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Crash probe begins

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Vitamins
See Family Medicine on Page 9

Rkk Nelson death on P • 7
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Vol.36, No.180

en tine
2 Sections. 14 Pages 26 Cants
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thursday, January 2, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

Inmates take control
of West Vir ·• ia Pen

---- .. -·-·--- . ----- j-··

W. Virginia State·
P~nitentiary Riot
Hostages 'taken

MOUNDSVILLE, WVa. (UP!)
-Up to 200riotlng Inmates woo say
they are tired of being "treated like
dogs" had control of West Vlrg!·
nla's State Penitentiary and 13
hostages today, and officials say
one convict died during the
uprtslng.
An unidentified female prison
employee was released shortly
after Inmates aJVled with homemade weapons took control of the
century-old prison Wednesday
night, and one of the 13 hostage
guards with blood pressure problems was freed six hours later. The
other hostage was a food serYlce
worker.
About 100 riot-Equipped pollee
SUITOUnded the 740-lnmate prison In
West VIrginia's northern panhandle during the tense standoff and
state corrections officials awaited a
Ust of convict demands.

NEW YORK

PENNSYLVANIA

'

OHIO\
Moundsville

The Inmates initially demanded a to. their ceUs and control of the
grievance meeting wllh Gov. Arch institution is returned to the West
Moore, but Moore was out of town Virginia Department of Correc·
when the rioting erupted and · !Ions," Price said.
Instructed officials not to negotiate
.Aix&gt;ut 125 to 200 convic.ts, some
until all the hostages were released, with homemade weapons. rioted
A spokesman for Moore, John during the Wednesday evening
Price. reported inmate Keht SUe, a meal, seized 15 hostages and took
38-year-old convicted murderer control of the maximum -security
from Putnam County, died some- prison. The sound of breaking glass
time Wednesday night, but said, "I could be heard through the nigh!
don't know if it was the result of and smoke occasionally walled
violence. "
above the prison walls.
Price said the inmates's de"They pretty much have the run
mands would probably Include · of the place. right now," Warden
increased visitation rights, better Jerry Hedrick said Wednesday
living conditions and conjugal night, but added that guards had
visits.
control of the prison's lookout
"The governor has oo objection to towers.
discussing grievances with the
He' said the convicts hatf set no
inmates but refuses to meet with deadlines and made oo threats.
them until after all lx&gt;stages are
"The lx&gt;stages are secure - that
released, aU inmates are returned is they have not in any way, shape

Shooting
incident
checked

•

WEST
VIRGINIA
®
Charleston

or form been hu n. " prison spokeswoman Jerrie Clutter said.
Price identified the remaining
hostages as food serYice employee
B'il~· Henderwn and prison guards
Patrick Glasscock, Robert Hill , R.
Johnson. Mike Smit h, John Wi lson.
Bill Wright, Robert Jones. Sanford
Klegg , Eddie Littell, Leslie Howearth, Russell Lorentz and Joe HilL
"We wan t. better living comlitions. better facilites and bet ter
medical conditions," one inmate
yelled out a window. "They treat us
just like dogs in here. This ain't
going to go on."
Hedrick said I he inmates did not
get weapons from 1he guards
during the takeover - I he first at
the prison in a dozen yea rs - but
added. "Of course 1hey manufacture 1homemade 1 weapons in
there."

VIRGINIA

Sheriff Howard E. Frank reports
hls department Is lnvestlgatlnll: a

~-----r----N.N. CAROLINA
TENN.

0

miles

·100

UPI Grnphic
GUARD RELEASED - Ambu~ rarrylng
releaaed pard llcJ8&amp;a&amp;e leaves the 80Uih gate of West
VlrKinla Penitentiary late w~ mgbt. 'Die
11\W'd, Mike Coleman, was reported Ito have had an

PRISON RIOT- Up to 200 rlotklg 1nmate11 who seized conCrol of West
VJrprlta's State Penitentiary a&amp; MOUDdsvlle Weeki~ nlpt
ClCIIIIplalaln&lt; they were "treated like dop", released one oll3 ho!iages
early todq. Olllclals 111Q' one ClOII\'Ict cUed doling the uprllllnr. UPI.

-

.

anxiety attack. Some 200 Inmates were reportedly
Involved In the rioting and continued to hold the others
hostag~ this morning. UPI.

shooting accident whr~r. &lt;Ill ~ -- . _ early this morning at the Cletus
Arnott residence on Rt. 143 nPa r
Pomeory.
Dale CalL 26, of Pomeroy. 11 J '
injured by a .22 caliber rille shot to
the hand . Call was transported by a
family member to Veterans Memorial HospitaL He reponed he was
cleaning the rifle when il
discharged.
The sheriff's department received the call regarding the
shooting at 12:50a.m. this morning.
On New Year's Eve, Ute departmen! answered three domestic
violence calls In the Harrisonville
area .

. . ~ vto
·1ent crunes
.
mar N
. ew Y
ear's Day
Fu-es,
•

By United Press lnterna&amp;lonal
Millions of Americans' reveled In the traditional
New Year's Day ritual of parades and football, but
fires, traffic deaths, violent crimes and an explosion
set off by a "very depressed man" cast a shadow over
the start of l!llli.
1n Pasedena, Calif., an estimated 1 million
spectators lined a 5~ -mUe route to~ the flowered
floats and marching bands of the 97th annual
Tournament of Roses Parade, while another 100
mUllon people watched on television.
Television coverage of the parade was briefly
Jnterrupted for the airing of peace messages by
President Reagan and ·Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev.

The extravaganza was marred by a bomb scare
and the shooting of a 20-year-old man who was
critically wounded during an argument, officials said.
Thousands of football fans attended bowl games In
Miami, Dallas, New. Orleans and Pasadena.
Oklalioma's 2!).10 win over Penn State In Miami's
Orange Bowl made the Sooners the likely winner of
the college national championship.
Some 25,!m Mummers strutted through Phlladel·
phta In their annual parade, a tradition since 1901,
while 750,!m people watched the 12-hour spectacle.
The 18th annual New Year's Day Alcatraz Island
swim in the the San Francisco Bay and a 5-mUe,
costumes-optional race sponsored by the New. York
Roadrunners Club In Manhattan ctfered an ·wtlet for

the athletically inclined.
The more robust, or foolhardy- several hundred of
them - plunged Into frigid Lake Michigan for an
annual ritual sponsored by Wisconsin Polar Bear
clubs.
"I got rid of my hangover real quick," said one
swimmer.
A proud mother was convinced she delivered the
first baby of the year in the United States five seconds
after the stroke of midnight In Chicago, and an
optimistic Spanish- American War veteran celebrated his 105th birthday in Columbus, Ohio, makinp
one resolution - to ring In another New Year.
1n Portland, Ore., a "very depressed man" Ignited
natural gas from a line In his basement, killing

himself and touching off an explosion that demolished
three homes and Injured six people. At least 40 lx&gt;uses
in a three-block radius around the home of Donald
Nickerson, 52, were damaged.
"It looked like an atomic lx&gt;mb cloud," said are
reslldent Ed Blaylock.
Tragedy struck In Los Angeles when thousands of .
revelers Illegally fired guns at the stroke c:1. midnight
and a bullet hit a 13-year-old boy in the head, leaving
him brain dead, pollee said. Stabbings and other
shootings In the Los Angeles area resulted In at least
five deaths and six Injuries.
"It was Ute worst New Year's Eve I've !\('en In 17
years," pollee Sgt. Tom Moore said. "There were a lot
of angry people out there."

WA'fUI)!lJ SOVIEI' LEADER - .Pr lie~
wa&amp;chelthetelevlled New year's m 5 Ufr!!Of
Soviet General Secretary Gorbaachev to the

Amertc-.1 people Wedne!lday while on vacii&amp;IDa 1n
Palm Spmp a&amp; the resldenc:e ot w~ A1Ntu1
UPI.
.

Reagan-Gorbachev deliver
New Year's peace message
By UnMed Press lnterna&amp;lonal
Americans had eJ1Wgh ailvanct&gt;
notice that Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbachev would deliver a hlitoric
New Year's message on netwOrk
televlskm, but Soviet citizens may
have been sul'prised to see Presl·
dent Reagan on their TV 5creens.
Each of the two worid leaders
Wednesday deliVered unprecedented simultaneous televised ad·
dresses to citizens of the other's
country, In which eacli defendedl1ls
stance on the dtspufed "Star Wars"
program but also stressed the
rapport they achieved at last
month's Geiieva summit
In contrast to the publicity 1n the
United States surrounding G&lt;lrba·
chev'sspeech. theSovletpubllcWas
· not Informed that Reagan would
appear on the nightly evening news
program "Vremya."
The announcement of the ex-

••

change of New Year's ~tlngs
was made last week by the official
Soviet news agency, Tass, but not
repeated by the newgpapers, radio
or television that distribute the
agency reports to the public.
The simultaneous 1V appearan·
ces - Gorbachev at 1 p.m. EST In
the United States, Reagan at 9 p.m.
Moscow time - marked the first
time an American president has
addressed the Soviet people since
Richard Nlxoo did so In 19?2. All
U.S. televlslon neti\'Orks broadcast
the New Year's Day messagestwo Interrupting telecasts of the
Rose Bowl Parade In Pasadena,
Calif., and a third cutting Into ·a
popular soap opera1
On the tQplc of "Star Wars,"
Gorbachev pressed his crusade
against Reagan'ss . Strategic Defense lnltlatlve or space-based·

'

•

nuclear shield, saying "It Is senseless to .seek great security for
oneself through new types of
weapons."
"It Is the forceful and compelling
demand of life Itself that we should
follow the . pa~ of cutting back
nuclear arsenals and keePing outer
space peacefu I,'' he said In his fiveminute addresses.
Reagan countered bVl telling the
Soviet prople Mosco~ and Wa·
shlngton both are developing nu·
clear defense systems aimed at
eliminating nuclear weapons.
"Both the United States and the
Soviet Union are doing research oo
the possibilities &lt;i applying ' new
technologies for till! cause &lt;i
dek&gt;nse," he said. "U these.techno!·
~es become a reality, It Is my
dream that they wiU ooedayfreeus
all from the threat &lt;i nuclear
destruction."

•

ae.,..

�...

•
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

''COmmenta ~
The D~ily Se.ntinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Pubiisher/Conlroller

BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
LEITERS OF' OP INIO N arc welcome. They shoul d bt" IPS.s than 300 "'ords
lon g. Alllrttcrs are subj ec t toedillng and must be signed u:lth name. address and
lt'lephone number. No unslgnf'd letters wUJ be publish('() . Lelu•rs should be in
good tastf&gt;, addressing lsso('s, not ):M'tsonalltie-s .

FBI director warns
Americans overseas
FBI Director William Webster said Monday Americans traveling
overseas can "assume ... they are at risk" ~ u se of terrorist attacks,
even if there is no speciiic warning of danger. •
Special warnings to Americans traveling abroad are issued with caution
because of their potential damage to international relations, Webster said,
adding that tourists are not always told when "something might have
transpired."
"Travelers' advisolies have an enormous adverse impact on
international relations," Webster said on the NBC "Today" show. "They
only should be given when the situation is considered rea!!y serious."
He stressed that routine and specia l seculity precautions "are being
vigi!antly foUowed, " especia Uy wit h the increase in terrorist activities.
• · Nevertheless, he said, "Americans traveling abroad would be right to
; : assiune that in general they aJ&lt;&gt; at risk.''
·: . The FBI director rejected recent reports by a West German newspaper
: .that a terrorist hit squad was on its way to Europe and planning to stage
; : attacks simUar to those last week on Israeli airline ticket counters at
: : alrports in Rome and Vienna. Eighteen people were kUied in the two
; apacks and mol&lt;' than 100 weJ&lt;&gt; wounded .
• · Webster refused to comment on whether simUar reports have reached
; • Washington.
He said security at European airports Is a continuing problem, but U.S.
; : airports have been free of terrorist attacks. mainly because of
: "Increasingly effective law enforcement" and "tetter analytica,l
· capability."
. Mol&lt;' than 23 major incidents have been avoided In the United States
:: because authorities succeeded in ··getting out in front of the pmblem."
; . Webster said.
· ;. "If they 're going a Her Americans. it's much easier to do it abroad where
; protection. wheJ&lt;&gt; lnteiUgence, where law enforcement is not as keyed in to
': this problem:· he said.
• Ambassador Robert Oakley, the State Department's top counter·
· : terrorism expert, agreed. He said terrorist attacks in the United States are
• : WSSible, but "so far the measures taken by the United States asweUas the
.• - attitude taken by the American people toward systematic violence ... has
·· prevented this from happening."
: · Brian Jenkins. a Rand Corp. terrorism expert. said on the CBS "" Morning
: News" that more terrorism should be ex~£C ted in the future .
• "ThCI"I' are many more groups using terrorist tactics. as well as a
· : number of states that are using terrorist tactics as an instrument of
: : diplomacy. so I'm afraid tha 1we're in for roore of 1he same In the future ."
:- Jl.'nkins sa id.

.. .iN Bu&amp;iNe§a NeW~ . UNicoRP UNiTeD
aND GeNeRaL AMaLGaMaTeD, THe oNI.Y

Two COMf'aNie~ LeFT iN THe UNiTeD
§laTeS, 8NNOUNCeD PU'lN2i To MeRGe ...

Thursdav. Januarv 2, 1986

The American evii.________Ro_b_er_t~_a_"lt_ers.

Widespr~ad
WASHINGTON .:_ lf you think
Big Brother Is watching· you, It
doesn't necessartly mean you're
paranoid. One thing is certain :
Federal agencies have the latest,
super-sophisticated surveillance
equipment , and they're using it.
What bothers clvillltertarians is
that federa l laws regulating the use
of surveillance devices and toch·
niques are hopelessly out -of-date.
State-of-the an tec hnology has not
teen matched by state-rt-the-art
legislation.
The result, according to a recen t
study by the non-partisan Office ot
Technology Assessment , is that
millions of Americans are e!fec·
lively unprotected from the abuse
of their constitutional right' by
overzE&gt;a!ous- or merely curiousfederal investigalors . The study
was conducted at t~ues t of
Rep. Rotert Kastenmeler, D·Wis ..
who chairs a Hou se subcommittee

tlon rt the body and a inore
addictive relationship to nicotine.
The milder taste ga\'e a stronger
fix. ·This Is what peopie find so hard
to break away !rom - even after
they team wbat It is doing to them,
or to other people who lnrocently
Inhale smoke hy being In congested
places where others Indulge.
It took some time for cigarettes to
replace the "mllscullne" cigar and
chaw of tobacco. Cigarettes were
mass-produced by 181fi, but In 1800
as much tobacco was stm being
cured for snulf as for use In
cigarettes. From "this low base the
use of cigarettes actually declined
early In this century. Only in the
19ros did It spurt, consuming more
tobacco than pipe, cigar and snulf
curlngs put together. ]'41chael
Schudson, who has written an
absortmlg social histOry ol the
cigarette In "Advertising: The
Uneasy Persuasion," finds two
main forces leading to the spread of
the cigarette: World War I and
19als feminism.
In World War I, the convenience
of cigarettes, which were compact:
easily lighted, easily dropped,
made them more available In the
trellches than pipes or cigars.
Rations of four cigarettes a day
were . given out hy the Army.
Charttable groups - even the
YMCA - sent cigarettes b) their
supply packages to the troops. The
association with war also canceled
the prejudice against cigarettes as
"sissy" fonns of the cigar, more
proper to women than men.
In the l!llJis the best women's
roUeges and sororities were In the
forefront of those experirnenUng
with new public roles for women,
Including that of smoking cl·
garettes, whlch no longef divided
society Into the post-dinner cigar
sessions for men, women retiring to
a dllfeJ&lt;&gt;Ot room. Women thought
they were asserting a social
freedom by acquiring a pharmacological bondage. Tobacco has al·
ways had a way of promising to
bless and staying to curse. Just ask
Jeflerson .

snooping___.__Ja_ck_A_nd_er_so_n_&amp;_J.....:,ose_p_h_Sp_e_;_ar

on civil liberties.
The congressional technblogy
office surveyed 142 federal agencies
to determine which ones were using
what surveillance equipment. The
CIA, the NatiOnal Security Agency
and the Defense Iiltelllgence
Agency were excluded, for obvious

based visual surve!Uana&gt; systems.
As the federal government's
chief Investigative agency, the FBI
might very well have a legitimate
need for the 18 technologies. But the
bureau was disturbingly secretive
when the C9ngresslonal evaluation
team asked It to explain the use of
each technology.
"Due to the sensitive nature and
specific application of the equip·
ment and techniques by the FBI,
detailed Information regarding the
specific technology, application,
user. locations etc., cannot be
disseminated outside the FBI," the
FBI replied.
.
Among t~ lB different technolo·
gles being used by the G-men are:
radio scanners, miniature trans·
mltters , "pen registers" that keep
track of numbers dialed on a
targeted telephone, nlght·vislon
equipment, microwave interception and other devices that keep

reasons.
The agencies' detall€11 responses
were not pubUshed hy the Olflce ol
Technology Assessment. But Kastenmeler provided our associate
Donald Goldberg with the raw
responses prepared by the agen ·
cies. They disclose how many kinds
of surveillance technologies the
·various agencies employ- and the
a nswers are scary. For example:
- The FBI is already using or
plans to use 18 of the 19 different
surveillance techniques the congressional questionnaire asked
about. The only snooping devices
the G-men don 't use are satellite-

tabs on where people aJ&lt;&gt;, whom
they're talklng to and what they'J&lt;&gt;
doing.
- The Drug Enforcement Ad·
ministration uses 11 of the 19
technolOgies, Including a S2 million
computer In El Paso, Texas, to
monitor electronic mall and other
rommunlca lions for development
of suspec t "profiles."
- The Internal Revenue ServiCe
uses nine of the 19 technologies, and
stated that there has been "an
Increasing use of electronic surveil·
lance since l!Bl." From 1983
through 1985, the IRS spent nearly
$3 miUion on electronic surveWance
equipment.
Kastenmeler and others In Con·
gress acknowledge that the use ol
sophisticated technologies olten
means the difference between
making a solid case and letting a
criminal walk.

collar'--~--ca_rry_W_i_tts

CANOGA PARK. Ca lif. (NEA) - At come baby-boom cohort. almost twice cral issues from school prayer to
The yuppies have received more
31 years of age, Jose Rodriguez enjoys as large. that has not achieved similar abortion.
publicity (not all of it favorable) but
a substantia l measure of fin ancial.se- success.
"Though some forces have begun to there are five to 10 times as many new
curity and is chronologically in the
The new collars are nurses. tete- speak to the new collars, no public fig· collars - and they are destined to be a
middle of the "baby boom" generation marketing specialists, legal secretar· ures or major institutions have yet crucial force in our society for de·
- but he"s certainly not a "yuppie."
ies and medical technicians. They re· trted to speak for them,'' notes cades to come.
That distinction is important be· pair office copying machines, drive Whitehead.
cause it"s a common fallacy to assume Federal Express trucks. process bank
that most baby boomers (those born loan applications and sell insurance.
between 1946 and 1964) are phenomeIn many instances, their jobs have ·
nally' successful young urban profes· been created by an economy increassionals (or yuppies) with up-scale as pi· ingly driven by service-oriented indus·
rations, gourmet tastes and insatiable tries and sta te-of-the·arl technologies,
consumer demands .
notes Ralph Whitehead Jr .. the Um[n fact, yuppies (depending upon . versity of Massach usetts professor
how they are defined] constitute as lit· who coined the phrase "new collar.""
tie as 2 percent and no more than II
They generally share economic. so~ent of that general!on's 71 million ciaI and cultural val ues with other
people.
baby boomers - and that means that,
The quintessentia l yuppie has a while they are loyal to their employ·
master's degree in business adminis· ers, they insist upon a meas ure of freetrati~n frQtp Harvard University, but
dom and independence fr om their
Rodrtguez·s forma l education ended jobs.
when he graduated from Slymar High
·· when l"m here 1 give 1tO percent.
&amp; hoot northeast of here rn 1973. In· Qut my day off IS my time ."" says Ro·
stead of a new BMW or ,..udr, Rodrt· driguez. who notes that one of the
guez drives a 7-year-old Ford. .
benefits of being store ma n~ger is that
Whrle the stereotypical yupp1e de· "if 1 want to see a baseba ll game I can
votes his_leisure_time t~ shuttlin~ be· schedule myself off that day." " ·
tween wrne-tasttng part1es and discotheques, Rodriguez spends most of his
Although the new collars have
evenings with his wile (who holds a emerged as the m1ddle class that w1ll
part-ume JOb) and four children.
beWh~truhc rald,nd decrdberng tfhuture el~tlotns.
But he earns mo th $35 000
'e ea.. escn s em ~s ex ra ·
earl as rna
re an . ·
partrsan, ··post-Jdeologrcal and "deye: Y
nager of a Jack-!n-the- aligned" from the maJ·or political
Box fast-food restaurant 1n th1s San
.
, .
.
Fernando Valley suburb of Los Ange· parttes..
Rodnguez mstsls that he has no lies,
les, where he supervises 33 employees
including two assistant lllanagers
weak or strong, to any poltucal party
· That places Rodriguez at the upper and says he is uncertain about whether
end of the "new rollar" socioeconomic to trust poltllctans - an approach
class of baby boomt:s - men and man~ ne": collars apply to other pow women in their 20s and 30s who ar,~ ~indJvldu.als and organ.1zat1ons
neilher traditional blue cpllar workers from ~rporatrons to labor umons.
nor roat-and-tie professionals. .
The -new collars temporarrly have
With family inromes of $15,000 to sided with President Reagan. princi·
' "" ·say, isn 't your company owned by the
$40,000 annually, those new collars paUy because of his commitment to
SAME COMPANY that owns mine ?"
constitute almost one-third of their economic growth . but they are critica l
generation. Beneath them is a ·low-in· of Reagan's,intolera nt approach to so.. ,.,

Berry's World

.

.

Today is Thursday , Jan . 2, ihe second rlay of 1986. with 363 to follow.
The moon is approaching it s last quarl!•r.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
, The evening star is .Jupiter.
; Those bbrn on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They include
Vtrgtnla patriot Nat haniel Bacon in 1647; British Gen. James Wo~e. heroct
thr battle of Quebec, in 17?7; fan dancer Sally Rand In 1902; author fsa ac
Asimov In 19~ (age 661. and singers Julius La Rosa In J9ll (age 561 and
Roger Miller In 1936 (agp ~ 1.
On this date In hlstory:
In 17!11, Georgia became Ihe fout1 of the original L1 colonies to ratify the
U.S. Constitqtton.
In 1900, Tile Soviet Union launched Lu nlk-1, the first unmanned
sparecraft to travel to the moon.
In 19Ql, South AfriCa 's Dr. Chrlstiaan Barnard performed his second
surcessful heart tmsplant.
In 1974, President Richard Nixon signed a bill requiring states to ltmlt
highway speeds to 50 miles an hour or lose federal highway funds.
A thought tor the day: English~ author G.K. Chesterton wrots:· "The
· obj&lt;'Ct •rf a New Year is not that we should have a new year. It is that we
should have a new soul and a new nose. new feet , a new backbone new
ears. and new eyes."
'

MIAMI iUP1i - Tim Lashar
kicked four field goals and Jamelle
Holleway threw a 71· yard touch ·
down pass to · Keith Jackson
Wednesday night to move No. 2
Oklahoma to the brink of Its fifth
national championship with a 25-10
Orange Bowl victory over No. 1
Penn State.
The UP! Board of Coaches
conducts its final poll Thursday to
determine the national champiOn.
The Orange Bowl victory moved
the Sooners up to the top of a queue
suddenly- barren of contenders.
No. 3 Iowa and No.~ Miami also
went into New Year's Day "1th
national title aspirations but the Big
Ten Haw keyes were upset in the
Rose Bowl by UCLA, 45·28, and the
Hurricanes were stunned in the
Sugar Bowl by Tennessee, 35-7.
Oklahoma improved its record lo
11·1 - the same mark tl)e sOOners
~ posted in l975 ,when they won their

Pomeroy-Middlaport. OhiQ .

Rise of the 'new

:Today in 'history

Oklahoma rips Penn State, clabps National Ti-le

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel

The growing effort to ban smok· fields were worked by slaves. -Both were hy oo means overdellcate.
log In many public places deserves Washington and Jetferson came to Tobacco In those forms, as In pipe
support, since even the bans In believe tobacco caused more hann fonn, is alkaline, and nicotine can
existence are poorly· observed .than good to their plantations, and be absorbed directly through the
e.g., that against srooldng In labored desperately to substitute membranes o(. the mouth or nose.
elevators. I have politely asked ' other crops. ·
• This made for heavy traffic of
several people recently to observe
Supporting social upbeaval for mucus and saliva at or near (or oot
that ban, and not a one complied.
economic reward Is not unu~al in so near) spittoons.
Tobacco Is oot an easy curse to be history. Rice and Indigo were
rid of, as our whole history worked hy slaves, too, as cotton
Qgarettes were Invented In the
demonstrates. The plant is native to would later be. But tobacco did oot 1870s, when flue-drying was found
our contlnent;-and seiling It to the stop being a · curse even after as a method of curing tobacco.
old world was an important part of slavery was abolished. Only re- Instead ct the alkaUne formed hy
the colonial economy. It Is the cently did we learn that tobacco sun-curing or fire-curing, this pro·
American rrop - profitable, but kills, but Is was a social nuisance dueed an acidic tobacco consideratroublesome. The yield was unpre- long before scientific analysis made bly milder than others. But Its
dictable from year to year. The It something more. Chewing to· nicotine could not be directly
plant quickly exhausted the soU It bacco and snulf stained clothes and abso~bed by the mQllth. Only when
was grown ln. The trade took heavy public thoroughfares In ways that Inhaled Into the lungs was the acid
capital outlay long before profits disgusted 19th-century observers turned alkaline. The seducuve
could be realized. Worst of all, the tsuch as Charles Dickens) wtn mildness led to a deeper penetra·

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

.:~

.

Stale defender. breaking up a oornpletlion in tlie Se&lt;.'l&gt;nd quarter.
Oklaltoma went on to wln the. Orange BOwl, thus laking a gJIIIil !llep ·
· towlll'li a National Championship. UP!.

Final _ratings should
favor No.2 Sooners

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The Daily Sentinel

SUBSCRIPTION RATH;
By Carrif"r or Motor Routt"

school has had In the past four
years.
StuU IS a fonner assistant coach
under Waslllngton head coach Don
James. HeandJamesalsocoached
together at Kent State.
The new head footbaU roach was
born In Dllvenport, Iowa , and
earned his Bachelor of Arts degree
in PIIYslcal Education and Masters
In Education at KaMas State.
StuU has been coaching major
roUege football for rmre than 16
years.

autostOro
·
.

.

i\10\1)AY NFI'E MIXF..D

for Dec'f'mbtr 2.

Stull replaces head jooibaUcoach

Oklahoma's nation-leading pass
defense Intercepted four passes as
the Sooners held the Ntttany Uons
to a season-low 10 points.
The Sooners No. !·rated defense·
was stunned on the first Penn State
drtve.

Sl'iCll.E COPY

Bill Yung, who was fired last
month . Yung had a 7-39 record
during his four years at UTEP.
Stull !&gt;aid he lS looking forward to
the challenge rt coaching at UT-E!
Paso and will try to win every game
next year, but acknowledged the
tmlverslty faces one rllts toughest
schedules.
Cords praised StuU's leadership
and . tQ~K:hing ability, citing his
record at MassachusettS. StuUs
compiled a :1-8 mark his first year,
then .led the University of MaSsa·
chusetts to a,74 season, the first the

• Pa_rts PIU$

l Local bowling
St~YttMIII!).

and feU to Alabama in the Sugar
Bowl.
The Oklahoma defense forced
four turnovers and effectively
harassed Penn State quarterback
John Shafl'er who finished wit h
10-d-22 passing for 70 yards. The
Sooners forced Penn State coach
Joe Paterno to yank his starting
quarterback In favor of Matt
Knizner with seven minutes left in
the game.
Knlzer promptly drove the Nitt.any Lions 51 yards to the Okla·
lorna 9, but · Massimo Manca
misseda26-yardfleldgoalwith2:45
remaining to kUl Penn State's
chanres for its fourth perfect
season of the :l} year Paterno era.
Oklahoma fuUback LydeU Carr
then bolted 61 yards dowr the right"
sideUne In the final two minutes
minutes to clinch the victory. Carr
flnl$hed with a game·high 148 yards
in 19 carries.

Stull named coach at UT-EL
EL PASO, Texas (UPli -·university of Massachusetts head·
football coach Bob Stu U ha$ been
named head football coach at the
· University ot Texas .at E l ~aso . .
· UT-E! Paso Athletic Director Bill
. Cords said Stull's annual sruary ·to
lead the Western Athletic. Col\ferencc·Min!'rs wm be.$8l,OOJ.
· Cords ·said StuU; · 41, has a
four~yeai:contract to tum !lie VT·El
Paso football prog.:am ·~round alter.
lo. conSECutive. lOsing seasons..

DIWPPED PASS "':' ~ Mo.rriS (84) of Okiahom~ js hit by a Penn

MIAMI !UP! ) -All the lnnportant pre-game numbers fa vored
Oklahoma. So will today's final
ratings.
'ThP second -ranked Sooners over·
came some shaky quarterbacking
• from fres hman Jamelle Holieway
Wednesday night in the Orange
Bowl and tumed to the nation's
most dominating defense en route
to a 2HO vir tory over No. 1 Perin
State.
Withthird·ranked Iowa dropping
a 45·2S decisiGn to UCLI),ln the Rose
Bow i and No. 4 Mlam I ltla . tlosing
to Tennessee35-71n the Sugar Bowl.
the JJ.l Sooners arc virtually ,
assured of their fifth national title
when UPI's Board or Coac hes
l"l'ieases the final ratings at 6:30
p.m. EST today .
"This Is a dream come true,''
, said Oklahoma fuUback Lydell
Ca rr. who rushed for 148 yards.
including a clinching 61-yard ID
dash in the final minu ti:&gt;s. "Even if
Miami had won. we would have
been the nation's No . I team in our
hearts.
·'Penn State has a good, solid
clcfcnst'. but it 's not as physica l as
Nebraska 's or SMU"s. We were
very upset with ou'r offensive
pe11ormance In the fi rst half, but
the defense played great aUgame."
The Nlttany Lions, Jl-1 , marched
62 ya rds "on the gamp"s opening
possession and Tim Manoa's 1-yard
plunge gave Penn Stale a 7-0
advantage. From that point.Ok la·
.homa 's natlon's ·best defense
yielded just ID5 more yards and
.forced five turnovers.
"! think Oklahoma is the best
team In the country," said Penn
State's J(J(&gt; Paterno, who ranks
SECond to Oklahoma's Barry
Switzer in winning percentage
among active coaches with at !Past
100 victories. "They're certainly
one of the best tN ms we've ever
played. I don't know anyone who
would be better."
Holleway led the Sooners in
ru shing this year, but he ga ined just
one yard on 12 caJTies and lost a
pair of tumbles against the Lions.
He did almos t all of his damage
wit h one lul·ch of his righ t arm f"&lt;!rly
in the srcond quart(•r. racin.F: a
third· and ·:!-! from thi.' Okl ahoma 29.
Holirway iound tight l'nd Keith
.Jackson on a post pattern, for a
71-yard touchdown and a IO·i le8d
for the Sooners.
Tim Lashar kicked field goals of
26, 31, 21 and 22 .vards and Carr
detoothed the Lions romp!C'tely
with his scoring run down the righl
sideline with 1:42 left In the gamr.
"We had a lot of minus yards on
first ctowr:· Holirway said . "'bP·
ca use they did a lot of stunt s we
didn 't think they would do. I wasn't
nervou s rut the!'e, but when "I
: fumbledlatelnthehalfandthe)' got
i a field goal, I thought the game
\ mJghl tum ."

last national title. They dropped
Penn Stat~ to a similar ll-1 mark.
The Sooners scofl'(l 16 secondquarter points to erase an early 7·0
deficit in winning their eighth
consecutive game and their first
bowl game since 1981.
The freshman quanerback Holle·
way entered the game Oklahoma's
leading rusher but was a non-factor
on the ground against the aggres.
sive Unehacking of Shane Conlan
and Rogers Alexander. But he
stunned the Nlttany Lions wlth his
71-yard ID pass to Jackson that put
the Sooners in front for good, 10·7,
barely three minutes Into the
second period.
Lashar also kicked field goals of
~. 31 and 21 yards during the
quarter to help stake the Sooners at
a 16-10halftime lead ,ensuringPenn
Slate Its first post-season loss in six
trtes dating back to 1979 when the
Lions were also unbeaten and No. 1

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�'.

Page-4- The Daily Sentinel

".

Thvrsday. January 2, 1986

·Pomeroy-Middlepc;rt, Ohio

Tennessee ~psets H~rricanes .
NEW ORLEANS (UPI) - ,The
8th-ranked . Tennessee Volunteers
scored five unanswered touch·
downs to shock 4th-ranked Miami .
35-7 in the Sugar Bowl Wednesday
night, destroying the Hurrtcanes
hope of a national championship.
The Vols, boosting their record to
~1-2, broke the game Open in a
wo-mtnute span of the thtrd
quarter when 25(). pound fullback
Sam Henderson scored on a
one--yard plunge.,
On Tennessee s next offensive
play, latlback .Jeff Powell broke
through a gapmg hole on a 60- yard
~amper that I'Xtended the lead to
7 lead midway through t he
period.
The Volunteers rally started with

.Bucks open
,league season
this evening
By United l'n!ss lnlenwtlonal
Ofilo State will be trying to shake
a two-game losing streak when it
opens the Big Ten season tonight
against Michigan State in St. John
Arena.
The Buckeyes have lost three of
their last four games. including two
In a row on Sunday and Monday
nights in the Sun Bowl Classic to
Texas· El Paso (58-57) and Nebraska 169-66\.
Ohio State. which ·follows up the
·Michigan State game by hosting
No. 2 ranked Michigan (12.01 on
Saturday, are unbeaten in stx
games ln St. John Arena. but ().3 In
games away from home.
The Buckeyes left El Paso, site of
the Sun Bowl Classic, at 3 a.m.
Tuesday, arrived back In Columbus
just before noon and Coach Eldon
Miller held a 5 p.m. practice
" We just iulve togobackanddo it
better," Miller said after the loss to
Nebraska. "We can be as good as
we want to be."
Dennis Hopson. who entered the
two-game Sun Bowl event with a n
aver,age of over 27 points per game
scor'ect just 15 and 16 points in those
two contests.
Brad Sellers scored 40 points in
the two games, inciudlng 27 against
liTEP, and pulled down 18 rebounds ln each game.
Michigan. State brings a !H
record into the first of 18 Big Ten
games for the two schools.
The Spartans, led by &amp;-foot senior
guard Scott Skiles. are comlng off a
7fi.61 win over New Mexico in the
champlonsh ip ga me of the Lobo
Classic. Thev have lost onlv at Iowa
State. 82-ill. ·in overtlmp. ·
Elsewhere in Ohio college basket·
ball action. Mid-American Confer·
. en~ play also begins to night , 141th
Miami hosting Bowilng Green,
Kent State entertai ning Toledo, and
Ohio University playing at North·
em Jlllnois.
In other top games tonight.
. Cincinnati plays at South Carolina
and Xavier pia) sa t St ~t-so n tFla .l.
In the only game involving an
Ohio college lpam on New Year' s
Eve, Dayton rolled to a 67·.'i0victor.·
over vis iting Detroit .
·
Dave Colbert hit seven straight
shots from the field· in the first haa
to pace Dayton. Colbert topjl('d all
scorers wit h 22 points as the Flyers
won their fourth straight game.
Ed Young srom:l H point s for
Dayton. i J. and 1\egele Knight
added 11.
Detroit scot'f'd the first four points
bf&gt;fo!l' Colbert's hot hand led
Dayton to a .15-27 halit ime advantage . Thr Flyers domi na ted play in
the second half. preventing the
Titans from cutting thr lead to less
tha n eight points
For Det mit. 5-i. Creg Wendt
&gt;cored 18 point s and Br ian Humes
added it

two second-&lt;iuarter touchdowns .the. first on a 5-yard pass . from
Daryl Dickey to Jeff Smith on the
opening play of the period. The
other came when wide receiver
Tim McGee recovered Powell's
fumble In the Mianli end zone 3:28
.before halftime. Tennessee add€d a
fourth-quarter touchdown on a
6-yard run by Charles Wilson.
The Hurrtcanes absorbed their
first klss since their openlng game
of the. season and finished at 10-2.
Miamt had been hoping to gain the
national title if No. l PennStatewas
defeated by No . 2 Oklahoma in the
Orange Bowl. . Miami had beaten
Oklahoma in the regular season.
The Hurricanes scored on their
first offensive series of the game.
The drivt' was sparked by a 25-yard
ga in by Melvin Bratton on a fake
fo urth-down punt. Vinny Testa ·
verde then threw an IS-yard
touchdown pass to nanker Mike
Irvm oo the next play with only '3: 59
elapsed In the game.
But the Vols dominated , the
remainder of the first quarter and the game. Tennessee .tied the
score 7-7 on the first play of the

second pertod when Dickey, found ·
Smith wide open In thi&gt; right comer
of the Hurricanes end zone.
. Neither team was to threaten.
again until 3:28 before halftime
when McGee pounced oo Powell's
fumble after the Tenne.- runner
had carried eight yards · ·to the
Miami 1. giving the Vols a 14·7lead.
Miami recovered a Tennessee
fumble at the Vols ' 33 with 51
seconds remalnlng In the first half,
but Greg Cox' 47-yard .field goal
attempt was short as time ran out .
Miami coach Jimmy Johnson
said several times before the game
tha t his team deserved the national
championship if 11 managed to beat
Tennessee. Meanwhile, the Vols,
coached by Johnny MajorS, smiled, .
kept a low profile and said they
were simply glad to be playlng.
Testaverde, a second-team All ·
America who threw for 3,280 yards
and 21 TDs . dt; rtng the regular
season, was no matcli for the
inspired TennesSI'€ defense. He
completed 20 of 36 passes for 217
yards. but was In tercepted three
SUGAR BOWL MVP - Tennessee quarterback
times and sacked seven times for &amp;I
Daryl Dickey, named MVP of the Sugar Bowl, pitches
yards in klsses.
out, protected by his offensive line, left to right, Bruce

Team
W I. Pet.
Southern .... .. .. .. ......... 6 0 l.tlXl
Hannan Trace ... .. ..... .. 4 I .tm
North Gallla .. .. .... .. .... 4 1 .8:0
' Symmes Valley ... .... .. . 3 2 &amp;Xl
F.asterlt ..................... 2 J .400
Southwestern ......... .. .. 1 5 .200
Oak Hill ...... .......... .. .. 1 4 .nl
Kyger Creek ........ .. .... 0 5 .&lt;XXJ
Jan. 3:
Kyger Creek. at Hannan Trace
North Gallla at Southwestern
Eastern at Oak Hill
Southern at Symmes Valley

.Jan. fpme:
Southern at Wahaina
r

ities to win. We did not make any
turnovers and did what tt takes to
get the ball in the end wne."
Meanwhile, the No. 6 Com·
huskers found themselves self·
destructing in the third quarter.
They com!llltted threP. turnovers In
the period, which led to 24 Michigan
points and tumed an 11-point
halftime lead lnto a 13-point deficit.
"We played well for three
quarters of the game, but the third
quarter went badly," said Nebraska coach Tom Osborne follow·
lng the game.
1re Cornhuskers dropped the
ball three times in their first
offensive ·five plays of the second
baH, looing two that led to Mlchi·
gan's first tMJ touchdowns of the
game.
" We got real sloppy ," said I. bark
Doug DuBose, who rushed for 99
yards on the day. "We laid ths ball
on !he carpet a few times. If you do
that agalnst a team Uke Michigan,
you should not ex~ to win the
ballgame."

'

~llchi g'Ul

Bowl

game i11 tht' Fic.ta
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SVA.C

Wilkerson, Jbn MIUer, and David Douglas. Dickey
Md the Volunteers scored an upset victory over
Miami, 35-7. UPI.

L

mance against the San Francisco
49ers In the NFC wild card game on
Sunday.
"Jamie played extremely well,"
Schembechler said. "I chided him
aboul his brother Joe before the
game with his 140 yards In their
playoff game, and I assumed he'd
do the same lor us."
Moms, who was named the
ootstandlng olfenslve player of the
game, broke off five runs of 15
yards or more to more than make
up for a Jess-than· Impressive
performance by Wolverine quarter·
back Jim Harbaugh.
"We felt like we could sweep on
them and get to the outside," he
said .
Harbaugh did not appear to be too
distraught with his day, In which he
completE~~ just &amp;-of: 15 passes for 63
yards.
"Statistics don't mean a damn
thing," said Harbaugh, the nation's
to'p-ratro passerenterlngthe game.
"1re only thing that counts iS
taking advantage r:l. your opportun·

'

Garl:.Uld Hin•r... ir~ !.:ill' first
quarter action of tht · ~t'hras k a:

ALL GMt}};
1EAM
W L Pet.
North Gallia .. .. .. .... i 1 .87S

2
2
3
5
5
7
8

TEMPE, Ariz. (UPI \ - In
assessing his performance ln the
Fiesta Bowl, Jamie Morris said he
took a cue !rom his brother. ·
That's not a bad Idea, considering
his brother is Joe Morris, the New
York Giants' 1,00J.yard.rusher and
Pro Bowl selection.
"He told me to run like a man
possessed," Jamie Morrts.sald of a
conversation · he had with his
brother prior to Wednesday's
game.
The sophomore running back
piled up 156 yards rushing against
Nebraska to lead the No. 5
Wolverlnes to a 21-23 victory over
the Cornhuskers.
The viCtory was the Wolverines '
stxth In a row and lett them with a
10-H record. Nebraska lost Its
second straight and finiShed at ~.
Michigan coach Bo Schem·
bechler said he hoped golng Into the
game that Jamie Morrts would
have the same kind. of day Joe
Moms did In a .141-yard perfor·

•

FffiST DO\\':\ - 'lt•hraska
back Von Shepp itrd t'!i nuu; for
a first down whilP tryin~ to p11~1
off ~dtlgw1 dd••n,;. e hack

SVAC standings ...

Southern ......... . ....... ,;
Hannan Traer ..
.. .. ii
Symmes Valley .. ....... 4
Easlern ................ ..... :J
O~ k Hill ........ ........... 2
Southwestern .... .... ..... 2
Kygt&gt;r Creek .............. 0

Michigan .stops
captures Fiesta ·Bowl, ·27-23

Allen, wht) wa~ n'n' n ll~· n.m"l~'d ·
to t ht-.~ Pro Howl fnr !Ill' third iimc, ,
was the M o.s t \ '; ilu. d)h' Pla~'f'l' in

the Sup!'r Bowl :\\ 'HI. H&lt;' rus hed
for 191 yards- 7·1 or ti&gt;' m coming

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Transactions

,,.

By United Pri'Ss lrolcrroattonaJ
Basketball
MiiwaukC!' - Plac('(l gu ~rd · '•
Craig Hodges on Injured reserve·
list with di oloca trd fingrt·.
. ;
Colln~P
..
111 !(
, I -· '-:usp&lt; •nclt~lligl! t'
rnd hr."'' ·.•~"'li'J for lhr 1986.'
fool baliS&lt;'~'on for skil&gt;plngclaSses.
·· Rice - Na mrd .Jerry Bcrn(lt of '
J 'ennsylvankt as head roothall ·• ~
coach.

·

· ·· .. .. ~

�·Local

,I

Team

'ftiUliSIMV SWiNGI!IIS
p Oecembor Ill, 111111

"1· -

~

ling.•
B.E ,D. . . . .. ..
. .. .. ....... Sll 61
E:IK trlc Motor Sl&gt;rv!Cf' .. -- .-.-- ..... .. ... .. .•Jt Kl
Robbins &amp; Myrrs - Cindy Jones. 4a):
Ward 's Sound SystNn - Kim ~ne. :N! :
Johnson's - Marilyn Browning tsubt , 49fJ:
JOl' Caln. At tv.. - Elalnr Ryan, 8; BE .D.
- Janet Goble (su b), oSZB; Rutland's

WL

... .. ... .. ...... . ·· · v ·· · .. ... .. .. rr l3

•1

Johhson's ... .... . ..... ...
Joe Caul, Atty ..
Robbins &amp; M}"rs . . . . . . .. . .

.. ... ..70

j)

. .. ... 66 ~

. .. ..64 ~
Ru!l(lll(ls FurnJture ...... .. ....... .. ... ......58&amp;!

Fumltun&gt; -

Linda Peterson. 07; Elt'ctric

Motor Srr.1ce- KandyNut-e:(li; •1-HaJt&gt;l

Ward's Sound System ...... ... .... ...... ... :58&amp;!

Marcum tsub l, ns.

AEROBIC DANCE CLASS
· 9 WOK WINTD SESSION

18 CLASS~$ FOR $36 .00
CLASSES START JANUARY 6. 1986
CARLETON SCHOOL - SYRACUSE. OH .
MON . &amp; WED. 4 :30 TO 5:30 - 6 :30 Ttl 7 :30
TUES. &amp; THURS . 5:45 TO 6 :46
fOR REGISTRATION PH. 992-3794
INSTRUCTOR. JOY KING

JUST
ANNOUNCED!
·7.9% A.P.R•
AGGIES CELEBRATE - Texas AAM juhllatlon slarted eat1y New
Year's Day when MM's Mollie Jay (51 ) """""'ered a fumbled punt by

Auburn during the firS quarter of yesterday's 36-16 vlclol'f. UPi.

Texas A&amp;M captures
Cotton
Bowl,
36-16
..
DALLAS 1UPI I - For 'much of
Its 5().year history. the Cotton Bowl
has been known as a passer's
paradise and a ruMo&gt;r's nightmare.
Texas A&amp;M sophomore qua rter·
back Kevin Murray and Auburn 's
Helsman Trophy· winning ta ilback
Bo Jackson added to that tradition
Wednesday.
Murray th rew fer a Cotton Bowl
record 292 yards while Jackson was
stopped time and again In critical
situations when the game was &gt;1ill
In doubt.
Those Ingredients combined to
setve up a J6.16 victotv for Texas
A&amp; M in a 'game that w~s fa r closer
than the resu lt shower!.

Over the years, such well- known
ballcarriers as Earl Campbell al)d,
Eric Dickerson have struggled In
the Cotton Bowl. The game has
played host to such famous throw·
ers as Ken Sta bler, Roger Stau!J.
ach, Bobby Layne, Joe Theismann,
Joe Montana, Dan Marino and last
year's Helsman Trophy winner,
Doug Flu tie.

No member of tha t famous
passing group, how('ller, threw for
more · Cotton Bowl yards than
Murray did Wednesday.
His lo ng-range aerials rallied t~
Southwest Conference champions
twice In the fi rst halt. Then, alter

Jackson was .thwarted In his bid to
give the Tigers the lead, Murray
gu ided the Aggles to the gamecllnchlng touchdown .
"This has been the most fu n I've
ever had In my lite," said Murray,
who completed l~f-26 passes. "We
set our goals so high at the start of
the season, and we made them."
Jackson, meanwhlle. gained 129
yards in 31 carries and surprisingly
was named the game's most
valuable ctfenslve player.
But when Auburn had a chance to
take the lead o&gt;arly in the fourth
quarter. Jackson was stopped on.
three successive carries from the
A&amp;M2-yard line. Moments la ter, he

Byars' foot _controversy continues
COLUMBUS. Ohio \ UPl i - The

controv~rs y

surround i'ng

the

broken bone in Keith Byars' right
fool continues to grow.
Byars. Ohio State' s f&gt;.foot -2.
232-pound Alt ·Amerlcan tailback r:i
a year ago, suffered the injury Sept.
2 during practice. Byars made ~is
first appearance In Ohio Sta t~·s
sixt h game of thr season against
Pu rdue. The next W('('k . against
Minnesot a. he re- mJured it and
didn 't pia)' again unfit the fi nale
'against Michigan. gaining onh 35
yards in 12 carries against ttx&gt;
WolvPrinrs

Prior to Ohio State's ll&gt;O Florida
Clt ms Bowl \·ictol)· over Brig ha m
Young last Saturda\·, B\·ars de·
ctared himself in " the best condi·
lion I've been all war ."
He ":as in the starling Buckey£'
lineup against B\' lJ, but again
re-injun' d the foot on Ohio State's
sr'Cond lXJsSt•sslon aft rr ca rrying

only twicP fu r fiw yards.
Following the Cltm s Bowl. Ry·
ars· father. Reginald. a Baptist
minister in Da)ton. Ohio. criti cized
Ohio State team physicians for ttx&gt;ir
handling of his Siln·s injur:&gt; .

" U they would have dc&gt;ne the

surgery In the beginning, he might
have played most of the season,"
said Byars' father. "The university
doctors made a mistake. U they
would havo&gt; operated, he could have
been healed in six to eight weeks
and would have been fine."
But, Dr. Robert Mu11Jhy, head
OSlJ team physician, said in a
prepared statement that Byars'
injuty was treated the wa)· most
such injuries are treated - wai t
and '&lt;'&lt;' if ttx&gt;y heal.
"Our medica l staff rcmm·
mended a six to eight WPt"k niat of
casting and then rehabilita tion...
said Mu11Jhy.
But . Murphy sai d, that changed
alter Byars 11'-injured the foot in the
Minnesota game. He said OSU
orthopedic consultants. Drs. Ja ck
Unverterth and Mel Otix, recom ·
mended surgerv then be pertormed
to insert a sc rew to strngthen the
broken bone.
"Keith and his familv refuS&lt;'d ,"
Murph) said of the doctors·
recomrnE&gt;ndat ion.

Byars then visited Dr. John
Bergfeld of lhe Cl"'Piillld Ciini&lt;'.
Bergfeld also urged surgl'ry br

perfomlild, but again, Muillhy
said, Byars and his family refused .
Fin ally, Byars saw Dr. Gerald
recommended
an operation,
but
Broock
of Dayton.
Broock, too.
also said he felt the player could
finish the season before·!~ surgery
as long as he ~id oot have
significant pain in the foot .
After Byars removed himself
from the Citrus Bowl game,
complaining of pain in t ~ an kle
and t~ area of the foot frac tu re.
.Murphy said he urged surgt-ry as
soon as possible.
"He tByars) has not yet acCE'pted
this rerommedatio n," safd
Murphy, woo addl&gt;d, " the Byars
family has been fu lly informed
through thesf difficult four
months."
.
During pre-game Citrus Bowl
inten.il'Ws, Byars was asked nu ·
merous times about his inju1y and
the ' possibility of surgery being
pefformed.
He constant r~p ly was that no
decision on a possible operatio n had
yet be mad~ and wouldn't be for
"two or three weeks," aftpr hr had
a chance to discuss things with his
parents and physicians.

Kosar doesn't expect big welcome
\'ERO REA CH, F'la . tlJ PJ1 Almos t two .r ears to thr da) after
Bl'rnir Kosa r worker! ont' of hls
bigges t mlrarl&lt;" in the Orangr
Bowl. Kosar br1ngs his CIP\'eland
Brown~

tra m !Q Mi am i hoping to

pu ll off an upSI't of ttr&lt;o defending
AFC champion Dolphins
On .Jan. 2. 191'1 . Kosar and lh&lt;·
Uni\'ersity of Miami (F la. 1 upS£&gt;1

top-ra nked Nebras ka in the Or.mgr
Bowl and won the national cham·
pionsh ip. Kosa r k'ft Miami a 1·ear
later .for a multi·mililon dollar
contract with the Browns. whom lie
rooted for while grov.ing up in
Boa t\lman . Ohio.
He started Jjl· ga m&lt;'S for the
Brov.ns. who won the AFC Central
1111h an 8·8 rPCO•d and arc 10''' point
unde rdo~s lor thei r 12:30 p.m.
game Sa tu rda;· with the Dolphins.
Kosar said he is anxious to return to
the Orange Bowl.
"Obviously, I'm looking f01ward
to II ," he sa id W!'dni'Sda y before 1c.Browns practiced at the . Lo•
Angt-leS Dodgers facility in Vero
Beach. "lt' s klnd of a highlight and
the main reason you play In the
National Football League Is to get
to the playoffs. If's an added ~neflt
for me coming back to the Orange
Bowl, where I played so many
games."
Kosar. who completer! 124·of· 248

• •
J ' •.lr.' .
1' ' '

pasSl's for 1.578 yards. 8 touch·
do1111s and 7 interceptions. said he
doesn't expect a warm f('(' Pption
from the Miami fan s.
"Mia mi has good loya l fans, " he
sa id. " I don't expect them tochangt•
for one guy coming back with a
vis iting team."

He ,aid he was n't netvous about
the game. but anxious to get It
under way.
.
" I don ·t think nervous is a good
word," Kosar said. " I think the
more appropriate word Is anxious.
I' m looking loiWard to the ga me.
It' s a good cha Uengt&gt; for oor team ."
Like th&lt;o Browns, Kosar had an
up·and-down season. He was
named AFC offensive player of the
week after tossing three louchdown
passes and running lor a fourt h
aga inst Houston Dec. 15, tlli&gt;n the
next week threw an Intercept ion
and fum bled twice as the Browns
lost at the New York Jets in the
sea son finale.
Ye.t. Browns' coach Marty Schot·
tenhelmer said Kosar Is de!lnltely
Cleveland's quarterback of the
futu re:
"He hall all !1 the characteristics
that ~ look ror In a winning
qua rterback," Schott en helmer
said. "HI''s smart ... And he Is
unflappable. His approach never
changes,
"As Is typical with any young

player, there are times you say 'Oh.
why did you do that,' but that's the
case wit h any young player." he
said.
Kosar admitted there have been
tough times.
"There's times w~n you have to
really buckle down and tune in on
what you know." he sai d. "When
you second guess yourself is when
you get In troubi,' .
"When you get the game experience and repetItIons, you feel a lot
more comfortable with yourself,''
Kosar said.
Kosar Is one of the few football
players that reallzed their child·
hood dream of playing lor their
home-town team . He said when he
Is on tlli&gt; field of Cleveland Stadium.
he does not have time to worry
about the emotion Involved .
"I looked loiWard to It , but when
you 're out there playing a game and
you're on game day, you have so
many things ruMing tlu"Ough your
lli&gt;ad," he said. "You try not to get
caught up tn the emotions.
"It went pretty welt for .us this
year," Kosar said. "Last year's
·team only won five games. This
year we Improved on ourfeC9rd hy
winsand we'reln the playoffs.
That's the main thing."
The playoffs are a Httillg place lor
· Kosar to finish his rookie s-ear with
the j3rowns.

three

was stopped ·again ·on 4th·and·2
from the A&amp;M 'J:l.
"The crowd noise got louder and
louder, and we kept stopping him,' '
said A&amp;M sophomore nose tackle
Sammy O'Brien!. "We expected Bo
would run ·the ball, and we were
ready lor him."
Until the 11n·a1 stop ct Jackson, the
game's momentum had swung
back and f6tt h, just the way It
should in a good bowl ma tchup.
Aubu rn jumped on an early A&amp;M
turytover, and Jackson scored on a
$-yard run. By the end of the first
quarter the Aggles had mover! in
front, 12- 7, on runs of 11 yards by
Harry Johnson and 22 yards by
Keith Woodside.
The kmgest play of the day, a
73-yard scr!'fn pass from Pat
Washington to Jackson, put Auburn
back in the lead . But a field goal
1t ~ first of his career) by Scott
Slater gave 1~ Aggies a 15-13

.

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lEG. PIICE '25 .00

LADIES SLACKS

SALE $2000

REDUCED

SIZES 28 THB lJ 36

20°/o To 30°/o

MEN'S HATS

LADIES' LEVI'S

DRESS &amp; CASUAL

REDUCED

40°/o

llDIS'

20.,/o ro 40°/o

REDUCED

PRICE

1 UACK LADIES'

SPORT &amp;
DRESS SHIRTS

REDU(ED

:Prostitute leaders
urge . cohorts to
join AIDS study
ATLANTA (UP! ) - The lea&amp;&gt;rs
of two prostitute groups will
encourage members of their profes·
slon to join a study that federal
health olflclals hope will determine
whether prostitutes are spreading
. AIDS to helerosexuals.
· Delores French of Hooking Is
:Real Employment (HIRE) and·
: Margo St. James of Call Off Your
:Old Tired Etl\lcs (COYOTE) said
· Wednesday they agreed to encour·
: il&amp;e prostitutes to participate In the
two-year study to make sure It Is
ljlir and accurate.
: "We don't want to see. whores
;;capegoated and the public fooled ,"
said St. James. "Cops want to use
sheets to wrap around hookers
)'!hen they haul them In - theY're
always blaming women lor diseases men spread."
· "Prostltu tes hlstoricaliy have
been the scapegoats l1&gt;r every·
thing," French added. "Everyone
Is looking lor a couple of grou))G to
blame. It helps people •.o 'divert
their hysteria."
Acquired lnunune deficiency
syndrome Is threatening the UveUOOod of prostitutes, French said,
"and a lot ciwomen have gotten out
of the business."
The national Centers for Disease
Control will ask prostltu~ In
Atlanta, Miami, Los Angeles, San
Francisco and Paterson, Newark
and Jersey City, N.J ., to undergo
blood tests later this month.

CORDUROY SLACKS

20°/o

REDUCED

30°/o

BAHR ·CLOTHIE·RS
•DDLEPOIT

.

•

AIDS Is spread through semen,
conlamlnated needles and blood.
transfusions and studies Indicate ·
homosexuals, drug abusers &amp;nd
~mophlllacs are the most likely to
get the usually fatal dlseaoe . .
Nearly 2 million people have been
exposed to the AIDS virus; the CDC
saki, and rmre than 15,(0) ~ave
developed the dlsl!ase.
But sdentlsis said 933 AIDS
victims oo 1:.'' !It the high-risk
cat~rlennd at least 155 people 137 woO&gt;en and 18 men - appar·
ently got AIDS through heterosex·
ual contact.
"We're doing this to help lhe
women In the occupation as well as
their sexual partnerS," said Dr. Bill
Darrow, director of the CDC study.
"We're concerned about how fa r
the virus has spread," said Darrow.
''This will provide us useful lnfor·
matlon about condoms and other
prophylactics - whether their use
will slgnltlcantly . bwer the rates of
Infection."
In the second year of the study,
scientists will examine "other
POP SINGER KILLED - Singer Ricky Nelson, his llauce and
aspects, like male partners," Dar·
members of his band were killed In a New Year' s eve plane crash In a
row said.
field south ol DeKalb, Texas. Nelson, the younger son of TV's ()zzie and
St. J ames said streetwalkers face
less danger of contracting (\IDS
than expensive call girls, who must
meet demands lor unprotected sex
entourage were transported Wed ·
DE KALB, Texas (UPI ) and often have bisexual bvers.
Federal
lnves
tlgators
began
the
nesday to Dallas where autopsies
"A lot of these rirh tricks go all
grim
task
of
silting
through
wreck·
were
begun. One firefighter at the
over the world," she said. "Who
age of a DC.J that crashed during scene said all he could see of the
knows what ttoey've got?"
calm sunny weather, killlog singer victims was "skulls and bones."
Nelson, 45, was on his way from
Ricky Nelson, his fiancee and five
Guntersville, Ala., to Dallas, where
members of his band.
Five National Transport ation he was lxloked for a New Year's
Safety Board investigators arrived Eve show w~n the plane went
Columbia.
Wednesday to Inspect the wreck- down, clipping power lines in its
Olarles F. Wildermuth, Kathryn
age, scattered along a 15().yard plunge to eart h. Electric clocks In a
L. Wildermuth to Richard B.
swath
cut Into a northeast Texas
Simpson, Tandy E. Simpson, Par·
at 5:17
houseenabling
nearby stopped
CST.
authorities
to fixp.m.
the
cow
pasture.
eels, Porn. Vlll.
time
Last
year
was
aviation's
deadli
of
the
crash.
Pomeroy Cement Block Co., to
Only the pilot and CO·pilot. who
Richard B. Simpson, Tandy E. es t. The first plane crash ca me on
were thrown out, survived, though
J
an.
1,
1985,
when
an
Eastern
Simpson, Parcels, Porn. Vill.
both were burned seriously.
Central Trust Co. N.A. to Dennis Alrlloes Boeing 7'll plowed Into a
NTSB c hairman Jim Burnett
Bolivian mountain. killing all 29
E. Saelens, Carla S. Saelens, Lot li,
people aboard. The last was the said the two could provide key clues
Mldd. VIII.
New Year 's Eve crash of the DC·3 to Investigators.
carrying Nelson' s party .
"The most significant thing about
In the months between, some the accident is, we have a Uve,
2,006 people lost their lives in surviving pilot," Burnett said.
crashes worldwide.
The pilot, Brad Rank, was listed
A revil'W Wednesday of radio In serious but stable condition at St.
transmissions showed that smoke Michael's Hospital In Texarka na,
had poured irllp the cockpit of the Ark.
'
when customers cannot pay t~lr · disabled DC-3, choking the pilot,
The co- pilot, Kennet h Ferguson.
bills.
before the plane crashed In calm 43, was In critical and gua'rded
''Th1s Is a regressive tax which
condition with burns to his face,
weathe r conditions.
may add 5 percent to the bUis of the
Witnesses reported smoke was hands and back at the University of
average law abiding, hardworking,
trailing from the left side of the Arkansas Medica l Center in Little
bill paying consumer," he said.
twin-engine propeller craft as It Rock, Ark.
Batchelder also cited an experi· sa iled over a h(lystack, narrowly
Nelson's fiancee. Helen Blair ,'!/,
mental program announced Mon· missed two farm houses, sheared bass gultarlsl Pa trick Woodward,
day through which four natural gas oil a utility pole and disintegrated. 35, lead gu itarist Bobby Neal, 38.
companies will help is,ooo low·
NTSB Investigator Rudolf Kapu~· drummer Rick lntveld, 23. pianist
Income families Insulate their tin said the agency 's investigators
Andy Chapin, 30, and sou nd techni·
homes for enef'gy savings.
would be at the scene for about five cian Clar~ Russell, 35, died in the
days, and It probably would take accident.
He said other lamllles earning about six months to reach a
Nelson ga ined fame In the 1950s
less than $16,(0) a year will be conclusion on the ca use of the
television soow, " The Adventures
asked tp subsidize the selected accident .
of Ozzleand Harriet,"parlaying the
15 ,000 wh o re ce ive fre e
The bodies of Nelson and his program to a successful pop music
weatherization.

Clemson R. Pratt, Ginger Pratt
to Buckeye Rural Elect. Coop.,
Rlght of Way, Bedford.
. Robert Hawk, Romona Hawk to
B.R.E. Coop., Right ol Way,
Bedtord.
Terry R. Cullums, Ca rolyn Cui·
lums to B.R.E . Coop., Right ciWay,
Bedford.
· Trustees of Columbia Township
to B.R.E. Coop., Right of Way,

Harriett Nelson, was on his way to perlonn at aNew Ye~u-'seve party in
Dallas at the time of the crash. Ul'l.

.

Crash cause sought in death of Rick Nelson

Property transfers•••

(6 cyl.)

•F-150 4X2 PICK-UPS
•RANGER 4X2 PICK;.UPS
.

{

1986

dulerl for broadcast later this year.

career.

r- --------------..,

A one-hour television special,
featuring Fats Domino and Nelson
during a tap ing of the '50s revival
show at the Universal Amphi·
theater in Los Angeles Aug. 22. was
to air this month on 143 stations
nationwide. The program has bc'Cn
recalled by Nelson's manager.
Grl&gt;g McDonald. It willb&lt;' re· edited
as a tribu te to Nelson and reschr-

OIL &amp; FILTER
PLUS

TUNE-UP
SPECIAL

~·~~~~~~~~~~~

. 'I· .

4 CYL. or 6 CYL.
WIT H COliPON
5JI JACKSON PfKE ·RT 35 WEST
Phone 446· 4524
BA~GA t ,,

Sta~e representative

MATIN EES SAT I \UN

ALL SEATS 12.15

SSION EVERYTUESDAYSl.

I
I
I
I
1

I seeks policy clieck
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UP! I State Rep. Wllllam G. Batchelder,
citing an experimental prograrn to
help low·lncome !amUles Insulate
their homes, wants the legislature
to look Into poUcles of Public
UtUitles Commission of Ohio as to
aid lor lhls soclo-econlomlc group.
The Medina RepubUcan claims
the' P UCO Is ttylng to redlstrtbute
the wealth of utility customers with
Its programs and he said Thesday
he wDI soon Introduce a resolution
calllog lor a Joint legislative
committee to examine PUCO
pollcles for low-Income famUies.
: "Working people in Ohio are
being taxed to support the redlstrt·
butlonlst schemes of the Publlc
OtUitles Commission without regard to their ability to pay, "
Batchelder said.
.
.. The northeastern Ohio lawmaker
cited a program under which
consumers are asked to help a
ulUity make up lor revenues lost

lJoard okays
• •
•

~ppropnat1ons

:Appropriations lor the first six
months of 198;, about $1,150,10l,
were approved when the Easto&gt;rn
Local SChool District Board of
Education, met Monday night.
The board changed the health
Insurance coverage from Blue
Cross of Central Ohio to CommunIty Mutual which Is Blue Cross and.
Blue Sh ~ of Southeastern Ohio,
and bids for supplies wenl to
M.G.M.. fuel oil; Sohio, gas andotl ;
Warehouse Tires. Athens, tires and
tubes; and Na tionwide, fieet
Insurance.
The annual organ iza tional meeting was set for 7p.m. Jan. l3andhls ·
will be followed hy a special session
to: discuss a temporary buget and
personnel.

Market
~eports••.
' ~TIIENS LIVESTOCK SAUl!
'.
~mber ar. 1181
•
CATILE PRICES: Fe&lt;'der St ..rs:
tOood &amp; Choice), JOO.SliO tbs, 147.·1M.:
~- 700 lbs, $43 . ~$52.25; Feeder Heifers :
1Cood &amp; Choicer, JOO.SliO lbs, 146.00:
Sll0·700 lbs, 137.·$43.; Feede&lt; Bull s: !Good
&amp; Cholet) . 501).100 lbs, S4Ul0: Slaughter

&amp;I lls: ~Over 1000 lbsl , ~_. 00: Sla ughter
Cows: Ulllllles, 132.-137.50: Ca nners &amp;
CUtters. 12ti.-S35.; Spri nger Cows: !BYthe
Head ), $275.·$330.; Vea ls: !Choice I
Prlmt l, $42.5().$54.00; Baby Ca lves : (By

the Head ), SS .00..$61.60.
HOG PRICES: Hf:Ws : t•l . Barrows &amp;
Gll tsl, 200·300 lbs , 148.: Butch.,. Sows.
132 .S043G . ~ : Butcher Boars. S2!i.·$.'1J.:
SHEEP PR ICES: Old Shet'f): 116.110·
$16.50: Slaua:htt'r Lam bs, $59.!)0,

$3995

l
I

I

l

Includes:
OIL
OI L FILTER
PLUGS
SCOPE TEST
Check :
PCV
AIR FILTE R
ADJU ST TIMING
IDLE SPEED

COOPER
CHRYSLER
PLYMOUTH DODGE
MIDDUPORT, OHIO
992·6421
8-S

Hazing charges brings fine
Mayor Seyler ends
four court cases
.

Two defendants forlelted bonds
and two others were lined ill the
court of Pomeroy Mayor Richard
Seyler Thesday night .
Forleltlng on speeding charges
were George Reeder, Waldo, $4'3,
and Daniel Thomas, Ml\ldlepori,
$50.
Fined were Ronnie Barber,
Middleport, $3'75 and cosls, driving
while Intoxicated. and$43 and costs,
failure to yield the right of way, a nd
Jaymes Carpenter, Reedsville, $45
and costs, speeding.

Meets Saturday
HarrisonvUie Lodge 411 F&amp;AM
will meel In regular session,
Saturday. 7: 30p.m., at the temple
to work In the master mason
degree. All master masons are
welcome.

Singers announced
Boyd . and Blaine Cornwell..
"Master's J':ncouragers " ..wtll be at
the East Athens Church of Christ
Sunday evening at 7 p.m.

Practice set
Pomeroy Olapter of the Order rl.
Eastern Star will practice Suooay
at 2 p.m. Cor Tuesday's 7:45 p.m.
to wear
meeting. ¥ embers
chapter dresses on Thesday.

are

Onler clarified

.
.
At the personal request of Ralph
Benton Wells, orders have been
filed In Meigs County Common
Pleas Court for Apex Contracting .
Co. of Paris, Ky. to withhold child
support payments from his wages ..

Monday
thru

many volts they could handle In a
NILES, Ohio (UP!) - A Trum ·
homemade electtic cha ir, McDo·
bull County man accused of using a
homemade elect ric chair and an
nald police ollicia ls said.
Police officers raided Bly's home
electrified cross to shock teenagers
.
Oct.
7 and confisca ted 232 pholo·
has pleaded no contest to charges of
graphs.
which showed the "games"
attempted hazing.
Richard Bly, 38, of McDonald that Bly allegedly played with 36
boys over a four· year period.
was lined $:nl alter entering his
The photographs showed the
plt&gt;a In Niles Municipal Cou11
youths
screaming and twisting in
Tuesday . He was originally
the
chair
as the current wen l
charged wit h child endangering.
through
their
bodies, police said.
Boys bet weeq Ihe ages of 12 and
Police Chief James Tyree said at I
18 in the small community of about
the boys were willing to participate
3,1XXJ people located between
in what they thought was nothing
Warren and Youngstown tested
more tha n a game.
their endu rance by seeing how

Friday

L--------------

I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~

January
Clearance
Begins

FRIDAY, JAN. 3rd,: 1986

Winter Clearance·Sale

GROUP WOMfN'S

CONNIE, DEXTER, NURSEMATES.... .1/2 PRICE

NOW IN PROGRESS!

QOI
3
CONNIE DRESS SHOES..............
10 OFF

WOMEN 'S

SAVE SAVE SAVE!

WOMEN'S PURSES ~~~~~!.~!?.~~ ....... 30°/o OFF

ALL CHILDREN'S KANGAROO ........ 1/2 PRICE
ALL CHILDREN'S PONY ................. 1/2 PRICE
GROUP' CHILD~E~'S NIKE .......~..... lf2 PRICE

MEN'S WOMEN'S, CHilDREN'S

ANGEL TREADS ......................... 30

Vo OFF
MEN'S WOMfN's ·ancl CHILDREN 'S
O
DINGO BOOTS .......................... 30 Vo OFF
GROUP GIRlS SUEDE and
O
WATER REPELLANT: BOOTS ........ 30 Vo OFF
POll PARROT &amp; THOM M1AN
l
BOYS &amp; GIRlS SHOES ................ /2 PRICE

GROUP Of MfN 'S

NIME, PONY and CONVERSE
.30«:'/o to 50°/o OFF

\

0/

ALL CONVERSE

RUNNING SHOES...................... 30 10 OFF

GIOUP WOMEN'S .

001

TENNIS SHOES .......................... 3

'10

· ·HAPPV NEW YEAR!

lEATHER AND WATER REPEWNT
I

OFF

. O

·

WOMEN'S BOOTS ..................... 30
htri \)~t
~

)OUSt

rJ'1le

[!
c \

SHOE PLACE

1

:

MIDDLIPORT ---'- ·--'-::

0/
10

OFF

�L-

Elwood Howanl, Sr.

U-S Merchandise
Trade Deficit

Mrs. Robert (Irene) Uttle, Brookville; Mrs. Marvin (Betty) Caldwell, Salyersville, Ky., and Mrs.
I..ronard (Kay) Peterson, Minooka,
Dl. Also surviving are 18 grandchildren and 14 greatgrandchildren.
Besides his parents, he was
preceded in death by a brother,
Jesse Melvin Howard, and a sister,
· Mrs. John (MearHne) Knowles.
ServiCes will be held at 3 p.m.
Friday at the Ewing Funeral Home
wtth Rev . Steve Fuller, pastor of
tl)e Cheshire Baptist Church, offtclatlng. B~l wUI be in Wells
Cemetery. Friends may call at the
funeral home from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9
p.m. Thursday.

.f .

· All figures in billions of dol •

1974

~,~~~- ·.~·

•..;

'

.· ·~·'•

~

~\
-,.

..

Q

••

Mlchaf'! Thriss. Racinr. charging

grm•s neglrd of tlu ty and rxlr&lt;'mr
cruelty . A resfra imng ordf'r h&lt;.~~
tx&gt;&lt;-n issuC'd agai nst thr ddrndant

.

·,

Two lotto winners

- Two
A dlvorrr .:1ction filfld by Vin('(lnt pl ay~rs who picked all slx numbPrs
E. Mossman. Pomrro~· . againsl in W!'dnesdav nig ht's Ohio Lotto
Lois M. Mossm;&gt;n . Middleport. ha; drawing will share a $1 million top
p1ize.
been dismissro .
The names of the pla~·ers will bP
announced after their tickets are
l'alkiated at a r&lt;'!(ional lottery
officr. Thr winning numbPrs wpre
l !!. 10. 17. 21 and 28.
Toda1 ... parr!) cloud)·. High i' to
The pla.vers eac h will rPCPive
50 Stm th II' inn 10 to 15 mph .
$510.122 in 20 annual pa)'ments of
Tontght ... cloud' wit h a chanrc of $2\.:JO!i .lO . minu s taxi'S .
· rain rarl~· a net .1 r hanC1' of snow
1n add ition to the top-prize
Jat('. l.ow 2~1 w :\0. Snu thra~t wind 10 winnrrs ..l47 plavrrs Sf'if-rtrd fivPof
to 15 mph . bo'Coming "''PSI during th~ numbers 10 win $477 Paeh. Also,
the night .
ll.li2J plavrrs had four of the
Frida:.·... p;lrtl:&gt; c loud~· TPmJ)('ra
nu'mh!'rs. winning U\ a pi&lt;'&lt;'&lt;'.
tur1'S falling through the 20s.
TickPt sales for the mrd -wl'£'k
E•tcndt'd fore&lt;·ast
lotto drawing totaled $ 2. ~.R67.
Saturday through Monday
"ith a tvtal prize payout of
Fair Satunlay and Sunda)'. .\ $1.6:!i,H7. Thr &lt;'Stimated jackpot
chunce of soow ,\londa)'. HIKI»&lt; for Saturday's drawing is $1
mostly In lh• :JOs. Lows t5 to ~ million.
pt'nding final action in the maft('r.

.,

'84

,,r; ~ :, ,,1,,,,, l l' ,,•. ,... ,w .•,
TRADE LOOSES - U.S. Trade Josse; to llrelgn nations swelled In
November to 113.7 bWion, nearly 20 percent hlgher than October's
defldt, the Commerce Department reported Tuesday. The deficit was
the thin!

CU::VF:IAND tl! Pil

hlghesl ever. UPJ.

New voice response
installed by General

Campbell, Racine; William Jewell,
· '.: " Meigs County Emergency Mectl· · Mason; Chester Mundry, Reeds·
. cal Service reports thrw calls •iliE'; Penny Smith, Middlepor1.
Tuesda y and three ca ll s
Thesday Dlschatges--None.
'·· Wednesday.
Wednesday Admisslons-- Edw;~rd
&lt;·. 1\Jesday at 7:34 a.m .. Pomeroy Coon, New Haven.
; was· ·called to tht' Pomeroy Health
Wednesday 'Discharges--Garth
'Carf. .Center for Peggy Ha~tman to Smith, Fred Shain.
··veterans Memoria l Hospital:
.Pomeroy at 11 : 4~a . m . transported
Cletls Arnott to Veterans MPmorial Car hea\·ily damaged
Hospital from an aut o accident at in Pomeroy accidenl
. 146 Mulbert;· Ave.; Racine at 8: :!3
·p:m . ireatro but did not transport
A car was heavily da maged and
Keith Pickens.
its drl\'er was cited to mayor's
Wednesday at 1:22 a.m .. Pome- court as the result of an accident on
roy went to Sumnf'l' Rd . for Lee Mulberry Ave. Tuesday.
Gaincy to Ca mden-nark Memorral
Pomerry Pollee said a car driven
Hosptlal: Middleport at o:03 p.m. by Cleatus Arnott. Route 4, Pomewent to ~orth Third for Doroth\' roy . coming down Ann St. to
Selby to Veterans Memoria l Hospr· MulbPrry Ave., failed to manlputal ; Pomeroy at H:;; 1 p m. trrat!'d latt.' the turn onto Mulberry and
but did not transpor1 Clctl&lt; Arnott . struck a utility pole. Arnott was
cited on charges of failure to control
his vehicle and having an open
To end Qlarriag..s
flask. Arnott who received lacera·
lions of the fa&lt;~' was taken to
Clar inda Sur ThPi!;.s. R;Jcinl'. ha~
Vet•'rans Memorial Hospital by the ·
· fllrd for a di\'orcr m Meigs Coun t\
Pomerov Emergency Squad.
Common Plras Court from Thomas

.. •

.. l'

'62

$18.0

:Emergency squads Veterans Memorial
-i;~nswet three calls
Tuesday Admissio!IS· -Rober t

· :c

'80

'78

..

J,

:Meigs County happenings ..
.

'76

MARION - Ramona Is her name
and numbers Is her game. Tele·
phone numbers. that is.
Beginning Jan . 7. phone users
who dial direc tory assistance fo r
new or changed numbers will hear
the Ute·lll&lt;e computer voice of a
woman named Ramona. General
Telephone of Ohio said today.
The company has Installed a new
voice responSP unit that "oll servP
Its nearly 600,000 customers In the
state. It will speed up service and
Improve accuracy. a spokesman
said.
Phone numbers customers see k
~&lt;1ll tl' rec ited from a digital
recording of Ramona speaking
from almost an Infinite combinatlon of numbers .
"L\ve operators

wtU

directory assistance."
If a number Is not In the data
hase. the operator wtll Inform the
caller and not pass It to Ramona, he
said.
But Ramona gets Into the act c1 a
caller asks for a number that Is
listed . She will respond by saying,
"The number Is 555-2299." Then she
will pause and repeat the number. ·
If It's an unlisted number, she
says politely that at the customer's
request the number does not appear
In GTE's listings.
"Our operators answer more
than' 13,1XXJ directory assistance
ca lls on an average weekday, or
more than Jro,IXXJ calls a month."
he noted .
ller said the directory assistance
operation was centralized In Mar·
ion in 1983. The service Is designed
to provide new or changed numbers
not listed In directories.
He said Ramona's recordings
contain ordinary pronunciation of
numbers complete with Inflections.
The voice even trails at the rnd.
" Ramona Is a rea l person-," he
satd. "She works for the manufacturer of the equipment. And, yes,
Ramona Is her rea I name. No. her
number Is not listed."

answer

calls, however," said Richard Uer.
m&amp;nager of operator services ln
Malian. "They will ask lor the city
and the name, press a few keys on a
keyboard and Ramona will do the
rest."
"This new system will speed up
response time four or five seconds,"
said ller. "As operators turn calls
over to the co mputer, they become
free to handle other ca lls . This will
give cus1omers quicker accpss ·to

By Unlled Press Jnlemalional .
Two multipll! fatality accidents
during the 54-hour New Year's
holiday period boosted Ohio's traf·
fie death toll to 12, ttte State
!Dghway Patrol reported today.
There were eight deaths on New
Year's Day and four Tuesday, a
patrol spokesman said. The victims
died In eight accidents, which
occurred between 6 p.m. Monday
and midnight Wednesday.
•
The patrol said alcohol was
involved In both multiple faUJIIty
accklents, Including one In which
four Warren residents were kiUed
and anotht'r .where two Clevelanders died.
The Patrol said a Geauga County
accklent resulted In the deaths of
four Warren residents - Jeffrey
and Carolyn Eakins, both 25,
RetX'ccah Bowman, 23, and David
Fennell, 23.
A Patrol spokeswoman said
Jelfrey Eakin's car was-traveling
west at a high rate of speed on U.S.
422 south of Chardon Wednesday
morning when It went off the right
side of the road, crashed through a
guard rail and landed In the
Cuyahoga River.
"One of the deceased was stU!
clutching a beer can" when the
victims were pulled from the
wreckage, said Patrol Sgt . Robert
Jones.
The two Eakins' and Bowman
were dead at the scene and Fennell

was taken th&lt;' Cleveland Metro
General Hospital with head and ·
chest injuries wher'l' he died shortly
before noon, the pat ml !Jilid.
Tuesday ev&lt;'n ing in do"1!toWI!
Cleveland. pollee officers were
pursuing a car that had been
Involved in a hit -skip accident when
the car hit another auto, killing two
passengers and severely injuring a
third.
Pollee officers said l..rola Traywick. 68, and Phillip Traylck, 43, both
of Clt'veland were killed and
KPyonna Adair, 12, was critically
injured.
Police offlct'rs chased the offending driver on foot, capturing hlm a
short distance away. Officers said
Melvin McDougall. 'n, Clevela.JM!,
who had been drinking, would be
charged with two counts of aggravated vehicular homicide.

Meets Friday
Meigs County Fox Chasers Association will meet Friday nlghl, 7
p.m., at the clubhou se on Eagle
Ridge.

I

'

1/2 PRICE
CLEARANCE SALE
CONTINUES
SAVINGS
THROUGHOUT THE STORE

MARGUERITE SHOES
"Tht Middle Shot Store In The Middle lloclt"

ON MOST ·
SEASONAL MERCHANDISE
I

DAN~S
IN THE MIDDLEPORT MASONIC BUILDING ·

POMEIOY, OH.
' I

)

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• •

Taylor celebraJion set Sund4y
Mr. and Mrs. Blain Taylor of
Tuppers Plains will celebrate their
50th wedding anniversary at the
Torch Baptist Church Sunda~ from
2 to 4 p.m . ~ obSerV'iW'Mn !lie
liosted by their dati'ghler-ln-law,"
Shirley Taylor. and their granddaughter, Debra Bloomer.
Mrs. Taylor is the fomJer Gladys
Bi-ock, daughter r1 the late Thomas
and Margaret Lemasters Brock r1
WlleY'11ie. W.Va. Taylor Is the son
of Lewis and Zona Stern Taylor.

·l'tOCHESTER, N.Y. !UP!) -In
the continuing battle for kazoo
superiority , the city of Rochester
has proclaimed victory.
New Year's Eve revelers
hummed their way Into the record
hooks as 54,500 people played
kazoos In down(own Rochester,
promoters said Wednesday.
The ka7.oo concert smashed
November's record 40,1lXJ- person
chorus at a Vanderbilt University
football game In Nashville, Tenn.
"'l!e are the ka7.oo capital ~the

Silver Hill, W.Va. He retired In 1983
as owner-operator of the Tuppers
Plains Hardwate Store.
~· and Mr~. raxlor were
~ oo Jan. {f9,li at the borne'
of her parmts. They are the parents
of Roselyn Tucker of Thppers
Plains, and Thomas Taylor of
Torch. They have eight grandchild·
ren and two great-grandsons.
Friends and relatives are Invited to
attend the observance.

JA~bllc

A mini-musical. "Join the An·
gels' Song" by I&gt;avld Drysdale, was
presented by the choir of the Trinity
Congregational Church at the
annual Christmas Eve candlelight
service.
LoiS Burt, choir director, sang "0
Holy Night" and "It Was Love!'
backed by the choir which also sang
"Gloria." The Rev. W.H. Perrin
had a Christmas meditation and the
service concluded with the annual

Is Invited.

Village Pharmacy
PH. 992-6669

271 N. 2nd AYE.

MIDDLEPORT, OH.

2856.
Cross-Country Ski Clin ic Jan . 25 ·
at Findley State Park south of
Wellington in Lorilin County. To
register, call 1-216-647-4490.

formation of certain types of kidney
stones.
Bu1 if you are heaithy and eat a
varied, balanced diet. you don 't
need to take vitamins. Eat four or
mort' servings every day from the
grain and vegetabletfrult group,
drink at least two glasses of mllk
daily, and have two or more
servings of the meal/meat substl·
lute group. Remember that \O·
tamin and mineral supplements
cannot fully compensate for a poor
diet.
"Family Medicine" is a weekly
column . To submit quest ions, write
to Edward Schreck, D 0 .. Ohlo
University Olllege of Osteopathic
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall , Athens,
Ohio, 45701.

,,
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•

•

and the side windows held electtic
lighted candles, pine and red bows.
The altar featured the Holy Family,
a while cross white and red
poinsettias, flanked with two nine
branch candelabra . While
wreathes adorned several of the
sanctuary windows.

Annual' hollday party or the
~ baskets and poinsettias
Ladles Auxiliary of Veterans Mem- were delivered to shutlns of the
anal Hospital was held recently In Auxiliary. MembPrs enjoyed a gift
the East-W&lt;&gt;St dining room. Hus- exchange around a lighted tree.
bands c:J. members wert' guests. · Next meeting 'will bP held on the
Poinsettias · were given as favors fourth Tuesday afternoon of Janu;md a card was signed for Shorty ary. A cabbage paich-doU was won
Wright.
by Joan Atkins, Portland .

Bln.., ·\:"\IIJGIR L)

SILADrUM'

Tl1i-. ollcr valid only for the purcha"l' ot
A rt C.Hv('d Stladium H.S. rin~ s b&lt;'twe{'n
lanua ry land Februarv I. J98b.

Aglow ·speaker is annotif?.ced
Karen Davis wiU be the speaker
at the January meeting of the
Pomeroy &lt;;hapter of Aglow to be
held Jan . 9 at the Senior Citizens
Center.
Reserva tions for the buffet

dinner are to ~ made bPfore
Monday with Mrs.'Da vis, 992-5893;
13t'v Rupe, 742-:mJ: Betty Carpenter, 245-W; Nancy Beaver, 9925286, or Caroiyn Searls, 992-3467.

Zirkle home from hospital
Sally Duckworth Zirkle, daughter of Robert and Virginia Duckworth, Middleport, Is now at home
following treatment at the National
Cancer Institute at Bethesda, Md.

Cards may be sent to her at 115
Covey Drive, Warner-Robbins, Ga.
31008. She will be undergoing
additional treatmen t at the hospital
in Macon, Ga.

.--_,_-----------------..,.------1

· IRVINGTON, Ky. tUP)) up-and-down stock market, a
According to L.H. Frymire's pet budgel-balandng tax Increase,
rooster, Ted, and some local bird~. lower gasoline prices and an
the economy In 1986 will get better unemployment rate c1 9 percent.
before It gets worse.
Frymire colnpu ted the jobless
· Frymire, who has demonstrated rate by putting 10 grains of com In
'ted's forecastlng talents on the lront or Ted, who ate all but one.
·:ronight" show, makes his predlc·
Ted chose the single grain c1 rom
tlons based on •ie blrd'sappetlte for in front or a tax hike sign and
(ltalns of corn placed before signs Ignored the "rio tax hike" grain.
marked Inflation, tax increase,
"He ne-verdld go near the grain at
s!ock market, gas prices and the ·no' sign," Frymire said.
.,
unemplovment.
: Ftymlre also watches birds fly
o/er his property belore Issuing his
lorecasl. Based on their Dlght
patterns, he said: "The economy ·
Jonathan Sanders· of Reeds-vOle
Will start oit on a rather high note attended a recent party lor his
and Ihen by the end of the year l!'lll nepheWs, Thomas and Tyler Simbe on a low note."
mon:;, year old sons~ Mr, and Mrs.
After analyzing Ted 's appetite, Thomas T. Slnunons, His name ' .
Frymire's I~ forecast was for was not IJICiuded In the original list
lnfiation to be 6 percent, an c1 g)lests at the party.

Omitted

Christmas Eve candlelight service
and the singing of "Silent Nighl."
Beth Mayer, pianist , and Ralph
Werry, organist, presented quiet
time and meditation music P,reced·
lng the service and then pf8yed
"Stars Over Bethlehem" for the
prelude to the service.
Acolytes were Julie Buck and
Kim Ewing. The sanctuary was
decorated with a Chrlstll)aS tree

Skinner, Tricia Davis. and Matt
Thompson as the multitude of
angels .
'
Presenting music for the quiet
time, meditation and pr dude were
Bet h Mayer, Lesley Carr , Jenny
Buck, Julie Buck, and Michael
Mayer. During the service the choir
presented several Christmas
hymns and sang "Westminster
Carol:: f~r ,!he morl)ing anthem.
The program coocluded with
classes of Marcy Thompson and
Becky Depoy doing recital ions and
singing "Away in a Manger." •
That evening, the Pomeroy United Methodist Church 'and Trinity
Church Sunday Schools enjoyed an
evening of Christm as caroling,
returning to Trinit y Church for
refreshments.

Auxiliary at VMH holds party

SATURDAY
SALEM CENTER Star
Grange will meet Saturday at 8
p.m. at the Grange hall. AD
members are urged to attend.

.

Your ducror prescribes a spec ific numbe r of pi lis when he
writes a prescription . By using rhe entire qu unti ry at the
required frequency , you make sure that the medication
provid~s irs full benefits. jus t as you r d&lt;K·tor presrribcd .

Cross Country Ski Clinic at
Sycamort.' Stat e Park near Trotwood in Montgomery County Jan.
18. To register, call 1-513-1l&amp;l-4452. ·
Kaiser Permanente F rost Belt
Classic at Punderson State Park
near Newbury .In Geauga County
Jan. 18, with a snow date of Jan. 25.
To re{tister, call 1-21&amp;-564-2279.
Cross-Country Ski Clinic Jan. 25,
with a snow date of Feb. I at
Mosquito Lake State Park northeast of Warren, in Trumbull
Coonty. To register. call 1- 21&amp;-637 ·

I

POMEROY - Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet at 8 p.m.
Friday at the Rock Springs Grange
Hall. Rock Springs Grange will be
the host. All members are urged to
attend.

world," said promoter Gregory
Smith, an advertising executive
and chairman of Rochester's
Downtown Program Trust.
"The North has risen again ."
Smith said the kazoo blowers
were required to hum at least three
!Dngs tOgt'ther to quality for the
GulnneS!: Book of World Records.
Orchestra corductor Isaiah Jackson direct~'(! the kazooers In "Daisy ,
Daisy," the theme from "Bridge
Over the lUver Kwal " and "Take
Me Out to the Ba Ugame."

Ricy,r, Stevt.' Musser, Michael
Mayer, Beth Ewing, and Sabrina
M~hlman , the readers: and Ni cilola Pickens, Noelle Pickens ,
,lf:aryn Thompson, Tara Erwin.
Beth Skinner, Cass Cleland, Carolyn Skinner, Benny Ewing,
Jackie Buck, P.J . Erwin, ADen

Church choir presents candlelight ·event

Bird bearish on economy

Be Sure To Take It All!

grains, milk products, -vegetables thinners treating such conditions as
and fruits ani! meat or meat phlebitis of the legs.
People oo low calorie diets (less
substitutes - receive enough vi·
Ulmins and minerals and don't need than tm calories daily) such as
supplements.
alcoholics and the elderly may need
.It Is also unlikely that vitamins vitamin supplements. Multiple viwill prevent disease, as many tamin deficiency Is especially
people think . In fact , large doses of common among alcoboUcs. They
vitamins and minerals can have need to take water !Dluble vitamins
adverse effects .
such as thiamin; riboflavin, follc
Question: When are vitamins and acid and ascorbic acid.
mineral supp l ements
Women who take birth rontrol
recommended?
pills need more B6 than usual, and
Answer: Newborn Infants, for people on the anti-tuberculosis drug
example, receive vitamin K to Isoniazid need more B6 as well.
prevent bleeding disorders . II a
Some vitamin supplements taken
pregnant woman takes too much of In large doses by healthy peoplethe same vitamin, t))ough, her such as vitamin B6 - can cause
Infant could become jaundiced. diarrhea or even loss c:J. sensation In
Vltamtrr K in la rge amounts can · hands and feet. Too much vitamin C
also block the effectiveness of blood In healthy people can accelerate

"The Greatest Story Ever Told" Tom Bowen , Donald Mayer and
was the theme of the trogram held Ben Ewing, the thrre wlsemen:
at Trinity Congregational Church 1 Fred Thomp!Dn and George Frana t the annual Christmas program cis, shepherds: Trenton Cleland,
held during the morning worship Nichola Pickens, Andrew Mahlman, Hank Cleland, Julle Buck,
service.
Taking roles were Jim Schmoll, and Kim Ewing as the tax
Joseph; Roxanne Mahlman, Mary, collectors; Lesll!y Carr, Bet h
the Rev . W. H. Perrin, an angel; -' Mayer, Jennifer Buck, Raymond

Mr. and Mrs. 8/am Taylor

What's kazoo in Rochester ·

ENTIRE STOCK

can caU 1- 513-421-:m!!.
,.:...Cleveland Orchestra Concerts
begms Jan. 9 at Severance Hall in
Cleveland. For a schedule and
tickets, caU 1-216- 231-T.m.
-The Columbus Symphony Orchestra performs Jan. 10 and 11 at
Mershon Auditorium In Columbus.
For tickets, calli- 614-224-3291.
Special events In January lor
which reservatiOns are needed:
Winter Candlelight Series at the
Ohio Vlllage In Columbus Jan. 10,
11, 17,18, 24 and 25. These include
dinner and entertainment at the
Colonel Crawford Inn. For reservations, caD the Ohio Historical
Society, 1-614-466-1500, extension
:ni.

Trinity church program held for Christmas

FRIDAY
. ,POMEROY - A revival will be
held at the Mt. Olive Community
&lt;;liurch, Friday, Saturday and
SUnday at 7;30 each evening.
H~ rbert Inscoe will be the evangel~! . and music wll be pro-vided by
t~ Pleasant Valley Singers. The

SAVE 20°/o • 50°/o

12.
-"Directions in American Paint ·
lng, 1815-1921" Is the display at the
Cantoo Art Institute through Jan.
26.
-"Tom Uttie Paintings and
Prints" Is on exhlblt at Memorial
Han In Lima through Jan. 24.
On lhe tllealrlcal sdled1de:
-Pro Muslca Chamber Orches·
tra roncert Is Sunday at Weigel Hall
at Ohio State University with guest
artist John Ty!Dn on the recorder.
Fpr tlcekts, call 1-614-464-0066.
-"Two Can Play" Is tresented at
the Cincinnati Playhouse In the
Park in Cincinnati Jan. 7 through
Feb. 2. For tickets, Ohioans cancaU
l-8J6.582-l'.n!. Those ou tslde Ohio

Will vit~mins help your h~alth?

BY EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
Assistant Prolesoor of
Family Medicine
Ohio University College ol
Osteopathic Medicine
Question: I want to do aln can to
keep healthy. To me, that ·Includes
taking vitamins. What kind should I
take?
Answer: The Food and Drug
Administration estimates that
about 40 percent of Americans take
some type of vitamin dally. Indeed,
the vitamin and mineral supplement business accounts for 1.7
bllllon dollars annually .
Mos.t P,I!OPle who take viUJmins ,
however, don't need them. Healthy
adults who maintain normal body
weight and who eat a varied diet
from all the main lood groups -

THURSDAY
ROCK SPRINGS - The Sallsbu ry Township Trustees will meet
lor their organizational meeting
Thursday evening at 7 p.m. at the
township haD at Rock Springs.

STARTS FRIDAY MORNING!

•

Family medicine

CalendarI happenings

Semi-An,nual
Clearance Sale

NEW YORK
CLOTHING HOUSE

.I

through March 2.
-''The Amasls Painter and His
World: Vase Painting In Sixth
Century B.C. Athens" Is on display
through Sunday at the Toledo
Museu of Art.
-"Christmas Sky" planetarium
Show Is presented on weekend at
the Museum of Natural History In
Cincinnati through Jan. 12.
-"United Nations Exhibit on
World Problems" Is a display at the
Health Educatkin Museum In
Cleveland through Aprtlll.
-"Ku,shan Sculpture: Images
from Early India" Is the display at
the . Cle-veland Museum of Art
through Sunday. A "Sacred Indian"
exhibit Is on display through Jan.
'·

Fairgrounds In Columbus.
A Home, Farm and Garden Show
opens Jan. 8 at the Hara Arena In
I&gt;ayton.
'
The Mid-West Recreatonal Vehlcle Show opens Jan. 8 at the
Convention Center In Cincinnati.
A Recreational Vehlcie Show
opens Jan. 8 at the Chapel Hlll Man
In Akron.
Outdoors In Ohio, tl)e Buckeye
Classic Dog Sled Racw Is set for
Satunlay and Sunday at Punderson
State Park near Newbury, but In
case d no snow, It Will he held Feb.
15 and 16.
-"The VItal Gesture: Franz
Kline In Retrospect" !son display at
the Cincinnati Art Museum In the
Eden Park section of Cincinnati

20°/o TO 50°/o OFF

Center on Mulberry Heights and
runs from 10 a.m. to noon . Local
residents ca n dial the Athens Social
Security otnce directly Mopnday
through Friday at 992-6622. The
Athens office, located at 221
Columbus Rd ., is open from 8:45 to
4:30 p.m.
.-'.::he.:......M,;.e:.;lg;::s_;.:_..:...~
Sen
-io_r_C
_i_tlz_e_n_
s _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _--1

SUITS
SPORT COATS
BLAZERS
DRESS SLACKS
ALL-WEATHER COATS
SPORT &amp;
DRESS SHIRTS
FLANNEL SHIRTS
LEVI'S
COATS &amp; JACKETS
'
TIES
SHOES
SWEATERS

By SANDRA L LATll\IER
United 1)'- lnlenlatlonal
A new year in Ohio brings with It
a varietY of Indoor shows.
The Carl Casper Custom -Auto
Show run:; Friday through Sunday
at Hara Arena In Dayton.
The Tri-State Gun Show will be
held Saturday and Sund:~¥ at the
ADen County Fairgrounds In Uma.
An Antlqueji Flea Market wlli be
held Sunday on the Ohio State
Fairgrounds In Columbus.
Tobacco Shipping Is an e-vent
Sunday at the Carriage HID farm
near Dayton.. a working 19th
century farm.
A Boat and RecreatK&gt;nal Vehicle
Show opens Jan. 8 at the MultiPurpose Building on the Ohio State

Seasonal·
Clearanee Sale

Due to the holiday•. the sche·
duled \'!sit s by the Social Security
rrpresen tatrve in Meigs County
havt.' be&lt;&gt;n changed to Wednesday.
.Jan. Rand Wednesday. Jan . 22 . The
represen tative usually is schedulro
on the flrst6 and third Wednesdays
of thrmonth. Thecontactloca tionls

POfiiROY

Page-9

Ohio festivals move indoors :for winter aatvtttes

Middleport Lodge 363 F&amp;AM wW
meet Friday, 7 p.m., to work In the
fellowcratt degree. All members
are asked to attend .

Weather forecast

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All Meigs County REACT
members are urged to anend a
·meeting Friday, 7:30 p.m., at the
senlor.citizens cen ter.

Dates changed for SS rep

MEN'S WEAR

--

By The Bend

Thursday, January 2, 1986

•

,

Elwood Howard. Sr.,· 72, 37'701
.. New Urna Road, Rutland, a former
•.: resident of Cheshire and a former
. :: ."tnilyor of that town, died Tuesday at
··.:: ·.Holl.er Medical Center.
" :;· :··Mt. Howard was born at Salyers.:&gt;. -ville; Ky., a son of the late Seymore
._:, _. and. Elizabeth Crace Howard. He
:&gt;W!IS a plpefltier and was a member
:)_:'0( Huntington Local 521 Pipefltters
"!Jri.lon Iii the Ohto Valley since the
.:·_-19:4il's: During the earlY 1900's, he
•;;. '!, ·was the mechanical contractor for
:,( ·: . -:; tl)e, · Magoffin County, Kentucky
. :;· :'&gt;' ·courtoouse, the MagoUin C&lt;iunty
"' &gt;l~: Health Center and for an addition to
.'f!!,;the SalyersvUie High School. He
\ ,_:;,.~_was also a retail merchant in
-~·: Salyers-vUle for a number of years.
.:.:· He was mayor of Cheshire in the Thelma
Sanders
!~ late 1950's and was instrumental in
·: : the 'Incorporation of the village. He
Thelma Jean Sanders, 56, 1658
was a member of the Salyersville Lugo St., San Bernardino, Calif.,
Masonic Lodge, Free and Accepted dJed Dec. lJ in California.
Masons.
She was born July 2, 1929 at
:·':;
Surviving are his wile, Clara Coolville a daughter c:J. the late Alva
,,,
··: Hale Howard; two sons, Lt. Com- and.Sara Shanks Baker.
mander William Dexter Howard.
Surviving are her hushand, Ha .. Virginia Beach, Va .. and Elwood rold Sanders, San Bernardino; two
:''Howard, Jr .. Rutland; four daugh· sons, Thomas E. and Wayne J.
, ters, Mrs. Lowell E. 1Bonnie Sue 1 Sanders of Bell Flower, Calif.;
Swisher and Mrs. JameS R. (Tt'rrie three brothers, Harold L. Baker,
Leel Neal, both of Cheshire; Mrs. Ca lifornia; Glen Baker, Oklahoma.
Cll1ford E. tBarbara GaUl Whit· and Raymond Baker, llt'verly: two
tlngton, Sr .. Pomt.'roy: Mrs. Ray· sisters, Mary Brooks, Athens. and
mond E. [E. Lou} Swartz, Ma· Carolyn Hapney, Coolville; three
· rletUJ; four brothers, C. C. Howard grandchildren and several nieces
and Gllsple Howard, both of and nephews.
Pqmeroy: Henry D. Howard, Gra·
Friends may call at the White
: tlso, and Cleatus Howard, Clay Funeral Home In Coolville from 2 to
. City. Ky., and six sisters, Mrs. Ross 1 and 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday. Graveside
· I Effie) Ridenour, Mrs. Franklin rites will he held at I p.m. Monday
·,_'(Peggy} Phipps. Mrs. Uoyd (Fay} at the Coolville Cemetery with Rev.
:..Hughes, all of Huntington, W. Va.;
Ro~ Deeter officiating.
....

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The Daily Sentinel

JANUARY
CLEARANCE
SALE
NOW IN PROGRESS
CHAPMAN SHOES
NEXT TO ELBERFELOS IN POMEROY

~RTQ1~X'&amp;Q.

$6995

.

RING&gt;

Many other feaw re::. ,1rr Jvadablt&gt;

at an &lt;'~lr.l c ha r ~&lt;' .

- ~~
~Jettelers

,

II ~

212 E Main, Pomeroy

BRING TH II 41}

. "STOP!" ~'ATTENTION!"
'YOUNG PEOPLE WANTED!"
POSinON: Service for Jesus
SALARY: love, Peace, Joy, "Riches Untold/' ...
POSITION TITlE: Baptist Youth Fellowship
High School/ Junior High

BENEFITS:
1)
2)
3)
4)

"Getting to Know Jesus"!
Fellowship and Fun
Christian Service
Problem Solving through
"The Problem Solver"
S)And many more we'll find together

•'tOME LEARN WITH US I"
KICK-OFF MEmNG: SAT.
(Jan. 4th)
'

6:30 P.M. at Radne first Baptist Church
FOR MORE INFORMATIO N CONT ACT: .
STEVE AND WANDA SHULER; ADVISORS
PHONE: 247-3494 .
"THIS SATURDAY AT 6:30!!"
(

1

�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, OhiO

~~~u:~;da~
- ~y.~J:a~n:umv~2~·~1~9:B:6~----~------------------~p~~~MO~Y_:M=id=d=l~==rt~,~O~h~~~----------~----~~~--~Th~e~D~a~il~y~S~en~t~in~ei~P~ag~e~~11 ..

Thursday, Janu.V 2, 1981

Beifutj .and arrests

mark Rose Parade

t

,,..
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'

By NIKI CERVAN'IES
'":J?fObably part of the float's gutPASADENA, Calif. (UP!) - A r-- dahce system.
million people jammed tile route of
The float was later towed to the
the 97th annual Tournament of
post-parade area for vtewtDg.
Roses Parade for Ill) eyeful of
Despite-the brief Incident and the
marching bands and dazzling floral
fact tbat Southern California's
Coats that was marnid by hecord
celebrated climate did not quite live
number of arrests and a bomb
up to expectations as haze mixed
scare.
(
with sunshine, the parade of 160
"It's so beau~l," gushed-Fonya
floats, 22 bands and 25 equestrtan
Wiley/ a .15-year,i)ld who traveled
teams was judged to be a resound·
from Greenvllle, S.C., with her
Ing success.
,
family for the fabulous flood of
Among the lloats tbat were the
Cora. "I've never seen a parade live
l:iggest crowd-pleasers was the
belore."
winner ri. the top award - the
Pollee made a record 481 arrests . Sweepstakes Trophy.
- most for public drlnldng The brainchild of Singapore
durtng the nation's largest parade,
Airlines and the Singapore Tourtst
which also rang in the New Year
l'ron\otlon Board depleted a towerWedlnesday lor an estimated 100 lng human-Uke monkey god of
mllllon television viewers. The Chinese legend, constructed with
previous record was 350 arrests bt
gladiolus, carnations and roses.
1981.
·
The rolling work of art was
Pollee blamed warmer than accompanied by a team rJ. acrobats
normal temperaturesfortheunusu- on sWts who took the crowd's
ally rowdy behavior ot the crowd.
breath away with a repertoire of
. The most serious act of violence perilous flips and jumps.
was a pr.edawn shootlng tbat left a
ThJs year's theme, "A Celebra20-year-old man critically wounded tion of Laughter," attracted every- .
with a bullet wound in the face.
thing from the whimsical to the
Police said the gunfire occurred mystical.
One float, "Carpet Capers,"
durtng an argument between the
victim and two unidentified people. featured a toy train carrying circus
A bomb scare sparked by a
animals as It careened along a
volunteer seeing someone place an hfl:h·speed roller coaster track.
object on the back of the Blg-10
Another float that brought howls
Conference fioat prompted authort· oi laughter was the jaunty "Let's
ties to pull the vehicle out of the lbte Get Physical," in which three
of march and evacuate pedestrtans 23-loot ostrtches in legwarmers and
and speetalors from the area. tennls shoes pranced in an aerobics
police spokesman Mike Guerin routine as real-life fitness expert
said.
Jack LaLanne looke!! on.
Humorist Erma Bombeck was
this
year's parade grand marshal,
Explosive experu{removed the
device, a &amp;-inch-long box co~talning and Aimee Lynn Richelieu, 17, was
wires. and detennbteit-lit was the Rose Queen.

;

·Colorado Boulevard durinK the annual Tournament of Roses parade in
Pasaden, Calif., Wednesday. (UPI)

fl,OAT IS A WINNER - The ARCO float, winner of the Grande
Marshall's Trophy for excellence of creative design, moves down

__...;.._,_ _ _ _ _ _ _ Honor r o l l - - - - - - - - Firth Grade:

Allison Gannaw ay. NeU

The sf.a)fld six wet'ks grading period honor
roll ,1.1 thP Salerri Center Elemmtary School
has been annm.incro. M aklng a grade orB or
above. in all their subjects. to tx.&gt; named to the'

Franklin Pier&lt;'('. Andy Myers. Saundra

Gary CantcrOOry . Cynthia ConertJJ.

M oo!'(', Jana Jude. Shaun Fife, Jennifer
Ervin, 5eth Cremoons, Amy Cleland, Adam

Third Grade: Kerry Sexton, Kimberl y
JanpY. Cryst'll Vau~an, BrtanSm1 th, Mandy
Jonf'S. Tabitha Largt&gt;. Susan Pal{e. J(Jihua

Barrell. Lorma

roll WP.rf':
F'lrst Grad!': Stacy Silvers. Jo sandy,

SN'ond Gfack&gt;: Bryan Colwel l, Jakt&gt;
Gannaway , Mlkt&gt; Jarvis-. Mt&gt;lls sa Er~· ln eo

Sigman

Andrea

&amp;lrn'tl. Mlcha£&gt;1 And£&gt;rson.

The Daily Sentinel

V~glpla

(llf'r ,

Shui...-

Michelle Young.

Sixth Gr adP : Sh&lt;iynt Aspln. Bt&gt;lh Clark,
Hale. Danny l..cYIIs. Susan Love,

Terry Mc-Guire.

Fourth Gr&lt;Ade: [}(In!sf' ShenE'fk&gt;ld .

PHONE 992-2156
Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St., Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

.

Public Notice

~

NOTICE OF
4PPOINTMENT OF
FIDU&amp;I4RY
On Decombe• 24, 1985,

in the Meigs County Pro bite
Court, Coso No. 24997.
Eliubeth Ann Webster. Box
188. Rutland, ohio 45775 ,

was appointed Executri• of
tho ootote of Ethel E. Chop·

man, dec: .. sed, late of BGIC
188, Rutland , Ohio 45775 .
Robert E. Bud&lt; .
Probate Judge
Lena K. Ne11elroad, C.. rtc
(1)2. 9, 163tc

Public Notice
IN THE COMMON
PLE4SE COURT.
PROB4TE DIVISION
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
IN THE M4TTER OF SETTLEMENT OF ACCOUNTS.
PROB4TE COURT. MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
,

Accounts and vouchers oi
the following named iiduc:tlir·
ioa hovo boon filod in tho 1'10·
beta Court. Meigs County,
Otlio, for approval and sett•-

mont .
C4SE NO. 24798 - Por·

tiel Account of Martin G.
4bbott. Executor of tho Es·
tate of Minnie Marie Abbott.
DeceaMd.
C4SE NO . 20234 - Eighth

Current 4ccountof hmard V.
F®. u 5 - r-TN*'• to
And...,n B. Kibb.._, Trutteeof
the Trust undo! lho 'MN of
Edno K. St-an, Doceaood .
C4SE NO. 218 15 - Sixth

machines
.

.

.

to make media

·~

,

.

'

.

Partial Account of Bernard
V. Fultz:, Trustee of Trust
Under Item 10 of Will of An·
derson B. l&lt;ibble, Deceased.
C4SE NO. 24482 - Flnol

and Distributive Account of
Gladys Shields, EJCecutrix of
the Estate df Ottie Arthur
Boston, Deceased.
C4SE NO. 24720 - Final

and Distributive Account of
Dena Raymond , E•ecutri•
of the Estate of Wilda Han ·
ing. Deceased .
CASE NO. 22780 - Final

and Distributive Account of

Computers don't have all the answers. Cost per thousand is not a magic talisman.
You have to factor.in some imponderables, because what ao machines k~ow about
human emotions like trust and believability? Asked in which medium they found
the advertising most believable, more consumers said "newspapers" than
the other four major media combined:+=
·1 •
Believe in newspapers. They can work marketing magic.
• Home Test1ng Institute, 1984

Meryl Houdasheldt. Admin ·

istratri• of the Eltate of Ver·
lio B. Midkiff, Doc01od ..'

Unleu exceptions are filed
thereto, said occountt will be
tor hooring before said Court
on tho 31'd day of Fobruory,
1986, at which tlmo soid oc·
counts will be considered and
continued from da~to day.-,.
tU finally diii'Oood of.
Any penon int.,...ted ·mav
ffle written 81ceptiont to ·Mid
accounts or to matten pertaining to the exa::udon af the

lruot. not lett than fivo days
prior to the date set for hnring.

ROBERT E. BUCK
JUDGE
Plea~ Court,
Problte Division.

Common

The Dally Sentinel

Meigs County . Ohio
(1)21tc

Newspapers. Our time has come.

GOOD USED
Refript1tors. woshtrs. d!yon,

Avenue, Pomeroy. Ohio
to aell for c..h . the following collateral!
1978 CHEVY Malibu
1 W27MBK591737
1978 DODGE - Serial
No.XP22K8R127997
1979 MERCURY - 2

Dr. HT. Mh't aerial no .
9H93R620478 Cougar
The Farmers Bank and

Savingt Company, Pomeroy , Ohfo. reterves the
right to bid at this sale,
and to
withdraw the
above collateral prior to
Hie. Further. the Farm ·
"'' Bank and S1vings
Com,.ny reserves the
rtght to reJect any or all
bids submitted .

Further . the automo ·
biles will be' told in the
condition they are in with
no IXPf ltlld or implied
warranties given.
112131:1112 . 3. 3tc
185-1180

· Real Estate General

TEAFORD
Real Estate

rn
.IIALIOI

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone

1·{614)-992 -3325

ONE FLOOR - Walk to the
store in "11ddleporl . 2 BRs,
gas heat &amp; lg. level lol !01

$16.500.

COUNTRY - 2 BR trarler
wrth porch &amp; carport lg, dbL
ga1 age, shop and 6 acres.
Asking $22,000
MULBBERRY - Nice older
3 or 4 BR home within walk·
1ng of slores. Hoi waler heat.
equrpped krlchen·, good IO·
catron . Above flood.
FAMILY - Lg. real n~ce 2
story beaulrulllocaled home
on 338 in Rar,rne. 2 car garage &amp; spacrous shop or busi·
ness bldg.
.
HANDYMAN - 3 acres &amp;7
partly.-burlt homes. Give us
an o!ler
YOU FINISH - l'h story 1n
Syracuse nea1 the school
being remodeled. Wi ll sell as
is wilh 2 lois for $16.000.
INeDME - Only a lew yrs.
' old plu s other space to rent.
Good relurn .
SMALL- 2 BR one floor oo
Union . Gas lurnace, ca rpeling, garage &amp; lg lot. Asking

$20,000.
CONVENIENT - In Middle·
port near shops. Has 5 rms.,
one slory, gas heat, bath &amp;
tr. porch. Just $17.000.

OPEN 8 TO 6

Housing
Headquart ers

617 Tnrid A" .. G.llipolis
4 6·

.;,'

uarv 4th, 1988, at 10:00
o.m .. o pubnc ule will bo
hold at 105 Union

QWM YOUR HOlE

Countv Appliance, Inc.

THE

PUBLIC NOTICE

608
E . Majn

y

POMEROY,Q.
992·2259
NEW LISTING -,- Rock Spr·
in&amp;s Rold- Approx . 4 nice
acres of land w&lt;th a two
story house, l4 bedrooms,
2 balhs. 2 kitchens lor use
as aduplex . Excellent condi·
lion. Insulated for healing
etonomy . 1ncludes 2 car
garage with storage, other
buildings. G1eat locat1on1

$43,000.00.
NEW LISTING- 6.35 acre
counlry estate - Barn.
sheds, 2 ponds. and a n1ce
HI story home in good repair. Electric heat plu s a
woodburner lor cheap heat
Call lor an appoin tment

$43900.00.
NEW LISTING - High on a
hill but what a view. This
ranch tjpe home can be
yours. foret losure prlllJertj
and p11ced to sell al

$34,900.00.
NEW LISTING - Here IS
·whal you have been look1ng
lor- Oh1o River lrontage m
Syracuse. 3 loi s and an
oldfl house, cleared land to
the river . All lor $18.900.00.
NEW LISTING - lnveslment properly in M1ddleport
- buSiness room is lea sed
plus 4 rental apartments .
overhead. Good gross In ·
co me. Owner may help li·
nance. $42.900.00.
NEAR CHESTER - Vacant
ground m the country. Great
bUiding or mobile home s1le.
10.51· acres. some cleared
lor our home plus a small
share of a producing ga s
well , plu s a sp11ng lor tree
water . $8 ,500.00.
POMEROY - cOoo n~ghlxn­
hood close lo school 2.:£ acre
lo~ beautdul newer split foyer
home. 3 bedrooms. 2 baths,
lull bajement, woodburner
hook-ups in lamily room. garaRe. Cl!tltral 11r &amp; heat pump.
All electric home. A$ulnable
loan, 9!1!'~ ~teres!. Approx.
22 years on balance ol
$40,000. $35~.74 per month
principle &amp; 1nterest.
REALTORS
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.

992-6191
Jun Trussel 949·2660
Dottie Turner 992·5692

.. 'lO'GGs·

Bu-s iness Services

KOUNTRY
KLUB

Notice it hereby given
that on Saturday, Jan·

ps one! eiec1n&lt; ,.,... one! TV

sets.

I .,

Public Notice

SALES

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

Golf
Equipment
Now ~ ......
1 ...d'..)$2.50 ...
Onrogt Gall lalk ' .. :$6.00 ....
•New &amp; Prtor Owned Cklbs
•Cultom Clubs

Youth Clubs
•Shoes •Trophies
•Repair

GA.AGE SERVICE
lr. 2, Coolwnlt

985·4189

WE HAUL- 810 OR SMALL

JOHN TEAFOID
Chotttr, Ohio

PICK UP WEEKLY
Re11onlble

12· 11·1 mo.

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
•Roofing
•Siding
•Garagis &amp; Pole
. Buildings

· MARCUM
CONTRACTING

long Bottom,- Ohio

Ph. 985·4141
Free

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addons •nd remodeling
- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete wollt
- Plumbing and electrical
work

(Free Estin:aatesl

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992· 6215 Of

Estimates
9-11· I mo .

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Complete Buildlag
and

Contracting Service
(Free Estimatesl

JEFF qRCLEr SR.
Long B·ottom. Ohio

PH. 949-2649
11-12·1 mo.

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Si1es Start From 12'x16'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up
to 24'xl6'
Insulated Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS
bcint. Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
10-6-llc

*VINYL SIDING
*AWMINUM SIDING
0 ILOWN IN
INSULATION

992-7314

No Sunday Calls
1111 /tl•

6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke

PAT HILL FORD
Middleport, Ohio
• T-13-tfc

and Graduation

•Washen •Dishwashers
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freezers

SERVICE

Alto Ttt•••l~tl ..
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tfc

4 5-tt(

A

PLUMBING &amp;
HEAnNG

l 17 N0&lt;th Stcond
Middleport, Ohio 457 60

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.

IU!IIfll PitON!
16141 H2All0

RI!IIENCI PitON!
1614) 992 -7754
1n1111c

B&amp;D Mobile Home

Repair Service
SHADE , OHIO

Anything that has to
do with a mobilo
homt. No job loo small
or too big. Wt do
Setups ontl
Underpinning.
"lpt&lt;ial latos lor
Sonier Cithans"
PHON! (614) 992-6100
11-20-tl l mo .

New Limo Rd.
Rutland

108 Vint St.
Gollipolis

· 742-2225 or 742 -2778

4411-9244

Have Your Trophy Mounted By A

Copy Stni&lt;ts, Et&lt;.
us Mill !1., Mitltlltptrl
1 MuiiMrrr •··· '''""'''
992-33453/1/tln

Full Time Taxidermist

o•

11-11-2 mo.

REPAIR

All Mt~u

PARTS and

II. 124,Pomoroy Ohio

9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. Mandoy·Saturtloy

Signs, lullbar Slamps,
lusiness Forms_

Ph.' (6141 143·5425

KEN'S

2lOCAnONS

Stollonwy, Magnati&lt;

CALl COllECT:

!CUI OUT FOI FUTURE USE)

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

PIUS' Offka Supplies &amp;
Furnlrure, Wedding

"Free Estlm1tes "

I·J·If&lt;

985-3561

Ftt All Yw Plltlltl NHir

Roofing of aii .Types
Worked in home area
20 v••rs

Parts &amp; Service

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

.SIDING. CO.

Equl~•e•t

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992· 7201

VINYL I ALUMIIIUM

11-28·3 mo.

F1r111

SERVICE

992 ·2196

SIDING CO.

PH. 742·2050

Bashan Building

We can repair and re·
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators . We also
repair Gas T•nks.

SUPERIOR

CHAlliS BAlLET

APPLIANCE

DOZER . BACKHOE.
TRENCHER, SEPTIC
SYSTEMS , WATER.
GAS t!1 SEWER LINES.
RECLAMAnON, PONDS,
SPRING DEVELOPMENT,
HOME FOOTERS,
·DUMP TRUCK STONE
flo DIRT

EUGENE LONG .

Occasion en Vtdto.... Wt
lapt Any Spacial Occasion.

Authorized John Deere,
New Holl1nd . Bush Hoc
Farm Equipment
Dealer

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

RADIATOR
SERVICE

CONTRACTING

Hawt Y.. r Watld""'
AMiwtrsary or Spocoal

Roger Hysell
Garage

GUN SHOOT

J&amp;F

12-8-llc

Complete Remodeling

PH. 949·2101
or 949·2160

Down from Rutland Post
Office, will be runninc until
after Christmas. New &amp;
used toys. something for
the whole family, dolls,
tools. novelties, etc.
12-4-IS I mo

Pomeroy, Ohio

Comp .. tl Gutter Work

Ntw Homts luilt
"Free Estimat11"

INSIDE YARD SALE

12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30 If

BISSRL

.

&amp;SERVICE

Co•P•"
O••lltg, Not Ptie•I
.

RENT A CAR
CALL
446-4522

"W• R111 F1t tm "

U-SA~E

AUTO ·

SRENT~L
. Rt. t60 ert~

&amp;.m,.n.. ~··

7111/ tln

"iz .
i5

:z:

-z

Television Ustening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Hearing Evaluations For All Ages

USA M. KOCH, M.S. •

licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second. Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, ·Ohio 45631
1-13 tfn

�Thursday,' January 2, 19

Porrieroy-Middlaj,ort, Ohio

Page- 12-The Dally Sentinel

Business
Services

LAFF-A·DAY

.

.

41

•'flO••·e..u

, BLUE STHAK .CAB co~

\.MNO

In Mln•lvilt'e ll'( tilt lulk ~ .
1 bedroom houM. Tatal.._..,c.
PonlllfV
114-ttZ- ·
8218 or n•-etz-7314.

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

QRSi

;:.;-:::~~-:;iii.~ ~:;:-::;1

'

'

PHONE 992-7075

L·

(I) 3-2-t, Contact iCC)

Cil CIJIJ Cil al llJ Ntwo

Olondonl. 8 CYI. onglno. II.
•
One 1977 GMC 1100 11riM 1 ·
fl., du... bed. CoO 114·04!;21532 .
1878 Chevy pickup. 6 cyl ..

(Pr.,K.usly lutlc.~d Rest Home)

674 Plum St.
Middltport
•Tender Loving Care

•Senior Citizens
•Disabled
•24 Hour Care

CAU JOE BOWLAND

992-3595

12/30/ 1 mo.

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSION
OVERHAUL
AU AMERICAN MADE
CARS &amp; ntUCKS
•TRANSFER CASES•
•TORQUE CONVERTORS•
•USED - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

Wt Vtllm

Automatic
Transnission 0ftrhaul
Rt. 2. Patriot, Oh.
614-379-2220
1fi30/ 1 mo .

SWEEPER fild 1.wlng machine
rep1ir, pert1, .and 1Uppli... Pick

up end delivery, Otvil Vecuum
Cluner, one htlf mile up
Get0rgn Cre-. Ad . Ctlt 814448-029 • .
Racine Gun Shoot sponsored by
Racine Gun Club . EverySundey,
beginning tt 1:00 p .m. Factory
Choke 12 guage shotguns.

E11~ A111mbl't' Workl t800 .00
Ptr 100.GuarentHd P1yment.
No Experience-NO Salt~ . Det1ll1
send lllf·addr•Md lllmped
.,vetop~ : Elan Vihll · 715 3418
Enterpri11 Rd. Ft. Pilfct, FL~
33082 .

Easy Assembly Workl teoo .oo
ptt 100. GuarantHd payment.
No Experience-No Sal•. Oetaila
send 1111-eddNtMd stemped
enve~pe: .Elan Vltl1 · 6847 3'18
Enterprlat Rd . Ft. Pierce. Fl
1; .•
:l1482.
•
WANTEO :Experienced Produc1
m81'11QM'. No leu _than 3 yeer1
expari1nce. Good pay &amp; btnl'fita. Send reaume to The Deily
Sentinll. 81..729 C.
'
Government jobs 118 .040·
tiS9.230 . Now hiring. Call 805187-6000. ut. R-9806 for
current federalll11 .

New Year 1988 Perm Speclel.

Jen . 2nd to 16th. t6 .00 oH tH
Perms. t25 and up. Betty' •
Buuty Boutique. 7 2nd StrMt.
Meaon. 304- nJ -5272 .

4

Giveaway

5 part puppies. 8 weeks old . Call

614-~8 - 8180 .

30 chicken• and 1 turkey to give
away . 614 -992 -5360 .
2 puppies to give awey . Austral·
ien Blue Heeler and ?. 614-992 72&amp;3.
Male Germ1n Shepherd. leu
than 1 year old . Call 614-949 2181 .

Ilk. female and blk. with tan
male Germ11n Shephtfdl, both
AKC regi1t1uttd with papen,
30.-676-0092 .

Attention R . N .' • end
l .P.N.'a:PorNroy Htalth Cart
Center it eccepttng spplicatlonl
for IIIYtn tO IIYift lhlft MUI'MI
who .,joy working In long term
'ctre. Excellent benefits. StllrV
commanaurete with area . Only
tfloa• nu rsn who an joy ma
proffttion nted apply. Applic•
tiona 1ccepted through Jan . 10.
E.O.E.

WE NEED YOUR PRIOR MILrTARV SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN THE ARMY NATIONAl
GUARO. Monthlv paych1ck.
nttirement benefha. tduc•tkm1ll
IUittlnoe, and other benefits
avt ileble to our pert -time
membtts. JO.a-675-3960 or
1 -800 -642·36 19 .

&amp; Vicinity
Moving Sale king alze waterbed
with baffle, bunkl bedt. Call
6U-U6 -9625

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALL YOUR

WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11 -14-llc

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
10-8-lfc

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

RI CK PEARSON AUCTIONEER

SERVICE . Eat ate. tarm. entique.
liquidnton ulu . licen11d Ohio
end Weu Virginia. 304-7735785 or 304 -nJ -5430.

9

We Pav casl'\ for late model clean
used c.n.
Jim Mink Cl'\ev.·Oidt Inc.
'
Bill Gene John10n
&amp;14-446 -3672
WANTED TO BUY uted wood&amp;
coal httltars. SWAIN'S FUANI T\JAE , 3rd &amp; Olive St. Glll ipo lit. Cal l 614 -446 -3159 .
TOP CASH paid for '83 modet
and newer used cart . Smith
Buick -Pontile. 1911 Elt lem
A11e .. Gallipolis . C1ll 614 -446 ·
2282
FOUND Cocker Spa~~ial . Vicinity
of foo tbal l field , Gallipolis. Call
814-.&amp;48-16 07 .
Buying daily gold . 1INar coins,
rings . Jewelry, sterling ware, okl
coins. large currency _ Top pr-i cet Ed . Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd · Ave. Middl8port . Oh . 814 992 -3476

OPEN TlWR!OAY

THRU lUNDA Y
AT

I I 5 BRICK ST.
POMEROY
CROCHETED
HATS
IN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available

992-5738

Buying Raw Fur Beet and 0Mr
hides . Selling-trapping suppUea .
Whttat and nile lites GCM:lrge
Buek .l ey . 61 4 - 66-4 -'781 .
Houra:12· 9 p.m.

360 eng ine torn Chevy pickup
fnJck . 304-576 -2695 after 8
p.m

Help Wanted

Paul f . Shockey, DVM

One cenifled Med ic• I Technolo·
gilt, weetldiYI- Send resume or
apply to Medical Plue. 203
J1ckaon Pika . Glllipolia, Oh
.5631 .
Excellent lnoome tor Plrt time
h·ome anembly work . F01 Into .
call 312 -741·8400 flllt . 313

PT. PlEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson be.
SMAU ANIMAl HOUIS

Governm1nt Job1 11t,0411 t59,230 yr. Now hiring . Call
805-887-8000 Ext. R-·4512 tor
current t.deralllst.

Mon.-W....-Thun. 3-S pm
, .... 6:30-1: fr• 1·7 pm
Saturday 10·11 :30.,
lAIGI AIMAl &amp;

Raps N-.ded . For bulln•s
ac:countl. Full-time I 0.000 to
180.000. Pan-time I 2.000 to
t11 ,000. No Mltint Reptl1
buain••· Set your
houre.
Tr~Wiing providtd . 1·
2-83111870. Mon.·Frl. BAM
8PM
CST.

SUIGEIT IY Am.

PH. 304-675-244'1
BEND AREA CAll
Ripl1y Office

for Houn
304·372-570tJ
10-lhc

tor the eklefty in our
horN . Trtin.:i and fifteen ytart
UPir itnce . Cell 614 -992 7314 .

V•cancy for elderly man or
woman in my home . ExPerienced cere, r•a~oneble rites.
Ctll61-4 -667-6329 .
Peoplu Sacuri1y Ute het 1n
agency opening in the Pt.
Pleannt-GIIIipoUs Ar11 . Unlimited .. min gt. Fringe benetitl.
Company training and m1ntge·
m.-.t opportunttift . Cell 304·
738-2491 . 8 '30 -4,30 EOE.

21

KHP thOH Ntw Ytl"
tions. lott weig ht. 1
elm extre dOllars . lOA
8H-WI -•7•5 .

...,.,.
·8PM,
~·It

AVON Sell Avon PlY
ristmu
billa. limited tirN ltl up,..
fRlE . C.ll tt•·44t- 88.

ptnning • porch , e.:c. cond ..
Make an Offer. Call 814-25t1e21 01 114 · 288 - eat~ .

,J ul1 ~Ill oH Rt 3ti In
M11on County. Exc. hunting a
privtcy on this 133 ecrn ,
Adioia"'o Corn SUlk.._
aaklnt 137,000. Mutt Mtl. Ctll
e1 4· 441·0201 lifter 5:30PM.

RenLils
41

Houses for Rent

23

Professional
Services

J

Plano tu ning and r~e~tir . tune
tor tl'\e holld•v•. special d1t ·
count. Ward 's keyboard. 30-4875-5800"' e75 -382 • .

Real Esl ale

By owner. Mu11 MU-mowd . 3
bdr. ranch, one c., Dlnfl,
wslldng diatance from North
G•llil High School . Reduced to
*29.900. Call 81' ·388·8711 .
4 bedroom house lor aell.
tire_plece, 3 mi . south of Gelllpo·
lit , t32 .600. Cell deya e14 418 -1e15 or nightt 814-44e·
12U .
Oo11emment Han• from 11
(U-repeir) . Alto deliquent tt.ll
pN:~ perty . Cell 805-187-eooo
ht . GH -4582 for Information.
e room hou .. 1 ~ ttorv. 1h bath
ahower baament. 2 c•r g••lil•·
3'h 1cret in Wlllnut Twp on SA
790. CeH 81 4 ·441·0Be&amp;.

--------·1•By owner. Remod.,ed 3 bed·

room houNon At. 33. NewF.A.
furntce, 1..-oe tot. 123,000.
Collect 11•·•23-8289.
.

·It-

By own If. St1tel-,, 3 bedroom
house et HtE. St. In Pomeroy. 6
wood.t •c'"· fsmUy room.
dining room. F.A. haet. 2 baths,
buement,
127.000.
Collect t1•· 23·8211.

x·•a•.

'

01

30.·178-

3 bdr , 8'1J mil• ,-at Hob•r on
At. 180, 1300 mo .. •160 d.,..,
no pets. Call IS14 -38B·97el .
5 room houM and b1th in A1clne

aret. AveiiAbleJanuary 4th. Call
eu-992-&amp;888.
8 room houM, 2 blthl. Foreed
alr 1'\tlt. Avallabll ttound Jan.
16 , 1986 . Reference required.
e1-4 - 949 - 2681 fot
IPPOintment .
Secluded country fl!'m houll , 3
bedroom. F.A. hut. S.curttv
deposit . UISO . monlh . 114742·2177

Llrg1 l'\ou11 and 1partment,
unfurnished. 304-875·1385 .

HOUSES FOR RENT, Btl Wll·
low L.ne. 3 bedroome, living
room. b1th. elt-ln kitchen with
wather tnd drytt ttookupl and
c1rport. R1ntet peya electric 1nd
water. UOO plf mOnth plus
dopooK
711 Vltnd, 3 bedrooms. bath,
IMnQ room. dining room, ktl·
chit'!, laundry room. and "'"•
ment. Renter peys wat.,-, g•
end electric. U&amp;O per monlh
plus dtpallt.
1 102 Viand. 3 bedrooma. 2
btthl, living room, dinint room.
tamtlty room and kitchen with
wtthlf tnd dryer hookup. Aen·
tlf' PIYI •••· water and .. ectrtc.
t171 Ptr month tw1 depotlt.

- APARTMENTS FOR RENT:
2105 Je~aon A'vt.. 2 bed·
roome. blth, kltohtn and ltvlfti
room. rerner PIYt ..tc"tric. t2150
P.f'

th P'UI depoth.

1410 hk., 1 btdroom. living

room·k hen corntHn~lon end
b11h. enter paye electric tnd
watar, UOO Plf month plus
dopo .
TOWN 6 COUNTRV
REAL ESTATE.
lrokM, 171·81548

LAVNE'$ FURNITURE
Sofa 1nd chain prictd frOm
1285. to 1895. THI•, 1150 and
up to 1125. Hid•·•·blds.U90.
tnd up to t510., toil beds
1146 . Recliners, t225. to
1375:, Umpa fn:tm Ul . to
1125. pc. dintttM frvm t101 .,
to '-35 . 7 pc. 11891ndup. Wood
tabl1 wilh alx chairs t285 to
1745. Desk 1110 up to 1228 .
Hutch•. t550 . Bunk bed complete with mattrllnt, 8275 .
and up lo t395 . Baby beds,
1110 . Mattreuea or box
tPringl , lull or ~n . te3 ., firm,
173. end t83 . Queen Htl,
1226. 4 dr. ChMtt, 149. 5 dr.
Chllfl. 159 . Bed trsm11 .
120.end t25 .. 10 gun . Gun
clblnau. 1350 . Gu or electflc
rangH t375. Baby m•ttr•111,
t25 • 135. bed tram• 120,
028, • no. tlno fnmo o&amp;o.
Good HltctJon of bedroom
wuitn, rvcker1, ntflll ceblnet1,
headboard• ua 6 up to tee.

·-·· -------- -----

UHd Fumlture -- Dr1111r, a. bed. ·
met•l office d•kl. 3 milet out
Bullville Rd . Open 9am to 6pm,
Mon . thru S1t .
810·«6-0322

GOOQ USED APPUANCES
Waahera. dryera. nifr~MaiOrs,
reng11 . Skaggs Appllancu,
Upper River Ad . bn:ide Stone
Creat Mot1l. &amp;14· 44e -7398.
County Appll111~. Inc. Good
us.:l lppl'-ces and TV Nts.
Open 8AM to ISPM . Mon thru
Sat. 81-4· 441· 159•. 827 3rd.
Ave. Gtlllpolla, OH .
Valley Fumlture. new • used .
Large HCtion of quality furni ture . ,216 Eutern Ava . .
Gallipolil.

Furniahtd spt. 2 bdr., 131 YI 4th,
G11Npoli1, t195 Wl11f paid. Call
.t48 ·4418 1fttr 7PM .

E-Z Credit MoUoh1h Furniture.
Rt. 7 North of Gallipolis. Call

e1• ·..&amp;-7404 .

740V. Second AVe. 3 bdr., 1190
mo .. dep . required . C.ll 814·
••8·0222 ~~e•- s &amp; 5

Stove tnd refrigerttor 10lid
wood triple drt1111t tnd match·
lng ch•t. Call 814-441 -7827.

Deluxe 2 bdr. downtown, com·
plate kitchen, 111 carpet. washer.
. dr-,er, 1lectrlc hiNt &amp; AC. 01p.
required . Cell daya 814·4•8·
4383, IIYI. a weekend• 614445 ·0139.

3 bdr., l1rge kitc hen . n ~ce utility
room, 1 Clf g.-~ga. 1295 mo.
Ret. &amp; dep requir~d . Ctll 81.t4•1-1368 .

3 bdr. home walk-in cedar
CIONt, K~gtf Creek achool dil·
triC1 . Caii814 -448-0t48.

SWAIN
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
Dl~ve St .. GeUipolle. New • used
wood-coa~ ataves, 8 pc wood LA
•uitl 1399, bunk bed• U99 .
anlron recllnen t99. new a.
uNci bedroom -.Jitaa, ranges,
wringer wtatlert. r. aha ... Naw
llvlngroom suttet 1199-1599,
J.mp1, tllo buying coal &amp; wood
etovn. Call e14 -441-31&amp;9 .

Upstsln unfumilhtd apt ., carplltld, 111 utilitiH paid, no
children, no pett. Call e14·448·
1837 .

Large 5 room up1t1lr1 tpt. ,
fumithed kitchen. 1200 mo.
plua utiUtiu. 238 1a1 . Awe. Ref .
&amp; dep, no pets. Csll 814-4.a! •928.

Etticiancy cottiQI, t55 .00
week , utllitl• pekt, phona 304e78-3100 or 875-580t.

Homes for Sale

30. · 875-5381
7898.

Furn~shed ept .. 4 roomt &amp; b1th.
no peb. tdulb. Avtllable Dec. 1.
Cslll514-448 · 1519.

Nice 3 bdr. homa 111 kitchen
1ppll1ncea , located Sanden
Orive, Gallipolis. UOO per mo.,
MC . dep.
m . requir.d . Cell
e1•-04e-0284 .

purpose. l•eder f.iortgage Co .,
61,·592 -3061 '

RtdecoratM 1pt .. 2 bdr., .160

•o U5o. c.1t 3oo-e76-61 o•"'

Furniattad hous1, 241 J•ck•on
Pike. Gallipolis. 1200 w1ter
Pllid. 2 bdr. c.uue.u1a •f\er
7PM.

Shop for nl1
evenmga 6U -698 -5!i35 .

HOME OWNERS -Refin1nce to

Apartment
for Rent

N~cetv fumlthtd mobile home.
eft. tpt .. c1n1ral •lr end half in
city, adults only. Call 014 -4-46·
0338.

from HoiZif. 1 yr. old. Cell
e14 -44t-1910 or 814-3792208.

low fi•ed rate. U11 equ ~tv fortny

44

1910 Uberty 14•6•. 2 b&lt;
unfurniehed, vinyl underpenning
included . Mu11 SelL 304-773·
6873.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO recommend• thet you
do buain•• with peop11 you
know , and NOT to aend monl'f
through the maN until vou have
in~~tttiglted the offe ring .

22 Money to loan

Ona and two bedrooms. Sand
Hill Road, 304·87&amp;·3834..

MOBILE HOMES MOVED: inlurid , I'IMOneble fit•. Call
30.·57e-2338

1980 Libeny 14d4. 2 bedroom, unfurnished, Yinyf underpinning Included . Mutt •"· Call
3o•-n3-5873.

-4 rooma • blth. newly decorat.ct . lnqulrt 11 918 Second
Ave .. O•lllpolla .

C1ll

2 bedroom mobile home nur
R•clne. ea.992·5868.

JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENT8 !Equtl Hou1ing Oppor·
tunltyl monthly rent ltlrta 11
t 189 for 1 bedroom and 1204
lor 2 bedroom. deposit 1200.
loctted n...- Spring VtHey Piart
end Foodland. pool and Cable TV
aveilable, offiCI hours 11 poui·
bll 10 am to4pmtnd 7pmto9
pm MondiY·FridtV. Call 81111·
4-48 -2745 or l•v• mtu.~ge.

'IJ duplp for rent , 2 bdr., 2 miltl

a . . u1y

12.1le5 Wkldaor furnlsfltd. new
Clfllet. an htlt, centrtl lir.
Routh Lane in Cht~hir. . C•ll
81•·387-022t ., 8t•-3e77202.

1982 Cley1on. 1 4X65. fulty

6 rooma &amp; beth, newty decorated . Inquire 1t 918 Second
A..-e .. Gtllipolia .

Business
Opponunity

2 bdr. trailer. t160 mo . plus
• .,... •. c.n 8t•·37S-2U5.

fum .• wesher. dryer. AC. under-

Nice 3 bedroom 1250 e month.
3 14 lrd. St., Kanauga . Ctll
814-445·7473 .

Finan cial

2 bdr.• on At. 7, complet1ty
tumlshed, wtter ptld, 1200
mo .. MC. dtp . required . C1l
114·2·6-5818:.

1108 .

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GAI.UPOUS. AT 36 .
PHONE 614-448-7274 .

&amp;~ l.lfV E D THAT AN"''ONS

WHO PM5ED OVER THE5f
MOUNTAI"'' ~E-VSR CAME-

6:05

8:30

SACK AL.lVe.

~IP.

4W
.o.:;.'

t':;:;::;~=:~:::;::::::;::-r;;::;;:::;;:;,:::;;:::;:;;:;:::i73

For rent with option to buy. 2 br
t13&amp; . month . Wetll' furnished.
C1ll 1ft1r 4:30 p.m. 304·875-

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Will Clre for 11'\e elderly 11 my
horN . Call e1.a -992-2.aB3.

31

12-5-1 mo .

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC

Vac~ncy

Emp lovm enl
Ser v1 ces
11

Exterior complete · intlf'ior
retdy to complete. AI brick.
energy efficient. thrtt bedroom
Randier sitting on 1 acre. Priced
on inspection onty. 304-1762981 .

p.,.._

Wanted To Buy

- - - - - - - - - -lc-

THE HAT RACK

Situations
Wanted

Yard Sale

·······aamr;olis··········

larg1 charming older home. axe.
location, many potalbliti• 2
lalllle Iota. mid t70'•· Cell
304·87&amp;·5156.

~RE THOSE BILLS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUDAYS Pll·
lNG UP. Join the Army National 36 Lots &amp; Acreage
Guard end y~ll get• tnonthty
paychedl;. 1 good pert-time
career. •nd mtny othlr great . Why pay double pri~1 Wt build
benefits. 30-4-876-3950 or 1· big 4 bdr. EtrtyAmlf'ICMHomll
800·&amp;42 -3619 .
118.995. New mocltlopen. Call
e14·888 -7311.

12
7

At. 2. Ashton, A"ington Hou ...
3 bedrOOms, 1'h batht, modem
kitchen , b"ement. 1 acr• pfus.
priced in the 40'a. Clyde Bow•n.
J• .. 30··571·2338 .

IN THE OL D PAVJ&gt;, lHEY

30··171-•1a1 .

51 Household Goods

Homes for Sale

f.BI Dlfl'rtnt S1roke~

red .. whitt, t2 .300. Of b'ldt.

of becoming a doctor?"
31

,fl·lle;. l ~ THE GREAT' 01\1 1DIN6
RAN6f I'IE.Rf PM51N6 0VE~l

THI~ I~ JU5T l-IKE
8fi~G I~ ~OME OLP·
FA;HIONED APVE~f!JI(f .
0\0VIE,I;N'T IT. EA~Yl

.
Ono 1982 ford ._WO, I ft.~ .·
.

.

Furnished ept. 920 4th A..-e ..
Gallipolis. on1 bdr .. t260 . utili·
tiM Plld. adults. Call 441-4411
after 7PM.
Apt tor rent in H1nda11on. WV.
•126 mo. Cai1814 -41·96U .
New ona bdr. effl~tncv ept. Call

e14-446 -0390.
----------::
Effenciency apertment . 2
rooms, beth , full baAmtnt.
Fumlahtd. In Pomeroy above
Kroger~ . 814-992·82115or614992-73U.
New 1 and 2 bedroom furnished
1pts. tnd l'looN in Middleport.
C1U 81.t·992·6304 or 814«e-1582.
2 bedroom lutnltlhtd 1pt. In
Middleport. Allutilitl• peid. C1ll
81,·992·5084.
In Middleport, 1 or 2 bedroom
1pts. in 1 2 story haute with
yerd . 11fi0. &amp; 1175. plus
utiiHi• . 814·992· 7177.
In Middleport, 1 or 2 bedroom
1pt1. Utilftia1 Included. 1200.
plus depolit. 814-i92-11n.
4 room 1pt . with blth. P1111111y
furnish.cl . 614 -992-5908.
Furnilhtd 1 bedroom tpt. No
pttl. Depoait reQuired. 81.at82·2t37.
APARTMENTS , mobile hom...
hou . .. Pt. PI1Mant1nd Glllipo·
l~ . ll• - 04e - 8221 .

2 br apartment~ in HendlfiOn.
304·876-1972 .

:-::-~:--~:-----

Nice 1 end 2 br 1p1rtmenta
downtown. 30.t-178· 2211
8-8

53

Antiques

Chine ceblnet exc. cond. 1300.
Call 814-245-5071 .

46

Furniahed Room•

r:or rw.t Sl..,.ng Aoomt tnd
light hou11 kteplng rooms. Park
Centrel Hot•l. Cal 814·441·
078e.
HouiiiiMplng roomr 111nge. r•

trig., .....o beth, ..... p•ofw.ed.
utilltMI pd . 112&amp; . Call .a41·

.W11 lftlf 7pm.

46 Space for Rent
Mobil home lot, 12'x50' or
lmtll•. 171 water pt,kl, 4th •
Nell, Oalllpole. Cal .t48·4411
lftllf IPM.
MobM• hom1 lOt In Rio G11nde,
Ohio. c.tll14·441·8812.
COUNTRY MOilLE HameParll.
Aoutl 33, North of Pomeroy.
loU. Colt a1 ..112-7471.

Ll..,.

Building Materiels
Block, brick. MW• pip•. windows. llntlll. etc. Cleude Wln terl, Rio Grande. 0. C1ll 114205-5121 .
kentucky Lump , Ohio lump,
Dido Stoker. Verd or datlvery,
cement bktcb and building
matarlal. Oalipoll• llodl: Co.,
Ptne St., Gallipolis, Ohio Cell
u•-04e-2783 .
Blodl:, bridl:, mortar tnd ma·
sonry suppll•. Mountain State
Block, Rt 33. New Hawn. W.
Vo . 30•·882·2222 .

56

Pets for Sale

Brierpatch Kennels All -breed
grooming. Adult1 &amp; pupplea .
EntUsh Cocker Spanielt. 3889790 .

V.. Blqte &amp; Y, Collie a Huskey
pupt. Ju11 bten weened. •10
tach . AIQ. bladl • ~1¥1r Pekl·
n... no PtPirt. 7 monlhl old.

AKC REg. lhua Ap10 p.~ppi ...
e weB told, wormed, tlrtf
shotl, 1 mtle, 1 ftmal1 . Call
814-041-0701 .
8u"DI. 1-&amp;mo. mal•. 1-11 mo.
mtle. Vary genda and well
mann•red. 814·742· 217?.

84 " sofa, full s111
30·-878-3282.

Hidlb~ .

GE walh• tnd dryer, worttlng.
1300. 304-878-2181 •• 878 ·
8000.
Serioue ebout losing welght1
ContiC1 Olorlt CJrst•. At. 2, lo•
2S2. Le11n. Wll. 25213. 30•·
812·3112 .
2 tnow t1rea. 2 chain•. tow"'ng
mirroW, garden thredder, ceiling
Ught fixture. toilet 1111, 304·
5'"15-117.t3.
Moto Ski 2&amp;0 Ski c1oo snow
moblla. t425 .00 . 304-81!12 ·
337e.
Sew 50 per eentll Fluhlng
1rrow slgl\l t28811 Llghttd.
non -srrow t219 . Unlighted
t219 . 1Frttlentrtl) Sttlocttly.
~800)423 - 011 3. 1nyt1me .
ISOOI82B ·2828, ....

so•.

Commodore M comp~e. 304178·1712 .,... 8:00.

LISlS

40U~ Ae£ A?

40!. .. JIJST

fJO.IJ 00 ~ ~PI.AIN TI11'? .• , ~M ~

(I) SCTV Ne1Work
[a) Eyewitn111 News

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

liD MacNeil-Lehrer Nowoh·
our

al il) Divorce Court
1!11 Jtfftroono

IHBOJinolde the NFL
7:05 J) Mary Tyler Moore
7:30 D CIJ Cil Now Newlywed
(Jamt
I]) PIIIH Don't Eat Deiolto
Cil lll Cil Jeopardy
(I) Nightly Buolneoo Report
® Wheel of Fortune
Ill ()2) Prlco lo Right
fJI WKRP In Cincinnati
7:35 II) Sanford and Son
B:OO D Cil Cil The Cosby Show

(; LIVI:Sillt:h

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS 6 SONS
u .s . 38 Wool Jocbon. Ohio.
814·288-&amp;481 .
MIIMY Flf"guton. N..- HollMd,
Bush Hog Still a Service. 0..-.r
40 ustcl triC10rt to cho011 from
a C0"11iltt line oi new a ulld
"ufpment . Lllrgett ~tiiC11on in
S.E. Ohio.

........
-"yd.....
"" o11v. n ·
88.
88
Oher
111ndard wide
front. Oliver 4 bottom dfat
plow. Call e1o\·388-9184 tfter

ANNIE

I.

I'IIIAT IS IT, A~Nie? IXl YOU
STILL THINM IT WAS THE
~5TOFT!Ie1/611{.

AMITY wttO S!&gt;IIED

&amp; .Campers

'iOU FflOM THAT
TlJM&gt;IeL?

.

--------------~· •·
Sl:fV I CI~S

Home
lmpravemente

ALLEY OOP

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
,
Unoondldontl llt«irM euwan· • ..

63

Livestock

64

J .tnd l. Instillation. Rooftnt..' ,..
vinyl lktlng, ltorm doors and ...
wktdowa. FrM tlltimattt. Cal. '
11··112-2772.
. --

••

... llogi11-

ln Ohio. AI .....
Coli 304-273-2811 . R-1- '
waoct. W. Vo.

liD Snuk Preview
9:00 D Clliil Ch11ro Norm is
reluctantly promoted to
'corporate killer'-the man
in charge of firing employ'~

RON ' S Ttltvltion 8trvlct.

Hou• c1111 on RCA. OUIRr.

OE. S-oling 1ft Zonhh. 0.1.
300-1'1e-2388 01 11•·04i201• .

oas. IAI. In Stereo.
1])700 Club
D Cll ® Simon &amp; Simon

Ftttv TIM Trimmino, stump
-•f.
Cell304·171-133t .

Hay &amp; Grain

O•J h1y 1nd 1lfalfa orchard gra11
m ..td li•Y· Call 81 • ·887·11 IS4.

RtNOLEI 'S SERVICE , oap•
rlencecl ClfPI"Uf, tltctfldlft,
muon, palntlf', roofing (lncllldlng hot ter ooollcollonl e75-20 . . . . 8?1-7381.

Rick end A.J . spend time at

a children's SUO)JI1er camp

,
..

in an effort to shut down

·
:

A dead girl's body is found

in the library of the Colonel
end Mn. Ban1ry. 160 min.)
CIJ llJ Dynaaty lt: Tho Colbye (CC) Jason is torn be-

Rotary or cllbte tool driiNnti.
Moet weh cornpletechsme_d_.,.. ,
,_.,.. ..._ and service. 3M·' .
111-3802

... ~

tween his marriage and his

~ EVERYOII~

ME! 11"5 mtr
I FOO NP OOT Wli ERE I FIT

self-worth. Zachery Pow -

DI5R!G.4R05

I

82

ers creates an oil spill,
which endangers Colby En~

THI5 WORLD/

terpritel; and Constance
gains valuable information
to prove her mental stabil-

Plumbing

ity. 160 min.)
9:30 DCilCil Night qourl Harry

&amp; Heating

meets the newly assigned

legal old attorney and Sull
is shattered by the dea1h of
Sol me . (R). In Stereo.
CIJ Profllet of Na1uro
!MAXI MOVIE: 'Tho Third
Mtn'
10:00 D Cil Cil Hill Strllt Blues

CARTER •&amp; PLUMitNO
ANDHEAnNG
Cor.
Pine
,.
Oo
tto,and
OhiO
. ,Phono 114- 1 ·3111 "' 114·
041-. .77

'i:.

Transpur1a11on
Autos for Sale

1961 Corvtlr good cond .. ntw
tir•. new btnery. netda tune
~ . 76,000 miiH, t900 . Call
114-245-5071 .
.
197.t Ford Country Squlreatati·
onwagon, 59,000, uc . cond.
CoM 81•·«8·0284.
197&amp; AMC Mat.dor, PS, PI,
AC, • dr Co1111•·28e -t891
· 3-191&amp; Mustange, wiU nil
peck1111 tor 11810 or pert out.
coM et•-379-2830.
1981 AMC Concord OL. auto.
good thfPe . Asklng 11 .aoo: Call
61··288-1832 oft., .PM .
78 Ford Pinto bled~ with red
ltrip•. runs • looks good,
1500. CtH IS to 10 PM , 5U ·
""8· 4482.
1912 Cemero, shllfl), AM ~ FM
lterto, AC , crulH, V-8, new
tim, muJt •II. Call 51.t·« l·
37e9.
1983 Plymouth RaUent SE 4
door. 1utorr.tic. AC. PS. PB.
cNiH. rur window dlf'rolttr.
47.000 mil•. 1984 Ptymouth
Turiento 2.2 IUtOrNtlo. AC,
IUnroof. 11.000 mn... Call
81.·371-27 21.
0

19M whha MuiUing witt! red
Interior. A-1 condhlon. 114·
702-2325.
1981 Z 28 Cam1ro, power
11Mrlng, power br-1kae, power
wlndowa, tJr, auto., new ttr...
Phone 30•·181·34•1 .
1918 Thunderbird. 4 door ..
&amp;e .ooo mllea. •ac •htpe ,
12 ,000.00. t · E Fergueon IrK·
tor 11 ,800.00. 304·671-4471 .
197-4 Oren Trtno 89,000 mlln.
tuto . elr. 304· 87&amp;- 1886 .

'78 Doctgo Omnl. AC. PS. Pl.
17.000 mllol. 11.200.00 ..
rnelllt FMtonllble offer. 304·
eU-3111.

8

burglary ring . (60 min.)
(I) Wild Amtrlce
liD Myotery: The Body In
tht Library (CC) Port 1 of 3

Starke Trw and lawn S.Moia. :
lond......... 304-871-2010.

H•y 1or Nil. Eacellent quality.
larg• round bal-.. 120. &amp; 1215 .
614·7•2· 2lln .

71

When Steven ge1s his long·
awaited promotion, his
long hour• of work leeve
him with no time for hil fa·
mily. In Stereo.

COLEIUN..,WATER WELL ;
Dn1LUNO
.... ,

Pu....... -

-,-,..--,--=-=----.;..· •.
JIM'S PlUMitNO a HEAT1N~. '
Rl. 1. loa 381, GoiUpol~. Col• :
814·387-0171.
. .

a

C • M Cleaning
Fumtce •.
Repair. Ateo plumbing. 10 yrt.
experi•nu . Ctll 114 -211, 1381 .

83

LaRue becomes implicated

Bi\RNEY
1\EAD MV

TEA LEAFS.
MAW

Excavating

I SEE VOU DOWN
THAR, PAW -- AN '
HERE COMES TH'
FOREMAN
FROM TH'
SAWMill

HARK!! .
HE'S OFFER IN

YOU A JOB --

TAKE IT.
PAW!!

TAKE

IT!!

SNAKE!!
I'VE·SS:T

MY'F001"

ONFI~e!!

I

I I I r'
(A.nawers' tomorrow)

Jumb.es: TRIPE BAGGY LAWYER BISHOP
Answer What today 's 1'\anoover might be connected
with- THE WRATH OF GRAPES

•IDGI

James Jacoby

'••t.

..

Dump truck aervloe now avail• :·
bit, will hlul gr.vtl. Mnd, fill - ..:
dk1. coaL ftc . CaN 114·441· .. -...

~744~7=·~~;;;;=::::::·

;

87

··

PEANUTS
TilE MEETIN6 OF THE
TOBOGGAN CLUB WIL L
COME TO ORDER ..
·•

.,

"·•

Cb

AS 'lt:&gt;U KNOW, TONI6~T

IS OUR lOBO~ PART\'...
~ NEED A'&gt;IJlUNTEtR TO
8RIN6 ATUNA CASS£ROLE ..

NORTH

1-2-11

+AQ
• 632

+ K Q 10 3
• J 6 52

By James J ecoby

Attu ~~;,5'
..
011-.4?

EAST

WEST

+10 6 I 2

+KJ8 75

• K J 87

• 10 5 I

+8 7 I

• 10 9

+87

+6 52

SOUTH
• 93

• AQ9
+A J 94

+AKQ 3

.\

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South
West

Nor1b

East

Soutb

Pass

t+
3
3+
5+

Pass
Pass

2'
3•

+

Pass
Pass
Pass

t+

DbL

Pass

Pass

Pass

Pa!ili

Opening lead: + 2
. the heart king onside. In that scenario
West would be able to win the bear!
jack and get off lead with any other .
suit, eventually settmg the ftve-club •
contract.
How did the contract get so high
when three no-trump is a laydown'
That's what often happens with 32
combined high-card points.

It'

loy THOMAS JOSlPtl
ACilOSS
lAMan

«Microbe
DOWN

instrument I Syrian city

5 Falling out 2 Cognizant
9 Prize
or
11 Languish
3 ArreSted
12 Landed
4 Tennis
estate
instructor
IS Kingly
5 Floral
• 15 "Exodus"
arrangment
character 6 Bakery
16 Senator's
item
"yes"
7 Virtuous 20 Joie
18 Hot season 8 British
de 'livre
in Paris
ritual
23 TerriLOry
19Vigor
24 Lavoisier
lOTest
21 Waterfall ·· project
was one
(Scol)
14 "Victory" 25 Thin layers
22 Carry
heroine 26 Fowl being
23 Peruvian 17 Fellow
27 African
lal&lt;e
cicy
(sl.)
24 Group of

28 Shade
of green

30 Disdain
31 Think
32 Drive
36 Ten ure
38 Vel's
group
40 Meai eut

twino . 180 min.)
·
CIJ Wa'lt MMt Again
liD Nowowotch
fill YNr of World Doo11ny
10:15(HB01 MOVIE: 'American
Draomo( (CC)
10:30 &lt;II To Bo Announcod
liD Tony Brown'o Journal

famil ies

provoker

29 Tailoring
f('ature
30 Rarely
33 fi'1end
(Fr.)

34 "Silent - " ·
35 Slake
37 Australian
wild dog
39 Choice part
41 European lrr+-+-,'~
river

42 Carreras,
0.

e.g.
43 Marine
bird

DAILY CRYPTOQU01'ES- Here's how to work if :

W N 1' L
LSLQL

Tony Brown discusses is·

weekly newt magaztne
which reports on Congressional ac1ivitiea .

®Eyowltnt88Ntwt
liD The MII!Uiry and lho
Ntwo Mtdlo: Corroipon.
denla Undtr Flro The role
of the pre•• in sh1ping
public opinions is ex·

plored. 180 min.) (R).

81 Bonny Hltt Show

1t :30 D Cll Cil Tho Tonight
Sh- Tonighfo guests are
Luciano

Pavarotti

end

Judge Reinhold . 180 min .l

..

26'fempo
27 Fictional
sleuth
28 Groan

II

One letter stands for another. In this sample A 1s used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single· letters,
apmtrophes, the length and forma bon of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
t -2

11:00 D Cil NowtConter
·uj Man ·t.O, U.N.C.LE
I]) Coiltgo Bookolbaii:Wothl"iff" It Clllfomll
CIJ lil i i CIJ CIJ llJ Nowo
® Capitol Journal Hodding Corter hosts 1hlo

••

A poison
finesse

dar is raised in Josl'lua·s

sues of special interest to
the black community.

W1ugh ' s Wattr Service. Wtllt.
reliable
elt1tms, pools.
11rvice. Call 114-25e-1240 or •,
111• · 258 - 1130. Auaonable •.

A &amp; M Furnltur•Manufacturi!'i
St. Rt. 7 , Crown Ctty. Oh. Cal .
1114·258· 1470, cell E'lt. 814441 - 3438 , Old l new
Uphostared.

Yestet"day's

)&amp; 'Tl

AXYDLBAAXR
Is LONGFELLOW

with Lilimae, and Val begs
Gary 10 stay away from the

K1n's Watar StrVice. WeU1.
elatems, pools filled . Phone •.
.... 317-0823 or et• ·387 ..
7741 nigh~ or d-v.
•

TRISTATE
UPHOL8TERY SHOP
11e3 S.c. Ave.. Galllpo1i 1
1114 -44&amp; ·7833 or 814 ·441:
1833 .

I XI

Now arrange the circled letters to
lorm lhe surprlse.answer, as eug·
gested by the abo..-e cartoon .

CIJ lll llJ 20/20 !CCI
g CIJ 1D Knato Landing
(CC) Tho quooiion of mu1·
death . Ben has problems

Jam• loys Wlttr SlfVica. AIID
poolo fiNed . Celll1··281·1141 ·
or e14· 448 -117.6 q, e14-4487911 .

Upholstery

~: t I

Stereo .

General Heulin,'g

fit...

in the murder of his g irff.
riend's husband . Wuhing ton resigns after a rookie is
dismiued for providing in formation. and the secret
ingredient in the diahes of
8 new Indian restaurant is

revealed. 160 min.l (AI. In

Oood· 1 Exc11Y1tlng, blatmtnts.
toottn, driww-•v1. septl;:: unltl.
landacaplne. CaH •nvtlmt 114.,.5 . .al537. Jam11 L. Ot..-llon.
Jr. own..-.

B6

tJ

In today's deal South could easily
make slam in either minor, if North's
queen or spades could be changed to
the king. Declarer would win the opening lead, draw trumps, play out all his
diamonds, cash dummy's other high
and then lead a heart !rom dummy. He would insert the nine and West
would be end played.
With the actual hand and actual bid·
Thea is horrified when Cliff
, South knows where the spade
invites his dreaded math
is . (East's lead-directing double
teacher to dinner with tl'le
spades was the tip-of!.) It's
family. In Stereo.
theref&lt;&gt;re obvious to declarer that a
Cil Wackiest Ship In 1he.
finesse will fail . But even with·
Army
double, declarer. in a five-club
CIJ College Baakotboll:
lco,ntract. should go right up with the
Ohio State vs. Michigan
ace. Why'
Ill CIJ ® Magnum, P.l .
Opponents' clubs will divide 3-2 al ® MacNoii-Lehror Newohmost 70 percent of the time. So declar ·
aur
IIlJ To Bo Announced
can draw trumps after winning the
Ill llJ Shadow Chanra
ace, play out enough diamonds
iCC) . Jonathan and Benny
strip that suit from the East-West
encounter a fresh mummy
hands, and then exit with a spade. The
when they incur King Tut's
play can now proceed as described in
CUIIa. J60 min .)JR).
the first paragraph. If East has won
fJI Collogt Baokotball: the spade king and leads a heart, de·
Ohio State vo. Michigan St.
simply inserts the nine. Why
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Tho Cotton
it
wrong
to try the spade finesse'
was
Club' (CC)
If East wins the king and plays a heart
[MAX) MOillE: 'Rtckleu'
B:05 CIJ MOVIE: 'Tho Brldgeo at back (the obvious play), dedarer will
no lon~er be in control and will need
Toko-Ri'
B:30 D Cll Cil Family Tloa

1 ·11•·237·0081.... 01 niglft.. Rogars ••••me(\.-:
Welltrptoofll..r.
• •::

Supplll''

] KJ

WHAT SHE WA5,
. AF'TER' A HAI!:I7
DAY'S 6HOP'P'ING&lt; .

Cil 0 CIJ Wheel of Fortune

For Ale or tradl proftlaiontl :
built pro·ttodl r~tee c•ch..lil. .
looliHke.Jegsterchtule. Air tin •

81

I [].

tSNOPER I

them·.

John boat for Mle. Clll 1142111-8017.

76

[MAXI MOVIE: 'Follow tho
Flott'
Cil Andy Grlffi1h
0 (2) NBC Nightly Nowo
CII Grotn Acrao
I]) SportaConter
'CIJ CIJ il) ABC News
C!J NBC Nowo
DCIJCBS Nowo
(I) Doalor Who
liD Body Eltc1rlc
1!11 One Dey 11 a Tima
Cil Carol Burnett
D (2) PM Magazine
CII Courtahlp of Eddie's.
Fothtr ·
I]) College B1okt1ball:
Goorgotown 11 Pittaburgh
Cil Enttrtoinmant Tonight
Gymnast Mitch Gaylord
talks about his feature film

. I J I

debut in 'American An-

~

r.~r111

Slabs- •• per bundle while they
lett. Calll14-245-5804.

lumJ! houll coli. llmatone.
grw11•. 11nd dtltvertd . one ton
end up . J im llnitr. 30.a-675 7387 01875 ·1247.

~E.Wt&lt;JU~

MR.llQ!J.l,AWLEO, ~,IPRIGATQ.I

....Frtelocel••••c.
fum..-..: .
.umat.. Call collel .. •

Top quality conditioned mixed
hay . 11 .30 per baJe. Cal e1•·
949-30159 elter 5 :00p.m.

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS , hot dip
reblueing, 111 lyptt of gunamltJt
wort. flit 11rvlce. lO.a -575·
• 131 .

AfFIUj\JW \IJI"IH '1'CXI~ _.,_.....,::-=--..

tor Sale

125. Coli 814·041-0461 .

For ..Ia Kindlewood ttov.. like
new, uatd 2 months, inMrt or
frH lfM\dlng. C1ll 814 · 448·
0319 .

Bedroom IUite. living room
couch and Zenith coftsol1 TV .
Mike otter. 81 o4-992·&amp;560 day ·
time. 814·992·5085 IVH.

fPW ~ AA~~ &lt;O&gt;em.J

B01t1 and
Motor~

Truck camp• top . fits B ft . ~
18 lnd'l over cab, •ccond, fnC411: ;.
... to appridMe, 1300.00 ...
304·8715·. . 91 .
•~ • •

Atf1lf1, orchlfd . . . . htV - 1 It,
2nd, 3rd. Cutting by the b.. t or
tn.t~lold . Ctli 814· 258-5535 .

Sony VCR 8111 Ma1. . 11
c...att • . UOO. Excellent con·
di_tlon . Call e14 ·992·1S357.

76

BORN LOSER

Looking tor female Engliah Bul·
ldog wfth papa;., R~. Pug for
alud IIMCI. Call 114•246·
6071 .

Dairyc11e8ft. wid1with r11m0te
comp .. 1300 . Call 614 -245 60&amp;2.

Save 50 pereant l Flalhlngsrrow
sign1 12891lighted, non-arrow
Ue9 . Unlighted t219 . (Free
l1tte~ll See locally. {800) 423 0183 , aJ'Iytlma. (8001 828 ·
2828, IXt. ~ -

eo CJ-1 ,;lcodoz.300. n Oklo
1100. CoH et•-3117-7238 . • ··-

••a-38..

Lar;• round bat.. of hsy 120 n .
Colt et4-«8-1012 oft"' 5PM.

Miatd twrdwood tlabs. t12 . Ptr
bundle. containing appro• . 1 Vt
ton, fob. Ohio Pellet Co.• Pomeroy , Ohio . Phoftl 814-9928411.

7:00

.w. tftlir 1:30 614-441-3243 . .

79 Motors Homes

C1llahan 'a UIMCI Tire Shop. Owr
1 ,000 ti,.. , air• 12, 13 , 1.t, 16,
18. 18.5 . 8 mil• out Rt. 218.
c.11 e14-2se-e2s1.

Flrtwood 140. lotd dalivarlld .
landtcsJMng. ··-o.t. yOUr l'tM
HtlmetH NOW tor Spring and
11ve. Cal 614 -445 -1'799 days
or 814-441-9846 after 8 .

6:36

Oregonwynd Cattery Kennel .
CF A Himllaytn, hr1i1n and
Siam•• kiHena . ~KC Chow
after
puppi... ,Cell
7PM.

Hog readv to butcher. 40c lb .
30.·876-0211 .
Hou .. coal. lump 8t stok•r. Zinn
Coal Co. Cell 814·4ol&amp;-1.a08.

111

Vans &amp;
Chevy""" 11.000 mi. ctli

or

54 Misc. Merchandin

:-::-:-::--,---,---,---

Middleport N. 4th Avenue. 2
bedroom. lurniahtd apertment.
300·882-28e8 .

66 Building Supplies

~DISTOL

® Eyewltnou Newt
liD Poworhouu

CAPTAIN EASY

42 Mobile Hames

Help Wanted

CII 1100.000 Name That
Tune

dayo .. 814-882·1723 . . ..

2 bedroom hom., 101 lurdethl
St. 300·1111·7207.

11

II (2) NtwoCon1er

I]) Mazda ~rtoLook

"All A's and an Fin penman·
ship. Have you ever thought

c-·---.
.
---1':=-!r~o
I I r [j
' = : ! '

Hou• or apt . for rtnt. Fumilhed

I·Z

3 Announcements

6:00

~.

'

j

LEXIE

EVENING

...2*-tf

'

I

Unscramble these tour Jumbles,
one letter to each squa~e, to form
four Of'dlnary words.

1/2/86

-----::-:-::-:-:--::W::··
1971 Dodge 0·100 lhott Wt
IWW pMit, MW . . . . . . . . . . ,
12.411. Jolln'o Autll' lltiJ-•
luiiVtMI Rd .. GalipoMI.

~

THURSDAY

noe.

far Rent

Announ ce men Is

fl:IREVER -

3 bedroom houM In Hendenon.
300·871-7.08 .

8/19/~'! J

ELUM
REST .HOME

DESII&lt;Of5 THIS PLANT,
FIJ$10N WI~~ I!!E TAANISf£0

or unfumiehtd. 814·112·2311

. . . tnd Su,oundlng '

'

· ')t?LJ'llE RIGHT, TRACY-

13

'il\1\Jruf fi.}'il ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
\9 ~~· by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

Television
Viewing

1F' "'-fAJC~EAREXPL~ION

'or ...

8 r6om hoult, OPI" .....
.
. In/
AHred Cummunlty. Rt1. .011
and -ol1 '"""'""· CoD 814911-3849.
;

a

Mtlgt Countg

TRACY

FCM"d rlcllup 81 '-:!~
' t710 . . . """"' 210 tllg '
Red. n .zoo. c.• 114-311S-

fum-.

xY't.

f

Now SBfrlnf All OF
I

a wt :r

Trucka for 1•11 ·

1172 GIIC V-1, PI, PI; :
fa.. - - . , . . . ..ao. c,l
300-al-11117.
• ·

r.o btdroom unfumfthld with

Haament. In HendetiOM, no
pete, t11111 month, 1100.00
30•·1111·1 na. ·

BCD E

'

72

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

Houna for R1nt

The Daily

Ohio

Pomeroy-

El'SU Y

s

...

J U LSLQS!T

1

S WDMPLUL

W U.J SQ

llY

rsL

E H

·.

r·

Q CU

i i'QM.IU .

HB C iLlli
r ..urday's Cryptoquote: TilE WORLD 1S SO f'!JLL
OF A NUMBER OF TillNGS, I'M SURE WE SHOUI.Il ALL
BE AS HAPPY AS KINGS - R. L. STEVENSON
In Stereo.

12:26

MOVIE: 'Hit Kind of
Woman'

Cil Dyneaty II : Tho Colbyo
D C1J Night Hoot

12:30 G Cil Cil Late Night with

®.T..I
CIJ (1) ABC Nowo Nlghtilne
IMAXI Girl Groupo: Tho
Story of 1 Sound
12:00 (2) Boot of Grouoho
® MOVIE: 'Hollywood or
Butt'
CIJ llJ Eye on Hollywood
81Gunamoko
12:05 [H80) MOVIE: 'Windy City'
!CCI

comedian George Miller.
(60 min.) IR), In S1oreo.
(]) Bill Cotby Show
Cil ABC Nowo Nlghdlnt
Q Cil MOlliE: 'Tho Gtntteman Sandlr
()2) Newt
12:40 IMAXI MOlliE: · 'Btuo l.aoon'
1:00 1'i) Bill Dono

eli LAttnlglit Amtilco

David letterman Tonight's
guests are Billy Cryataland

e

"

�Page--.,-14-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy_.:_Middleport, 'Ohio

Ohio saves $3.5 milliori
on state workers health
COLUMBUS. . Ohio (UPII F.ewer state employees had
Slirgery In l985 and those who were
blspitallzed didn't stay as bng, thus ·
meaning the state saved about $3.5
riuJUon lor Its employees enrolled in
the state's two health care plans.
Figures fronf the two plans show
a 36 percent drop In usage of
'hospital rooms - , from 853 days per
thousand employees In 1981 to 534
days per thousand w01kers In 1985.
Blue Cross of Central Ohio and
the Community Mutual Insurance
Co. administer the state's basic and
alternate health care plans.
"In 1981, the Celeste adminlstra.
tlon launched an aggressive and
comprehensive health. care cost
containment program," said Wll·
' llam G. Sykes, director of the
Department of Administrative Ser·
vices. "Our employees and their
familles have given their complete
cooperation resulting in a dramatic
decrease In health care costs."

•

Thursday, January 2. 1986.

~JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEAR~NCE ··JANUARY CLEARANCE ·• JANUARY

I
· ElBERFELDS · · · i
I . JANUARY CLEARANCE ~
&lt;

.

~

'

scrlbers nationally or in other parts
of tjle state, Sykes said. During the
same·-perlod, other members in
Blue Cross's central Ohio service
area had a 10 percent drop In
1"'1
~
patient stays.
Tl)e cost Containment measures
adopted In July 1981 Include
mandatOry second surgical opln·
~
~
lops for 12 selected surgical procec:0 .... '
.
.
~
_____
_._.._.....;...._.._..,_.._..
_
_._._.._..._._._....__..-..-.-_.._.._::D
dures, lncentlves for more efficient
.methods of treatment, and precertification for hospital admission.
·.. The decrease In cost is due In
part to pre-certification. designed
LADIEs ·
to.prevent unneeded or unnecessar·
Uy long hospital stays. and to the
t11u-thlrd;j decrease In use of
!i
HAllMARK GIFlWRAP, BOXED ,
surgical procedures lor whlch a
Jeans shirts, sweat shirt looks, 1 CHRISTMAS CARDS " NAPKINS •
secon\J surgical opinion is re- · 11\
' Gowns, robes, teddies, pajamas, nite
· stzes
·
8
CUPS • PAPER PLATES • STUFFED '"'
quired," said Linda D. Walton, DAS J)
dressy knits an d more tn
shirts. dusters and bed jackets. Sizes
,deputy director lor personnel.
Z small to 4X .
thru 18.
TOYS • AND MORE. WHILE THEY m
An estimated 26,700 state em·
~
LAST! BRACHS CHRISTMAS CANDY ~
ploy~ are enrolled In the tradi.
tiona! and optional health rare ~ Reg . •10.00 SLEEPWEAR ...... '7.50
SHIRTS
INCLUDED.
~
plans. Other sta te workers with
r. Reg . '15 .00 SLEEPWEAR .. .. '12.00 j ' 9 '95
.............. '7 .31
n
health care coverage are enrolled
:;; Reg . '24.00 SLEEPWEAR .. .. •18.00 1 '14.95 SHIRTS ........... '10.991
~
The decrease in room utilization In one of 24 health mainl e~ce
J) Reg . '35.00 SLEEPWEAR .... •2'7 .00
*16 .95 SHIRTS ........... '12.59
cited by Blue Cross exceeds any organlzatklns serving employees
~
Reg.
'44
.00
SLEEPWEAR
..
:.
•33.00
1*18.95
SHIRTS ........... '13.99
~
decline documented for its sutJ. throughout the state.
-..-.........-~-.----..----_.._..'!"'_..._.__.... -·-~ · .-..--..---.+_.._.._.._._...__ __ ..__.._._..___ .. c:

~

~·
~

~

Cleara~ce

January Clearance! ·j . . January ·

I

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

'-

First firefighter in 11
years dies in line of duty
this tragedy." said Mayor George
\' . Voinovich. "Wea l! feE'! the loss of
a man who gave his life In thE' line of
duty. Pcscatrice was an aggressive
flrelighter ...
Two othE'r firefighters injured In
the blaze at Milner Elec tric Co.
were treated a t St. Vincent Charity
Hospital. Timothy O'Toole, 35.
fractured hls ankle. and Lee Moser,
35. cu r his hand .
"We all feel a big loss today.
Death is somethlng firefighters
have to learn to live with, but each
time it occurs. ~·e all feel it
personally." said Fire Chief James
J . McNamee.
Su rvlvors include Ihe fireighter's
\\ife Cheryl and daughter Nicole, 5.
Authorities had not determined
the exten t of damage to the
building, nor the cause d the fire.

Celeste names interim
.Liquor Control director
COLUMBUS. Ohio IUP! 1-John

R. Hall, a deputy of merchandising

t

h1 • tllo! ·Department of Liquor
Control, takes over Monday as the
hiterlrn director of the departmen 1.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste named
Hall to the job to replace Richard
Carey who left to become adminis·
trator of Port Columbus lnternati ·
ona Airport.
Hall. 60, a native of Portsmouth.
joined the Liquor Control Depart.
ment in February of 1981 and was
named deputy of merchandising in
November of that year .
"The prineipal thrust of the
Department of Liquor Control is
merchandising,· · Celeste sa id Tues·
day in announcing lhe action.
"John's experience in this area will
help build on the department's
reeord of exceiiE'nce undE'r this
administration."
Hall served as the chief of
managE'mE'n t and counst&gt;ling and
aetlng director of the Small Busi·
ness Administrat ion in ti)t' Colum·
bus District offiee. and as a
business analyst with the U.S.
Department of Commerce to pru·
vidE' counsE'ling with Oh io- basrd
businesses. Prior to his SBA

experience. Hall held supervisory
and enforcement positions in the
Liquor Department.
Hall has owned Gulkers retail
store in Portsmout h for 10 years, is
a former president of the Ports·
mouth Retail Merchants AsSO&lt;'ia ·
lion and a former member of the
board of directors of the Ports·
mouth Chamber of Comm erce.
"John brings a strong ad minis·
trative background as well as long
experience in business and state
I"'vernmenl." Celeste sa id.
Hall ha s been act iw in many
cl\·lc associations and orga niza ·
lions In Port smouth . HP L• a past
mcmbrr of the Portsmouth Board
of Educa tion. He and his wife Mary
have three children and live in
Portsmouth.
Ca rey. 57. a lieu tenant genera l in
the Marine Corps. was an origina l
Celeste appointee in 19&amp;3 from his
posit lon as ·a Marin£' rommanct&gt;r in
Quant ico. Va .
A native of Columbus. Carey
~radual ed from George Washing·
ion University with a degree in
busi n€'ss a dminis trati on. and
se~~ ed

in KorE"a and Vietnam with

the Marines.

Heart transplant
patient tloing well'
CINCINNATI (UP! I- A Buller
County man was "doing well "
today alter receiving a new heart in
a two-hour transpla nt operation
late Wednesday at the t.:niversity of
Cincinnati Medical Center.
Billie Whlte, 57, of Hamilton wa s
In critical but stable condition at the
hospital's cardiac intensive care
unit, said a hospital spokesman.
"The surgery went wf&gt;!l and Mr
White Is doing well. " said Dr. David
Melvin, who headed a !our-man
team which performed IhE' surgery.
The hE'art donor was an un idenli·
fled man In his 20s who died
Wednesday at Timken Mercy
Medical Center In Canton.
Melvin said White had sufferrd
hear t trouble for SE'IIeral years and
had undergorll' bypass surgery in
19'19. His condition had deteriorated
recently and only about 40 percent
of his heart was functionin g, the
surgeon said.
"White's heart was sick enough
that he couldn't get by without a
transplant but the rest of his body
was well enough to make It through
.tlJe !lllrgery," Melvin said.
"We told them ~White' s family 1
that he had less than a 00 percent
chanoe of living more than six

Edllorlal on Page 2

SennooeUe on Page 5

OU, Miami triumpl.t

New church pastor

College cage roundup on Page 4

Pholo, story on Page 6

ALL SALES FINAL- NO LAYAWAYS- NO EXCHANGES

aovs·

months " without thE' tran splan t. he
said.
Melvin said he telephoned White
about 3 p.m. WPdnPSday aft er
learning that a donor heart was
avatlable.
"He was anxious. excited and did
not S('{'m too nervou s."
Melvin and Dr. Edward Dunn&lt;'.
another llll'mher of the transplant
team. flew to Can ton •1a helicopter
to pick up the donor hear1 . They
retumPd ro Cincinnati about 7 p.m .
and the surgery began about a half·
hour later
The transplant was the second at
the hospital In just over two weeks .
A northern Kentucky man I'I'C('ivrd
a new heart on Dec. 17.

~ auESPORTSWEARNEs

KNIT SHIRTS I

~

SKIRTS, JACKETS, BlOUSES, VESTS
and PANTS

&lt;

~

MISSY and nTRA SIZES.

J)

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zr.
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..:_ REG. '20.00 ...... SALE '13.40
~REG. '25.00 ...... SALE'16.75
c REG. '34.00 ..... . SALE '22.78

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LADIES'

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TER COATS
~ WIN
':'
&amp; JACKETS
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January Clearance of Junior,
Missy and Extra Size Coats
_and Jackets .

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' 2 PRICE
.

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!January Clearance

LADIEs'

BLOUSES

!I

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MEN'S

SPORT SHIRTS

Nice selection of casual and dressy!
styles. Hurry in and SAVE .

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l '14.95 sHIRTs :..... sALE ' 10.99
' 17.95SHIRTS ...... SALE'13.24
1 '19.95 SHIRTS .. .. .. SALE '14.71

TO

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By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel staff writer
To avoid employee layoffs, th£&gt; proposed 19S6
budget lor the Meigs County Highway Department
has been rev ised.
Phil Roberts, county engineer, Ted Warner and
Dave Spencer of the highway department, discussed
thE' situation Thursday with Meigs County
Commissioners.
The proposed 1986 budget calls lor a total
appropriation of $1,440,lXXJ including a carryover of
$65,00&gt; from 1985.
Last year's highway department appropriat ion
was $1,599,400.
The decrease in funding comes beca use the
county's collections from the state's auto license and
gasoline taxes will be less than In prior years

'-

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LIMITED QUANDTIES
PRICED LOW FOR QUICK CLEARANCE

Cl earance

~our

Special rack of missy and
extra size sportswear by

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COLUMBUS. Ohio IUPl l Columbia Gas of Ohio's residential
and small business customers may
divide abou t $16 million in natural
gas rate savings thls year, thanks to
an agreement between the utility
and thE' Oh io Consumers' Counsel.
The set tlement, announced
Thursday and still subjl'!:l to
appmval by the Public Utilities
Commission of Ohio, provides that:
-Columbia will teduce It s bills
by rl million in 1986, providing
small monthly credi ts to custer
mers, and will freeze its base rates
until April 1987. In addition, the
utility will postpotlf' automatic rate
hikes for 189 COffilT\.Ur:tltles, saving
customers there another $9.2
mUllen.
-1n return, Consumers' Counsel
will drop lis appeal to the Ohio
Supreme Court lor a $13.4 million
refund to Columbi a customers for
"Imprudent " gas purchases and
will not challenge for two years lhl'
utility's pipeline connections for
new gas su pplies nor the past gas
pu rchases .
Consumer•' Counsel \Viiliam A.
Spratley said the PUCO could

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1 Devon, Dotty ann, enard ~
1 and Lady D~von .
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Choice

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s322s TO s·aaso 1_____________
l/2 PRICE J.I____1./2
PRICE
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MEN'S SIZES QUILT -LINED

i

FLANNEL SHIRTS

P

Regular and extra large sizes, Regular and wes~ tern styles . Warm nylon quilt lining . Colorful
::o
plaid patterns.
J)
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21.95
.:
24.95
~ '26.95
~ '29.95
IT\

5
5

SHIRTS ................
SHIRTS ................
SHIRTS ................
SHIRTS ....... .........

SALE
SALE
SALE
SALE

January Clearance

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BOYS'

WINTER JACKETS
Size 8 thru 18 in a good variety of warm comfort- •
'able styles and colors. Many hooded stylas.
:o

16.71 !I 24.95 JACKETS ..... .... ......
'18.41 1 '29.95 JACKETS ..... ........ ..
'19.91 I '39.95 JACKETS ...............
'22.11 I s49.95 JACKETS ...............
5

5

Sale
Sale
Sale
Sale

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'18.71 :0
J:l
'22.21 &lt;
'29.91 p
*37.41 ~

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DRESS
CLEARANCE

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~ REG. '31.00 .. SAL.E '21.70

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REG .'39.00 .. SALE"27.30

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MEN'S

\

WINTER
JACKETS
.
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JUNIOR
SPORTSWEAR.

I

CAROUSEl AND CATNIP PANTS,

1'39 .95JA~ETS .... .... ' 29.91l
I '59.95 JACKETS ........ *44.91 I

- _._..._...,_.._.._.._.._._..,__.._.,_.._.._...._.'-'----------..-.-..-..-..--l

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.: Januarv Clearance

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cHILDREN's . .

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§
~

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I COATS &amp; ! DRESS SALE ~
~ KNIT SHIRTS I SNOWSUITS l1 CASUAl AND DRESSY STYLES :o~
:; Sizes Small thru Extra large IWINTER· ANDJACIETS,
,
COATS l
SNOWSUITS
REG: S9 .00 TO S41.00
MEN'S

1"'1

L~NG

~

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SIZES NB to 24 MOS .
2 TO 4, 4 TO 5X, 7 TO 14

Pick your favorites from this fine

r.
selection and save now.
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Reg . ' 15.95 sHIRTs ...
J:; REG. ' 18 .95 SHIRTS ..
~ REG . '24 .95 SHIRTS ..
~ REG. '29 .95 SHIRTS ..

I

Clearance Sale

Reg.• 20 .0 o ......... Sale'15 .oo
' 11 .79 Reg. •28 .oo ......... sale 1 21.oo
'13.99 !Reg. '36.00 ......... Sale "27 .00
*18.41
Reg. '44.00 ......... Sale '33.00
•22.11
Reg. '60.00 .... , .. .. Sale '45 .00

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Clearanca
$630 $2 8 70
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OPEN FRIDAY
'TIL 8:00 p.M.

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e·LB.-ERF.ELDS.
POMEROY

992-3671

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~CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE • JANUARY CLEARANCE
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AGREEMENT SIGNED - West Virginia Con-ectlons Commfs..
stoner A.V. DodrUl slgnsa,:reement with Inmate representatives Alvin
Gregory, left, Wid Dann;y LehmWI who requested better llvmg

conditions at the institutlon afterward. Sb: hostages remained In the
irunate controled prison this momlng. UPI.

A prison spokesman sa id he did not believe the
second death would £&gt;fleet the agreement worked to
end the rebellion at tne prison. whe re convicts
complained they are "treated like dogs."
The agreement promises corrections officiaL~- not
(Xlllce- will oversee the reopening of the prison, that
inmates Danny Lehman and Alvin Greg01y will
handle media coverage and that the re wil l br no
'retaliation against convicts who pal1icipated In the
uprising.
"Nobody wanted this th ing," Lehman said . "We
tried to avoid it for a long time."
"We .just want to he treated like human beings."
Gregory said , adding Inmates had tried for years lo
seek prison lrnpmvemenls lawfully. -

ca ll to come to the gale to pick up two. One was d£&gt;ad,
one was alive."
The body of 38-year·old Kent Slle, who was sr.rving
a li fe sentence for murder and kidnap, was released
early Thursday. HE' died of slash wounds durh·1g the
uprising in whlch 17 hostages were seized when about
200 convicts look control of the 740-lrunate prbon at
5:30p.m. WednPSday.
Before convicts and correct Ions offic ials slg ned a
agreement Thursday to end the bloody seige, lour
hoslages had been released .
Thursday evening, six more hostages- all guards
-were released and thcconvlcts promlsed tofr eethe
seven remaining hostages before a meeting today
with Moore.

I

board reorganizes;
approves temporary budget

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consider the settlement as early as
next week. He predicted It wlll be
approved .
"Coupled with last spring's com·
prehenslve federal gas cost reduc·
tfon for Columbia, today's settle·
ment illstrates how our aggressive
consumer advocacy has benefitted
Columbia customers at all three
levels of government regulation,"
said Spratley.
"This agreement also demonstrates a refreshing willingness by
Columbia to hold down residential
gas bills."
"This settlement reflects Colum·
bla's confidence that we will he able
to continue and to expand our
efforts to control all costs to the
benefit of our customers, " said
Columbia in a statement.
"We feel this set !Iemen! Is very
significant to us and our customers
in that It will enable us to focus on
our primary objective- to provide
our customers the very best service
at the most reasonable cost rather than becoming continually
hogged down In costly. time·
consuming lltlgallon."
!Continued on page 101

agreed that monev would have to he taken from th£&gt;
bituminous accounl.
"Everylhing else has been cut -to the bare
minimum," said Spencer.
The commission is scheduled to approve the
highway department budget, along with all other
count y budgets, at Wednesday's regular meeting.
At the request of Lee Wedemeyer, superintendent
of Carleton Schooi·Melgs Industries. the commission
approved the payro ll portions of the proposed 1986
budget for Carleton Schooi·Meigs Industries.
All other portions of that budget were tabled until
Wednesday.
·
Present for yesterday's meettngwereComm lssioners Manning Roush , Rich Jones and David Koblentz,
Mary Hobstetter, clerk, and Martha Chambers,

-----··--------------------....;as;;,SIS;;;.

summer youth wo.,;rk..:p;.ro,;;gr:..;.
am
;.._.

MOUNDSVILLE . W.Va. iUPI - Convict s who
took contml of West Virginia 's Peniten tiary in a New
Year's day t1ol that claimed the lives of two inmates
agreed to r£&gt;1ease their seven remai ning hostages
toda~· before meeting with Gov. Arch Moore to air
complaints abou t the J2().year ·old prison.
Hours aft£&gt;r reaching an agreement Thursday to
release the \3 hostages still being held in the
fol11l'SS·like prison. IhE' body of a second iruna le was
taken to the gale. a long \\it h another convict sufferin g
an asthma attack.
The ~econd dead inmate. who died of stab 1\Uunds,
was idcnlifird as 3l ·yca r·old kidnapper Harold ))('an .
There was no indication when he dird .
"II could have been anytime during the distur·
bance." sai d pr L,on official John Massie. "We got a

I JACKETS, SKIRTS AND CROP PANTS r.
1Good st'(le selectton. Stzes Small
~
1thru XL, plus big size. Suede and I
Jl
!leather jackf}tS included.
I
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REG.'16.00 ..... . SALE'11 .20
REG. '19.00 ...... SALE "13.30
:D REG ' 52 00
SALE '36.40 !'89.95 JACKETS ........ '67.41~ REG. *22.00 ..... SALE $15 .40
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'129.95 JACKETS ...... '97.41 REG. '25.00 ...... SALE ' 17 .50

~ REG. •46.00 .. SALE '32.20

Commissioner Rich Jones said he would like to see
the department continue the summer program, even
if on a minor scale. Roberts said he too Is hoping to
continue the program but that lt . would depend on
"unanticipated revenue," such as , if the department
does not have to pay out a lot of overtime this winter.
" If everything runs smooth," said Spencer, "then
the budget will run smooth."
Wartlf'r called the revised budget proposal
"workable."
"We will just try to live within our budget and
maintain the serv1ces we've been providing." said
Roberts.
When asked by Ute commission where the
department would make cuts if the budget does run
short ·ln some areas, Roberts, Warner and Spencer

Agreement ends crisis at West Virginia Pen

\January
Clearance!
1 January Clearance ~
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JUNioR, Mlsn
HALF SIZES

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explaiped Roberts.
All monies alloted the highway department comes
from the state treasurer's office in the fonncl Jmonles
from those taxes. Each year the state dispur ses the
monies throughout the!l8countlesbasedona!;.peclflc
formula. In the past few years, the state was 1!laying
catchup and dis!Jibutlng money that was due the
county from past years . This year thE' county is
"caught up" Roberts said.
To eliminate the need for layoffs at the department.
cuts havebeenmadelnseveralareas lncludlng:afund
for the purchase of a tandem truck an,d the
bituminous products account.
The department will still purchase a truck ~. 'a mer
sald , but not a tandem.
Also cut from the budget was the departrnent's

Settlement reduces
Columbia gas bills

~

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! SPORTSWEAR ~

TABLE COVERS
TOWELS
NOVELTIES

1 Section. 1 0 Pages 25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . NewfPaper

Layoffs avoided by budget revtston

.~

LADIES'

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HOLIDAY

en t i n e

Pomeroy-Middleport. Oh io, Friday, J anuary 3 , 1986
~~~~----~------------~--~~~~~

I

lI $900
Clearance
$3375 I

f"'lllllo.oool

copyrighted 1985

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II Regular and extra large sizes. Broad - :0
I cloths, flannels, corduroys. regular z
and button down collar styles.
C
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MISSY and EXTRA SIZES
REG. SJ2.00 TO S4S.OO

at y.

Vol.35, No.1B1

1

REG. S43.00 TO 5118.00

Jl

Christine Marie Arnold, infant
daughter of Jeff and Debbie Scott
Arnold, and Jessica Na dine Jordan ,
small daughter of Walter and
Kathy Gilkey Jordan , were dedi·
ca led In special services at the
Temple United ~ethodlst ChUrch.
Offtclating at the rite of dedicallon
was the Rev. Arthur Crabtree.

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&lt;

Child dedicated

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Clearaneel

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"My family, my self and all city
employees are deeply grieved at

Feeling of fear

_..-..~_._.._.._.._.._.._.,_.._.._._.._..1....__

!

CLEVELAND (UPII - A firefighter who died fighting a warehouse blaze this week mav have
gotten lost and ran out of air.
Battalion I Fire Chief Paul Wolke
said the flaming warehouse was a
maze of aisles and shelves a nd that .
firefighter Daniel Pescatrice may
have gotten lost.
"The warehouse was a maze of
aisles and shelves." Wolke said.
"Pescatrice kept In radio contact as
as long as he could. He told
firefighters he was in one location.
but they follt)d hlm in another."
Pescatrice, 35, Westlake, died of·
smoltl&gt; Inhalation, the first Clevp.
land Fire Department cllicial to die
In the line of duty since Dec. 7, 1974.

~

STARTS FRIDAY, JANUARY 3rd

Peace in 1986

•

A tem(Xlrary appropriation tota l·
ing $\,9!14,1i6H was adopted dUJing
Thursday night 's organi7.a lional
meeting of the Meigs Loca l Board
of Education . Tt·rasu1'1?r .Jane Pl)·
will bring figu res for the pc rmanrnl
appropriation to the February
meeting. Fty was aut horized to
secu Jt' advanc&lt;' draws from the
&lt;'Ounly au ditor Bil l Wickli ne whl'n
fund s u1·e avuilabl£&gt;.
\'rteran board member, Robert
Snowdt'n, was rlecrt-d plt's idrn l.

l](ofoll' the opening of the meet ·
lng, Robert Barton, reeiC&lt;'ted to the
board last fall , and Larl)' .R~pe. a
new mrmlx•r ri!'Cted In the fall ,
wrrr givm llll'i r oath&gt; of office by
Fl,.. Rarton was named vice
p 1~s ident for \986.'
M&lt;'CIInK dales,.,,
Rc~'l.lla r m('('llngs were sci lor 7
p.m. on tllc third Tuesday of each
mont.h ,with four deviations from

' l hat dati' already nolrd lor the year.
The first ohangewlll be the Januaty
meeting which will he held on Jan .
16 rather than on the regular

di'Stgnated date.
A service fund of $500 lor the year
was established for hoard members
and bonds were purchased lor the
board president, treasurer, superin tm&lt;k'nt and assistant suw rin·
tendent. They are $;IJ,!XXJ each.
Liability insurance for board
members, ad min istrators and cer·
lifted 8J1d non-certified pE'rsonnel
was purchaSf'd rrom the Nation·
wide Insurance Co. The tnsuran().&gt;
is $1 million pet· Incident .
Dan Morris, superinten dent, was
named the agen t to apply, receive,
expend and aec&lt;iunt for federal
fund s. Membership In the Ohio
School Boards Assn. was renewed.
Hospltallzailon Insurance was
changed to the new Community
Mutual insurance Co. which will
Include Blue Cross and Blue Shield
benefits. Supt. Morris submllted a
1984·85 progress report. At the
suggestion of Barton; il was agreed
with the superintendent will pre·
pare a newslett er for pu blication on

.

A state judge in 19&amp;3 gave the Departm ent of
Co!TI'Ctions five years 10 conec t unconstltional 13
prison condi tions that included Insufficient living
space. residenc£&gt; and dining areas investrd with
rodents and vermin. food that did oot fl1('&lt;&gt;1 minimum
nutrit ional needs. inadeq uate outdoor exercise
facilities, aud "grossly deficient medica l. dental and
psychiatric care offered b~· insufficient and unquali·
fird per'l:lnel in an inadequate and unhealthy medical
facilit y."
About «Xltnmates were hol&lt;&gt;d up Thursday in the
south wing 9! the prison where the hostages were
being held. but officials estimated only 200 of them
took part in the uprising !hal began in the prison
dining ha ll.

•
mlnes
New GM chosen for Meigs
ALBANY - Jame F. Tompkins
has been named general manager
of Southern Ohio Coal Company's
Meigs Division .
'
Tompkins . a native of Svdnrv.
Nova Scotia . Canada. has been
_ general manager Qf Sout hern Ohio
Coal' s Manlnka DivisiOn at Fair
mont , W.Va .. since \981.
Tompkins joined Southern Ohio
Coal's Martinka No. 1 mine In 1977
as assistant mine superintendent
He was named mine superintend·
ent In 1979. then was promotrd to
general mine superintendent in
11981. The name cY: the posit ion was
rh angrd to gPneral manager In
1983.
Prior to join in g lhe Mart ink a
operations, Tompkin s servrd as
assistant min£&gt; foreman for U.S.
Steel Corporation's coal mining

a regular ba sis.
Rupe, the ne•&lt; board metcnber,
brought up four points which' •1ll he
up for discussion and po :sslble
aetion at the F ebruary me•eling.
Those Include: 1001'1' easy &lt;tCCl'SS
lor clllzens of the districl'lo gel on
the board meeting agendas; e •xecu·
tlv£&gt; sessions to he held at the •:&gt;nd of
the regular meetings Instea d 01
lie!Dre the llll'l?tlngs en&lt;!; an
employees lncen tlve progra :m to
reward recognition of employees
petionnlng especially well , t md a
more comprehensive rea ding
program.

.,.

opera tions from \~70 ro \9i7.
Torr. pklns holds a minin g engl.
nee ring del(l'('(' fro m the Techn ica l
Univ{\rsity of No\'.:1 Scoti a, Halifax,

No,·a Scotia , Ca nada. He and his
wife. Rona lda . and their two
children : G!ooffn'V and Jenn ifer
wiU he reloeating from their hom~
in Fairmont to sourhrastf'rn Ohio.
Southern Ohio Coa l Is a wholl y
owned subsldl arv of Ohio Power
Company, onr of right opera ting
electric util itii'!' compHslng the
American Elrctt·ic Power System.
Coal from 1he three Meigs
Division mini'!' - Meigs No. \ and
Meigs Nn . 2 in Meil(s County and
Raccoon N9. 'In \'in ion County- is
used at Ohio Po11·er's G•meral
James M. Ga\'in IX)wer plant In

Cheshire.

Arkamas trucker injured in accident

The board movrd Into executive
session one hour to discus:;; the
salary of Treasurer Fty after w hich
Nme It was agt'l'(&lt;d - with Barton
c~tsttng ' a dissenting vote -- to
inr1'1?ase her salary by seven
percent annually. Plans were also
made for the board to meeting with
pr·tnclpals and adminlstraton; in
the tlf'ar tuture: .

JAME\1 F. TOMPKINS
'~

An Arkansas man Is -.listed In
satisfactory condition at Veterans
Memorial Hospital for Injuries
suffered after the tractor·Irailer he
was Operating overturned on Ohio
124 Thursday morning.
Harold L. Davis, 25, of Rogers,
Ark .. was admitted for observation
after suffering multiple scrapes
and bruises, hospital officials said.

The Gallla·Ml'igs post of the Stare
Highway Palmi said Davis was
eastbound on 124. about one-tenth of
a mile east d Salem Twp. 333, when
his rig reportedly went off the right
side of the road and overturned.
Davis' fig sustained heavy dam.
age In !hE' 10:08 a.m. accident. He
was cited by the patrol for failure to
control.
: l

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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="39933">
              <text>January 2, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="214">
      <name>baker</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="499">
      <name>howard</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="527">
      <name>sanders</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
