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                  <text>W. Va;·,......... ·

Pomeroy-Middlep6rt-Gallipolis, Ohio-Point
62 Wanted to 8~y

VA -RATE
REDUCTION

71

Autos for Sale

Now buying shell corn or ear

corn. Ctll tortatett quotes. AI..,•
City Fum Supply, 614-446-

2985.

good. drivn good. Sacrifice,
t185. C•ll614-246-9694.
82 Ponlltc Phoenix, LO allri11.
Lolded with accnaorl•. AC

PS. PI, Muti ull. •21500. Cali

63

Livestock

614-381-9943.

2 year old heifer, approx. 800
lbs .. Call 614·246-6474

Rebblts 'tor sale. Ootl, Buekl.
Afao 35 will be tryert. New
Zeeland Whttea, Californian Stt·
ins, Broken Color Rex . Alto

hu,chtl. Call 814-986-4180.
Livettock. Leoptrd Applloon
getding while wllh b.., spot&amp;. 60
days prolaulonal training. good
treil ho,.e, U50.00 firm: 304-

675-6799 1fte&lt; 5o30.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Large round bales of h-v for lila.

t10.00 each Ph . 814-446 -

1062.

Lltf'ge round balet for ttle or
trade. Call814 -387-7640.

Mlud hay for Nit. t1 .60 btle.

Call .614·256-1427.
614-245-5117.

GoodtimothymiJ18dhay.9001b.

Hay lorltle. Call6·1 4-379· 2807
Hay tor sale. Square "' belli.
•1 .50 per bale. Call 614 -246-

Clean mind hay, naver wet.
•1 .26 a bale. Call .814-446-

4063.

6131 .

-

11987)

1982 Cutlau Calais . One
owner. excellent condition .
Auto. load~. ·New tire• . Call

304-896-3638.

{19871

Hay tor 11le, mhted. 11 .00 &amp;
&amp;1 .26 bale. 304· 895 -3450.
Dried shelled corn . U .fiO per ·
cwt. Ground • 6 .00 per cwt.
Ground with molasses $6 .76 per
CWI. 304-468· 1031 .

Tran sporlolinn

304-676-4616.

Autos for Sale
82 Rabbit DINel, clean, sharp,
runs &amp; looks good. 13100 whh
m~gs. 12900 without Call

614-367-7677.

THt,RD AVE .. 2 bedroom cottage, large rooms on ;
174 lot Awnmgs, 1n ~Ji atio n Can ha ve100rns up sla~rs .
•

LISTING!'! - lnstdec1ty lnmls.. .30.798 sq. ft. tot. w1th. ••
,exisli1ng 4,800 sq. fl. meta l bldg. Bu y now tor $60.000.QO.·

pa•nt, bra &amp; loti more. Call after

6. 614-286·4621 .

1 .aao Audl 5000. • dr.. 5 1pd ..
d1e1el, PS/ PB, AM / FM / Cus ..
sunroof. A / C, e.cc. cond .,

04600. Clll614-446-0333.

1 as• Dodte Arl ... auto .. sir.
Cast. Price *2999. John '• Auto
Sales, Bultville Rd., G•lllpolls.
OhiO.
77 Monte Carlo. 306 eng. V-8,
Loaded. good cond. Gr~at worh

Creek. C•ll

72

Trucks for Sale

614-446-4782.

Cond.
1300.need.
Call repair.
614-245auto .. motor
Fair

6077.

I
t
I
I

'

pool. Buv now 101 $49.!'i!O 00

Ho~e1

3 II[OROOM HOME 011 KATHY DRIVE near
Hosptal. :
lJJw traffic area, la1ge back ya1 d, YI1JFP. Gan1J~5· City Sch'llll ·
()istrict Pr~e $45,000.
NEW ~ISTING: Downlowrr reslaurant busm ess w1th D-5
license included. Call lor ,mor e in formation"'

t
t

: 132 acres. 30 acres of bottom land. Buy now lo1
($265 00 per ACREII!I

$tip ., to pl6k up • FREE 1987 6tl~ndt,
SELLING YOUR REAL ESTATE IS 81G BUSINESS
CALL
. All EXPERIENCED WOOD REALTY
. SALESPERSON

up 1nd delivery, Davia V.:uum
Cleaner , one halt mile up
Georg., Creek Rd . Call 614-

87

Watteuon'a Water Hauling,
reuonable rates. immedlatt
~. 000 gallon delivery, cleterna,
pools, Well, etc. call 304-1578-

R &amp; M Cut1om Couctln 1nd
Reupholtterv. St. At . 7 , Crown
City, Oh. 014-268-1470, Eve.

-Page 3

10-35-17-3740-1

Upholstery

Lotto

Tonight, cloudy and colder
with a loW In the mid 20s. We!il
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of
snow 20 per cent. Tuesday,
cloudy with a high In the mid
30s.

742-2328.

2919.

House i:oal. Daliv~4' ton and
up. Jim Lanier,
4 -876-1247
or 875 -7397.
Coal and lime~tbtle delivery,

304-676 -3190.

•

••

'

614-446-3438. Open dilly 91o

Mowrey's Uptlolstering Hrvlng
tricountyarea21 yHfl, The belt
in furniture upholstering. Call
304 - 875 - 4164 for free
tttimates .

,,

enttne

a1 y

4 :30, Sat. 9:30 to 1 :30. Qld 8&amp;
new Uphostered.

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday. January 19, 1987

1 Soction. B Pages 26 Cantl
A Multimedia Inc . NewiJ)8PBf

304·876·

5601 ahtu 7PM .

l - - - - - - -- Real Estate General

GREEN TOWNSHIP
Well tared tor and it shows! 3-4bedroom bi-level homejust 2 miles tram town includescozy
tamily room , l1vmg room , eal-m k1lchen ~ 1 th buill-Ins, 2tull baths, I car gmge with plenty
of storage. New deck. Fenced m yard Wilh over 100 rose bu shes. Maintenance lree vinyl
s1d 1ng lets you entO Y your favo11te hobbies. Good neighbo1hood. Mid 60s.
#238

446-0294.

FTM General Contracting 13yrl
experltrtce. Rooting &amp; Con l1ructlon Ph. 814-388·9308 .
Free ettlmatll 10% off during

\h; ~~~~Ill''· offer ••plres J•n

WISEMAN REAL ESTATE AGENCY -446-3644

r~~§======~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~

1986 Ford F-280, 4lt4 pickup.
Ukt new. 3.200 miln . 3 / 4 ton
460 V-8 engine. lnqyire 614:
446-0406 daytime. 446- 2800
evenings.

SUNDAY PUZZLER·
RECEIVlNG - Emergency clerks were at the modern
receiving center Sunday to greet the some 200 visitors attending an
open house for the renovated emergency room and expanded care
center at Veterans Mem!)rlal Hospital. Pictured are, seated, from
left, Val Bailey and Kim Follrod. Standing is Fran Moxley.

1969 Ch8Vrolet. e.c . cond . New
motor. Call 614-256 · 1941 or

614-266·6574.

Dump 641nternational. !ispeed,
2 •peed. 1.1 000. Call 814-992 -

6101 .

1974 Fcrd truck with topper.
Gcod condition. Call 814-992 Fruehauf Trailer. 40 foot bed .
Good condition. Qood tires and
br1k11. PhOhe 614-698· 8896.

1976 Ford Cuetom 160 pickup,
8 ft . bed. 390 V-8 , aut . trans.,
ps, am -tm radio. With topper.

73

90
• 92
94
95
96
97

ACROSS
1 Freedom from
pain
1 Fissile rock

Vans ·&amp; 4. W.O .

1981 Plymouth Voyager Yin.
Excellent condition
loadad.

a.

14860. Cell 614-446-2048 after 6pm. ·
1977 CJS Jeep. 8 cyl, 268 CV
eng. 3 spd. Call weeknights

614·446-8173.

t2 Cudgels

·u Golf cry

Ford, 1978 F100. 4wh.. ldrive,
low mileage. Eltcellent condi·

don. 03260, 304-468-1031 .

~:~Real
~~~~~~~~
Estate

E. Ma·in...W.
POME~oy; 0 .

22 Swill
23 Caravansary
24 Object of

992·2259
POMEROY- Beautilul view
ol the Ohio River, th 1s ta ste·
fully designed home can be
you rs with alinle effort. Two
st01y home features th1ee
bedrooms. nice living room,
din1ng room, fufl basement
with a two car garage &amp; a
large front sining porch, I 'h
ba ths and attic area. MAKE
OFFER. $2 3.900.00.
MIDDLEPORT -This older
home Is close to stores and
schools. 2-3 bedrooms level
lot. carpeting, other features
include a nice front p01ch.
Must see to appreciate.
$26.900.00.
PoMEROY - l 'h story frame
home w1th new vinyl sidmg ·
three bedrooms, some new
taif&gt;eling and patio. Neatly r~
modeled and decorated. The
upstaiiS would make an excellent bunkroom tor ch ildren.
$29,900.00.
RACINE - Own 2 acres of
la nd with garden space. hu11
trees and elbqw room. 2
story home with four bed·
rooms In goo~ . cond ition.
Garage, and near schools.

$24.000.00.
POMEROY- One floor plan.
Two bedroom home with
1ural water, range and lefrigertor and a bath. MAKE OFFER. $16,000.00.
LETART AREA - Approximately 2 acre mini Iarm with
small barn, fencing to the
shed s, plus a 1978 modula1
unit wrth 3 bedrooms, satellite dish. 2 good garden
areas. Drilled water well.
Henry E. Cltltnd, Jr.

992-6191

Jnn Trmtll ..... 949-2660
Dottle Tumtr .. ... 992-5692
OffiCI................ 992·2259

72
74
76
77
78
79
81

82 Perceive

by touch
83 Briel
conversation

84
85
87
89

Short hit
Decay
Come back
The ones there

1 Pile
2 Finishes
3 Near
4 Brim
5 Allowance tor

furniture

25 Paid notice
26 Fuel
28 lmilale
30 Web-footed sea
bird
32 Tantalum symbol
33 Greek let1er
35 Walked on
37 Slorage
s1ruc1ures

Pulverized rock
As far as
Slalemale
Sandra or Ruby
"The - Ranger "
Thulium symbol
Danish land
division
Soil •
Capital ol Nigeria
DisMbance
Also
Myself
Tipped
Deface

DOWN

100 Check
101 War god
t02 Red planet
103 Bespaller
105 Highly serious
t07 Mountain: abbr .
109 Crimson
110 Proh~il s
111 - of Alexandria
113 Take one's part

devotion

63
64
66
67
68
69
71

171 DeciphOf

99 Article of

·:· 21AII

62 Nuisance

Rocks
Top of house
ldenllcal
Maps
Leases
Musical
instrument

waste

6 Vital organ
7 Grad-to-be
8 Cui of meal
9 Sacred Egyptian
. bull
10 Boundary
11 Roman officials

114 Patriotk: org.

39 Parasitic insects
78 Ford F-160 pickup truck, 4
wheeldriYe, lock-out hubt, good
cond . Call 304· 882· 3236 .

1973 Volklwagen re~ilt motor.
new battery, two new tires. 4
spd., auto. Ce11614· 446-4462.

Of

Llmtttoneand slabwood hauled.
AI Tromm, Rutland. Call 814 -

Daily Number
022

8ASEI',IENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guaran304-676-4228 . .
tee. local reference• furnished.
1974 VW Beetle, A-1 cond. Free ettiml1ts. C•ll collect
32,000 miles. 304-876-6912.
1-614-237-0488. day or night.
Rogers Basement
1983 Olda Cut1a11 Supreme. Waterpmoflng.
eJtc. cond .. cruise , 1ilt. AM / FM - • .,.....__.:_ __.::...__ _ __
/ caas. Call 614-388- 9065 or SWEEPER and sewing machine .
446- 1211 .
rep1ir, parts, 1nd suppli• . Pidc

61 Heraldic bearing

·

1983 ChtNette, •2995. 1978
Dodge tl1lf ton pickup, 1996.

304 -676· 4584

T·6 l Wtter d•live,Y anytlmt Ph.
ume day

81 4 · 388 -9732
delivery.

win streak
is snapped

Home
Improvements

1977 Cht'ly pickup. F1lr cond.

1973 Muatang fastback , rebuilt,
351 -C, Good shape. t1275.

BOY NOW: 211 ACRE lOT located w1ttnn Sprin glietd lwp.. •• 1760. Caiiii14· 379-2B80.
Gatlia Co. $10.500.00.
·
. 1 980 Pfymouttl Volare, new
paint. AT, PS / PB, ntw btltery,
PRICE REDUCED - ;'tuee ll!droomhome mPlan tsSoh-·
has been In one hmity since
div ~ ion . Excellent corrd1t1on and ready to move rnlo. Full
new. 80,000 miles. C•ll 814446-91169 or 448-8113.
basement. carport. Comforl able. Was $43 . ~0 . 00 . NOW
S39.'500.00 .
•
Muuang-815 GT, 302 H.O ..
NG - 3 Bedrrn. home s1tuated along Hanna!
Auto., PW, Pl. 2'9 .000 mi. New
. Wal nut Twp. 1.8 acres. Pncetl tor 111101ediate sale
T· A Rtdilll, very flit . Ctll

t
,ja.liUu.uru.
5 ACRES of level grou nd aqjacent to Plea t
Estates: 350· of road frontage, with city water I
gas on pr emises. $400.00 per front lao. t
NEAT 3 BEDROOM HOME located alonR Rousn Rd: t
Chr!shiire Twp Kyger Cr eek Schools. Appro•. ·~ acre. t

79.11 .

Ohio Lottery·

Servi t:es

1988 Plymouth Torismo, 1973
Ford Ltd. C1ll 114-448-1652 .

Cll1814-379-2706.

614-44&amp;-7717.
Charlie's on Mill

Jamn Boys Wat• Servk:t. Alao
pools filled. Celll14-260· 1141
OJ 814-448·1176 or 114-448-

5~game

Real Estate General

40 Chapeau
41 Take notice:
abbr.
43 Decorate
45 Entice
47 Selenium symbol
48 Tardy
49 Showy flower
52 Abound
54 Unruffled
56 Shoe bot1oms
57 Scissors
59 Narrow. tfal
board

Cell614·446-2004.

11115-3802

OU's

.. .

1984 Dodge Diplomate SE. all
powltf, clnn, 23 .000 rriiln, call

1981 Z28, air, tilt, cruitt, delay,

et~r .

Rotary or cabla tool drilling.
Moat well• completed lamtday.
Pump sales and service. 304·

For ta'' 4 turi;Jin wheel• for 6

81

01600. 304 -676-2674.

n~ VR80 Good year tires, new

'·

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce11orias

GM 360 Turbo hanamiaaion &amp;
ford FMX . Cllll14-448 -0986.
Aab~ilding II IVIiltble.

81 Cl\evette, good cond. 4 door,
a-c. automatic 81500. 304-

6818.

.

RINGLES'S SERVICE . tllperienced carpentar. elactridan,
muon, painter, roofing (lnctud·
lng hot . tar· ape:~llcationt 304·

General Ha~ling

86

Generel Hauling

1980 Sunbird Hatchbtck 4 cyl ..
am-fm Cllnttt. 80.000 mile~ .

1972 Ch"'Y 3/ 4 ron, PS/ P8,

hay for tale. Square bales.
Call 814 -898-1243.

I

Fetty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call304· 876· 1331 ,

675-2088 or 676· 7147.

.

Mhttd gran hay lor lilt. Call

Mi.~ted

t

76

1982 Ford• Eacort l wagon.
68,000 miln, good condition,
30 mpg. 11.500.00. After 15

Gr111 hay. • 1 .00 bale. Min. of
100 baln. Call 814-258 -8618.

Approx. 80 tons of corn tllage.
Call814 -378 -8291 .

••
. .
••
•I
•tt

304·576-2398 or 614-446 2464.

. eng Chevy. 304-675-8439.

1976 2 ton GMC septic tanh
cleaning truck with 1500 gellon
tank. hoses, dt-~mp bed. Call

614-949-2237.

•

RON ' S Telell'lslon Serv ice .
Houte calli on RCA. Qunar,
GE . Sptciallng In Zenith . Call

304-57&amp;-2680.

1974 Dodge Special Edition. 4
doors. low mlln, good condition. t1760. Call 814 -992 -

6485.

•

446-4477

Boati end
Motors for Sale

85

576-2698 or 676-2336.

Hay for ule. Aot~nd bales, in
· barn, ne'Jflt been wet. Call

(614) 446 4042

1980 Chtvettt. BodY. excellent
condhion. 2 door. auto. •uoo.
Caii8U-949-2801 .

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

All tvP• carpent• &amp; conCJtte
work: Interior, IM1trlor, remo- ·
Gallipolis. Otllo .,.
.
deling.. pelntlng. roofing. tree
eatlrnatn. Cell 814-441-8174. Phone 114-441-3888 or 614·

New tires,
excelleot running cond. Laohs
good. t400. C.n be ••n at uo' Wint..- Spt(:ial 14 foot fishing
Jack10n Esutu Apt . 88-B boat, &amp;0 HP Ell'•nrude. trolling
Jackson Pike, Galllpolit, OH . · ' motor. Trailer· very reuonable·.

614·74l-3142.

balet,
otored
in 5:30PM
berno.Call.
614·246·
9•60
after
!::::=::~~-~~~:=;::::"~~~=~ round

CONVENIENTLY LOCATED ALONG Jrd AVE. (300block)M1u~~~~~0 1~8.~8oM'ths. recently renovated, new ga,

1918 VM~MI Tri -Z 2&amp;0, very
good cond. Extrlllnclwded, Call
614-445-9710 1ftor 8PM .

76

Home
Improvement•

82

CARTER ' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourttl and f&gt;tne

19 Ford Pinto,

Call Vickie Hauldren with
Morgage One of Ohio for
more information at

•

81

07 Oldt. good thape. Aunt

.If you. c~rrently have
· an ex1st1ng VA Home
a,ortgage Loan you can
reduce your interest to
8°/o for 30 years,
8112°/o for 15 year$.
Could save you a lot
of money paid out in
interest.

•••

.

M~torcy~;le6

74

January 18, 1987

'

115 Poslscrip1: abbr.
116 Linger
117 Thai woman
118 Base
12Q Roman gods
121 COfemony
122 Flying creature
123 Wife of Zeus
124 Lamb's pen name
126'Doclrlnes
128 The universe
130 Chastise
132 Prepale for prinl
134 Carries
135 Spoken
136 River In Italy
t37 Gladness
139 G9d of love
-141 Exlsl
142 lnsecl egg
143 Lane
145 Lavishes
fondness on

147 Drunkards
t 49 Portuguese 1111e
of respect
152 Fullill
153 Sprlnls
155 Pertaining to lhe

navy
157 Meadows
159 The two ol us
160,Film lioness
162 Blood, sweat and
164 Choir voice
166 Kite
168 P.aper measure
169 Dart
170 Fungous
disease
of rye

l

12 Cesium symbol
13 Limb
14 Mountains of
Europe
15 Dismiss
16 Subsequently to
17 Sullable
18 Hypothetical

terce
19
20
27
29

Spin
Gladdens
Civil Injury
Lionel Riehle's
former group
31 College deg.
34 Purpose
36 Expires
38 Primitive
reproductive

40
42
44
46

bodies
Stop
Trinket
Liquefy
Decorative
metalware

48
49
50
51
53
55
56
58

Is defea1ed
Province In tndta
Mortlflca11on
Railroad: abbr.
Post
Tellurium symbol
Dispatched
Long-legged
birds
60 Athletic group
62 Body of water
65 Morsel
68 Hold on property
69 Brown, as bread
70 Specks
72 Eats
73 Frights
75 Long, slender fish
76 Allar screen

77
79
80
82
83
84
86

Cause of distress
Melodies
Entrances
Smokes
S~l of joined links
Disinterested
Measure ot
weight
88 Flap
89 Subject of

a tour of the laclilties but also
.door prizes, 'favors, refresh·
menls, free blood pressure r ead. ings and blood sugar tests . I

Wall-to-wall people were on
hand to attend a open house at
Veteran s Memorial Hospital' s
new renovated and expanded
emergency room and ur gent
.
I
Beth Stivers. R.N .. director of
car e center from 2 to 4 p.m.
, th e services being olfererd, and
Sunday.
The open hOuse offered not only Scott Lucas, hospital administra-

discourse

government

95 Trustworthiness
97 Vehicle
98 Paving substance
102 Servant

tor . and numerous -stall
members wer e at their post s to
greet the approximate 200 per·
sons who turned.. out Sunday
afternoon.
The renovated emer gency
room continues to be open 24

hours a day with a doctor on duly
at al l limes. Dr. Ja mes
McMullen has charge o f lhe
emergency room phys i cians.
Th e urgent care facility provides
a place where res ident s m ay go
for lrea tment of a condl1 ion

c-1

Sta((: believes. scandal was preventable
.

104 Tree trunk

Kansas
•
114 Ate to lose weight
116 Legal document
117 Medicinal plant
119 Broad
121 Rounded
protutierance
122 ·Unruly child
123 That man
125 Ventilates
127 Latin conjuncllon
128 Marvel •
'" 129 Colorful bird
130 Ado
131 Landed properly
133 tns1rumenl
136 Spaghet11,
macaroni, e.g.
138 Cui
140 Spirited horse
143 Father
144 Llaten·to
146 Warbled
148 TranslfC1ion
150 Was In debt
151 Apportion
153 Obstruct
154 Theater sign: abr.
156 Game at cards
158 Algonquian
Indian
161 South America:
abbr.
163 Compasa point
165 Football pos.
167 Negative

PRESSURE - Russ Brown, Pomeroy , was one olmany visitors
of the open house at Veterans Memorial Jlospllal 's renovated
emergency room and expanded care ce nter to have a free blood
pressure reading taken. Taking his hlood pressure I• Sue Zirkle,
R.N .

Area resideltts tour new Veterans .ER, ·urgent care unit

90 Keen
91 Wearies
93 Conlederaled

106 Cover
107 Having dull finish
108 Lock of hair
110 POtit
111 Harbinger
112 Senator from

BLOOD SUGAR- Fr~ hlood sugar tests were offered visitors
at an open house Sunday for Veteran Memorial Hospital' s
renovated emergency room and expanded care center. Ann
Fausnaugh, seated, Tuppers Plains. was one ol the numerous
visitors taking advantage of the tree test. Administering the tes t in
the photo Is Ruth Spann.

l '

! \

,. ..._.:;.;:;t.;.., ...

.

.' • v

.......

'

WASHINGTON (UP I ) - A middlemen - and that failure
Senate analysts concludes Pres!- was likely.
dent Reagan could have preSeveral laws and procedures
vented the sale of U.S. arm s to lor monitoring undercover oper Iran from backfi r ing ln'to the allons were broken. the sumworst scandal of his pres idency mary adds. and because lawby notifying Congress in ad- makers were kept in the dark for
vance, The New York Times 10 months after Reagan signed a
reported 'today.
secret ln\el!igence "finding"
The newspaper obtain ed a Jan. 17. 1986, authorlzln~ the
27-page sfaft summary prepar ed sales , · the entire pr ocess of
tor the Senate Intelligence Com - congression al oversight of such
mlttee saying the administration operations has been put "aI
ignored 18 months of warnings risk."
that lis arm s deals wer e based on
" Notification r equirements
nawed intelligence and suspect · were Intended not only to ensure

;

I he propriety of c"/1%1'{ opera'·
lions, but also to ensure their
effectiven ess," I he Times quoted
the analysis as sayin g.
" In this particular case. notlflcation could ha¥e p1:evented
whal proved to be a cos tly
setback for U.S. foreign policy."
The Times said I he document il
obtained was drafted or iginally
as the second part of a longer
report written by the panel' s
_Republican staff members about
11s extensive hearings In December Into the 1ran armsContra aid scandal.

)

., The report' s first sec t ion.
about 130 pages. was mainly a
chronology of the affair, 1he
Times satd - and 11 s ear ly drafl
was obtained by NBC News two
weeks ago. The por tion obl ained
by the Times prov ides a summary and analysis.
Th e summary crit icizes !he
administrat ion for running a
great "risk of exposure" with It s
Iran operation and cna r ges if
wtth a series of mistak es and
misjudgments from February
1985 to November 1986, when the
deal was exposed.

Nation paus¢s to remember slain activist
In Philadelphia. the Llberl y
ATLANTA (UPI ) -The fed· marches.
·Bell
was to be rung at 12: 30 p.m.
A wreath -laying ceremony at
eral government and 37 states
EST,
echoed by replica bells in
have declared toda y· a holiday to King' s crypt In Atlanta wa s to be
stale
capitols
from coast to coasl
observe the birthda y ofslaln civil followed by an ecumenical serln a "Ringing of Llber l y Bells"
right s leader Martin Luther King v ice at the nearby Ebenezer
ceremony.
Jr. who Infused 1he struggle with B aptist . Church where he
In San Antonio, Texas, Ol ymInspired r hetoric and a philo- preached.
pic gold medalist ~ art Lewi s will
Secreta ry of State George join ceremonies commemor atsophy of nonviolent resistan ce.
Shultz
Is among the dignitaries lng King's birthday with Rosa
ThOu sands of Americans. led
expecled
at the service, which
by King' s widow. Carretta Scott
Parks, whose refusal to go to the
was
to
be
lollowed by a parade back ol a bu s In Montgomery,
· j{ing. planned to commemo r at e
"l he martyred civil rights leader down Peachtree Street led by the. Ala .. in 1955 launched the civil
wtth a coast-to-coast bell-ringing Rev . Ralph David Abernathy, a
right s movement .
crremony, speeches , religious Kin g lieutenant during the civil
Delaware· celebra ted tho&gt; hollceremonies , par ad es and right s struggle olthe 1960s.

Fire guts·Gallia tire plant;·
Middlepqrt lends assistance
GALLIPOLIS - An lnvesti~a­
tlon continued today Into the lire
that destroyed mosl of the
building housing Willis Tire Co.
at 217 Third Ave. late Saturday
and early Sunda y.
Gallipolis Volunteer .Fire Chief
Ra y . Bush said he would be
calling In the slate fire marshal
.to probe the cause of the !Ire.
which remained undetermined
today.
The !Ire continued to smolder
throughout Sunday and firemen
remained on the scene hosing
down hot spots .
Bush declined to say If arson
was Involved. pending the outcome of his and the lire marshal's Investigation.
"I haven't ruled out natural
causes yet," he said.
·
Bush estimated damage to the
building at $150.000. 'fhlle loss to
the contents has been put at
$175.'000. The structure Is Insured
by Nationwide Insurance Co.
It was the second maJor fire to
strike the building. The flrsl. on
Nov. 8-9, 1983, caused an estl·
•

mated $180.000 worth of damage. .Willis Tire co-owner Raymond
Willis at 206 Third - Ave. wa s
Officials blamed that fire on a
damaged by the Intense heat,
malfunctioning electric motor In
Bush added, and fir emen
the retreading plant.
sprayed down the front of the
Saturday night's fire is be·
lleved to have started In the Willis house and nearby build·
ings owned by John Allison of
southeast corner of the building
Portsmouth Road.
on Grape Street and then spread
Bush said he called a crew
through open. doorways on the
from
Columbu s &amp; Southern Ohio
fir st and second floors to engulf
Electric
Co. when he feared
most ol the building. Some
power lines would snap on a
damage was reported to the
burning utility pole near 'the
adjoining warehouse section, but
corner of Third and Grape.
Bush said firemen were able to
keep the . blaze from. causing
Firemen were 41ble to -extln·
additional damage.
guish
the lire on the .pole. but
Damage was reported to a
C&amp;sbE
turned off a main feeder
brick hOuse at 50 Crape St.,
adjoining the area where the lire line on the roof of the tire plant.
is believed to have started. Bush Three major transformers on a
said fire affected four rooms In pole In front of the warehou se
. the house. owned by Harold entrance were not affected by the
Notter. 51 Grape St. Three fire and C&amp;SOE did not have to
lurn off power to nearby homes
occupants of the house escaped
withOUt Injury. Damage to the and businesses.
The fire did damage Ohio Bell
house was .limited to burned
Telephone
Co. lines, causing a
curtains and trim board. Vinyl
service
disruption
for the city's
siding on a residence at 411 Grape
south
end.
Bush
said
a. repair
Sl. was also dal1)aged, Bush said .
Some siding on the home of crew from Ohio. Bell worked to

day Jan. 15, King's actua l blrlh·
day. Th e 1964 Nobel Peac e Prize
winn er would have been 58.
Arizona, Ha waii , Idaho. Mlsslsslppl, M onlana, New Humpshire, New Mex ico, Nort h CarolIn a, South Caro lin a. Sou lh
Dakota, Texas and Wyoming do
not offlt!1aliy observe the holiday,
whlc ~ marks Its second year I his
year as a federal holiday .
Gov. Steve Cowper of A laska ,
whi ch Is without a pcrm anen1 ·
King holiday, declared t oday a
hOliday by executive ord er .

considered urgent bul no! of an
emergency naturr . The urgent
care facility is open from 9 a.m.

to 9 p.m. and Is slaffcd hy 1he
same doctors who are handling
1he emergency rooP'\.

House plans hearings
into tort reform bill
COLUMBUS 1UPI I -The Ohio Housc&lt;Jf Rcprcsenl atlves will
s1ar1 hearings this week on a civil ju stice and lnsur&lt;J ncc refor m
hill which cl eared the Co.ner al AsscmlJIY tn November, only lo
be ve toed by Cov: Ri chard F. Celcs t .
House 6111 1, a ca rbon copy of Senate 6 111 330 of last session.
will recei ve li s Initial hearing Wednesday In the l·lous&lt;"
Insura nce fo mmlllee, which cx pecl s 10 vo te II out Feb. 11.
Both the House and Senate ha ve schedu led floor sessions this
week, but mosl of the aclivlty will ce nl cr around organizational
meelings or new co mmittees. Today wa s Martin Luther Kin ~
Jr.' s Blrihda y, a stale holiday.
Rep. Michael P. Stlnzl ano. D-Columbus. chair man of lhe
Insurance Committee. said two hours wil l be devoted to
proponent lestlm ony and another 1wo hours lo opponent
tes llmony Wr&gt;dn esday. Further hearings arc scheduled for Jan.
28, Feb. 4 and Feb. 10. when amendment s will be taken.
Pl ans call for full House co nsider alion Feb. 17. Stlnzlanosald.
The legislation has the suppor t of leaders In the Gener al
Assembl y and appears to be on a fasl track back lo Celeste's
desk. ·
" In many ' ways, this Is a rr&gt;fresher for th e Insu rance
Committee." said Sllnzla no. adding he ha s left II up 10
rcpr esentallvt&gt;s of the business co mmunit y ami tho !ria l
taywers 10 coordinate the testim ony on House Bllil .
The tegislailon, cr aft ed durlnjl nine months of dcllberal ton In
1986. Is an all empt to provide co mmercial liability ln s u r~ n ce to
businesses and local governments at an affordable cos t.
One section tr ies to discourage l r tvo lo'us lawsuit s and
expensi ve judgments and attorney tees. Another major porllon
Involves stronger regula! lo n of Insurance co mpanies. Including
greal er financial disclosure of lhelr claims, payouts and
reserves.
" An enormous amount of wor k has alrea dy been Invested In
House Bill I, " said Stlnzl ano, referring to It s predecessor ,
Senal e Bill 3.10 In the las t session. " I'm oppos lnl( any etforl to
change the cl"ll jusllce and In sura nce sec tions. Th ere's a
delicate balan ce, and any a!lemptl o modlly It would causr !he
whole bill to
"

•

ON 'l'IIE
pumper
truck, purchuedlutaummer, wuoneoflhefour
,vehicles the vllla1e fire department sent to
Gallipolis late Saturday to help fight the fire lhat
restore service at the scene until
around 5 a.m. Sunday.
The 'lire department received
its first call at ll: 35 p.m.
Saturday and eventually sent 32
men, three pumpers and Its

WIUII
Co. bulldlntt.
de.trered moet of
Point Plea~ant also aided Galllf)llliH In fighting the
fire.

aerial ladder truck to the blaze.
The department called for assist·
ance from Polnl Pleallant at
11: 47 p.m. and from Middleport
six minutes later .
Point Pleasant sent It s aerial

.

truck and 12 men, while Middle·
port senl 15 men an~ lour
vehicles, Including two pumpers
and an air truck. Point Pl easant
fougllt the fire from Third
(Continued on Page 4)

�Monday, Jonuary 19, 1987 ·

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

P·-2-The Daily Stmtinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, January 19, 1987

.

I

The Daily Sentinel
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohlo

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIG~·MASON AREA
~lb

ts:m~

qjv

. .
.....,_,._-;..,......,.d,=

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher

•
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

~·

A MEMBERJ&gt;!The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoclallon and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPrNJON are welcome. They should l::w:! less than lXl words
long. Allletlers are subJect to edlllng and rr11 st be slgnaJ with name, address and·
telephone number. No wtslgnm letters wUI be publlsht-d. Letters should be In
good taste, addressing Issues, nol persooalitles.
.

,

The Lighter Side

Itmay be only a footnote to the
expanding - apparently. lndefl·
nitely - story of the Iran arms
scam, but It's still worth noting. .
Israel's role In the skimming of
some of the proceeds from the
weapons sales to Iran to fund the
Nicaraguan contras - whether
peripheral and unwitting, as the
Israelis claim. or ·central, as
some other accounts have It -Is ·
not the first Israeli connection
wfth arms for Nicaragua.
For the fuilslory , we have togo
back a number of years, to before
the revolution that brought the
Sandlnlstas, against whom this
operation was directed, to power.
Israel, -as It happens, had long

Letters to·the Editor
Support for pit bulls
I have a pit bull and s he Is part
of our family. My 4-year-old
daughter loves her and she can
ride on her back. I cannot
speculate on someone else's
happening. but If my daught er
were playing and there were
another dog around , our SAB
would probably atlack the other
· dog In fear of the dog hurting her
· little mas ter .
Pit bulls are very intelligent.
Our dog Is registered a DBA and
also UKC. Our dog Is trained to be
a welch \]og. When animals fight

they are using the animal Instinct
God gave them for survivaL It
really doesn't matte r what kind
of animal, whether It be cows,
cats, dogs or buck deer. They all
have a survival Instinct.
If you will try· to understand
our pit bulls and know we love our
pets too! We won't say anything
about your little dogs and cats
'that run loose and we know you
must love them too. Remember.
dog Is man 's best friend.
Thank you for reading this.
Sandy Sheets

Someone &lt;~how .mme initiative
1986. What a year! Especially
In our area sports. Take Meigs
High School for 'example. They
had a fantastic year In girls and
boys teams starting with both
winning the T. V.C league championships In basketball to the
recent perfect 10·0 season In
football. Remember how exclt·
lng the games have been? All the
crowd support that leads the
teams to victory?
,
This Is a ne,w year and the
basketball season Is well under·
way. Having attended all of the
boy's varsity basketball games
except one, I must say, I am
dllappolnled In the home crowds.
Particularly the student section!
They have a sign on the wall

above where they sit that reads
" The Pit." That Is where they
seem to have been during the
home games: In a "hole noi even
backing the teams at all. Come
on people! Get off your rears and
stand up! Show your support for
these young men and women who
practice long and hard hours.
They represent their school quite
well and so can you.
So let's go Meigs Marauders!
Show some better encourage·
ment. Someone has to iake the
Initiative to help these kids to
another consecutive winning sea·
son!
Robin L. J(ltchen
Middleport, Ohio

rooay in history:

'
By United Preu International
Today Is Monday, Jan. 19, the 19th day of 1987 with 346 to follow. ·
lt Is Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
..
The moon· is moving toward Its last quarter.
The morning stars are Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mercury: Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
Include Scottish engineer James Watt, Inventor of the steam engine,
. : In 1736; Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee In 1807; short story writer
and 'poet Edgar ·Allan Poe In 1809; English metallurgist Henry
Bessemer In 181~: French Post· Impressionist painter Paul Cezanne
In 1839; Ebony magazine founder John H. Johnson In 1918 (age 69) ·

~n

a staurlch friend of the

sdmoza dictatorship that the
revolution overthrew. It continued supplying arms to Somoza
brutal forces right up to the end.
That came In July 1979. The
revolutionary junta tlriltlally a
coalition, but soon a purely
Sandlnlsta show) that took over
Nicaragua also lnherlied a $1.6
billion foreign debt run up by
Somoza, Some halt billion dollars
of that, provided by American
arid European banks during the
last two years of Somoza's
clearly crumbling relgh, never
reached Nicaragua. It went
directly Into Somoza bank accounts abroad.

PR\VA~ &gt;ou~S 'TEL.L. us TH,.T"
IF ANt:&gt; WH&amp;N C:OL., NO~
mT'IFIC'S, HE W"L. ~AY·,.

(.

Nevertheless the new government assumed the entire debt
with the exception of the portions
owed two of the creditors. That Is
one page Of the Nicaraguan story
which you'll never find In the
version distributed by the U.S.
Department of State.
An Initial renegotiation calling
for a 12-year repayment has
since been renegotiated several
times. The Sandlnlstas have not
been able to meet the.repayment
schedule. But the full debt has not
been repudiated, although with
accumulated unpaid Interest It
has now grown to more than .54
billion, one of the largest per

THE CONTRAS ...

c:

Adams Dlvliion
Monlreal .., .............. 23 Ill l U lf.l 1411
Hurtl&amp;rd ......... .. , ......~l Ut I 1. 11 147 151

By Unlle• Pl'f.M lntPraatlonal

Ef\STEH.N CONFERENCE
AIIMitlc Olvllllon
W L Pet.
BO!Oton .........................n It .730
l"tllla(MpWa .. ............. '!! l'f .$5~
WR~&gt;hinllfon ................. 19 '' .SOO
i'lt'w l'ork ... ........ ......... Jt 'U .fl-1
Nf'w .rl)r"ey ................. 10 n .t'lo
Centnl Dlvlto~n

capita In the world. .
Publicly, the Sandlnlstas re·
main committed to repaymentexcept, again, for those two
exceptions. They are Israel and
Argentina. whose' defunct milItary government had likewise·
provided weapons until Somoza's
bitter end.

A(lanta .....................25
Detroit ....... .... ............2-1
MIIWllUk(.......... ..........21
Cblt:IIIJU .... . ......... ....... 19
Indiana ....... ....... .... 19
Clnch&amp;nd ... ..
. .. .... 15

GB
s•11
K~
IS

n

Roston ............. . ......~1 1!1 .\ n IS7 14 2
Qluohec .................... lll 'l't 7 1:1 156\ S~
Rulfalo .................... l326 8 3! IS211.5
CAMPBELl, CONFERENCE
Norrl" hlvls.lon

.

II .691 II .11\6
lti .1100
" .5U

Yr
3
51,.!

Ill .SH &amp;';t
.385 11

:a

\\'F..~TERN CONFERENCt:
Mldwf"!it Dh·"'ion

\\'

Israeli support lot Somoza has
been justified as the returning of
a favor. And there Is substance to
tljat. Somoza's Nicaragua was·
among the first governments to
recognize the new state of Israel
and consistently provided a sup·
porting vote In Israel's endless
battles In the Unltj!Cl Nations with
the Arab nations.

L rt·t. GB

Dtlllat~ ......... ..... ... ....:U I~ .6:1% Utah .................. ......... \!! Ill .!IGK 2~
Houston ............. ...... ....JK 19 .4~6 :t'4

D1•nwpr ............ ...... ...... 16
Sa••rumrnto ..... ....... ..... ll
San Anloalo .. .... ........... 10
P11clllc Dlv;iion
LA l..aker~ .\. ........... ..... :m
Portland .. .............. .'..... 2-l
Gold4&gt;n Statr ................ U
SeaiUP .............. , .......... OO
l'bocnlx ... .................... lll
LA Clipper!! ..... ............ 5

::1 ..UO KJ,.t
~~~ .297 12~11
!K .2113 1-t
X .7114 lti .600 6 1•1
li .575 7~
I~ .~ 1 9
'l'l .UI J:l~'i
33 .1:!2 ~~~ '

Saturd~'!• ltl&gt;!O!Uib

lndiaru&amp; 119, Dullu W. ~~ OTJ
lffltrolt It!, Nl'w Jcrsry 113
CII'VellUid Ill, New l'ork 110
Chka11o Ul$, Phlladclphlu H!l

", TI~AT 1-fc ~$ FOLI.OW/NG

ORPERS WHEN HE 1:1/~TEP'
I~ANSCAM MONE¥ 10

New j(er"I'Y : .... :....... !~ t.1 I H 116 %0l4

NBA Standings

The Israeli connections.:..._._____no..,..-n_cr-:.::..aff

What new appliances
go into the basement?
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UP!) ·- According to the Association of Home
Appliance Manufacturers Standards, It Is becoming Increasingly
difficult to find a place to plug In labor-saving kitchen devices.
John Gray. president of Philips Home Products Inc., was quoted as
saying: "Dishwashers, refrigerators and ovens already command
the majority of kitchen space.
"Microwaves are taking up counter space. There Is virtually no
'room left In the kitchen for other convenient appliances."
Shucks. we didn' t need a business executive to tell us that. Just ask
your friendly neighborhood electrician.
Or ask your chief cook and bottlewasher, who usually Is not so
friendly and may live In a different neighborhood .
One of the new appliances Gray Is pushing Is a trash compactOr. A
spokesman claims It "crushs paper, glass, cans- virtually all refuse
- Into a single, easy to dlspos.e of cube.··
Yes .. but will It also get rid of New Year's resolutions?
Suppose, for Instance, you resolved to do over the kitchen to make
more room for- ah, there Gray - trash compactors.
Will his appliances merely crush dishwashers, refrigerators and
microwave ovens Into a single, easy to dispose of cube? Or will they
also deal with broken promises'!
My home •. Including the kitchen, Is littered with unkept resolutions.
I certainly would want those Included In any easy to dispose of cube.
But hold!
"To help homeowners avoid rearranging their kitchens In order to
accommodate a new appliance," the spokesman . tells us,. Gray's
company has marketed a trash compactor "designed specifically for
use In the garage."
That sounds like a real copout to me.
More than my kitchen, my garage already Is overcrowded with
dishwashers. microwaves and various discarded appliances. Add a
few broken promises to the mess and therewouldn'l even be enough
room to park the family car,
I coold always park It In the kitchen, I suppose. But It wouldn't be
the same. Besides that, the chief cook and bottlewasher might
complain.
'
I don't care If this compactor Is portable and can be used as "a
caddy to wheel the garbage from the garage to the curbside."
Wheeling garbage to the curbside has never been a problem for me.
1 am more concerned about discarded cars and resolutions.
The pamphlet says the compactor designed for the garage "holds
the equivalent of five 20-gallon garbage cans,·· which would give It a
larger capacity than any competitor. Including those· designed to
operale In the kitchen.
"Not only can It digest empty gift boxes and ripped pieces of
wrapping paper, but It ·also 'can make a meal of unwanted presents,
leftover food, etc.," the spokesman assured me.
He said nothing about shredding broken promises and perhaps a
few bricks . I may need to Install another appliance In the attic for
that.

. .

That was certainly something
to be grateful for. But lt'ls the
same gratitude that has led a
democratic Israel to associate
Itself uncomfortably closely with
some distinctly undemocratic
regimes. It m·ay be understanda·
ble. but It has consequences.

MISUNPE~STANii&gt;ING OF A
TIMc·/ofONOREr:&gt; FbREI~N

POL. ICY...

HE THOUGHIS'OMEiiOPY TOL.P
HIM TO WALK SOFn.Y ANP
c:'ARRY A 816 ·STACK •• ,
(

Sacnmcnto 12~. St-all )to II ~
Sunday'11 Rcsull~
Ro!Oion I 'no llou!lfon 99
LA l.akl'l'll IU, W&amp;."hlnl(ton 101
MllwauJwr 100, Allanla 91
Golden Statr 116, Port lund 11:1.
Monda,v'11 Gam~
LA Lakl'h Ill New .rrrsr3r. I p.m
Bollton ai 1N1•w \ 'ork, I p.m.
Plllu... lx at Phlladt•lphla, :1 p m.
Houl'oton ;at Clt•,·eland, 15 p.m
fbl cagelll lndlana. 5: p.m .
Mllllll11 »I Dl'lrolt, nl~thl. Kp.m.
LA ('llppt&gt;rll at San ,\ntonlo. K::lO p.m.
rortiiUid ui DrnvPr, 5:30 p.m .
'l'u'ftlday'!OI CJillhl'l'
Mll•aukt•t•' at thlclli{(J, nla;hl
Golden Stat t• at Sacrumento, nl11ht

That It may be, but tbe
lsraeli-Somoza connection thai
preceded It also needs to be kept
In mind In passing Judgment on
the Sandlnlsta side. of the
confrontation,
End of footnote.

Specter of invasion __--,--Ja_c_k_A_nd_e,.-rso_n_&amp;_D_al_e_va_n_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - President
Reagan's defenders have In·
voked the specter of a Soviet
Invasion of Iran as justification
for the backdoor arms deal with
Ayatollah Khomeini:S bench·
men. This would give the Soviet
Union a stranglehold on the
Persian Gulf. source of half of the
Western world 's oil.
Crltlcs of the secret arms ~eal
have scoffed. But In lacl Pen ·
tagon strategists have been
warning for years of a possible
Soviet Invasion during th\' chaos
that Is expected to follow Kho·
melnl's death. This is a contingency that must be reckoned
with - and planned against. As
early as 1982. Defense Secretary
Caspar Weinberger focused his
secret "Defense Guidance" on
the assumption of just such a
Soviet attack.
So White House apologists
have at 'least the Pentagon's
scenario writers to point to.
Whether the military's fears are
valid. and whether clandestine
actions should have been taken

on the basts of wargam e scena·
rios, Is open to debate.
In any case, details of the
"Defense Guidance" documents
make fascinating, If macabre,
reading. Our associate Donald
Goldberg has obtained some of
the secret strategic planning
papers. which are prepared·
annually to cover military planning for the following five years.
The armed services use these
guides to allocate their people
and materiel around the world.
The Pentagon's concern over a
Soviet Invasion of Iran Is nothing
new. As we first reported In 1981,
the Soviets staged a mock
Invasion of their neighbor In the
fall of 1980, testing their command, control and Communications system near the Iranian .
border.
The timing of the exercise
suggested it may have been
merely a show of strength
intended to dissuade President
Carter from a second military
attempt to res cue the American
hostages llf Tehran.

By 1984, when the Defense
Guidance for the years 1985
through 1989 was prepared, a
Soviet 'invasion of Iran .was the
most lll)portant "Illustrative
planning scenario ... upon which
to base force development planning for the 1993 time frame and
to assess risks In programmed
forces." The scenarios "realistically portray enell)y capabilities
as Indicated by current lntelll·
gence estimates," although they
were not Intended as "a predlc·
tlon of future events."
The chilling sce.narlo used In
that document supposes that 24
Soviet divisions would invade
some two months after the
central authority In Tehran beg·
Ins to break down, presumably
following Khomelnl's death or
some disruption of equal magnitude. Full-scale - but not nuclear - engagement between
Soviet and U.S. forces begins 30
to 40 days after the Soviet
Invasion.
Meanwhile. according to the
war game scenario. NATO and
Warsaw Pact troops begin 'fight·

NHL Standings
WALE.'i fONFERENfE
Patrkk Dh lslon
W I. ·T Pt.• dlF {ii\
Phlladt&gt;lphla .... ...... !11 It :1 6~ 19~ l'tl

This Sandlnlsta-PLO connec-·
lion Is being advanced as justlfi-:
cation for Israel's willingness to:
lend Itself to the covert funding of
the contras.
·

N\' Mandt•r,. .. ..... ~1 1!1 1 ~10
N\' HanA:I • r~ ...... ..... 1M~ ~ U
\t,'w;hlnA(on . .. ...... Ill tt i ~3
Pllt!ohlllrf:h .......... 11 tO II .t'l!

'

presidential veto could not be
sustained.
Befo~ that occurs, It's worth
noting that until 1972, funds for
the·construction of sewage treat·
ment plants logically came from
water usage fees or property
· taxes collecled by state or local
·
·
governments.
The federal program was In·
tended lo allow municipalities to
catch up with growth that had
occurred during the 1950s and
1960s but then finance future
construction lhemselves.
Instead, state and local spend·
lng on waste treatment facilities
plummeted with the availability
of money fro.m Washington, and
sewage plant ·financing became
the second largest federally
funded public works program,
after highway construction.
When Initiated In 1972, the
federal program was estimated
to cost a total of $18 billion. It now
has consumed $44 billion and will
soar far beyond the $100 billion
mark If not contained. ·
Reagan has waged a deter·
mined campaign to Impose some
sanity upon the program. Early
In his first term, he successfully
pressed Congress to reduce the
federal share of construction·
costs from 75 percent to 55
percent and to slash annual
spending from $5 billion to $2.4
billion.
Last year, he proposed phasing
out the federal program by
spending $5.6 billion during the
ensuing four years to finance
projects already underway. Con·
gress, however, Insisted upon
.spending more than three times
as much for twice as lorig - $18
billion over an eight-year period.
To wean state and local govern-

ments from the federal dole after
the eight years,. Congress also
approved an especially generous
"transition" program.
It called for authorization of an
additional $8.4 billion, to be
placed Into a revolving loan fund
·from which statt!l! could borrow
at below-market Interest rates·,
then transfer ..the money to
municipalities seeking construction funds.
Aware that the lure of pork

~ li'l 2 1 ~ 1~11

I ~ ~ 160 IS~
I $1 18:1179
S IS UJI ttl

5 33 153 111 3

SlliurdiQ' '!! IWsult s
Bo!&gt;ilon 1, f"IUsburl(h 2

l"hlladelphiu 4, N\' lrih&amp;ndl·r~ 2
WalltdnR(on 6, Jlarlford I
Df'lrolt J. Qu~hec 2
Mnnt.n&gt;aJ 4. Buffalo 't
Edn'lonion 7, Toronto ~
Vuncouver 4, Cal.,ary 3
MlnnrNMa 3, Chiu~o!

l.u!i An~el~ .t. S1. Louis ltnrJ
SUndu.,v's Results
WlllihlniJ(un 6, Nt•w ,Jersey 1
N\' lsi~U~ders 3. Phth&amp;delphla I
Bullalull. Edmonton 5 tOT)
Doetro\1 1, Pllh;hur~~;h 41
~ MlnnP.~~Uta

:1

Vunc.'6UW'r ul Wlnnlprl(, II~ 85 p.m .
NY Ran..-r s lll Lo~&gt;AngriNO, 10:3.5 p.m.
Tul'NdiiY'II Gam1'S
Nt•w ,Jersey at Wlllllllnr.:ton. DIKbt
Boo;ton Ml Qu~. niJ~:III
( ' ~t l jtllfY al NY hlandt!r~. nllrht
8ufflllu lll Mlnnt&gt;~ob . nl~:ht

Ml~·hl~t:IUI 91, Syrui'USl' il~
Purdui • ~K. l.uuhl\'1111• 7:1

SOUTII\\'t::.!il
A.rlwna

WEST
~~

Ufl,\ 69,

110, \\'w;hlnKtnnSI. Ii-I

Orf'~n ~i .

.

67 (01')

'

.,1\;~L :A~' l,,

Jenni Swartz l -0-2. Shelly Stobart
0-0-0, Missy Woods 0-0-0, Wendi
Fry 0·0·0, Dee Henderson 0-0-0,
Jodi Taylor 0-0-0. Beth Ewing
0-0-0. TOTALS 22·11Hi9.
NELSONVILLE· YORK (38)Heather Allen 1·0-2, Lori Ander son 1·2'4, Kerr! Bair 3-4-10. Mia
Burt 3·2·8, Gloria Conkel 2-0-4.
Amy Pierce 3·0-o. Tiffany Ri·
chards 1-0-2, Cindy Dupler 1·0-2.
TOTALS 15·8·:18.
By quarters:
10 11 22 16-59
Meigs
!llei&amp;.·York
4 10 12 12~38
Reserves ·- Meigs 23. Nelson·
ville· York 16

RON Logan, Meigs girls
cage coach, guided the Mar au·
dereltes to their tOOth •lctory
against 4G losses IIISt Thurs·
day. In TVC play the pllSt
seven years, Logan·cuachcd
teams at MRS havewun67 and
lost 13.

OO's f~ve-game win .
86-82
streak .snapped,
-.

Berry's World
·-

By U:llt~'li Press lnternallonal
Twe nty di s mal m inut es
snapped Ohio University's five game winning streak this
wee kend.
Ohio made only 1:l of 40 field
goal tries 133 percent! and
converted just 4 of J:i free throw s
1:11 percent) the n rst half In an
86-82 Mld·Amerlcpn Conference
loss at home Sat-urda y to Ball
State.
.
"The game Is 40 mln,utes and
we didn 't play very good basketball In the first 20," said Ohio
coach Billy Hahn . " We dug
ourselves a hole' we.couldn'l get
out of."
But Ohio ma naged to come to
the sl.ldace the second hl\)f.
Ball State, which led 48-31 a·t
halftime, enjoyed a 55-35 advan·
tage with 16:34 left, but Ohio
rallied and tied It 74-74 with 3:47
remaining. Ball State, however,
quickly retook the lead and Ohio
never caught up again .
"Our press got us back In the
game ·· said Hahn, "but Ball
State handled It well at the end."
Ohl~ ' s Paul Graham was the
game's leading scorer wit~ .32
points. Ball State was paced 6y. ·
Derrick Wesley with 24 pplnts
and Charles Smith with 22.
BaliStalels now6-9overall and
2·3 In the conference, While Ohio

.

LESA RUCKER

IIOCtt. t ;\
•h •rM'V - ICI' i' U,Iil•d It'll

5J1 JACKSON

II. I n ~

st ra ight ct nd

At Ann Arbor. Mi ch.. Gary
Grant and Carde Thompso n
scored 2:1 points each to hrlp Ihe
Wolver in es hand the Orang emcn
their firs t loss or t he seaso n.
Grant. who seal ed the victory
with a frt::!' throw with fo ur
second s rema inin g, had 6assists.
5 rebounds a nd 4 steals for tho
Wolver ines. 11-6. Rony Seikaly
led Svracusc. 1&gt;· I. wi th 2o poi nt s
and is rebounds.
At Philadelphia. th(' 11th·
ra nk ed Ow ls fail ed to scorr in th e
final .'\: 58 but managed to hold off
St . .Joseph's fo•· an At lantic 10

PIK E · R T3~

WEST

Phone 446 · 4524

BARGAIN MAIINHS SAI/SU N/ MON
AL L SE ATS 12 .10
ADMISSI ON [VE RY TUESDAY 12.5 0

~NUARY 16 lhru 2!.]
FR IOAY thru THURSOA¥ ~

Richard Pryor

AI Chapel Hill. N.C.. Ireshm an
forward J. R Reid. making 11 of
his 14 field goal attempts. scorrd
31 points and grabbed 13 rebounds to power the Tar Heels to
an Atlantic Coas t Conference
victory. The 6-foot -9 Reid r xplo·
lted the absence of the Wolfpac k
forwards Charles Shackleford
and Chucky Brown, who were
sidelined with a nkle injuries .

meets No. :1 Iowa- Monday.
Herbert Crook led the Ca rdina ls.
8-8. with 16 point s.

:0.0 . £'uro1Jna !1ft\, N.f. S1 'lli
IWanokfo ~~. Mary ~1 tl i• 16
MJnWEST
IWPWIW iiO, Ill . WP!Oi f'yll n 76
l.llyttlatiii.) 9.J, DPtrnlt 7:1

f'i~·~~

1\ nlt!• r~ fn ri•Su n frum ~11111w ot tlw 1\11 1..

9-5 overall and :1·4 In th e co nic•··
ence. LSU improved to 10·8 and
2-5.
In other games involving
ranked teams Sund ay. No. 2
North Carolina r ipped No. 17
North Carolina State 96-78. No.5
Purdue routed Louisville 88- 73.
Michigan upset No. 6 Syracuse
91-88 and No. 11 Temple trimmed
St. Joseph 's 70-69.

has won seven

[1\.""T
Allred Ill , flarbon Q:l
KinK " t l ' ll 111:1, lo'liU ·Mil.dl~ n n 59
Tt•mpl e 70, st. ,Jmwp h's tl'u.) 69
SOU Til
l.oulslanu St. 7fi, l!; cntucky II

Ill:{ 1111
J.t7 171

Transaction~;

At West Lafayette, Ind ., Doug
Lee scored 23 point s. including
four of six from 3-point range. to
lead the Bollmakers.l4·1. to their
best star t s ince t9:J&gt;. Todd
Mit chell added 22 points and
:. . Troy Lewi s 17 for Purdue. wl1ie h

:-lio&lt;hl,\' ' ~ Rt·~ult"

Bay lor. IIO, Kh·t• 61

1&amp;1 I»

natl48·10 In 1926.- lt wa s the wors t
loss for Kentucky anywhere
since City Coll ege of New York
defeated the Wildcats by 39
points In the 1950 National
Invitation Tournament.
LSU forced the Wildcats Into 27
turnovers ari'd just 25 perce nt
shooting from the floor. The
Tigers, paced by 28 points from
Anthony Wilson, nevenrailed.
"We were just emotionally
ready ," Tigers Coach Dal e
-Brown said. "It all happen ed on
our defense today. It wa ~ our
day."
Sutton scheduled a practice
two hours after the gam e.
"We're not going to throw In
the towel yet," he said. "We're
going to practice at 6: 30 and
we· re going to work their fannies
'off."
The loss dropped Kentucky to

College Basketball

Ui7 IS~

BUCHTEL - Behind Tammy
Wright's seasonal-high 19 points
and 79 per cent team shooting In
the second half, Meigs rolled to
its 12th straight win with a 59·38
verdir.t over NelsonvJIIl'- York.
The Meigs win also was Coach
Ron Logan's 100th .win since
becoming the girls men lor seven
years ago. Logan previously had
been the MHS boys coach,
leading them to their first sec·
tiona! championship in sc hool
history (1975-76).
. Besld!ls, WnlgR.t;l\ team·lea,d\Qg
19. Jenny Miller added 18, Julie
Miller 11, and Jennl Couch
chipped In with nine. Kerr! Balr
led N·Y with JO markers.
· The class AA 8th ranked
Marauderettes IAPI popped in
nine of 11 third quarter shots,
outscoring N·Y 22·12, and then
continued that pace with six of
eight shooting In the final eight
minutes . Mf!S was 15 of19 (79per
cent) during the secondd half.
For the game, Meigs made 22
of 52 for 42 per cent and ~lght of 15
foul shots for 53 per cent. They
had 24 rebounds with Jenny
Miller leading with se"en .
. Meigs is at home tonight
against VInton County.
· 'In the reserve game, Meigs
won 23-16. Dee Henderson and
Jodi Taylor paced the Little
MaraudPrettes with seven each
while Beth Ewing chipped in
lour, Leslie Carr an~ Nikki
Whitlatch two eac h, and Wend!
Kloes added one.
Box score:
. MEIGS (59) -Tammy Wright
6-7-19. Jenni Couch 4-1-9, Jenny
Miller 7-4-18. Julie Miller 4·3·11,

barrel Is again likely to be
lrrestlble to most members of
Congress, the Reagan administration has advanced a compromise that calls for spending
$12 billion over eight years.
But the politicians on Capitol
Hill have been joined by environ·
mental organlzallons that ought
to know better In mounting a
determined campaign to resur·
rect the original extravagant
spending scheme.

•.

F.dmonlon ...............:10 H
" 'lnnlpel( ..... . . ..... ~ 11
C'lliKilr)' ............. ... '!5 00
Lo!i.Angrles ..
......w ~ 1
VUnou\·e r .............. .. 14 27

TONY A SAVOY

lng in Central Europe, starting
with a Soviet bloc attack by 90
divisions. Simultaneously, North
Korea attacks South Korea.
necessltaflng a swift Amewrican
Infusion of reinforcements there.
· The 1984-88 Defense Guidance
written · a year earlier uses
roughly the same sequence of
events on whiCh to base U.S.
military capabilities, though It
Includes a warning that the •
scenario should not be regarded
as •:approved war plans." However, the Invasion • scenario Is
Intended to be·the basis on which
the armed services allocate their
resources.
Interestingly, the majn scena·
rlos set out In the 'Defense
Guidances do not Include an
escalation of superpower host Ill·
ties to the point of nuclear
exchange. But a contingency
plan does postulate the delivery
of 19 nuclear bombs by B-52
bombers against Soviet troops
Invading Iran. This "limited
strategic option" suggests that
somehow nuclear warfare could
be confined to Iran.

"SO, SWEEPING THINGS UNDER TI:IE RUG
AGAIN, EH?"

SIJ:lylht' Dl \'bdon

By JIM LUTI'RELL
UPI Sports Writer ·
Eddie Sutton and his Wildcats
have experienced some recent
hardships at their old Ken tucky
home.
Kentucky, which suffered Its
worst defeat ever at Rupp Arena
when it lost to Alabama by 14
points two weeks ago, Sunday did
thai one better. Louisiana State
routed the Wildcats 76·41 In a
Southeastern Conference game
at Rupp - their worst 1defeat at
home In 61 years.
" I've coached for 30 years and
this was the most embarrassing
game I've ever been a part of."
Sutton said. "l"ve never seen a
team struggle like I did today for
40 mlnu tes."
It was the biggest margin of
defeat at hom e for Kentucky
since the Wildcats lost to Clncln·

··Meigs girls make it
12 wins in row, 59-38 Eastern girls edge
Southern five 44-38

The dirt .on clean water _____Ro_be_rt_W:_a_lte_rs
WASHINGTON (NEM- Any
legislation approved by bOth
houses of Congress without a
single dissenting vole surely
ought to engender skepticism If
not suspicion.
That's certainly true In the
case of the 1986 amendments to
the Clean Water Act, promoted
by countless legislators as cru·
clal to environmental quality and
approved last autumn by a 408-0
vote In the House and a 96-0 vote
In the Senate.
The me.asure did Indeed Include dozens of provisions crucial to sustaining the cleanup of
the nation's lakes, rivers and
other public waterways. Moreover, It extends two landmark
environmental laws - the Fed·
eral Water Pollution Control Act
of 1977.
But $18 billion of the $20 billion
authorized by the bill was earmarked for construction of sew·
age trealment facilities that
traditionally and properly have
been the financial responsibility
o! state and local governments.
Shortly after Congress ad·
journed lor the year, the bill was
"pocket vetoed" by President
Reagan, who neither signed nor
directly ·vetoed It within 10 ·
business days after Congress
c;pncluded Its work fpr the year.
That was the only prudent,
responsible action the president
could have taken because In
recent years the sewage treat ment grant program has become
a wholly unji!Jtlfiable "pork
barrel" operation.
Now, however, both the House
and ~nate have . placed the
legislation atop the agenda for
the lOOth Congress. Jt almost
certainly will be reenacted by
margins so large that a second

C hl ca~. , ... ......... : .... \7 :t3 I "' 181111!1

WlnnlpeA:

ao

IT WA~ AI.L. A SIMPLE

lh•trolt ........ , .......... IM'lCI M H HO 156
Toronto ........... .. ...... IM t.l I tl IH IU
S1 . Loul~t ................ 16 2tl K It I~ J7.l

Qut'hr &lt;' 5, ChiC'aA:O 3
Mondtty's GIIJ111'!1
llurtlord at Montn•al, 7::15 p.m .

San Antonio Ill~. Utah 91
Phoenix 13'!, LA Clippers 1111

In the case of Sandlnlsta
Nicaragua, It has been recognl' .
tlon of and support for the
Palestine Llberatlol(
Organization.

W I. T Ptli . Gt" GA
Mlnne!'otll .... ..........20 21 s n m m

Wildcais suffer worst home
defeat in 61 years, 76 to 41

""

EDDIE

IS BACK IN

GOLDEN

CHILD
And•ll Hell'a
About to .,..k looM.

[•'" u [·&lt;O·
SAT/IUN/t&lt;lN 1·10 ·

Conff'rence vlrt ory.

EAST MEIGS - Trailing 10·8
in the first pe riod. the Easlern
Eaglettes of coach Pam Douthllt
came back to defeat the Southern
Tornadoettes 44·38 In girls' high
sc hool basketball action, aveng·

with 19. Renee Ward had 12. Tina
Voga l 8. Missy Kitchen 4, Chris·
tina Carroll 4. and Amy Brown 4.
Eastern travels to North Galli a
tonight, while So uthern hosts
Kyger Creek .

lng a loss In the firs I game of the
season t0 SOU th ern.
Eastern Is now 4·4 In the SVAC
and 4·8 overall, while Southern is

Box
score:
EASTE.
RN (44)- Ll&gt;!!a Kueker, 6-~11;
Arlene Ritchie, 3-1·1: Patty Dursl, 11-0-0:
Tonya Savoy, H9: Met Mankin, 1·0-1:
Jenny Cowdery. 1·7·9: Erica Ke88ln~er.
fl.fi.O . TOTM.'i 11-16-+t.
.
SOUTHERN 131&lt;) - Rachel ll&lt;lher,
Hl ; Tammy Thet,., 11-!·1: Karta Smith,
2-0·4
; Dl,ana
1 -~4 : .lcnnUer
Mnold,
tln.z: SlmpMon,
Anste Bollitck.
~2-12:

J0HN A WADE I MD In(,
0

0

0

VETERAN S MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, JIQSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAl ALLERGIST
"WE HAVE HEAR/N"17 A/0(1;}
11

(ALL (614) ""2 2104

also 4·4 and 4·9 overall.
The Eaglettes were led In
· "I "7 •
scoring by se nior sharp-shooter
•
Lesahad
Rucker
whorebounds.
netted 17Senior
points ...~Cry~st~ai~H~It~1,~3~+~7.~TQT~~AU!~I~5-~fl.~:ltl~.~...:.l~=======================~
and
eleven
Arlene Ritchie sank seven points
and led the team with 13
rebounds. while Tonya Savoy
and Jenny Cowdery each netted
9, Mel Mankin 2, and Erica
Kessinger 2.
Angle Bostick paced Southern
with 12 point s and 9 rebounds.
Rachel Reiber and Crystal Hill
had 7 eac h, Karla Smllh 4, Diana
Slmp.son 4, Tammy Theiss 2, and
Jennifer Arnold 2.
Eastern hit 14 of 50 field goals
for 28 percent and hit 16 of 30 at
the line, while SHS hit 15 of 55 and
8 of 16 at the line.
Eastern won the battle of the
boards 37-35 led by Ritchie 's 13.
Mankin and Cowdery added 4
eac h. In additi on to Bostick's
rebound s, Arnold and Hill had ll
each .
EHS had 14 turnovers. six
assists. and 15 personals while
Southern had 8 steals and 5
assists .
So uthern too k a 10·8 lead Into
the second period, but was
ouldls taanced 13·7 as Eastern
took a 21·17 lead al the half.
Eastern continued Its momen·
tum In the third period behind a
good team effort led by Ru cker ,
taking a 35.27-lead.
Southern Initiated a mild come·
back In th e final round, but fell
short at th e buzzer 44:38.
In 'the reserve match Amy Hill
led Southern to a 24·13 win over
the younger ,Eaglettes as she
poured In ten points. Leslee
Dudding had 4, while Tracy
Beegle, Jane Williams, Becky
Winebrenner, Barb Lisle, and
Trlcla Wolfe eac h had two.

Is 9-6 ove rall and 3-21 n the league.
"We've come a long way as the
season has progressed, " said
Ball Stat e coach AI Brown . " A
ga me like this on .the road really
hel ps. The crowd was really Into
Ihe game and It helped us to tx&gt;
playing a good team In a good
collt'ge basket ball atmosphere. "
In other Mid·America n ConferFor Eastern Jenny Cowdery
ence games Saturday. Bowling led with 8, Trls h Spencer had 4,
Green edged Kent State 85- 83, and Mel Manki n l.
Miami topped Wester n Michigan
In other varsity ac tion Trimble
n 70 and Ce nt ra l Michi gan edged
Eastern 49-46 despite a 21
whipped Toledo 76-59.
point effort from s~nlor point
In other Ohio collegiate gam es, guard Tonya Savoy.
Ci nci nnati edged Florida State
Eastern's Lesa Rucker added
69·67, Marquette topped Dayton 8, Trlsha Spencer 7. Patty Durst
64-57, Xavier beat St. Louis 77-69.
5, Mel Mankln.2. Kesslnger2, and
ARron outscored Au~tln Peay
,
Ritchie 1.
89-76, · Murray State nipped
Eastern hit just 18 percent
Youngstown State 61·58, Clevl'from the field, but was still Ued at
land State ripped Western 1111·
the hall 20·20 collecting 30
nols 97- 73 · and Wright State rebound~ on the night. Patty
crushed Man chester 93-53.
Durst led with 10 rebounds.
Also, Wittenberg defeated
Serena Evans paced Trimble
Baldwln·Wallace 81·66, Mouni with 16, Jennlf~r Lowery had 12,
Union nipped Heidelberg 77-75,
and Shelly Shifflet 8.
,
Martella edged Carnegll'-Mellon
In a· non;league bout · with
72-71, Wilmington beat Defiance Kyge r Creek ,Eastern dropped a
86-81, pyke defeated Michigan- 49-37 till , but still face a rematch
Dearborn 84· 78, Capital topped • next week In league play.
.
Musklngum 58·47, Otterbein
Tanya Savoy again led Eastern
edged OHio Northern 58-55, John
with 19 markers, Rucker had 11,
Carroll stopped Washington &amp; Mankin :i, Rltchle 3. and Durst 2.
1
Jefferson 45-40 and Allegheny
Jill Drummona paced Kyger
beat Denison 75-64.

(l0 4 ) 67 5 1244

We're always by your side.

Every hour of the day,
electiicity helps make life
so much better.
Electricity is the security
of a night light, the convenience of a microwave,
the ease of a power drill.
It's the twang of country music, the beat of
rock and roU, a late
night movie and th~
early moining news:
Our job is to make
sure electricity is
there each time
you flip the switch,
push a button, or
tum the dial.
1\venty-four hours a day, ~ry day of
year.
And, you can always call us for valuable free infonnation on choosing efficient electric heating and cooling systems,
electrical safety, and our equal payment plan.
Electricity .. . making sure you
can get the most ou1 of life.

Ohio Power

Part of An1erican Electric Power

�, ..

Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

r----

~

.,

Local Briefs:---"-

EMs units answer 10 calls
•..,\

Meigs County Emergency Medical services reports 10 calls
over the weekend: five on Saturday and live on Sunday.
On Saturday af 12:13 p.m., Middleport to North Second
Avenue for Hubert VanMeter to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Middleport all: 17 p.m. to Sycamore Street for James Reynolds
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Syracuse at 9:28 p.m. to
Seventh Street lor Cynthia Wolfe to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Pomeroy at 11:07 p.m. to While Oak Road for Terry
Wood to Veter~ns Memorial Hospital; Middleport Fire
Department atl1:57 p.m. to Third Avenue, Gallipolis, to assist
with a fire at the Willis Tire Co.
On Sunday at 2:·37 a.m., Racine Fire Department to a
structure fire at the Ralph Rose residence on County Road 28;
Bashan Fire Department a t 2:46 a.m. was called to assist:
Tuppers Plains at 9:42 a.m . . transported Paul Conkel to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 3:29 p.m. to the
Maples Apartments for Eunice Christy to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 7:13p.m. to South Second Avenue for
Don Lovett to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

Fire destroys 1-story house
A one-story frame house on County R()ad 28, about 3'1, rriUes
from Racine, was destroyed by fire very early Sunday morning.
Racine Fire Chief Hank Johnson, reports that Racine
volunteer firemen were called to the scene at2: 37 a.m. Johnson
said that the owner of the house, Ralph Rose, works away from
the area and the house had been empty for about two months.
Johnson said damages had not been estimated, "but there's
nothing left ." Firemen were on the scene until about 5:30a.m.
Origin of the fire is under Investigation.

Chapel schedules speaker
There will be a guest speaker, Mrs . Hart , of Point Pleasant, at
Holiness Chapel in Pomeroy, on Wednesday at 7:30p.m . Rev.
David Farrell, pastor, Invites the public to attend.

Trustees plan special meeting
Chester To~n s hlp Trustees will meet in special session Jan.
27. 7:30 p.m ., at Chester townhall. -Regular meet ings of the
trustees will be held the second Tuesday of each month at
· townhall.

Club slates F~iday dance
'
The senior citizens dance club is sponsoring a dance this
Friday, from 8 to 11 p.m ., at the senior citizens center on
Mulberry Height s in Pomeroy. Music will be provided by True
Country and Larry Hubbard. Admission $1.50. Members are
asked to bring refr es hments for the snack bar. Everyone
welcome.

Firemen respond to brush fire
The Pomeroy Fire Department answered a call to the Rock
Springs Road at 2:15a. m. Monday to extinguish a brush fire.
Firemen were on the·scene unt113: 15 a.m. The fire was nea r the
Ohio Pallet Co .. it was reported.

Pomeroy police ticket driver
Two vehicles were damaged and one driver cited at the result
of an accident on Martin Street in Pomeroy at 12:45 p.m.
Sunday.
. Pomeroy Pollee sa id that a car driven by Rita Stobart,
Pomeroy, headed south on Martin. and a truck driven by Rick
Shaffer, Middleport, headed south, collided on the street. There
were moderate damages to the Stobart vehicle and light
damages to the Shaffer truck. Shaffer was cited to mayor's
court on charges of expired plates and failure to have financial
responsibility, police reported.
Pollee also reported that a Jeep owned by Brenda Murray was
stolen sometime Saturday morning from where It was parked
on Mulberry Avenue. The yehlcle was recovered by the sheriff's
department apparently having beel'f abandoned Sunday on the
Forest Run Road, pollee stated.

Union leaders

Ohio weather
South Centr.al Ohio
Tonight , cloudy and colder
with a low In the mid 20s. Wes t
winds 10 to 15 mph. Chance of
snow 20 percent. Tuesday, cloudy
with a high in the mid 30s.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of snow with highs in
the 20s Wednesday and ranging
from the mid 20s to middle 30s
Thursday and Friday . The low
will be in the teens Wednesday
and Thursday and from the
upper teens to mid 20s Friday.

Chester Council32:l, Daughters
of America, will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesaay night at the hall.
The charter will be draped in
memory' · of Gay Gaul and· ·
members are -asked to wear
white.
'

Veterans Memorial
.Saturday Admissions -James
Reynold.s, Middleport; CBrook
seeker, Chester.
Saturday Discharges - Mary
Roush, Jennifer Michael.
Sunday Admissions - Ernest
· Wood, f&gt;omeroy; Charles Nease,
Middleport; Paul Conkel ,
TUppers Plains; Eunice Christy,
Pomeroy; Donald Lovett, Mid·
dleport; Darl e ne Hicks,
Pomeroy.
SundaY Discharges - None.

Talks broke off July 29 when
the union rejected an offer that
included a reduction in employ·
ment costs of $3.27 an hour,
Including a $1.50 cut in the $12.28

I

The union said USX's labor
cos'ts per ton of steel .were the
industry's lowest.
The last strike against the
nation's No. 1 steelmaker w.as in'
1959 and lasted 116 days. ·

Hospital news

Discharges Jan. 17 - James
HOLZER MEDICAL CENTER
Discharges Jan. 16 - Eunie ·Aldridge, Erica Camp, Patricia
Brinker, Ju st in Burris, Helen Davis, Paul Ervin, Tara FitchpaBush, Teresa Canada. Robert tr!ck, Sandra Garey, Vera Hafer,
Clark, Lawrence Craig, Marga- Juanita Jeffers, Dewey Keels,
rat Downard, Cody Holling· Russell Leach, George Lee,
shead, Sharon Jackson, Mrs. Gusta Mannon, Mrs. Kenneth
Robert Kormanik and son, Mrs. Martin and daughter, Keith
Christopher Lewis and daughter, Mash, Leslie Mcpaniel, Joyce
Joyce Payne, Nancy Plantz, Ray Nibert, Dorothy North. Ryan
Redman, Kimberly Skidmore, Pelletier, Phlllip Saunders.
Discharges Jan. IS - Nathan ,
Virginia Tucker, Patty Williams ,
Sandra Wright, William Wyant. Grimm, Jamie Holland, Wilmetta Leifheit, Sarah Mcwllli·
Birth - Mr. and Mrs. Gary ams, AI Lee Morris, Ros alee
Walker.
McGuire, daughter, Bidwel
, l.

Fire guts Gallia tire plant

Sheriff investigates
8 weekend break-ins
Several break ing and enter·
ings occurred over the weekend
in Meigs County, one 'in the
Racine area, five in th e Five
Points area, and three In Tuppers
Plains.
Deputy Ruth Frank of ·the
Meigs Count y Sheriff's Department , reports that the sheriff' s
department was notified at 6
a.m. Monday, of break ings and
enterings at three Tuppers
Plains' businesses, .. Lodwick' s
Grocery, Cline's Gas Station, and
a body shop.
At 10 a.m., Herman Henry of
the Bureau of Criminal Invest!·
gation, was taking fingerprints
at the three locations, Dep~ly
F:ra nk said.
On Saturday evening, three
houses. and two mobile homes in
the Five Points area were broken .

QUESTION: l n11IKttd to pay rnl istole t1111 on my
h... lor two yoors. This ytlr l rtolized m1 house
could be sold'for back·tun and I pold all of the tms
d... C.n t claim atllhreeyeors' oftms poid aun ite·

Area deaths

ta~

mized deduction on my

Klrl A. Kebl11, Jr. E.A.
"Enrolled to Proctiee Before

return for lhis year?

· ANSW.ER: Yes. For 1 cosh bosisllipar,r.llxeure dedoctibte onty in the Y•!r in which t f'/ ore pald, It·
prdloss of when they were due. If tho amount of rnl
estatellxoslor tho threo )tars- plus other itemized
deductions - excnds your 1110 broctet amount, it

Hubert VanMeter ·

Hartford, W.Va ., died Saturday
Hubert (Humpy ) VanMeter, in Pleasant Valley Hospital.
Born Oct. 27, 1907, in Hartford,
60, of Pearl Street in Middleport ,
died Saturday at Veterans Mem- he was the son of the late Thomas
D. and Myrtle Bumgarner Harris
orial Hospital.
Sr
.
He was born May 10, 1926. The
was preceded in deat h by a
He
last surviving member of his
slster,
Ca rr ie Harris, in 1984.
Immediate family, he was a
•
construction worker and served
in World War II.
He was a retired painter from
He is survived by close frie nds, th e W.Q. Waters Co., Charleston,
Jan and Toodles Durst, with W.Va.
Surviving are lhree sisters,
and the prize will be awarded in whom he made his home; Whitey
20 annual installments, after Walburn, of Middleport. with Thelma Duncan, Hartford. Marwhom he .worked; and Bill Durst, garet! a Duncan, New Cumber·
taxes are withheld.
land, W.Va ., and Agnes Harris,
Numbers drawn were 1, 10, 17, of Middleport .
Services will be 11 a.m . Wed· Hend ersonvllle, N.C .; a special
35. 37 and 40. The jackpot was
crea ted through sa les of nesday at Rawlings.coats· , fr iend, Jack Johnson, Mason ,
Blower Funeral Home, with W.Va.;· and several nieces and
$3,284,227.
The 324 tickets with fiv e Pastor Fred Penhorwood offi: nephews.
Services will be at 1 p.m.
numbers are each worth $760. elating. Burial will be in River·
The 13,593 tickets with four view Cemetery. Friends may Tuesday at Foglesong Funeral
call at the funeral home on Home, Mason, with the Rev.
numbers are each worth $49.
Doyle Payne officiating. Burial
. - - - - - - - - - - - - - , Tuesday from 2-4 and 7·9 p-.-ih.
will be In Graham Cemetery.
Thomas D. Harris Jr.
Friends may call at the funeral
Thomas D. Ha"rrls ,Jr., 79, home from 7·9 p.m. today.
The Daily Sentinel

D of A to meet

The union said its members
would keep working during contract negotiations, but USX refused to reopen the plants.

hourly wage.
The company said tts wage and
benefit costs were among the
highest In the industry at $25.20
an hour and needed the conces·
slons to remain competitive.
~·-

(Continued !rom-Page 1)
Bush said this fire was more
serious
than . the 1983 blaze
Avenue, while Middleport' s
pumpers sprayed water from the because of the location. the way
fo rmer Jim Mink car lot on the buildings were constructed;
Second Avenue. Gai!ipolis unit s the openings between the firefought the fire from Third and walls and because material in-'
side burned.
Grape.
Co-owner Russ Willis, whose
Also helping at the scene was
one volunteer from the Rio apartment In the building was
Grande Volunteer Fire Depart· destroyed, sald some of the·
ment and three from the Guyan equipment' inside had been.
Township volunteer department, moved to the firm' s new warehouse in the former Scotten··
Bush said.
Bush estimated that more than Dillon Tobacco building at Firsf
three million gallons of water Avenue and Spruce StreeL Fame
into, according to Deputy Frank.
ily, friends and bystanders•
She reported Ihat the department was used to fight the fire.
helped
move equipment and·
has a suspect In these cases. but. Pressure from the James A.
other belongings out of the tire·
at 10 a.m. Monday, the suspect Northup Water Treatment Plant
plant before the fire spread.
was
boosted
to
meet
the
demand.
had not been taken Into custody.
"Fortunately, we have the
he
added.
And early Friday evening, a
other
building," WI ills said. "I
Crowd and traffic control was
breaking and entering occurred
guess
we'll
start over there. "
handled by city police and the
at a house in ihe Racine area.
The building, the former Gills
A suspect In the Ra cine incl· Gallia County Sheriff's Depart:
Grocery,
had housed Willis
The
Galiia
EMS
sent
two
men!.
dent had not yet been taken Into
Tire's
retreading
plant since the
sq
uads
to
the
scene.
custody at 10 a. m. Monday.
mid·1970s.
Willis
Tire
has oper·
AI its most intense moment,
Deputy Frank said tha t Sheriff
.
a
ted
In
Gallipolis
since
·April
Howard Frank did not want the the fire, which took three hours to
homeowner 's names , nor lists of bring under control, sent flames 1941.
Bush extended his thanks to the
the stolen items, released to the nearly 50 feet into the sky.
other
fire departments for their
"Flames
and
burning
debris
public.
and to Bob Evans Steak
help,
traveled
perhaps
50
feet
,"
Bush
And in other matters over the
House,
McDonald's, Holzer Med·
weekend, the sheriff's depart· said. "That brought concern
leal
Center
and the Galltpolis
ment recovered a stolen Jeep from the people on Third, be·
Saturday morning and a stolen ca u~e there were some heavy Emblem Club lor · providing ·
refreshments for the firemen.
automobile Saturday afternoon . flakes coming down."
The depar tment would release no
further details regarding' the
stolen vehicles.

One Lotto winner selected
CLEVELAND (UP!) - One
Ohio Lottery player co rrectly
named all six numbers draw n
Saturday to be eligible to collect
a $1,216,851 jackpot.
The ticket may be cashed in at
a!fY regional Ohio Lottery office

plants in · Pennsylvania, Ohio,
Texas, Minnesota. Utah, Illinois,
- Alabama, Michigan and Indiana.

will be lo your ben8fit to itemize.

ANOTHER SERVICE OF

II&amp;R BLOC~
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE

618 E. Main .

FREE

Ba~k ·BV·Maill
ftOfOIIT.OI
"''t liU~'I' ·
lfMAIUO •
111 1"'IJII IIIOSTiofll

.\DIY iNion of Mulllmf'dla. IQ, ..
Publ1shrd C'Vf'ry af!Prnoon . Monda.v
Frlrta~ . 111 Court St .. Po·
mrroy, Ohio, b.\' the Ohio Vallf'y Pub·
l!~hl n ~ Company /Mul!lm£'di a, Inc ..
Pom('roy, Ohi o 4~769. Ph. !t9'!·215H. Sf'·
('00d r las ~ po~ta~P paid a t Poml'roy .
Ohi o.
M!'mbC'r : Unltr d Pr(ls:o; l nt('rn ;ttlonal.

Inland Dally Pn•ss Assol'ia t lon a nd IlK'
Ohio Nrw ~ pap(lr Assorlat Jon. Nut lonal
AdvPrtlsl n ~ RC'prl'SC'nt ;11 lvr. Branham
N€'\A·spapC'r Sa l ~. 733 Third Avrnuc.
N~· York. NE'W York 10017.

POSTMASTF.:R: Sr-nd addrf'S.S r hanJ!N:
TO ThC' Dall,v Sf'ntln('). Ill Ccurt St. ,
Pomeroy. Ohio .0769.
SUBSCRIPTION Ri\TES
8)' Carrier or Moe or Route'
On&lt;' Wf'&lt;'k ............. ...................... $1.25
One Month ..... .. .... .............. , ....... $5.'15
OnP YPar ... .............................. $65.00
SINGLECOPV
PRICE
l}t~lly ....................... .. .......... 25 Cent~

Subscrl!Wra not df,Strlngto pay ttK&gt;car·
rler may remit 'l'fl advancr direct to
Thl' Dally Sentinel on a 3. 6 or J2 month
bas is. CrNIII will bt glvf'n carrier each
WPCk .

No subficrlpttons by mall permUted In
areas where home can iE'f' servl('(' Is
ava il able.

Mat18ubl&lt;rl!llloDt
lntlde Melp Co""IY

·

13 Wt&gt;cl&lt;s .. :.. ............ ................. $17.29

26 Wee~s ................. .... ... .......... $3l.06

!2 Weeks .................................. I6G.!6
OUIII&lt;Ie Melp Cooonl~
13 Wel'l&lt;s ......... .............. .. .'.. ...... SI8.20

26 Wecks ..................... ............ ,$3!.10

!2 Wecks ........... ...........,........... $67.00

BEGINNERS
APPALACHIAN
CLOGGING
CLASSES

WEDNESDAY,JAN.21
'

LOS .ANGELES (UP!) -Air
traffic controllers reacted angrily to news of a near in-flight
collision between an Air Cal
Boeing 737 and three A·7 Navy
fighter jets, blaming the incident
on chaos in the world's busiest
skies.
"It's constant traffic up
there," controller Steve Render·
son said Sunday. "We're on a
tightrope and th e rope's getting
thin."

-The pilot of the Air Cal plane
carrying 40 pa ssengers to San
Francisco told the Federal Aviation Administralion the near
miss occurred about 2: 15 p.m.
Friday, abo ut 20 miles wes t of
Los Angeles International Air·
port, an FAA spokes man said. .
Air Ca l spokesman Fred von
Husen said the jet was climbing
from the airport and had reached
12.300 feet )Vhen the pilot was
directed by regional air traffic
controllers in Palmdale to return
to 12, 000 feet.
As the pilot leveled off at the
lower altitude,. he spotted the
Navy jets about 1,000 feet above
him , proceeding across his flight
path, von Husen said.
Several controllers said Sun·
day that initial Information on
the 'near • miss points 'toward
controller error, but added 'that
the incident also shows systemic
problems with th e way planes
are directed over Los Angeles.
: ·"The Defense Department con·
•rollers at Point Mugu were
handling the Navy jets, which
\"ere being handed over to Los
1\ngeles control," said one con·
!roller, who asked not to be
tdentified . "They should have

PUBLIC NOTICE

We Pay T~e
Postage Both Ways!

:The Leading Creek Conllrvencyo District of Meigs
County is eccepting bids for
a JeaN of six yean. consist·

ing of office ·•p-ee. ohop
apace. "ohop otoregt, w 1 ,.,.
hj&gt;uto, port otoroge, l 'plpe
llotogo building otong with
the opproprlote ocroogo fO!'

PICK UP A SUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES
AT ANY OF OUR. THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS

.PEOPLES

7-8:30 P.M.

BANK
"The letter lank"
'

POMEROY CITY HALL
'

GIG POWELL, INSTRUCTOR
FOR INFORMATION CALL
992·6720 DAYS OR 992·2622
EVENINGS UNTIL 12 P.M.

Near-miss air incident
irks flight controllers

.

MEMBER F.D.I.C. ,..

Second Sat
MIIOII, W. V..

773-5514

2212 .llcltson AvtRue
Point Pllllllll, • . v..
675!1121

5th Stnet
New Haven, W. Ya.

882.2J35

t~e eforementioned build·

•

ingo. Sold bulktingo to moot
oN fodorol. ollto, ond loco!
building codot.
.
Booted bldt will be occoj,tld at thol01dtng Crook
Contorvoncv Olotrict office
tocotod ot 34481 Corn Hoi·
tow Rood, Rullond, Ohio,
bttwoenthehourtof8:30o.
m. end 4:00 p.m .. Mondll'/
through Frldov. All -lod
bldl muot be roc-.! tt tho
Laodlno Crooll Conurvoncv
Dittrlct office no toter then
noon Fobruorv 3, 1884. Ml'
ntmum opociflcotiona .:on·
Clfnlng thlt teeM moy be oo·
qulr..t ot tho IAodlng CrHit
Cl"'urvoncy Dlttrlct office
t-ttd at 34411 Com Hoi·
low Rood, Ruttond, Ohio,
-nthohou.rtof8:30t.
. I •

been stopped under the Air Cal
jet.
"They were aimed at each
other, and it was a mista ke," the
co ntroller said.
Conttoller Anthony Sklrllck
said, "These mistakes have been
increasing at an alarming rate.
There have been five er rors since
Jan. 1, a vast. increase over last
year."
Skirlick and other controllers
blamed the increase In near
misses on crowded skies, too few ·
co ntrollers , outdated eq uipment
and a splintered, confusing air
control system. ·
In the Los Angeles basin, near
collisions increased from 33 in
1981 to 94 in 1985, according to
FAA statistics.
"The s kies are extremely
chaotic," Skirlick sa id. "The
airspace Is so cOmplex that the
action is split ·second lor the
controllers."
Navy officials were not immediately available fo r comment on
Friday's near miss. The FAA
Investigation Is continuing.
The Orange County Register
reported Sunday that more than
140 planes were put in potentially
dangerous flight paths last year
over Southern California - the
world's most congested airspace
- by controllers who were not
paying proper attention or issued
wrong instructions.
Citing FAA documents, the
paper said that in one of the most
serious Incidents, a Boeing 737
descending to Los Angeles Inter·
national missed a Cessna by 58
feet because the controller forgot
the Cessna was holding for
takeoff on the same runway.

The Peck Shaffer and Williams
law firm donated $20,000 to the
party between July and Oc.tober
and three of the firm's partn ers
each donated $3,000 more.
Denni s J. Cone ilia, a
Prudential-Bache lobbyist, gave
several hundred dollars' worth of
computer time to the Ceiebrezze
campaign, records show.
The law firm Benesch Fried·
lander Co plan &amp; Aronoff of
Cleveland, whose partner James
M. Friedman was chosen as the
rail authority's bond lawyer for a
fee of ,up to $416,000, donated
$15,000 to the party between July
and September. Friedman made
a perso nal donation of $1,250 in
October.
Friedman , a longtime friend
and political fund-raiser for
Celebrezze, was chairman of
Cele bre zze's in a ugur a l
committee.
Prescott Ball &amp; Turben, a
Cleveland bond brokerage house,
made five contributions totaling
$33,000 between Jul y a nd
October .
The Prescott political action
committee donated 66 percent of
all the money ifs received in 1986
to the party .
Se~songood &amp; Mayer. a Clncln·
nati bond dealer, co ntri buted
$11 ,884 between July and
November .
McDonald &amp; Co. Securities of
Cleveland, the remaining bond
underwriter. made no direct
contributions, but its registered
lobbyist , Dennis J . Woljanowski,
cont ributed $5,00.0 to th e party in
October.

the 20 million vlolerit crimes It
surveyed - more than 9ll)lllion
rapes, robberies and assaults were committed by co mplete
strangers, but it noted thai figure
may be high.
''Individuals victimized by rei·
atives may be reluctant to
discuss the event, especially if
the offender. is present at the
rsuJ'Vey) Interview, for fear of
reprisal or out of shame or
embarrassment," · the report
said. Some victims of domestic
violence do not perceive the acts
as criminal, it added.
Most v'iolent crimes by
s tran gers, 70 percent , were com·
mUted against males; most
crimes hy relatives, 77 percent,
were ~gal nst females, the study
sa ld.
The bureau's survey, bas'ed on
Interviews across the country ,
found 75 P!'rcent of 1 million
robberies In 1984 were co mmit·
ted by strangers while only 21
percent were perpetrated by
friends and relatives.
But lor murder , FBI figureswhich count only crimes re·

Public Notice

ported to police- showed that 57
percent committed In 1984 were
by ·relatives and acquaintances
of the victim . Eighteen percent
were committed by strangers,
and the other 26 percent were
undetermined.
The crime survey In terv iewed
about 123.,000 people In about
58,000 households twice during
each of the three years to
estimate the number of crimes
nationwide, Including those not
reported to police.
The study found that less than
half of a ll violent crime was
reported to pollee. The most
commqn reason victims gave for
not calling the police was that
"the incident was not Important
enough ," II said.
For the entire period, about 2.6
million robberies, 4.1 million
simple assaults, ~ . 3 million ag·
gravated assaults and 245,300
rapes were committed by
strangers , the study said. Crimes
perpetrated by relatives, acquaintances and those known by
sight accounted lor another 10 ..1
million victimizations.

Public Notice

Public Notice

and 4:00 p.m. Monda! . P.O. Bo• 1387, Clovoland, NOTICE OF APPLICATION
through Frldly.
Ohio 44101 . Tho comment
Notice to hertbv given 11111
11119, 2e; (2}2, 3tc '
period will not end before the Formere Bonk ond Savlngo
Fobruoty 11, 1987 ond may Company, 21 1 w• Second
Public Notice
be oomtwhot longer. The St-. " -· Ohio. hit
Bo~rd'1 procedur•• for pro·
filed 1ft tppliclltion with the
' NOTICE OF APPLICATION coootng appllcotlont moy be Stata of Ohio, Dlviolon of
found It 12 C.F.. R. Port 282 Botnkt; Two Nationwide P1111,
FOR PURCHASE OF '
(oo rovietd, 49 Ftdorol Ro· Colurrtbuo, Ohla 43288·
BRANCH OFFICE
Notice to hereby Qlvon that glotor -&amp;803 tFobruorv 14, OM&amp;, ta apomo 1 bronch o1
Farmtf'l Bank 1nd 81vlnga 198411. Procedurn for pro· U.S. Hitlhwll'/ 7 end Stolt
Compony, Pornt•ov. Ohio. cooling prototttd oppllct· Roullt 481, T._ Plolno.
hOI tppilod to tho Fodorol tiona moy be found ol 12 C. Mligl Counly, Ohio through
Reaorvo Boord for pormlo· F.R. j 282.21(18841. To
lho ,...,_of on o111o1 cur·
tlontopurch-thoTu-e
copy of the tloord't rerttly .... .,., dottltllloootlon
Plolno bronoh of Bonk Ooo, procod. . . or If you l1lld byBoni&lt;Oni,Aihonl.,._
Athono, Notional Aoooclo· mort lntorm.llon lbout how • · ' dol•, 2 loulh Coun
tlon, Athena, Ohio. ond thor· to •bmtt your commenu on 11rwt AU... Ohio. Wrfttln
oby Hllbllth o brtnoh ol U. the JPS' lion, can18Ct Mr. cxw•••••ts from ll;twwtld
S. HighWIY 7 ond Stile Mortln E. AII&lt;IN. lho Com- port1ot 'Ill dlttg t1t1t .,._..
Route 1111. Tuppore Plolno. munlty Af!M Offloor Of tho w11 bl - * =OM·
MolgaCounty, Ohio. ThoFo· F - A - lljlnl&lt; of Ctov- t1on of 8onkt until
2
. . 1887.
.
'
dorot A_,. contldort o etond. tit (2111 171-2041
wll connumber of foetor• In tlecld111 12. t9 2tc
tno whether lo oppnwo tho lkllr your CDmliWitli- 11Pt
oppilcotlon lnoludino thoro- requoot for I public - . g '
co•d ·of performence of tho orformll twlng on the .....
-.flonl&lt;t In hotplng to rneot lo- Clition MtN\1 - &lt; IAtl br USf
~:.
the A - iri on I&gt;' beln
col ortdh - ··
the
.
.
ctet.
of
the
WiiWiwnt
You ore Invited to oubmh
.
'
commonttln writing on thlo f*lod.
oppllcotlon to tho ftdorol 11112,18, 21; (212· ..:.
•--'
A_... Bonk of C-ond.
m.

-·o

Tho,_, .._

.MAKE IT ARW...
WAll ADS. .. ·

ARMBY· .
'1001.

PHONE 992-2156
Or Wr itl Oa!il' Stntilltl Cllnil•td OtPl.
Ill Cou1t St. Pomerow. Ollio U76•

Business ervices _________
t---------r--------T;....;;;.;;;..,;..;;;;..;;,..;;,;;;._...,.

.,-----'":"---1....--------.
CJ t;Ot111111erized Hearing Air Selectioo
Z Swim Molds· lnlllrpreting Services

-iaJ5: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
::t:

-z

Licensed

Clini~;al

Audiologist'

WE ARE YOUR SALES
ANO SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
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We HIWJ A fill Tl•
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ASHLAND

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PH. 992-9949

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

19D MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

• Dutt

Alto Trusmlulon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
G·l1 :ttc'

A

PlUMBING &amp; HEATING
New lo&lt;ation:
1~8 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Carry Filtling Suppllet

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
. IUliNI!! PHONE

.

(~141 992· 6550
RESIDENCE PHONE
(~141 992·7154

YOUNG'S

-

Addon• and remodeling
Rooflna 1nd gutter ~ork
Con crete work
Plumbing and electrlcll
work

tFr.. Eatimatoo)

1178/ lln

WANTED:

OLD IAQIOS WAN1lD
Any lrand Non10... Bought
lofon 1940
Top money for somt modtls of
Zenith, Philco, Atwat1r hnl.

PH. 13041 182-2220

992·731~

Pomeroy, Ohio
'.
4·15·'86·1C
Real Estate General

GINGERBREAD
"OUSE
PRE· SCHOOL
(614) 992-7328

608

992·2259
POMEROY - Beaulilul view
of the Oh to River. this taste·
tully destgned home can be
youts with a little elforl. Two
story home features th ree
bedrooms, nice living room,
dtning room. lull basement
with a two car ga rage &amp; a
large Iron! sitting porch, I ~
baths a.- attic area. MAKE
OFFER. $23,900.00.
MIDDLEPORT - This older
home is close to stor es and
schools. 2·3 bedrooms, level
lot, carpeling,.otherleatures
include a ni ce front porch.
Must see to apprec iate.
$26,900.00 . .
POMEROY - l'h ~o;y lrame
home wrth new vinyl ~din&amp;
three bedrooms, some new
carpeting and Patio. Neatly remodeled and dCC()r~ed. The
upstaits would make an excellent bunkroom lor children.
$29,900.00.
RACINE - Own 2 acres of
land withgarden space, lruit
trees and elbow room. 2
story home with lour bed·
rooms in good condition.
Garage, and near schools.
$24,000.00.
POIIlEROr - One lloor pian.
Two bedroom home with
rural water, range and refri·
gertor and a bath. MAKE OF·
FER. $16,000.00.
lETART AREA - Approx l·
mately 2acre mini farm with
small barn. fencing to the
sheds, plus a 1978 modular
unH wHh 3 bedrooms, s~el ·
lite dish, 2 good garden
areas. Drilled water well.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr.
992-6191
Jtan Tru~~tll .. d49- 2660
Dollie Tumer ... ,.992·5692
Otflct........... ..... 992· 2259

PH.

992,.2772

l-19.'87-1 mo.

1· 2·'11· 1 mo.

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPJ.

Truck . auto, &amp;
heavy eq_uipment
repairs and welding .
(All makes &amp; models!

B!Jshan Building

!VERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756
t.l ·'II·J '"·

SALES &amp; SERVICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, 01110
Authoriud Jot.n Dnre,
New Holland, luoh Hog
Form Equipment
Dealer

•All Typos of

Ex:cavating
•Landscaping

•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

Far111 Eqllltllltllf
Parfl &amp; Se rvlce

Call: 742-2407

J.3.'86 lfc

1·16·'87·1 mo.

BISSELL
BUILDERS

RADIATOR

SER~ICE
We can repair and r~
core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks .

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prim"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Doy or Night
NO SUNDAY CAllS
4-16 : 86 ttn

PAT HILL FORD
992-2196

Middlaport, 'Ohio
1·13-tfc
' ___ _ _...;.,.,;.;:_;;;:.J

SHARPENING

SERVICE

MILLS ELECTRIC

Circular Saws
Saw Chain

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL
614-992-3023

Planer nives

Drill Bitt
Knives

GRAVELY

Middleport, Ohio

E. Main
POME~ov;o,

JAMES KEESEE

Chisels

V. C. YOUNG In
992· U15 or

"flEE ESTIMATES"

BOGGS

REASONABLE · REliABLE
8·20·'86 tfn

CARPENTER
SERVICE

•New Roof ing

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

Electronic Organs
Mobile seJVice

614-843-5248

Sunday thru Thursday
Friday &amp; Saturday
4 P.M. 'Tit 1:30 A.M.
PIZZAS, SUBS
PIZZA BREAD

•In sui ation
•Storm Doors
•Siorm Windows
•Rep I acement Windows

Roger Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TVs, Antennas
Satellite Soles
Installation
Service

PH. 992-2228
4 PM 'Tit 11 P.M.

VINYL &amp;
ALUMINUM SIDING

John 11. Bentz
Owner /Muhanic

Rt . 124, Pomeroy Ohio

New Homes Built
" Free Estimates"
PH. 949-280 I
or 949-2860
No Sunday Colis
1/ll(ttn

MAIN STREET
PIZZA

Fo&lt;tory Chok o ..
12 Gouge Shotgun• Onlft
10·8-t n

411/ tln

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

J&amp;L BLOWN
INSULAnON

Bob Barton, Owner
12·30·86·1 mo.

CHESTER~98S-3307

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

ow O~en
222 E. Main, Pomeroy

(614) 446·7619 or (614) 992·6601
417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis; Ohio 45631
8·13 «n

victims knew perpetrators

Public Notice

'

The Daily Sentinel Page-6

The Daily Sentinel ·

CLEVELAND (UP!i - Law $35,450 donated in 1986 to Gov. electric rail system from Cleve- i
firms and bond underwriters who Richard Celeste's re·electlon land to Cincinnati, is being !
contrlbutf!d near)y $125,000 to the committee by members of the
delayed because the U.S. Treas. '
Ohio Democratic Party were . lead underwriting firms
ury Department objected to the
chos.en to handle the Ohio High Prudential-Bache securities Inc: · Issue's structure.
Speed Rail Authority's proposed and Ehrltch·Bober &amp; Co.
The underwriters were chosen
$2 million bond Issue, campaign
An additional $5,000 was cpn- by the rail authority, Whose
finance records show.
tributed to Celeste by members members were appointed by
The contributions were made of the fall authority's recently
Celeste. Celebrezze selected the
during a five-month period be- appointed finan cial adviser, bond lawyers.
tween the time the rail authority Bear Stearns &amp; Co., the news·
:was form~d in June and the time paper reported.
The largest · contribu'tions
the authority and the attorney
By donating to the party came from two Cleveland firm s
. general's office ,picked the un- instead of the governor, the firms Involved In the bond sale.
derwriters and lawyers for the are not affected by the new ethics
George Forbes, Cleveland Cit.y
bond issue in November, the law provisions, which 'prohibit Council's Democratic president,
Cleveland Plain Dealer reported large campaign contributors along with his law partner
. Sunday.
from receiving no·bid contracts. Ricardo Team or, made fo ur
The party received 24 contribu·
The bond firms and law firms contributions In October totaling
lions totaling $124,234 from the were selected without competl· $33,000, according to campaign
three law .firms and their live bidding. Their fees are finance records. One mont.h
partners, and two of five underw· linked to the bond issue's size.
later, Celebrezze seleCted
riters and their lobbyists. ·
The bond Issue, which would
Forbes and Teamor as rail bond
That figure is in addition to Ihe finance construction of a 170·mph co-counsel.
·
Forbes and Tea mor, along
with Cincinnati lawyers John W.
Peck and John M. Anderson of
Peck Shaffer and Williams, are
to share a maximum of $666,666
In lees.

&lt;WASHINGT0N (UP!) ~V ic­
tims of more tha n half the 20
rtimton violent crimes committed in 19S2 through 1984 knew the
perpetrator, a Justice Depart·
rjlent agency reports.
In a study released Sunday, the
department's Bureau of Justice
Statistics found that victims'
friends and acq uaintances corn·
mltted 31 percent of the violent
crimes es timated for the threeyear period, another 8 percent
w'ere perpetrated by relatives,
and another 11 percent of offenders were known to victims by
sight.
Three percent of the relation·
ships we r e not clearly
established.
Robbery was the violent crime
most often committed by a
stranger, the bureau said in Its
National Crime Survey , while
homicide was the least likely in
that ca tego ry . Stranger · to·
stranger crimes were more
likely to Involve weapons, but
resuited in physical attacks and
Injury less frequently.
· T~e agency said 46. percent of

l l!SI'S' U~9illl

t h rnu~h

..

Records reveal .Dernocratic
hackers handled bond issue

~eport:

the Internal Revenue !)erYice."

1\\\\\

· Pomeroy .MiddleP,Ort. Ohiq

..,.

OK tentative USX pact

would. recommend un io n
members ratify the contract.
"We sought a competitive.
agree111ent, as the col'9pany
sought lila competitive agree·
men!," he said. "The modern
steelworker Is just as strong and
sincere and Interested In a good
labor contract as his grandfather
was."
Negotiators hammered out the
tentative pact early Saturday.
The contract includes wage
and benefit concessions of $2 per
hour and would eliminate 1,346
jobs, some through voluntary
early retirement plans. Pensions
WOI.\ld be Improved to encourage
retirements.
It also· restricts the company
from contracting out plant work
to non-union employees, a key
concession sought bY the union,
and provides an annual profit·
s har ing bonus · lor union
members, increases benefits for
surviving spouses, eliminates a
pension cap and calls lor plant
.modernizat ion.
USX spokesman Victor Curtis
said both sides won on their main
points.
"Our major requirement of
getting a competitive wage was
met ," he said. "In that sense,
we're pleased with the contract.
In their case, they're pleased
with the contracting· out and job
security language."
.
The ·record 170·day-old labor
dispute - termed a strike by
USX and a.lockout by th e unionbegan when the old contract
expired Aug. 1 and USX, formerly U.S . Steel Corp., closed

By SHElLA MULLAN
•:.:·
, PITTSBURGH (UPI) - Uni·
teq Steelwork.e rs union leaders
overwhelmingly approved a ten· ·
tatlve contract th at could end the
nation's longest steel work stoppage by February, voting to send
the proposal to members tod~y
for ratification.
The proposed four·year contract with USX Corp., the na·
lion's No . 1 steeimaker, was to be
mailed to members today. If
approved, some 22,000workers in
nine sta tes would be back on the
job in ear ly February.
Although the proposal includes
wage and benefit concessions
and eliminat es some jobs, it
comes with a strong recommen·
dation for ratification by the
union's executive board and local
presidents?
Votes will not be counted until
Jan. 3.1, union officials said: If
ratified, the agreement would go
into effect Feb. 1. six months
after the work stoppage began.
The tenta tive contract came as
pressure mounted on both sides
to reach an agreement this
month, when some of the idled
workers were to lose unemploy.
ment benefits and the company
was in danger of losing lucrative
second·quarter steel orders.
The proposal was unanimously
approved by 28 executive board
members Sunday, with two Can·
adian members absent. In an
e~rlier vote, 38 local presidents
a~oved the pact, four voted
" ' and one was absent.
p USW -negotiator Jim
McGeehan said union leadership

Mondey, January 19, 1987

Monday. January 19, 1981

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

'

OFFERS ENRICHING
LEARNING EXPERIENCES
FOR CHILDREN 3 TO 8 .
VEARS OF AGE

Opan Enrollment
Thru The Year
OPEN TUESDAY, .
WEDNESDAY &amp; THURSDAY
9 AM to 11 :30 AM and
12:30 PM to 3 PM
Call Administrator Mrs.
Shirin. J. Nuggud. M£d.
1-7-'87·1 mo.

11

Help Wanted

Growing
Radiology
Department
needs Full or
Part-time
Technologists.
American
Registry (ARRT)
required. Send
resume or call:
Karen Haines, RTR
Veterans Memorial
Hospital
115 East Memorial
·orive
Pomeroy, Oh. 45769

Ph. 614,992·2104
Ext. 237.

"An Equal Opportunity
Employer"
Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUC.IAAV
On Jonuorv e. 1987tn the
Mligo Counl'f Probolo
Court. Cooo No . 28392,
Geyonn Cloy ond Richard E.
Goul, Pott Office Box e.
Chottor, Oh. 48720. woo
oppoln1td co-flduclotlto of
th• oototo of Evelyn E. Gout
dociNtod, lolo of tho VIlla~
of Cheater, Molgo CountY·
Ohio.
.
R!&gt;bert E. Buct.,
Probo11 Judge
a..no K. Nnlllr011-, Clorl&lt;
11112,18,28. 3tc

I· IJ· 'IH ,...,

TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Ptlltfror. Ohio

PH.

-ANTIQUES

992-2975

BUY OR SELL

J.i5.'87-l mo.

RIVERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Main St.
Pomeroy
HOURS: Tuo.-Wod.. fri .
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sunday: 1 p.m.-7 p.m.
ly Chon&lt;t or Appointmont
RUSS MOOIE

(CUT OUT FOR FUTURE UUI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561
All Meku

992-2526

t-14·1 mo.

•W11hers •DIIhWtlhert

•Aanget
•Refrlgtrltort'
•Drvert •Freezers

PARTS end SERVICE
4-5·11C
...-~------.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT ·
. 10-l ·lfc

A11 nuu 111: t: tilt: nl s
3 Announcements
Rt t:lne Gun Shoot tpon to rld by
R• clnt Gun Club . Ewry Sundty,
Mglnnlng et 1:00 p.m. hctory
Choke. 12 uu•u• thotQunt .
New' Ar1 Cllttlt. Tutld•y tnd
Thund1y lo r ldultt 1nd S1tur·
d., for under age 11. Call
11 . .. g.g . lOtiO for mort
lnformltlon .
PreCJiout Mtmorlet Studl11 Spe·

cltllltsln portrelt1. Outlhy work
gutrtntted. C1\l 814 ·949· 3060
for tppointment. Autonabte
prlc...
Pitno le11o nt f or beglnner1. C1 ll
lor tppolntment 114 · 949 ·
3010 .
I wlll 'not be retPOntlbln tor 11ny
debts cont,.cttd by •nyon11
oth tr ll'ltn mynlt. Rnhtrt l

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES'

SIW'f'&amp;rt, Jr.

4

Giveaway

Automotl¥1 Repair

&amp; Senic• ·
IUNEUPl to rUNSMilSIONS

CALL 992-7403 Apt.
St. Rl. 33, Pomeroy, OH.

Ftmele poodle, miniature. N ot
gDod wllh children C111t 1514 ·

We'll Sell You A
Uaed Car or Fix
Your Old One
1-7-'81·1 mo.

Puppltt · Pl/1 Butell. only 2
ltfl . C1U tl14· 2415 ·i5009 .

441 · 1837.

2 l)tty rtmtle 0 111 10 good
hOme, I month• old Ctll
114 ·448 ·2118 .
- : - - - - : - - -- "987)
Ottman lhtphttd tnd Black
Ubtdor puppltt tO give twty , 7
wh. old. Ottptrlte tor homt.

c.tt 114.949·2930.

11987)
G&amp;MTV 114·992·
pu.... a•v.
_ _ __:__:___ t1917)
REPAIR ·

,1 mtlt 2 ftmate ml11td biNd
to
IWI';'. Call
74&amp; '

49US St. lt. 124
lodne, Ohio 45771

949-3011 Ius.

949-2606

Home

All Makes &amp;
Models
24 HR. SERVICE .
1· 11· 1 • .

Old ntwaplper• to gh,ttwty for

rtcycfing . Ct\1114· 7t12· 2012 .

llltv vo•t 10 monthl old.

304·937·2898 ,

8 Loat and Found

.

'•

LOIT: Black A whht. blueeyq,
=~~~utkay . C•U 114· 448 · • ·

•

�.

•'

Page-6The Ol!ily Sentinel
.

PomeroY-Middleport, Ohio

.

•

.

illlot~day; January 19. 1987

.Monday; January ~ 9, 1987

•

Poroerov-Middlepott.
... '• Ohio

The Daily Sentinel- P

'

6

LAFF-A-DAY

lost end Found

44

1 var old lord.- Collie, Auttrtl·
itn Hetlll'. IlK~ . and whhe
male. Alao 4 y.. r old Bltck
Labredore Retriever. Cell 814-

WI PlY c: ..h lor l.tt model tlltn'
used cart.

Jim Mink Chtv.~ Oidtlnc .
Bill Oene Johnaon

e14-448-3872

TOP CASH pakl for '83 model
and newltl' und ctrt. Smith
Buiclc.-Pontiac, 1911 Etttllfn

2282.

614- ~4&amp;-

Good llfgeMndttonerockt. Ctll
814-24&amp;-9480 tfter 8:30pm.

lot for mobile homt or will rent
private lot. Ctll 814-448-9601 .

"Joan, did you have a BABY
today?".

992·347e.

52 veer-old female aeeh male
corr.. pondence. Do• 679,
: New Haven. W1 Vt. 26265.

Ernpluyr!ll~ nl
Sermes

11

Financing available for all type&amp;
of butine~s . Lo•n• &amp; real-astate.
Competlti'lle ratea. Call 614·

2s5-1n2.

23

Professional
Services

a.

Piano
org1n lenons. Mary
Lucas. Call 614·448· 9787 or
614-448-4426.
.
St1r)tt Trae and Lawn Service.
' Hedges . &amp;hrubs, bu&amp;he&amp;
trimmed. landscaping, ttump
and leaf remo'llal. 304· 578·
2842 or 6711· 2010.

Help Wanted
HOME .ASSEM8lY

hcellent tptre time income;
electronic•. craftt, no expe,rience. Othert. information 604·
.641 ·0091 ext. 2987. 1

d"''·

•CAll NOWI

' Enttluaiaatic &amp; energetic penon
' with good communication &amp;kills.
:Poaition available to worlt for
.Southeutern Ohio' t lineat out ·
door recntation firm . No expe·
•rience need&amp;d . Will train. Stan
·immtdltlaty. Call between 10 &amp;
4 11 614· 288 · 2248, Wed. thru
,Sat . Ask for Sue.
1Netd a job1 Sell Avon part· lima
or full· time. For information Call

514-446-2188.

"Delivery-person with &amp;mall•uto.
'free to travel. 8200 a week plut
,e•penue . Call 1 -800 · 647-

·8177.

'

- - -- - - - - ; - - ·lcGovernmant jobt. •~6 . 040 .
159.230 yr. Now hiring. Call
805-887-6000 Ext. R-9806 lor
cunent federal list

'

119871

'Dental Hygenitt and dental
iulstant. Send typed written
· r11ume to 205 N. 2nd . Ave.
Middleport, Ohio. Good po&amp;ltlon
available for tha right person

- --

--:--'---:- 119871

Telephone talatpeople wanted
for evening work. Call614-992-

2031 .
..,-------119871
AIRUNES NOW HIRING . flight

Attendtnta, Agents, Mechanlct,
Cultom• Service. Salariet to
~ &amp;OK . Entry'ltvel potltfont. Call
808-887·1000 Ext . A-9805 far
current liltlngt.
-~-...:..--- 119671

Real Estate
.., .,-::-::::-::-::-:;;:-::,..-:;-::3 1 Homes for Sale

,

3 bdr., air, pool, garage. Nice.
Camm8fclal propeny, corner
Iota &amp; highway fron1ege. Uat
witfl u&amp; . We flave buyeu. A-One
Rul Estate· Broker. Call 304·

674·6104 or 304·674·6386.

Moult! for aale, A1 cc:m.illlon.
Commerical zona. 333 Third
Ave. Call 614-446-0737.
Small house-five mil.. from
Gallipolis . A/ C and carpet'1.000 down , t21 3 / month. '
· Call 814· 258· 1218 1fter 5.
3 BR- Centenary. Selling for
what i&amp; owed plut closing cosu.
AC, ganga. Call 814 ·446-

7023.

What a Bargain! 2 story house:
Rtm!)dtled, totllly rewired. In·
sulatad. brand niii'N hot water
he11ar. 2 or 3 BR 'a low he11ing
billa. very nice lot , garage with 2
outbuildinga . All for only

uo,ooo. Coli 614-246-9378

lftlf

5PM .

2 bdr. c:omplet• with washer II
dryer. New refNgerator &amp; new
couch . Bob . Young ' s treilor
court. Call 114·441-3899.
3 bedroom, 2 ttorv wood houta
with 1 car g•age and 'II
baumant. New Clfpet on firat
floor. Hemlock Grow area. Mutt
11U dut to trentftf' . 133,000. or
be&amp;t offer. Caiiii14-992-B104.
.,.,-~---- 119671

GOVERNMENT JOBS . 380 Grant, Middleport. e room.
816 .040· *59, 230 yr. Now Hlr· bath, garage. work •hap, good
lng. Coli 805·887·8000 Ext. location, ln&amp;lde reflnlthed. Call
R-9806 for currt&lt;nl lader•lll&amp;t .
614·992-2602.
- - - - -- - 119871 .
Haalth· home aide. Ouallflc:a·
tlonslnclude experlenpeln work·
lng with elderly and Of health
related field . Must hl'le reliable
tnn&amp;portation and willing to
work flexible hours, including
wttkendt. An Equal Opportun·
lty Employer . Reply by Jan. 23 .
1987 .t o P.O. Bo• 722. Pome-

roy , Ohio 45769.

CHRISTMAS BillS PiliNG UPI
The Army Nltlonal Guard may
have the toluUon . Monthly pay
chedc for pert time work. Join
now. 304· 676·3960 or 1· 800·

842·3619.

REPS NEEDED tor busin ...
accountt. Full·tlme 160.000·
•eo . ooa ; Part · time

f12 .000.00·t19 .000 00. no

telling, repeat butinMt, tel your
hou,.. Training provided. Call
1·612-938·6870, M-F. 8tm to
6"pm (Central St1ndard Timet.
HIRINGI Federal government
jobl in your area and over11aa.
i'nanv immediate opening&amp; with·
out welting list IH tnt. 11&amp;..8.000. Phone call refundable.

111021838·8896 .., 1203.

SoaP. lost thtir tudt? ptants
won't llslen? Or jutt plain bored?
Come loin the fun and earn O\lflr
•1.00 per hour. Call Jo 304871·12228 on Mon J1n 19.
&amp;PM to 8 ;30 PM . " Equ•l
Qpponunhy Employer" .
AVON . no servlci· chtrlje. open
territories. phone 304 -675 ·

1429.
12

I

Govarnment ttomn from 81 . (u
repair). DelinQuent 1111. propertv.
Repotleulona. Call 806·1878000. Ext. GH· 9805 for currant
repo list.

2 br, kitchen, bathroom, with
leundry room , living room &amp;
dining room. all elac. Appro•. 7
mil•• from Pt. Pl. on Rt. 62. 2
tractaappro,.. 1acrtmortori"s
overlooking Kanawha Ri'ller.
140,000. C1ll 304· 1175· 5440
betwHn 8:30 end 4 :30.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEl'S QUAliTY
MOBILE HOME SALES . 4 MI .

WEST, GAlliPOliS. AT 35.
PHONE 614·448· 7274. '
U.?O Fleetwood, 3 bdr. 2 full
betht, total tltc. Like new, price
negotl1ble. Call after 4 welkdav&amp;, •nytime week.,d&amp;. 814·

388-8833.

304-178·2812.

18 Wanted to Do
Odd jobt: plintlng, plUmbing,

1980 Uberty, 2 bedroom, atl·
up, can be movlld or left an
rented lot. 87450. C•ll 614-

992·7479.

' Ill ''Holly Ptrk" mobile hone,

1974 FrHdon 12x65, 3 bed·
room mobile home, ttove, ref,
n.-w w1tar he1ter 1nd g•
turn1ce 84,500.00. 304-882·

28Be.

Will do bebyalttlng in my home.
Call &amp;14·•·U· 930fl .
FIREWOOD! Locutt , Olk ,
chll'f'Y· 835 . per pick-up load

doll¥e&lt;od . BIH Slock 814-992 2211.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBliSH·
lNG CO. rtoommendt thlt you
do butinllt with people you
know. tnd NOT to tend montY
through tht mall until you havt
lnvestlgaled the oflering.

2 bedroom, furnlahtd . Em plowd peraon&amp; only . New
Heven. t160. per month. Call

304-882·2488.

2 bedroom apt&amp; .• New Haven.
Also commerciel tpace suiteble
for aerobict. tanning. etaha. Call
304 -882· 36B1 or 614 -992 ·

7481 .

46

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Room&amp; and
llghl house keeping room&amp; , Park
Centrel Hotel. Call 614·446·

0766.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

Roofi; for rent , day. week.
month. Galli a Hotel. C1ll 81 4·
448·9716. Rent a&amp; low as 8120
month.

614·446·4778.

2 bdr. luliy furnlaflttdadults only,
utiL ptid. Call &amp;14·«8· 4110 .
Mobile Home in Stella Court.

Coli 814-448-0758.

2 bdr . mobile homa loc:ated 2
milet from HMC in Evergreen .
Cable TV hookup, children ac·

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, Nonh of POmeroy .
' Rental trailers. Cell 61•· 992·

7479 .

Space for Rent: Trailer apecat .
locust Rd. Rt. 1. Point Plenant .

304-e76- 1076.

Merc hand ise

nlthtd. w"har-dryer. *2215 mo.
Locat'ed In Centenary •rea. Call

~ 184~ 4~i~~~ h;,me for rent. Cell

2

SWAIN
AUCTION 5o FURNITURE .82

Olive St., Gallipolis. New&amp; used
Wood-collstovH, 6 pc wood lR
2 BR unfurn. 1 OdO with suite
1399, bunk bed• 8199,
u.p1ndo , lh mila put HMC-Rt.
rt&lt;llinert
new • uttd bedroom
315. Raf. &amp; Oap. required . Clll ' lui1n. wringer
washers , II
814· 446· 4389 Of 304· 8715· thon. New livingraom tuites
9780.
t199· 8699 . tempt . C111 614·
'
2 bdr. Adults only. No pets. 322 446·3159.
Third. Call 114·448-3748 or
County Appliance. Inc . Good
e14-268-1903. ..
uted appliancas 1nd TV aett.
Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home, Open BAM to IPM. Man thru
Sat. 614-448· 1699, 627 3rd.
Routh lilne. On niee spot in
At~t . Galllpolit, OH .

614·387·7148.

2 bedroom. W1ter and heat
included. 1200. par month. Call

814·742·2170.

2 btdroom mobile home, Mid·
dlepon , 0 . Reference whh ••
curity deposit. 304-1!182· 3287

or 304·773 - ~024 .

bedroom mobile hornet, 304·

178·3000.

2 ~room trail•. couPI•. 1
tmall child . Locutt Rd . At. 1. Pt.
P1tal8nt. 304-176· 1071 .
Mobile home. 2 ~rooms,
located Ashton Upton Road.
tno.oo month plus utllitie~ ,

304·176·4088.

Two t.droom mobile hOrila nea
G'oodytlf Plant, natural gat

I

F1rm, 18Yt 1cre mora Of I••·
Blldtn Ro.ct. 8 room
hOUia, phone 304· 4158· 1823 .
leon

34

Business
Bulldir:~gs

98 acr11 on black top road 1 mile
from Aaclnt. 2 producing 111•
wtlla, wat• and •ectrlc ev•ll•
ble. Call b.mv..n lam·2pm onty

814-949-28n.

.

Athton building lou. mobile
homM Ptfmlttld. Ctyde Bowen,

,Jr. 304·578·2338.

L..rge round bales of hay for aale.
810.00 each Ph . 814 · 446·

1062.

large round baiH fqr ule Or
trHe. Call614-387· 7640.

e14·448·3224.
.
.79 F"'ohouf Von . 46 ft. 13.8 .56 Building Supplies

·-

Building Metlf!lrial&amp; ·
Bloctc, brick, tewar pipM, win·
· dowa, ltnttls, ate. Claude Win·
ten, Rio Grande. 0 . CeH 614·

Tree &amp; t tump removal. atone,
lilldirt, firewood. pickup-t46.
dump -*96 . Heap \IOuchersl
DOn't Landtcapea. 614· 448-

Concrete blocks all 1ize1 yard or
delivery. Maton und. Glillipolls
Block Co., 123% Pine St ..
Gallipolit, Ohio Call 814·448·

Mhced hardwood slatlt. $12. per
bundle. Containing appt"ox. 1 1h
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomerov. Ohio. Cell 614-992·

2783.

Pole Buildings by Quality
Builder&amp;. Work..,ops. carports.
animal &amp;hahers, garegu. Free
estimates. Phone 614 · 384 ·

6461.
: : - - - - - - - - -le-

For ule : Firewood . Heap
voucher• accepted. Dan TaylOr.
614· 742 · 2426 or 814-742 ·

6762.

1979 Oldt Cull•••· 8a&amp;t reaso·
nabla offer. 614-985-3606 or
614-986-3610 and IHVe nama
1nd number . Full maple bed,
t40.

APARTMENTS , mobile homM.
hou.... ftt. pt . .ant and Gllllpo·

Ill. 814·448·1221 '

Ont bldroom furnlhaed apt In
Point Pl. . .nt, adults onty, no

-

phorlt 304-171-131• .

Hty forule. Call614· 379-2607
Hay for sale. Square b1ln.
•1.60 Plf bale. Call 614·245·
~496 .

4063.

7PM.

Coll614·986·3681 .

AKC Reg. German Shephtt"d
pupt . 8 wks. old. Call814·448·
0373.

Hay for Ale, mixed . t1 .00 &amp;
t1 . 2~

Dried •helled corn. 84.SO ptf'
cwt. Ground t&amp;.OO per cwt.
Ground with mol au" 85.76 per

71

1

Firewood •'26.00 picllup load
nol delivered, wood ·apliltef
Antique cedar clo&amp;el 82&amp;0.;
Electric SpHd OuNn elodtM
dryer e100.; Mavt1g wringer
washer 176. 304-773· 6303 .
New HO drill preu. 'ti chuck Yl
hp with vice 1150. Homellte
IU~r XL 12 chain IIW praetl·
cally new with ,,..,a chain 8225 .
Cobra cordlen phone. Excel·
tent. 150. 304-882· 3376.

.

1910 Audi 5000, 4 dr., 6 1pd..
dluel, PS/ PB, AM / FM / Cau .•
eunroot. A/ C, axe. cond .•
t4~00 .

One female beegle. 18 months·
old. no.oo. 304-875-4154.

f drill

Colle14·448·0333.

1984 Dodo• AriM. auto .• air,
Caeh Price '2999. John'• Auto
SetH, Bulaville Ad., Galllpolit,
Ohio .

SIIP!IIIi~S

II LIV i~ S III t:k

1973 Volkswagen rebuilt mol or.
new banery, two new tlrn, 4
1pd., lutO. Call 11 '·4ol6· 4482.

61 Farm Equipment

SNAFUTM by Bruce Beattie

2010 John Deere die~el tractorptows. di1c t3960. New Idea
Dyne Bounce mower 8495. Late
model 224T John Dttre baltt
f1291i . Hay wagon t300. Call

t780. Coli 814-379-2880.

1980 P.tYmouth Volare. new
paint, AT. PS / P8 , new battery,
htt Htn In ont family 81nce
new. 80,000 mll11. Call 114-

814-288-e622.

448·9859 or 448-81 13.

CROSS &amp; SONS

U.S. 311 W111t, Jaclcton, Ohio.

19B3 Oldt Cutlau Supreme,
txc. cond. , crui&amp;a, tilt, AM / FM·
/ c~ta . Call 814-388·9085 Of

614·28e-8481 .

Mauey Ferguaon. New Holand.
Buth Hog Sala &amp; Sarvlea. Over
40 used trtctort to choo11 from
• complete line of new • used
equipment, l.arg• •election in

448·1211 .

Auto., PW, PL. 29.000oml. New
T·A Radials, very tat. Call
304-671· 41584 or 304-67!~~01

t16~ .

27' x36 ' x9 'EAVE whh sliding
d,oor • atNice door 14, 288.00

oft or 7PM .

Coli 814·246·9894.

814·31e·9943.

••cted.

'Iron Horn Buildings Ph.814·

71 Ford Pinto. New tirn.
nc•llent runnlrtg cond. Lookt
good.
Can bueen at 831
Jacklon Ettate~. Apt. 88· 1 .
Jadlson Pika. Gallipolis, OH.

332·9746.

••oo.

1978-240 nmberjack tklnn.-..

Coli 814 · 388·90~2 or 388·
9312.

1874 Impala. Aunt good. Call
114·"1·1822.

1980 l0ft11 810. 4•4. 84 HP,
Independent PTO. C..ll 114·
241-11117.

1880 CheYettt. Body. e,.eelltnt
coftdhian. 2 door, auto. t1350.

Ariens Rail' Tine Tiller. 8 hp.
Used 3 houra. 81150. cau

Coli 114-148-2801 .

814-886·4180.
------119871

.1174 Dodge Sptelli Edhlon. 4

dool'l, low mHa, good condi-

Farm III·H tractor 3 pl . hhch,
alto corn. 814-843-1118!.

tion . t1750. Coli IU-9928131 .
- - - - ---119871

Whltt Farm Tracton, lett Price
In Arat, Sldlt'e Equipment Co,
Htndtr.an, W. Va. 304·176·

or 4-tl-4522. See us for 111 your

lplr~

.

11 203 Rock

livMtocioondhorM1rolltrnoodl. , 1980 lunbird Hatchback 4 cyl .•
Al110, In ltackllteltruck bed• for

am·fm CIIMtte. 80,000 miles.

pickups and ton trucks, P &amp; H

304-875·4818.

bump ....

81 Chevette, goad cand. 4 door,
I ·C, IUtomMIC 81500. 304·

62 Wentejl to Buy

678-2111 or 878·2338.

1814 Dodgo Dlplomoto SE. oM

powar, cl~~n, 23,000 mil ... cat!

Now buylfti llhell com Of • •
com . c;an farl1t11tquotM. Rtvar

304-87S·4221.

Chy Form Supply. 814-441·
2911.

1874 VW luolo. A-1 cond.
32.000 mMOI. 304-878-5812.
1113 Ford FalrtMe 100, 304-

Liveatock

1171 c.._, ......... 4 door.
uoo. Coli 304· 773-1717.

171-t7181ftor 1:30.

DurnpMint-8-.
2 - . · 01000. CIH 114' H2·
5101

1 ......

11rrod
41S2.bull. . 17 · - · 304·.,1·

handicapped , • trie s to
make hi s dream to fly come
true. (60 min .)

@ Hogan's Heroes
8:05 Ill NBA Basketball : AI·
lanta Hawks. at D01roi1

following his
partner 's
death, a police officer's
spirit is reformed by a female c op·· who is invisible to
everyone el se . In Stereo.

8ASEMtNT

WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lif.. ime guaran..
1H. Locll refereneH furni1htd .
Free ntlmatn. Call collect
1· 514-237· 0ol88, d-v or night .
Roger• Bltement
Wattfproofing.

•

during a protest den1onstra·
tion.

@ Collfllle Basketball: In·
diana State a1 DePaul i2
hrs.l
9:00 D CIJ Gil Crime Story In
Ch icago during 1he aa rly
1960' s. Lt Mike Torello

-

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
HERE COMES YOUR coe: ..
.IJH -OH .' AND HERE COMES

'NOW.' I DDN 'TKNOWCI-HP5
COULD' RUN THAT F;'\ST!

YEAH , THATOIT'LL
NgVERO.TCH HIM /

br~iles

~(lFARF

80WWOW

WOWARFARF

SCARE '{f:

WORSE THAN HIS
BITEY WITE

29 Campmg
·

his I001h binhday.

HE~

WINDOW ...

~-

DON'T KNOW IF

W~IT&amp;

¢?
&gt;~'!)

....dl..

A new book by James Jacoby and hi•
father, the late Oswald Jacoby. is now
available at bookstores. It is "Jacoby
on Card Games, " published by Phartlll
Books.

20 llull&lt;•r
!;e rvi ng

21 "First" l:uly Yeoterday'o Answer
22 Marino
rnt•lh:&amp;ll

.,r

24 Chant'f' 30 "A - Is

38 lla.-1A!riu-

Burn ~

25 Mu slim

nam1•

loKi!:!t'S

win•

32 Shot• l.ier

26 ~kin

33 Tc rn,,h ·'~ ex 39 Proc; n ~aiA~d

)lrohll•m 34 Starr h

2R (;,•rman

41 Dutch

source

11risnn
t•amp

r ommunt:·

3S Mr!n only 42 Michael,
to Kirk
37 llru~an , c.~ .

•

&amp;However.

cey in¥ e stigal e the vandal·
ism in a toy manufacturer's
apartment , the trail leads
them to an ootraged citizen
protesting lhe unlawful dis·
posal of toxic waste&amp;. (60

DAILVCRYPTOQUMES- Here'• !Mwlowmll:

for short

AXVOLBAAXR

IILONGFELLOW
One leiter stands for another . In this sample A is used
for' the three L's, X for the two O's. et.c. Single letters.
apoatrophes, the length and fonr\ltlnn ol the word., are all
hints. Each day the code lettenaredJfferent.

caYPTOQuOTEs

1· 19
YE C

QR

ow

EDilEI C

llRNDU

LW

c ww o wu

QYW

QYEQ

LNTD U TKF

OR CQ

J E ·V Q
E

QYW

R Z

I

I.VT U FW
C QEVQ

LWKPYDWI
VRI.WVQ
Yett.erday'l Crypt.oqoote: NOT TO RE CIIVf:TIJIJS IS
MONEY IN YOUR PURSE ; NOT TO IJE AVIIl Tll llUY 18

ernTuJ

on One
Ill Jwllwroont1

TQ

UTZZTPNDQ

c.....,

Dl]) ABC Nows Nlghttlne
. ® (jJ Magnum. P .l.
(JlJ This Old HouM
e llli limon • limon 170
min .) (RJ.
12:00 I]) Bums lo Allen

INCOME. - CICERO

ee CD(J) Rawhldo
T-. of thw Una•·
12:30

David Lanarrnen Tonighl' e
guasti are '80 Mlnutu '

~

producer Oon Hewitt and
an tmal pt vchlc Beatnce Ly-

Explottr

deckar i60 min .) 'IRJ In
Stereo.

1 2 :0111]) Nadonel Qqtlflhlc

(!)One

•

the ugly seven of diamonds is no longer in the South hand to block the suit.

5 Seuny of!

I]) WKRP In Cincinnati

OR R'i&amp; :.

•

maining diamonds are winners, and

garb

Stereo.
I]) SportaCtntar

1!-IEV'RE WWO!.E M!EAT,

Opening lead: • Q

2 Palm leaf
3 MnthPr (Fr.)
4 llumorhtl
Buchwald

Lawrence and actress Mary

. NO, I

Pass
Pass
Pass

I Count
IJnu:ulo's

Armauong . i60 min .)iR)In

I JUST SAW A LADV
.THROW SOME BREAD
CRl!MBS Ol!T OF

2t
3•
Pass

® D ll2l Cagney &amp; Locey

e

Upholatery

Pass
Pass
Pass

DOWN

e

PEANUTS

Easl

('Ompilcr

Newo
()) Hardcntto and McCor·
mlek
I]) America's Cup Chll-.
Ionge Downunder: The
Final Four Live.
(l) M'A'B'H
(jJ) News-ch
t t :30
CIJ (jJ) Bast of
Tonlgh!'s guot11 are Sltve

Coal and llm•tone delivlf"V,

Norlb

461.ack

~'Biit~'!:~how
e m INN N4ws
@ Newo
11 :oo e rnma m®• IWGJJ

Houae coal. Dtlivlfad 1 ton and
up. Jim. Unlw, 304-875· 1 24?
or 676·7387.

Well

mulhl!rry

10:jo

2119.

Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: South

37 Weep
40 Unlnvlu•d
Muesl (sl.)
43 Exp• c·tanl
44 ~ illy one
4~ The"""""'

10:20 (I) MOVIE: 'The Groot

WaUaraon'&amp; Water Hauling.
rNsonabla ratea, lmmedleta
2 ,000 osllon delivery, cist•nl,
pools. well. etc. call 30•· &amp;78"·

item

30 EniN
31 ~hrint•
33 llurrn
361ndian

min .)

742-2328.

A &amp; M Cuttom Couchll and
Atuph~ttery, lt. Fit. 7 . Crown

rock

(CCI Whon Cagney and La-

Umntonaendtlabwoodhaulad.
AI Tromm, Rutland. Cell 814·

87

28 Fi ssile

more', Mictlael Learned and
Aidan Quinn . ~ 2 hrs ., 5 min.)

Jtma&amp; Boys Wet• Service. Also

i&gt;(IUTII
+A 9 4 2
• 72
t AK9 7
+AKB

1'9 An4•sllwtk

mate!

downfall in this Art~ur Miller
play s1arrlng James Whit·

General Hauling

• J 10 8

.Q 52

7 Uild ll'•wk
I Aljjoid nrm
nlm
5·1-ea.•h
8 ~'i&lt;' ld
10 On guard
9 .launly
12 Task
II lli•·tatur
13 "WN hlankN " 14 Nui sanre
15 - witnc~~ 18 Ft• lludn~ .
16 Vinta).tt•
4'.J.t.
auto

deceptions bring about tlis

IS

NONE, RUFE

+10 7 6 53
.K 54
tJ
• J 10 6 3

~·,(

17 "I r ould -a llorsr."
18 &lt;ilu•·
20 f'us.y
wacht!r
23 llefrn sl
2711old il ,

co mpany owned by Pop's
bro1her is hit with a strike .
t 0:00 (I) American Playhouse:
All My SonoiCCI A fathers

446·4477

304-871·3190.

•

and Chuck. take oppOsing
side s when the construction

HIS

EAST

ACROSS

more. Micheel Learned and
Aida n Quinn . i2 hrs .l
9 :30 ® D ll2l Cavanaugha Pop

DON'T LET
Ol' 6ULLET

WEST
+K6
.QJ 1098

by THOMAS JOSEPH

All My Sons(CCI A fa1her s

wow

.A63
tQ6542
+9 7 4

Declarer knew all about the holdup
play. so he didn't take lhe first trick
with dummy 's ace of hearts. He held
off again on the second lead or the suit.
When finally he had to win the heart
ace, he discarded his losing club. Next
came his ace and king of diamonds.
Unfortunately that suit did not split 2·
2. Declarer then played a third dia mqnd to the queen and was left with
the diamond seven. a card higher than
any of dummy's small diamonds . AI·
ter taking that trick, he had no way
back to dummy to take the fifth dia ·
mond . All he could do was to lead a
low spade and hope that the spade king
would be with East. who had no more
hearts. No such luck. West grabbed the '
spade ki'18 and took two more heart
tricks to set the contract.
It was likely that diamonds would
be 3·1, a division that would block the
run of the diamond suit for d ~ larer.
South missed seeing the play thai
would eliminate the problem . Instead
of lhrowing a club loser away on lhe
third heart lead, which was won with
dummy's ace, he should have let go the
seven of diamonds. Now he can play
A-K and win the third diamond with
dummy 's . queen . The aummy 's re·

dec eption s bnng about h1s
downfall in this Anhur Miller
play starring James Whit-

[3DWWOW .

+QJ

By James Jaroby

(!C,,,.

1·11·11

NORTH

opportunity

IIll American Ployhoute:

BARNEY

B6

A missed

eryone is lnvi ted to the Van·
derke llen mansion whe n
Stephanie's Un cle Ned cele·

898·3802

Cor. Faunh and Pine
Gallipolis, 'Ohio
Phone 814· 446-3888 or 614·

II

UNSCRAMBLE fORI
ANSWER
•

James Jacoby

®l . ru1 Newhart (CCI Ev·

Rotary Of cable tool drilling.
Most Willi compiM.d •~eday . ' ..
Pump aaln and service. 304·

CAATEA 'S PlUMBING
AND HEATING

by fil li ng in the mis1ing words
yo u develop fr om step No. 3 be low.

BRIDGE

Newo~our

THE SWEETLEYS 'CAT.'

AINGLES'S SERVICE , expe·
rlenced carpenter, ~ectridan,
m1ton, ptlnter, roollng {includ·
ing ho1 ttr application) 304·
87!5-2088 01" 171-7147.

Plumbing
&amp; 'Heating

Complelo the chuck le quolod

Never Ole, Th1y Just Yield To MATURITY.

work . i2 hrs.)iA)In Storeo.
()) 700 Club
(!) College Basketball :
Iowa at Purdue 12 hrs .l
live,
Cll ll (I) MOVIE: 'Out on a
Limb' (CCI Part 2 of 2.
Cll
MacNoii -Lahror

Fetty Tree Trimming, a1ump
removal. Call 304-8715-1331 .

B2

.

YESTEIDAY'S SCIAM·LETS ANSWEIS

fac es pressure from mobster Rav Luca 's se ries of rob·
beries · and from his own
wife Julie. who must deal
with his dangerous police

15. 1187.

RON ' S T•levialon Siuvlca .
Houtt callt on RCA. Qu1zer.
GE. Specilling in Zenith. Call
304-576· 23911 or 814 -441·

.

ll.unbly - liliot - Gamut - Merely - MA'IUR1l'Y
Sign posted behind desk of banking sxeculll/8: Old Bankers

(CC) Jack strains his friend ship w ilh Sam when he ask s
her for help after he is jailed

448·0214.

All typtl ctrpentlf &amp; conc:rt1t '
work; lnt«ICK, exterior, rema·
dellng, painting, roofing. frM
e~timatn . Call 614·1441·617•.

t)

®l Ill ll2l My Sister Sam

EEK &amp; MEEK

SWEEPER and eewlng machine ·
repair. PlrtL tnd tupplill. Ptck
up end ditlivery. Davit Vacuum
Cleaner. one half mile ifp'
a.ore• CrHk Rd . Call 61..4· .

Trucks for Sale • City, Oh. 11 .. 28f. 1470. Evo.
814·448·3438. Open dtllv 11o
4:30. 811. 1:30 to 1:30. Old l
1111 Cittvrol01.... oond. Ntw new Upha•t•ad.
motor. c.n 114-211·1141 or
11 .. 2111-BI74.
72

U.ootodc. Ltopord AP11floou
goldlng whho whll brry -.10
d.,.t profutionalln"*"' good
trail horae. 1310.00 linn, SCM-

ldul10 only. pilont 304·171·
2402.

ing on Air ICCJ Danny, who
is

Home
Improvements

good oifoo, blltory ond motor.

hU1eh•. Cllll14-811·4110.

COWl,

pression .

Pistons (2 hrs ., 15 min.)

871-2341.

Rtbbib for HI•. Doea, lucks.
Alto ,31 wll bo frton. Zeeland Mh•. Caltfomlan l•t·
ln1, Brok• Color Rex. Alao

After she finally completes
her college studies . Allie
falls into a post -graduate de·

8:30 D CIJ @Amazing Stories
ICCJ After he faiiS1o piocos

1171 AMC

St .• Pom«oy, Ohio. 8100. In
good condition.

Uveatodl - •

'

Omega flberglau. mountMI on
Ni111n, 1984 Model, 5 SDMCI.
dull whet4a. 23 MPG in / overdrive. 19900. Call 514-992-

T &amp; LWater dtllvtry •nvtime Ph.
814 · 318 · 8732 ume dav
delivery.
~

Rt. 180 North of Holz• Hotp.

Golllpolll. Dhk&gt;, 114·441·SIB2

meda Strain'

lW Ill &lt;lZI Ka10 lo Allle(CCI

IIll Wonderworks: Walk·

poolo fllltd . Coll814· 2~1 · 1141
or 814·448· 1175 or 81. :446~ ·
7911 .
.

814-742-3142.

One · bedroom fumihHd 1pt,

i

ALLEY OOP

1912 Cutlltt Calalt . One
own•r. ucellent condition .
Auto, loaded. New 1h'ta. C..U

7421 .
MOTOR CAR BROKERS. 51.

63

the middle of an international drug t:artel. (60 min.}
1!11 (1) MOVIE: 'The Andro·

'

2484.

Muotong-S8 GT. 302 H.O..

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SA 36 W. Gollpollo.
Ohio. Coli 814·448·1777. ovt.

oprlng

actress land MacGyver in

For uia 4 turbin wheel&amp; far 8

ltruction Ph. 614· 388· 8301.:
Free eatlmttM 10% off during,
the holidJIVI, oHer txpirH Jan.

82 Pont:ltc Photnll, LO aerltt . .
Loaded whh accnsorltt. AC.
Pl . PI, Mu.. sell . U600. Call

Sun. 12:00·8:00 PM. 304·273·
6886.

Russian poet and an aspiring

_•n...:9_c_•_""...:•_·_3o_..
_67-'~'---14_3_9_._ .
7

11n ChiWy pickup. Fair cond.

ford lid. Coil 814-446-1852.

. UTIUTY BlDG. SPECIAl:

Surplut·ArMv ·Rtntti·Ciothing,
!Lined Denim Jackett, Carhart
Clothing 10 per cant dltcount)
Dacron Insulated Coverelle
$25.00. Sam Som•vitle'a East·
Raventwood Junction lndependlnce Road. At. 21 , Fri, Sit,

INC .

&amp;:

1181 Plymouth Toritmo, 1973

Wanted to 8uy, u&amp;ed home
computer, game port pttferable,
304-882·2638 .
For llle or Trade. l mOdal
Gravely tractor lor repair Of parts
8200.00 or trede on 8N Ford
plow and dltc. 304·675· 1386
after 5 :00.

~XPlOSIVfg

FTM Gen•al Contrectlng 1 lyrs
e•perlenct.1 Roofing 6 Con-·

weeks for delivery . 110. each.

304-676·7e38. Allow. 2 1o 4

@ Jefferson•
7:35 Ill Honevmoooora
8:00 II CIJ@ A.L.F . In S1ereo.
()) Fa1her Murphv
(J) DIll MacGyver ICC I A.

AC£

Autos for Sale

8. 814·288·4121 .

I]) Judge

Ill © @ Jeopardy

GM 360' Turbo trantmiaaiOn
Ford FMX. Call 814·446-0966.,
Rebuilding is available.

19B1 Z21. aif, tih, crulte. delay.
new VRBO Good y.ar t!res, new
paint, bra &amp; lot:t more. Call 1ft•

Angora Hlm&amp;ter. Golden Hamster, eages, acceltorilll and food.
Alto Albino gerbil and c-ae. 820
for all. 30-1·773-9115.

U&amp;ltd R-65 ditch witch trencher
and John Deere backhoe. 8 14·

0

®l Wheel of Fortune

Auto Parts
&amp; Acce1sories

B1

2673.

c.u

FRANK AND ERNEST

•

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

.

fort

Srnvrces

For Sale or Trtde, ragiatered
Blue Tick tem~e and Plott
female, trede for yaung regis·
tered male Redbone, running
and truing by ill self. 304· BB2·

Tony't Gun Repaln, hot reblu•
lng . Open 9:00AM to ? :00 PM .
304·676·4631 .

PoniQ Only'.

76

AKC ntgi&amp;tered Chow-Chow
puppitJ, very reasonable pricu,
call after 5 :30. 304·176-1798.

6966.

Ill &lt;lZI (H) Wheel of Fortune
@ Barney Miller
7:05 Ill Sanford and Son
7:30 II C1J Ill Now Newlywed

3921.

Coli 814·992·2807.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

· Chait freezer t126 . k&amp;roltne
heater U415 , BR dre11er &amp;
minor •2a. light brown tterto
•4&amp;. bok &amp;prings for twin bed
t211, lawn mower 840. Call

304·676·2580.

.

&amp; LETTERS
PRINT NUMBERED
IN SQUARES

·

Game
1!11 (1) Too Close for Com·

Winter Special 14 foot fishinil
boat, 60 HP Evanruda. trolling
motor. Treiler very reasonable.'

.

. Newahour

bole. 304·895·3460.

AKC Cocker Spaniel puppiee.
Blonde, Golden luH, Red with
white parti. Femalet. Noeh&amp;dct. cwt. 304-468-1031 .

Two A78,.13 &amp;now tires. 820 .
Alto 4 drawer filing cHi net with
key lock. 136. C11i 814-992-

0

IO

LACITI

.

''Critical Condition' '.

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Clean mlxtd fl&amp;¥. n~Ner wet .
f1 .26 a bale. Call 614·448·
Grasa .hey. t1 .00 bale. Min. of
100b•ln. Ca1161•· 251· 6S18.

Pets for Sale

814-949-2218.

814·112-8173!

Good timothy mhtad hay, 900 lb.
round bal.-. ttored in barns. Call
814· 246-9480 after 6:30PM.

Dragonwynd Cettffl Kennel.
CFA Himalavan. Pertian and
Siam... kitten•. AKC Chow Grour1d •• corn.' t76. ton; U8 .
pupplea. New Himmiu &amp; Per· hill ton. Your sacka. Aleo hay
sian1. Ctll 814-446· 3B44 after and Jtraw. Long 8onom, Ohio .

Firewood for 11111. t36 . per loed;
5 loads, t1150. Delivered and
nacked, Call 614·949· 2501
after 5 :00p.m.

dri'llt monitor Jaystidt. moult
tound &amp; speech card. Modern
with de&amp;k with lote of sof!W. .r,
8 1.000.00 Firm . 304 ·182·
2210 aftar 4 p .m. 'lnt•nt.d

114·912· nl7. EOH.
1- -- - -- - 119171

76

Mi,.td hey for 1111. Squarebalet.
Call114·898· 1243.

25 inch Quasar Motorola con·
aole color TV. Good condition.
t76. Call 614·992-7075 or
614·992·2413 after 5:00pm.

Pickens Uslld Furnltur1. Good
Quality used furniture. OJ~tn 9 to
8 or call for appointment .
304;1175-8483 or 876·1460.

Graoiou• living. 1 and 2 bed·
room apertrntntt at VIllage
Manor al'td RIY•slcN Apar1•
m•nts In Middleport. From
821&amp;. lndudlno utilltiM. Call

Hay for 11le. Round beln, in
barn, never bHn wet. Call

=------119971

1976 JD 360·C Bulldozer. 6
way blade, winch and canopy.
Firm t7800. 1973 C-66 Chevy
live Tandum . t3600. Call 61469B·6631 .

Two bedroom trail•. newly
de eo rtte d , un turn ith ed,
1139.00monthplulutllltltt. !8
BurdaHe Addn, Point pteaunl,

"""&lt;"·Coli 814· 992·8839.

Ml~eed hiv lor salt. f1.60 b1la.

I

Starting a new year ir llkl
driving a new car. You keep
worrying about the (lrst dent
you're - to - .
..

"

"7=-T,.,6_,,-.,,-.,,.--,.--!

fll(l)M'A'S'H
II(() People'• Court
(J) Won.&gt;en's College Basketball: Marshall at Eaot
Tennessee Stlto i2 ~rs . )
®l Nowo
'
IIll
MacNefi-Lohror

0

Coll614·266·1427.

1.
.I. .I 1
.
.
6

10 catch Richard Pryor for
the making of his new film .

Motorcycles

1988 'flmahe Tri-Z 260, vary
good cond. Extrlt included. C..ll
614· .U8-9710 after 6PM . , , ,

2~92 .

56

74

·15 A U G G E

(J) Entertalhmerrt Tonight
ET goes behind-the-sc;:enes

Ford. \.1 178 F14;)0, • wh"l dri¥8.
low ~uge. bcellent, condi·
tion. 832110. 304· 458 -1031 .

614-245·61 17.

24~ · ~121 .

.

Uve.

1978 CJ·6 Jeep. 304·576·
2991.

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock;
ton. Oh. 614·286·6130.

1124. 6 raditls . Notecone,
Swing doors, smooth sidell\.
New floor. Cell614-379-2290.

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Pl11tic cistern attte apprO'Illd,
plaatic &amp;aptic 1ank&amp;, plattic
c:Jiverts, m"al culvertl. RON

Couch &amp; chair. recliner. coffee&amp;
end table&amp;, twin BR tuite, nice
refrig. IGibton). lamp&amp;. Call

Apple 2 E Computer with dltc

Room and board tor nnlor
citizen. TLC. 24 hour Clfe. CtM

36 lots &amp; Acreage

2 year old h*'ftr. approx . 800
lba. Call 814· 241·&amp;474

Callahan'• Used Tire Shop. Ovar
1.0001irea,aizll12. 13, 14, 16,
16. 16.6. 8 mlln out Rt. 218 .
Call614-256·11261.

Wa&amp;herl, dryers .. refrigerators,
ranges . Skegg&amp; Apptiencu .
Upper Rivlf' Rd. bllide Stone
Crett Motel. 614·446· 7398.

398.9088 or 446·121 1.

' •

-

17 Old1, good thape. Runs
good, drivn good. Secriflct,

living rOom .auita.
good cond. , t200 . Cell 814 ·

114·448·8173.

wheel drive, tack-out hubl. gOdd
cond. Cell 304·1182-3231.

e14-446-4462.

614·448·2026.

2 bedroom rtvtrvlt'Wtpartm•t.
Equipped kitchen, tra1h pickup.
Ideal tor 2 partlll to thara

IM7iopMIA,IN.

~~~;~~~;,~~~,~;==~~~~~~~
64 Misc. Merchandise 63
livestock
78 Ford F-110 pickup tn&lt;ck. ·4.

1981 Chevv tfan ., tuto. with
overdrive. 8100 .. Woodburnar.
with two lold&amp; of firewood. Call

hoot. 304·678-2103.

for Rent
32 urn 4 mH" outside of chy
limhs . Coay 7 room. 1 ttorv • - - -- - - - - - home. Popular Addlton tchool
1 bedroom apt . in Mlddlepon.
dlttrlct. Fl&amp;hing pond. bam •
f150. month plut utilltiet. Oeya
olllbulldlng. 304-52e.S033.
614 · 982 · 5145 or evening•

•

., ,

1977 CJ&amp; Joep. 6 cvl. 268 cv
eng. 3 1pd. Call weeknighJII

111 4-448· 3512 . Up front tr•ctora with warranty over 40 uaed
tractort. 1000 toolt.

e pc. wood

ii
.
e

t48150. Coil 81 ..448·204e or'

ter 6pm.

S.E. Ohio.

Mollohan Furniture. Rl. 7 Nonh.
Gallipolis. OH PH . 614· 448 ·
7444. Why pay mort? Chadt us
out tor low priett on furniture &amp;
applllncet. e piece wood living
room group, t399.

@ Facts of Life
8:05 Ill New Laavolt to Beaver
8:30· II CIJ GII 'NBC Newa
ffi
aCon1or
·
(J)
I]) ABC· Newa
Hogan'• Heroeo
Cll Doctor Who
® • rul CBS N.Wo
(jJ) RHdlng Rainbow
@ WKRP In Cincinnati
6:35 Ill Down to Eirth In S1ereo .
7:00 II CIJ PM Magazine
()) Herdcot11e and McCormick ·
ffi College Baoketball: S1.
Johns at Pittaburgh 12 hrs.)

UPTAIN EASY
"AND ;o W~ WOIJ THe

.l

Mu1ical Welking Eaater Bunny.
Plush bunny walks, stops. rings
hla bell, then start• wtlklng
again while playing E11ter Pa·
rade mu&amp;ic. 2 · C batlerin re·
quirtd, ..llmitad oHer. All ordan
mutt be received by Feb. 15,
1987. John Michaalt Co. P.O.
Bo• 14, 3100Parrl•h Ave. Pt. Pl.

Vtlley Furniture, new &amp; uaed.
Large .. ction of Qualirot furni·
ture . 1216 Eutern Ave ..
Galllpoli1.

. IIll Secret CilV

19B1 Plvmouth Voyaa• Yefl,"
EKcellent condhlon &amp; loadecr.

•"1

I

Il
~-~!

WOLCN

_1-+-1T-Is;:..,;1-"r;l,:-i

(J) 3-2-1, Con1a~ (CC) .

"'"'
SCAVENG-eR HUNT" ....

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

2

m

"
1971 FOfd. Cuttom..·t 50 plckup;l
.

.

PI 1 I I

Newa

~

t1600. 304·676-2574.

Iettau of the
. four scrombl«&lt; words b•
low to form four simple wordS.

. ()) Big Valley
ffi Mazda Spontl.ook
1!11 Jefferson•

doytimo. 446·2800'

B ft . bad. 390 V-8,.aut. trans.,
pt. am·fm rtdlo. With topper1

O Rearrange

'EVENING

'·

73

uoo.oo. 304-676-n71.

814-448-2390.

8:00 .. CIJ Ill II (J) [W. rul ®

'

4699.

51 Household Goods

1988 Ford F-210. 4&lt;4 pldwp.'
eYeningJ,

I

1437.

Ster'eo SANSUI, 120 W·Ch amp,
7 band·ch equalizer. auto , ..
verse ca&amp;t deck , linear trac:king
turntable, electronic turner, 2
tower tpeaken, matehing stand.
remote control. hlrdly used,.
phone 304·176-3690 or 878-

1/1 .9/87

448 -040~

Wall
lAMI

'

auto .. mo1or nNda ,.lr. F•i ~ !
Cond. •300. Calf .'1!114-241·1·
15077.
..
'.
Uke new. 3,200 mil•. 3/4ton,·1
410 V-8 engine. Inquire 814· •

Firewood lor sale. Hardwood,
large pick-up .load t35. Call
614-448 -9266 or 614·448·

9646.

.

1972 Chevy 3/ 4 iiir!. PS/ PI.

694·7842 or694·6806.

cepttd. Coll614·448-3697.

2 bdr., new 'C •pat, AC, fur·

Boot oHor. Coli e14-446-9346.

Television
Viewing

814-448-4712.

-,...---- - - (19871

At 110 Mulberry Aw .. Pomeroy.
Available Feb . 1tt. Ae•onable
rent , houtt need&amp; work. Call
614· 992· 5791 after 6:00.

2 bdr .. til utlliti .. ptid except
alec.. lurn . or unlurn., &amp;ac.
depo1Tt requlr.d . ConYIInlent
location. Ca11614-.U&amp;-815158 Of

PropaneLeu
hot than
watlf
tank. old.
40
gallon.
8 mos.

BORN LOSER

Trucks for Sale

1171 2 ton OMC Mptic lllnl(
ciNning truck wtttt 1.00 gellon
tank. hoNI, dump Met. Call·

e

par men

e ...,. Ph. 304-171-1104
Businen
Opportunity

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

-;:;;:::::;:=::;::=::;::==
j:..________.J.;;;;;;:;;:======~
"44 A t
t

Farms for Sale

Oftlcaaptct • &amp;tort tPICiin Pt.
pt ....nt, f200. 00 A· One Rt1l

21

Modern 3 bedroom home on 36
acrat near Dtx1er. Fenced for
horse1. barn . outbuildings.
t360. month to month. Call
614 -742 -2581 evenings or
614·742·2676 diV•·

304 - 273 · 58~~ .

tJIIperien*· Ref. Call 114· 245·

9148.

Coli e14·446·0390.

K Ill K Mobtle Hom•. 2 and 3

1982 Mln&amp;lon. Located on river
front In Middlepon. Has all
extru. Call 814· 992· 3348 •f1er
li :DO pm.

33

Furni&amp;hed apt. 919 Second.
Gallipollt. '150. Utilitia pd.
Single male. thtre bath. 446·
4416 after 7pm.

3 bdr . ranch , Rodn8'f' VIllage II, Oelu•e downtown apartment·
newly redecorated 2 bdr. apt.
t285 mo. plu&amp; deposit . Referen·
cea required. Call 814-448- . with full Insulation. complete
kitchen, wether-dryer, air cond.
0009.
tundeck. Call 814· 446·4383·
day• . 61 4 · 446-01 39 evenings
· Nice 3 BR tlouse. 1350 plus
utllitet &amp; sec. depoait. Call &amp; weakend1
814· 448 · 9280 after 6 II
Upstairs apartment. 2 BR . pertly
weekend•.
furn 'ad. Adult&amp; only. Oep. Re·
Furniahed house. Located 735· R quirad. Utilities peld. Call 814·
446· 1467 efter 4PM .
Ttlird Ave . Glllipoli&amp;. t136
month . t75 depotrt. Call 448·
1 8R, fumished , utilities paid, 6
3870 or 448· 1340.
mo . 11111, 860 dap ,. no pett, no
3 BA . ranch on 1 acre lot. children. t190 per month. Call
e14-448-3e67.
Att1ched geralje. AC. 1 mile out
16.0 . t350 a month . Cell 614·
2 room, turni1hed. upsteir&amp; apt.
446-2350.
dean , no pets. Adult &amp;. Utilities
fumithed. Ref. &amp; dep. required.
Small. 2 DR houte. fenced in
cal1614· 446-1619.
ftont yard, t200 permo. Utilities
not Included . Call 614-968·
Modern 1 bedroom apenment.
4160.

3 badroom. In Chnhlre. Cell

14.d O .• 3 bedroom•. 2 bathl,

Want a ele1n house, oHice
building. church? H1ve Refer ence. Night or Day call Janie.

Oelu,.e 2 BA houaa, 842 Firtt
Avanut. Gallipolis. off street
perking. no pett, reftfence&amp;,
deposh. Cell 814-2&amp;1-1529.

Choohlro. 304·773·5828.

304·676·7298.
Situations
Wanted

72

Furnished II. un;furnithed apts .. · Uaed Furniture: wood table &amp; 2
8160.00 ·and up, references Ph. benches. bed•. drnter. wood
wardrobe. 3 miles out 8ulavllle
304- 6715- 77~B A-1 Reel Estate.
Rd. Open 9AM to 6PM , Mon.
Up&amp;telrt unfumithed apt, car- thru Sat. 814 ·448-0322 .
peted, utilities paid, no children,
no pett call 448· 1637.
' 54 Misc. Merchandise

BUYING RAW FURS I Ginseng, 1~~~~;;;~;;.~~=l"-:;;o;;:~:::::~::::::::~t Apartment for Rent , 821 Sa·
Yellow Root. beef and dHf· 21
Business
. cond A'llenue. 2 BR, E•tra Nice,
hides. Also stlllng 1rapping
O
.
35 Lots &amp; Acreage
equipped kitchen, C/ A
•uppliet. Wheat Lltu , Nitalitn
pportuntty
'8260/ mo. C..ll 1114· 448· 2168.
Houri 1 :00· 9 :00. C\oted Wed.
Level rattricted buUding loll.
'
i
. George8Uckley614·884·4761 . Good money I Weel!.tyl Proc~ll·
Electric. rural weter. Cell 614 .
Completely lurn. 2 BR apan·
ing mailf lnformttlon7 Ruth
2 46 . 6467 ,
men1, large living room. 468
Buying junk cars . Call 614-992· Mlf· addreued. &amp;tamped enve·
Second . AduiU. 8226 per
6848
month. Sec. Oep. &amp; Raf. Cell
_
_after
__5 :00pm.
_.:_ _ 11987) lope. Terry Lee, ·Box 131 -A.
614· 448-2238, 446· 25B1 .
Eureka Star At. Galllpollt, OH
Old books. pamphlets. diarys. 46e31 .
Furnished apenment, ne~et door
let1ers, Iteam boat logt. etc. Pre 1-;:;~:;:;===::::::;===:.
to library. One profestionaladuh
1900's . No tt.11t. Boll 114 1·2
Atheno. Ohk&gt; 4~701 . 614-&amp;BJ·
2 Money to loan
only. Perking. C..ll 614·44641 Houses for Rent
8916, evenings.
0338.

~tor

' KIT'N' CARLYLE®byLarryWrlght

3844

Buying dallv gold, silver coint,
rings, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coint, l•ro• cuneney. Top pric:et. Ed . Burk_
. ,. S.rber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. &amp;t•-

Reduce ute and latt w;th
GoBue Tablets and E-Vtp "waTer plllt" Frutfl Pharmacy .

51 Household Goods

1 BedroOm bulc rant t171.00 Sof11 end chtlrt priced from
pluli eltctrle. Al1o required a U95 to t996. T1biM 160 and
1200.00 teet.~rlty dePosit. CON·- up to $126. Hide-a-btdl 8390
TACT: Jacklon Ettatn Dep1. Ph to 1696. Aeclinan 8221 to
446 -3997 Equ•l Hou&amp;lng 1376. Lampl t28 tO •126 .
Dinettes 1109 and up to f496 .
Opportunity.
Wood table w-8 chairs f28!i to
Furnished apt. •ns.oo water 1795, Detk 1100 up to 83715 .
pd. 2 bedroom . 1311h Fourth Hutch.. 8•oo and up. Bunk
bed•" complete w· m•ttresus.
Ave. Ph: 448·. . 16 after ?pm .
$296 ahd up to 1396. Baby b.d1
2 Bedroom apt . nice carpeting, 1110&amp; •175 . Mattr11s11orbox
water . paid. w.. her &amp; dryar springt full or" twin t63 , finn
hook-up, stove, refrig. turnlthed · 173, end 183.·Queen aet&amp;t225,
IIVSIIHie Jan 1. 1987 Ph. King 1360. 4 dr1wer ~hast tel.
· 'DrautrJ t89. Gun r.abinm 8,
814-448-7028.
10, 12gun. o.. orele&lt;:trlcrange
2 to 3 bedroom apt Conv•ient · $375. Beby mattreaa.. 8311 II
location in town. AH ulllltlll paid 846. Bed lramu 120, 830 II
132&amp;.00mo ., referancaa II dep· King frame *60. Good aeltctin
otit requir6d. Wiaemtn Rtal · of bedroom suite~. metal c•
blnet&amp;, haedb;oard&amp; no and up
Est,1ta Agency Ph. 614·44~ to
886.

898·1144.

Ave., Gallipolit. Call

Apartment
for Rent

-7

e (I) 13» La10 Nlgh1 with

�••"
•
•

'

.-

By The Bend

·The Daily Sentinel :
Monday. Jan~ary 19, 1987.

'

Chester Garden Cluo holds meet :
~

Betty Dean and J anet Koblentz
reported on plans of Region 11 to
host the convention of the .Ohio
Association of Gardens Clubs to
be held In July lnColum)JUsatthe
recent meeting of ·the Chester
Garden Club.
Various Ideas for table decora·
tloqs and table coverings were
disuc.ssed during the meeting
held at the home of Mrs. Ruth
Erwin with Mrs. Virginia Chaq·
well as co-hostess. A thank you
note was read from Janet Bolin,
OAGC .president , for the club' s
contribution to the gift presented
to her when she was installed as
president.
Kathryn · Mora reported that
Clarice Aile~ was the sunshine
recipient for November. Betty
Dean wil! be sunshine chairman
for January.
For. roll call members gave
their thoughts on the "the most
COOKIES FOR-''SALE - Girl Scout cookies
anyone? The sale Is on and scouts will be knocking
on doors through Feb. 1taklng orders for cook!Los
to be delivered In March. Among those hitting the
streets In the sale are, left to right, Crystal
Harmon, ,Junior Syracuse Troop 1204, Stacey

Price, Pomeroy Brownie Troop i27I, Stephanie
Price, Pomeroy Junior Troop 1276, and Wend!
Harmon, Syracuse Junior Troop 1204. Funds
raised through the cookie sale go toward camping
trips and equipment and other scouting
programs.

·Gir1 Scouts selling cookies in Meigs
It' s Gi rl Scout cooki e time
again and the sale Is on In Meigs
County . ·
Scouts in the Black Diamond
Council began se!!!ng cookies
today and will co ntinue taking
orders through Feb. I. The price
this year Is $2 a box .
Wh!!e orders for cookies are
being taken now, they are not to
be paid lor untl they are delivered, March 2 through 13. The
seven va rieties are pecan shortees, a shortbread with pecans;
Samoas, a combination of car-mel, ' chocolate and coconut:
chocolate chunks, a chocolate
chlp cookie; thin mints, chocolate wafer with natural peppermint; Do-S!-Do's, a crunchy

oatmeal cookie with peanut butter filling; trefoils, old-fashioned
shortbread with only 2~ calories
per cookie, and ta galongs, coo· .
kles topped with peanut butter
and covered with chocolate.
Girl scouts consider the sale as
"cookie magic" because. when
residents buy a box of cookies
they not enjoy the treat but make
·It possible_for !ocill girls to reach
special goals and participate In
worthwhile activities. For more
than 50 years, the sale of cookies
has been a major source -of
funding for girl scouts.
Troops use their pro!!ts to
finance projects such as troop
camping, a weekend at the
Center of Science and~ndustry In

Columbus or Discovery Place In
Charlot te. A longer trip to
someplace such as Girl Scout
National Center W~st In WyomIng or Our Cabana In Mexico may
· be at least partially fund ed by
cookie money.
Cookie profit received by the
Council Is returned to troops
through maintenance of camping
facilities, training of adult volunteers, purchase of tents, sports
equipment, books, film strips,
and also through support services of staff. .
Residents wishing to order
cookies but not being contacted
by a scout may call Gladys
Thomas, 378-6466, Fred Scarberry, 949-3015, or Laura Green,
949-2990.
.

Twenty-nine Meigs area stu· Morton Butcher, Richard M!·
dents have been named &gt;to the · chael Cline, Ronald Clair Cozart,
Ohio University dean's list fo r Juf!e'Elberfeld, Teresa M. Pratt ·
the fall quarter.
Fields, Joseph Richard FreeMaking . a 3.3 grade point man, Richard Allen Johnson,
average or above to be named to. Chr istopher Scott Ke nn~y , Lee
the list were Deborah Elaine Stanton Powell, Gregory Todd
Holland, Route 1, Cheshire; Thomas, Sandra J. Miller, all of
Suzanne Elizabeth Nay, Che- Pomeroy; Kathryn Lynn·Baker,
shire; Douglas E. Law, Cool· Gerald Lee Dill, Jr., Melissa Kay
vl!le; Christina A. Santiago, Ihle, Ryan Craig Oliver, D!x!e
Route 2, Coolville; Randall Kay Wolfe, all of Rac ine.
Two Meigs Countlans wer e
David Bahr, Gary J . Ginther,
Donna M. Coe Wolf, all of Long candidates !or degrees at the end
Bottom; Jidht Ann Sauer Crooks, oi the fall quarter. They are
Stephanie Jean Houchins Alex· Virgil P. Phillips, M!ddlepOJ:t,
ander, Penny Price Mullen, all of bachelor's In general studies and
. Middleport; Bernadette Hen-_ 'Bryan Keith 'Swann, Pomeroy,
nessy Anderson, Sherry Renee bachelor's in busin ess
and h!s . doctorate from the 1945 at Alamogorda, N. M. in 1947.
Univers ity Eott!ngen In Ger- After that Oppenheimer went to • Arnold, John C. Beaver, Charles · administration.
many In 1927.
Princeton at the same time
The renowned physicist then servjng as chai rman of the
returned to the United States advisory committee for the
where he taught physics at the Atomic Energy Commission,
Mr. and Mrs. David Watkins,
University of California and the 1947-52. He died of cancer In 1966.
Middleport
are announCing the
Californi a Institute of Technol- 'fhought fo r the day was "Acbirth
of
their
second c-hild, a son,
ogy, married and had two child· cursed Be He That First Invented
id
Everett
Watkins, It. ·
Dav
ren, and his political !nvol-.e· War."
ment. In 1941 he gave .Prs!dent
Mrs. Dwight Wallace presided
Born on Dec. 14 at the Holzer
Roosevelt the knowledge of the at the meeting with officers'
U-2 35 which was carried on at t'he reports being given. For roll ca ll Medical Center, the Infant
Manhattan Project which Oppen· members gave atomic bomb weighed eight pounds, ten ounces
helmer administered In the mid- memories. Mrs. Chester Erwin and was 20 Inches long. Maternal
grandparents are Jerry Ferguforties.
w!ll review '.Bess" by Ma rgaret son, West Columbia, W.Va. , and
ln her review, Mrs. Owen told Truman at Wednesday's meeting
of the difficulty which led to the to be held at the Middleport Mr. and Mrs. Ralph _•Bayes,
Middleport. Paternal grandparfirs t nuclear explosion on July 16, 'Presbyterian Ch urch.
ents are Mr .• and Mrs. Don
Pooler. Taylorsville, Ky., and
Mr: and Mrs. Bob· Watkins,
Gallipolis.

Watkins birth announced

Community calertdf,r/area happenings.
MONDAY
POMEROY -The Men's Fel·
lowsh!p of the Meigs Coun ty
Chu rches of Christ will meet at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Zion
Church of Chr ist.
POMEROY - Meigs County
Disabled American Veterans
meet Monday. 6::«1 p.m .. at
P!i'asers Restaurant.
LONG BOTTOM - Pyth!an
Sisters of Rockland Temple 615
. meet at Long Bott om CommunItY Building, 7:30 p.m. Monday.
New officers lnstal!.ed, members
to wear long dresses and to take
desl'rt or cookies.
TUESJ)AY

VINTON - VInton Friendship Tuesday at home o( Betty Fultz,
Garden Club meets Tuesday for Fa!rla ne Drive.
workshop, 10:30 a.m ., homl' of
Elva .Adk!ps. Brin g sack lunch;
POMEROY - X! Gamma
silent auction.
Eps!!on Chapter of Beta Sigma
· Phi Sorority meeting, 7 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT - Group 2 of Tuesday at Meigs Senior Citizens
Middleport ·Presbyterian Chu rch Center.
meets Tuesday, home of Mrs.
Dwight Wallace wit h Mrs. Jack
Sorden as co- hostess.
Literary club
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport Literary Club will meet at 2 p.m.
Chamber of Commerce meeting, Wednesday . at the Middleport
1 p.m. Tuesday at Middleport Presbyterian Church wit h Mrs.
Dairy Queen; election of officers Sibley Slack as hostess.
and board members .
.Legion to meet
MIDDLEPORT - Xi Gamma
RACINE - Aux iliary of RaMu Soror-Ity meeting and card cine Post 602, American Legion,
and game party , 7;30 p.m. meets 7:30 Thu rsday at the hall.

Bag wars pit paper against plastic

Vol .36. No.180
1987

Great-grandparents are Mrs .
James Sears, Mrs. VIrginia
Hartley, and Mr. and Mrs. Ora
Watklris, all of. Middleport, and
Charles Ferguson, West Colum-

David Everett Watkins II
bla. Mr. and Mrs. Watkins have a
daughter, Michelle, five.

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An entourage of 24 .000 - noble·
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Mo'st!y cloudy tonight, with
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194

PICK-4
0513
'·

e

1 Sectio n, 10 Pages

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, January 20. 1987 \

~-

. WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
"We' re always concerned
Justice Department, having about that, but we're confident
promised West German officials that this w!ll proceed with great
it would spare a Palestinian haste," he sa id.
hijac king suspect the death peOn Sunday, a German business
nalt y; says It plans to seek execu tlve was kidnapped by a
multiple !!fe sentences for the carload of unidentified gunmen
In Beirut - a move some
accused terrorist.
Associate Attorney General authorities fear was a retaliatory
Stephen Trott said Monda y he step against West Germany.
Trott Indicated U.S. officials
expects the comp!!cated extradit!on process aga ins t Mohammad ma y have had advance word that
Ali Hamadei "to go rather Hamadei would enter Frankfurt,
smoothly" follow ing department West Germany, where he was
agreement to West German arres ted las t week bringing
demands to waive the death explosives from Beirut Into the
penalty for Hamade! if he Is airport.
,
convicted In the United States.
"The FBI did a remarkably
· Another Justice Depanment good job Inves tigating this case,"
official said he expect!() the he said. "You m!ght.call tHamaforma! extrad itio n applicat ion to del' s arrest) a surprise, but It
be filed today agains t Hamadel, was the result of very good
accused of a! r piracy and murder p!~nn!ng . by o~r State DepartIn lhe hijacking of TWA F!!ght ment and FBI.
847 and dea\h of a Navy seaman
Trott, the No. 3 man in the
on board.
·
Justice Department who decided
If extradited, Hamade! would with Attorney General Edwin
be the first suspected Middle Meese to waive the death penalt y
Eastern terrorist returned to the for Hamade!, to ld ABC 's "Good
United States for trial. Hamadel, Morning America " that the sus22. is one of four Leba nese ShUte peel Is " looking at approx!·
Moslems indicted in 1985 by the mately (a) life sentence, a l·
United States for a!r piracy, though we're stud ying the
murder and other criminal of· possibility of even as king for
lenses In the June 1985 hijacking more. "
·
In which Navy seaman Robert
Trott said Hamade! will be
Stelhem was killed.
brought to Washington and will
Trott acknowledged that U-.S. go to tr!a,l, on h!s ~5-count
officials were concerned about indictment hopefully wlthm 70
possible reprisals by .terrorist days from the time of h!s fir ~~
groups in Lebanon agains t U.S. appearance. In federal court.
or West Ger man citizens for Und er federal a!r pira cy
Hamadel' s arresl and the subse- charges, he could have faced the
quent extradition process.
death penalty.

Council.
approves
village
budget

miii\ilt'"' HANDS -Secretary of State George
Shultz, right, joined Martin Luther King's widow,
Corella, center, and King's sister, Christine King
Farris, left, as they sang the famous civil rights

hymn "We Shull Overcome" during ceremonies
Monday at Ebenezer Baptist Church In Allanta In
ohservanct' of King's birthday. (UPI)

Civil rights leaders pledge
to 'meet hatred with love'
ATLANTA !UP!) - Civil
rights leaders celebrating the
birthday of Martin Luther King
.Jr. vowed to "meet hatred with
love" by -returning to a norther n '
Georgia town where brother hood
marchers were attacked by
white supremacists.
"We are goi ng back to set I he

Women take lead~rship roles
By LEE LEONARD
Sen. Mar!gene Valiquette. .
'UPI Statehouse Reporter
" It Is a trend," said Rep.
COLUMBUS tl.! PI) - More Francine M. Panehal. D·.
than ever In Ohio, a woman's Cleveland, the "senior" woman
place is in the house - and the In th e General Assembly with s!x
senate.
· terms of service. "I think the
· Fifteen women are In the Ohio number of women will continue
General Assembly this sess ion to increase. Young women tod ay ,
13 representatives and two sena- I think, are preparing themtors, surpass ing the prior record . _se!ves specifically lor politics ...
of 13 in 1983-84 and 1985-86.
"Women are planning their
1\vo new females were elected political careers now," agreed
in the House to replace men Rep. J oA nn Davidson, R·
Re ps. June Lucas of Mineral Reynoldsburg, the third-rankin g
Ridge and · Arlene Singer of Republ!cim leader In the House.
Toledo, . both Democrats. Sen . "I'm e!'lcouraged. Any time you
Linda Furney , D-Toledo, re· elect a woman. it encourages
ta!ned the seat held by former another one to try for it. "

26 Cents

.... A Mutl imodialnc.

Hijack suspect
may face life

POWELL'S.

Dean's list annouced

Daily Number

•

h

literary Club conducts meeting -"Shatterer of Worlds" by PererGood~hlld , thestoryofthe life
and · work of physicist Robert
Oppenheimer,. recipient of the
Enrico Fermi Award from the
Atom ic Energy Commission,
was reviewed by Mrs. Richard
Owen at the recent meeting of the
Middleport Literary Club.
Held at th e home of Mrs.
James Clatworthy, the reviewed
was presented by Mrs. Wilson
Carpenter, program chairman.
Mrs. Owen told of Oppenheimer's early graduation from
Harva rd, .of his diagnosis as a
schizophrenia, of his research at
the Caddendlsh Laboratories at
the University of Cambridge,

.oft

beautiful thing on earth." Devo- method for starting sweet potato , •
tions by Mrs. Ruth Erwin In· plants. She said toothpicks ;
eluded scripture from Mark 8, 29 should be Inserted Into th~ potato ':
and 30, and explored the many and then !I should be suspended :
In warm water. Commercially •
faces of Jesus.
For the program, Twlla Buck- gi-own sweet potatoes will not -~
~
ley presented in_formatlon on dl!l always sprout.
Kathryn
Mora
was
auctioneer
;:
and fenugreek seed. She said that
d!U seed was originally used as · for a club auction which featured !
an old remedy for colic In Infant s, "something good from Mother .••
·as a scent for soaps, and as a Earth."
Refreshments were served by :
p!ckllng and culinary herb. Mrs.
the
hostesses.
•
Buckley listed fenugreek seed as
The
Chris
tmas
dinner
party
for
.
one of the oldest of medicinal
was
held
in
Parkersburg
,-:
the
club
herbs', as a major Ingredient In
Lydia Pinkham's Compound ma- with Janet Koblentz serving as
nufactured In the USA for many hostess. For roll call . ·each ;
years beginning In 1875, and was member brought homemade ,,
used In poultices, ointments and Christ mas ornaments for :, -•
taken as a tea. She said the herb exchan ge.
Mrs. Stephanie Flu tie of Dud· .:
was considered a cure-all In
ancient Egypt, India, Greece and ley's in Parkersburg presented ~,
the program. She made several ~­
Rome.
.
· Paula Mora presented "Plants holiday arra ngements which ··
from Scratch" and explained the were awarded as door prizes to :·
Sandy Wood , Jo Hill and Dorothy,~
Karr.
Gl ft wrappings were judged-for
plant material used and attrac- .
class, Mickey Yonker lost the t!veness. The winners were Mr$
most weight and there was a tie Hl!l, Edna Wood, and Mrs: .,
for runner-up between Nelda · Koblentz. Prizes were candy;_
Weiss, Susan Howard and Janice canes and candle table decora-"
Re!tm!re. It was noted that the lions made bv Mrs. Koblentz. "':.
.
'
Mason class wl!l continue ~hen
the bridge closes. Jo Ann Newsome is lect urer.

Slinderella class has meeting
Linda Foster received . her
35-pound weight loss ribbon and
certificate when the Five Points
class of Sllnderella met Monday
nlght. Betsy Stivers lost the most
weight and s!x new member were
welcomed.
At the Tuesday night Mason

.

No.1 in UPI ·
.cage rankings
-Page 3

'

•

Ohio Lottery

Tarheels rate

No t too many years ago, the
General Assembly was virtually
a men's club. with Valiquette and
two or three representatives.
Now Davidson and Rep. Judy
B. Sheerer, D-Shaker Heights,
the assistan t majorit y whip, are
in leadership roles.
The ran k-and-file,. in addition
to Panehal, Furney, Singer ~ n d
Lucas, includes Sen. Grace L.
Drake. R-So lon, and Reps. Jo·
lynn Boster, D·Gal!!po!!s; Jane
L. Camp bell, Barbara Pringle
and Verme! Wh alen. all DCleveland; Joan Lawrence, R·
Galena; Jacquelyn O'l!rlen. R·
(Continued on Page 4)

record straight ," the Rev . Hosea
Williams, a former King aide.
said Monday In announcing plans
for a "freedom march " Sa tu rday
in Cumming, where Ku Klu x
Kla nsmen and ·supportE'rS waving Confederate flags th rew
bottles and rocks at 50 "brotherhood" marchers last Saturday .
Monday ma rked the seco nd
year of a federal holiday commemorating Ki ng's birthday.
The holiday was off!c!ally Ob·
served by 36 states, and Mary·
lanq and Delaware celebrated It
on the slain. civil r ights leader' s
actual birthday - his 58th - on
Jan . 15.
Bells tolled across thecountt;r;
a wreat h of red carnatiorts was
hung from the hotel balcony In
Memphis, Tenn.. where King
was shot, and demonstra tors In
PhornLx dema nded the recall of
new Republican Gov. Eva n Mecham, who rescinded I he state' s
King holiday one week after
taking office.
In VIrginia, the holiday was
shared by birthday celebrations
for Rober t E. Lee and Stonewall

•

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Stull Writer
A budget of $964,398.77 was
adopted Monday night by Pomeroy VIllage Coun cil for 1987
village opera lions.
.
Among a gencr~l fund total or\
$257,500 Is $154,000 for Jaw
enforcement and $103,500 lor all
other genera l gover nment opera·
t!ons. Some of the totals Included :
In general opera! Ions are $72,000
for admi nistrative o!!!ces, $3,600 ·
for lega l serv ices, $12,800 for the '
c!er k:trcasurer's offi ce, a nd
$5,800 for baste utilit y bill.~ al the
village hall.
Two figures Included In the '
total of · $27:!,023 for vill age
utilities Is $102,395 fo r basic :
sewer service and $45,000 for :
street light lng.
lncluced In special revenue
funds of $172.000 for the street
departmenl are $76,000 for em·
ployees. $41.000 for paving and
$10.000 for sail for snow and Ice ·
remova l.
A tota l of $:1.059.111 was In·

eluded In the bull gel from federal :
Jackson.
reven ur sharing, representing
Secretary of State George money left over from 1986, but ·
Shull z vis ited Atlanta to deliver appropria ted Into this yea r's'
the key note address at an ecu· bud get. This Is th e las t of
menleal service In the Ebenezer Pomeroy's revenue sharing ·
Baptist Chu rc h, King' s church. fun~! n g .
follow ing a wreath-lay! ngcerem·
Included In the budget fo r
ony at King's crypt.
parks and recrl'at lon was $1,600
"The black c!vl! rights move- and $11 ,100 In th e cemetery fund.
ment In America Is an epic
.!n other village business.
poem," Shultz said . '.' It Is a Ma yor Richard Sl'y!er repor ted
message that resonat e• around he has been In co ntact with Joann
the wor ld. Those who do enjoy the Montgomery. of the Ohio Envirkind of freedom Dr. King fought onment al Protection Agency In
for remain the minorit y of regard to EPA's rl'(j u!rment th at
humanity ."
the v!i!age submit to EPA by July
Williams and others who 1988, a compliance plan lor
served as King's lieutenants In . Improvements to lhl' v!llage's
the civil rights movement sa id sewer system.
they hoped thei r planned free·
Seyler sa id he told Montgodom march In Cumming would mery the village will not have
reaffirm princi ples they foug ht money to make the kinds of
for in the 1960s .
Improvemen ts to the system
· "What's so distressin g Is I which arc bei ng rt-q u!red by
thought a few yea rs ago we'd EPA. He said Montgomery will
es tablished that we have a right be In Pomeroy Wednesday to
to march." said Rep. John Lewis, discuss the matter further, reGeorgia 's only bl ack congress- view lhe vi llage's compliance
man. "It's a God· given right. It's pian and visit the village's
an American right."
sewage fac ilities ..
(Continued on Pagl' 4)
(

-

ntique. lQVers
open ~ store to aid
the 'I., 'Want-ers'
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentine! Staff Writer
It began as a hobby about 15
years ago- going to auctions
now and then. In November,
when they hung up a sign
·pointing the way to their
antique shop - It became a
part-time business for Hope
a nd Russ ell Moore of
Pomeroy.
Their shop, located next
door to their East Main Street
home, just above the Pome~oy
V!l!age waterworks, Is In the
former Loraine Sterrett
home, which they purchased
several years ago.
Three rooms of the old
house. Itself more than 150
ye~rs old , have been turned
.Int o a treasure trove to delight
the most serious of antique
collec::tors- the "I want·ers."
And the prices are moderate
enough to de!!ght the_now. and
then buyers -who are usually
on budgets -the "I wish-ers."
In the shop can be found
clocks, lamps, quilts, rockers,
stoneware, glassware,. tin·
ware, kitchen utensils, 'child·
ren's toys, baskets, quilts,
furnitu re, and much more.
The couple say. they try to
keep prices !ow In order to
keep sales consistent. And
when tl\ey make purchases

(usually at auctions) to add to
their stock, Russell says they
"try to buy something to
Interest most people."
The Moores got their start In
collecting several years ago,
when Hope purchased, lor
$200, a set of green, princess
pat tern, depression ware
from an engineer at the
Southern Ohio Coal Co. mines
where she worked as a secretary until her recent retirement. They began searching
auctions for additiona l pieces
to the set, and before long,
they were afflicted with a love
of co!!ectlng. (Auctlon-goers
and junk-store patrons will
good-naturedly admit this Is a
disease of sorts.)
Although the Moores have
refinished some of their pieces, they point out that they.
"are not rea!!y In the re!!nlsh·
!ng business," because of the
amount of time and hard work
Involved in the process.
It you visit the shop, be sure
and ask Hope about the first
clock she and Russell refinIshed. "We used denatured
alcohol" - which ts what
someone told them to use "and the finish turned white!"
Of course Hope panicked. But
when they began rubbing the
clock with steel wool, the

...
QUILTS TOO -This quilt, the star pattern, 18 more than 100

years old, and Is among the collection of Ruosell and Hope
Moore. Hope 18 showrl here, arranging the quUt along with
several others, at the anllque· shop which she and her huHband
huve opened on E1111t Main Street In Pomeroy.
whiteness, along with y.ears of
dirt and grime were removed,
and the original f!nL~h · wa ~
restored, much to her relief.
The couple have also taken
classes In caning, and exam·
pies of Russell's expertise In ·
the art·of caning may be seen
at the shop.
Collecting · antiques has
been great fun for the Moores,
as well as an education as the~
have read ani! studied about

the various pieces they ow n.
But when their c.ollet;tlon
outgrew · their home, they
knew It was time to go Into
business:
Prepar.lng the store " has
also been run," says· I-I ope,
a!t hough she still has more
merchandise at her hou se
which must be sorted out, ·
carried over a nd tagged for
sa le at the sHop.
When asked · how they can

LAMPS GALORE - A number of miniature oil Iampo are
among Jhe antiqur collection of Ru88ell and Hope Moore. The
lamps; which are favorlies of Ruuell's, are dblplayed at the
couples' antique shop on Eut Main Street.ln Pomeroy, In an old
cupboard that belonged to Hope'• mother.
bear to part with some of the
pieces they ha ve for sale, they
both ad mit " ll's d!fllcult."
And when the time comes to
se!! "Aunt Ruth's pink
basket, " one can' t help but
wonder If Russell w!Jl have
second thoughts. ·.
·
lt would appear that their
love of collecting has also
p assed on to their children arid
their faml!!es . Hope says tha t
eacit or their children now

have antiques In their homes , ·.
and the famil y saying Is " whenever you visit mom and
dad, be sure and take a
truck."
Well , It ma y not be necessary to always take,a truck,
but be sure whenever you visit
the shop thai you do take your
time. lr you don't, yoU'llllkeiY.
miss a sma !1, hidden (a nd
well-priced ) find .

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