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.

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
•

�Thursday, December 31 , 1987

Commentary
The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTE~!O T_H E JI"TEREST8 OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~ ,...,_,L-_,_ •.~~. ~

~m~

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHI'fEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller
·

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

A MEMBER of Tho United Press International. In land Dally Press
Asseclation and the American Newspaper Publlshers Associatloil.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. Th ey s hou ld be&gt; less than 300 words
long. All letters aresubj eel to edit lng an d must be signed with name, ad dres·s and
telephone number. No unsigned letlers wUI be published. Lettl'rs should be In
g~od tas1e. addressing Issues. not personali11es.

The silence of Forin 'l89__A_nde_r_so_n~an_d_v;_an_A_tt_a
WA.SIHNGTON - The federal
government says not to worry
about Special Form !89, the
pledge that federal workers have
to stgn saying they won't give
away secret Information. Nobody will get hurt lor not signing
it and nobody will be punished for
blowing the· whistle on corruption
and incompetence. the feds
promise.
Tell it to George Schoenberg.
Schoenberg used to be a cost
analyst In the Army's Tank·
Automotive Command In
Warren, Mich. He earned several
awards for spotti ng costly errors
In defense contracts. But apparently there Is a fine line between
making constructive suggestions

and mak lng your bosses nervous.
Schoenberg's repeated criticism ·
of management shortcomings
got him !Ired last year. He also
lost his security clearance be·
cause he refused to sign SF 189.
Through arbitra tlon, Schoenberg
was rehired last August, but
without the back pa y he lost
during nine months or unemploYment and wltOout ·his "secret"
security clearance.
With no clearance, Schoenberg's job options were li)lllted.
He was finally made a program
analyst. A two-finger typist, he
spent his time huntlng and
pecking data into a computer.
Army personnel official Anita
Carman told our reporter Tanya

lsch that Schoenberg has finally
had his security clearance reinstated and he will get another
job.
Schoenberg's nightmare with
Form 189 Is an example of the
possibility lor abuse that should
be givin g us all bad dreams.
On the surface, Form 189
sounds llke a good way to keep
federal employees from giving
away stale secrets. De'epdown,lt
Is a threat to the way ordinary
people keep their govern!l)ent in
check - ordinary people like
you, the press and even members
of Congress.
We agree with Rep. Gerry
Sikorski, D·Minn., whO said,
" The term 'natlonal security

Today in. history
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, Dec. 31, the 365th and last day or 1987.
This Is New Year's Eve.
The moon Is waxing , moving toward Its lull phase.
The morning s ta rs are Mars and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mercury. Venus and Jupiter .
Those born on the date are under the sign of Capricorn . They
include French explorer Jacques Cartier in 1491; Charles Edward
Stuart, Scotland's "Bonnie Prince Charlie," in 1720; French painter
Henri Matisse in 1869; Gen. George Marshall. formulator of the
Marshall Aid Plan for E urope following World War II, in 1880;
folk-blues singer Odetta (Holmes) in 1930 (age 57); actress Sarah
Miles In 1941 (age 46). and singers John Denver in 1943 (age 44) and
Donna Summer inn 1948 (age 39).

Letters to the editor
Concerned parent speaks out
I've watched television; I've
How ca n a teacher, trained in
crossed the picket line - I' ve put the profession of teaching our
my child back in school. I have children right from wrong justify
yet to be asked what I think~ I'm the vandalism when apparently
not all bad, just Interested in , they don't know ri~:htfrom wrong
"EDUCATION FOR MY
themselves. Will the ill-feelings
ever leave Meigs Local?
CHILD."
I read on the front page of the
If yo u want to teach; go back In
dally paper where a teacher
the classroom - if tht;&gt;re is no
stated: "Pollee State In Meigs
money, then there is not money . I
am sure a tax levy at this present
Local".
I accompanied my child to
time would not pass proobably
Pomeroy Elementary - the day not make It to the ballot. If not,
tM school opened. I did not see leave the picket line and LET
out of town deputies -no sentry OUR SCHOOL GO IN PEACE.
dogs- no tear gas- no mace- .
What happened to the dedi. What I did see was three cated teacher - not for money
Pomeroy Police Officers with ! purposes - who taught a whole
guns on their walst··but I believe classroom without the help of a
this goes with their uniforms as teacher's aide - and we got an
this Is their chosen profession as · education? Teachers are not the
pencil and paper is to t,lte only ones who spent money for
teachers. I also saw two security their profession- but they chose
guards at the school to see that no it.
It takes all kinds to make a
more vandalism could be done
and they carried no weapons . world and the teachers or Meigs
The officer's job is to protect and Local have shown us what kind
! serve; and that is what they were they are.
doing·seelng children were pro·
If parents had stood up In 1980
tected to enter the school.
when all sports and band activi·
What I did see was two young ties were cancelled, took the ·
ladles on a picket line and a group children to school, we might not
• of teachers across the street on a have this strike today. The same
hillside writing down names and ones running the strike today are
license numbers. The olllcers the ones who ra n the 1980 strike
were nice enough not to ask th em while their children are getting
to leave but they did move on an education in another school
when school took up - probably district. One thing is different
• on to another school to write from the 1980 strike - It's
different parents this time--these
more names.
s particular teacher states are the children of the students In
You wouldn't expect this ktnd of the 1980 s trike and the you nger
treatment in Russia ", I disagree ge neration Is a little bolder than
with him. In Russia. he and a lew most of us.
more would have been sh ipped to
I'm asking you as a concerned
Siberia - and they wouldn't parent "UNITE" - put you
dictate to Russia they wanted children back In schoo l. Let's
: more money . I'm not sure overfill the sc hools. If ,the
' whether it's right or wrong to teachers want their jobs , let
: cross the picket line but this is them be back In the classroom
· still the Good Old USA and l still where they belong - If not the
am a free human being and have substitute teachers are not doing
a mind of my own . I'm the one a bad job at all·and let our
thoi had to make that decison children finish this year and then
I'm THINKING ABOUT MY FIGHT YOUR BATTLES WHEN NO ONE IS GOING TO
; CHILD.
LOSE
ANTHING. DON'T USE
"To beat and arrest teac hers
OUR
CHILDREN.
who obey the laws seems in·
I would not have fell this way,
sane," he went on td say. Is
but
when teachers do what. our
obeying the Jaw when a teacher
•teachers
have done In Meigs
damages other people's perso nal
Local,
then
It's time the PAR·
property? I'm asking you is this
HAVE
A SAY IN OUR
ENTS
sane? Just think if you , the
teachers, had just sit the picket CHILDREN'S EDUCATION ,
line and didn't do the vandalism The board says open the schools ,
- the Jaw enforcement would not there is no money. We elected
hav e been Involved. When them to run the school district .
teachers take tt upon themselves We have to ta ke their word on
to be jud ge and jury and can things.
Think It over. The school is
damage property, s lit tires,
opened.
I urge you as parents, it's
spray paint cars - WHAT DO
our
children's
education at stake
YOU EXPECT?
and
the
future
of Meigs Local
Please exc use me here. No tall
Schools.
teachers are In favor of the
Signed
vandalism and the ones who are
Gerrl
Mlller;a concerned parent.
doing It are making it bad for the
·others.
·

To The Editor
While Christmas Is supposed to
be a time of giving it Is also a tlrlle
pf stealing for some. As I read the
letter to the editor about stealing
a Christmas tree right off a grave
of loved ones I thought of a phone
call 1 got from my daugh.ter,
today . Someone broke Into the
place of worship where she goes
to church and stole a large
container that held their building
fund for a n~w church .' All of the
congregation or Pastor Jim Ste·
wart's church had worked hard
to save that money In , the last

:

Interests' has always been the
last refuge or administrations
more concerned Wlht hiding their
problems than with protecting
ine public interest."
The situation created by Form
189 has aroused some outrage In
Congress. Members are particularly Incensed that they were
asked to sign the form to gain
access to documents and people
In the agencies they are supposed
to oversee.
To appease Congress, the Rea- ·
gan administration has declared
a moratorium on the practice of
suspending security clearances
lo employees who won't Sign. A
lost security clearance often
means a lost job.
The White House has also tried
to assure employees and critics
that Form 189 won't put the lid on
whistle blowers. There are laws
to protect employees who report
fraud and waste, and the execlive order that created Form 189
In 1983 forbids the classification
or documents merely to hide
waste, errors and Illegalities.
The soothing reassurances are
of little comfort when measured
against the record of how thefeds
have misused Form 189.
The Air Force, for instance,
originally deemed that reluc·
tance to sign Form 189 "will be
considered lack of personal com·
mltment to protect classified
Information." The Air Force also
required employees who didn't
even need security clearances to
sign the form; it recently modifled Its rules.
Under the old rules, Louis
Brase lost hts security clearance
as a training manager for the Air
Force In San Angelo, Texas,
when he refused to sign this past
June. The Air, Force ruled that
his refusal 'reflects adversely on
his trustworthiness." Brase got
his clearance back, but says he
received a low job performance
rating in retaliation.

Business funds its.enemies ___V_in_ee_nt_C_ar_ro_ll
U.S. corporate leaders, so
eager to please everyone these
days, should heed th e words of
Rudyard Kipling. As the English
author once warned:
It is always a temptation to a rich
and lazy nation,
To puff and look important and to .
say:
"Though we know we should
defeat you,
We have not the time to meet you.
We will therefore pay you cash to
go away."
'
Repla ce the word "nation" in
the. previous stanza with "corpo·
ration" and you'll understand
how business today deals with
groups pressing for expansion of
government and curtailment or
property rights. Rather than
confront these activists, business •
tries to buy them off.
It Is a hopel ess tactic, as
Kipling often warned.
The latest evidence of thi s
white-!lag policy can be found In
Marvin Olasky's book " Patterns
of Corporate Philanthropy." The
University of Texas professor

checked the charitable contrlbu·
lions for 77 or the largest 100 U.S.
companies (the rest wouldn't
cooperate) and found that In 1985
they funneled far more money
into " public· interest groups" of
the lett than of the right.
Sometimes a company gave
money to .groups directly opposed to Its own activities, as
when the defense contractor
Honeywell underwrote dlsarmament semi nars . More com·
monly, business funded gruups
whose goals clashed with Its
long· term Interests.
.
For ' example, NOW's Legal
Defense and Educatlon Fund
lobbies and litigates for "com·
parable worth," which would
further .limit the freedom to set
wages. Twenty-four of the big·
gest companies contributed to
NOW's lund.
The Urban Leagu e and the
NAACP 's Legal Defense and
Education Fund meanwhile push
for racial and group pre(erence
- as opposed to individual rights

'
- tnt eh hiring, promotion
and
firing of workers. Yet they
received gifts from dozens of
companies, too.
Also favored were organtza·
tlons such as the Children's
Defense Fund, Peopl!? for the
American Way, Gray Panthers
and environmental Institutes
that plump for greater federal
spending (and hence higher
taxes) for a host of domestic
programs, not to mention expanded regulation In everything
from adverti~lng and broadcast·
lng to the environment.
By no means all the money
flowed to such groups. A few
right -of-center organizations
cleaned up, too - notably the
American Enterprise Institute.
But as Olasky ably proves, the
overall trend for1985was clearand It uqdoubtedly persists to
this day.
Whether out or stupidity, a
desire to appease or merely a
naive belle! that such contributions nurture a responsible image, corporate America seems

determined to underwrite Its
enemies.
To some extent the myopia Is
predictable. Historically, business leaders have often sought lo
curtail economic freedom In
order to gain commercial advantage. That's why, for Instance,
the president and chairman of
American Airlines, R.L. Crandall, came out last summer In
favor of Sen. Edward Kennedy's
legislation requiring companies
to offer minimum
medical
benetif I
·
Its !for all employees. Crandall's
airline al•eady provides Its ·
workers wtth a costly benefit
package. He merely resents the
fact that rival Continental does
not.
At least Crandall's squalid ·
opportunism can be justified on
short-term competitive grounds.
Corporate funding of left-wing
publlc· lnterest groups relies on
no such' rationale. It Is both
squalid and pointless. UIU·
mately, of course, . It Is also
suicidal.

incomes than currently allowed
be included in this program. The
co mmittee a lso recommends
that coverage be expanded to
include children up to age 21, and
to include children In two-parent
families. They recommend ad·
ding new programs to provide
coverage to those who do not now
have it.
- Mandating that insurance
plans automatically include cov ·
erage lor ambulatory health care
for children. Many plans now
exclude such coverage, and the
committee believes th at laws
requiring the Inclusion of this
coverage would go a long way
toward solving the present
problem,
- Allow under·l nsured families to "buy-In' ' to state Medicaid
programs. In other words, a
family making too much money
to qualify for Medicaid, but too
little to buy private Insurance,
could buy Medicaid coverage for
a small prernlum.
~ E ncourage Insurers to remove restrictions on children
with preexisting conditions.
These restrictions now prevent a
child wtth 'a chronic medical
condition from obtaining medl·
ca t coverage when a parent joins
an Insurance plan . Millions of
c hildren are unable to obtain
Insurance coverage because of
these provisions.
It Is hard to find a sensible
argument againSt any of these
suggestions.
The problem with this repor t,
then, Is not what It says, but what .
It does not say.
The entire lour-page document
contains only 'seven lines that
even suggest thai pediatricians

..

might help to solve this problem
by providing more free and
low-cost care. The committee
does not even say that these child
doctors should provide more free
care. Instead, It says that state
agencies should coordinate tl)e
free care that pedlat.rlclans are
already providing.
·
There is no question that
pediatricians make less money
than any of their medical con·
freres, and probably provide

more free and low·cost care than
most.
One can' t help but remember
that the American Medical Association and the American Bar
Association have recently called
lor doctors and lawyers to donate
a minimum of one week of free
care or services to the poor each
year. And one can't help but
wonder why this committee Isn't
ec,holng that long overdue
suggestion.

Berry's World
'V'

&lt;J

HAPPY NEW YEAR

I

iowac's 34-year·Old record of
1,982 points by converting the
llrst of 2 foul shots with Jl : 291eft
to play .
Marshall Improved to 8-1,
while Kent State fell to 4·5,
despite double·flgure scoring by
Reggie Adams with 12, Mitch
Sowards with 11, and Eric Glenn
and Joe Schul tz with 10 apiece.
At Dayton,' Hercy Hawkins
scored 36 ponts and Anthony
Manuel added 26 to rally Bradley
over Dayton.
The Flyers, 7-4, had led 40-36 at
tlje half and led most of the game
by three to five points. However,
with 7: 33Ieft, Donald Powell hit a
fastbreak dunk shot that put
Bradley up by one and the Braves
stretched their led to eight
points with 5:28 left.
Powell finished with 16 and
Paul Wilson added 10 tor Brad·
ley , 6-1. Negele Knight led
Dayton with 24 points, Steve
Pittman added 16, Anthony Cor·
bitt had 11 and Ray Springer 10.
At Akron, Shawn Rober.ts and
lllya McGee combined for 28
points as the Zips rolled over
Bethune-Cookman. Roberts led

Redmen take 12-3 mark into
weekend tilt with Oiler five
CANTON - A 110-61 victory by
Rio Grande over the University
'of Guelph here Wed~esday has
helped boost the Redmen' s sea ·
son record to 12-3.and give n them
a winning edge entering this
weekend's contest with District
22 opponent Findlay.
On Tuesday, the Red m en defeated Brock University 97·50.
Brock and Guelph wer'e th e
Ca nadian half of the Ohto·
Ca nada Classic played at Walsh
College .·
Coach John Law horn's club
held top percentages over it s
opponents, a plus In shutting
down the Canadian s' run·ilnd·
gun playing style.
"As far as the teams are
concerned, Canada's di!lerent
because they like run up 'on you,
but we wouldn 't let them do it,"
Assistant Coach Doug Foote said
late Wednesday. "We played
well and kept them going."
Rio Grande· Brock
The Redmen allowed Brock' s
Badgers to get within 5 point s

(20·15i by 8:30 in the first half,
but clamped down Its offense to
score 26 more points . Rio
Grande's defense limited Brock
to 2 points for the remainder or
the half, leaving the halftime
score 46-17 in the Redmen's
favor.

Senior Ron Ritlinger provided
20 poin ts to lead all scorers for
th e game, Se nior forwar d Ray
Singleton, junior guard Jim
Kearns and freshman guard
Brian Wa tkins each added 15 and
·10 points each came !rom junior
guard Anthony Raymore and
sophomore forward/ center Rob
Jackson. The Redmen were 55
percent 147 on 87 attempts ) on
field goa ls and posted 53 percent
in free throws , si nking 7 of 13
tries.
Brock was 31 percent on·field
goals, making 20 of 65 tries , but
did better at the charity stripe on
11 of 18 attempts lor 61 percent.
Its leading scorers were forwards Kevin Moore, who 17, and
Kelly Grace. who added 15.

Scoreboard ...
Cham pionship

Ohio scores

F'indlay 63 , K11huna7.1JO (1\fll:h ) II!
Consulatlon
f0nov1• &lt;'lly !Pal 7ll, Olh·et ( Mich ) 7!1

Uhlo C."olll•ge IJa.~kl~lball Score&gt;;
Ry Uniltd Prf'~s In ternal lanai

Ot•llanct' To urnt'y
.A t Df'flanl'f'

Det. 30

Cham plon!lhlp

IJ.•Ihuw1• ;s, llt•dh.•lhcrg ;;

l\1arshulll!2, Krnl ~late 61
i\kNJn 115. Relhun('·C ookman iii
Ohiu l 'nl\·crslly '72, NC · \\'IIruln~~:t on 60
Hrndle y !r., DaJIOn .11 0
,
Uhlo Nort hern ll\1, l'onl'ordla ( Ml) 45
l ' ounK~Iown

Slat!'

f'lasshi\1 l'm~ng~t91 w'l, ,
llolida~

c:onsolntlon
t\fnlon { ~1\ch) 121, Thonm.'i 1\Jo"' I K3')

"

Cal'tiatlon City Class!!·
1\t Aillancr

&lt;'hampl om;hl p

,\11 UniiJu 111, Uulfalo [N\') Sl ~ !OT J

('hamphm.~hl p
l'OUIIIKSIW/011 Sl: 7.1, HIUiford ! VII) 61

Con.&lt;;O\atlon
flt&gt;lhany (W\'nf tiH, llh·.un st
.\ larh·tta Shrlnr Tournament

fonsolatlon
[!in Wa."i.hlngtun 7:1, S ( ' aruli~~a St 7'!
C'lasslt•
a l "' un.~li' r
("humpinnShlp
Mu 'tkinrr:;ulll 66, WoO!!h!r 5:1

At ~hrll'tlll
Cham pi onsh ip

\\' o~lt· r

Wnrn e!Jlurg I Pil l 711,

"

Con'OI•Iatlon
Dll'ldn...an /12. Lyrornln~: U
Mlk· Hh:h C l a~!Jc

A11t~ rr:;lwny

Cnn.~o l utlo n

Muriel Ia !tl, Ce dan111e 93 lOT)
At Ca nton
IUu Grandi' 110. Gu elph ((:aruda l 61

\\'uhh 9H, Brock (Camda) 5$

At t'lodlay

SVAC standings
ALL GAMES
TEAM
w L
Hannan Trace ..... 8 2
Sou thern .............. 6 2
Oak Hill ...... .... .... 7 2
North Gallia ........ 6 4
Easter n ............... :! 4
Symmes Valley ... 3 6
Kyger Creek ........ 3 6
Sou thwestern ...... .0 9
SVAC ONLY
(Varsity)
TEAM
w L
Sou thern .............. 5 1
Hannan Trace .. ... 5 1
Oa k Hill ....... ....... 5 1
North Gallia ........ 3 3
Eastern ............... 3 3
Symmes Valley ... 2 5
Kyger Creek ........ l 5
So uthwestern ....... O 6
TOTALS
24 24
SVAC
(Reserves)
W L
TEAM
Southern ........ ...... 6 0
Hannan Trace ..... 5 l
Oak Hill ..... ..... ... .4 2
Southwestern ...... .3 2
North Ga !lia ... .... .2 4
Symmes Valley ... 2 4
Eastern ............... 2 4
Kyger Creek ..... ... U 6
TOTALS
·· 24 24

ll"a )

(kterma n Clas101lc

" '.}'Uilllng UIO, ('lnl'lnnt\11 1:!
f'lndla .l· llalldu y To urnanwnl

p,

OP
797 633
661 IRO
621 545
626 6!13
450 :m
551 716
509 539
501 668

p

533
488
449
397
386
400
344

Oak Hil l 64, Rock Hill 63
Jan. 5 games
Wahama at Kyger Cree k
OVCS at Sout.hwestern

I

RIO GRANDE (97)- Anthony
Raymore, 5·0-10; Brian Watkins,
4(3)-4·15; Jim Kearns, 611)-2·15;
Marc Gothard, 3-0-6; Ray Singleton, 7-1-15; Mike Wheeler,
1·0·2; Ron Rittlnger,10-0-20; Jeff
Warner, 1-0-2; Doug Fogt, 1-0-2;
Rob Jackson, 5-0-10. TOTALS
43(4)-11-97.
BROCK (50) - Kevin . Moore,
5·7-17; Ken Karch, 1-0·2 ; Mark
Gilbert, 3-1-7; Stan Willoughby ,
1-0-2; Bruce Adams, 1·0-2; Kelly
Grace, 6·3-15; Bruce Girdler,
2-0-4; Steve Kolenko, 0-1-1. TO.
TALS 19-11-56.
RIQ Grande-Guelph
Jim Kearns, the 6·1 guard from
McGuffey, Ohio, exploded for 3Q
points against Guelph for the
Redmen 's 49·polnt victory over
the Gryphons.
One of Rio Grande's leading
3-poin t field goal shooters this
season. Kearns pumped In 5 to
stop Coach Tim Darling's club
cold and was assisted by Rlttln·
ger, who supplied 19. Watkins
was also on target with his
outside shooting, recording four
3·polnters to boost the Redmen
lead. Watkins was credited with
14, Raymore recorded 12 and
Singleton added 11.
Despite the
effortswho
of Guelph's
Raymond
Darling,
had 22
points, the Gryphons were keptln
check as Rio Grande built a 55-28
halftime advantage.
Statistically, the Red men were
58 percent on field goals, compared to Guelph's 30 percent, and
were 64 percent on free throws,
The Gryphons did better with
gratis shots, posting 60 percent.
RIO GRANDE (110) - _An·
thony Raymore, 6-0·12; Brian
Watkins, 4(4)-3·14; Jim Kearns,
12 (5) -1-30; Marc Gotha.ro. 2-0-4;
Ray Singleton, 4·3-11; John
Lambcke, 2-0·4; Mike Wheeler,
0-1-1; Ron Rittlnger, 9·1-19; Jeff
Warner, 1-0-2; Doug Fogt, 2·0·4;
Dave Shepherd, 1·0·2; Rob Jack·
son, 2-3-7. TOTALS 39(9)-12-110.
GUELPH (61) - Terry Upshaw, 1·0-2; Raymond Darling,
8·6·22; Pat Sullivan, 1-0·2; Preston Jlckllng, 4·0·.8; Russ Barry,
2-0·4; Ben Blrstonas, 1-2·4. TOTALS 17-8-61.

all scorers witn 18 a nd McGee
added 10 points.
The Zips improved to 5-3, whioe
B·C dropped to 0-8.
Harr\sQn Shines
In tournament games, Waynesburg (Pa.) tripped Allegheny
(Pa. ), 78·74, to earn the Marietta
Shri ne Tournament title while
host Marietta outlasted Cedar·
ville, 95·93 In overtime for third
place. Gallipolis' Gary Harrison
scored 21 points for the losing

439

437
511

3352 3352

P OP
351 251
345 224

246
281
296
284
324
310
22 16

Monday's results

North Ga llla 60, Hannan Trace 58
Kyger Creek 65, Southwestern :!9
Raceland (Ky .) 84, Symmes ·
Valley 33

Arizona Sun Devils top Air Force
·in Freedom Bowl; Cooper resigns

,~~
.
ito

I

li88bytjEA In&lt;:

"I•/

, . .__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _:...;
· .. _J

"I had three great years forme
and my family," Cooper said."!
leave ASU and Tempe with fond
memories. We went to the
Holiday Bowl, the Rose Bowl and
the Freedom Bowl. We had great
athletes and great coaches ."
A 1962 graduate of Iowa State,
Cooper spent 14 years as an
assistant coach at five colleges
before going to Tulsa. He served
und er Tommy Protho and
Pepper Rogers, among others.
Among tho se reportedly in the
running for the Ohio State job
were Don Nehlen of West Vlrgl·
nla, Bill Mallory of Indiana and
Larry Smith ol Southern Cal.
"It has been a great environment," Cooper sa id . "I'm not
going to live In a better environ·
ment in terms of living conditio ns. I'm leaving because It is a
better situatio n professionally .
"Once I made my decision to
leave, it was over.! told th e team
tonight. I hadn 't had my mind

ANAHEIM, Calif. (UP I) John Cooper resigned as Arizona
State coach after Wednesday
night's Freedom Bowl and refused to confirm reports he will
be named the successor to Earle
Bruce at Ohio State.
"This was my final game at
Arizona State," Cooper said
following the Sun Devils' 33·28
victory over Air Force. " Most of
you know what I'm going to do.
I've coached my last game. Hold
the squad that In the locker room.
" I wlll accept another position
shortly."
Cooper, 50, led ASU to an 8·4
record In 1985 and 10-1-1 mark In
1986 when the Sun Devlls won th e
Rose Bowl. A native of Clinton,
Tenn., Cooper coached for eight
seasons at Tulsa before going to
Tempe. His 11-year career re. cord Is 82-40-2.
The 1987 Sun Devils were 7-4-1.
They sold out 70,491·seat Sun
Devil Stadium for all seven home
games before the season began.

North Gallia 51, Kyger Creek 40
Hannan Trace 73, Southwestern
65
Indian Valley South 62, So uth ern
60
Symmes Valley 70, Westw ood
(Ky .) 44

made up until yesterday. You
have challenges in every job.
You've got to win . l thtnk that's
obvious, no matter where you
coach."
Coo per said he had mixed ·
emotions despite the victory .
" I'm not happy tonigh t," he
sa id. ''I'll te ll you, the guys you
love, the guys who have meant so
much to you for three years , it's
not easy to stand In there In the
locker room to tell those guys
that you're go nna be leaving.
"! guess · r m an emotional
person. It's not easy to say
goodbye."

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·==. ·:·:.: :.:·: :·: :· :• :•: ·~J~~~w~IO~

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~:~·

6 ( ireat Treats.

New Year's Eats.

SEAT FREE

at Ponderosa!

BACK ROW BEAUTY
'

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'79 CHEV. MONTE CARLO ...... Now $995

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aduft enll'ee Ktds Mealtncludes thooce ol ham
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D

Tuesday's results:
--~

Yellow Jackets; Rio Grande Classic; Wyomin g bombed Ci n·
rolled over Guelph !Canada ), clnnati, 100-73. in the Mile High
ll0-61. and Walsh thumped Brock , Classic in De nv&lt;&gt;r.
(Canada ), 98·55, in tM Os terman
Findlay won its tour ney with a
Classic.
65·62 triumph over Kalamazoo
Youngstown State won Its (Mic h.); Defiance nipped Heiholiday c lassic with a 73-64 delberg, 78-77, to capture its
triumph over Radford iVa.) tourney crown; Mount Union
while Eastern Wa shington took ~d ged Buffalo State, 87-84 In
third place with a 75·72 win over overtime to win 1he Carnation
South Carolina State; Muskin- City Classic and Bethany
gum beat Wooster, 66-53, lor the !W.Va.), 68-64 , in the consolatio n
champions hip of. the Wooster game.

OP
351
388
375

395
355 456

233
· 263
286
269
254
215
2216

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 3

Marietta itips Jackets, 95-93; Harrison nets 21

By United Press International
good all night, " he added.
Billy Hahn decided to make a
UNCW coach Bob McPherson
move In the second hall, and it said hi&gt;; team lost composure In
paid off.
the seco nd hal f.
"They forced
The Ohio Untverlsty coach us too far out on the floor and we
moved Paul "Snoopy" Gr aham couldn't get to th e ball inside,"
from forward to guard when the McPhPrson said. "We' stayed
University of North Carolina· close and had a chance to win .
Wilmington had an elghi ·point The turning point was midway
through the secoqd half when we
lead.
"He got us going," sa id Hahn lost our compsure and made
after his Bobcats posted a 72-60 some bad passes and took some
poor shots. I think we showed our
win at Athens .
youth in that stretch."
Backing up Graham was John
Greg Bender and Scott Tierney
Rhodes with 17 points, 17 re·
bounds and holding UNCW's big led UNCW with 13 points . UNCW
iS ·DOW 3-4 , OU is 4-6.
gun Larry Rouzer to 11 points .
"John Rhodes may have.
played the best game of his
Elsewhere Wednesday night,
career," said Hahn.
Marshall defeated Kent State,
Ohio University fell behind 82-67; Akron blasted Bethune28·25 at th e half.
Cookma n, 85-51; Bradley downed
" I felt that our offense was
Dayton, 97-80; and Ohio Northern
reatfyrustylnthelirsthaHfrom .overwhelmed Concordia
the Chr istmas layoff, but our
(Mich.), 89-45.
defense Was great all night "- •. At Huntington, W.Va., Skip
Hahn said. "We had 19 shots In
Henderson broke Marshall's all·
the paint In the ft r st half and
time scoring record . with a
made only seven. So we talked
game-high 30 points in leading
the Thundering Herd past Kent
about confide nc e a t halftime.
" In the second half, our offense State.
got it going. Our rebounding was
Henderson surpassed Walt Wa-

Don't deny kids health care ___n_.D_.c_ol_en

"Children should not be denied
access to the health care system
because or financial barters or
preexisting medical conditions,
and yet evidence suggests th a t
for millions of chlldren this Is the
case." So spaketh the Committee
on Child Health Financing of the
American Academy o f
Pediatrics .
That Is hardly news . Some 35
mllllon Americans are uninsured, and it is estimated that
perhaps 16 million of those are
chllren.
As the committee points out In
the current Issue of Pediatrics,
" ... Even though chlldren repres·
ent on ly 29 percent or the U.S.
population !hay make up nearly
half or the uninsured. Another 7
million children are only insured
for part of the year. Gaps ill
coverage are particularly pro·
found for chlldren between the
ages of 0 and 2 years and for
adolescents and young adu Its
ages 18 to 24 years."
The committee goes on to cite a
1982 study that revealed that
" Jack of insurance was causing
many !amllles not to seek care,
even when a family member was
year. They had approximately Ill . Nearly 4 million families who
$1,000 In that huge jar. They hold
need.ed health care In the 12
services In Albany, Ohio called months prior to the s urvey did
the Living Water Word of Life not obtain it. In 1 million cases a
..
'
Church In a lodge hall at present.
family member was refused care
Lei's all pray that the money will
because of Inability to pay . In
be returned since It belonged to 1982, 23 percent of the uninsured
God and His work. It can't really · had no regular source of health
do anyone else any good In the care.''
long r un. God will res tore It ten
The committee has suggesfold some how.
·tions for Improving the situatio n.
Sincerely
and all of them make sense. They
Dolly Woods
Include:
Rt. 1
- Expanding and Improving
Middleport., Ohio 4-5760
Medicaid. The committee recommends that people with higher ·

A time for givirtg... and stealing!

ou wtns;
•

Page-2. The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 31, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

'\,

'

•

/

There's a family feeling at Ponderosa.'"
{{J 1987.

PoMerose , Inc

f

"

"

.

�'

•

Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 31 , 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio ·

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 5

OUR GIFT .
TO THE
FIRST BORN
OF 1988

~

1

~

I

'

LISTED ON THESE PAGES ARE GIFTS OFFERED BY LOCAL
MERCHANTS THAT GO TO THE FIRST BABY OF 1988 BORN OF
MEI~S COUNTY PARENTS. PARENTS OF CHILDREN BORN ·
AFTER MIDNIGHT DEC. 31 I 1987 ARE ASKED TO -SEND
THEIR NAME, ADDRESS AND DOCTOR'S REPORT TO THE
DAILY SENTINEL NOT LATER THAN JANUARY 11, 1988 AT ·
12:00 NOON.

FIRST BABY 1988 RULES

A S1 soo

GIFT CERTIFICATE
MGM
FARM CITY I INC.
992-2181
POMEROY, OHIO

MEIGS
COUNTY'S
MR. or MISS
OF 1988

992-3785
POMEROY, OHIO

992-2039
POMEROY, OHIO

WE WILL
GIVE TO
THE FIRST
BABY OF
1988

Lot'g OF

Luck!
· A GIFT

FOR THE
FIRST '88
BABY!!
'

A ssoo GIFT CERTIFICATE

A CASE OF

5) In case of tie, award will be dis- ·.
fftbuted at the discretion of
the contest committee.

I

'

.I

'
'

''
&lt;'
'

,.
'

'

PAMPERS

•

992-2955 '
POMEROY, OHIO

CENTRAL TRUST ·
.

"Your Financial Center"
992-3007
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO
MEMBER FDIC

•'

We Will Give
to The First
Baby of The
New Year

Clark's Jewelry St()re
Congratulations
To The First
Baby of 1988

A SlO.OO
·SAVINGS ACCOUNT
..

CARDINAL

992-3471
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROW'S
FAMILY
RESTAURANT
WILL GIVE A·

992-6333

949-2210

We Will
. 'Give To The
First Baby
Of The

'

First Newborn of 1988 .

~ABY

'

CROW'S

A PAIR OF

.'BABY SHOES

FAMILY RESTAURANT

.HARTLEY SHOES

992-5432
POMEROY, OHIO

992-5272 .
,POMEROY, OHIO

'

WE WILL GIVE A CASE OF

A ssoo GIFT CERTIFICATE
'

.FABRIC SHOP

BABY SHOES

lark's Jewelry Store

HERITAGE HOUSE
OF SHOES

992-2054
POMEROY OHIO

992-5627
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FROM THE FOLKS AT.....

FOR MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST ARRIVAL OF 1988

Assoo GIFT CERTIFICATE

SlQOO

'

.I ...
,

992·-7031 '
POMEROY; OHIO

~----------

.

•

992-3671
POME~OY, OHIO

OF POMEROY'

.

WILL PRESENT THE FIRST
"MISS" or ~'MR." OF 1988

'

WITH A CASE OF

'
•,

'

.

BABY FORMULA CHOICE OF BRAND

KROGER'S
POMEROY, OHIO

992-5490

'MEIGS COUNTY'S
FIRST BABY
OF 1988
WILL RECEIVE
, A CASE OF

LUV~'S

DIAPERS .
FROM

.

992-6669 '
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

;.

ELBERFELOS

GOOD FOR BABY ITEMS IN OUR STORE

POWELL'S SUPER VALU ·viLLAGE PHARMACY

992-~84

· POMEROY, OHIO .

.•

WE WILL
GIVE A

KROGER
STORE .·

BABY CUP

'

992-2891
POMEROY, OHIO

COUNTY'S FIRST .
1988 WE WILL
GIVE THE BABY IT'S .

•

BIG BEND FOODLAND WILL BE
OPEN :NEW YEAR'S DAY 9 A.M.-1 0 P.M.

YOUR

NEWBORN OF

.

BEECHNUT BABY FOOD

TO MEIGS ·

FIRST PAIR OF

A S25°0 .
· Gift
Certificate
·For The ·
1988 First Arrival

'

TO THE PARENTS OF THE FIRST
BORN IN 1988!!!

992-2644
POMEROY, OHIO

STOP IN FOR )'OUR NEW

I

. We Will
Give To
The Mother
Of The

l

FRANCIS FLORIST

JOE and SUSAN CLARK

(Choice of Brand)

992-3148
'
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

FRANCIS FLORIST .
WILL GIVE .
THE FIRST
BABY OF
1988 A·

•

1988's
FIRST BABY
GROW ·BIG AND STRONG •••

GIFT ·
We Will Help The Baby
. CERTIFICATE
Look Toward The Future
TO THE
BABY BALLOON AND
With A
FIRST BABY OF 1988
$1 ooo SAVINGS ACCOUNT CUT FLOWER ARRANGEMENT

LOHSE PHARMACY

BABY MILK
~AUCHAN'S

...----------,
..
TO HELP

6) Prizes must be claimed by Jan.

'

3 BOXES OF NEWBORN

AS1 ooo GIFT CERTIFICATE
POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

2) All such babies are eligible.

1988.

Thursday. December 31, 1987

30, 1988.

OUR G'IFT
TO THE
FIRST BABY
OF
1988

. FOR

1 ) Winning baby must be born to
parents who are legal residents of Meigs County.

4) Application must be filed in this ·
office by noon, Jan. ·11,

3) Exact time of birth must be
specified in written statement by attending physician.

1988

We Will
Give The
First Born Of
1988

FREE MEAL

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

' FRUTH

ARMACJ .

992-6491
MIDDLEPORT,
OHIO
(

.___________. ....___....,_;.,___

,...__~

-

�Page-6- The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 31, 1987

Pomeroy-Midaleport. Ohio

•

Osborne feels .'87 Nebraska
squad one of his better teams
SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. (UP!)One game can sometimes change
the look of an enUre season.
That's the situation Nebraska
Coach Tom Osborne faces after
his Cornhusker~ lost 17-7 to
Oklahoma Nov. 21. Despite a 10-1
record, No.5 ranking and a berth
in the Fiesta Bowl, Osborne faces
some disgruntled N()braska fans .
"There is a feeilng among a
good por tion of fans that we've
had a bad year," he said. "That's
difficult to live with. We've had
some good opponents and we're
10-1 ."
However. Nebraska's tradition
of exce llence has jaded many to
the point of believing that a .
season Is a failure If it doesn' t
Involve an Orange Bowl berth
and top three ranking.
Indeed, the Cornhuskers have
been ranked In the top 10 the last
13 seasons and have not been out
of the final rankings since 1968.
Along the way. they have been in
17 straight bowls. including
seven Orange Bowls .
" We have developed the men·
tality here where if we don 't win
the national championship, it's a

bad year," Osborne said . "That's ilack Jamielle Holi eway and
. fullback Lydell Carr, and so me
not the case." ·
Nebraska players became so
In fact, Osbornehasbeenqu!ck
optimistlc they made commen ts
to point out he considers the 1987
implying the Sooners would get
Cornhuskers one of his best
trounced.
teams .
"Our optimism may have been
" This team ha~ played up to its
a · little misplaced, " Osborne
ablllty as well as any team I've
ever coached.'' he said. "We may. sa id. "Our goal was to win the
have had better offensive teams
national championship and we
didn't want to di $courage them."
or better defensive teams. But
Since the Joss, Osborne said he
together, along with the kicking
game, this is one of the best
has been encouraged by hi s
teams I have ever coached."
team's victory over Colorado and
in the way it has prepared for (he
Nebraska and Oklahoma were
Fiesta
Bowl against No.3 Florida
running neck·a nd-neck for No . 1'
most of the season. The Corn·
State.
"Once you take away the big
huskers finally wrested the top
ranking the week of the Okla·
goal. what kind of people have
you got?" Osborne sa id. "The
homa game.
"lt was a very, very disap· Oklahoma game was very dis·
polntlng loss," Osborne said. "I
couraging but the Colorado game
think some things happened • was very encouraging. They
where Oklahoma was conceded
found a way to pull together after
to have the best chance at the a most disappointing loss."
national championship, but they
The coach said he is hoping to
didn 't have a real tough.schedule change local perceptlons with a
and didn't play well in · the
victory over Florida State.
conference. Then they had some
"I don't ,lake a poll bu t I' ve
injuries, and we got our hopes up
gotten a lot of feedback," Osthere."
borne said. "It's not been good
Oklahoma had lost quarter - since the Oklah()ma game."

motavati~n

Spartans work on

By MIKE BARNES
a 10: 30 p.m. curfew on theteam·· s·
UPI Sports Writer
fifth day ln Southern California .
PASADENA, Callf. (UP!) - ' He added Mlchlgan State will
Michigan State Coach George
stay In Newport Beach, about 75
Perles took it easy on his club in
miles south of Pasadena, untll
pnktlce earller this week but
Thursday, when it moves to a
instituted a curfew with the Rose
motel In North Hollywood , 12
Bowl game against Southern Cal
miles from the Rose Bowl.
just two days away.
The Spartans, 8-2-1 , remain a
" We're using a tot of Ice,"
3-po!nt underdog despite beating
Perles said Tuesday at the the Trojans 27·13 on Labor Day in
Spartans' hotel in nearby New· the season opener for both
port Beach. "We're going to back schools.
"The only reason I can see for
off today, knock off the contact
and do some polishing. It's still a that is that the Big Ten has been
little bit early, but we're going to coming out here and losing out
start wo'rking on tM motlvat!on here," quarterback Bobby MeAl·
and 'rah-rah' stuff."
lister said.
Perles then said he would begin
The Pacific-10 has won six

California dinner held at lhe Hollywood Palla·
dlum Tuesday. Michigan State and USC will meet
Friday In the Rose Bowl. UPI

POSE FOR CAMERAMAN - Bob Hope and
Michigan State tailback Lorenzo White pose
together at the Big Ten Club of Southern

Cooper named OSU football coach
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) Arizona State football coach
John Cooper has been named to
succeed Earle Bruce at Ohio
State, an OSU spokesman con·
firmed early Thursday.
Cooper, 50, will be introduced
to the media at a noon (EST)

news conference Thursday at the
Woody Hayes Athletic Center on
the OSU campus, said Marv
Homan, OSU sports information
director.
' In three seasons at Arizona
State, Cooper guided ASU to a
25-9-2 record, including a 33-28
win over Air Force in Wednesday

night 's Wreedom Bow! in Ana·
helm, Calif.
Cooper will become the 21st
head coach football coach at Ohio
Slate and only the third in the last
37 years. Bruce coached the
Buckeyes for nine seasons after
replacing Woody Hayes In 1979.
Hayes coached for 28 years.

Cooper was chosen over several other candidates, including
West University
coach Don
Nehlen told The Charleston
Gazette he withdrew his name
from consideration for the Ohio
State job Tuesday.
Nehlen and Cooper were consi·
held then, the Vikings would be dered the top candidates for the
eligible for tournament play this job.
season.
"It was starting to bother our
" It 's possible the NCAA docket
recruiting and the kids were
is too full to handle all appeals, getting nervous,'' Nehlen told the
but they are capable of calling for Gazette in an article published
a special meeting at any time," Wednesday. " It was time for me
said CSU Athletic Director Bob to do something."
Busbey. "I have read the appeal.
Kent State University coach
I think it makes a very strong
Glen Mason, who was named
case. We felt they (NCAA) had coach at Kansas earlier Wednes·
not looked at all the evidence."
day, also was a candidate for the
The NCAA accused CSU ol 20 OSU job. ·
·
recruiting violations a nd
Before coming to ASU in the
charged head Coach Kevin
spring of 1985, Cooper had seven
Mackey with unethical conduct,
winning seasons in his eight
including lying. Mackey has two years at Tulsa. He succeeded
more years on his contract.
Darryl Rogers, who left to
No team has ever won an
become head coach of the Detroit
appea l with the NCAA.
Lions of the National Football
If the Vikings can win the
League.
championship of the Association
Cooper led the Sun Devils to
of Mid-Continent Universities,
their first Rose Bowl, a 22-15
they can look forward to going to victory over Michigan last Jan.1.
the NCAA tournament .
Nehlen has admitted to being
The Vikings are 7·2 a!ler Interviewed for the Ohio State
defeating Marquette, 72-70, Tues - job, but he .s aid he was not offered
day night in the championship the position.
game of the Milwa ukee Classic. ·
"I didn 't turn anything down
because it was never offered to
me," Nehlen said.

NCAA postpones
CSU's hearing
CLEVELAND !UP! ) - An
NCAA hearing on Cleveland
State University's appeal of
sanctions on its basketball pro·
gram has been postponed indefi·
nitely, meaning the Vikings
could be competing in post·
season tournaments.
Earlier this month the NCAA
charged CSU with recruiting
violations and placed its basket. ball program on probation for
three years, prohibiting the team
from post·season competition
"
this season and nexl.
However, the sanctions cannot
be enforced until the school's
appeal i~ heard. A hearing had
been scheduled for Jan. 8, but
CSU president Walter Waetjen
said the NCAA has informed him
that the hearing ha s been post ·
paned indefinitely.
David Berst, director of en ·
!orcement lor the NCAA, said
Tuesday that the next scheduled
meeting• after January would be
In April and, if theCSU hearing is

Morris signs with
Tigers for $4 million
NEW YORK !UP!) - Jack
Mo rris, the Detroit ace spurned
as a free agent last ·season, has
signed a two-year contract with
the Tigers worth about$4 million.
Detroit Tigers General Man ·
ager Bill Lajoie Tuesday denied
a report I hat Morris signed , bUI a
Tigers spokesman and the Major
League Players Association
Wednesday confirmed the deal.
"That's news to me, " Lajoie
said Tuesday night when told ..of
Th e New York times report
saying Morris · signed a pact
worth $1,988.000 in 1988 and
$1,989,000 in 1989.
Howe ve r. Dan Ewald, a spokesman for the Tigers, F ri da y
said the dea l had been made and
the figures were accurate.
" ] think it was about $4 ,million
for two years," Ewald said.
Morris is baseball's top winner
of th e decade with 141 victories
Since 1980. will get a $1 million
advance on the second-year
salary, bringing, the val~e of his
co nt rac t above $4 million , The
New York Times reported.
·
Th e 32-year -old r!gh t·hander,
18·11 with a 3.38 ERA last season ,
would make the highest annual
average salary ever by a pitcher,
slightly topping the average
yearly ear nings of Fernando
Valenzuel a of Los Angeles and

Rick Sutcliffe of Chicago. Valenzuela will make the most next
year, $2.05 million, in the final
year o.f a three-year contract.
Morris was a free agent for .the
second straight season. Last
year, his proposals were turned
down by the four teams lor which
he wanted play. He ended up
winning a one·year contract for
$1.85 million from Delro!l
through arbitration.
Arbi trator Thomas Roberts
ruled In September that basebali's club owners conspired to
block free agency after the 1985
season. The Players Association
has filed a separate grlevence on
behalf of the 1986 class of free
agents, with Morris' case cons!·
dered one of the more blatant
examples of collusion.
Don ·Fehr, executive director
of the union, said Morris' return
to the Tlge.rs suggests owners are
still avoiding free agents .
"It does not seem to me as if
there was any competition for
Jack Morris' services," Fehr
said Wednesday. "If I'm right
about that, that suggests you still
have a conspiracy . I'm not
saying its not a lot of money but
that's not the Issue. The opera·
· tlon of the market and the lack of
movement in it ls proving there's
stlll a conspiracy :"
I

•

80 yards
opponents
only, second
on the ground
besta game
in the
country.
''There are two big advantages
to the running game," said
freshman tailback Terry Allen,
who led the Tigers and the
Atlantic Coast Conference In
rushing with 868 yards. "If you
get ahead, the run kills the clock .
And if you can get good ball
·control with no fumbles. that's a
lot sa fer than passing when the
ball can be picked off."
The No. 12 Tigers plan to turn
to the sa me things against No.l9
Penn State in the Florida Citrus
Bowl J an. J.
"That' s wh11t we rely on and
we're not going to change any thing now ." Coac h Danny Ford
said.
The Tigers have a variety of
weapons. Wesley McFadden,
who shared the tallback spot with
Allen, ran lor 743 yards and led
the ACC with an average gain of
5.9 yards a carry.

CINCINNATI (UP!) As
79-year-old Paul Brown prefers
to put It, "I'm in the game a Ill tie
blt. "
The Cincinnati Bengals co·
owner and general manager is
st!llln the game a whole lot...- as
this week's process of evaluating
and re-hiring head coach Sam
Wyche !llfistrated.
Before giving his coach one
morE! year to improve on a 4:11
season , Brown put Wyche, whoal
42 ls nearly half Brown' s age,
through three hours of football
soul-searching.
Brown stated his " policies an d
philosophies" to Wyche and then
sat back to hear Wyche's reaction. When Brown was satisfied.
he marched Wyche to a press
conference to announce that
Wyche would . return in 1988.
Anything after that, Brown
noted, depends on Wyche doing a

" lot better" next season.
Wyche · was uncharacteristi cally meek at the news confere nce - a condition obviously
brought on by thret&gt; solid hours of
frank discussion with a general
manager who is extremely In·
voived in day -to·day and gamo·
by-game operations.
j&gt;. form er Bengals coach once
left town saying, "The old man
just can't stay out of it," and
Brown's immense involve.ment
was again demons trated at
Wyche's re-hiring.
''I'm in the game a little bit in
terms of some of things I believe
strongly in," said Brown. "I ride
along with Sam on the airplane
when we travel and I drop these
little things here and there ,"
Said Wyche, "Paul has done
this to me a hundred times , tha nk
goodness - 'Sam, consider this.'
To use his expertise and expe-

NEW ORLEANS (UP]) Syracuse fullback Daryl Johnston says the Orangemen are
Intent on pro. vlng their unbeaten
season is no fluke.
"There are people out there
who say we got toll-Obecausewe
didn't pl ay · that tough of a
schedule," he said. " I! we were
to lose to Auburn, go 11·1, a lot of

Fullback

Tracy

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FRIDAY:

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SATUROAY:

..

Vegtable Soup &amp; Sandwich .............. ~.

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HOURS: MON. thru SAT. 6:30 A.M.-8:00 P.M.

WILLIAMS DINER

Johnson

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MIDDLEPORT

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FOR INSTANT STARTS AND
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. EXTRA POWER.

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CLEAN UP WITH STIHL'S DEFERRED PAYMENT PLAN!'
Purehue any Stlhl chain saw,
trlmmerorblower .. tween
1m..=
September IS ond November 15 ---- - ~
I 987, and make no poyment• until•
lU lll• un~ 1
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Interest during this period) With · .,.. 0 .,.,....

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s hirt freshman who led Auburn in the new
at Syracuse.
r ushing this past season: " We
"In prev tous years, when we
.
fee.! Syracuse Is a good team, but w.er~n't winning, most people
•
we reprettygood too and we won dtdn t seem to care, one way or
what we think is the tOughest . the other," he said. "But thi s
conference in the country."
year, especially after we beat
Rio Grande's Redmen wlll end
Johnston, who averaged Penn State, everyone seemed
a holiday week of basketba li play
nearly five yards a carry whlle caught up In what we had done .
by facing the team they dis·
gaining 564 yards, said Wednes- People s topped us on campus to
placed for the District 22 cham·
day he and his teammates l!ke speak to us, even ask for our
pionsh!p earlier this year.
autographs.
The Redmen play Ron Nle·
"We'd like to keep that feeling
kamp's Findlay Oilers at 3 p.m.
going, show people this hasn't
·
Saturday in Findlay.
been just a one-year thing. That's
Rio Grande edged Findlay
wht beating Auburn is so
91-84 on March 5, 1987 to earn a
important ." ·
berth in the NAIA Nationals in
Syracuse has a remote shot at a
Kansas City, Mo .. a week later.
national championship. That is , The Findlay game, a thrlller the
if Syracuse beats Auburn and No.
Oilers were favored to win, saw
1 Oklahoma and No. 2 Miami tie
All-American player Joe Verhoff
in the Orange Bowl.
pump ,in 32 points for the
"It does no good to speculate on
Redmen, whlle Ron Rittinger
that," Johnston said. "If we wln
added 16. The victory came atter
the Sugar Bowl. we'll be 12-0, the
the Redmen cinched the Mid·
best we can be. If that 's good
Ohio Conference title in earlier
enough to make us No. 1, that's
victories over Tiffin and Walsh.
great. If it 'isn't, that's just an
Niekamp, now,. in his third
opinfon. The way we look at it is
season with the Ol!ers, is workif\g
that if we're 12-0, we will have
beaten everyone we played and
that's all we can do."
"We have no control over who
is named national champion," ·
said tailback Robert Drummond,
The Rio Grande Reserve Offic·
who led Syracuse in rushing wlth
ers'
Training Corps WAREA·
746 )lards. "We would have a lot
GLE
Cadet
Battalion will hold its
of satisfaction ln being 12-0 and
first annual invitational bench
I'm sure we wlil get pumped up
press competltlon Thursday,
playing a team like Auburn."
Jan. 28 at 6 p.m .
Weigh-in time will be 5 p.m.
The meet will be held in the
WAREAGLE Strength Center
below Davis Hall on lhe Rio
Grande Collegge and Community College campus. Entrance fee
will
be $5.
·Holzer Clinic will sponsor the
T-shirts
will be awarded to
next Booster Night with the Rio
each
weight
class winner and
Grande Redmen Tue~day , Jan. 5
trophies
Will
be
awarded to the
when the Redmen host Malone in
male
and
female winner.
overall
a Mid · Ohio Conference
Local competitors and outside
encounter.
Game time is 7:30p.m . at Lyne judges are cordially in vi ted to
this open event.
Center.
The WAREAGLE Battalion is
Tickets for the game are
also
making plans for a spring
avaiiat)le, free of charge, . at
quarter
" IRON-EAGLE ChalHolzer Cl!nlc's maln office, the
competition
to Include·
lenge"
Sycamore branch · in Galllpol!s
squat
from
a
rack
and
deadlift as
and at its Middleport iOC&lt;Itlon.
wei)
as
a
3·
mile
cross
country
A longtime supporter of Rio
mile
run.
A
military
class
will
Grande athletics, the clinic has
Include
a
road
march,
marks·
donated to the Rlo Grande
Tuesday. The Beef Bowl, part ol Cotton Bowl
Boosters Club to continue Its mans hip and ' a climb/ rappel
week festivities is a free prime rib dinner for the
support of sports programs at event.
two Cotton Bowl teams, this year Notre Dame and
Rio Grande College and Co mTexas. UPI
"
munity College.

Tickets available
for Holzer Night

.

THURSDAY:

ALL SMILES- Cincinnati Bengals head coach Sam Wyche (L)
smiles as Bengals general manager Paul Brown announces
Tuesday that Wyche wlll be relalned·for 1988 season. Wyche's job
was In jeopardy after a 4-11 season this year and Brown told Wyche

Bench press
competition slated

Enjoy the very finest In home etyle
cooking at the very best prIces around 1
CLOSED JANUARY 1 &amp; 2 - "Happy Mew Year"

Roast Beef Sandwich ~·············'·•·········· S349
Pork Chops &amp; Dressing ....................... $349

He could see it and he thought we
were right in asking it,"
Wvche desc ribed the dialogue
in the meeting as generally going
like this: '"Here's an area for
improvement. Do you agree? '
'Yeah, thought of that myself.
You're absolutely ~ight.' Or, 'No,
hadn't thought of that myself.
That's an excellent way to go."'
Wyche, of course, had an
alternative to agreement.
Said Brown, "If he had said to
us, 'You don 't think l!ke I do , l
don't belong here,' then that ·
wou ld change it .
''But we agreed on some pretty
basic thoughts. We wanted to be
sure we were on the same page
and he agreed that that was the
page to be on."
Brown then asked Wyche, "Am
l saying it .r ight? "
Wyche's reply was very brief
and very predictable: "Yes."

people will say we had a fluke
season. To beat Auburn · in the
Sugar Bowl can only help us ."
No . 6 Auburn went 9-1·1 during
this season, losing to No. 3
Florida Sta te and tying No. 16
Tennessee.' The Tigers meet No.
4 Syracuse Fr iday (kickoff 3:30
p.m. EST) .
Said Stacy Danley, the red-

Delicious Dishes!

WEDNESDAY:

r ience Is one of the smarter
things I do ."
Although Brown publlcly put
pressure on Wyche by saying at
ttie news conference that Wyche
needed to produce a lot more
wins next year, Brown exacted a
full measure of d!scipl!ne in the
three·hour private mee ting ,
which evidently was somethiQg
like ta king a wayward boy to the
woodshed. ·
"We discussed some of the
poltcies and philosophies that we
believe are Important in our
operation and we presented them
to Sam to find out how he felt
about it," said Brown .
''These are things we feel could
be helpful, th ings we feel are
important. It was the way we
wanted Sam to feel. Things we
thought he shou ld do. Cou ld he?
Would he'~ He concurred with us.

hemustdoa"lotbetter"in1988.UPI

r-;;;;;;;============~~~;;======~

TUESDAY:

•

Johnston says Syracuse season no fluke .
att~tude
R edmen battled
Ftndlay Satur ay

In the nine games the Tigers
won thls season. they averaged
279 yards on the ground. In the
two they lost, they managed only
87.5. That concerns Ford as he
prepares to face Penn State,
whichgaveup121.9yardsagame
on the ground.

MONDAY:

The Daily Sentinel- Page- 7

Paul Brown, at age 79, .still powerfu- tn runntng Ben~als

consecutive Rose Bowls and 12 of
the last 13, and leads the series
22-19.
.
" But I like being the under·
dog," McAllister said. "We've
been the 1underdog all season, so
it's nothing new to us."
McAllister believes Michigan
State has improved since its
initial meetlng with usc.
" We had three new starters on
offense besides me in that game
getting their feet wet- (guard)
Bob Kula, (fullback) James
Moore and t flanker) Willie Bou·
yer," McAllister said. "As the
season went on, we had a chance
to mature and become a better
offense."

ALL UNITS SHOWN FEATURE

•t.t participating dealero.

Thursday, December 31, 1987

Tigers running game, tight
defense spelled '87 success
ORLANDO, Fla. tUPI) -Two
gainned 469 yards and third things spelled success for Clemstring tailback Joe Henderson
son's football team this season.
had 312 yards. In addition, all
four running backs gained 100ot '
The Tigers averaged 244.3
yards rushing a game. ranked ' more yards In at least one game,
15th in the nation. They also
the first time that has ever
stopped the run better than
happened at Clemson.
almost anyone eme, allowing

.·

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

SIGNS FOOTBALL - Notre Dame's He ism an
trophy winner Tim Brown signs a football for
Shari Zoda at the 4th Annual Beef Bowl ]U!Id at
Lawry's Prime Rib Restaurant in Dallas

•

Browns have
first round bye
complex which ser ves as the Los
BEREA. Ohio (UP!)""'\ Thanks
Angeles Dodgers ' spr in g traini ng
to their third straight AFC
home.
.
Central Division title, the Cleve,
in the
Also
being
considered
land Browns will have a bye in
Ohio State Uni versity campus in
the first weekend of playoff
Columbus, Ohio.
games .
"We have made no forma l
Cleveland will then face ei th er
decision
on our training locale for
Indianapolis or Seattle in the
week,"
said Schottenheinext
second round of post -season
mer.
"We're
checki
ng weather
contests, and the Browns don't
forecasts
and
seeing
what's ·
· particularly care which team
available.
winds up being their opponent.
"Vero Beach is a consideration
· "At this point, I don' t th ink it
bein
g th at we' re familiar with
matters to any of us who we
facility. "
that
play," says tackle Paul Farren.
Tack
le Cody R isien, one of
''The key is be ready. We played
seven
Browns
voted to the Pro
the Colts only a month ago
Bowl,
agrees
with
the switch in
!losing 9-7). so we're familiar
training facil!ties.
wlth tr.em but they 're fam iliar
"The ide a is to get so mewhere
with us. too."
where
it's all work -oriented ."
The Browns' first playoff apsays
Risten
. "You miss your
pearance will be on Jan. 9 or 10 at
famil
y,
sure,
but the whole point
Cleveland Stadium. Seattle Will
is
to
prepa
re
for the playo!!s."
be the opponent if it beats
Schotte
nh
eimer
gave the play- Houston ln a wild card game next
ers
off
Monday.
a
lthough
Risien
Sunday. If Hou ston win s that
was
joined
by
wide
rece
iver
contest, the Brow ns face the
Webster Slaughter , Farren, cenColts.
ter Mike Baab, nose tackle Dave
"The aspect of avenging a loss
.
Puzzuoli
and linebacker Clay
to Indianapolis is mea ningless,"
Matthews
is usi ng exerc ise
says Browns coach Marty Sc hot equipment at · Baldwin-Wallace.
tenheimer. "We don 't worry
The Browns wi il have me etings
about who we play. We worry
and run briefly today before
about preparation."
workouts on Wednesday and
Schottenhe!mer sa id Monday
Thursd
ay.
that the tea m would practice at
Schottenheimer
said nose
Baldwin-Wallace Coll ege the rest
tackle
Bob
Golic,
who
broke his
of this week while another
arm
in
Saturday's
19-13
right
practice site is being considered
victory at Pittsburgh, will be
for next week.
re·examined today but probably
The past two years, the Browns
would miss the pla yoffs. Puzzuoli
tiave shifted !heir training head·
is Golic's bac kup . and the coach
quarters to Dodgertown In Vero
sa id defensive e nd Darryl Sims
Beach, Fla .. and the team is
would a !so play some nose
mulling over a return to that
tackle.

We're staying
up late New
Year's Eve.
"",,
'

ea
'· ·'

2
3
4

without the talents of ace playe r
Randy Kortokrax, Findlay's first
player to make the NATA All·
American first team. Kortokrax.
who set numerous record s In his
career at Findla y, graduated th is
year along with some other key
seniors . The Oile rs were 3-6 after
defeating Hunt ington (Ind.) 106· .
86 on Dec. 19, and hosted Olivet,
Nazarene of Bourbalnnais , l!l.,
. Kalamazoo (Mich .) and Grove
· City IPa .) in their own tourn ament this week.
Niekamp is expected to start
two top retu r nees, sophomore
Anthony Slappy and junior Aaron
Roth, as guards. On forward wil l
be senior Brian Stadler and
fres hma n Bill Riley, and center
will be freshman Todd Horm an.
Niekamp also t'l&lt;pects jun ior Pa t
Nolan to join the starting list.
For Rio Grande, juniors Anthony Raymore and Jim Kearns
are expected to start as guards .
with senior Doug Fogt to repeat
as center. Seniors Ron Rittinger
and Ray Sl nglelon, the Redmen' s
two top scorers, will be forwards ,
and freshman Bria n Watkins is
expected to be first of! the bench
for Raymore and Kearns .
Fogt's brothe r Eric, a 6·5
freshman cons idered to be one of
Fi ndlay's top prospects for the
season, may also see action in the
game as a forward .
,
The Redmen will return home
for a conference game Tuesday,
Jan. 5, against Maione, sta rtlng
at 7:30p.m.

GRAVELY TRACTOR ·
SALES &amp; SERVICE
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy , OH .

New Fall 8. Winter Hours
Closed Monday

Tuesday thru friday 9 a.rn.- 5 p.m.
Saturday 9 a.m .- 1 p.m.

~THE

GRAVELY
SYSTEM

PAY-OFF YOUR
CHRISTMAS CARDS

Save up those department store credit card bills as they
arrive. Then, see us about a "Christmas clean-up" loan!

You'll save each month in two ways:

,- ~

·. "'\·

You'll only have one payment to make, instead of several..
Also, department store credit cards have high finance
charges. Our loans cost less, so you pay less!

·'· /

~

Come try our new Breakfast Bar.
This New Yea r's Eve, there's a lot to be excited
about. Because Shoney's new, expanded Breakfast
Bar will be open from 11:00 p.ln. till 3:00 a.m. So
when the patty's over, drop on by. There'll be
plenty to celebrate at America's Dinner Table.

SHOMEY~s

America's Dinner Tables

Free· cabbage wlth any meal on New Year's Day.
'

.

APPLY AT ANY OF OljR THREE
CONVENIENT LOCATIONS!

PEOPLES BANK

Member F.D.I.C.
5th Street 2212 Jackson Ave. Second Street
Mason
New Haven Point Pleasant
675·1121
773-5514
882·2135
EQUAL HOUSING LENDER

G

.

'

�-

"'' :-_.__&gt;::'r.-y-;--;..-:.-"'""'

The Daily Sentinel

By The .B end
.
'

Community calendar
THURSDAY

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet 1 p.m .
Thursday at the Syracuse MunicIpal Bullding. Following the
regular meeting, an organizational meeting for 1988 will be
held.
POMEROY - Mt. Hermon
Church, ·the Texas Community,
will !Yave a New. Years Eve
seryke Thursday starting at 9
p,m.
RUTLAND - Rutland Freewill Baptist Church will have
watch night services Thursday
starting at 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Wesleyan
, Bible Holiness Church. 75 Pearl
St., Middleport, will have watch
night services Thursday starting
at 7:30p.m.
CHESHIRE - A New Years
Eve service will be held Thursday, starting at 7:30p.m .• at the
Silver Run Baptist Church.
·Cheshire.
CARPENTER- A New Years
Eve service will be held at the
Mt. Union . Baptist Church, off
Route 143 on County Road 10,
south of Carpenter, on Thur~day
starting at 8 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Ash St.
Freewill Baptist Church, Middle·
port, will have a New Years Eve
Service on Thursday from 7: 30
p.m. to 12 midnight.
MASON, W.Va.-ABendArea
Gospel New Years Eve service

will be held Thursday, from 7:30
p:m. to 12 midnight, at the
Christian Brethren Church In
Mason, W.Va .
f&gt;OMEROY - Calvary Pil·
grim Chapel, Route 143, near
Pomeroy, will have watch nlgllt
services Thursday. starting at
1:30 p.m. Every0 ne welCome.

.

from 9 p.m . to 1 a.m. Music by the
Write Ones Band. Admission $8
single, $10 couple. Buffet
provided .
LAUREL CLIFF - A New
Years Eve watch night service
will be held Thursday. startirtg at
9 p.m .. at the Laurel Cliff Free
Methodist Church. Refreshments and a film "An Ordinary
Guy," will start the evening.
Speclal ·music, communion, and
a candlelight service will also be
featured. Public invited.

RACINE - A New Year's Eve
service will ·be held Thursday,
REEDSVILLE - Olive Townstarting at 8 p.m .. at the Eagle ship
Trustees will hold a special ·
Ridge Community Church. Eve. meeting to complete year-end .
ryone welcome.
business, Thursday. 6:30p.m., at
RUTLAND - Rutland Church the Reedsville Fire Station.
of God, Route 124, will have
Mt. Moriah Church .
watch night services on Thurs- of RACINEGod,
Racine,
will be holding a
day from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight.
New
Years
Eve
night
Special singing and preaching. service on Thursdaywatch
starting
at 9
Midnight communion will be p.m. Everyone welcome.
offered. All welcome.
GALLIPOLIS Old ti: n~
PORTLAND - Hazel Comprayermeeting, testimony and
munity Church. between Por· songfest, Thursday , 11 p.m ..
tland and Long Bottom, will have Kerr Run Baptist Church. For
a watch night service on Thurs' day, starting at 7:30p.m. Eve- information, contact Mrs. Cornelia Bunch, 992-3168; or Pastory
ryone welcome.
Nyle Borden, 446-3815.
LETART · FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday, 10 a.rn., at the town ship building.
SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees will meet Thursday. 1 p.m.. at the Syracuse
Municipal Building. An organizational meeting for 1988 will follow
the regular meeting.
POMEROY - Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Route 143. near
Pomeroy, will have watch night

Community corner

Thursday, December 31, 1987
-Page-9

services Thursday, starting at
7: 30 p.m. Everyone welcome.
RACINE - A New Year's Eve
service will be held Thursday,
starting at 8 p.m ., at the Eagle
Ridge Community Church. Eve·
.ryone welcome.
RUTLAND - Rutland Church
cit God, Route 124, will have
watch night services on Thursday from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight.
Special singing and preaching .
Midnight communion will be
offered. All welcome.
PORTLAND - Hazel Com munity Church, between Portland and Long Bottom, will have
a watch night service on Thursday, starting at 7:30 p.m. Everyone welcome.

person.
MIDDLEPORT - A New
Years Even dance will be held at
the new Middleport American
Legion building on Thursday
SATURDAY

REEDSVILLE - Olive Town.
ship Trustees will hold an organ!•
zationalmeetlng on Saturday at
10 a .m. at the Reedsvtlle Fire
Station.

In our store~

.

·ce
on
AnY
Item
25% Off Prl~e.
t and Are excluded From - ··
Regular P r1
Are Still 111 EffeC
Prices in our: oec. 27th _circular

0
Off HECKS

0

D

Regular Price

Additional

0

Off HECKS ·Regular

Price

on All curtains
"'&amp; Draperies
in Stock

on Entire
Christmas Dept.

Off our Previously
Marked Down
Clothing Items

Limited quantity merchandise. sorry, no ralnchecks.

Umlted seasonal merchandise only, sorry, no ralnchecks.

Limited seasonal.merchandise only. Sorry, no ralnchecks.

D

Off HECKS

-

Regular Price

Off HECKS

Regular Price

on All sports
outerwear&amp;
Rubber
Boots
sports Dept.

on All Insulation.
Weather Stripping &amp;
Heat Tape

Limited seasonal merchandise. sorry, no ralnchecks.

Limited season~! merchandise only. sorry,__~o ralnchecks:

Off HECKS

Regular Price

on All Kerosene &amp;
Electric Heaters

sorry, No Layaways or Ralnchecks on These Items. All Items Subject to Prior Sale. styles anti Models May vary Per store.
9

ooes Not

' '

'.

eriC·

lncludP;icc~;e;~•c;~F~C; ATn.LieHECKS LO~ATIONS!
•

'·

•

..

Happy New Year!
How nice it is to throw away
that old calendar, hang up
. a new one and
start all over
"gain.
,
The new year
offers a time not
only for letting
mistakes of the past become a
part of the past and for letting old
grudges die, but also the chance
to reflect on the good th lngs of the
past year and then to resolve to
move on to new and greater
opportunities.
1988 offers a clean slate and it's
reassuring to believe that the
mistakes of the past will be
avoided a second time around.
Before us Is the pr.omise and
the challenge of a whole new
year and as Jackie Gleason
would ~ay. "How sweet it Is!"
Again Happy New Year!
The holidays have been happy
days for most families.
Joining Bill and Noami King at
Bradbury for a Christmas buffet
and gift exchange were their four
children and their families. Here
from Huntington were Rick and
Sherr! Meckstroth, Nicole and
Aaron, and from Circleville
Kevin and Cathy King and
daughter. Chelsea. They, were
joined by Hank and Kathy
Johnson and children, Jess1ca
and Derek, and Debbie and Steve
Finlaw, Heather and Matt. all
local.
Despite a cooking accident
Grate with
badly
which
burnedleft
andGene
bandaged
ha nds,
he
entertained with his trad itional
family dinner party on Christmas day. His guests were Bill
and Ruth Grate, Jim, Vicki and
Rebecca Grate, all of South
Charleston; Janice Dudding,
Huntington, W.Va.; Ruth and Ed
Tewksbary, Wellston; Tom and
Joan Tewksbary and children,
Trisha and Kim, Zanesville;
Leland and Brenda Brown,
Woodbridge, ~a.; Leland and
Mary Brown, Middleport . and
Charles and Rita Tewksbary,
Warren.
Guests of Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Roach, Pomeroy, on Christmas
Day were their sons, Darin,
Raymond and Tom, along with
his wife, Fay a nd children,
Brandon a nd Bron; and daugh ter. Trudy Williams, her husband, Mark. and children, Kasey
and Jordan, a-long with the
Roach's grandchildren, Charla
and Ashley · Roach, and Mrs~
Roach's mother , Marie Francis.
Making Christmas bright for
the Rev. and Mrs . J ames Keesee
was having all their children
home for the holidays. Don and
Verenla Barkman of Chatanooga, Tenn. joined other
members of the family who all
live here, Angela and Charlie
Hall, Wanda and Dwight Ashley
and children, Jennifer and Jo.shua. James. Jonathan, Dawn

SYRACUSE - Sutton Township Trustees w'ill meet Thursday .. 1 p.m., at the Syracuse
Municipal Building. An organizational meeting for 1988 will follow
the regular meeting.

FRIDAY

RUTLAND - A New Years
Eve dance, open to the public,
will be held Thursday , starting at
9 p.m .. at the Rutland American
l--egion Hall. Admission $3 . Bring
own refreshments . Ali ages
welcome.

25°/o OFF couNTRvAi~~NITURE,

RACINE -A New Years Eve
Dance, open to the public, will be
held Thursday, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m .•
at the Racine American Legion
Hall. Music by Circle D
Wranglers. Admission S5 per

BASHAM - Meigs County Fox
Chasers Association will meet at
the club house on Eagle Ridge
Friday. 7 p.m.

Mr. and Mrs, Don Lisle, Syracuse were Keith and Karen Lisle
and sons. Jason and Nicholas.
Warrior, Ala. The Keith Lisle
family. Don and Mary Lisle,
John and Janice Lisle, Todd Scott
and Travis, joined Mr.' and Mrs .
goy Jenkins. Kimberly !lnd Rochelle,' at Forest Run for breakfast on Christmas morning.

Includes: Trash Cans, Cradles,- Tater and Onion
Boxes, Hope Chests and Bedroom Suites.

15°/o OFF STOREWIDE!
SALE NOW THRU JANUARY lOth

and is majorig in botany while
working in the lab at Ohio
Universitr. Her husband entered
the U. S. last Christmas and
attended ·a university in Alabama until September when he
transferred to Ohio. Zhou is an
occasiona I weekend visitor ol AI
and April Harmon, Syracuse.

GINGERBREAD HOUSE
OF GIFTS
Hours: 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Mon.-Sat., 1·6 p.m. Sunday
1101 Viand Street
Point Pleasant, WV.

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POMEROY -Salisbury Township Trustees meeting, 7 p.m .•
Monday at township garage on
Rock Springs Road.
(Co ntinued on Page 111

LETART FALLS - Letart
Township Trustees will meet
Thursday. 10 a.m., at the township building.

POMEROY - A round and
square dance will be held at
Pomeroy· Senior Citizens Center
on Friday from 8 p.m . to 12
midnight. Music by Larry Hubbard and True Country Band.
Admission $1.50 per person.
Public invited . Bring snacks.

Lisle home for a . gift exchange,
From
there
they
and
then
on to
thewent
Don Lisle
to thehome
John
for more gifts and dinner.
Bill Radford, Toledo, and
daughter, Brooke Radford , Bethesda; Anna Florence Pullins,
Columbus. and her son, Don, and
his wife and son, Chris, were
pre-Christmas visitors of Bill and
Louise Radford. The local Rad·
ford s were joined for Christmas
dinner by Fred and Frances
Goegleln, Mary and Roger Gilmore Tim Glaze. and Allen
Gidrig.
·
Ronald and Connie Thompson
and children, Beth and Sam, New
Haven, spent Christmas Day
with her parents, Everett and
Kate Bachner.
Kenny and Lisa Roush, Jason,
Justin and Jeremy. •Pomeroy,
were among the many visitors at
the home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Albert Roush, over the
holidays.
Enjoying a holiday dinner at
the home of Helen and Virgil
Teaford recently were Zhou Jin
and husband, Dong Ni. The
Chinese co uple are from Peking
and ·a re both students at Ohio
University. Zhon Jin has been in
the United States for 18 months

---

The Gingerbread Boy Says •.•

.

and Melinda Keesee, for. the
holiday weekend. Also with the
family for Christmas was Lawrence Cua, an exchange student
from the Philippines making his
home this year with the Ashleys.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Steiner of
.war.ren spent several jlaJ._S h'&lt;re
with his mother, Mrs. Marie
Steiner. Middleport. Mr. Steiner
is on vacation from his duties as
an assistant professor at a
college In Big Rapids, Mich.
Holiday vlsltiors at the home of
Audrey Brewer and David at
Stiversville were Earnest
Brewer, Racine; Mr. and Mrs.
Gerold White. Murrysville, W.
Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Junior Pauley,
Portland; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Brewrr• Sr., Columbus; Mrs.
Marilyn Beall and Mark Beall,
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Michael
Wood, Columbus; Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Brewer and Mrs . Jane
Fitch and Brandon, Long Bot tom; Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Close,
Waterford; Mr. and Mrs. Mark
Garrett, Worthington ; Emma
Lee Brewer, Reynoldsburg, and
Leonna Beegle, Racine.
Veda Davis entertained Christ. mas Day with a family holiday
dinner. There were Bill and
Margaret Lehew, son, Billy,
Pomeroy; Sadie Thuener, Syracuse, Ted and Vicky Lehew and
sons, Nate and ian, Chillicothe,
and Cheryl Lehew, Galilpolis. On
Christmas Eve the group joined
John and Allee Lehew and
daughter, Sarah Jo, at Jackson.
Home for the holidays with ·
their parents, Mr . and Mrs.
James Johnson. Middleport. and

MONDAY

HARRISONVILLE - Harrisonvtlle Masonic Lodge 411,
F&amp;AM, wlil meet at 7:30 p.m.
Saturday at the hall.

Throw.out the old, ·bring on all the new
By CHARLENE HOEFLICH

SALEM CENTER - Star
Gra nge and Star Junior Grange
will hold their regular meeting at
8 p.m. Saturday at the grange
hall; a potluck supper will follow
the meeting. __ _
RUTLAND - Rutland Town·
·ship Trustees will hold their
organizational session Satur&lt;;lay
at the Rutland Fire Station.

12 CT.
Reg. $1,49

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WE WILL BE OPEN JANUARY 2nd .
SALE ENDS JANUARY 6th

SHOP
SINGER THE FABRIC
992·2284
APPRO\IED DEALER

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POMEROY OHIO

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89(

�•
Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel

Thursday, December 31, 1987

Pomeroy-,Middleport. Ohio

This Message and Church Directory Sponsored By The Inte~sted Busi~esSf!S Listecl On Thfs Page.

.

" MEIGS nRE
\ \ CENTER, INC.

'

"Fu'-ri•R K"tuelcg Fri1d Cbiehn"
228 W. Main St., Pomeroy
992-5432

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992 2955

a1

CHAPMAN SHOES

"Pomstog 't Quality Shoe Sto,"
104 E. MAIN ST., POMEROY
992-2815

CorJEr Union and MuJOOrry Rev

am

POMEROY FIRST BAPTIST Lys too
HallE!')', minister, Saturdav even in g
eva ngelistic services open to public, 7 p
m
Sunday Church Sc hool. 9 30 a m ,
Mornintt Wo rship 10 30 am
FIRST SOUTHERN BAPTIST, Po
meroy Pike E Lamar O' Brya nt pa st or.
Jack Ne eds Sunday Sc-hool. Direct or Sun
day School 9 30 a m . Morning Wors hip,
10 45. ev~:&gt; nlni1: worship 7 00 p m iDS T )
jl 7 30 (EST l. Wedn esday Pra yer Ser
vil!C', 7 00 p.m (0 S T \ &amp; 7 30 P M 1 E S
•T 1, Mission F riend s (ages 2 61 Royal
Ambassadors (boys ag es 618) and Gi r ls
In Act ion (ag e'S 6 18) on We dn esdays 7 p
m (DST )&amp; 7 JOpm (E.ST) Tuesda y
Vis itat ion 6 3U p m
FAITH TABERNACLE CHURCH Sal
ley Run Road, R('ll Emmett Ra wson. pas
tor. Handl eo;~o Dun n. supt Sunda y School
10 a m Sunday PVeningsf'rvice, 7 30 p m
, Bible teachmg: 7 30 p m Thu rsday
SYRACUSE MISSION Cherry St , Sy
ra cust" Services 10a m Sunday Evening
s~r vtces Sunday and Wedn esday at 7 00 p

m

MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST

IN CHR ISTIAN UNION 0\Aiight Ha ley
ftrst eld~r. Wanda Mohler, Sunday School
Supt Sunday School 9•30 a m , Mornin g
Worship 10 30 a m , Evening Wors hip 7 30
p m . WN!nesdav prayPr ffief'1 mg7 30 p m
MT MORIAH CHURCH OF GOD
Racine Rev J a mes Satterfi eld pastor
F re-e man Williams Sup! Sunday Sc hool
9 45 am . Su nda} and Wed nesday even
tng serv ices 7 p m
MIDDL EPORT F IRST BAPTIST
Co rn er Sixth and Palmer Earl Eden Pas
tor Bob Parker S S Supt , Ca thy Rig gs
Asst Supt Sunday School, 9 15 a m ;
Morn in fi! Worship 10 15 a m . Su nda}o
Evemng service i p m Prayer m eet ing
-a n&lt;t B1bll! Study Wedn es day ev~ n lng, 7 p
"m : Children s choir practice, WednC'S
da y 7 p m , Adu It choir practIce. Wed . 8
·p m Radio prl;f:ram WMPO, Su nday
8.30 a m
MIDDLEPORT CHURCH OF CHRIST
5th and Ma in AI Hartson, minister,
Ri chard DuBas£', Assocl,lt e Past or Mike
Gerlach Sunday School Su perint e ndf'nt
Bible School 9 30 a m . Mor nin g Worship
10 30 a m Evening Wo r~ h1p 7· 00 p m
~Wednesda y , 7 00 p m Prayer m eeti ng
• MIDDLEPORT CHURC H OF' TH E NA·
..ZARENE , P ASTOR Fred P~n horwood
~am Whit e, . Sunday School Su pt Sund ay
-school 9·30 a m ; Morning: Worship 10 45
am : Evangelistic m eetl n~ 7 00 p m
Wednesday, i 00 p m Pr ayer m eeting

UNrrED PRESBYTERIAN MINISTRY
OF MEIGS COUNTY
Rev . {;harl£'8 Talbott
HARRISONVILL E PRESBYTERIAN
-cHU RCH ,.,- Su nd ay· Wors hip Services
9 00 a m , Churc h SchootlO 15 a m
MIDDLEPORT PRESBYTER1A~ ~O~~aJ ~chool. 9 a
Churc h service,

m,

SYRACUSE FIRST UNITED PRESBY
TERIAN - Su nday School, 10 a m
Chu rch service. 11 15 am
RUTLAND CHURCH OF GOD , Pasta
•J oh n Evans S und ay School 10 00 a. m ,'
"Sunda y ~orning Worship 11 00 a rn Ch11
dr en's Church l1 am Sunda y Eve ning
Service 7 00 p m Wed , 6 p m You ng La
dies' AuKU iary Wrdnesday, 7 p m Fam
lly Wu rship

HAZEL COMMUNITY CHURCH Off
Rl 124 3 miles from Portland-Long Bot
tom. Edsel Hart . pastor Sundat SchOol,
9. 30 a m , Sunday morning preaching
10 JO a m , Sunday even ing services, 7 30

pm

MIDDLEPORT FREEWILl. BAPTIST
CHURCH. Corner Ash and Plum Noel
Herrmann p astor Sunday SchOollO OOa
m Morning Worship, 11.00 a m Wednesday and Saturday Evening Services a t

730pm
MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
NORTHEAST CLUSTER
Rev. Don Archer
Rev. Roy Deeter
Rev. Seldon Johnsoo
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a m
Worship, 11 a m UMYF 6 30 p m UMW
Third Tuesday. 7:30 p m Communion
fir st Sunday !Archei')
CHESTER - Worship 9 am . Church
School lOam BibleStudy, Thursday, 7p '
m , UMW. f1rst Thursday, 1 p m, Com
munlon, first Sunda:,; (Archer'
JOPPA - Worship 9 30 am Church
Schooll0 .30 am Bibl e Study Wednesday,
7 30 p m (John s oo )
LONG BOTTOM - Church School 9 30
a m Wor ship 7 p m, Bible Study , Wed
nesday. 7 30 p m UMYF. Wednesday.
6 00 p.m
Communio n First Sunda;.
(Archer \
REEDSVILLE- Chu rch Schoo19.30a
m , Worship Service 11 00 a m (Deeter) .
TUPPERS PLAINS ST PAUL Church School 9 am, Worship 10 a.m
Blblf' Stud y, Tuesday, 7 30 p m, UMW.
Thi rd TuPsday 7 30 p m Communion
First Sundav (Archf'r)
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Jam_, E. Cortlltt
Rev Kandy Burch
Rev. Melvln Franklin
Rev . Clemente S. Zuniga, Jr
Rev. Robert Mu!lsman
ASBURY (Syracuse)- Worship 11 am
Church School 9 45 a m , ChargP Bible
Study , Wed.nf"Sday, 7 30p m , UMW , first
Tuesday, 7 30 p m : Choir RE:hearsa. l.
Wednesday 6 30 p m : UMW fou rth Sun
day 6 30 p m (Burch )
ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
Church School 10 am. Bibl e Study , Tu es.
da y 7 30 p m , UMW First Monday, 7 30
p m, UMYF Sund ay, 6 p m Cho ir R~
hear:sal, 6 30p m Wednesday ~Franklin)
FLATWOODS- Church School lOam
Worship, 11 a m. , Bible St udy Thurs
da y 7 p m. UMYF, Su nda y 6 p m
(Frank li n)
FOREST RUN - Worship 9 a m ,
Church School 10 AM Choir pracl\ce,
Tuesday. 6 30 p m , UMW. firs t Tuesday,
7.30 p.m (Burch I
HEATH (Mi ddleport \ - Church School,
9. 30 am .. Morning Worship 10 30 am .
Yo ut h Group, 4 p m , Wednesday, Chu rc h
Choir rehearsal. 7 p m
Th ursday
Prayer Service, 6 30 p m .. Bib!~:&gt; Studv, 7
p m (Zuniga)
MINERSVILLE - Worsh ip Service 10
am .. Church School, 11 am , UMW third
Wednesday 1 p m , Choll prac11ce, Mon
day , 7 J0 p m (BUICh )
PEARL CHAPEL - Worshi p Service
9 30 a m , Church School 10 15 a m 1
UMW Second Tuesday , 7 30 p m, ( Mu ss
m a n)
POMEROY- Chur ch School, 9 15 a m
, Worship lO 30 a m Gho lr reh earsal
Wednesday , 7.30 p m . UMW, second
Tuesday, 7 30 p m. UMYF'Sunday, 6p m
(Corbitt)
ROCK SPRINGS- Chu rch School, 9 15
a m , Worship 10 am Bible Study Wed
nesda:,;, 7 30 p m , UK1YF (Se nior s) Sun
da y ~ p m , (Juniors ) e\.ery ot her Sun
day 6 p m l F ran klin )
RUT LAND- (:hurch School 10 am,
\\i orsh ip, 11 am UMW Fl1sl Mo nday ,

7:)0pm

SALEM CENTER - Church School 9 15
Worship 10 15 p m (Mu ssman )
SNO WVILLE - Wor s hip , 9 00 a m ,
church sc ho o19 45 am (Mussman!

am

SOUTHERN CLUSTER

Rev Ror;er Grace
Rev. Paul McGuire
Rev . Keith Rader
APPL&amp; GROVE -Church School 9 30
am Worship, 10·00 a m (first and third
Sund ays), Blbl ~study eve ry Sund ay 6 p
m UMW Seco nd Tuesday, 7 00 p m ,
Prayer meeting. Wedn es da}o , 6 p.m
(Grace)
BETHANY- Worship, 9 a m , Church
Sc ho ol, 10 am: Bible Study, Wedne&gt;Sday,
10 a m , Dorcas Women s Fellowship,
Wedn esday, 11 am (McG uire)
•
CARMEL - Church School 9 30 am.,
Worship, 10 45 a m Second and Fourth
Sundays, Fellowship dinner with Suttoo
third Thursday, 6 30 p m (McGuire)
EAST LETART - Church School9a m ,
Worship 10 am second and fourth Su n
days, UMW tirst Tuesday, 7 :ll p m
(Grace ).
LETART FALLS - Worship 9 a m ,
Chu rch SchooilO a m (G race).
MORNING STAR- Wo rship, 9 45a.m,
.Chu rch Sc hool, 10:30 am .. Bi ble STudy
Thursday. 7 30 p m (Rader )
RACINE WF;SLEYAN -Church School,
lOam, Worshlpllam, UMW fourthMon
da) at 7.30 p m , Men's Pray£&gt;r B~akta.~t ,
Wednesdav, 7 a m {Grace)
SUTTON - Churc h School, 9 30 a~m ,
Morning Worshi p 10 45a m fir st a nd third
S'ol{!days FellowShlp'din ncr with Carmel
third Thu rsday, 6 30 p n1 IMcGu ire )

I

804W. Molm

•

lil

786 NORTH SECOND AVE.
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Get out the paper hats and the noisemakers, to
welcome the new year! Put on your finest attire
and.get together with friends and relatives to ·
await the turning of the calendar at midnight,
wh1ch could also ring in a new way of life for
you. However, if you would experience that
good feeling of a fresh start, be 1careful not to
overdo the celebration. If you have this
tendency, it is hoped that a sincere desire to
overcome it .;,.ill be included on the list of
resolutions that you plan to follow; unlike those
previous years in wl)ich all your good intentions
had evaporated by the middle of January,
as you will recall by looking back over your
record of performance. Of course, that list
should also provide for regular attendance at
your House of Worship; and if you will just
abide by this one item, all the rest of them could
prove to be quite unnecessary.

Grocenes-

:De-

•

AIDNG WITH A NEW YEAR,
IT'S TIME 10 S'D\RT A NEW UFE

SONS SlORE
Racme949 2550

GRAHAM
UNITED METHODIST.
Preaching 9 30 a m fir st and second Sun
days of each month , third and fourlh Sun
&lt;lay ~ach month wor~hlp sefv!C&lt;'s at 7 30 p
'm , Wednesday l'Venlngs at 7 30 p m
Trayer a nd Bib\ e Study
.. SEVENTH-DAY ADVENTlST
Mul
.berr,' Heights Road, Pomeroy Pastor
Jo hn Sweigart , Sabbath Sc hool Superln
tend~nt , Darline Stewart Sabbath School
begins at 2 p m on Saturday •after noon
with worship serv ice foll owing a t 3· 15 p m
Everyone welcome
RUTLAND FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
- Sist~r Har r iett War ner, Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m Mormng Worship, to · 45

12 8760

WAID CROSS

992-5141

I{

of Columbus. 0.

'

1

J•

992-2318 Pomerov

Brown's Fire &amp;
Equipment. Sales
and
Ser,v tee
PhOne

(614)742-2777

.

FlOWERS FOR IVERY OCCASION

(6141992-2039 or
(6141992-5721

lOb. 8Utternul An., Pomeroy, Oh.

MIDDLEPORT - Dav1d and
Tamm1 Stobarl Cole. Bradbury
Road. Mlddleporl, are announc •
ing the birth of a daughter.
Samantha Jo , at O'Biencss Ho s' pital, AI hens. Nov. 26 The infant
· we1ghed s1x pounds, 14 ounces
and was 19 mches long
• Grandparents are Allen and

Bill Quickel and Ruth Ann Fo• ,

rMlJ
-z:::::;r

Veterans
Memorial Hospital
Pomeroy

115 E. Memorial Dr.

··2·2104

HARTFORD Cl-IURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTIAN UNION Hartfcrd W Va
Rev David McManis, pastor Church
SChool 9 30 a m : Sunday mornin g ser
vice, 1l a m Sunday even ing service,
7•30 p m Wedn es day prayer m eet ing, 7 30

day School9• 30 a m ; morning worship 11
a m . Sunday evening service 7 30 p m
Prayer Meeting Wednesday, 7· 30 p m
SYRACUSE FlRST CHURCH OF GOD
non Pen tecostal Worship service Sunday
10 am; Sund ay School 11 a m Evening
worship service 7·00 p m W~rlnesda y
prayer meeting 7 •00 p m
MT HERMON UNITED BRETHREN
TN CHRIST CHURCH, Located in Texas
Community off Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
Sand~rs , pastor Jpff Holter, lay lead~r.
Ed Roush , Sunday School Supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m : morning worship and
children's church 10 30 a m , ~venlng
preaching serv lct&gt; first three Sundays ,
7•30 p rn ; Special service fourth Sunday
r.v~ntng, 7 30 Jl m
Wednesday Prayer
Meeting, Bib!~ Study and Youth Fellow
s hip , 7 30 p m
CHURCH OF GOD OF PROPHECY
Located on 0 J . Wh\IP Road of Highway
160 Pat Hensoo pastor Sunday SchoollO
a m Classes for all ages Junior Church 11
am; Morning worship 11 am Adult
Choir practice 6 p m Sunday Young Propie's Children s Church and Adult Bible
Study, Wednesday at 7 30 p m
HOPE BAPTIST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
St , Middleport Afflllated with Southern
Baptt.st Convention David Bryan Sr., Ml·
nister Sunda:,; School 10 a m : Mornln~
worship 11 am, Ev£&gt;ning worship 71? m .,
Wednesday ev~nlnR Bible study and
prayer meet ing 7 p m
BRADFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST, S1
Rt 124and Co Rd 5 MarkSeev~rs. minister Sunday School Sup! Harry Hen·
drtcks, Sunday Schoot9 30 a.m .. Morning
Worship 10 3U a m , Evening worshtp 7 p.
m Wednesday worship 7 p m
ST. PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Ccrner Sycamore and Second Sts Pomeroy The Rev Willi am Mlddleswart,
pastor Sunday School 9 45 a m . Church
serv\ct&gt; 11 a m
SACRED
HEART CHURCH. M•gr
Anthony Giannamore Ph 992 5898 Saturday Evening Ma ss 7 30 p m , Sunday
Mas s. 8 a.m and 10 a m. Confessions one
half hour befot e each Mass CCD classes ,
11 a m Sunday
VICTORY BAPTIST 525 N 2nd S1 .
Middlepor t James E Keesee, pas t or
Sunday morning worship 10 a m , Even·
lng service 7 p m , Wednesday evening
wor ship 7 p m Vi s itation Thursday 6 30 p
m

MORSE CHAPEL CHURC!t David
Curfman , pastor Sunda y School, 10 a .m
worship service 11 a m , Sunday ni ght
worship service 7 30 p m, Midweek
prayer s~rv lce Wednesday 7 p m
WESLEYAN
BIBLE
HOLINESS
CHURCH of Middleport, In c , 75 Pearl Sl ,
Rev lvan Myers, pastor, Roger Manley,
Sr, Sunday School Sup1 Sunday School
9· 30 am: Morning Worship 10 30 am.,
Evening Wor ship 7 30 p m Wednesday
evening Bible study, prayer and ptaise
service, 7· 30 p m
LIVING WORD CHESTER CHURCH
OF GOD- Gilbert Spencer pastor Sun
day School 9 30 a m , Mornin g servke
10 OOa m, Su nda yeveningservlce7 OOp
m , Mid we~k prayer S(lrvice Wednesday
7 p Ql
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH ,
Lawrenre Bush, pastor MaJI F olmer Sr
Supt Sunday School and Morning Worship
9 30 am, Sunday even ing service, 7p m ,
Youth meeting and Bible Study, Wednes
day 7 p m.
UNITED FAITH CHURCH, Rt 7 on Po
meroyBy Pass Rev DavldWiseman,Sr .

past or Melvin Drake, S S Supt Sunday
School9 30 a m , Morning Wors hip 10· 30;
Ev~nlng Worship 7· 30 p m , WMnesday
Prayer Service, 7 30 p m
FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH Rallrood
St , Mason Sunday SchoollO a m ; Morn·
lng worship 11 a m , Evening servicE' 6 p
m Prayer meeting and Bible Study WE'd
nesday 7 p m
FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rev Nyle
Borden, pastor. Cornelius Bunch, supt
Sunday School 9 30 a m., Second and
fourth Sundays \\i orship service at 2 30 p
m
MT MORIAH BAPTIST, Fourth and
Main St • Middleport Rev Gllbert Craig,
Jr, pastor Mrs Ervin Baumgardner,
Sunday School Supt Sunday Schoo19. 30a
m ; Worship Service, 10.45 a.m
SUCCESS ROAD CHURCH OF CHRIST
- Joseph B Hosk ins evangelist. Sunday
BibJeStudy9a m Worshlp,10a.m., Sun
day evening service 6 p m. , Wednesday
evening service, 7 p m .
PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY. Racine,
Rt . 124 William Hoback, pastor Sunday
School 10 am. Sundav eveninp: service 7
p.m Wednesday evening serv ice 7 p m
CARPENTER BAPTIST Don Cheadle,
Supt Sunday School 9 30 a m. Morning
Worship 10 30 a m Prayer service, altern
ate Sundays
THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST,
APOSTOLIC FAITH - New Lima Rd f
nCKt to Fort Meigs Park, Rutland Robe-rt
Richards, pastor Services at 7 p m on
Wedn~days and Sundays
HARRISONVILLE HOLINESS CHAP·
TER of lhl' Wes leyan Holin ess Church
Rev Davit;!. Ferren, pastor Henry Eblin
Sunday School Supt . Sunday School10 a
m Morning Worship 11 a m ; Evening
service 7 30 p m Wednesday evening ser·
vice 7·30 p m
STIVERSVILLE WORD OF FAITH,
Harry Heller, pastor Sunday services
9 30 a m and 7 p m ; Midwe ek service,
7 30 p m Thursday
MIDDLEPORT PENTECOSTAL, Th1rd
Rev Clark Baker. pastor Carl Not t\n~tham, Sunday School Supt Sunday
School. 10 a m with classes for all ages
Evening services at 6 p m Wednesday Bi ·
blestudy at 7 30 p m Youth services Frl·
day at 7.30 p.m
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP 128 Mill S1.,
Middleport Brother Chuck McPherson,
pastor Sunday School 10 a.m. , Sunday
evening services at 7 p m. and Wednesday
services at 7 p m
.
ANTIQUITY BAPTIS'I . Kenneth Smith,
pastor Sunday School 9 30 a m, church
service 7 30 p.m.. youth fellowship 6 30 p
m , Bible study, Thursday, 7 30 p m
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE, 33045
Hiland Road , Pomeroy Tom Kelly, pas
tor Danny Lambert, S S Supt Sunday
morning service at 10 am, Sunday ev~n
Jng service 7 30 p m Tuesday a nd Thurs
day Services at 7· 30 p m
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE, Rev Glendon Stroud , pastor
Sunday School9 · 30 a m , Worsh ip st&gt;rvi«!,
10·30 a m ; Youth service Sunday 6 1 ~ p
m Sunday evenlngserv tce7 OOp m Wed·
nesday Prayer Meeting and Bible Study
7 00 p m
NEASE SETTLEMENT CHURCH, Sunday afternoon services a t 2 30 Thursday
ev.entng services a t 7 30
F IRST BAPTIST CHURCH , Ma.on, W.
Va Pastor Bill Murphy Su nday School 10
am, Sunday eventng 7 30 p m Prayer
meet in~ and Bible st udy W~dnesday , 7 30
p m Everyone welcomt&gt;
RUTLAND FREE WILL BAPTIST. Sa·
lem St Rf'v Paul Taylor, pastor. Sunday
SchoollO a m , Sunday evening 7 00 p. m.,
Wedn~day evening praye1 meeting 7 00
Av~

p.m

SOUTH BETHEL NEW TESTAMENT
CHURCH , Silv~r Ridge Duane Syden
Stricker. pastor Sunday School 9 am
Worship Service, HI am. Sunday~vening
servlc~. 7 00 p m Wednesday ni ght Bible
st udy 7 00 p m

THE WINNER - Annie ·Yates, right, of 22S East Second St.
Pomeroy, was the winner of a $400 gift certificate in the holiday
shopping spree of the Pumervy Sundry Sture. ]'he certificate was
presented lo her Wednesday by Anita Jacobs, manager. Mrs.
Yates was the winner in a drawing in the promoUon involving 52
stores in Ohio, West Virginia and Kenlucky .

HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN, R&lt;&gt;g
er Wa ts on, pas tor Crensoo Pratt , Sunda y
SCho ol S4pt Morning Worshit&gt; 9 30 a m,
Sunday School 10· 30 am; EvenlnR; ser-

vice, 7· 30 p m
MT UNION BAPTIST, Donald Shu e,
past or Joe Sayre, Sunday School Su pt
Sunday School 9 45 am : Evening wor·
s hip 6 3Q p m Prayer Meeting, 6 30 p m
Wednesday
TUPPERS PLA INS CHURCH OF
CHRIST Dave Pr~ntl ce, mini ster Deryl
Wells, Supt Chul"C'h School 9 a m , Wor
s hip Service, 9· 45 p m
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE NAZARENE Rev Herbert Grate, past or
Frank Riffle supt Sunday School 9 30 a
m • Wor ship scrvlce1 11 a m and 7 p m
Sunday Wednesday , 7 p m Pra}er mecl

lng

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH David Bell, pastor Robert E
Barten, Director of Christian Education,
Steve Eblin assista nt Sunday Sc hool 9 30
a m, Morning worship 10 30 a m .. Teens
InAction, 6p m , Evening Wo rship 7 OOp
m Wedn esday eve ning prayer and Bibl e
s tudy, 7 OOp m Ch01r prac11ce, Thursd ay ,

30

7 pm

DEXTER CHURCH OF CHRIST
Charles Ru s~~· ll Sr. m !n lst~r Ri ck Ma'
co mber s upt Sunday School 9 30 a m

•

Sermonette
New Year's Day Is not just a day to sleep In to get over a hangover
from too much partying the night before. It Is not just a day to watch
T.V parades and football games It ts not just a time to holler at the kids
to play with their toys In the other room or go outside. New Year's Day Is
for ramiJy and friends and to give a !Itt le thought to what you are going to
make of your New Year of 366 day s and a presidential election we
always want to start the New Year right We pray It will be a prosperous
healthy, better than last year and more worshipful for our family w ~
want God to be a part of our New Year with lotsofsunshlne and friends a
year worth remembering.
This Is why It is Important for you and your family to come to church
and worship the Lord God who has control of our lives and the world
round about us. We need to know that nothing goes on that Is not seen by
God He see~ the smallest sparrow being born or dying We, who are
made In God s image, are much more dear to God than that sparrow He
loves us both but mankind, you and I can love Him back and want to

Spread the good news, "He cares for you"

A new year is In reality a new volume In our Ute that Is filled with blank

pages to be filled Wl!h our deeds and thoughiS for God and man. How do

we perceive God and also our relationship to our fellow man. We can
make It good or we ca n make It bad rt is up to us, each and everyone

alone.

,

..

Let us have Carlin our hearts a nd minds Let Him ruleou rllves and let

us begin wllh going to church worship every Sunday and all the special

times and events and come to Sunday School on top of It all Let us p1 ay
every day for friend and foe alike and make our llfe one of service to
others. Let our thoughts be of serving others and putting ourselves last

Mayyouhavea HAPPY NFW YEAR and may God alwayswalkaryour
side, you and your family.- Pastor WOllam Mlddleswarlh Pomeroy
Ohio 45769.

'

'

Liddy: •A normal person would
be dead': CLINTON, Md (UP!)
- .The truck thai h11 G Gordon
Liddy during a conlrontalion in a
lovers' lane near h1s home may
have banged him up, but ltdldn 'l
seem to den1 the conv1ctcd
Watergate conspirator's ma cho
pride
"Bemg bounced of! a 1ruck 1S
nolhlng for me A normal person
would be dead Bul as yo u
probably already know, I don'l
fall into that calegory I'm in
tremendous phys1cal shape, but
the truck won." said the 57-yearold L1ddy. who boastso!domg 250
pushups and running 4 miles a
day .

It was before dawn Chn slmas
Eve when Liddy saw a man and
woma n m a pickup truck parked
on hts property al hiS Fort
Was hinglon , Md , hom e a nd in an
area known as a lovers ' lane and

a place where drug user s
congregate.
" I don'l tolera le that sort of
thing," sa id Liddy. who did put
up wi th 4 \'2 years in pnson lor hi s
role in Ihe Wa lergate affair.
Liddy laid the man he d1d not
approve. When Ihe man Ignored
his warnmg, Liddy banged the
Iruck door w1th a billy club.
Th e dnver smashed hls vehiCle
mto Liddy, bul nol before the
former Nixon staffe r knocked out

Community calendar
(Co ntmued from Page 6)
PAGEVILLE - Sc1p10 lawn
ship Trustees will meel a 1 7
Monday at the township building
in Pagevrlle
ROCK SPRINGS - The Jan 4
meeting of the Me1gs Local Band
•Boosrers has been can celled due
: ro the teachers slrike.
TUESDAY
, CHESTER - Chester Council
;l23, Daughlers of America, wi ll
meet at 7· 30 Tuesday night a ll he
hall The c harter will be draped
ior Edna Reibel and E thel Smll h
Me mber s are to wear white. New
officers will be in sta lled and a ll
are asked to altend.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter of Beta S1gma Phi
l&gt;ororlty will meet Tuesda y al
7· 30 p.m. at the home of Evelyn
J{mght
• MIDDLEPORT - The Heath
Methodist Church m Middleporl
1¥111 hold a New Year' s Eve
tovenanl Service beg mnln g at
7 30 th1s evening w1th Ihe public
invited.
•
'
Correction
; POMEROY -Th~Democrati c
Committee or Me igs County Will
meet the th lrd Thursday m
~a nuary and nor on Jan 3 as
"previously reported.
Revival
, MIDDLEPORT - Ash Streel
&gt;Free~lll Bapllst Ch urch m M1d-

•

requrres absolute diSCi pline and focu s I've seen people take
ltttle fa ll s. I've never seen people check ou1 ear ly, but I've seen
plenly of them fall our of I he charts."
SENA'rOR lN · SPACE: Sen. John Glenn , 66, who some 26
years ago became the l1rst American to complete a lull orbrt of
the earth on the space capsule Fnendsh1p 7, 1s ready to go up
agai n if we have a permanently orbiting space stalion.
accordmg to a n mterview in the January 1ssue of Omn i
magazi Qe.
·
"(If) NASA wan ls a seco nd-hand astronaul up there to
m easure the effects of a month of weightlessness, I'd be ready to
go," Glenn sa1d m the mterv1ew Why? " When you'reup there ,"
Glenn sa1d, "and you see a s unri se or a sunset refracted through
I he atmosphere, you realize how thin the atmosphere really is
and what a frag ile ltttle craft we live on. It changes you "
NASA phy sicia n and lhght surgeon Drew Gainey sar d Glenn
would not be automatically rul ed out because of his age. " It 's
physical standards, not age, that matter, " he saJd. " It would
depend on a phys ical II he could pass th at and pass a s tress test ,
T don't thmk he would be denied access because of his age."
MR. MISTER: Pop group Mr. Mister is donating royallies
from "Dusl," one of th e songs on th e group's currenl RCA
;libum, ''Go On .. ," to th e Pear l S Buck Foundation. an
organization lhat benefits Amerasian children These are the
chi ldren of Amencan servicemen who were lefl behind when
their fathers left Vietnam, Korea and other As1an countries
"Dus t" 1s about the Amerasian children of Vietnam who.
because of their Amencan appearance, are ostt acized in their
own country Mr Mist er have 1nv1ted several Amerasian
orphans who've been adopted by Amencan families to come as
spec1al gues ls of the band at severa l shows on the current tour
" Without soundmg philanthropic, I feel It's 1mportan1 to
share," said Richard Page , "Mr. MISter 's lead singer. " When
you wnte songs , you can't just be an observer and a
magnanimou s sort of soothsayer of what should be. You have to
do lhmgs, not just sit In a lofty place and write about all thee"lls
m the world There' s a real hypocritical hype to that. We're just
trying to do the most thai we can." '

BOGUS BEAUTIES: New Yo rk cosmelrc surgeons Drs Joel
Friedman and Andrew Brelman have Issued their list of th1s
ye a r 's "Bogus Beauties " Th1s year actress model Lauren
Hulton (s pace in her teeth. lace ls too long) and actress Susan
Lucci !asymmetrical face, jaw off center) top the list of 10
women considered s in king beauties even though falling to meet
"clinical and classical" standards.
Roundmg out the lrst were game show hostess Vanna White
(too much gum shows when she smiles ), Gary Hart paramour
Donna Rice (chin is too long), actress Daryl Hannah
(protruding chin), Tom Cruise's new wife actress Mimi Rogers
rasymmetncal face) . Jackie Onassls (convex face). model
Jerry Hall (face IS top lon g); Farrah Fawcelf (d1fficulty
bnnging her l1ps together ), and super model Paulina (convex
lace ).
•
So who do Drs Friedman and Brelman consider prefect? In
order, actress Kelly McGillis. singer -actress Madonna , singer
Dolly Parton. Washington secre tary Fawn Hall, super model
E lle MacPherson, Elizabeth Taylor, rocker Sheena Easton,
smger Wh!lney Houston. actress Jessica Lang, and super model
!man.
DAVID LEE'S MTV NEW YEAR: Rock wlldman David Lee
~th plans to unve1l his new video. "Just Like Paradise," on
MTV during the cable network 's annual New Year's eve
broadcast. The song Is taken from Roth 's just completed album,
"Skyscraper "In the video Roth 1s seen chmblng up the side of a
3,000 foot cllf!.
" Climbing is the perfect working metaphor for rock 'n' roll
music in general." Roth said "It's stralghl up or straight down
and frequently it 's all you can do to hang on and stay in one
place." Roth admitted tha t lhe mountain chmblng sequence
was a httle fnghlening
"The whole thing is about scary." he said.' 'Climbing for me is
hke mus1c m that It's al once a completely liberating
experience, something that had no restraints. something that

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP! ) Pictures of people gra bbmg
money along a Columbus free
way after an armored car's door s
flew open spilling bags of cash
las l October failed to provide
enough evrdence to charge any of
the people 1dentlf1ed, a pollee
ofllcial said.
Columbus Police Capt. Tony
Lanata said Wednesday the case
w111 remain open. but all detectives who were assigned to
mvestigat e 11 have been given
new dulles. He sard the depart ment is willing to provide Infor mation if the armored car
company's insurer decides to file
a CIVIl suit
The investrgatwn began after
bags of money dropped from the
back of a Metropolitan Armored
Car Inc vehicle as It traveled
so uth on Interstate 71 ln Columbus Oct. 18 One of the bags was
h1t by a car. and its contents were
strewed over the h1ghway
Hundreds of people stopped
and got out of their cars to pick
Ihe bills out or the air and off the
ground The exacl amount of
money that was lost was never
revealed , bul the most w1dely
used estimate was $1 million

Quirks in the news-----=---

pm

FAIRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH, Letart ,
W Va . Rt ~ 1 James Lew is pastor Wor
s hip st&gt;rvices 9· 30 a m , Suoday Schoolll
a m . Even in g worship 7 30 p m Tuesday
cot ta ge pray~r m eeting and Bible Study
9 30 a m ; Wors hip service, Wednesday
7 30 p m
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH,
Walnut and Henry Sts. Ravenswood, W
Va Th e Rev George C W~lrtck , pastor
Sund ay SChool 9 30 a m . Sunday worship
ll am
CALVARY BTBl.,E CHURCH , located on
Pom eroy Pike. County R oad 25 near Flat
woods. Rev Bla ckwood , pastor Services
onSundayat lO 30 a m a nd7 · 30pm with
SundaySc hO ol 9 30a m BibleStudy,Wed·
ncsday, 7 30 p m
F AlT H FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRlST. St Rt 338, Antiquity Rev.
Fra nklin Dicken s, pastor Sunday morn·
ln g 10 a m , Su nday evening 7 30 p m
Thursday evening 7 ~ p m
S1 1VERSVILL£ COMMUNITY BAP
f iST CHU RCH Pastor Robert Byers.
Sunday S&lt;: hoollO a .m , Worship service ll
a m , Sunday evening serv ice, 7 30 p.m ,
Wednesda y evening service 7 30 p.m
MIDDLEPORT INDEPENDENT HOLINESS CHURCH, In c 75 Pearl St R~v
Iva n Myers, acting pastor, Rog er Manley,
Sr Sund ay School SupC'rintendent Sunday Scho ol 9 30 a m • Morning wors hip
10 30 a m , evening worship 7· 30 p m .
Wedn esd ay evening Bibl e study, prayer
and p ra l s~ service 7 30 p m
CHURC H OF JESUS CHRIST APOSTOLI C -VanZandt and Ward Rd Elder
J f mes Miller, pa stor Sunday School
10 30a m , Worship Service, Sunday, 7·
P m; Bible Study, Wednesday; 7•30 p m
CALVARY PILGRIM CHAPE:L, Harrl·
sonv\lle Road Rev Dewey King, pastor,
Clin ton Faulk, Su ndn y School Supt., Sun-

in the news----------.

Evidence falls short in case

POMEROY, OHI0-992-6677

pm

pm

Lu cretia Stobart , &lt; Middleport.
a nd Raymond a nd Fane Cole,
Pomeroy. Great-grandparents
are James and Bernice Cornell.
Pomeroy, and Beulah Stobart.
Middleport The mlanl wa s born
on the wedding anni ver sary of
her great - grandpa~ents. Mr. and
Mrs Cornell

GRAVELY TRACTOR SALES

Worship service 10 JU am Bible study.
Tuesday, 7 30 p m
REORGANIZED CHURC H OF JESUS
CHRISTOF LATTERDAYSAINTS Por1
land Racine Road William Roush, pastor
Linda Evans, c hurch school director
Church school Y 30 a m , Morn!ng\Ai orshlp
10 30 a m.. Wednesday evening prayer
services 7 30 p m
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Shul er pastot WorShip service 9 30 a m
Sunday School10 30 a m Bible Study and
prayer s&lt;&gt;rvlcf' Thursday. 7 30 p m
CARLETON INTERDENOMINATION·
AL CHU~CH Kingsbury Road Rev
Clyde W Henderson, pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Ralph Carl, Supt Even·
lng worship 7. 00 p m Prayer meeting.
Wednesda y 7 00 p m.
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. Vernon
Eldndge. pastor. Wallac~ Damewood S
S Supt Sunda~ Sc hool9 30a m, . Worship
Servi ce. 10 30 a m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
0 H Cart pastor SundaySchoolat9 30a
m Morning worship at 10 30 am, Sun
day eve)'ling service at 7 30 p m Thursday
services at 7 30 p m
FREEDOM GOSPEL MISSION a1 Bald
Knob, lncated on County Road 31 Rev
Lawrence Gluesen ca mp pasto1 Rev
Roger Willford, asst pastor Preaching
services Su nda y 7 30 p m P r ayer meeting
Wednesday, 7 30 p m, Gary Griffith.
leader. Youth groups Sunday C&gt;vening at
6 30 p m with Rorcer and Violet Willford.
leaders Communion service ft rs t Sunday
each month
WHITE'S
CHAPEL
WESLEYAN
CHURCH- Cool v Ui eRD Rev Phillip Rl
denour. pastm Sunday Schoo19 30 am r
wm ship service 10 30 a m , Bible study
a nd worship serv ice, Wednesday , 7 p m.
RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Bill Carter, past or Sunday School9 30 a
m , Morni ng Worship and Communion
10 30 am
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST Amos
Tillis, pa stor So nny Hud s on, supt Sunday
School 9 30 a m Morning worship, 10 JO
a m: Sunday evening servicE&gt; 7 00 p tn
Wednesday serv ice 7 p m WMPO progr am 9 a m ea ch Sunday
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
RENE Sa m uel Basye, pastor Sunday
School 9 30 a m , Worship ser'" let' 10 30 a
m , Youn2 people's serv!Cf' 6 p m
Evangelis tic serv!c(' 6· 30 p m Wednesday
service 7 p m
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, M111er
St Ma son, W· Va Su nday Bible Study 10
a m , Wo rship 11 a m and 7 p m Wednes
day Bible Study vocal music, 7 p m
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud
di ng Lane, Mason W Va J N Thackfi!r,
pastor Evening servi ce 1 JO p m Wo·
m ens Ministry , Thursday, 9·30 am,
Wednesday P rayer and Bible Study, 7 15

KENO CHURCH OF CHRIST, Vf'f.non
Eldridge, minister , Oliver Swain, Sunday
School Supt Preaching 9 30 a m each
Sunda:,;
HOBSON CHRISTIAN UNION , Georgf'
Anedo , pastor Sunday service 9 30a m ,
evening service i 30 p m Pra;er mee1lng,
Wednesday, 7 30 p m
BEAR WALLOW RIDGE CHURCH OF
CHRIST Joseph B Hoskins, pastor Bible
Cla ss, 9·30a m , Mornin~WorSh\pl0·30a
m Evening Worship, 6·30 p m Th.ursday
Bib\~ Study 6 30 p m
NEW STtVERSVILLE COMMUNlTY
CHURCH , Sunday School service, 9 45 a
m
Worship scrvict' 10 30 a m .
Evangelistic Service 7·30 p m Wednes
day , Prayer meeting 7 30 p m, Thursday
ZION CHURCH OF CHRIST, Pomeroy
Harrlsoov !llp Rd Robert Purtell, mini s
fer , Steve Stanley, S S Sup! , 8111 McEI
roy, Asst Supt . SundaySchoo19 30a m ,
Worship s('rvlce 10 30 am Evenlngwor
ship Sunday 7 p m a nd WE'dnesd ay 7 p m
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH , Pine
Grovl' The Rev Wll\lam Mlddleswarth ,
pastor Church serv ice 9 30 am , Sunda y
School 10 30 a m
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
John Wright, pastor Sunday School9 30a
m . Larry HaynE'S S S Supt Morning
worship 10 30 a m
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev Lloyd D Grimm, Jr, pastor
Ora Bass, Chalrman of the Board o f Chris
tla n Life Sunday School 9 JO a m , Morn·
ing worship 10 30 am , evangelis tic ser·
vice 7 00 p m Wednesday service 7 p m
LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH Dex
ter Woody Ca ll, pastor Services Sunday
10 am a nd 7 p m Wednesday, 7 p m
RACINE FIRST BAPTIST. St&lt;'ve
Deaver, Past,M Mlk~ Swiger, Sunday
School Supt , Sunday School 9 30 a m ,
Morning worship 10 40 a m ., Sunday
evening worshi p 7 30 p m, Wednesday
evening B1bl e study 7 30 p m
BURLINGHAM COMMUNITY CHURCH,
Burlin gham Ray Lauder milt. pastor, Robert Cozart. assistant t:astor Sunday School
10 a m., worship 7 p.m, Wednesday 6 p m
you thmeetln~ Wed 7pm church services
PINE GROVE HOLINESS CHURCH. \\
mile off Rt 325 Rev. Ben J Watts, pastor
Robert Searles S S Supt Sunday School
9 30 a m. Morning Wor shi p 10 30 a m .
Sunday evening service 7. 30 p m . Wed
nesda y serv Ire 7. 30 p m
SlLVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Llltle
pastor Steve Llltle. S S Supt Sunday
School 10 am Mormng worsip, 11 a m ,
S und ay evenmg wm ship 7 JO p m Prayer
meeting and Bible stud y Wednesday, 7 30
p m , Youth meeting Wednesday at i p m
REJOICING LIFE BAPTIST CHURCH
- 383 N 2nd Ave Middleport Sunday
School10 am Su nday even ing 7 00 p m ,
Mid week service, Wed 7 p m
LANGSVILL E CHR ISTIAN CHURCH,
Robf'rt E Mu sser, pastor Sunday School
9 30 a m , Pa u l Mu sser, supt : Morning
worship 10 30 a m Sunday ev e ning scr
vice, 7 p m, mid we ek serv ice, Wednes·
day 7pm
SYRACUSE CHURCH OF THE NA
ZARENE Rev Glenn McMillan, pas tor
Mary J ani ce Lavender, Sunda y School
Supt Sunday Sc hool 9 30 a m ; Morning
IA.'orshlp 10 30 a m , Evangelis tic service,
6p m . Prayer a ndPr alseWednesday, 7p
m , Youth meeting, 7 pm
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, E lden R Blake, pastor Sunday
Sc hool 10 a m ; Gary Reed , Lay lea der
Mor ning sermon, 11 a m , Sunday night
serv ices Christian Endeavor 7 30 p m
So ng service 8 p m Preaching 8· 30 p m
r-.Jld w~ ek prayer meeting, Wednesda y 7

I

LACEY A. BARNETTE

Cole birthday is observed

Rutland, Oh•o 45775

J . wm. "81!1" Brown, Owner

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 11

By JOHN SWENSON
United Press Inlernatlonal

Mr and Mrs. Edward Barnell
of Gallipolis, the form er Brenda
Hysell of Middleport, are announcmg lhe bi r th of 1he1r f1r s1
child, a daughler , Lacey Angel.
born on Dec 6 al lhe Holzer
· Medical Center She weighed
seven pounds , th ree ounces and
~ wa s 19 mches lon g
Grandparents are M1 and
Mrs. George Barnette of Galllpo
' lis, Ms Rosemary Hysell. Mid·
dleport , Great-gra ndpa rent s are
·Mrs. Mary An gel, Gallipolls, and
Mrs Myrtle Barnette, Ponl
Pleasant

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

..----P~ople

Nationwtde Ins. Co . . ....

Pome10g Flowe' Shop

214 e. Matn
992·5130 Pomeroy

General Merchandtse

day

~

Complete
~
Automohve
- · "
Servtce
Locust tr Beech Street
992 9921 M 1ddleport

Pomeroy

264 S. 2nd, Middleport

• Thomas Glm McClung, poster Norman Pres
It')', S S SuJi., Surxlay School, 9·.}) am
morning wcrshlp 10' :ll a m : evening~ 6
#p m, mid-week~. Wednesday 7 p m
: GRACE EPISCOPAL CHUROi, 326 E
..Main St. Pom£'1'0)' Sui'Kiay services Holy
~ communion on ttl?- tlrSI Sunday of each month,
and com~ned with mornln~ prayer on ttl:&gt;
Ulird &amp;I rxlay Morning prayer and SPm10I1 on
• an &lt;Xtl:!r Surr:lays oft~ momh Chun:'h Schod
· and Nursery care provired COffee hour in tl'l&gt;
Parish Halllrrurledlately follO'Ningtheservlre
. POMEROY CHURCH OF CHRIST, 2l2 W
MaJn St. Leo Nash. evan~J.'llst Blbe School
"'9 .'IJ am, Mornlngworshlp 10 :xl am, Youth
: meet inS'" 6 00 p m , Evening worship, 7 00 p
m Wednesday night prayermeetlngandBlbiE"
stl.dy 700pm
TilE SALVATION ARMY, ll5 Butt~rnut
A~, Pomeroy M~ Dora Wining In charge
&amp;lrday hotlrw:'SS meeting 10 am, Sunday
· Schoo, 10 ll am Sulki&lt;\Y School, YPSM
Eloisf:&gt; Adams , .leader 7 ~ p m Salvation
T'tlf'e'llng. various ~p:oakers and music sp:octals
•Thur.;day, 11 .ll a m 10 2 p m Ladles Home
League, memt.?rs In charge all women
Invited; 6 45 p m Thursday, Corp;; Cad€11
Qasss (You~ Peo{je-Bllie), 7·lJ p m Bll~e
StOOy and PrayM" meeting, Opel to th? public
POMEROY WESTSIDE CHUROi OF
QtR.IST, 3.'1'DiChildrm's Home Road (Courd}'
Road ~~ 992-52.l; Vocal mustc SUrday Wor
slhplOa m , Bil:ie~tmy lla m , Worstup,6p
m Wect:ae:iday. BUi~ Sttl!y 7 p.m
OLD DEXTER BIBLE CHRISTIAN
CHURCH. Alvin Cmils, pastor. Linda Swan,
sup: Sumay School 9lJ am , pll'achingser
VIces, first and lhlrd Sunday followtngSurxlay
SchOO Youth mef'llng, 7 :Yl p m every Sun-

I I

ElliS &amp;SONS SOHIO

~......_

FUNERAL HOME
"Serving Families"

POMEROY CHURQi OF TilE NAZA

992 33,25

~~o~

Rawlings-Coats-Blower

... TRINfrY CHURCH Rev John IIJ!f, pastcr;
Buck. Sunday School Sul'f Church
Schod 9: 15 a m , Worship Servie 10: lJ a m
: Choir rehearsal, Tuesday 7 ;j) p m urx:ter dl
rectloh of Lo~ Burt

Pomeroy

Pomeroy

Prescriptions

Homehte Saws

RENE,

John F Fultz, Mgr.
Ph. 997-2101

~~~

m

2U S Second

SWISHER &amp; LOHSE

FRANCIS FLORIST

\1t&gt;iJ!" Cmtnl\ ·.. (Jidt•sl Florr~l
352 EAST MAIN
POMEROY. OHIO 45769
614/ 992 -2644

1

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT

TEAFORD REALTY

'

Barnett birth
iS announced

7 fXrERIENCE TI1E JOY Of RELIGION
(row's Family Restaurant

Thursday, December 31. 1987

die port w111 be m rcvwl Jan 3 9 at
7:30 p.m. n1ghtly. Everyone
welcome
Flame Fellowship
POMEROY - The Long Bot
tom Chapler of lhe Ohio Flame
fellowship w111 be held Tuesday,
7:30 p.m . at the Mt. Olive
Commuml y Church. Speaker
will be Da 1sy Tabor of Ga llipolis
Suzanne Bush, chapter president , we lcomes lh e public

a tall light w1th the club- an "old
FBI tnck " to mark the vehrcle
for pollee. Liddy said
"Both perpetrators are probably members of Congress,"

Lr~~i~~~k!~re

investigating the

incident
Liddy said he suffered a broken
left arm, broken rib, a torn knee
ligament and damage to his left
kidney. He was released from the
hospita l Wednesday afternoon.
Liddy added that he tried in
vain to leave the Southern
Maryland Hospital emergency
ro'bm soon after he was admitted
Christmas Eve.
Gandhi rescues beached
whale: NEW DELHI, India
(UP! ) - A vacationing Prime
Minister Raj1v Gandhi splashed
to the aid of a whale beached ln a
lagoon with his bodyguards close
behind. and helped push lhe
injured mammal into deeper
water. a reporl sa1d.
The news agency Press Trust
of lndm, in a dispatch from lhe
sparsely populated island of
Akathi In the Lakshadweep archipelago off India's western
coast, said Gandhi was walking
on a beach Wednesday when he
spotted the whale lying m the
shallow waters of a lagoon.

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Investigators were given pholographs taken by an amateur
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30°/o OFF

ALL WOMEN'S DRESS SHOES &amp; BOOTS
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SALE
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CHURCH
MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OHIO
SCHEDULE OF SERVICES:
Saturday PM Evangelistic Service .............7:30
Sunday AM Church School. .......... 9 ;30 -10:25
Sunday AM Worship ................... 10:30-11:45
PASTOR - Rev. Liston
Jr. - 992-2818

'"'

992-5627
MIDDLEPORT
OHIO

~
~

�•

.·
Page- 12- The Daily Sentinel

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UPJ) -Twenty-t hree of Ohio's public
schools have been nominated fo r the U.S. Department of
Education's 1987-88 Elementary Sc hool Recognition Program.
The 23 sc hools were chosen by Sta te Sc hoo l Superintenden t
Franklin Wa lte r who said Tuesday 65 Ohio sc hools submitted
appllcatlons lor th e program.
Sta tes are allowed to choose two mom schools than the
number of cong ressional districts.
This year's prog ram focuses on schools with unusually
effective stra teg ies for teaching ma thematics and science,
Walter said.
·
Each s tate's nominations will go the U.S. Department of
Education which has chosen a.99-member panel of to review the
nom inations. Educators and non-educators were named to the
panel. with one member being Constance Rice of South
Charleston, a member of Ohio's State Board of Education.
Panelists will not review nominations from their home state.
Ohio sc hools chosen include:
-Berwick ScienceMathEnvlronmental Studies Alternative
School, Columbus City Schools. Franklin County.
-Cottonwood Elementary School, Finneytown Local
Schools, Hamilton County .
-David Smith Elementary School. Delaware City Schools,.
Delaware County.
-Elda Elementary School, Ross Local Schools. Butler
Co unty.
-Evendale Elementary School, Princeton City Schools,
Hamilton County.
-Fairfield South Elementary School, Fairfield City Schools,
Bu tier County.
·
-Fairfax Elementary School, Mentor Exempted Village
Schools. Lake County.
-Glendale Elementary School. Princeton City Schools,
Hamilton County.
-Greensview Elementary School, Upper Arlington City
Schools, F ranklin County.
-Heritage Elementary School, Medina City Schools, Medina
"
....
County.
- Hillcrest Primary Schools, Revere Local Schools ..Summit
County.
·
- Hoffman Elementa ry School, Cincinnati City ·schools,
Hami)ton County.
-Hopkins Elementary School, Mentor Exempted Village
Schools, Lake County.
-Hudson Elementary School, Hudson Local Schools, Summit
County. ·
-Indian Hill Elementary School, Indian Hill Exempted
Village Schools. Hamilton County.
-John F . Dumont Elementary Sch~ol. Madeira City Schools.
Hamilton County.
·
-Lewis Sands Elemcnlary'School, Chagrin Fails Exempted
Village Schools, Cuyahoga County.
.
-Louisa Wright Elementary School. Lebanon City Schools.
Wa r ren County.
-Morgan El ementary School. Ross Local Sc hools. Butler
County.
·
-Sterling Morton Elementary School, Mentor Exempted
Village Schools , Lake County.
-Three Rivers Middle School. Three Rivers Local Schools ,
Hamilton County.
-West Elementary School, Fairfield City Schools . Butler
Co unty.
-Woodlaw n Elemel)tary School, Princeton City Schools ,
Hamilton Count y.

Reported Reagan visit
using some discord

DAYTON. Ohio tUP I I -Students who borrowed federally
insured loans. then slipped by for
years. without repaying them,
are lhea rin g the unwelcome
greeting of collection agents.
" We haven' t been bugging
them enough," said Barbara
Beran. assista nt U.S. attorney
for the Sou thern District of Ohio.
U.S. Attorney D. Michael
Cr ites said Tuesday his office has
increased collection on delin·
quent federal loans of all kinds,
includ ing s tudent loans. A staff of
live people in hi s Columbusolflce
"do nothing but go after delinquent debtors," Crites sa id .
In 'the pas t year. the dis trict
has filed motions for more than
400 judgment d~btor examlna·
!ions in Cincinnati, .Columbus
and Dayton. During the exam ina.

.

lion, debtors are required to fisca l year ending Sept. 30.
appear incourtand give lnforma- ·
Cr-ites said the fact that sbme
!ion to the governmen t concj'!rn- student borrowers 'have avoided
ing the ir ability to repay tfieir payment up to now shOuld not
give them ll false sen$e of
debt s.
In cases where debtors prove securily .
"Every day we are locating
they can't pay because of disabil·
debtors who have managed to
ity. unemployment or extreme
hardship, th e government does elude us in the past hoping that
not actively purs ue collection.
we will eventually forget about
Bu t the U.S. attorney's office them." he said in a recently
continues "surveillance" of the released statement. "We· wlll
debtor's fin ances, and is ready to pursue them until they have paid.
Several schools in the district
garnish wages and attach prop·
erty or tax refunds if a finan- have put students on notice that
cially able debtor refuses to pay: debt collection efforts are
"Unless we verify that a case is intensifying.
Dr. Arthur .Thomas, president
yncollectable, we keep them on
of
Central State University, last
our records ," said Beran, chief of
July announced a program to
the debt collection unl t.
Beran said about $300,000 in collect outstanding student debts
through the assistance of Attar·
delinquent student loans was
ney General Anthony Cele·
collected ·;n southern Ohio in the

I

Towriship

pol~ce

chief demoted,

. DAYTON , Ohio tUP I ) - A
suburban Dayton police chief
- resig ned Wed nesday and was
reassigned as lieutenant .following allegations he dropped a
traffic cha rge in exc hange for a
video eamera for th e
department.
Former Jefferson Township
Police Ch ief Thomas Woodson,
who was suspended without pay
w hen the charges aired last
month. was expected to be back
a t the police department Thurs·
day at the lower rank, towns hip
Trustee Jesse Gooding said.
"We felt that Chief Woodson
bad made some bad judgments
on the matte rs," Gooding said in
explaini ng the demotion.
But Gooding said the trustees
decided to retain Woodson Jn the
department after weighi ng " his
contr ibution to the townShtp
versus the ac t performed.''
•
Jn a prepared statement,
Woodson sa id "It is with due
deliberation, love and respect
that 1 ha ve lor this tow nship, its
·. citizens and you the trustees that
1 tender my resignation effec ti ve
immediately as chief of police."
Greene County Prosecu to rWll·
llam Schenck. acti ng as spec! a I
prosecutor for Montgomery
County in the case, said earlier
this week that if negotiations
conerning thP allegations fell

through, he would ask a grand
jury to look at several eharges
agai nM Woodson , inc luding br ib·
ery. obstruction of justice and
compounding a crime.
Schenck sa id other allegations
ofslmllarcasesattheJefferson
Township Police Departme nt
rose during the inves tigation of
Woodson.
" ! intend to follow up on them
to the extent that a determ inati on
should be ma de whether to go to
the grand j ury or not independe nt
of what happens with thi s,"
Schenck said .

KAN.

OKLA.

MISSOUHI

ARKANSAS

MISS.

TEXAS

LOUISIANA

Bennett seeks broader, tougher curriculum
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Edu·
cation Secretary William Bennett, urging . the nation to aim
high, proposed Tuesday a
"broad. deep and effective" core
curriculum he said U.S. high
school students should master
even if it mea ns an ex tra year or
two in school.
Bennett. in his report "James
Madison Hi gh School: A Curriculum for American 's tudents,".
sajd second ary school students ,
regardless of their socioeconomic backgrounds, should
be required to take four years of
English and three years each of
sc ience. math and social studies.
as was recommended in the
National Co mmission on Excel·
lence in Education insisted in it s
controversia l 1983 report . "A
Nation At Risk."
In addi tion. he said, s tudent s
should complete two yea rs of a
single forei gn language and two
years of physical educa tio n a nd
health , plus one year of fine arts.
in order to graduate. Twenty-five
percent of the courses wou ld be
electives.
"Most American s tudents. by a
long shot. do not ta ke that kind of
curriculum,' ' he told a news
conference. "Fifteen percent are
getting something approximat·
ing this curriculum today."
America must expect more of
its students. he said, insisting,
" High expectations make ari
enormous difletence. " lf sc hool
systems raise the leve l of expec-

la tions , students will rai.s e their
performance despite the difficu lty of the work, he said.
Bennett suggested conte nt for
classes in a li seven required
subjects to " flesh out" the
minimum graduation requirements called for in "A Nation At
Risk," and singled out seven ·
schools around the country tha t
already have put the ideals in to
action.
"A broad. deep and effective
core curriculum is possible lor
almost all. American seconda ry
sc hool students," he said in the
repor t. "If we are serio us about
equal. opportunity in general,
then we must provide equal
opportunity In school. 11
Such a program would not cost
more , he said. "In fact it should
be less expensive . You'd get a
lea ner, meaner academjc machine for your money."
that his
is Bennett
not a noted
s ta tement
of proposal
federal
policy beca use individual s tates
set th e manda tory curriculum
for the nat ion's high schools.
"A Nation at Risk" said high
sc hool coursework had become
so "homogenized. diluted and
diffused" that it no longer served
a clear purpose. "In effect , we
have a cafeteria-style curricu·
lum in which the appetizers and
dessert s can easliy be mis taken
for the ma in courses." th at study
sa id.
Bennett said ali 50 s tat es have
improyed their programs since

'

that report was Issued and that
Florida , Louisiana and Pennsylvania have met its guidelines.
"But it is too soon to declare
victory; much ground remains to
be covered." he wrote. "The time
a student spends on any subject is
no guarantee tha t he w111 master
it..'
Bennett told reporters."! think
a student is better off spending an
extra year, even an extra two
years ... in getting something of
substance ... rather than just
getting out in four years." ·
In his new proposal. Bennett
sa id, among other things, that
America must change the way it
looks at mathematics.
"We speak of mathematical
'geniuses' in terms we would
never apply to even our finest
history students. and while we
expect great things from a 'very
few students. we do too little to

ttlll"''
0
·10

encourage the rest," he wrote.
"We seem possessed by the false
notion that many students have
an incurable m ath phobia or
disability."
Spelllng out his proposed
science curriculum. Bennett
noted that American high school
students now are required to take
an average of 1.8 years of
science. better than the 1.5 years
when "A Nation at Risk" was
issued .
" But we still have a long way to
go," he said .
And although interest In for·
elgn languages has risen during
the past lew years. he said only30
percent of American public high
school students now study
another language. "No state only the District of Columbia currently requires all high school
students . to study even one
lore ign language."

Arl-.aiiSiiS

Toc/1 .
IJ/IIV.

Russellville
0
milo

0
D
D
D

Ir========================:::;~

WINTER SESSIONS: 9 Weeks-·18 Classes $3800
JANUARY 4th thru MARCH 3rd
CARLETON SCHOOL, Syracuse, Ohio
MON.-WED.
TUES.-THURS.
7:00 PJA.
5:00 P.M.
JOY KING - Instructor
Phone 992-3794

Store

,JACKSON . Miss. [UPII - A among black Mississippians has
black lawmaker -prepared legis - caused c lashes at football games
lation Wednesday to eliminate · and on the campus of the
the Confederate battle flag de·
University of Mississippi , where
sign from the 93-year-old Missismany students and alumni res ippi flag. a move expected to be
vere the Confederate banner.
followed in at least three other
The . university banned th e
southern states.
waving of the flags at its football
State Rep . Aaron Henry af games nearly 't hree years ago
Clarksdale, Mississippi NAACP
and attempted to introduce an
president. sa id his bill to rede- innocuous "Ole Mi ss" flag in its
s ign the state flag wou ld create a
place. Students and a lumni .
positive image for the state. The
however, have continued to wave
legislature convenes its 1988
the Confederate fl ag.
session on Jan . 5.
The present Mississippi fl ag
"Basically the bill will call for
became it officia l state symbol in
a study group to look at all the 1894.
possibilities of .flag design tha t
would not be negative to any
particular group." Henry sa id .
On Monday, the NAACP an·
nounced in Savannah, Ga., that it
would launch a cam paign to
banish the "odio us" ima ge of the
Co nfederate flag from the Georgia, South Carolina , Mi ss issipp i
and Alabama capitols .
Regional NAACP Director
Earl Shin hoster said the civil
rlglrts organization wants Confederate fl ags flying over the
capitols in South Carolina and
Alabama pulled down and the
. ..
''
leg islatures in Georgia a nd Mi s·
sissippi to create new sta te flags
without the Star s and Bars.
"'
Mississippi state Rep. John
Reeveso!Jackson sa id "a move
of that nature woul d create quite
a stir among a lot of people."
Cecil Sfmmon s. of Starkville.
president pro tempore of the
Mississippi House of Representa·
lives, said that if the meas ure is
in troduced " I could .-see how it
cou ld become a n issue."
The "rebel flag" and its Image

WILL BE CLOSED .THIS
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY!
WE WILL REOPEtt ON
MONDAY I JANUARY 4, 1988.

COLUMBUS, Ohio !UP!) -An
Ohio House Highways and Public
Safety subcommittee came up
with a blil Tuesday aimed at
keeping the deputy registra r
system for registering motor
vehicles but removing political
donations as a requirement for
the job.
Rep. Marc D. Guthrie, . D·
Newark, chairman. said the
proposal will be voted ba ck to the
lull committee Jan . 6 and proba-

I·

"HAPPY NEW YEAR"

Clark's Jewelry Store ~~
.!. .

[~•.'A

JOE

~'1 113 Court StrMt

&amp;9 :~~:o~:LARK

=~=

Pomeroy, Oh.

-~~

~~~~~~~~~;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ \

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DAILY
SENTINEL

One person killed at law offices of
Pell. Eddy and Gibbons
One person killed and one wounded
at Taylor Oil Company
Two people wounded at Sinclair
Mini-Mart
One person wounded and another taken
hostage at Woodline Motor Freight
Bodies of 14 of gunman's relatives
found at his home north of Dover

bly will he ready lor a floor· vot e
early in February.
·
The same bill, passed by the
Senate earlier this year , called
for replacement of the deputy
registrars wtth state employees.
a reduction in the number of
outlets and a centralized mail-in
system for opiional registration .
Guthrie's version a lso fea tures
the centralized mail -in system
starting in 1989. with 45 days'

advanc e notice fo r r eregistration. but it requires mo·
torists to pay the return postage
and also se ts aside 12 cents of the
deputies' $1.50 fee to support the
mail-in system.
The House subcommittee bill,
worked on since last summer ,
requi res at least one deputy
registrar's office In each county
and empha sizes public service
announcements and Yellow
Pages directory advertising of ,

and live months.
Men. the study said, generally
had served longer than women
for each offense, but in a ll cases,
most served only hall their
original sente nce s.
"Most offenders rel eased from
prison that year had served a
little less than one-hall of their
court-ordered max imum sen ten·
ces ," said bureau director
Steven Sc hlesinger . "The me·
diawtime ~erved was 45 percent
of their maximlim sentences."
The statistics surveyed the
r~--;;_~~~---~~--.;_--~~-;.;......;.
_;:..;.;;.~, tim e prisoners in 33 states, about
76 percent of all those released
1
that year. served behind bars,
The folfowing ind ividua ls were costs.
and said th e jail and prison time
fined this week in Meigs County
Bonds fo r speeding we re forfe- accounted for atiout three-fifths
Co urt. according to a report ited by Clarence Braden, Be nt on; of the total time served, and the
released by Judge Patrick Ill. . and Scott Ba iley, Belpre, other two-fifths was spent on
O'Brien.
both $55.
parole.
Mickey G. Oiler, Pomeroy.
$250 and costs. 60-day license
suspension, three days in ja il,
DWI; -$50 and costs, 30 days in jail
suspended to three concurrent ,
no operator's license: Bryan
Stewart, Coolville. $250 and
costs, three d ays in ja il, 60-day
license suspension. DWI ; $20 and
costs, !allure to control: Bobby
G. Rupe. Pomeroy, $250 and
costs. 10 days in jail and 120-da y
license suspension. DWI; $50 and
costs. possession of mari juana ;
Randy Kimes, Long Bottom .. six
months in jail suspended to time
served, six months probation.
restraining order issued, costs,
dome s tic vio.le nce; Chu c k
Snider, Racine, $100 a nd costs
with llne suspe nded, disorderly
conduct.
·
I
Walter E llis. Pomeroy, $30 a nd
costs, passing within an intersecUon over a double-yellow line;
Reduted
to
All Wool
90-day lice nse suspension lor no
insura nce; Martin Cha pman,
Reduted
to
All Panels
Middleport, $25 and costs. as·
sured clear distance; Paul
Christmas Panels &amp; Prints
Reduced
Grover, Ne'f Lexington, $10 and
95
Used Machines
Starting at
costs, assured clear distance ;
Eugene Adkin s. Portland. $10
WE WILL BE OPEN JAN. 2ND
and costs, followin g too closely.
Fined for speeding we re Paul
Hill Jr ., Raelne, $20 and costs;
992-2284
John W. Sisson. Rutland . $22 and
APPR(NED DEALER
POMEROY,
OHIO
c'Osts; Wayne Bayha, Athens. $25
and costs; Melvin Wallace,
Athens. $25 and costs; Larry
Stafford, Groveport. $21 and
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - The
average eriminal released from
prison ·Jn 1984 served less than
hall his court·ordered sentence
and an average of one yea r and
live months behind ba rs, a
Justice Department study ·s aid
Wednesday .
But, acccording to the new
:epor t by the depa r tment 's Bureau ·of Justice Statisti cs. those
entering prjson in 33 states that
same year could expect to spend
longer . The study predicted the
average term lor those going in

.

to boost to one year and 11
month s. and said violent offenders can count on a lmost three
years.
The study said the prison terms
served lor the l59,000 people
released in 1984 - 94 percent of
them male - ranged from an
average of 6.5 years for murder
and manslaughter to one year
and lour months for drug traf·
fieking. The median time served
for rape was three years and
eights .months; for robbery, 2.5
years, and burglary, one year

Me "gs County Court

__

20 5'0°/o
20 50%
20°/o
$19

SINGER THE FABRIC SHOP

13

seek insight into motive

By United Press lnlernational
Wilma Simmons. bleary-eyed
from a sleepless night , Wednes day said her decision to remain in
Alam ogordo , N.M .. rather than
travel with her ex-husband to
Arka nsas fo~ the . Christmas
holidays likely saved her life.
"My ex -hu sb~nd wanted me
\here, but I stayed home with my
adopted family ... she said in an
interview.
Her ex-husband is R. Gene
Simmons .Jr .. 26. who with his
and Wilm·a ·s daughter, Barba ra
jean , 3, were a mong the 16
people killed during the holidays
in · Russellville. Ark .. in the
nation's worst ever mass family
murder .
·
Simmons ' father. Ronald Ge ne
Simmons Sr .• 47, is acc used of
killing seven fam il y members
just before . Christmas. killing
another seven as th ey arrived for
the holidays late Friday or
Sat urday and then kill ing two
people and wounding fou r in a
downtown Ru ssellville · shooting
spree on Monda y.
Wilma . 22. said · she met th e
elder Simmons only once and
thought him a "ver y sweet
person ... who was qu iet and
stayed lo hlmse if." She declined
to describe he r curren~ feelings
lor him.
" You wouldn 't wan t me to
answer that r ight now," she said.
·:I have very ba d feelings about
the man. I loved my ex-husband
very much. "
She married Gene Jr. in 1984
when he was a foOd se rvice
worker at Holloman Air Force
Base in New Mexico. 'l'hey had
Barbara Jean In 1984 and the
famil y transferred to Kelly Air
Force Base in San Antonio,
Texas. They were divorced last
May and Wilma returned to
Alamogordo .
Gene Jrr .. who had custody of
the child. to ld friends in San.
Antonio he had left the c h·tld with
his parents in Arkansas and
would be bringi ng her back to

The average time in prison:
only one year, five months

Page

•

San Antonio to llve because h~­ - Steven K. Sand ers of Alamo· played while he was here,"
had stabilized his life following
gordo. the prosecutor in 1981 , Sanders said.
the divorce.
Ulibarri said family members
said Simmons escaped prosecu·
Shonna Seawell of Del Rio, a
tried to get Rebecca to divorce
tlon in the incest case by
frie nd of the younger Simmons in
disappearing with his entire Simmons but she refused . Jnfamlly before he ~ could be stead , she and the children
South Texas , satd Simmons had
arrested .
moved with Simmons from New
been talking about his trip home
as long as three we.e ks ago.
"I cannot help bu t wonder if it
Mexko to Russellville. NesbY
"It was a spec ial thing for him
said, and Rebecca allowed her(the mas s murder) is connected
to go home a nd see his parents
to the deviance Simmons diS · self to be isolated because s he
was "ashamed."
and daughter," Seawell said.
According to relatives of Sirn ·
mons Sr.'s wife, Rebecca. in
northern Colorado, Gene Jr . was
es tranged from his father be·
cause of his father 's sexual abuse
of his daughter . Sheila Simmons,
and . hi s physical abuse of
Rebecca .
Simmons Sr. was indicted in
THURSDAY, NEW YEAR'S EVE
August 1981 in Cloudcroft, N.M ..
OPEN
10:00 A.M. 'TIL 2:00 P.M.
for Incest. He had impregnated
FRIDAY, NEW YEAR'S DAY - -CLOSED
She il a, who eventually gave birth
to Sylvia, bo.th of \\'hom died in
RE-OPEN SATURDAY, JAN. 2, AT 11:00 A.M.
the massacre, and it was that
incident that family members in
Colorado said started Simmons
SUNDAY, JANUARY 3rd
on the road that led to the
HOMECOOKED ROAST BEEF DINNER ••••••••••••• 54.39
Christmas murders.
I G•n•ous Portion of Our Own Homecoolc.td Roost B11f Served With Mash.d
Edith Nesby, Rebecca's sister
Patato11 and Ho•mwade Gravy, Green leans with Mushnams, A Hat But··
who lives In Brlggsda le, Colo ..
tered laD ar Homemade Biscuit, Ma&amp;wlll Hau1e Caff11, ar Sanlca Decafsaid Simmons cut his wile off
flnated, bath Freshly lrewed (A Small Drink ar Hot Tea May Be SubstitutHI
from her family after the daugh·
IOAST BEEF SANDWICH ALONE .................................................... S2.25
ter's pregnancy became known .
SANDWICH TOPPED WITH MASHED POTATOES &amp; G.RAVY ............. s3.30
·.. He secluded her, he cut her off
SUNDAYS ONLY: Every Sundcry enjoy our waiter/waitren table service with your
from ali of us. and now he's gon e
meals. Served on (hina plates and drink your ,offee or teo from ' hino (Ups.
crazy," Nesby said . "He cen·
HOURS: 10:00 A.M .-7:00P .M . - 7 DAYS A WEEK
sored her mall. He wouldn't let
her have a telephone and he'd
stand there If she ever made any
calls from somewhere else."
.
---.
Edi th Nesby sa id the family
will I ravel to Arkansas this week
RESTAURANT
lor formal identification of the
ROUTE 7
CHESTER
bodies and to make funeral
985-3832
arrangeme)l ts.
WE GIVE SENIOR C
One brother, Abe Ulibarri, said
hi s sis ter 's sltutation worsened
after Simmons Impregnated his
daughter early in the 1980s.
"'Getting the daughter preg·
nant s ta.rted all the bad things
clicking," said · Ullbarri. "He
started secluding my sister and
kept her from us. He didn't.want
anything to do with our family .
He'd get violent."

This Week'• Specials

•

Z iK~~baltgl(~ of (!l4~ntrr

WINTER COLD SA'liNGS I
DIMETAPP ELIXIR
89
8 OZ. REG. 7.66 . NOW $ 5
DIMETAPP ELIXIR

House to keep deputy vehicle registrars

iff/ Clark's Jewelry~~

Legislation readied to
eliminate flag design

D

. PANCE FOR .JOY

r~------------~~..:..:..:.__..:..:::~:.:.:::..:.:::..:.::..:..:::=--1

COMING SOON:

~elatives

Arkansas Shooting Spree

brezze's office.
Antioch Un iversit y President
Alan Guskin announced this fall
that the sc hool 's financial prob·
!ems were partly due to lax loan
collection efforts and he prom·
!sed new pressure to locate
delinquent borrowers.
"It's amazing how many people never remember that they
signed a promissory note." said
P hyll is ·Williams , vice president
for financial affairs at Antioch.
The Department of Education
has discussed implementing ne.\"
enforcement measures that
would bar students at schools
wtth high default rates from
receiving federal loan money.
Wttllams said she opposes such
a move because current students
would be paying for the negU·
gence of former ones.

The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

.

J.

CLEVELAND [UPII- Presi- menton the economy ," City Ctub
dent Reagan's trip to Clevela nd director Alan Davis said Wednesnext month has still not been day. " I've also been told that he's
confirmed a nd White House stall coming to the City Club a nd as a
members are apparently upset secondary thi ng he will meet
that the visit was prematurely with the Voinovich people with·
announced by local Republicans. out the press."
Davis sa id Reaga n's trip has
Furthermore, the reason for
t.he re ported vis it remains not been confirmed and the
premature announcement by lo·
unclear.
Officials of the City CJu·b , at cal Republicans was "very upwhich Reaga n is scheduled to setting" to Whi te House stall
· ma ke a speec h Jan. 11. say ihe . members. He said he is expect·
vis it is in res ponse to a long- ing to receive official word
sta nding invitation to address the Tuesday.
Voino vich 's campaign spokeslongest running speakers' forum
man,
Joseph Wagner, however,
in the nation .
However. offici a ls fr om the sa id he's received a confirmation
Sena te campaign of Mayor on the Reagan vi sit and ha's
already sent out " tons" of
George Voinovich are stress ing
Invitations to a $1.000-a- piate
that the Reagan vis it is a plug for
fund- raiser.
their ca ndida te , while Cuyahoga
"We've been told by our
County Republican Pa rty Chair·
sources in the While House (that
man Robert Hughes says the
Reagan is coming)," said
visit is a push lor the U.S.-Sovlet
trea ty elimina ting Intermediate- Wagner. " I don't understand
why the City Club hasn't been
range nuclear forces riNFI.
And there a re other specula - Informed."
Ben Jarratt, an assista nt White
tions on the purpose of the visit.
House
press secretary, said.' 'We
" I' ve been told tha t he's going
have
not
ma de any confirmation
to make a major po licy state·
(on the Cleveland v isit ). "

'

Thursday, Decembt!r 31. 1987

Student loan collections increase

23 Ohio schools
nominated for honor

I~

Thursday, December 31. 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

the location and hours of each.
To air complaints, the bill calls
for a toll-free hotllne to the
registrar's office in Columbus.
To eliminate the perennial
complaint of long lines at deputy
offices, the hill provides for
registra tion by date of birth, with
each family choosing the date of
birth .of one of its vehlcle owners
to register all vehicles.
To elimina te the complaint of
political influence. the bill for bids knowingly soliciting a dep·
uty registr1)r lor a political
contribution, under penalty of a
$10,000 fine.
Under both political parties,
deputies have been expected to
donate 10 cents of each $1.50
transactional fee to the party in
power ..
The latest version of the bill
also prohibits deputy registrars
from operating more than one
office.
Guthrie said the taxpayers
could be5aved at least $20mllllon
by keeping the deputies. He said
it would cost too much to install
state employees at the registration offices, as provided in tlie
Senate bill .

4

-

NOW!--

oz.

NOW

r

$2 69

Col'YiiNit

"
~ryl

COIJ) oeo:.moN

•&lt;&gt;~ ·~

....... ~

eoki•~"'P'O"'

,. •

~~ ·

~

1,,,,1,1\ ... , " ·-

BENADRYL
DECONGESTANT

COTYLENOL
COLD TABLETS
24 CAPLETS

24 CAPLETS

NOW

NOW

$519

REG.

REG.

$6.10

$5.19

~illage
271 N. SECOND

•

Pharmacy

992-6669

MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

ELBERFELDS
JANUARY

ce

STARTS SATURDAY, JAN. 2, 1988

•

�'

•
14- The

Sent10el

Pomeroy- Middleport Oh1o

Rhodes disavows run for governor
COLUMBUS Oh10 tUPI ) Former Gov James A Rhodes
seeking credibility as an elder
sta tesman of the Ohio Republl
can party Wednesday took htm
self out of the race for go\ernot
or any other state office In 1990
It was the earliest date the
78-year old former four term
governor has ever dtsavowed his
own cand dac} s nee he entered
the political scene more than a
half century ago
Normall} when out of office
Rhodes keeps hts opuons open
and his adversanes guessmg
saymg we re not ruling any
thing m or out
Recent news reports ha\e
speculated that I might be
Interested In running for gover
nor agam
Rhodes said In a
press release I vould I ke to
say for the record and make It
emphatically clear that I have
absolutely no mtentlon of run
nmg for governor orfor any other

sta te office in 1990
That s what Gary Hart said
responded one skeptical Republ!
can m a different wing of the
party tha n Rhodes
He s changed his mind about
th ngs in th e past
obsened
state Rep Robert E Netzley
R Laura
a n ou t spoken
co nsPrvative
I thmk tt means he s not go ng
to run for public of!tce any
more said Rol)ert E Hughes
cha irman of the Cuyahoga
County Republican Party
I
never thought he was going to
run
Hughes and other pol!hcal
allies of Rhodes satd the former
governor apparently thought the
spectre of his future candtdacy
was hampering hts abtllty to
convince Republicans to make
an early endorsement of Vice
President George Bush for pres!
dent m 1988
Rhodes said he reserves the

Thursday December 31 1987

December 31 1

A1111 uun ce me 111:;

Business Services

nght to partictpate In pol tical
affairs to speak out and to do
what 1 can 10 support the
candtdates of my choice
I love Ohio and 1 may make

;;r: LISA M KOCH, M S
a:

suggestions from tLmetohmefor
the betterment of this state
sa td Rhodes
As a former

L1J

zJ:

from a unique perspective on
certam matters and Issues
Rhodes s reco mmendation

-

that the party endorse Bush early
to get on the appatent wmner s
bandwagon has been met with
opposition from Republicans
supporting Senate Minority
Leader Robert Dole R Kan and
other potential nommees
My support for George Bush
as the next president of the
United States Is based simply on
my behef that he w II he good for
Amenca and Ohio
said
I just believe that
Rhodes
George Bush is the best quahf ed
man to follow President Reagan

(614) 44li 7619 or (614) 992 2104
417 Second Avenue Box 1213
Galltpolts O~to 45631

Veterans Memorr~r J~spltal
Mulberry Hgts Pomeroy

12

Naed••ilte forNewYear1Eve1
Hourty o all n ght rttes Ca

114 992 2458

•Replacement W ndows
•New Root ng
FREE ESTIMATES
JAMES KEESEE

31 87 1 mo pd

11 23 87 1

4

PARTS
NEW AND USED
WIDE

SELECTION
ALL MAKES AND
MODELS
CALL

742-2315

INSULATION

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

HEATING &amp;
COOLING
•FURNACES
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•HEAT PUMPS
FREE ESTIMATES
PH.

992-2772
1 23 87 I

d

mo

614 662 3821

Aulhomed John Deere
Now Holland Bush Hog
Farm Equopment
Dealer

Far111 EquipMent
Partl &amp; Service

___
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......
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O'JIIO

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.....

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-- _ ·.·-·-- ·
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:;

r.:;;,.•-v=....:.CI
••
'

.::r .:':t

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C ot jed page o e he
fn lln .., ng e e ph~rt e.ulumget

:- : ..

GUN SHOOT
EVERY
SUNDAY

387 0650

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RACINE, OHIO ,

10 9 lin

Public Not1ce
MEIGS COUNTY
AGRICULTURAL SOCIETY
ANNUAL
FINANCIAL REPORT
RECEIPTS
Gate
$56 125 0(1
Membersh p
27 808 00
Concesstons

20 648 23

Out of County Entry 7 00
Contest
Entry Fee
1 939 00

Speed

Receipts
State Ad
County Ad

Sales

Adven s ng

10 725
36 951
6 600
34
2 720

00
96
00
00
00

Short Term

Rentals
6 183 00
long Term
Rentals
1 629 00
1 574 81
lnterett
Money
Borrowed
8 000 00
Refunds
1 774 62
M sc Income
6 584 43
Total
Aece1pts
1 88 104 04
Balance 10 Treasury
Beg nnmg of

Year

29 466 74

Grand

Total
&amp;217 569 78
EXPENDITURES
Salanes
$2 591 72
Temporary
Payroll
10 914 46
Non Payroll Bus ness
Expend1
15 075 00
tures
1 467 00
Judges
Board Members
1 469 23
Expenses
Adm n strat ve
Ex.pend tures
130 68
1 376 94
Taxes
100 00
Dues

Dv

S

P em ums
Jr D1v
P em ums
Rae ng Pu ses

l!o

Exp

3 566 08

Equ pmen
Refunds

R de

NOTICE OF siiLE
On the 8th day ofJanuar;
1988 at1000AM etthe
off ces of Porter
L1ttle
Sheets &amp; Frecker 211 213
East Second Street Pome
roy Oh o the real estate at

60024 TR1063

45 265 31

2 131 46
25 00

Company
29 249 00
Total Expen
dtures
21393243
Balance n T easury

End of Yea
.3 627 35
Total
$21755978
(12131 1tc
Pu bile N ottce

Vol

4 Page

Please be adv sed that a
Sher ff s Sale w•ll be held on
January 15 1 988 on the
steps o f the Me gs County
Courthouse at 10 00 am A
sa e w II be held ar s ng from
the case styled Glasgo vs Ben
W II amson Suppty Company
Case No 87 CVI136
On sale at that t mew II be
a Marv n Industry Kmg Mo
de M14 Fueplace nsert
The flrep ace nsert has a
he ght of 22 nches and f tsa
fireplace with a m n mum
open ng of 22 and
nches
It has a w dth of 38 nches
f1tt ng fireplace open ngs 29
nches w1de and has a depth
of 18 nches
The fereplece nsert f ea
tu es 3.1 I m ted l en (1 0) year
warranty an a r wa s h sys
tem and extra arge glass
door a standard automat c
two (2) speed blowe a 88
con dary after burner baffle
system an 8 nch flue 1'1
101 d • nch plate steel co n
struct on The f replace n
sert IS black with brass ac
cents
The firep ace nsert has a list
va ue n excess of $1 000 00
and s being sold to recover a
JU.flgment m the amount of
$670 00 In order to view the
fi eplace naert contact the
Me gs County Shenffs Department
Howard E Frank
Sher ff
(12 1 ~11Lc

ol the

26

Records of Plats of Me gs
County Oh o
Referenee Deed Volume
244 Page 1 81 and Volume

245

Page 1013

Records

Oho

Meigs

M n mum bid $47 500 00

I

C

MATLACK

de

ceased the unknown he~rs
dev111881 klgatees adm n s
tratora executors. and / or
aas~gns of I
C Matlack
deceased

MARY MATLACK

de

ceaaed the unknown hetrs
devlaeet legatees adm1nit
tratora executors and / or
auigns of Mary Matlack
deceased

RICHARD ROBERT MA

TLACK deceased the un
known he~rs dev ' " ' lega
tees
adm nutrators
executors and / or autgns of
R ~hard Robart Matlack
deceased

SAMUEL LONG f lov ng

address unkno'(ln 1f de
ceased the unknown he~ra
dev1aees legatees adm1n11
trators executors and/ or
aaa~~gna of Samuel Long
deceaaed

JOSEPHINE 8 WHITE

deceased
the unknown
hen
dev seat
legateat
admm atrators executors
and / or auegns of JoHph ne
B Wh te deceased

SOLON LONG of I v ng

addresa unknown
f de
caned the unknown hans
dev net legatees adm n s
tratora, executors and / or
au gns of S9lon long
dace at ad

WILLIAM S LONG

lnqu r as can be made at
Douglas W L ttle
Executor of the Eatate
of Besste G Webster
deceased

dacaased
the unknown
he rs
dev11eet
legataet
adm1mstrators executors
and/ or autgns of Wilham S
long deceased

112120 31 1114 Jtc

Pubhc Not1ce
IN THE
COMMON PLEAS CDU AT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY OHIO
JAMES W SUTILE 01 ot
- vs

Pia ntiffs

W H BERDINE alai
Defendants

CASE NO 83 CV 2
NOTICE BY
PUBLICATION
TO W H BERDINE f

v ng addraas unknown if
deceased the unknown
he ra
dev11ees
legatees
admtn1strators executors
and or ass gns of W H
Berdtne deceased

JENNIE BERDINE f I v
ng address unknown
t
deceased
the unknown
ha1rs
dev aees
legatees
adm1mstrators eJtecutors
and or ass gns of Jennie
Berdine deceased

of loving

addrns unknown
f da
ceased the unknown hers
dev1sees legatees adm n s
trators executors and/ or
ass gns of Flam long
deceased

NONA LDNG of llv ng
addreu unknown
f de
ceased the unknown hers
dev1sees legateea admm s
trators executor• and / or
ustgns of Nona long

In Memor1am

In memory of
Henry Guy Arnold
who passed away
January 1 1983
Your &amp;entl~face and lov1ng
sm1le
W1th sadness we oecall
You had a k1ndly word for
all
And dted beloved by all
You are not forgotten Son
Nor 'II II you ever be
As long as I fe and memo
r es last
We Will remember thee
Very sadly m1ssed by
Parents Dores and
M ldred Arnold Wfe
Barbara and Children
Brother and S sters

BEULAH CLONCH LONG
f I ving addrets unknown ;t
deceued the unknown
he rs
dev tees
legatees
adm1mstretora executors
and/ or asttgna of Beulah
Clonch long deceased
You are hereby notif ad
that you have been named
Defendants 1n a legal act on
ent;tled James W Suttle at
al
Pia ntiffs us W
H
Bard ne at al Defendants
Th1s act1on hu been as

sogned Case No 83 CV 2

and s pend ng n the Com
mon Pleaa Court of M e1gs
County Oh o
The obJect of the com
pia nt 11 a parttt1on act on
concermng the oil gas and
other mmarals underly ng
the follow ng descnbed rea
estate
S1tuated n Ma1gs Countv
Township of Lebanon State
of Oh o bemg 11 Sect10n 26
Town 3 Range 11 of the
Oh1o Company s Purchase
known as the Henry Ours
Farm and betng all of the
south half of the southeast
quarter of Sect1on 26 save
and excepting 16 acres
wh ch was deeded to Wm
Ours by Henry Ours Janu

ary 30 1899 Volume 86

Pages 372 373 and con
ta1n ng 65 acret mora or

Ieos
The prayer s that the o I
gas and other m nerala un
derlying the above descr bed
real estate be partitioned

2

In Memortam

press our apprecaat10n

for all those who whospe&lt;ed prayers sent cards
and for the beautiful
flowers durmg the long
tllness and death of
beloved

SIDING CO.
New Homes Butlt
Free Est mates

At Roasanable Pmos

No Sunday Calls

Nstu Too Old
To lmnl

6 pupp •

6 female. 1 male
304 676 7437

Teachmg Thompson
Schaum Bast1en
From Beg nners to

Elect lo tnga. oven doesn t
work. 304 675 6018

Advanced Students
Call For Information

949-2801
or 949-2860

PH.

DIANA IHLE

Day or N1ght
NO SUNDAY CALLS

6 Lost and Found

949-2890
t 24 87 1 mo pd

3 tl Lfn

son

James Jtm Ashley
Your ktnd words and
sympathy shall never
be forgotten
Sadly m1ssed by
wtfa Mary sons David
&amp; Jtmmoe daughters
Cressa &amp; Myra par
ants Garnett &amp; Wilbur
Ashley a11ter Jean and
brother Bob

PLUMBING &amp; HEAnNG
New local on

168 Norlh Second
Moddleporl Ohoo 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We C1 ry F sh ng Suppl os

Pay Your Phone
and Cable Bolls Hero
IUSif~fSS

PHONE

16141 992 6SSO
RESIDENt! PHONE

16141 992 77S4

31

11

VILLAGE GREEN

RACINE

APTS

FIRE DEPT.

Basham Bu•ldtng

&amp; Refngerator

EVERY

MAPLEWOOD
LAKE
949-2734

Furnished Laundry
facil1fles available

SAT. NIGHT

1177171 .......

7

P.M.
fa&lt;tory Choke
12 Gauge Sholguns Only
10 7 tin

992-3711

11 U 17 1 mo. pd

JUST CALLI
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL- SAND
TOP SOIL

FILL Dl RT

10 8 tic

SMALL
WANT ADS
PACK
ABIG PUNCHI

1} 7

Help Wanted

Requires Independent worker with

capab1ht1es tn all areas of chntcal
laboratory
EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS
Please cont!Kt
Ceceho G Lisle
Veterons Memonol Hosp1lal

" 115 East Memortol Dnve
Pomeroy Ohto 41769
PH 614 992 2104
E.O.E.
Public Sale
&amp; Auctton

and COLLECTIBLES SALE

AT HOWERY AUCTION HOUSE
It SO West of Athens, Oh1o
JANUARY 3, 1987 - 11:00 A.M.
Ave y n ce select on ol merchanct se a ot ol Count y and
Oak Furn lure also wa nut p eces dolls Rosev le and We e
polte1y seve a Hummel and Roya Oounon p eces wooden
toys g asswa e induct ngCranbe1 y Fenton an d others Va
s ne West more and Co nspot marked stone ars and tugs
and more crocks excellent doorstops sliver dollars gold
p eces nc ud ng 2 ~ 5 and 10 DO pteces Just a very f ne
sa e Co me and en oy the day
NOTE Due to short ttme tables and hoi days we are nol
able to lost a delatled advert sement
PLENTY OF PARKING AND REFRESHMENTS ARE AVAILABLE
TERMS Cash or Check w/postllve I D
Aucttonetr RODNEY HOWERY
614 698 7231 (Home) 594 3780 (Auctton Housel

Real Estate General

E Main••

POMEROY 0

992 2259

RADIATOR
SERVjCE

THE DABBLE SHOP

We can reparr and re
core radtators and
heater cores We can
also ac1d bOll and rod
out radtators We also
reparr Gas Tanks

IS FOR SALE

Middleport Oh1o

PAT HILL FORD
992 2196

Mtddleport Ohoo
1 131fc

If mterested stop by

1f2 PRICE SALE
GOING ON NOW
PLASTER CRAFT
CERAMIC BISQUE
MAKE &amp; BAKITS ETC
12 2 b7 1 mo pd

RACINE AREA - Approx1
male y 26 acres ol vacant
g ound Really ntce bu ldtng
stes $13 DOD 00
BRADBURY- Close n bul
out oil own Garden a ea 3
bed oom s outbu ld ng
some new carpet equ pped
k tchen One lh rd down on
and contract $21000 00
MINERSVILLE
Sma
house at a smal prce Good
ental property Elec 88
heat I bed oom equ pped
k tchen 1ront deckove ook
ng the rve $8 500 DO
MIDDLEPORT - I i! sto y
bnck home on appx 12
acres ol g ound 4 bed
rooms fA f 0 heat p us a
woodburner PRIVACY
MAKE OffER $27 000 00
RUTLAND - N ce 10 yt old
br ck ranch home Ove I
acre ol g1ound 3 bed ooms
2 baths 1u basement
equ1pped kttchen
arge
pat o MAKE OffER
$39 900 DO
POMEROY - 1~ ots w1th
an olde home Lots ay
pretly n ce SID 000 00
SYRACUSE - 2 story home
wth 4 5 bedroom s 2 baths
k tchen w/ breaklast nook
1u I basement a ge neat
ac1e lot 2 car garage Muc h
more $62 900 00
MIDDLEPORT - Remo
deled home n a n ce
ne ghbo hood WB fP or g
nat woodw ork 2 bedrooms
new bath new k Iehan
basement Musl see ASK
lNG $32 000 00
RUTLAND - Ranch type
home ocated on app1ox 2
ac es ol g ound full basement 3 bed ooms and only
12 y
old WANT
$29 500 DO

Moving Sale-- Everyth ng must
go Cal 614 446 8809

PRIOR

FIREWOOD
Locust Oak Cherry

SJSOO

•HOME BUILD NG
•ROOM AOOIT ONS
•KITCHENS
•ROOFING

BATHS

REMODELING

Wanted To Buy

We pay c•h for late model clean
u1edc••
J1m M nk Ch..,. Olds Inc
B II Gene Johnton

614 448 3872
TOP CASH paid for 83 model
and nawar Uled cars Smith
Buidl Pont ac 1911 Ea1te n
Aw G•lllpol1 Call 614 446

REPAIRS
SEPT C SYSTEMS &amp;
BACK HOE WORK

Phane Day ar E.,.n ngs

985 4141

Rete ences

Pool table and
n good cond

N

ng room sutte
Co 614 256

8666
Small woodburner
448 3113

614 992 2269
Evemngs

GENERAL CONTIACTOIS
1 3 n

12/t4/~7

1 mo

Call 614

HOUSE FOR RENT
107 LOCUST ST
POMEROY-985 3561

•Washers •D1sllwashers
•Ranges •Refr gerators
•D ryers •Freez er s

•ROOFING
•GUTIERS
•CARPENTRY WORK
•PAINTING
•CONCRETE WORK
ALL TYPES OF HOME
REPAIR l!o
IMPROVEMENTS
FREI ESTIMATES

WE SELL USED APPLIANCES

CALL 949 2969

KEN'S APPUANCE
SERVICE

985-3561

All Makes

4

c

H gh p ces pad for pra 1960
quilts Appl que paced any
condt10n C•ll614 992 2101
0 614 992 6667
Used outdoo co o T V en
tenn• Call 814 992 7304
Wanted to buy Wood and coal
ttoue good condition only
304 676 1113

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

REPAIR

Also J ransmiscion
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6 17 ti c

MUZZLELOADING
GUN
•SLUGS
•AMMO

SHOP

•GUNS

•MUZZLELOADING
SUPPLIES
OPEN 1 to 9 PM
Rt 124 Across from
Happy Hollow Ad

RUTLAND

11

Help Wanted

Fo tune 60 Me ket ng
Oppo tun ty Gall po s area
Part tlme/ful time Good n
come opportun tv Establ1tled
c:u1tomer be1e Off c:e equ pment field Sand ette or retume
to c o Box C a 120 Ga I pol •
01 ly Tr bun a B26 Th rd Ave
0111 poll Oh o 46631

614 742 2355
12141mo

$1750000
tiNIY l CLRAND It 'f92 6191
!A~ TRUSS! l
94'1 20oQ
DOTTIE TURNER
992 Sn2

··l~ff~LE~~~9~4~9J3~0~80
992 125~

TRACY
OFF CE ·:·

AW

.... ~~ ~
D&amp;r. ELECTRIC
Ron Diles or
Gary Cummtns

992-6226

Middleport
lnsurtd/L ctnstd
12 7 87tfn

EAGt£1 CLU8

POMEROY OH

THURS 7 PM - U b 4S

Chr ltmu b lis to pay? Stan
sailing AVON befo e Jan 12
receive free co ogne Call 814

445 2166
Job hunting? Need a skI? We
t an people for JObl as auto
mechanics ca penta 1 electr
c .,.. food urv ce wo ken'l
tiiiCtron cs tectln clan• ndus
lr alma ntanancework•s nu an; a11i1tant1 and o der 81
mach nl11t. and welda 1 Rags
ter rtow fo c MMI beg nn ng
Janua y 41h Call T County
Vocltlonal Adult Ceoter at 763
3611 e.ltt 14 A v1naty of
fund ng 1ourc::e1 to pay fo
tra nlng a e av• lab e for those
el g ble

614

N ce 3 bedroom 1 a •
IVtng
room expando La ge ya d Ka
nauga Call 614 446 7473

Room• fo
ent day week
month G•ll a Hotel Call 814
446 95BO Rent lllowas$120
month..

•t

32 Mobola Homes
for Sale

46 Space for Rent
Tralar for ent
some fu nitu &amp; $100 depostt
$27&amp; A I ut Itt e1 614 992
3122 01borna St Pomeroy

Off Cfl Sp•ce for rent Excel
downtown G1 lpols locat on
lnqu lea call 614 448 4222

Cal u 1 to your mobi e home
n surance M le lnsu ance
304 882 2145 A so auto
home te. health

1 8 Wanted to Do

21

Mob a Homo lot 60 fl or 181L
920 4th Gall po 1 S76 W1tar
pa d C&amp;ll 814 448 4416 after 7

PM

Flam ngo 12x615 with porch
Good condtt on Ca 614 256
1607
1 9B7 2 BR Sunny Brook
Mob Ia Home 2 wlcs o d never
been UIIDd Have to sell due to
pa sona c rcumstance
$13 500 or best offer Call
614 448 3608 anytme
14x70 2 BR 2 bath mobile
home on one acra to Sale o
Trada Cal 614 379 2629

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 Norttl of Pom•oy
Rental tra hra Ca 614 992
7479
Space fo 1ma t a erl All
hook ups Cable Al1oeff etencv
oom1 • and cab e. Mason
W Va Clll304 773 6661

44

Apartment
for Rent

Busoness
Opportunoty

NOTICE
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO ecommends ttl at you
do bus ness w th peop e you
know and NOT to send money
th ough til e m a until you have
nve1t gated I he offe ng

Tra ler spec• fo rent At 1
locust Read back of K &amp; K
Mob le Home Pa k. 304 676
1076

2 BA apts 6 c DietS krtcl1en
app fu-:.n shed Washer 0 yar
hook up ww carpet newty
pamtod deck
Regoncv Inc
Apll Ca
304 675 7738 or
676 5104

49

N ce 1 BR apt Ne• HMC No
pets Stove reft g
drapes
8226 a mo Ref equ red Cell
614 446 4782

51 Household Goods

Mode n 1 BR ap attment Ca

LAYNE S FURNITURE

1975 12x60 Gastleated mobllrt
11ome A 1 condition Wa1her
and drvar A condtt on• n
k tel'! an 614 687 6339

Sofas and ch• 1 pr ced from
&amp;396 to S995 Tab • &amp;50 l'lnd
up to 8125 H de-a bed• S390
to SS96 Red ner1 &amp;226 to
&amp;376 Lampl $2B to 8125
D nettes $109 and up to 1495
Wood teble w 6 cha s t28S to
$796 Desk $100 up to 6375
Hutcfles $400 and up Bunk
bada complote w mattreues
4296anduptot396 Babybedl
.S110 Matt 81Hsorboxsprngs
full o tw n $88 f m S78 and
$88 Queen set• $226 King
$360 4 drawer ch~mt 889 Gun
cab nell 6 gun Gn or e ectr c
range $376 Baby mattresses
836 &amp; !!146 Bed f 1maa $20
130 &amp; King ffame $60 Good
select on of bed oom suites
metal clbinets headboa ds $30
and up to 866

14x14 adda oomfo taler
w lh wall to- wall carpet two
c osets two entr 81 own elect ical bo.~t 304 875 6979

Busmess
Buoldmgs

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

Furn 1hed upstaers 1 BR Ut
t es pad t210 a mo Dep 94
Locust St Ca I 614 446 1340
0 446 3B70
2 BR l'lpt Stove &amp; r&amp;fr g
furnlat\ad Naar Go Mart Call
614 446 7026

BEAUTIFUL APARTMENTS AT
BUOGET PRICES AT JACK
SON ESTATES 636 Jackson
P ka from $183 a mo Wa k to
ahop and mov •
614 44'
3997 E 0 H

............

90 D1y1 same aa c:aah w th
appovedcedt
3Miaaout
BuliN e Rd Open 9•m to 5pm
Mon thruSat Ph 614446
0322

Ta a Apartments Elegant 2 Br 2 floor fully
ca 11eted CA and heat Pmrate
entrance en closed pat o pool &amp;
playg ound Sta t 8 299 pe
month Ut it et not nc uded
Call 614 367 7860
LuJ~ury

lo60x1 00 ft lot 4th St Syra
cuse Water gM sewe, suitable
taler o house 614 992 36B6
o wnte P 0 bax 114 SyracuM

Va ey Fu n ture
New and used lu niture and
app Cl'lnces Ca 614 446
7572 Houu 9 5

Renlals
41

PARSONS FURN TUAE

Homes for Rent

New waod 6 pc IN ng room
su tes 8399 95 chest of
drawars-4 d awe
848 tw n
matt as5es 19S set m crowave
oven stands
THE WORKING

3 BR house &amp; ga age A 1 Real
E1t1te Ca ol Yeager Broker
304 676 5104

MANS FR END
large 2 3 BA house Plenty of
storage Henderson 8 ea Call
614 446 7025

La g8 2 BR housa w ttl stove
refr g Fu I buement S226 a
mo 6100 daposlt Vinton Oh
614 38B B121
Furn 1hed 2 1m all ttouaaa 3
tooms &amp; belh aach Gell poll
Nice &amp; clean Aduh1 No pets
Ref 8c deposit Call 614 446
2543
Rent Lean Land Cont act
Homes n Eu eke Rodnw v
age II £van• Hgts Oep &amp; Raf
equ red 8 ackburn Re1 ty
614 446 OOOB
N ce 2 BR unfu rushed with or
without stova &amp; eft g 6 260 a
mo p us deposit &amp; ut 1 01 Ca
614 446 26 16
N ce 2 possible 3 BR hou10 n
M ddleport 0 1hwa1her ga
bage d sp AC full basamenl
E.xce location Cs 614 448
9206 efta 5 30 PM

EH aency Apartment 1 rm with
birth k tchooett:a p rvata en
t 11n ce ut lit 1'115 pa d on g ound
f oo
N ce fo older • ng e
person $176 a met Call 614
446 7516

Large 2 BR apartment next
doortocollega 1stlloo 8300a
mo All ut t es pa d Ca I
814 246 9170 o 446 1323
3 Room apart men 1 14 Stale
St Ca I 614 446 3356

30 elec ange. wh le 576
30 alec ange coppartone
$95 36 elac. anga. wh to
$7~ 30 g815 anga. avocado
$76 Kenmo e wash61 &amp; d ym
set $190 Kenmo e WElsher
$96 Wh pool heavy duty
WUher 496 G E washer I ko
nti'IN $176 Ref gerato
fro1t t ae coppertone t 150
Ref gerato 2 door $95
Skaggs App ances
659 Upp&amp;l' Rtver RJI 614 446

Homes for Sale

4 BR f re place. full basement 3
m so of Galllpol s 634 900
Call Days 614 446 161 S Rfte
6 00 446 1244

By own8f $25 000 OU .t.
m tes from Gall pols looks &amp;
Dam M laton &amp; Rd 1 2x60
raler plu1 15 rooms fum one
ao e washer &amp; dryo 1'1 cond
woodbu ner 158 porch h ac a
fenced w ttl pond 2 outbu ld
ngs 2 ca ports wood 1hed
304 576 2664 D 67B 2826

Back Mae Pek ngese 1 y old
C&amp;ll614 446 6974

County Appl ance I nc Good
used appl ances ~nd TV set1
Open BAM to &amp;PM Mon thru
Sat 814 446 1699 627 3 d
Aw Gall po a OH
GOOD USEO APPLIANCES
Wuherl dtye s ef gerl'ltors
anges Skaggs Appl ances
Upper RIVe Rd bUB de Stone
C est Motal 614 446 7398

fo aalo $100 614 742 2233

73

AKC Boxe pups 7 males 2
fema et very speCial pupp es
1260 each 304 624 7960 o
342 2467 co ect
AKC reg S ber an Huskw., pup
p es 2 fema es black and whrte
8200 Ask for Roge o Jenn fe
304 762 2173

57

Vans &amp; 4 W D

1983 Jeep CJ5 6 cyl 4 spd
he d top Lois of extras EJ~ce
co nd Cal 614 446 4976
1978GMC4wheeld rve o wll
t ade on s ng eaKie dump t uck
Call 614 742 2421

Mus1cal
Instruments

1978 Chevy W nslow van
$1400 304 6?5 2667

Fo .sa e upr ght p ano $40 00
304 675 1926

SWAN

AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62
Olive St Ga pohs
NEW 6 pc wood g ou~ $399
Lvng oomsutel $199$599
Bunk beds w th bedd ng $199
Fu srz.e mllttress &amp; foundat on
1t1 t ng
$99
Re el ne s
start ng $99
USED Beds d ~msers bed oom
suite1 4199 S299 Oesks
wr nger Wither a complete ne
of uaed turn tu e
NEW Westen boots 830
Wo kboots $18 &amp; up !Steel &amp;
soft toa) Catl614 446 31159

58

74

Fruot
&amp; Vegetables

Motorcycles

19B4 Honds 2500 m •
VT
600 Aseo 8800 Cal 6 4 379
2112

Open A I W nte
p enty f u ts
and p oduca 8 t II 6 00 Jack s
Market Rt 35 Henderson

76

Farm Supplies
&amp; liveslock

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessoroas

Used &amp; ebu It transm s.saons All
nto na ly nspected &amp; gua n
ood ca 614 446 0966 ~
buy JUnk ~ ansm ss ons

61 Farm Equ1pment
Cl'l ahan 11 Used T e Shop Ova
1 OOOtres Slles12 13 14 15
16 16 5 8 m as out Rt 21B
Cal 614 266 6261
Sa111oned Oak and A1h firewood
for sele $30 a p ckup load
dohvered Call 614 2S6 1674
New SDI'I s who e house hum
$100 Call 614 446
d fe
9240
T ea &amp; •tump
emoval
fi ewood 1110 pet dumpload
Heap Vouchers. Don s Land•
capM 614 446 9646

CROSS &amp; SONS

U S 35 West Jackson Oh o
614 286 6451
Maney Fe guson New Ho and
Bush Hog Sal• &amp;. SfHv ce Ove
40 used t actor a to choose f om
&amp; complete ne of new &amp; used
equ pment La gest se DCt on n
S E Oho

Services
81

MS 136 91S tracto p OWl d IC
and blade Ce 1614 992 7401
BUY WHOLESALE Whhe fa m
T acto 1 at whoi81Rie nvo ce
plus fra ¥ht Compare the p ce
and qual ty Models from 16 to
1 BO hp Leas ng ava ab a. Offet
good th ough Doc 31 S ders
Equ pmont Co US 36 Hondo
son. W Va 304 676 7421

Mxod hardwoods l'lbs 812 per
bundle Conte n ng approx 1 V:
ton FOB Oh o Pa let Co
Pomeroy Oh o 614 992 6461

Firewood delwe ed stacked
$35 00 Malon Count Di!l Galt
polsothera easwthn aasonat
ou d sc et on 304 895 3446
SURPLUS ARMY DENIM
RENTAL CARHART CLO
THING Or g nal a my c&amp;mou
flage H 0
Sam
Some., lie 1
Old At
21
Ea1t Raven1wood F Sat Sun
noon 8 00 pm 304 273 6655
lnau..ted camouf ega cove ala
$25 00 Black Wh to anow
camouflage

SWEEPER and sew ng mach no
ep1 parts. and supp 85 Pidr
up and de rvery Dav s Vacuum
Cleane
one half m le liP
Gao ges Cr eek Ad Call 614
446 0294

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buy ng shell co n OJ ear
co n Cl'l fo latest quotel R veJ
C ty Fa m Suppty 614 446
2986

63

Livestock
RON S Te ev s on Se v Ctl
House calls on RCA Ouaza
GE Spec al ng n Zen th Call
304 576 2398 0 614 446
2454

8 w eek old p gs fo 581 e. 6 35
Col 614 986 3565
Wanted to buy 1 o 6 b ed beef
cows Call 614 992 6040 or
614 992 7648

64

Rota v o coble tool d ng
Mosl wells completed urneday
Pump 18les and so v ce )04
895 3802

Hay &amp; G raon

U Haul tucks and traders to
rani 304 676 7421
Sheepskin coat srze 36 New
S76 00 Ph 304 676 1616

Hay fo sale Large 1700 lb
round bal• squl'l o bales Ca
614 667 6164

Baarcet 175XLscanner 16 chan
nel ec de search scan
weather a craft Oav s 32 suto
p stol Advantage a ms 22LR
p~atol 304 675 · 2823 ahor 5
pm

Transport ali on
71 Auto s For Sale
197B Fo d LTD Good t es new
battery s
8700 Call 614
246 6239
1982 2600 cc eng ne &amp; auto
trans 1979 Plvmou h A ow
truck 2600 cc. 6 speed runs
good rough body 1987 Honda
700 cc Into copter 1980 Harlev
1000 cc Sportato Many naw
eye e parts &amp; ace Stl'lp oton s
Cycl e Eu aka Sta Route Sox
16B A Gl'l pol a 614 266

For saD
Hay S1 00 bee
F &amp;Wood $30 00 truck ood
deltvarod 304 773 8166

Bu d ng Mate ials
Block br ck sewe p pes w n
dowa ntels etc C auda W n
ten A o G ande 0 Call 614
245 5121

Home
I mprovemants

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unco nd t onal I fet m.e gul'l an
tee Loca references fu n shed
F ae est mates Cl'l
ooll&amp;ct
16142370488 dtJVO nght
Roge aBasement
Wate 11 oof ng

Baby acceaso es. adjustab e
bed frome IW n men ess &amp; bo "
spr ngs Ca 614 379 2443

55 Butld1ng Supphas

6303
198~ Fo d LTD II PS PB AC 4
doo t3 000 1979 Fo d P n o
stat on wagon good cond ton
new ty rod ends $660 1977
Fo d G anada 4 460 A s
Cha men t act o w th bally
mowe Call614 446 2544 12
PM to 1 PM or 1 AM to B 30 n
the mo n ng1

Sa ks T ee and Lawn Serv ce
awn care land:tcap ng s ump
emova
304 576 2B42 o
576 2903

82

Plumbtng

&amp; Heatong
CARTERS PLUMB NG
AND HEAT NG
Co Fourth and P no
Gall po s Oh o
Phona 614 4A6 3B88 o 614
446 4477

84

Electrocal

&amp; Refrogeratmn
Aa dant a o comm etc a w
ng Ne.w se v ce o
epa s
L c6nsed e act can Es t mate
free R donou E ect ca 304
675 1786

85

General Haul ng

D ad Wl'l er Serv en Poo s
C s ens We Is G&gt;e IV O '1 Any
tme Call 6144467404N o
Sunday ce s

1978 AMC G eml
4 spd
$600 Clllatter4PM 614 446

9235

Conaete blocks a s 181 ya do
delivery Mllon sand Gall poll
Block Co
1 23V:I P ne St
Gal po 1 Oh o Call 614 446

R &amp; A Wale Sa v co Horne
c s 8 s we s poo s f erl Fo
me y Jam BS Boy s Wfl Ars Ca
304 675 6370

2783
Ready m ll concrete and ell
conaetesupp ee Ca us Va fll(
Brook Cement t'lnd Suppl 811
304 773 6234

3 bed oom IN ng oom kitchen
bath large yard ga den Rae ne
a ea Ava able Jan 2 Call
614 992 6B6B

56

One ental at 107 Locust St
ottle at 238 Second St Both
Pom&amp;I'Oy Ca 614 986 3837o
6 49863561
3 bed oom 2 fu baths Ia ge
IN ng room d n ng oom and
kitchen Al1o aundry oom 2
Ct'l garage. centra a r Eastern
School D at lei RafiX'ences e
qu ed Call6142474946

1984Fo d150ac ps pb c use
co nt rol 4 sp ow m les eJrc r•
cond See to app ec ate $6200 "'
F rm 304 882 2293
"

1 2 wk old M•le Cocker Span e1

convers on T aler eady Ca
614 446 4383 davs 446 0139
evens &amp; weekends

Couch &amp; cha
EMD cond
$100 Call 614 446 3909

6289

1978 Dodge 4 wl1eel
1977 Fo d 4 wheel d IVe
Chwy
ton p ck up $1
each 614 949 2801

Uving oom suite platfo m
rocker 304 458 1667

1

N ce 3 bed oom hou se Fam ly
oo m ga age buement
fo cad a heat 6 wooded acres.
ban S276 per month $100
d&amp;pQJrt No n1 de pet1 10 Easl
St Pomeroy Oh (I 614 423

Pets for Sale

~----------~---1982 Dodge 250 R Bm Cu1tom ~

6_1_4_4_46_ 7_
44_4_ _ _ _ __

G E au omat c washer Excel
lent thl!)e Gua anteed $126
Call 614 367 0322

56

7 F anch P ovent al couch &amp;
Ch81 ant que 7 drawnr desk.
ctle~t of d awe 11 4 drawa s A
p Ices Exc Cond Cl!l 304.
B82 3333 afte 6 30

Mollohan Fu n ture
Upper Arve Rd Ga pols Oh
D nette1 4226 &amp; up LIV ng
oom su tes S300 &amp; up
Red nera-t1 66 &amp; up Ca pet
start ng at $4 1'1 yd F nan c ng
avalabletoqulfedbu~ 1 Cal

By dtner Off141&amp;Noghbor
hood Rd N co 3 bad oom
enclosed br eezeway attach9d
garagu Ca 614 797 2441
2 bedroom 2 baths 2 ca
garage lwe ot on Rl 33
Sw mm ng pool satel to c ose
oMega H gh Ca 614 992
3264

P CKENS USED FURN TURE Sofas chal 1 amps ec n••
d 1hes d nnotte betld ng h d•
a bed g asswa e &amp; m IC 304875 1450

7398

Real Estale
31

51 Household Goods

Merchandise

Downtown MJdern 1 BR
complete k tchen c•pet a
e ectr c heat Call 614 446
4383 davs. 446 0139 even &amp;
weekend•

614 446 0390

34

For Lease

1400 aq ft commerc a space
au table fo off ces reta I ng or
sn v ces P me lo cl'lt on co nOf
of 2nd &amp; P ne n Gal lpo s
Amp epa k ng n ear 8:360 p91
month Cal 614 446 4249 or
448 2325

Fu n shed apt nEPCt to bra y
One p ofeaa on a adult only
Pa king Ca 814 446 033B

New 19B8 County V lla
14x72 A elect c A eady set
up on R ve front lol 614 992
3348

Fum1shad Rooms

Fu n shed oom 176 Ut lit et
pad Share bath S ng e ma e
919 Second G• pol11 Ca
446 4416 after 7pm

Insurance

HILLSIDE

DRUMMER WANTED For
coumry rock band Call 614

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

13

Financial

446 2144

MIDDLEPORT- 3 bedroom
2 slory home n Mdctleport
N ce k tchen and wtilp
PRICED TO SE LL

Sttuat1ons
Wanted

Room boa d or sleep ng oom
to nua ds Of eld erly 614 992
7204

ll 23 87 1 mo

Services

Rt 124 Pomeroy Ohto

Work ng aorv ce manage
needed fo mmad lrte employ
moot Must have Agr cultu al
and Mach., oa backg oundand
fu n 1h you own tools Sa ary
and comm 11 on Send esume
to 539 Uppe R ve Ad Gall po
Is 0 45631

Ho sec ean ng o office claan
ng have efe enCDs Ca 614
742 2404

EmiJioyment

Roger Hysell
Garage

Homes tor Sale

Commerc al bu ld ngs for 188118
Downtown Pt Ple11ant Sto es
offices A One Real Estate
Ca o Yeage Boker Call 304676 6104

12
Raw fu baef and dear hides
Gyn S ng and Yaltow root We
hwe wheat and nh:e lhes
Trapp ng suppl • for 18 e. {Buy
ng uted trap1) Gao ge Buckl~
Hou 112 9 614 864 4761

304 882 2666

Govarnment Homas for t1 (U
rpa r Ool nquent tl'lx 11 operty
Repossess ons Ca I B05 687
6000 Ext GH 9806 fo cunent

R N phys c ans off ce Please
send nume to Boll C16 n ca e
of Pt P euant Reg ste 200
Man St Pt PI

QUILTS

HOSKINS
HOME MAINTENANCE

Recovery Room Staff Nu se
Immediate open ng for Regs
te '9 Stl'lff Nu se n recovery
room P R N beslll Sa ary com
men1urate w lh exper ence
Cbntact Geoff Polen 0 acto of
Pe sonnel P easl'lnl Va 9( Hos
p tBI Va ~ D Ne Po n1 Ple&amp;unt W V 25550 304 675
4340 ex I 307 AA EOE

2212

Per Pickup Load
Delivered
BILL SLACK

&amp;

MIL TARY SERVICE
meense.~ttra monw.,fo membe s
oftheA my Nat ona Gue d Ca
304 675 3950 or 1 BOO 642

3619

WANTED TO BUY Usad wood
• coal heater• Swa n s Furnl
tu e 3rd &amp; Oltve St Gallipolis
Call614 446 31&amp;9

MARCUM
CONTRACTING
CHESTER OHIO

31

Salespe son nooded ex pe ence
n sales and crafts helpfu'l La
Salle Gallery apply n person
Monday th ough Saturday
1000600

MOM AND DAD Let the A my
Nation a Guard help pay fo you
ch d 1 college educat on Ca I
304 676 3950 0 1 800 642
3619

9

42 Mob1le Homes

45

19B6 Overland Park 14x84 2
BR tot&amp;l g• EJCCellant cond
ton F ench C ty 8 okDI'ego614 446 9340

Galllpo It Flea Market Former
Thelar Garage- Rts 36 &amp; 180
Open Satu daya &amp; Sundavs.

ae

M dd eport 2 room turn 1hed
apt P IVIte bath Ulliti• pa d

197312x65Freedom3BR gal
furnace With cent alar Wisher
dryer all ~tchen app ances
d nene set undarp nn ng. bock
&amp; porchee Call614 367 06B3
The Me g1 Local School D st ct
Is accept ng appl cet on&amp; fo
subst lute tea chers Substitutes
a a needed n all ca rt f cat on
areas The da ty ate of pay
4125 Schools a e open and a
temporary estra n ng o de s n
effeCt Oh o Certif eel Teachers
w II ng to c o•s a p cket ne
al1ou d mmed alley contact
Ma gs loca School Super n
lendentsoffca.621SouthTh d
Avo M ddleport Oh o 46760
614 992 2153

1984 Black Fo d Ooo y F 350
6 9 lnte nat ona d eee eng
33 000 m ea New unn ng
boa ds AM FM stereo New OB
8t t res T uck oo
to match
Ser OUJ

for Rent

Yard Sale

Galhpohs
&amp; VICinity

6:30

EOH

Help Wanted

773 5193

2 Bedroom Stove

WILL HAUL

FULL TM POSmON FOR REGISTERED M,EDKAl
lABORATORY TtCMNICIAN ON ROTAnNG SHIFTS

ANnQUES

GUN SHOOT

$5 00 Extra
For Sk1nmng

DENNY CONGO

MEDICAL LABORATORY TECHNICIAN

8

FOR RENT

Lo.. B ack and wh te m• e
Wa ker Lost near Fo ked Run
State Park. 160 ewa d 304

r

Larry E Spencer
Clerk of Couns
Me1gs County Common
Pleas Court
By Marlene Harr son
Deputy

24

52500

8

1987

112) 10 17
14 8tc

DEER CUT &amp;
WRAPPED

"And Happy New Year to

Cat spayed end daclawai:l lttar
tralnld 304 676 6016

Lad e• go d watch Nat lC
Found between park ng lot 1nd
Ch~pmansSat 614 992 2B,6

that the1r nterest be set off
to them and tf that ts not
feas1ble
that the entire
Interest en the oil gas and
other m nerals be sold and
the Pia ntiffs pa d ttle r share
along w th payment to all of
the Oefendantuccord ng to
the r nterest n N d oil gas
and other m nerels that the
nterest of the part111 be
daterm ned and that title to
n d real estate be quteted as
aga nst all Defendants that
all of sa1d procaadmge be In
accordance with the law and
that Plamt ffs attorney fees
be pa•d from the proceeds of
sa d sale and ncluded n the
costs of th 1 action that all
laKes agamst the 011 gat and
other minerals be pa1d and
that the costs of th11 act oo
be pa1d from the proceeds of
liB d
sale
and that the
Defendanu be raquired to
set forth any nterest or
defense wh ch they mav
have or be fo ever barred
therefrom
You are equued to
answer the Compla nt
withtn twenty eight days
after the last publication of
this not ce wh eh w II be
publ shad once each week
for 1 x conHcutwe weeks
The last publ cat on w II be
made on January 14 1988
and the twenty a•ght days
for answer w II commence
on that date
In case of your fallu e to
answer or otherw1se ra
spend as requ red by the
Oh o Rules of C1v Proce
dure Judgment by dl!!fault
w II be rendered aga•nst you
for the relief demanded 1n
the Compte nt
Dated December 10

We would toke to ex

our

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Mixed b eed female dog A
lhOtl lpaylld 304 676 4208

Y~u 11

CUSTOM BUilT

BISSELL
PH 949·2860
or 949·2801

PIANO LESSONS

Pubhc Not1ce

If
liv ng addreu unknown If

614 992 6689

2

deceased

Deed

County

Subject to a P pe L ne
Easemeot granted to
Tuppers Pia ns Chester Wa
tar D1stnct along with all
other leases easements
and rrghts of way of record
Terms of Sale Cash on
date of delevery of deed The
Executor reserves the r ght
to reJect any and all bids

FLEM LONG

TO THE PUBL C

Tuppers

Pia ns Oh•o be ng the reti
dance of the late Besaee G
Webster w II be sold The
reel estate s descr bed as
follows
S tuated •n the County of
Metgs n the State of Oh10
and tn the Townsh p of
OINe
and bounded and
descr bed as follows
Bemg lot 28 of Arbaugh s
Second Subd v•tan of the
V llage of Tuppers Pia ns
Me gs County Oh o see

6 597 16

Pubic
Ut hty
4 918 07
Spec a
Attract ons
20 057 00
San tat on
126 00
Advert s ng
1 924 72
M sc Exp
3 130 00
Pram Books
2 126 76
Ma ntenance R epa s
Supples
5 377 65
Cap tal m
p ovements
56 313 60

New

Pubhc Nottce

Public Not:fe

BISSELL
BUILDERS

t • Plic:l efeJencesand deposit.
304-B82 2586

' J

Doo t be Iaft beh nd by the ap d
chango n ml'lnufactunng tech
nology RRacelve spec a zed
tra n ng n tile mechan cal hy
d aul c and e ect Cl'l components of factory oqu pment n
the Adult lndustr e Ma nte
nanc:e P og am st The Aduh
Educat on Canter T County
Vocat onal Schoo We htnte a
va ety of fund ng sou ces ava I
able fo ehg bl e appl Cl'lntt
C atMI beg n Jelnua y 4th ca
7633511 ext 14toregster

2440

*VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULATION

•

0

3 Aoostars 304 676 1926

Sweap• and sweeper parts
Eureka and Hoove 304 675
RATES

Beech StrDet Middleport Ohio

V C YOUNG Ill
4 15 86

5024
2 bed oom fu n11hed apt utili

11

Pomeroy Oh o

1976 Buck un1 good new
ad &amp;'to good make w o k ca
3 04 675 2463

19B3 Omege. ps pb a am fn
4 d D.II C cond S2 BOO Ca
after 6 p m 304 B96 3620

2 male fuu:y pupp •
Small
brNd Cal ll!i14 9B6 4288

1386tfc

2 bed oomapartmunt ooL ncoln
Hill Pomeroy C. II 61 4 992
8539 0 614 992 3489

2 badroom furnlsed apt ref and
deposit New Haven W Va
304 B82 3287 or 304 773

Plumb ng and e ect ca
wo.
If ee Est mates)

2 va• old female Labri!Kio
Ret ll'lle
purebred 1 614

1976 P ymouth Scamp s ant 6
fo &amp;a e 6350 198 2: Su•uki 125
RM $226 614 9B5 3 597

N ce 2 br hOUM basem81lt
garege wood burn&amp;r No Pets
$100 depOsit $260 month
Now Haven 304 B82 3202 o

you, too"

992 6215 or 992 7314

CAfll-~t.e Pt-e"AS€ I M
~Pit'€ ~ fl\li 1'\EW '/GAR:$ !:'VI:
PART~ I II'IE.€D M'f CIIR '(E'f:, I

71 BuCk Sky a k.. CUi tOm 11 c
cr cont o automa c
u ns
good $300 30 4 675 5707

982 2882

Pupp ee to gtveaway Ready to
go 614 949 2194

Addons en d emode ng
Root ng and guue w o k
Cone e ewo k

1981 0 d1 ..Omaga 19 83
Ch yl1e.- F tt h Awnua Call
814 742 24 6 1

APARTMENTS rnobile!,omes
houaftl Pt P e11anund Gal pas 614 446 B221

G1vaaway

2 C1t1 to gtve away to good
f&lt;lome 1 Male &amp; 1 Fern a a. Call
614 446 2323

CARPENTER
SERVICE

G ae ous hv ng 1 and 2 bed
oom apartments 1t V age
Manor and Rrven tte Apart
manti n M ddlepor1 From
1216 ncludlng ut tl• Ca I
614 992 7787 EOH

8 room dup .,.. basement liar
age. p Nita n ce locat on 304S7S 3763

mo

YOUNG'S

BOGGS

71 Auto s For Sale

I
5 years old Call
614 446 9515

J&amp;L

Apartment
for Rant

3 bed oom hau 1e Northwelt
Columbus. $450 pe month
Ca 814 992 3662

Chow Wolf

v.w.

The Da1ly Sent~nei-Page-+- 15

I
~

PH. 992-2772

44

Very n ce 2 bedr~m hou1e fully
ca paled recenlly emodeled
Pay own ut tt es depolit r•
qu ad 1226 P&amp;r month with
D SCOUNT Call 614 992
5053

•Storm Windows

RU~~N~o~:lo

Homes for Rent

Va eSt n Pomeroy J bed oom
ga oge new k tchen Oepolil
oqu red Call 614 992 6556

41138 (101} 836 2746

ALUMINUM SIDING
•fnsulat on
•Storm Doors

WHITE Hill RD

41

KUPID S NEST Offers two
k ndl of dating serv ce w ite
PO Box 1519 ronton OH

INSULATION
VINYL &amp;

JERRY'S
CUSTOM
SLAUGHTER

cC LICensed Chmcal Audiologist

governor I bel eve I can speak

OPEN FOR
BUSINESS

LAFF-A-DAY

3 Announcements

~=====::;::=::=:r:::==::;:======tr;========:;rr=:::::=:;::=::==1
Telev1sron lrstentng Devrces
J&amp;L BLOWN
Dependable Heanng Atd Sales &amp; Se111icel
~ Hsanng Evaluatrons For All Ages

Pomeroy-Middleport Oh1o

Pets for Sale

G com and Supply Shop Pet
G oom ng A
b eed1 A I
atylae: lams Pet Food Dealer
Jul eWebb Ph 614 446 0231

They saod t was a scratch and dent sale
The on y scratches are where the sena
number used to be

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA H malayan Pe 1 el} 1nd
S am•• k t en• AKC Chow
pupp es Call 614 446 3844
1fte 7PM

we
automat c. powe a ea ng new
Vlny top Good cond 6695 Ca I
614 266 1332
197 3 Fo d To no &amp;200 Ca I
614 446 8594 aher 6 PM
RARE 1956 Chevy2 d Sedan
327 4 sp&amp;ed new p11 nt e~tra
pa ts tnte ested pa t es: on v
Call614 379 2112

87

Upholstery

Mow ey s Uph o s e ng serv ng
county a e•22yea .a Th ebes
n tu n ture upho ste ng Cl'l
304 67 5 4 54 to
f eo
est mates

t

•

�Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

I

Thursday. Oecember 31, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

Area Death

NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 AM EST 1·1-88

0
and John and Gina Roush , East
Letart ; two brothers and sistersin-law,
Herbert and Mary Roush ,
Lester W. Roush, 66, 23945 Hill
Letart
Falls , and Russell and
Road, Racine, died at his resiBernie
Roush, East Letart; a
dence Wednesday.
.
Shields, Racine; a
sister.
Gladys
A farmer , Mr. Roush was born
brother-in-law
, Walter McDade,
at Letart Falls, a son of the late
Troy,
and
a
sister-in-law,
Betty
Walter and Edna Boston Roush .
S.
C.
Eighteen
Roush,
Rock
Hill,
He was a veteran of World War II
grandchildren , one great - 40
having served In the U. S. Air
grandchild and several nieces
Force and he belonged to Racine
and
nephews also survive .
. American Legion Post 602 .
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
'Surviving are his wife, Carrie •
Sunday at the Letart United
J . Roush; five daughters and
sons-in-law, Karon and Jim Con- Methodist Church in Letart Falls
with the Rev . Roger Grace
nolly, Syracuse; Joyce and Jim
officiating. Burial wlll be in the
Smith, South Webster; Edith and
Letart Falls Cemetery. Friends
Roger Manuel, Racine; Jo Ann
-~ft
may call at the Ewing Funeral
and Dick Smith, East Letart;
l:!•::lsNOW
·
RAIN
~SHOWERS
Vickie and Greg Cundiff, Morn- HOme from 6 to 9 p.m . Friday
and from 2 to 9 p.m. on Saturday.
FRONTS:
Warm "Cold
. . Static
Occluded
ing Star; three sons and
daughters-in-law, Gary and Terl
Roush, Letart, Ohio; Michael
and Beverly Roush, East Letart,

Lester Roush

11

I

ft

Top prize

CLE'qELAND fUPI) - The
top prize In Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing went unclaimed. Wednesday night, Increasing the
jackpot to $12 million for Saturday's game.
There were no tickets sold for
the midweek game that listed the
six winning numbers of 15, 24, 31,
37, 38 and 41, a lottery commission said today.

I.

~nclaimed

Wednesday's jackpot was
worth $9 million.
Five of the winning numbers
were listed on 129 tickets, which
are worth $1,000 each. Also, 6,505
players picked four of the
numbers to win $104 apiece.
Ticket sales for the Wednesday's drawing totaled $5,858,088,
while the prize payout totaled
~805,520.
.

WEATHER MAP- Rain wiD extt;pd from eastern Texas across·
the guU states and the Tennessee and Ohio valleys to the lower
Great Lakes. Snow showers will be scattered over New York state
and northern and western portions of New England. Snow showers
will occur from the western Great Lakes across the upper
Mississippi Valley and the Dakotas to the northern Rockies. Rain
and snow showers wUI occur over the Pacific Northwest. Patches
of dense fog will plague the Great Basin.

Werry...
Continued from page 1
undergone a number of operations as a · result of the injuries .
He has done some athletic
coaching in the past year and is
the newest member of the Meigs
Local Board of Education. He
does not serve on the negotiating
team and he received the largest
number of votes among the three
candidates elected to serve on
the board ·in the November
election. He doesn 't officially
begin the term of office to which
he was elected until next month,
and is serving by appointment to
fill the unexpired term of Larry
Powell who resigned recently .
Miachel Wilfong, president of
the Meigs Local Teachers Associationg commenting on the fire
said: "I think it's terrible."
Wilford said that the MLTA had
nothing whatsoever to do with the
·
incident.

Young
brides

TO GET YOUR 1988
SAVINGS PlAN ROlliNG,
CAll OR STOP IN TO $EE US.

EMS has .six calls
Meigs County Emergency
Medical Services reports six
calls Wednesday; Pomeroy Fire
Dept. at 2:02a.m. to a garage fire
at the Werry residence on Pleasant Ridge; Chester at 8: 58a.m.
transported Murl Ours to Holzer
Medical Center; Racine at 1 p.m.
to Hill Road for Lester Roush
who was dead on arrival; Middleport Fire Dept. at 3: 11 p.m. to a
chimney fire at the Dorothy
Owens residence on Route 7;
Racine at 6: 55p.m. to Dorcas for
Jasper Powell to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 11 :29
p.m. trarfsported Sherr! Trlfonoff from an auto accident on
Route 124 to Veterans Memorial
Hospital.

Hospital news
Veterans Memorial
Wednesda y Admissions
Preston Parsons, Racine; Helen
Will , Chester; Jasper Powell ,
Racine.
Wednesday Discharges _;_ Ray
Haning, Goldie Lawson , Harold
Burt, Ruth Spaun, Carole Smith . ·

Announcements
Income tax school
The Meigs County Cooperative
El:tension Service and H&amp;R
Block are sponsoring an income
tax school on Wednesday , Jan. 6.
The school is scheduled from 10
a.m. to 12 noon at St. Paul's
Lutheran Church, Pomeroy.
There has been some confusion
. over the date because of a letter
that was sent giving the incorrect
date. Pleas note the correct date
as Jan. 6.

Gr~at rates. To encourage savings,
were committed to offering some
of the best rates in town on certifi1 cates of deposit.
·
I
Want proof? just take a look.

I

i CERTIFIC
OF

I

DEPO

. Our low $500 minimum deposit
makes a BANK ONE Certificate of
Deposit a super deal for everyone.

I
I
.I

Term

14·31 day
90-day
!-year
2-year

I
I

Annual Yield

Annual Rate

7.75%
6.30%
7.60%

7.47o/,
6.11%
7 .33o/r
7.88%

s.io%

·

·

,

'

d • J..&amp;.

u I ann-,.

Your interest earns more interest
at BANK ONE.
Interest on every BANK ONE
CD is guaranteed-and w~com­
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grows faster.
IRAs still get attention at BANK ONE.
The "Blue Bonus" and our
"Saver's Specials"·also apply to
your BANK ONE IRA. And
remember, your
IRA interest isstill tax-deferred, lfjl1
even if you can't '
deduct your contribution this
• year. A great way to make more
~f your retirement savings!

, .

'·&lt; . ·

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AU OUR SAVINGS OPTIONS COME
WITH AN IMPORTANT EXTRA:
CONVENIENCE.

*

Doesn't it feel great to_~ave money· the

J

BANK:ONE.

I
I
I

Fifteen thousand people who care.

I
IL
•

As_.. zm 11111111....,.. mJ, 1

BANK ONE, ATHENS, NA, Athens Ohio
Member FDIC
'

There is a substantia l penalty for early withdrawaL
Annual Y'i.l~ compounded by computing daily.

I

·

.

- - · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

- - - - - - --- - - - - - - - - - _j
I

'

,

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