B_. o_. c_ole_n '
LaVarn e Parker has come up
with a nifty new "cure" that
could put mental health professional s out of business.
Parker has a 15-year-old son
who has been diagnoses as
suffering from what the American Psychiatric Associ atlon calls
"attention deficit disorder" what us ed to be called

Stacey King .blocked a Tharal!
Mayes shot with 20 seconds left.
Mayes was charged with an
Intentional foul against Ricky
Grace, who converted two free
throws for ·an 88·84 leact with
eight seconds left. Oklahoma
retained possession on the Intentional foul , and Dave Sieger hit
the front end o!'a one-and -one for
the winning points. Florida
State's Aubry Boyd hit a 3polnter at 'the buzzer.
"I think we were exhausted,"
Florida State Coac h ·Pat
Kennedy said of his team's play
In the •final mome nts, ••and I
think our Inexperience showed
Its head at the worst time. :•
Grace scored 25opolnts, IncludIng five 3-polnters to lead Okla·
homa. 5-0. McCloud led Florida
. .State, 3-1, with 20 points. Tat
Hunter added 17 points and 16
rebounds, Tony Dawson also
scored 17 points, and Mayes 15.
"We played 40 minutes and

Rio Grande defeats KC·C /(nights, 9~~71

j
did all

r

The Seminoles outrebounded
Oklahoma 51-30, and committed
only 10 turnovers against the
Sooners' pressure defense.
With the score tied 84-84,
Oklahoma's Mookle Blaylock
Intercepted a George McCloud
pass and drove for an layup with
34 seconds remaining. Snoner

i'§ -

yOU

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

SOoners rally to nip Florida State, 89-87

Key votes _________B_:_y_J_ac_k_A_n_d_e_rs_o_n_a_nd_.__Jo_s_ep_h_Sp-;-e-ar:

Issues , nol personalltles.

By HELEN THOMAS
UPI While House Rep~rter
WASHINGTON- President Reagan deserted his hardline friends
and supporters in the twilight of his presidency to sign a nuclear arms
agreement .
The few who are left in his admini stration know they have to play
ball, and those who have always opposed moves toward control or
reduction of the U.S. nucle.a r arse nal have quit. That Includes
Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger whose deep suspicions of
arms negotiations were a strong influence on Reagan In his early
days In the White House.
In his first term , Reaga n 's a ppoi ntees at the Pentagon, the State
Department and to his arms negotiatio ns team had one thing In
common- opposi tion to any more nuclear accords with the Soviets.
In fact, they helped move·the pres!denttoward break!ngtheSALT2
. . agreemen t with Moscow, which was signed by President Jimmy
Ca rter and Soviet leader Leonid Brezhnev, but never ratified.
No one has put his fin ger on the reason for the president's softening
of his a pproach towa rd the Soviets. Some fo rmer aides, like Michael
Deaver, attribute the transition to the strong Influence of Nancy
Reagan , who reportedly would like to have her husba nd endowed with
the label of "peacemaker " before he leaves office.
••
Others believe that the president, weakened by the reve lations in •
the Iran-Contra scandal, where his cred!b!llty and accountability
were called into question , decided to leave a lega cy of arms
reduction.
The change is apparent; his lame duck adminis tration is now f1lled
with men who urge him to comprom,ise and foresake the stubborn
positions that ,have marked his presidency.
The anomaly is that Reagan has found that his conservative friends
a nd longtime s upporters have become his most Irate detractors.
Some of them have resorted to name calling. Conservative leader
Howard Phillips even denounced the pres ident as an "Idiot."
The fury of the conservatives - rarely a week has gone by when
Reagan , himself has announced to the world, "I am a conservative"
-stems from the president's obsetvations that their opposition to the
intermediate ra nge missile agreement (the INF pact he signed wi th
Soviet leader Michael Gorbachev) is based on their ignorance of its
provisions.
Even more a nnoyi ng to them was Reagan's statement that some of
them believe a nuclear war is Inevitable.
Reagan should · know. He has been there. Some of his own
Inner-ci rcle advisers in the fi rst term were sayi ng the same thing.
But later the president learned, as the world hopes all presidents
will, to say that "a nuclear war should not Q.e fought and cannot be
won."
In his rhetoric, Reagan goes out of his way to assert his credentials
as a man who still does not trust the Russians . He says he has not
changed and the Soviet Union Is sti ll an " evil empire."
He has also tried to convince his right flank that he wlll not be
char me¢ by Gorbachev into further concessions that might fo rce him
to abandon his drea m of a "Star Wars" space defense. He wants to
plunge ahead in the research and deployment of a. system he ls i
convinced will stop any Incoming enemy missile.
The United States is already a llocating billlons fora shield In space,
a nd Gorbachev acknowledged tha t the Soviets are working on one,
too. Moving into space probably was inevitable, but opponents fear it
w111 take war into the heavens.
In the days a head, Reagan will undoubtedly embar k on a high
profile campaig n to sell the new historic treaty a nd to win enough
votes in the Senate to assure ratifica ti on .
From the excitement aroused by the superpower summit, he also
will see that the American people are happy to have a presiden t who Is
a peacemaker, especially at Chris tmas.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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Wer~t Palm lkl~LC h, Fill!. - MOf,OOO.
Chrysler Tum Championship

&amp;M&gt;eer .
MaJor Indoor Soccer LeaJUC
ChicaK"O a4 St. LouiM, 8: ;a3 p.m .
D~ ll l more at Wichita, 8: 3S p .m .
Cll'l'tlland al San Dle1o, 10: 35 p.m.
LGM Angelet~~ a t Tacoma, 10: l5 p.m .

1.41ndon -

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•

�Friday, December 11. 1987
Pomeroy

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Friday. December 11, 1987

Middleport, Ohio

Winter meetings
~orne to a close

Cleveland._ Browns hope 'to regroup against Cincinnati
CLEVELAND (UP!) - The
Cleveland Browns consider their
next game an opportunity to
regroup, and say It Is merely
coincidental that intrastate rival
Cincinnati happe ns to be the

opponent.
"Sunday is a special day for us
because we've lost two straight
and we want to reverse that
trend," says veteran Browns
tight end Ozz!e Newsome. "We

Redwomen down foe, -73-33
Rio Grande' s Redwomen took
Rio Grande was in charge at
early control of their Thursday halftime, 34-11.
game with Kentucky Christian
Part II saw Redwomen Coach
and blitzed the Lady Knights Cheryl Fielitz smpty her bench
73-33.
into the game. she received some
KCC, winless in six starts this impressive performances from
season, compensated with indi- junior Billie Jo Stephenson,
vidual moments of good play but freshman Jenni Couch, who
was unable to shake the hosts' substituted Wednesday for the
home court advantage. The Red- injured Beth Coil at Charleston ,
women defeated KCC 83-52 at and freshman Chris Williams ,
,Lusby Center in Grayson, Ky. on former standout basketball
Nov.17.
player at Coal Grove. Williams,
A series of baskets by senior 5·8 forward, and junior Missy
Renee Halley, junior Lea Ann Pack, a 5-7 forward from GeorgeMullins and freshman Marlo town, posted all of the game's
Kistler gave the Redwomen an final points.
8·0 lead with!!\ · the first few
"We needed a good one going
minutes. KCC, through the ef·
into
the weekend, " Flelitz said,
forts of junior Erin Fitzpatrick
referring
to Saturday's game at
and freshman Lynn Manges,
Mount
St.
Joseph.
stayed In the game but Rio
'
F!el!tz
said
Thursday's game
Grande soon pulled away to keep
allowed
the
Redwomen
to ''try a
• the lead.
few things," Inducting a new
offense. She hailed the performances of her bene h.
Aside from Halley's high of 16
points·. the bench provided the
Teays Valley Christia n of Scott remainder of the double-figurj!
Depot, W.Va ., took advantage of scoring: Couch and Williams had
the Defenders' foul trouble In the · 12 each, while Pack supplied 10.
Mapges, Fitzpatrick, fresh·
fourth quarter of the Ohio Valley
man
Mlssie James and sophoChristian School's invitational
more
Nata lie Grimes each had 8
tournament Friday and Satur·
points
for the visitors.
day to get past the Defenders and
The
win boosts ' Rio Grande's
win the tournament.
record
to 6-2.
The opening match of the
RIO
·
GRANDE
(73) - Marlo
tournament, featuring Teays
1-0-2;
lenni
Couch, 6-0Kistler,
Valley against Rose Hill Chrls12;
Holly
Hastings,
3·1-7; Lea
tl&amp;n of Ashland, Ky ., saw Teays
Ann
Mullins,
3-0-6;
Renee
Halley,
overcome a 40-point effort by
8-0-16;
Billie
Jo
Stephenson,
Rose's Phil Cla rk to beat the
Ashland five 87·82. The second 4·0-8; Missy Pack, 4·2-10; Chris
game saw Defender junior Shan - Williams, 6-0-12. TOTALS35-3-73.
KENTUCKY CHRISTIAN (33)
non Gilliam find the nylon for 17
Lor! Hann 0·1·1; Natalie
points as he and his teammates
Grimes,
4·0-8; t Lynn Manges,
downed Grace Christia n of Hun4-0-8;
Erin
Fitzpatrick, 3-2-8;
tington, W.Va., 65-60, setting the
Mlss!e
James,
3-2-8. TOTALS
stage for the championship
14-5-33.
ma~h.
,
Tile Defenders reeled off the
· iirst eight points against Teays,
but Defender Barry Call was
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Inj ured late in the game and foul
SALES &amp; SERVICE
problems by the Gallipolis five
204 Condor St.
caused the momentu m to shift
Pomeroy, OH .
toward the Hurricane squad, who
New Fall &amp; Winter Hours
won 64-51 and the tournament
Closed Monday
crown.
Tuesday thru Friday 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
The consolation contes t was a
Saturday 9 a. m .~ 1 p .m .
closely-fought affair, as the Hun·
tington and Ash land teams
~THE
traded leads before Grace was
able to get the ball Inside to their
bigger players and come away
w!th a 79· 74 win . .

a

OVCS second
in tourney

GRAVELY
l., SYS EM

want to win the AFC Central and
go further .
"Natu rally, we get pumped up
for the Bengals and they get
pumped up for us. But we' re
looking at this game as if it's
important no matter who's listed
on the schedule."
Cleveland Is 7-5 and tied for
first place In the division wltl)
H_ouston and. Pittsburgh. Ci ncinnati is 4·8, so Bengals' quarter·
back Boomer Esiason says the
remaining three games on the
schedule "are like the playoffs"
for his team.
"That 's the only way we can
· approach them," Esiason said
Wednesday, "We're not looking
for revenge (for the 34-0 shutout
at the hands of Cleveland on Oct.
18). We're just trying to win
football games ."
The series between the two
riva ls is tied 17-17. Browns Coac h
Marty Schottenheimer expects

the game to be typical of a
Cincinnati-Cleveland matchup.
"It will be intense, and that 's
why we will have to pay attention
to delalls," said Schottenheimer,
whose team has lost two straight
games tor the first time since
1985.
"That's a product of prepara ·
t!on. For instance, a lot of pieces
have to be in place to throw the
ball effectively. We will deli·
nitely work on getting our rou tines bette r organized this
week.".
Schottenheimer said he expected former Browns ·quarter·
back Mike Norseth , ·now a
reserve with the Bengals, to be
able to inform Coach Sam Wyche ·
concerning Cleveland's pass pro·
t!!ction and defense ag11inst the
·"'·
blitz.
"I think Mike'll be able to
confirm or deny certain beliefs
the Bengals have, but I don't

and is second In the AFC to
think he can tell them much
In points scored with 309.
Denver
ahout our offense they already
"Cleveland's a tough team,
don't know ," said the coach.
Browns' running back Earnest and we have to be as t.~ugh to
said
- compete . with them,
Byner, who fumbled away a
Wyche
whose
contingent
is
drive on the Colts' 4 yard line
Sunday, said his team would highly.'ranked in both offense and
defense. "As far as we go, we
regroup.
"We've got too much pride to wouldn't be near the top statist!·
continue making ·the mistakes cally If we were a bad team. We
that add . up to defeat," said suffered because of injuries an~
Byner, who has fumbled five because of the strike. It doesn t
times this season. as has back- feel like a real season to me.
"The storm's been all around
field partner Kevin Mack.
us
but the ship's been sturdy. I
"I know some people have
do~
't
lose any sleep over my
blamed (quarterback) Bernie
,
be
Kosar, and that's really unfair. job."
Cincinnati
will
Injuries:
It's easy to blame him because
he's visible, but Bernie actually without wide receiver Cris· Colhad a good game. Especially linsworth, who is sideli ned with a
badly swollen foot. Wldeout Ed·
compared to the rest of us ."
die
Brown is questionable with a
Bengals coach Sam Wyche
sore
thumb.
noted that the Browns have the
Cleveland's
only serious injury
top-ranked defense In the NFL.
Is
free
safety
Chris
Rock!ns' sore
Cleveland leads the league In
back
which
has
him
Lsted as
fewest points allowed with 185
•
questionable.

Fulhage giving Bengals punting stahllity
Ful hage probably would have
made the team in August excel?!
that Horne was a fifth round draft
pick and he was a free agent.
Now, his 35.6 yard net average
leads th e AFC by a yard and is
second-best in , the NFL Ful·
hage' s 42 .6 ya1'd average trails
San Diego' s Roil Masiejenko by
seventh-tenths of a yard In the
conference.
If F ulhage had n't managed to
reclaim his roster s pot, he w,puld
be back on the family farm in
Beloit, Kan.
"For the first time since my
Dad and I have been farming
together, I have a little money of
my own to put back In the
operation," said Fulhage, who
has made $48,000 in the last 11
weeks. "Hopefully, I can stay in
the league tong enough to rea lly

CINCINNATI (UPI)- He was
among the final cuts in preseason
and reviled during the strike as a
replacement player.
But Bengals punter Scott Fulhage has rebounded to post the
best net average in the AFC and
provide stability at a position
where Cincinnati has floundered
the past two seasons.
"I never thought it would come
to this," Fulhage said. "I knew
I'd get an opportunity to show
myself In a few games (by
playing during the strike), a nd I
thought that if I did well, I might
get my c hoice of a few NFL
training camps this summer."
But he kicked so well during .
the stri ke the Bengals decided to
release Greg Horne, the player
who had edged Fulhage for the
job in traini ng ca mp. In fact ,

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WILLIAMS DINER

HOM

and proving it to everyo ne else." will not be a hind ra nce In the
Wally Bu~nham, Florida State pros .
linebacker coach, said there's no
Florida State coach Bobby
do.ubt McGowan will be drafted . Bowden said he has never seen a
to play in the National Football linebacker better than McGowan
League.
and ca lled him "the best blood·
"All the (NFL) scouts that and-guts linebacker In college
have come in, and we ha~ as football today ."
many as anybody this year, are
Former Chicago Bears stan·
very high on him," Burnham dout Dick Butkus will present the
said, insisting McGowan's height bronze trophy naf11ed for him at a
Dec. 14 dinner.
The Downtown Athletic Cl ub
also announced Lee Roy Jordan,
former player for Alabama and
the Dallas Cowboys, was chosen
to receive the Silver Linebacker
Award for his college. play 25
years ago.

531 JACKSON ptME · RT35 WEST

Phone 446·4524

SATU RDAY &amp; SUNDAY ~ T!NEES
ALL SEATS $1.50
BARGAIN NIGHT TUESDAY 11 .99

~CEMBER 11 tl,'lru ~

CHRIS SPIELMAN·
(Finishes Second)

FRIDAY thru

THURSD AY ~

MacPhe~on n~ed

UPI
football coach-of-the-year
SYRACUSE , N.Y. i UPIJ Syracuse to 41 -36-1.
Dick MacPh erson was chosen
The 1958 Springfield College
United Press International' s Col· graduate was 45-27-1 during
lege Football Coach of the Year seven seasons at Massachusetts,
in balloting announced Thursda y which he sandwiched bel ween
after he led Syracuse to an 11-0 stints as an assistant defensive
record and a trip to the Sugar . coach with the NFL's Denver
Broncos and Cleveland Browns.
Bowl I.
The No. 4 Orangemen, who
MacPherson received 27 votes
rebounded from a 5-6 record in to easily outdistance Michigan
1986, will meet No. 6 Auburn. State Coach George Peries with
9-1-1, in the Sugar Bowl.lan . 1 in five a nd Florida State Coach
New Orleans. It will be the first Bobby Bowden wit h lour in
trip to a New Year's Day bowl for voling by 40 UP! college football
Syracuse in 23 years.
writers from across the nation.
"I think it Is a grea t tribute to
Barry Switzer of Oklahoma,
our football team, because all Jimmy Johnson of Miami and
these honors that come to us are Paul Roach of Wyoming also
coming to all of us." said received votes.
MacPherson. "Our 11&lt;0 (record)
MacPherson said he would
is being recognized."
never have predicted a n un"From a professional sta nd- beaten season.
point. it just makes you awe"I thought we had to be7·4 with
struck." he sald.·"Youcan't lake a win over Penn State to get to a
it in stride, it 's •oo special."
bowl, · and I was really shooting
MacPherson, 57, who took over . lor an 8-3 or 9-2 record," said
the SU program seven years ago • MacPherson. ''I think we were
this week, th is season improved 5·0 and we were play ing Penn
his overall college coaching State, and if anylhing ever came
record to 86-63-2 and his record at
it was then."

- COI&lt;ING SOON: TED DANSON ;, "THREE MEN AND A BABY" &amp;

BILL COSBY in "LEONARD PART 6"

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single point for the third annual
award from the Downtown At·
hletic Club of Orlando.
Also voting on the panel of
sports writers, broadcas ters and
football officials wa s Seattle
Seahawks rookie Brian Bosworth, who won the two previous
Butkus trophies while playing lot·
the University of Oklahoma.
Finishing third this year with
13 points was Dante Jones of
Oklahoma.
Bill Romanowski of Boston
College was fourth with two .
points, and Indiana's Van Wait ers and Ken Norton Jr. from
UCLA each received a single
point. in balloting computed on a
3-2-1 basis with panelists listing
their to~ three selections among
the six finalists.
McGowan notc hed 134 tackles
and recovered two fumbles in
Florida State's 10·1 regular season and helped earn the Semi'
noles a No. 3 national ranking
and a berth in the Fiesta BowL
Asked if he felt vindicated after
years of tak ing jabs about his
size, McGowan said, "It does
give me a little satisfaction , but
all along it was a matter of me
having confidence and knowing
what I could do and ... going out

Friday's games

Delicious Dishes!
MONDAY:

ORLANDO, Fla. (UP!)- Paul
McGowan of Florida State University, lightly recruited out of
high sc hool due to his size, has
been named winner of the 1987
Butkus Award as Ihe na tion's
best college linebacker.
McGowan, a 6-foot-1, 230pound senior, received 25 points
from an 11-member judging
panel Thursday to edge Ohio
State's Chris Spielman by a

Dispatch says
Bruce offered
Kansas post

GAINESVILLE, Fla. IUPI)In his first collegiate start,
Emmitt Smith set a Florida
rush ing record of 224 yards ,
carrying the Gators to a 23-14
victory over Alabama.
Using that game as a sl1ringhoard. the 18-year-old running
back ·personally restored bal·
ance to a lopsided F lorida attack,
and Thursday he was the over·
whelming choice In voting for
United Press International's
.
Freshman of the Year.
In becoming the Southeastern
Conference's rushing leader with
1,341 yards, Smith was named on
38 of 40 ballots from UP! sports
writers across the nation. The
remaining votes went to West
VIrginia quarterback Major Har·
ris and quarterback Sterling
Henton ·of Tennessee.

get something established back
home."
Two areas in which Fulhage
needs to improve is catching the
ball and getting it off quickly .
Against Kansas City, the only
reason one of his punts wasn't
blocked was because the Chiefs
player ran past him.
This Sunday, when theBengals
play at Cleveland, Fulhagecouid
encounter poor weather condl·
lions for the first -time this year.
But he isn't worried.
"It probably will be the worst
NFL field I've kicked on , but I
saw plenty of bad fields and. rain
and snow and wind when I was a t
Kansas Sta te," he said. ''All I try
to tlo is outkick the guy on the
other team. and I've always been
confid1nt I could do that."

Florida State's McGowan earns Butkus trophy

DALLAS (UP!) - Although with Dave SUeb.
several clubs remainell hopeful
The Oakland Athletics had
,Jlf doing more business base- shortstop Alfredo Griffin on the
ball's winter meetings faded to a market and at one time the New
quiet close.
York Yankees were rumored to
Only a handful of teams were be hot after hlm, but that deal
left Thursda y trying to squeeze a never tra nspired.
deal out of what was left of
Oakland and Los Angeles were
baseball's wi nter · meetings,
talking and a deal sending Griffin
which officially ended the pre- to the Dodgers for Welch would
. v!ous day .
make sense if the contracts are
The winter meetings produced right.
the fewest trades for the fewest
A complicated three-way deal
number of major league players between the Mets, Athletics and
for the second year In a row.
Dodgers never took shape.
Only seven deals Involving 16
Baltimore, Houston. the Chiplayers were transacted after cago White Sox, Seattle and
the Hollywood, Fla., meetings In Milwaukee a lso stayed at least
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
' 1986 produced a record· low eight part of an extra day in hopes of
Former Ohio State University
trades involving 29 players.
working som ething out.
Pittsburgh had pitching and head football coach Earle Bruce
"It's been said before, I know,"
has been offered the head foot Pittsburgh manager Jim Ley- minor league ~atc hin~ prosball coaching position a t the
land said, "but you can trade any · pects, two of the most desired University of Kansas, the Columtime now . There's no deadline. commodities in baseball, in plen·
tlful supply, yet could not swing a bus Dispatch reported today.
And If somebody's borderline,
The Dispatch said· a formal
healthw!se, teams want to walt deaL
multi-year contract will be
until spring training to ~ee if he's · "We've still got all that pitchIng," Leyland said before depart- · m'liled to Bruce for his
healthy, then mak e a move."
ing. "Someone ought to be consideration.
Prospects for a last-minute
However, Bruce told the Dis·
interested - or be reasonable
winter meeting deal were so
patch
that he had not 'heard of
about making a deal. We're not
bleak even the few tea ms that
any
formal
offer from the univergoing to give them away."
planned to stay through Friday,
sity. Bruce admitted he has
St. Louis came with extra
such as the Toronto Blue J ays
catc hers and left the same way. talked with a selection commitand New York Yankees, were
Tom Pagnozzl and Steve Lake , tee from Kansas .
moving up their depar ture times.
" I know they were doing
The New Yotk Mets remained will con tlnue to back up Tony
In hopes of unloading shortstop Pena. Montreal and Toronto both something , talking things over
Rafae l Santana, left-harlded re· left without getting backup with their selection committee,"
said Bruce, " but no one has told
liever Jesse Orosco and out- catching help. _
One item th at surfaced Thurs- me I have been offered the job."
fielder Mookie Wilson.
Bruce admitted to the Dispatch
The Los Angeles Dodgers also day was that Cleveland pltche'
that
he had an. interview with
ained and were trying to Ken Schrom bought a 10 percent
Kansas
officials on Wednesday,
die right -hand ed starter Bob interest in Milwaukee's El Paso,
but
did
not discuss · contract
ch without success. They Te·xas, farm c.l\lb in the Class AA
specifics.
·
would not take ariythlng from Texas League. Schrom is a
Bruce,
57,
was
fired Nov. 16 as
Toronto, which wanted 10 part resident of El Paso.
Ohio State coach. but. he is not
expected to decide on a new
position for some time. He is
expected to first talk again with
officials from Southern Metho·
dist University.
However, SMU will not resume
Its foo tba ll program until 1989,
following a two-year suspension
DALLAS I UP!) - Billy Mar- players.
by the NCAA because of recruittin, admitting ,another showdown
"After games, I' m going ·to ing viola lions.
with Yankees owner George hold press· conferences outside
"This is all happening so·
Steinbrenner is inevitable, ·said rhy office. So player s can hear quickly I've gqt to sit back and
Wednesday he hopes to manage my answers . That way if a player digest It," Bruce told the
New York for two more winning misses a ball he should have
Dispatch.
seasons a nd then retire.
ca ught he can hear me say It and
Kansas fired Coach Bob Vale' "I want to manage two mo re , won't have to read a bout it in the sente
after two seasons during
:s-ears," Martin said at baseball's paper."
which he compiled a 4-17·1
winter meetings, "and if I have a . Every m anaging stint by_the
record. '
couple of winners, I'll step down. gaunt, drawn -faced Martin has
Bruce earned a base salary of
I've illways wanted to go out a been punctuated by an Incident $89 ,000 at Ohio Stale and It is
winner. It's very importan t for with Steinbrenner .
believed he wa s offered $85,000
ine to end that way."
"Every bod y's wondering
for the Kansas job.
: Marlin. whoturns60onMay16. when Billy Is going to explode,
The Dispatch said Bruce is
sta rts his fifth turn as New when he's going to do some·
known to want a contract match !"ark' s manage r looking like he's thing," Martin said . . . , hope you ing the five-year $300,000 annual
i).l ready halfway through it. He have a long wait. But so mething
g uaran tee · lhe University of,
_appears in much better health, will happen, you can guarantee
Arizona offered him in January.
however, than he did at the end of thai. It 's inevitable. We're goi ng
I) is fou rth term w. th the Yankees. to disagree.
' " Ma nag ing takes a lot ·out of
"B~t we're friends. We'll stay
you," said Martin, who will friends. And we're noi going to let
marry for thefourth time on Jan. the press come in between us this
Athens at Gallipolis
25. "At least it does out of me. time. Well, the media won't hurt
Logan at Marietli!
Having someplace to go after the me- It's the owners that believe Jackson at Warren Local
"them."
games will help."
Eastern a• Hannan Trace
Steinbrenner took Martin out
New York came into the winter Southwestern at Kyger Creek
Qf le broadcast booth during the
meetings looking for a shortstop, Symmes Va lley at North Ga ilia
World Ser ies, firing Lou Pinlella some left-handed hitting help and
Oak Hill at Southern
as manager a nd naming him a ll the pitching it could get. It
Portsmo uth at Russell
loqks , as though it will leave Minford al Wheeler sburg
E:~ew York's general manager..
Like everybody e lse familiar looking for the same things .
Portsmouth West at·Waverly
Many clubs looked more inter· Bel pre at Meigs
wi lh th e rerun scene, Martin
acknow ledged a confronta tion ested in going home on the final Greenfield at Wilmington
wit h Stci nbt·enner is sure to business day of the winter
Saturday's games:
meetings than in trying to make a Chesapeake at Wheelersburg
~o rn e. What makes Martin differl"nt from most Is believing the trade. Most organizations were Green at Waverly ·
scheduled to depart Thu rsday.
outcome wi ll be different.
Jackson at Wells ion
Seattle reporledly got cold feet Zanesvi lle at Loga n
"It's already started, " Martin
said from behind blac k plastic about ·dealing left fielder Phil Alexander at Athens
glasses hiding his eyes. "We've Bradley to Philadelphia for Belpre at Warren Local
got a couple of writer s who had Glenn Wilson and minor league
Saturday's games:
me and Lou mad at each other pitcher Mike Jackson.
North Gallia at Uniolo
California reportedly had a
before I even took the job. Lou
deal - but contingent upon two
and I are friends.
"Everybody's waiting for Billy other clubs swingi ng a deal,;· Free
and George to d o something. agent Bob Horner was still
'When is Billy going to punch a dickering with Texas, which was
player? When Is Billy going to trying to structure an incentive
package a ttract!ve enough to
punch ·a writer?'
·
OPEN
"Wei!, I'm goin g to chan ge a induce the Irving, Texas, native
SUNDAY 11 AM-7 PM
few th ings. You know, I used to to sign.
"It's
hard
to
complete
a
spe nd a lot ol time In the
MONDAY. THRU SATURDAY
clubhOl\Se talking with the press. trade, " Toronto General Man10 AM • 9 PM
That takes away too much of the ager Pat Gillick said. "There are
time I can use doing what I do llke so· many new general managers.
to do best - working wilh They don't want to blow their
271 112 N. SECOND AVE.
players. I'm going to spend more first deal. They want more time
MIDDLEPORT OHIO
time on Ihe fie ld working with my to think, to check things out.

Smith top frosh

Th6 Daily Sentinel- Page- S

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

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1986 E_l

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Chevv
C-10
•.•...••••.
$2495
6 cy!. auto., PB, f»s .

98 REGENCY

..
-•••,

1976
Che~y C-10 •.....••••• S1295
Auto, PB, P, shdmg back window.

$191 .57"'

Number ol months

48
$150.00

48
$200.00

He!wtiCIIIII~ Ul~llli d~~~:~~oloon•ng Ruer•e

Cash down ~ayment
$1 ,000.00 $1 ,000.00
Total cash due at lease inception St.ZB0.26 $1.391 .57
$6.252.48 $9,195.36

60,000
6Ciml1e

60,000
6¢1mile

• Lene payments basel! on Manulacturer 's Suggested R ~ta ll

Prices on RangerS anH·15D. Payments lndude desllnallon

chargel. Payments dD not include uselsales laa. tllle and
llttnse tees, wntcll vary tram •tate to state. See your ForJI
fl!ater lor payment and leum.

lhrougll Ford Credll on the new 1988 Ringer S or 1988
F·150. Lasue has the o~tiun. but is not obligated, to
purchne the true~ Ill tease end at a price ta be negutiated
wllh the Dnlflr at tease Inception .
Leuee is r11punslble lor tlUU wear and tear. Refundable
ltCulity depos.ll /RecoMI!Innlng ttuerwf'. Cllh down payment
1nd flrsl monlh'I INi:l payment due In IIIWintl. LtUI IUIIItCI !O
lp~rawel lnd IIIIIIUate lllllflftCI IS dltermlned IIW ford Credit

'

•,•
•
•'•

1982 Olds Cutlass
Just Arrived. Loaded. $

Total mileage allowed
Mileage charge ow 60,000

••'

.·

r

Lilli a RangerS tor about $13 0.26 per month or 1 F·150 tor
about $1!n .57 per me nth . This ~8 - mont• Red Carpet Leaae
11 tnllable to qua tilled tenets bW par!lclpallng Dea ter•

.•'

197
S Chevy LUV •••.••••••••.•• S695
4 sp . runs good.

f·l50

$130.2&amp;•

TtELEASE:

•

1978 Ford Thunderbird ••••• s1 ·195
Auto, PB, PS, air, 302 .

Ranger S
Monthly payment

Total amount ol payments

&lt;

l980
Chevy
Chevette
•••••
$1
-195
2 dr. auto.
·
'

THE ARITHMETIC:

$19157*..

Lease
a .
Ford
F·150

' for about

~

~

per

month

.,
~

·.•

'

$4000 DISCOUNT

SALE PRICED

··

···~

JIM· COBB
992-6614

~
~

see

,

your

. CHEVROLET•OLDSMOBILE•CADILLAC
308 EAST MAIN

~

ONLY 41N STOCK

· POMEROY

•
•••

'' "OuaMt.la Job 1" In IKt l.r
lfle pnt1mn ctllncvll'fl Yllrt, Ford tlas ted 111 ot1111 Amerinn 111lnaUwe tomp~~~lls . This 11 bind on •n
avtrt~~ ol DWIIIINtiiOflti .....,_ II I Mriel tf Rl"'l ol 'ft-"IT lllliltl6l ....... M1
Mlr~ AmlriGa

••

••

•

J

�Friday, December 11, 1987

Iessin s

Open house slated Dec. 15

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored Ry The Interested Ru.~inesses Listed On This Page.

ElliS &amp; SONS SOHIO
r l;jjl Ol

Comple1e

SWISHER &amp; I..QHSE

~~~~~! @

~

~
-

Autornoh'lle

Servtce
Locust &amp; Beech Slreet

Pre scnpltons

992 9921 Mtddleporf

F'omerov

992 2'9SS

•

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment salesand
Servtce
Ru11and Otlto4S775

Wm

811!

Brown Owner

Phone (6141 742 ?117

,,

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Na honw1de Ins Co
ot Columbus 0
804 W Maul
991 2318 Pomerov

Brogan-Warner
INSURANCE --=--SERVICES

I

214 E Mam
992 5130 Pomeroy

"'

ti)\
~

MEIGS TIRE

1

John F

Ful1z

0

992 3978
1 RU\rrrY CHURCH R1v lotm Iliff (l(!r.IOI
~h ool Supt Chul'('h
S('t\00 9: 15 a m Wors hip &amp;&gt;!"\ k&gt; 10 :Jl 1 m
C'holr tl.' hf arsal r\.lesd ay 7 :l:l p m u rrler dl
n'C't lon of lJ.lls B Ul1
.., POMEHOY CHURCH 0F TilE NAZI\
RENE Cu rer Union an ll Multl:rrv fl('l,
Jllomas Glen Mc('h ng pa st« Norman Pfrs.I!"V s S ~ up- Su rd ay School C! :Jl am
~
morning wor,. hip 10 :n a m CVE'flingsci"Vic:'(&gt; 6
p m rm(}wt'C'k ~ T'Vl('(&gt; \\i cdnM&lt;JY - p.m
~:
GRACE EPL.';CQPAJ CHURC"H 't2fi E
Mam St Potllf'rov Su nell('; sen k'ffl Hoi'
('(lrrtmuruon on 1ir ftrsr Su OO !lj. of &lt;'ach month.
'\ md comb ned v. i1 h morning prnyr r on rt'l&gt;
.. thirdSu nd \\ M ornln g prav e~ an d srrmon on
all ot tn Su 00 a,o;of1 tv:'monrh Chu f('h Schod
.. an d Nui'SCTV cat e prw lci'd Coffet' hOur In thf'
.. r ar l~h Hall lmm('(il!lt('!v folio\( In~ ttl&gt; !l('I'V\c('
,...
POM EROY CHURCH OF CHRL'5T 212 W
M al t~ St Leo Nash. {'Van~ list Biij(' School
9 l) t m Mor rU ng "--ot'Ship 10 ,)) a m "r outh
mc'f'lmgs ti OOpm EH•n ln ~wors hi p 7 OOp
m \\ ('ctle.dtr. nl):!ht p1D'\C'r moc'l mgand Bible

Pomeroy

"' ,..t i.dv 1 m p.m
•

:
•
•
•

fl-IE SAl VATJO ~ ARMY 11:1 Bune rnul
1\\t' PomN"O\ Mr&lt;; 001a Wlrurfg n chargt'
~nclav hOIJfi('SS mcn m,g, 10 a m
Su nl:la\;
SChOO 10 ll am ~u rda,v SchOol YPSM
I IOb4:' Ad Ull~ ]('fidel 7 l) p m SalvatKln
mN'ltng, \oi:l16uss(X'uJ&lt;ersand mll'&gt;ICS p:'C!als
J1lursclay lJ l} 1 m to 2 p m Ladl ('S Homr
1

\~~Froe ljn~r:m'S ~u~~: ~~ P'" ~d~

tlas.~~

i \ ouM Propi(&gt;-IJit:iel
)) pm D1blr
SrOOv an d P aver moo mg oprn 1o til. public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHU RCH OF
t H HL~T J.3'.!26 Cluldr('n s Homr Ro ad (Cou nl \
Hood 7tH \.fl l J2:Ji Vocal mu sic SurWy Wor
~t hp 10 o m Bi bl(' Shrhll a m \o\ o'S hipU p
rn \\ t'lln~ iav BJI:if'St \.rlv 7pm
OlD I&gt;EX I'E R BIBLE CHHL~TIAN
CHU HCH Alvm C lll h" pasta Lmd1 S\\ !l/1
~~Su B:!~\ School9 (1 1m p lliiC hm g~r
\l&lt;t '!:. f u ~ t lldt hi d Sunda't fOJICMin ~Sun:la\
Sd 10o! Youth m('t'tlnl: "! JJ p m c-. crv ~u n­

da.'
GRA HAM

•"

UN I f E D

Mr:T HODIS f

Pr t &lt;t lht n~ I Wa m f1rs1 and s('('Ond Sun
dn~o ft Jt hm ont h thl dJ nd fo uJ th Su n
d n 1 rt h m on th ~~ orsh 1p se v ICf"S rrt 7 JO p
Y\f'!ln csd &lt;JV 1\ f'n tn .QS at 7 30 p m
m
P ravN a nd B1 tll f Stud v
SEVEN 1 H DAY AU\ EN liST
Mu
ht'rr'\ H C'i~ h ts Road Pomnov Pastor
Jo hn Sw(lg:H I Sabba th School Supclln
tr nd• nr Dar hm Sll " aJ 1 !&lt;;at:tbat h Sc hool
b('glns 11 2 p m 011 S&lt;tturd .~v afternoon
v.l h wm shi p st n irf foliO\\ l ng at l b p m
F:vC'ryon t&gt;

Y. Pim mr

RUTL\N D flllST B \PTlST CH URCH
- Sht&lt;'f ll 1rr1C'tl \\ ar nf'r !'iupt ~unrll\
School 9 30 m Morning V.. or shi p 10 l!'i

'mPOMEROY

F I RST BAP'I JST I \ston
H 11 r~
mr mstl"
S&lt;I!Ut'(l v f'\f'n n~
f'\ mJZdlst c sr \](('&lt;: opt n 10 puhl h" 1 p
rn
Su nda'-' ChuJch &lt;Jchool q 30 :r m
Mlll n n g \\ otship Ill 30 am
r IH ST ~OV HH:: FtN BAP TTS r Po
muov Plk f' 1: La m ou O B!V lnl p&lt;!SlOt
Jar.k N('«i" Sunda\ School Dr r4:'C10I Su n
dav Sl:hoo ~ {() n m Mor n!ng V. rlr~h p
10 l'i tHnllg-"or~hl p 7 rrnp m r fl ~l 1
&amp; .. 10 1} ~ I 1 \\ cflnrsda v P r &lt;1\ ('I Sri
\ tCI 700pm rlJS 1 l&amp;iWPM rES
T 1 M 1s~ lon F' r ]('nds (:.Jgl'S '&gt; ti) Ho\ 11
Amb l!&gt;s:.HIUI ~ Ox:rv!&lt;&gt; a2l'S fi IHl tncl Girh
m \f linn IJ!!f~ ~ l[{t on \\: t ((nf'~d \~ ~ r.o
m
s 1 &amp; 7 lOp ~~ If s r 1 uf'~d ,
Vl~lt&lt;illon fl 10 p m
F \1 f H 1ABF.HNAC'l E C' Hll1( II A
lr' Ru n Rn ul R('\ F. mm rtt n t~o~" n p ~
tor H 1mllt v Dun n ~up t Sund \ S&lt; h( J
!Oum Sumln f'\r n mg~ !'\ t"'f'
Hlpn
Blbl ~ te:.~ch ln g ' 10 p m I hu1~ n
f ~YRA.t:US F MIS:-i i ON C'hNn S! S\
ra&lt; USf' SttVICi"S JO&lt;t m Sundl\ I \ I n~~
o;rr v \Cf's Su nd Jv a nd \\ f'dn "&gt;Cb\ tl 7 00 p

m

m

.,

MIDOI EP OKI CHURC'Jl 01 t HH ISf
It' CHR ISTIAN Ul"\10:'11 Ov.i~h t t1 II('\
f ro;J f'l du Wa ndJ Mohl&lt;'r Sundot\ Srhool
Supr Sunda\ SchDnl !! 1t) J 111 Mo nlng
Wot&lt;.h!p 10 lila m LVf&gt;ntn!!\o\0 ship .. m
p m Wl tl nr.c;d t \ pr "' f'J mr¥ t ng 1 l,{J p m
MT • MORIAH Oil HCI-l m ( 00
R tlln t Rf'\ J am1~ Sal! llu:ld p1~1o1
FH'!'mun Will!dms _:;;upt "iunda' S&lt; hool
9 4a 1m Sunda\ ~nd V.. rllnPsda\ f'\4 n
lng ~f'rvlr r~ 7 p m
MrDDl F POR1
F IHST BAPJJs r
Cornf'rSI~tharulPrlmiJ EtrlErlf'n Pa ~&gt;
ror Bnh Pa kll S S Supl ( 11hv Rlggo;
As !.t Su1J1 Sunda\ St ho 1! !l 1!'i &lt;.1 m
Morning Wo ship 10 11 1m Sunda1
£vf'n!ng" stl\IC'l 7 prn Pr t\f'l mining
and Rl blf' Stu1h Vl r{.l nr~ciu\ Pvrnln,l! 7 p
m &lt; hrldr1n ~ chJh prHirlf' WC&gt;(.int'S
da\ 7 pm Adult choir p!Htll'l' V.cd R
pm
R 1d 1 fH(J!!:I rm WMPO ~unda\
8 :10 u m
MJJ)DI 1- P OH I {Ill H( H Of C IIHIST
5th wd M 1ln \I lla t~ on mlnlsr('r
Rllh&lt;~id Duf3o&lt;if' 1\ss&lt;lli.Jtl Pa~tu r M lkt
Gtrl1ch Sund n S&lt; h (I Supt rmt rndt&gt;nt
Ribll !i(hor;l9 ~ • m Morn i ng Worship
Jfl ~() 1m 1: \of' nm.Q Worship 7 (10 p m
W..-.dnt~d..t'&gt;' 7 00 p m Pr l\ t--1 ml't ling
MIDDI F POHI CIILH(H OF IH F. Nl\
Z\llP.NE PAS10R Fn cl PrnhOrY. ood
Sll V. h! tc&gt; Sun(l.w School Sup! Somll\
';thnol 9 Ill J m M01 nrng WoJ snip 10 4'i
d ITJ
F.\an~E&gt;llslir nlf'Ciin,g 7 00 p m
~\ Nlnrsdav 7 Oil p rn Pnnr1 nn't.tl ng
1 NITED PRESBY fEHIAN 1\HNL~TR\
OF MEIGS !OUN rv
R1 v (lu:trl•~ T.&amp;Jbotl
II ARR ISONV l Ll E PRESBVfER IAN
CHURCH - Sundav W01 ~hlp Srn lu-..:;
9 ()(] &lt;-! m ( hurrh Sthofll 10 15 a m
MlfJDI ! P!lRT PRESBY ! ER l AN Suncl...t\ S1 hool q 1 m f'h u1 ch &lt;;u '-'lU
l(l15.1m
s' H.ACUSE PIHS I UNI1 EO PRESBY
fEHI1\N - Sund 1'- Sr hn Jl )0 &lt;i m
(hu r"&lt;'ti ~f'J\1('( JJ J5a rn
H.U 1! 1\ :'liD f li t.: RCH OF' (Of) Pust or
John 1 \'Un'i SundJV SrMol 10 Ill! n m
Sunrit :\1 rnlngWot&lt;,hipl1 Of 1m rhll
dr• n ~ (hun h 11 ;.r rn Sunt.la\ 1 \l'n In~
SNvlr! 7 Of) p m WNl f p m Young I a
dlr"' Au:'! liuv WrdnC'Sdll } 7 p m fam
llv Wm !ihlp
fiA7.FI lOMMUNII Y CHLRCfl Off
Rt 124 ~ milt~ from Po1tlond l on)7 Hoi
tnm E d"f'l H 1rt p.1-;lol' Su nda\ School

•

Each one of us some speaal way
Observes a sacred holiday,
By hangmg ornaments so bnght
Or lightmg candles every mght,
A time when happmess depends
On seemg relatives and fnends
At parties filled wtth JOY and fun ,
Wtth gifts galore for everyone
For some, thiS day 's about to dawn,
For others, 1t has come and gone
Whichever one you celebrate,
Your House of Worshtp will relate,
Accordmg to your chosen creed,
ThiS festive month IS guaranteed
To brmg one present we'll recall
God's greatest gift, of love to all
-Glona Nowak

-o

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy

q92 2104
] 0 30 a m

Sund I V morning p1eachlng
Sund;n evenm~ Sl'l v lccs 7 30

pm
MIDDI E PORT FREEV.lLL BAPTISr
CHURCH Co t nf'r Ash rmd Plum Noel
Hr rrm ann pu s tor Sund:.r v School 10 UOa
m Mo r nin g Wors hip 11 00 am Y\t'd
nesd a\ t~ nd Satur.cl u' Evcnlng:Stl\lu&gt;s 11

730p m
MEIGS
COOPERA1 !VE PARL~ I!
l NITED 1\fETHOOIST CHURC H
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev Don &lt;\rcher
Rev Ro) Deeter
R,r.v Seldon John" on
AlFR ED - Church School 9 ~n a m
V. o! Shrpllum UMYF630pm UM\\
Thi r d Tll ('Sduy 1 :.10 p m Co mmuni on
f u "' Sunda v 1 Arc h~r1
CHESTER - Wors hi p 9 om Church
School ID a m Blblf' S!udy Thursday 7 p
m UM\\ fi rst fhursdav 1 p m Com
munlun flr&lt;;;! S undi:I Y (Arch en
JOPPA - \\orshlp 9 :10 a m Church
Schod 10 \0 a m Blblc Srud v WednesdaY
7 30 p m r Jo hn son
LONG ROT1 0M - Chu1r h Scho ol9 30
am \o\ 01shi p 7 p m Blbl c- Study Wed
n£&gt;S da o~ ' 30 p rn
UM\'F \\c-dnC'Sday
U 00 p m
Commumon F'h st Sundav
(A rc hl'r)
RE E OSVILLE - Church Schoo! 9 30 a
m \\ Clrshl p Se1 vice 11 00 a m i l)(&gt;eterl
I UPPER S P I A INS ST PAUL Chu rch School 9 a m \V or sh!p JO am
Btbl e St udv 1 U('Sday 7 m p m UM\o\
fh HI ful sd a't 7 10 p m Communion
t&lt; t ~t Sundav (Atr her )
CENTRAL (;LUSTER
Rc" JahlOii E UOrhill
Re" K and:y Burch
Rev Melvln I&lt; ranklln
Re' C l e~nente S Zuniga, Jr
Rt v Robert Mussman
AS BU R\ iSvJ a C U ~C'l- \A. or shlp 11 a m
Chu rch SchOol 9 45 a m ChaiJ.!t:' Blblt&gt;
Sl ud v Wedm.-s ua, 7 30 p m UMW fh s t
Tu&lt; sd 1V 7 30 p m
Choir Rt h{arsa!
Wf'd nr"Sd11V h m p m UM\1. fou rt h Sun
d a\ h :m p m 1Burrh )
F Nl ERPRISE - Wor&lt;;; htp q .1m
Chu rch ~ r h oo iJOa m A1bl r Sturlv Tuo;
d :.~\ 7 ;\{) p m
UMW F irs t M onda v i \0
p m UMi' F St nd t \ 6 p m CtJq ir RP
hcJHal h lOpm \\ f'dn f'Sd tv (F'runkllm
Fl \ TWOODS- Ch u rc h School 10 a m
Wo sh ip 11 1 m Brbl f' Studv Thtp s
d \
J) m
Ul\.n P Su nda\ n p m
~ I ' •n kllnl
F ORE ST RUN - \\ ors hlp 9 am
f hu &lt;' h School JO A M C'hO!r pra cll{'('
I U('S da\ h lO p m UM\\i fn st Tu C'sd a\
7 10 p m iBut('h
HE AI H (Mi ddl('()or tl - ChUI ('h School
9
1 m
M o rn m~ Wor ship 10 \0 a
'r oul h (. roup ~ p m \\ Pdn csda y Churc h
( hol1 rf'hf' 1s II 7 p fn
fhursday
Pl t \ &lt;' sr \ 1f t fi «lpm Blbl f' Studv 7
pm tZ un r~l l
MI NI:: RSVII I F.- \\ or s hip &amp;&gt;1 \iCf' 10
a m Chuah S&lt; huol 1l 1m U MW thlrO
\\ ('lln f'Sd 1\ 1 p m Cho ir practl cr !vlon
d i.lV 7 :lOp m i Bur t:h
P ~ ARI ( HAPEI Worshtp Serv [C('
9 :)Jl a m
C hur~e h School 10 1~ am
UMW Sf&gt;t'O nd Tul sduv 7 Kl p m (Muss

m

m

mm

P OM EROY - Chun:h School 9 15 am
Worship 10 10 am
Cho1r 1eh carsa l
\'\,N in £'Sl lllv 7 30 p m
UMW second
Tu('~ d iV 7 Ulp m LMYF' Sunda\ 6pm
j ( nrblft l
ROCK SPRINGS- CliUJCh Sc hool 9 15
l m \V nJ&lt;;;hi p lOam Blblt Stud y Wed
nl"~d&lt;.l't 7 iOpm UMYF' t Scmorsl Su n
d&lt;1\ 5 p m
( Ju n lu.r.~;\ ('V(' t ' oth er Su n
drr' b p m (F r an kli n\
RU II AN D - Church SchOol 10 a m
Wo1 ship 1l am UMW F'!r s t M o nd&lt;~ Y
IO p m
SAL EM CENTE R- Chur C'h School 9 15
1 m
Wo rship 10 15 p m ! Mu ssman )
SNO WVll LE - Wo1ship 9 00 a m
churC'h sthool 9 45 a m ! Mussm an \
SOUTI! ERN CLUSTER
Rev ROker Gra ce

Rev P!lul McGuire

Re" Keith Rad er
1\PPL E. ~·R U VE- Church Sc hool 9 30
r m \\ OI Shlp 10 00 a m t fu st •.m el third
Sunci1VSI 13it;&gt;](' stud\ cvrrv Sunda\ b p
m
~J M W SC'C'On;i r ucsctav 7 00 p m
P I &lt;vrr mll(&gt;tlllg Y.. ffin csday 6 p m

cGr •c('l

BF I HAN) - Worshi p fl 1 m Church
Schuol 10 Ll m Bl hlf' Stud } Wcdn rsda y
10 1m
Dorca s Wom Pn ."! F el lov. ship
Wcdn f'Sda\ II a m !McGulr&lt;'J
( AHM F L - ChU J('h School 9 W a m
Wo1 !&gt;h p 10 -15 a ITl Second and Four th
~undavs fC'IIOv. shlp di nn&lt;'r " lth Su tt &lt;tr
third lhurs&lt;II'IV 6 30 P m M ~.:G u iJI.'
£A.'jT I F.-T A RI -t'h!H'Ch Sc hool9 1m
Y\or ship 10 a m SC'C:Ond tnd fou 11h Su n
rl..t\1; UMW fhst TU('Sday 7 10 p m
l(.il HCl)

L F.T ART FAL LS - Worsh!p 9 a m
(hur&lt;' h School 10 am {Grat'Pl
MORNING STA R - Worstllp 9 &lt;J 5 a m
C: hu rc h School 10 :lOam Blblf' ::; rud y
I hu sday 7 :W p m 1Raden
RACINE \\'ESUYAN- Chu r ch School
!O am Wot ship11 a m t,J MWfour1hMon
day at 7 :.D p m Men s P rttyer Brea kfast
Wednesday 7 a m JG raCf'l
SUTTON -Church School 9 30 am
MnrnlngWorshiplO ol 5a r'n fl r st andthlrd
Sumlo.~}~ I ! IJow!'.hlp dlnn('f wtt h Carmel
thhd ThuJ sda\ 6 30 Pm (M cGuire)
KENO CH J..:RC H OF CHR IST Vr rnon
Eldrldgfl m l nls!('l O!ivf'rSwaln Sunday
SchOol Supt Preachi ng 9 30 a m each
Sunduy
HOBSO\ &lt; HR ISflAN UN TON Ceor ~e

,

(614)992-2039 or
(614)992-5721

4

,

106 Butternut An Pomeroy Oh

AnOOo p 1st or Sunday S('J'V lr(' 9 30 a m
C'V&lt;'n in~ SC'l \ lcP 7 30 p m Pr t\; er m &lt;'E'Iln~
Wf&gt;dncsdav 7 30 p m
BEARWALLOW RJD(,E CHURCH Of
CHRIST Joseph B Hoskin~ pa stor Btbl t&gt;
Class 9 :lO a m Morn ngWorshlp 11J ~Oa
m EH~ n !ngWors ht p 6 30pm fhu 1sdav
Bibl e SI Ud\ b 30 p m
NEW STIV ERSV !LLE COMMUNlTY
CHURCH Sun dav SchlJol sor v icC&gt; 9 45 a
m
\\ orshtp ser v \('(' 10 30 a m
E\iin):!E'IJS! Ic Sfon IC€' 7 30 pm WC'dn C'S
day Pravtr mt'f"t!ng 7 30 p m Thu1 sdav
ZION CHURCH OF CHR IST Pomt roy
Haljlsoovlllf" Rd Robert Pu1tel l min is
1('1 S1f'VI Sta n!C'\ S S Sup! Bill McEI
r o\ Ass ! Sup! Sunda\ &amp; hool9 ~0 a m
Worshtpsenicf'l0 30a m EHnrn gy,or
ship Su nd av 7 p m and WPlln~dav 7 p m
Sl JO HN LUTHERAN CHURCH Plno
GIOV&lt;' 1ht' R£'\ Wllllum Mrddl eswan h
pastor Chu1r h sr Jvlt.:e9 30a m Sunrtav
S('hOOl ]{) 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST
Joh n Wn~ht past 01 Sunduv School9 JOa
m Lat ry Havm-s S S Supt Morning
v.or:&lt;;ihlp 10 30 am
RA Cl NE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE RC'v Llovd D Crimm J t past or
Ora Bass Ch:.r iJm m of th C' Board ofC hrl ~
tlcm Llf(' SundaySchool9 30a m Morn
lng Y.orshlp 10 30 a m l"vangelistlc Sf'r
'l1'f' 7 00 p m Wl'dnrsday S£&gt;n !cr 7 p m
llBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH Dox
l£lr Woo:!.~ Call pa!:IOr S4:t v lrE"S Sunda y
10 a m an d 7 p m \Ycdnt'Sday 7 p m
HEM LOCK GROVE CHRlSTlAN Rug
€'1 \\at son past or C1cn soo P1atl Sunday
Sr hool Supt MorninJ:: Worship 9 30 a m
Sundet\ Sr hool 10 30 t m Ev~e n i n g sC'r
vir&lt;' 7 30 p m
MT UN ION RAPTIST Don 1ld Shue
pas tor JOC' Sa y r(l Sumlav Sc hool Sup!
Sund~v School 9 15 am
Evening "or
ship 6 30 p m Pra ver Met&gt;l lng: 6 30 p m
'A C"dn t:.&gt;s da~
'
TUPPERS PLAlNS CH LRCH OF
CHRIST DuH PrC'n11ce mtnls tu Deryi
W£'11 s Su p! Chutc h School 9 a m Wor
ship Servlc€' 9 45 p m
C HESTER CHliRCH OF T HE NA7.A
RENE Rev HC'rbC'rt Gwtr pas tor
Flank R ff!t: supt Sund a ~ School 9 30a
m Wor ship srrv1ce 11 1m 1nd 7 p m
Sunrlon Wf'dnesdav 7 p m P1 r\ r r m{"('t
In•
LAUREL CLJFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH D:.rv\d Bell pastor Rober! E
Bartoo Dir('clor of Chris tian Education
Slf' ve Eblin assi stan t Sunday Schoo19 30
a m Mo l nl ng wm ship 10 30 a m T eens
mAcl!on 6p m EvcnlngWorship 7 OOp
m Wl-rln rsdfly cvenl np: prayer and Blbh
stud y 7 00 p m Choir practi ce Thursday

7pm
DEXTF.R CHURCH OF CHRlST
ChaJ les Ru ssen S1 minister Rrck Ma
co mbf'r supt Sunday School 9 30 a m
Wo r s hip SC'rvt ce 10 10 a m B l bl C' sludy
Tuesd IY 7 30 p m
REORf:ANlZED CHURCH OF JESUS
C' HRTSTOF'LATTEROAY SAINTS Port
l md Racin e Ro ad Willi am Roush pastor
Linda E '" ans church school d ire-ctor
Church s(' hool9 30 a m M orn In~ wo1 ship
10 ln am \\cdn esday e v cn ln~ pray cJ
sctvlces 7 30 p m
BE fHI EHEM BAPTIS1 Rev E a1\
'ihu lN pas101 \\ or sh\p so vi ce 9 30a m
Sunllav SchoollO 30 am B1blcStud v and
pr aver sc-r' IC&lt;' Thu rsday 7 30 p m
CARLETON lNTERDENOMlNAfiON
AL CHURCH KlnRsburv Road RC'\
Clyd&lt;' W Hcndersoo past or Sunday
Sc ho ol9 30 a m Ralp h Ca r l Sup! E\en
tng worship 7 00 p m Prayer meelln!Z
W('d nesda' 7 00 p m
LONG BOTTOM CHRI STIAN Vernon
E ldridge past or Wallace Dame\\ood S
S Sup! Sunday School9 30 a m Worship
St&gt;rvi ce 10 30 a m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST
S!CV&lt;'
Dea \€'r Pas tor Mike Swlg&lt;'r Sunday
School Supt Sunda} Scho ol 9 30 am
Morning worship 10 40 a m
Sunday
CV&lt;'nlng "orsh!p 7 30 p m \o\Mnesd ay
evening Bi bl e studv 7 30 p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH
Burlingh am Ray Laudrrmlll pastor Ro
bert CozaJ1 assistant rnst(J' Sunda} School
10 am wcnhlp 7 p m •Wcdn('Sday 6 p m
vou1h mret!J1g; Wl'd 7 pm church servtces
P INE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH \l
mll eoffRt 325 Rev Ben I Watts pastor
Rob ert Sea r lf'S S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m Morning Wor ship 10 30 a m
Sunda y e vening sf:'rvlce 7 30 p m
Wed
nesd ay serv h.'f' 7 30 p m
SILVER RUN BAPTIST Bill Llf llc
past or Steve Little S S Supt Sunday
School 10 a m Morning worslp 11 a m
Sunday ev ening worship 7 30 p m Pra yer
m eeti ng a nd Bibl e study Wednesday 7 30
p m Youth meetlngWednesQ.ay at 7p m
RE J OICING LIFE BAPTIST CH U RCH
- 383 N 2nd Ave Middleport Sunda y
School 10 a m Sunday evening 7 00 p m
Mid wl'rk servi ce Wed 7 p m
LANGSVH LE CHRlSTlAN CHURCH
Robert E Mu sser past or Sunday School
9 ~ a m Paul Mu!iser sup1 Morning

•

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

A PE'nnsylvama truck driver was Injured In a tractor trailer
accident Thursday atll 15a m lnSallsburyTownshlponS R
7 accordi ng to the Gallla Meigs Post of the State Hi~hway
Patrol
•
John D Hols inger, 41 of Duncansville, Pa was taken by the
Meigs EMS to Veterans Memorial Hospital He was treated and
released for cuts
He was driving south when hls tractor trailer, wh1ch was
hauling trash ran off the right Side of the road and h1t a
guardrail before overturning Debris was spread along the
roadside, according to the patrol
The tractor tra1ler IS owned by Penn Eastern Corporation of
Harmony Pa
He was Cited for !allure to control

(row's Family Restaurant

FUNERAL HOME

' Fettu~rng

"Senung Fomrhes"

992-5432

992-5141

the dear God who
loveth us
,,e made and loveth

all

- Samud lliylor

Colendge

uorsh\p 10 30 am Su nda y t venlng: se1
VI C'l 7 p m
mi d WC't-'k scrv lre Wcdnes
da~ 7 p m
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rc\ Glenn M cMlllan pastor
Mur~ Janl cf' Unf'ndcr Sund&lt;ly Scho ol
Su pt Sundav ~ehool 9 30 u m Morning
worship 10 lOam Evangelistic srr\ Ice
n p m Praver and Prals(' \\ edncsday 7p
m Youth meeting 7 p m
EDF.N UNlTE D BRETHREN l N
CHR tST E lden R Blake pastor Sunday
Sch ool 10 a m Gary Re M Lay lcad e!
M orning sc-rmon 11 a m Sunday ntgh1
s£&gt;rvlc&lt;'S Chris tian Endcavo1 7 MJ p m
~ong se1vice 8 p m Preacchlng 8 10 p m
Mid week pra~N mccting \\ ednC'Sda\ 7

pm

HYSELl RU ~ HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Carl pas1or SundaySchooi at9 30a
m Morni ng wors hi p at 10 30 1 m Sun
drry&lt;'venlng s&lt;'r VIC&lt;'at 7 30pm Thursday
s('rv lces a t 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION at Bald
Knob l ocated on County Road 31 R('V
Lawr&lt;'nc(' Gluesf'n camp paslor Rev
Rog('r WJJiford ass \ pa st or Prrachlnr;t
s ervl ct'SSu nda y7 30p m P r ayC'rmre! l nJ~:t
WE'dnesd ay 7 30 p m Gtu y Griffith
leadf'r Youth g1 oups Sunda} even in)! at
6 30 p m wll h Rog('J" nnd VIol et Willrord
leaders Communion sf'n IC{' fir s! Sund a}
f'a Ch month
WH!fE S
CH APEl
WESlEYAN
GH URC H - Coolv ll le RO Rev Phillip R l
d&lt;'nour pa st o1 S untl:.r \ School9 W a m
wors hi p servlce 10 :lO 1 m Blbl&lt;' stud y
and "or ship servlct Wpdn es day 7 p m
RUTL \ND CHURCH OF CHRl ST
Bill Cartf'r pa s\Qr ~unda y School 9 :'lOa
m Mmnlng Wurshlp a nd Commu nion
10 30 am
RUTLAND B fBL E METHODIST Amos
Ttllls p1st or SonnvHudson sup1 Sunda y
School 9 30 am Mornln~ v. orshlp 10 30
am Sund tv &lt;'vrnlng s&lt;'rv lc&lt;' 7 00 p m
Wellncsda, scrvl c(' 7 p m \o\ MPO pr cr
g1 am 9 am c 1ch Sunda\
RU1 t AND CHURCH OF T HE NAZA
REN E Sam u&lt;'l Jlao;y(' p &lt;:~s tOJ Sunda v
S c honl!f 30 r m \\ oJ s hlp s('nl crlO 30a
m
Joung pmpll s s&lt;'rv!ce 6 p m
E va ngC'II stlc sen l11&gt; fi :mp m Wedn&lt;'Sdav
St'J V\c(' 1 p m
MASON CIWRCH OF CHR IS! Mlll&lt;'r
Sl M 1son \o\ V 1 Sund t v Bibl e Stud v JO
Ll m \o\ orshlp 11 1 rn ami 7 p m W1 dnes
dJyRlblf&lt;Study l\ ocnl mu slc 7 pm
LI BERTY ASSEMRLY O F' GOD Dud
d i n ~ I an(' Mason W V&lt;.t J N Thack u
pa,.&lt;;tor Even I n ~ sen Icc 7 ~ p m Wo
mm s Ministry Thursda y 9 )(I a m
WE'dn cstlay Pray er and B1bl e Studv 7 15

pm

HARTFORfl CHURCH OF CHRIS f IN
CHR ISTIAN UNI ON Han ford W Va
Rl'V David McManis past or ChurC'h
Sr hool 9 30 r m
Sunday morn in~ ser
v ier 11 a m Sunday C'Ven lng SE.'r Vlet'
7 3ll p m WPdn csda y pra yer m eet lng 7 30
pm
FAIRVIE\o\ BIB! E CHlRCH lC"t art
W Va Rt 1 Jam&lt;'S Lew is past c;lf Wo r
ship SE'rVIC&lt;'s 9 30 a m Sunday Scho ol J1
u m Evf.'ni ngworshlp 7 30p m Tue~day
ccrtlagC' pray er m£&gt;etlng and Bibl e Study
9 30 am \\orshlp sc1 vi ce Wednesday
730pm
OUR SA VJOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
\\ Jlnu t and Henry Sts Ra venswOCtd w
Va Th e Re v G('Orge C Wei rick pastor
Sunday SChool 9 lO a m Sunday wor ship

L1V1N(, WORD CHES1 E R CHURCH
OF' COD- G!! b&lt;'rt Spf'nCt'T past or Sun
da\ School 9 W r m Mo r nln ~ scr vlc P
10 no a m SundaYC'\1cnl ng scrvh'( 7 OOp
m M id'" ('k pravr-r St&gt;l vi ce Wldn rsday

7p m
Mr

01!VE COMMUNJ1 Y CHURCH
L 1\\ rf'nCC' Bu s h past or Mall F ol mPr Sr
Supt Sur davS~.:h o ol •nd M u1nlng Wor ship
9 101m SundaV&lt;'V&lt;'IIing: srrvl Cf' 7p m
\ oul h m('( tin~ anJ Blb!C' Stuclv Wf'clncs
tltv 7 p m
U N ITED FAITH C' HURCH Rl 7 on Po
mr1 ov By Pu ss RC'v I) 1v l1 1Wl srm tn S1 .1
p:.r s lnr Mf'l\ In DrakC' S S Supr Sundu v
School 9 30 a m Morning Worship 10 ~0

llam
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH Jocatl'don
Pom('roy Pike County R o ad 25 ncar Fla!
\4 oods Rev Bl ack" ood past 01 Se1 vl u.&gt;s
on Sunday at 10 30 a m and 7 30 p m wl! h
Sunday Scho ol9 30 a m Blbl cStudy Wed
nesday 7 30 p m
FAITH FELLOWSHl P CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST St Rt 338 Antiqu ity Rev
Franklin Dickens pastor Sunday morn
Ina 10 a m Su nday evening 7 30 p m
Thursday e v enlm~ 7 30 p m
STIVERSVlLL E COMMUNlTY BAP
TIST CHURCH Pa stor Robert ByPrs
Sunday SchoollO a m Wo r ~:~ h ip serv lc&lt;' 11
a m Sunday evening servk'e 7 30 p m
Wednesday evening Sl!J vlc£l7 30 p m
MlDDLEPORT l NDEPENDENT HOLJ
NESS CHURCH l nc 75 Pearl St Rev
Ivan Myers ac1ingpastor RogcrManll')
Sr Sund ay School Supt rintendent Sun
day School 9 30 a m Morning worship
10 30 a m ev Pnl n~ worship 7 30 p m
Wednesday t vt ning B!bl e study prayer
and p1atse se1 vlcf' 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRrST APOS
TOLIC - Va nZa ndt and Ward Rd Elder
James Mill er pas t or Sunday School
10 30 a m Worship Service Sunday 7 30
pm B!bleStudv Wednesday 7 30pm
CALVARY PILGRJM CHAPEL Harrl
sunv llle Road Rev Dewey King pastor:
Cllntoo F'aulk Sund ay School Sup! Sun
~aySchool9 30 a m morntngw orshlp 11
a m Sunday evening service 7 30 p m
Prayer Meellng Wednesday 7 30 p m
SYRACUSE F IRST CHURCH OF GOD
non Pentl'COstal Worship serv ice Sunday
10 am Sunday Schoo.! 11 am Evcnln~

il
~

f
...

i

~

:;

a

,::

'

Foote Mineral meeting called
There w1ll be a special meeting of all Foote Mineral Company

Evl.'n ing Worship 7 30 p m
Wednesday
Pra}('r Sl'rvl cc 7 30 p m
FAlTI! BAPTIST CHURCH Rallrwd
St M ason Sunday SchoollO am Morn
lng v. orshlp 11 a m Ev&lt;'nlng serv lrt:' 6 p
m Prayer mret \ng and Bible Slud y Wed
nf'Sda y 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev NyJc
Borden pa sror Cornft11u s B unch supt
Suhday School 9 30 a m !Second and
four th Sunday s v. orshlp sen,ce at2 30 p

786 NORTH SECOND AVE,
MIDDlEPORT, OHIO
worship servtcr 7 00 p m WMn esday
pray€'r meeflnR 7 00 p m
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
JN CHRIST CHURCH Loca1ed In Tex:as
Commun ity off Ct Rt 82 Rf'v Robc1l
Sanders pastor Jeff Holter lay lcadf'r
Ed Roush Sunday School Sup! Sund ay
School 9 30 am morning worship and
chlldrrn s chu rch 10 30 am
£'\E'nlng
prl'achlng s(;'rVIct' tlrst !hi ee Sund ays
7 30 p m Special serv lee fourth Sund av
evening 7 30 p m Wednesday Prayl'J
Meeling Bibl e Study a nd Youth Fello\1.
ship 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Located on 0 J White Ro ad of Jllghwu y
1110 Pat Hen son pastQI Sunday School lO
a m Classes for alillRCS Jun ior Chu rch 11
am
Morning wo1 ~ h l p l I a m Adult
Choir practlre 6 p m Sunda} Young Pco
pies Children s Chu rch and Adult Bible
Study Wednt'Sday at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPE L 5711 Grant
Sr MlddiE,ll ort Affll latt'd with South €'fn
Baptist ConvP.ntlon David Bry an Sr Ml
nlster Sundav School 10 a m M orning
worship 1l am EH•nlng worshi p 7 p m
Wt'dn esday E-vening Blbh st udy ami
prayt'r m(&gt;(&gt;l\ng- 7 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH OFCHRfST St
H1 124andCo Rd r; Ma rkSetVC'r s mlms
IN Sunday School Sup t H 1rn HPn
dricks Sund ay Sdtoul9 30 1m Mo r ni n ~
Worshrp 10 30 u m EvPnln g "'or ship 7 p
m Wednf'SUay worship 7 p m
ST
PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH
Corn• 1 Svcam or(' und Second St s Po
mf'l uv Th&lt;' Rf'\ Willi 1m Mlddl es wart
pa st or Sundav Sehoul 9 45 am Church
ser vlcP 111.1 m
SACRED
HEAR r CH URCH Msgr
Anthnnv G!a nn t~mOI'(' Ph 992 5898 Satut
Sunday
day Evrnlng Mass 7 10 p m
M 1ss R a m and tO a m Confi'Ss lons on r
hfl[t hour bf'fO r e rach Mass CCD cl asS&lt;'s
11 am Sund ay
V ICTORY BAPTI ST ~25 N l nd S1
Mldd lepor 1 l ames E Kf'l&gt;s(l(" past or
Sunda y mormng worship 10 a m EHn
!ng Sf'r vic&lt;' 7 p m W ~Un('!;tiav f'V('n!n~
wors hl p 7 p m Vls l! al !onT hur sd Jvf\ :lOp
m
MORSE CHAPEL CHURCH na, \d
Curfman pas t OJ Sunda v St hnol 10 1 m
"orshlp Sf't v ier 11 am Sund •v night
Worship SPI Vi{ IC 7 30 p m
MldW{'Ck
prayN ser v lCf' Wrdnrsdnv 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIB! E
HOLINESS
CHURCH uf M!ddl t'Port In c 75 PC'arl S1
Rf'v Ivan Myprs past or Rog er Man lf'V
S1 Su nday ~ch o ol Supt Str nd,ty School
9 30 u m Morning Worship 10 30 r rn
Ev• nlng Wo rs hi p 7 30 p m Wl'&lt;ln c-sd av
f'Vj nlng Bible stud} pra.vr1 and prai sf'
SI'I\(Ce 71Qpm

K1ntueltg F1l1d c•leklw"

228 W Mam St, Pomeroy

264 S 2nd, Middleport

An open house will be held at the Meigs Coun ty Farmers
Home Admmlstr a tlo n o!Uce 105 Butternut Ave Pome roy
from 10 am to 12 noon on Tuesday, Dec 15 to demonstrat e the
new computer system
Archie R Stegall FmHA Acting County Supervisor , said tha t
the open house Is a part of the state and nationwide open house to
recognize the completion of the three year automation project ,
one of the largest projects of its kind in the coun1ry FmHA
Installed 95 computer terminals In Ohio and over 6,000
nationally, Stegall said
"We think this computer system is going to be a big help to our
borrowers expeclally family farmers Once we plug basic
numbers Into the machine we can help determine which
management decisions will be the most benefic tal Well be able
to project annual cash flow figures quickly and accurately In
addition o.e can go directly Into the FmHA main frame
computer in Kansas City We expect th1s equipment will also
help us to proct'Ss applications quicker than we have in the
past Stegall commented

Man injured in Rt. 7 accident

........ • 992-2975

GOD'S PRECIOUS GIFT OF HIS LOVE
CAN BE SHARED BY ALL

212 E Mam Street
992 3785 Pomeroy

115 E Memonal Dr

Florcst

352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY OHIO 45769
614 / 992 2644

Pomeroy, OH

Mgr

Ph 9921101

rt.h'

Dt bblr Buck Sunda\

FlDWIR! FOR IVIRY OCUSION

204 Condor St.

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Mill Work
Cab10et Makmg
Syracuse

\lr~ ~-:s (nu !ll\; ~ Oldt ~~

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

CENTER, INC.

I

•

FRANCIS FLORIST •

Pome'Dg Flowe, Shop

The Dally Sentrnei - Page- 7

~---Local news----~ A nightmare.. : Continued from page 1

orne to hlllt~

OR

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohto

employees on Monday, at 6 30 p m m the United Steel Workers
Local No 5171 union hall at Hartford according to union
spokesman Bernard White
All employees are urged to attend The meeting will dtscuss
lhe proposed buyout of the New Ha ve n Plant closed for two
years by American Alloys, In c

Judge appointed
for trial

m

MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Main St Middleport Rev G il bert Cratg
J r P&lt;~ SI 01 Mrs Ervin Baumgardner
Sundav School Sup1 Sunday School9 30 a
m Won; hlp ServlcP 10 45 a m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- JoSC'ph B Hoskins evangE'IIst Sunday
Blbi i?Siudy9a m Worship lOam Sun
fla y CVP nln ~ SCI V ic(' 6 p ffi
Wednf'Sday
ev&lt;'n In~ S( n lc&lt;' 7 p m
PEN1ECOSTAL ASSEMBLY Retclne
Rt 124 Wil liam Hoback pastor Sunday
School 10 am Sund 1y C'Vc&gt;ninf: S('rvlcc 7
p m Wcdn ('$rl ay &lt;'vrn ing sf'rVIC'£'7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m M orning
Worship 10 30 a m Pray('r st'rvi ce altPrn
Jt (l Sundays
THE; CHUR CH OF JESUS CHRIST
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd
ncxl t o Fort Mrigs Park Rutland Robert
Ri char ds pastor ServicE'S at 7 p m on
WPdnesda ys and Sunday s
HARRlSONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP
TER of th&lt;.&gt; Wesleyan Holiness Church
RE&gt;v David Fe&gt;rrcll pasto1 H enrv Eblin
Sunday School Sup! Sund ay School lO a
m Morning Worship 11 a m Evening
sE&gt;r\ICt'7 30 p m Wednesday evening ser

Jackson County Commo n
Pleas Judge W1lllam Martin has
been appointed by the Oh 1o
Supreme Courl to pres1de over
the Meigs County Common Pleas
Court trial of Gary Wolle of
Raci ne replacing Judge Charles
Knight who stepped down Wolfe
is charged .with two coun ts of
intimidation with firearm speci
flcatlons In connectiOn with inc1
dents which allegedly occured
during a Sept 9 marijuana
mvestigatlon by th e Me1gs
County Sheriffs Department and
Ohio Bureau of Crimlnallnvest&gt;
gallon The trial is scheduled for
early February

lnspec uons
Ind eed, severa l )ears ago the
new Silve r Bndge was inspected
to such a degree that 108 small
defeets were noted and 1\l'o of the
four lanes closed for several
months while repairs we r e
made
But It s not the new Silver
Bridge that worries townspeople
It s the Old Blue Bridge across
the Kanawha, which empties Into
the Oh10 just upriver from the
new bridge
Before lhe Silver Bridge fell
you never heard any talk about a
bridge collapse around here but
you sure do now.' says Wamsley
I have a stster m law who Is
vt&gt;ry fearful of another bridge
falling m '
That Old Blue Bndge Is so
shaky that's why I always
assumed 1t was the bridge that
collapsed and was repaired '
says 16-year,qld Roderick 'I
didn 't know what really hap
pened until I researched It for a
school history project l still
don t think a lot of my frie nds
know much about It
Even yet It 's hard for me 10
understand what 11 was like
People dying on the bridge Whal
11 d1d to the commumty I live In
It must have been awful But,
there s no way I can really
1magme what 1t was like
I Ju st can' t thmk of a big
tragedy happenm g here It s like
rt's somethi ng lhat should have

Weather
South Central Ohio
lncreasmg cloud mess today
w1th a chance of afternoon
showers and highs between 55
and 60 Moslly cloudy tonight
with a c hanc e of showers and a
low between 35 and 40 Co ns1dera
ble cloudm ess SalUrday w1th
highs m Ihe upper 40s
1The probability of prec1p1ta
lion is 30 percent today and
tomght and near zero Saturday
Wmds w11l be from the soulnw
est at 10 to 20 mph today
becommg westerly a 1 10 'to 20
mph tomght
Ohio E&gt;&lt;tended Forecast
Sunda) through Tuesday
A chance of snow mainly in the
norther n pari of the state Sunday
and Mo nday and over the enUre
state on Tuesday Highs will be
mostly m the 30s each day
Overnight lows will be m the 20s
Sunda y and Monday morntn~:s
and ranging from the mld teens
to the m1d 20s early Tu ~sday

happened In the movlt&gt;s not
where I live The blggt&gt;sl th lng. J
ha\ e to compare It 10 Is when our
cour1 house burned a lew years
ago But that 's no t really the
same Nobod) died In It
Roderick says she ca n I even
plclure what it was like when a
ferry was used to tra nsport
people and cars across the river
during the two years I! took to
bulld the replacement bridge
Recalls Wamsley The ferry
was a block from my house and l
remember long lines of traffic
tryi ng to gel across '
Roderick just shakes her head
' Today I see lines of cars on
the streel wa1ting to lurn Into
K Mart and the drivers are
getlmg mad I can t imagine
people waiting in lines to gel on a
ferry just to cross the river '
Wamsley also recalls a dark
incident from 20 years ago that
makes Rodenck shudder al the
thought
' Cars "ere parked on both
sides of lhe highway for miles
and lots of people lefl the1r cars to
look at what happened he says
There were a lol of Chnstrnas
presents In those cars and there
were some looters whO grabbed
as many as they could
"Because the bridge collapsed
so close to Chnstrnas lthmk the
memory of It comes back strong
every year a bout thts time,"
adds Wamsley I knowitllngers
in the back of my mmd And It all
comes back to me m an instant
Even after 20 years
It s so eas y lor Wamsiey s
generation And so hard for
Roderick s

I

George Carutht'rs
George Head!&lt;'\ Carutners 65
Beech C1ty formerly of Me1gs
Cou nly died Sa turda. following
a lengthy illness
Mr Car uthers was born In
Meigs Count y on Ocl 22 1922 the
son of Ma ggie Buchanan Car uth
ers of Middleport and the late
Levi Caruthers
He was retired fro m Re public
Steel in Massillon was a' eteran
of World Wa r II and was a
member of the Church of God In
Dunfee
Survl\ mg m addit iO n to his
mother a re his wife Opa l Howell
Caruthers three daughlers and
sons m law, Geo rganna and
Dale S&lt;;hollS Billie and Da vid
Ross and Esta and J ohn Winkler
four sis ters Da1sy Ta ylor of
Middleport Ht&gt;ste r Eblm of

Seeks dh orce
A dl\orce aclion has been filed
m MeJgs Counly Common Pleas
Court by Melody R Ramsburg
Rutland agamst Edward H
Ramsburg, Rutland

Forclosure action
filed in Meigs court
A foreclosure acllon has been
ftled lq Meigs County Common
P leas Court by Central Trust Co
of Southeastern Ohio , Ga llipolis
agamst Ronald M Young, In care
of John Young, Racine, and
Carolvn S You ng Po meroy et
al

1987 MODEL

I

Area deaths

Rutland Alberta HoH man of
Belle,JIIe, and Reba 0 Brian of
SeatrlP fl\e brothers Ja mes
Canton , Robert Middleport
Russell of Sea ttle Richard
Pomero) and Levi tEddlei of
Chesh ire He ts also surv1ved by
11 gr andc hildren flve great
gra nd chlldr!'n and several nie
res and nephe" s
BeSides h1 s father he "'as
preceded m death b~ a son' Le' l,
a brother Ralph , and three
s1sters Pauline Lillia n and
Edna
Sen 1ces were held at 2 p m
Tuesday at the Lancer Boone
Funeral Ho me m Beech C1ty

Stocks
Dally stock pr1ces
(As oliO 30 a m )
Br)ce and MIU'k Sm1tb
ol Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewl
Am Electric Power
AT&amp;T
Ashland 0 11
Bob Evans
Char mmg Shoppes
C1ty Hoidm g Co
Federal Mogul
Goodyear T&amp;R
Heck s Inc
Kt&gt;y Centuuon
Lands End
LtmJted Inc
Multimedia Inc
Rax Restaurants
Robbins &amp; Ml ers
Shoney's Inc
Wendy s ln tl
Worthington Ind

25'!8
2734
551,
141&lt;,
10)',

34
30~

54Y,

1'h

35'*
16'\1
17~.

!14

.... ......3

6'!4

......... 21 )1,
4')8

15%

DELTA 88

\I Cf' 730pm
ST!VERSVILl E WORD OF FAlTH
pastm Sunday services
9 ID a m and 7 p m Mldwf'ck srrvl ce
" 30 p m Thu1 sdav
MlDDLEPORT PENTF.COSTAL Th&gt;rd
\w' Rev Clurk B 1krr pastor Carl No!
Ingh am ~unda~ School Su p! Sunday
Sch ool 10 1 m wn h c l a s~ E&gt;s for all ages
Evf'n ln~ S£'1 v!c('S ar tip m Vi ('dn esday B!
bl f' ll \ud v a1 7 30 p m Youth S€'rV ]C('S Frl
da \ '-' ' 7 :m p m
E CCl ESI A FElLOW SHIP 128 Mill Sl
Mlddlrporl 81 olh('r Chuck M cPh€'r son
pa s1ur Sunday St hool 10 a m Sunday
l'V&lt;'n l n ~ sNvlc&lt;'s at 7 p rn and WednC6da ;v
srn Ices at 7 p m
AN1 IQUI I Y BAPTIST Ken n e1 h Smith
pa s! or Sunda} School 9 30 am chu rch
S£'nicC'7 :l(J p m youth fe llowshlp6 30p
Jl1 Blbl e sludy Thursllay 7 Wpm
F U LL f:OSP&gt;"L LJGHTHOUSE J3045
Hiland Rml{i Pom NOV Tom KC&gt;IIy pas
101 lJ1n nvL umbert S S Supt Sunday
morn I n ~ ~f'r vlcC' ut lOam Sunday &lt;-ven
mg o; nr vkC' 7 111 p m Tuesda y and Thurs
d I V SC'n lri'S ut 7 30 p m
NE W HAVEN CHURCH OF TH E NA
ZARENE R(lv (~lrndon St r oud pastor
Sund 1y School 9 IDa m \'\oorshlpset vic£'
10 Jfl ~ m Y!,u\h s rnlct'&gt; Su udav 6 15 p
m Sunda\ !'V&lt;'nln~ SNVIC( 7 00 p m Wed
nf'Sd c•Y P1a y£' r M ecllng and Bibl e St udy
Hu1y Holl f'r

OOpm

NEASE SET1 LEMENT CHURCH Sun
da y afl crn oon scr ' kes at 2 30 Thursday

117 3()
F IRSr JJAP I JST CHU RCH Mason W

P\lnlnjZ S£'1\ ICf'S

Va Past or Bill Mu1phy Su ndaySch ool 10
1 m
Sunday f'Vt n nK 7 3(J p m PrayC'r
m('('tinJ! and Bthl( NIUI!y W&lt;'dnesday 7 30
p m E:w 1von r Wf'i(Om ('
RU fLA ND FREE WILL BAPTI ST Sa
!em St Rn Paul Tuylor pas1 or Sunday
S(hool to a m Sunda y E'Vf'n i n~7 OOp m
Wednt&gt;sday 1vc nl nR p r a ~er mretlng 7 00
pm
SOUTH BETH El Nl W 1 ESTAMENT
CHU HCII Sil v&lt;'r Ridg£&gt; Duanl' Syden
~ r Iick er p J ~t or Sunday School 9 am
Wor ship SNVi{'(' lO a m Sundayevcnlnll"
Sf'rvlcr 7 00 p m Wednt:'Sday night Bibl €'
study 7 00 p m

Woe t o them tha t are at case ln Zlon an d 11 u st In the mountain of
Samaria
Ye tha t put far away thp evil day and cause the seat of v lo
lcnce to come near that lie upon beds of Ivory and st ret ch themselves
u pon their cou ch es and eat the lambs ou t of I he f lock and thE? calves out
of thf' m i dst of the stall that c hant to the sound o f 1he v iol and'1 nvcnt t o
themsel vs instruments of mu sic li ke David th at tlr mk wln t;o in bowl s
and anoint themsleves wHh thE' c hi ef oi ntmrnt s but they iHC' not
grieved f or the affliction of Joseph ' -Amos 6 ]a '6
What some p eople considered the goocll1fe m I srael In thf.' Plghth
century B C Is similar to what many cal l the good !tfr in out tim(' The}
will show what they think the good life is by t h('l r a ct!vttles durin g th{;'
n ext three weeks Th e coming of Chr 1st In to t h~ v. o r !d wtl 1 tx' celebr ated
by eatin g too much by mu ch Indulgence In LJli. oho llc bev cra~es by
many parties andbyltttle devotlon Thatk!nd of c:c l l bl a ttor.wlllle ave
the participant s worse t han before spi r itua l ly and ph ysical ly and s!a tn
out streets a nd hig hw ays wit h blood
Th e perversion of the Chr lstm as 5(:'8SOn r csu /1 s no ! onl y in th e hal m
a l ready m entioned T here Is a lso the neglect of lhl' nc('d y by the sel f I n
dulgent th ey are not grieved for the afflict ion of Josep h Mllllonsar£'
hungi"y In ou r world but money I hat could be used to feed them will b&lt;'
consum ed by gluttony Millions are Il l housed and ill clot hed but monpy
that could provide shelter and blankets a nd clot hes will be mon than
wasted on st ro ng d r ink
By closing their minds a nd their heart s to thf sufferi n g of thP op
pressed many may try t o put far away the ev il da\
but (.)C tu ally lhC'y
cause the seat of v iolen ce to come n ear Hd\\ c&lt;:~n w e a ccount forth
continued slaught er of the unborn by le~ l abo1 tion} Why has thi s hoi~
caust of m!Uions of the Innocent con ti nued foJ so long? I gnorance con
cern ln g abor tion and the reality of the humanity of un bo 1n babies Is or
course pa1 t of the reason But there is al so th C' an/tude of not cat In
abou t the su ffering of others a willingness th at habtcs be klllC'd w h&lt;'~
they are Inconvenient Thus th e so cal led right of priva cy Is eXall cd
above even t.l'leo right t o life
T heJ e must be a calling Into accou nt for this as sureI) a s ther{' Is a
rtg hlcou sandh ol yGod T hesameGodwhoscworcl thl' holy Scrr tu:c
co ndemns the slaughter o f boy babies of Bethlrlhcm by H erodph as a
co ntroversy with those who commit approve condonr or tolerate the
slau ghte1 of thP Innocent by abortio n or ot her m£'an s In the tw(ntlcth
cenfUI)' as well as the first centu ry It was wrong In ll erod s time as St
Matthew well knew whe n he wrote h is Gospel It Is wrong now
The same mind set which looks away I n r egard t o aborflpn al~o wiJI
turn away fr om responsibly d eal ing with the evil of p or nography and Us
effect In the sexua f abu se of children and others The se al so ar e not

grieved for the affliction of Joseph

The message of Ad~ent and Ch r istmas lncludl:'s a c all to r c (In
lance. Cease t o do evil Learn to do well Repent and believe 1he ~o!S
pel of Him \\h o cam e to purify a people t o b e His ver v ow n

-

- "-~

'
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports slx
ca lls Thursday Racine at 4 13
a m to Cherry St for Ronald
Hart 10 Velerans Memorial Hos
pita!, Pomeroy at 9 56 a m to
Americare.Pomeroy Nursi ng
Center for Estollla Cassell Sy ra
cuse fini shed th e transporl to
mechanical difficulties with the
Pomeroy unit, Sy racu se at 1 36
p m to Route 7 for John Holsln
ger to Veterans Memorial Hospi
tal, Rutland at 2 37 p m to Meigs
' Mine No 2 for Woodrow Frazier
to 0 Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Middleport at 6 23 p m assisted
Mason EMS In transporting
George Rowley to Pleasant Val
ley Hospital Rutland Fire De
partment a t 11 23 p m to the
Howard German residence on
• Depot St

__,_

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_ _ ,______ &gt;-

~ -----~~---------·~----------------·------------------------~------------------------~--------------~-----~-

�•

.

The Daily Sentinel

.

.

By The Bend

Page-S

...

UMW conducts Christmas party
The annual Christmas dinner
party of ·· the Asbury Untied
Methodist Women was held recently at the home of Beulah
Ward. Members brought holiday·"
foods to be served with the
chicken prepared by Mrs. Ward.
Mary Lisle had the blessing
after which a short Christmas
program was given by Helen
Teaford, Kathleen Fryar assist Ing. "The Word Made Flesh" was
the theme. The Lord's Prayer
was given In unison and Helen
Teaford had a !~Iter and pictures

Secret pals were revealed and
of the Santees. ·missionaries in
Brazil . Forty-one shutin visits new names drawn . There was a
were reported. Officers' reports gift exchange and toys for the
were given and the Christmas hospital were displayed. Mary
offering was taken. Ann Sauvage ' Cu ndiff closed the meeting with a
reported that the yearly pledge meditation and prayer. Fruit
had been met and she read a baskets were taken at Thanksletter from Sine-Cera's manag- giving to Nora Houdashelt and
ers, Rob and Tammie Barber. Mrs. Hlildore, it was reported.
Attending were April Harmon,
Gifts are to be brought for the
Helen Teaford, Mary Cundiff,
residents there. ·
It was suggested that members Ann Sauvage, Irene Parker,
Kathleen Fryar and Tammy,
sent birthday cards to Anna
Hilldore who will observe her Marcia Karr, Marie Houdashelt,
Ruth Shain, Harriet Sinclair,
88th birthday Sunday.
Mary Lisle, and Beulah Ward.

home was Mrs. Thelma Giles.
Peggy Murphy spent Monday
eve ning with Mrs . Joseph Evans,
Tyson and Jonathan.
Holiday guests of Robert Russell were Mr. and Mrs. Tom
Summerfield, Cr ystal and
Wendy. Mr . and Mrs. Brian
Reeder, Medina. Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Russell , Mr. a nd Mr.
Ronald Russell, Hacine, Mandy
a nd Michael, Mr. and Mrs. Steve
Haggy, Stephanie and Brad.
Mrs. Iva Johnson , Mr. and
Mrs .. Jerry Hqlley, Calvi n Lee
and Mr. and Mr. Terry Johnson
were Thanksgiving Day visrtGrs
of Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sarver,

''•.
•
...

Richland, Ind., Mr . and Mrs.
Larry BaiT, Michelle and Mrs.
Howard Thoma, Jr. , Becky and
Curtiss, spent Thanksgiving with
Mr. and Ms. Howard Thoma .
Mr. and Mrs. Doyle Knapp,
Langsville, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin
Knapp, Michelle and Amy , and
Charles Knapp were Sunday
dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Charley Smith.
Spending Thanksgiving with
Mrs . Gladys Tuckerman were
Mrs . Dorothy Reeves and Bryan,
Mrs. Paul Darnell, Jeff and
Me lissa, Mr. apd Mrs. Eugene
Haning and· Ronald, Mr. and
Mrs. Leslie Frank, Sarah Beth,
Matthew, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
E lam and Carolyn.

SOUTHERN CHOIR CONCERT SUNDAY- II
you're in the mood lor an afternoon of holiday fun
then make plans to attend Sunday's combined
band-choir-show choir concert at Southern High
School. A highlight ol the concert will be the
vaudeville style revue "Santa's Frosty FoUies,"
featuring many well-known Chrtstmas-time char·
acters including, Suzy Snowflake (Mayia Yoa·
cham), Rudolph"the Red-Nosed Reindeer (Shelly

Winebrenner) , Frosty himself (Carol Fisher},
and of coul'!!e, Santa Claus (Herb Rose). The
choirs and band are under the direction of
Roberta Maidens, assisted by John VanReeth, .
June Buchanan' and David Deem. The concert
begins at 2 p.m. and freewill donations WilJ. be
accepted. Art work by the districts' students of
Debbie Hill will also be on display.

Bridal shower given for local woman
was "Best Wishes, 'Jim and Moore, April Harmon, Debra
Milisa ." The ca ke, flanked by r~d Grueser and Jessica , Sharon !hie
and pink candles, was served and Kimberly. Martha Moore.
Vickie Morrow. Beth Ewing;
with punch, nuts and mints .
Games were played and door Joyce Bun ch, Mary Donna Daprizes awarded. The winners vis, Eileen Clark, and Kandy
were Irene ParkeF-, Kim Ewing,
Burch.
Others presenting gifts . were
Harriett Sinclair, Gloria Kloes,
Karr, Ruth Crouch,
Marcia
Stefanle Arnott and Crystal Harmon. Others attending were Thelma Hawl ey, Anna Brown,
Wanda Rizer, mother of Dr. . Elma Loucks , Marie and Nora
Rizer, Mary Cundiff, Janice Houda shelt. Judy Pape, Hilda
Lisle, , Marjorie Manuel , Betty Weaver, Rose Ann Jenkins,
Ash , l:&gt;onna Smith, Mary Bowen,
Emma Jean Congo, Vera Van
Helen Teaford, Ruth Shain, Ber· Meter, Garnet Roush, Becky'
nice Winebrenner, Lela Ervin,
Baer, "E mma Jane McClintock,
Peggy and Jo Crane. Elma Anne Wiles , Sue Murphy, Linda'
Weese. Ann Sauvage, Trina
Ferrell, Ca rl Weese, Jeannie
Davis, Lou Ferrell, Id a Diehl, Alle n.
Doris Ewing, Barbara Law rence. Jennifer and Jason, Hope

Star junior grange meet~
"

ANTIQUE MEDICAL DISPLAY - For the,rest
of December the antique medical equipent, books,
medications, and related items will be on display
. at Veterans Memorial Hospital. He re Pamela

Priddy , left, and Joan Ward, right, look over the
many things on exhibit. Serving as hosts lor the
exhibit are members ol the Women's Auxiliary
with Mary Dimond being pictured center here.

•
1
h
·
•
1
·:Exhibit on dlsp ay at Osptla
Antique medica l equipment.
.books; medicat ions, and related
It ems are being featured this
month at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
~ he extensive display , curated
by the French Art Colony and
featuring medical artifacts from
1794 onward, may be viewed
anyday from 9 to 4 p.m. Visitors
will be taken to "the display area
by members of the Wome n's
Auxiliary.
Whle the exhibit features items
from Galli a, Mason and Meigs
Cunt.ies. it is releva nt to a muc h
broader area and represen ts
medicine "the way it was. "
Holzer Medical Center and the
School of Nursing have served as
training centers for many of the
personnel who work in regional
hospitals, tncrudlng Veterans
Memorial.
The collection of an ti que med i. cations will bring a smile to
many whPn they see "Li ttle
Early Risers", passio n flower.
red clover blossom , paraldelhyde, epsom sa lts, and many
qtht'r products of the past.
. Antique medical books in the

TOPS names
queen
Janet Jeffers was crowned M;.
Christmastime at the recent
Christmas party of TOPS 570
held at the Coonhunters Build lng
on the Rock Springs
Fa i rgrou rids .
Gifts w~re presented to Ms .
Jeffers. For the program there
was a duet of "Noel", a skit,
"Sa nta Slim s Down lor Christ·
mas " by Nancy Giilisple and her
daughters, Penny and Robin .
Jane Lavender was the bes t
loser , Penny Gills pie the best
teen loser, and Julia Hysell won
the fruit basket. Secret pals were
revealed with a gift exchange
and new names were drawn for
next year.
Members were reminded that
the new s tarting time for the
winter months has been cha nged
to 5 to 6 p,.m . for · welghins, with
the meeting to begin at 6 p.m.

co ll ect ion date all thb way from
1

•

1808 and some of th1e titles and
sub-titles are both desc riptive
and amusing. For example there
is a 1896 book titled "the Glory of
Women" or "Love. Marriage and
Maternity", and a nother from
1888 titled 'Common Sense Medi cal Adviser in P lain E ngli sh", or
ProbablySimplified.
one of "the most
" Medicine
interesting additons to the colieclion are the payment log books of
Dr. Jesse Bennett loaned by Dr.
John Grubb of Point Pleasa nt .
One of the most famous, who
along with his family. are noted
several times, was Samuel Cleme ns (Mark Twairi.l who paid his
bill with tea . fla x and wheat. Dr.
Bennett is credi ted with having
done the !irst Cesarean section
and the first oophorec tomy in the
Americas In 1794 . The story Is
told in the display.
Many In teresting items have
been re trieved from the basement of th ~ old Gillingham Drug
Store in Gaillpolis and have been
loa ned by Ventures IV .. Inc.
These include a stack 6f old
prescriptions wrltt~n by local
physicians In the twenties .
The exhibit wnich will re ma in
at Vetera ns until Dec. 31 Is

sponsored by the Gallia County
Medical Society with co-sponsors
being Holzer Clinic. HolzerMedica l Center, and the Thaler
Orthopaedic Clinic, with support
of the Ohio Arts Council. Travel
a nd exhibition are through the
courtesy of the French Art
Colony In Gallipolis.

Twelve members were present
when Star Junior Grange met
with Master Denise Shenefield
presid ing.
The group decided to deliver
fruit baskets and to Christfmas
carol area shutins . The annual Christmas dinner
and party was set for Dec. 19,
6:30p.m. at the firehouse In
Salem Center. There will be a $3
gift exchange and the public Is
invited.
Bryan Colwell, lecturer , led
the group In the singing of carols
and each member named one
presentthey would like to receive
for Christmas . A sympathy
cared was signed by members
and sent to Mendal Jordan was a
thday card was given Patty

Star. master of Star Grange.
Following the business m eeting,
members made refri gerator
magnets and held a potluck
dinner.
Anyone between the ages of
five and 13 who would like to join
the Star Junior Grange should
call Linda Montgomery at 6694245 for details.

Hubbards Greenhouse
'VOW OPF.N FOR THE
0/R/.'.;'f'MAS SF.ASON
Poinsettias
Hanging Baskets
Christmas Cactus.
House Plants
live 8t Cut Christmas Trees
Candie Arrangements
Grave Blankets
Monument Sprays

OPEN DAILY 9 -5
SUNDAY 1· 5
SYRACUSE
992-5776

Sa' ~e on ·#-- 2p~~
SINGER Machi. nes
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~

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20°/o OFF
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99
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OPEN SUNDAYS THRU CHRISTMAS 12-S

APPROVED DEAlER

JANE JEFFERS

Planned parenthood
POMEROY - j"lanned Parenthood of Southeast Ohio patient
services offices will close Dec. 23
· at 5 p.m. In observance of the
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport holidays.· Offices will reopen on
Evangeline Chapter Order of Jan. 4 at 8:30 a .m .
Eastern Star will have open
lnstaiiatiori of officers on Friday Sorority meeting •
at 7:30 p.m. Members are asked
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
to bring two covered dishes. Epsilon Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi
Meat, pie and cake will be Sorority, wll meet at the home of
furnished .
Phyllis Hackett, sponsor, at 6:30
p.m . on Tuesday for a Christmas
party. Members are reminded to
POMEROY Round and
take a gift as well as an ornament
square dancing will be ;featured
for the exchange.
Friday night from 8 to 11 p.m. at
the Senior Citizens Center In
Pomeroy. Music by Larry Hub- Eagles meeting
POMEROY
Fraternal
.bard and True Country Band.
Order of the Eagles Ladles
Admission $1:50. Bring snacks.
Auxiliary 2171 will met Tuesday
at 7 p.m at the hall. There will be
SATURDAY
HOBSON - There will be a election of a vice president.
hymn sing on Saturday nigl\t Members are reminded to take
starting at 7 p.m . at the Hobson Items for the Christmas baskets.
Church of Christ In Christian
Orange trustees
Union. Everyone welcome.
ORANGE TWP
Orange
Township
Trustees
will
meet
In
POMEROY - The Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance special session Monday , 7 p.m .,
Club will have a dance at the to conduct unfinished business
Senior Citizens Center Saturday a~d meet with a representative
from 8 to 11 p,m . All western of H&amp;H Cable Television Comsquare dancers are invited to pany . The meeting w!t"i be held at
attend. Kent Hail of Marietta will the home of Dorothy Calaway ,
clerk.
be the caller.

THE FABRIC SHOP
992-2284

POMEROY

Sign Up for. Merchants Association's
U,OOO Give-Away.

SUNDAY
POMEROY - Annual open
house of the Meigs Museum will
be held this weekend, 1 to 4: 30
p.m. each day . Theme Is a
Victorian Christmas.
Concert
RACINE -

Southern High

Dance program
RACINE - Barbara' s School
of Dance, Syracuse, will present
a Christmas recital this Sunday,
starting at 4:30p.m., at Southern
Junior High School in Racine. A
variety of tap and novelty
numbers will be featured. The
public Is welcome to attend.

Eastern .bOard
.
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Local
Board of Education \\'111 meei In
special session Monday, 7 p.m. at ·
the high school.
Sororlly
POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Ch'apter of Beta ·Sigma Phi

Mr. and Mrs.- non Cotterill
spent Thanksgiving with their
daughter Linda Finley and famIly, Columbus, Ohio.
Mr. and Mrs . Allan Gibson and
sans, Reynoldsburg, were Sunday guests , of his mother, Mrs ,
Virginia Gibson.
Mr. and Mrs. Steven Stanley,
Athens, were Thanksgiving
dinner guests of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. David Napper and
Sunday dinner guests of his
parents, Mr . and Mrs. Duane
Stanley.
Mrs. Martina Lowe and Mru;.
Ne111e Lowe, Jeremy and Lisa,
spent Thanksgiving at the home
of Roy Lowe and family ,
Columbus.
John and Katherine Domlgan,
children Rebecca and Tyrel, of
Virginia vis tied her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Raymond Cotterill over

Bloodmoblle
The Red Cross Bloodmobile
will be at the Senior Citizens
Center In Pomeroy on Wednesday from 1 to 5: 30 p.m. Blood Is
urgently needed.

---

· COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Despite what you may believe
from watching television commercials featuring high-tech
toys, an Ohio State University
psychology professor says preschool children will be just as
happy receiving a set of wooden
blocks or some empty boxes.
Charles Wenar said that some
of the best educational toys may
be · simple, .Inexpensive items
that allow children to use their
imaginations and explore the
world around them.
• ·•Parents shouldn't get tricked
Into believing that if they don't
buy the latest, most expensive
educational toys, their children
somehow be deprived," he
said.
Toys that are marketed as
educational may be either too
~ompllcated for small children
or so sophistic a tee! that they take
away the Imaginative aspects of
play, according to Wenar.
Much better are simple, dura ble toys that can have a variety of
uses in play . Although this Is
particularly true for preschool·
ers, it also applies to older
children.
They may beg for the latest
toys they see adver!lsed on
television, but parents shouldn't
be easily persuaded.
"Children may be carried
away by " the dazzle of an

expensive new toy, and a week
later they'll be bored and won't
play with It again," he said.
"Children's interests change
rapidly, so If parents· anticipate
they'll get angry at a child for
wasting their money, it's better
not to buy the toy. Parents are at
such a disadvantage when they
shop for toys. The toy Industry is
too often just a commercial
venture that Is more concerned
with what will sell than with the
needs of children."
Parents should choos.e care·
fully when selecting toys for
children of any age.
In children up to age 3, what
parents think of as play Is really
just exploration, he explained.
Infants are fascinated by sights,
sounds and motion.
An Ideal toy Is a mobile that
hangs above a crib, particularly
one that makes noise. Pull-up
toys that assist In motor development make excellent Christmas
gl!ts too.
The most indispensable toys
for older preschoolers are a set of
unvarnished blocks of varying
sizes and some empty- boxes.
Children will get years of use out
of these and can use them In a
variety of different , play situations, according to Wenar.
Simple household Items like
po(s and pans, wooden spoons
and magazines with colorful

'

INGELS Furniture &amp; Jewelry
106 North S_econd Avt.
Middleport, Ohio 45760
1614) 992-2635 -Toll Fret 800-426-5581

"FREE" CHRISTMAS LAY-AWAY

For compulsive shoppers the
Christmas season Cf!n be more
harrowing than jolly .
' Evan Steffens, who conducted
what she says Is apparently the
first formal research on addle·
live shOpping, says compulsive
buyers can go Into a Christmas
5 pending spree that drives them
Into debt and takes a heavy toll on
their peace of mind .
· Steffens, a registered nurse
and consulting therapist, presented results of a survey of 25
compulsive shoppers this fail at
the Seventh Annual Clinical
Nursing Research Symposium In
Dayton .
The study found addicted
shoppers frequently lie about
purchases, go on shopping binges
while under stress and spend
Impulsively . .
Compulsive spenders report
they get their Christmas shopping done early, then decide their
gifts are not gpod enough and go
buy new presents wlthoutreturn lng the first purchases, Steffens
said.
"COI!le February or March,

when the bills really start hitting,
most of them find themselve In a
really nasty situation," she said.
That might sound no different
that what many consumers experience at Christmas when Its
hard to put the brakes on
shopping.
But Steffens said the compulslve shopper carries buying to

All of the past matrons and
pas t patrons, those having grand
appointments or former ones ,
and all honored masons were
presented and Invited to the east
for a welcome. Also recognized
was Ruby Diehl , a 60 year
member. Announcements in cluded a school of Instruction to
be held at the Middlepo rt Ma sonic Temple on Feb. 3. lt was
also announced that th e pa st
matrons club will meet Dec . 15 a t
the Western Sizzlin' Steak House

In Athens.
Following the meeting the
worthy matron held a short
practice session of the rlualistic
work. Harold Rice gave the
blessing before the group entered
the dining area where they we re
served refreshments by Mr. and
Mrs. Doug Bishop, Mr . and Mrs.
Glen Kennedy, and Miss Beverly
Bishop. A get well card wa s
signed for Pauline Atkins who
.has a broken wrist.

Harrisonville happenings _ __

School program
RACINE - Rac,lne Elementary School will present a Christmas program on Thursday at 7
p.m. at the Racine First Baptist
· Church. Everyone Is welcome to
attend .

,,

Photo, lund raiser
SALISBURY - Salisbury Ele·
mentary students may pick up
their pictures and fund raiser gift
Items at the school on Monday
from 6:30 to 8 p.m . If you are
unable to pick up the items on
Monday you may pick them up at
the school any day until 2. Pleas
call the school at 992-3404 If you
have any questions. All back·
orders have arrived.

the Thanksgiving holiday. The
previous week, their son Law rence, of Ft. Hood , Texas, visited
them, his wife was unabl e to
accompany him due to the recent

bir th of their seconU child.
Mr. and Mrs. John Williams
has ~ s guests, her brother ,
Char les and a friend of
Columbus.

Kimes inducted into order
Pershing Rifles Is an honorary
military fraternity founded · In
1894 by John J. Pershing, an
instructor of military science at
the University of Nebraska.
Pershing Rifles was originally
started as a drill team and later
became an honorary fraternity.

Cadet Kimes Is a 1983 graduate
of Southern High School In
Racine and is the son of Command Sergeant Major Thomas
M. Kimes and Treva Kimes ,
Racine. He Is a freshman majoring in educ a lion at Rio Grande
College and Community College.

..--------..;..----L----------·----,.----------

The Pershing Rifles Co. A-1
was established at Rio Grange
College during the fall quarter In
1984 and has grown to Its present
membership of 40.

pictures make excellent toys for
toddlers.
"These are educational because they help children find out
about the everyday world around
them," he said. "Toddlers are
exploring their' environment."
Before chlldren reach school
age, they begin to act out roles
during pilly, Wenar said. They
will " play house" or pretend they
are storekeepers or astronauts.
Household Items and costumes
that help children play -act these
roles are helpful.
Board games make excellent
gifts because they help teach
children to play together and
follow rules, he said.
·
When parents choose Christ·
mas gifts for children of any age,
they should consider why they
are buying a particular Item .
"Parents should know whether
they are buying a toy out of
competitiveness or out of genuine 'concern for the child,"
Wenar -said. "You shouldn't buy
toys just to keep up with the
people next door."
· A child will not suffer psychologically or intellectually If he or
she doesn't get the most popular
and expensive toys, or the ones
that the neighbor kids got.
"Parents should be able to say
'No.' Children will pick up the
real educational aspects of play
without expensive toys."

extremes because of low selfesteem. They also tend to "speciallze" In what they buy .
Consider:
,
-A 49-year-old female accountant from Dayton who bought
pairs of shoes by the half dozen,
tossed the boxes In a dumpster
and smuggled the shoes Into the
house in her briefcase.

'
provides many
and campus

The group
community
services.

Cadet Private Ken Kimes ot
Racine was inducted Into the
Pershing Rifles Co.
.
A-1 at Rio Grande College and
Community College.

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With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung by the fire I
I
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
••
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the blessings we've shared ~
this past year. For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many . I
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always treasure. ~
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!
i
I

Wish all your customers and friends
a ·very Merry Christmas in our
Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.

ADVERTISING
ASK FOR BRIAN OR DAVE
'
J

•

A Christmas program and gifi
exchange were features of the
recent meeting of the Harrisonville Chapter 255, Order of the
Eastern Star ,1\eid at the Masonic
Temple.
The program consisted of
poems of a sacred nature giving
honor to the birthday of the
Christ child. Bernice Hoffman ,
worthy matron; read two poems
which her students had composed at a time when she was
teaching school.

Forget expensive toys: psychologist

By United P.ress International

SINGER SEW WARE CARTRIDGES

SINGER

Shoot
POMEROY - The Ken Amsbary Chapter of the Izaak Walton
League Is sponsoring muzzleloading shoots on Sundays st~rt ­
ing Dec. 13 and continuing
through Jan. 3. Ail shoots,
consisting of free hand and bench
rest events at various distances,
begin at 1 p.m. Open sites and
scopes will not be shot In the
same category. Various prizes of
meats and money will be
awarded.

Christmas. . program held at OES

Compulsive behavior goads shoppers

SUNDAY ONlY SPECIAlS -

#6230

LONG BOTTOM - Public
square dance, 8 to 11 p.m . Friday
at t he Long Bottom Community
Building.

will

r••··-~·-····-~·-········~~
X
·

Model #3102

School Choir anq Band will Sorority will have a Christmas
present a combined concert on dinner and gift exchange on
Sunday at 2 p.m . at the school. Tuesday, 7 p.m.. at the home of
Student art projects will also be . Annie Chapman. Members are to
on display. The public Is welcome bring gifts wrapped In white
paper with red bows.
"'
to atten\1 . .

..

Dr. Milisa Rizer, bride-elect of
Maj . James D. Allshouse, was
honored with a bridal shower
Monday night at the Asbury
Unlted Methodist Church social
room.
Beulah Ward and Mary Lisle
hosted the shower whlcl) fea tured a gift table beneath an
umbrella edged with red roses
from which fell streamers in red
and pink. A bride Barbie doll
belonging to Dr. Ri zer was
Included and red and pink
streamers and roses surrounding
the table completed the decor.
Refreshments were served
from a table with a red fringed
overlay cloth with white bells.
Inscription on the cake decorated
with red roses and white bells

,,

FRIDAY
POMEROY - The Willing
workers Class of Enterprise
United Methodist Church will
meet Friday, 7: 30 p.m ., at the
hOme of Marjorie Bowen.

MIDDLEPORT- Return Jonathan Meigs.Chapter , Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday at 1 p.m. at Heath
United Methodist Church, Mid:
dleport. Dr . Marjorie Malone
will have a program, Memories
In Music. Members are reminded
to take gifts for the veterans at
the Chiilicothe V.A. Hospital.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Nan
Moore, Mrs . Arthur -Skinner,
Mrs. Larry Wiley, Mrs. Roscoe
Wise, and Mrs. Daniel Thomas .

Wolfe Pen happenings_ __
Thanksgiving day guests of
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Murphy were
Robert Murphy, Robbie, -Ginny,
Chad, Mr, and Mrs. John Downs,
Adam, Eric and Dickie, Mr. and
Mrs . John Murphy and Chris,
Mr . and Mrs. Joseph Evans,
Tyson and Jonathan, . Peggy
Murphy and Mr. and Mrs . Greg
.Davis, Ashli, Joshua and Mirinda
)3eth.
The John Downs family who
xes ide in Trimble were overnight
• Wednesday guests of Mrs. John
Murphy and Peggy with Mrs.
Murphy and Peggy •visiting Mr.
. and Mrs. Howard Thma and Mr.
'.and Mrs Frank Saver on Friday.
,Another guest at the Murphy

c;ommunity calendar

Friday. December 11, 1987

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, OhiO

Friday, December 11, 1987

992-2156
THE DAILY SENTINEL
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�December 11 1987

Ohto

Concert violinst Heifetz dead

'-.==========iii';!=~~~~~~~~~~
balls! You and I m ight as well 1
take our fiddles and break them
across our knees
It was mainly through Kreisler
and Zlmballsl that Carnegie Ha ll
ln New York was packed the
night of Heifetz American debut
Home Grown
Oct 27 1917 In what critics
hailed as one of the most
Scotch and
dram atic mus c successes of the
Whtte Pme
century
WEBER FARM
One critic wrote
He rose
Rutland, Ohro
above his mstr ument and the
music written for It
Others
742-2143
called him a modern mtracle
a nd a perfect vlohnlst
Elman attending the concert
HOUSE FOR RENT
with eminent ptanls l Leopold
107 LOCUST ST
Godowsky leaned over to Go
dowsky while mopping hi s brow
POMEROY-985 3561
and said It s rather warm In
FIRE
KEN'S APPliANCE
her e isn t It?
Basham Buddrng
SERVICE
Not Godowsky replied fo r
EVERY
pianists
985-3561
Heifetz s l fe centered around
SAT. NIGHT
his music although he was a n
•Washers •0 shwashers
enthusiastic tennis player sa tlor
6:30P.M.
•Ranges •Refr gerators
and gardener and he never
Fo&lt;lory (hoke
•Dryers •Freezers
babied the hands that m ade him
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
WE SEll USED APPliANCES
famous
1 hey were never
10 7 tfn
45
Insured

His lather Ruvin a profes
s tonal violinist recognized his
so n s talent and he was e nrolled
at St Petersburg Conservatory
n Russia when he was 8 He
s tudied there under Leopold
Auer tea, her of famed violinists
Mischa Elman and.Eiram Zim
balls! fat her of theo Hollywood
ac tor
His careet was never dts
cussed at home where tt was
me rely expected that each con
cert would surpass the last He
never knew what was said about
h m In the press and thus had
little idea of the sertsatlon he had
become during his prodigy
years
His youth was dom inated by
study and practice - six hours
and more each day Heifetz
credtted that study for the
technique wh ch ca me as a
second nature and later enabled
htm to perform with very little
practtce
Vlohn master Fritz Kretsler
heard an early Heifetz concert In
Berlin and told his friend Zllh

LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Ja
scha Heifetz who "as -ecog
nized as one of the wor ld s
foremos vlolintsts at age 16 and
rna ntamed his position as a
maste bf the ins trume nt for
more than half a century died
tare Thu rsd ay a spokesm a n said
today He was 86
Heifetz died at ll 20 p m a t
Cedars Sma Medical Ce nter
"here he had been hospitalized
smce fall ng at his home m the
Hull) wood Hills Oct /6 hasp tal
spokesman Ron Wtse sa td
The cause of his deat h was
complicatio ns arising from the
fall and subsequent neuro
surgery
W se said Offlclals
earl er said Heifetz suffered
from a malignant brain tu mor
Born Feb 2 1901 n Vtlna
Ll thuan a then a province of the
Russia n Emptre Helfetz started
lessons when he was 3 and made
his I rsl publ c appearance when
he "as 7 The Heifetz family fled
to the Untted Sta tes alter the
outbrea k of the Russian
revolution

Business Services
FOR SALE
CHRISTMAS
TREES

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
DEPT.

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

-·.....
·R--•
...--. .. ·-- ..·-___
-.. .........
__ --. ...--·.... . . .--·_____
..... _
__
. -·---.....
---..-·=.tiE:.
.---·-·
..
.-- ·-·--. .••

•WOflot

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,...

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.-

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........ 11&lt;H

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....
_,_

MAKE OFFER

HERE s a substan a home
n good co nd ton w th a
great v ew of the rver
Owne wants a sale NOW
ASKING $23 900 00
RUTlAND - N ce ranch
style hom e wth cen al ar
ga age ow ul t es f oot
and ea po ch 3 bed ooms
age vng room b g eve
lot REDUCED $38 500 00
PRICE REDUCED - Rea y
nce tan ch wth a go geous
kitchen huge fam y room b g
vng oomw/ 1 eplace pusa
tra ler hookup 20 acres appx
ONLY $49 900 00 MAKE Of

fER

-·-

Public Nottce

H(NIIY l C E AND JR
£~N RU55E

DO E URN£11
RA R H f
0 (I

PUBLIC NOTICE
12 1987 et 1000 em

follow ng collateral

A[H
~
REillOR

8

Savtngs Company Poma
roy Ohio reserves the right

to bd at tha aale and to
w thdraw the above collat
eral pr or to sale Funher
The Farmers Bank and Sav
ng• Company reserves the
r ght to re1~1 any or all b ds
submitted
Further the above collat
eral w1ll be sold n the
condtt on t IS n w th no
eKprassedor mpledwar an
ties gNen

Harley Hantng
Resrden(e
3597 S Flatwoods Rd
Pomeroy Ohto
2 2 miles from F1ve Potnts
1113871mo

KUPIDof
S dai
NEST
Offers
two
kinds
ng serv
ce write
P0
Box 519 Ironton OH

46038 10011 838 274&amp;

m••o•

4

GNe away to good home
lema e Cockef Span el
&amp;14 246 9120

a.

11

n

6

Automat c PS PB A1r con
d1t on ng
Ser al #

PAT HILL FORD

t121 9 10 11 Jtc

992 2196

2FABP22RJEB124B19
1985 FORD BRONCO II
XLT 4x4 Overdnve Senal #

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

1/2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW

52500
Extra

For Sktnntng

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734
I 1 II II I mo pd
HOSKINS

HOME MAINTENANCE
• DOFING
•GUl'TERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR &amp;
IMPROVEMENTS

FREE ESTIMATES

CALL 949 2969

J&amp;L

INSULATION
HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•A R CDNIDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992-2772
I 23 87 I mo

Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

ANTIQUE &amp; COLLECTABLE
AUCTION
SUNDAY, DEC 13, 1987
1·00 P.M
HOWELLS GROVE PARK
BE~PRE OHIO

D n~ s nk 2 d awer oak stand oak clock shelf 41 ca l
deer gun old couc h 2 c h~rs pluslotsofotheroakfur
n u e rr0
vi~ ware

INSIDE SALE - FOOD AVAILABLE

PATRICK H BLOSSER AUCTIONEER
Ltc #599 87 - 1 304 428 7245

•HOME BUilDING
•ROOM ADDIT ONS
•K TCHENS BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODEL NG &amp;

PARTS

NEW AND USED

WIDE
SELECTION
All MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL 742-2315
12 4 87 1 mo

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New Homes Butlt
Free Est mates
PH 949 2860

Advan ce d Students
Call For lnformalton

DIANA IHLE
949-2890

or

BACK HOE WORK

985 4141

GEIIIIAL CONTUtTOIS
, 1 3 fn

J 11 tin

YOUNG'S

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U S

•Insulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm W ndows
•Replacement W1ndows

RT SO EAST

CARPENTER

•Now Roof ng

SERVICE

FREE ESTIMATES

JAMES KEESEE
PH

Adfo ns and emode ng
Roof ng and gu t e wo k
Cone e e wo k
Plumb ng and e ect ca
wok
(Free Est mates)

GUYSVILLE OHIO
1114 11112 3821

Authonzed John Deere
New Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equtpment
Dealer

V C YOUNG Ill

farm Equipment
Parts &amp; Sertlce

992 621S

0

992 7314

Pomeroy Ohto

4 5 86 c

l386tfc

PLUMBING &amp; HEAliNG

BUSINESS
JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

New locohon

161 North Se&lt;ond
M ddleport Oh o 45760

;aS:-

1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB

Ron Dtles or
Gary Cummtns

992-6226
M dd aport

10 9 tfn

We Ca v F sh ng Suppl es

Pay Your Phon e
and Cable B lis Here
BUSINESS PHONE
t6141 997 6550
REIIOENCE PHONE
t6141 992 17S4

1131mopd

"

FREE LANCE
VIDEO
•Ho day Pa t es
•Wedd ngs
•Schoo &amp; Chu ch P og ams
•Spo t ng Event s
•Ahmve sa 81
•Aeco d Va uabl os
Document s
•T ansfer Photo Albums o
VHS T•p e
•T ansfe Bmm and Super 8
Mov as o V deo Tape
•C eete Tanng F ms fo
Stud en s and Emp oyees.

REASONABLE RATES
CALL FOR FREE ESTIMATE
d

CONSUMER MONITOR
SYSEMS
Home &amp; Au1o
(614) 992 3718
Add on m n tue computer
system f Is any ta Instant
m les pe ga on eadou
know you fuel consumpt on
f om one block o hundreds of

m les

Commerc at
Store to Job Co5t
Tax Serv ce

Before and after auto tune up
(Compa ator) F I up your
tank and watch t subtract and

display fue cons med

UND ER 90
Mon 1o s fo MCF CCF used
fo furnaces ca brated to

you gas meter
M ddleport Col, Ohoo
b 87

LISA M KOCH M S

~ Ltcensed Chmcal Audtologtst

~ (614) 446 7619 or (614) 992 2104
z 417 Second Avenue Box 1213
Gall polis Ohto 45631

-L:..

Record Those Spectal
Occastons on VHS
Tope

TeleviSion Ltstentng Devtces
Dependable Hearmg Atd Sales &amp; S•n•ir•l
(!) Heanng Evaluattons For All Ages

~

I)

or at
Veterans Memonal Hospital
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy

THE
KOUNTRY CLUB
Chrlstmac \1~~~
Sale
)
•Golf Clubs
~
Shtrts Shoes
•Troph es Plaques
Badges
•Name Tags fo r
Dogs
JOHN TEAFORD
CHESRR OHIO 45720

11 20 87 I mo

2 btths 2 c•
lwei lot on Rt 33
Sw mmlng pool utellte ciO••
to Mep High Ca &amp;14 892

9

Wanted To Buy

Five lots on co ner with 4
badroom houM Carpeted fu
b . .mtnt centl'l heat. f re
pace. a•r~u• Cell 304 B82

tua 3d &amp;OiiveSt Galllpo
Call 614 446 3169

Fo ula on land contrtct llouee
and g•age apertment on 2
acrtl Call 614 992 2862

6 1ooma bath oncloHti porch
to oedalr furnace nsulatednr!W
roof ntlj! carpet Upper Mason
v. !Ef1'4 992 2813

w

Fu nilhed home In M dd epo t 7
rooms. 3 bedrooms 2l•galot ..
2 blodl;s to shoppmg church•
bo.ting fishing IW mmlng Cell
814 992 15304 befo e Sam
After &amp;p m
P ce under
.16 000

~-----·
4 room hou" wtlh e ul t ea.

PeacockSt Pomeroy 8100 per
month •11500 Call 814 992
2720 or 814 992 3589

Houee to rent '" Middleport 3
bedroom LR D n ng oom
hmlly room fully ce peted
carport
aundry ~oom 8260
month plua ut tt esand depoalt
Ava I able Jan 15 or befo e

I

Good Weatl'18f'ed Oak Ba n s d
ng
Call 614 446 8592 or

448 8217 aha 8 PM

GOVERNMENT HOME$ from
t1 00 IU epa 1 fo eclosurM
epot 111.11. del quent p opert es
Now Mlllng your erae Cal
1 311738 73!7 oxt 2P Wv H
for curr..t list 24 HRS

1 Vz ttory n8'Niy aqu pped kit
chen l•ge tam ly room • r
cond convient locat an 304

676 6027

32

Ann ou ncem en ts
3

Announcements

Cake decorat ng Spec e1 l'lolld~r-~
cak• tlO and up Ca 814
992 3903
Heme Decorat ng Open House
F an d Sat Oac. 11th and
12th 10 00 am 9 00 pm each
Jj., G o a 0 I• St At 326
Langsv le Oh o 814 742
2016 N ce doo p zes Eve
ryone wei COf1'1e

!r ~~~1~~W~n•=·~·=q="='="=•~be~g=•~•
4 h

I

AVON al are• Shirlay Spea a

BuVJng daly gold sl vt1 co na
nngs ewe y sterl ng ware o d
c~n• l•ge currency Top p tc• Ed Jlu ka1t Ba ber Shop
2nd Aw M dd eport Oh 614
992 3476
Raw fu beef and deer h des
Gyn S ng and Ve ow oot We
l't~Ne
wheat and nite Utes
T app ng auppl es fo sa e (Buy
ng used I apt Gao ge Buck l1i
Hou a12 9 614 664 4781
QUILTS
H gh pr ces pad fo p e 1950
qu u App que p ec&amp;d any
condltton C•ll614 992 2101
0 614 992 5667

Ph•m•c 11 Fou tto e ind•
pendent phsrmaey Athent e ea
1'181 mmed ate open ng tor auft
ph•mac: st 44 hou wo k Wlll&amp;k
Compat tiVe salary based upon
exp• enca Benet ts J.ackege
Send re~ume with
erences
Med ea Center Pharmacy 400
E State St
Athans Oh o
46701 Att Er c R ch• ds RPh
8 dd ng c oses Dec 161h
TEXAS OIL COMPANY needs
mature perton for al'lort tnps
su round ng Ga llpo 1 Contact
custome 1 We Ira n W ;te T J
D ckerson P us Southwetle n
Pet o eum Box 961 006 Ft
Worth T1t 78181

Call

1984 SkYline. 14~t70 centnl
underpenn ng, decka new
c•Pit. k tchen appl ences let
up on rented ot K &amp; K Po nt
P NPnt •1 &amp; 600 Call we•
kends o afte 6i weakdevs.

Sttuations
Wanted

babysit n my home Tuppers
P anurea Call614 667 6677

W

1973 2 badroom 12~~:65 on
ented lot 14 500 304 675

3783

33

Farms for Sale

land comract 6 96 acres ba n
cl'l ckan coop pony shed wo lcshop end 3 bed oom hauta
12600 down and t3&amp;8 90
month 16 yrs or c11h pr ce of
126 000 Cell 814 992 2143
8 30 to 4 30 Ask fo m ch"

Insurance

Ca I us for you mob le home
n.su an ce M I e lnaurance
304 S82 2146 A so auto
home fa heath

814 992 8373

34

Wanted to Do

Motha of 2 w
care to your
c:h d an du ng the ho dav fw
tl\l t ea Even ng1 weekends o
du Jng he schoo vacac on
Conven ent location easoneble
atas Ca 61 4 448 0088

Busmess
Butldmgs

CommMc • bu ld nga for lean
Downtown Pt Pl. . ant Stores
off CH A One Ree Es1111e
Ca ol Yeager Broker Call 304

676 .,04
749 Third Ave P esently The
G ft Shop 1600 sq ft Commtr
c a1 or warehoul8 Parking on
sde AdjecenttoTh d&amp;PineSI
C al
614 446 2362 to
appo ntment

HOL DAY HELP Let ue help vou
get you home look ng good fo
the Ho days Cal Domesl c
Clea.n ng Se v~ee 614 992

35

6379

Lots

&amp; Acreage

2 Bu ldlng loll 1 1.1 acfl!ll each
with county wate Jerry• Run
Ad Apple G ove W Va Call

Financial

46868 814 379 2297

21

MAINTENANCF
SUPERVISOR
The Goodo(..r T e end Rubber
Comp•ny it ... k ng an egg 01
siva Ma ntenence Sup.-v tor fo
p .cement n our potyeste ma
nufeetu ng fee lny In Apple
Grove W Va Appl e11nts ahould
hevebackgrbundswh ch ndude
d r.ct sup«v tory npons b
n manufactur ng pan
tlea
e•perience n rapa rs preventive
m•nt•nenca •nd wo k schedu
ng EKPII' .-.ca n ma nten•nco
t alnlng p ogflms wou d 1 10 be
benflcaal If you a ,e seek ng a
ch.U81"tg ng poaftlon wh•e you
can be •n nteg el member of the
ocal bus nen team submrtyou
esume to
M ch.aell Ha ngton
lndust a Re at on1 Dept
The Ooodyu T e end Rubber

Busmess
Opportun itY
NOTICE

THE OHIO VALLEY PUOL SH
lNG CO ecommends tha you
do bu1 ness w th peop e you
know and NOT to send monuy
th ough tl'le ma unt I you heve
nvast gated tl'la off• ng

23

6289
Comp etely renovated 3 bedoom p antv yard and g•den
apace beauttful home All elect
nc. hut pump central atr 4
mil• from Rwenswood Por
tlend Oh 814 843 5309
3 bed oom houM for renl No
pets or k ds Deposit requtrad
Cal 814 992 3169
3 bedroom houae Beument 2
sto age bu ld ngt garage, etOYf
furniahed •2&amp;0 per month
Daposh required 614 949

2 BR tre • e160 • mo No
pets Ref required C•ll after 8
PM 387 0181 or 367 0121

Sal• 8x60

304 578 2383
Gen aral Farm Wo k
Some ••pe ence equ red Long
e m employment for a qual fed
person Home &amp; ut it es proVIded Mull ive on farm An
olda e.a:pe enced person pr•
ferred Wages&amp;.beneftsnegot
abe Ca o write A chard Inns
Rol ng Ac et Farm Rt 2 Bo• 86
W seman Ad
Pet ot 01'1 o

N ce 3 bed oom hou• Fam1ly
oom garage buemant
forced • r heat, 5 wooded acret
barn $275 per month t100
depotit No lnaide pets 10 East
St Pom•ov Ohio 614 423

Tr~~l•

304 875 1294

18

814 992 3090

42

1

Hefp Wanted

Tour Gu des Male &amp; Female
Ou
top people aarn $80'0
t 1200 pe week P easant wo k
ng cond ton I Salary to start
w th bonuses A ee tv fun place
to work. F endly neat dapen
dabla a e the requ ernenta. Call
614 288 t421 atk to Sua

Unfurn 1hed hou11 for rent
Nawtv redeeorated carp• Call

1983 14di8 Fe rmont mobile
home 2 bedrooms wa•hardryar hook up In ucellent co.,_
d tion Ca11814 317 7242

1973 Fairmont mobile home.
t3 000 304 876 1970

Employment
Servtces
11

Call after

elecl 3 BR 2 baths furnished
Anchors akittlng Loaded with
atn~s •14 600 Kan ..ga Mo
b le Hom• 614 441 9862

•cr•

1 900 642

PRIOR MlliTARV SERV CE
means extra mon1!ffo mamba a
of the Anny Nat onal Guard Call
304 875 3960 o 1 BOO 842
3619

13

or 614 992 2509
500 peue

Houae fo rent 3 bedroom
g•age depoalt requ red 81 4

14•70 W ndaor with 14IC30
tddiUon 3 bedroom• app oxlml1ely 3
black top oed
Several out bullctln;t end pond
Gall pol a Ferry 304-876 8930

3619

12

614 992 6113 8'4 992 8723

Two bedroom hou11 half m le
out Jer cho Road call attar

for

0322

6 OOpm. 304 876 8483
Mobrle Home•
for Rent

44

Apartment

for Rent

Rentols
41

Prpfesstonal
Servtces

Modern 1 BR apartment

614 446 0390

1 BR new apt furn shed o
unfurnished He• Malp H gh
Scho~ Call 814 446 889S

Brown 10 place sectional Origi
n• pr ce •1200 Ca I 814 446

Fu n shed Efflcleney S180
Ut It 81 paid 807 2nd Gallipols Sh•• belh Call 446 4418
aft• 7 PM

66 000 BTU

Real

ecentty remod~od STAT 279 Ook H II Ito
R o Grende No ch d •n o pMI

Estale

Coli 6'4 246 9311
Large 2 3 IR hou• P entY of
stor•g., Hend•son aru Call

Homes for Sale

814 446 7026

2 or 3 Bf' unfu nlshed ha Yard
c ty schools t%76 mo Pus
ulilitl• • depo1h Cal 814-

448 2616

Co
St Rt 2 Apple G ova W VA

26602
Eque Opportun ty Employe

Furnished Two sma I houees 3
(1011"11 aach N oe and cl ..n
Adults only Nopet1 Ref &amp;dep
C• I 814 448 2543

8891
0100 Coli 814 446 2971

Up ght froatleu freeur 1 8
cu ft Wh t• Excel cond e150
Ca 1614 446 78S6
Ce

814 448 7307 oltw 8 PM

8,4 992 7787 EOH

Kenmo e Mlaowtve Oven E K
cellent eondltkm Ca 614 992

N ce apt Hudd approwd New
carplll clean Pt Pl..ant 8,4

7143

992 6868
2 bed oom apt and 1 b. . oom
houM for rem In Pomeroy

814 992 6215
2 bedroom apartment on L ncoln
HII Pomeroy Cell 814 992
8639 or 114 992 3489

Brown flowered couch rockar
chttr end end tllbl• t200
Good conditkm Call 614 986

3610
Aoll1wev bed tllb e and a
c:hllirs. Sol d olk round lamp
table. Clll efte 3 30 pm 814

992 3111

APARTMENT&amp; mobile homes
hOUI81 Pt Pl . .lntlndOtlllpa..

Ia 814 4-48 8221
2 bedroom furn sed apt ref and
dapo1tt New Heven W Va

304 882 3267 "' 304 773
6024

G E butt n dlshwnh• Harv
•tgold t76 Coppertonecoun
ter top range 146 arge green
aculptured c•pet foam backed
t50 All very good condltk)n
614 992 8031 •Iter 15p m

2 BR Mobile Home tor nnt
Adults. Ref • dep No p.ta. Cell

Picken• Used Furnltu •
Olnett• tofM chairs. end
tabl• lampe beds druAfs,
d11k glauwere 304 876
1410

3 bedroom furnished o unfur
n shed Good clean eond;t on 1
d1ild no pets New Haven W
Va 304 882 2488

In Middleport Oh o 1 and 2
room furnithad aptl prNI1•
blthl utI 1181 paid 30 ... 8S2

Beige 6 p ece prt g oup amok.:!
glau coffee •nd end t1blea and
lamps Earty American couch
and ch• K ng wet«bed double
sl'le f l'leadboa d 304 676

3 bedroom 12x86 furnished
Wath• and dryer t210 month
prus depoalt and uti ti• 614

304 876 3108 •• 67&amp; 8636

6,4 367 7743

2588

1226

3 bedroom unfurn lhiKI apt

53

992 7479
3 bad oom 1 1h bath 14x70
Mob e home n M ddlaport
Newc•pet Vlti'Ynlce 814 992

6858
Two bed ooms Upper R va
Road wil accept working per
aon or family whh 2 ch dren

Rooms for rent d "f . \Wek
month Gal e Hotel Cal 814
4449180 Aentaslowast1ZO
month
Furn shad room 876

Uti iti•

M4 448 0809

pad Shore
919
Secondboth
GalSingle
poh

Mob a homes turn thad
$186 00 plus utillt • 876 00
depostl ca aft• 6 00 pm

" 8 " 1' olt•• 7pm

molo
C.ll

46
Apartment
for Rant

2 BR apts a c oseta k tch.,..
appl furn tl'led Washtf Dr;et"
hook up ww ce prt newty'
Regancy Inc
p1 nted deck
Apll Call 304 675 7738 Of

676 6104
Fu n shed apt next to bra Y
One p oftl~ona adult only
Parking Call 614 448 0338

Space for Rent

Office Space fo

ent EJCCel
downtown Gallipolis loeat on
lnqu r " c1ll 814 446 4222
Mob le Home lot 80ft or l•a.
920 4th Gall po • 176 Water
paid Cal 614 446 4416 after7

PM
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Routa 33 North of Pom•ov
Aentel tra I•• Call 614 992

7479
Spece far amall 111111 er• All
hook up• Clble. Also eft aenev
room• al and cab! .. Muon.
W Va Call 304 773 6661

Downtown
Modern 1 BR
comp ete k tchen carpet. a r
e ec1 c heat Ca 814 446
4383 dJVS. 446 0139 even 6.
weekend•

Spec oua mobile home ots for
ent Fam tv P Ide Mobtle Home
Pa '- Gallipol s Fe rv 304 876

Relli!rNIV t*lecorated V•v n ce
apartments n downtown Galltpo s 1 &amp; 2 BR unfurn shed
second floo from S176 S22&amp;
Oep &amp; aferencea requ r.t C•ll
eY&amp; 614 446 2326 0 448
4249

ANT QUES Buy or Sell R ve
rine Antiques 1124 E..t Man
St Pomeroy Hours Mon
TU81 Wed 10 em to 6 p m
Sun 1 pm 6pm Bychance
or appo ntmant Ruft Moore

~~8;1;4~9~92~2=5~28;:;:=~=;:::
54 MIIC Merchandise
Ca Iehan e Usad T eShop Ova
1 OOOtr• tiaes12 13 14 16
18 166 Bml•outRt 218
Call 614 266 6251

Nice 1 BR apt Ne• HMC No
pett Stove
elf g
d ap•
•226 a mo. Ref requ ed Call
814 446 4782

Furntlhed 4 rooms • belh
C ean No pets Aduhtonly Ret
&amp; dep requi ad Ca 614 448
1619

7960

0

3073

Tra er spactt for nmt Rt 1
lOCUit Road back of K &amp; K
Mobi a Home Pe k. 304 676

1076

49

Tree 6 Stump emova
firewood Heap vouchers •ccapted
Ltve wh te pine Ch stmea trHs
$37 50 Ca 614 448 9146
Chhr stmas T ••• for aele
t&amp; 00 t10 00 Rodnev Ia B d
wei Rd Cl 614 246 6248
Ricllard Fitcher

l76 Coll814 387 7850

1986 Dodge 0 100 4 apd
Sh11 p t5494 John 1 Auto
Sal• be ow Ho day Inn n
Kanaugft Oh Rt 7

MI.J'ed herd wood slllbs S12 p•
bundle Conte n ng eppro~~: 1 'h
ton
FOB Oh o Palllll Co
Pomeroy 01'1 o 814 992 8481

1979 Fo d 150 Rangar Super
Cab V 8 au om•t c PS PB
Cab has no u1 Bed has tome
t1500 Ca 614 593 6835

1861 A miQOrt Navy Reb b tck
powe 44 revolve Neve fi ltd
Also 12 guage pump Eastfield
Cel614 992 6320
Firewood for sal• All hardwood
tplh and deliVered 836 Also
1977 LTD Cel 614 992 6619
or 814 992 3662

56

Pets for Sale

New arnvalt fo Ch stma1
Reg1ste eel AKC Chow pupp.et
Call 614 388 8801

.,...

Mate lis tor ule f om torn
down bu d ng New and o d
2x4 s panel ng new wete
heater plywood doors carpet
etc Pant costa Church 873
3rd M ddleport Oh
1 baby bad goodcondit on good
manresa feed ng tab e With toy
tray beby ca rlage whrtew ck•
ahelves fo clothes rtorag e All

$126 814 949 2561

••IV before co d weather tag
your tree at Newel Ch lstmas

AKC Reg ste ed. Brittany Span el
pupp 88 liVR &amp; Wh te 6 Wkl
old WI hold for Ch atmas Cell
814 682 7549
Two tama e Reg Beagle pup•
11 wkt old Ona- 1 color
on•lemon color S60 each Call

814 24&amp; 9678
AKC S bar en Husky pupp ee
Blue eyed be-.tt as 8126 Will
hold to Chr stmu Ca 614

448 8927

G ll 20 b ka Ught blue wtth
bMkat E .11.ce cond 84ti Call

114 268 1168
Eledr c whlel cha~r I ke new
cond uMd vary llnle Aduh
pcattycl'lair Ca11614 446 0646

GE cook stoYa t96 Refng
t126 Bothgocadshepe lnqu a33 Court St

Farm EqUipment

Intern at onal 1060 G nder
M xer a111c cond 304 273

4216

62

7\84

Wented to Buy

Now buy ng shel co n o ear
co n Call fo latest quotes R ve
C ty Farm Suppty 614 446

2986

63

Ltvestock

3 UKC Registered me e Wa kll!ll'
Coon Hound pups S re s Grand
N te Champ on Mothltl' 1 N ta
Champ on
S100 each 16
weeks old Call 614 992 3992
AKC Reg ttered PomBI'IIn en
pupp 81 1 me e. 1 female 8
weeki old t150 Cal814 867

1768

6 pc drum sat. make offer 3 pc

814 992 6806 or 814 992
3028

81&lt;1

C2284

bedroom 1utte t130 00 304

676 3763

Mar n 12 gauge over and undar
Made 90 S276 00 W nch•tltr
22 Megum pump Modal 276

.,00 00 304 87&amp; 6944

Ch astmes .,... tag cut nr dig
White and Scotch •ny sme
$16 00 At 2 North 7 M 1..
from Po nt P Hllnt 304 676

Pure bred Coek A Poo • 6 wks
o d Read\' for Chrlstmas 4
m1 e Wh te •nd Buff n colo

l126 814 378 6279
6 Beag R Rabbit dogs Aged 2 to
6 yn o d T a ned Rusonab R

Cell 814 742 2521

SIGNS L ghtad Arrow S gn
t299 Non Anow US9 un gh
tad 81 99 F ee delivery latten
t II Dec 11 W Ve 1 800 642
2•34 Oh.io 1 BOO 633 3463
Wantad To Buy 0 neue or
din ng oom au t 304 676
1542
Fo Sale Maytag portable
wash• 160 Adjustable drMs
form t 10 2962 Me!Kiowb ook
New 10 tpeed bike t&amp;9 00
Red n•• 846 &amp; up Other
Christmas G fts Pickens Uaed
Furniture 304 676 1450

56 Butfdtng Supplies

77 Ch811y Cheynne Bhaz:e
wheel d tva 304 875 5460

Ready mlk concrete end a
concretesupples Ce usVsll.,
B ook Cement and Supp •
304 773 6234

56

INe

71

Auto

s For Sale

1978 Raly Sport Camero LT
360 T top a r spoke mags dual
exhaust. cruise SHARP No
t ad• *2796 Nag Ca 614

61. 986 4317

1986 Ford LTD I l ke naw
12 900 m auto AC PS PB
tlh cru•e $6800 Cal 614

388 8240
614

1982 Fofd Eaco t 4 spd air
.,599 John • Auto Sa •
below the tiolidl'f Inn Kanauga.

At 7
1982 Old• 98 A power V erv
c ean 69 000 m I• 0 etel
$3750 Cal 614 446 0787 at
te 6 PM

Five

piece

d um set

Sh• p 1983 Toyota Supra
loadad Sp01rt package powe
ttee mg b akea w ndows. au
tomat c cl mete cont o
All
perfo mance terns A'11'8ragam
leage 6 epeed Mechanically
pe feet Met culously ma n
ta ned Gorgeout C1
614
448 2417 Even nga

58
&amp;

Frutt
Vegetables

Jecks Fruh Ma kat Route 36
Hendar1on See ua fo a you
Chr atmas needs Apples Navel 0 ang• - Blnanat Tangelo•
All k ndl nuu
Candy
Grepea &amp; Tomatoea
Bak ng Potetoea 60 lb t4 00
Swel1 Onions 25c pound
Green cabbage 20c pound

Farm Supplies
1'. Ltvl:stuck
61

Farm Equtpment

1986 S 10 B ue 4x4 87 600
1986 Fo d Escort 6 spd
22 000 m les $3 200 Ca
614 448 8S98
19B4 Dodge
2 2
44 000 actual m les Exce
cond Ca 614 379 2410
814 446
1977 Couga XR7 moderete
m eaga colo white ove ed
E.11.ce IGnt unn ng cond 1 on
$1300 See at 766 Second
Awnu• Call 614 446 1871 o
1986 Plymouth Re ance K
Auto PS PB AM FM ad o AC
tue n ect on E.ltcellent c:ondl
ton Ca 614 992 6084 aft«
6 30
19S7 Oldl Cutlata Supreme
Top shape Assume oan F bar
gl•• tapper to El Cam no Ca
aven ngs 304 773 6911 o
1981 Dodge Omn
19S1 Dodge 024

l900

1987 Long 50 HP Bu dole 20
hours on tack. like new lnte na
tiOfiBI ndustna tractor wtth
load• Call 614 288 6522

For n!llnt apartment trail• fu
n shed unfurn 1htd WoodbOrnng f replace Water nwage
paid CIMn QuiM Foater t
Mob Ia Home Park. 448 1602

814 448 o•44
Upstl rt unfurnished epartment
Carpeled Ut it.. pe d No
ch ldren or pett Cal 814 448

a.

Uncond tonal I fet me gua an
tee Local eferen cas hA nished
F ee est mete• Ca
col act
1 614 237 0488 day or n ght
RogeraBaaeme nt
WRIMp oof ng

RON S Telev 1 on Serv ce
House calt on RCA Quaur
GE Spec al ng n Zenith Ca
304 676 2398 or 614 446

2454

Rotary o ca ble tool dr II ng
Most we seompleled samadrt
Pump se et and serv c.. 304

896 3902

Sta kJ T ee and Lawn Serv ce
awn ca e andec ap ng stump
remova
304 576 2842 or

578 2903

82

Plumbing
Heattng

8t

CARTERS PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor Fourth and Pine
Ga lpo s Ohio
Phone 614 446 3888 o 814

446 4477

84

3800 Ford with plows d sc 2
ow Ford plante 6ft buth hog-

N.. l6960
6622

Co

814 296·

Now till Dec. 31 all Zalllor
tractors k'l 1tock 10 percent ova
oost No trad• n Mor Is Equ p
ment Rut and Ohio 614 742

245&amp;
BUY WHOLESALE Whhe fMm
Tractors tt whol . .le Invoice
p us freight Compt e the p Ice
1nd qua hy Models from 16 to
180hp leMingave abe. Off•
good through Dee. 31 S d••
Equ pment Co US 315 Hander
son W Va 304 676 7421

E lectncal

&amp; RefrigeratiOn
Res dental o co mmttre al w
ng New se YIC8 or epa s
L cenaed elect lei an Est mae
free Rldenou Electr cal 304
875 1186

85

General Hauling

D ard Water Sent ce Pools
C sta ns We s Delivery Any
time Call 814 446 7404 No
Sunday co 1

1 9S5 Dayton• Turbo Z ad
slver leatl'llf nterior nw t•es
loaded •a 750 00 con1tder pe
till trade. 304 875 &amp;308
1987 Chevy A1tro van
S82 3886 or 676 6300

County Appllenee. Inc.. Good
used appl 11101111 end TV s.ta.
Open SAM lo &amp;PM Mon ttwu
Sat 614 448 1889 127 3rd
Ave 0811 pollt OH

Furn atled apertment 4 roomtla
batl'l 1 o 2 aduttt No pets Ref
&amp; SeG&gt; dap required Call

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

t900

814 992 2888

1037

3997EOH

Home
Improvements

:4:4:8:8:8:24~-----------·

614 992 3992

6,4 448 7026
SON ESTATES 631 Jackton
Pkefromt183amo Walkto
thop and mov t1 814 448

81

448 0294

8200

3187

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 82
Olive St Ge ipoUa
NEW I pc wood g oup- t399
Uv ng room sui1" $181 t618
Bunk bedl wtth bedding- 1199
Fu size m tttrlls &amp; foundation
IUrtlng
t98
Reel nart
ltlrting . , .
USED Bedl dr""'' bed oom
suites t198 e299 DHkt
wring• wa•h• • eomp tte I ne
of ulld turn tun
NEW Wwtern boots 830
Wo kbootl t18 • up lSteel
toft toe! Call614 448 31&amp;9

Services

304-773 6616

Me rr.llonrlise

BEAU{IFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDG .. PRICES AT JACK

Rockwell !ltanderd front a.a: e
hub b akes spr ng1 and wheels
from auto car t acto Aulo-car
power aleer ng box w th slwe
cyl nde and b ackett 2 Pdd e
tenka 80 to 100 gallon• A C
type T 652 d rt and wate
remove Cel614 949 2226

SWEEPER and sew ng mach ne
repe peru and suppl• P ck
up and de Ivery Davas Vacuum
Cleaner one tla f m e up
Gao gBI Creek Rd Call 614

19S6 Che!IVette Very clean
Stenda d ahift 16 000 m I Ell
t4600 Ca I 814 446 4841

Scott

BudgetT an am allons U1edand
&amp;bu It a types Gua antee 30
dev• Cell 814 379 2220 o

1977 Chevette &amp; Lawson 981
stove Cal 614 246 5620

1975 Bonnev e

Musical
Instruments

Auto Parts

&amp; Accessortes

304 676 4230

1979 Pnto 8600 Cal
446 4913 after 4 PM

e14 44e 2971

57

76

448 8176

buff Cocker Sptn el
female pupp es 10 weeka o d
reg up to date ahota Cal
e\lenings 614 992 3393 o

For Lease

Household Goads

3 Wheel8f ATV Kawasak 200
Good con d Ca
614 446

3362

1980 C.d ac Sedan DeV lie
De sel Show room cond ton
AI powe 1S 000 m M on new
motor 30 m pM gal Th • 11 a
ttael at only t3200 814 992

51

Motorcycles

1985 Yemaha 80 3 wheeler
good cond tJOO 00 304 882

1969 P ymouth Stetion Wagon
converted to truck 31 B eng ne
auto trantm ts.on cheap Call

2 BR ept Stove • refr g
turn shed Ne• Oo Mart Call

4

1988 Suzuki Quad agar 250
4 wh~er Cel 614 742 2S06

Be~utiful

Pets for Sale

Groom and Supp y Shop Pet
Groom ng A
breeds A
styles ams Pet Food Dealer
Jul 1 Webb Ph 614 448 0231

675 3427

74

1982 Pont tc Trani AM PS
PB T top AC AM FM Ceu
t3600 Call 614 388 9098

814 949 2860
Bu dngMatMII
Jllock b ick S&amp;We P PEII win
dows I ntal1 etc Claude W n
ten R o G ande 0 Ca 614
245 6121

van

Baby rabblt1 $6 00 each Tu
klrfs $12 50 each Ca 614
246 6831

Tr~nsportalton

hours 24

, 6184693734

1980 Jeep Renegade Good
cond $1760 Ca 614 446
61S9 0 446 6826

7026

Me gt Co Humane Socallly now
hat a ovety •lect on of clltsand
k ltena ready fo adopt on Some
already spayed and neute _. AI
shots up to dtte Adoption fee
aqu red Ce to more Into ma
ttOn ebout ou
lovely pats

NEW CREDIT CARD No one
refuted I Mejor C edt Cards and
More Gat you c•d tod.,.l Call

1982 Dodge 250 Ram Custom
conve • on T alar reedy Cal
614 446 4383 d-vl 446 0139
evens 8t weekends

1979 Jeep Wagonne VB trl I«
l'ltch AM FM CB ado 1
co nd c u sa 82 500 00 304

n8

887 3858

CARHART CLO

W D

8 Y old Reg ed So rell Quarte
Mare 15 3 hand• t850 New
Shoe udd e. 8110() value fo
&amp;686 Cal 614 206 6622

Butcher
hog 42C b
weight. 3 4 875 1824

1 AK C Bauen puppy left 5 wkl
old Frands Benedum 814

RENTAL

4

1982 Chevy convo 1 on

2903

THING Or!liJ nal army camou
flage H 0
Sam
Som•
v
le s
Old Rt
21
East R IN enswood Frl Sat Sun
noon 8 DO pm 304 273 6666
lneulated camouflage coveralls
$26 00 Black White snow
camouflage

Vans &amp;

c 10 814 992 73e7

Mlxed firewood $80 00 dump
truck oad dellve ed 304 678

DENIM

614 992 3992

73

Tree Farm 1 m e ebove Mason
on Hang ng Rock Ad 304 773
6371 or 882 2S86

814 379 2880

814 448 2318

61

, 976 Fo d p ckup Short bad
302 standa d good ad al t es
81200 A 10 19EP Dauun
T uck 5 apeed a sun oof
custo m f berg ass top pllf rad al
es 54 000 m es 12300 Cal

AKC Male Cock• Spen els On•
back 1yr od Onebu" 6mo1
old 8100 eecl'l Call 614 6B2

1

ARMY

Dodge p ckup 318 3
New pent s d ng gtaas
whfte apokes t as e.11.
Ca 614 446 448 2

19B4 Fo d Ranger Teke ow
peyments Ca 614 446 0502

Setelltt•repaired all milk• Ce
Muule load ng Suppl 11 Pr ces
h..,a been Nducad Shop gong
out of butln•• Loebel s M II
Creek Rd Hn Mon Wed Fr
5 B PM S1t 1 5 PM PMne

1980
speed
v so
haust

screen Be ttv uaed t200
Lad liB Se ko watch uled once

SURPLUS

Fo d p ekup auto
1973 GMC Van 360
ton. 8665 Bothlook.l &amp;
eat Cal 446 1912 o

386 9873

8 MM MovieCam8f'll prOJector

6773
Anttques

974
t1200
auto 1
una g

0()

Or

304 676 6612

44

Sturdy wooden c b wi1h. mat
t ess bumper p.t metch ng
1heet 8100 Gatol ne weed
week• t&amp;O Ce
614 367

AI Ch iltmatT ees 812 Come

LP gas huter

a. lowseat

1969 Chevy e.a:ce ... t condl
ton t2100 1969 Ch""Y body
rough good angln«. &amp;428 Cal
614 367 7760

6 f1 Satellite comp •• l400
1973 Jeep good cond 1700
Cal814-388 9376

31 Ram ngton Pump Shot Gun
12 guage 28 ndl bar e f226
Also 31 Remington 12 guage
Shot Gun 32 inch bar e S300
Ca I 814 992 3992

Uke new couch

Trucks for Sale

K ng wood I. coal stove with
bower Like new Ce I we

New wood 6 pc llvmg room
sultea
t399 9&amp; cheat of
dr•wer•4 drawe 14B twin
m1tt ...... 196 ' " microwave
oven standi

814 246 5363

oom apartments at VII age
Manar and Rlver.lde Aplrt
mants In Middleport F om
t216 ncludlng utlltt 81 Ca I

72

KIT N CARLYLE ®by Larry Wnght

Sews comb net on 11:..,eo tape
plr,er 6 ed o Ca 814 448
4881

PARSONs' FURNITURE

2300

0 ac ous hv lng 1 and 2 bed-

Mise Merchandtse

Electron c exercise bike co1t
t140 tel t75 1 9B4 Hond•
cycle. V 66 Sabfe 4500 m lea.
M c 82000 814 387 0649

a.

304 078 B104

hom•

7572 Hour• 9 5

Luxury Tll'l Apartments El•
g1nt 2 B r 2 flo« ftllty
THE WORKING
cerp«ad CA and heat Prtval'tJ.o'
MANS FRIEND
entre nee anclo1ed patio pool &amp;
playground Sta t $299 PI
Hid a-a bed SleeperS mons and
month Utlltt .. not ndudtd
green couch Call814 446
Ce 614 367 7850
1107
Modern n ce 2 BR apt Located
Gold he1111yduty w••h• drye
at 641 4th Ave Adults onty
VMY good cond t160 tet Ca
t2Z6 P• mo Cal 614 446

3 OR house&amp;: garage A 1 Real
Caro Yeager Broker
Ettate

2 BR

New
and usedCall
fumlture
and
appl c:anees
614 446

814 448 7444

2 BR Honeytuckla H lit G11
he.. p lvate pat 01 Wate
sewe trlth llf'V ce turmahed
Rentltlrt e220 CaU81444&amp;
3344or4411134 EquaiHouslng Opportunity

Homes for Rent

N cetv furn shed small house
Adutta onty Ref requ red No
pete Call 61 .t 446...0338

V..lay Furniture

Carpet Prices Starting at
Commercul
84 a yd
Sculplu ••6 • yd Push t7 a
yet Lots of room amenta n
•toek F naneing awl lb e. Mo
lohan Fumhure Upper Rlvtpr Ad

614 742 2976

MOM ANO OAD Let the Army
Nat ona Gua d he p pay for you
ch ld a collage aducat on Call
0

2 3 or 4 bedroom houaes •nd
apt n Pomaroy •ree P.,. own
utilit .. deposit requ .. Call

1 acre 12K85 tnlerw;th 12d4
add t10n New porch turnaehld

304-876 1429

304 676 3960

New eKh'a n ce 2 BA duplatC
furn shed kitchen Low utI t 81
No pels Oep &amp;. ref requtred
Cell 614 446 1250

992 OB61

I

'

Mabtle Homes
for Sale

614 388 8294

Good used a to UK &amp; man do n
Call614 446 2616

Homes for Rent

3027

New 1988 Prest ge 14x70 total

4

90 D•v• ume a• c11h with
approved cred t
3 Mil• out
Bulwilli Rd Open 9am to &amp;pm
Mon thru Sat Ph 114 446

I~::::========="T':;:~=~======::-1
41

•so

...........

"I'm on a Christmas diet I
eat anythmg that's red or
green I"

2776

lack the ski ls1 We tl'l n peop •
to JObe as mach nistt In our
mach ne trades prog am Ne•ly
every product of ndultry f om
cornflek• to turb n• 1 made
e tl'ler us rg mach ne too 1 or
ut ng machinet made wtth ma
china too 1
n the mach na
1 ad• p og em you w I leam
how to use va out typH of
mach n-v suc" as lathe dr II
press m ng mech na. g ind ng
mach ne and punch press We
hll'leavarlllyoffundngaoun::n
..,, I able for e g bte appl cants
Ca theAdultEduc:.tonCrnte
T County JVS at 763 3611

WANTED TO BUY Uled wood
&amp; coa heaters Swan 1 Furn

a.

3264

RACINE OHIO

Insured/licensed
127 871fn

SALES &amp; SERVICE

WHITE HILL RD
RUTLAND OHIO
747 203S

II 16/ 87 I mo

~

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

D&amp;C ELECTRIC

OPEN FOR

992-7632

DON T LET YOUR ELEC
TRICAL PROBLEMS BE
COME A SHOCK TO YOU!
CALL

2 bedroom

o••ae.

Job h~nt ng1 Need a sk 111 We
tra n people for 10bt: •• auto
meehan cs carpenters. electric ant food sarv ce wo kers
electron ca techn clans ndu•
tr a ma ntenance workert nurt
ng 111 atants and o derl •
rriach n sts. and we dera Rag 1
ter now for clenoa beg nn ng
Jenuary 4th Ca I T County
Vocert on a Adutt Cente at"763
3611 81111 14 A var ety of
h.1 nd ng soureaa to pey for
t a nlng are avalab e fo those
el g ble

Oa I pols F •• Ma ket Former
Th•• Garag• Rtt 36 &amp; 160
Open Fr deya
Satu day II
Sundav• 9 15

VINYL &amp;

ALUMINUM SIDING

1807

8828

Galhpohs
&amp; Vtctmty

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

6 17 tfc

BOGGS

949-2801

No Sunday Calls

Also transmtulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

Ph••• Day or hen ng•
References

From Begmners to

REPAIR

REPA RS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;

d

'VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULATION

Schaum Bast1en

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

Yard Sale

TOP CASH pad for S3 model
and newe used cars Smith
Bu dl Pontiac 191 1 Eastern
Ava Gal pols Ca 614 446
2282

v.w.

24

Part dme (F d.,. and Sat mo nngs on y
Dent• hvgeniat
wanted tor Meigt Hnlth Dept
Dental Schoo baud ua ant
prog am Beg ns m d January
thru Dec 08 Contract only Call
Norma To res at 814 992

12 2 87 1 mo pd

PIANO LESSONS
You ~e Nerst Too Old
To Le~tnl

Rt 12 4 Pomeroy Oh o

Lost and Found

PLASTERCRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS ETC

M ddleport Oh c
1 13 tic

Roger Hysell
Garage

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER OHIO

ntage

Lost of stolen Ma e B ue T dt.
female We k• Coonhound 663
North Fr011t St M dd eport Oh

M1ddleport Ohto

SER~ICE

1984 Ford Tempo 4 dr

1983 Ford Ranger XL Serial
# 1 FTBR10A8DUB07662

Y

LOST 6 month old ye low
femela Ret ...,e puppy R o
Grande a .. Rewa d area Call

THE DABBLE SHOP

If rnterested stop by

B162.c

Wanted Fu t me employment
n you own home u a Home
Serv cet Worker w. h Buckeye
Communt¥Se vice Wep ovide
sa IIV plus banef 11 and a dally
oom and board a,e You
p ovKie a home gu dance 1nd
I endship n a tam tv atmos
phere Raquwes abil tv to teach
personal rvlng skills and a
comm;tment to tt)e g owth and
development of an nd vidual
with sevare menta reta dat on
Conlllet S¥1via0ay at814 446
7109 after &amp; 00 p m Equal
oppo tun ty employe

111 mo. pd.

IS FOR SALE

EXT

46780 614 992 2163
W ndows ••tv 1900
304 882 2024

e

9 room hou• 2 full baths &amp;
ba,.ment 3 oom apt • bath on
pma property Moving out of
county Will 11crtf ce t64 600
842 6th Ave Call 814 446

The Me gs Local Schoo D ttnct
1 accept ng appl Cllt on• for
aubstitute teach•• Substitutes
1 e needed n all certif cattan
1 . . . The dtly l'lte of p-v
1126 01'1 o Cert fled Ta.chers
wi lng to cro11 a p dcet I ne
should mmad ately conuct
Me gs Local Schoo Super n
tendent 1 oH ce 621 South
Th rd Avenue M dd aport Oh o

388 889&amp;

Sof• and ehli • prle«i from
$391 to ta91 Tabl• t60 and
up to 11215 Hide-• bedl •390
to 1&amp;96 Recliner• 8226 to
S37G Lamps 828 to •125
D nettaa t109 and up to t496
Wood t11bla w
ch• 1 t2B&amp; to
1796 Delk 8100 up to 83].6
Hutchel 8400 end up Blink
beds compl81:e w mllltr•••
•296 and up toe396 BabV bedt
• 1 10 Mattreu• or boK apr no•
full o twin ees fir"' 178 and
888 Queen sett t22ts King
1310 4 drawer ch•t •89 Gun
cebineta 8 gun Ges or electr c
range t375 Baby' mattreuet
t36 • $4&amp; Bed .,• .,.. .. $20
$30
K ng frame
Good
Hlectkm of bedroom auhes.
metal cabinets headbo•d• •30
and up to t66

n town Good local on Low
40 1 C.ll after 6 30 PM 614

54

Sentmei~Page -11

814 246 9120

LAYNE S FURNITURE

3 BR Randl Attached u•age

1 &amp;18 469 3635" Ito I

refundablol
howfl

5 F ae pupp e1 part Labrador
Good Cftr stmas g ft Call after 9
PM or all day Saturday 814

•·U

448 ,408

tod8'(

1343

drya • refr gerators.
nnges Skaggs Appl anees
Upp« Fltvar Rd betide Stone
Crest Motal 814
7398

2108

Ea n exc't ent money n home
usembtv work. Jewel y toys
and others FT • PT avt Call

Two amall dogs mae fema e
Vi Ch huahut Vz FoxTer ler Has
hid some shots Call614 258

GOOD USEO APPUANCES

andl Country Are h
tat• George 1 Ck Ad 2 3acre
ot Above ground pool Very
•nonebla Cell 114 446

It

Household Goods

w.~.

3 BR

Gove nment Jobs t16 040
t69 230 y Now h ring Your
area 806 687 8000 bt R
9S06 for cunent repo federal

Gtveaway

51

Coll814 4-48 4347

Someone to stay with lady from
8 PM
8 AM Cell 814 446
1414

7

992-3711

LAFF·A·DAY

Hom as for Sale

2 BR houM wilh g••ue
Ca peted
drape u
d 1
hwuh• nfrlg•ator t 05 Kl
neon Dr Na•thenewchypoo

Sitte needed n my home frva
diiVS a week Must be depend•
be Ca I 614 448 2153 &amp; leave

814 992 6864

fa,thtres available
EOH

31

797 4869

814 24&amp; 9679

Furmshed Laundry

Teachmg Thompson

$5 00

Stove

&amp; Refngeratar

RADIATOR
We can repatr and re
core radtators and
heater cores We can
also actd boil and rod
out radtators We also
repatr Gas Tanks

Business Services

9112 b q

991 2259

8

pubhc sale w II be held at
106 Un on Avenue Pomeroy Oh o to sell for cash the

949 2b 6 0
997 Sb92

949 ]080

1 FMCU1 4SXFUC88867
The Farmers Bank and

Public Nottce

NOTICE a hereby g ven
that on Saturday December

Tog Your Tree
Early
For Chnstmos

Publtc Notrce

446-2342

II 23 87 1 mo

SR 7 - SILVER RIDGE App x l9 80 ac es all m
ne as and oya t es from ex
st ng we I Appx 15/ mo 2
sp ngs fo deve opment
$12 000

CHRISTMAS
TREES

u_...
__
n-~

POMEROY 0
992 2259

POOR FOU&lt;S Uveable oder
homa equ ppej k~chen eady
to go Want $8 500 00 but

...

~=Oil-

WANT
ADS
WORK!

HERE IS A BAR &amp; Resta u
ant to sale Bu d ng &amp; all
equ pment complete and n
ope at on Ca fo deta s

2 Bedroom,

Help Wanted

The Da•ly

Pomeroy- M1ddleporl Oh1o

Someone to ent..- nto cont •ct
fo snow remove Call 814

~--

608
E Man

SO YOU DIDN T GET A
DEER Maybe you need lh s
sec uded cab n on 70+
acres of g ound smack n
them dd e of dee co unt y
ONLY $29 900 00

Day or Ntght
NO SUNDAY CALLS

.,.....,-

Real Estate General

OWNER MUST HAVE SALE
Rea y n ce 3 bedroom
newer anch type house on
a eve! ot 2 car ga age f re
place sw mmngpool sate!
te d sh Reduced o stea
p ce at $44 900 00

VILLAGE GREEN
APTS

:==:.'":."'':!.
. . ....

-~

HERE s a estaurant fo
sal&amp;. All equ pment n p ace
nc udesbu ld ng plu sa en
ta hou se - Bus ness ready
to go $25 000 00 to the
whole th ng'

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

......

:t•....u:;r.,.

Cleb f ed page ove he
fo ow "! elep ho e exch.an!e

u:"';:""'

_

FOR RENT

At Reasonable Pmes

R.-TES

••
••
•

11

Announcement•

All Makes

BISSELL
BUILDERS
·--

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALl'
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

3

Friday December 11 1987

304

1981 VW Rabb tt a.a:cellent
runn ng cond tktn extra set
rtudded snow tlr• 82 000
mil-. •850 Fl m 304 372

R &amp; R Wate Se v ce Home
c sta s we 1 pools f led For
merly James Boyt Wa
Ca

304 876 6370

er•

sese
1986 Metcury Cougar
cond

loeded

w ith

exc
aJttns

l8 BOO 00 304 87&amp; 5339

1979 vw R1bbit esoo oo call
304-773 91 2S If no antwe cell

773 6988
72 ChiWy Impala. n ce

Watte son s WBte
reatonab e ates
mmed ete
2 000 ga lon dahverv c s e ns.
poo 1 we etc ca 304 576

2919

87

Upholstery

Cllf

304 876 24&amp;7
7S7 LncolnTownCI 78 Mark
v 77 Cad ltc: Sadan oevm ..
Good Condit on 304 773

6940

M ow ev s Upho 1ter ng terv ng
cou nty a et22yea s Thebest
n tu n l ure upho ste inv Ce
304 875 4164 f o f e 9
est matea
t

�•

,•

.---People in the news

•

..
December 1'1, 19BY

•

Sunday

. • 50 cents

Browns, Bengals battle

· By WILLIAM C. TROTT
United Press International
BATMAN'S NO SCAB: Holy video flashback, Batman! It's
Adam West on British TV! Britain's Independent Television is
using the old "Batman" series to fill In for " Good Morning,
Britain" whlle techlcians ar e on strike and it's becoming a
craze. Viewership Is up as much as 100,000.
"We've gotten a lot of mail from people saying they prefer
'Batman' to the regular news and Interview programming,"
said "GMB" spokesman David Keighley. " We were hoping to
get Adam West over here for an Interview and contacted his
agent in America. But he told us that Mr , West found out about
the labor dispute and didn't want to he In the position of having
&lt; to cross a .picket line."
· West, 53, starred as th e caped crusader In 140 episodes before
"Batman" was canceled and is delighted by his ne~ -found
popularity abroad . . "It 's taken 15 years to shake off the
'Batman' image," he said, "and now It's taking off again. It's
runny that British people are waking up to me in the morning."
UNHAPrY CIOLDHOOD: Kathleen Sulllvan, co-anchor of
CBS's new morning show, reveals some candid aspects of her
childhood In an Interview with The Boston Globe. " When I was
an Infant, my father was hospitalized." she says. ';As a chlld, J
was told my father was mentally ill. I felt thai , as a child, I was
watched to see If I exhibited certain behavior patterns."
Sullivan says she grew up Insecure and alone --since her
mother worked. " My family life was not on !irm ground," she .
says. "I've created my own firm ground. In a situation like this
you could either crack under the pressure or go deep inside
yourself and define your strength. I decided to do the latter."
Sullivan, who recently left ABC for the starcrossed CBS ·
morning slot, says she intends to make the most of her
opportunity. "I'm committed to making this medium the
formidable Industry It once was," she says. "People are tired.
fed up or Insulted with some of the drivel on the air. I'm
speaking of all time periods."
LOCAL BOY MAKES GOOD: Exiled Russian poet Josef
Brodsky received his Nobel Prtze'for Literature Thursday even
· as he was gaining more recognition In his homeland. Four of
Brodsky's poems were published Thursday for the first time.
covering nine pages In the December Issue of the Navy Mir
journal. They arf\ titled "From Nowhere with Love;" "Letters
·to a Roman Friend," "The Letters of the Ming Dynasty" and

Christmas
countdown

.

~7

Bridge· disaster 20 years ago ...
~· ,

Bill Algeo, Business Mgr.

Middleport-Po~roy-Gallipolis-Point

· By MARGARET CALDWELL
Times-Sentinel Staff
GALLIPOLIS- The Christmas holiday season
Is usually met with much cheer and joy as families
join together , friends visit and presents are
exchanged. ·
Unfortunately, with this holiday cheer comes
holiday stress . More often than not, the season .
takes the joy out of us, which takes the joy out of
the season,
.
There Is the tree to put up, dinners to fix, guests
to prepare for, social events to attend, families to
shop for, a budget to maintain, and a house to keep
clean. With this comes a cry of " Humbug" and a
need to have the holidays over With.

"Stress is our reaction to , these outside
occurrences ·- how ,we choose to handle these
events In our Jives," said Dr. Edward R. Sofranko,
who Is a professor of psychology at Rio Grande
College and Community College. Sofranko Is also
director of the Center for Healthy Living.
"Inflexibility maglfles the stress."
According to information from Ohio State
University, the United States Department of
Agriculture and the Gallia County Cooperative
Extneslon Service, there are three baste teactlons
to .stress, anger, withdrawal and taking charge.
Aggr~sslon and anger may bring te.mporary
relief, but It usually does nothing to change the
'problem or make the stressful situation any

Commissioners Fred Simon
and Frank Beane sustained a n
earlier ruling by William Flaherty , director of the Ohio
Department of Liquor Control,
while commissioner J ohn Sweeney dissented.
"We' re glad the comm ission
upheld our order," said depart-

Ernie Algeo, Sales/Leasing

Dan Boone, Sales/Leasing

A HAPPY HOLIDAY- Twenty local children
received a Christmas gift from KMart In
Ga!Upolls Saturday morning. Here, one little girl

Christmas tree
Ralph Loll, Sales/Leasing

Mex Miller, Sales/Leasing

•

Unfold for any occasion:
Sott, earthy Harmony~ Series colors blend we ll with
any decor and create an inviting atmospt&gt;ere for
entertaining, relaxing , playing games, hobbies or any
occasion. Built with Samsoni te durability, Harmony 1
is ready when you are .
• Large 40" diameter table
• Comfortable pillow seat
• Warm earthtone
decorator coi0r vinyls
FURNITURE
or fabric
• Chip and scratch
resistant baked enamel

0

finish

12 Section•. 84 Paget
A Muttlmedia 11nc. Newap•per

Pleasant, December 13. 1987

better. In fact, It may even compound the
problem, according to the service.
When presented with a problem, time alone can
be helpful at first, but continual withdrawal can
be destructive. Support and understanding from
others is necessary for decision-making. Feelings
of being overwhelmed, trapped, unloved and
angry add to the problems.
"Such feelings are not that unusual, and they
may even be constructive If they help us to think
about the real meanings behind the feelings, what
causes them, and where they are taking us,".said
Rev:Les Shear of the First Un)ted Presbyterian
Church In Gallipolis.
Dr. "'{ayne Dwyer, author of the 1986 book,

"Happy Holidays" said there is a a ttitude during
this season that creates s tress. An example of the
attitude Is, "We have a history of traditions
surrounding the holidays. and I rriust make sure
that these are maintained."
His remedy fo r this attitude Is, ''This year I am
·going· to forget about tradition and simply
approach the holiday s. from a perspective of ·
spiritual fulfillment and enrichment for all of my
family and friends. I am not going to do things
simply because I've always done them. We can be
free to decide. "
Sofranko gives four "learning" relief suggestions to help during the holiday stress season;
(:See HOLIDAYS, A4)

RIO GRANDE, Ohio - "The
Christmas tree Is one of the
classic tradition's of the holiday
season," says Tim Snow, Reference Librarian at Rio Grande
College and Community College.
''However, an examination of the
available literature shows that
scholars are not always in
.agreement on Its historical
background."
"Some sources state that the
Christmas tree Is a fairly recent
de\/elopment, within the pas t
century and a half, that originated in Germany," Snow said.
In ''Every Day's a Holiday,"
he a,dded the author agrees that
the Christmas tree Is a German
Import, but claims that Its
origins are centuries older.
According to Snow, the book

picks out hers from the many many !hlngs
available In the store. See story on page A4.
(Times-Sentinel photo)

tradi~ion

relates the story of St. Boniface
(673-754) who came upon a group·
of Druids about to sacrifice a
child beneath a giant oak tree
deep In a forest In Germany.
"He turned the killing sword
aside with his cross and miraculously felled the. oak," Snow
explains. "Then, In telling 'the
simple story of Jesus,' he pointed
to a fir tree, saying that It was
'the living tree pointing to
heaven'."
In the "Encyclopedia of Superstition, " It Is argued that the
Christmas tree had Its beglnn logs -.ln...Egypt long before the
Christian era.
"The book claims that a spray
of palm tree with 12 shoots, one
for each month, was used at the
time of the winter solsllce as a

By CHARLES A. MASON
ovr News Staff
PT. PLEASANT - A siting
agreement signed by the Mason
County Commission in SeptemberwithPyroChem, Inc., has
been temporarily blocked by a
judge's order.
A hearing is !£heduled for Dec.
29, 9 a.m., In the courtrQOm of
Mason County Judge Clarence L.
Watt on the siting agreement
sl!l"ed Sept. IO between the Mason
Olunty Commission and PyroChem. Inc.
Jim Neel, president of PyroChern . In•(.. could not be reached
for comment on the judge's order.
• The judge on Thursday granted
a temporary wrtt of mandamus
against the county commission
and tndlvidually Paul Watkins,
president; Kenton Sheline and
Thomas "Tucker" Mayes; and
County Clerk Josephine T. Hanes.
The writ temporarUy blocks the
commission from carrying out the
terms of the siting agreement.

hazardous was(e Incinerator to be
The agreement, signed by rom·
missioners Watkins and Sheline, · buUt.
Both regulatory agencies are
but not Mayes, calls for Pyrocurrently
reviewing applications
Chem, Inc., to deposit In a county
by PyroChem, Inc., to bu~the
benefit furr:l one
hazardous waste Incinerator tn
half of I percent of the gross
Mason
County. The results of those
revenues derived from the hazardfindings
are expected to be made
ous waste Incinerator operation.
public within six months, accordThe county, according to the
Ing
to officials close to the project.
agreement, wUl JliiY ·out of that
The
judge's temporary wrtt to
county benefit furr:l the costs of
block the carrying out of the siting
training eounty , fire and safety
agreement was req~ted fran
personnel and costs for purchase
the court by Jan L. Haddox, a
or lease of emergency response
resident of Durst Road. Point
vehicles, equipment and supplies
Pleasant,
In Mason Cbunty. Irt a
and other expen!lt!S the county
petition lllect with the court earlier
may lnClir In meeting the terms r:i
this week, Haddox asked the judge
the 27-page contract.
to
weigh the authority of the
taken care of, the county may use
to enter Into such a
·commission
the rest of the funds remaining for
siting agreement and al~o the
any public purpose It wants.
of the commission to
authority
The agreement Is to run for 10
enter
into
a contract to "encouryears from the date the West
age,
foster,
aid, corr:lone or In any
VIrginia Department of Natural
tel'ty!S and con:lltlons"
way
accept
Resources and the West VIrginia
to butld a hazardous waste facility
Air Pollution Control Commission
(See JUDGE, A4)
both Issue permits alloWing the

a controversary for historiaris

s~mbol of the year completed,". established In America. "In the
he explained.
"International Dictionary of
In addition, Snow said, the
Thoughts," we discover a I660
edict from the Massachusetts
lights that are used on the
Christmas tree may represent
Bay Colony General Court which
many various customs and
banned the celebration of Christprecedents.
mas altogether and levied a fine
Many ancient civilizations
of five shillings against
used light and lights as a symbol
violators."
of winter solstice festivals, he
From other sources, there are
said. "They may also have
stories that the Hessian soldiers
originated from the Jewish Hafighting In the American Revoiu nukkah ' (Festival of Lights),
tlon were the first to set up
which occurs during this
Christmas trees, he says.
season."
"And , we can · probably thank
"Religious scholars believe
the Pennsylvania Dutch as the
that the lights are symbollcofthe
first Americans to regularly
homes of the people In the Holy
follow the Christmas tree tradiLand that were lit the night that
Jesus was borit."
According to Snow, Christmas · ·
trees had a difficult time getting

lion," Snow 'a dded. "But, as late
as IBlfjl, a Cleveland past())' \VhO
had a Christmas tree In his
church was censored for his
'Idiotic Ideas'."
There Is even significant disagreement among scholars as to
how to dispose of the Christmas
tree and evergreen decorations.
In the "Encyclopedia of Super-.
stltlons," Snow says. we are
given two contradictory pieces of
advice.
HOne citation warns," he said,
"that 'If Christmas evergreen
decorations are thrown out of
doors, a death will occur In the
house before next Christmas.

They would be burnt on Christmas Eye."
tn a separate citation, we are .
advised that " Holly andlvymust
not be burnt, but must be kept tut
next year to save the house from
lightning."
According to the National
Christmas Tree Association,
there will be 33.3 million trees
sold In the United States during
the 1987 season, an Increase of
about 600,000 over last year.
''So It Is obvious," Snow
concludes, "that the Christmas
tree is a strong symbol In our
country and that Is is here to
stay."

Drunk, drugged &lt;lriving awareness
week emphasizes holiday season .

S amson1•te·.

$99.00

mt

Judge halts agreement between
PryoChem, Mason Commissioners ,.

GLIMPSES: Bob Hope's eight-day Christmas trip to the
Gulf Is all set. He wjll entertain sailors on U.S. warships
staftlng Dec. 21, the USO said. Hope proposed the trip Monday
and Defense Secretary Frank Carlucci ordered that the
arrangements be made. Hope's last overseas foray was 1983-to
Beirut ... An International telephone operator In Pittsburgh will
appear on "Late Night with David Letterman" after putting
Letterman's call through to-a Leningrad hotel.

ment spokeswoman Vicky
Gelety .
"I believe we are not' In
violation," said James DeLeone,an attorney representing the St.
Louts-based brewing company,
adding lie does not view packagIng as advertising according to a
federal exemption.
In a statement Issued from
Anheuse r -Busch headquarters In
St. Louts, the company said It will
cooperate fully with state officials even .though It did not
believe at any time that Its
packaging was In violation of
Ohio laws that prohibit Santa
Claus from advertising liquor.
However. the cartons may
wind up on ·the consumers
shelves rather than back at
Anheuser-Busch warehouses.
Surveys have shown the Bud
Light holiday packs featuring
Sp'lds has been a hot item since
the original complaint was flied
Nov. 25. Since the company
agreed not to br ing any more
Spuds-Santa cartons into Ohio, It
has be en restocking shelves with
regular cartons .

•

Holidays a stressful time, hut can be managed

Per~an

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) . Spuds MacKenzie, the white bull
terrier depleted as Santa Claus
on I2·paCkS of Bud Light beer,
has .been ordered off Ohio beer
shelves.
The Ohio Liquor Control Comrplsslon .voted 2-1 Thursday to
ban the Spuds-Santa cartons on
grounds they violate a state
liquor rule against associating
Santa Claus with alcoholic
beverages.
.
The commission assessed no
penalty but ordered AnheuserBusch, Inc., to remove from all
Ohio outlets by 5 p.m. Dec IB any
Bud Light holiday packs bearing
the likeness of Spuds In a Santa
hat and shouldering a sack full of
beer.

Cloudy. Highs In mid 40s.

•

was made for " personal reasons. "

Santa Spuds banned

Along the R1 ver ... .... . B-t-8
Bu~lness .. .... ..... ...... .. ,,.E -1
Comles-TV ....... ....... Insert
Classlfleds .... , .. :.... .. .. D-3-7
Deaths ..... .. ... .............. A-4
Editorial ...... ............. .. A-2
Sports ........... .. ...... ... C-t-8·

tmts • ·
Vol. 22 No. 43
Cop)'righted 1987

Jerry Cunningham, Sales Mgr,

Im. id•·

•

Chuck Hupp, Gen. Mgr.

"The New Jules Verne. n

Brodsky, 47, who was kicked out of the Soviet Union in I972
and now lives In New York, picked up his Nobel Prize In
Stockholm, Sweden. Next month Navy Mir publishps the first
Installment of Boris Pasternak's "Doctor Zhlvago," which has
never appeared In the Soviet Uri ion.
,
MAIDS OF HONOR: Boston Mayor Raymond Flynn is the son
of a former cleaning woman and he apparently is still angry
about a hotel's plans to force maids to scrub floors by hand.
Flynn had planned to have hisJ~n. 41naugural ball In the Copley
Plaza Hotel but has moved It to the. World Trade Center.
The Copley had tried to elimlna te mops - meaning maids
would have to get down on their hands and knees- but a staff
revolt put an end to that policy. But Flynn was irked by the plan
and Is taking his party elsewhere. A Flynn aide said -the move

Beat of the Bend, by Bob Hoeflich

Sports C-

Bob Refold, Sales/Leasing

Reg. 5159.00

· • Padded table top

Stove Rittle, Sales/Leasing

STARTING DEC. 14 WE'Will BE OPEN ,
'TIL 8 P .M.I
HOURS:
9-6 Daily
Mon. &amp; Fri.
Free Parking

FREE
CHRISTMAS
EVE
DELIVERY
Jell Roth, Safos/Looalng

GALLIPOLIS - The week of
December 13 through 19 has been
proclaimed National Drunk and
Drugged Driving · Awarenes ~
Week. This effort l;&gt;y the National
Highway Traffic Safety Administration is to generate awarenes s ,
education and action, in hopes of
eliminating drunk and drugged
drivers from the nation's roads .
"D-Day on Trafflcways" wlll
kick off the week. D-Day was
observed during the ·13 hours
b'e tween 6 p.m. F r iday , Dec . 11 ,
and 7 a.m . Saturday , Dec. I2.
During these 13 hours; po)lce
officers in the county wer ~ out In
force looking for drivers who are
under the influe nce of alcohol
and drugs.
This campaign is coordinated
by Operat)on C.A.R. E., the Combined Accident Reduc tion Effor t
program of the na tion 's state law
enforcement agencies .
This year's theme Is "F irst a
friend, then a host. " For unknown reasons, traffic accidehts
are on the Inc rease again a Iter

several years of steady decline.
Federal, state, and local authorities and public interest groups
are trying to attack the problem
where It begins during Dec ember, at holiday parties .
''If you host or at tend a home or
office party, · serve drinks In
moderation and make non alcoholic beverages available for
your guests," said Lieutenant
Dan Henderson; commander of
the Gallla -Meigs Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol.
"Encourage those who do
drink to select a designated
driver Ia drive people home after
the party. If someone has had too ·
much to drink, help arrange
alternate means of transporta'·
!ion so they will not endanger
themselves or others by attempt·
lng to drive with their abilities
Impaired."
Still, too often, holiday party
host are unwllllng to stick their
necks out. A difficult sltuallon to
take, friends . must look at the
sttua lion as a risk - they risk
)osipg a friend, they risk the lives

•

•
of others and they risk living with
the knowledge that an accident
could have been prevented. First
a friend, then a host.
This year, there have been 75
alcohol related accidents In rural
Gallla and Meigs counties, ·according to Henderson . Five
persons.'were killed and another
56 people were Injured In these ·
accidents.
In Oh to, the alcohol · traffic
death toll in 1986 was 809 people
killed. Every day, two people are
killed '11nd 84 are Injured by
drinking drivers.
Each year, 23,000 persons lose
their lives In alcohol related
accidents. A11other 560,000people
are Injured and 43,000 of them are
seriously Injured.
Lt. Henderson asks Gallla and
Meigs county motorists to call
the Highway Patrol at 44624331992-2397 If a possible ,drunk
or other dangerous dr.lver Is
seen. The patrol also monitors
CB channel 9. Call letters are
KNN 3083.

CHRISTMAS PAGEANT- The cast of the Rio
Grande College and Community College produc·
tton "The Best Christmas Pageant F;ver," staged
a perfonnance for area elementary school

- ··

students on Friday, A part of the Little Buckeye ·
Theater Series, all public perfonnances of the
play are sold out, according to Dr. Greg Miller,
director of the college's Fine and Performing Arts
Center.

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