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Page;.;_ D-B-The' Sunday Times· Sentinel .
61 fal'm Equipment

Transpurtatton

71

u.s .. 3~AOIU ION&amp;

-:./._~=%_J•cbon. Ohio.

'~::~t':i:".·- !lollond.

• &amp;40 -

.

71

Autos for Sale _

•'*

1974 Pontiac LeMan•. 11,500
;= II1 h .o f new • uaed or
·b8Jt offer. Call 614· 367·
:.~~p= .Largett t .. IC11~ ln 0541
.
'
.

1984 Chevy Chevette, 4 1pd.,

!S2 W~ntecl to Buy

Cash Price 12399. John ' • Auto
Sales, Bule.wllle Ad,. , Galllpolla,
OH Call 814-448-4782.

..

NoW ·buvl. th:.. l co~ or~ eer
.. cofft, Call fof 1...., quottJ. River

. ~:Ja.'""" . luPJIIy, 814-446·

· 63

Polled Ch..-Q,ail bulla, reg. 800

,, word.
C.lll1
4-379·2597.
.
'

64

79 Ford Piitto. 4 eyl. aUto . new

tire1. AM -FM cauettit, ex . running cond. , looks good. 180,0'.
Jack1on Estates. on Rt . 3S by
Foodland, Apt. 888, anytime.

·Livestock

~l't'!"'thv, correct. W,ill work
.
"" hail.-1. George Wood-

82 Rabbit Oieael. ch~an . sharp,
runa II look• good. 13100 with
mags, 12900 without. Call

614·367-7577.

1970 ~hevelle conv .. 360 auto .·
trans., new tires. new top. &amp; new
exhaust. 12850 or best offer.
C•U 614-446 -8113 or 614-

Hay &amp; Grain

446-8201 .

For sale or trade tor lingle 1111~
dump truc:k, 78 Cadillac:

Ml•ed gran hay for sale. Ce ll

Eldorado-leu than 60,000 ac tua! mile~. brand new Goodyear
Arnwe t1res, brand new disc:
bra.kes, loaded. Ca ll 614· 446223~ aftM Spm

114-1148·2237.
!'lev· for : tlht. Conditioned or- Ch.-d Gfllf and mixed. Call
,11·4-892·53U or 614-949. 27&amp;4 or 814-949-2688
.
'
'

'

H.-,, blUe ribbon fair. •1.00 and
e1.10 aquere bale. Phone 304 - !7odii·I088 after 5. p.m .. night
J -·.,. • ng.

72 · Trucks for Sale

,.., "'" S~tl(llA~~f..~s· . ::::

Improvements

PI IlLII
-'!"""-~;....;; l4llo4 loy CIA\' ·~ POW.!!

· 1979 Vc»lkswagon JA•bblt. good
~e1nlng ·truck'\v~ . 150Q glllon
con~ . New motor, aaklng
tank. holft, dump· bed. C.ll
S1600. Call &amp;14·258-0878.

U77 Chrvtler

low mileage. 11200 , Caii 614·

446-8035.

1985 Dodge Omni, OLH, 611Jd .
16,000 m i. 4 dr. Calll14-379-

1981 Monte Carlo, G.C. 304 -"

676·6930 or 675-3346

814-247-4292.

2726.

1982 Plymouth Horizon. auto .
air. Call814 -379•2728.

1984 Plymouth Horizon. 4 dr. 6
spd. with sun root, 52,000
l'f'!iles. call 614· 379-2720.
1985 VW Gulf. &amp; ~peitd, AC :
gold color. 24.000 miles. Lik'e
new. 16600. Call 614-742·

3080.

1976 Ford Elite. Very goOd
condition . 11600. Call 814-

986-4418.

74

Motorcycle•

82

1982 Htlnda. Silver Wing Inter·
atate. hcellent condition. Call

Z28 Camaro.

1982 Honda Cano Custo(n tor
aale. New tirei. btr111, reuonabte offer. Call 814-949-2734,
uk f~ Larry.

5:00.

•""

T • L Water deliverY enytima Ph.
814·388 - 9732 ume day

985-3869.

1985 Camero e8600.00. 304-

or wh.tever. 8600. M.v. Reed.
Raedaville, Ohio. Phone 614·

1981 AMC Concord DL station
wagon, low .millage, exc cond,

304-676-3641 .

1976 Plymouth, 4 door, PS. PB.
400 engine, good cond,
$460.00, cell304-773-5303.
',76 Velare atatian wagon, &amp;cyl ..

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

Waner,on't Wiler Hauling,
reaaonable re~et, immediate
2,000 gallon delivery, Ciatarnt.
paola, well; etc. call 304-678-

BudgeC trinsmi..io-ns used &amp;
rebuilt ell typ11. Torque conver-

up. Jim '---"'•· 304--78· 1247

'85

Minimum 30 d~ to lifetime
werrentv. Will dtliv«. cash and
carrry or install Ph. 814-379·

Supreme
Brougham, 16,000 miles. EKcellent condition. 304· 676-4212 .
1984 Ford F100 piclcup; short
wheel base, 8 cyl. , 3 speed, 'no
rust. Cusloml:r:ed cab. $2,000.
Hyd_raulic wood spli"er, 6 HP
ang1ne. New engine &amp; pump.

lion parts end

eve

Joints.

2220.

Used GM tran1mluions. C.U
614-446-0988. Repairing Also
Available. 1-Ford 302 Auto.
·
Trans.

0460, 304-676-5492.

Serv1 ces

'79 Ford Fairmont Station
wagon. recently painted ,

1

.

87

'

1~11

81

Home
Improvements

Trucks for Sale

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

1

~~~

Hou11 co .. . Dellvated 1-ton 1nd

871-7397,

Complere rhe chuckle quoted

•a;. r 1 r 1· r I' r r I' · ro r 1
1..

'"

IIIIIIIIIIII

By JOHN VAUGHAN
WASI!INGTON (UP!) -New
revelations from a Secret Senate
report indicate President Rea·
gan was personally involved in
. soliciting millions of dollars to
aid the Contra rebels last year,
and a key Republican senator Is
holding him personally responslble for results of his dealings with
Iran.
NBC News cited the Senate
Intelligence Commltlee reporl it
obtained last week ln saying
Sunday that Reagan was Involved "personaily" In an effort
to get money for non-lei hal aid lo
the Contras at a time when U.S.
milllary support for the rebels
was banned by law.
His efforts may have resulted
ln a $31 million don allon from
Saudi Arabia last year, the
network lndlcaled - the highes t
single Contra ctintributlon figure
yet disclosed.
Speaking earlier Sund':iy on
NBC, Republican Sen. Wlll!am
Cohen of Maine, the inlelligence
panel's new vice chairman, said
Reagan bears responsibility for
the sour turn In his secret
deallngs with Iran because· he
iook U.S. (orelgn policy "underground" and pushed ahead on the
advice of "amateurs."
Both _Cohen and Sen. David
~r.~~ · D:C}kla.- 1 t,he lntelllgence
commlllee'!f ' new cl\alrM'an, ··
urged skepticism ln viewing
news accounts based on t he
leaked report of the panel's
· Initial Investigation Into the !tan
arms-Contra aid scandal.
Boren called the leaked verslon an "unauthorized staff
draft" from testimony the panel
heard last month in the most

'

Upholatery
cm'B'lVIID(N(M

R 6 M Cu·stom touchea and
Reuphol•terv. St. Rt. 7, Crown

.DmfiiH

.

.. '03rtlffWOONorl l!ulllliiU
A!UIVIIIO., 'IOWII 8JI.IBIO ·'II'IWOM
8111 p&amp;lfW ,./,8J0j8(1 IIOfMI II'IJ.I8W
1!11811 ~ llllj)md IIJDq UlljM lljdnoo
l!u1PP11M I JoJ 1811 no.&lt; op 1114M..

Oh. 814-2&amp;6-1HO. E,.,
614·446-3438. Open dol~ 9 to
4:30, Sot. 9:30 to 1:30. Old &amp;

City,

new Uphostered.

mNN\1:&gt;
\'Bii(IW

NVMVI
:moH;CI'l

mHdOO
Sllii'Ii'M!OS
01 SUMSNY'

Mowrey't Uphoiatering tervlng
trl counlytrea21 vurs. The beat
304 - 175-4164 for free
estlmatea.
·

\

1979 Chevy Luv 4WD. 4 speed.

Call 614-992-6349.
' 72 Che'loty truck, 307 4 speed,
shart bed, step tide, looka good
in and out. 81,600.00. 304-

675-, 1&gt;15.

1974 Ford Courier, body good
cond, needs motor, 304-676.

3429.

1968 Chevy 'A ton truck, flat
bed, changed engine. need•
finished. Make good farm truck.

0326. 304-882-3793.

'71 Ford 34 ton t500. KingWood
s tove $176 .00. 304-675 -2700.

..

. Real Estate

ral

TEAFORom.
Real Estate

LJ:!

Uncondltklnal llfellme guaran·
1ee. Local references furniahed.
Free ntimatea. Cell collect
1 - 814- 237 - ~88, dey or night.
Rogers. Baaement
~atltrproofing .

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair, parta, and auppllea. Pick
up and d.Wery , Davis Vacuum
Cleener , one half mile ' up
Georgn CreH Rd. Call 814-

446-0294,

FTM Gen•el Contracting 13yrs
experience. Roofing a Construction Ph. 614-388-9308.
Free ntimetea 10% off during
the holidays, oHer expire• Jan

15. , 987.

:-;:-------i
All type• .carpentry work Interior/ exterior. Remodetlng :
kitc:hena, bathrooma.btaement

conver1iona, garag•. frte eattmatea. Call 814-448-6174.
RON

·s

Television Service .

IUli'OI ' HouN calls on RCA, Quaur,
OE . Specialing In Ztntth. C1ll
216 E. 2nd ,St.
304-678-2398 or 814-448-

Phone

1-(6141-992-3326

NEW LISTING - 12x50
Kirkwood 2 BRs. Furnished
&amp; lot in Racine. $8.000.
NEW liSTING - 125 acres,
old 3 BR larm house, and all
elec. 3 B.Rtrailer. Irh baths &amp;
larm bldgs. Asking $70,000.
NEW LISTING - Good 9 rm.
• home al Racine .School 4
BRs. gas furnace. living
THIRD AVE .. 2 bedroom cottage. large roo ms on ;
about 24•25, garage &amp; ba174' lol. Awrun gs, lllsulalion. Can have 1ooms up slaiCs. •
sement $27,500.
500.00.
POMEROY - Lg. house, lg.
lol.
3 balhs. gas furnace wilh
liSTING!!! -I nside cily lim11s 30.798 SQ. II . lol, w1lh ••
attached
woodbumer. 3 I~
1exis&gt;ling 4,800 sq. II. melal bldg Buy now101 $60.000.00:
BRs, fam1ly rm., woodburning unit and lg. lol for the
BUY NOW: 21h ACRE LO. Tlocated wilh in Sprmgfield lwp.. ••
children.
• Gallia Co. $10.500.00
4.36 ACRES - Southern
• PRICE REDUCED - lh ree oodr oo rnlio rne 111 PlanlsSut·· •
Schools, T.P. wafer available
• • division. Excellenl cond1l1 on an d ready lo move rnlo. full •
and in lhe woods. Asking
basemen!. carporl. Co mlortable. Was $43.500.00. NOW •
$6.000.
• $39,500.00.
43 ACRrs - Eastern School~
.IIEW liSTING - 3 Bedrm. home situated alqng Haona1 •
larm houie, 9 rms., build1ngs
.rnce Rd .. Waln ul lwp 1.8 acres. Priced lor immediale sale •
and minerals. $45.000.
~38.000. ~.
•
MIDDLEPORT - Remo• APPROIIMATEtv 5 ACRES ollevel ground adjaceol to Plea •
deled 3 BR home on corner
. .nl Valley Eslales: 350· ol road fronl age. wrlh city waler
lol near the school. Cenlral
sewel and gas on premises. $400.00 per Irani loa.
heat. equipped kitchen, garage
&amp; carport. Now lUSt
NEAT l BEDROOM HOME located aloll R Roush Rct: •
$29,500.
Cheshue Twp. Kyp,e1 Creek Schools. Approx . '! ac re. •
POMEROY - Hoi wafer
• :.wblp. pool. Buy now lor $49,!llC 00 .
heat. 3 BRs, 2\l baths,
range, relugeralor, base·
• 3 fi(DROOIII HOME ON KATHY DRIVE near Hoker. Hos!&gt;tal ••
menl
&amp; 2 .porches. Walk lo
• I.IIW traffic,1rea, large illck yard, WBFP. Ga11!&gt;~5 City Sch'101
slores.
Asking $28,000.
• District Pra $45.000
•
PORTLAND
- 2 lg: level
• iiEW LISTiNG: Downtown rcstauranl bys•ness WLih 0-5 •
lois,
aboul
one acre, old
' 1
license incl¥ded. Call lor more inlorma lioniLI
•
home &amp; buildings. Drilled
well lor just $11 ,000.
lCRlAGE: 132 acres, 30 acres ol bollom land. Buy now lo1 •
RUTLAND - 2 aparlmenls
;35,000.00. 1$265.00 per ACRE!!!)
•
near lhe post off1ce. Some
••
lurnilure
&amp; 2 lots.
aou•ou YOUR REAL ESTATE IS BIG BUSINESS .... 1 •
EXPERIENCED WOOO REALTY SALESPERSON
SElliNG PROBLEM!
CALL BRUCE AT 992·3325

e

l

l••

•

I tou smq
Hoadqu.rrlt:1s

SUNDAY PUZZL\ER

BASEMENT
W!ITERPIIOOFING

24&amp;4.

Fetty Tree Trimming, etump
ra~ov... Cell 304-175· 1331 .

AINGLES'S SERVICE , oxpo-

rienced carptnter, ·electrid..,,
ma10n. painter, roofing !Including hot tar appUcation) 304871· 2088 or 175-7147.

ACROSS

1 SeH-eataem
6 Lassoes
11 Pilfer
16 Capital of Tlbe1
21 Award
22 To the left
. 23 Japanese
gateway
24 Passageway
25 Inquire,
26 Famed
28 New- Day
30 Pound' ~own
32 Elth6r
33 Compass polnl
34 - ·diem
35 Insect egq
36 Blunt end.l '
37 Slender finial
38 "The alxth sense"
40 Dinner course

42 Proposition
43 Kind of fabric
44 Woody plant
45 Be In debt
47 Looked fixedly
49 Melody
50 In favor of
51 Feet Indignant a!
54 L11mb's pen name
55 "Star -" ·

E.~ln..

POME
992-2259

flEW LISTING - PORT·
LAND - SELLERS RIDGE
ROAD- Approximatey ISO
acres vacantland. 17 acres
tillable, balance pasture and
woods. Eleclric available.
Drilled well, gas well on
property, royalty income
and free gas. $400.00 per
acre selling price.
NEW LISTING - PORT·
LAND - SELLERS RIDGE
ROAD - Approximalely 40
acres of vacant land. Elec·
lric available. Gas well with
royally income and free gas.
$12,000.00.
.
PRICE REDUCED- II Long
Bottom is where you want to
live, then this is the house
you want to live In! 3 bedroom ranch, family room, 2
car garage. Built-in kilchen,
bar. Approx. I acre lot. Greal
bul al Only $28,000.00.

58 Brings about
59 In music, hlg'h
60 Underworld god
62 Went In
64 Pretty
65 Article
66 Agave plant
67 Golf mound
69 Railroad alation
70 Food flsh
71 Greek letter
72 Schad: abbr .
;74 Stem '
76 Tier
\
77 Shut up \
'
78 Retain
79 Colony
82 Calm
84 Part of shoe: pl.
85 Row
66 Debatable
118 Unit of Italian
currency
89 Prophet

90 Mixture
921mprove
94 Painfulness
98 Period of lasting
. 99 ProhlbHs
100 Actor Lowe
102 Nooses
103 Press for
payment
~04 Goal
105 Separate
106 Measuring !levlce
108 Informer
109 Concerning
110N8ar
111 Workman
~ 12 No1 e~aggerated
114 Lair
116 Malure
117 In l~e direction of
119 Pat
120 Imitates
122 Seesaw
124 Sudsy brew
125 Tille of respect
126 Fasten
128 Emmet
129 Foundation
131 Apj,ortlon
132 Individual
133 Precipitous
135 Rubber tree '
138 High mountain·
139 Abrasive
lnllrumenl
140 Rude cabin
141 Before
142 You and me
143 Therefore
144 Ivy LMgUt
university
145 Nerve networlcs
147 Little
149 Perform
150 Bury
152 At that place
154 Metal
156 Flaming
158 Hall
159 Downy d~k
160 Collection
161 Liquid

.

DOWN

1. Aspect

'
2Abedof3 W[lllng fluid
4 FuHIII
5 Sea eagle
6 Badgerllke
mammals
7 Manage
8 Seed conlalner.
9·Hosp. room
10 Pigpen ·
~ 1 Sedate
~2 Civil Injury
13 Biller velch
14 Three-toed sloth
1s sma11
16 Young shaep
17 Joint
18 ~qually · ·
191ncllne
20 Eagle's nest
27 New Deal agcy.
29 Wife of Garalnl
31 iliving bird
36 Basin
37 God of love
39 Station
40 Dl~patch
41 Small valley
42 Kllchen utensil
43. PetitiOned
44 Exacl
46 The two of us
48 Skin of fruit
49 Allowance lor
weste
50 Top of head
51 Evaluales
52 Choice part
.53 Snicker
55 Garden fool
5688C1
57 Artlal's sland
56 Cuts
61 Junclure
63 Epic poetry
64 Frull of lhe pine
88 lngredlenl
70 Lawmaker
71 LOOked Intently
73 Accompany
74" Wlnler vehicle
75 Difficulties
77 Danger
78 Sharp
80 Shede
81 Small child
83 Bone of body ·

84 PossesSive
pronoun
87 Cylindrical
89 Sel of seven
pereons
90 Cry of goat
91 Music: slow
92 Poet
93 Repelltion
95 Frog
96 Billow ·
97· Scoff
99 Musical
org&amp;r!lzatlon
101 ChasHse
105 Peel
106 Underground
excavation

107 Transported with
delight
111 Healthy
112 Crippled
113 Meadows
115 Close
116 Aleutian
Island
118 Winged lnsecl
119 Tardy
121 Plotter
123 Prlnler's

l-4-8-13-22-33

ex tensive probe of the scandallo
dale.
·

enttne

name again blacked oul - had
contributed $31 · million to the
Contras'. political group, the
United Nicaraguan Opposition."
The network, noting $31 mllllon
Is the highesl single donation
figure yel disclosed, said It
learned from a source lh&lt;)l the
"someone" was Saudi Arabia.

He said a final reporl evenlu·
ally will ·go to Ihe Senate's
Watergale-slyle select committee formed to continue the
investigalion. That panel, he
said, will decide whal to release.
The conlroversy over the SeWhile questions abound renate report was augmented to- garding
the scope and timing of
day by a story In The Washington the Iran arms
deals, the ex len! of
Post saying conclusions In on~
Israel's
role
assisting lhe
draft of the document that policy, and thein implications
of
faulted the administration were
·
cland~tlne aid to the U.S:deleled at the urging of the
panel's former Republican chair- backed Nicaraguan rebels, con-.,.
man, Sen. David Durenberger of gressional leaders , also·, have
focused on how the Reagan
Minnesota.
·
makes foreign
The Post, citing unidenllfled administration
policy.
sources, said Durenberger urged
The Senate Foreign Relations the QOnclusiOIJS be dropped Jan. Committee
will begin "hearings
5, jusl before .the panel's now- ·
Wednesday
on
U.S. policy toward
Democrallc majority won a 7-6
vole againsl releasing the draft Iran .
report
Cohen said he ls . convinced
The conclusions charged the Reagan "sllll believes It was nol
White House and CIA wilh an exchange of arins lor hos·
violating stalutes and regula- !ages," but his .. Iran deals
tions governing Ihe use of Ihe CIA "quickly evolved ... to a preoccuIn covert operations and requir- pation with .freeing" Amer ican
lng such operalions to be re- hostages held by pro-Iranian
ported to Congress in timely groups In Lebanon.
fashion. lhe Post sald.
NBC's reporl cUed the draft
"The Intelligence communlly
document ln saying a decision ... had raised a number of red
was made In May by Ihe flags, " aboul ,lhe dangers of
president and his National Secur- d91ng Q\!Siness wit~ so-.called
ily Council to have l«!agan "ask moderates in Iran, Cohen said,
someone - the name is blacked bul the Initiative "continued
out -to contribute humanilarlan because the presidenl wanted It
aid lo lhe Conlras."
to continue."
The reporl's nex1 sentence,
NBC said, shows former natlbnal
"The presidenllurned to amasecurlly adviser Rober! McFar- teurs lor advice on a major
lane telephoned Se~retary of for eign policy decision.... That· s
Stale George Shultz two months where he made a J;nlsta ke," the
later lo say, "Someone - the senalor added.

measure

132 Exrerlor
134 Lamprey
136 Riches
137 Chemical
compound
139 Journey forth
140 AI this place
144 Affirmative
145 Crimson
: t
146 Pallor
147 ~an
148 Ordinance
.
149 River Island
151 Tantalum symbol
153 Greellng
155 As far as '.
· 157 Freight agen1:
•
'
abbr.

.

NEAR POMEROY - Approx.
10 acres of ground with
many uses. Housing, apartmenls, special purpose, elc ..
plus an older 2 story home
1n good condition. Let's lalk
about lhe potential. Wanl
$43,000.00.

'r

WASHINGTON (UP!) - The'
Senal e Foreign Relallons Com·
mlttee will open hearings lhls
week on U.S. policy loward Iran
under a new Democrallc chairman who thinks President Reagan misjudged lhe bllterness
Americans feel loward lhe Is·
Iamie regime.
Sen. ClaibOrne Pell, 0 -R.l.,
will preside over lhe hearings
that begin Wedn esday regarding
policy towa rd Ihe government of
Ayalollah Ruhollah Khomelnl.
The wllnesses will Include Ro·
be'rt McFar lane, the former
nallona Isecurlly adviser who Is a
key figure In lhe Iran arms·
Conlra aid scandal.

URGE'&gt; SKEPTICISM- Sen. David Boren, D-Okla., chairman
ol the Senate Intelligence Committee, spoke with reporters afler
appearing on a NBC television news program Sunday. Boren
cautioned that news accounts based ·on the secret comrlilltee
report o~ lts Initial Investigation Into the Iran arms-Contra aid
affair scandal must be viewed with some skepticism. (UPI)

Celeste challenges
Oliio lo," lead nation

The hearings will not specifically examine Reagan's failed
policy of seiiJng weapon• to Iran
lo Improve relations wllh "mod·
erales" tn lhP government and t.o ·
win release of American Mslages held by pro-Iranian groups
In Lebanon.
They will review, however , ih"e
straleglc Importance of Iran to
lhe Unlled S1ales and the prO$·
peel of ultima!Ply Improving iles
wllh the anti-American regime
brought 10 power wllh lhe Islamic overthrow of the shah In
1979.
In an Interview, Pell said It
could be years before Washingion and Tehran reach an Improved plateau because Amerl·
cans remember lhal Iran held 52
U.S. clllzens hostage for444days
and Is accused of financing the
198.1 bombing of lhe Marine
barracks In Beirut lri which 241
American servicemen died.

By LEE LEONARD
citizens and prohiblled slavery
UPI Statehouse Reporter
norlh off he Ohio River.
COLUMBUS (UP I) -Calling ' "What was only fmagln allon In
lor Ohio to lead the nation ln 1787- free public education and
employment. edu callon. human breaking the shackles or slavery
services and peacemaking, Gov. - Is accepled truth 200 years
Richard F. Celeste was sworn In later, proved ... here In the.
"The admlnlslrallon sorely
today lor a second ler m.
Northwest Territory," sald lhe
misjudged the acuteness ·of
As he did four years ago, Ohio's governor.
64th governor called lor a spirit
"What would you Imagine American dislike of lhe Iranof logetherness In solving lhe today for Ohio, knowing lhat Ians," Pell said. "The ldea ;of
state's considerable problems. logeiher we can make 11 come . ac hieving a normal relallonslrip,
from Ihe Amer.lcan side. will be
He said rema rkable progress has true?" he asked.
been made since 1983.
Celeste said he envisions Ihal very dllflcull while lhe wounds
Celesle was sworn ln shortly by the lime lhls year's kinder- are sllll fresh.
after noon on Ihe west slepsof the gar ten class - the youngesl
"I do nol think we ca n achieve
Statehouse by Chief Justice Tho- generation of leaders In the nexl
mas J . Moyer of lhe Ohio century - graduales from high normal relallons Wllh Iran lor
several years - period," he
Supreme Coprl, with an esll· school In 2000, he envisions:
mated 4,000 people, mostly loyal
- Meanin gful jobs to be found declared . "I think If's possible to
, achieve belter relallons If we can
Democrats from arou nd O[l!o. In Ohio;
looking on.
-graduates "lll era te In more lind the rlghi people at the rlghl
Celeste. in remarks prepared !han just Iheir mother longue and time and go alit In an open way."
To repair lhe pollllcal damage,
fo r a 12- mlnule Inaugural ad- capable pf meellng the trying
Pell said Reagan musl be as open
dress, noted that 1987 Is the 200th challenges of a new age;"
anniversary ·of Ihe Northwest
-people who are "strong and as possible with the U.S. public
Ordinance, a documenl predat- caring •enough 10 share their on his approved sale of arms to
Iran and the subsequenl scheme
lng the Conslltutton which, strength and resources wllh
am&lt;mg other things, guaranteed family or friends or sirangers to divert prollls from Ihe deal to
Nicaraguan Conlra rebels .
a free pubiJc educallon lor all wea ker than !hey."

Patrol offering road condition data
In case or severe winter
wealher, area drivers will be
belter Informed of road condlllons through a new program
' inllla1ed between the Ohio High·
way Patrol and the!"lreserv lces.
Col. Jack Walsh, the patrol
superinr endenl , said lhal between Nov. 1 and April 15 lhe
patrol will furn ish Ihe Assoclaled
Press and Unlled Press Irilerna ·
llonal with early mornhig and
allernoon highway condition
reporls.
Walsh said lhe wire services
will In turn make the Information
llvallable lo lhe nearly 300 radio

•

... .

2 Sect ions, 12 Pag"' 26 ConiI
A Multimedia Inc. Newapaper

Senate
begins
policy
•
•
InquirY

125 Slrlke OUI
126 One opposed
127 Harbinger
129 Fundamental
130 By oneself
131 Wire

''

Mostly clear tonight, wltb a
low In the mid 20s.
sunny J'uesday, with blghs
the mid 40s. The probability
precipitation Is near
through Tuesday.

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 12, 1987

measure

MORNING SIAR SUBDIYI·
SION -' 3acre parcel of vacant land. Road frontage,
wMer &amp; electric are available. 9,500.00.

WELCOME TO THE PARTY- Gov. Richard
Celeste and son Chrllltopher greeted well·wlllhers
as part of the pre-Inauguration ceremonies In

Columbus Suday night. 'lbe CeiMiee were
attending "Ohle Fan Fare" at the Ohio 'lbeatre.
(UPI)

,.

and 'television stations they
serve. The reports will be broad·
cas I on local stalfons in advance
of lhc mor ning and afl ernoon
rush hours, he said.
.. Whenever unusually severe
wlnler weather threatens the
state, lhe patrol will provide
more frequenl highway condition
reports," Walsh said.
· ·"This new rush hour highway
condlllon reporting has lhe potenllal to prevent accldenls and
help people plan their !ravels
when highway conditions are less
than Ideal." he added .

. Ll. Dan Henderso n, rommander of 1he palrol's Gallla·
Meigs Posl, urged area residents
" to hs re n lor Ihe pat rol' s road
condition adv isories on local
radio and lclcvlslon whene.,er
Ihere Is a probablllly of snow ·or
freezing raIn ."
The posl will keep the local
media updaled on the condition
ol highwa ys In Gallla and Mrlj!s
counties, Henderson said.
For more del ailed lnlormal(on
on rhe condition of a specific
highway , Meigs County resldl•nt•
can call lh£' posl al 992-2397.

.

\

Governor's tas,k force to recommend law to end .paddling

MIODLEPORT - Nice 2
slory, 3 bedroom home with
I'h baths, enclosed front sHtmg porch, fireplace, carport, lots of storage space.
Many olher lealures. All for
$37,500.00.
.
lllnry E. Cllllnd, Jr.

COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Governor's Task
.Force on Family Violence will recommend a slate
law banning paddling In Ohio's public schools, a
task force member says.
Areport, resulting from a three-year study on
family violence, wUI bepresenledtoGov. Richard
F. Celeste In aboul two weeks .
"That (pa&lt;!dllng ban) Is the cornerstone of the
whole report," Russell Miller, a task torce
member and president ot the teague Against
Child Abuse ln Columbus, told the Columbus
J)lspalch. "'lbat recommendation sets the stage
for the whole Issue of family vloll"nce. "
Miller said the state cannot make·headway ln
reduclpg family •vlo)ence until It gets rld of
paddling in the c~Juroom.
"Corporal punishment In the schools represents

992-lltl
.INn Truiiiii ..... MJ-2&amp;&amp;11
Datllt Turll« ..... tH-!IItZ
Otlict....... ,........ 9t2-2259

AI:B
.•

·Lotto

Report claimS Reagan
solicited Contra funds

0
by filling In •.he missing words
f -1..I-1.
1. ..;....L-...L-L-..J.
1 you .develop
from orep No. 3 below.

2919.

or

IQ

M
I E RIITIIHI

In furniture upholtterlng. Call

81,150.00. 304-675 -1997 or

[ 675-2322.

I
I 1 I' I I'·

Umatone and alebwood hauled. ·
AI Tromm, Rutland. Call 614· ·

76

ten • trantfer casu. Engine
over hsul kita. AHiacm Tr~nsmit·

Cuthll

delivery.

742-2328.

auto ., new paint. good radial
tires. 8676 .00. 304-875- 1325.

-.

Daily Number
&lt;088

at y

Vol. 36, No.174
Copyrlghled 1987

· have been married twice
before?" asked the wom11n.
~:~rr!.J advice, ,"Certainly

N A D C EN

Ohio Lottery•

•

: 8 E A MA 0 I
5 I . I · I· 17
"WhatdoYQUgelforll~
1 1
. . . . .
ding couple when IJo!h parties

7911 .

378-6338.

I

NALMAY

4

Boat tor aale. Bolton Whalat
1 81fz ft. boVI!' to stem. Weight
aprox , 1000 lb&amp;. One of the
&amp;afeat. Be good lor f.,.-y aervice

HIa

I
.I 11.1'11

Cor., F!)l-lrlh end Pine
GallipoHa._ Ohio
:::.-: ;;4· 441,- 3888_or 814-

James Boya Wat.- Service. Alao
pools filled • .Call 814-268-1141
or 114-448-1176 Or 814-448-

(j OIG ,

of

I

.

CAATEA '.S .PWMaiNG
AND HEATINO

Boats and
Motors for Sale

75

l~ra

: ROOSEM · 1·
.1 I' lk I I .

1981 Honda XRBO. exc i:ond,

Loaded.

GMd shape. 82800 . Call 614-

72

. I~

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
.

814-992-2371 .

'700.00. 304·6~-6240

1981 HoP.da . Accord Hatchback. 5 apeed. good work car
and mileilg~ . ,1139&amp;. Cell 614-

1981

slmplo wordl Prlnl

.eoch .In 1t1 line of sq'uares.

,Aahby Conflructlon, CarPenterv, rem~d-llng. room addhk?n .
cement bloc* Work. rOofing,
lnt•lor . and · eaterior painting,
aiding. Roofing, Free eatirhltel.

304-175-5441 or 871-51.82.

67&amp;.5510.
1 980 Chevette. Body, excellent
conditio n. 2 door, auto . $1360.
Call 614-949-2801 .

Auto, PS, AC . . 78.000 miln.
loo"- ·and runs gOod. 1876.

.Denver, N.Y.
·.on their way
to bowl game .
-Page 3_·

.. G-.Is
R~arrange lflo 6 ocrombfed
bolfow. io moko 6

814-448-4782.
_
__:__.:...:_::.__~ - le Cardobl. · low.
1976 FO..d , F-2&amp;0. lupier . Cab.

949-2288.

l.airp round bales of hay ferNie.
·~0-00 tooh Ph. 614-446-

10&amp;2.

Autos• for Sale

..

JC~nuary 11 , 1.987

Ohio-.Poiot Pleasant. W. Va.

.1 178 2 ton QMC :HPtic. tank

S.VIea. Qvor
.,.._•tolhooHfrom

.

Pomeroy-

·:

~·~~--------· -1~------

·•

..

prevent abuse of spouses, 1he elderly and other
a cu II ural jusllllcallon and state sanction for the
children.
use of. force against children," Miller said.
- The governor to have an execu tive ass'lstanl
·'II yo~ have this state sanclion on the one hand,
for
family Issues on his staff. This assistant would
Ihen It's totallyrounler to what we're trying to do, .
work to strengthen Ohio families.
to discourage force being used against spouses,
-Staff members are mental health and mental
children and the elderly.
retardation centers to he trained ln dealing wllh
"EIImlnat.tOII of corporal punishment Is a key
family violence ls•ues.
element In child abuse prevention."
The report suggests that state money be
·The recol'lllnelldatlon is one of five major
allocated
In the 1987·88 biennial budget to train
proposal In tilt report. The others are:
teachers
In
alternallves to paddling.
- Welfare •'lllllles to be Increased so !here Is
more money to· help abused . and neglected . It also says the only way to eliminate family
violence Is to education people 1o the point thai
children.
·
violence Is prevented.
.
-crea!lon of.,.., comprehensive education
.
The
task
force
was
made
up of 30 teachers,
program for Ohio's elementary, middle and high
mental
health
officials,
lawyers,
judges and law
how to
school studentato help chldren.understand
'

•

I

.

enlorcemem authorities.
Lesley Brooks Wells, a Cleveland judge wh9
chaired lhe task force, said 11 concluded that
abuse and neglect of children, Ihe elderly a"il
spouse~ now Is widely con,ldered a criminal act.
"There has been a shift In society as to what It
permissible at a fairly deep level," she said.
"Thilt shift means that people now can roll up
'their sleeves and work on the problem."
•
Under 'tate law, teachers and admlnlsrrarors
can _paddle children unless lhelr school boarp
outlaws the practice.
· ··
Paddling has been banned In several ohl6
school districts, Including Clevela~d and Dayton_:·
A paddllpg ban will go Into effect In Columblla'
schools next fall.
·

.•..

..
.,

-·

•

�•

.'
•

Commentary.
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~~
~v

I'T'-&gt;.....
-,-, ,...,....,doo=o

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER ofThe,.Unlted Press Internallonal , Inland Dally Press

Association and the American Newspapf"r Publishers Association.
LETI'E RS OF OP INIO N &lt;m' 14'elcolll(' . They should lx' ll'ss than .'KIO words
10n2. All letters art' su bj (.'Cf 1o ro II ing and rrru st De sign 00 wllh name, address and
1&lt;'1(11hone number. No un s i~nro lett ers wlll be publi shed Letter s should be In
good last(' , addrPSsing Issu es, not personalltles.

Ohio Politics

, Dear Friends,
Believe me. I understand very
well the high hopes with which.,
you greeted 1987. Hav.lng been
defeated ,In the last presidential
election by your usual49 states to
I, and facing 1988 without any
serious hope of Improving much
on that score, you were forglva bly desperate .
Then a Beirut weekly disclosed
what the rpassed resources of
your Washington press cronies
had not managed to discover:
that President Reagaq had been
dealing secretly, even to the
point of arms sales, with certain
elements In the government of
Iran - elements which, In turn,
had obtained the release of three
of our hostages In Lebanon! It
was the work of only a moment to
condense this whole series of

transacllons Into "trading arms
for hostages ... . convert your selves retroactively Into firm
opponents of "bargaining with
terrorists," and denounce Presi dent Reagan In shocked tones for
bad policy and (worse yet)
"deception ."
"But that was only the beginning. Too bad It was Reagan who
told the press about the secret
diversion of arms-sale profits to
the contras, rather than vice
.versa. Still, disciplining was
called for. National security
adviser John Poindexter and Lt.
Col. Oliver North had to go, and
the stage was set for the gaudy
pair of Democrat-controlled congressional Investigations now
under way.
So your high hopes for 1987 are
understand able. Surely, some

By LEE LEONARD
Ul'l Statehoust• Reporter
COLUMBUS I UP I I -State senators were electing their leaders for
1987-88 at la st week's opening session. It · was a routine ratification of
what had bren dreided In piuty raucu ~es and announced severa l
w('('ks &lt;:&gt;ar li&lt;:&gt; 1.
report er 's mind wanderrd . G&lt;:&gt;ttlng ahead of the game. he pe~ n &lt;:&gt;d
In SI-n. Ri c hard C. Pfeiffer .Jr .. D-Columbus, as the assistant minoritv
whjp, th&lt;' la st of four DPmocrat ic leadership posts.
.
·
Suddenly. Plclffrr wa s on his fee t, nominating Sen. Michael White,
D-Cleve land, for the position . White won by acclama tion, and It was
obvious that Pfeiftr' r, a ris ing senatorial star, was off the leadership
team .
"I w11s r elu ctant Ito lake th e leadership spt&gt;t) ,"said Pfeiffer, "and
you don't do anything In politics r&lt;:&gt;luctantly . My instinct s were to sav
no.: and I w&lt;:&gt;nt back to mv instin cts."
·
·
·
I}ut why wouldn 't Pfeiffer welcome the chanc&lt;:&gt; to serve on the
Democratic lead&lt;:&gt;rship t&lt;:&gt;am '1 He has the potential t o be a statewide
ca ndidate. He was on r ;ov . Richard F. Celeste's shor t list for a
r unning mate• in IYR6.
While th&lt;:&gt; 42-year old Pfeiffer und&lt;:&gt;rstands politics as well as any
srn~lot · . hr is il ft r e-thinker and an independent sort . He did not wa~t
to be bound b,v lradershtp positions on is su&lt;'s.
"If you serv r on a leadership tram, it ts a realit y of politics that you
ha1•r to stic k tugethrr." he said.
But ther&lt;:&gt;' s mor&lt;' to lh&lt;' storv than that. Pfeiffer owes his political
career to Housr Speaker VC'rn.il G . Riffe Jr., D -New Boston, whom hC'
srrvcd as exrcutivP assistant a fC'w yeCJrs ago.
When it came time to vote·on Ce leste's V&lt;'IOof the civil justice and
i~surancC' reform bill, Pfrlffrr undNstood he had to go with his
mentor. who was fur ious about the Vl'I O. Pfeiffer voted to override,
much to the chagrin of I he gOI'C'rnor and 51-nate Minoritv Leader
Harry Meshel, D-Youngstown
·
When Ml'shl'l dC'cllnr:d to glvC' Pfeiffer t,wo other jobs he wanted chairman of the Senate Dr•mocTatlc,,(Jampalgn Committee and
mr!mber of the Senate Fina nce C'ommitteC'- Pfeiffer told him what
hr-could do with thr ass istant whip's job and the extra $1.400 a year
th1it gOI'S with it.
'
The upshot is that Meshel has used the opportunity to spi'C'ad a few
plums around toot her Democratic senators. White Is a potentIa! star.
an~ thr lradNs~ip post is a good opportunity for him.
. ~u t ltl s the first visible crack In a Def!)ocratlc caucus that has bren
alt~lght under MC'shel's IC'adrrshlp sine&lt;:&gt; 1981.
~nd whatrvrr ad1·ancC'mcnts Pfelffrt· makes will br tht ough his ·
o"'!' conslderabll' skills and with Riffe's help. not with any as slstancP
from Meshel ot· CP!rstC'.

law has been broken by some·
body.· HOllie North so much as
spat on the sidewalk, he can be
prosecuted to justify these
heavy-breathing probes. And If
I just If! I It can be est a bUshed
that somebody really high up did
something truly reprehensible ... ! No wo~der you marvel at
this apparent recurrence of the
Miracle of 1974, when your
vanquisher was struck down by
what must have seemed to you
the Inevitable consequences of
his obvJous defects.
Of course. you know very well
that you aren't going to be able to
Impeach Ronald Reagan, or ·
force his resignation, or even
diminish materially the affection
with which he Is held by the
American people. But you are
confident thai he can, at a

M~P

8TU(;@NT~?

'" NAH,

R@lb~RS.

A

•

l'hl' atmo,pher c was pa l pab le In the aged 'Stat&lt;:&gt;housP rotunda last
wwk as .Judge Thomus J . Moyer was sworn in as chief juslirl' of th&lt;:&gt;
Ohjo SuprC'me Cout 1.
•
Ulstory Wit S being madr• h&lt;'nC'ath the insignias of Ohio's eight
pr~sidrnt s . Huge Ohio and AmNican flag s adorned thr cavernous
slt')IC'iurr. Six black -rob&lt;:&gt;d justicQs watched the changing of the
guard In lh&lt;' audient'l' w!'rc the widows of tw o formC'r chief justices.
!.(l~gs ley A . Taft and C. William 0'1\eill.
As Moy!'r solemnly took the oath for Ohio's highC'St judicial office.
o ne could not help butrC'rall this Fl)OdC'st man ' s days on the Columbu s
sC'hool board 11nd as thC' chief serva nt and order -taker in the 1970s for
Gov. JamC's ,\ . Rhodl's, who now proudly looked on .
One also rememh&lt;'r rd most of l~R6 when Moyer. who some have
compared to 1'V's Mr. Rogrrs. drov&lt;· himself and his wife, Ma-ry, to
campaign appr' at·ances . fiC' had no &lt;:&gt;ntouragC'. but stt'odc th e
sidewa lks alone• or with a friend or two. He had no supporters except
~-h~-law)• er s of Ohio and, apparently. thl' people. who believed him
w hen hr said som&lt;'thing wa s wrong at thC' 'Supreme Court.
Yet Moyt•r toppll'd ChiC'f Justice Frank D . Cr l('brezze, a man with
H yt' ars on till' Suprerill' Court who s('('ml'd lo h11ve It all- a powC'rful

Drmot'rat ic name in a DPmocrat ir state. ·
" I think tht• P&lt;'Oplr of our stat!' fC'lt VN)' strongly that there was too
mu:ch part I san politics ~olng on in t h&lt;' Supreme Court," Riffe h11d sa ld
a ft~r I h&lt;:&gt; elect ion.
·
SB as Celeste lril'd lo look plrasant and some of the other justices
sq~lrm&lt;:&gt;d unromforl11bly, l.rsllc .Jacobs, president of the Ohio State
Bar Association. publicly t•xorclzt•d Cc lebrezze from the court and
Mr: RogNs . a most unlikely c andida!(', took control ,
Par man)' , II symbolized thC' American dream that an ot'dlnary
ml~ · mannNrd pNson t·an rise to the top In govrrnmcnt .

l~tter
to the Editor
'
The girL~J rate support, too

league standings In the paper,
and very seldom get a write up of
a game. even though they receive
state ranking. I don't see how
they have the heart or desire to
play under those conditions . 'It
wouldn't hurt to give them a little
mor~ support, I know they would
appreclat~ It very much. ,
Olen Harrison
Pomeroy

Today in history
By United Prt'!ls International
Today Is Monday, .Jan. 12, the 12th day of 1987 with 353 to follow .
The moon Is moving toward Its full phase.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn .
'f;he evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are unde1· the sign of Capricorn. They
Include British statesman Edmund Burke In 1729. American patriot
Jol!n Hancock In 1737, painter John Singer Sargent ln. 1856, novelist
Jai!k London In 18(6, World War,II Nazll~ader Hermann GoeriQg.ln
189), Western singer and actor Tex Ritter In 1905, and former
hf'I(Vywelght boxing champ Joe Frazier In 1944 (age 43).
•

.

lj

minimum, be depleted as i
half-senile non-entity, unaware
of what was going on In his own
administration. As a national
leader, as a sym_bol of a new
dispensation, Ronald Reagan
(you are sure lis through.
It Is true, of course, that no
president Is as strong at the end
of his administration as he Is at
Its beginning. And Ills even true
that the Iran/ contra controversy
has forced the Reagan admlnlst~ation Into an unaccusto'med
defensive posture of Indefinite
duration., But ' let me disabuse
you, my liberal friends, of any
notion that the strategic balance
of political forces In this country,.
or the Issues that shaped them,
have somehow been fundamen ·
tally altered .
The welfare system that you
foisted on America In your
heyday Is a shambles and you .•
know it. You created a vast new
underclass of permanent mendi cants, and all but destroyed the
black family. You drove this
nation In to the swamp of VIet·
nam and ·then successfully pre- .•
vented any exit from it but a
disgraceful one.
You traded the freedom of half
a dozen countries for a series of
meaningless " agreements" with · , •
th e Soviet Union. You let the
armed forces slide to a point
where warrant officers were
qualifying for food stamps. You
ran Inflation into double digits
and interest to above 20 percent.
Even now, you are doing your
best to prevent effective resist ance to the communist takeover
of Central America (a takeover
we will wrap around your necks.
when and If It occurs). You would
sink President Reagan's proposed space sh ield if you dared.
Those .arc still the real issues.
No wonder you want to change ·
the subject. I promise you: You
ca n'l.

MAN ON THE RUN - Brown's quarterbapk
Bernie Kosar scramblE!$ In first quarter ot tile
AFC Championship Game lo escape Broncos
Freddie Gilbert for short · yardage, during

/'

disagreeing. Similar findings
have been reported by the
presldenl's private pollster, Richard Wirthlin, who watched
Reagan's approval rating fall
after the Iran revelations. then
rebound above 50 percent.
Bregllo directed the Peoples
Poll and -analyzed tne results which, he said, do not necessarily
present a microcosm of how all
Americans feel. But thl' poll_
accurately reflects the views of
reading, thinking, participating
Americans - the people most
liklllly to join In the. public
dlalogul' and participate in the
democratic process, Breglio
expla in ed.

By WILL DUNHAM
UPI SjWrls Writer
'EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UPI) - The ,New York Giants
defense collaborated w lth a whipping wind to deny the Washington
Redsklns their third Super Bowl
berth in the last five years.
The Giants defeated Washing·
ton for the third time this season
and advanced to Super Bowl XXI
with a 17-0 victory Sunday in a
game played In wind gusts up to
30 mph.
New York, which recorded the
third straight shutout in the NFC
Championship Game, will play
the AFC·champion Denver Broncos In the Super Bowl Jan. 25 In
Pasadena, Calif. The Broncos
earned the berth with a 23 -20
overtime victory Sunday over
the Cleveland Browns.
"Everything that could go
wrong did go wrong for us and
that doesn't happen too much, "
said Gary Clark, Washington's
AII·Pro wide receiver, who
dropped two , fir;st-quarter long
passes and was shut out during
the game.
The Giants had defeated the
Redsklns 27·20 In Week 8 and
24-14 In Week 13. The Redsklns
have lost four straight to New
York at Giants Stadium dating
back to .1983 and have been
outscored 98·36 in It hose games.
"We did not get a play all day to
get us going," said Washington
Coach Joe Gibbs, whose wildcard playoff entry ended the
season 14-5. "Other than the
three games with the Giants this
year, we played with the upper
echelon of the league. "
"I guess we lick our wounds
and iurn it on again In six
.months," safety Curtis Jordan
said. "I think we got a lot further
than people expected. "
The Redsklns suffered their
first shutout since a 14-0 loss to
the Seattle Seahawks Sepl. 28,
1980. The Redsklns were la~t
blanked In postseason Dec. 8,
1940 In the NFL title game
against theChjcagoBears.loslng
by record 73-0.
The Chicago Bears blanked the

If you want to take part, the
Peoples Po ll will next consider
whether the media has been fair
to President Reag .m. For six
years, the president has floated
placidly above the sq ualls that
reporters stirred up, secure In
the esteem of a large majority of
Americans. .
Reporters swooped down on
the usual scanda ls and tried to
keep them reverberating until
they became stuck In I he public

\'"

mind , B ut Reagan projected a
sincpre, "• etJ.gaglng, relaxed,
father-figure Image that made
him relatively Immune from the
press scourging that had Ilium I·
nated the mishaps of his
predecessors .
Now the Iran scandal has
cracked the shell of Immunity
that has surrounded Reagan,
causing a seeping erosion that Is
diminishing his standing. But
there are two edges to the sword
wielded by the media:
(I l The media contends that
government will not reform
Itself, that wrongdoing must be.
exposed until the public furor
forces politicians to clean house.
121 The White House claims that
the Iran carnage not only Is
hurting the president but the
nation. The Whlt.e House also
believes that the press coverage
has been unfair.
What do you think? In a
democracy, your opinion Is Important and will help shape
national attitudes. I,f you believe
the press generally has been fair
and responsible, simply dial
J-!J00.210-3280. If you think the

press has been unfair and Irresponsible, dial 1 - 900-210- ~284 .
ThC' telephone company will
bill you 50 cents for the call . Or
just write the telephone number
of your choice on a postal card
and mail it to Peoples Poll, P.O.
Box 2300, Washington, D.C.
20013, II you wish to f'la borate, w&lt;:&gt;
will welcome· a letter explaining
your views.
COVERUP ON CASEY?: Did
G'IA Director William Casey's
chief aides not notice that their
boss was ailing In th!' days before
he s~fferr:d a. selzurC' and was
operated on for a malignant
brain tumor - or did thC'y ju st
pretend not to notice? On Dec. II,
Casey attended a .memorial
service in Philadelphia for a
former colleague who died In the
Beirut embassy bombing In 1983.
Some who were there said Casey
looked really dreadful and, while
never a polished public speaker,
he seemed Incoherent In hi s
prepared remarks . Yet when ·
questioned about tl)e dlrector:s
appearance, Casey's aides said
he was silll as sharp as ever. He
collapsed day s later.
·

·.

Contra policy a bust ______c_eo_rg_re_M_cG_..:,ov_.e___;rn.
The current Reagan administration crisis, brought o n by
secret arms sales to Iran and
Illegal diversion of funds to
Nicaragua's contras, has prompted a re-examination of the
policies and procedures In volved . As one who believes
strongly that both the policies
and the execution of those
policies w~s wrong, I welcome
this reconsideration.
Some argue that ·u.s. covert
sponsorship of Nicaragua's mercenaries Is a good policy thai
should not bt' changed simply
because the Iranian arms diver·
slon was Illegal.
Xavier Arguello , a Nicaraguan
spokesman for the contra lobby
In Washington, says It Is unfair
and unwise to make the contras
In Nicaragua pay for the mistakes of the United Slates In Iran .
He makes a second argument
that Americans should not be so
concerned · !I bout preserving
their constitutional democracy
at home that they forget about
their security Interests abroad.
The second of these arguments
should be rejected. Arguello
simply does not comprehend that
the preservation of our own
·constitutional democracy Is the
first concern ot every patriotic
American ~nd of every responsl~le American president. Intervention In the affairs of other
nations may sometimes be In our
• national lntert:st, but It Is never
sufficiently important to justify
subverting our laws and our
democracy here !It home.
There might be a certain logic
In the first ot those arguments If,

In fact, the poll~y of sending
arms and money to the contras
could stand on Its merits.
But the Reagan policy In
N)caragua has been, from the
first, highly controversial and
dubious. It has never had strong
support In Congress or from the
American public.
The fact Is, the contras are
simply not suitable allies for the
United States .
Originally organized by the
late 'and unlamented dictator
Anastasio Somoza, tlren supported and directed by the CIA,
then by White House operators
Including Lt. Col. Oliver North,
the ,contras are not exactly the
"freedom fighters" described by
President Reagan .
While the contras may have
,some well-motivated members
and Illustrious . leaders, In the
main they are an assortment of
Somoza henchmen, adventurers,
drug runners and bullies who
would not command the respect
of most Americans. Their tactics
center on ' trying to sabotage
rural cooperatives, killing· com munity leaders and harassing
defenseless families. They do the
work ot terrorists trying to make
life more difficult for Nlcara ma's clllzens and lhe Sandlnlsta
government, which we still offl· .
clally recognize .
The Reagan admlnlstrallon
claims we should help the contras because · t.~e Nicaraguan
government Is shipping large
quantities of arms to rebels In El
Salvador and engaging In terrorIst attacks against Honduras a~d

I

Costa Rica . Little or no evidence
has been produced to sustai n
these cla im s. It seems that just
the reverse Is true: The Reagan
administration Is using El Salvador, Honduras and, to a lesser
extent, Costa Rica, as bases·from
which to Intimidate Nicaragua.
Eugene Hasl;'nfus, the Ameri can survivor In the plane shot

down over Nicaragua last fall,
said the plane was carrying
American arms · to the contras
from a CIA ~tatlon In El Salvador. Honduras has been con·
verted lnlo a sizable American
basing operat)on near the Nicaraguan border.
It Is difficult to see how any of
lhese Is In the U.S. h\tere~t.

a

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•

NBA Standings
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WAU:S CONFERENCE ,
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PtllhM..Ithle ....... .... W II J t1 1111 111

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Berry's World

Giants 24-0 last season in the NFC
title game. Two years ago, San
Francisco shut out the Bears
23-0.
New York limited Washington
to 190 total yards, including just
, 40 rushing, and held quarterback
Jay Schroeder without a completion until early In the second
quarter while building a 10-0
lead.
.• "We lost the game In the first
quarter," said &amp;hroeder, who
suffered a minor concussion on
the next-to-last offensive play for
the Redsklns and collapsed on
the sideline after the gam e. "We
got behind and cou ldn't make the
plays. Their defense wa s In
control."
The Redsklns failed to convert
any of their 14 third- down
opportunities and all four of their
fo u rth - down conversion
attempts.
, '__.l
"I 've got
_gr%·r . deal of
admiration for the Giants and I
am of the opinion that they'll beat
their opponents In the Super
Bow l, " Gibbs said.
"There's nobody going to beat
the Giants, " said Pro Bowl
defensive end Dexter Manley,
who was frustrated again In his
matchup against offensive tackle
,
Brad Benson.
· The Redsklns lamented wasted
opportunities, parllcularly the
two dropped passes by Clark on
successive series in the first
quarter. On the Redsklns' second
possession, a 50-yard , pass
glanced off Cl ark's fingers after
he had gained a step on the
defender at thl' Giants 35. Clark,
wide open, dropped a 43-yarder
at the Giants 30 on Washington' s
nex t possession.
"When you gel chances to
score against the Glarits, you
have to tak e advantage of them.
Today, we botched too many
plays," Clark said.
Schroeder became the fifth
quarterback to be Injured by the ·
Giants this season. He was
sacked by George Martin. San
Francisco's Joe Montana suffered a concussion during last
week's 49-3 drubbing, joining

Scoreboard ...
R' l
RONton ......................... ::~ 10
Phllad~·lplda ................ J9 18
M'w.tdnl(tun ................. 11 17
N1•W VMk ................. ! ~ '!:1
N••• ,h •rKf'Y ................. 10 '!I
C!•nlral J)h•J.o;lon

I

Cleveland's first 9l•yard
Browns lost 23-20
Stadium. (UPI)

.The
Municipal

Giant defense, wind proves
too much for 'Skins Sunday

You decide fairness ___J_ac_,k_A_~J._de_rs_o......n_&amp;_.D_a_Le_~-'-a_n_A_tt_a
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan appears to have weathered the Iran storm, so far,
without losing the trust · and
confidence ·o r the majority of
informed Americans .
This Is the verdict of the
Peoples Poli. which was con·
dueled under the supervision of
the respected Washington pollster , Dr. Vincent J. Breglio of
Research / Strategy / Manage·
ment Inc. Next question: Has the
media been fair to President
Reagan? We'll explain later In
this report how you can
participate.
We established the Peoples
Poll to give Americans the
opportunity to register their
opinions on national Issues.
Other polls consta ntly te ll us
what we think and how we feel.
based on the tiniest of samplings .
Our purpose Is to give people a
chance to participate In establishing public opinion .
We Invited readers to tell us
whether they thought President
Reagan's secret dealings with
Iran were justified. The results
heavily favored the president,
with 2&gt;.204 agreeing and 15.811

Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-Page-~

Denver earns Super Bowl
berth with · overtime victory

Monday, January 12, 1987

Young senator leans
toward independence

Meigs High School girls have a
ba~ket)lall team, they play the
saJI'le sC'hools the boys do. they
Jxo[ong to the sal)le league the
boy's do. they like to win the same
as .the boys. they hate to los!' the
sat).lr as the boys, they put
trophies In their trophy case, the
sallle as the boys, they never
hate any cheerleaders like the
boy~. they never have many
foll!lwers. they 'never have a

Pomeroy~Middleport,

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
POO)eroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

,·

AJetter to .Jiberals_ __,....__--'-_w_ilh_·am_A_._Ru_sh_-er

The Daily Sentinel
1::: mil:!

'(

'L Phlladetpllla t (Ill• I

Rltnpn~

II, V.nrou~er 3

t::dmonton I. f'lll ~ary 3
fhlt · ~t~o I, OrlrGII :1
Mond111'1 G11mi'IJ
llarllord 11.1 N•w ,J&amp;r!U'y, i : J5 p.m.

NV Kllar;tl'l!llt IOtlton, 'J:U p.m.
Tor0111o IMI Monlu&amp;l, 1: 35 p.m.
.Ill . Lo•iff 11 MhnwOia. K:" p.m.
Tuetulay'll GanwN
Pltllit!ut'JI;h M Nl' l11landl!n., ni.:Jl
~' lnnlpeJ ll W•hln~t~on. •1.:111
Edmonlon a1 Df'trolt, nlpt

.

NFL Playoffs

Dallas' Danny White, Minnesota's Tommy Kramer and Philadelphia's Ron Jaworski.
Schroeder declined to leave the
game after the sack, waving
backup Doug Williams off the
field with 2:13 left.
After tossing an incomplete
pass on fourth down, Schroeder
walked off the field and collapsed
on the sideline. He was helped
into the lo~ker room.

NFC " 'llcf.Card (. W~t~~hlnatonl
WMIIfnpon It, t.o. .tn1t1• 7
s.. urdQ \ lu. J
AFC ~mlrtnll (Ill

Cltnl~tnd)

Ck•veland Zl, New York JP,t11 1:0 (101'1
NFC MemlfliUII ( • Clllu.:ol

W~~&amp;lllia&amp;lon

n , Chlcqu 13

S•ltd.,., .lu. t
AFC 8emlna.J (a DenerJ

htuer ft. Nrw Enll•d 11

think about whatlt means to be a
player and a coach. and your
heart stops as the kick goes
through the upright s and it' s an
unbelievable feeling.
· " It's my fl'rst time to Super
Bowl (as a head coach after five
previous trips when an· assistant
with Dallas) and It's wonderful.
When you have players like John
Elway and Rich Karlls and all
the others, being down by a
touchdown Isn't an lnsurmountable thing."
After a 48-yard touchdown pass
from Cleveland' s Bernie Kosar
to Brian Brennan put the Browns
ahead 20-13 with 5:43 left In
regulation. Mark Moseley's en suing kickoff burled the Broncos
at their own 2-y ard line with 5: 32
remalnlng.
"We felt solid abou t our posltlon," said Kosar. "W" be lieve In
ourselves, and that's one of the
things that got us this far lhls
season .
"The Broncos deserve credit
for mixing up their coverages
well and they pressured us .
Education can be painful, but
we've learned and we'll be back .
Elway,ln particular, has learned
from his experience and It
showed ."
Elway, who entered the huddle
wlth a grin that resembled a

who arguably shed the repulatlon that he flops tn· key games.
"After that, we knew we could
uepend on Rich Karlls If we could
move the ball."
After Cleveland could not capitallze on the opening possession
of overtime, Elway started from
his 25 and moved Denver60yards
to th e Cleveland 15. Karlls then
cam e on for the game-winner.
Cleveland failed In Its quest to
make the Super Bowl for the first
time - curiously, no team that
lost Its first game of the season
(as the Browns did al Chicago)
has ever reached the NFL's
ultimate contest - and coach
Mar ty Sc hott cnheimer tried to
hide his emotions.
"I am obviously ver·y dlsappointed," he said, "but my hat's
off to Denver. Elway's a great
player who make those plays that
win championships. Give him
credit .
"1 feel for the fans of Cieveland. The support and the spirit
of the town over the last for
months has been unbelievable.
I'd like to promise this- we'll be
back. We will win a Super Bowl
and complete what we've set out
to do."
The teams forged a 10-10
halfllm e tie. Cleveland got a 6yard scoring toss from Kosar to

piano keyboard, fashioned a ·~·r;u;nn;l;n~g~b~a~c~k~H;;er;m;;an;;;;;;;;t
15-play possession that ended
with 37 seconds remaining as he
hit Mark Jackson on a 5-yard
scoring pass. During _!he drive .
Elway converted a 3rd-and-18 at
the Cleveland 48 by passing to
Jackson for 20 yards.
" We came out clawing and
scratching when our backs were
to the wall," said Elway , a
four-year veteran from Stanford,

POWELL'S

CASH
JACKPOT

WIN
CASH

EA.CH WEEK
THIS

~EEK'S

JACKPOT

.,

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"•
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1,150 .

'

SOUTHERN GIRLS VARSITY- Members of
the Southern High School girls basketball squad
ar e (In front from lefl) Dawn Johnson, Diana
Simpson, Rachel Reiber, Tammy Theiss and

:\ogle Gruesser. Standing lltc Coach Kim
Phillips, Karla Smith, ,Jennifer Arnold, Angle
Bostick and Crystal Hill.

•

Eastern loses 76-59
By SCOTT WOLFE
FRANKFORT - Despite a
third-period comeback, the local
Eastern Eagles dropped a 76-59
non -league basketball decision to
the Frankfort Adena Indians
here Saturday night.
Giving up several Inches In
height at all five positions.
Eastern made a competitive
showing In the first period.
Adena utilized Its distinct height
advantage to post a 2!);15 first
period lead, but Eastern's s tron~;
outside shooting allowed the
Eagles to stay In the game.
&amp;nlor guard-turned post man
Ed Collins nailed down a stro ng
Inside-outside game, flanked by
fine Individual efforts from Mike
Martin, Jeff Caldwell, 3J1d Bryan
Durst.
Eastern. trailed 41-30 at the
half.
Coming back. from halftime,
Coach Dennis Eichinger's Ea ·
gles were really fired-up while
making the necessary adjustments to hold off Adena's offensive surge. East~rn pulled to
within lour at 47-43, e~dlng the
period at 55-45.
Adena wen! on to outscore the
visitors 21·12 In the final ~tretch
to post the 76-59 win . Eddie Collins led all EHS
scorers with 18 markers, Bryan
Durst and Mike Martin added 11,
Jeff Caldwell 10, and Mark
Griffin 6.
Carl Hitchins paced the

Suad.:, , Dec. II
AFC WII ..Card IIi Ne• York f
New Vork Jeb a , Kt.11111 CkJ' II

By ROBERTO DIAS
UP! Sports Writer
CLEVELAND (UP!) - Rich
Karlls had a cold foot, but hardly
cold feet.
"After (quarterback) John Elway put together that 9&amp;-yard
drive to tie the game 20-20, all of
\,IS felt ·the confidence he ob·
vlously did,'' said Denver's barefooted kicker.
,-,It slapped us In the face like
being tackled Into that frozen
turf. Although I personally would
have preferred my own efforts to
have been less dramatic, I'm
glad I contributed."
Indeed. Karlls made sub· freezing temperatures seem more
brutal than any wind chill factor
where the host Cleveland Browns
were concerned.
Karlls' 33-yard field goal
teased 79,915 fans by curling just
inside 'th~ left goalpost at 5:48 of
overtime Su nday, and Denver
notched Its first AFC Championship since 1978 with a 23-20
victory.
•·
The Broncos will face the New
York Giants Jan, 25 In the Super
Bowl In Pasadena, Calif. The ·
Giants won the NFC title with a
17-0 drublil'ng of the Washington
Redsklns. l
"I watched Karlls put that ball
through the uprights and
thought, 'What do I do now•• I
didn't want to leave the field, "
said Cleveland linebacker Clay
Matthews.
But the Browns were forced to
trudge off in shocked silence
after Karlls' third field goal of
the game.
"It sounds like a Hollywood
script you wrote, and It came out
the way you wanted It too," said
Denver coach Dan Reeves. "You

...•·''•

NFC Ht!mlftuJ 1• Ne• YukJ

N.\'. Glul••.s.. Frutllw'
Jill ....,, la1. II

AFC Ch ......... ..Wp ta Cln~•dl

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

Detlver II. CJe..IMd • (01')
NPC auunpiOIHip ca Nn York)
N.Y. OIM11 17, Wulililtell 1

ltf!Jift' Bowl XXI(a r • .-... Calif. ~. t
p.m.

Drner (Il-l) WL N.t', Gt•• (lf.l)

The Daily Sentinel

winners with 24 points, Vlck
Austin and Todd Thomas each
had 17, and Ron Rice 10.
Eastern hit 24 of 72 and 11-18
from the line, collectlng7 assists,
12 steals, nine turnovers, and 16
personal fouls. Adena hit a
red-hot 31 of 57 from the floor and
hit 14-20 at the line. The Ross
Cotlntalns had 10 assists, 6 steals,
11 tu rnovers and 15 personal
fou ls.
Eastern lost a 35-21 battle on
the boards. as Mike M artin and
Ed Collins each had 6 r ebounds.
Thomas had 12 for Adena ,
Jeff Ca ldwell had 7 steals to
lead Eastern .
In the reserve tilt Adena
cl aimed a 77-43 triumph led by
Bill McDonald and Pat Stewart
with 19 and ·16 points respectively. Ken Caldwell paced the
lltUe Eagles with 10 points,
Shaun Savoy had 9, and Scott
Fitch 8.
Eastern travels to South ern
Friday .
EASTf; KN (59) - Ed ColltM, H ·IK;
,Jelf Caldwe t~ HtO; ary.. Donot, 4-:1-10;
Mike MMI'IIn, Htl; Mark Ortlllo. 1-•1:
and AUeo Tripp, I·J.I. TO'UI.S UII·H .
ADENA ('It) - Todd Thomooo, 11-1 ·17:

Vlck .tuolln, 1-11-11; Chr~ f'otll, 1-H dell
Harr ... 1-il·li C•rt HKcbto,., HU: Jo1
HarrtH, &amp;-O.v; Ron Rtce, 4-2-10: D.c, ,
Vlllenttne. 1-il·i . TOTIU.S 31-1+11.
Eottem ....................... ll II ,17 12-511
Adeoo .. .. .. ................... 15 11 14 11-11

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A lllvblion of MuUimf'dla. Inc·.
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Inla nd Oally Pri"S5 A S!\f'I('IO I Ion and I hf'

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Ad vc•r:rtslnu llc•p r.•s('nt a l lvt'. Orunh am
Nc•wsp!I JI C'f Sll l f~. 7.13 Third 1\ v(' nut•.
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POSTMA'i TI: R: St•nd

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ll ddrf'S&lt;~ l' h nn~

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PKICt!
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f': u Osrrl bl'r!.: not dl'SI ri ng r o puy 1hr l' ar Mcr muy r('m lt in ~ dva n ef' &lt;l trrrt 10
Th1~ Dt~ll y Scn tlnrl on a .1, II or 12 m onth
b as i ~ . Crrdll wi ll t&gt;t• 'dw n tar riM" rac h
W(!f'k .

No ~u h srrl pt lo ns by ma ll jM 'rmlt1Pd In
arro !li wh r rr hO I'nl'' ea r r lt~r SPr VICf' Is
ava tl abll•.

Mall SuMcrlpllo~"
lmdde Melp County

13 WP('k.'l ........ .......... .......... $1 7.29
26 Wf'CkN ..... ..... ........ ...... ...

$.14.06

12 W&lt;rkK.. ............................. $6li.56
Outl!ld e MelkfJ t;ount)'
IJ Weeks ................................ $18.20
26 Week~ ...... .......................... S:I:..lO
!12 WeekH................................. Sfi7.1:h

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Saturday, 10 P.M.NO WINNING NUMIER
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'

By The Bend

..

Mondily, JaniJary 12, 1987

Monday, January 12, 1987

Carpenter
community
happenings
I

.Sunday school attendance De· rleton Follrod, Pomeroy, on
cember 21 was 41; church attend· Christmas Eve .
·
aoce, 20. On Dec. 28 Sunday
Christmas guests of Mr. and
s ~ hool attendance was 26;
Mrs. Arthur Spencer were Con·
church attendance, 18:
nle Ballard, Brian, Chad, and
Mr . and Mrs. Hobart Swartz Jason, Chestervill e; Jean
visited Katie Swartz, Dana and Spencer, Columbus ; Mr. and
Mabel Swartz lit Kimes Rest Mrs. Keith Weber, and Michael,
Home, Athens.
··
Mr. and !'4rs. Sammie Brown,
·The !)burch and community . Aaron and Alex, local.
were saddened by the death of
Nina Robinson spent Christ·
Lee Henderson. Mr. Henderson mas with her granddaughter,
was a farmef In the Alfred area Ta mml and Greg Crumb, The
all his life and was owner· Plains.
operator of the Allred store for
Mr. and Mrs. Garland Caldwell
many years. A large crowd of hosted a family dinner De·
relatives, neighbors and friends cember 27. Present were Mr. and
attended visitation at the funeral Mrs . Steve Weber, ShanMn,
home and the funeral.
Sasha, and Shalyn, Eagle Ridge;
:Beatrice Bentz, Lancaster, Is Ma rilyn and John Weber, Flor·
visiting Pearl Randolph who Is Ida; Mr. and Mrs. Ben Ewing,
not well. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Beth, Kim, and Benny, Pome·
Stearns spent Christmas holl· roy; Mr. and Mrs. Charles
days In Fairborn.
Caldwell, Carrie and Crlssle,
Clara Follrod, Nina Robinson , Columbus.
Lee and Osle Henderson had
Clara Follrod spent Christmas
dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Ca· . with Mr. and Mrs. Clair Follrod.

OES conducts meeting
The chapter congratulated
Racine Chapte r 1.14 Order of
Eastern Star held their regular David Fox, assorlate patron, on
stated meeting Jan. 5 with Judy his recent marriage to Ruth Ann
Williams, worthy matron, and Yeauger.
Jim Hill, worthy patron.
Happy Birthday was sung to
Chapter members were in· members Judy Williams, David
formed of a school of Instruction Fox, Barbara Dugan and Coni
Jan. 30, 7 p.m., In Athens .
Webb.
Following the meeting, re·
The sunshine fund was col·
lected by Patty Sttuble and Vicki freshmenls were served by
Northup, Shirley Johnson was Sherry Hensler and Vicki
Installed as organist.
Northup.
A 4.J.year pin was presented to
Refreshments lor lhe Febru·
Cora Webb by Louise Stewart, ary meeting will be served by
and Mrs. Webb was Invited lo the Debbie Wolfe and Patty Struble.
East. A gift or Fostoria candle
There will be an open book
holders was presented to the 'practice at the February
chapter by Mrs. Webb.
meeting.

' .

S/inderella class has meeting
Five new members were wei·
corned at the Monday night
meeting of · the Five Points
Sllnderella Die t-Exercise Class.
Melissa Fostesr lost the most
weekly weight and recE-Ived a
special rltibon and certificate for
losing 20 pounds. In the ladles
class, Betty Dill lost the most
weekly weight and the runner-up
was Roberta Dill.

Three new members - were
welcomed at the Tuesday night
meeting of the Mason Class.
Sharon Cole lost the most weekly
weight anct Zelia Riley was
runner-up.
Information on classes and
locations can be obtained by
calling Jo Ann Newsome, lee·
turer, at 992·3382.

Fireman's association organizes
The Wilkesville Township Vo·
lunteer Firemen' s Association
held Its yearly organizational
session wit" officers being
elected.
They are Eugene Wells, pres!·
dent ; Gary Hulton, vice pres!·
dent; Linda Montgomery, secre·

tary; Rill Cray, treasurer. The
trustees appointed Bradley
White as fire chief and he then
appointed Paul Spry as a~ slstant
chief; · Richard Wells as first
lieutenant and Dan Wells as
second lieutenant.

Ora Collrlll, Pt. Rock .area, Jordan.
home of ·his grandparents, ·Mr.
visited with her daughter Lulu
Sixteen· members of the prim· and Mrs. William Culwell at
Oxley and family ~ear Columbus ary and junior classes of Temple Satsuma, Florida. On Christmas
during the holiday vacation.
Church Sunday School went day, they, along with Mr. an&lt;!
Mr. and Mrs . Dennis Devine, caroling one · evening before Mrs. Keith Jordan · were at
Columbus, spent the weekend ·Christmas. Mothers .who accom· Disney World where they en·
here with her parents, Mr. and panted them were Sue Peck, . joyed the sights Including the
Mrs. Dorsey Jordan and other Jennifer Ennis, Kathy Jordan parade before returning home.
relatives.
and Coleen Davis.
Freda Smith spent Christmas
Preston Hamon, McArthur,
Mr. and Mrs. Bryan Jordan at a family gathering at the home
brother of Mrs, Rex Cheadle, vacationed this past week. They of her son-In-law and daughter.
local, Is recovering at his home visited his brother and sister-In· Mr. and Mrs. Reece Prather and
following open heart surgery In law, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Jordan son, In Kettering. Other guests
Columbus.
at Monroe, N.C . and assisted were another son-In-law and
Christine CaS&amp;ell, Zanesville, them In !llovlng to their newly daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Larry
spent several days during the purchased home. Theil they Stanley and Anna of Edison,
holiday vacation here with her joined a family gathering at the Ohio.
grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Clay

MONDAY
POMEROY - The Meigs
Count y Better Livestock Dairy
Club will hold Its first meeting of
the new club year at 7:30 p.m.
Monday at the Meigs County
Extension Service Offices, Mul·
berry Ave., Pomeroy .

·I

PT. PLEASANT - LaLeche
League meets Monday, 7 p.m.,
Presbyterian Church. For ·Information. call 675-4439.

MIDDLEPORT - Heath Unl·
ted Methodist Church Women
meet 7:30 p.m. Monday at the
church.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chapter 80 R&amp;AM. meets In special
session Monday, 7 p.m .. work In
master mason. past master
degrees.
POMEROY. - Meigs Athletic
Boosters meet Monday, 7 p.m., at

The Syracuse Presbyterian
Church hoSted a dinner and
holiday program for the United
Presbyterian Ministry, which
includes the Syracuse, Harrison·
ville and Middleport churches,

A program, "The Characters
of Christmas Meet Christ" , fea·
lured a visual presentation of
theme carried out through a
large, bright colored book made
by the primary and Guys and
Gals Classes.

'

Recitations and readings were
given by Trlsh and Luke Holman,
Leigh Anne and Amy Beth
Redovian, Michael and Jay
McKelvey, Ryan Nease with
Plano solos presented by Leigh
Ann and Amy Beth Redovian and

Rock Springs Grange ha! meeting
Women's Activities Chairman Pomona Grange. The annual
Barbara Fry announced that she grange banquet has been tenia·
has applications for the various tlvety set for April 24. ·A thank·
grange contests this year when you note was -read !rom the
Rock Springs Grange met In Carleton School.
regular session at the hall.
During the program, Pat Hoi·
'Frances Goegleln reported on ter Introduced Sally Gibson,
the recent Pomona Grange meet· ,personnel assistant of the South·
lng and II was announced that the ern Ohio Coal Co., who showed a
national sewing contest will be fiim of various operations at the
held at the March meeting of" mines and · conducted with a

question and answer session.
Frank Broderick, an employee
of Meigs Mine 2 told of the
various phases of his work at the
mine.
Members reponed ill are
Leona Lievlng and Wllmetta
Leifheit.
Refreshments were served by
Mr. and Mrs . William Grues.er
and Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Blackston.

•

Star Grange conducts recent meettng
Judging dates for state and
A Star Grange Officers Confer·
national contests were an· ence was announced · f()r Satur·
nou need by the Women's Activi· day, Jan. 17, at 6:30 p.m. A
ties Chairman at the recent potluck dinner will precede the
meeting of Star Grange.
conference. A legislative report.
According to the announce- was given by Ray Midkiff and
ment, the state baking contest Opal Dyer reported on youth
will be judged at the Feb. 7 activities.
meeting of the grange and the
The literary program con·
national sewing contest will be slst~ of readings, "The Way to a
judged at Star's Feb. 21 meeting. Happy New Ye'ar" by Becky
The chairman also gave tips on · Rife; "Are You :rtred Each
winter snow safety.
Day•" by Ben Rife; ''Y'All May

Wonder Why Y' All Tired" by
Larry Montgomery; " Little
Things Give Life" by Maxine
Dyer; "Motor Mirth" by Bill
Dyer; :·safe Jump Starting" by
Ray Midkiff; "Facts About Ben
Franklin" and "Poor Richard's
Sayings" by Ruby Lambert; "An
Irish Mother Writing to Her Son"
by Linda Montgomery; "A New
Year! A New Year" by Virginia
Carson and riddles by Ruby
Lambert.

Jay McKelvey. The program was
followed by a candlelight communion service with Rev. Cha·
rles Talcott officiating.
A dinner was then. served to
Peggy, Rodney, Luke. Trlsh and
Erin Holman. Diana and Ryan
Nease, ,Carroll Ann Harper,
Marcella"t:oleman , Erin Harper,
Patty Stein, Mary and Butch
Stein, Lola E. Clark, Virginia
Gibson, Frances Young, Mar·
garet Douglas , Stella Atkins,
Norma A. Lee, Elizabeth Bur·
kelt, Katherine Jean Moore,
Eddie Burkett, Fred and Dana
Kessinger, Erica Kessinger,
Helen and Lewis Sauer, Jack and
Joan Sorden, Beth Keller, Ethel
and Don Lowery, Faye and
Dwight Wallace, Linnie and Paul
Haptonstall, Maxine Owens ,
Mrs. Katherine Miller, Velma .
Rue, George and Rut Holman , .
Bob and EsthE-r Harden, Janet
and Jacob Harden, Charles A, ·
and Lisa Talcott, D. Stanley,
Pauline Atkins. Hazel Stanley.
John, Tuni~ Leigh Anne and Amy
Beth .Redovlan, Marvin, Elea·
nor, Michael and Jay McKelvey,
Katie Crow, Mr. and Mrs. George .
Schneider, Inez Hill. Beatrice .
Blake, Gertrude Nelgler, Mar·
garet . Cottrill, Jane Teaford , '
Janice Lawson, Maxine Russell,
Icy and Joseph Miller, James ·
Teaford, Deborah Harden ·Sec·
rest, Chuck Nease. Karen Roush
and son.

r------------

Meigs County property transfers

'
J.W. Scarbrough aka John
Winford, to Phyllis McMillan.
1 &gt;nA: Lebanon.
Phyllis McMillan, Ellis McMII·
Ian, to John W. Scarbrough, J %A,
Lebanon.

Patricia J. Preston, to Robert
Edward Preston, parcel~.
Columbia.
Richard B. Wl)lted, Dorothy M.
Whited, to SamuelS. Clay, Mable
F. ClaY,. Lot 358, Mldd. VIII.

Meigs High School.
TUESDAY
HARRISONVILLE - Harrl·
sonvllle Senior Citizens Club free
blood presure clinic from 10 a.m.
to noon Tuesday at the tOwn hall
EAST MEIGS- Eastern Band
Boosters meet Tuesday, 7; 30
p.m .. In the band room.
SYRACUSE - Ohio Eta Phi
Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
Sorority meets Tuesday, 7: 30

p.m., home of Judv Williams,
Syracuse. Pledges meet at 6:30.
RACII'JE - Racine Lodge 461
F&amp;AM meets Tuesday, 7:30p.m.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Merchants Association meets
Tuesday, 8 a.m., Bank One.
WEDNESDAY
POMEROY - Pomeroy Chap·
ler 80 R&amp;.AM and Bosworth
Council 46 ~&amp;SM meet Wednesday , 7:30p.m.

-People in the news-- Harrisonville .happenings ·
By WILLIAM C. TROTf
United Press International
BESS TAKES THE FIFTH: New York Mayor Ed Koch and
his longtime friend, former Miss America Bess Myerson , may
be headed for a showdown.
Last month Myerson. who Is New York's cultural affairs
commissione r, took the Filth Amendment when called to testify
to a grand jury jnvesllgatlng contractor Carl Capasso.
"I want to find out the reasons for her appearance at the grand
jury and her reasons for taking the Fifth Amendment," Koch
said. "In add !lion, I would like to know whether her taking the
Fifth Amendment In any way Involves her performance as ·
commissioner."
Last June Koch promised to !Ire city officials who did not
cooperate with corruption Investigations. The grand jury Is
'·looking Into Capasso's contracts to ensure fraud, extortion or
racketeering weren't used In obtaining them.
The panel also Is checking allegations that Capasso
entertained KQCh administration o'(flclals and a,divorce case In
which a state judge reduced Capasso's alimony payments a
month after Myerson gave the judge's daughter a job.
COUNTRY GOES CORPORATE: On the corporate side of
country music, Alabama has reached an out -of-court
settlement with two Nashville booking agents over some $3
million In commissions . No terms were revealed.
Singer Eddie Rabbitt recently picked up $1.6 million for
selling his three song publishing companies to the MTM Music
Group. Those songs Include Rabbitt hits Uke "I Love A Rainy
Night .... "Drlvln' My Life Away," "Suspicions," and "You Can't
Run From Love." "I remember every song In the company," he
said. "I remember where It was written, when I wrote the last
Jines. There's a llletlme In those songs. Take care of my
babies."
Other songs changing hands In the deal Include · KeDDY
Rogers' "Love Will Turn You Around," Dr. Hook's "When
You're In Love With A Beautiful Woman" and LacyJ. Dation's
"16Jh Avenue."
TELL THE DOG: Madonna's "Papa Don't Preach" was
honored Saturday nlgl)t as Ihe nation's and the world's favorite
video but the singer didn't S~!fl overly lmpr~ssed . "That's
great," she said In a recorded message to the first World Music
VIdeo Awards show.' "Walt 'til I tell my dog."

· By CHARLES MITCHELL
United Press International
Soldiers In the Soviet Union
and Sweden worked to rescue
,and feed people trapped by
Arctic-like snows and winds that
have triggered avalanches, cut
power and lect to deaths In at least
three Europea~ nations.
Temperatures plunged across
Europe today, and snow and cold
disrupted road, rail and sea
traffic. Radio Moscow said 19
vessels were locked In the Ice of"
the harbor of Leningrad, and
train delays of 12 hours were
reported In Sweden:
Deaths resulting from the Icy
Arctic conditions were reported
In France, Sweden and the Soviet
Union , Temperatures of mtnus40
In Moscow forced the closure of
the city's schools today.

Holiday hastings reported in Meigs County

Community calendar/ area happenings
I

Europe

Johnny Sampson , St. Louis, mother, Bessie Graham and the
Mo .. recently visited Bess Gra· Harold Graham family.
ham and his uncle . . Harold
Nellie Borgan and Rosella
Graham.
Birchfield spent Christmas with
Arlie Patrick Lowe, Akron, • Mrs. Horgan's sister In West
Ohio, spent Christmas with his Virginia.
mother, Nellie Lowe.
Mr, and Mrs. Roy Lowe and
·The Harrisonville Senior Cit!· son , Columbus, spent a day with
zens held their Christmas dinner his mother, Nellie Lowe.
and gift exchange on Dec. 15 at
Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur House·
the town hall. Quarterly birth· holder, Glouster, Oh., visited Mr.
days of members were observed. and Mrs. Russell' Eshelman and
Tommy Graham of South Ca · son .
rollna visited with his step-

Smiths announce child's. birth
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Smith,
Letart Falls, are announcing the Mr . and Mrs. Lester Roush,
birth of their second child, a • Letart Falls, and paternal grand·
seven pound, six ounce son, parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
Joshua Tyler, on Dec. 15 at the · Smith, Middleport. Mr. and Mrs.
Smlt h have another son, TravIs,
Holzer Medical Cent er .
5.
.

Joseph J . Davis, Kathleen B.
Davis, to David P. Hoffman,
parcels, Mldd. VIII.
William M. Lawson, Margie
Lawson, to Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohto Elec. Co .• Ease, Chester.
Clifford Manley, Faye Manley,
to Columbus . &amp; Southern Ohio
Elec. Co .• Ease, Mldd. VIII .
Robert E. Collins II, Beverly
Collins, to Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Elec. Co., E:ase, Lebanon.
Rol)ald L. Clay, Gayann G.
Clay, to Columbus &amp; Southern
Ohio Elec. Co., Ease, Chester.
Harold Lee McGrath, Debbie
Faye McGrath, to Columbus &amp; •
Southern Ohio Elec. Co. , 'Ease,
Chester. •

pigeons lay dead, only a small
dent In the overall pigeon popula·
tton. But officials vowed to hold
future shootouts until the protr
lem Is brought under control.
It was the third plg'eon shootout
In recent months. Two similar
outings the week before Christ·
mas eliminated about, 650 pi·
geons and ,officials said t~ey
would keep shooting pigeons
uvtll they reduce the population
to acceptable limits.

WEST

BARGAIN MATINEES SATURDAY I
SUNDAY ·ALL SEATS $1.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 .50

N.OCHARGE
CHECKING
.ACCOUNTS

'Mercy' killer views
TV film about his case

The freeze was expected to lift
In Moscow within the next 48
hours, but temperatures in Le·
ningrad were expected to remain
near record 'lows for up to a week.
Avalanches triggered by up to
15 feet of snow In the Soviet
republic of Georgia killed an
undetermined number of people
and left hundreds stranded In the
wo~st snow storm In 50 years, the
Soviet news agency Tass said
Sunday.

' of the Soviet
Tass said units
Into Georgia to
army
were
sent
AVON PARK, Fla. (UP!) movie aired, Gilbert said, " I
Roswell Gilbert, convicted of heard It was fairly sympathetic. I rescue people from 50 villages
murder for killlng his ailing wife think It's probably the only thing and settlements bur led 'beneath
record snowfalls. Electricity and
of 51 years in what he called an I have going for me."
food
we~e in short supply In the
act of love, says he hopes the
Gilbert shot his wife, Emily,
Caucasus
mountains, the newstelevision movie about the case twice In the head, saying he acted
paper
Izvestia
said.
will arouse support for his "out of love" after she had
Tass said high· ranking. Comrelease.
pleaded with him repeatedly to
.
munist
Party officials were over·
Gilbert, 77. refused to talk to end her suffering !rom the
seeing
army relief efforts, an
reporters immediately alter ·, painful bone disease osteoporosis
Indication
that the situation was
watching veteran actor Robert and brain-degenerative Alzhel·
very
serious.
Tass described the
Young reenact his crime on mer's disease.
as
a " calamity."
avalanches
NBC's "Mercy or M•trder, " but·
He was convicted of firstIzvestia said hundreds of res!·
agreed to hold a news conference degree murder In March 1985 and
dents
and tourists were evacu·
today at the cenlral Florida sentenced to life In prison with no
a
ted
from
ski and heait h resorts
prison where he must serve a chance of parole for 25 years.
near
Mount
Elrubus In the
minimum of 25 years unless
Gov. Bob Graham recom- " Caucasus.
granted clemency .
mended clemency for Gilbert In
'the tall, thin retired engineer August 1985 but could not get the
Stockholm, Sweden, expe·
watched. the television movie three votes he needed !rom his
rlenced Its coldest day In 112
with fellow Inmates Sunday night· six-member Cabinet to grant
years SatUfday, and the bitter
In the recreation room at the clemency. Florida swore In a
cold, which approached minus
Avon Park Correctional Instltu· new governor, Bob Martinez, and 40, caused power cuts of up to six
!)on, a prison security chief said. two new Cabinet members last
hours, leaving much of the city
week
.
without
heat.
..,__
:Before the made-for-television

USX, union hasten to end walkout
· to resolve the dlspu_te."
But Hubbard said the company
and union had not made great
strides toward a pact.
"Progress Is measured In
Inches," he said. "It's tough
going ... Sometimes It seems like
we're back where we started
out."
The union 's top Issue was
sub-contracting, a company
practice of contracting out work

to non-union workers , Hubbard
said. The top company Issue was
job reclassification.
Curtis said the negotiating
teams met "Into the night" over
the weekend. Both sides had met
for almost a week without ihe aid
of longtime steel Industry arbl·
trator Sylvester Garrett, he said,
with the understanding that
Garrett be called In If talks
reached a standstill.

ow Open
MAIN STREET
PIZZA
222 E. Maln, Pomeroy

. PH. 992-2228
4 P.M. 'Tit 11 P.M.
Sunday thru Thursday
Friday &amp; Saturday
4 P.M. 'Til 1:30 A.M .

PIZZAS, SUBS
PIZZA BIEAD
1·2·'17· 1 mo.

GEARY'$
BODY SHOP
550 Page St., Middleport
OPEN 8 A.M.·4 P.M.

PH. 992-3537

12·16-' 86-1 mo.

WANTED:

OLD RADIOS WANTED
Any Brand Name... Bought
Bolero 1940

lop monty for some modlls of
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PH. t3041 812-2220

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Point Pleasant. W. Va.

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773-5514

..

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The Daily Sbiltltlll.,-fttY:ij

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TUNEUPS to TRANSMISSIONS

ICUT OUT fOR fUTURE USEI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

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We'll Sell You A

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(614) 992-7328

EVERY
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FOR CHILDREN 3 TO 6
YEARS OF AGE

Open Enrollment
Thru The Year
OPEN TUESDAY,
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY '
9 AM to 11:30 AM and
12,30 PM to 3 PM

Coli Administrator Mrs.
Shirin. J, Nuggud. MEd.
1·J.'81·1 mo.

54 Misc. Merchandise

FIRE DEPT.
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POMEROY, OH.

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12·30·86· 1 mo.

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417 Sact11td A¥111Ut...x 1ZIJ ·
Ga IIi polis, OIJio 45631

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW, INC.
405 MAIN Street . Pt. Plmant. WV 25550
(304)675-5252

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Real Estate General

BISSELL
BUILDERS

601
·E. M.llnt.._
POMER:OY; 0 .
992·2259
NEW LISTING - PORT·
LAND - SEllERS RIDGE
ROAD - Appro11matey 150
ac res vacan t land. 17 acres
tillable. bala nce pasture and
woods. Electr ic 81a1iable.
Drilled well, gas well on
prope rty, royalty income
and lree gas $400.00 per
acre selling price
NEW LISTING - PORT·
LAND - SELLERS RIDGE
ROAD - Appro•imately 40
acres ol vacant ian~. Elec·
tric avarl ab le. Gas well with
royally incom e andfr ee gas.
$12,00000 .
PRICE REOUCEO -II Lonp
Bottom is where you want to
live, th en th is IS the house
you want to live rn! 3 bed·
room ranch, fam ily room, 2
car gara ge. Bulll·rn kitchen.
bar. Appro• I acrelot. Great
bu t at Only $28.000.00.

NEAR POMEROY - Approx.
10 acres ol grou nd w1 lh
man y uses. Housrng, apart·
men ls, special pur pose. etc..
plus an older 2 story home
in good cond1tron. Let's talk
about !he potentral. Wan!
$4 3,000.00.

Problte

~~

·-

ltn

MORNING STAR SUBDIVI·
SION - 3 acre parcel of va·
cant land . Roa~ frontage,
wate r &amp;electric are availa·
ble. 9,500.00.

County

• •

:t Licensed Clinical

Phone
1-(8141·992-3326

Melg1

--

'

~ LISA M. KOCH, M.S. ·:

218 E. 2nd St.

'
NOTICE
OF
APPOINTMENT Of
FIDUCIARY
On Jonuorv e. 1987 In tho

.

...

"' Co"'uterized Hearinc Air Selec:tioo
Z Swim Molds · lnterpretinc Simces

RIAl

Public Notice

9~1·S+t·J
Mf-llc

~

I

LJ:!
TOR

Housrnq
H eadqua rl! •r .,

Hyffll

Garigt

REBUilT &amp; REPAIRED

TEAFORDm

NEW LISTING - 12x50
2 BRs. Furnished
&amp; Jot in Racine. $8,000.
NEW LISTING- 125 acres,
old 3 BR farm house, and all
elec. 3 BR trailer. Ii1 baths &amp;
!arm bldgs. ~s kin g $70,000.
NEW LISTI~G -Good 9rm.
home at Ra ci ne School. 4
BRs. gas furnace. living
about 24x25, garage. &amp; ba·
semen!. $27,500.
POMEROY - Lg. hou se, lg.
lot. 3 baths. gas furnace with
allached woodburner. 3 lg.
BRs, family rm ., woodburn·
ing unit and lg. lot for the
children.
4.36 ACRES - Southern
Schools, T.P. water available
and in !he woods. Asking
$6,000.
43 ACRES - Eastern Schools,
farm house, 9 rms., buildings
and minerals. $45,000.
MIDDLEPORT - Remo·
deled 3 BR home on corner
lot near the sc hool. Cen tral
heat, equipped kit chen, gar.
age &amp; carport. Now just
$29,500.
POMEROY ,- Hot water
heat, 3 BRs. 217 baths,
range, refrigerator, base·
ment &amp; 2 porches. Walk to
stores. Asking $28,000.
PORTLAND - 2 !g. level
lots, abou t one acre. old
home &amp; buildings. Drilled
well lor just $11,000.
RUTLAND - 2 apartments
near the post ofhce. So me
furn 1ture &amp;·2 lots.
SELLING PROBLEM!
CALL BRUCE AT 992·3325

'

TV

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

Real Estate General

Real Estate

6

...r·

1-11·1 . ..

Public Notice

BANK

Automotive ltp11ir
&amp; Senice

24 HR. SERVICE

NO GIMMICKS! NO MINIMUM BALANCE!

PEOPLES
.

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

Models

SENIOR
CITIZENS!*
I
I
'Must be 62 yatS of ace or older
.-=----,
.

--

OFFERS ENRICHING

FOR

Pigeon population pooh poohed
BEAVER DAM, Wis. (UPI)The people of Beaver Dam were
fed up with the stained sidewalks, awnings, hats and clothing caused by the pesky pigeon
population.
So city officials enlisted a
group 20 citizens, armed with
shotguns and a distaste for
pigeon droppings, and posted
them 'Saturday on downtown
rooftops for a pigeon shootout.
When the smoke cleared; 150

.
-448·4524

NOTHING LIKE THE REAL THING, BUT ...- Japanese snow
sculpture artists unload a truck lull of artificial snow Sunday In St.
Paul, Minn. The snow sculpture artists came to Minnesota to buUd
snow sculptures for the St. Paul Winter Carnlv al, but a Jack ofsnow
forced carnival officials lo truck In artificial snow from a ski area
outside of the Twin Cities. (UPI)

.

~;1:. ..

Business Services

pl~es

Guests at a family gathering at
the home or'Mr. and Mrs. Arthur
Crabtree Included Mr. and Mrs.
Paul Gaston, Mr. and Mrs .·Joe
Gaston, Aaron and Jessica, Mr.
and Mrs. Bruce Gillogly , Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Gillogly, Mr. and Mrs.
Carl· Crabtree and Russell, all
local; Tracy Woods, Carbondale,
Lori McDaniel, Charity and
Kristen, Gallipolis.' and Mrs.
David ·Norris, Serena and Ml·
chelle, Nelsonville.
Steven Gillogly, Atlanta, Gear-.
gla, spent several days here with
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Cecil
Gillogly and other relatives In the
area.

•

The ,Daily Sentinel

Arctic
weather

. Page-4,

Alfred happenings

Ohio

•

"~-....

'

Pomeroy-Mi~leeort,

The
.Daily Sentinel
'
.

I

MIDDLEPORT - Nrce 2
story, 3 bedroom home with
I ~ baths, enclosed Iron I sit·
ling porch, fireplace. car·
port, lois of storage space.
Many olher features. All lor
$37,5110.00.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-&amp;191
Jean TtUJStll ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992·5692

Court, Cote No. 21392.
GIVonn Clor ond Richerd E.
Gout, Pool Offlco Bo• e.
Chtotor. Oh. 4&amp;720. wo•
oppolntod co-flduclerlet of
tho oototo ot Evelyn E. Gout.
doceoHd, loll of tho Vlllogo Office................992· 2259
of Cheotor, Mlfgo Counl)'.
Ohio.
Robert E. Buck.
Probtto Judge
· Lone K. Noootlrood, Citric
tl) 12. 19. 2.1. 3tc

AlB

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Roasonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY CAlLS

J.R. 's REP_.411S.
TYs, Awl au
Sat.teS.s
lnst.......
Serwice-.

Electronic ·Ot

a

II

MoW.. 'a 1aitee

6t4:au-ma
llUSONAIU • 11"•1

4-16 .'116 tfn

• ·• ·•• lilt

YOUNrs

New location:
t 61 North Soc and

Midtlloport, Ohio 45760

SAliS &amp; SERVICE

We Catry Flthlng Suppat.

Pay Your eable 6
Phone Blllo Here
• IUSINI!! PHOIII
16141 992 -6550
RISto IN CE 'HOIII
(6141 992·
'

I

•viNYL SIDING
•AWMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN W

f

WSULAJION

BISSnL
SIDING CO.

. New Homes luilt
"Free EttlmetM"

,H, 949-2101
or 949·2860

CARPENTER
SERVICE ' :;
- Addont M4 rt:;

-

- RHfllot _. . - - Conornt . . .f

-""""""" .... ...,_.
.,.

.

tf,.. 1111 cisl)

Y. C. YOM •
ttt-6211 or m-rJI4
Pc:::s:cf4 ....

_.;..

.. ' . 4.15·'•6·1C

.If••.

WecaR=·Jrt"

core ,_.

111d
heater Clftl. • can
also acill boil 1141 rod •
out radiators. ·It 1lso

repairGu Tub.

PAT

No Sunday Calls
1/tl/llo

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAII
Truck, auto. &amp;
heavy equipment
repeirt t!nd weldlnt.
(All makea 8o modeltl

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756
John I. ...h
ow-/ltciNIIIk'

'..
DENNY COIGO
WILL HAUl
JUST CAU.!
992-Q
LIIIEST.

GRAVEL~ '

TOP
FILl

I

�•.

...

.

Page'"'"76-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

SMALL
WANT ADS

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr.. ell utilities paid except
elec., fum or unfurn.. lee.
depoalt required Convenient
lo catio n. Call 814-446-8558 or
61.·448-4778.

PACK ,
ABIG PUNCH!

2 bdr fully furnlthfldadults only,
utll paid. Call 814-446-4110.
2 Bedtoem furn11hed We accept
MUD, 8ttutlful river VIBW, FDI·
tart Mobile Home Park 614·
448-1802.

2 BR Fum'ed Adultt only. No
pets . 322 Th1rd Avenue. Gallipolis . Call 614-446-3748 or 2661903.

Racin e Guri Shoot t ponaored by
Racine Gun Club. Every Sun day,
beginning at 1 00 p m Factory
Choke. 12 guage s"otguna

6

lost and Found

1---------.---.----------...,
11

Help Wanted

31

High scf1ool Juntonand Seniora
can . 101nJ the Army Nat•onal

MANAGEMENT TRAINEE .
grownlng

retail

company

Is

seeking an aggressive penon
wllllng to be trained In retail
businau No pre1.1ious experience required Exc benefltt.
Send retume and talary requ1r•
menta to W1I-Ca r Enterprises,
Inc P 0 Box 1308 , Portsmouth, Oh•o 46662

REPS NEEDED tor businets
accounts. Full-t1me $60.0009 \(Vented To Buy
880,000, Pert - time
812.000 00 -S1B.OOO.OO . no
We pay cath for late model clean telling. repeat butinen. set your
hours. Traimng provided. Call
used cars
1-612-938-8870, M-F, Bam to
Jim M1nk Chev -Oida Inc.
6pm
{Central Standard Time}
Bill Gene Johnson
814-446 -3672
MIRING! Federal government
TOP: CASH paid for '83 modet jobs in your area and overnas.
and newer uted cars. Sm1th many immediate openingt with·
Buiclc ·Pont1ac. 1911 Eastern out waiting list or teat . 816Ave .. Gallipolis. Call 614-448 S6B.OOO Phone call refundable
{8021838-8886 ... 1203
2262.
Country furmture, collectibles. R N Applications ere now be1ng
child ren ' s toys, doll s. Pre-1960 accepted lor part-time positions
at Pleasant Valley Nursing Care
Cora Mill Call814-379-2727
Center . !Fie~tlbl,e _hours -all
Buying dally gold, silver coms, ah1fts) Benefits available. Con·
nngs. Jewelry, sterling ware, old tact the ' Peflonnel Otfice at
coins. large currency Top pri· Pleatant Valley Hospital 304ces. Ed Burkett Barber Shop. 676-4340.
2nd A1.1e Midd leport, Oh 61 410 peoplea who want to make
992· 3476.
mon ey, no Investment, 614BUYING RAW FURS! Ginseng, 763-4840.
Yellow Root. beef and deer hides. Also selling trapping JOB OPPORTUNITY Area
supplies. Wheat lit at, Nita lites. Home Center hat an open1ng in
Mours 1 00 9 .00. Closed Wed sales department Reply in confl·
dance to Po1nt Pleaunt Regis·
George Buckley 814-664-4761
ter, Box C-8, 200 Mein St ., Pt.
Pit , statmiJ your qualifiCations.
QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD
Cas h paid . Pre 1950's Single or
whole collection Call Marc and 12
Situations
Ellen Fulu 614 -992-2101 days
Wanted
'or 614-692-2461 evenings and
weehends

Buying junk cart Call614-9925648 aher 5:00pm

Room and board for employed
man. Nice home Family atmot·
phere. Call814-992-6873 .
Lady to movfl 1n and there
expenses Two Chlldftn welcome Call 614 -992· 7662

18 Wanted to Do

Emp loyment
Serv1ce ~

11

Help Wanted

HOME ASSEMBLY
Excellent uare ~lime m ooin~t;
eiectroni&lt;::t, crafts. no tK perience. Others. information 604·
641 -0091 ext . 2987, 7 days.
CALL NOW I
Parttime housekeeping POSition
in apartment building located in
Pomeroy, OH . Send experience
&amp; three reference• to P.O. Box
136. Marlena . OH 46760 We
are an eq u a l opportunity
employer
Dependable individual for gen ·
eral ofi1ce work. Must hav e
accuute t'lpmg ••ulls, good
handwriting, &amp; pleasant telephone voice Sand resume to
•Box T·2000 Gallipolis DailyTribune. 826 third Ave Galllpo·
lis. OH 4fi631 .

2 br, kitchen, bathroom. w1th
laundry room, living room

a.

dining room, all alec. Appro11. . 7
miles from Pt. Pl. on At . 62. 2
tfactaapproJt . 1 acremoreoriMI

overlooking Kanawha River.
040,000. Cell 304-676- 6440
between 8 :30 and 4 30

For uleor rent, 3 bedroom, 2 full
baths. built-in kitchen, central
air, barn, pond, 8Y2 acres. 3
milet from town. wiU contlder
land contract 304-875-2886
Butch and Pa1 Greenlee.'

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Merch antli se
51 Household Goods
ll

Pa intlng · lnter10r - E11terior.
Reasonable r1tea. 26 yeara
8)1perlence Free eatima1e1. Call
614-266-6786
G1ve pl~no and organ leuont in
my home to beginners. ad~.~ancad pupil• and adults Also
teach chording and transpoting.
Coli 614· 992-&amp;403
Attention Businesses· Will pick
up , repair , and deliver pallett to
any busineaa within 60 miln for
13.00 each 304 -676· 2863 or
678-227,3

Financial
21

Business
Opportu'nity

New 2 bedroom a pta in Mtton,
W Va Quiet setting, off street
park1ng Rent ttartt at $199.
Call linda Carson at 304· 775·
16011 or Denise Stre1b It 614·
863 -41 11 . Equal Houting
Opportunity

Upstairs unfurnished apt, carpeted, utihries paid, no children,
no pets call 448.1637
Apartment for Rent, 821 Second Avenue. 2 BR . Extra Nice,
equipped kitchen . C I A
S260 / mo Call614-446-2168

Completely turn . 2 BR apart·
ment, large livmg room. 468
Second . Adu lts . $226 per
month. Sec. Dep. &amp; Ref. Call
614-446 -223e, 446 -2681 .

•
furni!i!hed apartment. nex.t door

34

Furnished apt. 919 Second,
Gallipolis. 8150 Utllitiet Jld
Single male. share bath. 446·
4416 after ?pm.

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom houtftl
for rant Ph. 446· 1871§
Deluu 2 BR house, 842 Firat
Avenue, Gallipolis . off street
parking, no pete, reterencet,
deposit Call814-266-1629

Good money I Weakty I Pracets- 3 bdr . ranch , Rodney Vtllege II,
•2B5 mo. plut deposit. Referening ma1ll Information? Rush
telf addreued , tlltnped enva· , ces required. Call 61 • ·448·
0008 .
lope. Terry Lea. Box 131 ·A.
Eureka Star At . Gallipolis, OM
Large 3 bdr. full bsmt., carpeted
46831
livmg room. Cloteto city school.
Enthu11att1c &amp; energetic perton
Rat. 6 deposit. No pett. Ctll
with pood commun icat10n Sllllla.
614-446-1734 after 8:30pm .
Professional
Posltton availnble to work for 23
Southaastarn Ohio' t fmeat out ·
2 bedroom homa in country.
Services
doo r recrention firm . No eKpe·
Large yard. langsville -'"ea.
i-lence needed. Will t11in. Start
Oaposit required Call814-742immediately . Call between 10 &amp;
4 at 614-286-2248, Wed thru Plano &amp; organ le11ons. Mary 2541
lucas C111 614 ·448-9787 or
Sat Ask for Sua
3 bdr house In Pomeroy. $225
614-446-4428.
month plus deposit. Call 614W•nted· Lead gu1tar &amp; bau
992-8783
pl1yar fo r a coun try -wettern Scuba Diving cl1ues to begin
band r•(lrouptng. Prefer lome- thortly by certified insructor. at
2 6edroomt on Ohio At 141 . all
one ovef' 26 yelfS of age. Would foul Indoor poOl Fot informa• carpeted, 2 miln from downlion
Clll814-256-1393
like lor themn. to sing but not
town Gallipolll, deposit and
necesaar.v. Ple118 call614· 245·
rt1rtncea requited, 8275 .00
Starks Tree and Lawn Service
9316 efter 5pm
304-875-3666.
Hedge s. ahrubs , buahet
trimmed.
l•ndscaplng,
stump
Cost a Inventory anelvst.lmme·
diate opening for tn lndiv.id ual. and leaf removal , 304· 676with a BS In accounting with 2 2842 or &amp;76-2010
42 Mobile Homes
vra. cost ell p.,ience. Microfor Rent
computer e11perience de11red ,
Salary comen1urate with IK Pe·
RP.~I
ritnce. E11cellant benefit pkg.
Nice 3 br ., furnithed on At 7
Please und retume with nlary
Watt'r plid . t216 month. Sac
reQuiremenu to Jeno't a div dep required. Call 014· 246·
isio n of the Pillsbury Co P.O.
6818 .
Boll 16 1. Wellston, OH 45892 . 31 · Homes for Sale
~ttn . Mary Mo,tgomery 614Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home,
384· 2 131 AA-EOE
3 bdr . air, pool. garagt Nice
Roush Lane. On . nic:e tPot in
property, corner Chethlrt. 304; n3-5828
Bi.byaiUer for a.M &amp; 5 year old . Commatcfal
tqu
highway frontage Utt
Second shift 4' days a week . with us We have buyen. A· One
Onlv responilblt perton need Ae lll Eat11e-Brokw. Cell 304· ,3 bedroom . In Chtshirt C.ll
614· 367· 7148 .
apply. Ca!IIS14·446-2 163 after 874·5104
., 304-874-5386.
9AM
=:::.:....------le- Mill's Home. EVInt Heights. 3 2 bi-d,oom mObllt home. M1d·
Government )obt . 116,040 • belt' , ctntral air, full bsmt .. dlepor1 , 0 . Ref.-enc:a with se1&amp;9.230 vr. Now hiring. C1ll carport Low bills-IFHA) Call curity deposit. 304-882-3267
or 304-773-8024.
80&amp;-687-1000 E11t. R·9805 for 814·446-0905.
current ledarellist.
K • K MotMie Hom•, 2 and 3
Houn for sale. A1 condition
Know how to do service worll on Commerical zone. 333 Third bedroom moblllt hom•. 304175-3000
appliancet7 lnternted In uln7 Ave. Cllll14·441-0727.
If lnttretled. write Apphcant,
Two bedrooms, t1'25.00 m.onth
Boll 40&amp;, Pomeroy. Oh10 45708
giving full retuma. All tpplica- 3 bedrooms. split lwei. 2 beths, plus utilltltt must alan a months
finished blltmtflt with lire INtO, phoftt 30•· 678- 408&amp;.
ttont ttrlctiV confidential.
place, 2 car garega. n .ooq.oo
Part•tlme or full time secretary down •61.000.00 a11urr.abl• 2 bedroom mHIIe home UPPII'
end o Hiet worker Oood tvplt.t, VA loan. 304· 676· 1997 or River Aold. rtfrtnCM •nd dtp·
osit. 2 children accepted. 61 4·
ahorthend, computer exp•l.nce 675·2322.
446·0101.
Of' college helpful but not nec•nry. WrHe f'oit •2e. Pom.-ay. 8 room end bath, a11 ,000.00 Of'
Ohto 41718 gktlng full '"ume. rent t171 . 00 mon1h1nd 2 bedroom tr1Her, coupt•. 1
how 100 ~IYn IVIillblt, part- t 100.00 deposit. no peu, 30•- •mall chile(. Loculi Ad . At. 1, Pl.
875-3298.
Plenant. Jo•-871-1078.
tlme or full t1m1.

Estate

Furnished apt 817S.oo water
pd 2 bedroom 131 Y2 Fourth
Ave Ph 446-4416 after 7pm

to library. One profess1onaladult
only Parking Call 814-448033B.

41

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH ING CO . recommend• th.t you
do business with people you
know, and NOT t o tend money
through the mail until you h811B
lnveltlgated the offering.

1 Bedroom b11ic rent $176.00
plus electric. Also required a
$200.00 security deposit CONTACT Jackton Estates Dept Ph
446 - 3997 Equal Housing
Opponunity

WANT TO BUY, 60 aetJI Maaon
County Hunting land, big home,
baument. tend .nformation
P.O. Box 1&amp;8, Clifton, W . Vt.

Rentals

Sofas and chairs priced from
S396 to t996. Tablea 860 and
up to f126. Mide-a -beda 8390
to $69&amp; Recliners 8226 to
$376. Lampl 828 to $126.
Dinettes S109 •nd up to S49tJ
Wood table w-6 chairs S286 to
8795. Desk 8100 up to $375.
Mutche1 8400 and up Bunk
beds complete W· maHrenea
8295and up to 8396 Baby beds
8110 &amp; 8176. Mattre11eaor box
springs lull or twm 863. firm
S73, and $83 Queen sets S226.
Kmg 4360. 4 drawer che1t t86.
Drenet'S $89 . Gun cabinets 8,
10. &amp; 12 gun. Gas or electric
range S376 . Baby mattre11111
836 &amp; 846 Bed frames 820,
$30 &amp; King frame t50 Good
salection of bedroom suites.
metal cabinett, haadboards S30
and up to t65

Oeluu downtown apartmentnewly redecorated 2 bdr apt,
w1th full lntulation, cornpleUt
kitchen , washer·dryer, air cond
sundeck. Call 614· 446-43B3dayt , 614-446-0139 evenmg1
6 WHkendt.
2 BR apartment on Fltlt Avenue.
Adults only. Call 614-4466221 .
2 bdr. apt located at 3 Garfield
Utilities not paid Call 814-4467544.
1 br ., penly furmshed, 8176 mo
In Rio Grande. Ohio Call
814-448-8883

Good used color TV's
614-448-1149.

Cell

Motpoint automatic washer,
good cond Call614-446-3462
after 5
Mollohan Furniture. Rt 7 North
Gallipolis, OH PH 614-446 ·
7444 Why pey more? Check us
out for low pnctt on furniture&amp;
applumces. 6 piece wood h1.1ing
room group, 8399 .
Pickens Used Furn1ture. Good
quahty used furniture. Open 9 to
6 or call for appoi_ntment.
304-676 -6483 or 676-1450
Large gold refrigerator, 304675-2598 or 2906 Parrish Ave

64 Misc . Merchandise

..'

-..

(]) Mazda Sportslook

mmJeffe•oons

6:05
6:30
WHEW! I THOU5HT I
WA; NEV~R GONNA
G ~T OUTA THAT
ROOM~

6:35
7:00

mick

'."'

Vans 8&amp; 4 W.O.

One bedroom furnihted apt In
Point Pleasant. adultt only. no
pet1, phone 304-676-1388

Full tin pool lable 886 air
hockey table t60 00, GE stereo
t36 Coll81•·446-1042 .
Public Notice. 1 9B6 open erm
school model sewing mechin111
equ1pped to zig zag. monogram.
make button holes, hams, &amp;
mend &amp; more. Regular Price
1399.96-Now while they last
$126. Coli 1 -814-38&amp;-453&amp;.
Free delivery.

Bu1ldmg Materials
Block. brick. HWer pipes, win dows. lintels, etc Clltudfl Win ten, Rio Grande. 0 Call 814246-&amp;121 .
Concrete blocks all tlzes yard or
dell1.1ery. Mason sand Gallipolis
Block Co , 123'h Pine St.,
Gallipolis, Ohio Call 614 -446·
2783.
Pole Buildmgs bv Quslily
Builders Workshops, carports.
animal sheltera, gar~~gn . Free
estimate• Phone 614 -384·
6762

56

Pets for Sale

UKC Pilt Bull puppillt, 8 weeks
old. 304-882 · 3796 .

58

Fruit
8&amp; Vegetables

A new truckload thote f1m0t1t
Lake Ontario Appl11, large lite,
good · kMJPtrl, 7 vtrlttil!ll. all
fruit and prCiduce. Jack"s Frutt
Market.- At . 35. Hendenon.
W.Va.

F~r n 1 S upp l tJ ~s

&amp; L J Vt:~ to c k

2010 John Deere dinet tractor ptowa, ditc I 3950. New ld ..
Dyne Bounce mower t495. Ute
moda4 224T John Oa..-e bal«
t1295 May wagon 1300. Ctll
814-288-6&amp;22 .

Tree &amp; ltump remove!, mulch.
stone. firewood ; pickup e4&amp;.
dump t96 Oon't Landscapes.
814-446· 964&amp;.

Ir;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;J.::::;::;;:;:;:;:;:;:~

SNAFU™ by Bruce Beattie

CROSS llo SONS
U.S . 36 W•t. Jeckson, Ohio.
8 14-28&amp;-8461.
M11aay Ferguson, New Holland,
Buth Hog Sel• • S.rwlce. Over
40 usld trectors to chooie from
a CQmplete line of new a uaed
equ.,mtnt. Largelt selection In
S .E. Ohio.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. BR 35 W. O.Nipollo.
Ohio. Call 814-448-8n7. eve.
814-441-3112. Up fronl trac·
tors with warranty o.,.- 40 used
tractort, 1000 tbols.
UTILITY BLDG $PECIAL:
27'x38 ' )19'EAVE • with tlldlng
door &amp; service door ••.288.00
trected .
Iron Horae BuMdlnos Ph.814332-9745
197B-2.a Tlmbtrjack skinner.
Coli 114-388·90~2 •• 3889312
3000 Ford triCior·new thort
bloch with plows and d.,c
t3850, gravity btd wagon
1295. 2 row c:orn planttr 1275.
Coli 814· 281·1822
2010 John Detre diiiHitractor
whh plows and disc 13110.
New ld11 Dyne lounee mower
1418 Lohl modol 224T John
O..e btllf t1ZII . Hay wagon
Coii114-21B-1522.

noo,

1180 Long 110. 4x4, 14 HP,
lnd..,end•t PTO . Call 114241·087.
TflctOf lu,.- A, with cultNator

"You bought flood l~surance .for
our houseboat? I"

Livestock

Hay 8&amp; Grain

Mixed gran hay for sale. Call
814-949- 2237.

Moving . Roland Juno 60
svnthe11zer- t400. 2 JP2 Pe•
vey speakers, UOO. WISherdryer~ $37&amp; . 2 c.metary lots.
bemg sold now for 1726, my
price t300. Call 614· 4467024.

Rooms for ren1, day. week
month Galli• Hotel. Call 814448-9716 Rentat lowaa8120
month

63

large round bales of hay forule.
*10.00 each Ph . 614-4461062.

61 Farm Equipment

Firewood . t50cord. DeliVered •
stacked Call 814· 379· 2761 .

Now buying sh&amp;ll corn or tar
corn Call for hnett quotes. Riv8f'
City Farm Supply, 614-446·
2986

M1.111ed hardwood tlabs *12. per
bundle Containing approx. 1 'h
tont . FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, Oh10 Call614-9926461 .

55 ·Building Supplies

end tide dr•Mr, e1 ,100.00.

304· 871-2147.

1982 Manda Silver Wing lnterttlle. Excellent condition Call
814-992-2371 .
1982 Honda CB 760 Custom for
sale New tires. Extra~, re11ona·
ble offtr. Call 614-949- 2734.
ask for Llrry.

=-::::::~==
==75

, Hsy for Ale. Conditioned orchard grall ana mind Cell
814-992-5383 •• 814· 9·92764 ... 814-!M9-2&amp;68.

Transpor tat10n
71

Autos for Sale

1974 Pontiac t.eM1n1, 11 ,600
or best offer Call 614-3870641
1984 Chevv Chevette. 4 tpd ..
Cesh Price 12399 John'• Auto
Sal11, Bulaville Rd .. Gallipolit,
OH C.ll 814· 446 -4782
79 ford Pinto, 4 cyl. auto . new
tires. AM· FM cauette, e11. running cond , looks good 1800.
Jsckaon E111111, on At 36 by
Foodland, Apt 881, 1nvt1me

Boats and
Motors for Sale

.---------,

76

''•·

_,
'

1981

Honda Accord Hatch5 tpeed , good work car
lnd mileage. t1396. Call 614949-2288.
be~ .

1180 Chwett•. Body, ~cellent
condition. 2 door, auto. t 1 360.
Call 814-841-2801 .
1181 Z28 Csmaro. loaded.
Good lhepa. 12800 C1ll 81491&amp;-3859.
1975 Chevy lmplll. 57.000
ICtual mllet t600 Call 614·
7U-21B7
1986 Clm•o 'l8600.00. 304·
876-6510
1981 AMC Concord DL stetlon
wagon.· low mlleaga, exc cond.
304·175-3841 .
.
1975 Ptymouth. 4 door. PS. PB.
400 engine. good cond ,
t450.00., &lt;oil 304-773-5303.
'71 Vola,.stiUon wqon, I cyl.,
auto.. new ptlnt, good redial
tl75.00. 304·875-1325.

tl••·

' 85 Cullan 8uprem•
BroughMn, 11.000 mil• Exc.t.
lent condition 30•·876-4212
1184 FMd F1 00 pldlup, ""'"'
wh... bU8, I cyl., 3 speed, no
rust. Cullomlred ceb. t2,000.
Hydraulic wood eplitttr. 5 HP
ena'nt New anoint • pump.
14110. 304-875·5·92.

' 19 Ford Fllrmont Btetlon
wagon. rtctntly painted.
11,150.00. 304-176-107 ••
171·2322.
1M2 Fo•d Eaaon L WOf!On,
18.000 mil•. good condition,
J0 mpg. t 1, 800.00. After ' 8,
304-811-3138.

7:05 CIJ Sanford and Son
7:30 D CD ffi New Newlywed
Game

FRANK AND ERNEST

f1l CD Too Close for Comfort

:X: j(N~W IT! ,. f'R08ABLY
AtJl)'rH·I~R

~ &amp;3 'i.-:J'

D (I) Judge
®l Wheel of Fortune
CD ® @ Jeopardy

i'!EVISIOf\1.

@ JeHe..ons
7:35 (!) Honeymoonera
8:00 D (I)@ ALF As 1he fam1ly

~~Ef'! ...
~E~ f"! ..,

..

~EEf'! ..
'/

'

"',.
•
'

prepares f&lt;..r a visit from
Kate's overbearing mother,
ALF must retreat into the
~rage

..

MacG ywer heads tnto bavou
country when a revengeful
undercover agent kidnaps
Thornton 's 8)(·Wtfe and

!

'

·'

1eenage son. 160 m•n.l
Ill CZJ MOVIE: 'Citizen
Kane'
())
MacNeil-Lehrer
Nawahour

,,
l•

®liD (j}) Kate 8o Allie !CCI
Jennte starts a roman ce
With a charming but klutzy

'

boy w~o has a crush on
Emma . IR) .
[jj) Wonderworks: Hopplly
Ever Alter ICCI A peculiar

•
'

"'

Home
Improvements

•l

.,•

assortment of friends help a
young girl adjust to her parents d1vorce (60 mtn.) ·
IBi Hogon' o Heroes

...•

BASEMENT
. •~
WATERPROOFING
., ·•
Unconditional lifetime guaren- ·"''
tee.· Local referencet furnished . • -' ·
free estimate•. Call collect
1-614-237-0488, d..,- or night ·
Rogers Basement
Watarprooting

I'M A
KIU.·JERK

LIBERAL ...

school dance1yrns ou110 be
an introvert

fBI College Bnkotb&lt;lll:
Notre Dome at Creighton
12 h•sl
9:00 8 (I) (liJ MOVIE: 'Stronger In My Bod' (CCI In

..

Stereo .

"
,,,.

I CAN'r DECI DE: WHAT
I WANT TO CO WH E:N
r &lt;?tROJ/UP.

YQJDOIP
YOLJ WERE ME~

WEAR A
MG:OVER
MY HEAD.

THATS THE KIND
OF HE.L.P 'IOU GiET

AROUND HERE: .

Dick ftnds himself in a tight

'•

spot when t'tis old college
g!flfriend arrives at the Inn .
(jJ) CIIM1plon1hlp Ball·

,.
,.

,,
,.
"

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Most wells complet:ed 11meday
Pump saln and service. 304896-3802

,,

, ,..,., .. , ""

,~, '

,..,•'

room Oonclng Top dancera
from e•ound 1ha country

'·

compete for honors In three
different categories. ~90
min.)

Hl.

9:30 ®l iD ® C.vonaugh1 Kh
once again heads fqr the
road when ahe grows frustrated with the preljlsures of

BARNEY

.. '

W~AR'S AMOS,

MIZ HICKS?
Plumbing

8&amp; Heating
.o CARTER 'S PlUMJING

HE'S Fi.DDLIN'
AROUND OUT
IN IH' BARN,
SNUFFY ··

I DON'T LET HIM

.

AND HEATitlfG
Cor Fourth and Pme
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 or 614446-4477

SAW THAT THING
IN lH' HOUSE

!CCI Mary Be1h worr1es
when a revengef~l rapi1 t ahe
helped convict is released
from pnson and Chrie fights
with David when he agrees
to defend the man who at·

.
1emp1ed 10 kill her. 160 min.I
10:10 (I) MOVIE: 'VaMey of the
Klnva'
10:30. Cll INN Newa
[jj) fBI Now1

.,
"

.,

Wa1te t19 n 1 Wat et Hauling ,
reat onabl e rat e.. im mediate
2, 000 gall on dehvery. Cllttrns.
pool t . well, etc . c• ll 304 -5762919

'

••
'
"

rates this e)(amlnatlon of
health care cost contain·
ment
init•atlves
acrosa

'·'

.

'
.•

Amenco . 160 min .l

· '· ~ '"

11 :30

' .' •~
' •\
• "'
•• .. .:

e (]) llJJ Bnt of Coioon
·• Cll TIXI

• (I) ABC Newa Nlghtltne

.'
. '

A &amp; M Cu1tom Couches and
Reuphol ste ry. St. R1. 7. Crown
- ''
City, Oh e14-258-1470, En
81.·448·3438. Open daily 9 to ,,.," I'
4 :30, S1t 9 30 to 1 :30 . Old &amp; \ •I
new Uph ostered
Mowrey's Upholstering serving
~~ county1rea21 yeeu. Thebnt
In furnf1ure urholttering, C•ll
304 · 676 - 4 S4 lor rree
11tlmatn.

•

.'
·'
.•' '..'
'

..'",.

I T~IN K I'LL ASK THAT
REO HAIRED61RL
IF l CANWALK I-lOME
FROM
WITH

I THINK I'LL
MAKE A ~EMARK
ASOVT 140W

I

T~INK
51166EST
T14AT MA~SE

140LD loiER HMI/,,

Comp lete lhe chuckle quoted

by ftl ltng In _the mtsstng words
1-J-..L_J_.JJ...-L--1 you develop
lrom sfep No J below

8

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

I) ~~;c:~~~ER LETTERS

To

IIIIIIII

YESTERDAY'S SCIAM·lETS ANSWEIS .
&amp;Give - UiifB - Apart - 'lbrrid - '!RIP OVER

"We're living on a shoestring," complained the husband.
"I think you're wrong," sootded the wife. "Cauae the only thing
you can do with a shoestring Is TRIP O~ER it."

BRIDGE
James

Jacoby

Seeing
double

1-11-87

NORTH

• J 72
"J 10 2
t7
+ AKQ 8 74

By James Jacoby

EAST
Does it surprise you that North b1d WEST
tK
only two spades at his Sf(!Ond turn' • g 8 54
"7 6 3
Many players use a lwo-level response "A Q 5
•
J9
6
2
tAI0 85 13
in a new su1t as a fo rce to game unless
+to
6
+9 3 2
the responder simply rebids his suit. I
watched today 's deal played at two
SOUTH
different tables in a local duplicate
+A Q 10 6 3
"K9 81
game in Dallas last November, and
tKQ
both pairs were using that method. Ac+JS
cordingly both arnved in four spades.
What was really remarkable was that
Vulnerable: Eas1·West
both declarers, experienced hfe masDealer: South
ters, managed to go down.
North Eau
The defense started with a diamond West
lead East won that ace and returned a
2•
Pass
heart. West took the queen and ace of . -Pass
2•
Pass
hearts and played a third heart. That Pass
Pass
PaRS
placed the lead in dummy. and declar- Pass
er called for the jack of spades. East
Opemng lead 2
played the king, grateful that his singleton could be used to cover an honor.
Sure enough, West now came to the spades. (He would return to dummy to
setting trick with his 9-8-5-4 of spades lead the jack: after that was covered,
South would have been right to lead he would get back to dummy w1th an the jack only if he had no more entries other club to lead through what would
to dummy. As 11 was, he could return now be the guarded eight or nine In lhe
to dumm'y twice in the club suit and so East hand I
should have played a low spade hrst.
Although the problem IS immedialely A new book by James Ja coby and his
solved wben the king appears. it's father, the lafe Oswald Jacoby, Is now
worth noting that declarer would also available at bookstores. It '' "Jacoby
succeed with this play If West held ei- on Card Games," published by Pharos
tller the singleton nine or eight or Books.

+

di~N•"t'(
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

I Windsor
or Eton
4 Beatpounder
7 Swiss city
8 -- Khachaturfan
10 Hackneyed
II Headwear

43 Bruce

or Brenda
DOWN
I Ooctnm•
2 Author
Levin
3 Expand
4 Junto
0 Native
mineral
19 •Just the
6 Type of
Way You - ' umbrella
21 Boundlll}' 29 Dieter's
14 Between
7 Actre,..,
22 At a
dish
Miss. and
Lynn -bargain
SO Cultural
Ga.
9 Household 23 More
level
18 It's --win I 0 French
laborious 31 Operatic
situation
dance
Inheren t:
excerpt
17 Verbatim 12 Rental sign
Inborn
32 Sped
19 Maglle
10 New Guinea 20 Civil War 37 P""t
or, Mineo
town
soldier
39 Odd
20 Mellow
18
27
,....,....,....;;number
21 Theater box

2.

Cll High WI" A ponran of
1igh1ropo walker Philippe Pe1it aa he
tor a 1982
walk celebrating 1he re-

. I THINK I'LL WALK
1/ERV SLOW IN CASE I
SUMP INTO ATREE ..

prepa•••

sumption of conetructlon
wo"' 0&lt;1 lhe Ca1hedral of St.

COLD IT IS ..

:
I'

''

..

John 1ho Dfv,lne. IRI .
®I® Mognum, P,l,
• (jJ) Simon &amp; Simon AI
1he Slmonlaflrch for • I tO·
ion ohow clog, Rick worrieo
when his own pooch Mit·
lowe io dognoppod 11 wall.
170 min.JIRI.

'·

•

22 Selected
20 Cut
Of steak

28 Belgian - '
27 WriU!
28 Work unit
29 Cocktail
33 Nabokov
novel
34 King Kong ,
e.g.
85 Ex coach
Parseglllan
88 Subject to
punishment

38 Varn~h

k-+-+-

AXYDLBAAXR
II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands lor another. In this sample A Is ll.ICd

lor the Ibm L'a, X lor the two 0'1, etc. Sill(!le letters,
apoetrophes, the length and fonnaUon ol the word3 are ~II
hlnls. Each day the code lettef'l are different.
CIYPTOQUOTES

Ton ight' a guests are Jackie

up. Jim Lanier. 304-676-1247
or 675-7397 .

•. '

~-..1;;...:;.,17,;:..TI,;_;:;I,..::...,.I~

DAILY CRYPTOQIJOTES- Here'alloW lo work It:

Iongo Downun0r: The
Fino! Four 14 hrs.l
• • (lJ M•A•S•H
(jJ) HMith Core on lhl Crlt·
leal Ull Jeck Kfugmon nar·

----------'
Moute co11. Delivered 1 ton and . .. : .::
Upholstery

•

mfck

Gleason and Jim Staffo•d.
160 min.IIRI In S1ereo.
Cll WKAP In Cincinnati

87

•

(I) Amlrico'o Cup Chel·

Newo

CD Horde~~otlo end McCor·

,•

T &amp; l'V'Iat er dehvery anytim e Ph .
614 -3 88 9732 uma day
deliverv
.Umestone and alaf;lwood hauled .
AI Tr omm, Rutland Call 614742· 2328

I learned that
was
somecone
whoa phlioaophBr
talks about
5 6 1
~hlng ha doesn't understand
•I 1
•
.
and malles you think It's your
. . - - - - - - - - - . lault. All along I thought that
S L E TE 0
described a ----'- .
,..

lnflTedlent
40 Latvian city
41 Theater
flTOUP
42 Cape or fill~

11 :00 B (])IIJ II Cil® D (lJI~

'
J am es Boys Wat er Ser1.1ice Al to
pool• hlled. Call614- 256· 1141
or 614 -446· 1176 or 614 -4467911

family fife.

10:00 g Cll Odd Couple
®I g ClJI Cagney 8o Llcey

''

·

General Hauling

WHATWOLJLD

C!l Colleg. B11lcetball: In·
dlona at Michigan 12 hrs.l
Live.
CllOIIlMOVIE: 'Night of
Courage' (CCI
(I) 8-1 7 Flying Fortreoo 12
h... , 30 m1n.1
®&gt; 1D ® Newhart (CCI

'·'·
'·

o•po-

85

(1) 700 Club

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

,."

Ii

I
t
-rN:..~,:.A:..,iC;...!;---jl ·!: !~·
1
Ie
I
ESNEH

®l 1D ® My Sloter Sam

Pani' s blind da1e for a

'.
,,.

1

glimPses of her past in her
wmdshield. In Stereo .

ICC I Sam is reminded of her

RINOLES 'S SERVICE ,
rienced c1tpen1er, electrician ,
m11on. painter. roofing !Including hot fir application) 304878-2088 o• 876-7147.

B2

ltfATS AlL 11-E E:Xm:ISt
'10J ~f.D MS£ ~

own ' wallflower' past when

Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump
remov11. Call304-676· 1331

Ashby Construction. c•rpen t..-;, remodellng. room •ddillon,
cement bfock work, roofing,
Interior and e~tterior painting,
tiding. Roofing, Free eltimetes
304· 67&amp; ·6446 o• 875-&amp;1&amp;2

8:05 (I) MOVIE: 'The Rare
Breed' .
8:30 D (I)@ Amazing Storieo
ICCI A disnaught woman
picks up an unusual hitchhiker and beg ins to see

EEK &amp; MEEK .

'•

SWEEPER and sewing machine
repair. parts, end tuppliet. Plck '
up and deliVery, D1via Vacuum
Cleaner, one half mile up
Gflorgtt Creek Rd Call 614·
··6-0294

In Stereo

Father Mu'flhy
Cll lll IIl MacGyver !CCI

(IJ

,,

for 11le or tr•da for single axle
dump truck , 78 Cadillac
Eldorado-lets than 60,000 actual miles. br1nd new Qoodyetr
AITiva tires, brand new d11c
brlkl!ll, load ad. Call 61 • · 446·
2232 1fter 5pm
·

1976 Ford Elite . Very good
condhlon. $1800. Ctll 614·
985·4418

@ Barney Miller

,.

Servic es

RON ' S Television Service .
Houaa calls on RCA. Qu•zar,
GE Specitling 10 ZeMtt. Cell
304-671· 2398 or 614-4462464.

1985 VW Gull. 5 speed, AC,
gold color. 24,000 mdet. like
new. t8600 Call 614· 7423060

Iii fW @ Wheel of Fortune

.

81

MacNeil- Lehrer

Nawshour

Used GM uansm11iiont Call ~ ·~
814-446-0966. Repainng Also ~' t'
Available 1-Ford 302 Auto
"
Trent.
.,.

All type• carpe,ntry work interiDf I e11terior. Remodeling
hitchena, bathrooms,baaement
convertlons, g•agea, free Blti·
metas Call 614-446-6174

1184 Ptymouth Horizon, • dr 6
1pd with sun roof, 12.000
miln. c .. 814, 379-2726.

liD

1

1-,1 ..,:..1".;..1::...;.1:...:.:,1---j

®l News

·-.,,.

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

r

Grizzlies' Part 1.

'•

Budget transm11110ns used &amp;
rebuilt 111 typn. Torque converteu II tranlfer ca&amp;es. Engine
over haul kits Alhton Transmission parts and eve Joints
Mimmum 30 day to lifetime
warranty. Will deliver, cash and
carrry or innall Ph. 61•· 379- .
2220 .

N

()) King Of The Grlulles
Pt 1 Tonite on Disney
WPBY •••
(!) MOVIE: 'King of the

*

,,

Auto Parts
8&amp; Accessories

1970 Chevelle conv., 360 auto.
trans., new tires, new lOp, &amp; new
exhautt. 12850 or bnt offer.
Call 614-446-8113 Of 614446·6201 .

1182 Plymouth Horizon, auto.
1ir. Ctll 814-379- 2728.

'

"
"

Boat for tala Boston Whaler
16 'h ft bow to stern We1ght
apro)l 1000 lbs. One of the
nf11t. Be good for ferry ser1.1ice
or whatever. 8600. M.V. Reecl.
ReedSVIlle, Oh1o. Phone 614378-6338 .

82 Rabbit Diesel, clean, lhlfp,
runs &amp; looks good. 83100 with
mags, *2900 without Call
614·387-7677

1986 Dodge Omnl. GLH. 6 tpd.
18.000 mi. 4 d•. Coli 814-3792726.

fll ffi M'A'S'H
0 (!) People's Court

'

~M General Contracting 13yra
e11perience. Roofmg &amp; Construction Ph. 614-388-930B
Free e1t1matea 10% off during
the holidays. offer &amp;Kpires Jan
15. 1987.

1879 Volktwagon R1bbit , good
cond . New motor, uking
t1800. Coli 814· 266-8876.

J1m Belu sh1 talk s about re·
ceiVIng top btlling for ht s
new mov1e, " Aeal M en"

p.•

62 Wanted to Buy

64

1987 Sunal Prof Tanning Bed,
hardly used , many e11tru,
$2,800.00 e11c cond, 304-675·
3087.

For rent Sleeping Room1 and
light house keeping room1. Park
Central Hotel Call 814-44607&amp;8.

MOTOR CAR BROKERS. St.
Rt. 1 60 North of Holter Motp,
Gallipol11. Ohio, 614-446·6692
or 446-4&amp;22. See us for 111 your
ltvntock needt. Alto, In stock
lteef truck beds for pickup• and
ton trucks, PH tpring bumpers.

Regular 111e quilt for ule. Call
after 6 814-446-7617

Used R-66 ditch witch trench at'
and John Deere backhoe, 614·
894·7842 ••89. ·6808

Propene hoi water tank 40
gallon leas than 8 mot . old.
Beat offer Call 614-4-i&amp;-9346.

7•21.

lira changer. coats 40 40 A- all
tool• to do split rima • man
wheels. incl. Call 614 ·245·
&amp;131

AKC regltterad Chow-Chow
puppiea, very re11onable price•.
call after 6:30. 304-876-6799.

Large WMm Morning bon led gu
sto11e over 10,000 .BTU Oslsy
Croll t t1tct1 quih 304-8B23682 •• 882-2476.

White F~rm Tractors, Best Price
in Area, Siders Equipment Co.
Henderton. W. Va . 304·676-

Polled Charol111 bull$, rtg. 800
lbs Growthy, correct. Wtll work
well for heifers. George Wood·
ward Call 614-379-2697.

D1 -02 beer license Middleport
Village Call614-992· 9903

S u rplu 1-Army -Rental -Clothing.
jDemm Jackets, Carhart Clo·
thmg 10 percent Discount!
Dacron lntulated Coveralls
t26 .00. Sam Somerville' a Eut ·
Ravenswood Junction lndependance Road Rt. 21. Fri. Sat.
Sun, 12:00 · B:OO p.m 304273 -666&amp; .

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
houses Pt. Pleuant and Gallipolis. 614-446 -8221 .

Used R-65 Ditch Witch Tren'cher
6 John Deere Colter. Call
814-694-7842 •• 814· 89•5008

AKC Reg. minieture Oachthund
puppiet &amp; AKC Reg Peklnne
puppill. t 160 each Call 614448-7920.

2 bedroom apts .. Now Maven.
Also commercial space suitable
for Mrobict, tanning. crafts. Call
304 -882-3681 or 614-992 74a1 .

2 bedroom apart'T!:mt in Syracuse. 1176. pur month plut
utilities . Deposit requ~red . C1ll
G14· 992-56B7 o• 614-992·
&amp;732.

FirltWood for Ale. HardwOod.
lArge pick-up toad 135 Call
814-448-928e o• U8- U37.

FIREWOOD! Lo c ust , oak ,
cherry 836 . por pick up load
delivered . Bill Slack 614-9922289

Tony's Gun kapairt , hot rab.ue·
1ng Open 9 ·00 AM to 7:00PM.
Calll04-676-4631

1 end 1 1/a bedroom lor rent.
Basi c rent starts at $179. plus
electricity $200 secur~tv dtp ·
olit required, Conttct Riverside
Apanmentsat614-992· 77B7

Pl11tic cistern state approved.
olaltiC septic tanks, plastic
cul11er1a, metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jackson. Oh. 81 4-286. &amp;930.

Oragonwynd Ctttery Kennel .
CFA Himall'fan, Persian end
Siamese kittens. AKC Chow
puppi11. Cell 614-448· 3844
af11f 7PM.

Garage apt furmshed . 29 rear
Neil. Gallipol1a. 8235. Utilities
pd. 2 br. 446-4416 aftltf 7pm.

1 bedroom apt. in Middleport.
11!0 month plusutilititl Deys
614 -992 -6646 or even1nga
814-949-2218.

C!l .College Basketball:
Georgetown at Villanova
12 h,. I L1ve.
(I) Entertainment Tonight

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Motorcycles

()) 3-2·1, Contac1ICCi
[jj) Secret City
lDI Facts of JJfe
(!) New Leave It to Beaver
Dill @ NBC News
(]) SportsCenter
(I) 0 IIl ABC News
fll ill Hogen' a He•oos
()) Doctor Who
®l G CW CBS News
[jj) Reading Rainbow
@ WKRP In Cfncinnsti
(!) DoWn to Earth In S10reo
D (I) PM Magazine
I]) Hardcas1fa and McCor-

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llMI

r1 ~

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I]) Big .Valley ,

short bed. step side, looks good
in and out. f1 . 100.00. 304875·1145.

74

Firewood. all herd wood Hut
vouchers accepted . 835 a
pickup load Phone 614 -7422466
-lcFirewood lor sale. $35 per load
or 6 loads a 160 delivered and
stacked 614·949-2601 after
5 00 p.m
- - - - - - - - ·leFor sale : Fnewood . Meap
vouchers accepted. Dan Taylor.
614-742-2426 Of 614-742·
2692 .

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News

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1982 Mansion. located on river
front In Middleport. H11 all
extras. Cell&amp; 14-992- 3348 after Nice unfum apartment 4 room s
' &amp; beth. Close to tchools 81
6·00 pm.
shopping. Ref. a. Sec. Dep.
req.,.ired . Call 614-446-0444

Ashton building lott, mobile
hornet permitted, Clyde Bowen.
J• 30.· 678- 2338.

6:00 D Cll ())Ill Ill® II rJJHlll

WOlD

TltAT DAILY
PUULII

EVENING

ARLO AND JANIS ·

GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers , refrig&amp;tators.
ranges. Sheggs Applian ces.
UpJ!er R1ver Rd. beside Stone
Crest Motel 614-446-7398.

lot. Acre plus. Close to Pom•
roy Rt 7 . Cell 814-992-6587
or &amp;14-992-5732.

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Apartment ·
for Rent

Furnished &amp; unfurn11hed apts ,
8150 00 and up, refer en cea Ph
304-676-6104 A-1 Real Estete

{19871
Anyone interelted m the 17
acret of Herold Holsinger. con·
tact daughter June Payne at
814-289-4435. Piheton. Oh10
46681. Ttteacreageltwithin 1 If•
miles of forked Run lake.

1979 Chwy Luv4WO . 4 speed
Coll614-992· 8349.

73

Used Furniture dryer, wood
table &amp; 2 benches, beds,
dreaser, wood wardrCibe 3
miles out BulaviHe Ad Open
9AM to 6PM . Mon. thru Sat
614-446·0322.

Business
Buildings

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1/12/87

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'71 Ford JA ton t600. King Woo~
stove t176.00 304-e76-2700.

2 to 3 bedt-oom apt Con1.1enlant
IOC-Itlon in town All utilities paid
8326 OOmo , reference• &amp; depOtlt required W1teman Rail
Estate Agenc-,. Ph . 614· 446·
3644

100 Acre Farm Cati614-3B8·
8139.

79 Chevy Luv pidcup. Motor
rebu11t. Wtth camper top. $360.
C-:•~11=8~14~·:26~8~-8~7~&amp;-2_.____
-lc1976 Ford f ·260 Super Cab.
Auto, PS, AC, 78.000 milea.
Looht end runs good •875.
814·24H292.

1988 Chevy 3M ton truck, flat bed. changed engine, need•
fin is hed M•kegood ferm truck •
0326 304-882-3793 .

14x 70 Fleetwood. 3 bdr. 2 full
batht. totalelec. Like new , price
negotiable. Call after 4 weekdays. anytime weekends. 614388-8833.

33 . Farms for Sale

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1974 Ford Courier, body good
cond. needs motor, 304-875·
3429

2 Bedroom apt nice carpeting,
water paid, washer &amp; dryer
hook-up, stove. relrig furnished
available Jan 1, 1987 Ph.
614-448-7025

1984 SchultJ Mobile Hom&amp;14ll70 with 7x21 ft expendo, 3
BA , 2 full baths, totaf electr1c,
apace saver microwave, vacant
Need to sell, selling for pey-olf.
If interested with loan approval
through Greentree Acceptance.
Mev flnence for 10 percent
down You Pl'f 5 percent 8t we
PlY 5 percent fDf you. Interested
-Cell814-446-8725.

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'72 Chevy truck, 307 4 speed.

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

Off1ce space· Store space in Pt
Plhnnt. 8200.00 A-One Real
Estate PI\ 304-676-6104

Wenled to buy- '71 or '72 B1.11C~
304-876-4828.
.
Person driving red Chev. pidl up
behind 1ccldent Dec. 22. at the
Sliver Bridge Shoppmg Piau.
please cell 304·676-5143. Ask
for Ronn1e Holcomb.

Space for Rent Trailer specea.
Locutt Rd. Rt. 1. Point Pleumt
304-675-1078

The Daily SentinBI- Page- 7

Television
.
Viewing

-.

614- ~6. 4782 .

2 bdr. mobile home located 2
miles from HMC in Evergreen.
Cable TV hookup, children accepted Call614-446-3897.

44

Found: Beegle pup, near Suecell Rd . in Reedsvi lle Ct1ll
814-887-3128.

QUILTS
,
BOUGHT-SOLD
Cash paid. Pre 1950's, Single or
whole collection . Cell M1rc and
EIIBn Fultz 614-992 -2101 daya
or 614· &amp;92· 2461 evenings and
waekenda.

Homes for Sale

Trucks for Sale

1978 2 ton GMC 1eptlc tlnk
cleenlng truck with 1500 gellon
tenk, hoset, dump bed. C1ll

COUNTRY MOBILE Hom a Park.
Route 33, North of Pom«oy.
large lots. Cell614-992·7479 .

Furnished traitor in City References required 1226 plus deposit . Call 614-266-6338.

WQffiefl.

Guerd now. Begin earning a
monthly pay check and dufur
your active dutv training until
June 1987 304-876-3960 or
1 800-842 -3619.

LOST - Black and while ca1
Return to Dr. Notter's off1ce
Rewlrdl

72

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Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

·BORN LOSER

~~~---'-~~

Mobile Mome in Stella Court.
Coll614 •46-0758.

"When are you going to
teach me
how to deal with
?"

LOST Black male dog, lmdberg,
weight -GO lba. wearing black
thin nylqn co llar. rewiJd Or
Kranz 304 -676-1373. or office
676-6971 .

lost · green Army trench coat,
Jan 3 Gallia Academy wret·
thng match 304-875-2886

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

46 Space for 'R ent

2 BR. Mobile Home, Plants
Subdivision. Bulaville Ad
1175 / mo. Cell 614-448-4564
after 6 PM .

Annou ncements
3 Announcements

Monday, January 12, 1987

'

Monday,' January 12, 1987

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1-12
RO

KY N

Dy J J

LMZ

Hy

0 11 L W W R Q, W

ZBZ M

JNSSYMil

L

T Y Q 8 Z M J I, H R Y Q ,

RQ H MYF N T Z

H XZ

YO

OZRWX

ZLHRQW

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'·

H Y S R' T

XNQII .

Ye~terday'a Cr,ptoq110te: IN MY OPINION TilE
MOST FRurrFUL AND NATURAL PV.Y OF TilE MIND
IS CONVERSATION . - MONTAIGNE

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· Paea 8 1he Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

-r ----Local Briefs:- _,
Mason man wins $2,500 on spin
Steve Lyons of Mason won S2,500 In last Thursday's spinning
of·the West VIrginia Lotlery jackpot wheel .
·.
No one won the top prize, but pocketing most of the cash was
William Epperhart of Fanrock, W.Va.. who plans to buy hts
family some gifts, take a trip to Hawaii and Invest the
remainder of the $25,000 he won In the spin.
~

. Department plans Saturday dance
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Department Is sponsoring a dance
this Saturday, from 8 to 11 p.m.• at the Synicuse Grade.School.
Admission $2 per person . Music by Wayne Lyons' and Kelly
Counts' Midnight Express. Refreshments will be available. All
ages welcome.

Flame Fellowship• to meet
Galtlpotls Flame F:ellowshlp will meet Friday, 7 p.m.• at
Dale's Smorgasbord, with Pastor Lawrence Bush speaking.

Harrisonville OES meets Tuesday
Harrisonville Chapicr Order of Eastern Star will meet
Tuesday evening In regular session.

Emergency units answ~r 16 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports 16 calls
over the weekend; eight on Saturday and eight on Sunday.
Saturday at 7:57 a.m .. Rutland transported Clarence Hall
from the scene of an auto accident on Ohio 124 to Veterans
Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:07 a.m. to Union Avenue for
Edna Leach to Dr. VIllanueva's office; Pomeroy at 6:07 p:m. to
Rock Street for Charles Werry to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7:01p .m. to the sheriff's office for Charles Canter to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 8:39p.m. to the
Morland Addition .for Connie Swiger to Camden-Clark
MPmorlal Hospital; Rutland at 8:48 p.m. to Vance Road for
Rom a Haning who was trl'ated but not transported; Rutland at
10: 17 p.m. to Salem Center for Sarah Wheeler to Holzer Medical
Center; Tuppers Plains at 11:31 p.m. transported Mark
Grossnickle from a thrre-wheeler accident on Ohio 681 to
Camden:Ciark Memorial Hospital.
Sunday at 1: 14 a.m .. Middleport Fire Department was called
to a car fire on Ohio 554 near Cheshire; Middleport at 5:14a.m.
to Brow.npll Avenue for Martha Burns to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 6:31a.m. toOakStreet for Carl Hendricks
to Holzer Medical Center; Middleport at 8:42 a.m. to VIllage
Manor Apartments for Francis King who was dead on arrival;
Pomeroy al 4:23p.m. to Mulberry Heights for Georgia Hicks to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 9:33p.m. to New Lima
Road for Ida Young to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy
01t 10: 4R p.m. to Spring Avenue for Christy Fellure to Holzer
M~dical CPnter; Rutland at II: 13 p.m. to Ohlb 124 for Maggie
CaruthNs to Vetc&gt;rans Memorial Hospital.

··,

Court grants divorce decrees
Divorces have. been ~ranted In Meigs County Common Pleas
Court to Benjamin F. Upton Jr .. from Donna Lynn Upton; Judy
Bleszk from Lloyd James Bleszk: and to Bonnie Sue Loscar
from John Lascar. Bonnie Loscar has been restored by the court
to hrr former name Bonnie St. Clair.
Trrc&gt;sa Hoffman. Middleport, and Larry Hoffman, Syracuse.
have filed for a dissolution of marriage.
A restraining order has bel'n Issued by the court against Clell
Labonte Sr .. pPndlng a divorce action flied by Pauline Gay
Labonte.

Middleport

sues firm

Al'nold Hayes and Nettle N. Hayes, of Middleport, have flied
an action In Meigs County Common Pleas Court requesting
judgment ol $7!i.OOO from Super America ta division of Ashland
Oil Inc. I. Mlddlt'port.
Plaintiffs alleg(' that on or about Jan. 15, 1985, Arnold Hayes
sustained lnjuri&lt;'S when hE' fell on Ice just outside Superamerlca's front entry . Plaintiffs allege that the defendants were
n~gllgcnt because they faiiE'II--to remove the ice and failed to
give warning of the Icy conditions.
Arnold Hayes is reques ting judgment of $50,000 In the first
claim. His wife Is requesting $25.000 In a secona claim.
Plaintiffs want a trial by jury.
Fed!'fal National Mortgage Association has been granted a
judgment of $19,207.32 plus lntt'rest. In a foreclosure action
against Paul T. Imboden. c:&gt;t al.
An order compPIIng discovery, as requested In the original
motions of the defendant, has been flied In the case of Gary J.
Wolfe, et al , a~alnst Howard E. Frank, et at. The order must be
complied with on or before Jan. 15.
A motion for summacy judgment has bel'n gr.anted and def~~dants Marcella Chapman, Brent Chapman and Bob Chap·
man havt' been dismissed as parties In an action by State Farm
Fire and Casualty Co .. against Columbia Gas of Ohio Inc .. et al.
·A confirmation of sale and order for deed and distribution has
bel'n flied In the case of Diamond Savings &amp; Loan Co. against
George A. Groghan. E'l at.
A cas~ flied by Edward L. Laudermllt against Lorena L.
LaudNmllt has been dismissed by the court for Jack of
prosecution .

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~Budget
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couple.~

cut upsets senator

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: WASHINGTON iUPII -Pres·
: !dent R('agan's plan to cut money
: for higher education while boost• lng funds for the military has
: even somE' of his Republican
, allies upset. with one GOP
: senator warning It ultimately
- could weaken U.S. defense.
: "Our young people have to
. have the education toonderstand
: how to use t~e weapons we
; devise.". Sen. Robert Stafford,
' R-Vt.. said Sunday, warning that
~· education cuts · also could harm
: U.S. strPngth abroad.
•

"We need educated brains In
: this country if we're to compete
• internationally, even If we're to
· look after our national security."
• said Stafforil, a member of the
; :;enate Labor and Human Re·
: sources subcOmmittee foreduca: uon and the arts.
• He said he was "very deeply
' disappointed with the higher
, education budget."
Reagan's proposed fiscal 1988
, spending plan. released last
: week, would cut federal · aid to
' education by 12.5 percent and

.

I

Area deaths
Callie Jones

Farley Oller; a son, Marlon Allen ·
Oiler. Shade; three sisters. Mrs.
Callie Jones, 83, 719 Fourth Paul (Betty Ann) Bibbee, FlemAve. , Gallipolis, died at 10:30 Ing; Mrs. Paul (Rosel Wamsley,
p.m. Saturday at her residence, Little Hoc)t~ng; Sharon Oller.
Marietta; two brothers. Clarhaving bel'n In fallipg health.
ence
Oller, Orlando, Fla .. and
• Born AprU 17, 1903. In West
George
Oller. Ravenna; two
VIrginia. daughter of the late
granddaughters.
Chasllty Dawn
James and Lillie Banks Saund·
ers. She married Elex.Jones on Oiler and NJC!&lt;Ie Lynn Oller. both
April 6, 1934, at Logan, W.Va., of Parkersburg. W.Va.; · a grand11nd he preceded her In death on son, Gregory William Gentile.
Ventura, Call!., and several
Sept. 6, 1969. .
She was a homemaker and a nleees and nephews. ·
Besides his parents, he was
member of Trledstone Baptist
preceded In death by two broth-'
Church, Gallipolis.
ers
and a sister.
Surviving are a sister. Julia
Mr.
Oller wa~ a member of the
Worthy of Aliquippa, Pa.; and a
Church
of Christ In Christian
sister-In-law, Lucille Saunders of
Union at Hobson.
Gallipolis.
Services wlll be held at 1 p.m.
Services will be 1 p.m. WednesWednesday
at the Church of
day In Trledslone Baptist
Christ
In
Christian
Union with
Church, with the Rev. Grover
Rev.
Theron
Durham
officiating.
Turner, the Rev. John King and
wUI
be
in
Gravel
Hill
Burial
the Rev. N.D. Borden officiating.
Burial will be In Pine Street Cemetery. Friends may cal'l at
Cemetery. Gallipolis. Friends the Ewing Funeral Home from
may call at Cremeens Funeral 2·4 and 7-9 p.m. on Tuesday.
Chapel, Gallipolis, from 7-9 p.m.
France8 E. King
Tuesday.
The body will be taken to the
Frances E. King, 73, died
church one hour prior to the
Sunday
at her residence, Apart ·
service.
Pallbearers will be John How- ment 22, VIllage Manor Apartard, James Howard. Wilbert ments In Middleport.
Mrs. King was born Sept. 23,
Stoney, Jesse Saunders, Chris1912,
a daughter of the late
topher Anderson and Robert
Guy and Elod Myers
Walter
Howell.
Ellis. She was a member oi the
Rutland Church of the Nazarene
Marion M. Oiler
and was a member of the Meigs
Marlon Marvin Oller, 59, 40993 County Senior Cit.lzens.
Parker Road. Shade, died MonSurviving are a special friend,
day at Pleasant Valley Hospital. Dale Kerns. Middleport; six
Mr. Oller was born In Gallla sons, Franklin, Charles W.. Ed·
County on July 27, 1927. a son of ward and Jack F. King, all of
the late Marlon F. and Bessie Pomeroy; Walter King, Albany,
Siders Oller. He had worked as a and William King, The Plains; a
coal miner and and Foote Min· sister, Ruth Lowery, Marlon;
era! Corp.
two brothers, Guy Ellis, Marlon,
Surviving are his wile, Marilyn and Charles Ellis, Pomeroy;
three stepdaughters. Leota Norris, Akron; Louise Mor;rls. Ariz·
ona. and Evelyn Gilmore, Pomeroy, and several nieces and
nephews. Several grandchildren
and great-grandchildren also
survive.
Besides her parents, sue was
preceded in death by htl'r husband, Park Edward King; a
brother. Richard Ellis, and a
stepdaughter, Freda Coles.
Services will be held at 3 p.m.
Wc&gt;dnesday at the Ewlng Funeral
Home with Rev. Lloyd Grimm
and Rev. Lowell Ford officiating.
Burial will be In Wells Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home after 7 p.m. Monday.

.Court order~ . testing
for Gallia ~ounty man . ··
.
GALLIPOLIS
A Gallla the fire.
The grand jury returned the
County man was arraigned this
morning In common pleas court Indictments against Curley last
on one Indictment for aggravated Thursday. The case was Investiarson .and a secret Indictment for gated by . the Gallia · County
murder.
Sherlff~ s Department and the
WUllam 0. Curley, 64, Rt. 4, state fire marshal's office.
Gallipolis attorney Wtlltam
Gallipolis. was placed on $150,000
Dean
Conley was appblnted t()
bond for the murder Indictment
and $50,000 bond for aggravated represent Curlf'y . Conley sugarson by Judge Donald Andrew gested to the court following tl1e
Cox. Curley, who was unable to setting of bond that his client was
meet bond. most post 10 percent not competent to stand lrlal.
Under state law, the court then
of the total bond to be released.
ordered that Curley be examined
Curley has been held In the by Shawnee Forensic Center,
Gallia County Jail since Dec. 22, Portsmouth, to determine comone day after a fire swep( petency for trial. The court
through a portion of the Kemper expects to have a.report from the
Hollow Road mobile home he center within 30 days.
..
shared with his mother: Noldle
Because the questlon of CurE. Curley, 81. Mrs. Curley died of Icy's competency wa~ raised. no
smoke Inhalation and severe · pleas were taken from the
thermal burns In connection with defendant.

Goodyear: sells aerospace unit
AKRON iUPI J - Goodyea r
Tire &amp; Rubber Co. officials
announced today the sale of
Goodyear Aerospace Corp. to
Lora! Corp., a New York defense
contractor s pecializing In
electronics.
The co mpan v. which made th~
announcement at a meeting of
abmlt 1,000 Aerospace employes.
did not disclose the Sil le price,
which was reported to be about
S600 million. far exceeding the
$3.10 million reportedly bid by
Martin Marietta Corp., another
defense contractor.
·
Stock market analysts have
estlmateq Aerospace's worth at
betwl'en $350 million to $500
million .

Other companies reported to
ha ve been Interested in Aerospae
were the Ford Motor Co., Gencorp's Aerojet General subsidiary . General Electric .Corp..
Chrysler Corp., and the ~luml­
num Co. of America. r

..

Aerospace, with 5,100 em:·
ploycs, Is second only to Goodyear itself as the area's largest
employer.
::

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Lora!, which employs about
8,100 people worldwide, develops
and manufactures defense elee'
Ironies systems and survelllence
sys tems.

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Ohio Lottery
Daily Number
769

· PICK 4

-Page 3

4539

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Vol.36, N_o .176
Copyrighted 1987

en tine

COMBINATION DINNER ONLY .
DINING ROOM- ONLY
Served with whipped potatoes. chicken gravy,
cole slaw. hot roll. blllter and coffee. Sorry,
no substitutes mept beverage with addi·
tiona I

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio, Tuesday, January 13, 1987

liability in.surance was $4500 In
By BOB HOLFLICH
1986 and this year will cost
Sen~lnel !o.ews Staff
Mlddlepart Village Council · $16,000. The mayor spoke of
adopted a $969,997.31 appropr!a· efforts by the Ohio Municipal
lions resolution for 1987 at Its League to establish a statewide ·
regular meeting held Monday pool with the Idea of lower costs
. to participating communities.
night at Village HaiL
Making up the appropriation Mayor Hoffman said also that
total which is considerably under more substantial balances In
the $1,011,709 appropriations for funds at the end of the year than
1986 are general fund, Including had been anticipated has bel'n a
safety fund, $289,780; street helpful factor for 1987.
Council gave a flrst reading to ·
maintenance, $66,310; fire equipment , $19,065; fire truck, $21,350; a salary Increase ordinance for
sanitary sewer escrow, $50,000; village employees. The ordlfire house impr 0 vement, $66,500; nancewhlchrequiresttireereadeconomic development, $17,935; lngs Is expected to go Into effect
public transportation, $106,115;· In March and provides for an
water tank. $50,000; water. approximatesevenpercentwage
.$135,000; sewer, $105,300; swim- Increase for employees. The cost
ming pool, $17,300; cemetery, to the village will be $14,000 for
$18,930; meter deposit, $6,000; the Increases and the total cost
wUI be $16,500 with the fringe
revenue sharing, $412.31.
In discussing the 1987 budget, benefits Included. The Increases
Mayor Fred Hoffman pointed out were provided for In the 1987
the effect of rising· costs in the budget approved by council
Monday night, the mayor
commuoit~. Blue Cross Insurance has:gone up eight percent reported.
Council approved the Denow cosllqg the town $33,892, the
cember
report of · Mavor Hof·
mayor said. Overall and building

'or

fman sho~lng receipts $4,297
in fines and fees. A letler was
read from the Ohio Department
of Transportation approving an
additional $12,244 In federal ,and
state funds for the operation of
the public transportation system
making a total ol$72,000 recflved
during 1986. The system Is the
Blue Streak Cab C_o. which
officials say has been "very
successful" in Pomeroy and
Middleport.
Approval was given several
fire contracts for19871ncludlng
CheshlreTownshlp,$4,650ayear
plus $75 a call; Cheshire VIllage.
$2,800 a year plus $75 a call. and
one-half of Salisbury Township,
$1100 for the year. Council
approved the appointment of
John Hood to another five years
on the town's recreation commls·
ston and Council President De·
wey Horton was reappointed as
the council representative on the
Middleport Planning Commls·
slon. Steve Story was reappointed assistant law director.
Council agreed not to request a
··
·

hearing on the transfer of Dl, D2
and D3 liquor permits jrom
Yvonne Scally to Carroll and
Mildred Johnson. Horton was
reelected to serve as council
pres ident for 1987, receiving
commendations from other of!lclals for a "good job" In 1986.
Mayor Hoffman read a com·
munlcatlon from Cong. Clarence
Miller reporting fhat everything
Is "go" this fall for the new dam
construction In Gallipolis: The
construction wlll go from seven
to nine years at a cost of $237
million and is expected to be a
shot In the arm for local
employment.
After a discussion on Consolidated Communications. Inc. .
which serves the town with cable
television, council voted to
increase the company's franchlse fee from three percent to
five percent, the maximum per·
mttted and provided for a four
percent late paY,ment fee per
month If the company does not
pay the annual fee by Oct. 31.
1987.

$3.25
,.

POMEIOY, OH.

Featuring Kenlu,ky Fried (hi,ktn

Pomeroy SA
manager ends
training class

•'

. chamber of the ~alllpolls Locks and Dam wUI be awarded thr
October. Photo was taken last March as a tow passed throul(h tHe
outdated chamber.

WilJ .award dam contract in.October
In what has been termed "good
news" by U.S. Rep. Clarence E.
Miller. t'he contract for the new
·locking chamber of the Gallipolis
Locks and Dam will be awarded
this October.
Miller· obtained his Information from the U.S. Army Corps of
Engineers.
"In s ho~t . this means that
on-site jobs will be created at

Ohio weather

VeteraR8 Memorial

•

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Dodge Dakota

We
know
....1..6

c

for qualified. buyers through ~.
Chrysler Credit Corporation .:'
Other rates are available-as length of ,;,.
contract increases. Dealer contributiort:
may' affect final price. Ask for details. ~-:

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Buckle Up For Safety.

COOPER .
I ·. · Chrysler-Plymouth-Dodge

Riley, Athens; Sarah Hicks,
Silver Springs. Md.; Ida Young,
Rutland.
Sunday·Discharges- Barbara
Richards, A,mee Hubbard, Leigh
Canter, Corbett Ratliff.

395 So. !rd

992·6421

•

Midilleport

HOUIS: MON.·FII. 8·61 SAT. 8·4

GallipoliS this year," M!ller said.
"Work on the new complex Is
expected to stretch over the next
seven to nl·ne years."
Total cost of the new locks and
dam project Is $237 million.
'
Miller said that "of equal
importance Is the fact that the
president's fiscal year 1988
budget request just submitted to
Congress Includes $8 million to

Mayor Hoffman said !bat he the Intersection of High St. and
received $4,614 In January, the Hartinger Parkwa / to see If
three percent feefortheperlodof a streelllght Is needed there,
Oct. 1, 1985through Sept. 30, !986. as sqggested by Councilman
The company. will now have to Clat worthy . The need for gravel
pay the five percent fee and mu st at the rea r of the former Miller .
pay It by Oct. 31, 1987 to avoid late Lumber Co. offi ce building,
payment charges.
brought out by Counellma n WilCouncil President Horton 'tiam Walters, was discussed.
charged that the company Is Councilman Ja ck Satt er field
"Insensitive" to what the custo· presented a letter from a restmers want to watch and Council· dent of Cleveland who visit s In
man James Cla tworthy agret!d. Middleport. The Cleveland restHorton sa id he has received dent c.omplained becauselhcrels
numerous calls from residents no marklngon theRoute7by pass
Indicating they do not like the as to where to turn onto the
new QVC programming now on Hobson Road to go on Into
Channel 6 but has not recl'lved Middleport for southbound tr·a rone call from anyone who likes fie. Council thought the mar·klng
the sell on the air program. The should be there and Ma;;or
discussion Indicated that Middl e· Hoffman will approach the prob·
port will continue to pursue the lem with ODOT. It was also
Idea of establishing Its own cabII' sugges ted that the Intersection
system or securing another com· bc:&gt; illuminated . A r&lt;'qucst for a
pany to servt' the town.
street light at the alley near
Council agreed to look at Motor Parts will also be looked
property on North Fourth Ave.. Into.
which Horton said Is "deplora·
Also attending the meet lng was
ble" Inside and out to see what Councilman Bob Gllmote, Clerk·
can be done and the street Treasurer Jon Buck and Pollee
committee was named to look at Chief Sid Lit tiP.

cover Initial construction co~ts of
the new Gallipolis locking
complex."
Miller said 50 percent of the
1988 construction cost, acc.ount·
ing. for $4 million, w!ll be drawn
from the barge Industry's Inland
Waterways Trust Fund. The fund
Is revenue collectep from a 10
cent-per-gallon taxon barge fuel.
The tax will Increase to 20 cents

Miller

per gallon by 1995.
The corps has Informed Miller
that acquisition ofthe550acresof
land needed for the new 1,200-foot
channel and 600-fuot auxiliary
channel has been completed.
Congress gave authorization to
legislation for Inland waterway
projects last October. The bill
was signed by President Reagan
a month later.

One persob was Injured and the cause of a fire a t 91u
another treated and relesed. In Hartinger Parkway last week.
Meigs County fires In which two The Middleport Department had
homes were destroyed Monday. five trucks okt the scene at
The two stqry frame home or Monday' s flrc7\.l
Mr. and Mrs. Everett Plantz, Mobile Home De•troyed
·
Fire destroyed the mobile
Storys Run Road. was leveled by
fire Monday.
home residence of Lucille Diehl,
Middleport Firemen were on Ycllowbush Road In Raci ne.
called to the scene at .9:44a.m . about midnight last night.
and were at the fire until 2:36
Racine firemen were ca lled to
p.m. Fire Chief Jeff ·Darst said the scene at 11:48 p.m. and the
that the blaze was completely out trailer was already ablaze. Fire·
of control when firemen arrived men were on the scene until
at the scene. Cause ol the blaze about 1:30 a.m.
was not determined and no figure
Hank Johnson, Racine fire
had bel'n set on the loss. All of the chief. reports extensive damage
contents of the home were lost to the trailer. with two rooms
also In the !Ire. Mrs. Plantz was des troyed by fire and the res t of
not at home at the tlmeofthe fir e, the trailer with heavy smoke and
baing confined to an area hospl · water damage. Johnson reports
tal. Mr. Plantz, however. appar- that Diehl had been experiencing
ently attempted to ex tinguish the problems with electrical fuses In
fire. He was taken to Veterans the mobile home. It Is b!-llevcd
Memorial ·Hospital by private origin of the fire was elect r ica lin
vehicle and was taken from nature. but the Incident Is still
Veterans Memorial by Llfefllght under Investigat ion, Johnson
to the University Hospital burn said.
center In Columbusatli :03a. m. -../ Brian Diehl was transported
by Racine EMS from the scene to
Veterans
Memorial Hospital,
Chief Darst said that a representative from the · stat e !Ire where he was trea ted and
marshal's office would be In the released.
Fireman Ralph Fisher was
community today to help determine the cause of the fire. The treated at -the scene for smoke
representative will also look Into inhalation.

Celes-te sworn in for second·
term; calls for 'togetherness'

/

For a limited time, get low
,financing or high cash back . . . . . • •
on selected 1987 Dodge cars and
LJnc lr]l'
trucks in stock. $500 cash back or 3.9%
annual ·pe~centage rat~ financing

Cent~

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

One injured in
2 Meigs ·County
fires on Monday

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

Jeff Stamper, manager of the
Super America store .at 279 W.
Main St., Pomeroy, was honored
at a graduation dinner for
completion Of a week-long management training workshop, ac·
cording to R.D. Davis, eastern
region vice president of Super
America's Southern Division.
During the workshop, parttcl·
pants were exposed to a broad
spectrum of job-related acttvltles, Including customer Sl'rvlce.
Inventory control, merchandls·
lng, delegation, interpersonal
communication, staff motivation
and lntervle\lllng' skllls.
A native of Port Charlotte,
Fla .. Stamper joined the company In 1983 as a cashier. He
altended West Virginia State
College.
Super America is a chain of
approximately 400 gasoline/grocery stores featuring the
one· stop shopping concept. Super
America is an operatlng·dlvlslon
of Ashland 011 Inc.

1 Section. 10 Pages 26

Middleport Village Council adopts '87 budget

. FOR JUST

PH. m-5432

Clear tonight, with a low
near :10. Mostly sunny Wednes·
day, with highs ne•r 50. '

.

~"'C""T~~~

'
Selling ""'IIC!l&lt;fotdt of ()4llfonJianee.
See 5150 limited warranty at dealer. Restrictions apply.

•
'

Hoosiers win
BASKETBALL over Michigan
.
at the buzzer

Jeff Stamper

South Central Ohio
Mostly clear tonight, with a low
overhaul the system of grants
and loans to put more financial In the mid 20s. Mostly sunny
burden on students. The Pen- Tuesday. with highs In the mid
tagon . meanwhile. Is seeking a 3 40s.
The probability of precipitapercent Increase to $312 billion In
tion Is near. zero through
flscal1988. plus Inflation.
.
James Miller, the admlnlstra· Tuesday.
lion's Ottlce of Management and
Winds will be light and wesBudget director. defended the terly tonight.
education proposals Sunday on
Ohio Extended Forecast
fO'OUnds they would provide
Wedneaday throuJ!h Friday '
adequate assistance to students
A chance of rain Wednesday,
- and place less burden on with a chance of snow Thursday
taxpayers - by dras.tlcally cut- and Friday. Highs will range
ting grants and Increasing the from 45 to 55 Wednesday, frOfTl
number of loans available.
the 30s to the low 40s Thursday
and In the 20s Friday. Overnight
"There's no such thing as a lows will be In the mid 30s
free lunch." Miller said. "The Wednesday morning, between 25
cost of our education has got to be and 35 early Thursday and In Ihe
borne by someone."
teens Friday morning.

Saturday Admissions - Charles.Werry, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges .:. Shirley Ables.
Sunday Admissions - Corbett :.
Ratliff. Middleport: Raymond

Monday, January 12, 1987

By LEE LEONARD
UPII!tatehouse Reporter
COLUf11BI!JS, Ohio tUPli
Gov. Richard F. Celeste says
that If Ohioans have a vision for
the year 2000 and work hard
enough to cooperate. " together.
we can make II come true."
Thai was the theme Monday as
Ohio's 64th governor was sworn
In fOr a second term. vowing that
the Buckeye State wUI lead the
nation In job oppo.rtunllles. edu·
cation, human services and
peacemaking skills.
.
After his election In November.
the 49-year old chief executive

said he would spend more time
"articulating the vision" for
Ohio. Monday, he renewed 'his
oath and folded' back the pages of
history In revealing his dream .
ln taking a specially wrlt'lllln
oath on the west steps of the .
Statehouse shortly after noon
from Chief Justice Thomas J .
Moyer of . the Ohio Supreme
Court, a broadly smiling Celeste.
hatless In the near- freezing air,
promised :•to the best of my
ability to Inspire our common
effort for our common good."
Some 3.500 chilled spectators.
most of them loyal Democrats.

looked ' on as former Dayton
Mayor Paul R. Leonard became
the state's first lieutenant governor since 1985 and said he would
do everything to help CeleSte.
Celeste, In an 18-mlnute ad·
.dress, stressed the theme of
togetherness. "Four years ago, I
asked you to stand with me and
stand up for Ohio, " he said. ''You
did, and together we have made
remarkable progress."
The governor noted that 19871s
the 200tli anniversary of the
Northwest Ordinance. a document predating the Constitution
which, among other things. gua-

ranteed a free public ectucatlon
. for all citizens and P.rohlblted
slavery north of the Ohio River.
"Wha.t was only Imagination In
1787- free public·education and
breaking t)le shackles of slavery
- is accepted truth 200 years
later. proved... rlght here In the
Northwest Territory." said the
governor. "Virtually everything
now true was once simply someone's dream.
"What would you Imagine
today for Ohio, knowing that
together we can make It come
· true?" he asked.
Con\lnued on page 2

Weinherger ·~akes ·budget t~ Capitol_ Hill
By LINDA WERFELMAN
WASHINGTON !UPI) - Defense Secretary Caspar Weinberger. taking his $312 billion
military budget to Capitol Hill
today. Is urging reluctant lawmakers tQ put up $5.23 billion for
the "Star Wars" missile defense
project.
Weinberger , scheduled to
make his !lrst 'budget pitch ofthe
new Congres~ to the Senate
l:ludget CommtttE&gt;e, will defend

the Pentagon's request for $626.6
bUIJon to be spent in fiscal 1988
and fiscal 1989 - th&amp; llrst
two- year budget package ever
drafted by his department.
The ·measure calls for an
Increase of 3 percent, plus
Inflation. In defense spending for
fiscal 1988, which begins Oct. 1.
gtvlng the Pent~gon $303.3 bll·
lloil. A request for another $8.7
billion for defense projects at the
Energy Department pushes t~e
•

•

• •

requested 198ll defense total to
$312 billion. The 1989 request Is
for another 3 percent lncreas ~. to
$323.3 billion for the Pentagon,
plus $9.1 billion for related
Energy Department work.
An accompanying five-year
~Jan proposes to continue the 3
percent annual Increases
through fiscal 1992.
When the nel\' budget proposal
went to Congress last week as
part of the government's overall

$1.02 trillion t!scal1988 spending
·plan, Weinberger characterized
Its recommended Increases as
modest .
He reconciled the huge requested Increase for the Stra·
teglc Defense Initiative With
plans to stretch out purchases of
conventional weapons by sayblg
SDI. as "Star Wars" Is formally
known. Is ''one of our very
highest priorities."
Contln&gt;al'd on page 2

ALL SMILES- Gov. Richard Celt!Me Ill allsmiiC1J tiiJ he dancetl
with hill wife, Dal(mar, durtnt~the J,naqpral Ball celebrating the
start ol hill second lerm, Monday. ( UPI)

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