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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Page-24-The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 24, 1986

"A racing heart'

NFL wild card games

FamDy Medicine on Page 8

.Stories oa Page 5

Meigs faces Bulldogs

Bitter cold East

Preview on Page 6 ·

Weather story oo Page 11

•

Wintery blast hits Midwest
'

Unlled Press Inlernatlonai
Snow, Ice and another blast of sub-zero cold hit the
upper Midwest today, endangering millions of
holiday travelers with slippery roads, while logbo~nd nyers In Seattle and Reno, Nev., expertenced a
different kind of white Christmas.
In Concord, Calli., a six- passenger plane trying to
make an Instrument landtngln !Favyfogcrashed into
· a. mall crowded with ~hrlstmas shoppers Monday
rught , kUling three people and Injuring at least 54,
authorilies said.
The plane hit the roof of the Sun Valley Shopping
Mall, ll mUes east of San Francisco, burst Into names
and crashed Into a large lobby area between stores
where children were ltned up to see Santa Claus.
Heavy snow fell early today along the shore of Lake
Superior, and weather advisortes for snow and
freezing rain were issued for eastern Wisconsin and
much of Michigan. Snow was also predicted for parts
of Ohio. 1
Temperatures took a tumble across the upper
Midwest early today, with International Falls, Minn.,
reporting 14 below and Grand Forks, N.D., 12 below. ·
.Strong gusts drove the wind chUJ factor at Grand
Forks to 62 below zero Monday night.
The frosty cold front dipped into the South. Wind
chills were expected to be near zero later today In
Arkansas and Louisiana braced for a hard freeze.
High wl,nds ·kicked up snow In South Dakota,
Nebraska and Wyoming, and dense fog combinEd
with Icy roads made driving treacherous In southwest
Oregon.

Two people were killed ln. Icy road accidents tn
Wisconsin Sunday and Monday, and several mlrior
accidents were reported.
The National Safety Cou{ICil estimated between 150
and 250 people wlll die In traffic accidents during the,
Christmas holiday, and 7,410 to 12,00J wUI sutter ·
disabling Injuries.
Up to 4 Inches of new snow fell in Wlscorisin.
"It's basically not a good night to be driving," said
patrol communications operator Nancy Elth In
Madison, Wis. "The temperature is dropping and
we're getting glare Ice and freezing conditions oo the
main highways."
In the West, fog settled in over San Jose, Calli.,
Reno, Nev., and the Seattle-Tacoma· area of
Washington Monday, stranding hundrEds of air
travelers and spoiling their holiday plans.
It was the seventh day a thick, white fog had
descended on the Seattle-Tacoma International
Alrport. It lilted brieRy In the afternoon, allowing
some weary travelers to get out of town..
In California, fog forced a 90- minute closure of the
San Jose airport.
The Reno Cannon International Airport also was
closed bY heavy fog.
"It's going to mean a sad Christmas for many,"
said Reno airport spokesman Rick Peacock. Even II
the fog clears today, he said, many stranded travelers
will not be able to get a seat on departing flights.
"We don't want to spend our Christmas here," said
Marcie Evans of Reno. "We want to be in Yuma
(Ariz.) with all our relatives."

Tobacco giant wins

UNIQUE REQUEST- At the New York Mets
Clu1!tma8 pariy at Shea Stadium recently, Sanla
Claus (third base coach Bud llam!lson) captivates

six-year old Christina F.Bposlto of P.S. 114 In Queens.
The chlld Ill rather IB!Ique In her Chrlslmas quest she's on a waiting ll8t for a klduey transplant UPI.

West Virginia businessman
donates $1 million to OSU
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPII-Alex
Schoenbaum says he Is "helping to
create an even greater Ohio State
University" by donating $1 mllllon
to the schooPs Department of
Athletics.
Schoenbaum, founder of the
Shoney's restaurant chain and a
1938 OSU graduate, and his wife
Betty gave the gift, the school
announced Monday. Schoenbaum
will serve as national chairman of
the university's athletic campaign
which Is seeklngtoralse$45mUIIon.
The money Is to be used for a
multi-sports IndOOr practice facility
with a tuU-slze football field,
expansion and renovation of the
Biggs Athletic Training Facility,
new administrative office space for

the athletic department, expansions of the press box at Ohio
Stadium and upgrading several
other facilities to enhance the
university's program in intercollegiate ·athletics.
Schoenbaum, who lettered In
football from 1936 through 19ll,
received a bachelor's degree In
business administration. His wife
attended OSU from 19li to 1937.
"Since my days as a student and
a football player at Ohio State, I
have been a firm believer In the
need to repay the university !or
what I gained there," Schoenbaum
said. "I believe that what Betty and ·
I are doing Is really more than
paying the uni versity back,

however.
"We are paying forward. We are
helping to create an even greater
Ohio State for many more students
who will follow our footsteps. "
OSU President Edward Jennings
praised Schoenbaum for his dedication and support of thlsahna mater.
"Alex has been a great friend of
the university for many years, not
only through his flilanclal support
but through Is contrlrutlons as a
volunteer."
Athletic Director Rick Bay
echoed Jennings' sentiments.
"Ohio State's athletic programs
have benefited greatly aver the
years because of Alex Schoenba·
urn's good work."

Warrant issu~ for EMS official
CINCINNATI (UP! I- An arrest arraignment and a warrant was
Home State fell last March after
warrant Is out for one of founders of Issued for his arrest.
ESM, with which Home State had
"(Mead's) attorney Indicated Invested more than $145 million ,
ESM Government Securttles Inc.
indicted lor his alleged Involvement last week that lF will resist the went bankrupt. Home State's downIn the failure of Home State Savings process which means thai we wUI fall trlggered a run on other stateBank, while another ESM official have to extradite him," special chartered savings and loans, forc who was lndlrted pleaded Innocent prosecutor Lawrence Kane said.
Ing Gov. Richard Celeste to close 70
Kane said he expects Mead, who thrifts temporarily.
to 56 charges.
Ronnie Ewton, co-founder of the Is living In Florida, to appear In
Three Home State principals who
Flortda·based ESM who had signed Ohio within the next three weeks. were Indicted - MalVIn Warner,
a waiver of appearance. Monday Mead was Indicted oolO counts of Burton Bongard and David Schieentered his innocent plea In writing. theft by deception and one count of bel- are to be arraigned Friday.
He was Indicted Dec. 13 by a special obstl')lctlon of justice.
Hamilton County grand jury on &lt;10
counts of aiding and abetting willful
misapplication offunds,l2countsof
theft by deception and !our counts
"This trip will be a unique
YOUNGSTOWN, Ohio (UP!) c:i obStruction of just ice.
At
the
Invitation
r1
a
West
(ierman
opportunity
for me to meet with ·
Hamilton Cwnty Common Pleas
steel
firm,
Rep.
James
A.
Trafi·
West
German
executives In the
Judge Fred Cartolano met with
Ewton's attorney Monday after· cant, D-Ohio, wlil tour a European steel Industry and talk abou t a wide
range of Issues affecting both our
roon and arranged for Ewton to be plant In February.
Traflcant
said
executives
of
countries,"
said Traflcant.
booked by the Hamilton County
Verelniste
Deutschte
Metallwerke
The
congressman
said he hopes
Sheriffs Department Friday, Jan.'
In Frankfurt, West Germany, have to "lay the foundation" for future
3.
talks with VDM and other West
Cartolano also said that Ewton's show Interest In setting up an
operation
In
the
Youngstown
area.
German
officials.
trtal date would be set March 7.
The
congressman
wUI
make
the
"I
plan
to Inform the West
Meanwhile, George Mead,
flip, scheduled lor Feb. 10-15, at his Germans about the hard· working
another ESM d~tor who was
own E'ltpense, he said.
people ln the Mahonlng Valley · I
Indicted, failed to appear at · his

at y

'

By Jllll FISHER

SANTA BARBARA, Calli. (UP!)
-Tile SQJ.bUJion tobacco Industry's
record of never having to pay
damages In a health-related suit Is
intact with a jury's rultng that R.J.
Reynolds Co. was not Hable in the
death of a man who died after
smoking three packs of cigarettes a
day lor more than half a century.
"The main Issue In this case was
personal" respqnslblllty and freedom of choice," Reynolds attorney
Thomas Workman said after Mon·
day's 9-3 verdict.
The jury, which had only one
smokl&gt;r, deliberated about nine
hours before deciding against the
family. of Jolm Galbraith, who died
ol heart and lung disease In 1982 at
age 69 after smoking Camels and
Wlnstons for 54 years.
Jury 'forewoman Stacie Prof!
said the majority was shnply not
convinced that Galbraith died of
smoking-related causes or even
that he was addicted to cigarettes.
"We agreed that smoking is
harmful ... thai II Is bad for you,"
she said. "But In this case, the
evidence just wasn't there."

Indeed, Superior Court Judge
Bruce Dodds had chastlzed the
Galbraith's lead attorney, Melvin
Belli, for bringing the case to trial
without sufficient preparation.
"We beat the 33 (Reyoolds)
laWyers and their $4 billion, but we
couldn't beat the judge too," Belll
said.
Belli, wlnse use of the Surgeon
General's report on smoking was
severely restricted by Dodds, said
he would appeal, saying the case
was replete with judicial error and
adding he had "saddle sores" from
being "ridden" bY the judge.
The case was the first of abOut 45
shnllar pending suits to reach a
jury and industry r£1lresentatlves
and stpck market ' analysts were
among the SpeCtators.
When the verdict came In, a
representative of a Wall Street
Investment firm ran out of the
courtroom to phone the news to
brokers wonied abou I the possible
effect on tobacco stock prices.
R.J. Reynolds stock closed up 1'A
Monday on the New York Stock
Exchange.
Belll and Manzione had asked for

dea~h ·suit
S:JJO,!XXl damages. No tobacco
company has ever 'been ocdered to
pay damages or has ever settled
such a .case wt~h a payment,
Reynolds lawyers -said.
Bellt argued that Galbraith, a
retired Insurance Salesman, was so
addicted to tobacco that he wwkl
rt;'!TlOVe oxygen tubes from his nOse
so he could llght up.
. But Workman dented that Galbraith was addicted.
"The evidence ... showed the
reason Mr. Galbraith smoked Is
because he loved to," Workman
said . "That was his right.
"This sends out a message that
American juries are oot sympa.
!helle to the kind of cases where
freedom of cholee ts Involved."
Galbraith's wile, Elayne, said the
suit had been a success despite the
verdict.
"I feel that we have opened the
doors and windows to let the
American public see what dying by ·
Inches Is Uke,': she 5ald.
"And I feel that In time someone
somewhere wUI be able to get a jury
to realize ,, that smoldng Is
addictive and It does cause death."

Public help sought for child
support cases in Ohio .town
BOWLING GREJ;:N, Ohio (UP! I
- Wood County officials have
turned to the public !or help In
eflorts to find parents who are
thousands of dollars In arrears on
their child support.
Wood County Crime Stoppers
Inc., a non-profit organization that
seeks Information on crimes In
exchange for a reward, has published a list of "Ten Most Wanted"
men who owe qetween $8,640 and
$21,492.
The names, taken from the
bureau of support and the prosecu·
tor's office, are among an estl·
mated 3, 700 people who have been
ordered In Wood Cou nty to make
child support payments, but have
failed to do, said James H.
Graneckl, an assistant Wood
County prosecutor who specializes

In child support cases.
Lt . WUUam Fox, coordinator of
the progam and a member of the
Bowling Green pollee department,
Monday said six of the 10 men
named on the list have warrants
outstanding.
At least 200 people are In arrears
for at least $8,1XXl, said Graneckl.
"We're talking big bucks,'' Fox
said. "The crtme Is a little different.
It's Important."
Geraldine Jensen, president of a
national organiZation that monitors
hearings lor enforcement of sup·
. port laws, heralded the Involvement of Crime Stoppers as an
hnportant step 10\Wrd publicizing
the plight of single parents who fall
to receive court-ordered payments.
"It's a crime against children, a
form of abuse against children,' '

said Jensen, who founded the
Toledo-based Action Committee
For Enforcement of Child Support
after her former husband fell
behind In hts payments. \
"You have to not ooly educate the
public thatlt'sa problem, but It wUI .
prove you wtll catch up with •
someone who Ignores their moral
responsibility,' ' she said.
Graneckl said the hoUday season •
was chosen for the Crime Stopper .
emphasis because It Is a dlltlcult • ·
time fora moUierwho Is attempting .
to support. a famlly Without a
lather's help.
Either the children do without
basic necessities, said Graneckl
"or the mothel' Is on public'
assistance and we (the taxpayers)
aresupportlngt !Fm. It's not a good
situation."

Vol.36, No . 176
. , Copyrighted t986

•

ent1ne

'

•

By S'mVE GORMAN I
Untied Press lnlernatlonal
Americans moved by the "magic" of Olristmas
· spent the holiday performing acts of good wUJ that
ranged from rescuing oil-soaked sea birds on Pacific
· beaches to feeding needy famHies free dinners of
turkey, and even Chinese food.
President Reagan aitd his wile, Nancy, stayed at
.the White House, exchanging presents In the morning
· and hosting a turkey dinner for family members and
"longtime friends, Including actress Claudette Colbert.
Lisa Paul, 23, of Minneapolis, passed up a
traditional holiday supper lor liquids, continuing a
·three-week hunger strike In support of a RuS!IIan
'friend seeking permission to leave the Soviet Union
' lor medical treatment.

The spirit ol giving was played out across the
country In acts of charity whose benefactors were as
varrted as the recipients.
"It's magic. That's what Christmas Is,'' said Roy
Elliott, a manufacturing manager who dressed up as
Santa Claus and passed out bollday gifts to 180
mentally disabled adults In Marshfield, Mass.
Nearly 200 volunteers spent Christmas providing
ftrst aid lor on-covered sea birds In Port Angeles,
Wash., and searching beaches !or others that may
bave been Injured by a massive spill from a grounded
tankl&gt;r.
An emergency center set up at Port Angeles High
School took In more than 1,000 birds for cleaning,
blow-drying and lorce-leedlng, organizers said.

•

.

stmas magtc moves
• •

•

In Commerce City, Colo., the owner of the Happy
China restaurant, Benjamin Cheng, seJVed 2,500
eggrolls and pounds of sweet-and-sour pork to needy
families, with the help of the mayor aild two city
councilmen.
More traditional turkey dinners were dished up at
other shelters.
"A Jot of .them remember past Christmases when
they were surrounded by Ia mutes and friends,"
Ralph Hughes, the director of Boston's Pine Street
Inn said ol the 600 people packing his shelter.
A homeless woman seeking shelter from the cold in
New York was found dead tnStde the Grand Central
. Terminal, unwrapped Christmas gift by her side.
At Mercy Hospital In Baltimore, Christmas magic

an

encans
came In the form of five newborn babies rough! by
nurses to their mothers' stuffed snuggly In Christmas
stoektngs.
At St. Luke's Hospital In Denver, Elysia Martinez
gave birth to a son and received a dozen red roses
from an anonymous man whose rrother died In
childbirth Christmas Day 43 years ago.
Members of he armed forces obseJVed Christmas
far from home. Among them were the B- 52 bom~r
crews on duty at Falrchlld Air Force Base, Wash.,
where six planes loaded with nuclear bOmbs stood
outside.
"One of the main reasons there Is peace on earth is
because of all those weapons out there,'' said Jst Lt.
Dave Cothran.

Ohioans
hit by
big chill

'Gallia-Meigs
;roads clear
after dusting
According to the Gallla-Melgs
Post State Highway Patrol, oo
traffic fatalities were recorded In
.either county during the Christmas
~ollday period. A light snow fell
,t:hristmas morning and another
·dusting came this morning. Troopers report all major highways are
clear whlle secondary . roads are
snow covered and tn some cases,
sUppery.
o. r..am• .COWI!y '!\'(1111811 • was
tteafed and released at Holzer
Medical Center Christmas Eve for
lnjuties received in a single-car
accident on
35.
• Jane B. Hensley, 42, of Rt. 1,
Bidwell, was treated !or multiple
bruises, hospital c:iflclals said.
The Gallla·Melgs post of the State
Highway Patrol said Hmsley was
westbound on li, when she apparently lost control of her car on a
patch of Ice and struck a guardraU.
Her car sustained moderate
damage In the 4:00 p.m. Incident,
troopers said.
A Meigs County man was cited
following a two-vehicle collision
Christmas Day on Lew Jones Road.
• Ernest Thacker Jr., 56, of Rt. 1,
Ewlngton, was eastbound on Lew
Jones. about !our-tenths of a mile
'tiast of the Jackson County line,
when the patrol saki a westbound
pick-up driven by Joseph E:Taylor,
· 18, of Rt . 1. Rutland, allegedly sUd
left of center and struck Thacker's
plck·up In the left side.
No injurles were reported In the
4:~ p.m. accident, which troopers
said caused moderate damage to
both vehicles. Taylor was charged
by .tlF patrol with laUure to yield
·ooe-halt c:i the roadway.

u:s.

By United Press International
Ohioans wbo received down-filled
coats illld other similar winter
clothing for Christmas got a chance
fl:st the gilts today as temperatu~
dipped to near zero with wlrid-chUJ
readings In the ll-below zero range.
In addition to the cold tem~ra­
tures, residents of extreme npr:
theast Ohio were digging out from
under live to eight Inches of snow
that !ell In parts of Lake and
Ashtabula counties durlnga 24-hour
period ending early today.
The snow coupled with gu~
WJnds made tt difficult to kfl€11
hlgh~ay~ open In those counties.
Bloyo1ng snow restrtcted visibility
along Interstate 90 near the Pennsylvania border.
Early morning temperatures
ranged from three above zero at
Dayton to two below at AkronCanton. Wind-chill readings ranged
from mlnus-15 at ColUITllNS to
mtnus.J7 at Oeveland.
More snow was In the forecast for
Ohio today and a travelers advisory
continued In effect for the lakeshore
areas of northeast Ohio east of
Cleveland.
One to three Inches of snow was
forecast for northern Ohio today,
whUe the rest of the state was
expected to receive one Inch or Jess
of the white stuff.

reported today.
Herma Kindred, 56, Lancaster,
was kUied Wednesday when she !ell
!rom a northbound car on Ohio 159
In Plckaway Cwnty and was htt by
two southbound autos, said a
spo~ !or the Plckaway
Coonty Sheriff's Ilepartmen!. ·
Kindred was a passenger 1n the
car driven by her daughter, Allee
WUson, aiao c:i Lancaster. when the
older wilman apparently decided to.
get out of the vehicle, the spokes·
man said. The auto was traveling
about40to45mphwhenthelncident
occurred.
The S!XIkesman said tests would
be conducted today In determine II
the Incident might be ·alcolnl·
related.
The weekend traffic vlcthns died
In six separate accidents, lncluPlng
one Wednesday, iour Tuesday and
one Monday evening. None of the
victims was wearing a seat belt, a
patrol spokesman said.
The patrol counted fatalities
resulting from accidents on the
state's public roads between 6 p.m.
Monday and midnight Wednesday.
Killed were:
Wednesday
Clrclevllle: Herma Kindred, 56,
Lancaster,
struck by two cars
on Ohio 159 tn Plckaway Cwnty.

Businesses
destroyed

when

Tue8day

Cincinnati: Ralph Mendel, 46,
Aurora, Ind., In a one-ear crash on
Ohio ~ 1n Cincinnati.
Zanesville: DanielL. Glosser, 32,
Zanesville, In a two-car collision on
a Musktngum County road.
Ravenna: Charles F. Searl. 63,
Kent, 1n a t~ro-car accident on Ohio
43 In Portage County:
Ohio 1ata11t1e1
. Cincinnati: Rosemary Hanlon,
Meanwhile, six people, Including 56, Cincinnati, In a two-car mishap
a woman who fell from a car and . on a Cincinnati street.
was struck by tiro autos, died In
Monday alsbt
accidents on Ohio roadways during
Ashland: Robert F. Ringler, 31,
the 54-bour Christmas holiday Greenwich, In a two-ear accident on
period, the .State Highway Patrol U.S. 250 In Ashland County.

REIAXE8 AFTER HECTIC NIGHT - After a
hedtc nJih&amp; of llft-l!lvlnJ, Santa Clau.l enjoys a
weiJ.eamed rest lion&amp; the Padflc at Saala Monica

beach ClutstrnaB Day. Temperatures In Southern
California were In the 808. UPI.

CIIRIII'lMA8 DINNER - HGmeie. lllftl ell
Chrttllmal Dinner lit the Pine ~ Inn Shelter In
llollton ma Chrltllmall Day. Some '110 mea and women

enjoyed at the_. dlmer as 10111eofBolloll'sG,OOO
homeleu took refupfrom thellh'eet81orthe llllday.

Man suffers injury
in attempted break-in
An alleged breaking and entering

a

A deputy at the Meigs County
Sherllrs !)epartment reported that
Black ran his car Into a ditch near
the school and said he attempted to
enter the school to get to a
teleplnne. In breaking rut a
window he severely cut his wrtst.
From there he went to a nearby
mobUe home and the residents
called the EMS who took Black to
the hospital. The matter Is stU!
under Investigation by the sherHI's
department.

·Fire damage set at $150,000

GINGERBREAD MAN - Dan Rottennan, I ~
Klngerbread mao of.Dayton, poses with five of hiS

• Two tractor tratlers and a trailer
were destroyed by ftre which struck
a large, frame garage at the Amos
Cross home on the WUI Vance Road
In the DanvUie area about8: ~a.m .
Christmas morning.
The Salem Center Fire Depart:
was on the scene and was
ISslsted by the Rutland Fire
gingerbread huUdings which Is
Dayton Holiday Festival. UPI.

011

dlspl

at the
ay )

I

Department which hauled water to
help fight the blaze which leveled
the · garage. The Joss of the
equipment alone was expected to
run about $150,1XXl. The equipment
was reportedtohavebeenleased by
Cross. Cau9e ot ~ blaze has not ·
been iletermtned.

UPI.
I

•

..
2 Sections, t 6 Pages 2&amp; Con\&gt;
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Thu'rsday, Decembfr 26, 1985

.

attempt at Meigs High School
resulted In a serious Injury to a
Rutland man early Thursday
morning.
Lonnie Black, 29. Route I,
Rutland, Is confined to Veterans
Memorial Hospital lor treatment r1
severe wrist laceration. He was
taken there by tl)e Meigs Cwnty
Emergency Medical Service all:31
'a.m. and ts reported tn satisfactory
j!Ondltlon.

Traficant to tour steel firm

•

PARMA, Ohio (UP!) - The
scene of a fire in downtown Parma
"looked like a winter wonderland"
thiS morning after more than 100
firefighters worked all night to
control a blaze that destroyed eight
businesses.
Lt. Donald McNea of the Parma
Pollee Department said water used
to estlngulsh the names had frozen
ori the collapsed and charred
remains of a small shopping
complex at the comer of Pearl and
Ridge roads, producing the winter
scene.
McNea said firefighters believe
the fire started around 7 p.m. In
Barron's Restaurant and Tavern,
located In the centerofthecomplex,
and spread, to the adjoining businesses. He said firefighters had a
dlfllcult lime fighting the fire
because o(the freezing temperatures and because there was a
problem getting the natural gas
turned off.
McNea said none of the businesses were open when the fire
started and the cause Is under
Investigation. He said although tbe
tavern was closed, there was an
open dOOr In the back, which may
be a clue !hat the fire was set.
About a dozen members of the
Parma Fire Department suffered
frost bite and were treated at the.
lnspltal, McNea said. ·The water.
used to fight the fire also Impaired
many of the firefighters wlnse suits
becam~ Ice-covered while fighting
the blaze. They solved the problem
by using halrdryers from a nearb)( · .
barbershop to defrost themselves,
':·••
McNea said.
The Intersection, which was
closed off to traffle, may remain
closed through this evening or unw
an Investigation Is complete.

�•

Dacambar 26, 1

Comment
•

The Daily Sentinel

-·Chacon a son ·go~t --:--____w,_·uia_m_F_._nuc_k_ley~__Jr:

Pomeroy, Oblo
DEVOTED Tl) THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG!I-MASON AREA

~~ ~._...,..,r-raoc:lo ...
~V -

ROBERT L. WINGETI'

Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOBHOEFUCH

General Maaa1er

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

New• Editor
LE'ITERS OF OPINION a~ welcome. Tht~y should be less than 300 words
.,. long . All leiters are subJect to editing and mu1t be sflned with name. address and
: telepbone number. No url!lgned letters will be published. Letters should be In
~ &amp;ood tastf, addressing lnues, not personalities.

:f entagon foot ~ the
chemical warfare door
• 'nle United Slates has. not bullt chemical weapons slnre llHi9 and cannot
slal't untn next fall, but the Pmtagon has chalked up a major win by
Cracking the Capitol HW qlpOSitlon to them.
; It Is likely In be ooJy a matter of time - barring any quick agreement
with the Soviets on a chemical anns treaty- before assembly work can
begin oo chemical weapons.
· 'Ale opponents cari dalm a small victory: the money approved this year
!lias lal'gl!ly locked up untll a long list d. requlremel)ts are met. But that is a
lOng way !rom the ab6ol111e refusal r1 the House betwren 1982 and 1984 to
ilccept the Idea In any fonn.
: Whtle tbe Republican-controlled Senate approved money to modernize
!he stockPiles each year, the House balked. And the House position
prevailed In cont&gt;renre committees.
. 'f!lls year the House bac&lt;ked olr a bit, and Pentagon backers were quick to
press their advantage, e'llen though they did not get Immediate production.
Even one d. the principal opponents - who vows b try again In the
8prlng wtth the next Pl&gt;ntagon budget to scuttle tbe entire proposition Concedes tbe dam has been breached. ,
: Rep. John Porter, R·lli., said, "With this (catchall sPending) bill, the foot
Is In the door and tbe blstorlc commitment the U.S. madPin not p-odudng
ibese terrlble weapons years ago will be broken."
' sPectflcally, tbe new Pentagon spending bill J;roVtdes ~ m!Uion of the
Ji-63.5 m1lllon the administration W4Jited to doearly work on a new
generation d. chemical weapons.
: The new weapons are tenned "binary" munitions because tbey contain
IWo chambers, each with a largely hannless chemical. The tv.u m1x ancl
~dangerous when·the shell Is fired or bomb Is dropped.
• Of that $126 mlllon, ~.3 million Is ftlr production fa.cllltles to buDd tbe
"blgeye" bomb, a weapon that has been !lll oo hold. Work oo tbe plant can
~ oo, but the bomb Itself cannot be buUt. That raises the posslblllty of the
argilment later thal'"because we've bullt the plant, weshouldn'tlet It go to

Waste."'

.

: In'the meantime, Congress told tbe Pentagon and General Accounting
Office to write specific perfonnanre specifications for the bomb and
~lded S6 million for testing to see !!the problem-plagued weapon can he
made to work better.
·
• F.or the controversial 155 mm artillpry shell, some $21.7 mtlllon for ·
assembly has been provided, but there Is long list d. restrlctlons oo use of
!be :money and none can be spent before Oct. 1. And there can be no final
issembly work before Oct. I, 1987.
: 'j he admtnlstratkm bas argued that restoring production, In addition to
:providing more modern and safer weapons, Is needed to prod tbe Soviet
I.Jrilon to agree on a treaty governing chemical weapons.
' "What we're trying to do Is give tbe Soviets an opportunity to rome to the
table, and give us a sale weapons system If It does come to tba t PJint," said
Rep. Bill Chappell, O.Fla., who pushed for the system during House
Clebate.
: 13arrfngthat agreement, with Its lootalreadytn the dlor, tbe Pentagon Is
likely In !becoming years to pry theopenlngwtdeenough to get almost alltt
wants.

Letter to editor
Property reappraisal rip-off
To every clttzm of West VIrginia
I ask you to mark oo your calendar
the date of Jan. 15,1986 and set that
day aside for a trlp to Charleston.
· Get together wtth your friends
and neighbors and car-pool, hire a
~s. walk, run, ride a horse oc any
otber way possible you can get to
the capital for a showdown with
your legislators concerning this
u.njust, unneeded and unfair proP:
erty reappraisal ctp.olf.
' Jan. l5 is thP day we plan to
presmt to the legislature the
"Demand ror Redress of Grlevanres" signed by many thousands of
-you good people from 52 counties of
West VIrginia
·
·
U you have· not signed the
"bemand" you may do so oo that
dily also If anyone has signed copies

lbem 1·2-3-4 In orders altogetb.•o express themselves tactfully) to of Bach plus social blal!, one
conlllcttng. A taste-sociologist, hav· say that the persistent preference reserves the rtght to pity, In the
tng himself arrivEd at tbe conclu· for Longfellow Indicates an ar· recalcitrant Invitee to tbe .Bach
slon th$t tbe flrst of the iwo tasters rested critical development. Either concert, the underdeveloped aes·
was better equipped by background
that, or an underdeveloped critical thettc senslbUitles that make an
evening of Bach more pain than
and expertenre to make a 5opblsU-. faculty.
cated reading ofthe wlne,lsentlt!Ed
Last week, In great, cosmopoU· pleasure. In other word&amp;, demJCJ'a·
to say exactly that; bdt nothing tan Fun City New York, the tlst recognition r1 lndlvld!lal rights
more. If tbe • same wine tbe supersophisticated New York ought neverto sway judgements on
"expert" classltles as tbe least gOOd Times' exrellent social commenta· the matter of quality. Even as (as
Is tbe wine thlit above all tbe others
tor Charlotte Curtis discoursed on a was true) very few cared about the
gratlltes tbe criteria of a purchaser, series of house concerts featurlng music of SchObert, stUI Schubert Is,
why, that Is till! md oft he question. Judith Norell, the distinguished
and was, subllme.
Each to his \)WI! taste.
Go back then to vernacular and
harpsichordist playing the works of
But, of course, the UJl!!rtarlan · J.S. Back (a 3001h anniversary contemporary questions of taste. A
premise can approach anarchy It celebration). Miss Curtis said It was · year or so ago, something called
the cosmoS does... One slw)uJd tbe pubUc; whtle defending lndlvld· a great Idea and Ia dl da, but the
aspartame was authorlied by tbe
guaJ'II against taste arbiters who ual lights llS5el'l ktdlvldual prefer- high societY types Invited to these
Food and Drug Administration as a
presume to say that Coca-C.ola Is ences, gOes so far as to say that ooncerts were, some of .!hem substitute fOr s~~gar. Skeptics at this
positively "better" than Dr Pepper. there Is no considered acknowledg· after two or three experiences point are agreed that the sugar
ment to be given to persons of rnanufacturlng excuses not to go to lobby did everything It could to kUI
So much 110 good, but walt now.
It Is axiomatic In the world of elevated experience. One example the next one. An excuse not to do acceptable sugar substitutes, to
here would be tbe study of critical !llmethtng - save possibly an which end It exUed cyclamates,
wine that nooeriologlstcan wtthany
contldence prescribe for everyooe. maturation. At age, oh,l3, Longfel· excuse not to be faithfUl, patriotic which are used In Europe even by
Four wines of approximately slm- low's poems attract more than and clean - Is absolutely to be white mice without any problem.
Uar quallty (defined as age, Shakespeare's sonnets. But those honored. But even as you honor the Exactly as, a generation ago,. the
content, background) can be who prefer Shakespeare's sonnets right of someone to prefer an dairy llbby ldlled margarine ftlr a
served to two people who will rank are entitled (though they should evening of social blah to an evening speU by laws forbidding It to be
colored yellow, competing with
'rutter.
~.
ETTA ~~~!i fOJn WOR'n\~41!·TELEGIZ.OM-­
Well, along came American
HULME
Ingenuity, and we got something
1&amp;-#
NE'~
'called NutraSweet. Now the awf!ll
alternative, during the long winter
c1 King Sugar's reign, has~ a
powder called Sweet 'n Low. II Is, In
tbe experience of this user, the most
revolting affront 011 the taste glands
slnre that New York state chi'blls
once descrlbed by critic Hugh
Kenner as tasting like old CocaCola mixed with battery acid. By
contrasl, NutraSweet Is just about
as good as cyclamates.
And yet• And yet, many firstclass restaurants neglect to serve
NutraSweet, confining their anti- •
sugar clients to Sweet 'n Low. The
all-American solution to this problem Is quite simple: Serve both.
And tben see which o1 tbe tv.u takes
over the PJpular taste.
But recall this: that just as It Is
forever coiTect that those woo want .
·Sweet 'n Low In preferenCE! to
NutraSweet should be free tci
exercise that preference, so others
should be free to say: . "Go ahead.
But you are really nuts, palateWise."
As we near lbe year-end, we
pause to examine the popular
assumption that tbe taste of the
tndliridual B!IOUld govern: "Cbacun
a son gout"; Some say tomatoes,
some say tomabtoes; "Secundum
aesttmatlonem Iori." All of these
are sound llbertarlan precepts, but
sometimes they are carried too far.
It's one thing to say that no ooe
should stand In the way of someone
who prefers (ugh) Dr Pepper to
Coca-Cola, anotber to say, as Ollver
Wendell Holmes said, "I happen to
prefer champagne to ditch water,
butl have no reason to suppose that

OVER
200 NEW
AND
PRE-OWNED
TO CHOOSE
FROM

WASHINGTON - President
Reagan brought a pair. of binoculars with h1m to Geneva last rmnth,
hoping he and Soviet leader Mikhail
Gorbacbev cound view Halley's
comet together.
The opportunity nevl5' arose for
star gazing, but the president spoke.
to Gorbachev about doser ties
between America's Young Astro·
nauts and Russia's Young:
Caimonauts.
The peaceful conquest of space
can begin now, Reagan !llggested,
bY bringing together wr future
space explorers. 'They will lnherlt
the 21st century, which should be a
fabulous age d. exploration, with
distant planets within rmch. The
IJ'eSldent's hope Is that Soviet and
American youngsters should lead
the world Into a new era d.
discovery, achievement and

prosperity.
Reagan establlshed the Young
·Astronaut program as a catalyst to
prepare America's youth for the
21st century, to train them In the
technologies d. tomolTOw. Whetber
they become astronauts or accountants, scientistS or poets, they wlll
need to understand tbe romputers,
lasers and robots that wt11 soon
become everyday equipment. . ·
One of the Young Astronaut
CouncU's flrsl moves, with· the
president's blessing, was to estab. !Ish contact wtth tbe Young Cosmonauts. "Our Yourtg Astronauts
want to be friends 'Yith your Young
Caimonauts," the council pro·
Plsed . "They would l!ke to exchange visits, to learn· from one
another, to share dreams .:."
Back came a letter from the
Young . Caimona~ts, signed by

When trash isn't

Sergey Trorlmenko lll)d N!kolay
Kubyshktn. "We are for .cooperation In space," the letter declar6l.
"We would llke space to remain
forever peaceful so that chUdren
could lift up their eyes to the
heavens without fear."
As the next ·step, President.
Reagan proposed at the Geneva
summit meeting that Young Astronauts and Young · Caimonauts
exchange visits. The Young Astronauts have also been ·encouraged to
write letters to Young Cosmonauts
In an attempt to open a dialogue by
mall.
The presJdent, meanwh!le, has
founded Young Astronauts International In response to requ~ts from
around the world to participate In
the program. Inquiries have been
received from 52 foreign countrles,
and Young Astronauts chapters

HURRYIHURRYIHURRYI
First Come First Served Basis!
• NO DEALERS PLEASE

1f83CADILL4C
SEDAN DeVILLE
Stock No. 20'132, 4 door , sedan. V-8.
air cond., vinyl roof , outo. ,t rans ., PS ,
PB, power windows , power seat .
power door locks , tilt wheel , crulse ,
AM / FM radio, stereo tope , radial
tires . white walls .

WAS
SI3.S95

Sale Bag'lns Dec. 26th, At 9:00a.m. Ends Dec. 31st, 12 noon.

NOW
512,595

19a5 VOLKSWAGEN
SCIRRDCCO
Stock No. 51601, 2 doors , coupe ,
front wheel drive, 4 cyl., air r:ond ., 5
speed. stand. trans ., II#IFM radio ,
stereo tope , radiolt ires , leather
bucket seats , extra keys.

WAS
$10,295

1913 VOLKSWAGEN GTI
Stock No . 51731 , 2 door , sedan , front
wheel drive , .ol cyl ., air cond . , 5
speed . AM/ FM radio , radial tires ,
bucket seats, rear window defogger.

WAS
$6795

NOW
55795

1985 MERCURY TOP4Z
Stock No . HUIO,..,. doo r, sedan. front
wheel drive,..,. cyl. , a ir cond .. auto .
trans . • PS, PB, tilt wheel , AM / FM
radio , rodlaJ tires , white walls.
bucket seats.

WAS
$9295

NOW
$8295

Stock No. 64021 , ..,. door , sedan , fr o nt
wlie81 drive, 4 cyl. , . ,. speed , PS, AM
radio, bucket seats .

WAS
$6495

Irons .. PS. PB. tilt wheel, AM/FM
NOW
$7895

NOW
55495

Stock No. MIWI , 4 doora . station
wagon, front wheel drive , 4 cyl .. . ,.
sp&amp;ed , AM / FM radio , rodlol tires.
wh ite walls , bucket seats .

WAS
$5295

NOW
54295

.

Don't forget they (the leglsla·
.
.'
.
.
ture) were out to skin yoif ln'l~ - WoeDIIUR\':•t t (NEA) ~very RD~_JII!IfWoe ialhat tread ly successful recycling program tltat serve as :an uncontrolled dtlmping · .".
with the "Tax Umltatlon Amend· bage collection ln most communities more apparent than In the Garden is "among the best iQ .the nation" with group for too many years.
. ·
•
ment" and again In 1983 with !s a mlndleu once- or twice-a-week State, where two-thirds of the S67 mu- landfill load reductions .in some comAs a result, New Jersey uid,ty bas .,
"Senate bill IO" and the are stlll ritual, but in this 11011them New Jersey ntclpallt!es now participate in wa.ste munities approaching-90 percent.
'
the highest concentration of SUper·
Y
town the process has a special rhythm recyclioc programs.
New Jersey's aggressive approach fund sites of any state in the nition oot to skin you.
that stretches from Monday through
The state government Imposes a to the problem Purves suggests 1s in
butit also has a belated commtlrrtent
. This trip to Charleston could well Friday.
surcharge of 12 cenll per cubic yard great messur~ a derens!ve re~ction to
improve waste managemen~ '. .
·be tbe rmst Important any home · Monday and 1'6eSday·arunuilictpal on aU IIO!ld-waste damped in lallf!IU)A; Mriii!Mo..._ute ·allowed itself to
owner every made to our capital collection days for food debriB, plu· then redtatrlbutea the proceeds (about
·
·
·
city.
tics and other non-recyclable mater!· .
mtllloa per year) in the form of ,
No other single Issue deserves ala. Wednesday !s reserved for picking vantl and low-Interest loans to pro- ,
our attention more than this tax up leaves, grass clippings and other mote community recycling progral"'. ·,
Y
yard debris.
.
They wort because various forma-of ,1
rtp.d.f so come one come all and I
1be high point of the procea occurs paper.from nenpapen to food P4ck; ·.
wlll meet you about noon on Jan. 1.5 on Tbtinday and Friday, when Wood· alfn&amp; comprtaea 48 percent of tiJe!en;J• '&lt;
In the rotunda of our state capital. bury residents separate their recycla· t!re solid wute stream and can .!*! ·
Robert 0 . Morgan ble waste Into u many u six different rudlly recycled. Another 14 per~nt
Rockport, W.Va. pllet - paber, cardboard, aluminllfll, Ia recyclllble class and metal. ·.. \··:
other metals, clear'glass and colored
Only about 20 percent of the $pl,ld
gluts.
waste stream - 8 percent food wasfe;
The town government receives 7 percent plastics and 5 percent othe~
tz~.ooo to us,ooo yearly from the materials - poses recycling dlfllculr':
aale of thooe recyclable matertala to Ilea so serious that burying it at land•' ·
ICI'Ip · dealen - but that additional fills !s logical.
.
·
revenue Ia relatively 1::duentlal
Woodbury, Gioucester Couqty, .
: Today Is Thur.;day, Dec. 26. the 360th day of 1985 With five 10 ftlllow.
· .. ""'e moon is approach ina Its full phase.
compared with the wute !sposal community of slightly more than ·
UY,Inp.
10,000 people a few miles south of the·.
. ,.
,
~ven !I they (~e scrap buyen), Phlladelpll!a.Camden metropolitan
•The morning slars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and ,Saturn.
•The evening star Is Jupiter.
don t pay me, I don t pve a damn, area began recycling as a voluntal'y
Those born on Ihis date are under the sign of Caprlcorn. They Include =~:n::f
:.'\1o!;.~~~ effort In 1970.
,
Aitm. George Dewey. lhe American naval hero r1 Manna. in 1837; novelist mOlt Important tblJII 18 that I'm keepA decade later, the city council ap- · .
Henry Miller In 1891; Mao Tse- tung, leader of the Chinese communist
it
the ndfiU ..
proved
a mandatory source separ~.;evolutlon, In 1893; actor Richard Wldmark In 1914 (ljle 71); entertainer In&amp; It ou1 01 1a
·
t!on program that today Hood cla!ma
Sl e Allen In 1921 (age &amp;4) d
In 19'11'
1111)
That's crucial because the nation's hu reduced the amount'of soltd wu•~ 1 .
, ey
· an comedian Alan King
'age ·
urban areas are rapidly deplelinc haUiecl to landfills by os -cen' .'-'
·On this date In history:
'
tbelr available Jandflll space - and
,
ba
... " '' ,:
&lt;1~ 1176, American forces under Gen. Geofil! Washington defe~ted the C(Jit of diapoAI'at tbe rema!nlnc
Hood • gar se collectors also eq{ ·
J:!esSlan mercenary trocps fighting for the BMtlshattlletattleofTrentOn. lila bu rtaen dramatlcaUy In recent force the law, poking, shaklns apd ·
·trt 1917• the federa1 governmenl lOOk over operation of American yealnn.N - Je , for example, ••• search
peeling Into plastic trash ba~s · lnl •
of recyc.lable materials .· · · .',
•·
r'.aOroads for the duration of World War 1.
•" rsey
~,.
• tn 1972, Harry Truman, 33rd Presldeni of the UnitEd States, died at the "tlpptna fee" paid to landfill operators
VIolators rece.lve three warnlnss
averacld fl per too u recently u the before the fl_rst fine (f ilS plus court
8,.,. of 88.
•••
late 11701 but now averape t12 per co,ta) Ia lev1ed - but penalties are '
.•1111977, Egyptian President Anwar Sadat and Israeli Prtme Mlnllter 1011 _ ind the dllpoul cott at one new rare because compliance Is almost .
~~chem Begin concluded Iheir peace talks wltbout reaching an accord. landfill.Ia fll per ton.
unlvenal.
'
· ~.thought for the day: novelist Henry Miller wrote, "If men cease to . AI a Nllllt, a p-owinc number of
In nei&amp;hborins, highly urban Cifd,
" I'd like to return this. Oh, please - don't
~e that they wlll one day become gods, Ihen Ibey :WDI811rely become communities tbrqucllout the courilry den County, Solid Waste Admln!stra\
take It PERSONAL L Yl "
~·"
bave turned to some form of re1011rce tor John R. Purves boasts of an t\Quar:

...

Stock No. 51341 , 2 doors, hard top ,

front wheel drive,

4

cyl.. S speed.

1fond . trans .. PS , cruise. AM / FM
radio, stere-o tope. radial tires,
bucket seals, r@Or window defogger.

WAS
$7A95

NOW
56495

1913 LINCOLN CO.NTtNENTAL
Stock No. 63361,4 dooro, oodan, V-8,
air cond., auto. tron1., PS, PB, power
windows , power seot, pow..- door
locks, tilt whMI , cruise, AM / FM
radio , 1tereo to~. rodlol tires , white
woll1 , bucker seats, reG' window
d.togger, pow.r mirrora, auto.
heodllght dimmer.

WAS
111 .595

NOW
$10,000

19al VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
Stock No. 51591 , ~ doors. sedan ,
front wheel dr ive , ..,. cyl .. 4 speed ,
stond. Irons ,, PB , AM/ FM radio .
rad ial tires , bucket seots .

WAS
$3695

NOW
$2695

I

tfe,U:::

•

WAS

Stock No . 64381 , 2 doors , V-8, air
cond., vinyl roof , auto. trans ., PS , PB
tilt wheel, cruise , AM / FM radio :
s tereo tope, radi al t ires , ex tra keys.

sms

~~is

Stock No. 53011 , 2 doors , 6 cy l. , a ir
cond .. auto . trans .. PS . PB. AM/ FM
radio , ste. eo tape , radial tires ,
bucket seats ex tra kevs .

Stock No. 63662, 2 door s. 6 cvl. . air
cond ., auto. trans ., PS, PB , tilt wheel,
AM / FM radio , stereo tope . rad ial
tires , white walls.

WAS
$5195

WAS

NOW
$2995
1911 CHRYSLER CORDOBA
Stock No . 51802, 2 doors. hard top. 6
•

cyl.. air cond., outo. trans ., PS, PB ,
AM radio . radial tires. white walls .
bucket seals .

WAS

NOW
$3595

$&lt;1595

HOliDAY SPECIALS

NOW
$4195

WAS

Sale
Price

'19,461.

10

WAS
$29'15

NOW
$229 5

19aO VOLKSWAGEN RABBIT
Stock No. 51361. 4 doors , sedan ,
front•wheel drlv•. ~ cyl., air c;ond., _.
speed . stand . frons ., AM / FM rad io,
radial tires , bucket seats, r.ar win·

dow defovg•r,

WAS
Sol195

NOW
514,595

WAS
S5A95

NOW
S449S

PB, power

windows , til t wheel. cruise , AM / FM
radio . stereo tope , rodlol ti res. while
letters, bucket sea ts, rear window
defogger , goug~s . ~txlro keys , T·top.
WAS
NQ\11

$9995

1979 FORD F·IOO
PICKUP

1976 CHEVY C-10

58¥¥~

Dec. 26 ... 1966 Dodge Coronet Stock# 65052
Dec. 27 •.. 1971 Chevy Vega S/ W Stock#63 133
Dec. 28. :.1971 Chevy Vega S/W Stock #63665
Dec. 30 ... 1973 Mercury Montego Stock# 63862
1 Dec. 31 ... 1966 Volkswagen Beetle Stock # 21038

Stock No. 65072, 4 doo rs. sedan , V-8.
air cond .. vinyl roof , auto. trans .. PS,
PB. power window,, power seot ,
power door locks , tilt wheel . cruise.
AM/ FM radio , radial tires , white
walls.

Stock No. 60242 . :?doors . conv. top . 4
cyL , .. speed , PS , AM/ FM rodlo , ~
stereo tope , rad ial tires . bucke't
sea ts .

Stock No . 63841. 2doors . coupe, V·8 ,
air cond., auto. Irons. , PS ,

Stod; No. 64761 , '1 doo rs , 6 cyl. , 4
speed , 1/t ton pickup. long wide bed .
rear step bumper .

WAS
$7295

Stock No . 6,.612, 2 doors. 4 wheel
dr ive . V-8, au to. trans ., PS, PB .
AM / FM rad io stereo tope , while
walls , bucket sea ts.

WAS
S•l95

Stock No . 62071 , 2 doo rs , v.a. 3 .
speed . stond . trans .. PS. AM I FM
radio s tereo lope, y, ton pickup , long
wide bed: rear step bumper . guoges .

WAS
14895

1976 FORD BRONCO

The Following lnventoiJ Will ~ Sold On The
Day Indicated Promptly At 10:00 a.m. Daily.

1977 BUICK ELECTRA LTD

•

i979MGB

1978 CHEVY. CORVETTE
SILVER ANNIVERSARY ED.

'

NOW
53395

NOW·'
$2395·

NOW
51295

$1 '1'15

'99.95

only

WAS
Soi3'1S

STICKER PRICE
'22,489.00
lUCKY DAY DISCOUNT '3,027.20

WAS
S33'1S

1977 OLDS OMEGA

EXTRA! EXTRA! EXTRA!

Stock No . 6338 1, 2 doors , 6 cy l., olr
cond., au to . trans .. PS. PB, radial
tints, white walls .

Stock No. 5339

1979 MERCURY COUGAR ,

5~f~

NOW
S319S

1980 DODGE II AN
Stoc k No. 2003 1, . ,. doors , van . 6 cyl.,
a uto . trans .. PS. PB . bucket seats ,
sho rt wheel bose, gouges .

WAS
$4295

198S FORD E·lSO VAN
Stock No . 6-"'751 , V-8, a ir cond., au la .
nons .. PS , PB . AM radio , bucket
seats , auxiliary fuel tonk .

$99.95
$99.95
599.95

WAS
St I.S9S

NOW
$10;295

NOW
$3895

NOW ·
S3295 ·
1978 CHEVY MALIBU

Stoc k No . 2,.56i, ..,. doors . ~edon . 6
a ir cond .. auto . tran s., PS, PB ,
radial t i re~ . white walls .
·

c ~l ..

WAS
$'69S

NOW
$1995

HOLIDAY SPECIALS

197aMERCURY
COUGAR XR 7

1910CHRYSLER LeBARON

1985JEEP GRAND
WAGONEER

WAS
$15.595

NOW
$1995'

Stock No . 40811 . 2 doors, hordtop , V8, air cond ., vinyl roof, auto. frons .'.
PS, PB, lilt wheel. cruise , AM/ FM 1
radio , radial tires .

NOW
53295

Stock No , 64721, 2 doors , . ,. wheel
drive . V·8, oircond .. auto. Irons ., PS,
PB , power windows,. power door
locks, tilt wheel, crui se. AM / FM
radio , stereo tope , radial tires ,
bucket seals , gouges, power reor
gloss.

1980 FORD T·BIRD

Stock No. 63711. 2 doorcoupe, 6 cyl. ,
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a

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already have been formed In 18
countries.
Footnote: The president has
encourage&lt;~ elementary arid secondary schools to form Young
Astronaut chapters and participate
In tbe studies that wlll lead to
t:Xporatlon and settlement d. other
worlds. ·The Idea Is to make
schoolwork Jess rorblddtng by
dramatizing that It Is the key to the
.
universe beyond.
A pre.ldentlal letter to 75,(lX) : · •
schools has already brought. mOre . . ·
than Sl,(lX) responses. Although the ; , ·'program has been operational less .• : . .
than a year, hundfe!ls,ofthousan~ . :
of Young Astronau~ have a~ ·...' :· .
signed up. ChUdren betwren. the .:. : ::
ages d. 6 and 16 ,can~~ )'lid~ . ;. :
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Avenue, N.W., Washlnit'qn; · DC . · · ·
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Coopet;ation in .space.__J,_ac~k--,-A_nd_e_~so_n_&amp;_;_J_o_se=--ph_S_:_p_ea_r

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t~~~~~~w:::~ehelpedget
signatures
many thanks.

The Daily

Page-2-'-The DaiJy Sentinel
Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio
Thursday, December 28, 1986

111 Court Street

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•

�"Po:--4-lhe Daily Sentinel

Bengal coach proud,
despite 7-9 record
CINCINNATI (UP!) - Clnclnnail Bengals coach Sam
Wyche, whose team finished 7-9,
understands fans who were
disappointed by the Bengats·
performance, but he hopes they .
are understanding of the team's
efforts as well.
"There are a lot of disappointed fans who think we should
have had a better record or
maybe we should have won a
game here or there that ,we
didn't win," Wyche said. "I hope
they'll understand somewhere
along the line what we're In lor
every time we go out.
"It's a tough contest and all we
can demand of them · and
ourselves is that they make the
effort to win every Sunday. And
they did, including the last one,
which didn't count. I'm proud of
our team."
Wyche's comments came at
the beginning of what will be a

Thursday, December 26, 1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

long winter for Bengal players
and fans alike. Cincinnati, which
many said was one of the most
talented teams In the league,
including some Bengals, faDed
to live up to pre-season
expectations.
It was thesecorid losing record
In three years for the i3engals
(8-8 last year, Wyche's first, 7-9
in 19Kl under Forest Gregg) and
the third year in a row in which
they failed to mak.e the playoffs.
Wyche, an admitted &lt;ptlmlst,
said 1985 will serve as a learn!ng
experience.
"They know they missed a
chance this year and they are
ready not to fall short next
year," he said. "If you're a real
pro and you make a mistake,
you analyze what happened,
lllw it oocurred. And experience
has taught you a new lesson and
you don't make that mistake
again.

Thursday, December 26, 1985

Slow s~a:rt crippled .Bengals' playoff chance~
CINCINNATI (UPI) - The .•
Bengals' season-ending loss to the
Patriots provides a . tidy little
synopsis for the team's whOle
season.
Against New England, the Bengals played miserably in the Drs!
half and traUed at halftime, ~- In ·
the second half, the offense shifted ·
into a higher gear, · the defense
stiffened, but ... .
But the Bengals were unable to
overcome their horrendous start
and eventually lost the game, :W·23.
The same can besaldforthelryear,
In which they finished 7-9.
If there Is one team that should
know the lll effects of a poor start,
It 's the Bengals, Last year, their 1-6
break from the starting block kept
them from making the playoffs.
Wliming six of their last eight
games, though, made them a
pre-season favorite to win the AFC
Central Division this year.
Whereupon they promptly lost
four of their first five games to open
the 1985 season. From that point on,
they played better than .500 football. In the AFC Central this year; a
winning record would have nearly

nents' 40-point games to a halt . In
one three-game span they surrendered only 40 points.
But by the time the defense had
righted itself, the offense began
floundering. Second-year pro Boomer EsiaS9n took over the quarterback duties from Ken Anderson in
the third week of the season and
went on to post some sparkling

lapped the field.
The primary culprit of the club's
poor start was the defense. The
league's top-rated unit just a few
years ago, the Bengals gave up an
astounding 437 points In 1985, a club
record, and the inost In the AFC.
A mid-season swltcb to the
"Bear" defense employed so eft€&lt;;·
lively by Chicago brought oppo- .

HQOp shoot winne~ named
Lewis Bush, dtairman of tiW
Galllpolls #107 Elks Lodge annual
Hoop Shoot Contest, bas announced
the Winners and runners-up. The
contest was opeJl to both boys and
girls In the following age categories: 8-9 years old, 10-ll years old,
and 12-13 years old. The event Is an
annual contest open to contestants
!rom Gallla, Meigs, and Mason
counties.
The winners In each age category
wlll advance to the dlstrlctcompetltion which wlll be held Jan. ll, at
Jackson Hlgh School.
The winners and runners-up are
lin that order) :

· Winner, Runner-up, Boys 8-9:
Chris Gulntber, Green Elemen(ary

and Tommy Morgan, Rio Grande
Elementary; Girls 8-9: Jessica
Ccxlner, Portland Elementary and
Michelle Martin, Clay Elementary.
Bays 10-ll:' Darin Smith, Bidwell
Porter Elementary and Scott Lisle,
Syracuse Elementary. Girls 10-11:
Mandy Murray, Washington Elementary and Heather Huestis. Oay
Elementary . Boys 12-13: Robbie
Skidmore, GAJHS, and Joshua
Codner, Portland Elementary .
Girls 12-13: Dena Greene, Green
Elementary and Christy Lewis,
Sou thwestem Elementary.

Long wait over for Giants;
seek revenge against 49ers

numbers. The left -hander completro 58 ~rcent of his passes for
3,44.1 yards and 27 touchdowns, and
tlu-ew only 121nteroeptlons. (Anderson's team records, set In the
Bengals' Super Bowl season, 1981,
are 3,754 yards and 29 rn passes.)
But In a · critical two-game
stretch, the offense could manage
no more than two field goals In
either game, and the Bengalsended
up bsing to. the Raiders, 13-6, and
the Browns, 24-6.
The loss to the Browns proved to
be the most damaging. The Benga\5
knew going into the game that
winning it was vital to their playoff
hopes; they , played their most
lackluster game o! the year.
Consequently, the Browns ended up
winning the division with a record
of 8-8, just ooe game better than the
Browns.
But in true 1985 Bengal rollercoaster fashion, the offense rebounded to score three touchdowns
in the first quarter of each of the
next three games.
In two of thnse games, the
Bengals took it the NFL's Texas
teams.

Jets-Patriot matchup could
be filled with the unexpected

•

EAST Run!ERFORD, N.J. (UP!) - When the
Ne\vYork Giants made the playoffs In 1981, they were
just happy to be tllere after a 17-year absmce. Last
year, they still were not sure they belonged perbaps because they needed lots of help from other
teams in the fil)al weeke!ld to qualify.
The 19@5 Giants are proud oi their season and
believe they have as much right as anybody Ill be In
the playoffs. They are notabou t to back down Sunday
from · the San Franctsco 49ers, the team will
eliminated the Giants In their last two post- season
appearances.
"You never know how long you'r~ going t9 have to
walt for another chance," Giants coach Bill Parcells
said. "I've got some key veteran players who have
waited 10 years for their chance, guys Hke Harry
Carson; George Martin, Rob Carpenter, Don
Hasselbeck, Bnld Benson, Gordon King ... you think
these guys want to walt untO next year?"
Carson, for one, is tlredofwaltlngfor next year. The
Inside ltnebacker has spent 10 seasons with the
Giants, most of them losing ones. He's not sure how
many more he has left.'
"I have no future," Carson said. "You can't hold

The Daily Sentinel-Page 5

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

anything back. Last year we had ihe abUity to do thEi
job and we didn't. This year we go hack for another
opportunity."
.
Carson wrote a message on the blackboard In the
Giants' lockerroom before Saturday's ~10 playoffclinching victory QVer Pittsburgh. The message told
the players to remember 'the long, hot days oftralnlng
camp, how hard the club has worked to get thls far
,
and that It was now-or-never.
Other veterans spoke to the club before the game.
Hasselbeck, who played In a Super Bowl with the
Raiders and made two playoff appearances with New
England before joining the Giants this season,
reminded the players they might never get th1s far
again.
Martin, the Giants' pass- rushing speclallst, didn't
expect to be here th1s time. At the end of the 1984
season, Mylln -made up his mind to retire and
become a businessman In California. He reconsidered
after Parcells asked him to come back.
"lflgured 10 years was enough," sald Martin, who
has. been with the Giants since 1975. "It was 10 years of
futlllty, by and large, 10 years wltlxlut grabbing that
brass ring.

NEW YORK (UPI) - The New
York Jets and New England
Patriots have seen each other
enough th1s year to expect their
AFC wlld-card game to hinge on the
unexpected.
The Jets and Patriots meet
Saturday at 4 p.m. EST in the
anticipated cold and wind In East
Rutl)erfoi'll, N.J., with the winner
earning a trip to Los Angeles to
meet the Raiders in the AFC
semifinals.
The Al"C East rivals spilt their
two regular-season nieetlnga this
year with both games turning on big
· plays by the defense. The Jets lost
20-13 in Foxboro, Mass., due in part
to a goal-line fumble by running
back Tony Paige with the score r.6.
New England quarterback Steve
Grogan took advantage of the
mlslake and drove the Patriots 92
yards tor a go- ahead TD.
In the second encounter, won by

the Jets 16-13 in overtime at East
Rutherford, N.J.. It was New
England which lost a TD near the
goal line. With New York leading
6-3, the Patriots' _Irving Fryar
fumbled on the Jets' 1. Two plays
later New York's Ken O'Brien
connected with Wesley Walker on
an 88- yard TD strtke.
While in both games the offenses
overcame the setbacks and tied the
score, the defenses' ability to come
up with the big play cannot be
overlooked.
"When you think of the Jets you
think of defense," said New England running back Craig James,
who rushed for 202 yards In the two
games.
James was the only player to gain
over 100 yards against the Jets with
his 1~yard day in New Jersey. He
singled out nose iacl&lt;le Joe Klecko
as the key to the Jets' success.
"Klecka just seems llke a tough

m the
first game against New England .
rut was nailed six times in the second contest.
The Palrlots will have to contend
with a somewhat healthy Freeman
McNeil- which Is more tha n they
have had to on the previous two
occasslons.

Knicks dump
Celts, 113-104
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Memb&lt;&gt;r: UniH&gt;d Prrss ln!Prnallonal .
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The New York Knicks, woo had
not beaten Boston since their fi erce
semifinal playoff se1·ies of 1984- or
many other teams, for that matter
- overcame a 25-point thirdquarter deficit Wednesday to down
the Celtlcs 113-104 in double
overtime. ·
Roolde center Patrick Ewing led
the charge with a ca reer- high 3f .
points, including 18 in the fourth
quarter, and 11 rebounds.
The Knlcks won their third
straight, equaling their longest
streak of the season. Bnston fell for.
the fifth time in nine games.
Kevin McHale led theCeltics with
29 ppbints, Robert Parish added 24
and Larry_Bird 23. Rory Sparrow
had 22 points for the Knleks.
New York scored 1 point in the
first 5: 21 of the third quarter, and .
trailed 58-33 when they launched a ,
_comeback, spurred by the crowd of
17,481.
With 2:23 left in regu lation,
Ewing pulled the Knicks within 2
points with a hook . Sparrow tied it
86-86 with 34 seconds left.
Knicks starters Louis Orr and
Pat Cummings fou led out in the
first overtime, but with 1: 37 left.
New York rallled from a 5- point
deficit to tie It 97-97 on Treni
Tucker·s 3-polnter with 11 seconds
remaining. New York outscorl'd
Bos~on 16-3 in the first 1:34 of th.._ .
second overtime to ensure the
victory .
In the only other game, the Trail
Blazers beat the Los Angeles
Clippers 121 -107 in Portland, Ore.
Kikl Vandeweghe scored 26 points
to lead six Trail Blazers In double
figures. The Clippers were pa ced
by Marques Johnson's 31 points.

531 JACKSON PIKE · RT J5 WEST
Phone 446-4524
MAT!~[£ 5

SA1

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EVERY

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paid at Pomeroy,

I

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPI Sporls Writer
It was, according to coach Huble
Brown. "a magnificent Christmas.

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The Daily Sentinel

hard-nosed guy. He'salwayscrea iing a disturbance in your game
plan," said James.
While there is no way to prepare
for the unexpected, the Jets know
they wUI be facing one of the best
linebackers in the league in Andre
Tippett.
Tippett led the AFC with 16 Y,
sacks this year.
"First of aU he's (1lppett ) is a
great player," said Jets quarterback Ken O'Brien. "But our offense
is not going to change to avoid
Tippett."
New York coach Joe Walton said
Tippett poses special problems.
"They move him around, sometlrnes as a linebacker and sometimes as a down lineman," he said .
"You have to mix up the protection
on him."
New York ought to be working on
protecting O'Brien. He was sacked
an NFL-record 62 times this year.

---------------------------------------~----------------------, O'Brien wasn't sacked at all

Merchants
gain from
Citrus Bowl
ORLANDO, Fla. (UP! I - Merchants In Orlando, where the Citrus
Bowl wlll be played Saturday,
should see substantial dividends
trom the visitors to this year's
game.
A study says the out-of- towners
should inject more money Into the
Orlando economy than last year
because Ohio State and Brigham
Young are farther from Florida
than the 1~ bowl teams.
Last year''s Citrus Bowl featured
Florida State and Georgia. It
brought In $5.9 mUllan In direct
revenue and added $11.1 million in
gross regional product, according
to the study by the University of
Central Florida at Orlando.
However, the study says, "The
close proximity of the 1984 schools
to the Orlando area tended to
minimize the length of slays and
total expenditures."
The report, which was Issued
prior to selection of teams to pllay in
this year's game, also says If teams
were further than one day's drive
from Orlando the Citrus Bowl
would "result In a considerably
larger impact on the loca I
economy."
Nearly all of ll,!OJ tickets sent to
Ohio State have been sold In Ohio,
and at least G,OOJof the7.00ltlckets
offered to BYU have been purchased in Utah, said Chuck Robe,
executive director of the Citrus
·Sports Association.
. That compares with 12,001 tickets
sold to Florida State and 8,500 sent
to Georgia last year.
Robe estimated a combined total
of 16,00J residents of Ohio and Utalh
wlll attend Saturday's game. And
he said, "Most of them will stay at
least twice as long as those who
came to last year's game."
Rohe's predictions along with
projections of the study, which was
spansored by Barnett Banks of
Florida Inc .. have raised expectations the 19E5 Citrus Bowl could
bring $ll million or more to the
Orlando economy.
Saturday's kickoff Is scheduled
for 12:30 p.m. EST, with the game
televised nationally. A parade
through downtown Orlando Friday
night begins at 6:30p.m. and will be
televised In 49 states, Canada and
parts of the Caribbean.

•

)

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3 PIECE

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JUST ARRIVED
REGULAR SJ299 &amp; SJ399

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~

SUN

I

�P9.-6-The Daily Sentinel ·

Thursday, December 26, 19$6

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

December 26, 1986

tNorseth shines in
Blue-Gray Classic
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!) -

•

~

Kansas quarterback Mike Norseth

: says he liked the a!rbomeoffenseof
Purdue coach Leon Burtnett - and
~ professional scouts at the Blue·. Gray All-Star Football Classic sure
•: liked what they saw from Norseth.
;
The Jayhawks' field leader ans• wered some questions with conll• dence and control In the 48th annual
' Christmas Day contest, leading the
North squad roached by Burtnett to
a
27-20 victory over the South.
J
•
Norseth connected on 18-of-27
~ passesfor228yardsandwasnamed
: the game's Most Valuable Player
• alter hitting Steve Griffin of Purdue
• with the wlnnlng 16-yard touch·
: · down pass In the third quarter.
.: ; "The MVP trophy Is a great
~ honor for me and our school,"
,; Norsethsald. "Wecamedownhere
: ;and had a great time and won ... and
:· ;I sure like the Purdue style of

...

~ -offense, I

I

~

~

·•
:~
:.'\
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-:;
-;
::
'•
"•.
'",·
"
:::
:
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Burtnett led the Blue offense and
Bruce Arlans of Temple coached
tiE wlnnlng defense, while coaches
Galen Hall of Florida and Eddle
Robinson . rt Grambling took the
Gray llss.
"Michael did a great job,"
Burtnett said. "It's tough to come in
here and adapt to a new offense
right away."
But that'sjuS1 what rmrethan :m
pro scouts were looking for when
they came to Montgomery for
(ractlce week. Notre Dame's Allen
Pinkett, who scored twlce and w.on
Blue offensive honors, called It
"enhancing our NFL draft
position."
, "We were really determined to
;win this one," said Pinkett, the
;all-time leading rusher for the
-Fighting Irish. "The North had lost
:those last three games."
:: Flortda's Neal Anderson scored
cfw!ce for the South, and the Gray
:Picked up single TDs from Napo;Jean McCallum of Navy and Kent
Jlagood of South Carolina.
• But Norseth prevailed In the
sub-freezing temperatures at Mont·

t

•.
;
~

~
~

;:
::
...
~
:;
~
~

:
..

. HONOLULU (UP!) -

Wednesday toward prepara-

tor the Atlantic Coast Conferseason.
.
Wallpack defeated No. 12
N,evalla-Las Vegas M-73 &lt;;hrlstmas
to wln the Chainlnade ClaS$1C.
the consOlation game, Stanford
Chamlnade 77-59 behind Greg
}Mier'sOO points.
Ernie Myers placed a defensive
~1p on UNLV's Anthony Jones
helped key a second- half Spree
the Wallpack ran their record to
"We've really progressed since
the start of the season," Wallpack
coach Jim Valvano said. "We're
'getting better each tlmeoutandoor
ptnuys (Chris Washburn, &lt;llarlf:s
Qlackleford and Pano Fasoulas)
~ using their size.
: · "The work of our guards (Nate
1/1cMUian and Myers) was really
significant. They handled the presSure defense well."
, : Myers, McMllllm and ShackleofOrd each scored 4 points during a
•lli-6 run at the start of the second
'halt, allowing N.C.. State. to pull
~ay. The closest the Rebels came
'thereafter was 5 points late In the
'gaine. The 'Wolfpack led 40-38 at
halftime.
"They'll ~t more defensive
pressure on us than any team fte
of Texas-Arlington and Carl Carter (25) of Texas Tech Christmas~
at Montgomery, Ala. In lite annual Blue-Gray FootbaD Classic. UPL:

Scoreboard
NHL results
NATJlNAL IIO()(EV lEAGUE

w-. to.lerfnce

Pflhictnh'Won
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Phlladf&gt;lphi
26 9 0 52
Wastdngtoo
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l:l 11 9 M
NY RangKs
lti 17 2 loa
Plttlbu11h
14 17 ~ l2
New J('ney
13 19 1 'lT
i\damt Dtvhlon
Queboc
18 13 2 . .11
MontR'al

17 1:1

Boston
Bu!fa)o
Hartlbrd

16 n
16 16
lti IS
Cunpbel fonlemlet

4

II

6 II
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:: rebound while Norih Culllaa Stlte'• P.......,.. r-IM (lilht)
·~ · reachelln an arm durtnc the Ch8mlnde a-le In IIIIIOium Oll'l!Cma8
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••

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"

HEMMED IN - North running back Rueben Mayes (32) of
Washington Slate Is hemmed up by South defenders Tim McKyer (23)

I•

mandatory eight-count, we wen! up
by seven and when I woke up we
were up by 10. Maytie I'D save that
again tor later."
,
The Wolfpack scored the game's
first 6 points and were·ahead by 9
with 13:50 lett ln the half. UNLV
rallied behind Annon G!lllanl,
Banks and Graham,
The Rehels took a :!2-21lead on a
field goal by Jarvis Basnight with
9:28 remaln!ng ln the baU. The lead
then changed hands five times and
the score was tied seven times untll
consecutive Deld goals by Washbum, ~vtln Binns and Myers put
tile Wollpack ahea.d for good.
In the consolation game, the
Cardinal, 6-4, led 42-31 at halftime.
A 14.0 run early In the second half
Increased Stanford's lead to el-45.
&lt;llamlnade, 5-7, was paced by
Rod McCray with 26 points.

Edmonton

,.~ :unbeaten

~
ROCK SPRI]'lGS - Steadily·
• Improving Athens steps In front of
: the. Meigs firing line here Saturday
: astheunbeatenMaraudersgoafter
~ their ninth straight win ln boys
t non-league basketball action.
~ The Bulldogs, 4-3 overall and n
• In SEOAL play, has lost 34-po!nt
• decisions to Zanesville In thetr
#
~ lastest outing (7844) and to Meigs
; (93-59) ln the season opener. But
: between Urnes, Athens has de·
r. feated VInton County (63-58), Cir·
~ clevllle (64-52) , Wheelersburg (54·
: 47), and Jackson (54-45) while
~ j oslng only to Galllpolls (55-42).
..,. . Coach Fred Gibson's Bulldogs
:=:~tch-up well height-wise against
;=:..the Marauders as the ten-year
t::J:oach plans to start 5-9 junior P. J.
t.,Lyons at point, 6-3 sophomore Tim
• .• Adams and 6-0 senior Geoff
•·.
,, Dabelko at wings, and !Hi senior
; Matt Jordan and 6-4 Steve Mac: combs at the posts.
~
In the earlier meeting, Meigs
,. applied a strong mid-court double
t. team defense that forced numerous
I.
•I Athens turnovers and resulted In
• many oncontested Meigs baskets.
~ It Athens' has shored up their
: backcourt, they'll provide much
~ stiffer competition the second
•· go-around.
t With eight straight wins Including
'· five road wins, Coach Greg
'· Drummer's charges look nearly
•·
~ unbeatable at times and have
proven themselves under pressure
:: as three of Meigs' v!ctortes were
~ : three points or less.
•• The Marauders lead the TVC
with a 7-0 mark, one and a half
' games above second place Belpre
and Warren Local at 5-1. Meigs
comes off a 70.59 win over Warren
,. Local last Friday.
~ . Prior to Saturday's game, the
~ BuDde~ host TVC member Alex·~ ~nder at Athens High School. That
•· game was ortg!nally scheduled for
~; Ohio University's Convo along with
:~.. Southern and Peebles' game, but
~ that site was changed.
~ :· Probable starters for tiE Ma~ rauders Include the all-senior cast
,. of 5-7 Brad Robinson and 5-9 Rlck
;; Wise at guards, G-0 Shawn Baker
: and G-5 Mike Chancey aI forwards,
"' and G-6 Lee Powell at center.
'. Juniors Huey Eason and J . R.
~. Kitchen both will see action early
~ and often. Eason has C!Jme off tiE
: bench with 26 points In his last two
: games while Kitchen has looked
w better every outing.

play," Valvano said. "They just
lai!ep coming at you."
Washburn scorEd 17 points and
. grabbed l3 rebounds while Myers,
wbo held Jo11es to 4 points, and
Beanie Bolton each had l3. McMillan added 12 poiDts and 10 assists
and Shackleford and Paho Fasou·
la5 scored lO points each.
For UNLV, 9-2, Armon Hlll
scored 24 poln\5, Freddie Banks
added 18 and Gary Graham 16.
Jones, the Rebels' top scorer,
entered the game with a 16.2
average.
.
N.C. State's plan was Ill deny the
ball to Jones and Banlcs. Banks did
oot score over the first seven
minutes c1 the second half when the
Wolfpack bull! their lead.
''They are an outstanding team
because they are so big," UNLV
coach Jerry Tarkan!an said. "They
didn't really surprtse us. With their
defense our guys would get by their
man and run Into a &amp;-10 guy. We
need one d. our big guys."
UNLV was without center John
Flowers. He was Injured during
(ractlce Monday and played three
minutes, going scoreless.
Late in the gameVa!vanotoppled
over from dizziness, apparently
from standing too fast.
"I got up to yell and the rext thing
1 knew I was on my keester," he
said. "When I went d(lwn for the

... j l

••. ~

North

~al'!lllna State took a stgnt!lcant

gomery's Cramton Bowl. He hit
Griffin with 7:45 left in the third
quarter and t!En threw a tv.u-polnt
conversion to Stanford's Greg Baty
to ensure the win:
Stelle Bradley rt Indlana also .
quarterbacked tiE Blue squad,
taking over In the second quarter
after field goals of 41 and 25 yards
by Don McAulay of Syracuse.
Bradley directed a nine-play.
66-yard drive that ended with
Pinkett's !-yard dive over t!EHneto
close a Gray lead at 14· 12. The
South had gone ahead 14-ii on two
passes from Its own leadlng
quarterback, Ken Karcher of
1\ilane.
Karcher led the Gray on Its first
march alter linebacker Douglas
Landry of Louisiana Tech Intercepted a Norseth pass at the Gray
36-yard llne. McCallum's 39-yard
dash set up a 19-yard scoring strike
to Kent Hagood of South Carollna.
A tumbled kickoff recovered at
the Blue 15-yard llne by Aaron
Pearson of Mississippi State set the
Gray up for Its second touchdown .
Two plays later, Karcher threw a
15-yard scortng pass to Anderson.
The Blue pulled ahead 19·14 with
7: 12 left In tiE half on a 65-yard
drtve capped by Pinkett's 1-yard
run. After a failed ooslde kick, the
Gray took 0ver at tts own 40-yard
line and Willie "Satellite" Totten d.
Mlss!Ss!pp! Valley State led the
South downf!eld for Anderson's
1-yard run that made II !1·19.

•

The Daily Sentin'ei-Page-7

C State, Stanford triumph

~

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Ohio

Double
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I

COPYRIGHT 18M · THf: KAOOEft CO. ITEMS AND MICES 0000

THVIIIIDAY, DiCEMIEft 21. TtiROUGH 8ATUfiOAY, DECEMIEJI 21. 1-.
IN tlALLfOI~ I PQIIEIIOY SlOAt~'

WI ftESEAIII THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANT!TilS. NONE SOLO TO
DEALERS •

�The Daily S~ntinel

--~

. ~~"'

/

the spotlight

...
•,••
~\

BY CINDY OUVERI

:.·
..:. .

Coun&amp;y Extension Agent,
Home ~odes

In addition, you soould:
Check b;tttery-powered equipment before the storm an1ves. A
portable radio or television set JliiiY
be your only contact with till \\lll'ld
outside tbe winter storm. Also
check emergency cooking facUlties
and flashlights.
· Check your suwly of healbtg
fuel. Fuel carriers may not be able
to rmve if a winter storm buries
your area In snow.
Check your food and stock an
extra supply. Your suwlles slx&gt;uld
lnclu!E food that requires no
cooking or refrtgeratk&gt;n In case of
power failure.
Prevent fire hazards due to
overheated coal or· otl blmlng

". If the thought of winter storms,
shoveling and endless
makes you want to buy a
one-way ttcket to till Islands, you're
'•lilt
. al(lne. However, If you, tlke
·~host fA us, plan to face the wtnter,
::yOu should do so as safely as
"'pOssible. The following mini artt·
):l!!s will help you recome preparro
t!f potential winter storm hazards.
J;l:l;t these somewhere for till entire
·~~»nstant
~!filing

lamUy.
..

'

Always keep a step ahead of
winter storms by listening 1o the
- lalest weather warnings and billet ~
• lii5 oo radio and television.
~

.,.
· Family medicine

•

~·-·

By The Bend
Facing winter's chilling troubles outside
'

~n

'From Consumer Reports:

'IJ!ursday, Deceml!ar 26. 1986
Page-S

'

stoves, fireplaces, heaters, or
furnaces.
Stay Indoors during storms and
severe cold spells unless In peak
physical condition. If you must go
out, dress . properly and avoid
over-exertion.
DRESS SENSIBLY·
Winter weather requires special
dressing, and In severe weather,
your Ufe could depend on lt. When
outdoors, wear loose-fitting, light·
weight, wann .clothlng In several
layers. Layering Is Important stnce
you can remove them to prevent
perspiring and subsequent chill.
Outer garments should be ttghtly
woven, water repellent and hooded.
The hood should prot~t much of

your face and cover your mouth to
ensure wann breathing and protect
your lungs from the extremely cold
air.

Remember that entrapped, tnsU·
Iatlng air, .waniled by bodY heat Is
till ll!st protection agalhst cold.
Layers of protective clothing are
nnore elfectlve. and ettlclent than
single layers of thick clOthing.
Mittens, snug at the wrists, are
ren~ proteclton than lingered
gklves.
:
Also, keep In mind that warm
blots are the ll!st preventive tor
cold fleet ,In winter weather. Since
there's a type ilr every occasion,
choose till boot most pracitcal for

your oulbtg.
AUTOMOBILE PREPARATIONS
If your car has not already been
completely lnspectro and winter·
!zed, have II done before you
become stuck or stranded In a
storm. In case you 'do become
lncapacltatro In a storm, you
soould be equipped to handle the
emergency by carrying a winter
storm car kit.
Sjlggested lteqJS to carry In·
elude: blankets or sleeping bags;
matches and candles; facia!' '
tissues; paper towels; extra ckl·
thing; hlgb..Calorte, nonperishable
food; compass and road maps;
knife; first aid kit; shovel; sack d

sand; flashlight or
windshield scraper;
bles; tow chains;
gulsb:!rs; catalytic

,.· this?

· Answer: You may have a
·mndltlon called atrial fibrillation.
This Is a common abnormality in
the electrical activity oftb:! top two
dwnbers of the heart, or the atrla.

:Your Social Security:
This Is the time of year for all
t!lDse appropriate "let's take a look
back" artiCles that reflect on the
past year. Don'tlookfor metobe an
~lon. ...I'm going to do the
l8l'lle thing because 1~ has heeil a
¥ery eventful year for Social
Security.
; Without a doubt the event ct most
~cance was the celebration ol
:OClal Security's 50th anniversary
911 Aug. 15. It was truly an
American celebration as commem·

.

The atria receive blood from till
lungs and the rest of till body and
push It Into the lower chambers of
the heart. The lxlttom parts ot the
heart are the main pumping
chambers for rmvlng blood to till
lungs and body.
Atrlal flbrtllatlon causes the atria
to beat as fast as 400 times per
minute (75 reais jJer minute Is
normal ). Although the lower
chambers of the heart do not work
as rapidly as the atria, they can
reach up to m beats per minute.

If the condition · persists un·
treated, It can lead to heart failure
or clotting In the heart. The rapid
rate requties rmre oxygen by the
heart and tbus aggravates chest
pain and coronary artery disease.
Question: Are there other symptoms of atl1al fibrillation besides a
racing heart?
Answer: With this electrical
disorder, the heart can race for a
few minutes, for oours or even
continuously. You may feel d1121·

from airta:t fibrillation?
Answer: , No cause be ilund for
atrial flbrUlation In only about 10
percent of eases. Most people who
contract this disorder have had
rheumatic heart dlsmse with invol~
vement of the mitral valve or have
heart damage from high blood
pressure and coronary artery
dlsmse. Patients are also generally
over 50 yvars old.

'

Question: How Is atrial fibrilla·
tlon treatro?
Answer: Atrial flbrDlatlon can be
well controlled by medication. One
oommon drug which sklws the
heart rate considerably Is dlgttalls.
New drugs called beta blockers and
calc1un1 antagonists are also sue·
cessfulln controDlng atrial fibrilla·
tton. Electrical shoclt treatment
can convert the almormal rhythm
to a mrmal one for some patients, .
as well.

aw~

ceremonies, and other

activities.

In conjuctlon with the 50th
anniversary, a study was commls·
sklned by the AmericanAssociation
of Retired Persons as a report card
(II the 50 years of Social Security.
The findings were amther signlfl·
cant plils for Social Security In 191!1.
The overwhelming majorjty of
toose polled believed the system
Important and necessary and
wanted II continued, clearly estab-

llshlng the program that was
considered by some a radical
experiment In 1935, a mainstream
American Institution In 1985.
Another study showed that people
felt the service ~ved by Social
Security was of high quality and
among the best of all governmental
agencies.
·
191!1 also marked the m ann!·
vei'sary d. Medicare. This program
has come to provide medical
Insurance for over :rJ rniUion

signal light;
booster . ca·
fire ex tin·
heater; and

axe.
Pld You Know That...Signs of
hypotb:!r:nla (a dangerous lower~
lng of the body temperature) are
cold, cool skin, shivering, putty,
bluish skin, a body temperature
below 95 degrees. If someone you
know exhibits these symptoms
followtng exposure to extreme
temperatures, contact your physi·
clan Immediately. For additional
Information on hypothermia, con·
tact till Meigs County Extension
Office at 002-6696.

1 By RICH EXNER
Untied PM. IDternallonal
~ If you got a Swatch watch for

Christmas, join the crowd.
- ~ They were going so fast that

fetaUers across Ohio could oot keep
·.lhe shelves ftlled.
• "Every time we got an order In,
.we sold out," said Bruce Campbell,
-~:t of administration for the
Co., which operates •11
lltores In northeast Ohio. "We've
PI out many times on Swatch
~tches."

· ~ Stepre~ Thorpe, senior vice
pres~t of the May Co., said the
linn's 10 stores In northern Ohio
..liad the same problem.
-:~. "Swatch watches were terrific,"

he said. "Probably noretallerc;ould
get.enoogh d them."
It looks like the Swatch w'!tch has
taken Its place next to Cabbage

&lt;Esplle having slil fewer shopping
days lietween Tlumksglvlng and
Christmas.
In fact, several Cooks and Zayre

Patch dolls
and In
video
games
as Pat
this
year's
fad gift
Toledt,
said
Fowler, a spokeswoman for The
Lion Store.
"Swatch has been great," said
Janet Block, vice president of
public relations for the downtown ·
Cincinnati Shllllto Rlkes. "Coca·
Cola clothes, which are new this
year, have been outstanding. And
we have lllen seUing a lot of toys,
electronic items and fragrances."
More than the "hot" Items were
selling at a brisk pace as virtually
every ret~ller contactro reported
an Increase in business this year,

dlsoount stores
state
operated
24 hoursacross
a daythe
through
Christmas Eve.
"Even with till six less days, It
looks tlke we'll be ahead of last
year," Thorpe said.
"It's a difficult calendar this
year, · but It's going according to
plan. We had the biggest day of the
Christmas season Sunday," Campbell said.
George Dlab, manager of the
154-store Ohio Valley Mall in St.
ClalrsvWe, I'E!POI'tS busy roads
leading to the shoWing center.
"Just from the Indications we get

from what the tenants tell us, sales
are detlnltely up," Dlab said.
"From my stanc\Jolnt. I've seen a
tremendous Increase In traffic over

"Family Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to Edwaro Schreck, D.O., Ohio
University College of O!te:lpathlc
Medicine, Grosvenor Hall, Athens,
Ohio, 45701.

:t

he couldn't hold back the tears.
Gov. Richard F. Czleste, unable
to be on hand when Angus was
officially awarded the car, sent a
child restraint seat for the Angus
family since Marcia Angus Is
expecting the couple's second child
In a few days.
Not long after Angus got the keys,
he and his wife headed for home.
A month ago Angus, 24, was
reading the want ads In the local
paper when he spotted a classtlled
ad that said whoever was sitting in
the car at noon Dec. 24, 1985, could
have it.

report released gave renewed
confidence In the system showing
Social Security to be strong and
results of years d cooperative solvent through the 75 year proJec·
study between Social Security and
lion period ot the report.
experts In the health study fields.
It has been a banneryearandyou
Continuing dis a blllty review can count on us to keep Social
JJ'OOI!(Nres an_d till new evaluative Security worklngatlevels tokeeplt
guidelines for mental Impairments one ,of the most efficiently run
were two d. the hlghlllhts from all agencies In the world. At this time
that work, guaranteeing a humane,~ we WOI)Id like to · wish you the
. efficient dlsablllty program for merriest of hoUday seasons arid the
those who need lt. And the actuarial best tlr till new year.

oWe R•erve The Right to Limit Quantities
Thursday, December 28, thru Sunday,

•• •

•P,rlcel Effective

December 28. 19811. •U.S.D.A. Food Stamp• Accepted

•Not Raaponalbla For Typogr..,hlcel or Plctoral Errora

afew pennies spent here
comes back folding money

WANT
ADS
WORK!

OPEN

NOW AVAILABLE
HOLIDAY
FRUIT BASKETS

NEW YEAR'S DAY

DLA

.'
MEDIUM

10 AM· 7 PM
SAVORY

SWEET
ONIONS ·

.,

NEW YEAR'S EVE TILL 9 PM

'.

malls thJli year.
vi~ ,f~ai!P'an of the Downtown
"Buslnless Iii downtown Cleve- Bu5Ines8 Coonctl.
land for ·us Is cteflnltely stronger_ "Most of wr memb:!rs are
than any otrer year In recent ex~Ing a sales Increase of 5

BACON

FOODLAND

&lt;MEDIUM-FOODLAND

HOT DOG or

EGGS

HAMBUMGER BUNS

r~the~la;s~ttw;o~wee;~ks~.'~'2;~~~~jmemo;!;ry~·
~"~sald~~~~~~w~ho;_jpe~rceCnt~to~l:O~pe:roe:n:t~ov:e~r
~l:ast~
restricted to
"
1·11.
PKG.

USDA LEAN

GROUND
BEEF
S lbs.

FlANDER'S

•OIL •WATER

BEEF
PATTIES

STAR-KIST

TUNA

or
More

'

He went down to ths car
dealership, sUpped In behind the
seat of the car lnhthe parking lot,
and locked till door.
When he emerg!!d, he hugged his
wife and told the crowd !hilt he was
tired, cold andhready to go home.

'

99

"At ftrsthmy wile was totally
against it," he said. "When she
found out It wasn't a joke, she told
me 'Don't~ out."'
He alsb said red has always been
his favorite color. His wife was
clutching a dozen red ra&gt;es, given to
her by the local high school.

S.ll.
BOX

LB.

LIMIT 2
PLE-ASE

71!2 oz.
CAN
· SPRITE, .TAB

BIRDSEYE

Pomer·ol Home &amp;.Auto
606 EAST MAIN

ORANGE ·JUICE
10

HERR'S

Diet or. Regular

POTATO CHIPS

COCA-COLA

DIET RITE, RC 100

R C COLA

.,;8$

oz.

oz.
Bns.

ZEST A

VALLEY BELL

SALTINES

COTTAGE (HEESE

FOODLAND COUPON
--~-----------------­

ORANGE CRUSH, A&amp;W ROOT BEER
DIET OR REGULAR

SEVEN UP

PKG.

POMEROY
24 oz.
CTN.

AUGI.NT ON MOST CARS.
r

,,1

39

16

BAG

1 ....

'

Wi DO IIAICE SERVICE &amp;

~

lxlth their Incomes and their egos.
From retirement, the show
moves on to the frightening health
problems of the aging. Too otten
they are discarded by a health
system that doesn't have the time
or money to care for them;
mlsdlagnosed by careless medical
workers, and Ignored Instead of
rehablllta ted.

people. Another slgnltlca:nt Item in

1985 wils till finalization of the
dlsablllty refoqn leglalation, the

12 oz.
CAN

I

Inadequate health Insuranoo add to
till worries of the aging, woo also
may feel discarded by a society that
throws away trelr years of
experience.
Hopes come from the estimated
200 firms natlonwi!E that are
rehlrln$ their retired employees oo
a part-time basis. The companies
get good workers; till retired boost

!f

'

OLD FASIUONED GOOD TIME- Roland Smtih
'otWayne, Maine, ~~~esateam ol dratl horses to puB~
-~ wacon carrying a group of OuistmaB Carolers

.declined the Invltat)on. A question of privacy, he said.
FINAL DAYS OF AMEIDCA: Even though Paramount
Television has pulled the pl\lg on Its syndicate! TV series,
"America," the show still has a couple rmre weeks Io run. Sarah
Purcell, who was on her way out the door for a vacation, was called
back to the show to host its final programs. But poor MacLean
SteveiiSOn, whose stormy television career Is legendary. The
program's co-host was lold his services would no longer be needed ·
and that the show would go on wltoout him. Merry Christmas,
MacLean.
TOUGH AND TENDER: The University of California at
Berkeley's best known cop has traded In his badge for a fishing pole.
John Teel, 59, has been called a campus Iandmbrk. Here Is a man
who has lobbed tear gas and dispensed advice while walking his
Sproul Hall beat. He's talked some students out of committing
suiCide and arrested others for throwing rocks through car windows.
His advice to younger officers Is "to take time with people. If you Uke
them, it will usually be reciprocal. But I also tell students, If you don't
want to get his with a baton, then you don't throw rocks." How very
sensible.

•1

~1\1an
gets car he. sat in for a month
.

: CHll.UCOTiiE, Ohio (UP!) Mer a month of sitting behind the
;:"wheel d a car, Stacey Angus cried
:when be got the keys so that he
jould drive It away.
The unemployed construction
:f;orker recelvro the keys, a set of
· license plates and registration to
ihe 1986 bright red Ford Escort he'd
iat In Since Nov. 24 In a promotion
-Ctmrntck staged by a local dealer.
.: He was so overwhelmed by the
~t he'd accomplished the feat, the
that showed up at noon
to wish him well, and a
11ft from the governor that

By ELL11 E. CONKLIN

'

'Growing Old in America': long, sad story

If you are experiencing any of the
described symptoins, see your
doctor. If you do have atrial
ftbr!llatlon, waiting could have
sert!rus consequences.

.~watch watch joins shopping as neWest ·tiiditfln
.•
•

.

.

1985 in review for Social ~rity happenings
oratlve activities were held all over
the country, from a display at the
National Archl••es In Washln~~ton to
a special Social Security night at
Detroit's Tiger Stadium to special
events at nearly every Soclal
Security oHice. There w~ even a
commemorative stamp Issued by
the Postal Service in honor of the
oa:aslon. Locally, we had open
houses, speeches, bands, refresh·
ments, Informational dlspla'ys, special newspaper supplements,

Rid home of bad air

in the news·-.;.,_______,

United Pm181~nal
hasn't kicked the habit, the best strate·
GREETINGS
FROM
VICE: Doo Jolllloll, who plays narco-cop
of Coasumer Report•
gy is to incre~se your ventilation. AI·
.
Sonny
Croc.
k
ett
on
TV's
"Miarril VIce" has sent out "fantasy"
ter tha.t you might get a room air
Chrlslmas
cards
to
friends
fans and ftacks: Sure, the usual"Happy
The air inside your home may be cleaner. Some units employ a nega·
more polluted than outside air, sayre· live-ion generator to remove smoke;
Holidays" Is there, but that's wrere till Merry Christmas fanfare
cent stu~es.
others use filters. The best use both.
ends.
·
The pollutants can come from many Two ton generator·fan/filter mod·
·The cover features a reindeer ooverlng in the blue sky,
sources - tobacco smoke, emisst~ els tested - the Btonalre 1000 and the
glft~wrapped presents washing up on till beach, a red-striped fish
from gas ranges, beating appliances, Pollenex Ionizer 1801 - were Judged
swimming
on the sand and a palm tree with an ocnament reflecting
. :defectlve.centr'al.JJeating systeJRJ, lin· excellent at smoke removal In a limit·
Johnoon'
s
best
asset- his face. "Oh, this Is !D trippy," said a woman
· .vented gas and kerosene space heat· · ed area. But you must remember to
on Johnson's staff. The original painting of !hi! design now hangs
: :en, wood-burning stoves, common keep replacing the !ilters, and don't
-household chemicals and 1111tural ra· expect miracles.
proudly In Johnson's horne. No word yet on how many cards were
dioactlvtty tn the aoll.
Flames fr9m a' gas range or stove
printed, but Johnoon knows he signed plenty of them. "I didn't know I
Scientillts are concerned that high give off nitrogen dioxide, carbon mon·
had so many friends," he.said. ·
pollutant levels might have adverse oxide and pa. rticulate matter. Without
ENQUIRING MINDS ~ED TO KNOW: Speaking of "Miami
health effects. .
·
proper ventilation; these pollutants
Collsumer Reports' editors say that can be t~apped in the air in your borne, · VIce," location scouts lor the popular show recently approached
Generoao Pope, the publisher of the National Enquirer, to ask his
indoor alr·pollutlon Ieveii are incre~· and may cause resplra.to~y pr~blems.
permission to fDm Inside his spacious seaside manslo?. Pope
lng, because, ironically, houses are To reduce such errussaons an your
tighter and better Insulated than they bouse, keep your kitchen properly ven·
used 'to be. Such houses tend to trap tilated. Range hoods should be vented
pOllutants produced inside - the outdoors. If that's not po~ible, cook
tlgllter the bouse.- the more prevalent with a window open slightly.
tbe problem.
Make sure the llames of your gas
In a typically ventilated house with range are properly adjusted. If they
well·insulated windows, condensation bum orange rather than blue, the gas
should form Inside only on the coldest Is not burning completely and P?llut·
retire, there's a lot more of II as Ufe
By JOAN HANAUER .
days. But if your bouse is so tight that ants may be ln.creased substantaally.
expectancy
increases.
moisture can't e51;ape, you'd have con· (If you need a ~w gas range, choose a
UPI TV Reporter
For some, retirement Is a joy.
delllition frequently because of w~ter ' model with an automatic igniter rath·
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
:vapor buildup. Other indications that er than a p!lotlight That wlll help cut bottom line on "Growing Old In For others It Is an emotiOnal or
'you may have an indoor air-pollution down on pollutant. emissions and also AmeriCa" ' Is that, to paraphrase financial dlsas ter -and America Is
problem incl11de mold or mildew ap- reduce your gas btllaomewhat)
losing the expertise of some of Its
peariDg ort walls or ~elltngs; stale lin· Aerosol paints and ansectlctdes can cartoonist Walt Kelly, we have seen most experienced workers.
gering odon; smarting eyes; or recur· also add pollutanta to your iDdoor air. the future and It Is us.
·On the one hand, the poverty rate
"Groivtng Old In America" Is a
rent respiratory tllnesses, especially Aerosola usually release . lar~e
among
ol&lt;Er Americans Is down three-hour.
comprehensive,
.com·
· ~niong children. ImproNlng your am.ounts of. chem!cala Into the aar,
home's ventilation may belp to reme- whtcb can Ianger an a tightly sealed passionate aitd frlghtenlng ABC from more than :fJ percent In the
dy some of those problems.
house. Some of these chemicals are News Closeup to alron Dec. 28, S.ll 1900s to less than 13 percent today.
Cigarette smoke adds copious known to be toxic. Where possible, use p.m. Eastern time. Hugh Downs Those that llve well do It on a
amounts of toxic chemicals to indoor aerosol products outdoors. Wben usang hosts.
'
combination rf. Social Security,
air.' Cigarette smoke can also harm them indoors, open your windows and
pension and savings. .
·
The
statistics
begin
to
ouDlne
the
certain passive smokers. For e:um· turn on a fan.
On the rup sire, 71 percent of the
problem.
At
the
turn
of
the
~th
pie very young children of smoking (For a special reprint of Consumen
elderly
poor are women.· Sixty
pa~ents have an Increased Incidence Union's evaluation of smoke detec· century, life expectancy W!IS ooly 47
of bronchitis and pneumonia. And tors, send
for each copy to CON- years. Now It Is 74. And after the ~nt of single or widowed
many adailis eipeclally those with SUMERS. P.O. Box 461 , Radio City turn of the next the next century, women live only on Social Security.
respiratory allergies suffer Ievere Station, New York, NY 10019. Be sure one In every five Americans will be The average annual Social Security
discomfort from the I;.,.ltatlng effects to ask · for the reprint on "Smoke over 65,
payment for a wldowro woman Is
:of cigarette smoke. Obviously, the detectors.")
$4,!81.
That means, wltoout add!~
The first problem addressed by
best way to avoid this foa:n of andoor Send your questions to: ~onsumers
air pollution ts not to smoke, or notal· Union, Box DCB, 256 Washangton St., Downs and company Is retirement. tiona I Income, widows on the
low sinoking in your hJ&gt;me.
Mt. Vernon, NY 10SS3. Volume of mall All Increasing' number of Amerl· average live just $1 above the
,
cans are taking early retirement. poverty line.
Qut if you
~v~ a smoker who prohibits persona) replies.
Problems
with
pensions
and
· Even for those who walt unltl ~to

'

ness or faintness, as well.
Question: Who Is tikely to suffer

~-----People

By tbe Edlton

Racing heart might signal a problem

· BY EDWARD SCHRECK, D.O.
"
A"hhanl Professor of
Family Medlcme
Oblo Unlverslly cmJege rt
OMeopatJic Medicine
Question: The last few days, my
,.mart has been racing every few
,"minutes. Should I see a doctor about

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 26, 1986

I

�Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 26. 1985

P9-10-The. Daily Sa 1titi81

ThurSday. December 26, 1986

Pomeroy-Middlepori. Ohio

..

:Baby powder can be dangerous; not ,necessary item: doctors ·
. By Rl1DI YOUNGBLOOD .

Dr. Patricia J. Davidson, said tile
death last summerct a 4-month-old
Infant wlth a tracheotomy tube
"shows tile danger ct an as)ilratlon
- airway occlusion caused by
Inhalation o! baby powder." ·
"Since more and more ln!ants
are now going home with tracheotomy tubes In place, this potential
danger Is becoming more wldes·
pread,'' said the physicians In a
letter to The New England Journal
o! Medtctne.
Cotton said the prematurely bom
baby was having his diaper
changed at home when "baby
powder was spilled accldentaliy
and a cloud ot powder apparently
blocked ths child's alrwayc"

. ,BOOTON (UP!)- Pedlalrlctans
;wJied parents today 10 Slq) using
~by powder on Infants. warning
:f!ie P'l!"lar product Is dangerous
'and may even cause death by
-:Sutfocallcm If Inhaled by tots wlth
-ltacheotorny tubes.
·."There's no reason to use it at
aH," said Dr. WDUam H. Cotton. "It
just makes babies smell good lor a
while but can present a problem !or
any Infant."
"Baby powder Is not a necessary
Infant-care Item," Cotton said. "Its
absorptive capab!Uty lssmall, Its
lubricating pripertles are minimal,
and Its per!urne aspects are shortlived."
Representatives ot Johnson &amp;
. ,Jo)lnaon, tile nation's largest manu. !acturer ot baby powder, countered
that tile ''product Is sale when used
as It Is Intended." Spokesman
Robert Knl!!ln said "studies slx&gt;w
Johnson's baby powder Is ILSe!ul to
adsorb rmlsture and reduce

Thehparents tried to vE!IItilate tile
chlld by changing the tube and
performing mouth-to-tracheotomy
respiration. The boy was resuscl·
tated at tile hospital but died tile
next day, the physicians said,

squirts It In the face, coughs and
chokes," Cotton said. "Usually the
powder doesn't get fUrther tban the
mouth, but II tile dose Is big ~:~~ough
and It gets Into the lungs, a
chemical pneumonia can result."
"Containers look like feeding
bottles,'' Cotlon added, "and the

noting ths reactive, IICIIJ$1 air·
ways of babies wtlh conditions
requiring tile tubes "are likely to
become EVEII more consii1Cied and
obstructol by the baby powder."
"Usually the ln!ant has some
obstruction In the ~r airways so
that tile tube E!llbances bre!lthlng,"
Cotton said. "The tracheotomy Is a
relatively unprotected direct conduH il the lungs."
Although Cotton and Davidson
said their criticism was directed at
all baby powders and they were not
singling out any partiCillar brand,
Johnson &amp; Johnson spokesman
Robert Knl!!ln said, ''This Is the
first we've lEard o! such a

···Record cold hits-East
Press International
Temperatures In the bitterly cold
East fell to record single- digit
levels as far south as South Carolina
today, while winds of nearly 10 mph
whipped up blinding clouds c1 snow
that shut down highways In the
Rockies and Plains.
·
The valleys of the West began
their third week under a blanket of
den~ fog on Christmas Day.
· Travelers advisories· were posted
· tnday In the 'central valleys and
northern coast of California and In
northwestern Nevada.
Winds of 68 mgh raked Colorado
Wednesc!ay nlglit. and Warnings for
comparable gusts reached today
, from the Rockies to Minnesota.
State troopers reported zeor vlslbfi. lty In northweslei;Jl Minnesota, and
portions of Highway 2 and Highway
11 'Were closed because of blowlng
snow.
"There's no traffic out there at
all," Thief River Falls, Minn.,
. trooper Wally Heaton said ot
By United

open containers are often grabbed

Irritant ~Inhaled .
by Infants during dlaJlZr changes.
Kniffin responded, "On the gen·
"Any medication ~livered as a eral question o! safety, both the
powder would be better adminis- Food and Drug Administration and
tered In a cream or lotion," Cotton the Consumer Products Safety
andDavldson said.
Commission have concluded tllere
Cotton sapd the talc Is benig! If Is no serious problem wltb talc
Ingested but acts as a pubnonary Inhalation."

problem."

"Whlle baby powder Is extremely
dangerous as an Inhalant lor those
with tracheotoniy tubes, we see
other clllklrEII who've gotlen Into
trouble at least mce a week,' Colton
said In a telephone Interview.
"The baby grabs the bottle,

fi'!Ctlon."

4
DAYS
ONLY
Friday, Saturday, Monday &amp; Tutsclay

CONCORD, Calif. (UP!)
Investigators today stut did not
kn.ow why a light plane plloted by a
veteran !lyer dashed Into a crowded
shogplng mall, saying the dlscov. ery o! the crjft's missing propeller
had failed to reveal the cause.
Local cl.flclats said the crash also
had ·forced them to , reconsider
whethe'r they should allow ommerclat jety to seJYe Buchanan·Field,
the nearby airport where the pllot,
· James M. Graham, rn. had trted to
land In heavy f9g.
Security guards Wednesday
found the 3-!oot propeller that had
been missing from the twin-engine
Beechcra!t Baron since It crashed
Into the Sunvalley Mall Monday
night, k!Uing lour people and
· lnjupng 76 others.
· Iilvestlgators had speculated tl)e
,. propeller might have spun loose,
' causing the plane · to go out o!
control and hit the malt, ripping a;
50-!Qot. hole In the roof and sending
ttamlng fuel, tar and debris onto
Clu:lstmas shoppers below.
)M the discovery of t~ propeller
WWed between an ln!ormallon
booth and a rack ·of rental baby
&gt;.cai Hqas In the sllopplng ·center
ruled out that theory and prompted
Investigators today to consider
other posslbllltles.

~

"•'~ ~

.

-..·;.:
......

~:professor
::
........
'

'f~hortage
..

--·
........
~

Our Biggest Sale Ever

. PATRICIA McCORMACK
....._, _,
YORK (UPI) -The Ford
::'):o.indatlon plans to spend $4.75
~n on higher education grants
=:to:siem a predicted shortage o! up
'::'1ltl: fm,(D) pro!esoors beglnnlng In
1900s.
• · The foundation annoiiiiCed Wed•' nesday It wtll divide the molii'.Y
among successful bidders !rom 39
colleges Invited to propose ways o!
preventing tile pool of profesoors
!rom shrlnklng In the next decade,
)Yhen many Cllrrent teachers wllt

- ·NEW

hottest
suite on
the
mcirlctt .
todoyl

=*

New 2 pc. (country look) livin&amp;
room suite which includes couch,
chair and two throw pillows 1110
woOD lllll Covered with stain resistant. ellra strong 100% nylon
cover.

. ~Ire.

•-: Peter W. Stanley, ofltcer In
•Charge o! the Foundation's Educa'tlon and CUlture Program, saki the
c:Oi~eges wtll also be asked to
lbimest rnethods ot Improving
luilergraduate curricula and moUvaJing middle-aged tenured faculty
l(leJnbers.
·"Our aim Is to enhance the skills
andcornmltmeilt c1 undergraduate
facility, whose Intellectually engaged teaching not only determines
the quality o! education but also
Influences students to consider
academic careers," said foundation, president Franklin A. 'Thomas.
"More undergraduates must
chose fa'culty careers than have
done so In recent years and the
quality o! tile graduate pool must
rise. At present, relatively few of
oor best students pursue the Ph.D.
and become college teachers."
lbe expected drought o! profes·
sOl'( Is In contrast wlth the cu !TellI
glul'o!tmured teachers, a situation
that has lead to a s)xjrtage of
openings, Stanley said.
The situation got worse when tile
mandatory retirement age was
IJOOSted to 10. But by the 1900s, large
numbers of the elderly f8Cility
members wlll retire, creating
many opportunities . for young
professors, he said.
.
Academic forecasters say tile
shortage wlll peak In the year 1l10,
with up to liOO,IDl new teachers
needed.
"Columbia University wlll be
feeling the shortage o! quaWied
new young !acuity In about five
years," Stanley saki, noting that
most other colleges across the
nation wUI be affected by 1995.
"It. takes about 10 years from
freshman year In college to the
Ph.D.," be said. "With this new
program, we hope to address tile
rrolliem at the beginning o! tile
pipeline."
Institutions Invited to submit
propoSals Include: Harvard, Yale,
Princeton, Stan!ord, Swartlunore,
Oberlin, Knox. Mlllsaps, Morehouse, the University o! Call!ornla
and the City University of New
York.
"The coUeges and universities
selected by the Foundation are
notable not only for their quality
and diversity but also lor their
success In educating !uture fa·
culty," Stanley said.

~-

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Where did all the money go?
"Everything I have Is bor"We spent It," Hurst said.
rowed," said· Kanouse, whose
"The money was used for
husband may lose his job as a diesel
expenses,"
acknowledged the
mechanic because his tools are In
Hursts'
lawyer,
Karl Lehr.
Anchorage.
Strickland said the Hursts' customers
were largely younger and
"He needs those tools desper·
poorer
couples, rmvlng to find a Job
ately," she said. "My household
and
attracted
by ads that offered a
goods, 1 can live without, but not my
less
expensive
move to or !rom !ar·
husband's tools."
Kanouse misses her ChriStmas Dung Alaska.
"We didn't do anything to
ttee tile most 10day.
"'l,'ltat's what I cry ~bOUt when I Intentionally hurt anybody," said
thlrilc about Christmas," she said. Hurst.

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399 So. 3rd

.-

.

.

Family finds fetus along roadside:-:

992-6241

DEC. 31st

"It has dollies and crochets glvm to
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UPI) me
by my mother before she died,
All Mary Kanouse wants for
and
11 has a picture of a guardian
Christmas Is what she already
angel from 1864.
owns: clothes, dishes, shoes,
"It has been passed down from
blankets, pots and pans, her oldies
generation
to generation In my
but goodies album collection, her
famlly.
It's
handmade. You
husband's tools and a handmade
couldn't
give
me
enough money to
heirloom Christmas tree.
replace that Christmas tree."
Mary and Ronald Kanouse live In
Tucson, Ariz. Everything they own
In Junction City, Kan., Fern Felts
Is locked up In a moving company !rusted everything she owned to
storage warehouse In Anchorage. Hurst Enterprises, Including some
They paid to have everything things that really mattered, things
shipped to their new home, but the made for her by her late husband.
moving company did not come
When Felts left Anchorage June
through.
7, It never oocurred to her that more
No one knows when the.Kanouses than six months later, her winter
wlll get tllelr Christmas tree and the coat and SO boxes of belongings .
rest of their belollglngs. Not the would stU! be In Alaska.
state of Alaska Consumer Protec·
"I'm wearing a summer jacket
lion Of!lce, which sued on tltelr and two sweatshirts to keep
behalf. Not Raymond and Wanda warm," she said.
Hurst, operators o! Hurst EnterSeventeen tamllles paid from
prises, who took their money but $.ll{l to $3.250 to have the
did not move their belongings. Not Anchorage-based Hurst Enter·
the Hursts' lawyer.
prlses move their helonglngs, said
The Kanouses are not alone.
Sheridan Strickland of tile Alaska
People whO moved from Michi- Consumer Protretlon Office.
gan, Mtnneso!a and Washington to
In an Interview, Wanda- Hurst
Alaska are In the same predica- acknowledged that she and her
ment. So are others who moved husband took Jieopies' payments,
from AnchOrage or Fairbanks to but did not move their belongings.
Houston and Corpus Christie, She blamed the fafiure of their
Texas, to Palm Dale and Westmlns· business on broken trucks ,
ter, Call!., to Bend, Salem and "crooked" employees, and costs
WUllams, Ore., and to B;ellevue and that outstripped the moving fees
Seattle, Wash.
they collected.

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Read the Best Seier
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Don Llorente o! the National
Transportation Safety Board said
they were particularly baffledbecause Graham, .a!lyer for nearly
half a o;&gt;nturylncludlng World War
11 combat, had been using Bucha·
Field for many years.

0/o

PILLOW
ARM
SPECIAL

1170

-·

.Four killed when
.plane hits mall

· Cotton, a pediatrician at tile
··UniverSity o! Cincinnati's Cblld, reo's Hospital Medical Center, and

· Foundation
•
_
.tnes
to
....
.
..... . .
:s=p
. revent
......
....

Atlanta recorded a trace i1 snow
Wednesday - mly tile · seventh
time since weather records began
that snow has !allen In that city on
Christmas Day.
Los Angeles, meanwhile, reported a high of 82, short of the
record 85, but high enough to send
140,1Dl people to the ll&gt;aches to
celebrate Christmas on the sand.
Along tiE shores of the Great
.'
Lakes, up ·to 15 Inches of snow
belted western New York and a foot
of snow fell In Erie, Pa., pollee said.
Erte auihOrttles said blowing snow
closed some exit ramps on highways, but no major roads.
· "We never close tllem. Mother
. 'V
,, ·,
Nature may, but we don't," said
'
•.
Pennsylvania State Trooper Wil;
-\~ ' ,;.:..,~'\
~
~~ii!Wil-~..,....... .
Ham Cooper. "Here In Erte ... when
SNOWBOUND FARM -Josh Morse, age six, has snowbound Green Meads Fann In rural RichmOnd,
It' scold, lt'scold. When it'sblowlng,
Mass., recently. UP I.
'
his dog Rosy Scout ahead lor him as he pedah past the
It's blowing, So what?"
Snowfalls of up to 13 Inches in
Vermont Wednesday received a
more welcome greeting from New .
England ski enthusiasts.
.. '
"Great skllng," said Janet StannThe unidentified family stopped
COLUMBIA, Md. (UPI) - Po- to Inspect what IIIeY thought was a
ard of Bennington, VI. "Hopefully llee have begun checking with bl'QWil paper bag with red Christ- lhelr car about 2: 15 p.m. Wednes·
(the snow) wlll be JEre all winter." doctors and hospitals In the Balti- mas wrapplng.paper sticking out of day after they noticed the paper
Firefighters In Chicago Wednes· more area lor clues to lead them to II.
bag lying on the shoulder of· _the
day braved a wind chill Index of the person who abandoned a fetus
Howard County Sgt. Angus Par roadway.
"Instead they found the bo~ of a
40-below zero to search for the discovered by a family along a said InvestigatorS hoped to learn If
bodies of a grandmother and her
there "were any terminate preg- 1-to 8-month male fetus," .Park
roadside on Christmas Day.
2-year-otd grandaughter, killed In a
A famlly driving to relatives for nancies with no child" around said. "They thought they were
retrieving someone's lost ChristChristmas Day blaze blamed on a Christmas dinner made the grue- Christmas.
mas
gift."
kerosene
space
heater.
some discovery when they stopped
Graham, his two male passenger:s and a young woman
shopper were killed. The ensuing
fire Injured 76 others, with 17 stnl
hospitalized Chrlstma·s Day. Seven
were reported In critical condition.
Uorente said ln!ormation already collected Indicated the plane
did not have a power !allure. "The
propeller I saw had signatures that
were consistent with power at
lmpach," he said Wednesdy.
Pacific Southwest Airways has
received lentatlve approval ·to
begin jet service next month out of
Buchanan Field, about 35 miles
east of San Fr1111clsco and already
the busiest airport In fast-growing
Contra Costa County.
But County Supervisor Susanne
McPeak, who was In the mall at the
time of tile accident said, "We wlll
make a decision (to allow filghts)
only If It Is determined It Is a safe
operation."
Rep. Tom Lantos, D.Call!., asked
the Federal Aviation AdmlnlstraUon to bar PSA from starting flights
at Buchanan untll tile county·
completes an Investigation.
"We need to re-evaluate the
appropriateness •of commercial
flights Into a highly constrained
RECLINERS BY
airfield with a great deal of new
construction around II," Lantos
said. "lthlnk weowelt to the people
In the area In view of this tragedy, to
re- evaluate the capabfiltles of the
field."
PSA spokesman BUI Hastings
said he did not expect the accident
to stop conunerelal transportation
at Buchanan Field.
'

Highway 2. "Everybody's
stopped."
Wlnd-chnl temperatures plunged
to 50 below In the Great Lakes and
ranged !rom zerp to :lJ below along
the Atlantic Coast. Freeze warnIngs extended Into central Florida,
with a hard freeze warning In effect
for northem Florida.
In the South, tile mercury feU to
10 degrees In KnoxviUe, Tenn., and
25. degrees In Jacksonville, F1a. A
re~dlng o! 5 degrees today at the
GreenvUie-Spartanburg, S.C. broke ·
the record lor the day and the
month.
Despite the freezing temperatures In the South, Doug Bournlque,
director or F1ortda 's ln&lt;!fan River
Citrus League, said be saw llttle
threat to crops.
"I don't wantto sound blase about.
It, butwe'remtthatconcerned with
tile cold temperatures," he said.
"We haven't gone running around
screaming wolf."

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Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

\

, '

•

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio .

•

Due to being overstocked
with inventory and taxes
coming up Empire .
Furniture needs to_sell
thousands of detllars
worth of fine furniture.
Because of this we are
marking our
$1,000,080.00 Plus
inventory of furniture
down to the bare bones.
We need to empty our
warehouse and
showrooms before
January 1, 1986•.

Thursday, December 26, 1985

·Business
Services

•

lemptation of arroga nt power and
oppression,' : the pope said , rrfer·
ring lo himself In the third prrson.
More Ihan ll.IXXJ people ga llrered
in St. Peter's Square for the j:ope:s
address and apostolic blessing,
which were beamed live to millions
on radio and television.
John Paul delivered Chris I mas
blessings to the world in ~i
languages, Including his nar ive
Polish, Vielnamese, Russian and, ·
for the first time, Afghan". He also :
spoke In the fiv e major languages ·
used in India, where he is scheduled'
to make a pilgrimage Feb. J.lO.

INSIDE YARD SALE

Down from Rutland Post
Office. will be running until

after Christmas. New &amp;
used toys, something for
the whole family, dolls,
tools, novelties. etc.
12·4·85 I mo .

(C~l OUT FOR FUTURE USEl

IMPARTS Bt.E§SING - Pope Jom Paul B,
holding his pastoral staff, waves crowd from central

•

5
DAY-S
ONLY

loggia ol the BaSIlea CllrWbna8 Day after imparting
his Urbl at Orbl blessing. UPL

passeng~rs

Hijacked

•

ONLY

English greeting.
John Paul spoke mostly of the
Christmas mystery - the birth of
what ChriStians believe is God
made man In Jesus Christ. But he
also raised current concerns about
human rights violations, oppression
and starvation.
The pope s;Jid he was "defense·
less" In an armed world, bul thai he
wished to proclaim again lhe
Christmas mystery in the ''signs
and needs of our lime. "
"He repeats it as one defenseless
in the midst of a world thai isanned
and too often defeated by lhe

· VATICAN CITY (UP!) -Pope
John Paul II delivered his annual
· Chrlslmas greeting to the world in
51 languages, the most ever used by
a pontiff, and again proclaimed the
mystery of ChriSt's birth.
The pontiff, dressed in shining
gold and white vestments, celebrated a solemn high mass in St.
Peter's BasUlca Christmas Day,
then delivered his traditional "Urbi
et Orb!" message to the city and the·
world !rom the main balcony of the
largest church in the world.
"A .blessed Christmas In the
peace of Jesus Christ, the saviour of
the
his

~

I

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 13

Pontiff delivers Christmas message

•

·5
DAY

Pomeroy_:_

1986

MOSCOW (UP!) - , The Soviet
Union conflrined Wednesday that
anAerolotjetwashljackedtoChlna
last week and said the passengers
and crew had returned home.
Moscow said there was a sole
hijacker but a hlnese of!lclal said
Jour were In custody.
The announcement by the official
news agency Tass was the first
·. official confirmation by the Soviet
UnionoftheDec. 19hljacklng-the
first%ublicly announced hijacking
. since five people attempted to
hijack a Tu-134 tn 19&amp;'l.
Tass said the plane, a twin·
enli!De turboprop Antonov·24, was
on a domestic. flight from the
Sovlet·Chinese border town of
Nerchinski Zavod to Irkutsk, 700
mUes to the west, when It was
o· hijacked and forced to land Ina cow
pasture.
~
"An Antonov·24 plane, Dying a
local Aerofiot route, had to alter Its
.• course as a result ctforclbleactlons
;- by an armed criminal on board, and
, landed In the northeastern part of
the Peoples Republic of China,"
Tass said.
-~
According to Tass, "The Chinese
side adopted measures ior finding
the plane and'eturnlng the ·
.
t""
, ,.

retum

pssmgers and crew borne as soon members and all the passengers
as possible."
· returned to the Soviet Union
"The Soviet side expressed grati· safely," said Chinese Foreign
tude to the Chinese authorities-for Ministry spokesman Ma Yuzhen In
the spirit of good· neighborly
a short statement, theflrst by the
cooperation they displayed .In the Foreign Minlsl!y on the Incident.
situation," Tass said. The fate of the
AChinese ofllclalln Cannan near
hjacker or hijackers was unclear. where the%.Jane was forced down
The Soviets mentioned only a single said Soviet diplomats and Chinese
"armed crlmial on board" but a officials traveled to the remote
Chinese Foreign. gaffairs official area, about 3t,XJ mUes east of the
said four Soviet hijackers were in Sovietbortler, tonegotiateanmdto
custody. ·
the hijacking.
·
It was unclear if Chinese officials · Ma refused to comment on the
would return the hijacker or report that four hijackers were in
hijackers ho the Soviet Union or custody. He also declined comment
prosecute them In China. Under on possible motives for the hijack·
Chinese law, hijacking Is a "coun- ing and refused to clarify conflict.
terrevolu tlonary crime," carrying lng repots on the whereabouts of the
a maximum sentence of life In plane.
·
prison. Hijacking with loss of life
The official In Hallar said the
carries the death penaity in the plane was flown back to the Soviet
Soviet Union.
Union but another Chinese official
Nb Injuries were reported In the said Wednesday the plane was still
hijacking.
In Cannan .
In Peking, Chinese officials said
"Regarding the airplane, you
the plane, which was carcying 39 have asked a lot of questions," Ma
passengers and four crew told reporters. "I havesaldallthatl
members, all Soviets, crossed the can say."
9llnese border over the Inner
In the 19&amp;'l hijacking, at least 10
Mongolian city of Manzhouli, then people died. Four of the hijackers
landed in a cow pasture.
were sentenced to death and the
"On December 21, crew fifth was sentenced to 14 years In
· prison.
..

President Reagan dims lights
in ,honor _of U.S. hostages
By ROGER BENNETr

Uolled Press International
The president dimmed the White
House lights to honor hostages who
were not home for Christmas; a
young Canadian girl started a
memorial for · the 248 American
peacekeepers who lost their lives In
· her country; and allover the nation,
the giving spirit of , the holiday
. appeared as surely as did Santa.
Preslden t Reagari made Christ·
mas Eve phone calls to five U.S.
servicemen Stationed around the
world, telling them, "Your role as a
peacekeeper is what the spirit of
Christmas Is all about.''
The president also sent letters to
the famUies of American hostages
held In Lebanon, telling them he
had ordered the dimming of the
llght!f of the .National Christmas
Tree on Christmas Eve "as a sign of
prayerful solidarity with those·who
·are not with their loved ones at
Christmas." ,
In Toronto, Canada, 15-year· old
Janice Johnston used $a! she saved
by buying "littler presents" for
family and friends, to launch a
campaign tocreatea livlngmemor·
Ia! of trees to the 248 U.S. soldiers
kUied Dec.l2 when their charter jet

crashed In ' Newfoundland. The
soldiers, part of the multi-national
Middle Ea~t peacekeeping force,
were headed home for Chrlsimas.
"I want to show them that people
care," she said.
The chUdren d the peacekeepers,
members of the 101st Airborne
Division of Fort Campbell, Ky.,
received 2,500 pounds of toys on
ChriStmas Eve from major toy
makers.
In New York, three inmates
dying of AIDS were released !rom
Sing Sing to spend Christmas and
their last days ·of life In the care of
Nobel Peace Prize winner Mother
Teresa.
·~It's a very beautiful night,"
Mother Teresa said when asked if
she had timed her nquest for
Christmas Eve. "I wanted also to
help them be strong In joy and
love."
On New York's LOng Island,
Christmas brought freedom to nine
"low risk" prisoners awaiting trial
for petty crimes thanks to a real
estate developer who every year
plays Santa Claus and balls out
destitute tninates.
Sal Miglio, 50, put up $4,000 to
aUow the Inmates to spend the

holiday with their families. During
tile past 15 years, Mlg~o has spent
about $75,000 to free 150 prisoners
for the day.
"Next to creation, caring Is the
greatest thing," he said. "We are
our brother's keepers, and why
should the kids he victims of the
crimes of their fathers?"
And in communities all over the
country, people shared their good
fortune with those In more humble
circumstances.
In Hibbing, Minn., "Santa Claus"
braved wind chUI temperatures of
70 below zero to helicopter to a
foodbank and hand out 500 pounds
of · hoUday toys and food for
distribution to the needy.
In Los Angeles, for the third
consecutive Christmas Eve, a
·mysterious man who refuses to give
his name, h8Jided oot $5,!XXJ in $10
bills to 500 homeless men at a
· downtown rescue mission.
Leo Manning, 59, who runs a little
bakery in Livermore, Calif., was
typical of the holiday spirit. Far
from wealthy, Manning has dell·
vered food and gifts to the needy on
Christmas Eve for the last five
years, about 10,000 people In all.

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
~II Maku

The Daily Sentinel

•Washers •Dishwashers

•Range•
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•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

Envlronmentel

Prot.ation

Agency (OEPA) loot w•k.
Effective dlllil of fino! ac·
!lone ond l11uonc• dllteo of
propoood ectk&gt;nurutotod.
Flnol ectk&gt;ne moy be
oppootod. In writing, within
30 dayo of the date of thio
notice. to the Envlronmontof
Bo1rd of Review, Am . 101 ,

260 E. Town St .. Cotumbuo,
Oh .. 43215 . Nolie• of any
appHt'ehlll be filed with the
director whhln 3 dovo. Pro·

poaed ectiona will become

final unleu a written edjudl·
cation he1ring request Ia

oubmillod within 30 dayo of
the lnuonce dot•: or·tho ell·

- Addons and remodeling

V. C. YOUNG Ill

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

THE HAT RACK

SMAll ANIMAL HOURS ·
Mon.·Wod.·lhurs. 3·5 pm
lues. 6:30-8; Fri. 1-2 pm
Solurdov 10· 11 :30 om
LARGE ANIMAL &amp;

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

PHONE
992-2156
Or llrilt Dallly S.ntintl C\auaitd De

Public Notice

Public Notice

rector roviooa/whhdrawo umbuo, OH . 43218. Ph .
NOTICE OF
the propoud octlon. Any (814) 466·6037 . Contull
PUBUC SALE
peroon moy oub&lt;~~it com· ORC Chap. 3746 and OAC
Purouant to., Entry Autho ·
menta •nd/ or · request a Chopo. 3746·47 end 3748·
rizlng ·Sale of l'lr1onal Plopmeeting rogordlng eny non· 6 for requirements.
by the Probeto Court of
fino! octin whhin 30 dlyo of Propoud .Denial of Certiji· ....,
Meigo
Ohio, 'the fol·
tho date lndicotod. "Ac- cation: Huntington Diotrict lowing County,
property of Hilde P.
tion", oe ,uood ebove doel Ccrpo of Englneoro. lobo· McD.,Iel. dec mod. C.u No.
not Include receipt off . ..,,. non, Letan, Olive Town·
being a 1979 Fprd
fled complaint. If oignificont ohlpo, MoigoCounty. OH.Io· l24,861.
.T
.O.
4 Dr. Sodon, and radio
public ln!oreot exloto. a pub· oue Oato: 12/ 13/86 . Por·
ltlnd, wiU be olferod lor
ljc mHiing moy be hldd. Ao talne , to 401 cortHicotlon, ond
IOio
at
public auction litho low
to anv. acdon. including ra- denial. Penaino to public no·
olllco
of Porter, little, Shoeto
celpt of verified complolnto, -tico NO. tH)86·98. Aloo Sol· and Frocl&lt;or, 211 ·21 3 Eoot
eny parson moy obtain no· lobury, Sutton Twpo.
SecOnd 811'801. Pomeroy, Ohio
lice of furthor actio no, and
46789. on the 6th day of
odditionel Information. Un· 112126 . 110
January,
1988. The I"'Pertv
less otherwl•• provided in
can bll_, by aPJ!Ointlnentby
noticea of panicularactlons,
telephoning 614·992·1M189 or
ell communicattona ah1ll be
304·876·7898.
.
11nt to: Heoring Cieri&lt;,
Oebra
Sue
Doclriil.
OEPA, P. 0. Box 1048. Col·.
.
Admlniotrltrt.

ClASSifiED ADS sure to gat mauna

'
(12) 26. 27. 30, 3tc

115 BRICK SJ.
POMEROY
HATS
iN YOUR COLORS
Many Other Crafts
Available

992-5738

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL ; :
Ripley Office ·
For Hours
304-372.5709
10,14-ilc

12·5·1 mo .

3/11 /tfn

OOZER, BACKHOE,
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS. WATER.
GAS &amp; SEWER LINES.
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

SURGERY BY APPT.

CROCHETED

No Sunday Calls

R~~~012l

,

We can repair and recore radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tariks.

PAT HILL FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1-1 3-tfc

JIM CUFFORD
PH. 992-7201

CAll COllECT:
(~141 843·5425
11·12·2 mo.

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

RENT A CAR': :
CALL
446-4522

"We Rw Fo1 tm"

U-SA'IE
AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North

Calli polls, Ohio ·

7/ 1lltln

BOGGS

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING

F11 All Ym P11111ng N1111t

SALES &amp; SERVICE

Complete Building

PlUS: Office Supplies

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE. OHIO
Authorized John Deere.
New Holland . Bush Hog
Fa rm Equipmenl
Dealer

&amp;

Contracting Service

Furniture, Wedding
and Graduation
Stationery, Magnetic

(Free Estimates)

Signs, Rubber Stomps,

a I'll

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

Long Bottom, Ohio

long Bottom, Ohio

Ph. 985-4141

PH. 949·2649

Free Estimates

OPEN THURSDAY
IHRU SUNDAY
AT

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

CONTRACTING

fi\ARCUM
CONTRACDNG

VETERINARIAN

"VINYl SIDING
"AlUMINUM SIDING
"BlOWN IN
INSUlATION

12-B-ilc

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

*Complete Remodeling
*Room Additions
*Roofing
*Sid inC
*Gara,es &amp; Pole
Build;ngs

TOWN &amp; COUNlRY .
CLINIC
Paul E. Shockey, DVM
PT. PLEASANT OFFICE
305 Jackson Ave,

J&amp;F

Ph.

11·28-3 mo.

992·621S or 992-7314
Pomeroy, Ohio

EUGENE LONG

Worked In home area
20 yeero
"Free Estimates"

Reasonable Rat!1s - Reliable
ll -22-1 mo.

Factory Choke
12 Gauge Shotguns Only
9-30 II

IO·B·tft

VINYL &amp; AWMINUM
Complete Gutter Worio
Complete Remodlliing
Roofing of all Typeo

WE HAUL- BIG OR SMALL
PICK UP WEEKLY

CHARLES BARlEY
PH. 74'2·2050

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30 P.M.

(Free Estimates)

Busintu forms,
Copy Servi(tl, (tc.
255 Mill St., Middloport
104 Mulberry Av., Pomeroy

992-3

IH2·1 mo.

10-17 II•

Roger Hysell
'
Garage ,

0

z

' Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio

a:

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR·

~

:z:

Also·Transmission
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

!

Farm Equi~ment
Parts &amp; Service
1·3 · tfc

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

LISA M. KOCH, M.S. •
Licensed Clinical Audiologist

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8-ll tln

3·24-tft

HUDNALL
PLUMBING &amp;
HEATING

31 7 Norlh St&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 4S760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

• We Also Carry
Fishing Supplies.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start From 12'x16'

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP

B&amp;D Mobile Home

Repair Service
SHADE, OHIO
Anything that has to
do with o mobile
homo. No job too small
or too big. Wt do
Sofups orol
Underpinning.
"Special Ia, far
S.nlor Cithons"

2 LOCAnONS

New lima Rd.
I 08 Vine St.
Rutland
Gallipolis
742·2225 or 742 -2778
446-9244
9:00 A.M. • 6:00 P.M. Monday-Saturday

Have Your Trophy ft'lounted By A
Full Time Taxidermist

Comp9te Qu9fifg, Not p,ice

PHONE 1614) 992-6100
12-10·15 I mo.

KOUNTRY 1t'/,~
IClUB '"" "
Gall
Equipment

' '

~ hwh~l • $1.50 ea.
~ llolio .... $6.00 Doz.

Now

Sizes from 6'x6' U9
to 24'x36'
Insulated Dog Houses

•New 8. Prior Owned C\Ub•

P&amp;S BUILDINGS·

•Sholl •Trophle•

Racine, Oh.
P~. 614·843·5191
10-6-tlc

•Cuttom Clubs
Yt~uth Club1 •
•Repair

JOHN TEAFOI D

, ...., ... Oloio
12·11·1 mo.

11·2· 1 mo.

fiiUE STREAK CABTo:-;

t

t.

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

PHONE 992-707 5
We Wish All Our
Customers AMerry
Christmas and AHa~~V
New ~ear!
II 29 85 I mo II U

MILLER

ELECTRIC
SERVICE

FOR All YOUR
WIRING NEEDS
Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992·5875 Or

742-3195

B·B·tlc .

..

Have Your Wedding, • ..
Anniversarv or Special •
Ouasion on Video .... We : ..
Tape Any Spe&lt;ial Ouasion.

Bashan Building

- Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work

4-5-ttc

UTILITY BUILDINGS

PUBLIC NOTICE
Tho following wore recoi·
vod/ preporod by the Ohio

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

THE

pl.

Public Notice

CARPENTER
SERVICE
work

IUSINESS PHON!
16t41 992·6510
RISIDIN&lt;E PHONE
1614) 992-7754

tll Coun St., ,omtrOJ. Ohio 151&amp;9

Public Notice

GUN SHOOT

- Plumbing and electrical

1/W tk

.

YOUNG'S

JOHN C. EBLIN
GARBAGE SERVICE
Rt. 2, Cool•ill•
985·4189

RT. 62 SOUTH

POINT PLEASANT, W. VA.
8 miles from
Pomeroy·Mason Bridge
. SINGlE '24.95
•live entertainment
' Free HBO •Restaurant
.Olympic Pool

A. A.A.

304·675

•

&amp;:

'

f. ::

&amp;

':

.-! ~

�Pape- 14- The Daily _Sentinel

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Thursday, December 26, 1985

1986

. ~~~::~~==r::::::::::::::r--------~l~A:;F~F~-~A~-~D~A~Y~~~~~~4;2~M~o:.b;,il~e~H~o~m:es:::r~K=rr~·=N·~c~A:RL~Y~L:E:
®~:7L:ar:ry:w:r:lg:ht~~~::~~7~1~~A;ut~o;sTcro;ris~al~a
54 Misc . Merchandise
GOOO USED
for Rent
Refrienton, wasll4rt. diJtl',
ps and tltctrit rarcos l!1d IV

..... OPEN 8 TO 6

Battery Sale

panda.

9534.

627 !l.rid Ave., Gollipolis
446-1699

COMPLETE LINE OF
FARM AND AUTO
BATTERIES
12 VOll-6 .VOLT .

44

HOBSTETTER
REALTY

S3995

ONlY
ALL SIZES IN STOCK

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
6 A.M. TO 11 P.M.
PHONE 614-992-9932

Reel Estate General

FARII - 153 acres m/1, with
three bedroom brick-YI!leer
IIJme. Hams and sheds, fru~
trees. FREE gas $70,000.00.

.

1969 Pontile CattiJne._,...tow
milll, tunl good, mull ~ for

rn

11

1~/26/85
EVEN INO

RIPI

N..cled . For busin••

$45,000.00.
CONDOR ST. - Fwr room
house, U500 as office rental.

Someone to Clrt tor lldy In her
homl. Aoom 6 board. Small

Asking $7,!00.00.

10lary. Call 814·448-4352.

fiCREAGE - 50 acres on :bte

Junior PtiQI Sh"f Reider 14 or
15 yHn okf. Mul1 h.VI I

Route 143. $22,500.00.

genlfallcnawlldgt of thelibrlrv
and en undemanding of the
Oaw.y DeciiT'III Syatem. Suning salary 11 $3 ,31 per hour. To
adlldule an IPPointment fof' an
interviMN c.~ll 814-441· 7323

Velml Nicinsky. Associete
Phone 742-li92

Dr. Samu.. L. B0111rd Memorial

SWEEPER and sewing mechint
repW, parts, snd supplill. Pick
up 1nd delivllfY, Davis Vacuum
Cleaner, one half milt up
lloo'll• CrMI&lt; Rd. Coli 614-

Recine Oun Shoot tpOniOrld by

33482.

Choke 12 VUIIIt shotguna.

. School District - A lar~

modern fiome il a gooo
neighborhood. Up Ill fr;e .
bOOrooms. located on approx.
I acre lei II the R• ()est
SubdMsiln. Approx, 9 yeMS
0~ with 2&gt;1 baths. $59,!ro00

lilt, Jan.

4334.

e.

1981. 513-392-

Two uM rllllal · separate
utilities. liVe in on~ rent
theother or rllll both. !Ner
$JXI.OO monthly · rental WI·
come. Want $24,!K!O.OO.

NOV LISTING - Rutllnd -

home features a large
yard, new roof, and ~ priald to
sell at $22,000 with filancilg
at II'll interest. $500 00w n for
up to Jl yem Monthly
payment as lifll as $204.75 oo
balanre of $21,500 01 cash
price of $19,11l0 withywrown
filancil~ Ask for a slwil~

Th~

26178 .

Lost and Found

lllW USING - PomefOy StatelY home with river ~ew.
spend the eveni1g; on the
front porch relaxilgaslhe river
goes byl ltlme has formal
dililg area, famiy room, 4
bOO rooms, I ~ baths, fuM
basem111t, &amp; a 2 car garage.
Storm docn and wilOOw~
some insulation, forced air
natural gas furnace, &amp; wood
oomi1g fieptace contribute to
goo! heating ms1s. Want
$26,!K!O.OO:
NOV USTING - Have yw

beer1 wanmg a campsite? Th~
4&gt;1 acres of IOYety cleared land
wth tall trees to shade yw this
summer. Small stream llitt1
12x20 cabil nestled abng;ile.
Water, etectri:, ililet facilities
on sie. Woukl be beautiful
homesite also. Owner asking
$12,500.00.

PRICE REDUCED - lllddltport - 2s!IJ)' home on quiet
street, 3 bedrooms, garage &amp;
patil area Naw $16,000.00.

POIIEROY - Real~ nke 2
stiJ)' home that is a real
bargall. Owner must sacrifice
&amp; has reduced pr~e to
$23,000.00. Call now for your
showily,
IIIDDLEPORT - On a Plod
s1n1e1 - This 3 bedroom two
story remodeled home is
priced to selL It looks nice &amp;
has a woodbumer for cheap
heat this wilier. Owner reaHy
wants to sell. Make OOer

WIN V1e pereon who mok m~
dog off Ilia chain In my
~lrd. pfeue retum him? Hell 14
ve111 old lnd i1 on mldlctUon
for 1 hllrttitment. Noque1tion1
liked. Bud McKinney, 85 South
Fourth St.. Middlepot1. Phone

Boagle

814-992-3610.

FOUND M1M COCker Sp.niel on
Rt. 33. near Darwin. Cell

114·992-7897.
8

p., 100. Ou.'rM'Iteed ptyment.
No ExpHnOI·No Sal•. Detaill
Hftd uH-eddr•Hd damped
envetopt: El~n Vltal-1847 3418
Enterprilt Ad, Ft. Pltrce, FL

LAYOFFS. Coil 304·178-3950
or 1·800-842-3619.
time and 1.-onll wort!;. Bllche·
lor'1 degree r-.utred . Repty 1o
Point PIHient Regl1ter, boa:

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER
SERVICE . Ettete, ferm, entlque,
liqukletion ..ln. lictr11ed Ohio
and W•t Virginle. 304· 713· .

12

Situations
Wanted

Henry E. Cleland, Jr.

992·6191
Jean Trussell 949-2660
Dottie Tum11 992-5692
Jo Hill 985-4466

rn

•

rocker•.

U11C1Fumhure .. Ore11er. &amp; bed .
metal office d61kl . 3 mi111 out
Bulwllle Ad. Open 9am to 6pm,
Mon. thru Se1.

814-441·0322

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Washen. dryer1, refrigerator~ ,
ranges . Skegg1 Appliance•.
Upper River Rd . bt1id1 Stone
Crftt Motel. 814-448-7398.

Apt , for rent In H1nder10n, WV.
$126 mo . Cell 814·48 -9882.

53

Effenclency epartment. 2
rooms, beth, full buement.
Fumi1hed . In Pomeroy ebove
Kroger~. 814·992-821 !I or814·

We p-r c..h tor lete model cl11n
uHd ct~rl.
Jim Mink Chw.·Okl• Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson

7314.

Will care for the llderty In my
home. C.III14·192·24B3.

114-446-3672

WANTED TO BUY uoocl wood 6

18 Wanted to Do

coel hHten. SWAIN'S FURNI·

TURE. 3rd. 6 Olive Sl. Galllpollo. Calll14-441-3119.

1980 Llborty 14K64, 2 bed-

TOP CASH pilei tor '83 model

end ntwtf ueed car~ . Smith
Bulck·Pontlec, 1911 Etnem

992·2219.

Avo .• Golllpollo. Call 614·448-

Hou .. coal. Lump &amp; 1toker. linn
Coal Co. Calll1'·446-1408 .

Coli 814 -992-&amp;304 or lt4·
446-1552.

304-n3·&amp;B73.

Call1hen'1 Used Tire Sho.p. Over
1.000 tire•. 1l1ea 12, 13, 14, 15,
18, 11 .6 . 8 mll11 out At. 218 .
C1il 514·2&amp;6·5251 .

1 or 2 bedroom lp!l. Nice
Hction o1 Middlepot1. 11&amp;6. per
month plu1 utilitin. Cell 814·

992-7177.

Bl1ck powder 115.95, munle·
IOiding ICCU10ri81 spetillilt.
Koebel '• Gun1 &amp; Reptlr, Mill·
creek Ad. Open 6·8 P.M . Mon.
thur Fri. Set. 1 · 5 . Cell814-448.

APARTMENTS. mobile homM,
hou'" . Pt. PltMtntlndGelllpo·
Ill. 614-448-8221 '

2316.

2 br apertment• in Hendenon.

304-875-1972.
8-6

Middleport N. 4th Avenue. 2
bedroom, furnilhed epertment.

Ferm for 111e: no houM, 2 btml,
counr; water &amp; septic lank. Call

304-862-2&amp;88.

614-379-2268.

45

Why PlY double price? We build
big 4 bdr. EertyAmeriCin Hom•
t18.995, New model open. Call

all day, 614·448·1822.

Furnished Rooms

Fuel oil heater with thenno1t1t
175. Shower ch1lr with wheels
never used $20. C1ll 814-388·

For rent Sleeping Room• 1nd
light hous1 k•ping rooms. Park
Central Hotel. Call 814·••e-

814-881-7311 .

B824.

0768.

R1: nl ~ l s

D•lryc11e 9ft . wktewith remote

comp., *300. Call 8t4-2456052.

Housekeeping room. r~~nge. ,...
fri~ .• lhlfe beth, mele preferr..:l,
ullllll• pd. *126. Coli ~484418 efter 7pm.

Houses for Rent

Mixed herdwood 1leb1, t12. par
bundle, contelnlng approx . 1VJ
ton, fob. Ohio P1lltt Co., Pome·
roy, Ohio. Phone 114-992·

Johnoon 114·3417-7410.

COMPLETE HOUSEHOLDS

7PM.

21

FURNITURE. hdl, Iron, wood ,
cupboerd1, chain, ch11t1,
-11ket1, dllh•, done I••· en·
tlqu". gold and allvar. Write·
M.D. Miller, At.2, Pomeroy,

Business
Opportunity

Buying deity gold. 1ltv11' colna.
rinoa. jewelry, ttlfling were. okt
colnl,
currency, Top prlcn. Ed. urkan Blrbtr Shop,

•1•

2nd\ Avo. Mlddl-n, Oh. 114·
992-3471.
STANDING TIMBER . AI
Tromm. Call: 114-742·2326 .

22 Money to Loan

Nice 3 bedroom 1260 • month.
314 3rd. St., Kenauga. Call

61 -1182-30&amp;1 '

Hour~ : 12·9

23

auckloy, 114 -164 -4781 .
p.m.

'

Professional
Services

Ernpl oym ent
Plena luning end repair, tune up
for lhe holidey1, IPICitl dllcount. Werd'1 l(eybolf'd, 304-

Sr: rvtt: r:s
Help Wanted ·

Rl! dl

f Sl dll:

rebluelng, ell typM of gunsmith
Work, fest nrvlce. 304·675·

4831 .

7317 or 178-1247.

614·441-7473.

OE lld.:bv· •lde doubla door
frolt free r1frlgeretor, white.
$300. Exc. Cond . 304-875-

Tf'liler IPICII. Small children
accepted. Out At. 1, Locust
Roed . beck of K&amp;K . 1 ·30•·1715-

7479.

1078.

8 room houaa. open e•age. In
Alfred Cummuntty. Reterenc•

$' proJector TV ICrHn, made by
Advent. Exc. cond. Perfect
plclura. Muot ..11 $600. 304-

178-7479.

Mcr r: h,JIHII SI:

ond dapolil required. Colll14985-3849.

9 urpful · Cerhert·Army -Denim
clothing, jln1uleted Dacron
c:overell1 camouflege, orange,
brown •28.00). Sem Somerville's , Et1t·Revtn1wood,
Jun~:tlon lndep.,dtnce Rolcl ·

51 Household Goods

flreplece . No pet1. Cell 114·

949-2253.

5 room houte end bath In Racine
.,... AvellebleJenuary 4th. Cell ·

814-992-5B58 .

3 bedroom. 2 story hou11 In
HOME QWNERS·Reflnanct to , Pomeroy , Ohio . Oepo1lt relowfbld rttl. UMequityforeny quirld. Phone1 -814·753-3484
pu7011. Lieder Mortgege Co .. ,_"'_1_·1_1_4_·7_1_3_·4_8_5_8 -_""C":c::-:c-:c

Buying Raw Fur. 8etf and o..,
hldtl. Selling-trapping 11.1ppllt1.
Whnt and nlte Rln. George

TONY'S GUN REPAIRS, holdlp

Gerege for rent. 1Uay back of ·.:..·- - - - - - - - - - -Thomas Cloth!••· Cell 114- Lump . houn eo1l, limntone,
448-2419 or 614-44&amp;-3949.
griVtl', 11nd deliv1red, one ton
end up. Jim Lanier, 304-8715-

Hoult or ept. for rent. Fumithed

through the miN un111 you hiYI
Investigated the offering.

3667.

Dhlo. Coll814-448-9812.

3 bdr., 11rga kitchen, nice utility
room, 1 car garege, 1295 mo.
Ret. ' dep required. Call 8 14·

I NOTICE I
or unfurnilhed. 114-992-2381
THE OHIO VALLEY -NBLISHOhio 45711 or call 614-!192- ING CO . recornmtndl thlt you diV• or 114-992-6723 ovn.
7710.
do bulin•• with people vou 4 bedroom•. wood burning
know. end NOT to llftd money

Firewood, all hardwood. t35 .
delivered or 1215 .• you pick up .
HEAP accepted. C•ll614· 986·

Mobile home lot In Rio Orende.

Partlolly fumlohocl. 114-9926215 or 814·982-7314.

Wentld to Buy: Stendlng timber
pulp wood. Contact Alvin

•

1481 .

Mobile home lot, 12 'x60' or
smaiiM, 175 watM peld, 4th &amp;
Nail. Gellipolls. Cell 448 -4416
after BPM.

Furnl1hed houn, 241 J1c:klon
Pike, G•lllpolil, $200 weter
peld, 2 bdr. Ce\144$-441 8 efter

Old A~ 21 , · Fri, Sal, Sun,
SWAIN
1:00-7:00 PM (until Xma11f11r
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82 6:00 PM ..an} . FREE DELIV·
Olive St., Gelllpalla. New &amp; ullld ERV , 3Q4-175-3334 IKido
wood ·coalstovft, 8 PC wood lR
C1moufleg1).

suite 1399, bunk bedl. $111,
entron reclln•a tal, nr.v &amp;
used bedroom sultu, rangN,
wringer wuher1, • lho•. New
IMngroom suite• 1199 -tSII,
Iampi, 11to buying coal• wood
11ov... Call114-441-3161.

Amend a 18 ft . fro11 fretrefrlger•tor, 30" electric ltlf·clean
range t380. each. 304·576·

2069.

Ulld photocopltr, es 11, 304-

176 · 8~74 .

' .EHiclency

cottege, t615 .00
welk, utllltl• peld, phone 304·

&amp;76-3100 or 175-6609.

County Appllence, Inc. Good
ulld applianc.. end TV tet1.
Open BAM to IPM. Man thru

55 Buildif)g Supplies

Ava. Gallipolis. OH .
Vellev Fvrnlture. ntw &amp; uled .
Large Mctlon ot quellty tuml·
ture , 1211 Eutern Av• .•

Building Mlttrllll
Block, brick, IIWer pip11, win·
dowt. llntel1, etc. Claude Win·
ttrl, Rio Grinde. 0 . Cell 814·

Sel. 614-448·1899, 127 3rd

Large housa and apertmant.
unturnilhed. 304-871· 1 366.
Two blldroom unfumllhld with
biHment, In Hendaraon, no
pett. 11BI5 .00 month $100.00
depoalt, 304-871-1118

I::;~:;;:;:;:;;::::::;:;====
42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Gollloollo.

248-51,21 .

E Z C edit M0 11o• 1 F llu
· 7·rNonh of Golllpollo.
" n ~m Call
" ·
AI.
814-448 -7444.

Kentuclcy Lump, Ohio Lump ,
OhkJ Stok•. Yard or dlllvory.
cem111t blockt end building
m1teritl. Oelllpoll1 Bk&gt;ck Co. 1
Pine Sit., 0111ipoiM;~ Ohio Call

Weiher &amp; dryer set 1185. auto
One certtfied Medlcel Tethnoto·
gilt, welkdeys. S"'d resume or
epply to Mldicel Pfere, 203
J1ck10n Plh. Qellipollt Oh

411831 .

'

Govemm1nt Job1 118 040·

·*&amp;9,230 yr. Now hiring: Call
806·117-11000 bl. R·4BI2 for
current ftcl . .l lilt.

l

Pert·linle. Must be 21 . Allthtftl
and WMktnde. Country Cerry
Out. 511 Upp., Rtver Rd.,
Gelllpolll.

31

Homes for Sale

By owner. Must Mll·movtd. 3
bdr. ranctl, one cer glflge,
Wilking dlstllnce from Not1h
Gtllll High Schoal. Reduced to

128,900. CaH 614-388·8111 .

4 bedroom houet for •II.
fireplace, 3 mi. 10uth of Oetllpo·

I

2 bdr. fully furnithed , 12xl6.t
conv. locttlon, Upper Rtver'Ad.,
wtttr peld, 1ec. dep. r.qulred .
2 bdr. unfum . 12Jtl0, wethtr •

hookup. 1ol milo put HMC
llo. f32.600 . Col 'dayo 114- dryar
AI. 3&amp;. Call 114·448-4369
441-161S or nl!lhla 114-441· on
or 304-17&amp;·9710.
1244.

AKC Auttrellan Cettie Dov
puppie•l Blue Heeler). 2 m1le1,
1 female. Good working blood
linn. Had first •hots end
wormed. C.ll Sh1l111 11 1-814·

[HBOJ ln11do1ho NFL

Boats and
Motors for Sale

76

592·1073.

AKC Lha11 Ap1o pup1, mala
only . 20 chempton•ln pecUgrH,
gentle. quiet end loving dog1.

Four T.A. 215-70A, 14 mOt,,
Goody111 Eegl• ST radiale. l~t
ni!IW, $180.00. 304-882-28158.
_,

304·87&amp;-5537 or 875·2223.

875·878t .

Farm Suppl11: s
&amp; Ll vl!s lot: k
61

Farm Equipment

u.s.

36 W11t. Jack1on , Ohio.

CROSS

&amp;

SONS

614-286·84&amp;1 .

Malley Fergu10n. New Holland.
Buth Hog Still Service. Ower
40 u1ed 1rectOfl to choose from
&amp; C0"'4Jittt line of new 8t ulld
equipment. Llrg"t Mltctk»n In

a.

S.E. Ohio,

Gravity box. auger driv1n, grain

foeclor•275 .. buJh ·hog 1295 ..

polt hole df;ger t176 .. menure
IPrllder t4150 . Cell 814-281-

6522.

Lite Model BN Ford tractor. 4
IP,d. cream puff, not u... hlfd. •
new tlrM, 11996 . Call814·281·

1522.
New Hollend hal 0% Finenclng
for 2 yeer1 on new Of utld Hay a '
Forage product1, Grinder mix er~ , menurs sprlldel'l. Now 11
the time to buy box m1nure
tpraedtrs larg1 Cllh dilcounl•.
December Speciel1: 1· New
Model 21 3 N.w Holland , 08 bu .
Menure Sprelder t2.8 00. 1·
U1ed Model 387 New Holland
Tenk Spreader 11200 . 1- U1ed
Model 676 New Holl1nd Box
Spreader 2 Belttrs, Tenden
Axla. 250 BU 13600. 1· U11d
John Deere Model 700 Grindll'
Mi11.er u•oo. 1-Uttd Model
· 365 New Holllfld ,.00 bu.
Grinder Mixer Hyd-Drive ulld
very llt11et6600. 1· U1ed Model
361 Qrinder Mixer $1460. 1NfiW Modei353New Hollend80
bu. Llrge tir11 Grinder Mixer
8'400. 2- Uaed New Holland
Model8151 Round btllfl Hydw·
f'IP 16600 . 1· Used New Hoi·

land Modol270 Bafor 11800. 1-

Uied Super 88 New Hollend
Squ1re Beier 1800. 1· New
Holland Model488 9ft. Hayblne
Demonstrelor 18200. 4- Good
used model 68 &amp; 256 H1vRek•
from tBOO to $1400. 1- U1ed
Model707 3 point ChopperWhh

bolh hood• *1900. 1· U1ocl Glhl

Forage box 11600. 1-UIIc:l
Super 717 Chopp1r with 1 Row
Head 81800. 1· U1ed New
Holland 71 B Chopper &amp; 1 Row
Heocl *3300. I -Now Holland
L-.a2 Skid Steer Lolder Dim·
on1treto.r 100 hours 112,500.
1-UIId Glenco 7 Sh1nk Soli
. Sewer new molcfboerdl 6 potn11
t3600 . ~Hfert Service Centtr.
St. At. 81, Pt. Ple111nt WV.

Rlpll'l Rd. 304-66·3874.

ATTENTION farmer• 11 the new
tax lew PIIIN In 1986 which it
highly probtble you will loll the
ten percent inveetment credit
tax . 11 you need 1 new triC1or.
buy now, we cen nil you 1 new
Oueb ·AIIIa di11el tr.ctcM' from
21 HP to 1BO t-IP It INI price
then we told 1 trtcotr for In
19BO. Keefer Service Center, St.
At. 87 , Point P...11nt. Ripley

Rood, ••11304-65-3874,
54

Hay &amp; Grain

Large round belli of h1y 120 ea.
C1ll 61'·446· 1062 after &amp;PM.
Top quality conditioned mixed
hey. •1 .30 per bale. C11l 814849-3069 lfter 15:00 p.m.
Oet hly end elf1Heorchlfd gr111
mixed hl'f. Cell 814·187-1184.

()) Gll12J Shadow Chonra
(CCI While in 1ho woods in-

vestigating reports of wer-

ewolves. Jonathon

BASEMENT

pears 10 be a .wolf girl. (80
min.!
Cl ()) (j] Magnum, P.l. A
high school friend enlis1s
Magnum'o help in locating
a s1olen dolphin to be uaed

1-614,-237-0488, diV or rilghi
Roger• l11emenf
Weterprooflng.
,

in

J.and L. lnttandon. · Rooffna,
Yinyt skiing. ttOf'm doors anti
windowa. FrM Htlmtt•. Cll
114-&amp;&amp;2·2n2.
~

Pump •1•, III'YI91· RegitwM

in Ohio. An .VOrl&lt; ~~~~~~
Call 304-273-2611 . R-1!
W. Ve.

•· •

RON ' S hltvilion Strvlca.
~ou.. c1ll1 on RCA, Queur.
GE . Specie ling in Zenith. Cjl
304-671-2398 or 814-448•
24154 .
'

.

'

AINGLES'S SERVICE, exp.;
rlenced carpenter, electrtden ~
m110n, pelnter, rooting tln~ffl
lng hot tlr appllc:edon) ~

Rotery or cebl1 tool drMUng,
Mott w.U1 compl ..ed •emed~
Pump 11111 1nc:l •ervtce. 3

-

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Ptne

"' ~

MY

;:;=;;:==.:==
~
83 Excavating

TATER DOIN' IN
.KIDDY-GARDEN,
MISS BESSIE?

•9&amp;.301n.uoarangal76, 311n, 56
pll..co Uppor Rlvor, Rd. 614-

Pets for Sale

Brlarpetch Kennels

All· brHd

Reproduction Aoae craved Vlo· fi"'Omlng. Adulla 6 puppiH.
torlan oola. Call614-441-1512 Englt1h Cod!., Spanltll. 388·
9790.
apor &amp;.

'

'

HE'S REAL
GOOD AT,

Dorer Work lend cl•rlng,lenda- ~
ceping, 1tc. FrH Htlm11•. Ca~ v

614·448·8038 or 614-992· '
1

~8~5=;;G~erl;:e~r;ai;;H:;:a:u:;;li:ng: ~
'

.

.

..

Jemu Bey• Wet., Service. Atw
pools filled. Call 814·21&amp;·114.,. ~
or 614 -441·1175 or 814-641- t
7811 .
f

;;::::::-::::-:---::--:-----:-~·
K_an 's Weter Service. W1U1, ~
etllems. pool• filled. Phone f'

614 -367·0123 or S14-3877741 ni!IIH or ·•av.

ill Proflloo Dl No1ure
CIJ (!) Hill Stroot Blu11

A rookie Cop hlngs him·
self, LaRue admits to an involvement With 1he w ife of
a murdered man , and

f

.•;

~--,-----~·~------~r

~lugh 's Wiler Service. Wt11. :
C11t1m1, pooM;. Fast, rwlltble l
Hrvlce. Ctll 814-211· 1240 or
614 -266 -1130. Reaaoneble
rttll.
..
#

NOWI

11

li's7,--o;:;==--Upholstery
' "' '

1

:

cond . Call614-448 -3028 .

opd, 42,000 mll10. Cell 814448· 7414 after 4pm.
ptymouth Vellent Scamp, v .a . 2
door, 318lT'IOtor, AC. PS, radial
dru, rldio . Call 814·248·8891.

1 163 Sec. Alit..

Gallpolla.

1

814·441-7833 or 614-441' '

~ ~

1833.

R • M fuJnltureMtnufecturtng I,
St. Rt. 7, Crown City Oh

eu.u&amp;-1470.

ceu

caei '
E..,.. ·, 1,.. :

4'8 ·34 38 . Old •
Uphosttred.

new

1,

,

,oo I moo m•

HE DOESN'T LIKE 'iT

BECAUSE THE HERD
IS

A CAT...

1-lc WANTS A!lOOK

WH~

ALL ~E CATS 6ET
EATfN 8V ALli6AT()gS
ON TI-lE FIRST PA6E!

()) •

liZ

Nowo
Cil Men !ram U.N.C.LE
()) C.pltol' Journol Hodding Cor1or hoot• 1hl•
weekly nowa magazine
which roporta on Congrea·
alonol octlvitloa.
(j] Eyowl- N-a
[)) A Walk Thro1111h tho

Twentieth Century wllh
Bill M~ Chengo,
Chongo ICC) Tholmpoot ot
tho 1960'a on American

Norl• Eaol

Pa"
Pass

3'
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

+I 0

smoothly drop his spade queen. Of
course, It Is still not clear that declarer will insert the nine when be playa
the third round of spades, but he at
l~ast now has the chance .to C01111der
going wrong with that play.
Now return to the openina sentence.
Read tbe words slowly, lettine your
bridge consciousness absorb tbem.

Yesterday'• AMwer

23 f'atceur
31 Kook
U Deep gorge 32 Lessen
25 Type of !19.11 36 Bavarian
26 Exagriver
gerated
37 Strap
27 Where to 39 Chill
find Helena 41 French
29
d31lce

b-+-+-

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, eu:. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE
12·26
TQ

T C,

T

PRNVEFTKF
T K F

QYW

ON C Q

CE I ,

C ~QNJ

UE I

Lt

-

E

UTC-

t: QEVQ -

YF.STKF

QR FWQ NJ! - YED PYE U llTPX
Yeeterd&amp;,•• C'7Jit0quote: ANOTIII:R CIIRISTM...;
WISH: MAY YOU NEVER FORGET WHAT IS WORm
REMEMBFRINO, OR REMEMBER WHAT IS BEST
FORGOTI'EN. - IRISH TOAST

Derby

'1

676-3190.

w...

IALONGFELLOW

[)) TDny Brown'1 Joumol ·
Tony Brown ditcu•••• il·
lUll of specie! lnttrtl1 to
tho block community,

f

Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

DAILY CRYPTOQIJOTFS - Here's how to work It,
AXYDLBAAXR

Balker goes undercover ••
a chicken-and-egg mascot.
(80 min I (Rj.
()) Cll ~ 20/20 (CCI
Ill ()) ® Kno11 Lending
(CCI Gary deotroya tho secret in!ltaUation It Empire
Volley, anmd lillmee altempll 10 meddle in
Cathy's television show.
(60 min .)
ill Wo'll Moot Ageln
[)) Newawo1ch
IHIOI Wllllo Noloon'o
Toxoa Party Willie end
frlonda perform a downhomo baah for 3&amp;.000
fen•. (60 min.)
(MAXI ·MOVIE: 'Tho Stono
Boy' (CCI
10:20 ()) MOVIE: 'Holt, Horor
10:30 Ill Variety
(!) Champlonehlp Rollor

;;::=:;;--:-:---:-~~--,-- ~

H2

+K 12

42 Mate of
Nora
Charles
43 llrazltian
seaport
44 Billy Williams

·

10:00 G

Oump truck tervh:e, wiH ~
COil. limldone or other~304..
~

1983 Pl';'mouth Turl1mo, 2.2, &amp;

448·73SS.

COPV- CATTIN'!!

Good -1 ExciYetlng, baem•ta. :
looters. drlvew1ya, MSnlc 'llnlll. land1caplng. Cell enytlrne 114- ~
448-4537, Jem" L. Oevfton. ~
Jr. own1r .
,1

71
Autos for Sale
rolrlgoroiOr *180, 2 dr. PhllcO Block, Rt. 33, New Haven. W. l-------------- ----------------~·
TAl STATE
·ft :
refrigentor t915, frklalre rtfrlg- I·V
;a;.:30:4:-8:8;2;-2:2:2~2:.::;;:::;=
1973 VW Super Beetle good
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
;-:
er~tor •as. 30 ln. elect . range I ~
au fll'tlle tea . Sk~to• ~P­

THAR'S

ONE THING

SOUTH
.AJ7
'AQ972

sourc:es
40 Humble

llrange old man comes be-

fore Judge S1one claiming
to be Santo Claus. IR}, In
Stereo.

+J 10 8

weight
34 Hire
36 Apron top
38 News

for Rachel but il retected .

C &amp; M Cleaning &amp; Fum~
Repair: Al10 Plumbing. 10 '(1'1!
expeuence . t:ell 814 · 211 ·
13151 .
:·

'
'3
.AQ745

.Q9 6 5

star.
33 Indian

(60 min .)
9:30 D (l] ill Night Court A

JIM'S PLUMBING I HEATIRt . 1, BoJl 3151. Geillpolie. .
814-367-0576.

7119 enytlme.

29 Favoring
30 Greek deity
31 "On Golden
Pond" co-

only marriage to Fallon.
(80 min .)
.
• ()) ® Simon &amp; Simon
(I) Wild Amorlao
[)) M'(ttory: My Coualn
Aochot (CCI Port 4 of 4
Phillip profeoseo hie love

Galllpollo. Dhlo
Phone 114-441-388a or e~
448·4477
~

'K8

.• 10 9 8 5

280wn

fruatrated over hll in-name-

"":
.'

EAST
.Q 10 3

WEST

+BIZ

· ACROSS
46 Vigilant
1 Harass
DOWN
8 Tasteless
I "Wildcat"
food
stage star
9 Vibrant
2 "Essays of
10 Spring
'
I 2 Ship
3 llurn
13 Scottish
4 Twilight
island
6 Hoose
Ill Fall behind
adjunct
I 8 Decay
6 Denture
18 Nigerian . 7 Chalice
I 9 Circumvenl veil
21 Slarted .
8 Exemplar
(poel)
II Procession
22 Golf score 14 Nine
23 Napoleonic, musicians
e.g.
17 Poem
24 Intimate
20 Urn
27 French
painter

ble and Conatonce cluh
over who Is mls1ron of the
ea1oto, and Mllea becomu

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

10 6 4

by THOMAS JOSEPH

lieving aha is coming be·
tween Jason and Sable.
moves out of the house; Sa-

Get your carpet In ahlp tt~eH
whh C•p~eln St11m•. fumltuM·
ciNnlng·wlter d1m101 worTt. ~
304·1715·22815,
"' ,·

11-IWI

~tWAFC,t~

tody of her oldest •on. (R),
In Stereo:
Cil700 Club
(!) PKA Full Contact Kor·
oto
(J) Ill ~ Dynnty If: The
Colbya (CC) Francooco , be-

SteJks TrM end Uwn SaMe.!
l•ndteaplng. 304·178-2010 ..~ ;

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

at-

by giving in to her aw·
husband's demand for cus-

,

NORTH
• K 96 4

What could be simpler than to say
that when you play the card you are
known to bave, your opponent may decide not to play you for the card you
are not known to have. If you say that
fast. tO times, I'm sure your tongue as
wellu your brain will gel twisted, so
let's look at today's deal to see how it
applies.
·
On lead against what we might condescendingly call a "Mama-Papa auction," West tabled the diamond 10.
East took two diamond tricks and then
switched to a low heart. Declarer finesaed, losing to West's king, and West
continued with his remaining heart.
Declarer now smoothly cashed two
more trumps, ending in the dummy. 11
was no surprise that neither defender
with a spade. Next came a low
to the jack. H•pplly for South,
won the trick. Declarer now
cashed the spade aee, on which a
sleepy East contributed the 10. On the
play of the third spade, even tbe lowliest novlee would now rise with the
king, swallowing the queen and making dummy's spade nine the game-going trick.
East Is the culprit, since he missed
his chance for deception. When the aee
of spades is played, East should

mother. IAI. In Stereo.
[)) Sn11k Prevl9:00 D (ll ill Ch..,. Carla
ahocks tho gang at Cheers

t

89&amp;-3802

If they know you

a meeting with his real

Fetty Trat Trimmin,. llurnAI
ftmOYII. C•ll304·17 · 1331 .

675-2088 or 17&amp;-7318.

en aJSaatination

tempt. (80 min.)
()) MocNoii·Lohrer Nowahour
[)) Tho Snowmen
fll MOVIE: 'Song of Nor·
woy'
[HBOJ MOVIE: 'Pioc11in tho
Heart' (CCI
IMAXI MOVIE' 'Bye Bye Blrdlo'
8:30 1J (ll (!) Family Tlea
When Skippy learns he's
odopted, Alex t1k01 him on

COLEMAN WATER WELl
DRILUNG
,

82

and

Benny encounter what ap-

WATERPROOFING
1
UncondltlonellHetlme gu.,.n,
lie. locel referent~~ fumlthiiL
~ree 11tlmat11 . Cell collect "t

wood,

James Jacoby

.A 73

min.)

Home
Improvements

15 year old male Beagle good
hunting dog. t66 . Cali 304-

IRIIHil

By Jame1 Jacoby

Army
(!)Auto Racing '8&amp;: World
Endurance
Moleyalon
1000 Coverage from Kuala
Lumpur, Molay'eio. (80

•'•

81

Answer: A. gur wh o l•aves too much to chance
uaua IV hasn 't got th is-A CHANCE

m Cl (I) Jeopardy

Stereo.

Scrv11:r: s

t506.

YeOiortfoy'sl Jumbloo: HUMID TAKEN ENTICE CAUCUS

'J
.KJ

Cil Wackiest Ship In tho

" to 18e u1ls to lvoe u1 ",

Rat Terrier Puppie1;' 304-675·

(Answers lomonow)

got it, flaunt it

()) Nightly Bualnon Roport
(j] Wh•l of Fortune
Cll ~ Price lo Right
fll WKRP In Cincinnati
IMAXI Comedy Exporimon1'
Spitting lmodo If
7:3&amp; (I) Sanford ond Son
8:00 II Cll ill c..by Show
Rudy and her friend Peter
unwittingly domogo Cliff'o
prized new )ulcer. IAI. In

Auto Parte
&amp; Accessories

I I I I XI I )

Prlntanawerhw: (

Gamo
Cil Ploon Don't Eot Dol1i11
C!JS~k

Wanted to buy 3 pc. rear apol*
for '76 Cemero in Point Ple...nt
Aree. C1l 30• ·~8 · 19115 .

118. Kenmore wether like new 1~
t171, Kenmore dl1hw11her Block, bfkk. morur 1nd• mettl. lid• by tide Admiral 10nry IUPPII•. Mountain State ·

Call 114-446-1602.

Call 614-44&amp;·8568.

614-258-9354.

tJ

Now arrange lha circled lettare to
form the surprise answer, aa suggested by lho above canoon.

Rue

1:0&amp; ()) MIN'!_Tyler Moore
7:30 D Cll ()) Now Newlywed

256·6417.

AJCC Reg . Bo1ton Terriers, 10
wks. okt, wormed , 1hots . Cell

1I I

8Je~raono

John boat for 11le. Cell 814·

woahor •7s, Kenmore wolhar 1.6:-:1-47-4--:4 8-:-2-:7 8 ~3·__· - - - -

Furnished, AC , cabie, no city
tiXII, betUifful ri'llr Yltw In
Ken1ug1. fOitef'a Mobile Home
~ork .

'

Clo•e-Out Ammunltlon Sale!
1300 boxe1 of Winchester,
Remlngtom II. Federalc1rtridg11
et pricea t1 .00 -U.OO . Below
K·Mert or Hecka. All shotgun
altH, aome pi1tols, riffle. IncludIng aome raritl11 . All new·
current m•nuf1cturt~ . Acro11
from Blue Fountain Motel. 4:30
to 8:00 weekdey1. Set. 6 Sun.,

Nice 1 and 2 br ep1rtmtn11
downtown . 304-176-2218

In MlnertwUie by the Bulk plent.
1 bedroom hou11. Totllelectrlc.

2282.

614-388-8469.

with

J I K) I

McClanahan.
(!)Ill (I) Wheel of Fortune
ill SCTV Network
(j] Eyowltnon Now•
[)) MocNoii·Lohrer Nowahour
el12J Dlvorct Court

Sacrifice *300. 304-876-747t.

75

I I K ()

Tuno
(!) Mltdo Sportalook
()) 3-2-1. Contact (CCI
(j] Eyowltne11 Now•
[)) P.-rhou•
• Dlffren1 Stroke•
(I) And!_ Griffith
D Cll ill NBC Nowo
Cil GrHn AcrM
(!) Down tho' Stre1ch
()) . . ~ABC Nowo
Ill ()) (!] CBS Nowa
()) DOC1or Who
[)) Body Elootrla
•Toxl
()) Ctrot Burnott
II Cll PM Magulno
Cil Courtship of Eddlo'l
Fothor
(!) SportsContar
()) Enttrtslnment Tonlgh1
Interview

AKC Germ1n Shepherd puppie1,
7 week• old, t76 tl, Cell

814·949,-2801 ofltr 6:00p.m.

New 1 and 2 bedroomturni1hed
IPtl. and hoUII In Middltpon.

441-1358.
S ..l e1ch window In pl11tlc.
Prev.,t hut loR during the
coming winter. BHI Slack. 814·

Antiques

Garden . 4 pre11ed back ct1alr1. 6
old coHectottpodcetknlvll. Call

46 Space for Rent

Wanted To Buy

61 4·448-0708.

5 ..Om unfurnlahtd apl. Call 54 Ml' sc. Merchandl"se
614-992-&amp;434 or 304-8822666.

room , unfumi1hed, vinyl underpirvllng included. Mud 1ell. Cell

41

AKC Reg. L110 Ap10 puppies.
Reedy in time for Chrlstmaa.
One male, two 1 femele . C1ll

AKC German Shepherd pup1, 3
1emele1. Shott end wormed.
Make en offer. 304-468· 1628 .

2 old qui11a, Grandma• Flower

992-7314 .

vec... cy for the lkiedy In our
home . Train.:! end fHtMn yurs
uperlence . Cell 11 4 ·992 ·

875-15&amp;00 ., 176-3124.

$19,!Kl0.00.

plete whh m1nr11sfJI, t276 .
1nd up to U915 . Baby bed1,
•110 . Mettre11u or box
aprlng1 , full or twin. t63 .. firm,
t73. end U3. Queen 1ets.
U25 . 4 dr. ch•t•. t49 . 6 dr.
che1t1, tl59. Bed fremu,
UO.and $26., 10 gun . Gun
cebin1t1, 13&amp;0 . G11 or electric
rengea t3715 . Blby manrn~ts .
$25 ' *35 , bod fromu no.
1215 , &amp; t30, king freme 160.
Good IDiectlon of bedroom
•uhtl,
metel clblneta.
heedboardl US &amp; !JP to t66 .

Calll14-448-8036.

57B5 or 304·n3-6430.

11

$745. DHk 1110 up 10 *225.
Hutcha, $160. Bunk bed com-

Nice 2 bdr ept, 4 mil• from
Gelllpolis,ltOVII, ref rig ., &amp; Wit.,.
futni1hed ., t200 mo . No Pets.

19B214x70 with 22ft. upendo
on r.nted tot. 2 bdr. AC.
underpinning, porch. metel
building. Calll1 4 -246-9534.

Trucke for Sale

72

' ':"'
1972 GMC truck V-1. PS, 1PB,
long wkle bed. price 1850. Cell
304-4118-1997.
'~

•sse.

Fumi1hed apt. 920 4th Awe.,
Gallipolis, one bdr., 1260, utili·
tl• pakf, adult1. Ca11448-4418
after 7PM.

fum .• weltler. dryer. AC . under·
pinning • porch. Exc. cond ..
~1111 1n Offer. Cell 814-2&amp;8·
1821 or 114-2&amp;8-13Hi .

Pets for Sale

7:00

Oragonwynd Cettery . Kennel.
Sofu and chairs priced fTom CFA Himalayan. Peflien end
•2n. 10
Tobles, .so end Slemen kitten•. AKC Chow
up to 11215. Hidt-l ·btdl,l390 . puppin. Call 448 -3844 efter
and up tv 1580., IOfl beds 7PM.
74 Motorcycles.
1146 , Recllner1, 1226. to
t376 ., Lampl from US . to Uve T&amp;ddy Be1rs: AKC Aegil·
Chow
Chow
puppltl.
tered
t126. pc. dlnettu from 1109 ..
Aalldy for Chriltmn. Call 814•
1043S. 7pc. 1189andup. Wood 266
-127t.
. 1978 750 KewaAkl mu1t .11.
table whh aix ch11rt $286 to

614·268·1222.

fully

56

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

6 rooms &amp; blth. Loceted Crown
City. Newly decoreted, el-=trlc
st'o ve 8t refrig . No pet1 . Cell

ASK THE ARMY NATIONAL
GUARD RECRUnER ABOUT I 980 Liberty 14•64, 2 br
VACANCIES FOR QUAUFIED unfurnl1hed, vinyl underpennlng
PRIOR MILrrARY SERVICE IN- Included. Mutt Sell. 304-773·
DIVIDUALS. Part-timolobawllh 5873.
fuN-lime borloliU. Call :!04-6753960 or 1-800-842-Hlt.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
BE A PART DF THE NEIGH·
BOAS HELPING NEIGHBORS
TEAM! Join the Army Netkmel
Guerd end you heve 1 good
p•n·tlmt C8felf··vood btn.th•
-monthly paycheck· · NO

51 Household GoQds

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

4928.

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALUPOUS, RT 35.
PHONE 114-446-7274.

8:35

Hedden Co'rvene relliM. hurlt
shifter, ·4 ep~ .. 350, 4 bah'el,

or

La'ie 5 room up•te!rt apt .,
furnished kitchen , t200 mo .
ptu1 utllltln. 238 ht. Ave. Ref.
&amp; dep, no pelt. Call 614-·UI·

1988 Scholtz 1 0•50, 1 bedroom, fully c:arpeted &amp; remoWANTEO:EJII)eri41nc..t Product-- dolod. 13200. EC. II 4-949·
mWIIIQer. No .... than 3 .,.,,. 2855 eny1ime.
1111perlence. Good P8Y • benef·
Its. Send resume to The Dlily MOBILE HOMES MOVED: in·
Sanllnol, a..729 C.
1ured, reasoneble ret .. , Cell
304·571·2338

STAFF ACCOUNTANT: Part

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

$23,001.00 .

POMEROY - Ctrte home With
up to 3 bOOrooms. Deck area &amp;
Clher features. Prioed to sel at

apt .. 2 bdr.. •1150

Furni1hed apt. , 4 room• &amp;. beth,
no ptt1, adult1. AYiillble Dec. 1 .
Caii&amp;U-646-1519 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

C·23,

9

44,000 mila. need1aome ~rk
t1.800 or belt ·offer. Can be
'"" 7 Woodmont. Point ft11·
11nt. 30•·8715·13;47.
·"!

448·0139.

. 7 room .,d blth house , located
208 Flfttl St.. New Heven,
304-882·274B.

14~65.

8:05
8:30

W-W, C·C, U&amp;OO. Coli mer &amp;
•
p.m.. 304-87~·3177.
1980 XR 7 Cougor loodocl,

Deluxe 2 bdr. downtown. com·
plete kitchen, ell csrpet, wa1her,
dryer, electric heat&amp;. AC . Oep.
required . C1ll dtyl 814-448·
•383. eve. &amp; weekends 61 4·

33482.

NOV LlmNG - IIMIInnt

PftiiJIIIJ in llldcleport -

Enttrprite Rd. Ft. Pltrct. FL

Eaoy A,_,blv World *600.00

SINGLES: Larg11t club In Weld
Vlrghlit . Out-of- atttlfl wei com.. All IQM . Hillbilty HttrU
Cklb, Bo111 81, Lliv81y, W. Vt .

6

mileage, eJtcellent conditktn, elr
cond., A·S. PQwt!F brtkll, lf·W,

740"h Second AVe. 3 bdr .. t190
mo .• dep. required . C11l 114·
446·4222 between 9 a. 6.

Rt. 2, A1hton , AITington Houu.
3 bedroom•. 1Vt bl'lhl, modern
k/tcf'ten. bli1ement. 1 acre plu1.
priced In the 40'a. Clyde Bowen.
Jr., 304-678 -2336.

1982 Cloy!on.

RKine Oun C.lub. Every Sunday.
btgliftnlna It 1:00 p.m. Ftctorv

Union Tobacco WtNhOUit. Ripley, Ohio. wlU rtetfvt IObtcco
ev.ydty ucept Chri1tm11. Firat

Eastern

R.33U2 .

Easy AINmbly World 1800.00
per 100-GuarantNd Pllyment.
No hptrienC!I· No StiM. Details
11nd setf-.cldr11111d ltlmped
.,velope: El.n Vital -716 3418

446·0294.

POMEROY.O.
992-2259

Body 1 Truck. C1ll 114 -388-

Furni1hed ept. 2 bdr., 131 Y..t 4th,
Gelllpolil, 1196 w1ter paid. Call
446·4418 after 7PM.

Ubrary.

per 100. Ou.rantNd paym1nt.
No experience-No lalel. Detlils
... d utt-Mdf'IIMd damped
envelope: EL4N VITAL -5847
3418 Entt'Prilt Rd, F1. Pi.-ce.

Cil 11 00.000· Nemo Tho1

8246.
1982 Pontioc Flreblnt, low

peted.- ell utilitill paid. no
children. no pelt. Cell 814·4•6·
1637.

By owner. Stately. 3 bedroom
wooded ecr•. ftmily room.
dining roam . F.A. heet. 2 baths.
besement, gerege. 127,000.
Collect 814-423-8289.

Nowa

1un Toyola Collca GT, \u11y
lotdocl. 5 opd., n2oo . .Coli
814-441-0028.
"
1877 MGB 6 1967 OMC (lole

Upllairt unfumlaloocl opl .. c.;.

Colloel 514-423-8289.

Trolnlng provlclocl. 1·812-9381870. Mon.-Fri. lAM 10 5PM
CST.

3 Announcements

601

Homes for Sale

hoUII It 10 E. St. In Pomeroy. &amp;

Eaay Auembly World teoo .oo

E . M~in,LIIQW..I..I

31

tao.ooo. Pert·tlmt t12.000 to

t18.000. No Hlllng. Repeat
bulln111. Set your own houJt.

A1111 uunce111 en1s

Ho usi ng
Hea dqua rters

Help Wanted

tccounu. Full·tlme .eo,ooo to

ACRfAGE - 48 acres, mil.
with ranch home, FREE gas.
Close to town . Askin&amp;

furnace, 2 porches, garage &amp;
lg. kit
IW:IIIE - Lg older home.
Has one acre al yard, trees,
shrubbery, lui basemllll &amp; al
utiities. 1M us an alfer.

,

e:oo 11 w oo m 111 ()) Cll ~

"'

l~==:i=====~:========~ 13,000.
t981 Chovafla 8UI"'r Sport
304-&amp;75-&amp;3a8 or 304-176Call 304-875·29B2.
Redecor~tld

to 1260 . C•ll304-871$-5104

Wat" Safety lnltructon and
ur.guardt .,. needed for the
1988 swimming "'10n at the 8789 or &amp;14-2&amp;8·820&amp;.
Otlllpollt Community Poal.
Hon11 from 11
lnttf•tld penont. c.rtlfled or Govemment
rtPelr) . Al10 deUquent 1111
uncertified, ere urged to contac1 IU·
property. Call B05-687-IOOO
the Oalllpollt RecrHtlon Dt- Ext.
GH -4662 for lnformetlon .
pertrMnt, 5U Second Ave ., .
Oollloollo, DH 45531, ph. 448· By owner. Remodeled 3 bed·
1789, ext. 24 for detellt and job
room houuon R1; 33. New F.A.
deteriptlon.
fumtce, lerge lot. 123.000.

basem111t one car garage.
REDUCED, $39,900.00.

~fF:- ~ reroodeloo
6 rrn. horne buit n 1957. Gas

0338.

3 bdr. , H2 beth, ftmilv room,
3112 mil11 out S1. Rt. 688 In
Green Town1hip. Cell 814-2156·

RUllAJID -Three bOOroom
ranch home. All electrK:. full

SYRACIJSE - 314 acres llitt1
all utilfu; &amp;7 rm.older IIJme.
/t;kilg $25,000.
POMEROY -Good one floor, 6
rm. home. Hot water heat full
basemllll &amp; dbl. garage.
300 ACRES - In Sutt111
l(Mnship wi1h Rt 124 &amp; river

91fi7 .'

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -78_9_&amp;_.__--:---:-------~

$42,500.00.

216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1-(6141 -992-3325

Apartment
for Rant

Nicety fumiahed mobile home.
eft. apt., cantrel elr and hast in
city. adutlt only. Ceii1U4-446·

"The last owner was an
electric train nut."

POIIEROY - Bric~ two
bOOroom home, large, ~ing
room w/fireplace, dililgroom,
fuM basem~ garage and
carport. Central heat and air.
Well kept home. Asking

Real Estate .auuo•

'

THURSDAY

ouoo. Col 614-441-80411.

MENTS (Equal Hou1ing Opportunity) monthty rent 1t11rt1 It
t 1 19 for 1 bedroom end t204
for 2 bedroom, depoeit t200.
loCittd n. . Spring VIII.., Pllll}
end Foodl1nd, poolendCabltTV
eveilable, office houri 11 po11i·
ble 10 am to 4,pmend 7 pmto 9
pm Monday-Frldev. Call 114441-2745 or laeve mMiage.

Geo. S. Hobstetter, Broker

MGM Farm City
Service Station

· lfAIIDI

1980 CheYrolet Chevene, • -dr..
AM·FM ceutne. dJM ..c.,

JACKSON ESTATES APART·

EXECUnVE HOllE - Three
acr~ w~h l!eaut~ul two storv
cedar home. Four BRs, 2"
baths. central air and heat
pump, custom drapes, bui!-in
kitchen, lull basem111t. PRICE
REDUCED. Call for detai~.

A
~- ,

bdr. Cell 814-246·

'

·

C)lrinmaa t220. Call 614·245·
Reel Estate General

3 YEAR WARRANTY

NlW USTING -

Call 8) 4·44e -4412,

2 ,br treil&amp;r for ret. ·You pay
utilitiM. Deposit R~uired . Rtf·
eNnce. 304-876·2536.

AGRI BOSS

TEAFORD

·z

T·e levision
Viewing

1976 Ford Tempo bleck wi~ tid
atripea, Nftl goc?d. loo~ tDOd·

19B2 14.70 whh 22 ft. ••·

Countv Appliance, Inc.

Ohio

IOj:lety Ia oxomlned. lBO
mln.t (A).
8onny Hill Show
fHIO) MoVIE: 'Forbidden'
!CCI
11:30
CIJ il) Boot of Corson
Tonlghfl guu1o are Mi·
chltl Kea1on. Paul Rodriguez end Helen O'Connell.
(eo min .) In Stereo In

e

a

Stereo.

(!)lpomC.ntor
()) WKIIP In Clnalnnotl
Cl ()) Nigh1 Heat O'Brien
end Giambone invo•11g01o

a successful businessmen
who Is the prime suspect in
the disappean1nce of two

children . (60 min.}

ill Latenlght Amorico
®Taxi
Q)(l}J ABC Nowa Nlgh111ne
f» One Slop Beyond
)MAXI MOVIE: 'Blame II on
tho Night'
12:00 Cil Bn1 of Grouoho
(!) 198&amp; Supor Bowl of
Motororou Coverage from
Los Angeles, CA. (80 min .)

�Otiio

Streets cleared
Weather forecast
Today... snow this afternoon
following snowfall a~ulating
around 1 Inch by
Mayor processes court cases

Pomeroy and Middleport street

Five cases were processed In the weekly hearings before
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman.
' Forteltlng bonds were James R. Peck, Guysville, $450 and costs,
driving while intoxicated, and $00, no .operator's llcense; Mark
• La'udermilt, near Pomeroy, $450, drtvlngwhlleintoxtcated. a,nd$100,
no operator's license; Peter L. McKinney, West Columbia, $450,
driving While httoxtcated, and $:nl driving while under suspension;
• Dean.Richarils, Rayland. $00, failure to yield. Fined in the court was
Robert Smith, Racine, $425 and costs, and thrte days in jail, drtvlng
while Intoxicated, and $100 and costs, driving while under
suspension.

Holiday tournament set
The Meigs Holiday Wrestling Tournament will be held Friday and
Saturday at the Meigs High School starting at 9 a.m. both days.
. . Participating will be teams from Coal Grove, Gallla Academy,
' Ironton, Meigs, Nelsonville-York, New Lexington. Philo, Trimble,
Vinton County·and Warren Local and all together over 500 matches
will be held during the two day period.

· WIC coupon schedule announced
'

The schedule for the pickup of WIC coupons at the Meigs County
Health Department has been anmunced.
Those with last names starting with A through G are to pickup on
Jan. 2; those with last names starting with H through P pickup on
· Jan. 3 and those will last names starting with Q through Z are to
pickup on Jan. 6. Hours of the pickup on all days will be 9 a.m. to 11
· a.m. and 1 to3 p.m. Makeup days for those unable to pickup on their
scheduled days wUI be Jan. 13 and Jan. 21 during
the same hours.
.

department woiil:ers as wen as
others associated with roads ln the
county had to gtve up the traditional
holiday observllliCes with their
families for the most part as !!JIOW
feU Tuesday night Cfl!llling a "white
Christmas" . lOr Meigs County.
Workers began clearing streets and
. roads about 9:00 Tuesday night and
Iruiily wori&lt;ed Into the early hours
on Wednesday morning handling
tbe problem of an approximate
three inch snow fall.

Ohio lottery winner
CLEVELAND (UP!) -

TuesLottery

evening. Continued cold with brisk
winds. High around 15. Soli!hwest
wiDds 15 to 25 mph.
Tonlght...snow likely. Steildy or
slowly rising temperatures.
Southwest winds 10 to ~.mph;
Friday... mostly cloudy. High
around ll.
'
Chance of snow.. 8l percent
today .. 60 percent tonight.. and ~
percent on Friday.
Extended forecut
Salurday throup Monday
A chance of IIIOW.. e.peci•Dy In
lhe norlhealt half Saturday and
. Suuday, wlih lows In 111e teens and
blpa mllbll,y llltbe 2illl. Fair and DOt
u .cold M~ with Iowa 15 Ill 211
and hllhl &amp;eaenD.v Ill lite -

lt'w!da Henson

Friends ntaY· call from
Frtday at the fUneral home.

.

p.m.

Freda Henson, 77, of Jamestown,
dled Tuesday ' nwrnlng at her Hemian
Moumin8
resld~ following a long Ulness.
Herman James Mourning, 87,409
. A re!Jred .postmistress at the S. Second Ave., Middleport, died
Addison Post otflce, she was born Tuesday at Veterans Memorial
Mar . .'1:1, 19(Jitn Addison Township
to the late James R. and Helen Hospital.
Mr. Mourning was born at Point
Anna Keeler Baker.
Pleasant, W. Va., a son of the late
Survivors lnchule her husband. · Harvey and Sarah Rice Mourning.
Lawrence Henson, whom she mar·
Surviving are his wife. Elizabeth;
rled Nov. 1., 1900; three daughters, two sisters-ln·law, Nan Moore and
Mrs. Noel (Dorls) Hockman rl Lorena Davis, Middleport; several
Jamestown, Mrs. Donald (Wllma)
nieces and nephews and several
'Godfrey of Burbank, Calif., and
.
great
nieces and nephews. ·
Mrs. Richard (Karen) BronSon of
Besides his parents, he was
Roakoke, Va.; 13 grandchildren preceded in death by two sisters,
and six great grandchildren;
two brothers; ancl a sol), Robert.
One brother and one sister
He was a member of the Heath
·.._
preceded her in death.
United Methodist Church.
ShewasamemberoftheAddison
New Year's ·service
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
Methodist Church.
Frtday al the RawUngs.Coats·
Funerat services will he 2 p.m.
A New Year's Eve service will tie
Blower Funeral Home with Rev. C.
held at the Ash Street Freewill Saturday at Waugh·HaileY·WOod
S. Zuniga officiating. Burtal will be
Baptist·church of Middleport Tues· Funeral· Home with Rev. Chester
in Riverview Cemetery. Friends
day night at 7:30p.m. The public Is Lemley officiating. Burtal will he In
may call at the funeral home from 2
invited to attend.
Reynolds Cemetery at Addison.
to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. today.

day's winning Ohio
numbers: Dally Number
644.
Ticket sales t o t a I e d
$1,165,060.50, with a payoff due of
$455,122.50. PK:K-4
.
6910.

J,

•

at y
Vol.36, No.177

Tuesday Admlsslons··Belva Nelson, Rutland; Doris Sayre,
Pomeroy.
'Tuesday Dlscharges..Harvey Erlewtne, Matilda Rowley.
Wednesday Admlsslons··Paula Queen, New Haven; Jeffrey
McKinney, Racine.
Wednesday Dlscharge.·Ronald Bearhs.

Emergency squads answer 7 calls
Seven calls were answered over the holiday by local units, the
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports.
On Tuesday, Rutland took Belva Nelson from the New Lima Road
to Veterans Memortal Hospital at 3:22a.m.; Racineat3: 51 p.m. took
Mary Kerns from Trouble Creek Road to Holzer Medical Center;
Racine at 6:02 p.m. went to Racine for Ralph Webb, no
transportation required, and at 6: '1:1 p.m. Racine took VIrgil Hill
trom Buck Town Road to Holzer Medical Center.
On Wednesday the Salem Center Department at 8:29a .m. went to
a garage fire at the Cross residence on the Vance Road with the
Rutland Department assisting. at 1: 38 p.m. Rutland took Clarence
McDaniel. Main St., to Veterans Memorial HospitaL

IBUTT SAVINGS Ll

RON I

~

~

~

~
~
~

~~
~UY

Fined In the court of Pomeroy
Mayor Richard Seyler Tuesday
night were Thomas QuUien, Middle·
port, $43 and costs, speeding;
Wanda Imboden, Syracuse, $43 and
C96t&amp;. speeding. and Brian Gheen,
Pomeroy, $375 and~. driving
while intoxiCated. Forfeiting bonds
were Kenneth GOkey, New Haven,
$.'!0 posted on speeding charges, and
Wlllle Jones, Tuppers Pia~. $43,
assured clear distance.

~

•
~

olld colors. Mede ~

~

~

s

~

~
~

~~

HEIMAN JAMES

~.~
~

MOURNING
Calling Hours:

~
~

S.nrlng the

fallllly of

El MEN'S

NIT
HilTS

Service~:

~
~.

frid1y: 1:00 P.M.

:&gt;.."\

Knits ..... $12,69 ~
nlts ....,$14.99 ~~
Knits ...;. $15.79 ~
11-i....
$19 79 ~
:~..

lUI.......
. ..
o*i.rr-·-:--~
PWEAR ~
Dmll STOCK
~

~~
~

1965·198p

ltCWDED

~.~"
~
~.~'

mal, duatera end bed

u Smoll to 4Xl.

:'\."\
~
~"'\

~.~
~

~

.., ............. 31.99 ~

=

~:--e

~~
~

~ Sizes NB to 24 rna., 2 to 4,
:&gt;.."
4 a 7 t 14
~tox.o.
~

~

~1... 19Drents......... •7.19
~ .... 114 Dr- ..... 11.99
~ 1'1. 120 Dr- .... •15.99
~ ••· 121 Dr- .... 122.39

..

~ ~~~~~~== ·.~

SALE
~ JUNIOR
~ JACKnS
~ Junior alzu S·M·L In ahort

J k E
·
• : 152.00
J ah ........ Salt 141.11
1 : 159.00
J •h ........ Salt 147.1a
111. 164.00
Jockeh ........ Salt •sua

~ •c eta. •cetlent quality.

~

~

~'
~

~

~

~~

~

~

'Uppt'r Rl"er Rd ••ftl. 7
\

..

..

(Soulh of Sllvf'l' Rrldjl:r Pinal

Galllpoltt
Ponc*oN, Inc

..Kidt under 5 Ell Free"

~

~

ear .." ........ t27.99 ~

~. -

~

~

- r .............. •7.99 ~
ear ......... ,;l11.99 ~
ear ............ S1S.99 ~
ear ............ S19.99 ~
.., ............ •23.99 ~

~

~

~

atylea and colors in ~
and robea, ahort ~
robea, teddlea, nlte ~

~

~

~~
~

~-

PONDEROSA
ANNIVERSARY

~

~~-~
Jean•
s~trtund ·no· · ~

;-------~=====~==.J
~
..

-

~

XLslm. Goodae·
styles end colors In· ~

~

Thurs.: 2 to 4 end 7 to 9

LADIES'

l

OPS
dreuy atylea in an array of
colors and prints

Reg. '8 Blouaea ... .. .. '8.38
Reg . '14 Blouaas ... '11.19
Reg. '18 Blouses ... '14.39
R~..:~~~ousea:: ~.8:79

SALE
SWEATER
VESTS

Slzea 6 to 24 mos., 2 to 4
4to6x,7to14
17.00 Panh .....mom.. 15,59
112.00 Pnh ............ l9.59
117,00 Paah,......... 113,59

12!,00 PC111h .......... ll7.59

..

'

Nebraska and the Dakotas to the
Great Lakes. Gale warnings were
Issued · In the Great Lakes and
travelers advisories lOr blowing
and drifting snow reached from
WyQming to western Maryland.
Winds up to 58 mph swept across
Wisconsin Thursday, while gusts rl
55 mph raked Cedar Rapids, Iowa.
Io)lla Highways 2 and 53 were .
closed Thursday because of blow·
ing snow, and were only open to ooe
lane of traffic early today.
"You coukln't see at all because ·
of the blowing snow. They had
about 3 Inches, and with that the
winds klc~ed up pretty good and cut
the vtslbUlty right down to nothing," said Dubuque Coonty she·
riff's dispatcher Pat Pfohl.
"As fast as they plowed it, It
would blow shut again."
(Continued on page 10)

,.

.•

•

HOLIDAY SEASON- These We-size wooden 80kilersare being used

at tbe mobile

home of lhe Betdnp on Mulberry Ave., Pomeroy, Ill
extend holiday wlsltea Ill mo&amp;orlsls.

Weekend lllvlng1 on our entire
atock of junior lize ._,.,
ve1t1. Many colora and atvl•
to chooH from. Jr. olz11 s. M,

L
I ... $12 Y
tt 59
leg. •u Y11ts ........ •11.99
leg. $21 Ytst• ....... *16.79

leg. 160 Coah ............,s41
171 C
) 62
leg. 111 Coah .............•7o
leg. *104 Coah ~......-•n

•st• ......... .

·

....

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

Boys' sizes 7 to 11 . Men'a 9
t 13 Wh ·
h·
o
·
1te, w 1te or grey
~ith color top. Famous
anet quality.

~~~:~~t·R:~~~

~

~

·REDUCED

20°/o 40°/o
TO

\.

Manning D. Webster, 19, tong·
time Meigs County attorney and
judge, died unexpectedly at his
home at 114 Butternut ave., Pome·
roy, Thursday morning.
Mr. Webster was born October 5,
I~ at Pomeroy, the son of the late
R. G. and Martha Malone Webster.
After spending his chUdhood years
In Eastport. Maine, he returned to
Pomeroy and graduated from
Pomeroy High School in 1921. He
graduated from the Ohio State
University School of Law in 1932.
From 1935 to 1945, Mr. Webster
served as Meigs County Prosecut·
tng Attorney untO enlisting in the U.
S. Army during World War II.
During World War II he was
stationed in the Phllllpine Islands

~~·
"

~
.

~

~·

~~

~

~

FORMER IUDGE DIES -

~

~~

- Ed Turley, Route 2, Racine, against Premier
Brands, 1nc., and C. R. Harris, dba Harris Farms,
Portland, and Jeff Harris, dba Harris Farms, Route
1. Portland, $24,150.
- . Russell Quillen, Route 2. Racine, against
Premier Brands, Inc., and Burton Flower and
Garden, Ihc., Burton, $6,210.
- Jeffrey Lee Thornton, 24429 HU Road, Racine,
against Premier Brands, Inc., and Burton Flower and
Garden, Inc,, $41,446.
- Dave Graham, Route 2, Box ll, Racine, against
Premier Brands, Inc., New Rochelle, N.Y. and C. R.
Harris and Jeff Harris, dba Harris Farms, Route 1,
Portland, $22,218.
-Troy T. Manuel, 49007 S. R. 338, Racine, against
Premier Brands, Inc .. $2,008.56.
-Robert Ashley, 49567St. Rt. 338, Racine, against

Premier Brands, Inc., and Landmark, Inc., dba
Meigs Landmark, c-o Country Mark, Inc., Otestnut
St., Columbus, $15,962.46.
-Lewis Pickett, Route 2, Racine, against Premier
Brands, Inc., $1,552.50.
- Elza Bartlmus, ~ S.R. 124, Reedlvllle,
against Premier Brands, Inc., and Apex Feed and
Supply, Inc., c-o Daniel Kelly Graham, Route 3,
Marietta, $17,595.
- Dennie E. Hill, 17!64 S.R. 124, Racine, against
Premier Brands, Inc. $5,175.
-Kevin Wolfe and Catherine Wolfe, dba Wolfe and
Son GroWers, 2'1:166 Bucktown Road, Racine, vs.
Premier Brands, Inc., New RocheUe, s.'IM.
- Pamela Rlf!le, Route 3, Box 88, Racine, against
Premier Brands, In., $2,587.50.

Retired probate judge,
Manning Webster dies

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•2.50 Tube Socks ...~ 11 •11 ~

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defendant In all of the cases, was defective and as a
direct result the seedlngs raised in the growing
medium were defectlve and incapable of producing
commercially acceptable produce In that they
exhibited extremely underdevelped root structures.
misshapen tap roots, curly leaves, brown leaves, and
If deficiency 1n the number of roots, resulting In
abnqrmal and underdeveloped fruits and vegetables.
The actions !lied were as follows:
-Rex Thornton, Route 2, Racine, against Premier
Brands, Inc., New Rochelle, N. Y. and Burton F1ower
and Garden, Inc., aka B.F.G. Supply Co., Burton, In
the ~mount of $17,767.50.
- Charles T. Hill, Route 2, Racine, against
Premier, Inc., New Rochelle, N.Y., and Burton
Flower and Garden Inc., aka B. F. G. Supply, Burton,
in the amount of $26,845.60.

Thirteen actions for. money totaling nearly $185,001
were f~ed Thursday in the Meigs Coonty Common
Pleas Court by farmers In the Racine, Portland, and
Reedsvllle areas against the producer and dlstt1bu·
tors of a commercial growing medium which
allegedly caused defective growth and production.
The 13 new cases !Bed bring the number to·a total Of
36 slmUtar actions filed in the rourt against the
companies which made and dlsfrtbuted Pro Mix.
The petitions of complaint filed in the court charge
that during the 1984 growing S~?Bson, the plaintiffs
purchased Pro Mix from the defendants which was
used as a growing medium lor tomatoes and peppers
and other vegetables being raised for commercial
sale.
They allege that the Pro Mix manufactured by
Premier Brands, Inc., New Rochelle, N. Y., a

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Meigs farmers seek dalnages from New York company

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s~~:s ~

COAT SALE

:!: ~~,:,"tr:a:~··.~~

~

~
Reg.
ops ..... 6.39 ~
leg. $10 lops ..... l7,99 ~
leg. $12Tops ..... s9.59 ~
ltg. S14lops ... S11.19 ~

woMEN's

jackets. Many beautiful
ltylel and colore.
Miny alztl 6 to 20.
Half alzea14'111 to 24'111

SPORTSWEAR
SALE

natlng top1.

blouses, oxford
eater knlta 1nd
aweatlhirt knita. Sizes 6 to
24 moa., 2 to 4, 4 to 6x, 7 to
14
· SST
$

~~

·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~-d

,. '

By Ualled Press lnlematlonal
Blinding clouds of wind· whipped
snow blamed for three deaths
shrouded roads today from the
Plains to the Great Lakes, while a
record·!l!ttlng blast of frigid air In
.the Southeast made It colder in
central F1orida than in Alaska.
Travelers advlsortes for dense
fog today were posted in northern
Nevada and northern and central
California. Fog in Anaheim, Calif.,
was blamed for the death Thursday
of a man who was hlt by a car while
crossing the street.
At the· southern tlp of Florida
early today, the temperature In
Key West dropped to a record 46
degrees. Elsewhere in the state, It
was 38 degrees in West Palm Beach
and 32 in Orlando, compared with33
in Anchorage, Alaska.
Snow fell early today from

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BLOWER
fUNERAL HOME

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RAWLINGS-COATS .

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Five cases finished

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Florida citrus
crops chilled
•
by frigid all'

.

Veterans Memorial Hospital

en tine

~

Mannmg D. WebMer, 'It, fonner
~-anc llltomeY and J'ro.
b~o•e 8lld JU\Ienlle Cwrt Judp
for Melp County died 'lltul'llda,y
momJnc at hill borne. Webller
w• 1 vetenn o:i World Will' I~
dlredor of lhe Pomeroy National Bank and fonnermember

of the Met,! Mental Retardation
Board. (File photo) .

_____.._ •; .

--~-

--

- ..

where he was prosecutor and chief
of the prosecuting section In the
headquarters of General Douglas
MacArthur.
'
Returning to Pomeroy, he con·
tinued practicing law and In 1973
was elected Meigs County Common
Pleas Judge, Probate and Juvenue
Division, and held that posltkm until
his retirement In 1979. Mr. Webster
was a member of Grace Episcopal
Church In Pomeroy; a long·tlme
member of the Meigs Coonty Bar
Association and the American Bar
Association. He was a
of
Pomeroy Lodge 164, Free and
Accepted Masons; Bosworth Coun·
en 46, Royal and Select Masters;
Pomeroy Chapter 80, Royal Arch
Masons, and the Ohio Valley
Commandery 24, KnlghtsTemplar.
Mr. Webster was a member of
Drew Webster Post 39, American
L!!gjon, and was a long·tlme
director of the Pometoy National
Bank. In recent years, he had been
active in the Meigs County Mental
Retardation Program and served
many years as chairman of the
Mental Retardation Board. He
served as a member of the Meigs
County Elderly Housing
Corporation.
Besides his parents, he was
. preceded in death by his first Wife,
Agnes McQuigg Webster. He ts
survived by hls wife, Mary; a
step-daughter and son·in·law, Dl·
ane and Lyle Meyer of Morehead,
Minn.; a step-11m and daughter·in·
law, Joe and Debbie Reichman,
Columbus, and two step-grandsons.
Timothy and Eric Meyer.
Funeral services will be held at 1
p.m. Sunday at the Ewing Funeral
Home wlth Rev. Lee MUler of
Grace Episcopal Church official·
tng. Bui:tal will be In Beech Grove
Cemetery. VIsiting hours Wtn be
from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday
at the funeral home. The farnlly
requests In lle\1 d. flowers that
contributions be made to the Meigs County Cancer Society of the Meigs
County Heart Fund.

Hunger strike
threat issued

~t(!ll ll•'P&lt;l•t.lltl\1 •" •111·111·. 1 •• 1,

!t&amp;Jiln Internal Revenu e Service

mentbef

\'

-· --·-'----.~

1985

Instructions
for preparing

and lnatrwctlona for

From the Commissioner

orm 1040

Schedule a
A,B,C,D,E,F,
andSE

NEWYEARGREE11NG8-CarllonRol*-',an
IRS taxpa)'er service repreeen&amp;Mive IIi the Federal

the 19811 lax booklets Thursday wbch are being
mailed to lax~ IJU week. UPI.

Jbdlclnclll.downlowa~~holds••llOpfo:i

~-·-- --~-

------ ' --

~-.

·-· ·-

-

-

LUCASVILLE, Ohio (UPI) -Six
inmates ln a high·security cellblock
at the Southern Ohio Correctional
FacUlty are vowing to begin a
hunger strike New Yellr's Day to
protest prison conditions.
The inmates are housed In the
prison's J·1 cellblock, where two
guards were held hostage for 15
hours in rnld.Qctober. Four of the
inmates were involved in the
hostage- taking incident.
In a letter to the Columbus
Cltlzen·Joumal, the Inmates said
they would go without food untll
eight demands are met, including .
the transfer of one inmate to ""
out-of·state prlscn and the invest!·
gallon of two inmate deaths.
The letter was signed by John
Byrd, J.D. Scott, Eric SwofiOrd,
Wllllam Zuern, John Steward and
Willie Price. The first four were
involved In the October hostage
Incident, and the other two were
placed in the cellblock since then,
prlscn officials said. Byrd, Scott
and zuern areconvicted murderers
sentenced to dealh.
A SOCF spokeswoman said ·a
different version of the letter was
given to prlscn officials, and was
signed by about 40 inmates who
support the six prisoners '
complaints .
Among their complaints are the
.Jack of privileges available to other
prisoners and the lack of writteit
guidelines for placement in or
release from the cellblock. They
also allege physica l abuse by prison
guards.
The J·1 cellblock Is the most
restricted unll In Ohio's penal
system, prlscn offtclals said. It is
used for prisoners who are known fo
be violent and who have commltt~
serious vlolatlons of prison rules. ·
On Oct. 14, guards Raru!Y
Mehaffey and William Dunn were
overpowered and held in the
cellblock until prison officials
agreed to temporarUy transfer the
IQur inmates to the Franklin County
Jan ln Columbus.

.,

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