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Community comer

Arms talks

Olutelle B....... 011 fale 7

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·LOOal weather.·

.Marauder preView
Spol1ll 0[11 Pace 3

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-1-'

Metal Photo
Frames
.
-' -

5"x7"

·

99

OR

8"x1 0"

CAND$}19
.

With
· Coupon

METAL
PHOTO FRAMES-. ·
, .. X 7" OR I" X -10'~
'

SAVE
UP TO

AND

75'

'I' 19

WITH_
THIS

COUPON

FINAL TOUCH
····__,_

-·--··--~--

Big_64~~

.-

SAVE '1•

~road

•

repairS_

Alleged killers
were~ guests of'-

'

th~ high cost of everyday vUlage
·· ,.. •· ov~~ ~ !J)Q, rP-aSOD.fQr needil'._::
Terrt Long, GalllpoHs, has been the Income tax.
The Income taxortllnanCe, passed
hired by POmeroy VUl~~ge Counctl to
admlntster the one percent Income after three readings by council, was
tax which went Into e!fect Tuesday. proposed following rejection In the
Mrs. Long Is now prepanng Novemberelectlonofafour·mllltaX
·questlonnalrf's which will be l'(lalled levy for operating the village. .
next week to every resident and / Council has slated improvements
business Within the vUl~~ge to be for the village after. tax coUectlon
completed and retilmed . .Income, · begins, Including Improved streets
tax mes will be prepared from these and sklewalks. ,
questionnalrf's.
·
Pomeroy employers will withhold'
,_;-~~Everytine Hvlng -In Pomeroy or- • the one-pereent tax from the wages
employed In the village with an of . employees retroactively from
earned income will besubjecttothe Jan. 1, to be paid atthecloseofeach
one percent Income tax.
month.
Long, who will' be bonded and
Prior to April 30 of this year,
operate under strict confldentlallty, pomeroy businesses and corporahas been a tax examiner In lions will declare their estimated
taxes'based on what they think their
GalllpoHs for the past five years.
- ~ACthis time, :a dally schedule· of net Incomes wW be for 1~. These
hours for Pomeroy's new tax otflce taxes are to be paid quarterly and
has not been dell!rmlned. The office , can be amended a~ any time. Final
lslocatedlnvUiagehaHintheformer returns will be duelnAprllofl986 at
water department office.
' which tlriJe any adjustments, either
Long's salary Is stUI under overpayml!llts or underpayments,
negotiation, according to Long and Will be made. Pomeroy resklenpi
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler. A not employed within the village, will
salary 'figure siJ.ould be released at. also declare their estimated taxes.
the next regular meeting of PomeAccording to Ohio law, residents
roy VW~~geCouncllonJan. 7.
have no referendum In
· ·
. -·~-~Both councilandtbeJ'layo~bliU)'le

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COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -Two Correctlonallnstlt)ltlon.
men charged with wounding Evan
He said Meadows and Cooper ·
Damron and killing his wife had· ,arrived about 5 p.m. on Dec. 3, the
been guests In their Hocklilg CountY
day of the shootings: Meadows had
visited the Damrons before; and he
home the night of the shootings,
Darnronsays.
andCooperweretosleeponcouches
"If they had something against there that night.
"My wife fed them," Damron
me, that's OK to com~:at me,"
Damron said In an Interview, from said. "We talked about the old days
his . ~Wm~aLGranJ I:Jospltal !tere_. .~ In the, j!l)l)! ~al:)!!uLHfe~!n general_
"But they didn't have no business really. ItwasHkeaHttleparty." · shooting my wife. She was a
. Damron said his wife, Evelyn,
beautiful woman. She was never ,wenttobedaboutll:45p.m.,andhe
Involved In nothing- ever- In her foUowed after getHng blankets· for
Hfe."
Cooper and Meadows.
•
Wayne R. Meadows, Z7, · and
Damronsaldashorttlmelater as
Stanley R. Cooper, 29, both of be and his wife slept, som~ne
Manstleld, have been Indicted on entered their room and opened fire.
charges of aggravated murder and Damron was sbot In the back' and
attempted aggravated murder.
one leg with a shotgun and then,
They were arrested In Mansfield a while unconscious, In the back of the
'
couple of da~ after the shootings bead with a .2'kallber weapon. Hts
and are being held In the Hocking wife was killed with a .45-callber
County Jail In Logan.
weapon, Damron said.
FIRSTDAYONTHEJOB-TeniLoeg,ataxexaminerlnGaDlpolls '
He said the last words be heard
for the past five years, began work Wednesday as.Pomeroy's aew tax
Damron, who grew up In Mans· fr!&gt;m his wife before he lost
adpili)l!itrator. Long, who will commule from the fanilly fann bt the
field, said he and Meadows became conSciousness were,. ·:Don't shoot
Gallipolis area, Is mlll'ried to Richard Long and a 15-year-Oid
· friends while irlmllteS at the London him any more."
siepdauKNer, Teresa.

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$1· 88~with
Coupon
.

;

4 hll
Whitt 1nd
Colors

101 Sixth Ave.
Hontinaton. W. V1.
1125 loin Street
Milton. W. VI. .
106 Zht StrHt
"itro, W. Yo.

CHARMIN ·
BATHROOM TISSUE

$} 09 '

4 loll PIC•

...._ud c.tors

$}09Co11pon
With

House and Senate backing away from his budget
proposals at l,&lt;XXI miles per hour. And yqu see total
Indecision In the White House," . Gray said In an
Interview Wednesday.
Both the RepubHcan-eontolled Senate and the
Democratic-1ed House were to meet at noon today,
but Congress ts notexpected to engage In serious work
untU Jad:'22 - the c;Jay after Reagan Is sworn in for a
second term.
Re~~gan bas not o!fered a speclflc plan to cut
detlctts, but has said he wants to do so without elther
ral,slng taxes or making major cuts lh defense
spending. Hts stance has been met with skepticism
even from congressional GOP leaders.
First order of business for the435-memher Hou!.)eof

ByTOM~AUM

.

CHARM IN
BATHROOM
TISSUE

'

2 Sectiort•: 12 Pages 26 Cent1
A Multim8dia Inc. Newsp•peto

1985

By NANCY YOACHAM

~"~·_,:=" """·

.WE ARE
WORTH I

•

iddleport, Ohio,

Tax
adlninlstrator
.
begins her duties

.
CLIP
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US
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FQR
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"~= ALL

T'!'o-wey easel back for vertlcel or ho1rlzt,~
tal dlaplay. Full atrength glaaa.

-'~"'""'

By ROBERT E. ~~ ER
which makes modem tlnanCing t,echnlques available
governments.
CUIT~t econoiruc development efforts, Meshel saki.'
A.s8oclated Preas Writer
to local governments as they seek to butld and rebuild.
"They can't do It alone," said Meshel, who will be
"We can't expect to attract new plants and major
COLUMBUS, Ohio (1\.P) -A Democratic lead.e r of
These techniques Include use of variable Interest
minority leader of the new Senate which convenes
lndustrtal expansion liere if our transpOrtation
~ =t~~~~~~ate has Pr:o~~ bUU~~~-~!o_
rate f~an_c:Ug:-~':."'Ha~~- bo~~ ..sales:~el deb!
Monday.
systems art! lnadequ11te, our sewer and wastewater
lk:lp l\1\:ii:U t;:u"~IU!IIC'Io\1;'11 ..,.... ,...,. wa"' • - r -· -~- ---.;;~~--•-·~'?J'IIl'CJ.l""' auu· V\.U \:a y&amp;o."U."'C"O' un"'""p:""'
.......-.. ... _:'2e~~-·
-.-_~SJd~.J'J.:\~nstltqUonal amendment will provide
' tre~tJnent plants are Obsolete, and Other. pubUC
roads, water systems and other facilities which make · permitted under existing law, the senator said.
that the $1 billion be used for grants to match federal
amenities are crumbHng,", he added.
.__UP .!h!?lr~deterloratl!'~!nfrast:,ucl;"re!!:,~
•
~h4!\.~Jd!he~rob.!f!!ll.~2fsm:~m,agnltu~J!l~tl~~u ~~l_oca~ dol~rs f?.~ qua~ng subdlvtslo{IS which
The Infrastructure ts going to be a major ue ln .
'to' ru"'SS'U'ui1crn· 1n¥u)ec'.s• ~---~~ -4lllv~wnn=~co
IU.IIJ '"b--~
JII:;G.I~ tu
JYJ~In=J.
't~ •"':·-~"'~
cannotbe put ott•
COwallildel'U!Ki!"u-..
.• -cUIII'c:',
~ -. ..
-"-' ' J - ~--'
Sen. Harry Meshel, [).Youngstown, saltf'W~·
di!Y J:l!' is dr~t1Dg a constitutional amendment which,
He predicted that the statewide cost Is going to be
The necessity for upgrading facWties Is obvious In
adding that, "We need lmmedlate and sure actio
'
If approved by votl!rs, . wW permit creation of. the
staggering- frOm $l5 bllllon to $62 bUUon- and said
terms of their continued use by Ohio's citizens, but It
this problem If we are to begin to bring our state back
special fund to assist In up to $6 billion In projects.
·he thinks the state has to share It with local
also Is underscored by the Impact on the. state's
to economl~ vitality::
. Meshel said he also will Introduce next week a bill

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Amendment proposal -callS - f or

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Vol.34, No. 184.

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37'

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716 N. Second Str10t
Middleport, Ohio
120 W. Secoad Stteet
Wtlllton, O~lo
Ohio Ill. 1 Eut
, Prwctanillt. Ohio

WITH
THIS

COUPON

AMociJlted Pre88 Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) -Aslawmake!1&gt;gatheredon
Capitol HUl for today' s start of the 99th Congress, a
key House Democrat predicted that President
Re~~gan's second legislative honeymoon will be a
short one.
·
"1 think the honeymoon ts going to be over by
February," said Rep. Wllllarn H. Gray III, D·Pa. ,
expected to be named later this week as chalmian of
the House Budget Committee.
The 'Panel wt11 be a key battlei:round In the fight
over ways to cut the nation's $200 bllllon deficit, .a
problem that tops the agenda of both chambers.
"You already . see ~ubHcan members of the

RDbert Dole of Kansas.
Representatives was election of a speaker for the next
Dole beat four challengers last fall In the raee til'
tWo years, a race that the Incumbent!or the past eight
succeed
Howard H. Baker Jr., R-Tenn., who retired to
years, Thomas P. O'Neill Jr, already had wrapped ·
practice
law and prepare for an anticipated bkl for the
up.
.
presidency
1n 19111. As a 'party position, Dole's
The House leadership vote - the first House vote of
selection
does
not require a vote by the full Senate.
any Congress - always breaks .down along party
)Wbert
C. Syni, DW.Va., Is continuing as
Sen.
lines: And Democrats, while losing 14 seats In the
minority leader.
November elections, enjoy a · comfortable 252-1&amp;3
Major skpmlshes are anticipated In the 99th
margin In the House.
·
Congress
over the budget as well as over Re~~gan's
The Senate, where Republicans losi two seats In
program
lor the MX missile and his support of
November but stU! cqntrol the chamber, now by a
anti-government
forces In Nicaragua.
5347 margin, were to meet today, with little
Efforts
at
tax
simpHcatlon
also are expected to be
substance on the agenda.
given
considerable
attention
In
the new session.
The return of Congress today marked the first day
on the job for the Senate's new majority leader,

.

Mining .i ndustry hopes ride
--~ on- co~l-powered locomotive
HUNTINGTON, WW.Va. (AP)- energy-independent and help put
The speeches are over, the throngs unemployed miners back to work.
of camera-toting train buffs gone.
"We're running this :n.ctay ·test
NowaNewJerseycompanywWsee
whether its coal-tlrect, steam-driven . program to give our. engineers the
Englne6141s up to thetaski&gt;fputtlng answers they need for the fmal
· designs of the. ACE :ml," said
.
coal miners back to work.
the locomotive, retired 28 years American Coal Enterprises Pres!·
dent RDss E. RDwland, Jr.
l!gO when ·diesels took over the
Rowland's Lebarlon, · N.J., com·
nation's rails, on Wednesday began
pany
ts · de!llgnlng a coal-fired
hallllng coal cars three days a week
locol'notive
that it claimS will meet
on the 100.mUe run between
envtromnentalstandards
and be far
Huntington 811~ Hinton. The test
more
ehergy-e!flcli;'llt
than
coal·
runs are .the tlnal step In a
burnnlng
engines
of
the
past.
- ·loeOmotlve-deslgn project that goTrain buffs Hned the .tracks
vernment and Industry o!flcials say
could make the countly more Wednesday as ~ld Engine 614,

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puffing proudly and sporting a new
coat of paint, chugged across West
VIrginia In Its Inaugural run:
Hayes Watkins, chalrmanofCSX
Corp., which owns the Chessle
System on whose rail lines the test ts
l!elng conducted, was on hand for
the first run. He said the nation's
second·largeSI rail carrterts \OOklng
foiW~ "to Joint participation and
to the purchase of the firSt
commercial mod~:I ACE :ml.''
RDwland saki the test engine has
been retro-fitted with sophisticated
InStruments to collect data on
engine efficiency. ,.,

Fewer dividend changes revealed
The numbers were "sort of a ·
NEW YORK (AP) '-Companies
surprise
to me," said Arnie Kauf·
made fewer changes In dlvi~
man,
edltcrofTheOutlook.Hesald
last year than In 1983, possibly as
higher profits and lncn!ued cash
they hoarded cash tn fear of a
flow
frm:lllbertlllzed depreciation
recession, according to the editor r1
laws
llhould ha~e booited the
a Standard &amp; Poor's Corp.
number
of positive actions.
· puhllcaUon.
"What
I suspect happened is that
Decisions resulting In extra,
during the year became
companies
Increased or resumed dividends fell
5 percent to 2,'JiJ7 bt 1984, while concerned about a possible reces·
actions to cut or omit dividends fell ' ~ion and decided to IQ~I 8WI!Y
22 percent to 181, Standard&amp;: Poor's tbelriiiOne)',"·Kaufrnansald;
The IJe!'CEII~ earniJtis that
·-~sam.
corporations paid out In divtdends -

or

\.

fell to about 43 percent In 1984, down
tromashiibasOOpercentdurlngtbe
1950s, he said. "That's cloee to the
Iowendoftherangeo&lt;thepast25to
:llyeani."
·
In other ecoiiQillic developments
Wednesday, prices o! crude oil and.
petroleum l)roducts fell to five-year
lows on the New York Mercantile
Exchange In the first session since
the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting . Countries' year-end
--"na,

"'""'- .="
~~ -~

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. RETUIINOFENGiNEIU-OidF aWIU...

·awq rrem BtdlqtGD, W.Va., far .... mile tdp to
..,.._, W.Va., Ill 1111! ........ . - of a 11411}'
exptdiileul dMip to mtve !heap of llle llelm
~2.-A::I L,_ I'~ EIU!!*I . -~-~~~

'

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"

Jeney cm!pllll)', II hOping that the )II'Oio&amp;ype
~ loean1oU\'e wllrepacetleaeletnak ea 111111 ,
llelp lid I ' employlr.eat Ill the fWta (AP
r
rjl +•).
~ _

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Thllrlday, Jenuary, 3, 1986

Comment

•

JERUSALEM - The "Shas member become the minister of time (presuming, always, tha~the
crisis" liroke , out, in mid· rellgio~ .affairs. This post was government holds together an
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS. MASON AREA
December, just after I arrived In traditionally held by the NRP long) .
.:Israel. It raged a week; then went
(National Religious Party) In the
Whowould.wanttbegovert)ment,
&gt;
away,
as
such
things
.do.
But
It
was
decades
ol
Labor
dominance'
In·
put
together With s.uch effort, to
~~-y;L~~~~
~"""""·~·~·-':'-·+···-.
wayn~mgr
"
elritrodu..-.A
to
'
·
Ist~el,
limiUy·broken
·in
197'i
wh.eil
~-call?
Weii, S6me·La.ll0c lt!inlers·lsel
' ~
~~
thli mazellke realities and Illusions Menachem Beglri brought Llkud to , that If. Llkud's demands get too
RO}lERT L. WINGETT
~! Israeli Politics,
power·
unr~allstlc, a new government
Publisher ·
On the sur!ace, It was a simple
Last summer, neither labor nor 'could be put together under labor's
sole leadership: Others thinkGthat
piece of jockeying 1n an unstabl~ Llkl!d won a m'ajorlty In ' the
BOB HOEFLICH
. PAT WHITEHEAD
en.
coalition - a ' Staple problem of election, r and neither could put. two rising stars of ·Likud d
General Manager
Assistant .Pllbllsher /Gontroller
parliamentary democracies, exac• together a coalition under Its sole . Aile! Sharon and seli-ma e man
David Levy - would like to s~ke
erbated In Israel by the leverage leadership. The result was a broad
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
give\\ re(\gloos parties to mal&lt;e up coaUUo" o( the tYro part!es wltl\ · - the goverment ei\OUglt to .replace
News Editor
the margin Ql coalitions. Shas, the th.,lr adherence. The prime m!nls·
Shamir before his term comes as
A MEMBER o! The Associated Press .. lnland Da.!!y Press As~ocla·
party of 'l'orah guardians, has oiuy
ter's post Is to alternate - first ,Prime minister.
.
tlon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
·
four seats 1n the·Knesset, and they Shimon Peres of Labor will govern
All these considerations came
were. pl~ged,, to the ou.tgolng Llkud for 25months, followed byShamlr's . IntO lnst&lt;~ont ..play the minute the
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than llO words
·
ed f
th
long. All leiters are subJect to editing and must be s igned with name, address and
governing for the same amount of
Shas leaders resign
rom . e
government of. Yltzhak Shamir teJepbone. number . No unsig ned letters wll1 be published. Lett&amp;s should be In
hut on
that a · Shas
Knesset,
that th e
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good taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

'&lt;

·

' ,•~~\,~~~1.',

Garry

-~S· . . talks~
who~-s _
ahead?
The usual method of measuring a nation's military might Is by askirig
whether it would win a .war against a potential enemy. ·
But In the nuclear age, that measure no longer works, so there Is no
absolute answer to the queStion: "Who's ahead, the United States or the
Soviet Union?"
"''nctr'!"V'l.'''"'~-.•-,,o.~
..... ~- "' ..,..t~'"l"!',.,., 'l;" "'!''~-~ .... fW':\1:)~1 t.!;ll\rc:
.l-'iil.7• •· n u .;,uy--J.
Y'"'" t:;l ;;, oo;'ll~.._
.. ,;n \:7 u..o;;r o V&amp; t'~ '-...U~ u.a• ...•J ...,.. ...... .,...,......... - - -

'"Alo.,. ••• , ,

a

·.H01 OHI.If
·- ~rrl+l~ OffiR ~A Bl.® LJBt~-11£Y Al.SO. ~IJRI'MV. M~INGs.'
-

1

wu_~ -

braod..coalition had not kePt tile
pledge made by Llkud wheti'lt was
bargaining for dotnlnance. Sharon
was In New York conducting his
trial agalnsl Time magazine.
SbiUll.lr..JWI!S .!lft a •.
!O Latin ,,:.,
America. David Levy took up the
cause of Shas .In their absence,
making himself the voice of Llkud
In defense of orlhollox senslhUitles
against the, seeularlzeil Labor
,
Party.
.
,
Shimon Peres made a midnight
visli to the rabbinical court judge
wliose word IS law to the Shas
members. (By Israeli law, such
rabbinical judges are In eligible lor
political activity.) There was daUy

mlt

·c

negotiating on spill . ministries
•
•.....
(between Shas and the nnP),.
redistribution of budgets Within the

-~-,

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•

neXt Monday and Tuesday In Geneva, Switzerland, armed with vast
: stockpiles of nuclear warheads and dozens of methods of firing those
~ weapons at each other.
Trying to figure out which side Is ahead Is difficult because the nonnaL
measures of mllltary comparison, such as nwnbers ·and effectiveness of
· weapons, do not easily apply to nuclear weapons.
Wllllarn Arkin, a nuclear weapons expert who is co-author of a book on
the U.s. arsenal along With several studies, said, "The Soviets may ~
~ ahead In actual warheads, but we have more than enough. Deterrence Is as
: much state of mind as anything else."
.
.
_ _ BQth_.JI~t)onsjlase~thelr nuclear J:lOllcy on the coiJ.~pt_ of, deterrence,
believing that each has such great destructive power tnat an attacker
cannot escape retaliatory destruction.
ThetwQsUperpowerS'h'&lt;!Veanucleartrladolland·basedlntercontlnental
ballistic missiles, manned bombers and submarine-launched missiles.,
Each leg of the triad has to be attacked In different ways, making It
: difficult for one side to plan a strike which would leave the other side unable
: !()retaliate.
•
.
But each nation -has .different strengths In Its triad. While almost_
'three-quarters of the Soviet Union's long-range nuclear weapons sit atop
ICBMs, the United Sfu,tes has only 25 percent of Its strategic warheads on
ICBMs. Another 25 percent are aboard bombers and half are on subs. .
President Reill!an entered office With a record five-year, $1.8 trllllon
. military buildup when Congress has generally approved, although some
; riltnor cuts have been made.
• • But most of the weapons Reagan proposes building have not yet been
• ~nstructed because of tfle long lead Involved In modern weapons.
So almost all the nuclear systems deployed during Reagan's first term
were approved ·
the 1970s, the "decade of neglect" often 'cited by
Reagan and
Caspar Weinberger.

OhiO

Pomeroy-MidrlhiP Dtt. Ohio
:Thu.rsday, JllfiU8I'Y 3, 1986

*'

Ill Court Street ·
Pomeroy, Ohio ·

Pomeroy-Middleport,

.

Page-2.;...The ~. 8•1tlnel

I

,=-~~&lt;TI~..,;.t~})-.e='M-•;:m=,~e n~~i'w~~""'··="""~·,.,, 'i=~lsraell.~pnliticalcrlsis
.. .. .. .~ · ~···· -=
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The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

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c:Ontrol over 1ocal religious coun,
ells. Noneofthesels very important
In Itself, and most people thought
the matter would blow over. But
- --"" rii]gh! ),\jp I!Qb)ts, or Sl!.anilr
them; or Peres, after shoWing
great dHeren('e \O Shas, might
demonstrate the Impossibility of
getting along with some ol Llkud's
more demanding partn~~- Atld, all
the time the NJ{P, which had been
wooed away from Labor by Begin,
was being more firmly reattached
to Its old partner (though It has less
·. to bring back t : inow)
l
.
So the crisis
not real, yet It
was. Jt wa,s coni liable, but on
terms - and the terms remained In
doubt for a week. Shamlr fiew. back
to keep an eye on Lev'y, and Sharon
to keep an eye on them both.- while
both of them worked to settle things
before big "Arlk" could take credit
for any solution. So, a genuine
crlslsc But just politics as usual.

·.

By SUSAN CHICOINE ·
Associated l'nllll Writer
Western Michigan Ignored the
preseason polls Wednesday night,
downing favorite Toledo 72·64 to
open the Mid,American Conference
college basketball season.
Toledo had roared back !rom a
39·26 halftime deficit to tie the game
58·58 With 5: 32\eft, but the Broncos
fought back with thenextnlnepolnts
'" ('v , tafte
--a =-=~-·
'" ·T"tif ,.. ·. g, -!)8 Ieaa w J 1;, 1~
remaining.
"Theplayerssbowedalotolpolse
afterToldeo had tied the game, and
we rose to the occasion," Western
. Michigan Coach Vern Payne said.
"IcanseewhyToledowasplckedto
Win the MAC They have a fine
·

P-'"--

W LT Pta.GF GA

Philadelphia
NY b landrrs
Plnsbu~h ;_
NY Rangen··
Nc!w Jl!Bey

is

untold s ory burled In the records of
the •i!J84 election campaign. These
·
In the
records show what happened
final wl!ek of mqst close congresslon;li campaigns.
"li's not the amoaunt of money
yau · get," a veteran senator ex·
plallied, "It's ~hen you get lt." Polls
are taken to Identify why and where
a candidate is weak or sirong. 'Then
he must have enough money to
focus the final · advertising blitz
where It· Will do the most good.
· Last-minute donations, there·
fore, can make the difference
between winillng .and losing a close
race. The unsentimental profes·
slonals, who run most political·
action committees lfuow they can

21 15

1

'S I

IQ) U8

r. • 17

~

49 157 UO
tt 181 118
.'M 129 l5ol

U:, 19
12 jJI

5
4

31 }l) 151
28 124 149

2l 10

7

16 l2

9

~~17 _16
lbitoit
~16 ' 16

6
. 6

49 1!18 125
41 t:M · UJ
40 1$ to&amp;R

......,_ .

Montrt'al
Buffalo

.an~ can challenger Richard D. Mcln- _ question that martin -l\'J]Q,,~oul.!l

2,606 votes, the winner collected
ty re d efeated t he 1ncum bent Demo- scrape up only $2,000 1n late PAC $26,5/Xlln last-mlliute PAC 1'll0ney;crat,. Rep. Frank McCloskey, by 34 funds - must still be asking Including $5,000 "out of. the blue"
from the ,fundamentalist Christian
votes ·- pendl ny a recount. Mcln· himself. '
tyre had $2S, 776 cash on hand as h.e .
- In Utah, a strategist J1l( Voters' VIctory Fund. Andrews
moved Into the final two weeks of Republican winner David Monsoh · raised only $9,000 from tlie PACS In
the campaign. This was boosted the tollt my reporters Tony Capucclo the waning days of the campaign.
last minute by $40,750 in PAC and Scott Barrett candidly that the
MISSION IMPOSSIBLE: The
money, $4,000 of -lt~from milk $46,800 in last-minute special - Ahny Corps of Engtn_ee!'S~Is one of
producers. McCloskey had only Interest money his candidate got
those 'can-do outfits that often
$1,965 cash on hand but . got a "was the margin, no two ways boasts, "the difficult we do immelast -minute shot -ln-lhf,arm -of about lt." Monson edged Democrat dlately: the Impossible may take a
$23,500 from PACs, including $7,000 Frances Farley by 473 votes; her little time. " But the engineers may
from the campaign chest of Shoo-In last-minute PAC money mostly
have met their match In the
Democrats.
from unions, came to $35,930-'- not
military eggheads at the National
_ In Idaho, history professor bad, but not good enough.
Defense Unlver51ty. The brass·
Richard Stallings unseated the
- In Pennsylvania, Incumbent
bound academicians decided they
Republican Incumbent, Rep.
Rep. Bob Edgar barely jenged off needed a new war-gamescenteron
George Hansen, by 133 . votes. the challenge of Republican c.
Fort McNair campus In southwest
l;fansen's main problem was his Weldon. Edgar's 481-vote margin
Washington, D.C. And they wanted

1
5

!I! llJ 133 .

' 12" 19
6 'lr

6

J1 128 148

5

17 ll4

Edmonton
~
8
Calgary -· ~:ll 15
Winnipeg
19 15
t..m Angl'k&gt;s
15 14
Vancou\'cr
8 2&amp;

4
3
4
8

54 Ull lZl
43 UIJ 151
42 156 w
.11 163 l~

5

121 2l4

-Dtv-

Toi'Onto

:n

111

w~·· Garrwm

N.Y. lslllfidcn 7, Detroit 2

•Q\.Il'b.'C 7, Har1rord 3
. N.Y. Ranlilf'l!i 6, VIII'ICOUW'r 0
Plns:tl.lrRh 2. Toronto 1

&lt;1llcago 3. Montrt"al 2
Phlladelphl:a 5, F.drromon 2

'nlmlday'a G~

..

,day!

/

No. 17, NCI'th Carolina Slate 17-:ll lo&amp;t

to Mal)'lalld 58-56, WEdnesday;

al

Km· _

tucky' Saturday.

Hal1f011:!
, 13 U! 4 .lJ 111 152
CAMPBELL (X)NF'm.Uti'L'£
Norris Dpvt*lll
1 Chicago
1B 17 3 39 153 141
15 15 5 :!i l.lJ Ifj
St . Louis
'liJ 20f 5 J] li] 173
OcOroil

Mlnrn..&gt;!oDta

Wa.3

ro;o, 13; Oldatim'ia ·-19:3) vs. Nmtnll
LOJislana, Saturday.
NO. U, J..(lllsW!a ~te i9-1J tiNt CAoor·
gta ~74, WDt. .ay;,. at Miss~
Slate, Saturday. ·
No. ~. Wuhlnglon (8-21 be-a) Lamar
61 -~ : \ '5. Stanford, 'Illlrsday; vs. oreaon
Slate, satun:!ay.
.
No. 16. Mk:l'llaan iS.2) lOst to Indiana
87-G!l. Wednl'Sday; at Miami, Ohio. Satur·

M'Al.D OONFEBENCE

PAC· cash' made ' a difference__J_a_ck..........A_nd_erso_n
W~NGTON----.'fhere

::::::::: ::::

NMIGMI Hodle)' LNpe

Z! 10
-Zl .10

'
No. 18, l...oolslfea Tech {10.1 ) vs .. Na'lh·
west LDuiStarla, Saturday.
No. 19, Maryland ill-21 bl'Eit Nartl\
Carolina Slifl! !!8-56.lVRtru:'!iiaW, al Oily·
ton , Satw-day.
·
No. :JJ, VIrginia Commonwealth IR-11 at
JucksooVIllf', Saturday.

Final ratinWJ

~ B)' 'l1le t•cda'edl Pl.The T~ Twmty t~ams in the Associ·
ated Press nna1 1~®~ llDbittl
!Jll.l. with ftrst·place votes it parmthfses.
~ason· ~. tofal points baietl oo a).
1!HS17 -16-15-1 '-13-12-U · 1~9-8-7-&amp;s-t-3-2· J
and rankin~ ~ the pl'l"VklUs Jl)ll:

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

l.Brl~m Yng (381 13-0-0
1 Wastd~oo tlfi)
lH-0
9-l· l
lF'Iorla&lt;l jfi)

1.140
1,00'2

I
4
3

4.Nl'braskll

10.2-0·

1.017

5

5.8ost(li Cotlt't(.
&amp;Oklahoma

10.2-0
9-2·1
10-2-0
11)2-!l

1m
883

7.0k1ahoma State

Van(()Uv&lt;'r ·at Nev.· Jersey
Montl"('al at St. Louis

8.So. Metrodlst
RUCLA

1.1~

8
2
~ 9
161· 10

613 14

S.J.{)

lO.SWihern Cal
U .Soulh Carolina
l2.Mary!and
--~··· • !3.0!'~ -SHt!..~

;~;~~~~~~~;imat.erlaLabout ~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~~~~~~a~2~~~~:~~;;;;~~~~·~'o~r~n-~~a~:-~·,c~rt.J~"!l~:~scF::~o:~"~;:~:~·~rru~·t~g.~l!t. ~d;!e~.. tr.a£ed to the .$15,!!ll -!..'1------..-it mlexolght.--~ - -~~: ~·"~

I

TboF&gt;IaiAP ...... -

Detroit at Hanford
Phllodl' lphla at
Mlnnt'Slta at

Local bowling

•

NHL results
W ashln~oo

I

''1iai'imne

Scoreboard ...

.

'

·

Michigan edged Ball state 711-75.
Gallipolis, !lien . reeled off stx !rom last year's 22·1 team. Warren · sophomore Jenni-Couch and eitller
team."
·--'· Miami opens defense ol its MAC stralgbt wins belore losing 55-44 to whipped Meigs by 30 m· 111e llr!;t"...5-5 senior B. J. Gordon or 5-3 senior
The Broncos were led by 16 points
title with 8 visit to Ohio University
Athens. The Bulldogs, under le- meeting last year, again by two 011 a
Rhonda Haddox. First off the behch
!rom Booker James and 15 from
tonight.
gendary coaclt Charles McAfee, b.12ZE!r shot at Meigs, and finally by wUl be Ruth ·Fry, Rhonda Neece,
Donald Petties.'
Anthony Grier scored 18 points went on to claim the SEOAL crown five In second round sectional and Jenny Swartz.
Ken Epperson led Toledo with 22.
while Meigs tied lor 5econd at g.s,
points, while ~ter Jim Lange •· and had a team-leading live assists
The Marauders fought off a mid·
added 11 polilts and guard Jay~ast for Kent State, &amp;-3 overall. ·The
season slump to go 1HI overall.
grabbed nine rebounds.
Golden F1ashes dotnlnated .. the ' The aUJTellt lour-game streak Is
· Western J\.!icbllll!II1 ~-E&amp; t~=' en~~ g~~: leading --~:ll -~~ &lt;'lossed up by the !act the skein has
!lnlsh last In the con!ei'ence" lly .
iiUU ""'" ''"'""'I&lt;:cdu&amp; ·u·~ . ..,..
comii al~t!W. expense"onO\lr oi ····"'··
-·~~:~· •. ooC ... ,~--~;::;~:~) ~:tf'~~'Z..:s:n; No.2
league coaches, Hfted Its record to Falcons, 6-4 overall, get any closer Meigs' · tougher opponenta,Aiex·
~- 19, 111!4_
Pta.
41181 Powell's SuP"' Valu 485.
.;,
~"='~
"~"'·'-~"-"•~•
•
JW
eil!ht
POints.
-~~oA:.1j
~-1-·IR2
7?.\
Team
Team,.,;.,Whaley's Used
Auto .-Parts
1
000&gt; VVII:'l u 'u. :( ua=uu NU."'..'Vii"U1 ~--~- '""
~~- tile~- first
"' ....,___,_,. ~.....
.
-="""'-""'.I.O'Oj,~ ....: - ""'" &lt;:.G·- 'i'·""""""P.!Iofo!l ...~.!l::i$..
_,~__._, ~·-....::&gt;.,..&lt;( .,p;o n
· . -.....
~ --~--,....l'IJ
twoO
.~o:on..T...:f·'r..F- "+- _......
"It
league
game
~
~
pna...
~., "'
.... ... .......... ....... ..._,...,_"iS
.. ..
• ' ,' G"U'
• ••
, ""'"'
... tt ~--""~n• ~ · - • · - · · • •••• .
"WMU has shown a great deal of
. was
'. Warren Local (76-59), and Athens Gallery Hair Ans ............ ................ ...... 70
Valu 13lll.
Improvement from last year,"
which right now 15 very Important,
(5149), and three ol the four have No.2 ..,. ..................... ................. ..... .ti6 , - - - - - - ' - - - - - : . _ but I don't know wl)at It wU1 mean
PowoU s Super Valu ............. .................. 64
Toledo Coach Boi&gt;Nichols said.
.
.. K
State been on the road.
Whaley's Used Auto Pans ..................... .62
In other league action Wednesday
three weeks from now,
ent..
Mike Chancey continUes to lead
Netwcrk Vide&lt;&gt; .... ........ .... .,, ........ ........... .a
mght, Kent State beat Bowling
Coach Jlm MacDonald said. Get·
the Marauders In both scoring and . ~1f.~.~.:::::: :::: ::::: '~ :
~
Green~.EasternMichlganbeat tlng It (the victory) on the ~d retxiundlng as the &amp;4 junior forIndividual game- Lantta Wentt£1 1B6:
·
l1llnots 81·56 and Central means good things could happen.
ward puts In 15 9 politts a game
Cindy Rice 177: Patty [J(,Ify 17.6·
515
16
Bowling Green was paced by
Other double ~~ scorers are s-2 Th~.:;~~,-Lat;;!~f:;-"~ '
points each !rom James Tyler .a nd senior forward Jay Carpenter and . Team game- No. 7rill: GaUery Halr Al1S
5J1.JACKSON PIKE · Rt35 WEST
'Phone-446-4524
Anthony Robinson.
5-g junl
ard R1 k Wise both at
4!18: Network VIdeo 493,
"It .,· ery frustrating loss It
or gu
C
•
Team serteo - Network Vldl!&lt;! 1434 : No. 2

S.J-{1

·

10-2-0

!IS 18
!i7 7
~ 12

aV

'

1~1; No.7, Powell's Super Valu 137S.

11.8.

wasn't a fi~ke. They outplayed U6 all
The other two Marauder starters,
Dec. 17• tBI!I
·
the way," Falcons Coach John 6-4 senior center Dave Fisher and 'f:.:"rmacy North·............ ........... ..........~
Welnert.safd.
,
5-7 junior guard Brad Roblnson,are Gallery Hair Arts ... ............................... 76
Eastern Michigan's Fred Col!eld ·a t 6.2 and 5.3 a game, respectlvel•'. ~~&lt;;r.'sSuusect 'v'"a'lo Parts .............. .. ...... 6868
ured In 19 pOints and VInce Giles
J
•vw•• • per u ........... .. ........... ·
po
1
Bench Report
No. 2 ........... ................................. ....... 68
added 18 points and 15 rebounds to
The Marauder bencb, has come
Netwcrk Vldro ...................................... 50
helpdefeatNortherniillnols
all
d
ChapmanShoes .. ....... ...... .................... 44
Eastern, 7·3. expanded on. a 34-19 ~:r :':~ res::'nce~5; ; Nt~~~ii~ai ii~;;;~ :.:: ·M;;;ji;:;;;;·r;;,;;i ·~
halftime lead that overwhelmed the center Lee Powell sc
· ores at 4 5 a
Laurte Betzlng 181: Thelma Osborne 1'19.497
' K
·
Individual series - Thelma Osborne :
scoring ol the
uskles
enny game while 5-11 junior forward
Battle,a!restuna orwardwhohad Shawn Baker Is at U. Meigs'
•·
a game-high 24 points and grabbed back-up guards juniors ciuiS , . - - - - - - - - - - - ,
eight reboundS. Northern fell to 4-6 Kennedy and Rodd Harrison, have
!;'rep scores ·
~
· _ ~
~ - also contrlbutedjrofu the bench.
overall.
' "Battle Is certainly oneofthebest
Metp ~. . _ ,
Oldo H.S. Gltta BukettMIII
·Wednflda,y'a fteMIIa
young players I've seen," Eastern
(Overall Garnal
Buck1•yf' W. !li. Buckf"Ye' N. 29
1
Coach Jim Boyce Said.
Play.,
G Tp -'•«·
Delpt'CS St. JOhn's KJ, Contlnt'll te~l :5
F
dDe kBold
. dguard MlkeChancey .............. ........... 9 143 15.9
Elyria Cath. 51. Lorain Brookskie :It
orwar
re
on an
Jay carpenter ............ : ........... 9 106 IU
Caraway 111. Ll::liOOnvllle +I
Steve Sctunldt each nailed two free Rick wtse ............. ................. 9 106 u.s
iDdlan VallpY SOU!b 61, Conotton Va!W)•
throws In thellnal42secondstohelp Dave Fisher ........................... 9 5i ~2
Brad R&lt;&gt;blnson ....................... ,9 &lt;18 5.3
Central Michigan .edge Ball State Lee Pl&gt;wen ..........., ...... .......... 9 411 t.s
Ulkeland Eil. Cadl:z 3S
Mlnf-ral Rk¥re ,.;, McDonald :II
711-75
Shawn Baker .......................... 9 :rT 4.1
" -zati£'6VWE' ~ fi]-;--f:;akt•'IIIU:Jd~ 9 -2'2-- u
.
te forWard Dan Palombi· Chris Kennedy ........
ONo H.S. llaya BMkdt.D
BallSta
.
Rod&lt;IHarrlson ........................ 7 5 Q7
w--.y• ~tau~m
zlo Who had a game-high 26 points
Park..- Long ............. ~...... ....... 3 4 1.3
Akron COYmtry 59, Fleld M
nine rebounds·, hit a &amp;-loot hook i:l.,Shank. c . .................... 3 1 ·~ O.S,g
Cln. CAPE '72. Martermnt 54
Copley 73, Akrm Garflctd 6l
shot With 1: 21 lett to give the
Greens.btJI'i Gn!1!n :'8, Akron Mar!('hesCardinals the lead, 75-74, before
ter43
'
Olk Glen, W . Va .. 62. Bea-wr Local :n
Boldon and Schmidt sealed the
W, Chestrr Lakoti\ 81, Mason til
~
victory.
Guard Jeff Heide scored 19 pol,nts
to lead the Chippewas, 64 overlll!.
The Cardinals are 3-6 overall.

A

..

=............

and

TVC

COMING SOOtH "THE RIVER" I
'NICKY AND' MUDE" -· -

--1

cage

l6.1U'A'II

In 1!81 while the number of Sovjet ICBM nuclear warheads has lnCirea;sed
during the crucial last days before" only m1 on hand shortly before the
frQmJ!JloUt 5J(!) to aroung 5,Ero.
_ -·
.
_
_ .~ _
- thfvote, _.
· electlon, -Ste.lltngs got-$2'/;JOHrom .
The United States, With Its B52 and FB-111 planes, has more bombers,
lfhe PACmen 's strategy Is PACmen who smelled the scent of
clearly IUustrated by the eight victory. Hansen had $3,151 1n cash
about 340 to 290, but the Soviets have closed the gap somewhat in the past
four years.
closest House •campaigns last fall . but could raise only $7,500 more
At sea, the United States still maintains a large lead, With about 5,700
In all but on~ race (where a final from the PACs.
•
sub-launched warheads to an estlmated 2,(0) for the Soviets.
determination awaits a recount ),
_ In North Carolina~ Republican
These figures Include only warheads on strategic, or long-range,
the candidate who got ihe most: J . Alex McMlllan owed his 321 _vole
last-mlnute.speclal·lnterest money squeaker over challenger David
weapons. If the total o( all warheads Is counted, the United States has a
stockpile of 25,000 to 26,(0) atomic warheads, according to various
won the electidn.
·
Martin largely to Ronald Reagan's
estimates.
, Here's the rundown on the coattails. But could he have pulled It
· The total Soviet stockpile falls SQmewhere between 18,nxl and 41,nxl,
campaigns:
off without the last-minute Infusion
according to a recent study co-authored by Arkin, the arms expert. ·
_ ln. southern Indiana; Republi· of $25, 750 In PAC. money? It's a
The Soviets have never published data and their stockpile and the wide
disparity In the numbers of warheads Involves different assumptions about
Soviet deUvery systems. The higher nwnber Is arrived at by assuming
nuclear weaP&lt;&gt;ns are fired from some systems which can be used for either
nuclear or non-nuclear weapons and by asswnlng that some delivery
It's been 30 year.; since the Great country, "
"That's a heck of a story. If they
systems are reloaded and fired again.
Red Hunter, Serr. Joe McCarthy,
got
control of Foggy Bottom they
announced that the State Depart·
Whatever the total, both nations are spending vast amounts of money on
new weapons for aU three legs ol the triad.
'
ment .wa~ filled with Communists, could force diplomatic solutions In
'The United States Is now testing a new ICBM, the MX, and plans to add
Comtnlesympa, . plnkos and fellow military problems. Does the president know what's going on?"
100 of the 1Q.warhead weapons to the arsenal oll,OOO Minutemen weapons.
travelers.
"For the moment he's sticking by
The older Titan ICBMs are being phased out.
That was in the early Fifties and
things havr changed'. As far as the Shultz, but the conservatives are
At sea, the first J].S. Trident subs have been deployed along with their 24
Republican · right wing Is con- not going to stand by and see this
Trident I missiles, each of which has eight warheads. Within the next tWo
years, thosemlsslleswlllbereplacedbytheTrldentiimlsslles,whichhave
cerned, we have nothing to lear country's hard·ltne policy go down
. a longer range and better accuracy than the current weapons. The Navy
from Commies In the State Depart· the drain. We didn't reelect Reagan
,
111ent any m,ore. The real threats to to make an arms control treaty or
· eVentually plans to build at least 20 Trldent,class subs.
· · The Soviets are olfset)lngthe U.S: boats With Typhoon-class subs, each of . the ·nation today are the "moder- keep us .from getting mllttarlly
whlch can fire up to ID missiles. Those boats will he In ad(lltlon to the ttu:ee
ates," . who have Infiltrated the Involved In Central America."
"It would lie a disaster .to purge
other classes ol missile-firing subs the Soviets no)V deploy.
·
president's own family.
Ideological
presidential appointees
On land, the Reagan administration Is pushing hard lor 100MXwea(lo~.
It's a -very serious situation
With
State
Department
profession.according to my conservative
despite strong objections that It makes no sense to put the weapons Into
als," 1 agreed. "It could lead to
existing Minuteman silos which might be vulnerable to a first strike.
friends. •
worse still, a
Congress has already approved 21 MX weapons, but the number o!U.S.
Sln10n Simple, the leading right·. another detente
land-based ICBM warheads will remain about whatlt was because the Air
wing l'Ol\lmnist In the nation, told nuclear freeze. I can't believe
Force ts retiring the aging Titan II missile. In j!ddltlon. the Air Force Is
me; "Setretary George Shultz Is Shultz \VOUid do this If he didn't have
developing a new ICBM commonly known as "Midgetman."
reshuffling the department, and friends in tbe WhJ.te House."
The Soviets have 1,400 ICBMs, according to the Pentagon, compared to
purgihg all the hard-liners, and
"That's just it. The moderates In
1,~ for the United States. The Soviets have continued to Improve their
replacing them With moderates so the White HoJ.I§e are -~l!!nd tile
·
he' can take ·control of the foreign · whole. thing."
ICBM force and are adding two more types of missiles to the eight lype$
"Are you. trying to tell me that
lllready depleyed, the Pentagon says.
. .
policy of1be country."
: In the air, the Soviets are developing,. a new, long·lflllge bomber
"Why would sreretary of state ·there are moderates In the White
House too? Who are tbey?"
code-mimed Blackjack, which wU1 be cortil;llned With the shorter-range
want to do that?" I asked.
·
"JII'l Baker, Mike Deaver,
Backfire.
"Because · he ' s a closet
George
Bush, just to name a few."
But tile United States is developing two new types of bombers to replace
pragmatist."
"l
never
thought · ol them as
the aging B-52s and t~e FB-llls which .are the heart or the U.S. bomber 1 ·"Those are . strong charges," I
Ioree.
·
,,
·
llllld. "I hope y'bu have evidence to moderates.:'
"Why do you think they refused
back them up,''
Reagan's main strategic nuclear weapons decision was to reverse
"I do. Shultz wants to replace U.N. Ambassador Jeane Klrkpa·
Presldenl Carter and resurrect the B-1 bomber. The first ol the swing-Wing
one-third' of Reagan's pollticaUy ttick a key job?"
planes carne all Northrop production lines In September.
"She said It was because they
At the same time, the Pentagon Is pushl~
'ahead With Its ''stealth"
appointed atnbassadors With lor~
technology, Involving special paints and cons
on to make It extremely
elgn' service professionals, and be 'were male chauvinist pigs."
"You can be a male chauvinist
ill1flcult lor planes to be detected by enemy ra . 'The secret program Is
plans to sUbstitute six hard· line
reportedly aimed at developing both bombers and lighters.
·
assistant secretaries with State pig and moderate as well."
"What are the conservatives
Both sides are also In the midst of deploying thousands ollow·llylng, Departmeht experts."
to do about It?''
going
slow·movlnJ cruise missiles. The small weapons aredHIIcult to detect and
"M,aybe lie just wants to beef up
"We're
calling for a Senate
can be !Ired from planes, surface ships, 'subs or land bases.
hiS staff."
Investigation
to root out all the
In addition, the Reagan administration has poured more !han S3J billion
"Here Is the list. The.majorlty of
Into lmpt'OVIilg ti\enuclear cornrn8tid-and-ronlro1 struciti1'e to m8kesure .-"Shuliz's aPi)ln1ees arereasanable moderates arid jjragmatfSIS In ·
that the: retaliatory 5trtke capability cannot be knocked out.
people who would sell out the government. Anyone who can't

Weldon got.
-In lllihols, former Hep". Ken
Gray regained his old seat by 1,377
votes over Republican Randy
Patchett, with the help of $34,275 In
last-minute denatlons from labor
PACs. Though Patchett had $40,000
cash on hand compared to Gray's
$2,125, be could raise only $16,500 1n
tate PAC donations:
- In North Carolina, where
Republican challenger BU! &amp;\hey
beat Incumbent Ike Andrews by

center should be. The only clue they
goJ was that tile ~ar·&amp;!l_mell. toent(!r
across the river at the Pentagon
was too small, And While the
Defense. Intelligence Agency Inslsted that t~ new center· be
super-secure, no details were given
-on grounds of national security.
So the engineers went ahead by
guess and by golly. One result Is
that the center will probably cost at
least twice the Pentagon's original
$500,000 estimate.

. __~A_r_tB_uc___;h_wa_l_d
The m odera
. tes are COmmg

NBA results
N~-Baaketb.o AiiMOda&amp;klll
EAS1'ERN OONn:aENCE
o\tlantk Dhii!Jbl
•
" ' L Pet: GB

'!16.818 ?li 6 .813
~
19 13 !li4 7¥.!
1."1 18 ,4!6 12
12 ?2 .l\1 "~

jlh!Judclphla
""'"'"
WoshlnJ!loo
N f'IO.' J&lt;'~'

Nf"A' York

Caural Otvlf!IOII

, Milw.auk('('
Detroit
Chln•l(o
Atlan ta
I r.db'UUI
. Cl("'.•rlund

.f£7 .s:n 4lh
.500 5T,i
.424 8
.290 12
6 23
.11!! 14
~'EBTERN (XlNF'ERENCE

'

pass the conservative Ideological
litmus test wUI. be hounded out of
oftlce." ·
"I hope It's televised. ·rd like to
see what a moderate In the Reagan
administration really looks ltke."
"Don't worry, you'll see all of
them. Not only wlll they have to
testify under oath whether theY are
moderates or not, but they'll have to

17.F1crlda SlatE&gt;
t8.Mtamt, F'l_j.

give the names of other moderates
In their cell. If they retuse they'll be
'held In contempt of CongteSS." •
"It could be the beginning of
another witch hunt," I said excll·
edly. "We haiJI!n't had a good one
since Joe McO!rthy was alive."
Simon smiles, "May he rest in - ·

22 ' 11
11 15
Hi 16
H 19
9 22

Dcorlv('r

Mldwe!ll Dlvh!H
19 13

H(l.l~lm

19 13

Da llas
Utah
Son AntoniO
Kansa.~ City

15 15
15 18
14 18
n· 19

PadlkDI\1NMn
22 10
Phom~
18 15
Ponland
,
14 18
L.A. Olpi)('I'S
14 19

LA. l.alc(lr.;

,.._
,.._
·""
..wi

341),

.&lt;18

$.1

'

7

.!Bl -

.54.5

.m

.01

~ Y,

8

!Ph

SC'a nle
14 19 .42:4 8~
Gold!:'n Statr
tO :&amp;.1 .:m 11
W,IDlfllllll¥'" Gameoa
•
Boston 110, NM't' .J~r.K)' ~ ·
Atlanta 121, Otic~ 107
Dt&gt;lmh liB, Clevrland JOO
PhOOnlx U5. Kansas City 11T7

peace.'.'

Houstoo U3. Om\'l'r 111
PhlhuJetphla US, &amp;&gt;ani&lt;' 100
'1111.ndAJ's flarntotl
L.A . Olppl'f'S a t MUwapiU!e
Wm;hlngtoo at Clf&gt;vcland

Dallas at San Antonio
lndlwut at Goldl'n Statf"
St&gt;ant&lt;' at Portland

Berry's World

f'lidqsG~

N&lt;'Yo' York at Boston
P~IJ. a t Nrw Jlff'K')'

Attarua at ()(&gt;troll

or.

1

Mttwauka&gt; at ~kago

L.A. OlPPf'I'S nt t&lt;ansas City
~\~,-111 Utah
Portllll\d at L.A. Lakm

How they fared

-.

"""'
"'' """"''""
""""
lrJ,:r
OOsl«'lball
li'ams lart'd
: Top "' rol·
No. 1. c:.~ •...,.,., 112~1 ... , ~"'"

·---~~-

-lliU"no;.

a

w"'""""'' "" ""'"" Col·

"";;"'J.'"~:.:: 19&lt;1\ al VI"""'"· Saou...,.

No. 3. "Ml&gt;mphls SlatP 1!W1 llf!'llll r.hjt
Stafl' 7.1~1. ,Wt'dn~y: a! So.llh Caro""'· "

1
""'''·

•

No. 4, SC . Jom 's t9-ll trat Connecticut

S7-~l. W(l(!n('o!;da}~ vs. Seton HaU , Sarur-

'!'\'~CAGE STANDINGS

"'

t9.Kent!K'kY
:II.VIfjtnll
8-·U
- U9 Othcn ~vlng votes: Wf':AI Vl~!a

11». ~~~ rr. ArmY 44. Air l'"orce
:!6, NO!rt [lamp 26, Nevada·LaS Wgu 17.

TI!)Cas Christian 9, Arkansas 8, Rutpr! 7,
W!~mln 7, Teltlls 5. Purckl.e 4, F'uiFnon
Statt&gt; l
·

College scores
"- _

... l!oNo&gt;
EA8l'

56. New Hampshire 47

Dn:xtt!B, Delaware 75
Falrfteld IIi. oanrnwth 1IJ
Florida .a..M 97, Alabama St. !tO
~t(Min 73, Seton HaU !.E
Lafa)"ne 47, Colgat~ 40
Siena !M, An"nv til ·
St. Jot.l '.! 57. ConnectiC\It S1
VWaJHPJ.. 82; Syr.ai'USt' 1IJ

BOO'l1l

OO'T'ISal IM, A~achlan St. 7l
Dav&amp;dlon 111, FUrman 61

F'\orkla IM, Tennesaee iU
norlda AII:M fl/, Alabama St. oo
GroriJ' Muon 101, ~ncan u . 78

GrorQ!a Scr.t!ht'rn n. CampbeiiG'J
lB. Auburn 6J
Lrulslalla St. 79, Geor"Ria 74
Ma~hall !10, Dtlaware St. 62

Ku11udly

Mar;land-rt8,- N .-Carol lnod~l. !i!
M~m~phl!i St. 73, Dell a St. 6l

SW Loulslsrta 63, F"ft&gt;Sro St.~
Tmrii'S'Il:t.&gt; St. 76. Austill Pely ~
Vanderbilt 63. Mta&amp;l!lllipp161 .' 01'

-

Vlrgl.nla 87, V~rtnnla Tedt 58

Wake FOit'llt &amp;t, William 1- Mill)' 47
Dradley 76. Cl'elitflton 1l
CWtctnnutl 6l Florida St . 8l
Indiana 87. Mldllpn 62
Ken( St. ll. &amp;Jwllna Green &amp;i .
Marquftt£' 96. Wis•.CI"'l"efl Bay 48

l!OII1UWI!Sl
Southern Metl'odlst lfi. RICe ~7
TM~;as-San Anlookl 101, Be~br 91

•

_ FAR"'Eft'
Colorado 81. Hanford 67
Gonzaga ~. Idaho 5o&amp;
Nt'\' .· lA~ Veaaa 142, Utah St . 140, lOT
Hawat!-HliO 93. Alaska-Fairbank! 00 12

aT•

NFL 'Playoffs
..

N............... ......._ rta,ofta
-

c.nt 0omoo

!IIIIIII'IIQ, Bet! !I

Seante 1l L.A. Raldrn 1

"' or ,.................,
~
When' Ralph Sampson has a good Nelsonvl
Federai·Hocklng ,................ .5 4 578 561
game, theHoustonRocketsarehard VIntOn County ... , .. .. .............. 3 6 5'18 :
to beat. tt goes double when Akeem Warrel'll.ocal ..... .... ....... .. ....2 6 550
Miller .................................! 8 432 :
Olajuwonls playing well.
we11S1on ..............................o s 486
'That was the case Wednesday Team
(1'\'C Onlyl W L P OP
night when the Rockets' so-ealled Alexand,&lt;'r ......................... 6 ~
452
"Twin Towers" combined for 56 Meigs ........ ............. ........... &gt; 462 ~
Bolp.-. ............ ....................5 2
:
points and 26 rebounds In a 11?-ill Trimble
.. .................... ........ 5 2 472 463
National Basketball AssoCiation
victory over the Denver Rockets.
"They killed us off the boards warren Local ...................... ~
(with a 5&amp;-33edged In rebounds) and Miller . .... .. ... ............ .. .....
570
It's really that simple," Denver WPIIston ........................ ~~ ~ ..: . TeiU
~
CoachDougMoesald. "!thought we
(TVCReloerv&lt;OI
WLPOP
did a good job In a lot ol respects Team
Belpre
............
,.
..
..
......
tonight, but we just couldn't get our Warren Local ......................67 01 ~ · ~
rebounds. We stopped them and we Ale&gt;&lt;3ndt'r .. ................... ......&gt; 2 361 ~
328
stopped them defensively, .but Melp ........... .. .... .. . . . 44 ~ :
Vtntm County .......................
~ ~
tkey'd just go and get (J_Mck !!ialn· Trimble ....... ,........... .. .... ...,.. 3. 4
2li:!
Fedf&gt;t'ai·Hocklng ............... ... 2 5 244
They're so big and they're really
Nelsonvlllo-Yor k .......... .. ...... 2 5 267 Ill
tough for us to handle."
Miller ..... ........... ................. 2 5 'lllll :
InotherNBAactlon,ltwasBoston ~o~~ls~on ............................. ~ ~ ~~ 3219
UO, New Jersey 95; Atlanta 121,
Jan. f IJIIIB!
Wellston al Meigs
.)
Chicago 107; Detroit 1!l!, Cleveland
Alexander at BelPrE'
100· Phoenix U5, Kansas City 107,
Federal-Hocking at Nelsonville-York
Phlladl!lphla 118, Seattle 109.
M!Uer at Vlntoo County
'The Rockets won the game on ' Warlen Local at 'J!imble .
Olajuwon's 10.fo91 jump shot With
three seconds left, his 27th point of
thegarne.Sampsonhad29,andeech
collected 13 rebounds.
The victory bollsted tlie Rockets
Into a lint-place tie With Denver In
the Midwest Division. Both teams
are 19-13 alter Houston broke an
eight-game. 10$lng streak to the
' Nuggets In McNichols Arena.
Larry Bird scored 23 points,
'svA~ AU.. GAMI!S
ne.rDMoflfo 10 lstsandgrabbed TEAM - .
W L
P- OP

~=.f.~i;·: ::: : : : ii : ::~ :~

and

ArkanSaS 70, Tl'XAS A.I!:M it
HOUBIOO at Teu!i CbrUUin. ppd: St10W
TC'IW! Tfdl 67. Texas 00

By ASSOCIATED PRn!S

J..

=

Bostoo'Coll. 67, Providl!rTC't' M
Can~u:i

three seconds

iADG""""I
Tam·
- - -W- L t&gt; OP
ancler .......................6 2 00! ::
Belpre .. ... ................ .... .......6· 2 ~26 [j)4
MeiiS ........................ ...., ....6 3 567 :134
Trlmblei.I....Y.....k .. . ........ ; 33 ~ 531

SVAC

cage
standings

~u

r

ass

.

seventhe
~
to lead the Celtlcs
Nets

over

'

Hannan Trace ...... .............6 1 417 3M
South•rn ........................... ~ 3 458 408&gt;
Kyger creett ...................... 2 4 31~ 327

Eanern ................. .. .......... 2 5 409 505

It was the rwrth victcry In live North Gallla ...................... 2 6 !507 585
No. 0,
'~' 1 " ' ' 10 vm .....,
"""""'lor the CeiUcs, who have the Soulhwestern ........... -..... ... .1 6 395 m
RZ·1II. W«in...O)'•
N.Y. GlanblO, LA. Ramo'IJ
..-·-~-MDAwlth2'7, 'The
No. '· iutnol.• 11)·11 al M~-· ·
belli record In tu"'"'''"'
..,,
SV.\CV,\11811'\'
nm•""Y. at 1..... Sa)W'IIay,
c
•loss.sriapped a four-game winning Teom
WLP OP
No. 7, Soultlml Metrodt!1 tl0-11 bfat
IWiiiNif,llle.•
Rlrt&gt; 00-57. Wl'&amp;eadiY, vs. ArkanUI, Sat ·
Miami 31. hdlf' lO
streak tor the Nets.
:::: :~ g ~ ~
unloy.
·
'""fr- :n, N .Y . C1"' 010
MIJieGmlnskiled the Nets wlth23
Nu
8,
""''"''
ll'&lt;dl
lU
I
vo.
Marylond·
Do&lt;..
pain'"
and
18
re'-·-"•.
Eost&lt;'rn .Shclnl. 11J.ar1day; at Wake For·
Ctllc110 :13, WMtdqi:Dn 19 1
LD
UUWIIB'
~~~caii~·::::::::::::::::::l ~
..... Sooou... y.
.
Ptn- :11. """"" 17
Bill -utmbeer scored 16 ol his
~
No. 9, Nonn Coroilna t(l.!i It S.,oon,
c·-.hi""' "" points In the third ~~":! ::::::::::::::::::~
'T'hlndlly: at Fkl'lda State-, Slt\ll'dly. ,
C ' uwCiwnsl Npn
a.l'll;'ll:;'' •"''P• J.J
TGT.U.S
1 ' 1 1111 ~
No. tO DePtoul I., I w . St. Mary.
- · IM. I
quarler to Jead the PJstoas over the
lllJnday; at Alabami·Bin:nlngblm. S.t·
Plllsbw'gh It Ml.-nt
Cav•"'&amp;.AUII~
.........._, WJio SID'·
......
•
Chlclfll!(l at .Sall Fnacllro
Allt:'lli.
1ou1......-. at Hannu Tric-e (matceup)
pa-.!hlapreviDUShllbof33ll!t last· Kypr CnK ol Eostem (mokoup)
-No.
- U, Kansa1 1~21 loot " Koondy
II bthern
-~·:.;: ~'";,""!!.:!':"'· ~: ~I
~=·
seaiOII,pjl(.'edDI!Il'OitiniiD'Incand Wlbaml
:;.t-.;r=¢-:..~!U''
. ___... """~~
No ..l2, lncMMlclol... 1!1·
MPolo .W..Ilill.
- reboundin« In eac'h of the first till'ee
Crou Lantt at North Gallla
62, W~y; at Mld)lpfl statf', s.tw'·
AFC C't\amp6on VJ, NFC.O\Irl1*ln .1
KyiJer Cr~k at Fort Frye
L;,.:;•:&lt;&gt;;..
· _...;._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _..;..._ _ _ _ _-:-~ ' quarters.

s,.,.,....

00)'.

-·-

·.

·

i:'.:::",;;;;;;;·: ::::::::::

i

"Sevent-r YfiBTB ago, htl wa juar a BABY.
Now, he's watched more than 15,000 HOURS
OF-7V:' -~

~-~

~ r ~~

.

..

v
I·

•

~·-·

,.,I """

::

1:

·Eat Free

Ponderosa on

at
•t
Nights!
Faml Y ,,, ~~~ttilclosi.
6. ,

rue.., tlllfl

�.

&gt;

Pomeroy-Middleport: Ohio

Thursday. January 3, 1985

Ohio

foul out hi 3 OTs,·Rebels ·n ip Aggies, 142~1 ~

Six

·MUS· wresders fiftlt in Belpre.

..

.

In other games, · 11 . was 0111
llrTheA..,....•tedt&gt;n.
ball·handlers, we had no shooters; . Wtnnlnistreakto23game!i.
Jen-y . Tarkanlan, !he tllWel· ' wehadguyaoutofpo61tlon.Howwe · Inothei-gameslnvolvtngranked Pomlnlon ·86, . South Alabama 84;
· chfi!Wing basketball roach at f!Ver came back to win just amazes teams, No. 3 Mempl)ls State llmped VanderbUt 63, Mlsslsslppl 61 In
overtime; VlrgJnla 67, VIrginia
Nevada·Las Vegas, sttn can'tflgure me."
.
by llttle Delta State '73-61; No. 4 St.
out row Jt happened.
Utah State Coach Rod 'l'Ueller, John's got only 12 points from. · TE!Cl,h~; WakeForest 64,WUllami·
Maey of/; Brl!dJey ·"rel ~t:!m"1l·2 ;...,.,.,-·•~
IS""ffiell'· ~ , ·"'l·mai\ililrs ,.. 4if',..,.,.,,;-.lY"&lt;ii~ma .::·. -·= i\B-Airieiical'imguard Chrls Mullin
Runnln' Rebels ran, and ran, and for most points f!Ver scored by a
yet managed to wln Its Big East Clnclnnatl63, F1orida State 62; and
Texas t ech 67, Texas 00.
ran some more against Utah State. losing team, was just as stunned..
Hd.llfter over Connecticut 57-51; No.
Derrick GelVin, brother of San
. ButtheAggleskeptpace-through
"Obviously, wedldn'thandlethe 7 Southern Methodist rallied past
Antonio
Spurs all·star guard George
one overitme and a second and Into lead very well," TueUer said.
Rice 66-57 ln the Southwest COlliera third.
'
·
WhUeUNLVandUtahStatewere ·ence, and No. 14 Louisiana State Gervln. scored 51 points In .leading
Alor.g .tbe.way,..sL'! of UNLV's 11 _lll!!l!!l!g~l'Y., the_fe!!! of college _ sfQ~Gf'nrg!!IJ.l-7i!na§QtLtll.e.ll_st· .1"elHI!!-~ · ·~!O..l!!£...!.O _a 10!J1
tiiumph over Baylor.
players were dlsquallfled on fouls, · basketball was going about Its ern Conference match. ·
.
and an appeared lost when Utah busi!te&amp;S. No. 5Syracuse~tltsfirst­
State took a slx·polnt lead. But the llameoftheseason,fl2:70toB1gEast
Rebels came . back and, when ' I:Jval V1llanova; No. 12 Indiana got
Richard Robinson tipped 1n a 31 points from .Uwe Blab and
basket, the game
finally, b!udgeonedNo.l4Mlchlgan87-62ln

·tourney, second in own invitational
ROCK

SPRINGS - The Meigs- . , Coach Larry Grtmes' grapplers lts own elght-team, two-day tour"'JfS~ te11m) 1ad a busy ho!kl1_~ . en~ 'N.ftl!J!~e~n placln!,_~r~. IJ.El_Y ~d fW:ed better;~!~,,a .~n~····break as. Q!ey ·competed tn two
thari ROush. 'James Sriyiier (1l2 place tln'fsli.
· · -~ """"'" """'
tournaments and tared welllri both,
pound) IDok second place hOnors,
.Team scores were Warren Local
as a Marauder claimed both . Butch Stein, w)lo ls the only 445, Meigs 265, Galllpolls 251,
M.v.P : awards.
Marauder yet to be pinned thls lrontgn 249, New Lexington 243,
"Belpre Tournament
year, hlld a f~urth In the U9 pound Trimble 239, Nelsonyllle-York 224,
Meigs' freshman ~ pound Mike class, l26 polll!d 1J9Ug Priddy lost and Fairland 56.
-Roush- won-"J-.e ·.tl;urney'o ·MV'P - !~-!.~ tL.~"!!S-tl'.is ·!,leJi.""-Srul ·~ ··'l!I!&amp;~12S po!m9.!ir1ddy .~li?POO.Jills"-···-··"~~-­
award with a first place that
finished . fourth, '32 pund Robert record to 16-3 as he rook first pl!lce
· Included two plns 1n three matches · Sisson was 'second and wrestled the honors .and was named the MVP of
-'The MarauderS itntshed llfth tn
best of hls career as he defeated two ' the tournament. ·
nlne-team fleld . ,
undefeateds, one of whlch was a
Also claiming first "place was
Final results were Wlrt County
dlstrlct runner-11p ln class AAA last Snyder ln the U2 pound class, now
(W.Va.) 175 ~ , Belpre 162Ji2, Ripley
year, and 167 pound Butch StUes sp6rtlng an 18-2 record f&lt;;&gt;r the year.
(W.Va.)
Wintersville
showed tremendous Improvement SlUes and raul ·Dalley both placed

tlwi

Federal-Hocking
· c ounty 10Ji2.

and VInton

Thl$'pa5t weekend, Meigs hosted

BYU crowDed
.
.
national champs

(11'0!\tOn), E . Ander:son (Warren),
132 pou.nds- R. Henthorne (Warren ), M. 11
Mc.lntosh (Trlinble), J. Roach (Gallipolis ).
138 poundS ·- J. Mllleson (Ironton), M.
Starner (Warren ), w. Clarlt {New Lex.).

.'

~-~m'"'erc1tUlly,

Top three
tournament were as follows:
•
98 pouoo - R.. \Voodrull (Warren 1. K.
Holley (Ga11!p:llls ), . D. Rogers (NelsonvtUeYork ).
'.. lOOpOunds- B. Knotts (Wa rren ), C. Wentt
(Fairland ); P . D. Rase (Ironton ). , 1

.
/

STILES PLACES TJDRD - In action from
Saturday's Rouod-Robin Toumament at Meigs High
School, Meigs' Butch SWes 1s shown on his way to a

.

victory over Canter from Nelsonville-York. Stoes
went on to place third overall In the 167 pounds weight

class.

wUh·JndlaDa. The HOOIIIel'll beat the Wolverlnes87-C. (AP Luerphoto).

·Marshall ends_. losing·
II, romp-s 90·62

.'

Hutm1,G1tON.

r;Co:nfi:e:ren::c:·e=c=ham=p~J~ons~hl=p~===:!:~===~====~::~~

Sports
briefs.•.
FOOl'BALL
NEW YORK (AP)
The
Brigham Young Cougars, winners
of24 straight games andthenattoo,'s
only unbeaten m!ljor-college team,
sllmced the critics that sayltplaysa
palsY schedule and won the first
national championship 1n the
school's tootbal) history, edgfhg
runner-up W asblngton by 20 points .
BYU, which completed a rare JJ.O
campaign by defeating Michigan
24-1'7ln t~ HolldayBowlon Dec. 21,
received 38 of 60 first-place votes ln
the poll and 1,160 of a possible 1,200
points from the nat!onwi~e panel of
sports wrtters and sportscasters.

BEGINNING CLOGGING CLASSES
SUNDAy JAN. 6th
2 to 4 P.M.
_Pomeroy Village ~all

·Call for info: 992-2622 or 992-6720
head against
the NFL with a fall~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
schedule
In 1986.

_.....c...,.-....

J .oLlhe Both ·Of You Styling Salon ·

and serve you betteJ.
With sincere
·.
.
--"""-~

Welcomes

••

FROM JANUARY 7th THROUGH llthl

CALL 992-3982
Open Monday through Friday 9:00-5:00
Thursday Evening by Appointment

'

.

gratitude for your friendship.

'

ORENDA CUNNINGHAM!
.
FREE GIFT TO EACH OF ORENDA'S CUT A~D STYLE PATRON'S

world of opp()rtunity. To us, it
means the opportunity to knQw

Cherry Street, Syracuse, Ohio
•

Washington, which defeajed Ok' laboma 2S-17 ln the Orange Bowl,
finished No. 2 behind BYU with 16
llrst-place votes and 1,140 points·
.BYU's 20-polnt margin of victory
was the closest since The AP went to
a postbowl poll In 1968.
. .
NEW YORK (AP) - Four Los
· Angeles Raider defei!Slve players
head the NI\Uonal Football League
All-Pro team selected by the
· Professional Football Writers
· Association. .
Defensive end Howie Long was
:_. theonlyRalder~ater,oneofnlne
players who retained their All·Pro
status of a year ago. The· other
Raiders picked were outside linebacker Rod Martin and corner·
~ backs Mike Haynes and Lester

Looking ahe~d. ; 985 holds.a
•.

·

Come jn and Registir for

. OUR SHOWROOM

GRANO OPENING
Dr5HES ON DISPLAY
:
ON RT. 7
TUPPERS PLAINS, OHIO

I ___D.,. E_B_&amp;I_E-_P_o_w_·c_u_-_o_w_n•_r_-s_,_YI_i•_'_ _...~,I' I -~-

IY THE POST OFFICI

SONY Watchman TV
to be ginn away. 1$200

I

The ou.er" repeaters

• ton,

••v ;· I

1

. ·.;r~:~r:·
:t=~ =~aso:a:t~:==
Middletown, was sent home before
corneri;?acks. ·

BUTl'ON BUCK - Ronnie 11enriY 1dlled ~ 12&amp;-pOund button buck In
· Salisbury ToWNihtp wHh a bow alid arrow. It wiiShls llrst"!t wttha bow
arid BITOW. H1s coach has. been a larnlly friend, Wallace Russ!&lt;!~ of_
Bradbury. Ronnie 1s the 8011 of Mr. and Mrs. Earl~· Middleport• .

SNOW SH_OVEL
1}
.
. --2 PRICE--SALE

STEEL
ALUMINUM

~~~~ER $1 29 .

·- .. --

$299

ana111

REG. 15.91

$349

#101097

REG. 16.99
#80b242

REG. 19.95

WHILE LIMITED SUPPLY LASTS

Remanufactured
1DISC

BLOWER MOTORS

BRAKE PADS

•791

For Air c0nd . System

'

GMC CARS
AND LIGHT TRUCKS

Axlo Sot

/' .,

WI\GNEA'"

.,.:!-~

AMC·FDRD AND
CHRYSLER CARS
J . LJl!!!T JRUC,KS'-"-__.
S•.JUOUP..._

DISC BRAKE
CALIPERS

S2143e•cH.
FOR MOST

NEW

RADIATORS.

.

•

WE STOCK··-

0.£.M. PARTS

We sell

IMPORT
UFFLEAS

•Built To Exceed The High·
est Industry Standards
•Value ·Priced - Costs Less
Than Most Rebuilt or
Recores

••PLICATION&amp;

AND
PIPES

BELTS
&amp; HOSES

FOR All MAKES OF

.IMPORTS

MORE THAN .
TWICE AS LONG
AS GALVANIZED STEEL

MODINE

M~

bvanaa.

START WITH

POWER

WITH TRUST .

..........

REMANUFACTU~ED

Altemllton

·Gat·a Delco
Freedom
Battery

Gat• Delco
Dura Power
Battery

Come to us for

• ·M'aintenance-free, neveradd water, no-wony, sealed, for-life battery. .
· e. Available with side or toppost terminals, in sizes to fit
virtually every car and lig!'lt
truck on the road.
· • Delco quality.

Trust quality
when your car
needs a new ·
starter and htilp
keep rt running
.with quality Trust

• 650 cold cranking amp$ in
an IHnch: case.
• Maiillenance-fr!Ml, never:.add- '
water, no-worry, sealed-for-life
' batiBf'Y:
• Available with side or toppost terminals.
• DelCo quality.

· alternators.

$39: ~ 5

STAI111$

EXCH. mF-50

AS
lOW
AS

m-so mF-50 as
w70·!0 m -5o
W74·50

•

S304l
IXCH.

ALJIIIIATOIS

lOW
AS

$3492
IXCH.

MASOJ· WV.
'240 THIID AVI.
. 446·1111

e AM .!TIL St30 PM

1.704 IASTIIN AVI.
446·4104
I AM ~T!L 7 PM

21 SUIES

$5995mH.

Plus

G&amp;J

IIJIII'dS John Hannah of New

renceT~oftheNewYorkQiants
and strong l8fety Kenny Easiey oi

STOW-AWAY

Unfreezes frozen locks

nto.oou

Were often·

pbenlon ot Miami, ruJIIIIn8 back
Eri~ DlcJfenllll .of the Loe AngeleS
Rami, ~e tackle Randy ·
White at: Dallu, Unebacker Law-

'

CAR TRUNK

SPRAY

, England and RUlli Grtmm of
' WaahJnclon, center Dwil!ll Ste-

378-6158
-~~--!;1'1\liVr .. G. 1"f
......,
\IUR \1

dlsclpllnary

Snapp would not re\leal • the

•· live tackle Joe J&amp;rotri of Washlni·

Systems from 11695
installed

Sat. 11-6 -·--

w ...

"SEI¥111 YOU lmEI"

• Hayes.

Retall Value}

HOURS: Man.-Fri. 2-6

:::'ii!{l~~:~tpermlttedto

called

REMANUFACTURED

NEW YORK (AP) The
do~' t knov/ what the future holds for
scramble for the services of
me."
Helsman Trophy .winner Doug
Donald Trump, owner of the
Flu tie has begunl
Generals, has said he would make
· While the rival'Natlonal Football
every effort td sign the 5-foot -9'4 I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
· League draft won't be held until
Flutie who holds the NCAA total I
· Aprll 30, the United States Football . offens~ record of ll,OM yards and
Uague·again' got a head start with -~ wm be Ioog remembered for hls
Its third annual ·selection of college
last-second 48-yard touchdown pass
. players today. .
that led the Eagles past Mlaml
I.
Under USFL rules, Boston Col·
(Fla.) on the day after
lege players belong to New Jersey,
Thanksgiving.
The USFL has·signed the past two
thus giving the Generals the rights to ·
Flutle, the All-American quarter- • Helsman Trophy winners, Herschel
Walker with New Jersey and Mike
back whO finished hls,collegecareer
Tuesday by leading the Eagles to a
Rozier with Pittsburgh. The slgnlng
'
45-28 Cotton Bowl triumph over
ofFiutiewouldbeab:lostforthenew
Houston.
leaglie,-which plans to go head·to-

•

~~ns~ey

se-ven

Domlnlc Snowdan topped
Hornets, whO fell to 2-5, with 22
points, aru:L Bernanl _ Cai!l~ll
added 17.

Gators, 9-1-1, won the Southeastern

OrangeBowlforanll-lrecord-th~

SA'I'IliJ.ITI!
Sl'STilMS

Tuesday. The Buckeyes lost to
1
Southern Callfornla 20- 7.
Richardson, a junior from Cleveland, was dispatched to a student

. r;;==~
· ~~~------~~MR~~~--

-~ann:==fi·;.,,.,..,"':"'t;; ~ and

most victories in Its history - and
.
'
finished behind BYU with 16
first -place votes and 1,140 points. On
Dec. 21, Brigham Young defeated
Michigan 24-17 and bequne only the
.
seCond rnajor-eollege team Jn the
year will have·14 teams, four less
· last 80 years -:· Nebraska's 1971
than last season.
national champs was the other- to
go 13-0.

sn.vmmnm ·

Stat.E"tlfllclalssaldWednesdaynlght
that two sub!;tltutes, Dwight Smith
and Kevin Richardson, did not dress
for the Rose Bowlfootb411 game tor

W.Va. (AP) -

trom"forward Don Turney In a ~62
romp over Delaware State, but 1t
could have been a costly victory for
the Thundering Herd.
Marshall Coach Rick Huckabay
said Tumey, a 6-foot-9 senior,
suffered a rib Injury ln Wednesday
night's win and might not be
available whm the Herd opens
Southern Conference play at home
- Saturday againstVMI.
.
Turney got 16 points Jn the first
baH but lett the game with three
mln11tes to play after being elbowed
In the ribs.
1
"1 don't lmow how bad lt Is, hut he
may have some broken rtbs,"
Huckabay said.
Marshall took the sting out of the
Hornets early, outscortng the vjs:
, !tors 23-2 over a nlne-minute stretch
midway through the first halt. Alter
that, the Herd's sixth victory ln
games was nf!Ver ln doubt.
Marshall shot 66 percent from the
floor Jn the first halt, which ended
with the Herd leadlng48-23. Overall,
Marshall shot 48 percent from the
floor, hitting on :13 of 68 shots.
Sam Ervin backed up Turney
with 14 points, while Jeff Guthrle

·

Forl!ll5, theallgnedandreduced
USFL will operate the s8.11Je
winter-surrunef: schedule, but this

"(AP) ··..;:~blilo"-"lhe"iU:lSe ·EuwrgaYfie"Wao" played •·

Mars all UnlveJ;Slty got 22 points

='Scramble for Flutie's services are underway

"l'dllketoplaylntheNFL,butl'd
. have
to take a look at the USFL,"
Flutle has sal&lt;!. "I can't help but
think about it. My thoughts are
about what my worth ls. 1 really

Specific reasons are not released

.

FOOT
_ Mlchlgaa'a RlchardBeiHord and GaryGr&amp;nt (:ill)
race up court after a slealln the 11rst haU of Wednesday
_ nllht'• game.

r;iilii~
fingers
(Insteadwe.wentthroughthe
ofone) Jfwehaveto. In my oplnlon,
season with the most difficult
schedule with the best record. I'm
disappointed we can't claim the
national championship, but I'm'tlot
going to jump off the roof."
Washington,. which ended · the
regular .s eason ranked No. 4,
defeated No. 20klahoma28-17lnthe

....._.-

~ ~·~--- --·--- ·-·· r;"~-D:ii&gt;-··~·•==="·

. -,

!'"·"

. We'll put up two

Teun~;;an;~d~N~o~-~19~~~:~Z2

"We just had to be grateful to the
Lord for thls one," a shaken
Tarkanlan said after Wednesday
night's extravag~. "We had no

ByHERSQIELNJSSENSON
AP Sports Writer

dule than we

· the Big

over.

NCAA record; SU11)ass:tng
put on the board
Hawall-Hllo 164-U11n 19'16.

112 pounds- J. Snyder IMelgst . E. ~ayne

BYU'smarglnofvictorywasthe . 145pounds- J. l!utf)nan tNew Lex.J. R. • •
smallest since The AP went to a Adams (Warren), R. Webster (Trimble).
_.:_,Sf ;;t.§!)Wg!Q.n
·
155 P9Unds- S. Yinger (Nelsonville-York ): .
mJljlaV..I\1Q,W~~ " ..pcy;tbowJ pq!IJn;~, ALll~.Wtm ___.IJ••IJRy&lt;.Lffi:!mbl~l. C. Woltz ili§Y~~'!. ' c... ;.,_ .•
..
the Huskies can do
thel009natlonalcharnplonshlpby28
167 pounds - · R. Barnes tWan:enJ, ~ .
Brunton (New Lex.), B. Sliles (Meigs ).
somet1)lng about Brtgham Young,
points over Sou them California. The
175 pounds - J. Southers !GallipolisI. J.
which outpolled Washington for the closest flnlsh since The AP poll Fryman !Warren\ . P. Ashworth i Nc~onvUJ enatlonal 1ootball championship In
began In l9.ll was Alabama's Y~JP,unds _J. D. Anderson tWarrenl . T.
16-potnt triumph over Ohio State lr). Bruce INcJsonvllle-Yorkl. !'. Dalley IMelgsJ. _
the closest .race since postbowl
voting started In 1968,
1961 when the national Charnl!lon·
Unlimited - L. Dewitz (Ironton ). D. Koons
.
r(Trimble) , D. Stalnaker (Warren.
On the second Saturday Ofthe 1985 ship Was decided on the basls Of
Winning matches but not placing for tit&lt;&gt;
season / the twO teamS that flnJshed a
regular-season play. ·
Marauders Included Roush.. Stein, Sisson,
controverslall-2
Wednesday
In
The
"That's
Incredible
"
was
E:d·
Tony
Shoemaker. Jell Hood. Paul Brlckles,
.
.
·
,.
Denny Welsh, and Paul Wolfe.
Associated Press college football
wards' ~action when Informed In
.pollmeetlnProvo, Utah.
PaloMto,Callf.,wherehew1llcoach r---------:--'--"It makes a good buildup," BYU
In Saturday's East-West Shrtne
Game, that BYU had convinced
Coach LaVell Edwards said afler
learning that hls No. l -ranked enough skeptics. "The way the
!USPS IH·96Cl)
A Dh,.Jslon of Mul~lmcdla, Inc ..
Cougars had overcome more than a ·-whole thing ls structured, Jt doesn't·
month of almost constant criticism· makesensethatsornethlngllke\hat
Publi shed £&gt;Vf'ry a fTe rnoon, Monda y
,tl'lrough Frida y, )11 Courl St., y lh!:'
about the difficulty of hls team's
couldhappen~butltdld.
ehlo Va ll ey Publ ishlng Co rnpany / Mul·
schedule and captored the first
"No one ln our part of the country
timedla , I nc .• Pomeroy , Oh io 45769, h .
992·2136. Second class postage pa id a t
naUonal chainplonshlp ln the hlshas ever won 1t before. The fact that
PoR)eroy, Oh io.
tory of the country's Ia~~ It requires a vote from people all
Memtwr: ThC' Assoc latt'd Prrss. In ·
over the country and an awareness
prtvately owned university.
land Da lly Pr&lt;&gt;ss Assoc i&lt;U16n a nd Th E'
"I'm sure both teams will be fired
of BYU ·ls just really satlszylng.
Ame rlci\n Ne wspa prr Pu b ll ~hf'rs As ·
There's no question that all the
sdclatlon , Na tl o ~ a l Ad vr r tls ing Rc prc up'," said Washlngton'sDon,James,
SE'nl ~ ll ve, Brannam Ne wspaper Sal es,
who will have absolutely no trouble controversy added to our Identity. I
733 'Third Avrnuc , Nt'W York, New
Yorkl 0017.
--'-~..,.
·
getting. his players ready for that · don't think-we'll- have-a prob)em
one. "I'll assume there'll be. some with that any more."
POSTMASTE R : Send ~ddrcss Changt's
sparks flying."
Even after Oklahoma was beaten,
to The Dally ~nllllf'l , 111 Court St. , Po·
mt&gt;l'oy, Ohio 45769.
In the meantime, words of Coach Barry Switzer refused to
crtticlsmcontlnuedtoflyafterHYU, . acknowledge that BYU might have
SUBSCRIPTION RATE'l
By Carrier or Motor Route
the only unbeaten major-college a legitimate claim to he No. 1.
One Wf'f&gt;k ... ............. ..... ... , ...... .... $1.10
team, received 38 of 60 first-place
"Washington ls the best team we
One Month ... .... .... ... ... .. ... .......... .$4,80
One Yt&gt; ar ... ... ..... .... .................. $57.20
votes and 1,160 of a pOssible 1,200 playedandtheydeServetobeNo.1,"
SINGLE COP\'
polnts-trom The' AP's nationwide he said. "They're a better football
PRICES
panel of sports writers and sports- team than BrtgharJl Young, I
Dally .. .... ................ . , ... ...... 25 C(! nt s
casters. The Cougars were ranked
guarantee you."
S ubscrl ~rs not desiring to pay Th c-c3 r No: lfor the final three weeks of the
In addltlon tO' Its 38 first-place
rlcr may re mit in ad va ncf' di rec t to
The Da ll y Sentinel on a 3, 6 or 12 month
regular season.
b;l.llots, BYU received 11 seconds,
ba sis. Credil will bt.&gt; gi V(' n "ca rrf€'r C'ach
" The relative merits and six thirds three fourths and two
month .
strengths of the leagues (Pac-iOand
fifths. W~hlngton had 16 firsts,.29
No subsc ript ion s by mail per·m]lt(:'{! In
WE!Stern Athletic Conference) had
seconds, 14 thirds and one fourth.
towns whe r&lt;' hom(' co r l'lcr S&lt;'I'Vic(' Is
available.
The Huskies had been No. 1 four
been discussed for six straight
weeks - that was the only hope we times durtng the regular season
Mall Subscription~
bef~resuff~ringthelronlytoss,16-7,
had,'' James said. _"Week ln and
W·
lnsld~ qhto ,
13 e eks .. .... .... ............ .... .., , ... , $14.56
week out our players had to go toSbuthernCalonNov.10.
26 We Pks ... ........... .. ...... ......... . ...
· against better
than

· The Daily Serttin'*...:_Page- 5 ·

·

10

ui

. 771·5511
! -AM '.Y!L !1U t!l. . lAM 'tiL JtJUM

"2·1119

515 MAIN ST.

675·1520
IAM''IILSPM

161 1 JACKSON AVI.
675·1711
• lM11l7 ..

Seattle.

•

'

.'

�..

.

Page-6~The Daily 5entin81

.

.

Thursday, .January 3, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

.Agreement. reached on . toxic dump claims ·

CINCINNATI (AP) - A lawyer suedChem-Dyneand175companles
representlngsoo'leoftherompanles
which _deposited wastes at the
HamUton site. Cleanup of surface
whlch contributed toxic wastes to
defunctChem-DyneCorp. says
wastes and contalriers was comf "'-''''.-·~-,c:.;; ~ent rias · 'ilreiFreacni!a----c-PletEIF'ili d&amp;Otili ilii3 'mia' wiil'
with the government to cover all
financed tbro!Jgh the federal go.
outstanding claims lor the federally
vernment's Surnl"fund nl'OI!l'am.
James R. Adams, attorney (or
. flnancedcleanupoftheslte.
Tiie trlal of consolidated lawsuits several, coq~panles that were deover thecleanupwas to have started fendants, declined to say how much
•. -Wednesday- "-'!!'re-Ll.S.- IJ!s!r!ct .. money.l&amp;!!t&gt;!Ollled·!n thP ffill~t
Judge Carl B. Rubin but was called He said the agreement, which last
off because of the settlement.
monthwastentatlvelydisclosedasa
The U .$. Environment a! .Protec· . $21 rnlllion package, is designed to
ttonAgencyandthe stateo!Ohiohad resolve all remaining claims

Kovacs signed a doCUment In 1'11'1·
against defendants In~ Cliem- t:rlalanddtywaterwellswithlntWo accused KovacsandChem-Dyheor
him to remove an _
requlrlng
Dynecleanup. ,
environmental officials say. 'f!~~o waters with pestlwastes
· trnm the site
ln!lust:rlal
Still to lle worked out Is a consent Federal and EPA officials . are · c
·
ust:rlal wastes. ·
decree, subject to court approval, ponderlngmethodstocleanupth'at ''...;,:_ _ _ _ _ _ _..:_~:._-.:...lld!!!!!Llt.~!!!!!!L-----:Wrii~n wouia sp€u~oui ii1W' mUISr ' ~:i.•~m.=· ~ ""-"'~ ,.....,.,.
·
each company must cont:rlbute to
Chemicalcontalnlnantsattheslte
thecleanup·cost.
.
Include pesticides and volatile
· Costsfor'lheChem·Dynecteanup organtccompoundssuchascarbon
'
/
-ruiVe been estimated tO be at least tetrachloride. Some of the contaml·
m million; 'Iile EPA still is nanis are considered carcinogenic,
...ron•l!lliring..JU!l&lt;!ll f!lr .clgill!!nJU!P ~ •.·O{ caila\lle of cau~ cancer.
contaminated son and groundwater
William Kovacs oWiled lind ~.r_- ,
~-INCLUDING LADIES' &amp; SAFETY SHOE~'"
at the dump site.
ated the Chern-DYne site priOr to
The polluted groundwater, If left 1979 as an lndust:rlal·wastedisposal·
unchecked, could threaten Indus· facility. State authorities in 1976

yeai$,

.

FIRST TIME EVER./ .

'The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend
.

'

:::•

.....

)

.

Thul'lday. January 3, 198
_ 5

Paga
7
'

Friends gather at holiday

ALL KNAPP SHOES ON SALE

PH . 992-2644
352 E. Main, Pomeroy

'

'·

-some· Groups -112 Price
MANY MORE SPECIALS

•

MARGUERITE SHOES
)

-L·.IDll.·ted
. _ __ . ~-r·1.m·:e _ "Onl
--~-~ v.'

~~-=- _

by Broyhill

-

SEMI-ANNUAL

Calendar
TifURSDAY

MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline Chapter 172, Order o!
Eastern Star, wlll .meet In
regular session at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday.

Colonial d.;,oro1011 wllllovethe elegant
almpllclty of Soulh Bay. Rugged yet warm

•Brorhlf
BEDROOM DIVISION

REGULAR S1299.95

.
tia.or••

·highlighted wlth-oxqulalte dentlllnotdlnga
and embossed pll,.tera. Smartly ocaled
·

---

.i

and gracetut dealgna appeal to lhe
rM.acullne and remlnlne tastes In decoratt,ng.
A rich, warm maple brown tintah Ia enhanced
with authentic colonial styled har~war4tand

When you see Pine Meadow you'll surely agree
it's the: most.Lxciting Colonial s tyled bedroom
collection ever! Each piece features the. master

placee provide speclousatoraga to meet all
requlremanla tor any muter bedroom. Come
tn and take a look at Sooth Bay by Broyhill
. . . Now atJremendoUa•vlngal

craftsmanship that has made Broyhill a name of
quality. The beautiful embosoed cpvlng.motlfs

NOW
WITH FREE NIGHT STAND

are design chttractertsttcs of early band-crafted
fumlttlre . Construe lion is solid plne drawer
fronts and bed posts with pine machine graining
.
on tops, ends, mirrors and bed panels, all
enhanced with an outstanding lacquered finish .
There's no' better time than now to start • famUy

helrloom .. . Pine Meadow . .. now offered at

, special 8av!ngsl

MIDDLEPORT
Middleport Evangeline Chapter 172 of
the Ohio Eastern Star wiD hole! a , regular meeting Thursday at

REGULAR 51499.95

NOW

$999 95

7:30 p.fl).

FRIDAY

NIGHT STAND FlEE

POMEROY - Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet Fel·
day at 8 p.m. at the Rock Springs
Grange Hall. , HarrlsonvUie

Joe lades: Triple Dresser,

Hutch Mirror, Cannonball
O.d .and Cheal

· Night Stand Optional,

.

SATIJRDAY
SCIPID - Scipio Fire Depart·
ment w1ll have a shooting
match, Saturday, 11 a.m: at
Pagevllle behind the townhouse.
Events are 12 guage only factory
choke, luck and pattern shot.
Shells furnished , food served.

MONDAY
ROY AI.. OAK - Belles and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club will sponsor lessons begin·
nlng Monday, 7 to 10 p.m., at
Royal Oak Park Rec~atlonal
.Building. Instructor John
Waugh. For Information, call
992-2500, 992· 7261 or 992· 7471.

Alfred area happenings

._,

SPECtAL BUV ·
REGULAR S1699.95

1 /IC'Jit

~F 1~ ,;~~

NO~ S9999S
WITH FREE

-

CHESHIRE - Kanauga Unl·
ted Methodist Women wiD meet
with Jerry Litchfield at the
parsonage In Cheshire, Thurs·
day, 7p.m.
·

Grange will be host for the
meeting. All officers are asked to
be at the grange hall by 7:30 for
an entrance rehearsal.
·

"'\

..

"

I

r"'• //,'~

~k·_.""
;_~, .. ;.::__ '
l··rw-" • "·r'

NJGHLSIAND~~-~-'

I

f '

.

.

-

'

\,~
REGULAR S1795.99

NowSl 099 95
'

By NELLIE PARKER
Sunday School attendance Dre.
16 was 39; church attendance, 25.
· · On Dec. 23 Sunday School attendance was 56.
· - -- clir!simas pro gram was . presented Dec. 16 to a lull church.
Dorothy Galaway and..Lori..Rltchle
were program leaders . Mrs. Cala·
way gave the welcome; Thelma
Henderson, opening prayer. Choir
sang "Sliver Bells" and "White ·
Chrtstmas." Small children spelled
"Christmas" with Doris Dillinger
reading. Intermediates led by Mrs.
Ritchie recounted ChrJslmas
legends.
'

Teenagers Joyre Burke, Kevin
and Jim Brooks, Michael Frash
and Missy Calaway presented a
play, Anti-Christmas. The teachers
were surprised by being asked to
sing "Twelve ilays of Christmas."
-Tne sma U ..:nu
-'-"d-n
....
n ::- ... ...
.,_l"ln•M
.. .:.""""··1,;- nLUO:&gt;

,,

.,., .... .
,

•

Nativity Scene. Debbie Brooks and
Michael FraSh sang "Frosty, the
Snowman." Santa ClaUs appeared
after Mrs. Ritchie read "The Night
Before Christmas" to the little ones.

ENTIRE STOCK
SAVE 20°/o To 40°/o

Speaker set
at church

.'

•Hart Schaffner &amp; Marx Suits

•Johnny Carson Suits
•Paim Beach Suits
•Sewell Suits

Larry -Burgett , director of devel·
opment for the Canton Christian
Home, Canton, will speak at the
Pomeroy Church of Christ Sunday.

s 165.00
S17 5.00
S185.00
s21 o.oo
S345.00

Burgett speaks In churches and
at area meetings on the Canton
Chrlsllan Retirement Home, citing
the churches' care for the elderly ,
charitable. gifts and the making of
wills .
He received a bachelor's degree
at Ashland College and attended
Ohio ·state University, Cincinnati
Bible Seminary and received his
master's degree In public school
administration from the University
of Illinois. He also holds a master's
of divinity degree from Lincoln
Christian Seminary.
The public fs.lnvlted. Burgett will
speak at hoth the Sunday School
hour and the morning worship
service. Slides wtll be shown durtng
the Sunday School pertod.

HALLMARK

Christmas·Cards and·.
Christmas Gift Wr.ap
1/2 PRICE .·

·

SUITS ....... NOW
SUITS ..~.... NOW
SUITS ....... NOW
siJITS ....... Now
SUITS ....... NOW

S132.00
S140.00
S157.00
s 11 a.oo
S276.0q

SPO-T COATS ................................ nm~tNA~I ••••• 200f.·15 Of. OFF
SPORT SHIRTS ......~BJgm ..................mLII.~1Q~J.............. 200fo OFF
ROBES .....&lt;..ll916l'.Y.MJ.......................M1Ul~AIJLC&amp;I.............. 15% OFF
WOOL SHIRTS ... Jmqr••ml'.QIM4 ......... M1UltAT~I .............. 200fo OFF
SWEATERS •• UUJIJJIJ.......................... M1UltAW61.............. 200fo OFF
DRESS SHIRTS .. JAiltVPJ. ..................... M1UltAW61••••• 150fo·200fo OFF
GLOVES .~Ufl;J •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .uttUR~I •••••••••••••• 150fo OFF
LEATHER COATS Lmm•.~QVL...............MlUltAIJLC&amp;I.........:..~. 200fo Off
DRESS SLACKS ...uttviMI. ...................MlUKN~I .............. 200fo .OFF·
CORDUROY SLACIS ..mYU...........·.....IJllUKATJLC&amp;I.............. 200fo OFF •
FASHION JEANS ........LL,Yll................Mli&amp;UIJLC&amp;I•.;.~ .....; ... 200fo OFF .
DOWN VESTS ••••••••••••••~ ••••••••••••••••• MliMAV51••••••••••• ~ •• 25 OJ. OFF
·--CCJIATS~&amp; -JUI05:;Wl,WJUA~...~ .... ;A1W\~1..... 20%=30.,.-0FFWEATHER COATS .IUIJlQOP.fiW. .......MIW\»ACCI.............. 20ttfe OFF
SHOES. ••• ~ ••••••••~~QII1WJU.••••••••••••••••••• M.J.TJ51 ••• ~•••••••••• 15 Of. OFF
LUGGAGE .......l"•Lw................~...MlW\BI..... 250fo·400Jo OFF
LADIES' WEAR .......~IJIIMlKLim.UUHUlLU.................... 25% Off

York Clothing
House ·

VILLAG.E PHARMACY
N. 2nd

OH.

.. -

_,..........

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....

-·

--- .._............. ...

-· ·- . . ...

'•

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~·r~-~,..,.,...,.....,...

I

The

r

Sentinel

.

WASHINGTON (AP) - The . trapped,. . this effort
a
NaY),' is facing a last-dltch·appeal to dead end for two reasons, according
cancel a massive goat hunt on an fD Mitchell.
.
uninhabited Pacific Ocean Island It
The trappers could not pursue
uses for target practice.
fleeing ao:ats Into the island's deep
. ~ I!qbql..[!el!ler, R-Callf., and canyons or Into the soutllern end, .
· Clevelal)d.Amory, head ot thelfUna- wfilclf IS off-llrtiits''lile(:aliie"'l:lHI~e·
for Animals, ~ to meet today danger fron\ ~oded shells left
with Navy. brass 10 urge postpone.. · over trom target practlce;he saki. '
men! of the week-long goat hunt,
The second reason, he said, is
· scheduled to start Friday on San · Mother Nature: '"They double their
CIP.mente Island.
·
berdslzelnl8months. TbeY'revery
The Navy says a hellcopter wtll proline."
·

~·~---+~~;~~~~~~~are
~ :~d)',r~ ~!:~:'c!~.S~~_ology_Is~-l . ··"'l
Hanes said Madray homes aie slinllar In sorne respects to Lustron
homes manufactured in Columbus between 1947 and 1950. Before It
went bankrupt, Lustron produced about 2,tro homes at Its plant In
northeast Colunibus. The plant now Is occupied hy Rockwell
lnternatlonal.
"Lustron had its problems, but the concept was good," Hanes said.

~~~

to

assembled with simple tools on the boyer's site. Madray uses enamel
paint on extertor surfaces rather than Lustron's distinctive porcelain
Onish..
;
· Hanes said Madray expects to begin production In February.
.Ultimately, he hopes the plant will produce 00 homes ada~/
Madray will sell six models, ranging from a one-bedroom compact
to a three-bedroom, three-bath del~e. Prtces are not set, but the
company said costs shoUld be 10 percent to 25 percent below
·
conventional construction.

blue away with shotguns at an
estimated 1,500 andaluslan goats.

.The ljn1mals are descended !rom a

herd that reached San Clemente
perhaps a centii{Y ago.
The Navy, whlchusesthelsland65
rnlles northwest of San Dlegp as a
shooting range for warships, says
the goats are belngklll!!dtoprotecta
and plants that are on the
·

MARYSVILLE (AP) - A Perry County man who allegedly tied
up a bank teller in her home and then used her keys to enter an
American Savings Bank office was arrested after leading authorities
on a chase through two counties, pollee say,
Police said Michael' T. VIse, 22, of Glenford, was placed in the
Union County Jan after his arrest ·near North Lewtsborg late
Wednesday morning. A Union County grand jury later indicted him
on ~Ingle counts of aggravated burglary, kidnapping, robbery and
breilklng and entering, and two collllts of grand theft.
Marysville Police Lt. Jack Holton said a man arrived at the teller's
Marysville home a boutS a.m. today, tied her up and took $25, her
office keys and her car.
.
~ ... +.-.lin..,~
hn..-eo.o.!f ...... .-~ ;:;;-11......,.
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hnmo
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.. ._. oovo """ '

••'-,......_. &amp;.&amp;&amp;-

.. , . __ ,. __._. ._ ..

Hollon, amvlng at the bank's office, said he found a man at the
· door, which was unlocked. He said the man had an empty bag under
his shlrl.
, When Holton approached, the man ran. Holian ordered hlm to stop
and fired two warning shots. The man lied l'n the teller's car.
SheFiffs' ·deputies ·1n Union and Clllifnljatgn counties joined the
chase, whloh ended with Vjse's arrest on Ohio RDute 2!15 outside
North Lewisburg and about 10 miles southwest of Marysville.
'

'

Holiday D WI arrests increase

~··

COLUMBUS (AP) _- The Department of Highway Safety said
Wednesday that Ohio state troopers made more drunken-driVIng
arrests In the state during the 1984 Chrtstmas and New Year's
hOliday pertods than in the comparable periods of 1983.
During the just-completed New Year's .holiday, which extended
from 6 p.m. Frtday to midnight Tuesday, State Highway Patrol
troopers Issued 709 drunken-driving citations, compared with 484
issued during the shorter 1983 period.
For the 4';6-day Christmas holtday period, troopers charged 6ll!
people with drunken drtvlng, compared with 255 over Chrtstmas
weekend In 1983.
The Highway Safety Department said more miles were drtven
during the 1984 Chrtstmas holiday period than l'n 1983, In part because
of warmer weather in 1984.
.

. MiSsing radios recovered '

Accident victim buried
FRAN!q.IN FURNACE (AP) Nl'ne-year~ld Richard
McClellan, the fifth vlctl'm io die from a Chrtstmas Eve· auto
accident, was to be burted today. ·.
The accident that tdok the lives of Richard, his parents, Duane,42,
and Jantee, 38, and his sister Renee, 11, and Charles R. Johnson Jr.,
24, occurred about 5 p.m. on Christmas Eve on U.S. 22 in Fa!rfteld
County.
.
The McClellans were returning .home to Franklin Furnace, a
small comm.untty between Ironton and Portsmouth, after visiting
frtends In Nt:Wark.
Falrtleld County shertff's deputies said Johnson lost control of hi's
car on a shaJp curve, skidded light, ihen left l'nto the McClellan car.
Coroner Stephen Hodsden said a test taken shortly after the accident
showed JOhnson was drunk.
Mr. and Mrs. McClelll!ll and Renee were kllled Instantly. Johnson
died three days later. Richard, who suffered multiple fractures
head ir)jurles, ilved for eight days and regal'ned consciousness before
he died Jan. 1.
The five-person fatality ranks asoneofthethreeworst accidents in
- O~lo last year.
·

New Year's murder-suicide probed
XENIA (AP) -A murder·sutcide on New Year's Day has left two
people dead, according to Xenia pollee.
•
Gecllia Hawkins, 28, apparently was shot twice shortly before 11
p.m. Tuesday, said Steven Hale, Greene County coroner~s
investigator. Her husband, Jeffrey, 28, .then ·shot hlrn5el1 in the head
while .being purs~ hy pollee.. .
.• _ .
Sgt. J~ Hughes said It was believed the couple W&lt;IS recently

.estr!!J!ged_.--·

..
/"'

.

..

'

Church day eare center to close
WEST JEFFERSON (AP) - Despite efforts by parents to keep
the"Llttte Nazarene Day Care Center open, ofltclals say there are no
'plaits tn keep tt operating.
•
The =~nald Comfort, pastor of the W~t Jefferson Chureh of
, which operated the center, said there was no
the N
guarantee that enroliment would go back up again.
Attendance at the center had dropped from 40 to 11 folJQwtng
~egaUons that a fonner teacher there sexauDy abull!d students.
The centet closed last Friday, even though parents had asked to
discuss ways In which It might remain open.
"'

~.-~

··"~

'

.

r~ J• ·42HW

JoaO.

I

CAR$

2756 ., 882·2712 .

~

I

PW61NTD
.992-2156
54 Misc. Merchandise

We can reo;1i1
core
and
heater cores. We tan
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. Wealso
repair Gas Tanks.

SALES

•ZENITM

~

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNORT
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

.. ..,

Wtllawe Ahll Tl••
~

RIDENOUR

YOUNG'S
CARPENTER
SERVICE

-Addont •nd remodeling
- Roofing •nd gut1., work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing end etectricel

work
(Free Eo'timat~e) .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

304-675-34, 9 '

Television Listenina Devices ,
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Cl ·Swim Molds • lnierpretina Services

FOUND blk and white PI.IPP.Y

approx 3 months old, Galli-

z

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
licensed
Clinical
Audiologist
r ·
.

11.1
:J:

polis Ferry. phone 304-675-

6,28 opr, 676· 1888.
.

I ~ "(614)446:7&amp;19 (); (6i4,-992'-6GOI
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

8

i~~.~!..~~:...........'....•7o D·~J!~~.~~:........~ .... - 062
·a.......
'""'••·-.................. •no 76-12
Co• F-.s .................. •6o

, ........................;.....!59
10·14 FOI'd Tr.

79·10 Mus!fioot
·
Car ftndlrs ............- ... 160
11·14 locort-Cynx
Fonoltn .........................149
OIMI·IIirlzon 2 4r; ll&lt;

F"t.•;::-,; ...................191

(~ ~!::

, ............................ 1110

Auction every Frid~y night at
Hartford Community ·
Center . Truckloads of new
merchandise every week.
Consigments of new &amp; used
merchandise alwaya wel-

the

DECEMBER PRICE BUSTER
The DISH: Commander I' Spill Ahminum
The FEED: Chapatr ill POicntor I
The RECEIVER: Dexcel DXP-1100-01
AFC, Stereo, Cord Remote Control.
Be•t ~al11a on the Market Today

4 •. , ...................175

............ 169.95

72-10 Dotlgo Tr.
79-12 '"""'" GrHis ......l31 ·
london ...................... 0115 Ford Rangor Grilts ............t75
Fwd •1141 Cho•y Toil &amp;et11

.991-6115
,...,.,... 99J·7514
o••• L__j=

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

tfn

11·14 '""'' Tr.

510·515 Che•y Tri.
· ,_., ..........................~10
7~-n f•d'T•.

LOST small black Cockar
Spaniel around Jericho

LOST: female Pitt Bull. black
with white chest, red collar.
Main Street, call after 6 ,

..
73

dark _brown - tan~ whitefe_et,

Road and Rt . 2 vicinity,
Child ' s pet, 304-675 · 7966 .

&amp;SERVICE

Authorized john Deere.
New Holland , Bush Hot
Farm Equipment
Dealer

s•tt T~tlttltlaa

PAT HILL FORD

FREE ESTIMATE
I NT PL

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE,.OHIO

*SilYAIIA

FOUND : Beagledog,troyod
into my home Dec . 10th

~~~~;~ L~;;·;i,&lt;~·R·~ ·~·''~TT::!,:''~~.~"'""'""''' "••·- H7:::-:="""""-:'"'="~=.=="··=~"'""

BOGG

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
· HEADQUARTERS FOR

Cal.l collect 614·867·5904
Of 867-8336 .

white tip of toil, collar only
and . no_tag. Coil Clinton
Smith, 446· 2529 .

OR WHOLE HOUSE

I APARJ'MEN1S I
I REAL ESTATJ:

Pulllic Notice

&lt;Jfrlllle
;9nsu~al!o~
- -lf&amp;lp
- re, ·oM;;.---.-

'·' :!'·:'!.''."!."'"""•

of Lati•n Mass

·comed . Richerd Reynolds, ·
Auctioneer. Call 304-21'5 3069 .
.
Need extra money? We buy
about anything of value. no
junk , please. leon Flea

Morices, 304·458 · 1 57~ .

(2 Yr. Factory WarJanty)

The PRICE: S129soo
(Pl~~t

.

Ta1 and lnstallalianl
,;

We pay cash for late model
clean used cars.
Jim Mink Chev ..- Oidi Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

.i

448·3672

!ar!!!!les~

In Washington, said Wednesday
none .Jl( ...the.J~Yl®_nce indicates !!
national conspiracy. ·

favors such a return.
ln.addltton, 53 percent said. they
would attend a Latin Mass 11
conspirators and other persons
convenient to do so.
Thlrty-ftve· percent opposed
brtnglng back such a Mass In
pre-1970 form, and 37 percent said
they wouldn't go even If It. was
avaUable. The rest were undecided
or had no opinion.
.
For nearly two decades, the
world's Roman Catholics have been
OSL&lt;l, Norway (AP) - tr . ·top1of the Scandinavian peninsula.
. attending Mass In their own
low·flylng "object" that appeared to
Norwegian radar stations saw the languages, having changed from
be a Soviet cruise missile passed
object disappear in the direction of . the traditional Latin as a result of
over northern Norway and landed in
the Lake Inarll in Finland. Accord· decisions made in the Second
FJnntsh temtory in what may have
ing to unofflc)al reports, F1nntsh Vatican Council in the early 1960s.
been an errant training shot, the . radar s~tlons also observed the
And the formal content of the Mass,
Norwegian military says.
the
basic Roman Catholic ritual,
mlssUe.
'
. .
Defense Command .-;pokesman
also
was somewhat altered in 1!110.
The Swedish news .agency TT
Ole R. Bollmann said Wectnesday
'rhe
change in langilage - and
quote&lt;l a Norwegian Derense Minis·
that the obfect seemed to have been
other
alterations
such as having the
try spokesman as saying: "The
a Sd'vlet tactical training mlssUe
missile crashed later into the Lake celebrant face the congregation
fired· from a vessel In the Barents , lnarll or near it. We have tnforma· Instead of facing the altar- brought
Se.Aalld thalli may have been off lls_
tlon that Indicate that the cruise cries of protest from many Catholics
planned course .....·
mlsslle must have crashed on who felt uprooted from tradition at
The object was tracked hy , Finnish temtory."
thetlme.
Norwegian radar stations last
However, church officials praised
At the Norwegian Foreign Minis·
Friday as it flew westward across
try, there was l)O tmmediate official the changes as symbolic of efforts to
Rustvatn Lake and the Pasvlk. comment. Spokesmen said a decl·
River, which folTilS the border
sion on any reaction to the Incident
between Norway and Finland at the
would be made in the next few days,
but officials said prtvately that a
"strong"' protest toMoscowrouldbe
expected,
LOS. ANGELES (AP) -Four· allthepeoplel'nLosAngelesCounry
Tonight, snow, mixed with rain
Gen. Frederlk Bull·Hansen, the teen people tied themselves to- that-don't have a place to ltve," said
an!l sleet at times. Low In the low»;,
Norwegian defense chief, said there gether with rags and chanted "We Stevens.
. likely. High was no ..way of knowing for certal'n · Shall Overcome'' in a protest of
Friday, . snow flumes
About 1,tro people sought shelter
whether the mlsstle camed a
near35. Thechanceofpreclpltatlon payload, but neither he nor Bol, welfare rules after state officials in the tents set up Dec.l8 hy a group
is 8l pen:ent tDntght and 00 per;cent ·!mann had any reason to belleve 11 ordered a tent city for the homeless of socU\1 workers called the HomeFriday.
d
dismantled and forced hundreds or less Organtzlng Team, said spokes~lu.
AAoUfo
JW
ld,
'
'
, man John Malpede. There was
~
· · umo exten...,._, rec.
~':"=-~"--~"llt-would-be highly unllkely for transients back on the streets.
Saturday through Monday:
Pollee arrested 1J of t11e demon· space for a bout :nJ peopie.a-ntght.
Fal'r. on Saturday. Scattered anyone to arm a tralntng missile or strators Wednesday night for lnves· City officials estimate as many as
this type," Bollmann said .
Cruise missiles are small, un· . tlgatjon or trespassing in the protest 50,tro people live on Los Angeles'
shOwers or snow flumes Sunday
and a chance or flurries Monday.
manned . aircraft whiCh fly rela· at the. County Hall of streets.
Highs In the upper in! fD mld40s
The tent city was set up on
Administration.
Saturday and Slinday,' coollng Into lively near the ground at speeds of
Jerry Stevens, one of the ho.me- s!Jlte-owned land under a pemrlt
the in! Monday. Overnight IPWS less than 500 mph, In contrast to less demonstrators, 'said hi's arrest that expired the day after Clu1st·
hlgh-flytng, supersonic balltsllc dldn 't seem as bad as going back to mas, when a one-week extenplon
mostly in the
mlsslles.
the )treets after Sp!llldlng the was granted. Organizers of the
1n Los Angeles, President Reagan
holldays l'n the big blue-and-white project voluntarDy removed the
said the United States had "no
ten
!I pitched near City Hall to tents Wednelday.
absolute verlflcatlon" that the
dramatlze the pUgh! of the
The arrests ended a ftve-hour
ClEVELAND . ' (AP)
The object was A Soviet mllslle; Aaked
homeless.
demollllratlon by 13 men lnd a
1wlnnlng number drawn Wednesday 'by reporters if Soviets could be
•
woman outside the Board of
night in the Ohio Lottery's dally sending a signal In advB!)Ce or next
"If worse comes to worst, at least
~"~ ,
lng
·-rs meet
robm. The
week's U.S.·Sovlet arms · Ialka l'n we'Dhave. a hom e, a room and some Su,....,
· game, u1beNumber," was864demonstraton !led themaelves, toln the semiweekly "Ohio Lotto" Geneva, Reag_,. replied: "I bot meals. That's more than we ~wtthragsands
"W Shall
,_,..... • • ...a.:..l.&amp;..,__
'-:-":""""'' ~ A" l.. AQY ~ UfO don't - ba"C trw'ru , co.,qiA ~t-tan.a 41
~ -----='~--''11
ang
e
.. ,dra\Virtg, tiie siX Winning num~rr , n'VUIWI'
--"""'
:~
J n....
•
..
Jl --:"'~-=-"--·-· -- ,. .
=;··· VVft1.vlile' iiHU "'tgw-if1 ~· i::xJw S··- ·r·
were 2, 7, 13, 19, 33 and M.
have any verlflcation.':
"We wanted to set an example to Chartot.''
I!
'

The Coa1try Left

OIFT SHOP
It No• Ope•

Russian misslle
lands iri Finland

Tuts.·Wid.·Fri.·Sat.

&amp; Sun. 10 to s·
~.:J' 10 to I
Cl

"'""NO OPENINfJ ·

PUBUC AUCTION HOUSE

'

.

''

""~=..Y;:m;4.~0i;-h

cr· Chtck wf.tf!, PotHivt -.IJL
Auctioneer: Rodnay Howery, &amp;91·7231
Associate: flint Hutch
582·4349

II

I

MANI.EY'f
l TRASH
SERVI(E
I

· ·Curb Inflation ;

I
I

Pay Cash for
{ Claulflecls and
1
Savalll
I . Wri~ your
oroer tw

I

J

I
I

own ' ild lnd

CONSTRQ.CnON ·

em.., luift Now """'"
Cemflleto lomodol"'

·
S..ko
Qvality Werlnnattohip

H y_, E•porionco
•• jolllft

llli ..........

F!Mfl-to.

DAVID D. G... DSTAFF
949-2061
II 7lllll.

AND

MIDDLEPORT

"011 S.tllllf ,, S.llt

mall Wiltl

coopon. Cancel your ild by ptoane when rou
1rosulls. Money not relunclable.

0• $urlei"

gel

"

IUSINISS-RESIDENTIAl
For Trash Pickup
Service Call

:~am•-------------------AddNI~--------------­

992-3194

~ne----------------

IIOG£1 MANLEY ·Ownor

!1·29·1 mo.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS
EURNI.TURE. _Bodo, iroit,
wood; cupboards, chairs,
chests, baskets, dishet,

stone iars, antiques, gold
and silver . Write - M . O .
Miner, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohio
46789 or call 614·992·
7780 . .
.
Buying daiily gold, ailver
coint. rings. jewelry, sterling '
ware, okl cOins. large currency . Top prices. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop, 2nd. Ave.

Middleport, Oh . 614-992-

....

3476 .
-=-===~:-:
BUYING RAW FURS . ·lc.Beet
and Deer Hidei.Ginaeng and
yellow root . Selling trapping auppliea. · Wheat
lightl, night lights. George

Buckloy.phono 814·664 4 781 ,hours 1 2 - 9PM ~dailey ,
-:--:---:---:--·lcParts, good condition fo'r
1963 ' oldo 98. Two ,,..,
doors. one sliding side door

for 1 977 chevy van .
304-713·6651 '

A1111 uun r:e men! s

ROUSH
CONSTRUCTION

New Hdaft-Eitttisivo

( IWlriN
! IFOI'S.Ie

( I Amouncement
! I For Illen!

loiiOdtliM

lnstriiCt Wort
CuiiW"..J!!! Bldp.
~10ik
. ..L.
Aluainu• &amp; VInyl ~dlnp
11 Yearo Experience
GREG ROUSH ·

PH. 112-71513
or 912·2212

11·1-ltl:

12.. .
,_
. -_
--_
-_
_
_
3. _ _ _ __

~·-----

6.·- ---1.----5.----~

e. _ _ _ __

13.
14.
15. _ _ _ __

FOI AU. YOUI
WI-G NIIDS

16.------

Re•l•••tlal I

11.

1e.

1v.

10.
--11. _
_'_
___12. _ _ _ _ __

MILLEI
ELICTIIC
SEIYICE

'I
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I
20. - - - ' - - - I

30.------

~.
33.

=======

35•• - - - - - - -

L.._,__ _:;.:__...;:.;.::::::.J

4

Giveeway

Puppleo, 8 WHkl old. Cell
114·2&amp;8·18815 otter 15PM .
Two tmiH puppees to ~ 1 v"
eway. Part POO&lt;i'
814-912-2008 1,

-

·

~·-.,~·•·-·1 . week•
2 odoro!ll-...f!mr -·~ ·
r----•7 ""' ,...,,..,
old. need
1
Jl.·-·-··-·--·-~--·-·-·-····~·-:-·-•. lppteciote. 814..
..... - ......_-, - .· ..,.
1 __..., .. ,

IMMEDIA1E
~PENINGS

•""rv

:11.------

31 · _
---~-32.
_..___ _

11 Help Wanted

Manager Trainee

Club
Sundey, 1 :OQ
p .m . Fecto,Y chocked guns
only.
·

Lldill come to ·Parte. Lines
Now Ytofl Porty, Thuradoy.
Jonuory 3. II , :00 PM . AI
the banquet room OVfr top
of th8 LeSane resturant.
'24..
~ .J
ling&lt;!' fM-Iowly-tlfta .. Heer
25.
•
I
M. _ _ _ _ __
how yo~ con win .•500.00.
TV'o: dlemondo en4 other
fenteotlc prizeo. Fins 28
27. - - - - - - - - ,
arriving regiltered on dra29. _ _ _ __
1 wllng for opoclol prizn.
(donollon ~2 . POI

22.
23.

Tile 1M11J II II 11
111 c.r1 If.

Caii,J~2~ill5 ..

Servlt.t~o

Gun' shoot It Racine Gun

I
II
I

21.

MeiiTI!IICIUJILI . . . ._,..._

.(MILRIIIdiJI

SWEEPER ond· sowing mechine repair. parts. end
Pick up and
oupplloo.
delivery,. Davia Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile Up
o-ve• c...~ Ad . can
8,4.4441·0294 .•

C~ll

r lliplnynll~nl

3 Announcements

'·------

Or 742-3195

NOW PKIII4G !At IN

"POMEROY

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL·FILL DIRT
~..-_____!Jl:B:tic

HOME

.•,. ,,-; '

10-6-llt

992-3410
or
843-5424

Auctioneer
Associate-

~ttery

heine, 011.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

Come out to our just commpleted new Auction·facility and
spend the evening.·
•
· £ats
Plenty of

roe.

Sizes from 6'x6' Up
· to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

11'13011 mo.

Drawin&amp; for ·Prizes Every Hour

Unpaid Storace. Take notice that all unclaimed
and/or unpaid lots IJicated ·at the WlftbltH"of
Professional Movina &amp; Stoll&amp;t, Inc., 180 Columbus
Rd.. P.0. Box 987, Athens, Ohio will be· sold at
Public Auction on Jan. 6, 1915 at 1 P.M., Aid Ale
to be at Route 50 West, at Howery Auction House,
Athens, Livestock Sales Annex, Alblny. Ohio. ·
Items in storage include: Refrigerator. TV, sofas, beds,
dressers, fans, radios, chairs, tables. desk, lamps, old
juke bo1, air conditioners, carpets, pads, hospital
beds, wicker pieces, typewriters, coffeemaker, misc.
household items .and · furniture too numerous to
mention .
·
·
Also cartons of misc. We cannot disclose until day of
sale because they have been closed since put i11
storage. Many, many cartons! (Treasur.es Unknown).
DON'T MISS THIS SALE!
.
Plenty of parkin&amp; at this bpnd new Auction House
just opened.
Come out and enjoy till day at tlllallc:tlon.
Eats AVIillblt

UTILITY BUILDINGS

.Ph. 614-843·5191

THIS FRIDAY TO BE SOLD

PUBLIC AUCTION
Warehouseman's Lien and Sale of Unclaimed and/or

Sizes Sl.lrt From 12'!16'

T•rn loft, .... Twp. 79, hi
•lrtwoy .. "11!1.

Cons ignmenls, large Iools consisting of 10 ton port·a-power,
1" 21 pc. sockel set plus olhertools, new 5 h.p. snow blower,
leaf mulcher, used snow blower like new, furniture, round
drop,leaf !able, cookware, watches. vases, very large bisque,
man~ tools, rolls of naughahyde, many, many items too num·
erous to menlion.

·

ALL STEEL &amp;
POLE BUilDINGS

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

lr Meigl High School

--~------~~--~-~~~--, .

I

End of II. 7

Athens Livestock Sales Annex, Howery Auc·
lion; beginning Jan. 4, 1985. We will be having
auction every Friday evening at 7:00 .M.

Tent city dismantled

-

Thursday

o._, s.""' ,_

J

').

9ac:·

.Bcot~oftlle

support :re·turn

&amp;

'

because

·, - liiillllat - not

I
·.Man..Y Ca.th·0· l•C·S

Weather

OPEN EACH
THURS. EVE. 6-8

WITH
NERS·CORNING
FIBERGLAS.

.

firearm and explosives laws.
The women were arrested on the
basts- of siitemPri!S by- "co-

PAUL E. SHOCKEY, D.V.f.

Femtle Dobtrm1n ' has been
1peyed, appro111 4 vear1 old.
goQd WitCh dog, 304-882 ·

Lost : female beagle in vicin ity of Mudtock . Reward .

cited in bombings

-l!!.'!'J!ar.

'" MIDDUI'OIT .

·removed ~ but net necessarlly
killed - because they are destroy·
tng habitat needed by two types of
birds, the San Clementeloggl!l'beiul
shrike and sage sparrow, and the
island night llzard, according . to
spokesman Bill Meyer.
He said the agency Is not womed
about !be endangered wlldllfe

·ooo

ea$!IJ"'~~=e~.ee!'~·

BACKHOE

OIL UNES

ReligiQUS~.re.asons~

.counts

YETEIIHARY

.. " "" tufil(-

JIM CLIFFORD
Pit. 992-7201 ·].. U.•

optlmlsttc abOut the goats' chances
the San Clemente goats, ran a
for survival.
"I've never ruled anything out," ·for a weekend l'n 1983. An estlmo~ted
goats were killed before a
he said, ;'bull don't iiee any!IUng at
ABoRTION CLINIC BOMBING SUSPECI' - Kaye WlgJIIIs, 18,
order
silenced the guns.
the
moment
tn
Indicate
we
'W()Uld
and her lawyer,
Klnunel (dark jacket), foDow ail unldeniUJecl man
With
that order no longer in force,
change
course
on
this
one."
He
said
down the stepe of. till&gt; U.S •.CourtlltJwMi after she w&amp;s released l'nto·the
the
Navy
is putting the goatS' fate
loday's meeting was mi!Tely to hrlef
cll8tody of Jier mOther pOOdlng trial on charges she aided In the
into
the
hands
or Steve Carothers Qt
opponents about the goat bunt.
Chrbttmas D~ bombl'ng of three abortion-related cHnlcs. (AP
F1agstaff,
Ariz.,
who conducted the
Laaerphoto ) . ."
"We have to get aU the goats off,
19@3
hunt.
Under
federal contract,
We've done everything· we feel Is
humanly possible to save them," Carothers also shot wlld burros in
. ·~I(I.Km-MltcheQ, !lsl!ll!e5IJIJ!!!10L - ~- Grand . Canyon from a
theNavalairstatlonatNorthlsland, netiCoprer. ~· '
. ,
Calif.
Amory said he ftnds It ironic that
Mitchell says that since 1973; the Navy would kill goats.
about 16 tro or the brown and black
"The Irony, when the goat Is the
anlinals'
.have.
been
taken
off
the
mascot
of the Naval Academy, Is
ByWIL KAczOR c
having knowledge of the bombing
island, most of them In the last four 811!azlng,''Jle said.
ASsociated Presoiwrtter·
Incidents," ATF agent George
'
PENSACOLA, Fla. · (AP)
Bradley or Chattanooga, Tenn., · ·
'
lnfonnallon from co-consptratnrs testtriedatoneoondhearlng. ·
led to the arrests of the wife and
StmmonS said he was responding
. .
.
fiancee of two men who adriUtted to .a cau from God to destroy the
that ' for ' religioUs reasons they cllnlcs, authorities testlfted.
"Nooneca,nguaranteeGodwon't
bombed clinics where abortions
were performed, authorities said.
give hlm such . a calling again,"
·
.
"The investigation Is still open," Crongeyer said.
agent Bob HOlland of the u.s ..· Lawyer Paul Shimek, represent·
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and lng Slmmm;ts, argued that !he only
,J
Firearms said Wednesday. Hoi- places where elective abortions
By ROBERT F1JRLow
land, of Atlanta, Is part of a national · were performed ln Pensacola had
team sent here after . bombs been closed as a result of the
· Allsoclaled Press Writer
exploded at three clinics on Chrtst· Chrtstmas bombings.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Almost
mas Day.
He also said God didn't ask the gone but hardly forgotten, the
At hearings Wednesday, U.S. pair to harm anyone. No.one was tr~dltlonal Latin·language ROman '
Injured In the bombings.
Catholic Mass would be welcomed ·
· Magistrate Robert Crongeyer released the wol')'len. But heorqered · A New Year's Day bombing backbymany·U.S.Cathollcs,anew
- James Thomas Simmons· held . damaged an abortion cllnlc .Jn survey suggests.
Washington, D.C., :ind l'n Connect!·
Forty percent of responding
without bond as a danger to the
·conununlty, as he did Monday with
cut on Tuesday two telephoned Rol111111 Catholics said such a Mass,
Maithew J. Goldsby.
bomb threats forced the evacuation all but banned by thechureh in the
. Simmons wife, ~thy, and Kaye of a clinic in West Hartford. No . mld·l960s, ought to be available as
Wtgglns, GOldsby s fiancee, were
bombwasfound. ln1984, therewere analternattvetothene\Yer,Engllsh

"'b

~

M•l• ten 1 white dog , ·s
months old, Plrt Collie ptrt
1. Good WIICh dog, 304·
675·6933 .

TOWN &amp; COUNIIIY

•"RECLAMATION WORK
'OIL FIE~D SERVICES
'DUMP TRUCK IERVlCE
"CONCIIETE WORK
'CUSTOM SUitT HOMES

spokesman at the Pen lagon, was not

~~;;;;t;·~~S·~,e~,~~th~~y~he~a~rd~t~he~sou;~n~ds~~o;f~m;~;·~~c~a~n~d~I~a~:g~h:.t~er~o~v~e~r~~~~~~,.~~~;vl·;;.~i~·~-~wt;,·~th~.~Jo~•~•r
speakers .a t the city fire station Tue51:\ay.
They dld a-little sleuthing and found out-that two $1,100 poP!able
radios were missing from city fire trucks. Police have arrested a
·14-year-old boy who was volunteering at the central fire station as
part of a community service program for the county juvenile court.

list.

'DOZER

Giveaway

1 mele and 1 fetn1le puppy.
cell304·876-3097 .

J&amp;F

~'Nl.t:~-.pid-"" i'relf; ~~
~·

were

4

Busmess· Senices

yel!l'!l by the Fund forAntmals.

ByDAVIDGOEIJ.ER

·";F=c,cc.r~orr·":'·~Q!.!..lJI!!B!JB J,_,\.P,,),.-',&amp;.e&lt;&gt;l ~ ~"&lt;J!! ~ .d'4l"Mlg . ~'" '$"·i
1940s, · are about to make a comeback, according to a F1ortda
manufacturer.
"Back in the 1950s, the Amertcan PeoPle
just not geared up
for this kind or technology," said Jack Hanes, vice president or
Madray Homes or OkeeclKibee, Fla. "Now., It's a dl1ferent thing.

J

The Daily

3,198&amp;

avy considers .
goat kill appeals ·

Steel homes coming back

'

' ThUI'Idlly. January 3, 198&amp;

--~------~--------

Ohio Briefs·:

•

Delivery

S1les
If you are honest.

dopendoblo and would like
a careet Instead of just •
job call tor • PftSONII

_ln_torvio,w 10ANlJo 4f'M
Thura. 8o Fri .. 448· 7441. •

,,0, ,40.,,

Account Clerlt II. SliMy
, ,024 ennuolly
clepeinding on queltflc•ttont.
Muot be femiNor with gen.
•ral eccounting principlet
end dote proceulng -ip·
ment. Apply City luHdlno
518 Socond Avenue. be~
Jonuory 4. 19815. Eqllal
Employment Opportunlly
(M ·F·Y·Hl E"'P.Ioyer.

Boy Scoutt of Amtrica- 'ult applicants for IUrnmer
•P dlroctcw, P&lt;Otrom ell·
·"· buoinfto . . . . _
··
•· Hfetuonl. Ju• la:
-=-~~7.:. ..~~&amp;11't!3~ -~ .... ~.~··~
· '"""''" ... •. · 'ftV
1
·
_ ·_ _ _ _ __

..

1

�3. 1986

Page-1 0 - The Daily Sentinel
11

. LAFF~A-DAY

Help Wanted

44 .

Household Good•

Apartment .
.for Rent

BebySitter to watc.h 3 amall
•

children in our home. Mon.
thru Fr i., 8 :00AM to
5 :00PM . ' Refll!!lrencas rB ·

JACKSON ESTATES
APARTMENTS (Equal
Housing Opportunity) has
one and two bedrooms. rent
&gt;,p(.,,...,.,c."O'··.~ f...&lt;;.pc~-""": i .,t';l"i1f~Wt ·· • nl-3 '-7 uf~
·bedroom and e198 per
bedroom,
mqnth for
with $200 d
sit located
near Foodlan and Spring
Valley Plaza. pool and TV

quired. Coli 446-1418 be·
tween 8:00PM -8:00PM .
;zM:'1'J

Reli.itil~ ffi.li'YSrttar wanted
in my home on Raccoon Rd
for · 1 Y2 yur old, prefer
reforenceo . Call 448 -3431:

!f.

JOIN THE LEADER. lho
New AVON . Dramatic new
earnings plan. profesl!ional
~-=....:o:e...~-=!e:&lt;:~· ~aininy.~~ake up,
color anal'ftie, unlimi1ed
new growth potential . Call•
now.304-675-' 429 or 304· ·
344·01_
2 4.· . .

ant. Call 446-2746 or leave

message .

1-;-~::::0?::==::;-:i::;::';;::i=1 bdr apt ..
$150-t260. Call-30•4 · 1!!:!~7 26 3_ 676-61Q4
63 8 6

Fumfshed efficiency 8146.
·utiltie·s J)d. share bath . 607
2nd. Avo. Galllpollo. Call
448-4416 after 7PM .

Help '" Wanted ~ res! dent
manager and or mainte·
nance couple or penon for
small 24 unit elderly

;;! ~~~hl'"ffi1fijjPf'
Virginia. Send reauma to:
Colonial American Oevelopand settle for Mr. Available!"
ment Corporation . 380
South Fifth Street. Columbus. O&amp;hio 43215 .
Naod someone to care for

elderly man in· his home. call

Homes for Sale

41

Housaa for Rent

304-675 -3335 . '..
ARMY NATIONAL GUARD.
Enlist, ~tnd you · hav• a
part -time e;areer, edUca ·
tioi'lal and ritlirement benefits. $35.000 life insurance.

AND - A"'"M"OJIITR1Y

3 bdr. ranch, ·city school ,
Utilities, carpOrt, deck. ca·
blo. $33.600 . Call 446·
7144 .

2 bedroom house 42 Chillicothe Rd, &amp;210 per mo.,
$75 doip . Call 446-3870 or
446-1340.

KIT '111' CARLYLE

utilities paid, 1 person $76.
2 people $100. Call 44&amp;·
1414 or 446-1023.

73

74

o.

613 Third Ave .• 1 bdr.,
washer-d,.Yer hookup, water
paid, f;iepoat reql!ired. $166
mo. Call446-4222 bot waon
9 and 5 .

Used Furniture ~- electric
fireplace, 5 pc. dinette, head
boards. ·and 2 bedroom
suites: 3 miles out Bulaville
Rd . Open 9an-i to 5p.,.-., Mon.
thru Sat : .
614-446-0322

Television
Viewing

Van• lo. 4 W .O.

,

~

8 :00 • Cll Ill (IJ • Ill ® Gl
(jJ Newa
(I) Hot Potato
(JJ To Be Announced
(I) Lucy Show
(I) Dr. Who
Gil 3-2-1 , Conuq (CC)
- · · Dlifcront Strokeo
[HBOI MOVIE: "Acrosa the

Motorcycles

CAPTAIN EASY

·,•

•

'The
-Boats and
Motors for Sele

low-line

bY Honr! Arnold ~nd Bob Lee

..

EVENING

J·· -~

75

8 :30

-=

. I I K I I

t

- ~·· ,,.

'""-4'-

IGUYSAR

F15URE5

DON'T t.l E--.
L!AI&lt;!S

IFRYBLEj
rJ r

John 14 ft.

1

motor with trailer and ace.
Cell 448-2322 .

t-;~;:;==;:;===:::=l~~=;:;=:=;~;:::;:==i
~=-=~:-:--;-;----"'·
79 Motors Homes
54 Misc. Mercha. ndise

64

ARMY SURPLUS. Sam
Somarville'1, Eeat of Ra·
venawpod 7 miles ·(old
·Route 21) N- ERA. opan
Fri. Sat, Sun 1 :00-7:00. Call
In order 304-676-3334.

large rpund bales of hay t20
each . Call446-1 0112 after S.

Hey

&amp; Grain

)

7 :00

lo. Campers

Ea~ corn 82.60 buehel. Call
446-2563.

Electric
One
.-t a Time
Cll PM Mll!9~i'n!
Hero Come !he Brides
SportsCenter
C1J Gomer Pyle
.
C1J Gl Cl2l Entertainment
Tonight
Wheel of F.o nune
Wheel of Fonune
· MacNeil/lehrer

(Answers tomorrow)

= ·n .. •.

BORN LOSER
For Sale : 1968 Banner
camper, s.leaps 8 . eelf contained, good co.-.dition .
$1 ,500 . Cal! 614-256 ·
6645 or 614-25.8-6878 . ·

16 AIW.IEO C~R, I AM CALLI~

i:lJ ~L'( 10 ~'( ~ ,la.OOIT

. I'S~W

a:t10.

- OH I Df'AI(IE: .w;I

I.'LL M ,&amp;. alfLK
IN1HeMIL

Yesterday's

I

Jumbles: GUILT ABOVE WORTHY RITUAL
Answer: What doe&amp; a small inlay cost these days?A BIG OUTLAY

...-=-:--==~~;~~~=::===~===:=~====:.~=~

PAY -

CJI Tic Tac Dough
ESPN' s Speeclweek
Andy Griffith
Ill Collage · Baaketball:
Ohio State ·at Michigan
State
CD Jeopardy
0 Cll Family Feud
® Wheel of Fortune
-Gl ·(j) New· N•me That
Tune
·
fl) WKRP in Cincinnati
8:00 0 (})CD Co&amp;by Show Denise decides to ·help Thea impress his date by mak ing an

Serv1ces
Situations
Wanted

Ground ear corn. •6.00 per
hur1drad, bring own ucka,
304-676-3308.

Will take care of patients in

Cabbage _.. Patch Preemi8,
$100. 304-676-6498 .

their homes. 5 days a week.
have references. Call 614367-0535 .
Ha"J.e vaCancy in .my home

who need personal cine. Call
614-992-6022 .

Furniture, new &amp;
used . large secti,o n of quality furniture . 1 2l6 Eastern
Ave .. Gallipolis. ·

Valley

3 bedroom house for sale or

rent . Call 614· 992-7366 .'

Set Of weight bunk beds,·

o!:

15

-~~!~r -TI-!.=~~~:e!e­

needs minor repairs 840.
Call614-245-9469 after 4.

Schools
Instruction

Auto washer $65- five other
washers 1o choose from.
Gas
$75- 2
to

.Beginners guitaLie.sao.r:,.s_in
your ~ome. Call446-3125 .·
Large- ·2

17 MiscellanaoiJS

•

Gallipolis Ferry 6 year old
brick ranc:h, 4 car. gJm~ge ,
$43.000.00. Phone 304·
676 -6861 .

2 or 3 bedroom houses in or
near Pomeroy. Furnished or
Cfozei · worK." land clearirfg,
unfurnished. Rent and utililandscaping. etc. Free esti- . 1-----~-'---­ ties negotiable. Day 614mate ~ ·Phone 61.4 -992 J bedroQm. double garage . . 992-2381. eve~ings 614·
7119. or 614 -446 -803.8 all electric. $3.500.00down 992-.6 723.
anytime.
and take over payments .
Nice. redecorated 2 bed 304-676· 7753.
room home in Pomeroy;
18 Wanted to Do
7 room home with one and a insulated, stove and refrigerhalf lots, ·· garden space, ator provided.Storm w:in ·
Hartford . W . Va .. dows. *186 .0Q 'ji!lls securTyplng: Need 1ome typing $19 .500 .00. phone 304· ity depo!Jit. Sprry. no
children or petl. Phone
done? Contact Mrs. Cheryl 882-3374.
614-992-5292 eveniniJs or
(Baird) Swain at (614) 256·
Saturdays.
1419 after 6PM on weekdays .o r any time on 32 Mobile Homes
In Middleport, 3 bedroom
Weekends.
for Sale
house. New kitchen . Call
304-882-2811 .

Financial
21

Business

NEW AND USEO MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUAL·
lTV MOBIL~ HOME SALES.
4 MI . WEST. GALLIPOLIS :
RT 35 . PHONE 614 -446·
7274.

THE OHIO VALLEY PUB·
LISHING CO . recommends
.that ...yoq: _do_ ~u1ineas with 1= :-----::--::-::::-::::-:::-::-::::--::-c::
people you know. ond NOT
salf. 12x66 Torch, 2-3
to send money through the bedroom, unfurnished. Inmail uritil you have inveati- eludes s1orm windows and
ga1ed the offering .
·
screens ., Call 614 -446 7132 .
Own your own Jean Sportswear, ladies apparel, 1 2x66 mobile home. 2 bdr ..
combination , assessories. new carpet, washer &amp; dryer.
large size store. National AC. st.ove 8i. refrig, all
brands: ·J ordache, Chic, Lee. drapes, outside deck .w levi. Vanderbil1. lzod, Es- indoor outdoor carS)e1 &amp;
prit, Brittania. Calvin Klein. storage bldg. Call446-1805
Sergio Valente, . Evan Pi- after 5 .
cone, Claiborne, Member~
Onl',', Organically Grown, Beautiful iwo bedroom with
Healthtex, 900 othera . 1w'o full baths on 4 acres.
$7,900 to $24,900 inven- Many extras. Country living
tory, airfare. training, fiJC.;- on hill site . $32.000 and will
tures, grarld opening etc. finance. 15 miles from Mid·
Can open 16 days . Mr. dloport . Call 614 -742 2332 .
Loughlin (6121 888-6555 .
~2 Money to Loan

HOME OWNERS-Rafinance
to low fixed rate. Use equity
for any purpose. Leader
Mong8ge - Co ., - 614-592- 3081 .
·,
23

Professional
Services

Piano Tuning and Repair.
Brunicardi Music Co ., 4460687, TWentieth year . of
quality setvice. lana Oa ·
niels. 814-742-2951 .
PIANO TUiiiiNG AND REPAIR. Raduc~d rates limited
ti.me only. Ward'a Keyboard .
304-675-6500 br 875 3924.
.

12ac60. two bedroom wi1h
central air heating. Block
and underpinning , front
all in great condition .
n,,.,uu. Call 614 ;742 ·

Two bedroom, all electric
home with full besement.
la;ge patio and carport on
wooden area. One mile back
of Racine . $200.00 per
month plus deposit. Call
614-949-2849.

42

Mobile Homes
for Rant

.
14x70 total electric 3 bdr.,
furnish,d. plus washer &amp;,.
dryer on private lot, 10 min .
from town. $200 mo. plus
deposi.t and utilities. Ref.
req . Call 614-268-1393.
2 bdr. unfurn . 12x60, V2 mi .
p~ll HMC. Call446-4369 or
676-9760 .

2 bdr. Washer-dryer, stove,
refrigerator. 1 mi. from
hoapital. $200 mo ., $200
dep. Call448 ·1364.

bedroom

apt .

carpet. washer aild dryer
hook-up, exc cond, private
parking, quiet neighborho.od. 304-675. 1962 or
675-4580 .

Nice furnished apartment, 1
bedroom, Clean. private entrance: Adults only. 304675 ·2661 .
45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms ·
and light house keeping
rooms. Park Central Hotel.
Call 614-446-0756 .
Fuinished room, $125 . Utili ties, range, ref. Share bath.
Men only. 919 Sec .. Gallipolis. 446-4416 after 8 p.m .

46

Space for Rant

' $76 water
Mobile home lot.
!

Fo~ Lease

Apt. for lease, owerlooking
city padc,lR. kitche~. stove,
refrig .. dining area, 2 bdr.,
bath. $190 mo.· plus utili·
ties. Call PJ' 446-1819.

Merchandise
51 Household Goods

For rent 2 bdr. &amp;. 3 bdr.
trailer. Call 446:3371 .
3 bdr mobile home, completely furnished. Conve·
nien1 location on At. 7 . .Call
245-6818 ."

Nice sofa hide - a - bed ,
$125.00. Two Zenith house
speak oro. 8100 .00 . Call
614 -992· 7467.
Pickens used furniture . 304·
615-6483 or 676-1450.

12•66 Mobile Homo. com pletely. furnished and aat up
for immediate occupation.
304-675-1385 affor 5 PM .

RICK'S . NEW AND USED
FURNITURE. Used stoveo
and refrigerators. Compare
Our prices. save today .
Phone 304-773· 5430 .

2 bdr. furnished trailer,
8 160 mo. plus. depo1it on
Rt. 654. V. mi. off Rt. 160.
Call 614-388-9.661 .

•

Firewood. $20.00 pickup
load. $30.00 delivered. Call
-304,468· 1728.

Firewood, will deliver,
phone 304-676-2897 .
BaBiiet arid Caning.Supplies,
Write for free prfce list.
Carol's Cenery. 232 Barnsdale Rood, Camelot. Charlottesville. Va. 22901, 1·
804-973-5646.
55 Building Supplies

BUilding Materials
Block. brick, sewer pipes,
windowa , li~'el1 , etc..
Claude Winters. Rio Grande.
6. Call614-245·5121 . '

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; .FURNITURE Now open tOr . buainess.
62 Oltve St .• Gallipolis. Now 'Mountain State Block, Rt.
S. used wood-coal stove1, 6 · 33, New Heven. Complete
pc wood LR 11uite $399, masonry eupplles, 4", 8".
bunk ·· beds S199. antroo 12" block . Delivery ~&amp;rvice.
recliner• $99. used bedi-oom Phone day 304-882' 2222.
suites. rang8s . wringer evenin11 882-3239.
washers. &amp; shoes. Call614446-31 59 .
56
Pets for Sale
54 Misc. Merchandise

Knauff Fir8wood Split- 96%
hardwo-ods. Seasoned or
green. You pick up or we
deliver. HEAP vender. 614266-6245 .
Limestone, Sa{ld, Gravel.
Pick up at Richar:ds &amp; Son..
Call 446-7785 .

HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breads. Heetad
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC. Dc;Jbermen puppies:
Stud Service. Call614-4467795.

1ransportat1on
71

• Autos for Sale

TOP CASH paid for "80
model and newer Uieci cars:
Smith Buick-Pontiac, 1911
Eastern Ave .• G•llipolia. Call
614-446-2282.

77 Pontiac Grand Prix 301'
air. PS / PB. good condition.
One owner. $1260. Call
after 5PM, 446-0137.
1974 Muotang PS, AM·FM
cassette. low mi., new battory. Call 614-246-9469
after 4 .
·
1974 Chevrolet lmpola, 2
dr., 360 V-8, air, tSOO. Call
446-7838 otter 6:00.
1974 Dodge 'D an; 60,000
actual miles. good rr-echanicsl cor. f1 .000 . Call 4469700.
1980 Toyo!o. Carollo. 4 dr.
deluxe, alt, power 11eering Be
brakes. auto, AM-FM
cassette. suggeated -retail
book 14,460 ,asking 83.850
or B.D.. Cell 446-8096
l'ave mesailge.

5298.

J

Open Houoe- new model.
blf"CdlififiY__..ri~ Z: bdr.,
built on your lot. t18,900 •
up . Coll1 -114-811·7311 .

H 81 S Home Improvements
vinyl &amp; aluminum a.iding,
roofing , ·~ seamiell guners,
atorm windows, overhang.
Call 814-367-0409 or 614367-7244.

Red •nd gold plaid tweed
couch and chair. Fair cond.
304-675-6375.

Z..17 whiift.llw.ning.for Hie.
like new. Call 614-3677468 .

Woodburning furnance. automatic controls. blower,
ready to hook·up, never used
$400. Call614-256-1216.

nel.
•nd Siamen
Chow puppies. Call
446-3844 after 7.

Special Price- AKC regia·
tered Cocker Spaniol pupploo, buff in color. Call
614-3118-9766.

Ne~ camper gas cook stowe.•
dinette set gold color, gas
furnance for mobile home. · AKC Engliah Springer Spahand -tooled saddle brown niel, bird dog liver &amp; white.
with silver trim, complete
.equipment for tavern . Call $1.00. Call 446-8234.
614 -256-6413 .
.
AKC Regietered Chihuahua.
Cell614-388-8632.
Mobile home new pans and
doors . Inside. outside, Storm Silver miniature poodle
doors. trailer windows . pups. 304-882-3672.
About 500 !priced to sell)
McAr1hur.Ohio, Route . 1.
Call 614 -598-4282.
.•
White oak firewood fOr sale .
$25 .00 pick-up load doll·
Fdrlll Suppiii!S
vered. Dennis or Dale Tea ford . Call614-843-5394 .

"' Livestock

For Sale: Like· new, couch. 2
me tchi n g-ch airs'o--3-glass't.op
and tables $600 .00.- Washer
and dryer good running
condition, · $200.00. Call
992-2054 between 9:30
and 5:00.
(Coal Oolivored)1Jood lump
house coal 1 to 1 ton. call
Jim Lanier 676-7397 or
304-675· 1247.

61

Farm Equipment

Troybllt now good time to
buy. Buy before spring .
Swisher's lmp .. ment, 4480475.

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional-lifetime guarantee . Local references
furnished . Free estimates .
Call collect 1-614-237·
0488. 9 a.m . to 5 p.m.
Rog"' 8rs Bas ·e mef!t
Waterproofing.

1972 Chovorlet Malibu. Call
614-245-6492. .
1984 Oldsmobila Cutl01s
Suprema- S•ble brown metalic, 11 ,000 miles, like
now. $9,200. Call 4464316 after 6PM .
1977 Buick Century 4-D.
p-s. p-b. air. V-6. A1Condition . 304-676-6365.
·eo Monte Carlo Landau.
VS, auto. PB; PS, {'.C, AM,
rear defroster, tilt wheel,
304-676-6286. .

1979 Pontlec Bonneville
B.rougham , ·exc cond.
loaded. 614-446 -101-5 -or
446·4182 ·anYtime.
1978 Z-28. 304-676-2714
0&lt; 304-675-1677.

1973 Vplkewegen. need•
minor work. beet offer.
304-675· 7177.

Plymouth Valera 1978 hes
everything. rune goo4;1.
.1.000 . 00 . 304-67&amp; -'
7322 • •

I'LL .JUST SWIM
OOT AS FAR AS. 1

FlOA.T IN THE A.IR"

Ct.N IWD DROI.\IN

????p

INVADED 6Y "lHINGS"?
WHAT KIN!&gt;A THINGS?

GENE "S DEEP · STREAM
CARPET CLEANING . Opor·
ated by owner . Deodorilers·
scotchguard . FREE esti·
motes. Call 614-992-6309
or 614-742 ·221 1.

GASOLINE ALLEY

Trucks for Sale

Rotary o ~ceblo t&lt;&gt;.QI drilling .
Mo1t wells completed same
day. Pump sales a~d services. 304-895-3802 .

BUilding-Renlolding. con•
cre1e, drywall. electrical.
kithcen~bathroom installa 1ion, door-window framing.
304-875-2440.
82 •

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phono 614-446 -3888 or
614-446-4477

BARNEY

JIM'S PLUMBING l!o HEAT·
ING~Rt ~1, Box 365, Galli·
polls. Cell 614-367 -0576 .

SurviWors'

11 :oo

83

Excavating

Good-1 .Excavating, base ments. footers. drivlltway&amp;,
septic tanks, la''fld&amp;caping.
Call anytime 614 -4464637, James l. Davison, Jr.
owner.
84

lo.

Electrical
Refrigeration

SEWING M•chine repairs,
aerViCe. Au1horized Singer
Balli &amp; ·service Sharpen
Scissors . Fabric Shop , .'
Pomeroy . 614-992 -2284.

87

be~room

2 bedroomo. Bond
304-875-3834.

62

Wanted to Buy

General -Hauling

SNAKE!!

YES"Tl!i&lt;:DAY
·w/16MAY
'fWEN1Y-

FOURTH

1

""Ill

PEANUTS

I THINK A80UT ALL TilE
E')(CUSES LUCI' lJSED TO
HAVE WI-lEN SIIE MISSED

o:5.o:vaJ•cr::. ~ l:
------

ltenclng ..w timber, ph-·o-ne~..1 ~~ 0
304·571-4&amp;81 lifter I p.m. 2t 30.

0

·

I WONDER W~AT KIHD

OF EXCUSE SIIE'D AAV!:
IF

Upholstery

0

•

TRISTATE
UPHOLSTERY. SHOP
i'""iiic~sec·~Ave .• O•llipolra.
"814-446-7833 or"l14-446·
1833.

0

"

•

WE WERE I'I.AYI NG

RIG~T

ANOT~a FLY BALL ...

0
0

•

D
0

0
'

tS

.. ,;,.

1- J -IS

----

NOW ...

CIJ ® .,

.
Kept

Cil World" s Best
Secret
(JJ Collego Baske!hall :
UCLA at Oregon State
@ Sneak Previews Film
critics Jeffrey lyons and
Neal Gabler show scenes
from the bes( mov ies of
1984.
.
1!11 Benny Hill Show
11 :30 0 Cll (IJ Tonight Show
Tonight's gueets are John
Davidson,
A. Whitney
Brown and Elva Baskin. (60
min.)
.
Ill WKRP in Cincinnati
0 Cll Newhart Joanna and
Lesini are len to thEljr owilt
devices when Dick, George
and Kirk go to a basketball
game in Boston. (R)
®Taxi
(jJ Nlghtllne
• Twllght Zone
{HBOI MOVIE: 'Defiance'
12:00 (I) Nlghtllne
II Ill MOVIE: 'Puma Man'
Cll Dad's Army
® MOVIE: 'A Boy Ten
Feet Tell'
&lt;JJ Eye on ljollywood
•Gunomoke
12:15 Cll
MOVIE:
'Doctors'
Wlvao'
!MAXI
MOVIE:
'Last
Embf~~ee' .
12:3o •
Late Night w1m
Devld Lenennon Tonight" s
guests are Marv Alben and
Wil Shriner. (60 min .)
. --·-=t. (!) ~
'""";'"

e

0

·so Ford LMrt 1'100, olr.
cruiH. bull1·1fl CB. AM·FM

om Cll rn o
(1Z Nows

Ken's Water Service . Wells, '
cistern•. pools filled . Phone
814-367-0823 or814-367·
7741 nf11ht or doy.

Mobile home In Clolllpolla,
nice foi' MRior citizen• or
married couple with one
child. ro poto. depoalt ond
reference• required. K • .K
Mobile Homeo. Inc.. 304178-3000.

·ell electric mobile homo. 1135.00 plua
utllitlee, loca\ed Gelllpolie
Farry, 304-171-40118 .

-~----

..•

Taking out
insurance

NORTH
• 9 81
• .K 108
.• 84.
+QJ7 &gt;2
WEST
EAST
·tQ10
+K6 S32
. 9Q 76 _U _
.,.
tKJ
·- i -Q97ia2
tK1083
+ --SOUTH

'
James
Jacoby
these precarious times ,

the~e· s

nothing wrong with guaranteeing a
·contract. ii you"re·piaylng the hand ,
ask yourseU how you can go set. Then
ask yourself what you can do about it.
Declarer played the I 0 of hearts
+AH
from dummy , holding the trick. Next
.AJ9
came the queen of clubs, and East dis,t A 10 S
carded a diamond. West was able to
tA 9 6 4
make twq club tricks, and South could
Vulnerable: North-Sooth
not develop more lhan. eight tricks.
Dealer:
South
Certainly the band was unlucky. Four
outstanding clubs very seldom divide
Soutli .
Nortb East
West
4-0, but at a slight sacrifice _of a possi1+
Pass 3NT
PaSs
2+
ble overtrick, declarer could have
Pass .Pass
~ass
provided for any club distribution .
All he had to do was win the first
· heart lead in his hand and play a low
club toward the dummy's Q-J. It is
then easy for him to make four club
tricks and it is immaterial how they
are divided . He does sacrifice an
Here is what your thought process
overtrick when East started with king should be: " I mlgM go .set if the clubs
and one club or king and two small · are divided 4-0 . What can l do abo~t
clubs. Giving up that possible over- itr' ' Once y~u get that far, you will
trick is cheap insurance.
wmd up making the band.

· -w-G~ian thinks that everyone has forgotteri his binhday.
Cll Entenainment Tonight
1 0:00 0 II) CD Hill Street Blues
Chief Daniels is highly confidant as e lection day·arrives,
a strange man mounts a last
minute campaign tor office
and Hill and Renko deliver
some money to a slain boy·s
mother. (R) {60 min.)
Cll Gl ® 20/20 {CCI
0 Cll ® Knot's Landing
(CCI Val"s new iden!;ty
leads her lo romance, Karen
is forced to rilake a fateful
decision about some serious
surgery and Joshua is offered a weekly television
program . (60 min .)
Gil Newswatch
[MAXI Timeslip
10:15 C1J World at War
10:30 Cil My Unle Mar11ie
Gil Tony Brown' s Journal
'The
IMAXI
MOVIE:

11 11 ,

2

MYSELF!

di's Opera . (4 hrs.)
(j"j) Forum
GJ .(i) MOV!E: 'W"'Ifen'
fil .MOVIE: To Bo

·- ·-·

---......l..--~--. -

Announced
IHBO!Inside tho NFL
[MAXI MOVIE: 'Sudden
lmp•ct" (CCI
8:30 0 (})CD Family Ties Ale•
becomes obsessed with a
young unwed mother that
he met through Elyse's natural childbirth class.
ffi Top Rank Boxing from
Atlantic City. NJ
Gil Gallery
9:00 0 II) (IJ Cheers
Cil 700 Club
0 Cll ® Simon &amp; Simon
Gil Mya!eryl {CCI "Partners
in Crime: The Sunningdale
Mystery.·
Tommy l'fl"d ~ · ·
Tuppence. believing the
woman accused to be innocent, set out to fi nd the per~="'""'"""'"""-'l;o• •"W'IK"i'&lt;to:iiv·i&lt;;;;,•d'·;Go;jr.;;rr-~~1~ _,.,_,_ •.o.;...=&lt;'" by fMSM:a5 JCI~~..-~===;;l:

Iron Horse Builders . FarJTt &amp;.
Commercial Pole Bldgs.
614·332 - 9745 Collect .
Winllf spl.: 30X40X9 with
1 5' track door &amp; man door:
e5238 erec!ed .

James Boys Water Service.
Also pools filled. Cell 814288 - 1141 or 614-446 ·
, 1176 or 614-446i 7911 .

coth•"Hci. "2 bdr.• •ttO'mlt.';" ;--~--,.,
. --.....,----

175 dop. Call446-3870ond
448-1340.

DtD "'''U SA..V "StUI\JY

ROUND ROCKS THAT

'11-11$ $TR..IGHT.. Y'SAV
'rDUR COUNTI1:"r"'S BEEN

•

1984 Dodge Dovtona Turbo
loaded 6,600 miloa. Call
446-8149 before 2:30PM.

Houses for Rent

Houoo for ront 42 Chilli-

NOW 1-EMME ·GET

-~

Rentals

Furnlohed houu, 3 bdr., :is
Nell Ave .. Gelllpolla. 8225
plul utUtles. references. Call
446·4418 altar 7PM .

Cil Circua
ffi .NFL' a GraatMoments
Super Bowl II Highlights Green Bay vs. Oakland.
(I)
NSA
Basketball :
Washington at Clavelar1·d
0 Cll ® Magnum. P.l.
Cll Uve from the Met:
'Aida' Leontyne Price, Fiorenza Cossotto and James
McC racken star· in this per/ formance of Giuseppe Ver~

ALLEY OOP

Roofing, g~ttering . siding,
plumbing, carpentry work'
and concrete work . , Free
estimates. Call446-3171 .

8!i

Houn for rent. Call-30487&amp;-7283 875-6104 or
876·6388 .

i:Opy of a- dcsignc:shirt that he wanted .

:-, .,.- -tJ:'\

1978 Subura, 4 opoed, now
paint, carb•rator need1
work. •1.000.00 or boat
offer, 304-678-3880.

3~ Lots &amp; P!creaga

41

- i&gt;i\Q~t '

. l

'

•

1 Engrossed
40 Adolescent
5 Florida

Homes for Sale

Remodeled " 2 BR vlnyled
' home. carpfted, 2 ecr..~
1 ~24 pound tobocco olio!·
ment, city schoola .
U2,500. Call 814·248 -

Marcum Roofing &amp; Spout·
ing. Now installing rubber
roofs. 30 yean &amp;lllperiance,
specializing in built up roof.
Call 614-388-9867.

Kennels

...
Three bedrooms, central air.
vinyl wall paper. nrpet
throughout. well insulated.
new paint. attached Q8rlgil.
g11 outdoor grill, awninp.
mony e•troo. Cell448-2&amp;83
·tM 5 :00PM, otter 8:00PM
coft &amp;14-245-6859.
•

Improvements

Judy Taylor Grooming. Call
614-367-7220.

72

31

1-::,-,:----:H-:-- m- e_ _ __
81
0

! .

COUNTRY MOBILE
Park, Route 33. North
Pomeroy. large lots. Call
6111-992=7 479 : ~ -

49

from . Refrig . $95, side by
side, refrig. $175. woodburning stove S95. Maytag
wringer washer $76 :
Skaggs Appliances, Upper
River Rd. 446-7398 .

~1.)1

c:&gt;O 'TH 15.

Now' arrange the circted letters to
form the surprise answer, as sug·
gested by the above cartoon.

--c-~--··--·

12

..

~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD OAME

~ Jl.lUL!)~ •

Uni!ICt~t:Me theM four Jumbles.
one teuer to eacn square, to form
four Ofdlnary words.

'"/"lj

1/3/85 ·-

1980 Hondo CR-260-R very
good cond. Call446-9710.

l

ft\Jjii.\,0' j])'il

· ''\~

THURSDAY

1979 Luv 4x4, one owner.
e•ccond. 39.000 mileowith
radio, Leer top .pe r~
f3,400.00. 304-8963838.

11
OS .. to
436 . 7 pc.
89 and up.
Wood table with 1ix. chain
f285 to 8746. Deok 1110
up to e226. Hutches, 8660.
Bunk bed complete wi1h
1 · '!'.!'.!'!""''!"• $ ~"151
=~d up to
bedo, e H
~~ .. ~lror11 ao or box aprlngo.
full or twin, 168 .• firm. 168.
and &amp;78. Quaen seta. e196 .
4 dr. chests, · $"4 9 . 5 dr.
chests. 859. Bed frames.
e20.ond t26., 1 0 gun - Gun
cabinets~ 8350 . Ga1 or
electric ranges $376 . Baby
mattreJSes, $25 &amp;
bed

The Daily Sentinel-Page 1 l

Ohio

1978 Chevrolet Blazer 4
whaol ·drive. 360 engine.
uepo. Coll441 · 7141 ohor
6pm .

chair. rocker, otto·
3 teblea. {..tra heavy) ;
Solai and • choiro
from t286. to 1896.
ond up to't12&amp;.
.. ••,. . .•DOO&gt;o, U90 ..... nd

heedboards $38 l!o up to
$85·

·{ (

1985

TRACY "

Wright

king frame
tion of bedroom suites.
·roc"ers, me1al cabineta.
2 rooms furnished nicely. all

31

'
~~J~3.

e

m rn

ellJINewa

theaters
11 Moniker
12 European
river
13 Au courant
15 Sea eagle
I6 Two make
a te!Uier

17 Denial
18 Utilizing

20 Cratchit

DOWN -1 Abie's
Irish2 Hebrew
month
3 Theater
section
(sl,)
4Road
covering
5 Domesticating

Yesterday 'sAnswer 1
9 Beset

1t God of
marr(age
16 Saw
bucks
I9 Litigious
one
%1 Gluts

6 Lengthwise

child
2IBitbya

7 Amongst
8 Express
artisti·
cally

bee
22 Dad
or JU(lior
23 Wise ones
24 Mature

%Z "La

23 Yule
visitor
Z4 Boorish
26 Montana
city
28 African

tribe

"'

32 Different

.
"1

33 Claim

Boheme" 35 Ventilate
heroine
3li Favorite

25 Rose
. deriva-

tive
.2,Damp
2'7 Nothing
28 Physician
; (SI. )
· 29 Indian
cymbals
38 Beverage
31 Such (Fr . )

34 Coniented
:11 Hungarian

Jrr-t-t-

dog

breed

370fa
Great Lake
38-Gaelic

•

D.W..YCRYPI'OQVOIES- Here'• bowtoworklt:

AXYDLBAAXR
laLONGFELLOW

'

One letter stands for ~r. In this $810Jlle A ~ used
for the lllree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the lengtb and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day~ code letters are diffet:enl.

CRYPI'OQUOO'E

1--3

,
MO

VHUULC JRSSLlO CZHC . ILWO

WO"U

-.

ZHJO

·H

GTEZ .C CL PO TU

MLGYN,

UL

G"T"E Z C . -

HUN

Z0 UG A

LCZOGI
E 0 LGE0

·Yesterday'• Cryptoquote: AN EPIGRAM IS A HALF~

TRUTii SO STAtED AS TO IRRITATE 11IE PERSON

.. .JDKJ .!JE;UEVES 'rtflilJlf.t~R,_ HA~. -:. ~LER
MATHE;WS

.
..•

�..

0

12-The

Ohio

Plant' retoo~~g . will mean ·additio~al
em .....
.
.

'

FAIRFIELD, Ohio (AP)"!... The
·General Motors Flsber Body plant
here may add between 00 andOO new
jooo after it retools to produce front
fenders and hoods for luxury cars.

inerriploymentmayheaflrststepin ' in~re_sted in keeping the plant,
a much larger plan for the plant.
Nelson said.
.
Action by the cltl~ of Fatrlleld
Creation of the enterprtse zone, lf
all!l Hamilton and Butler County It Is approved by the state
commissioners that created an Development Department, wntena·

foranyiu~retooUngalsocouldbe

granted, Nelson said.
Nelson added that he belleves GM
Is tesUng the plant's productivity
and thecommunlty'stnteresthefore

~- ·~.,·~:n;:NiiiYSrr,·-· pg· ~~~j;&lt;.o~dtj~-"'~~~~~p8:11;!!Mlg "~~,...!:l::-- ·~~e,.:~~.y · :: =~;t.~ ·,:-. Ee~~l&amp;!:;:r~e...-\j!~W:ta·!

development direCtor, said the · Fisher Body plant appears to have
retooling and the resulting increase shownGM thatthecommunltlesare

·

·:-~:~·~

.

~rcent tax abatement for retooUng · chahges there.

the .plan~. Nelson said. Tax breaks

Company spokesman Jolm Davi·

·Middlepo
· rt , .mayor's
court
hands out• five fmes:t~j:en::'~OC:U!~~~th~
.
..
:
theplantlnfouryearsandwUlcarry
.,_ t ---' •n '0 "-ys 1n iall nn . conduct charge, and $100 and costs over Into the 1990s,· GM employs
~-- ~~~ ~;' ~:~: nl:t~ ~u;;::~~~t
theft w;; - for ttghtfui !ilpUblicwas ROy'Nat,- '2~:n\peopleat theF~eldplai!t, he
five persons ~ere fined, and three Terry Michaels, Middleport, Who Middleport.
,
said.
.
.
ottters (ortelt~ bonds on a variety of was also fined $100 and coots ·tor
Forteltlng bonds in the court were
Hoods and bumpers made at the
charges.
disorderly conduct. Robert Rim· VaughanJ.Spencer,Pomeroy,$450 plant wnt _be Used on the .1986
Richard Hemian, Middleport, mey Jr., Point Pleasant, was fined on a charge of OWl and S50 for Oldsmobile Toronado, Buick RJwas fined $50 and costs, on a charge $50 and ~ts. for dlsQrderly drlvin~ left of center; Carl Eugene viera, Cadillac El Dorado and
of destruction of jail pioperty, and mal)ner; $50androstsformenac;tng Smith Jr., LangsvUle, ?hio, DWI, CadlllacSevllle,pavisonsald.
a second charge Qf thre;~ts, and $200 and · costs and and $50, weavfog course, and David . . - - -----1
~~'"'-::~~~~~;{~ Tom Walters, sentencearolOilays_ ln_Jail on a K--;-Slmpson.l~Po\n\-Pieasan\,$100 \-,....~-was
$50-aildco'StS charge of assaulting an officer: lltsoroet!yrnanner,$1oooostrucllon

0

f. ut:..••---M

;tty

JA UAR~ .
-CLEARANCE
·~--"' ~/2 .PRI.CE..~~.
J

'

•

.

'

.

.. .. ' ...
VQI.34, 'llio.ta&amp; · · · · ·

Two fined in Pomeroy court
Two persons were lined and 10
othersforfeitedbondsinthecourtof
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Wednesday night.
Coleman, ~ Albany ,-$4'7-and coots, on a speedingcharge; Cathy George, ZanesvUle,
$63 and costs, on a traffic light
violation.
Forteitlng bonds on speeding
charges were Jeffrey Whittington,
£hes~. $46; Carl ]1/iortit Long
Bottom, $43; Kim Bo~a. Athens,

Meigs County Sher1ff James J.
Proffitt reports that the department
"~handle--d-

twv=aeeldents Wednesday ·

night.
The first accident occurred at
Rutland at 6 p.m. Robert P. Hooten,
Mason, W.Va., was traveling west
on SR 124 (Main Street) in Rutland
arid. his 1979 International truck
struck a 1980 Chevrolet owned by
Rick L. Jolmson, Portland. The Johnson vehicle was parked
In front of Pizza Dan's and·,was
knocked apprux!mately one and
one-half car lengths onto the
sidewalk by the coal truck.
H_ooten was arrested for driving-

·-

.

Raclne, $46-. - - -Roger VIning, Middleport, forfe-~

ALL SALES FINAL, NO LAYAWAYS, NO RETURNS Jtllllltg Cfutllfl.~el
MEN'S

while under the influence and was
released on bond for appearance at
a later date in Meigs County Court.
The second accident occurred
around 9 p.m. on pr1vate property
in .Reedsville.
·
·- According to the report, Teddy
Osborne, Reedsville, was P'!rked on
private property near Thlrd and
Fifth Streets11n Reedsville, when an
unidentified statlonwagon report·
edly backed from a private dr1veway and struck the r1ght front of his
1971 Ford pickup truck.
·
Light damage was reported to the
pickup truck. . ·
·

WINTER

Sizes 8 to 20. Good selection of styles and
colors. ·

Men's 139.95
Men's 149.95
Men's 179.95
Men's 189.95

Reg. S22.95 .Jackets ... S16.00
Reg. ~29.95 Jac~ets.~: S19.00
Reg. S39.95 Jackets ... S27.00
Reg. S49.95 Jackets ... S34.00

Waist length styles and parka
lengths. Select yours now and
save.

.lockell .... 127
Jackell .... 134 .
.lockell •••• 155
Jackell .... 162

Jtnu11tg ,C/,,.,6, Sefe

Medical Center. At · 8: 53 p.m.
Syracuse Squad went to Minersville
for Freda Russell to Veterans
Memorial.

MEN'S

COATS

SHIRTS

Clearance sale prices on our entire

stock of winter coals and jackets. Excel·
lent selection of sMes and coiQrs 1n·

Includes all of our men's knit shirts
· sport shirts · dress flan.nels . Van
Heusen dress shirts and quilt lined
flannels. Sizes S thru XXl and some
tails.
·

eluding lurs. '" length coals and ' sta·
dium coats.

Junior. Misses an.d Hall Sizes

REG. 143.00 TO 1139.00
Cl~t~nll61 ~tis

$30°

·..

Men's
Men's
Men's
Men's

9 to

$9729

110.95
514.95
119.95
129.95

DRESSES

Misses and extra sizeo. casual
and laney dresses.
Misses sizes 6 to20.
Hall sizes 12\+ to 24!-\
REG. $30.00

DRESSES ••••• SA~E I 19.4 9

REG. l 31.00 •

DRESSES ..... SALE 124.69

REG. $45.00

DRESSES ..... SALE 129.29

REG. $52.00

DRESSES,,.,. SALE 133.79

. \~
'

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
-Long gowns and robes
...:..waltz length gowns and
robes
'
-Paja mas

Shirts ....... 57,35
Shirts ..... S10.00
Slirts .... SI3.35
Shirts .... 120.00

Pomar:ov_.:,_lilliddleport, Ohio;

A ~nd. 5e!:tl6n of the slngteceng!ne plane believt!\1 . ·. ·:·

Frid~y,

2 Sec1ions, 12 Pages 25 Centl
A. Multimedi• Inc . Newap1per

January 4. 1985

Ute d~ejy, but a &lt;jlsJ)atc~r with 'the detac~erit

feet from shore. Gibson said he checks th~ river four
· Hubert "Bert" Harder, 28, also of Columbus and a
. or five times a day from his nearby home.
graduate student at Ohio State Un)versity, was alSo
· found Thursday .a t · Glenwood In Mason,. County,
''Beckett Said the section apJ;iarently Is from the.area
Beckett said a more thorough visual·search of the
reported to h~ve been in the plane.
according to the West Virginia State Pollee. . · · . . ·. of ·the plane where. lhe right Wing Ill: attached to the
·artla will be conducted, hopefully next week, when the
A seat and a wheel, Identified as belonging to a llght ·
.
A _4-foot·sq~are section was fouild IIi the. over, . : · ·· !u-Setage..
·· ·. ·· · .
,
rtver level~ down.
1
plane were found shortly after the Initial search
~ ~~-fi¥~1J'!!le~ $9.11!11 Qt.th.er~~;~.IISL . : . Gibson took_the piece to _the:V~ey Y olunter Eire · - The plane reportedly crashed- in-the river Elec. 9 .. began. The search, which included special dive~
site around 9:30 a.m. by Earl Gibson, a GlenwOO(;I ,· DCPariment and Resc.ue Squad ritter he fished the . near the Galllpolls Locks and Dam.
from Cincinnati, was called off in late December. At
resident, Meordlng to Cpl. K.R ..Beckett,-commander
piece from the nver wtth a long pole. Gibson · told
The Eliot is believed to have been Paul.ffilwk§. ~of
least twice, sonar lQCat€!;1 ol)jectsJn tberiver, but they
-of-the-Point Pleasant state pollee detaclunent. ·- ' Beckett'he saw-me- piece fioat:IJ\g al&gt;proxlinately-15
Columbus, a free-lance photographer. Hawks' friend ,
had been moved by the strong current before divers
..A visual search of the ar.ea was conducted following
.
.
~ld investigate.

. .

REG.Ia.oo To $44.00

$ale
$6 39 To $3519

Gunman freeS
captives today:

..,. o•

'

WASH)NGTQN .." (AP) .;.; Coal . suiibuy, ther~portsays :
consumption in 198.5 will be on the . . . But while domestic coahise ·wn~ .
r1se bec:allSe of higher.demapd from increases, 1985 wm be anottter slow
electric titiiltles, ·aceordlhg .to ' a : , year for coal exports, the depart:
report from the U.S: Departrrieill of . ll)ent'sreportsays.
· ·
· ·
Commerce. . . . .
· · · ·.
. . The strong U.S. dollar abroa&lt;l and
In its U.S. Industrial Outlook 'for
internatlpnal buying ,patterns ,have .
1985, the Commerce Department' hindered U,S:i:OaJexportsforyear-S,
predicts 'that coal consumption wfll the report says. The entry of new
grow-by llearly·6 pereent from 1984; traders ·s!l~h as .Argentina, Qdna,
jumping fl:om795 mllllon·toiis t(!842 New Zealand and Malaysia aiSQwUl
million tons. .
..
· keep U.S. eXpOrts low, the report
Coal Wodtictipn Is expected to predicts.
. ·
· · ·
ke,eppacebyincreaslng4,21lercent,'
In the . long run, domestic coal
the Commerce ~rtment says. . consumption Is &gt;e}(pected to .keep
Electric. utilltles wil) continue to rlsmg as tile naUop;s.eriergy needs
be the largest consumers oi domes- increase, the rep6rt says. .
tlc coal, increasing to 54-perce~t of
By 1989, coal production Is
the total market, the department . expected' to increase to·l.l b!Ulon
says. "
tons' annually. The Commerce
An expected Increase in raw steel . Department also predicts rapid
production also will mean Increased development of Western . coal recoalconsumption at coke plants, the sources and that 38 percent of all
department's report says.
U.S. coal production wnt be in the
This year, coke plants- are West.
expected to use 47 million tons of
'IbereportsuggeststhatU.S.coal
coal; an increase of 4.4 percent over exporters must off,er "coal teclutol·
1984, the department says.
ogy'' along With coal supply to stay
Residential and commercial cus· in business. New combustion tech·
tamers are expected tousetheleast nology amd· poiiutlon devices wfll
amount of coal among all consu· make more steam coal llsable.
mers but still will increase their use

Jtnuetg CfettiiiCB Sefe
LADIES'

J~n111tg Cf~~tlneer

LADIES' ·

Emergency calls answered

WINTER JACKETS

JACKETS
Regular and extra large sizes.

-

se~oRdsOOtiO!\l.f·.· · missirlg plarltntiscovered :

. .

Jmetg Cl,.,ln6el
LADIES'

Jmttg Cf•mnc~!
BOYS

·,: .

·. .... . . .. .

(:oal ·consumption
tojurnp in l985 · ·

SALE START$ FRIDAY, JAN. 4TH AT 9:30 A.M.

Accidents
probed
by deputies
.
.

~

~ to have ~rashed: into the Ohio River Ia~ month· wa.S :'. · said this inornlilg nothhl_g.e~ lias, qeeri found. ·

Long Bottom, $47; Brian · Zlrllle,
Pomeroy, $44; and David Cundiff,
ited $63 on a charge of f~ure to
register his vehicle; Paul Parsons,
Pomeroy, $375, on a dr1ving while
intoxicated charge; and Sharon
Sharp, ReedsvUle, $63 on f~ure to register hls vehicle.

.... . .

Copyrlghi.d, 1985 :

NEXT TO ELBEI;ELDS IN POMEIOY

~' \

$45; Timothy RJchardson, Parkers·
burg, W.Va., $43; Trlcla.· oaney,

.. .
. . ..-~ .·.. . ' ·- ··. .·,._ . ' " ·'

,.

·CHAPMAN SHOES

·"·· ~ I_
&amp;NIJ&amp;IIW/
_5

~threats.

.

·. ON ALL SALE SHOES

bd~~~~and-and ~~and~ooa~~-o;f~J~~~P~~~~~~,an~d~·:·m:en~a~ct~ng~~~~~~!!!~;~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i

coots for possession of marijuana.

.

,--

~-

I)A'l'lfi OF OFF1CE -

lint s&amp;ep. In taking

left, !!tanding, Enunop!lle &lt;JcoaKu, COUIIIy RlCOI'der;
Phil Roberts, county engineer; Robert Buck,
probate-juvenile judge; James COOde, county
coroner; and In front, Larry Spencer, clerk of COUJts.

•

.._.

'

•

PA.INESVILLE; Ohio (AP) ~An,
armed man surrendered to pollee
early today after barricading ·him·
self, his i:Jrlfriend and herl-year-ol&lt;l
son. in her home for nearly seve!)
hours.
Police Chief Jeny White said the
woman suffered a· head injury · . . ·
durlngthe ordeallateThursdayand · ·
early today. . ·
·
· -·
The woman ·was taken to l.ak.e ·:
County Memorial . Hooptt&amp;l E~st,- :
where nursing supervisor· Colleen ·
Nawro.;kl identified her as Debra
· Petroblc; 28, of" Painesville: . Ms.
Petrobic was being treafe(f for an ..· :
unspecified head ·injury,. M~.' Naw-·. '
rocki said.-.
.
· Ms. Petrobic ·was llstedin: .fair "&lt;
condition at the hospital.today,_: ·
''There ' was . a shot flied . that .. we re aware of, prlortoouramvaJ·'' ,
White said.. · .
.
. ' :
Ms. Petrobic's son, Stephen;_was~
ta\ten_to the hospital but was not
Injured In the ordeal, Ms. NawrOCki
said.
•
'
· White saki the man gave up after
throwin,g a handgun out the door of
the home at about 1 a.m. tpday. The
man was taken to the city jail.
White said the child was not hurt.
"It was a domestic situatlon "
White said.
'
1

o~ for.any elected olllclaiiS to be swom, ln. Meigs
CouJdy Common Pleas Judge Charles KJIIgh&amp;,
exir..me right, admlnlsten lhe oath of office to, from

.,...

•

•

.

'

•

-

"""~F'="'"= ~-~=~-.PJ'of!';.i,. --~director~~-~
But the effects are impossible to. ingful step would be belts, Cox
.
measure. And while a mandatory indicated.
·"A
lot
of
different
factors have
law woulcL not he. observ.ed b)' all
"'made
seat
belts
ahot
Item " Cox
grams promoting voluntary use of l drivers, Cox said he believes It
said,
although
he
stressed.
that the
seat. belts are helping, but a would. increase from about 15
department has not endorsed spepercent to ·50 or 60 percent the
~dat&lt;iry seat belt law Is the only
clfic )egislation.
hope for making fUrther significant number who would wear belts. ·
State Rep. Arthur Bowers, DSteu·
reductions in traffic dea-ths and
benvllle; plans to introduce next
Although there was a slight
injuries, Ohio Highway Safety
week a mandatory measure similar
increase In fatalities last year from
Director l{enneth Cox ~ays.
to
one which went Into effect in New
1983,
Cox
said
the
state
Is
still
at
its
He. said Thursday that the
York
last month.
lowes
\level
"in
about
30
years."
department has developed a coall·
That
law sets a fine of $50 for
The
·
55-mUe-an-hour
speed
llmlt
tlon of more than 300 groups around
failure
to
buclde up and applies to
thestatewhicharepaylngformedla and tough new drunken-driving
front
-seat
passengers as well as
and other programs that urge laws are credited for s,orne of the_
dr1vers. It also requires passive
Improvement, but the next mean·
drivers to buckle up . ..

By ROBERT E. MUJ,tR
~Press Writer
~GeLUMBUS, Ohio. (AP-) - Pro-

an Income tax for a period of one
year after enactment. If at the end of
a year, residents feel thatthemoney
generated by the income tax has pot
been managed properly, a petition
to revoke the tax can be filed. The
Issue can then be put on the ballot
" - ·and voted In or out,
The entire ordinance wfll soon he
publlshed 1!1 The Daily Sentinel.
"This should answer ~Y ques·
lions for thc;o;e affected by the tax,"
said Long.

As stated by those involved wtth
the legislation, the definite amount
ofrevenuetohegeneratedby!hetax
cannot yet be ascertained. However, at a recent councU meeting
attended by several concerned area
residents, Jolm Anderson, counctl
presld~t. estimated that around
$200,100 would come into the village
through the tax.
Some liullvlduals within the
vntage - feel the figure could he
considerably higher.

"'"'"9 Cfunne•f
llnlE GIRLS'

Wel~ome

The New Yell With The1e
'

WINTER SPECIALS

..

CONNIE FASHION BOOTS ............. 40% OFF
CONNIE.SHOES ............!.~~P.'!! ......... SO%\OFF
CONNIE SHOES ............!.~~'!'!........~ 30%)OFF
THOM MeAN SHOES.~!qU.f.!IJ~U....... 30% OFF
NUR.SEMATE$••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20"/o OFF:
MEN'.S. .HIKER BD.OlS....;•.,.,......._.,..~ 3OOfo OFF
DINGO BOOTS .................: ............ 20% OFF
SLIPPERS .~ ..:.................................. 20% OFF
DEXTER SPORT SHOES ...............;.. 20% OFF
DEXTER MEN'S DRESS ...............;... 20% OFF
RAND &amp;.THOM MeAN MEN's........ SO% OFF
FALl PURSES ......................... ~ ....... 30°/o OFF
OPEN
UNTIL ·7 P.M.
FRIDAY

DRESS
SALE
Velours, corduroy jump·

J11/UifiJ. Clsmnce/

, Jsnuttg Cf69tlllei $1f1

LADIES'

· GIRLS'

SPORTSWEAR

Sportswear

Russ Girl and Russie qua,lity
blouses, skirts, jumpers, vests,
·sweaters and pants.
Girls' Sizes: 4 to 6X, 7 to 14

Special rack of misses and
extra size sportswear.
Skirts, Jackets, · Slacks,
· Blouses, Vests.

ers, fleece skirt sets, knit
dresses and poly/cotton
dresses.
.
Sizes: NB to 24 mos. 2 to
4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14. ·
Reg. 11 0 ....... Sale 16.99
Reg. 114 ..... Sale 110.19
Reg. 121..... 51M 114.69

REG. 113.00 TO 125.00

Clemnee S•l•

$780 ·,0 $1 500

Reg. 132 ..... Sale 122.39

EIEN

'47••5 lly WUNGISt

J,.,.,-, Cllflltt•l

Jm11v Cl'""u $1/t
CHILDREN'S WltiTU

. MEN'S
CASUA' ·

IOYS'
CASUAL

COATS, JACKETS
&amp; SNOW SUITS

I

L1tt1e boys sizes 6 mos. to ·'

PANTS PANTS

INSULATED
COVERALLS
Dooble action zipper, red

Sweat shirt looks · rev·
ersible · parachute
cloths and novelties.
Sizes S, M, LanJ XL
Many styles coordi·
nate with men's knit
sale priced In this ad.

qiltt lnina &amp; adjustable leg
SI\Jp&lt; Navj bile "' olivewood .. Not

lt~t~tg Clfft•~"l

all ,;,., S

tllrooth XL SOOt, reculars
Old fills. )Yhile tlley laSt
sale.

1/2 PRI~E

.• ~:::::r-=~

-

.,

!
''

' ·.

.

By EVANS WlTr

As8octaled Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP j' - With the
warmth of llrst -day festivities
already a memory, leaders of the
new CQngresS .are talking of "cold,
hard" ·decisions on cutting social
programs to deal with burgeoning
federal deflclts.
".We're going to all have to jump
off .the cliff several times, "Siild
Asslstaiit' Senl!te Majority Lead~r..
Alai! : K. Simpsj)n of Wyoming,
commenting on the political perlts of
, this year's budgetc~e&lt;;isions, ·
'Ibenewlyelectedmembersofthe
99th Congress were sworn in on
Thursday with traditional

formality.
Vice President George Bush
admlnlstered the oath to the new
and re-elected senators four at a
time, while House Speaker Thomas ·
P. O'NfUl gave the oath en masse to
the lower chamber as family
members and friends looked on
·. from packed galleries,
But the Eighth District of Indiana
remains without a representative as
the House struggles with the
question of who really won the close
fight there In November- Reput]li·
can .Richard 0, Mcintyre or
Democratic -Incumbent Frank
McCloskey. The House voted along
party llnes to let.Its Adminlstrl)tlon

Committee look into the matter.
The top leaders of both houses
were duly elected and installed in
other ceremonies Thursday. O'Neill
toolt the gavel as House Speaker for
what he sald -· ls his last term and
Robert Dole of Kansas aS.sumed hls
newly won job as Senate major1ty
leader.
,
But the question of who wUl be
~halrman of the House Armed
Services Committee remained In
doubt. Rep. Melyin Pr1ce of llllnois
should retain the p6st by senforlty,
but younger House Democrats have
called for his replacement! House
Democrats were to caucus in closed
session today to decide the Issue.

24 mos . 2 to 4

Sizes S, M,- Land XL
Sateens · corduroys·
and polyester colton
twills. Elastic boxer
waist. Big tops to coor·
dinate advertised on
sale in this ad . .

DWI ·sentencing law-signed

REO . '18 .00

Coats .. Sole 112.60
RE0.'24.00

Coats... Sale s16.10

REO. '32.00.

Coots .. Sole ,122.40

-l/2 PRIC~ . ·

REG . •47.00

.::, _

Coots .. Sale '32.90 '

FREE PARKING

lios PLACE ·

c:

Girls Sizes: NB to 24 mos ,1
to 4, 4 to 6X 7 to 14.
.
Many warm siyles. Most are
machine washable

•·

houst ·

~

'Cold, hard' decisions await
Congress .in coming months .

OHIO 'II"""" r=.

--

COLur,nJUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. in duration, theoffendermustspend citizens' reward program $uch as
Richard Celeste has signed into law the balance of the time in .Jail.
"Crlmestoppers" groups which
a bill clarifying the authority of
Severalo!theotherblllsslgnedby have been set up in several Ohio
the governor address the appreben· cities.
~
·
judges to' SliooUtute certified driv·
ers' intervention programs for the , sian of ctlminals; the victims of
Once recognized, that group
three days in jail now mandated for vanous types of crime, Including _would be ellglble to receive fUnds
rape; and other subjectS ranging and set rewardS for the apprehen·
drunken-driving convictions.
The measure was among 28 from the state lottery to utillty bUl slon and convlcUon of criminalS.
approved by Celeste on Thursday
payments.
• Speclftcally, they would get 25
,without comment.
Sen. Charles L. BullS, 0- percent of. the proceeds from the
Although the bill permits the Cleveland, sponsored one new law salebylawenforcementagenclesof
suOOtltution for the mandated which allows but doesn't require . confiscated and!orteltedequlpment
county conimlssloners lo recognize·· . and property.
'!enlencet, It says that unless the
Wiihin~iill!it
courmeg o11e-omctlll
- - ~ ~-- ·~---..~..
in~fiOO ilt'Oill'ari'i IS tlil'ee days
•

.

•

"just on the basis of statistics, the
restraints
matter where they are seated.
department has to look favorabi~!Jn
Cox· said Gov. Rlch;y-d Celeste this kind of legislation."
. s!iU -·15' conslderll!g '!egiSJatlliii,
The- departmeiif earlier cited
including Bowers', but that the figures showing that about half of
governor h':':s not advised him about the 1,100 unbuckled drivers killed in..
an official administration position.
Ohio this year would have survived
Celeste issued an executive order . had they been wearing seat belts. :
Another factor In favor of a
last July that requires slate em·
ployces to wear seat belts while mandatory law Is the potential for
driving state vehicles or while using savings on auto Insurance. With
their personal cal'!! on state fewer deaths and injur1es, lnsu·
ranee premiums would decrease,
business.'
The highway safety director said Cox said.

The U.S. Deparbnent of Transportation also Is applying pressure
on the §.lat~ !Q_ enact · passlve_
restraint laws- mandatedseathelt
usage or automatic buckle systems
-as an alternative toalrbagswhich
O\herwlse wUl be required in SOil1e
new vehicles startinJ; in 1987. ·
The federal agency recently ··.
adopted a regulatlqn requlrlr\g a1t
bags in all new cars B.tter 1~ but:·
said the rule will be rescinded.·lf '
passive restrl\lnt taws aie enactec:L ·
by two-thirds oftbe state!i. :
·

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