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..

By The Bend
Calentl4r/ happenings
MONDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Bethel 62,
International Order ol Job' s
Daughters. will met at 7:30
Monday night at the Middleport
Masonic Temple.
MIDDLEPORT - OH KAN
Coin Club meets Monday at
Burkett Barber Shop. Social hour
a nd trading session at 7 p.m. Coin
auction and refreshments fo llow .
RACINE - Racine Merchants
Association meet at 7 p.m.
Monday, Racine Department
Store. Election ol office rs .

TUESDAY
CHESHIRE - Cheshire chapter OES meets Tuesday, 7: 30
p.m.
MIDDLEPORT
OAPSE
meeting Tuesday, 7:30p.m. , at
Meigs Junior High School. - - THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Women's
Association of the Middleport
First Presbyterian Church will
meet at 7:30 Thursday night at
the chu rch. Group II will have the
program. and Group I members
will be hostesses.

Birthday noted
Ida Cheadle of Carpenter
hosted a surprise dinner party
recently In observance of the
birthday of her son, Rex Cheadle.
A!tending were Rex and Donna
Cheadle, Don, Kaihy and Bradley, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Cheadle,
' Jr. and children, Mr. and Mrs.
Gene Jeffers , Mr. and Mrs. Jim
McNabb and so n, and Mr. and
Mrs. Sam Johnston. Joshua,
Sammy, and Amanda.

Two named

Kitra King

King birthday
Ka ra King observed her sixth
birthday recently with a party at
her home In Racine .
Gifts and cards were presented
to her. Attending were her
mother, Diana, her grandmother, Mary Porter, her greatgrandmother. Susie Fischer, Ciarise and Craig Knight, and Car la
No ttingham . A Care Bear cake
and lee cream were served.
Later a party was held for her
at the Show Biz Pizza with Ma rk
Porter, Kimberly Sayre, Autumn
Hysell , Jesse Lit tle, and Kara' s
mother attending.

Property. transfers
Danny R. Proffitt, Pamela Sue
Proffitt. Patricia W. Cozart,
Kenneth L. Cozart, Randall R.
Proffitt, Sandra C. Mapson.
Isaac Mapson, Candy K. Cox,
David Cox to Eula P . Proffitt,
tracts, Lebanon.
Donald R. Eichinger, Rebecca
Jan Eichinger to Debra E. Put man, parcel, Orange.
Samuel S. Clay, Mable Clay to
Jeffrey A. Hill, AmyL. Hill. parcel , Chester.
Mabel Smith to Robert Cundiff, Jr., Lucille Cundiff .. 60 A..
Salisbury.
Norwood Ferrell, dec. , Alta
Ferrell. Affld ., Bedford.

Two Me'igs Countians attending Ohio State University have
been named to the honor roll for
the autumn quarter. To be
named to the roll students must
receive a grade point average of
atlr:~st 3.5. The two are Timothy
Michael Woodyard , :14549 Ball
Run Road, Pomeroy ,a nd Eric
Allen Thoren, 32300 Pine Grove
Road, Racine.

The· Daily Sentinel =~·.•.
Monday. January 26, 1987''.
. Page-S . ·.

Wolf Pen community happenings___:_,--_ _ _ _ _ _ ____..&lt;
Mr. and Mts. Jerr:Y Holley and
Calvin lee were recent visitors of
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Johnson
and Tammy.
Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Knapp,
Michelle and Amy, Racine, spent
Monday afternoon visiting Mr.
and Mrs. Charley Smith and Iva
Johnson.

Mrs. Leslle Frank and Sarah · Haning and Ronald.
Beth of Texas Road visited
Mrs. Paul Darnell was a recent
Wednesday ·w!th Mrs. Eugene VIsitor of Dorothy Reeves. Also

visiting Mrs. Reeves and Bryan: :;
over the weekend was Robbie •·
.Reeves, Chester.

Racine PTO meets
Fund raising was discussed
and It was reported that the
Racine PTO now has enough
money to match funding from the
Southern Local School District's
Board of Education to proceed ,
with playground equipment.
Meeting Tuesday night at the
School, the PTO discussed proposed Improvements Including
new banking boards for the
basketball court. February fund
raising activities. were planned
at the meeting.
It was noted that again this
year the teachers will h-ave
valentine parties for the students
and the date was announced for
Feb. 13. Officers' reports were
given and 'one of the teachers
reported 1 on the Intervention
workshop held for third, fourth
and fifth grade teachers . The
free meal at Ponderosa for
students with perfect attendance
was discussed.
Parent-teacher conferences on
Jan. 30 were noted with school to
be dismissed that day.
Parents were encouraged to
arra nge for the care of their
chlldren In the event school Is
dismissed due to snow o.r Icy road
conditions. The room count wa s
woq by the fourth grade.

..

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no substitutes except beveraae with additional

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PH. 992-5432

POMEROY, OH.

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- 384-7

en tine

Vol. 36. No.1 85
Copyrighted 1987

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS !UP!) - The
state of Ohio's vers ion of "Wheel
of Fortune" is ready to . begin. ·
"Cas h Exp,loslon," a weekly
half·hour telev ision show in
which s tat~ lottery contestants
competP lor $67,500 In prizes
through games of chance, lnclud
ing a spinning wheel, starts Feb.
7.

The state Controlling Board
authorized the Ohio Lottery
Commission Monday topur~hase
up to ~40,000 worth of Ohio-made
,produc.ts . d~':ln g J!le. -l~~t ..five
months to give away on ' 'Cas h
Explosion."
·
Anne Bloomberg. public Information officer, explained that
the commission will be giving
away a top prize of $50,000 In
cash, plus automobiles, trucks,
motorcycles, bicycl~s. furniture,
kitchen appliances, clothing and
art.
The half-hour program, be·
lieved to be the first of its type In
the country, will ai r at 7:30p.m.
every Saturday night. It wil l be
carried in Columbus, Ci ncinnati,
Cleveland, Toledo. Dayton ,
Youngstown, Steubenville, Za·
nesville and Hu ntington, W.Va.
Seven contestants who h av~
purchased winning "ent ry"
tickets at their local lottery sa les
outlets. will compete for the
prizes. They will also be paired
with home viewers, sel ~c t ed at
ra ndom from a list of licensed
Ohio motor vehicle drivers over
,age 18; One home viewer per
. week will win a $500 cash prize.
Bloomberg said the vehicles
will be purchased from Ohio
div isions of Ge n~ ral Motors,
Ford Motor Co. , American Motors or Honda Motor Co.
"It Is our belief that we will
obtain the best possible price by
dealing with auto manufacturers
located in Ohio, " she said.
The board approved a 52
million tow -i nterest loan to Copperweld Steel Co. to purchase a
furnace and high-tech equlpm£'nt
al Its specia lty steel factory In
Warren, Trumbull County .
Bruce Langmer, financia l officer with the Ohio Department
of Developmenl, said the new
equlpmPnt will preserve 1.~ .•

MISTER BEE

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, January 27. 1987

night, with a chance ol snow
and a low between 15 and 20.
Becoming partly. cloudy Wed·
nesday, with highs ~I ween 30
and 35. The probability ol
precipitation Is 30 percent
lonlght and 20 percent Wed·
nesday.

1 Section,

10 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Naw spapM

'

REG. &amp; DIP
Ill OZ. lAG

$'179

'
CIUAMTITI!S •

l:aj.J

••• •

jobs at the ·facUlty and add 50
more in three years.
"This company has been losing
money, "- sa id Rep. Robert E.
Netzley, R-Lauroi', a member of
I he board. ''I'm just wondering if
It's worth the effort."
Rep. Michael G. Verlch, D·
Warren. ' lobby In~ for the loan,
said the company renegotiated
its labor contract ·and that
workers gave up $3.50 an hour for
profit sharing and preferred
stock.
"They have cut their losses,
and there's a very good chance
they'll ~ ,. In . a prof!)·rnak!ng
situation soon." he said.
··~. Jack Roberts , president and
chief operating officer of Copperweld. said workers have Increased their performance and
costs were redu ced by 20 percent
in 1985. " This equipment is
critical for our surviv al, " he
said.
Th~ board approved a $3.975
million grant to the Development
Departm~nt for an Edison Technology Center In Dayton 10 do
advancf'd research on materials.
Ten Industries. Including General Motors and Dayton Power &amp;
Light Co., will matrh th£' state
grant . ,
'

Indicated that he, too, Is inter- changed hands, is' for a 25-yea r
ested tn an alternative to the period and he will give a copy of
company now providi ng service. the contract 'to Horton for study.
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported
Mayor Hoffman repor ted that
that he has made contact with a he has been advised that Middletelevision technician who will port VIllage Is again eligible this
provide tnpurto council on wha t year for gra nts on low and
steps the gr0up can take follow - moderate cost housing throu gh
lng an alternate route for ser- the Department of Urban Deve' ·
vice. A meeting had been set up opment. The department has
with the technician. However , he advised the village that It does
became Ill and the meeting will meet the standards for ald.
be reset In the near future, Mayor
The mayor further reported
Hoffman said.
that the U.S. Army Corps of
Horton stated that he wants to Engineers has a.new master plan
study the original contract for on boat launching facilities.
television cable service made Rules gover ning the operation of
before the present1company took the Corps of EniJllneers have
over the town. Mayor Hoffman changed and the organization
said that contract, still in effect now has a cost-sharing plan
even though the company has which It can use in development

of such0ac ililles, Mayor Hoi!man said. A n'present atlve
from the corps will be in vit ed to
at tend the next meetin g of
co uncil to outline programs th at
are ava llablclor further dPvclopmen! of the boat launching
facllitles at the marina.
Council agreed to adver t isc for
bids on a lot nea r the Gi lbert
Service Station in Middleport.
The lot Is of no value to the tow n
and badly needs to be filled in and
cl~an ed up, officials sa id. .
Counci l vo ted to place a two·
mill fire protection lrvy on th~
May ballot. The levy Is a
renewaL A second r~adlng was
given to a pay Incr ease ordinance
which will give employees of the
town an approxi m ate 7 percent

··RITE A-ID DISCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.

PHARMACY PHONE( 992·2586

United Press lnternatlonlll
Sentinel Staff Reports
The application deadline for
Ohio's Home Energy Assistance Program has been extended from 'Jan. 31 to Feb.13.
"This ex tens ion Is lmpor·
tant to allow our low-Income
citizens additional time to
apply for assiStance," Gov.
Richard F. Celeste said Mon·
day In announcing the extension. "I urge every household
tha i might qualify for HEAP
benefits to file an application
as early as possible." . ·
The HEAP program is a
federally-funded program
which helps low-income !ami·
lies ($16,500 maximum lor a
famlly of four ) pay their

I

CUTTING BRUSH ~ Monday was a cold day
for mowing hut State Highway Department
,-orker VIrgil Carl was bundled up warm tor the
job on Ohio l:U Just outside ol Dorcas. Carl Is
followed In a truck driven by Don Folmer.
Highway crews mow this time ol year to prevent

brush, which could become weighted down with
snow, from overhanging lhe ro:ldways. Superln·
len dent at the state garage I• ,James ,Proffitt.
Proffitt assumed that position Aug. JH otl'ast year,
replacing Norman Weber, who retired.

Clifton, W.Va., cutting through that U.S. Reps . Cla rence Miller more _,expensive than orlgln:J!I y
By NANCY YOACHAM
red tape with the railroa d com- · and Bob Wise were broughr ro thought becausf? of easements,
Sentinel Staff Writer
"Everything that could have pany on the West VIrginia side of Meigs Count y to discuss the liability Insurance, safety light ·
lng, ~t c .. whic h 1vould be re·
been done, was done. " stated the riv er. and supplying Initial problem.
Asked
Middleport
Ma
yor
Fred
operating
expenses
for
ferry
qulred
by the railroad.
Ron Ash. member of Po me roy
Hollman,
"Why
did
wP
have
a
Doc
McCoy,
who
Is
the
Greg
Gibbs of Southeastern
operator
Chamber of Commerce's board
ferry
the
last
time
the
bridge
was
only
openi
tor
that
has
displayed
Development'
sa id he cont acted
of directors, at Monday's quarclosed
but
not
this
tim
e?"
HofInterest
In
supply
ing
the
service.
some of the Indu s tries In the area
terly meeting of the Meigs
County Regional Planning Com- · But those types of funds are no fman answered his own question apout purc hasi ng adva nce
mission, In answer to a question longer available at the federal or and said that "advance tlckN tickets, but Indus tries wer&lt;' con·
sales" financed the ferry the la st cerned they might be gett ing Into
from The Dally Sentinel regard· · state level, said Ash .
go-round.
an employee benefit situation.
Eflorls
commended
lng efforts to secure ferry service
Ash
pointed
out
that
adva
nce
Ash,
as
well
as
Steve
Powell.
of
Gibbs ec hoed Ash's and Powhile the Pomeroy-Mason bridge
sales
were
suggested,
and
ticket
.the Meigs County Ol!lce of
well's statmen ts that Neasl' " did
Is closed for repairs.
Ash said a copy ol a letter from Development, commended both large and small busi nesses a heck of a job," but he added
Warren Smith, dlreclor of the Pomeroy Chamber President In the area were contacted, but th at it was "his observation, "
Ohio Department ol Transporta· Bill Nease lor his efforts In trying response was minimal becau se that once It was determin ed by
lion , stated that 10 years ago, to secure a terry. They said they ol Increased expenses to put a the ferry operator that the
Pomeroy landing was not a good
money would have been avalla· thought boJh the Pomeroy and ferry In operation these days.
Powell pointed out that cos ts site, there was a lack of unit y by
bleat the federal level to fund the Middleport Chambers exercised
1
IContinued o n Page :i)
every route available, and noted for the project became . even
project completely.
The project Includes making
repairs to a landing at Middleport, rebuilding a landing at

British negotiator drops from sight

.winter heating bills lor December, January and Febru·
ary. Eligible households re·
celve payments of 14 to -42
percent of their bills.
Applications are available
locally at the Gallla-Melgs
Community 'Action Agency
olllce In Cheshire, the Depart·
ment of Human Services, the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
Center. post offices and other
public places.
CAA staff Is available to
help people fill out the applications at the Meigs County
Outreach office In the court·
house and at the central office
In Cheshire. More information
Is available by calling 992·5605
or 992-6629.

I

when It goes In to
It was agrred to take a louk at
the road near the Sid Little homr
on South Sfc ond Avenue. Coun·
ell men Hort on and _Ctatworth v
have received com plai nt s th at
the narrow roadway becomes ·
slippery In cold weal her due to
poor drainage and is closf' to thr
rlvrr . lt was suggested that.
perhaps, guard railing ca n be put
at the location.
Mayor Hoff man. upon queslloning by Cialwm· thy. sa id that
n~w street signs fo r th&lt;• t' nt Ire
tow nh ave bccn rrceived andwlll
be put up wh~n th~ wcathrr
lmpro v~s .

Clatwurlhy also repol'l~d that
hr h &lt;~s been 11pproac hed h)' a
tContlnued on Page 51

Dexter
resident
won't be
charged

Ferry funding· unavailable, panel learns

HEAP deadline extended
from ]':ln. 31 to Feb. 13

POTATO CHIPS

CALL MIKE MARNHOUT~ 304-675·1155

'•

PICK-4-

·G ame show gift
purchase approved

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

COIBINATION
ONLY
DINING ROOM ONLY

Dai(,• Numher
156

By BOB HOEFLICH
bo.x" so they can again pick up
Sentinel Staff Writer
the Columbus station, which they
The Consolidated Communlca- lost due to the changeover.
tions Group Inc., which provides
Horton further charged that
televlslo.n cable service for Mid· the QVC programming, the seldleport, again came under fire ling of merchandise via televlMonday night when Middleport slon, Is detrimental to local
VIllage Council met in regular business houses in that It encour·
session.
ages residents to spend their
Council Pres ident Dewey Hor- money out of town. Horton said
ton said that he . has received that the company provides no
complain ts· from subscribers to local programming to promote
the service complaining about local activities and advertising
the conversion of channelS to the from local merchants.
QVC program.
"The com!lany Is not f1lllngthe
Horton charged that subscrlb- needsofthecommunlt y,"Hor ton
ers resent .the change from the said. Horton recommended that ,
Columbus slation, which was on officials "get something else
channel 6, to the new program · going" In regard to cable televiand do not !Ike the Idea of having slon service.
to go to Point Pleasant "to get a
Councilman James Clatworthy

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.

CALL {614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

Ohio Lottery

Cable channel change draws council's lncreas~
anger~fleet.

s-1,000 R.EWARDI

\

Meigs girls
h~d defeat
to·Belpre
-Page 4

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) British officials today Investigated reports that Church ol
England hostage negotiat or
1'erry Waite was taken ca ptive
by Moslem extremists and police
sources said another foreigner, a
Saudi, was kidnapped.
A Church of England spokeswoman In London said the chur.ch
was seeking "clarification as a
matter of urgency" ol a Kuwaiti
News Agency report Monday
that Waite, who dropped out of
sight a week ago, was put under
"house arrest" after a deal to
free two ~merlcans collapsed. ·
"At this poln\ we have no direct
evidence Terry Waite Is being
held against his will, " Archbl·
shop of Canterbury Robert Run·
cle said. But Runcle confirmed
there was no direct contact with
his envoy since Waite disappeared last Tuesday on his way to
meet the Shiite Moslem
kidnappers .

Officials or the Druze Mos lem
Progressive Socialist Party were
Increasingly concerned about
Waite's whereabouts alter PSP
militiamen escorted him to a
meeting wl!h the kidnappers,
militia sources said .
The state-run Kuwait! News
Agency said Monday that Waite,
who has not been seen for seven
days, was being detained by
Iflamlc .llhad, the pro-Iranian
group with which he was negotiating for the release ol Amerl·
can hostages Terry Anderson
and Thomas Sutherland.
But Voice of Free Lebanon
radio, controlled by the Christian
Lebanese Forces militia, sa id
today that Waite was still In
Beirut and was In contact with
his iiJards through a neutral
Intermediary, which It did not
Identify .
British Ambassador John
Gray traveled to west Beirut to
check and the Embassy urged
the last "lew" Britons In the

Moslem sector of the ca pital to
leave hours alter gunmen ab·
ducted lwo unlde ntllled Englishspeaking foreigners at gunpolnl.
"Waite was an envoy or the
Anglican Churc h and not an
envoy of the British government. " Gray said. Gray, who
sai d he did not ~now ol Wait e's
whereabouts , met with Prime
Minister Rashid Karam! a nd the
Shiite speaker of the Lebanese
parliament, Hussein Hussein!.
"Obviously we have been con·
cerned about these reports,"
Embassy Defense Altache Col.
!an Johnson sa id. "bull am quite
sure that he (Walle) Is safe and I
am confident that he Is contlnu·
lng his efforts."
In another development, pollee
sources said a Saudi Arabian
nat lonal was se lz~ by gunmen In
Moslem west Belrul, bringing to
13 the number of foreigners
abducted since Waliereturned to
Beirut Jan. 12 on his latest
humanitarian mission.

'

"A ithls point In lime. cvlden c~
is consistent ," says Pa uI Gerard,
Inv esti gator for M ~l~s County
Prosecu tor Fred Crow III. that
last Thursday's Incident at the
Dex t0r reside nce ol Cecil Stacy,
whlth resulted In the shooting
deat h of a ;,.1-ycar-old Wheeling ,
W.Va . man..Jessr Andc•rson, wa s
a robbery a tt ~mpt .
Gerard says that Stacy Is not
being charged, nor Is he susp~cted of any wrongdoing In the
Incident .
According to a r~por t Issued
Monda y by the prosecu tor's
off ice, Stac;· b~ca m 0 suspicious
of Anderso n. who had come to hi s
res idl'nC&lt;' with a ll ~g~d car lt'O U·
blr, and got a .22-callber revolver
from his bedroom and placed It
under his shi rt.
Anderson rrturn0d to Stacy's
house lor a glass of wat~r. and
-when Stacy turned his bac k, h~
was attacked by And~r son who
by then, according to Information released. had drawn a
.:12-callber automatic. A struggle
ensued, and Stacy , who finally
r rac h~d his gu n, fir('([ eight
ro unds. srvcn of which struck
Anderson In th~ abdo men .
No v~ hlc l~ was fo und at the
sct'ne. but an aut omobl ll' belongIng to And~rson was tater rceov~rrd by authorities ' at ~c
Gal lipolis Holiday Inn .
A 24 ·year-old woman, Valerie
MrDonald. also of Wher llng, was
fou nd In Anderson's room at thr
Holiday Inn , and broug ht to
Meigs County for routine ques- •
tlonlng beforl' being released .
According to Information Monday, McDonald Indicated s h ~
was at 1he morrl at 1he time of 1h&lt;'
attempted robbery and resultant
shooting.
Gcr&lt;~rd sa\'S authorities arr n' t
sure If And ~rson 's car, or some·
one else' s, was taken to Stacy's
house. "We're looki ng fonon.vonf'
with know !Nig&lt;' as to how this
guy got thrr•·· " h~ added.
·
Anderson had a crim ina l rr··
cord daring ha ck to 194R. whl,.h
Included sevrral convic tion' lor
gra nd theft, brPak lng and !•n t&lt;'rlng, auto thrft 'and variou s
fi rearms cha rg('s . He had S('rvrd
lime In several st:&lt;ll' and !Pdi•ml
jal!laclllllrs.
He was also not a stra ngN to
the southe~ s t rrn Ohio area. und
several years ago had lived
around Point Pl0asa nt , and had
worked for a tlmr at the Mar ietta
Manufa ct url n~ Co .. accordln~ to
Gerard, who lidded th at th&lt;' man
had been arres ted In Point
Pleasa nt and Chesapeake.
Allhou,gh Anderson eit her
"owned or managed " a Wheeling
night club. "u robbery attempt
would not . hav&lt;' been lnconslst ·
ent " with his background . ~ays
Gerard.
·
Gerard says FA! and federal
authorities · !rom Wheelln~ be·
came Involved In the lnv£'stl~a ­
tlon because the incident was
Interstate and because of And r·
son's p rior record 'a nd
reputation .
I

�~

I •

Comment

•

~ -~

111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Qhlo

.

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

rs:m~
~v

..................-.-.,...,.,d.=-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assl!ltant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The Un lt!'d Press Int ernational. Inland Dally Press
Association and the Amer ican Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are W('ICOme . They should tr less than :iJO words
long. AIIIE.'t1ers are su hj ('('! ! o 00 It in!': and must Des lgnfd wUtj na m£&gt;, address and
telep hon e number. No unslg nOO lell ers will be publl:r,hed . Lellers shou ld be In
gOOd taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

Washington Window

More free

Berry's World

•

"I really LIKE the way we handle pay raises
around here. "

Today in history
Today is Tuesday, Jan. 27, the 27th day of 1987 with 338 to follow.
The moon Is moving toward lis new phase. ·
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn .
The evening stars are ryiercury, Marfand Jupiter.
nose born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius, They Include
composer WOiflliang llll)adeus Mozart In 1756. ·
,
\,

.
...,_,

-·
•

•

Stephen VIncent Benet's story
"Tiu&gt; Devil and Daniel Webster"
has a memorable scene where
the ghost of the fiery Sen.
Webster asks, "Neighbor, how
s tands the union?" and then
Benet sugg~sts , -"You better
. · answer the union stands as she
stood, rock · botlom ed and
copper -s hea lhed, on e and
litdlvlslble. "
Well, that's one form of rating
• ystem . It's a n old game; people
a,lways want to know, as Lincoln
a &gt;ked, "where we have been, and
w~lther we a re tending?"

.

Ben Wattenber!{ . :•.

A small organization, Freedom House, each year tries to
answer and quantify tha t ques·
lion for the whole world, In
regard to one of the most
ineffable of substances: human
freedom . They've been doing It
each year since 1973 and their
scorecards and observations are
fascinating and relevant.
Their main conclusion Is this:
Slowly, perhaps very slowly, the
world Is becoming more free . •
Nations, as seen through ttie
lenses of political rights and civil
liberties, _are ranked by Freedom

.
House from 1 to 7, with 1 being the
most free and -7 the pl!s. Among
the conditions surveyed are
press freedoms, labor union
activity, the ability to vote In real
elections and the ability to travel
or emigrate.
Back In 1973, 32 percent of the
populatiO'n of the world was
categorized generally as "free."
By the beginning of 1987, the rate
had climbed to 37 percent .
Moreover, the number of nations categorized as "partly
free" has also gone up: from 21
percent of the global population

Question= Drug Testing?
Answer:
·

Reagan distances
self from scandal
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON ( UPI) - President Reagan has a strategy of
distancing himself from the !ran arms-Contra aid scanda l that was
hatched In the White Hou se.
And the modus operand i Is not so new to his style. Although he ls the
man In c harge he has always been above the fray , detached,
uninvolved even when major adm inistration ligures weregolngdown
the tube.
·
More of his top political appoin tees who ran various government
agencies have been forced aut of their jabs· under a llega tions of
wrongdo ing than In any administration In recent history, If ever.
. None of this has rubbed off on Reagan, not at least until the current
scandal that has come too c lose to home. The scandal, under three
separate Investigations - two in Congress and one by Independent
c6unsel Lawrenct;&gt; Wa lsh -Involves the secret selling of arms to Iran,
which had been on Reagan's list of "terrorist sta tes ," and the covert
funneling of th~ profits to the Nicaraguan rebels, known as Contras.
.Reagan has.acknowledged he approved the sending of arms to Iran.
He said In a nationally televised broadcast Nov. 13 that It amounted to
one planeload of spare parts a nd ot her arms. According to Inquiries,
there were six planeloads of weapons sen t to Iran.
·But the president con ten ds that he was not privy to th e diversion of
money to the Con tras . Attorney Genera l Edwin Meese said that was
the brainchild of Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North, a deputy on the
Na tiona l Securit y Council staff , who has refu sed to testify on grounds
of self Incri mination. Deposed national security affairs adviser John
~olndexter, who apparently knew of the secret financing of the
Contras a t some point, also has refused to testify.
:The Sena te committee has turned up nothing In Its report to
c(lntradlrt the pres !dent in terms oft he Illicit financing of theContras.
But It has found the clandes tine operation skirted the laws In several
Instances. particularly laws that req uired the White House to inform
Cpngress of Its cover t operations In a timely fashion.
According to his aides, the _presldent takes "full responsibility" for
tbe affair that has th rown the ad minis tration's credibility into
question. But he has no apologies to ma ke, they sa id.
Although Reagan has re mained in secl usion , going about his •
official business in a private way, there a re Indications that he Is
digging In, hoping It will all fade away, as has been his luck In the pas t.
Without the tes timony of key players, North and Poindexter, the
congress iona l committees and Walsh may find It exceedingly
difficult to piece the puzzle together. Reagan was briefed orally on the
Jan. 17, 1986, memora ndum that gave the formal go-ahead to selling
U.S. weapons to Iran . Hi s OK was Initialed by Poindexter. And that
may have been the way that the president often did business.
: Reagan's own feelings on the matter have not been personally
rievealed si nce he fl ailed out In a Time Magazine Interview shortly
&amp;Iter the sca nd a l broke, rai lin g the media "sharks" and Nort h a
·•national hero."
: From ti me to time he Is .-eported to have been depressed and
su rprised at the r£&gt;velat Ions. His wife. Na ncy, has expressed the view
that her husband be lieves he was "decelv!'d." But Reagan himself
has not told his story In full .
...,
His stra tegis ts are apparently telling him not to do that until all the
facts have bi&gt;en lined up. As a resu It he Is not available or accessible to
a ny qu£&gt;stlonlng by the press. even on a hll·a nd·run basis.
A pres ident ca n on ly be shielded so long. Reag.:.n will be speaki ng
out when he delivers his State of the Union address to a joint session of
Congress on Jan. 27. At th a t time, he may s hed more light on the
scandal a nd he may point the direction of his administration as It
winds down .
· ·

I(

Tuesday, January 27, 1987
'

The ·Daily Sentinel

Rio plays OD Panthers on road tonight

Page....:.2-The Dally Sentinel ·t

Pomeroy-M.kk!leport. Ohio

I

In 1973 to 24 percent now. Only the
"not free" have dropped: from47
percent then to 39 percent now.
The current numbers make for
a striking, graphic display called
"The Map oi Fre~dom," published by Freedom House. The
map shows the free countries In
white. The partly free countries
are cross-hatched. The unfree
nations appear on the map In
solid black.
The firs.! thing that hits your
eye Is a solid black (unfree)
mass, represenllng the Soviet
Union and mainland China. Most
(but not all) of Africa and th_e
Moslem worldarealsopalntedas

!
~

•
;
~

•

!'

1
~

!

unfree.

By contrast, almost the entire :
Western Hemisphere Is depleted •
as free, In white. There are a few :
major exceptions, most of which
are rated "partly free," and )
these Include a few Central · •
American states, Chile, Para- !
guay and our neighbor Mexico, :
which Is rated 4 on boUt political ;
and civil rights. And then there Is •
Cuba, which Is unfree, rated 6 ,•
1
and 6.
Western Europe Is all free. The !
communist-dominated nations of •
Easte.rn Europe are either un· •
•
free or partly free. (Hungary •
•
gets a 5-5, Poland a 6·5 - both : ·
"partly free.") A few African :
sta tes are partly free. Australia •
(1·1) , Japan (1·1) z nd India (2·3)
are rated free.
l
Now, what actually ha-ppened ,
In this trl· polar world In 1986? :
There were a few selbacks. •
•
Nicaragua closed down the news- ,
paper "La Premia," the last ~
serious voice critical of the )
Sandlnlsta government. In Para- ~
guay, the opposition radio station •
was closed down . The parliament •,
in Kuwait was closed down.
:

1

!
•

•

lack Ander.'iOn &amp; Joseph Spear i

Captive correspondent ·
WASHINGTON - In what
appeared to be a deliberate
provocation, Syrian pollee ar·
rested a Voice of America
correspondent recently and held
him for .10 hours In a tiny cement
cell, without heat or light. A
classified cable added : "It
seemed clear that this was not a
case of mistaken Identity."
Earlier, Syrian troops broke
Into U.S. Embassy property In
West Beirut imd tried to dismantle it. Syrian· Embassy charge
d' affalres Bushra Kanafanl was
summoned to the State Department which expressed Its "con-

cern" and "dismay" over the
Incidents. But a confidential
report declared, "She did not
ex press r eg r et at either
Incident."
The State Department's response was to hush up lhe affront ,
ask the abused correspondent
"not to publicize the details of his
story" and continue Its policy of
sweet reasonableness toward
Syria ' s wily dictator, Halez
Assad.
. Compounding the outrage, the
Voice of America correspondent,
Muhammad Gunalm, not only
was traveling on a U.S. passport

R~port

but ha_d been Invited to Syria by
·the government Itself.
He landed In Damascus on Jan.
1.1. What happened then Is
described In State Department
class ified cables. Although ·he
s howed his passport and pro·
tested that he had been Invited to
Syria " by two ministries," he
was shoved into a car and driven
to pollee headquarters . He was
dumped Into a " llghtles~ 3-by-5
foot unfu rnlshed cement cell with
..
a heavy steel door."
.Gunalm was "frightened" but
resourceful and managed to
smuggle word of his arrest to the
U.S. Embassy. He "was not
physically mistreated although
he found It Intimidating to be kept
In a tiny, dark cell and lnterrogat!'d repea tedly."
It took 10 hours for the embassy
to secure his release. A Syrian
government official "apologized
profusely for the mistake" and
promise d Gunalm "safety" If he
wished to stay. But the State
Department doubts It was a
mistake and ordered him to leave
Syria "Im mediately. "
For four years. we have cited
evidence tha.t Hafez Assad Is

:

engaged In a pattern of subver·
slon and terrorism against the
United States. His troops not only
protect the terrorists who live in
Syrian-occupied Lebanon but
h-a ve participated In anti ·
American violence.
We have looked for a pulse beat
of State Department anger over
the Syrian provocations. But
there just isn't any to be fou.nd.
This appeasement of Assad even
violates President Reagan's
written foreign policy guidelines.
A confidential White House polIcy paper quqtes the president as
saying that Americans "are tired
of suffering Insults at the hand of
other nations ," that the president
will "stand up for America even
If the est of the world doesn't
approve" a n that "minimal
risks" can be taken to restore the
United States "to a position of
leadership In the world."
LIMOUSINE LIBERALITY:
Federal Energy Regulatory
Commission member Anthony
Sousa has been cleared of any
wrongdoing In connection with
his questionable use of government limousines. The Energy
Department's Inspector general
concluded that the commissioner

•I
•
'..

had been misinformed about the

rules."

,•

Sousa took 15 questionable
trips between January 1984 and ,
May 1985, at a cost to .!he :
taxpayers of$1,154.41, thelnspec· :
tor. general found. But he had .;.
been told, Incorrectly, that he ..
could use government limos to :
attend private functions he was
Invited to on behalf of the
commls~lon.

One function was a 1985 pre..
Kentucky Derby party sponsored
by the Kentucky State Society In
the Washington suburb of
McLean, Va. Witnesses told the
investigators that Sousa and his
wife asked the chauffeur to walt
while ttiE'y attended the lawn
partr.
Sousa said he was Invited
because of his '!good work In the
government," and that he had
been recommended for commis·
slonlng as an honorary K~ntucky
colonel. He said he was told soon
after his appointment as commissioner In September 1981,
that he could use the limo to go to
social functions "to which I am
invited as a result of ... my
offlclal ca pacity as comm ls' ·

1960s, when It was lured by tax
exemptions and abatements and
the river's availability . for
transportation .
Supporting ~ work force of
45,000, the Industry has an annual
payroll of $1.5 billion and spends
an additional $1.5 billion yearly
in the state to purchase goods and
·services.
But Louisiana has paid for that
Industrial deve lopment. Its natural beauty fia s been despoiled by
cracking towers and storage
tanks. Is air, water and soli have
been contaminated by. deadly
chemicals. Its communities are
constantly threatened by chemical spills from railroad cars,
tanker trucks and pipelines.
Chlorine, a . lethal gas, was
acciden tally released by Allied In
1976, by Dow In 1977, by BASF
Wyandotte In 1981 (along with
phosgene l and by both Formosa
Plastics a nd Ethyl In 1984.
The Sierra Club recently reported that 15 plants near
Geismar (a small community 15.
miles downrive r from Baton
Rouge) had released more than
75.7 million pounds of pollutants
-Including almot 223.000 pounds
of known or suspected carcinogens - Into the M\sslsslppl
between October 1985 and October 1986.
Earlier, 23 tons of phenols were
Intentionally dumped Into the
river, contaminating New Or·
leans' water supply for four days.
In these cases, the companies
exceeded the legal limits . tor
dumping In the river.
Four firms operating lertUizer
plants In the area now are·
seeking federal permission to
discharge 12 millions tons or
radioactive gypsum Into the
..
river every year.

•

Among the suspected effects of of-Environmental Quality, Patrl- "
the chemicals: A concentration cia Norton, recently was fired by
of miscarriages among pregnant Gov. Edwin W. Edwards because .
women and elevated levels ol she was "Inflexible" and tOQ '·.
bladder, rectal and lung cancers aggressive In her enforcement ·
among all residents.
activities.
New Jersey, the only other · "Loillslana had a blind spot In
state with an equally high level of Its zeal to turn Its economy from
petrochemical activity, spends agrarian Into · Industrial .' The · ~
more than $9.00 per resident on state forgoi environmental conenvironmental protection - but trois ," notes one area news- '
Louisiana spends only about paper. "The Mississippi River
$1.50 per ca pita.
· became a sewer for chemical a nd ~
The head ol the state's chronl· municipal waste."
·,
cally underfunded Department

1

Berry's World

NATIONAL BASKETBALL
AMQC.
' . .

'I'Ueaday'" GamtM
Hartford at Qoellec. 7:31p.m.
Wuhi•Pon a1 Pltlshur~~:h, 7:35

p.m.

wtnolper al. NY

p.m.

p.m.

•

.

"

ftrlll:•pla~ Yatt'!l, m.1trdK. lotalpulnlu nd
IIIII WHII'N nnkln-. (Volill!landr!K'Ord"
haHed on Jllllflll throu,~th SUndQ aiKfll
wllh 15 polni~ awardf!'d fnr ftn~t pii\Cf', U
for srwnd. etc. l

Portland Ml LA Lakrrs, 10:30

p.m.

,mno:. '•
'f

U7 t

HI. AlahM.rna tl~2)
11. Dukf' (lt-3)

Ut II

U.
U.

IUI110~

It

('k&gt;IDIIOft

178 ••
JIM li
1-l:l lt

IN 1!1

IU·-1)
Geur~cnn (Wll
Ui·H

12 Ill
15 z

1$. Tt&gt;XIUII ( 'hrilitiM Jlfl.3)

....

16. Florida 115-.t)
1~ . A.-urn (11·-1)
I ll. St . .fuM' II (IJ. :h

MllwaukH' al Golden Stale, 10:30

p.m.
WedneMd&amp;y'a Game~

S4U
31 1'7

l!t. PIIIKIMra:h ClHl
KMftiiMII I IH)
l·U•MkM

Chi"''O ot Boot .., otrht
Cleveland at Philadelphia, ni~hl
Golden StMe at Phoenb:, •l~hl
New Jersey at LA Clippers, nll'ht
LA Laker• a1 S.atlte, ~trhl

"""

~-

College scores

......

·\ llriJIIl II, FDU Mlldlllon '7tl

NHL result!i

Aml't'ltan liS, William A
r\liliumptklllll.l AIC 71
BkMtmKhilr~~:

NATION IlL IIOCKEV LEAGUE
Wlllei Conference
Patrick Dl•lolon
W L TPI•. GF GA
Ph !Ia
3~ II 4 Ill ll0fl:141
Nl' bin
1421 4 51 175 117
WMhn
28 u 7 47 159 18~
NV Rn
19 !2 8 48 Itt! 198
Nw ,Jr"Hy
10 II I -15 Ill! 22ft
Pth•hr
tM n 8 14 m 11111
Dl~iNion

Montrt
2ll II 7 57 178 t67
HrUrd
H lK I 56 161 158
llootCMt
II 19 ,! 55 180 113
Queht•
IM !I 7 43 Iii 165
BuDai
11!11 6 :14 162192
Campbell Conferent-e
Norrlti Dlvbilon
• W L TPt». GF G,\
Mlnru;t
22 !I I 49 IIIII 177
Drlroll
20 it ! 49 t55 168
Toront
IUS I 13 1'111180

M~try

S3

Ill, York KS

BOllton U. ~ Col~~:ahl SB
California Ill, Davl!! &amp; Elkin~"

C'hf')'nt)I·9S,Indllllla!Pa. ) 1111

Debware Valley Ill, Moravian Iii
Dicka.on n , .lunlaht St

Ill. Rhode l!ola.nd 111
Elmira f7. c:ortiMd Ill
Gordon C:ol. • · N~w En~~:land fol . ~'i
Houlblon 71. OPneMeu 6lf
kll'f'Df' st. "-Southern t:oniL ~
Duq~~e~~nr

Lyt'G'!'III~ 1111,

Rapt W Blhlf' (:oil. 7:i
Mlu!Nftcld 114. Run IIIII 1!

"

M!Ut~IM.' huKetlto 7l

Holy ( ' l'rnl!l fl6

Mert:yhun;&amp; '79, Edlnhoro .7K

Mt•rrlm.ck M, SprlndMd KO
Mount Nl. Mlll')''li II!, Shlppen.~hu r~~:
NJ Tro(:• 139, SUN\' ·Purch*t' :10

6~

Sorlhrllhtern Ill.&amp;, Qulnitlplll(· 54
PIUM00rll:h 114. s,rucut~f' ifl
PIU .JOhn11lown 'n, lolllppt'_,, KtH.'Ii 61
StTIUIIOD " · Dl'f'W 80

I

St. Fr.utriM M. Lo4 · kh~o~\'t'fl 76
St. 1\ ...rtm II. Slont'hlll Col. 1i
Uth:a TN:b 7'l. lirocli pol1 II
\\'II,VMHhllrll: ~1, Sl. Vln••Pnt 7l

TUESDAY TRirLJCATES

Team

Gallipolis girls down
Soothe~; face .Ath.ens

In Monday's non-league game,
GAHS led 14-10, 40-15 and 55·21 at
the quartermarks.
Betsy Bergdoll paced the Blue
Angels with 18 points. Sarah
Todd added 12 and Angle Holley
10. Angle Bostick had 10 for the
Lady tornadoes.
Gallipolis won the ·reserve
game. 36-15. ShellySkldmorehad
17 lor 'the winners. Trlsh Wolfe
had s1&lt;1 for the losers .
Thursday, GAHS will t ravel to
Marietta for a league game. Both
GAHS and Marietta share the
loop lead with lderttlcal 4·1
records.
Monday's box:

'

'

4 811 576

6

~11

71tl

7 'l'RI ADO
"

KyKC!r Crt•l.'ll....................... 8 II

m

w

7MZ M~

Symme!&gt;l Vulll'y ............ ..... 1 II 511 'H9
I fONFERENCE)

WL
Hann11n 'J'fa£e ........ ........... ll 1
North .Giillla ...................... 7 ~
Roulhrrn .................. ......... 8 :1
Oak Hilt ............................ ! I
Ewtller• ....................... ..... A S
Southwt•NII•m ..................... f t
Ky~ee~ Creek. .. .... ...... ......... :l 7
SymmeM Valley ................. 0 t

PF .PA
M Ill
Bttl 53.'1
516 177
itS Ill!
58fl SM
5St 1911
.t87 m
445 m

R:lm,S

at

North

Southern .. ... .lO 5 6 9 - 30
Galllpolls ..... 14 26 !5 10 - 65
Reserve score-Gallipolis 36,
Southern 15.

Gallla

!loothw-ro.....................1 7 144 Ill
Kfl"' Creek. ........ ............. ' I M8 Ill
!lymm,. Valle, ................ ,t I •1 Ill
8ootlow.. terai8KYI"'Cree!M (ma.t..opl

•

OVERAI.I.
W L. 1, 1'1 .
~I .J .11:1:1

HIO GRANDE ...........6 U

:&amp;

10 II .471
II ~ .ltl7

~

7 13

l'tll. Vttr non NQ .... .. .. .. ~ 4
. Ohln Domlnlcan . ....... ..l l

.sao

i II .3HK
'l n .152

Saturday'!! remtlt.!i
RIO 4.ati\NOI': 79 (;t•d~irvlllt• 7K
M~tlonr&gt; 59 nfftn ~7
Mt. Vernon NazMr~ne 66 Urbwua 415
• " '11hih tii Ohio l)omlnicun tl'l
Tut't'da)·'s lf:JunCfi

Rio GriUlde at OhiQ llominl can
Walsh at (;edar\11111'
M1\lone Ill Mt. \ 'ernon

Urhanu at

·nmn

,.,

Wednt~&gt;iday'~ I{IUill'

Tlfrln al WllmlnRt on
S&lt;ilurday'l&gt;i I{WJtt,.;

Rio Gran dt&gt; at MulonP
Tllfln at Cedan lllt•
Ohln Humlnl cnn ut Mt. \ 't•rnlm
lJrharu• iU Wlll!&gt;!h

4

ShPily Co............... .. ...

HI

6

Ohio Pal101 Co. .............. ....... .. ..

&lt; i2

Middleport Trophl Ps ..

4

12

553. t368.

TUESDAV TRIPLICATES
Slandln.¢!1 for 1-t:I·R7
Team

W

L

Da iry Quec&gt;n .............
Shelly Co ........ .............. , ............
Chateau Beauty Salon ....... ....
Middlcpor1 Trophlf."s ........ ..........

20

4
t:i
10
14

Ohio Pall et Co.......... .................

4

IR
14
10

:.m

H l~h l ndv . Game. Dcbblr Phf'lps . 234:
Serond High lndv . Gamr. Debbie Ph elps.
208: Third Hl2h l ndv . Game. Kat hlcrn

losses. But, as a starter. they
didn't think a sidearmer would
be that effective."
Williams, however. doesn ' t
pitch exc lu sively slde;~rm. tn
fa ct he began throwi ng sidearm
whrn he s uffered a n arm inju ry
and "couldn 't put my arm up
ovN my shoulder. lt was kind of a
fluke way of getti ng Int o it.
" I've been work ing on Ilw
sp_llt·li ngered, overhand fast ·
ball.'' he sa id, "becau se I fe~ l
likr I need another chang!•up
pitch from up there. Especially,
as a stopper.! feel lik e I'd like to
bring another pitch ln."
One of his nPw teammates,
~ds' second baseman Ron, Orster. is happy with thr trade. If
only lor the fact he won't have to
lace him any mor£&gt;.
" He defi nit ely will help us,"
the switch-hitting Oester sa id of
Williams. "He's a lways given m&lt;·
a lot of troubl.e. He's super tough

sa id. "Nothing has been said to
me by the organization about my
role.
"I'd like to be a· short man
sooner or later." he said. "but
whateve r lhc Reds need to link
lhelr bullpen together to be a
cont ender will be my main goa l
be it a middle reliever or a s hort
reliever."
Rose has made Williams just
one promls£&gt; - thai he will be
used more in Cincinnati th a n he
was in San Francisco.
"The addition of Frank Willi·
:~ms to our club gives us the best
bullpen In the National Leag ue.'·
said Rose. ''I'd like to say the
best in a ll of baseball, but I don't
know !hat much about the
American League."
Willi ams, who spent eight
years in the Gia nts orga niza tion,
labeled tho trade "a breath of
fres h air, a blood transfusion .
I'm really looking fo rw ard to
spri ng traini ng and goi ng to
F lorida !Tampa 1 Instead of
Arizona (Phoen lx l."
Williams spent severa l years
in the San Fra ncisco organization as a sta rter a nd made the
s witch to the bullpen a t . the
Giants' suggestion.
" I was successful as a starter
on every team I was on.'' he said .
" f led in Innings pitched, co mplete games. strikeout s, wins a nd

Fryar l'lfi; Hl~h S&lt;&gt;rirs. DrbbiC' Ph el ps,
604: &amp;!cond ,HI~h &amp;&gt;rl£&gt;s. MargarC'I Eynon,
449; Thi rd H l~h Scrlr•s. Belly Whltla 1ch,
427: Team High Caml' &amp; Sr&gt;r!es, Shell.v
Co.. 500, 1437.

~Jt

on righ t-handed battrrs. I batted
le fty 11galnst him and I think he
s tru ck me out eight of the 10
ti mes I laced him."
Williams a lso joins onr of the
toughest out s In he league lor him
Rr ds' rlghtflelder Da ve
Parker.
" He's an Int imidating man.' '
Williams sa id of the 6-foot -5,
2:10-pound Par ker. "He' s hi! the
ball the hardest off me than
anvbodv I ean think of. There's a
lo t. ol g~ys you co uld na me. but l
don' t wa nt to mention too many

or they'll ro mr out swi nging real
hard ."
Williams, despite his 1981) success. says he will go to spring
trainlng . ledlng hf' has a win a
job.
' 'I'm goln~wlt h th;~t attitude.''
11&lt;' said
r'--~---------­

IACMSON Pft&lt;.E · RT. J~ WEST
PhoM 446-4&amp;24

IARGAIN

~TtNEES

SATURDAY I

SUNDAY -All SEATS 12.10
AOHISitON'EYERY TUESOAV t2 .50

I

JANUARY 23 thru 21

FR IDAY thru THURSDAY :

You jusl won't lind a
better value lor your in·
surance premium dollar
than a Homeowners
policy from the State
Auto Companies. As an
independent agency representing State Auto,
we offer truly outstand·
ing protec~on packages
lor houses, apartments
and condominium units.

NITEOWL~

SKVLINE Lt\NES

t-7-87

Team
Kut N Kurl ....................

Pts.

. ....... 7fi
Pa yne Trur kln!Z ... . .... .. .. .... . ..... . .
... 74
Scars·Pomrroy i Middll'pol't .. ................ 73
Wha ley's UsNI Cars &amp; Auto Parts ... ..... 72
Gai!L•n • H &lt;~ lr Ar ts .. .. ..... ..... .................. 72

Pharrri&lt;JL')' Nort h ... ....... ........ ........... .... 72
.Jim Mink's Ch1•v.·Olds .. ..... ......... ......... 72

Rio Min i Murt .... ........... .... ... .... ........ li:l
.J 's Exxon ......... ........ .... ....... ... ...... ..... .. 60
Km art ........ .... .. .. .. ...... .. .......... ... ..... ..... M
Dukr Trur klnj.'! ... ...... . , .. .. ... ............. ..... 57
JC'frNs Truckin g &amp; Exc, Co.................. 55
Quic k Rlrk' s ............. .... ..... ............. ..... 46
IN D. GA ME: Shl rlf'Y Sull\van , 180;
Sonya Roush, 17J: Chris Ba iley. 170; IND.
~ER IES : P. Houdash••lt . ~52 ;
Chris
llallf'y, 444; Trudy Cns lo, 441: TEAM

· GAME: Whulf'y's Usr&gt;d Ca rs &amp; Pa rt s, 004;
Phurmacv North . fiOJ: Quirk Ri cks, filll;
TEAM s'ER IES: Whal ey's Usl"d Cars.
17.12: Gallery Ua\r Arts, 1716: Pharmacy
Nor1 h, 170R.

214 EAST MAIN ·
POMEROY
992 -8687
ltato .Auto

r;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;;;;;;l
RUTLAND TIRE SALES

IIIIUI'INIOO

r . ." oanlot

"8EniN8 ~OU THERE SAFELV"

Games reset
The Symmes Valley boys at
North Gallla high school basket·
ball game has been rescheduled
for Saturday, Jan. 31, a school
spokesman said today. The Symmes Valley girls game
with North Gallla has been reset
for Tuesday, Jan. 27.
Both games were postponed
last week because of had weather
conditions.

\ VSrS 141-9110)
A Dl\'klon of Muhlmedla.lnl'.

Publlshf'd f'wry aftC'r noon. Mondtty
throu~h Friday, 111 Court St.. Po·
mf."roy, OMio. b.v 1h(' Ohio Va11ry Pub·
Jl shln.c Company t MuH lmrdl a. Inc..
Pomr&gt;rov. Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2151-i. Si'·
ro nd cJ3ss p osta~e paid al PomNoy.
Ohio.
Mf."mbt'r : Un ltf'd Pn•ss lntc&gt;rnullonal.
Inland Dallv Press Associ alton and t h£'
Ohio NC'wsPupf'r A!liSOC'I at lon. Nat tonu l
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LOWEST PRICES ON PASSENGER CARS
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treston

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P225/75R 15
rad ial
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sold/

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Pomeroy. Ohio 45769.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES
ly Carrier or Mot• Rou&amp;e
Onr W•et&lt; .... ... ..... ...... ........ ........ .11.25
Ont' Month ........ ... ..................... $5.45
On(' Year ............ : .. ......... .. ....... S65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Subscriber~ not desir ing to pay thecar·

E.. tera ............................. l 4 _, SM
Oak Hill ............................! I ItA 1M

'·

2

Dairy Queen ....... .... .............. ..... 12

lndv. Ga m(', Dotllr Wil l. 220;
&amp;&gt;cond High Jndv. Game. Jackie Wa lburn .
1R6: Third High lndv. Ga mf'. &amp;&gt;tty
Whitla tch. 165: High Srrlf&gt;s . J ar klf' Wal·
burn, 496: Second Hlj::h Sforlf'S. Dot liP Wil l.
490: Third H l~ h SrriPs , OrohbiP PhPips.
467; Team High Camr &amp; Srrl rs. Shpll y Co .

I

Dally .... .. .. .. ......................... 25 Cen"

Retene1dlea
(CONFERENCE)

Saluni&amp;J'If mult: ·

MOC

u; 6 .7t7
It ! .IDI

11rhana ........ ........... ... ll 4

MOC Standings
W L

I

S

POSNASTER: Send addrPfS c han~

Sai•nlit)''M la&amp;mt&gt;
( 'rrek H SouthwNiem .tt

VaiJQ

Probable staring lin eups lor
the Redmen will be: Ant hony
Ra y more, 5-11 so phomore,
guard; Joe Verhoff , ~-4 senior.

\\'tdSh...... ..... .......... .. .. ~
Til fin ...... ... .... ......... ... 3
Midon••.... ................... 3
ft.•dan lllto .... .... ..... ..... ~

to Tht&gt; Dally SMIInE"I. 111 Court Sl.,

Satant.y'•rame

Symmert
(malt..,p)

L

Hl~h

SOUTHERN (30) - Reiber,
1.4-6; Theiss, 1-1-3; Smith, 2-0-4;
Simpson, 0-0-0; Bos tick, J.4-10;
.Hill, 2-0-4; Winebrenner, 0-1-1;
Duddln, 0·0·0; Beegle, 1·0-2.
TOTALS 10-10-30.
GALLIPOLIS (65l - Todd.
6-0-12; Combs, 0-0-0; Holley,
5-0-10; Thomas, 3-0-6; Mabry,
3·2·8; Bergdoll, 9-0-18; Hamilton,
2-0-4; Elliott, 0-0-0; Garber, 1-0-2;
McMillian, 0-3-3; O'Rourke, 0-00; Atha, 1-0-2. TOTALS 30-5-65.
By quarters :

L PF PA
I 7:15 &amp;12
li K&amp;ll 11216

"'

Chateau BeauTy Salon............... 14

ISVAC Standings lr2===~
The Daily Sentinel ·
tOVERUI. )
W
11/orth G•ltlo ........ ...... ...... IO
Hannan Truct•.: ................. 9
!Oiul~t'fn .................. ..... .... K
Ook Hilt. ....... .... ...... .......... 7
Southwt"Mlt'rn...... ............... 7

forward: Doug Fogt, 6-7 junior,
forward; Ron Rlttinger, 6-7 jun·
lor, forward and Mike Smith, 6-3
senior. guard.
For the Panthers, It will be
Randy Tucker. 5·10 sophomore·.
guard; Johnnie Walt ers , 6-6
senior. post; Doug Hoover. junior, 6-5 wing; Brian Harvey, 6-2
junior. guard and Bob Walt£&gt;rs,
6-4 freshman, wing.
Tipoff Is 7:30p.m.
Conference standings:

man."

Local bowling
Standings for H -87

W L PF PA
!loothern .. ...... ................ ... ~ t Itt Ill
North G•ltta ........ .............. 7 ' ttl lit
Hunu Trace ................... l J Dl •

•

- 114 :J

t. Oklahoma (1 ... :\J

H11.n1an Trace II Oak Hill
Southwl."ffltrr• It Symm• Valier
Soulbern II Nort• Gl.llla
Kner creek 11 Eutem

~

:m . t

K. D"Paul (16-1 )

,

Fr.,.

•

IMI I

Ul I
MS 3

'7. Tcmpho ( Hl-21

Tue!idQ'N (UI'IfM

•

2'. UNU' ( I) 011-11
:t IBWil ell'- I)
~ . lndl... a l! ) (1 ~'! 1

NorthC'arollnatatll U7-ll

5. Paar ... Pjll-'!)
6. S~ rM'UM' (l'l·ll

lndlana at Atfanta, "p.m.
BoMten at Chic&amp;I'O, tl: 30 p.m.
Wuhln,P.on at Dallu, M: 38 p.m.
Ulah ol HouHton, R:30 p.m.
Detroit at San 1\nlonio, R: 30 p.m.
New.Jrneyat Sacramento, 10:30

!Oiuih Wrholer • Oak Hill
Ohio Valley Chrl8tlllll It Southwellern
EAH&amp;H-n at HannU 'n"act&gt; (re~~thedul~
lrGm J ... ,%SJ
" .

'

Polnl.~

I.

p.m.

Ky,;H

•

By GENE CADDES
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP I)
Frank Williams, the newest
member of the Cincinnati Reds,
says the more he thinks about the
trade that brought him to the
Reds and se nt outfielder Eddie
Milner to the San Fra ncisco
Giants, the better he likes it .
" It 's a good feeling," Willia ms
sa id during the Reds' annua l
media carava n stop in Co lum bus. The Reds believe Williams
will help give them the bes t
bullpen In the Nationa l League.
"The more I think about it, the
happier I am," said Williams. " I
was surpr ised at fir st, the n
everything starts to si nk In that
you' re going to be playi ng for a
top contender.
" Playing under Pete Rose as
manager. too," added Williams,
a right-handed, primarily sidearm pitcher. "It's a grea t
incentive. It picks me up eve ry
time I think about it."
Williams, who will be 29 years
old on Feb. · 13, split thr 1986
season between Phoen ix of the
Pacific Coast League a nd Giants,
where he had a 3-1 record and a
1.20 ERA In 52 plus innings of
work, mainly as a middle relief
pitcher.
"We ha ven't disc ussed any
role possibilities yet," Willia ms

hukf't.hall rlllln~~:~~ h)' Ualted Pr~"
bal"naUoaai'K Bwrd ol folll'ht'li, wllih

T"'m

Sar tori sa id, " It will take" a very
great game from us to beat them.
We have to' rebound, pla y good
defense and be patient on
offense."
Ri.o Grande enters the game
20·4 ovt•rall and 6-0 Inside the
MOC.
Lawhorn said, "We need to
control the tempo. I don't want a
run and gun match with them.
Defensively, they' ll play a lot of

Frank Williams happy to be with Reds

c:oll~,~tr

NEW VORl !UPI) - Top \JI

cmaktup)

.;:" I wan/ to make this room real homey - like
the set for the CBS 'Morning Program."'

Wedlul8day'tt Games

College ratings

Frtdii)'' MKMmf'!
li\fl p0Mtpoiled ... ,, lo MOOW,)

.

M:~l ·

Phltouletphla al Bollalo, illghl
"'1nDlpet: at NY Ran1ertt, nl1ht
New Je~ at Lo8 Angeles, nlghl
W~Whln~ton a&amp; Detroit, •llfht
Toronto at Chlc&amp;lfO, night
Vuoouver ilt Edmonton, nl~ht

Milwaukee Itt,' Ll\ Cllppen 94
Portland 14~ Denver 141 (ot )
TueMday'8 G11mes
Phttouletphla o1 New York, 7:30

t-::a."lt'm ............................. ti

..

btandet:•.

Montr-eal II St. Lou bi, 8: :u p.m.
Edmoaton at Vucuuver, 10: S5

u......

/\dams

Rio Grande wilt: resume MidOhio Conference act ion tonight a I
Ohio Dominican In Columbus.
·•we must hit the boards, must
play hard and must take care of
the basketball," said. Redman
mentor John Lawhorn. "We
can't look at their record which is
2-17 and l -5 in the conference. We
must look at what they have done
the last two games," he added.
ln . the Panthers' las t two
games, they defeated Cedarville,
85-78 and and losi to power ful
Walsh by only fiv e points Satur·
day night. 67-62.
Ohio Dominican Coach Lou

Smylhe Dl•lllon
Edmn
3314 2 lUi .·'t.li itj,~
Wnopr
27 18 4 511 til ISM
Caltey
fi Z2 I 115 1111167
1M Anrt.
it I! 6 18 !111264
Vnc.. '
, II 29 5 35 Ill 191
Monday'IJ ReNultH
NY Ran1er• I. New lersey 3
llotltill I, BullaloZ
Catr-'l&lt; I. Toronto!
Motitrul I, Chl..,o I

By Uoked Prolo lotenollonol
Eulern Collfereace· , .
,!..
Allanite Dl•looloo
W L Pet. GB
aoo~...
:1t 11 .m
l'!,la
2l 18 .!Ill 7
Wohnpn
lt It .511 111
New York
13 !Ill .sn 17
New ~oroy
11 lt ctn t8\\
'
C.ntralDMatoo
U.troK
!8 14 .6111
1\Uinla
II 14 .6141
' MIIWIUke
Zl 1.8 .&amp;Ill 2
Chlcqo
!I 18 .liS f\1
lndtona
21 !I .188 6\\
Ct.. etnd ·
II II .SMt II
" 'hlft'n Confrrence
Mldwa~t Dlv ... lo_n
W L Pet. GB
Dall..
II tl .610 - .
Utah
u 11 .m 3
Houst011
Zll 18 .537 f\lo
19 24 .112 8\\
13 27 .Sill 13
Sa&lt;ramnt
San Anl011l
12 29 .293 14\\
PaciOc Dlvb!llon
LA Lakero
32 9 .71!0
Portland
26 17 .!181 7
Seotlle
22 t9 .537 10
Golden Sit
28 ill .!131 II
Phoenix
18 21 .41&amp; ts
LA Cttpp..,.
I 36 . I!I 27
Monday'H Resulb1.
Seattle 1011, Ulah 85
Phoenix Jill: Dot roll 118 1oH

p.m.

17 I! 8 4! Ill 181
17M 7 41 175201

!II. Lotta
Chl"''

"'

from cancer alley __~_R_ob_ert_W_a_lte_.rs

GEISMAR. La. (NEAl - A
solitary great white heron stands
by the side of a cou ntry road
. here, forlornly surveying what
once were tranquil marshla nd s
among the banks of the MIs sis·
sippi River.
The elegant, long-necked bird
now Is con_fronted by a Shell
Chemica l plant that produces
eh tylene oxide, hydrochloric
acid, ammonia and sulfuric acid.
Next to It stands a Vulcan
Materials facility that makes
chlorinated so lve nts.
Less than a mil e down the road,
BASF Wyandotte produces ca ustic potash, formaldehyde, phos·
phorlc acid, 2,4-di nltrotoluene,
phosgene and other hazardous
compounds.
Not lar away are facilities
operated by Exxon, Shell, Texaco, Gulf, Marathon, Occidental
and other oil companies as well
as Du Pont, Union Carbide,
American Cyanamid, Monsanto,
Dow, Stauffer, Allied a nd oth&lt;&gt;r
che mical firm s.
Nowhere In the nation Is there a
greater concentration of petrochemical plants than a long the
80-mlle-long portion of the Mississippi River known as the
"chemical corridor" or "cancer
alley."
It begins just north tif Loulsla·
na'scapltalo!BatonRouge, then
stretches south to Westwego, a
New Orleans suburb.
In addition to the more·than 60
plants that line th~ river, other
petrochemical facilities are located throughout the -state, glv·
lng Louisiana the dubious dlstlnc·
lion of producing 25 percent of all
the country's Industrial
chemicals:
Much of the Industry 's $15
billion Investment In the state
occurred during the 1950s ·and

,NBA resull8

Gallipolis defeated visiting
· Southern, 65-30, In a non, conference basketbll game on
the GAHS boards Monday .
evening.
The vl~tory left Coach Gordon
Baker's Blue Angels ll-3overan. ·
This evening, Gallla Academy
High School's gJr.Js will host
Athens In a makeup contest.
Reserve _g ame starts at5: 30 and
the varsity tilt at 6:45 p.m .

stoner.'

The Daily Sentinel:-Page~3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

rler may remit In advance dlrW to
The Dally Sentinel on a 3, 6or 12 month
basis. Credit will be ,tven carrier each
week.

4 120~2ED&amp;
FOR

ISS/10113
•Steal Belted WR -12
or
•Steal -belted Clientee
•Imports end small
domestic cere

IALANCED

No subScriptions by mall permlltPd In
areas whtre home carrier serviCE&gt; ls

available.

Mail 8uboerlptloM
l01kte Molp C.u•y

·

13 Weelts ... ... ............. .. .... .. .. .. .. . $17.29
26 W•elts ....... ............... ... ........ S34.06
12 Weelts ..... .........................•.. . 161!.!ill

OllllldeMol .. Countr

·

13 w.................................. ..... IJ8.20
26 w........:..............................I35.Jo
12 w....................................... $67.60

POMEROY
HOME
AND
AUTO
992;2094
POMEROY
MAIN

60D EAST
lUGIIMittT MOST CAIS .
114.50

SDVIIO IIIGS CO. 10 YIAIS

I~AKISIPICI
l.,

�'

Page-.4-The Daily Sentinel .

.. ·•. ..

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....

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...

-~

Pomeroy-Middktport; Ohio

~

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- ·t,

27,1987.

second hall. All 22 of Jenny
Mlller's.polnts were scored In the
first half.
Also leading Meigs wa~ Julie
Miller with 11 points while Missy
Woods came orr the bench lor 10
and Jennl Couch added nine.
Tammy Wright four polkts and
six assists while Jenny Miller
and Woods each had seven
rebounds. Johanna Shaw led
Belpre with 12 markers.
. Meigs, now 14-0 overall and
12.0 in the TVC; played without
the services of starter Jennl
Swartz, who was out with the.flu.
The Marauderettes made 31 of
68 from the field for 42 per cent
and six of 17 foul shots for 35 per
cent. They grabbed 36 rebounds
and had only 10 turnovers.
In the reserve game, the Little
Marauderettes continued their
winning ways of late with a 34-31
win to up their record to 9-5
overall and 7-5 in the conference.
himself player
.Jodt Tavlor's 11 potnts ted the

Rose

MHS reserves while Beth Ewing
added 12. Other Meigs scorers ·
Included' Nikki Whitlatch with
threeandAudraHoudasheltwlth
two. Jennifer Gerkin led Belpre
with 18.
Box score:
MEIGS (68) - Jennl Couch
4-1-9, Jenny Mlller 9-4-22, Julie
Mlller 5-1-11, Tammy Wright
2-0-4, Dee Henderson 1-0-2, Missy
Woods 5-0-10, SheU)iStobartO-i).O, .

•'

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r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;j
19 DAYS UNTIL
HISTORY BOOK
DEADLINE!

•'

618 E. MAIN ST.

H
.lA BLOCLQCW.
......
n,;

I

Opportunity
listings available
. I

THE INcOME l'AX PEOPlt , _

27 SYCAMORE ST.

· Pomeroy, Ohio
Gallipolia; Ohio
Phone 992-3796.
.Phone 446-0303
Open 9 A.M.-6 P.M. Wealulays. 9·6 Sat.

..

APp.()INTMENTS AVAILABlE

'insurance'
CINCINNATI (UPI)- Clncln·
nail Reds player-manager Pet(&gt;
Rose, baseball's career hit
leader with 4,256, says he views
hls 1987 playing s.tatus as "lnsu.. ranee" that he hopes his team
won't need.
Rose, who didn't play the final
seven weeks of last season, Isn't
on the winter players roster and
won't be eligible to play this year
until at least May 15.
Rose, who turns 46 on Aprll 14,
said he has no Idea at this time if
he·wlll activate himself May 15or
at any point during the coming
season. Although the 24-year
veteran hasn't hinted at retirement yet, he said he wants his
1987 team to do so well that he
isn't needed .
"Hopefully, there will be .
enough guys doing the job where
they won't need me," Rose said
Monday as the Reds launched
their annual week- long winter
publicity tour of the midwest.
"The last thing in the world I'd
like to do ls send a player back to
the minor leagues to activate
myself. But, I'm going to get
ready In spring train in~ cause
you never know what t e guys in ·
Triple-A ball are goln to do.
"And," added Ros "what
happens on May 14 If o of my
best pinch-hitters goes up to bat ,
breaks his wrist and no one ln
Triple-A Is doing the job? So,
you've got insurance (In Rose)
sitting .there. That's the way I
··

~;
'

;:~

; '
'.

.

..
WE'VE JUST REMODELED OUR STORE
AND WE'RE SO EXCITED ABOUT THE
CHANGES WE'VE SLASHED PRICES
TO GET YOU IN TO SEE IT.

'

SAY CIIUGE mCNOit is •• H II at ...... lht
..,. bl JsJ Pay-11 """·..,..,Inti Cloargt or
, ... llalt..c..l, Vha, ., Dhco- c.ri &lt;hartilll

i:.

Asked lf there was a chance he
; :; might do more as a player that
~ -~ just pinch-hit this year, Rose
·.···said, "I don't like to look that far
·Into the 'future. It' s not even on
•· my mind."
Rose has guided the Reds to
. back-to-hack second place fin-·
: · . lshes In the National League
::: West in his two full years as
. : manager, but was deeply d!sap, pointed his club didn't win the
· dlvls!on last year.
"I wish I could look Marge
(Reds' owner Marge Schott! in
the eye and promise 1\er we're
going to win the West this year."
said Rose. "But I can promise
her I'm going to be very disappointed if we don't win lt. This is
ihe best ieam I've b{'('n around
for awhile."

..'

Hurry in to catch the action! Ladders here,
workers there , .. and everywhere you look; savings,
savings, savings! Every item is tagged at inc·
redible reductions , .. Values for every room in
your home! We have to ·make room Right NOW·
and these prices reflect ill Hurry In NOW·
and sweep up .some fantastic furniture!!!

, The need· fpr the Meigs County Emergency Medical Service,
headquartered on Mulberry Heights, ls brought home in the
annual report which shows that in 1986 2,804 runs were made by
the various units of the service.
.
Calls made by squads include Pomeroy, 560; Racine, 324; _
Syracuse, 142: Rutland. 381; Tuppers Plains, 274, and transfer
units, 680. Djsregardlng the transfers, there were 2,124 calls
answered by lhe units with 1.684 patients being transported. Of
the total, 1,095went to Veterans Memorial Hospital; 332 to the
Ho~er Medlc~l Center; 73 to Ple~sant Valley Hospital and 182 to
other Institutions.
.
All vehicles, Including the transfers, were driven 91;789:2
miles during 1986, an average of 32.74 miles per call.

'

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Owners of stolen autos identified
. Owners of t~e stolen vehicles recovered by the Meigs County
Sheriff's Department have been Identified.
Two trucks 'recovered are owned by J.D. Drllllng Co. One of
the trucks was found Friday and the other on Saturday.
· A third truck reported stolen, owned by Ray Riggs' used car
lot in Chester, was found Friday, and a car taken from the
Kimes residence on Ohio 124 near Racine, was located near
Racine.

School subsidy payments issued
I

I
(

*******
ltDINETTES
AND

.'

lt SETS: For the
If-live today! 3, S, 7-Pi•tce(

:m;~:~2·9 s98 TO
Jt

Meigs County's three. local school districts received
$~57 , 115.09 as ~elr part of the January State School Foun!)atlon subsidy payrlien(s, according to State· Auditor Thomas E.
Ferguson.
Amounts received by the three districts after deductions for
employees and teachers' retlrment Include; Eastern Local, ·
$;121,060.68; Meigs Local, $314,349.76, and Southern Local,
$~21 , 104.65. In addition. the Meigs County Boar,d of Education
received a direct allotment of $28,983.79.

Ferry

Choo'' contemporary , trQdltiOI'IOI. or

I

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funding_&lt;_Co_nt_ln....,ued_fro_ni_P~ag:_e...;,l)_ _
·1

Jt Amemon. Auoried waod1, metal,, chromo, Jfo-

**
*If-

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SAVE '1021

SAVE 1122-'201

Traditional Sofa and lovMIIIt enhan&lt;e
your living room with sophisticated style.
In- vtlvtt 100"/o acryliC protected by
Stotchgard.
ly Sthweig« Industries

COFFEE &amp; END TAiLES

$88°

SAVE S3QO

-$898

~~***' .

**
•

998

li9ht wooch, daril linilhe1, Qlau, br~n .

Contemporary, farly AmtrKOn, any ll"'ot1fl
you deslrt, any tunctton you n"d!

~

list-*************

**

TABLES, WAU UNITS,
OCCASIONAL ACQNTS.
Charming miscellaneous!
,9;i~599 s33 TO 5

SAVE 13511
Famous AtiMsn

•,
:
•

lfIf-

round lamp
Sofa Table S198.00

J

:

!

Also on salr. Commode or
J

•.
'·
,

:

0 EA.
FROM
Cocktail or End Tablos-stril&lt;ingl

TWO PIECE SUITES FROM '499 .00

•!
~

'

,

S~EEP SOFAS

in twin,
f11ll, and queen sizes.
Assorted style1, covers
5
S69;·~im 5 388

~

;
'
•.
,
J
..

Tradll•oncl , C'onlempo,ory, MCI!Of'OI'
in He"ulon. """'''''· in ~lrtp~ . W~lid~.
dot,, pr•nli, w1th whd tupport ·mottrewe1.

~t·lo- - - - - - - - " "
~************'lilt
BEDDINc; BONANZA! Every ....

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.

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.
I
1111, firmneu, stye,

~

~1249 $798 ·• ~ ~.~all ~~6fa8moTuOsnc;n7:8 ·.

LAIGE SELEcnON
511 OUI SPECIAL
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19

1799

k~

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******************&amp;**********~~~~W~WW*** *
4 PC. SUITES FIOM 5299.00

. '

ICEBLER
IUSINESS SERVICE

, '

·lt """ium ...,,,"••dllexsprios~-.
lt :!.":' ,:"'.,::: ~'"U

Hurry . .. values this good
won't last lon~&gt;t.

.- ·. "
.'
•.

"-···
I

Only

6111. Main St.

FIOM

S322 5499

p...,oy, Oh. 45769

FIOST

Flit

· PHONE

614-992-7270

REFRIGERATORS I
FREEZERS
RADARANGES
DISHWASHERS
LAUNDRY

'

.~'

CAICOIDEI
VCI'S
COLOI TV'S

STEREO RACK SYTEMS
60 WAn -100 WATT
PRICED TO GO '
COMPLETE SYSTEM

VCR'S '
PORTABLE or
CONSOLE TV'S

INGELS Furn tu
MIDDLEPORT

' Retenilon progr~m report
In other business, the planning
commission received a report
from Ash, Meigs County Extenslon Agent John Rice and Kim
Shields, of the county developmen\ office, regarding business
retention and expansion in Meigs
County.

...

992, ·i

the , comniunlty. In general and
Nease did not have the help he
needed.
"There were a lot of people
spinning their wheels in the right
direction," saiH Gibbs, "but not
In unity. I don't know what, if
anything can be done at this
pollit, but I think lt . wlll be
something we look back on in six
mo~lhs and regret ."

two,' and that that number will
soon be cut to one, as papers for a

'

•
'

cha~ge

Cable c h a n n e l
(Continued from Page 1)
~ pa rticipant in state horseshoe
pitching events about the interest
of Middleport In hosting Ohio
Junior Horses hoe Pitching Tour·
naments In June and October
since the villa ge does have four
pltch!ng facilities at the Diles
Park.
Clatworlhy said the tourna·
ments would bring In from 40 to
50 famll!es. He said he has
referred· the matter to B!l!
Blowe1·, president of the Middle·
port Chamber of Commerce.
How ever, sever a I co uncil
members Indicated that they, are
certainly receptive to the communlty hosting such events.
Councilman Bob Gilmore In-

.
qui red as to the status of signs on
the Rout e 7 Middleport for
southbound traffic , noting the
turnoffs Into Middleport Mayor
Hoffman said that he has advised
1he Ohio Department of Health,
the Meigs County Connn!ssloners and the County Engineer Phil
Roberts of the request but has not
received an answer to his
communication.
Cou ncil discussed several
str{'('IS lights which are not
staying lighted and Mayor Hof·
fmun reported that power com·
pany workers ar·ema k!ngcorrectlons . Also attending the meeting
were Cler k-Treasurer Jon Buck
and Coun cil men Jack Satterlleld
and William Waiters.

Nursing Home.
Surviving hi addition to her
Charles Clinton Grim, 79, 2907 father are a daughter, :;andy
Washington Blvd., Belpre, died Mur rey , Nelsonv!lle; two sons,
Sunday at hOme.
Michael of Hockingport. and
Born In Meigs County on Sept. Jimmy,. Columbus; two grand·
19, 1907, he was a son of the hite children, Jelfrey Murray, CoDavid A. and Edith Barber lumbqs, , and Roxanne Murrey ,
Grim. He was a member of the Hockingport; a sister, Madeline
East Canaan Church and worked Greenll!af of Canton; five half·
for Pride Farms in Eel pre and as . sisters, Edna. Yeager, Canton;
custodian at the .Belpre High . Hazel Moore, Glenv!lle; Eileen
School.
.Laughlin, Sanford, Fla.; Emma
Surviving are his wife, Ber- Varner, Washington, W.Va.;
rilce: three sons, Charles C. Jr., Lena Kline, Parkersburg; a
Gainesville, Fla.; Raymond, Bel- half-brother, James Parsons,
pre, anmdRussell, Jacksonville, ' Parkersburg, and several nieces
Fla.; three daughters,· He~ · and nephews.
Beall, Hanoverton; Donna Mead,
Besides her mother, she was
Waco, Texas, and Phyllis Cline, preceded in death by two broth· Ohio, area weather s c e n e
Belpre; three brothers, Rodney, ers, Roy and John Yeager , two
South Central Ohio
Thursday through Saturday
·columbus: John T., Guysville, half-brothers, Lambert and Fred
Increasi ng cloudiness tonight ,
A chance of snow or rai n
wilh a chanc&lt;' of snow and a low Thursday , wllh snow or rain
andElberl,Belpre; .aslster,Opal Miller, and ·a half sister, Ruby
DeVore, Columbus. Also survlv- Miller.
bel ween 1; and 20. Becoming likely Fr iday, and a (' hance of
log are 12 grandchildren and 10 .
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
pa 1·tty cloudy Wednesda y, with snow flurries mainly in the
great-grandchildren.
Thursday at the White Funeral
highs bel ween :10 and :15.
northeastern part of the state on
Besides hls parents, he was Home in Coolville with Rev. Roy
The pi'Obability of preclplta· Saturday . Hi!(hs will be In the 30s
preceded In death by a brother, Deeter and Rev. Je(f Burdsal
lion is 30 percent ton!ghl and 20 Thursday and Friday and In the
five sisters, a grands9n, and a offlcatlng. Burial will be in
percent Wednesday.
20s Sa turd ay. Overnight lows will
great-great-granddaughter.
Stewart Cemetery at Hocking·
h4' In the 20 early Thursday,
Services will be held at 2:30 port. Friends may call at the
Winds will be from the soulhw · ra nging from 25 to 3:i Friday
p.m. Wednesday at the Leavitt funeral home from 6-8 p.m. rst at 10 to 15 mph tonight.
morning and between flvund 10
Funeral Home ln Belpre with Wednesday.
Ohio Extended Foret asl
l'ar ly Sa turd ay.
Pastor Walter Carney offlclat- . - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _ ; __ _ _:__ _ _ __
lng. Burial will be in Rockland
Cemetery. Friends may call at
the funeral home anytime after 2
p.m. Tuesday.

Goldie Alice Murrey

SALE PRICES 1001
THIU FE I. 1, 1187

Goldie Allee Muhey, 51, Hock·
trigport, died Tuesday morning
at the Camden-Clark Hospital in
Parkersburg, W.Va.
Mrs. Murrey was born May 7,
1935 at GhinvUle, W.Va., a
daughter of Asle Yeager and the
late Donna Yeakey Yeager, who
died In 1957. Shew as employed as
a nurses ' aide at the Arcadia

Property transfers
.

PIPER

William Allen Barnhart,
Brenda Barnhart to Jerry R.
Hubbard, Kathryn Hubbard, 20
A., Bedford.
VIllage of Pome~oy to Gladys
Gertrude Smith, Danny Zirkle,
Sue Ellen Zirkle, 0.262 A. Salls·
bury.
Gladys Gertrude Smith, Dan·
ny I. Zirkle, Sue Ellen Zirkle to
VIllage of Pomeroy, 0.280 A., Sal·
Is bury.
. Hazel A. Van Cooney to George
W. Kauff, Mary L. Kauff, pt. lot
49, Pomeroy village.
John J. Blake, Tamela S. Blake
to Lawrence Darst, 0.83 A., Rutland.

VINIUI

Veterans Memorial

IIOW 321

Monday Admissions - Howard Phillips, Rutland; Ada Grin·.
stead, New Haven, · W.Va.;
Evelyn Shuler, Middleport: Jeff
McKinney, Racine; Edna Leach,
Pomeroy : Karen Haines,
Syracuse. ,
Monday Discharges - GI'Over
Oiler, George Deem, Betty Wll·
Us, Josephine Shanabrook, Anita
Shepherd, Ernest Wood, Virgil
Collins.
p;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1

TOWELS

0
VICKS
tlllllll.

·-

~

Ill. IIIIlS

All
SAVE UP TO
'2.511 IY MAIL!
stE STillE Fll
DETAILS!!

FORMULA 44 I

1101¥4..
0111 llaM U.H

....

BUY 3

OllMCWI SJ.4t

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4 IZ. IIIII

FORMULA 44 II

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1101¥411

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CILOUSEPTIC
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IIOW2II
M llCIIIJt ll.H

Ill 32 OZ.

LISTER IIE ..._
.....

STAYING IN

49

TUNE IS·
~EDOLEO MAINT!NANCE AT IEGtJI.AR DMES

2 F. 1 DILII EILAIIE.IT SPECIAL
BUY OIIE 511 001.01 EIIWCEIIUT 110111 YOUt FootiTl IEGAnVE
RECEIWE 011£ FlU FIOII TIE WI£ llGAmE IUIIIII W II.JII

1211.

'II It IIIII. IPUY

DURITIOI

2..

ENGINE
TUNE-UP

'2195 •2495
'3195
«rtir*

-

SEISmiE EYES
SALliE SOLm•

__..__

IIOW 341

OTEITUS 12'S

IIOW2''

,.........

l&lt;r!indtf

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Price Includes: (For engineS with

IIOIIIM, IITIIA 1011'1)1(111, JOIOU, PUlED

dectlallc IgMJonl
• Install Mopar/Champlon
,~park plugs

.c•m•

UIUPUY

llCIIIAI. mt.llttllD,

EJ1U

IIOW111

·~~speed

• Set lining
• lnspe« emissionS contrc1 system
Standard ignition

UIE

~ate!' tllan 2-llbl carDuteiM.

Ill FIIILJ SIZE!

Whlctes equipped ....;m
-

stiahiiV hlgllel:
ttnllllOil.- ..... 11111-·

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CLOSE-IP u u.

COOPER
On*...,..........
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HOURI:

Mon~'

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21

- --- -- -

'•

•

The Daily Sentinei-Page-:-5

Charles C. Grim

..
'.

.

Area deaths

possible occupant are now l)elng
processed.
1
She also reported that appro- 1
val has been received for a grant
to purchase a van with a
wheelchair lift', however, $4,000
ln match money will be needed at
the local level. Thomas said
nearly $1,000oftheneeded match
has already been donated by
local churches and other
organizations.

To resubmit piiUis
And finally. Meigs County
Engineer Phil Roberts reported
that plans for the access road to
Carper's Nursery from U.S. 33
~
will have to be resubmitted to the
•
state, according to Information
• The R &amp; E program was to Roberts from Tom Hedrick, a
•, spearheaded In Meigs County in planning engineer with the Onto
Department or Transportatlon',s
" November of. 1985 by Rice.
• Statewide, the R &amp; E program District 10.
"We are essentially," said
\ is being recognized as the way of
Roberts,
" back to sq uare one."
' the future, as experts In developAlthough
ODOT now says they
• ment ~ealize that mQllt ne\'1 jobs
will
approve
construction of th&lt;&gt;
' come to communities through
expansion of already existing access to the nursery, "Including
a median crossover," Roberts
businesses.
I
says the plans have to be
Powell updated the group on resubmitted because It has been
,. the park district, stating that so long since they were first
' since defeat by voters in No- submitted. Federal concerns will
; vember of a proposed opera- also have to review th£&gt;plans, and
' tiona I levy, the district Is lnac- it 11'111 have to be determined If
• tive: except for activlly which Is Appalachian Regional Commls·
; continuing on a proposedstudyof slon funds are still available for
the project.
~ the Sh,ade River In Meigs County.
' Tom Closser and Rhonda 01, man, of Buckeye Hllls.-Hocklng Acquisition romplete
Valley Regional Development
,' District, briefed the group on an
INDIANAPOLIS (UP!) -The
; update which Is being made of Columbus, Ohio-based Bane One
• the county's 1984 Industrial Site · Corp. Monday signed and com' and 'Building Inventory, as well pleted an acquisition of Ameri, as other ·Buckeye Hills' can Fletcher Corp. that was
undertakings.
valued at $552 million and ranks
'
as the 101h-largest bank merger
In the nation. '
Prol"ani on schlclule
Sidney Edwards of Gallla·
Under the merger agreement,
Meigs Community Action which was an exchange of stock ·
' Agency reported that the second based on Bane One' a closing
: year of Meigs County's Housing price Monday, American
• Rehall pJ'OII'am Is on tchedule, Fletcher shareholders will re, with eppllcaltonl for rellab being · ceive 2.1!105 shares of Bane One
stock for each Fletcher share.
.: takell Cbrough Feb. 1.
.
,, Elelllor :J'homu, of the coun· The deal • valued atl552 million
• ty's council on aging, reporled based on Bane One's $26.25-per·
that apartment units at The share close on the New York
Maples are occupied except for Stock Exchange.

TO 888

4 Piece
SoHd Pint
Bedroom Sat
Early Indo·
con looutyl ~

DILEIIII,

I

'

EMS d~tails 1986 activity

I

And, the Reds cou ld try to get
even better through anoth~r
trade, general manager Blll
· • Bergesch Indicated.
t '
"Pete and I have talked about
: • · 11 and lf we feel we need to go for a
pitcher or anything else, we've
• · gotenoughtalentonthlsclubthat
I think we can go out and , get
whatever we havt&gt; to get ln the
way of a trade," said Bergesch.

you would care to
m•et a CPA and talk
ab41)ut what they can
for your company
call Ul. We WOIIId
happy to viait.wlth
no obligation to you.

, The MNgs County Development Office recently received an
Ohio Departltlentof Development Publlcatlon titled ''Interna·
tiona! Business Opportunities."
·
· The· CQntent of this publtcation Includes listings of foreign
companlfS searching for Ohio companies to export U.S. goods
and import foreign goods.
: This Information Is made available to local companies in
hopes of ~xpandlng their current markets. Leads on file at the
Meigs Co~nty Development Office include, but are not limited
to, requests for auto parts, Industrial supplies: engine parts,
tools, crop seed, . poultry, beef, fertilizer, shoes, mining
~ulpment., oil Industry accessories, agricultural parts, animal
fi:!ed and more.
It Is not n{'('essary that a business be involved In the
l!lanufacture of these products . These foreign companies are
I9Qklng for 1Ohio companies capable of supplying products to
them, either. as distributor or manufacturer.
Contact !he Meigs County Development Office for more
~etails, list 'of leads and U.S. contacts.
·

'

look at H.

"I think It's good to have
insurance In case you need It,"
said Rose. "If I can do the job
pinch-hitting - which I think I ·
can - It's something to fall back
on if we need It. But, hopefully we
won't need 11 because we don't
want anybody to get injured or to
have an off. year."

' Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports five calls
Monday.
· .
· Syr4cuse at 2:33a.m. to Spring Avenue for Christy Fellure to
Holze~ Medical Center; Rutland at 9:56a.m. to Depot Street for
Evelyn Shul.e r to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport at
1:33 plm. to Dr. Da~o's office for Rosalinda Rogue who was
treat~ but .not transported; Pomeroy at 7:58 .p.m. to Union
-"venuf Jor Edna Leach to Veterans Memorial Hlispltal;
Tuppe~s 'Pialns at 9:56 p.m. to the Moreland Addition for Jane
Radc.ll(f who refused treatment.
I

IT'S AVAILABLE
WHETHER WE PREPARE YOUR RETURN OR NOT.

FOR INFORMATION CALL
992-3810 OR
992-2264

ers

'

'.

Bl k k
ed
At H&amp;R . oc we now you'rt concern
tax refotm will affect you. Our new Tax
IFoJcecas.ter"' service provides a written
how you d come out under the
so you'll know whether your tax
would go up or down.

..

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

EMS units answer five calls

•'

wendy, Fry 3-0-6, Beth. Ewing
2-0-4, Jodi Taylpr 0-0-0. TOTAUi
31-6·68.
BELPRE (2)) - Johanna
Shaw 4-4-12, Kim Griffith 3-0.6,
• Jenny Delong 1-0-2, Penny Riffle
0-1-1, Tracey Gerkin 0-0-0. TOTAUi !1-~21. .
By quarters:
Meigs .......... 22 20 16 10 - 68
Belpre ......... 4 4 7 6- 21
Reserves- Meigs 34, Belpre31

~

'

Local Briefs:--

....

'

BELPRE - Jenny Miller
ripped In 22 points in leading the
undefeated and 9th ranked (AP)
Meigs Marauderettes to a onesided 68-21 win over Belpre In
girls cage action here Monday .
Coach Ron Logan's crew could
all but wrap up the TVC crown
this Thursday when they host the
strong Alexander Lady Spartans
at Larry Morrison gym. Meigs
has a two-game lead over both
Alexander and Federal-Hocking.
A win over the Alexander five,
which Meigs defeated earlier
37-36 on Julie Miller's field goal
with three seconds remaining,
would all but eliminate the Lady
Spartans.
Agalnsi Belpre, · the Mar auderettes were up 42-8 at the half
and Coach Logan benched .his
starters for practically the entire
"d
con~n

-·

ru.clliy. Jan!Jarv 21. 1987

Meigs girls roll .over hapless Belpre
.

• .'

1

IIIZ.

DOWIJ·
FAUll

""" r- •o•..,...
....,, ........

�•
.'

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

':

".

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

~

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''

Tuesday, January 27, 1987
Tuesclay. January 27, 1987

For people who like to·smoke•••

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

w _oking to save...

Beat of the bend
By BOB HOEFLICII
· SenUnel Stall Wrllfr
Many of you will remember
Bess Webster,
Tuppers , Plains
~ you know, the
Webster Apple
Orchards.
Mrs. Webster,
who Is 92, has
bee n · mov e d
from the Holzer Medical Center
to the Pinecrest Nursing Center,
555 Jackson Pike, Gallipolis. She
would love to hear fro m her
Meigs Coupty friends. By the
way, a~ corilin g to present pians,
Mrs. Webster will be at the
center for a few weeks.
Anyone need an old picture.
Dorothy _J enkins ha s a photo of
the eighth grade at Middleport,
class of 1914, and Is willing to give
it to anyone who has a special
interest in it. You can give
Dorothy a ring.
I'll bet you thought you won a
door prize at the recent open
hou se held In conjunction with
the new emergency facilities
didn't you? Well - I hate to tell
you, 'but yo~ didn't. The winners

are Helen Johnson of Mason, year you have the opportunity to
W.Va., and Sherrie Might of
run for one of the town offices.
Pomeroy. Continuity of Care .
The Meigs Board of Elections
provided the prizes for the highly
reports that very few petitions
successful open house,
have gone out for the primary
elections1 n the two towns Indica! ·
Got youf Golden Buckeye Card lng that a lot of people apparenliy
yet?
aren't gung ho to fill the spols.
If you eligible you can pick up
Deadline for filing petitions of
an application at the Pomeroy candidacy with the boa rd of
Library or the Meigs . Senior elections Is 4 p.m. on FeQ. 19 and
Citizens Center. On top of that, both parties will nominate t~eir
Edith Reiser wmbe at the Racine candida tes to run In the fall ~
Department Slore ~weathering that is, if there are enough
permitting ~ from 10 a.m. to 2 candidates when the deadl ine
p.m . Friday so If you live up that rolls around.
way, you might find it easier to
In Middleport a nd Pomeroy,
stop by there. You must have candidates tor mayor and two
proof of your age ~or proof of a candidates for village council
disability If you're getting on the will be nomlna.ted by each party.
basis of that.
Also In both towns, candidates
will be nominat ed to run for
On behalf of Bank One em- clerk-treasurer. Middleport will
ployees , Marlyn Wilcox extends elect two members to the town 's
a big thanks to Meigs Countians board of public affairs and
for their support In the bank' s Pomeroy will elect one member
"coats (or kids" program. Marto its board in the primary
lyn reports that the program to elections .
get warm coats for Meigs kids
this winter was highly successful
Someone said th at the clouds In
-and that, of course, Is because your life, sometimes bring showof you, you and you!
ers of blessings. I'd like to believe
that, wouldn 't you? Do keep
If you're a resident of Poineroy
smiling.
or Middleport, don ' t forget this
I

MIDDLEPORT
OAPSE
meeting Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., at
Mei gs Junior High School.
CHESTER ~ Shade River
Lodge 453, Ches ter, will hold
practice Tu esday, 7 p.m. A
clean-up meeting will be held
Thursday, 7 p.m. Practice will
also follow the clean-up .

be by Joan Stewart on making
containers from junk.
POMEROY ~ Wildwood
Garden Club meets Wednesday,
7:30 p.m .. at the home of Sandi
Hawley.
THURSDAY
MIDDLEPORT ~ Women's
Association of the Middleport
First Presbyterian Church will
meet at 7:30 Thursday night at
the church. Group II will have the
program, and Group I members
will be hostesses.

Trustees slate meetings
POINT ROCK ~ Columbia
Township TruslC'es will hold their
regular meetings the first Mon day of each month, 7:30p.m .. al
the fire station.
Weekend meeling
RUTLAND~AwC'ekend meeting wlil be held Friday through
Sunday, 7 p.m. each evening, at
the Rutland Bible Methodist
Church. Rev. Coy McGinnis from
Por ts mouth will preach and sing
each night.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF PRIVATE
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
On' the lOth day of January, 1987, at 10:00 A.M.

Public Notice
a post in the fence at the
southe11terly corner of the
right· Of'Way
along · the
southerly side of the Charles
C. Lewis and Margaret Ella
Lewis propeny deacrlbed in

Douglas W. Little, E~eecutor
of the Ettate of Margaret
Elle lewis, deceased. as re- ·oaed Book .. ... . Pogo .....
corded in Case No. 24,961 , Meigs County Dud recorda ;
of the Meigs County Probate thence in a waaterly dirac·
Court, will offer for 11le at tion parallel with the south·
the offices of Porter, little, erly line of the lewia pro, Shaau &amp; Freckor, 211 -213 poertv. 1 80 feet, more or
Ealt Second St., Pomeroy , len, to a post and an iron
Ohio 46769, tho following pin; thence in a aoutharly dideacrib8d real eltate be· rection following the fence.
longing to tho lata Margaret 140 feet to a post and en
El!O Lowia, located at39151 iron pin; thence in an eat·
Bradbury Road. Middleport, terlv direction. 150 teet to a
post and an iron pin at the
Maigo County, Ohio:
PARCEll : Situated in the· right -of-way of the public
County of Meigs, in the road; thence northerly elong
State of Ohio and in the the fence parallel wlth 1seld
Township of Sali,sbury and road leedino from Rutlend to
bounded end described as Middtapon, 140 fHI to the
place of beginning, contain·
follows :
Situete in ·100 acre lata ing one-half acre, mora ar
No. 308 and 307 and in lot lelt.
Being part of the 18-ecra
No. 21 of Penny 's Survey
and. deacribad 11 follows : tract of real 11tate deiCribed
Beginning on Ella Hyaell's in deed to Stanley H. Do..
north line at the touth·•••• and Sharon L Doaa, recorner of Griff Ruuell '1 lot; corded in Volume 234 , Page
thence south 22 degrees 46' •17, Meigs County Deed rt·
E. 71 feet along Ella Hyaell's cordt ,
The Gran.tora further quit·
north line to a stake; thence
claim
to the Grenteas, any
north 8~ degree• 30' E. 153
right.
title and intarett
feet to' a stake on the aouth
side of the Bradbury and which they mey have to the
Rutland Road; thence N. 27

dagre01 30' w. 109'h fHt
along the oouth lido of told
Road: thance S. 75 degrees
w. 136 foot to the .place
of begi"nlng, containing
26 / 100 of an acre, more or

1,. ••.

Baing the .. me raalettate

conveyed by Margaret Elle

Hyull, tingle, . to Clair F.
Ruuell and Wende Ru..all.

by dead dated June 10,
1 963 and recorded In Vol.

174. Pill• 387 of the ~od
Recorda of Melgo County.
Ohio.
Refere.:tce Deed : Volume

174, Page . 849, Malgo
County Deed Recorda .

I

I

I

I

Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CALLS

1-14-1 mo.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
RfBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND
190 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-9949

Bob Barton, Owntr
12-30-86-1 mo.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYlVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

We Heo Af•ll Tlt11t
Shop T11hlelu
011 Oalt
RIDENOUR

. TV &amp; APPLIANCE

PARCEL .2: Sltuotad In
tho · Townalolp . of Salio·
bury, County of Molgo, ond
SlOtt of Ohio: Being In Soctlono 24 and 30, Range 13,
and In lot 307. ·

B~innlng at an Iron pin If,

SMALL

WANT ADS
PAD&lt;
ABii PlKHI

f \HI'

CALL 992-7403 Apt

&amp;

()\VI'S

lid VI(

;.....;.-"-"--'--'"--1''

PHONE
992-2156
Or llite OIJIIW Sentiwel Clm•l itd Dtpl.

Public Notice
Reference Deed : Volume

237. Page 196, ond Volume
264. Page 663, Meigo
County Dead Recorda. ·
Subject to alllea111, aate·
menta •nd rights of way of
racord.
The minimum acceptable

bid will be $9500.00. Termo

of ule : CASH on delivery of
deed. Subject to accrued
real estell taxet for the year
1987. The Executor rfll·
orval the rigM to rajecl any
and all bids.
Douglas W. Little,
E~etcutor of the Ettate of
Margeret Ella lewia, dec .

11121. 27, 2tc

PUBLIC NOTICE
FDIC PUBLICATION
The City loen Bank. Lima.

Ohio, propo~es to1file 1n application with the Federal

tJfl

llliHIId\jP &lt;111!\ h11~,j

iol.'\'

tw~ ...

!I o·&lt;~•l ""' t111h; 1p py
df\d dnll t knnw wh1ch
wnv 111 111111. CIH!ll! !1\ fo r
ad v1rr~

OrH· \.'IS

Wily

We~!

Umon, hlhr n•
Ph . 194- 7848
$5 OFF Woth Th" Ad

301

I 26 I mo.

46769.

Pomeroy .

Also Trantllllttlon

YOUNG'S

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addona and remodeling
- Routing and guner worll

BOGGS

work

(Free Estimates)

SALES &amp; SERVICE

V. C. YOUNG In
~2-6215

or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15-'86-tc
• ~ -~,;.;::.;::.::..;;:_j

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
49135 St. Rt. 124

F~r111

Equipment ·
Paris &amp; Se rvlee
J&amp;L BLOWN .

INSULATION
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

Models
24 HR. SERVICE
1-12-1 ....

New Locarion:
161 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
' IUSINESS PHONE

lbUI 992·6550

ONLY

25(

EACH

USES FOR ALUfttNUM SIIETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
,MAKING HAMMERED LAW SHADES. '
CAN ·BE PURCHASED DAlY AT Ttl
DAILY SENTihiL TIL 3 ¥.M.

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

RESIDENCE PHONE

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

f•UJ 992-7754
11211t!n

New Homes Built

Ohio

Anv person wishing to
comment on this eppllcation
may file his or her comments
in writing with the regional
director of the Federal DePOiit lnsur.nce Corporation , •t it1 regional of-

plea can be obtained from

until

12

Rutland, Ohio
ill tho

Rutland American
legion luilding
AUCnDNEEI: Lon Neal

PIZZAS, SUBS
PIZZA BREAD

1· 2· ' 17· 1 mo.

RADIATOR

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

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13·110

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10·1·1fc

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding.
!All makea &amp; modela)

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756
John K. Bentz
Owner/Mechanlr

1-2·'17-l..,,

IIII I)!!'

CJ Co~uterized Hearine Air Selectioo

-a:z Swim Molds • lntetpretinc SetVices
.

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
::r:: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

eof .

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

Mary Hobstener, Clerk
Board of Meigs County
Commi11ionera

I· tl lfn

111 20, 27 2te

•

Public Notice

SHAIPENING
SEIVICE
Circular Saw•

Saw Chain

Planer nlvea

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Janueoy 6, 1987, in the
Meigs County Probate Court,
ColO No. 25394, John David
Edwards, 100 Union Avenue,

Pomeroy. Ohio 45789, waa
appointed becu1or of the H ·
tate ol Vemard David Ed·
warda. deceaHd, 'lato of 100

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY
•All Typn of

Drill Bitt

E~ecaveting

Knives
Chi•• I•

•Landaciplng

GRAVELY ·

•Sawage Sy11amo

TIACTOR SALES

•Baaemenla

204 Condor II.

•Water &amp; Gas llne1
•Water Wetl Drilling

, • ..,.,,,, Dflio

• Trucking

PH. 992-2975

1-15-'87·1 mo.

Call: 742·2407

1· 16-'87·1 mo.

ICUT OUT fOI FUTUII USEI

J.R.'s REPAIRS

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

TV s, Antennas

985-3561
All Mtku
•W11her1 •DIIhWIIhlrt
•R•ngea
•Refrlgeratou
•Drvar.a •Fratzers

Satellite Salts
Installation

Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614-843-5248
RfASONUU • REUAilE

PARTS end SERVICE

8-20-'16 tfn

4·!J·ttc

TI

Halp Wanted

An niHJ t11:1: 1111: nl ~
3 Announcement•

EARN EXTRA CASH

BECOME A DAILY SENTINEL
CARRIER. ROUTES AVAILABLE.
·sYRACUSE AND MIDDLEPORT
MUST BE AT LEAST 11 YEARS OLD

614-367-7101

CALl 992-2156

booking EIUU. Form,
Hou .. Saloo fO&lt; Spring

THE DAILY SENTINEL

NOTE: Wo oro now

4 P.M. 'Til 11 P.M.
Sunday thru Thursday
Friday &amp; Saturday
4 P.M. 'Til 1:30 A.M.

Ono now 1986 or I 987

SPECIAL

la'9l Trucldoed of
Nothing But Orocorl01
Hundredt of ltem1 Ia
Choo.. From ~ Don't
Mitlllll
liN OATE MERCHANDISE!
LOCATIO at_

No Sunday Calls

Model Tractor
Bid specification• may be
picked up at the Meiga
County Engineer' a Office&lt;or
the Melg1 Courlty Commiasioner• Office.
The Meigs County Com ·
mlnionars maV accept the
lowest bid, or aehtct the batt
b id for lhft intended purpose. and reserve the right
to accept or reject any or all
bidt and / or any part ther·

CHECK THE

GROCERY AUcnOII
JAN. 31, 1917
Fll. NilE 7:00 PM

PH. 992-2228

1-19-'87-1 mo.

o'clock {noon), February 4,
1987. The bids will then be
opened at 1 o'clock p .m . on
·Feb. 4, 1987 and read &amp;loud
for the purchase of ;

w•

23X30X007

•lnsuladon
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Aepl acement Windqws
•New Roofing

"FlEE ESTIMATES"

45769 ,

222 E. Main, Pomeroy

1'-";.'

949-3088 Bus.
949·2606 Home
All Makes &amp;

Ohio

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

1-3-'86 tfc

NOTICE OF
111 20, 27, 2tc
APPOINTMENT OF
Union Avenue, Pomeroy, OhkJ
46769.
FIDUCIARY
Public Notice
Robert E. Buck,
On Januory 6, 1987, in the ) ~-------­
Probete Judge
Meigs County ~· Court,
PUBLIC NOTICE
lena K. Nenelroad, Clerk
Ce11 No. 25395. John
Cherloo Handloy, 4804 Cham- Notlc~ lo Equipment Deal- (11 13, 2!1, 27 Jtc
blee-DunwOody Road, At- ers:
In accordance with seclanta. Georgia 30338,
appointed Executof of the ntote tion 307.86 ofthe Ohio Re.'
of Hottn l. HandJeo(."dect-. vind Code. Holed bido wtll
late of 207 Mulbeny Avenue. be received by the Board of
Meigs County CommilllonP"'"""'Y. OH. 45769.
•
Robert E. Buck ,
8
Public Sale
Probate Ju~ge
Lena K. NetMiroed, Clerk
&amp; Auction
11113, 20. 27ltc

SI~E

Authoritod John D11ro,
New Hollonol, lush Hog
Form Equipment
haler

PH. 949-280 I
or 949·2860

the regional office.

"FOR SALE

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVIllE, OHIO

laclno, Ohio 45771

•

ow Open

'·

- Concrete work
- Plumbin g and electrical

,
ll

Open Enrollment
Thru Tho Year
OPEN TUEIDA Y,
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
9 AM to 11 :30 AM and
12:30 PM to 3 PM
Call Adminislrotor l!lrs.
Shirin. J. Nuggud. I!IEd.
1-7-' 87-1 mo.

6-17 -tfc

era, Court House. Pomeroy,

procesaing of the applic:zation h11 bHn completed.
Processing will be completed no earlier then the
Public Notice
21st day following either the
date of the Ia at required pub~
NOTICE OF
licatlon or tha dale of receipt
APPOINTMENT OF
of the application by the
FtOUCIARY
FDIC . whichever it later.
On January 9, 1987, in the The period may be extended
Meiga County Probate Court. by the regional director for ·
C11e No. 26398. Frances l. good cauae. Thft non·conflDavis, 550 RutHII Street. dential portion of the appll ~
Middleport, Ohio 467&amp;0, Wll I Cation file ltaveileble for lnappointed E~eecutrix of the 81· opoctlon within one day lottate of Harold Henrichlon. de- lowing the request for such
ceaHd, late of 440 Ru-1 tilt. It may be inapected In
Street. Middleport, Ohio the CorPoration'• regional
4676D.
pffice during ragular butiRobort E. Buck. ness hours . Photocopiaa of
Probate Judge information in the non -conlena K. Nauelroad , Clerk fiduntial portion of the appli(1 113, 20. 27 3tc
cation file will be mede available upon request . A schedule of chargaa for auch co-

ALUMINUM SHEETS

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Ohio

fice at One Nationwide
Pla1•. Suita 2600, Colum·
buo, Ohio 43215, bafore

Public Notice

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

"Free Estimatea"

46769 to 238 Eaat Main

Street ,

Roger Hysell
Garage

Public Notice

tion to relocate Itt City Loan
Bank, from 118 East Main

Pomeroy ,

Fa&lt; lory Choice
12 Gauge lholg,.,s Only
10-8-lfn

FOR CHILDR EN 3 TO 6
YEARS OF AGE

t wrl\um

V II HI' VILI Ou~rl' I~ ;J h•lfllr

Deposit lnaurance Corpora Street,

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

fu

I'

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Blll1 Here

Public Notice

Bashan Building

ADVISOR

pH~s•~nt

Tt ·lls p;lsl

We Cany Fishing Supplies

right-of-way which 1111 bet·

ween the property above described and the adjacent real
eatate now ownlld by the
Granttts.

PALM RUDER

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES
TUNEUPS Ia TRANSMISSIONS

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

LADY RACHELS

' 4/ 1/ lln

Automotive R•pair
&amp; Service

GUN SHOOT

4-16 .' 86 tin

CHE5TER-9tS-3307

1·1.3·'11· 1 "''·

IJ I Court St ., Pomt~ay. Oh io t S7U

.

RUSS MOORE
992-2526

614-992-3023
SERVICES BEGIN
David Canfield, evangelist, .
will speak at revival services
to be held at the Pomeroy
Church of the Nazarene, 198
Mulberry Ave., Friday
through Sunday. Services will
he at 7 p.m. each evening and
Canfield will also speak at lhe
10:30 a.m . und 6 p.m. Sunday
services.

Middleport, Ohio

PH. 1304) 8t2-2220

OFFERS ENRICHING
LEARNING E)(PERIENCES

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL

__________

The Daily Sentinel

fop monty for 1om1 modtlt of
Zenith. Philco, Atwotir Ment.

CUSTOM BYilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

.. H. 949-2801
or 949-2860

MILlS ELECTRIC

- - -

. Any lrond Namo... lought
hfor• 1940

· GINGERBREAD
HOUSE
PRE·SCHOOL
(6141 992-7328

Think right, live healthy

. .&amp;..... -

OLD IADIOS WANTED-

"At Reasonable Prices"

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

The NIH scientists told the
magazine th eir llndings help
expl ain why people wilh a
positive outlook tend to get better
sooner.
" The more I look, the more I'm
co nvinced that emolions are
running the show," NIH neuroscientist Candace Perf. said.
A separate study at George ·
Washington University found
that thymosins, hormones that
strengthen the body's immune
system, also appear to ~a u se
aggress ion.

WANTEDs

BISSELL
BUILDERS

HOURSo Tuo.-Wod..fri.
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday.-1 p.m.·7 p.m.
ly Chanco at Appointmonl

St. Rt. ll, Pomoroy, OH.

------------------------------------j

'

RIVERINE Alt'nGUES
112 4 East Main St.
Pomeroy

:mf~Mg~:~E:~l~~ICE

.

SURGEON GENE-RAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women . May Result 1n Fetal
·Injury, Premat~re Birth, And Low Birth Weight.

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL

WEDNESDAY
RUTLAND
Rutland · Family night
RUTLAND ~ Rutland FreeFriendly Gardeners meets Wed·
will
Baptist Church Is hav in g
nesday. 7:30p.m., at the home of
family
night on Feb. 1 at 7 p.m .
Margie Davis. The program will

By United Press International
NEW YORK (UP!) ~ Doctors
studying links. between emotion
and health are finding · new
ev idence that positive thinking
helps ward off sickness and that
aggressive people tend to be
especially resistent to dis ease.
Recent studies at the National
Institutes of Health Indicate
' positive thoughts help the brain
produce higher levels of chemicals called neuropeptides, which
bolster di sease-fi ghting cells
called macraphages, Discover
magazin e reported.

- 7·

Business Services

Calendar/ happenings
TUESDAY
CHESHIRE ~ Cheshire chapter OES meets Tuesday , 7:30
p.m.

The Daily Sentinei-P

~-------------------

Rtclne Qyn &amp;hoolsponaortd by ..
A• cineGun Club. El!'etv Sunday,
b...lnnlng •t 1:00 p,m, F•ctory •
Choke. 12 Qutga •tlotgun 1 ,

Pt.Mo ln•on• forHglnn ttt ..C;ii
for 1ppoln1ment. Ttught by ·~
college graduate , 114,·1•&amp;· "
3060.
-::--~:-:-----::-- ·

·-

New Art CllttM. Tuttd-, lnd
Thurad"' for JdyiU •nd Sa•ur·
day tor und• ttp 1t. CAM
114·841·3010 tor mort lntor.
mttlon . Gutrtn1eed , you'll

learn.

�•
Page-S- The Daily Sentinel
3

An nouncuments

LAFF-A-DAY

44

Prec10u~ Memorial Stud•o. Speclahzetm portraita Quality work
guarnt6ftd Call 614 -949-3080
fOJ appointmtrll. Reatonable
prices

4

•

51

Apartment
for Rent ·

Furnlthltd apt. 919 Seoond
O.llipollt. f1 60, Utilities pd.
Single mila, lh1re beth 448·
441 8 efter ?pm

Giveaway

D~tlu)lt downtown IPII'tment·
newty, redecoreted 2 bdr . ept.
whh 11.111 lnaul~ion, complete

~upp•••· Blue Healer &amp; Aualfal •an Shepherd !cattle dogs) 3
male, 1 female. 9 wQ. old. Call

kltc;han, wathtr·dryer, eir cond.
tundeck Cell 614·448-4383·
deya, 814·446· 0139 evening•
&amp; WMictndl .

Puppies- 9 weekt o ld. 1;, Collie,
1
A German Shepherd. Call614 -

2 room, furnithed, upt•eirt 1pt.
dean, no pet1. Adults. UUiitiet
fumithed. Rat. &amp; dap . required.
Clll614· 448-1519.

614-246-5002.

448-6665 anytime

Have _ol~ newtpa pen. Anyone

Modern 1 bedroom eplrtment.
Call 814· 446-0390

who ts mteralted '" recycling
them may call 6:14 -245 ,5425
One yellow and white adult

f8mtle cat. Two tabby luttens.
Call 446-2168
Small breed puppi ea, 6 wk s old
Caii614-38B-8180.
Pair

of Albino gerbals

Call

614-446-1364.
Detperate to give away ca ta and
kitten • 814 985-3884

6

lost and Found

lost 1n Cora Mill area-One ligh t
colored female Cocker Span•el
One female puppy. Black Lab
mi)l, Call aftar 7. 614· 379 ·
2128.

·-- - - -

lost · ltght tan male lhaso apao
V1c . 2nd Ave .. !'ina Brown
collar &amp; flea collar 12 yeau old
Children'&amp; pe1 na m e lenny .
Plane call 614-446-1-671 or
446 2695 .

l ·t1

&amp;

"James - since we've had
that remote control, ·do you
realize we've been more
remote than ever?"

Oakwood -'Pta. Modern 1 bdr.
lpt. Security depoth. rlfertnca.
r-4o pet1. Single per.orr'pr•
ferred . located between Galli·
polls &amp; Holzer. C1ll 814-448·
20&amp;5 after 8 PM.
Just built 2 bdr . duplu .
Equipped kitchen. Extr1 nice.
Security dapoalt &amp; reference
required No peta Call81 4· 446·
1260.
2 BR ; 11 Court St ., Carpeted,
Kitchen fum . f360 /P~onth plu 1
utillllet. Depoth Cll/814· 446·
4928.

~;:;~~;;:~~;;~;:~~~~~~~~~~1:Fu~•~nh;s~h~ed~.:N~e~w~ly~d~e~co;oa~t~ed~
.::;1
115
Schools
32' Mobil~ Homes
lerae encloted porch
I

.:ruasclay, January 27, 1987

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Household Goods

nstruction

for Sale

Retrain Now. Southeattern But·
inesa College. Call 814-446·
4367.

1983, 14x70 tratler, call after
6:00. 304-773-5963.

1B Wanted to Do

1972 Community 12)162. 2
b,edroom, partially furn iah_ad . 2
a1r conditiont, awning. N1ce &amp;
Clean, 301l· 676-71569 .

lo1t: 3 doga, 1 Doberman, 1

2 bedroom 1pta .. New Haven.
Also commercill tpece tuitable
for aerobics, ttnning, erath. Call
304-882· 3681 Of 814· 9927481
2 bedroom r1ver view apartment.
Equipped kitchen, trath pickup
Ideal for 2 partltt to share
e111pences Call 614-992-6539.

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®tlr Lllrrr Wright

71

Mollottan Furniture. Rt. 1 r-4orttt.
Gallipollt. OH PH . 614· 446·
7444. Why pay more7 Chltdl us
out tor low pricet on furniture &amp;
appliance• 6 plec;a wood living
room group, 1399.
.

Sofat and 'chlirt priced from
1395 to e99S. Tabl• 850 and
up to 112Sr Hid•• ·bedt *390
to 1695. Reclinert t22&amp; to
S3?6. Lampa 128 to 1126.
Oinettea t109 -.Jd up to 1496.
Wood teble w -6 chaifl 1285 to
17915. Detk $100 up to U71 .
Hutchea •400 end up. Bunk
bedt complete W·mattretaet
$296 end up to U91 . Baby bed&amp;
S110&amp;t176. MattrelleJorbo)l
lpringt full or twln 163 , firm
873. end 183. Queen satt 1226.
King t350. 4 drawer cheat 186.
Drnsltl'a 189. Gun cablnata 8.
10, 12gun. Gltorelectricrange
8375 . B1by mattreun •36 6:
845 . Bed framn UO. 830 •
king fr1me t&amp;O. Good aelactln
of bedroom auhet. metal ca·

Misc . Merchandise

Call 614 -742 2788, Chr•ny

Television
Viewing

Autos for Sale

Trucks for Sale

8:00

8:06
8:30

MY FRIEND WM ON VACATION
DOWN HERE. TilE LAIJT I HEARD,
HE: WAIJ GONNA TAKE A CI~IME
.
ON THE PINTA .

GMc

~-~·:"'::'•::-:· :~======:;:==========~
55

Building Supplies

61 Farm Equipment

Callahan'• Used TifB Shcp Over
1.000 lire1. IIZ8112, 13, 14, 15.
16 , 16 6 . 8 miles out At. 218 .
Cell 614 ·268-8251

Building Matenels
,
Block, brick, 1ewer pipes, win·
dowt, lintale. etc. Cleude Win·
tara, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·
246-6121 .

Plasti c cistern state approved,
plastic septic tanks, plaatic
culverts. metal culvert•. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jack·
son, Oh. 614·288 -6930

Concrete blockt all ilzet yerd or
delivery Muon aand. Qallipolit
Blocll Co.. 123'1.1 Plna St. ,
Gellipolit, Ohio Cell 614 -441·
2783.

1030 Cate di"el with cab, 6
bottom plpws. t49150. 4 row AC
no till planter, •1500. 12 foot
wt.eel dlac, e600. :.:1600 Ford
tractor, low hra with 616 lilt
model Ford mowing mechina.
e&amp;450 No. 3 MF blilor. se&amp;o.
Pull type reke. 1475. Call
1-286·5622 .

dump truck. Cal( '
.

Cub tractor, flail mower, plow.
grader blade. Call 814· 3792639.

.,

Olympic weights &amp; bar, deluxe
bench. S326 . RedhawkAugar. 1
of 5000 81 000 or trade tor car
Call 614· 446· 2469.

Frnoncral

8:36
7:00

..

19791 / 2 ton 4114Chevy.1973
3• ton Crew Ceb Chevy, 1976 ...
Chevy BelAir. C•ll 614-2415- '
9241.
1974 88 pauenger IC:hool bus.
Exc. Cond. Auto. trans., whh all
seats. 81600, 080 Call 614·
379-2288.

Vans

8o 4

78 Ford Cunom van. ex. cond.
Call 814-.4 46-8201

min,

crz

FRANK AND ERNEST·

7:05
7:30

TH~~:- ~~ '~HAve5"

AN{) THt?F2f: AflE

"HAve

..

Employrnent
Ser vrces

:r~M

A '•CAN'r fiND':'

to Simon for help when he

EEK &amp; MEEK

WV.S,
M££1&lt;. ...

OCf:l)

rrve; DECIDED TO
STOP BEINe A BUL..L.Y.'

FUNNY. .. I THOI-EiHT THIO:RE'D
8E A CRASH CF THLJNDER.
OR SOME'THINIS-.

l o, . l

BARNEY

wow..

WHY DO YOU WANT
TO GO SEE' JAME.Y'S
OL' TIRE 5WIN6 ?

AN' WITtl A WtliTE'
SIDEWALL·

c.,

........

' .

'•

--

~------~-----

....

btic'"

tus

scaence

teacher of being a Russian
spy . (60 min.l
[D Nova: Children of Eve
(CCI Recent controversie s
concerning evolution are
explored. (60 min.l
@ MOYIE: 'Topper'
8:05 ([) NBA Bnkllbell: Philo·
delphia 78ora at Now York
Knlckal2 hrs .. 15 min .l
8:30 (]) flJ (]) Growing Paino
(CCI Jason tries to cheer
up e dejected Carol after
her boyfriend doesn 't ask
her-to the winter formal.
9:00 . . (I) (]) flJ ([) ® Cll lW
IBi Sllte of tho Union AdRo•
dreao/Democrlllc
ponte l ive.
(]) 700 Club
(!) College Buktlbell: VIIrenovo at St. Johns(2 hrs.l
Live. ·
(I) VIctory II Sea
[D Frorntlne: Rtal Stuff
Host Judy Woodruff ex·
pi ores NASA's shuttle pro·
gram through the eyes of
the astronauu. (60 m;n.l
9:30 (I) MOVIE: 'Tht LongeOI
Hundred Miltt'
10:00 (j] In tho flee of Terror·
lam: Incident In tho Midi·
terranean Panelists discuss a fictional hijacking .
(jJ) Nowa
10:15 (]) fll ·(]) Jack and Mlko
(CCI Ben's enthuaium at
having a comedy group in
h1s restaurant fades when
one of the comics displays
a cocaine habit. (RI .
10:20 1IJ MOVIE' 'YankH Doodle
Dendy' Colorized Version.
10:30 (]) Colobrlty Cholo
f,l (l) INN Nowt
(fJJ Nowawatch
11:00 D CI1 CIJ Ill ([) llJ 111 1)]1
IBi NtWI
(]) Hordcnllt end McCor·
. mlck
Ill inside tho PGA Tour (60

$

TALKIN6 TO TH IS
GIRL SEE .. IT'S DURING
LUNCH ' PERIOD...

l n -."

Complete the chuckle quoted
by Idling in the missing words
you develop from step No 3 below.

PRINT NUMBERED LETTE RS IN
THES SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·lEIS ANSWERS
G1Paum - Begun - 01181- Touchy - YOUR MONEV
Court Clerk: "Can you say anything In English?" Sullpecl:
"Vee, I can say 'Give me YOUR MONEY.' "

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Exotic defense
for exotic deal

NORTH

t-11-17

u

'AKJ9875
+A Q 10 8 6

By James Jacoby

+---

When English experts Terence
Reese and Martin Hoffman co-authored " Play It Agaon, Sam" in 1986,
bridge-book buffs knew they would get
some exolic deals. Today 's offerin g
dod not disappoint them .
The opening club ace lead was
ruffed in dummy as Easl played the
king. Declarer played dummy's heart
ace and then a low heart, which he
ruffed with his spade eight. Wes t over·
ruffed and played another club, but
South ruffed , drew trumps and made
the rt~tt of lhe tricks by laking the diamond finesse .
" We couldn't beat the hand unless
South had another club, " exclaimed
West .
" If be did, wouldn't he have tried to
discard it on a second high heart?" re plied East. " But there was a way to defeat the contract If declarer had the
right shape. and it would have
worked."
Since declarer started with only one
heart and, from his play In the heart
suit, can be assumed to have started
with only one club,· West must hope
that declarer has three diamonds. II
that is so, West can defeat the contract
by leading a diamond altrick four, but
not just any diamond. The winning defense is for West lo exi t with his diamond king. Declarer cannot play another heart without letUng West make

EAST

WEST

+Q to 2
'2
+ K 7 54

+s
• Q 10 6 4
+s

+AI 0632

+KQJ9874

SOUTH
+AKJ876 5 4

'3• J9
+s

2

Vulnera bl e: Both
Dealer: South

Pass

p,,.

North

East

6+

Pass

Opc~ ing lead:

Soot•

u

Pass

+A

a second trump trick. If he tries for his
conlract by playing a second diamond
to his jack, East will ruff with his soli·
tary spade and play back a heart to set
the contract two tricks. And the same
result Is obtained if declarer ruffs the
third heart with his spade jack. West
overruffs and plays a second diamond,
which East will ruff .

A new book by James Jacoby nnd his
father, the late Oswald Jacoby, is now
available at bookstores. lt is "Jacoby
on Card Games," published by Ph1T01
Books.

liHar•~rr
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS
3 Turn '"ldt•
I Contour
.f For ead1
8 Lead •
5 Re..,e&lt;"h
10 A.•ylum
8 Quock
II Old French 7 Before
decree
8 Coml n~
13 VIgilant
9 Humiliate
14 Twolled
12 Wobb le
17 Eddie
fabrll'
15 June beellc
Fisher's
16 Coiffure
· - Time"
Yeaterday'a Anawer
gadget
20 W11f!erl an26 Car part
31 Harsil
18 Anger
heroine 28 - cordlale 321mlllltlng
19 Undersized 23 · - a1td 27 Trumpet 36 Brink
21 Large barrel
Marge"
bi~~St
37 Rind
22 Secular
24 Pul
29 Philippine 39 Coral or Red
pe118Mt
41 Oullaw
23 Conslrurted together
2,&amp; Cockscomb
27 TeKa.• city
28 Roc kfish
29 Coal
derlvativf!
30 Munch
31 Barbara
or Clara
33 "Now We
- Six "
34 Child
35 V/talily
38 Neovous
40 Endure
42 Door sign
43 Scope
44 College
omr/111
45 Heavenly

r'M TALKING AND I'M
TALKING W~EN ALL OF
A SUPOEN SIIE SAV5,
''WHO ARE 't'OU? "

MAV6E SHE

1 Food nsh
2 Nimbus '
DAJL.Y CRVPTOQUO'IJ:S - Here'a how to work It:

1'27

AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW

One letter slands for another . In this sample A Is tiled
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc . Single letters,
apo~trophel, the length and I011111Uon of the words are all
hinll. Each day the code leUeruredltrerent.
CIYPTOQUOTE

.1·27
0 R L Z L

N I S
T K

GTSLDD

BL

YLFTLML

KLZLSO

Rawlllde

KNOwS, BUT

170ESN'T

B L

I 2:08 ([) ICTV

12:30 • (f) 9 IAII Nltlht with
Devld l.oMnnltn fonlght'a
guilt Ia comodltn Donnla
Miller. leD mjn.lln Sllroo.
(J) ..., of CliouGIIo
ABC IMM Nlllhtllno
(I)Moro ....ll'. . .
MOVII: 'A fine Polr'
MOVII: 'Down to tho
... ln ..IIM'
.
12:40. llJJ MOVI!: 'To 1o .An-

I

nounoed'

I•

~~

KZUA

s

y L
0 RL

T S

I)

R I 0 ·

O RT S EO

I ZL

ORL

V T K -

ORTSEO

([) Ttleo of tho Unex·

PEANUTS
t'M

coach: 'Winning lfll't uveeythlng,
but It beats anYthing that comes

Ie

L-.1---L--.L--.J-~.L-....J

mln-1
fll (7) M'A'S"H
Cil Tho Shokoopttrt Hour
HoOIId by Walter Motthau:
A Mldtummor NIQh!'a

CIJ
I_...,

CINTEE

h5,...,l,.;'....;I...:.:..TI:....::;..1-=-rl-1

•rn

po••••·

.,.,.Ph.

I

Famous- quota by a tamoue

._

' 1 1
I_ I_ . _

Dream Levert flee ing i n\D
the woode fall under the
spell of the Fairy Ki ng ii\&lt;1 his henchman, Puck. (86
min.)
(fJJ Fair Game
(l1) Honay_moonora
11 :30 D (I) crJ Tonight Show
Guolf hat! Jay Lono weicornu alnger John Dovidaon . (80 min.l In Stereo.
([) WKRP In Clnolnnatl ·
Taxi
• (I) ABC Nowa N!Qhttlne
&lt;II 1B1 Megnum, P.l.
(fJJ Flro In tho Ellt: Portrolt
of Robert Fronk
•IDT.J. Hookor(70 min.l
I AI.
12:00 (]) luma • Alton
· ill Tonnlo: Nlka lnterna·
!lonol From Portland, OR.
(~ hrt.l Llvo.
([) Jofftsaona

6=-=====::~

'.

7:35
8:00

suspects

Merchandise

a

crz

f'JO\S,~ ~u,­

Tronsporto ti on

1

lJ) News
[D MocNeii·Lehrer Newohour
Ill IBi WhHI of Fortuna
@ Barney Miller Part 1.
IIJ S.nford end Son
II (I) (I) Now Newlywed
Game
fJI (7) Too Clo11 for Com·
· fort
Ill Cll Judge
® WhHI of Fortune
Ill IBi Jeopardy
@ Joff1ti'IOno
IIl Honeymoonoro
IJCiliBIMotlockt60min .l
In S1ereo.
(]) Ho/1 Town
(]) II (])Who' a the Boso1
!CCI Tony wrellles with his
conscience over whether
or not to reunite Angela
end Geoffrey after they end
their relationship.
&amp; (7) MOVIE: 'Captain
Nowmon. MD'
(I) MecNeii·Lohror Newth·
our
® Ill ~ Wlzerd A day.
dreaming youngster turns

1_

-~ ,:C:. .O:,. :.E-rD:. .:,Y-II :-.!

recent career comeback in

W.O.

2

I

(]) Big Volley
(!) Mozdo Sportolook
J.tforoono
Cil Looming Hour
[D ~rot City
@ Foell of Lifo
IIl Bovot1y Hillbillies
8 (I) IBi NBC Nows
C!l i!PortoContor
ABC Nowt
&amp; (7) Hogan'o Haroeo
liD Ill CBS Nowo
[D
Porklno
Family _
Grandma d8cldos to loavs
and Dad and Matt come to
an understanding .
@ WKRP In Clnclnnotl
IIJ Andy Grlffl1h
II (I) PM Megnlne
(]) Hardcastle ·end McCor·
mick
(!) College Betkttbell:
Conn.ctlcutll Bolton College 12 hrs.l Live .
(]) Entortolnment Tonight
Susan Day 1tlk1 abou1 hor
1he hit NBC· TV series, "L.A.
laW" .
fJI (7) M'A'S'H
D ([) Peoplo'o Court
Cil Wonderful World of
Disney: Disney's Sports
S-lat " The Fox and the
Hound," . " Mickey's Polo
Team "
and
"Olympic
Goofy" ere featured 160

Rr.ntol s

Real Estole

a Cil ([) a ([) Ill • crz
IB!No-

crz

78 FOf\1 F100 shortbed, I cyl , 4 ..
tpd. t1960 . Call 814-361·
7200.
.
..

73

wei

(]) a ([)

-...;---~- ··

RtOrrange Ietten of
four scrambled Words

I:":::; •:; &gt;rds.11
. I I I' 1
.rl-=;:..s_.: . . Lu~R~E~o~~~ :
, I I I' 1-. ,

,. rn

18 Chavy pickup. Short wheal
bue, no ruat. ~)1 . cond . Call
814-441·8201 . .
~___;~--~ •'
1986 Ford pickuP· 4Jt4, F-2&amp;0)•
V·480, low milaage. 3.200 '~
miiH. Ukt niiW. Call 814-446·· ""
0406 dayt;me, 514·446-280Q-;
evenings.
•.
1978

'"' .- - -.

EVENING

•

814-26~-6243.

lAM I

'

Cemero RS 305 engine. 4 •
tp.-d trlnt. PS.. PI AC needs : '
comprQtor. phone 304·671·
2078 betwHn 4.00 end 1 :00
PM.

72

WOII

1/27/87

'.

·n

Building Supplin. Clbaaouta1976 C·J6 Jeep 4 wheel drive
Buyouta· Surplua f1)4')18'x% "
White Farm Tractort, Best Price Runs good, body rough. 8600.
Painting Interior &amp; auerior. 26
Yellow pine rough tawed T 1·11
W11rd
in Area, Sidert Equipment Co, Coli 814 -742-2763.
Business
siding, t10.99 ee . 26 pc, up
years 11.11perience Reesonable 34
Gractout living. 1 and 2 bed·
Henderton. w. Va. 304-676·
ratea. Call 814·266·6786 .
•9.99.(2)4'x8'k¥.:' Yellow pine
Buildings
room apertmentt 1t VIllage 26 mch diagonal Zenith 1y1tem 3 rough Jawed T 1· 1 1 tiding.
lOST Norw&amp;l:Jian Elk Hound.
7421
1982 Ford 360, tteel flatbed .
Manor and Aiveraida Apart·
dog lost letart or surround ing Wanted to do· Peinting Call
36,000 miles, 400 motor, 4.
ex. cond . Teknlka TV remote 06.99 eo. 26 pc, up 14 99. 13)
menta in Middlaport From TV,
area, named Smokey. 3 yn• old, 614· 266· 6785
MOTOR CAR BROKERS, St. apaed, $6600 . Can aaa et
control. Playpen-und once. Ctll 4 ')1 8 ' x% " r•G ptvwood .
304·895-3683.
For Rent: Small ofllce on Locutt f216 . induding utilities. Call 614-446-7307
Rt. 160 Nonh of Hplz:er Hosp. Ashland Oilm Mmertvilla 614·
810.96 ea. (4) 4'•10 '11~ " pty614-992-7787.
EOH
Gallipolit, Ohio. 614 ·448·6&amp;92 992· 6900. A1k for Bill
LPN wanta to do privata duty. 2 St. in Gallipollt Would mtlte
wood. 118.96 e1. (5)4 ')18')11A! "
or 448·4622 See ua for ell your
veers eltperienca in hoipltal. 2 Ideal locatlon tor small teNice
Luan plywood. $6,99 ea. f8J
TRS Model 4·P Computer with
bedroom apt. Syra~;:use. 8160
llv..tock and horse trailer needs. 1876 International/ Scout , 4)14,
9 Wal)ted To Buy
yean e•petlence priv1te duty. butinau Across from Galli a Co. 2month.
prpnter Ex Cond. Call614-446- 4'1118' •II wood paneling. Wood·
plus
utilities.
Deposit
Courthouu. Call 614 -446·
Call 614·446-8396
9633
graina • ,prlntt. 17.915 ea. Alto. in ttock attiel flat beds for 304-882· 3237 after 6 ·00 PM.
required
.
814·
992-51587.
614·
9533.
pickups and ton truckt, P I. H
Secondt 85.99. [7) Maaonhe.
We pay cash for late model clea n
992-6732 or 614-992-7671 .
spring bumpert.
Marlite
planks
16"
wide
98"
Pr~te11ional
cleaning.
Home
or
Wall
turnace,
130
7
eluminum
used can.
long p•neling. T8tQ . Seconda
otftca. Reterencea Calllinyttme.
windows, &amp;30. Eartv Ford
75 Boats and
Jim Min k Chev · Ollis Inc
Apta. for rent in Recme. 2 to 3 storm
35 lots 8o Acreage
614· 742· 2788
11.50 ea. (814'x8' Martha bath
front a.11le with drumt &amp; 4 apolle
Bill Gene Jonnson
bedroom . Call Cleland Realty. wheelt,
62
Wanted
to
Buy
Motors for Sale
panel
embosaed
In
4"
1t4"
block
$45
.
1968
Ford
picllup
614 ·44(1 . 3(172
614-992 ·2269 .
windshield VG 16. Call 114- t7.95 and t8 .96 e1. (91 4 'xB'
367-7114.
Foil faeed foam lnsuletlon board.
1 . ~ acr81 Rt 7 close to Pom~ 2 bedroom epartment for rent in
TOP CASH pa1d tor '83 moitel
(%" thick $4.99 •• , f~A: '- t5.99.
roy. &amp;3400. Call 814 -992 · Bradbury. 11.1: bath. Call 814·
12ft. V·bottom boat&amp; 7 HP Su
end newer used can. Smith
Now buYing tllell corn or ear King
Halt Price/ Flashing arrow ltgnt 11 "-08 59)110)4B" Vonltywkh
76?1. 614-992-6732 or 814- 992· 3312. Dolly Woodt .
motor, $400/ palr. Call
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
corn.
Ctll
for
latttlt
quote1.
River
'289 Lighted, non -arrow t2791
marble top •179.95. (11• 30"
992· 6687.
21
614-246-9241
Business
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 614·446·
City
Farm
Supply,
614-446·
2282
APARTMENTS , mobile homes, Unlighted $239 1 Fr11e lettenl Vanily with marble top $?9.9&amp;.
2986.
Opportunity
For tallt. 90x110 k)t in Twin houses. Pt . Pleaunt and Gallipo· See locally Call today ! Fectory· 1121 &amp; piece high glo11 tub
enclosure
kit
$29.95.
(13)
6'
1
·800·423·0163
anytime.
Cedar addlton. New Haven, lis 614-446 -8221 .
Used mobile hom es Call 614·
tempered glen 11fding tub
W.V 14600 firm . 304-882·
76 Auto Parts
446-0175
63
livestock
doofl, aluminum finlth. t49.94
Firewood
for
sale.
Herdwood
•
3206.
I NOTICE I
One bedroom furnihted apt in
&amp; Accessorius
or 139 95 wlth purchue of tub.
Large pickup load, 836 . Cell
Buying da1ly gold. silver coins, THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHPoint Pleasant, adultt only, no 614·
(141
Single
door
med.
cab.
446-9266
or
614
-446·
ING CO. recommend• thlt you A1hton building loti, mobile pats. phone 304-676· 1386.
ringt, jewelry, sterling ware. old
1437.
pllttic bu. •tainlett tteel
Holt tein cow· third calf coming.
do busin111 with people you hom11 permitted, Clyde Bowen,
coms, large currency. Top pri·
frame. 119.95 at . (1111 1 tnd 2
Huvy milker . Call 814-388· Budget tran aml11ion1 Uled &amp;
ces. Ed. Burken B~rber Shop, know. and NOT to tend money Jr. 304· 67&amp;· 2336.
piec:e fibargl111 tub and thower
Tree &amp; Stump removll. stone, fill
9718
rabuilt all typal . Torque conver·
~hrough the mat/ until you hrrve
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh 614·
45 Fur~ished Rooms dirt,
ft rewood pickup t45 .. combination. Colora &amp; white.
tera &amp; tranafer Clllt. Engine
tnve.nigated lhe offering.
992-3476
Dump $95. H1111p vouchers. 1129.95 to 1199.96 ea. 15
Charollit bull . Coming 2 year ov11r hMJI kitt Alhson Trant mit·
For rant Sleeping Rooms and
Oon'a Landscapes . Call 614· percent ditcount on 2 piece •
old. Cal1614· 367 -0242 .
aln Plrtl and CVC joinU . Mni·
Good money weekly. Procetting
BUYING RAW FURSt Ginseng.
448-9648.
up. C161 4 piece solid olll tOwel
light house keeping rooms Park
mum 30 day to llfelima war·
mail infOtmation. Ruth telf·
Yellow Root. beef and deer·
Central Hotel. C.ll 614-446·
bar ut. '19.91.11 ?) Prefinithed
Rqiatered Murray Gray Bull ranty. Will deliver, caah and
addre"ed stamped envelope:
hides . Also selling trapping
0768.
Crafl•man-New. ntNer ueed. 3 01k bruce flooring W'd W'
C11ved 12·20· 80, out of Wid· c1ny or in t tall. Call 814-379·
Terry Lee, 131 -A Eureke Star 41
supplies, Wheat lltet. N1te Lltet.
Houses for Runt
apd., drill Pflll, 10 inch variabla Random lengths t1 86sq. ft . 10
roongt Ac;e. Proven-brother of 2220 .
Rt.. Gallipollt. Ohio 46831 .
last day to buy furt Feb. 7th.
Roomt for rent, day week. speed band 11w. 7YJ inch table c.t. n up t1.715 aq. fl . 20 sq. ft.
Nttion•l Grand Chlmpion
Hou rt 1:00-9:00. Cloted Wed
pr. c t .n. 1181 Prehung steel
Phone 814-986·3508 .
Budget tran1m1niont uted 81
Deluu 2 8R houtt, 842 Fint month. Gallia Hotel. Cell 814· liiW &amp; acceuories, aaklng 8350
George Buckley 61 4· 684 -4781
rebuilt all types. Torque conver·
AvHue. Gallipolit. oft etraet 446· 971 5. Rent allow es t120 Paid over t700 or trade for Insulated doort 189.915 ee. (19)
23 Professional
good 3 ton air conditioner for Pine p1nel doora t39.95 to
.,_king, no pelt, r.terencea, month .
ten I. trensfer cates. Engine
Buymg j1.1nk cars. Call614· 992·
169.96 B. V"doo. 1201 Double
Services
furnace or good shower atall &amp;.
64
ovlo,fadtemp
Hay 8o Grain
depoait. Cell614-258-1!29.
6648 after 6:00pm
commode or what·hlva-you. tidelight entrance doora 11,z glut
Call 614 -448-2746.
Y2 penal. t299.96 e•. {211 8'
3 bdr. ranch, Rodney Vill-sJe II, 46 Space for Rent
Standing timber AI Tromm 1
,
Double entrarw:e doors, Yt gl111
614-742-2328.
Piano &amp; organ leuont. M1ry ' t2815 mo. plua depotit. Referen·
Llrte round bales of hay for sale.
Serv
rr.es
1h
plnel.e349.96.
122)
Prehung
Mixed
herdwood
slabs.
112
pit'
lucat. C1ll 614· 446-9787 or cat required Call 814-~8t10.00 each Ph . 114· 446·
bundle. Cont1ining 1ppro)l. 111J lnterlor doors, flnithed I. unfln0008.
814· 440· 4426.
Offiee Space for Rent. E.celient
1062.
ithed.
Choice
liz11a.
134.95
ee.
tons.
FOB
Ohio
Palle1
Co.
for Attorneva. Accountant, etc.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 814· 992· 1231 Wood &amp; pl•tic ahutters
Sttrka TrltB and Llwn Se"'ict. Nice 3 BR hou•e. 1350 plut Clote to Court House. Cell 6481
Hay lor tile Round balea. in
from .o31" .. to 80'' 19.96 to
. Home
Hadgea . t hruba . bu1he1 u1ilitn. &amp; 1ec. deposit. Call Wlumen AeiH Eaate Agency
bern , never bHn wet. Call B1
121.95
pr.i(24•
ell
wood
screen
614-446-3844:
trimmed. llndsctping, stj.lmp 814 -448 -9280 after 5 •
814-245-6117
.
lmprovemenls
Firewood for ..... 836 . per load; door l . *12 . 96 e1 . (26)
and leaf remov11. 304· 676- weekend I
COUNTRY MOBILE Home P1rk7~ · 6 load1, 8160 . Delivered and 1 W' •38"x80" white ttorm
2842 .. 676 ·2010 .
B•led hey , t1 .10 bale Celt
doors, in1ulated f01m futed.
Furnithed houu. LoCated 735-R Route 33, North of Pomeroy. • tacked. C1ll 614-949· 2501
114-388-8S41 .
t89.96.
(28)
Cowntlrtop
plastic
p.m.
lf1er
6:00
BASEMENT
Third Ave. GelllpoHs. 1135 Rente/ trliltrt. Call 814 -992 ·
80 centt sq. ft . 127) Vinyl tiding
WATERPROOFING
month. 175 depoait. C1ll 446- 7479.
11 Help Wanted
1 BN Tractor. E.11cellent rubbtir. trim 6 colort (12 ' J channel
Unconditional hfatime guarsn·
3870 or· 448· 1340
1 .50) (10' lntide corner
tH. Locel referencea furnished
Sp.-ce for Rent· Trailer apec8t. Meeh1nicalty perfect One 300 *1
Free Htimates. Call collect
Small, 2 BR hou11, fenced In Locust Rd. Rt. 1. Point Plelllr)t. amp. AC· DC welder. Brend n .OO) (10' ouuide corner
new. One 5000 w1tt alternator. t4 .00) 128) 12"•12" plo;n
1·814·237-0488, day or night
front yerd, 1200per mo. Utilities 304-876 -1076.
AVON-Wow!! Mak e big buch .
10 Horn Brekll and Streton, white ceiling tile 28 cents ea. or
Rogera Batement
not lncludtd. Call 614-968·
31 Homes for Sale
No proceuing cflarge. Call
Wat~~rprooflng
brand new electric lllrt. Pipe -64 piece ctn. •11.10. (29)
4160.
814·448· 3368 .
71
Autos for Sale
dyes, half through 2 inchet with 24" JC48" acoutlic.tl embo11ed
What a Bargeinl 2 story house 3 bdr .. tully carpeted. Electric
wric;het handle Pipe t1ps from fire r~tislant ceiling ptntll
SWEEPER and 11wing machine
Avon Free Basic Kit . Jan
Remodeled, totellv rewired. in· beseboard &amp; woodburner heat.
quarter Inch to thrH qu1rtart 12.35 ••· {30) Clo1eout whfte
repair. part a. and suppll•. Pldt
28-Feb. 28. Start · now Eern
aulatad, brand new hoi weter Rural watar. 1300 month plut
and half inch. Wnta to Box 178, ceiling grids (12' main tee *1 .60 81 Monte C1rlo. 83 Olds Hurtt. up and delivery, Davia V1cuum
e•ua dollart. Call 614· 446·
h~ater . 2 or 3 BA ·a low h11eting doposk. Coll614· 258-1,23.
Ohio. Leave phone ee.) (4' teaiO ~ntae•. ) Penn '• Ca/1614-448· 8201 . ·
Cleaner, one h11f 'mil e up
51 Household Goods l'omeroy,
bills, Vlr'f' nice lot , garage wht'l 2
1 6:.:6...-4 4--6---4
.:.:8:.:8.:2-- ----Werehouta. Welltton , Ohio.
number
and
addra••·
Gaorgftl
Creak Ad. Cell 114·
:2-119871
outbuildings . All for onjy At 180 Mulberry Ave , Pom•oy
8"-384-3646. · Open 8-5. 8
1984 Buick LeSabre. 69,000 446-0294.
Dentel Hygenitt end den111
120.000. Call 814-246-9378 Availeble Feb. 1st. Ruson1ble
dl'fl
.
mile • . · inlerior ... . eond .,
For sale. Firewood, Poplar t 11bl
umtant . Send typed written
after 6PM .
exterior-good cond. Must sell. FTM Ganeral Contracting 13yn
16 00 par bundle; Oak 1labt
rent, houta naed1 work. Cell
SWAIN
re•ume to 206 N 2nd Ave.
Pole Building• by Quelity Coll814-245-9412.
exp•ience. 'RootinU lit Con.
114· 992-&amp;791 efter 8:00.
Middleport. Ohio. Good potition
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62 110.00 per bundle. Sawmill Builders.
1 nile watt of Rodney-Rt 35. 3
Workshops, carportt,
County Road 19. Peach Fork Rd.
11ruction Ph . 614-388-9308.
Olive
St
..
Ga
llipolis.
New
8t
used
available for th e righ t peflon.
1
bdr .. brick mat. frea, 2 car gar, 2 bedroom home for rent in
Phone 614-992·6922 at 12:30 lnlmal sheltert, ger1gat. Free 1 884 Ford Eacort w•gon. 4apd., FrH altimllea 10% oH during
11987)
heated workahop. ch1ln link L•ngavllle tree. Depotit ra· wood-eoal l tOVet. 8 pc wood LR
tltimatea. Phone 814· 384 · air, AM·FM, C1tll price 12999
p.m.
the holldey1, offer u:p irea Jen
tuite 1399, bunk bed1 1199.
AIRliNES NOW HIRING . Flight
6762
fenee. t.ll , cond. Call 814-245· qulrld . Coll814· 742-28'1
Joflnt't Auto Seln, Bulavllle 16. 1987.
r•cllnert
new
&amp;
used
bedroom
Attend•nta. Agent1, Mechenlcs,
9268 .
Rd .. O.lllpolls.
Gun Aepein, hot rablue·
suitea . wringer wuhert. 8t Tony's
Cut tomer Service. Salaries to
-=:------ - - 11987)
ing.
Open
9
·00
AM
to
7.00
PM.
All typn carpenter I. conereta
1hon. New llvingroom suites Coli 304-676-4631
160K . Entry level po titlo nJ, Ctll
Government hom" from 11 . 1u 42 Mobile Homes
1881 Chrytler Lebaron. 4 dr.• work: Interior. 111~erior, remo·
1199-1599.
lamps.
Call
614·
806 ·687 ·6000 Ext. A· 9806 tor
repair). Delinquent t1.11 PfOperty.
auto , air. 44,000 mlln. Cell dtling. peintlng. roofing, free
56
Pets for Sale
446-3169
current h1tlng1.
for Rent'
Repotltltiont . Call 8015-687·
814-379·2728 .
26 cubic foot fraezar UOO 00.
ettim11111. Call 814. 448·8174.
_:___ ___:_~-- 119871
8000. ht 'GH -9805forcunent
renge and refrigerator
County Appliance. In c. Good Kenmore
GOVERNMENT J06S
r"o lilt.
1984 Dodge Omni: 4 dr .• 6 tpd , RON'S Televition Service .
used appli1ncet and TV 1111. 1260.00. Jonalll'eds 70 E chain
t 16,040-S69,230 yr Now Hir·
2 bdr .. all utilitiet paid except Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thru saw f260.00. Remington chein Dragonwyl\d Cattery Kennel. tunroof. 60,000 milet. Call Hou&amp;e calls on RCA. Quazer
lng Call 806-687·6000 E11t
3· 4 bedroom houte neer tchool elac . furn . or unturn.. tee.
uw 1100.00. Fr•nkhn truck CFA ·Himalttv•n. Per~ian 1nd 814-379-2728.
GE . Speclaling in Zenith. Celi
R-9806 for cu~rent tedera/1111 .
and hotpltal. Priced to a1111. dapoalt required. Convenient Set. 614·441-1699, 627 3rd
camper 1400.00. 6 hp ·ai'r Slam8M kitten•. AKC Chow
304· 578 · 2398 or 81 ll-446·
Ava
Gatllpolla.
OH
pupP'•.
New
Himmi"
&amp;
Ptr023,000. Coli 814-992-8060.
1971 AMC Hornet. 13,000 246,,
location. Cell 614 ·446-8568 or
compranor $650.00. D••k and
Ai rlin e io b a 8 17 , 747 . to
tlana.
Call
114
-448·
3844after
614-448-4778 .
Clbinet 1100.00. 304 -676· ?PM .
mlltt. 8 cyl., •uto .. *425. Call
Vetley Furniture, new &amp; used. file
•63.469. per year Now h l t~ng l
2 br. kitchen , b1throom. wfth
3686 .
114·367·7200.
Felly Tr811 Trimming, ll\lmp
Large
section
of
quality
furni·
C11 ll Job line 1-618 -469· 3536
leundry room. living room &amp; 2 bdr fullyfurnithadldulta only,
removal. Cell304·876-1331 .
ture
.
1216
Eutern
Ave
Ext A-1 385 0 fGr info 24
AKC Aagiltared German Shedining room, all elec:. Approx. 7 util. p1id Cell 614· 446·41 10.
Gallipolit .
• Co11 heating etove. uted very pherd pups. 10 wb. old. tao 1980 Audl 5000, 4 dr . &amp; 1pd.,
nours
mil11a from Pt. Pl. on At. 82 . 2
di..el. PS. PB, AM·FM CltUtte,
li«la, t275 00. 30~ · 876 · 1892 .
RINGLES 'S SERVICE , e•pa- h. Coli 114-441-0373.
t,.ctt apt:Jroll . 1 acre more or htst Nice 3 bdr. partillly furnished.
tunroof, AC , e•. cond. 14600.
rianced c~rpenler. el~tctrldan.
USED
APPliANCES
QOOD
The Meigs Local Sc;hool District
over looking Kenewha River. • Convenient locetion on upp11r 7.
19?6 Olds Cutl111, good shepa,
or B11t offer. C•ll 814·44-6·
mason,
painter. rooting (in elud·
Weah,.s,
dryera.
refriger11
0r1.
it curr ently aeaking applicatiDns
840,000. Coli 304-875· 6440 Waterpeid Caii614·24&amp;-S818
19 incn color TV. 304· Reg. AKC Be1gle, male pup. 7 0333.
ing hot blr eppllcation) 304·
ranges . Skagg t Applianc es. stereo,
lrom certified applicanta for 1
wkt.
old.
Field
cflempion
etock.
batween 8:30 1nd 4 ·30 .
876-2088 or 876-7147
Upptr River Rd . beside Stone 675·8461 .
Varsity Football Coact'! for the
e150. Calll14· 246·9397.
1 978 Ford Thundarblrd, lolded.
3 lA mobile home, lerge yard, CreJt Motel. 614 ·446-7398
198'/-88 school year . Apph·
Hou te. 6 acres, living dining city school. 314 3rd. St . Ka ·
HUNTERS : Ctrharttt. Leates,
uc. cond. inside • out., one
Rotery or Callie tool drilling.
ca nu muu· hold 1 v1 lid Ohio
roo m. kitchen, 3 bedrooms. 3 n1ug1. Call$14·448· 7473.
Collan , Feed, Neme Pl1tet, AKC Rqieteted tamale buff owner. Call 614·388· 8813. Molt we/11 completed s1meday.
teachtng ce rt!ff cate and lor
batha, large temity room, wood·
New Seara refrigerator &amp; stove
Capa, lights jNitefhe Dulers). cocker tpanlel, housebroken
Btwn. 8 AM &amp; 5 PM .
Pump aalet and tent'ica. 304.
.
coaching position • must meet
burning ttove. lhop u••ae. den Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home, Muuaell Cai1614-446·88B&amp;.
Insulated Boots. HOUII ot Oifta. 304·773·5155.
895· 3802
certification require ment s ()f
or 4th bedroom. Hett pump, Routh Lana. On nlca 1pot in
407 Sl•tt'l St. Point Pleaaant.
1980 Trant-Am ; new V· B enOhio for Jporh med icine and
6 month old r~giltered, mete gine, no rutt, 9 intide, 8 outtide,
Sola • chair. brown 1 t200
nne! water , appralted It Cttnhlra. 304· 773-15828
CI'R . Per1ona interett od should
Sofa, beiges, 8176. C~ll 6 14~
180.000.00. 304· 676· 3099 .
Surplus Dtnim, Army. Rental Leopard Ker end Mountain Ktr Auto., PS/ PI , eir, atM"eo, CB,
B2 .
Plumbing
cont11ct Dan E Mon is. Superin .
446·7367.
clothing. Copy of this ad worth CfOIIed, 304 -895 · 38~3 .
not hot-rodded, wall main·
3
bedroom,
untumithed.
No
8o
Heating
tendent of Me1ga La cal Schoolt ,
Houae Gtlllpolls Farry. Large pets. New H1ven, w.v. C1ll
10 par cent off on lined denim
t•lned. Asking U900. or b"t
el 621 South Third Ave in
kitchen, large bath. 3 bldroomt, 304· 882· 2461 .
For ule· French Provin c1al
jackets, Carhart Clothing, IDI· 57
off•
or
trHt for 4 lo 6
Middleport , Ohio.
Musical
I amity room, living room &amp; utility
dreuer. t50 . Walnut drener
cron inauhted Coverellt
peueng• 4 ~HhHI drive. 89 to
;
on 1.8 acre. 304-675-2284.
175.
Call
614·
742·2690
t26 .001. Sam Somervilla'a.
CARTER 'S PLUMBING
Instruments
73 muSteng convertib4e or what·
0
3
bedroom
motJile
hom11
for
rent
Former or new Avon reprltl!l fln18 ·
Eatt-Raventwood, Junction Old
h...,.you. Cell 614-441 ·2745.
AND HEATING
nelf' ChHhire. Call 614-317· 814· 742-2997
tives want11 d. ND thi ppin g
Rt. 21 . 1ndependenc&amp;Road, Fri.
Cor. Fourth end Pine
7148.
charge. no sign up felt. Call
32 Mobile HomuH
Pick~ns Uaed Furnllure. Good
Galllpollt. Oh io
Sat, Sun, 12 :00·8!00 I'M, 304- Gutter inttrucUon by An Clsty 1978 Unooln M•rk IV 'D esign•
614-992 ·7180.
273· 6665.
Edidon,
new
engine,
complete
Phone
614·448·3B88
or 614·
k &amp; K Mobile Homn, 2 and 3 quality ualtd furn itura. Open 9 to
tor Sale
for beginninp to advanoed put. new Interior, eJChtuet, tlret,
448 -4477
badraom mobile hom111. 304· 6 or c111 fo r eppointment.
tlfi:..C•II114-448-9782.
Ilk
for
BlbYi it1er needed In my home
304-176·8483 or 676· 1460.
Wicker Itt · 2 chairt, ltrge teble. Kevm .
brtk-. alternator, b•Hery. PS.
876· 3000.
One 4 vear old. 6· 6 day&amp; a weell'
two small tlbles, large metal
pump. control module. water
Must have own c11r. Ca ll 614·
NEW AND USED MOBILE 2 bedroom trailer, couplet, 1 White GE Wllh&amp;r 1100 DO
cloth" closet wllh mirror. 304·
pump, etc. No rutt. Askinl
85
General Hauling
742 -2060.
HOMES KESSH 'S QUALITY
e2. 000. Beat off• or trada for
1mall
child
Locust
Rd
Rt.
1,
Pt.
J3
:
0:4:
·
:67:6:
·
;;;3;;;6;;;16;:aft=e;;6:
'
0;0;·;;·
;
;...
·
;6::75:
·
:4:6:1
f
.r
r
111
Slli
ll
il
r,•:
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 Ml
or lpettengtr, 4 whNI drive, or
~
Someone to live on my nome 6 WEST, GAlliPOLIS. AT 36. Pte... nt. 304-87!-1078.
whtt· htv•~\1 . 3 appraiNis of
X
l,•,,·:,!LI.h
dayl a week Monday . Friday
PHON E 614 · 4~1 - 7274 .
Jamea Soya Wet• Service. Also
tor 13200 before paint
2 bedroom mobile home on
614·742 ·2060.
poola filled . Call 814· 268· 1141
scr1tohed by v1nd.t1. Nothing
Athland Upton Rold, 112&amp;.00
1984Shuhmobllehome. 14 ~ 70 month plut utllltllll, 304· 87&amp;·
tod.,. will! pull CI"'Ptr IS well or or 614 ·448· 1175 or 614· 446·
7911 .
CHRISTMAS BILLS PILING UP I
witll 711121 a.11pando. 3 SR . 2 full 4088 .
In cla11ic comton. Cell 114Tne Army National Guard may
bltt'lt , tOtal electric, 1PIIl8 IIVet
448-2745.
61 Farm Equipment
have tM Jolutlon. Montnly pay
microwave. lmmediet•
011/erd W1ter &amp;ervica: Pool•.
check for p1rt time work. Join
Sitternt, Wtllt. Oelklary Any.
tio n . Origina lly sold for 44
Apartment
1184 Chevy Chwette, 4 tpd.
now. 301l· 876· 3960 OJ 1·800· 122,000. Wllf tell for 11',000
time C111 814· 446-7404.
AM / FM / IIpe, wlrt rima. c..h
for Runt
842-3619.
I"• tn1n payoff. C1ll 614· 44&amp;·
2010 John O..e diMel tractor· price •2111. John 'a Auto 8•1",
5726 .
plowa, diac t39110. New ldu Bul..llto Rd., O.Nipollt, OH .
Wttteuon 'a Water Hauling
AVON . no altrvice charge. open
Dyne Bounce mower 1418. Ute
rHton•blll rate1 , immedlatf
territorin , phone 304-8715 ·
1981 Oekbrook, 14)170 with 1 Bedroom b11ic ren1 1176.00
2 .000 gallon delklety, cisttrn 1 .t•
modtl 224T John De.-e b.ter 11711 CNuidt. AT, AC, Pa,
1429
7•12 e11pando, 3 BR .. 2 bttha, plut el.ctrlc. Also raqulred 1
11298. /Hiy WfltiOn UOO. CoN AM /fM, tl", now point. Vory
pool•. well, etc cell 304·67•: ..
u
·~
114-281-IS22.
woodburner. u . cond. French 1200.00 ,_rity d11p01h. CONoood concl.- 12700. Coli 814· 2819.
Be par1 of the number One CitV Brokertge. C1U 6U ·4•1 · TACT: J.-t bon Estlftt Dept. Ph
.U.-34e7.
H Oute coel , Oallverect 1 ton and ••
Buuty Company with AVON. 9340.
441 -3897 Equal Ho uaing
CROSS I. SONS
Vou eern as y.ou le~rn . Call
Opponunlty.
up. Jim Lani•. 304·875-1247 ·
U.S. 31 w_., Je~ton, Ohio. 1878 Ford Elhe. Good condi·
or 175· 7397.
Marilyn Weaver , 304 - 882 ~
114· 281-1411 .
14~70 Fl~tttwood . 3 Bdr .. 2 lull
tlon. 11400. Coil 614·815·
2846
betha, totelelec. Like n.w. price 2 8edro0m ept. nice Clfplltin"
MatHY .Fergu110n. New HoNend, 4411.
nttJOtllbla. Call aft11r 4 wetk· Wlter Plld. welh• I. drytr
Coel and limastone delivery.
lu... Hog · - lo S.nrict.
304-87&amp;·3190.
Someone to clean 9:00· 12·00 days, •nytime w..._aendt. &amp;14· hook· yp, tlove, r.trig. fumlthld
OOvtr 40 uHd trKtoq 1&lt;1 1875 IMimtt~el lu1. 18
morn ing• two or three ti met 1 388-8833.
waH.We J•n 1. 1887 Ph.
chooe. from • compl11:e line ot P-'Mglft. 8tlndtrd II'IMmiaRIW
Uted equipment. Uirgtft llloft. lnYtrygoodcondhton. Can
week. call 304·675 ·2135.
814-441-7021 .
87 Upholstery
MIICtlon In I .E. Ohio.
1971 New Moo n Mobile Hom•
be ulltl • church bUI or be
'
12)146, on Smokey-Roe Ad • Off
Fumlthltd • unfvmilhed ept1.,
COiherted &amp;nto c~mper, Call
12 Situations
t110.00 and up, ,..•
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT 114-112-3117 or 814-317Ble..ing Ad., Northup . 13,000
•
CENTER . SR 35 W. O.lllpoill, 7214:
304-171-7731 or 304-175Wanted
R I. M Cuatom Coucha'1 lnd
Ohio. Colll14-448-ln7, ....
Sltv.r Sprlnga, Florida. 1880 1104 A ~ 1 Real Ettlte.
R-.,pholtltry. St. AI. 7, Crown
114-441· HI:I. Up front troc· 1114 Chwy Co..,llor. ·PI, PI
14)1)0, On 1 acre with cbined
City, Oh. 114-251-1470 E"
linked fence. 12Jt30 ICfHned
tori wtth w•rremv ovw 40 uHd rodlo. 41,000mll'!lo- cond~
Upltlirl unfurnithtcl apt, Cll'·
814·446-3438.
Opon doliy 9 t~
Will do word proce .. ing in my p1tlo. au.742· 2414.
trocton,
1000
toolt.
ptled. utlllt ... pal::t. no chtldren,
tlon. Colll14-ft2· :1703.
4 ':10, Sot. 1 :30 to 1' 30. Old
1o
home. Call 614-448 -8136.
no 1&gt;oto clll441-1137.
n• Uphotterld.
UTILITY BLDG. SPECIAL, · 1113 Ford Polrlono 100, 3041980 P1rkwood, 14x?O, untwr·
ork Wanted, ·painting, some .-Melted. 3 bedroomt, 2 POrch•.
27'da'd'EAYE with llldfoa a7!1·2:141.
Fumllhed IPittmtm, next door
MDWfey'e Uphallfwing IMVing
1
repelrt, t4. 00 hour, Lulie underpenning i n c luded .
door l ttMco - r t4,21a.OO
to llbrlf'V. Ontpt Oft tlontllldwh
tri county •r••Z 1 vem.Theb"t 1
Hughes. 304· 67e· 212Qnightor •1.1100.00. Mutt be moved.
onty. Ptrking. C.ll 114-441·
1•1a
....._
C
l
17
000
"So, thla Is what's been fouling up the
In furniture uPholslarlng Cell
,
dov
Iron H - lulldlngo 1'11.814·
304-178·7718i10om-9pm).
0338.
304 - 871 · 4154 for ' tree •..,..l '
~uol
· AC, PI, PI,
heat-seeking
missile
testsl"
332-1741.
'
-~. :104 ·1711·2210.
e.tlmetq.
Collie, and 1 small mind breed

•

BORN LOSER

1111 Pontiac GTO, good condi· .
tlon,' 11 ,500 .00 304· 882 - .
2195.
~
.•

to
t85 headboards 830 1nd up ~
bineta.

54

The Daily Sentinei- Page-9

1979 Mercury Cougaf XR 7,1ow
miletga, 12. 100.00. Cell 304· ,
876-6449.
.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

BA.

t200 / monlh. Adults . Sac :
Dep . Ret'•· Cell 814-446·
2238, 448 -2681 .

Tli8Sday, January 27, 1987

V U .

-

K Z L C I

.0 0 I Z W

Yeaterda)''t Crn«oq-: TO ACCOMPLISH GREAT
11-IINGS, WE MUST NOT ONLY ACT BUT AlSO DREAM,
NOT ONLY .PLAN BUT A1.'iO BEUEVE. - ANATOLE

FRANCE
12:80 (I) MOVIE: 'Wolt Unlit

O.rk'

1:00
1:30

IJtoklonny

~Today' a luti-·Dollll. Cl41111 .
Wild. Wild WMI

2'00 (]) 700 Club
()J Muda 8porto(ook
!Il MOVI!: 'Luoky Lody'
liZ Nowa IAI.
2•30 (!) lportaCenttr
lJO Cll Nowo Nlghtwatoh

I

."

�•
Pomeroy-. Middleport, Ohio .

· el

This
''Your Athletic
SHoe Headquarters''

•

eek's
8a·m.es
Vol. 36. No.186
.Copyrighted 1987

NEEDS

•

l

'

..DOWNING-CHILDS
MULlEN, MUSSER
INSURANCE

SOUTHERN
BOYS' BASKETBALL
Jan. 30-North Gallio .......... Away
Jan. 31-:-Miller ...................... Away

GIRLS' BASKETBALL
Jan. 29-North Gallia ........... Home

EASTERN

111 SECOND AVE.
POMEROY

BOYS' BASKETBALL

CALL 992-3381 or

Jan. 30-Kyger Creek ............ Home
Feb. 6-Southwestern ........... Away

992-2342

GIRLS' BASKETBALL

1·

· PH. 992~66 M .
308 E. MAI'N
· POMEROY,.·OH.
'

'

·EWING
FUNERAL
.
HOME

BOYS SCHEDULE

.

"DIGNITY AND ,
~ERV,CE ALWAYS" ·
Ben' H. Ewing•Diredor

~

i'

'·

Jan.30-Kyger Creek ............. Away
Feb. 2-Meigs ......................... Home

.

Meigs

Southern

BOYS BASKnBALl

BOYS BASKETBALL

PH. 992-2121

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL

Jan. 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31-Miller ...... ... .. .............. Away
Feb. 6-Hanilan Trace .. ........... ... Away
Feb . 7-Federal Hockin2.. ......... Home
Feb. 13-Southwestern ............. Home
Feb. 17-Ravenswood .. ...... ....... Home
Feb. 20-Symmes Valley ...... ...... Away

Jan. 30- Kyger CreeL ............. Home
Feb. 6-Southwestern ................ Away
Feb. 7-0PEN :........ .. :.............. Home
Feb. 13-Symmes Valley ...... ..... Home
Feb. 17-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Feb. 20-0ak Hill ...................... Away

108 MUlBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

GIRLS SCHEDULE

"HOME BANK

[

Meigs
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Southern
GIRLS BASKETBALL

•

Eastern
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WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pres· has pursued since taking office In
ldenl Reagan, acknowledging 1981, with an added emphasis this
mistakes an~ accepting res pons I· year on making the nation more
blllty In the Iran arms scandal, competitive .In the global
nevertheless says his only "rna· marketplace.
jar regret" Is that \he gamble
As anticipated, however, his
failed to open political channels
and free American hostages In comments on the Iran·Contra
controversy broke no new ground
Lebanon.
Reagan, In his first public and repeated his previous stated
appearance since his prostate view that "serious mistakes"
surgery this month, delivered his were made. He did not specify
sixth State of the Union address what mistakes or who made
to a joint session of Congress them, but vowed: "We will get to
Tuesday night, appearing fit and the bottom of this and I will take
overwhelmed by the warm ova· whatever action is called for."
Two Watergate·style commit·
lions he received at the beglnnfng
tees
created by Congress and an
and the end of the nationally
Independent federal prosecutor
televised speech.
are now Investigating the foreign
It was an address viewed as
politically cruclaHo a president policy scandal.
Reagan dispensed with the
mired In his worsl crisis and
facing an oppositiOn·led Con· scandal early In his address,
gress, yet Reagan glossed over defending his 1985·86 policy lnltl·
the scandal, Insisting the goals of atlve by saying:
"Though we have made much
his secrel arms sales to Iran
were worthy and avoiding men· · progress, I have one major
tlon of any profits diverted to the regret. I .took a risk with regard
to our action In Iran . It did not
Nicaraguan Contra rebels.
Instead, he warned lawmakers work and for that I assume full
assembled· In a packed House respons lbll!ty.
"The goals were worthy. I do
chamber - and his nationwide
television audience - that the not believe It was wrong to try to
counlry musl not become olr establish contacts with a country
sessed with "debating the past." of strategic Importance .. . and
Many of the policy goals certainly It was not wrong to lry
Reagan presented lo the 100th to secure freedom for our citizens
. congress echoed the agenda he held In barbaric captlvlly.

hike proposed

COLUMBUS IUPII - State Rep.· Frederick H. Deering,
D·Monroevllle, says Ohio needs to raise Its 12-Cents per gallon
tax on gasoline to offset losses In federal funds and keep state
highway construction projects rolling.
Deering made his comments Tuesday following Gov. Richard
F. Celeste's "State of the State" address. The governor said he
will not propose any Increases In personal or corporate Income
'taxes, or the state sales lax, but he lefl open the possibility cia
gas tax hike.
Celeste also proposed that the state take over maintenance
costs of bridges carrying state roads through municipalities.
Counties currently are responsible for such maintenance.
"I think there will be some (gasoline) revenue Increase
proposed,·' said Deering, who conceded he has been workln!( on
the proposal lor several months and has support from most of
the highway and local government lobby groups.
Deering declined to specify an exact amount of a tax Increase,
but he was believed to be thinking of 4 cents per gallon . He said
he wants to provide local governments with one penny of the
tax. Local governments take 25 percent of the state tax under a
distribution formula .
Deering said House Speaker Vernal G. Riffe Jr., D·New
Boston, would decide whether or nol the gas tax should be
raised ."Riffe sald .lf It Is proposed, the House " would lake a
serious look at 11. Jusl give us the reasons that It should be
done," he said.
·
Deering is a merflber of the lax·wrlling Ways and Means
Committee and Is chairman of the General Section of the House
Finance Committee. which will begin considering the Ohio
Department of Transportation budget In April. The tax likely
would be part of that bill.

BRUCE FISftER

POWELL'S

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-~ Gas ·~ax
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Feb . 13-Federal Hocking .......... Away

enttne
2 SecUons, 16 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Reagan regrets deal
for hostages failed

Jan. 29-Aiexander................ Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ..................... Away

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Partly cloudy tonight, with
a low In the .low 20s. Cloudy
Thursday, with u chance of
rain and hlgl.- In the low 40s.
he probability of preclpltallon
Is 20 percent tonight and 40
percent Thur•day .

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"But we did not achieve what · 1 og'.l"
we wished, and serious mistakes
were made In trying to do so."
Administration officials have
blamed the Contra funding diver·
slon scheme on Natlonal Security
Council staffer Lt. Col. Oliver
North , whom the president fired
Nov. 25 but later described as
"an American hero."
Reagan had been urged by
some Republican leaders to use
Tuesday's speech to apologize
for the affair, but he did not.
White House chief of slaff Donald
Regan confirmed reports that
the president was not about to
budge, and told reporters, "I
don't _t hink you're going to get
him to."
Pointing to the While House
basement, where the NSC has Its
It's somellmes difficult to
offices, Regan added. "The mls·
get
through Pomeroy's busl·
takes were made' down there."
ness
section these days The president began his 35on foot or by vehicle.
either
mlnute speech nollng the ap·
While work has resumed on
proachlng bicentennial .of the
tearing down the Meigs Inn, a
Constitution and the presence of
wall
·stlll stands. at the front
the new House speaker, Demo·
apparently
creating a danger
crat Jim Wright of Texas, who
for
those
walking In the
introduced him.
middle
block
on East Main, ll!i
Reagan was Interrupted al·
seen In the photo at right. The
most 40 times by applause that
sidewalk Is cluttered with
Included several standing ova·
bricks and debris from the
lions - led by Republican
razing
oileratlons so far and
loyalists when he defended the
the
sidewalk
area In front of
Iran policy and by Democrats
the
operation
Is blocked off, .
when he said: "The federal
making It nece)lsary lor pedes·
deficit Is outrageous."
trlans to walk out In the street.
Acknowledging the new Demo·
Meanllnie,
the sll·eetln the Is
cr atlc majority In the Senale,
being
dug
up as Fishel Co.
Reagan said he was confident
continues
digging
trenches lor
"harmony and good will" would
Installation
of
cable
for Gen·
prevail In moving the nation
eral Telephone Co . ~ with one·
ahead and that the new Congress
way traffic prevailing most of
"will make history. " For the first
the
lime during the normal
time since 1981, the Democrats
work
day.
control both House and Senate.

Families pay tribute to Challenger crew:
F

A~ON,

Va. iUPI) the Challenger
se ~ ga~he~l~g today to re7t:em r 1• e a len pioneers on
e 11 rst anniversary of the
shuttle disaster, say t~.e astro·
nauts fie~ not for aimless
adventure but for their country .
Family .members .traveled to
the nallon s capital to join NASA
Administrator James Fletcher
and othei:_ Iop agency officials In
brief aft ernoon service at an
Army chapel near Arlington
National Cemetery to pay tribute
to the seven ~rew members klll~d
Jan. 28, 1986, In space history s
worst disaster.
Killed that cold day were
~.huttl~ commander Francis
Dick Scobee. co· pilot Michael
Smith, astronauts Ellison Onlz uka, Ronald McNair and Judith
Resnlk, satellite engineer Gre·
~~~le:at~f

Me

gory Jarvis, and Christa
Au ·
llffe, the New Hampshire school·
teacher who became the first
"ordinary citizen" to fly In a
shuttle.
President Reagan planned to
deli ver a !O·mlnute address later
In the day to employees of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, whose morale
was severely shaken In the
aft ermath of the tragedy.
. At the Kennedy Space Center
at Cape Canaveral, Fla., where a
bitter cold wa ve served as a
harsh reminder of the frl!(ld day
one year ago when Challenf(e r
was launched, workers stood ~)'
to lower lla,gs to half staff at 11:38
a. m. EST, the time the shuttle
took off on It s doomed 73-second
flight.
And al NASA ·field centers

a/

nationwide, space agency emScobee unci Smi th arr burled
ployees and contractors pl anned ArllnJ&lt;ton, as ,.,.., astronaut. '
to observe 73 seconds of silence In VIrgil "G us" Grissom and Roger'
memory .o t\hl' Challenger crew, Chaffee. killed 20 yea rs ~go
who gave their lives In ·· the Tuesday a hoa rd lh&lt;'lr Apollo 1
purs uit of knowledge and to open moonshlp In n launch pa d fire
the highest frontier.
Ihat also cla imed lhr life of
"They risked their lives not fo r astronaut Edward Whi te.
the sake of aimless adv&lt;' ntu rr,
NASA dcl lbi'ra telv avoided a
but fo r the nation that gav&lt;' th em
opportunity and for lhc space form al public r:l'remony to mark
frontier, which was an extension the anniversary In a con sc l ou ~
of It s sp irit ," relallvr.s or thr •·ffort lo put thr past lo rrs t and to
crew wrote In an open Ieifer 10 locus on th r fu ture.
NonNhelrss. for many space
Ihe Amer ican public rr leasrd
agency employees thP m!•morles
Tuesday.
" If Ihey wrrr ali ve and co uld of Challenger' s fri ghtening des·
speak IO all America ns." thr Iruct ion 9 miles above th r Atlan·
letter added, " wr believe lh•• tl r Ocea n and Ihe pa lnfu l ln vcs tl·
Challenger crrw would sa .v this: gal lon thai followl:'d remain
·Do not rea r ri sk. Only If wr ca n loday.
"Not a day ~oes by Ihal I don' t
accept our problems as cha llenges can today's drea ms 1)('- lhlnk abo ul Challcngl:'r." sa id
one offi cial.
come tomorrow's realities .,..

Celeste promotes pioneering
spirit- on low-growth budget
•

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPil - Gov .
Richard F. Celeste says Ohio can
keep Its pioneering splrll alive on
a low· growth budget and move to
new frontiers In job creation,
education, human services dellv·
ery ~tnd local government ald.
The governor, In his annual
"State of the State" address, said
Tuesday he will propose no
Increases In major taxes and that
stale spending growth will be
l'lmlted Io less than 1 percent this
coming year.
But Celeste, speaking to a join I
session of the General Assembly
and on stalfwide lelevlslon, said
much can be done withOut
spending money . ·
• "Self discipline doesn't mean
standing still," he said. "It
means making tough choices and
setting clear priorities. It means
Inventing ·new ways to use
.existing resources, and above
all, cooperating In the same
spirit that raised barns, built
churches· and schools, and ·
brought In harvests lor earlier
generations of Ohioans."
1---- -- _ ._... _

The, 38-mlnute speech, more · companies conducting vital
sparsely attended and less heart· research.
Outlining his plans for 1987 and
lly applauded than earlier Ce·
beyond,
Celeste could not reSist
leste efforts , neverlheless
taking
a
poke at Congress and
brought the governor a harvest of ·
President
Reagan.
compliments about his purpose·
"Two hundred years and still
ful delivery.
Republicans, while praising pioneering, " Celeste said, refer·
the governor . for curbing state ring to the bicentennial of .the
expenses, said they want to see Northwest Ordinance. "That
the costs of his new Initiatives must be the spirit with which we
face the challenges of 1987 and
before passing judgment.
William J. Shkurll, director of beyond.
"We cannot count on anyone
the Office of Budget and Manage·
else
to do li for us," he said.
ment, said state .spending will
"Certainly
nol Washington,
Increase by only about $100
D.C."
million after July l on a $10.3
Celeste credited the General
billion •annual budgeI.
Celeste promised to revise the Assembly with helping him make
Local Government Fund, giving "remarkable progress" for Ohio •
communities a $35 million one- during the last lour years In
attracting Industries, building
time Increase In state ald.
The governor also said the · highways, creating technology
state will take responsibility for centers, burning Ohio coal
maintaining bridges on slate cleanly, g~lillng national recog·
hll(hwavs Inside munlclpalltiE!$. nltlon for Ohio's educallon sys·
In education, he proposed tern, ·and Improving mental
Edison Technology Fellowships health care.
"Working together, we have
- two-year programs for posl·
graduate and post·doctoral slu· turned our state around, " said
dents to keep the brlghtesl Ihe governor, repeating a theme
(Continued on Page 12)
students at Ohio's centers or

CONGRATULATIONS TO THE GOVERNOR
-Gov. Richard Celeele, cenler, Ia conll'alulated
by Houee Speaker Vern Rifle Jr ,, left, u Senate

..

Preeldent Paul Glllmor, rtrht, applauded at the :
coaclualon of Cel•te'a State of the state addreroM ·;
to the leplature Tuesday; (UP I)
I

. •.•

·...

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