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                  <text>Monday, December 8, 1

Pomeroy-Middlepon, OhiQ

·Simmons twins
note birthdays
Thomas and Tyjer, twin sons of
Thomas and Deedrah Simmons,
Tuppers Plains, celebrated their
second bir thdays with a party 111
the home of their maternal
grandparents, Roher(, aiid Nina
Sanders, Tuppers Plains.
Gifts were presented, to the
children a nd . refre~hments
served to the maternal greatgrandparents, Harold and ' Lav- .
ina Brannon, Reedsvllle; mater nal great-grandmother, Ettie
Sanders, Tuppers Plains; paternal great-grandfather, Theodore
Cremeans, Rutland; paternal
grandparent s, Tommy and Shirley Sim mons, Rutland; aunt alld
uncle, Mike and Debbie Hoi.·
brook, Logan; paternal auQts,
Kathy J effers, Albany, and Melanie Dudding, Darwtri; maternal aun t, Deleah Sanders ,

OVP -employees conduct annual Christmas party
Jeff Cochran and Lynn Wood, Morgan. Wendy Harhlll, Cr!sH::
Bob W)rigett , Jeannie Surface. · Hemphill. Blll and Margaret •:
Tammy Surface, Cleo Llevlng, Le hew.'' Dave ·Harris, Charles·:_:.
ThOmas and Phyllis Roach, Tony · and Angela Hall, Mark and •.
Keathley and Lisa Fields, Mr . Nan~Y Yoacham, Jim and Jean :
and Mrs. Hobart Wilson ,Jr., Mr-. .Davison. Larry ,a nd Pat Boyer, -·:·
and Mrs. Gay land Bush, Mr. and Katie Crow. Cha rle ne Hoeflich, '-.
Mrs. Vernon -Deweese. Steve and Tom and Debbie Skinner, Kevfn· '
Cozy Halstead, Dennis ShUmate, Kelly, a nd Keith and Barbar a :
·'·,
Lee An n Welch, Damo n and Judy · Riggs.

Employees of the Ohio Valley
Dally Tribune and the Poi nt
Pleasant'Regis ter.
Publishing Co. and their guests
held their annual Christmas
Thos e alteilding were Tim and
party Thursday at the Gallipolis
Trhonda Casto, Pa ul and Terra
. Elks Lodge,
Barker, Fred Hoffman, Betty
A ·. 'meal was provided by
and .Paula Tope, Margaret FlnniCircle's Catering of Gallipolis,
cum; Emina Lou Davis, Helen
a nd entertainment was offered
Davis, Pat a nd Kitty Whitehead,
courtesy 0fl the Madrigals of Donald and Evelyn Wright and
Gallla Academy · High School
their son, John, Mark Bowen.
under 'the direction of Anne.--------------------------'-:------:---:----:- ~
Fischer. The Madrigals per:./
· formed several holiday and con•
temporary tunes.
Gifts and door prizes were
awarded to employees following
the Madrigals' performance.
Thomas and Tyler Simmons
Attending the party were em•
ployees
of
all
three
OVP
papers,
••
·Tuppers ~lalns, maternal uncle,
.. J;.•.••
Jonath!!n Sande rs, Tuppers The Dally Sentinel, the Gallipolis
'. • •
P.Iains, a nd a grea t aunt and
•
uncle, Danny a nd Judy McDo. nald and children, .lingle and
•.,•
Danny Jr: ·

..'

Church holds
holiday dinner

Jonathan
has 1st birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Charles
Larkins, Middleport, recently
honored their son, Jonathan
Charles, wit h a party In observa .c~e of his first birthday on
Nov. 19.
A Pound Puppy cake ··was
baked and decorated for the
occasion by his mother. Attend~
ing the party besides his parents
were his grandparents, Clarence
and Wanda Wolf and Randall and
Margie Peck .. His sisters and
brother, Angle, Sarah, and Brandon Larkins, Greg, Della and
Greggie peck. Others sending
cards and gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Corns, Mr. and Mrs.

Jonathan Charles Larkins
John Nichols, and Mr. and Mrs.
Blll Boston.

Community calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - DA V meets
Monday, 6:30p.m .. DAVHall, 124
Bullernut Ave. Dinner will be
served.
RUTLAND -Rolland Garden
Club will have !\Inner at Craw 's
Family Resta urant, Pomeroy,
Monday. 6 p.m. Following
dinner. the group will move to the
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Rutland , for the regular meelin!(.
Members are to bring cookies
and there w ill be a gill exchange.
IJ:ARRISONVILLE ...1. Ladles
Auxlllary of the Scipio Volunteer
Fire Department will hold a
Christ mas potluck supper Monday, 6 p.m .. for members of the
department at the fire station In
Harrisonville. There will be a gift
exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Intern ational Order of Job 's Daughters
wil l elect officers Monday, 7:30
p.m ., at the Middleport Masonic
Temp le.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- TOPS 570 meets
Tuesdav at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Weigh-in, 6 to 7 p.m. A
holldav covered dis h dinner will
be followed by a weigh-ln.
Membf;rs are to take food.
HARRISONV ILL E - Harrisonville Senior Citizens will have
its regular monthly blood pressure cftnic, Tuesday, 10 a. m.noon . Ferndora Story, R.N., will
be In ch arg~;&gt;.
RUTLAND - Rutla nd Vill age
Council meets Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
a t the civic cent er.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce monthly
meeting Tuesday, noon, Porn.?roy Trinity Chu r.ch. Guest
speaker will be Jim Tompkins of
Southern Ohi o Coal Co.. )'Jho will

Honor rolls
Letart Fotto El...,...ary
Th(\ second six Wf'f'ks grading period
honor roll ar lhP U&gt;ta rt Falls ElfmPnlary
School has bePn announced. Makln~t a
.({T ad~ of B or abOve In allthPir subjOO!I to
be namt:'d to the roll Wf're:
Second Grade.-: John Gilland, Adain
Roush. Jesslra Sayr(', Lora Sayre, Va ·

nessa Shuler.
Third Grade: Jason Barnett, Bobbl
Ki n$:. Jason Shuler.
Fourth Grade: Sabrina Congo, Tracy

Plckl'll. Brandy Roush.
F'lfth Gra&lt;k&gt;: Stephanie Sayre.
Sixth GradP: Ntcklt&gt; Bf'E"~Ie. Darn•ll
Sayr(', Mlt'hellf:&gt; Stobarr. Kyle Wickline.

Syracuu Elfftlentary
Tht" serond six w('('ks gradi ng l)f'r'lod
honor roll at t hf:&gt; !'iyracuse Elementary
~ hool h,u been announCPd. Mak lnJt a
.l{rade of B or abov(lln all their subJects to
be named to thP roll wtre:
·
Grade Six: KE'vl n Arnott, Bethany Sus,
Jn hn &amp;nl!f'Y', Raberta Caldwell, Valrrle
Connolly. tamara Hayman. Heather
Mc ftlall , Angte Mills, Angl e- Swiger.
Grade Five: Aaron DrummH, Andrew
FIE'Idft, Crystal Harmon. Jod i Mobbs.

Michael Mcl&lt;l'lvcy. Amy Moorf'. Amber

Ohlin~er .

Grade Four: Brian Ande-rson, Randy
Ma lon Fisher, Be1h Hysell, Andrea
Moore. Ma11 MorrOYJ, Amy Weaver, Ryan
Wllllama, Adam KrawiCZ)'n.
GraM Three: Rochelle Jfnklns, Jen·
niter LaWI'ftJCf', Jay McKeolvey, Amanda
Mills. Sa mantha Sl11011, Rayan Young.
Grade Twa: Brian Allen. Carilaa Ash,
Chris Ball, Jorrmy Buskirk. Donat~
Elkins, Philip Hamm , Et1ft Kraw§C1yn,
Juon Lawrence, Travtl Llale, Tom
Powell. Adam Sayre, Nate Stuon, Amber
Bl n~t.

Thomas.

present a brief program and
discussion of operations at local·
coal facilities. All members
urged to attend. Turkey luncheon
will be served.

•
•

The annual Thanksgiving
dinner of the St: Paul United
Methodist Church was held in the
basement recently • with 66
attending.
Turkeys were furnished by the
adult class, and a Thanksgiving
dinner was held tn ' the church
sanctuary following the dinner.
"Count Your Blessings " was
sung by the group, there was
prayer by the pastor, and a
reading, "Count Your Many
Blessings" by Joanna Weaver.
Jessica Chevalier had a plano
solo, Hazel Barnhill, a reading,
"Make Every Day Thanksgiv·
lng" and Roger Wilford accompanied by his mother Mrs. Roger
Wilford' Sr., and a song "What
It's Like to Grow Old Together "
by Chester and Lorean Gorrell.
There was also special music by
Edna Coe ana daughers , Donna
Wolf. Diane Wolf, and Pam Bond,
and a group of the men attending.
Dorpthy Stout read "Father
Carved the Turkey," and the
closing song was "How Grea t
Thou Art" and a prayer.

.

VMH auxiliary

JEAN NAT~
GIFT SET
NO. 341-CONCENTRATEO

BODY PLEASURES

honors

volunteers

EWINGTON
- Pine
Grove
Holiness
Church
will be
In
revival Dec. 5- 14, wit h the Leroy
Manns family. Services begin
7: 30 nightly.
Auction scheduled
ROCK SPRINGS - Word of
Life Church is sponsoring a
Christmas auct.lon Sa turday,
Dec. 13, beginning at 11 a.m ., In
the coonhunters · building at the
Meigs grounds. Proceeds are Jo
go to the chuch building fu nd.
Donations. of merchandise or
money wlll be accepted. For
pickups call· 698-7238, 698-6855,
992-5316. Mall donations to Rev.
Ray Laudermllt, 34055 Pine
· · Groye Road. Racine, ~hio, 45771.
Chrlstma~~ auction

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Volunt eer Fire Department Is sponsoring a Christmas auction Sa t. urday, Dec: 13, beginning at 7
p.m., at the firehouse in Syracuse. Toys, tools and miscell aneous items will be so ld. Everyone
welcome.
•

.,u..,., :

WEEKENDS, SOME HOLIDAYS AND

Jusr ,,r;;•rEATHl.,,,

••
••
•
. '
•
t

NOtTtONS ARI £XCLUOtQl •

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - OAPSE chapter of
Southern 'Local Schools Christmas dinner, Wednesday, 6 to 8
p.m., Southern High cafeteria.
Those pla nning to attend should · J essie White was presented her
ebjng a covered dis h.
6,00()-hour service pin at the
recent meeting of the Women' s
Annual Christmas dinner
Auxllary of Veterans Memorial
CHESTER - The Chesler Hospital held in the conference
Volunteer Fire Department will room.
hold Its annual Chr lstrpas party
Others receiving pins were
and dinner al the Chester fire- Mary Folmer, a 1,000-hour pin,
house on Sunda y at 6 p.m. The a nd Freda McFann, a 100-hour
department will provide . meat pin.
imd beverage. All fire departA Chris tma s par ty was
ment members and families, planned for Dec. 11 at 6 p.m. at
a uxiliary members and famili es, the cafeteria. Each person is to
and anyone who ass isted the tai:e a covered dish and their own
department at the fair booth or table service. Turkey and dres sbar-be-guess, a nd their families, Ing wlll be provided. There will
are Invited to a tt e nd. Sa nta will -be a $3 gift exc hange.
Members continue to operate
make an appearance for the
children and door prizes will be the gift shop In the lobby of the
awarded.
hospital using the proceeds to
purchase needed Items for patients and service departments.
Revival continu~s

OLD SPICE
TRAVEL
GIFT
SET
NO. 3300-STICK

COLOGNE SPRAY-1 .5 OZ.
&amp; AFTER BATH SPIASHSIZE

DEODORANT-2.S OZ. SIZE
&amp; AFTER SHAVE-2.26 OZ. SIZE

99

99

s·oz.

CANDY WORK SHOP
AI

OHIO VALLEY
BULK FOODS
MAIN ST. 992 •6910 OMtROY

THURSDAy FRIDAy
&amp; SATURDAY
I

DEC. 11·12·13
10 A.M.'til 4 P.M.
.Ct~IH In and Itt Jonni,

ht or D" show you
how to make candy for
the· Christmas llelldays
·,... Chocolate CoYered
Cherrits, Coconut Bon
Ions, Peanut Iutter
Cups .... It's fun and
easy to do.

CALL NOW FOR ·YOUR· PROFESSIONAL
CONSULTAnON:
KATHY CLONCH-DEBBIE POW~LL, OWNER .
PHONE 992·3982

FOR THE BOTH OF US

Cundiff, Shaua H1rrll, AUda Mulford,

STYLING SALON
SYIACUSI, OHIO -

Lisa Russell. Evan Struble, Kevin VIning,
BIUy Young.

---------·· -

.I

_ ______

----···_..,.

\

RITE
WE

THE RIGHT TO LIMit QUANTITIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE PECEMIER 8 THRU 14, 1986 • NOT

I;Ui.J

•

. '"

·~

FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL !RR~~

'RITE AiD DiSCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

16

Daily Number

079
PICK-4
'9552
•

•

at y
Vo1.36. No.152

Ponwroy ~ Middleport,

!=opyrightod 1.986

Rain possibly chanpns &amp;o
snow flurries before endlns .
tonight, wllhalowllltheupper ·
30s. M011tly cloudy Wednes- ·
day, with temperatures fal· .
lil)g Into the 30s during the ,
afternoon.

..

en tine
26 Con11 '
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper ·:

3 Sections. 24 Peg eo

Ohio, Tuesday, December 9, .1986

MiddleiJ?rl to consider owit cable TV systeni
By BOB HOEFLICH
increases are not In accordance
Sentinel Staff Writer
with the franchise the company
The'Consolldated Communlca- · has with the vlllage but are the
!Ions Group, which provides result of federal deregu lation.
, ca ble television service for Mid-- . Mayor Hoffman . said he Is
dleport, came under heavy fire- "very displeased" wit h the· ineven to the point . of being creases and the service of the
replaced - when ·Middleport company. He ha s Solicitor Steve
Village Council 'met In regular Story revlewlngthe franchlse the
· sess ion Monday night.
village has with the company and
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported charged that the company has
tha t he had met with represent a- not abided by . the franchise
lives of the firm and stated that agreement and contends if the
rates in the town are being cornpany can break the franchise
increased for basic service from agreement, then so can the
$10.74 a month to $12.95 and all village.
·
other services of the company
He said the 3 percent the
are being increased by $1 a village receives from the franmonth.
chlse should be Increased to 6
The mayor said th at these percent.

COLU MBUS tUPI)- Mic hael
C. Harris of Cleveland has been
rehired by the state to coordinate
surveillance and publlc education !or acqu ired Immune deficiency syndrome, despite some
controversy over the way information h_as been disseminated.
The state Goll.trolllng Board
voted 5-2 Monday to award
another unbid contract to Harris,
a consu ltant who has been ·on the
Ohio Department Of Health payroll s ince January 1984.
Harris will be paid $31,994,
in cluding travel expenses,
through next September.
Robert Campbell, AIDS progra m supervisor for the de partment, said Harris mee ts with
high-risk groups, chiefly the gay
a nd bisex ual community , dispels
myths about ,the disease and
promotes precautions to be
ta ken.
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, RLaura, one of the members
opposed, said the Health De partment 's own physicians should be
doing the educating, and Sen.
E ugene J . Watts, R-Columbus,
objected to the lack of control
over what he termed "controversial materials" which have been
dis tributed.
Before approving I he contract,
the board added langu age giving
the department "control over the
distribution and content of materials which are dissemina ted. "
Cont roversy surfaced las t fall
over the dissemination at the
Ohio State Fair of a pamphlet
cont aining graphic information
about preventin g AIDS. Ca mpbell said a n Independent organizatio n. and not the department,
distributed that pamphlet. He
said Harris felt the pamphlet was
·.. ,oo strang and offensive."
. Cam pbell said t hal all hough
Harris Is not a physician , he Is a
specialist in sexually tran s mit led diseases and In communications. "Unfortunately, ther e's
misinformation that's spread
about AIDS," he sai d.
Cam pbell said Harris is conducting a pioneer ing program,
trai ning bartende rs in gay bars
to help dispense factual Information on how AIDS Is trans mitted
and what precautions to take.

r;;:==========:;i

BALDNESS - ACNE - WR~NILES
- PSORIASIS .- EXTREMELY
DAMAGED HAIR - MAKEUP
PROBLEMS

Days ~til
Christmas

Council authorized Mayor Hof- stated the defendant has not been November report of Mayor Hoi- land from the company for ·the
!man to contact an engineer in g handled severely enough in the !ma n totaling $2,943 in fln es and development of a bicycle patti.
firm to conduct a study in the
may or's court.
fees.
, A letter was read from Freda
community to determine the cost
That defend ant is scheduled to
VIllage receives hmds
Welling expressing her appreclafor the village to have Its ·own lace charges again tonight in the
A letter was read from John tion for the services ·or the publlc
cable telev ision system. Ma yor court of Mayor Hoffman. During Wolfe, representing the annual transportation system now operHoflman was also authorized to the discussion, Chiefo!PollceSid Dave Diles .. Golf Tournament, at'lng under the name of Bi~e
contact the Columbus &amp; Southern Little repqrted that the subject indicating that Middleport is Streak Cabs. Mayor Hoffman
Ohio Electric Co. to de term ine agai nst whom the co mplaints receiv lng. $750 from the annual reported that he has applied for
thE&gt; cost of utility pole rental for a were leveled has been arrested 24 fun d ra iser to hel p with further a n additional $9.300 in ,federal
village operated system.
limes and fined a total of$4,0251n ·development of the Dave Diles funds and $2,500 In state funds to
Resident seeks action
the mayor's court.
Park. The tournament raised finance the service for the
A Broadway Street resident
Mayor Hoffman commen ted $13,550 this year.
rema inder of the year. He
appeared before council and
that the actions In the court were
Mayor Hoffma n reported that a nticipates no problems.
charged that one individual is not a matter to come before the vlllage has received a $4,000
Facilitate buDding buy
har assing him a nd his famlly . He council and declined further travel and tourism grant and a
Council authorized Mayor Hof·
charged 'that t he Individual has
commen t on the matter except io letter was read from a Chesa- fman to facilitate the purchase of
damaged his automobil e, made · say that Solicitor Story has made peake &amp; Ohio Railroad Co. the burned out Empire Furniture
threateriing and obscene calls to 'recommendations on tonight' s representive inquirlllg about the Store bulldlng if action needs to
Ills home and others a nd, he
hear,lng. Cou ncil approved the village's intention on purchase
(Continued on Page 8)
·

··s·~ultz, McFarlane say they
]mew little of secret scheme

Expert
on AIDS
rehired
by state

ARE YOU TROUBLED WITH
ANY OF THE FOLLOW1tl8 ...

Grade One: Erl&lt;:a Amott, Mlck Barr,
Cynthia Caldw&amp;!ll , Ja1011 Counts, Valerie

'

.

Ohio Lo.ttery

drizzling rain to· appear on his
·
. braved '
1
sleigh Monday night when the Middleport Cham be~ of Commerce
_staged Its annual Chrlslma.~ Parade.' The raln not_only klll.ed
parade participation but reduced greatly the crowds coming into
the town to view the parade and shop . . Walking units of
Feeney-Bennett Poot 128, American Legion, and fire department
and a pollee vehicle composed the parade units.

Tom Lantos, D-C ali!., said of the
By E. MICHAEL MYERS'
affair.
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
Tw"
o
1
"This was the most ludicrous,
of President Reagan 's key forins
ane, count er-productive, hyeign 'policy advisers told a House
pocritical
and duplicitous initiacommittee Investiga ting the Iran
tive
I
have
ever heard of In all my
arms-Contra aid scand al they
in
the'Congress,"
said Rep.
years
received little. if any, information about the secret operation. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., aft er
leading one panel member to meeting with McFarlane In executive session. "It litera lly bogd ~ mn the entire affair as an
gles
the Imagination."
exam pl e of "s taggerin g
·
The
administration ' has been
stupidity.".
fire since the Nov. 25
under
Secretary of State George
Shultz and former national secur- disclosure oft he covert operation
Ity adviser Robert McFarlane that diverted up to $30 million in
testified under oath Monday profits from arms sales to Iran to
before the House Foreign Atlalrs the Nicaraguan rebels fighting
Committee In the firs t public th e Sa ndlnlsta government
hearing of the unfoldlng·scandal. through--a secret Swiss account,
The testimony by two of at a time when ,milita ry aid to .the
Reagan's closest aides prompted rebels was banned by law.
Three other pivotal players
several pointed remarks from
were s ubpoenaed to appear tocommittee members.
" It was 'mind-bogglin g myopia day before the commit tee - Vice
a nd staggering st up idity," Rep. . Adm . Joh!l Poindexter, McFa r-

DWI awareness week,. enforcement scheduled
The fifth annual Drunk and
Drugged Driver Awareness
Week wlll be observed Dec. l4-20,
Lt. Dan Henderson, commander
of the Galli~- Melgs post of the
Ohio Highway Patrol, said.
A few years ago, the public
demanded . and got tougher
drunk-drugged driving laws and
strict er punishment for drivers
convicted of driving under the
Influence of alcohol and other
drugs.
This grassroots . support for
DWI enforcement action has
been very helpful to to law
enforcement officers who work
to rid highways of these dangerous drivers, Henderson said.
Drun_k and Drugged Driver
Awareness Week Is promoted by
the Na tional Highway Traffic
Safety Administration to focus
a tt ention on the drunk-drugged
driver problem apd maintain
that much-needed public support
for effective enforcement of our
drunk driving laws, Henderson
said.
Drunk and Drugged Driver
Awareness Week wlll once again
be kicked off by a concentrated
anti-drunk dr iver enforcem erlt
effort called D-Day on Trafficways. D-Day wUI begin at 4 p.m.
Friday. Dec. 12, and end at 5p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 13. During these
13 hours, thousands of state,
county and local Ia~ enforcement officers across the United
States will be on the highways
looking for alcohol or drug
impaired drivers.
Last yea r, 6,900 pollee officers
were .wor king du ring' D-Day.

They arrested 2, 743 drunk and
drugged drivers. On D-Day 1985
ther e · were only 34 alcoholrelated deaths reported. By
comparison, on an average day,
62 people will lose their lives to
drunk or drugged drivers in the
United States.
This D-Day, officers of the
· Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Pomeroy and Middleport

police depa rtments and troopers
of the Gallla-Meigs post will join ·
together in this 13- hour enforcement effort. They will pat rol
those Meigs County streets and
hi ghways tha t .have a history of
a lco hol -rela ted accidents or
drunk driving violations.
Henderson concluded by "askin g Meigs County motor ists to
report drunk or ' other dangerous

drivers before they involve some
innocent motorist In a serious
traffic accident. You can call the
highway patro l a t 992-2397. We
will send the nearest available
officer and notify the appropriate
pollee agency if the violation
occurs within a city. The highway patrol also monitors CB
cha nnel9 all day. Our ca ll letters
a re KNN 3083."

lane's successor; Lt. Col. Oliver
North, an aide to the National
Security Council and the alleged
mas termind of the covert
sc heme, and Howard Teicher,
senior director of politicalmilitary affairs at the National
Security Council.
Poindexter and North lnv.oked
the Fltt h Amendment on grounds
of self-incrimination before the
Senate Int elligence Committee
las t week.
Shult2 and McFa rlane described Monday how the admlnls1ration was approached unofficia ll y In July 1985 by
representatives of Israel - ,although they did not identifY the
country-:- about elements In Iran
who opposed terrorism, wanted
to end the war with Iraq and
sought better · relations with
Washington.
There was no request for arms,
and McFarlane said Reagan told
them to pursue the dialogue.
But in August, the Israelis said'
their contacts needed help to win
support In the Iranian Army and
as ked for "modest quantities" of
mllitary hardware.
Shultz said he favored Reagan's policy of trying to arrange
a new relationship with Iran but,
" I was opposed and very skeptical about the use of arms In thai
connection."
In December, It appeared t~e
diploma tic effort was getting
nowhere and the Initiative was to
be phased out because It appeared to be·taking on the guise
of an arms-for-hostages swap,
exchanging the weapons for the
release of Ame rican hostages
being held In Lebanon by proIranian factions.
McFarlane said hew as sent to
London on Dec. 8, 1985, to tell the
Iranians Reagan wanted a political dialogue but "we would not
·engage In arms s hipments to
Iran nor encourage others to do

so."

CROWD - Even though a cold, drenching rain them an opportunity to visit with Santa In
fell , parents, many with umbrellas, lined up Middleport Monday night.
outside the Plant Parlor with their children lo give ·

McFarlane re turned t6 tell
Reagan there was no reason to
continue the policy. "I then left
the government ass uming th ~t
the matter was closed, " McFarlane said.
However, in August 1985, Rea gan had au thorized "lndirec.t
delivery of small am0 unts of
arms to element s (within Irani
opposed to terror is m," McFarlan e sa id.
His test imony directly cont radicted Attornev Gener al Edwiq
Meese, who h"s said Reagan
,wasn't aware of the arms s hipment, which was delivered by the
Israelis. until after It occurrl'd,

U.S. helicopters return to .base after Hondur~ troop lift
.
By NOE LEIVA
. JAMASTRAN, Honduras tUPI) - Honduran
troops nown to the front by U.S. helicopters
combed the rugged hills along the HonduranNicaragu an border for Sandlnlsta troops .who
crossed Into Honduras apparently In pursuit of
Contra rebels.
U.S. officials said the four Chinook and five
Huey helicopters that ferried the Honduran troops
to Jamastran, 25 miles from the rtghtlng, returned
to base at Palmerola airfield in western Honduras
Monday, ending the 36.-hour airlift.
In Ma~agu a, Nicaragua, the Defense Ministry
said Monday that fighter jets flying from
Honduras bombed clvlllan and mllltary targets in
two Nicaraguan provinces, kllllng seven soldiers

and wounding 12 soldiers and two chlldren.
Lt. Col. Javier Carrion, chief Nicaraguan
officer in the northern military zone, said
Nicaraguan soldiers were not able to Identity the
planes but said intelligence Information deter·
mined the attack was directed by the United
States.
Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Miguel d'Escoto
said Monday the planes that attacked the
Nicaraguan cities were American. U.S. offl~lals
denied attacking Nicaraguan cities .
A Honduran officer said seven 'Nicaraguan
soldiers were killed and seven wounded by
Honduran soldiers combing the hills along the two
nation's rugged and poorly defined border. The
report was not confirmed by U.S. officials.

U.S. Embassy spokes man Arthur Skop said
Monday night that he could not conrtrm repor ts
that 1,500 Nicaraguan troops, who overran a
border outpost on Thursday and wounded three
Honduran soldiers, retreated Into Nicaragua in
the lace of the !-londuran operation.
"I don ' t have any Idea," Skop said of the
reports. " I don't have complete information."
A Honduran official, who spoke on condition
'that he not be identified , said, "The army
co ntinues to sweep the area in search of the
In filtrators. There is no confirmation they have
left Honduras."
Honduran army spokesman Lt. CoL Jose Oscar
F lores said, · 'Unt II the Sandlnlstas, supposedly In
the area in which they Intruded, leave, the

.-

operation will continue."
The fighting and Honduran request for U.S.
assistance came after Nicaraguan troops , appaj"ently In pursuit of U.9'. -backcd Contra rebels
based In Honduras . overran a frontier post th~ee
miles inside Honduras Thursday .
.
A senior official said Monday that President
Jose A2cona warned Nicaraguan President
Daniel Ortega last weekend that the Intruding
Sandlnlsta troops would be attacked !!they did hot
leave Honduran terr itory.
·
The official, Deputy Foreign Minister Guillermo CacereS Pineda, said Ortega dented fhe
charge during the. telephon e conversation arid
A2cona told him that "the Sandlnjsta troops Will
be taken out of Honduras." ·
,
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Tuaadey, December 9, 1986.

.t~mmentary"
••
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ROBERT L. WINGE1T
Publllher
PAT WIDTEHEAD
Asslslaal Publlsher/Conlroller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Edllor
A MEMBER of The United Press International. Inland Daily Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Xssociatlon.

·

LETTERS OF OPIN ION are welcome They should be IE"SS than 300 words
long. All letters iresubjE'('t to editing and ,must be signed with name, address and
telephooe number. No WlslgnEd tellers will be published . Letters should be In
good laste, addrE"Sslng Issues, not persmal!tles.

T~~D~ber9.

And so once again we hear the
old chant of the "arrogance of
power" in the White House.
The phrase gained currency
during the VIetnam War when
critics claimed fhat President
Johnson· was waging war over
tht! heads of Congress. How dare
he? said the critics - conveniently forgetting that Congress
was voting funds to continue the
war.
Now we are told about "arrogance of power" in the Reagan
White House. Just imagine, there
was this reckless lieutenant
co lonel · (Oliver North) running
the foreign policy of the United
States - and from the White
Hou se ba se ment! What
arrogance'

, About a hundred 'years ago 1
worked on the White House staff
of President Johnson. With that
credential, ' allow rrie t() offer a
generic perspective on what I
sense a large part of this
arrogance-power battle is all
about.
What it 's not all about is an
allegedly reckless light colonel In
a "basement." You should have
such a basement. It's at street
level, one flight of stairs away
from the president's office. It's
where top National Security
Council staffers are housed.
What it's also not about is
whether a 43-year-old Marine
was given too · much authority . .
North was not working as a
Marine. He had been detailed

from the Marines . and had a
heavy title: director for political
and rn!)!tary affairs of the NSC.
As such, he was a member o(the
president's P.rsotlai staff. .
What th.e ;ugument is abOut is.
that the "arrogance of power" Is .
a phrase that concerJ:Is power
more than arrogance.
Not only the president, but the
president's "personal staff," has
great power. And White House
staffers -smart ones and dumb
ones alike - usually have one
legitimate thimght on their occas!onally simple minds. This: The
president, unlike any member of
Congress, was elected by a
majority of all the people.
UndertheConstltutlon,andby
law and precedent, the president

.Washington Windmv

The cold, hard
world of Temple
By i\RNOLD Si\WISLAK
WASHINGTON tUPII - The phrase, "We have no permanent .
friends; we have no permanent enemies; all we have is permanent
self Interests," has been attributed to many sources, but the most
plausible author Is Harry Temple.
Temple was better known as Lord Palmers ton. one of the most
successful English ,politicia ns of !he mid-19th century . Palmerston
served much o! the time between 1830 and 1865 as the British foreign
minister and prime minister, giving definition a century before It s
lime to the label "wheeler-dealer."
•· · Palrnerslon's rule of thumb for national conduct, which can be
regarded either as ultimate cynicism or simple realism, was adopted
In this century by another Brll!sh political giant, Winston Churchill,
who explalnetl his alliance with Stalin by saying in effect he would
embrace the devil if it would help defea t the Nazis.
Nor is the idea exclusively Engl)sh. The efforts ofsevera! European
governments in recent years to make secret accommodations with
terrorist groups to ensure themselves against bombings, skyjackings
and other violent acts are in the spirit of Palrnerston's formulation.
. , But American foreign policy usualiy has been framed in far
different terms .
· : Even when the United States was engaged In such ventures as
sending Marines to occupy a Caribbean or Central American country,
presidents Insisted that American motives were altruistic. In most
cases, they argu~ that the policy was to he!pthepeopleofsomeother
WASHINGTON - What will
country. not the United States.
the
Democrats' unexpectedly
This emphasis on morality in foreign policy reached a peak in
solid cbntrol or Congress mean
·. World War 1. which was fought "to make the world safe for
for the nation's economy? !s the
· democracy," and in .the postwar period when Woodrow Wilson
Reagan Revolution about to be
insisted on "open covenants openly arrived at."
blown
away by a whiff of
After World War II , fought to preserve "the Four Freedoms."
grapeshot
from Capitol Hl!l?
American foreign policy was centered on opposition to communism
Before
supply-siders
start hu·
.and Soviet expansionism. Its publicly expressed goals were to save
rUng themselves off their conless fortunate peoples from totalitarian enslavement and Its means
dominium balconies, they should
were massive aid programs such as the Marshall Pian.
·
realize there Is no need lor panic.
But at the same time, the United States got deeply involved in heavy
Radical
reversals of fiscal policy
duty u.ndercover and covert operations around the world, also aimed
are
unlikely,
and even the more
.at thwarting the perceived communist threat. Some of these
modest
Democratic
economic
:succeeded and remained secret. Some failed and became public
unit!at!ves
that
survive
a presi't\mbarrassments at best. major crises at worst.
dential
veto
will
not
take
effect
: :That is what now has happened to two major elements of President
for months. The major Impact of
:- :Rt&gt;agan's foreign policy. The secret U.S. effort to re-establish
new trade , agriculture and
: ·American Influence In Iran and block Soviet Inroads in the Middle
budget movs won 't be felt until
: .~ast blew up in the adm!nlgtrat!on's face when the Iranians 1988pr 1989.
· • 'lllemselves went public.
.
Besides, the Democrats' do. · :; The associated use of money from arms sales to the Iranians to help
mestic
agena Isn't ali that
the ant!-Sand!n!sta rebels in Nicaragua at a time when U.S. aid to the
rad!!cal:
reduction of budget
Contras was ll!egal turned a flap Into a firestorm.
deficits; improvement of trade
The president is not taking respons!bilty for illegal transfers of
through legislation; !ower inter·
. nioney to the Contras. but he staunchly defends the Iran arms sales
est
rates; resuscitation of hard·
· · and the general policy of helping the Nicaraguan rebels as part of the
hat industries; and a shift of
· worldwide U.S.-Sov!et contest. with increasing emphasis on the
governmental spending priori·
: : American need for access to Middle Eastern oil and the defense of the
ties from military to domestic
· United State~·s southern flank.
programs.
.
These are Pa!rnerston·sty!e explanations. and if the initial polls are
; any Indication, the American public Isn't happy with them . Part of
• • this may be the shock ofhav!ngtoconfront the rea! world according to
: : Harry Temple.
·

The new

.·

lJPI p,icks Blue Devil ace
as Clas's AAA defensive end

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

1986

lly GENE CAnDES
UPI Sports Writer
Gall!a Academy High School's
Andy Howard, 6-0 senior and
200-pound running back and
defensive end, was named First
Team Class AAA AU-Ohio Defen·
slve End today by United Press
Inter,nat!onal' s Board of
Coaches.
Howard, · who led GAHS to
back-to-back SEOAL football titles, led the Gall!ans In total
tackles and finished the season
with 688 yards . In 101 trips . He
scored 42 points.
It was the second time within a
month the GAHS senior has been
named First Team All·Oh!o. He
received First Team Defensive
End Associated Press honors two
weeks ago. Howard is the first
Blue Devll ·to be named All·Ohlo
on the Triple A level, and the first
football player since Tommy
Valentine in 1974 to make UPl's
ljDream Team."

Arrogance of power?__,.--_ __:__B_en_-w_a_ue_nb_;_e_rg

lll Coon Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
• DKVOOED. TO TilE INTEKESTS·OF THE MEIGS-MASON AJIEi\

~v

Page-2-The Daily Seriti'nel
•

Congress~
The trickiest chailenge for the
Democratic Congress will be to
cut the deficits without a tax
increase. Republican leaders
candidly admit their hopes that
the Democrats will revert to
form, raise taxes , spend more
money and thus be vulnerable to
attack In the 1988 campaign. ·
The congressional majority
Isn't about to fail into the GOP
trap , even though just about
everone privately agree.s that
some sort of tax hike w!l!
evenlua!ly be needed to restore a
semblance or fiscal sanity. But
sources told our associate MIchael Blostein the best that can
be hoped for In the next two years
are some "tehnical corrections"
In the tax code that would raise a
sma!! amount of money - and
would not be a political millstone
around anhyone's neck.
Here are the major economic
battlegrounds for the new
Congres:
- Trade and protectionism. ,
Reversing their historical roles,
the Democrats are more In favor

has broad authority in foreign .
affairs, including the ability to go
to war for 90 days.
For logistical purposes; the
president delegates some of his ·
powers. He can choose the
secretary of stateforonetask. Or
a member of the NSC. He can
choose an experienced person for
great responsibility or a young,
Iess·exper!enced person like Ted
Sorensen (age 33, on Kennedy's
staff ) or Bill Moyers (age 29, on
Johnson's staff) or· Hamilton
Jordan (age 33, on Carter's
.staff).
,
The president · will then be
judged by the quality ·of his
choices, and·by·whether or not he
and they obey the law. II they
don' t, they're in trouble and
deserve to be.
But many of our laws have
ambiguities in them, put thereby
Congress to give •the pr.es!dent
some running room. (Even Congress knows that 535 politicians
in Congress can't make foreign
policy at once.) And' so presidents end up pushing, testing,
skirting and sometimes, the
court rules, breaking laws. That
sounds •terrible. But the White
House often deals with brandnew laws whose limits have
never been defined by the courts.
The power struggle- from the
generic White House view- does
not involve a claim that Congress
has little power. Congress has
considerable clout , which prop- .
erly checks the president. What
often bo(hers presidents' men is
the feeling that both tfie Congress
and the press use their power
parochially, demagogically and
sensationa!ly.
What critics consider "arrogance" is often seen in a different
!lght by the president and his
staff.

COLUMBUS, Ohio iUPll Chris W!!llams, Lakewood St.
Edward's hard-running and elusive tailback, and Jay Koch, a
three-year, two-way starter for
Cincinnati Purcell Marian, head
the 1986 United Press International Class AAA All- Ohio
Football Team ...
Koch, a 6-foot-3, 195·pounder,
played both tight eqd and outside
l!n~backer with equal ability for
the Cavaliers, who finished 14·0
and wan the Division II s tate
championship.
" He plays with great !nten'
sity," Purcel! Marian coach
Herb Woeste said of Koch . "On
defense, he reads offenses very
well. He's seldom fooled by a
reverse or, some other trick
play."
But It 's Koch's blocking and
passing abilities that have the
college coa~hes .knocking on his
door.
" He has great hands and
concentration," said Woeste.
"Probably his greatest asset Is
his ability to catch the ball-high
over the middle. We split him
him occasionally •to keep hlrn
from getting too beat up. It also
gave him a little chance to do his
thing in the open."
As a blocker, Woeste said, "one
of our strengths was getting
outside. That requires hooking of
tbe end, which he does very
well."
In 14 games this season,
., tnclud!ng four playoff contests,
. Koch had 69 catches for 1, 064
yards and -eight touchdowns._ In
his three-year career, he had 110
receptions for 2.1Y77 yards and 19
TDs.
Williams, a 5-foot -11, 182pound senior, rushed for 2,453
· yards and scored 28 touchdowns
. in 13 plus games for St. Ed !he
past season, missing one due to
• an injury. He averaged 6.8 yards
per carry in 361 tries.

___Ia_ck_A_nd_e_rs_on_&amp;Jo_se...:...p_h.....:Sp_e_ar
_

of across-the-board tariffs and
quotas than the Republicans. If
the Senate Finance Committee
fo!lows thorug~ on such legislation, It w!l! mean slower growth
and higher !nl!ation, according to
economist Alien -Sinai. Commit·
tee chairman Lloyd . Bensten,
D-Texas;-wlll be sympathetic to
pleas from businessmen for
changes in the new tax law.
-~hen the budget is cut.
interest rates wl!l also have to be
cut to provide the needed spur for
the economy, making up for the
loss of government spending as a
stimulus. In-fact, some sources
figure this will be the basis for a
deal between Congress and the
Federal Reserve Board : spending cuts for lower Interest rates .
The White House. with an eye
toward 1988, w!il add its weight to
the pressure for lower Interest
rates .
The main obstacles to a deal
like this are Federal Reserve
Board chairman Paul Volcker
and Sen . William Proxmlre,
D-W!s., incoming chairman of

the Banking Committee. They're
both concerned that the · money
supply may already be growing
too fast and believe the best
po!!cy would be to slow it down,
even if it means higher interest

rates.
-Tax lobbyists are actuaily
looking forward to working with
- or on - Finance Committee
Chairman · Bentsen. They regarded outgoing Chairman, Robert Packwood, R-Ore., as a
loose cannon. too unpredictable
to be trusted . Bentsen, on the
other hand, is a conservative,
pro -busin ess pol from the
oill!elds.
-Both Senate and House BankIng committees w!l! have to come
to grips with the nation's festerIng crisis · in banking. The first
order of business w!ll be to
recapita!!ze tlie government in·
surance fund that guarantees
sav!ngs-and · loan deposits of
$100,000 and less. The fund would
be bankrupt now, if federal
regulators didn't keepal!veS&amp;Ls
that are technically defunct.
·

"He's a strong kid wi\h good
: legs and can 'break tackles," St.
, Ed coach AI O'Ne!!l said of
Williams, who was held to less
• than 100 yards only once all
; season, getting 87 in a los s to
• North Canton Hoover.
' " He can run both Inside and

·· Letter to the Editor
•

Putting them in the right mood ·

The reason I am writing this Is
· to get the attention of the
members of the Board of
• Education.
.
·
:
·
:
·

In case you didn't know, at
: Meigs High School and no doubt
at' all Meigs County schools we
' now have six-weeks tests. Which
•Is fine. depending on what kind of
' student you are and how you feel
about schooL
Because of Christmas coming

up we will soo n have our
Christmas break. My point:
when we come back from Christ mas break we will have our
six-weeks tests. since that is the
last week or the six weeks.
Knowing that we wll! have
tests - big tests - to study for
will surely put us In the Christmas spirit. Won' t It ?
V. Margene Thomas
242 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

:Today in history
•.

I
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•.

,
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Today Is Tuesday, Dec. 9, the 343rd day of 1986 with 22 to follow .
The moon is moving away from Its first quarter.
The morning stars and Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are unclfr the sign of Sagittarius. They
include English poet John Milton in 1608; industrialist-inventor
Clarence Birdseye in 1886; circus clown Emmett Kelly in 1898; actor
Douglas Fairbanks Jr. in 1909 (age 77); actor Broderick Crawford In
1911; Thomas P . "Tip" O'Neill, retiring Speaker of,the House, in 1912
(age 74) ; actor Kirk Douglas in 1918 tage 68); comedian-actor Redd
. Foxx in 1922 (age 64) ; actors John Cassavetes in 1929 (age 57) and
Beau Bridges in 1941(age 45). and singer Donny Osmond In 1957 (age
29).
011 this date in history:
.
' In 1'193. Noah Webster founded the American Minerva, the first
dally newspaper in New York City. ,
In 1907, Christmas Seals were placed on sale In the post office in
Wilmington, DeL, to raise money to fight tuberculosis.
•In 1920, the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to President Wood-row
Wtlson.
In 1974, White House aide John Ehrllchman testified at the
' Watergate trial lbat President Richard Nixon was responslb!elortlie
coverup.
.
In 1984, a six·day hijacking ordeal, in which four Arab hijackers
·killed two American passengers of a Kuwait A.lrways filght, ended at
Tehran airport with freeing of the last nine hostages. The hijackers
were arrested as they prepared to blow up the plan~ . .

•

WASHINGTON (NEA) - ObsC\Jred by the daily disclosures in
the arms-to-Iran-for-cash-to-thecontras scandal Is one of its root
ci1uses - President Reagan's
militarization of the National
Security Council.
Established by the National
Security Act or i947, the NSC is
suppoSed to provide advice and
counsel· to the president on
national security and foreign
policy matters. The director of
its srnail staff trad!t!ona!!y has
been a civilian while the second·
ranking official has been a
military officer. I
'R eagan adhered to that tradition in the Initial years of his first
term , designating first Richard
V. !\!!en and then William P .
Clark to head thf NSC staff and to
serve as the president's national
security advisor.
,
In the autumn o!l983, however,
Reagan appointed former Marine Corps Lt. Col. Robert C.
McFarlane to succeed Allen.
Although McFa.rlane was a civilian at the time, he had spent
virtually a!! of his adult Hie almost a quarter of a century In
the Marine Corps.
When McFarlane resigned late
last year, Reagan named as his
successor Navy VIce Adm. John
M. Poindexter - a career
military officer who remained on
active duty throughout his yearlong tenure as head of the NSC
stall.
The ascendancy of Marine
Corps Lt. Co!. Oliver L. North
within the NSC staff occurred
under the· leadership of McFarlane and Poindexter. North, also
a career military officer who
remained on active duty through·
out his White House service, held
the- NSC title of deputy director
lor poi!Ucai·mll!tary affairs.

'

He emerged as an important
figure in the Reagan adrn!n!stra·
lion In late 1983, when he
convinced the president and
others at the White House that
the most effective means of
diverting public attention from
the terrorist bombing of a military barracks In Beirut that
killed 241 Marines was to mount
an !mrnedtate military invasion
or the island of Grenada.
His plan worked. Reagan was
widely praised for the Grenada
!nll!at!ve and escaped almost all
criticism of his decision to send
the Marines to Lebanon.
• The character .of the NSC has
changed markedly und er mil itary leadership in recent years.
No longer exclusively a consultative agency, II has become an
operational organization that
ru~s pararnll!t~ry ventures from
the White House.
Those operations include coor·
d!nat!ng " private" aid to the
contras in Nicaragua during the
years when public funding was
prohibited by Congress, and
providing military assistance to
the mujahedeen lighting to deny
the Soviet Union total control of
Afghanistan.
In addU on, the NSC staff
orchestrated the covert arms
shipments to 'Iran and devised
the now-discredited plan to destabilize the Libyan government
through the useofdlslnformation
led to news organizations in this
country.
When they needed assistance,
senior members of the NSC staff
turned not to the personnel of
established government depart·
rnents and agencies but instead
to former military officers they
personally trusted.
For example, retired Air Force
Major Gen. Richard V. Secord,

who holds no official government
position, accompanied McFa r lane ...on a secret mission to
Tehran and was a key figure In
supplying · weapons to the
contras.
Thus, Reagan ha s es tablished
a milit ary force that operates
with impunity at the highest
levels or government and is
accountable (depending upon
who us to be believed) either to
nobody or only to the president.
The only officials to whom ~ he .

NSC staff )I'Ould have repOrted
are Reagan and his chief of staff,
Do~ald T. Regan. Both, however,
deny any knowledge of the NSC's
specific activities -even though
its operations clearly were designed to Implement the pres!·
dent' s publicly stated policies.
If Reag~n is to be b,elieved, he
has permitted a quasl-rnll!tary
unit to operate Inside the· White
House without restraint or accountability. That is truly terrify ing.

PHILADELPHIA (UP!) -An
invest ment group headed by
Phill!es president Bill Giles is on
the brink of owning 100 percent of
, the team, bill fans should not
notice any change at all as a
result.
Tart Broadcasting Co. announced.Monday it was selling its

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.

out , but his greatest asset is his
cutting ability when he gets into
the secondary. He has real good
vision and he just feels things. He
had. a great year, no question
about that."
The quartel'.back on the first
team is Tony Lowery of
Groveport-Madison, a 6-foot·4,
180-pound senior who passed and
ran the Cruisers to a 9·1 record
the past s·e ason and their first
playoff berth.
Lowery, a two-year starter
who has been timed · at 4.5 in the
40-yard dash, accounted for 20
touchdowns the past season. He
completed 77 of 130 passes for 819
yards and eight TDs, while
throwing only twO interceptions.
, He also rushed for 532 yards and
another 12 touchdowns, averaging 6, 7 yards per carry.
The other running backs
named to the first team are Doug
Lewis oiM!ddletown, P,au!Capri·
ott! 6f Worthlngion and Chuck
Webb of Toledo Macomber.
Webb. a 5-foot -10, 190-pound
junior, rushed for nearly 1.~
yards and scored 15 touchdowns
for Macomber the past season,
averaging 9.5 yards per carry.
Six times he rl!shed for over 200
yards in a game.
Capriotti. 5-foot-11 and 195
pounds, rushed for over 1, 200
yards In leading .Worthington to a
10.0 season, while the 5-foot- 10,
180-pound Lewis gained 1,547
yards and scored 24 touchdowns
for Middletown, with a season
high of 299 yards against
Lancaster.
Fairfield's John Pfeifer, a 6foot -4, 205-pounder, who caught a
pair ~f touchdown passes in the
. Indians' win over St. Ed in the
Division I state championship
· game, is the split end on AAA
first team, with Koch the tight
end.
'Che first team interior lineman
are guards Derek Schmidt of
Worthington and . Paul Long of
Mayfield, the tackles Mike Huddleston of Wooster and Darry l
Hardy of Cincinnati Princeton
and the center Lance Ference of
Berea .
Pat Skinner of Toledo St.
Francis Is the placekicker.
Skinner, a junior, took over the
Knights' kicking chores in August when injury struck the
returning starter and booted 28 of
30 extra points and, 13 of 16 field
goal attempts, the longest 44
yards.
The first team defense consists
of ends Jim Knecht of Cincinnati
Moeller and Andy Howard of
Gallipolis. tackles Ma r k
K.enl!edy of Cleveland Benedictine and Andy Krupa or Centervl!!e ana nose guard Andy Klare
of Cincinnati St. Xavier.
The first team linebackers are
Toledo Whitmer's Steve Bailey,
Jerrod Vance of Massl!!on Wa shington and Dave Dlebolt of
Mayfield.
Mark Fletcher 6f Princeton,
Dave Schamer of Cincinnati St.
Xavier and Lorain Admiral
King's Mike Carrico are the
defensive backs,.
The first team punter is Col urn·
bus St. Charles' Bob Benjamin, a
6-foot-1, 210.pound tailback who
averaged 42.7 per kick .

1986 ClU$s AAA All-Ohw Football
fOLUMIUK, ot.ln (UPI) - Tk•· ltM
l 'llllf'd 1'1'1- llltf'l'llllliollal (1~¥+~; .UA.

AII·Ohln F .... hllll lf'lllll hi Ill hril(l-l.
wtllthlllll•tu:llool yoear) ~
Fltlll Tum Oflfttlll'
Spill fii......,Ohn PfeU.,r, Falrllrl .. i- 1,
'!15, Sr .

.....

,lt._

SINOLECOPV
PRICE

.

Dally ........................ ...... 25 Ce-n ts

KEEPING

Subserlbfrs not deslrlnfl to pay thr car·
riM' mav remit In advanre dlrPCt to
Thfl Daliy Senfln('l on a :I. &amp;or 12 month
ball I!'!. CrNl.ll will b€' ~vrn car rlt'r C'ach

My

OPTIONS

W£1(1k .

No

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,

s u~crlpt\o ns

by mall prormltrrd In

arras wh !'"" holtlP

~arrleor

S(lfvlce 111

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Mall SubflcrtpUonlll

lulde Melp Coun11

•

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2fi Wt'e-klll "'I"' ' ! ' ..... " .. " .. .... ... .. " $34 .06
~2 Wrt'k1 ........... ....................... S66 5ti
Outlllde Melp Coullt)'

13 Wrcks .. ............................. 118.20
26 Wrcks ............................... $35.10
12 ~·el&lt;s ...,..,...., ...,. .................... l67.60

r

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Kol'l1.

n•dnnllll

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MhldloeiOWI\ ~16, 1U, Sr. : 'fhtuok l\Phh,
Tolrdo Mat'Omhl't, ~ II . Ill. ,Jr.;

rh"'

WIIIIIU'I\'o, LaktwOid
1110, Kr.

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Plllt'l'kidtH-Pat !i'lk.lnner, T!lh•do St.
FriUitiro, ;,.t, 173. Jr.

Fl,.t

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1'1'11111 llrft'IUif'

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flntlnnlltl

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!H. '!'!fl. Sr. : Andy Rowa~rd, Calllpoll11, i1, W. Sr.
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2:«1, Sr.; Mark Ht•nnt d;\ . 1 C: ~ t'­

i\NDY HOWi\RD
(First Team AIJ.Oh!o)

IMd
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NOMt• I(UIII'd--A.nd, KIW' r, flnclnn;lll

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St.
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,
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!Z. :'lr
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Fkoh•lwr, (' lnl'lnnatl

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folumhu~

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fl.:\, :!:UI. Sr.
Guarct.-Matt Kn•l(1•1. Tolt-00 frn

....

f11thullt-, li-.f. ~II. Sr.; Br1!U1 Laird.
Fn•mtmt RO!'o~. .... m . Sr.
T atk lf'!I - 0!1V I' Prllt·ho•l! , l ' ppt•r
r\rlln ~t

tM, 1-'!. ~ Sr : D'11n ,\ndrr..on.
Kt•llrrlnJt AIM-. i-t
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f;&gt;ntrr-('hrl!; na,-1... :Milford, Ii-I. lll.

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l'lnt:t•·
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K1111n l nJ;
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.lone;,
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fil'ld 1-Hmth: RIH l.t•dl'rl'f , Sht"ll'l.l';

J&lt;.

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.ff!lul. U 110. Sr.

St&gt;fnd Tf'llm Delt·h"

En""-Willlam Furd, Mldd.lf'lown, :'). JI
:115, Kr .; &amp;ott MowrJ, Ashland.!!-~ . W!l.
Kr .
T~o~.t_.. IP.oo - f' hlll'll o• Snmple., Bl•lnll Kf':-&gt;1
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&amp;--1,
2-141,
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f' hud
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luuktl!-.;~
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S.ou!h: ll:nl ' l'otokar. •: m·lht , ltnl
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t'~alrnt•ld : SJ:·ott Rlni. 1'1••, ~~Mn d Bl·n ~· dlt"
tln1 •: Jim N!.,.. ln•kl. :YIIddlt•tllrlt ""'" .. ~'
,l ttdplll'k: So oil St·hod'lner. ( ' lnl'in-

II. IU, !Ior.

IJII ttMit•k en-Tum !!ph t')', East fk-1' 1'"
land Sluaw , I-t '$, Sr.; And;l :'tluh'"·
Fllltl-.v. lo'!. JU, Sr.; But Prh•t•, f&gt;allun.
$·11 , :zes. !V.
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F..11~: ( :trllnn Th&lt;uua.-;. l.lm a S..-nlnr:
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Rldt ,\111'11. flf'H•I;IIld Rf'nt•dh'·
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Tni~·OO Mut·omhrr;
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Gallon. •Jat·k l .utwr•ul. C'lnt·Jnnatl !&lt;it .
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:\tllt'!i n a1 ldsnn. \ 'oung·

•

II . IM, Sr.; Dirk MiliA', "~h'I'I' UI J •
190. Sr. : Rl•·ll Ylurr•" ·
A~tlntawn Fltt•h. &amp;.I. IK.$. Sr.
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;yt!ar- .Ja y Ktuh .

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(;rf'l•n l .t • mon-Monr'ui~
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thlnK~on.

Mu.~~nlun

Ma-hlnl(ton;

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Fl't'mont Rero.-.: Fran" F..rllr, R1 •lolt \\ t'!&gt;t

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Spt•;•lld Ml'nllon Hutb
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.Redmen edge Demons on 3 _·.~
point play at buzzer, 77-76

SUCCESSFUL HUNTER Rutland hunter Raymond
Lambert was successful his
llrst day out. Lambert bagged
this 13 point buck last Monday
in the Dye Road area near
Rulland.

.'

Vis iting Rio Grande edged
Dyke, 77-76, on a three-point goal
at the buzzer by 6-I sophomore
guard Jimmy Kerns Monday
night to post Its sixth hardwood
victory in eight outings.
Down 76-74 with seven seconds
left and Dyke's top scorer. Curtis
'Golston at the line for a one-andone. Golston missed his first shot.
Kerns took a pass up court on the
wing about 21 feet out from
Anthony Raymore and let fly . It
swished the nets as the flnal horn
sounded.
It was Rio's third three-point
goal during the final minute and
a half play.
Th e Redrnen trailed 71-65 with
about two minutes to go when
three-pointers by Joe Verhoff
and Mike Smith ~ept the visitors
In the bail game.
Rio led 38-31 during halftime.
Three Redmen finished in
double figures . led by Smith's 18
markers. Ron Rlttinger and

BAGS S.POIN'l' BUCK Ralph (Gene) Hall, or Route~.
Pomeroy, bagged this eight
point buck Thursday, · in the
area of Ohio 7 and Ohio 124.
/\!though Hall has taken several deer In I he pas,l, this deer
is his biggest . .

Verhoff added 17 . The Redmen
hit 25 of 51 field goa! attempts,
four of six three point attem pts
and 15 of 21 from the foul line. Rio
Grande had 22 turnovers. Smith
had four assists and Verhoff had
10 of Rio's 24 rebounds .
Dyke was 31 of fo1 from the
field, three of eight on the
three-point goals, and five of nine
at the line. The Demons had 25
rebounds, 12 by Golston.
Golston was the only Dyke
play~r In double figures, finish·
!ng with 27. '
Wednesday , Rio will play de-

fe nding District 22 NAJA champion Findlay at Findlay. Sa(urd ay, the Red men return home to
battle Defiance College in · a 3
p.m. contes t at Lyne Center .. ·
Monday's box score:
·

',
RIO GRANDE (77) - J\nthony Ra)'·
more. 3-0.6; ·llmmy Kern~ . 2·1-3-R: Ray
Slnglei.on, 2-4--8: Mlkt SmUh, .f·2·-t· IK: Ron

RlttlntJer, 8-5-17: .Jo&lt;' Verhoff. 6·1·21--li:

Geru:ld C ia)' , (}.3-3. TOTAIJi 2~4·15-77;

DYKE (76) -

C'harl~

Kinney, :u-o-H;

Ruy WIIIIIUils, -1-G-K; Demaroo Scott, •t--2;
Cut1~ GobU.on, l:!·lU7; Ke-Y Arm,.t~onK,
.2-0.-t; Wrn· Walltower, 3-1-6; Carlos
A.ponce• .f·O.K: Derrick Plalrt •I·JJ.

TOTALS 3t-~~1tl.
.
,
Halftime 11corr- Rio 3ll. Dykr 3l. , •

..--------===========

Testaverde
UPI Player

of Year
ByBOBKEIM
UPI Sporls Wrller
MIAMI !UP!) - Miami quar·
terback Vinny Testaverde, who
waited three years to start and
spent his final two seasons
breaking school records, today
was named the College Football
Player of the Year by United
Press Iitterna~!onal.
'
Testaverde. who won the Heis·
man Trophy last'tVeekend by the
second· largest margin ever, was
described as the " best quarterback I've ever seen" by Okla·
horn~ Coach Barry Switzer.
Florida State Coach Bobby
Bowden compared his ability to
dominate a game to that of Babe
Ruth. Miami Coach Jimmy Johnson simply called Tes taverde the
"best football phiyer I've ever

47.5 ·percent interest in the
Philadelphia Phlll!es lo the
Giles- led group.
Taft's share of the baseball
franchise will be sold for $24.1
million, giving the Giles group
100 percent ownership of the
team.
The sale must now be approved
by the owners of the 25 other
major-league baseball teams.
Giles, whose personal share of
the team would Increase from
about 10 percent to 19.5 percent ,
sa!Cl the transaction would have
no effect on the operation of the
Ph lilies.
Giles said la st week that he
would remain general partner
"a'nd the ot hers would remain
limited partners as it is presently
constructed."
" It' s not going to change
anything," said Ph !Iiles spok~s­
rnan Larry Shenk. "He (GIIesJ
was !n'~;,~targe before and he is in
charge now . He just has a little
bigger part of the pie now ." .
Shenk ·added that Giles was
"pleased that the rest of the
partners were able to pu rchase
it, rather than having to go
outside and get someone else."
Taft board chairman Charles
Mechem Jr. said the company's
decision to sell the team followed
logically. from the recent sale of
their Philadelph!a·based televi sion station, WTAF·TV, which
bro~dcasts Phillies games . .
"While the decision to sell our
Phlll!es part-interest makes obvious financial sense, it also ends
one of lhe happiest business
associations we've ever had,"
Mechem said.
· He said Taft's dealings with
Glles and the Ph!ll!es since the
company bought a minority

I'II,;.....J•r

t•tll Murl.,,
llt5. i'ir.
G uarito- D I!r e k I'W'hml!l. WorUIIIn"'
Inn,
8-S. t55, lk: Puul Lo"JI'• Mll)'De ld.

Giles group taking over full
:oWilership 'of Phillies team

Demilitarize the NSC ______Ro_be_rt_~_a~(te_rs

Th8 Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.

'

The Daily ·Sentinel
~~

'

TAKES DEER-' Norman
Ray Laudermllt sbot this 14
point ,buck, Wednesday; Nov.
26, on West Creek In the
Letart, W.Va. area. Field
dressed, the deer weighed In
al 151 pounds.

seen.''
Interest in 1981 " have always
been harmonious:"
"The Ph!IIles' owners a nd
management are first-rate baseba ll execu tiv es. combining
shrewd business acumen with
genuine love or . the game."
Mechem said. "We wish them
well, and we shall miss our clos e
association with them."

a

The fifth-year senior from
Elmont, N.Y., completed 175 of
276 passes for 2,557 yards with 26
touchdowns and nine interceptions . He had ·a completion
percentage of 63.4, and completed less tllan half his passes
only once.
Testaverde holds Miami ca·
reer recOrds for total offense
(5,738), passing yardage (6,058)
and touchdown passes (48).

1~----------------------CHRISTMAS TREES
II
BRADFORDS
.

I
II
I

FRESH CUT TREES AVAILABLE
OR CUT YOUR OWN

Located on Cherry Ri~ge. Turn East at Darwin onto Rt.
681, go 4 mi. to Milepost. Turn South on gravel road,
11/t mile to grove.
WATCH FOR SIGNS
HOURS: 10 'Til Dark

·-----------------------

AFULL LINE ··:
OF ACCESSORIES
ARE
AVAILABLE
&lt;
:&gt;
FULL LINE OF SAFETY EQUIPMENT ,,,

...

POMEROY HOME &amp; POMEROY,
AUTO,OH..,

600 EAST MAIN

99%-7094

ALIGNMENT MOST CARS...$14.50
lining M1ig1 Co. 20 YICIR-1966·1916 Ml

'.

STIHL"·-·
........

I

�'

Page-4-lhe

'

l'omeroy-

Sentinel

Tuesday, December 9, 1986

Seattle hands Raiders worst
•
·NFL loss ·In
years, 37 to 0
•

.

By Mi\RC McFARLAND
SEATTLE (UPH - Seattle's
victo ry over the Los Angeles
Raiders Monday night helped
Denver clinch theAFCWest title.
Now, the Seahawks need some
help to qualify for a wild· card
berth .
Seattle improved to 8-6 with its
third st ra igl\t victory, a 37-0
shuto ut of the Los Angel~s
Raiders that represented their
worst-ever NFL defeat.
After starting the season 5·2,
thr $ea hawks lost four straight
ga mes, before their current
winning strea k.
" We're st ill in the hunt for the
playoffs, '' said Curt Warner, who
ru shed for 116 yards and two
touchdowns. · "Unfortunately,
four weeks ago, I think we were
the worst team in the· NFL and It
will be hard to overcome that. It
isn't over, but it's do-or-die
t irrit&gt;. "

Sl:attle's victory enabled the
10·.4 Broncos to clinch the AFC
W~st.
De nver, Los Angeles,
Ka nsas Cit y and Seattle all could
firush the season with 10-6 re-.
cords , but the Broncos would win
the; title under-the tie- breaking
form ula.
To make the playoffs as a
wil d-card team, the Seahawks
mqst wi n their remaining · two
ga mes - aga inst San Diego and
Denver - lilhiie.Cincinnati must
lo s~ its final two ·games and the
Ratd e rs a nd Kansas City each
must lose once.
Seatt le's Dave Krieg completed 14 of 21 passes for 243
yards ~nd two touchdowns
a~ pin st Los Angeles. He was not

·.

intercepted.
Norm Johnson kicked thr~
field goals as the Seahawks .
handed the Raiders their worst
loss since Oct. 5, 1962, wnen they
lost to Denver 44·7 when both
teams were part or' the AFL.
The Raiders, who joined the
NFL when the two leagues
merged in 1970, had not been shut
out since Oct. 11, 1981, when they
were defeated 'by Kansas City
27·0.
"This was more satisfying
tha n our win over Dallas on
Thanksgiving," .Seattle Coach
Chuck Knox said. "All games are
important, but this one was the
biggest win of the year."
The Sea hawks set a club record
with 11 sacks - the most ever
surrendered by Raiders team.
"We knew we had to stop their
first-down rushing and make
them pass, and then keep (Raid·.
ers quarterback Jlrn l Plunkett
from scrambling," .said Seahawks nose tackle Joe Nash, who
had two sacks for minus -13
yards.
Warner, the AFC 's top rusher
· with 1,196 yards, scored on a 5·
yard run In the first quarter and
closed the scoring with a 3· yard
dash with 7: 3lleft in the game. It
was the sixth time this season he
has rus hed for 100 or more yards.
Los Angeles, also 8-6, has now
lost five straight games at the
Kingdome since winning 32· 3lln
1981.
Plunkett completed just 4of 11
passes for 61 yards and was
Intercepted once. Marc Wllson
hit 5 of 10 passes for 55 yards with
one Interception.

a

"It was a humbling · experience," Raiders Coach 'rom
Flores said. "We didn't play well
in all catagorles. They just
outplayed us."
The Seahawks raced to a 14·0
lead In the first quarter on a 10-·
yard scoring pass from Krieg to
Steve Largent .and the 5-yard TD
run by War.ner.
· The Seahawks extended their
lead to 24-0 at halftlrne on a 46yard field goal by Johnson. with
4:17 left In the second quarter
and a , 12-yard TD pass from
Krieg to Ray Buller with 45
seconds left.
· Johnson accounted for all the
scoring In the third quarter,
kicking field goals of 51 ·and 53
yards to give the Sea hawks a 30·0
lead at the end of the period.
Warner's fourth-quarter TD accounted for t,t1e final Seattle
points:
A highlight for the Raiders was
Todd Christensen's catch of a
21J.yard throw from 'Plunkett
during Los Angeles' opening
drive. With the reception, Chris·
tensen became the first player in
NFL history to catch at least 80
passes In lour seasons.
Christensen, an 8-year veteran
from Brigham Young, caught 92
passes In 1983, 80 In 1984 and 82
last season. His 3 catches for 50
yards against the Seahawks ·
lifted his NF'L - leading reception
total to 82 for 1,017 yards.
"The record means nothing
when you lose, especially when
you lose like this," Christensen
said. "Right now, the only thing
that counts Is making the
playoffs.'"

There ;hall be music
--.-- thanks to area choir
Jennifer Sheets- they·have been
busy this holiday season.
Ron Is also director of the
Christmas cantata, "Oi His Kingdom There Shall be No End" to
be given at the Middleport
Church of Christ ·at 10:30 a.m.
Sunday. Tlils one is by the
members 'or the church choir and
Jennifer Is accompanist. Incid·
entally, the presentation ls open
to the pu bile.

By BOB HOEFLICH
Senllael Staff Writer
There shall be music and you,
you and you are
invited.
The . almost
brand ·n,e
Meigs County
Choir 'Is inylt log
you to attend a
Christmas . concert to be held at 2 · p.m. on
·Sunday, Dec. 21; at the Trinity
Church In Pomeroy.

"

Congratulations are In order
for the Meigs County American
Red Cross blood donors.
Due to them, Meigs County has
been awarded a plaque from the
Huntington Blood Center for
achieving 100 percent of the goal
In blood {!ollecjlon for fiscal year,
1985-86. 1
.

The concert selections will
inClude· a variety of old time
holiday songs and several selec·
tions relating to the birth of
Jesus.
· The, Meigs County Gholr Is
made up of local . people who
attend a number of different
churches [n the county and the
group has been working since·
late spring. So far, only two
programs have been given. Di·
rection Is by Ron Ash and
accompanist Is Jennifer Sheets.

PLUNKETI' SACKED - Los i\ngeies Raiders
quarterback Jim Plunkett (right) Is wrapped up
and sacked by Sea&amp;tle's Fredd Young (left) and

There is no charge for the Dec.
21 concert but a .donatlon will be
taken with t~e proceeds being
used to purchase food for needy
families within Meigs County.

Jacob Green during Mondaynight's NFL acllon In
Seattle. The Seabawks handed the Raiders their
worst loop loss since 1982, 37·0. (UPIJ

Purdue tops Wichit~ State, 77-61

'

By BILL WOLLE
left on McCants' layup.
4-2, was led by Kyle Anglin's 14
UPI Sports Writer
Henry Carr led the Shockers points.
·
The Purdue Boilermakers con· with 13 points.
At Pittsburgh, Charles Smith
Elsewhere In the Top 20, Nri. 6 scored 23 points and grabbed 12
vlnced Wichita State Coach Ed·
die Fogler what the top team In Illinois ripped Eastern Illinois rebounds, arid all !lye starters
the count~¥ Is.
85-51, No. 13 Syracuse downed scored In double figures for the
Buckeyes were in double figures. .
" Purdue is the best team I've Cornell • 83·76, No. 14 Navy Panthers; 3·1. Demetrius Gore
"Our players were tired to· seen this year," Fogler said crushed St. Leo 92·57 and No. 17 added 23 points, Curtis Aiken 21,
night at the start of the game," Monday night after Wichita State Pittsburgh outscored Xavier 99- Jerome Lane 13 and Mike Good·
said Ohio State's Williams. "We fell 77·61 to the No.4 Bollermak- 76. '
son 10. The 3·3 Musketeers were
had an emotional game against ers. "I vote on the UP! board, and
In an upset, Western Michigan led by ,guard Byron Larkin's 31
Ohio University last Saturday I'll vote Purdue No. 1 next week. earned a 62-59 victory over points. /
night and the coqcentratlon just Purdue has . great. experience, Michigan.
great team chemistry and ls
At Champaign, Ill., Ken Norwasn 't there at the start."
The Buckeyes, who are idle expertly coached."
·
man scored 21 points to lead the
now until they host Howard
Center ~)-!elvin McCants scored Illlni, 5·0, who built a 42·19
Saturday night, also have final 20 points, Everette Stephens halftime lead. Six other Illinois
exams to deal with this week.
added 15, Doug Lee 14 and Troy players scored at least 8 points.
"I understand that," said Willi· Lewis 10 for Purdue, 4-0.
Dave Stein paced Eastern llli·
ams, who picked up a technical
Wichita State, 3-2, scored a nols, 2-1, with 11 points.
·foul early In the contest when his basket off the opening tip, butt he
At Syracuse, N.Y., Sherman
team was struggling, "but you Boilermakers scored the next 9 Douglas scored 22 points and
have to be ready to play. That's points and never again trailed.
Howard Triche added 16 to lift
just part of being a student·
"I'm always happy with a win, the Orangemen. Syracuse, 5·0,
athlete."
but .my main concern is improve- built a 50·331ead, but Cornell, IJ.4,
As for the technical, Williams- mimt," Keady said. "(But) we're closed within 79·75 In the· final
claimed it wasn't planned, but not really improving. Our free- minute on a barrage of 3· point
admitted, "I just wanted to get throw shooting was poor and we field ' ~oals . Cornell, wlllch 'was
our guys pumped up. As It turned lou led too much. We've got a long led by John Bajusz's 22 points,
out, It worked."
ways to go if we're going to play came no closer.
Frank Booker led the Bowling In the Big Ten or with a team like
At Annapolis, Md., David RoGreen In scoring with 18 points, North Carolina. We're not doing binson scpred 30 points and
hitting four of five 3-point field things the way I think things pulled down 16 rebounds for
goal attempts. Lamon Pippin ought to be done. "
Navy 4-1. Navy scored 13 of the
added 10 for the Falcons, who fell
Purdue led 42·30 at halftime first points in the second half to
to 1·2 and face Ohio University ' and surged ahead 70·48 with 5:09 lead by 33 with 15:581eft. St. Leo,
,,
Saturday In the opener of their ,....,-.....- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ' ' - - - : - - - - - - - - - - Mid -American Conference
schedule.
.
"This Is a very tough stretch of
games for us, " said Larranaga.
"It's more than we can handle.
We just have to live with \he fact
Ohio State Is a better team tham
us. We have to play over our
heads to beat the teams on our
sc hedule right now. "
Elsewhere Monday night, MIami nipped William and Mary,
60-57; Ohio U~lverslty downed
Hofstra, 84 -70; Pittsburgh
thumped Xavier, 99-76; Robert
Morris (Pa.) defeated Marietta,
55-41; Cedarville topped Wil·
mlngton, 90-80; and Rio Grande
edged Dyke, 77· 76.
At Wlllla.msburg, Va., Eddie
Schilling hit two free throws with
· 39 seconds to play and Tom
Straker added two more to give
Miaml its win over William and
thePOWER
Mary. The Redsklns, 4-0, were
thePOWER
XTSeries
paced by Trlmmlll Haywood
Series9000
with 19 points. ·The Indians, 1·3,
were led by Tom Bock with 18
point s.
Save$25.00
At Athens, Paul "Snoopy"
650 Cold Crlllking AMPS
Save
$25.00
Graham scored 27 P&lt;&gt;lnts, includ,.
72-Mooth limited Warranty
7N.tlr11h Limited Warranly
ing 23 In the second half, to lead
•
Oh!o University past Hofstra.
Marty Lehmann added 18 points,
Reggie Rankin had 12 and Rich
Stanfel 11 to help the Bobcats
Improve their record to 3-2.
Hofstra, 3·3, was paced by LeRoy
Allen with 26 points .
At Pittsburgh, all five Pitt
starters scored in double figu res
as the Panthers rolled over
Xavier. Charles Smith led the
NAPA SILVERLINE Thermostats only $1A9
17th-ranked Panthers, 3-1, with
23 points. The Musketeers, 3·3,
NAPA SILVER LINE Starters low $23.49
who had beaten Pitt the past two
seasons, were led by guard
NAPA SILVERLINE Ahemator low $24.95
Byron Larkin with 31 points.

Ohio State humbles. Bowling Green
By GENE Ci\DDES
UPI Sports Writer
It was more of a technical
knockou t Ohio State put on
Bowling Green Monday night in
St. John Arena.
The Buckeyes, now 5·0, once
again using their constant pres·
sure to for ce numerous BG
turnovers (25 \ , staggered the
fa lcons wi th an early 7-0 lead,
then ja bbbed away for an 89-52
win.
" As with all Gary Williams
1earns, as your players get
fatigued, that pressure wears on

you," said BG coach Jim Larran·
aga. "And, as we fell behind, we
don't have the firepower to catch
up. We don ' t have a Dennis
Hopson."
·
The Buckeyes led 37·18 at
halftime and by as many as 40
points with just over four minutes left In the game.
Hopson scored 24 points to lead
the Buckeyes and also had 7
rebounds and 5 assists. Jerry
Francis added a career-high 18
points, Jay Burson 15, Curtis
Wilson 11 and Tony White 10 as
for the fifth game In a row fiv.e

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Stephen Saltz

Stephen Saltz
has 4th birthday
'

I'm afraid Jim O'Brien's golf·
tng buddies are pu\tlng the heat
on him,
Bub Stivers says that last
summer at the Jaymar Golf
Course, O'Brien went nine
straight holes getting all pars.
This past summer, O'Brien set
another record. He went 12 holes
without a par. His playing
partners besides StiVers are
Lionel Boggs and Shorty
Hackett .

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Saltz
entertained at McDonald's in
New Martinsville, W.Va., with a
party honorln~ their son, Stephen, on his fourth birthday. His
sister, Sarah, assisted with the
party which carried out a Big
Ruby Hysell of the Hysell Run
Bird theme.
Road
Is confined to St. Joseph
Stephen's grandmother,
In· Park.ersburg, W.Va.,
Hospital
Bunny Kuhl, baked his birthday
and
was
scheduled to undergo
cake. Going to New Martinsville
to attend the party were his surgery Monday . I know cards
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. would be appreciated. The room
Charles Kuhl and Mrs. Roy . number Is 238 .
Mayer, Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Remember when you used to
Mayer. Beth and Michael, Mrs.
borrow
one of your mother's
Donald Hauck, and Mrs. Roger
Karr, Jessica and Valerie, who stockings to hang on Christmas
also spent the weekend with the Eve so that you'd get more
goodies - and Santa always put
Saltz family .
the bananas - which ended up
Others presenting gifts to Stepretty squashed - In the bottom
pheQ. were Mrs. Donna Carr and
of
the sock. How green was your
Leslie and Mrs. Norman
·
valley
. Do keep smiling.
Goodwin.

OUT OF A JOB?
DON'T WAIT - ENTEI THESE
JOB TIAINING PIOGIUIS
Takl111 Applications Now

Come by or Call

'(614) 446-4367
'

NEW CLASSES STimNG lVIII 12 WEEIS IN:
•CLERK .TYPIST
•MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•COMPliTER PROGRAMMING
•ACCOUNTING, and more
Eligible for the Training of Veteran•
FINANCIA~ AID AVAILABLE

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Business College.
629 Jeck10n Pike - Suhe 312
Gallipolis, Ohio 46831

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Gallipolis, OH

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Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Address~~--------------

City----,------'-..;....-- State_~z~P-- ,
Phone 11'---.,.-

'·

officers

Caroline Latham, the story of a
dowager empress of an Ameri·
can dynasty. A devout Irish
CathOlic daughter of a Boston
mayor, Mrs. Kennedy was wife
to an ambassador to England,
mother of a president, and two
senators, she said, but few knew
the real Rose Kennedy as a feisty
Independent lady in her 80s
whose iron will forged her fame

and her famil y's.piace In history . .
Although very wealthy , she was
always trying to save money and
cut corners , according to the
reviewer.
For roll call member and
guests told of an old fashioned
remedy -and commented on the
two reviews. Nuts, candy and
snack crackers were served by
the host ess.

Presentation made
Juniors of Racine Troop 1042
recently enjoyed an audiovisual
on "Passport to Adventure: Th e
Four World Centers" when they
met with the troop leaders, Kay
Roberts and Bev Cummins.
Christmas ornaments will be
made by the scouts, some of

•

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'

Brandon Allen Bell

Bell birth
Mr. and Mrs. Allen Bell, the
former Dream a . Eblin, are announcing tlfe birth or their first
child, a son, Brandon Allen. The
seven pound, 12 ounce iqfant was
born Oct. · 4, at Pleasant · Valley
Hospital.
.Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Eblin, Jr. ,
Rutland. Pate~nl!l grandparents
are the Rev. and Mrs. Edward
Bell, Point Pleasant. Greatgrandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Henry Eblin, Sr. and Ms. Maggie
Caruthers. ·

ffi~&amp;­

:Fatwtat .YftJme

I

.

.'

to Scouts

wh ich will be taken to the · ·
Veterans Memorial Hospital Ex: · .
tended Care Center Nlients. The .
scouts earlier took halloween
crafts to the Center. Patches for '
the tune-into-well-being project
were distributed.

l,p;;H;;O;;W;;C;;A;;N;;I;;H;;EL;P;;M;;Y;;N;IE~C;E~AC~C~EP~T~H~ER~M~OT~H~ER~'S~D~E~A=TH=?~
When aparent dies, most young children feel their world
has come to an end. ~Y have many questions and new
feelings which can cause added pain and sorrow.
Helping your niece realize that others have had to •
adjust to such great loss may be one way to comfort ·
her - and you!
"Talking About Death with Children" by Dr. Earl A.
Grollman, is an easy-to-read , excellent book to ~elp
, you provide the comfort your niece may be seekmg.
It contains descriptions of how children have felt
when they lost a parent under many different cir· ·
cumstances. One of these is sure to be similar to
your niece's own experience.
The book is designed so it could be read to or by your
niece to give her assurances and lasting comfort.
Your problems are our concern. Please feel free to
call on us.

..

.

"Sewice Plut ... Attention to Detail"
BRUCE FISHER

BILL BLOWER

WHY
IT?
ingclose tabs on tax reform
and other financial trends,
we've been developing new
ways to help you solve today's
tough money problems.
We call them, simply
Wl'll WOIIIIIG -10
enough,
"Money Solutions".
HIP YOU SOLVI.
Willi 10 DO Wlllll1111 TU
Everybody's talking about
tax reform. Most of our custo- LAW~ IUT1111MGI•t
IUIIIIfA1111 AWAY.
mers are struggling to f!gure
out how the new law will
There's more to Money Solu·
change the way they handle tions than just income-tax
tactics. Because there's a lot
· their money. '
. There's been a lot of talking more going on these days that
and thinking at BANK ONE, affects your finances.
too, as we've tried to antici·
For instance, interest rates
pate the problems and opportu· havegonedown ... great
nities tax reform would Create news for borrowers, but not
for you. In a meeting t}je other so great for savers.
day, one of our Equity Money
On the other hand, tax reService people pomted out,
form has scuttled interest
"We're all concerned about
deductions on most loans,
what our customers are con· while boosting spendable in·
cemed about. Because we're come. That's good news for
in the same boat."
savers-but bad news for bor·
rowers. So how do you decide
what to do?
At BANK ONE, we think
your best strategy right now
IS to be as flexible as possible:
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hand, but don't let it sit idle
while it's not being used.
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foluz•rm lr/)011 111111 our custo""" Qr!l
when you need it.
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._,.11111AX . . . ACTOF
lti61111AIII'S CIIA'IIII
W110U R SIT OF IIOZT

..........,.,

"""' 'I let ,..do Uris ••Y /Qnger-N!hal
1if111/ do?"

.. IErwWn,. SK

RldiiiiU. U. ......., • •
sttrpllrr. ltl. W"l Uhtrly '21
SW U.•l•• ts. Teau Tet•h ~
IH . 81M.elt, ller'fllf' .. 81 . U

,,

New officers were elected at members and guests, Mrs. Harry
the recent meeting of the Middle- Cheshire and Mrs. Ira Butcher. ·
Mrs. Carpenter, program
port Literary Club held at the
chairman,
Introduced Mrs. Rohome of Mrs. Chester Erwin . .
Elected were · Mrs. Wilson bert Fisher who reviewed ''Anal·
Carpenter, president; , Mrs. omy of An tllness" by-Norman
George Hackett, vice president ; Cousins. She noted lt is a
Mrs. Sibley Slack. secretary, an.d successful fight againSt a crlp·
piing disease, ankylosing spon·
Mrs. Chester Erwin, treasurer.
.dylitis.
It Is the story, she said , of
Mrs. Dwight Wallace, presided
a
man
who responded to a
at the meeting welcoming the 14
challenge, demonstrat)ng what
mind and body working together
can dO to overcome 'Illness, and
what a physician in partnership
with a patient can do to beat the
odds. The role of laughter,
courage and tenacity as a means
of overcoming the odds was
stressed.
Mrs. Carpenter Introduced
Mrs. Ron Reynolds who reviewd
the book "Rose Kennedy' by

el~cts

And a good time was had by all.
Harold Blackston,' Pearl Car·
sey and Arland Kin!( are teachers
of the Ailult Class at the Rock
Springs United Met hodist
Church. No - it doesn't take
three teachers - they alternate
the Sundays.
So, the teachers treated the
class to a Christmas dinner at
Dale's in Gallipolis with 26 people
attending. Nancy Radford . and
Helen Blackston gave Christmas
readings and Buena Grueser
gave the Christmas prayer. Door
prizes went to Avery Goe~leln,
Bill Radford, ' Arizona Stewart,
Roljert Burdette and Eloise
Watkins.
Others enjoyln~ the outing
were Bill Grueser, Thor Carsey,
Bill and Ida Mae Clark, Louise
Radford, Helene Goegleln, Ro·
land Radford, Roger Watkins,
Ken Stewart, Violet Hysell, Dorothy Jeffers : Bernadine Chase,
Ann Mash; Cliff and Mildred
Jacobs and Jenny Burdette.

N.f'.·Aflllr\'•,. U. W. farollna 11

Prt~tht'l~l•

Middlepot1 literary .Club

'

Since Meigs County ' has no
chap'ter office these days. the
plaque will be on diSplay at the
Meigs Senior Citizens Center ln
Pomeroy. The Center Is an
appropriate location since the
bloodmobile visits are held at the
center.
., By the way, the next bloodmo·
bile visit will he on Tuesday, Dec.
30, at the center from 1 to 5: 30
p.m. This is a change In the
normal bloodmobile visit day.

The choir members have a lot
of talent and you're sure to enjoy.
Speaking of Ron Ash and

· The Daily Sentinei- Page-5

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Beat of the Bend ·

.

We'rereadytohelp. With
what we've learned by keep-

• Don't let today's ups and
downs upset your long-term
retirement goals.
That's the strategy behind
Money Solutions.

VISAPREMIERC==
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cndltcMII wllll
~ ....... Inc.

..........

of

Cl'tllt.

IRA, . . an Important option 1or
oetlo-ntplaorinabec.l- of tax
.r.o ,.. on e......tlnterost.
-MIIHIIS'VIEW:
"TO liD WI cas 111111as
II~WIIIAVITO IIIP

c-.n•wnH

In times like these, you
need more than traditiOnal
Alld.W."
bank accounts can offer. Why
The difference between a
restrict your financial tool kit
good
bankandagreatbank
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,better products and more helpful services. At BANK ONE,
problem-solving ideas like
Money Solutions are part of a
commitmentshared by every
PRIMEPLUS,•penlllllfCI'IIItlne
one of us ... a commitment to
wlllch ..... JOIIIIMI caot,C.htlr
tent cah .... cc.
.
help customers manage their
money more wisely and
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With all the complications
of tax reform, you need all.
the bank you can get .. ' and
the best ideas you can find.
Ask us how Money Solutions
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•

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'

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••
••'

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I

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•

•

•

BANK!!.ONE.
lin thoustmd ptop/1 who cart.

•

�Decemb8r 9, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

DAR briefed on gifts
sent to veterans' facility

This
eek's

'

MEIGS

Dec.
Dec.

BOYS BASKETBALL
9-Trimble .................. Hom.e
12 -Belpre ................. Away
16-Aiexander............ Home
GIRLS BASKETBALL
11-Trimble ............... Away
15-:-Belpre .................. Home

SOUTHERN
Dec.
Dec.
-\;1:

(

DOWNING·CHILDS, ·
MUlLEN, MUSSER'.,.
'INSUQNE&amp;. : ;,,
111 SE.CoftD ,AVE;
POMEROY

.

}

.

''

CALL 992-3311 or
"l, 992~2342

Dec.
Dec.

.BOYS BASKETBALL
9-North Gallia .......... Home
12-Hannan Trace ...... Home
GIRLS BASKETBALL
11-Hannan Trace ..... Away
18-Southwestern...... Home

. EASTERN
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

BOYS BASKETBALL
9-Kyger Creek ......... Away
12-Southwestern...... Home
13-Miller .................. Away
GIRLS BASKETBALL
11-Sauthwestern..... Away
18-Symmes Valley ••• Home

EWING'
FUNERAL·
·HOME .-;

BOYS SCHEDf!LE

' .

x··~,

'.

"DIGNITY AND
~1~fRYICE

'

ALWAYS''
I

hn H. Ewing·Director

'PH. 992-2121
'
·&gt;10• -·lY
AVE.
POMIROY,OH, &gt;

\

Me ig.~

So uthern

BOYS BASKETBALL
Dec. 9-Trimble ........ ............... Home

BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 12-Belpre ........................ Away
Dec. 16-Aiexander ......... .... ..... Home
Dec. 23- logan ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Wellston .. ............... .. ... Home
Jan. 6-Federal Hocking ........... Home
Jan. 9-Miller .................. .. ....... Away
Jan. 13-Nelsonvile .. .. ............. Home
Jan. 16-Vi~ton .......... ..... ... ... ... Away
Jan. 2D-Tnmble .......... ............. Away
Jan. 23-Belpre ........... .......... .. Home
Jan. 27-Aiexander ................... Away
Jan. 31-Pomt Pleasant ... ........ Home
Feb. 3-Warren ........................ Home
Feb. 6- Wellston ....... .............. .. Away
Feb. 13-Federal Hocking .. ........ Away

~cr

Dec . 9-North Gallia ........... :.... Home
Dec. 12-Hannan Trace ............. Home
Dec. 19-Southestern ................ Away
Dec. 27-Peebles .. ............. .. .. .Convo .
Dec. 30-Southeastern .,........... Home
Jan. 9:_S~mmes Valley ............. Home
Jan. 16-Eastern ...................... Home
Jan. 20-Kyger Creek ................ Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill .............. ....... Home
Jan. 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31-Miller .................... .... . Away
Feb. 6-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Feb. 7-Federal Hocking ........... Holne
Feb. 13-Southestern ............... Home
Feb. 17- Ravenswood ............... Home
Feb. 20-Symmes Valley ... :........ Away

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Dec. 9-Kyger Creek ....... .......... . Away
Dec. 12-Southwestern ... :.. ....... Home
Dec. 13-Miller. ................ ........ ~way
Dec. 19- Symmes Valley ............ Away
Dec. 23- Federal Hocking .... .. .. .. Away
llec. 26-Wahama Holiday Tourn ..... Away
Dec. 27-Wahama Hoiday Tourn ...... Away ·
Jan . 9-0ak Hill .................... .... Away
Jan . 16-Southern ..... ........ ....... Home
Jan . 20-North Gallia ..... :....... .. Holl]e
Jan. 21-Hannan Trace .............. Away
Jan . 30-Kyger Creek ................ Home
Feb. 6- Southwestern ................ Away
Feb. 7- 0PEN .......................... Home
Feb. 13-Symmes Valley ...... ..... Home
Feb . .!?-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Feb. 20-0ak Hill ...................... Away

YINGS CO.

~ Popll"'Y.

011:

A6hr

GIRLS SCHEDULE

"HOME BANK

··'

FOR

HOME

HARRISONVILLE - Harri·
sonville Senior Citizens will have
it s regular monthly blood pres·
sure clinic, Tuesday, 10 a.m .·
noon . Ferndora Story, R.N .. will
be In charge.

!E.OPLE~
Meigs

MEMBER FDIC

,' SYRACUSE OFFICE
~· 992·63'33
RACINE OfFICE
949-2210

.

GIRLS BASllnBAll

Southern

Dec. 11- Trimble .... .................. Away
Dec. IS-Belpre ....................... Home
Dec . IS-Alexander .. ....... .. ........ Away·
Jan. S-\Yellston .................. ..... Away
Jan. 8-Federal Hocking ....... .. ... Away
Jan. 10-Miller ........................ Home
Jan. 12-Southern .. ............ ...... Home
Jan. IS-Nelsonville ................. Away
Jan.l9-Vinton ................ ........ Home
Jan. 22- Trimble ........ .. ............ Home
Jan. 26- Belpre ................ .. ...... Away
Jan. 29- Aiexander .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ........................ Away
Feb. 5-Wellston ........... .... ....... Home
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ........... Home
Feb. 14-Southern ............ ,........ Away

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 11-Hannan Trace ...... .. ...... Away
Dec. 18- Southwestern ...... .... ... Home
Dec. 20-Aiexander ............... .. . Home
Jan. 5-Gallipolis ..................... Home
Jan. 8-Symmes Valley .. ............ Away
Jan. 12-Meigs .. .. .... .. ............... Away
Jan. IS-Eastern .. .. .. .. ............... Away
Jan. 19-Kyger Creek .. ........ ..... ~orne
Jan. 22-0ak Hill ................. ..... Away
· Jan. 26-Gallipolis ........ .. .......... Away
Jan. 29- North Gallia ............... Home
Feb. S-Han nan Trace ............... Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ......... .... Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern .............. Away
Feb. 14- Meigs ........................ Home

Eastern

RUTLAND - Rutland Village
Council meets Tu esday, 7 p.m.,
al the civic ce nter .

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 11-Southwestern .......... .... Away
Dec. 18-Symmes Valley ........ .. . Home
Dec. 20-Federal Hocking .. ....... Home
Dec: 22 - Trimble Holiday Tourn .. ... Away
Dec. 29- Trimble Holiday Tourn ..... Away
Jan . 8-0ak Hill ............ ............ Away
Jan. 15-Southern ...... .............. Home
Jan. 19- North Gallia ....... ......... Away
· Jan. 22- Hannan Trace ............. Home
Jan. 19- Kyger Creek .... .. .......... Away
Feb. 2- Meigs ......................... . Home
Feb. 5-Southwestern .. ............ . Home
Feb. 9- 0ak Hill ...... ................. Home
Feb. 12- Symmes Valley ..... ....... Away
Feb . 14- Federal Hocking ... ....... Away

POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce monthly
meeting Tuesday. noon, Pomeroy Trinity Church. Guest
speaker will be Jim Tompkl,ns of
Southern Ohio Coal Co., who will
present a brief program and
discussion of operations at local
coa l facilities. All members
urged to attend. Turkey luncheon
will be served.

WELL'S ·

,.

FeatUring. • ,,~ , .

.**Roast
Great Harilbllti*!S · '
Beef on •

Croissant * Stufftd Wid
Potatoes • Taco Salads
·.
~ Saladlar
* Re•llce .Ctealft
*'
'
Dining • CarrY Out •

Orive·ThiU

Mon.-Thun. 8 A.M.-11 P.M.
flri . • Sot. 8 A. M.•12 P.M.

· Sundlv 7 A.M.·1 1 P.M.

Me

•,,- r;

Church women
h tp
k

w. Moln s~. Pomoroy
992·2057

. .

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*

'#

HOURS! ···
MON.· SAt.
' 8 A.M.· 10 P.M.
* , SU.NDAY . ,).
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A.M.-1 0 P.M:'

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - OAPSE chapter of
Southern Local Schools Christ·
mas dinn er. Wednesday, 6 to 8
p.m .. Southern High ca feteria.
Those planning to attend shoUld
eblng a covered dish.·
THURSDAY
.POMEROY ~ Rock Springs
Grange will have a holida y
· potluck Thursday , 6:30 p.m ..
Members are reminded of the
white elephant gilt exchange and
are also to take·canned food for a
special project. ,

.

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:)

1

Boy s.heart murmur may not be serious

·Garden 'club meets for holiday dinner

$~~$~~$

*·
rrrrr

For the program, Mary Jane
Wise showed slides of h!'r trip to
the West Indies .

or ienlal foods prepared and
served by Eva Robson. Gene·
vieve Ward, and Mrs. Powell.
At the November meetin g held
at the home of Karen Stanley,
Mrs. Powell gave scripture and
Donna Gilmore had the devotions
on thanks. Scriptures were taken
from Psalms 100, 104, and 107
with Wanda Eblin giving the
pr ay~r.

Plans for caroling on Dec: 17 .
were made. The friendship
basi(et was won by Evelyn
Stanley . Gay Harvey was a guest
at the meeting with Dea nna
Haggy being enrolled as an
associate member. This month's
meeting will be held at the hom ~
of Wanda Eblin.

Mass begins at 6: 30 p.m., with
dinner and party to follow.
Creamed baked chicken will be
provided.
FRIDAY
POMEROY - Belles and
Beaus Square Dance Club will
have a western-style square
dance Friday, 8-11 p.m., Roy al
Oak Resort Park. Caller will be
Bill Bumga rner.
POMEROY -: Return Jona·
than Meigs Chapter of the
Daughters of the American Revolution meets Frlday,1: 30 p.m.,
at the home of Mrs. Dwight
Milhoan.

Annual Christmas dinner
CHESTER - The Chester
Volunteer Fire Department will
hold Its annual Chrtslmas p,arty
and dinner at the Chester firehous!' on Sunday at 6 p.m. The
department will provide meat
and beverage. All fire depart· ·
ment members and families;
auxiliary members and families ,
and anyone who assisted the
department at the fair booth or
bar-be-guess, and their families,
are Invited to attend. Santa will
make an appearance for the
children and door prizes will be
awarded.

Auction scheduled
ROCK SPRINGS - Word of
Life Church Is sponsoring a
Christmas auction Saturday,
Dec. 13, beginning at II a.m., In
the coonhunters building at the
Meigs grounds. Proceeds are to
go to the chuch building fund.
Donations of merchandise or
·POMEROY - Michael Pan· money will be accepted. For
gio, pastor of Rejoicing Life pickups call 698-7238, 698-6855,
Baprlst Chu rch, will be guest 992·5316. Mail donations to Rev.
speaker at the meeting of Pome- Ray Laudermllt, 34055 Pine
roy Women's Aglow. Thursday, Grove Road, Racine, Ohio, 45771.
7:30p.m. , Senior Citizens Center.
A light salad buffet will be served Christmas auction
. at 7 p.m. Reservations are to be
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Vomade immediately with Beverly lunteer Fire Department Is spon·
Rupe, 742·9003, Carolyn Searls, soring a Christmas auction Sat·
992·3467, Karyn Davis, 992· 5893, urday, Dec. 13. beginning at 7
or Marton Michael, 992·3219.
p.m., at the firehouse in Syra· .
cuse. Toys, tools and miscellanePOMEROY Catholic ous items will be sold. Everyone
Women's Club party Thursday. weiCQme.

,

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Reservations needed

Calendar
TUESDAY
POMEROY- TOPS570meets
Tuesday at V!'terans Memorial
Hospi ta l. Weigh· ln. 6 to 7 p.m. A
holiday covered dish dinner will
be followed by a welgh·ln.
Members are to take food.

f

after they engage in vigorous murs are detected more easDy ·
exercise. That could explain why and frequently In children beyour physician found your son's cause their blood circulates more
heart murmur during a sports actively and their chE!st cavities
physical. When these conditions are thinner than adults'. Your
- illness or exercise - .end. the son's . heart pumps faster and
heart murmur usually disap- more audibly than yours, makil)g , :
pears too.
It easter to hear a heart murmet'.
Question: Why are so many
Question: I've heard that·:.a
heart murmurs found In family histor)! of heart trouble
children?
can lead to heart murmurs .· Is
Answer: Innocent heart mur· · that true, or are other factor~
lhnvolved?
·
Answer: Heart murmurs can
r!'sult from several factors. For ·
example, excessive alcohol
:rhe annual holiday dinner of were also served refreshments contes t, with the Middleport drinking during pregnancy can
lead to a heart defect, as can
the Middleport Garden Club was · by Mrs. Louise Thompson, Mrs. Amateur Gardeners to be in
1
• held recently at the Holiday Inn, 'Dana Kessinger, and Miss N!'llie charge. Miss Zirkle and Mrs. Infections such as German mea·
OJ .. · OttUC.
Horky will work with members of sles (rubella). Very seldom is a
Gallipolis, with a party followin g · Zh'kle.
. ,
malform e d heart purely
at the'home of Mrs. Betsy Horky. -~. Arrangements were. made to the Amateurs on the contest.
gernetlc.
The Forest Run United Metho·
Arrangements on · display in·
•
t present · Mrs. Janet Bolin. presl- ·
Questions: How are heart
dist Women met at the church for
During the business meeting, a dent of the Ohio Association of el ud ed a basket filled with holly
a Thanksgiving potluck dinner. r!'port was given on the recent Garden Clubs, with a gift in prepared by MIss Zirkle. The murmurs eval uated?
Answer: If your doctor thinks
Hilda Yeauger presided at the workshop at which time wr'eaths appreciation of services to the mantle was decorated with
meeting with the Lord's Prayer and decorations were prepared club. Dorothy Morris had the everegreen and red tapers and your son 's hea rt murmur is
being given In unison. Officers' for the patien ts· at th e Pomeroy program for the evening. She poinsettias. Th!' Christmas tree · serious, he will probably recom:
reports were given. Plans were Health Care Center. They were showed ·selections of evergreens · was trimmed wl~h red velvet mend several procedures. First;
made for the program books to be delivered to the patients who best suited for decorations and bows and decorated pinecones he will perform a thorough
prepared at a meeting Monday at
'how to prepare them for arrang· with red velvet ribbons and physical examination of YO\!r ,
6:30 at the home of Kathleen
ing, the preferable types and how flowers. For favors. Mrs. Horky son , followed by tests like a chest
Scott. The fruit basket.commlt·
to grow them. She mentioned gave each member one of the X·ray and electrocardiogram,
tee will prepare treats for shut·
Reservations to the JayMar · .pines, fur, cedar, spruce. box· decorated pineco nes from . the which m!'asures the movement
of electrical Impulses In · th~
Ins ·A total of 22 sick and shu tin Golf Club holiday. dinn er and wood, and magnolia leaves along tree.
calis were reported. · .
heart·, or echocardlogram, whlc.h
dance io be heid ·on Dec. 12'at the with the perennial holiday favor·
The refreshment table, co- uses sonar waves to define the
Eagles Club are to be made with ite, holly.
vered In red with a white lace heart 's dimensions.
Cards were signed for several Bob Freed, 992-2044. The dinner
Gifts were exchanged, with overlay, was centered wilh ivy In
Today, effective treatment mem hers who are Ill or shu tin·. A will be served at 7:30 with a Mary Skinner jucjging the wra p· a silver bowl and red candles in
special thank offering was CQI· social hour to precede th at at a pings and Dorothy Morris getting silver candelabra. Mrs. Kessin· mostly surgical - is avaialble
for nerly all heart deformitieS. ·
Ieete&lt;! as each member gave cost of $25 a couple and $13 for the prize.
ger served the coffee lor the But mroe than likely, your son's ,
something for which they were singles. The dinner and dance is
It was noted that the two social hou r hosted by Mrs.
thankful as they placed colored open to members, leagu e Middleport clubs will aga in thi&lt; Horky. Gues ts were Mrs. Law· heart murmur Is harmless and
he will lead a normal life .
leaves on branches of a tree members and guests .
yea r have a home d ecol';.ltln !.; renee Stewart and Paul Nease.
replica. Purpose of the , thank
offering is to celebrate some
success stories of the Work of the
UMW in missions, to give thanks
lor those who began the work and
'
lor those who contin~ e it. The
closing song was "Count Your
Blessings. u

WMFI holds Oaober meeting
An or iental theme was carried
out at the October meet ing of the
Women's Missiona ry group of
the Laurel Cliff Frre Methodist
Women.
Most of those attending were
attli'Ed In Japanese costume and
many .brought in items· from I he
orient for a display. Iva Powell
gave a reading and Jean Wright
had a member participation
program on God's sufficiency.
Officers' repo'rts were given.
Marge Fetty won the fri endship
basket.
The book , "A Light Shining
Th rough" about a converted
J apanese was given by Mrs.
Wright and the group enjoyed a
dinner of Japanese and other

,

By Edward Schreck, D.O.
excellent health history, chances
ior shelters for elected officials.
A881111Lat
Professor
of.
are small that his condition Is
Also discussed was the tragedy of
Family
Medicine
serious . Like' more than half the
illiteracy in ihe I,J.S. Md the
Ohio University College of
children his age, he most likely
necessity for schools to return to
Osteopathic Medicine
has a harmless, or "innocent,"
th&lt;' phqentic ml'ihod of teaching.
Question: .·. After our heal1hy heart inurmur, a sound produced
Guests were int roduced . and
Mrs. Mora gav!' a program on ·8-year·old .had a basketball phys· ·by the flow of blood through .th_e
Revolutionary ancestors. Mrs. · leal, the doctor told us our child heart anq its valves.
Sometimes doctors find a faint
Reynolds, Mrs. Linda Patterson, · has a heart murmur. Wh at does
this
mean?
heart
murmur when ·chllden
and Mrs. Melvin Van Meter Sr.
Answer:
Based
on
your
child's
hav!' a high fever or anemia, or
served refreshments with Mrs.
'
.i ' .
Dwight Milhoan at the silver
service. Mrs. Mllhoans wUI host
th&lt;' Dec. 12, 1:30 p.m. meeting.
.

'

.,

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Family ,Medicine

'

A report on Christmas gifts
sent to the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital was given at the recent
meeti ng of Return Jonathan
Meigs Chapter of the Daughters
of the American Revolution held
at the home of Mrs. Ronald
Reynolds, regent.
Mrs . Reynolds reported that
about $140 worth of gifts had been
sent for the veterans and that
. about 114 pounds of Items had
, been mailed to ·DAR supported
~c hools , A thank you note was
received ~rom Mrs. Ruth Moser.
Southeast district director, for
. support shown to the state
regent' s project.
Mrs . George Skinner. treas·
urer, noted that all chapter dues
have been collected and the
" barn" pin displayed by the
regent had ~n orde'red.
A discussion was held on the
erosion of the riverbank in upper
Pomeroy anil members were
enCQuraged to contact village,
county and state officials abQut
the .possibility of guard railing
being erected along the bank to
prevent further loss of life.
Plans were made to assist at
the Pomeroy Flower Shop. open
house In a project to raise money
for the upkeep of the Ohio Room '
in Washington, D.C. lVIrs. Ashley ·
reported that she will speak at
the Racine Elementary School on
the DAR. Ideals and principles.
Mrs. Clarence Struble, acting
chaplain, assisted in the rltualis·
tic opening. Mrs. Pearl Mora.
national defense chairman, reviewed several of the resolutions
passed at the 1986 Continental
Congress followed by a report
from '.the National Defender on
equal disarm anent, unemploy·
men! , and the need for returning
aliens to their respective countr ies. She talked about the atomic
shelters In Switzerland and Rus·
sia and the tunnels in China, and
said that the United Stall's has
plans to spend millions of dollars

8ames
·Dec.
Dec.
Dec.

'.
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This is an exclusive from •••
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P.ge 8·-The

December

Sentinel '

--Local Briefs:-----.

Divorce fded
'
Juanita · M. Pullins,
Middle- ·

VISIT - This Middleport Z.year-old girl was one of the many

visltOI'$ who "just loved Santa" Monday night when he fll'eeted
the Plant Parlor on the "T"In Middleport. Santa not
only listened to the Chrilltmas toy requests of lhe klddles, but also
dJstrlbuted candy treats provided by tbe Mlddle11ort Chamber of
Commerce to the youngsters; Photographo of chUdren . visiting
with Santa were taken by BID Blower, president of the Middleport
Chamber.
youngsters~

Area deaths

EMS units respond to 2 calls

.

Racine man arrested by deputies

..
..
' .

A Racine man is In the Meigs County Jail following a domestic
dispute In the Tackerville Road area on Monday night.
Robert Sawyers was brought to the jail by au.thorlties around
10:30 p.m. Monday, after barricading himself In his house lor
more than one hour.
Deputy Ruth Frank reports that calls from neighbors began
coming into the sheriff' s department about 8:30 p.m. that
Sawyers was fighting with his wife.
Deputies Brent Sisson, Kenny Klein and Harry Lyons were
dispatched to the scene and upon arrival, saw Sawyers enter the
house. The wife had gone to a neighbor's and was not in the
house when authorities arrived.
The doors to the house were locked and Sawyers would not
respond when deputies knocked and called from the outside.
The lights were out ln the house and the wife told autborlties that
tliere were guns inside the house. The deputies radioed lor
backup and Sheriff Howard Frank and Deputies Dan
Levingston and Jimmer Souls by came to the scene.
Sheriff Frank forced entry Into the house and authorities
located Sawyers in a locked room in the basement. Sawyers.was
arrested and brought to the jail where he was charged with
domestic violence and resisting arrest.
A restraining or.der against Sawyers was stili in effect In a
pending divorce action in Meigs County Common Pleas Court.
In another matter, the sheriff's -department received a call
about 12:30 a.m. this morning (Tuesday) from John Harper,
Dexter, that his 1976 Chevrolet Camaro had been stolen.
Gallla County authorities located the vehicle about 7:16a.m.
in Galila County.
·
The matter is stili under investigation by the department.

: Middl~port Council
(Continued from Page 1)
be taken before the next regular
meeting of council which wUI not
. be held until January.
· ·, Council approved end of the
year fund adjustments within the
. appropriations and thanks were
. : ~tended to Mr. and Mrs. Willis
Anthony, who donated the village
- hall Christmas tree this year.
: 'Councilmen Dewey Horton and
· 'Bob Gilmore were named to
. &lt;:~&gt;ntinue serving on the Volun·
· ti'f!r Firefighters Dependents
' Fund Board.

Councilman Jack Satterfield
reported that Eldon Walburn will
be providing cost figures on
curbing ramps lor the handi·
capped in the near future. A brief
discussion was held on the
establishment of a ferry service
when the Pomeroy -Mason
Bridge closes for repairs and it
was the consensus that interest ls
lacking in the project.
Others attending the meeting
were Clerk Jon Buck and Coun·
&lt;?limen William Walters and
James Clatworthy.

Mymi~

Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by one brother,
one grandson and two
granddaughters.
Services will be Thursday, 1
p.m., at the White Funeral .
Home, Coolville, with Rev. David
Lyons officiating. Burial will be
in Stewart Cemetery. Friends
may call at the funeral home
after 9 a.m. Wednesday with the
family present from 2·4 and 7-9
p.m.

I. Dailey

port, has filed lor divorce in
Meigs County Common· Pleas
Court from Gerald 0 . Pullins Jr.,
Pomeroy,.charglng gross neglect
of duty anq extreme cruelty.
A dissolution of marriage has
been granted David K. Breeding
and Linda Sue Breeding.

Veterans Memorial
Admissions ..:. Maxine Evans,
Reedsville; Rita Stobart, Pomeroy; Fallon Eichinger, Pomeroy.
Discharges - Nancy Mker·
mart, Irene Christy, Mary
Pickens, Ivory Bush, Shirley
Frazier.

CANDY WORK ·SHOP
AT

OHIO VALLEY
' BULK FOODS
MAIN ST. 992 •6910 OMROY

THURSDAY, FRII)AY
&amp; SATURDAY
DEC. 11-12·13
10 A.M. til 4.P.M.
'

Come in and lot Jonni,
Dot or Doe sliow you
how to ma~o candy for
tho Chrilfmas Holidays
... Chocolate Cowered·
Cherries, Coconut loll
Ions, ·Peanut Butter
Cups - It's fun Clnd
easy

1D

rio.

Myrnle Larry Dailey, 48, of
Stewart, died Monday evening In
St. Joseph's Hospital, Parkers·
burg, W.Va.
·
Born Aug. 24, 1938, in Stewart,
he was a son of the late James E .
and Grace Burk Dailey. He was a
night watchman and custodian at
Federal Hocking High School,
. COMBINATION DINNER ONLY
FOR JUST
and was previously employed by
DINING
ROOM
ONLY
Rutland Bottle Gas Co. and
Served with wltipped potatoes, chicken gravy,
cole
slaw, hot roll, butter and coffee. Sony,
Vanadium Tool Co.
Surviving are, Pauline Ewing
no substitutes extept beverage with addiDailey, Stewart; one son, Myrnie
HO. DICOUniiO OPIII
tional ice.
'
HOUSE Fll. &amp; SAT., DIC. 12
L. !Nick) Dailey Jr., Stewart;
&amp; 13, 10 UL-9 P.M.
one daughter and son-in-law,
Each Day Door Prizea. '
Myra.and Jack Salyers, Stewart:
Everyone Welcome. .
POMEIIOT, OH.
two brothers, James Dailey, Qf
Gloria
Oiler, St. Rt. 325, .
Ashville, Ala. and Pat E. Dailey,
Featuring ltnlv1kp Fried Chilktn
Lan aville. Ohio, 742-2078
of Stewart; and a paternal
grandmother, Ollie Stumbaugh, 1---~---------1---'---------------------·
The Plains.

TUESDAY NISHT SPECIAL

ALL THE KENTUCKY FRIED
CHICKEN YOU CAN EAl

$3.25

r;::::::=:::::::::::::;-1

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Named co-conspirators were
John Ma rt in and James Coleman, both of Wintersville, Ohio,
and George Ely of Steubenville,
Ohio.

.: -Meigs property transfers
Clifford Kaulf. DPc'd , Clara
MayfordA. Harris, Wilma C. Marriag~
; Kauff, Affidavit, Mldd. Viii .
Harris, to Monongahela Power
Pfrry A. Ri~gs. Gladys Rig~s. Co., right of way, Olive.
Marriage licenses have been
to Joan Riggs Johnson, Nora R.
John R. Monroe, Anna M. issued_ in Meigs County Probate
Eason. Parcels, Chester.
Monroe, Kenneth Keith Walton, Court to Charles Eugene Boyles,
Max F. Taylor. to Esta Taylor, Debbie M. Walton, to Mononga- 28. Middleport, and Sue Ellen
,parcels, Scipio.
bela Power Co., right of way, Bentz, 36, Middleport; Anthony
:: . · Emmett Rawson. Zora Raw· Olive.
Todd Nibert, 23, Marietta, and
- 'son, to William E. Sellers.
John W. Moore, lenora Moore, Tamara Lynn Eichinger, 22,
; pamela K. Sellers. \7A. to Buckeye Rural Elect. Corp. Pomeroy: Harold William Fetty
· Salisbury .
Inc .. right of way, ease, Bedford. Jr., 21, Langsville, and Evelena
Mendal W. Jordan, Elizabeth Sue Lambert, 18, Middleport;
Robert M. Hysell, Julia M.
Hysell, to Barbara Brown. lot. Jordan, to Buckeye'Rural Elect. Clifford Joseph Kennedy, 24,
Corp. Inc., right of way, ease, ·· Pomeroy, and Daria Lynn Willi·
Syracuse VIII.
· amson, 23, Rutland.
. Central Coal Co. and Otis R. Columbia.
Mary S. Russell, Wayne · D.
Blankenship, etai, Robin Blan·
kenship, Sidney Blankenship, Russell, .Louise Russell, April
Boundary Line Agree. Lebanon. Gail · Morris, Jackson· Morris,
T"" ;;;,,,br.od Boy s..,.....
, Warren D. Clay, Phyllis J . Charles Ned Russell, Judith
~
n.;,
lJ• IJttri"l .,.,., H.w. 1 .ow..,..
· Clay, to Paul Lee. Cathy Lee. Russell, to Trustees of Salisbury
•
_
,
_
__
, ,. . .. .. 1:......
Township, parcels, Salisbury.
, parct-ls, Scipio.
l
.. , ' Jt&gt;an A. Redmond, Jeffrey J .
Georgia E. Thoma , Dec'd, Guy
1ltnUo I W..,
'
,,..... 101:11 '" l
- Redmond, Barbara W. Graham, M. Thoma, Helen Pauline King,
loolll
to Frederick J . Stobart , Earlene E. Kelly Thoma , Suzan A.
Cert
.
Trans.,
Bedford.
Thoma,
• Stobart, parcels, Lebanon.
Leo McMillin, Alma McMillin,
: Bertha D. Gibson, Don C.
GINGERBREAD!.
; Gibson; to Lawrence Rapp, to Charles G. McMillin, Carolyn
: Roxie Rapp, par ce l s , K. McMillin, parcels, Salem.
HOUSE OF GIFT
Marvin Reed, Darlene Reed, to
' HarrlsonvUle.
'
: · Gladys Williams, Dec'd, Ruth Craig Reed, Barbara Reed, par·
eel, Olive.'',
: Ann Balderson, Aflid ., Olive.
! Jane A. Rupe, to Thomas E. , _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
, : turner Jr., Marcia Gall Tor·
!" gesen, parcels. Salem.
, Mary Jaraldine Fletcher, to
~ Randall C. Fletcher, Nora
t Fletcher Cannon, parcels,
: ' Lebanon.
· • Clyde F. Nau, Marsha A. Nau ,
••
LOWEST PIICIS ON PASSdGEI CARS
, Bruce Dourm, Donna Dourm, to
, Monongahela 'Power Co., right of
AIID UGHT TIUCI niU
; · way Ollve.
*ALIGif.IU *ROllY liD WOII
,. Roger A. Holsinger, Cindy L.
*IAIIIEIS
IIPAII
: Hollinger, to Monongahela
LOCATED: MAIN ST .. RUTLAND:' OHIO
i .Power co,, right of way, Olive.
OPEN: 8-11 MON.-SAT.; 8-8 FRI.
; Clement L. Cowdery, Joyce E.
. . PH. 742·3088
: Cowdery, to Monongahela Power
Mllttr
Card 111d Vl18 Welcome
: Co., right of way. Olive.

licenses

'
Becky , Colterlii entertained
recently.wlth ·a shower honoring
(lltcky _,\~Jn,!!Oll'. llrlde·elect of._
James .Cotterlli:
Games were'playedwithprlzes
going to Kaye Fick, Debbie
Chevalier. and Dolores Will.
Bessie King and Carol Brewer

:
•

. With wreaths of holly and mistletoe, stockings hung hy the·fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the blessings we've shared
this past year. For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!
'

Wish all your customers and friends
a very Me.r ry Christmas in o·u r ·
Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.
.

,.

MEIGS
EXCAYAniiG
COMPANY

Typal af
Excavotlng
•LandOOC:oplng

•Aft

Call: 742·2407

11-28-8&amp;-1 mo.

. SHAIPEIIING
SEIYICE

'

Public Notice

-------NOTICE OF

·~~
,
'·

I·

,•
:
:
,
·
'
:
·
'·

WORKSHOP -CAP workshop leaders, Dee Shepard, 'Polmet~y,
second from left, and P~ula Winebrenner, Syracuse,
r~enlly conducted a workshop In Jackson County as pari of
tralnln1 for the ChUd Assault Prevention Project of GaiDa,
Jackson and .Meigs Counties. The two women did several
role-plays which taught the child participants how to handle an
assault from another child~ an adull stranger, or an adult known to
them.

w0n the door prizes.
Others attending were Ka·
tileyn _Wip!lon, Karen Facemyer,, •..
Robyn Cotterill.-· Bertha Smith,
Barbara Tripp, Abby qevaller,
Linda Finley, Amanda and Mi·
chele, Helen Bible, Faye Cott~&gt;rill, Stacy Brewer, Mary Hag_;-

Public Notice

ONLY

$29995

GE YCI

fd~&amp;, Rebate
$29995 '

swttto..........
......

C ...

Gl 19"

TELEVIS,ON

.-

.,.'

"HTTIIII YOU TIRE SAFELY"

made to lhe town plat of uld
Town o{ SyracuH.
RoiOtOtow Deltl: Volume

293.1'1oge 701. Moigo County

FOR SALf ·

CHRISTMAS~

i
TAGGING NOW I

614-446·7126

TREES

SALES &amp; SEiYICE .
U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVI.L£, 01110

*VINYL SIDING
. *ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN .IN
INSULA nON

Pre-cut trHs availabll
Located on
i
Flatwoods Rd. (Co . ~
. Rd 26) at Harley ,
Haning reiidence, 2 :
Mi. from Five Point11,
Watch
•.

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

D.,.,

Authorized John
Ntw Hollond, lu1h Hog
Farm Equipmtnl
I Dtalor

New Homes Built
"Free Eetimatas"

PH. 949·2801
or 949-2860

Fll'lll E•ul~tmf
Pert• &amp; Servlee

J.R.'s
TYs,

•

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JUST CALL!

~~ $259~ 5

_____

Balhan luildmg

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M. ·
Factory Chah
12 Gaugt Shetg'"'' Only
.
'
10·8-tfn

Service

.

'.·

o•Y $2"
GOliStAI

614-843-5248 :

992-3410

•

REASONABLE - REliABLE •

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL· SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

'
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA

IO·S-tfc

MICROWAVE

$109"

MGM

FARM
CITY INC.
POMEROY
882-2104

•

:
'
:

deceased , whoH last known

•SATnUTE SALES &amp; SERYI~

Wt Nut AflU Tl• l

4-)6 .' li tfn

'

Oefendlntaln a legal acdon

a::tion has been assigned

Coso Number 86 -CV-334

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

Public Notice
mora or less .

OEEO REFERENCE : Volume 294. Poge 9, Meigo
County Deed Recordt.
You are required to .,_
swer the Compl~lnt within

28 days after the fall publl·

cation of this notice which

at

HEATING &amp; COOLING

hetf of 110 Acre lot No.
1169, Sections 4 and 10,
Township 4, Ronge 11 of
the Ohio Compony'o Pur-

d'llll, contalnittg 40 acres,

SIZE 2'3X30X007

2- 5(

EACH

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

- Addont and NmDdeltng

- Roofing 1nd gutter work
- Concrete woril
- Piumblnglnd electrical
work

IFree Eatlmotooi

':

CHESTER-915-3307 •
4/ 1/ 11

•
I&lt;UT OUT FOR FUTURE USII

992-2772

KEN'S :
APPLIANCE :
SERVICE
985-3561
All M1ku :

271 11. 2nd, Mlddltport
992-5766
OPEN : Mon.·Fri. 8 am' 9 pm - Sat. 8, 6
Walk-ins Welcome

•
•Washers •Dishwaaha(a
•Rengel
'1
•Refrigerators :
•Dryers •Freezers ,

EAR PIERCING, MANKURING, PERMS AND
All YOUR STYliNG NEEDS

· PARTS and SERVIC,E
4- S ~Ic

Debbie Meadows-Owner: lmojean Blevina
Loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Merri Amabery

An noun c1: nu: nl s

•

•

Y. C. YOUNGIR

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDAYS
Cl Coltfuterized Heari11 Air Selection

-az: Swim Molds - Inttrpreti111 Setvices

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed
Clinical Audiologist
:1:
z

- (614) 446-7&amp;19 or (614) 992-6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

992 -6215 or 992-7314

Po1111roy,

8·13

will be made on December'

23, 1986. and the 28 days

for answer will commence
on that date .
In cue of your failure
toanswer orotherwiserespond as required by the

the Complaint.

. Meigs County
Coinmon Pleas Court
2,

9, 16,

'-----------1

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR
Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding.
IAll m1kn &amp; modelal

PH. 949-2893
or 949·2756
John K. Bentz
Owner I Mechanic

BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODEliNG
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

.

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 II. S.Cortd

COMMERCIAl • RESIDE~TjAl
-FlEE EsriMAltS-

PHONE (614) 992-5009
IPEC/Alll/NS IN W/Nf)()W l/IOOR REPlACEMENT
11· 10·86·1 mo.

11· 19:16·1 mo.

~-J~~~~L.-~

10' MESH ANTENNA
PANASONIC RECEIVER

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

FUU YREMOTE &amp; INSTAllED

$4800

SKATE-A-WAY

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

Chrillma1 Par!y Dec. 20
Ntw Year'• Evt Partp
Dtc. 31
17:30 until 1:00j
Optn Wtd, Fri, Sat.
7:30 until 10:00
Availa~it

for
Birthday1, Chur1h,
Privati Partin
985·3929 or 985-9996
I MO. 11·911

btgln'nlng at 1:00 p.m. f'•citory
Choke. 12 gutge lhotguM..

Attentioyt formlf AltOn Aepr• ;
nntatlvHI Return home' to
Avon. No shipping thergt, 'CaM

&amp;14-982-7110.

'

liking order• for homet11Me ~
Cindy 1nd COOk!ll. 814 ·192·

109 IUI.IEIIY AYI.
POIRDY, OH.

PH. 992-9949

... lurton, Owner
11· 28-86-1 mo.

To the p1r1on who ltole my "
Wi lker Coon Hound from ~ne
and took her to Llngtvilf.. jl••e •
c:lll me and h1ve11ittle chit. C. II ,
814-949-2171 '
No

hunting or tre•p•ulng,

Myne1 Farm· located Chntnut
Ridge Rotd.
..

Middleport, Ohio

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

Win A Pair of s•atts

R•clne Gun ShD011p0fttorM by ~
Recine Oun Club. EvtfY IURd.y,

5019 lfter 6:00 p.m.

week for si~~; auccesslve
weeks. The last publication

Business

loWilg
de1Crlblld
Situate
In lloe r•le1tata:
County of

Dlllf

RIDENOUR
:
TV &amp; APPLIANCE :

•NEW FURNACE
•AIR CONDITIONING
iHEAT PUMPS
•BLOWN INSULATION
•REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATE

witt be publiohed once each

111'118, 25; 1121
of Common Ptou of Meigs 23. 6tc ·
County.
46769. Pomeroy, Ohio ..
Tha object of the Com·
plolnt It to portillon the fol·

.nd is pending in the Court

.!

Shp Ttt~tlll..

3 Announcements

entitled Richerd Kibbto, Dated : Novambor 14, 1988
Ptolntlff. vs. Ernest L. Klb·
Larry E. Spencer,
bte, Et AI., Defendento. This
Clerk of Courts

11 followa . viz :
The wast half of the wast

•

PH. 949·2801
or 949·2860
I

lddreu was 1285 N. Sen
Gtbriel Blvd.. Apartment Ohio Rutoo of Civil Procedure, judgment by defeuh
18, Azusa, California ;
You ere hereby notHied will be rendered against you
that you have been named for the relief de monded in

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
ONlY

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Rtaaonablt Price•"

•

•GilSON REFRIGERATOR '

J&amp;L 'INSULATION
JAMES lEESE

PHONE 992-2156

and bounded end described

- vsER NEST L. KIBBLE,

·\

:

Electronic 'OrQan~
Mobile service :

BISSELL ·
BUILDERS

NO SUNDAY CAUS

;____;_...;;_,___;:_..:.;·

and In the Township of Oliva

IN THE
COMMON PlEAS COURT
OF
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RICHARD KIBBLE,
Plointlff

$79"

Ant~nas

;
SateUito Sales :
Installation i

. No Sunday Calls

{"·-----------.

Day or Night

Meigo. in the Stoto of Ohio

YCIIAPES

·THE DAILY SENTINEL

_....._

gerty, Ellie Blaettnar, Carol
Crow ~nd Danielle, Wendy Win·
don, Cynthia Cotterill.
Others presenting gifts wer.e
Gloria Van Reeth, Oieva Collerill. Dana Kessinger, and Bev·
erly Gaul.

Public Notice

Deed"--.

131

CALL 992-2156 - ADVERTISING

7 Years
Maintenance ·
Experience
Work
Guarantied

Roger ·Hysell · DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
Garage

RACINE
FilE .DEPT.

oOtldooed,IMiing CoN No. 88Defendant
APPOINTMENT OF
CV-98 In llicl Court, t wilt ofCue
No. 86-CV-334
FIDUCIARY
fer for uto ot lloe front dOOt of
NOTICE
BY
On No..mber 26, 1981, tho Courthouoo In P01n010y:
PUBLICATION '
In the Mtolgo County Proboto Mlip County. Ohio, on t1oe
To Jean Turney ChamberCourt. C111 No. 26300. J. 11thdoyofJonuory, 1987,ot
8. O'Brlon, 100\&gt;1 Court 10:00 A.M.. tho following lain end thaunknown heirs.
StrNt, Pomeroy, Ohio, Iondo lnd ~~. focotod devil••· and legatees of
45719. wea o,lipolilted E•• ot 8ec:ond Streot, Synocuoe, Jean Tumey Chamberlain , if
she bo ~ued. whooe fast
cutor of tho ntlto of Elton Ohio45nl.
known
addreu was 431 6
Stewart. ctocoolld, .tete of
Situated In tho VIllage of
lane Road, Howell,
Mldcltoport, Moigo County, Syrocuoo, County of Moigo Crooked
Michigan:
and
Ohio.
ond Stolo of Ohio.
To Lawrance Van Amburg
Robert E. Buctc,
Being Town Loto No. 11. and
the unknown heirs, de Proboto Judge 12. 13 ond 19 In tho Town of
Lana K. Neooetrood, Ctork Byracu•. for 1 more partic- vlsoos. and legatees of lawt12) 2, 9, 16, 3tc
uler dHCription reference ia ronco Von Amburg, if he be

4-Evtnt 14·Dty Timar

.RUTLAND TIRE SALES

BOGGS

'

D&amp;P
APPLIANCE
. REPAIR .

11·26-'86'1 mo.

1-3-'86 tfc

GUN SHOOT

'·

,.

Otrtac.ur

16141

••

•smo QUEEN lAUNDRY

,·

30' ELECtRIC

Jo,..or

16141 "2·6550

RISIDIN(I PHONE

6·17-lfc

Ill C:ourt St .. Pomtror. otllo 45769

RANGI

otu••

204 Co'"'odt.
·Po!..,o•y, Ohio

· IUI{NIII PHON!

REPAIR ·1
Alao TriiUIIIIIoa.
Pfl. 992~5682
or 992-7121

Or Writ1 D1illr Stntil'lrl Clluifttd Ot~t.

HOYPOI1'

·-cdr..u

GRAVELY
TRACTOI SALES

I"~P -

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

APPRAISED AT:
NOTICE OF SALE
By v1rluo of on Order of Sole ., 6.000.00. Tho reelo1111e
•: luuld ouf of the Common connot be aold for Iouthan
, , . _ Court of Molgo County. two-thlrdt tho opproioed va·
. Ohio, In lloe .... olD- lue.
TERMS OF SALE: Cash
' Sevinat • Loon c..._.,,
Ptointfff, VI. Ctlflord R. on dolivo(Y of dHd.
Bmhto. ot ot., ·DtfondMbo,
Howard E. Frank
Sheriff of Moigo County.
upon 1 Judgn..,. thoroln
Ohio
(1219. 16, 23 3tc
. 64 Ml~ . Merchendiae - - - - - - - Public Notice

I

Circular Sews
Saw Chain
Planer Kniva1
Drill Bita
Knlvot
Chiaela

Your Cable &amp;
Ph&lt;&gt;ne Billa Here

Rt. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

...

.'

,.........

Ntw locatlan:
16a North Second
MWdltporl, !lhio 45760
We C•rry Filhlng luppll•

•BIIMmant•

·AT CONFERENCE - Theresa Tucker, dlre~lor of Communlly
Assault Prevention Services, left, and Dr. Margie Lawson, Meigs
County Health Commissioner, are pictured at the recent
Association of Ohio Heallh Commissioners conference held in
Columbus They' are shown In 'the Child'Assaf!lt Prevention Project
display area with one of the doUs used in the program to present
persenal safety programs to young children. CAP workshops wUI
be presented to Meigs County this year lhrough a grant from the
local Children's Trust Fund Board.

PlUIIING &amp; HEATING!

· SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Sn.age Syatomo
•Woter .. Gao linea
•Water Well Drilling .
•Trucking

...__ -

J

Public Notice

r·

•n•

Business ,Services

__
The Daily Sentinel

..
.' .

'

c\1\ll~'t~~~

The

.'

&lt;

?

.------------l

.L::::::=::=::::::::::=:J

Ohio

Teaching children to Identify
potentially dangerous situations
and how to act appropriately lor
' their protection is the basis of the·
Child Assault Prevention project, which will be initiated In
local schools'la.ter this rnonth by
a team of C~P workers currently
undergoing a training program.
As a pa'rt of their training, Dee
Shepari:!, Pomeroy, and Paula
Winebrenner, Syracuse, particiP!Ited in practice workshops at
the Jackl;()n VIew A,partments,
Jackson, and the Liberty Baptist
Church, Oak Hill.
The children attending the
program took •P!Irt In role plays
and ' guided . discussions which
focused on assault situations
·they might face:
They learned strategies io ·
stand up for themselves and
others. Slmlilar workshops will
be presented by leaders In the
CAP program In Gallia, Jackson
and Meigs Counties.
Theres!l Tucker, director ofthe ·
Community ·Assault Prevention
Services in the three-county
area, also presented the C~P
program with a display rec~ntly
at the conference of the Associa·
lion of Ohio Health Commission· ·
ers held In Col~in~us.
She was there at the invitation
.., of Dr. Margie Lawson, M&lt;:&gt;lgs
:~• County Health Commissioner,
..;, who served on the conference
' planning committee and was
.• · familiar :ovlth t~e CAP program.
Ms. 'i)lcker had earlier talked
' about the need for prevention
programs ihat teach children
they have rights, at a local
meeting of health officials.
At the Columbus ronference,
Ms. Tucker represented the·
national office with a display of
Information, the dolls used in the
. pre-school CAP workshops and
, pictures drawn by the children on
• the theme of being "Safe, Strong
and Free."
Information on the program is
. , . available through CrislsUne ',.· 1-800-:1!;2-5554. ' .

~·

A three-count indictment was
announced in U.S. District Court
against Joseph Campinelil Jr.

Federal authorities said Campinelii was involved in a series of
robberies dating back to 1972,
Including a heisl in June 1984
involving $16,000 worth of coins,
Jewelry and silverware.

~.

· Shower honors ·bride-elect of ]ames Cotterill

ELKINS, W.Va . (UP!) - A
Wellsburg, W.Va., man was
indicted Monday and three Jel·
ferson County, Ohio, men were
named co-conspirators In a
robbery ring.

'
.
Sentinai- Page-9 ·

.

.

t1on
·program
conducted
·
..

',i'

Ohioans indicted

He was. Indicted on charges of
racketeering, conspiracy to com·
mit robberies and interstate
transportation of sto len
property.

.

•

r;:~========::::;

lion isWednesday.
70 percent tonighf and near ·
zero
Winds will be from the northw·
est at 10 to.20 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
· Thul'$day throd1h SaturdaY
A chance of snow flurries in the
nQrtheastern · part of the state
Thursday, with fair weather

· Council plans recognition banquet

.

area weather _scene

South Central Ohio
elsewhere' through the ·period.
A fi()()d watch Is In e!!ect today . Highs will range from the 20s to
Rain possibly changing to snow the low 30s Thursday and from
flurries before ending tonight, the mid 20s to the mid 30s Friday
with a tow In the upper 30s. and Saturday. Overnlg~t lows
Mostly cloudy Wednesday, with ·will be between iO and 20 early
temperatures falling into the 30s . Thursday and ranging from the
during the afternoon. .
upper teens to the mid 20s Friday
The 'probability of preclplta· and Saturday mornings. ·

Racine Village Clerk Jane Beegle reports as of Nov. 30. a cash
balance of vlll'age funds In the amount of $109,588.27.
A bre11kdown of that figure includes $22,871.27 In general
fund; $45,991.79 in lire; $J,c.IL98 in state highway; $6,703.10 In
street; $15,501.82 In revenue sharing; U,478.35 in cemetery;
$2.800 In a certificate of deposit for truc,k repla~ement: $2,400 In
· ,. water deposits: $6,000 in a certificate of deposit for cemetery
· perpetual care.
Super Now Interest received for No,rember totals $395.86. The
Super Now Interest, to date. totals $3,434.03. .

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reporis two calls
Monday; Rutland at 12:34 a.m. to Happy Hollow Road lor
Juanita Harmon to Pleasant Valley Hospital; Middleport at
10:10 a.m. to Storys Run Road lor Emma Waugh to Holzer
Medical Center.
·

.

December

Obi~,

Racine clerk lists fund balance

The third annual special recognition banquet of the
Southeastern Ohio Regional Council on Alcoholism has been set
lor Thursday evening at the Sportsman Restaurant in Athens.
The banquet is a gathering of people who have been actively
involved In programs assisting to reduce the harmful effects of
chemical dependency and abuse.
In other years, representatives of the courts, schools, church
groups, childrens' services, parent and other public and
· privately funded organizations have been in attendance. The
Teenage Institute, a high school drug and alcohol abuse
prevention program, will be showcased at the banquet, through
a slide show and student speakers. Certificates and plaques will
be awarded to those recogniZed.
·
The council serves Athens. Hocking, Meigs, Monroe, Morgan,
Noble, Perry and Washington counties and award recipients
represent those counties.

•
•

'

•

PER MONTH WITH

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET'
Middleport, OH.

. lletlson ld.

PH. 992-6173

4

Giveaway
.

To • good home • tern• leaate
mixed dog, A f~ll• Colle

.

mixed dog Ph . 814-441 - ~12 .

Cuteldor•blepups. Met.• toDd
chrlstma• gifts Ph. 114.r4461184.

Full •ire bed mattttll ,good
condition Ph. 814·-"1 -4347 .

.

Pan Retriever puppiM to gi"Jt
•way. 814· 742-2320.
•
Mixed Beagle pups, 3 m-te. 1
ftm1le . 614·742· 3143. ~ \

7 week old helf Germ•n Sh•
phtrd puppie1, 304-IJS,. 79~1 .
Good u1ed toys to low Interne

flmillas, Clll 30•·175-tlll tor
more intormltlon.
2 vellow kitten. r..dy , · for
Chrl11m1s. 304-1715·141·( or

304·882-2614.

:

o\ lo\lleable mixed breed puppi•

to good home Ph. 304·:17&amp;·

RAtiATOR
SER~CE

We can re~ir and rr.
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out r1dilton. Wulso
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD

992·21911
Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

UB7.

6 Lost and Found
Gr•y Schnauur In
vicinity of St•m lt. • ~~·
wood Ph, 114-441-2101.,

LOST:

LOST- O.rm.n lheph•d, dog,
blade • tan, h.. coMot Oft
Answer• to lrutut Ph. 114· 441~

2709 .

•

LOST- In Northup vlctnlty, lig
bltck g•rm•n thtl)trd, •n.,._,.
to a..r. It -.n ......_ celt

m;.••s.7862

••

et

4·····

Lost: ,Sm•ll brown tnd 'Whhe
pony m Harrlsonvthe 1,.1 • Clll

1u.eea.sos1 0, 814 :., 42
2131.
.

liE
DIIJIIIS

Found: betty m~~ttrtlt founct "'
7 clooo to 111 Whoot
·

114-9U·B234.

. .COH

�-.·- . .
·~

Page 10- The Daily Sentinel
6

44

Apartment
for Rent

lost : Small bro wn and white

pony m Harriaonvllle araa Ca ll
614-992- 6057 or 814- 742Found: baby

Nicety furnls~ed mobile h,o me
CA &amp; halt. e11ct1. locetion,
ldultsonly. Cal161_.·._.·0338.

mattreu found Rt

7 cion lo Big Wheel
614 -992- 6234 .

Call

513Ya 3rd. Aw. 1 bdr. priYitt
btth, 1 140 p• mo. Depottt
required . Call 614-448-4222
between 9 &amp; 5.

LOST 0 1111 .amatl bl ack fe mal e
kitten, lona hair, near Beata
School. child' s pe1 , REWARD .
304 -675-6504 ,

Furnlstled sfflclet"CV n 60 utili•
tlea ~~~~ld, thlre bath. '70 1 4th,
Gallipolis. C•ll448-4418 after&amp;

- - - - - - - DONE

LOST pa1r dogs . black German
Sflephefdl, wearing red collars.
Rewa rd ! 304-468 -109 8

pm.

Fu~nlshed 3 rooms end blth,
clean, aduttt only, no patt. Call

Wanted To Buy

9

614-446-1519.
Nicely
Adultt
First •
Stltl

We pay cash for late fl10del clean

used cars.

a

J1m Mink Chev.-Oids Inc.
Btll Gene Johnson

6 14-446 -3672

Use d M obtle Homes P'h 614 446 -0175

furnished 2 bdr. apt.
only. lnquir• 1t corner
Olive St. at Sheppard~
Service.

Furnished apertmtlnt, upsteln.
Adults only, all utlitin paid. Call

TOP CASH paid for '83 mod:el
and newer used cars Smith
Bu•ck -Pontlac, 1911 Eastem
Ave. GaH1polis Ca ll 614-448-

22 82

614·446·9623.

"0rder in the court. Order in
·the
COurt' n
· ·

Furnlshtd efflcienoy •ns.oo.
Zrms. &amp; bath utilttles Pd. 441-

441

7
6o " •m,
11

Furnished Apt. U10.00 utll•
ties Pd. 1 bedroom. first floor Ph.

441·441111tar ?p.m.

~ii=~~~;:~~;=~:"'T-;;';~;';~~~~~~~1 ---~------"""'· iewel•y. Slorllng wa ... old 1'18 Wanted to Do
32 Mobile Hames
Duple• ue Socond. C"P"'""·3
coi ns. lerge c urrency Top prlbecttoom. LA. OA , n.w kitchlft
Buymg daily gold, silver coins.

ces Ed Burkett 81rber Shop.
2nd Ave Middleport, Oh. 614 - Babysitting in my home. Mon992· 3476
.diV thru Friday, day shift, phone
304-1!176-,1 230.
Wan ted to buy. Standingtimb8f.
Ca ll 614 -742-2328.

hnanml

Heade r panel . grill and front
bu m per, tor 1981 Gran Ply-

mo uth Fury . Car use from
1979 - 1982 Chrysle r New
Yo rker, New Pon or Ply Fu'lf
Ca ll 614 -992 -7076.
BU YIN G RAW FURS! Ginseng.
Yellow Root , beef and deer·
hides. Also selling uappmg
supphes , Wheat Lites, Nita Utes
Houn 1 00-9 .00 Closed Wed.
George Buclcley 6 14-664-4761 ,

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD
ptlld . Pre 1950's. SinQieor
wf'l ole eotlat:tion . Call Marc and
Ellen Fultz 614-992-2101 days
or 614 -592 -2 461 evenings and
weekends.
Cash

21

lNG CO recommends that you
do business with p&amp;Ople you
know. and NOT to send money
through the mail until you hav e
invet t1geted the off8fing
Buatness Opportunity, operetmQ
bii'·Ciub, 3,000 sq ft on 2 ICfet.
304-675-3509 evenings

Services

11

•

1972 Alcon• 121160 _. 2 bedroom
mobile home. Completety fur·
nlthed, excellent condition .

U9oo . .-. 11 614-886·4227 .
.....

1972 Alcona 1 2x80, 2 bedroom
mobile home. Completely fur•
nished, excellent condition .

$4900. Ca11614·986·4227.

1969 2· bedroom PMC mobile
home. Rudy to mo\11. •3.000
firm. 304-876-2484 .

34

Business
Buildings

Off1ce space · Store space in Pt '
Plettant. A-One At81 E11ate Ph.

304-a?S-5104

Hous~s

41
Piano Tumng and Repair. Clip
thia ad for 26 percent dlacount.
Lane Demels 614- 742· 2961

RP.o l Eslolr.

Help Wanted

for Rent

2 Bedroom house, very clean
$150.00per mo.. $76.00 deposit, located 9 Wtlite Ave Ptl.

441·3870

3 bedroom walking distance to
city achools. t360 .00 per month
$3&amp;0.00 S.curtty Oepotit. Ph

614-446-4061

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom hous•
for rent Ph. 448-1875.
2 Bedroom house located 68

Ma intenance person to live in
apartment co mple,., Call 304675-51 04
GOOO MONEY!
Weekly !
Processing IIJ!eill
INFORMATION1
Send self·
addressed. sta mped envelope to
P 0 Bo11 27&amp;2. Etut Liverpool ,
O~io 43920-0752.
Pi rwtcrest Care Cen ter. a 116bed skilled nuning facility,
needs a Public Aelation t Admiss tO ns Co -ordinator. Position requ lrH abihty to pl1n and
orgenire to meetth e needt of the
elderly. Ability to speak publicly
and willingnest to belnYolved in
th e com mun ity it essenti•l
Position works directly wrth
Director of Nu rsing 11nd Admin istrator in the plannlng end
eucu tlon of goals. Medical,
social work or marketing degree
help ful . Some related experience necespry,
Direct rH umes of Inquiries to
M r . Lindeman, Pinecrest Care
Center. 555 Jackson Pike. Galli·
polis, OH 45631 . (614}-446-

7112.

Airlines now hiring. Flight Attendants, Agents, Me chanics ,
Customer Ser\llce. Salaries to
$601( En try IGYot potititms Call
1-805·687 ·6000 Ekt. A-9805.

- - -- - - - - ·lc-

31

Mill C-. $1110.00mo. $78.00

Homes for Sale

3 bdr .. eir. pool, garage. Nice.
Commerci1l prop.-ty, comer
lots &amp; highway frontege. Uat
with ut. We have buyen. A-One
Real Estete-Brokar. Call '304-

674-61 04 •• 304·174·6388.

3 Bedroom, IWeue way, 2 car
garage, 1112 acre app. 5 mil•
from Holzer Hosipitel route110
ceii614-3BB-9301 or614-381·

S708.

Neet 3 bdr carpeted. central
h..t &amp; eir. Newfy r.modet'ed,

low utility, or will rent. 824,900.
Catl614-446 -2496

6 room haute. 1.2 ecr01. Double
cer gerage. L.ocated on Roae Hill.
Bargain priced $20.000. Cell
614-678-2513 . •
Government home. from t1 . (U
repair). Delinquent t111 pro~trty.
Repossetaions. CaH 805-687·
6000 E•t GH -9806 for current
repo list.
2 bedroom houn for sale in
Clifton (Meble Johnson proparty). Fultv csrpeted. rteentty
remodeled. new roof. Aaking

Large house with threel01s, B10
E. Main. Pomeroy . $1B.OOO .
Call 614-985-4427 efttt' 1:00
I
p.m.

Need babytln er MuS1 hwe ca r.
Come to my home. Watch ona
child 6 dayt a week. Cell after
7 .0 0 p.m. 614-742-2050

2 br. kitchen , bathroom, with
leundry room. li\ling room a
dining room. allele&lt;:. ApproJI . 7
m iles from P1 Pl . on Rt 82. 2
tractuppro• . 1 acremcneorlen
overlooking Kanawha River .
S40,000. C1ll 304-675-6440
between 8:3Q and 4:30

Uve-in. 5 d.,.sa week to care for
eldet'lv women. Patient cere
only. Call6 14-992-7479
Need money to continue your
college? Before you drop out,
cell the Army Nation II Guard for
free information o n our educe·
t•on auiatence program. 304-

675-3960.,1 -800-142-3619.

Let Avon hel p you get the bett of
1hose post Chrlst mat bills and
blues. Free gift with first order,
Cllll 304 ·882 -2646 .

Federal, State end Civil Service
jobs now available In your area.
For information call(805) 644-

9533 Dept. 43.

Let Avon help You get the b. .t of
those post Chrlttmat bills and
blues Free gift with fiflt order.

Call 304-675·1429.

Southwestern Community Ac 1ion Counc•l Inc. it accepting
applications for the child and
•amity d~~r~utlopm en t progrem for
a teaching atsiate nt for MI. Olive
tieadstert Ce nter in Athton.
Must have high school diploma
or GEO and have car w ith vllid
driver 's license. Apply at 640
5th Awnue, Mondev througf'l
Friday, 9 a.m. · 5 p.m . Hunting·
ton, L..ut dft'l for appUcMion it 5
p.m Monday. Dec. Hi . SCAC it
an EOE Employer.

12

Situations
Wanted

Clean. well maint1ined. aluminum tided. 3 bedroom&amp;, 1 1JJ
b1ths, forme! dining. rec. room ,
lar ge eat-in kitchen. 2 Cit
garage. New fuel tffict.nt fur·
nace, 304-876-4804.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sala
NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOM ES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOillE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 36.
PHONE 614·441· 7274
1973 Vindlle 12x65 wtth 7x14
ex pando . Total eleCtric setUp for
woodburner Good Condition.
Ph. 614-246-6308 between9&amp;
6. .
1977 Festival 14x70, totll
electric 2 bedroom Ph. 614387-01B8 efter &amp;p.m. or 114446·0682 e:.:t. 32 before 6 .
81 Oakbrook expando , 3 bed·
room. 2 full bath&amp;, nove &amp;
refrigerator. new c•pet. Mu.r
sell Ph. 614· 379-2687.
Big down p~ment , shon time
employment or past credit hietory stopping you from buying?
Conlider e r•cleimed 14x701
t600 .DO down . euumable
lo1n1. No charge fOt' dtllvery.
lnteretted? Caiii00-821-0712
1974 Carritge HouJt 12xll5 2
baths. 3 bedroom•. total eltct·
ric. C.rpet thru out. mull tee Ph.

614·441-0175.

PARENTSII
Sante will visit your child · at
home. Believers cell Nonh Pole
614-245-9!83 for details.
Room end board lor employed
man . Nice hom• Family at~os ­
phere. Call 614-992-8873 .

End of veer sale. No peymentt
until April 1987, on eny new
mobile home.. Purch11e btrlo,.
O.c.31 ,1181. French City Mobile Home Inc Ph. 814-441·

9340.

Price reduced, Clayton 1182
12x 10 total eiiCtric. excellent
condition. French City Mobile
Hom• Ph 8U-4.tl· 9340
1981 mobile home for 1111.
14x70. 111cell.-.t condldon. 2
bedroom. 2 full bettls. Call

18 Wanted to Do

114·992· 7183.
Will do babysitting in my home.
Mon tfnu Friday 6 :30 to 6. Lots
of TLG. Cell Grendma•n Vinton
Ph.8 14· 388-8193
Local firm aeeklng tnow removat
s..-vic:e to keep our ptrldng iree
cleated Ph 814-44e-7 112 Mr.
Um~ hler .

'

1340.

2 bedroom house for rent in
Middlepon. Completely ramo·
deled. New carpeting throughout. New cabinets. 8275 per
monttl plut depoalt. Call 614-

992-5888.

B11utiful new houH In Pomeroy AltO new one bedroom
furniahed 1partment in MiddleOf

In Middleport, 6 room s. 3
bedraomt. 1 'h barh. Fully carpeted, endosed back porch.
Level lot Call614-992-3610.
Sman 4 room and bath home
with attached ;•age kl Middleport. Cerpeted. new ttove end
refrigttator. Excellent condition.
Ideal for a s•nglt or mpimum of
2 eduhs. Sorry, no pMa or
children. t178. monthly plus
security deposit. Phone 814-

992·6292.

Urge term houte in country, 8
milet ftom town. free gas,
304-675-4600 , 9 :00 to 4 .00
PM .

1- ::___________

•11,000. Coll304·773·6634o• 4 room houaefor rent on At . 62,
304· 773· 6784.
304·676-3Q17.

GovMnm ent jobs . S 18.040 ·
$59.230 yr Now hiring. Call
805· 687-6000 ht. R-9806 for
current fedet"al list.

W&amp;nt live -In middle -aged
wom &amp;n to watch 2 childrEtn . 1
child in school. Light house
work. moderate cooking. Saltty.
roo m and boerd. Call 814-742·
2050 after 7:00 p.m

Dlpotit Ph . 448-3870 or 448-

port . Call 114-441-1552
114·992·6304.

3 bedroOm. Fumithed. Wash•,
dryer. air. awning . Completely
set-up on rented tot. 16700. Call

614-992-7479.

B•41 two bedroom whh g11
furnace. Call 114-918· 3380 or

814-985-3361 .

b1th, wather &amp; dryer hook-up,
t285.00 mo. plua utllltin &amp;
ttcurity dtpotit Ph . 614-0690.

Apartments for rent $100.00.

e15o.oo. noo.oo. Ph 304·
675-6104.

I(IT 'N' CARLYLa ®br LMrJ Wright

72

Unfurnished 3 bedroom availa·
ble, Point Pleasant, good location. nice yerd. tny on heat,
refri!)erator and ttove if needed.
S226.00 mQnth plu• utilltin
Cell 304· 676-8240 alt..- 6 p.m.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr., 111 utilities paid except
elec., furn . or unfurn., ue.
deposit required. Convenient
location. Call 614-441·8658 or

614-446-4776.

2 bdr. fully furnished adults only,
util . paid. Call 814-446-4110.
In Eureka· nice and clean, adultt
only. No pete, depoth required.
180.00 mo. call 814-258-1838
before 1 Oa.m.
2 Bedroom furnished . We accept
HUD, Beautiful river t~lew . Fostora Mobile Home Park 814·

441·1602.

2 Btdroom , 1 year leaae
$250.00
pM month Pf'lone
448· Z168 .p
nice. unfurn. In town ,
apacious; 2bdr, refrlg., rang•.
yard &amp; cov..-ed patio, quiet
ltntet. No peta •175 .00 month
plus deposit · &amp; , references cell
Eerl Tope, 448-0332 dtya or
448-0111 eveningl &amp; wk·ends.
Very

'

.

Trailer spaca ICfOII from Otlio
PaiiM on C.A 20 TPC weter

Call 114-992-2941 .........
and 814-Bit2·1411 drt•·
2 bedroom. 1 child, no peta. Call

304-682-2418.

12d6 treiler, tully c.-peted. 2
bedroom, gat furniCt, 5 tern.
t2fi0 per month plua utiliUe~.

114-992-2018 ., 114-992·
7784.
2 bedroom mobile home, Mid·
dlepon, 0 . Rtftf'tnce With ••
curlty deposit. 304-812- 3287
or 304· 173-1024.
K &amp; K Mobile Homtl. 2 tnd 3
bedroom mobUe homll, 304-

178-3000.

Mobil• home. 2 bedrooms.
located Athton Upton Roed,
t 1150.00 month plu&amp; utillliee,

304-876-4088.

Two bedroom treller, coupltl,
one amtlll child. Atfer8ncet •
Oepoait. Everett Schwert1. At .'l
LDCUit Lane, Pt. pte... ntbtokof

KloK.

54 Misc. Merchandise
Callehlrt'l Used Tire Shop. 0\ler
1.00Dtiraa, sizet12, 13, 14, 15,
18, 16 .5 . 8 miiH out Rt. 218.

Call 614-261 -6281

Pleatlc cistem stalt epproved,
plestlc nptic tenlcl, plattic
culverta, metal culverts. RON

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jockoon, Oh. 614-288·5930.

46 Furnished Rooms

1980 35()· C John Deere Dozer.
with canopy and W1nch Ph .
3BB-9312 or 388-9062 etldng
price •13.000.00.

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light house keeping rooms. Park 1 .::.::.:::__~~::.::::_
Centre! Hotel. Cell 614-448- U~e Kmas tren, t28.60. Fir•
0758.
wood, t95 .00 Dump truck k)ld,
heap vouchers acctpted. Call
Rooms for rent, day. week . 614 · 446 - 9641 Don · a
month. Ollila Hotel. Call 614- Undacaptt.
448-9711. Rent at low as •120
month.
4 white spoke whaelt with tires.
alze 10001116. with 8 lug
Furnished room 919 2nd, Galli· wheels. t300.00 Ph. 814-9340
polls. •111. UtllhiM pd. Share or 304-676·331 3
bath. Single mele. Call 448 ·
4416 efler 7pm.
4 white apoka wheels with tires,
size 1000x1&amp;. with 8 lug
Slteping roOm with private btth wtleelt . '300.00 Ph. 614-9340
tor rent by -monthly, femaiM or 304-676-3313 .
onty. Conttct 114-448-2041 .
Teking orders for Christmu.
Colonial style doll eredl• 1nd
46 Space for Rent
Deecon style toy chest, made
aturdy. 61.·992-3362.

____

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Plrk,
Route 33, Nonh of Pomii"''f.
Larue lots. Ca11814-992-7479.
'Bulinesa or Office Sp1ce for
rent New Haven 304·773·

6024 ., 304·882-3217.

Mobile homelots.tmltil children
eccepttd. Rt. 1 loculf. Rd.
Mobile home lots. Ohio Rivtt'
Road &amp; Petttr&amp; Creek, Rt 1.

304·176·1076.

Mixed htrdwood tlabs. 112. per
bundle. Containing approx 11h
tont. FOB Ohio Pellet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio. Call 814·992-

1461 ,

••••

AUCTION

SWAIN
FURNITURE 62

&amp;

Olive St .. Gallipolis. New &amp; uaed
wood-coli lf.OV81, e PC wood LA
aultt t399. bunk bedt '191.
Miron reclln•• t99, new &amp;
ustd beC:Iroom aultea, rangu,
wrlnglt welhtrl, •lhoet. New
IMngroom suitM •199·$599,
lampa, also buying coal &amp; wood

• t -. C.ll814-441-3159.

CoUnty AppiiMct, Inc. Goad
uud eppiiMcet •nd TV seta.
Open BAM to IPM Mon thru
Sot . 814·441·1199. 127 3•d.
Ave Gltlipolla, OH .
Valley Furniture. new ,&amp; ut td.
Large taction of quality furniture . 1218 Elstarn A'tle .•
Glllipolls.

tlon. 30§·171-11~.

54 Misc. Merchandise · 82 Wented to Buy
Mlot'-". 304-876·1769.
28 Inch Zenith color consOle TV
1175.00 . 30 gil 911 water
heater. Shop llghta. Mite items.
6 piece living room set, good
condition, 1150.00. 304· 675·

1703.

676·2010 •.""' 6 p.m.

66 Building Supplies
Building Meterlalt ·
Block, brick, sewer pip11, win•
dows, llnttll, IIC. Cteude Win ters, Rio Grande. 0 . Call 814·

Pole Building• by Quality
Bullden. Worklhops, carporla,
animtl thettert, a•egft, F'"
estlmetll. Phone 814· 3B4·

66

Pets for Sale

Oregonwynd Cettery Kennet
CFA Hlnialtyln, Peraian and
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow

puppiM. Colt 114·441-3844
lltar7PM.
·
Groom &amp; Supply Shop
ProfetaiOftal S.rvica, all styltl,
all bre,dt, 1t1t1 Rt. 1 41 Otllipolis, Ohio415631,JulleWtbb, Ph.

614-441·0231 .

Pure brtd bleck O.rman She·
pard ftmMe, pep1rs, 3yn old

Cott514-448-0a.e.

1 mile chlnne pug 1yrs old, hM
pepers. bcetlent chriltmea gift

f300.00 448-7882.

Beagle pupa, &amp;wiLl old, fental•

Tony's Gun Repairs, hot rtblu•
lng. Open 9 :00AM to 7 :00PM

Coll304-675-4131 .

Shop for Chtistmea with

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS,
Call304-175-1090.
Andersen 's High Performance
windows. still In carton. Never
been used . 304-8715·15478. Cell
efter &amp; p.m .

31!1 Inch new ber atool. Celt

080. 304-875-150• .

...... 304-175-1478.

25 inch Ztnith color con10I1TV,
rec1ntly reptlred. •100 . 00.
Firewood U&amp;.OO pickup load.

Full blooded 811gta pups,
$40.00. hold til Chrittmtt

t5o.oo. 304· 1~·.6174 .

A.K.C ' Chow Chow , puppln,
live WHka old, raldy to go now
or will hold till Chrillmes til
black, three mal• end ont

tomato. 304·882·2760.

57

Musical
Instruments

Peavey P.A. System XR700
mix• with spuktrs, monitors,
microphon... 1t1nd. Ph. 304-

V·f,

PS; 1'8, flvo

opood.

ET celebrates w1th Bob Ne-

304- •

83

Livestock

·, Grain fed b..f r..dy to butcher
Pit. 114·446 · 43~4.

64 Hay 8t Grein .
Dried shelled cotJ'. U .IO per
cwt, ground •1.00 per cwt,
ground with moluaes U . 76 per
CWI,

304·458·1031 .

I Mil' Supplll"
1\

LIVCSIIII:k

11 rl llSII III 1.1 11011

Motorcycles
....:_

Autos for Sale

Mtreedii1971450SEL 4·door
XX Shii'P ..,eded will trlde

1-114-188-7311 .

•••

:::~~:·:: :R 10 ~400.00,·~~
1

. CROSS lo IONS

U.S . 315 WMt, Jeckson, Ohio.

1185 Colebrily 4·doo•. 2.8L 8
Cyt MPFI, Auto, AC. AM FM

stereo1 clock. rutt proof under
co11, gaugiiiJI. trip odom, interm
wipers. new dr•, floor m•a. •II
..,...ice recordt:. local ow-ner

$8.000. Ph. 114-245·5120

------3
1913 Plymouth Turitmo. 1.7
engine. 2·door. 86.000 mil•.
nice. 13000.00 Ph. 114-371·

2728.

1911 2.2 Engine, Auto &amp; AC,
11 .OOOmi, like new •4.825.00

Ph . 114·379·2726

·n et...otl Mottbu 1795.00

'78 lnt.m8tlonll Soout. 4•4

$1,000.

'81 Mercury Lyn•, eutometlt. eir

1

5fE(.. IT

Budgtt trtnamislllonl, UMd &amp;
rebuilt . · Tool conv•rt•ra •
ITens.... Cll"· WHI dtiiVtr C11h
• C.rry or Install c.. 114-311·

·ea.'72

$1 ,200.00 1'11.614-11108

1688.

1 lou 302 Ford engine com-

c•

tr•ll• •too.oo. 1ulldi3IO.OO
Pit. 114·386-9801.

1810 Cutl11s8uprerne. PS, PI,
tJtt

whoot, tow mil•. 304-882·
2788 oft., 7:00PM.

1918 Chovoll SS, *1100.00,
304·876-7210.

&amp;I Cil MOVIE: 'Scrooge'

.,
·''
~==---::~
304·171·1701.

:~~~~~-r--~----

81

332-9745.

For ule: J D 410 Doar. I w1y
blede. winch end cenapy.
Tromm EKCINttlng. Cell 11•·

742·2328.

Pldltnt Ultd Furniture. Good
quality uaed furniture. Open 8 to
e or call for appointment.

John Dl•e 10 f•m trtotor, DC
cond. New ont row mldlanlcll
1reneplen1tr tobacco eetter.

7421.

114·281-11011.

value 10 Son1a on a foggy
Chris1mas eve. [60 min .IIRI .
(jj) Wonderworks iCC)
Anne g0ts her best fr~end

drunk it a tea panv and is
forbidden t o see her . (60

,
:

-- - - -- - -;:-- - ·»,,

min .)
@ MOVIE: 'Going In Style'
(jJ) Camden Clark Memorial Hospital
8:05 C1J NBA Buketball: los
Angelee Lakers a1 New
York Knicko [2 hrs. , 15
min .)
8:30 Cil a Cll Growing Pains
(CCI Jason end Magg1e fogh1

EEK &amp; MEEK

'

O!Jer a difference of opinion
in the high sc hool dress

code.
9:00 II !Il @ Hill Street Blues
Furillo leams the truth about
his fathers death while a
shaken Selker calls the Pres·
ident after an all·too· realistic

._ _ _ _ _ _ _ &lt;I
-.2:..:4:.54:;.
..,
Fetty Tree Trimming, arump 11 1
"'""::::•::.v•:l~
. C:•:l:_:l3::04::...:
·1::7.:8_
·1:..:3::3.:.1·:._ "
SERVICE, ••Po- ' ' '

'

-RINOLES'S

MORTY MEEKLE AND WI.,.:;,N:..:.T:.:H:.:..:R:.:..:O:.:P:___ ____, ~-------..-..,.......,
I'VE GOT MY FA\ORI"fE;

BOLOONA, TLJNA FISH , CREWA

I 'MJNDeR WHY HE

&amp;.NDWIC/-1 FOR i.LJNC/1 1VOAY•. .

CHEE6EANDMA5HED 84.NANA5.

SLJDDENLV DliCIDED

W&lt;=iO 6ACK HCW.E.

Dionne Warwtck. 12 hrs.) ·

2281.
j.::.:::.::.:...
_________

1811 Ford Eac;ort L·statlon
w.gon.19,0000tct.
cond. Ont own•. U1 ,000
cllh. No cheake. Ab10hltetY no
colla ott• I p.m. 304·181-

"'"•••c.

3974.

1871 Fo•d F1oo; 1871 302
4-epHd. lldd• rlckt. gpod

CARTER'S PWMB!NO
AND HEATING
Oolllpotto, Q!lto

441-44n

Jam• Boys Water Service

8181 ott .. e.

I

r

ber Saab Pro Series (R).

"
'
:

•

i

••
...:

· -~

'I

R 6 M Custom Couchu end
Reuphollttry, 81. Rt. 7 , Crown

City, Oh. 81.·211·1470. Evo.
114·441·3438. Opon 'dolly 8 to!
5, Sit. 9 :l0 to 1:30. Old&amp; new
Uphottered .
~o~

. .

1

1
' I

l.f

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

.

. .

P*e-r'Be c:onetructlvdnd uk,

~-..:TALLFY
:...:;I;....::.,I;;:'...:,I....:.TI--1

Complete th• chuckle quoted

__l,__l,__j __J.:...,JL.....J
~Y filling In 1he miuing words
L
·
·
•
•
•
•
you develop from step No. 3 below.
A

~

PRINT NUMBE~EO lETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
UNSCRAMBLE -ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER,

YESIIRDAY'S
'
., . SCIAM-LETS ANSWIH

•
.

~ .--~'--Plank- Hoclclly- SKUNK
One lllflllllll' ~~~.Wu viiiHing Grandpa on his lerm, he

_______

liV8 me thlllldvlce. ' Only i foal will argue with the cook, •
:nule Ill' a SIWNK."
--,,___..
'
'

BRIDGE
Attitude
or count?

NORTH

12·11-11

• Q 10 6 2
• A 81

tJ82

By James Jacoby

.QJ7

EAST
Here is an age-old problem relating j WEST
+ 53
to defensive carding. When your part- . ; ~
953
.Q J 7 2
ner leads the king against a slam. con- +A K 10 1 3
• 9765
tract, IS 1t proper for you to s1gnal • 10 5 3
• 8 52
whether you like the lead? Or should
you play a card that will tell your
SOOTH
+AKJ981
partner how many cards you hold in
.10 6
the suit led (high for ·an even number,
tQ
low for an odd number)?
.AK91
In today's deal, East played his lowest diamond. He meant thai to indiVulnerable: Qoth
Dealer: South
cate his fear that ~ second diamo~d
would be ruffed. He also felt comfort·
Nortlt East
Soutit
able about · his partner shifting l,o a Wes1
heart. However, West thought , his
Pass
s+
I NT
partner was showing an odd number Pass
Pass
5+
Pass
6+
of diamonds, since the five was . the Pass
Pass Pass
lowest diamond not iit view. So West
tried to take a Sf'COnd diamond trick.
Oj&gt;eni~g lead: K
Declarer happily ruffed, drew trumps
and made his slam.
What's the solution• There is no
unanimity, even among experts. My spot). Should you and your favorite '
suggestion is this: When a king is led partner agree'on this method, I hope it
agailllil a slam contract in a suit, give may be a while before you get to try it
count. If you have four cards in the out in actual play. It's much more fun
suit, as East did, play the second-high- to bid a slam and lry to make it lhan tO
·
est card (in this instance, the seven- defend against it.

••

+

L---------------......J

~t!IJAF'-'t!lf'
by THOMAS JOSEPH
DOWN

ACROSS
I Pamper

1 Dutch city
2 Composer
Copland
9 Uncommon a London
I 0 Attic
attraction
I 2 Ireland
4 Craving
I a Actress
6 "Divine
Lanshury
Comedy"
14 Speck
author
15 Shelter
6 Work unit
16 Beak
7 Prestigious
17 Type
Paris
of dye
institution
19 - Magnon 8 Aircraft
20 Dispatched navigation
21 Burn
system
10 Emaciated
22 Talk
2a Collins
~Adroit

y;;,te.rdo,v'• Answer
11 Small drum 26 Hauled
16 Suggest
27 Con ceal
18 .lump
28 "Gigi" star
21 Pistol
291 told you'
22 Garbo film 34 Dutch
23 Tarzan's
commune
36 Irish
caubeen
•

or Rivers

24 Temptress
26 Sort
mineral
26 Aust. bird
27 One kind
of lens
30Japanese
miles
a 1 Have debts
32 Burmese
knife
33 Garment ·
feature
35 Present
36 Baffied
37 Cupid
as Wife of
Cuchulain
39 English

-

river

.DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES-Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONGFELLOW

sampl~

One letter stands for another. In this
A IS used
for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
a~trophes, the length and formatioo of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are differenl
CRYYJ'OQUOTE
12-9

PEANUTS
A RECENT ~EPORT
SWOWED THAT MAN'{
ATTORNEVS ARE NO

&gt;!AVE VOU FOUND
AI&lt;I'/THI!II6THAT 15 MORE

LON6ER Pf(ACTICIN6 LAW

PRACTICIN6 LAW?

IMPORTANT ltl '100 THAN

VA L

MX

F D J

@II (lJ M'A"S"H

L YZ

KZDPZXL

Cll An Evening with Barbara Cook Barbara Cook

VAL

yz

presents an evening of
song, including show tunes ,
"Old favorites and contem·

'•I

"'
••

, Mowrey-'• Upholltll'ing tet\llng
county er• 21 yqra. The but
1tll Chovoy C-10, outo olr, 1t'l
in furnhurt UDholetlrtng. Call
CC, duet blnb Johnt "uto 304 - 675 · 4114 for fret
lei•, lulwllt ,Ad. OeRipoUt, eltimllpt

OH41131

mick

ffi Auto Racing '86: Bar-

•.

------'-----

Upholstery

.

- - - - ' - - - . . . - - - . "How i:8n I make H-?"

ffi Hardcastle and McCor-

•

Coli, lim•tone, nnd end grtve4

11S2 VW I opotd wHh toppor,

AM ·FM c•n:tte attrto. Pay
bllllllce on loan. Call 114· 441·

.l

New&amp;

SNAKE!!

~_:__-----~··
Coal tnd llm81tont hauled.' : ~

Coal. llmntone, grl\l'tl, etc:
Delivered 1 ton 111d up . Jim

and

10:30 ffi Celebrity Chefs
fJI (lJ INN News
(jj) Everly Brothers Rock
'N' Roll Reunion Concert
10:35 (]) Cinema Showcase
t1 :00 D CDCil a CIJ® ID ~llll

II

Wetterton ' s Water Htullng,
reasonable r1111. Immediate
2.000 gtllon dllhlery, ciat.-ns.
pools, well , ttc. aall 304-571,2919.

mterview

M1ke is offered 1he chair-

Murder'

'

T &amp; L Water delivery anytime pt~,. ~ 1
1!114 · 381-973:2 umt day ,
deUvery.

87

II B-10 pldtup, llko now,

•

Tromm E.Cavatlng. Cell 614."

from prison grants Jackie an
exclusi!Je

Ii .
~11 .::,_,-:-:..·:.".-=
Ie

.:;.,-=E..:..r...:N;...I

fJI CV Odd Couple
@ News
10:20 Cll MOVIE: ' Dial 'M' for

i

742·2329.

Cll a Cil Jack and Mike
(CC) A 'mobs1or released

manship of the city' s annual
restaurant festival. (60 min .)

'
AI.O , I'

cempft' top clll814-441· 7110.

U.•. ol&gt;or11. .Call

BESIDES ·- THAT AIN.T
NO CANDY STORe

e1•-

dotiv..., . 304·171·3190.

dow, ntw
114·441-4991,

min .)

"''
,.

pooto t;tttod. C.lll14-268-1141
., &amp;14·448·1175., 814-44&amp;7911 .

(90

min.)
1 0:00 II !Il (jJ) 1986 (CCI 160

.,

72

AM -FM Gllttltl, aiding win·

from the Australians

. ,'

Lonl•. 304·175·1247 or 171·
7397.

1813 Chowoyl-10, 4-opood hoo

...!

as they try to con ~
struct a boat that can win
back the America's Cup
~es 1g n ers

BARNEY

11.... fliOO . 304-&amp;71·2842 ••.
... 1:00, 304-171-2010. '
Trucks for Sale

program looks a1 sallboa1

Plumbing

::;;::::::;;;:=::=;:::;:;::::;:;:::
85 General Hauling

57 Chovy tt Novo ss. 02500.

.,

304-175·0441 or 171-5152. --::

1910 Cordoba. body In greet
shlpt. c• runs good, phone

For S1le or Trade. 304-671-

(fil Nova: Soil Wars This

Alhby Conauuctlon. carptn· 1
tery, rtmodlllng, room eddltion. '
ceman1 btock work. roofing,
int•lor end u:ttrior pelnttna·.- 1
aiding. Rooflnv. FrM lltkulet. , 1

8&amp; He1tlng

and TV stars offer their tal·
ems under the big lop, w11h

bart Eden, Msrv Griffin and

895·3802

82

*

dream. (60 min .)
C1J 700 Club
CIJ 0 Cll Moonlighting
(CCI lBO min .)
'
(]) HOLIOAY INN/Crosby
&amp; Aotalre/Groat Music
By Irving Berlinl
WPBY '"'
Cll MOVIE: 'Holiday Inn'
@ II (jj) Eleventh Annual
Circus of the Stars Movie
ringmasters Dtck Clark, Bar-

Rot1ry or ceble tool dritllng.
Moatwellscomplattktumtday.
Pump tal• and Str\l'icl. 304--

Phone 614-448-3188 or

AMC1e81 Eoglo4·W·D,Icyl.

27'J13I' x9' EAVE with tlidlng
door &amp; sarviot door •4. 211.00
tfectld.
Iron HorN luildinfia Ph .l14·

cast reindeer. shows his

I ' I

Home
Improvements

Cor. Four1h tnd Pint

At-air. good cond. 304-1754437 or 878· 331•.

UTIUTV BlDO. SPECIAL:

CIJ
MacNeil-lehrer
Nowshour
@ 1D (!21 Rudolph the Red
Ntitod Reindeer An out-

Trensmilslon' 1t1d Nove parta. •

1984 Ponlloc 1.oo0. U,IIIO.
Phono 304-175-1141 .

Malley Ferguaon, New HoM.-.d.
Buth l-log lei• • Strvlc.. O~,ttr
40 used trtctors to chooH from
• complete lint of new &amp; used
equipment. Leraeetltlec:tlon In
S .E. Ohio.

ton with warranty ovtr .cl uted
trtctors, 1000 tools.

1n a mlnlatuie golf game .

olon. 31.000~C1uolmlloo. 1121.
Coll114·192-7841or814-11923763.

l 7&amp;-4319.

1977 Ford Pln1o, UOO.DO;
19U Honda 3 whellw, exctl-

basko1ball team. while Tony
and Angela fiercely compete

ALLEY OOP

Y6 Buick motor tnd transmit·

19715 Volll't Ford, r11dy to go.
ood condltlon, e&amp;9&amp;. 304-

304-175·3385.

she tries out for the g1rls'

J

304-571-2010 or 571·2842.

pow..- windows, cruise,

murdering his landlord . (60
min I In Stereo
I]) Hell Town
G) NHL Hockey: Edmon ton Oilers at MinneiDta
North Stars (3 hrs .) Live.
CIJDCDWito's the Bou7
(CCI Samantha faces a disappointing love life when

TYPO.

•.

Nov• pert:• Contaat
John efttr 5pm Ph. 814-441-

SWEEPER lnd tewing mect.lne I
· replir, ptrta. and tupp~• - Pick '' '
up and dtiNery, Devte Vacuum
1184 Chavetta 4-opotd, AM- Clttntr. ont tltlf mile up
FM Tape, wire rima. •z.499.00 OID'fl• C- Ad. Call 814·
Johns Auto Sal11, BuJ•ille Ad. 446·0284.
Galllpolia.
RON ' S Ttlevlalon SeNice .
'85 Sky Hawk, '11 C~•ettt. 'H Houae calls on RCA, Oueur.
Chq•. 'T7 Honda. '80 Honda, GE. Spodollnt In Zonhh. Call ••
'74 Dust•. '74 Detaun Truck. 304·171·2381 .. 614-441- ••
•I
Must aeU 1878 O.ttun 2DOSX
66,000 •ctual mil•. 1-splld
ti'lntmlnkln, looks &amp; run• goOd

takes on the case of a street
corner Santa accused of

WA$N'TA

2745.

Ph. 514-441·9833.

ton
a Cll Judge
@ Wheel ol Fortune
Iii GJl illl Jeopardy
@ Benson .
7:35 Cll Honeymooners
8:00 II !Il Matlock Ma11ock

.'i

not • hot rod t4.100. 00 or but
off•. mev trade Ph. 014· 441-

814-281-1451 .

JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMEPit
CENTER. 8R 31 W. O.Hipolio,
Ohio. Colt 114·441·8777• ..,,,
114·441-3112. Up """' tree-

ffi NFL Films Presents
fJI CV Too Close for Com·

,t;::
,. ,.,

Auto Parts
·8&amp; Acceesorie•

I
1~- .....~-=-=
I1

IXSET

porary works . 160 min .)
@ Honoymoonent
11 :30 D (]) (jJ) Tonigh1 Show
Tonighl' s guest is Don Rickles. lBO mm.) ln Stereo .
Gl SponaCtmar
Cll WKRP In Cincinnati
8 C!J T11tl
aCIJABC Newt Nightllne
®@Magnum, P.l.
(jj) SUtr Huttlar
1D lliJ Hot 8ho18 Amenda
and Jason uncover a ruth·

less family feud over 1he sale
of o magazlno. (70 min.)
12:00 ffi Bumi &amp; Allen
Ill NFL Filma Presents IRI.
Cll Jefferson•
CV Rawhide
a Cil Tales ol1he Unexpected '
J
Cll SClV

e

'

.

1-,..:..I~I::.. ::1~t-~

MacNeil-l-ehrer

Game

ucellent condition . 1179 ·.;;;
Honde CR 121!1 •200.00 Cal ~•~
814-381-8897

~:::::;::;==

K12

R

ID ri2J @ Wheel of Fortune
@ Ramey Miller Pan 2.
7:05 CIJ Sanford aitd Son
7:30 II Cll Cll New Newlywed

1986 t~ondo125 4-whoot•. Ph.•·=-=

198&amp; 2110 Big Rtd. QC t1.000
Ph. 114·388-9906.

(j t i I

II

Newshour

'•

pl .., with held••· 1 New

C1n rMChld efhr 1 :00.

Farm Equipment

(jj)

2220.

71

1.,1 condklon, 304-175-1714.

61

® News

:

114-246·9898.

171-1512.

(I) American .Playhouse

I

Fresh truckload Naw York 114·379·2728.
grown ltrge tppln. 7 kinds.
Nevel orengt1 • ttngelot, ban a· 1911 Ariee-K Doda• Station
naa · grap", •mall lots or by bo•. Wagon, AM - FM Stereo
Jecks Fruit Msrket, Rt. 3&amp;, Cassette, auto, CC, ra.-window
wipers, good condition Ph.
Htnderaon.

Of

fJI (!J .M•A•S•H

a (]) People' a Coun

_____ ____ ...

76

1913 P.t';'mouth Turllmo, 2-door
811i,000mi. Nice &amp; clean Ph:

1951 Dodge Bosshog motor
home, CoiMtan f\.lma~. elr
tondhlon•. ulld elec. g11 or
bttttrr. be. lhapt. C.n be tttn
It K'""ol P.,k, 304-171-7329

TV series "Newhan" .

1985 HOnda 7,0, 9 wheeltr, ·

8t Vegetables

1828.

sode of h1s successful CBS-

.'

74

f"'m four titnplo -.:Is.

completion of the 1OOth epi·

'
1978 Ch..,f SW8. 4 whool
driYe. lolded! new 10•150 tfrM. 1
68,000 mttol. 13,000. or lot~
off•. 304-1'11·2842 .,.. e
p.m. 578·2010.
'

-

to

whart as he 1alks abou11he

..,ell,

Whtle Ftrm Tracton, lett' Prtce
In A-. Slden Equipment Co.
Hend•aon, W. Vt. 304·171·

178-4031.

ffi SponsCenter

Cll Entertainment Tonight

ritnctd Clfptnter, eltctrid.., •
· muon, paint•, roofiftg linclud - 1
'85
Ctl.ity
blue
wavon
ve.
876·3978.
, 00, lit, 3 SlitS, CIUilt, IUtO, ing hot ur appllc.t:ion) 304'I
digiial s1er10 Ph. 6 14· 871·Z081 or&amp;71·7147.
Peavy Sound Syttem. 20 piece 441-2278.
Ttma drum eet, 304-875-2107
St11ks TrN and Llwn Serv~. 1
18115 Dodge Ari11, eutomtlc. Hedges , stlrubl . buthu · 1
with AC , 4-door. 11,000tnlllke trimmtd, lendtctplng end - ~
6B
Fruit
stump rltmO'III. Leef removel.
,_Ph. 114· 378·2728.

• plec. li\llng room teblt tet. 2 304-676-7771 .
end ttbl81 , 1 coffee tlble, 1 ,
commOde table. Marble tops, Matti office dtakt, drawen or
eKcellent eondition. Alto 2 typewrtter peltfarm, with edJu•
lamps. UOO . Ct il 614-992· teble swivel chair, .b01h for
7866 after 1:00 p.m.
$126.00, 304·372-2801 .
Seth Thom•• mantle clooll
•ee.oo. 100 tmp trtltr dlaconntct bol'l t31.00. Phone 304-

' ~

, 8A8EitiEPIT
f1 ,89G.OO
..
030.00, molnl40.00 Ph. 114- ' B4 Ford Eacort , ' · •pled
' WATERPAOOFIPIG
379-2386.
Unconditional lifetime gueran02.185.00
tee. Local rl'f•an'* fumlehed. ,;
Ph
.
614·38a·8115
AKC Aeglatattd Beagle pupa. 7
Frft "tlmetn. C.lf collect •
waeks old . Both parents ••eel ~ 1910 Flrtblrd Trans-AM, power, 1·114-237·0488, doy or night. ·lent hunt~r~ . 150. tech. Call air, stereo, ca. ntw engln~. 22 A o a e r • B a • e m' e n t •
114·986·4460.
;
MPG. E~~etlln meint.-..-.ce, Waterproofing.

814·992-3110.

614-S92·3110.

CCC Gen•lc Certificates, 30·-

17&amp;·1807.

8782.

Firewood Stltontd mixed
hardwood. aplit and dlli\lll'ed.
t40 tor X-large pick-up toad.

Firewood . Seeaoned miud
h~rdwood, t pUt and delivered
UO for X·large pick-up told.

Now buling thell corn or ear
corn. Ctl tor lat•t quot•. River
City Farm Supply, 614· 44629851

Blodt ~o.. 123'h Plna 81:.
Oolllpotto. Ohio Colt 114·441·
2783.

614-892-2319.

614 -9S2·2319.

' mick

1981 Ford Renoer 4•4. 'acel· ..-2
lent condition, duel txhtutt,: •.

Concrete blockttllalut ytrd or
dellvtry. Mtton tend . Galllpolla

Baldwin 2 keyboltd orgllf'l,110.
p;•no, Upright. •4o. 304-8-76·

Uaed 275 gtllon fuel oil tank
US Can be lttn at Meigs Tire
Center or call814-992-2101 or

•

875-7121 ett•l p.m.

Machine quilted quilts for nla.
triO . e1ch. Ctll614-992-2418.

Uaed 275 gellon fuel oil tenk
U6. Cen be teen at Mtlgt Tire
Center or cell 814-992-2101' or

'· ··;

~

2486.

Creftsmsn, 10 inch raditl arm
sew, br~nd new, never been

304-871·1483 Of 178-1410.

3.00""' 114;7.4"2·2171. , .

1878 Joop. Prlcoll on lnopoc·

69 For Sale or Trade

King Size Wattrbed. big mirror In
the middle, night lights bulh In
on uch tnd and a built In
booluhett. 1E1Celltnt condttlon
f121 .00 Pit . 114-379-21108.

114·182-2452.

1979 JlitP CJI. Good condi-...~
tlon. Rebulh lftlllnt. Cell after

'

Fhtwood, all hard wOod. Hell
vouchers eccepted. •35 . 1
pickup lotd. Phone 814-742-

Skylant. $300. Call 614-982·
7690.

Ul. PER~ONALLV
!lET YOU fiOO, 000
THj;Y'LL Wlt&lt;J.

1979 CJ.&amp; Ooldtt1 Eaalt. v.a,' ~~
3·tpMd,tpOktrwhHit, AM·FM .,,.
11ereo. low miluge. Ph. 114- u·;
441-8700.
•fi

246·6121 .

1 Bedroom b.. lc rtnt •116.00 Firewood del~ered Oak 6: hick·
plus electric. Also required a ory,
split, HEAP voucher, pickup
1200,00 security depoatt. CON ·
load 136. Call814·446·2223 ••
TACT: Jackson Estatn Dept. Ph, 614·446·3028.
441 -3997 Equel Housing
Opportunity. ,
Several plecet antique tilver,
IMX Bikalike new UB .OO. Bear
2 and 3 bedroom apartment• Grizzle Hunting Bow&amp; Arrows&amp;
e nd hou111 in Pomeroy , or Quiver t4D.OO Ph. 614·446·
Middleport. Furnithed or untur· 83.98
nit hed. P1y own utilitiee . Call
d8ysl!l14 -992-2381 .
Mayteg Dithwasher. like new. 2
Acouttic Guitars Ph. 614-4461 1nd 11h bedroom ept. avtillble 0666
at Alvenide for rent. Bulc rent
stlrta at •179. , plus utilitiH.
1200. ucurlty deposh required. Variety atlop on At 3! under new
menagement. Llrge essortment
Inquire at 814·992· 7787.
of Christm11 gifts. used tir11 &amp;
recaps, mud &amp; snow ti ~ new
1 bedroom apt. for rent. Basic tire&amp;
guaranteed
rant attnt UU . a month that
includ81 til utllltlaa. Depoait
metal datectora, ntw &amp;
required of t200. Con,lct Vil- Whit•
used modelt, low pricn. Ph.
lage M1nor Apt . Middleport
· 814-992-n87. Equal Houalng 614-448-0548.
Opportunity.
Gttin Feed Freezer Beef for sale
Clll
614-246-5084.
Apartments for rent in Pomeroy.
One and ' two bedroom. Clean
and nice. C.l\1!114-992· 8211 or 1803-1978 Ohio 176th Annlvernry Colt Government model
614-992·7314.
46 caliber speeial edition. 1 of
APARTMENTS, mobile homn, 2150 collectora Item nev.,- been
. $1 ,000.00 firm Celll14hou181 . Pt. Plaatent andGIIIipo- fired
446-94 76 anytime wk-ends,
lio. 114-441-8221 .
after &amp; week. days.

12• 10 2 bedroom In Centenary

1 986 14d50 1ml south of
gelljpolis dM' . St Rt 7 . No ptta
call after 3pm Ph. 2111!1-1089

•

Fli-ewood •Bo. dump truck load
dtliverld. 304· 676·2842 or

614·446-7444.

V•lla 8&amp; '4 W.O.

73

0

The Oaka Apartment•· We art
now having a Dece-mber move-In
special on rent &amp; depoait. U99
is all you pay to move in for
December. Get in on the action
a. cell for more informttion. Call
814·882· 7670 Ttt"ry Htle, Ret.
Mngr. E.H.O. Managed by US
Shetter Corp.

Mercliandi:;e

2 Bedroom. nopett. CrownCity

0

304-175-1080.

2 Badroom fully furnithed .
Aduhs only. All utiliti81 paid
exc~t g11 a el1ctric. Owner
poyo wot., &amp; -•go, mowing 51 Houstihold Goods
and trash pldcup. Ceble TV ' - - - - - - - - - - available Ph. 614-448· n93.
•·

Oh. Ph . 114·251-8484

875-1130 aft• l _p.m .•

Oakwood apts. modern 1 bedroom units. $186.00 plua utili· Fireplace ' inaert glass d0on,
tlee, no pets, single person 2-spead blowers. good condipreftlfred C1ll 614-446-2056 · tlon noo.oo Ph. 814-245after 6p.m
9153 efter 5pm.

2 bdr mobile home, Upp..- River
Ad. 1ft mile from Gallipolis. 2
children accepted Call 614-

Ph. 614·446·4292.

tt&lt;OOd goo mlleogo. 14150. 304-

Washet~,

6·pc. Wood living rDDin auhe
t399 00, 4 -pc. leigh bedroom
suite t8i39.001 We alto hiVe
pohery. Mollohan Furnrture &amp;
Appllences, Kanauga, OH Ph.

'".

4 eye .• I eptld, em-fm c. .itte.

OOOD USED APPLIANOEI

446-1171

6:00 II!IlCil aCIJ®liD@ @
News ·
C1J Big Valley
Gl Mazda Sponslook
fJI CV Jefferson•
Cll 3-2-1. Contact [CC).
(jj) Secret City
IBI Facts of Ute ,
6:05 (!) Andy Griffith
6:30 II !Il @ NBC News
Gl NBA Today
Cll a C1J ABC News
fJI CV Hogan's Heroes
Cll Doctor Who
® 1D GJl CBS News
(jj) Body Electric
@ Good Time•
6:35 Cll Safe a1 Home In Swoo.
7:00 II !Il PM Magazine
ffi Hardcast le and McCor-

un Dotoun pit~!••· •aoo.oo. •
304·575-291 1.

614-441-032~ .

18 cu. ft. upright freezer, cycle
ct.trost. Corbin &amp; Snyder Fumlturt 966 Second Ave Ph.

EVENING

Ullwtl lty ClAY L pOUAfll .

Roorrano- t.Horo of 1M
0 lour
, ocrambled -da be-

12/9/86

nice.

1 .':7~5=·4~1~8~1~---~~~--·~ · :

Uald Fumh:ure: Weiher &amp;
dryer, gu rtngt, wood tibia &amp;
2 bench II, beds. drn. ., wood
wardrobe. 3 mil11 out
Bulavllle Rd . Open 9AM to
I PM, Mon. thru Sat.

Complete Seart Winnie the Poo
Nursery Colltc1ionl
Bed. dresser. lamp, *"sing ,
table, ceiling light, wall
himgings and cunaina. Never
betn used $2150.00 Ph .

tnd dr l vu

S@ \\~M. -l£ t.trs· WOit
••••

'::~:t.~'
low

f1 ,450.00, 304·175·1758 ..

no.

New Moped, 1400. 1970 Buick

446-0608.

lookl

The Daily Sentinei- Page-1 1

Television
Viewing

1971 Ch..,y o11ort whool l!oOo
Sldo SliP pldtup. 310 IKihl, PI,

a.

dry... •etrigeretort,
rang11 . Sk.tggs Appllencet,
Uppet Rlvtr Ad . betide Stone
Creat Motel . 1!11•·. .6·7391.

BORN LOSER

Truck• for Sale

.

P0me.oy- Middleport, Ohio

304·481-1721.

up to t1Z&amp;. Hid•·•-btd• t380
to tl91. Aactlntra UZ&amp; to
13715. Lampa ua to •us.
Dinettea 1108 and up to 14915.
Wood tlblt w -1 chaire Ull to
1785 . Detk •100 up to 1371.
Hutchee ••oo tnd up. Bunk
blda complete w-maUrtltta
f~Siond up to 03)1&amp; . loby btodo
1110• 11715. Mlnr•••orbox
springs full or twin tl3, firm
f73. end $83. Queen lett 1225,
King $350. 4 drewer ch11t tel.
•e9. Oun catHnets
1D. &amp;' 12
Gas
electric
range J37 . leby mattr81111
136 • t415. led tram•
t30 6 King frame •so. Good
se6ection of btdroom tuitea,
metel cabineta, headboards •30
and up to tl&amp;.

r.n. or

.. ,.

home c:IMI I far ule or trtde

Ullto .ae1. Tobloo 1110 onct

o,.....,.

'

,both
_ 1873
1Nhl11 hlghl "···· ·
good cond. 1971 motor

Sofu and chlirt priced from

614 -446·1324.

Nice 2 bedroorn ept. refrig. &amp;
stove 6 water furnished. No
pets, 4'/t mllu from Galllpollt.
t210.00 p• mo. $50.00 dep·
osit. Ph. 014· 446-8038.

Professional
Services

Starks Tree and L.ewn Servic,.
Hedges , shrubs , bu.thn
trimmed, lendscaping, stump
and leaf removal, 304-576·
2842 or 678-2010.

Ernplovmenl

for Sale

Renlols

Cash pa1d. Pre 1950's. Single or

whole collec11on Call Ma rc end
Ellen Fultz 614-992-2101 days
or 614 -692 -2481 evenings and
weekends.

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

23

QUILTS

BOUGHT-SOlO

51 Household Goods
LAVIllE 'S FURNITURE

293 8

... .

Tuesday. Dece111ber 9, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

LAFF·A·DAY

Lost and Found

..·'

,_

MX

E Z Z Q . -

C D

M .1
J)

E Z Z (l

D

JDLAEZ
LYM .II'M./ U

·x T D R

Yettertlay'e CI')'Jitoquote: IT IS ALWAYS INCOM·
PREHENSIBLE TO A MAN THAT A WOMAN SIIOULO
REFUSE AN OFFER OF MARRIAGE. - .JANE AUSTEN
12 :30 • !Il (jJ) Late Night with
David letterman Tonight' s
guests are Peter Ustinov,
George Miller and Ham·
machor Schlemmer. (60
min.) In Stereo

C1J Bet1 of Gruudto
Gl Top Rink Boxing from
Atlon11c City, NJ 190 min .)
IAI.
(IJ MOVIE: 'Night of the
Following Day'
Cll ABC News Nightllne
II Cll More Real People
@ MOVIE: 'Fateo'
@ MOVIE: 'Tho F.B.I.
Storv'

12:40 ID @ MOVIE : 'One in a
Ml)lion: The Ron leFio•e
Stoty'
1 :00 [J) Jack Benny
Cil Dick Cavett
• CV Wild, Wild West
1 :30 D !Il Today 's Business
ffi Dobie Gillis
2;00 [J) 700 Club
G) Mazda Sportslook IRI
fJI ffi MOVIE: 'Carnal
Knowledge'
1D Cl1l News IRI
2:30 Ill SponaConter
@ CBS News Nightwatch
Joined Ia Progrua

'

•

.

�Federal mediators
.enter Kroger dispute
By ALISON GRANT
DAYTON (UP[) -A possi·
biP strike· by clerks at 28 ,
Kroger Co. stores in Dayton ·
and the Miami Valley has
been av erted with the inter·
vent ion of federa l mediators,
who have arranged for labormana gement negotiations
Wednesday.
Gene Wits ken. president of
Lilcai1099, said he received a
telegram Monday from fed·
era! mediator w. Kenneth
Evans and Nicholas Fidandls,
chairman of the Joint LaborManagement Committee In
Washington . D.C. , asking the
union to delay strike action.
" It wa s requested tha t we,
alon g with th e Kroger Co.,
postpone an y strike or lockout
or pr eci pitous economic ac·.
tion until "the Joint Labor·
Mana gement Committee and
the federal mediator are af·
forded the opportunity to
provide whatever assistance
is dee m ed necessary. : ·
Wit sken said.
Kroger officials co uld not be
reached for com ment on the
talks. wh ich have been set for
Wednesday at an unspecified
loca tio·n.
Cier·ks and checkers at 28
area Kroger stores voted
774·642 Saturday to reject a
coot ract offer that calls for a
36-cent- per·hour wage reduc·

lion phased in over three
years, and a reduction in
holiday days from live to one,
according to Travis Mitchell,
a steward with Locall099.
Clerks and checkers voted
to strike by an even larger
margin- 894-507- but were
told to continue reporting to
work because the union 's
international board requires a
two-third's approval for a
strike vote, Mitchell said.
Because of the international
pcsition, Local 1099 officials
apparently were left with the
decision on whether to go
ahead with a strike.
That pcssibility has bee n at
least temporarily delayed be·
cause of the action by the Joint
Labor-Management Committee. The co mmittee was set up
by the Labor-Management
Relations Act in 1947 and
intervenes in food industry
labor disput es to fend off
potential strik Ps, Witsken
said.
The joi nt committee cit ed
the Kroger wage and benefits
dispute "as one ~f the critical
negoti atio ns fo r 1986,"
Wit s ken Sal'd ·
The negotiations will inelude Kroger and Local 1099
officials, Evans, Fidandls,
and William Olweli. head of
the internal ional. UFCW's col·
I t · bargai'ning unit
ec rve
·

Weirton Steel announces organizational changes
While recognizing Weirton's
WEIRTON , W.Va. (UPI ) Initial
success In three years as
Weirton Steel Corp., the nation's
largest employee-owned com· an .employee-ow ned company,
pany, Monday announced plans the McKinsey study Identified
to Invoke major management numerous areas that need
organizational changes to ensure strengthening.
Its survival.
The ability to effectively bring
. "The ccmpany must funda- on line new facilities provided for
menially change the way it in the long- range capital plan
operates If we are to compete . headed the' McKinsey lis t. Weir·
successfully In an Industry that is ton also must upgrade product
undergoing radic al change·, .. quallty. exeeute on-time custo·
Weirton Steel Chairman Robert mer delivery and Improve Its
Loughhead said Monday.
overall cost position in all pro·
The restructuring will mean a duct lines.
·
reduction In 'he steelmaker's
Additionally, the study recom·
salaried workforce of at least 160 meilded. Weirton must develop a
people The company, which ha s customer-Jocused mark etin g
has more than 8,000 employees, capability; achieve productivity
said It didn't know how many gains and improved relation·
may be affected over the long ships through a participative
n
management style; and make
ru Weirton Steel has had a string changes that accomplish a lean,
of profitable quarters since going
respcnsive
to employee ownership In Janu· to
support Itsadministrative
operations. staff
ary 1984, splitting . away from
Am~ng other • re~ommenda ·
National Steel Corp. But the tions; tedu clng management
profit margin has dwindled this layers where appropriate, Up·
year. The company has said it grading of technical and analyt i·
needs huge amou nts of cash to cal supper!; increasing the r erenovate the decades-old North·
ern Panhandle steel milL
~~~MM
The planned changes follow a lt N0¥1 OPEN fOR'THE
comprehensivestudyoftheman- !II
agement organizat ion by the 1A CHRISTMAS SEASON
consulting firm of McKinsey &amp; 1A Poin 11 ttias, Holly TrHI, Liie &amp; Cut
.Co. Loughhead said the recom· !
Christmas TrHs, foliage Plants,
mendations were accepted and
Hanging Boskets. ChristiJias
strongly endorsed by the Weirton
Wreaths, Candle Arrangements,
board of directors.
Grawellankttl &amp; Spray•

Witn esses testified at last
week 's trial that Drescher des·
cribed to them how he killed
Saint Deni s. saying he shot,
stabbed and beat the victim. One
witness said Drescher told· him
he was the triggerman because
Reid "lost his nerve."
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So Where Is Kermit?

1
•

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I
Kerm1t Wa ton can be
found on Fridqys &amp;.
Saturdays at

THOMAS CLOTHIERS

Gallipolis
·:clothien tal1ii11 i. Csnll1mrn"

•

Taste breakthrough/
generic price!

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12mg"tar;' 0.9mg nic ctme av. pe1 cigmtte by FTC method

c:

Phihp l.lorn1 1nc 1986

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth, And Low Birth Weight.

'

v

•

enttne

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

992-6687

,..,._
.IJ

State Auto

Colftlllllllel

Vol.38, No.1 53
Copyrighted 1988

\

.

3 Sections. 28 Pogeo · ·25 Conto •

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 10, 1986

'

~

A Multimedia Inc. Newap1per

Pomeroy Chamber ends year on sound basis
By l\IANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Pomeroy &lt;;hamber of C!lmmerce wiU end 1986
"In the black" according to President Blli Nease:
This was one of the chamber board of directors'
goals for the year and was accomplished "without
asking for next year's dues ," said board member
Jennifer Sheets.
,
Renewed as board members for the coming
year were Sheets, Tom Reed, Joe Clark and Ron
Ash. Dick Warner was appointed to a two-year
term, replacing Hank Cleland, .whose term
expired. The terms of board members Blli Nease,
Mary Powell, Bruce Reed, Paul Gerard and Paul
Simon will expire next year.
Sheets reported on the success of the recent Big
Bend Varlet Ies show, which afforded the chamber

in excess of $1,000. Special thanks wete extended
him he has found someone willing to provide the
from chamber to Robert Hoeflich, ·director, and · capital needed to pay for· initial· operating costs.
Aardvark Sound. All chamber members said they
including the purchase of liability Insuran ce.
are hoping for "future shows."
.
Presenting the program for the meeting were
Thanks were also Issued to Paul Simon for
Jim Tompkins and Chloris Gaul of Southern Ohio
supplying the Christmas decorations for the parks
Coal Co. The two described SOCCO's mining
on Court Street.
facilities and outlined plans fo r the future.
It was announced that a dinner dance will be
Two drainage fa cllit les are to be constructed in
held Jan. 24 ill Royal Oak Park, with Pizza Hut to · the near future, and, according to Tompkins,
provide refreshments. Admission will be' $15 per
plans now Include the placement of two additional
couple and music will be provided by Sugar Bear.
longwalls In 1991, one at Meigs Mine No. I and the
Nease repcrted that efforts to secure ferry
other at Raccoon Mine No. 3 in Vinton County.
service during the time the Pomeroy-Mason
Two longwalls already operate at Meigs Mine No.
bridge Is closed are at a standstill. Nease said he is
2.
awaiting "an accurate estimate" from ferry
SOCCO employ s 1,600 people at the Meigs
operator Doc McCoy, on the costs to build the
division, and the figure ·should r~nge between
landing at Clifton, W.Va. Nease said McCoy told
1,500 to 1.600 through 1991, Tompkins said. Of the

'·

.·. ~. '

.. ..-:-

By HELEN THOMAS
UP! White House Reporter
WASHINGTON iUPI)-Presldent Reagan , struggling to end
the Iran arms-Contra aid scandal
engulfing his administration, refer red to an old phrase from
another Republican White House
debacle to describe It - •·smok·
lng gun."
Reagan told a group of GOP
governors Tuesday tha t he
picked up the term. pcpularized
dur ing the Watergate sca nda l,
from Attorney General Edwin
Meese, who used the phrase
when he told the president about
the diversion of secret U.S. arms
profit s from Iran to I he Nicaragua n Contra rebels.
New Jersey Gov. Tl!omas
Kea n told reporters Reagan
" used the words ·smoking gun:
He knows there's something
wrong,. no question about It something wrong In the transfer
of money. They are try ing to find
out who did what In the transfer
of money."
The term "smoking gun" was
used during 1974 by House
Judlelary Committee members
In referring to irrefutable evl·
dence that would link President

Nixon directly with the Watergate coverup. That evidence
eventually was found on a tape
recording made in the Oval
Office.
Reagan has lrled to maintain
distance from the current scandal , arranging to meet tciday with
newly elected members of Con·
gress, planning to sign the
Human Rights Day Proclamation and to meet with Soviet
dissident Anatoly Shcharansky.
The president has acknowl·
€\iged his Involvement In the
covert sale of weapons to Iran but
denies any knowledge of profits
being dlirel'ted to a Swllls'aceount .
for the Contras at a time wllen
U.S. military aid to the rebels
was illegal.
.
"I have a strong feeling of a
man who desperately wants to
get the facts before the American
people," Kean said :Tuesday.
"But there's a legal problem "
because Investigations are under
way.
"He recognizes the fa ct that
this Is all-consuming- that it Is
taking people's eye off the ball,"
Kean said.
White House spckesman Larry
Speakes Indicated Tuesday that
Reagan might consent to be
questioned by Investigators delv·
ing lrito the scandaL
But Speakes refused to recon·
clle contradictions resulting
from congressional testimony
about when Reagan first gave
approval for the secret arms
shipments, saying all such questions will be left to the
Investigators .
"Recollections of meetings
where no reccrds were kept can
differ," Speakes said In offering
a possible explanation for the
contradictions. "Certainly, the
pres ident Is entitled to an oppcrtunlty to refresh his memory."
That pclnt. he said, will come
"I n due course" If Reagan Is
approached by Congress, a pcssible special prosecutor or a
presidential panel reviewing operations of his own National
Security CounciL

COLUMBUS (UPII - Infamous mental patient William
Milligan was being held in a ma ximum-security psychiatric
hospital today after being returned from .Fiorlda .
Milligan, 31, who ha s been diagnosed as having 24
personalities, was returned to Columbus Tuesday night , five
months after he walked from the Central Ohio Psychiatric
Hospital. a minimum security fa cility .
Alter being processed at the Franklin County jail Tuesday
night, Milligan was taken to the Timothy B. Mor itz Forensic
Center, a maximum-security facility In Columbus.
He Is scheduled to undergo at least 30 days of treatment and
evaluation at the Moritz center before appearing In Common
Pleas Court on charges of leaving a stale mental Institution
without permission and violating parole on a 1975 theft
conviction.
He was arrestetl in a suburban Miami bote! Nov. 20.
Milligan was found Innocent by reason of Insanity of three
rapes on the Ohio State University campus In 1978 and has been
housed In various mental institutions since then. ·
Milligan claimed, in a videotape left tor the Columbus media
after he !!!leaped July 4, that he fied for his life. He criticized the
administrator of Central Ohio Psychiatric Center for overruling
his doctor on tbe drugs used In his treatment.
Meanwhile, pollee In Bellingham, Wash., want to question
Milligan about the disappearance of a 33·year-old Bellingham
man they beileve hns been killed. According to witnesses,
Milligan was acquainted with the missing man and lived near
him for a tim£: last summer.
·

Regular &amp; Menthol,
Kings&amp; 1005

11111t II~PP'QP' ·f'l Dlllll'nt a• ""~'1"!:1 1111·~1 "&lt;:·11 c~oc,

lol'!"ntdll.,-!ll !n. •~2Mil0 l •l~l·l f t 11 U1~ 11)!ol00 S.•·
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ntr"""IO '"~I(',..,..,,.,...., FIC t ~ "~I Mt\10 Dt I"'&gt;H II Cal11~•1
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St• o!ll'HI Dtol~"'rf OI '"MII'Itl Ct'! &lt;,(fii O'~I-l!lf ll'l

PICK-~

Clear tonight, wltll a
near 28. Partly cloudy Th1on1-l
day, wllh hllhs between
and 48. The probability
precipitation Is near
through Thursday .

•

Milligan back in Ohio;
awaits tests, hearing

, c· . 1"0*• ~ '''""•• "llem~"'l:l ~..'""" u 'o:ltlo! ""Oli:f'"l:lll• J•
'ill!~ .lc'T'!•IIIIIMI• I:':N1011'4b\Oil L!IIJoU:-l!' i '6U2310o!ll0 S..r~;1

,,.., t!llf

You just won't find a
better value for your in·
surance premium dollar
than a Homeowni!~S
policy from the S~te ·
Auto Companies. As an
independent agency representing Slate Auto,
.we offer truly outstanding protection packages
tor houses, apartments ·
and condominium units.

Cam ·rid e
blowsawa
etition!

11101-NA 111$1,/R.Jitl CO ct 1'14 1~*"'1 S\Mf Ollftll 1~1 "'t tO"'DI·ICI •I~
""1M 0'!11 SWe 11101(10&lt;~ 10 ! JM '' a.JIIIO'•I e.l ~,o•ofl; tnt CWtl'l ~I I

~~·c tC"

444

I

President Reagan

.,.,.a"&lt;t.•O• J •l'~
s:.~•r ot 0"-o Otor....,r o1 ~VI'Itl tn •ca•t :t c;o..,~,.r.c:t-Tnt,.,
ll!'• 4 'ltll s.,gr "f'IWil r:1 1'1,o•I1Ce 01 r!lt Stttt 01 O'le ""'101' cf't • n""'

11 19!5

·Daily Number

0710

-

,.,,,_ 111(1

...,, ~"'~*rt

Days1'til
Christmas

15.

,',

ilfXl'IS "IJ! S•oo:IIXIlOO ·loUMI5o! OO E.\ll'l!M"'n SH,S!IIIOO
IN WITNESS '/h1fii!QI 1"" ' l'e'1!Aill&lt;ill!oCIIlei:l
CI~HII...,
~ 10 111
• I':I•Ca~.~c., 00.11 Ill teat a"O ~ G.a&lt;QIIfl~ s,ojll r1

;•~4:1 'll'

· Among changes recommended
for the top management structure is the addition of a chief
operating officer repcrting to the
chief executive officer with di·
reel respcnslbillty for operations
and other function s.
Loughhead ~aid work will
co ntinue over the next few weeks
in completing the new top management structure. He said part!·
clpative management will con·
tinue to be a keystone of the
.,

S

Ohio Lottery

f[=~~~~~~~~~~

1.600. 22 percent areMeigsCountians, with Athens:
County at 25 percent and Gailia and Mason·
Co unt les both at about 13 percent.
Tompkins described relations between labor:
and management at the Meigs division as"excellent," however, nat ional issu·es, such· aS:
acid rain, and the local Issue of subsidance, 11:
resu It of longwalling, could affect future plans for.
the division. If litigation over longwalllng
becomes too costly, or if the Ohio Department.ot
Natural Resources should decide not to Issue.
Iongwali permits to SOCCO, Meigs· coal industij.
could be brought to a halt .
, .. :
On a dally basis, said Tompkins, "45 percent o£
coal mined at the Meigs division comes fro~
Iongwalllng by 9 percent of the company'~
division workforce."

Reagan may open·
self to questioning

1977-7!1.

·

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

tbrough
the "gaqga leader"
-cforce
cncept;
establishing
performance evalu ation 'system and
greater management accou nta bility for results; and autpmat·
ing a significant · pcrtion of
clerical tasks.

A summ ary of the McKinsey n
findings was presented Monday . ill
at informationa l meetings with
SYRACUSE. OHIO
l'l
Open Daily 9 to S, Sunila(t to5
employee groups and the lnde· ~PH . 992-5776'-&lt;!:i:la l:.Sl!lil

MOUNDSVILLE, W. Va .
IUPI ) - Marshall County Pro·
secutor Thomas White says he
must map out a new stra tegy in
the Janu ary 1987 murder trial of
a second Hare Krishna malcont·
ent accused of killing a fellow
worshiper thr ee years ago.
White says the first defendant.
Thoma s Dr escher , openly
bragged about the 1983 slaying of
Char les Saint Denis. but the
second Kris hna charged, Dan
Reid, Jl . Los Angeles , generally
was retice nt about the matter.
Reid Is sched uled to stand trial
Jan. 13 in Marion County Circuit
Cour t.
Drescher, 37, of · Ravenna,
Ohio, was convicted of murder
Friday by a Preston Coun ty
Circuit Court jury. Facing a life
prison term , he will be sentenced
Dec . 15.
Whit e said Monday that he will
have to approach the Reid tri al
somewhat differently s ince there
is testimony available from
wit nesses who heard the defend·
ant discu ss the alleged murder.
"We have less admissions ,"
Whil e said. "There was not as
much bragging (from Reid co mpared to Dresc hen ."
Saint Denis vanished on June
10. 1983. His body has never been
recovered.
Stat e and Marshall County
author ities un earthed a human
skeleton last Monday In a wooded
area oft he Krish na commune but
an identifica tion has not been
made.
.Krishna leaders have been
adamant that th e body ccu id not
be Sai nt Denis . They quoted a
search warra nt as saying the
body was that of a white male
known dea d during the period

,#

!
!
J

Weirton,Steel 'organization.

sponslbility of the hourly work

;:::::::::::::::::::::::~p~e~n~d~en~t~S~t~ee~i:w~o~rk~e~r~s~U~n~lo~n~---_1~~~-~~~M~~~~~.a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~======================

2nd Krishna
trial planned

(ho

Tuesday, December 9, 1986 .

.Pomero~- Middleport, Ohio

Page- 12- The Qaily Sentinel

Appeals _
court
upholds ...
decision
A decision and judgment e,ntcy .
affirming a previous declslon In
Meigs County Common Pleas
Court by Judge John BacoR has
been filed In Fourth District
Appelate Court ii\ the case of
Meigs County Sheriff Howard E.
Frank versus Meigs CouRty
Sheriff Department Employees
LocallOIIOo\, et.al.

GIANT - A giant yellow poplar tree has been
cut on what Is known as the Highley Property In
Rutland Township. Melp Extension Service
Agent John Rice reports that the tree, alter being
topped, was stUI '7G feet In length and It measured
more than five feet In diameter at the base.

Eugene Facemyer of Facemyer Lumber Is
pictured with the logs which came from the one
tree - some 4,600 board feel of lumber. Rice
reports that the normal yellow poplar produces
only ahout 300 board lect .of lumber.

Information gaps plague panel
after witnesses invoke rights
By NEIL ROLAND
WASHINGTON (UPI ) - RIchard Secord, a retired Air Force
majo r general, has become the
fourth person to refuse to teestlfy
before the Senate Intelligence
Committee - a day after he was
Identified as having a central
role In the administration's secret negotiations with Iran.
Committee Chairman David
Durenberger, R-Mlnn., said that
Secord. who Secretary of State
George Shultz linked to "backchannel" discussions with the
U.S. ambassador to Lebanon,
invoked the Fifth Amendment
while appearing before the panel
Tuesday.
Secord, a former deputy assist·
ant defense secretary for the
Middle East , Is the subject of a
Justice Department criminal In·
vestlgatlon related to two Swiss
bank accounts said to have been
used to channel profits to thE"'
Nicaraguan Contra rebel s from
sale of U.S. arms to Iran.
Three others - former 'na·
tiona! security adviser John
Poindexter; Lt. Col. Oliver
North, a National Security Coun·
ell aide, and former State De·
partment consultant Robert
Owen- refused In recent days to
testily before the committee .
Administration officials have
said North and Poindexter
helped engineer the pcsslbiy

QUESTION OF IMMUNITY - The Senate lntelll·
gence Committee, alter a
fourth key witness In the Iran
arms-Contra aid controversy
took the Filth Amendment,
discussed but did not act on
,lhe question of Immunity for
witnesses Tuesday·, said
Chairman Dave Durenberger,
R-Minn. (UPI)
Il legal diversion of Iran arms. sale profits to the Contras.
Contra sources cited Owen as
their link to North.
Duren berger said the commit·
tee faced infor mation "gaps "

becau se of their refu sals to
testify .
"No one has proven yet that the
Contras ended up with any
money," he said.
Sen . David Boren, D-Okla.,
who is du e to become committee
chairman in January, said that
after hear ing testimony from
CIA employees, the panel "must
continue to track the chain ·or
where the money went."
"That becomes the heart of
deter mining whether or not via·
lations of law have occurred and
who violated the law," he said.
Secord, who headed the Air
Force mission to Iran from 1975
to 1978, ha s declined comment.
Associates at his VIenna. Va ..
company, Stanford Technology
· Trading Group International
Inc.. who also have been linked to
various aspects of the operation,
also refus€\1 to comment
Soon after leaving the gover nment In 1983. Secord worked·as a
private consultant to the P~ n ­
tagon on special operations serving without comp.;nsatio n
until August, a Pentagon spckesman said.
Secord has been tied to nearly
every phase of the scheme to sell
u.s. arms to Iran and divert as
much as $30 million In profits to a
Swiss bank for use by the Contra
rebels flght"ing to overthrow the
Nicaraguan government.

An appeal was filed by defend·
ants In .this case against Bacon's
decision to Issue a restraining
order against the sheriff department employees' local, and the
Ohio Counc!l 8, American Federal Ion of State, County and Municipal Employees :
The appeal charged that the
court order by Bacon, who was
assigned to' the case, was unsuppcrted by law and denied the
defendants due process of law. ·
Although two of the appelati&gt;
court judges, Homer Abeli .n!l
Earl Stephensen, affirmed Pac·
on's decision, the third JUdge,
Lawrence Grey, dissented .
However, It Is only necessary
that tw&lt;l of the three judge)
concur In the final entry.
•• •
•

Celeste kicks~•
off campaigr_l~
AKRON tUPI) - The family and friends of Gov. Rl·
chard Celeste can rest easy
this holiday season.
As the governor kicked oil ,
hi s "Buy Ohio" holiday shopping campaign Tuesday, one '
ccmmon Ohio ccmmodlty "he •
did not purchase was a lumiJof (
coaL
·
Celeste began his spending
spree at the downtown Quaker .
Square Mali, where he p~J:d .
cash for purchases of pewter, .
perfume. wood. leather. silver
- and food. Celeste apparently wanted to malnt~IJ!. '
some secrecy about his gift •
list. which Includes about 140
people. What specifically dilj '
•
he buy?
" More than I could affor~,"
he quipped as he paused amid ·
the more than 35 shops at t'he
malL "Spend lots of money,'' '
he urged shoppers between ·
choruses of "We Wish You a
'
Merry Chri stmas."

.

Lawmakers draft foreclosure relief legislation
to be funded by a 0.25 percent
CL~VEJLAND (UP!) - Legislation \hat would provide relief Increase In the real estate
transfer tax.
for people unable to make their
mortgage payments wfil be Intra- • The program Is modeled after
duced In the Ohio House and
a program In Pennsylvania,
Senate early next year, two state which- was recently renewed
lawmakers say.
after three years .
State Sen. Michael White,
'"Foreclosure Is a social
cancer." White said Monday
D-Cieveland, and state Rep. Troy
Lee James, D·Cleveland, each
during a hearing sponsored by
Introduced bills last year to help the Clevelnnd Council of Unem;
people facing foreclosures, but played Workers . "It affects the
the proposals died In family, the block, the communcommittees.
Ity, the clly and the state."
The lawmakers want to create
the Ohio Residential and AgriculDuring the hearing It was noted
tural Emergency Finance Corp., that 1. 342 forclosures on homes

i.

and businesses were flied In
Cuyahoga Cou nty Common
Pleas court In the first six months
of 1986.
''We feel strongly that If people
mainta in obligations during the
good times, they should lie
allowed to save their most
important possession - their
home," said Sebastian Lupica.
execu tive secretary of the Cleveland AFL-CIO Federation of
Labor.
James Walsh. business agent
for Plpefltters Locall20 said 800
of his union's 1,500 active
members had been unemployed

w

since March and might face
forclosure problems.
McKinney Huff, a plpefitter,
said he had been working In the
trade for. J9 yea rs, but has been
unable to lind work for more than
a year and a half.
In October. several weeks
before his home was to be sqld at
a abtrlff's sale, Huff, flied tor
llankrupt~.

know what else to 11o to
save ,my house," Huff said,
noting that lie could still lose his
home because his wife's job does
not · provide enough money to
make partial payments.
·· .
~
' ·~

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