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Page-16- The Oaily Sentinel

Nicaragua
releases
Ohioan
from :jail

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

MANAGUA, Nicaragua (UP!)
,;_ Nicaragua said It decided to
grant the release of imprisoned
A merlcan spy suspect Sam Hall
without trial for fear his "mental
instability" could lead him to
attempt suicide.
The self-proclaimed counterterrorist was to be turned over to
family lawyer Gary Froelich
today and flown from Nicaragua
aboard a commerlcal .airliner,
Deputy Foreign Minister Javier
Chamorro said.

Wednesday, January 28.1

"Today we w11J proceed to turn
He said Hall, an Olympic likely through Miami.
over Sam Hall to his. family diving medalist and brother of
Hall, a self-styled counterterrepesentative so that he ·can be Rep. Tony Hall, D-Ohlo, spent rorist whose.disdain for commu·
transfetred to the United Tuesday night "under the cus, nlsrn has driven him to the
States," Chamorro told repor- tody of tlie Sandtnlsta govern- bat!leftelds of 'Chad and Le·
ters on Tuesday.
ment" before his release tOday. banon, was captured Dec. 12 in a
Chamorro said Hall, a reco- Nicaragua first announced Mon- restricted area 'of Punta Huete
vered drug user ahd alcoholic day it would free Hall.
air base, 12 miles north of
who once shot himself and was
Hall was to leave Nicaragua Managua. He allegedly was
hospitalized for mental illness, today aboard an Aero Nica flight carrylpg secret Information and
would be freed without trial · to San Jose, Costa Rica,: at 6:30 maps stuffed in his socks.
because his "mentally instabil- a.m. (7: 30a.m. EST) ,-and then
President Daniel Ortega had
ity" could lead to a suicide fly to the United States, most said , Hall would be tried In a
attempt.

1[:1

People's Tttbunal, a, ,~~~~~~~~
court that sentenced ·A
Eugene Hasenfus to 30 ub''"·'·•• ·
jail for helping to supply Nlc~.aj{~!Sf
guan rebels. Nicaragua
doned Hasenlus and he returrle
to his . home In Marinette, Wls,; •
Dec. 17.
.
:J
Congresslon\V investigators fa ·
mlllar with !tall said he wa&lt;t
linked to a n"twork Involved i ,
Illegal military aid to the Nlcar guan rebels, called Contras. •{
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Each of rhese advertised items is required to be

e·

•, Jl'

readily~·.~.~

ava~able for ·sale in each Kroger Store, except as~:~

specifically noted in this ad. If we do run out of an • .1,

ad'W'ertised item, we will offer you your choiCe of a ,:·~

comparabkt item, when available, reflecting the same •·..
savinQs or a rairtcheck which will entitle you lo purchase ;.:
the, advertised item at the advertised price within 3b
days. Only one vendor coupon will be accepted per item ·~:
purchased.
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Vo1.36, No.t87

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WE RESERVE THE RIG\iT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES . .! •
NONE SOLD TO DEALERS .
~~

out routine road malntalnance,
By NANCY Y~ACHAM
·In particular, ditching and reSentinel Stall Writer
Through June, the Meigs placing culvert piping. The highCounty Highway Department way department contends that
and. General Telephone Co. of cable lines are not burled as
Ohio will be Involved in a trial deeply as cailed for in GTE'sown
·
program to help eliminate prob- specifications.
Although GTE does not have as
lems between GTE and the
highway department. The exper- great a problem in Meigs County
imental agreement was made In as In other counties, Forrest
Wednesday's Meigs County Com- Turner, engineering supervisor
for GTE's Athens office, told
missioners' meeting.
GTE is upset because highway commissioners that any cuts· in
the cable are expensive to the
workers sometimes cut telein addition to being a
company,
phone cable lines when carrying

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BUY ONE

BUY ONE

12-CT. PACKAGE

'

BUY ONE

BUY ONE
1-LB. BAG

Dinner
Rolls

superintendent, pointed out that
sometimes multiflora rose and
honeysuckle grow over the pedestels, making them difficult to
see.
Both Bates and Warner agreed
that the highway department
should not have to call GTE
before conducting r.outlne malntalnance work, and various methods to draw attention to the
pedestels were discussed.
· However, It was finally decided that for the next few
months, the highway department

disserv ice for leie'phone
customers.
Gary Bates, manager of Pot)'le·
roy 's GTE olllce, stated that his
main concern is damage to
" pedestels," which are access
points from which telephone
company workers repair burled
cable. "When you see a pedestel," Bates said, "we've got
wires there, definitely." Bales
asked if highway workers
couldn't be more careful as they
work around pedestels.
Ted Warner, county highway
'

wilt contact GTE at the fi rst of
each month, with a list of roads
where work will likely take place
during that month' s time. Then if
Bates feels cable in those areas
are not burled deeply enough, he
can- take steps to correct the
situation, or at least have his men
on the scene or near the area
when road work is taking place.
In addition, the telephone com·
pany. will no longer walt for
approval ·from the county when
laying new cable. GTE will
proceed with laying the cable,

2 Sectlono. 12 Pogtl 26 Conto
A Multlmodio Inc. Nowopopor

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By NA.NCY YOACIIAM
Sentinel Stall Writer
What happens If you forgeJ
to brush your teeth before you
go to school?
If you're a student at Portland Elementary in the South· ·
ern Local School District, you
brush alter you get to school.
In fact, you brush your teeth
twice ·at school - in the
morning and right after lunch.
For several - years now,
schools in Southern District
have been· involved In a
weekly flourlde program• .in
which students, with permission from parents, swish their
mouths with a flourlde rinse.
This year, In an effort to
zone in even more on dental
health, Portland Elementary
students, and teachers, are
brushing twice a day, in
' addflion ' to the weekly
swishing.
Mickey Hoback, principal
at Portland, rewrts that child·

ren there have been quite
receptive to the idea of brush·
lng their teeth at school, and
foUpw their progress on lndl·
vidual charts.
The brushing program began just after the first of the
year, and toothbrushes in
containers were purchased by
Portland's PTO. Each student
keeps the brush at his or her
desk, along with toothpaste
from home.
At the onset of the program,
Joyce Thoren , R.N., spoke to
sludents. about proper brushing techniques.
Dental lips are also sent
home to parents In the school's
weekly newsletter.
And since February Is National Denial Health Month ,
s{X'clal speakers, Including
Dr. Margie Lawson, of Ra·
cine, will be visiting the school
lo fu rthur emphaslw the importance of dental health.

and then · submit a let• er of
notification to th~ county. along
with a copy of plans describing
cable location and depth.
Turner explained that after the
phone company applies to the
Public Utilities Commission of
Ohio to install new cable. PUCO
then allows 30 days in which lo
complete the project . Turner
said that about half of those :10
days are lost in procedures lha t
follow the PUCO approval. With
just a few days left, contrac tors
(Continued on Page 12)

Reform
backers
collide
over bill

Portland students
brush off decay

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IN THE PASTRY SHOPPE

enttne

at y

Agreement to end problems with GTE cable

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 29, 1987

Copyrighted 1987

COPYRIGHT 1987 - THE KROGER CO . ITEMS ANa ·:~
PRICES GOOD SUNDAY, JAN . 25, THROUGH ' , •
SATURDAY, JAN . 3t , t987 , IN POIEROI"Da.~IPOliS : :
STOlES.

Super Lotto

•

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'"~

Rain likely tonight, wllb a
low near 40. Cloudy Friday,
with a chance of rain and rala
chanJinlf to snow In the
afternoon, with temperatures
falling to the mid 308.

25-28-26-17+8

.~

ADVERnSED ITEM POUCV

Daily Nu,mber
429

-Page 3

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Ohio Lottery

·Ohio State
faces Purdue
cagers tonight

....

COLUMBUS (UPIJ - Consumer advocate Ralph Nader·
blastect.Ohlo's civil justice and
Insurance reform proposal Wednesday , saying It is making a
"conventenl scapegoat" out of
trial attorneys while doing nolhlng to regulate a highly profit a·
ble lnsurancP industry .

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BRUSH·BRUSII·BRUSH - Jusll~ Mlddleswart, left, prefers a lillie more toothpaste on
hls brush than his fellow second grade classmate, Amy Rizer. But whether Its a lot of
toothpaste or just a little, students at Portland Elementary are learning thai dental health
should be an tmporlaniP.art of their e-.ryday activities.
,-- ··:.
dental heal lh encourages rrg.
lland tea ching staff ar~ anxHoback says she and the
ular d~nt a l checkups.
Ious to see if the focus on
other members of the Par-

But .James K. Coyne, representing a coalition of Ohio bus!·
ness groups, called Nader
"phony" and "arrogant." He
said the liability insurance crisis
has been caused lly "the 'narrow
economic ~reC'd ol a small' group
of trial altorn~ _vs."

Both Nader and Coyne lest lflt'd
before the Ohio Hous~ Insurance
Commlllre, whleh Is tuklng I!.'S·
tlmonv on 1hr samr rlvll juslkc
and ' tnsuran c ~ reform bill
adopted last Novrmbl&gt;r hul vr·
1o~d I he follow ing month by r:ov .
Richard F. C~ l estr .
in th~ talks .
jeopardy."
"Ohio legislators have bt'Cn
The membership also ap- 'gl\'Cn a second chance to avoid an
Those concerns prompted lhe
UMW to call a special convent ion proved a requesl by Trumka IO Ill -advised and unwarranl ed relast October to consider its llfl the $70 million cap off the sponse 10 I he propaganda , falslfl options'and strategy as It headl'd union's strike fund, which is rallon and strong-armC'd lobby;
for 1987 contract talks. The finan ced by'a V i percenl assess· tng of lh~ property-casualty.
union's current contract expires men! on 'each min&lt;' worker's lnsurancP Industry ," said Nader.:
Jan. 31 , 1988 and negotiations for paychecks.
Trumka said he hoped to reach
a new pact are expected to start
"While House Bill I will do ·
a
settlrmenl "w ithout a single nothing to guarantee reasonablewithin the next few months.
With roughly one-third of the day of lost time." But h(' added ness of Insurance (premiums 1 :
UMW's 150,000 members out of that his union needed all the for businesses and consumers, It ·
work, the special conve ntion leverage It could muster In will severely restrict tMrlghtsof
adopted a proposal instructing sq uaring off with the huge Innocent victims and subjret
union negotiators to make jo~ multln atl'o nal co nglomerat es Important human rights now
opportunity and economic secur- that now dominate the coal afforded Ohio citizens to , a
ity the UMW's primary objective ' indu stry.
political process highly vulnera·
ble to factors of . power ' and
money ...
·'
" I find the rhetoric of attorneys
like Ralph Nader so phony," said
Coyne, the president of the
American Tort Reform Association. "They 're only interes ted in ·
victims that can make attorneys .
rich."
" He's fighting only for 1he
pocketbook rights of the lrlal
lawyers," said Coyne.
Coyne, who was rcprescnlin~ ·
the Ohio Alliance for Cll'il
Justice, a coalition of , major
business assoclallons, said "a ·
runaway civil justice sy~ wm '' ·
has driven up lht' cost of liability.:
Insurance.
"It's llll~atlon that's drlvtn~
this system, and il's the grc1•d o(
those ltvlng off I he systl'm that's
ruining it," said C'oy nl'.

UMW readies selective strike strategy
BUY ONE

BUY ONE
y,. GALLON CTN . KROGER
' I LIMIT 2 PLEASEJ

Natural Flavor
Ice Cream
· UMW Prelldent
Richard Tnunka

WASHINGTON !UP!) - Unl·
ted Mine Workers President
Richard Trumka says his union
Is fattening !ts strike lund and
honing a "selective strike" strategy for 'upcomlng national contract talks that already appear
tinged by distrust.
Trumka, speaking before the
Industrial Relations Research
Association Wednesday, said his
membership fell threatened not
only by the depressed condition
of the coal industry, but by
overtly anti-union activities on
the part of coal operators.
, Trumka charged that many
coal companies increasingly

play a "s hell game" in which
they set up subsidiaries to evade
contracts requiring unionized
labor. He also accused them of
openly defyi ng arbitration decl·
sions and refusing to pay re·
qulred retirement and health
benefits.
"In our industry, there is real
distrust of each other," Trumka
said in a luncheon speech.
"Our conclusion is that they
don't like the (United Mine
Workers) and that they want to
do away with the mine workers,"
he said. "I think our membership
believes their existence is In

..

Committee sets ·dates
'for health screening
BUY ONE
12-CT. PACKAGE

24-0Z. JAR VLASIC

Freezer Pleezer
Ice Milk Bars

California
Broccoli . . . . . . .·

Bunch

DOUBLE

BUY ONE
Kosher or·Zesty
Snack Chunk Pickles

manufacture's

COUPONS

This week· your manufactured products "cent_s off" coupons are worth double at Kroger.
Limited to manufactured products coupons worth up to and including 50¢ Off . Coupons wonh
more than 50¢ are redeemed at face value only. Limit one coupon lor each product purchased
Limit one coffee coupon . No beer. wine or·cigarette coupons will be double .- Not valid on Ire~
coupons, Kroger coupons-or retail food store coupons. The amount refunded cannot e~ceed
the price of the item. You must purchase product in $izes specified on the coupon. This offer
aP,plies only to manufactured' products "cents off" coupons for items we carry. To. assure
product availability lor all our cultomel'1, only one coupon per shopping family , will be doubled
on any brand item during each store visit,

By CIIARLENE IIOEFLICH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Dates for the comprehensive
multiphasic health scree'l-lng
clinic for Meigs Countlans was
setlor' May 17, 18 and 19 and May
23 at the Meigs Multipurpose
Building on Mulberry Heights.
Meeting Wednesday at the
Senior Citizens Center, the plan:nlng committee, composed of
personnel of the Meigs County
Council on Aging and the Meigs
:county Health Department, cosponsors, along with other health
professionals, detailed plans lor
the health scr~enlng program.
Plans call for the screening to
include complete blood work as
well urinalysis and h~moccult
testing, dental evaluation, tuber-culosis test, needed Inoculations
· (tetanus ln.cluded), glaucoma
•and eye disease checks, and
:hearing tests. Professionals are
being secured to carry out every
phase of the screening.
In addition, the committee Is
working to secure the services of
Jane Denbow of the Southeast
Ohio Lung Association so that
pulmonary lung capacity checks
can be made, as well as getting a
couple of podiatrists. There will
also be educatlomil exhibits by
the Cancer Society, the Heart
Association, Planned Parenthood, and Mental Health, and
Information on children's clinic
at the.,Health Depar!meilt and

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breast examinations and pap
tests available throughou't the
year.
Arrangements were also made
lor employing a part-lime coordinator, either a registered nurse
or ~omeone with a medical
background, to handle some. of
the scheduling and screening
services, as well as to follow up
on any problems detected In the
examining process . The coordlnatl!r will be employed for ·a
nine-week period, May 18 to July
17.
The clinic will operate from 9
a. m. to 5 p.m. ori the firs t three
days, from 1 to 8 p.m. on the
fourth day, May 23. If more than
the anticipated 500 persons make
appointments to go through the
screening, then plans call _for
continuation of the program on
May 25. Scheduling of appoint·
ments will begin about a month
before the screening pro'gram: . '
As In previous years, Income
will determine whether or not a
patient pays for any of the
services. Those who fall under
the HEAP Income guidelines·
($8,040 In a hoUBehold of one;
$10,860 In a ·household of two;
$13,6110 In a household of three;
$16,500 In a household of tour;
and $19,3:1Jl in a household o!tlve)
will not be charged for any oft he
services.
Others wlll pay between $17
and $19 depending on charges for
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MULTIPHASIC HEALTH SCREENING
TEAM -May 17, 18, 19and 23havebeeilsetasthe
dates fpr a comprehensive health screening
program at the Meigs Mulllpurpotte Building on
Mulberry Heights; The most anyooe wlll pay. for
the complete range of servlce8 Including
examlnatlorw by professionals who will volunteer
their time and extensive laboratory- work
-- performed at cost llguretl will be between Sl7 and
Sl9. Dr. Jaml!ll Witherell, not pictured, Is the
medical advisor for the program. Reviewing
. ·~r.

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details or the program here are committee
members, Scott Lucas, admlnllttrator, Vetera111&lt; ·
Memorial llospllal; Susav Oliver, volunteer
coordinator, Linda Friend, hell)th coordinator,
Senior Citizens Center; Ginny KJJiln, R.N., lleallh
Department; Joan Tewbbary, county tuberculo·
sis nul'l!e; Jon Jacobs, llealth Department, ~~eated
lellto right, and standing, Norma.Torretl, R.~ .•
Health Department, and Eleanor Thomas,
executive director, Meigs County Council on
Aging.

small cost only because county
department's levy funds.
funding
is going Into the proAs pointed out by Norma
gram,
the
professionals are
Torres. R.N., health department
volunteering
their
services, and
supervl~r of nurses. if an
'
t
he
blood
work
and
other Ia bora·
Individual were to purchase all of
the services available through tory tests are being secured at an
the clinic. paying for the profes- actual cost figure.
Susan Oliver noted thalli takes
sionals and the lab tetts,lt would
more
than 100 non-professional
cost between $450 and $500. [t can
to move the partie!·
volunteers
he offered through the multi·
(Continued on Page 12)
phasic screening
at the
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laboratory work. The profession·
als, doctors, nurses and other
specialists, volunteer their
·services,
II Is anticipated that the
program will cost about $10,000
over the payments made by thOse
going th~ough , the clinic. That
amount, according to Jon Jacobs, health department admlnlst£ator, will come !rom thar

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Nader said Florida adopl&lt;'&lt;l
tort reform in 1986. He sa ld since
then. there have bel'n 277 fllln~s
with the statt• for premiums and
175 of thosl' fllln~s show no
savings, Of t)losPcompanles that
offered savl n~s. no rC'ductlons
were more than 10 perccnl, h~
said .
But Coyne said the Florida law
was an unfair test. because it
contains ·a four-year "sunset"
provision, and Insurance companies cannol predict tHeir risks
under those terms.
Nader told the committee that
instead-of makln~ limitations on
plaintiffs in lawsuits, the leglsla·
tlon should strengthen lhe hand
of the Ohio Department of
Innsurance In reguialil)g lrisurlince companlE'!!, which he sild
have made $79 billion In protlls ·
over the last 10 years.
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�Page 2-The Daily Se;nti:;:;'ne::;I~--------------...:P.:OI:,:m,:18:.,:fOV::_..:,:M.::idd=le:p-:ort.:.:·..:O:IH:'o·-...- - - - - - -...- - . _.;,;Th;.;,;ursc;;;,;;;;da;;;.Y~·..;;J;;an,;,;;ua;;;.ry;.:..;:2;;;.9,~1.;.;9.;.;8"'1'"7
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Nets ·now ·one of ··five teams
to' lose a game to LA Clippers:;·
By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sports Writer
The New Jersey Nets joined an
exclusive club Wednesday night
- they became one of only five .
teams to lose to the Los Angeles
Clippers t~s season.
" We were outplayed, outcoached, outhustled and any
other 'outs' you want to put ·tn
front of a good adverb," New
Jersey Coach ' Dave Wohl said
after the Clippers' 98-91 victory
over the Nets In a meeting of the
two worst teams In the NBA. "We
took them lightly. We played as
poor a game as we have In a long
tjme."
·
Considering the Nets have lost
eight of their last nine games,
seven straight on the road, and
are 11-31 this season, the performance had to be something
special.
" We cheated the owriers out of
money tonight,".said Buck Williams, attesting to the Nets' effort
that Included 34 turnovers·. "We
walked around like zombies who
·. had never played basketball
before."
Los Angeles earned Its third
triumph in Its last 36 games and
snapped a five-game losing
streak, despite missing starting
center Benoit Benjamin with a
sore ankle. The Clippers own the
league's wor~t mark, 1).36. They
have also btaten Seattle, Houston, Phoenix and Denver twice.

~'

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURD.IY •
SUND.IY • All SEATS 12.50
AIIMISS ION EVERY TUESDAY $2.50
.:..,_..::;·:.:.:._ I.AST DAY!

Kortokrax named player of week
FUTU.E EFFORT - Cleveland's John Williams (18) goes high In a strong, but futile effort to
block a score by 76ers' CUI! Robinson (4) during

third quarter action of Wednesday's NBA contest
In Philadelphia. The home team beat the Cavs,
109-107. (UPI)

Elect 11 to College .
Football Hall of Fame
KINGS ISLAND, Ohio (UP])Player tn· 1956 when the Volun·
Eleven former All-America seteers were nationa l champions.
lections constitute the College Runner· up to P a ul Hornung for
Football Hall of Fame's 1987 · the Reisman Trophy that yea r,
class of Inductees a nnounced
Majors Is now coaching a t
••
Wednesday.
Tennessee.
· :Heading the group are form er
Georgia ,q uarterback Fran TarNow a nationally recognized
'kenton, Penn Sta te tackle Mike composer, Reid played defensive
Reid and Tennessee tailback
tackle for Penn Sta te from
johnny Ma jors.
1961). 70. He played fi ve seasons
· Joining them are VIrginia Tech for the C l~cinnatl Bengals before
~nd Carroll Dale. Washington
retiring to devote full time to his
quarterback Don Heinrich, Ml- music career . Reid wrote the
'8ml (Fla. 1 end Ted Hendricks, Grammy-wlnnlng "Stranger In
'Navy center Ri chard Scott, Bay. My House" s ung by Ronnlp
lor tackle Jim Ray Smith, Army Milsap.
guard Joe Steffy, Michigan Sta te.
Dale wa s a two-time All·
roverback George We bster and America select ion while at VIr·
Southern California tackle Ron gina Tech from 1956-59. Hv la ter
·Yary.
played five years with the Los
The 11 were elected by the Angeles Rams a nd e ight yea rs
Jlla'tional Football Foundation's with Green Bav :
12·member Honors Court. They
Former NFL coach Hein r ich
will be formally Indu cted Into the played for the Washington Hu shall Dec. 8 at a dinner In New kies from 1948-52 and Is now a
York.
sportscaster In Sa n Francisco,
Tarkenton pl~yed quarterback while Hendricks played offensive
a t Georgia frQm 1957-60, leading ·and defensive end for Miam i
the Southeastern Confe re nce In from 1965-68. He was United
total offense and passing his Press Internal ional' s Lineman of
senior season. He went on to play the Year his senior season.
··is' years In the NFL with the New · Smitlr. a tackle at Bay lor !rom
York 'Giants and Minnesota 1952-54. h1t er played profess ion·
VIkings.
ally with the Cleveland Brown s
.• ,,. Majors, a tailba ck a t Tennesee and Dallas Cowboys and served
;/ri:om 19!i4-56, wa s th e Sou!heas t- as president of lhe C'ot !on Bowl
".el-n Conference's Mos t Valuabl e Association.

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''I'm not overly exc ited about It
Slxers 109, C!lvallers ~~~·
(the victory)." s;~ld D;~rnell
At Philadelphia, Andrew_,J'o,
Valentine, who scored 20 points ney scored 14 of his 21 points ln.
to pace the Clippers, "but we'll . the fourth quarti!F to lift the
take any kind of wlq we can get. 76ers . . Cleveland~ an lH
"I'm not satisfied with getting spurt to close to
with 53
a win every five games or every seconds left on a !like! by John
15 or 16 games. That's for the Wllllams, but Jo nny Newman
birds. Teams don't respect us. missed an off-balance shot with
Teams don't respect us when we 40 seconds remalnjng.
play frightened."
Suns 131, Warriors 104
Kenny Fields added 18 points ~ At Phoenix, Larry Nance
lor Los Angeles, ln&lt;'iudlng 10 In scored 29 points and grabbed 10 .
the final quarter to help hold' off rebounds to lead the Suns to their
the Nets. Tim Kemptt&gt;n, subbing third straight victory. Five other
lor Benjamin, played a season- Suns scored In double figures,
high 31 minutes and contributed 8 ·and rookie guard Jeff Hornacek
rebounds.
handed out 18 assists, one short of
"It was fun to play In this kind the team record. Chris Mullin led
ofslfuatlon, runnlngupanddown Golden State with 21 points.
Sonlcs 125, LakerslOI
the court," Kempton said.
. When you're a Clipper, you
At Seattle, Tom Chambers
take your satisfaction wHere you scored-37 points, Xavier McDacan find It.
nlel added 28 and Dale Ellis had
In other games, Boston 25 to power the SuperSonics. The
whipped Chicago 132-103, Phila- margin of victory matched Seat delphia nipped Cleveland 109· tie's biggest in·its 20-year rivalry
107, Phoenix blitzed Golden State with the Lakers. Earvin
131-104 and Seattle dumped the "Magic" johnson scored 24
Los Angeles Lakers 125-101.
points and James Worthy added
20 to pace Los Angeles.
Celtlcs 132, JJuUs 103
At Boston, Larry· Bird and . . - - - , - - - - - - - - Dennis Johnson each scored 26
points to help the Celtlcs complete a home-and-home sweep.
Kevin McHale added 22 points
and alll2 Celtics scored. Michael
Jordan, the NBA's scoring
leader, finished with 27 points to
lead the Bulls, 6-14 on the road
this season.

.~

.TVC standings
!OVERALL&gt;
WI. PF PA
l\1l'IJtS .. ..... .......... ...... .... I4 2 1051 H65
VInton Counl)' .. ............ tt ~ 956 9!2
Belprt&gt; .......................... II 7 1151 1052
Aleunder ...................... K 8 951 m
Wfll ~ ton ......... : .......... ,. ... 9 , 1005 102%
Federal·llocklng............. 7 M KZti K:IO
Nel~o~onvUie-\'ork ...•...•..•.. 5 10 1025 . lit%
1'rln1hlc....... .... .. .......... ... 2 II 13t m
Mlll er........... .. ................ l I~ 1111 I051
((;ONFERENCE)

• W L PF
Me lgN ... .... .. .............. .... IS I IOJ:i
VInton c:ounl)' .............. 10 2 ~
Bclpre .. ... .. .. .. ................. 9 li 910
Aleunder .................... .. 7 li m
\\'elbUon ......................... 7 · 6 K211
Fl'deral· llo ckln~ ....... .. .... 6 7
11•
Nt•hwnvUil"\'ork ............. :i 9 Kl7
Trlmhle. .......... ...............~ 10 001
Mlllcr ... ....... ............. .. .... u 12 ti05

Tue:;day's result!'i
. MeiKN 1R Alex1111der 10
Fl!dcrlli-Hocklng 1'1 VInton Co unty

PA
Kl4

752
KOO
K02
H:IO
10K
KK9

69K
K60

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (UP!) Randy Kor(okrax, who averaged
33 points and 13.5 rebounds a
game last week In leading
Findlay (Ohio) to two victories
and an NAIA Top 20 ranking,
, Wednesday was named the association's player of the week.
Kortoklax, a t&gt;foot-5 senior
from Kalida , Ohio, keyed a win
over Defiance and a 72-69 upset of
Wright State. Kortokrax's 34
points and 11 rebounds against
Wright State snapped that
school's 49-game home-court
winning streak.
Against Defiance he scored 32
points and had 16 rebounds. For
the week he connected on 2t&gt;of- 52
shots from the field and 9-of- 10

MOC

5fl ( ~

WL

'Rt.•Nenc• ad ion
(CONFERENCE )
Tt•am

\\'

~IPIJ!S .... ............ , .........................

II

Alc1111lnder ..................................... ~
Bt·lprr ........... .............. .. .... ...... ...... 9
Fcderal·llocklng................... 1. .. ..... . 7

l\1111i:r........ . ................... ... ............. 6
Trimhlt!....................... .. ....., .. ....... .. ti
Wt•llstoo ................. ......... ..... . ........ 3
Vinton Counly ........ .. .............. .. .. ... ~
Nt•li'iOn\' IIIP.- \'ork ................. .. ..... .... 1
'l'u('!ltday'l&lt;l rNiull,..
Mt•IJr.i U ,

Alc~~:andf'l'

L
:1
~

3
6

6
6
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M
11

:t:t

Ft•dcrai·IIOt:klnr; 35, Vinton Co unl)' :H
l\111lcr 4!1, Wt•llston 41
1\tlpno 3K, Trl.mhl.f' 27
Friday '~ l{anH'l'i

"STAR TREK 4"
7:00 &amp; 9:20 P.M. IIATED (PGl

The Daily Sentinel

iTHUI

(USPS 1411-11111)
A Dlvbdo• of Multlmedla. Inc.

AMIG8I!

Published ('vf'rv a ft~rnoon. Monday
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I MOC Standings .,

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'rrlmble 50 firlpr(• ~ 5
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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3

'.Ohio State battles Purdue .quintet tonigh.t
By GENE CADDF.S
UPI Sports Writer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!)
Ohio Stale will go after Its second
top five scalp within a week
tonight when the Buckeyes battle
5th-ranked· Purdue In St. John
Arena.
The Buckeyes snapped Iowa's
18-game winning streak last
Saturday with an 81). 76 victory
over the 2nd-ranked Haw keyes at
Iowa City beh!O'd Dennis Hopson's 36 points.
-Ohio State has won four
straight Big Ten games after an
0-3 start and stands 13-6 overa! I.
Purdue, which lost at home to
Iowa and beat Illinois In over.
time in Its last two starts, Is 15·2
overall and 6-1 in the conference.
Purdue coach Gene Keady,
whose team has been Idle since
last Thursday and plays at
Intrastate rival Indiana on Satur·
day, says he Isn' t worrying about
\

LOOSE BALL - Indiana forward Daryl Thomt!S (left) and
llllnols guard Doug Allenberger ( rl«hl) battle for loose ball during
Wednesday's first half action In Big 10 hardwood game at
Bloomington. The Hooslers 'won, 69-66. ({JPI)

By GE!IlE CADDF.S
. UPI Sports Writer
Something's suddenly gone
wrong with coach Billy Hahn's
Ohio University Bobcats.
Orie of the hottest teams In the
Mld-Amltl'lcan Conference just
over two weeks ago when they
had won five games tn a row, the
Bobcats have now lost four '
straight and three at thOse have
been at home.
No. 4 came Wednesday night,
70.61 to ieague-Ieadlng Central
Michigan, and It dropped the '
. ·Bobcats three full games behind
: the Chippewas at the midway
· ~tnt of the conference season.
Hahn, who replaced Danny
: Nee when Nee leit OU for
· Nebraska, puts his finger on a
: lack of d~pth and poor free throw
• shooting as·the possible culprits.
·'Our depth has been bothering
:- us ," · said Hahn. "We're only
· playing seven people. And free
. throws have been our downfall
: all year long. Tonight, we shot
; below 60 percent again (10 of
. 17) y
• The. Bobcats did Jose the game
· ' at the line, althoug h Central's 20
: ;!'f 30 was nothing to talk about
•· -elther.
Despite their problems, the
: -Bobcats sUllied 48-47 with 9:15
· ·left In the game. But Ervin
: Leavy, who scored 17 of hls 25
; ·points In the second halt,' led a
· ' brief Central surge that pnr
duced 8 unanswered points and a
55-48 lea.d the Chippewas never
relinquished.
"Give Leavy credit," said
; Hahn. "In the second half, tie
. . really poured I! on."
· Central coach Charlie Coles
said he was surprised by his
team 's play.
.
"Ohio University had a good
• :crowd, but our players really got
;. ,up and played some good basket•
·ball," said Coles. "Our guard
:play was ·very good tonight.
' AlthOugh we may not have won
·the rebound war, we still re• .bounded our best game of · the
;year."
. The Chippewas actually outrebounded the Bobeats by one.
: ·. Paul " Snoopy" Graham once

. Ri~ women edge
: Wheeling, 83-78
WHEELING, W.Va. - Down
~ev.en points at hal !tim~. the Rio
·.. Grande College f(edwomen rallied Tuesday night .to roll past
' Wheeling College 83-78.
: Sophomore shooting guard Lee
' Ann Mullins led the Redwomen's
charge with 23 pOints. Senior
guard Robbin Luck added 22
•. points; sophomore center Krls,
Shepherd and freshman Angela
Packard chipped In with 12 each.
' The Redwoman trailed 41·34 at
halftime but regrouped during
, .the Intermission to register the
· come-back victory.
. • "In the second half we played
· 'some man defense and stuck
1 right with them," Redwomen
' · Coach Cheryl Flelltz said. "We
·. ' stayed really composed under
· : the pr.essure,"
; • Lisa Jones, a 5-foot-5 senior
·• . point guard, d\Shed out 13 assists
: for the second straight game, as
: · :th'e Redwomen Improved their
·
: 'record to 14-4.
: · Wheeling, 7-9, was led by
·• ·'Frances McDonald, Jolene Crar
·.:and Jackie Ernest, w.Jto each
· · · 'SCored at least 20 points. Me Do• • :nald netted 26; Crar 22 and
' · : .Ernest 20.
.: : : ruo Grande next travels to
. Greater Ohio Athletic Confer,• · ence toe Ohio Dominican
· ; Saturday .

·-.. . . .
' ·

810 GUNDI: (UI - M,_ .. '1-IJ; ·

&lt; JMel 11-1-111 ..,.,..... "I-ll; Pa.urd

,

1-1-" Moat I w

1-I-J: BallliiP 1·1-1;

~-I·U.
W'MIIiilflll
-lldleaoldtl-1-lfl ~ ...
11·1-lli Brwooll·•t~: Jiron H-4: Wlo&amp;ltarti-W: ,.all t-•s. Tollll , ...'II.
...........n:

--·41-N.

'

ams :· "We beat Iowa Saturday,
but we can lose to anybody In t'hi!
Big Ten , too, and I think
everybody knows th at.."
•
As for the t&gt;foot·5 Hopson.
Williams said, "he's just done
great job. Hi s scoring Is what lias
kept us around and let us "lin
against some great tea ms." :

:a

.

Williams, however, a lso h,.C
words of praise for 6-foot ·9cent$' .
John· Anderson.
" At Iowa , John didn 't scor-e
any points," noted William~.
" but he did a grea t job for ·35
minutes. He hasn't gotten much
credit , but we're nowhere without him.''
Williams promised some new
wrinkles lor the Boilermak ers.
"We'll do some things differ·
ently tx-catise Purdue Is a great
team ." he said, "Purdue Is a
tough matchup for us so we have
to play with a lot of emotion."

•crosby Tournament opens with 180 pros

:OU drops fourth
\; straight, 70 to .6 1
•

the 4th-ranked Hoosiers, yet.
· can keep Hopson from having a
"Right now, we're concerned super night, we may be able to ·
only about Ohio State because bang In there."
they're playing very well." said
Meanwhile, Ohio State coach
Keady. "They just came back Gary Williams Is equally con·
from a road trip where they won cerned about Purdue.
at Minnesota and Iowa. That's a
''Their !lrst five have trem endgreat accomplishment .
ous balance," said Williams.
"They've always played us "With Troy Lewis and Everett
very tough there," Keady said of Stephens outside, you ca n't conthe Buckeyes, "and we're look- centrate on the guys Inside like
Ing for ~ very dlf!!lcutt game. you should.''
We're not even thinking about
Lewis. a 6-!oot-4 guard. leads
Indiana. "
the Boilermakers' balanced scar·
lng at 18.9 a game, followed by
To beat the Buckeyes , Keady forward Todd Mitchell at 15. 9,
knows he will have to at least center Melvin McCants at 12.6,
slow down If not stop Hopson, Stephens at 11.8 and forward
who. leads the Big Ten In scoring Doug Lee at 10. 7.
at 29 points a game.
Despite the victory over Iowa
"Ohio State Is a team with and the four Big Ten wins In a
other outstanding players," con- 'row, Williams Isn't talking continued Keady. "We're concerned ference championship.
about (Curtis! Wilson, (Jay)
"We're not till! type of club to
Burson, (Jerry) Francis and be considered lor championship
(John) Anderson, too. But, If we honors this season." sa id Willi-

again led OU In scoring with 20
point's. Reggie Rankin added 16.
In other MAC action Wednesday night, Miami nipped Eastern
Michigan 81-79, Western Mlchigan beat Bowling Green 82-75 and
Toledo edged Ball State 64-61.
Kent State was Idle.
At Oxford, Todd Staker scored
25 points and Karlton Clayborne
sank two free throws with five
seconds remaining to lift Miami
to Its narrow win over Eastern
Michigan.
Staker connected on five ot Sill
th~ee-polnt shots, Clayborne !In!shed with 20 total points and
Trim III Haywood added 14 points
and 13 rebounds. Eddie Schilling
also had 15 assists for Miami,
now 10-8 and 4-4.
Jell Haar scored 14 points and
the Rockets hit 6 free throws In
the !Ina! two minutes In Toledo's
64-61 victory over Ball State. Ball
Stale took a 59· 58 lead with 2: 55
remaining on a Derrick Wesley
3-polnt shot, but Toledo responded with 4 free throws to
make It 62·59 with 1:44 to play.
The Cardinals closed to within
62-61 with 1: 30'left on a Charles
Smith layup. The Rockets' Andy
Fisher, who h~d 12 points In the
game, then closed out the scor1ng
wlth2freethrowswlth19seconds
remaining. Blake Burnham also
scored 12 for Toledo.
Billy Stanback scored 15 points
and Bill Rapp 13 to lead Western
Michigan to Its win over Bowling
Green.·
BG, which hit only 8 of 35 field
goal attempts In the first half,
trailed 31-24 at halftime. It was
50.43 with 12:44 left ,In the game,
when Western Michigan scored 8
unanswered points, six ·Of them
on a pair of 3-polnt field goals by
Steve Amundson.
BG's Anthony Robinson led all
scorers with 20 points .
At Youngstown , Tilman .
Bevely continued his hot shoot· ;
lng, scoring 31 points to lead ·
Youngstown State to a 99- 90 win
over Wright State. Bevely had 55
points Monday night In YSU's
win over Tennessee Tech.
The Penguins led 44-37 at
halftime and pulled away to a
63-43 lead just five minutes Into
the second half. The Penguins'
biggest margin was 81-56 with
8:30 left In the game.
In Ohio Athletic Conference
play Wj!(lnesday night, Otterbein, 9-1, beat Marietta 87· 74 to
stretch Its first place lead to two
games over a trio of challengers
- Musklngum, Wittenberg and
Capital, all at 7-3.
In other OAC games, Mus kln·
gum beat Wittenberg 54-51 In
overtime, Capital downed Ohio
Northern 65-61 and BaldwinWallace defeated Heidelberg 7771.

By MIKE RABUN ·
UPI Sports Writer .
PEBBLE BEACH, Call!.
(Uf'l) - As soon as Jack
Nicklaus started talking about
semi-retirement, he began playIng about as well as he can play.
"I've made 19 birdies In three
days," Nicklaus S\lld Wednesday, the eve of the opening round
of the Pebble Beach National
Pro-Am. "The probl~m . of
course, Is that ·the tournament
doesn't start until tomorrow."
The tournament, still known
as, "The Crosby," opens today

with a field of 180 pros and 180
amateurs playing on three of the
nation's most alluring courses:
Pebble Beach, Cypress Point and
Spyglass Hill.
The appearance marks the
first of the year for Nlcklaus and
will be one of only a few he will
make on the tour in 1987.
"I'm not retiring," Nicklaus
said. "l'in only semi-retiring. I
don't expect to be competitive all
the time, but I think I can be now
and then."
Nicklaus said he 'would proba·

bly play no more than 10 times
this year -Including this week's
event. the four majors. his own
Memorial Tournament, Dora!
a nd the Wes tchester Classic.
"At my age (471, I just can't
expect to be competitive every
week," he said. "If I thought I
was capable of winning two or
three majors this year, I'd be out
here every week working my tall
off. ·
"When I play, I still expect to
play good. I jus t have· to realize 1
ca n' t play good week alter week

anymore. There Is not hing !love
more tha n playing and pla ying
well. There Is nothing 1 hate more
than playing poorly likr I did
early las t year."
Despite struggling ear ly last
year, Nicklaus won his 20th
major title by swee ping from
behind on the final nine holes t0
beat Greg Norman a nd Tom Kltr
by a shot and ca pture th e
Masters .
"It's just time for me to han.gJt
up as far as a werk·to·weck
sc hedule goes.'' Nicklau s sa id .
"It 's time for me to cut back .' '

Pirates host Southern; Wildcats travel
to Oak Hill for key conference contest ·:·
By JIM WEIDEMOYER
Tribune Staff Writer
With only three weeks remainIng In the season and three games
separating the t0p four teams In
the race for the Southern Valley
Athletic Conference title, the
picture will either fog up further
or clear up considerably Friday
night .
The first division teams play
each other with league-leading
Hann&lt;J,n Trace traveling to
fourth-placed Oak Hill and
second-placed North Gallla hostIng third-placed Southern.
At Oak Hill, th e Wlld&lt;:ats, 10-5
overall and 9·11n the SVAC, have
a tall task ahead of them playing
on the stage-gymnasium. Currently the Wildcats are playing
some of the best basketball in the
conference using their balanced
scoring attack to roll to nlne
straight conference victories.
The Oaks, 8-6 and 5- 4, are
coming off a solid game agalst
South Webster, claiming a 68-48
victory, Tuesday night . Oak Hill
has lost two of Its last three
conference contests since the
holiday season. The only victory

came over wlnless -in · th c·
conference Symmes Valley .
At VInton, the top defensi ve
squad In the league (North
Galllal Is pitted against the
highest scoring team tSou thern 1,
with the winner taking second
place.
.
North Gallla Is allowing an
average of 53 points per game;
Southern, who Is only allowing &gt;6
points Itself, scores an average of
68 points per contest.
The hosting Pirates, 10-2' am)
7-2, may have the services of
junior Keith Burnette. The ankle
the ~-fdot-2 shooting guard se·
verely sprained against Unloto
two weeks ago does not appear to
be as serious as first thought. His
stat us is questionable.
Defending champion Southern,
8-4 and 6·3, has slowly c llmtx-d
back Into the title pictu re after
losing three or Its first four
teague games. Its only losses
have tx-en at the hands of Hannan
Trace, Oak Hill and North Gallla.
North Gallla also plays Saturday, when it hosts Symmes
Valley In a mak eup game thM.
was postponed last Friday, while

Southern travels to Miller for a
non·ccnference game.
In other SVAC contes ts Friday
lO\IEKi\U. )
•
W I. Pf' PA
night, Sou thwestern travels to
C.lallhl ................. ... 10 2 73$ &amp;.U
Symmes Valley and Ea stern North
Hnnn t~n 'I'Ta•·i• .. ............... 10 ~ 97:1 KIU
hosts Kyger Creek.
Southt.'l'n ............... ........ .... K I Kll B7i
At Willow Wood, the Highla nd · Oak Hill ............................ ~ 6 90! m
..................... !( 7 !(!12 Mil
ers, 8-4 and 4-6. will be shooting Southwt'tltern
F.:uMlern ................... .......... ti 9 964 160
for their third straight league K)'•er fr ef'L ........... ...... ... 6 9 7M2 M~
vlctorv, fourth overall. with Mymmt'M V01llt~ ................. 2 II R!Yl RO~
1I'ONf'EKf;NI'EJ
junior' forw ard Chris Bryant and
W 1.. I'F PAr
sophomore guard Dave Mer shon Hannan 1'Tat:~ ....... .. ........ .. 9 I 671 ~K&amp;
pressed Into unusual starting North Gall\" . ............... ......1 't ti'lM $11
.... ....... ........... ..... i 3 ltl ..,
roles, because leading scorer Southern
Oak Hill. ............. .. ............ ! I Ill '"'
Sean Colley and Rick Matslop E11Nicrn .......... ............. :.... A 6 811 lil$1
Southwtfflern ......... .. ....... .. ..l 6 ).'J! Hft
have quit thE' team.
Ky~t~ Ctt'f'i. ...................... 3 7 n1 IUS
Symmes Valley, 2-11 and 0·9, Synun._,.
Valley ................. (! 9 44$ $?4
has yet to clafm Its first league
·.
victory but Is coming off a 79-56
Ke!l crvc att~n
II 'ONFEKENCE J
victory' over Hannan iW. Va .J
W I. l'f' 1M
Tuesday night.
Soulht.'f'n ........................... X l 4UI :150
AI East ME'Igs, Eas tern, 6·9 Norlh (iallla ........ .............. 7 2 463 :lit
and 4-6. will attempt 10 snap It s JlannMn 'ft iU ' t• .......... .. ....... 7 !J :tn 334
Oalri Hill ........ .............. .. .... !'i I liM :JOj
three-game losing s trE&gt;a k, with
Jo::a,.ttrn ..... ........................ &amp; ' 4111 .m
junior guard Bryan Durs t still Soulhwe'l\l«n..................... :l 1 344 ....
Ku•~ trtf'k ...................... 2 K :14K ft2
nursing a sore ankle.
sylnm(lll
V·aiii.'Y .......... .... .. .! K :101 lSI .
The vis iting Bobcats , 6·9 and
l'rlday'!'IIICMIU~
3-7, have lost five st ra lght co nfer·
lfunnW1 1Tace l&amp;l Oa.k IIIII
encc games since defea ting
SOulhwt'l'llt' rll M Symlllei Vllllt•y
Sllruthcrn u1 North Oa.llla
Symmes Vall ey In the middle of
Ky•er Crf•t!k at E1U1l f' rn
las t month .
!'lalurda)""' ll:ltmt•

SV AC Standings

Symmt"'

V~t.IIC)'

Ill

N11rU1

( malif'Up)

..

.------------------------"T------------------------';-

Pirates plan caravan
PI'M'SBURGH (UP!) - The
Pittsburgh Pirates Wednesday
announced details o( their annual
promotional . winter car!lvan,
which will begin· Feb. 2 and run
weekda:r-s through Feb. l3.
The first week of the caravan
will be held · Feb. ' 2-6. Pirates
represented on the trip will
Include Manager Jim Leyland
and players· Mike Dlaz, Don
Robinson and l'ftlke Bielecki,
announcer Jim Rooker and the
Pirate Parrot.
The first week will swing
through Morgantown, Fairmont
and Wheeling, W.Va.; Niles,
Ohio; and Franklin and Erie, Pa.
Pirates R.J. Reynolds, Bobby
Bonilla and Rick Reuschel and
announcer Lanny Frattare will
lead the second week of the
caravan, which wm rut) Feb. 913. Stop~ along the route the
second week will Include John·
stown, Altoona, Harrisburg and
State College, Pa.; and Cumber·
.land, Md.
"
·~

PLEASANT VALLEY HOSPITAl.
15 Plused To Welcome
D.lnny R. Westmoreland, D.O.
Dr. Danny Westmoreland Is originally from Cott.~ge­
vtlle. He completed x-ray school at Baytor University,
Fort Sam, Houston. Texas while In the U.S. Army. His
undersraduate training was obtained from Alderson··

ONE LOW PRICE
Twin,

Ful~

Queen,

$99!~.

..

King~~
~:;"ti•--r.,._......}
·~·

:L~~r

.

." . .
I.

Broaddus College, PhlnpPi, West ..,rglnta. He went
on to receive his Doctor of Osteopathy degree from
the West ..,rglnla School of Osteopathic Medldne,
le~Msburg, West ..,rglnla. He receJomt his Internship
ce"lftcate frQITI Metropolitan General Hospital,

,in,

only
r ··"· ·- --ALLIJZES

' '

a•AMI! QUALifY

....,.....

•waPC.u.

•sum

199~5

•

l'lneflas Parlt, Florida.

Dr. Weslmol$nd now resides In Mason with his
wife, Teka and three children: Chits, age I0, Tamra.
.,e 7, Md P.atrlck, ~&amp;e 9 months. The Westmoreland
fiiTIIIy c.re Center wll be a lull praclk:e, Including
minor surgelles and mlnol' emersenCies and excludtns ob5tetlks.
The Westmoreland Family Care C~ter Is located
In Mason, West ._,rglnla with olllce nours Monday
through Friday from 9:00a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Appoint. meuts may be tMde by cdlns 773·5333 .

lftl

fl fAS\NT VAllEY HOSPITAL
Volley Drive, " · .......... W¥21510. 304-175~:1«)
"We lreat you ~ke fam•ly ...

�Thll'llday, January 29, 1987

C._o·rnrnentary

The ·Daily Sentinel
111 Court Slreel
Pomeroy; Oblo

·· ·

DEVaJ'ED TO THE INT!I.ItESTS OJ! TJ(E MEIGS-MASON AREA

Alb

S!mlltl
~v

~ .....-.-,~c::~ ....

.

ROBERT L. WINGETT

Publlrlher
PAT WHITEHEAD.

AM•Iaul Publlsher/Conlroller ·

BOBHOEFUCH
General Manager

A MEMBER ol The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association .
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They shoold be less than :m wards
long. All letters are subJ ect to editing and lll.lst be signal with name, address and
telephone number. No wutgne:lletters wUI be published. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues , not persooaJIUes.

~

A few
ideas

·

,

·
allowing the noted dissident
Andrei Sakharov to return to
Moscow from exil e in Gorky,
withdrawing provocative Soviet
milit ary dispos itions along the
Chinese border of Stberla and
dec laring a unilatera l six -month
ceasefi re in i\!gha nistan.
More r~centiy still, he re placed
th e Soviet a rms control ncgotla tor In Geneva with a much higher-ranking diplom a t, who
pretty clearlY
. Is coming to thE'
bargaining table with new and
presumabl y mor e fe tching
proposals.

Wh ether G or bac hev ca 1cu 1a t cs
that Reagan would be a particularly easy mark rlgbt now , In
vtew or his presumed desire to
take the play away from Con·
gress' heavy concentration oo
the Iran controversy, Is · not
k nown. If so, howcver. he may be
· R
we II be m Is ta ken, for eagan
discovered after Reykjavik last '
Oct obe. r th a t a fl rm re fusa I to
a b an don apr IncIPIed pos Illonspec Ill ca 11 Y• th e concep t o1 a
spaces hie ld 1n re turn for sweepIng Sov j e t prom Ises Io rruuce
nA..
their nuclear arsenal - Is good

for
a swift
in the popularity
polls.
!Thatrise
Interesting
piecc of .
Information may turn out to be' :·
the most di sastrou s sctback the .
sellout brigade has Suffered .
, s lnce Re agan "s ori g in a i' '·
electlon. l
But Gorbachcv Is n't the only·
adversary Reagan has to contend with. orevm necessarily the
most persistent or effective. As·
Rep. Jack Kemp warned re··
cently In an open lettcr to the
president, the U.S. State Department
Its ownlittle
agenda
that .
bears has
precious
resemblance to Re agan's.

Sale prices in effect Jan. 29th rough Feb. 4. 1987.

Robert Walters
MAPLEWOOD , N..J.- "We're
In an economic crisis," says
maverick labor union thcor·eii·
clan Anthony Mazzocc hi. "There
have been II million jobs lost In
plant closedowns - that's 11
million displa ced Am erican
workers."
Mazzocchi. one of th e co untry's
most thoughtful and c rea tive
labor leaders, has fa shioned a
typically unconventional solution that goes far beyond routine
proposals for enhance d training
programs.
·He would give displaced
workers the option "of going to
school with tuition and child care
pa:ld."
Adds Mazzocchi : "This propoi;al redefines, work In this
society. It, says that education
s hould be considered work. I'm
not talking about retraining rei ralnlng Is a lot of nonsense.
J'tll talking about education for
education' s sake."
· How would the program be
financed ? " CorporatIons are
s kimming off Incredible mone.v
through mergers, which a re
drstructlve to jobs and the
~nomy as a who!£&gt;," he says.
!'Th£&gt;re's an awful lot of c apital
ln1his society, but there aren't a
IQt of jobs," says Ma zzocchi,
adding that " the money to pay
for all this would be drawn out of
tilt&gt; capital pool from corporate
ml:'fR£'rs.''
That appears very radical. but
Mazzocchi suggest s It Is no more
unthinkable than unemployment
compensation was when It was
proposed In the 1930s a nd Initially
r!'jected by skeptics who· were
astounded by the notion or paying
pcilple for not working.
Mazzocchi has long bern
among the firs t to advance
pi-oposa is to Improve the lives of
blue collar wor kers. He played
an Important role, for example.
hi srcurlng the passage of the
fNleral Occupational Safety and
HE all h Art of 1970.
Now he want s to go a s tep
fu r ther by giving employees not
onl\' 'the right to know a bout
W.orkplare haza rds but al so to act
ind&lt;'pendently If they find unsafe
or unhealthy prac ti ces or
conditions.
"All safety dec isions should be
In the hands of the workers, the
communit y and their des ignated
representatives," say s Mazzor ·
chi. " Wr've let management
re,t&lt;ulate safety since the dawn of
thr Industrial revolution and that
has not worked."
.
A member of the 011. Chemical
and Atomic Workers union s ince
1950. Mazzocchi seryed as the
Denve r· based union 's health and
safety director, It s legislative
director , head of its Washington
office and Its vice president.
· In 1979and agalnln1981, heran
ror union president against the
incumbent but lost by narrow
m~r,t&lt;lns . HP subsoqucntly was
otfered the position of assistant
to the pres ident . whic h he under·
sfood would reQuire subser·
vJance to those whose policies he
OppoSed.
· Refusing to compromise his
P.rinclples, Mazzocchi turned
&amp;own the job offrr and moved his
family to a modest housr In this
l'j:ew York s uburb.
• The 59· year-old Iconoclast now
~rves as a $1-per-year ass istant
to:an OCAW regiona l officer. In
ad'llltlon. he Is dlr&lt;'rtor of the
Workers' Polley Proj ect of the
1mtltute or Labor Edu cation and
Research.
~ The NC'W York· based Institute.
which Ma zzocchi wa s a
(ounder, Is a " think tank" that
focuses excluslvei)' on issues of
concern to blue collar workers .
• Among other Ideas at the
IOstltute Mazzocchi ha s proposed
tltr creation of a worke rs' polltlc:'al party that Initially would not
field candidates but would de·
velop an agenda and " a new
1!1$.1on of what Is possible" to aid
rank·and·flle worker s.
~ ~· we ' re In the · era .of _
the
gi-eatest socio-economic trans·
f6rmat ton since the Industria l.
lt'volutlon," says Mazzocchi In ·
explaining the, need for a
workcn' party.
•

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I

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B,v VnMt'tl Prfi!IK lntl'rllllli81Ull

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~~·· #1073101,

27.88

88¢
Tradco

33¢
Qualrer State

.......

Window De-Icer

G•siJ,.. Anti·Freeze

1_.111,#118

•••
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49.88

Dlpstlclr H••w•

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~7.88

72·Montlt ••rr•ntr
"-g.
., sue. PCEN650.

M. .netlc Engine
He.,ers
Rig. :11.95, #IIH1/IIIH2

••

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,•.

.::

,.
,.

·-

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Clutch Discs
From

wlthexchonge

Delco

S.OOOFF

Perfection High Test

Clutch Assemblies
From

-1'\" 17.95
"-g. from 22.115

49.95
Remr

with exchange.
·

utclt Bearings

Hltlt reclt
llemanuf•ctured
St•rters•nd
Altern•tors

• Full" tested and backed by
our uiiS year warrantJ.
• FormoatCh71ler,G and
Ford caraan light trucks.
• Price good with exchange.
'

81ci1'11 houn1: 8:30 o.m. to 8:00p.m. Mondey through Frid1y.
.
8:30 o.m. to 1:00 p.m. 8o1urd1y,ond 10:00 o.m. to B:OO p.m. Sundoy.

.'

209 Upper River Rd.

Gallipolis, Ohio

~

t•;,

II
l'l
1.1 •11

*
* '87 FORO TEMPO

t• -r

24'1'1

( ' hh·ll.~~;u

M:t

l'luw••h: 1:11. Chtl*n Sluh· 10~
1..,\ ( "llpprr&lt;~ !Ill. Nf'w ·l• ·r'"' '~· !II
Si•lMllt• ltJ. J,/i l...ll.kHS ljli
'nntr.o;da_,·'s(O:mH'II .,
,\ll ttnl u 111 {'IN t•land. 7::'141 p.m.

" "•hln.,unallk&gt;lroll, i: 30 p.m .
~tlhruuk• ••· Ul llouiOlnn, ll: :lliJI.m .

b11lll»i Ill bi•nwf',l::tl p.n1.
Portland ull llllh. fi:;Jtp.nl.
So&amp;n ·' "'""'" Ill Sll.t'I'IIIIU'IIID, Ill: 341 p.m.
Frhi!U' 'l'i Oum1'!'
Nf'W \'ork ut 1\IIIUIIu, nl~~;hi
c ·hh·~ ut rhH~Iphla. nla;ht
Rtt!oillln Ill IIIIIMAil. Bl«hil
Mllwllllkrt• lil. Dallaa.o;, nl~~;hl

I.A t..•kt•nt 111 not'ftlx . nl«fit
!Will lit• W O....n Sl•lt•, nl,ll'hl
N"w .r.. r'"j'YIll l'urthand, ni~~;ht
·""lln :\nlonlo 111 LA ( "llpjll•rM, 111111:hl

Palridtmv~ivn

M' I, T rtJ;.
l"hll;uk&gt;iphhl ............ $1 J:l ~ 71
1111"\' Mllndrr~ ........... U :tl 5 51
\\' IIHhln~~;to• ............ .'U ~ I 7 It
PIIIMIIUr,l(h ............... It 2~ ~ Ul
N\' ILln~~:t•n~ ........ .... ll tl ~ JJj

Nt•• · .ft•r!it,. ..... .... ... .'. 241 3
Adii.IH'I Pi1'1!ookln
~1unlrt•W ............... .. a :t'2 7
H11rHord .. ................ ts Ill fl
~on .....................:!li 1!1 ~
Qurht't •.. .................. ll tt 7
Bunalo ................ ... . l-t 341 II

II F 1~,,
'U:I I-'ll
117 1111
lA ItO

1111 I'U
IH all

U II'!\ t!U
57 179 10
~ 11:1112
~~ 1110 IS:t
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.\.t 1111111

f' AMI'BF.I.I. f'ONt'ERt:Nf't ;

!'l.'t1rrbi llh·bdon
" . I.
Mlnrw'IIOnla .. .. ...........et ~ I
Dl'lrulll ................... .'!11 ~
Sl, IAHtbi ... ........... , ... ll'l tl

T Pi'&gt;. lit' Iii\
$ II IKII In
M IK I!Mi 171

II
Toronlu ........ ........... l~ 'Ill ;1
( 'hlo-&lt;*«D ................... III ~~ 7
Sm,Vtlk• Dhloolllft
F.AIImtl .. on ........ .. .....:U II :1
M'ln..,..J .................tll Ill !i

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llfiiKa
tJ 170 ll'I S
U IIIU:lfll
71 ~W! 17l
II l~t 1':1

( 'tdfll'af)' ... .. .............. ~ tl I ll ~ 1A7
Li:'l'i Ana;t•h ........... ....."l"! tl II Ml 21".! 201
l 'llnt'OU\1•r ....... .... .... U :NI II :i4i IHfi toll

M'•hlncto• :t lh'trek I
Wlnnlpt•~~;!. Nl' Ru«t·r ~ I
fhh·ll,II'O S. Torunln f
Edm. .lon 7, V*lt'OU\' 'r :1
lAM&lt; linJif'll'!ll i, Nl'w _,.,r ..,'!. '!
11t•NIIO'' " llanH'!I

fbrtler• Ill Bo,;lon. 7: ~s· p.m.
PiUMhu,P ad Plllla.drlp!Ytt. 1": :tS p.m .
Torolio 1M 11.1; , LoaM, 11: ':'15 p.m.
Mln•'MIIl• IIi ( 'llll'arJ. t.U p.m .
lo'rldll.l'~~'

Qut•bft• lU

a..-rato,

Oanu"
nlll;hl

Nl' bl•...'"' Ill \\'IIMIIInl(on. niJI'Itl
MlnnMIOlllll.l Edmnnlnn, nla;hl
New .frrt«')' Ill l'•t 'OIIwor, nlpt

*
"Some 0' Our Best
Moving Models....

{'LMsu

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II
1.Jt1

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* '87 MERCURY TOPAZ

Polnl i'l
1. Oherlln t31) (1:1-l) ....................... :m
2. Nt •w LfohMon Dlxlf' t t) tll-0) : ... .. 211".!
:t f: r•'t'nfit•ld ~ll·('IJ&amp;In til 11~ - n J ... ... 24'!
~- 0•k Harhor (1!1--1) ..................... .. 2:18
=1. \IIlii Wl'l'l 41 ) 41!l-l) ..................... 17:1
6. fampbell Ml'morhtl ! U•l) ........... I~ I
7. PorliVTIOIIIh (14-:h .. ..... ................ .. !10
1!, M'oulitf'r Trlw11y 11,._1 ) ............. .... .. M&amp;
!t. •:1yr111. l 'ulholk 11~·2) .................... Ill
10. Younpt-n l 'r~ullrK' tlf.~l .......... ;til
Sfol'OR.I.-n: II . M1n•on :11 : It 11)'1'!0 \'llh•
Mt·udowhrook t :J; 1:1. ( ',\PE ~ 1: U.
H11rrilllon Radin IM: 15. Drl'lidt•n Trtl'ltii•'J 17: 11. Kprlnll;flf'll Kl'•• Kld!ll;f'
l:t: 17. Ulf') Avon 1.. 11.. ~~nd Vt'lllrt•lt•r l'i"hur~~:. U t•JU•h; J!l. Pf'mtwor,·ill r fo: o&amp;~oiWt~~ • d
Ul: tn. St•w func·n rd .lnhn (;!''"" !J.
Tl'lllll

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Now Your Best Buyl"
198t FORD-ESCORT
_Over (30) To Choose From ·Hurry While Se\ection ls Good!
DEAlER CONTRiflJTKJN MAY AFFECT SELLING PRICE

( '1.1\."'S ,\
Polnh
I. l ' nlumhii ~ M -t• hrH• 4331 l]l-01 .... ,.. :I:M
t HtK'YI'lll'i \\'y nfnrtlti+O ) ........ . ": ' ~ 211 I
:1. Frunldlnt'UI'ftll.t't• firt •t•• !1:1-11) .... ".!'!'l
~ - .'\ nn•II.J.II ........... ...................... 1117
:), HavU~~nd \\'"" 111• Trat•t• 111· 11 ...... IU
1. fonllltt'fli llllll-l) ....... ................. ut
7. lnllll1111 VILli(')· St•ulh 41a-1) ........... It~
11. l 'ppt'rSt-ICIIn\lullt')' {lt- 1) ........... 111
!1. folumtMIUia frl'lih¥11• ( 1 ~- 1) ......... 111
II. ·hn· k~~e~~ fll'nh•r ilH) ................... -~!!
Sf't'Ohd tr n: II. Applp('not•k \\'a,v111·dlllf'
:t!; l:t'. I.Ut'*" 17: 13. St-hrln11 II: U.
~l'nt'tr~lll~· It; 1 ~ . Hnmlt'r Patrick
~lenry 11 : Ui. Uk l Mlna;o , C'on vuy
( ' F!·~I~li'W lind Slrll,.hura;, fl t' llt'h; Ill.
('lnl'inrwll fouliry lluy K; tt. Nf' 'A'
l..o ntton 7.
Tl' lUl l

F-150 PICKUP
N73661. 6 cyl, 4 speed, sl111d. trans..
,PB. AMIFM radio. ra!lial tres, II&gt; IDnpic~~
wide bed. rear ~ep buml]&lt;!l.

ar

N 10010. 4 doors, hArd 10!!. V·B.
root IIIIo. trans.. PS. PB. power

w•

whe!l IIM!fM rado, """"
tres, white
rear llindow

NEW YORKER .
N74681: 4 doors. sedan. V-8. air cond.
roof. auto. tran•. PS,PB. power wllOO.~
sea\ power door klckt tiH whee\ cruise
AM/FM rado, stereo bp~ radial tires.

walls, rear window defogger.

i I0670, 4 doors. hard to~ front wt-.et
. 4 cyl., a&lt; cond. aut~ tran&gt;. PS. Pll.

radio,

radi~

tires. buckiJI

u~

deloiilf

rur
NOll

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H.S. Wrestling
ISo)" Rat lnp
IIOI. L,\ND (liP I) - 'Thl" """" " ' ~Ohi o
hl~h 114: h.ol wrt 'tilli•a l'll.llnp, c'~ •mpii P d
"' bh·k lloowr, se.·rrtuy·IM•as•rr.r of
1111• Ohio Hlidt Rt:hool Wrt'ftllin,l( ( 'oat•hr!i
,\?;MH·Iallo., and tlilllrltutt·d h)' l iPIIJir!jl
pi 1M••• vat"" WI panonlhl'!lt:o;l:

1985 FORD
T·BIRD

C-10 SILVERADO

('LA."S AAA
Tl'am
Point '"
1. l.ak towood st . F.d-..· ~trd 11111 .......... Iii
t fh·vt·l'W . l~n».llu~ .~...................... l~~
t v ,pt'r ,\rtln,l'lvn .......................... ll ll
I. ~ni11 ............................ .. ............ IU
•1. Sol•• ........... .................... .: ... ....... Jii
8, North c·anlt~n Hntn rr ...... .... ..........li
~ - ~urdonlll . ...................... .. ..... ......... J.'I
11. M'urtllln-'• ········ ............... ...........;u
8. 14llrnt'ld . .......................... ............~
II. Mllplr• H••ljjhii .. ........................... ...:U
~ t'OIId trn ; II . l.onln !'4oouthv"""' :N:
12. North Olnull• •d t; : 1:1. Oallon 17: It
t: lyrlu 1-t: l l. Tnl1•du HO«f'rK It; ll.l.lmu
Sh llWIII'I' II: n . flnt•lnnatl Eldfor 1: Jll.

t'nmuiM

Rto~ l'i

2 doors. V·B. air cond . autn
PS, PB, AMIFM radio, stereo bpe, ra&lt;ial.
~ ltlo piclol~ long wide bed, rear step
gauges. sliding rear ~IS~ t2.tro
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,995

1&amp;. ." itrun.,.llh• :t; :H.
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fLAAS AA. .
rolnt"

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I. 84 •dford l'blliii'I(IOI ........... , ........ 110
! . t 'olumhal'l 11 · 11~· .............. .... ...... ... 111
:J. ROl'il'llnrd ................................. ......SJ
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tilt wheel•.cruise control. AMIFM radiO.
tires. Y, 1on picMup. bng wide bed. rear
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ELIGIBLE MODELS:

Boy11 R.UI•I"
('OLVMBllfi (UPI) - Tllikoi Wl'i'k' li
l lnltl'd Pn&gt;SN lnltTNIUonlll Ohio Hl~~;h
School BtiiU'd ol foat·ht"' IMI)'I'IhMkt•thall
ratlnp (with Hr~l - placr ~oh'!tl i&amp;lld
won-lo!llret:ordM In puenlht"Mf'!l) :
('LA.!~S AAA
Tf'am
Pol.as
1. flf','t' St. ,JDllt'Ph 1t21 111-11 ......... au
2. lh•Uerllla Altllr 1131 ! 13-0l ........... :tn.
:1. Barhtrton(I:J-1) .... ................. ..... 271
~ - rlndnutl\\'o odward ftl (I H) ... UI
l . Toii'Mst . Fr1U1d11 il ~ l ) ........... .. t 'l~
t . {'».nhlll Mt·K.Inley (1!-2J ............... HiA
7. Warn"n H11rll•11:' ilt-ll .................. S:I
K. Hlrl WIIIMh · h·~tult !21 11,.0) .......... 52
M. Hlt&gt;l " 'IU'r..a W Rl'!lt''Vt' ( 11·21 ......5t
10. 81-11\'rn-rt-ek (IS.1) · ............... .. ...... 51
Slo('Ond IPn : II . llll,VIitn Dunh.- '~ U .
F.o11o ~1 U~r.tponl :tl; U . Lonlla !Wnklr 37:
· It Mt. He.llth.V JIJ 31i: 15. l'bH~llloft
.•I l'••rr)' :n; Ui. Akron Krnmo"' ~II: 17.
Sfrlnrd'll'ld North 'l'!: lA. ~ldney Jl: If,
G11 lllpol"' lt ; 20. \\'t'!&gt;ilrnUit• NDrth 1:1.

Et\.0\Tf;HN ( 'ONFJ:RF.NrJo;

.
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1·
9
.88
Blazer

At Clemson. S.C. , senior Kenny
Smith scored a career· high 41
points to help North Carolina
overcome a 12-polnt halftime
deficit and defeat Clemson. The
Tar He~ls Improved to 18-1
overall and 7·0 In the ACC, while
Clemson lost Its second straight
ACC game to fall to 1S.2 and 4-2.

H.S. Basketball

•.

Lawrence hit co nseeuti\\e J.
bench to fill In fo r foul-plagued
point ers in ovcrtime to lead ce nter Cha rles Smith and scored
Florida over Alabam a. Law ~ · 17 a nd 15 point s. respectively.
r!'nce had 13 points, a ll on .J. The Pa nth ers improved lo 16-4
pointers, and Me lven .Jones a nd 5·2.
grabbed a ca 1·eer-high 17 re· . In oth er games, It was Arkan·
bounds. Th e victory enabled thr sas 76. Southe rn Me thodis t 63;
Gat ors, 16-4 overa ll a nd 8· 1 in th1• Georgia 60. Tennessee 55; Mary leagu e. to move into firs t place In land 90. Ja m!'s Madison 76;
the SEC. Th e Crim so n Tide fell 1o Memphis State 64. Louisville 48;
15-3 and 8·1.
South Ala ba m a 80. North
At Pittsburgh, Curt is Aike n Ca rolln a ~C h ar iott £' 76; Vandrrscored 21 point s to, lead five bilt 76, Mississ ippi Stat e 57;
Panthers In doublE' fi gures In Virginia 61, Nor th Carolina State
PHI' s romp over Set on Hail. 60: K a nsas Sta te 88, Oklahoma
Frcshman Rod Brook in and State 77; and Missouri 81 , Nr·
senior Tl co Cooper came off the braska 71.

-:====:-----..:...-----------,.------.. . . -

NBA Standings

,.•

Dirty oil filter and clean
don't mix. A new filter
should be Installed every
time ollls changed.

Wilson scored a game-high 25
At Blommington, Ind., Dean nected on 2 free throws with 30
points, Ollie Brown added 14 Garrett scored 20 points and . seconds left to tie the score,
points · and Bernard Woodside "blocked three shots in thefinal40 before Lewis sa nk his winning
seconds, leading Indiana ovei' jump shot from dcep In the right
contributed 10.
"The hell Wlth. being 'calied 'a nitnols . The victory gave the corner. Th!' Friars snapped an
streak shooter," said Wilson. Hoosiers a . halt-game lead over 11-game losing streak agains t
who hascbeen criticized for being No. 5 Pur~ue and No. 3 Iowa In Georgetown dating back to·Janu Inconsistent this season. "I just the Big Ten rae!'. Indiana im- ary 1982.
wanted to win and get back to a proved to16·2 and 7- l.lltlnolsfetl
At Fort Worth. Texas. Larry
tournament."
to 14-5 oveNII and 5-3 wtth Its · Richard and Carven Holcombe
Moore scored ·21 points to lead third straight conference loss.
each scored 17 point s to power
Auburn, 11-5 and 4·4 In the SEC.
At Providence, R.I., ErniE' Texas Christian to It s 13th
Auburn has lost nine or Its last 11 Lewis hit 3 3-polnters In the. final straight vlctvory . Richard al so
games In Baton Rouge.
two minutes, Including the game- grabbed a . game-high 13 re·
In other games Involving winner with two seconds left, to bounds for the Horned Frogs.17·3
ranked teams, No. 1 North lift Providence over George- and 8·0.
Carolina defeated No. 14 Clem- town. Ronnie Highsmith conAt GalnsevUie, Fla.. senior Jo!'
son 10S.99 in an Atlantic Coast r.:.....,:.:.....:..:.:..:..:.::.:.....:..:.::....;;.;.:.::;,;.:,::_:;:.:__________
Conference _g ame, No: 4 Indiana
topped No. 12 Illinois 69-66 In the
Big Ten. 'No. 13 Georgetown lost
to Providence 82-79 In Big East
action, No. 15 Texas Christian
pounded Rice·64-381n the Southwest Conference, No. 16 Florida
outlasted No. 10 Alabama 9().80 In
overtime In an SEC game and
No. 19 Pittsburgh clipped Seton
Hall 95-811n a Big East gam e.

Scoreboard ...

...
••

Do-lt
Yourself
---Tip

I

By .JOE U.LUZZI
UPI Sports Writer
Louisiana State learned last
season what can happen once a
t~am advances Into the NCAA
Tournament. Despite winning
the Southeastern Conference, the
Tigers were not expected to last
long In the postseason tournament. Sparked by John Williams,
however, the Tigers moved to the·
Final Four before being ellml·
nated b~ eventual , champion
Louisville.
. ThIs season, wlthou t Williams
and two other starters, LSU Is
fighting to survive In lhe SEC and
maybe earn another berth to the
NCAA tournament .
"These kids just refuse to di e
and believe they won't be·back In
a -national tournament," LSU
Coach Dale Brown said Wednesday night alter the Tigers de·
feated 17th-ranked Auburn 75·73
In Baton Rouge, La .
Senior guard Anthony Wilson
hit a short baseline jumper with
55 seconds ll'ft to lift LSU. The
confl'rence victory was LSU's
first at home this season and
Improved Its record to 13-9
ov!'rall and 4-6 in th!' league.
Auburn, which fought back
from a l7·polnt halftime deficit.
missed an opportunity tos!'nd the
game Into overtime when Jeff
Moor!''s jumper from the lane
fell short with five seconds left.

Support .for .selling out __ _·_ _w_illia_m_A_.R_us_ke':
With press ure on him to
recapture th e psyc hologlcallnitl·
a tlve by some bold action, yet
any hope of congress ional coop·
eratlon approac hing absoju tely
zero, ma ny conscrvatives tear
that Pres 'ld"nt Reagan may be
tempted to' seek some ea rly,
dram al.lc agreement on a rms
control with Sov iet boss Mikhail
Gorbachev .
The l'n" lc atlonsar" that Gorba·
u
1' s th't' nkin g a long
Ch "V hlms"il
&lt;.
'
so me Su"h t1'n"s. H" has recently
' o!' striking steps
ta ken a 'number
to .soft " n th" So. viet image :
"
'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-6

•
North (:arolina, LSU, Providence among college wmners

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, January 29, 1987

.·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohi_o

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Freed Ohioan put

By The Bend

in veterans hospital
By JEFF HARDY
MIAMI (UPI ) - Accused spy
Sam Halt, who was freed by '
Nicaragua after 49 days of,
captivity lor fear he might k!ll
himself, returned to the Unlted
States and was hospitalized lor a
complete physical and· mental
checkup.
Hall, who told the Nicaraguan
people before leaving, " I am
sorrx I brought some embarrass·
ment, " was met Wednesday at
Miami's airport by his brother,
Rep. Tony Hall, D· Ohio, and was
whisked away to a J Veterans
Adm!n!stratlon hospital.
FamUy attorney· Gary Froel!ch said the sell·styled counter·
terrorist told his family he
bel!eved " It !s In his best Interest
to have Immediate, complete,
thorough medical and psychlat·
ric treatment."
The Sandln!st a government,
with little fanfare, released Hall,
49, late Tuesday, six weeks after
he was captured In a rest r icted
area of Punta Huete air base
·north of Managua and accused of
spying lor the Contra rebels.
Nicaraguan Deputy Foreign
Minister J avier Chamorro said
Hall, a former mental patient
and drug and alcohol abuser, was
freed out of '"generosity" and
because of tear Hall's emotional
problems could result In his
suicide.

ELLIOTT'S

Froelich, who accompanied
Hall from Managua, said the
'former Olympic d!vlng sUver
medalist suffered from a lack of
· sleep, Intense Interrogation and
solitary confinement during his
Imprisonment !n Nicaragua.
. "For ' the better part of his
llnpr!sonment, he was alone !n
his own cell and he was !nterrogated or questioned regularly, "
Froelich said, but added Hall
said he was not mistreated.
"He !s extremely tired," Froellch said, adding Hall' s lamUy
was not told tn advance of h!s
release. "He d!d not sleep. He has
been very excited since 6: 15last
night when he found out he was
coming home."
Froel!ch said Halt will remain
at the Mtam! VA hospital lor an .
undetermined length of time and
then will probably return to his
home state of Ohio:
Before leaving Managua, Halt
told reporters •'I was treated l!ke
a human being, with dignity."
Asked If he had tried to harm
himself !n jaU, Hall said, "No."
Nicaraguan President Daniel
Ortega originally had said ,.Hall
would be tried In a People's
Tribunal, the same kind of court
that sentenced American Eu·
gene Hasenfus to 30 years In
prison lor helping supply arms to
the Contras . Hasenfus was par·
doned and returned' to h!s home
In Marinet te, Wis., last month .

Page- 7 .

-

WE MUST .REDUCE OUR INVE
RY
BEFORE JANUARY 31, 1987. AND THE
·SAVINGS GO TO YOU! STOP IN FRIDAY ·
- AND SATURI)AY. FOR,. THESE .GREAT BUYS...

40''
BIG SCREEN

RCA

25"

11 DAY ONlY)

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'

'.

CINCINNATI (UP!) - Home
State Savings Bank defense
lawyers began presenting their
case Wednesday, . but under
cross-examination their llrslwlt·
ness testified th at a bank ortlclal
Ignored h!s concerns about the
thrift 's large transactions with a
Florida brokerage firm.
·
Defe nse witn e ss Robert
Wreder, In charge of accounting
at Home State from May 1983
until the bank's collapse In
March 198.'i, said under cross·
exam!nallon that former Home
State president Burton Bongard
"didn' t listen" to his concerns
about the risks Involved In
transacllons with ESM Govern·
men! Securities Inc. of Fort
Lauderdal e. Fla.
Weeder's tesllmony came In
thP criminal trial o! Bongard,
former Home Stat,e owner Mar·
vln Warner and form er bank
prE's ldC'nt Dav id Sc hiebel. who
are char~E'd with misapplication
and unauthor ized transfE-r of
Home State fund s to ESM.
WarnPr and Schiebel also face
'ecurlt ies charges.
~SM co llapsed in 1985 owning

.

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Special

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weapons sale

Heart Fund drive slated in Meigs; AHA tips given
SHARP
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COLOR TV

THURSDA.Y
SHADE- A clea n·up meeting
will be held Thursday , 7 p.m., for
Shade Ri ver Lodge 4o3, Chester.
Pr actice will follow the clea n-up.

GIBSON FREEZER
'

MIDDLEPORT - Women's
Association of the Middleport
First Presbyterian Church will
m~ t at 7: .10 Thursday night a t
the chu rch. Group II will have the
program, and Group I members
will be hos tesses.

$227 $297 $267 $277
•

PaniJDI'lic.

CROSLEY

REFRIGERATOR

'

FRIDAY
HARTFORD, W.Va . - A spe·
cia! three-day meeti ng, open to
the public, will be held at the
Chu rc h of Chris! in Chr is tian
Union, Hartford, W.Va., begin·
nlng Friday and cont inuing
through.Sunday. al 7 p.m . eac h
evening. Fea tured s ingers on
Fr ida y will be Voices of Love:
Satu rday, Mike and Wand a
Thompson: Sund ay , Cha r ity
Si ngers.

AM·FM CASSEnE
RECORDER

~--

$299 $67

RUTLAN D - T h ~re will b~ a
weekend meC'IIng at Rutland
Bible Methodist Chu rch begin·
nlng Friday and cont! nuln ~
through s unday. 7 p.m. each
night, with Rev. Coy McGi nnis

Grads named

I .

•
10

s
SILVER BRIDGE PLAZA
..

Six Meigs Countians have
completed th(' req uirements for
gradu ation from Hocking Tech·
nicil i College, Nelsonville, at the
end of the fall quarter.
.
They.are J a nice Baker , Pomeroy; Sharon Griffin, Reedsville;
S.herrle Might, Pomeroy; Car·
latta Tucker, Reedsville; Lor! 1..
Tucker. Rutland, and Mary
Warner. Route 1. Minersville.

•
10

GALLIPOLIS.

·70 PINE ST.
GALLIPOUS

446-8051.

446-3733

.

programs.
The chair man reports that the
American Heart Association places Its ~mphasls on research to
reduce early death and disability
from heart disease and relies
heavily on community lund rals·
ing to support that progr am.
"In the past15 years, the death
ra te fr om cardiovascular diS·
ease fell by 32.5 percent. Despite
these gains, cardiovascular dis·
ease continues to be this nation's
number one killer ," Iannarelli
added, "but more ·support is
needed so that more lives can be
saved.
In Meigs County , according to

statistics from the Ohio Depart- ease will be almos tth!' same as If
ment of Health , Division of· Data you had never smoked.
Ser vices, Meigs County had a
Control high blnod preM•ure.
total of267 deaths In 1985 wtth 135 Have your blooG press ure
of those bein g attr ibuted to checked regularly and, If di agcardlovasular diseases . The per· nosed, stick with your trea tment
centage o( total deaths from programs.
Reduce II overweight. Re·
hear t di sease In Meigs County,
according to those ligu res, was search shows that the dea th rate
from hear t disease among over·
50.6.
To reduce personal ris k of weight persons Is estim ated to be
hear t programs the Amer ica n th'r ee limes higher 1han among
Hear t Assoc iation reco mmends those who are not overweight.
Eat and ex erc l~e ~ens lhly . Ea t
the following control techniques:
Stop .smoking . . Within a few a diet !ow In cholesterol and
years of stopping, the r isk of satura ted fa ts to lower· blood
death from ca rdiovascular dis· choles terol levels , and exercise
briskly 15 to30 minutes a week to
build a health heart.
The America n Heart Association Is a non-profit, vo luntary
heart organiza tion aimed at
reducin g early death and d!sa bll·
~ .no rth of Point Pleasa nt , W.Va.
!ty from heart disease, stoke and
Ca ller, Ed Clark.

Calendar/ happenings

HEAVY
D.UTY

~

'-

·- ·
\

•'

F ebruary Is Heart Month and
Sandra Ianna rel!l of Middleport
has been named chairman for the
1987 Amer ican Hear t Campaign
In Meigs County.
Under her direction volunteers
will be making door-to-door
visits to accept contributions and
" to distribute literature about the
work of the America n Heart
Association.
Last year more than $4.000 was
collected, according to Iannarelll, with most of that money
being sent to (he Centra! Ohio
Chapter for. on-going resParch,
trea tment and edu catio na l

(

MNTADSbrilg
. Ylcalion Money

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Automatic
Dryer

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Washer

Bill restricts

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in Home State trial

992-2156

BUSY GRO UI' - Members
of the Sugar and Spice Porn
Porn Baton Corps have heen
putting In a bu•y season with
competitions a~d area pa·
rad ~JS . Members are, Iron!
. from left, Nathan Sayre, An·
gle Engle, Tasha ,John son,
Klmi Conde, ,Jessica Smith,
Missl Layne, Becky Collins,
Kelll Bailey, Andrea Jlllhert ,
Crystal ,Johnson, Jull Bailey,
Stephenle Bell; second row ,
Dustin Zirkle, Sarah Marie
Smith, Angela Edwards, f rystal Jlolman, Autumn Conde.
AnKela Uhratore, i\mny :llorthup, Tatum Roush, ,fanuary
Beckett, i\nKela Wolle, A.llda
Kersey; third. Kevin Kit chen,
Kristen Hens ler, Mandl Van·
Maire, Tracy Stone, Eric
Kern, .Jyl Mathews, .Jennllt•r
Mora, Andr&lt;•a Fry&lt;•, Erin
Kllch&lt;•n, Paige Watts, J essica
Roush; fourth, C.,J. Ston e,
Angle Teaford, Andrea Dll·
lard, ·lessyca Jlallleld. Nlkl
Kersey, Mls ll Clendenin,
Marcy Mathews, ·lenni Hill,
Kar eena Becketl; back,
Mi ckey Mouse, Rudolph and
Minni e Mou se. Oth e r
mem hers not pictured art•
Stacy Lyons, Shauna Manuel
and Tiffany Williams. The
organization Is accepting new
m&lt;·mhers, agl'l! t through 10,
at 12 noon on Satorday, Fe h. 7,
at the Carleton School In
Syracuse. The girls are undl't
dlrector· ln s tru etor Mary
Smith and Instructors, Kelly
and Kenda Rizer, who may he
conta&lt;:ted at 94!1-2-165, alter 3
p.m. In regard to ll'SSOIIll In
Syracuse.

RGII

Defense opens case
Home State $144 million. ESM's
latlure triggered the collapse of
Home State, which '!n turn led to
Ohio's financial crts!s.
Throughout the trial, prosecu·
tors have contended the three
defendants knew and were
warned that they were engagl,ng
In unsafe and unsound banking
processes, but they continued to
engage In these activities. Defense attorneys have argued that
bank officials were deceived and
duped by ESM ottlc!als.
Weeder said he learned shortly
alter he joined Home State that !t
had made a $700 mllllon transac·
tlon In securllles and purchase
agreements w!lh ESM, the !arg·
est repurchase transacllon he
had ever seen.
Weeder said he went to Schiebel with his concerns, and
Schiebel "basically agreed with
me," but Schiebel said he had
!Jeen overruled.
Asked · who had overruled
Schiebel, Weeder said Bongard,
Warner and other ESM officials
had made the decision.
The $700 m!lllon deal soured
and In December 1983, Weeder
teslllled, he and Schiebel went to
the New York Investment firm of
Lehmann Brothers to lind out
what went wrong.
He said Lehmann Brothers told
them they had never seen a
repurchas~ agreement that ex·
·COLUMBUS I UP!) - Rest ric· tended lor a year and that such
tli&gt;ns on the sale of ballistic transactions usually were short·
khlves and throwing stars Is the term, possibly a week or slightly
locus or a bill before the House
m~r:~er also testified that he
Judiciary Committee.
.
Green Township Pollee Chief prepared -a 1984 Home State
James Suder of Hamilton County offering circular In the Issuance
seld thesale ofthe devlces, which of new debentures . 'rhe state
are commonly associated with clalins Home Stale did 'not
martial arts, has proliferated, disclose Its full financial status In .
and he said he found -, hem on sale . the circular..
Weeder said he never thought
at carnivals and In hobby shops.
The bill, sponsored by Rep. the figures In the circular were
Thoma s Po I te n g e r • R · · false ·o r misleading and thaCthe
Cincinnati, would prohibit the bank's Independent auditing
sale of throwing stars, small flat tlrm had approved the circular.
pieces of metal with sharpened
Defense witness Rodger Mar·
points also called ninja stars, to lin a securities expert who·
j.uvenllcs , unless the juven!lewas se~ed as commissioner ot ihe
accompanied by a parent. The Ohio Division of Securities from
bill also would place restrictions 19113- 85 testl1!ed that Home State
on ballistic knives, a knife with a did nothing wrong !n not flUng Its
detachable blade propelled by a full financial disclosure In the
spring mechanism. ··
circular because II was not
" If kids can buy these ju~! required to. ,
walking home from school,
He said he also would not have
Suder said, " we are goln~ to have Included Information pertaining
someone seriously hurt.
to ESM In the clrcular.ln earlier
Suder said the problem with testimony It was pointed out that
this type of weapon ls that Its size a footnot~ on the circular said
allows It •~ be easUy concealed more complete financial stateand they are becoming popular ments were ava!lable upon
because ,of movies such as request.
"Return of the Ninja."
Defense attorneys said one of
A separate bill con~ ldered by the three defendants, probably ·
the committee Wednesday specl· Bongard, will testify within the
fles the circumstances that jus· next week: and that the others
tlfy the use ot deadly force .
wUI eventually.
The bill. sponsored by Rep.
Rodney :Hughes, R·Huntsvllle.
says deadly force ls justified !I
used wh!le Inside an established
dwelling, II a break-in was being
attempt{'(! or If the person•uslng
deadly force thought It was
necessary to get a burglar to
letve.
·
Under the b!ll, a person would
be protected from prosecution or
a number of offenses, Including
murder and assault, If those
clfcumstances apply.
.
Hughes said the Idea of the but
Is to codify the common law rule
tor sell defense !n the home. He
said the measure passed the
.
.
House during the last session, but
fa!led to be recommended by
committee In the Senate.

The .Daily Sentinel
Thursday,January 29,1987

· CLASSIAED ADS
attiiiii'.Uf

from Por tsmouth , preac hing and
singing.
REE DSVII.LE - Olive Town·
ship Trustees will hold a special.
meeting at 6:30 p.m. Friday to
make the 1987 appropria tions.
The meeti ng will be held at the
Reedsville Fire Station .
SA.TURDA.Y
SHADE - The annuallnspec·
t ion of Shade Ri ver Lodge 453 will
be hr ld 7: .10 p.m. Saturday. '
Dinner will be served al 6 p.m.
· SUNDAY
RUTLAN D - Ru !land Free·
will Baptist Church will have
fa ml!y night at 7 p.m. Sunday.,
TUESDA.Y
LETART - l.et art Township
Trustees will meC'I Tuesday . 6
p.m., a t town hall.
Dance planned
PT. PLEASANT - Grande
Squares Dance Club, Gallipolis,
Is sponsoring at ')li th " western
style dance · Saturday, 8 to 11
p.m., at the Moose Hall, on Route

•

I

Howard. Sc ipio Tow nship; Lou
Shenefield. Salem Township:
Teresa Col!lns, Olive Township.
Members of chapter s of Beta
Sigma Ph i Sorority will go
door-to-door In Pomeroy and
Middleport , with Ohio E t&lt;~ P hi
Chapter to handle Pomeroy, a nd
XI Gam ma Epsilon, Middleport
residential.

FLORIST
Moigo County"o Oldtlt Florill

352 E. Main St., Pomtroy, Oh.
PH. 992-2644
"0/l t•n lm itnl l' tl - N,.,.,,,
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VALENTINE'S DAY
FEBRUARY 14
At-H&amp;R Block we know you're
co ncerned about the most sweepi ng
tax law changes in history. Th is year
put us on your side. We're pledged to
find you. the biggest refun d you' re
entitled to .

Valentin~'s

Oay .. .a day to
. express sentiments ol love.
There are
humorous,
contemporary,
cute and
character cards
that express those
sentiments
perfectly.

H&amp;RBLOCK
THE INCOME TAX PEOPlE

WHAT CAN WE FIND FOR YOU?

61 8 E. Main Street. .
Pomeroy, Ohio
Open 9 a.m.·6 pm. W...days 9·5 Sat.
Phone 992·3795
APPOINTMENTS AVAILABLE

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related diso rders. To . achieve
this goa l, the Assoc!allon funds
medical resea rch. professional
and public education and com·
munlty s~rv lce programs. All
fundin g Is provided by pri va te
contributions.
The chairman advises th at
communit y vol un te~rs will work
throughou t the month of Febru·
ary collecting funds. Eac h
worker will have lde ntlfy ln~:
tags, she said. Chair men have
been sec ured for all areas except
Letarl and Orange Townships
and volunt eers are needed In
those areas.
The ot her chairmen art' Faye
Clifford, Bedford: Lily Kennedy,
Rutland: Barb DeVol. l.ebanon
Township: &amp;&gt;Iva Fis her. East
Letart : AIIC{' Llevlng, Columbia
Township; Peggy Harr is, Sa lts·
bury Township: Sue Clelland.
Ches ter Township; Sandy Ia nna·
relit. Syracuse: Sue and Pam

'

Middleport

Kenneth McCullouiltl. •.Ph.
c... rlll ltllflt, lt.PII.
ltonalf Htnlnt. lt. Ph.
Mtn. tllru hi. 1:001.111. tot'·"'·
lunclly II:H It 12:JOend I tot .111.
.
l'ltUCIUI'TIONI
' I'H . 992·2911
'rlenclfy Service

1. Mtln

Otlfll Nltlllt till t

"'"''"'"· 0 .

-'--

�Page;_8-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

.· .Beat of the bend 7

Thomas birthday is c;elebrated

:~$13eing a crafty .guy... .
~

r

•

By BOB HOE.FLICH
dresss, city, state an.d zip code,
Sentinel Staff Writer
app roximate grade point aver.
Are you a craft person?
age and year of graduation .
:;•:: ·: If so a nd
Sixfy.five winners wi ll. be se·
~-::: would
like to
lected on the basis of academic
'
perfor mance, Involvement In
~·::: offer your orlgl·
extra-curricular activities an d
;.:•.. nal, hand ·
·need for financia l aid.
~
:·:· haf t e d g ift
The latter announcement says
0:. jtems for.sale at
nothing about any fees Involved
::; the French Art
in applying. This, you should be
· · : Colony gift shop
very carefu l .about in a ll
::;-, In Gallipolis, tljere is a way.
: . •. · You can subm it examples of Instan ces.
· · your Items at the Colony each
Eleanor McKelvey , facu lt y ad·
: r Tuesday. They arc jurled for
·
visor,
repo rts that orders for the
display and sale and all items arP
1987 Meigs High Year book wi ll be
sold on a consignment basis.
At the present time 25 area ta ken all nex t week at the high
artists are providing gifts that · school.
The books arc $17; name
lncludt&gt; a wide varietv of it ems at
engraving
is $2 ex tra and plastic
the shop, Which is open from 10
are
another dollar. You
covers
a. m. to 3 p.m. each Tuesday a nd
Thursday a nd from 1 to 5 p.m. can pay the ~ n tlre cost for your
book when you order nex t week
every Saturday and Sunday.
or you can pay one- half when you
~ ~
Bob Werry says tha t it has been order and one· half upon delivery.
.~· • 20years now since Meigs High . St udent s are · to place orders
' ~~ool began graduating st u· during their lunch period: ot hers
,' dents and he thinks it is hi gh time can order at the hi gh school officP
that an alumni association be from 9a .m. to :Jp. m. durin g order
week .
formed .
.. · Previously, various classes
Wow ~
· have had reunions but an associa·
Confusion reigns for .Jo&lt;' Kirby.
' •· tlon formed to represent all of the
classes has n't been tried before. Racine Village Chief of Police.
.
Bob would ' like at leas t two and .Jeff Hysell.
The
new
Ohio
Valley
phone
representatives from each of the
classes over the past 20 years to book on the Inside covN lists the
serve as the cor ps for the new Racine Poli ce nu mber as 949·
-association . If you'd like to be a 235.3. It turns out th at th is is the
home phone of .Jeff Hysell who
part just give Bob a call at
· 992-5396. He' ll take all of the has nothin g at all to do wit h
· pertinent Information about you Racine pollee matters .
and get the association rolling. . . This means that Chief Kirby is
not get ting the calls which might
I always like to mention any require ac tion and .Jeff. who ca n
scholarships that are aro und for do nothing abou t the problems, is
higher education so I wanted to rece iving the calls. Yo u mi ght
· tell you that there is anew one for wa nt to make a note that you ca n
fine and performing arts stu· reach Chief Kirby at 949-3089.
. dents at Rio Grand e College and
Pomeroy and Middleport mer·
· Community College established
by Mr. and Mrs . D. Wayne chants will be havi ng moonlight
madn~ss sales tonight. Now
·
Evans, Circleville.
. The new scholars hip is In picking up a few thin gs you wa nt
memory of Mrs. Evans ' parents, at a barga in price should help
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney.H. Fadely, you to keep smiling.
and is designated to ass ist
students ex hibiting proficiency
·and talent In the fin e and
performing arts, as well as
showing merit and finan cial
need. ThIs one Is res tricted to a
: .' student or student s from Gailla
and Meigs Counties in Ohio and
• ·· Mason County, W. Va.
,
Also high school student s who
are Interested in applying for
: :.$1,000 co llege scholars hip s
~hould request applications b y
March 16 from the Educational
' Communications Scholarship
, Foundation, 721 N. McKinley
: Road, Lake Forest, !1\ . 60045.
To receive an app lication, send
a note stating your name, ad·
::;·-:
.;-· .• •

·&gt;:

..

The llrst birthday of . Brandl grandparents; Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas was observed recently Chuck Kennedy, David Scott,
with two parties held at the home Mr. and Mrs. David Kennedy,
of her parents, John and Cheryl Jennifer and Greg , and Debbie
Thomas and her brother, Adam, and Mike Kennedy ,
.
In Middleport.
Sending gifts were Mr. and
"Strawberry Shortcake" was Mrs. Jim Thomas, A!llber and
the theme !or both parties With Autumn, Kitty Mees. Ll$a Saund·
cake and Ice cream being served ers and Norma Goodwin.
to the guests.
Attending the !lrst party were
Mr. and Mrs. James Thomas,
The name of Tonia Ash, Syra·
grandparents; Mr. and Mrs . Dan
Beam and Ashlee Saunders. cuse, was omlited from the
Present for the second party recent listing of Meigs Countlans
were Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kennedy, named to the dean's list at Ohio
grandparents; Mr. and Mrs. University for the fall quarter.
Charles Strauss, Mr. and Mrs. Ash · made a 3. 7 grad ~ point
William Kennedy, great· average for the quarter.

Omitted

Brandl Thomas

Girls •State
meetmg set
Prospective candidates for
Buckeye Gir ls State, the Amerl·
can Legion Auxiliary's workshop r •
in democracy, from Meigs High · ·
School and Eastern High School,
are being invited to a get·
acquain ted meeting scheduled
for 2 p.m. on Feb. 8 at the Legion
hall in Middleport. corner of
Fourth and Williams. ·
This year Girls State will be
held at Ashland College, Ash·
land, Ohio, June 20 to 27. At the
Feb. 8 meeting two former
delegates, Polly Chadwell and
Melissa Calaway , will speak
along with Florence Rlahards
and Gerry Parsons, both past
district Auxiliary president.
The names of 20 eligible girls
from Meigs and 15 from Southern
have been submitted for possible
selection. All of the girls, who
have been advised ol their
eligibility, along with their par·
ents are Invited to attend.
Also Invited are representatives of co-sponsoring organiza·
lions and the presidents and
Americanism chairmen of the
American Legion Auxiliaries,
Unit 39, Pomeroy, and Unit, 263,
Middleport.
Additional Information or
questions concerning the meet·
ing should be directed to Jean
Gilmore, 992·5128, or Pauline
Greathouse, 9~2- 6444 .

The. charter was draped In
• · memory o! Gay Gaul at the
recent meeting of Chester Coun·
ell 323, Daughters of America,
held at the hall.
Margaret Tuttle, councilor,
presided with Ethel Orr reading
a thank you note from the Gaul
family thanking themembersfor
·cards, flowers and food, as well
as the memorial services held at
Ewing Furieral Home.
It was noted that 'Elizabeth
Hayes Is hoine !rom the hospital
now. Dorothy Ritchie, deputy
state councilor, Installed JoAnn
Baum, junior past councilor;
Virginia Lee, conductor, and
Helen Wol!, trustee, unable to be
present for the early Installation
ceremony.
Flag bearers escorted Jo Ann
Baum tothealtarwhereshewas
presented with a past councilor's
pin by Mrs. Ritchie. The spring
rally of . District 13 to be held

lax Benefits

Lori Betzing and Marcia Cale
were hostes;es for a layette
shower honoring Mrs. Brian
Conde at Heath United Methodist
Church.
The basement was decorated
with pink, blue and white strea·
mers. On the gift table was a
small cradle containing a' doll,
and gilts were arranged around
It
·The refreshment table was
covered In pink and centered
with a basket arrangement of
pink and blue baby niums and
pink tapers. Games were played
with prizes going to Mrs. Kellee
Nease, Mrs . Debbie Roush, and
Mrs: Edith Hall. After Mrs .
Conde opened her gifts, a salad
course and cake were served to
the guests
Attendi~g were Mrs. Marty
Gress, Mrs. Katie Crow, Mrs .
Louise Thompson, Mrs. Cheryl
Halley, Mrs. Jeannie Owen, Mrs.

You pay no closing cost or application fee If you
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.

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I MEET JANUARY 31, 1987 DEADLINE. ·

$1

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.

NAME........:.......................................................................................................... .

: ADDRESS.........................................................................................................
I

~ CITY ............................ STATE............................ ZI P...............................

"
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'

NO DOWN PAYMENT
60 MONTHS
LOCAL FINANCE SOURCE

COOPE·R

Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge
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I
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HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8 -6; Sat. 8·4

Middleport

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358 Second Ave.
Galllpolle

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Debbie Meadows, Mrs. Juanita
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Mrs. Margie Blake, Mrs. Mar·
garet Andrews, Miss Laurie
Wayland, Mrs. Susie Karr, Mrs.
Melinda Venoy, Mrs. Dreama
Knight, Mrs. Gall Hovatter, Mrs.
Barbara Mullen, Mrs . . Grace
Rusche!, Mrs. Maline ,,Owens,
Mrs. Betty Reed, ¥rs. Edith
Hall. Mrs. Judy Stewart, Mrs
Kathy Hubbard, Mrs. Nancy
Cale, Mrs. Dorothy Roler, Mrs.
Evelyn Ca.sto, Mrs. Eula
Hensler, Mrs . Sherr! Thompson,
Mrs. Debbie Roush, Mrs. Kellee
Nease.
Sending gifts were Mrs. LorE'tta Roller and Lora , Mrs. Pam
Crow, Mrs. Helen Byer , Mrs.
Bessie Darst, Mrs. Sara D.
Owen. Mrs. Mary Dillard, Mrs.
Katie Biron, Debbie Werry, )VIrs.
Rhonda Conde, Mrs. Diane
Conde, Mrs . Hazel Hays, and
Mrs. Angle Edwards.

Garden Club. meets,
winter care is topic

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March 14 at the senior citizens
Center In Pomeroy was noted by
Mrs. Rilchle. She announced that
the district will have a 'meeting
and practice on Feb. 7 at 10 a.m.
at the Senior Citizens Center Jn
New Lexington. There will be a
potluck dinner and members are
to take their own table service.
Flag bearers escorted Marcia
Keller to the altar where they
sang "Happy Blrt~day" and
presented her with cards. Helen
Wolf was pianist for the meeting.
Laura Mae·Ntce, Marcia Keller,
and Goldie Frederick served
refreshments.
Others attending were Beulah
Maxey, · Ada Morris, Everett
Grant, Erma Cleland, Margaret
Amberger, Faye Kirkhart, Ada
Bissell, Lora Damewood, Opal
Hollon, Betty Young, Charlotte
Grant, Mary K. · Holter, Sadfe
Trussell, Mae Mcpeek, Alta
Ballard, and Doris Grueser.

June Ashley and Sue Hager renew the Ohio vendor's license,
were named to the Ohio Genea- and it was voted topurchase a
'·
logical Society Cemetery Com· mailing permit.
mlttee at last week's meeting of
Mrs. Ashley noted that she had
the Meigs County Genealogical put together a booklet entitled
Society . held at the Meigs "Soldiers of the Rel)elllon Living
· In Meigs County In ~895." It was
Museum.
Karen Werry presided at the voted to sell the booklet.
meeting wilh a discussion being
June and Keith Ashley showed
held on the Index !lie !or several new books1 which they
correspondence. Arrangements recently purchased. They also
were made to copy file cards to had an article !tom a 1881
be Jell In the Museum library. newspaper · sho)vlng both birth
' Keith Ashley read . correspon· and death records. 1'flke Parker,
dence and asked for aid from son . of Leland and Margaret
members in ariswerlnglt. He also Parker, displayed his geilealogl·
announced that the chapter's cal char\s and !lies.
· Margaret Parker.won the door
newsletters will soon be In the
mall.
prize. !')ext meeting will be Feb.
Arrangements were made to 15 at 2 p.m. at the Museum.

Low Rates/Flexible Payments

Also for Information on th£&gt;
· poster contest or to make reser·
•· 1 vatlons for \he dinner, residents
• , may call Malson at ~92 - 2084 ,
• , . office; 667·6455, home. or Lee
• Miller at 992·5656, home, or
1.9ll2-3968. office.

the troop ship Dorchester which
carried four chaplains of thi'ee .
!alths to their deaths as they
stood united In prayer when the
ship went down:
The !our chaplains, Romon
Catholic, Jewish. and Protestant,
gave their own life jackets to four·
soldiers on the ship and thus
sacrificed their own lives. The
heroic deed o! the !our chaplains
and their combined act of su·
preme devotion and sacrifice for
American liberty and human
freed9m will be an Inspiring and
ever·shlnlng example o! .real
brotherliood for all time to the
people of the world and It Is
fitting that special recognition
should be given In their memory,
Gilmore stated.

Wayland birth is .announced

MEMBER Fo1c

97 N, Second Ave.

Middleport
992-6Ml

I

''

Brenton weighed nine pounds,
one ounce and was 21 1nches long.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Legar,
Pomeroy, and paternal grand·
parents are Mr. ·and Mrs. Gary
Wayland, Middleport. Great
gra ndparents are John Terrell,
Pomeroy, and Mrs . Ed na Elchin·
ger Wayland, Middleport.
The Waylands res ide In Ho·
mestead F)a., where Mr. Way .
land Is employed with Florida
Light and Power as an electrical
engineer.

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Way·
land, the Iarmer Marla Legar,
are announcing the birth of their
first child, Brenton 'Michael, on
Dec. 23 in South Miami HospitaL
William Henry Harrison holds the
reoord for the largest presidential
family: tO children.
The ancient Greeks played with a
toy called the "diskos." A painting on
a vase from about 500 B.C. shows a
youth spinning what we today call the
yo-yo.

' ....... - ___ .,_
The Daily Sentinel

··-·
Rev. Fred Hill

Revival set
at church
The Rev. Fred Hill will be the
evangelist for a revival meeting
. hosted by the First Southern
Baptist Church, starling this
Sunday and continuing through
Wednesday, Feb. 4.
Rev. Hill was the firs t pastor at
the church. He has served as
director of missions In Minnesota
and is now serving as director of
missions In Mansfield with the
responsibility of sta r ting new
churches.
The revival services will start
at 10:45 a. m. Sunday and will be
held at 7:30 each evening. There
wtll be special music at the
services under the direction of
Bob Mills. A nu rsery will be
provided and
Rev. Lamar
O'Bryant, pastor, extends an
Invitation to the public to attend.
The church Is located near the
Meigs High School at 41872
Pomeroy Pike.

'·" ·'" ·' ""'·

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SELL
IIVEIINE ANtiQUES
1124 East Main St.
· ~omeroy
HOUBS: Tut.·Woti.·Fri.
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sundar: 1 p.m.· 7 p.m.
ly Chance or Appointm1111
IUSS MOOIE

992-2526

1·14·1 mo.

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

1·7·'87·1 mo.

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
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190 MULIERRY AVE.
POMROY, OH.

PH. 992-9949

lab lartan, Ownitr
12·30·86-1 mo.

LADY RACHELS
PALM RUDER &amp; AD VISOR
l " I ~ ·,
,,,,,.

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w.~·,

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fit•

\·

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'
'

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,,,, ,,,.,,

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" 1•I"'
11

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•I

I ' I' I

CARPENTER
· SERVICE

- Addone and remod•llno
-Roofing and gutler work

Jeremy Michael Connolly

.

- Concnte Work

- Plumbing end eiiCtllcal

.......

(Free

E111mottol

V. C•.YOUNG 1ft

'

301

WPII \Jrtrnrt, filfw m

Ph \ 1/.1 IR 4 R

$5 OFF

W11h lh11 An
l(,

!

9U·6215 or 992-7314
Pomtroy, Ohio

4·15-'86-fc

J&amp;L BLOWN·
INSULAnON
VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulation
•Storm Doors

•Storm. WindoWs
•Replacement Windows
•New Roofing

"f.IISflMATIS"

JAMES KEESEE
PH. 992-2772

1·19-'17·1MO.

(CUT OUT FOR FUTUIIE USfl

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All M1ku

•W11hert •DilhW11hlr•
•Rangea

•Atfrtge•otont

•Dry•• •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

MAIN STREO
PIZZA.

222 L.llaln, Po-oy

PH. 992-2228
4 P.M. 'Til 11 P.M.

Sunday th1u Thursday
Friday 1!. Saturday
4 P.M. 'Til 1:30 A.M.
PIZZAS, SUBS
PIZZA IIEAO
1·2-'tl·f ....

•All Typftof

Excavating
•Lindtcaplng
•BaHmentl
•Sew~ge Syatamo
•W•ttr &amp; Gil Un11
•W•ttr Wall Orlltlno
•Trucking

Call: 7U·2•07

FIRE DEPT.
Boshon Building

EVERY · .

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Foctory Cholto
t2 Gaugo Sholg\111 Only
·

10·8-tln

BISSELL
BUILDERS
CUSTOM IIIILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Pri11s"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day ar Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
491il St. lt. 124
lad111, Oltli 45771

94.9-3048 Bus.
94.9-7606 Home
All Makes &amp;
Models
74 HR. SERVICE

• 10·1·tfc

Wt HtfJ Ahll Tlt~tt
S.. t Tte~lltlll
II Dllf

RIDENOUR
TV &amp;APPLIANCE
CHESTER-915·3307
411/ tln

Roger Hys~ll
Garage ·
Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AIIO TrU&amp;IIIIIIIDII
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
6:17-tfc

BOGGS
SlUS &amp; SEIVICE
U.S. Rl. s'o EAST
GU'fSVIW, OHIO.
Autharlzod John DNro,
Ntw HoHontl, luoh Hog
Form fquipmont
Dtaltr

F~r111

E4alpMut

,.,.. &amp; ,.,., ••

1·3-'l&amp;·ifc

BISSE~L .

SIDING CO.

Naw Homts luilt
" Free Eltlmat•"
PH. 949-2101
or 949-2860
Na Sunday Calls

992-2198

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY

• GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATElUTE SALES &amp; SEII¥1CE

•VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
*ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

Middleport, Ohio
t -13·tfc

992-3410

•ZENITH

•SYlVANIA

1·11·1 ...

PAT HILL FORD

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADOUARTERS FOR

4-16 .' 86 !In

We can repair and r~
core radtators and
healer cores. We can
also acid boi I and rod
out radiatm. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

,

J.R. 's REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
lmtallation
S.rvke
Electronic Organs
Mobile seNice

614-843-5748
liUSONAit£ • lflllltf
1·20·'86 tfn

1/IIIJJ.•

SHAIPINING
SEIYICI
Clrcullr Sowo

Sliw Choln

Plentr nlvH
0•111 Blto ,
Kn'IVII
C~ltolo

GIAYELY
TIICTOI SILlS
20H ...... SI.
,,...,.,, Ohlt

PH•. 992-2975
. l-IS-'17· 1111o.

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck. auto. 6
he•vv equipment
rep1irt and wel.dlng.
(All makea 8o modalal

PH. 949-2893
or 949·2756
Jolin l.lenh

Ow111r /lllchollrc

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
SIZE 23X30X007

25(

1·13 tfn

' ·' ·'17·1-.

J.l&amp;-'17· !ItO,

ONLY

. RACINE

RADIATOR
SERVICE

4 · ~~,

MEIGS
EXCAVATING .
COMPANY

GUN SHOOT

lllil

owop..

YOUNG'S

Twin talk was a feature of the'
recent meeting of the Mot hers of
Marge Purtell hlld a program pottery, wicker, old bottles, Twins Club held at the Pomeroy
on " Winter Care of Houseplants" decorative cans, antique objects United Methodist Church .
at the recent meeting of t))e and hanging baskets.
The mothers shared experlen·
Fernwood ·Garden Club held at
Ida Murphy presided at the ces of having twins and then
the hOme o! Mrs. Robert Purtell meeting with the club collect enjoyed a coupon exchange.
, .)ast week.
being given In .unison. For roll Plans were made for a night out
· Mrs . Purtell talked about call, each · member responded on Feb. 16 at Shoney's in Point
blooming houseplants, mention· with the name of a houseplant Pleasanl.
lng begonias and geraniums and they now have In bloom. Mrs.
Two new members welcomed
noted thai they need lots of light Kathryn Johnson had devotions were Dwlla Sayre, Evans,' W.
and adequate moisture. She said using an article "Putting Shoes Va., and Barbara Logan, Syra·
that lhe favorite houseplant on a Goose." Quoting !rom cuse. Other members attending
seems to be · the African violet Ephesians 6 she stated we all were Shelly Smith, Ashland, W.
and th11,t there are numerous need to be shod with the " prepa· Va:; Dee Simmons, Reedsville;
varieties. She said they require ration of the gospel ot peace."
Gall Patrick, Gallipolis; Fonda
!lltered sunlight, should be kept
Oftlcers reports were· given. Thomas, Shade: Debt Gilmore,
!airly mo(st and fertilized on a Mrs. Susanne Warner and Mrs. .. Middleport; Eloise Drenner,
monthly basis.
Thelma Giles reported on the Linda Faulk, Jan et Eblin,
She said that the Christmas, judging o! the Chrlatmas deco- Pomeroy .
Thanksgiving and Easter cactus rating contest In Middleport.
Winners of prizes in a recent
all denote when they bloom and . Mrs. Giles reminded the group drawings were VIcki Ault, Linda
said that they do well in !lltered that the bulb order needs to be In Faulk, Janelle Haptonstall,
sunlight In temperatures In the by Feb. 1. A "thinking of you" Pomeroy; Larry Rupe, Shade;
·~ sixties. After blooming they card wu signed for Mrs. Flossie Paula Mora, Betty Wrltsel, Ra·
should be allowed to rest, she Hysell. Mrs. Giles conducted a cine; Jenny Smith, Middleport:
said. She also talked about plants cold weather recipe exchange. and Kathy Jeffers. Albany.
which bloom out of season and Next meeting will be a program
RE:freshments were served.
noted that Christmas gilt plants. on trees at the home o! Mrs. Ida
Anyone Interested In joining ·
should be kept out of drafts and Murphy.
the club !rom Athens, Gallla,
away !rom cold windows.
Attending besides those named Mas.on, and Meigs Counties are
Several 1ea!lets •and books were Kathryn Johmon, Helen asked to call Mrs. Faulk at
were distributed showing d!f!er- Eblin, EvelY,~ Thoma, and 992·2475 or Mrs. Thomas, 992·,
elll ways to display plants using Brenda Arms.
2753.

PHONE 992-2156

614-992-3023

We'll Sell You A
Used Car or Fix
Your Old One

Twins Club
has meeting

•

r-------.....1--------..1.--------t=======::;
MILLS ELEtTRIC
Bus I· ness Servi· ces
COMMERCIAL
RES
TAl
IDEN I ·

..... d'

Jeremy Michael Connolly, son
of Michael and Sheila Connolly ,
celebrated his third birthday at
lhe his home Saturday with a
party . A Sesame Street theme
was carried out and cake, Ice
cream and drinks were s~rved.
The children received balloons
and gifts at the party.
Attending were his paternal
grandparents, Ted and Marge
Connolly, Debby, Misty and
Travis Lyons, Arlene and Jason
Parker, Wayne, Barb, and Kurt
Bennett, Steve, Lau rle and Chris·
tie Barber.
·
Sending gifts and cards were
his maternal grandparnts, Mayford and Wilma Harris, his
great-grandparent, Everett and
Beulah Schultz, his great·
grandmother, Erma Connolly ,
his 'great -great -grandmother,
Lola Griffin, and Erma Jean and
Darlene Connolly, Laura and
Bruce Hawley, and Robert and
Trennla Harris.

...0.-"'---'------~~-....,

lll C0111l 51 , POIIItfOY. 01110 4S769

Automotive l1pair
&amp; S.nice
TUNEII'S to TRANSMISSIONS
CALL 992·7403 Apt.
St. Rt. 33, Pomeroy, OH.

·a:mnolly
birthday

Brenton Ml chllcl Wayland

O!.l tll Oalllw Sentint1 tlnl l!ttd 0.,1.

Genealogical group ~eets

:

.

. Pomeroy Mayor Richard D.
Seyler has proclaimed Sunday,
Feb. l, as Four Chaplains Sunday
in Pomeroy.
The mayor has signed a
proclamation !or the observance
held under the auspices of Drew,
Webster Post 39, American Le·
Post Chaplain James
· glon.
Gilmore reports that the obser·
vance wUI be marked on Sunday
. at the 10 a.m: mass at Sacred
Heart Church in Pomeroy. Man·
signor Anthony Glannamore will
preside.
The Pomeroy American Le·
glon Post l)nnually observes
Four C~J)laln Sunday with a
special service held at a dll!erent
church each year-. .
tUesday, Feb. 3, will mark the
44th anniversary o! the sinking of

Chester council meets ·

.. \.cOntest.

'·

The menu for school lunches In
the Eastern Local School District
for the week of Feb. 2 Is
' announced:
.
, .Monday : polish sausage,
baked beans, 'jelli&gt; pudding pOp,
milk.
'
Tuesday: turkey slice, bread, .
butter, corn, pineapple, milk.
Wednesday: spaghetti, cheese,
homemade roll, butter, green
beans, applesauce, milk.
Thursday: bam patty sand·
wJch peas, pears, brownie, milk.
' cooks' cho~ee.
.
Friday:

· The Daily

Ohio

:· 4 ·Chaplains
y
plannecl. for Feb. \1

IMPROVE YOUR BOTTOM LINE

Easy·Access

The Big Bend Clvitan Club,
along with the Meigs High School
and Wahama High School Junior
Clvllan Clubs. will host Its th ird
annual Clergy Appreciation
Dinner at 7 p.m. Monday at the
Meigs High School cafeteria.
According to Clergy Week
Chairperson Sue Malson about 80
clergy h ave bee n se nt
· •· Invitations.
. "With changes occurring from
:· ·· flme to time among ou r minis·
: ters. It Is possible we missed
someone. I hope anyone whose
name was not ava ilable to us will
• call and make reserva tions to
~
attend," Malson said. Area com·
; munlty leaders have also been
• Invited lo participa te in the
; special event.
·• ·. Cblldren In grades one throu gh
six are being encouraged to take
part In a poster contest can ylng
put the theme, " Ministers are
: Special". Posters submitted will
be displayed In various business
houses during February. Child·
, ren should as k their school
: prlnlclpals for Information on the

.. '

''

the home equity credit line from Central Trust

dinner
is planned

,.

Menu announced
at Eastern·Local

I

WITH CENTRALINE·!

.;.....Clergy
.

'

Thlnday, Jan1.1ary 29, 1987

GINGEIIIEAD
HOUSE
PIE·SCHOOL

••••992-7321
,.rt.
Ollie

WANTED: · .

OLD IADIOS WAIRU
Any lrontl ..............

. ..,.,. 1940

..

To,.._, f• OotM ...... of
Ztoloh, Phlkt, Alwtl" ......

... 13041 111·22111

(6U)

O,IRI ENRICHING
LIAIINtNa IXPIRIINCU

EACH

FOil CHILDREN I TO I
YIARI OF Alii

USES FOR AWMINUM SIIETS RANGE
, FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO ·
,MAKING HAWMRED LAII' SHADES.

Open Enrollmant
Thru The Y•r
OPIII TIISOAY,
WIIIIIISOAY &amp;TIIUISOAY
., AMt•lltiO AM IIIII

CAN IE PURCHASED DAlY AT Til
DAILY SENTitll nL 3 P.M. ;.,

c•
.wnti•tr•ter ••·
Sliritt. J. Nu .. .-. • 4.

u....... , ..

1·7-'17·1 ...

.~11111111111 t'lllt' ll ls

3 Announcem1n1t
•

�..
Page-1 0-The
3

Daily Sentinel
44

New An Claqn. Tuetday and
Thutld.V tor tdultl and Saturdl\' for ~nder ,198 18. c.~ll
614·949·3060 for more inforMition . Guaranteed, you ' ll
INrn.

pricet .

".

Qr.,d~rtnta who don't get to
... thltir grandchlldr., cell this

number 1· 304-878-8187. Ai1:1e
M. He...

4

=1

I?

J..==-

1

•

One yellow and white adult
female cat. Two ttbby kittens.

Coli 448·21 ~8 .
Smtll brHd puppiea, 6 wks. old.

Coli 814·388-8180.
014-448-1354.
Pup-Part hound, pen Germtn
Shepherd. Ctll614· 446-3044.
Smell mafe pony to give away.
H••
been foundered . Must gal
Coli 514-982-6856 .

FemMe cat, mitten paws, to give
away to rod home. Call fl14·

992 -722 .
814 · 992 -2016. 614 - 992 7784.
Give away: 1 r&amp;frigerator and 1
tnow blowet. Call 614-992~; 1'183 after 15 :00 pm and ask for
..t•Tom.
.

______

•·Seart Kenmore dithwashar for
:: partt. 304-676·4•13.

lo1t and Found

••

' \.ott : Ught tM malelhuo apto
:Vic.: 2nd Ava., Pine. Brown
1 colllf • flea collar. 12 yurt old.
, :children'• pel-name lenny .
1 Pluse call 614-4.a&amp;-1S71 or

t-:::::::::::1r;;;::;;::;::;;::;::::::~
Help Wanted

Be pBt of the number One
Besuf'.l Company with AVON .
You earn as you learn. Cell
Marilyn Weaver. 304-882 -

2845 .

• Collie, and 1 tmall mbced breed.
~"Call 814·742·2786 , Chritty
::Ward.
· ~-----

•.found: Pekin.... black and
: brown. Nocollw. Found Jan. 27
, nelf Sacred Heart Church. Ctll
o814-982-7318 .

Someone to c:l.an 9:00· 12:00
mornings two or three time• a
waeh, ctll 304· 676-2636.
Babytitter in our home for 2
children ega• 6 yr and 16 mo.
New Haven, week days, 30.a882-31i74 after 4 :00PM .

Situations
Wanted

Will do word ptoce11ing In my

Wanted, painting, so'me
rl!)lirt, $4.00 hour , leslie
Hughes, 304·676· 2120 night dr

orll

doy.

:;pomeroy. C.ll 614· 992·7227.

Schools
Instruction

Retrain Now. Southeanern BusInns Cl'llega. Call 614 -4.t6-

4387.

18

Wanted to Do

~EWARD .

814-742-2163 or
814· 742-2533.

...'·

-

Wanted To Buy

LPN wants to do privtte dutv. 2
yeart eJCperienca in hospital. 2
yetrt experience private duty .

Finan m l

•• 614-440-3872

XPP.

CASH pakl for '83 modet
and naoNer used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eattltfn
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 814-4-t&amp;·

2212.
bu~ ·

pool ttble. Call

514-2&amp;5·8535.
Old

•oo ••In M1trcury. 40-50

HP outbo~rd motors, operable·or
for parts. Call 11 • -441-7372.
Buyi~tg

dtlly gold, tltvar coins.
rlnga, jewek'y, sterling Wife. old
coins. l•te c:urTencv. Top pri·
c:... Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Avt. Middleport. Oh. 614·

992· 3478.
BUYING RAW FUR II Ginseng.
Yellow Root, beef and deerhides. A'-o sailing trapping
suppiiM, Wheat Lites. Nita lites.
Lilt diV to buy furs Feb. 7th.
Hours 1:00·9 :00. Clottd Wed.
George Buck!.., 81 4·&amp;&amp;4·4761 .
Buying junk c••· Ct11&amp;1 4-992·
5648 after 5:00 pm. ·

21

Buaine11
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH -

ING c~. JIICOm!]tend• that you
do bua1nH1 with people you
know, tnd NOT to tend money
through the mail until you htva
invettlgated the oHerlng.

Good'money weekly. Proceuing
mtil information. Ruth tell·
1ddrt1Md ettmped anvalope:
Teuy .Lee. 131 ·A Eureka Star

9298 .

Profeuional
Services

814-448·4428 .

Sr:l vll.l~s

Guiter l...ons. Call 814· 388-

9431.

AVON·Wowll M1ke big bucks.
No prDC*IIing charge. Cill

Real

814-,48-3358 .
Avon. Fr• Basic Kit. Jan.
28· Ftb. 21. Start now . Earn
utre doll..-.. Ctll &amp;14·4•6-

21 51. 448·4882.
Nlled babytiHtr· Mtture ratpon·

llble peraon. Bidwell area only.

Coli 114-318-9102 .

2 yell~ ptge

..l"people needed. Only thoae
with 1t lull one yJiar sales
uperience need apply . Mail
reeum• to box T-8000. ctra of
the GaiWI)Oiis Dtitv Tribune. 825
Third Ave. Qalllpoll•. OH 46631 .
e&gt;ental Hygtnltl tnd dtntal
eelietant. Send typed written
rNUtne to 205 N. 2nd. Ave.
MtddJ.,, Ohkl. Good poahlon
.v1MIIblt tor tha right person .
·
-lc -

AIRUNES NOW HIRING . Fligho
Attendants. Agtntt. Mechtnlca.
cunarn. Service. Salerlaa to
eiOK . Entry lwei poaitiont. Call
801·07-1000 EJCt. A-9805 for
current lia:tingt. _ _ _ _lc=;,::;__:;_

GOVERNMENT JOBS .

t11.040·•11.230 ' '· Now Hir·
1ng. Coli 108-117·1000 Eol.
R-1101 tor cu"ent f.cferallltt .
Airline jobt e17 , 747 . to
•el.-411. ptr year. Now hirlngl

_.

Ctll Job Uno 1· 518·459-3635
Ext . A·
1315 0 for Into. 24
_

lomMRI to llv• on my homa 5
d.ya 1 wMIII. Mond!IY' · Friday,

1114·742·2050.
Exporiencod bed\' ,_ noeded.
Mutt ttMre own tools. Inquire

t:OO to 5:00 Mondoy
,..,....... Frklly. P11ont814-992 -7011 .. 114·1t2·1583.
CHIIIITIII~S BILLS PILING UP1

Tile Afftfll ,..tlon81 Ou1rd mty

ll1o
· MOftlhly
poy
GMc*
tot- ,... time
work. Join
- ·· 304·175-:JHO or 1-800·

•12·H1t.

AVON no ......,. chorgo. op.,
ttrrito'rlll. phone 304 -67&amp; ·

, 1421.'

•

Sttrb Tree and lawn Service.
Hadget , shrubs , buthu
trimmed, ltndsctping. ttump
end leaf removal. 304· 576·
2842 or 576-2010. ·

Help Wanted

JMf wnk.

388 -8833.

I·

OakwooU Apts. Modern 1 bdr.
apt. Security deposit. reteranca.
No pets. Single penon preferred. located between Gllllipolil &amp; Holzer. C11ll 614-4462055 after 6 PM.
'
Jutt built 2 bdr . duplex. .
Equipped kitchen . Extra nice.
Security deposit &amp; reference
required. No pets. Call614· 446·

1250.

1971 New Moon Mobile Home·
1211.46. on'Smokey-Roe Rd .• Off
Blessing Ad. , Northup . $3.000.
Silver Springs, Florida. 1980
14x70. On 1 acre with chained
llnked fence. 12x30 screened
patio. 814-742 ·2464.

2 BR; 16 Court St .. Carpeted.
Kitchen turn. $]!50/ month. plus
utilities . Deposit Call 6,4-446-

31

E st~ l e

Homes for Sale

1 milt west of Rodney-At 36 . 3
bdr., brick mal . frea . 2 Clr gar.
heeted workthop, chain link
ltnce. a~~: . cond. Call 614· 245·

Furnished. Nawly decorated. 1
BR. large enclosed porch,
8200 / month . Adults . Sec .
Dep., Ret'1. Call 614·446 ·

2236.

2 bedroom mobile home. Good
condition, must tell . t3500. Call

Lerga apt. &amp; duplelt houae on
Main St. Che1t.ire. 2 bdr ..
furnished . Water paid. Call614-

614-742-3100.

33

Farms for Sale

98 acres. 3 Btrnt . ouibuildlngs.
1 new home. 1 oldllf home.
Good fence. TobKcO bne.
Equipment. Miner~l rights in·
tact. Secluded but good roads.
Productive f~tm . Must sell. High
70' t . No trad... but wiN conlider l•nd eontrtet. Call 61.t·
643-2227 after 7pm .

34

446 · 2~81 .

''

8538 .

&amp;

Lots

Beneficial haa accepted voluntary repo11a11ion of a houte in
Addison, Ohio. 3 bdr., kitchen,
blth, attic, dining aree. &amp;
in -bt .. ment ganga . Priced
below mtrkM vtlue &amp; nagotlt·
bla. Contact Duana Clttworthy
at Beneficial of Ohio. 614-446-

2765.
- - - - - - - - -It-

Government homn from t1 . lu
repaif). Delinquent ta11. prop.-ty.
Aepo11a•aions. CaM 80&amp;-187 ·
1000. ht . GH -980&amp; for current
rapo lltt .

Acreage

2 V, acres of bottom land,
approx. 5 miles south of Eureka
oH old At. 1 Good home trte.

Ca116h -268· 1774.

Ashton building lots, mobile
hom11 permitted, Clyde Bowen.
Jr. 304-678-233&amp;.

Rental s
•

Houses for Rent

3 bdr. ranch. Rodnay Village II,
1285 mo. plua depoalt. Aefeten·
ces required. Ctll 614· 4•6·

Stla or rent New Haven. 1
bedrooma. 2 baths, fireplace,
gltage, 138.000.00 or I 275.00
month ptut dapo-'t, 304-273-

2471 .
Mobile Home•
for Sale

NEW AND USED MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOilLE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WElT, GALUPOLIS, RT 35 .
PHONE 814·448-7274.

APARTMENTS. mobile homes,
houses . Pt. Pleasant and Gtllipolit. 614· 446-822, ,
One bedroom apartment in Point
Plaa1ant. Vary clean 1nd nice.
Has washer and dryer hook-up.
Adults only. No pet s. Phone

.304-675-1400.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light house keeping room t . Ptrk
Central Hotel . Call 614·446 ·
Rooms lor rent , dey. week.
month. Gallia Hotel. Call 614446-9716 . Rentas lowasl120
month.

46

Space for Rent

0009.

Ni ce 3 BR hou1 e. S360 plus
utilites a 1ec. depotit. Call
614 · 446 · 9280 after 6 &amp;
weekend•.
Smtll. 2 BR hou11. fenced in
front yard, t200 per mo. Utilities
not included. Call 614-968·

4150.

At 160 Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy.
Avtilabla Feb. 1 at. Reatontble
rent, house needs work. Call
614· 992· 6791 after 6 :00.

Office Sptce for Rent. Excellent
for Attorneys , Accountant, etc.
Close to Court Houta. Call
Wiuman Real Elate Ag ency.

814,446-3644 .
COUNTRY MOBILE Home P11rk,
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Rental trailers. Ce ll 614-9927479.
Space tor Rent : Trailer spaces.
locust Rd . Rt . 1. Po int Pleasant.

304-876·1076.

42

Merc l1andi se
51

Household Goods

Mobile Homes
for Rent
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

2 bdr .. all utllitiat paid except
elec.. turn. or unfurn.. tee.
dapoail required. Convenient
loc1tion. Call 814-448-8&amp;68 or

814-446-4778.

..

~

2 bdr. fully furnished adulte only,
util. paid. Call 614·4-48-.a110.
3 BR mobile home. largt yard,
city school. 314 lrd. St. Kt·
neuga. C1ll 814-446-7473.
f1 5o par month. t 150 depo t it.
12x60 furnished plua utilities.
Raccoon Rd. Call 814· 4•8·

3 milet out Buhwille Rd . Open
9AM to 5PM. Mon . thru Sat.
614·446 -0322 .
Full tize bed, complete. Asking
$60. Cell814 -446-9993.
Saara Kenmore. electric:, eoppertone stove. 850 . Call 614·

0500.00. 304-875-132&amp;.

72

~all

61 4-268-8243.

r

0

(j])
(])
. (!)
fi)
Cll

Trucks for Sale

1978 GMC dump truck.

1979 1 I 2 ton 4x4 Chevy, 197,3
3• ton Crew Cab Chevy. 1976
Chevy BelAir. Call 81.a-246·

0
0

•

6 :05
6:30

9241 .

Olive St ., Gallipolit. New &amp; used
wood -coal ttovet, 6 pc wood LA
suite 1399. bunk bed• t1 99,
,reclinen new &amp; used bedroom
s~ltea, wringer washert, &amp;
shoes . New livingroom suites
8199-1599. lampt. Call 614·

448 -3159 .

Building Materials
Blodc, brick, sew,r pipes, win·
dowa, lintels. etc. Claude Winters. Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·

246-5121 .

Concrete biockl alltizes yard or
delivery. M11on und. Gallipolia
Block Co., 123V2 Pine St.,
GaiUpoH1. Ohio Call 114-446-

2783.

446-3142.

USED FURNITURE . Sofa. e1tcel·
lent condition. coffee tabla, solid
maple comer cabinet . Corbin&amp;:
Snyder Furniture. 9&amp;6 Second
Ave. Gallipolis, 614·416 -·1111 .

Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tires. lil:et12. 13. 14, 15,
16. 16",5. 8 miles out Rt. 218 .
Call 614-256-6251 .
Plastic cistern tttte approved.
plattic teptic tanks . plastic
culver11. metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jackson. Oh . 614-286-5930.

Building Supplies. Cloteout•·
Buyoutt-Surplul (1)4'x8' x%"
Yellow pine rough uwed 'r 1·1 1
tiding. 810.99 ea. 26 pc. up
$9 . 99 . f214'JC8'JC~" Yellow pine
rough uwed T 1· 1 1 tiding.
86.99 11 . 26 pc. up 14.99 . (3)
4 '~e 8 'x%" T•o plywooc:t.
110.95 ••· (4) 4'x10'x34" plywood, t1 ,8 .9&amp; ••· (5) .a·xa ' x'AI"
Luan plywood , $5.99 ea. (6)
4 '~t8' all wood paneling. Wood·
grains 81 prints. t7 .9&amp; ea.
Seco~• 15.99 . (71 Masonite.
Marlha plankt 18" wide- 98 "
long paneling. TS.G. Saconda
$1 .150 e1. (8) 4' x8 '"Mtrlitt bath
panel embossed in 4 "~t4 " block
$7.95 and $8.96 ea. 191 4'x8'
Foil faced foem lntulation botrd.

For lilt: Firewood, Poplar slabs
S5.00 per bundle; O•k slabs
S10 .00 per bundle. Sawmill
County Rnad 19, Peach Fork Rd .
Phone 614 -992 ·6922 ,., 12:30
p.m.
Siegler Gat Stove. 7000 BTU .
With blower . Like new . $200
Call614· 992-7713.

Tony's Gun Repairt, hot rablue·
ing . Open 9 :00AM t o 7 :00PM .
Call 30• ·675-4631 .
HUNTERS · CarhartU . Leases.
Collar!, Feed, ·Name Plates,
· Capt, lights {Nitelite Oealen).
Insu lated Bootl. Houn of Sihs,
407 SiJCth St. Point Plea111nt.
Surplus Denim, Army , Rental
clothing4 Copy of thit ad worth
10 per cent off on lined denim
jackals, C11hart clothing, (01·
cron intulated Coverallt
126.00 ). Sam Somerville's,
East-Rsventwood, Junction Old
Rt. 21 . Independence Road, Fri.
Sat, Sun. 12 :00·8 :00 PM . 304·

56

Pets for Sale

Dr•gonwynd Cattery Kannel .
CFA Himalayan, Persian and
Siame1e kitten•. AKC Chow
puppies. New Himmlet S.. Pet·
siant. Call 614 -446-38•4 after

7PM.

Miniature Pin tcher puppiea.
AKC Regilttrld red , black &amp; tan .
Htd l hOts, wormed, t1il1 cui.
Call 61 4·•23 ·8071 .
Pure bred white Garman Shepherd pupa. $100. Cell 614-

992·2582 .
6 month old reglnered. mala
lsopard Ker and Mountain Kar
t:rOII&amp;d, 304-895 · 3883 .

57

Musical
Instruments

Guitar Instruct ion by Art C11ey
for beginrMng to tdvtnced gui·
tara. Call 614·448 ·8782 , ask for
Kevin .

Va.

,.,

61

Farm Equipment

w..t.

814-280-8451 .

ferguton, New Holland.
Buill Hog &amp;oleo • hfvlce. Over
.to ulld trtctort to chooM1from
• complete line of nwt • uetd
·equipment. Largnt eelectJon in

S .E. Ohio.
JIM'S FARM !QUIPMENT
CENTER. lA 35 W. Qolllpollo,
Ohio. Coli 114-448-1777, ovo.
114-448-3582. Up front 1JOC•

K 6 K Mobile Hom•. 2 tnd 3
bedroom mobile "omet, 30'·

875-3000.

tor1 with w.rranty ovtr 40 uhd
tractort, 1000 toolt.

2 b~room trailer, couples. 1
smaU child. Locutt Ad . Rt 1. Pt.
Pltatant. 304·175-1071.

UTIUTY ILOG . sPECIAL:
27"x38"si'EAVE with olldlng
• . -... .4.21S.OO

MOTOR CAR BROKERS. St.
Rt. 160 North of Holzer Hoap.
Gallipolis. Ohio. 814-448-6692
or 448-4622 . Sea Ul for all your
livestock and hone trailern•ds.
Also. in atoclt tt'aal flat beds for
pickups and ton trucks. P lit H
spring bumpert.

62

Wanted to Buy

1976 Lincoln Mark IV De signer
Edi1ion, new engine, complete
new interio1. eJChaust, tires,
brlkes. alternator, battery. PS,
pump , control module, water
pump . etc . No rust . Aski ng
12,000. Ben offer or trade tor 4
or 5 pastenger. 4 wheel drive . or
what-have-you. 3 appraitalt of
ear for $3200 before paint
tcratchfl(t by 11andals. Nothing
today, will pull camper 11 well or
in clauic comfort . Call 61 4·

446 -2746 .

1984 Chevy Chevette. 4 1pd ..
AM / FM / tape. wire rima. cash
price t2199. John 's Auto Sales.
Bulaville Rd , Gallipolil, OH .
1979 Cre11lda. AT, AC, PB.
AM I FM , tilt new paint. Very
good cond. 82700. Call 614-

1981 Volkswtgon Rabbit l , fuet
injec1ion. IS -speed, loaded! low
mltetge.. Ctll 61•·«6·3643
day , or 614 -•48-2262 evening.

1975 International Bus . 65
PIIMngtrl. Stlndard transmit·
lion , In vary good condition. Can
ba uud •• church bus or be
convarted Into camper. Call

014-992-3187 or 614 -3677284.
1984 Chevy Ctvelier. PB, PS.
radio. 4&amp;,000 mlln, good condl·
11oo. Coli 814-992 -3703 .

Moto~cycles

74

Geme
(!) AWA Wreatflng {90

BMW 900 with taring wind·
shield , ax. cond. For sale .or will
trttde for ·car or truck of equlll
value. $1600 range. C•ll 814•

min.)

fil

246 :5040.

75
.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

,.

-·

12 h . V· bottom boatS. 1 HP Sea
King motor, 8•00/'pair . Call

SU -245-9241 .
13 h . aluminum boat with 6'h ·
HP motor 1nd oan. E~ecellent ·
condition . $400. 614 -9492021 after 4:00p .m.

_.

-·

·.
"' ............. .

ALLEY OOP
1'E1.L ME,

76

7:35
8:00

HE SERVED GEN' ~
JOHNSlON AS TH'
60UTH1&amp; FUST

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

AERIA~

OBSERVUHI

Budget transmi1sions u1ed &amp;
rebuilt all types. Torque convertert a transfer case~ . Engine
ovlf haul kits. Allison Transmit·
sin parts and CVC jolntt. Mni·
mum 30 dey to lifetime Wit·
ranty. Will deliver, cash and
carry or in1tall . Call 614 -379-

2220 .

8:05
8:30

Servrces

9:00

EEK &amp; MEEK
81

Home
Improvements

1171 Malibu Clauic; 17,000
.ctual mil•. AC, P8. PS , bucket
11t11.

JO&lt;l-875·2290.

hrs .) Uve.

Unconditional lifetime guarantee. local references furnisf'led .
Free estimates. Call collect
1 ·6U· 237· 0488, day or night.
Rogers Basem ent
Waterproofing .
SWEEPER and 1ewing machine
repair , parts, and supplies. Pick
up and delive ry, Davis Vecuum
Cleaner, one half mila up
Georges Creek Rd. Call 61•·
446-0294 .

a pair of female private
eves when they investigate

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

FTM General Contracting 13y ri
experience. Roofing &amp; Con·
struction. Ph. 614-388 ·9308 .
Free estimates 10% off during
the holidays, off er eJCpires Jan

I'M -~ING

All typ es car!)enter &amp; concrete
work: Int erior, exterior, remo·
dating, painting, rooftng, fre e.
estimates. Ctll61-4 ·446 -6174 .

tt-le theft of 21 priceless set
o f antique samurai swords.

A LEOPARD
CAN 'r CI-¥\NEiE

TO STOP
BEING A
6LJLLY.

16. 1987.

I Dlc:N'r EVEN KNON
r HAD5PCms.

ITS 6R:JI"S.

IIl College Baok•tball: Vir·

I OCN'T
6ELieVE

glnla Military at Morahall
(2 hra.}
~ Hogan'&amp; Htrotl
10:00 D CIJ ® L.A. Law Kuzak

I

i

IT.

2464.

I'

faces

•

Fetty Tree Trimming , st ump
removal. Call 304·675· 1 331 .

when

I ·~

RINGLES ' S SERVICE . eJCpa·
rienced carpenter. electrician.
mason, painter. roofin~ (includin{l hot tar application) 304675 -208., or 671S -7147.

BARNEY
I DON'T KNOW

AAAW.'!Grr

895-3802

Ate MENT- •

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

MV

TATER'S ALWAY5

UNDERFOOT

.c.,...;:::::..' '

CARTER 'S PLUMBING

AND HEATING

332·1745.

General Hauling :
•

Jam es Boys Water Service. Also ·
pool s filled. Call 614· 266-1 141
or 614-446-1175 or 614-446 - •
7911
.

See Dick.

See Jane.

See~.

Coli tnd limettone delivery ,.

304-875·3190.

SeeM.

'n

87

e09lne. 4
AC nMd1
304· 178·
and 1:00

1110,Z21, 3&amp;0V·8. T-top, ou1o
trlnt, PS. PB. ~ltl wheels, new

1~00.

etc. 304·875-6392 1111tr

PEANUTS
''·'
SI-IE DID

575 - ~8 .

IT

A6AIN ! .

1 TRLf TO TALK TO THIS .

6iRL, SEE, BUT ALL SJ.IE
EVER SA'/SIS,''ARENT VOO

Uphol1tery

KIND OF OlD FOR

014· 2~8 · 1470,

Mf.?"

In · a

;ncb Odd Couple
al fi2I Knofs Landing
(CC)(60 min)
1H1 ilJl Nowa
10:30 I]) Bill Coaby Show
fJI CZl iNN Newa
[J) Tony Brown'l Journal
10:38 ffi ACE Award&amp; Live coverage of the Awards for Cable hcellonce. 12 hrs.)
11 :ao
CIJ Cll Cll® 111 (j])
(j]) Nowo
(]) Hardcutlo and McCor·
mlok
,
(!) College Baoketboll :
Wuhlnglon ot UCLA {2

a

hrl.) Li11e .
fJI CZJ M'A"S"H
1H1 Eyes on tht Prlz•
America'&amp; Civil Rlghll
Yoara 1154-1888 ICC! Do ·
oogregsdon In tho Sou1h io
tha focus of 1hio opioodo. ·
(60 min.)
ilJl Honeymoonera
11:30 D CIJ (lJI Tonight Show
Guilt hol1 Garry ShandUng walcomoo Carrie
Fisher and Ju011no Bate·
man. {80 min .) In Storao.
Cll WKRP In Cincinnati
• (Z)Taxl
G (J) ABC Ntwa Nlghtllnt
IIl Mtohtnlool UnlvorH
ill ilJl Megnum. P.f.
1111]) Night Hoat (70 min .)
12:00 (I) Burna • Allen
Cll Jalftreone
• CZl RoWhkll
D (J) To1N of tht Un•x·

pacil!f .

• (J) Mtohanlolil UniYtrll
12:30. CIJ (j)) LIIW Night with

81.a· .t48· 3438. OpHn daily 9
to -4:30, Stt. 8 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp;
naw Uphotttrtd.

Devld IA1Wrman Tonight'•

guHtl lrl comtdiennl

8:00.

' 171·1314.

ONLY TWO MONTHS

OLPER THAN S!IE!

E&gt;o.

Mowrey 's Upholttering liNing
lrlcountvarea21 ·yllrt. Thebet1
In fur.,hure upholstering. Call
304 - 671!1 · 4164 for f r ee
1
•tlmetlt.

I WAS 80RN IN OCToeER ...
S!IE WAS SORN IN DECEMBER •.
I'M

A &amp; M Cuttom Couches and
Alllpholattty, St. Rt. 7, Crown

ClOy, Oh.

client

'

Oillard Water Servlee: Pools, :
Sisterns, Wells. Delivery Any ·
,time. Call 614-446 -7404.

Hou1e ~:oal . Delivered 1 ton end
up. Jim Lanier, 304-676-1247
or 675-7397.

·his

I])

e

Cor Fourth and Pine
Gall ipolis. Ohio
Phone 614·446-3888 or 614446 · 4417

•

BACt&lt; AN'

embarra11ment

personal·injtJrv cue with ·
hold• vital informat ion and
Abby Perkins' 3-yoar-old
sonia kidnapped. {60 min.}
(R}In S1oreo.
Cll lll Cll 20/20 (CCI 160

PAW'S ALWAVS ON

r~' MY PIPE !I

WHICH tS WORSE-·
MY SACK AILMENT
OR MY FOOT
.

Rotary ot cable tool drillir1g.
Most welts completed semedav .
Pump ulet end tervice . 304·

85

{60 min)
1H1 Myotory: Secret Advoroory (CC) The detectives
search on for the illusive
Jan a Finn. {6 0 min.} Part t .
9:30 U Cil (j]) Night Court In

Stereo.

RON ' S Te levision Service .
House call t on RCA , Outzar.
GE . Specialing in Zenith . Call
304 -676 · 2398 or 614-446·

82

Cil

Colby&amp; (CC) A
.wounded Cash fighls lor ·
his lifo. a pregnon1 Fallon
lakes a dangorouofsll end
Sable and Francasca may
soon have somelhlng In
common. (60 min.)
Cll Three Womon Filmmakers Three Europe_an f ilmmakers are highlighted .
(j] Ill (ill Simon &amp; Simon
.Rick and A.J. contend with

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1178 Mercury Cougw XR 7. low
mil..... t2.1oo.oo. Coli 304·
C•mlfO AS 301
apatd trana, Pl. PB
CompriHOr, phone
2071 bet\118811 4 :00
PM .

CZl Too Close for Comfort
Ill Cll Judge
® WhHI of Fortune
III!I21 ® Jeopardy
~
Collego Bukttball:
Marquette at Notre Dame
12 hrs.)
(I) Honoymoonoro
U CIJ 1I1J Coaby Show ICC)
Theo finds himself torn between his girlfriend Tanya
and a new female admirer.
{R)In Stereo .
Cil Doktor!
Cll fi1 Cil Collage Baakot• ball : Purdue at Ohio State
12 hrs ,)
Ill Cll Our World {CC) {60
min ,)
.
Cll MacNeil-Lehrer Nowsh· ,
our
® lll !I21 Sholl Game {60
min .}
IHI no Planet Earth ICC)
Tho last great lron1ie r • the
oceans • are foa1Ured. {60
min.}{R} .
(I) MOVIE: 'Botaan'
U Cil (j]) Family Tlos ICC)
In Stereo .
8 Cil (j]) Ch"rt {CC) In
Stereo.
(]) 700 Club
@
College Bukatball:
Duke at Georgia Tech (2

0

1181 Mercury Lynll GL. Auto·
maUc: tranamiuion. power
lttefing, tir. front whHI drive.
t1159&amp; . Calll14-317- n&amp;o.

'7l Nan. 33,000 mil•. 8 cyl.
A,P.I , .t 'doar, MCDnd DWRer,
Iron Ho,.. luiWfnge Pt\.114- , gr· blk lop. •uao.oo. 304-

" "'aki1B

'86, S10 truck, 4 wheel drive,
V-8, PS, PB, AM· FM Clllalte,
18.000 miles, $7,000 .00. Af1er
. 6 :00 clll 304 ·675· 6643 .

1973 Ford F·100 pickup truck.
240 e eye .. 3 speed nandard.

........

2 bedroom moblla homt on
Ai.hland Upton Road. t128.00
mo.,th plut utllitltt. 304-878·

401M.

JlcktOn, Ohto.

Mat~

7141 .

Monater of Strewberry
Cove· Part 2.
®News
IHI MacNeil-Lehrer Nowoh·
our
III !I21 (j]) Wheel of Fortune
~ Berney Miller
7:05 Cil Sanford and Son
7:30 II Cil Cll Now Newlywed

7421.

614·448·1622.

F"rm Suppl11~s
&amp; LIVI:SIIIi:k

U.S. 35

3 bedroom mobUt hom a for rent
near Ch•hire. Can 114·317-

White Farm Tractors, Best Price
In Area. Siders Equipment Co,
Henderson. W, Va. 304· 676·

1974 Chevy Caprice, good
Aunt good. Aut o .. PS. PB.

CROSS&amp; SONS

304-882-2486.

2639.

1876 International! Scout, 4x4,
304-882-3237 after 5 !00•PM .

eo~d .

&amp;14-288-8122.

3 bedroom. untu,.ithed. No
ptts. New Haven, W.V. Ctll

'tub tractor, flail mower. plow.
grader blada1 Call 814 -379·

New•
Big Valley
Mazda SportaLock
CZl Jalferaono
Square One TV
1H1 Secret City
~ Facta of Lite
Cil Beverly Hillbllllao
IJ Cil (j)) NBC News
Ill NBA Today
(I)IIJ (I) ABC News
fil CZl Hogan'• Heroes
Cll Doctor Who
(j] &amp;l!I21 CBS Newi
1H1 Real Advno. of Sherlock
Jonoa &amp; Proctor Wataon:
The Case of the Dog Gone
Dog (CC) Sherlock and
Bryan investigate when
naighbQrhood dogs begin
to disappear.
~ WKRP In Cincinnati
Cil Andy Griffith
8 Cil PM Magazine
(]) Hardcutte and McCormick
(!) SportoCenter
Cll Enllrtalnment Tonight
ET talks with Ray Charles
about his recent performance in an upcoming episode of NBC-TV's
Elsewhere".
fil CZJ M'A•S•H
Ill Cll People's Court
(I) MOVIE: 'Tho Strange

tfiAT DAllY
PUIJLII

'71li.A

0 four
~oarrang• loWoro of
tcrQmbled words
low to form four simple

I I' I I I 1 l
PREMAC

Sandra

••

.B~rnhard ,

Jack

2

r_ I I, I t _
--,~;..=+..:.r--11 ~.0'
~ I I

-i-S...::U;.,M:.:...;.:.H...::U:,.......jl ,_
1

.

T HE C F
15
j
.

.

.

.

.

L A GL E E

I

"You're
like "The
a fraction,"
informed
Granny.
numer11or
Is

what· you

are

and

the

denominator Ia whet you think you
are. The largar the denomlnalor

llhe - l h e fraction ."
Complelo lho chuckle .quo1ed
-.1.-..1..
-.1--.J.~..L.
--1.
by filling In the miuin9 words
L

~-T.,,;....:~I"'7=-,I;:-.::I.-.::.~,-I

0

you develop from step NQ. 3 below.

&amp; PRIN'I
NUMBERED lETTERS I'
IN THESE SQUARES

e

,

,.
r
.

2

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSWER
1

I'

I ·1 I I I

1 1
YESJEIDAY'S SCIAM-Im ANS!IEIS
AllcaH - Labor - Flltll - Condor - HAD a FORK

.

.

Our psychology Instructor fe~ llka aha only had a epoon to
consume all of the "ocean of knowledge." One atudenf
aulooed fhst he only HAD a FORK.
.

··st

1982 Ford 350, steel flatbed.
36,000 miles, 400 -1-notor. 4'·
tpeed. $6600. ca·n aH a.t
Athland Oil in Minersville. 614·
992-6900. Ask for Bill.

1400. Coli 304-675 -1651.

2010 JOh~ O.ert di11M trictor·
~OWl , di1C t3860. New Idea
Dyne Bounce moWir $481 . Ute
model ~24T John Deere' bal.11291. Hay wagan •300 . Call

Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Routh Line. On nice epot in
Chnhlra. 304-773-&amp;828.

•

448·3467.

Quilt top• for sal a. US.OO each.
thit it the l11t I will.mlka for a
while. Le11ie l. Adklnt, 1116
Evergreen Dr, Point Pleuan t, W.

SNAFU'M by Bruce Beattie

Moblte home, fUfnlthltd. Wether
• dryer. lnCenttnlt'f aratl210
1 month. Calll14·446· 2390.

1-286·6622.

l'h " lhlck 14.99 ••II'"" -$6 .99)

273-5665.

County Appliance, Inc;. Good
u1ed appliances and TV Jets.
Open RAM to 6PM . Mon thru
Sat. &amp;14-446-1699, 627 :Jrd.
Ave. Gallipolis, OH .

1030 C~tse diesel with cab. IS
bottom plow1, 149~0 . 4rowAC
no till pl•nter, 81600. 1 2 foot
wheel disc, 1800. 3600 Ford
tractor. low hrt. with 616 lata.
model Ford mowing machine,
$6460. No. 3 MF bailor, 1660.
Pull tvpe rake , &amp;475 . Call

{1 ''· 86 .691 (10)4B" Venitywith
marble top $179.95. (11) 30 " · Now buying thell corn or etr
Wall furnace. ' $30. 7 aluminum Vanity with marble top 179.96. earn. Call forlatettquotes. River
storm windows. 830 . EartV Ford 1121 6 piece high gl011 tub City Ftrm Supply, 614·446·
front ule with drums &amp; 4 spoke enclosure kit $29.96 . (13) 6 ' 2986 .
• wheelt ,' 846 . 1968 Ford pickup tempered glau tlidlng tub
windshield VG 15. Call 614· dbotJ, aluminum finlth, $-49 .94
387-7114.
livestock
or *39.96 with purch11e of tub. 63
(1-41 Single door mecl. cab.
Firewood tor sale. Hardwood. plutlc box , tttinleu steel
Large pickup load, t315 . CaH frama. 819 .96 ea. 1151 1 end 2 Charolail bull. Coming 2 year
614-446·9Z6fl or &amp;1• ·448 - ' piece flbergl111 tub and shower old. Coli 614-387-0242.
1437.
combination . Colora a white.
$129.95 to $191 .95 ea. 6 Ewe Sheep ind twin lambs for
Tree &amp; Stump removal. none, fill pitrcent ditcount on 2 piee1 &amp; lila. t160 . Cell 614· 742- 2002 .
dirt. firewood pickup S46 ., up. (18) 4 piece solid otk towel
Dump 895 . Heap vouchers. btr Ht. t19.915 . (171 Preltni1hed
Don't landtcapes . Cell 614·· oak bruce flooring SJ."~e2W'
448-9648.
Random length• *1 .96 tq . ft . 10 64 Hay &amp; Grain
c .t.n up 81 .76 sq. h . 20 tq. ft .
1969 Ford, V-8 , pickup truck, pr. c.t.n. (18) Prehung 1teel
runs good. Bottle gu furnace for intulated doort 189.96 ea. (191
trtilor, g'aod cond . Call 814- Pine panel doort t39.9&amp; to large round b-'e• of havforsale.
110.00 each Ph . 614-446·
&gt;188-8473.
$59.96 B. grades. 1201 Double 1052.
lideUght antrance doors '!h glass
40 galiOn gas water heater, like V2 panel. t299 .9&amp; ea. (21) Ill'
new . Price negotiable. Call814· Double entrance doora, "'h glau Cle1n mlud hay, never wet:
440-9341 .
$1 .26 a bale. Call 814 -446·
Y, penet•MI .II. (22) Prehw.g
4003.
Mobile home frames, 56 ft . long. interior doon, finished • unflnIn clude• wheels &amp; ax lat . French ia hed. Choice lizes. t3.a .9&amp; ea.
Wood &amp; pl•tic ahutters
City Mobile Homes. Call 814· (23)
from 31" to 80" t9.96 10
446-9340.
t28.96 pr. {241 til wood screen
Transportation
dDOfl . $12 . 95 18 . {26)
10 Church pews. 11 ft . 2Y:! inch 1'1. "x3 6 "~t 80 " whitt ttorm
long. With Bible stand. $260. doors. insulated foam fiHed .
Call 614· 446·6308 or 30•- $89.95. (261 Counttrtop plaatic 71
676·3099.
Autos for Sale
60 c:anta JQ , ft. 1271 Vinyl siding
trim 6 colora (12' J channel
Mixed hardwood slabs . S12 . per S11 .50) 110' Inside corner
bundle. Containing approx . 1% $3 .00) 110' outside corner 1980 Audi 5000, 4 dr .. 5 apd ..
ton1. FOB Ohio Pallet Co
U .OO) (28) 12"x12" plain diMal . PS , PB . AM·FM cassette.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call814-992· white ceiling tile 28 cants ea. or IUntOOf. AC . lllC . cond. $4&amp;00.
6461 .
84 piece ctn. *16.60. (29) or Beat offer. Ctll 614-44624 '"'x48" acouttical embotted 0333.
Firewood for sale. $35 . per load: fire retis tant ceiling panelt
5 loads. S, 60 . Delivered and 82 .36 ea. (30) Clottout white 1978 Ford thunderbird. loaded.
stacked . Call 614·949-2601
ceiling grldtl1 2' m1ln tee 11 .60 axc. cond. insid e lit out., one
after 6:00 p.m .
owner. Call 6,4-388 · 86,3.
u .) W tea 50 cents ea .) Penn '•
Warahoult. Walltton, Ohio . Btwn. 8 AM &amp; 6 PM .
One 300 amp. AC -DC welder. 614·
384·3646 . Opan 8 -6. I
Brand new. One 5000 watt ,dayt.
1980 Trans-Am; new V· S enalternttor. ,0 Horse Brake and
gine, no rust. 9 inside, B outside,
Straton. brand new electric Poia Bu ildings by Quality Auto., PS / PB, eir, atereo. CB,
nan . Pipe dyes, halt through 2 Bulldert. WOikShOPI. CtrpOrtl, not hot-rodded , well main·
inchea with wrichet handle. Pipe animtl Jhelters , gMaget. FrH teined. Asking ••900. or best
taps from Quarter inch to one&amp; a estim1tu. Phone 814-3B4· offer or trade tor 4 to 5
half inch. Write to Bo~~: 178, 5782.
pasltftger 4' wheel driv e. 69 to
Pomeroy , Ohio. le1ve phone
73 mustang convertibleorwhat·
numblf and address.
htve·vou . Call 614-446 -2746 ,

Split tirewood for sa le. Oall .
Hickory. Walnut. t15 • plcll -up
load . Call 614· 742-2182 .

Will rant with cption to buy or
Land Contract. 3 BR . bride home
in Btum Addition. Family room
with fireplace. In full basement.
1 acre with patio and grill.
E11tern tchool dlttriet. Availtble
immediatety. Termttre negotia·
ble. Caii614·986 ·4191S or Collect 614·887· 5388.

Convenient location-upper Rt.
1 . Nice 3 ldr.. ptt11ally furnlthed. Water ~Mid, no intide
pe1t. C11i 614· 245·6B18.

HouM Olllipolit Ferry. Urge
kltc:htn. large bath, 3 bedrooms,
f~mity room. INing room' utility
on 1.8 1cre. 304·171-2214.

One bedroom furnished apart·
ment in Middlepo'rt for rent. Call
614-992-6304 or 614· 4•6·
1552.

0766.

023.000. Coli 81 4·992·6060.

batw..n 1 :30' and 4 :30,

2 bedroom apartment for rent 1n
Bradbury. , 1h bath. Call 614992· 3312. Dolly Woodt .

45

9346.

UO.OOO. Coli 304·876-6440

814-992-7787 EOH . '

One and two bedroom apert men\t in Middleport. Furnished .
1 Call 814-992· 6084,

3-4 bedroom houta nelt school
and hospital . Priced to ull,
2 br, kitchen. bathroom, with
laundJY room. living room &amp;
dining ruom. til alec. Approa . 1
mlln from Pt. Pl. on Rt. 12. 2
trecttajlprol. 1acnmoreorlets
ovarloolclng ICtnJwha River.

Graciout living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Village
Manor and Rivenide Apen menu in Midd leport . From
8215 . Including ut ilities . Call

e059 .

Antique Shop and ttodl tor .. Ia.
Will Jell teparata. Call614· 667-

35

2 bedroom river view apartment.
Equipped kitchen, trash pickup.
Ideal tor 2 partiat to share
expenc:es. Call 814·992· 6639 .

Apartment• for rent in Pomeroy ·
and New Haven. Cell614-992-

Business
Buildings

92~8 .

32

EVENING
6:00 8 Cil Clllll Cll ® III!I21

6 :35
7:00

4926.

1976 Ptnnhouaelrafler for Jtle.
Call 614· 992· 6189.

DtluJCt 2 BR house. B42 Firtt
Aver~u e. Galllpolit, off , Jtr&amp;at
parking, no patt. references.
deposit Call 814· 268- 11529.

Plano S. organ lellont. Mtry
luc11 Call 614·4•&amp;·9787 or

t600

14x70 Fleetwood. 3 Bdr .. 2 full
bliths. tote! alec. Like new. price
negotiable. Call after 4 weak·
days , anytime waaksendt. 61 4·

$1000.00 per week net -profit.
Unique vending unltt with to ea·
tiona Ntme brand itemt. Pop,
Ctndy &amp; antcks. lnvettment
aecured with inventory equipment. Ctll Now at 816-741 ·

Stlndlng timber. AI Tromm,

11

1981 Oakbrook. 14x70 with
7x12 expando, 3 BR .. 2 baths,
woodburner. ex . cond . French
City Brokerage. Call 614-446-

41

814-742-2321 .

f IIIIJfll'/llll'nl

Modern 1 bedroom aplf'tment .
Call 614· 446·0390.

Al .. Gollipolis. Ohio 45831

23

1/29/87

'78 Volara StationWegon, 8
cycle, new paint. radial tirat,

LAYNE·s FURNITURE

--------

for Sale

Coli 414-448-8398 .

We PlY c11h tot' late modet clean
Uled Clrt,
. ,.. ,.Jim Mink Chr.~ .- Oidt Inc.
..
8111 Gane Johnaon

Wanled to

Mobile Homes

5:00, 304 -773-6983.

15

•·

2 room, furnished. Upstairs apt .
dean, no peu. Adults. Utilitie1
furnithed . Ref. &amp; dep. required.
ea11"614·446-1619.

1983. 14x70 trtilet', call after

•

•.&amp;.o1t : Mlsalng Iince Jan . 12 from
bnv•ville area. Whhe male dog
: with tc:attered bltek tpots.
, An ~Wert to Whltll\'. Childs pet.

'86 Mercury Lynx, AM ·FM ate·
reo, 2 door, t4,000.00. Good
cond, 304-875-5929.

Deluxe downtown apartment·
newly redecorated 2 bdr . apt.
wjth full insulation. complete
kitchen . washer-dryer. air cond .
sundeck . Call 614·446-4383deyt. 8H-446 -0139 eveningt
&amp; waekend1.

245 -5818.

•,Found: Janutrv 27th in Pom•
:.roy, 181 of keys. Claim 1t The
1 .Sentinll office.

~-----------­
'. 'Set
of keyt lott Stturday in

3;!

9340.

home Call614-448·8135.

' -lott: 3 dog1; 1 Doberman, 1

Autos for Sale

Furni1had apt. 9, 9 Second.
Gallipollt. 8 150. Utilities pd.
Single male. share bath. 446·
4416 ahar 7pm

"Ws also an educat.ion for
the parent. You learn you
don't get much for ten
bucks."

12

71

0338 .

!

1

; _4_4_•_
-2_:5_8_5._ _ _ _ __

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by IMry Wright

Television
Viewing

ooRN LOSER

Furnithed tpertment. next door
to library. One professional adult
only. Parking . Call fl14 -446-

1
r

11

4 male puppi". Great Pym"
1nd Husky and mix breed,

9·..

5104 A-1 Real E1t1te.

• 1·19

Pair of Albino gerbtlt. Call.

!lousehold Goods

304-876 -7738 o• 304-676-

J--

Giveaway

51

Valley Furniture, new &amp;. used.
Large tection of qu1lit;' fuml ·
1 Bedroom buic ra~t $176.00;, ture . 1216 Euttrn Ave ..
plut electric. Al10 required a Gallipolis. ·
$200.00 t.ec:urity daposh . CON ·
TACT: Jackton Estate• Dept. Ph alfoo useo APPLIANCEs
•46 · 3997 Equtl Hous ing W11hers, dryers , rafrlveratotJ.
O.PPOrtunlty.
r1nge1. Skaggs Appli•nce• .
Upper River "Rd. bnide Stone
2 Bedroom apt. nice carpeting, Crett Motel. 814-•48-7398.
water paid, washer ' &amp; dryer
hook-up, llove, refrig. turnlthed Mollohan Fqrnhure. At 7 Not1h.
available Jan 1 , 1987 Ph. ~allipolis. 'OH PH . 61···46·
814-448-7026 .
7444. Why pay more1 Check ua
out for low prices on furnhure &amp;
Furni1hed &amp; unfurnished apt I ., eppllances. 6 piece wood living
$150.00 and up, raferanc:et Ph. room group, 8399.
,

-=---------

·lcPreclout MemoriH Studio Sp•
daliltl I" portrAits Quality work
guunJ.-ct. Ctll 814·949-3080
for appointment Ru10nable

Apartment
for Rent

_Th~-~nuiyt,~J~aniuiary~2-9_,,_9_a.7--~~--:---~--------~~~~
-:-·:··~~~-_:M:idrd~I~~:·~O~h~=-~~~--,---~======.=;::~™~D:a:il~y;S;em~i;ne:l::~;~;-=·~

Thursday, January 2_9, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Announcements

:.&amp;
•'

..

.... I

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Obvious shift

NORTH
+.r.K75

turns out wrong

I·IS-17

'"J
+J75

By James Jacoby

+QH6

You can probably tell from the bld·
ding thai North was not a rubber
bridge player, since he chose to play
six no-trump rather than six clubs.
The slam is easy in clubs but cannot be
made in no-trump unless the defense
makes a mistake.
Against six no-trump West led a
heart. Declarer played the jack from
dummy and East took the queen. Noticing the weakness of dummy's diamond holding. East now shifted to a
low diamond. South knew better than
to think that East had led away from
the diamord queen. He therefore took
his ace, cashed his spade queen and
went to dummy with a club to play A·
K of spades, on which he '.hrew a low
diamond and a heart. No • he ran the
rest of the clubs, throwi1 g dummy's
little spade on the fifth club. That
brought everyone down to three cards,
and poor West was trapped. II he unguarded his king of hearts. declarer
would play to dummy's heart ace and
back to his diamond king to take his
good 10 of hearts. II West threw a dla·
mood, South would cash the king of diamonds. lelling West's queen. and play
to dummy's heart ace to win the last
trick with the diamond jack .
It was a mistake lor East to play a
diamond at the second trick. II he simply returns a heart, declarer will not

~d·"-

WEST
+J94

EAST

• Q92

• 10 8 6 3 2
, ,Q 7
• 10 6 43

• 7!;

+84

'K96~2

SOUTH

+Q
' 10 8 4 3

+AKB

t A K 10 52
Vulnerable: East-West
Dealer: South

Pass
Pass
Pass

E11t

Sooodo

1•

Pa:~:~

3'

Pa..
Pass
Pass

I NT
3t

Jt

Pass
Pass

I.

Nortll

6 NT

Opening lead: •

4t
Pass

5

be able to create the end position that
squeezed West. Best for North-lloutb,
of course. is simply to play six clubl,
which will always make 12 tricks. :

A new book by James Jacoby and hu
father. the late Oswald Jacoby. Is now
available at bookstores. lf Is "JIICOby
on Card Games. "publlsMIJ by PIYrot1

&gt;

Books.
0

by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

DOWN

I Lean-to

1 Undt•r-

5 Equal
9 Ahelarrl
In He!o i&lt;~•
f I English

Karrnt•nl

2 lnteKril y
a f)odg&lt;'
4 ('ozy room
5 Wha('k

('OmpcJsN

12 Willes.•

6 Gcm.,alion

13 Dieter's
ordf'r

7 l nvignrall'
8 NO idPalisl

I 5 Seed

) 0 l'ul on

ves"" l
16 S lash

24 Fashinn-

taf)&lt;'

14 ToOih ( F'r.)
181sland (Fr.) !7 .Japan ese
19 Oistanl
verso
21 Coq au - 20 Deep mud
22 Gershwin 23 Gamish23 For fear
men!
that
24 Credil nr

able
25 Spanish

!:H!rie!&lt;l

S&lt;&gt;aporl

31

Cholc••
26 lnnumer· 32 Symbo l
able
36 Jaunty
-27 Disfeature 38 Badly
28 Filch
40 Allow

..-lr'.,.,...,.-

greetln~

.

26 - ju lep
27 Equine

-

..

· hybrid

28 "Catcher
in the - "
29 Weapon

30 Wasp
33 Wrath
34 Kimono

,.

sash

35 Cut off
37 Deserve

.. "

39 Similar

.. •

41 Afrkan

river

42 Sidetrack
43 Lofty

44 Pup or

&gt; • • "

OK}'gen

DAILY CRVPTOQtJOTES -

Htre'a boW lowortt It :

I'll

.·

AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

..

One leiter slll)ds for another. In this sample A Is u.sed
lor Ute three L'1, X lor Ute two O's, etc. Single Ieite,.,
apoetrophts, Ute lenc1h and IOrTIIIIUon of the words sre all
hinta. Each day Ute code !etten are different

. ..

CIYPTOQU(1J'E

'.

1·29

R .r

ZQWDRJX

L

DLQWNLWZ

L Q F
L M Z

-

L

L
0 L H

J D R E

II .X Z

G LT A

J -L E Z

.x Z

0 N Q Q K
T X L Q T ·Z '
TXLQTZ

.

IIXRQW

M· C Z M II

YeeterdaJ'• Ceyp~A~qdot.e• THE USE OF THE HEAD
ABRIDGES THE I.ABOR OF THE HANUS. - HENRY
WARD BEECHER
Hanna from tho Columbuo
. Zoo end Dave Edmundo.
(80 min .) In Storoo.
CD ..., of Grouoho
Cll ABC Newt Nlghtllnt
• (J) Moro ANI People

'

..

.·

(!0 MOVIE: 't.volly LHy'

z.,...,.-• •~·:

~ MOVIE: 'Viva
12:35 ()) WomenWoiOh

12:40 . . (j]) MOVII: 'To

nounoed'

1e Aft.,.:
. ..

�'

Page-1 2-The

oaiiy Sentinel
.

-----Local Briefs:-A J?Ubllc lecture, entitled "Sclentlllc Sensitivity, or Physic
Isn't Physic Anymore," will be held Saturday .10 a.m. to 2 p.m.,
In Room 201 of Morton Hall on the Ohio University campus.
Sherry Edwards. il sutnma cum laude graduate of O.U., will
be In charge. Edwards has conducted research that may
establish a scientific support lor the existence of abilities
.
previously considered to be paranormal.
The program t~ be presented Saturday, Edwards says, Is
designed "to dispel commBn myths but at the same time
provide reliable data" from experts In the field. Several topics ·
will be covered and partiCipants can expect straight-forward
Information that will be for the novice as well as the expert. The
program Is free of charge.

EMS units .respond to three calls
Three calls were answered by local units Wednesday, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
At 1: 50 a.m .. Racine took Norma Evans from Carpenter Road
lo Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine at 5:51 p.m.
extinguished a chimney fire at the Bonnie Mathews residence in
Anliquity; Racine at 9: 27 p.m. took Kevin Allen Phillips Jr.
from Letart Falls to Veterans Memorial Hospllal.

Patrol tickets bus driver
A Meigs Local Dislrict School bus driver was cited for
Improper ba~klng Wednesday morning after attempllng lo turn
around at Ilie lnlersectlon of Happy Hollow Road and County
Road 3 In Rutland Township, state highway patrol authorities
said .
Shirley M. Wllsqn, 42, Rutland, was heading northbound on 3
around W: 30 a.m .. when she attempted to back onto Happy
Hollow. according to the Gailla·Metgs Post of the State Highway
patrol.
'
The bus made contacl wll h, and damaged lightly, a
westbound 1979 Mercury Cougar. driven by Wayne E. Cleland,
62, Rutland, according to Ihe patrol. No children were riding the
bus al the lime and lhe bus received no damage, troopers said.

Helen Bartels

Eva Stoul, 86, Page Slreet,
Middleport, a former Mlddleporl
businesswoman, died Wednesday night. .
Mrs. Stout was a daughter of
!he late C.P. and Ella McClure
Dutton. She was co-owner of The
Shoe Box in Middleport for many
years. She was a member of
Grace Episcopal Church In
Pomeroy, the Mlddleporl Buslness and Professional Women's
ClubandtheMiddleporiLiterary
Club.
She attended DePauw Unlverslty and was a graduale of Ohio
University. She had served as a
home economics supervisor for
theColumbiaGasCo. lnFremonl

Howard T. Norris

and
alsoPomeroy
had served
as a teacher
in the
Exempted
VIl-

.

Ohio Lottery

Alexander
falls to MHS
girls, 47-45
- Page'4

Daily Numht&gt;r ·
814

PICK-4
1218

An electrical short has been
determined as the probable
cause of the fire thai gutted !he
Willis Tire Co. plant at 217 Third

moved In !he buffing room and :
prepared lor recapping, Bush :
said.
,
Bush said he couldn't deter··.
mine whal kind of material :
Ignited by !he short when flames •
swept through the plant late on :
•
Jan. 17.

A~~lllpolls VolunleerFireChlef
Ray Bush said the delerminallon
was made by himself, State Fire
Marshal Frank Eisnaugle and
investigators for Nallonwide Insurance co., which Insured !he
plant. Bush mel with Eisnaugle
and the investigators
Wednesday.
The short was In a 220-volt wire
In the buffing room In Ihe rear of
lhe second of !he four buildings
thai made up !he plan!. Thelread
from old tire casings was re-

Veterans Memorial
Admllted - Dorothy Brewer. :
Porlland; Kenneth Imboden, ·
Mlddleporl; Glennls Musser, ·
Rutland.
'Discharged- Zelpha Stewart,
Sharon Bailey.
'

r~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~!i!~!!~!!!ii!!ii!"-iii!!!r-•

Schools. are
.
Howard T. Norris, 78, Racine, lage
Surviving
a daughter,
died Tuesday In the Veterans Barbara Shuler, Middleport; a
Administration Hospital at brother and sister-in-law, Dale
Chllllcolhe.
and Margaret ·Dutton, Middle- ,
A
retired
farmer,
he
was
born
port: a sister and brother-in-law . .
(Continued from Page 1) .
Nov. 3, 1908. at Apple Grove, LucllleandGeorgeFarls.ColumOhlo,asonofthelateHarveyand bus. and a niece. Ellen Dulton
Roberls Is "In the process of Mary Roush Noryls. Mr. Norris· Kiehl, Sarasota Springs, N.Y.
contacting different employers," was a veteran of World War II.
In addition io her parents, Mrs.
in both the public and private
Surviving are his wife, MarJe Stoul was preceded in death by
sectors, lor Information on their Norris: three sons, George Nor- her husband, O.B. (Dick) Stoul,
policies regarding this situation. ris, Groveporl; . Gary Norris, in 1941 and a son-in-law, Emmel
Roberts said he feels he must
and Terry Norris. Hous- Shuler.
take Into conslderallon whether Racine,
ton, Texas; and four , Graveslderlteswlllbeheld.al
the loss of a driver's license
11 a.m. Friday al the Miles
actually affects a worker's job grandchildren.
Besides his parenls, he was Cemelery In Rutland with Rev.
classification. If a worker Is no! preceded ,ln death by a brolher, Lee Miller offlclaling. There wliJ ·
classi!led as an equipment opera- Oscar Norris.
be no vis itation hours. but a
tor, loss of a driver's license
would not really matter as far as Friday
at will
the be
Ewing
at service
a laterwilldate.
The
Services
held atFuneral
I p.m._ . _duled
memorial
be schethe job Is concerned.
Home wllh Rev. Steve Deaver Rawlings-Coals-Blower Funeral
However. Roberts again officiating. Burial will be In !he Home Is In charge of
pointed out that the highway
department's existing policy for Letarl Falls Cemetery. Friends arrangements.
may call at the funeral home
drinking "on the job" remains In from
2-4 and 7-9 p.in. Thursday.
Vesta L Tuttle
effect. Workers drinking on the
job face possible suspension or Oshel A. Panerson
Vesla L. Tullle, Colter Avenue.
termination of employment. He
Akron, a former resldenl ot'the
said It was his personal feeling as
Oshel A. Pallerson, 58. Crown Alfred community• In Meigs
an employer, that If a worker Is Ctty,'formerly of Mason Counly, Counly, died Wednesday evening
"proven" to drink "on the job," W.Va., died Wednesday In Holzer In Akron City Hospllal.
Mrs. Tuttle was a daughter of
the result should be "automatic Medical Center after a long
dismissal."
Illness.
the late Waller and Vletta Mae
Formulation of a policy reBorn Feb. 23, 1928, in Mason Hollman Tuttle and she was
garding "off the job" problems Is County, he was the son of the late employed by the Goodyear
not yet complete, however, Ro· Ja)o:e Palterson and .Goldie Jor- Rubber Co.
berts said he hopes to have in dan Patlerson.
Surviving are a daughter,
finished within two weeks. He
He attended The Church of God Mildred Chello, Akron: lwo sons,
said lhe cqunty prosecutor's In Eureka, and was a janitor at Dorsal Bentz, Akron, and Maloffice would also be contacted for Point Pleasant junior and senior colm Bentz. Hers!, Texas; a
an opinion.
high schools.
brother. V: Clay Tultle, MiddleThe commissioners discussed
Surviving are his wife, Belly port: lwo slslers. Flora Mae
with Steve Powell, director of the Pittman Patterson: live daugh- Gibson. Mlddleporl. and Ver·
county's litter program, as re- ters. Kathleen White and Karen
neda Hartung. Chesler: lhree
quest !rom the program' s collec· Mullins. both of Gallipolis, San- , sisters-in-law. Geneva Tultle,
lion supervisor lor a raise. The dra. Ester and Patricia Patter- Mlddleporl; Blnlce C. Tuttle,
collection supervisor made his son, all of Crown City; 10 sons, Tuppers Plains, and Bernice
request to members ot the James A. Patterson, West Co- Hawk, Hemlock Grove. Eight
county's Utter control board. lumbia, W.Va., Oshel Patlerson grandchildren . 11 greatPowell said It had been his Jr., Gallipolis Ferry, W.Va., grandchildren and several nieunderstanding that salaries Walter H. Larry, Johnny, .Ri· ces and nephews also survive.
would remain the same this year, chard, Lonnie and Robert PallerBesides her parenls. she was
because the program didn't start son. all of Crown City, and Bruce . preceded in death by a son John
on schedule last year and full and Tony Pallerson, both of (Jackie) Bentz; a brolher, Veri
salaries were still paid. The Gallipolis; three sisters, Elfie Tultle, and a sister, Veda
commissioners said that If a Siders, Crown City, Kathleen Par rish.
raise was mllde, the money Roush, Logan, and Louvlna
Services will be held al 1 p.m.
would have to come from within Vaughn; Apple Grove; five brolh- Saturday In lhe Rawlings-Coals·
the Utter program's budget. The ers, Byrd, Arley and Harley Blower Funeral Home with Rev. ·
matter was then tabled unlll a f Patlerson, all o! Gallipolis Mark McCiu~g and Mr. AI
later date.
Ferry. Clarence Patterson of Hartson offlclaling. Burial will
The board also approved a Henderson, W.Va., and Orlando be in the Tuppers Plains Chrisrequest from !he county auditor Patterson of Haydenville; 17 tian Cemetery. Friends may call
for a $100,000 advance draw on grandchildren and three great· at Ihe funeral home from 2·4 and
the current cbllectton of taxes, grandchildren.
7-9 p.m. Friday.
for general operations. and ap.
He was preceded In death by
pointed Patty Parker as chairman of the county's Northwest
Ordinance and U.S. Constitution
South Central Ohio
Rain likely tonight, with a low
Bicentennial Commission, which
near 40. Cloudy Friday, wllh a
will function throughoutl987.
chance of rain and rain changing
to snow In the aflernoon, with
temperatures falling to 1he mid
30s.
ntng numbers were 6, 8, 17, 25,26
The probability of precipitation
is 70 percent tonlghl and 50
and 28.
The holder of the ticket will percent Friday.
receive the winnings In 20annual
Winds will be from Ihe south a!
pre-tax payments of 5250,000.
.15 to 25 mph tonlghl.
In addition lo the top-prize
Ohio Extended Forecast
winner, 138 players picked five of
Saturday throu1h MBnday
A chance of snow flurries in the
the numbers to win $470 each.
Also, 6,280 players selected four northeastern part of the state on
of the numbers to win $40 apiece. Saturday, wllh fair weather
There were 99,402 tickets sold elsewhere Saturday and Sunday.
with three of the numbers. Those A chance of rain or snow on
tickets are

IF YOU CAN
IN WE .CAN MAIL
YOUR PRESc·RIPTION'S
TO YOU
·

·

·

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~9~9~2§·6~6~6~9$!

SALE":.:_-

·

(BEGINS FRI., JAN. 30-ENDS SAT., FEB.l,
'•

I~

GROUP WORK BOOTS ::
DINGO BOOTS

WOMEN'S

FALL SHOES
lf2 OFF

It
$ 30 Values
17.500

ALL WOMEN'S NURSEMATE

WINTER

DUTY SHOES

SNOW BOOTS
20°/o OFF .SE~ON

SAVE

$10 EACH
PAIR

GIRLS' FASHION

LACE-UP. BOOT

HIKER BOOTS

REG. $19.99

Reg. '25.95 to '29.95

•Block
•Blue
oAaopberry

SALE

•'

:

$1 SSO TO $18 ·: ·

L-___;:....__--1 .

~· -- - -

(1~;.~~; h~~ -~

' ! fJh

. :1 ~

MIDDLEPORT

~HOE PLACE
...... _.... , __,

NEW HAVEN, W.Va. -Gov. ArchA.MooreJr.
will discuss the fulure of Ihe Foote Mineral plant
al New Haven, which has been closed since
December 1985, when he visits Mason County
Monday.
.
The governor will be at Wahama High School in
Mason at 8 p.m .. according to Sen. Mike Shaw.
R-Mason, who met with Moore Thursday
afternoon .
While delalls of thai meellng were nol
disclosed, Shaw confirmed last month !hat an
effort was underway lo Implement an employee buyoul of the plan!. He said members of United

Steelworkers Local 5171 have been working with
the governor's office in an attempt to secure a $4
million loan from the stale to enable former
.
employees Jo buy the plan!.
Such a loan. Shaw added, would pullhe former
employees In a position to secure additional funds
lhrough a number of banks and insurance
companies .
The 28-year-old Foote Mineral plan! closed Dec.
31, 1985, putting nearly 300 people, including 250
hourly workers who took concessions two .years
earlier to help keep Ihe plant opera ling. oul of a
job.
'

~oom

'

~="!

992-5627

Ohio weather

COLUMBUS rUPII - The
Ohio Bureau of Employmenl
Services may have to close 42 of
lis 108 OBES offices across the
state because of a $12 million
deficit in the agency's budge! for
1987.
Roberta Steinbacher. adminislralor of !he al(ency, Thursday
said funding for the agency.
which pays uncmploymenl compensation beneflls a nd runs a
network of employmenl offices to
help people find jobs. has been
cut drasllcally since 1983.
Slelnbacher said the effect of
closing the oflices will mean
some people served by OBES will
have to drive fa rther to get to an
office, and she said It will mean
fewer services.
·
Steinbacher said the cu t, which
Is approxlmalely 12 percent of
OBES's 1986 tolal budge!. will not
decrease benefils paid by OBES.
In addllion lo closing Offices.
OBES will offer an early retire·

nient program to ils 3,200 em·
ployees . hoping lor an approximate 23 percenl workforce
reduclion through altrillon.
She said the specific offices
targeted to close will not be
announced for at least one month
while !he agency, Gov. Richard
F . Celeste and olher legislators
make a last-ditch efforllo get the
fed eral governmenl lo restore
the money or reduce the amount
of the cui.
Grace Kilbane. an assistant
admlnlstralor ofOBES, Siild 25 of
the·\08 offices are in slale-owned
buildings. and will nol be closed .
Those offices are locatedprlmarilv In large cities.
·"II doesn'l make any manage·
men! sense to close Ihe 25 offices
located In slate-owned build·
lngs," she said.
Kilbane said OBES's budget
problem Is aggravated by additional federal requlremenls. For
example, she said the Wage

Record Conversion Program,
which will go Into effect In April,
requires OBES lo collecl addlllonal dala from employers for
use In controlling fraud.
Anticipating a need to tlghlen
bells, Stel)'lbacher las! month
named a committee to review
lnformatlori on all local oflices.
That hepled delermlne which 42
offices will be closed and resulled In 60 recommendations on how lo
save money and improve services and efficiency .
Steinbacher said even though
unemploymenl has declined In
Ohio - II was 7.9 percenl In
December - !here are still a lol
of people who rely on OBES
services .
She said OBES helped aboul
100,000 Ohioans find jobs last
year, including 22,000 who were
on welfare when Ihey came to the
agency. Ironically, ihe pr()~ram I
tha:t netped tl!e ·welfar~ recipIents find jobs Is set lo end In
July.

BEIRUT, Lebanon rUPII The leader of !he Druze Moslem
militia responsible for the safety
of Terry Walle relurned to
Lebanon from Syria to search
loday for the hoslage negoliator
who vanished while trying lo free
1wo Americans.
Druze Moslem m illlla lead er
Waild Jumblatl left Damascus,
Svrla. late Thursday for Beirut to
"iook lnlo the matter" of Walle.
Ihe special envoy to the archbl·
shop ofCanlerbury wh~ had been
missing since Jan 20.
Jumblalt provided armed es·
earls for Walle before Walle l ~ft
for a rendezvous wll h Ihe caplors
of lwo Americans J a n. 20. When
asked If he believed Waite wa s
kidnapped. Jumblatt told Lebanese television, "I hope not."
British officials said Ihey were
concerned for the safe!;· of Walle
-on his flr sl mission to Lebanon
since the secrel U.S. arms sales
10 Iran surfaced In Novemberdespite assurances by !he
Church of England he was in no
danger.
·
British . Ambassador John

Gray said he would be concerned !shed during Waite's latest misuntil he .saw !he 47-year-old sion. which began Jan. 12 and
Anglican t.roubleshooler himself, was described by Walle as his
!he British Broadcasting Corp. most dangerous In the civil
war-torn nation.
reported.
Nine of !he missing are AmeriFears for Walle's safely rose
cans.
A group that claimed
Monday with a reporl by the
official Kuwaiti news agency responsibility for kidnapping
!hat he was placed under "house lhree Americans and an Indian
arrest" by Moslem cxl remlsts U.S. resident Saturday threawhile working to free Americans tened Thursday lo kill them I! the
Terry Anderson and Da vld United States or lis allies
mounted a mllllaty action
Sutherland.
against
the group.
'Chrlsllan Voice of Lebanon
"The
Islamic Jihad for the
radio reported· Thursday thai
Liberation
of Palestlne ·announ·
Waite was seen in Baalbek. 52
ces
II·
will
execute the four
miles east of Beirut in easlern
Lebanon's. Bekaa Valley , a American hostages as a prelimiholbed of Moslem fundamenlal· nary step Immediately after any
ism. The report could not be altack occurs and this will be
followed by olher actions," the
independently verified.
Walle's absence Is his longesl group said in a stalement.
The gourp' s. statemenl was
since he made his first !rip to
Lebanon In November 1985 aller accompanied by a photograph of
American hoslages appealed for hos tage Rober! Polhlll standing
help. Waite was ·Involved In the grim faced wllh two submachlne
relea ses of three or th e guns pointed at his head. He Is a
. cerllfied accountahl who taught
Americans .
Thirteen of the 29 foreigners al the private Beirut University
missing in Lebanon have van- College.

SIOCI 1129

$19802

MOIITH
IN SIOCI NOW

NO DOWN PAYMENT
60 MONTHS
lOCAl FINAfKE SOURCE

CO·OPER ·
Chryslar-Pivmouth·Dodge

399 So, 3rd

iiiiiii.-.- .·

· t4'1-6.tll

·

i Sections. 14 Pages

26 Cenu

•I'
"·.:,.,

I

'

ferroslllron used lo pre par ~ iron for making
cas llngs. Sh aw said las t month th at employces
are looking al significant changes in one of lh t•
furna ces and toward !he poss ibility of producing a
new product.
Former plan! . employees have ta lked with
Moore on several occasions and Shaw sa id earli er
thai Ihe go vernor has worked closely wllh them to
make th eir bid to lake over the plant a re all ly .
The public fs Invited to the meetin g, which will
also be allcnded by plant work ers and co mmun ity
leaders.

Board
studies
electrical
•
estimate

.

't

•·

t'·

•

. !.;.

SUCCESSFUL SURGER)' - Flfleen-month·old Stacy Ann
Hysell underwent surgery at Children's Hospital II\St Aui\'Ust to
correcl cogenltal heart defects. Her mother. .Joyce Hysell.
acknowledges lhat without research such a.~ Is llnanced through
the 1\merlcan lle~rl Association, such surgical proc~dUrt!S would
not be a•allablc today.

Successful surgery
saves Meigs infant
the American Hea rl Assoc iat io n
By CHARLENE HOEFLICII
and
li s resea rch program in
. Senllnel Stall Writer
Stacy'
s recovPr,... Shr knows
One look al lively litlle Sta c~;
Ann HysPii now and you wouldn ' t th ai without co nt inuin g n•believe !hal just a few months search, sur~ er y such as thai
ago she wa s sleepy, letha rg ic. needed by her daught er. might
not havr bern a\'a llable.
and severely underweight.
11 Is through resC"a rch mad&lt;•
Fl !tee n-monl h·old Stac y,
possible
by donat ions thai doc·
daughler of Joyce and Slephen
Hvsell. Pom erov. was born with tors a re able to ma kr progrr., s in
congenital hear! def('CtS and hear! hralth car r and develop
underwent corr rr tlv~ s urger;• at proc('durrs nrc&lt;&gt;ssary 10 savr
Children's Hospital In Columbus children born with such defec ts.
Aboul 2;,, ()()(J ba hics arr bo rn
on Aug. 12 last yrar.
each
vea r wllli co ngr nlt&lt;ll hrarl
Slacy was born with PDA
1Patent Ductu s Arlerl os is 1 dcfcci s and as a rr&gt;s ull of
which caus&lt;'d her to go int o resea rch. many of the defec ts
congestive hear! failure. and also rah be ro rrrc•ted. But morr
had alrial septral and ventrlcu· resea rch Is nf'Pded and much of
Jar defects In her heart. Since Ihe th r fundin g lor thai rrsrarc h
surgery to correct the defrcls. comes through the annual fund
thr slrawberry-blond headed Il l· driv e of th e Amer ica n Hea rt
tie girl has gained weigh! , /\Ssoclallon.
The Association advises !hat
although she remulns petite lor
1wo cenl s ou 1of every heult h
onlv
her a~ e . ·has taken on a belter
ar
spent by the government
dol.
l
col or. Is ene rge ti c a nd
Int o bas ic bl omcdial
goes
prrson a bl e-- a nd a lt og&lt;•th cr
rcsea rch.. lhe kind !hal has
delightful.
Mrs. Hysell Is qu ic k to give broughl the polio vacci ne. open·
!Continued on Pa ge 10)
1est1monv of !he Importance of

By CHI\RLENE IIOEFLICII
Sentinel Staff Writer
The lnadl'quate eleclrlcal sys·
!ems at th e Chester and Tuppers
Plains Ele mrnlary Sc hools and
whal acllon can be Iuken lo
alleviat e !he problems wNe
dlscussrd al length at Thursday
.nlghl' s mreling of the Eas t ~rn
Local Board of Educalion.
Superint endent !H ebard Ro·
bert s reported lo !he boar d thai
the Eastern Eieclrlc Co. Of
Parkersburg, W.Va .. has glveli
an esl\malr of $H,f00 for each
building just to run !he new line
from !he pole to th e needed new
amp bo~ cs . H.e said Tuppers
Plains Is cur re nliy opera ling on a
41XI·amp box. which nN'dS to be
upgrad ed to an 80()-amp bo x. and
that Che&lt;l!' r Is fun ctioning wllh
200 amps and needs to go to thr
BOO-a mp box.
Of Ihe loltri'Y monies for 1986.
$4.500 has alrea dy tx&gt;en encumbered for thee!eel rica! work . The
board took no ac tion on !he
projcct ·pendlng furth er sludy or
fin ances, and advised R o tx&gt;rt ~ to
gel cs llm atcs from olh N
companies.
Rotx&gt;rl s was also asked lo get
an cs limate on a new door for !he
Riverview Elementary Sc hool,
and pul an old. refrl~ er a tor all he
Tuppers Pl ains school up lor bid.
The superlnlendenl advlscd
board memtx&gt;rs !hal the Ohio
EnPrgy Conservallon Agen~y
will meet wllh thr board on
Wednesday, F'cb. 11 . at 7 p.m 10
disc uss a special reimburse ment
fundin g program lhrough tha i
agency. 11 the dlslrlcl qualllll•s.
fundin g can be provided by lhe
agency . wllh !he payba ck 10
come from Ihe amount saved on
utility ex penditures, II was
reponrd.
Randy Koehler wa s empl oyed
as a substit ute leac hcr and Gary
L. Battin as a pari-lime school
psychologlsl to ass \sl In lhr
re-eva luation of lh r sprcla t cduca llon unit s.
Added to th r su llstltull• list for
substilull• cus todi ans wcr&lt;' Tct·rv
W. Pooler . Mar k F: . Dillard.
Dav id Dallev a nd Kal hv Bantn·
ger. Williams Wrl \s and Dav id
Woola rd w.. rr· addr d to thr ·
subslilul r lis ts for custodian ,
malntenancf' ;o nd mec hani c. Th P
resignatio n of Dar lent• Cassaily
as a bus drl1' 1·r was ac"Cr ptr•cl.
The board approved I hrr·r•I'TO
rCont lnu P&lt;J on Page Hl1

Report lays foundation for probes

FULLNOSI.
Z
E
PICKUP
DOWN PA Ylllllt
.
AS LOW AS

•
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

AI the lime, Foole officials said !he decision lo
close the plan! was based on declining market
condlllons caused primarily by large volumes of
imported ferroalloys .
AI the same time Foole Mineral announced Ihe
closing of the New Haven plan!. the company said
it had entered inloan agreement with SKW Alloys ·
of Niagara Falls to lra nsler loSKW, a division of a
West German firm oil he same nam e, it s specialt y
foundry products line Including lechnology. lrade
names and patenls.
The New Haven plan! had produced primarily

'

Druze militia leader launches
search for missing emissary·

BOYS'

Cloudy . tonlg~t. with a
chance of snow flurries and a ,
low In the lower 30s. Varlable
cloudiness Saturday, with
hlgt.s In the mid Jtls. The
pf9hablllty of precipitation Is
50 percent tonight and 20
percent Saturday.

Moore to ~discuss future of Foote Mineral

as unit awaits budget cuts

CALL US FOR INFORMATION
v·ll
.
. I
age. 'Ph armacy

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Frid-ay, January 30, 1987

-

•

Ee 0 e

No.188
Copyrightoo t987

OBES offi,ce ·closings

.

ent1ne

a1 y

Vol. 36,

CLOUDY

•

•

Probable cause of fire set

Eva Stout

·Ticket nets Super Lotto prize
CLEVELAND tiJP!) - There
was one tlckel sold !or Ohio's
Super Lotio game Wednesday
night !hat listed all six numbers
drawn, making the holder ellgtble lo claim the $5 million
jackpot .
The name of Ihe winner will be
announced a!ler the ticket Is
validated al a regional lottery
olllce. a lottery commission
spokesman said today. The win·

.

pathlc Medicine &lt;jnd Rio Grande ·
panls lhrmlgh !he various sla· College for volunleer doctors and
seven sisters and three brothers. lions which Will utilize both floors nurses In training.
Funeral services will be Satur- of the building. As dlreclorof !he
Dr. James Witherell is the ',
day at 1 p.m. at the Wyoma Rellred Senior Volunleer Pro· medical advisor·for the planning
Peneoostal Church in Gallipolis gram, she antlclpales using ·commltlee. Also at the meeting
Ferry with the Rev . Robert . those who volunteered all he last were Scolt Lucas, Veterans .
Smith officiating. Burial will be screening three years ago and Memorial Hospital: Ginny Kll·
In Patterson Cemetery In Galli· recruiting new senior citizens lo Un, R.N .. health department
polls Ferry. The body will be help wllh lhe Iask.
Linda Friend , heallh coordina· nurse: and Eleanor Thomas.
taken lo the church one hour
executive director for the Meigs ,
prior to services. Friends may tor at !he cenler, reported !hal County Council on Aging, who
call at the Wllco~en Funeral she Is making conlacts with presided allhe !!leetlng.
Hocking Technical College, thr
Home on Friday from 7-9 p.m.

Helen Bartels, 89, Syracuse,
died Wednesday at the Pinecrest
Care Center In Galllpolls.
A homemaker. Mrs. Barlels
was born Oct. 2, 1897, al New
Haven, W.Va., a daughler of !he
late Riley and Lettie Cundiff
Siegrist. She was a member of
the Syracuse . United Methodist
Church.
Surviving are two sons, William C. Bartels, St~vensville,
Mich., and Vernon H. Bartels,
Cincinnati; four grandchUdren. ·
Barbara Bartels Grandy. St.
Joseph, Mich.; William Olan
Bartels, Tampa, Fla.; Joyce
J;!artels Hamilton and Michael
Bartels, both of Cincinnati, and
one great-granddaughter, Julia
Michelle Grandy, St. Joseph,
Mich.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her husband, Emmet Bartels, in 1975.
Services will be held at 10: 30
a.m. Saturday at the Ewing
Funeral Home with Rev. Steve
Nelson officiating. Bu?!ill will be
In Letarl Falls Cemtery. Friends .
may call at the funeral home
from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. Friday .

Agreement to end
are "hard· pressed" 10 finish the
job In the remaining lew days.
By eliminating the need to
notify the county In advance, and
nol having to wall for the
commlsslsoners to meet and
approve lhe request, several
addlllonal days will be allotted a
conlractor. "With more time to
work." Turner sa1d, contractors
should be more conscientious
aboul burying lines according to
specifications.
Ideally, lines should be buried
at least 18-24 Inches below the
flow line of a ditch. However,
' Turner and County Engineer
Phil Roberts agreed Ihat in some
rocky areas. achieving that
depth is Impossible. Ills in those
types of areas where !he telephone company would like to
have notice.of highway work.
Commlsslonea*ich.ard Jones
pointed out ttial" the telephone
company does not, by law, have
lo notlly the commissioners of
their lntenl to lay lines, nor ask
for approval. Turner said that
GTE follows this procedure because they wan! lo "work together" with local entitles .
Turner said Meigs County Is
the first place the limited .basis
work agreement Is being tried.
Turner and Bates admitted
!hat following the agreemenl
may not eliminate all accldenlai
cable cuts. and they asked that If
highway workers do experience
trouble wllh cable lines, that they
call a GTE emergency number
Immediately with notification of
the problem.
In other matters, Roberts
reported that he has been In
touch with the Ohio Department
o! Transporlatlon ot!lce In Ma·
rlella, and !hat the PomeroyMason brld~te will "probably be
closed sometime In March" and
the structure could be ready lor
reopening In June. Roberts said
thai steel lor lhe repair job had to
be reordered because' the com·
pany !rom which the steel was
originally ordered, Is out or
business.
In regard to eslabllshlng a
policy to deal with highway
department workers who have
incurred DWI otrenses "all !he
job," and los! driving privileges,

Committee.
sets
dates
::
· (Continued from Page l l
Ohio University College of Osteo· •

Area deaths

Public lecture slated Saturday

•

Thli'Sday. January 29~ 1987;
' .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

'

'

·.

1

....

DISPIAY -ll'atheiOih IIIDlvenarJ of the 113'7
Oood aad · featured al The Fannen Baal! II
savlnp Co. Ia thla dlllplay or more than 80
photoJrapbl !allen during ud after the Oood. Not
only do the photos ihow the actual flood but

Middleport

HOURS: Mon.-Fri. 8-8; Sat. B-4

- - --·- ·· --

towapeople lD DlodudpoiltfloodNtllap.Cailly

Edwarda, left, ud Bet117 ' Hawtbone, lluk
employees, look over tbe dllplaJ' nlcll .. lrtm
the pbotogaph llGIIedlon of Xa&amp;hleetl 8cotl ud
the late John Scott.

•

WASHINGTON (UP!) - Se- Willia m Cohen, R·Malne, said
nate Investigators have no !lrm the report provides a strong
evidence thai President Reagan "foundation" for the select pan·
knew o! the scheme to skim els formed In both Ihe Sen ale and •
money lor the Conlras from his House to continue the lnves llga·
cover! arms sales 10 Iran, bull he lion at the same tlll)e as lnde· ·
are convinced the lives of U.S. pendent prosecutor.
"I think they'll be able lo build
hOstages kept him from killing
on
this rather substantially ,"
t~e weapons deals.
said
Cohen, who 15 also a member
In releasing !Is long-awaited
of
the
11-member select Senale
reporl on the lran-Conlra crisis
panel.
Thursday, the Senate lntelll·
The report. based on weeks of
gence Committee drew no con·
private
hearings last month and
elusions about Jhe scandal that
'eagerly
awaited after draft ver.
has slaggered Reagan's presld·
slons
were
leaked this month.
ency but offered the most de·
was
released
by the Intelligence
tailed assessmenl to date of how
panel
on
a
14-1
vote with only Sen.
his policy was conceived · and
executed under the strictest Arlen Specler. R,Pa .•dissenting.
The 65-page document con·
secrecy.
eluded wllh two pages of ques·
Committee VIce Chairman tlons the select panels will try to

'

J

resolve In gr tt lng to !he bo ll om of
th e controvrrsy .
The major Issues, it sa id. un•
the prec ise rolcsofolflcla ls alth•'
While Housl'. ' lht' CIA, oth er
governm(' nl agencies. and prl.vale individu als- bolh U.S. ~nd
le&gt;relgn - In planning and lmpll'·
mcntlng !he sa lr of American
arms to Iran and !he scheme to
divert sale profit s to the Nlcara·.
guan Conlra rebels.
The lnvesllgatlon to date has
been hampered by the refu sal of
key figures IO tes ll!y . Vice Adm .
John Poindexter. the presldenl' s
former ,national security ad·
vlser, and Lt. Col. Oliver North .
his fired National Securit y Coun·
ell ,aide, have led !our others
citing cons tllutlonal right$
against sclf-lncrlmlnatlon.
·I

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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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          <elementText elementTextId="38802">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
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      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="38801">
              <text>January 29. 1987</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
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      <name>bartels</name>
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    <tag tagId="3129">
      <name>dutton</name>
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    <tag tagId="987">
      <name>norris</name>
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    <tag tagId="228">
      <name>patterson</name>
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    <tag tagId="6908">
      <name>seigrist</name>
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    <tag tagId="713">
      <name>stout</name>
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    <tag tagId="2012">
      <name>tuttle</name>
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