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I"UIIIIIIUY -- IVIIUUI~IJUI l, VIIIU

PONS ALL WEEK

DOUBLE

SEE ..T,,DI

OR

PRESENT: CHRIStMAS PROMO '86

'

AND

A FREE VACATION!!

Ohio Lottery .

LOCALLY AND INDEPENDENTLY OWNED

14

LIVE LIKE A ICING GIVEAWAY WINNERS
BIG lEND FOODLAND

'

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NELLENE PETHEL
NEW HAYEN, WY

•

1) Grace Lewis- Langsville, Oh.
2) Suzie Sauva-Mason, WV
3) Burt Grueser-Racine, Oh.
4) G. D. Smith-Pomeroy, Oh .

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YES, IT'S REALRin~~~u~~~ri~gs
Pendants
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Make Great Christma$ Gifts

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EACH PLUS TAX

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Commissioners intend to impose sales tax
counties have been forced to $161,000. Revenue sharing funds
curtail needed services, lay off In the amoupt. of $190,000 have
needed employes, reduee service been eliminated. In other words,
hours by going to a three- or we now find ourselves with a
four-day work week, and, In budget deficit for 1987 In the
some cases, the complete eliml· amount of $351,000.
nation of certain vital. govern"We sincerely believe that our
ment agencies.
·
revenue sharing money has been
"We In Meigs County 'have also spent wisely In the past. Many
been faced with lhese problems. programs which we feel are
However, through the coopera· . Important to our county have
tlon of all office holders, we have been funded through this probeen able to keep expenditures at gram. Without these funds, funda minimum and make budget Ing for agencies such as the
cuts allowing us to maintain a Meigs County Soil and Water.
balanced budget each and every .Conservation program, the
year. We have now, however, Meigs County Extension Servl·
reached the point. where further ces, ihe Meigs County Historical
budget cutting Is not a realistic Society and the Meigs, County.
alternative If we are to continue · Senior Citizens program would
to provide those services that we ·have been Impossible. The true
beUeve to be essent.lal.
fact Is that without a new source
"Departmental and agency of revenue, funding for all of the
budget requests for 1987 exceed above-mentioned agencies wlll
the anticipated revenues by ~ave to be eliminated. Also,

· payment to the state's mandated employees . closing certain agen·
Crippled Children fund ($20,0001
cles and discontinuing funding to
and the county's mandated share others, or dO we face up to our
of Public Assistance ($46,0001
responsibilitles.and ask tht' peo·
pie lor additional tax money?
have been paid from these. funds
and will now have to be paid from
"We have chosen the IaUer.
the general ,fund.
. Primarily because we sincerely
"One of the primary responsl· believe It Is In the best Interest of
btlttles of a Board of County this county now.and in the future.
.
' be a
Commissioners Is to ensure thai To do olherwise
would
adequate funding Is available to short-term solulion to a long·
provide for the operation of the term problem.
government they serve and In the
"Having made. this decision,
event adequate funding Is not ' the question then became - what
available, to take those steps type of tax do we try to enact'? .
necessl)ry to generate the needed Income tax? Property tax? Or
revenue.
saies tax? We have chosen the
· "In accordance with that re- sales tax method, to become
sponslbllty, we have given this effectlve F.eb. 1, 1987.
matter our total attenllon over
"In 1981 the Ohio General
the last few months. We had a Assembly enacted House Bill 373
decision to make. Do we institute which authorized ~oun!y com·
a policy of further cutting ex· missioners to levy up to one
penses by such actions as going percent In permissive sales
to a shorter work week, laying off taxes. Seventy-four of Ohio's

eight -eight counties ·have now
enacted thi s tax. including sur·
rounding counties of Athens .'·
Gallla, Washington and Vinton.-,
"It Is p'rojected lhat this tax
wil! generate somewhere In the
vicinlly of $400,000 in 1987. This
will allow our county to continue
to operate wllhout drastically
culling services as well as
providing approximately $50,000
for repairs on county-owned
buildings.
"History shows that the
amount collected from this tax
should show a small Increase
annually, If this holds true, this
increase should also take care of
' any need at the local level for
years to come.
"There Is one thing of great
importance that needs to ·be
pointed out. This increased revenue will notln any way mean a
· (Continued on Page 11)

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OPEN HOUSE - At Sunday's open house there will be a
display of antique toys. Here Sherr I Hart places a Bye-lo baby in
a handmll;de blanket 111 an antique wicker doll buggy.

Meigs Museum plans
Sunday open ho~se
The traditional Christmas open house or the Meigs Museum
will be held Sunday, 1 to 5 p.m.
Special displays will Include .antique toys and dolls around the
Christmas tree. an exhibit of Florence Smith's paperweight
collection, a workshop on holiday crafts, and a display or wall
.
hangings by the Winding Trail Gar,den Club.
At 2:30 there will be a craft workshop by Granny 's Crafts,
Pomeroy, with three .Items to be made at a cost of about $2 for
supplies.
'
Winter scenes will be shown In the theater. Cookies and
candles will be for sale and refreshments will be served.

Care facility plans outlined
at commissioners' meeting

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPI) - A legislative
audll reveals that dally patient rates at Lakin
Hospital are too low to meet operatlng·expenses of
tbe state· run facility In Mason County.,
.
On every meal an employee bOught last year In
the hospital cafeteria, the audit showed, Lakin
lost $1.27.
·
The audit, one of several turned over thiS week
to the Legislature's Joint G:ommlttee on Govern·
ment and Finance, covered a three-year period
belw~n July 1, 1982. and June 30, 1985.
In the reporting period, auditors learned that
the maximum b!lllng rate for patients whose bills
are privately paid was not high enough to rover
dally operations.

FROM

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3 Sec1ions. 32 Pages
26 Cttntl
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Pomeroy-:-Middleport. Ohio. Thursday, December 11, 1986

By NANCY VOACHAM
Page and Elm streets In MiddleSentinel Stall Writer
port, through the sale of Ohio
Although the major ·topic In Industrial Development Re·
Wednesday's meeting of the venue Bonds.
Meigs County Commissioners
Brown explained lhat In 1978,
was their announced Intent to the Ohio Department of Health
enact a I percent sales tax, affirmed that two 1()(). bed facill·
effective Feb. 1, 1987, other ties or this type were needed In
business matters were also the county, however, only one,
considered . .
the Pomeroy Health Care Cen·
Dr. Harold Brown was at the . ter, was built. The Middleport'
meeting with a thumbnail sketch site, with sewage, water and out
of his plans to build a lOO·bed of the flood plain near Stonewood
skllled nursing and Intermediate Apartments, had already been
care faclflty In the vicinity or chosen.

Cltocolatt

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POINT PLEASANT
Five
weeks afer Mason County voters
cast their ballots In the Mason
County Commission race, the
results of that election have been
certified, with Democrat Tho·
mas "Tucker" Mayes a 16-vote
victor.
·
'
The recount of the race be- tween Mayes and· Republlcim
Earl Keefet, who was the apparent wlllner following the Nov.· 4
election, concluded Tuesday with
records In the Mason County
Clerk's · office showing Mayes
with 41004 votes to 3. 988 for
Keefer.
'
Although unofficial results fol·
lowing 'the election showed
Keefer a 53-vote winner over
Mayes, lh~ canvass conducted by
the Mason County Commission,
acting as a board of canvassers,
on Nov. 'to and Nov. 13 put the ·
race In a 3,959-vote deadlock.
Keefer lost ground In th&lt;&gt;
canvass when commissioners
discovered a 50-vote discrepancy
In Precinct 21. one of four
precincts with _polling places at
Ordnance Elementary School.
The tally sheet there showed
Keefer · with 122, votes while \he
form turned In to the county and
circuli clerks' offices by poll
workers gave him 172 votes. A
one-vote discrepancy was disco·
vered In another precinct and
Mayes picked up enough votes on
challenged ballots to tie Keefer
at the end or the canvass.
(Continued on Page 121

Plus

NESTLE'S
SEMI-SWEET

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A&amp;W lOOT IIEI
OUNGE CI'USH

•

Victor
named
•
·m race

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Voi.JI, No.164
Copyrighted 1986

By NANCY VOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
The Meigs County Commis·
stoners announced Wednesday
what Commissioner , Richard
Jones d~crlbed as "the rough·
est, damn . decision I've ever
made In the years I've been on
this board."
Starting Feb. 1. 1987, Meigs
Countians wjll likely pay sales
tax on Items purchased wlt,hln
the county.
Stated the commissioners In a
prepared message:
"During the last few years
much has been written about the
financial dlfflculti!!S being faced
by county governments through·
out !he·State of Ohio. State and
federal mandates, along with
. Increased cost of government
operations, have 'driven numer·
ous counties, many In our area, to
the brink of bankruptcy. Many

Ch._nstmas Eve

MT. DEW, P.EPSI. FREE •

$
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The GNM Nonh Amtrlc~n '(••tlon
lncludcs Four D.lyl •nd Ttvft NIQhtlol-

Cheese
·singles

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an flsl
Myrtle Beac,
. • -.

NATURE:S lrsT SliCED AMERICAN

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lonlgl!t,
a
chance of rain changing to ·
snow nurrlcs and a low ·
between 25 a.nd :10. Mostly
cloudy Friday, . with hlglui
between 35 and to. The probablllly of preCip It atlon Is :18
percent tonight and near zer~ ·

enttne

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lata•
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Top Sirloin
Steaks

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TENDERBEST USDA CHOICE BONELESS

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4-29-1-42-40-I 0

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KATHLEEN MORRIS
Long Bottom, WV

ARMOUR CANNED HAMS

Daily Number
531
Super Lotto

···--...,==

19'' COLOR TV WINNER
Sl 00 IN FREE GROCERIES

Days 'til ··
Christmas

Kat e Raup, representing the
bond counseling firm or Peck.
Shaffer and Williams, Columbus,
was at the meeting to explain the
sales procedure for the municipal bonds and to ask the commis·
sloners to pass a resolution of
Inducement. Passage of this
resolution gives Meigs Center
Llmlled, or which Brown Is the
general owner, assurance that
the county will consider Issuing
the municipal bonds for the
project, contingent upon endor(Contlnued on Page 12)

The report said, "fiscal years ended June 30,
1985, and June 30, 1984, our calculated cost per
patient day was $78.~ and $73.21." The maximum
billing rate for part of 1984, however, was $13.89.
The rate was raised In November 1984 to $64.~.
and, In January 1985, II rose to $73.21.
·
Lakin apparently Is violating a state law
Involving the collectlon of bad debts, the report
showed.
,
According to the report, one patient failed to
pay for services after Jan. 1, 1985, and the bill
reached $11,71&lt;!.01 by June 30, i985. Auditors said
the patient paid the dally $13.87 rate, but halted
payment when the rate was Increased Jn January.

Auditors said the pallent had about $22,000
available to pay the bill.
·
While hospital officials .Informed the patient of
the Increase, the report said the Cabell County
sheriffs .office, acting as trustee for the patient,
said If the higher rates were paid, all the patient's
nloney would be spent.
\
'The audit Included comments by hospital
officials, who \said the faclllty has come Into
compliance with regulations covering bad debt
and per diem charges.
Lakin was opened In t926 to treat patients
suffering mental and nervous problems. It also
provides a residential treatment program for
emotlonally ·dlsturbed youths.

In a review of the meal situation, audilor:S
learned that employees paid an average of ·t'i
cents per meal last year ood 80 cent s In 1984. The
cost to provide those meals wa s $2.02last year a!l4,
$1.89 In 1984.
•• •
The policy conflicts with a state law preventlhg
employees from profiting from their emplQJl·
ment, the audit said. Hospital officials said til.l'
facility Is complying.
;.
The report said that or the 10 recommendations
In a previous audit, four had not been met. All
Involved accounting procedures In the busln~
office. The hospital ~aid Its small staff preventell
It from complying fully with them.
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t:ommenta..r
The Daily Sentinel
,

U 1 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

~lb

!Slm~ "'-''---r•~do=o

q,v

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher

. BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

So what if he
For John Bonifaz, a Brown Univer·
sity senior, the Reagan administra·
lion's disinformation campaign, possible illegal shipment of arms to Iran
and accompanying violations of congressional mandates lead to only one
possible conclusion.
Impeachment.
Bonifaz recently put together
enough signatures to get the issue of
Reagan's impeaChment included in·
the student government elections.
Bonifaz's youthful audacity was
based on what he termed Reagan's

lied?~

"shocking dlaregilrd lor international
law and .constitutional limitations on
the power of the presidency."
. Unfortunqtely, nooe of Bonilaz's
arguments make a strong case lor
Reagan's impeachm.ent. More important, I don't think the country could
withstand the trauma of another cOD·
stitutional crisis in the presidency so
close behind the Ni1on tragedy.
But Bonifaz's 'enthusiasm is not
misplaced. As Disraeli observed, "A
man who is not a Liberal at 1,6 has no
heart. A man who is not a Conserva-

tive at 60 'has no head." Bonlfaz's
heart got' intellectually involved in a
dialogue on the merits of the Reagan
presidency.
Whether or not Reagan lied about
the sub rosa Iranian arms-for-hiis·
tages deal is immateriaL And tbe situation is not remedied by John Poindexter and Oliver N~rth leaving their
jobs, or even - If it comes to that by the resignation of Reagan's alter
ego, Donald Regan (the real
president).
With Trumanesque bluntness, Rea-

· LEITE RS.OF OPINION are welcome. They .!i!.~ld be le-ss than m words
long. Allle1ters art' subject to edltlng and ll'llst be signed with name, address and
tel ephon e number . No WJsign«i letters wUl be published . Lehers should be In
goud taste, addressing lssut'S, not personaUtles.

Washington Window

Plenty volu~teer
for Iran probe

.

Letters
to
the
Editor
...
Thanks for the patronage
'

.1'be Meigs Marauder Yearbo&lt;ik staff would like to thank all
of. •.the local businesses and
pairoM who purchased ads in the
1987 Marauder.
xour advertising dollars help

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us preserve the high llghls and
the events of the year at Meigs
High School.
Sincerely,
Tracy McKinney
Editor

It's unbelievable

Dobelievable! Some might say
crazy, some might say dedl·
ca t~ ; but for lack of any other
word, It was de!initely
unbelievable.
'the goosebumps could have
been from the bone-soaking rain,
but ,no doubt It was lrom the sight
of &gt;10 motorcyclists and their
riq~rs; followed by a seemingly
endless convoy, moving through
Meigs County to ensure that the
children of the county will have a
ha ppier Christmas.
Needless to say, so many
pe&lt;)ple helped, both private clti·
zen$ and businesses, that time
and· space doesn't allow us to
nallll! them all hel'e, but it Is our
hop~ t bat all who did help, realize

how much It was appreciated.
Special thanks Is extended to
the Pomeroy and Middleport
police departments, for their
escorts, the bands for their
entertainment and last but not
least to Lenny and The Riverboa,t
Inn, because without a place to
hold such an event, lt no doubt
wouldn't be possible.
In closing we'd like to say we'll
all have lighter hearts at Christ·
mas, knowing every child has
something under the tree and
we'll see you next year!
Merry Christmas,
Brenda Davis
and the bikers
ol Meigs and
surrounding counties

NBA Standings

gan accepted full responsibility for •
the Iranian fiasco. "The b~ck stopll
here."
,
~
Even if Reagan deliberately lied, I
there are no constitutional remedies
for presidential lying, and the First
Amendment can even he construed to
protect the right of the press to lie and
peddle disinformatlon, which - lrail
institution that it is - the press occasionally has done.
Instead of telling pollsters they
don't believe the president (and who
cares other than George Bush?),
Americans need to focus on whether
Reagan acted improperly, unethically,
illegally,
criminall~
or
unconstitutionally.
We can dismiss improper and unethical conduct as any basis for con- '
gressional action. If the Iranian gunsfor-American-lives deal Is illegal,
Congress can do nothing about it except chafe at the bit and maybe pass a
law which - like the old one congressmen insist Reagan has broken --:
will he forgotten by subsequent presidents and violated again.
In his intractability on the,Iranian
arms con job, Reagan has demonstrated more eloquently than any
court that laws are subject to '
mterpretation.
By now, a national consensus has
concluded that Reagan lied. But so
what?
Presidents have always lied According to distinguished historian
Thomas A. Bailey, they often have no
choice.

Poland, and other forbidden
weapons to Iraq and Argentina.
The defendants claim their deals
were part of an elaborate plan to
obtain two Soviet T-72 tanks and
some SAM-7 sholllder-fired antiaircraft missiles and launchers ·
for the Pentagon. The Defense
Intelligence Agency has wanted
to study the metals and technology used in the Soviet weapons.
According to the plan, the New
York-based HLB was to sell the
guns and ammo to Poland and
Iraq, which is a military custo·
mer of both Poland and the Soviet
Union. The idea was to disguise
th~ U.S . government's
Involvement .
But a government informant,
who also happens to be a
competitor of HLB In the sale of
counterspy equipment, found out
about the scheme while he was
secretly helping a Customs Ser·
vice investigation of technology
transfers to the Soviet bloc. This
led to the defend a nt s'
indictment.
Sources say that Assistant U.S.
Attorney David Kirby contacted
the FBI and the DIA after
Schwartz first told prosecutors
that he had been working on the
two agencies' behalf. FBI and

Truth but not the whole
Every time I believe my movie."
credulity has been stretched to
"He wants you to believe that it
its limit someone stretches It was OK to send a few fire·
some more.
crackers to Iran as a goodwill
This time it was my conllden- gesture to the Ayatollah, but It
tiai source at the White House was a bad Idea to use the money
who did the stretching. His code from the sales to li~ance our
name Is "The Meeseburger."
brave freedom fighters in Nica·
"Do you believe the story that ragua - especially if you get
Col. North of the NSC was the caught at it."
only person In the White House
"Now can I ask about the law?
who know we were smuggling Did anyone violate it?"
arms to Iran and sending funds to
The Meeseburger's nostrils
the (ita!) contras (unital) at the started quivering. "That's for
same time?" he asked me.
the Attorney General to tell us.
"I not only believe it , I'm sorry after he conducts a thorough and
I didn 't think it up myself. complete investigation ."
Anyone who can run an under"Maybe. But he's the Presl·
the-table multimillion -dollar dent's lawyer, and has a vested
arms smuggling ring in the While interest in protecting the White
House can write a helluva yarn," House."
I told The Meeseburger. "The
"That won' t stop the Attorney
mov ie rights are wor th a General from finding out who is
fortune."
behind this das.tardly act, which
"Do you believe that Secretary took place 'in the White House
of State George Shultz is a rat?" within steps of Don Regan's
he asked.
office. I assure you the AG will
"Do you want me to?"
pursue this case even If the
"No, but I would appreciate It evidence leads to George Shultz's
if you passed It on."
bedroom."
I asked The Meeseburger,
"I'd still feel better if the AG
"When did the President know took a drug test."
George Shultz was a rat - before
"You're being too harsh on the
or after the arms shipments to Attorney General. He may have
some weird Ideas on the law ot
Iran were OK'd?"
"He !ound out afterwards the land but he's hell on wheels
but we suspected something when it comes to people who are
earlier when Shultz refused to.:r·runnlng money through Swiss
take a lie detector test, whlcli~!lank accounts from the White
showed he wasn't a tea m • House basement. TheAGwUiget
player."
to the bottom of it."
"Do you believe the President
"Suppose It Involves all the
knewaboutthearmstolran,but President's men sneaking
not about the money for the (Ita!) around the laws of Congress?"
contra's (unital)?"
"You have to understand
"What does the President want something. Nobody likes to viome to believe? After ali, It's his late laws passed by Congress.

"You've convinced me."

"Now if you won 't buy George

Danny

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C olle~e

7
7

HuDler IN,V.) - Numed Derek Alv~m
11-iKk-lhuJtlra.ck W1d field co~~.eh: aame d
Glean D11v1A U!lbltanl wr8;tllnl coach.
Ml&amp;rylluld- Named Joe KrhU h e~
foot Mil eoach.
.
Purdlle - N'amed Frd AkerM head
foot hall coach.
Utah - Named Tom Gudd tooth11ll
dtfenKiv e coor.Unalor.

6 .IIU 7, .ill l t,l
4~

A 10 .4-&amp;4

n

Dea~er

B

.-tt&amp;

s

San Aftlonlo

8 13 .318
6 It ,:1(10

1

Sa~rament•

Pad BiliiiiA'e.
LA Ral~ - Signed wltko r('t•t•lv e r
~••~k Patt1110n: phu.·l'd dcoffn"l\'f' end
Mike ~llit' IUid t-orn('f'ha«·ll. L.t&gt;i;IH Hay t'li
on bt,klretl rtt&lt; ern.
N\' Jets- Wilved llnt~ackHfhurle;
,f at k.'!on IUid delen~lve oPnd Eh•toi Frank...,
• SC. Loui-1 - Placed ' tl~thl end ,Jay
• NO\'IItek oft lnjured rt'Nervl'; ~l~edtlaht
end Cap Blt!lo
St.llltle - Sl11;11ed wid( recriH'I' 8)'rnn
" 'alker.

15 ' .f .tHI 10 K .536 ••&lt;:
II 9 Jilt H~
1~ 1!1 .M5 ~ ~l
10 10 sot S~
4 15 ,UJ II

Phoenix

lA CUppen
"ednC!Id!IY' !i ReNIIIt!o
Boston 1011, New !er-,;.ey M
Pblhulelpllla Itt lndlan11 m
WIIKIIlncton 108, New York IDS
Allaata l'l3, fhlt!atp &amp;S
Detroll: IOK. Sac:ranw•nlo 101
Mllwalllkee 118, LA l...ilken~ .,
n.ll• ISO. Po111and 121
Utah 11%, Dfonv•r 110
Houlll•n 111, PhoenP. lt9

Hockt,'
Recal led ~allr PI'IN
Sl&lt;l!rldt.'Wk'l frum BlnJ[hiUtllon nf tht•
1\HL.

College Cage Scores
Wli'dneK du,y '~

Ohio Rf-Kulls ,
Marli ht\11711, Ohio Vnl\' l'f'"lty 611
Wrl~~:ht !!I 116, Mlch· Deurborn 7i
.John C a~roll ItS, ll t&gt;ldoPiherg 6S
Ma.rleCill 65, Dt•nbion &amp;I '
Otttrllcln 94. Ohio Weslf')' wt 'ifi
Kenyoo 1M. WtlmlnJII;on iWI
F1nclar t1. Rio Grandt• Mi
Edlnhom tr11p-1. Dykop72
Calllernlll !&lt;It t Pa) 59, {entr:ll St 56

Porll•d at LA Clipper"' nl•ht

Sl Fran tt-1 !In d )

NHL Standings

,

~

·~

som

f~~ompMII fonft'f'l'DC~'

C:tlkttgo .. ..
. ....... Mli ,j Zl
Sm)lthc• Dl\'to;lon

RahM)n ~. HrldKt"'u1t•r St . 7:1
Calli hot on St, &amp;\ (0 or don 411
£'ott~ t-1, M alni~Pr,.,.q ueiKI I• 73
Columhla lli, Kin~ Point 69

Oowlln~ 67. Phil adt'lp tda Te~ tu,. 112

Fulrftdd8t, Marls! M lOTI

95

Lout~

2

Kan,v,. 5. Lo,. Aul•h"
Ct~IJI'IU')' I. Pltbhur(ll-1
N\

~

Toronl.ull, M'wohln~on ~

fhh IIlli G. Ruffalo ll
F..dmont.on 1, Wlnnlpt•lt 1
Thun.da,y ',. (ianu'N
N\' IKIMderN a1 Nf'* .lt·r~t)'. i U p. m.
NY Kl&amp;nJI:fflo at Monln•¥1. i : M p. m.

Van couvtr IU 80foilon. 1::U p.m.
at Phlladotlphla, i: :U p rn.
Mln1H"110t11 al Detroit, i : ~J p.m.

C'al,llllf)'

'1

lirtd._- ' KGu.qwr.;
Torn ..o al PJit ~j iJUrp. nltchl
Wlnnlpt'll' 1M F..dmunton. nlriM

•

t...

Al'l~tl'lff'i - 'ITadf'tl pllc•h,.r n cnnh.

POWI'IIarul m1Mr-51•a~ttwlnftf'l.. r 1\fl~l'
M'al.tt'"' to Sot111Uir for nojll'f plldler M11.11
\ 'ounr. lrl&amp;flrdflrM h~tNI'miUI ror••J DM• ·k

The.Daily Sentinel
(USPS

l in'\
AUJU"'II. Coli. &amp;'7, Ml'rt!er S1
Otn'ltl-!on !ill, Ersklfte 63
Elon 7'9, AIIIUillt! Chr~llan 71i
F1•rrum 115,1.yn~hhurA" il
fo' lorldu.M9, f1•ntral Fla. 54
Gl !"n\ Ul1• 107, Du.v~ &amp; Elkins 9:!
Kt•nnl'tiiiW ( 1111. &amp;.!. ( 1' 0. \\I'SII•,V an 61
lflnpood 119, VlrR!nlu Wt·~lt•yan 7~
LoullivUitoifl, Wt&gt;st('rn Kt•ntudt)' 1111
Radford .KqVIrp;lnla Military $1
South fur&lt;~11na
C'lladrl61
UNf-GrrMIHfioro ill " ''''rl'tl ~'
U,..C.( hurloU•• HI, " '.rurullna 63
Vlrlinl11 il:i. F.um Tl'n nt'Sii('(' Sl Sti
\\f"!'i l Uhl•rt)' A5, \\lu·f'thtJ II3

llshlnJt Compam / Mull\mrdl a. Inc..

PomNov, Oh io 45769. P h m -2156 So·
cond c 1as11 pos taJH' paid a! Poml.'roy.
Ohio
Mrmbrr: Un(IC'd Prf'Ss lnlrrnottonal.
Inland Dallv Prt'Ss A ~soc l at ton and t h&lt;'
Ohi o Nf'\1-'!ipaprr As~t()('la llon . Natlon&lt;tl
Advl'rllslnf!: Rl'pN'SPnt a ll vl'. Branham
Nl'W sp:ipf'r Sal~. 733 Third Avl'nUt'.

N('W York. Nrw York 10017.

'lll

Wl ~ hk.t St 81 . Mloi !d~l•dppi 'St : ~~~

,\ tldw PNI

Soulht-rn Ill

lllll

It,

rt•niraltl, CiDi hllllf' 86
SF. ,\ ll!ttiOurl U. Mlllwult'r Smith 89
'l'rM,.Yivllnl-. h. Franklin t!
~ll.lparldNo

\\l~t-onliiD

Local bowling

Mall SulwcrlptiOM
ln11ld e Melp County
13 Wook L
26 Weeks ,

..... .................... $17.29
.. ... .. .... ........... 1.14.00

52 Weeks . ........ .. ........ .. ...... .... . 166.~ 6
Ouhllde Melp County

13 Weeks ............................... $18.20
26 Wooks . .. ........................ 13510

No\' . 19 , 1986 ·

NITE OWLS
Team
Kul N Kurl .. . ...... . ...

Ft11.
....

•14 ...... .. ....... ...... ... ...... ........

. .f()

.. .. ...... 58

Jim Mink's Ch(lv.·Oids.................. .56
Pharmacy North .... ... .....
.. .... .52
Sears. Pomeroy /Middlt"port ..
..... 51
J 's Ex.xon ......... ............................ 50
Gall ~ry Ha ir Arts .. . .... . ..
.. .. . .50
Wha le-Y's Used Cars &amp; Parts .
.,... 48
Duk(&gt; truC'klnli( ........... .. .................. .47
Rio Mini Mart ..... .... . ....
.. ... .47
Kmart .. ........ ..... .... .... .. .
.. ... .42
Jeffe rs Trucklnp: &amp; Exc .......... .. ...... .. 35
Qui ck Ri c k 's .......................... .34
IND GA ME: Chris Bailey, 2!16, 181;

Janel Duffy, 177. IND. SERIES: Chris

Haggy, 458: TEAM GAME : Gallery Hair
Arl9. 647; Whaley's. 628; Quirk lUck's,
607; TEAM SERIES: Gallory Hair Ar!s.

*rrrrr

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New Orleans race
Oct. 16-18 in 1987
By United Press Jnternatlonal
The Grand Prix nu La New
Orleans will~ staged Oct. 16- 18.
1987, on downtown city streets
near the Louisiana Superdome .
Admission will be $20 for the
three days of racing. The 2.1·
mile, nine-turn course · will be
enclosed by fencing and lined
with concrete barriers.

52Weoks ... , .............. ............ 167.60

BULLETIN- AID

*

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•

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*

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CHIISTMAS nfES
SllECT YOUW OWN
Cut it ""1 II,. IMfort
Chrhm-, '12.00 any lizt.

Ntwtll'1 Chrimnal Trtt Form
Hontlnt ladl ld. Mason
304-7l!· 371 or 112-2 •

"Remember when Donald Regan was a
KNOW-IT-ALL!?"

(

..

(Conference)
Team
W L PF
Belpre..... ........................... 0 !66
Meip ............................... ! 0 2'18
Atexander .................... .. . 3 0 215
VInton County .... ............... 2 1 003

PA

m

216
1193

201

FederaJ-Ho&lt;1klng................ 1 2 181 183
NelsonvUie-\'ork... ............. l 3 2:80 300

Mm .................................. o 3 134 212
Trlmble .. ................. ;......... o 3 IH IllS
Wellstua ........................ .. e 3 Ill 1106
Tuesday's retiults
5~ •. Trimble 4i
Alexand~r 73, Miller 61

Meigs

Belpre SO, Nel11onvlDe-York 00
VInton County 6'2, Wellston 63
Friday'~ lamES
Federal Hecldng at Wellston

,VIntoo Counly at Trimble
Meigs at Belpre
NelsonviUc Vork at Alexande r

•
I•
111
JJ
..
l

It Pays
To Advertise
CALL
992-2156

0o

FINANCING
AND

" L ..

FINANCING

ll~

1771: Wha ley's, 1731 : Duke Trucking, 1711.

No su ~!iC'r l pll o n s by mnll prrm!IIC'd In
arPas whr rC' h om~ c&lt;trriM' Sl'fVIC'C' !!i
available.

WeUstoo .... .'..................... .. o 3 172 106
Trlmble. .. .......................... o 4 12t m

00

•.,

n

RMIIIf'r ~
MI. North Dakota St. iii

SUBSCRIPTION RATE'l
By Carrier or Motor Route

wrrk .

MIU..-................................ 0 3 134 m

•

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\\' I.'S( Vlrdnla Sl , to, Cunt'itrd Iii
M't'Kt Vir-'"'" U. Vlrdt;tlu Teth -u1

Baii&lt;'V. 522; Peg Houdash(&gt;lf , 467; Br(&gt;nda

Subscr\bt&gt;rs not d C'S irlnJr to pay fh&lt;- ca r·
riN may r£'fTl lt In advance dlrcC't to
Th£' Doll y S£-n tin&lt;-1on a~ . 6 or 12 month
basi ~ . Crrdll will bf' r;;vPn rarrlf'rcach

Berry's World

rrrrr

POSTMASTER: Scond addrrs~ c han ~
t o Th&lt;' Dallv S&lt;'nlini"J, 111 Cou r1 St .
Pomeroy . Ohio 4!i71l9.

Onr WC'f'k ........ .. ........... ......... $1.25
Onr Month .. ...... ...... . ...... $!i.45
Onf' Yrar
. .. ... .. ........... $65.00
SINGLE COPY
PRICE
Dally .... .. ........... . .. . .... 25 Cent s

Shultz as the heavy in this whole
mess, would you consider Nancy
Reagan's maid as the one who
smuggled the arms to Iran•"
" Is that the direction you're
heading?" I' asked.
"The White House has to keep
all its options open. "

2'18
101
ISS ·
S8"'

~

n.

A Dlv~lon of Mulllmedla. In&lt;'.

lhroo_gh Friday . 111 Court St .. Pom&lt;'rav. Oh io. by lhf' Ohio Va\lry Pub-

337
193
161
381i

Jj

SKYUNE LANES
Monda~ ·

:m ue

,\tahwna H1. 1\rkM~a" 1G
,\lder"·Drclol t3. W.Va. \\C"~ Ie\'1111 90

14~9601

PubllshOO rvf'rV aftf'rnoon.

PF PA
tl5 193

South

,'-Jphra~kw II~.

Ba."rhllll

0
1
t
1
2
3

J)i

fenll'lll MrlhoiM"I /10, P!'ru Sl 72
O.Ptwl 1~1. Wl'li'll"f'rt Mlt·hla:ll.lllll
Kf'flyoo 11M. M'llmln~ on M

Transactions

(OveraU)
Team
W L
Alexander ......................... 3
Belp.......... .......... .............. 4
Melgs ................................ 4
VInton County ...... .. ........... 2
Fedt."''ai-Hocklng ................ I
Nel8onvWe-York ................ 2

Lt•hu.non \illll')' JOt ,'noravlun ill
l..rhl,ll'h 73, l'enn St iO
Ml'rc-yhul'l'il 95, l.aRochc• 9~
MerrlmiM k 90. Suffolk 6.'1
Nlthol .. 99, ~·un~·!ltl' r Sl. llti
POito:dam l-i t K5, O"Wl",I('O St. 71J
Rltt.r 7$, FDU·Madl11on 8-1
Suiiqueb~~r~na511 • .Junlllla 36
VPrmont 110, ll tu·vard 9:e
" 'wl(llw i ,l, N\' Mllrltlml' fi 'l
Wc'N imln lillor n , Grovt• ('II' n
W1'Nt C'h1 •"h•r 1~, Sldpptons hur~~; till

~ ~~

M'••dne.dlO' '~ lk~u K K

Newberry the defensive player of
the year.
.
In other boys TVC · action
Friday, Nelsonville-York (2-3
overall, 1·3 TVC) Is at Alexander
(3-0 overall, 3-0 TVC), Federal·
Hocking (1·2 overall, 1·2 TVC)
goes to Wellston (0-4 overall, 0-3
TVC), and Vinton County (2·1
overall, 2-1 TVC) goes to Trimble
(0-4 overall, 0-3 TVC) . Miller Is
Idle Friday ,
In Saturday action, Wellston is
at Jackson, Athens goes tQ.
Alexander, Federal-Hocking
hos ts Waterford, and Eastern of
Meigs goes to l'flilier.

Cri'orl(' M11Mn .fl, Towson Sl I,\
llu"~on 79, Muln, .. MachiWi 69

Edmonton!
.... , IIIII I :li J .~ 10!1
fliiJw:y ...... .. ... ...... II 12 I 't l 106 UlK
Wlnnlpt.,; .
.. ..... IS II '! :t! IO:t 9t
1.011 AnJt'lt-.; ,, .......... 13 13 '! ~ 12M 1:10
\ "l&amp;llt'OUVf'r ............. IIIII 2 Ill !It 11:1
Hanford I, St.

F..11st

3!5
Anna Murht. $2, S11.lvc ~·~lnu U
Army Ill. ManhaltllnVUit' H5

Norrlh Dlvi"kln
W I. T Ptto:. Gf c;,\
)olt . Lou~ ...... ... ...... 1! I! 4 1!11 Jt\! It\!
Tornillo ..... . . .II It ~ :ttl !I~ U
1\tlnn.?riu(a ..... .......... IJ 1:1 '! !4 1011112
Dt'tritlt .. .....
. .. 10 IS ~ \!4 79 Ki

The confidential informant
was Ben Jamil, owner of CCS
Communications Control Inc., a
New York competitor of HLB In
the counterespionage equipment
field. Jamil was Indicted in 1981
on charges of Illegally seiling
espionage equipment 'to Syria.
Guinea, Switzerland and Greece.
The charges were dropped when
Jamil agreed to become an
Informant for federal
prosecutors.
According to the HLB prosecutor In a letter to the judge, Jamil
provided "valuable information
regarding potential felony violations of federal export and other
laws and has done so at significant risk to himself."
CONFIDENTIAL FILE: The
latest country to experience the
stirrings of Moslem fundamentalism as preached by Iran's
Ayatollah Khomeinl is Jordan.
Intelligence sources report that
young people are particularly
attracted to the fundamentalist
dogma , and there have been
demands that the government
impose the strict Islamic legal
code. There is growing concern
in intelligence circles that the
fundamentalist Influence will
create instability lri the kingdom .

Rllttfton 1111

Alhrl~ht i ·l . Meo!tlldl

\hlf'll Conlercn~e

.. ..... it 1!1

.

~~.

all, having lost to SEOAL
member Marietta, 66-61. Belpre
has defeated Miller 67-32 ,
Federal-Hocking65-38, and Wellston 56-44 before the win over
NYHS.
Probably the two finest players
in the TVC, Meigs' 6- ~ guardJ. R.
Kitchen and Belpre s 6-3 Chris
Newberry, will both be on hand .
Kitchen ls the Marauders' outside threat ·While Newberry is
more of a scorer from t~e lane.
The two were both already
named the league's two top
football players, Kitchen the
offensive player of the year and

TVC Standings

COLUMBUS, OhiQ (UPI) Rich Wetkircher, who led Brilliant Buckeye North to its second
consecutive 10-0 regular season,
has been voted the United Press
International Class A coach of
the year.
Welskircher, whose Huskies
also qualified for the state
playoffs for the firs t time,
received 8 .of 41 votes cast by
Class A coaches from around the
state. Tim Boeckman of St.
Henry finished second with five
votes . ,
Others with more than one vote
were Ron Roesch of Berne Union,
Bob Olwln of Tiffin Calvert ,
Craig McCord o( Ayersviile,
Martin Montgomery of Area·
num, Kevin Fell of Delphos
Jefferson, Jim Massa of Cincinnati Country Day, Mike Ward of
Lisbon Anderson, Larry Rogers
of Cuyahoga Heights and AI.
Hetrick of Versailles.

Hartford -

LA Cllppen Jill, Sealllf! 94
Th11r&amp;day'11 Gaml'fi
flf'Yelllldallndtanll. 7:30pm.
Golde• State Ill Ho11Klon. II: 30 p.m.
DMIIWI at Utah, 9::10 p.m
San Antoni&amp; Ill SfoaUie, 10:30.p.m.
Frlday'N (lamt'll
Plllhwlelphhi.lll Ne• .Jer"l'Y· nl~tht
Sacrlllflt&gt;nto Ill Atlanta, nl~t.
W•linlllon Ml Df'troll, •lllhl
LA Lali.l'l'JO ».t Bo!ltvn, 11IJ1hl
fhl~qn at MliWII.IIkf'f, IIIJihl
Phof'lllll 111 Denwt•r , nl~~;hl

mak ing for another clitr·hanger,
but that won't be anything new to
the Marauders. Coach Mick
Childs ' Marauders have posted
four straight wins, but the last
two have went down to the wire.
Against Vinton Cotinty the
Marauders needed an ove~Ume
period and a crucial VIking
violation that cancelled the
game-winning shotfor a60-57win
and Tuesday edged Trimble54-46
In which Meigs led by only three
points at the two minute mark.
Meanwhile, Belpre clobbered
N~lsonville· York 80-60 T~esday.
Meigs has defeated the same
Buckeyes, 92· 74. Coach Dave
Wilcoxen's Eagles are 4·1 over-

Weikircher UPI
"A' Coach-of-Year

Foot hall
JniiWIIIpOIJii - SIJDt"d deh•nii!Y(' h llCk

7•11

Padfll' DlviHion

LA Laki!I'H
Si!llttle
Golden Slate
Portland

i\nnouncf'd RLIIIIntN!I

ol rear.

81rt

W L Pol: . fiB

13
II

rnlno,...lcMJUe

Manq('r Lob Kr em" ""Ulretlrc al the end

5

Mhtwttll. Dllihdon
DlliiMI~.

and

National Lnpe - Named K141r
Fe&lt;'ney Dlret1or ol M ed ia and Puhll~
Aflt.lntutd Ph,yUbl Coli IIIli Vh:e Prtwldent

'l \lt

Mllwau!U'e........ ........... H 7 .811
Delrall , .......... ........... t 1 .M3
Chluiii(O .................. ...... t 11 .n1
llldl••- .. ..................... t 11 .no
CleVtlan ..... ................. ll II .44-t
1We8lern CooferM(le

Tndrd lnllelder·ooiDel•·r

T11rtahull

plt cller Rldl Luecllen to Kan"P City lor
pltcllt'f'll Scott' Bankhead ud strve
Shiel~ and ou!Rtlder Mik e Klnli!l'll .

Phll . . phla&amp; .... ........... 13 6 .61\4 W•hlnatoa ..•. ,............. 9 10 .f74 4

Bufflltl ..... .

Art Buchwald

But what is the White House
going to do if the lawmakers
won't back up the President?
Ronald ReagalJ has to have some
flexibility in ignoring the Jaw of
the land, as long as he personally
doesn't know what is going on."

Stall,le -

W L Pt•l. GB
IS &amp; 811.4 -

.. ,

lack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear
DIA officials denied having authorized the Illegal arms transac·
tlon, the sources said. In court
testimony, officials of the agen·
cies admitted meeting with
Schwartz, but dented encouragIng or approving any illegal acts.
In September, the defendants
asked permission to present
classified information at their
impending triaL That's when
U.S, District Judge Thomas Platt
made his remark about the
defense attorn'eys' reading
tastes.
, ".
Schwartz then submitted 'a
lengthy affidavit giving explicit
information to support his defense. · The sworn statement
identifies agents of the CIA, DIA
and FBI with whom Schwartz
had discussed the plan to obtain
the Soviet weapons. It also gives
the dates and locations of the
discussions, Including at least
nve with the FBI's counterinteili·
. gence division and several at DIA headquart ers in
Washington.
Schwartz maintains that he
kept federal officials fully in·
formed of his dealings, and told
them he might have to sell U.S.
arms behind the Iron Curtain to
pull off the coup.

lkllton ........................

First place In the TVC ts up for
grabs Friday when Meigs travels
to Belpre in an early crucial
conference match-up as both the
Eagles, who were plckecl by the
league's coaches to dethrone the
two-time defending champion
Mara.uders, and Meigs enter with
perfect 4:0 1lVC slates.
In girls basketball action tonight the undefeated Meigs
Mar~uderettes travel to Trimble Coach Ron Logan's crew has
ch~lked up tour consecutive
wins, three of them TVC wins.
Friday's bout at 'Belpre has the

Ol'lt"'}'t'llf (iOnirtu.'1,

Allan I i( DIYW .. n

Htutlord ............. H H :t :11 IIi 110
ROKtnn ..................... r:t II I :Ill
Qut•lw•t· ..... .. ........ 131:1 ~ ,RJ 1114 91

did.fl

WASHINGTON -The Ameri·
can public is beginning to learn
more than ~t may have wanted to
know about the murkey world of
international arms deals. Nothing Illustrates the Byzantine
intrigue of blgtlme arms traffick·
ing belter tban a case now on the
docket in New York.
At one point, the judge suggested that the defendants' lawyers had read "one spy novel too
many." Indeed, the defendants'
case has elements of mystery
and alleged double-dealing that
would be quite at home in a John
Le Carre noveL
The defendants, HLB Security
Electronics Ltd. , Solomon
Schwartz and three other individ·
uais, are accused of illegally
attetnpting to sell arms to
Poland, Iraq and Argentina. The
case is being conducted under the
Classlfled Inlorniatlon Procedures Act of 1980, which keeps
sensitive material under wraps
during triaL But our associate
Donald Goldberg has had access ·
to many of the details or the
complex case.
The government charged in a
recent indictment that Scha·
wartz and the others tried to sell
500 Ruger automatic rifles and
100,000 rounds of ammunition to

&amp;llller11 ('onferenl..

P11.trlck Dlvidon
W L TPb. Ot 0,\
Phlilui('lphlt~. ........... Sl 6 '! U 119 61
PUbburjl;tl ...... .... I~ Ill I :12 IU7 ·B"f
NV 1!!11411ck&gt;l'l'l ........... H 12 ! :10 UU R'i
NPw olt•r"ry ........... l:l l ! '! til IOi 121
W.,; hinJI(un ............. 10 I~ II !II !I :IllS
N\' IUn~rM ............. t 1~ 6 tt 109 117
Ad lUll!&gt; Dl\' l!;.lun
Mnlllrtll.l ........ ........ H II I :J~ Ill I !II

"The basiC question," Bailey once
proposed at a Foundation for Foreign
Affairs symposium, "is to what extent
in a democracy - and particularly in
time of crisis ~ can the leaders take
the people into their confidence and
defer to them?"
After saying he regretted Franklin
Roosevelt's "white lies" before Pearl
Harbor, Bailey concluded that "I am
still not sure I blame' h1m for what he

Anns for Iraq

First place at stake in TVC at Belpre

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mlner-leque pitcher Stanl~ CrewK.
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ChriH Sp~ e r weed to l!;!!'mK on 11

By Unlttd PriNtllnl«naUanal

The Daily Sentinei- Page-3 '

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Scoreboard ...

_____c_h_uck_S_ton_e

AMEMBER of The United Press international, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

By ROBERT SHEPARD
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The old military caution to "never
\olu1Iteer" Is being widely ignored on Capitol Hill as Congress
p1epares for a major Investigation of the Iranian arms sale.
Vo lunteers have been almost falling over each other to get in on the
.1ct io n.
Wi th visions of Watergate dancing in their heads , members of the
Sc·na te and the House see an opportunity to get. the kind of media
e'posure that usually comes but once a career.
"We've got about 12 committeees alr,eady chomping at the bit."
S0nate Republican leader Bob Dole said last week. "They can hardly
wa;;t to get started."
" We understand there's some Infighting going on- who' s going to
be Arst, who's gohig to be on this committee, who's going to be on that
comm ittee," Dole said.
Senate Democratic leader Robert Byrd said he understood Dole
had "a plethora" of senators volunteering for investigation duty.
Byrd Indicated the Democratic senators were equally aggressive in
seeking a spot on whatever committee or C&lt;?mmittees get the
llsslgnmcnt.
Byrd. who will become majority leader when the new Congress
convenes in January, announced plans to set up a single, special
Sena te committee, rather than let several existing committees
launch separate Investigations under their own jurisdictions.
Byrtl said "a considerable number of senators have expressed an
in t ~rest" in serving on the panel and he commended them for their
sense of duty. "But obviously it can't be too large."
B~· rd recalled that the Senate's special Watergate committee had
jus t seven members. "If it (the new committee) gets too much larger
than that it would be unwieldly," Byrd added.
(l.s Byrd and Dole point out, Congress has both the right and
respollsibility to investigate the Iran arms-Contra aid snafu.
Ob\•lously, something went badly awry and is causing problems !or
the' U.S. government. But most lawmakers also cannot have forgotten
Walergate and how the- key players In that lnvesligatlon became
me&lt;lla stars In their own time and now are enshrined in history books.
The Senate Watergate committee hearings and the House
Judiciary Committee's impeachment hearings enjoyed days and
weeks of live television coverage, and each member of those panels
broalne familiar faces to millions of Americans. Had it not been for
!he' Watergate scandal, most of those lawmakers probably would not
ha've become known outside their congressional districts or states.
Sen. Sam Irvin. D-N.C .. chairman of the Senate committee,
bec;amE' almost an American folk hero. Television viewers were both
amused and impressed with the way the one-time country lawyer
vres kled over the committee as it questioned the cast of characters In
tM: Watergate drama.
Confirmation of lrvm's ceiE'brlt y status came lat er when he did
lclev islon commercials, urging Americans to not leave horne without
their American Express cards.
R~publlcan Sen. Howard Baker, vice chairman of the committee,
was little known outside his home state of Tennessee before the
Wa tergate hearings, but his persistent questioning- "What did the
pr~ident know, and when did he know it?" -caused his career to
soar. Baker later went on to become Republican l~ader of the- Senate
arid Is considered a likely contender for the GOP presidential
nomination In 1988. .
R):&gt;p. Peter Rondino. D-N .J ., chairman of the House Judiciary
Committee, became a nationally known figure as a result of hi~ _
commiltee's arduous wprk on the resolutions of impeachment
aga"i nst President Nixon.
•\ II other members of that committee became celebrities in varying
d~rees and a few were able to capitalize on their new status to win
election to the Senate.
Those wh&lt;t now are in Congress recognize that if the Iran-Contra
investigation comes even close to matching the Watergale
extravagan&gt;a it will send several political careers skyrocketing. For
the ambitious, that is not an opportunity to be missed.

Th...-sday, December 11, 1986

Thunda~ D~ber11,1986

'

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-.Middleport, Ohio

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page 4-The Daily Sentinel

.

Thu.;sday, December 11, 1986

Har-rumph! ·

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

·'

By MaJ. Amos B. Hoople
, the gut contests.
coach. His team handed the
Peerless Predictor
Arizona State's Sun Devils, No. favored Sooners a 31·6 pasting.
Egad, friends! w·hat 'a fitting 7, earned their first-ever Rose Egad! Do you think Barry
climax the Fiesta Bowl will be for Bowl trip as the Pac-10 title· Switzer will remind his players of
.
the 1986 college football season. holder. John Cooper's cluli wlll that ?
Rounding out our Top IOare the
The game pits the Hoople Sys. be a formidabl e foe for Michigan
Auburn Tigers, who barely beat
tern 's No. 1 Miami Hurricanes on New Year's Day.
against the No. 2 Penn State
· Nebraska's Cornhuskers, In out Alabama lor the spot with a
. Nlttany Lions.
the No. 8 spot, came within !wo come-from-behind 21·17 win In
• · ; Of 105 universities competing minutes. of defeating Oklahoma the last 32 seconds over the
• Jn major I·A football , only two- for the B!g Eight title and 11\e Crimson Tide in their season
. Miami, 11-(}.0, and Penn State, Orange Bowl berth. They had to finale!
· ll·O·O . - fjnlshed with clean settle for the Sugar Bowl.
Incidentally, in the Hoople
ThE' No. 9 Arkansas Razor· pre-season Top 20, Oklahoma
'Slates .
·. ' And separating thE'm for No. 1 backs will be _ In the spotlight was rated No. 2, Miami 4.
. and No. 2 was no easy task .
against Oklahoma. in the Orange Michigan &gt;. Texas A&amp;M 6, Penn
. ; Against their common oppo- Bowl. The last time these two StalE' 7, Nebraska 10 and LSU 17.
GUEST SPEAKER_ David Gaul, former EHS
• ·J\!!nls - East Carolina, West teams met in the Orange Bowl, Fa irly closE', eh what?
star and 'starter for the Ohio University Bobcats,
. ;Yirglnla, Cincinnati and Pitts· on Jan. 2, 1978, Lou Holtz, now of
Next watch lor my forecast for
center, was the guest speaker at Eastem's Fall
burgh -Miamlscoredl76polnts NotrE' Dame, was the Arkansas . the early bowl games.
• ~hlle allowing a .total of 47. The ;.::_::_:::::__::_:::_::.::_.=::==~~:_=.:~_:_:._
. Nlttany Lions were equally effec·
· t!ve, scoring 118 points and
Sale prices
limiting the opposition to 48.
· . The Hurricanes scored imp res. .s lve victories over Oklahoma,
.when the Sooners were No. 1, and
• -tough Florida State, in a back·
•
· yard brawl.
: : Penn State dealt Alabama It's
. first loss of the year alter the
· . Crimson Tide opened with seven
consecutive wins. The Lions also
. turn~ back talented Boston
· 'College and won a triller from
• reJuvenated Notre Dame.
• • Miami appears to be a shade
• betier at this point - but we'll
·. ,liave to wait until the Fiesta Bowl
· ,OJI Jan . 2 to see who wins the
; · national championship.
. • Here's the final Major Hoople
Top 20 teams, with their 1986
• records (and their bowl
· assignments):
~ ~ 1. MIAMI (Fla .), 11 -0-0
!Fiesta); 2. PENNSTATE,ll·0-0
· (Fiesta) ; 3. MICHIGAN. 10·1·0
Motor Oil
·(Rose) ; 4. OKLAHOMA, 10·1·0
. (Ora nge) ; 5. LOUISIANA
: STATE. 9·2·0 (Sugar ); 6. TEXAS
. A&amp;M, 9·2·0 !Cotton) ; 7. ARIZ·
• ONA STATE , 9-1-1 (Rosel : 8.
NEBRASKA, 9·2·0 (Sugar) ; 9.
f0W40Motor Oil
. ARKANSAS. 9·2·0 !Orange); 10.
. : AUBURN, 9·2·0 !Florida Citrus) .
. : 11. ALABAMA, 9-3·0 (Sun l; 12.
OHIO STATE, 9-3·0 [Cotton); 13.
STANFORD, 8-3·0 (Gator) ; 14.
: BAYLOR, 8-3-0 (Bluebonnet);
- 15. WASHINGTON, 8·2·1 (Sun);
• 16. CLEMSON. 7·2·2 (Gator); 17.
FourGard
ARIZONA, 8-J.O (Aloha); 18.
5W30 Motor Oil
·UCLA, 7-3-1 (Freedom ); 19.
AUtomatic
. 'NORTH CAROLINA STATE, 8-2Oil FiHers by
Transmission
1 (Peach); 20. (lie) GEORGIA.
Fluid
AC and Motorcraft
8-J.O (Hall of Fame); and IOWA,
limit 2.
~-J.O (Holiday).
.
• The No.3 Michigan Wolverines
..
won the rugged Big Ten title and
-tlie Rose Bowl trip with a
;bfgh-scorlng offense and a very
·stingy defense. This may well be
Air FiHers by
:&amp; Schembechler's best team.
:. 'Oklahoma, No. 4, after stumAC and Motorcraft
bling against Miami in their third
limit 2
game, ran of! eight straight to
.take the Big Eight title and the
·coveted Orange Bowl host role.
:Their last-second, 2(}.17, victory
:over Nebraska was pressure
"football at Its best.
After 3.00 mlr's mait·in rebate
: LSU, No. &gt;, headed for the
when you buy 2
Sugar Bowl, closed on a high note
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;rival Tulane In the last four
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: At No. 6 are the Texas A&amp;M
; Aggies. repeat champs or the
:. SWC and Cotton Bowl participants. Jackie Sherlll's club won

sr~;:·!~Banquet.

Gaul Impressed In the younKer
at
minds thai "hard work does pay oil!" OJ\
the left Is Coach Ron Htll and at the right Is coach
Don Eichinger.
·

_______________.:.___,_______:=:-=.:.:;:..:.___________--:in effect through December 17. 1986.

By United Press International

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VIsiting Rio Grande dropped a
91·87 non-league basketball con·
test to defending District 22
NAJA champion Findlay Wednesday night.
Findlay converted three of lour
free throw attempts in the last
second .to beat the Redmen.
Aaron Roth led the5-20ilersw!th
24 points while Randy Kortokrax
had 22 and Brian Stadler 18. Ron
Rlttenger paced Rio ~ran de with
20 points and Joe Verhoff had 18
for Rio Grande.
The defeat left Coach John
Lawhorn's Redmen 6·3 on the
season.
Saturday, Rio Grande will host
Defiance College at LyneCenter .
Rio fans are reminded that
contest will begin at 3 p.m.
Elsewhere Wednesday night ,
Wright State overwhelmed
Michig an-Dearborn , 116-77;
Marshall trimmed Ohio Univer·
sity , 78-68; John Carrol! nipped
Heidelberg, 66- . GJ; Marietta
edged Denison , 65- 64: Otterbein
topped Ohio Wesleyan, 94· 76;
Kenyon defeated Wilmington,
68-JS; Edinboro (Pa. ) got by
Dyke. 74· 72: California State
(Pa.) beat Central State, 59·56:

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:Purdue names
::Akers new coach
. WEST LAFAYETTE. Ind.
;; (UPil -Purdue's football team
·:gained a coach Wednesday and.
:conseq uently, may lose Its start:·lng quarterback.
.: Jeff George, a freshman, says
: ·tie Is considering a transfer after
: the Boilermakers named former
•• Texas coach Fred Akers their
•' new coach.
:: " Right now, it is really hard to
;:say (if I'll stay)." George said.
; "I'm going to go home for a ·
:•couple of days and sort t hlngs
·:out. It's kind of !Ike I'm being
::recruited all over again. I should
: know In less than a week or so.
;:rrs something I have to take slow
·:and hope I make the right
:-choice."
·; George had set nalional high
.:school records for attempts and
~· completions
in 1985. but
•' struggled this year during a 3-8
&gt;season. It was Purdue's fourth
::losing record In five years under
•XDach Leon Burtnett, who re•:stped under pressure lollowlng
· the season.
: • "There are some things I'm not
' too happy with this year,"
: George said. "!feelllke I' ve been
: lied to."
: Akers, 48, said he plans to
:entphaslze a passing game.
' lllrowlng 4&gt; to 60 percent of the
'ume. He said George's second
IJ!Oughts are common alter
. coaching changes.
• '"nnat's natural when you have
8 altuatlon like you have here,"
:Alcel'l said. ''I hope he is satisfied
&lt;~~ere. He must have loved · this
:ptace to come here, and I hope
)IOthlna has &lt;'hanged that deeply
:;beCaaM he has the potential to be
8 lfe&amp;l player and we would like
to buDd an oftellse around him. ''

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---LAST DAY ! - - -

and St. Francis (Ind. 1 downed
Bluffton, 89·80.
At Dayton, Dave Dlnn and
Matt Horstman scored 17 points
each and four other players hit
for double figures as Wright
State. 4·1, roll~d over MichiganDearborn, 1·11.
At Westerv!lle. Dick Hempy
scored 41 points to help Otterbein
Improve Its record to 3-2 with a
win over Ohio Wesleyan. Scott
Tedder led the 4·3 Bishops with 25
points.
At Granv!l!e, Tony Starr hit a
· pair of foul shots with no time on
the clock to give Marietta Its
victory over Denison. Starr, who
topped the 3·3 Pioneers in scoring
with 16 points, was fouled In the
act of shooting as time expired.
Denison. 4-4, got 19 points from
B!ll Smiley and 16 from Dave
Hall.
At Gambler, Dave Mitchell,
Paul Baler and Stan Johnson
combined · for 42 points to pace
Kenyon to Its win over Wllmlng·
ton. Mitchell led the 5·1 Lords
with 17 points, while Baler had 13
and Johnson 12. Wilmington,
winless In 10 games, got 17 points
·
from Pat Nartker.

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key baskets down toe stretch · to game-breaking, 13·2 run.
as much as they did. I thought . - The University of Maryland college head-coaching job. He- .
rally the Thundering Herd to a
"Ohio University didn' t quit they would be satisfied to walk bypasseu a list of experienced agreed to a four-year contract
win that squared Marshall's and we didn't quit , either," the ball up, considering their applicant's and promoted un· Wed'nesday, 10 days after Ross'
record at 2-2 and Ohio's at J.3..
Huckabay said.We "showed a lot injuries and depth.
tested Terrapins assistant coach resignation . .
Lewis popped In all four of his more maturity thim the last time
"Our man-to-man bothered Joe Krlvak to replace Bobby
foul shots and added a stlckback we played. It was a 'must· win' 'em In the second half."
Ross as head football coach.
"I'm 51 years old and this Is niy
layup. Henderson broke the for us, as lar as conlldence goes.
Marshall returns to action Dec.
Krlvak....: an 18-year collegiate shot , and I'm just elated that I've
game's final tie a( 65 with two
"Overall, 'Delaware (Lewis ) 18 at home against Florida A &amp; assistant at three different got It," Krlvak said at a news
foul shots that touched off a 6-0 made some crucial free throws M.
schools, including eight years at conference.
spurt by the Thundering Herd and Tom Curry got a key round ,....._ _ _..;__ _:..__ _:_ _ _ __:_ _:.._:.._..:_~-:------'----.....,-:--:":-:-:-:;:an\! 'Marshall went. on top for late. We played pretty well
good .
tonight. We got crucial rebounds
Graham countered .with a 3· and played great defense. Ohio
point goal !tom th~ right side to ·University coach Billy Hahn said
·bring the Bobcats to within three Marshall played " the hardest
they've played this season."
points at 71·68 with 1: 01left. ·
"They did very good against
Also In double · figures for
Marshall were Henderson, who our press," he said. "Coach
finished with 19, and John Huckabay had them well prepared. Tlie box-and-one really
Humphrey, who added 15.
Reggie Rankin was Ohio's hurt us. I was surprised they ran
other double-digit scorer with 15 .------------j
points.
.
The Bobcats trailed by nine
with 13:22 to play but came back
to take a &gt;9-JSiead with 6: 53 to go.
\All PIICII GOOD THIU 12/ 171I&amp;
Five lead changes lati"r, .t he
Bobcats led 6J.62. With 5: 37 to go,
Lewis knotted· the game at 63 to
OJf JACKSON PIKE · RT. 30 WEST
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- Just when "Snoopy" looked as
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slngle-handedly, Marshall rose
up like an aroused Red Baron and
came out firing.
When the dust finally settled,
the Thundering Herd had settled
for a 78-68 "must win" over Ohio
University Wednesday night.
"Snoopy" Is what teammates
call Paul Graham, who outdid .
every · man on the Henderson
Center court with a 26-point
performance, and who was keepIng Marshall's defense frus·
trated, until coach Rick Hucka·
bay decided to change his battle
plan .
"We played matchup and went
to a box-and-one when 'Snoopy'
hit his first 14," Huckabay
explained. "We gel more rest
when we match up than when we
play man to man."
The rested defense thep fo·
cused on offense.
Guard Dwayne Lewis scored a
team - ~ll(h 24 points and combined with Skip Hende; son for 10

,u,~:~.:"':..'::h~;

Maryland names

Marshall rallies to trim Ohio University

Miami No. 1; Penn State No. 2

,•

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�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

ThU'Sday, December 11. 1986

By The Bend

North. Gallia's MeAvena on
UPI's Class A All-Ohio. HM
.

'

I

..J \.

"He has good size and senior, completed 144 of 298
strength," St. Henry Coach Tim passes lor 1.957 yards and 26
Boeckman said of Borgerding. touchdowns In Mogadore's 10
" He reads his blockers very well regular sea:son games. In three
and has good acceleration. He playoff contests, he completed 35
also is a tough Individual. In four of 67 for 495 yards and threeTDs.
years, he missed only one game That, while also being the No. 2
due to Injury and that was just tackler on I he team as a safety.
precautionary.
A three-year starter, Pierce's
"The last two years, wewentto career figures Include 461 of 906
the I·formation and featured · attempts lor 6,C&amp; yards and 67
Tony," added Boeckman. "He's TDs. with only 21 Interceptions.
been · our bread-and -butter
McDuffie, a 5-foot-11, 175player, but he had a great line In
pounder and the only junior on
front of him and he'd be the first
the first offense, rushed for 1,470
to tell you that."
yards, a 9.3 average, and 24
Borgerding, Boeckman no(ed,
touchdowns In 10 games.
also does well In the classroom
wit h a 3 . ~ grade point average,
Vincent, a &amp;-foot , 185-pounder,
adding, " he'.s just an excellent ,
rushed .for 1,405 yards , an aver·
all-around student-athlete."
age of 7.6 .yards per carry, and
Closson, the lineman of the
scored 20 touchdowns. Twice he
year, like Borgerding has started
broke open close game&amp; with lour
since he was a freshman. A second half touchdowns.
6-loot-1, 230-pound junior, he also
The receivers on the first team
plays fullback on offense for
offense are split end Todd Criss
Coach Kevin Fell.
of Mingo and tight end Bill
" He' s been a pretty good
Franks of Newark Catholic.
player lor three years, " said
The Interior line · includes
Fell, "as good as any we've ever
guards Darin Devore of Fair·
had here."
banks and Chuck Clouse of Tiffin
And that Includes Closson's
Calvert, tackles Scott Harring·
older brother, Matt, a sophomore
ton of Conotton Valley and Denis
member of the Ohio State lootRaschllla of Mineral Ridge and
ball team .
center Walter Skaggs of
Shadyside.
Closson, who has been timed a
The placekicker Is David
4.65 In the 40 and bench presses HoSsler of Hopewell-Loudon.
420 pounds. had 87 solo tackles · Dan Gel haus, a teammate of
the past season and more than 80 Borgerding's at St. Henry, and
assists. He also had three pass Toronto's Phil Thompson are the
interceptions and four quarter· first team defensive ends.
back sacks.
At the tackles are Tim Coulter
"The biggest thi ng about of Williamsburg and Dave Ran·
Tony.' ' said Fell, ''Is that he gets kin of Hopewell· Loudon and the
stronger as the game goes along. nose guard Matt MacLellan of
He's better In the fourth quarter Richmond Heigh ts.
than he Is In the first ."
Closson, Eric Dowling of Wells·
As a fullback, Closson rushed ville and Steve Rucker of Crooks·
for over 700 yards and averaged ville are the linebackers, while
6.6 yards per carry.
the backs are Butch Vicencio of
The first team backfield, In Marion Catholic, Andy Groll of
addition to Borge.rdlng, includes Ayersvllle and Andy Mox,
quarterback Richard Pierce of anothe r Delphos Jefferson
Mogadore and running backs junior.
Rodney Vincent' of Cincin nati
Voted the first teain punter
Country Day ' and O.J. McDuffie was Brian Stepleton of Delphos
of Gates Mills Hawken.
St. John's, whoaveraged38.5per
Pierce, a 6·foot·2, 185-pound kick with four over 60 yards.

Steve McAvena. 5·10, 180pou nd senior guard-linebacker,
today was named Honorable
'llention Lineman Class A All·
O.h io by Un i ted Pr e ss
International.
McAvena , who set a school
individual tackling record this
fall, led th e Pirates to an 8·2
overall record and a 6·1 fini sh in
the Southern Valley Athletic
Conference.
By GENE CADOES
UPI Sports Writer
COL UMBUS, Ohio (UP!) -St.
Henry tailback Tony Borgerding
a nd Delphos Jefferson linebacker Tony Closson head up the
1986 Uni ted Press International
Class A Ali·Ohio Football Team .
Borgerding, a 6-foot -2, 195po und senior, was the over·
whelming choice as the Class A
back of the year. receiving 23 of
49 votes cast.
A four -year starter lor the
Redskins, Borgerding rushed lor
2.162 ya rds and scored 31 touch·
downs, 28 rushing. 2 on pass
receptions and one on a 90-ya rd
kickoff return. He also passed for
one·TD . His career marks show
4.138 rushing yards and 50
touchdowns.

1986 All-Ohio Class A
I 'OI.l ' MRl'S , Oh hi t lPi r - Tilt- 19Kti
\'nll•·d l'rt~ "' lnl c-rnatklnal fl:¥o~ s .\
AU·IMIM• •' tllll.hall Trwn rwllll ht •l~:hl
" 'l'l,tr:ltl ~cf loC'hoOI Yt'W' ):'
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SpJJI t•nd-Todtl ( 'rl.-ts, Mln~o. !Pl. IW.

Tal'lr,Jf'l'i- Ki•n lloudr;, Cory RllW J&lt;iUII ,
li-:L 200, !Or.; 1\n!ly HuffmiUI, .~ulb
1\mht..Kt, i--t, :! lfl, Sr.

ftllllt't' - M•rk Kapo!ihl~~ . fairport
Harbor, IH, tal, !ir.
Qu~o~rtl'fhlc:k- L,-nn frtd!&gt;r, Let•lnnl"'
&amp;-fl, lllfl, Sr.
Hun•lnl(lu&amp;dr.K- Tim DrM111tlo, Indian
VaUPJ North. ft-11 , 1115, ~r.: Chrb
Soi ·hhldltt'l', l\yrr)ivlllt•, 1-t 'II$, ,Jr.: fh11d

Sr.
Tt~:ht t'lld-Rill Fnnk..,, l'lit•!urk Clll t OOih·, H I. lll3. l'ir.
G uurtt~;IUuln Dt •\lolr(•,

Fair INUtk.'l , JJ- 10,
11141, Sr.: fhut•k flou.~ t' . nfllnCal\·t'rt , 5-!1.
1 ~5.

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Towkh,. - St ·oll Harrln~u .. fnnouon
\Iaiit~. 6-~ . ~u •."ir,: Ot•nl..; Ka.~• · hllla.
l-lhH,-Ill tud,w . ft. I, "!35, Sr.
('t•nlt..-- M'allt•r !&gt;ikar~ Shlld)·s ldt•,

rt-t. ·m . sr.

Qullrt t• r ha~-·k - ltlt · h.-d Plf't'c'(', Mu ~: a·

clort•, lkt, Jill, Sr.
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ll t• nr~ . &amp;-'t 1115, Sr.; R udnn· Vln1·rn1

l 'hw lnnatl f oontl')' Dlly . &amp;ll, IK$, Sr.:

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Mr•Otilflt•, liult•~ Mill~ H~~.wl!.t&gt;n , $- 11 , Iii.
.l r.
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Ph t·t•lc ld;rr - n a ,· id Ho~o~ol ~r· r,
lluptowrll·l.oudfln, 5- I, '!'U. Sr.
FirM Tl'wn Dt•li"'''si
F.ntio;- Dan f;l'llrouu!&gt;!, .~L Ht•nry, 6-2. 1~ 5.
sr .; l'hll Thum,.un. Torofllo, 6--:1. 211~ . Sr.
T1u •klt"- Tim foullrr . W'llllam~OOrJI,
6- 1. :! Ill, Sr'.: lla\'t' Runltln, Hopt'Wrll·
l.uu~oo, 3- 1. 2$1, Sr.
N&amp;.w ~ard - Moll Mai'IA•II*i, Rldtnmnd ltt • l ,; ht~ . $- Ill, 1!1~, Joir.
l.lowhw•kt'f's-Tnn.v Closson. lh•lpho!&gt;
·lt•Ht •r."'''n. 11-1. : 111 . •rr.: Erit· Ou..· lln~
M't • ll!~illll ,., &amp;-I , 'mt Sr.: Stt'\'t~ Rudtl'r,
frooiMIIIi•, f. I . I!IO.Sr.

8al'k!&gt;-Hul•·h \'lt ~nd o, Markin Lt ·
thol lt•, ~ II. I MI. !olr.: ,\ndy Groll. ,,,.,.,,..
\'llh ·, i- 10. 163. Sr.: Andy Mo.11 , JMpk~
,Jt •Ho•r•un, &amp;- l. IIi.'•, Jr.
I'Unl l'r - 8rian Slf'P I.-Ion. IIE&gt;Ipho!o. I'll.
,Jnltn ' .._ li--1. tHG, Sr .
St•1•ond Tt•wn OHt•A!&gt;f'
• Split t•nd- Gt•OF jtt• Rt•ll, I.A•f't o nl~~o, It- I,
11«1, Sr.
Tl1~ t'ftd- Tlm Ro•t·k, ,\rt·hhold. IH ,
111.1. ~ r .
CJuurd-;- MIIw \' :11'~1 . Rrldreport lt-1.
~Ill. Sr.: Crall: Nlf'dt•rmlt'l', 8tM·kt')' t'
I 'forti r ul, .l- IR, IK.1, ,"ir.

Prall, FAAIII

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Kfto•. lo ll. 1.15, Sr.

PIIM't... l~krr-Tim M'llllllfJJN, Waynesville, ~II. 141, ."ioph.
Srt'Ond Ti•am ~14'nM&gt;
F..n4o;-Parrt'll \\'olf, Mlalltf'l', .f.3, 115.
Sr.; Bohfrlillklln, LihertyUn'-n. 1--! , ! U ,
Sr.
Towldt!&lt;o -Don Lyonll, MonrOM' IIIr, 511 , ItS. Sr. : C'hlp U I ~W'd, F~trkw~t,¥ , i-'!.
ltD. Sr.
N.,.., lUard- Da\'ld Whlll'ton. 8t-rnt·
l 'nlon. f.P, Ita, Sr .

UnriNick(f"ll-Doul t'our.-. Fre mont,

Sl. ''"'"'P" f. I. ltD. Sr .: Mllll Srlarrt'tll
Tus t·IU'awu" { "alhllllt•, -l-11, Jt:l, Sr.:

f"hut·k Tllflnll'r. f '~t.rl')' , f-0, 115. Sr.: Bnh

l..w.dd. Ot&gt;lphol; -~rlft'tlinn , 5-'t. '!'~~..Jr.
RK~b-Roh Slny, CCJiumhllllla. a- n .
lfl:\.."ir.: F.d fhtll_.ht'r, l 'flnolltm Vodlt•.l' ,
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141.\. -Jr.:

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Run~ ,Jnnr~ .

Wllllwnshur,

Puntt•r -fu.~ on Rc-n t'dht, \r11.n Run •n

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Rat·k· DI ·tlw-yrar- Tony

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Unrmllll·of·ltlt'-yeui-- Tol\y no!oSOn
llt•lp ho,. .Jt•lft'rNOA,
.. '
Co~~t• b- of·lbt'-)'r IU'- Rklt Wl'lsklrt•ht•r.
Rrilllilllt Bot·key" North. -~
Sptte•lal Mrllllon 8 ;1t'ks
'
Donnl• R~tkt'r, Art·anum: Slt'\'1' lli&gt;!oU·
Iant~ . Shad,¥ II Ide: Mark H,ll klllllp, P 1.rk·

way; Erh• My""· f'olumlllan~ RJt·h
~UiillhiWm, Coltllitnn VIlli!,-: ( 'rlliJI
Sl_udll'. St . Hf'nry: lirt•~t St·humac•hrr.
Moo~t&gt;~nrtd: .l"ml l' Vlldtf't•k, ruyuho~t~t
H f'l,lllll~: Krl,. Walltt, Rul'ltey•· f'rnlral.
!&gt;ipf'di&amp;l Ml'nlJoon Unfmt•ll
·lllrnl•• •\lton, Bt•rne l lnlon: Mll!.t•
~·rrlt• r. Hupt~' I'II· Loudon : t:rit· Burkt•r,
Muracl!1rr: Kf'Hh Dk·knt 1111 , Drlpho.~
-l t • fll'f~n; Tom £1Jert. M11.rk1n Locul:

fhrio. f' III~~.A;I(i . SG~tlh AmiM'I'"t; Rlt•h
Hazlrtl, Butkt')'t ~ Nnrlh: StM'f' Hayn1&gt;M,
Twin \'Miley SOulh; Brlt~n Ol100a, CovlhK"
Inn: John P oplf')' , F11.irporf HaJINir; C.n•~t
PhlltlpK. ,S)'camorc- Motunt;lt: G"'lt
Si'nllh. Tffftn l 'a lv• li : St·oll Sud. Nc•·

Wllrll C'lltholk.
llonorllhlt' MPnllon &amp; ckM
,ftm J\rm"' riNI., B .. ffto11; Todd Antill

~-!ildt.-: Dil\'r Bd:l'r, Llo!hon Andt&gt;~
!WI: St·oll (;lodMif'r, Tlpp fll)' IMhd:
D\Wie ('oldlron. Syumor(' Moh..-k· .Jon
flut t&gt;r, M'¥ ll!~ivUII.": Ron Dumer..;.ulh.
Thlit'IU'IlWaM flllhnllt: Sc·ou IJ».vl!.,
Mt·f•mh: Slf'v, 0f'llrldc. A)'t'rllvUi e:
Thm Ht'lm"- N!• w~trk falhollc~ 8111 Kldd,
Ba:kc')'t' Norlh: 0.11 Lo•·f'ry , Fair·
h~~nkll: Daw !.)·on~. Lorain f1f'arvk&gt;w:
,Joltn Muunl, Cincinnati Coullley Day;
0..0• Mllltr, ~orl h Urn a South R11np:
Jt'lt'fii,Y Mont~mM"y, N•warll. C11.thol1t·:
~·.,ry Kohl.-t~ raldwC'II : D».n stupha.r,
( U)'MhOitll. HMjt~li; 'Chut·k 'Th!dl. Fair·
port H11.rher: Ed •roon. Gil les Mill"
Ha~· l!.rn .

Honoralllt· M••nl lon Un,•mt•n
Bt)'IUI! •\tht•r,._ \ 't'tMIIIII..S: Darrf'n
,\mhuro , Wn,vnt'IIYIIIt•: f:rr·~lt Ruwt•r'Wll, Hatml••r l'alrl(•k Ht•ary; Todd
Rn'Yt·r r, Klllmlllft; Mark Do~· nry . Prl·
pholi -ltoflt'r!Hifti f11rl Elt·henhwb, Port ~
moulh ~Din• Uanw : Sh'\'t• Ford, Evt•r-

«rrt•n: .lohn l-' 1•rru!10n, Rrllalr•• Sl.

.foh•'!&lt;; Ciuy frlr n4 "' lndh ~~tn; Eric·
Gll K kiA~, \\'llllam~hur~: 'nm Gunc kt-1.
An·anum; Mlk, H11rdln~ r,darvUit.·;

lUck Henlll«rr. •\rt'MtiUm; 5&gt;111'\'f' Harris,

~llflll·o~a Ht•l.t~"~; Mlltf' Lltl'o~ky . Tlpp
~ lty Belhfl: Bill Lovr, lndilill VWIC')'

•

D of A conducts recent meettng

The annual Christmas dinner
and gift excilange party of the
deputies and Past Councilors
Club of Dlstrlci 13, Daughters of
America, was held at the West·
ern Sizzlln' Steak House, Athens.
Esther Harden, Syracuse, Dis·
trlcl13 deputy, gave the blessing .
before the dinner served at tables ·
decorated With candles and orna·
ments. ·The party room Included
a decorated tree. Erma Cleland,
club president, read scripture
from St. Luke and members gave
the Lord's Prayer and the pledge
in unison. For roll call each
named something they like about
the holiday season.
Margaret Tuttle, seeretary,
read the minutes of the April 27
meeting held at t he University
lpn, Athens. The hunting accl·
dent death of the son of Sara

Hoover, Junction City. was
noted. Reported Ill were Gay
Gau) and John Hayes, Chester,
and lt was noted thal Thelma
McMannl!i, a member of Chester
Council, now resldln~ In Athens,
fractured her hlp In a fllli:
The 1987 holiday party was set
for Dec, 5 at ·1: 30 .p.rrt. at the
Western Slzzlln' ~teak' House.
Mrs. Harden annoUnced a dis·
trlct practice meeting tor Jan. 3
at 10 a.m. at the Lions Club
building in Belpre.
Several members read verses
from the poem, "Christmas Is."
. There was group singing of
"Bless Be the Tie that Binds."
Marcia ~eller, Ethel Orr and
Lora DamewoOd conducted the
gift exchange.
Harden won
the door prize. Faye Hoselton
and Erma Cleland . aimounced

Mrs.

they are working on another tour
tn Sept,.
Attending besides those named .
were Betty Wolfe, Perry Council
283, New Lexington: Margaret
Ki~tler, Vernle Congrove,
Mildred Lowery. Mary (&gt;ano,
Kathleen Trow bride, Fay~ Trowbridge. Sylvia Bownes, Violet
Darnell, Mildred Schultz, Logan
Council 120; Beulah Moyers,
Golden Gleam Council ·254, Ma·
rletta; Janice Lawson, 'Eileen
Clark, ,Betty Biggs, Betty
S~ncer. Guiding Star Council
124, Syracuse; Essa Varner, Iva
Shutts, Faye Hoselton. Belle
Prairie Council 269, Belpre;
Faye Kirkhart; Sadie Trussell,
Thelma White, Dorothy Ritchie,
Doris Grueser, Betty • Roush,
Pauline Ridenour, and Mary K.
Holter, Chester Council 323.

Thursday, December 11, 1986
Page-7
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STEVE MCA VENA

The Daily Sentinel

Heath UMW has meeting
Mary VIrginia Reibel presented the story, "The Tree with
the Star ·on Top," at the annua l
Christmas party and meeting of
the Heath United Methodist
Church Women held at the
decorated home of Emma K.
Clatworthy.
Miss Reibel, a guest, re)ated
the tender tale of a poor family ,
Its first Christmas tree, and the
positive Influence It had on their
lives. Pauline Horton presided at
the meeting opening wit h a
Christmas poem. Grace Johnson
gave devotions on the Christmas
theme using thoughts · from the
Upper Room .and the Lord's

Prayer in unison.
Reports were given !rom the
Aft ernoon Circle and the E leanor
Circle on the s uccessful bazaar
held Satu rday. Apprecia tion was
expr essed 10 those who helped.
Twila Childs announced that the
children's party and program
will beheld on t heeveningo!De~ .
21, with the Christmas cantata to
be presented at the mornin g
service.
Mrs. Childs, Mrs. C!atworthy,
and Lettie Young were hostesses
with Emily Sprague contribut·
ing. Refreshme nt s were served
from a decorated table.

Keena EDen
Morris
.
.
I

Morris birth

Brenda and B111 Morris of
Racine are announcing the birth
of a daughter, •Keeha Ellen, Nov.
14. at the Pleasant Valley Hospl·
tal. The Infant weighed seven
pounds, and was 20 Inches long.
Vegetable Crops; Steve Nameth,
Mr. and Mrs. Morris have ·
Extension Plant Pathologist; Ro· another daughter , Brandy Nl·
·bert Precheur, Extension Spe· ·cole, three. Grandparents are
clallst, Vegetable Crops; and Patti and Bruce Hoffman, PomeMack Riedel, Extension Special· roy, and Joan and Dean Heckert,
ist, Processing Vegetables.
Williamstown, W.Va.

Extension classes set in Meigs
John Rice, County EKtenslon
Agent , Agriculture, reports that
several programs are planned
for the next couple of weeks to
asslsUarm families . They are as
fo llows:
Thursday, Dec. 11 , I p.m . Dr. John R. Staubus, Extens ion
Dairy Specialist, Nutrition, wlll
be speaking at the Extension
Office on the feedin g of high
producing milk cows.
Friday , Dec.12, !Oa.m. to noon
-Tax Wqrkshop to be held at St.
Paul's Lutheran Church, 231
East Second Street. Pomeroy .
This workshop will cover all the
new Income tax cha nges for 1986
and give a highlight of the
changes for 1987. Karl and Mary
Keebler of H &amp; R Block, and John
Rice, will conduct the program .
Monday, Dec.15, l r30 and 7:30
p.m. - First of several seSsions

to be conducted on multiflora
rose control training. Other dates
lncludeDec. l8,1:30or7:30p.m.;
Jan 5, 7:30 p.RI. only; and
January 6, 1t 30 p.m. only. All
meetings wUI be hell) at the
Extension OffiCe and only 15
!Jeopl,e per session, and reserva·
lions are needed. Call 992-6696 to
make your re!!ervations 'tor the
day and time of your choice.
Wednesday, De.:. 17, 9 a .m. to
2:30 p.m. - Winter Vegetable
School to be ·held at Racine
United Methodist Church. The
church Is located near Southern
High School on State Route 124.
Registration Is $4 to cover
refreshments and lunch.
Several state specialists will be
on hand to dlscuss·cfrtain·toplcs
and to answer ·any questions you
·may have. They · are Mark
Bennett , Extelfslon Specialist,

on select

'86.Model

s~:::!n~:y ~::e;~1;dm~?mu:~:::p:~~e~~d

•
''' ms1
• ,g
1ee n
••
I lOR
••
om1n

Block managers, . Pomeroy, recently attended the Ohio Farm
Income Tax Workshop held at
Chillicothe. The two-day work·
shop was sponsored by the
Department of Agricultural Eco·
nomlcs and Rural· Sociology,
Ohio Cooperative Extension Ser·
vice and Ohio State University.
Topics discussed Included net
operating losses, alternative

losses, Ohio Income tax, urban
and farm problems and various
other topics, A strong emphasis
was placed on the 1986 Tax
·
Reform Act.
Due to chaiiii!S In the tax code,
emphasis is being placed on
reviewing tax situations now to
determine year-end plans geared
to minim~ the 1986 tax liability.

JEEPS &amp; RENAULT$

........
~

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RENAULT ALLIANCE

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.....

' ...

.;

A. P.R•
Financing

-·
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•

24 MONTHS

Nt·holt. fu ldwt!ll: D11mon Aim. lirlphuK
·Mft'f'lltln; (1111')1 Van Nf'l'il Stuulyliidf&gt;·
.flm \l.'y11.n1, frl'lilllat•; Phil iltu. RriiLLir~

'''

Sl . •lohn',._

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'•
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$10,995 '9995

Stock H 3124 1, ar cond. aut~ trillS., PS. PB.

•
''

CONTACT

(

~

A FULL LINE
OF ACCESSORIES
ARE
AVAUBJ,£
f

FULL LINE Of SAFETY .EQUIJiiiENT
•

WAS

$9995

198&amp; CHEVROLET
EUROSPORT ·

1985 CHEVROLET

Stud&lt; ~ 10621. 4 IDn. flont wheel tme. 4
. or cond, JUto. trillS., PS, PB, til wheel,

Stnd&lt;N IDtiiO, 2 IDn, ooupe. V·8. ai' coM,
JUto. trSI1. PS: PB. tit wheel, cruise control,
.tMIFM rod~. -.-~~~ t'IJ&lt;, mal tre;, bid&lt;d
seats.
NOW

contrrl. !MIFM radio.

NCM

'9395

1984 FORD
F-150 PICKUP

CAMARO Z-28

cmd. autn trillS., PS.
PI!, til wheel, cruoe cortrol, AM!fM radio ,~
lln pidoJ~ llng wide tet;l. XLT.
flOW

•'

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10,495 59995 '8995 $6295 '5295
Stud&lt; H7315 1. 2 (lx)rs, ha&lt;dtop, coope tront
wheel drive 4 cyt. ' " cood, PS, PB. cruise
control, AM!TM rad~. ra!1at t(e;,
WAS
NOW

4995 '3995

5

$4995 '3995

•

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600 EAST MAIN ·

992-2ot•

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AUGNMENT MOST CARS".$ 14.50
SlrvingAWgs Co. 20 YIOI'I-1966·19·6

•

•

D_EADLINE MONDAY, .DECEMBER 22

••

'

•I

'

' ..'

·'

•

•

1983 DODGE
SHELBY CHAR~~r.

1983 OLDSMOBILE

•

OR CALL

Stock ! 695111. 2 &lt;km. har~op. ~oot wheel
'drive 4 cyl, N-1 /FM rado. ~wrot'IJe. t.Jck~
""!:\ rear w ~&lt;llw defogger.
WAS
N!M

CUTIJSS.CIERA

'·

8995

COLT

Stock~ 6974a V-~ ar

WAS

N!M

5

1986 DODGE

Stocll H 67922. 4 IDn, .tSI, front wheel
drive 6 cyl., ai' cond, autn. trw , PS, P8.
bow~&lt; door bd.s. tit wheel. cruise oontrnt,
ltt!!FM radio. sta-111 t""', radill ti's. white
WAS
'
wills.
D

'·

t"''·

'h ton !liclw ~ oog
wide tet:l. reor Stfi)IJJ IT'll"'. gillge;. l~ e Newl
MllfM raJ~. ~...,

..

•

ecis/1

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. F-150

9IDdl ~ 106ll, 21Dn, 6 cvL ai cond, aut~
tr~. Ps, P8. cnli!e control, MllfM rado,
lldill ti's. whb wlllts.

•

Pomeroy
Daily Sentin~l

1985 FORD

1986 CHEVROLET
MONTE CARLO

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•19

Mgr., Tonya Savoy, and Arlene. Ritchie. Back ·
row, Lee Ann Robln1oa, Beverly Wigal, Melissa
Nutter, Lesa Rucker, and Krlatl Hawk.

'

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P~&amp; rkl"f, Bt•riH• l lnloiJii. ( 'had ParldnM

Rlufhon: Tum Shrrniln, Mlnllltt: .nrr:

&gt;

SENIOR NETTERS - Honored Jut Saturday
evening at the Eastern Fall Sporle banquet were
these eight sen~~rs, Front, l·r, DeLeah Sa~dera,

.

CASH
BACK

..

Sorth G11lll..: ,\ llkr NoonlUI, G111"' Mlllli
llilwlPn: o~.. rr Okuty, Ayt•J'!jvlllr: .Jon

'

$500.

'•.•

Nonh; Kurt t..vt•r, Soulh Am hL'rsl: .lim
o'tlllli tlllwkrn; Tod Miller,
( adU; .f••lf M'IU'IIh!UI, Vt't!lillllle-;; .John
Ml·,llllflllh. \l.'rll~vlllr : Nli•Vt• .\ lt••hf'na,

l:i"· (oll.l""'

.

OJI Up To

·~

i.

JEEP COMANCHE

RENAULT ENCORE GS

•

•

�~

'

·:Smith birthday is celebrated
. The first blrthqay of Jeremy
.Craig Smith. son of Vincent and
:Oiane Smith, Richmond. Va.,
,was observed recently with a
party att.he homeofhls maternal
grandparents, Oscar and Madgle
Smith, Pomeroy.
Mickey Mouse and Big Bird
themes were carried out In the
:party and cake decorations.
Others attending the party and
{lresentlng gifts were paternal
grandparents, Jack and Virginia

Menu set in Meigs
In accordaance with the unl·
form lunch program of the Meigs
Local School District, the menu
Is announced for the week of Dec.

Smith, Hartford. W.Va.; Joseph
Smith. Richmond, Va.; Lee Ann
Smith. New Haven. W.Va.; John
Smith, Pomeroy; Laura and Nell
Proudfoot, Pomeroy, and Des,
Jonl., and Katie Jeffers.
Harrisonville.
Sending' gifts were Barbara
Murray. Pomeroy, and Anita
Smith, whO Is attending Spring
Arbor College, Spring Arbor,
Mich.

Shade ·Valley Council
planning meeting, dinner

15:

Monday: beef barbecue,
mixed vegetables, cole slaw,
fruit, milk.
Tuesday : beefaroni. applesauce, bread. and butter, milk.
Wednesday: hot .· dog with
sauce, corn, brownie, fruit, milk.
· Thursday: creamed baked
chicken, mashed potatoes and
gravy, green beans. bread and
butter, Ice cream, milk.
Friday: c.ooks' choice.
Jeremy Craig Sml!h

Schneider birth is announced
'

The annual holiday potluck and
party of the Shade Valley Council
~ of Floral Arts )Vlll be held
·Tuesday at 6:30 at the home of
.Bobble Karr.
Members are reminded to take
a gift for exchange decorating It
with some sort of live materials.
The packages will be judged.
Sandy Archer and Jennifer
.Krawsczyn were welcomed as
:new members at a Tecent meet·
~lng held at the home of Debbie
Weber. The group had a work·
·shop on reindeer usin2 birch

donated by Henry Bahr. The
reindeer were used .for decorat·
lng the entrance to the Senior
Citizens Center for the county
Christmas ilower show.
Last week Melanie Stethem
worked with a class at the
Chester Elementary School. The
children made reindeer for the
school lawn and also decorated a
,
tree.
The program was given by
Denise Mora who showed slides
on landscaping do's and don 'ts.

·Slinderella results announced
....
was runner-up.
Awarded ribbons and certifi·
cates. for losing 20 pounds were
Roberta Dill. Betty Dill, Lina
Foster, Julie Nichols, and Tra·
cey O'Dell. At the Tuesday night
Mason class, Susan Howard lost
the most weight.

Melissa Foster lost the most
·weekly' weight in the teen class
:lind Chris Nichols lost the most in
4he men's class at the Monday
:hight meeting of Sllnderella at
:1';lve Points. In the women's
cjass. Margie Lawson lost the
·~most weight while Roberta Dill

livewire .class meets for dinner
Hilda Yeauger's Llvew ire Sun·
day School Class of the Forest .
Run United Methodist Church
held Its annual Christmas dinner
party at the Western Sizzlln'
Steak House In Athens.
Attendlng were Alfred and

Hilda Yeauger, Dale and Mary·
. belle Warner, Selma Call, Edison
and Evelyn Hollon, Kenny and
Faye Wiggins , John and Juanita
Grueser, and Vernal and Betty·
Blackwood.

I

•

Mr. and Mrs. Robert (Pam)
Schneider. Jr. of Denton, Texas,
are announcing the birth of their
first child, Jaryd Bradley, July
16. Maternal grandparents and
great-grandparents are Carl and
Linda Watts, the Rev . and Mrs. ·

Edison Stevens and Janice
Moyer, McKinney, Texas. Pater·
. nal . grandparents and great·
grandparents · are Gene and
Charlotte Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs.
Leslie Carr, Pomeroy, ~nd Ro·
bert Schneider, Florence, Ky.

Y/ANT

Ellen Johnson, Shirley Jones,
Connie Rankin, David and· Dale
Ferry, Jean and Bob Gilmore,
Edith Ross, Irene Roush, Mar·
lene and Goeffrey Wilson, Linda
Jell, Charles and Roberta Dill,
Betty E . Dill, Tony a 'Dill and
Rickie Dill, Linda Foster.
Guests at the party were Judi
Cowan and Ryan, Sam Cowan,
Betty Lou Gilmore, Clara ·and
Junior Riley, Andy Fields, Mary
Beth Brewer , Jeff, David and
Mary Rankin, · Lisa Hooten,
Floyd Ross, Libby Roush; Jacob
and Kelly Roush, . Gertrude
Casto, Mabel Moore, Angle Dill,
Bobby, Ryan and Missy Foster,
Kathy, Courtney and Gina Scar·
berry. · Geroge ·and Sharon
Folmer, Michelle Folmer and
Danny Folmer, Joshua and Jes·
sica Hooten.

J'.

a few pennies sp~nt here
comes bock folding money

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By Cindy Oliveri
weathersports-skilng,skatlng;
County Exte118lon Agettt
even blcycilng or walldng, socks
Home Economics &amp; 4-H
provide Insulation for warmth. In
Socks - low on the fashion aerobics, tennis, and racquetball, ·
·tote.m pole, destin~ to gather socks· pad and cushion the feet
.dust under the bed or -dlsappeJ~r when jumping, twisting and .
' In the laundry - are· the most turning. In a'ddltion, socks ab·
underrated, overlooked neces· sorb moisture when teet are hot
slty in sports. Their Importance and sweaty and reduce persplra·
Is apt to make Itself felt as many lion odors .
foptsQre weekend athletes dis,
Check fiber content carefu)ly
cover. · If you are looking for as you sock shop. :• ·
.·
socks for a person on your gl{t
'Cotton Is a lightweight •.
llst, this week "In The Spotlight" molsture-absorbent fiber, often
shares so!)le things to consider. blended with nylori lor Improved
These tips come to us from Joyce fit and durability. When knitted
Smith , Extension clothing spe- . In 8 terry loop, thickness and
cialist, The Ohio State cushioning Increase, but ' these
·University.
. loops will flatten because cotton
Different sports require differ· ' Is not resilient. A blend of cotton
•ent .socks as well as different
acrylic fibers gives more
·athletic shoes. In walking and and
resiliency. When cotton absorbs
running~ socks reduce abrasion
moisture, It Is not a good choice
and friction as the feet move for cold weather wear. Once
wlihln the shoe. With cold moist, cotton dries slowly and

.I

SELECTION OF1
ASSORTED '
GIFT ITEMS.

,

'

Stop in and pick up your FREE copy
of our Hardware Gift Circular

CHEERLEADERS - The Syracuse Raiders
sixth grade cheerleaders are &amp;ettlag ready for the
1986-81 bJisketball seaso1. Members of the gro11p
are left to right, bot4om, Angela Swiger, Brld~t
Cl'OIIs, mascot, and Bethany Bass, middle, Angle

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634 EAST MAW STREET, POMEROY, OH.
PHONE 992·5500
Now Open 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.A( Mo11clay-Friday
Saturay I A.M. to 3 P.M.

I

PLENTY
OF
' FREE

!eels Cold.
.
• Acrylic. a· man-made ·fiber
usually marketed under the
trade names Orion and Acrllan,
Is crimped to Increase bulk and
softness. These hlgh·bulk fibers
transport moisture from the skin
to the outer edge of lite sock
where It evaporates or Is allsorbed by other sock fibers or the
shoe lining. Because .of their
bulk. acrylic socks .are warm,
shrink resistant, provide good
padding and dry quickly .
•spalid~x is an extremely
elastic fiber. Used with other
nbtirs, it provides elasticity and
close flt, primarily at the sock top
to'hold 11 In place and in the arch
and ankle to provide extra
support.
'Nylon, a very strong, hard·
wearing fiber. Is versatile; socks
made of nylon can be thin and
silky or thick, bulky and highly
el~stlc. Nylon Is often used with

VINE STREET AT 3Rb AVE., ·GAWPOLIS, OH.
PHONE 4U-1276
. .,
NOw ()pin 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Monday-Friday
Saturday 7:30 to 5 P.M:

""'' ,

II

~

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•

second sock to reduce friction
and keep the feet dry.
'Polyproplene, a smooth, soft,
durable fiber, can wick moisture
awayfromthefeet.ltisusedas a
liner to reduce friction and
conduct moisture to an outer
sock and Is often blended with
wool or wool and nylon. Poly·
propylene Is heat sensitive and
.may shrink or even melt if dryer
dried.
In most sports, socks must
cushion the foot as It strikes the
ground. For good padding,
choose socks made of wool or
high-bulk acrylic, socks knitted
with .a terry towel·llke stitch, or
socks with a durable sole. Such
socks are usually thick - try
them on with the shoe you plan to

• notes
AI£red community

Sunday school attendance Nov.
2 was 24; church attendance, 22.
On Nov. 9 Sunday ~chool atten!l·
ance was 36; church attendance.
' 18.
Church visitors were Leah and
Raney II Koehler, Tuppers
Plains.
Alfred Christmas program will
be December 17 at 7:30. All
welcome.
'
Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Brooks
attended the graduation of their
son Bob from basic training at
Fort Leonard ·Wood, Missouri.
They were accompanied by their
children, Jim and Debbie, and by
Mildred Brooks, mother of.
Lloyd. Bob Brooks Is now In AIT
training at Fort Leonard Wood.
Mrs. Wilber Parker accompan·
led Irene. Howard, and Homer
Parker to the home of Myrtle and
Les Frl, McArthur Rt., on Nov. 2.
They all then visited Mabel
Pierce at LPN Nursing Facility,
Newark. Mrs. Pierce's other
visitors tliat day were her daugh·
ter. Linda. and family.
Jonathan · Avis returned to
s.chool Nov. 3 following recent
hospitalization for pneumonia.
Pearl Randolph returned home
after visiting Beatrice Bentz,
Lancaster, and Bernice Meeks,
Shade. Recent visitors at Miss
Randolph's home were Dorothy
'
.
Dvecher, Chippewa Falls; Lily
Mills, Serena Davis, Jennifer Cross, and Kim·
Randolph, Mr. and Mrs. Prentice
berly J enklDll, and top, Valerie Connolly and
Hess, and Nellie Parker, all
Tamara Hayman. Advisors are Lura Swiger and
local.
·
·Jill Nease,
Alfred UMW served lunch at

the Mattie Pullins sale Nov. 8.
Members of the church and
community assisted with dona·
tions .and work.

/

use them
f with.
t bl A cramped
d
't foo(Js
t ric •;• ·
uncom or a e an can u · r
tion well.
·:
Sport socks need to cope With :;
perspiration - look for flbers :that wick moisture to the sock's .:
outer surface. It your "feet pers- :•
plre heavily, two-layered socks:.
may help. The Inner layer of.
these socks is polyproplene:
which transports moisture to the f
ouJer wool layer.
•:
If you wear two pairs of socks :to reduce friction or provide·.
cushioning or warmth, the ·shoe :
must be big enough to hold your :
foot and the socks comfortably. ~
When the shoe fits too tightly, the .
Insulating air spaces In the sock ;
are squeezed flat and cold feet ·:
result. The outer sock must m:
smoothly over the Inner one ·
without wrinkles or lumps.
;
Did You Know That: The :
Cooperative Extension Service ·
has bulletins on · Buying Action :
Wear Clothing. For additional ::
Information, call 992·6696 or .
write to us at Box 32 , Pomeroy" ~
Ohio 45769.
· · •·

'

Ohip really is special

By BOB HOEFLICH
. p.m. on Saturday, Dec. 20 and
'
Sentinel stall
will be held at the Coolville
Youngsters who couldn't make Elementary School Cafeteria.
It to the Plant
The camp wlll serve oyster
Parlor Monday
soup, crackers, relishes. hot dogs
for a visit with
ahd beverages free of charge
Santa · are get·
with each family requested to
t lng a rain
take a dessert.
check.
Highlights of the annual .event
Because of the
will be the singing ol carols, the
cold downpour
presentation of the community
which discouraged "getting service award. entertainment by
out". Santa w.lll be at the Plant members and the usual Christ·
Parlor from 12 noon to 2 p.m. mas sharing collection will Pe
Saturday. He will vlsll with taken to provide food baskets for
children and wlll have treats for the underprivileged. Officers for
those who couldn't make the 1987 will be elected and best of
earlier appearance. Pictures · all, Santa will arrive with treat
with Santa will be available bags for the children present.
during the designated time slot
and there Is a charg!! for that.
. And speaking ol Santa's arr-1·
Middleport Is attractive for the . val, he will becoming to town just
season with the white lights being In time Monday to help Southern
used In t~e trees through the OhloCoaiCompany'sMelgsNo.1
business section and the John
mine cap an unbelievable year of
and Marilyn Fultz property
fund raising for the underprlvl·
which will be a bed and hoard
leged children of Southeastern
establishment ·. Is an . attractive
Ohio.
addition to the business section.
Santa, played by Meigs Mine 1
shuttle car operator. Max Whl·
--"''"'
So- apparently Ohio Is to have
tlatch, will host approximately 40
special presidential primary
youngsters on Monday from the
elections.
Gallla County Children's Home
. Secretary of SLate Sherrod
and area foster homes served by
Brown reports that (he flrsf such
the Children's Services of Meigs,
election will be held on the third
Gallta and Vinton Counties!.
Tuesday In March In 1988. Only
Each child will receive a gift
the presidential primary contest
provided by donations !rom
will be held on that date with
employees of Southern Ohio Co~ I
other primary elections and
Co., union personnel .and local
~peel at elections to be held on the
Individuals and businesses. All of
first Tuesday after the first
the festivities will be taking place
Monday In May, the date on
at Meigs Mine 1 which Is located
which primary elections have
near Salem Center on Route 124.
been held prP~Iously.
Since there are so many
children involved, the gift pres·
After a bit of a mixup, the
entations will take place al two
annual Christmas party of the
different times on Monday - 10
Modern ·Woodmen of America,
a.m. and 1:30 p.m.
Camp 10900, is now set for 6:30 ·
The Coal Mlners' Christmas

A reception honoring Janet
Bolin, president of the Ohio
Association of Garden Clubs, was
held Sunday in conjunction with
the Christmas flower show at the
Senior Citizens Center.
Hosted by members of Meigs
County Garden Clubs, the reception was sponsored by Region 11,
OAGC, ·tor Mrs. Bolin, Meigs
County's first state president.
Pat Holter, Allee Tholl!pson,
and Ida Murphy were chairmen
for the reception, which carried
out a yellow and while color
scheme. The- cake provided by •.
' Sharon Barr carried out an owl
motif. Mrs. Bolin has an extetl·

.

Other fibers to Improve durabll·
lty or to give elasticity. Nylon Is
, nonabsorbent but transports
moisture to the sock's outer
surface.
•wool Insulates, Is reSilient
and absorbs .moisture readily
·without feeling wet. But It dries
slowly and w~ars quickly, especti•llY In the toe and heel area.
While some machine washable
and dryable wool socks are now
. available, many100percentwool
socks require special care in
laundering to keep their shape.
Wool Is ·usually blended with
other fibers to Improve flt,
durability and care quail ties.
'Silk, very smooth, soft, and
moisture-absorbing, Isn't dura·
ble. It is used as a liner with a

Planning Committee Is the pr im·
ary movement unit for the
collection of over $10,000 lor
these children this holiday
season.
You'll want to visit the Hope
Baptist Chapel. 570 Grant St.;
Middleport, over the holiday
season. There will 1x1 a live
Nativity scene In front of the
church from 7 to 8 each evening
starting next Monday night.
The well known Handel's Mes·
siah will be presented at the fine
and performing arts center at
Rio Grande College at 8 p.m.
Sunday.
This year's production wlll be
the first under the direction of
Edward Roark. assistant professor of theater - and probably
some of you remember Ed In the
male lead ol Oklahoma at Ohio
University a few years back. The
college production has been a
traditional favorite for area
audiences and for years was
under the direction of the late
talented Merlyn Ross. From
Pomeroy, Suzan Thoma, Is a
member of the group doing the
Sunday night presentation.
Money from the Dave Diles
Golf Tournament Is being distributed and recipients should be
prNty happy about it . One of.the
recipients Is the Shrine Park In
Racine which got $500. An earlier
report stated that the gifi was to
the vlllage proper - but It Is for
the park which is now owned,by
the town.
To make this a Christmas you
won't forget for a long, 'ongtlme.
just put everything on · charge
accounts. Do keep smiling.

Organization honors state president

,.,...__

.......-............
.....................
.....

160

'

ln. dMpdl'.....-• • ~ llorag~~
arta uncs.t the lid, keyed Cyllndll

Gloss Door,
lighted, mirror

REG. 1219.95

til

kid(

The Daily Sentinel-Page-S ~:

Ohi

.The overlooked, often lost sock provides warmth .;

1

LARGE .

1 .•Fruit Baskets
1

Middle

,,

·r·····-c-iiiis'TtiAs····; .·
I ~ OPEN HOUSE . l
I

P

~w~~~~~~~~~!---------------------~~~~roy~~~~~~·~~o----------------------------~---------;~
·In the spotligqt:
.
·
~

,.

I
I .•Poinsettias ·
Wraths
CB club has annual party II •Christmas
•Holley Trees
1
•House Plants
B •Bulk Candy

The annual Christmas party of
the Big Bend CB (,:lub was held
Sunday at the Rock Springs
Grange hall.
Gifts lor an exchange were
placed beneath a decorated gold
and white tree. Following the
ham and turkey dinner gifts were
presented to Mary Beth Brewer,
guest package; Shirley Jones,
member' s gift, J·oshua Hooten
and Courtney Scarberry. child·
ren's gilts. Santa visited th e
party with gifts for all the
children and the members en·
joyed an exchange.
Members attending the party
were Libby Hall, Dusty Tobias,
Tricla Tobias, Mary and Jim
Brewer, Jimmy and Patty Haw·
ley. Harold and Etta Will. John
· and Kathryn Metzger, Simon and

Th•..;;.....y, "'--·n ober 11, 1986

Thll'sday, December 11

Ohio

{

slve collection o! owls.
As the county clubs' gift to the
new state president, a page has
been reserved In the new Meigs
County History book for a picture
and tribute to her. Gilts were also
presented to ~er from the Gallla.
Vinto11 and Washington ,County
clubs, and from several garden
club members attending the
observance. Guests were regis·
tered by ~ate Roush.
.
Amonj( ·the state officers at·
tending were Susie Poole, Ma·,
rletta, a past president; VIrginia
Covert, Rio Grande, member· ·
ship chairman; and Faye Col·
llns, Minford, past flower show

chairman. Mrs. Lucille Ma·
comber. Wllkesvtlle, regional
director, was present as were
several other regional officers.
Members of Mrs. Boitn's lam·
lly at the reception were her
husband, Joe, sons and
daughers·ln·law and their faml·
lies, Mr. and Mrs. Rick Bolin,
Derrick and Brook, Rutland, Mr.
and Mrs. Brent Bolin and Lindsay, Shade; Mr. and Mrs . Craig
Bolin and Zackary. Pomeroy;
and her daughter, Brenda Lope
and her son, Kyle, Marion.
Guests attending from Gallla,
Meigs, Vinton and Athens
CountieS.

w~

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II

li

�Page-10-The

Sentinel

On rhe VCR scene

.I

Last month, we journeyed into
the realms of Hollywood Halloween and came out relatively
unscathed. Now. It Is time to take
a look at the more gentle side of
1he movie industry and feel the
enchantment that occurs at this
time of the year.
When the first movie was
released, the promotion was
"YOU'LL BELIEVE A MAN
CAN FLY" and thrOughout this I
got the feeling that the producers
~&gt;~re trading on the reputation of
the ea rlier film they had made
called ''Superman." I'm speak·
tng of the Salkinds, who put
toget ht&gt;r an t'xciting hodgepodge
call••d "Santa Claus The Movie"
1104 minutes, PG, Media) star·
ri ng David Huddlestor.ln the title
rd'le and with Dudley Moore and
John Lithgow as supporting
actors. this movie can only he
dflSCrihed as fun, enjoyable and
lively. Even the music smacks of

I

I

cal'lng about the quality of the me, you' ll actually find yourself
finished product. Lithgow out· falling In love with what Is one of
does himself In his role of an the most faithful adaptatiQns or
unscrupulous toyrnaker but ku· the novel. I know I did.
dos go to the lead, who now is
Still on the subject of Dicken's
reduced to doing TV comrner· work, we come to our first. of two
cials. Be sure to catch this when cartoons, the Disney studios
you can give this your undivldl)d release "Mickey· ~ Chrlsi!Das
attention.
Carol" (5() minutes, G, .Disney)
unfortunately seeJTIS to ·lack ·
O~e of the all time great
rlasslcs by Charles Dickens much of the legendary magic
occupies our second slot and with they have been famous for In the
good reason: It says the basic past. But do.n't let that stop you
proof of the true . ·magic of from seeing this . Mickey ar\d all
Christmas is love and the the other cartoon characters we
warmth that can he seen this grew up with do wear their age
time of the year even when ti's well.
Ever hear of Virginia O'Han·
cold outside. "A Christmas
!on?
She wrote ·a famous letter to
Carol " (86 minutes, in black and
white) tells about the miserly the editor of the New York Sun,
Ebenezer Scrooge who gets into Francis Church, who answere&lt;j It
the spirit of things 'literally. back with what Is one of the most
Played by Alastair Slm, who famous letters of all time, which
obviously enjoyed himself in the serves as reaffirmation of faith
role. the character emerges with ·and love. The film Is called ''.Yes,
a SY!DPalhetic fla vor that lingers Virginia, There is a Santa Claus"
long after the film is over. Trust (25 minutes. unrated, Para·
mount) and even ' drew a lew
tears and smiles !rom this
hardened critic. The animation Is
a bit rough but does not detract
from the story. By the way, the
cartoon was drawn by the same
artists who did the work on the
Peanuts cartoons and you' ll
office at 39350 Union Ave .. notice a resemblance to the
Pomeroy.
characters in those films. Par·
Custpr wanted to inform the ents who watch this with their
public of the Ohio War Orphans children will find grounds lor
Scholarship program. This Is a discussion with their kids . After
program designed to help child· all , sooner or later, all new
ren of deCeased veterans or parents will he asked the ques·
children of 60 percent or more tlon "Is there a San Ia Claus•"
The last rum Is a nature vlde&lt;i
disabled veterans- with a college
education. For more Information that deals with one of the Panda
about this program contact the Bear. one of the endangered
local County Veterans Service species because of the encroach·
Office at 114 Mulberry Ave., men! of man. "Save The Panda"
Pomeroy.
(60 minutes, unrated, Vestron
If a veteran or the family of a Video) Is a National Geographic
veteran Is trying to find inform a· release that tells of the plight or
lion about his or her discharge one of the most gentle and
the Governor's Office of Vete- inoffensive ol the Ursotd or Bear
rans Affairs may have the species. Once !here were count·
DD-214 form, which is a dis· less numbers of them but now
charge paper for vpterans, and just a handful exist. For those of
can he provided by this office If you who are asklng what this Is
the veteran applied for a war· doing in a Christmas column, the
time bonus In previous years. only defense that I can offer Is
This lnforllJation can he obtained that we should not Iorge! ihat this
by writing or calling. The ad· Is the season when we remember
dress and phone number are:
the man who made the blind see
The Governor's Office of Vete- and the lame to walk and who
also made the animals who share
rans Affairs, Stale House Annex
Room 11, Columbus, Ohio 43266 our sma ll , fragile world. The
or phone (614 ) 446-5453.
point this video makes success·
full y is that once any species Is
gone, It can never he regained.
It's time to go. once again, but
helore I do, allow me to wish you
a Merry Christmas. · ·

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/nrento1g Reduction
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Australian investor
~e-buys USX.stock

Address. _________________________:_______

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HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

'86 liNCOLN
·TOWN CAR
'

7,900 MILES

$18,900
'85 BUICK
SKYLARK
25,000 MILES

$5900

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'84 CADILLAC
ELDORADO

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Comml.SSt"onerS

(Complete and mail to Meigs County Jaycees, P.O. Box
603, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769.) •

(Continued on Page 1)
windfall for any office or Its
employees. The task of ·placing
an additional tax burden on our
citizens ts not a pleasant one. It
should he understood by all that
this board wlll continue its policy
of sound management and fiscal
responstbllty."
times to get his job back.
The com.missioners urianh:n·
"He had a grievance against ously passed a resolution declar·
hls treatment and he possibly lng that a financial emergency
wanted to harm individuals he exists within the county, and
felt had harmed him," Childre . stating their Intent to place the
said.
one percent permissive sales tax
Davis fired more than 50 shots and use tax into effect as of Feb.
around the building during the 1 8
morning and police said William
Higgins, 48, was slightly
1
wounded in the left leg when he
arrived at work.
County Courthouse.

ICHRISTMAS i

$12,900

TUNE-UP :
SPECIAL ,!

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The inli!rr!st charg~s on secun&gt;.d Ce&gt;rtmLines may be loX dMui:tib/e.
The new loX law allows fur dMui:tion ofsonw or all ofthe inli!rr!st
on loons secun&gt;.d by a J&gt;ersonaln!Sidence. ·

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NOW$22 95

'86 CHEV.
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3.9% Financing A.... oble For 24 Montbl
Ollw Good Until.lniiiY 4, 1987

COOPER
Chrysler
Plymouth

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Dodge Inc.

$5900
•

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992-2594

if)&lt;JU oct be/!m!}mUllry 31. A savings of
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TlwannUllljre is tm/y $30. And
fXlYirumt is tkfemd untz1 p u use

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A Gold MasiJJrCan:/ is included for easy
access to )&lt;Jilr Centrolin£ of Cn&gt;.dit. Use
ilfurmajor jJurr:lzases. ur to get cash at
any Centro[ Trnst office or at owr 500
Owl automaiJJd teller machines through·
out Ohio, Kentucky. Indiano. and lll!st
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To find out more about CentraLine of Credit, visit any one of our convenient
branch offices. Or give us a call. But do it today. If you get your application in now,
you may soon be enjoying the best way to borrow money around. More or less.

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'!bur Centra Line must be approved by january 31, 1987 lo qualify for the 90-day rote guarontee.
• • The annuol percentage rote may vary due to fllletuatwns in Priw. Prim£ rate n!jers lo the then-current Prim£ rolt m
The Centro[ T!·ust Company The roles /or an unsecun!d Centro Line of Cn!ditlllll:$5,000·$24. 999. Prim£ plus 3%:
$25.000·$49.999, Prime plus 2 1/zo/o; $50,/X){) and up. Priw plus 2%.
~
'

REG. (tR KING

T

97 North Second
Middleport, OH.
Phone 992-6661

352 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH. '
Phone 446-0902 I

II

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$893

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EXP. 12·15·86 1
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Th£ &amp;nk That Makes Things Happen.

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THE CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY

A/Jil~all'. Th1 (P,t'fll /Jan(:rn'{mn flon, Cincrnnalr, Ohw

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16u pay nocll!sing costs orapplictJiion joc

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And. you cmr pay lxick a~ liN/e I!OCh mmrtlz as
the intelfsldueon&gt;~"' outstanding balance.
For romp/eiR jlnancia/flexibilily

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of Credit is
Yoor Secured Rate" is
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Prime+! %
$25.000 . $49.999
Prime 1112%
$ 5.000 . $24.999
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This suf'!lr rote is /IUaronteed mz a Centro Line
of Crr;dr f" lll!mli equity loon for 90 daysonaJ
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W/COUPON

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PRIME PillS 1%

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CummtA.PR.

REG. S34.95

EXPIRES 12•24-86

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: ON ALL OTHER
SERVICE ON 6
CYLINDERS

II

EXP. 12·1S·S.

11 :

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1S0/o DISCOUNT

W/COUPON

I ' .-----------·COUPON-----------

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18,700 MILES

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II - CHRISTMAS COUPONS - I·~ .
I t-------- ----COUPON ---------- 1
I
RUSSELL SlOVER
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CANDY
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'86 GMC
SIE·RA CLASSIC

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$7400

SPONSORED IIY
RUTLAN'D v F w
' • '
DEC. 12
fRIDAY NIGHT

:~~c}~~~ ~~~o'": ~~ :t:~~~~·~:~

I

10,600 MILES

(H·RISTMAS
AUCTION.
.

'~~ ~ilchearingsonthelntentto

I

ON DODGE ·I
SLANT-SIX I
AND V-6 CYL. ,:

llshed Wednesday ·jn The New
The 19·merntx!r task ·force. said G crher~lng.
England Journai of Medicine. ~ which originally Issued a set of
Wllh AIDS patients -as w;ith
were based In part on a study guidellnes lor handling hospital· victims of any lnfectiou~ disease
Involving 326 hospita l workers !zed AIDS patients in 19&amp;1, - health care wllrkers should.
that found none to be · infected reviewed and rejected a variety wear protective clothing when
with AIDS unless they were at of special procedures fo r dealing directly contacting blood or other
high risk, such as homosexual with victims of I he deadly virus. body lluids , wash hands 'tho·
men .
Among those was a proposal roughly, carefull y handlelabora·
The study covers workers i~ for blanket screening of in·com· tory samples and try to avoid
hospital AIDS units. AIDS labs ing hospital patients lor exposu re being stuck with needles. Deot·
an&lt;l AIDS clinics and Includes to AIDS, which destroys rhe isis should also use masks and
nearly 100 people "who have had body's immu~e system.
protective eye wear when e'lponeedle sticks and been splashed
The panel, comprised of Iii sure to splashes or saliva, blood
with blood," said Gerberding ina doctors and three registered and ot her secretions is likely.,
teiEiphone Interview.
nurses. concluded that standard
The AIDS virus Is spread
Gerberding said that of more preca utions agains t any In fee· though sex ua l contact, priinarily .
than ·2,400 health care w.orkers . tious disease. such as hepatitis. among homosexuals . or by In·
who took part m a vanety of aresulficlent safeguards against I ravenous iQjection of contami·
studies nationwide. only one has AIDS, Gerberding said.
nated blood products , most com·
been documented to have con·
"The basic message is that nn monly among drug apusers who
tracted acquired Immune defl· f~sp~e~c~la~l;:c:o:n:tr:;;o:ls::a;;;re;.;;rt;e;;;ed::e;;;d;:
, ;;;;;;s:;;;ha;r;;;e:n;;;ee;,d;;;le;;s:. ;;;
re:s:;;;ea:r:c:he;;;r:s;;;sa;.y:.::.
clency syndrome through con·
.
tact wIt h an 1nIected pa IIen t .

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·.Other A1sistance (food stamps. etc.) ----------------

r--------------~

58,000 MILES

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Source of Income --------------------------

LEXINGTON, Ky. (UPil- A
fired University of Kentucky
worker bent on revenge returned
to .campus in a Ninja warrior
costume, shot a . former co·
worker, held his ex-boss hostage,
then begged to he killed before
pollee subdued him with a fi re
hose.
Ulysses Davis III , who
stormed the university's physl·
cal plant building at dawn
Wednesday with a rifle, shotgun,
pistol and samurai sword. was
overpowered aboui 5 p.m. and
captured unharmed by police
using a fire hose.
The 2:i·year·old martial arts
expert and Kentucky National
Guardsman was to he arraigned
today on charges of llrst-degree
assault and wanlon
endangerment.
Neither of the two men
wounded by Davis was seriously
hurt.
Police subdued Davis wilh a
blast from a fire hose after he
broke off talks with his family
and negotiators ·and demanded
that police kill him. ,
"He was plastered up against
the wall" by the force of the
water, said Sgt. David Childre.
"He had his sword in his hand
and after the hose hlt him, he was
pushed against Ihe wall and it
made II easy to overpower him,"
said Sgt. Greg Howard, a pollee
negotiator who had talked at
length with Davis.
Davis, wearing a black· hooded
pajama-like Ninja warrior outfit,
was hole&lt;~ up In a flrsUloor
supply room at the physicaL plant
building clutching a samurai
sword and surrounded by his
guns when police made their
assault.
"His only demand was that the
pollee end his life." Childre said.
"We had linally reached a point
. where II was obvious he was
going to make an eflort to make
us end his llle...
Police said Davis was fired as a
unlversiiy rna lntenance worker
in July for fighting with a fellow
•:mplmw an~ had tried three

BELOW ARE JUST AFEW OF THE
FINE USED CARS ON OUR LOT•••

The World's Best Selling
Car ••• Just Got B.e tter

' Roderick said the federal In·
ves llgallon Involving Wall Street
atbitrageur Ivan Boesky, who
agreed to pay the Securities and
Exchange Commission a record
noo mllllon penalty for engaging
itf i nslder trading on takeovers.
l!iiS "complicated and prolonged
CJllr discussions."
•lcah n had threatened a ta ·
kllover of USX unlt,'!iS the corn·
plinY took action to enhance the
value of its stock by completing a
sl..dy by early November on .
pbssible restructing moves. But
Ica hn backed of! that deadline
a:itd USX st111 Is In the process of
sjqdylng restructuring
alternatives.
:l(olmes a Court, who is chair·
r'Qa~ or Bell Resources Ltd. and
seld his entire usx holdings
w1m:th about SlS million around
IDe ,· time Icahn unveiled his
proposal. "has repurchased
sDnle stock," Roderick told repprters. "He told me that he had
.mtfer 5 percent of our stock as of
1D day~ ago."
~Holmes a Court, fcahn and
~vera! other corporate raiders
ligan accumulating USX stock
~rll er thi~ year because the
s1larcs dO not reflect th~ value or
IIIP .i:ompat~y's net asseb .
tJSX stock, which has hovered
In the $20 to $23 a share range,for
the past month, was unchanged

Income - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Police subdue gunman
on.Kentucky campus

•
By ROZ LISTON
. at $21.25 a s hare on the New York
I CHRISTMAS SEASON I
:·
U PI Business Writer
Stock Exchange Wednesday.
)'lEW YORK (UPIJ - USX
Roderick, who Is overseeing ~ PoiMattiot, HoHy ,,..., u.. &amp; Cut
~rp. Chairman David Roderick
,..,~~,
the study on restructuring alter a· ·
Ito. . Wets. ChristS'llld Wednesday Australian busi· lives, said he recently met with »
........ c.... "'......,..
riesstnan Robert Holmes a Court the chairman of British Petro- :
~
Gr"'t ltooktls &amp; !prOJL
ttas rl'purchased some stock In leum in London to discuss the
tile' largest U.s . steelmaking possible sale of USX oil assets . In
firm and several major oil 1983 USX acquired Marathon Oil
c9mpanles have expressed inter· Co. and purchased Texas Oil &amp;
SYRACUSE. OHIO
~t In buying Its oil assets.
Gas Corp. earlil'r this year.
ll
0,.. Doily 9 to 5, !...doy ., to's I
II
PH . 992· 5n&amp;
&gt;Roderick also told reporters at
lk•llllli$1!1$1!1$1!1$1!1$11l:'lli$1JI:II . .
ao n('WS brlellng that he Is " still
try ing to get a definition" or the r-----------L------------1
lotcntlons of New 'York investor
C~ rl C. lcahn. who has made an
OiiPI' to acquire USX for $31 a
st&gt;are In cash and owns 11.4
percent of the steelmaker' s
sl!JCk. USX was formerly known
~ U.S. Steel Corp.
-:·Our discussions with Carl
lro hn have been friendly," said
~oderlck. who pointed out that
Ul&gt;X staff were meet ing with
1£a hn' s representatives
W£dnesday.
:' 'We are trying to come to a
c1ear dellnition of what Mr.
t'tahn 's proposal is and to definS'
t~e conditions under which we
~n permit due diligence," he
Sflid.

1 Clwi••- """ ,.....

BOSTON (UPI) ...:. No special
precautions are needed to pro·
teet doctors, nurses and lab
Iechnlclans from exposure to
AIDS patients other than safeguards taken against .any lnfec·
tious disease, researchers say.
"We really don't think It's
necessary to put a sign on the
door saying this person has
AIDS," said Dr. J. Louise Ger·
berding, a member of the task
force at the UniVersity of Call lor·
nia In San Francisco. '
The task force findings, pub·

Number of Adults and Children Family Members __________

3
DAYS··oNLY
THURSDAY, FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY

f'NowO,Ei.'foRi'Htl

',.

Deadline Dec. 13

l'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-11

Study:. health ·workers safe from AIDS···

Christmas Aid Application
Name ________________________________

.'

POMEROY, OHIO

Pomeroy-Middleport, .Ohio

'

State officials meet
With veterans officer

,' Roger D. Tackett, the adminis·
u:ative assistant to the director of
tiJe Governor's Office of Veter~n s Afralrs, was in Meigs
COunty recently meeting with
Cp.unty Veterans Service Officer
Hugh Custer and the Ohio Bureau
of· Employment Service
0ficlals.
.This year. Is the IOOth anniver·
s~ry of Ohio's Soldier's Relief
Aet and this year's slogan Is
· 'L,et's Help One More Veteran."
Tile Soldier's Relief Commission·
ers have a long and proud history
of.asslstance to veterans In need
othelp.
~hio Bureau of Employment
Services officials wanted to rerl1,1nd employers of the Veterans
.lob Training Program available
locally. ·In this program tile
V.~terans · Administration will
pay an ·employer up to $10,00!.00
ro)lelp train and hire a Korean or
V~I nam veteran who has been
o..t of work for10 out olthe last 15
weeks. rr the. vetl'ran has any
qu,es tlons about this program, he
sllould contact the local Ohio
B\ireau or Employment Services
.•

I

Thwsdey, December 11, 1986

Jl
OBB
CHEVROLET-OLDSMOBILE-CADILLAC

A look at Christmas rentals
BJ .JEFF HIU.EARY

1

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Pharmacy
K•lllllttl McCulltutlt. It .Itt!:

......... "'"'"'·"·'"·

Men. ltlru s.t.I:H 1.m. tet •·"' ·
1I!H 1111tJI U41111D t .m.

$t,~Miy

PH. "1·2'11

Fr1fll411V" Stn''a

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Chlrlft .tfflt, Ill .fth.

,JIIISCIUPTIONS

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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Mary Agnes Johnson; 74, Point
Pleasant, died Wednesday In
Pleasant Valley Hospital. ·
She was born July 2. 1912, in
Par~ersburg, W.Va., to the late
Thomas a nd Mary Virginia
Brown Keller.
She was preceded in dea th by
her husband. Clarence Milton
Johnson, in 1982.

..

She was a former employee of
the Mason Furniture Factory.
Surviving are three daughters,
Virginia M. Bland , West Columbia, W.Va., Sarah A. Gleaso n,
Point Pie.a sant, a nd Marceline
M. Dan iels, Petersburg, Va.;
three sons, Si mon H. Johnson,
Pomeroy, and Edward K. and
William A. Johnson, both of Point
Pleasant: 21 grandchildren , 26
great-gra ndchildren, and one
great-greal'grandson, Brandon
Lucas Hall; and · several nieces
and nephews .
Services will be Saturday at 11
a. m . at the Foglesong Funeral
Home wit h the Rev . George
Hoschar offici ating. Burial will
be in Zerkle Cemetery. Friends

CHOIRS - The Melp Junior High School choir concert will be
held at 7 this evening a&amp; the junior high auditorium lq Middleport.
The Meigs High School Choir, the Choraliers and Madrigals will
present their Christmas concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in the high school
audllorlum. Direction Is by Gay Pippert . Pictured are three
members of the high school choir reh earsal for the upcoming
Sunday event.

r---Local Briefs:-___,

Care facility

Free commodities to be given
j

The Gallia-Meigs Communit y Action Agency will be
distributing cheese, butter and rice Wednesday, Dec. 17.
Distribution will begi n at noon at Racine American Legion
Hall, Meigs County Fairgrounds !Grange Hall). Tuppers Plains
Fire Station a nd Pageville Town Hall.
Senior citizens. handicapped or sick persons o;&gt; r those who
work may -have someone else pick up their commodit ies by
sending their food card with a signed note.
Persons picking up commodities are as ked to bring a sma ll
box or paper bag.
•

lm

Santa to visit foster children
Santa Cla us, played by Southern Ohio Coal Co. Meigs Mine
No. 1 shuttle car operator Max Whitla tch, will hos t
approximately 40 children on Monday from the Gallla County
Children's Homee and area foster homes served by the
Children's Services of Meigs. Gallia and Vinton cou nties.
Each child will receive a gift provided through more than
$10,000 of donations from employees of the coa l company, union
personnel and local Individuals and businesses. Ail the
fes tivit ies will take pl ace at the Meigs No . 1 mine, near Salem
Center on Ohio 124.
The gifts will be distributed to Meigs and Galli a grou ps a t 10
a. m.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Wednesday: Pomeroy a t 6:48 a.m . to 128 Peacock Ave. for
Gladys Smith to V~terans Memorial Hospit al; Pomeroy at 7:59
a.m . to the Meigs County Infirmary for Helen Crabtree to
Vetera ns Memori al Hospita l; P omeroy at 11:59 a.m. to Hi g h
Street for Pa tr ick Lochary to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleporl a t 4:33p.m. to Gra nt Street for Arnold Knight to
Veterans Memdrial Hospital.

which can be shown. Hopkins
sai d ment al health money to the

•·
John Sexton , 76, of 7621 Key stone Furnace Road , Jackson,
died Wednesday at Holzer Medi·
cal Center.
Mr. Sexton was born Sept. 1,
1910, in Rock House, Ky .. to the
late Elam and Victoria Gunn
Se &gt;;tQn. He was preceded in deat h
by his wife, Opal Bentley Sexton,
In 1972.
Survjving are two sons, Leroy,
of Jackson, and John E. of
Langsville; four daught ers,
Nancy Mtller, , Bremen. Ind .,
Velma Tiilotsom, E tna Green,
Ind., Edna Scarberry, Bourbon ,
Ind., and Sharon Fisher. Nappa·
nee, Ind.; one brother, Roy
Sexton. of Perris, Calif.; 17
grandchildren and two grea tgrandchildren.
Services will be 1 p.m. Sa tu rday at White Oak Church. near
J ackso n, with Rev. Robert Hat fi eld officiatihg. Burial wlli ~in
Bentley Cemetery. Friends may
call at May hew Funeral Home,
135 Broadway St., Jackson, from
3-9 p.m. Friday.

Shade River Masonic Lodge 453 of Chester will hold a regular
meeting tonig ht. 7:30 p .m. Closed ins tallation of officers.
Rt-freshments to be served .

Ail Middlepor t Village money
totaled $388,3M.6.1 as of Nov . 30,
CICI' k· Tr eas ur e r Jon B uc k
reports.
Receipt s, dis bursement s, rc·
spectively. during the month
from each fund and the balance
as of Nov. :10 include:
c.•eneral : $17,294. 98. $14. 796.03,
· $44.377. 80; street rna In tena ilce,

I
d
Jackpot unc aime
CLEVE LAND

jackpot in Ohio's Super Lotto
drawing went unclaimed Wed·
nes. day pight . increasing the' t ~p
prizr to $7.~ , million for next
week' s game.
A lottery commiss ion spokesman sa id thNe were no tickets
so ld •that listed all six of the
numbers drawn. meaning the $5
million jackpot will be a dded to
the top prize for next week . The
wlnn ing number swere1,4,10, 29.
40 and· 42.
There were 97 players who
picked five of the numbers to win
$705 each. Also, 5,765 pla yers
chose four of the numbers.
winn ing $45 apiece.

There will be a special meeting of the Meigs Coynty
Communlt.v Improvement Corporation Friday, 7 p.m., In the
common pleas courtroom of the Meigs Cou nt y Courthou se.
Cons ideration is to be given the issuance of $2.600,000ofM eigs
Ohio Indust r ial Development Revenue Bonds (Meigs County
Co nva lescent Cent er Project! .
·

Qhio weather

~:c:;;~::n~:::::

GALLIPOLIS - About 100 pounds ammo nium nitrate was
spilled on Ohio 7 in Addison Township, just north of Addison.
WednC'Sday after a right rear tire on a tractor- trailer worked
loose and br ushed against the unloading bin, according to the
Gallia-Melgs Post of the Ohio State Hi ghway Patrol.
Ammonium nitrate is a co lorless. crysta ll ine salt used in
some explosives and fertilizer. The chemical erodes metal upon
eontact bu t is nonflamma ble by itself, Gallipolis Vo lunt eer
Department Chief Ray Bush sa id.
The Gall ipo lis fire department wa s called by the palrol to
clean the spill off the road, Bush sa id.
Argus W. Farmer, 43. Zanesvil le, who drove the truck,
:. escaped wit hout Injury. The truck is privately owned by Carl
Forgraves ol Zanesville .

night.

Admissions - Gladys Sm ith,
Pomeroy; · William Lochary,
Pomeroy; Millard Ball, Long
Bottom; Leora Strom, Pomeroy ;
John Frick, Pomeroy.
Di sc harg~s - William Smit h,
Lote n a Frec k er. Kei th
McCarthy, Daniel Shain.

1

11
•
Il•l!

SAVE
.,

NO wr

'I

SA

20

Galipolii .

"C/1~111 to itli11 t. Gffi/MM"

'

0~

•Skirts
•Slacks

·

0

:oswraesasete'r Vests

OFF All
ALL AREA SCHOOLS

I

!

•Sweaters

ALL CHIC SPORT

5 1&amp;!~~~:·

Sweat Shirts

I•

~:~:99

•Blouses

Sl·3 -0 0

PLUS A '6 MAIL-IN
REBATE FROM CHIC

OPEN 9:30A.M. TIL 8 P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY.

Christmas Parade 1

1
I

••

I

SAT., DEC. 13-1 P.M.

.,

SANTA WILL ARRIVE DURING THE
PAIADE AND WILL STAY UNTIL 8 P.M.

II

REGISTER FOR
MYSTERY GIFT

SINGING GROUPS WIL BE SINGING CAROLS
AROUND THE CHRISTMAS TREE WITH HOWARD
WRITZEL PLAYING THE GUITAR.

Come Join in the Fun!

SIGN UP FDI CIIISTIUS DUWING AT DIFFERENT
IUSINESSES. NO PUICHASE NECESSARY.

DON'T FORGO THE HOUSE
UGH11NG CONTEST DEC. 22ND
YOU MUST REGISTER AT RACINE
DEn, STOlE 01 YIUAGE CUT RATE
TO• WIN.

1

•Vinyl, Steel Siding

An Ordinance to provide
. additional compensation for

Vitlage employees for 1986.
:

Be it Ordained by the

• Council of tho Vitlago of

'1988,

SECTION 1: That lor tho
yeer 1986 the VIllage ohotl
. pay each full and port time
' employee in active employment at of December 16,

1988 In eddition to ttl other
salary and fringe benefits

1:00 p.m.. II tho
Meigs County Courthouoe,
Seconds.-, Ponwoy, Ohio
415789, in the County Com·
_ , _. olllco. Second
Floor. to dilcuu tho pooolblo
.......... ..,. the , _ ol currondy -od not to oxoood
f2.600.000 in principal
It

amount of indualrlal develornent revenue bond (the

'

50°/o OFF

DECEMBER 5TH WINNER
ALICE FREEMAN

NEW SHIPMENT OF

WOMEN'S COATS
OPEN SUNDAY, DEC. 14th 12 •5

FRIDAY 5-8

'

EVENING HOURS BEGINNING
MONDAY, DEC. 15th

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

83

DDLEPORT
BOOK
STORE
·
MILL
MIDDLEPORT
ST.

992-2641

paid thla additional compen ution before Christmas and
fnadequaite. maetinga are
scheduled to pall this Ordinance by norm11
• procedures.

Public Notice
OF THE FAITH AND CREDIT
OR THE TAXING POWER OF
THE ISSUER. The primiiV
...... of .... Project io prauntly
onticlp.otod to be tho Bor·
t
rower. ntorootod p.onono
are Invited to al1ond thio

~

nince shall taka effect and

gi""n on opponunity to o•prooothoir vlowo concerning
tho propooodloouonco of tho
Bond ond tho tocotion and
nature of tho p1opoood Projoel. Anyone deolring to
moko ,wriHon commonto con
gi"" tnom the ct... oftho
Boord of
Commio·
olonoro
umo addrou
the Public

11 Ht

no11celt

purau1nt 10 Section

Hobltettar, Clertt of

the Board of County

. be in force from and after

construct, inttall

and / or equip o commorciat
facility conoloting of 1 100bod okitled nuroing and intormodlato care focitity located
• Clerk/ Treaaurar
at Pogo StrHI, VIllage of'
Richard D. Soylor, Mayor Middleport, Moigo County,
Bruce J. Reed, Otito, 4&amp;780 (tho " Projoct'l .
Council President
THE BONDS SHALL NOT
' (1214. 11 , 2tc
REPRESENT OR CONSTtTUTE A DEBT OR PLEDGE

· Doc:embar 1 B, 1 9B8.
. PASSED: Doc. 1. 1988
. ATIEST: Jane Walton,

•

_6_4_M_i-sc-.-M!,..e-rc~h-a-nd~ise

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
SIZE 23X30X007
ONLY

You'll Find Cooi'Sovings
In The Classifieds

2s(

EACH

USES F,OR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAM' SHADES.
CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT TIE
DAILY SENTINEl nL 3 P.M.

SALES &amp; SERVICE

MOUNTAINEER
BODY SHOP

Commiaaionere

1

FarM E•ulp•e•t
Parh &amp; Servlee

PH. 949·2.01
or 949-2860
Oay or

Night

RADIATOR
SER~ICE

We can repair and re'core radiators and

HOTP.ONT

RANGE

30' ELECTRIC

$29995

GE VCR

4-EYent 14-Day Timlf

13 19 95

-2~.00 Rebate

$29995

GE 19"

TELEVISION
~2~ $25995
HOOYD

SWEEPERS

$7995

VCR TAPES
ONLY $299
GOlDnAI

MICROWAVE

$10995
MGM

'FARM CITY INC.
POMEROY

982-2104

Call: 742-2407

11-28·86-1 mo.

SHARPENING
SERVICE
Circular Saws
Saw Chain

Knives
Chisels

GRAVELY
. TRACTOR SALES :
204 Condo• Sl.
Pomeroy, Ohio

BISSRL
SIDING CO.

12·5-'86·1 m

"Free Estima1es"

PAT HILL FORD

PH. 949-2101
or 949·2160

992-2196

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tfc

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas ~
Satellite Sales ~
Installation ~·
Service
.

No Sunday Calls
Ill IIIIo

J&amp;L INSULATION
JAMES KEESE

Rt. 124, Porn11oy Ohio

Electronic Organs
Mobile service ~

'

HEATING &amp; COOLING

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
AI•• TfiiUIIIIIOI
PH. 992~5682

614-843-5248 :
REASONABLE • RELIABLE :
8-20-'86 ttrr

•NEW FURNACE
•AIR CONDITIONING
•HEAT PUMPS
•BLOWN INSULATION
•REPLACEMENT WINDOWS

or 992-7121

FOR SALE

FREE ESTIMATE

992-2772

6·17 -tfc

YOUNG'S

CHRISTMAS:
TREES

1 Mo. 12-9-86

CARPENTER

10' MESH ANTENNA
PANASONIC RECEIVER

SERVICE

FUllY .EMOTE &amp; INSTAllED

TAGGING NOW :

Pre-cut frets DYoilabl~

located on
\
Ftatwoo.ds Rd. (Co.
Rd 26) at Harley !
Haning residence, 2 •

$4800

Mi. from Five

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET

Hobson ld.

D&amp;P

BUILDING

PH. 992-6173

PAINTING EXTERIOR
.

N. Secand

Anno uncr.m en l s
3 . Announcements

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
3I 7

Middleport, Ohio

COMMERCIAL • RESIDENTIAL
-FREE ESTIMAlES-

Rtcine Gun Shoot spontored;,
Atclne Gun Club. EverySund.,,
~inning It 1 :00 p.m. Factory
Choke, 1 2 gutge thotguns. "

Crlft sale Sat . Dec;.

fPEC/Ai/ZING IN IVIN901V I. I)()OR REPLACEMENT

Craft sale Sat . Dec. 13tH,
10a.m. · 1. At th e home of

No hunting or trea paulng,
Mynn Farm located Chnlnut
Ridge Road .

11-10·86·1 mo.

S.e-r:ces
• •
·
~

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR ,
Truck; auta. &amp;
heavy equipment
repaira and walding.
(All mokn &amp; modol1)

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756
John II. ltnh
Ownar/Mtchanic

II· I K-1 mo.
\

.. .. ·· -- .. - -- .. · -

CJ Co1111uterized Hearirc Air Selection
z Swim Molds • Interpreting Services

-

~

~

z
z

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audiologist

- (614) 446-7619

or (614) 992-6601
417 Secood Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631
8-13 tfn

WE ARE
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS fOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
*SPIED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GilSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATRUTE SALIS l SERVICE

Wl H••J AFill Tl•
ftep Tt~hlel••

D•tt .
RIDENOUR
N

TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER-985

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915-3561
All Me...
•Washere •Dilh.wllhera
•Range•

•Rifr . .rltOrl
•Dryen •Frlllll'l

PARTS Mid

Giveaway

Cuteadoreble pups . Mak•good
chrl~11 gifts Ph. 814- 448·~
H64.
I
Full siZe bed mattrns QOol1
condition Ph. 614·446· 4347 . :

Betgle like famtle, brown ·&amp;
black. Bmo. old, 'Ptied httl
shots. Ctlt 614·448·30?3. •
1 female puppy. part hound. p~

lemtln
thephard Ph. 814- 44~
044.
\

leautHul white female AnoQ'ra
Ct1. to glva to a good home. Call

a"er &amp;pm 614-446-7526. , ,"'

•

lost· Pekin... male answers t'P
Sugar Bear, lost on second tv&amp;
H found call 114·446-8201 Dr

614·446-2012 .

•
'
Couc::h, chair, ottoman. uprigHt
piano. female Doberman Ph~

614-446-4802

271 N. 2nd, Middleport

992-5766

OPEN : Mon.-Fri. 8 am·9 pm- Sat. B-6
Walk -ins Welcome

EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS
Debbie Meedow.- Owner: lmoleen Blevins
· Lorette Hololnger, Shelly Ohlinger
Morri Am1bery

..

&gt;

6 Pit Bull puppies to givatway 18
good hom e. Call 814 ·992-

2292 .

..

Ptrt Wtlker and pan Beegle pupl
to give away. Call 614 ·992r

6952 .

4 loveablo -miud breed puppiet'
t o good home Ph. 304-176•

6367.

6
((UT OUT FOI FU1UIE US!I

13t~.

10e.m. · ?. At the home of
Qenlfdina Cleland. Main St.
Racine, Ohio.

Gtreldine Cleland, Main St.
Recine, Ohio.

•PHONE 1614) 992-5009

I

The family of
Melissa German
would like to
express their
-appreciation to all
the Leading Creek
friends and
neighbors who
brought us comfort
durin&amp; the death of
our loved one.

:

Middleport, OH.

. GENERAL REPAIR
REMOQELING

INTERIOR

~

~oints

Watch for S1gns •
11-24·86·1 mo .·

PER MONTH WITH

992 ·6215 or 992-73 U
Pomeroy, Dhia

.

PH. 992-2975 t'

'New Homes Built

repair Gas Tanks.

Roger Hysell.
Garage

Planer Knives
Drill Bits

*VINYL SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

heater cores. We can
also acid boil aild rod
out radiators. We also

4- 16-'116 tfn

614-446-7126

•Trucking

10-S-tfc

NO SUNDAY CALLS

7 Years
Maintenance
Experience
Work
Guaranteed

•Sewage Systems
•Water 8o Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

Dtalor

"A I Reasonable Prices"

•Basements

WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
99.2-3410

Card of Thanks

;=====ar:c:h:a:n:d:is~e I1--~~;;;;e;;-~

ONLY

DENNY CONGO

Aulhorizotllolln DMro,
Now Holland, hsh Hog
Farm Equiprnont

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES

Excavating ·
•Landscaping

.

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSYilll, OHIO

BISSELL
BUILDERS

•All Typea of

4

to an allltlatod or rototod I•.:..::!..!
acquire.

BOGGS

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

..loll .. rt011, Owner
11·28-86· 1 mo.

&lt;'""

I

"'. It ·I 7-11&amp;

PH. 992-9949

Factory Choko
12 Gauge

Public Huring end wiH be

vised Code. The proceeda of

SECTION Ill: Thlo Ordi- rower
peraon.. )ortoentity
(the
"Bor·
finance
coata
to

(614)

APPLIANCE
REPAIR

PHONE
992-2156
Or
Ill illy Sentinel Cln,ilid Otpt.

the Bondo would be loonod

to Meigs Canter. Limited. an
Ohio limited partnership. or

1.£5111NCI PHONE

4U-6323 Day or E..ri.na

109 MULIEIIY AVE.
POMEIOY, OH. ·

6:30P.M.

IUSINISS PitON!

1614) 992·6550

V. C. YOUNG In

"FlEE
IIISTALLATIOtl"

____

·· Pomeroy, two-thirds of all
· members concurring ""'
tic Heering on Docembor 28,
thereto:

SAT. NIGHT

(Free Eatimetes)

IHOWJOOM HOUIIS:
9 to 5 Mon., ·futs., Wed. I Fri.
9 to 12 !hun. &amp; Sot.

NOTICE OF PUBLIC
HERING
INDUSTRIAL
DEVELOPMENT REVENUE
· BONDS
Tho County ol Moigo, Ohio
~- "t-"j, will hold 0 Pub-

Your Coble &amp;
p,;,,.A Billa Here

CARPn
· UPHOLSTERY
PLUS

SUGAR RUN
ASH LA MD

EVERY

We Clft'Y Fishing Supplitl

L&amp;W CLEANNG

REBUilT &amp; REPAIRED

Iathan ll!lilding

- PiufNJing tnd electrical
work

Wr~t

ORDINANCE #661

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

- Aoaflng end gutter work

Window

Public Notice

Now location: _.
168 North S.ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

- 4ddon• tnd remodeling

Ill Caurl St .. Pamer11y. O..D45719

Public Notice

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

GUN SHOOT

-Concr.te work

(fj of tho lntornol Re·
Ohio
Conotllution
end
~~~~","d~Codo
of 1986. 01
order that employees may bo _Chapter 186 of tho Ohio Rt· I•

Friday Evening Special
All Christmas Items

Heavpn's main door.

•lntulatad Replacement

SECTION tt: That thlo "Bonds") pursuant 10 Arti·
Oi'dinanca Is hereby de- cte VIII, Section 13 of tho
clared to be an emergency in

OPEN .FRIDAY
NIGHT TIL 8

throu ~h

,.,,,.,,t Cuter

The Daily Sentinel

additional ulary.

i

The Old Church BuUdlnJ
The old Church buUdtng, I can spe II now,
Sitting on top of the hill.
Servf'd Its purpose to the fall hful each day,
The ones who did God's will.
A haven of rest tor soul weary ones.
Those stranded along life's way.
Yes, It proved Its worth, many times over,
. And stilt does the same today.
·

TIN PROF£$$/ONAl/1•.,

..._

heroto!O&lt;e provided tho oum
of fifty dotlaro (160.00) aa

J"i:Ch.~-.:,;h:..i;,;;;,~ra'tro;n

And as he looks upon that rose.
That ros(l, just might be me.
Oltn Harrison
Pomeroy, Ohio

(304) 675·5252

The OOdy shows signs of wear.
The wr lnkiH are- ge-ttlnii~ mu ch deeper,
· From worry, that pur them thtre.
' The hair has lo~· Its color,
~ From dark. to a slivery ~ra,v,.

·1

I•

And don' t know where to go.

He may be waHdng ai mlessly,
As 11 s hip !hats Ins! at sea.

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW, INC.
405 MAIN Str"t. Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

•Dooro

Business :Services

1·3-'86 lfc

And If by chance, thPre comes alonf(,
A slrang~r we don' I know.
HP may be looking for someone.

That is everywhere In sight.
I wonder of the feeling,
Wllh no stars to shl~e at ryight.

The V e a.n~ Roll 8)'
Th e ;vears ,havp takeh thl'ir toll,

I
I

!

Or Would we, by the thin~s WE' do,
Stand out like the littl e ros e?
Or would we hide our Inner self.
ThPre Is only one who knows?
So lets bE' llkP the flowe-r we saw,
Stand up for all to sre.
BE&gt; a friend lo those we m(l(&gt;! .
Th(' best that we ca n be.

And now In my mind, I can See It again,
Bringing memories from out or the past.
Memories that age refuses to hide,
And a heart that wan ts them to last.
Times that were spent In the- presenc(' of
God,
As relief was sought for th{' soul.
Yes, l'd like 10 go back there a !lain,
To thPplace where I first was made whole.
Olen Harrison.
Pomeroy, Ohio

~
It

· R

But as lime don't walt , I travelled on.
And a thought came to my mind.
Put us out In the world alonE'.
What beauty would one find ?
Would we bP special for all to ·see,
To bright en up each day.
Givi ng out wit h love to all,
To those tha t came our ~A'ay?

A tl ckf't

It!

'I

A little rose that stood so proud,
A sight for all to see.
Beauty given by God above,
And all of It Is tree.
A gift '!hats far beyond compare,
·That only time oan ma r.
This little flower 1 with ~a ut y l'£,'(1.
Tha'tlt stands alone by far .

•Storm Windowt

I
I
I

I
LAY-AWAY .
•
Llll:tl~lll:tllll:tllelllfl*lfl*~-lll:tlill:tllll:tllll:tl.lll:tllll:ti~ICII·IIl:tl···'-

I

And with this greatness He displays,

~~~

u
'
I
NDY S BOUTIQ E I
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

Keep ~our Wf'll of salvation

II!

I

One day as I was walkinf:
Along a pleasant countJ)' side.
J came- upon a cabin
Where someone had lived and died.
All things there seemE'd forgott en,
Like the tombstone old and gray.
Until I saw beside t hat stone
A rose In red ar ray.

The same old bu ildi ng, year after year.
Gave peace to the weary at heart.
Many found answers to problems at hand.
As God offered each a new start .
A chance to' be free. rrom the stain of sin.
~ To live and be happy once- more.
With the gift of Salvation, He oners to all.

Reading God's word Is
Filling your well
Drinking from It
Sa V(IS lost souls
From helL

ThP well or salvatlon
is crys tal- so clear
And It kl:'eps our Lord Jesus
Llngt'-rlng: near.
Barbara James
Pomeroy, Oh

tj!,•
•

·1

Loaely Beauty

The days ar ~ all un · ~dlng,
As you take them, one bv one.
The stars spell out the night time.
While the day Is marked by sun.
The dark that clouds our vision,
Ends at breaking of the day.
I guess1 thal solves the problem,
For God planned 11 all that way.

Just pick u~ your cup
'Cause Cod s holy word
Keeps Its !evrl up.

The

SALES &amp; SERVIC£

Drlk from II

I!

I

•

I

R

·

rrown.

He Planned It '111M Way
The sun that s hineS so bright ,
The sky that Is so blue.
The stars that shine at night,
With a moon that helps oUt too.
Gives birth to dark and dayllgh1.
That we call night and da y.
To me, It Is amazing,
But Cod planned It all that way .

With pureness of heart
. lis cle-ar spa rkling water
Can stop Satan's dart.

r••••n~~:~~lfl*""lltWI!lll&lt;l!lll&lt;lfl*lltWI!lii&lt;B:IIIfl*lll:tllfl*lfl*l!l:(ll¥lll:fllll:tl4io

11

The feeling, I cannot describe,
Its different for everyone.
But the gift Is by the giver.
God's on e and only SoD.
. So I'll thank the gtver .tor it all,
And have no more fo say.
Take each day and night that comes,
For God planned It an that way,
Olen Harrl$on
Pomeroy, Ohio

The teeth have long departed,
Thpy left by ones and (wM.
'nle dentist gave nie new OJles,
Which now T have to use.
Allthts leaves bill JuSt one thing,
But the lords been good and kind
I could not have written any of this,
If I had lost my mind.
Olen Ha rrison
Pomeroy. Ohio

We can draw from It
Drink each day
Praise God! Praise God!
For the price He did pay.

1-------------------------

I

THOMAS CLOTHIERS

OFF

PR'E~

'

Contented
I watchE'd a llttlp bird.
Barbara James
Build a llest in yonder tree-.
Pomeroy, Oh · To probably raise a family .
Of one, or two, or threE'.
11 didn't see to mind,
Of birds nylng to and fro.
Tbank You Lord
The only thing it cared about ,
Thank you LQfd for this day.
Was wher e the little twigs should go.
Th e many blessings you sent our way.
But as the days passed swiftly,
We seldom thank you for ait you've done
I WatchE'd that little n'est,
Holy Father, Precious Son.
To me It was unsightly,
But the bird had done Its best.
Th ank you for the sunshine bright.
It wasn't like we humans,
Thank you for the moon at night.
Where pcrf['('tion had to be.
·Just a place to be of service.
To ·ralse a famil y.
Thank you for our wakening hou r.
Th ank you for your holy power.
A pla~e that would be home,
Thank you for the peace and qu!E&gt;t.
For the young ones due In tim('.
Thank you for our rest at night .
A place on high. and out of reac~ .
Of most enemies that can cllmb.
Thank you for our right to praisr.
A place secu r e, and all its own,
To stand most any test
Thank you for our night and day.s.
'Twill serve the little- bird quite wt&gt;ll.
Thank vou for the food we eat .
For U had done Its best.
Your blessln~s 'Lord are ever sweet.
Mrs. Barbara James So as each day, that lime will brlnj:!;,
I'll watc h that nest so small.
Pomeroy, Oh
Fo'r the young ones. that I hope to see,
And to hear their pleading ~a ll .
To hear them cry and beg for food.
So they can someday be. ·
The Well of Salvation
TherE' is a well of salvatton
A tnother or dad to build a nest,
That lives within.
•
To raise a family.
II coml'S from our Lm d Jesus
Olen Harrison
And saves you from sin .
Pomeroy, Ohio

THE MIDDU SHOE STORE IN THE MIDDLE BLO&lt;K
POMEROY, OHIO

1

How would it be without the- .sun,
The moon and sky above.
And all the beaut~ that we see,
That He planned becau~e of love?

Tlte ltands are not as steady
The t~pgers , they woh' t close.
The feet and legs grow weaker,
They ache until It shows.
The ea~s ha ve trouble he-aring,
The eyes, now dimly see.
This all comes with age, they say,
At least is has wtth me.

Remember, He has rtst&gt;n
Asc('nded above.
He s its with out Father
And looks down wit h tov(l.
Yes, this Is victory
.
Its Jesus, Its Jes us
He'll save Us from sin.

MARGUERITE SHOP

R

Kermit Walton can be
found on Fridays &amp;
Saturdays at

Vtltory!

Believe God
· 1 know he arose from the grave.
C Is for COM('
To Jesus Christ go
· He'll save you ...
. Yes, save you, so
Please don' t say no.
T Is f()r time
Today Is the day.
Believe me, believe me
Our Christ Is the way.

STOREWIDE

I
•

Gives appearance of a

The well of salvation
Can never f'\.ln dry
The wat er In II
Our God does supply.

c hrl•stm·.as

to be so h'ard to comb

Th e heart, tl skips a beat or two.
Tt:it&gt; muscles, they get sore.
No use tryln~t to exercise.
There nothing left In store.

The w('IJ is clear
Bubbling free
Its there tor you
It s there fo r me.

20-0/o

URed

The body Is bent with age,
Th(' walk Is slowing do\~·n.
The lines upon an aged fa ce

V Is for valian t
For our God was brave.
I is Incred ible

SALE

and courteous ass istance during
the mental health board's recent
levy promotion.
Also present at the meeting to
discuss budgetary matters for
the coming year were Rex
Sh~. nefield and Mike Duhl, of the

The recount began Nov . 24,
cont inued Nov , 25 and picked up
agai n on Dec. 4, wi th the last

Firemen clean up chemical spill

$1,i02.78, $7,739.m. $2,552.06 deficit ; federal revenue sharing, no
r ecei pts , no disbu rs ements,
$3.841.26: street light. $1,61 0.08,
$1.678.29. $1.057.m deficit :· street
levy, ~o receipt s. $714 .90,
$1, 628.66; fire equip men t,
$2,016.73. $947 .71 , $3,292.60 deficit : fir e truck, $1,610.08, $93.34,
$8,669.97;
.
Public tra n s p ortat io n ,
$12,559.78. $1~.370 . 10, $1'1,9~3. 14
deficit : sanitary sewer escrow,
no rece ipt s. no dis bursements,
$m. 217.29; fire house Improvem e nt , $3,224'. 79, $186 . 88,
$45,698. :11: wat er tank, no recei pt s , no di s bu rse m ~n t s,
$130.977.58; water, $13,083.60,
$1 0,124. 16, $14,899.40; sa nitary
sewe r , $7,789.18, $9,107. 46, ·
$27,496. 90; swimming pool. $750,
$18.38, $82.33 deficit ; ceml\lery,
$587.89, $1,191.30. $2,856.31 deficit: water meter trusts, $270,
$385.04. $12.265.75: B-19. con., no
. receipts, no disbursements ,
$102.10 deficit: B-}7 econ. devel.,
$917.45, $1,173.81, $9, 157.32 .
RPceipts for the month totaled
$6J ,ll7.34 and disbursements
a moun t'ed to $60,526.27.

STOREWIDE

I
fo~~awisnowintheinltlaldraft r;;;;;;.:=~;;;~;t I
Hopkins descr ibed the pro·
Ch I
I C I f I
posed law as "a clean-up law "
r ltlllas s om ng I
which wlil focus more on
.So Where Ia Kermit? 1I
Victor
named
I
!Continued from Page I)
'
II!

Meigs CIC to meet Friday

1UP I I _ The

community-based mental health
need s. and defin e the adm lnistration of the state agency. Hopkins
said the new law, which may be
ready to begin · the le gislative
process in the spr ing, would
probably be' phased in .over a
five-year period.
Hopkins also commended
Meigs County Auditor William
Wickline for prompt, accurate

center.
as well
ney allotted
the center
fromas
themo
Older
Amerl·
cans Act, ca n be used as match.
South Central Ohio
Once the cen ter becomes 366
Cloudy !onlght, with a chance
of rain changing to snow flurries
Cert .f'ed b th t t th M dl
1
1
y
e
s
a
e,
e
e
.
caid dollars can the n be used to and a low between 25 and 30.
subsidize all present activities at , Mostly cloudy Friday, with highs
th e center.
between 35 and 40.
Hopkins also gave a brief
The probability of precl plta· .
overview of a proposed new lion is 30 percent tonig ht and near
mental health law lor the sta te.
zero Friday.

Masonic lodge meets tonight
~

s~xlon

Ram ola Hopkins. executive di·
rector of the Gallia-JacksonMeigs County Soli Conserva tion
Melgs Me nt a l Health Board.
Service.
Hopkins announced that the
Meigs County Senior Citizens
And finally, it was announced
Center will soo n be apply ing to by Phil Roberts. county englthe state for 366 certificatio n to neer, tha t a bridge on Nease
bring Medicaid dollars into fhe Hollow Road , Lebanon Towns hip
senior center budget.
Road 105, will be replaced by the
As Hopkins explained, the Ohio Bridge Co. Ca mbridge, at a
amount of Medicaid dolla rs allot - cos t of a bout $25,000. Co nstru e·
ted the Meigs center will depend lion will start a round J a n. 5 and
on the amoun t of match money ~:e~~idge should be closed three

Emergency units answeP 4 calls

'•

J ohn

·

Ohio

Is hard to find today.

Vlcton·. let met tell you
What ft means to me.
Its Jes us! Its Jesus~
And he sets us frCe.

rcontinued fro m Page 1)

semen! of the project by the
Co mmunit y
p rov e m e n t
Corporation .
The CJC will meet 7 p.m.
Friday at the courthou se 10
discuss the matter.
If the ere endorses the project,
the commissioners will then hold
a public hearing IJefore adopting
a resolution authorizing the sale
of the bonds .
It was point ed out that sale of
the municipal bonds does not
obligate the county finan cia lly,
in any way.
Also at the meeting was

.

may ca ll at the funeral home on
Friday from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m .

What

.
13

-

DecMnbar11,1986

Poet's
corner

Middleport official
lists village's balance

Area deaths
Mary Agnes Johnson

Thunda~

Thl.l'sday, December 11. 1986

•

lost and Found

LOST- Garmtn Shepherd dog',,'
black I ten, h.. collor on .

AntweJI to Brutu• Ph. 114 -448~ ·

2709.

;:

LOST· in Northup vicinity. Bit•
black gtfman theperd, aniWert
to Bttr. If snn ))l ..ae c 1 1l_

814-448-7852 or 614 · 446;
4221.
:.

LOST· In Rodnrt •••· Beagl. ,'
bleck • white f.mtlt. 1yr. old,;
ahswera to Mluy Ph, 114-24&amp;'·

1171 .

~.

'

~--------------~··

LOIT· 7wk old Germtn Sh.; 1
P"ad. ftmale bltck wilh white'
- .. lost on Johnsons Ref!,'

NHdt mNieine, childs pet. Ph~
114· 211-1411.
~.
and

•'

white~

•..... c.a ~

114-7421'

Pound: baby mllttr•• found Atfw."
1 ro Big WhMt. c,tl.;
114-r~-1234
••

'

�'·

r
. ~

E~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;-------~~~~~~ir~~~~~~~~~~~~;;~~~~~i~~~~~r~1~1~,~19~8~6
LAFF A DAY·
..
Page- 14- The

6

Loll

Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

44

and Found

,•

lott: Smell brown 1nd whlt1
pony In Herrisonvlllti •r••· C.ll
&amp;14-992-&amp;057 o• &amp;14 · H2·
2938.

•

·

~-·

Found: baby ""ttrt11 toun~ Rt.
7 cloie to Big Wheel. Call
6 14-992·8234.

Fur~iahed 1Pir1mtnt. Upttlirs.

Adulta only. all utilhlll paid. Call
814· 446-9123 .
Apertmenta tor rtnt t100.00,
1110.00, 1200.00, Ph 304875· 5104.

LOST pair doQt, black German
Shepherdt. wearing red eolian,
Rewtrdl 304·458· 1098.
Lost 1 blactc &amp; tan German
Shephard, male pup. P•rk Drtve
area. ltltaeen· 12·9·8.8.- 304·
675-7991 .

7

Yard Sale

-·-····p·amii'rov··-·----··
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity
Inside garage sale. Thur. Fri. Dec
11 ,12,13 . 3 16 Condo• St.
Pomeroy.
·
.. . ....... -.. . ......... ... ... ... . .

Apartment
~or· Rent

"Stt'ck those stomachs out!"

61 Household Good•

Moving Sale. Saturday, De·
camber 12. 3-10 mile past
Hickory Chapel · Poplar Heighls.
304-676-6110 .

9

Wanted To Buy

W e pay cuh

for late modet clean
used cars.
J im Mink ChiN.· Oids In c.
Bill Gene Johnson
8l4-446·3672

23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning 1nd Repeir. Clip
this ad for 26 percent ditcount
Lane Danielt «114·742· 2961 .
Starks TJee and Uwr.· Service.
He dgea , ahrub1 , buahu
trimmtd. landac1plng, 1tump
111d leef ramoval, 304· 6782842 or 571-2010.

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used Clrs. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 E11tern
Ave , Gallipolis . Call 614-446·
" 2282.

Real Eslale

Used Mobile Homes Ph 614448,0175.

31

Buvirg daily gold. t ilver coina.
ringll, jewelry, aterhng ware, old
coins. large currency. Top prtces. Ed. Burke« Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614·
992-3478 .

3 bdr .. air, pool, gartge. Nice.
Comm•cill property, corner
lot• &amp; htghway frontage. liat
with ua. We hwe buytra. A-One
Reaj Ettet•Broktr. Call 304·
674-6104 or 304 - 674 · 63~8 .

Wanted to buy. Standing timber.
Cell ,6 14· 742· 2328 .

8 room houae. 1. 2 acrn. Double
c.r garage. Located onRo•e Hill.
Barg1in pric.d t20,000. Call
814-878· 2513.

BUYING RAW FURS! Ginseng,
Yellow Aoo1. beef and deer·
,idea. Alto selling trepping
supplies. Wheal Lites, Nite Lites.
Hours 1:00-9:00. Cloaect Wed.
George Buckley 614-664-4711 .
OUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD
Ceali paid. Pre1960'• · Single or
whole collection. Call Marc and
Ellen Futu 814 -992-2101 daya
or 6~4 - 692 - 2481 eveninga and
weekenda.

Homes for Sale

Government homea from 11 . IU
rep"rl. Delinquent tax property.
RepoJtenionJ, C.ll 805 -8876000 Ext. GH-9805 fOf current
repo list.
2 bedroom house for aale in
Clifton (Mible Johnson property) . Fully carpeted, recently
remodeled. new root. Asking
$18 ,000. Call304-773-5634o•
304-773-6784.

Large houae wtth three loll, 810
QUILTS
.E. Main, Pomeroy. t18,000.
BOUGHT-SOLD
Clll 614·985· 4427 after 6:00
Ca1h paid. Pre 1950'• · Single or p.m.
whole collection. Cal! Mere and
Ellen Fulu 614-992-2101 days Apartment for ule in Ch•ter.
or 614-692-2461 evenings and Cell 614·986·3867.
weekendt .
380 Grent St ., Middleport. 8
Now buying ahelled corn and ear room1, beth, ger-ae, work ahop.
corn, Must be dry and cl81n. t23.700. Make off• . Ctll614·
Whv drive 1 00 miln when you 992-2602.
c1n get the tame price at MGM
Farm City in Pomeroy? Call 2 br, kitchen, btthroom, wh.h
814-992 -2181 and uk 'for laund,., room, INing room &amp;:
Richard.
dining room, all elec. Approx . 7
mila from Pt. Pl . on Rt. 12. 2
Good uaad 911 110\/e. AeMone· tnctsapprox. 1acremor.od"'
bly priced. 304-675 -6211 .
overlooking Kanawha River.
040,000 . .Cell 304-876-5440
between 8:30 and 4:30.

Em~loy1111~nl

Serv1"es
11

Help Wanted

Mainten1nce peraon to live in
1partment comple11. Call 304·
675-5104.
Lldy to live-in, care for elderly
lady 6 dayt a week. ftoom &amp;

board &amp; t llarv. Pt. Plea11nt 1ree
Ph. 814-448· 4798

Clean, .,.;ell mllnt1lntd, aluminum tided, 3 btdrooms, 1 1h
b1th1. formal dining, rec. roam.
large tlt·in kitchtn , 2 car
garage. Ntw fuet efficient fur·
naet. 304-175-4604.
32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI .
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. AT 35.
PHONE 814·448·7274.

Rent with option 1o buy. Exeep·
tioneltv good 3 bdr. homa. New
carpet plu• many more eJCtraJ.
City aehooia. Undtf t40,000.
V.l. Smith, Reehor Cell 614388·8928
6 Rooms It bath. out building,
garden , 4 'room• cerpeted. City
tchool district. county water. 15
min. from city 1/mlta, no inside
pett . Reference &amp; depoat
quired t200.00mo plut utilitill.
Ph. 614-255·8256

r•

3 Bedroom Ranch. Rodney
ViH-ue II. UII.OO per month ..
plus depc1it. refarenctJ re·
qulred . Blackburn Rutty Ph.
814-448-0008
2 bedroom hou11 for rent in
Middleport. Completely remo·
deled. New carpeting through·
out. New c1bineta. U75 plf
month plus depo1it. Ctll 61 4·
992· 5858.
leauttful new houH in Pom•
roy. Al1o new ont bedroom
furnished apartment in Midcll•
port. Call 114-441-1662 or
614-992-6304.
tn Middlepon. 6 •oomo , 3
bedroom•. 1Vz beth. Fully eerpeted. encloaed b-- porch.
Llvlllot. Call 61•· 992·3510.
Small 4 room and bath home
with ttC.ched g1rageln Middlllt'
port .. Cerpetld, new ltove and
refrigerator. Excelltntcontlitlon.
ldealforaJingleormulmumof
2 tduh1 .. Sorry, no peta or
children. 1176. monthly plut :
security depoait . Phone 614 912· 6292.

from 111.00 to t110 .00 Cell
LM T.Y.'a S.le It t14· 441·
1149.
'

t••

2 t.dr. mobile home..Upper River
Rd. 'II milt from~llipolil . 2
children 1ccepted. Call 614·
44&amp;-0508.
2 Bedroom fully turnlahed.
Adulta only, All utllitill paid
ucept gu a. electric. Owner
PIYI water • tewage, mowing
and traah pidtup. C1blt TV
IVtillbit Ph. 114· 446-n93.

Lhl•in. 6 dey• a Week to carafor
eldlfly wom811. P1tiont care
on~ . Call814·992·7479.

Price reduced, Cl1yton 1982
1 2)160 total electric. excellent
condition. French Chy Mobile
Homot Ph &amp;14· 448·9340

1211 86 lrailer. fully Clrplted. 2
bedroom. g11 furniCt, 6 1eres,
1250 per month plua utllhln.
814· 992· 2018 o• 614· t82·
77&amp;4 .

1973 Schultz 2 btdroom t rliltf,
furnished, Wllher &amp; dry her good
condhion Ph . 614-448-4083 or
814-446-3716.

2 bedroom mobile home. Middleport. 0 . Ref•en~ witt. aecurity deposit. 30•·882-3287
or 304-713-6024.

1985 mobllt home tor salt.
14x70. neal lent condition. 2
bedroom, Z full bttha. Call
614-992·7183.
----..,.-...,---..,.-..,.,--3 bedroom. Furnished. Waaher,
dryer, air, 1wnln"'. Completely
tel· up on r•ted lot. 16700. Call
114-992-7479 .

K &amp; K Mobile Hom... 2 and 3
bedroom mobile homM, 304·
676-3000.

8x41 two bedroom with gn
furnace. Call 614· 985-3360 or
814-986-3381 .

Furnished 2 bedroom. t1815 . pM
month. Plua utiUtl•. 176.00
deposit. 304·«176·8612.

---------------

Babyaltting in my home. Mon·
day thru FridiV· Prefer inffntl to
&amp; vt ar old. C•ll 304-676 -3774.

12x60 2 bedroom in Centenary
Ph. 6·14·448·4292 .
2 Sedroom. no pat1, Crown Chy
Oh. Ph. 114-258·1484
1986 1•x60 "mi. touth of
gaHipolit dem. 1 Rt 7 . No peu
coli oh" 3
h. 26&amp;·1089
2 bedroom oblla home In kyger
crMk aeho I dittrict Ph. &amp;1•·
441· 0722 .

Two bedroom trailer, couples,
ont amall child. Rtftfencea &amp;
Dtpotit. Everett Schwam. Rt. 1
Locult Lane. Pt . Ple111nt back of
K&amp;K
___
. ._.!. _________ _

---------------

12

44

Situations
Wanted

PARENTS! I
S1nt1 Will viait your child et
hame. Belitw•• cell North Pole
814-245·9513 for detlils.
Room 1nd board tor empkJyad
man . Nice home. F1mily 1tmoa·
ph .... Call 814· 992-8873.

1972 Alconl12x60, 2 bedroom
mobile home. ComplttMy furni•t.ed. e11ctllent condition .
U900, Coll614· 981·4227.
1
-1~96;_9=-:2:-·b~ld ,..
-m-:P::-M1:::C~m-o7bl:;:le
home, Ready to move. t3.000
firm . 304·1576· 2484.
34

1B

Wanted to Do

Will do b1bylittingin my home.
Mon thru Fridey 1 :30 to 5 . Lou
of TLC, Call Grandm1 In Vinton
Ph.814-389 -8113

Offlct tpace • Stori IPICt in Pt.
Pl....nt . A-One Real Enate Ph.
304-178-1104

R1~111 oIs

f I II illll:lrt I
41
21

_ Buslne11
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. racammend1 thet'you
du bualn.. with ptople you
know. and NOT to teftd mon-r
through the mail umlt you hwe
Inv estigated the oH•Ing.

Business
Buildings

House• for Rent

2 ltdrqom haute; 'mY CINn
UIO.OOpor mo., 171.00 dop·
oolt, loootod t Whlto Avo Ph.
441-3170

61

·Sale tires P1B5·13, radial
tlrea with ltudt uted 2

Apartment
for Rent

Nicety furnlthed mobilt' home
CA a heat, elllctf. tocatlon.
aduttt onty. Cal! 614-446-0338.
1513'1: 3rd. Ave. 1 bdr. prilrete
bath, I 140 p• mo. Dtpoah
required. Call 814· 448·4222
bMWHII 8. 5.
Furnlthtcl tfflcitnc, t150 utili·
tl• paid, ahare beth, 701 4th,
GaiiiPollt. C.ll441-"418after8

....

FurnllhN 3 rooms 1nd b1th,
cl11n, eduttt only. no peta. C111
614-448· 1119.
Nicety
Adutta
Flm a
Saltt •

furnlahed 2 bdr. 1pt.
only. Inquire at corner
Ollvt St. at Shtppardt
Service.

Furnished affldencv t1715.00,
2rmt. &amp; btth utllltiN Pd. 448·
"411 efter7p.m.
F"'nlohod Apt. 1210.00 utll•

llttPd. 1 ~ad oom1firttfloorPh.

448· 4t1o18 lfl• 7p.m.
em . ho- 2 bodroomtloeetOd 1 -=~~:-::~-'---­
on Ill In ftodnoy . Depooh Dup!G 148 S.cond, c•polod, l
required. noptt• ·"' · ':4f·22ee btdroom. LA, DR. new kitchen
&amp; bath. weth•&amp; dryer hook· up,
2 bedroom I 3 b..troam hOUIM t285.00 mo. plue utlltlill •
ID&lt; , ... Ph. 448-1875.
IIICUriiY dtpoon Ph , 114-0890.

61 Household Goods

. SWAIN
AUCTION S. FURNITURE 62
Oli\le St., Gtllipolia. New &amp; u1ed
woocl-cotlstovet, 6 pc wood L"
suite 1319. bunk bed• •199,
antron reclin•• e99 , new &amp;
ulld bedroom auitea, ra.,gu,
wringer w11htr1, a. tho11. Ntw
livingroom Jultn t199-tl88.
l•mPI, elto buying coal &amp; wood
11011... Cell 614-«8·3159.
County Appliance. Inc. Goad
ulld eppllancn and TV a.ta.
Op1n lAM . lo &amp;PM. Mon thru
Set . 114-UI-1899, 127 3rd.
Ave . Gelllpoli1, OH .
Valley Furniture, new a uted.
Urge uetion ol qu1lity ·furnl·
ture . 1211 Eaatern' A'Vt .,
Galiipolla.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sofas tnd chairt priced from
1396 to t995. Tebl11 150 and
up tO 1125. Hldl·l ·bedl 1390
to 1181. Recun.,. t225 to
t376. Lampt t21 to t121.
Oinettn t1 08 and up to t4915.
Wood tibia w-8 chairs t285 to
t795. De1k t100 up to t3715.
Hutch" 1400 end ,.p. Bunk
beda complete w-mattr•111
t2915 tnduptoi3H . Iebybeds
t110 • t1711. Mllnr. .etorba•
tPrintlt full or twin tl3. finn
173, end t83. 0u•n•et•l225.
King tl50. 4 drawer ch•t t815 .
Drn1tra t89 . Gun caiMnen 8.
10, &amp; 12 gun. l'ltlt or attalrlc
range 1375.· Baby m.ttr""'
t35 S. U5, Bed lrom11 t20,
t30 • King frame tiO. Goad
ttlection of bedroom auhe1.
mttll cabint11. htedbo•d• tlO
and up to tel.
Uaed Furniture: Wuher •
dryer, gat renga. wood table &amp;
2 benchn, bed1, dres•. wood
wardrobe. 3 mil• out
Bulavllla Rd. Open 8AM to
ISPM, Mon. thru Sat.
614· 448-0322.
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Wathera. d,.,en, refrlg•l1ort,
rangea . lklist• Appliance• ,
Upptr River Rd. betida Stone
Crnt Motel. 81•·«8· 7398.

1

White Farm Trectort, Baat Price
in Area. Sid•• Equipm•l Co.
Heod.-son,
w. va. 304·17&amp;·
'1421
.

,~:~~~~~:::::

For aale 24" boys lnved• dirt
~ike. good eond. •eo. 304-676·
6203.

62 Wanted to Buy

For sale glrla Strawb•rv roller
Jhoe lkatea slz• 13 like new.
pqm1 $10. 2 tett mattr111
. $20. eaett. 304·

Now buying shell corn or e•
corn. Call for lateat quottl. River
City Farm Supply, 814· 448·
2985.
CCC Generic Certific:ltll. 304·
876-1807.
63

Livestock

1 Grain fed beef rtedy to butcher
Ph. 814-446-4344.
4 vear old · Regittered Quarter
Horae for nit. Good 4 · H ~ Cell
814-992-6380.
64

Hay

&amp;

Grain

1'

•

'I

...'
'

lit 4 W.O.

114-245-9524.
,
.:.__....:,_ _ _--:-:-- --:
1974 Chevy Spdll Von. good
condhion. rt•onablt price Ph . "'I
.
114·261· 1989.

I

,,

FRAtllel~! YOO'R£ ACO&amp;T
ACCOIJI.ITM~T 11J II.ICHIGAil!

'

'"'~ r

1918 Wlllya Je..,. 4-wheef
drive. good cOndition
t~.eoo. oo Ph. 614.·2&amp;&amp;-8&amp;14

role is. actually .his first true
adult character.

1!11 (!) M•A•S•H

....1

1988 lnt.ml11onll Scout, runt
good 1100.00. Ph. 514·448·
0782

.,

m

1979 C.... y SWI . 4 Wheel.
driva. toedld. ·new 10x60 tira,
156,000 mil11. •3.000. Of fair
oft•. 304-67&amp;-2842 lh" 8
p.m. S78-2010.

Game

Urge round bails of hev for Hie.
t10.00 eKh Ph . 614·4·1·
1052.
Mi•ed gra11 hey for 1111. C.ll
814-94B-2237.

Cattery Kannel.
· Persian and
AKC Chow

Grein fed Angus Steers. Ph.
614-446-0780.
DP Gympac Ptu1. for ale
comp... e with bench, leg m•
chine, rowing, curt &amp; Itt ber.
1&amp;51bt of weight II corn• whh
1elf 1upporting ~tend. 1400.00
Callefter &amp;pm 61•·44«1· 2262.

Dried lhelltd corn, 14.50 per
c~. ground t5.00 per cwt,
ground wlthmoiiUH t5 .75per
ewl, 304-458· 1031 .

Tronspnrlallllll

Motorcycles

'

bred black Germeft Sh•
ftmele, pepert, 3yra old
I 814·441·01148.
1 - -- - - - - - - - 1 m•lechin•epug1yrtold, hu
p1pera. Excellent chrittm• gift
1300.00 .t48·78&amp;2.

1- - - - -,...-----,--Beagle pupa , &amp;wka old, femelea
130.00, m1lt1 140.00 Ph . 114·
379·23815 .

Chrittm .. Sale
18' girlt bike •2&amp;.00. lntelwi- 1- - - - -- ---,--Jion game &amp; tlpet t30 .00. Spaniel pupplts rudy for chrllt·
trundle Md 1100.00, Phono- m11 t26 .00 Ph. 814-245graph , Aefrig111tor, wopcl end 9167.
coal burntr, couch. antique 1---:----.,-::-~-~­
dretler, 2 TV gam•. 2 eay bake AKC reglnerld Beagle pupjHet.
ovena, ehllcktnt juiC41 mektt, 1 1 wka. old, 160.00 tKh. Cell
ano cane mtchln1. C.ll t14- 614-388·8415.
446·7064 ohM 3,30.
1 --::-:-----:-~~--:-:-::
1A Chow puppill, 4wks old, C. II
1• Commtdora Computer with after&amp;pm 114-388-9932.
printer, software, disk drive ealt 1--..;..-- - - - - -,.114· 2151·1989
AKC Regittertd Norwegi1n Elk
Hounds. lwkt old reedy to go
Mixed h11dwood tlabt . •12. per Ph.614-218-1117.
bundle. Containing approx . 11IJ 1----,.----~--::
tons . F08 Ohio P.llet Co. AKC Rtgiat.rtd Beegle pupa. 1
Pomeroy, Ohio. Cell 814·99Z· weeks old. Both parenta 111cel·
6411 .
lent huntart. taO. e•ch. Call
814·985·4450 .
Firewood. 111 hard wood. Heat
'IIOuchara eceepttd . t36 . a Beagla' puppltt. Ready to go by
pickup load . Phone 814· 742· Ch ri1tm11 . Alao okler leegiH.
2488 .
304-876-3011 .
Ntw Moped , 1400. 1970 Buick
Skylonl. t300. Call 814-992·
7810.

Aeglttered laagle pupa It old•
dogs. Dwight lok•. 304-89&amp;3938.

Ueed 275 gallon fuel oil t1nk
t31 . C.n be seen 11 Melgt lira
Center or calll14-992-2101 or
814·992·2319.

57

Musical
Instruments

4r

•

/VUM8E~

ALLEY OOP
AT'S TH' Wft(. PEOPLE!

®

,.
/l. ·II

. T... A'12S

1 8011 302 Ford tngine com·
plt1e whh hald•e. 1 New ear
t•oll• •aoo.oo. , • ..,. n5o.oo
Ph. 614-311-9908 .

~~ ·- ~

.... ''

'12 Chev. pickup peAa trenlmis·
1lon. rnr·tnd, rediMor, windshield, b1ck gle11. tome body
...... 304-488· 1183.

Stereo. '

Wonderworks Anne
goes off to a teaching col. lege, and she and Gilban fa ll
in love . (60 m in.)

J&lt;EEP IT QUIE;f, AN
KEEP IT MOiliNG I

@ MOVIE : 'Tell Them
Willie Boy Is Here'
8 :05 ([) MOVIE: ' Coward of the
County'
1:30 B ill@ Family Tiao ICC!
A disillusioned Ale• lllorns

••••

Serv1r:t~s

Charg•. '77 Honde. '80 Hond•.
'74 Dutt•. '7" Detaun TI'UCk.
Ph . 814-44&amp;-9933 . .

Muat 1ell ,978 Dattu'n 200SX
55,000 actual miiM, 15·apted
trenamlulon. loold &amp; runt good
1900'.00 Ph.l14-446-880&amp;.
1985 . Dodge Aries, IUtomtiC.
wllh AC, 4-door. 11 ,000mi like
n- Ph . 814-379-2728 .
1983 Plymouth Turiamo, 2-door
85,000ml . Niet &amp; el11n Ph.
814-379-272&amp;.
1981 Ariea· K Dodge St1tion
Wagon , AM · FM Stereo
C11Hflt, euto. CC. n•wlndow
wiper1. good condition Ph.
814-246-9898.
19115 Muatang • 302 8011
engine. Runt end look• good.
Natda a litt;le work •1 ,800 or
belt off., wMI contldtr a trtde.
Coli 814-378-243&amp; .
1984 Mercury Lynx Station
Wagon, 4- ap t td, AM -FM .
U ,711 .00 John1 Auto Salet.
BullaYUie Rd., Gllllpollt.

'
'

Home
Improvements

·sa '"yHawl. '81 ch..,etta. ·se

that his revered economk:s
professor has falsified lnfor·

.....

mation to keep up with univ-

.,'

' BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional l~iml gu••n·
tee. Local raf•en~• furnlahed .
FrM tltlmat". C.ll collect
1-81•· 231·0488, doy •• night.
Roger• B•••ment
Waterproofing.

·n

''"

ersity research demandS. In
Stereo.
_
® Ill Ill! Simon &amp; Simon A
marathon runner hires the
Simons when she firmly believes that suspicious men

'HR£ MIGHT

min .) ·

•'
EEK &amp; MEEK

'I

•Jv

F'TM O.n•al Contracting 13yrs· :
uplrienct. Roofinu • Con· • .
ltruetlon Ph. &amp;14· 388· 9308. ' ·
FrM •tlmatn 10" off during .
the holld.y-1. offer upir• Jan .
18, 1187.
4

'I

,,,'
MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

•

••

THERE MUST BE: 60METHII-G
YOLl L. IKE A Ba.JT 6CHOClL ,
WINTHROP.

1978 Chevy lmp111. 350 tuto.

r7------------~
UH- HUH .. .THERE AR~

Slerka: Tr" and t..wn Service, · ·
1 984 Dodge Diplomat. 30,boo · Hadgu, shrubs, buahu .. ·• ,
mlloo. Loodod. U500. Call trimmed , landsCiping and .
'
Firewood. Stlloned mixed
814-742-2451 .
atump remo'llal. Le.t ,.,.oval . • ' ~
hardwood, split and delivered. P81vy Sound Syattm, 20 piece 1 ----,--~-----­ 304-571-2010
Of 178-2842.
• :
t40 for X·large pick-up load. Ttml drum HL 304-,S715-2107. 1984 Chwy Ca'llall•. 4 door,
•
614·992-31 10.
AT, PB, PS. 44,000 mlloo. Coli Rotary or ctblt tool drilling.
Upright piono . Woo pl...,. Ool . 814-992-3703.
Mott w.tl1 complttld ltmadey.
Used 271 genon futl oil tank very good cond. 304-175·1320.
/'
Pump aal.. and 1ervlce. 304·
t315. C.n be Hen at Melga 'Tire
'I
1981 Mercury Mar~lt. PS, PB, 891·3BOZ
Centtrorcall814·192-2101 or
air, cruite. GoOd con tlon . New
&amp;14-992-2319 . .
6B
Fruit
tirM. t1900. Call 14· 941- Ashby Conttruction, ClrPtn·
2801 o• 814-949-2880.
&amp;
Vegetables ·
tery. remodalng, room eddhlon,
Firewood. Saaaoned mixed
cement bloG. work. roofina.
hltdwood, IPIIt and detlvered.
1976 Vol•• Ford, re141Y to go. int•lor and exterior painting,
t40 for X·llrge plck·up load.
good condition, ti59S. 304- tldina .. Roofing. Free QtlmatM.
Fresh tru~:klo1d New York 875-4369.
814-992· 3110.
304·178-1144&amp; .. 875·&amp;182.
grown lerge appl•. 7 kinds.
Porta Crib with bumper peds 1nd Navel orangu . ungeloa, bena· 1984 Pontiac 1,000, 12,1150.
nM -grapas, •malllotsorb'-1 box .
mattrMI. C.tl114·812·3241.
82
Plumbing
J1ck1 FNit Market, At . 35. Phone 304· 675·1141 .
HtndertOn.
{'
lit Heating
1981 OriYely. I HP. Kohl•
1980 Cordoba. body In great
tnglnt, 30 Inch mower. dual
shape. c• runa good, phont
whHit. Very littta houra. Call
59 For Sale or Trade 304-675·3388.
114·992-&amp;8f1 .
CARTER'&amp; PLUMBING
87 ChOYy II Novo SS. 1250.00
AND HEATING
Knight Woodbumtr for 11le.
For Sale or Tr,ade. 304-871 ·
Cor. Founh end Pint
With blo-. noo. Coli 814· S1le or trade 197&amp; . Elhhart 2296.
O.lllpollo, Olllo
992-701&amp; .
Mobile Home. 2 bedroomt. , - - - -- - - -- - Phone 114·441·3881 or 61412250. Calll14 -992· 7841 .
AMC 1981 Eogle4·W•D, 8 oyl. 448-4477'
200 piecaa of alate(roofl. 12x24
At·alr. good cond. 304-675·
lnchM. t2.00 uch or all lor Baldwin 2 keybo~rd organ t1&amp;0. 4437 or 871· 338•.
t200. Coli 114-949-2801 .. Plano, Up•lght. t40 . 304·175·
814·949·2810.
General Hauling
1921.
1181 Ford Eacort L·ltation 86
wagon. 19.0000aet. miiii. IXC.
Tony' a Qun Aepelra, hot reblu• 1955 Dodge 8otahog motor cond. One owner. •2.100 CMh.
ing. Open 8:00AM to 7 :00PM . home, Coleman fum~ee, air No che&lt;*t. Abaotutefy no calls
Jamnlova Water S..Viee. Atao
Coli 304·175·4831 .
candhlon•, uled elte. g11 or "'" 5 p.m. 304·895' 3974.
pools lilltd. Coll814-26&amp;-1141
b1ttery. Exc. ahape. C.nbetttn
814-446·1175 or 814·448Shop for Chrlatmes with ot K•odel P..l . 304·871· 7329 1175 Fo•d F100, 1178 302 or
7911 .
•
FULLER IAUSH PRODUCTS , or 6715-11512.
4·tpeecf. lldd.- r~cka. vood
Coll304-178·1010.
tli-11. UOO. 304-571-2842 of· T &amp; LWit&amp;!' delivery anytime Ph.
... 8,oo, 304-&amp;78-2010.
114-388 -9732 same day
&lt;(
Andenen'1 High Performenee ·
d~IYory .
windowa. IIIII In carton. Never
l.~rn1 Sllllllllt·•:
1988 VW Jet1o. o-c 5 opood.
I&gt;Hn uMd. 304·878·1471. Coli
i
am-fm
IIPI. 28,000 mil• ltlll Wttterson' • W1ter H•ullng .
~
1fter 15 p.m.
&amp; LIVI~SIIIt:k
und• werranty. 304-171-11540 rHi onable rat11, immtdltte
d.,; 171-UII f"'enlng .
2.000 g..lon dellverv. citterna, ·
PQOIJ, well. elc. call 304-576-

••

••
••
••

..

RECESS, Si.JMMER
VAO..TICN AND

A 60UI' SCHOOL. ...

q R.ACt.JATICN .

HE GOT HIM

IT LOOKS

A NEW

MORE LIKE

BIRD DOG?!!

A POSSUM

HOUND.

PAW

SNAKE!!
L.AOY SNAKE'S
.JUS'T L..IKE

~e DOL..L..AF( !~

.,l'

·-·
I

Upholetery

I

•

•

•

Whle vacationing 1r1 Europe my
neighbor decided not to '-ke . a
picture of the famoua rull'll. She
explained ll!at her h~ WOLild
think she ran the - Into -.

Complete the chuckle quoted
~Y filling In the missing words
L.....I.-.&amp;......JL.....L.-'-..1 you develop f•om step No . .3 below.

•

•

•

.

UNSCRAMBLE LETTERS TO
GET ANSW R
- -~- .

-

YESI IDAY'S SCIAM•IITS, ANSWEIS .
Impure - LO'I8r- Abate - RJchly - UMBRELLA
Auntie lied !ilken a self--delense COUIH. When slle wu
1118ckejl by a thug she did_lhe most natural thing. She hit him
with her UMBRELLA.
.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

No second
chances

PEANUTS
EVER'! TIME I USTE~
TO 'f'OIJ,I'M REMINDED

HAHAHAHA

j

".'
•

1!-10-16

'1 0 9 6 3
t AKJ 6
+10

Today's deal, pla yejl in an interna tional team-of-four matc h last Sep·
tember, ha s several points of interes t.
It was not unusual that both tables ha d
the same final contract of four hearts.
The surprise was that the opening lead
of a low spade was the choice o f both
West defenders.
At the first table declarer took
East's king with his ace. Declarer now
played three rounds of diamonds to
shed a spade, and West ruffed in. West
now made a fine play, uriderleading
his queen of spades so that his partner
could win the jack. East returned another diamond, and West was able to
promote his A· J of trumps into two
tricks. (If declarer ruffed with an honor, West would simply discard :)
At the other table Stlg Werdelin of
Denmark found the correct declarer's
play at the first trick .. He held up with
his
the opening le,ad. East
a spade, and declarer now
took the trick. The play then continued
as at the first table, with three rounds
of diamonds played as South shed bis
last spade. Although West ruffed;
there was no way for him to ge t East
on lead so that the A· J of hearts could

WEST

EAST

+Q 8 4
'AH

+KJ 7

'4

+KJ94 2

+a 16 3

+ 83

• 10 9 7 4 2

SOUTH
+A 10 3
'KQ 87 2
+Q 5
+AQ 5
Vulner a ble: 1!1lth
Deale r : Sout h
West

North

Eas1

South

Pass

••

Pass

Pass

Pass

Opening lead:

I'

+4

be

promoted i nto t wo t ricks.
Of course, the expe rt South at that
first table realize d his mista ke as soon
as the deal was comple ted. Unfortu·
nately the cruel game of bridge does
not award points for discovering er·.'
r or s after they have been m a de.

6&amp;"tMM"W
by THOMAS JOSEPH

US\
as Sam goes out .
own
and leaves Woody in charge
of 1he bar. Woody rec eives
~ de va stating news from his
hometown g irtfrlend . In
Stereo .
CD 700 Club
(I) Ill (I) Colbys (CCI Je·
son e ndangers 1he IMOS
project, a snowbound Fallon
goes into labor and Monica
learns the trulh ,bout Scon.
(60 m in.)
'

ACROSS

DOWN

1 Stubborn

1 Priest's
garb
2 Certain

-

mule

..-..

4Stylisb
8 Between
investor
9 Navlgator's 3 Hoosier wit
system
4 Customer
11 E x asperate 5 In t he
12 Turkis h inn
fa mily
14 High card
6 Auth or
15 Notion
Levin
I 18 Road com - 28 English
18 Fe male
7 Fa ncy
pany's t rip
royal
ruff
family
clie n te le 21 Poltery
17 T~x as city &amp;Rumanian 22 Germ a n
29 Co in
19 Greek
P.O.W. c amp inscription
city
mountain 10 Goad
23 Arthur
31 Model
20 C ivil
13 Shade
or Hu ro n
34 After ess
wrong
of blue
24 Ragout
3 5 "But 21 B'erlin
15 By nature 26 Gems tone
fo r Me"
eyesore
22 Gyrated
23 Patti
of song
24 · - Wars"
25 Painful
28 Sailo r
27 Sitting (thriving)
30 Po rke r
31 Abyss
32 Street (Fr.)
93 Lusty _
35 Nothing
(Sp .)
38 Gaggle's
me mbers
37 O lfactory
perception
38 Whirl
39 Thrice
( Lat.)

CIJ

• Ill! Oesigning
Woman
10:00 B ill Gil L.A. Lew FollowIng Sifuentes · resignation .
Becker hopes to find a suite·
ble replac ement while an ov·
erjoyed Abby looks forward
to seeing h~r long-missing
s on . (60 min.) in Stereo.
CIJ D C1J 20120 ICC) !BO
min .)
Ill (!) Odd Couple
®I
G2l KnOll Landing
(CC) Karen learns the truth
eboul Pa ige, Pete r and Ben
form a cautious partnership
,.·.
and Laura tells Greg she's
pre gnant . (60 min.)
till Myt1ery: Agetha Chris·
tla '1 Miss Marple (CCI
Miss Marple discovers the
connection between t he
nurse rv rhv me and t he
crime. (60 min .) Pan 2 .
C9 News
10:05 Cll MOVIE: ' Rough Night
In Jericho'
1 0 :30 Cll Bill Cos by Show
. (!) INNNews
11 :00 81ll Cil Dffi®. G21GII
N-o
(J) Hard. . ltle and McCor·
mlck
(!) M•A•s•H
(I) Semlmental Joumeyo
(60 min.)
till John Lennon : A Jour·
ney In the Ute
•

DAILY CRYPJ'OQUOTF.'I - Here's how to work it :

12111

AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFEL L OW

One letter stands for a nother. In this sam ple A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, e tc . Sing le le tters.
apostrophes, the length and formation of the wor ds a r e all
hints. Each day the code letters a r e differen t.
CRYPTOQI}OTE
12-11

M

L KG X

ZPFX

LK J

K

GMNMPHN

MH
-

I

DWRMVEMHI

YFXKEM G X ,

p P .I

ZK H O

. ELPD I LEN ,

XS W K H N M GX

ALMR X

NP K U MHI

YPZVPFEKTRX

T K E L N

AMR N PH
CATS BRING .lOY TO
YouR UFE : YOU OON"r HAVE TO SEND THEM TO
COLLEGE - AND THEY NEVER ASK FOR THE CAR. SOURCE OBSCURE

C9 Honeyrnoonen
1 1:30 8 Ill (JI Tonlght Show
Tonight's gueau are Billy
C_rystal and James Garner.
160 min.) In S11reo.
C!JSportaCantar
C1J WKRP In Cincinnati
(!) Tul
Cll ABC N-. Nlohtllnt
(9 Magnum, P.l.
G (!II Night HN! Silvie
leams that her ne w bov·
friend Is 1he prime s us pect In

NORTH

+9 6 52

By J•mes Jaooby

u mGil Cheon (CCI

I

· Mowrey'• Upholatlring s~rving ~ 't
trlcountyara121 ynra. Thebest
In fumi'lure uphollflrlng. Cell
304 - 17&amp; -4184 for free
ettlmet11.

•

•

e

OF TJ.IAT OLD SAVING,
1' TALK 15 CJJEEP! 11

R • M Cullom CouchM and
Aeupholatlt"f, St. At . 7. Crown
Chy, Oh . 814-2&amp;8-1470. Evo.
114· 441·:1431 . Optn dolly 8 to
I, lot. 1,30 to UO. Old a. •Upholterld.
,1912 OMC o·18 PIGk·up. I
:oy.,,_,longbod, 17,000mRio.
Qoocl ....... 13,000 Ph . ., ...
441· 43410.

'

"

I I 1- Is I e

a

•'I

6·pc. Wood ltvinU roOm tuha
1388.00, 4 -pc. Leigh bedroom
tulle •831.00, W. M hwt
pottery . Mollohan Furniture &amp;
Afpll-. Konoutt. OH Ph .
8 4-448-7444. I
I' PI&lt;-

I I I I
I.

,--F
. . _O_C_I_F-E-.,,

®

BARNEY

•• ••

Coli. llmeaton1. und and grevel
d~IYory. 304·878· 3190.

A T L £ M I _N
-,!

I

Oklahoma at Texas-Auatin

•

B7

be-

........
o.....
R_o.._c_H........,I
2
.l,_
.111
1. !1

. (2 hrs .) Live.

l

~919 .

the

.

'Benny Goodman-Let' s
Dance' Klcko Off A
Tribute To Swing Era I
WPBY '"'
CIJ Bonny Goodman : Let' a
Dance (2 hrs .l
® Day · the Universe
Changed : A Personal Vlow
by James Burke Burke
look s at 1he difference be tween scientifi c and pubtic
view s of te chnologv . 160
min.)
'9:30 B Ill Gil Night Court In
Stereo.
C!l College Basketball :

*

TI-1REi'E TH 1~5 I U I&lt;G

1979 Oldo Cutl11. 11860. "'
beat off•. Clll814 · 98~·36015 .

11 cu . ft . upright freezer, cyclt ·
dtfrott . Corbin • Snyder Furnl·
ture 9&amp;5 Second Ave Ph.
448-1171

9 :00

y

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

RON'S Teltvitlon Service .
HouH cell• on RCA, Ouaaar,
GE . Spoellllng In ZinHh. Call
304· &amp;78-2398. o• 814·4482454.

lAMI

O lour
harrongo loHetS of
Kramblod words

have been foUowing;l:
er. 60

·6£ SOMt:
VIClU.ICE ... ..

SWEEPER ond ~ moc:hino
rapa6r, plfta, and auppHII. Pick
up and .UV1ry. Davit VICUum
Cleaner, one half mila up: •
Goo•. . Ciiok Rd. Call 81·-. '
44&amp;-0294.

body rust. Call t14-9U-291 1.

'""

UTILITY BLDG. SP-~IAI_,
27'•341'K9'EAVE wnh oHdlng
dO« 8 ..,.,.. door 14,218.00
ereatld.
Iron HorH BuDding~ Ph.114332· 974&amp;.

.........

1

'-- -- - - - - - "" .,. .t
-

81

In Stereo.

CD Coral Jungle
(I) 0 (I) Our World (CCI
(60 m in.)
Ill CZJ MOVIE: ' Neat &amp;
Tidy'
CIJ
MacNeil· Lehrer
Newshour
®l iD Gil Twiligh1 Zona In

3
Plymouth Turi.amo, 1.7
2-door. 115.000 mila.
03000.00 Ph. 114·379·

(!) College Basketball: Se•
ton Hall 81 St. John's 12
hrs .) Live .
8 (!) Too Close for Com fOrt
D ffi Judgli
® Wheel of Fortllne
G G2l Gil Jeopardy
@ Benson
7 :35 Cil HoneymoOners
. 8 :00 B lll@ CosbyShow!CCJ

tkfY-PO/cEY.

'61."'72 Nov1 PIAl ContiCt
John after 5pm Ph. 114-441·
1818.

Autos for Sale

rwo,

PO THE

Auto Parts
&amp; Acceesories

~

71

5'

•'

1986 250 Big Red, GC 11 .000
Ph . 814-388-9908.
76

•

WOlD

a

D (I) People' Court
(I)
James
Galway' s
Christmas Carol (60 min.)
® Newo
,
(j]
MacNeil-lehrer
News hour
&amp; Ill! Gil Wheel of Fol'tllne
1H1 Barney Miller
7 :05
Sanford and Son
7 :30 Bill (I) New Newlywed

1978 Jeep. Priced On lnapec·
tlon. 304·875-6704.

74

a

B ill (I) II (I) ~
G1H11l
News ·
CD 81g Valley
(!) Mazda Sportslook
1!11 CD·JeHersons
Cil 3·2 · 1. Comact (CC).
(j] Socre1 City ·
@ 'Facta of Ut. Pan 2.
6 :05 . (I) Andy Griffith
.
6 :30 Dill Gil NBC News
(!) Fishing-: Bas1 of .J ohn
Fox' a Outdoor Adventures
(I) D (I) ABC News
1!11 (!) Hopn's Heroes
Cil Doctor Who
® G .Ill! CBS News
(j] 80dy Electric
1HJ GOod Times
6 :35 (I) Safe 81 Home In Stereo.
7:00 D ill PM Magazine
CD Hard..otte and McCor·
mick
Ill SportsCenter
(I) Emertainmem Tonight
ET visits Mau Dillion on 1he
Toronto set of his latest
film , " Big Town," and the
actor tells Why he feels this

8 :00

-~

1976 Dodgo Window Von, 3·

'

Compl.te hart Winnie the Poo
Nursery Colltctlon!
Bed, drtttlt',lllfnP, dreaslng
teble. c111ing Ught, Will
hanging• and curtalna. NevM
been uaed 1210.00 Ph.
814-441-1324.

King Sl1eWaterbed 1 bfg mirror in
tho mlddlo. nlgh1 lighll buiH In
on NOh tnd and 1 built In
boobhttf. Exetl!tnt condition
1125.00 Ph . 114-379-2808 .

Vans

YIAftUf
PIULII

EVENING ·

FRANK AND ERNEST

For rent Sleeping Roams 1nd
light ho~1e keeping rooma. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614-446·
0758.

Me rc handi se

Farm Equipment

1- - -- -- - - --

Sleeping room with private beth
for r.nt by-monthlv. famal•
only. Contact 614·446· 2041 .

End ol year 1tle. No payments
until April 1987. on sny new
mubile home. Purch•e before
Dec.31 ,198f5, French City Mobile Homa Inc. Ph . 814 ·446·
9340.

t..t Avon help you get tht bat of
thou poll Chriatmas bill1 1nd
bluel. Free gift with flrtt order.
Call 304· 676· 1429.

Misc .

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

2 8adroam furnished. We eecept
HUD. Beautiful rNer view. Foa·
Mobile Home Park 614·
448·1802.

TILL fJe)(T !MY!

r~~~~ii,~~i;.i1irnff=i~;;;:rc~~~~ good,
opMd. body
228,good
&amp;-eyllnd"
t860.00 "'""i
Ph . · ·•

4 room hOuta for ren t on At. 62.
304-875-3017 .

Want live -in middle -1ged
wom1n to watch 2 children. 1
child In school. light house
work. moderate cooking. Sal1ry.
ri)Om and board. Call814l7422060 afttr 7 :00 p.m.

Let Avon help you gtt the belt of
t ho11 polt ChriJtmat bills •nd ~
' bluea. Free gift with first order.
.
coli 30•-sez, U46.

~·

UI!LilW

I~4;5;:::~F;u:r:n;ia;h;a;d:;:;R~o;o~m~s

Mobile home Iota. 1mall children
accepted. Rl. 1 Locust Rd.
Mobile home lots. Ohio Rivtr
Road &amp; Pettlfl Creek, At. 1.
304-875- 1078.

AOOT~ CC~

1979 CJ-5 Golden Eo9le, V-8,
3 · -· opokwwhe .... AM· FM
atareo, low milug"-Ph- 61.t448-8700.

,..,

Entertainment Centtf, h11 AMGroom A Supply Shop
FM radio, record player. 1TV. it Profenion1l S.rvic:e, all ltylet.
need1 repair colt over 1900.00 all breedt, atate At. 141 Gllllpowill uti tor t160.00 Call 814· lio, Ohio 45631, Julio Wollb. Ph.
251·62&amp;8.
614-448·0231 .

1973 Ylndala12xl5 whh 7•14
IDII.Ptndo. 'Total eloctric11t up for
woodburn•. Good Condition.
Ph. 614-2415-5308 between 9 &amp;
5.

Need money to continue your
eollege? Before you drop out.
call the Army N1tional Guard for
free information on our education .. ait tlnee progr1m . 304·
676-39&amp;0 o• 1 ·800-842-3619.

73

Furni1hed room 919 2nd, Galli·
polls. t115. Utiliti• pd . Share
beth . Single mR. C1ll 446·
4411 1fter 7pm .

In Eurek• niee and cl11n, adulta
on!v . No pelt. depoth required,
180.00 mo. coli 814· 288-1838
before 10a.m.

Television
Viewing

lj\.'{ i5() OOtJij flljD ~

4 eye., 5 tpted.·tm·fm cttaette.
goo~ gil mll•age. •49&amp;0. 30•·
178,11830 oh• I P·'!' · · .

APARTMENTS. mobile homtl,
houtta. Pt . Pltaaant and Gallipolis. 814·448·8221 .

Butint" or Office Space for
rent. New H1ven. 304·n35024 o• 304·882 -3287.

Q\~STMA'5 61H

I. .,U\J:) I

15

12/11/86

Two 1973 Whitt trliaht lin ...
both good co~d. ~ 971 motor
home cllll I for 1111 or tredl
304-488-1729.

' tor rent in Pomeroy
' .
Apartments
One 1nd two bedroom. Clean
1nd nice. Call 614-992-8215 Of
814-992-7314.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk.
Route 33, North of Pom•ov.
Urge loti. Call614-992·7479.

IT 1\'5 1\

'

low 10 t.,;m lou• simple - d t.

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

1 bedroom apt. for rent. Betic
rent 1tart1 t215. a month thet
includes ell uliNtin. Deposit
required of 1200. Contact VII·
lage Manor Apt. Middleport.
61•·992 ·7787 . Equal Housing
Opportunity.

46 Space for Rant

'

1974 Fori F1 00.. 351 onglno,
Ilk• new aluminum topper,
. nHda eomt body work. Excellent work vthlc:le. At Is t710.
Phon• 814-742-2748. ·

Beautiful antique box grand
pi•no. loya 201n. bike. Twin aize '
m1ttreH 111. Ph. «114-441·
1010.

2 bdr ., all utilitl• Plld except
eloc.. furn . or unfurn., aec.
depoalt required. Convenient
locl1ion. Clll814·448·8&amp;58 or
614·448-4778 .

IF 'tOO ~'51::

1972 GMC 11&lt;1on trudr. Oood
ollopo, nJnl goocl. 350 .........
po, 8 h . 1ry 12.,.h, flotbod. Good
for farm or miec. un. Clll
814-98&amp;·4225.

1 end 111J bedroom apt. available
at Rivortlde for rent. Balle rent
11arta at t179. plut utilities .
1200. security deposit raquired .
Inquire at 614-992· 7787.

-------:-c-:---:~:---

Truck• for Sale

I9B3Che...,&amp; ·10. 4 -opMdhoo
cernptr top cell 114· 44t· 7050:

Roomt for renl. day . wHk.
month. Gallla Hotel. C.ll 614·
446-9716. Rentltlowat 81 20
month.

Airlinet now hiring. Flight At·
lendtntt, Agents, Mach1nica,
Cultomllf Service. Stlaries to
tiOK. Entry lf"'el potitiont. Call
1-805·887· 6000 h:t. A-9806.
.:....:.~-~:--:::--:- -leGo\llfnment jobt: t16.040 ·
tl9.230 yr. Now hiring. Call
805· 687· 6000 E.wt. R·9B06 for
cunen1 federal list.

1974 C1u lagt Hou1t 12xl6 2
belha, 3 bldroom1, tottl tlec:t·
ric. Carpet thru out, mutt SH Ph,
114-448-0175 .

72

GOOd uHd color ·T.V.'t, ra_n gta

-------PfPieiisiinf _____ I1-----------T~~~~~~~~~:;:,
41 Houses for Rent
F1 11onc1al
&amp; Vicinity
2 Bedroom house loctted- 68
Mill Creek. t160.00mo. 176.00
Oopoait Ph. 441-3870 or 446·
1340.

KIT'N'CARLYLE

For Salt· 8ofe end coff• teble
ooll814:44&amp;-3174.

SIHPif IOfa full size, Inn•
tprlng mettrtll 130.00 Ph.
The Oaka Aplrtmentt· we ~re _8_,_,.._44_&amp;_·1_o_s_e _. - -'- - - - :
nowhevlngaO.cembefmove-in · 1 Pldl•ll UMCI furniture. Good
apeciel on rent • dtPoait . t199
ia .u you pay to mo~ in tor qulllty utld fumhurt. Open I to
December. Get In on the actlor, 8 or celt tor appointment.
li cell for more informltion. C,ll 304·1115·1483 Of 871·14&amp;0.
614·882-71570 Terry Hale. Res, 2 end tabln. coftet tlblit,
Mngr. E.H.O. Managed by US metchtd aet. $100. or bntoff•
Shllt• Ccrp.
clll 304·178·2291 .
Nice 2 bedroom 1pt. refrlg. &amp;
11ove a. Water furnit~ed. No ~~i1iili().1ji8j;cjiljridile
peta. 4 YI mil11 from QallipoUt.
1210.00 par mO. 150.00 dep·
oslt . Ph. 614-446-8038.
2 Bedroom. 1 yea.r le11e Calllh•n'a U1tcl Tire ~hop . Over
S260 .00 per .month Phone 1,000 tim, li•es12, 13.14. 11.
11. 11.&amp;. 8 miiM out Rt. 218 .
446 - 2158 . ~
Ceii814-2U-6261 .
Very nlc:e, unfurn. in town.
clatern state 1pproved.
l pleiouo, 2bck, •ot•ig., •ongo,
fiPtiC t•nkl. plutic
y1rd &amp; covered petio, quiet
atreet. No pet1 •175.00 month Ic••lvolfto,, mete! culvertt.' RON
EVANS ENTEAPAIIEI , Jeoloplua
doposit441~332
• references
Eo•• Tope.
dor•call
o•
448-0181evenlngo&amp;wk-endl. odn, Oh. 814·281·1930.
Fi..wood dollverod Ool e. hide 1 Bedroom baaic rent 1171.00 ory. apllt. HEAP vouchlf, pickup
plu1 electrie. Alto required a loedt36. Call&amp;14·448· 2223o•
$200.00 security deposit. CON - 614·440-3028.
TACT: Jt~sqn E1t1tt1 Dept: Ph
446 -3997 Equal H0u11n9 Several piecea antique tilver,
BMX, Bike like new t35.00. Bter
_o_P_P_ort_•n_l_tY_·- - - - - - Gri~ zte Hunting Bow&amp; Arrow1&amp;
1
Seniprcltizena,nicaepartments. Quiver $40.00 Ph. 114-44ePh. 304- ~75·6104 .
. 839B.
2 end 3 bedroom apartment• Whltet metal detectors. new &amp;
uatd mod•ls. low pricea. Ph.
and hou111 in Pomttov Of 614
·446-0648 . •
Middleport. Furniahed or unfurnilhed . Pay own utllitlea. Call
doyo 814-992-2381 ..

POmerov- Middleport. OhiO ..

XJZDHJ

Ye.tent.,'o CI'JPlOqaote:

an organiZed crime ring . (70
min.) (R).
12:00 (I) Buma &amp; Allen
l]) Flahln' Hole Speclel (60
min.) (R),
Jefforaons
Ill Cll Rawhide

m
.

·- .

-.

1iJ

(I) Ta les of the Unexpected
I]) SCTV
12:10 I]) MOVIE: 'Torn Curtain '
1 2 :30 D (J) @ Late Night with
David Letterman Tonight 's
guests aro comedian Paul
Reiser and Freida Caplan.

..

�..

llunday, December 11, 1

.Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

CH ISTMAS SALE

13

,.•

CHILDREN'S

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR

Gowns, Robts, Pajamos
ancl SIMpers

..

· · C~rlstMU S.le

$6 39 to

.

$1919
COMPACT

BUXTON
SALE PIICESI
MEN'S BUXTON

VE OVEN

MEN'S S19.95

•

at y

Sale Pried

Vol. 38, No.166

REMOTE CONTROL
RCA VCRsl

'

N

· SAlE! REG. $1.15
RED HART
WINTU~K

Selecl .... tctfon , ..
wont Jr... ttW IMg seltc·
tK Jill ouiCt slctins.

WALLETS
Chooso oor fa vorito stylos aod

s...... ,,,..

color from our big Mltctioo.
Tri-folds and bi-fold styles.
BOXED READY TO GIYE

JEANS

Sl3 ta

Pre-washtd 1OOOfo

YARN

$ 49

~--~

su

WalletsM .......... '10.80

cotton.
Sim 29·to 42

' waist, 30 to 34
:::-"&gt;:"&gt;4. indl lengths.

•0.53 cu. ft. interior cavity
•!0-minwte tiMtr with outomtlic

$1299

·
- (011101
~
1 """
•Cookint
Svst.mt
Stirrer
Fon
- ("""""' built·in nwriog
fon lo distrib.te mkrowoYt
....., ....ly.

SIS ta 117

,..,.oH

WalletsM......... $12.80
117.50 ta 118.50 ·
Wallets ........... $14.40
SUto 127.50
Wallets ...........
. . $20.SO

·speelal

$13800

ONLY

$37900

WEAR SALE

Powerful Motor
Top-Loading Dust Bag
Power Ori11en Beater
Bar Brush Aoll

Swoat shirts, swaatponts
and hood jackets.
Anorttd color sin lilts: 2
to 4, 4 ta 6X,7 ta 14.

,SPECIAL!
MEN'S ·
.WESTERN STYLE

SPORT' SHIRTS v...-..Y-A

Sizes 5, M. I. n. also tal liltS
and big sim to 3X. flannels
- poly cotton bltnds. Solid
colors and neat pottoms. True
wostorn styling.

. O.b floor ..... .,__ .
lrilgt floer .... .
.... - floor hlnp.
. 11\fttllr• finish.

$14,95 ...........$11.19
S16.9S ..........,S12.79
S18.9S ........... S14.19
S22.9S ........... S17.19

S~ecl1l

Reg. S6 ..... Sale S4.50
Reg. S9..... Sale $6.75

ssa••

S11 .. Sale S8.25

ELEC1RIC MOTORIZED IECUNER

Chrl•t••• S•lel

MEN'S

SWEATERS
Crow
slipa1ors,
nt~k

/t\t u. s.~&gt;-·

.....
&gt;&lt;&gt;

V-nocks, 1011s a"" coat

--

slylts. Solid colors ~nd
ptllorM. Gift hi'm a
swMter and you' rt sure
to pltast.
"411.-..-

CHORE COAT
SIZES 31-4/i

""'

............. Oll«&lt;ll' .

fOI!IIIIt' .... MAD

$27800

-·

OfA~r:olla:

F8l.INIR.srr &amp;tO:

$18.95 ... SI$.19
S22.95 ...$1 &amp;.39

S221
SIZES 41-50
Reg. 126.95 ... $21.59
[!!]
l29.95 ...123.99
SALE S231 8 ..,__.....____...

SAtE

Re~uc:ed200fo

andauoeu to 107 broa:Mt,and cablechann•. 3hlld
machine give• excell.nl
actton and lfow mot6onl

FLOOR
LAMPS
· ct....... ""• ..,.,

JOGGING

STOCK UP flOW

Experience the convenience of an RCA remote control
VCR. naw at apeclal liNings. Model shown lndudel
S•arch and Stop Actlcm, 80-posltlon elealronic tun«

S79.9S

CHILDREN'S

Special pricH now Oft
quilt Htl....... ""'
polt•nH ram p•,
..It lltol...

llliAC.L~

r&lt;'EtU. '1tl "a. iOI'

" ' '!II( 1V.OI Cl"" flnll l
""""""'-'

I

:leg.

cue

ZIPPER-FRONT

JACKET
SIZES 38-46

1988
48-50
SALE$ 2a1

SALE$

SIZES

COZY BOOTS

Warm quilttd/slotarling boats in sins S, M, I,
XL. Choost navy, rtd, snowcap, calico htart or
Jennifer prints.

$ 7aa

c,,,,,.., sm s,,,

$389°0

"*KIIOO_,_
MWI--

, . _ 1K1 I •0111

LADIES'
SLEEPWEAR '
. long and short
gowns and robts,

l,fe~

I

"i\· .

•LIFETIME FRAME WARRANTY
•INNERSPRING MATTRESS
•DURABLE LONGWEARING COVERS
•OUR REGULAR '896.00

' By HELEN THOMAS
Speakes acknowledged that
, Reagan purposely did not Inform
UPI White H~se Reporter
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres· some tap aides of his Jan. 17
!dent Reagan, facing' a long siege · authorization . to sell arms to
with the Iran arms-Contra aid Iran, apparently bypassing his
scandal, has.turned hls attentlon . own procedure' for circulating
to next year's budget and domes· national security decisions ..
But he refused io acknowledge
tlc programs as Investigators
a report In The Washington Post
rummage through his tiles.
Deputy press secretary Larry that a 19S2 "tuitional security
Speakes said Thursday that the decision directive" by Reagan
FBI, congressional Investiga- set up a system ·for notifying
tors. and the staff of a presiden- eight top U.S. foreign and detial panel chaired by former Sen. fense policy officials of key
John Tower at Texas have access decisions. •
to the files ln a secure area oft he
Speakes explained he could not
Executive Office Building.
confirm the Post account be·
In addition, the White House cause of a )ongstandlng rule ·
counsel's office, headed by Peter against discussing top secret .·
Walllson, Is preparing an Inter· documents ...
But. he said, "As you know: on
nal report from the papers In the
files.
the Jan. 17 or(ler, the presldenl
Speakes said that Reagan is issued very strict rules about
maintaining an "even keel" how It should be a closely 'held
during the heavy barrage from type operation. ..•. As we've
Capitol Hill and the media abou1 indicated, very lew people knew
the secret , operatlon that dl· about this and It was a very
verted up to $30 million In arms deliberate arrangement ... besales prouts from Iran to the cause It was a sensitive Issue."
Nicaraguan rebels.
On Jan. 17, Reagan Issued a
Reagan Is currently working intelligence authorization, called
on the 1987 budget and looking a "finding," which authorized
over a welfare reform plan and a and provided legal justification
"catastrophic health" program for the secret arms sales.
Thursday evening, Reagan
which Is being pushed by Health
and Human Services Secretary helped an 8-year-old fatherless
boy, Byron Whyte of Prince
Otis Bowen, Speakes said.
County, Md., light the
Georges
But the repercussions from the
National
Christmas Tree in a
scandal are never very far away,
ceremony
dating back to Calvin
with ·aides acknowledging that It
Coolidge.
will tak~ m~ny months before ap
Standing with ·,h\m · in the
indepeqdent counsd and , t!w
Hou.se and--Senate select diplomatic receptlon room for
the launching or the Pageant of
Wat~rgate-slyle committees
Peace were his wife, Nancy, and
complete their probes.
Tower's panel, looking into the Byron. who belongs to the Naoperations of the National Secur· tional Capital area chapter of Big
lty Council, was expected to have Brothers and Big Sister~ .
The red and blue lights ignited
a report within a couple of
on the 32-foot blue spruce when
months.
When full-scale hearings get Byron pushed the button on a
underway, Speakes said the .lectern on a desk in lhe ornate
White House would not object to room where the president greets
public hearings by the congres· world leaders.
As soon as the lights went on
slonal committees as long as
Mrs.
Reagan exclaimed "there"
some of the intelligence-related
subjects are reserved for closed and the musicians struck up "0
Tannen\)aum."
sessions.

$6.8800

'

.

·'

. ·'•

CARING AND SHARING - Christmas is for
'caring and sharing, and this year the Farmers
Bank &amp; Savings Co. have Initiated a new program
of remembering needy cbUdren. Employees have
been Invited to purchase toys, bring In the
receipts, alld tlien the bank will match the amount
dollar for do Dar lor the purchase ol other toys. All
wUI be turned over to the Jaycees lor distribution.
The Idea for the employee participation program
was proposed by John Karschnlk and the response

SAVE 8207.00

victims can fend off disease
By JAN ZIEGLER
UPI Science Writer .
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Call·
fornla researchers have disco·
vered certain white blood cells
are able to keep the AIDS virus
from reproducing, a finding that
suggests patients may have the
power to fight off the deadly
disease withoul drug treatment.
The team from the University
of California at San Francisco
reported Thursday the Isolation
of the cells from three apparently
heallhy homosexual men who
had antibodies to the AIDS virus,
but who showed no trace of the

IIIIT

FREE --.,..........
Mow-:
..,. .. SMtl "tlllllto 1t1t i HII
_,. Plllll JOif ~"· __
""'w1n
lfltlfii_W.

• C~ r CHM-9i llecl ll lll YtllfiA .OFIOOME~
II bllltl' blllllt\llft lOll iltll OWOOOWII

""

o Duel EDGE !OILHNEI't• ~1'111\1
• t C.l(llll ·. ,lllll'llfl\11 • ao rr cora

$719

The Proot Ia In lht Poalmarkl
r..n • 111111 a. ,... Olfic&amp; ltlltt . . "' ..,. .,

collftlll lttltn 1111 ........ fiOI Allllrta. 1t.p *icl
IIIIi! It ill .. ....- ...... Wt 1111 """ it POStul..
.... CIM, ........ ""' It .. ..,. " ~ ll&amp;trry

'·

ClviniM \a cfMI!I If II IIIL

MISSES

Cardigan
Sweater
100'1. ocrylic .

CIILDREN ·

Coats &amp;
its

-·-

1 "' r'lvnt •nd

--

FeW,... ... * -

, . . fGI bh SiiNI'tll
.5lnMi' n.clod ...... .iniP
J !iMIII t)l[d c..

cardioan in rnisMt
am 1-M-L bfors

iitcl,..pllow,

turqoist, purple
and IJfodc.

n.-ruw. Wlltll'lllll mwtG
Mill'S SillS

141/1

from others who develop AIDS or
AIDS-related symptoms.
He and colleagues theorized
the CDS cells make some substance that interferes with the
virus's reproductive machinery.
Loss of those cells weakens
victims' ability to fight off
disease, leaving them open to a
variNy of fatal Infections and
rare cancer.
If the CDS ceiL .vere removed
from the bloodstr~am, made to
multiply using a natural cellbooster like lnterleukln 2 and
reintroduced Into the body, they
could be a way of preventlng or
treating AIDS, Levy said.
"This selective treatment
would avoid the known effect of
IL-2 in Increasing T·helper cells
that could become additional
target cells for HIV !AIDS virus)
replication," the team wrote.
The AIDS virus attacks socalled helper T-cells . .JL-2, an
Immune system booster, Induces
these cells to multiply and has
also been in testing as a cancer
treatment.

Officials label trailer
fire cause 'suspicious'

SAI.E

...'1S~ off...
"'

disease. .
The cells, a type of white blood
cell called CDS suppressor Tcells, destroyed· the acquired
Immune deficiency syndrome
virus when mixed together in a
test tube. ·
"I think the drama In this Is
that this Is the first Indication of a
mechanism by which an lndivld·
ual can ward off or suppress the
virus in their own body," said Dr.
Jay Levy, a UCSF professor or
medicine who wrote the report
published In the journal Science.
"I'm really excited about
this." he said. "It also fits into
our own belief that If your
Immune system Is functioning
well you should be able to handle
this virus."
l#vy and · the UCSF researchers have been following
about 40 healthy men who have
IAJDS virus antibodies bul no
deteclable virus In their system.
Since most AIDS patients do
have active virus Infections,
Levy said he wondered what
made the healthy men different

•

·

I

DONATION - A ~heck lor 12M was presented
to Patty Hays, Meigs County special olymplcs
coordinator, at right, by, left to right, Mildred
Hudson and Betty Smith, of the Eagles .Club
Auxiliary. Hays stated that tbe money wUI go

,ijiii"'

AUIIDIIC
. . IIU1lllll

so far has been excellent, he reports. The bank
wUI also continue Its annual project of contributIng to the ,food baskets program of the Jaycees
whlcb will be usln1 the old Moore's Store buDding
owned by the Farmers Bank for Its distribution
headquarters. Here Bruce Reed, left, accepts a
toy from Cindy Brown, and John Karschnlk, right,
accepts one from ;Jo Ann Crisp to add to the
already large array of toys.

Researchers suggest AIDS

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toward the purchase of additional basketball
uniforms and equipment for the Carleton School
basketball team. The. first home game for
Carleton's River Racers Is scheduled (or .Jl a.m.,
Jan. 20.

A !Ire which destroyed an
Ferguson said that ·aulhorltles
unoccupied house trailer early have no idea how long the trailer
Thursday evening Is "of a was on fire before the departsuspicious origin" according to ments were alerted. He said
Albany Fh'e Chief Jim Ferguson. tliere was no' electricity or source
Ferguson reports that Albany. of heat in the trailer, and that a
Rutland and Scipio Volunteer relative of Brickles reported th~t
Fire Departments were called windows had been broken out of
around 6:30p.m. toMeigs Counly the trailer earlier.
Road 47 where the trailer, owned
Sheriff Howard Frank was
by Esta Brlckles. "was already called 10 the scene and the malter
on the ground" when firemen remains under Investigation.
arrived.

WASHINGTON !UP!) -CIA
Director William Casey, under
siege in two days of congr~:
slonal hearings, erriphati~ally
denies reports that he knew or..;.
but dld nothing abo~! - th~
brewing Iran-arms foreign polIcy scandal lhat exploded l.nt~
public view 17 days ago.
. ..
As Casey reiterated his stance
Thursday to the House Intelll;
gence Committee, the White
House sent the Senate Intelll·
gence Committee a 13h·lnch·
thick stack of documents relating
to the Iran arms-Contra at~ .
controversy - about half the
memos and National Securtl)'
Council reports reques.ted. i
panel spqkesman said. ·
,
The. Senate panel, whlc~
launched an lnvesllgatlon intp.
the matter last week, planned ,to
resume hearings today. There
were no similar plans for the
House Intelligence and Foreign
Affairs committees, whlcll
opened hearings this week. • , ·
Still expected are a crlmliull'
lnvesllga!lon by an Independent.
prosecutor .to be named by:.a.
federal court as well as ad~t:-- '·
llonal congressional probes. . :
Casey, forced to overcome· a
loathing or the limelight in two
grueling days or closed conunl~­
tee questioning, broke his silence
Thursday and iold reporters h~
had an inkling that money fro'\!
secret U.S. arms sales to Iran
was missing even bo:!fore It was
publicly rrvealed Nov. 25 by
Attorney General Edwin Meese.
Casey Insisted, however, that
he had no idea as much as $30
million ·was diverted to the
CIA-backed Contra rebels In
Nicaragua untO Meese told b,irg.
Casey repeatedly has sai4•1)i$
agency had a minimal rolfi ·Iii
President Reagan's covert tr~n..
initiative.
·• '·
Bul The Washington Post reported today that Casey provided
the White House with an Intelligence evaluation that encouraged the administration's self·
described effort to build ties will\ .
Iranian "moderates."
.
Sources told the Post that
former national security adviser
Robert McFarlane asked Casey
to submit his own evaluation of
the region following a July 1985
meeting between McFarlane and
David Kimche, director general
of the Israeli Foreign Ministry.
Klmche, a 30-year veteran of the
Israeli Mossad secret intelli·
gence service, had told McFar; .
lane that moderates were wU!.tn.Jt
to negotiate.
·
"Casey found the Israeli analy·
sis bona fide, based on his qwn
intelligence," the Post quoted
one source as saying, and he
spenl weeks gathering inform&amp;·
lion from U.S. Intelligence agencies and comparing it to Israeli
information.
·
'
The New York Times reporled
today that the CIA originally
proposed the Idea of keeping th~ ,
Iran dealings hidden from Con~'
gress. Sources told the Times the
agency took the unusual step In
the first draft of what became a
presidential order guiding the
program.

Scientists remaining cautious tow~d cancer breakthrough

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. Pomeroy_;Middleport, Ohio, Friday, December 12, 1986

Copyrighted 1986

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•

By LARRY DOYLE
UPISclence Writer
CHICAGO (UP!) - A natural tumor·flghtlng
subStance once touted as a cancer breakthrough
effectively attacks a form of skin cancer resistant
to other treatments, but government sclentlsls
remain cautious about Its future.
Interleukln·2 Is "an experimental treatment,
and It needs to be kept In perspective," said Dr.
Steven .Rosenberg or the National Cancer
InstUute hi Bethesda, Md.
•·
The caution surrounding the NCI report in
today's Journal of the American Medical
Association even exceeds that usually exercised
by scle~tt!S!S, reflecting the belief Of many
medical researchers that early hopes for the
highly publicized protein may have been too high.
Rosenberg said In a telephone fnterview that
while interleukln-2 may proye a valuable therapy

for melanoma and other resistant cancers, "the
research on this is really in Its Infancy. Oneofthe
things we really need to tell Ihe public is that this
Is certainly not ready or suitable for wide
applications. "
.
Interleukin-2. produced by white blood cells as
part of an overall defense reaction, was
discovered in 1976 and has since been synthesized
outside the body. Early reports referred to It as a
"magic bu,llet" to fight cancer, and lt has been
hailed as a cancer breakthrough.
Dr. Charles Moertel of the Mayo Clinic In
Rochester; Minn., wrote an editorial accompany·
lng the NCI study and urged researchers to "slow
down before you pull drug X out of a bag and
splash It all over the headlines."
'
"'Ibis Is an extraordinarily toxic and expensive
drug, and preliminary results do not appear to me
to be all that promising," Moertel said ln a

telephone lnlervlew.
·
"This isn't going to be important to the cancer
patient of today, and it's even too early to predict
whether It will be any good to the patient of
tomorrow," he said.
Rosenberg and other NCI researchers have
been working with lnterleukln-2 alone and In
conjunction with specially cultured white blood
cells called lymphoklne-activated klller cells.
The team recently treated 10 patients with ·
cancers resistant to other treatments, six with a
form of skin cancer called melanoma, three with
colon cancer and one with ovarian cancer. The ·
patients received high doses of the lnterleukln·2
·alone, given three· times a day for up to three
weeks.
In three of the melanoma patients, tumors
shrank by 50 percent, altbough two of the patients
required re_tr~atment. The tumors o! two of these

melanoma patients continued to shrink for six .•
months after therapy was completed.
. ~~
No effect was seen In the three other melanoma"
patients or the four other cancer patients.
'
Rosenberg said the trial was still a success
since melanoma ".ls a disease Ihat tends to. not
show this kind of re6ponse to any other
treatment" and added lnterleukln· 2 may be morl!
effective used in combination wlth otl~r
treatments. '
· ..
Interleukin-2 produces a number of serious slcie
effects, 'Including nausea and vomiting, diarrhea;
rashes, leakage of fluid from blood vessels and
blood In the urine.
· ' ·
Rosenberg said treatment-related deaths . ar~
low In his lnterlelikln·2 studies, but he said: he'
could not discuss the numbers untO the over,aJ,I:.'
data are published In a scientific journal
expected early next year.
·
·
, I

..•

,.

'
I

..

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.. •

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