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                  <text>Page- D-B- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

House to OM'}, budget study

Area deaths
Walter W, Edmonds
PO INT PLEASANT - Walter
W. Edmonds. 70. 200 Second St. ,
Point Pleasant, died Sat urd ay in
'Pleasa nt Valley Hospital afler a
lengthy illness.
Born Dec. 7, 1916. In Glenwood,
W.Va., son of the late Nimrod and
Maude Holley Edmonds, he
atlehded Fail h Gos pd Miss ion
Chu rch al Glenwood. was a
construclion worker and a
member of the AFL-CIO.
Surviving are his wife, flelphi a
Qualls Edmonds: a son. Wendell
Wes ley Edmonds of Ashton,
W.Va.: three slepdaught crs.
Rosa Fuller, Wllladena N. Pin·
ker man and Madeline Pinker·
man, all of Hunt ington, W.Va .:
lhree s lslers , Naomi Gue of San
Pedro, Calif., Myrtle Holley of
Huntington, a nd Evelyn Lcfford
of Illinois: two brolhers, Wendel l
Edmonds of As ht on, and Char les
Edmonds of Glenwood: and fiv&lt;'
stepgrand child ren.
Services will br 1: .10 p.m.
Monday in Wilcoxen Funeral
Home, wilh the Rev . Sam Egnor
officiating. Burial wil l be in Pe te
Meadows Cemetery. Glenwood .
Frit'nds may ca ll al the fum•ra l
homr from 7-9 tonight.

February 1, 1987 ~

Pomeroy- Middleport-'Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Pleasant, W. Va.

COLUMBUS iUPli - The
Ohio General Assembly will
quickly begin consideration this ,
week of Gov. Richard F. Celeste's $20.8 billion budget proposal forflscal1988-89, concentrating on the 1outlays for major
agencies.
·The budget document Is to be
released Monday, a nd the House
Finance Committee has scheduled three days of hearings,
beginnin g Tuesday with an overview by William J . ShkurtL
director of the Office of Budget
and Ma nagement
The Ohio Department of Taxa- .
lio n. the Legislative Budget
Qffice and the Ohio Departmen t

Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and7-9p. m. today.
Milita ry gra ves ide rights will
be by Post4464 of Ihe Veteran s of
Fo reign Wars.
P"ilbean•rs wiil be Kent Hansee l. Tim Shepherd, Darrell Dillon. Srolt Pltls, G"ry Provens
and !.loyd Wynn.

Edward A. Raymond

ALBA, Texas - The TimesSentine l Sa tu rday lea rned of the
dea th of Edward A . Raymond ,
7!1, of Alba , Texas .
1\ former residenl of Gallia
Co unt y. Mr . Ra ymond died Jan .
21. following a long illness.
Born on April 27, 1907, in
Youngslown , he was a reti red
school teacher and carpen ter. 1\
memb&lt;•r of t he Methodist
Church. Mr. Raymond had residPd in Alba since 1972.
Survivors include his wJfe,
Sarah (DeWit! I Ra ymond, Alba;
a so n. Edward Lee Raymond.
Houston. Texas; a daughter,
Rose Ann .Johnson, Henderson.
Texas: fi ve grandch ildnin and
lwo grr" t-grandchildren.
Servi ces wPre held ,Ja n. 23 In
Alba . Burial was in Pleasanl
Ridgr
. Cemetery
, . in Alba .
Honorar.v pallbea rers were
Horace Cranford, Don Pinson .
Jaspe~ Prowns
Ra ymond Ga by , Cl yde Wilson ,
.John Margos, Hugh McKenzie,
COLUMBUS - .Jasper Prov- - Elwood Brow n and members of
ens, 70, 84o .Josephine Ave., lh r Alba Volunlrc r Fire
Columbu s. formerl y of Gallia Department.
Count y, died Friday at Mou nt
Carml'i Hos pital follow ing a brief
Illness. He w.as a rei ired millwrighl worker.
WASHI NGTON tUPI )- PrcsBorn Sept. 18. 1916, in Gall ia
idcnl Reaga n, plrascd a Senate
County , he was a so n of th&lt;' lat e pa nel found he knew noth ing of

&lt;

of Mental Heallh will complete ·.
Tuesday's testimony,
Wednesday, the committee
will hear froin the Department of ·
Rehabilitation and Correction, ·
the Ohio Board of Regents and
the Departmen t of Human
Services.
The Ohio Department of Educa tion will meet with thecommit- ·
tee Thursday to discuss spending
for prijllary and seco ndary education during- the next two years.
The House will at tempt to
move the budget over to· the
Senate by Eas ter. The deadilne
for enactment is June 30, wh~n
the current two-year approprJation ex pi res.

®

or

thr.

Prow•ns.
He married Rub_v Fral ey in
1952. and she preceded him in
dea th on .Jan . 21. 1909.
Surviving an • two so ns, Si c·
phen Provens and Hi ckey Prov cns, holh of Columbus: on&lt; ·
daughter, Kimerly Provens. of
Columbus: four gra ndchildren :
four brothers, Harold Provens.
Eugene Provens, bolll of Northup, Holl is Proven s. of lli lliard.
Willard Proven s, of Springfi eld;
Jhrec sisters. Mrs. Elhel Frye, of
Columbu s. Mrs . .Juanita Rr i.sklrk, of Spri ngfif'ld . and Mrs.
Eslell H••nklr, of Pir•kawav. He
was prrced r cl in dr at h bv on e

profit s to Jh•• Nicaraguan rebels,
fa ces ca lls fo r the resignatio n of
lhr lop ad viser who shielded him
fro m thr C'o nl ra aid scheme.

brot her and t hr f'f' ~ i s t Prs .
He wu s a m rrnbPr of· llw

Millwright Union Local 12ll: a
vrtCI'a n of Wor ld l'h 1r JI.
Services wil l bfo 1 p.m. Monday, at Waugh-Halley-Wood Funeral Home. Rev . Ernes t Bakc·r
officia tin g. Burial follows in
Flagg Spri ngs Cem&lt;'tt•ry .

d iversion

arm s sa l es

Aftf''r issuin g a sta tement that

Reagan is glad lhl' Senale
lnl PIJigence Co mm illep' s report
"confirms his posi tion !hat he
nr ilhr r

.'luthori zPd

nor

wa s

awa re of the alleged tra nsfer of
funds lo lite Conlra s," Wh ile
Hou sP spokes man Larr.v Speakes
sugg es l!•cl Friday the presiden l
ma y hold a new s conference or

othrrw is&lt;• speak publicly on the
iss ue.

Rea ga n ha s not met the press
since NovPmtJcr , when he tried to

explain his policy and made a
number or factual errors . His
· lat flst

pronoun ccmenl

on th r

issue ca me in his Stat e of the
i)l(;on messag e Tuesday nigh t
when he said he regretled the

situation and that "ser ious mislakes were made." But critics
have demanded he enumera te
Ihe errors or take th e bl ame for
some of them.
The chai rman of the inlelligence co mmittee, Sen. David
Boren, D-Oki a., sa id in an
lnl ~ rview wilh United Press
International on Friday that a
resigna tion from chief of slaff
Donald Rega n would be in lhe
" interes ts of Ihe coun try ."
Bort'n, whose panel released
Thursday the most comprehens ive report to date on the Iran
arms-Contra aid sca ndal. sa id
ev idence the committf'c ob ta ined
showed th ai at times Rega n was
"foreclosing" foreign policy ex perts fr om seeing Reagan, including Secre ta ry of Slal e
George Shu li z.
In lhe ln lcrview wllh UP I,
Boren nol ed the "odd" a rray of
people who had access to the
Oval Offi ce to formulale the
policy th a t has ex ploded into the
worsl crisis of th e . Reaga n

•

at y

Vo1.36. No. 189
Copyrighted 1987

SUPER
SAVINGS ON
QUAliTY
RCA STEREO

preside ncy.
•"One of th e mosl dist urbing
I hings to me is the disarray in
which we find fore ign policy and
the undue role that private
ind iv iduals pla yed," Boren said,
ad ding in a later stalemenl thai
he bore no "ill will" to Regan.
In its in vestigation of lhe
affai r, Boren said the panel
examined White House logs and
grew concerned aboullhc "kinds
of people who came in and out of
meetings, those incl uded and
those excluded."
The committee held 15 da ys of
hearings in December on thr sa le
of U.S. arms to Iran and the
possible diversion of profi ts to
the Nicaraguan Contras. While
the administra tion has pa inted
the arms sales as a ga mbit to
sway "moderates" in Tehran's
radical Islamic governm ent , the
panel's repor t sa id the policy
"quickly evolved" into a stra ighl
barter for American hostages
held ·by pro-Iran ex tremists in
anarchic Lebanon.

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Trip is postponed

ing'
"Chtck lml uble ca111p1ny tar
(011'1PIIibil il~ IIQuirtments .

CLEVELAND tUPlr - Tr ustees of lhP Rock ' n' Roll Hall of
Fame Fou nd al ion can celed their
trip to Cleveland Friday becau se
of bad weal her condil ions on Ihe
East Coast .
The trustees and architect LM.
Pel were to tour possible sil cs for
the proposed roc k museum.
Their trip from New York C'it y
. originally sc heduled for Monday
was also canceled because of
stormy w••alhcr.
They have resc hedu led their
visit for Thursday .

Regular

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, February 2, 1987

White House: Congress need not see notes
'

evening and in the residence, make privat e notes
on what he does durin g the day."
But while the newspa per sa id Senale Investigators are interested In seeing the notes - and
possibly in in terviewing author Edmund Morris,
who is working on a Reagan biography- Mathes
said Congress should not be allowed access.
"There is a feeli ng here that to release these
notes would be to infringe on the privacy Of the
pres ident and others," he said. "They are not
transcript s. They are not delalled chronicles."
Bul While House officials confirmed Reagan
referred to the notes in preparing for his
75-mlnu te private session last week with the

three-man panel he nam ed to review lhe
operations of his National Securll y Co unciL
The NSC is the 1op-sec re1 While House agency
lha l was run by Vice Adm . John Polndexler
during the height of the Ira n arms sa les la sI year ,
and it provided a base for Lt. Col. Oliver North.
I he NSC deput.v bla med as the ringlead er ol the
possibly crim inal scheme to divert a rms sale
proflls to the Nicaraguan Co nt ra rebe ls.
Mathes noted there had been no request for
Reagan 's notes, and in an apparent bid to head off
what could become a clas h between the president
and Congress over access, he noted: "The White
House Is co nfident that by the end of these

WINTER SPECIAL

By LEE LEONARD
Celeslt' also proposed eliminat- chiefly for health care and a 4
UPI Statehouse Reporter
ing tax exemptions for commer- percent increase In benefi ts In
COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPil
c ial airline fuel ' and interstate 1989.
The administration plans lo
Gov. Richard F. Celeste today long distan ce telephone ca lls,
spend
GOV. RICHARD CELESTE
all It receives, with no
unveiled a $22 billion no-fril ls, bringing in an extra $111 million
increase
In the sta te' s savi ngs
tw o-yrar state budget proposal in two years, an d raising the tax
··
a
ccount,
or
rainy day fund , for
which he called Ohio's most on stockbrokers and finance
Gallia
two years.
austere in the last quarter companies .
Counting federal fund s. the
The governor called for a n end
century.
The governor's outlay . which 10 the state tax credit on home overall two-year budget would be
man dies
increases state spending by a Im provements, and an increase $36.3 billion, a 9 percent Increase
scant 1.2 percent In fiscal 1988 in the Identifica tion fee on fro m the current biennium.
Increases of 15 to 20 percent
and 5.8 percent the following trucking comp ani es. A compuin mishap
year, would be balanced through terized cross-c heck also will nab and higher have been common In
selective belt-tightening, s tricter 1rucking companies now escap- recent years . Celeste sa id his
A Ga liipoils man died a1 tax Jaw enforceme nt and a Ing Ohio's corporate tax.
proposed increase is the lowest
Veterans Memorial Hospital hodge-podge of Increases in fees
Other revenue-raising gim- s ince 1963.
Sunday afternoon from head a nd taxes raising $277 million .
The Ohio Ge neral Assembly
micks include fee Increases for
injunie~ ·he sustained after the
As pmmised, Celeste refrained boat registration. insurance will consider the governor's
motorcycle he - was driving fr om hiking lhe sales, personal agents, racetrack ow ners. solid req ues t. Deadline for action Is
struck a car and la nded in a dit ch income or corporate Income waste generating compa nies, June 30.
In Meigs County, au thorities taxes.
"The key to this budget Is
gra in warehouses, and ride and
self·dl
sclpllne," said the gover·
said.
concession
permits
at
fairs
and
But to help fund his spe nding
this budgPI will
nor.
"Following
Leo Davis, 61. 487 Jackson requ es ts, he called for a nickel amusement parks.
The budget proposal freezes mean ma king tough choices and
Pike, was eas tbound on Ohio 124 hike in the14-cent taxon a pack of
in Rutland Township around 2 cigarettes to raise $100 million spending levels for basic and inventing new ways to use
p.m., whE"n he was unable to stop for priso n expansion, and a fee higher education for fiscal 1988 exis ting resources."
Celes te and his budget adv ishis 1984 Honda Goldwlng In time increase of up to 10 percent at and allows only a 4 to 7 percent
ers
already made some Iough
and struck the vehicle In front of sta te parks for campground , growth the second year. Welfare
him. according 10 the Gallla- cabin and dock users starting In expenditures would increase choices, excising $886 million ou t
modestly in the second year,
Meigs Post of the State Highway 1988.
Continu ed on PageR
Patrol.
The 1985 Chevrolet Corvett e,
drlveri by Fred Priddy, 35, Happy M e i g s f i n n s s h o u l d h a v e n e w O h i o
Hollow Road, Middleport, that
Davis str uck was stopped to
make a lett turn onto Township
taXation tables released on Sunday
Road 174, troopers said.
After making contact with the
The tax will be collected and co unt y auditor. treasurer and
Corvette, Davis and his motorcy- Meigs Cou nty businesses should
have
received
copies
of
new
di
stributed
back to the couniy by prosecullng att orney-- that decle veered off t h~ right side of 1he
taxation
tables
from
the
Ohio
the
sta
te
Department
of Taxa- partmental and agency budge!
road and into a dit ch.
Department
of
Taxation,
since
lion.
The
commissioners
ex pect req uests for 1987 exceeded antic I·
He was tra nsport ed to VMH by
the
co
unty's
one
percent
sales
the
county
to
begin
receiving
paled revenu es by $161,000. This.
the Meigs County Emergency
reven ue from the tax in late April coupled with Ihe loss of $190,000
Medical Serv ice, Hospital offi- tax went Into effect Sunday.
Passage
of
the
one
percent
or
ear ly May.
In revenue sharing funds , left Ihe
cials said he died at approxiper
missive
sales
and
use
ta
x
was
The
sales
tax
was
proposed
b)'
count
y wllh a dcflcltl987 budge!
mately 2:25 p.m.
1
Both vehicles were dam aged approved Jan. 7 by the county the commissioners in mid- of $351,001
In order to maintain the
moder a tely, troopers said. co mmissioners. It has been an- Dec&lt;&gt;mber, after a determination
tic
ipated
that
the
ta
x
will
gener·
was
made
by
the
county
budget
present
leve l of coun ty serv ices,
Priadv was cited by Ihe patroller
ate
about
$400,000
lor
the
county·
.
commission--comprised
of
the
Contin
ued on Page R
fl ctious registration.

Phil sees
shadow; 6
more weeks
of winter

••

10~. Deposit and Ia Iane• In Connnlent Low Monthly Payments
CHOOSE FROM THE LARGEST SELECTIONS IN CENTRAL and SOUTHEASTERN OHIO

By DEBORAII BAKER
P UNXSU T AWNEY , Pa .
!UPli -PunxsulawneyPhil , the
nalion's pre mier weat her- for ecasling groundhog, emerged
from a snowy hilltop today and
saw his shadow - an lndlcalion
that six more weeks of winter are
a head.
·
The predtclion was greeted
with boos from the crowd of more
than I, (XX) winter-weary people
that gat hered outside Punxsutawney for the folklore tradition.
"He saw his shadow at precisely 7:29," said James Means,
president of the Punxsutawney
Groundhog Club. " We will have
to walt six more weeks for the
arrival of spring."
Today marked the 100th anniversary of the first official trek to
Gobbler's Knob outside the small
western Pe nnsylvania town of
Punxsutawney and Means and 14
other men tn black top hats stood
around Phil's electrically heated
burrow to a walt the groundhog's
forecast.
Club member Bud Dunkel
pulled the fur ry Phil from the
burrow, )leld him aloft to the
(Continued on page 8)

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LOGAN MONUMENT CO.
POMEROY, OHIO
Meigs Couoty Display Yard
Near Pomeroy-Mason Bridge
Let~ L Vaughan, Mgr.
Phone 992-2688

VINTON. OHIO
Gallia County Display Yard
, James 0. Bush
Manager
Phone 388-8603

PUNXSUTAWNEY PHIL SEES SHADOW Punxsutawney Phil (riJihl) »peak&amp; lato the ear ol
'Groundhog Club President James Meano (lett) in
r

''

i nves t igations, lhC&gt;I'f' w il l bP no unartswf'rrd
qu cs lions t11a 1 wou ld wa r rant thr u:;c of l h ('
pres id enl' s pr iva1 f' Jla pPr.'i ··
In it s 1 ~)74 l a ndm &lt;.~ r k rulin g (l fl P rPsidf'n\
Ri c hard Nixon's Wutl'r gat C' w pe.s. ttw Suprcrn('
C'ou rl d&lt;•cided lhc· prP&lt; ifirnl ha d 10 &lt;UtTPndN
rf.IPvan l C'Vidcncr in i.t tT lmina l in vf•Stlgalicm
when \ssuPd a subpor na.
Re a~ a n ' s

nol&lt;'s mi ght help cslaiJlls h wlt" l

drc isions he mad e an d wl wt ord e rs hr ga vr in lt1c

arms sales th"l beg an through Israel In
SeptemiJPr 1985 . as well as how muc h ronccrn lor
U.S. hosl ages in Leba non skewed the policy
operation.

Celeste budget totals
$22 billion; no frills

AfirstiHgSftllemeJttPjCove

said.
He wi ll rccri v&lt;' 2ll an nuaL
after-tax payments of $200,000 .
The jackpot for loda y's Ohio
Lotto drawing will br at lea st St
million.

South Ce ntral Ohio
Partly sunny today, ' with a
cha nce of rai n and highs belween
45 a nd 50.
The probability of preclplla·
lion Is 40 percent today.
Ohio Extended ·•' orecast
Monday through Wednesday
A cha nce of rain or snow eac h
day. Hi ghs will range from lhe
mid 30s lo the mid 40s Monday
and Tuesday, and be in the .lOs
Wednesday. Overnight lows will
ra nge from the upper 20s to the
lower JOs early Monday, and be
in the 2()s Tuesday and Wednesday .mornings ,

Lotto

l6, 40, 14, 29, 39, :J5.

By SEAN McCORMALLY
WASHINGTON (UP!i - Pres Jdenl Reaga n's
personal notes on dally doings in the Oval Office
contain some detail about the Iran-Cont ra
scandal, but White Hou se officials say Congress
can .solve the puzzle without such " private
papers. "
.
The notes, apparenll)' compiled for use in
Reagan 's memoirs. were disclosed to Ihe Senale
lnteiiJgence Commlltee by White House chief or
staff Donald Regan in its probe of the scanda l last
month, The Washington Post reported Sunday.
White House spokes man Don Mat ties confirmed
lhat Reagan "does, from time to time, In the

STANDING -Only the Main Street entrance, with double doors
and the glass still I~ tact, remained standing at the Meigs Inn at the
close of th e work day Friday. Tearing down of the aged Pomeroy
hotel, once known as the Remington House, has heen und erway for
the past two weeks and should be completed this week. Bricks from
the razed' landmark, which extended from East Main Street to
East Second Street on Lynn Street, are being hauled to the Sacred
lleart Cemetery . Meantime, the East Main Street sidewalk In front
of the razed building was cleared Friday and opened to pedes trian
traffic.

CCEVELAND 1UP II - 'l'h J' $o
million jackpot in Wrdnesdav's
Super Lot to drawing was won by
Ray Lumbert of Columbus, stal e
lottery offi ci al s a nnoun ce d
Friday .
Lumbert went lo 1h&lt;' regional
lottery offlcr in Columbus al
noon Friday lo cla im his win-

Ohio wealher

l'artly cloudy . lllghs near
Lows in th&lt;' upper :10s.
Mostly .,unny Tut•sday.

•o,

.

Columbus residenl
wins louery prize

CLEVELAND tUP II - Friday's wi nn ing Ohio Lollerv
numbfors:
Dally Numher
435
PICK-4
91.64

Dail)·' Nurnht·r
583,

-Page 3

Reagan faces demands to fire chief of staff

Grover P rovens and Cora Sh(•PI s

Ohio Lottery

Marauders top
Big Blacks

order to ctve hill welliher lorecMt. Phil aaw hill
lhad'ow a1 7: 21 Lm. today and predicted alx more
week&amp; of winter. (UPI)

•

W

.t

a1 e:

NTERRV WAinTE

o

ra

om

s

or hostage exchange
LONDO N tUPir - Miss ing kidn apped Ameri ca ns.
hos tage nc!(ollalo r Terry \Val lr
" r urn \'CI'y anx ious w ht •n • hr
left emphat lc Ins Irucl lons be for&lt;' · Is. I have no fr esh news." Runc lr
sai d aft!'f lf'adlng a church
h ead l ~ g to Beirut - no ru nsom
pay menl or hosta ge exc h"nge If sr rvic&lt;' Sund ay at Canl er hu r)·
he Is kldn &lt;~ pprtL
Cath edt';J i, '"' ml i(·S south rasl of
Archbishop or C'antrrbury Ro· l.ondnn .
bert Runclc, for wh om Wa ll!'
" Hf", of cou rs(·, had sultlt o m~"
sr r vcs as

t1

spC'&lt;.'Ial envoy, .1\;·l ld

Sunda y th ai he would ablclc by
the Instructions despi te conc(·r n
· fo r his envoy's safpt y.
Walle, a nostage nPgotialor
from the Church of F:ngi;J nd .
re turned 10 Sel rut .Jan . 121n s"" k
the release of Western host ages .
He di sappeared J:lJJaysa go whl l('
working for the release of two
Alfred

by

more t hun oncf' on pa s 1 oecu sio n ~

!ha t s hould

a n y l liln ~

happm In

him . hf' wouiUn ' t wa nt monr y or·

Jlf'Ople to br· r xc hang&lt;·rl for him,"
flun r i&lt;' s"Jd.
" I Jhin k h1• t&lt;·l t quite· 'Jrongly
!hil l hf' had a p;r rt k ula r c-ha ractrr or m l ~~ l on - tha t il anyon('
w1:1s go ing to gPl lliml rrf', hP'dd o

thai hi msf'IL "

man arrested

sheriff on

charge

lfl nCt' , f.hlln I ~ a lso h• •lng d iUI'J.!f •(.)

An A lfr~d man charged lus t.
Septembfor wllh fel onious assa u II
In connccllon with~ shootin g In
Pomeroy. was urr •sled OVI' r the
Wl'{'kc•nd and charged with domestic violence.
.J o ~nny Cleveland Eblin, :!5. of
Alfred, was arres1ed Sa tu rday
evr&gt;nlng by Sheriff Howard E .
Frank on a domes tic vlolcnc£'
complaint signed by his wife,
Ellen Eblin. Mrs. Eblin ca lled
the sheriff' s depar tment and
reported tha t she had been
as sauiWd by her husband, und
that he had srveral guns In the
house and had lhrea tcncd lo kill

rC" por ts ttwt a hrf'a k!nJ.( and

her .

r nl cr lng o&lt;.'(' Un ·d SoJI ur day mor n·

Frank responded to th&lt;' ca ll,
assisted by Paul Gerard , Jnvcsligator for the proslocutor' s office,
and Deputy Harry Lyons .
Gerard reports that one .22
ca ll bcr revolver, one 20 guage
shOt gun and one .22 cali ber rifle
were removed from the home
and are bei ng held as evidence,
as well as ammunition and an
Item of clothing..
In addlton to domes tic vio-

lng at f. aw rc•ncr 's Storr on
Township nou d 144, l.ong 801·

1

with h;Jvlng a w•·apon whll&lt; ·
und ~r· dl s;JI&gt;I lli ;•.
E bl in w;r ~ to h :.t \'f' &lt;.~ pp("a rrcl on
lhC' new C' h;u g , ·~ t h l.~i mor n I n ~

tMond ayl In MP I ~-' f' ou nt ;· ('nur-1
IJCforr· ,Ju dgr l'a lrlck O' tlrlr· n.
The

fclo nlnu:-,

a~ s ault

f ' U ~0

"ga lnst l'; t,lln. whl l' h Is p&lt;•ncllnJ(
In Meigs County Comm on Ph•as
cour t, ~ t rm .'il from a Joi hooll n ~ last
Sroptcmbr•r In whi ch (' hurlrs
Napp,,r, of l'omr r-o.v. wa '
lnlu rrd.
1n oth er mall c·r&gt;. Shcrlfll'rank

tom .

Ent ry

wa s

gal nf'd

hrcu kln ~ uu l
thl ~vcs took

hy

a window and
m"lnly ~rocer i os.
No money wa,, reported takt•n lhr
sheriff said, and several box&lt;•s of
grorer les w&lt;•re lrfl hPhind as the
thelves left Jh c- s t or~ . appar ' nlly ·
In a hu rry. Olh c·r evldcncr was
recovNed al 111c seen (' and
lnvesllgation i&gt; c ~ ntlnuing .

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The ·Daily Sentinel

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Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOO'ED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb ,......._,.._.....,.......,c:::~,.,.

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ROBERT L. WINGE'M'
Publisher ·
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'f"tERS OF OPfNJON are welcome. They shwld ·be less than m words
long. A1lletters are subject toedlling and m~ st De signed with name, address and
telephone number. No un signed letters wUI be published . Letters should be In
good taste, addrE'Sslng Issues, not personalities.

"'.

_________

.;,: Ohio
Politics
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Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Mon&lt;tay; February 2, 1987

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By LEE LEONARD
:,;
UPI Statehouse Reporter
• .', COLUMBUS !UP I) -Consumer advocate Ralph Nader breezed
, ~ : Into town last week to take on the giant Insurance lndu_stry and the
•· . corporate world over a civil justice and Insurance reform package
:"- · now In the Legislature.
=~: . . He wound up taking on Ohio House Speaker Vernal Rifle, D-New
~ :. Boston, who makes the wheels turn In the Statehouse, and may have
, -. overplayed his hand.
"':~
Nader's message to the House Insurance Committee was simple:
·:... : forget about changing the system of handling lawsuits; that would
:- only hurt the lUIIe peopll'. Instead, crack down on the Insurance
~- _: companies. Their lneplllude Is why liability Insurance Isn't available
--- · -at allordable rates.
· .
: -~ : Nader told reporters Ohio's bill, except for those states which put a
: : ceiling on damage awards, "Is the worst bill in the coilnfry."
:·.~ . This Is the same bill over which lawmakers agonized for nine
:•• :. months last year, and ·which Rille Is protecting as · a model of
·~ compromise.
·:.' Nader didn't stop there. He publicly flogged Riffe, saying he has
maintained Iron-fisted control over the House, discouraging diversity
: : of opinion by "reprimand and removal," and staying on top for a
• ·' record 12 years by "an Ingenious deployment of political power."
; : "If.he's going to run for governor In this state of Ohio, he's going to
~~: : pay a penally lor straight-arming the workers and consumers,"
.. warned Nader. "This Issue Is going to track him !rom New Boston to
·- · Cleveland."
,:-: Nader said Rille will be described as "soft on crime" for keeping
• :. consumers from recovering adequate compensation for wrongful
.. .. acts.
: ... What made Nader's attack even more Interesting was that he had
: -: spent the previous evening at the Governor's Mansion as the guest of
~ . • Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
, ·- Celeste only recently had a meeting of the minds with Riffe over
•: civil justice and Insurance reform. Alone In the governor's olflce,
•• , they agreed to work together on a solution. Celeste, who had vetoed
: last year's version at the request of Nader and others, said he would
: · negotiate language on defective product lawsuits.
: ;:: Yet here came Nader, after having slept at the governor's house,
• •• saying Celeste was not convinced that product liability had to be part
~ ~ of the settlement.
~·
"Ralph Nader doesn't speak for the governor," said Brian Usher,
~.- Celeste's press secretary, who also denied the governor was going to
allow Nader to drive a wedge between hlmsell and Rifle.
• • "The governor still thinks Vern Is his friend, his mentor," said
: : · Usher . "He listened to Ralph Nader. That doesn't mean he agrees
with him ."
•
But why beard Rifle by havi ng Ralph Nader stay overnight?
•
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"He's a prominent figure In the ranks of consumer advocates, " said
~- Usher. "He's a nallonally known figure, the kind of a guy the governor
1: would like to have a little chat with. He (Celeste) Is not going to
' • disassociate hlmsell !rom people who have differences with Vern
-. Riffe."
•• As for Rifle, he coolly endured Nader's barbs, knowing he still holds
•.
~
the high cards In the game that's about to unfold .
•
And Riffe laughed heartily when one House Republican told him,
~ • "That's tht&gt; best thing that could have happened for you, Ralph Nader
coming here."

have failed spectacularly to live
up to that Spartan standard.
Franklin Roosevelt, to take o!le ,
memorable example, didn't
know that the ambiguous warnIngs his military advisers had
sent to our commanders at Pearl
Harbor had been misinterpreted,
and that the key battleships or the
U.S. ·Navy were sllllllned up at
anchor like so many sitting ducks
· In early December1941. Ought he
to have known?
' Or take the beloved sovereign
of Camelot hlmsell. When, al the
height or the Cuban missile
crisis, Nlklta Khrushchev complained that he shouldn'l be
required to withdraw the Soviet
missiles from Cuba while
Intermediate-range U.S. missiles were still based In Turkey a
few dozen miles from the Soviet
border, John Kennedy did a fast

:&lt;

.-

double-take. Hadn 't he or'dered authorized to draw on lt. If recent
those missiles withdrawn from allegations are correct, he exTurkey several months earlier? ceeded !)Is authority and diYes, he had;· but the Pentagon verted some of the fUnds to the
had somehow neglected to obey Nicaraguan contras. He hinted
his order. Kennedy didn't know as much to NSC dlr_ector John ·
Poindexter, who later reportedly
that. Why not?
Compared to those massive told Attorney General Edwin
examples of presidential lgnor· Meese that he "felt sorry" for the
ance, the · gap In President contras and therefore said no. Reagan's Information looks posi- thing to anyone about it.
Just how, then, could-President
tively trivial. The proceeds of the
·
Reagan
have found out about the
arms sales were deposited In a
Swiss bank account. The account episode? Say If you will that,
seems to have been set up·by the having been deceived (or at any
CIA to serve as a convenient way rate not Informed) by North and
station for funds destined for Poindexter, the least the presl·
various covert but entirely legiti- dent could do was dismiss them.
mate purposes: supporting the But , of course he did dismiss
Afghan freedom-fighters, for ex· them, promptly, as soon as he
,,
·
ample, and perhaps even Jonas found out about it.
Nevertheless,
the
game
·
of
Savlmbl's forces In Angola.
attributing
omniscience
to
PresiLt. Col. Oliver North knew the
number of the account and was dent Reagan Is still going on.
l
Recently, for example, on "Meet
the Press," NBC correspondent
Marvin Kalb hectored Treasury
Secretary James Baker mercl·
lessly because an ex-CIA agent
had held a conversation with an .
Iranian contact in London last
December "on the very same
day" that President Reagan was
assuring the American people on
television that negotiations with
Iran had been broken off. Kalb
almost visibly reeled at the
president's sheer brazenness. It
was left to Secretary Baker to
sugg~st gently that President
Reagan can hardly be held
responsible lor every unauthorized conversation that takes
place In London.
Where the media's favorites
are concerned they are, paradoxlca:lly, willing to excuse almost
limitless amounts of Ignorance.
Secreta!'¥ of Slate George Shultz
has been a notable beneficiary of
this selective compassion . .
Shultz's , reaction to developments In the Iran/contras con·
troversy has been to Insist
repeatedly that he dldn '.t know
what was l(olnl! on.

Approaching its sunset
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan won re-election on the
cheerful theme, "It's morning
again In America ." But two
years later, his own Commerce
Department experts are predictIng an early sunset for the heavy
Industries that once characterIzed America's economic
success.
The administration's policies
- helped Immeasurably by the
drastic drop In oil prices - have
slashed the ruinous Interest and
Inflation rates ofthe Carter years
and have trimmed unemployment back to where It was before
the Reagan recession of 1982. But
there are still significant pockets
of misery left over from the
recession.
Few Industries were hit as
hard by the recession as steel,
and few have made so little
progress trying to pull out of 11.
Steel mill shutdowns have turned
many once-thriving communi·
ties In the Rust Belt Into ghost
towns.
Unfortunately, the steel indus-try has nothing to look forward to
In the new year but more hard

'

times, according to a draft copy
or the Commerce Department's
"Industrial Outlook lor 1987,"
obtained by our associate Ml·
chael Blnsteln.
"The adverse trends currently
buffeting the steel Industry are
likely to continue to keep steel
consumption from rising 111uch
above current levels ," the report
warns. In fact, II predicts a
decline In U.S. steel production,
from 70 million Ions to 68 million
this year.
,

A big part of the problem Is that
steel's customers have been
moving their plants out of the
country to achieve lower production costs. The report warns :
"Steel consumers that have
moved offshore are not expected
to close recently established
overseas plants and reopen shut
facilities here."
·
Steel is also suffering from the
revolution sweeping through Its
best customer: the auto Industry.
Detroit Is rapidly replacing steel
doors, fenders and bumpers with
fiberglass and ot~er plastics.
The auto Industry ltsell, of

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear

course, Is In a precarious position, though It has mounted a
comeback from the recession
that nearly sank lt . The Commerce Department experts predict that sales of new American
cars will fall this year; foreign
cars accounted for 3 million of
the 11 million auto sales In 1986.
"The persistent move of the
Japanese manufacturers toward
producing larger, luxury models
and the continued Introduction of
vehicles from countries new to
the U.S. market will pressure
domestic manulacturers to be
more competitive," the report
states.
Look for models from Australia , Brazil, Romania and possibly
Taiwan to join the many Import
lines already available In U.S.
showrooms. "Domestic automobile manulaclurers will continue
to face the most challenging and
competitive period In their hislory," the report warns.
Even In the new growth Industries of computers and Information services, where U.S. technology has been leading the pack,

foreign competition threatens
America's front-runner position.
In 1987 the Amerl'can computer
Industry may show Its first
foreign trade deficit, thanks to
sluggish exports and the rapid
growth of rival products from
overseas . Imported printers and
terminals could capture 30 percent of the U.S. market this year,
the Commerce report estimates.
Still, the Industry should show an
overall growth rate of 2.6 percent
In 1987, ·Including a 25 percent
jump In the software end.
Inlorma lion services Is
another growth Industry, expected to Increase by about 12
percent this year. Here again,
though, the specter of foreign
competition Is daunting. "The
transfer of data-entry operations
to low-wage i:ountrles might
become a major Issue for the
data-processing Industry during
the next five years," the report
warns. "Performance of certain
types of data-entry work In the
Caribbean or other regions
where labor rates are extremely
low Is now cost-effective."

Don't bankrupt Russia --:---~-G_eo___;rg;;._e_M_cG_oo_er_n

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Today in history
By United Press International
Today Is Monday, Feb. 2, lhe 33rd day of 1987 with 332 to follow.
The moon Is moving toward Its first quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Safurn.
The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Aquarius. They Include
French statesman Charles de Talleyrand In 1754; psychologist
Havelock Elllls In 1859; Irish novelist James Joyce in 1882· Charles
Correll, "Andy" of radio's "Amos and Andy" program,' In 1890;
National Football League co- founder George Halas In 1895; violinist
Jascha Heifetz In 1001 (age86); novelist Ayn Rand In 190!5; actor Gale
Gordon In 1906 (age 81) : gossip columnist Liz Smith in 1923 (age 64) ·
comedian Tom Smothers In 1937 (age 50), and actress Farrah
Fawcettln 1947 (age 40) .
•

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Scoreboard ...
NBA Standings

Can Reagan see all? _____ il_lia_m_A_.p_us_h_er.
President Reagan's critics
have been singularly unsuccessful thus far In demonst rating that
he knew about the alleged
diversion or prollts _from the
Iranian arms sales to the Nicaraguan contras. But they have
comforted themselves with the
reflection that, If they must
ultimately concede he didn't
know abOut It, they will then be
able to Impale him on the other
horn or a tidily constructed
dilemma: He oug-ht to have
known about it.
But just how true Is that latter
proposition? It rests upon the
comfortable assumption that a
president Is In a position to know
just about everything - or at
least everything Important - If
he does his job properly. Maybe
so, but some of the media's
biggest presidential favorites

•

Ceorge Wilson, the highly
regarded military-affairs expert
or The Washington Post, reports
that the Defense Department Is
now pursuing a strategy "to
force the Soviets to spend billions
on new defense efforts."
The strategy Is outlined by
Defense Secretary Caspar W.
Weinberger In his recently released annual military report.
The plan calls for a costly new
high-tech effort conducted be·
hind a curtain of secrecy that
would devel•op American
bombers, fighters and cruise
missiles with a "Stealth" capability to confound exlsltlng Soviet
air defenses .
The assumption driving the
new weapons strategy Is that we
can force the Russians Into an
even more costly arms race that
will place additional burden~ on
their economy··and their defense
budget.
I do not kno~ of ·a more
accurate word to describe this
strategy than "stupidity."
Why would any person of
common sense assume the Russians will behav_e ,more agreeably or safely after we tighten
economic pressures on their
country? 1 think just the reverse
Is -true: Accelerating the cost of
the arms race can only add to the
tensions, suspicions and paranola that already complicate
Soviet-American relations.·
There are many signs that the
Soviet economy Is already under
pressure, aggravated by the cost
of the country's defense outlays.
This Is believed to be a major
reason for Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev's eagerness lor an i

arms-control agreement .
Why Is It not also In our Interest
to seek such an agreement rather
than challenging the Soviets to
engage us In an expanded arms
race?
Granted the United States Is
more prosperous than the Soviet
Union and better able to finance
an arms race than the Soviets.
We are nonetheless under some
economic pressures ourselves.
The huge $300 billion annual
military budget has been responsible for a sizable portion of the
deficits In the federal budget in
recent years. Our concentration
on developing more new weapons
has diverted scentlflc, technical
and financial resources to milItary purposes at the expense of
non-military Industry, educallon, the environment, transportation and other Important pur·
. poses . While we have
concentrated on the production
of missiles and bombers, the
Japanese have surpassed us ·In
the production and sale of
automobiles.
From the begiQnlng, the Reagan administration has acted on
the assumption that It was in our
national Interest to engage in
harsh and confrontational tactics
toward the Russians. Pa'rt of this
strategy has Included trying to
make life more difficult economically lor the Russian people. It Is
a bad strategy politically, economically and morally. It Ill not
worthy of a great na tlon such as
the United States.
Lest I appear overly partisan,
let me suggest that a far better
stralegy toward the Russians Is
the policy of "peaceful coexist·

ence" pursued by Republican
President Dwight Eisenhower or
the policy o{ "detente" !allowed
by Republican President Rl·
chard Nixon.
Neither ol these Republicln
presidents loved the Russians,
but they were realistic enough to
understand that both Russians
and Americans art&gt; beller off
searching out areas of mutual

.~ Berry's

Interest In arms control and
economic matters rather than
trying to cause each other
maximum trouble.
Secretary Weinberger Is said
to have labeled the arms-to-Iran
dea1 "absurd." For that he Is to'
be congratulated. Alas, he does
not seem to realize that his
"bankrupt the Russians" defense strategy Is equally absurd.

World

·By Unlletl Philal~ter••IOIIII
F.ASTERN CONFERENCE

AIJ•IIc Dlv._kln
W L Pd. GB
JI.Oiillon ......................... :ss II .7iKI .$'m 1 ~
.lit 10 \il
.285 •
.ao U

:'llad@lp"'. ................ M 19
N•lllnaton ................. 21 !I
N"' Vork .................... u Sl
ew JerH)' :····· ........... 11 33
Central Dty•ton
Detroll ... ..................... 21 15
Ali...... ........ .....,........ 2A Ill
MIIWIWkH ................... I\' •
Chlc1110 ....................... %~ tt
lndl .. a : ........ .............. ~ %4
Ctevel~~r~d .... ............,•.. l/1 ~

.118 .IM I
,MJ s
4M '2 L,of
'w 1
:.... ll l,ol

W.m!TERN CONFERENCE
MlttwfWI Dlvhlon
W L Pl.'&amp;. Gl

Dalllt'l ......................... '2:11 li .136 Utah ............................
Ill .lil t ~

a

. HOI11JI•a ......... .............. t3 t l .St:l ~
Dea~er ....... ........... :..... • !5 .4U 11 ~
S... Anlonlo ................. 16 !8 .356 1! .,.
. Saerameat• ................. l4 30 .31A 14
Pacific Dlddon
LA L.akf'hl ,.................. :h 10 .ns _
PortiMd ...... ................ ~ 11 .SH 1 ~
8eatlle........ ................. 24 '!I .$15 10
GolllenSbh• ... ............. %5 t'l ·.$,,1: . 10 ~,
ftiOellb; ...... ,,., ,,,, ......... lt 2'7 . ~13 16
't7

LA.CUppert~ .................. 1 J7 .Ut

S.t•rdQ'II KeK•III"

Detrolll IJ.I, NP:w York llJ
W.. hlll-an 101, Philadelphia IBIS
CI!Vel•d IO'l. lndt111a 100 .
Denn•r 142, Sacramento 11:1 LA.
Cllpper~o~ m, Utllh 113 lOTI
Sullie IIA. Pllombl m (OT)
Sandii,)''MRfof!'UMII

Houllen IN, AtllUIIIJ&amp; 104
Goldell Stale 1111, New ,f~&gt;N~ey 117 HOT)
D!•lrtlll ''- Chll-qo 8'l
Portl.n4 133. DaiiM II,
tian AntHio 1!1, Mllw llU kee Ill
UtMh 121, Sarnmmto IJS
Monda.)''N f.llmn
D:di~K M LA Lab~ 10;30

pit'.~

"''ve got It! I'LL do the boring repelillvtl tssks ·
at HOME, Bnd YOU do the .borlng rspetlllvtl
tasks at an OFFICE/''

Smylhe Dl'viliiiOn

Edmo•ol&amp; ...............SI II f
II
CaltarY ................... !!! U :II
1m An1cle~~ ............. n 1:4 a
1Ailnnlpec ................. l l .

U !U IKS

II IRIIRS

58 811203
111 1:11 !:It
Vu.cou~er ............... n 3% I :• · 175 til

Salarday'• Rellu\11;11
NY Rupn 3. Filii adelphia I
BOflton t. WIDIII,es S
NY llh&amp;nden t. Hartford 2
Montreal 5, W bl(fl tw :t ·
r.aiP'f 1, New .lt!'Kf)' s
Detroit '- Toroalo t
Chluro .f. St. Lo•IM t
911 nd..,-'11 ftc¥.1111
w.. hlnllon I, Wlnlllp e~~; 4
luff .. o I, Ddrolll
NY Ran ten I. 8011ton 4
llartrwd fl. PIU11burP I
QMetil!c 3, Lor; Aaplflll ~
fhluao 6. Edmonton t
MlniiHOla 4, V•rouwer 3
- ·Mondl)''• Gamr
Phlladf'lphia M T•ronlo, tJS p.m.
We.l!flday'" Gamt'l!
Montreal .t Quebec, •l•hl
lrdmonlon at St: Lou Ill, nl.-;hl
V•cou\'fr at Call(ll'f, nlxlll

College Basketball
Mf.nH Sund.-y Rhub
EAIIT

CornrU ftt, Han~.rd 1:1
LeMoynrllf. Merl•yiMII'Kt 110
Mllii'I'~~Uit• KS, Rudolph Macon 72
Rhodt- h1land 114, Pe•n Slait! 15
!Yton Hll\178, BOHIOII Collt'l:f' 76

SOUTH
Bhu.ofidd !i, "-'""' Lltwty K7

Tech "16. M11ryland 72
UNLV 104, Allburn liS

MIDK'DiT
Ml!&gt;i!iiiUii &amp;II, IUI.n!iaM Hf-'t' 64

p.m.

New J~n~ey Ill Sulllr, It: 3f p.m.

Notrr Dam«' M, North Carolina $H

Tuewdl&amp;,y'- GMml!ll

B~on, l&amp;t

Atlanh, nl.ctt
Phll . .lphla at Indiana, nt,chl
WIJijhJn.on Ill C hh• ~&amp;~~:o. nl~:tw.
New \'ork id MllwiWkt&gt;e, nllfht
Den"er .a Htu!iton, nl•ht
(ioldrn St!UIP .d Sln A.ntonto, nla:hl
~crMmmto il Utah, nl~thl
l'lun•nlx Ill Portl1111d. nl~thl

College Standings

NHL Standings
WALE~&lt;~NFERENfE

Patrlcll Ulvlo.lon

" ' I. T
l'tllhutelphi11 ............ ll 1-1
N\' biMtM•I'l'j ........... :1 :U
W~t~lllntl;lon .............z~ 24
NV RllnprK ............ 21 t3
New.ll•f!&gt;ley ............. 21 t1
PiU!O!INrafl .. ............. l8 t&amp;
Ad•.nu• nl,· ~ton
lb.rtlord ...... ..... , ...... n a.

l"h1. GF GA

t 7! 1:lt l.ut
fi 1141 IM J1.1

l4 ~2
Jol 5I
5 n
l4 K

a

m 117
21111 'M5
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lSI 111

60 17!

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Menlrof'ld .... .. ........... 28 '!2 7 511 Ill" 1"12
ROIII.on ..................... ttt 21 l n 113 117
qu,..... ,....... ... ........... ~ ~ 7

Bufflkl .......... .......... l&amp;:tll

n no'''

&amp; :til

17$'l81

MIO..OHJO fONFERENCF.
fnnfer•·nt.'t' All (i~am..,;
W L Pel. W I. Pet .
H\Q Orllndl• ............. 1 I .In$ :u .J . I!IK
Wlllsh ..................... ll 'l .nt 1"1 7 ,'/tK
Tlflln ...................... $ ~ .ll!IJ I.J K .13i
M».lo .... .......... ......... S :1 .IIU 1!: II .m
Ml Vrrnon Nllz , ...... :l ,, .J'l'S !II% .410
l'rh•u................... :l 5 .J'l'S K14 . ~
f4'd.,wUh• .............. ~ 6 .!51 II 7 .ill
Ohio Dominican ...... \ ~ .m tIt .(15

OHIO ,\THLETIC C'ONFIERENfE
fonler~nl~ AU G~aml!loi
W L Pt.'t. W L Pel.
OUniM'In ............... ll I .tot iC 3 .M!

WIUHitlf'rJ ............. 11
MU!ildn..-m ............ "i
Caphl.. ......... ... ..... 7
Ohio Nlihrn .... ........ 1

3 .Tl114 I .'ItO
3 .'JIIII II .571

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Mount' Unlon ........... 3 1 .Jit II t .Ui
BIII .. Wall lk...- .......... 2 II .201 R II .121
Muletla ......... ........ 1: !I .1112 WIZ .til
Heldellw)( ............ 2 1 . 1112 tl:l .m

Big third quarter lifts
.Meigs to 76-64 victory
ROCK SPRINGS - Guards
Donnie Beeker and J. R. Kitchen
popped In 17 points each as Meigs
pulled away with a 24-polnllhlrd
period to post a 76-64 win over
Point Pleasant (W .Va.)
· Satutday.
The Marauders, now 15-2 overall while remaining at 13-lln the
TVC, scored the first 10 points of
the tblrd period to raise a 31-23
halftime edge to a commanding
'' 41-23 margin. Pt. Pleasant, now
3-9 overall, managed to close
within nine at 63-54 with over
three minute~ left, but Meigs
scored 13 points to the Big
Blacks' six In the next two
minutes lor a 76-60 advantage.
Despite coming off a 71-52 win
over Wahama the night before,
the Big Blacks could not cope
with play of Becker and Kitchen
In the backcourt. Becker continued his excellent play of late,
scoring 13 of his 17 In the
st&gt;cond-half, and also pulled
down five rebounds while Kitchen scored 10 of his 171n the first
hal I In anot her line performance.
Brent Bissell added 13 points
and matched Mike Bartrum for a
team-high nine rebounds. Bartrum, who added 12 points of his
, . own, played well despite suffer·
lng from sickness during the
entire contest.
PPHS's Craig Hensley took
game scoring honors with 20
points while big 6·7 John Pelfrey
added 19.
.
Meigs' Phil King came off the
bench and had probably his best

Rio Grande suffers
first Mid-Ohio loss
CANTON - Freshman guard
Keith Troyer collected '26 points
to top four players who scored In
double figures as Malone upset
Rio Grande 85-74 Saturday night
In a Mid-Ohio Conference game.
The loss dropped ll.loGrande to
20-5 overall and 7-11n the MOC,
while Malone Improved to 12-11
and 5-3.
Malone, which led by nine
points at halftime and by as
many as 20 In the second half,
also received scoring support
from seniOr forward Jim Widder,
who had 18 points. Sophomore
center Andy Booth added 12
points for Malone, while fresh·
man point guard Tim Schlabach
had 11.
Forward Mike Smltb and center Joe Verholt scored 21 and 16
points, respectively . to pace Rio
Grande.
ne;

INJDyNIA, trle. ~•f

CAMPBELL OONFERf:NCE
Norrill Dlvlllo•
W L T rta. GF GA
MlniN!Mflla ............... U !I 1 SS 117 1115
Oetrult ................. .'.. !1 U II II Ill 1111
SL IAIIM .................. It H 8 f'l m 181:
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T•ronlo ................... 191:!1 5 4! 114 113

Oet~r .. ll

New Vurk al Wat~hln~on, 7~~ p.m.
LA C"UfPer5 at Dt!nvrr, !1::10 p.m.

RIO GRANDE ('ltl - Sml~ 11-Z-Zit
"""'• t-t-• Verlloll 7·S.If; lltllltlrer

Cl

Pomeroy~Middleport.
.
.

..

Ralph Nader plays
politics in Ohio

,'

Monday, February 2. 1987

w_
.

111 Court Street

•

'

I

.Commentary
'

.., l

lla)-mon ,...,

•Ill••

H-1; '""

1·11-1: WIINe 1•1. TC7l'AUI._'l·14.
MALONE ttlll"- Tr.,.er In-It WilMer
11-t-IA: -~ H·ll; Sclolaboeb H-1~
Mllmio t-t-1: Marlltl 4-11-tt; Mato 1·f.l ,
TOTAUIII-111-&amp;
Jlalltlneaeere: M81•e • lltGr••e
._ ,...,.,__., JUoOr-ltlml~
~ KelrM 1), Mol•e I t'l'rq.. , I),
......., JUt Gro. .e Ill tVerlloll II),
Mol_ II (TrGJtr Il l

Ohio

The Daily Sentinei-Page- 3

Notre-· Dame knocks off North Carolina
-

'

many opportunities to take my
By DAVID E. NATHAN
shot
·and I wasn't going to force 11
UPI Sports Writer
The Notre Dame home crowd because that would benefit North
claimed another victim Sunday Carolina," Rivers said. " I was
just pauent and waited until my
- top-ranlsed North Carolina.
The 60-51! Fighting Irish victory · shots came."
North Carolina played without
marked the fifth lime in 13 years
that Notre Dame and Its faithful point guard Kenny Smith, who
In South Bend, Ind., had learned wUI miss a minimum of two
up to· defeat the nation's No. 1 weeks after undetgolng arthroscopic surgery on his kneee. ·
team.
With 3:16 left In the opening
"They were awesome," Notre
Dame Coach Digger Phleps said half, North Carolina led by 16.
or the crow'd. "They knew what But the Irish went on a16-2spree,
carrying over to the second hall,
we could do with their help."
David Rivers, uncharacterlstl· to get back In the game.
Gary Voce added 15 points and
cally quiet In the first half, scored
all n of his points alter halltime 10 rebounds for the Irish, Includto spark Notre Dame. Rivers hit Ing two· free throws with five
a key jumper and adde&lt;lt:-vo free seconds left. The Tar Heels were
throws In the final 63 seconds or led by Joe Wolf with 14 points.
J .R. Reid had 12 and Jeff Lebo
the game.
"In the first half I didn't have finished wUh 11.

AI Atlanta , Duane FerrPI)
scored 25 points and Craig Neal
hll two foul shot s with 2:1 seconds
remaining to lilt Georgia Tech
over Maryland. The Yellow
Jackets led by as many as n
points In the second hall brlon ·
the Terrapi ns ral lied .
AI Los Angeles, Jerom&lt;'
"Pooh" Richardson scot·ed 1:1
points and Monte! l·lat cher and
Dave Immel added 12 each as
UCLA held of! Washington Stair.
Washington Stat e's Br ian Wright
missed a short shot at the buz.zcr.
At Eugr ne, Ore., Anthony
Tay lor scored all 16 or his point s
In the second half to spa rk
Oregon ov('r Stanford . Oregon hi t
6 ~ percent of It s shots In Ihi' .
second hall while Stanford mad&lt;'
just :15 percent from lhr floor
after halftlmP.

In other games, No. 2 NevadaLas Vegas routed No. 17 Auburn
104-85, Seton Hall nipped Boston
College 79-76, Georgia Tech held
off Maryland 76·72. UCLA edged
Washington Stale 61-60, and
Oregon whipped Stanford 68-55.
AI Auburn, Ala ., Freddie
Banks scored 36 points and
Armon Gilliam added 31· Sunday
to power UNL. V past Auburn.
UNLV hll halfofl1s28three-polnt
shot allempts wllh Banks connecting on nine or 13. Jef! Moorr
had 17 points and 10 rebounds lor
the Tigers .
AI Boston, James Major
scored 21 points and Mar k
Bryant added 18 to carry Seton
Hall past Boston College. Dana
Barros scored 27 or his 35 points
In the second half to rall y thr
Eagles.
·

Turnovers,.key penalty lead AFC to win
ByGORDONSAK~OTO

HONOLULU . (UP!) - Coach
Marty Sehottenhelmer of the
Cleveland Browns said turnovers
and a critical penalty enabled the
AFC to defeat the NFC 10-6
Sunday In the Pro Bowl game.
"We made a couple of big
Interceptions, but the big play as
far as I'm concerned was ·the
olfslde call against them when
(Eric) Dickerson scored," Sehottenhelmer, t he AFC coach, said.
The NFC, trailing 10-3, had
possession on the AFC 1 with .
about eight minutes left In the
game. Dickerson of the Los
Angeles Rams plunged over for a
touchdown, but the play was
nullified when Washington guard
Russ Grimm was called for being
offside.
On the next play, Lloyd Burruss of Kansas City picked off a
pass by Washington's Jay .
Schroeder to end the NFC's
drive.
"Another big play for us was
when (Miami rookie John) Oflerdahl pushed Dickerson out of
bounds at the 2," Scotten helmer
said. "It stopped them from
scoring the tying touchdown."
With about five minutes to
play, Dickerson look a swing
pass from Tommy Kramer ol
Minnesota and appeared to have

a lane to the end zone when he England's Tony Franklin when
was pushed out of bounds by he recqvered Slkahema's seco nd
Olferdahl.
fumble a't the AF'C 44 In the
"We knew they had the lag second period.
pass play with the running back
A 24-yard pass from Boomer
coming out of the backfield," Eslason of Cinci nnati to New
said Oflerdahl. "The backs York's Mickey Shuler on a
switched so It was kind of tough to fourth-and-six situation was the
cover, but we were aware of the big play of the drive. The NFC
play.
scored on Andersen field goals of
"I had single coverage on 38 and 19 yards.
Dickerson and just came up and · Slkahema rebo unded In · thP
made the ta ck le . Thank second half with a pair or nice
goodness.H
runbacks, one of which set up a
Instead ol going In for the lying field goal. The second return. a
touchdown, the NFC had to settle 23-yarder, sta rted the NFC drive
for the second of two field goals that ended at the AFC' 1 on
by New Orleans ' Morten Burruss' Interception .
Andersen.
"It was the same old thing The NFC turned the ball over mistakes," said NFC Coach Joe
live times. Mark Haynes picked Gi bbs of lhe Washington Redsoff a pass In the second quarter klns. "We played hard, we had a
that stopped an NFC drive at the lot of yards, we had some scorin g
16 and St. Louis punt return opporlunltles. But then, we made
specialist Val Slkahema lost two mistakes . We just couldn't overfumbles In the first half that led come the mistakes."
to both AFC scores.
Slkahema sa id II was "a rough
Fredd Young of Seattle reco- day."
vered Slkahema's first muff at
"The first one (fumble) just
the NFC 17 and It resulted In a golloslln the su n. The othc'r two
10-yard scoring pass from (one which did not figure In the
Denver's John Elway to Todd scoring!, there's just no excuse, "
· Christensen of the Los Angeles he said. "I just had trouble
Raiders.
catching the ball today. He (AFC
Oflerdahl, only the fourth punter Rohn Stark) kicks left ·
rookie to start In the Pro Bowl, looted and maybe that had
set up a 26-yard field goal by New something to do with II."

game ever, combing the boards
with seven rebounds while scorIng three points. Huey Eason
added ·six markers lor the
HEMLOCK - Claiming their on 20-of-40 for 50 percent, SouthMarauders while the Blacks' second
In a row, the Miller ern hit nlne-of-21 In the first half
Scott Vickers helped out with Falconswin
took advantage of a to Miller's shabby four-of-22. The
nine points.
phenomenal
38 trips to the foul difference, h'owever, wa s
"I thought we played real line to defeat
Southern Miller's 16-of-23 !rom the line
well," said Meigs Coach Mlck Tornadoes 53-48 attheMiller
which gave them a 24-20 lead at
Childs. "Pt. Pleasant Is a good School Saturday In a High
the half. Southern hit just two-ornonlearn, much better than their
six
at the line.
conference basketball contest.
record Indicates."
In
the first hall most of
Miller was paced by three
Meigs had a 39-29 advantage on double
scorers led by Tom Southern's personnel found
the boards while connecting on 32 Dutlel digit
with
13, Jeff Glenaman themselves In foul trouble. In the
or 76 shots for · 42 percent and with 12, Craig
Wilson 10, and course of the game one player
dropped 12 of 19 free throws lor 63 Johrt Edwards nine.
exited with five louis, live
per cent. MHS had 16 turnovers .
Junior guard David Amburgey players had four personals, and
In the reserve game, Meigs paced Southern with 12 points, another had three.
held olf a late Pt. Pleasant rally Kenny Turley added 10, Matt
In the second half, the Tornato post a 45-44 win as Joey Snyder Harris eight, and Todd Kimes does held their own, bul to no
had 15 points, Kevin Oller added
avail as Miller continued their
.
14 and Rodd Harrison chipped In sixFrom
at the line, hilling
success
the onsel 11 was evident
with 10. Steve Henry led the Lillie the non-league
27-of-38
overall
to olalm the 53-48
alfalr would be
Blacks with 16. Meigs Is 12·5 won or lost on the foulllneas with victory.
overall and has clinched at least 6:57 still remaining In the llrst
Overall, Southern hit 20-ol-40
a share of the TVC reserve crown period the Falcons entered the from the field and eight -of-13 at
with an 11·3 mark.
the line, while collecting 23
bonus sltuallon.
Tqe Marauders, who need one
rebounds,
led by Todd Kimes
Shooting a very warm clip
more TVC win to clinch at least a throughout the evening, hitting with eight.
share of their third consecutive
Miller hit 13-of-37 lor 33 perconference title, again play a
cent, but hit 75 percent from the
non-league foe Tuesday at home
line. JMIIIer collected 24 reagainst Warren Local. Friday,
bounds, led by Wilson with nine.
Meigs goes to Wellston and winds
Southern had four steals, 23
up their regular season a week
turnovers, and 28 personal fouls
later at Federal-Hocking. Tuescompared to seven Falcon steals,
day's bout against Warren Local
17 turnovers, and 15 louis .
By United Press International
will be the Marauders' home
In the same fashion as the
Miloslav Meclr downed Ausfinale.
reserve
contest Miller claimed a
tralian Peter Doohan 6-2, 6- 4, to
Boxscorc:
.
:10-47
win
. The difference was
win the $105,000 New South Wales
POINT PLEASANT tl41 -11m Boweno
again at the line as Southern hit
*'t-1, Mike Barton 2-Z..ti, John Pelfrey grass court championship at
Sydney. He became the llrst 7-11 and Miller hit 16-25. Shane
1!-Ht, Brtu Sayre t-0-1, CroiK llenotey
11-Ht, !!coli Vtckon 3-3-9, SliMe Mltter
Czechoslovak to capture the
1-tf-t. TOT AU! U-14-14.
trophy, and also the first No. I
MEI(lS ('JC) - J. R. Kltcllen R-1-11.
seed to win the title since the
Don•le Becker K--1·17, MIJie llartrum
The Daily Sentinel
1-1-lt, H!M'Y Eu"' :1-2-1, Brent BlloiOftt tournament went open In 1968.
4-1-11. Chrto SmNh 1-tf-2, 1'1111 Ktnr 1-1 ·!,
Gretchen Rush-Magers cap(U8P814. . . )
BUI Brootheroo 1-0-l, Scott Wltllam8 t-~D.
tured her first professlonaltitie
8cou Powell t-t-0. Steve Muuer 1-D-l.
A Dlvllloft of MaHI~,SI .. In c.
Tm'.\LII JZ.IZ-71.
when she defeated Terry Phelps
, B;y quartent :
Publtthed every art(lrnoon, Monday
of
Larchmont, N.Y, 6-2,6-3, In the
through Friday , Ill Court St .. PoPoint Ple.. OIIII ............. l 11 ts 16---14
meroy, Ohio, by the Ohto Valley Pubfinal of the $50,000 Nutri·Mellcs
Metp .......................... tl IH 14 I I-'II
llshlng Company/Multimedia, lnr'.,
ftaervftf I'ICOre: Mrlp 45, Polnl Plca-=International Women's Open at
Pom..-oy, Ohio mti!l. Ph. m -2t56. Se-l-1.
Auckland, New Zealand .
cond cla.sa p0111age paid at Pom&lt;'roy,

" 31 JACKSON ptKE · Rl3S WESl

""""'446·4524

BARGAIN MATINEES S ATUR~I I
SU NDAI - All SEATS 12.50
AOHISS ION EVERY TUEI~Y 12.50

._.,.,
iTHUE

STEVE MARTIN
CHEVY CHASE
MARTIN SHOAT
9,10 P. H. DAllY .

Southern tastes second straight loss
Simpson paced Southern with 16
and Chris Stout had 10. Hat!lelo
had 15 lor Miller.
Boxscore:
SOUTIIEHN ( ~K ) -

MILLER

GlmlllllM, 3-6- 12. TOTALS t:t-l'l-53.

BETTER-THAN
JUNK, WE THINK:
'

75

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BUSINESS COLLEGE

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SUIICIIIPTJON JI,\TEII
BJ Corrler or Mol•

4 Door, F.W.D.

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Pontiac Bonneville ••• S77t
Ford LTD Wagon •••• S1423~
Chev. Monte Carlo •• S88SjFord LTD .•••••.....•.... s1 o8o:•
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78 Mercury Cougar ••••• S1285 ~
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Spare parts and keh go with it.

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PBICE
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Sltblcrlb&lt;t't not dettrlilr to PlY them·
r1er 1111r, r«n..t In adVance direct 10
1be Dtl y Senttn.rl on• ! , &amp;or 12 month
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POSThi~R: send ad.r... chan'l!l!"
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Ohio Nmnpa~ Auoclatlon. Nat lonal

u:u -

,John Edwards, 1·7·9: Torn Uutlel, 3- 7·13:

Mecir wins
grass court
championship

Inland Dally Pres• Al&amp;oclat Jon and the

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Monday. February 2, 1987

i

By The Bend

.The Dai.ly~· S~nti~ei ·

-INLA feud may ·bring more killings

Monday, February 2, 1987

DUBLIN, Ireland (UPii Police on both sides of the shoot out on March 17, 1984.
Auth~rlties expect
more border. launched a manhunt for
She was cleared In a Dublin
gangland-style slaylngs follow- the gunmen.
court last year of kl!lnapplng th£:
ing the murder of the wife . of
"The murder of a mother In step!atl)er or an INLA Informe r
Dominic " Mad Dog" McGIIn· lront of her children is an act of for a brief period In an e!fort to
chey, the former · leader of 'the savagery," said Irish Justice get the Informer to keep silent on
Irish National Liberation Army
Minister Alan Dukes .
testimony eventually used to lm·
guerrilla group.
prlson 27 INLA members in NorTwo masked ·gunmen broke . Her imprisoned 34-year·oid thern Ireland.
Into the McGlinchey home Satur· husband, once Ireland's most
In December, 24 of the 27 were
day night in Dundalk, a border wanted man who boasted or !reed after a court In Belfast
town 50 miles north of Dublin, kUling some 30 people, was ruled the Informer's testimony
and opened fire on Mary McGIIn· moved to a special cell, then was unreliable, triggering pollee
chey, 33, as she was preparing a Informed of the slaying in the rears that a bitter feud would
bath for her two sons.
top-security prison south or Dub- . erupt wi,thln the INLA .
She was hit by up to five bullets lin where he is serving 10 years
Shortly afterward, a Belfas t
and slumped dead In the bathtub lor attempted murder .
man with INLA links was shot to
In front of her screaming sons,
Authorities said Sunday night death in Bellast, and on Jan. 20
·
aged 9 and 11.
they would not allow McGlinchey gunmen burst into a hotel lounge
· Pollee blamed her dea th and to attend his wile's funeral In Drogheda in the Irish Repub·
three others In the past month on because or the possibility. of an lie, killing two INLA members a feud among rival factions oft he attack against him or against including one who was th e
INLA, a Marxist breakaway officers escorting him.
reputed leader or one of the
group of the outlawed Irish
A spokesman !or the Irish organization's factions .
Republican Army that Is fighting Republican Socialist Party, the
The INLA first att racted world
to drive· Britain from Northern INLA 's political wing, claimed attention when It claimed responIreland.
the killers were "pro·Brltlsh sibility lor the March 1979
"We believe It is part . of the agents" and called on all Irish assassination of Conservative
tlt·for-tat reprisals that seem to nationalists "to ostracize these politician Airey Neave In London
be going on In the organization," murder e rs from the with a car bomb. .
a pollee spokesman In Dublin community."
Among its ·other attacks were
said, warning that there were
McGlinchey's wife and child· the bombing of a disco northwes t
likely to be more killings In
ren had been on the run with l)lm of Bellas t In 1982, killing 17
Northern Ireland and the Irish
for about a year before his people, Including 11 British sold!·
Republic.
capture In a St. Patrick's Day ers.

. Page-4

Rutland Garden Club meets; discussion topic
Birds and bugs and how to
i attract one and destroy the ot her
~ • were the topics of {lapers pres=·
1
: . en ted at the recent meeting of the
• ·Rutland Garden Club held re·
,' cently at the home of Ann
' Elizabeth Turner.
'
In a paper on birds, Dorothy
f Woodard suggested that the best
r way to become acquainted with
•~ 'the many kinds or birds Is to reed
i them in winter and to keep water
• available lor !hem to drink. She
. i also read a paper on the care or
'·-·' foliage house plants which have
. _ _to be left for a period of lime. She
: r.1said It is advisable to set the
: · plants back !rom the window so
; .the exposure to heat , cold and sun
~ --

is decreased.
Pearl Canaday talked on soap
sprays which can control pests
effectively and safely. She said
that soap water sprayed on
plants kill aphids, mites and
other pests noting that whale oil
soap sprays are a natural enemy
to pests.

It was reported that Mrs.

the meeting presided over by
Mrs. Woodard In the absence of
Roberta Wilson, president. Mrs.
Turner had devotions using
"Glory or God" and "Flowers
Need Their Fragrance." Miss
Diehl read "A Friend" closing
with a prayer. The creed and
collect were given In unison.

Canaday had help In the demon·
stratton or making velvet roses
for the Friends and Flowers
Garden Club. Pauline Atkins wils
named to write a history of the
Rutland Garden Club for the
Meigs County History Book.
Mrs. Canaday, Mrs. Nicholson,

Neva Nicholson's program
topic was "Indoor Plants and
their Care." She said that an east
or west window are best for
plants, and that temperatures
should be about 68 degrees In the
daytime and about six degrees
cooler at night.
Binda Diehl was co-hos tess for

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MONDAY
f'
GA LLIPOLIS - Riv erb.y Wri·
'
· ' ters
meet Monday, 4::!0 p.m.
Bring manuscr ipt s.

: , POMEROY - Meigs High
•.:' School Band Boost ers meet Mon·
day, 7 p.m., high school band
, .room.
( .:
TUESDAY
!"·,· ,.. LETART - Letart Township
' Trustees meet Tuesday, 6 p.m ..
at town hall.
~-~ ~

.

POMEROY - XI Gamma Mu
Sorority hearts and hands meet·
ing, Tuesday, 7:30 p.m. at the
home of Libby Sayre. Mem bers
are to take packages In white
paper with pink bows.
POMEROY·- Pomeroy Chap·
t.er 186, Order of the Easter n
Star, meets 7:45p.m. Tuesday at
the .Pomeroy Masonic Temple.
Practice will be held lor inltla·
tory work.

"r-------------------------------~

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Racine in 1937...

I •

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KOPS RECOGNIZED - KOII'S, keep off pounds sensibly, were
honored at a recent meeting of TOPS 570. Gills and a yellow rose
were presented each. In the program, each shared weight loss
stories. Honored were, front !rom left, Llnnle Bell Aleshire, Freda
Davis, Imogene Dean, back, Ola St. Clalr, Julia Hysell, Pearl
Knapp and Virginia Smith.

Racine UMW .meets
'

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'~·.

A candlelight program on
"Conflicts and Differences"
presented by Marlene Fisher
highlighted the recent meeting of
the Racine United ·Met hodist
Womeii beld at the church. Each :

church. Serving will begin at 3:30
and the menu will Include soup,
sandwiches, and beverages. On
Sunday, March 8, following the
regular church service, there
will be a potluck dinner and a

member lighted
a candle
as
scrlptut'j&gt;
was read
and the
service concluded with prayer.
A report was given on sick and
shu tins with visits being reported
and several cards were signed
for those in the community.
Plans were made for a soup
supper to be held on Feb.19 at the

workshop on Sunday
School
conducted
by Char
I es
Martindell.
April4 wa s set as a cleanup day
at the church . lj was noted that
Mr. and Mrs. Larry Fisher has a
new son. A gilt of money was sent
to her. Thank you notes were
read !rom several people.

•

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tS

balance of nature

UMF group has meeting

Delores Whitlock o! Syracuse
recently hosted a meeting of the
Chatter Club. Officers' reports
were given and It was decided to
have an "edible" valentine sa le
at the February meelfng to be
held at the home or Linda
Hubbard.
Hostess gifts were given to

rr::::~;;;:==:================~
---·---·- ·

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

E_AR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
".WE HAVE HEAR.INC AIDS"

Mrs . Whitlock and birthday gifts
to Mary Starcher and Elaine
Quillian.andRefreshments
served
games played were
with
prizes going to Linda Gheen,
Susie Cleland, Dorpthy Ro ach,
and Brenda Bolin. Mrs. Roach
won the door prize.

CALL (614)
(3

·Chris Nichols lost the most alter having reached her goal
weight in the men's class. and weight.
At the Tt1esday night Mason
Cara Folmer the most In the
women's class of the Five Points class, live new members were
Sllnderella this week. Runner·up taken in and Eddie Reitmlre lot
In the women's class was Betty the most weight In the kids' class,
Dill. Tracey O'Dell was accepted · with Barbara Varian being the
into the slim and trim program runner-up.

•"

••

••
•

•

992·2l 04

Ka~ A. Ktbltr. Jr. !.A.
"Enrolled to Proctlce Btlort
the Internal Revtnue Service."

QUESTION: 1111 pltlrt...,. fiiPOI1 IOII!ho&lt; 10 ICHIIIooy
111 mum tor~ this '"'- Ctn IOU t~lftltlllot loi&amp;llllood IIIII
wl1ot WO~d lit I aood llltftacl ol kooi&gt;IOJI1110411111t f1C01111!
AIISWEI : Voo will nNd jOur W·h, IOIII!Oidl of otlllr In·
come. a rKord of business aAd lnvtttlltflt tXPiftltl, iltfor·
m~tio• on a•y salts ol prCJtNrty or ac•itlts, cost artd Yllvt
records for chlrillblt contribvttons of property worth 1500
or mort a•d a list ~ cult contributions, cost and valut records tor any CISIAitr lesus.lftd a list of medical tlfltllts,
taru and iftttrtst ro• peld. A.fM)d 1111ttlod of ..... ,._
cords is to use 1 fm TuiiVtr 11~ or Tu IKofd tool
availlblt at anr.t"l llock offiu. Tilt TariM!' and Taaltcord looks hlwt spiCes tor recordiniiiiCOM, IIPIRift, tRd
othtr l1lonn1tion Mtdt4 for yovr return. You will Wlnt to
btp all of your rtctlpts tot dtduetlblt txptnHs, of fOU!'H.,

ANOTHIIIERVICI OF

iii
lhr I I
~r ~

"" ' ' " ·

.:,
.•

~0

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~NLY

DINING ROOM ONLY
Served wit11 whipped potatoes. chicken·a111vy,
cole slaw. hot roll. butter and coffee. Sorry,
substitutes except be1'81111e with addi·

T

$3•25
FOR JUS

CRO.W'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
P.OMUOY,

PH. 992·502

Fried Chicken

WIESniNG
ELE.NTAIY THURSDAY, FEB. 5th A1
7:30 WITH OX BAKEl VS. GENE
ROBERTS AND THE WILD lOAD WAIIIOR .
VS. BUDDY DONOVAN.

'

NO·CHARCE
CHECKINC
ACCO.UNTS
.

-

.

.

By RALPH JOSEPH
United Press International
· : Iraqi war planes struck 11
'· Iranian cites and hit two schools
• In the city or Mlaneh, killing 68
.schoolgirls and wounding 150
•. others , Iran' s !RNA news agency
said today.
''
Iranian forc es occupying
', southern Iraq launched three
· " limited assaults" against Iraqi
troops east of Basra, Iraq's
: second largest city; according to
' I ran ·s sta t e-run Islamic Repu~"'
• lie News Agency.
:;
Military communiques In Teh·
ted b !RNA said Iraqi
ran quo
Y
. ' je ts bom bed 11 Iranian Cities •
:: including Mlaneh, killing or
,• wounding "scores" of people on
Sunday.
' ',
The girls were attending
· ' classes tn two schools, one
. elementary and the other secon·
dary, when the attack took place
on Mlaneh, 250 miles northwest
or Tehran, IRNA said. It did not
say bow many people were kiiiE:d
in the other 10 citieS bombed.
Iraqi jets also appeared to be

~ SE- NIOR

N~ qiM=ICKsl NO MiNIMU~ BALA~CEI

.'

Public Notice

--,.---.

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT Of
FIDUCIARY
On J1nu1rv 11, 1987, In
tho Meigs County Problto '
Court, C111 No. 28315,
Cillrlll TyrH Jr., 388 Wll·
ll1m1 Sir..,, Middleport,
Ohio 41710. Wit appointed
Admlniotrotor of tho oollto
of Robert TyrH. decooHd,

Ohio 44101. Tillcommont
pe~od wtn not ond boforo
Fobruory 11, 1187 and m..,
be oomowhtt longer. Tho
Board'• procodUfH for procalling opptt..tlona ...., be
found 1112 C.F.. R. Port2e2
48 Fedorot Roglllor lt03 (Fobruory 14,
19e4J}. Procodu'" for pro·
cnolng pro.. lled oppllco·
dono m.., be found 11 12 C.
F.R. ! ~82 . 2&amp; (1884). To

Ohio41780.
Robert E. Buell,
Proboto Judge
lono K. NeoHirood, Ct.rl&lt;
11121: (2) 2. 9, 3tc

Pubilc Notice
'

!•• ,.,....,

-·-ofthla-d't
,..,....... Of

lf ""' .....

more tnfomllldon obout I.t o - your com-on
the 1111' •lion, oont80t Mr. ·
Martin E. Abromo, the Community Affotll Offlcor II tho
F-.. AI 1 dlonkofCtov·
ollnd. It (2181 111·2041.
~ ,,_

-

R-wllcon-

yGU! COIIiiTWIIa .... ony

.....,. for

I pubic 111Ntl110

oifoomot~onthl..,..

Mtilly . . roul'lld by
thiR-IIonkonor-.
the foot elMo of.the cooronord

'

~; : •

Belnrsltuated alonr the bankll oflhe "Old Ohio", Racilne Vlllaae
received Us share of damage and water In the hlllorlc Oood ofl93'7
u evidenced In these pholollfrom lbe collection of Mrs. France~ '
Roberti. Racine bad the only Rood drownlnr !n Melp .:..lhevlcllm
wu Sam Marr Jr., 20, From lop are: the back of the home oflhe
late Dr. John Philion; home owned by lhe ,late Mayme
~ . Hartenbach, occupied by lhe Sidney Fadley family; water at
· · Racine Elementary School; the Odd Fellows Hllll and the Haymu ·
Hardware Store; and water reaehlnr the second llloey of homes.

· AUO FIAIUIED ON THE CAID WIU IE\.. .
DO-IC DENUCCI, IIAIIIIADDOI, IIADUir
MILLEI, NICHOLAS voN 511111 PlUS onem.,
IN IIG MATCHES
If

'lElBER F.DJ:C.

5th S!Mt
NtlrHMn; W. Ya.
" 112·2135

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BANK
:Mnri "
"THi line~

Second S!Mt
Muon, W, VI ..
m-5514 ·

In Memoriam
In Memory of

ARTHUR· ORR
who passed away •·
Feb 2 1982
· •
•

Asilent thought, a se·
cret tear keeps his
memory ever dear.
Sadly missed by
wife, Ethel Orr, and
family.

-llml.
1111-v 10, 1887. for lmprooeIn: - . Hoclllng.
Molgo, Mlinnle. -.... No-

c-.

"" .... Woollfllgflln
Ohio. on - · rou111 ond
- . . . by hllllloldol .,..,.
lng.
Worll longth - 287.01

mi....

.

eo

"Tho doto 11t for camplt·
lion of thlo worfl lhlll bl Ht
forth In tho bidding propo·

985-3561
•Washer• •Diahwashers

•R1ngea

•Rtfrigtra1ort

•Drver• •Freezers

PARTS and

bide.

rtiiMtl

WARREN J . IMITH
DIRECTOR
' (1121: (212 2tc

work

tFree Ettimatoo)

V. C. YOUNG In
992 -6215 or 992 -7314

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-15."86-tc

J.R.'s REPAIRS

RACINE

TVs, Antennas
SateUite Saies
Installation
Service

BISSELL
BUILDERS

TUN!UPS fo TRANSMISSIONS
CALL 992·7C03 Apt•

St. Rt. 33, Pomtroy, OH.
We'll Sell You A

Used Car or Fix
Your Old One
1·7.'87·1 mo.

MILLS ELECTRIC
COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL

614-992-3023
I ·U ·'Il· l m...

the Meig1 County Prob1t1

Court, Coao No. 25379,
Son!l Sue W1ylond. 187 ·
Choolnut ltr..,, Middle·
port, Ohio, 4&amp;710, woo IP·
pointed Executrix of tho to·

CUSTOM BIIILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Rtasonablt Prim"

PH. 949-2801 ·
or 949-2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY UUS

. 4-16 : li tin

LADY RACHELS
PALM RIADEA &amp; AVVIIOi
T1 ·l

,,,, •• r

!I II''

I ' ' ' I''•

I rl\1'

p·, ·I I ' I· d I''

IH''

,,II

.ill• I

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1rt·.

''

'JV,J,

OFFERS ENRICHING
LEARNING EXPERIENCES
FOR CHILDREN 3 TOe
YEARS OF AGE

Open Enrollment
Thru The Year
OPEN TUESDAY.
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
9 AM to 11:30 AM and

12:30 PM to 3 PM

Coli Administrator Mrs.
Shirin. J.
MEd.

••II

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:,,.,~

II I'Y
'.h

. "
., "'

II"

II"

,. " l ' )

302 Wnt UrPol!, hlhf' IH
Ph 1'1·1 18~8
$5 OFF W11h 1111, hn
I h lrno

Middleport, Ohio

(614) 992-7328

'"••n

'

.1'1•1
' J

'"

'w' I I I

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE
PRE-SCHOOL

,.,,,
.. L1•

:or·"

ANTIQUES
BUY OR SElL
IIYERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Main St.
~omeroy
HOUtS: Tut.·Woti.-Fri.

11 a.m. lo 7 p.m.

S.ntlay: I ~.m.· 7 p.m.
ly Chan11 or A,tloinlmMit

IUSS MOOIE

614-843-5248
REASONABLE • REUAIL!
tin

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho Loodlng Creek Con·
oervoncv Diotrlct of Molg•
County 11 accepting bldo for
a tease of olx yeore. con tilt·
ing of off leo opoco, shop
epoco, ohop otorogo, warahouoo, port otorogo. • pipe
ttorogo building otong with
tho appropriate ic•••u• for
tho afottmontlontd build·
lng1 . Sold bulldlrigo to moat
all todorot, ototo. and tocet
bu tt d01~0Ddcocfbtd'•"· will be ••·
50
copted ot tho L.oedtng Crolk
conotrvtncy Dlttrlct office
locottd ot 34481 Com Hottow Road. Rutlond. Ohio.
be~tntillhouroof8 : 30o.
through
m. and 4:00
Frldoy
p.m.
. All
, Monday
Holed
bldo mutt blrocolv.d ot till
Luding Creek Con•erv•ncv
District offici no l1ttr than

corning thlo t.a11 m1y be IC·
qulrod 11 tho l.Hdlng Crtlk
ConHrVIRCJ!o Dletrlct office
locotld at

34481 Corn Hoi·
low Rood. Rulilnd, Ohio,
bltw"" till houroof8 :30a.
m. ·ond 4:00 p.m. Monday
through Frldoy.
(1, 19, 21; 121 2. 3tc

tate of Emra J . Hendrbl:, De·

25(

EACH

' USES FOR AlUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
.MAKING HAMMERED lAfll' SHADES.
CAN Ill PURCHASED DAlY AT Ttl
. DAllY SENJitll nl 3 P.M.

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT .
10·1·tfc ·

G&amp;M TV
REPAIR
49835 St. lt. 124

lad111, Ohio 45771,

949-3081 Bus.
949-2606 Home
All Makes &amp;
Models
24 HR. SERVICE
1· 11·1 ...

"VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

We cu repair and rP.
core radiators 1nd
heater cores. We q~n
also acid boil111d
out radiators. We
repair Gas Tanks.

PH. 949-210 1
or '949-2160

PAT HILL FORD

Naw Homes lullt
"FrH Eatlmat•' •

992-2196

Middleport. Ohio
1·13·tfc

No Svnday Calls

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
·coMPANY

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAII
Truck. auto. &amp;
heavy equipment
repelro end weldl ng .
(All makee &amp; modele)

•All Typoo of
Excov1ting
•llndecoptng
•Baotmonta
.
•8-•o• Syotomo
•Wotor &amp; Goo Unoo
•Wotor Well Drilling
•Trucking

PH. 949-2893
or 949·2756
John K. Ientz

Loo.

Owner /lltchonlc
J.t. 'I7· J

Public Notice

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

. 992-3410

Electronic Organs
' Mobile service

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Automotive lepair
&amp; Service

1·13 tin

GUN SHOOT

EVERY

nlmum specifications con·

ONLY

- PiumiM'ttt'•nd eiectrlcal

Boshon Building

noon Fobruory 3. 1987. Ml·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Jonuory 20. 1987. In

the

ony ond ott

- Concrtt.t ~rtt

FIRE DEPT.

SIZE 23X30X007

rojoot

- Addon• 1nd remodeling
- Aoof6ng •nd gutt•r work

!II'I~VIIC:I'

ofT....._..., lnd tho of·
flee of the Dlttrlct Deputy

The Director

CA8PENTER
SERVICE

All M1k"

.,. on flflln the.,.,..,._

rteht to

Copy .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
5EIVI(I

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

don It ........ doyt prtor to
the d... Mt lor-Ing bide
In toeordOIICI with Chl;tlr

YOUNG'S

ICUT OUT 101 FUTUI£ USE)

COiled, toto of 11 liberty
AYonue. Pomoroy. Molgt
bt ro· County, Ohio, 4&amp;719.
rloblrt E. Buck,
qulrod to Itt. with hio bid a
Probate Judge
Cll'ltflld choci&lt; or ..oht.r't
Lena
K.
Ne1Mirold,
Clerk
check for 1n ~~mount equvl
to flvtl per cont of hlo bid, but (1 I 28; (2] 2, 9, 3tc
In no ovont more thin fifty
thou•nd dollro, or 1 bond
6C Miac . Merchtmdiae
for ton per cont of hlo bid,
PIYIIblt to tho Dlroctor.
· •lddoromiMiopply, on tho
pr- forma. lor quotMtco·

Dl-.

'CO~~~ugRI

Business Services

......Eoch bidder oholl

Plans 1ncl sp aclflcetions

(1)12, 11. 21; 12) 2. 8

. STAT£ OF OHIO
DEPAIITMENT OF
TRANIPORniON
Ohio
,1117

Public Notice

&amp;1121 Ohio R.-.IHCI Codo.

poriod.

:PEOPLES

2

Public Notice

Cllion

"Must be 62 Y'lts•of • or older

raids on Isfahan and Tabrlz. In
the two air raids on Isfahan,
" scores of civilians" were killed
or wounded, Iran's news agency
said.
Also Sunday, Palestine Libera·
tlon Organization Chairman
Yasser Aralat, warning ol In·
creased superpower nava l pres·
ence in th e Persian Gulf, pro·
posed an Islamic buffer for ce to
Impose a settlement In the war.

Iraqi jets also attacked the
Cy prus tanker Lady A above the
propeller. The attack started a
small fi re which was extln·
guished, but Lloyds reported no
casualties on board .
Lloyds also confirmed an Iraqi
missile hit an Iranian oil tanker,
the 138,000-ton Kharg 3, 20 miles
south of Kharg Island .
Iraqi warplanes · raided Isla·
han, Tabrlz, Mlandoab, Mlaneh,
Maragheh and Islamabad
Ghard, the Iraqi News Agency
said. Iran fired missiles late
Saturday at a "military center"
in Baghdad In reta'llatlon, the
agency satd.
Following the missile attack,
Iraqtw'arplanes staged more air

. Public Notice

• l1te ot R. 0 . 1, MlddJepor1,

.ICITIZENS!* I

taking aim at ships In the Persian
Gulf.
Shipping Insurers Lloyds of
London said Iraqi warplanes hit
the 163,173-ton Iranian shuttle
tanker Alamoot off the Iranian
port or Bushehr In the gull over
the weekend. The ship ran
aground.

Ill Co111t Sl .. P01111ray. Ohio .SJ6t

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

Is one or nine termed "critical."
The National Citizens Mo ve·
ment lor Free Elections said
soldiers brandishing firearm s
roamed around a schoolh ous~ in
the nearby town or Muntlnlupa,
frightening voters.
Scattere d vio le nce was
reported.
Three bombs exploded out side
a radio station. a church and a
bookstore In metropolitan Man·
!Ia befor e midnight Sunda ~,
shat tering windows but ca using
no injuries, pollee said .
,In the southern city of Cot a·
bato, a man was wound ed when a
grenade exploded on the roof of
his house, pollee said.
Pollee officials said a man and
a woman carrying 120 sticks of
dynamit e were arrested in the
·capital Sunday . Another 800
sticks or dynamite were seized In
a raid amid reports of a plot by
. supporters of Marcos to disrupt
voting.

PHONE 992-2156 .

'

•

Or Write O.iiiJ S..li11tf C&amp;nsilid Dtfl.

&gt;

-..::.:.:..:___~~"""''r--------'"T'-...;.____L_.=:;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::::!....J

-~-

FOR

By FERNANDO DEL MUNDO
after a clvlilan·mllltary revolt
MANILA, Philippines (UP!)- ousted Ferdinand Marcos, needs .
Millions of Filipinos voted on a a 51 percent majority for approdraft constitution today In a val ol the constitution, but she
crucial test lor President Co- hoped lor at least 70 percent to
razon Aquino's embattled 11· dispel doubts about her support.
month-old government.
The plebiscite came just lour
Scattered ballot box snatching
and military harassment were days after the end o! a n attemp·
reported during the plebiscite ted military coup, the most
voting that wllldecldewhetherto serious challenge to Aquino's
adopt a U.S· ·style charter giving leadership in a series or opposl·
Aquino a n automatic six-year .lion attacks.
term.
Election olflclals said a large
The military was on red alert, number of the nation's 25 million
the highest stat eo! readiness, but voters trooped to the polls. An 80
voting was generally peaceful at percent turnout was expected
86,200 election precincts, armed and authorities said those who
forces spokesman Col. Ho,nesto rafted to vote raced $5 fines and
would be banned !rom seeking
Isleta said.
Precincts were to close at 3 public office .
p.m. and countllng was to begin
Military authorities said MoS·
lmmediately.. ln the crucial pie~ lem separatists snatched 50
lscite, but full official result s ballot boxes In the remote town of
were not expected until the Build In the southern province of
weekend.
Lanao del Sur forcing cancella·
Aquino, who took ontce Feb. 25 lion ofvotlng there. Tbe province

The Daily Sentinel

10-B-tfn

Iran fires missiles at Iraqi capital

~=:;::====·=0=4=):':7:5:·:1:2:4:4=·===~~

Slinderella class conducts meeting

I

the observance of Tyson Evans'
bir thday .
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Frank of
Texas Road are annoinlctiig- the
birth of a son, Mathew Ryan.
born at the Pleasant Valley
Hospital on Jan. 23. They also
have a daught er, Sarah Beth.
Mrs. Charley Smith and Cha·
rles Knapp were Tuesday after·
noon callers at the home o! Mr.
and Mrs . Harley Smith, Kanauga. Mr. and Mr. Roy Smith
were also visitors there.
·:,.

Recent visitors or Mr. and Mrs.
Robert Bailey were Bill Zurcher
or Statton and Mrs. Carrie Owing
or Weirton
Mrs . Barbara Davis ad child·
ren, Ashli and Joshua, Mrs. J .R.
Murphy and Peggy were Satur·
day visitors of Mr. and Mrs.Jo.
seph Evans. Racine. The birth·
day of Jonathan Evans were
observed.
Mrs. Ida Murphy and Peggy
recently joined Mrs. Joseph
Evans and family of Raci ne for

..

Foctury Cholet
12 Gauge Shotgt111 Only

Filipinos voting
in
crucial
.
.
plebiscite for Cory Aquino

Wolf Pen area not.es

Chatter Club holds recent

••

Mrs. Atkins displayed an arrangement of velvet roses featur·
lng one with red bird accessories .
Evergreen slips to Identify were
displayed by Mrs. Woodard. Mrs.
Denison will host the next- meet·
ing with Margaret Parsons to be
the co- hostess.

Mrs. Woodard and Marcia Deni·
son furn ished flowers lor the
churches. Mrs. Diehl won the
traveling prlze furnished by Mrs.
Denison and will furnish the one
for next month. Plans were made
to remember president at the
Meigs County lnlirmary. ·

Plans for the observance of
11 was announced that on
·Compassion Month, February , March 13 and 14, the Cheese·
. and the. World Day· of Prayer man's Navaho Missionaries
were made at the recent meeting from New Mexico, will be In
of the Laurel Clill Free Metho· Columbus for a conference. Iva
dlst WMF held at the home of Powell had a reading on the
Kay Clark.
religlgus beliefs of Japan anll
Mrs. Clark had the opening how these can be turned tp
prayer and devotions were given Christianity . She also gaven an
by J anice Haggy who read • article on stewardship.
selections from Guideposts. Of·
Beulah Oehler will be honored
fleers' reports were given. Jean
as
a member In memorlum.
Wright read an . article on the
work of Dr. and Mrs . Bruce Refreshments were served by
Davenport who are serving In Bonnie Friend and Jan Haggy.
Africa. The Wrights are ac· 'The February meting will be bela
qualnted with parents of Dr . and at the home of Janice Haggy with
Eva Robson to have devotions.
Mrs . Davenport.

Calendar/happenings
:

•

The Oaily Sentinel- Page-&amp;
,

Ohio

Call: 742·2407

MO.

J.l&amp;-'17·1

0.

Real

BOGGS

SHIIPEitiiNG
SEIVICE

SALES &amp; SRVICE

CirCullr laws

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLI; OHIO
E. M•l••l.i!ll
POME~O-Y,

0.

992-2259
PRICE REDUCED - MORN·
lNG STAR ROAD - Here isa
beautilul ranch type home
with a lull basement, W.B.F.P
oo I acre of land, w~h plenty
of extra ~ Country setting in a
great netghborhood l NOW
$49.900.00.
POMEROY - 11h acres, n.ce
I lloor plan home w&lt;th car·
port. sheds and cellar. Gar·
den space and other featules. PRICED TO SEll AT
$26,900.00.
POMEROY - NICe I ~ story
home with vinyl sidtn&amp; 2·3
bedrooms, pa~ial basement
and equipged k~c hen . Just
SIO,OOO.O .
HYSELL RUN -Really nice
ranch with a gorgeous kit·
chen, huge lamily room with
lireplace, plus a tra iler hoo·
kup. All quiet and peaceful
on appro11 mately 20 acres.
$53,000.00
.

SElLERS RIDGE ROAD Approxima tely 150 acres of
vmnl land. 17 acres tillal·
ble, balance pasture and
woods. Electric a•ailable.
Drilled well, royalty income
and lree gas. Will split
acrease into separale par·
eels. $400.00 an we. Call
f01 mote information.
HYSEU RUN - A 14'x65'
mobi~ home with 2 bed·
rom1s, equipped inchen. and
in real aOOd cond~ion , lmmed·
late Pimession. $10,500.00.
Henry [. Clt!tnd, Jr.
H2-6191
Jun Trumll .. , . 949-26&amp;0
,Dottie Turner ..... 992-5U2
Offltt ................ 992-2259

SowCholn

Pl1ntr nlves

Drill Bho
Kntvn
Chlooto

Aut•ori•otl lohn D•ro.
Now Hdullf, luth Hog
Farm ft!tlipmtnl
Dooltr

GIIVELY
TIICTOI SIUS

F,,.
E41IP•••t ·
P1rt1 &amp; Set11l11

204C..... St .
,_.,, Ololo

PH. 992-297S

1·3-'• tic

Roger Hysell
Garage
lt. 124,

•-roy Ohio

•

1-15·'17· 11110.

Allllllitlll:t~tllt:nl : . .

3 Announcement•

AUTO &amp;TRUCK

·lcPl•no l••tont for begiMtn .~ CIII
far appa inlmtnt. Taught b¥
c:ollaga gudutte . 114 ·141·

Alu TtUUtiHI ..

-------·1•An Clo- . Tuetd'J and

REPAIR

PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

3080.

Thursday tor 1dutt1 and

..ur.

d.,. for und• tt• 11. CAM
14· ..... 3010 for mort lnfor.
m•tion . Outflntted, vou ' U
le... n.

e

-------·1•Pr..:loul MtmoriH llud'o. tp•

c:l•ll:r•• in portr•ltt. Oullltvwork
guarnte•d. CtU 81•·841·3010
for appointment. AtMOn•l•

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULA nON

prlc••

AKint Gun Shoot tponiOrMI by
A•c:lnt Gun Club. Every lund.y.
IJe91nnl"9 •• 1 ;00 p.m. Factory·
Choh. 1 2 guqt thotvunt . ...,

VINYl &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING
•lnaulttkm

•Storm Door•
•Storm WJndowt

4

GiVIIWIV

•RIPIMII'I'Mint WlndoWI

•Now Roofing
"P.IISt... IIS"

JAMES KEESEE

PH. 992-UU

••
,
••
MAIN STIED
PIZZA

222l.llallt,P-•J

1 month okl puppy. Mind.
bfetd. Pan Otrmtn lhiPh•d.
Ntedt room to run . Ctlf IU-

441·127t .

•

am... long.hllrtd ~"~~'" to;
otve twty. I wet«t old. Clll.

et4-992-7&amp;36.

•

PH. 992-2221
4 P.M. ·n111 P.M.
Sunday !llru Thurlday
Friday • Soturday
4 P.... 'Til 1:30 A.M.

PIZZAS. IllS
PIJIAIII~D

.

I· • 17· 1 ,..,

6

Loat and Found

- - - - -·•
L.wl : In Stlwnvttle .,... l.afl'

C-dot· 14,._,...,, Po1111ty '
poa. IAolro lllro L.atlt. " •• Chico. fl1- oa11 11¥11111_,

It f14·143·&amp;1te. LootJen.1t. •
.

' I

I

�..

P~meroy-- Middleport, OhiQ

' Page- 6--The Daily Sentinel

Monday. February 2. 1_9B7

·~·i6~L~o;st~a~n~d~Fio~u~n;d::~--------~LJ\-;.~F;F~-~~-;D~~~Y;---------~4~4::~A:p:ar:tm~en:t~~;F~5~1~H~o~u~se~h~o~ld~G~oo~d~s~-K-IT-,-N-'C_A_R_L_V_L!-®b~•-y_L_I_rr_y_W_rl-g-ht~----~~=r~7;2~T;ru~ck~s~f~n~r;S~al~e~
for Rent
Found At th e corner of Jrd &amp;
Ol•ve· Portable tgnthon system
(fron} back of red 4 " 4truck l. Call

Large apt Bt du piM house (] n
Main St Cho1t'lrre. 2 bdr ,
furnist'led Wat er patd Ce liS 14245-6818

Dave 6 14 -446-1018.
Ma le Oober'fflDn , has been mtsamg since Tuesday Vtcinity ot
Vine St Ca ll 614 -446 -9598

7

2 BR , 15 Court St. Carpeted
Kit chen furn 8350-montt'l Plus
ut1IIUes . depGsi t Ca ll 614·4464928

Yard Sale

Furni shed, newly deco rated. 1
BR , large enclos ed porch, t200
month Adults Sac. Oep. Ret' s
Call 814· 446· 2238 or 814·
446-2681 .

- -- Giillli&gt;olis
&amp; Vicinity

1 Bedroom basic rent &amp;176 00
plus electric Also required a
$200 00 •ecurtty deposit CON·
TACT . Jackson Estatet Dept . Ph
446 - 3997 Eq1.1al Ho ustng
Opportumty

ln!u de yard sa le 2 18 Th trd Ave
Fe bruarv 2nd 3rd. &amp; 4th 9- 4
Lots of goo dtes

9 - Wanted To 'luy
Old 400 series M ercury, 40-50
H P out board motors. operable or
for pa11s Ca ll 614 -446-7372

We pay cas h lor lat a mode l c lea n
used cars

Jtm Mmk Chev -Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
614 -446 - 3672

"Mom, may I let my friends
come in and watch you bake
cookies? They've never seen
a mother bake cookies
before."

2 Bedro(]m 11pt . nice carpotin(l,
water p1id washer &amp; dryer
hook-up, S1ova, roirt g furni1hed
available Jan 1, 1987 Ph
614 -446-7026
Fur ntlhed &amp; unfurmahed apt s.,
S160.00 an d up, refetencas Ph
304 -675· 7738 (] r 304- 6765104 A· 1 Real Estate

Furntshad apartment . neKt door
to llbrruy. One proteu 1onat adult
onlv Parktng Call 614 ·•46·
TOP CASH pa1d fDr '83 model L...----------,-----------~ 0338
an d newttr uted cars Smith r
Buick · Pontiac. 1911 Eastern
- - - -- - - - , - - ,- - Ave. Gallipol•s Call 614 446 - 18 Wanted to Do
32
M
b'l
H
Furmahed apt 919 Second.
2282 .
0 I 8
ames
Gall ipolis. S150 Utrhties pd
for Sale
Single male share bath 446·
4416 after 7pm.
Wan led to buy aton di ng timber
Call after 6 1514- 446 7524
Hart sho rn Mo bile Hom o Servtce
Deluxe downtown apartment·
&amp; Rapair. No JOb too small Day
1981 Oakbrook, 14x70 with
newly redecorated 2 bdr apt
Tra thtr lot m GaHtpohs vtcm tty
&amp; nigt'lt Sflrvlce Cell en ytrme
71112 e11pando, 3 BR , 2 batha,
wtth full insulatio n, C(]mplete
Call 61 4 446 -4466
614-446-6669
woodburner. e• con d French
kitchen , washer·dry er, au cond
City Brokerage Call 614·446- tundeck. Ca ll 61 4-446-4383·
BUYING RAW FURS! Gmseng,
Babystttmg tn my home. Call 9340
day1. 614· 446·0139 evemngs
Yellow Roo t beef and deer
614·446-9306.
&amp; weekends
hides Also aelltng rrap ping
Skyhne 14x 10. 3 bdr , gas, ---------------- 4
! upp ltes Wh ea1L11 es, Ntteltt e5
Will clean vour home or o tflcfl shmgled roof. house type aidmg
2 room turn1sl1od , upstairs apt
Last dfi'W to buy furs Feb 7th
anvtime Ple111se cell 614-256- French City Bmkorage Call
clean. no pou Adults Utilities
Ho urs 1 00 9 00 Clo5ed Wed. 1240
614·446·9340
furni shed Ref &amp; dep roqutred
George Buck ley 6 14 66"4-4761
call 614-446·1519
Wtll care for your children inyo1.1r
Buying dally go ld. stlv or com s,
home Day only Call614-992·
Mod ern 1 bedroom apartment
rmgs. J!Wiehy. slerl ing wan1. old
2428
Call 614-446·0390.
33 Farms for Sale
coins large currency Top pn
cos Ed Burk ett B.!n ber Shop, Wrll care tor eldMiy in their
F1.1rnishod apartm ent. 2 BR . nr ce
2 nd Ava Middleport Oh 614
home 304·676· 7298
location . Adult I only. No pets
992 · 3476
30 acre farm . t'la1 good home,
Calt 614-446· 2404
Will car111 for elderly person rn my large barn &amp; large pond .
Standing ttmber AI Tromm, home, 81tC care. phone 304 - Southwestern sc hool drs trt ct
Apartmenll for rent tn Pomeroy
614-742 -2328 .
675 · 7541 evenings
Call 614 ·246 ·6281 .
an d New Hav en Call 614 -992·
6059

\

I

i

II

l

Employment

!
I

11

I

I;

21

Help Wanted

AVON · WOw II Make b1g bucks
No procen mg c harge. Call
61 4 ·446· 3368

!

Avo n. Free Basic Kit Jan
28 Feb 8 Start nnw Earn ex tra
do ll ars C11 ll 614 · 446 · 2156,
446 ·4882

I
I
I

I

''

Financial

Se rvices

~ __

Need baby sl tt e r - ~ a tur e respon·
st ble penon. Bid well are11 only
,~, ~~ .•. C all 614 3B8-9862

5500 per waek 2 yellaw page
\t'". sales people needed Onlv tho se
wit t'! at le1s t one year sal e•
1•
e~tperience need apply. Ma1l
.Jt·.. re1u mes to box T-8000. care ot
lhe Galhpohs Daily Tri bune 826
~..,:
Th~rd Ave. Galhpol is. OH 46631
:· 1' '

r·,

Fi:~;;;

AIRliN ES NOW HIRING
"t tl ,.. Att &amp;nd ants Agents. Mechan1cs.
· ~ . , ... C1.1stomet Sfl rv•ce S11lanes to
S60K Entry level posltto ns Call
805-687-6 000 E11t A·9805 tor
currentlistin9s
---------------- lcGO V E ANMENT JOB S
5 16, 040-•59,230 vr Now Hirtnfl Call B0&amp; -687-6000 Ext.
A·9 805 for current federal list .

.,oJ '

Ttle Me1gs Loca l School Ott trict
ts cu rr ently accepting applic a·
rlons from individu11ls who may
be ln11uested In panicipatlon in 11
forty (401 hour cou rse leadi ng
toward• eertlf iu tion IS a Dnver
Ed11Catlo n Laboratory Atde. Ap plica nts mut t provtde evidence
of dr!ver insurability and a
Department of Motor Vehicles
check will bo m ade of Bppllcanu
dttver licenses Informat io n and
application• mBy be obtained
fr om the Meigs lo cal School •
Supermtendont ' s Offtce 1n Mid·
dloport. Ohio. 614-992 ·2163 .
8 a bysitter needed in my t-lome
tmmedunely for 3 8nd 6 year old
Srmd refarence 11nd wage1 •• ·
pectod to Deily Sentmel 8011
729l . Pomeroy, OtHo
8 abysiller needed in my home
Dfly shtfl Send expected pay
and RI!Jume 10 Dally Senttn el
Box 729W Pomeroy. Ohto
POSITIONS AVAILABLE S un·
lim tted urnmg potential S Sou ·
thens t1nn'1 linest most flllti t in g
new rec raati(]nal res(]rt 1sgetti~:~g
reAdy for the soas(] n of Fun
VA C t~t lon Recreatio n Now I'I C·
cepting eppllcations for followtng po11ltOn1 Secreterlal work ,
Recep tionist . Sales Penonnel.
Closert. Plenty of benefits w ith
week ly pay. If you are naat tn
appearance, energetic: and en·
thu siastic contact Mr Anth ony
1mmediatlyl Ct~ll Sa tu rday. Jan·
ua rv 30 tl'lru Tuesda'f , Febr1.1ary
3 110 am·6 pml at 614-992·
6488 t o schedule an
a ppo mtm ent.
Someone to c ore for elderly m
her home m Tuppers Plains
Room. bollrd end some pay Ca ll
even• nRt 61 4· 4•&amp;· 749:6 Bess
Webster
Avon represe ntatives wanted
No shtpptng cherge Fm mora
tnform•t mn c all 614 992
7 180
AVON , no service charge. o pen
t c rrltones , phone 304· 675 ·
H29
Be part of th e number One
Benu ty Comp•nv with AVON .
You earn 111 yDu learn Call
Marilyn Wea\ier . 30 4 882 ·
26 46
HIOH SCHOO l JU NIOR S AND
SE NIOR S Jom th e Army Na ·
tiona! Gu1rd now. begin eatning
a monthly paycheck. and deter
your active duty training until
June 1987. Part ·t1me lobs
30• · 675-3950 or 1 800· 6423619

12

Situation s
Wanted

Need roomm•t• to share half
utilities. hllf rent Call 614 · 379·
2896.
o rll Wanted, p•intlng, some
repahs, U . OO h(]ur , lulllt
Hugtte1. 304-678 -2120 night or
day .
·

- - 16

Schools
Instruction

Retrain Now. Soulhtutern 8u•·
ineaa College. C1ll 61-4 ·448·
"'• '387

Business
Opportunity

Good :no nay weakly Processing
ma~l informatmn . Rush selfaddressed stamped envelope
Terry lee, 131 A EurekA Star
Rl , Gollipolts, Ohio 45631 .
• 1000 00 per week net ·prolit
Un ique vending un11a wittll(] cations N1me brand rtems, Pop,
Candy &amp; sn1cks Investment
secu red w rt h mvant ory eq urp·
ment . C11ll Now at 816 ·741 ·
9298.
l NOTI CE l '
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO reco mmends ttlat you
do busineu with people you
hnow , and NOT 'to send money
lhrougt. tho mail until you have
tnvestigllted the otfertng

23

Professional
Services

Piano &amp; organ lessons . Mary
lu cas Ce ll 614 ·446 · 9787 or
614-446-4426.
Guitar tenons Call 814-388·
8436.
Starks Tree a nd hwn Service.
Hedge s . shrubl , bushes
trtmm ed. landscaping. tt1.1mp
and leaf removal. 304 676·
2842 or 576-2010.
Julia's Personal C.,e Hom e.
Clition, W Va Femlly business
11nc:o 1959. Ht~ve vacan cy for
elderl'!l pattent 304·773 -6873 .

Rea l Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Beneficial ha• accupted votun
tary repo neuion of a hou se In
Addison, Ohio 3 bdr., kit chen,
bath. attte, dining Area. &amp;
in . be sement garo~ge Priced
below marktl value &amp; negotta·
ble Contact Du1ne Clltworttly
at Beneficlll ot Oh io. 614-446·
2766.
3 bdr .. close to town 2 beth l
firep lace, eenrral air. Cit'!l school
dimlct . Cell614· 245-5281 .

-:----- - - ---lcG(] vernment ho mes from t 1 (u
repalrj , Oelin quent tu property
Reponeuions. Call 806 .8876000. EAt . GM ·98051arcurrant
rep(] hs t.
3-4 bedroom house near sc hool
and ho!'l pital Pr lctd to sell.
023,000 Ca ll 614-992·6060.
2 b• . kitc hen, bathroom, with
laundry room. living room &amp;
dining room. ell alee Approx 7
m1le1 from Pt . PI on At. 82. 2
trae1t approx. 1 acre more orleu
ovarloolung Kant~wha River .
$40,000. Call 304·675·6440
between B 30 and 4:30.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

35 Lots &amp; Acreage
2 V~ acres of bottom land,
appro11 . 5 mt les so uth of Eureka
o lf old Rt . 7 Good home site
Call614·256-1174

98 ecre s on black top road 1 rt11l e
from Recine, two prod ucing gas
wells, w ater and electric avai la·
ble. C11t between 9 00 am and
2 :00pm only. 614-949·2877
Aahton buildtng lots, mobil e
t'lomes permitted, Clvde Bowen.
J,, 304-676-2336

Rental s
41

Houses for Rent

3 DR. unfurn 'ed houte. tv roo m
wrth fp, 1 bath, 1 / 2 mile past
Holzer Medical Center on Rt 35 .
$350 / mo nth. Dep . :6 Ref.
R•q 'ed. Call &amp;14-441= 4389 or
304 676-9780
2 hedioom
446 -2589.

&amp;26 0 Ca ll 614-

NEW AND US ED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, ·RT 36
PHONE 81 4· 441-7,2,74.
14• 70 Flee~ood 3 Bdr., 2 full
bath I. tolllelec. likt new , price
negotl1blt Clll 1fttr 4 wetk·
dl'f l , 1ny1lme Wltklends . 8 1··
388-8633

Ono bedroom furn ts hed apart·
menr in Pomt Pleasant, all
electric: Adu lts only No pets.
Call after 4 p.m., 304-675
3788

45 Furnished Rooms
Furnished ro(]m. $1 1 5 Utilities
pd St(]ve, rof , single male
Share bath 91 9 2nd , Gellipolrs
446·4416 after 7PM

Rooms for rent. day week
month Gallia Hot el Call 614·
446· 971 S Re nt u low as $120
month

Nice 3 BR houae $360 plus
utilites !. .tee. depO!Iit. Call
614 -448 - 9280 111181 5 &amp;
weekends

53

Anti(lue dming room set; table,
c hina closet. &amp; buffe'l 70 years
old Sotid oak Call 614· 388·
9960

54 Misc. Merchandise
Tree &amp; Stump removal. stone. frll
drrt , trrewood pickup $46 ,
Dump S96 Heal' vouchers
D(] n's land sca pes Call 614446 -9646
1969 Ford V-8, pickup truck ,
runs good Bottle gas turnace for
tra1 lor,. good cond. Call 614·
388· 8473 .
40 gallon gas water hea ter. hke
new . Price neg Dtiable Call614446-9346.

Mobile home fremes. 56ft long
Includes wheels &amp; a~~: las ft8t1ch
C1ty Mo brle Homes Call 614446-9340
Half prtcel Flashing arrow signs
$2891 lighted non - arrow
82791 Unlighted 8239• Free
lenersl See locally Call today !
Fact ory 11800 ) 423 -0163,
anytime
7 HP concrete frntther S500 Call
614·379-2616
1000 It of cherrv lumber Call
after&amp; 614-256 -1372
Coats 20· 20 trre changer &amp; XL
12 Homelne chainsaw. Haa 1 6 II
20 Inch blades. Used very little.
Call 5 ·7AM 81 11fter 6PM
614-246-6636 .
Callahan's Used Tire Shop OvRI'
1,000 tires, si res 12 , 13, 14, 16,
16, 16 .5 B m1les out Rt . 218.
Call 614-266· 6261 .
Plesttc ctslern Ua te approved,
plutic •eptic t.tnks, plasti c
culve rt a. metal culverts RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jaek!IDn Ott 614. 286 -5930
F ~rew ood

46 Space for Rent
Ofhce Space fo r Rent Excellent
for Anorn oys, Accountant, etc
Close to Cou rt House Ca ll
Wi se man Real Estate A ~ency .
614· 446-3644

Antiques

tarsa le Call614-986·

4484
Visa-Mas terca rd Get your c ard
today I Al so now credit card, no
one refu1edl Call 1-6 '18-4593546 E11t C 13850 24 t'loun

COU NTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy .
Rental trail ers Call 614 992 ·
7479

Grom fed freerer beel. Ro y Van
Meter. Call614·949 2514

2 bedroom. furniahed hou se for
re nt No peta. New Haven.
304-882 2466

Spece for Rent Trat ler spaces
locust Rd Rt 1 Point Pleasant
304-676· 1076

Childrens play house Wrndows
and doors Orrgtnally S1 41 , wm
sell for S5 0. 19 13 an hque settee
$50 . 614-992-696&amp;.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Merchandise

3 8A mobrle ho me. large yard.
cll v sc hool. 31' Jrd St. Ka·
nauga. Call 614· 446-7473.

51 Household Goods

t160 per month . t160 dep(]llt.
12x60 furn is hed plus utilities.
Raccoo n Rd Call 614 ·4469346

Molloh an Furniture Rt 7 North
Gallipol is, OH PH . 614·446 ·
7444 Why pay mo rel Check ua
out lor low prices on furn iture &amp;
applian ces 6 piece W(]Od liv ing
roo m group, U99 .

Conven ient location -upper Rt.
7 Ntce 3 Bdr., partiall y fur·
n11hod W11ter paid, no inside
pets Call 614 245 6818.
Mobtle f1ome. fur n11hed. WaJher
&amp; dryer In Centen11ry area 5210

USED FURN ITUR E Sota. ucel·
lent condit ion. coffee tabl e, soltd
maple cornlf ca binet. Corbin &amp;
Snydet' Furnit ure, 955 Second
Ave Gallipolis 614·446 1171

a month Call 614-U6· 2390
Bulavrlle Ad I 160. 12x.60
newly dec. t 160 / month. 8100
Depo1i1. Water p11id Ret . Call
614 448· 3888 t~ltar 6 4464491.
2 bdr , all utilities pa id excep t
alec , furn or 1.1nturn , sec
depoSit req1.1ired. Convenien t
location Call814 446·8668 or
614-446-4778

3 bedroo m mobile home for rent
near Chesh rre. Call 8U-367·
7148.
Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Rou1t\ lana On nice spot in
Cheahire. 304-773. 6828

New couc h &amp; matc hing cha ir
Cell 614 ·448-3897 or 614
446-2316
GE Was her for sale. Call 614·
446-0026 ah er 6.

:wF~~NITURE '

AUCTION
82
Olive St .. Gallipohs New &amp; used
woDd ·co11 lstovea 6 pc wood LR
suite 1399. bunk beds 8199,
reclin ers new &amp; uud bedroom
sui tel . wnnger wuhers. &amp;
s hon . New hvm groom swtes
S199·15 99 . lamps. Call 614
446-3169.

Split firewood for 1ale Oak,
Htckory. Waln ut $15 a PI Ck·up
load Call 6 14 -74 2· 2182

Unw a nted Ad s 1982 - BHP
Kohler walk behind gravely wttt'l
mnwer. Sulkey and sno w blade
E•ce ll ent con d $1696 L ModalGravely with mower and SUikey.
Runt {!Ood 8596. Baum Lumbar
Co 614-986· 3301
Mr11ed hardwood slabs . $12 per
bundle. Contoining approx. 1v~
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet Co
Pomeroy. Ohio Ca ll 614 -9926 461 .
l(ingwood Stove . s 175 . 00 .
304·&amp;76 -2700
Firewood. t2 6. ptckup toad Not
Delivorad. 304·675-1771
4 petrs 110rm Wtndows, 6 p11rrs
lcreenl for casemant wrndows.
bar &amp; 4 Uoa la for famt ly room.
larg~t bookcase, 1 6 qt . Jar for
tmokln g hams. 304·676· 4563.
Fuel oil tank &amp; used 'gll!l furnace
" like now " 30' ·875-3000

2 bedroom tr11ler, couples. 1
tmt~ll child. Lo cust Rd At 1, Pt .
Pl .. unt. 304·676· 1 076 .
2 bedroom mobile home on
Ashland Upton Road , $125.00
month plu s utilitlaJ, 304-&amp;76·
4088.

44

One bedroom apartment in Point
Pleuant Very tie., and nlc..
H11 wuher dryer kook-up.
Adults only No pat.t. Phone
304-115· 1400
AP.-RTMENTS, mob411 homn.
houttt. Pt. PlaMintenct Gtlllpollo. 814· 448-8221 .

0
55 Building Supplies
81.1ilding Supplies Closeoult·
Buyouts· Surplus 11) 4 ' xB 'xil'l' '
Yellow pine rough sawed T 1· 11
srding S10 99 e1. 26 pc. up
•9.99.(2)4' x8 '11¥i" Yellow prna
rough sawed T 1· 11 siding
•6 .99 ea. 26 pc up 14 99 (3)
4'118'xW' T&amp;G plywood ,
t10.95 aa, 14) 4 'x10'x,A " ply·
wood . t16 95 e1. (6)•'x8' x. 1/4"
Lu•n plywood. $6.99 ea. 16)
•·x.e • all wood paneli"'J. Wood·
grain1 &amp; prints. 17 96 aa
Secondl $6.99. 171 Masonite
Mlrllle planks 18" wide 96"
long paneling. T&amp;G Second1
U .60 aa 181 4' 18' Merlite bath
panel embo11ed in • " ~t4 " block
87 96 and $8 95 et 191 4'x.B'
Foil faced foam ln1ulation board
{W' th1c11 t4 99 tal PA''- $6 991
11 ''·86.69) 11 0)-48'' Vamty with
marble top tHI.95 . (11) 30"
Vantty wtth marbl e top t79 96
(121 6 p1eca high gloas tub
andosura kit U991!1 113) 5 '
tempered glau sliding tub
doors . aluminum finish, t49.!M
or $39 95 with purchase of tub.
11•1 Single door med. cab.
plutic bo11 , steinletl ateel
frame 819.95 ea. l15) 1 and 2
piece frberglau tub and shower
combrnation . Colms &amp; wt'llle.
$12996 to 119995 ea 6
percent discount on 2 ptece &amp;
up. {1 6) 4 piece solid oak towel ·
bar set t19 96 11 7) Prefini•had
oak bruCe tlooring 3A"II2W'
Random lengJh• .95 sq. tt. 10
c t n up $1 .76 tq. ft . 20 sq. fl
pr. c.t.n. 118) Prehung steel
rnsu lated doors $69.96 ee. (19)
Pine panel doon 839 96 to
869.95 B grades (201 Double
sidelight entrance doors 'h gl11ss
lh penal 1299.96 e• 1211 6'
Double entr1nce doon, 'h gl1u
v, panel $3•9 .96. 1221 Prehung
rnlertor doors. trnished &amp; unfin rshad. Choice sizes t34 .96 ea.
(23) Wood Ar plutic shunars
from 31" to 80" t9 96 to
$26.95 pr (241 all wood screen
door1
$12 . 95 ea . (26)
1 '!.r. "x3 6" x80" wh1te storm
doors. insulated foam filled .
S89 95 1261 Countertop piastre
60 cent11q. ft. (27) Vinylarding
trrm 5 colon 112' J channel
511 .50) (10' inside corner
$3 001 (10 ' outside corner
$4 00) (28) 12"x12" plain
white ceiling tile 26 cenu ea or
s• piece ctn
50 129)
2•" x48" acoustu:al embosted
f1re restatant ceiling panels
t2 35 ea. (30) Cloteout while
CRitmg gr1ds (12 ' main tee 51 50
ea.ll4 ' tee 50 cents ea.) Penn's
Warehouse. Wellston, Ohio .
614-384-36•6 Open 8 -5. 8
dav•

61 Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S 35 W•t. Jlck•on. Ohio.
614-286-6451 .
Meuey Ferguson. New Holland.
Bush Hog Sites &amp; Service Ovar
40 used tractors t(] choose ft'om
a complete line of new &amp; us&amp;d
equipment Largest aelection In
S .E Ohio

62 Wanted to Buy

.,6

Burldtng Meteritls
Block, brick, sewer p1pes. wrn·
dows. llntelt. etc. Claude Wmters. Rio Grande, 0 . Call &amp;1•246 -6121
Concrete blocks all sizes yard or
delive ry Maton send Gallipoht
Block Co., 123% Pine St ..
Gal lipolis, Oh1o Call 614-446·
2783.
Pole Burldings by Quality
8urlders Workshops , carports,
ammai shelter~ , gerages. Free
estimates Phone 8 1·· 384 5762

56

Pets for Sale

Mmrature P1nsche r pu pp teJ.
AKC Registe red red. black 61an
Had shou. wormed, ta1ls cut
Call614·423·8071 .
Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA Hrmalayan Pen1an 11nd
Siamese kiltens AKC Chow
P"'PP•es. Call 614-4•6· 38•4
after 7PM
6 month old registered, malo
leopard ker and Mountain ker
crossed, 304-8915· 3883

59 For Sale or Trade
1986 Ford 4114 260. 4spd . . 300,
8 cyl , long bed. step bumper,
Ext11 t'leavy duty low miles.
Uke new conditton Will take
oth• truck. good condilion. on
trade. Munsell Call 81• · 3889080.

I drill SllilPii l:s

(). Livestoc k
61 Farm Equipment

8:00 8 CD CIJ 8 CIJ ® Ill G2l
1!11 Newo
C1J Big Volley
I1J Moz~a Sportslook
lill (!) Jefleroons
® Squaro One TV
(J]) Secret Citv
@ Faota of Life
8:05 (I) New Leave It to Beever
8'30 8 CDIIJI NBC News
I1J SportsConter
(I) llJ ({) ABC News
lill (!) Hogen's Heroes
® Ooctor Who •
® Ill G2i CBS News
(j]) RHdlng Rainbow
ill) WKRP In Cincinnati
5,35 (I) S.Ofo at Home In Stereo
7,oo G CD PM Magazine
C1J Hardcoo11e and McCor·

-lli-

1979 Ford Cuatom van . Ex.

large round bales of hay to rule.
•10.00 each Ph. 814 -446 ·
1062.
Hay for sale, mi11ed. $1 00 to
$1 26 bale 30•· 896·3460

Trans port at llln
71

about three of hts recent

WII~T

1980 Trans-Am; new V-8 en·
g1ne. no ru•t. 9 tns•de. 8 outside.
Auto., PS I PB, a1r, stereo, CB.
not hot-rodded. well moin ·
t1ined. ~skrng t4900. or best
oHer or trade for 4 to 6
passengvr 4 wheel drive. 69 to
73 must•ng conven1bleorwh1t·
have -you Cali614· 4•8-27,6 .
1978 Lincoln Mark IV Oe•lgner
Edition. new engine. complete
new Interior. e~~:haust. tires,
brakes, alternator, battery, PS,
pump, control module, water
pump , etc No rust Asking
t2. 000 Beat offer or trade for 4
or 5 Plltenger, • wheel dnva, or
what -have-you. 3 t~ppra l salt of
c ar for S3200 before p1int
scratched by vandall. Nothing
todav. wrtl pull camper as well or
in clatsic comfort. Call 6U446-2746 _
1984 Chl\ly Chevette. • spd .
AM / FM / tape, w ire rims, Clth
price $2199. John 't Auto Sales.
Bulavtlla Rd .. Qalhpolia. OH
1981 Voikswagon Rabbit l , fuel
inJection. S·speed, loaded! low
mileage . Call 614-448-3643
d.ty. or614-446-2262 evening.
1974 Chevy Caprice, good
cond Runs good. Auto • PS. P8.
614-446-1622
1912 Votkawegen needs so me
work- UOO o r batt offer. Call
614· 4•6·8461
1979 Ford ltd. Good con d.
B2.000miles All power, $1600
nego l. Call 614-246 -5878

the Cays," "Cosey at lhe
Bat" and "Johnny, Apple-

FRA.NK AND ERNEST·

•
~T~Hw[~~~~----------~

OF THINGS
INC.

Auto Parts

1983 Ford Elcort. 4 apd ,
AM ·FM tepe, wire rima. c•sh
price t21 99 JDhn 's Auto St~lt~ s .
8ulaville Ad Gallipolis
1979 Hond• Civic, 4 spd .
re -built motor, m•chlntng bv
Jet 's, like new r1d l..s. near
perftct rnterlor. ne1r ptftect
bocf't-needs plint t1400 ~ in ·
veat..t. Taking offers. Call 814·
441-2308.
1987 C1maro. Rtttored Mlkt
oH.,_Coli 814-912-8822-

' 73 Nova, 33,000 miiM. 8 cyl.
A.P.S, 4 door. ltcond own.,,
v•·blk '""· ouso.oo_ 304·
875·1314.
'81 M•cury Lyn.t, AM -FM tte'""· 2 doo•. $4,000.00 Good
cond, 304-871·1921.
' 79-Cemero, t1 . 100. ; '8 1 ·
C1mero. 12 .000. 304-871!1 ·
3302.

'77 Ch"' C"-• pick up.
lfl•p. topper. '71 Monte C1rto,
10,000 mi,_ IIU 304·
871-5281 .
'75 Chovy M -. UIO.OO.
304-178-7641.

Bur"(ou vUSi

less husband (80 min I
f)) (!) MOVIE: 'The Pope of
Greenwich Village'
® MacNoii·Lehrer Nowohour
(j] Ill (jJ) Keto &amp; Allie (CCI
While Chip and hiS froend

ALLEY OOP
BUT I THINK ONCE
THE INITII'.L IMPACT
WEAASOFF

HE'LL BE PLEA!;ED

W1TH THE NEW SET-UP!

Louis build a plastic rocket
model. Kate, Allie, Jennie
and Emma have a major

f_illht.

(j]) W011dorworko:

Hecto(o
Bunylp (CCI In this Austrehan film, a foster child
with an a&lt;:tive imagination
creates his own special
friend . (60 min.l
@ Hogan's Heroea

Home
Improvements

TAKE 1l6FEAIN ..
rr taSkl'T KILL PAikJ...
.. .IT BUILDS
CHAAACTER

I CPIST Br&lt;£A1l-l£...
~ f.l(AD IS R:XJOOtOO.. -

ll-1€. PAl~ IS I~TEtVSE ...
1

u::e:o

y

REL.I£F. .-

SWEEPER and sewing machine
r11pair. pans. and supplies. Pick
up and delivef"tl, Oavi• V1cuum
Cleaner. one half mila up
Georgea Creek Rd Call 61444&amp;·0294

7

i

AqAIN~

L-1 FE HAD L.OST IT5 Ft.AVOR ...

WAS TOO

AND MY CA'-.LLJSES
WERE GETTIN£:r

MUSHY.

HARD.

love story aJCplores the un·
likely 1econd marriage of e
proper grandmother to 1
former alcoholtc who ha•
been divorced seven times .

® &amp;l

(l2l Newhart (CCI
Dick has his hand• lull

RINGLES. 'S SERVICE , allptrlenced c1rpenter. electrlcltn.
muon, Plinter. rooting (lnctud·
ing hot tar t~pplicationl 30•·
876-2088 or 876·71•7

when he must cure Joanna's fear of eye doctors
and patch up a misunder·

Rotarv or cablt tool drilling.
Most wells co mpleted same day.
Purnp 11111 and servll!e. 30•895-3802

Ufi·· CHOP TH'
WOOD fiN' SCRUB
TH' FLOOR·· CLE'AN
OUT TH' Pf\NTRV

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

standing between Stephanie and George.
(j]) American Ptoyhouoe:
Wide Not In this ldsptstlon of a work by Eudota
Welty, a young couple'&amp;
problems disrupt • Millil·
~pl town . (60 min.l
9:30 (I) College Baokotboll:
Oe•ld10n ot Maroholl 12
hll.l
[D
~ Ca•en1ughs
10:00 • (!)Odd Couple
[D
~ Cagney ·• Locoy
(CC) AI Chrlo 1nd Maty
Beth lnvoatig1to tho myotorloua dooth of 1 17-yoarold bukolball o1or. Mary
Bath worrloo eboutthololl
of t f1mlly h1irloo!" when
her homo Ia burglarized.
(80 min.)

·· MEND

PAW'S
SOCK

AN'· ·

CAr.TER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cot Fourth and Pine
Galhpolrs, Ohio
Pllorte 614·446·3888 or 614·
446· 4477

e
e

General Hauling

Dillard Water Service . Pool•.
Sitternt. Wells. Del+very Any·
time. C1ll 614-441 ·740•.

(j]) ~-Itch

10:30 (I) 1111 Coolly lhow
• (!) INN Nowo
(j]) Oulo • Ruby: Hell Fire
God uka 1 tato•loion ovangoliat to aproad the truo
word of God .

W1ugh 't Wat• Service. Well1,
cltterns. pools. Seme d1v dehv·
ery. Call 81.(· 2&amp;8· 1240
J•mes Boyt Water Service. Alsq
pool• tllled 1 Calll14-2158·1 at
or 614-440· 1175 o• 814-448)
7911

HouN coli. 0111\/et"ld 1 ton 1nd
up. Jim Lanllf, 304·1715·1247
.. 875-7397.

B7

IDl New•

tlllm01...

mlck

PEANUTS

11J A,.m,.'l Cup

MOW ASOOT
SALUTATORIAN?

Mowrty' t Uphotlt.... tervin;
trl county arM 21ye~r 1 . Thtbest
In furniture uMolltering. Ctll
304 · 171 · 4154 -lor hu

t

10:31 ()) Block Hie tory Month
Speolal E•ploro block imagu in tho entartsinmont
media. (00 min.)
11:00 • rn CIJeiD&lt;me~
i!JNIWI
(I) HerdCIIIIe 1nd MoCor·

OQ

...

Upholstery

A • M Cu.tom Cauch11 ind
AIYphotstery, St. At , 7 . Crown
Clly. Oh. 814-258-1470. Evo.
814-441-:1438. Opon doilyl1o
4'30. .... . ,30 1o 1.30. bid.
new Uphosterld

Stereo

[D Ill (jJ) My Slater Sam
(CCI Sem gels tho runeround when she tnes to ob-

College Bukotboll:
North Carolina State at D•
Paul (2 hro-1
9:00 II (]) 1!11 MOVIE: 'Convicted: A Mothe~o Stoty'
(CC) In Stereo.
C1J 700 Club
11J College Baako1ball:
Georgetown at St. John'•
(2 hro.l L•ve.
(I) D CIJ MOVIE: 'Single
Baro. Single Man' (CCI
(f) My Mother Married Wilbur S1ump Thla bitt&amp;rlwttt

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
r-~~----___;--,
YEAH ... IT

twrittng sptder p lant. In

ken new headphones.

i

YOW'RE
A B U L--L-Y

writer becomes a huge sue·

cess. thanks to hia scrip·

@

•

All typn carpenter &amp; concrete
wotk: Interior, e•terior, remo·
dttl!ng, paintlrt9, roofing , tree
utrmates. Ca\1614·448-6174

Eagl"'
8:30 II CD (IS Amazing Storloa
(CC) A struggling comedy

tain a refund for Patti's bro-

it

FTM Qener•l Contracting 13yrs
experience. Roofing &amp; · Constructi(]n Ph . 614-388-9308
Free astin;1ate1 10% off during
the holidays, offer "'Pires Jan
15. 1987.

W•Heflon 'a Water Hauling;
r11aonebl• rat•. immediate
2.000 g.alon dtllvtry. cistern•.
paola, well. etc. Clll, 30•·&amp;78·
2818.

IL.....J_..l._J.....JL-..l.-l
_

.

_

_

.

the chuckle quolod

by fdlin g in the missi ng word•
you dev e lop fro m step No 3 Qelow.

~s

YESIEIDAY'S SCIAMoii1S

~NSWEIS

Delloon - 0r1J1t - Indue ., Nation - DIRECTION
It aeemallka an eternity when you are looklnJI for a freeway
ex" when you're headed In lha wrong DIRECTION.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

A lead not made
is revealing

.AK2

By Jame~ Jacoby

tg7612
+6 2

NORTH
• J 62

1-1-17

EAST
Even beginners realize that a de· WEST
+3
fender's openmg lead reveals much +9 7 ~ 4
.JIOIU
about the hand, thus helping the de- • 4 3
+Q3
darer to make good play decisions ' +K J 6 &gt;
+A9874
But dedsions in the play should also be + K Co 3
influenced by what the defender falls
SOUTH
+A K Q 10 I
to lead.
•Qn
Against four spades, West led the
+A 10
four of hearts. South could count nine
+Q
J5
tricks and needed a club trick for his
lOth. So he won the king of hearts in
Vulnerable. Neither
dummy and played a club to his queen
Dealer South
and West's king Back came another
Nartb E ..l
•heart. A second club was oow played. W011
' East won the ace and gave his partner
2+ Pau
a heart ruff_ Since declarer still had to Pa..
Pass Pau
Pass
lose a diamond, the contract was set.
Declarer's play would be nght
Opening lead: • 4
whenever West held bolh the ace and
the king of clubs, but was wrong under
the present circumstances. Declarer
would do well to ask what he himself leads, and then playing a second hurt
would lead as West if he held the ace to dummy so that he can lead up lo btl
and king of clubs. The answer, of club Q·H. By getting back lo dummy
course, is the club king from A-K, just with a third heart lo play clubl onee
to take a look at dummy. After the again, he makes his game-golnc trick.
heart opening lead, it was a fair deduction that West did not hold both A new book by James Jacoby .ad /Iii
high club hono1'11. Therefore, Soulh father, the late Oswald Jacoby, u now
should play more cautiously by win- eva/lsb/e at bookstores. It 18 "JM!Oby
nlng the heart in his hand, drawing . on Card Games," published by I'MTOI
trumps_ even though it takes four Books.

8:05 ill MOVIE: 'A Gathering of

EEK &amp; MEEK

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un condilion•l lif.. ime guarantee. lactl references furnished
Free ettim11et. C•ll collect
1-6,..·237-0488, diV or n~h t.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

85

7:35
8:00

bers Of a crime synd1cate
led by the woman 's ruth -

Se rv1 ces

B2

7:30

seed". !60 min.l
®Nowo
(j]) MacNeil-Lehrer Nowshour
&amp;l (jJ) 1!11 Wheel of Fortune
@ Berney Miller
(I) Sanford and Son
II (%) ell Nir- Newlywed
Game
lill (!) Too Close for Com·
fort
D CIJ Judge
® Wheel of Fortune
Ill G2l (jJl Jeopardy
illl Jeft.raons
(I) Honeymooners
II CDIIJI A.L.F. In Slereo.
C1J Father Mutphy
lU Ill Cll MocGyvar ICC)
MacGyver and a woman in
labor are trapped by mem -

Budget tr1n1mis11ons UIBd &amp;
rebuilt 111 type•. Torque converters A tranafer cuet Engine
over haul kh•. Allison Transmis·
tin pans •nd eve joints. 30 day
to 1/frntme w•rrenty.
Wrtl
deliver, cash and catty or ln•tall.
Call 814· 379-2220. or 2688- •
6877

Fetty Tr•e Trimming, stump
removal Call 304-676·1331 .

7'05

~O(C~Y, BUMf&gt;U~,

.::t:'l\1

DoN'T FIT IN Ht:~e.

&amp; Accessories

1970 Chevelle 327. 4 spd .. new
pamt It tires. 48,000 miles
83196 or best offer Call 614448-8201

1982 Buick Riviera, Grey whh
power Hill, air, PS . PB , tilt ,
eru•se. delay w1pert, •s,ooo
mrles. S7800 Cttl 81 4 --446·
4223

DID l

•

RON ' S Television Servica
Mouse c1ll1 on RCA , Ouaur,
GE Speciel ing in Zenith. Cell
304-678· 2398 or 614-446·
2454

1 97' Buick Apo llo Good wor k
car S596 1980 Plymouth
Volare. Good cond. C1ll &amp;14
446·8201

film projects.
lill (!) M'A'S'H
Iii CIJ Peoplo'o Court
® Wonderful World of
Disney: Four Fabulous

1988 Honda XR6DOR, t1760
1981 Hond1 XRIOOR , t676
1983 K•wauki l TO 750, Stoltdrlve. t1376 C1ll 614· 927268

01 d s - Pontiac -Bui ck - Chevy.
Ch!Wy truck. Ul ed· el.ltomatic
360. transmisstons .• FMX· C• 6
Chrysler. Guarenteed. Call 6, 4·
446-0966.

I

GIRUEF

1--r=l~~:..:...r.l,-;-1::.,;17-l O Complele

Brave Engineer" (Casey
Jones). "The Martins and

1981 Honda 600 . Good cond
S400. Call614·258· 12'0

81

--...

Char11cters Four ammated
tales are featured: "The

74 Motorcycles

76

One thing you should _.say
without thinking twice: "II WOI'H
comea to worse. you can alwaya

.

Actor Gene Hackman talks

Autos for Sale

1978 Ford Thunderbird, IOMted,
e11c C(]nd. in11de &amp; out , one
owner Ct~ll 614- 388 -8613
Btwn 8 AM &amp; !S PM

r_ I I' I' I _

-r-S_,I,..:.S.,;.S...;WT--11 ,
1

(I) En1ertolnment Tonight

1979 Chevy Luy 4114, ltft krt ,
good tirea, chrollle whttels, ron ·
bar, fog light1, run1 &amp; looks
good. Coli 814-379-2282.'

Hay &amp; Grain

I~11111

I

2

nolo a1 Ohio State 12 hra I

1985 Ford Ranger 4x4 Many
e•trat, 59300 or t1 000 &amp; take
over payment• ~ Call after 6pm,
614· 446-4786

'83 Ford Ranger, • ·wheetdrrva
304-675-7942

WOit

PUULII

·

Live.

1977CJ -6JeopwlthhOrdtop&amp;
good heater, winch. 63,000
miles, new tires '&amp; header pipes.
VB motor. new pei'nt last
1ummer. ex.ceRent condition.
will trade for sm•ll car. C1ll
614-367-7101 .

Hillsboro 16 ft dump goo1eneck
grain trarler, 13.500 00. 304·
767-8677

64

mick

....

TIIA1 DAIL1

11J Coiiego Bliketboll: 1111·

c(]nd,
7844.Calllrll Jewett, 614· 367·

'86. S10 truck. 4 wheel drive.
V· 6, PS. PB . AM ·FM cauetta,
18,000mlles, $7,000.00 After
6·00 coli 304-675-6843

2010Jolln DaertdiettHrectorplowt, disc t39150. New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower 1485. Let• I~::::-::::---:---:::---:--:--­
model 2241 John Deere bal• 1181 Chrysler Fifth Avtnut.
11291. Ht~y wqon 13()0. C11 With all toyt 33,000 miiM.
814-288-8522.
$8100. MuotNII Coll814·192·
2801 .
UTILITY BLDG SPECIAL
27' x38'JC9; EAVE with •lldlng 1979 Mercury Cout• XR 7, low
dOOr &amp; ••rvict door t4.218.00 mhtlae. t2. 100.00 Call 30'·
erected.
175-1441.
Iron Hor.. Buildings Ph.614·
332-B741.
1110,!21, 310 V-8 , T-toP.IUIO
trt~nt, PS, P8, m~g whMI•. new
Ford pic:IJ-up disc for trector. Call tires, etc 304-875-1392 lftlr
114-446-1004.
5'00-

W. VL -

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

1876 lnternation811 Scout, 4JII4,
30•·882·3237 after 6.00 PM.

,978 Datsun. Runs good. 1&amp;2!1.
1979 Pinto. Runt good, body
rough. U26. C1ll 114· 2474212.

7U1 .

73

Now buying shell corn or e•
corn Ct~llfortetest quotes Rrver
City Farm Supply, 614· 446·
2986

•1

White Farm TrHton, hat Price
In ArM. lid. . -.,lpm.nt Co,

peece ft:esly71"

•

r~;~;;~~~;,~;r-~~~~~~~~~~1

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

"They're fighting about how to word the

-'

."

.u M E A R N

EVEN!NQ

'73 Chevy half ton, fiar cond.
304-676· 2226 .

C11Nh,.,.,""'

MOTOR CAR IR~~ERS. 11.
Rt 110 North of Hol•er Hosp.
Gallipolis. Ohio, 81'·"8-8112
or 44•4122. 8eeu1forallyour
livHtock lnd horlltreller nMdt.
Alto. in 11oclltMI flit bede 101'
pickupt 1M ton truckl. P &amp; H

1 bedroom apt In Hende r1on for
rent. 304-871!1· 1972 after 6.

2/2/87

For sala: 1973 C-65 Live Tandum long frame. C.llll14· 1986631 .

JIM ' S FAAM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . lA 35 W. OaMipollo.
Ohio Call 814-448·1177. 1110.
814· 448-3192- Up lnNn ,..,_
tort with warranty OV« 40 Ulld
tr-=tors, 1000 10011.

Apartment
for Rent

.A+l-'*1-AH H~•1H H...

1964 F·160 Fo•d. 300. 8 cyl
3-tpeed 00 . C Chancey.•614192-6668.

New one m1n uw mill. po rtable
hi·preu1.1re w11her 11nd sand
blute r. Phone 304-676 .6357
aher 5:00PM .

SNAFU'M by Bruce Beattie

Television
Viewing

7&amp; ChiYV Sllvtrado, 1 IOflo
dually 4 dr. $3600. Call 114·
446 -2107-d..,time. 61•-2•&amp;6600-avening•

Suburbln auta wo od &amp; coal
heater 304·' 68-16,.4 .

To ny 's Gun Repairt, hot reblua·
lng Open 9·00 AM to 7 .00 PM .
Call 3 04 -876-•631

BORN LOSER

1982 Font F-150 4x4. 3008 cyl
motor, with 4 1pd., 39,000
miiH. Call 814-446· 1542.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Sol• &amp; chair, browns: $200,
sofa , be1ges. t116. Call 814·
446-7367.

The Dailv Sentinei - PAaa~7

'

1973 Ford F-100 pickup truck
240 e eye., 3 speed .tland.-d,
UOO Coli 304-875-1851

GOOO USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. refrigerators.
ra nges . Skaggs Appliance•.
Upper River Rd beside Stone
Craat Motel 814-446-7398.

U1ed Furniture· wood table &amp; 2
ben c ~e s , beds . drasaer, wood
wardrobe 3 rnlles out Bulav1lle
Ad Open 9AM to 5PM, Mon
thru Sat 614· 446-0322.

.

~

1974 86 PIIMnOIH' tchool bus
be. Cond. Auto. 1rtnt., with 111
...... t11500. 080 . Call 614·
378-2288.

Vallev Furnitura, ntw • used.
lArge section (]f q1.11lity furnr·
t1.1re 1216 Ealla rn Ave ,
Gallipolis

Will rent with oplton to buy or
Land Contr11ct. 3 DR . brrck home
in Bau m Additton Family roo m
wrtfl firepll'lce. In tull ba&amp;emen t .
1 acre with patio and grill.
Eastern school di str ic t Available
immediately Terms arft nag01 illble Call614-986·4196 or Collect 6U-687-5388.

'B1 Co'llmodore, 14•45, llkt
new lived In only 8 months,
payoff Phone 30-4· 882· 3864.

1970 Gregory mobtlt home,
apaclous 3 bedroom~ , 1 'It baths,
tlr cond. very good cond.
04.000.00. 304-875-3111 .

Grac1ous hv1ng 1 and 2 bed·
room apartments at Vtll ege
Manor and Rtv11rs1de Apartments m Middleport From
$215. including utilities Call
814 992 7787 EOH

3 bdr ranch . Rodney Village II ,
82 85 mo plus depol tt RefRI'ences requtred Call 614· ••&amp;·
0008.

K &amp; K Mobile Horn et. 2 a nd 3
bedroom mobile hOrnet, 30•·
676-3000.

1972 St•rcratt , Clatl A, 22,000
•ct . mlle1 he . condition All
flberQitll body, all new Urtt,
tully telf-con tllntd, a ir o;oncll·
tlon &amp; lurnact 304· 896· 3888.

2 bedroom rtvor v•ew apartment
Equipped k1tchen. trash pickup
Ideal tm 2 parties to st'lare
e•pences Cllll614-992 -6539

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
hg ht house keeptn g rooms Par k
Cent ral Hotel. Ca ll 614· 446·
0756 .

1912 14x86 Mobile Home on
river tront lot In hljiddhtport. Unit
h.. all Cllt ra' s tet up Call
814· 992· 3348 •htt 15:00 pm.

1983. 14x70 traiiM , call after
6.00 . 304-773-6983.

One and two bedroom apart·
menta tn Mrddleport Furnrshed
Call614-992 ·5084

Oelu•e 2 BR hou se, 842 Ftrst
Avenue. Gal11pohs, oft str eet
parking, no petit references.
deposil. Ca ll614· 266·1629.

2 bdr fullyfurnlshedldultsonly ,
util paid C•ll 614·-4•6· 41 10
Hll70 Fleetwood . 3 bdt .. 2 full
baths totalelec. like new. prr ce
negotiabl ft Csll aftar 4 waek
day s. an..,tlma weakends 814·
388-8633 .

On e bedroom turn1shed apart
ment in Middleport tor rent Cat I
614-992 -5 304 or 614-4461552

Coun ty Af,plience. Inc. Good
1.1sed appliances 11nd TV Srttl
Open BAM t(] 8PM Mon thru
Sa t. 814-446 -1899 , 627 3rd.
All8 Gallipolis. OH

Solaa and cha1n priced f rom
$396 to $995 Tablef t&amp;O and
up to 5126. Hide·a· beda t390
to S695 Recliners t225 to
8375. Lampl $28 to 8125
Dinettea t 1 09 and up to 8495
Wood table w-6 chairs 8285 to
t796 Desk 8100 up to t376
Hutches 1400 and up Bunk
beds complete W·m•ttresses
8~96•nd up lo t 395 . Baby beds
1110&amp; $176. Mettrauesorboll
s prings tult or twin •83, firm
873. and S83. Oueensets$2215,
Ktng t360 4 drawer cttul t65
Oreasers $89 Gun cabinets 8,
10, 12 gun Gas or electric range
8376 Baby mettresses S35 &amp;
145 Bed frames S20, $30 &amp;
Ktng frame 860. Good aelectln
o1 bedroom s uite•. metal ' cabrnets. headboards S30 and up
to S65 ·

.

'

M6nday.
February 2. 1987
.
-

•

MA¥SE A
WILt'·CARt'

I

SPar ?

Ch1~

lengo Oownund.,
• (!) M'A'I'H
(!]]Color
11:30 G (]) 1!11 lleol of Corson
Tonlgh(o gu1111 111 Tim
Conway 1nd Hoi Lindon.
(00 mln.lln St.,to IRI.

l1l lporteCantor

,I
·.

()) WKIIP In Clnolnnlll
emTul
• ()) A1C Nowa Nightllno
' _(I) Tho Pie- Elrth (CC)

6StUJAFC,ta/
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
41 Early
I Chorus
garden
voice
DOWN
~ Emulate a
I Veneraw
pugllis1
2 Boston 's
9 Harsh
airport
I 0 Propelled 3 Re~allaw
a rafl
(sl.)
12 Fiend
4 Neighbor
13 Reed
of Ida.
Yesterday'• Answer
or Hardy
5 Product!d
I~ Appeared
""eds
Ul Soccer
30 Greek
in print
6 Venetian
giant
lslar1d
16 Golf
luminary t9 Type of race 31 Con sumed
Instructor 7 Mr. Baha 20 French
17 Small bill
8 Move In
river
33 Alpine
18 Dinner
an orbit 23 llibll1'al
snow
course
II Silk
dty
neld
20 Cut
weigh!
24 Dread
30 Aolan
21 Anna of the unit
25 Lose out
holiday
Sllents
14 Take to 27 Stringed
37 Scottish
22 Perpetually
court again lnstrumen1
river
23 Stone
pillar
2~ Pa..slonaw
28 Greek
mountains

27 Yemen's
capilal 28 Cart
29 F111morc
follower
32 Eye
33 Nothing
34 ' - pro
nobis"
3~ Llquened
37 Piano piece hrt-+3811e was
Superman
39 Grafted
. (her)
40 Editor's
direction
OAILY CRYPTOQUOTES - Here's how lo work II:

Ill

AXYDLBAAXR
Ia LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A Is lllled
for lhe three L's, X for lhe two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoetrophes, lhe length aod fonnstion of the words are all
hlnla. Each day lhe code lelte1'11 are dlfferenl
CRYPTOQUOTES
2-2

J LK

MT G

JLOX.i

I O I!F

Q

I IJ Q S r;

K IJ II

MTG

K IJ II

U I T .

y

ZMBYFR
K U 8

R F X

YXR
llX

lJ T

A Q U I T

Yetterday'o Cryptoquote: NO'r TO OVERSEE
WORKMEN,IS TO LEAVE THEM YOUR PURSE OPEN. ITALIAN PROVERB
-

Tho laot groot frontll' · tht
oc:11n1 • era fetturad .

&lt;D ())I Mttnum, P.l.

(II) Thll Old HouM
• G2illmon • Simon (70
min.) (R).,
. 1 1:311 !J_) ¥1omonWI1oh

12:00 ()) Burna • Allen
I1J Ono on Ont
(J) Jofforoono
• (!) Rowhlcle
• CIJ Tel•• of the
pooted

u,...

�•
'

cheers of the crowd and placed
the !0-pound groundhog at
Means' ear.
Means, dressed In a tuxedo and
top hat, then turned to the crowd
and announced Phil's forecas t to
the crowd. He was booed.
The crowd was bundled up
against the winter chill, which
registered 37 degrees according
to a thermometer above Phil's
bunkeF.
A group of students from
Punxsutawney Area High School
wore Hawaiian' shirts and shorts
and several college students
pitched two tents and spent the
entire night on the hill.
Brad Glgltottt. 17, a senior at
the high school, was one of those
wearing shorts and shivering.
"We're protesting wint er
weather," he said.
Other groundhogs around the
country had different results.
Dunkirk Dave In Dunkirk, N.Y. ,
saw no shadow, which was
encouraging for residents anxIous for sprh\g. Schoolteacher
Robert Will. who owns Dunkirk
Dave. says his groundhog has

A settlement has been reached In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court in a case by Stonewoods Ltd., et al. again! Benedict.
Bow man, Craig and Moos, et al. Thedefendantshaveconsented
to a judgment of $142,000. This amount Is to be paid by the
defendant s as fo llows, Benedict , Bowman, Craig and Moos,
$65,000; Ca rdinal Industries. $65.000: Sonjl Herzberg. $2000;
Seymour-Shaw and Associates, $10,000. The case has been
dismissed and court cos ts are to be divided among the
dPiendant s in equal shares.
Marth a Lee. admlnistrlx of the estat~ of Robert William Lee.
Racine, has filed an action against Nationwide Mutual
lns umn ce Co., Columbus. requesting judgment of $4,148.42.
Farmers Bank and Savings Company has been awarded
damages of $3000 plus interest In a case against Jerome K.
Howard. et at.

Free clothing day Wednesday
The Ga tlla-Mrigs Community Action Agency will hold free
clothing day Wednesday from 9 a.m. to 12 noon. The agency 's
clothing bank is located In the old high school building at
Cheshire.
·

I

Whaley,
Donn
La uAdmissions
- aGrace
SundayPomeroy;
dermlll, Rutland; Pauline
Saunders, Long Bottom ; Lena
Baxter, Pomeroy.
Sunday Discharges - David
Yonker, Edna Leach, Pauline
Cunningham.

'

Leonard Cale
Leonard C. Cale, 52, of Par·
ker sburg. W.Va., died unexpectedly Sunday at his home.
A truck driver for Associated
Transport and Boss Linea. Ma rietta, he was born Aug. 10. 1934
in Wood County. W.Va. to the late
Walter and Edith Cale.
Surviving are his wife. Ruth:
four daughters. Kimberly Coplin
and Sandra Jean, Judy Marie
and Bonnie Lou Cale, all of
Parkersburg: two grandsons.
Jason and Ryan Copelin. Parkersburg: two brothers. Kenneth
Cale. of Middleport, and George
Cale. of Georgia: four sisters.
Mildred Sheets. of Vincent.
Helen StUgenbaur, of Parkers·
burg, Kathleen Raines, of Dun·
bar. W.Va .. and Mary Kerby, of
Walker, W.Va.; onehalf.brother.
Raymond Cale. Parkersburg:
his step-mother, Marth Cale;
Walker, W.Va. : one uncle. William I. Cale. Walker, W.Va.; two
step-sisters. Diane Jones, of
Reedsv!Ue, and Joan Drake,
Parkersburg: and one step·
brother, Terry Pepper, of Las
Vegas. Nev.
•
Sery Ices w!U be 2: 30 Wednes·
day at Kimes Funeral Home In
Parkersburg. Friends may call
!rom 7 to 9 on Monday and 2 to 4
and 7 to 9 on Tuesday.

CLEVELAND (UP[) - Ohio
Lottery officials said one Ohio
Lottery Lotto player correctly
chose the stx numbers drawn In
Saturday's lottery. The winn er
wntvecelve 20 annual Installments of $59,613 for choosing the
numbers 14, 16, 29, 35, 39 and 40.
Total sales for the drawing
were $3,217,864, and the total
prize payout will equal $2,081,093,
Including the $1,192,263 grand
prize jackpot.
There were 266 players who
chose live of the six winning
numbers; each will receive $907.
And 11,992 players chose four a!
the six numbers: they will each
collect $54. The estimated jackpot for next Saturday is $1
million.

Celeste ...

but~s~go
up 4.2 percent in 1989.
r,~ch~a~n~c;e~to~d;o~lt~a~g~a~ln;·~";;;;;;;;~d~le
w~ou~t~d~f~re~e~z~e~t~he~fl~rs~
t~y;e;a~r~r.::~:~:~~~~
POWELL'S
JUSf In
Tl•me for

1

Valentine's

Day

20°/o Off
ALL PERMS

-·--··

South Central Ohio :
Partly · cloudy today and tonight with highs near 50 and lows
In the upper 30s.
Mostly sunny Tuesday with
highs In the upper 40s.
The .proba bility of precipitation Is near zero through
Tuesday.
Winds w!U be from the southw·
est at 10 to 15 miles an hour today
and from the west at 10to 15mlles
a n hour tonight .
Extended ForecMt
Wednetiday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Friday
with a ·chance of snow Thursday .
Highs w!U be In the 30s. Lows wtll
be In the 20s Wednesday and
Thursday and In the mid teens to
mid 20s Friday.

$2500
OFFER GOOD UNTIL 217/ 87

· Shear Illusions

293 S. 2nd
992-!550
Middleport
Susan Sisson, Paula Butcher, Jean!Ia Pauley

He's not up there alone.
Rain or shine, day or ni , hatever the problem, the people
who bring electricity to your ho _e are always there.
ln the coal mines, generating !ants, on poles and in offices,
we're working to make sure you have electricity when you need it.
And, our job doesn't stop with reliable service. We can provide
you with valuable free information on choosing efficient electric
heating and cooling systems, electric safety, and the eq1,1al payment plan. Call us. We're happy to be of service.
Electricity ... making sure you can get the
most ·out of life.

THIS WEEK'S
.JACKPOT

$200
S25 ·
CASH PRIZE

CASH PRIZE
JACKPOT ·
LAST WEEK'S WINNERS
$25.00
Pat Boston • Glen Stont

sso.oo

Jack Hitt
S400 JACKPOT
Adaline Baker
---~

WINNING NUMBERS
. POSTED IN THE STORE
SUNDAY 10 A.M.
'

Meeting annoum~emenls'

(Must come in and claim
priu by following
Saturday, lH:M.NO WINNING NUMIER
GIVEN OVER THE PHONE)

Long Bottom Flame Chap-

ter meeting w!U be held Tuesday

at 7:30 p.m. at the Mount Olive
Community Church. Ernest
Bush of Racine w!U be the
speaker. The public Is Invited to
attend.
/

'

WIN
CASH

SlOO

Lebanon Township Trustees
w ~ l meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday at
the township building.
I

.

-

sso
CASH PRIZE

Continued from Page I
and meet state and federal
mandated cost Increases. the
commissioners chose to enacl
the tax, but only after two public
meetings on the proposal.
If the tax generates as much
revenue as expected, $50,000 of
the money will be used to put a
new roof on the county
courthouse.
As pointed out by the commissioners when they proposed the
tax In December, money col·
lected from the sales tax ·should
show a small Increase annually.
If this holds· true, they said, the
Increase should take care- of
·county monetary needs for years
to come.
Food Items and prescription
medicines are exempt from
taxation.

The Middleport Literary Club
wUI meet at 2 p.m. Wednesday at
the home of Mrs. Robert Fisher,
Middleport. Mrs. Roy Holter wUI
give the review, "Lonesome
Dove" by Larry McMurty. Roll
call will be a comment on the
book.

CASH
JACKPOT

EACH WEEK.

Meigs firms ...

T~e

LON~Wt~

12 TANNING SESSIONS

Trustees lo meet

Weather -

'i

ftCDid

Player has number

Lancaster, Thursday, 1:30 p.m.
Friends may call at Frank E.
Smith Funeral Home, Lancaster,
'.Ved11esday. 7 to 9 p.m.

If Any Priu Is Not

Ohio' Power

Part of American Electric Power

•

·~eigs girls
hand loss
to Eastern

•
•

NATIONAL WEATH~R SERVICE FORECAST TO 7 PM EST 2·2-87

been 65 percent accurate In his 12
years of forecasting. In Sneflvtlle, Ga., General Lee also
couldn't see a shadow, nor could
Jimmy the groundhog In Sun
Prairie, Wis .
According to the legend. when
the grounilhog sees his shadow he
returns to his den and spring Is
six weeks away. If he falls to see
his shadow, which Phil has done
only six times, spring Is just
around the corner.
Punxsutawney Phil, the mos t
famous of the groundhog prognosticators, does not actually see
a ny shadow, except those cast by
the glare of television camera
lights. Rather, he allegedly
whispers In " groundhogese" t.o
Means who relays the message to
the crowd.
Cornelia Yocum of HollidaysrnSHOWERS
~SNOW
-RAIN
burg celebrated her birthday at
FRONTS: . . Warm
-Sialic ftOcc.~
Gobbler's Knob.
.,
"I was born on Groundhog Map shows malCimum temperallres.At least 50% of any shaded area is po edcted
· UPI '
Day. I· always wanted to ~o rne to receive precipitation indicated.
•
and see It," said Yocum, who
WEATHER MAP - Snow Is forecast for parts of the .northern •
made the 9Q.mlle trip to mark her
plateau and northern plains. Rain and or showers are for~castlor
52nd birthday.
parts ofthe South Atlantic Coast and the Eastern Gulf Coast. (UPI) •
•
;&lt;;:ontinued
trom
page
1)
"Everybody should try It
once," sa id Don Westbrook of
The giant Ohio Department of ~
Hospital news
Washago, Ontar io, 120 miles of the Department of Education's
north of Toronto. w estbrook and request, to leave primary and Human Services, funded half by ~
Veterans Memorial
his wife stopped at Punxsutaw- secondary schools with $6.18 federal money, was allowed a •
Saturday Admissions - Char- ney on th ei r way to Flo r ida ..
billion - an Increase of 0.1 continuation budgei In the first ;
lie Mabes III, Columbus; Pauline
Four young Mormon Chu rch percent the first year and 4.4 year and a 5.5 percent lncrease'ln :
fiscal 1989 for a total of $6.98 ; ·
Cunningham, Pomeroy; George missionaries from U,tah, Arizona percent the second.
The Board of Regents' requ est billion In state funds. Celeste ·
Black. Portland; Howard Tho- and Texas were In the area and
mas, Letart , W.Va. ; David . dec ided to attend the event.
was trimmed by $622 million, trimmed $284 million from the :
Yonker, Pomeroy.
" I've heard of this all my life,.. leaving $2.88 bllllon for two years agency's request.
The budget document Is lit·
Saturday Discharges - Glen- said Damon Murphy, 20, of - lncludl~g a 7.3 percent hike In
te
red with programs.
nts Musser, Larry Powell.
Dallas. 'Til proba bly never get a the second year. Student subs I·

Settlement .reached in court

Area deaths

Monday, February 2. 1987:

;[
Continued from Page 1
.Ph " "'----..=..--~-

Meigs County Emergency Medica l Services reports 10 calls
over the weekend; three Saturday and seven Sunday.
Sat urday at 1:04 a.m., Rutland to Salem St. for Dana Hoffman
to Holzer Med ical Center; Middleport at 3: 2() a.m. to North
Second for E lt on Lauder milt to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Tuppers Plains at 3:28 p.m. to Sumner Road for Kenneth.
Yonker to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 9:07a.m .. Pomeroy to Lincoln Hill Road for Grace
Whal ey to Veterans Memorial Hos pital; Rutland at 9:42a.m. to
Beech Grove Road for Donna Lauder mllt to Veterans Memorial 1
Hospital: Rutland at 2: 0.1 p.m. transported Leo Davis from a
motorcycle-auto accident on Happy Hollow Road to Veterans
Memorial Hospital: Pomeroy at 3: 44p.m. to Pomeroy Health
Care Cent er for Le na Baxter to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 3: 11 p.m . to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Ina ·
Kautz to Holzer Medical Center: Middleport at 11:35 p.m. to
Noble Summit Road for Nora Cambron to Holzer Medical
Cent er: Tuppers Plains at 5:09 p.m. to Belleville Locks and
Dam for Maria Hitchcock who wa s t-aken from a boat to St.
J osep h's Hospilal.
,

WASHINGTON- He le~ Marte
Miller, wife of long-time Rep.
Clarence M!Uer, ' ts dead at the
agf' of 71.
MUier di ed Saturday at Northern VIrgini a Doctors Hos pital of
cardiac arrest .
A service is planned .for Tuesday in Washin gto n and Thursday
In La ncas ter, headqu arters for
her husband's congressional
dis trirt.
Miller was active In congressional wives orga nizations. She
served on the board oft he Capitol ·
Hill Club had beeri an officer of
the Republ ica n Congressional
Wives' Club and was a member
of the Congress ional Wiv es C'iub.
She Is also survived by a son.
Ronald Miller. Sylva nia, Ohio; a
da ughter. Mrs . Jacqu eline Wllltmas, Ci ncinnati; · and fi ve
grandchUdren.
F uneral serv ices will be held at
Ftrsl United Methodist Church,

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

....----Local briefs:--..
' get 10 weekend calls
Squads

Esther Mae Parker, 48, died
Tuesday ..Jan . 27. at Camden·
Clark Memorial Hosp!lal In
Parkersburg .
Mrs. Parker was born at
Loga n. Ohio on April 21. 1938. a
daught er of the late John and
Mildred Bolin. She wa s also
preceded in death by a brother,
Larry. She att ended the First
Church of the Nazarene in
Parkersburg.
Surviving are her hu s band.
Willis C. Parke r. 1011 Swan St.,
Parkersburg; two daughters.
Debbie Parker and Brenda Devore; four sons, Russell, Rodn ey,
Tim and Brian. all of Parkersburg: six sisters, Irene Sm!lh,
Gallon; Juanita Lodwick. Chester: Helen Rader, Vienna, W.
Va.; Leota Krautter, Joliet, Ill.:
Linda Shepard, Marble, N. C.,
and Cheryl Sue Greene, Hart·
ford. W. Va . . and six
grandchildren.
Services were held at 2:30p.m.
Thu rsday at the Vaughan Fun·
era! Home with Rev. W. Dayton
. Lockard officiating. Burial was
In the IOOF Cemetery.
Those attending visitation and
serv ices from Meigs County
Included Mo·. a nd Mrs . Harry
Lodwick, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Lodwick, Nola Young, Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Poole. lrPne, VIolet,
N~lli~ a nd Homer Pa rker , Suzy
Ca rpen ter and Mr. and Mrs .
Howa rd Parker.

.

:"

Page-8- The Daily Sentinel

Esther Parker

.

I

Claimed In Tht Allotted
Timt, The Prize Will Bt
Included In The Next
Weak's $100 Cash Prize
Jackpot.
,
PURCHASE NECESSARY

•

Ohio Lottery
-Daily

'

PICK-4
2813

-Page 3

•

at y

Vol. 36. No,190
Copyrighted 1987

Number
8,72

•

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio; Tuesday, February 3, 1987

West Virginia aids
Foote plant purchase
By JUDY MORGAN
OVP News Editor
MASON, W.Va. -Gov. Arch A.
Moore Jr. brought former em·
ployees Of the now·closed Foote
Mineral plant at New Haven to
their feet cheering Monday night
with the announcement that he
was putting $4 million on Une to
help get their jobs back.
The ~rowd of nearly 1,800
people gathered In the Wahama
High School gymnasium roared
with approval again · moments
later when the governor signed a
letter of commitment for the
loan . which he called "seed
money" that American Alloys
Inc .. a group of former em·
ployees and management per·
sonnel seeking to buy the plant
from Foote Mineral, can take to
other lending institutions for
funding In the nearly S20 million
project.
· Over 200 people have been out
of work since the ferroalloys
plant closed Its doors Dec. 31,
1985. Bernard White. vice presi·
dent of United Steelworkers
Local 5171. said last night from80 ·
to 90 percent of those workers
remain In Mason County, despite
the ·fact that unemployment
benefits ran out for most of them
midway through last year.
"Everybody's been waiting on
this, " he said, adding that he
antlctpat~s most of those employees will have a job In the new
plant If the restructuring plan Is
SUCCt&gt;SSfUI.

"I believe we'.re going to mak ~

it." White said followlilgMoore's
announcement. "! feel sure everybody will have their jobs."
The governor's announcement
of the $4 million loan Is "a
foundation upon which we can
build the financial pack:me."
said Frank Lee. executive director of the Mason County Developmen I Authority, who estimates
total cost of the proposed buyout
at anywhere from $18 to $19.5
million.
Lee today called Moore's announcement significant because,
"The governor last night didn't
just send In a letter. He came and
called In the actual families who
were affected (by the closing) the unemployed workers whose
cars and homes and famtlles
were 011 the line- and presented
that commitment to them."
He pointed out that the gover·
nor has provided not o,nly the
financing to get the deal off the
ground, but his personal support
'as well. "I think (I he governor)
has helped rekindle some enthu·
siasm and some hope toward the
successful completion . of this
project," Lee added.
Lee also praised the efforts of
state Sen. Mike Shaw, R·Mason.
calling him "a driving force ...
the quarterback In our efforts to
obtain that $4 million In financing
from the state.
"Mike was there with me in
meeting with )hose members of
that local out there when we
didn't have good news for them ...
when times were dark, when

Urnes were really tough. And It
was appropriate he was there
last night when we finally had
some ray of sunshine,'' Lee said.
"We're very, very pleased with
the commitment (from the gov·
ernor)," Shaw said this morning.
adding, "There Is a lot of work
ahead In putting the rest of the
financial package together."
The senator said he met last
night with Carl Holmburg of the'
consulting firm o!Holmburg·Len
&amp; Associates, which conducted a
feaslbllty study of the proposed
buyout, and William Doepken of
the Pittsburgh law firm of
Berkman·Ruslander, corporate
counsel · for American Alloys
Inc., who helped put the Weirton
Steel package together several
years ago, to go over the
governor's letter.
"We analyzed the conditions,"
Shaw said, "and we were all of
the opinion that we could meet
those conditions and there was
nothing there which we had not
anticipated."
Elements of the loan package
Include a ·$1 per wage hour
contribution by employees to an
Interest-bearing trust account as
collateral to the state. Moore
called the willingness of the
employees to do this "a refresh·
lng commitment" that probably
"tilted this thing."
Other payback measures designed to reduce any possible
risk to the state's money Include'
a policy of no profit sharing and
no dividends until the state's loan

Deccmb!!r 1985.
Seyler and Council expressed
enthusiasm for Moore's an·
nouncement, which will enable
many residents on the Ohio side
of the river to also return to jobs
at thc.28-year·old plant.
MJiYor Fred Halfman and
village council members from
Middleport were also present at
Wahama.
Following the Wahama meet Ing, council reconvened In regular session at vlllage hall, and
elected John Anderson as council
president for 1987.

Council gave the first reading
to an ordinance allowing 8
percent across·the-board salary
Increases for a)! village em·
ployees. The salary hike will be
retroactive from Jan. 24, follow ·
tng the second and third readings
of the ordinance.
Reed reported that he a nd
Anderson met last Friday in
Gallipolis with State Rep. Jolynn
Boster to .outline the vlllage's
riverbank erosion problems and
potential completion dates for
each section of the major under·
taking. Reed said Boster was

MOMENTOUS OCCASION- Wesl VIrginia Gov. An:h A. Moore
,Jr., fronl, signed alelter ollntent Monday to provide seed money
fur the purchase of the Foote Mineral Co. plant by American Alloys
Inc., a group of former Foote statfel'!l. Applauding Moore'~ move
are Miles Epling, left, clerk of Mason County Circuit Court. who
Introduced Moore, and Lysander Dudley, Moore's director of
community and economlc .developmenl.
Is ri?· pald .
The five-year loan , which will
be drawn !rom the state employees' pension and retiremen t
lund. carries a 10 percent Inter·
est rate, the governor said.
Moore added his o!flce has

already put up S75.000 for the
feas ibilit y s tud y b y the
Holmbu rg-Len &amp; Associates,
which he said has an excellent
track record for predicting suc·
.cessfu l ESOP programs . and
(Continued on PageR)

unaware of any available sta te
grant, montes, but she agreed to
contact George Dougan at the
Marietta office of the O~Jo
Department of Transporta tion to
discuss the matter further.
Reed also presented council
with recommendations from
Mike Duhl of the Soli Conservatlon Service, to alleviate drain·
age problems at the Monk ey Run
Park site. The major sugges tion
caned for addition of flll. Mayor
Seyler and council agreed the
vtllage should try to follow -up on
Duhl'ssuggestions this winter , so

t

the park ra n be romptf'ted thi s
spring or summer .
Councilman Henry Werry re·
ported t'he count y highway department ha s agreed to sea t the
count y's portion of the Uberty
Lane-Flood Road as soon as
weather permit s. The mayor
comm ended We rry for his efforts
tn working with the count .v to
secure the road repair.
In a matte r relat ed to the
vlllage water department. toun·
ell voted to permit the water
depanment to adve rtise for bids
!Continued on Pa~ c 81

Ailing CIA director resigns;
Reagan nominates successor
·WASHINGTON (UP!) - A
fight with cancer has ended
William Casey's stormy tenure
as CIA director, confronting a
2Q.year veteran of the spy agency
w lth the challenge of repairing
Its Image and relations with
Congress.
The White House announcl!(l
Monday that Casey, hospitalize&lt;\
since Dec. 15 and struggling to
recover from · brain-cancer
surgery, had resigned and that
his veteran deputy , Robert
Gates, would be nominated to
succeed him.
On Capitol Hill, lawmakers
praised the way Casey strengthened the CIA with big budget~
and assertive leadership, faulted
him lor a lack of regard for
Congress and pr~lcted better
rE'Iatlons and sounder judgment
under Gates.

called Gates "a professional with
respect for the oversight process." Rep. Dave McCurdy,
D·Okla., a member of the House
Intelligence Committee, said
Gates " will be a breath of fresh
air" at the CIA.
·
But with Gates still to face a
confirmation hearing before the
Senate Intelligence Committee,
the relief heard from lawmakers
eager to see the CIA under new
leadership was accompanied by
questions In the Iran-Contra
crisis.
The committee rePorted last
week that for more than a month,
Gales and Casey withheld suspl·
ctons that profits from the sales·
of U.S. weapons to Iran were
being diverted to Nicaraguan
.Contra rebels. Gates told sena·
tors the suspicions were not
disclosed because they were
based on "analytical judgments
Sen. David Durenberger. R· of bits and pieces oflnformatlon"
Minn.. past chairman of the and not considered '.'very much
Senate Intelligence Committee. · to go on...

Gates also testified he and
Casey urged going public on the
Iran arms deal In mld·October to
avoid having It "leak out In drlps
and drabs," but their advice was
rejected by VIce Adm . John
Poindexter, the national security ·
adviser.
Sen. Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., said
Monday that Gates would have to
be asked to describe what he
knew about CIA Involvement
with Lt. Col. Oliver North, the
National Security Counctl aide
fired for his role In the scandal,
and why Congress was not
notified about the arms deals
that began In September 1985.
If confirmed as e,:pected,
Gates, 43, would be the youngest
man ever to head the CIA. He
joined the agency In 1966 and
beaded Its Intelligence dtrectorate _ Its analy.t lcal side as
opposed . .to Its Intelligence·
gathering division _ tor more
than four years. He has been
deputy director since April lB.

3 Soctiono. 24 Pogoa
26 Coflll
A Multimedil Inc. Newapaper

Lobbies
rallying
to fight
cutbacks

'Poltteroy ·officials cheer move to reopen facility .
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Pomeroy Vlltag~ Council and
Mayor Richard Seyler were
among the many attending Monday night's meeting at Wahama
High School for West VIrginia
Gov. Arch Moore's announce·
mt'nl ol a $4 million loan to
rt'Open Foote Mineral Co.
Seyler·and council attended the
meeting at the request of New
Haven Mayor Grayson "Pat"
Williamson to sho--: support for
the reopening of lhe Mason
County plant. which closed In

.
· · Clear tonight, with a low
the upper 20s. Sunny We,dn•!!i·l
day, with highs near 40.
probability of precipitation
ncar zero through
day.

IT'S DOWN - The lutstandlnr section of the Melp Inn, 111t1ed
by fire In mld-1981, toppled late Monday afternoon. 'nle teardown
of the Pomeroy landmark, once kno.wn u the Hotel Remlnpon,
becan on Nov. !tllut year. The larf!e lot creatl!d by the razln1 of
the hotel extenda from Eut Matn Street to Eut Second Street at
lhe comer of Lynn Street.
1

COLUMBUS (UP!) - Lobby•
tst s of ali' stripes headed for the
stat e Legislature· today to battle
against the Increased taxes and
program cuts that Gov . Richard
F . Celeste dev ised to balance his
$22 btfllon 1988-89 budget.
The !lrst checkpoint wa s In the
Ohio House of Representatives,
where debate began In the
Flnarlce Commlltee. It wUI be
early April before a s howdown
occurs th ere .
'
Tom Green, a lobbyist for the
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co., was busy solidifying
his many tegtslatlve co ntacts to
scuttle a proposed tax on tnterstatt• long distan ce telephone
calls.
William L. Phillis. deputy
superint endent of public tnstru~·
tton. was surveying school district s to dN ermtne the ·tmpact ·of
a zero growth appropriation f&lt;lr
public schools In fiscal 1988. The
answer Is ex pected to be " bad."
Phillis said he would present
the r esult s of his survey to the
Finance Committee Thursday.
Celeste a lienated a variety' ()f
special Int erest ~roups Monday
by announcing a variety of taxes,
fee Increases and program cur·
tallments to balance what he said
was th e skimpiest budget In
terms of new spending since 196.1
William .J. Shkurtt. director of
t)le state Olltce of Budget and
Mana~em c nt. sa id thr money
slmpl,v Is not there. and that low
growth will co ntinu e
· 'tnde!lntt&lt;' ty ."
"We nN•d to make sure we
squ eeze every penny out of
exp&lt;'ndttu res tha t ma y be nice
but are not a high priority," he
said. ·
"This budget will erode lmpOr·
tant prog ress we ha ve made' In
recent years In our a bilit y:· lo
recover from previous losses,"
said William B. Coult er, chancel·
tor of the Ohio Board of Regel)ts,
who described a one-year freeze
on college and university appropriations as "v e rJ.
dlscouraglnl!."
'
Both Coulter and Shkurtl
agreed . that the state will be
unable to help students with any
tuition Increases thi s coming
year at state colleges and
universities .
Shkurtl said the frct'Zc on
education was necessary to bat·
ance the budget. He pointed out
that education received more
than a 20 percent hike during the
current fi sca l period.
.
The budget does allow for a 4.2
percent Increase for colleges and
universities In fiscal 1989, and a
10 percent Increase In Ohio
Instructional Grant awards.
Coulter cxp~essed sa ti sfa ction
that the go ver nor had chosen to
fund selectiv e excelle nce prO.
grams. a supercomputer ce nter
for Ohio untvers ttles and ex ·
panded workforce retraining at
two-year co llrgcs .
Phillis •aid the no-growth stat P
budget for se hoots In ft s(·a t 19KH
could hu rt schools cou nttn.; on
the subsidies.
"It just s tands to reason lh••n•
are going to be so me probt cm8...
said Phlltts. pointing out th•t
some sc hool dis tri cts havl'
passed operating levies bascd.on
the belle! that the state would
Increase It s subsidies .

Moslem terrorists warn U.S. agaiJ:tst military inten'ention
Anderson, kidnapped March 16, 1985. The second
came late In the day with a photograph of
American Alanll Steen, taken Jan. 24.
The wamlnp came u two U.S. aircraft carrier
battle groups anclla .Marlpe assault force stood by
In tbe eutern Medlt!!'!Tanean, ready If needed to
respond to the hollafle !!fills, PentriOD officials
said In Washlnlton.
"Holy War ftlhten are standing ready and are
awalltng the comtn1 of !be AmeriCan forces to
take control of the Immortal, htatortc batt~. " said
Ihe Islamic Jihad for the Uberatlon'of Palestine.
"For every martyr that wUI fall
a result of
lhe American attack on Lebanon, 10 Americans
will be kUied throu1hilut the world." It said,

BEIRUT, Lebanon (UP!) - With U.S. Navy
and Marine forces within striking distance of
Lebanon, Moslem extremists said they had
moved their American hostages from Beirut and
would kill the captives If the United States
Intervened mllltartly.
.
Two threats against the hostages were Issued
Monday, first by the pro· Iranian Islamic Jihad, or
Holy War, and later by the Islamic JlhaJI for the
Liberation of Palestine, a previously unknown
group that clafms responsibility for abducting
four professors, _three of them Americans, on Jan.
24.
The first, delivered In the morning, was
accompanied by !_Photograp~ of American Terry

as

·- - - - ,_.... - -·-i)

J

adding It· had foiled any raid by moving the
h&amp;stages to "safe areas " outside Beirut.
"Any mllttary operation against the Moslems of
the ~eglon, particularly Lebanon, will result In the
killing of the hostages and America's Interests,"
Islamic Jihad said.
It said the Americans would be held "as long as
there are Mosle1111 In the jatls of America ,
Europe, Israel and Kuwait and the reactionary
Arab countries and u long as America continues
ns lies and maneuvering."
Eight qf the 28 foreigners missing and belleY,ed
kidnapped In Lebanon are Americans . Thtrteenot
the captives have been seized since hostage
negotiator Terry Waite, miss ing for two weeks,

came to Beirut for his lat est mtsston.
In Damascus, Syria, ShUt e Moslem i\m itl
militia chief Nablh Berrt tald after a meellngwlth
Syrian VIce President Abdel Ha llm I&lt; haddam and
Druze warlord Walld Jumblatt that he believed
Waite was being held.
"I am stiff looking for him," Jumblatt said
before returning to Lebanon. "! urn worried for
Ills safety, terribly worried." A senior Amal
official In Beirut also aald Waite w ~s a hostage.
Jumblatt's militia prov ided protection fo r
Waite until he lett his escorts Jan. 20 to meet with
Islamic Jihad In a bid to secure the releas ~ of
Americans Anderso'n and Thoma s Sutherland . ·'

•
.

.

.

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