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                  <text>Tuesday, December

Ohio

Ohi~

Georgia
slips past
Arkansas

Lottery

Daily Number

236
Pick 4

·Page 4

5115

•

at .Y
Vol.38. No.162
Copyrighted 1987

••

Clear tonight. Low in mid
20s. Cloudy, windy Thursday.
Chance of rain. Highs in upper
40s .

•

ent1ne
2 Sections. 14 PBges

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 30, 1987 .

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

'

Ohio GOP chaitmen plan endo:rsement meet
WE ·woULD JUST LIKE TO SAY TWO

CLEVELAND (UP!) - Ohio's 88 Republican
county chairman could influence the outcome of
lhe nation's early caucuses when they meet next
month in Columbus in an unprecedented move to
consider whether to endorse a presidential
candidate.
And if an endorsement Is made, it wlli most
likely go to Vice President George Bush,
Cuyahoga County Chairman Robert Hughes,
president of the Ohio Republican County -Chairman's Association, said Monday .
"This will be the first time that the Republican
couniy chairmen have assembled as a group to
make theit views known," Hughes said at a news
conference. "The purpose is for the Ohio
Republican party and its leaders to have a ma jor

TH1t~8S ....

I

••••••

IN OUR NEWLY REMODELED STORE. MOST OF OUR HEAVY
CONSTRUCTION IS DONE!!!

~::-=----:---r---__:,__

•••
FOR SUPPORT IN OUR FAMILY BUSINESS THROUGH THE GOOD TIMES

impact on the presidential nomination ."
Hughes said an endorsemenl from the Jan. 23
meeting will inlluem;e voters in Ohio, which holds
its primary election May 3. and other states as
welL
"By the end of Super Tuesday, March 8, 49
percent of the Republican delegates to the
national convention will have been chosen. So you
can see what an influence this early period has,"
said Hughes.
Hughes said out of Ohio's 88 county chairmen.
'' somewhere between 50 and 60 are on record as
supporting Bush."
The Cuyahoga Couny Republican Party has nqt
made an endorsement yet but Hughes said he has
submitted his name as a Bush delegate.

__,

: i

1.
i

AND THE BAD. WE HOPE TO SHOW OUR APPRECIATION IN THE FUTURE
BY BETTER MEETING THE NEEDS OF ALL THE PEOPLE IN OUR AREA.

'

l'

"HAPPYNE .YEAR"

a

stand,"'
Republican Par ty, statewide. 'take
said Hughes .
Hughes said the GOP infighting has nothing to
do with the decision to hold an endorsment
meeting.
The chairman said it will also be decided at the
meeting whether to endorse a candidate for GOP
state chairman, should current Chairman Michael Colley follow through with his plans to step
~-·
down before his term expires in May.
Those In the runnin g for Colley's job. are:
Robert Holmes, Allen County; Robert Bennett.
Cuyahoga County; James Brennan. Lucas
County; James Betts, Cuyahoga County an&lt;!
Martha Moore, Muskingum County .

Suspect arson in $20,000 garage blaze

Arson is suspected in a $20,000
garage !Ire early this mornir1g at
the Jell Werry residence, 109
Pleasant Ridge, Pomeroy.
Pomeroy Fire Chief Charles
Legar reported that Pomeroy
firemen were called to the scene
at approximately 2 a.m. but that
the garage, a concrete block
structure which was separ~
from the house, was already
nearly destroyed.
Lost in the blaze, according to
Legar, were a 1984 Ford Econoline van, two new bicycles, a
mower and some stored antiques. The roof and inside of the

'

Former Gov. James Rhodes has already
endorsed Bush, a move that ha·s angered some
GOP leaders, particularly those supporting Sen.
Robert Dole, R-'Kan.
Some suggested Rhodes retire from active
participation in party affairs and suggested they
would initiate a move to boot him off the GOP's
National Committee.
But Hughes said, "You cannot tell a four-term
governor of Ohio, a man 78 years old who has been
a leader of the Republican Party for a generation.
to shut up and go over to the nursing home."
"THis is the business of getting out front and
there are only three things you can do as Rhodes
says: 'You can lead. you can follow or you can get .
out of the way.' What he is doing is saying to the

garage were completely des·
troyed. Legar estimates losses at
"at least $20,000." The property
was insured.

Authorities suspect arson due
to evidence found at the scene,
but have no suspect at this time.
The State Arson Bureau is being
called In to investigate Legar
said.
·
Werry is a member of the
Meigs Local Board of Education.
He was elected to that board In
the November election but was
appointed to fill the unexpired
term of Larry Powell, board

member, who resigned a couple if any individual cannot come
forward, he or she should at least
of months ago.
Meantime, Meigs Local Board provide anonymous information
of Education President Robert by telephone to officials to aid in
Snowden this morning said that the investigation, Snowden
while he is accusing no one of the stated. Snowden said that tires on
alleged arson he is requesting one of Werry's vehicles were
any individual having Informa- slashed earlier this week.
tion In regard to the alleged arson
Snowden said the Meigs Local
at the Werry garage to pass on
such Information to the prosecut- · Board will meet in special
ing attorney, the administration session at 4:30 p.m . today. The
of the district or to the board of federal mediator handling negotiations in the teachers strike
education.
within the district, has not
"It is important that anyone
having Information come for - sc heduled another session,
ward," Snowden said, However . Snowden concluded.

Meigs board accused of twisting truth

FROM ALL THE FAMILY OF VAUGHAN'S.

POSTMASTER SOULSBY RETIRING -James (Jim) Soulsby,
right, will retire as Postmaster of the Pomeroy Post Olflce
Thursday. Soulsby became Pomeroy postmaster on July 27, 1966
replacing the late Charles Diehl who was serving In an active
capacity. Soulsby who resides at 117UnionAve., Pomeroy, with hls
wile, Susie, Is a member of Pomeroy ~lasonic Lodge I &amp;I; Chapter
186, Order of Eastern Star; is president of the Meigs Local Athletic
Boosters and Is a sports writer. lor The Daily Sentinel. He will
continue sports writing activities and possible part-time
employment In other fields . Tom Reuter, left, has been named
ofllcer in charge at the Pomeroy Post Olflce until a replacement is
named. Reuter began his work with the Postal Department on Jan.
27, 1957. A resident of Rock Springs Road, Reuter receives the keys
to the post office from Souslby. In Pomeroy Tuesday and
Wednesday to help with the transition was Lou Jordan, Zanesville,
Postal Systems examiner.

Michael Wilford, president of ing in its demands. tor a, ra lse of
the Meigs Local Teachers Associ- $3,000 on the base salary. for the
ation, today accused the Meigs third year of the contract.
"The board is using figures
Local Board of Education of
from one of our early proposals
"twisting tpe truth by using old
figures that no longer are on the made last summer long before
table" in referring to the nego- • the strike began.
"The MLTA has always taken
tiating position of MLTA .
Wilfong's statement reads:
" The MLTA has never taken
an Inflexible stance -in any
negotiating session since the
talks began early last summer.
To say that the MLTA is
inflexible simply distorts the
truth.
"In .a statement to the news
media Tuesday, the board
claimed the MLTA was unbend-

the position that anything is
negotiable and we objecl to the
board using hard and fast ligures
that make it appear the MLTA is
unwilling to make concessions to
end this strike.
· "Figures used by the board
were contained in a proposal that

is no longer on the table."
Meantime, Wilfong said he has
still heard no response to the
MLTA proposal made during the
last negotiating session last week
that was to be taken to the entire
board of education.

•% ;' ~

'

MLTA is accused of ·w orking
everywhere but bargain table
WHOLE

Boston Butt
Pork Roast

FRESH GREEN

Cabbage

+

+

PERLB.
S·6·L8.

II~ERAGE

LB.

U.S. NO. 1

IDAHOt
POTATOES
10 LB.

BAO

*129

The Meigs Local Board of
Education today Issued a state·
ment in regard to press releases ,
letters to p:;~rents and other
methods being employed by the
Meigs Local Teachers A.ssociation In its strike which began on
Nov. 6.
The statement reads:
"Apparently the MLTA negotiating team, or the powers which
give them instructions, has decided to try to negotiate at places
other than the bargaining table.
They are making daily press
releases', sending letters to
members of the community, a nd
calling parents of students .

"They are complaining that
the Board now has a 'pollee
state'; that the Board is demand' ing total capitulation instead of
negotiati ng at the table, and they
have suggested that children
should not attend school for
various reasons.
"The Board's answers to these
sta tements are as follow:
"After the extreme vandalism
and threats shown by the MLTA
to substitutes at the inservlce
meeting of Friday, Dec.18, it was
obvious that protection and security was needed for these
teachers and students on the
following Monday . .There were

not 118 police on duty. In fact,
there were about half that many
on duty.
"There were not, and have not
been 55 substitutes on duty.
There have been almost twice
that number from the first day,
and the number has increased:
"The acts of vandalism, des truction and coercion demonstrated since Dec . 18 have
scarred ahd marred the reputa·
!ion of the Meigs Local School
District's regular teaching staff.
"The Board does not believe
that by making several proposals
which would keep the district in
Continued on page. 7

Cold temperatures follow storm
By JEANNE REALL
Rocky Mountains and Great
United Press International
Plains, closing airports and
Ohioans braced Tuesday for stranding holiday travelers.
Slick road conditions In Clevesome of the coldest temperatures
of the season In the wake of a land Tuesday caused a 10-car
winter storm that dumped up to 5 accident on the east shOreway, a
inches of snow In some parts of part of Enterstate 90. Pollee
northern Ohio and was blamed officers said live people were
for a 10-car pileup in Cleveland. treated at hospitals ior minor
The average snowfall across Injuries. The pileup temporarily
northern Ohio was 2 to 3 inches, blocked the shoreway's westthe National Weather Service bound lane into the city, causing
said. The southern two-thirds of a ' mid-morning traffic jam.
·Further west on !he shoreway ,the state received only a trace of
near Cleveland's downtown ,
snow, if any.
Much of northeast Ohio es- heavy winds off Lake Erie blew
caped the 4 to 8 inches of snow waves over about a mile stretch
predicted for the area Monday of the road, creating a hazardous
night, bu t some sections of the Ice patch.
Jim Pargolitl of the Ohio
snow belt east .of Cleveland
received as much as 5 Inches. Department of Transportation
Ashtabula County in no r theast said road crews worked for hours
Ohio and Williams County in the clearing the Lake Erie ice from
northwestern part of the state the road.
both had four inches of snow. ·
"They've been out there salt·
The · storm moyed through !ng all morning," sa id Pargoliti.
northern Ohio after dumping as ''It was completely iced about 10
much as 2 feet of snow in the a.m."

'

\

About 45 trucks plowed ana
salted Cleveland city streets for
rush-hour traffic . By noon, most
of Cleveland's roads were dry.
A winter storm warning issued
for extreme northeast Ohio was
downgraded Tuesday afternoon
to a snow advisory for Cuyahoga,
Medina, Lake, Geauga and Ashtabula counties, where snow
flurr.\es and squalls threatened to
bring additional accumulations
of I to 3 inches .
Cold temperatures, however,
were expected to become more of
a concern than snow lor most
Ohioans.
.
Milder temperatures are ex pected to prevail by New Year's
Day, but the National Weather
Serylce predicted clear skies
would contribute to some of the
coldest weather of the season
Tuesday nighl and ear ly
Wednesday.
Temperatures across most of
the state rem a Ined In the 20s
Tuesday and lows were expected ·
to be in the tee.ns Tuesday night . .

PRIZE WINNER - Middleport businessman
Dick Owen, on behalf of lhe Middleport Chamber
of Commerce, presents Ann Lowry Crow, of
Syracuse, wllh gill certificates totaling $1,000,
Crow wa.s the grand prize wln11er in Middleport

Chamber's Christmas promolion. Owen says 20
lmsinesses donated to this year's promotion. In
addition to the grand prize, prizes of SlOO, $200,
$300 and $400 in gift certificates were given away
earlier.

Eliminate Ohio in bid for new plant
The superconductlng super col- $270 million a year.
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Eight
The Jist is the fir~t step ·in the
states mada the f.lrst cut In the llder would be the world's largest
billion-dollar bNlding for the scientific fac111ty, a tunnel 50 sele&lt;;tion process ..The Energy
superconducting super collider, miles in circumference in which Department will review the
the atom smasher !hat could give sub-atomic particles called prot• academy's list and release its
researchers a glimpse into the ons would be accelerated by own -likely with the same states
essense of the universe, officials high-powered magnets nearly to -next month .
In July, the department will
the speed of light, then smashed
said Tuesday .
announce
its preferred site,
Illinois, Texas, Arizona, New into each other to form other
would
most likely be the
which
·
York, Colorado, Michigan, Ten- sub-atomic particles .
winner
unless
environmental
From those experlmen ts,
nessee and North Carolina are on
problems
.a
re
found.
tl)e short list drafted by the scientists hope to discover the
origins of the universe and the , Most of the states on the list
National Academy of Sciences.
The list was released by Sens. research also could be applied to wer~ considered leading conPhil Gramm, R- Texas, and Jesse such technologies as nuclear tenders in the sweepstakes for
Helms , R-N .C., Tuesday after medicine, microchips and super the $6 billion project . Two states
:. conspicuous · by their absence
they recei~ed telephone calls comouters.
were California and Ohio , which
The
super
coilider,
which
from Energy Secretary John
had lobbied heavily with project
would
open
In
1996,
Is
expected
to
Herrington.
Later the academy, which had cost between $4 billion and $6 .6 partner West Virginia.
At a news conference, a gleeful
recommended the states to the billion. Once completed, It would
Gramm
described the super
Energy Department ·on Christ- mean the steady employment of
c!)lllder
as
" th e most Important
mas Eve, released the official about 2,500 scientists and techniContinuee on page 7
cians wlth.an Qj!Crating budget of
"best qualified list ."

__.._....

. '

�.,

Commentary
W

Or)d's

The Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

••

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-~IASON AREA

~J:h

Bm~ rM.......~._
-rr f'""T""E;!d ..==~~
~v

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT. WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

•

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publis h£&gt;rs Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome They should be less than 300 words
long. All INters are subject toedll ing and must beslgnro with name, address and
IE'Iephone number. No unstgned len ers will be published. Letters should be In

goOO taste,

addre~s!ng

issues, not personalltles.

.

Nevada loses
power struggle
By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON iUPI)- As Congress was wrapping up its work for
the year, and the usual end-of-session bargaining intensified, !he
state of Nevada was treated to a dose of power politics on one of the
most sensitive environmental issues in recent years,
With Nevada lawmakers only able to wait in the wings. senators
and House members from other states agreed Nevada should be the
site for the nation's first high-level nuclear waste storage site.
The decision, included in a huge deficit -reduction bill, left the
state's representatives in Congress fuming and bitterly assailing
their colleagues.
"Congress is behaving like a pack of wolves going in for the kill. "
said Rep. Barbara Vucanovich, R-Nev.
"Base power politics at its worst." said Sen. Harry Reid. D·Nev.
Rep. James Bilbray, D-Nev., warned that the' other states were not
ketting off scot-free since lhe dangerous waste materials would have
lo travel over ma ny of their highways during the long haul to Nevada.
Previously, Congress had approved a selection process by which
:he Energy Department would come up with a list of possible storage
sites and conduct scientific studies of those sites before a final
~ecision was made.
There were no volunteers for the honor of being the nation's dump,
lmd v1gorous protests were hea rd from every state mentioned or
listed for consideration by the Energy Department. Finally. the list
was down to sites in Nevada, Texas and Washington. but other states
-including some in the East- were being considered for a second
permanent storage site and for a temporary storage site.
Th~ issue was taken up by House and Senate members who met to
negotiate-a-compromise on the deficit-reduction bill. The result was
that Yucca Mountain, Nev., was chosen to be the waste storage siteassuming the scientific studies s upport the choice- and plans for the
second and te mporary sites were put on hold.
Not s urprisingly, the plan was welcomed by lawmakers from those
states mentioned as possible storage sites or bordering the candidate
states .
One Texas congressman issued a press release hailing the action as
"an early Christmas present for the sta te of Texas."
·
Nevada, with its four-member congressional delegation. simply
did not have the muscle to head off the agreement negotiated in the
House-Sena te conference committee. None of its members were even
appointed to the comm ittee.
And to make matters worse, Texas and Washington are home to
some of the most powerful members of Congress. including House
Speaker Jim Wright, House Democratic leader Tom Foley, and
Senate Finance Co mmittee Chairman Lloyd Bentsen.
The situation might have been different in previous years, whendespite it s size - Nevada wielded a fair amount of influence in the
hails of Congress.
That influe nce went into deci!ne with the retirement last year of
Sen. Paul Laxait, a close friend of President Reagan and an
acknowledged deal-maker in the Senate. A few years earlier, Neva da
also lost the considerable clout of Sen. Howard Cannon, the
Democratic chairman of the Senate Commerce Committee.
Had Laxalt or Cannon still been serving this year, Nevada might
well have escaped being chosen for the nuclear waste site.
Instead, the state is represented by newcomers who have not had
time to build their power bases. Nevada's two senators and one of its
House members ail are in their first terms, and Vucanovich is in her
third. ·
The inability of the Nevada delegation to prevent the site deciSion
cou ld spell particular trouble for Sen. Chic Hecht, RNev .. who will be
running for re-election next year
There appears to be little the state can do now to overturn the
decision , but the bitterness may linger. Vucanovich was particua r ly
strong in her condemnation, accusing her colleagues of "gloating
about h avi ~ g kept it out of everyone else's backyard while sticking it
in Nevada ...
She ter med the action " politica lly motivated and coward ly."

Today in history
By United Press International
Today ' Is Wednesday, Dec. 30, the 364th day of 1987 with one to
follow .
The moon is waxing. moving toward its full phase.
The morning stars are Mars and Sat urn .
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus and Jupiter.
·Those born on this date are under the sig n of Capncorn. They
include British a uthor Rudyard Kipling in 1865; Canadian economist
and humorist Ste phen Leacock in 1869; Japan's World War II Prime
Minister Hideki Tojo in 18&amp;1; former Miss America Pageant emcee
Bert Parks in 1914 tage 72); rock 'n' roll pioneer Bo Diddley in 1928
1age 58); actor John Hiilerman in 19:\2 Iage 55); former Los Angeles
Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax in 1935 1age 51); and two founders of
the pop group The Monkees, Mike Nesmith in 1942 (age 45) and Davy
Jones in 1945 (age 42).
On this date in history:
In 1853. the United Sta les bought 45,000 square miles of land along
the Gila River from Mexico for $10 million. The area is now sou thern
Arizona and New Mexico.
In 1903, na111~s swept the Iroquois Theater in Chicago, killing 602
people. The fire led to safety regulations for thea ters around the
world.
In 1922, at the first Soviet Congress of the U.S.S.R., Russia, the
Ukraine and two other Soviet republics signed a treaty creating the
Soviet Union.
In 1972, President Richard Nixon ordered a halt in the bombing of
North Vietnam and announced that peace talks with the Hanoi
government would resume in Paris.
In 1986, Exxon Corporation became the first major international oil
company to withdraw from South Africa because of that nation's
racial policies.
. A thought for the day: Stephen Leacock said, ''Advertising may be
described as the science of arresting the human intelligence long
enough to ge:. money from it. "
t

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Wednesday, December 30, 1987

•

W~rSt

WASHINGTON - Pentagon
bu reaucrats have created a tern·
pest in a tin cup out of what
shou ld have been the simples t of
tasks- buying drinking cups.
To be appreciated. the canteen
Cup caper should be savored as al·
legory. ll is a symbol of everything
that Is wrong with the Byzantine
bureaucracy on the banks of the
Potomac.
You may have read the details
already: The Army needed metal cups for combat infantry. Th.e
cont ract went to a ri Israeli manu·
facturer The Army dutifully
paid installments, even though
the Israeli company wasn't de·
l!vering the goods on schedule.
The $2.64 cups e_pded up costing
$9.72 ins tea d.
· In shopper's parlance, we ca ll
this "being taken to the cleaners.
" After the ti n-cup fi asco, the
Pentagon could write a book on
being taken to the clea ners.
CHAPTER ONE: In which the
Pe ntagon goes shopping. The
Army notices it is perilously low
on its supply of metal cups for
combat canteens. Defense De·
par tent officials. rus h to hll the
order by awardmg !he btd to S.
Han a ny Metal Craft of Israel for

shopperst_________:_By_J_ack_A_n_de_rs_on

298,350 cups at $2.64 each. A run·
ner-up bidder, Pacific Fabrlcalion Co. of California cries foul.
Han any doesn't fit the "Buy
American Act." The Pentagon
waives that ac t and, adding in·
suit to injury lets Hanany use
German instead of American
steel.
CHAPTER TWO: In which the
cu ps dribble in. Hanany has troubie from tne start. The firstcupdelivery is seven months late and
only one-third of the promised
quantity. The scorned competitor,
Pacific Fabrication sends a pri·
vate detective to Israel to find out
what's up. Hecomesbackalleglng
fraud and criminal misdealing.
The Pentagon sends its own investigator four on this after the first
delivet Yd eadll ne is m Issed . I t lSn
· 't
easy to keep track of a foreign con·
tractor . the p en tagon says, especially when th e su beon trae tor Is on
a kubbutz ·
CHAPTER THREE : In whi ch
the Pen ta gon th rows good money
after bad . T en days be fore Hana ny mis ses Its first delivery
de a di'me, th e p en t agon g 1ves t he
company another contract for
298,350 more cups at the save
price. Han any 's total take wiil be

$1.6 million. Pentagon officials' highly probability" It will cancel
fail to issue notice to terminate its contract with Hanany.
POSTCRIPT: You can pick up
the contract for tardiness, so Ha·
nany Is ( free from its perfor· a Taiwan-made version of the
mance schedule. The 'Pentagon canteen cup at your local Army
decides that, "given time," Ha· su rplus store for about $4. The
nany will come through.
genuine, "certitled" U.S. mliiCHAPTER FOUR: In which tary surplus model is $8.
the cups hit ,the fan. The now-enCOLOMBIAN CONNECTION
rage&lt;l competitor, Pacific Fabri- -There is a saytngin Colombia,cators, sues the Pentagon. A fe"First a drug trafficker buys a
deral judge grants an injunction Mercedes then he buys a large
halting the delivery of the cups estate then he buys a politician."
and the payments to Hanany
Our sources confirm that It's no
pending the completion of an in·
joke.
vestlgatlon by the General AcGovernment officials in Col·
counting Office.
ambia are taking millions of dol·
EPILOGUE: In which the Iars in payoffs !rom drug traf·
Pentagon goes shopping. The !lckers to look the other way. A
GAO and th e FBI say no crime classified report from the Drug
was committed. The Army is still
Enforceent Administration says
desperate for cups. it has only
that the bribes total more than
34,200 from Hanany which, when
$100 million.
the payments to the Israeli
The Colombia drug traffickers
company are counted up, come
cover themselves by using good
to $9.72 a cup. The Pentagon
old American corporate mana·
awards an emergency procure- geent techniques. Their organiza·
ment contract for 200,000 cups at
tlons are so specialized and coma cost of $3.53 a cup. This tie, the . partmentalized that it makes it al·
winner is an American firm but
most impossible to arrest a sophis·
not poor Pacific Fabrication
Heated smuggler or shut down an
which, for its hollering stili can't
operation. If a key person is
get its bid in the ballpark The
caught, the rest of the carry on
Pentagon announces there ·is "a
their specialized asslgnents, conducting business ~s usual. And bu·
siness Is big.
Colombia is the largest single
source of cocaine and marijuana
coming into the United States.
PREMATURE SHREDDINGWe have eVidence that the Soviet
KGB Is a bit overwhelmed by the
areas of information that Ameri·
can- trnitors and paid agents give
tliem. One of the KGB'shighest defectors, Maj. Stahlslav Levchenko,
now lives secretly In the United
States, aware that the KGB has
sentenced him to death.
Levchenko tells the story of an
agent who hooked up with a key Ja·
,panese inteliigence official. From
that official, through an intermedl·
ary the KGB was picking up docu·
ments about the international ter·
rorist network. But Levchenko was
shocked to · learn the documents
weren't even being read. In fact,
they were being shredded before
anyone translated them. One of
Levchenko' s superiors dismissed
his complaint, saying there weren't
enough Japanese translators in
Moscow.

ReV IeWlN~ A~THeR ARMs (oNTOO~ TReATY

Which

party

By Robert J. Wagman
WASHINGTON (NEA) - In
the wake of Mikhali Gorbachev's
visit ' t8 Washington and the
signing of the INF treaty, arms
control is a growing political
issue. The effect it wUJ have and already had had - on both
parties' presidential campaigns
is th e s ubject. of intense
specualtion.
There is general agreement
that the coming Senate debate
over ratification of the INF
treaty will have a substantially
greater impact on the GOP
primary process than on the
Democratic campaign.
The reason is simple: the
Democratic contenders have almost indentical views on arms
On

hands

owns

· at

more "conservative
than the "avR
bli
erage
epu can.
Th us, rat!'f'Jca ti on of the newly
signed INF treaty could become
·
i
a maJor pr mary Issue in the
com ing mon th s.
Th e t wo Iea di ng Gop contend·
ers - Vice President Bush and
. it L
Sena t e Mmor
Y eader
Robert
·
'
D0 Ie - are bot h m
favor of
ra till ca'ti on.
Bush s 1mage was greatly
en hance d because he was positloned 'ati
as a rna j or
player in the
negotl ons w ith Gor bachev.
·Bu t he has started taking his
·
hi hl
lump s '"
some g Y conservati ve pr im ary states, like New
.
Hampshj re, over h1s
-pro-treaty
Stance ·
Tooff tth' B hh
se ts, us asalready

increased defense spending and
stepped up "Star Wars" research and testing.
Meeting with reporters the
morning after Gorbachev re·
turned to Moscow, Bush said, "I
think military spending will have
to continue to increase, and if I
am elected president it will."
Bush said that expanded military
funding will be necessary to
offset Soviet conventional force
superiority after eltminatlon of
intermediate nuclear weapons in
Europe.
Caught in themiddieoftheiNF
debate was Bob Dole. On the one
hand, as leader of the president's
party In the Senate, he had to
champion ratification or else

ought to turn in his three-piece
suit for a white robe and pointy
llood, and furnish his guests with
wooden crosses and a box of
kitchen matches. "You ought to
at least have the decency to look ·
like what you are," I said, "so the
rest of us can spot you and stay
somewhere else."
Then I told him that I didn't
believe his customers wanted to
see minorities in subservient
roles, any more than they want to

see children abused or dogs
kicked.
I believe I was right. I don't
think the majority of the people
in this country want anything to
do with the post-slavery class
system we've fought for decades
to dismember. And I'm sure the
Copley Plaza couldn't have sur·
vlved the loss of those of us who
would have taken our Mastercards elsewhere to spend the
night.

Berry's World

Arizona,

tilt

meet

in the championship game of the
Caliia County Holid ay Tourna·
ment Tuesday night to lead host
North Gallia to a 51-40 victory
over Kyger Creek in the cham·
pionship game.
Denney, named the Most Valu·
able Player in the tournament
after the game, joined tea m·
mates Keith Burnette and Don
Mays as selectees to the alltournament team. Mike Brad·
bury and Bill Loveday, the only
Bobcats to post double 'figures
against the Bucs , were also
named to the aU -tourn ament
team.
NORTH GALUA (51} - Den·
ney 9·3·3-21; Burnette 3-2-4-14;
George 3-0·1-6; Glassburn 1·2·0·
5; Mays 2·1·1·5: Blackburn 0·0·1 ·
0; Lemley 0·0-J.O. TOT.ALS 18-8-11-51
KYGER CREEK (40}- Love·
day 5·2-1-12; Bradbury 5-0-5-10;
Leach 4·0·2-8; Denney 1·2·1·4;
Reese 1-1·5-3; Perry 1-0·1-2;
Hodge 0-1·0'1. TOTALS- 17·6·5·
40
Score by quarters
KCHS ................ 10 10 12 8-40
NGHS .......... ..... . 13 16 12 10-51
Southwestern· Hannan Trace
Center Rick Swain of Hannan
Trace and Highla-nder pivot
Shawn McNe~l not only scored 20
points each to tie for game
honors, but were also named to
the all-tournament team at the
end of the tournamen\.
However , Swain's sco ring ef·
fort was combined with strong
performances from teammates
Scott Rankin, who scored 19, and
Grady Johnson, who had 12, to
pace the Wildcats to a 73 65 win
over the Highlanders in the
consolation game.
HANNAN TRACE (73) - R.
Swain 7-0-6-4-20; Rankin 6-1·4·3·
19; G. Johnson 5·0·2·3·12; Stitt
2-0-3·3-7; Petro 3-0-0-5-6; Brumfield 2·0·0·3-4; Cremeens 0·0·3-4·
3; J. Swain 1-0·0-1-2; Jenkins
0-0·0·1·0. TOTALS- 26·1-18·27-73
SOUTHWESTERN (65)
McNeal 7-0·6·4·20; Merstv:m 1·3·45-15; Bryan\ 4·0·5·0·13; Walker
1·2·4-5·12; White 0·1-0·0·3; Hively
1·0-0-3-2; Cemini 0-0·0·1-0; Dar·
nell 0-0·0·3·0. TOTALS- 14-6·19·
21-65
Score by quarters
SWHS .......... ...... 14 16 5 30-65
HTHS .. .. .. . .. .. .. .. . 9 23 17 24-73

-

Scoreboard ...
NHL results
N,\TION/\1, HOCKEl:' LEAGUE
Tu;•,.da.y',; Kt'IHJ it~
llo,;tnn .f, 1"\tL-.hurglt .f ( lit' )

t)u;•IK•t• ~. Rullalo I
N\' ltaogt.'r'i :t, NY hhlndt•r";J (II(•)
\1unlrt&gt;~tl-l , \ ' iUM'UD\Irr I

\\'t•dnt•N.Iay'" COnnws

Turonto at llurtfunt, ~ ::Iii p,m,
,
w~~~bington at ~''" lt-r"ii'Y . i : "~ p m
lh-troit 111 St .

Lou\ ~.11: :~l tJ, m ,

Mlnn!'l'!Obt ~1\ ( 'h k. a~o, II: :!5 p,m ,

l'hiladt•lphlu :II t~ dmonltm . 9: :t1 p,nl

WIIII'IIP"Il' at

1 ~11'&lt;

,\nJ:t•h•,., II : 05 p,m,

Thurso:lny '" C&gt;altWI'i

Quo•lu•t' at N'll' ltanl!•'f", night
Sl . Loui!i 111 ll&lt;•INIII , 11\Jrhl
Rmdon at Bulfalo, nh:hl

l' hliPdt•lphln ad l:algar) , r1ip;hl
( 'ltka,;o at Mlnn('!iOill, o iKhl
\\tnnlp•p; at Vant'Oll'&gt;t'r, niJ'lhl

NBA results
M!OOKt~TMI . L ASSOC
Tm·~;I,V'~&gt; ltt · ~llll-.

r..iATION i\1,

knee~ta_k_e_d_o-ut_a_p_o_sl-tio_n_f_a_vo-ri_n_g_a_p. :p~:.: =rr-=d~=s~. :oy-~=-1=t: .: :.:i~. : . : e:.;e=id=;-=·-;

Yet agai n the newspaper
She was a smar t woman, so I
brings fac t stra nger than any ,decided to put 11 to the test. I'd do
fictton : Centuries after a castle one floor with my trusty O'Cedar,
· chambermaid strung an old fox and another on my hands and
pelt onto a discarded jousting knees, and look at the difference.
pole to create the first floor mop, Once finished, I compared notes:
and decades after O'Cedar in- O'Cedar floor, pretty darn good.
vented the power stripe Boston's Hands-and-k nees, pretty darn
luxurious Copley Plaza Hotel good . O'Cedar floor, 15 minutes.
ordered Its maids to get down on Hands-a nd-knees floor, 10 min·
their hands and knees to scrub utes. O'Cedar floor, no pain
floors.
anywhere, except possibly a
A few troub lemakers imme- slight creeping hint of lower·
diately accused the Copley Plaza back neuralgia that might hit by
of ca ter ing to an elitist clientele the next morning. Hands-and·
that wanted to see the hotel's knees floor, two knees and a back
elderly, minority maids kneeling th a.t felt like they'd bee n
by the toilets, They hinted of a squashed in an industrial tool
plantation mentality among a press and then kicked by a horse.
few born too late to ·enjoy the
To wit: Spending 10 minutes on
· my hands and knees on a tile floor
spoils of slavery.
But, hey, I'm a reasonllbie gaL was not a n act I wanted to repeat
I was willing to enterta in the in my lifetime. It might take a
Copley management's claim that few minutes longer to get those
the edict only carrtilll ou t the las t few hairs up off the floor with
hotel's "hands-on bu siness, wllh a mop, but I was convinced I'd
a lot of attention to detail," and make up for it later by avoiding·lf
reflected cus tomers' negative walker a nd a•hospital bed.
comments abou t floor cleanli·
So, finding little merit in the
ness. I started out my considera· Copley's "better job" argument,
tlon of the decree as a study in
I moved on to the troublemakers'
quality control: Can one, I contention that a certain class of
wondered, really do a better job customer just liked the idea of a
of cleaning a bathroom floor on serving class acting more like a
one's hands and knees th~n with a ·serving class. I' ve s uspected that
mop?
the plantation mentality is alive
As a ma tter of fact, I had
in some reptilian part of some
considered this question back in
brains ever since a hotelier
1971,. when r took over a college confided a few years back that he
friend's house-cleaning business.
always hired blacks for certain
Her new class ·schedule conjobs beca.use "the customers just
flicted with her job, adn 1 agreed
like it better that way!' Wink.
to take over her route. When she
What I told the hotelier then
was instructing me on the nuan· was borne out l&gt;Y the Copley's
ces of cleaning tile floors, she
retractio n of tlie hands -andadmonished, "I always get down
knees rule the day after it was
on my hands and. knees. I think
proclaimed. I told him that if
you do a better job thai way."
what he was saying is true, he

loses

buzzer, 62-60

Doug McConnell drove inside
and scored on a layup at the
buzzer )o lead lndian Valley
South to a 62·60 victory over
Southern in a holiday specia l at
the OU Convocation Center Tues·
day night.
It was one of three high school
games played in the huge Athens
arena -Oak Hili edged Rock Hi U
64-63 in the first tilt. Columbus
Academy downed Wellston, 72·
46, in the other outing.
The layup was exac tly what
41- South needed, because Tornado
center Dave McMillan hit both
ends of a one-and-one with only
four seconds left to tie the match
at 60. McMillan's final points
comprised the culmination of a
Southern comeback from a 13·
point deficit at the sta rt of the
third auarter.
The first tie in the second half
came when Tornado fo rward
Dave Amburgey connected on
one of his three three-pointers
with 17 seco nds left to play to tie
matters at 58. South's Larry
Lasure scored with five seconds
left to restore South 's two- point
advantage at 60-58. However, IV
committed a foul away from the
ball, sending McMillan t.o the foul
. line to shoot a one-and-one.
McMillan made both shots, set·
tlng the stage for the gamewinner for South.
South's Lasure led aU sco rers
with 27 points, six of those·
coming from three-pointers .
Teammate Steve Allensworth
had 10 of South's 28 rebound s.
Amburgey led the Tornadoes
with 18 markers. half of which
: came on three-point shots.
McMillan grabbed seven of
Southern's 20 rebounds.
South was 27 of 46 from the field
and 6 for 8 from the foul line. The
TornadO!'S were 23 for 56 from the
floor and 8 of 10 from the stripe . .
IV SOUTH - (62) - Lasure
: 10-2-1-27; Adam 6-0-1-13; Aliens . worth 5·0·1 ·11: McConneli 3-0-1-.
7; Polen 1·0-2-4. TOTALS . 25-2·6-62
SOUTHERN- (60)- Am bur·
gey 3-3-3-18; Caldwell 2·3·0-13;
McMillan 5·0·3·13; Turley 4·0·2·
10; Riffle 2-0·0-4; Diddle 1-0-0-2.
TOTALS - 17·6·8·60
Score by quarters
IV South ............ 21 12 16 13-62
Southern ............ 13 15 8 24-60
Rusty Denney scored 21 points

arms-control-issue?

control and military spending.
All of them favor adoption of the
INF treaty. And all but Sen.
Albert Gore of Tennesse favor a
significant decrease in Pentagon
funding.
In a clear appeal to Southern
De mocrat s, Gore has staked out
a more conservative position ·on
military spending. While favor·
ing elimination of waste, he says
he would keep spending at higher
levels than his rivals. '
The arms issue is potentially
much more explosive for GOP
contenders.
. Republicans generally favor
high levels of Pentagon spend·
in g. Studies have shown that the
type of Rep ubi lea n who shows up
to vote in primaries is usually
and

Southern

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r'lo'1•" \'nrir. 1:!:\, 1•urtlltnd 1111
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llnllu" 121i, Sat r.lmt nto 117

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,\I htnhl ul ( lt• vt•l••nd , 7: ,\0 p,rn
IIOI1"11Jn all\1llwaukt•t•, II: :If! 11 m ,
Sat ranwniP at San 1\nlonlo II ,\tl p m .

Girls scores
f,id, 111.... 1/ 1 ~/, " ' ' ' " " ' JJo,,,,,, ,,(l
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' '

Arizona, which came into the
game shooting 57 percent as a
learn. made only 39 percent in the .
first hall, which ended With the
W1ldcats holding a 31·25lead . But
the defense keyed the second·
half spurt, and Arizona's shoot·
ing improved to47 percent for the
gamP.
Duke never trailed against
Florida. The Blue Devils held a
51-33 lead at the half, then scored
the first 6 points of the second
half to lead by at lea st 20 points
lhroughout the final 20 minutes .
;
Florida fell to 7-2.
In other games involving Tpp
20 teams, No.4 Pittsburgh routed
Alabama 87-51 in the championship of the Citrus Bowl Tourna·
ment , No. 8 Temple blasted
Southern 84·47 in the champic\n·
ship game of the Sugar Bowl
Tournamen t, No. 10 Oklahoma
ripped Oral Roberts 144-93 atld
Iliinois State upset No. 15 Iowa
89·88 in the All -College Tourna·
ment, No. 11 Purdue stopped
Wake Forest81 -73 in the opening
round of the Palm Beach Hurricane Classic .
Also, No. 12 Michigan ciob·
bered South Florida 92-56 in the
·championship game of the South
Florida Holida y 1nvttational, No.
13 Indiana topped Stanford 83-73
for the championsh ip of the
Hoosier Classic. No. 14 NevadaLas Vegas held off Louisia na
State 78-59 in !he final of the
UNLV Holiday Classic.
At Orlando, Flu., Demetreus
Gore scored 24 points and Cha·
rles Smith blocked 7 shots and
scored 14 points to lead Pitt·, 8-0.
Smilh. lhe tournamenl MVP,
bio~ked 13 shots, scored 27 points
and on ly committed 1 fou l in two
games.
Co ntinued on page 4

.
AT YOUR NEARBY NISSAN DEALER, GREAT YEAR
END DEALS AND FACTORY INCENTIVES MAKE THIS
THE BEST TIME TO SAY, "YES"!
'

-~--- ~

Sa"eupto

s

s

stan:za

Front Wheel

P ubllsh t'd C'Vf'ry aflpr noon . M nnd.t ~
t hl' OUgh F'rld tJ,v , 111 Courl St ., PomC'rov, Ohio, by th ~~ Ohio V&lt;~il&lt;•,\- PubIts hint; Compan ,v i Mul tim('CJia. Inc,
PomPt'OV, Oh io 4rl7fi9, Ph 992 -2156. s~·
mncl rlas ~ postag£' pa id ,11 Pornt' roy,
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NC'wo.;pa pPI S;lit~ , 73:1 Thil d A\'C'n uc.
New York, Nf'w York 10017,

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POSTMASTER St•ml

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SURSCRWTION Ri\'l' ES
By Carrit•r ur Motor Koulc
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SINGJ.E COJ»Y
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EARLY WEVNESIMY
12- IG-87

COUNTY
APPLIANCES

627 3rd An., Gallipolis
PH. 446·1699

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ln:o. ldt • Mel ~' ( ' uunl)
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TEAM

College Basketball Roundup
By United Press International
Top-rated Arizona and No . 6
f'uY.e each scored victories Tues·
d1 "r ight to crea te a matchup of
unbeaten powers in the Gham·
pionship game of the Fiesta
Classic.
"'Duke is a lot like us," Sean
Elliott said after scori ng 24
points to help Arizona puli away
for a 78-58 victory over Michigan
State. "You can see they really
like each other and they're
unselfish players. It 's iikP we ' t·~
playing our own team in a
mirror.''
In the first game, Kevin
Strickland scored 21 points to
lead Duke in a 93· 70 rout of No . 9
Florida.
Arizona improved to 11 ·0, Du ke
to 6·0.
.
Arizona struggled with its
shooting and Michigan State's
tenacity for 26 minutes. The
Wildcat s o nly led 41-36 with 14:06
to play but used defense to key a
15·0 run.
"'We found out what we have to
do when we're not shooting the
bali," said Arizona Coach Lute
Olson.' 'I thought the key was our
guards defensively. We forced 23
turnovers:·
Michigan State Coach Jud
Hea thcote agreed.
"We aren't blessed with great
ballhandling guards and I'm s ure
!Arizona ) knew that. We were
pleased to be down just 6pointsat
haiflime. and 1 to ld our team
we're going to have to turn it up a
notc h beeause I knew they would.
They turned it up and we didn 't.
It's that simple."
Ant hony Cook added 14 points
and 13 rebounds for Arizona.
Michigan State, 5·4. was led by
Car lton Valentine with 17 points.

(U SPS 1-1 5-900 )

GOOD USED
WASHERS, ·DRYERS
REFRIGERATORS, TYs
GAi &amp; ELEC. RANGES

Wh lt m ~n , J57 .

Hu rricanes' ex tracurricul ar ac·
tivity on the field. Miami beat the
Soo ners in heated games 1985 and
1986.
"At first. I thought they were a
bunch of rude and sorry individu ·
als." Oklahoma Ali -American
tight e nd Keith .Jackson said
·'When they are on the field, they
are as rude a bunch of guys as
l've eve r been arou nd . Off the
field, though, th ey are a bunch of
nice guys who itke to have fun."

crown

A Dh·i'-lion o l i\lulthnr&gt;dla. In c.

Hig h Sf'l'iC&gt;s Tf'um- Pot IIIII F'ord· lR99;
M G M 17,12: Car p£'nlf't 's V\d('o-1635
Hi gh GLimt• Tr•om - Pat Hill Font ti7J·
hf\2, CarRf'nters Vifi('U,fi24 .
,
High 5&lt;-riNi - Hon S m 1t h - 5f~ · Rod
Wal kf'r,4Y8: 'I'C'rf\. SC'idC&gt;nabel-451. JuflV
Mu sSt' r·H6: TC'n l Whltm ,m,HJ, Ann
Spin•s,417,
Hig h CafT\f' - Ron Sm llh·208· TC&gt;trY
5&lt;- llit•n;Jil!'l - 1~0. Ro n Sm!th·lR5: ' Lot'f'!l.'l
Alk l n:-;-171: Jutly MussC&gt;\ 162; Terri

"Why is it ALWAYS little boy babies that represent the New Year - and NEVER little GIRL
babies?"
"

MIAMI !UPI) -The Univer·
sity of Miami lias accomplished
the near impossible - making
Oklahoma the good guys.
The same Sooners who run up
scores, talk as if no other sc hoo l
plays football and perfo rm for a
coach in Barry Switzer who ha s
created an atmosphere of our
way agai nst their way.
"It's been weird." said Okla·
homa cor nerback Lonnie Finch.
whose team plays Miami m lhe
Orange Bowl Frida night. "I was
thinking about it two days ago.
Finally , people aren't asking us if
we play dirt y and talk a lot."
That's because when it comes
to late hits and trash ta lk the No .
1 Sooners are, at best. second·
ranked to No. 2 Miami.
The Hurrica nes have tried
mightily this season to tmprove
an image that even Edward
Foote. the university president ,
called "rude and unacceptable. "
The issues last season ranged
from criminal charges, including
assault and concealing a weapon.
to wearing army fatigues at the
Fiesta Bowl and storming out of a
reception attended by Penn
State.
Miami Coach Jimmy J ohnson
attributes most of the criticism to
a "bandwagon'' approach by the
med ia . He says changing how
people look at the tea m - not
changing the team - was most
important.
To that end. several steps were
taken , incl uding the formation of
a code of conduc I.
But many of the image·
clea ning measures have lost
their luster in the last month.
Following a Nov. 28 game, Notre
Dame Heisman Trophy winner
Tim Brown criticized the Hurri ·
canes' on-field decorum . On Dec.
5. the Miami-South Carolina
game was slowed by fights,
many triggered by Hurricane
tat e hits. South Carolina. like
Maryland ear lier in the season,
sa id it would no longer schedule
Miami.
This week linebacker George
Mira Jr. and tackle John O'Neill
were suspended for the Orange
Bowl because they failed an
NCAA drug IPS!.
"We"re not the bad guys th Py
ail call us.", wide receiver Brett
Perriman said. "Everything we
do is ·blown out of proportion.
Overall, we're good people."
Oklahoma kn ows ail a bout the

to

The Daily Sentinel

KnB)a•lllt• , Tt•nn,

12-H ·K1

f

Miami changes immage

for

Duke

('ltamplon,.hlp

MONDAY NITE MIXED

one

ELLIOTT DRIVES- Arizona forward Sean Elliott , left, tries to
drive past Michigan State forward Carlton Valentine, right, during
the first half of Tuesday night's contest. The Wildcats beat the
Spartans 78-58. ( UPI}

~9

'

1987 DyNE,.,

....·'

l' on~ l u tlon

&amp;"k+'lhull
(' lt•\t'h!.ud - o\ t ii~III NI ~Uilrlt Hun
ll.1rpt•r , "'a iv• •d fnrM ard 1\ annurd

~

College scores

, . ,.,.a

Transactions

nn i\ik~·n

f'ln l'tlt•rt')' 1':!, &lt;In Coh•r.tln It
fin Ml ~· ntn • Ilame;)() , ( lnS,n llmon•:l&gt;l
nn Pl'lnt·rton ~~, nn Ouk HIIIK:n
DdtWilft' til,llut•kt•y•• \'ltl31
Gullowa,~' Wl'sllund 51t. C'ol West l"i
Grnnd\•lt;w 39, ('"I ~·Sale" ;w
Hannlhal RhN ~K, llridgl'ptlrt 39
Harrison 35. HauniUon 8adln411
LatM' IlJ~fer -li&gt; Nt&gt;"ark 2i
U~ · kln!il Val ~6 . Urt•:oclen Tri-Val41
Loul!&lt;v6lh• AquhJ.I~ 411, Au.,lln!Gwn :15
Mlllt·r f'ily U , INt.a"'a Glttndorl :!D
Moool Vt•rnun l'!, Damill•· ~I
Nl f.!.,. 3G, Ml'llttntlld :1:.1
l"l ckl'rlnto::lun ~~~. ('In M('i\nlt•y 15
Tlpp t ' ll~ Gl), Art ·anum .UI
l 'PPI'f Arllnglon tii, Rt' )'Hold.~lmrl{ 19
(Jrha na 6L Sprln~ Cl'nl ( 'alb 46
\-' lt•nnu Malht• w ~ ~'l. Gintrd '!K
"t'SIBrmmh ,H, MIVi~lllonti~

(inldt'll ,'&gt;lalt• at Uhth, !t :JO p,nl
l'ht~t • nh all,,\ ( ' llpJwr ~ . Ill: ,Ill p.m.

Hoslon ·••
tit', Ill :10 p,m,
Thur..day's liJitlll'l-1
!'lin J.tll1114'" sdwd lll+•cl

C'ln i\Juh•rp;un Sll

' ( 'In Hu~thtos 35,

Local bowling

~~
!l
12

The Daily Sentinel Page 3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 30, 1987

Outsldr Mt•lg1'1 Co unty

·.

TAYLOR NISSAN
1200 E. State Street • A ens, OH .
(614) 594-3528
Member of Your Nearby Nissan Dealers
'

"

�Wednesday, December 30, 1 987 ·
'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

By BILL WOLLE
UPI Sports Writ er
New teammate Joe . Ba rry
Carroll makes Houston 's Akeem
Olajuwon happy. which can't
much please opponents of Houston 'S revamped front line
combina tio n.
Carroll and Olajuwon scored 10
points each in a pivotal third
quarter-Tuesday night to lead the
· Rockets to a 101-91 road victory
over the Detroit Pistons.
The decision ended the Pistons ' .
10-game winning streak. the
longest In the NBA this season.
Houston had dropped six straight
road games. ·
"I'm glad to have somebody
like Joe Barry we ca n go to any
time," Olajuwon said. " Once he
gets the ball In the low post, he's
going to stuff it."
Carroll scored 25 po ints, his
high est output since coming to
Houston Dec . 12 in the trade that
sent 7-fooH Ralph Sampson to
Golden State. The 7-foot-1 center
start'ed alongside the 7-foot Olajuwon to open the seco nd half and ·
the Rockets reeled off 16 straight
poin ts to overcome a 57-46
halftime deficit and take the lead ·
for good .

fvo~

32 .

Carroll scored the final six
points of the quarter, as Houston
outscored Detroit 30-10 In the
period.
" They've been playing together, bu I that's _the first time
they' ve started a half together,"
Houston Coach Bi·lt Fitch said .
•'I've said all along they can play
together as well as Ralph and
Akeem did. Joe Barry is a fine
offensive player. He's just got to
work on hi s feboundlng and
defense."
Olajuwon played only nine
minutes In the first half because
of foul trouble and had two
poiilts. He finished with 15 points
and 14 rebounds.
" We gave up some second
shots, " Pistons guard Islah Tho·
mas said. " We couldn't get
anything to break their run . We
tried to get to the fo ul line to
break their run and couldn 't."
Adrian Dantley paced Detroit
with 18 point s. Bill Laimbeer had
14 points and 15 rebound s, while
William Bedford had a season high 14 points .
Elsewhere , Milwaukee
drubbed New Jersey JOG-88. New
York overcame Portland 123-110,

Atlanta whipped Chicago 108-98, ahead of Detroit into first place In
Dallas bumped Sacramento 126- the Central Division.
Mavericks 126, Kings 111
117, Utah ' nipped Denver 98-97
At
Dallas , Mark Aguirre
and the Los Angeles Lakers
scored 31 points and Derek
blitzed Philadelphia 131-115.
Harper teamed with Roy Tarpley
Bucks 106, Nets 88
At East Rutherford, N.J .. to blunt a Sacramento comeback
and - give the Mavericks their
Terry Cummings scored 21
points and Randy Breuer added fourth straight triumph. Aguirre
l9_to power Milwaukee to Its third scored 24 points In the first half as
straight triumph. The Bucks ran Dallas bu ilt a 68-52 lead. The
off 9 straight points late In the Kings were led by 25 points by
period en route to grabbing a Otis Thorpe.
Jazz 98, Nuggets 91
28-19lead after one quarter, New
Jersey was paced by Dennis
At Denver, Ka r l Malone ~cored
Hopson's 22 points .
a personal season-high 37 points,
including the decisive two with 42
Knlcks 123, Blazers 110
At New ¥ ork, Kenny Walker seconds left, and Uta h held off a
scored 25 points, Gerald Wilkins late Denver rally. Dick Stockton
22 and Patrick Ewing 21 to spark added 2l points for Utah. Danny
the Knlcks. Portland was paced Schayes scored a season-high 27
by Jerome Kersey's 29 points and
points for Denver and Alex
Steve Johnson's 20. Mark Jack- English added 24.
son had 13 assists for New York,
Lakers 131, 76ers U5
which got 14 points and 11
At lnglewood , Calif., Byron
rebounds from Sid ney Green.
Scott scored a career-hig h 37
Hawks 108, Bulls 98
points to lead Los Angeles to Its
At Chicago, Glenn Rivers . ninth consecutive victory. Magic
scored 29 points and John Battle Johnson adde~ 26 points and 17
led a seco nd-quarter c ha rge tha t assists for the Lakers and James
helped Atlanta hand the Bulls Worthy added 22. Charles Barktheir fifth straight loss. The ley led Phlladelphl&lt;l with 25
Hawks have won eight of their points before being ejected In the
las t nine games a nd moved
third quarter.

JOHNSON SCORES - Los Angeles' Magic Johnson gels past
_76ers Charl,es Barkley (left) and Albert King (right) and goes up
for a basket )n Tuesday night's NBA action in Inglewood, Calli. The
Lakers won. ( UPl)

;Frojans's Smith says
'MSU defense tough'
PASADENA, Ca lif. tUPJ) 27-13 on Labor Day. Friday's
Southern Cal Coach Larry Smith
g-a me marks the fifth tir)'le there
said Monday th e Mich iga n State
has been a Rose Bowl matehup
d&lt;&gt;fcnsc the Trojans will encounbetween tea ms which played in
te r in the Rose Bowl is one of the
the regular season . ln the four
toughest he ha s seen in two
previous games. the regular
decades .
season winner won twice and Jost
. "I s tudied the 11 ga me films ··twice .
a nd I see some of t he bes t football
The Trojans moved to the
minds in the country," Smith · Rams ' training faci lit y in A nasllid at the fina l formal news
heim on Sunday and will practice
CQnfcrc ncc before F r ida y's
there through the week. Like
g~me. ' 'Nobody has cracked
Mrchigan State. USC scheduled a
their defense yet . ·] know it's a
trip to Disneyland on Monday .
tremendously big challenge. Per." Our players are very excited
haps it 's the best I've seen in
to be here.:• said Smith 1, who wil l
cpllege football si nce I've been in
be coaching in the Rose Bowl for
college football 1 Smith's career
the first time. "It's a little
b'egan in 1967) . I'm si ncere in
different circumstances (th an
tha t.
those encountered by the Spar'·We have a very difficult time
tans 1 beca use it's like being in
kee ping a helme t on th em be- our backyard. Our players are
cau se we're not sure where they
having a tremendous time.
arc goi ng to be. Everybody is
"Over 70 or 80 percent of our
r)'lo,·i ng and they play t-he defense
foot ball team wanted to go to
so we ll. "
Disneyland. That tells you that
·Smith sa id none of the Spar - our players are having fun. A lot
tan s' 1~87 opponents succeeded of people are complaining about
at the run and pass .
the weather around he re (night
"Peoplr that have moved the temperatures ha ve dropped Into
ba ll .well or rea sona bly welt the 30sl. but it 's a lot better
running the ball have n't thrown arou nd here than it was In El
the ba ll ve ry well," he sa id . Paso Ifor the Sun Bowl when it
"Tea ms tha t have thrown the s nowed )."
ba ll reaso nably well haven't
Smi th said all his players
been ,able to run it. They give you except tailback Steven Webster
a lot of pro blems in bot h areas. are healthy. Webster is out with a
It's goi ng to takl' a &gt;uper"great knee injury. The e ntire Troja ns'
ga rnr fr9m C&gt;ve rybody on our ros t er pas s ed NCAAteam - not just the offense . but adminis tered drug tests . Smith
the defense. too."
said.
Michigan Sta tP defeated USC

Bengals retain Wyche
CI NCINN ATI IUPi l - Emba tt lPd Cincinnati Bengals head
coach Sa m Wyche will retu rn for
the l9AA season. General Manager P au l Bro wn said Tuesday.
" We've dec ided that we will
hon or the fifth yea r of his
cont rac t, " Brown said at a
h &lt;is til ~' ca lled new s confere nce.
'Pete. Mike I Brown' s sons) and

I spe nt yesterda y discussing
some policies and thoughts and
we pres ~ntHd them to Sam to find
out how he felt a nd he concurred
wUh them "
Wyc he's job wa s considered to
be in jeopardy after the l:lcngals
were 4-J l thi s season, a season in
which they were expected to
c hallen!(e for a pla yoff berth.
W)•che ha ~ a career record of
29-34 in four .vears with the
BJ'&lt;l gals.
''I' m glad thi s da y has come
a nd tha t we ha ve come to this
decision." Wyc he said . " l certa in ly wa nted to come back.
Anyti me you have a year like we
had you look long and hard back
on it to fi nd aut wha t made you
· 4 11 and " ha I you can do to make

I

The Daily se,tinei- Page-5

•

1ssues
'

With education at a standstill in Meigs Local
School District, the time -has come for
citizens to know the real issue involved in the
current teachers strike. While teachers are on
strike over wages, job security, fair dismissal
and seniority, the underlying issue in this

Rain forecast for tonight's Freedom Bowl

.I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Rockets end Piston's 10-game streak

•'

-~

Wednesday, December 30. 1 987

challenge, " he said . "But when
'88 is over. then the nexl ;;ear will
be my biggest challenge."
As fo r why Wyche was retained, Brown said, "We lost
some peculiar games, but to
Sam's crE!dit. I thought we fought
well at the end of the season . I
think our team was hit a little
hard er by the strike than so me
other learns."

Wyche had said just a week ago
that he expected to be [ired if
Brown and other front office
executives concluded the team
hadn 't progressed this seaso n.
" lf

By MIKE BARNES
· UPI Sports Writer
.
ANAHEIM, CaliL tUPl ) Arizona State seeks to set asid e
distractions caused by the ru mored departure of Coach John
. Cooper a nd the recent arrest of
two players when it meets Al r
Force Wednesday night In th ~
fourth annual Freedom Bowl.
Cooper, who has taken the Sun
Devils to bowl games In each of
his three seasons in Tempe, is .
reported in line for the vacant
head coaching position at Ohio
State.
_"I can't put (the rumors) to
rest, " Cooper said Tuesday following a Disneyland news confer-

ence. "My position right now is 1
can neither conflrin nor deny
whether I've been offered the job
at Ohio State. I'm sure you'll
know something later in the
week."

Arizona State, 6-4· 1, is a 6
Y.. -poin t favorite over the 9-3
Falcons In the 5 p.rn. PST game
at Anaheim Stadium. A crowd of
about 42 ,000 is expected. a nd rain
Is in the forecast.
Cooper. said defensive end P'at
Taylor and flanker Chris Garrett
will play d espite the fact both
were arres ted Sunday night in
nearby Costa Mesa. Cooper suspended them but then reversed
the 9ecision after hearing details

Ohio Outdoors
leave it there. Better to ha ve to
sort through a bunch of unrelated
sheets fo r the one yo u want tha n
to completely empty the "junk "
drawer and sort through th at and
th e old coupons a nd recipes.
Remember, too, to send .In
warra nty reg istration cards
within the time allot ted.
Sometimes; this ca n save the
need even for I he m inor surgery
that could get you in trouble to
begin with" Some warranties do
not take effect until the manufacturer receives the card. Others
don 't require you to send a card
at a ll. Read the paperwork to be
sure.
Now is th e time to pay a It en !ion
to such things before the tree Is
re ti red and the family room
clea ned up for another season. If
you wait that long, the papers
ma y not be there td save.

By JERRY PICKRELL
Outdoor Writers
Association of America
Distributed by UPI
Christmas is over and Santa
Claus has his feet up and his head
back .
Here 's hoping you got
everything you wanted" Here 's
hoping, too. th at you dldn 'i
throw the most important part
of it away with the wrapping
pa per ..
. The ol(l saying is that when all
else fails. read the directions. ln
the case of a reel that won:t get
taken apart for cleaning until
sometime in April, the direct ions
ma y no longe r be anywhere to be
found .
Most reels, trollihg motors ,
shotguns a nd other outdoor gear
that operate as a result of the
smooth interactions of hundred s
of tiny moving parts come with a
very detailed instruction sheet
inCluding an "exploded " view of
the criller.

on it, that diagram may be the
on ly thing betwee n you. and fhe
repa ir shop. Showing up there
wit h your new reel in a box of
loose parts is not only embarrassing, but it also ca n be expensive.
Not to mention that you have to
do without the use of it until the
guys at the shop can get around to
setti ng your error stra ight.
Often, the best th ing to do Is
take that sheet (or the box itself If
th at's where the direc tions are
printed) and slip it into a Zip-Lac
bag a long with all of the others
that you're savi ng.
"
If you don't have a safe place 10
sto re such items in the house, put
the bag in your tackle box and

FAMILY SEAFOOD
RED SNAPPER
300 PARK CENTER DRIVE
PARKERSBURG , WV 25101

STORE HOURS

Friday &amp; Saturday 11 a. m.-10 p.m.
Sunday 11 a.m .-8;30 p.m.

WAGES: Teachers are willing to forego wage

CLOSED MONDAYS

increases for the next two years in
recognition of -the poor financial condition of
the district. In return, they want to be able to
negotiate a wage increase for the third year of
the contract. By waiting two years for any
salary increase, the board of education would
have time to put an operating levy on the
ballot. The Ohio Legislature will also be ·
appropriating more money for public schools
during the life of the. proposed contract.

IT'S NOT A MUST •••
IT'S A PLUS!
TRY A CHILLED SEAFOOD SALAD MADE DAILY
WITH FRESH CRABMEAT &amp; WHITE FISH ON A
. BED OF LEnUCE

BOILED SHRIMP $699
5 P.M.-8:30 P.M. JANUARJ &amp; FORUAIJ

-------------~-------------1
I
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I
I
I
4 OZ. BROILED or
I
BAKED FILLET
I
I 3 OZ. BAKED POTATO
I
I
TOSSED SALAD
I
112 CUP APPLE SAUCE
I
I
I
PRICE I

SHRIMP
CREOLE
DINNER

GET AFREE
COFFEE MUG*
WITH
OIL &amp; FILTER
CHANGE

Arizona...

• New oil

!up to 5 qts cars/6 qts trucks)
• New Mopar oil filter
• Check fluid levels
• Check batte ry
• Ve hicles requiring specia l/
extra oil and diesel filters
slightly higher

'

°

51 0 q~~LAR
1:

r

COOPER
I

$395

EXPIRES JAN . 31 , ' 1988

('See our Service Advisor for detolls.)

tI

WEIGHT WATCHER
SPECIAL

ON A BED OF RICE

$21 95·Cars
b &amp; 8 Cyl.
&amp; Trucks
OFFER EXPIR ES 2/28/ 88

.'

FOR CARRY OUT
ORDERS
486-3632

Tuesday~ Thursday 11 a.m .· 9 a.m.

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
992-6421

399 S . Third Street
Middleport, Ohio

PICKENS
t,
~ ~~tnopQr~
HARDWARE
tt!!
MASON, W.V.
• ~ vlt ~ ~ - 1\
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:

EXPIRES JAN , 31. 1988

-----------,----------~---

1-LB. WHITE FISH ·
SPECIAL

·oYSTER
DINNER
WITH FRENCH FRIES
and COLE SLAW

Sl 00 ~E~~LAR

.

'

•'
•
•

LARGE

PRICE

EXPIRES JAN . 31 , 1988

WHITING or
TROUT
WITH FRIES &amp; SLAW

s

$ 95 (Reg. Price
$7.95)

'

.

•

'

''
''

In event Meigs Local does not have enough ·
money to operate schools, the State of Ohio
wi II provide enough suppor~ through a
special loan fund that will keep the school
system solvent. Regardless of the outcome
of the contract negotiations with teachers,
the Board of Education has already indicated
it ·will -apply to the state loan fund for.
operating revenues.
'

fund
does not require a district to reduce its
.
educational program. In order to protect the
quality of the educational program, it is
necessary to prevent the elimination of
classes and teachers. This is why the MLTA is
asking the board to guarantee -no layoffs for
the duration of the contract. This will protect
the educational integrity of the academic
program in Meigs Local.

FAIR DISMISSAL: The MLTA is seeking to
protect all teachers in the district from
arbitrary dismiss,al. This would extend this
right to all teachers, not just .those with more
than three years of service. This provision
would only require the board to provide
reasons for dismissal and an opportunity to
appeal any unjust di'smissal. It would not
prevent the board from dismissing a teacher
for just cause.
.

SENIORITY: In case teachers must be
reassigned, seniority and certification would
determine ·which person would be moved.

The Board of Education refuses to bargain
these reasonable demands. This ·
unreasonableness is apparently rooted in
its opposition to the right of the Meigs
Local Teachers to bargain coll~ctively.
If there is to be a resolution to this
conflict, the board must abandon its
anti-union attitude and negotiate a
mutually .agreeable settlement with the
MLTA.Insteadof wasting $15,000 a day it
doesn't have ·on inferior education, police
dogs, and security guards, the board
should end its silly posturing and get down
•
• •
to senous
negot1at1ons.

.

EXPIRES JAN . 31 , 1988

Paid for by the Meigs Local Teachers Association/OEA/NEA
MICHAEL WILFONG
President, Meigs Local Teachers Association

.... &lt;:1

1

Here is a look at the bargaining issues in
the Meigs local school dispute:

Restaurant

ALL· YOU-CAN -EAT

t $1895 ~.~~1,

Here's hoping that
this New Year
leads you to new
friends, new
adventures and
new success.
We appreciate
your loyalty
and support"

Snapper

~---Sunday Night Special----.

If you need later to take it apart
and perform some m inor surgery

a

Continued from page 3
At New Orleans, Mark Macon
scored 27 points and Mike Vreeswyk added 24 to lead Temple, 7-0.
Ti m Perry added 18 points for
i t l l -~ ."
Temple. Southern, 5-4, was paced
'Brown said Wyche ha s the
by Kevln 'Fiorent with 15 points.
prerogative to mak e whatever
At Oklahoma City, Okla. , HarCh('Tlgc·s he wa nts in his staff of · vey Grant scored a ca reer hlgh40
points and Mookie Blaylock
as sis ta nts.
"ti ny c ha nges that Sam deadded 27 Tuesday night to lead
r·ides on a nd thu) we ca n get to we
Oklahoma, 11-0. The Sooners
wil l accom modat e him." Brown
built a 65-43 halftime lead behind
· Grant's 18 points.
said
.
Mat Taphorn's 3-polnter with
"W~ lost some ga mes this year
six seconds to play gave Illinois
that we shouldn't have," Brown
State its upset. Taphorn was 7 of
· · co ntJnUf'd ''J'h0'(; lhing.&lt; should
ll from 3-poi nt ra nge a nd finnot hdppf'n c.~gain Wf''rp going to.
ished with 25 points. and Jeff
havr- lculo b('llt"~r next year th an
Harris
led th e winner s with 30.
we, did this y(•ar '" and Sam
Illil10!s improved to 4-3. B.J.
u ndcrsld nds 1ha I. "
Arms trong scored J8 points fo r
Wyc·nc said hP i' up to the task .
'
Iowa. 7-3.
"This \\'ill be my blgg~s t

vo·ur teachers made a difficult decision when ·
they decided to withhold their professional
services because of an unresolved contract.
The issues they face are serious enough to
affect the entire future ofMeigs Local.

S3.25

they th ink we're going
mak~

dispute is whether or not the teachers in
Meigs Local have the right to bargain
collectively.

Save those instructions

nowhere, we 've made no pro·
gress and there will be no futu re

th is way, then thcy'll
change." Wyche sa ld.

'

per carry) gained 191 yards per
of the incident.
Cooper said Taylor was sitting · game on the ground .
The Falcons, though, will be
on the lap of another player In the
hur
t by the loss of Dee Dowis,
front seat of an automobile that
who
this year set an NCAA
was stopped by police Sunday
record
for rushing yards (1,315)
night. An officer ordered the
by
a'
quarterback.
He has a
driver out of the car, and Taylor
broken
wrist
and
will
be
replaced
also came out.
by sophomore Steve Letnich.
Taylor was told to get back In
''I don' t make people miss
the vehicle, and when he did not,
ttackles) lik.e Dee does, " said
a scuffle ensued, Cooper sa id.
Letnlch, who opened the season
The contest features two of the as Air Force's No.1 quarterback.
NCAA's top r unning teams.
" I need to turn upfield and try to
Air Force. which employs the get at least 4 yards."
wis hbone, averaged 386 yards on
Added Coach Fisher DeBerry:
the ground, finishing second in
"We're a wishbone team a nd
the nation to the Sooners.
we' ll do what we do best; ru n the
The Sun Devils, led by seniors triple option. I think we'll move
Darryl Harris (879 yards) a nd it, but l hope It's in the forward
Cha nning Williams (5.9 yards direc tion."

JOB SECURITY: Participation in the state loan

lr

�•

High school
cage scores
n... •. ,,, .. ,,

~
lh I IHII•oll'r•"• /,.,., ,,,,.,.,/

""'' fJII, , fi ,Jilt ,, '"'"'

. . .. ..

,.,,... ,,

,~

~

Ada49 , WII,YD~'!illeld Go.!ihen. .fo1
M.r 1\h.-ncheoil.i&gt;r 69, Me dina Hlghlllnd

"

,\ltr St Vllll'('nl &amp;8, Akr Ea~t !IS
A.llhuK't• ll2, Ma!il'iillon Jllcbon ~

o\nn» n . Nl'-...· Bremen ti
,\nlht)n,v W II,YM 11, Tol Woodward ti ~

\01)

.

Antwerp 63. l''ayetlf :3

,\n·oullu Ht, N1•'A lU1·~~·I ~·
i\rdthnld .;,, Wuu-..·un ttl

1

thhl Edl(t'"''nod 71 , A,;ht Si ,John M
,\&gt;ihlu hula n , M"dl&lt;;(}n G:l
i\utl)n• 7!1, Burton Bf.rk&gt;ihln• &amp;~
i\~j!'itlnlolll· n J' lh: tt_!tl , H11l1hard lit
i\,y.-r..vlllt• 1:~. Contlntonl.lll .W

Dll~ ('hum-.Jnl-19. C't&gt;ltn11 3M
lk'(;r,aff Kl\l•r,;ldl' fiS, Col T'rt~f" Ult• 1:1
, Oj•lpho~&gt; .Jt•ff••rMIII 'li!. Pnrltway Gl
Uowr .~ . Tu!duw 4t

( atull \\lrM'Ili',.tN till,~~·~ \I hun ) Ill
(':wllt•ld ill. Pl'trr,.a,IJI'J!: Sprln~&lt;:lld :\:1
fumort ~ i$, ~··w r•hthtdrlphlu ~0
('.arlh.h• (Pa) 51, fol W••hrlt· :i.i
('urrullton it MlnN\'11 lit l ui~
(' In Gret•nhlll~&gt; i'l, lnt Ill' Will) M

I

Gran\'111••12
Dun'har 13, FurN&gt;II {l'a) G9
Eaton 611, Trt•nton Hdr•·ood. 65
Elldq !13, UpiJt'r Sandu•lty II£

('In l'urt•t•ll7!, Du.y " 'hilt• 10
( ' In St Xuvlt•r 81. ('In M• · ~ldtnla.~ ~ 3
(' h• \\' Tl•t•h 1141. &amp;•rt•a 6~
(' \yd.- KG, Mw.ll'url'ltll Gl
Col :\t·adt'my n . Wfll.!&gt;tOn ~8
C'ol Brooi!Jiu\l•n SM. Uma Sr ~'
C'ol buSt-pendent.•• 71, Col Hurtle) 69
( ' ol Un:lt'n Ill , Nf'wport C11lh 7:1 loll
C' nl St Chll!O 6'1. M11rion Lc!c iiJ ~9 100
t:oootton Val '1'2, lnd Val N 11
Convoy ('re ..tvl-· fW, Ft .JtnniRR:S ).1
C'roobvlll~&gt; S.O, llemlodll'tlllcr li (Ot)
( ' u)'ah6~tll IUs 113. W'oodrldltC t6
D»)' D.i•lmont ;~ . Oa:r StebbirtS $6

Boardma• 73, \ 'ounl" East II
Bo~kln... 58, Indian Lake .fo&amp;
Brooki)'D it, Galf'!i Mlll"i Gilmour &amp;.'i
Brook\·llle 9.fo, Tri·C'ouniy S 72
But:keyt· Val 60, London 55
t'IUlB 78, Wt•lrton (W\'a) Madonna&amp;~~~
CambrldKe 7.fo. Caniun Cea c:ath 51

.,, ..

Holrat•• 811. Miller Clly 41
Huron 117, 011k H11rhor '10
lnd Val SIt, RaciiW' Southern G8
,fohmJlown N'rldl!'ll! II, Ucldnx Ht!'i 59
Henton I:J, Marlon ~l(ln !ll
K~Uerl~ Alter 1'1, Ce nt.ervlllfo &amp;0
Ke)'!doM '71, IUac:k Rlwr %3
K11111111U11 Badpr tz, Map~wood 119

Falrhankll Gl, Sprt""tlt'l. N~ fiO
Fal[fldd M8, Fore~~t hrk 611
Findlay ~~~. 1..-... pler M

Fort R~o\'t'ry 16, OtiO\'IIIl' It
Frankfort i\df.na 84, Amuda II
Franklin Molll'oe 71, Verullle• 'IS
Frt&gt;df'rldunwn 'M, Cardln(ton 511
Frontier M, P.u)ersbur« (W\' al C»th

LuviU.Ibura; LaBru N, " 'lndham 55
UbertJ Beaton '21, N BalUmore U

Llcldq: VaiC!l, Rldiii!Wood 419
Uacohwli!!W 13, Ohio Cit)' tl
Utlbon SA, Malvern f1
Lodl Clowr•urn, Orrville 52

"

G11lllpollli '15, GrHJnlleld II
Garuway SH, StraAhurJ 4C
~lllltlury

LoralnSr a, Sudullly 14
Lo\llllvllle Aqul-.s 71, Ravenna !14
MaDill• 81 Pde 17. Hebron Lakewood

Ukl' 541

G!Nrd 7t Mustllon Ia

'

60, (li&amp;,Yll)rt Norlhmvnl 16

Hamilton 11, fol 8riJ(p fll
H»•nan lYIU't' 13, PatriotS"' 65
H11rdln Nwilll.'l'rt M3, Uma Pt•rry QM

llrt•~t· n1'rt..VK1 $1 ,

· C'ln l.aSalll' M~. Jlw.rri!ion 41

Rarho•rlqn 7)1, Akr Ktnmon• 6(1
Barnt'!'ivUit&gt; 19, Skyu•t• GM
Bu.ll!l\llk- 70. Flemlnkfnn (\\' \ ' a) SO
l"'a\f"r F.a.. t.•rn II. W.'averly.t7
Rtoa\..rc•n't'k 57, " ' Ch~ter Lako:W.a ~I
lk'llf'fontal,.. 17. MarJ!i~me U
Berlin Hllllnd S!l, " 'f'llt llolmf'li n

(;re~&gt;nvtlk&gt;

1

,........--Local news

l'lilntot• H•rYey N, .o\~thl Harhorl'il toe)

"

!\brlt'Ua ~6. P~~&lt;rk+'r!&gt;il) Ufll: (W\'I&amp; l 5I
M11rlo11 l:11th 69, Ontllrlo &amp;I
M11rllnM Ferry fl:'i, ~llalrc 64 I ~ol)
MllliMIIIon Gil, Girard 12
Meado"'brook 711, Bucke-.4 Trall111 oU
Met.:hnlet~hul'f so. W ilb- SMJcm 441
Middletown Ff'n11 . VtLIIey VIew II
Milan Edi!Wln 1~. Obrrlln tlreht.ndi Ml
Mo•l Gilead $1 , G~tllon Northmor 43
Napeleon 63, llryan 5I
Nfw Uoxlntf:un 61 , Yalt11eld Union 46

Newark so, Frt"mont Ro!!IB 411
NIIN U, Brookfield 36

Palnr11 Rlllc-r•ld~ 13, .renrrMn Are•••
P1U1du.,.·GIIho~t67, CC!It.mhUI GtO\o't li l

Plorteer N C'A'ntra113, Hlmop Sll
Pl~n1ouU• 81, Seneca Eul 11
Port1muuth 1110. 011Mlftlln iMI

EMS has eight calls Tuesday

PymatunlnJ( Valley 1%4, Brlalol •

lte)'noktlbura 71, westenllle 8 IS
Rhl!edale 81, Rh·er Valle)' n I:lot)
RoobJlown 19, Akr Geveatry 81
Sahli P•rkln. IS, Sand St Marys 5I
Sandy Val II, Eall Ca•ton 58
staadyAide It, Woodsfteld II

.

Sldllll!y 11, Fort Loramte 5I

North Canton GlenOak n, N Canton 40
North Gallla 51, Kner Creek ~0
Nortll Royalton "/7, Rocky River H
Northwood U Tol ChMsllaa 85
Norwayne 61. Hlll!ldllle 44
Oak Hllll &amp;-1. Rock 811113 (ol)

0t!ll'&amp;:o 91 ~ Evergreen 71

Soulh R&amp;n~r &amp;3, Lords\OWn S3
South Webll&amp;er 71, LUcuvllle Val 54

Spencer\'llkl H. Bluffton 44
S(lrtn&amp; N i5, Sprlnr Shawnee II

Sprtnr Northweaworn '11, IMide 83
S{lrlni 8 tiD. Sprlar Gree.-on U
Sf. Pari» Grabm 74, Triad 36

.....

•

'

...

Nation's storm death toll climbs to 51

By United Press International
Storms that left the South
Meigs County Emergency 1\;'ledical Services repdrts eight
awash in floodwaters. the Midwcalls Tuesday; Middleport at 3:56a.m. to North Second Ave. for
est burled under 2 feet of snow
Caroline Smith to Veterans Memorial Hospital; fuiclne at 7:57
and claimed at least 51 lives
a.m. to Manuel Road for Joseph Manuel to Veterans Memorial
swept into the Northeast TuesHospital; Syracuse at 9:38a.m. to Seventh and College Sts. for
day, snarling rush-hour traffic
Damon Ferrell to Holzer Medical Center; Racine at 10:08 a.m.
' and delaying air travel in New
to Hlll Road for Ulla Strauss to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
York and Boston .
Middleport at 7: 13p.m. to South Second Ave. for Steve Martin to
In New York City, morning
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at 9: 13p.m. to Vl1lage
commuters slipped and slid on a
Manor Apts. for Ralph Fry to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
light powdering of snow that
· Rutland at 9:35 p .m. to White Hill Road for Daisy Haggy to
stuck to the streets before
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 9:49p.m. to Antiquity
shovelers .were able to clear the
for Preston Parsons to Veterans -Memorial ·Hospltal.
sldwalks . Up to 3 Inches fell over
the city and Long Island by late
afternoon when the snow tapered
off.
Fined in the CO\Irt of Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman
Rush hour traffic was a night·
Tuesday night weere Martin L. Spangler, Rutland, $10 and
mare across the New York area.
costs, expired tags, and Jerry Armstrong, Middleport, $50 and
Getting to work in Boston also
costs, obstructing dfflflal business; $100 and costs, false
was a major headache.
information to a police officer, and $25 and costs, disorderly
Six Inches of snow fell in
manner. Wayne W. Little, Jr., Pomeroy. forfeited a $50 bond
Boston , tangling morning rush·
posted on a charge of running a stop sign.
hour traffic, and as much as 8
inches of snow was measured at
Falmouth, Mass.
Major airports - including
thOse
In Boston and New YorkThe Dally Sentinel will observe an early news deadline of 9
remained
open, though airlines
a.m. on Thur$day, Dec. 31. The Sentinel business office will
wind·blown
snow caused
said
close as soon as all of Thursday's papers are picked up by
minor
delays.
various carriers. The early deadline permits carriers to finish
Cape Cod was battered with
their routes and be home in time to spend New Year's Eve with
· high winds and up to 15 inches of
their families and friends.
snow that created near blizzard
The Sentinel will not publish ·on New Year's Day Friday .
conditions.
Normal hours of operation will resume Saturday for publication
" They have severe white -out
of the Sunday Times·Sentlnel.
conditions down there on the

Fined in Middleport court

List Sentinel holiday hours

All Stores Will Close At 1O:OOpm
Thursday, Dec. 31st.

OPEN
NEW YEARS DAY
8:00am Til 9:00pm

Another resident Saved by the Belt

Re·Open Saturday, Jan. 2nd. At 7:00am

Lieutenant G.D. Henderson,
commander of the Gallipolis
Post of the Ohio State highway
Patrol announced that another
local resident had joined Ohio's
"Saved By The Belt Club" after
he escaped serious Injury In an
accident that occurred Oct.13, on
S.R. 32 In Meigs County .
According to official reports,
Boyd M. Beller of Robertsburg,
W.Va., was eastbound onS.R. 32
when he falled to notice a slow
moving semi. Unable to avoid a
collision, Beller struck the rear
of the semi's trailer causing
heavy damage to his car. Fortu·
nately, Beller was wearing a
safety belt and received only
minor Injuries.
Beller was presented with a
''Save By The Belt Club'' certlfi·
cate signed by Gov. Celeste,
Highway Safety Director William M. Denihan and Highway
Patrol Superintendent Colonel
Jack Walsh. He was also pres·
e nted with a "Saved By The
Belt" lapel pin.
The "Saved By The Belt Club"
. Is a joint effort by the Ohio
Department of HIghway Safety
and over 400 police agencies to '
recognize people who have bene·
!ited from their wise decision to
wear their seats belts . A "Seat ·
Belt Survivor" is a living testi·
monlal to the effectiveness of
safety belts, Lt. Henderson said.
' 'We hope this example of how
safety belts can save lives will
influence others to voluntarily
comply with Ohio's mandatory
safety belt law and help us
reduce the number of deaths and
serious Injuries on our highways, " Lt. Henderson said. "If
everyone wore their safety belts,
400 fewer people would die in
traffic accidents on our high·
ways. Four hundred fatal acci·
dent victims could literally be
Saved By The Belt."

FRESH "SILVER PLATTER"

Assorted
Pork ~hops
'

Fresh
Green Cabbage

Pound ·

Pound

U.S. GRADE A WHOLE FRYERS OR

Holly Farms · .
Cut Up .... ,.... :........... .
THIN RYE, WHEAT OR
PUMPER NICK LE

Country Oven .
Cocktail Bread..........

SLICED
FREE

lb.

2

SOLD. IN PACKAGES OF 10-LBS . OR MORE

$J

a-oz.

Kroger
0.5% Milk.........

·FROZEN

Gal.

KROGER

~ Golden

Crown
Mixers

Jeno's
Pizzas

WHO LE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE CORN EARLy PEAS
CUT OR FRENCH STYLE ·
'
'

1-liter

10.3-1 0.8-oz.

g~!e~ :!~ns....
0

. 3,)'~;$JlS .

FROZEN PINK LEMONADE FRUIT PUNCH
LIMEADE OR
'

For

Minute Maid
Lemonade · · .... · .... · · .. .. ............ 12-oz.

gg·c

PARTY FAVO.RITES!

ADVfRllSlO tUM POUCV-EJCh ollhe:.e ad~!!ftl~erluam~
:; '"'lu""d 10 h" fO!drloly .l¥doli!bltr I&lt;Jr ~ale on each KrOj!ef
.. !01\l II&lt;CtOI Ill&gt; l&gt;l)llCI IoCdlty 11uh.!d 111 rh 1~ &lt;Ill II W(l no
t~l\ 0~\ ot Jn Od'o orrr~c d •Hrm t¥e w•tl oHt!r you your
d\o tt! ul Dcarnp aro.~bi O! •te m, w ll~n J~dll ,rhlu rQIIeCtlllU
rh~ lolllllt!M~ony:.ul 11 fa111Chou wh och wrll onr11 111 ~ o to
P\.JH:ha~a the ddv~rt•:.CO otern at lhll ildv""'~"d p~•~e
w•llllfl JO ddy~ Only one vundar cuuDo n w•lt be
.Jr,.CO!t &gt;l~d Jl"' •IO!m puoChi!~~t.

I
I

Connoisseur's
Choice

Relish Tray

Moist Pink ham , roast beef, corned
beef. turkey breast plus American
SwiSS and muenster cheese with chip~
or salad centerpiece.

Fresh carrots, celery sticks , green
on1ons, stuffed olives, ripe olives,
ch?rrY t?matoes, radishes, pickles with
omon d1p center.

·

..

Mo ist pink ham, roast beef, corned
beef, turkey breast and relish center.
n

··,·· ....:'.' ,·

-..

FROZEN REGULAR REDUCED.ACID
CALCIUM FORTIFIED; COUNTRY.STYlE

Minute Maid
Orange Juice
10-12-oz.

DIET CAFFEINE FREE COKE,
CAFFEINE FREE COKE,

Diet Coke or
Coca Cola
6-Pak 12-oz. Cans

18

.

,

... ........

oi

Dally stock prices
(As oll0:30 a.m.)
Bryce and Mark Smith
ol Blunt Ellis &amp; Loewi ·

SAVED BY THE BELT- Robert Beller of Robertshurg, W.Va.,
was honored by the Ohio Highway Patrol and Ga!Ua·Metgs post
commander Lt. Dan Henderson with the Saved by the Belt Award.
Beller escaped serious Injury when he was Involved In an accident
on State Route 32 In Meigs County. ( OVP photo)

-RAIN
SHOWERS
"
Cold
. . Static "
Occluded
Map shows minimum tempera:u,es. At least 50% of any shaded area IS torecas1

11

to receive precipiiaticn ind:cated

Trash sen-ice
date changed
Due to the holiday, Manley's
Trash Service will run Friday's
route on Thursday.

Authorities find nine more bodies
RUSSELLVILLE, Ark. (UP!)
Authorities searching an
Ozark home Tuesday found the
bodies of nine more family
members apparently . kllled as
they arrived home for Christmas
by a retired Air Force sergeant
already suspected of killing
seven other people, two of them
in a rampage linked to personal
grudges.

Continued !rom page l

Announcements
····--------------------------------------"A Board member now has

Trash service day changed
Due to the holiday. garbarge In
Syracuse will be picked up by
Henry Eblin's Garbage Service
on Thursday Instead of Friday.

former fellow employees.
''It seems like he had some
kind of feeling against the people
he worked wltl1, and after this (at
the farmhouse), he said , 'Why
not go ali the way?'" said Pope
County Sheriff James Bolin .
"The great unanswered ques·
lions Is 'Why?' What causes a
person to wipe out his family and
go on another shooting spree of
people he's known? " Bolin said .
· A woman who sald she knew
the family when they lived in
New Mexico told a newspaper
there that Simmons was an
abusive husband and father.
Bolin said the family apparently
came to Arkansas from New
Mexico.
Adeline Schower told the Ala·
mogordo Dally News her son was
good friends with one of the
'lictims, Ronald Gene Simmons
Jr., 26, when the family lived
near Cloudcroft , N.M .. between
-1977 and 1981.
's chower said the elder Slm·
mons almost killed Gene Jr .
when he tried to stop his father
from attacking his mother.

'tal news
Hospl

Veterans Memorial
- Carol
Tuesday Admissions
m ith , Middleport .r Crystal
S
Pridemore. Pomeroy ·, Sara Cul ~
lums, Pomeroy; Rose Dearing,
Pomeroy; Edward Thacker'
. t; Ulla strauss, R 8·
Middlepor
. H II Mlddl
t
C Ine; Bill le
yse
ep0r ;
L
Ja
ggy,
Rutland.
lsy J
DaTuesday
Discharges _ Peggy
Taylor, Elvlra Barr 1 Norma
Goodwin, Alan Wilson .

---~--Weather-----South Central Ohio
Sunny t&lt;&gt;!lay, with highs in the
upper 30s. Mostly clear tonight ,
with a low in the mid 20s.
Becoming cloudy and windy
Thursday, with a chance of rain
and highs in the upper 40s.
The probability of precipitation Is near zero today and
tonight and 40 percent Thursday .
Winds will be light and varia·

DANCE FOR JOY
WINTER SESSIONS: 9 Weeks-18 Classes $3800
JANUARY 4th thru MARCH 3rd
CARLETON SCHOOL, Syracuse, Ohio
TUES.·THURS. ·
5:00 P.M•

MON.-WED.
'
7:00 P.M.
,, 1JOY

·

KING - Instructor
Phone 992-3794

ble today and from the south at 10
to 15 mph tonight.
Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
Chance of snow Fr~day and
Sunday,. Highs will b.e in the 30s
Friday and Sunday and in the 20s
Saturday. Lows will be In the 20s
Friday and Sunday and In the
teens Saturday .

Gary, Pauline· Wolff{
sentenced this morning
.

Gary Wolfe and Pauline Wolfe,
both of Racine, were sentenced
this morning In Meigs County
Court by Judge Warren Lotz of
Vinton County.
On Dec. 9, at the conclusion of a
jury trial, Gary Wolfe was found
guilty-of disorderly conduct and
Pauline Wolfe guilty of dlsor·
derly conduct and resisting
arrest.
These were lesser charges
than the original charges filed
against the Wolfes in connection
with a Sept. 9 marijuana invest!·
galion at the Pauline Wolfe
residence. The Investigation was
conducted by the Meigs County

Court news
Duval Fedearl Savings and
Loan Association, Jacksonville,
Fla., has filed a foreclosure
action in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court against Jerry M.
Milam, Albany, et al.
Kenneth D. Cooke was
awarded a judgment of $5,500 in
. an actlon against Rex Hurley.
A rec Iproca I ac tl on f or c hild
SUppOrt h as b een flied b Y the
State of Ohio and Teresa Scoville
against- David Scoville.
The case of .Richard Seyler, et
al, against General Telephone
Company 0 f Ohi 0, h as been
dis missed
'

Sheriff's Department and the
Ohio Bureau of Criminal Invest!·
galion, London. Both defendants
were originally charged with
resisting arrest and assault. No
charges in connection with the
actual cultivation of marijuana
were ever flied by authorities
against the Wolfes.
Gary Wolfe was fined $100 and
one· half of the court costs for the
disorderly conduct. Pauline
Wolfe was fined $250 and one· half
of the court costs for resisting
arrest, and sentenced to 90 days
ln jail with 86 days suspended and
credit given for one day already
served, leaving a three·day sent·
ence. She was _fined $100 and
costs for disorderly conduct'.
Judge Lotz was appointed to
preside over the trial in place of
Meigs County Court Judge Pa·
trick O'Brien who stepped down
In the matter .

r--:-----------_..:--1

-.::=============::::::::::::::;1

r

UPI

WEATHER MAP- Snow will be scattered over western New
York stale. Freezing rain will be mixed with sleet and snow over
southeastern South Dakota and southwest Minnesota. Snow will
extend over the remainder ol the upper Mississippi Valley and the
northern Plains, also across the upper Missouri Valley, the
northern and central' Rockies, the northern Plateau, the Great
Basin and higher elevations olthe southern Plateau. Rain will
extend over the remainder ol the Pacific Northwest and Northern
California.

1

Meeting canceled
The Monday Jan. 4 meeting of
the Meigs Local Band Boosters
has been canceled.

rn

G33sNOW
FRONTS:
Warm

Am Electric Power .. ........... 26%
AT&amp;T ........................ ... ...... 27';4
Ashland Oil ......... .... ........... 58';4
Bob Evans .......................... 15 34
Charming Shoppes .... .... ...... 11%
City Holding Co ................... 29
Federal Mogul .................... 32 ~
Goodyear T&amp;R .. .... ............. 60'!1.
Heck's Inc .............. ............. !~
Key Centurion ........... ,.. ...... 38';4
Lands' End ......................... 20%
Limited Inc ........................ 17}'8
Multimedia Inc .................... 52
Rax Restaurants ....... .. ......... 2Y.,
Robbins &amp; Myers ................. 6%
Shoney's Inc ... .................... 21 ~
Wendy's Inti. ......... ... ........... 5Y.,
Worthington Ind .................. 16%

financial order Is forcing capitu·
lation. The MLTA's financial experienced an act of vandalism.
demands are now more than they Tires were slashed and a vandal
were in their original package was chased from the garage of a
presented on May 26. They keep Board member. Acts such as
stating they will be flexible, if these do not cause people to
only the Board will guarantee waiver in their beliefs that their
dollars, and yet , even by their position Is right as far as the
own estimates there will not be students of Meigs Local are
enough dollars available to cover concerned
"There have been reports of
the costs of their demands.
quite
a few pe~le being sent In
"The Board's position Is, and
has been, that it will negotiate by the OEA to help the MLTA In
percentages based on the money this strike situation. Some have
that is available. whatever the even said that the local teachers
amount. In this manner. the have lost control of their local
Board could retain some finan· union because the OEA is trying
cia! stability for the district and to make a point with the State
Legislature, as the President of
for the children.
·
OEA
has been quoted as saying.
"As for the substitutes, all
If
these
statements are true, then
have valid Ohio teaching certifiIt
a terrible thing that the
Isn't
cates. The only area In whiCh we
Meigs
Local
School District is
are having difficulty in finding
going
through
just because the
substitutes Is In the vocational
area. We are continuing to · power structure of the OEA
search for teachers in . these 'wants to use' our people to try to
prove a point?
areas.
•I

50

Stocks

Police said the suspect. Ronald
Gene Simmons, 47, armed with
two .22-callber pistols, appar·
ently killed the first seven
relatives before Christmas as
they gathered at his backwoods
home outside Russellville and
hid the bodies.
He apparently killed seven
more as they arrived late Friday
or Saturday and then went on a
25·minute shooting spree Monday at four downtown business,
continued from page 1
-----'~--- killing ,two more people and
wounding four before surrender·
Fermilab as a companion facility ing peacefully to the local police
scientific project built anywhere
could save more than $500 million
in the world In the last quarter of
chief.
for
the larger colllder.
the 20th century."
Simmons was charged Tues·
Galen Reser , head of the day with two counts of capital
So important do some states
Illinois state office In Washington murder ·a nd four counts of
view the project that they spent
who has been spearheading his attempted capital murder for the
millions to bag it. Texas, for
state's
lobtlying effort, said he downtown shootings. He was
instance, offered up to $1 billion
was
"extraordinarily
gratified" given two court-appointed attar·
in aid and Texas voters approved
to
hear
Illinois
was
on
the list.
a $500 million bond issue to back
neys, ordered held without bona
The
project,
which
has
Pres!·
up lheloffer .
and later will be charged in the
_ nTi-n'ois offered the existIng dent Reagan's blessing, . still other 14 deaths.
&lt;'
particle accelerator at the Fermi faces obstacles in Congress,
Authorities could give no. mo·
where boosters say it will be an live for the family massacre, but
National Accelerator Laboratory near Chicago, the world's economic and scientific boon and said the Russellville shootings
largest atom smasher, as an opponents question the wisdom apparently resulted from his
incentive for building the super of spending so much . on one spurned . love for one of the
collider. State officials said using facility.
victims and , grudges against

MLTA
-.:

storm dumped heavy snow in
Cape," State Pollee Cpl. Joseph Trooper Anthony Fazio said.
"There's
a
nice
layer
of
ice
under
higher elevations a! the West.
Howley said. "Jt seems that the
•'
Fifteen
inches of new snow piled
the
snow.
wind is blowing the snow right
The
snow
was
the
product
of
up
at
Mammoth
Lakes , Calif.
back as fast as they can treatlt."
the
same
storm
system
that
sent
Snow
spread
over much of
" It's exciting. I love It ," said
floodwaters
coursing
through
southern
New
England
Tuesday.
Nancy Cribari of Barnstable on
Snowfalls of 5 to 6 Inches were
Cape Cod. "This Is my Idea of parts of Arkansas and Tennessee
during
the
Christmas
weekend
common in Massachusetts,
fun. It's blowing, it's snowing
and
stacked
Hoot
snowdrifts
Rhode Island and Connecticut,
very hard. The visibility is lousy.
across
wide
areas
of
the
Midwest
and
numerous minor traffic
It's beautiful ."
Monday.
accidents
were reported.
Sub·zero temperatures were
It
was
the
latest
in
a
series
of
As
the
snow
settled over the
forecast in New Hampshire,
storms
that
began
Dec
.
22
and
area,
winds
kicked
up and
Vermont and Maine.
which
have
been
blamed
for
at
temperatures
plunged.
In Bos·
"The oeep freeze," said Ed
least
51
deaths
In
a
weeklong
ton,
the
mercury
was
expected
to
Hogan of the weather service
rampage.
hit
10
degrees
Tuesday
-with
a
bureau in Concord, N.H. "To·
Seven
deaths
were
reported
in
wind
chili
factor
of
20
to
40
night ougbt to be pretty brutal."
New Mexico, six In Texas. six In degrees below zero, said Ralph
The storm dumped a half·foot Illinois, five In Arkansas and four
Kaplowitz, a National Weather
of snow on upstate New York, each in Michigan and Oklahoma.
Service forecaster at Boston 's
triggering scores of minor South Dakota. Kansas and Ten· Logan International Airport.
lender·benders and snarling traf· nessee each reported three
Temperatures of zero and
fie on the state Thruway .
storm-related deaths. Arizona beloft were expected in the
Most New Jersey received 2 and Oregon reported two apiece Bershires overnight.
to 3 inches of slushy snow that and Nevada, Wyoming, Colo·
"This is definitely going to be
threatened to siicken roadways rado, Ohio, Pennsylvania and
the coldest night and tomorrow
with ice as afternoon tempera - Missouri each reported one.
will be the coldest day since last
tures dove into the 20s .
Meanwhile, a new Pacific winter," Kaplowitz said.
"It's not going to be a nice night
'O Ut," said · Jim Eberwlne, a
NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 12·3Hl7
forecaster with the National
20
Weather Service In Atlantic City.
"In some cases. It may even be
life· threatening.'·
Shelters for the homeless
across New Jersey were prepar·
ing for an onslaught of fugitives
from the freeze.
Sections of Pennsylvania's Pocono ·Mountains were- burled
·beneath 9 inches @f snow. A state
police spokesman at Honesdale
in Wayne County, where accumu·
lations ranged from 4 to 81nches.
said most of the roads remained
snow·covered and slippery.
· "When we first tried to move
the cars (In the parking lot ) out
back so the plow could get in,
they just sat there spinning,"

El ...;m;nate
...
...

All Meat
Splendor

The Daily Sentinel-Page-

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday. December 30. 1987

Wednesday, December 30, 1987 · ·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio .

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

•'

60 stlltol0hl0. 0epMtmtntallnsijffACt.Cefl lllttltaiComph,nct n~
ulldemgned, !'ilpe•intendffil ol Insurance ol the Stat~ 111Ohro, he•etrv
certlltes thll COlotiiAliMS CO Of CA ol Anaherm, Sute ol 0.. hi!
com~red wrtllthe
olth.s stale •Pilllctblt to • .~nd 11 r~~JihO!rzea
dunng lhe cunent ~!If ltllflf'ISICI .n IhiS state 11~ appr~pfllte bus'"e11 ~~
lnSuflnce liS Ftnantilt cgn d~10n 11 stlown by •Is annu~ stalerrent to
h.l~f been il5 lolloRS ~n D!c:M~llef 31. 1966 ~dmltt:e!l ass ell, ~!I.·
32~4!)9.00 LlaM1t1ts, $3~, 631 m.oo Sllrptus. S7.19l90000. tn·

t•••

$24.~3!i.9S400.

come.
$2g,S8l775.00
£•pendrtultS,
Ntt mt15.
S1U69l900
00. Cap~al . 11500.000
00 IN WITNESS WHERf:Of.
l blvt
he•~~nto subsC11bed m, name tnd t•us!!d my ml to be allr~ed at eo.
lumtm. Oh10. IM oav &amp;Rd dale George Fib!. SUil;t ollnsunnce ol
Ohro
101 Slite or Oluo, OepJrtmtnt ot lnsutltlCe. Cerl111ea!e ~
Corfll::rkanct TM u nd mra~ed, Superrntendent ot ln $u r1n~e (lllh~SIAI~
cl OhiO.r..!ll!febv cl!rt~rn Ihill GREAT AIIIEIICAN R(SUW IllS CD ~~
Oalln, :l~BI~oi1X, hascomplrtdwl\h the 11wsclth1S Stilt liJPIIca bielo •
and I! author!led duf)!\Rihe current }UI to trlflml tn thrs stale «&gt;
appro~oate trus•nessol1nsurance Its fii'IIOC!IICllnOttron 1~ ~ho&gt;lon bJ d~
1nnua1 $lllemen!ID hl¥e been 11 toliowson De~;embt1 31. 1986 Aclm 1
ted u~ . $589,91~ . 16500: l11brl1hes. 551B.Jnl,l!l6-01l Surplu~ .
$65,!;29.897 OQ Income, $309. 31&amp;399.00. Eopend llu!H. 51 Jl.40Z.' ~JO,~ Net mets $71,539,0091)1 Caprllt. $6,009, Ill 00. IN WIT·
NESS 'M1EREOf. I ilave ~ettulllo,ubscnbed m1 ntme and Clllsed my
sui to bl! alluedatCokrmbJs.Oino ~~~~ til~ ind dale. Gtolltthbt, Srlpl
ollnMII}~t ot I)Ho
. 264 SUte ot Ohoa, \)tp111tment olln1ura~ct .
Cefitfru1e oiComplranCf Tlleundef1•ane&lt;i.SUperlntffldtnt ollllsurance
ot the Slateollltlro, titre~ tetlllleSt~lt UN IUD llt$COG1 AMERICA ~ !
ChiCII!(), Slat eel ll, hn DJfllphed • •lh thtlal'r! at lhrs State .l.!)piiCa bleto
rt .111d IS a ~\~omed durlnt111e current \'Ur to trln"ctrn thr~ ~tale 1ls
awrcpt rJie l&gt;vsiness of 1nsuJ1~C~ II! r •~•n c1al condotroA!S shOwn by 1IS
innual staltmfnllo h1~! bun as IOII011Son I&gt;!CtmbBr 3lll986.Admlt
ted as~s. jl , 95\,~Jl,902.00 lrabltrlr!S, S911!i.51!G.99 00. ~rpl u~.
$941,214.8 I 00 lnctin!l, $51132[1 20000. hrtndltLRI!Ii. S481.C164,
08100 Nti~SStls, $965. 946.9\T 00 C1~1 tal , S a732.020 OO.I NWIT
NESS WH£REOF. l ~we htfi!Linlo su1ncr1 btd tn~ natlle an~ t lll&gt;e!l rr~
s~lllo be al11~tC a1 C~lumbus Olllo,lh!l lhyandditl! G!!crgl!! f»bt SIJpt
gflf15Urlnt:!0 10hlll
r
•

16! Siat!OI -011IO Otp~l ll~!'fllollnlulance Cenrl·ca\~oiComphanct
Tht! ~ndl!SI!ned Superrntf'l'd~nl ot tnsuran~eolth~ Sta1~ot0hlo, her
elly cenrlre51hl MUT PIIOIECTIVlt~S COol Om1ha State nl NF h ~ ~
comphed 11'11~ thP lhl cl'll.:, ShU ~plrca~le ro It and IS autMrrz~
dunn&amp; the c~rrent , e;li\O tr ~n ~~~ on th,~ stateol~ ~ pp.o pr r&gt;~ le busrne1 ~ ot
Ul$Ufin(f 0~ Ill~ mutual pla1 ltllrMnda condr!IOn l'.&gt;hO~ n by II$
b.
a!'lnual statement to ~He be~n a~ l~ltows6~ Dectm~r )I, 1986 Adnl&gt;l
t!!dmel~ . ~206.54800. lra~rllles l24.1)4.1 8401lSurolus 12~.
471 7&amp;11.00 lnc~me, ue, 41)'t,51~ ~0. !p~ndrl~res. S37 441 510 00
IN W11NESS WHEREOf. I hB~e htlfil nl~ sub&gt;Wbed my name and causrd
my m i lo l:t alhiM il ColumbuSmOhiO,
thl~ dif and dill! Gt'OI~P FatE
SuPI l)llnSUflf'Cf ol Ohoo
Sl~lt ot OhiO , ~utm~~l ollnsu:
r~nte Certrhcateoi Com~ltilnCe lheuAOefSI~ntd SupfunteMPnUIIfl •
~ur an ce ollht Slatf ol Oluo r~re hy cer•rliesltld PRUCO liFE lfiiSCO ol ..
Phoeml, Siatui Al, hascomphtdl'rllnlhei8'1!SOIIIUSShte3ppljCatile!O ..
If iAd ~ i!UihGr'!led durmKltlf cu nellt 1ear In tuns,tlln th ' &gt;ltlf ols

Jpprop~rattbusmeuot•nsLIIa~ce
tt~f..nanera~
cond• t~n ·ssll(lwnbylts
annut statemtnttohnetwPriJ&gt;tollo
!on D~~003\ l91!6Adm•t
~~ nsm. $ 1.l00.60&amp;4\lOO.l la~ll lhtS, 510A6.340,90900 Surpluo

r.i l. 7£7.505.00. tncorre, s7~799l ~ oo U.po:!nd•t.. ~ $720.412.
086.00 Ntl mel1 $5~ 26/~0~00. CaPitiL 52.!10000000 tN WI I·
Nf SS WHERt: Uf t ~a~! heraJ~tll&gt;ubscn~ ITIJ ltilffie and (~US'd

my

sealtobl!lffll~iii.CotumbY~ OM1 th·~~~Yind dat e GfOfg~hbe Suet
Z19 Stil:r cl Onro Dep~rtnwnt ol tnw1;11ttP

ollnsu rance o! OhiO

Certtlrutea tt»m ph t nt:~ ltfuOOmo~ntd SUpennltndt'hiOII~ti!f1te

ollhi! State ol 0~10 heteb'l rprtolr'' rh~t PRUDENTIA l IN SCO Of AM(R
ICA of Newtr~ Shtt'ot NJ h~· ron1pl1rd ~ llh lhf la"' s olth~:o Slatt
apphcable to 1t ara 1 ~ aut~~~r 1 r&gt;rt dun•.,~ ~~~ cul!fnt yPar 1o tr~n~act 1rr
thrs slate 115 appropr at~ ~\on~\ ot rn~lllance on t~e "l!lulull pl~n It;
f1nancr~l cond11(ln 1s ~~~~''" ' tJIJ ~~~~nnu ~l st atfml'fltlo ll~vt been as
!oiiOws Gil Oec~m~be! 31. 1936 Admottl"lla!!~ls, $0 00 \l~boilo~~ SO00.
S!Jrptus. Sl2C~.224.41400 tnt~mt, $2&amp;70ll~G.39I!OO Etperd 1

h.w~ ~~~~u1Tto

tum,
518.868,401
IN W\TNf
su bHu~
m, namt 61900
and CiiiJ~r~
my ~eatSSto WHF.I![OF
be at1r1td atIColumoo~ Oh(l
thos d8'1 1nd date Ctotg~ F&lt;~bf. Sup\ otlnsu\lf\(t ~I Ohoo
255Stale
of Ot11o, Oep~rlm!nt ollnsut ancf Ctt11ttc3te ot CDmptra~ce The und~·
S!tned, SIJperrntendentoll~ \ur ~n ce olth~ S1~1@ ol O~ IO, hErPby cer hlres
thill TUYH[RS IItS CO o! H ~rtlord S1ille ct CT ha! compt1ed 'filth the
I&amp;R! oi i~ IS Slate IPIII!CIIIlleto 11 ~nd rs ~ut~outl!ddu!tl~ th, cune~t year
totranur:t1nthrs ~Ill! rt~ ~ppr~prrlll~ blls!nmo llllSUIBnGf ttl F1n~nco ~l
condrhDn IS shOwn ~ liS annuli statement to hllf bftn as loltOfi Son
[)!em tiel 3l, 1986 Adm•ttPd ts~l'tl !17,2\0 137 \4100 tratlllri•Pii
$26. 141,801.341 00. Surp1u; 596&amp;J2 ,19&amp;00, In come $72~11,9~5.·
S6J.OO Err.pendrturn, $5.817.?)918300 Net ml't; S1 061!329.·
798 00 Ctprtll, S\00.000000 00 IN WIT NESS WHHI£01 . j haVe he·
reunto subscribed my n~mP on~ c au&gt;~ my ~ul tu b!! ~ ~~~-td ill
Columllls. QhKI lh1s day !rd da l&lt; Groortef tbeo Su lll olln~ull1tt' of
Olno
215 State ~~ ()h•o [).op~llm~l ol tn~u•ffi~P t"f1ot 1 cat~ of
Complootn&lt;t lh, ~ndm1~nt'11 'iupe,.,n'~ft~HII ol tnwran··~ ~~~ ~~ShiP
at OhiO. htr~b'( r.Prlotrp· t~at WISCO"SIN NAl iO NAI UH 11'1 5 CO c!
Qst~o~h StJI~ o' ~· ~
·• t
•bll
1o 11 M1Q11 ~~11 ,
r
1 '
to
IIP~!OpiQ!e 00 . '
, . ,
'1, 1
~ 1 1 1 1~
1111nual ~lalem• :li I~ 1. ,. bl , , '011011 ~on [le. tll'br'f )l \ !Jar.:r Aomtl
ted asStf!J.JIB6. ~llb90 00, loab•I•IIP~. Sl!ll285.627 O(l SUrplus
l29,9]5,U!)l00 lnromt ,62,266.~49011 lJptn!1 1 t~IM ~ 2107
3100: Net IS&gt;Illi, $32 93!1,062 00. Cap1lill, Sl000.000 00 IN wti
NESS 'Mf:R{()f t tla~e her ~unto 1 ulnct1be~ m~ ntmt &amp;nd ( AU\~d ml
su!to beoalllledltCDiumllu\ Onia 1~1\ da~ •nd d&amp;tr G!of g~fa l!l' Supt
of tn~lltlnc~ ~~ l)tuo
•

�•'
•

;~7"

.. ··..

EASTMAN'S. . ·your Independently Owned

\

FREE
TICKETS

Low·Pric:ed s·uper~arket

. ·.
'

Pomeroy-Middll!e!!po~rt~,~O~h~i~o__,~---~~~..;..-~---;;.·,!l!!he;..E~~~~:!;;!::C;;;;.,

Wednesday, December 30, 1987

.

.

••
• •

The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

•

... '·,·.

~

..

\
'' '

Wednesday, December 30, 1987
Page-S

- ·--~----------------------~--~----~--~
, ~----~~~
E_&amp;_at__::of~B_end_
Myth/reality
:;::~.: Natt"on
reductt"on
CANCER
rightamountofsexwlththeright fine. But if you like it, and don't
them feel good. they may be
. a1 budgJ....t
t::' 1.'
Myths and Realities
person, and above all, not worry. drink it because you're ·afraid
contributing to their risk 'by

Cancer ·caused by eating cookies?

B D
8
Dlrect!r S~~::;r::c~::,"gy
· Grant
Hospital,
Cookies
Cause Columbus
Cancer!

~

By BOB HOEFLICH
Shucks- It don't surprise me
. •• By As part .of the national none ,
· ~ budget reduction, there will be no
Sarah Fisher had 665 people
· :window service
sign the guest book as visitors tci
• -: at Meigs County
the Fisher home and craft shop•• •-l?ost Offices this
behind the Rock Springs Fair· saturday followgrounds- this holiday season.
lng the pattern
' Sma-ll wonder. Sarah Is so
of last Saturday.
creative a nd decorates every
On Thursday,
· room in the spacious Fisher
this week a norhome for the season - and
mal Saturday schedule will be elaborately!
VIsitors came from as far
maintained which means that
window service will be available away as Peoria, Arizona and two
only from 8:30a.m. to 12 noon.
groups visited this year. They
were the Meigs Senior Citizens
There were 13 correct entries and girls from Kyger Creek High
In the Sunday Times-Sentinel School.
mystery farm contest of Dec. 20.
Sarah thanks everyone for
Winner Is Joan I,. Tuttle, Racine, visiting and letting her share her
who wlll receive a $5 cash prize Christmas spirit with them. She
for naming the Theodore Pullins received so many beautiful letfarm . All 13 entries were correct ters and cards from visitors but
so the prize winner was lottery . one communication Impressed
Mrs. Tuttle will receive her her a· great deal. It told of one
check by maiL
family whose members had
gotten away from Chr Istmas an d
Turn back the calendar to Aug being together. But after visiting
, 8, 1885 - at least it might make the Fisher home they returned
you feel warmer -and the place home and decorated extensively
Is Middleport where a memorial and had all members of the
service was held In honor of Gen. family come in · for a special
U.S. Grant.
holiday gathering. The Mother of
The observance began at sun- the family thanked Sarah lor
rise wlth thE!' firing of 38 guns al making it all happen.
intervals of one minute, begin·
Don't look now - but Sarah,
nlng at sunrise.
after all of that work, is ' looking
At 9 a.m. a procession was forward to next Christmas and
formed at the G.A.R. Hall with hopes to see all of the visitOI's
the order of march Including the aga in.
Grand Military Band, escort,
By the way , winning door
orator, sons of veterans, children prizes were Anna Blackwood,
with flags, Women's Relief Sumner Road , Pomeroy, and
Corps, Visiting Comrades, Carolyn Melrose of Point Plea·
G.A.R., visiting citizens, citizens sant. The two winners may pick
of Middleport, Pomeroy Fire up their- prizes but should call
Department, Middleport Fire Sarah before making a trip to the
Department, artillery, mounted residence.
men , carriages and wagons.
.. The program included a chant
Best wishes to Delmas Kearns,
by the choir. prayer by the Middleport, who will observe his
chaplain, military record of Gen. 8lst birthday onNewYear'sDay.
Grant. funeral ceremonies,
chant by choir, and an oration by ·
Missing all of that snow which
Rev. T. DeWitt Peake. P . F. fell all around us. should help you
Zelse was grand marshal of the to keep smiling.
event.
'

I
~

SING A SONG

Hum U sweet and low.

Sing a song of Christmas,
Chris I, our Lord we know.

Sing a song of Christmas,

Sing It soft and clear.
Sing a song of Christmas
For our Saviour dear.

Sing a song of Christmas
Straight from the heart.
,L.et It bubble from within

....

•.oar God wlll never part.

'Sing a song of Christmas
All people great and small.
Let us praise and worship H im
The greatest King of all.

Glory to Jesus,

Mrs. Barbara James
JOY, PEACE , LOVE
iJ'~

for Jesus

,

'- • So .sweet evermO re;
Ottly He can save men

He Is the door.
'Yes, He Is that Joy
. That bubbles from our heart.
As long as we're with Christ

... .•. Our Joy will not part.
·~

'"' P is for th e Prince of Peace,

· Beloved Saviour dear.

Everlasting Father,

Who always lingers near.

Almighty Father. Oh!
Bright and Morning Star,
, Caring for Your chidren

Both near and far.
Emanual

Bring Peace on Earth.

CHRISTMAS

Christmas Is for.Joy ,and Peace on
Earth.

Heavenly hosts do glorify our pre·
sclous Saviour's birth.

V.·ls victory over death

He arosE&gt; from the grave.

Eternal Hfe forever was,
The precious love He gave.

Mrs. Barbara James

CHRISTMAS LOVE

Think of all the hungry ones
Who have no food to e-at .

Tt seems they're all so lonesome

there
Wllhout a friend at all.
I J!ray my Father blesses them

xe loves them, one and all.

fknow that some have found the Lord

As Christmas- comes around;
~cause the Love of Jesus
In our hearts does abound .

This,- take note, If you will.
Is what Christmas means to me~ the hungry, clothe the naked,
""H'elp with heart and hand;
Spread peace, joy and love
Throughout this troubled land.
Mrs. J!arbara James

Bath Tissue

Macaroni
..............

e

•

· :~r
· ~-·

•

·'

SATURDAY

.

•

•

•
•

'

•

....._ _,'

'-..........
'· ·:..,...

FOODLAND KING SIZE

·Fresh Green

sc

Cabbage

r

'

White Bread

OFF LABEL CLOROX

2

Liquid Bleach

DECEMBER 31 -JANUARY 2

DIET RITE, CHERRY RC
DIET or REGULAR

•

'
20 oz.

R C Cola

LOAVES

.. ..
..
.

Plus
Deposit

I

·~

u.•eary world in strong and able

hands. A righteous Governor
You will be over all your Fath·

er' s land .
Savior. Emmanuel, Prine of Peace.
Tru ly this you are, and much,
much more to me. You are the

16 oz.

Fairest of Ten Thousand.
Through you, . Lord. all sinners

BAG

can be free.
Mrs. Barbara James,
Praise the Heavenly King
STAR OF BETHLEHEM

Star that shone brilliant bright
To guide the wise men on that night.

BOSTON STYLE

And unto us this day a Saviour was

born
Reigning King on Christmas morn.

10 OZ.

~

!:~o~;~~~~ZZA .......

88(

KRAFT

BROUGHTON'S LITE 1% ·
or DAIRY LANE

.

?~~~~.~ ~.~R!~~~~:!. $188

Here was born the Holy Ch ild,

DAWN
32 ot.bll. $168' SHEDD'S lb oz.
8
~~!~ LIQUID .......-..
QUARTE RS .....
MAC I
( HI-HO-'S &amp; SUNSHINE $1
CHEESE. ••;~~·...
CHEEZ-ITS ..... !~.?.~·.

Love a nd Pear£: with mercy mild.
E nriched you are ;;~nd sweeter far .

40&lt; OFF LABEL

Oh! Holy Child

2I 88(

From a VIrgin's womb you came. Je.
sus Christ Is your name.
Endowned you as a special place.

4I 88

grace.

SURF
42 oz. $
DETERGENT ...~~~....
KRAFT
$
SINGLES ....... ~~.~::..

Herod for the Christ Ch ild looked;

E nlightened Wisemen another ro ute
took. Love entered in your scope:
Messiah, Jesus Is our Hope.
Mrs. Barbara James
PUT CIIRIST BACK IN
CHRISTMAS

LB.

Let's put Christ back In Christmas
A daily prayer will start .
Put Christ back In Christmas

Let ' s put Christ back in Christmas,
He'll bless you evermore.

wounds we eann9t heal.

Leg Quarters

ASSORTED COLORS
NORTHERN

LONG SPAGHETTI or
ELBO SHELL
,

MATINEES DAILY · ALL SEATS $1.50
BARGAIN HIGHT TUESDAY $1.99

And, Lord , we know you hold this

tt ·s very hafd to see a child who surf-

Somewhere deep Inside of us
Fair faces Unger still.

HOLLY FARMS ·

,, ~'' ',

We are the hands and feet of Christ .
We must help with all our heart.

ers deep within:
can not feel their pain, Their

T RESPONSIBLE FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL' OR PICTORAL ERRORS .
SAT., JAN . 2. 1988 •USDA FOOD STAMPS ACCEPTED • NO

:'

Let's put Christ back In Christmas;
It Isn't hard to do.
Put Christ back In Christmas;
He'll give us life anew.

W~

•WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANITITES •PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU

there. We forget about the Savi-

Sing praises from our heart.

Yes, we must give our services
Arid love we must Impart.

EW YEAR'S GREAT 1988 SALE!!

our who all our burdens bear .

tpok at all the tiny tots

.~Who
. walk with shoeless feet .

.

us very much.
This is the time to share our love with
people everywhere. For I am
sure today and every day we're
In our Saviour's care.
Many times we go running here and

This day He bl essed you with His

• He gave His only son.

DECEMBER 30 -

THURSDAY

Free Groceries,
Plus Dash for Cash
'

\

YEAR END
INVENTORY CLEARANCE
3 .DAYS -ONLY
WEDNESDAY

WIN: 90 Second Shopping Spree,

1

away In all the Christmas rush:
Son of God, King of Kings, who loved

TQday and every day.

Oh! Yes, HE' was crucified
• That His Father's will be done.

developing cancer b~ worrying.
Ftobeertunatelcyu,sceodok lresprhoadvuec·nnogt
0
ye
n ac
So
th
cancer. me o er, equally en ·
joyable foods andacllvitleshdve.
1 wou ld Ilk e for yo~ to become
1ess f ear fu 1 of cancer--less man!
· ·
upu 1ated bY th e th rea t of cancer
or 1ess s t res sed by the worry of
cancer.
c k·
!I
cancer .. so
h oo' 1es ca se
w at.
I want to deal with Issues that
and
concern
you. Yo u commonts
,
1
d
quest ons are encourage ·
1
h
t
1
Please mal t em o me n care ot
hi
t s newspaper .

Father' s will.
I know sometimes we're carried

Bet hlehem. God chose you:

LovE' Is Cod ' s lovE' for us;

you'll get cancer that's too. bad.
My guess is that people ~hko
enjoy their coffee or their stea ,
but give it up because they fear 'It
causes cancer probably increase
their stress factor while reducing
their dietary factor.
Interestingly, sttess is impll·
cated as a factor in the deve 1op·
ment of cancer by some experts.
I suspec t thatthey'reright.Ilso,
there are a lot of people who are
stressed daily by their fear of
cancer--who are reminded every
lime they eat that they may be
contributing to the development
of cancer. By avoiding the things
they enjoy, the things that make

Reading from His precious book will
bring Chris I closer still. He was
born and crucified to do our

The world's In sad dismay.
w~ long for peace a nd hope for

peace

1

I

Poet's corner

Sing a song of Christmas ...

h Does that get your attention? I
ope
I so. It's supposed to.
t seems to me that whenever
someone wants to get your
attention, wants you to give up
something you like or buy something you don't need, they put the
word cancer In there. Caffeine
causes cancer so give It up .
VItamin X prevents cancer so
buy lots or It.
,
If 1 wanted you to stop eating
cookies, how could I do It? I could
say that cookies ~ight make you
fat, and most of you would say,
"What else Is new?" I could say
that cookies elevate your blood
sugar and most of you would say,
"So what?" But if I tell you that
my studies have shown that
cookies cause cancer, many of
you would stop eating them right
now .
Sound crazy? Think about it.
How often do you read in the
paper about another food,
another product, another activity that has been "shown to cause
cancer"? ·
Coffee, cola, diet .PDP· steak,
french fries, hot dogs . Hair
spray, deodorant, feminine
sprays, talcum powder. The sun.
Too much sex. Too little sex.
Stress. All of these have been
implicated as causes for cancer.
There are those who· would have
us all live indoors, eat rice and
water, smell funny, have just the

we may not get cancer but who
cares. I'd probably die of
boredom.
Several people have written to
ask about diet and cancer. Let
me explain. No fo.od has been
shown to cau&lt;ecancer. cancer Is
• What you eat Is
not that simple.
just one small factor in the
overall process of tho develop·
men! of cancer. You ' could not
"give'' someone cancer by feed·
ing them lots of meat, for
example, and you cannot avoid
cancer by giving up all those
things you like. You might
conceivable reduc e your chance
of getting a specific type of
cancer, but that may not translate into living longer or better.
For example, the incidence of
pancreatic cancer In a large
group of coffee drinkers may be
15 In 100,000 but is only 10 In
100,000 for non-coffee drinkers. If
you give up coffee, you may
slightly decrease your risk of
getting cancer of the pancreas.
But no one has looked at what
else happens to the non -coffee
drinkers. Do they drink some·
thing else that increases their
· chances for a nother kind of
cancer? How many non -coffee
drinkers · have car accidents
because they fell asleep a t the
wheel? How many are late lor
work? How many nag their
spouses?
If you choose notto drink coffee
because you don't like it, that's
fine. If you choose not to drink It
because you feel better, that's

FOODLAND NilE: Rio Grande College vs.
Mt. Vernon Nazarene College
SAT.; JAN. 9; 1988- 7:30P.M.

88

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6 01. (tn.

1 ..
98
8
8
(
1 V-8 JUICE ......~~.~!~.. .
CAMPBELL'S

Now

•

For a ransom He was sold.

Don't forget Jesus this Christmas;
Just think of all His care:
He gave His life, His love,
And all our burdens bear.

Somellmes we get caught up

In the commercial rush and such:

Let's put Christ back In Christmas
With Chrtsl, please keep In touch.
Praise Jesus, Lord of Mercy,

SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA

..

•,

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"7. 11.00 .
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Mrs . Sarbara James

•

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and Foodland Will
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local Special
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Milk

Martha White:

1 'm sure He knows we're lost.
Somehow we have forgotten

So listen, all ye people,
Some young, and others old;
Let's put Christ back In Chrtslmas

'

'

9 volt single

Let's put Christ back In Christmas,
He paid the price, the cosl.

lOW
FAT
Mill

•PLAIN •SELF-RISING · ..

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1988

-

He's standing a t our d~or.

79

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OLYMPICS DAY

Just put Christ back In Chris tmas,

( I

C.MIP 'N'
DIP

JIF

Join This Worthwhile Commu•u•v

r

]"~

fji;;iT;:;1

•J

..

�Page- 10- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, December 30. 1987

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

December

Community calendar
WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
PORTLAND- Lebanon Town- .
SALEM CENTER - Salem
ship Trustees will meet Wednes- Township Trustees will meet
day . 6 p.m ., at . the township T!Jursday , 9:30 a.m ., at the
building.
Salem fire house.
-"'1"'""-

TUPPERS PLAINS -Orange
Township .Trustees will mee t
Wednesday, 7 p.m., at the home
of Dorothy Calaway, clerk.
DARWIN- Bedford Township
Trustees will hold their year-end
meeting on Wed nesday at 7 p .m.
at the town hall.
RUTLAND - The regular
meeting of the Rutland Township
.Trustees has&gt; been changed to
Wednesday , 6:30 p.m ., at the
Rutland fire station.

HARRISONVILLE - Columbia Township Board of Trustees
will meet Wednesd, 7:30p.m. , at
the fire station . An organizational meeting lor 1988 will
follow .

Church, the Texas Community,
will have a New Years Eve
service Thursday starting at 9
p.m .
RUTLAND - Rutland Freewill Bal'tist Church w!ll have
watch night services Thursday
starting at 7 p.m .
MIDDLEPORT - Wesleyan
Bible Holiness Church, 75 Pearl
St.. Middleport, w!ll have watch
nig ht services Thursday starting
at 7:30p.m.

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet 1 p.m.
Thursday at the Syracuse Munic·
ipal Building: Following the"·
CHESHIRE - A New Years
regular meeting, an organlza· Eve service will be held Thurstiona! meeting for 1988 will be day, starting at 7: 30p.m., at the
held .
Silver Run . Baptist Church,
Cheshire.
POMEROY - MI. Hermon

Holiday visitors to area noted ·
By CH,mLENE HOEFL)CH
Christmas '87 has come and
gone, butt he memories linger on.
So you're worn to a frazzle
from the hustle and bustle of the
season and all you've got left is a
dirty house, a refrigerator full of
leftovers, and a pile of laundry.
But it was really worth · it
havi ng everyone home for Chris tmas . After all that's what the
season is all about, having the
fa mily together. for some a once
a year happening.
Sure t here was confusion to the
maximum (would you really
wan t it a ny other way?), not to
mention the trad itional complaints about the weat her, too
much snow, too little snow no
snow at all .' But, at least, 'thi s
year the weather cooperated so
the drive was less hazardous for
happy travelers .
Ch ristmas is a se ntime nta l
season--for some a time that. like
it or not. seems to leave a feeli ng
of sadness. Reflections on happier times lead ing to com ments
like ''I'm glad it's over ."
Getting too caught up in the
givi ng and rece iving with all the
shopping a nd trying to please
everyone has its dowqside. Per·
hap~ there isn't e nough e mphasis
o n the true spirit of the season.
But certainly there were highlights of the season for all of us.
Wedding bells rang in Lancaster for Lori Kloes, da ughter of
.June a nd Manning Kloes, Middleport . on the day after Chris tmas ,
with many relatives home for the
holidays being able to attend. Bil l
H ac~e tt, Colu mbu s, his two sons,
B. J. and Benjamin, West Lib·
e rty , Linda a nd John Goodw in.
· Kyle and Jay , West Palm Beach,
Fla ., De nnis a nd Sue and son,
Spencer, Hackett of Co lumbu s,
Me lanie and Bob Franko of
Phoenix. a nd Frances Smart of
Col umbus were here wit h Phyllis
a nd George Hackett a nd othe r
\ relatives, so, or course, joined in
rhe wedd ing celebra ti on.
Bill a nd Flo Grueser made a
tr•ip hme from Florida for the
holidays and joined others at the
home of Debbie a nd Mike Gerlach and their c hildren , Tara and
Alison, for Christmas · dinner .
Ot hers there were Mr. a nd Mr s.
Ro bert Jay, Col umbu s , Mr. and
Mrs. Carl Bra nnan , and Clyda
Allensworth, Middle port. The
Cerlac.hs traveled to Chillicothe
on Chri stmas Eve for a famil y
gatheri ng wi th hi s parents, Wendell a nd Peg Gerlach.
Traveling to Phoenix to spent
Christmas with their son, Cap-

lain Mark Morris, wife Lisa and
their fa mily, wereJa net. a nd Carl
Morris, Rutland. The other two
sons. and a ll a re In the service,
are out of the coun try now. John
is in the Philippines and Jim is in
Korea although he will be retur ning in early '88.
Lori Lee and daughter, Cassie
Michelle of Linde n, Te nn . made a
pre-Chri Stmas visit with her
parents. Richard and Ann Rupe,
a nd her sister, Linda Faulk and
her !amlly,
· Joi ning Don and Carolyn Thomas fo r Christmas Eve dinner
were her parents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
Ralph Graves, and their child ren
a nd familiesNick a nd Becky
Depoy and son •. Trevor, Shade,
Dan, Fonda and Dan Thomas and
twins, MicheM and Danielle,
Reedsvllle, and Greg Thom as of
Kent.
Grandchildren m ake all the
differe nce in holiday ce lebrations, accordi ng to Colleen Van
Meter, who is in Columbus with
her two, Stacie a nd Brad, ch ildren of Brenda a nd John Shuler.
Coming home for Chr istmas
with the C. E. Blakeslees were
their two daughters a nd their
families . Melvin and Patricia
Circle, Wichita, Kansas , a nd
their daughte r, Marianne. and
son. Mark, both s tude nts at
Kansas University, a nd Jim and
Jennifer Butcher, a nd their four .
Jeff, Julie, Jessica a nd Joanna ,
Rockport , Ind. were here. They
were joined for a family dinner
on Christmas night by Mrs. Ira
Butcher. Middlepor t.
The holiday broug ht never a
dull moment at the home of Mr.
a nd Mr s. Albert Ro us~ as rel a-

rives came in and out for severa l
days before Christmas . Here
visi ting were Mr. and Mrs.
Geo rge Sterke'l, Dayton Beach,
F la .; Randy and Jim Sterke l and
Christina Smi th , Bunnell, Fla.;
Kevin a nd Cora Smith , Columbus ; Larry a nd Judy Flowers,
Picker ing ton; Doug Roush a nd
his fiance, Sheryl Hall. Reynoldsburg; Roger and Janie Roush ,
Roger 11, Susie and Ryan, Grove
Cl ty; Dale and Joy Roush a nd
Davis, Michael a nd Sher r ie
Haynes, St. Albans; Mildred
Meade, Co lumbus . a nd Lois Ann
J e nkins a nd J , D., Virgil and
Gerry Parsons. Becky a nd
Lanny Tyree and Spanky, all
local.
Joining Mr. and Mrs . James
Crow, Mer edith, Carrie and
Wesley for Christmas dinner
were Bob a nd Ka tie Crow and
their so n, Bob, and gra ndson.

Golden Rule Class meets
Annual Christmas meeting of
the Golden Rule Class of the
Middleport First Ba tis t Church
was held at the h om ~ of Ma nning
a nd June Kloes.
Devolions were given by Mar - .
jorle Walburn who read . " Hunch ba c k Zia" and a poem " Just
Watch the Hu stle". Mrs. Kl ocs
had a rea ding, "T'was the Night
Bcfol'r Christmas ."
Followi ng a short bu si ness
meeting officers were e lected fo r

the new year, Mrs . Kloes, pres i·
dent ; Jean Thomas, secre tary;
and Mar jo rie Walburn .

MIDDLEPORT
Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church, Middleport, w!ll have a New Years Eve
Service on Thursday from 7: 30
p .m . to 12 midnight .
MASON, W.Va . -ABend Area
Gospel New Years Eve service
will be held Thursday, from 7:30
p.m. to 12 m!dnigl)t , at the
Christian · Brethren Church In
Mason, W.Va.
POMEROY Calvary PHgrim Chapel, Route 143, near
Pomeroy, wUl have watch night
services Thursday, starting at
7:30p.m. Everyone welcome.
RACINE- A New Year's Eve
service will be held Thursday,
s\artlng at 8 p.m., at the Eagle
Ridge Community Church. Everyone welcome.
RUTLAND- Rutland Church
of God, Route 124, w!ll have
watch night services on Thursday from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight.
Special si nging and preaching.
Midnight communion wlll be
offered. All welcome.
PORTLAND Hazel Community Church, between Po rtla nd and Long Bottom, w!ll have
a watch night service on Thursday, starting at 7 :30 p.m . Everyone we lcome.
LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will m eet
Thursday, 10 a.m ., at the township building.
SYRACUSE - Sut ton Township Trustees will meet Thursday, 1 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Building. An organizatio nal mee ting for 1988 will follow
the regular meeting:
POMEROY Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route 143, near
Pomeroy, wlil have watc h night
services Thursday, starting at

RA CINE- A New Year 's Eve
wil l be held Thursday,
starting at 8 p.m., a t the Eag le
Ridge Communi ty Church. Everyone welcome.
servlc~

MIDDLEPORT A New
Years Even da nce will be held at
the new ·Middleport American
Legion building on Thursday
from 9 p.m. to1a.m . Music by the
Write Ones ·Band. Admission $8
si ngle, $10 couple. B uffet
provided.

A whi te elepha nt auction wa s
held wit h the proceeds goi ng to
the class treasury. En joying
re fres hments were Mr. a nd Mrs.
Dale Walburn, Mr. and Mr s.
John Reibe l. the Rev. and Mrs .
Dwig ht Anderson, J ea n Thomas
C arolyn Davi s, Howard
Wagenhols .

"Christmas Store" and the Rev .
and Mrs. Dwight Anderson pres e nted "'O'tl " Interview with
Mar y."
Donna and Tra cy Grueser
gave a s.kil " Le t's Do It ", Chris
a nd Amy Rouse had read ings,
Susie Heck , Jeremy, Joshua,
Eric a nd Je nnifer joined Ethe l
Sha nk a nd Stacey and Wa nd a
and Adam Shank in a presenta·
lion of "The Chris tmas Tradi tions" and read the Chri s tm as
story from Luke.
The Lord's Prayer in unison
·c losed the program. ·

WANT ADS

ARE JUMPING
WITHBARGAINS

MEMf'HIS, Tenn. (UP!) Georgia beat Arka nsas In the
Liberty Bowl because of a
defense that upheld its reput a·
tlon against the rush and a rookie
kicker who had no previou s
c hance to build a reputation.
The Bulldogs rallied for 13
points, Including replace ment
sta rter John Kasay's field goal
with five seconds left , and s hut
out the Razorbacks In the fourth ·
quarter Tuesday night tb c laim a
20-17 triumph.
" We' ve lost games In the last
second recently, so It 's good to
win one In the same way, "
Georgia Coach VInce Dooley
sa id.
Freshman kicker Kasa y,
harned to start just before the
game, atoned for two earlier
misses by kicking the decisive
field goal. He'd missed a 48-yard
attempt late In the second
quarter and a 47-yarder In the
third as the Razorbacks buil t a
17-7 lead. Kasay, however, came
through from 39 yards out to g ive
the Bulldogs their first bowl
victory over Arkansas after two .
losses.
"I'm very proud of John Kasay
for coming bac k and kicking the
winning field goal, '' Dooley said.
"He had missed earlier a nd
really came through for us a t the
·e nd ." · ·
Kendall Trainor missed a
35-yard attempt for Arkansas
with just over two minutes
remaining that allowed Georgia ,
9-3, to rally for the victory .
Trainor's pote nti al gamewinner fell wide to the left after
an 18-play, 74-ya rd dr ive by the
-Razorbacks, 9-4.
The Bulldogs were for ced to
punt on~heir ens uing possessio n
with less than a minute left..
However, as Arkansas quarter-

HARRISONVILLE . - Harr!·
sonville Masonic Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM, will meet at 7:30 p.m .
Saturday at the hall.
TUESDAY
CHESTER - Chester Council
323, Daughters of America, w!ll
meet at 7:30 Tuesday night at the
hall . The charter will be draped
for Edna Reibel and Ethel Smith.
Members are to wear white. New
officers w!ll be Installed and all
are as ked to attend.

,. POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu·
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
LAUREL CLIF F - A New Sorority will meet Tuesday at
Years Eve watch night service . 7: 30 p.m . at the home of Evelyn ·
Knight.
will be held Thursday, sta rting a t

1/2

WINTER
PRICE SALE
CONTINUES

OFFER GOOD THURSDAY and MONDAY
.
.\

I
.

rr=:=~~~~~~~~====~~ Season's Greeti'ngs From the Staff of Woodland Centers, Inc.

enta{ ea£tli

is goodfor everyone!
13eing ftea[tfi.y Jeers good.

,
•
,·
•

CHAPMAN'S

CLOSED FRIDAY and SATURDAY

Stayir~g

fzea{tfi.y Jeers better!

Medical checkups, exercise, a balanced diet: All are Important for
good h.eallh. Menial health - or emotional wellness- also plays an importanl
part in·our overall heaHh.
Everyone wants good health, bul jusl as cuts, bruises, and colds occur...
so d? emollon~l problems, such as stress, depression, and crisis silualions.
Thais part of hfe ... for mosl of us.
Not letting these get us down Isn't always easy. Fortunalely, however,
Just as there are medical heallh services lor general health problems !here also-are
mental health services readily available within Ihe community.
'

'.

BEREA, Ohio (UPI ) - The
Cleveland Browns, AFC Cen tra l
Division champions for the third
straight year. may tra ve l to Vera
Beach, Fla., or Columbu s to
prepare lor their first pl ayoff
game.
Browns Coac h Marty Scholtenhe imer said Monday that the
team would practice at Baldwin ·
Wallace College the rest of !his
week while another practi ce sit e
is being considered .
" We have made no formal
dec ision on our training loca le fo r
next week," said Schot tenhei·
mer. "We're c hecking weather
(orecasts and see ing what' s
available.
"Vero Beach is a considera tion, being tha t we're fa m iliar
with tha t facility."
The Browns have used Dodger town- the Los Angeles Dodgers'
s pring training complex - the
pas t two season s In preparing lor
the playoffs.
Cleveland will play · e ither
Seat tle or Indi a na polis on Jan . 9
or 10 a t Cleveland Stad ium .

. Although WOODLAN~ CENTERS, INC. will be closed December 24th and i 5th and January 1st
rn observanc,e of the holtdays, Emergency Services are available 24-Hours a day by calling 4465554 rn Gallra County, and 1·800-252-5554 in Jackson and ·Meigs Counties.

Wood(ancf Centers, Inc. .
Servin~ Gallia, Jackson, and Meigs Counlies ... and Surrounding Communilies.

•

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2860
or 949·2801
No Sunday Calls
3· tl ·ttn

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY
1:00 P.M.
RACINE
GUN CLUB
RACINE, OHIO

10-9-tfn

TATE SCORES- Georgia tailback Lars Tate (32) goes over the
top ofArkansas defe nders for a touchdown during the Liberty Bowl
Tuesday night in Memphis. Also In on the play for the Bulldogs are
Todd Wheeler (63) and Mack Burroughs (69). (UPI)
(!J

back Greg Th.o mas tried to pass
on the fi rsr play, Georgia's
Ter r ie Webster tipped t he ba ll
and Carver Rus sa w intercepted
and returned the ball to the
Arkansa s 43.
Georg ia quarter back James
Jackson rushed for four ya rds
a nd then hit Troy Sadowski lor a
16-yard ga in to the Arka nsas 23.
That set up Kasay 's ga m ewhining kick .
Kasay was named starting
placekicker when Steve Crumley
wa s suspe nded for disc iplinary
re ason s. Georgia c ited broken

Seat tle will be the opponent if the
Sea hawks bea t Houston in a wild
card game next Sunday. If the
Oilers win tha t cont es t. t he
Browns face the Co lts .
Also being consid e red is the
Woody Hayes Athlet ic Ce nt er. a
giant new indoor· multi -sports
p ractice fac ili ty at Ohio State
Un ivers it y, but it is believed the 1
tea m

is

lean in g

t oward

Dod gert own.
"The idea is to get somew he re
whe re it 's a ll work -ori ented,"
say s tackle Cody Ri sien, one of
seve n Browns to be elect ed 10 the
Pro Bowl. " You miss your
fam il y, sure. but th e whole point
is to prepa r e for th e playoffs."
Sc hott e n helmer gave the play ers off Monday , a lthough Ri sien
wa s joi ned py wide receiver
We bste r Sla ug hter , tackle Paul
Fane n a nd li nebacker Clav
Matthews in using exercise
equipeme nt at Baldwin-Wallace.
The Browns will have meet ings
a nd run bri efly Tuesday before
workouts on Wednesday and
Thursd ay .

Daugherty sent Spartans a
telegram prior to his death
PASADENA , Calif. iUPII Michigan State Coac h George
Perles said Monday the deat hs of
forme r coach Duffy Daugherty
and the tea m 's long tim e chaplain
have put into per spective _the
Spartans' first Rose Bowl ap. pearance in 22 years .
" Before Duffy passed away. he
sent a telegram to the. tea m
wishing the m the best of luck ."
Perles said at th e final formal
news conference for Fr id ay's
74th Rose Bowl. " I only wish he
was here, becau se he would
certainly bring more humor than
T ca n. When yo u go to some thing
like this. you'd like to see your
loved ones take part in it.
" I have m y mother he re. She'll
be 80th the fifth of January . She
r eally thinks she's the head
coach. I have a lot of respect for
m y mother. Duffy was very, ve r y
close. The good Lord operates in
m ysterious ways . We had a nice
successful season. but you should
never lose perspective,"
P erles also reflected on the
November dea th of Msgr , J.V .
MacEachln. the chaplain at
Michigan Sta te.
"Father Mac passed away a
few weeks ago ," Perles sa id. "I
went. to see him a nd he was lying_
in bed . He crossed his hands and
said , 'George, football Is only a
game, ' 1 thought he was going to
pass away ·right the n. Then he
said, 'l 'rri going to heaven to
watch the Rose Bowl with
Duffy."'
.
Perles sa id his team's prepa ra tions for Friday's game have
been smooth. The Sparta ns arr ived in Ca lifornia last Friday.

'VINYl SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN IN
INSULATION

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

trai ning rules in r emoving the
junior before the ga me.
It was Kasay' s 24-yard field
goal a t the beglnnlngof thefourth
quarter that brought the Bul ldogs within 17-10: With 10: 23left,
Jackson ra n in lor a 5-yard TD to
even the score, 17-17.
Thomas carried for two touchdowns a nd Trainor kic ked a field
goal to give the Razorbacks a 17-7
lead in the thi rd quarter . Georgia's Lars Tate ran 1 yard In the
second quarter lor Geot'gia's
only score until the fou rth
quarter .

Browns may train in new
Ohio .State sports complex

.

Obtaining professional services lor our emotional well being makes
good s~ns~ . and good menial heallhl

Business Services

.

RUTLAND - Rutland Church
REEDSVILLE - Olive Townof God, Route 124, w!ll have ship Trustees will hold a special
watch night services on Thurs- meeting to complete year-end
day from 9 p .m. to 12 midnight. business, Thursday, 6:30 p .m .. at
Special singing and preaching. the Reedsv!lle Fire Statton.
Midnight communion will be ..
RACINE - Mt. Moriah Church
offered. All welcome.
of God, Racine, will be holding a
PORTLAND - Hazel Com- New Years Eve watch night
munity Church, between Por- service on Thursday starting at 9
tland and Long Bottom, will have · p.m . Everyone welcome.
a watch night service on ThursFRIDAY
day, starting a t 7:30 p.m. EvePOMEROY
- A round and
ryone we lcome.
square dance will be held at
LETART FALLS - Letart . Pomeroy Senior Citizens Center
Township Trustees will meet on Friday from 8 p.m. to 12
Thursday, 10 a.m ., at the town- midnight. Mu sic by Larry Hubbard and True Country Band:
ship building.
Admission $1.50 per person.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Town- P ublic Invited. Bring snacks .
ship Trustees will meet ThursFRIDAY
day, 1 p.m., at the Syracuse
BASHAM- Meigs County Fox
Municipal Building. An organizational meeti ng for 1988 will follow Chasers Association will meet at
the club house on Eagle Ridge
the regular meeting.
Friday, 7 p .m.
RUTLAND - A New Years
SATURDAY
Eve dance, open to the public,
REEDSVILLE - Olive Townwill be held Thursday, starti ng at
9 p.m ., at the Rutland American s hip Trustees will hold an organlLegion. Hall. Admi ss ion~ - Bring zationa lmeetlng on Saturday at
own refres hments. All ages 10 a. m . at the Reedsville Fire
Station .
welcome.
RACINE- A New Years Eve
Dance , open to the public, will be
held Thu rsday , 9 p.m . to 1 a.m .,
at the Racine American Legion
Hall. Mu sic by Ci rcle D
Wranglers. Admission $5 per
person.

'

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Georgia tops Arkansas·
. 20-17
on Kasay's last-second boot

9 p .m ., at the La1,1rel Cliff Free
Methodist Churc h. Refresh ments and a film "An Ordinary
Guy," w!ll start the evening.
Special music , communion, and
a candleHght service wlll also be
featured. Public Invited.

7: 30 p.m. Everyone welcome . .

treas urer.

Church program held
"Chri st m as is Fami ly " was
th~ th eme qf the Middleport First
Raptist Church's a nnual pro·
gra.m d irected by Marj orie
Walb4rn.
Mr. and Ms. Marc Fultz ope ned
and closed the program with a
piano-flut e medley. The congregation sa ng carols. Mr. a nd Mrs.
Don Wilson had a pr ayer and
read ing, a nd Pam Crow assisted
her childre n. Meredith. Carrie
and Wesley a nd niec&lt;&gt;s, Amber
and Autum n Thomas in songs.
Meredith also had a piano solo.
&amp;·u tah White gave a reading,

Robby, Syracuse. Doroth y Neut zll ng joined the family lor the
afternoon.
Christmas Day guests of Mr .
and Mrs . Charles Bradbury,
Middlepor t, were Mr. and Mrs.
Asa Bradbury, Nikki and Jeff,
Circleville; Mr. and Mrs. Pat
O'Brien, Joy and Sean, Pomeroy; Susanna Wolfe, Wendy ,
Tric ia and Megan, Racine, and
Jerry Lee, Columbus .
Here for the Christmas weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Bob
Hoeflich were their daughter,
Jay ne, Colum bus , and her
fiance, George Boerger. Marys,
ville, and Mr. and Mrs . Jim
Di s hong, At h e n s. Bet ty
Hammer , Columbu s, made a
pre-Ch ri stmas vis it.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Knight of
Middleport spen t Christmas in
Co lumbus with th eir daughter
and son-in- law , Sue and Ron
Halley, and children , Brad and
Paige.
Formerly of the Bend area,
Rita Phillips now of Phoenix ,
Ariz. returned for a holiday visit
with relatives a nd friends. She
was the overnight guest of Donna
Jenkins during her visit here.
Home for Christmas dinner
with Mr s . Vernon Weber wer e
four of her live children a nd their
families , Dallas and Tammy
Weber a nd Infa nt son, Zachary.
Langsville; Steve a nd Donna
Jenkins, Gabriel and Sarah
Dawn, Du ane Weber, a nd Dean
a nd Linda Weber, Logan . De nnis
Weber and his family will be
coming in for New Year's
weekend .
Sunday was a highlight fo r the
Weber family wi th Sarah Dawn,
porn In September, being chris tened a t the Heath United Methodist Church by the Rev. Sonny
Zuniga. She wore the dress of he r
great -grandmother, Marjorie
Milhoa n. Soloist was Sally Rad ford . Afterwards Mr. a nd Mrs .
J e nkins e ntertained with a
dinner party for r~Latives .
Now In her late eighties, Elsie
Forbes who lives a t Pomeroy
Cliff Apartments. enjoyed visits
from all fou r of her children on
Christmas Day, June and Brooks
·sayre, Syracuse; Helen Jones.
Belpre; Paul and Dorothy
Forbes, Minersville, and Marge
Re uter, Pomeroy. Also there
were Jack and Paula Welker.
Hemlock Crave, and Sherri e
Reu ter, Pomeroy.
Here fo r the holidays with his
parents, June and Brooks Sayre,
Sy ra cuse, are Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Sayre of Fort Wayne, Ind .
To share your news of holiday
happi ness, just call 992-2155.

CARPENTER - A New Years
Eve service wlll be held at the
Mt. Union Baptis t Church. off
Route 143 on County Road 10,
south of Carpenter . on Thursday
starting at 8 p.m.

1987

" ! can't think of a thing that

hasn' t gone well as far as feeling
a t hom e:· he said . " We' r e in
good heal th . We'll start to res t
our players come tomorrow. A
little less wor k the next da y a nd
ba sica ll y nothing the day before
th e game.
" We ca me ou t

her,~

with our

ga me pla n. We've tried to work
on a littl e cond itionin g because
we had been out of practice for
aboul a week . T he fine tun ing is
coming back. We' re very happy
a nd thankfu l to be he re ."
Perles sa id the d iscomfort
ta ilback Lorenzo White felt in his
hams trin g during the fina l
regular-season game is gone .
" We pulled hi m out early
aga in st Wisconsin ," P erl es sa id ,
" It wa sn't pu lled. bu t it wasn't
feeling one hundt·ed percent.
Hall!s (ham st rings) a re ihc type
of injury th at could ta ke six or
seven weeks to heal. He didn't
pu ll the ham strin g, but he knew
there was a problem ba ck there .
He's running at full speed. The re
are no pro ble m s."
The Spartans schedu led a
Monday trip to Di sneyland.
"I' m looking forward to seeing
Mickey Mouse. Dona ld Duck and
P luto," Pe rles said. "We' re
gonna visit wi th them awhile. I'm
inq uisitive. I've never been io
Disneyland . T never had reason
to. I' ve never bee n to a zoo even
though we've raised four c hildren. Going to Disneyland now is a
little diffe re nt when you repres ent one of the Rose Bowl teams.
"I like to have fun, but I' ve got
a zoo right now •knowing where
everybody is out of187 peopl e (in
the traveling party )."

. "At this point. l do n' t think it
matters to .any of us whho we
play, " says Farren . "The key Is
be rea dy . We pla yed the Colts
only a monrh ago ilosing 9-7). so
we're fam iliar· with them but
t hey'r e familiar with us. too. "
Schottenheimcr sa id nos e
tackle Bob Colic . who broke his
right arm in Saturday's 19-13
victory at P itt s burgh. will be
re-examined Tuesday but woba bly would mi ss th e pla yoffs.
Dave P uzzuoli is Golic 's
b ackup, and · the coach said
defensive e nd Darryl Sim s would
a lso pl ay some nose tac kle.
" I don 't think there's much of
an opportunit y for Bob," said
Schottenhelmer. " We have no
immed iate pl ans for hi s rost er
spot. We have a number of
possibiliti es available to us from
injured reserve." ,

Scholte nheime r sa id Lee ,Johnson, who had three 24-yard punt s
a!(ainst the Steelers Sat ur day ,
would rema in the Browns' s tart ing punter .
" It's a mechanical thing with
Lee." added the coac h. "I'm sure
1it) will be corrected. We 're
goi ng with LeP. George (Winslow! will not be ac tiva ted from
injured reserve. ·'

Possible injured reserve ca nd idates for act iva tion include defe nsive e nd Reggie Camp and
tight e nd Travis Tucker.
Sc ho tt en he im er indi c ated
Camp wou ld begin wor king out
this week.
Li ne backer Mike Johnson, who
missed the Steelers ga me with a
sore lq1ee, a lso· will res um e
pra ct icin g a nd s hould resume his
sta r ting \Ole in the playoffs.
De fe nsive end Sa m Cla ncy. who
has cracked ribs in his right side,
is im provi ng with time, sa id
Schotte nheime r .
·
The Browns' 1988 reg ul ar season oppone nts have been
determ ined. The tea m will host
Cincinnati . Houston, Pittsburgh,
Dallas. Indianapolis, th e New
York J e ts. P hiladelphia and
. Sea ttl e. Away ga mes for Cleveland include visits to Cin cinna ti.
Hous ton , Pittsburgh, Denve r,
Kansas Cit y, the winner of t he
Miami-New E nglahd game Mon day ni ght, St. Lou is a nd
Washington.

Named new coach

~

992-3410 .

$5.00 Extra

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL DIRT

10-8-tfc

z

-

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734
11-21 ·' 17 1

. oFURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMrs
FREE ESTIMATES

PH. 992·2772
1-23-'87-1 mo.

NEW AND USED
WIDE
SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND

roons
CAL 742·2315

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

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

RADIATOR
SERVICE

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

WE SELl USED APPLIANCES

•ROOM ADDITIONS
•KITCHENS · BATHS
•ROOFING
REMODELING &amp;
REPAIRS
SEPTIC SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK MOE WORK

GINIIll CONTIAC101S

·15-4141

References

-

-;a~
D&amp;r. ELECTRIC
Ron Dilel or

Gary Cummins

992-6226

Middleport
1nsured/liclftltd
12·7·'87 tfn

Roger Hysell ·
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6-17-lfc

4·5-tlc

·~OME BUILDING

992-2196
Middleport. Ohio

PONIROY--985-3561

·All Makes

1

Phone Day or htnlngt

107 lOCUST ST.

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

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
1
CHESTEA . OHIO
:

PAT HILL FORD

BUSINESS PHONE .
16 I 4) 992-6550
RISMJENCE PHQNI
1614) 992-7754

DON'T LET YOUR ELEC·
TRICAl PROBlEMS 1£COM£ A SHOCK TO YOUI
CAll

HOUSE FOR RENT

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-2104
417 Second Avenue. Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
·
or at
Veterans Memorial Hospital
Mulberry Hgts. Pomeroy. Ohio

We Carry Fishing Supphes
Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bills Hera

11281 Un

PARTS

HEATING &amp;
· COOLING

a: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

~

SALES &amp; SERVICE.

For Skinning

v.w.

J&amp;L
INSULATION

New lorotion:

168 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohi~ 4S76D

S2500

i
Oepend;lble Hearing Aid Sales &amp; Senricel
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

11 - 3-tfn

1 - 13-tfc

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS
4·t6-86-tfn

FOR RENT
VILLAGE GREEN
APTS
2 Bedroom, Stove
&amp; Refrigerator
Furnished. Laundry
facilities available.
E.O.H.

992-3711

tt -23- '17 I m~

pd.

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 1 t 88-87

An Ordinance to Establish
Salaries for Village Officials.
Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport as follows:
Sec. I. That village council
members shall be paid 826.00
per council meeting. up to a
mmlimum of 24 meetings per
year.
....
Sec. II. That village council

president shall be paid $30.00
per council meeting. up to a
m1111.imum of 24 meetings per
ya..-.

Sec. Ill . That village Board
of Public Affairs members
shall be paid $15.00 per
meeting up to a maximum of
12 meetings per year.
Sec. IV . This Ordinance
shall take effect and be in
force from and after the earliest date as provided by law.
Passed the 14th day of
December, 1987.
Attest : Jon P. Buck. Clerk
Dewev Horton,
President of Council

t121 23, 30

-Public Notice
PUBLIC NOTICE
FOR SALE
1974 Chevrolet " Va n - ·
- former emergencv squad
vehicle.
Racine Village Clerk Jane
Beegle will receive SEALED
BIDS until 6 P.M . Monday ,
January 4 , 1988 , for the
above described VAN . BIDS
will be opened at 7 :30P.M.
Monday, January 4, 1988.
during the village council
meeting.
•
Council reserves ttle right
to reject any or all bids .
The vehicle may be seen
during dav hours SA to 3P by
contacting Street Commis·
sioner Glenn Rizer at the
water building .

BIDDERS PLEASE MARK
ON ENVELOPE " BID FOR
EMERGENCY SQUAD
VAN" .
Jane G . Beegle, Clerk
(1 21 16, 23, 30, 3tc

Public Notice
ORDINANCE NO. 1187 -8
An Ordinance to proviete
additional compensation for
village emplovees for 1987 .
Be it ordained by the
Council of the Village of
Middleport as follows:
Sec. I. That for the year

1987 the Village shalt pay

each full ~ time employee in
the active employment as of
December' 15, 1987 in addi·
tion to all other salary and
fringe benefits heretofore
provided the sum of Two

Hundred dollars ($ 200 .001
as additional salary .
Sec. tt. THAT be ~ further
resolved that the Village shall
pay each pan-time employee
in the active employment as
of December 16, 1987 in ad·
'Clition to all other salary fringe
benefiti heretofore provided
the sum of One Hundred dollars ($100.00)as additinlllaa·
lary,
Sec. Ill . This Ordinance
stlall take effect and be in
forco from and after the earliest date provided by low.
Passed ttle 14th daY of

E DINBORO, Pa. i UPl) Ed:nboro has named Tom Hal·
!ma n of Athens, Ohio, as Its new
hea d .foo tball coach. ·a schoo l •
spokesman said Monday .
Hollman. 41, was defensive
coordinator at Ohio University
from JS85 through this season, He
will assume his new post a t
E dinboro some time in J a nuary.
Dec:emb!''· 1987.
Hollman r e places former
Attest: Jon P. Buck, Clerk ·
Edinboro Coac h Steve Szabo,
Oewev Horton ,
who reslg~ed at the e nd of !he
President of Council

season .

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

(121 23, 30

· Real Estate General

iii!....,..

E. Mai1oL.I.IIi
POMEROY, 0.
992·2259
RACINE AREA- ApproKi·
mately 26 acres of vac ant
gr ound. Really nice building
s1tes $13,000.00.
BRADBURY -Close in , but
out of town. Garden area, 3
bedroom s, outbu ildin g,
so111e new c·arpet, equipped
k1tchen . On e th ird dow n on
land contra ct. $21,000.00.
MINERSVILlE Small
house at a small price. Good
renta l property. Elec. BB
heal, 1 b.edr6om, eqUipped
kitchen, front deck overlooking ihe river. $8,500.00.
MIDDlEPORT- 1~ story
brick home on appK. 12
acres ol grou nd. 4 bed·
rooms, F.A.F.O. heat plus a
woodbu rner. PRIVACY.
MAK E OFFER. $27,000.00.
RUTlAND- N1 ce lO yr. old
brick ranch ho me Ove• I
acre of gr ou nd, 3 bedroom s,
2 baths, full basement,
equipped kitchen, lar ge
pat 1o. MAKE 'oFFER .
$39,900.00.
POMEROY - l \? lots w1th
an older ho me. Lots lay
pretty nice. $10,000.00.

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE
•ROOFING
•GUTIERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TV PES OF FIOME
REPAIR 1!o
IMPROVEMENTS

BOGGS·

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO
614-662-3821
Authorind John Doero,
New Holtilnd, Bush Hog
Form Equipment

Dealer

FREE ESTIMATES

Farm Equlpmut

CAll 949-2969

Ptrll &amp; Str-lu

tt-23-'87-l mo.

HILLSIDE
MUZZLELOADING
GUN SHOP

1-3-'86 tfc

BINGO

IAGLIS CLUI-POIIIIROY, OH.
IHURS.:7 PM- II 6:U

·

•SLUGS
•AMMO
•GUNS
•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES

OPEN 1 to 9 P .M.
Rt-124 Across from
Happy Hollow Rd .

RUTLAND

614-742-2355

t2 / 14/ 1 mo.

FIREWOOD
Locust, Oak, Cherry

$3500

Per Pickup load
Delivered
·BILL SLACK
614-992-2269

THE DABBLE SHOP
Middleport, Ohio

IS FOR SALE
If interested stop by.

1/2 PRICE SALE

GOING ON NOW
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS, ETC .
12· 2·'87-1mo pd

SYRACUSE - 2 story home
w1lh 4-5 bed rooms, 2 baths,
kitch en w/ breaklast nook,
full basem ent, large neat
acre lot, 2 car garage. Much
morel $62,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - Remodeled home in a nice
nei ghbo rhood . WBFP, ori~­
nal woodwork, 2 bedrooms .
new bat h, new kitchen,
basement. Mu st see' ASKING $32,000.00.
RUTlAND - Ran ch lype
home located on approx. 2
acres oi grou nd Full basement, 3 bedroom s. and only
12 yr . old . WANT
$29,500 00

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addons and remodeling
- Rooting and gutter w ork

- Concrete work

VINYL &amp;

AlUMINUM SIDING
•Insulation

(f ree Estimates)

•Sto rm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Replacement Windows
•N ew Rooting

V. C. YOUNG Ill

FREE ESTIMATES

Plum bing and electrical

wor k

992 -6215 or 992 -1314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15·'86-lc

MIDDlEPORT - 3 bedroom
2 story ho me in Middl ep.ort.
Nice kitchen and wbfp .
P RI CE-il I 0 S El'l .
$17,500.00

GUN SHOOT

I-INRY £. (lfl~D. JIL ... .,92·61q1
JEAN fRUSSEi l .... ........ 94q. 2660
DOTTIE TURNER ......... ,. 991· 5692
fRA CY RIFHr ............. 94q. 30!0
OffiCI ..... ,... ...... ....... 991 -1251

Basham Building

A 1J3

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULATION

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke'
12 Gouge Shotguns

JAMES KEESEE
PH, 992·2772

11-23·' 87-Lmo.

PIANO LESSONS
·You ., Ne~v T10 Old
To Lt~tn!
Teaching Thompson,

' Schaum, .Bastien
From Beginners to
Adv anced Students

Cull For Information

DIANA IHLE
949-2890
1·24-'87-t mo. pd.

�'

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel
ArHIIIIIIl c e 111 P. nt s
3

LAFF-A-DAY

Announcements

44

71 Auto· s For Sate

Apartment
for Rent

wo v~t&gt;N'T 11 ~ wot\~l!.fi!\...

)6061 e36·27.6.

614-992-2458 .

I will not be rnponslble few anv
dtbts othwth..-. my own. Je anle
w... d.

Giveaway

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Chow Wolf- 6 va•• old. Cell
&amp;14- 441-9615 .
.

'
1

COUI;\)\f;U.. Mli: (})t'lfl\ HII~NS
0-1 AU.. 1'1-\E: "P~~ WIIHl I'M

814 -949-2194

4 d•ling puppi• to giveaway. 3
mal• and 1 tem.ae. Call 614-

N1ce 3 bedroom trailer, living
room ex pando large yard Ka nauga. Call 614 ~ 446 - 7473 .

1981 Olds Omegl. 1913

~1' wo~ .

Chryll..- Fifth A...anue. Call
814-742-2461 .

2 mala fuuv puppies. sm ...
brMd. Call 614-986 -4288.

Near Waterloo· 2 BR .• S126 per
mo Ref. &amp; dep Adults. Call
614-448-7754 or 643-2844 .

70203107.

Two Hlnding trees fOf firewood
304-~75-3168 weekdays. Ask
for Bill

3 Roonef'S . 304-875-1928 .
2 ~If old female labrador
Retrlltvet', purebred. 1-614-

"They said we should come

as We are ... not as we used to

be. ".

ro;:::;:;:;:::;:;:==:;:==T;;:~;::;:;;=:;:;====~
1 1 Help Wanted
32 Mobile Homes
for Sa le

387-0550.
6

Lost and Found

Ladies gold ' watch, Natrix
Found betwe~~n parking tot and
Chapman• Sat. 614-992-2815

7

Yard Sale

··-····aanrpotrs·- .. ······
&amp; Vicinity

Don' t be left behind by the rapid
change in manufacturmg tech·
nology , Recet\le specialized
training in tf't e mecf'tanical. hy·
dflulic and electrical components of factory equipment in
the Adult Industrial Maintenance Program at The Adult
Education Center-- Tri-County
Vocational School. We h8'1e a
variety of funding sources a\latl·
able for elig1ble applicants.
Classes begin Jalnuary 4th, call
753-3511 ext 14 to register.
Government Jobs S16,040 ·
t59,230 year Now Hiring Your
Area. 805 -687-6000 Ext. R
9805 for current federallial.

The Me1gs Local School Oistm:t
is accopling applications for
. substitute teachers. Substitutes
are needed in all certification
9·5.
.areas The daily rate of pay
t125 Schools are open and a
temporary rttlitraining order is in
8
Public Sale
effect. Ohio Certified Teachet'"s
willing to cross a picket l1ne
&amp; Auction
should 1mmediat1ey eontaet
Meigs local School Superin
tendents office. 621 South Third
lnakle Fl• Mkt, old Arbuckle ,I).Ye. Mtddleport, Ohio. 46760
furniture Store. Sat and Sun, $14-992-2163 .
sell•s welcome.
1 ~--,-----,----Couple wanted for maintenance
of rental propertiet. Living quar·
9 Wanted To Buy
tors and weekly wage nego·
tiMed Send refet"ences and
We pay cash for lela model clean resume to The Oallv Sentinel,
P.O. Bo~~:729W, Pomeroy, Ohio.
used c•s·
Jim Mink ChiW.·Oida Inc.
Salesperson needed, experience
Bill Gene Johnson
in sales and crafts helpfuL La
614-446-3672
Salle Gallery , apply in person
TOP CASH paid for '83 model Monday through Saturday .
and n..wer used cws. Smith 10.00-5:00.
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eaatern
AVON . All areas Call Marilyn
Aw.• Gf!ltlipolis. Call 614-446·
WeiNer 304-882-2646.
2282.

Gallipolis Fl .. Markel · Former
Th81• G~rage- Ru. 36 &amp; 160.
Op.n Saturdays &amp; Sundays.

WANTED TO BUY . Used wood
&amp; co•l heaters. Swain's Furni·
ture, 3rd. &amp; OINe St Gallipolis.
c.u 814-446 -3169.
Pool table and lhting room suite
in good cond. Call 614-256·

6888.

Small woodburnBf. Call 614446-3113.
luyk'lg daily gold, silver coins,
rin91, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coint, large currency Top pri·
cN. Ed Burkett Barber Shop.
2nd. Ave. Middleport. Oh . 614992·3476 .
Raw fur, beef and deer hides.
Gyn Sing •nd Yallow root. We
hwe wh81t and nita lh:as.
Tr•pping supplies for sale. (BuyIng used traps) George Bucklsy.
Hours 12-9 614-664-4761
QUILTS

High pr1ces pa1d for pre-1 9 50
quih1. Applique, pieced, any
conditiOn. Call614-992-2101
or 814-992-6857 .

Used outdoor color T.V. an1enna. Call614-992-7304.
Wented to buy- Wood and coal
••ove. good conditic., only
304-876-1113.

Emplovmenl
Scrv 1ces
11

Help Wanted

Accounting instructor needed
Minimum requir&amp;men1s . BA d&amp;grae. Call 114-446-41 24.
Fortune 60 Marketing
Opportunity-Gallipolis area .
Part-time/full time. Good income opportunity. E1tablished
eultomer bue . Off1ce equip·
m-'t field Send letter or resume
to: c / o Bo• Cla-120 Gallipolis
Oaity Tribune 825 Third Ave .,
G•llipolis. Ohio 46631
8aby1itter needed for 2 children.
11·6. Call614-446-0026 .
DRUMMER WANTED· For
country-rock band . Call 614446-2144.

Christmal bills to pay7 St8t1
selling AVON before Jan . 12,
racttive free cologne. Call 614-

44G·2166.
Job hunting? Need a ski111 We
train people for jobs as euto
machanit~. carpenter~, electrici.,s. tood service workeu,
aleetromcs techniclens, industrial maintenance workers. nurling ••li•tanta end ord•li81.
m•dlinista. and welder• Registttt' now for cles.-s beginning
January 41h. Call Tri-County
Vocetional Adult Center at 753·
3511 elllt. 14 . A variety of
funding 10urees to pay for
training are evailable fo r those
eUgible.

MOM AND DAD. Let the Army
Nat1onal Guard help pay for your
child' s college eduea1ion. Call

197312d5 freedom3 BR .. g•
furnace with central air, wasf'terdryer, all kitcf'ten appliances.
dinette set. underpinning. block
8t porchBS Call 614 -367-0683.
Flamingo 1 2x66 with porch.
Good condition Call 614-2561507.
'
1987, 2 BR . Sunnv Brook
Mobile Home. 2 wks. old, never
been used. Have to sell due to
personal circumstance .
$13,500 or best offer. Call
614-446-3608 anytime.
1 4x70 2 BFL 2 bath mobile
home on one acre. for Sale or
Trade. Call 614-379 -2529.
1985 Overland Park-14164, 2
BR .. total gas . Excellent condition. French City Brokerage614-446 · 9340 .
1975 Ken I - 10x36 . Good condition. Many possibiliti•. French
City Brokerage, 614-446-9340 .
Used Homes- Big selection. Prices reduced. Shop and save.
Frenctt City Mobile Homes614-44ij-9340 .
For sale or rent : 4 mobile homes.
One 3 bedroom. three 2 bedrooms 614-742-3033 . No pets.
New 1988 Country \1'1lla
14x72 All electric:. Already set
up on River front lot. 614-9923348 .
1975 12x60 Gas heated mobile
home. A -1 condition. Washer
and dryer. Air conditioner in
kitchen . 614-667-6339 .
14'x14' add-a-room for trailer.
with wall-to-wall carpet, two
closets. two entrie&amp;, own electri·
cal box . 304-675-6979.

304-675 -3950 or 1-800·642·
3619 .

PRIOR MILITARY SERVICE
means extra monet for members
of tile Army National Guard. Call
304-675-3950 or 1 -800-642·
3619

34

Recovery Room Staff Nurse
lmmed•ate opening for Reg1s·
tared Staff Nurse 1n recovery
room P R.N . bas1s. Salary commensurate with eJtperlence.
Contact Geoff Polen. Director of
Personnel. PleiiSant Vallev Hosl)ltal, Vall~ Drive, Point Pleaunt, W.V. 25550, 304-6754340 e~~:t . 307. AA -EOE.

Commercial buildings for lease.
Downtown ?1 . Pleasant . Stores.
offices A-One Reel Estate.
Carol Yeager, Broker. Call 304675-6104.

Get paid for readtng booksl
$100 per title Wrtte: ACE517E , 161 S . lineolnway, N
Aurora, IL 60542 .
Working service manager
needed for immediate emplov·
mont Must have Agricultural
and Mechanical background and
furmsh your own tools . Salary
end comm1111on. Send resume
to 539 Upper RNer Rd .• Gallipolis, 0 . 45631 .
R.N., physicians' oHice. Please
send resume to Box C16. in care
of Pt Pleasant Register, 200
Ma1n St. Pt. PI

12

Situations
Wanted

Room, board, or sleeping rDom
for invalids or elderly 614 -9927204

13

Insurance

Call us for your mobile home
1nsurance : Miller Insurance,
304-882 -2145 . Also· auto.
home. life. health.

Financial
21

Business
Opportunity

, I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommends t11at you
do bu&amp;inOIJs with people you
know, and NOT to send money
through the ma1l untH vou hB\Ie
invest1gllted the offeung

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

4 BR ., fireplace. full basement 3
mi. so of Gallipolis t34 ,900.
Call Oays-614-446-161 6, after
5 :00· 446-1244.
By Owner· Off 141 &amp; Neigt'tborhood Rd . N1 ce 3 bedroom,
enclosed breezeway, attactled
garage Call614-797-2441 .
2 btldroom. 2 "baths, 2 ur
gauge, leval lot on At. 33.
Swimming I)OOI, sateltt.,, cloae
to Meiga t-ligh. Call 814 -992·
3254.
Government Homes for &amp;1 (U
rpair) . Delinquent tall propeny.
Repossessions. Call 806 ~ 0876000 Ext . GH -9805 for current
repo hst
By owner. $25,000.00: 21h
miles from Gall lpol te Locka &amp;
Dam , Mill s tone Ad . 1 2x60
trailer plu a S rp oma furn ... on e
acre , wnhar &amp; dryer. air cand.,
woodburner, 58' porch, 'h a cre
fenced with pond, 2 outbuild·
ings. 2 carports. wood ahed
304-676-2864 or 676-2826

Business
Buildings

35 lots &amp; Acreage
50:d oo ft lot , 4th St , Syra cuse Water, gas, sewer, suitable
trailer or house . 614-992 3685
or write P .O. bo~~: 1 1 4, Syracuse

Renlals
41

Homes for Rent

3 BR house &amp; garage A-1 Real
Estate, Carol Yeager-Broker
304-676-5104
NiceTy turmshed small house.
Adults only Ref required. No
pels Call 614-446-0338
Large 2 -3 BR . house. Plenty of
storage Henderson area. Call
614-446-7026.
3 BR . house near Patriot Call
614-379-2678.
Large 2 BR house with stGIJe,
refrig. Full basement . $225 11
mo. $100 deposrt. Vinton. Oh614- 388-8121 .
Furnished- 2 small houses, 3
rooms &amp; bath a11ch. Gallipolis
Nice &amp; cl01n. Adults. No pets.
Ref. &amp; deposit. Call 614-446 2643
Rent -lease -Land Contract ·
Homes in Eurel&lt;a. Rodney Vii lege II , Evans Hgts. Oep. &amp; Ref.
required . Blackburn Realty ,
614-446-0008
Nice 2 BR . unfurnished w1th or
wtthout stove &amp; refr~g . 8260 a
mo. plus depostt &amp; utilit1es. Celt
614-446-2515
2. 3 , or 4 bedroom houses and
apt in Pomeroy area. Pay own
utilities, deposii required Call
614-992-6113. 614 -992-6723
or 614-992-2609. Call after
5 .00, please .

•

304-8e2 -2466.

944169 4S4o1coe n..
d . G7alllpolis. Call
·
• or om.

Tratler for rent . 2 bedrooms,

46 Space for Rant

Furn11hed room. t75 . Utlliti..
paid. Share bath. Single male.

3, 22 Osborne St .. Pomeroy.
Mobile home 64x14, 2 baths, 3
bedrooms, all electric:, children
but no pots, 304-458-J887
Trailer for tent 304-675-3954.
2 br trailer on Jim Hill Rd
Henderson . Beautifully fur niShed. ref. and deposit required .
304-675-1926.

44

Apartment
for Rent

2 8R apts. 6 closets. lcttchenappl furrii1hed, Wash•· Dryer
ttook-up, ww carpet, newly
painted. decto:.. Regency, Inc.
Apts Call 304-676-7738 or
676-5104.

Oftiee Spaea tor rent . Excel.
downtown Gallipolis location.
Inquiries call 614-446-4222.
Mobile Home lot. 60ft. or len
920 4th., Gallipolis. $76. Water
.paid. Call 614 -446·4416 after7

PM .

-.;-;;---;:-:--'-;-----_:__

Nice 1 BR apt. Near HMC. No
pets. Stove. refrig., drapes.
8225 a mo. Ref. rei!utred Call
614-446-4782

1400 sq. f~ commerc:1al space
suitable for offices. retailing. or
services. Prime localion-corner
of 2nd. &amp; P1ne in Gallipolis
Ample parking in rear. $350 per
month. Call 614-446 -4249 or

Downtown - Mode{n 1 BR .•
complete kitchen, carpet, a1r,
electric heat Call 614-4464383-day s. 446-0139-even. &amp;
weekends.
Furnished : 4 rooma &amp; bath.
Clean Nopets. Adultsonly. Ref.
&amp; dep required Call 614-4461 519 .
Modern 1 BR apertment. Call
614-446-0390
RenD'NIV redecorated. Very nice
epartments in downtown Gall._
polis 1 &amp; 2 BR. · unfurnished,
second floor, trom S175-S225.
Dep &amp; references required . Call
eve 614-446-2326 or 4464249 .
Furn1ahed upstairs- 1 BR . Utili·
ties paid. $210 a mo. Dep 94
locust St. Call 614-446· 1340
or 446-3870.
2 BR apt. Stove &amp; retrig.
furnished . Near Go Mart Call

614-448 7026 .

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUDGET PRICES AT JACK ·

SON ESTATES. 536 Jackson
P1kefrom 8183 a mo. Walk to
shop and mov1es 614-4463997 E O.t-1 .
Luxury Tar• Apertmenla. Elegant, 2 Br. 2 floor, fully
carpeted; CA and heat Private
entrance. en dosed patio, pool &amp;
playground. Start - $299 per
month. Utilities not 1ncluded.
Call 614-367-7860.
Furnished Efficiency 8160
UtilitiBS paid. 607 2nd Gallipolis. Shere bath . Call 446-4416
after 7 PM .
Furnished apartnienl 8210
Utilities paid. 1 BR. 701 Fourth"
Ave . Gallipolis. Call 446-4416
afte' 7pm.
1 1 Coun • large apartment. 2
BR.. 2 baths. w / w c.-pet.
complete kitchen, $325 plus
ut1lituts
238 First - River view - 1 BR , 1
bath, no children, $176 plus
utilities. All apartments-Cap. &amp;
ref No pets Call 614-4464926
Garage al)t .- Furntshed· 1 BR .
291h Neil, Gallipolis $225 utili·
ties paid Call 446-4416 efter 7

PM.

1 BR 960 First Ave. Ref. &amp; dep .
Call614-446 -1079 .
Efficiency Apartment: 1 rm w1th
bath, kitchenette. private entrance. utilities paid, on ground
floor. N1ce for older, single
person. S176 a mo. Call 614446 -7515.
Deluxe 3 room unfurnlsf'ted first
floor. Like now through out.
Pr1vate &amp; qu1et. Heat furnished .
S285 a mo. Call 614-446-4607
or 446-2602 .

51 Hous.... old Goods
..r
Mollohan Furniture
Upper River Rd .. Gallipolis. Oh .
Dlnettes-5226 &amp; up, Living
room suites - S300 &amp; up ,
Reelinars-8165 &amp; up, Carpet
atanlng at $4 a yd. Financing
available to quilified buyers. Call
614-446-7444 .
G E. automB11c washer. Excellent shape. Guaranteed. S 126.
Call 614-367-0322.

COUNTRY MOBtLEtiomePark.
Route 33. Norttt of Pomeroy. · PICKENS USED FURNITURE Rental trail8fs , Call 614-992· Sofa's, chairs. lamps, recliners.
dishes, dinnette. bedding. hide7479.
a -bed. glas&amp;ware &amp; m1sc. 304Space for small trailers All 676-1460 .
hook-ups Cable. Also eff1C1ertCV
rooms, air and cab I e. Mason, 7 ' French Provential couch &amp;
chair, antique 7 -drawer desk.
W.Va. Call 304 -773-5661
chest of drawers, 4 drawers. All
Trailer spaces for rent, Rt. 1 prices E11c Cond. Call 304Locust Road . b.ack of K &amp; K 882-3393 after 5 :30.
Mobile Home Park, 304-675Living room suite. platform
1076.
rocker. 304-458-1657.

Furnished apt. next to librarv.
One profMsional aduh only.
Parking. Call 614-446-0338.

49

For Lease

446-2325.

Merchandise

County Appliance, Inc Good
used appliances end TV sets
Open BAM to 6PM Mon thn.1
Sat. 614-446-1699, 627 3rd.
A110. Gallipolis, OH
GOOD USED APPLIA,NCES
Washers. dryers, refrigerators,
ranges . Skaggs Appliances,
Upper Rl\ler Rd . beside Stone
Crest Motel. 614-446-7398
LAYNE 'S FURNITURE
Sofas and chairs priced from
S395 to S995 . Tabl08 $50 and
up to &amp;125 . H1de-a-beds $390
to S595. Aec:hners $225 to
5375 Lamps S28 to S125
Dinettes $109 and up to t495
Wood table w -6 chairs $285 to
$795 . Desk $100 up to 8375.
Hutches S400 and up . Bunk
beds complete w -matlreues
$295anduptoS395 Baby beds
S1 10 Mattresses or box springs
full or twm ~68, firm 978, and
S88 Queen sets 8225 , Ktng
8350 4 drawer chest $69 Gun
cabinets 6 gun Gas or electric
range S 375. Baby mattresses
$35 &amp; 545 . Bed fr11mes $20,
$30 &amp; King frame 550. Good
selection of bedroom suites,
metal cabinets, headboards $30
and up to $65.
90 Days same as cash w1tf't
approved credit . 3 M1les out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9am to 5pm
Mon. thru Sat. ?h. 614 ·446 ·

0322.

Vall~ Furniture
New and used furniture and
applicances . Call 614 -446 ·
7572. Hours 9 -5 .

PARSON'S FURNITURE
New wood 6 pc. INing room
suttes, $399 .95 ; cf'test of
drawers-4 drawer, S48; twtn
mattresses. S95 set; microwave
o\len stands.
THE WORKING

MAN'S FRIEND

Large 2 OR . apartment, next
door to college, 1st floor . 8300a
mo. All utilities paid Call
614-245-9170 or 446-1323.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Siamese kittens 6 to 8 weelca
old. Call after 6 p .m . 304-6782241.
AKC Boxer pups, 7 m&amp;l81, 2
females. \lery specl~ puppi•
8260 each. 304-624-7960 or
342-2467 collect

57

Musical
Instruments

For sale upright piano. &amp;40.00.
304-676-1926 .

58

Fruit

&amp; Vegetables
Open All Winter - plenty fruits
and produce 8 till 5 :00. Jack's
Market. Rt. 36. Hendonon.

Farm
&amp;

Supplies

Livestock

NOW, EA!;Y.

VOU MEAIJ
'IOU"I&lt;E GOING
TO 8E 'ORRV TO
5fE OIL RIG!'

4

am~fm. ·-=~

61 Farm Equipment

Callahan's Used TireS hop. Over
1 ,000 tires. sizes 12, 1J, 14, 15,
16, 165. 8 milasouiRt 218
Call614 -266-8261 .

Kinder woodburning stove, Gen·
eral Electric range, 1977 4x4
CllO\Iy pick-up Call 614 -3792798 or 614-256-1267.

U.S. 35 West, Jackaon, Ohio.

-.:·
·::

t5200 . C.ll 814-3e8 -9e31 "'

....

BUY WHOlESALE, Whtte farm
Tractors at wholesale Invoice
plus freight . Compare the price
end quality. Models from 16 to
180 hp. leasing available. Off•
good through Dec. 31 Siders
Equipment Co., US 35, Hen darson. w.•va . 304-876 -7421 .

Joey discovers that Rick"s
lather is abusing him·.
Theme: c~lld abuse. ~NA) Q
II)) lnllde Politico '88
® WKRP In Clnclnnoll
Ill (lJ Too Clooe lor Comfort
6:35 (I) Corol Bumllt
7:00 Cil Remlnglon Steele
IJ (%) PM l.logozlne
(!) Spon.Conter ILl
(I) Entertainment Tonight
Ill (I) People' I Court
(f) ® MacNeil/ Lohrer
NewoHour (1 :00)
crm News
II)) Moneyllne Current
reports on world economics

~

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

and flnanctal news with Lou

Dobbs. (0:301
Ill 1!2) d)) Wheel of Fortune

1982 Dodge 260 Rem . Custom
conversion Trail• ready . Call
814-448-4383 dtl'fl. 446-0139
evens. • weekends.

i, Cheers

Ill (lJ M'A'S'H

74 JeepCJ&amp;, 304 motor, new U
joints tie rod1 . bod¥ good.• 304-876-7376 .

EM~LOYMENT COUN)ELop.

Half Price! Flashtng arrow signs
$2991 lighted, non-arrow S2891
Unlighted ,t 2491 Free leneril
See locally. C•ll today I Factory: 1- cattle trailer, 14' disk, 1 ·
· creeper feeder, 24' grain con1·800·423 -01 63, anytime
veyor, seed sower 304 -8758979.
Girls 20 inch Schwinn 3 spd
bicycle. $45 . Solid oak ftat top
desk with swNol chair. S75. Call
62 Wanted to Buy
614-446-4209 after 8 .
Seasoned Oak and Ash firewood
for sale. $30 a pickup load,
delivered. Call614 -2&amp;6· 1674.
New Sears whole house humidifer $100. Call 614-446 9240.
Tree &amp; stump removal .
f1rewood - 1$110 par dumpload.
Heap Vouctlers. Den' s landscapes, 614-446-9646.
M111ed hard wood slabs S12 per
bundle Containing approx 1 h
ton. FOB Ohio Pallal Co.
Pomeroy, Oh1o. 614-992-6461 .
All Christmas Trees S1 2 . Come
early before cold weather, 1BII
your tree at Newell's Christmas
Tree Farm 1 mile above Mason
on Hanging Roclc Rd 304-7735371 or 882-2886
Mixed firewood, $80.00 dump
truck loed. delivered, 304-6762903.
Firewood delivered. stacked,
$36 .00 Mason Counties. Gallipolis other areas within reason at
our d1scret1on, 304·895-3446 .
SURPLUS ARMY , DENIM ,
RENTAL . CARHART CLO
THING . Ortgmal ermy cemou
flage, H. 0 . " Sam " Somerville ' s , Old Rt
21
East-Ravenswood . Fri. Sat, Sun,
noon · 8 :00pm . 304-273-6655
Insulated camouflage coveralls
S25 .00 Bla ck-White snow
c amouflage
U Haul trucks and traders for
rent. 304-675-7421 .
Sign · Portable lighted sign,
1$299. E~eplres Jan. 2 Free
Oehvery - letters. WV 1 -800642-2434 . Otl•o 1-800· 5333453.
Sheepskin coat, si:za 36 . New
$76 00. Ph. 304-e75· 181 ¢ .
Bearcat 175XLscanner16cf'tannel , ae -de, search , u :an ,
weather, aircraft; Da'llia .32 auto
pistol; Advantage arms .22LR
pis tol. 304-675 -2623 after 5

pm.

Ou1lt tops for sale Call before 5
p.m. 304-675-3836 .

$1400. 304-675-2e87.

Now buying shell cOrn or ear
corn. Call for latest quotes River
City Farm Supply, 614 -4462985"

63

livestock

1----------8 week old p1g1 for sate. 836 .
'Cell 614-986-3565.
Wented to buy 1 to 6 bred beef
COWl Call 614. 992 -6040 Or
614-992-7648 .

64

Hay &amp; Grain

5U~E !!M FAMILIAR WlTtl

/

FuRNITU/?1! ~E)TO~ING.

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

MOST Of M"{ fu~NtTUf?E
WENT gAel&lt; TO THE

STbRE JU)T L~ST WEE/&lt;!

Used &amp; rebuilt transmlu6ona. All
mternally Inspected &amp; guarntaed. ·Call 614-446-0986. We
buy junk tr11nsmiuion1.
Cylinder head for 78 Honda· •
Accord· radittrtor, distributor,
manifolds, starter, alternator, ac ~,
compreuor C•ll 614·446· '

1808.

(I)

ALLEY OOP
WAIT A MINUTE! THERE'S A
LEDGE DOWN THERE ON TH'
FACE OF THE CLIFF!

MESSE THERE'S A
WAY OUTA THIS

AFTIOR I&gt;J.L!

..

Hay tor sale. Large 1700 lb
round baloa· square balea. Call
614-667-6164.
Mixed hay for ule. Call 614·
742-2716

Transporlalion

developed. 1:;1

crDi Ill 1!2) The Chino

B1

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional llfetlma guarantee. Local ral..-encet furnlahed.
Free estimates. Call coll-=t
1· 614·237-0488, day or night.
R ogersBasement
Waterproofing.

EK

MEEK
rr'.S '5/JNNPJ.. Cf 11-\£.

SWEEPER and .-wing machine
repa1r, parts, and suppllll. Pick
up and defivery, Davia Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georg• Creek Rd . Call 614-

fi~T I!J 11-\IS IA.a&lt;LD...

Lit:\£ lHE MAtJ SAID...
'' IF tllJ Ga.l'f LIKE IT

... CHA~ IT"

.---L-...l

CHARU:S DAR\UI~.. CVMMY
... 1"-J HIS 1l-\£01&lt;Y CF

avownoo

'

446·0294.

Carpenter Work· Plumbing,
rooting. siding. All hOmerepeifs.
CarpentBf work· S6.60 • hr. or
by the jOb. Panelling, painting,.

•. ..'
drywall, remodeling. Call 614.-. :~:
446-6377.
••-• •

~~~~~~~RON'S Television Service.
2454.

fettv Tree Trimming. stump
removal Call304~ &amp;76-1331 .
Rotary or cable ~ool drilling.
Most wellscompletedumeday.
Pump aal81 and serv1ce. 304-

e96 -3e02

1981 Dodge Aries K statton
wagon . AM -FM stereo-can.,
cruise control Good cond. Call

Starks Tree and lawn Service,
lawn care. landscaping. stump
removal. 304 -576 -2842 or
576-2903.

1978 Ford LTD . Good tints, new
battery, air 8700. Celt 614245-5239 .
1984 Camaro Z28. Black, auto ,
air. VB . Sharp! t7400. Call
614-446-6679 .

B2

1983 Ford Escort 4 dr. , auto ..
air cond, 82300. Call614-388 9631 or 446-6679.

84

1985 Chwrolet Cavalier Stati
onwagon Auto.• a1r, red, black
interior. Nlcel 83800 Call 388 9631 or 446-6579.
1985 Pontiac 6000 . Black
w / grey inter.. auto., air, 4 cyl.
$6300 Call 614-388·9631 or

Performing Art!3

RTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
ISN'T' Tl-IAT A
WEIRD· WXJKING
FACE~

WHATs THE BIG

CCWIE ON, WE'LL

DSA L? ITBJUSTA
DLIMB OLD RCa&lt;:.

BE LATE' FCR.
SO!:X)L . .

Unfurnisl1ed 2 bedroom house
for rent Energy efficient. nice
and clean . Carpet: Call 614-

992·3090.

3 bedi-oom, liV Ing room, kitchen,
bath, large yard. garden . Racine
area. Available Jan. 2. Call

Concrete blocks all sizes yerd or
delivery. Mason send. Gallipolis
Block Co.. 1 23 1/l Pine St,
Gelllpolis, 011to Call 614-446-

614-992-586e

2783

One rental at 107 locust St ..
other at .238 Second St. Both
Pomet'oy. C.ll 814 ~ 986 - 3837 or
614 -986 -3661 .

Reedy mix concrete and all
concr&amp;te supplies. Call us Vallev
Brook Cement and Supplies,
304-773-5234 ,

3 bedroom. 2 full batha, lerge
living room. dining room and
RTtchen. Alao laundry room, 2
c.- garage, central air, Eastern
School District. Reference. re.
qulred. Call 814-247-4945. "'

56

Pets for Sale

1983 Ford LTD II, PS, PB, AC , 4
door. $3,000. 1979 Ford Pinto
station wagon, good condition.
new ty-rod ends. t850 . 1977
Ford Granada , $450 . Allis
Chalmers tractor with belly
mower. Call614·446-2644, 12
PM to 1 PM or7 AM to8 :30 in
the mornings.
1978 AMC Gremlin. 4 spd,
tl500 . Call after4 PM. 614."446 ·

Groom and Supply Shop-Pet
Groom1ng . All breeds .. All
styles. lama Pet Food Dealer.
Julie Webb Ph. 614-446-0231

Vale St. in Pomeroy. 3 bedroom,
garage. new kitch8fl. Deposit
r~u i red . Call 614-992 ·6666.

"" A little left I Oops! To the right I No, back
the other way!" ·

9236.

19B•fDodgt~ Lancer Turbo. Air,
c ruise. tilt . SB900. Call 614 367-0512

Dre1Jonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himell!Van, Persian and
Slam..e kittens. A.KC Chow
pupplfll . Call 614-446-3844
-.fter 7PM .

1967 Cllevy . 1976 Chevy Step
Van 2 wood Ill coal stoves. Call
614.446-2668, mornings or
ovenlnga.

AKC Reg . Chih4af'tua' pupptes
for SBie, Call814-388 -8481

1977 Chevolet Caprice. 4 door
air, crui.e. Good cond. Cali

614-38e·99e7.

interviews with top
newsmakers and celebrllles.
9:30 (I) 0 (I) Slap Moxwell
Story Slap dares to look
back and see all the things
gaining on him. (RI r:;J
10:00 I]) Straight Talk
IJI]) d)) 'Scared Soxlua•
NBC Newa Special
Investigate the ever-changing
anltudes towards sax In
America t~ay . Look at how
society is reverting back to
more conservative sexual
behavior. C
(I) 0 (I) llyn111y Sammy

Jo rejects Steven·s living
arrangement; blows are
exchanged. C
II)) Evening llewa A wrap up
of today's news and a look
ahead to tomorrow 's news
stories. (1 :001
QJ) News
10:05 (I) MOVIE: Rio GrandoiNR)
(1 :45)
10:30 Ill American Snapahota
(f) Mark Ru11ell Comedy
Special Satirist Mark Russell
performs before a live
audience , to turn the day 's
worrisome news Into fuel for
laughter.

HE'S UP
IN TH'
PENTHOUSE

Electrical

&amp; Refrigeration
Residential or commercial Wlf·
i~g . New servicD or repairs.
Licensed electnt~en Eatimata
free. R1denour ElectJICal 304676-1786.
•

Q])NOWI

11:00 Cil Remington Sllele

446-e679.

1982 2600 cc engine &amp; auto
trans . 1979 Plymouth Arrow
truck. 2600 ec, 5 spaed, runs
good, rough body . 1987 Honda
700 c:c Intercepter 1980 Harlet
1000 cc Sportster. Many new
cy cle parts &amp; ace. Stapleton' s
Cvc:le, Eureka Star Route , Box
168-A, Gallipolis, 614 -256 ·
6303.

llll!li"Kennedy Center

l!lll.erry King Llvel In depth

Plumbing

388-9631 .

1984 Trans AM . Blue, auto., air,
T-top, VB . S7900 Call 614-

Simone's edttlng of their

prose. (R) Q
9:00 CD 700 Club
IJI]) d)) Unaolved
Myoterieo Hosted by Karl
Malden (R)
(I) 0 (I) Hooperman Using
an obnoxious dog,
Hooperman bends rules to
capture a killer. (R) C
Honoro A Celebration of the

&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446-4477

Odyauy: Empire of the Sun
II)) Primenewa Wrap ups ol
the day's worki news and tn
.depth feature reports. (1 :00)
l8l College Booketball
Ill (lJ Freedom Bowl
8:05 (I) MOVIE: Monte Waloh lPG)
(1 :46)
8:30 Ill Loot Frontier
(I) 0 (I) Head of the Claao
Students complain about

IIJ)

·-

House calls on RCA, Quanr.- .. '
GE. Sp-=l .. lng in Zenith. Call • .
304-576-2398 or 81 4-4•6- • ~.:

71 Auto's For Sale

614-246-9e98.

Important career moves to a
Chicago newspaper.(R) Q
(!) ® From 7 to 28 Up
Participants In 1964 World in
Action team Interviews have
. been Interviewed at seven
year rntervals . At 28. look a1
how their lives have

Call 814-388-8842.
Mixed hay. I)Ood grade. 300 bale
lot, S1 .25 per bale Call 614446-0871

Cl (I) Perfect Strangers

Larry and Balki make

ROOST!!. ....

Services

7:05 (I) Andy Griffith
7:30 IJ (%) Hollywood Squoreo
(!) College Football
(I) Newlywed Game
Ill (I) Judge
crDi Wheel of Fortune r:;J
II)) Croaoftre(0:30)
Ill 112) 1!1) Jeopardy! Q
@ Barney MIUer
Ill (lJ WKRP In ClnclnnoU
7:35 ()) Sanford and Son
1:00 Ill Second Honeymoon
IJ Ill d)) Hlgl1woy to
Hoven A lonely writer finds
herself targeted lor murder.
(R) C

DANG IT! THERE'S tiOWHERE
T'GO FROM THIS .•. THIS DANG

4 wheels with good tlrea for e
Sub.-u 304-676-8984.

85

.. Ill

General Hauling

Dillard Water Service : Pools,

ttme. Call 614-446 -7404-N.o
Sunday calls.
J &amp; J Weter Stfvtc:e. Swimming ,..
pools, cisterns, wells. Ph 614~
246-9285.
R &amp; R Water Service Homa
cisters, wells, poolt fllla:i. For- .. •,
marly James Boys Waters.Call .
304-675 -6370
..
Paul Rupe, Jr. Water Service.
Pools , ei1terna, walla. Call814446-3171 .

2919

Mowrey' s Uphol1terlng lentlng
trl eounty ar.. 22 years. Tho best
in furn iture upholstering. Call
304 · 675 - 4164 for free
estimates .

Cl (I)

a

Watttirson ' s Water Hauling,
reasonable ratea, lmmediata
2 .000 gallon deiNery, cisterna,
pools, well , etc call 304-676-

Upholstery

(I)

.WELL, 11M 0"" TO
THE DENTIST ..

I DON1T WANT TO
CATC~

'{OUR CAVITIES !

iiJ)

1111121

Nowa
•
(!) NHL .Hockey
(f) Sign 011
® Mark Ruasell Comedy
Special Sat~rist Mark Russell
performs before a live
audience , to turn the day 's
worrisome news into fuel for
laughter.
(I}) Moneyllne Current
reports an world economics
and financia l news with Lou
Dobbs. (0:30)
®JoHeraona
8) (lJ Love Connection
11:30 IJI]) 1!1) Tonight Show
(I) Cheora
(I) Nlghlllne Q
IIJ) Magnum, P.l.
® Oronb,r's Prlmatea: A
Capllve Life Explore five
species of primates at the
Granby Zoo In Quebec.
Canada. and how their
captive lives were Improved
by building new habitats lor
them . I;J
(I}) Spolia Tonight Action
packed sports highlights with
.Nick Charles and Jim Huber.
(0:30)
.
111 1!2) 'Adaelty' CBS Late
Nlghl
d))

~!sterns. Wells. Delivery An{

87

!

CR 0 F E

I
I
6
1
I

Our neighbor always borrowed

~ tools and faile d to return th em.

s

Jokingly my husband sa1d. "' I'm
going to put my table saw &gt;n your
r,-~N:-::E-::1-::C-;-;V-E:---,1 garage so all my tools will be in
.

.

.

.

.:..

.

I I I I·' I Q Co·o~plele

lhe chock le quole d

.
.
.
.
.
•
.
by ftlltng in t fle missin g wor ds.
L...J-...L--'--J....-'-...1 you de\le lop from step No. 3 be low.

Ill 1121 CBS Newa
® Degr1111 Junior High

1978 Dodge 4 wheel drive,
19n Ford 4 wttHI drive. 1978
Chll'Jy Vtton pick-up. t1500
each. 614-949-2801 .

76

~·
'.

iiJ)

1984 Black Ford Dooty , F-360.
6 .9 International di•al eng.
33,000 mi101. New running
board1, AM·FM stereo. New CB
&amp; tirea. Trut:k tool box to match .
Must see to apprecl .. e. S..-ious
inqulriM onty. Carl a..ver 61 4 · ,.:
2&amp;6-6201 or 440-1347.

'

I

7

(I) lit (I) ABC Newo E;l
(f) Nlflhi!Y Bullneu Report

..JANl

1982 ford F-260 King C.b. 8ft: ..
bed. auto.. air •. red &amp; or.Y:

e14-2Be-e451 .

Maney Ferguson. New Holland,
Bush Hog Sal• &amp; Service. Over
40 u1ed tractors to choose from
&amp; complete line ot new &amp; used
equipment. Largest selection in
S .E. Ohio.

~ NBA Todly (T)

HE~E . RAN~EI':

lo

Trucks for Sale

lhe entertainment world ls
anchored live from New
York . (0:30)
l8l Facta Dl Life
IIHIJ One Day a1 a Time
8:05 (I) Allee
8:30 Gill d)) NBC Nightly News

I ~NOW THE JOS&amp; T HEY'Ll6RiN~ WM 6E GOOD FOI&gt;.
THE LOCAl ECO~OMV. SUT·

WIO"RE' IN PERFIO'CTLY

71 Buick Skviark. custom, a-c.
cr-control. automatic:, runs
good. $300. 304-676-15107.
•... .
• ....
ps, pb,
air.
41983
-dr, Omega.
exc . cond.
S2,800.
Cilll : !'-.
aft• 6 p.m. 304·895·3820 .
~;~

73

I! I I' I

Q
1121 ShowBiz Today News of

UN,POILED TERRAIN

72

'LANGO

1!]1 Squora Dna TV

446-8579

CROSS &amp; SONS

6289.

Very nice 2 bedroom tlou1e, fully
c arpeted, recently remodeled.
Pay own - ut11ities. deposit required. $226 . p.- mon1h with
DIS C OUNT . Call 814 -992 5063

Pets for Sale

Newo

(f) Dr. Who

1978 Chevy Win1low van,

lady ltenmore portable dts hwesher for sale. 304-675 2572.

N1ce 3 bedroom houte. Family
room . _garage . basement ,
forced -atr heat. 5 wooded ac:tBS,
barn S275 per month S100.
deposit No mside pets 10 East
St., Pomeroy, Ohjo. 614-423-

56

ReGular or queen size bed, solid
walnut. 4 poster Cannon Ball.
304-675-6446.

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
OhiJe St . Gallipolis.
NEW- 6 pc. wood group- $399 .
Living room suilea- $199-$699 .
Bunk beds with bedding· $199 .
Full ai:ze mattress &amp; foundation
starting - $99 Recl1nera
starting· S99.
USED - Beds, dressers. bedroom
suites, $199-S299 Desks,
wringer wasf'ter, a complete line
of used furniture
NEW- Western boots- -530 .
Workboots $18 &amp; up. (Steel &amp;
soft toe} Call 614-446-3159.

d))

(!) SportoLook (T)

1970 Chavelle. red bleck ltripat.
S1.350. Call 304·67l5 ·6781
after 4. No calls after 8:00.

Rooms for rent. day . week.
mont". Gallia Hotel. Call 614446-9580 Rent as low 81 t120
month.

NUKCAP

• Ill CIJ o CIJ crm 1111121

30~ · 675-2453 .

rvJo

four scromb le d words belo w to form fovr 51mple words

&amp;:00 Cil Crazy like a Fox

1976 Buick. Nns good, new
radl ..or, good make work etr.

Furnished Rooms

•

T~~~:t:~' ~©R~}A-~t-trs®
fdit•d by Ct.AY It POLLAN
O Rearrange letters of rhe

EVENING

1984 ford 150•c, pa. pb, cruiaa •.
oontrot 4 -ap, low mil•, axe.
cond Seetoappred*· eezoo.
Firm. 304-882-2283.

3 bedroom furmshed o• unfur·

some lurnituro S100 deposrt
0275. All utilities. 614-992·

WED., DEC. 30

e.oo.

---------'--- ~~==========;::======·:":":":':~:~::J

nished. Good clean condition. 1
child. no pets. New Haven

•

1966 Ch.,y. 17.000 tetual
mil•. 2dooreedan, 1913Ch1Wy
truck. 304- 675 -&amp;143 after

Middleport • 2 room furnished
apt. Prwate bath. Utilities paid.
304-882-2666 .

45

Television
Viewing

614·992-5692

PuppiM to giveaway. Ready to
gQ,

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Wednesday, December 30. 1987

1978 PontiK Pho•bl. Motor , ...
and body not good . Good tlr•·
Many oth8f good parta. t100.

II' YCIV COVI.O 'fAu:.-;; "filiON '{(j.) '

Efficiency apt. Total electric,
HUD approved. Nice. Mt , Ver·
non Ave .. Pt. Pleasant. Call
614-992-6868 .

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
houses. Pt. Pleas.nt and GallipoNice 2 br house, basement. , Iii . 614-446 -8221 .
g.-age, wood burner No Pets.
$100 deposit e250 month
2 bedroom furnised epl, rei and
New Haven. 304-882-3202 or deposit , New Haven, W. Va.,
882-2682 .
304-882-3287 or 304 -773 5024.
Small hou se in Pt Pleasent
Furnished or unfurntshed. Ref. Beech Street. Middleport. Ohio,
and dep. Requira:t 304-675- 2 bedroom lurnished apt, utili1926.
ti .. paid, retarencaaand deposit,
304-882-2&amp;66.

Ne.d 1 titter lor New Ye•• E\1&amp; 7
Hourty or •II night '''''· Call

4

Homes for Rent

8 room duplex , baaement. gar898. pnvate, ntce location. 304·
675-3753

P,O. Bo" 519, Ironton, OH

"

41

3 bedroom house , Northwest
ColumbYt, 8460 per month.
Call 614-992-3562 .

KUPID 'S NEST. Otf.. two
kinda of dattng service, write
•&amp;&amp;38.

Wednesday, December 3o. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

•

SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS
·•
Paling - Laser - Taupe - Yellow - YOUR AGE
Someone once said that the secret of stay1ng young was
to live honestly, eat slowly and lust not think about YOUR AGE.

BRIDGE

NORTH

11-10· 11

+KQJ98
• 854

A long shot
is the only shot

t3
+A J 10 1

By James Jacoby

+A754 3 2

.KQ10916 3

· You already knew, didn't you, that
defensive pre-emptive bidding distorts the auction, taking away room
that most of us humans need to get to
the right contract? That's a fact of life
and bridge, but don"t let the sad reality
of occasionally playing a ridiculous
contract blind you to taking the best
chance to make it. Here, when West
stepped in with three hearts and North
bid three spades, opener South had his
last chance to bid three no-trump. He
had the heart ace and hoped that
North held the diamond ace for bis
bidding. ThU was not the case.
West led t1ie queen of hearts, asking
partner to unblock the jack, and declarer ducked. When another heart
was continued, declarer won his ace
and resignedly played the king of diamonds. East took the ace, cashed the
ace of spades and put declarer In the
dummy with a second spade. Poor
South could now do nothing except
cash dummy's ace of clubs and hope
that the king would fall . When that
didn't happen, he was down three.
Though it seems unlikely that East
would hold both missing aces, that is
the only hope declarer has for success.
Bul to avoid being locked into dummy
early in the play , South must work on
clubs. At trick three, declarer ~h.~~~~

.J

EAST

WEST

+&amp;

+s

tA 14 2
+B 2

+K 6 54

SOUTH
+10
.A2
tKQJI0986
+Q9 3

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

North

Ea.sl

South

+

Pass

It
3 NT

3

Pass

Pass

Opening lead: • Q

run the nine of clubs. When that holds,
he can continue with the queen and an·
other club and then drop West's king
with dummy's ace. Only then should
he play diamonds, and East cannot
stop him from making the contract.
James Jacoby's books "Jacoby on
Bridge' and "Jacoby on Card Games•·
(written with his father, the late Os·
wald Jacoby) are now available at
bookl;tores. Both are published by
Pharos Books.
@ 1&amp;87, NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.

by THOMAS JOSEPH
2 Avoid
capture
.
1 Harass
3 Temptress
6- canto
9 Aristocracy 4 Zeta
follower
10 Drooping
5 Navigation
12 Bucolic
device
13 Built a
nest egg
6 Abject
15 Dutch town 7 Old
16 Cote
musical
Yesterday's Answer
denizen
note
26 Cicero, e.g. 33Fed
18 Before
8 Caress
the
26 St. John
19 Tenn
11 Wig
kitty
- ,Roman
21 Egyptian 14 Inhibit
34Rows
church
king
17 Moisten
36Camp
27 Bronson
20 Soviet
22 Tattle
sight
film
river
(sl.)
39You
23 One kind 29 Sticky
23 Use an
(Ger.)
stuff
of eagle
oast
'1 Native
Lustrous 32 Writer
2'- goose ' 2' fabric
· (suffix)
Bret
27 Candle
28 Soviet sea
29 Colloidal
substance
30 Make lace
31 Passe
36 Resident
of (suff.)
36 Com site
37 Black
cuckoo
38 Scandinavian
40 Talent
42 Picnic
spoiler
43 Aquatic
animal
44 Trawler
need
45 Craves
DOWN
1 Cap
DAILy CRYPTOQUOTFS- Here's how to work It: 12130

ACROSS

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

CRYPTOQUOTE
12-30

P KZRH
[) y

. E N R

DN

H K E.
D W :

T

XT Z ~ PTD MRZ

J Z K G.

T

X K G

WK

PDNWQRNN

DY
HKE
J ZKG
ZK W . - XK QTFR
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: THE GREATEST MIS.
TAKE YOU CAN MAKE IN THIS UFE IS TO BE
CONTINUALLY FEARING YOU WilL MAKE ONE.
. . .
f:LBERT HUBBARD

'
'

�•

.

Page-14-The Daily

Sentinel~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~;;;;;~o;h~io:..••••••-------===~~==:.i3:o~.~1~9~87

People in
the news

.... .. .. .·.... i .
o··-~• ·

By JOHN SWENSON
United Press International
NEW YEAR'S DEAD: Good
seats are still available for the
Gr"*efol Dead's annual New
Year's Eve bash -In your living
room. That's if you have a cable
hookup that carries the pay-perview network Viewer's Choice.
The concert at the Oakland
Coliseum, ava!lable to 6 million
cable subscribers at a cost of
$19.95, will commence ; at the
stroke of midnight eastern time,
and features warm-up sets from
the Looters and the Neville
Brothers before the Dead go on at
about 1 a.m .
''This Is the 19th time the Dead
have done this New Year ' s Eve
celebration," said Viewer's Cho·
Ice president Scott Kurnlt: ''They
always sell out, so we' re expandIng the arena .by 10 to 15 times its
size. "
With two sets scheduled and
the posslb!l!ty of a third looming ,
Deadheads could well be up until
dawn. Who knows what to ex . peel? If you don't have the cable
hookup, you can still hear the
stereo simulcast for free 0 n local
FM stations that are part of the
D.I.R. radio network.
,
HEROES OF 1987- Pope John
Paul II and Elizabeth Taylor
head a list of the year's " 10 Most
Insplting People," according to
the Mlllenlum Society, a group
formed In 1979 by Yale students
to mark the year 2000. Society
president Cale Magennls made
the announcement at New York's
Hard Rock Cafe Tuesday . Other
honorees Included Nobel Peace
Prize winner Oscar Arias, singer
Paul Simon. basketball legend
Julius Erving, oceanographer
Jacques Cousteau, Harlem charIty worker Mother Hale, Canadian runner· Rick Hansen, well
baby Jessica McClure and the
U.S. Constitution.
The 1987 honorees received
Invitations to attend the World
Millen!um Charily Ballin 1999, a
global party at a n"umber of
locations Including the Great
Pyramid of Cheops, the great
Wall of China and the Statue of
Liberty. The 1987 honorees join a
Ust that Includes Ronald Reagan ,
Deng Xlaoplng, Bill Cosby, the
Statue of Uberty, Bruce Springsteen, Rob Hope, Pete Rose ,
Mother Theresa, Winnie MandeJa, George Bums a,nd Corazon
Aquino.
MANY HAPPY SHALL RETURNS - Gen. Dave Richard
Palmer. superintendent of the
U.S. Mllttary Academy, presented Jean MacArthur with a
traditional gray flannel West
Point bathrobe embroidered
with six .stars on the occasion of
her 89th birthday Monday.
Five of the stars represented
MacArthur's late hu sband, five
star Gen. Douglas MacArthur,
who wore his bathrobe throughout his career, and the sixth
honored her as First Lady of the
Army. The presentation was
made at a birthday dinner dance
hosted by publisher Malcolm
Forbes at the Forbes Galleries In
New York.
Wlien MacArthur cut her birthday cake, topped by her watercolor portrait painted on marzipan ,
she told the guests-" You all COJlle
back next year for my 90th."
One of the guests was TV's
Joan Rivers. a new arrival In the
Big Apple who has just purchased her fi rst Manhattan
apartment - the ballroom floo r
of a Fifth Avenue residence
formerly owned by the J .P.
Morgan family.
NEXT STOP, POET'S
CORNER: Bus riders In 11 major
U.S. cities can catch up on their
reading with the poetry-on-thebuses program sponsored by
National Endowment of the Arts.
The current series of poetic
posters features the work of six
Native Amer ican writers.
"The goal of this project Is to
reach millions of new people In .
each city each day with a
sampling of some of the best
American contemporary poetry, " said Endowment Chairman
Frank Hodson. The current serIes of poetic pos ters are riding
along In New York, Philadelphia,
Washington , Chicago. San Francisco, Minneapolis, Atlanta, MIami, Dallas, Phoenix a nd Oakland, Calif.
T BIRD SHUFFLE: The
Detroit Pistons basketball team·.,
Invited the Fabulous Thunderbirds to play a concert a t the
Detroit Sllverdome Tuesday
night following the game be·
tween the Pistons a nd Houston
Rockets.
The Pistons ha ve been Thunderblrds fans since they started
to use "Tuft Enuff" as the-team's
theme song last year. bu t the T
Birds also merit loyalty from
their local pals from Housto n.
"It's jump ball all around,"
quipped vocalist Kim Wilson.

•

l'le Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

•

STORE HOURS
Monday thru Sunday
8 AM-10 PM

Vol .38. No.1 63

Copvrighted 1987

enttne

at y

.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Thursday,

What do you wish for Meigs County in 1988?

•

•

•

e

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY, OH.

•

• ••• •

l
Dec~rr,tl&gt;er

31. 1987

2 Sections. 16 Pag es

26' Cent s

A Multimedia-Inc . Newspaper

MeigS program will not be
funded, comffiission · leams
I!

Another year Is nearly over
and Meigs Countlans, like
people everywhere, are looking forward to 1988, making
resolutions for improvement,
and hoping .lor the best. With
thai thought In mind, The
Dally Sentinel asked several
local residents what · they
would wis h for the c.ounty In
1988. Here are their responses.

BONELESS

Rump Roast ••••••••• $179
LB.

BUCKET

Cube Steak •••••••••• $199
LB.

U.S.D.A. CHOICE

$119
Chuck Roa·st ••••••••
Ground Beef •••••••• $119
LB.

1/4

Pork Loin •••••••• $J19
LB.

MIXED

Wednesday's regular sess ion
of the Meigs Cou nty Commissioners was brief.
• A public hea ring was held to
ta~ e comments on a petition
from Bruce and Rita Reed to
an nex .346 acre of.their Sutton
Township property into Pome·
roy. The remainder of th eir
proper ty is already in Pomeroy
limi ts.
The petition was advertised
and a viewing of the property in
question was held Wednesday
morning. Since the commissio n.
MATT VAN VRANKEN,
owner of Hartley's Shoes,
Pomeroy, "I wish prosperity
lor everyone in Meigs County,
and a special wish for success
lor the reopening Foote Mineral plant In Mason County,
W.Va. May God watch ove r
and bless all of us In 1988, and
help us to be more tolerant and
caring."

REV . . JAMES KEESEE,
pastor of the Victory Baptist
Church, Middleport . "For
Meigs County as a whole, I
wish for a great spiritual
revival. I'm also looking forward to the completion of
construction of our new VIc·
tory Baptist Church In Middle-

port."

ers

received

no unfavorable

comment s regarding the a nnexa-

~,

,,fh:,-

lion. a resol ution was passed , service as chairperson of th e
approving the request of the county 's bicentennial celebra Reeds. A copy of the reso lution Is tion of the Northwes l Ordinance
to be forwarded to Pomeroy and Ihe U .S. Consli tulion .
Finally, th e cohm issio ners es·
Village.
tablished
Monday. 1:30 p.m .. for
The commissi oners have rea
meeti
ng
to adopt a county
ceived notification from the Ohio
budget
for
1988.
Department of Na tural Resour ces that the state agency is
Present for Wednesday's meet unab le to fund all requests for
Summer Yo uth Litter Corps Ing were Commissioners Roush,
funding , and that Meigs County is David Koblentz and Richard
among those entitles which will Jones, Clerk-Treasurer Mary
Hobstetter, Bruce Reed , Attor·
not be funded in 1988.
Commissioner Manning Rous h ney Pat O'Brien. Pomeroy
presented a plaque to Patricia Mayor Richard Seyler and Ro Park"er , In appreciation lor her bert Burton , a Pomeroy resident.

LB.

·

Fryer Parts •••••.'!·•••.' 39&lt;

Chick-en Breasts.!~ $J 09

CATHERINE WELSH,
Pomeroy resident, retired. "I
wish the Meigs Local school
strike would end for the sake
of the children. II aflecls a lot
.of people but the children
mostly. I wish for more
business opportunities
throughoutourlocalarea,and
I wish for peace everywhere,
from Meigs County to the
Middle East."

FRONTIER

Bacon •••••••••••••••••••• 89c
LB.

SALLY LMIDERT, owner
of Lambert Insurance
Agency, Pomeroy. "I want to
thank the customers of Lambert Insurance · Agency and
wish them, and everyone else
in the county, a Happy New
Year. Also, I wish for a
peaceful and speedy end to the
teachers' strike In Meigs Lo cal School District, not only
for the benellt of the Meigs'
stuaents and their lumilies,
hut for the benefit of Meigs
County as a whole."

JOAN MAY, manager of the
Rutland Branch of Bank One.
"I wish lor the end of the
Meigs Local school slrlke,
with no animosity. And 1 wish
for an upturn In the local
economy with more industry
recruited so we'll have enough
money with which to operate
our county and our schools."

RECEIVES APPRECIATION PLAQUE- Meigs
County Commissioner Manning Roush, on behal!
of the. other commissioners and the county,
presented a plaque to Patricia Parker, In
appreciation for her time spent in charge of the

county's bicentennial celebration of the Northw est Ordinance and the U.S. Constitution. As
chairperson of the hicentennlal celebration,
Parker spent much time this year in planning and
carrying out celebrations throughout the county.

Meigs schools will be open
again Monday, officials report
3 LB. BAG

Yellow

.
.
69&lt;
On1ons ••••••

BROUGHTON'S .

2°/o Milk •••••••••••••• $149
GAL.

BROUGHTON'S

Cottage Cheese'!!!·. 99&lt;

BANQUET

'

Pot
Pies
••••
!~;
...
3/8
9
&lt;
$129
Potato Chips •••••••

MIKE SELLS

1-LB. BAG

. s
Bush's Beans ~~.o.z~ 51 1

PINTO. KIDNEY. CHILLI. GRT. NORTHERN

1

$S99

limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Olfer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 1

Frozen Pizza ••• ~~2!·•• 69 &lt;

PRICE SAVER

TIDE DETERGENT
l!~xoz . .

CHEF BOY -R-DEE

BLEACH .GAL.

69(

Limit One Per Customer
Good Only At Powell's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 1

STOKELY

PRICE 'SAVER

TOMATO JUICE

PAPER TOWELS

160Z.

2f$1

limit·lwo Per .Customer,
Good Only At Powell 's Supermarket
Offer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 1

LG. ROLL

3f$1

Limit Three Per Customer
Good Only AI Powell's Supermarket
Olfer Good Thru Sat., Jan. 1

With no ind ication of a settle- a m~le caller. They are Robert ing was. held for s ubstitute
ment in sight of the teachers Snowden, Robert Bar ton and leachers prepara to ry to reopen strike in the Meigs Local School ·J effrey Werry. A garage burned Ing the schools with th e use of
Distric t, schools of the distr ict at the Werry hom e early Wednes- substitut es on Monday , Dec. 21.
will open aga in Monday with day morning and arson is sus- Krawsczyn and Wilfong, who Is
pected. Damages a mounted to president of tlie Meigs Local
s ubstit ute teachers on the job.
Classes were condu cted Mon - some $20,000 and a s ide of the Teachers Assoc iation. posted
day, Tuesday a nd Wednesday Werry home on P leasa nt Ridge · bonds of $75 each in the Meigs
this week in six of the nine was blis tered by the heat ol the County Court and heari ngs have
garage fire . Two of th e three been set for next Wednesday.
schools which have been reo..
···
pened using substitutes. Nor- calls received by board members
its contents and a van parked nearby at the home ? J1 ma lly. schools would have been
Wednesday night threatened adGARAGE DESTROYED'- Arson is believed to
of
J
effrey
Werry,
Pl
~asant
Rid
ge,
Pomeroy,
closed
,
for
the
entire
holiday
ditional
fires.
be the cause of a fir~ which destroyed this garage.
South Cen tral Ohio
early Wednesday mornmg.
period . However, · the board
Snowden, who is president of
Cloudy
and windy today, with
the
board
of
ed
ucation,
reported
agreed to hold classes for the
rain
likely
thi s afternoo n and
his
ca
ller
as
saying:
three days tljis week in an
.
highs
between
45 and 50. Rain
"
We
get
our
money,
or
you
're
attempt to make up time lost in
likely
tonigh
t,
changing
lo snow
th e strike which began on Nov. 6. dead meat."
by
midnight
.
and
a
low
nea
r 25.
All five members were present
The admin istration reports that
Approximately 50 p&lt;•rcenl of
Partly
cloud
y
Friday,
with
highs
at Wednesday eveni ng's special
attendance is running 55 percent
all truffle fatalities ot·cur in
between 25 and 30.
board meeting .
while
the
Meigs
Local
Teachers
llkohul-rclated em•hes. More
Ohio Extend ed Forecast
. Warrants Served
We rry sa id th at a bout 8:30p.m . lhan 2.1,000 live' are los! each Association says th at 'tt is Jess
"They're not intimidating me.
Saturday
through Monday
The
department
of
Sheriff
than
50
percent.
but they are· disturbing my on Monday nlghl he had heard a )'·l'ar in .&amp;l-1roho1·r••lat£"tl Cf4.t$hl'~.
A
chan
ce
of snow in lh e
Howard
Fra
nk
reports
that
war
Meeting in special sessio n
Ahout 560,000 people are in·
c hildren - and that makes me noise in Ihe area of the garage.
northern
pan
of
the s tal e and
rants
issued
against
tw
o
teachers
When he ca lled out someone ran ' ju red &lt;'ach y••ar in aJcoholWednesday eveni ng. the Meigs
mad. ''
chance
of
s
now
in the sou th
on
Dec.
23
were
served
yester
Local Board of Education hired
This is th e commenl of Jeffrey from lh c building. Pomeroy relntcd c:ra•hes, ~3,000 of thrm
Saturday
nigh!
and
M o ~day .
daY.
Served
the
warra
nt
s
chargadditional substllute teachers
Werry. whose garag&lt;' was des- Pollee responded to a ca ll ~eriou~ily injurt'lt.
Otherwise
fair
ll1rough
the peIng
crimi
nal
damaging
or
endan
before moving into exec utive
Alum! two-thirds of all people
troyed · by !ir,e about 2 a.m . quic kly , Werry slalcd. An invesr
iod.
Highs
will
be
in
the
20s
gering
were
John
Krawsczyn,
session.
Wednesday morning. Pomeroy liga li io n ,-evea led th at three ti res killed in akohol-rdatcd trashes
Saturday
and
Sunday
,
and
in
I
he
Wednesday night follow ing the Jr ., Pomeroy, and Michael A.
Fire Chi&lt;'! Charles Legar, who on hi s va n had been slashed and arC' drivers or twde~trians who
30s
Monda
y.
Overnighllows
will
Wilfong, Middleport . Charges
tha i a fl ama ble substance had had been drinking, while oneboard mee ting , it was reported
s u ~pec t s arson, sel the losses at
resulted from alleged va ndali sm range from 10 to 20 Saturday and
been
poured
over
some
books
that a t least three of the board of
third art' innor(~nt "ktirns.
about $20.000 as a resull of lhe
near the Meigs High School on Sund ay mornin gs and in the 20s
education members rec~ ived
OJ the roughly 9,000 young
fire which destroyed the garage sto red in the garage. F'ollowing
Dec
. 18 when an inservlce meet· early,Monda y.
th e fire on Wednesday morning , p&lt;•ople belwt'&lt;'n t,5 and 24 yt•ars of threa tening telephone calls from
a nd its contents .
A van pa rked in front of the Werry sa id lh at a five gallon agt• who wt•re killed in aknhol•
garage caughl fir e and was kerosene ca n which did not relaled crashes in 19H6. 5.8ll0
gutted. Werry who was awake at belong 10 him was found in the wert~ in ('r;L.I)hP~ in \\.hit'll ttl(~
·
driver ·wa.• lntoxicat~d.
the time hea rd a n explosion and cenler of the !\'arage.
•
A
state
fire
mar
shal's
office
These !acts lronl the Natlomtl
looked oul of a window at his
hom e, 130 Pleasan t Ridge, Pome- was ex pected to have a represen· Highway Traflic Satety i\'dminlstallve in Pomeroy today to IJ·ation and !Itt· Nallonul Center
roy . The front of the garage was
for Statlstk' and Analysis, a{P
completely engulfed In flam es, lnvestlgati' the blaze
Anyene havin g a ny lnfor ma Due to the recen\ rash of severa l ve.hlcles, 'Including the
Whil&lt;' some exp ressed the just r.mlnd~rs IQr anyone ~ ho
he . said. He quickly moved a
cars
of
three
pollee
officers,
have
lion concerning such incident s
vandalism In, the community ,
second family vehicle parked opinion ·that Ihe fire was . arson tloes not plan to not drive after
been vandalized by tire slashing are asked to contact the.,police
Middlepor
t
Mayor
Fred
Hoffman
and
is
'
a
teacher
slrike
relaled
drinking. If you're a host or
near the garage'but the fire in the
department al 992-6424 .
asks th at reside nt s not ify police and scratching.
van had advanced to a poin l incident, no one had an explana- . hustc~"· don 't let your (.::nest
He
also
stated
that
one
pollee
The mayor warned that anyon.e
when
suspicious
Individuals
are
wht're It was dan gerous to tion as to why Werry would be a lpaw alter they have b&lt;•en
officer
has
been
hit
In
the
head
convicted
of any such va ndalism
seen
In
their
neighborhoods
.
·
attempt to move It . New bicycles vi ctim . He was a tea cher outside drinking.
with
a
rock
while
on
routine
In
the
village
would be P&lt;'Qse- .
The
mayor
stated
that
during
Frum the· stall of the Daily
given to the Werry children were of MeigS Co unt y unti11984 where
patrol
during
the
early
morning
cuted
t0
the
fullest
extel)tjo f Ihe
that
past
week,
numerous
cars
In
be wa$ seriously injured in an S~nttnel, please. don't drink and
destroyed In the fire.
hours
near
th
e
Middleport
eleth e commu nity have been coated
Jaw .
//f
Werry said tha t he does have a utomobile accident and has drh·c,
p:.:
mentary
school.
with
mustard
and
catsup
and
Insurance.
·
Continued on page 16
,,.,J''

Weather

Werry says incidents
disturbing his children

Don't drink, drive

a

• •

Mayor Hoffman urges citiZens to
• •
watch out for .susptctous
persons

......

I
•

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