<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="12341" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://66.213.69.5/items/show/12341?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-05-05T01:05:14+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43313">
      <src>http://66.213.69.5/files/original/3ca9821e4cd90887166619025c2383cd.pdf</src>
      <authentication>49ee8f0072a054b6a5f69209d40a03dc</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="38746">
                  <text>.
•

Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Sixteen cases were processed
.
In
the court of Pomeroy Mayor
a
nd
the
.
•
Ross
County
School
Dr, C~rge Schaaf
Richard Sey ler Tuesday night.
Board.'
·
Fined ·were Kei th MuSser ,
Surviving are his wife, Wilma
Private services will be held
Portland, destruction of propThursday morni ng at the Salem J une Shin gle Sc haaf; fourdaugh·
er
ty, $113 and cvosts; disorderly
ters,
Mrs.
Richard
(Ginny
Lou)
Chu rch. Ch ill icot he, for Dr.
manner,
$63 and costs; !ntox!ca'
Koehler,
Columbus;
Dr.
Sally
George C. Schaaf, 79, Fra nkfort,
$113
and costs; Jerry
The
Plains;
Mrs.
Daniel
Schaaf,
a former Middleport dentis t, who
Moore,
Pomeroy,
fleeing and
died Sunday follow lng a short · (Barba r a) Wade, Frankfort, and
$313
and costs;
res!sl!ng
arrest,
Mrs. Charles (Betsy ) Jones,
.Illness.
trepass1n·g,
$213
and
costs;
: Born in Pomeroy, Dr. Sc haa f Londo nd erry: a so n and
was the son of the late .Jo hn and da ughter·in-law, Charles a nd
Margaret Hess Sc haaf. He grad· Dana Schaa f, · Frankfort;. .15
Service times changed
uated from the Ohi o State Uni· grandchildren; · several grea t·
· : versily School of Dent stry in 19:11 grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs
S~nday's worship service at
· and practiced hi s profess ion for Ed ison IMargaret) Wessa of · Middleport Presbyterian Church
Columbus and Mrs. i!: vere tt
56 years.
wlll be at 11:15 a.m. The
(Kathryn) Bachner, Middleport.
He wa s a member of the
Middlepor
t Church has exIn addition to .his parents, he
Middlepor t Masonic Lod ge 36:!.
c hanged times with the Syracuse
F&amp;AM, ·for 50 years and a was preceded in death by a son,
Presbyterian Church, which will
Jon M. Sc haaf, and a sister,' May
member of th e Salem Church,
worship at 10:15, so that a
E llis.
Chillicot he , where he wa s pres i·
congregational meeting may be
Friends may call at the
dent of the congregation. He was
held In Midqleport following the
Fawce
t t·OIIver-Glass F uneral
a form er member of the Fra nk·
service.
regular
fort Exempt ed Village Sc hool Home In Chillicothe from 4-8 p.m.
today. Burial will be ln., Green·
Board a nd was on the founding
lawn
Cemetery at Frankfort.
AA chapter to meet
board of the Piekaway·Ross
The r egular. meet ing of Alco·
Joint Vocational Sc hool. He was
Catherine E. Phillips
ho lies Anonymous will be Thurs·
a current member of the voca·
day,
7 p.m., In the basement of
tiona! school board of education
' F unera l services for Cath erine
the Sacred -Hea rt Ca tholic
E lizabet h Phillips, 98, North
Chu rch, Pomeroy .
Sha nnon Avenue, Athens, former
Meigs Cou nty residen t who died
Jan
. 1 at her home fo llowing an
Four defendant s forfeited
·
ex
tended
illness, were held at .1
. bonds a nd six others were fined
p.m.
Su
nday
at the Hughes
In the co urt of Middleport Mayor
Funeral Home In Athens.
Fred Hoffm an Tuesday night.
Born In Meigs Cou nt y, Mrs.
Forfeiting were Kenneth R.
Drummond, Ga llipolis, $50, fail · P hillips was a daught er of the
ure to yield the right of way: Joan lateLeroy a nd Margaret Mic hael
Carl. She and her hu sband
E . Seder, At hens, $41, speeding;
Ferrell W. Day, Middleport, $450, opera ted the former Alpine Res·
driving whil e intoxica ted, and ta urant In Athens and later
Dav id R. Schm itz, Pickens. S.C., ow ned and operated Carl's
Lunch on Court Street in Athens.
$100, di sorder ly conduct.
Fined were Rodn ey Ebersb· She was a member oi the First
ach, Middl eport. $25 a nd cos ts, Chris tian Church.
Survivi ng are a nep hew,
disorder ly manner: Thelma E.
Wilmer
Carl of Colu mbus; and
Payne, Pomeroy, $21 and cos ts.
two
nieces,
Helen Chapman ,
speeding; Kennl'th E. Wise,
Sl
iver
Spring,
Md.,
a nd Margaret
Cheshire, $425 and costs and
three days in jail, driving whil e B urrell, Columbus. Bes ides her
intoxicated, and$50andcosts, no parents, she was preceded · in
operator's license: Richard Fri· d ea th by her husba nd, Carl
ley, Middleport, $50 and costs, Phillips in 1971. and seven
disorderly man ner: George W. brothers.
Officiating at serv ices was Dr.
Hackett , Middlepor t. $16 and
James
Grooms. Burial was Jn the
costs, s peeding, a nd $2&gt; and
West
Un
ion Street Cemetery,
costs, disorderly man ner: Jef·
Athens.
frey Cu ndiff, Middleport, $50 and
Morris
cos ts, di sorder ly manner, and MarnQ
$100 and cos ts and five days In
Funera l services for Marvin
jail, res is ting arrest.•
W. Morris, 77, Dexter, will be
held at 2 p.m. Thursday a t the
Veterans Mt~morial
Bigony.J orda n F uneral Home in
Albany
with Rev . Robert Muss·
Tuesday Admi ss ions - Mi·
ma n officia ting.
c hael Sals~r, Shade; Dessle
Friends may ca ll at the fu neral
Patterson, Pomeroy: Pearl Ra n·
home from 4·9 this evening and
dolph , Coolville: Carl Findling,
Masonic services by the Orphans
Reedsville: Preston Parsons,
an d Frle·nds Masonic Lodge 275,
Racin e; Ma ry Ro ush. Rac ine.
Wilkesville, will be held at the
Tuesday Discharges - Po·
fun era l home at 7:30 till s even·
rothy Brewer, Evelyn Kni ght ,
in g. ·Burial will be In Sta ndis h
Loshla 'Mitchell.
Cemetery .
.

lion,

'

.

REMEMBER
WITH ToFLOWERS
'Mend a beaullfuJiy ,
""•lgned fu lleral
arr~Angemenl, juel eall
or \lhll

Oliv~·Orang&lt;' Memorial VF'W Pos t 90:.3 will meet Thursday
7::10 p.m , at Tuppers Pla ins Elem ent ary.
'

!Cont inued from Page 11

but Smith ca lled the Pomeroy
ill will a nd hatred, and at the very
Pollee Department. They say least ' werr negligent act ions.
they were told by a policeman
Bot h Doughty and Barnett arc
that Smith could make them use . s uing for $750,000 compensa tory
the fire escape . . In moving Ihe damages and $750,000 punitive
eq uipment down the fire escape damages. Doughty's wife . Is
stairs, bo th plaintiffs fell and suing for $.'i0,000 compensatory
susta ln('d injuries.
a nd $50.000 punitive damages. A
Plaint lffs allege t h&lt;t t act Ions by tria l by jury is tequrs ted.
the defendants were the result of

90· DAYS
SAME
AS
CASH

7P.M.
Includes
. Lobby,
Installment Loan Department,
orlve·ln And Waii(·UP
Window

Peoples Bank
2212 Jacl "''Al'olne .,
... w. v..
171-1121

llhl-

......-:w.v..
112·21U

. Super Louo

25-3434·35-1 0

EMPIRE .FURNITURE of ·POMEROY
108 WEST MAIN

en tine

2 Sect tons. 12 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 8. 1.987

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc.- New spaper

Commissioners approve sales tax, '87 budget
Department of Taxation In late Items in miscellaneous Is $18,919
By NANCY YOACHAM
April
or early May .
Sentl.nel Staff Writer
to crippled childre n, $20,800 to
An $8.2 mllllon budget to
Appropriated by the commls· soli and water, $10,075 to sell
operate. Meigs County govern- slon· to the county general fund, survey and $15,000 to senior
me nt and. services in 1987 was comprised of county offices and cit !tens .
adopted Wednesday by the departments, was $2,072.016.50.
Appropr iated to the landfill and
co unt y commissioners.
A figure of $5'0,000 has been set
The budget is about $600,000 . bond retirement were $71,434. 37 aside In capital improvement s
more than last year's spending and $47,373. 11, respectively.
for the posslblity of putting a new
The remainder of the budget, roof on the courthouse.
bill of $7.6 million, and reflects
anticipated revenue from the over $6 million, we~t to special
The auditor's bud get of
passage of a 1 percent sales and revenue funds tor clviUnd public $161,183.98 Includes a new cour t.
permissive use tax for the services. .
. house computer system. The
Insurance raised this yea r auditor's budget . for 1986 was
county.
The sales tax was also passed from $44,000 to$63 ,200, reflecting $U9, 183.95.
•
by the bo ard Wednesday, just an increase In liability .
The s her iff' s dep art m e nt
Several funds which In the past showed the grea test Increase
prior to their adoption of the
budget, to become effec tive Feb. have bf:en pai d out of fede ral with $~93,378.14; as. compa red to
1. Revenue . !rom the tax is revenue. s haring dollars were last year's figure of $264,794.88.
expected to begin filtering back combined ·in a miscellaneous Included in the sheriff's budget
to the county from the state category of $75,121.61. Among are increases for f,aod and

also given 4. 7 percent salary
increases as was Trea surer Jane
Fry, who was given a four-year
cont ract earlier. Her ne w co ntra ct started Jan . 1, this year. It
was noted that the pay Increase
given the two administrators and
the treasurer Is the same rate of
increase as given Meigs Local
teachers In their recent new
cont ract.
Board m e mbe r Rob e rt
Snowden was re-elected pres!·
dent .of the board for the new year
with three of the five board votes.
Richar d Vaugllan, who served as
(Continued on Page 12)

Southern Local board
reorganizes for year

.U NTIL

Mostly cloudy tonight, with
a tow hctwel!n . 25 and :W.
Mostly doudy agai n F riday,
with hl g~s between 40 and 45.
The probability of preclplla·
lion Is near zero tonighl and 20

353

at y

Vol. 36, No.172
Copyrighted 1987

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
Super intendent Dan' E . Morris
a nd · Assistant Superintendent
.la mes Ca rpent er were given
new four-yea'r contracts in their
respective pos itions when the
Meigs Local District Board of
Educa tion met In Middleport for
its organtzai'ional session Wed·.
nes day night.
Announcement of the grant.lng
of the co ntracts, which will.begln
on Aug. 1. 1987. was made
following an executive session by
the board .
The two administrators were

"

IPIBER F.D.I.C.

Daily Number

•

~·

''The ·let.t er lank"

Ohio Lottery

A woman's
financial·
standing·
-~age 7

Morris, assistant
get ~ew ·contracts

FRIDAY~S
'

..

By NANCY YOACHAM
"I don't think just beca use
there were only 13 people tes tify·
Sentinel Staff W~lter
As expected , the Meigs County ing that that 's all the citltens of
Co mmiss ioners . approved pas· this county who are aga inst the
sage of a one percent sales tax for tax . But it probably shows that
the county when they met Wed- the major)ty of the people of
nesday . The tax goes inio effect Meigs County understand the
Feb. 1.
predica ment we'.re In, not that
In discussion, Commissioner they wa nt more taxes."
Jones said that If the commls·
Dav id Koblentz sai&lt;J' that most of
13 indiv id uals testifying at two slon·ers made one mistake in the
public hearings on the proposed sales tax procedure, It was
tax , presented personal views scheduling the public hearin gs in
"but no real solutions" to the the morning hours, rather than at
count y's financial problems.
times when wor king people could
,
" In order to balance the county have attended.
budget, we've got to have a sales .. Jjpii'~Y~~ • . Jones ~greed that
tax a nd I' m In favor of )t ,'' • "iio feasl~li! alternatives ~· were
presented at the public hearings,
Koblentz sa id.
Said Ma nning Roush, com mis· and he too voted for the tax .. "The
slon pres ident .• " I feel the' way commissioners have the respon·
I've felt all .along. There's no slbllt y of ma intaining tlie· coun·
other way out a nd I feel . the ty 's financial Interests and I
ma jority of the people In the think the sales tax Is in ·the
count y will support our decision county's best interest," he
(to pass the tax) 100 percent. "
commented.
The commissioners ex pec t the
Commissioner Richard J ones,
reviewing testimony from the county to begin receiving rehear ings. said that of the 13 who venue from the tax in late April
testified. seven were against the or early Ma y. The tax will be
tax and six were for it, with three collected and distributed back to
the county by the sta te Depart·
vol~ing concerns over the dls tr i·
·butlon of the tax revenue.
(Continued on Page 12)

VFW plans mt&gt;eting

.

.

medical needs of prisone rs.
The sher iff's budget,.as well as
other office budgets, reflect las t
year's e mplo yee s.alary
increases.
The commissioners' budget
s hows a de c rease, from
$172,999.42·1as t year to $158,274.76
this year. At the suggestion of
state auditors, part of the co m·
missioners budget was transferred to the buildings and
grounds category, from which
the custodian' s and janitor's
salaries are paid.
A breakdown of other count y
general fund budgets show the
treas urer with $00,641. 83; ot her
financial administration,
$2,364.10; prosecuting a ttorn ey.
$110,388. 48; burea u of Inspection,

.Joseph Thoren was elected the new ,ptesident when the
Southern: Local School Dis tric t Board of Education me)
Tuesday night for its organltatlonal session.
Charles P yles was elected vice president and compensation
for board members was set at $80 per meeting for three new
members and $40 for two others who are continuing their terms
of office. The compensation Is set by Ohio law .
The board voied to join the Ohlg, School Boards Association.
The Racine Home National Bank was named at the district' s
depository. Performance bonds were established for the
· treasurer, assislimt trfasurer , payroll clerk, secretaries,
principals, and the s uperintendent In the amount of $20,000
each. A $2.500 service fund to cover expenses of members doing
board business was established.
The board hired Nancy Fisher to s ubstitute In the high sc hool
'&lt;lor Daisy Franz, wlfo Is on leave. Plans were made to open bids
. for the removal of ashes los, ceiling repair work and lighting
fixture replacement a.t th e high school, Portland and Syracuse
schools ai 2 p.m. Thursday.
·
The' board approved the purchase . of maximum liability
Insurance for the . district, individual board members, all
employees and volunteer workers through Nationwide at a cost
of $2,255. Other board members are·Don Smith , Dennie Evans
and Scott Wolle.
·
·

POmOY

I ~

ran 's services; $29,541.1!;; the
county's share of public assis t·
a nee. $46,438: plat map,
$37,488. 68: law librar ies,
$U90.o0; historleal soc ie ty,
$6,000: a nd $2o,OOO l.n
co ntingency.
·

which Is the sta te audi tor's
exam ination of county fun ds,
$50,000; co unt y pla nning com·
mi ssion, $5.257. 75.
Com mon pl eas cou rt,
$92,500.66, Inclu din g a $5,lXIO
In crease ill attorney fees; domestic relatio ns and juven il e rourt,
$4 5,609.72: proba te co u r t ,
$25,697.59: cler k of co urt s,
$102,041.37: coroner, $19,434.89;
count y a nd municipal .courts,
$74,426. 95; boa rd of elect Ions,
$76,906.36; maint enance a nd op·
erat!on. $141,777.27: recorder,
$62,704.94: disas ter services,
$1-,622.27; agriculture, $74,163.
Reg is tratio n of vit al sta tistics,
$100; county home. $86, 348.12:
childre n services board, $26,4:Jil:
soldier's relief, $J6, 664..1R: vet e.

Offi.cials: sales tax
good for .county

W.

FOR YOU
.

..

?

Gregory Hicks, Pomeroy, dl~- Wyant, Pomeroy, $46; . Jack and Michael Hlndy, Pomeroy;;,
orderly mariner, .$63 and costs;
Sattertielll, Pomeroy, · $49; . $47, aU · posted on speeding;
expired plates, $63 and . costs;
Tommy Goett, ., Syracuse, $46,
charges.
;~ ·
Cal'! Hughes , Pomeroy, $63 and ·:r-"..,.....--.....,.:____..__,.....___...,..______,_..,
c.osts; six mohths probation,
disorderly conduCt; Debora NeJ:
son, Racine, $51 ·and costs,
speeding; Richard Gerlach, New
Haven, W.Va., $63 and costs,
expired plates, .and $49 and costs,
speeding; Shari Stone, Middle.
port; $63 and costs, expired
plates, and $46 and costs, .
·
·
.'
speeding.
Forfeiting bonds were Debora
Davis, Middleport, $49; Debora
Coffey, Rutland, $46; ·· Dennis
Boothe, pomeroy, $47; Melissa
$48; Linda .
Hubbard,
Grover,
Timothy

Middleport Court

Athens trio files

.

Pomeroy mayor c~nclu(les 16 c~es in court . ~
.

\

•

•,

Wednesday, January 7. 1987~ .

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio.

Area deaths

"•
.....

.

Amo ng the speclll l reve nue
fund s, $805,:1:!6 was appropria ted
for the co unty board of m ent al
retard a tion a nd devPlopmental
disabilities: $2,890,982 for public
assistance; $79,650 for litter ·
cont rol and recycling: $48,790.50
In rea l es tate ?Ssessment:
$1,462,845.94 In the motor vehic le
a nd gasolin e tax fund which
Ofl&lt;'raiPs thl' counl y hig hway
garage: $10:1,610.72 for TB;
$420,676.42 lot· EMS.

'

Budget
.
summit
may be
possible
By LINDA WERFELMAN
WAS HI NGTON (UP()- Pres·
!dent Reaga n Is opposed to
negotiating his $!trillion budget
plan wit h lawmakers who want to
raise taxes. his budget director
says. but " hcar t·tO·hM rt talks"
abou t a reas for compromise
could encourage him.
Jam es' Miller, director of the
admi nistra tion' s Offi ce of Ma n·
agcment and Budget, s u ~gested .
after his fir st day of Ca pit ol Hill
tes tl ~ony that Reagan might be
wllllng to meet with lawmake rs
about the plan .

G.f;-OSED TO TRAFFIC - L'ynn Street In
Pomeroy Is closed to traffic preparatory to the
razing of .the Meigs Inn. Although the building Is to

be torn down soon, the the eucl date of the razing
Is still unknown.

Common pleas court slate~
sentencings in three cases
Wlelgs County . C~mmon Pleas
Court Judge Cha rles H. Kni ght
ordered sentencing of three de.
fendants for 9 a. m . on Monday,
Feb. 17, following arraignments
of the three In his court.
Douglas E. Freeman, 19, Mid·
dleport , entered a plea of guilty
to a two-count bill of Information
prepared a nd filed bytheofflceof
Prosecuting Attorney Fred W.
Crow II chargin g In count one,
grand ·rheft~to; and count two,
receiving syllen property .
Charges result from an inc!dent on Nov. 29, 1986, In which It
was alleged• that Freeman hal)
stolen a 1975 automobile belong·
ing to .Earl a~d Nel\'aza Smith In
Pomeroy. According to Paul
Gerard, Investigator for the
pro~ec utor's office, Freeman
then purchased gasoline for the
vehicle with a stolen credit card
belonging to Francis Broderick .
Grand theft auto Is a felony of
the thir,d degre carrying a
possible penalty of one,l ~ or two
years In prison, and a possible
fin e of up to $5,000. Receiving
stolen property (a~credlt card) Is
a felony of the fourth degree
carrying a po sslbl~ penality of
six, 12 or 18 months in prison and
a possible fine of up to $2,500.
Freeman wa s released upon a
$1,000 recognizance bonp until
Feb. 17, the sente nc ing date.
Michael A. Sheffield, 19, Mid·
dleport, recently of Santore!, N.
C. , and Etta N. Randolph, 19,
. Coolville, also known as Christy
~ Randolph, also known as Etta
Noel Kelly, enteRd pleas of
guilty, each omf(~harged . with
forgery, In bl),ls of Information
tiled by the.offlce of Prosecuting
Attorney Fred W. Crow III.
•
Sheffield and R.andolph were.
each charged with one count of
forgery as the result of &lt;In
Incident which occurred shortly
before"Chrlstmas, according to
Paul Gerard, Inves tigator of I he
prosecutor's office. The two

allegedly passed a c heck bearing
the for ged signature o! Ran·
dolph's former hu sband, accor!f
lng to Gerard.
Fargery is a felony of the
fourth degree ca rryi ng a possible
penalty of six, 12 or 18 months In
prison and a flhe of up to $2,500.
Sheffield wa s released under a
$2,000 reconglzance bond an d
Randolph was released under a
$1,000 cognizan ce bond until the
sent enc ing date.
Also, David T. Barstow, 33,
Route 1, Albany, a ppeared be·
fore Knight Wed nesday for sen·
tencing upon a prior plea of a
charge of felony dru g a buse
(cocaine).
Barstow was charged as a
res ult of an Incident which

occurred In 1986 at his Gibson
Ridge home, according to Paul
Gerard , lnvestlga!or for the
count y prosec utor's offi ce.
Of!lcers from Athens Cou nty
had go ne to Barstow's hOme to
serve a warrant from Athe ns
cou nty chargi ng Bars low with
trafficking In cocaine In Athens
· Count y, Gerard sa id. Bars to":
a llegedly had cocai ne In hi~
possess ion at the time at"
Athen~ offi cials ca ll ed the Me gs
Sher iff' s Offi ce In at tha t point.
T he charge Is still pending a nd Is
scheduled for trial later this
month In that county .
The Meigs County charge Is a
felo ny of the fourth degree and
carries of possible maximum
!Continued on Page 12 )

"I t hlnk the possibility Is worth
rxp lorlng," Mill er said,, " (but) I
think we need to have some
hear t·to· hi"ll rt talks before any thing Is decided."
The budget dlrt&gt;&lt;:tor cau tioned
that dec isions wou ld have to be
made fir st on wha t lop lcs would'
be incl uded In any " budget
summit ," a nd he not ed Reagan's
expressed opposit ion to a ny
compromise In favor of a new
~e n eral tax.

Mill er's comment s ca me alter
3Y, hours ol testimony Wednesday a t the Senate Budge t Co mmittee's fi rs t hearing on the $1.02
trillion flscal1988 proposal.
Treasury Secretary James
Baker was to testify before the
same panel today.
The president 's plan - the nrst
In his tory to exceed theS I trillion
mark- expects to meet the $l08
billion deficit reduction target
spec ified In the Gramm-R udman
balanced budge t law wit h cut s In
domes tic programs, sales of
government property a nd In·
creases In fcesf or peop le who use
federal lands . .
Reaga n wanls to ac hlevt· lhe
goa l while ril ls lng military
spending by .1 percent . plus
Inflation . Many tawma kN s ·in
both pa'rlles ~ay the proposal
cannot grt th rough Congrrss
·· without maj or changes.
The Democrats chall enge ad·
ministration
ca lculation s that
•
our
customers
a
low
as
possible.''
asser
t
the
deficit
ca n be trimmed
Unlied Press International
Ga
llia-Melgs
of(]ce
manager
from $17.1 billio n this yl•ar to
Sentinel Staff Report.~
Columbia Gas of Ohio has for Columbi a, Jo hn M. "Jake" $107.8 billion for the fiscal yc•ar
beginning Oct. I. They also sayannounced a S2.'i nillllon rate Koebel , term ed the move "good
even though the Whit e House
red uction a nd pledged lo seek no . news.''
Koebel salq Co lumbia Is also claims lis plan Includes no new
rate Increases throughout 1987.
as
king the Ptlbl! c Utlllttes Com·
taxes - that proposed new fl.'Cs
The rate reduction,. effective
mission
or
Qhlo
to
approve
the
and other moncy·raislng provl·
Immediately, ·wnl result In a
slons amoun t to thl·equlva lent at
savings of about $10 a year for an .. following :
-Conttnuatlon of a red uctio n tux Increases .
average c~stomer, · 'Columbia
Chai rman C. Ronald Tilley sala In rates that wa s to have e nded
Jan. 1, amounting to $5a year fo'r
Wednesday .
Sen. Lawton Chiles. D·Fla ., the
The reduction Is a continu ation the average customer.
Budget
Committee chairman,
-A
reduction
In
rates
due
to
of a rate red uction tha t was to
said
negotiatIons
with the' White
lower
corpora
te
federal
Income
have ended·Jan 1.
House
on
a
co
mpromise
would be
Koebel
said,
tax
rates.
This,
Tilley said lower operatlhg
the
best
way
to
"really
fact"
up to
amou
nt
s
to
.about
$5
In
sav
ings
cos ts enabled to company to
lhaf'wc
have
to
get
the
problems
per year for the average eusto·
redu ce rates.
mer. "We advised the the PUCO. this bUd Ret on track."
·Sen. Warren Rudman, R ·N.H.,
· "This Is the seco nd consecutive last fall that we would fully a nd
agreed the at.l mlnlstrat ion and
year that we are reducing rates promptly reflect the changes In
and voluntarily' placing a freeze federal tax rates," Koebel said . Congress must cooperaH; .
"sooner, rat her ·than later, to
on base rate Increases for the · "We propose to reduce rates· now
fashion
a compromise. If we walt
entire year," Tilley said . "The so that customers quic kly retoo long to do It ... we're going to
announcement Is In line with ou r ceive the lull benef its of the
have a hard tlr'rw."
continuing efforts to keep cos ts to reduction."

Columbia Gas slates
' rate reduction
major

•

�.,

Thursday, January 8, 1987

•

Comlnel)tary
The Daily Sentinel
'

111 Court Street
.

Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO :rHE INTERESTS OF :rUE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

...,....__,._...,..., O"'T"E!c:;::lo =
'qlv .

ts:m~

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Asslslant Publlsher/Coniroller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

'

DALE ROTHGEB, ·JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publisllers Association.
.

LETTERS OF OPINfON are welcorn&lt;:'. They should t.. less thOJn lXl words

long. A. II letters arC' subj ect loro lt!ng and 111.1 st bc s lgned wl1 h na mP, address and
telephone number . No Wl slg n(l) letters will be published . Letier s should be In

good tast(', addrt'Ss ln g Issues, not person a lii IE'S .

•

Worccslr•r (Mass.) T&lt;•h•gram
Then•11·as a time when l herrsecmM to lx• no limit s to the amount of
r]lonr·y major league ba seball own~t·s were wlillng to pa)' unsigned
pl &lt;OI'r•rs from other clubs. Thosr with hrlty bank accounts OJlllng for
shor tcuts to _a pennant abandoned the tlme·honor&lt;'d sys tem of
nurtu r ing .\'Oung players to stardom and opted for rs.ta bl is hed "sl a rs"
Instead.
·
But the quick fix didn't work very well. Whlleplay~rs' sa laries h av~
lnrr ~asrd dramatically, t h~ hlgh·prlced acquisitions often fail ed to
fulf!H rxp&lt;•ct at ions. In fa ct. trams I hat depended on these costly free
agents for success. didn't clo as well as so m~ othet·s that opted for
gradual imprO\·emrnt. ... This past sea~on produced one of the largest
and best crops of talented rookirs in recent memory . Most of th~
owners who hHve dipped h&lt;'av!ly Into the free-agent market in thr
past h av~ como away dlsappointro by th{' rC'suit s. That, m or~ than
anything, migh t prompt them to stay away now .

J'~day

in history

; Tod&lt;~y Is T~\lrsday, Jan .. ~. Ihi:' eighth day of 1987 with 357 to follow .
-: Th ~ moon Is moving toward its lui! pha se.
· The mot·ning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn .
Thr rvrnlng stars ar~ Mars and .Jupiter .
Those born on this date are uniler the sign of Capricorn . They
Include educator and hym n wr iter Lowell Mason t "Neat·erMy God to
The&lt;'" 1 in 1792: James Longs I reel. Confederate general In the Civil
War, In 1 ~2 1 ; publisher Frank Doublroay In 1862: actor Jose Ferrer In
1\112 t age 751; comrolan Soupy Sales In 1926 1age 61 l: singer Elvis
Presley In 1935: actress Yvette Mlml~ux In 1939 t age 481, and
singer-actor David Bo~le In 1947 (age 401.
; On this date In history:
In 1815, Am&lt;'rlcan Gen. Andrew Jackson' s forces decisively
dcfeatro the British In the Battle of, New Orlean,-, the closing
engagement of the War of 1812.
In 1867. Congr'ess approved legislation that for lhc first tim~
allowed blacks to vote in the District of Columbia.
:· In 1973, 1.iw trial of the "Watergate Sev~n" began In Washington .
They were charged with breakln~ Into the Nat ionall;leadquarters of
the Democratic Party.

Tide hands Wildcats first ho e defeat:.

'

'

8y DAVID E. NATHAN
UPI Sports Writer
Alabama, which lost four tim es
last season to Kent ucky- and
Eddie Sutton, Wednesday night
handro the second-year Wildcats
coach his fir st home defeat.
The Cri mson Tide ripped No. 8
Kentucky 69·55 in Lexington,
Ky, , en ding Su lton's · string of
Rupp Arena .v ictor ies at 23.
Kentucky's 14-point losing mar·
gin matched the worst defea t
ever for th e Wildcats at Rupp,
which opened In 1976.
"Because Kentucky Is the
basketball power that it Is, this
win makes it more impor tan t
than others to our fans back
home and 19 the coaches and the
players." Alabama Coach Wimp
Sanderson said.
A year ago, Kentucky beat the
Crimson Tide twice in th e regu·
Jar season before beating Ala·
bama in Sou theast Con ference
and NCAA tournament play.
Derrick McKey scored 23
po int s and Jim Farmer added 22
to lead the Crimson Tide.
Kentucky, which trailed th e
entire
game. pull ed within 59-53
LOOSE BALL - Willie Glass (30) of St. .John's and Reggie
with
5:52
left when Rob Lock
Williams of Georgetown vied lor control of a loose ball in the !irsl
convert ed a :I-point play. Farmer
half ol the Big East game al Capital Centre Wednesday. (UPI)
th en sco red 6 strai ght points as
·Alabama took command for
good.
Alabama improved to 8-2 overail and 3-0 In !he SEC, while
fui on a 45-fool pull on the par-3, Kentucky dropped .to na nd 1·2.
CA RLSBAD, Ca lif. IUPI) Mac O'Grady says all pla yer s 204-yar d 14th hole.
The Crimson Tid e hit 58 percent
" File that one under the of their shots, and Kentucky
except Greg Norman are pre·
tenders at· the $500,000 Tourna· category of ihe mystery of the connected on just 39 percent.
game," O'Grady said. "This
men! of Champions.
Mi chael Ansley joined M cKey
"The course favors the long ga me is very unusual.
and Fat·mer in double-figu re
hill ers like him," O'Grady sai d
Wednesday alter he and Mark
Calcavccchia matched 65s and
shared the lead after the opening
round of the first PGA event of
!he year.
" Don't be surprised if Fred
Astaire is doing the tap dance at
th e end of the pi cture. Greg
Nor man will gel the girl at the
end, I promise you."
Norman, last year's money
leader, shot a'69 at the soggy La
Costa Country Club. The score
left him three strokes behind I he
leaders and one in t)ack of Corey
Pa vin and Rick Fehr.

Collt:ge-picking time ______c_h_uck_S....!,_fo_ne.·
Any high school senior worth students honestly befleve the neat college," " They had the
his or her scholastic salt ·has college admissions process Is
number-one football team In the
already clintflbuted to the flood
governed by such caprite.
count'ry," "I walked around the
1
of ·applications currently InunIt's not.
campus and really llkro it."
dating coll.eges and universities.
The law of admissions reel·
Last week, I Interviewed a~
It' s college-picking time proclty works both ways.
applicant for an emlnentlydlstln·
much more· Important than
College admissions officers gulshed college.
Christmas time.
spend as much time poring over
You realize, ol course; that my
But how do the colleges decide . and dissecting applications as being an alumnus In no way
who to selr!'cf or reject?
the applicants spend decldln'g vitiates my Impartial assessA standing joke among college
which college to apply to.
ment that this college Is one of 12
admissions officers is that the
Is there an unimpeachable titans occupyl_ng the Mt. Olymsurfeit of outstanding applicascientific formula . a parent or pus of academic superiority. (I'll
tions pressures them Into stand- student can use to determine the document that In a·moment) .
Ing belore a staircase and
best college?
Ellen (not her real name) had
throwing the applications
Not really. Parents tend to be applied to - In alphabetical
against the stairwell. Those
conservative, elitist and per· order - Amherst, Brqwn, Prinwhich land on the highest rung
sonal: "Several business asso· ceton, Wesleyan, William &amp;
are acl'mitted .
elates attended," "It has high Mary, and Yale.
Such humorous hyperbole Is
SAT scores," HI went there."
One quality connects all six.
dangerous because some disapSimilarly, students are guided Prestige. I could list six other
pointed parents and rejected
by Irrelevant criteria: "It's a ·COlleges of comparable educa·

Byrd·ready to go

Opinions -of other editors

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3 •
•

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Th11rsday, January 8,
1987
'

Washington Window

By STEVE GERSTEl.
WASHINGTON I UPn - After six years of strumming second
fiddl e, Rober! Byrd is back on the podium , orches trating the
100-member Senat~ ensemble and jijsl plain loving the feel of the
baton.
Si tting with a couple of reporters around a low circular table in one
of his offices last week, Byrd .made no attempt to disguise his
eagerness to get the lOOth Congress moving.
All hough he wa s fielding countless Interviews on th e forthcoming
sess ion - an almost obligatory assignment for reporters covering
Ca pitol Hill - B)Td left the impression he was willing' to give replies
as long as there were questions.
Not always answers, of course.
Byrd Is much too cautious to give specifics which tim e and
circumstance could lea ve him stuck in an untenable position.
And. as always, a spot of history from a man who ha s made the most
ctet ailed history of the U.S. Senate a .personal proj ect.
· He Is. Byrd told the repor tNs, .the first to have served as majority
le~der (1977-81 1 and minority leader. (1981·871 of the Senate and then
returnro as majority leader 11987·1.
"Yes, I 'm excited, " Byrd said, "but I 've lived 69 yea rs, mostlY.
filled with rxcltment."
·
"
·
• But that answer probably docs not convey the total impact of
moving from being Democratic leader In a Republican-controlled
Senate, a personal gulag where he spent the last six yea rs, to being
Democratic leader In a Democrat·controlled Senate.
;'\I! hough he makes no complaints, II is clear Byrd and the other
SClnate Democratic leaders have ~ ulferro as unwelcome stepchildren.
since President Reagan won the preslde,ncy In 1980 and brought with
him to Washington the first GOP Senate In a quarter of a century .
: Byrd compared the sta tu s of Senate Democrats "as some kind of
.Invis ible tribe'' over the past six years. He said he and the other
Democt·atic leaders wrr e not brought Into play by the White House,
.
the Republica ns lro by Sen. Robert Dole nor, more surprisingly the
Democratic House pres ided over by Speaker Thomas O'Neill.
Even when he was majority leader the first time, Byrd's role was
dlf!~rent, with Pre sid ~nl Car ter, notorious for his inability to deal
with Congr~ss, was in the While House. He says," .. , we met some,
usually at the Whit e House."
This tim ~ around, however, Byrd predicts that the " Democratic
$(-nate Is going to be a force in Its own right."
The West Virginia veteran sai d h es~s the "point" In meeting with
Speak~r Jim Wright· and ot'her Democratic leaders in the House and
working with them and does not foresee any problem .
" Jim Wright and I hav&lt;• a very good rappor t," he said. "We' r e
going to see things pretty much eye to eye."
AI the same time. Byrd, widely known as a workaholic married to
the Senate, mak es it abundantly pl ain that )le will assert a highly
active role as the Democratic and, thereby, majority leader. Nor will
his seemingly unflagging en&lt;'rgy be devoted to high matiNs of stat e.
He has shown no aversion to going after be !IN Capit ol Hill property
for his suit e of offices, scrambling rea l estate holdl ngs even at the
ex ~n sr of VIce President George Bush and Dole or of trying to shift
the television ca meras in the Senat e to get better shots of the
lea ders hip in act ion.
And he may even have set up a baltic of succ&lt;'ss lon b)' two senators ,
DaniP! lnou y~ of Hawai i and George Mitchell of MalnP, two Byrd
loyalists.
Inouye, w~I J.iik ~d and well-respec tro, stuck with Byrd whm Sen.
B~nnrtt .Johnston of Louisiana made his 111-fat &lt;'d campaign to become
th&lt;' Democratic leadN. So· did Mitchell.
When the plums were hand&lt;'d out by Byrd, lnouy&lt;' became the
chairman of the blur -ribbon committee crea ted to lnvpstlgate the
Iran-Co nt ra sca ndal. a ticket to national exposut·e.
As for Mll c h ~ll. who englnecr~d the Democrats' stunning victories ·
In 1he November Sr•nal e races. hr was named deput y president pro
tern of lhr· Senate and part of the leadership team. Only one othPr
sf'nator has held that title - Hubert H. Humph re,Y . honored as h ~was
dying of ca n&lt;w.

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

tiona) excellence, but they might
not be endowed with comparable
prestige.
Ellen was mare than an Infectious personality and Independent thinker. Editor of her·school
newspaper, president of the
theater club and French born
player In the orc.hestra, she was
sixth In her class o( over 600 and
had scored 1,380 out of a possible
1,400 on the SATs .
That last criterion awes most
colleges and absolutely seduces
all parents . But It Is the· least
lmpresstve criterion to this longstanding opponent of standardlzro testing - although I confess
I always want to know what the
SAT scores are. '
I also want to get rid of themor at mlnlmlim, make the!ll
optional for the admisSions
process.
Ellen clearly was a perfect
candidate lor my alma mater.
But how could I convince her?
Consider, I suggested to her,
my alma mater Is one of only 12
colleges that could boast both of
the following distinctions:
- Headed by one ol the 100
most effective college presl ·dent s, as voted by 485 chief
executive officers, higher education officials and scholars.
- One of the 46 most selective
colleges, based upon the percentage of admits .to apjlllcant5.
That "distinctive dozen•," In
alphabetical order: Brown, Ca rleton , Chicago, Georgetown,
Harvard, North Carolina (University of), Notre Dame, Vlrgl·
nla, Wellesley, Wesleyan, Willi·
ams and Yale.
But I counseled Ellen to look at
other criteria - the college 's
graduates, Its teaching excel ·
lence; distinguished professors,
library, the students and tlie
" feeling" she got on her visit.

woebegone Bush has sustained
more measurable political dam·
age lhan the president.
Bush Is seeking the kind of
sympathetic neutrality asked of
the Lord In the story about the
country boy who was running
a.long a r ailroad tra ck Inside a
long, narrow tunnel while a train
bore down on him from behind.
As hope of escape withered, he
cried out, "Lord, If you can' I help
me, for God's sake don't help the
train!" Jranamuck seems to be
helping the train .
But If ·Bush can't be rescued
from the train, this will remove
the presidential contender whom
Deriwcratic strategists considered easiest to defeat. Worse,
his place Is even now being taken
In the polls by the candidate they
fear the most: Senate Republl·
can leader Robert Dole.
The nimble Dole Is a charter
member of the crew of Senate
pragmatis ts who can trim their
sa ils to accommodate the shift ing winds of public opinion.
Though he has been the Reagan
administration's most visible
defender In th e Senate , he Is
shedding thi s parti cular skin
with excessive delicacy. So far,

he has managed to weave enough
ambiguity into his postur~s so as
not to appear a toady nor a
traitor.
Dole has also been edging
toward a softening of the caustic
Image that has hurt him In the
pa st . Instead of slashing his
opponents he has learned to •
suppress his sca thing wit ; now he
goes about the Senate with a
gargoyle's Inward grin as if he Is
savoring some Intended jibe.
In his new role as mlqority
leader. Dole will also have more
time to campaign. Yel he will
continue to champion the Repub·
!lean cause on Capitol Hillin the
worst of weather. Already, h ~ Is
beginning to emerge as a heroic
figure carrying the deadweight
of a flawed administration.
It Is of such stulf lhat presidents are made.
WATCH ON WASTE : The
Veterans Administration ~pends
$10 million a year on unn~cessary
X·rays, according to the agen·
cy's Inspector general. Veterans
Administ ratio n doctors told the
Inspector general's investigators
th at 21 percent of lhe chest
X·rays at eight veterans' hospl·
ta ls weren-'t needed.
·

The event is scheduled to
conclude Saturday and carries a
first prize of $90,000.
'
O'Grady, the PGA's bad boy a
year ago, birdied eight holes, but
Cal cavecchia had a 30 on the
ba ck nine to match his 7· under
par 65. O'Grady, who earned
$256,343 last year ·desplte being
suspended for six weeks because
of repeated rantings hurled at
Tour Commissioner Deane Be·
man , recorded four birdies over
his first nine holes, then had four
more to fini sh a " magical"
round.
He secmro at peace with
hlmsel l and Beman during a rare
interview -room appearancE'.
"In the best interest of th e
game of golf and the Tour, my
personal feelings must stay in th e
house, " sa id O'Grady, who had
gained an invitation to the
Tournament of Champions with a
triumph in the Hartford Open .
"They're In the house and that 's
good for everybo dy. The com·
munica tlon ·lines are open and
that's important :"
O'Grady. a long hill er helped
by the wet conditions. improved
to 5-under when he was success·

Burned by mi·crowaves·-=-.---.------Ru_sl_Y_Br_ow_n
It 's no surprise to me that
microwave ovens are selling at
the rate of more than a million,a
month: I've bought three In the
last 10 days .
No, I'm not stockpiling them ;
I 'm just trying to find one that
works- and one that I can work.
For years, I've dlsdainro this
latest brea kthrough In kitchen
appliances. But the summer ol
1985 changed my mind. The
temperature hi! 98 degrees six
days In a row. The afternoon sun
bakro relentlessly lhrough the
west kitchen window . And ,
wouldn't you know, I gol this
craving for bakro potatoes.
Only a mad woman would tuil.
on the oven under the clrcu;ri:
stances . It was clearly time to
join the microwave·generation.
Off we went one evening to a
local department store. There
was a veritable gem on sale $161) off - and the salesman's
eyes gleamed as he recited the
super features: "Three·stage
memory with 99-minute timer In
each stage; 10 power levels;
700-watt peak cooking power;
temperature probe; jemperature hole; automatic start, up to
12 hours; 1.4'cublc·foot oven
cavity,"
_
·
Of coursf, we didn't understand a word he said. But In 10
minutes , he hadconvlncrous this
was the perfect choice. We
waved our plastic and said we'd
takeit .
·
i
Excited as kids with a new toy
- which It was - we Wasted no
·time trying aut the speed-heating
miracle on a frozen pizza. .
We pluggro In the oven. Lights
came on:· a fan began whirring;
·ye\ nothing gol hot. We consulted

-·---

our neighbor, a nuclear physl·
dure. Alas, the oven wen I darkAnd I hal's how comewe'renow
clst. He has no solution, but
lights, beeper, digital clock and on our third microwave. It's the
kindly offered to warm the pizza .all. The oven was flnlshro- but
ultimate In smallness and slm·
in his early-model microwave.
dinner wa s not.
'p!lclty. It has one temperature
Back to the neighbor and his (high) and one timer- period: It
" Must be something wrong
old reliable microwave.
with the computer,' said lhe
heats water, cooks bacon . and
technician. who listened to our
We were the ones who were frozen dinners, defrosts meats
complaints the next da y' and
heated up when we returned the and reheats leftovers . Nothing
second "miracle chef" and de·
ordered a duplicate to be dell·
too laney.
cllned lhe salesman's offer to
vered in three days.
It also bakes two po1atoes In 10
Meanwhile, I began reading
send out another. But In a couple minutes on a hot day. Now thai's
the 23-page ,Instruction manual. . of days, my desire for baked
what ·I ca ll a neat Invention.
There were ; diagrams of· the
potatoes returneq ..
"digital readout display win·
dow, " the "auto start pad,' ' the
"multi-functional number pads"
- and eight sets of operational
procedures, Including cyclic de·
frost , three-s tage cooking,
tmeperature-probe cooking, etc.
The more I read, the less I
·'
underslood. And the 23 " don'ts"
at lheendofthe manual made me
very uneasy.
I was still game, though when the second microwave was
delivered.
But just as the delivery men
walked out, I noticed the oven
~as listing to starboard- one of
Its legs was missing. Shouting,
"Hold It, hold it! " I raced out the
door and after the disa ppearing
truck - to no avail.
We picked up a replacement
'leg at I he store the next day and
lookro !orwaro to our first
microwave dinner. Reading
aloud with the manual In one
hand·, I put the lasagna In the
oven and pressed the necessary
pads for time, power and
temperature.
.
When the three-minute beeper
sounded, I was awash with
triumph. It was time to turn the
·:1see you slipped off the diet. You tested
casserole according to directions
. positive for ICE CREAM USE. "
and resume lhe operation proce·

In other games invol ving
rankro teams, No . 11 Auburn
defeated Georgia 62-0R, No. 12 St.
. John' ~ was wh ippro G0-46 by No.

· 531 JACKSON PIKE -RT. 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524

BARGAIN ~··tNEES SATURDAY I
SUNDAY - ALL SEATS l l.SD
ADMI SSION EVERY TUESDAY lZ

second-half run .
At Dur ham , N.C ., Quin Sny&lt;lei'
scored 17 points and fo ur Duke
teammat es also scored in doubl&lt;'
figures to rally the Blu e Devil s
over St . Joseph 's. St. Joseph 's led
by 6 points at -halftim e !Jut sh ot
just :l8 per cent in the sf'cond halt.
and Duk e' hit 62.5 of it s shots .

from a 4 t-26 ha lftime defi cit to
close within :1point s in the lim~!
seco nds. Clem son is orr to it s !Jest

start ev er.
E: l scwlwrc, Ar my whipped
Corn ell 89-71. Bos ton Unlvr rsit.v
&lt;lumpr•d Mainr• B1·o7. Vermont
sto pped ('&lt;olgat o 71!-li:l. 1-:a sto' r n
Kentu,. ky o·dgPd Wo•,l crn K&lt;·n ·

At Fort Worth, Texas, Ca r l

tu cky liH·Iili, Flo ri d.t ~ l ;.m~ rnrd

Christian ripped B.aylor 71 -:&gt;6 and
Clemson surprised No. 20 North
Ca rolina State 73- 6\l.
AI Auburn, Ala., Jeff Moore
scored 16 points and F ran k Ford
added 14 to pace Auburn ovl'l'
' Geor gla 's Milt Blakl ey
Georgta.
.
hit a 3-polnt shot wilh one seco nd
le ft in regulation to send th r

Lott , Jamie Dixon and Carven
Holcombe scored lti poi nts e;och
to power Texas Christian over
Baylor. TCU shot 6:1.6 percent in
the s&lt;'cond half and built a
23-poinf lmd midway 1111·ough the
half.
AI CJomson
HOJ"' IM
c·
'
'
' ' .,
" .
Grant sc orro 17 points and
gra bbed 15 rebounds to pa ce•

Mi ssis sippi ~1:11 1' lllll·c•l i. l.uuls·
l 'ilfr got pa st Flurid a Stil l I' n li4
and Vandl'rl&gt;ilt tuppo·d Mi&gt; sls·
sippi lili-:o!l .
Also, Virgin '" ' li'OltnrPd Mi s·
sour I Gt;.:,o. William &amp; Mal')'
stopped '!'owson St atl'ii:\.;ol , Iow a
dn' fp alt•d D.ii .11 10n 7'!.- 6~.
•
1\ansas Stall' cdgr:d Marqu ~lt r
Wo-!!4. Texa s A&amp;M sHpp• •d b1·

game int o OVC'rtime.

undefeated Clemson OVt' r N. C.

Southrrn M(-'lhoclis t

17 Georgetown, No . 16 Duke bea t
St . Joseph' s 93-83, No. 19 Te:xas

sc

s·, ,,,,.

1) 1 · ~)~ 1

arid

AI !.andover . Md ., Reggio Sta te. The Wolfpack batlio' cl bil r k
'l'r'xas T ~cll whlppr•tl Hlr·r• ti:o-47.
Wi lliams scored 16 points a n d , - - - - - - . : . _ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - ·
Per ry McDonald added all 12 of
..... -.:
his points in th e second hal f to
power George town past St.
John's. T he game wa s tl~d 26·2fi
·at the half, but the Hoy as surged
to a big lead with a 22· 7,

Norman TOC favorite

A GOP hefo ______,;___J_a_ck--:-A_n_d_er_so_n_·_&amp;_J_o_s_:ep~h---=Sp~e_a_r
WASHINGTON - As the In- I he workings of the engine room.
coming congressional Demo Though Reagan may now be
crats and the tenacious surviving sagging In public esteem, he has
Republicans assemble In Waalways been able to exude a
shington to lake up their respec - special calm. Mills prrolctro
tive dominions, they must warliy
that , In the end, most American s
pick themselves out of the will feel the presid ent Is entitled
shambles of Iranamuck. For the to' sympathetic national
wreckage Is littered with politi - understanding.
cal hazards .
Meanwhile, a degree of paraly:rhe scandal has broken dawn sis has already been Inflicted on
the cordon sanltalre around the Reagan administration. This
Ronald Reagan. But before the may excite and delight Demo·
Democrats resume their Reagan . crats of narrow perspective, but
bashing .. they might hearken to those with broader vision are
the advice ol Wilbur Mills. Once a concerned about the damage to
power In the party, he was ruined the crrolblllty and stability of the
by alcohol but is now the most Unlled States.
sober man In Washington. He has
warned party leaders privately
If the Iranian revelations keep
that the attacks on the president reverberating In the public dia·
could backfire.
Iogue, Mills said, the Democrat s
Mills has advised them not to may lose more' than they · will
und ere s timate Reagan 's gain. For bashing the president
buoya ncy; the presldent 'scheer· has Its Inherent dangers lui visage may yet loom above hazards that will be test ed in the
the wreckage. · Given his In- 1988 presidential election.
grained nonchalance about deAmong the many constella·
tails, It Is unlikely he was aware tlons shaken by Iranamuck i s
how lar his subordinates had George Bush. He achievro his
gone. He has always steerro I he place In the heavens as the tall to
ship of state, setting the course Ronald Reagan's comet, but on
and issuing orders from th e the descent, the tall appears to be
bridge, without much Interest in ahead of the comet. Somehow the

scoring with 10. points . The
Wildcats were- Jed by Richard
Madison ' s 15 points and Derrick
Miller' s 14 .
·

MEIGS CO.

KARATE CLUB
· BEGIN CLASSES
STARTING JAN. 8
AT 7 P.M.
CARLETON SCHOOL
FOR INFORMATION
CALL 992-6839
OR 992-5896

HAS,NOT VET BEGUN!!

CHECK OUR PRICES FIRST
ON WINTER AND
ALL SEASON. TIRES •••
'

GENERAL TIRE SALES
PHONE 992-7161

Middle ort, OH.

N. Second Ave.

~RAilA
OIL
FILTER

10W30

10W40

limit 12

limit 12

Reg. 79~

•

Zerex Antifreeze

Reg.84¢

Reg. 4.1911mlt 6

2.99

49.88

AHtrrebato

Pylon

Savage

Snow lllades

Batteries

Reg. 4.49

72 mo. warranty
Reg.59.B8

4.88

ntl fATt Of' THI M\N UU
HIOCOI tl THE PAST.
~HIM Clt41A~TH ... tM6.

Windshield
Washer
Solvent

3.49 llleprltt
- .50 mtr'uebatua .

Reg.99e
limit 6

wt1hpurchi H

ol2

Booster
Cables
BC812
Reg.6.88

Berry's World

10.000FF
From

89.95

2.000FF
Rebuilt Water
Pumps

4 and 6 cyl. Reg. 15.95
8 cyl. Reg. t8.95

w1th e•change

Radiators

" '

Reg. trom.99.95

Standa.rd
Heater Hose

S.OOOFF

Reg. 2.99

20.95

l.OOOFF
Thermostats

13.95
16.95

1.88

From

Heater Cores

From

Reg. trom 2.89

Reg. from 25.95

\

·OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
Store houro : 8:30 1.m, to 8 :00p .m : Monday through Friday,
8: 30a.m. to 6:00p.m. Soturday and 10:00 a.m . to 6:00p .m. Sunday .

209 Upper River Rd.
Ga~lipolis, 9hio

·1.69

�Page-4- The Daily Sentinei

Pomeroy- Middleport, -Ohio ·

.

LoH AnKeletl 6, F.dmomnn I
Thu rwda,y',. Game.
Quetlf'&lt;'. Nl'W .lerlif')', 1; 3:1. p.m .
DetrOII a&amp; RtaMlon, 7: 95p.m.

Ry t 'nit !:'it

r•n.,.~ lril{'t'nllllonlll
F.AI'iTERN C'ONt'I-:Kt;r..T t:

Mlnnertot~t, K:D p.m.
LAt. ""&amp;el~ 111 ~a iJIU' Y, t : 3:1p.m.

Bufi.Jo d

AtiiUitk Dlvl&gt;&lt;lnn
Ro~o1on ........................ !'~

" ' L Pc{t; R
9 . ~1() !....

Philadt•lphl oL .............. 1!+ It .:'i71i
WW~hlnat"n ............. .... l!l

Frld.,'" c:ame!i
lbrtford IU Wlnnlpt'IC. nlrltl

I
&lt;1t

li ..tti!l

N\' bhllllif'l'fi J&amp;l NY Rlilnat'n., nlxN

P'ltl!ibUrlh lr.t "' llili hhi~4ln, nl~~:nt
Sl . l .oul'l Ill. Edmonlun. nt ~~: hl

S1•w •IHM'Y ............. .... 16 ~~ .313 )2 111

N¥w l'o rk .... ................ IO t:l .3Cl3 U
('c·nlrall)l\l'&gt;ln n
AII1Ulla ....... : ... ............. f~ !I .ilD :\tll~o~.· IUI I! •~ ·

.. .. .... '!l

I~ - ~'

H.S. Wrestling

Ht

Dt1rolt ................... ... 1!1 10 - ~~

'l

lndl arw ......•............ ... 11 15 .1'.31

~ ·~:

fhlt•Ujl:i! ............. ...... .. lti l:i 516
Ill . W6

!J L1

HOI.LANO, Ohlu tU PI' - Thl'

fi

flf'\"l'hUid ... .............. 1:!

lll a~h .... ... : ................... 1~ l l

. 61~

I~

.4!9

21

.:~2

llniiSMO .......

.. ...... .... 1:1
U!'h VI'f ... ....... .......... 1:1
~l&amp;l ' rllmt•nto ................ fl
~a n 1\nton io .....
.. .. ~

•·ompUed hy Dlt-11. Hoo 11er,

d1Ntr11J&amp;!If'd h)' UPI { f lhl pi!W'e 11ole11ln
pam·ntht'IH'!;j :
&lt;:1.1\."tS A,\ A
T1&gt;um
Polnlli
I. 1.!111.1-wood St . t;d wurd ( I:IJ ..... .... 1-l:i
t (' lev&lt;• st. l,;nar.llu ~l I II ...........
13:{
:J.· t lpp••r 1\rllnl{lon .
. ... Ill
I. J'l;nrlh ('anton Hoolll'r .................... 74
~- X•·nla ............................................ 1.!
ti. Solon .. ,.. ,, .... , .......................... .. ....ill
7. l'lo' ordonht. .......................
. .. .. 34
K. 'd'orthl nRfo n ........................... .... .. e
!1. F&lt;~ lrflt•ld .... .............. ......................3~ ·
10.M~&amp;plr llela hll" ......... .................. .... l'l

2~
~!,

10

u •"E

. ~12

l'udllt· Dlvlooinn
(. ;\ Lio~ +' r~
.... 5
II . ~ 1 :1 l'uriiWid . .....................t l t:1 . Iii~ li

(Onldt•n Slall•................ l9 1.\ . ~5!1
Si'al lli• ........................ 16 U ..~ I ll
-1--P!"::.~&gt;·:

...................
11
.................. 1

C llppu~

M

9'-'r

1!1 .1'l t 121 ,

211 . m

!Oe~rftar)"·

trf•:.&gt;u"'r ol Ilk&gt; Ohio High &amp; hoot
Wrt."'IMna fou.chl:'l'l Alil&gt;odaUon. a nd

l!2 .2911 12'-'t
~~

flr~t

1!)1!7 OHio ttl.-h lll"hoo l wre!ot lln 1 u •UnK!!.

WESTERN fOJ'I;Jo'f:RENfE
,\'lltlwl'!l{ Uh·l!.lu n
\\' l l"cl . HH
Uall'w. ....................... ?.! t(J .I:IIIX -

22

."W&gt;I!flhd lf'h :

~'t i dm!!'ldat,V'.". fW!OoU]h

II . Ull') ('lf'\'l'l ll.lld Nl .

hM·p h Wid Lorain Soutlll\' ll'W, !:1 t'ach:
1:1. ~urlh Olrn1111•d !2; II. Lim a ShuwiWt'
12; 15. l'ln dnnld i t:td..r II ; Ill. Ull'l
E lyr l11 llll d SWlh l;!i\'llh·. 10 f' al"h; Ill.

ror.;,.". , j, · r~•·!"

!Ill, K'u.,hJ IJI(toll 91i
Roslon ll!t, Mllwaukr •• !12
l'tlihult•lp h.Ja 109. /Ui un la 10 ~
l.hof:r&lt;lll, l!'l, N1•w \ 'nrk Ill
llall a" lltK, Sun ,\ol uolu IO:J
l ::it "I:U. II. i•r~ 117. llo•n vr r 109

F'rt'monl R011 ~ II; 19. Toltodo Rogers 7: %0.
H111iun li.
fl.i\."iN i\,\

Tt •wn

Tlmr-tla.,v'-. r:amto,;
1.,\ f liPJl'.'l'loi ll.l C'II ·V t•land, 1: 311 p.m .
l'11rtland at fhll'aJ( Il,II: :IO p.m.
lndiiUl ll at llou slun. 11: :W p.m.
I.A l .u ~ er".Ja t l ll ad1. !1::1(1 p.m.
·" '' l.ll.llt• al 'liold1•n Stall•, 111: :111 p.m .
1-'rld~zy 's Ga m1'ii
Sou ·rumcnlo 0111 8o~lon, nl chl
1••• rti 1U1 d ~tl Nt•w ·lt•rM•)·, ni N:ht

Points
l.lh•dford( 'hlllli'IIH ) .................... . !II
'l. ( ' n lumhu ~ Kl•alb' ................ ...... .. !II

:1.

6. ( l it' I Ros~ford ........................ . .. .. r.
(lit• I !oil. l'arll'i firahiUn ........... , .. .... t:

6.

~ - lllll ~horu.. . .............
.. .. ....'l4
11. tt_l nt~u· d 1-"a l._ ... ........................ ... lA
to: (Jhrl! ·hs\'Uh• nay mont ................... Ill
!olhvnd h•n ; II . ~WIUllllrt 17: 12. (IIi• )
Eafun 11ndT•· In~hurl(, IS ~&gt;1u· h: H. Mll11.11
Edt..on 13: U. M•·dlna H l~ hfand 12: 16.
,\krun St. Vln('rnt·St . Mary II : 17.
8n1nklyn ttl : lit. Sprlnl{l'leld ,'\lorthwl"l&gt;l ·
o•rn i : 19. l'as.ta ll a Mar~: 11.reth1 6; 00. (lifo I
llurun an tlfba,IC'l'ln Fall ~ K1•nston. ~l'al: h.

:11 l'hlh1111'1phi&lt;t, nl~;ht
LA fliPPf'l'lO "' net roll . n l ~¢hl
" '.,ttlnl(lun &lt;~I Mllll'l· au~ t't', olrhl
lll•n VI'f U.l fblln,o;, hljtht

."ian t\ ntun lo lll l'ttn•·nh. nighl

NHL Standings

C'l.ASN A

{;F fiA

176 1111
1 !1~

Ill

1~1

1:10
IIi:\ IH7

ltl iK5
l'l:) IHO

llalrlftlrd ... ............. :!0 1:1 fi 16 1:11

L

~ ~~

,' lnntrt•!ll ................ :!~~ 17 li IIi 117 1:1:.
Ku~tuo .................. 114 17 I Ill 1:11 tU
lf!u•hl •t ............. .. n 19 li

.. ..... 11 21

to

It '~

~

!1 tt!t
I"AI\II' II EU . Ill:o.if'lo; tu:sl ·t-:
Snrr is 1)1\' IJ&gt;Ion

K11fh.lu .

Uli

m

W I. TPis . (iF(; I\
Ud roU .................... 16 IIi 7 3!1 1:::1 IJ~
1'1lf&lt;ll11111 ................... 1 ~ ~ ~ " J9 IH lUi
I'll . l .. ou l ~ .................. lti li fi ~ 140 IM

Chh·Ufl:u ................... lti '!II li :UI u:tm
,"''ln!W~IMII ............ .. IIi,, 4 :\ti 153m
Nm y lh•• Ul vls lun
1-::dmunton ............... 2~ l:t 2 ~'l 11!4 Itt
( ' u l~tar.v ................... t:I IS I 17 15, 117
" 'lnnlpl'll ................ 1!1 l'l I I'! l:i.i 1111
lo~l.; AnKI'I&lt;"" ...... ... .... III lfl I Ill lli!l 1jj
\' :me·uuvt•r ............... l~ '!~ ~ :!II t :!~ 161
W• · dn• ·~fl l,,. . loo

Ot·SaJPii .......................,.. 56

I. Mt•dlnu But:kt'Jt' ........ ~.......... ..... .. A2
.1. Oa~ lh1rhnr ...............
.. ........ :11

Nt •~o~• \' ll r~

l'a l rh·k IJI ~· lo&gt;lo o
\\' I. T l'b.
rhlhtdi•lphl:l ............ ~ II ~ lit
N\ ' bh•n•t.•r • .......... .', 17 :1 1:1
l'ltt ~ tmr ~~; h ............ 1111i ; -11
N\' K ltn NI'f~ ........... IIi Ill j :t!t
,"'ii'W ·lt •rM~' ............. IIi ~ I :t :IIi
"' ~~&gt;o lllnl(tuu .......... 11 ~ I li :11
r\d :mh lllvl!iluu

C'o lurnhu ~

Tt•lUll
Polntti
I. ~l! W hur y I II ..... ......... .......... ......... 11)
t Hrid,l;t 'JIOrt ('l) .... .... .. ........ ............. 6.'1
:1. Ril:hmnnd lll•IKhho ........................ ~
I. Mlddlrlll•ld ('a~ rdlnalt'll ................ ~
.\. f uya lm aa H••l• hl " r!J ....................Sti
li. Ulll•rt.vt ·;·nlt-r (I) ........................ .!i l
1. I ~tdb. I II ...... ... .. ..........
.... AI
11, jo' N•mum ~ ~ • •lof• ...................... ...... ~ •
!t. lib•) l i rand\· h·•· ll cl~t: hl ~&gt; ................ 2:1
11. i llt•t i\r1·hMid ............
.. .... 0::1
~·t~l n d ll'll : II . fill') W1os1 Utlf'rt y
Salt•m and f:U~unhur11. 16 ••:u·h; 1:1.
.\ yf'r~ •· i l h • 1-1: II. Hluntun 13: IS . (lit-)
SiUHill 'il(\' Sl . M11ry!i a.ndMadt'lrll ( I) , II;
17. Apph• frt'l'k Way n!•dl&amp;lco 10: 111. Uk•J
1\ut:u·lu. \\u udmon• &lt;~ udll ckln,~;Hl • l~~;t. ~.
"l'lll"h,

Transactions
H1\."iKt;THAJ.I.

flt•lrnK
.'~h-QIIII'I'n

-

l'l'tllcr

( "o1.r ll

tu lll·lla,v 1:ontra•·t.

.'

JW,uu ..

Si~t:m'lt

fO t.U:nt:

K nl alll iii.OU - ,\nnoolll." l'd· fo~ e ph 1111._·
lin wnulfl hl'l'lllllr h••MJI ha .. lirlhullt11lll'h
n1 ·~ I M'"'u n.
\\'lf'ohln~on Slatt· N11Jm·d n .. nru~
fo: rtdt~on •~I W'yumln~ hPII.d footh all

l&gt;flllll df•lpttluli. N\" KIIRII"I'h :l
J, Muntrl'al :! (OT)
l'lthhur11h !i. "'a.•hln~un 2
." it. l .uql.~ ti, Hart ford :1
lhlffulo -1. Mlnnlp•'il: t
(11h·axu fl, Turunln I
\' 14111~1uw r

I"Oat•h.

Meigs girls ranked
12th in Class AA ·poll
· STEWART- The Assoc iated
Press' 8t h and 12th ranked class
AA g irls tea m s, Meigs (9-0) and
Federa l-Hocki ng (9-0J knock
heads tonight at Stewart with the
winner ta kin g over firs t place In
the hotly dispu ted TVC cage
race.
In thr AP' s first poll of the
yE-ar, the Marauderettes co lJccted 34 points to nab their 8th
ranking whil e Federa l-Hoc kin g
had 27 poin ts. First place Millet·sburg West Holmes eas ily outd istunccd seco nd place Tipp City
Tippeca noe with 72 point s.
Both Meigs a nd the Lady
La ncers were di st rict champio ns
last year . Meigs class AA while
F HHS:was then a class A schoo l.
Both wer&lt;' e limina ted in the

.

never quits," said Hahn. "We
By GENE CADDES
were down 16 points (60- 44) with
UPI Sports Writer
First-year - Ohio . University nine minutes to go.·Thls has been
basketb&lt;lll coach Billy Hah.n is taking place ever since our loss
at Bowling Green. We 've tight·
just 33 years old but aging fast.
Hahn added a few more gray ened our ship up a little at OU and
hairs Wednesdll,Y nlgnt while things have been startin g to go
watching his team ~orne from our way."
Paul Graham led the way with
behind for the fourt h gam e In a
row, nipping Toledo 75-72 on a 21 points for OU, which matched
3-point jumper by Roger Smith Toledo 's record of8-5 overall and
with o)\!y one secori~ to play In a 2-lln theconferencewith the win . .
key Mid-American Conference Toledo and OU share first place
in the MAC with Kent State and
ga me.
"As long as we win, I hope we Central Michigan.
" We played well the first 35
keep coming back all season,"
minutes,"
sa id Toledo coach Bob ·
said Hahn. " We've won four in a
Nichols
,
"
but
we certainly didn't
row and in all four games we've
been down at the half. It's been play well the last five. Ohio U
dlfflculfand It' s not pretty, that's · deserves credit for hanging
for sure, and obviously It takes a around and being In position to
win the basket ball game."
toll on the head coach."
Ohio U, down 33-29 at halftime,
Elsewhere In the MAC Wedneswas never ahead in the second day night , Ke nt State rolled over
half until Smith' s jumper found ' defending champion Miami 83the range and the Bobcats trailed 53, Eastern Michigan whipped
72-66 with 1:50 left to play.
Bowling Green 95-52 and Ball
"I think It's a good personality State slipped by Central Michito have on a tea m when It never, gan 81·79.

l)h·ls lnn nf :\lullinll'di :l, lm·.

1\

Put&gt;l l.~h •..-1 1'\'l 't'\ ;.ll r l' nllnn , M o nlla \ '
lhrouu h Frlt L•''· 111 l nur1 S1.. Pn ·
mi' I'(W, Ohi o, h\ l h f' Oh ll"l \" ;1ll1 '\' l"uh·
11shtn'il Comp;tll \ Mul!lm•'(l lo1. . Int.,
Pnml'l"m·. flhlll ·l:•ili!l, l'h . ~!!I~ :~nH . ~f' ·
(~\ nd r llnos po ~ la ~l' pa id ;11 Pomt •f 11~ .
Ohio. :

Un iTI'Il P rl""" ltl lt' r nall li nal .
!n!anc1 J);1l lv PI' I'~~ A-..~(lf · i ,ll Jo n anctr hr

Ml •rnl)rr:

Ohio N••w:-Pa pP r i\'-""'''1;11 ion N,tr ion,II
J\d \'e•r i i.~l n ~ H f'prt•:o.(•!l l ,lll\'1\ n r;lllham

r-;(•\l"!olPllp &lt;'r Soill'' · 7:1:1 Third 1\wnul· .

;..lrw YOI'k. NPw \' ur k liln li .
POSlMA.t.;TI:R: ~ I HI nddrr"" t • h .tn~l '"
10 Thr&gt; Oallv S(lnlirwl. Il l C'o urt S1 .

Pomf'6r,v. Otllo 1:116!1.

.

.

· RUR.~C IUI"J' ION

Rv Currh•r nr

By BOB KEIM
23-20 doubl e overtime win
UPI Sports Writer
agains t the New York Jets in
VERO BEACH, F la. (UP!) -; place of Injured starter Eddie
Cleveland Inside linebacker Johnson and fini shed the gam e
Mike Johnson likes to ta ke things with nine tackles and a sack.
In stride . ·
With Eddie Johnson hobbled
When he first joined the with kn ee a nd ankle lnju~les,
13rqwns in August from the U.S. Mik e Johnson seems to be in line
Football League, he faced a n for plenty of playing time in
uphill ba ttle to make the team, Sunday's AFC Championship
but he managed to do it by~ against the Denver
making 13 tackl es in the fin al two Broncos.
ex hibition games. At fl_rst rele"I'm j ust taking it as another
ga ted to special teams' duty, gam e and If !'have to start, I'll do
Johnso n excelled there, forcing the best I can ' o he lp us )Nin,"
three fumbles a nd leadin g the said J ohnson, who played at
fore spending
teatn with 32 tackles on ·special Virginia Tech
teams.
two years In th USFL. " I'm not
He got a cha nce to make his nervous or a nyt ing lik e that."
first start Dec. 7 against Buffalo,
Asked to ass s hi s perforand responded with six tackles m a nce agai ns t tile J ets, he said,
and a fumbl e recovery. Johnson "I did OK. I f On't say I 'm
played most of last Saturday's unhappy, but I can play better

I

Area teams ranked in
weekly AP prep poll

It's eit her feast or fam ine for
the three Ohio boys basketball
champlqns according to the
Associa ted Press' spor tswriter s
a nd broadc asters first cage poll.
Jennl Swar tz, ·and twin-s ister
Both CiassAAc hampionOberall-district performers Julie and lin (8-0) a nd Class A champ
J!'nny Miller . FHHS returned Columbus We hrle (9-0) were
four · starters Including all- overw helming pickS for their
district as a freshman and now respective classes while defendsophomore Lori Williams. Willi - lng Class AAA champion Akron
. ams cou ld be one of the greatest Cent ra)-Hower Is unrat ed.
female cagers southeaste rn Ohio
Ga llipolis (8-1) Is lis ted 17th In
. has seen in a long time before her the Class AAA poll, grabbing 19
prep ca reer is over.
points while Lancaster is 27th in
the big school divisio n with 11
Also expect ing to see plepty of points.
act ion for the Mara uderettes will
Southeastern Ohio Is loaded
be Dee Henderson. Missy Woods, with entries In the Class AA ·poll
Wendy Fry, a nd Shelly Stobart.
as Middl eport-native, Me igs
Other area teams ranked in the · grad, and ex-Gallipolis reserve
AP poll includes class AI).A coach Rick Van Maire's GreenLancas ter (16th I an d class A field McClain (8-0) five Is ·lis ted
sc hools Richmonda le Southeast - sixth 'with 72 points. The Tigers
er n (11th) and Ch illicot he Unloto are followed closely by, Wh~le__rs(20th I.
burg (8·01 with 68 ' polii!s· in ·

KOREAN KARATE
at the

BUDORYU DOJO
NEW CLASSES BEGINNING WEEK OF
JANUARY 5th

a

Or!C' MonT h : . .'..

.. S~•- ·F•

One• YN tr . . ....

. . StifdiO

SIN(:t.E C'OPl'
I'IU fE

Dull~·~ ... .......... .. .

not drslrlng 1o pa ~ r hr r 11r ·
ri&lt;'r ma\' r r mtl in iHI\':.1 11 «' dit't"c·r ro
Th(' Dall~· S1•nt ln&lt;•l on a :\, ti or· 12 mon th
b:ur; 1'* . C1·rdlt will bro ,1! 1\'f'll ("!lrrlrl' ('.1 c h

Sul)!lcrlbrr ~

hOm&lt;' rarriN S(• n •lrt• 11'

a va ll nblf'.
Mall :-l uh:olcrlptlon.oo
ln"ldt&gt; MPIW' Count y
13 Wf"'f'kS ., ................................ $ 1 7 . 2~
26 'A'rrk!l ............. .. ................... $..14.06
52 Wf'Ck-'1 ...... ...................... ....... $66.56
o0tit!dd4&gt; Mel~ c;ounl)'
1:\ Wf'C'ks ,,. ................ .. .... , ..... ... S11t2U
24; Wf•rb ......................... .. ....... S.1~. UJ
~2 Wf'rkN .............................. , ... $67.60

team."

(Jf

PERFORMANCE
ATHLETIC FOOTWEAR
- ~ .

•WOMEN'S AEROBICS
•MEN'S TENNIS &amp; BASKETBALL

CHEVY
4X4TRUC 5
-

-

-·

Saturday: 10:00 a.m.-1 2 Noon; Competition Team Practica
•COURSE LENGTH: 12 Weeks •STYLE : Tae Kwon Do
•TUITION : ' 1 2 month : students may attend as many classas as
they wish
•
•New students may ragistar through the month of january
•INSTRUCTOR : Jerry Maule, 3rd dan
•ASSISTANTS : Mickey Davis, 2nd kyo; W. T. English, 2nd kyo;
Aaron Williems. 2nd kyo

CALL 446-8161 if you wish further .
information, or visit the dojo
.
We alao offer combination AEROBICS / FITNESS CLASSES in
tha afternoon for paraons wishing to shepa up, lou weight , ra·
cover from lllneas / lnjury, or just to maintain good health and
physical/ mental fitness.
Monday thru Thursday:
1:00 p.m·. Aarobics/ Fltn 1 - 2:00p.m. Aaroblca/ Fitnau
3:00 p. ~ . Aaroblca/ Fit 11 - &amp;:00· &amp;:30 p.m_. Aerobica Only
TUITION: '12 m . th (attend as often 11 you wiahl
TO ENROLL: 81 ply ettend thi ctasa to wish to join

•

••

$9.995·00

JIM COBB

CHEVROLET • OLDSMOBILE • CADILLAC
Hours: Mon.·Wed.·Fri. 8:30-8:00 p.m ., Tue.·Thur. 8:30-5:00 p.m., Sat. 9·4 p.m ..
308 E. Main St. .
Closed Sunday
Pomeroy, Oh.
PLUS OESrtNATlON •TAXES •FEES

By WILL DUNHAM
UPI Sports·Writer
WASHINGTON (UP!) - Jay
Schroeder, the NFC's premier
big· play quarterback this sea·
son, promises to show his new,
patient side when his Washington ·
Redskins play the New York
Giants Sunday In the NFC
Charopipnshlp Game.
Schroeder w&amp;s a nything but
patient during the Redskins' last
game against the Giants, the
NFC East champs. New York,
which had surrendered a career.hlgh 420 yards passing to
Schroeder in a 27-20 lilct6ry In
Week 8, confounded the ·firstyear starter five weeks later with
a soft , tw o-deep zone secondary
that effectively eliminated the
Redskins · deep passin g game.
Schroede r , known for hi s poise
under pressure, lacked patience
and forced deep passes tha t day,
but says he' s learned plenty In
the last month.
"You have to be pa tient; you
can't always rely on things you
think are going to be there ," said
Schroeder, who threw a careerhigh and club record· tying six
interceptions in that 24-14 loss
Dec . 7. "I went into that ga me
th ink ing they were goin g to do
$O rne of the same things they did
to us (Oct. Z7) and they didn't.
They changed things up.
"I didn' t adjust at all." adped
the NFC's Pro Bowl reserve
quarterback. "I tried to force the
ball downfield and got ca ught,
and got myse lf in big trouble."

A SWITCH-FOR SCHROEDER- Washington quarterback Jay
Schroeder practices the game from lhe other end as he tries his
hand at centering the bali during Wednesday's drUis In Herndon,
Va. The ~dsklns are.practicing lor Sunday's NFC title game with
the P.owerful New York Giants. ( UPI)

Bruce likes what
he has returning
at OSU in 1987

SAN DIEGO, Calif. (UP! ) $200, 000. The Arizona package
By a process of simple dedu ction
reportedly was worth about
it was widely reported the Ohio
$200,000 annua lly.
State head coach Ear le Bruce
Bay said he could not offer
was on the verge of accepting the
·
Bruce a longer contra€!.
head coaching job at the Univers it y of Arizona.
The deduction was fl awless.
Arizo na was offering Bruce more
money and a longer contract
than he had with the Buckeyes.
One report sa:id Bruce's departure from Ohio State was a "99.9
Lightning could have struc k ing 27-58 from the floor and 10 of
percent" certaintv.
Point Pleasant Coac h La r ry 18 fro m th P line.
Markham Tuesday night a nd he
Some keys to the victory were
Thosc reports were 99,9 percent ·wrong.
would not have felt It as he· ·that Point reduced it s turnovers
After severa l days of what
watched hi s Big Blacks hold off a to 15 a nd· some aggressive
Bruce described as an ago nizing
late ra lly to_ stun a h&lt;'av ii y defensive pla y by Br ian Say rP
decision makin g process, the
favored Warren Local team, who seemed ·to be everywhere,
Ohio State coach discovered he 67-64.
causin g numerous miscues himwas "a Buckeye through and
The win was the first in six self: Mike Barton also, as usual,
through."
sta rt s this season for PPHS.
had a solid. consistent ga me.
Bruce informed his school lat e
The Big Blacks jumped out to a
David Bod kin also got his first
Tuesday night that he had
quick 7-0 lead on baskets by Tim win of the year as his junior
decided to remain at Ohio Sta te
Bowers and Scott Vickers and a varsity cagers finised strong to
and serve out the remaining two
th ree-po int play by Mik e Barton, put back the Little Warriors,
year s of a three-year agr eement
a nd used a stingy zone defense 56-'48. ·
worht $87,000 a year.
and a fr ustrating full court press
The Little Blacks received
"I am a Buckeye through and
to kn ock the Warriors down and strong perfor mances from David
through," Bruce said in a stateout early in the Iirst period .
Fa ber and Dennis Brumfield to
Two bas kets by Crai g Henseiy run their record to 1-3.
ment released by the univers it y.
" I hav e two years remaining on
a nd Bower's and three by John
Both teams return to ac tion
my Ohio State contract and 1 ·, Pelfrey enabled Point to guild a Friday In their own gy m when
21-13 advantage at the end of the they play host to. two exce llent
Intend to honor it. I'm anxiou s for
the 1987 season to s tart ~' eve '"11rst stanza.
Milton Gr~&gt;yhound tea ms. Ga me
Th~ second period saw Warren Urnes are set for 5:45 p.'m., with
though we jus t finished a long
season that bega n back in Au - Local cut Point's lead to 27-25 the varsity tilt getting underway
gust. I like this team; I like the
wli h .4:20 left , but Hensely a nd , at 7:30p.m.
athletic department; 1 like Ohio
Pelfrey quickly answered, scorSta te. I guess I just like every - ingallbut twoofth e PPHSpoi nt s
th ing about Ohio. "
in the period to enable the Big
Blacks to hold a narrow 34-20 lea d
Ohio State athletic director
~II,
Rick Bay sa id Arizona had
at halftime.
_ 618 E. Main St.
offered Bruce a better deal
The third quarter began with
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769
fin a ncfally as part of a five- year
the visitors taking a-n ine-point
pac kage.
lea d on baskets by Pelfrey and
PH. 614-992-7270
Bay. Bruce and his coaches
Vickers and more long range
were a ttending the American
bombs by Hensely to explod e to a
Football Coaches Association
51-41 quart er -er\dlng lead .
If you would care to meet a
a nd NCAA conventions in San
'
CPA and talk about what
Diego. Wh en Bay hea rd he was
Warren Loca l closed in fast In
they can do for your
a bout to lose his· coach he made th!' final period but Point m ade
company
- call us. We
an a desperate appeal to Bruce's eight of 12 foul s hot s to, hold off
would
be
happy
to visit wllh
sense of loya lty.
the Warriors. The Big Blacks
no
obligation
to
you.
were a lso aided by key ear ly
"I met late last night (Tues - period buckets by Bowers and a .
day) with Earle and his coaches ga me-icing la te bas ket by
and made an e motional appeal to Vickers.
PPHS out rebounded WLHS,
their loyalty to the sc hool," lilay
said. " I told him I was not In a :I0-29. Pelfrey had 10: followed by
pos ition to Improve the ir con· Bowers and Vickers with seve n
tracts with Ohio State but we apiece.
On the evening Point shot 28-58
discussed the wor k Earle had
done thus far , his t.reml'ndou s from the floor and 11 of 16 from
success a nd th ~ things we hoped the line, which was c losely
mat ched by Warren I,ocal, shoot -_
to acco mplish in th e futu re.
Bruce's wife Jean said s he and
her hu sband debated the possible
move for several days . .
··Some people may think he's
nu ts," she said referr ing to the
more lu crative offer from Ariz·
ona, "but we are happy with the
..
decision."

K. A•.KEBLER

Bruce' s decision to remain a
Buckeye left Ariwna In the cold.
On Tuesday the sc hool had two
strong candidates to replace
Larry Sm ith, who recently accepted a five-y~a r contract with
the University of Southern Ca ll -.
fornia-at $250,000 a year .
The other · candidate was
Denny Stolz of Sa n Diego State.
By mid-a ft ernoon Wednesd~y.
Stolz had announced he would
remaJn a t San Diego and there
was speculation tha t Arizona
would turn to Iowa's Hayden
Fry .
The Arizona Republic ,'qu otlng
unidentified . sources, reported
Bruce was offered a five · year
cont ract by Arizona A tnletlc
Director Cedric Dempsey. The
sources - · also In San Diego for
the convention - told the newspaper the length ot the contract
was more lll)portant' to Bruce
than the dollar amount.
- Bruce recenliy finished the
first year ot a three-year- contract at Ohio State, worth $87 000
a year. It Includes no guaranteed
extra benefits but, with Income
from television and radio shows.
he receives a total ot about
.

'·

..
•

•

·

CPA

.,

.

OHIO WELFUE
COMPENSAnON
GENERAL RELIEF
UNITED MINE WOIKEIS
BOILERMAKERS
PAID
P.C.S.
MED.ET
ADVACARE

1.0°/o DISCOUNT
To Those 60 and Over
On All Prescriptions
i - -.... - -...
. ------~

SUJISHER lOHSE
il~

(Jfrl'('](

.,'

.::..:::...,.•........
c=.-•-·•·""·
. . . .•...........
. .. J·
...

~~-.•
. '·

--- -

~·• ~ ••n: •••t•• · • ·

'" · ff'l·mt

I'.. IIC.IP'fiOIIS

I . MMI

,

,

, _ . , , 0.-

0,. . . NNt

·\

.

--

•

The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

'new look' -Sunday

·Schroeder promises

WE FILL PRESCRIPTIONS AND DO THE
BILLING FOR THE FOLLOWING:

Stock No. 0269

Starting At

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio"

Was hlngt bn, 14-4, trave ls to
off. No one missed practice and
East Rutherford, N.J., to face
reserve defen~ive lineman Steve
New York, 15-2. The Giant s, on a
HamUton, eli gi ble to oome off the
l().game · winning streak, are
injured reserve list, participa·ted
undefeated at home I his season.
a nd may be activated later this
week, a team s pokesman sa id.
The Redsklns went th ~ough
Schroeder, 25, was the mos t
two hours of drills Wednes day at _
productive quarterback in thr
Redskin Park, their firs t pracNFC this season, passin g for p
lice of the week after three days

clu b-record 4j09 yards, sur passlng Hal l of Farner Son nv Jurgen se n's 19 -ycar -old m~rk of
.1.747. Only Miami's Dan Marino
thr ~w for more yards this season ,
as Schroeder rrror drd the lOthmost-produetivr pass in g srason
in NFL hi story .

Don•t Miss It U Factory Sponsored!!
.

*
A.P.R.
Financing·
Now
Available

ON ALL NEW RANGERS AND BRONCO II'S

--or--

••

Point Pleasant ups~ts
Warriors, 67 to 64

.

CLASS SCHEDULES :
Monday: 6 :30·8 :30 p.m.-Advanced Class
Tuasday : 4 :30-6 :00 p.m.- Kids yellow/ rod Belts
6 :30·8:30 p.I!I.-Adulta yellow/ red Belts
8 :30·1 0 :00 p.m.-Adult _Accelerated Class
NEW 8EG!NNE&lt;IS CLASSES:
Wednesday: 4 :30-6:00 p.'m.-Kids white bait (Beginnars)
6 :30·8 :30 p.m.-Adult white bolt (Beginners)
Thursday:
6 :30· 8:30 p.m.-Adult white batt (Baginnars)
8 :30· 10:00 p.m.-Tradiionat Clan

' Yo'l'f'k ,

No .subScrlpll o ns h ~· mail prrmln('d I n

be good enough to start against
the Broncos.
"I'm going to play regar dless," Eddie Johnson said. "But
that' s just as far as I'm concerned, They (the coaches ) may
ha'(e a different story. "
Aside from Eddie Johnson' s
dete rmination to play, Mike
Johnson's story has been getting
better all season. Hew as.drafted
by the Browns in the 1984
supplemental draft and signed
with the team Aug. 11 . With less
than a month before the start of
the regular season, Johnson
knew he had little time to
Impress the coaches .
" I knew I was late and it was
going to take a lot of work on my
part to catch up," he said.
"There was a lot of competition,
but I never doubted myself. I just
put It In my h!;!ad that I 'd have to
work extra hard so I could catch
up and make a differ ence on this

JUST ARRIVED!

team, Portsmouth (8-2), cracked
with top 10 with 51 points for lOth
spot.
Also ranked In Class AA is
Chillicothe Zane Trace (8-1) with
15 points and 30th place while
Meigs (9·1 ) Is tied With Willard,
Cincinnati Academy of Physical
Education, and Coldwater for
32nd place, all with 14 points.
Top-rated Oberlin far outdistanced second place Van Wert , 195
to 108.
Former Logan star Chuck
Kemper's We hrle Wolverin es
garnered 229 points for a big lead
· over seco nd rated Anna (10·0)
with 113 In Class A ranklngs.
Franklin Furnace Green (8-0) is
ranked 4th with 97 points while
Lucasville Valley Is lis ted 17th
and Chillicothe Huntington is
30t h with 12 points. Former
Pomeroy resident Ted Lehew Is
athletic director and he ad footba ll coach at Huntington.

(Japane~e / Koraan)

Kouh•

One' W~ &lt;'k ...... : .......................... Sl.'J;j

an~ 1 !i . whN1"

tha n that. I expect myself to play
bet ter . Every time I get a,Chance
to per form. I'll try to improve on
my last performance."
Cleveland coach Marty Schottenhelmer said Johnson, 6-foot-1,
228 pounds, played well against
the J ets artd has been Improving
steadily throughout the season.
" Mike did a good job," Schot·
tenhelmer said Wednesday before the Browns practiced at the
Los Angeles Dodgers' Dodgertown faCility. " We think he's ' a
ver~ good football player. He's
gotten lot better idea of what
we're doing the last few
months ."
·
The Browns won't announce
who ' will start at Inside linebacker until later In the week ,
possibly waiting until just before
game time. Eddie Johnson , who
finished third on the team with
117 tackles, said he hopes to be
"70 or 80 percent" by Sund'ay, but ·
said he didn ' t know if that would

To Enroll Simply: (1) Stop by the dojo frOI'l\
noon 'til10:00 p.m. Monday thru Friday to
pre-register, OR (2) Call446·8161 from 8 a.m.
to 11 :30 a.m., Monday thru Friday, to
pre-register, OR. (3) Attend the class you wish
'
to join and enroll then.

n ,\ Tt:...,

~l ot or

put the Cyclones back In control.
Ed Young led the Flyers In
scoring with l i .. polnts.
- . .
In the Ohio Athletic Conference, Otterbein, behind Dick
Hempy 's 25 points and 18 rebounds, blasted Capital 90-56,
Ohio Northern downed BaldwinWallace 6().39, Marietta beat
Heidelberg 79· 70 and Wittenberg
defeated Mount Union 79- 71. In
non-league action, Musklngum
dropped a 72-71 decision to Ohio
Wesleyan ,o f the North Coast
Athletic Conference.
In NCAC action, Case Western
Reserve edged Denison 87· 83 In ,
overtime and Allegheny (Pa.)
beat Oberlin 89-75.
Rounding out Wednesday
night's results, It was Tiffin 109,
Concordia (Mich.) 85; Dyke 118,
Wilmington 94; Westminster
(Pa.) 105, Hiram 61; and John
Carroll 59, Carnegie- Mellon 48.
Defiance won the week-long
Bahama Goombay Tournament
with an 84· 78 victory over
Minnesota-Morris·.

Browns' Mike Johnson ready if needed

26 N. Second Ave., Middleport, OH.
(UWSIU·flfillf

Kent State, which had five
players In double figures , scored
the first 13 points of the game
against Miami and never looked
back. The Golden Flashes, also
-2-1 In the conference and 8-4 for
all games, led 38-15 at the hal!.
Jay Peters•and Reggie Adams
led Kent In scoring with 14 points
each, while Mlamlt whlch fell to
0-2 .and 6-6, was paced by
D.ernard Newell with 17.
At Ypsilanti, Mich., freshman
Br-ad Soucie scored 25 points and
Grant Long 21 to lead Eastern
Michigan to Its romp over
Bowling Green. The Hurons
jumped to a 15-llead and led 43-17
at halftime over the Falcons.
· Anthony Robinson led the
scoring for Bowljng Green with
17 points.
Iowa State handed Dayton Its _
sixth loss In 11 ·games, 72·62, ·
behind Jeff Grayer's 32 points.
The Cyclones led 36-28 at half.
Dayton pulled to within three, .
38-35, early In the second half but
10 straight points by Iowa State

992·5627
MIDDLEPORT
T--------------------------~s~e:v~en~t~b~p~la~c~e~.~a~nd~a~th~(~rd~a~r~ea~r-------------------------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

reglo
Thenals.
Ma rauden't tes fe ll to th is
year's 5t-h ranked tea m, Germa ntown Vall ey View (9-0), Meigs
wound up 1~1 - 5 and Federa lHocking 20·5 last season.
Coac h Ron Loga n's Marautlenmes a nd the Lady Lancers
eac h retur n a strong portion of
, last year's tpams. Meigs returned ai l fl vr star ters Including
Tammy Wright. Jennl Couch, ·

Thr Dail'y Sentinel

·-

January 8, 1987

OU comes frow. Jlehind ~o edge T~~edo . ~ :·
Rockets, 75-72, 'o n 3·point· goal at buzzer ··

Scoreboard ...
~BA Standings

r Thurscl8y,

$500

CASH BACK

$600

CASH BACK

ttimted Time Offer - 24 Mooth Tetrtl!. Wrth Approve:l CrtJ:U

TURNPU&lt;E USED CARS AND TRUCI&lt;S! 11

1986 CHEV. C-10 4X4

1986 FORD
BRONCO XLT ·
Stock '! 74571, 1 ttm,4 wheel drive.V-8. air
cond : auto. trans.. PS. PS. ti~ wheel, cruise
contr~. AMIFM radio, radial tires,bucket seats.
· gauges.
WAS
NOW

·-

1985 VOLKSWAGEN
GTI

Stock! 73672. 1 doo&lt;S. 4 wheel dtNe.V-8. a11
cond .. aut~ trans , PS, Pa power w~nttow ;
power door bcks. t~ wheel, cruise control.
AM/FM rado, ~eroo tape, radial tires, 'h ton
jicku~ toog wide red. rear ~ep rumper,
au•iliary fuel tan' IOUII"'. ~HiinR rear Rials.
WAS
NOW

Stock! 73261.1 dotll s. hard top. lront wheel
dnve. 4 cyl., air oonr1 , stand trans.. PB.
AM /FM radio. ~eroo tape rad,.ltires. bu cket

1986 -FORD F-150
PICKUP

1986 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

Stock!73661,1001lrs.6 cyL, 4speed.PS,PB,
AM / FM radio, radi~ Ires.~ ton )ickup. short
wide bed. rear step I&gt;Jmper, giiUgt!S.
NOW
WAS

Stock H I06ll. 2 doors. hard top. 6 cyl .
cond .. auto. trans.. PS, PB. cruoe conlrrJ,
AMi fM rad•. radial toes

1986 FORD
ESCORT

1985 FORD
ESCORT

seats. rear wrncbw defOFJ!P.f

WAS

NOW

15,9951.4,995 14,59513,495 $8995 $7995
1985 VOLKSWAGEN

.JETTA

Stoci&lt; i 7021ll. 4 ttm. hard to~ lmnt wheel
driv~ 4 cvL. air r:ond., stand. trans. , PB,
' AM IFM radio, ~eroo tape, radi~ tires. ruck~
seats. rear wintlow defouor.
·

WAS

•

____ _____________
NOW

WAS

$8995 '7995 ._$9695 $8695 '1

1986 CHEVIOLET
EUROSPORT
wlteel drive; 4
cyl., air oond.. auto. trK. PS. PB, cruise

S~k H 68071. 4 dtm, hard top. Iron! wheel
drive, 4 cyt, air corni., auto. trans, PS. PB.
AMIFM rldo, radal tires. ruckel seats, reO'

WAS

WAS

gock

H 10620. 4 li&lt;JM. l'ol:tt

contr~. AM / FM radio, 'radill til5.

stereo tape. rad rallrffl, lxlck~ lieats

wirttlow-de(ogger,

11011

Stock i 31413. 2 doo~. hMd top. Iron!
dr•e. 4 cyl. arr rood . 4 speed. AM i fM

NOW

WAS

$9995 '8995 $8995 '7995 $6995 '5995

I

1985 CHEVROLET
· CAMARO Z-28
Stock ! 10600, 1 doo&lt;S. hMd top, V.S. air
am. auto. trans., PS. I'll. cruise control.
IM/FM radio. stere:t t.lpe, radi~ ties, buck!l
stat~ gauges.

WAS

11011

SJQ,995 '9995

.25°/o
9 A.P.R

F-INA NCING
AVAILABLE
ON MOST USl- D
CARS &amp; TRUCI&lt;St

1983 FORD

1984 FORD F-150 XLT
Stock H 69743, 1 dtm. V-8. aw cond., auto
trans .. PS, PB, power w~tlow~ power door
locks. Jitt whee!, atise oorrtrol, AMIFM radio,
rldi~ )ires. \.l lln pidtup, llng ·~ bed, let!
mp I&gt;Jmp«, audilf'l luel
gauges,

rear ~ass.

•sgs95
•
~iding

ian'

11011

'8595

CONVERSION VAN
Stod&lt; I

731i6~

6 cvl. auto kim.• PS. PB,
AM/FM rod~. radial lies, wlite wah, bucket
seab. short w!teei bile puges.
NOW
lAS

1984 FORD
RANGER PICKUP
Stock H12281. ?1tm. 4cyl.4 5peed,AM /ICMI
rill)~. ~eroo la!Je. &lt;~l•all•l5. si&lt;Jrl wh&lt;&gt;.~ IJ&gt;:•

re~ stet&gt; "''"""'
WAS

s5595

1983
SUPRA
Stock H1414 I. 2 doo~ . h.lr~ top. lront • heel
drr.e. 6 cyl . cond. ~•M trans . PS. PR,

"r

t(IWer wrnOOwt,, lilt whool , crurse contto4,

AM /FM ro1&lt;. ~ereo tape, rari~ lfes. ruck.;
!ell' rear wmdow deiOitRef, ~aultfl!

NOW

7495 '6495 'l9295 '1295

5

�'

~·

•

1Page-6-The Daily Senti11el

.'

Pomeroy-Middlepcirt, Ohio

weal Briefs:-____, Probes. focus.mg· on Krishna-comrpunlty
.
'

Scipio Township Volunteer Fire Department Is now In service
providing fire protection· for Scipio Township, through Meigs
Cou nty Emergency Medical Services, at 992·6663.

Squads respond to seven

cd

'

Meigs County Emergency Medical Servlc reports seven ·
calls Tuesday: Middleport at 12:33 a.m. to Stonewood
Apartments for Shirley Frazier to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 6:43 a.m. to C01,10ty Road 10 for Om a
Starkley to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 11:22 a.1Jl.
transported Wanda Gardner to Veterans Memorial Hospital
from an auto acclden t on Ohio 124 at Langsville; Tuppers Plains
at 11:!!7 a.m. to Ohio 681 for Pearl Randolph to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:53 a.m. to PomeroyHealth
Care Center for Dessle Patterson to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Racine at 4:24p.m. to Antiquity for Preston. Parsons
to ,Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 7:16p.m. to County
Road 28 for Mary Roush to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

Area church slates hymn sing
The United Christian Church at Centenary will have a hymn
sing Saturday, starting at7 p.m., with the Unroe F'amlly, from
Crown City, and Dan Hayman and the Faith Trio, from
Syracuse.
·

Bank seeks money judgment
An action has been flied In Meigs CountyCommonPieas Court
by Glous ter Community Bank, Alllance. against HomerS. Hill
Sr. and Anna Hill, Chester, requesting judgment of $22,392.51.

Couple files for dissolution
Christopher Paul Haye and Harriet Sharon Haye have been
grant ed a dissolution of marriage in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
· ~ '
Vincent E. Mossman and Lois M. Mossman have been
granted a dissolution and Lois Mossman has been restored by
the court to her maiden name Reilmlre.

Court issues marriage license
A marriage license has been Issued in Meigs County Probate
Court to .Jlmmy Older, 34, Rutland, and Darlene Kay Reeves,
24. Rutland.
·

Two enter guilty pleas

~
.

]
PI

A,
F•

Douglas Freeman and Etta N. Kelly, ln ·separate cases,
entered written pleas of guilty to charges against them when
they appeared this week ln Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
Freeman was charged with grand theft auto and receiving
stolen property (a credit card ).from incidents on or about Nov.
29.
Kelly was charged with forgery from an lncldent on or about
Dec. 28 when she signed the name of another person to a check.
Both w&lt;:&gt;re 'released on recognizance bonds pending
sentencing.

hE
w

lh

rH
YE
lc
n1

h&lt;
bl
ar

Tl

Teams set to play this weekend
Eastern Eagles Bol(s Basketball teams play Oak Hill Friday
at Eastern beginnl~g at 6:30p.m. Earller the game had ~en
announced as an away game. Adance will follow )he game atlO
p.m. Guests for the dance must be signed up In the school offlce
by an Eastern student before Friday night,
A:Jso, on Saturday, Eastern travels to Frankfort·Adena near
Chillico the. This game fills an open date originally set for Feb.
7.

La
Ia!

F!
Be
rc
ye
to•
W(

H&lt;

Fire damages garage apartment
Heavy damages WE're incurred to a ga rage apartment owned
by Mr. and Mrs. Larry Hoffman at 916 Hartinger Parkway In
MlddiE'port at about 3: 15a.m. Wednesday.
The apartment was gutted by the blaze. Middleport firemen
were on the scene until aoout5: 30 a.m. Wednesday. Cause of the
blaze and damages have not been reported. No one was In the
reslde.nce all he lime of the fire.

do
eu
la1
tu

T!

I

r
I

I

I
I
(

I .
I
I
I
I '

r

I

1
t

Gr~in

•I

South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy tonight. with a
low between 25 and 30. Mostly
cloudy again F'riday, with highs
between 40 and 45.
The probability of precipita·
lion ls near ZE'ro ton ight and 20
percent Friday.
Winds wlll be light and wes·
teriy tonight
Ohio Extended Forecast
Saturday lhrou~h Monday
A· chance of snow Saturday,
with fair weather Sunday . and
Monday . Highs will range from
the mid 20s to the mld 30s
Saturday and Sunday and be in
the 30s Monday. Overnight lows
will be between 20 and 25 early
Saturday , the middle or upper
teens Sunday morning and be·
twren 20 and 25 agai n early
Monday.

WINTER
REDD._CED FOR

OPEN
. FRIDA

a·

'

futut·es receive boQst

CHICAGO (UPI) - Grain
sales to foreign countries. and
talk of add it !anal export business
boosted,
grain andon soybean
fu·
lures Wednesday
the Chicago
· Board of Trade.
Opening prices were mixed,
but quickly turned higher as
buying interest picked up.
China and South ' Korea bought
145,000 tons of corn whlle India
was said to have taken 20,000tons
of soybean oil. March wheat
gained eight cents oil rumors that
Egypt and Poland may buy more
than 500,000 tons of wheat.
South Korea ls expected to be
In the market next week for an
additional 200,000 tons of corn.
Much of the buying was linked
to shorl·coverlng, but gains were

COLUMBUS (UP!) ·- The
Home Insurance Co. has signed a
consent order requiring the !lrm
to refund an additional $2 million
ln pretplum overcharge:; to Ohio
clttes and counties.
George Fabe. director of the
Ohio Department of Insurance,l
said W~dnesday the consent
order was the second signed by
Home Insurance. Last Sep·
tember. the company re!undea
$1.8 million In excess premium
charges.

limlled by the"'strength of the
dollar on foreign exchanges and
heavy deliveries against the

r~Ja:n:u:a~r~y~s=oy~be=a=n~c=o=n=tr=a=ct~·--J.!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

2 to share jackpot
CLEVELAND (UPI) - Two
Ohio Super Lotto players · wlll
share a $5 million prize after
picking all slx numbers in'
Wednesday night's drawing.
The names of the players will
be announced after their winning
tickets are validated ' by state
lottery officials, a lottery spokes·
man said today. The wlnnlng
;~f!lbers wer,e 3, 4, 10, 25, 35 and
playef.s wlll n~celve $2.5
million ~ach, in 20annual pre· tax
payments of $125,000.
In addition to the jacll,pot
winners, 92 players chose five of
the numbers to win $733 each.
Also, 5, 238 players selected four
or the numbers to win $50 apiece.
There were 93,690 tickets sold
listing three of the numbers.
Those tickets are worth $3 each.
Tlckei sales for the weekly
drawing totaled $4,153,648, with a
total prize payout of $5,610,406.
The jackpot for next week's
drawing wiiJ be at least $5
million .

10 DAYS ONLY!
EVERYTHINC
•IR
the afo,e teduced
10% TO 60%

and Trucks

,,

PAY CASH •.. SAVE AN EXTRA 10%//
•

NO

llddleport

992·M21
HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8 to 8: Sat. 8 to 4

NO

'

DOWN
PAYMENT*
'
'

..

395 So. 3rd

-

Here is asale where nothing is held back. Every item throughoutourstore
has been marked down and is on sale. You can save lOOAt to 60% OFF
MasOn Furniture's everyday low prices. We haven't held anything back. In
addition, just look at this...

Ford LTD Wagon ..... S19995
Plymouth Volare •••••• S1 095
Ford Escort ...............$1495
Olds Frienza ............. S2 495
Ply~ Horizon •••......•.•• $2695
Chevy Custom Van .......... $12,995
Ford Ranger 4 Whetler ••..$6695
c.-10 Chevy Pickup ....... $1 0,795
Chrysler·Piymouth·D~dge

,_ ·---:-,·-·T

.J

.

·'

By The Bend

~

The .Daily Sentinel
Thursday, January 8,

.,.._,._c_
~·

•1'1'• • 'pJII'

IIDtD

N.O

MONTHLY FINANCE
PAYMENT
CHARGES
.
until

APRIL

FOR ONL
FULl YEAR:

f.!Cbtld From TNe on.

·MASON FIJRNITIJRE·. co.
HERMAN GRATE, OWNER

· 2nd Strut

(304) 773·5592

Mason, W. Va.

1981.

Page-7:

In the spotlight

Woman's financial identity important, now

By Cindy Oliveri

soure Management !\peclalist.
because most of all major
County Extension Agent
- If you are a male, your name !lnanclal accounts were reported
. Home Economics and 4-H
an~ f!nanclal Identity usually are
only in the husband's name.
When It comes to family money one and the same. So, unless you
matters,. what Is YOUR "flnan· use a nickname or have a name
Falling to establish their own
clalldentlly"? What name Is on · just .like someone else, your financial Jdenlltles cari be a
your social securlly account or financial· Identity should be a costly .mistake for married
.the checking, savings and credit simple and routine matter for women and, also, for their
accounts that you use or on the your entire life.
dependents. Whlle gender·based
deeds/ lltles to property that · For some women, however, the credit dental is now Illegal, some
.... you've bought?
matter of !lnanclalldentlty is not married women who were denied
While this may no! need to be so simple and the problems often credit In the past have not taken
the first resolution on your new · are not discovered until a major advantage of more recent flnan ·
year's list, It Is a vllal part of an cr:tsls occurs . Many married, clal opportunities, relying. ln·
~nnual family financial review.
newly divorced or recently• wl- stead . on having a husband
This week, "In The Spotlight" ~owed ·women are shocked to handle major !lnanclal business
lakes a look at the Importance of discu. ~~ ••1t they areflnanclally and accounts In' hls name only .
each adult having a flnanclal "invisible" or nonexistent when
Thls can result In a lack of a
idenllty. These tips are shared by they attempt to conduct financial recorded flnanclltl history for the
Carolyn McKinney, Family Re· business without their · spouse wife, even lf she Is employed, and

.

Beat ·Of the Bend

contributing earnings to the
household~ When such women
lose a spouse through death,
divorce a)' separation, not hav ing
a financial Identity makes a
personal crislseven worse. Open·
lng new credit accounts, buying
properly, etc., may be lmpossl·
ble, or at best, difficult.
It's important to recognize thai
married women have both social
and legal names and that these
are not necessarily identica l.
Let's take the example of "Sue
Green" who marries "John Wil·
son", Sue can use a number of
names , and titles Including: (a)
Sue Green; (bi Sue G. Wilson:
(c) Sua Green Wllson; and (d)
Mrs. John Wilson. Which is 9nly a

Movin' ·along, lookin' fine
Belle~ and ·Beaus dancing
'

18. The initial meeting Is set for
By BOB HOEFLICH
7:30 p.m. at the !lre department
Sentinel Sial! Writer
Aren't the Belies and Beaus quarters on Jan. 19. If you want to
take part, all you have to do is
Square Dance
show up.
Club members
impressive?
--- ·
I don't under·
The Meigs High School Band
· ~land how they
B'ooster_s are looking for possible
move so fast
candidates to flll the booster
so long - and
· offices for the next year.
Any band parent who would be
s till look so
great In those attractive outfits. interested In serving in one of the
Regular bundles of energy.
official capacities is asked to
Thlrty·one members of the attend the next meeting which
Mallory Jean Roach
club traveled to the Hockl~g has been set for 7 p.m. on Feb. 2
Valley Inn at Nelsonville on New ·at the high school band room.
Year Eve to attend a dancQ
At Monday night's meeting,
si&gt;onsored by the Allemanders Director Lori Klinger int roduced
Squr.re Dance Club of Athens .
representatives from Cerr's who
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Roach,
There was dancing from nine explained the possibilities of Raclne,areannounclngthebirth
untli 12 and a buffet at midnlgl:tl. purchasing jackets for band of their second chlld, Mallory
' Members attending were Lynn members to match the trousers Jean, Nov. 28, at the Holzer
and Clara Burroughs. Homer bqught a couple of years ago. Medical Center . The infant
'and Shirley Bell, Roy and Pat That's all well and good, but the weighed eight pounds, nlne
Holter, Ray and Bernita Maxson, problem the boosters have ls ounces.
Harold and Betty Newell, Ken getting funding for such a
Mater nal grandparents are
and Ann Richardson, Jlm Ste- · purchase.
Jean Stevens, Fort Myers, Fla.
Incidentally, winners of prizes and Dan Hayman, Syracuse.
wart. Sally Savage, Virginia
Chadwell, Dana and Bernice so far in the boosters fund raiser .Maternal 'g reat·grandparents
Hoffman. Dale and Marlene are Connie Black, Mike Haley, are Daisy and Ward Sayre,
Harrison, Jim and bdnna Nel· Bob Caruthers, Dottle Musser, Racine. Paternal grandparents·
son, Blll and NaomlKing, Georl'(e George Miller and Paul Simon.
are Esther Ia and Charles Powell,
and Ruby Nlcinsky, Art a!bd
--Portland, and the late Ira Roach
Mary Skinner, VIrgil and Kathe·
You might have noticed the Sr.
r'lneWffld&amp;n;-and .Elan-and Karen·· ..ilbltuary..·ol Dr. George Sohaaf~ - Mr.. and Mrs .. Roach's other
Meadows. ·
formerly of Middleport ln an daughter, Erin, Is four.
earlier issue. And as a result you
Speaking of dancing the Pome- might of thought of his family,
roy Area Chamber of Commerce particularly Sally Schaaf who
will be sponsoring a wInter dance lived In Middleport so long. I'm
on Saturday. Jan. 24, at Royal sorry to advise you that Sally now Dr. Schaaf- is con!lned to a
Oak Resort Club.
Music wlll be provided from 8 nursing home.
Mr. and Mrs. Barney O'Brien
Undoubteddly. she would enjoy of Junction City were recent
to midnight by Suga .Bear and
pizza will be served, compli- hearing from old friends . Her · visitors of Mrs. Eunle Brinker.
ments of the Pomeroy Pizza Hut. address Is Room 508, Hickory
Mr. and Mrs. Jeff Circle and
Tickets are $15 a couple or $10 Creek Nursing Home, The famlly of Keno Road spent
for a single and may be pur· Plains, Ohio, 45780. Sally was Sunday eveping wlth Lula Circle.
chased from chamber members, with Ohio Unlverslly before
Arthur Earl Johnson and
Bill Nease.' Tom Reed, Mary being struck by Illness.
daughter, Sheryl, were Sunday
Powell, Jennifer Sheets, Ro)l
visitors at the home of William
David Hysell has the gloopls;
Ash. at the resort or at the
Carleton and famlly, Racine.
Jane Wlse has the gloopis; Allie
Pomero~ Chamber office.
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Johnson
Simon has the gloopls . They all and daughter, Sandy, of Middle·
agree -It's just 11ard to gel rid of port spent Sunday evening at the
The Rulland Fire Department
gloopis. You got the gloopls home of Arthur Johnson and
is lau nching a junior fire depart · the
too? Well - just try to keep family.
ment for young people 16through
smiling.

present the program for seniors
who plan to attend a higher
learning instill lion In the fall and
their parents.
·

ROCK SPRINGS - Rock
Springs Grange meets Thursday,
POMEROY- Aregular meet - 7:30 p.m.: at the grange hall.
ing of Alcoholics Anonymous wlll' Guest speaker wlll be from
be held at 7 p.m. , Thursday, at Southern Ohio Coal Co.
the Sacred Heart Church AuditoMIDDLEPORT -Eva ngeline
rium
. in Pocmroy. .
Chapter 172, Order of the Eastern
POMEROY - The Pomeroy Star, will have Its regular meet·
Women's Aglow Chapter will lng Thursday, 7:30p.m. Officers
meet Thursday at the .Meigs are to wear street dress. Thurs·
Senior Citizens Center, Pome- day ls also the last day for
roy." A 7:45 p.m. meeting will members to pay their dues.
follow at 7 p.m. buffet . Speaker
will be Diane Harrison, Rutland,
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Mary Sh~lne of
recording secretary for the Sou·
theast Ohio Area A!(low Board .
White Shrine of Jerusalum will
meet Friday. 8 p.m., at the'
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta masonic temple,
. Beta Chapter.' B!&gt;ta Sigma Phl
POMEROY - Senior Citizens
Sororit y, wm meet at 7:30p.m.
Thursday at Grace Episcopal Dance Club will have a dance at
the Senior Citizens Center on
Parish House.
Mulberry Heights Friday, 8·11
'
LAUREL CLIFF - Laurel p.m. Music by the Strlngdusters.
Cliff Hea lth Club will meet? p. m. Admission Is $1.50 per person.
Thursday 'a t the home of Mabel Bring snacks for the refreshment
table.
Tracy.

---

SYRACUSE - The Meigs
Assoclal·ion of Retarded Citizens
will meet Thursday, 7 p.m., at
Carleton School, for Installation
of officers.

APPLE GROVE - A hymn
sing will ·be held at 7 p.m.
Saturday at the Apple Grove
United Methodist Church featurIng the Sisson F'am ily.

POMEROY - A financial
workshop for Interested seniors
of Meigs, Southern and Eastern
High Schools will be held at 7: 30
p.m. Thursday In the Meigs High
School Library. Richard Ritz· ·
· rpan, assistant director of finan·
clal aid at Marietta College, w111

SATURDAY
' BURLINGHAM - Slides on
the dangers of fire wlll he shown
at 7 p.m. Saturday atthe'Modern
Woodmen of America Hall In
Burlingham. The public Is In·
vlted and refreshments wJil be
served.

'

Dale and Joann Kautz ob- mood Yeauger. Southside, W.
served their 30th wedding ann i· Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Foster,
versary on Dec. 15 with a party at Pickerington; Mr. and Mrs.
Glenn Rinehart. The Plains, Mr.
their home near Chester.
Entertainment was provided · and Mrs. Richard Sams, Belpre;
by George Hall at the organ. A Mr. and Mrs . Lowell Boggs,
Guysville.
buffet dinner served to guests.
Mr. and Mrs . WaynP Battrell
Attendlng were B111 and u s·a
Kautz, Pam and Tim Massie and and daughter, Iva, Mrs . Bill
children, Jason and Jeff, Galllpo· Ballreil, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
lis; Mr . and Mrs. Don Pope, Thomas. · and Andy Ba ttrell,
Gallipolis; Mr. and Mr. Ray.

sharing financi al assets, obilga:
lions and responslbliitles. Also; :
make sure th at the credit bureau'
has a record In the wife's nam&lt;• as
well as the husband's and that
joint accounts are also being
reported in her file . Be sure. too ,:
to protect financial Ident lly·
through responsible finan cial
management. A negative Identity may be worse than none at
ail......_
brct-vau Know That: Over 110
million plastic charge cards have
been issued across the count ry?
Credit eard fraud is a growi ng
concern to finan cial institutions.
Next week some ideas for combating th is problem.

SYRACUSE - Dan Hayman
and the Faith Trlo of Syracuse
wlll be among the singers at a
hymn sing to be held at 7 p.m.
Saturday at the t:entenary Unl·
ted Christian Church. The Unroe
Family of Crown City will also be
featured.
SUNDAY
MIDDLEPORT - .lnternallonal Order of Jobs Daughters'
Installation practice wlll be at 2
p.m. Sunday at the Middleport'
Masonic Temple. All installing
officers and members are urged ·
to be present.
Garden mcellng
MIDDLEPORT.- The Middleport Garden Club wlll meet
Tuesday at the Presbyterian

Albany; Mr. and Mrs . George ·
Shamblin. Mr. and Mrs . Ralph
Calvert, Mr. and Mrs . Roger·
Gau l, Ruth Ann Yeauger , David
Fox, Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Newell. Mr . and Mrs. Roger
Keller and sons , Ru ssell and ·
Rodney, Mrs. Ina Kautz, Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Karr, Mr . and Mrs..Jlm
Nelson, ,and Bernard Fultz, ail
local.

Davis enlists in U.S. Navy
Charles E. Davis, son of
William and Lucille Davis,
Middleport, has enlisted In the
U.S. Navy and ls one of 80
young men chosen as members
of the Woody Hayes Buckeye
Special Recruit Co.
In order to qualify these you ng
men had to meet rigid physical.
mental, and moral . require·
ments. The Woody Hayes Buck·
eye Co. has special significance.
The recruit company, at the
Recruit Training Center. Creal
Lakes, Ill. is comprised entirely
of young men from central and

southern Ohio. In add ition to
being "M1·. Buckeye", Coaeh
Hayes is a noted military historian and served as Commanding
Officer of a Navy destroyer
during Wo rld War II.
The company was sworn in by
Ca ptain James Tlsarannl, USfl!,
command ing officer of the "Gold
Crew" of USS Ohio (SSBN·726i .
Upon graduation, Jan. 30,
Davis w111 transfer to the Air
Cre w Survival Eq uipm ent
~c hool, Naval Technical Train·
!rig Cent er, Lakehurst, N..J.

Charles E. Davis

Story hour time changes

ubrary lines:

By RUTH POWERS
There has been a change in the
days and limes of the pre·school
story hour held at the Meigs
libraries. Pomeroy library story

Club. Only $15 entitles the person
to check out over 200 videos a
Y,ear. Not a bad idea.
II is a new year and a good time
to make yourself a resolution to

visit your library at least once a
month. You will be surprised at
1he rna ny services your public
library offers to you.
Come In and cheek us out!

hour10:30
wlll be
heldand
on Wednesdays
~~--~~~~!ili;;i!i;;iiiii!i~;jl;jl~;jl~;jliiij;jliiijii
at
a. m.
Middleport I'
library storyat hour
be held
on
10:30will
a.m.
Norma
Thursdays
Hawth orne, will be the
storyteller. •
She will also feature some easy
craft programs. Take this oppor·
tunlly ;to getwith
yourthe
pre-schoolers
acquainted
library . It
will be an excil ing experience for
them.
Thelibrariesnowhavethe1986
federal
Income tax forms. Wf
have many forms on hand and
those we do not have on hand we
can reproduce from our reprodu·
cible kit .
Stumped lor a birthday, annl·
versary of valentin~ gift? Give a
glft membership In our Video

Ou·RJANUARY
·CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES

STOREWIDE SAVINGS
'

MARGUERITES SHOES

102 East Main

Middleport

\

Community calendar/area happenings
THURSDAY
TUPPERS PLAINS - A meet·
lng of Olive-Orange Memorial
VFW Post 9053 will be held at7: 30
p.m. Thursday at the Tuppers
Plains Elementary School.

'

social title? If you answered " d",
you're correcl. However , while
this Is a very appropri ate social
title, II gives Sue no financial
ldentll y in today's financial
world.
If a married woman wants a
ilnancial !denlily in the future, it
needs to be esta blished today .
Use the same name consistently
on employment records. indivld·
ual and joint checking and io1·
savings accounts . on lndlvldu ai
~ ~red il accounts, on joint credit
acco unt s shared with on e's
spouse and on all oth er major
business where fln anclalrespon·
sibillty is involved.
Aspousecanhelpestabiishand
maintain financial id entity by

Kautz anniversary is celebrated recently

Carmel area
happenings

r. The

COOPER

.

Roach birth

..

Save on.Used Cars

~86

.

;._______...,-

'

SHIPMENT OF CHILDREN'S
STONESWEAR
FOR SPRING

."

'79
'80
'81
'82
-,83
'84
'85

'

taking authorities to the stream and !lnanclal records from the additional , searches at thr
where he says he and Drescher Kr.lshll&lt;IS' business af!lce.
Krishna commune as part of the:
· "It's going to be a lenghty copyright probe. ·
•
burled Saint Denis. Authorities
unearthed a body after about 11 process because of the volume
He said the Krlshnas wouldhours of digging:
(of the evidence) and the scope of have the right to seek a court
While said the remains showed the Investigation," Kollbash hearing and ask that the Items~
flesh and hair on the skull, flesh said, adding he e~pected no returned once the inventories are
on the torso, a string of beads
filed with (he magistrate.
&lt;.
worn by krlshnas around the. ~~;jl;jl;jl;jl;jl;jliiiijiiiijiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiii;;iiiii;;i~
'
neck, and a small circular hole in · I
the skull.
The prosecutor said evidence
shows Saint Denis w.as shot with
a .22·callber pistol and stabbed
repeatedly. He said an autopsy
may show a knife broken off ln
·.
the body.
·
The ·stream helped preserve
the body believed to have been
burled almost three years ago,
White said.
Meanwhile, sports caps and
stickers secured In Monday's
Taid of the Krishna commune
were being ,!teld by a private
moving COfllpany and law en·
forcement agencies.
U.S. Attorney William . Koll·
bash sald ·agents Wednesday
continued to list the evidence and
contraban·d taken from buildings
and trailers at the Krishna
communlly to present to · a
federal magistrate In Wheeling.
Fifty state and federal agents
carted away printing equipment
along with boxes of stickers and
sports caps with profession&lt;~! and
college team logos. The, Items
•,
--,-~ 'TIL
were believed to have been a
portion of many sold without the
necessary li ce nses and
authorization.
ON THE "T" IN MIDD,EPORT
Agents also took computers

Ohio weather

Refunds scheduled
~

MOUNDSVILLE, W.Va ..
(UPI) - The Hare Krishna
community In the Northern Pan·
handle remains under close
sctutlny as authorities piece
together separaate lnvestlga·
t.lons involving a suspected ·
murder and alleged v lolatlon of
copyright statutes.
Marshall County Prosecutor
JTom Whit~ says. he believes a
string of beads worn by Krlshnas
and a circular hole In the skull
will help pro.ve the body found
Tuesday at the commune near
Moundsville Is thill of former
devotee Charles Saint Dents .
"We are relatively certalri this
Is the Saint Dents body,'' White
said. "We hope to match physical
findings wllh other evidence."
The prosecutor sald Wednes·
day the state medical examiner's
office in Charleston had begun a
review of the human remains and
expected to release a preliml·
nary Identification In a few days.
The medical examiner also has
yet to release an idenllflcation of
a body found Dec. lin a wooded .
area of the commune. The body
was believed to be that of a
22·year-old white m·ale burled for
at least nlne years.
Saint Dents disappeared in
June 1983. Former Krishna.devo·
tee Thomas Drescher. 37. of
Ravenna, Ohl'O, was convicted of
murdering Saint Dents while
former member Daniel Reid, 31,
of Los Angeles. pleaded guilty to
voluntary manslaughter in the
apparent death.
Reid pleaded Monday before

•

Thursday. January 8, ·:1987 ·
•

Department sets phone number

-'

Church In Middleport. 7:30p.m.
Mrs. George Anderson an d Mrs.
John Davis wlll be hosteses

'

~/4.

years ago
s
we
our
doors for the first time. Now (thanks to you)
we are celebrating our 18th year in business,
so come in and celebrate it with· us and save
like you have never saved bef.ore.

FLO~IST

Moigo County 'o Oldoot Florio!

352 E. Main St., Pomeroy, Oh.
· PH. 992-2644 - '
"Of,_n lmilored Duplicnted"

NP~w

T;;;;;;;;~~~~~~·;;;;;;;;;~~

ALL

CHRISTMAS
ITEMS

IOJIIIIAII 10 1119.00

1/2 PRICE

SAVE 1 120

NEW S PC. WOOD

HALLMARK CARDS, PAPER, anw~.
CUPS, NAPKINS. ETC.

VILLAGE PHA
MIDDUPOIT

•e
DINEnE SET •
••
•
....;-...;;...:.:.::.......e
DINEnE SET •
••
S19995 ••
••
NEW 7 I'C. WOOD

CY

COJIIIIAII TO •26, .00

SAVE'I9

�.·
Page 8-·The Daily Sentinel

Po~eroy-Middleport,

•

.

;

Ohio

, • Thli'Sda_y• .January 8, 1987

,Literary Club conducts .holiday _meeting A Christmas program of scripture, stories and p~t ry highlighted the recent meet ing of the
Middleport Literary Club held at

the home of Mrs. Bernard Fultz.
Mrs. Wilson Carpenter , chairman, Introduced the program

which replaced t he usual book
review. Mrs. Dwight Wallace
welcomed the '12 members and
five guesis, Mrs . James Cri swell,
Mrs. Charles Bradbury , Mrs.
Charles Hayes, Mrs. Rodney
Downing, and Mrs. R.R. (Martha
Jane) Johnson.
The program Included scripture from Luke by Mrs. Nan
Moore; "The Christmas Goose"
by Mrs. Fultz; " The Legend of
the Ponsetlia';' by Mrs. Charles
Gaskill; "The Story of Christ·
mas" bv Mrs . M .L. French;
"Keeptn'g Christmas" from
Christmas Ideals by Mrs. James

Woman named to chair
St. Jude~s Bike-a-than
· April Hudson ha s been named
chairman of the St. Jude Children' s Research Hospital Bike-aThan for Racine, The Central
Regional Ofllce os St. Jude
Children's Research Hospit al
announced today .
The hospital was founded by
el)tertainer Danny Thomas and
opened Its doors to the public In
1962 to co mbat ca tastrophic
diseases which afflict children .
St. Jude Hosltalis non, sectari an,
non-discriminatory, and provides total medfcal care lo over
4,200 patient s.
At St. Jude, 'cienlists and
physicians work side by side

seeki ng not only a better means
'of treatment, but also the causes,
cures and prevention of potentia I
killers. Through St. Jude, children who hav e leukemia , Hodgkin' s disease, sickle-cell anemia,
and other child-killing diseases
have a better chance to live.
The Bike-a- Than program is
dedicated to "Jaime." Jaime is
from Ohio and was diagnosed
with leukemia In May, 1983 and
began treatment at St. Jude
Children's Research Hospital.
Today her cancer is in r emission
and she is doin g quite well.

Quirks in the news

· " I'm a card-ca rryi ng m~m ber
of the Christian fail b. and what
good Is It to go to church If you
don't pr ac tic e what yo u
preach?"
But Graham, 40, a driver for
Lor~le's Cab Co., sa id his fellow
cabbies have subjected him to
merciless ridicule.
" I ' m the laughingstock of the
San Francisco cab companies,"
he sai d.
Graham said his "heart
stopped " when he opened a gold
and bl ack purse stuck In the seat
of his cab and found a roll of
$"t.792 In cash, some travel ers
checks, three credit cards and a
bus token from Brazil.
After an hour of re tracing his
route Sunday night, he found the
owner of th e purse at a hot el
where he had picked up a part y of
a m an and' three women earlier
In the ni ght . Only the man spoke
English.
· Graham has been a tax! drlveror
far eight yea r s and Is complet ing'
doctorate In jurisprudence at
San Francisco Law School.

• The small town once boasted ·
t'wo tilling stations. a . grocery

,

..

a

Luncheon menus to be sevved
In schools
t he Eastern Local :·
School District have been an- ·
nounced by · Grac e Stout,
supervisor.
The menus will be as follows:
Monday, hotdog with sauce,
baked beans, pineapple, . and
milk; Tuesday, grilled cheese
sandwich, tomato soup, peaches,
and milk; Wednesday , spaghetti
with cheese, homemade roll With .
butter, green beans, applesauce,
and milk; Thursday, chicken
patty sandwich, peas, cookie
pear s and milk; and Friday, fish ·
sandwich, corn , Ice julcee, and
milk.

oi

'

Ferrell as runner-up. Terri
Smith was welcomed .as a new
m ember. Information an the club
m ay be obtained by calling
992-2612. M eetings are held every
Tuesday at 6 p.m. at the Civic
Center.

held wit h cake and homem ade
ice cream being served In observance of those having birthdays
in bctober , November and
December.
Elizabeth Jordan, women 's
activities director, announced
that Norma Isler has been
appointed the new state women's
activit ies director:
The program presented by
Arthur Cr abtree, lecturer , was ·
given by cahdlellght and ineluded a manger scene, Christm as songs, a contest and gift
exchange. • Holiday plates were
prepa red for older members,
Murl Galaway , Oma Starkey,
and Glen Cline.

Includes Ribe!fe Steak,
bakedpotato, aU·you-can·
eat Salild Buffet with fresh
NO COfJ1'0N
fruit hot vegetables and two
. NUDBD
hot ~ups. Plus our aD·YQU&lt;an-eat Sundae &amp;lr.

r

YN Tina Davis, sta tioned with
the U .S. Navy P-atrol Squadron
Base in Brunswlch, Maine, spent
a two week leave here with her
parents , Mr. and Mrs. Robert

T
%-lbTl "!t!!!..Sffu':' ImulSafJJ:ret I

--

---

f.Bolle

I Ste('/)9 "'ij99 er w~~r·
I
I it . I'""""'
'
"
''
"
"
"•"'
"
"
I
I ~~~~~.,discounts I
I

I

Includes Sala dBut1et wrth ttot
spotf' (all -ym..can-uU and

bakedpota\o. Cannot bB used

S ol'l ~~II · ou-can-eatJ and
II
01 ~ 0 Cannot be ustld

I
•'""'""''""'""'"'
"

11 ~ 1111

. ioct. Cou,.llfCidlariiJ
plllyllzt.

-------

-

'

can-eat) Ca ~nat be us~d wt th

I

olhe rdtscounts. Tax n,cltncl.
Ctlptlllld IOIIftY flrl•

...-

lizt.lh ·lb. pre-cookedwl.

' At,.rtiCIJIIilllt~OIIH.

PONDEROSA

- - - Upper River ·Road, Gallipolis
· . (Across from the Airport)

W11l1 011ll y
Il l Court St Pom,IOY. Ollro •5769

ELIDA, Ohio IUPI) A
strapped to his ches t. Blank said
gunman who claimed he had
Tippman showed a dev ice that
explosives strapped to his body
looked like a detonator.
was per sua ded to relea se five
Daley credited co lleague Lt .
hostages unharmed and sur- Da n Protsm an for maintainin g
render at a small western Ohio contact on the telephone wifh the
bank.
gunman and secur ing the safe
The two-hour standoff ended
release of the five hostages.
Wedn esday evening when L arry
" We just talked him into
Eugene Tippmann, 21, Fort
releasing them one, two at a
Wayne, Ind., Was persuaded to " tim e, " Daley sa id. "It was a
su r r ender after aut hori ti es show of good fa ith. We agreed to
promised he could spea k to hi s let him see his wife at the jail and
wife after he wa s taken into that's what br oke it loose."
custody at the Allen County jail,
Bl ank sai d his wife, R ae Ann
sa id sher iff's Lt. Bill Daley .
Tippmann, 17, dropped him off at
The four women and one man the bank and parked their pickup
-all employees Gf t he Commer - tr uck abou t a bl ock away and
ci al Bank of Delphos - were waited for him. She was allowed
r eleased unharmed.
to spend ti me with her hu sband
Tippmann was held on suspi - afier he \"as app rehended.
cion of bank robbery and wa s to
"He kn ew that Dan (P r ofsbe arraigned tod ay in Lima man) would do what he told him
Municipal Court, said Deputy he would do. There was no B .S.
Bill Blank.
He could rely on what Dan told
The inclden1 began around 4: 30 ·him . I think that frankness is
p. m. when Tlppma.n walked int o what led him to give the hos tages
at the Elida br ancHof the bank to up."
as k about a loan, Daley said.
" He (Protsmanl was pers uaAfter the custo m ers l eft sive and . able to give an air of
around 5 p.m ., Tippmann to ld · truthfulness. Th e guy believed
employees "he was going to ro b what he was saying and knew he
·the bank and hold them ~os ­ wa s able to develop an one-ontage." Blank said.
one re lationship with the guy,"
Investigators said Tlppm ann Daley said.
carr ied a handgun and claim ed
The las t hostage was r eleased
cl aim ed to have explosives at 7:15 p.m. Tippmann was then

Business Services

order ed to step out lrom be hind a ~-...;._ _ _~_...,_ _ _ _ _ _ _.__"'T"_.._______,-_______._.
counter , remove his shirt and l ay
on the floor to wai t for deputies to
enter the bank.
Ti ppm an was then to ld to ,
slow ly r emove the white cloth
t hat wa s wrapped ar ound his
chest.
Blank, stationed on a near by
roo ftop, sa id he watc hed TippmaJ&lt;n un strap what appear ed Ia
be six sticks of dynam it e on his
ches t. The bank was sealed aft er
the Incident and it was not
determined if the It ems were
explosives, B l ank sa id.
The hostages, who were not
i mmedia tely identifi ed, were
taken to the sher iff's office wher e
they were quest ioned by FBI
agents.
Blan k said approximately JO
law enforcement offi cPrs from
nelghborin gcommunities sur rounded the bank and helped
provide crowd cont rol assistance
and blocked highways leading
in to the com munit y.

&lt;'-"~
- -~---..,

DENNY CONGO ,
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOH .
FILL DIRT

, 10-S-ttc

~

992-2772

~

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE .
PRE-SCHOOL

I

(614) 992-7328
OFFERS ENRICHIN G
lEARNING EXPERIEN CES

PlU

AS LOW AS

'

.CHOOSE FROM 13 DIFFERENT STYUS &amp;
COLORS IN TWIN, FULt &amp; QUEEN SIZES

.

.

'

La·Z·Boy®and Action®

RECLINERS

BARCLAY

REDUCED

Reg~ $688 .................................................... S3 99.00

•Beautiful blue attached pillow back sofa.
Reg. S750 ..................................................... 5S 29.00
•Country Sofa and loveseat in mauve plaid.
· '
· Reg. S1100 ................................................... S699.00
•Rattan gtey with rose floral print sofa.

25°/oTo 60°/o
DINETTES REDUCED

Bedding by

•S PC. DINETTE - ook ond brass rectangle table
with~ plush black vellet chairs.$

lEG. 11299 ................

V2 Price

64900

Simmons and
Stearns &amp; Foster
REDUCED

AND CHROME 5 PC. DINETTE - formica tap
oval table wilh 4 beige tweed upholstered chairs.

e()AI

,S544°0
e()AI CIINA wilh etched glass doors (discontinued).
.
. 1/: . $63800 .
lEG. '1275 ................ 2 Price
lEG, S924,.,.,.,,.,.""""""""'"":...

50°/o To 60°/o

Also 7 Other Dinettes to Choose From

REDUCED

SOME MISMATCHED AND DISCONTINUED

20°/o TO 50°/o

Call Administrator Mrs.
Shirin. J. Nuggud. MEd.
1-7-' 87-1 mo.

W1n A Pair of Skates
Chmlmas Party Oec 20

' '

I

lo p monry for 'omr modeh of
Zrni th, Philco, Arworrr kent.
I .

,

Reg. Sl899 ........... 1f2 Price

$9 49

.

Reo I Estate

Rill toR

216 E·. ·2nd St.
Phone
·
1-(6141 -992 -3325

67 ACRES-Eastern Schools.

54 Misc. Merchandi se

Lmd lays very welLHas all minerals 011 blacklop road wtlh
lP. water nearby.
VERV NICE - 3 bedrooms,
master 39x 15, private bat h.
central atr &amp; heat. range. relngerator. disposal, therm opane wmdows, carpetmg,
dbL garage and land sc aped lot. $1 30,000.
83 ACRE S - Sutlon town ·
ship. minerals, 3 BR house.
Abou t 20 to 25 ac res of trac·
tor land.
1 HOUSES - One needs
help bu t olher one 111 good
repair, nat ural gas FA lur~nce &amp;lull basement. A real
buy at just $1 5.000,
1!6.00a.oo - Lg. modern
kitchen. new Vinyl S1d1n ~
WarmMorning gas hea ter, I.
P. water and 2nd lot wtlh
sepllc ian k lot !rat let. 3 BR
home lor qu1ck sale.
NEAR RUTlAND - 3 BR
home. l ead tn~ Creek wate1,
coal-woodburner. 011 lur- ·
nace. barn, garage and 1.94
acres.
SELLING PROBLEM ?
CALL BRUCE

992-3325

Housing

fi eadq uarte rs

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY

.•

On January 2. 1987. in the

Moiga County Probeta COYn.
Case No. 25140, Bernard V.
Fultz, P.O. Bo• 723, Pomoroy, Ohio 46769, WOI •P·

CORNER OF THIRD 8o OLIVE - GALLIPOLIS
•FREE PARKING

'r"'" DAILY TO 5 P.M.
MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY TO 8 P.M.
Where Customer Satisfaction Is
Our Main Concern

pointed Executor of the estate
of Neva M. Grimm. deceased,

ALL BRASS BEDS IN STOCK

20°/o TO 50°/o

tote of 832 E. Mtin Street.
PomMO'/. Ohio 45769.
•

Robert E. Buc'J;.
Proba1a Judge

Lena K. NHoelrood, Clerk
t1) B. 15 , 23 3tc

Public Notice

SIZE 23XlOX007.
ONLY

25(

' 614 -843 -5248

•

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
F10UCIARY
On January 5. 1987, In
the Melgt County Probale
Coun. cua No. 26390. Robort E. Buck. 129 M ulborrv
Aven ue, Pof'leroy, Meigs
County, Ohio 46769 . Wl l
appointed Admlniatrator of
the eatate of Mary Ewing
Buck , deceaaed, lltt o r A_n·
tiquity, Meigt County. Oh1o .
Chootao H. Knlvht,
Acting Proboto Judv•
Lena K. Ne11elro1d. Clerk
1118. 16. 23 3tc

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM .SHEETS RANGE ·
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAIVP SHADES.
CAN BE PURCHASED DAILY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

cusToM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
" At Reasonable Prim "

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

4-16 -' II; Ito

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW, INC .
405 MAIN Street. Pt. Pl easant. WV 15550
(304 ) 675-5151

The PROFESSIONAl/lome
.,.,1ovemw CsnfBI

New Yeor 5 Eve Party
De&lt;. 31
(7:30 until 1:00)
1

•In sulated Roplnceme nt
Window

•V inyl, Steel Siding
•Storm Windows

Open Wed., F11 .. Sol.
7:30 until 10:00
Avatlable for
Birthday•, (hur&lt;h,
Private Parties
985 -3979 or 98H996

•Doors

"FREE ·

INSTALlATION"
SHOWROOM HOURI:
9 to S Mon., Tu11., Wed. &amp; Fri.
9 to 12 Thun. &amp; Sot.

12-tl-'86-l '"'

Jmol2986

YOUNG'S

GEARY'S
BODY SHOP

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addons a"nd r e modelin~r

SSO Poge Sl., Middleport
OPEN 8 A.M .- 4 P M .

~ R oo f ing

and gutte r wo rk
- Con crate work
- Plu mbing and electr ical
work

(free Estimates )

V. C. YOUNG In

Real Estate General

992-62JS

Of

992 -7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4 15-'86-lc
_ _.:_:
:...:.:...:.J

Roger Hysell •.
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio ·

AUTO &amp;TRUCK · .
REPAIR
Alia Trantmlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-712~
6-17 -ttc

-- ~
.

· !CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USE) '
608
E . Main,._iOiiiioill-•

New Location:

POMEROY, 0 .
992 -2259
NfW LISTING - POMEROV
- A 3-4 bed room home 011 a
I acre lot. Pr~vate but closem
C"port. garage, sto.,ge but ltl·
tng. Asktng $17.000.00

168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 41760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your Cable!!.
•

Phone Bills He re
, IUI!Hill PHON!

..

All Maku

RIIIOINCI PHON!

•Wash8n • OI1hwashers
•Ranges
•RohigetBtors
•Dr"¥ers • Freezers

(ot41 '1'12 -17l4

PARTS and SERVICE

1o t41 992 -osso

---WE ARE VOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

PRIC E REDUCED - LONG
BOTTOM - A neat 3 bed -

•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFitGERATOR

lamt ly IOOITI, kitChen With
built·m range &amp; oven unt ts.
separate dmmg area Gas r
A. heal plu s woodbu rnCt. 2
car garage,-apptownately I
acre w1lh garden pace and
outbwld1ng $28,000 00.

985-3561

W1J C ftrrv F f1 hing Supplios

MIDDLEPORT - large lot,
eQuipped k1tchen. basement.
gatage, 3 bedrooms. mce
Iron! sttltng porch. washer &amp;
dryer. too. Also has hookups
tor tratlcr. ale u nlts. l~replace.
~ummum s1d1ng. Thts one you
must see! $34.900.00.

room r-anch w1th spaciOus

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG

•SAHLLtiE SAlES &amp; SERVICE

We Hm AFull Tltrt1
Shop Tteh•lelu

o• Dutt
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER- 985 -3307

GUN SHOCT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Buildirl,g

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.
fa&lt; lory Chotc e
I 2 Gouge Shotg~.~ts Onli , '

10·8-tfn ·

4/ Ji lin

NEW LIST! NG - POMEROY
- S1x acres close to town w1th n1ce l 'h story lrame
hom e, wth 3- 4 bedrooms. Has
ntce k1tchen cabmets, 10•20
storage bUIIdm&amp; ~alto. garden
space. $16.000.00
NEWER HOME - W1th Gambr~el type rool. plu sh cat pet.
tremendou s ltvmg room w1th
cathedral ce11111gs. stone h·
replace. eQuipped k1tchen,
3 bedJOorns. lull basemen t.
2 heatm g systems, ' lat ge
older barn. pond and ap·
proxtmately 30 acres ol n1ce
laytng pasture. $69.500 00.
NEW LISTING - RUTlAND
- Over one acre111 the counY &amp; a like new 3 bedroom
ranch lype house With 2 gatages, eQUtpjl€(1 ktlchen, electnc B.B. heat. All tn goorj condition $37,500.00.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.

992·6191
Jean Tfusseli .. :.. 949·2660
Dott le Turner -... ,.992-5692
Olf ice .... ............ 992-2259

&amp;W

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED .

1\ 5·11C

•

l! 7l!llln

EAGLE RIDGE .
AUTO REPAIR ·
Truck , au to . flo
heavy oquipm on1 ·

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

repair s and wolding. ,
JA il makes flo tnodel• l

190 MULBERRY AYE.
POMEIOY, OH.

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756

PH. 992-9949

John K. Bentz
Owner/Mechanic

Bob Barton, Owner
12-30-86·1 mo.

SHAIPENING
SERVICE
Circuli! Saws
Saw Chain

-

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES
&amp; S•rvice

Drill Bi11
Knives

1· 2·'17· 1 mo. '

Autjlmative Repair · ·

·Planer K_nives

TUNEUPl

I··

· Chisels

GIAYELY
TIACTOII SALES
204 Condor !1.

Pomtroy, Ohio

PH. 992-2975

t2·5-'J6·1 mo.

·

to . TUNSMISSIO~S

CALL 992 ·7403 Apt • .
!!. Rl . 33, Pom~roy, OH. ·

..

We'll Sell You A ,
Used Car or Fix
Your Old One ·
1·7-'87-1mo

.'

""
I•

BISSELL
BUILDERS-

REASONABLE - RELIABLE
8-20-'86 It•

,

fEAFORD(H

54 Misc. Merchandise

AND MANY MORE TO CHOOSE FROMII

Electronic Organs
• Mobile service

Rea l Estate General

. ·

•Traditional sofa &amp; chair in brown/peach plasd.
Reg. SJ175 .................................................... 875.00

'
'

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
.

TVs; Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

PH. (3041 882·2220

by Dresher

solid oak (2 011lyl .......................199.00 oa.

~

·

Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

J.R.'s ,REPAIRS

12-16.'86-t mo.

Any Brond Nome... Boughr
·
Before 1940

Reg. $695 ............... ~.................................S279.00.

TEMPLE

17.·1·86· 1 JnQ,

8-l l Ito

OLD RADIOS WANTED

Member FDIC

· •Contemporary mauve flame stitch sofa.

z
..,.

PH. 992-3537

WANTED:

TRUST
Makes Things Happen.

'

WV 1-800 ·654 46 5 7

Outside WV 1 ·800 623-2013

w LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

1-3-'86 He

SKATE-A-WAY

1· 2.' 87 . 1 mo.

The Grand Regency Quein Size Brass Bed

~- ttools~ASH &amp; CARRY ITEMS ~
e(onte.;ary rust occalioiiDI thalr ...................11 16.00
•Grey bttrrtl back occasiollal chtiir ......................1199.00
.whitt wicktr rocker '"'''"'""''."'"''""'"'":............. S17 7.00
•Tradltiollal antique gold mirror ............................, 159.00
eMaplt dinette chairs 12 onlyl ................................. l76'.00
-white 1 apricot kltchtn chcirs 12 only) ......... sn.oo
•T111 vinyl uphl(st•ttl ....._ chtir (2 anlyl ...... 139.00 ta.
elran I ahwatld Qdjuttlllle floor lamp .................. :29.00
.Console cherry ntirror """"·r····................................ 79.00
•Maple tquart cocktail table ............................ .... 1154.00
•Ma!llt ...,...., tnd t.W. (2 inly)............J154.00 ...

SIMMONS

lOCill 304 · 882 3729
l n~ilie

J: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

Farm Equipment

12:3D PM to 3 PM

PIZZAS, SUBS
PIZZA BREAD

· Reg. S718 .....................................................S399.00
•White on off-white print traditional sofa.
Reg. S655 ...........................~ .........................5399.00
·•Contemporary 3-pc. sedional in mauve &amp; :an.
Reg. S1324 .................................................... 899.00
ettigh pillow back 3 pc. sectional w/indiners.
Reg. S2254 ................................................ S1688.00

a:

Authoriz~ John Deere,
New Holland, Bush Hog

Farm Equl~ment
Parts &amp; Service

4 P.M . 'Til 11 P.M .
Sunday .t hru Thursday
Friday flo Saturday
4 P.M. 'Til 1:30 A .M .

D BRASS BEDS

o•scONTINUED
BEDROOMS
50°/o TO &amp;0°/o OFF
NEW BEDROOMS
2.0°/o TO 30°/o OFF
•lar

'

•Whits on white print loose pillow back sofa.

WIIHIIIl i V ll\IJUi ab hi V
D ELIVF. A V IN Tl11 S r ATf AR EI\

&lt;(

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILlE, 01110

Dealer

PH. 992·2228

It's the single under lying factor in returnin g
_
economic vitality to this reg ion .
Central Trust Company, the loca l representative
of the Central Bancorporation, Inc.; ca n play a
leading rol e in providing borrowed ca pital for new
ca rs, homes, business inventory, equipment, and
industrial facilities.
Jobs result from such business expa nsion the greater the expan sio n, the ~ore jobs! ,
Gallipolis and the surrounding regton now have
the best sou rce of cap ital ava ilabl e.
Central Tru st's lending capabilities are second
to none!
.
The size and complexity of a large project may
very well pose a problem to other banks, so come
to Central Trust - with Confidence.

25°/o TO 60°/o OFF

z

SALES &amp; SERVICE

YEARS OF AG E

MAIN STREET
PIZZA .

BARCLAY
TEMPLE
AND SIMMONS

nnd hnv e 3 vr m sl llu o u!lh

Cl Computerized Hearing Air ~election

BOGGS

OPEN TUESDAY,
WEDNESDAY !1- THURSDAY·
9 AM to 11:30 AM and

Cl Hill? foonderosa, loc .

$488°0

3/ 11 / tf n

t Mo. 12-9-86

FOR CH ILDR EN J TO 6

Open Enrollment
Thru The Year

BY

No Sunday Calls

1 -13-tfc

ON BEDliNEH S

II 1111

CONFIDENCE
•

'.

Lowered Pri ces

WA sull lO ll q&lt;~uJit¥ IJ ;ut s

ar 949-2860

992-2196

Has

" Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801

Middleport, Ohi o

BODY SHOP
PARTS INC.

F01d S. GM Tru r::k FtmdtHS
E11 rlv '39
Law •56
ChromA 81Jmpm s G M 73·
80 $55 Fnrd 7 3 77 569
THRU D EC FREE IN STA l.

New Homes Built

PAT HILL FORD

MOUNTAINEER

. BISSELL
SIDING CO.

•NEW FURNACE
•AIR CONDITIONING
•HEAT PUMPS
,
•BLOWN INSULATION .
•REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

222 E. Main, Pomeroy

HIDE-A-BEDS

SER~ICE
We can repair and r~
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas Tanks.

HEATING &amp; COOLING

Middleport, Ohio

SOFAS, LOYESEATS AND
SECTIONAL$

•VINYl SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
"BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

J&amp;l INSULATION
JAMES KEESE
.

····· Nihil.O~en

SIMMONS, STEARNS &amp; FOSTER, LA·Z·BOY

RADIATOR

FREE ESTIMATE

family feeling at Poiaderou.'"

Davis, Forest Run, Pomeroy ,
and other rel at ives over th e
holidays. She r eturnep to Maine
on Dec. 28 to 24 Inches of snow ,
and dr tft s of nearly seven feet.

PHONE
992-21 56
Or
Sentinel Clmtlitd Dept

'

IAti11AM-4PM,
LICin Salad Buffet
{all -y_
out!GL·SII.

#~-.:...---

Thera~• a

·Indiana.man holds
.
hostage
.
workers at west Ohio bank

p~~D~~'A :'::. ",,..,,,~, ·~

P . . . .,atlllltllkMIItl.

PON_DEROSA PI.U
Vllld1Mtii21111J

la. not

· incI CIY!IDIIaltll l9i lilY

wllnother discoun)s.Tax not

...

Davis home visiting from Navy duty

''

.,

Luncheon m enus for sc hools in
the Meigs Lpcal Schooi District
to'r next week have been announced. The district has
uniform menu program provld·
· lng that the same foods be served
In all schools on the same day s.
The Monda y menu wil be hot
dogs with sauce, corn, cookie,
fruit and milk; Tu esday, chicken
· pattie sandwich, celery with
peanut butter, j ello wi th fruit ,
and milk; Wedn esday, beef· and
noodles, green beans, hot rolls
and butter, apple sauce and
milk; Thurscjay, sloppy , joes,
mixed vegetables, cole slaw,
fruit and milk, and F r iday,
cooks' choice .

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 9

,•.

The Daily Sentinel

SAVINGS OPPORTUNITY AT OUR

will

~fre."

Clatwor thy; "Chr istmas Cheer"
by Mrs. Forest B acht el~ 'Orna·
mental Breads" by Mrs. Charles
Bradbury; " Christmas Night,
December Night" by Mrs. Roy
Cassell; story of Silent Night by
'Mrs . Carpenter; "Piccoli" by
Mrs. Dwight Walla ce, and "The
Other Wiseman" by M rs. Sibley
·
Sl ack. .
Mrs. Wallace announced that
Mrs. Clatworthy will host the
January m eeting with Mrs RIchard · Owen to review, " The
S)l atterer of Worlds" by Peter
Goodchild . Roll call will be on
atomic bomb m emories.

~

delegat etotheOhioStateGrange
session held r ecently in Colum•
bu s, reported on activities of the
co nference wh en Columbia
Grange met at th e hall .
King reported on resolutions
considered at the conference
including two which had been
submitted by Columbia grange.
He urged members to get more
involved In the state m eetings
and commented on how enil ght lng they are as to how the
program works to benefit. Its
mem hers.
Pauline Atkins , Meigs County
Pomona master , and Ruby
Diehl, Harrisonville Grange
member, were gues ts at the

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.--:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;••••••••••••••••••lll'l!~
~
A

a

Plain Vlew may vanish :
• PLAIN VIEW, Iowa (UP!) 'Phe 45 residents of Plain VIew
decide March 3 whether t o
vote the tiny Scolt County co m munity out of ex istence as a way
ID beat the risi ng cost of liability
IIJsurance.
The vote was sc heduled Wednesday by thf four-member
Plain VIew City Development
G:ommittee.
' Mayor ~enneth Koberg said he
believes · a majority of Plain
VIew's eligible voters favor "dls. lhcorporatlon" because "the ex- .
P.ense of Insurance Is getting wa.y
out or hand for what we have

•

~::~~~Me~~~~U~~g
.
~==~u~~~as
I

Reeking rejects:
store and lock er plant , bul a bar
·· DELTA, Colo. IUPI ) -Delta
and grill Is the only business
Cou nty resident s who com - es tablishment left. Koberg sa id.
plained about the assa ult on thei r
Residents h a~e been talking
noses by tons of rotten onions las t • about voting lhe town, which
year arc grumbling this year
Incorporated in 1933, out of
about having to pay for the
existence since 198'4, when a
disposa l of t he offending
lawsuit was fil ed agains t Scot t
veget ables.
Countv stemming from a fa tal
The bad onions are culled from
accident on a road th at runs
the crop about this time each
through the town .
year because they may be
The city was th en sued for
diseased, weather-dam aged or
$46,000
by I he co unty's insurance
too unattractive to selL
Oelta County Extension Agent company , which wa s try ing to
Bill Harriman sa id getting rid of r ecover the mon ey it · paid to
the unwanted onions is difficult . settle the suit. Th e iss ue was
The vegetabl es cannot be spread resolved by the Scott Cou nty
ba ck on the fields and plowed Board of Supervisors with the
under because that could keep city paying $1,500 to the Insuthe diseases alive, ruining more rance company and agreeing to
begin steps to "disincor porate."
of next year's crop.
" We' ll still alw ays be Plain
Some of the culls can be fed to
View,"
Koberg sa id. "We ' re ju st
$heep, but last year there were
too many onions and not enough· a dot on the m ap , but I gues s we'll
sheep. The ar&gt;rlval of warmer lose that identity."
weatherinto
turned
the piles ofmess.
culled
onions
a m alodorous
Th e onions drew flies and
citizen complain Is.
Harriman said this yea r the
county commissioners voted to
bury the r eekin g r eject s In the
public landfill. That solved the
fly problem and quenched the
stench, but he sa id the controversy .continues.
" The public dldn' t cr eate this
mess, the agriculture sector
created the mess," Har riman
said. "So why should the public
have to pay for dl s po~a l ? That 's
the controversy."
Hon es t
cabbie
is
'laughingstock' :
SAN FRANCISCO (UP!) -A
taxi driver who spent an hour
tra cking down three customers
who )lad left $1 ,792 In cas h In his
cab says hr has become " the
laughingstock" of the city 's
cabbies for his good deed.
: "I figure If Abraham Lincoln
can walk 10 miles to retu r n three
cent s, Rick Gra ham can drive
around the streets of San Fr ancisco to return $1, 792," Gr aham
said .

Luncb menus announced

TOPS names Miss Christmasume
.
'
VIcki Ferrell was crowned
Miss Chrlst mas tlme at a recent
meeting of TOPS held at the
Rutland Civic Center. A holiday
party was held with a buffet
dinner and gift exchange. Best
loser wa s Linda Bailey wiib Mrs.

Thursday, January 8, 1987

·,"

•

'

._,

"'·

''· .

�.. '

~age-1 0- The. Qaily

Sentinel

Annuu nce 111 r. nt s

Pomeroy-Mid(lleport, Ohio ·
42 · Mobile Homes

LAFF-A·DAY

3 Announcements

for Rent

.'

2 bdr:, tit' utlli1iet paid except
.elec., furn . or unfurn., tee.
dapoah required. Convenient
locatton. Call 114·446·86&amp;8 or

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by

, Racine_Gun Club. Every Sunday,

814-'46·4778.

beglnnmg , at ·1 :OQ p .m . Factory

Choke, 12 guage shotgunt.

will -~ot be doing lncome'taxet
thlt veer . Wallace Ruuell

4

.

2 bdr. fulty furnlthede.d ultt only,,

utll . pold. Coli 614·448·4110.

I

Bradbury.

44

'

Giveaway
2 Bedroorri furnithed . We 1ccept
HUD, Beautiful riv• vi.W. Fottltl's Mobile Home Park 614-

448-1802.

2 BR , t1&amp;0 / mo. plua depoalt
and utilities. Raccoon Rd . Call

Full size mattreJJ 81 bolt spring.

Call614·446-0()26.

614-446-9346.

lab 8. Spaniel mi11. female, 9
wkt. Celt 814-446-7054.

2 BR FUrn'ed. Adults. only. No
peta. 322 Third Avenue, Galllpo·
lla. C.ll614-446-3748 or 2581·1

"Arnold, I've · hired a P.R.
man to save our
marriage."
,___________
T _____
..;;.___..j

FOUNO; Black and white cat. I
corner of Cour1 and Third. Mas
been declewtd . Cell 614-446·
7137 aher 5PM .
LOST: Black maledog 1 Lind bert~

weight -60 lba. wearing black
thin nylon collar. reward. Dr.
Kranz 304 -676 -1373. or office

676·6971 .
- - - - -- - - ·lc-

lolt: Reward -2 female straight
leg Beagles. White with brown
and bla ck spots. lost in liberty
Ave. and Flutland St . area
Middleport . 614· 992-5680 af ter 4 :30pm .

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clean

used can
J im Mink Chev.·Oids Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614·446 ·3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used cars . Smith
Buiclt ~ Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
A11e .. Gallipolis . Call 614-446·

2282.

Country furniture, collectibles.
children' s toys, dolls, Pr .. 1960.
Cora Mill. Call 614· 379-2727 .
16 to 16ft . fiberglan Bau boat
with motor &amp; trolling motor. etc.
Call614 -446· 1142.

• Cuh paid . Pre 1950's. Single Or
whole collection. Call Marc and
Ellen Fultz 614· 992·2101 day•
or 614· 692· 2461 even ings and
weekends.

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLO

Cufl paid. Pre 1960's. Single or
whole collection. Call Marc and
Ellen Full.z 614-992-2101 deys
or 614· 692· 2461 evenings and
we ek8nda.
Buying junk c8rs. Call614-9926648 after 6:00 pm.
Surprise Birthday Party to cel&amp;brate Evelyn Gammon's 80th
Birthday. All formar studenta,
family, triends and auocialet
are welcome. January 8th, 7·9.
Pt. Pl. Presbyterian Church.

Emplo ymen t
Serv1ces
11

Help Wanted

11

Help Wanted

32 Mobile Homes

Government joba. • 1 6,040 .
S59,230 yr. Now hiring . Call
806-687·6000 Ell.1 . R· 9806 for
current federalllal.
Federal. S1ate and Civil Service
jobt. S15.414 to $68,786 year.
Now hiring. Cli!l job line1 · 518469-361 1 EKt. F-138150 for
lilting. 24 hr.
Mig h 1chool Juniors and Seniors
can join the Army National
Guard now. Begin earning a
monthly pay check and defer
your active duty training untM
June 1987. "104-675-3960 or

1·800·642·3619,

Part time help with elderly ladv.
Some houae cleaning. Refet'en·
cea required. Reply to P.O. Bolt
451 . Point Plea11nt. W. Va.

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE ,
growning retell company is
1eehing an aggressive person
willing to be trained in retail
buainees. No previous axpe·
rience required. Exc benefits.
Send resume and aalary requintmenta to Wit -Car Enterpris11s,
Inc.: P.O. Bo~t 1308 , Ports·
mouth. Ot.io 46662.

12

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL"S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALLIPOLIS. RT 36,
PHONE 614·446· 7274,
1984 Schultz Mobile Home14x70 with 7x21 ft. expando. 3
SR. 2 full batht, totel alectrle.
apace saver microwave, vacaM.
Need to aell. aelling for pay-off.
It interatted with l~n appro~o11l
through Greentree Aceaptance.
May finance for 10 percent
down-:- Vou pay &amp; percent &amp; we
pay 6 percent for you . lntltt'esfed
-Cell814-448-872! .

33

Farms fo~ Sale

100 Acre Farm. Cail 614-388-

8139.

34

Room and board for employed
man . Nice home. Family atmos·
pflere. Call 614-992.-6873.
Room and bosrd for aenlor
cilizens. Plent y ot TLC. Call

614-992·6873.

1 B Wanted to Do

Business
Buildings

Enlhualaatic &amp; entrgetlc Ptt•on
with good communication akllts.
Po1l tlon available to work for
SoutheaJtern Ohio's fineu out·
door recreat ion firm . No tltpe·
rience reeded. Wlll train. Start
immediately. Call between 10 lSI
4 at 614-286· 2248 , Wed. thru .
Sat , Asll for Sue .

- - - - - - - -·IC-

Renl als
41

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom house•
for rent Ph . 448-18715 .
Newly decorated, mutl h...e
good reference. Call 11 631
Fourth Ave . in Gallipolis .
Daytime.

1 811droom basic rent S176.00
plus electric. Alto required a
t200.00 seeulitydepotit. CON·
TACT: Ja~kton Estetet Dept. Ph
448-3997 Equal Houaing
Opponunlty.
Furnithed apt . $176.00 water
pd. 2 bedroom. 13''h Founh
Ave. Ph. 448-4416 afler 7pm.
'New 2 bedroom aptt. in Muon.
W. Ve. Quiet letting, off 1trHt
parking. Rent stlr1t at 1199.
Call linda Carson at 304-776·
5011 or Denlaa Streib at 614·
863-4111 . Equal Houaing
Opponunlty.
2 Bedroom apt . nice carpeting,
water paid, washer &amp; dryer
hook-up, stove, refrtg. furniahtd
available Jan 1, 1987 Ph

· · 72

Furnl1hed &amp; unfurnlthad apes .,
1150.00 end up, reterencea Ph .
304-676-5104 A-1 Real Eatate.
Upttairt unfurniahad apt, carpeted. utililiet peid, no children.
no peta call 448· 1837.

.

.

Apenment for Rent, 821 Second Avenue, 2 BR , Extr• Nice,
equipPed kitchen , C / A
1260/ mo. Call 614-448- 2168.
Nice unfurn. apanment. 4 roomt
&amp; ~eth . Cloae to schools &amp;

shopping. Ref. S. Sec. Oep.
required. Call614-446-0444.
Complllely fum . 2 BR apartment, large living room. 458
Second. Adulta. $226 per ·
fnOnth. See. Dep. &amp; Ref. Call

Would like to do babysinlng in
my home. located near Nonh
Gallia HS . Call 814-388-9096.
Babyaltting in my home on
Raccoon Creek Rd. Call 614·

446·7211 .

Give piano Bnd organ 1euon1 In
my flome to beginnert, ad·
vanced pupils and adults. Al1o
teach chording end trantposing.

Fin ancial
21

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUeLISH·

lNG CO . recommenda that you
do buaine11 whh people you
know, and NOT to und money
throuqh the mail untH you hiVe
inveattgated the offering.

23

Professional
Services

Piano • organ le11ons. Mary
Lucas. Call 814-446 -9787 or

614·448-4428.
St~rks

Tru and Lawn Service.
Hedges . shrubs , buthts
trimmed. landscaping, ttump
and leaf removal, 304-57&amp;·

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr .. air, poet, _gar~ge. Nice.
Commercial property, corn•
lots &amp; hlghwav frontage . Uet
with ua . We h111e buyers. A· One
Real Estate-Broiler. Ctll 304674-6104 or 304·674· 6316.

Furniahed ep•nment. next door
to llbr..-y. One Ptofeuionaladult
only. Perking. Call 614-446·

0338,

Furniahed apt. 919 Second,
Gallipolit. $160. Utilities pd.
Single male, thare bath. 446·
4416 aher 7pm.

2 bdr. houaa on Pine Hill
Ceme1ary Ad. Call 614-446-

Oalulte downtown apartment·
newly redecorated 2 bdr. apt.
with full lntulatlon. compllla
kitchen, wllhltt'·dryar, air cond.
aundeek. Cfllll 814· 446 -4383·
diVI, 614-446·0139 8\lenings
&amp; weekendt.

1 bdr. newly remodeled includes
furniture S. water. Good ref. •
depoait required. $226 . Ctll

614-448-1769.

5 room hs., beth, 84 Garfield
Ave. t176 . 5 room 1pt., blth,
509 1acond. UOO. 3 room apt.
Cedar &amp; 4th. 11715. All carpeted
&amp; redeco.rated, plus utlli11et &amp;
deposit. Call 814-448-0952 for
appolntmlf'lt .
3 bedroom house, 111 carpeted.
on Rt. 218. $300 mo. plus
depotlt . Call614-266-1523.
Delu•e 2 BR haute, 842: Firat
Avenue, Gallipolla. off ltreet
periling, no pata. references.
depoait . Call 614-258-1629,
3 houaaa for rant. Nice. Sea
Ruby Vaughan at Vaugflans
Cardinal in Middleport.
2 bedroom home In country.
Large yard. Lang1villa area.
Depo1it required . Cell814· 742·

2641 .

'

2·1tory, 6 rooma • bath, baa•
mant. large yard, cloae to
tchOoll, all carpeted. Referen·
eel and Oepoait. 304·876·

2851 .

2 bedroomaon Ohio At. 141 , 111
carpeted, 2 miles from down·
town Gallipolis. depo1it tnd
refrenc" requlrjl&lt;l. U76.00.

304·678· 3868.

42 Mobile Homos
for Rent

2842 or 878· 2010.

Real Eslate

Juat built 2 bdr. duplex-extra
nice. good location, no patti
Reference &amp; aecurity depoait
r~quired . Call614-446-1260.

3 bedroom, furnilhed, wuh6f'
and dryer. $200 . ptr month plue
dapo1lt 1nd utllltlll. Call 814-

Ver.., nice 2 or 3 bdr. downateirt
apt .. in town location. cloae to
school. located at 602 Fourth
Ave. $260 e month. !nt•etted
partie• call 614-446· ~897 .

-::-::c:-----:::-'--,--n
2 BR apar1ment on Firat Avenue.
Adults only . Call 61 4 · 446·

8221 .

.

2 and 3 bedroom apertmenta
and houtel in Pomeroy or
Middlltlort . Furnlahed or. unfur·
nlthed. Pay own utilitin. Call
dav• &amp;14·992-2381 .
2 bedroom aptt., New Htven.
Alao commereill 1pace auitable
for Mroblc:s, tanning. crafts. Call

304·882·35e1 or 614·992·
7481 .

2 bedroom rlvtr view apt.
Wllhtr and dryer available,
uUIItlea, paid. equipped kitchen.
newl~t painted and curt1in1, no
pett, dtpotil . Ideal for working
91,1 to aharee•pence. &amp;14-992·
8639 mornings,
1 bedroom 1pt. in Middleport.
$160. month plul utititle~ . Days
614 · 992 -15546 or avenings

992-7479,

llo, e14·448·e221 ,

Nice 2 bedroom Mobllt Home,
Rouah Une. On nice IP01 in

Ona bedroom furnlhttd apl In
Point Ple1nn1. tdultl only. no

Ch " hi re. 304·773·o"B28 ·
2 bt~room mobllo homo. Mid·
diO!&gt;Ort. o. Rof•enco with

0..
curtly dtpOth. 304-882-3287

r

.SMALL

WANT ADS
PACK

ABii PUNCH!

.45.000.00. 304-871-2688.

32 . Mobile Homes
for Sale
1 4•70 Fleetwood. 3 bdr , Z full
btths. tott' tltc. Ukt ntw, price
negotiable. Call after 4 wnk·
daya. anytime weekenda. 114·

38e-8633.

Callahan '• UHd Tire Shop. Over
1,000 tlret, siua12,13, 14, 15,
16. 16.8. 8 mil" out Rt. 21e.

2010 John Dlere dinll tractorplows, ditc $3950. N1w Idea
Dyne 8ouncemower t495. Late
model 224T John· Deere bal•
t129&amp;. Hay wagon $300. Call

Plaatic cltlam slat• approved,
plastic teptic ttnkt, pl1116c
cutv8rts. metal eutvartt. •RO,.

Black powder 5.95, caps. fluka,
horns, begs, quick loldert.
Thompton canter perts, MUul•
loading Speciality Shop, Mill·
cr~k Ad. Hrt. M·ft1·8PM, Stt.
1-6. Call 814·445-2318.

2 rollt ttiel cabl .. 7 / 8. C1ll

614-446-3243 ohor 8 PM.

Firewood for tale. HardwoOd.
Large pick-up load 836. · Call

614-446-9266 or 446·1437'

Utld A-86 Ditch Witch Trencher
&amp; John Deere Do1er. Call
614-694-7842 or 614-894-

6006.

Mixed hardwood slebt. t12. per
bundle. Containing approlt. 1 'h:
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Cell614-992-

6461,

2466.
-----'----·lc-

Firewood for tale. $35 per told
or 5 loadt * 1 50 deltvtrad and
stacked. 614-949-21501 after
5:00p.m.

81150. 2 end tablet and coffM
table t&amp;O. Cell 614-949·2249
after 6:00pm.
For sale : Firewood . Hut
vouchers accepted. Dan Taylor.

27'x38'x9'EAVE · whh lllding
door • tervlee door $4,288.00
erected.
Iron Horse . Building• Ph.614-

332-9746.

1978-240 Timberjac:k tkinner.

Coli 614 -3e8-9052 or 388·
9312.
3000 Ford tractor-new shon
block with plowt end di1c
t3950, grtvity bed wagon
8295, 2 row com planter $275,

Coll614-2e6-6522

2010 John Deere dietal trac:tor
. New Idea Dvna Bounce mower
t4815. lata model 224T John
Deere biller 81295. Hay wagon

t300. Coii614·2B6-6622,
1980

Long

29B6.

· Livestock

· Many ••toned placet of profet·
alonal photogr1phy equipment.
C•merat, lenJ, tlhet'l, metwt,
etc. bct111nt condhlan. Re•
10nably priced. Call 614-992-

8824.

Want to Buy, Auger "scriiW" for
coal atoker. approll &amp;1h ft long,

Large round balet of hay for lila.
110.00 e1ch Ph. 114-446 ·

Hay &amp; Grain

8868 or 814-949-24e6.

For sale: Sofa and matching
chair. Ca11814·367-0403 .
Aay 'a Used Furniture. Addiaon.
Call 614-367-0137. King coal
Jtove, t150. Pot belly stove.
$100. Laundry .tove, $&amp;6.
' Bathroom heat.-, t10. Fuel oil
Jtove, $75 . Cheat of draw.a.'
U5. Draner, U&amp; . Buffet, 1215.
Bunk beda, $85 . Gun cabinet,
t46. Open 10-5 Mon.- Fri.

304·773·6526 and 773-9140.

1082.

55 Building Supplies

814·268 -1427.

Hty for ule, t1 .50 a bale. Call
Mill.ed grea hay tor tela. Call

Building Matarialt
Block, brick, 1ewer pipes. win·
dowa. lintelt;. etc. Cllude Wintara, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·

246·6121 .

Pickens Used Furniture. Good
quality used furniture. Open 9 to
8 or call for appointment.
394-876 -8483 or 876-1 410.

814-949 -2237.

Hty, blue ribbon feir'--t1 .00 and
• 1.150 ~quare bale': Pnone 304·
175·6088 after 5 p.m., night
lollding.

Concrete blocks ell alznverd or
delivery. Maaon und. Galllpolia
Block Co.. 123'12 Pine St ..
Gallipoli1. Ohio Call 614-448-

OuHn al1e water bed and
drawera. 1200.00. 304-895·

3823.

GE wather and dryer , whitt,
$100 .00 eech, 304-675-7541
evening•.

56

Antique quilt, log cabin pattern,
(1870 parlodl. Price t300

Pets for Sale

Oragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Hlmal1y1n, Persian and
SlameM kittens . AKC Chow

FIRM . Coll246·5416.

puppl... Call 814·448·3844
after 7PM.

54 Misc. Merchandise

Blick Springer Spanief. · Cocker
Spaniel mix puppiH . 4 mo. old
main. $40·11ch . Call 81 4 ·246-

9167.

AKC Reg. minitturt Oai::hthund
puppin &amp; AKC Rag. Pekintat

2259.

puppln. 0160 eoch. Call 114·
448·7920.
'

Coli 304·875·44131 ,

AKC ~lttartd Chow-Chow
puppltt. very reuontble prlca.

Rust Kenmore dryer $100.
Whitt GE we1her $100. 304-

call thO&lt; 5c30, 304·575·8799,

878·3618 oher8 :00.

UKC Pitt Bull puppitt, 8 WHkt

old, 304-8B2·3795.

Guit•. E· 70 dre. dryer, Kawa·
uki motorcycle. VolkMwavon,
chain uw, exercill bib, biev·
clu, cer carriert, 304-871! ·

Blue Tick pupt, 4 months old.

no.oo. 304-BI2-32e8.

1883.

Bruce Beattie

Musical
Instruments

814·446-2B19.

OH Call 614·448·47B2.

79 Ford Pinto. 4 cyl. euto. new
tirN. AM·FM cataltta. u . run·
ning cond. , lookt good. •sao,
Jackton Eatltft. on At . 35 by
Foodltnd, Apt. 888. anytime.

82 Rablilt Di11tl. d~art . ah•p.
runt •lo9kt good. 83100 whh
m1g1, t2900 without. Call

One Kimball Organ for Slle. C.ll

514·445·1247.

Kimball Eltctric Orv~n . Needs
Repeir. Cell614 -441·3127.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

A naw trucklo1d .thote fiiMOus
Like Ontario Appl•. l~rt• 1111,
9ood kMptn , 7 vwl•l•. all
frutt 1nd produce. J1ck't FNh
Mtrktt. At. 3&amp;, HandtrtOn.
W.VI.

Trill.,, 2 bedrooms, lumlah.cl,
air cond, w1ahM tnd dryer,
t180.00 pkn utUIII• and referencu, Gallipoh Ftrry, 3041·

IIIII Si!lliJIII'&gt;
i'.

IIVr'~lrll,,

878·4174.

2 bedroom mobile homa Upper
Rivlf Rolld. refrance~ and d•·
oalt. 2 children 1cc•11tlld. 114·

61 Farm Equipment

448·0808.'

't

Whlll Farm Traotorar 8ttt Price
In Aru. Slden Equipment Co,

fort

'·

® Wheel of fortune
IIIIDl il11 Jeopardy

ill) Banson
7:35 ® Honeym-.ero
8:00 IJ III illl Cosily Show iCC) .
Cliff is pleasan!ly surprised
when Sondra's boyfriend

AC::j•CHLL.., f:V~ING•J5•
'

SATISfAGT•CHL-t.."-'

'

•'••

...

J.&gt;N~;

Nf'CESSA~Y.

Elvin proves useful in train·
ing Theo for 1n upcoming
wrestling match . In Stereo .

•

(]) Daktari
f11 Cil Coli... l ..ktdNIII:
Ohio State at Michigan (2
hrs.)
1iJ (I) Our World (CCI (60
min.)
III MacNeil-Lehrer Newoh·

,,

•·••~•·· iHAV~

.. '

I• 8·87

ALLEY OOP

Sr.rvi cr. s

our

MIERE A pair of con or!i&amp;IS

...

go straight and decide to
use their talents on a local
television consumer-action
s how. where they investi·
gate the wrongful commit·
ment of an heiress to a
mental
institl{tion . (60

'·

Home
lmprol(ements

.....

eASEMENT
WATERPIIOOFING
Unconditiontl lifetime guaran·
tae. Local rlf•eneet furniahad.
Free ettlmatet. Call collect
1-114-237-0488, day or night.
Rover• Baaement

min.)

ill) Survival Special: King

Penpuin: Strandod Beyond
tho Felk18nds (CCI The

..

Wat~rprooflng .

SWEEPER end aewing machine
rBJ!air, ptna, and tupplles. Pick
up and delivery, Davft Vtcuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Georgea Creek Rd .. Call 814·

EEK &amp; MEEK

breeding season and court·
s hip behaviors of the king
penguin are seen on the subantarctic island of South
Georg ia. (60 min ,) (A),

--------,

A \.IJ£.£K ? IJJHAT AM I

lO 00 W!Walr 1V ~

446-0294.

SUPFO~

@ MOVIE: 'Once a Thief
8:05 ([) MOVIE: 'Will f&gt;enny'
8:30 U III illl Family Tiea iCC)

AWE.E.K ?

FTM Gtneral Connecting 13yrs
es.perlenca. Roofing &amp; Con ·
11ruction Ph . 114-388-93Q8.
Free estlmM:es 10% oH durin'g
the holidays, offw upirea Jan

Steven's

wt.en he announces the
end of his 25-year mar·

riage , Par1 1 ol2. 1n Stereo.

All typea urp1n1ry work·
Interior/ exterior. Remodeling:
khchens , btthroomt.belement
converslona, gerq11, free ettimatn . Call 814-446-6174.

9:00 U ~ • illl Cheers ICC)
Sam's second marr iage

proposal to Diane lands
him in court charged with
assault and battery against
her. in Stereo.

RON 'S Tafevialon Service .
Hou11 calls on RCA , Quazar.
GE . Speciallng in Zenhh. Cell

(]) 700 Club

304-676-2399 "' 614-446·
2484,

ill Collogo

lukotbell:
Maryland al North Carollno
(2 hrs.l Live. '
1iJ (I) Colbya (CCI As Ja .

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
'·

'rOLl &lt;:JUST ~VE ME

LOOK ATME . .'. I

YOU 'v\OR!&lt;Y TOO
MUCH ... 'rtJLJ WORRY
ABOOT EVERYlHING.

roN'r wa&lt;RYAeowr

son investigates a family
trag•dy, ·a mysterious man
from Constance's past ar·
rives in los Angeles . j60

SOMETHING; ELSE

. ANYTHING-.

10 ~R'Y A60LJT.

min ,)

® Nova: China·o Only

'

Child (CCI The one-child

Ro1ary or cable tool drilling.
Mottwellt completed same day.
Pump •ties 1nd service. 304·

per family policy of the

People"a Republic of Ch ina
Ia "a mined , (&amp;0 min,) (A) ,
® Ill II}) Simon • Simon
While at a marine park
test ing a security system ,
A.J . and Rick encoun1er a
vic ious pair of hoods who
have sworn vengeance

304-675-6446 .. 676-6152.

82

BARNEY

Plumbin!J
&amp; Heating

STEP ABOARD
MV BRAND-NEW,
SECONT-HAND
FISH IN'

CARTER'S PL)JMaiNG
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourtfl and Pine
G111ipoll1, Ohio
Phone 814·448-3888 or 614-

HOW MUCH
DID 'YOU PAY
FOR IT,
LUKEV?

ONL'I TWO
DOLLERS

a_ga ins1them. (10 min .)
Myl!ory: A,.tto. Chrla1io"o Mlu Mtrplo(CC) Two
(jj)

5HHH-I'M GITTIN'

witnesses know who fired

sholl at L11itia Blacklock,

A NIBBLE

but one of the witneues is

dead , (60 min.) Part 2,
t :30 8 III® NithtCourtHorry

BOAT,

is stunned when • meek
woman calmly announces

SNUFFY

446·4471

ahe hu murdered hor hul·
band and ~·• proof to back
up her 11ory,
CIJ Big 10 PNvlow
10:00 8 1I11Dl LA. Lew An over·

814·387-7817,

1970 Ch~elle conv .. HO auto.
trent., new flrtl. new 1op, • new
exhautt. *2810 or bett offer.

86

Genaral Hauling

Boya Water Service. Also
Coli 814·445·B113 or 814· James
pools filled. Call 614-2!56-1 141
448.B201.
or 814-448-1176 or 1114-448·
1878 Ford Bronco. 4 wheel 7811 .

81 4·445·8345.

For Hit or trade for·slnlle axle
dump truck. 18 Cadillac
Ektoredo-leat th.. ·eo.ooo •c·
tUII milia, bf'lnd new GoodvHr
Aniv• tlree. brand new ditc

brok•. lotldod. Call 514·441·

2232 after lpm

1978 Volklwagon R1bblt. good
cond . 'New motor. ltklng

01600. CoH 814·285·8e78.

worked Kuzak Iandt in prison on contempt charges

.,
••.,
.,. ,

Llmeatone 1nd alabwood h1uled.
AI Tromm, Rutland. Call 814·

3010.

\

1175 FO&lt;d Elht,\1M¥ OOOd
-hloft. 01600. Call 814·
118-4418.
1111 Monto C.rlo, O.C. 304·
178·1130 or 178-3341.

1113 Font Thunderbird lllerh·
ldhlonlloodod w•h ...,.o,
Hondonon, W, Yo. 304·87&amp;· ogo
uc aond, 42,000 m.ltll, ......
7421 .
8:00 PM, 304-182·3778.

deceaud pilot when 1he
sues a major airline mlnufacturer. (80 min .) In

.

742·232B,

SCORAS
1

2

IL.-..1....1_,_1_._l"_.l--1Ii
-tl
r III
WADRN
3

•
Cll 8 Cll 20/20 ICC) 180
min,)
Ill Cil Odd Coulllt
I]) Do Not Enter. The Vlao
Wor Agolnot llltoo (CC).
® • II2i Knou Lending
!CCI Abby volnly trill to
moko Ollvlo owtro of, hor

'·

I,

,,~-,,

2819,

,,
'
..'•
'.
..'·'·

HO\IIe coal. Oaltvlfed 1 ton lind
up, Jim Lanier. 304 -876-1247

I'

Upholstery

R &amp; M cu..om Couchn and
Rauphotattry. Bt. Rt. 7, Crown

.,"

CIIY, Oh. 114·288-1470 Eve
114-448·3431, op.. daliv 91 ~
4:30, Sat. 9 :30 ta 1:30. Old 11
HW UP'hottlfad,

'

Mowrey•, Upholat•lng ltfYing
trl countyar1121 yeara. Th• batt
In fumlturt ufholttering. Call
304 · 87&amp; - 4 84 for free
tltlmltet.

..''

t~'

~E

I

SAID HE FELL IN A

I-IOLE, RAN INTO ATREE.

WAS STEPPED 011 BV A
HORSE ANI' BITTEN
SV A FOX!

.

SAID TO HIM ,

11 T~AT

MUST HAVE BEEN

A LON6

DAV.. 11

HE SAID, ~ NO, TfiAT ALL
i-IAPPENED IN

drug problems while Karen
It uptet that Mack hit
planned a meeting with

Anno, hll llrat loitt. 180
min .)
ill) II) N 10:20 I]) MOVIE: 'Tile Uquldotor'
10:30 • (!)INN Newt
.
To"l..ar-•o Journol
CIJ
&lt;a
11:00
III

PEANUTS

I N-•III.. !II.

T11E

FIRST FIVE MINUTES !''

m Htrdoaotle ono1 MoCor·

i

'

~,..

-TMMEI"'R;;.,_;U_,.F

A man confided tO his friend
that he hed lnveeled $12,000 in
1 .. .
precloue metal. "Gold or sliver?"
------,--~_,Inquired the trtend. "Neither," he
1·
lr8plled. "I bough! a - - ." .
6

I

I NH A V S

l---ri.;;...;,I;.,6,;.;.TI-.,I~.,.~.....-j

t)

Complete the chuo:;kle quoled
by filling ln th e miss ing words
1
L.-.1.--.L-...1.-..L.-L-....J you develop from step No. 3 below .

YISJIIDAY'S SCIAM-UTS ANSWEIS

~lh - \\!Yea - Avert - Millice - 'IWK:E a

YEAlt

I belleva It the government were lo ask lo heve the paper
clip Invented today It would have seven moving parte, two bat·
lerlee and require servicing at .leas! TWICE a YEAR.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Fighting off
temptation

NORTH

1-8-87

+2

'

• A K 67

tKQ1064 3

By James Jacoby

• 65

Several of the themes in this week's
deals have been inspired by the book
" A New Approach to Play and Defense" (Eddie Kantar, P.O, &amp;x 427 ,
Venice, CA 90291; $9.95 postpaid).
It's a safe bet thai many of our readers would bid four spades with the
South cards after the one·hearl overcall by East That would be wrong . Of
course you plan on playing in four
spades. but jumping to game immedi·
ately would deny any possible interest
in slam. Although it's not true on thi s
deal, many limes a minimul" opening
facing South's hand would produce 12
tricks. Making a forcing bid of one
spade anti then bidding game at his
nexllurn was lhe right way for Soulh
lo bid his hand.
Having bid il right, declarer had to
play II right. The first instinct, to win
the heart lead and play a club, musl be
suppres!led . Even novice defenders
would simply grab lhe spade ace after
winning the first club and lake two
more club tricks to defeat the contract. And if South were fortunate in
finding the club jack in East's h~nd . it
would still be an easy matter for lhc
defense to take the spade ace and play
another spade. thus forcing declarer
to eventually lead away from the Q·
10-9 ol clubs. ·
The simple winning play. if you

WEST

EAST

• '3
•sn
te n 2
+KJ 7 4

+A 6 5

.QJ 10 92

+JW

.

+A 3 2

SOUTH

+KQ J 1098 7

. 5
tA

+ Q 10 9 A
Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: North
West

Nortb

EaKI

It

I.

2+
Pass

Pass
Pass

Soulb
It

u

Pass
Pass

Opening lead: •

:t

haven't already noticed, is lor declar·
er to play A·K of hearts immediately.
pitching the ace of diamonds. Now he
can cash K-Q ol diamonds In dummy ,
lhrowing two clubs away. He willlhen
lose only the spade ace and two club
tricks, making his contract
A new book by James Jacoby and his
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, is now
available at bookstores, It is "Jacoby
on Card Games,·· published by Pharos

..

Books,

~~a•
"'"(
by fHOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
39 Sally
I M.D.'s woup - llowes
4 Dross
DOWN
8 Duck
I Food
9 "Salome'"
acid
role
2 .loin the
II Hold on
ml\lorlty
property
3 Beard
12 Piece
on grain
of Umber
4 Sacred
14 Aardvark"•
site
prey
5 British
15 Bolivian
film
export
dlrector
16 Palm leal . 8 Fido's cry
17 "The March 7 Be no
of the more
8 Cabbage
Soldiers"
19 Moo goo gal
salad
- (Chinese' 10 The "D"
dish) ·
In FOR
20 Not a whit 13 Bombast
21 Crooked
22 Gael
23 Octavia's
mate
24 ·-of

..

Yeeterday's Anawer
15 Bivouac
she lter
18 Charity
21 Strap
22 "G unfi"hl.
at the
OK - "
23 Coward
24 Late
actor,
George -

2~

Type
of piano
28 Giant
29 Czech
river
31 Fall
the mark
34 - Claire,
Wise.
3~ Rock"s
- Na No
•

Traleeto
25 Betrayed
26 Weapon
27 Little
30 Holy man's
• title
31 Wire

measure

32 Drinking
veSHel
33 Hoodwink
35 Location
38 Renlal
binder
37 FrO!Il
88 Brownish
color
DAILYCRVPrOQUOTES-Here'l how to work 11:

111

Stereo.

'

Watttraon ' s Water H•uling,
r1asonable ratet , Immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, cittarnt,
poolt. well. ate. call 304· 676·

87

after reluoint 10 doland •
hit·and-run drlwr ond Kol·
ooy llgh11 lor !loo wile of a

SNAKE!!

T &amp; LW1ter delivery anytime Ph .
814 · 388 -9732 ume d 1 y
deltvery.

19n Chry... Cordoba. Low.
low miiiiiQo, 01200. Coli 114· .. 675 -7387.
448-8038.

1818 VW GuN. 8 · AC.
aokl cotor. 2•.000 mil•. Uke
n..,. 08600. CoM 814·742·

conservative

brother shocks 1he family

16. 1987.

678-2088 o• 676-7147.

,

®Ill II}) Shell Game PRE·

I

mlolc
I]) NFL't Gret- . Mo.
mente: 1t71 tncl 1177,
AFC 8uddon DMth l'lllr·

offl

fill (!) M"A"S"H

••'

•

Iii (I) Judgo

;:;;;.....,....., · JlJ.&gt;i ANfWE/&lt; ''Ye$"o~ ''NO'~
1
' 1i'.S' ·iHE·j~UiH, li~

304·675·7487 or 676·6391.

Chevrolet Malibu Clauic, 4 dr.
1977, nice car. lnt.-ior perfect.

Call 11 4·448·7904

@) (!) Too C'- far Com-

Want to buy: Engine. 1980
Monte Carlo 360-305. Phone

1884 Chavy Chevotto. 4

opd,.
C11h Price 12399. John'a Auto
SliM, Bulavllle Rd .. Oallipolit,

Game

Uaed GM transmistions. Call
614· 448-0986. Repairing Alao
AVIIIable. 1-Ford 302 Auto.
Trans.

Aahby Conatrl,'ction, ClrPen·
ttry, remodeling, room addition,
cement block work, roofing,
Interior and axterior painting,
aiding. Roofing. Free estlmltH.

.

--~~_u U!~~~!S~7Jji-~~!~4-~------~~

2220.

896-3802
'

0641 ,

Faa( Part 2.
®Nows
ill) MacNail-lehror Nawoh·
our
IIIIDJII5J WhHI of Fort~no
ill) Barney Miller
7:05 ill Sanford Mil Son
7:30 U III New Nowlywed

i

Budget trenamit!lions used &amp;
rebuilt all typH. Torque conver·
tera &amp;. lranaler case•. Engine
over ha~i kltt. Alliaon Tranamis·
lion partJ and eve Jointa.
Minimum 30 day to lifetime
w1rranty. Will deliver, eath and
carrry or install Ph. 614· 379·

81

wa&lt;do.

I 1 1 I I I· l

II([) People's Court

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

1974 Pontile LeMan1. $1 ,500
or best offer . Call 614·317·

drive, PS ·PB, air. AM radio.
$2200. Conttct Herold George,

Two badroomt, $125.00 month
plua utllltlat mutt sign e montha
lease. pho!"'e 304-875-4088.

76

RINOLES 'S SERVICE. e~tpe ·
riancltd ctrpenter, electrician,
m110n. p1intlf, roofing (including hot tar application) 304·

69 Poritiac: leMans. 400 eng.
New auto. trtna. New rtlr end.
Ntw wtter pump. •110. Cell

~mplo

•'

hrs., 30 min .)

1700.00. 304-875-6240 after
6:00.

Pole Buildings by Ou1llty
Builders. Workthopt, ctrporh.
animal shel1ert. gerages . Fr"
estimatll. Phone 0 14·384·

Autos for Sale

tt.
bo·

@) Cil M•A"S'H

i

2783.

71

·

Basketball:
Ohio Stale at Michigan (2

Motorcycles

Fatty Tree Trimming, atump
removal. Call304-ll!li75-1331 .

6762.

Antiques

rran sporl ali on

Reorrartge letter• of
0 four
·o:ramblod wordo

® MOVIE: 'Shadow of

810. 4x4, 64 HP.

corn. Call for latest quotn. River
City Farm Suppty , 814-446·

64

Live .
(I) College

1976 12 pastenger Ford van. A
good buy. Call614·448·2310.

446-9667,

63

,.

Vans &amp; 4 W.O .

lnd.endent PTO'. Call 614-

Holstein bull cilf. Call61 4·388·

K &amp; K Mobile Hom ... 2 1nd 3
bedroom mobile homM, 304-

tl•. 304·878-232B,

UTILITY BLDG. SPECIALe

614-742-2425 or 614·742·
2592.

Rd , 814-448-7398,

3429.

1988 Honda XR80, exc cond,

- - - - - - - - ·It-

Washer GE t95. Wuher Weat·
inghouse Avacado t95, Weshar
Kenmore Av1cado $86, Wuher
Coppertona Kenmore •915 ,
Electric range til!lrvestGold t96 ,
Gas range 30 inch $96, Refrigerator Avacado t91. AetrigiH'ator
White 2 dr. t95, G1s dryer $95,
Color tv floor model t126,
Skaggs Appliancea Upper River

1974 Ford CoUf,er. body good
cond, nuda motor, 304·676·

JIM"S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 35 W. Galllpolio.

Electric hospittl bed for 11le.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

@Good Times
8:35 Ill Sale at Home In Stereo.
7:00 IJ III PM M1941zlne
(]) Hardcaotla end McCor·
mlok
ill Colklgo Baskotl&gt;ell:
Temple a1 Kanoaa (2 hrs,)

1976 Ford Ran'ger F·150 ,
1300.00, call lfter 6:00, 304·

74

Excellent condition. Soa 1t 129 62 Wanted to Buy
Mulberry Ave., Pomero,r- or call
614-992-3e33 or 814·378·
6214.
- - - - - - - - · I t - Now buying at-ell corn Of eer
Good utld couch and chair

W1shers, dryers, retrig•atora.
rangea . Skaggs Appllancea,
Upper River Ad . betide Stone
Crest Motel. 814-448-7398 .

304·488·1e01 .

S.E. Ohio.

Ohio. C•ll 614·448· 9777, eve.
614·446·3692. Up front tractors with warranty over 40 uted
traetort, 1000 tools.

~y

WOlO
UMI

1!11 Cil Hog.,.•a Heroeo
® Doctor. Who
® Ill II}) CIS Nowa

eyl.,
good f2000.00.
,condition.
Na..tystandard,
new topp•.

Ohio.

with plowt and disc e39GO.

Firewood, all hard waod. Heat
vouchera acclpted. 1315 . a
pickup lo1d. Phone 61 4 · 742·

614-446-0322,

"Just a second ... l'm almosl
done aerobic Ising."

R16HT HERE.

1977 Ford pickup, f-100. tilt

73

Maaaey Farouson, New Holland.
Bulh Hog S1l11 • Service. Over
40 used tractors to choote from
&amp; complete·line of new • u1ed
equipment. LlrgtJI ... tction in

1973 Super Stinger, 400 TK
anowmdbile, 803 miles. Very
good cond. Call614·448·8278.

Used Furniture: dryer, wood
table &amp; 2 benches, beds.
dreaaer. wood wardrobe. 3
miles out Bulavllla Ad. Open
9AM to &amp;PM , Mon . thru Sat.

614·2B6·11822.

CROSS6 SONS
u.s. 35 Wet1. Jackaon,
614·2e6-6481.

2819.

or 304-n3-5024.

Trlllll' tor rwnt. 2 t.droomt,
furnlthlld, •110.00 plua utili·

YeA~, I FOUND
'fOUR MONOC~E ·

458·1904 or 46B·1727.

EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jock·
oon, Oh. 814·2e6-6930.

6 cflein bindert, 2 of them are
recoiletl. $100. Call 814· 446·

2 br. lilt chen, bathroom, with
,laundry room , living room •
dining room, all tltc. Approx. 7
M1il and achool but route. 3
mlles from Pt. Pl. on Rt. 12. 2
bedrooma, bath. hNtld whh
tractaapprolt. 1ttrtmoraorltss
overloolllng Kantwht Alvtr . . wood or 11•. unturnlthld, 304·
UO.OOil. Call 304-878-8040 411-1887. Kldt welcome, no
pets, refrtneo, Hud ICcepltd.
betwun 8 :30 and 4 :30.
3 bedroom Jerrys Run Aold,

61 Farm Equipment

Coll814·268·8261.

876-3000.
Must ull now l Two hous• In
Middlepon . One, 8 rooma and
bath and other 9 roomatnd beth, Two Mdroom mobile home,
Both good condiflon. Both -~ furnlthed, 8715 dtpOtlt plut
priced below tppral1ed value. utHhln. 304-875-&amp;1512.

Coli 114-992-8603.

54 Misc. Merchandise

~=Pot:·:•·:P:ho:n:•:3:0:4:·6;7~5·:1:38:8;:.;;;J=========:..! 57

SNAFUN

•

30f·876-5e22 oftor 4:30p.m.

614:949·2216 .

APARTMENTS. mobile homH,
houaea. Pl . Plelltnt tnd Gtlllpo-

'
Coli 722·21!93 collect
Ch 33 "Learning Hou(
WPBY Adv.
® 3·2·1, Com.Ct (CCI.
ill) Socre1 City
ill) Facta of Lifo
8:06 I]) Andy Giifflth
8:30 II III illl NIC News
ill SportaCen111r
® fl (I) AIC Nowo

line

1981 Ma1da truck, 4 cyl.,
4-lpltd, new tlr•. exc. cond.

--------"":"--T-----------1

'

® Moth Homework Hot·

Lookl 1nd run1 good. •&amp;76.

Sofas and chl!lifl priced from
$396 to $996. Tabhta UO and
up to $126 . Hlda-a-bed1 $390
to $696. Reclinlfs $225 to
$376. Lamps $28 to $125.
Dinettes $109 and Up to $495.
Wood table w ·8 chairs 828&amp; to
$796. peak $100 up to t375.
HutchH t400 and up. Bunk
beda complete w-mattr•an
$296 •nd up to U95 . Baby beds
$110 &amp;. $175. Mattreasetorbox
springs full or twin 183, finn
$73, and t83. Queen aatt U25.
King U&amp;O. 4 drawer chett $'6 5.
Dr11aen $89. Gun cabinets B.
10. • 12 gun. Gaa or electric:
range t37&amp; . Baby m1ttretsas
$35 &amp; t45 . Bed fremn *20,
flO &amp; King frar;ne t&amp;O. Good
selection of bedroom suites.
metal cabinets, headbo8f'ds 830
and up to U&amp;.

Tony's Gun Rtptirt. hot reblu•
lng. Open 8:00AM to 7 :00PM .

•y.

·- '

614·247·4292.

Valley Furniture, naw 6 uted.
large section of qutlity furniture . 1216 Eattern Ave .,
Gallipoll•.

1 and 1 Y, bedroom for rent.
Bulc rent st1rta·et 1179. plu1
ehtc:trlclty. *200. securttv diP·
otlt required. Contact Riverside
Apartments 1t 614-992· 7787.

(]) Big Volley

•' ill Mazda SportoLook
m Cil Joffiorwna .

r.trs·

'=~::~' t&gt;©\\.&lt;lllJ~
(LAY I I.!OLLAN

_ _ _ _;.__ ldiiOd

low 1o form lour

1/8/87
s:oo II III ill II ill 1D Ill IDl
illl News

1978 FO&lt;d F-260. Super Cob.
AU1o, PS. AC. 7B.OOO mlot.

County Appliance. · Inc. Good
used appliances and TV IllS.
Open BAM 1o 8PM . Mon thru
Sat . 814-446-1899, 827 '3rd.
Ave. Gl!lllipolis, OH .

FIREWOOD! locuat . oak ,
cherry. 13&amp;. per pick -up load
delivered . Bilt Slack 814-992·

1!'011~' 100.

Trucks for Sale

1979 Ford: V·B. au1o ., 1976
Chtwy 8 cyl.. uandard. Call
614·446·3243 oftor 6 PM.
·
· lc...-

Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; \!ted
wood -coalatovlt, 8 pc wood LR
suite t399. bunk beda t199,
antron racllnera $99 , new •
uaed bedroom 1uitet, ranges.
wrtnger washefl , &amp;. shoes. New
livingroom suites 8199-$1599,
lamps, also buying coal &amp; wood
stove~. C..,tl814-446-3159.

Someone to mov1 In and ahare
ltvlng expenca. 2 children wel~;;ome . 614-992·7562 call at1er
Wed.

~~A

'

614·448·4782.

SWAIN
AUCT10N &amp; FURNITURE 62

53

,,...," ~ Hj;U?j;DMI'ii1115EA~H
IT...IH AU. FAIF'.IJ&amp;95, fiE:

-

The Daily Senti,nel- Page- 11

Television ·
Viewing

1878 ·2 ton QMC 1eptic tank
cleaning truck wilh 1500 gallon
tank. hoJ81. dump bed. C.U

LAYNE'S FURN ITURE

3644

OhiQ

EVENING

51 Household Goods

Small, 3 bdr., city, Cll'peted.
cleen, no pets, accept one child.
Ref. &amp; dap. t260 -mo . Ctlt

2198 ..

17B6.

6PM.

Apartment
for Rent

2 to 3 bedroom apt. Convenient
location In town. All utilities paid
e326.00mo. , reference• &amp; dep·
otlt required. Wiseman Real
Estate Agency Ph . 614-446·

614-448'2459.

Part-time babysitter needed in
my hom e. Pleue call614· 266·

Want ed: Experienced farm hand;
will pay by the hour or by the
week. Call 614·474· 7263 after

Merchandi se

614-446-7026.

Olfice space - Store apace in Pt .
Pleaaant. 1200.00 A-One Real
Eatate Ph . 304-675-6104

Situations
Wanted

Will live in &amp; care for one or two
emb. persona. Ught housekeep·
ing . Hours negotiable. Write P 0
8o• 9, Gallipolit, Ohio 45631 .

E~tcellent apare time income;
eleetronlca. crahs, no e•pe·
rience. Others, infotmation 504641 -0091 en 2987, 1 days.

Dependable individual for 'gen·
e111l otfice work. Must hove
accurate typ ing ' skilla , . good
flandwrlt lng, &amp; ple111ant tel&amp;ph one voi ce. Send resu1ne to
Do• T-2000 Gallipolis Oail't
Tri bune, 825 third Ave. Gallipo·
lis, OH 45631 .

Mobile Home in Stella Court.

614-446·2236. 446-2681 .

HOME ASSEMBLY

Parttime housekeeping posit ion
In apartment building located in
Pomeroy , OH . Send e•perience
&amp; tflree i'eferencea to P.O. Bo•
136, Mariettll , OH 46760. We
are an e qu al op po rlunit..,
employer.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Rou!• 33, Nor1h of PomiWOy.
Llrgelota. Call814-992-7479 .

BORN LOSER

,,

•4eo.oo. toll 304·773-1303.

Pomero\f-=-~idchport.

.,...--~

..'•

1971 Plymouth. 4 door. PS. PB,
400 engine. gOod cond,

Furnithad room 919 2nd, 0.111·
polls. $11&amp;. Uti111ill pd. Sh•e
bath . Single male. Clll 446·
4418 after,7pm.

2 IR , Mobile Home. Planta
Subdiviaion . Bullville Rd .
t175 / mo . Call 614-446-4584
llftor 6 PM.

-

,,

304-678·3841,

RoOmt for rent, day. week.
month. G•llla Hotel. Call 814446-9716. Rent ulow 11 •120
month.

46 Space for Rent

'

,.
''

1981 ' AMC ConCGrd OL ttetlon
wtgOn. to-.: m!le,ge, ~t•e cond,

45 Furnished Rooms

1903.

44

for Sale

Coli 814-992-8403.

CALL NOWI

118&amp; Comor"o .. 60.00. 304671·8810. •

Downatalrt furnlthtd 1pt, 1
bedroom, • 400 Twenty firat
Street, 2 utllltl• P•ld. U15.oo,
ldultt, rafrencat ind HCUrity
depo1it, 304 ~ 876· 2el51 ,

Call814-446-0766,

REPS NEEDED for busin1111
account1, Full-time $60.000:'
S80 , 000 ; Part - time ,
Gu hettlng t tove &amp; gas dryer. •12.000 .00- t18 ,000 .00, no
Call614-367-0613.
selling, repeat buainen, set your 35 Lots &amp; Acreage
t.oun. Training provided. C.ll
Buying daily gold, silver coins,
-812-938-6870, M-F. Sam to 119e7J
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old 15pm
{Central Standard Time).
Anyone interested in the 17
coins, large cu rrencv. Top priacret of Harold Holalnger, conces. Ed. Burkott B11rbor Shop,
HIRING! Federal government tact. daughter June Payne at
2nd. Ave. Middloport , Oh. 614· job11
in your area and overaeas, 61 4· 289-4435, Pikaton, Ohio
992·3476.
many immediate openings with· 46661. Theecreagelawithin 1'1.ro
out welting llat or tellt. $16- mile• ot Forked Run Lake.
BUYING RAW FURSt Ginseng, • S68.000. Phone call refundable.
Yellow Root baef and deer· {802)838 -8886 ext 1203.
Athton buliding lots, mobile
hidet. · Also selling trapping
flomea permitled , Clyde BOwen,
s uppli&amp;a. Wheat lites. Nite lites.
Jr. 304·578-2336.
Hours 1:00-9 :00. Closed Wed.
George Bucklwv 614-664· 4761 .

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLO

-

Thlnday, ,January 8, 1987

Autos for Sale

71

0766.

614-446·339e.

Lost and Found

KIT 'N' CARLYLe ®by ~rry Wright

Apartment ,
for Rent

For rent Slt~~~ing Rooms and
ltrlht houtt kNping room•. Park
Central Hotel. Call 814-441·

Fe male, 1!1 Pekingeae. l!J Poodla.
Appro!'. 3 mos. BlaCk . Call

6

Thlnday. January B. 1987

.J

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used

lor the three L's, X for the two O's, elc. Single letters .
apostrophes. the length and fonnaUon of the words are all
hlnlf. E.lch day the CGdt letters are dlflerent. ·
CIYPI'OQUOl'E

1·8
IAHLC
MEGLH
GO

BL

CEF C

LBAHKC

EFRRBKHLL

K G·C E B K X

DG W

KF C II G K
ZGQWLII

OQWKIII. !; if ,l

E B LC G w N

C t:

LFN .-C EGYFL
SHDiliiWLGK
T..WnlaJ'I ·CI"J'IIIGq•ote: THERE ARE MANY
PATHS TO ntE TOP OF THE MOUNTAI N, llU1' Til!;
VIEW IS ALWAYS TilE SAME. - CHINES!; PROVt:RR

•

�..

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

Pomaroy~Middleport, -Ohio

.

Thursday, January 8, 1987.' 7

.

...

••

•'
,,•

,

But oplnio~ was not shar~ by:·
about 60 ailtl·nuclear protester~ ....
who bused to Columbus from the:
. Cleveland and Toledo areas, an~...
marched near the Statehouse.•
carrying placards which said: ;
"Bury Perry," "Born to Glow, '\
and "Happy Non-Nuclear New&gt;
Year."
"
'

POINT PLEASANT - U.S.
Rep. Bob Wise, D-W. ya., saldite
was told Wednesday that Mason
County will get a $189,000 federal
grant to resurface the runway
overlap at the· Mason County
Airport .
Wise said the money will be
used to repair cracks on the seam
where It was widened In 1969.
A request for an addltonal
$42,380 to expand the runway Is
pending, Wise said.

Units answer Wednesday calls

Sentencings

996
PICK-4
3096

..

•

RAIN
Rain developing tonlrht, '
with a low In the mid 30s:Raln ·
changing to snow late In, the
day Saturday, with hllhs In
the upper 30s. The probability
of precipitation I• 80 percent
tonight and near 100 percent

~~

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport •.Ohio, Friday. January 9, 1987

3 Sections, 20 Pageo

26 Conti

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Secret report reveals a11ns-hostages swap
Funding awarded

By KATHLEEN SlLVASSY
.WASHINGTON (UPl) - President Reagan's
~ecislon to sell U.S. weapons to Iran emerges as a
direct arms-for-hostages deal In a secret Senate
report that also reveals deeper ki10wiedge than
admitted by two top officials l.nto the scheme to
divert profits to Nicaraguan rebels, NBC News
says.
The network reported Thursday it had obtained
a copy of the draft "sanitized by the CIA and the
White House" based on testimony heard last
month by the Senate Intelligence Committee,
The Senate panel has conducted the most
comprehensive probe to date Into the secret
shipments of weapons to Iran and the possibly
criminal diversion of sale profits to aid the
U.S.-backed Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
The committee's unreleased· report, at the
center of recent controversy lit the scandal, states

!Continued from Page 1)
. penalty of 18 months In prison
and a fine of up to $2,500.
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney Fred W. Crow Ill recommended that Barstow be sentenced to the maximum period of
lncarcer.atlon In prison due prinlclpally to the fact that the
defendant Is c~arged with selling
cocaine In Athens County.
Judge Knigh,t placed Barstow
on probation for one year and
fined him $1 ,000 with no Imprisonment. Knight further ordered
the prosecuting attorney to return approximately $5,000 In
cash which was seized as evi(Continued from Page 11
· ----------~-- dence at the Barstow residence
funds are available and Pltyable at the time of his arrest.
Defense Attorney frank Lato the district. The board agreed
velle
Indicated to the' court that
to purchase a $20,000 bond for the
treasurer for the four years of Barstow might !lie an appeal on ·.
her term and bonds were pur- the decision:
chased lor the board president,
superintendent, assistant superintendent and an additional bond
In that paqkage lor the treasurer.
The board authorized t))e
purchase-renewal of liability insurance lor board members,' the
treasurer, school administration
and certificated and noncertificated employees.

Meigs Count y Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
Wednesday: Racine at 2::15 a.m. to Tyree Boulevard for Allen
Faulk who was treat ed but not transported; Middleport -Fire
Department at .3: 15 a.m. to a structure fire on , Hartinger
Parkway: Pomeroy at 9:23a .m. to Second Street for Barbara
Chapman to Veterans Memorial Hospital; later to Holzer
Medical Center; Columbia Township Fire Department at 12: 13
p.m. to Ohio 143 for a chimney fire at the Terry Woodyard
residence; Pomeroy at 4:57p.m. transported Jeff Werry from
an auto accident on Hemlock Grove Road to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at o: 15 p.m. to Lincoln Hill for Evelyn
Knight to St. Joseph's Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 5:49p.m. to
Ohio 681 East for 'Harold Brannon to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Raeine at 5: o5 p.m. to Apple Grove for Jessie
Buchannan to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

that Reagan authorized the arms deals with the
understanding that all American hostages bet.ng
held In Lebanon would be released, NBC said.
The Washington Post reported friday that a
background briefing paper prepared for Reagan
Indicated Iran had agreed to Israel that all .U.S.
hostages would be released upon receipt of 1,000
American TOW anti-tank missiles via Israel.
The document said .a total of 4,000 anti-tank
missiles would be sent to moderate elements In
Iran but the deal would be stopped If the hostages
were not freed by ,pro-1ranlan captors after the
first 1,000 weapons were received.
A senior White House official told the Post the
briefing paper, which was part of the Senate
committee's report, was never given to Reagan
· but he was briefed on it.
The president has defended his Iran operation,

ques tions on It s cont ents. It Is essPntial that the
full report rather than selected details be made
available to the public. The report should be
t•elcased Immediately."
NBC said the report "never clearly establishes
how much mopey went to the Contras or If any did.
... As fo rTh resident, the report draws only the
conclusion th he seemed surprised when told
money had been lverled to the Contras. "
. ,The report does s y, however. that CIA Dl_rector
William Casey knew Oct. 7 about money beln~
diverted to the Contras - much earlier than
Casey has admitted, NBC reported.
Casey suggested Nov. 16 that Vice Adm.
Poindexter get the White House counsel to probe
the Ir11n-Contra link, but Poindexter reportedly
told him he "could not trust the--White House
lawyer to keep things quiet, " the ne.twork said.

Reagan
returns
to lower
workload

Racine .Council
OKs. appoiritmen~
of new marshal
Meet.lng In regular session,
Racine Village Council approved
the probationary appointment of
Joe Kirby Sr .. as marshal effective Jan. 5, 1987 by Mayor
Charles Pyles.
A six-month probationary period Is requlr·ed oy state law.
Council also approved the second
reatllpg of an ordinance waiving
:the residency requirement for
.1\irby to serve as ma~slwl. .
• :...cOW!Cll,l:eJecttd,.tbe req~tot
First Aid Chief George Cummins
to start taking thtl village-owned
squad truck on out-of-town runs
Instead of the county-owned
vehlrle and council commended
the emergency squad for a
"wonderful service " to
residents.
The finance committee reported that ·tn November a
1.4-mlll current expense levy will
be up for renewal but the
committee recommends that
village offlc'lals continue close
scrutiny on expenditures so that,
perhaps, the millage will not
have to be renewed, thereby
reducing the taxes of Racine
Village residents.
An end of the year financial
report was given' showing that

HAS

Treasurer Fry was authorized
to invest Inactive funds at the ·
most productive rates when such
funds are available. Morris or his
designee was named as the agent
of the board of education to apply
for, receive, expend and account
for federal funds. Membership In
the Ohio School Boards Association was renewed for 1987 at a
cost of $1,105.

APR
.,

Officials __,__(_co_n_tt_nu_ed_fr_o_m_P_a.:g_e_11_ _ _.:....___

·

~~:s~~:ru~a~e~~~~r~~ f~e~~; :
the necessary Items tor the 1987
records. The purchase of a first

:~p~~~!~~
the police cruiser was
The street committee was

named to check on a request
from Clarence l;lradford for
gravel on an alley between
Fourth and Fifth streets. Council
recessed until 7 p.m. on Monday,
Jan. 19 .

RGC sets

1987 BRONCO II

RIO GRANDE - Dr. Richard
Towsley Adams has been appointed dean of the Emerson E.
Evans School of Business at Rio
Grande College and Community
&lt;College.
: Adams, whose wide-ranging
~xperlence Includes · work · in
Afghanistan, India and Brazil,
comes to Rio Grande from West
Virginia Tech, where he served
as a visiting professor of business
management.
Adams previously served as
president and professor of fl·
nancc at the Community College
qf Beaver County, Pa. He was
provost and dean of the college of
business at the University of
Charleston and dean or the school
of business at ferris State
College In Michigan .

O·R
1987 RANGERS

$60 CASH BACK!

PROGRAM PERIOD : JANUARY 6- FEBRUARY 2B, 1987.
ELIGIBLE VEHICLES: 1.987 RANGER, BRONCO II.
PROGRAM DESCRIPTION: CUSTOMERS OF ELIGIBLE VEHICLES DELIVERED
FROM DEALER INVENTORY BY· FEBRUARY 28, 1987 WILL RECEIVE FINANCE .
RATE ASSISTANCE OR AN ALTERNATIVE CASH ASSISTANCE PAYMENT AC - .
CORDING TO THE FOLLOWINt&gt; SCHEDULE:
APR TERMS
· CUSTOMER CASH
12-24 MOS. 26·36 MOS. 37-4B MOS. 49-60 MOS.
ALTERNATIVE.
1 600
RANGER
9 .9%
3.9%
6.9%
7.9% •
1 600
BRONCO II 3.9%
6.9%
7.9%
9 .9%

'

...

ON THE SPOT FINANCING
SEE: RICK TOLLIVER, J. I. PIERCE 01 PAT HILL

992·2196
•

•
J

'

He has taught at Purdue, the
University of Nevada and West ern Michigan University .
, Adams has worked for the
Departme.nts of State In both
Brazil and India, for lndamer
Afghan .Industries In Kabal,
Afghanistan, and the lndamer
Corp. In Indiana.
"Dr. Adams brings a valuable
wealth of knowledge and experlenee to our campus," said Dr.
Paul C. Hayes, president of Rio
Grande. "Under his leadership,
we are confident the Evans
school of. business will be a ·
posltlw force · In southeastern
Ohio.".
,
Adams graduated . from
Purdue University with a bilchelor's degree In economics. He
went on to the Harvard Graduate
•School at Harvard University,
and later received his d~torate
·II

.

the village closed 1986 will a cash
balance of $108,388.93.
Council approved a revised
budget then passed the annual
appropriations resolution for
1987 on a temporary basis until
certification of funds Is received
from the county auditOr. Another
resolution was passed authorizing the village to particlpa(e In a
program to purchase surplus
property through the 9hlo Department Qf 4\.d m'lnlitra.tlve .. ,
Services.
·council approved ihe mayor''
appointment of Glenn Rizer as
str.eet commissioner for 1987 and .
· BACK ROME- Accompanhid by Mrs. Reagan,
approved the attendance of the
President
Reagan . waved to welcomers on his
cl!!rk-treasurer to a seminar In
return to the While H9use Thursday. The
Nelsonville sponsored ,by the
slate auditor's office and to deal .

new dean
.for ·school

UP TO

which began In mld-1985, as an overture to
moderate elements In that country . He has denied
any arms.for-hostages deals wer'e ever maae.
NBC said the Senate report Is the "most
extensive account yet "· delineating times of
meetings and dates for arms shipments to Iran
ye t does not shed much light on· the diversion of
profits to the Contras at a tlmt- when U.S. military
aid to the rebels was banned by law.
White House spokesman Dan Howard, respondIng to the NBC report, said In a statement : "We
believe that this report will underscore the fact
that the president knt-w absolutely nothing about
the diversion of funds from Iran to lhe Contras and
that no such policy was ever approved by the
•presIdent.
"The White House does not ~ave a copy of the
report and Jherefore It Is difficult to res pond to ·

I

Morris' assistant

ment of Taxation. Ills hoped that and they have Instructed the dog
approximat ely $400,000 for the warden to make extensive
county will be genPra ted by the checks to see If dogs In the county
tax.
are being tagged. Individuals not
In other matters. the commis- purchasing tags for their animsioners accepted a .bid from als may be cited to court and
Ernest A. and Robert Wingett, fined .
for offlcP space for the county
board of elect loris, at a cost of V.4.-rans Memorial
$400 per month for fiv e years,
commencing In March. The
Wednesday · Admissions
office Is located on Mechanic Kenneth Wolfe, Rutland; KenStreet In Pomeroy.
neth Lawson, Syracuse; Leigh
The commissioners approved Canter, . Syracuse; Jeffrey
the appointment by Judge Pa - Werry. Pomeroy; Mayme Mantrick O'Brlrn, of Linda Bentz as nlng, Racine: Harold Bronson,
. county court clerk, and Jennifer Reedsville; Larry Bunch, LexAnderson as deputy clerk.
lngton, Ky.
·
Wednesday Discharges - BerThe commissioners also Issued
a reminder that Jan. 30 is the tha Diehl, Marie Dudding, Cadeadilne for purchasing dog tags __th_r:..yn.....o_u_v_er_._ _--:----~

Oaily Number

at y
-

Copyrighted 1987

. Kimberly D. Basham, 24, Coolville, ~ppeared ~fore Meigs
County Coup Judge Patrick O'Brien for sentencing under her
December conviction of driving under the Influence. ..
Basham had two prior arrests on charges of driving while
Intoxicated, one· In Middleport and . one In Pomeroy, Paul
Gerard, investigator for the county prosecutor, reports.
In the current case which was tried before a jury, the state,
represented by Assistant Prosecuting Attorney I. Carson Crow
alleged that Basham had been driving under the combined
Influence of alcohol and drugs. The jury returned a guilty
verdict after less than two hours of deliberation.
Judge O'Brien ordered Basham to pay a fine of $300 and
sentenced her to six months In the county jail but suspended all
but 20days of the jail sentence. Judge O'Brien said Ihat he would
suspend an additional 10 days if the defendant enrolls In and
successfully comp·leles an accredited program or alcohol
and-or drug abuse rehabilitation . In addition, Judge O'Brien
suspended Basham's driver's license for a period of one year.
Basham will begin to serve her sentence In the county Jail
frida y.
,, .,i

vice president last year, was
nominated for the president' s
position by board member Larry
PowelL
However, board member Ro·
bert Barton nominated Snowden
for re-election. Vaughan, Larry
Rupe and Barton voted for
Snowden.. who abstained from
voting on the president's position. Upon the mot ion of
Snowden, Barton was unanimously elected vice president of
the board for 1987.
Regular board meet·ings for
1987 were set for 7 p.m. on the
third Tuesday of each month with
the exception of the regular
meeflng In January, which was
earlier set for 7 p.m. on Jan. 14 .
Treasurer fry was authorized
to pay all account bills as they
are presented provided that
funds are avaii3'\Jlc and to report
to the board monthly those bills
which were paid. She was also
authorized to secure advances
from the count y audit or when

Eddie Milner
to -Giants
~ .Page 3

Vol.38, No.1 73

Judge sentences Coolville woman

Ohio Lottery

Reds trade

Is safe."

A Logan man was listed In satisfactory condition this morning
In Veterans Memorial Hospital for injuries su~talned after the
vehicle he was driving veered off the r ight side of County Road
39 In Bedford Township Wednesday .
•
Jeffrey S. Werry, 35, was no.rthbound on 39 around 5:03p.m.,
when he lost corytrol, veering off the road arid striking a small
· group of trees, according to the Gallia-Melgs Post of the Ohio
State Highway Patrol.
On Tuesday, !\:Langsville woman was treated and released
from VMH lor Injuries she suffered after the vehicle she was..
driving struck and embankment and turned on Its side.
Wanda Y. Gardner, 31, was eastbound on Ohio 124 around
11 :1oa.m . , when she lost control of the 1980 Toyota she was
driving In a sharp left curve, according to the patroL The
vehicle went off the right side of the ro'\d, struck an
embankment and came back on the road as it rested on its right
side, troopers said.·

'
-.

t '

•'

Local News·in;Brief: Celeste seeks cutback from. 2 plants
Accident hospitali;.es .Logan man

'

..

.'

Dr. Richard T. Adams
In economics from Purdue In
1965.
"My association with the
Emerson E. Evans School of
Business Management gives me
the . opportunity to do some
exciting things," Adams said. "I
am particularly interested In
developing a college-sponsored,
student-operated business program. It Involves setting up
QUSiriesses to be run by the
students."
"It lets students learn about
business management and al' lows them to get lnvolv:ed while
learning and getting good experlencee," he added. "This Is the
kind of work experience businesses are looking for ."
With a current enrollment of
300 students, the Emerson E.
Evans School of Business Management emphasizes small buslnes's and entrepreneurial trainIng and extends those concepts lo
Include a service function to
support small business and Industry In Ohio.
·
'.(

president was relea.•ed from Bethesda Naval
Hospital, where he underwent prostate surgery,
(UPI)
.

S.yra·cuse officials .discover
no evJ·dence of gas rate hike
•

.

:,

By NORMAN Pi SANDLl1:R
WASHINGTON , UPil - His
spirits high but /.ctlvities restricted. Pres ldenf Reagan Is
back at thP Wh1te House to
conv alesce from prostate
surgery and ease Into his work as
aides confront an array of political challenges.
Reagan, walking stiffly, made
9 buoyant return to the White
llouse Thursday after what his
doctor' called a "remarkable
recovery" from this week's
surgery. and a battery of test~
that detected no recurrence or
· spread of colon cancer.
"I feel great," Reagan told
reporters as he tcft Bethesda
Naval Hospital In suburban Washington. Asked· what advice his
doctors imparted, the75-year-old
president siood In t~e windwhipped hospital drlv.eway and
cracked: "They said It's cold out
hc.r(• and to get In where It's
warm."

By KATIE CROW
Sentinel CorresponOeiit
There Is no Information available Indicating that natural gas
rates have .been Increased by the
Syracuse Home Utilities Co.
Due to the number of Inquiries
made by the residents serviced
by Syracuse Home Utilities,
·1\!ayor Eber Pickens and·
- members of council agreed
Thutsday night that If a rate
. 1ncrease had been approved,
council wofild have been notified.
Jack Williams, president of
council; earlier had written tq the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio, following a request for an
Increase by Syracuse Home
Utilities, asking that a public
meeting be held In the village of
Syracuse by the. PUCO before
any decision to Increase rates
was made.
Williams received a letter
from •the PUCO which read as
follows: "This letter Is to Inform
you of recent events surrounding
the Syracuse Home Utilities
Company.
"On December 23, 1986, the
commission directed Ohio Attorney General Anthony Celebrezze
to Intervene In federal bankruptcy court on Its behalf concerning Syracuse Home Utilities
Company.
.
·
"As you may know, the company filed for reorganization or
Its debts before the court on
December 22, 1986. The cominls·
slon and Its staff will continue t~e
InvestigatiOn into the fiscal
health of the compaqy and the
·circumstances which led it to
such a precipitous action.
"The commission's primary
concern has been and will be the
continuation of adequate service'
to the Syracuse customers.
"We do not anticipate ·any
lnterruplon of servl~e In the
foreseeable future as a result of
the banj(ruptcy .petition of the
COI!Ipany.
"The' attorney general will
work with the commission to
protect the customers by requesting the appointment of a
competent receiver to oversee
lhe revenue arid expense balan-

ces of the company's finances.
···se assured that the PUCO
will remain full y Involved In the
proceec)lngs until a solution has
been found to the position In
which the company finds It self.
"Again , we do not anticipat e
any interruplon or discontinuation of service to Syracuse Home
Utilities Company customers,
nor do we expect an Increase In
rates for customers In the next
couple of months at least.
"However , power over rat es
may rest for now with the court
until the final dlsposHion of the
bankruptcy proceeding. In brief,
things wJII remain as they are (n
the ~ ho rt term.
"!will try to keep you apprised
of developments on this as they
occur. Please don' t hesitate to
contact me, Chairman Thomas
Chema or your State Representative, Jolynn Boster , If we can
answer any question you or your

colleagues might have." The
letter wa s written by John
Duffey . leglslalive liaison.
Williams did Indicate that he
will contact Duffey possibly
today.
Meet lng with council was Gene
Imboden·, fire chief, In regard to
a 00-00 grant through the Ohio
Department of Recreation to
purchase a new radio at a cost of
$2,000. Cost to the village woulu
be approximately $1,000. Council
agreed to submit th9· grant
application.
·
lmboden also reported that the
department is seeking addit-Ional
members for thHire department
and the emergency squad.
At the present time, the fire
depa rment and emergency
squad a combined unit, has· 1~
members, ~ lx of which are
women. Eleven of 1he 13 are
EMT~.

!Continued on Page 4)

Pressed on whether he was
ready togo back to work. Re~
an
replied , "01 course. but I ev
stopped."
·
What work the president does
In the next few weeks will be
limited and largely confined to
the famil y quarters of the White
House. full recovery from prostate surgery can take six weeks,
and his doctors prescribed a
gradual return to work alon~t
with no heavy lilting or strenuous
exercise.
Today, Reagan was expected
to meet with White House chief of
staff Donald Regan and perhaps
national security adviser frank
Carlucci. Next week, additional
aides ma y lie Included and
Reagan witt me&lt;.' t for the first
tJme with David Abshire , his new
special counselor In the Iran
arms-Contru aid scandal.
· White Hou se spokesman Larry
Speakes said Reagan will remain
on a "limited but progrcsslvl'
schedule" and will make his llrst
trip back to the Oval Offl c~
sometime next week.
Doctors from the Mayo Clinic
who perform ed Monda y's
surgery will stop by for "a
farewell look" before returning
to Roches ter, Minn ., Speakes
said.
Reagan• wa s operated on to
. relieve pressure on an enlarged
prostate gland that had caused
what the White House . termed
"mild, recurring discomfort."
He also was given his third
semi-annual colon examination,
part of the follow -up care to his
July 1985 operation In which
doctors removed a canct'rous.
llfOWth from ·his large Intestine:

, APPOINTED - Frederick Crow Ill, left, wuappolnted vlllare ·
tor the vUiare of Syracuae 'lbul'!lday nlcht by 8yraeu11e
Vlllace Council. Thilr Is Crow's~ec.oad appointment aa 10llcltor lor
the villaJe. Pictured with Crow 11 Mayor Eber Pickens, ·

~allcllor

Four small .growths know~o as
polyps were removed Sunday In a
pre-surgery &amp;xam, but were
found to be benign. X-rays an&lt;ta
CAT scan Tuesday nlghttound no •
sign. of cancer ahd doctors gave
Reagan, who will be76Qn Feb. 6,
a clean bill of heall h.

•

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="111">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2677">
                <text>01. January</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="38748">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38747">
              <text>January 8, 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
