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Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

. .. ,.

.

i! IUZZ~E LOADING
•IMI· HUlliNG SUPPLIES

This
eek's
Games

.'

Mon.

t~ru

Fri.

7;1.0 a.m. to 5:00 p.m• .
': . ,

Saturday

' 7:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m.

MEIGS ·

Vo1. 36, No. 181
Copyrighted 1987

BOYS BASKETBALL
Jan. 20-Trimble ............... Away
Jan. 23-Belpre ...................Home

BOYS BASKOBALL
Jan. 20-Kyger Creek ....... Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hiii ............... Home

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jan. 22-0ak Hill .............. Away

EASTERN

F

.

.

.AIINitUIE ·,.

BOYS BASKETBALL

'f.;

'

.'

,"i

.-;• . ._•

lpy- M~r,.-for

Jan. 20-North Gallia ....... Home
Jan. 21-Hannlin Trace..... Away

Jt Lett·at

GIRLS BASKETBALL

. IMP,IIE . ·
FURNITURE
;oiiEROY, OliO

Jan. 22.-Hannan Trace ...... Home

1-

BOYS SCHEDULE

MULLEN, MUSSEl
. I"SURANCE

Ill SECOND AVE..•
\ ,.aov r;:

·.

•

•

enttne

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio, Wednesday, January 21, 1987

Meigs

Southern

BOYS BASKETiALL

BOYS BASKETBALL

Jan. 20-Trimble ....................... Away
Jan. 23-Belpre ....................... Home
Jan. 27-Aiexander ................... Away
Jan. 31-Point Pleasant ..... :.... , Home
Feb. 3-Warren .......... " ............ Home
Feb. 6-Wellston ..................... "'Away
Feb. 13-Federal Hocking ........ " Away

Jan. 20- Kyger Creek ................ Away
Jan. 23- 0ak Hill ..................... Home
Jan . 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31- Miller ......................... Away
Feb. 6- Hannan Trace ................ Away
Feb. 7-Federal Hockin! ........... Home
Feb. 13-Southwestem ............. Home
Feb. 17- Ra\renswood .. ............. Home
Feb. 20- Symmes Valley ............ Away

By NANCY YOACHAM
reported a balance of $248.15 in separate from thP treas ury. with
Sentinel Stall Writer
the treasury. The chamber $1.789.94. Blower sa id the board
Middleport Chamber of Com- started 1986 with a balance of of directors will have to meet
soon and make a determlnation
merce officers for 1987 were $279.
elected Tu"esday when the group · Blower noted that chamber's what to do with these addit ional
met at Middleport Dairy Queen. main income is from dues, and · funds . He suggested the possibil'
Re-elected president was Bill sai d It was his feeling that money ity of using the money lo
Blower. Dick Owen was elected collected fro!!\. dues should be purchase another certificate of
vice president and Mary Lou spent within the year for whichh deposit .
Approxim ately $4,000 in the
.Boggs secretary, replacing Ja · the dues were paid. He said the
son Ingels and Yvonne Scally. board of directors have also form of a tourism gran t from the
stale will also be coming Into the
respectively. Craig Mathews discussed Ihis issue.
was re-elected treasurer.
The annual Middleport Block chamber treasury this year. The
, Elected to serve one-yea r Party is chamber's largest ex- chamber and Middleport Village
·terms on the chamber bOard of penditure. The group spent $3,384 co-applied for tourism fund s.
directors were' Randy Osborne. on the 1986 block party, but However, Blower pointed out,
replacing Mark Harvey, Bi ll grossed only $2, 075. Blower Items for which the gra nt money
Hap tonstall, Dean Harris, Dan pointed out thai the event was may be spent will be stipulated
Arnold and Jason Ingels, replac- never designed to be a money- by state guidelines. He sa id he
ing Dick Owen.
maker, however, he added, the hoped at lea,s t part of the money
Business matiNs discussed by difference between the expend!· could be earmarked for some
the group included yearly dues. tures and the gross has lessened block party expenses, such as
advertising. If so, he added, Ihe
which are payable this month . year to year.
Dues are $10 for associa te
Mat hews informed the group block party could become a
·
members. $50 for sma ll busi· that chamber has an eight-year break-even event.
The
ma
tter
of
establishing
a
nesses and $100 for large $1,000 certificate of deposit at
and
time
for
1987
meeting
day
businesses.
Central Trust Co .. which rna·
Mathews recapped the group's lures this year. The chamber was discussed briefly, but no
1986 fin ancial endeavors. and also has another bank account, action was taken.

~ Lieutenant

governor -requests ·
reconsideration of mandates

Eastern
BOYS BASJCUBALL

'

k

7147

Jan. 20- North Gallia ............... Home
Jan. 21- Hannan Trace .............. Away
Jan. 30- Kyger Creek.. .............. .Home
Feb. 6-Southwestern ,............... Away
Feb. 7- 0PEN .......................... Home
Feb. 13-Symmes Valley ........... Home
Feb. 17-Federal Hocking ......... Home ·
Feb. 20- 0ak Hill ...................... Away

·CALL992-3381 or
~92-l342

HOME
"DIGNITY AND
.
SERVICE ALWAYS"

GIRLS SCHEDULE
Sou th ern

GIRLS BASIIOBALl

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jan. 22-Trimble ...................... Home
Jan. 26-Belpre ........................ Away
Jan. 29- Aiexander .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern ........................ Away
Feb. 5-Wellston ...................... Home
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ,.......... Home
Feb. 14-Southern..................... Away

Jan . 22-0ak Hill ...................... Away
Jan . 26- Gatlipolis .......... ,......... Away
Jan. 29- North Gatlia ............... Home
Feb. 5- Hannan Trace .............. . Home
Feb. 9- Symmes Valley .......... ". Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern .............. Away
Feb. 14- Meigs .......................
., . Home

Eastern
. GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jan . 22 - Hannan Trace ............. Home
Jan. 30- Kner Creek __ ....... --..... Away
Feb. 2- Meigs .......................... Home
Feb. 5- Southwestern .......... --... Home
Feb. 9- 0ak Hill. __ .................... Home
Feb. 12- Symmes Valley """""" Away
Feb. 14- Federal Hocking .. """" Away

~MMERS

·•:-.,BANK·
•

•

&amp;,SAVINGS CO.
POMEROJ, OH.

PH. 992-2121

992:21.36
""\

108 .MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.
'

Larry Chamberlin, Ashland
. 'COLUMBUS !UP!)- Lt. Gov. gover nments from this abandOn·
County
engineer. told the com,PauLR. Leo n'ard has asked stale !!l~.nt b~ the federa l govern·
' legislators IO refrain from impOS· ment." he said. 'IThe money Isn't mit tee Ohio's counties are re• ing any more costly mandates on · there. And don't send a signal ceiving $250 million a year to
financially strapped local go. that money alone is the answer." main,tain roads and bridges, but
Leo nard said local govern- are short of needed funds by $225
ver nments. and to consider rem·
ments
are go ing to have to share million.
oving sorhe existing ones.
Chamberlin, represen ting the
responsi
bilities and costs to
In an appearance Tuesday
before a specia l Ohio House serve the taxpayers. Instead of County Commissioners' Assocla·
com mltlee ·examlning the effects opera tin g I nd e pendent tion of Ohio. recommended a
penny increase In the gasoline
of ' lederal cutbacks on local ' "!lefdoms."
Henry-Guzman, director of the tax to raise $53 million . and a
govern ments, Leonard ·a lso
·pleaded wilh lawmakers to avoid State and Local Government boost in the motor vehicle regis·
send ing any signallhatlhe state Commission, sa id local govern· !ration fee to raise the other $172
is goi ng to bail our loca l govern· ments regard mandates in the million .
areas of welfare, minimum jail
ment s with increased ai&lt;;l.
standards. retirement system
Leonard said local govern·
requirements and collective bar·
mrnts already arr stuck with
gai ning for employees as the
costly programs mandated by
There has been one confirmed
most ex pensive.
the federal government, with
He sa id It will cost Ohio • case of merilngococca l meningi·
no accompanying funds.
communities a tolal of $1.23 tis in Meigs Count y, Norma
billion to meet the 1988 deadline Torres.. R.N .. nursing supervisor
Leonard, a former member of of the federally mandated' Clean of the Meigs Count y Health
the Ohio House, has been deslg· Water Act, and that a recent Department, reports .
nated as the Celeste adminlstra· amendment to the federal Flar
Since the diagnosis was made,
tion's official liaison with local Labor Standards Act will cost Torres said she has been
gover nments. He was the ma yor local governments $733 million a
of Dayton for five years. and now year In increased overtime
is chairman of the State and payments.
Local Government Commission
. Rep . Marc Guthrie, D-Newark,
by virtue of his office .
a member of the committee, said
ByTONICARDARELLA
"If there's one recommenda· he Is Int roducing legis lation
United
Press hiternutlonal
tion you need to come forwrd juggling the amount s of stat
An
Army
brigadier ge neral
with . it's that gover nmen t Is taxes that go Into the Local
was
among
five
people presumed
going to have to to tally· re· Gover'nment Fund .
killed
In
the
crash
of a military
examine mandates ," Leonard
He sa id his formula will place
told the House Select Committee less emphas is on the corporate plane and a private craft in sunny
on the Effects of Federal Cut· income tax and more on the skies over Missouri. a short time
backs on Local Governments.
individual income tax, so the after two small planes brushed
Leonard sa id local govern· fund will grow. He sa id II would each other nea r a Rhode island
ment s al ready are stuck with produce $15 million more in the airport but landed safely. offl.
co§tly programs ma ndated by first biennium and $43 million cials sai d.
Brig. Ge n. David Stem, comthe federal government, with no more in the second two-year
mand
e~ of thP Military Pollee
· acco mpanying lunds.
period.
·
Sc
hool
at ~'art McCIPllan. Ala ..
''Please do not send any signal
Guthrie's bill also wil l more
was
one
of three people on the
- that thestalc is ready, willing evenly distribute the local go·
· and able to bail out the local vern men I aid among counties.

• I

. '•

"HOME BANK
FOR

HOME P·EOPLE"
MEMBER FDIC

•

THE

-CENtRAL:
llb$1 .
COMPANY'
'

..YOUI FINAIICIAL

.CErtTEr'

•

;I}

RAWLINGS
· ~QATS
'

•

'

BLOWER

fiUNIRAL.
:HOME
'

97 ·....·2MOSIIEET

-.IPOIT

SYRACUSE OFFICE
' 991-6333 '
iACj(l OFFICE
f49-t210 ,.

26 Cents

·walls come

tumbling
down
At about 3 p.m. Tuesday, the
w.recking ball swung Into the
Lyrin S~el side of a Pomeroy
landmark ·:.. the Meigs· Inn,
known at the !Wming'ton
House and the llotcl Marlin In
past years, as seen in the
above photo. The building was
gu(led by a lire on ,June 15,
1986. A new structure Is being
planned lor the location hut
details have not been announced. Earlier in the day,
the crane used In the demoil·
lion moved onto Lynn Stn-et.
which has been closed lor
several weeks as work pro·
gr.,.scd on dismantling the
inn.

·~

- ·-

.,. .992!'661t1 .
INSTM_1:4TIOI.t.OAIS

.ft!.JOt7

swamped with phone calls from
residents wit h questions on the
disease.
Torres reports that meningit is
is an inflammation of the cover·
ings of the brain or the spinal
cord and tha t meningllis germs
are frrquenliy found In the nose

and throat of humans wi thout
necessarily causing any Illness In
the pt'Dp lr where they arc found.
Most people who get signs and
symptons of the disease arc
children tX'IwPc n 6 and 12 mont hs
or age with the greatest percrn·
tagc or cases occurlng In children

under&gt;, Torres stures. However,
the disease can occur In any age
Individual.
Signs and symptoms of the
Illness may Inc lude a quick onsrt
of fever, chills, tiredness, ge n·
era! feeling of the " blahs" and a
!Conti nued on Pag1• 121

2-pl~e -collision kills gener~l, 4 others

Meigs

len H. Ewing-Director _

2 Sect iont. 1 2 Pages

A Mult imedia Inc. Newspaper

Health unit briefs residents ori

EWING .
.FUNERAL

Variable cloudiness tonight,
wllh a low between 20 and 23.
Cloudy Thursday, with a
chance of snow and highs
bel ween 311 and 35. The proha·
hlllly of precl pltalloil Is near
zero tonight lind liU percent
·
Thursday .

Middleport Chamber
elects 1981 officers

SOUTHERN

DOWNING-CHILDS

PICK-4

at y

Jan. 22-Trimble ................Home

WE WILL
TAKE CARE OF
ALL YOUR
\ INSURANCE
•
i" ' .'
.
NEEDS ··'

833

•

GIRLS BASKETBALL

·"Your Athletic
S_hoe Headquarters"
•

Daily Numbt'r

-Page 3

J'
HOURS:

Ohio Lottery

Redmen net
first place
'in MOC play

VALENTINE - Although It's po~~slble that rnu:r Chrlatmu
· goodies haven't yet dlnppeared from the scene, Big Bend
~ merchants are ready with the Valentine's Day sweets. Unda Noel
of the Swlsher·Lohse Pharmacy holds one olthe olferlnp lor eale
. In the Big Bend area. This particular ''model" contalll8 lour
pounds ol1chocolates and haa a $49.95 price tag .••

Army plane thai collided with a
Piper Navaho with two propie
aboard abou t 12::10 p.m. CST
Tuesday at 7,000 fee t over lndP·
pendence, Mo .. an Army spokesman sal\l .
"
The debris fell on the grounds
of a privately owned amm unition
pla nt 45 miles so utheast of Fort
Leavenworth, Ka n., but did not
hit any buildings, and there were
no injuries on the ground, Maj .
Bill Auer said.
The military plane. a twin·

engine Beechrraft Kin g Air
based with Its crew &lt;tt Anniston
Army Depot in Alabama . was on
It s way to Fort Leavt·nworth .
Details about the prlvutc craft
were not lmmcdlalcly released.
Fort Leavenworth spokesman
u .' Col. .John Gnrllnger sai d five
bodies werr found at the crash
site, hut they were not lmmc·
dlatcly Identified.
Auer said late Tuesday that .
Stem was the on ly pass.enger on
the milita ry plune but added that
positive ldcnllflcatlon of the

remai ns had nol lx&gt;Pn made. The
pilot was Identified as Maj.
Michael .Johnston, of All)xandrla.
Ala, The plane also Cllrrled a
civilian co-pilot who was not
Identified .
FAA spokeswoman Sandra
Ca mptx-11 said controllers at
Ka nsas City International Air·
port were tra ckin~ the military
plane when II disappeared from
radar. It was not known if
con trollers had ron tact with thr·
private plane.

Study -shows area .poverty has increased
ever. is nol taken Into account.
United Press lnternatlohal
In 23 Ohio counties . lumped
· Sentinel Start Reports
mostly
along the Ohio River from
One out of every sevenOhioans
southwes
t Ohio to eastern Ohio.
Jives in poverty, says a report
at
least
one oul of every five
released today.
residents
lived below the poverty
The Ohio poverty rate. up 34
percent since 1980 to 14.2 percent, level In 1986.
"This has always been the
Is slightly above the national rate
case,"
Zeller sa id. "There's a lot
of 14.0 percent In figu res proof
rural
economic deprlyation In
vided by the Census Bureau.
thai
area.
It 's not unlike what you
"That shows we're typical to
might
find·
In adjacent areas In
the country as a whole. Some say
we're the rustbelt and In a West Virginia and Kentucky."
Figures released show thai in
declining region, bu t other
this
area, Vin ton County has the
states, I'm certain, are showing
highest
percentage of residents
the same patterns," said George
Zeller, a spokesman the' Council living In poverty at 32.47, an
lor Economic Opportunities In Increase of 85 percent !rom 1980
Greater Cleveland, which con· to 1986. Poverty affects 3,701
Vinton resident s, the study said.
dueled the survey.
Meigs County's poveny level
Some 1. 5 m1111on Ohioans lived
In poverty In 1986, up430,000 from was set at 25.52 percent, an
Increase of 49 percent {rom 1980.
1980.
The same guldeltnes were used affecting 6,049 people, according
as those by the federal govern· to the study. In Gallla County,
ment . For a single person. the · 7.659 residents, or 25.36 percent
1986 poverty level was $5,360. Jt 'of the population. were Identified
was $11,000 for a family of lour. as living In poverty, a 78 percent
Public assis tance money, how· Increase lrom ~980.

Figures lor other area counties
Include Lawrence, 15,887 125.22
percenll. a 65 percent increase ;
Jackson, 6,175 (20.38 percent 1. Ull .
22 perct•nt ; and Athens, 1:1, :17J
(23.25 perceniJ, up 28 Jl('rcent.
Most of the 2.3 counties with
poverty levels below 10 percent
were In northwest Ohio.
The lowest-two poverty rates
were In Lake and Geauga coun·
ties just east of Cleveland at 5
percent , followed by Henry and
Ottawa cou nties at 6 percent, and
Medi na, Hancock and Erie coun·
ties at 7 percent.
The biggest jump In poverty
was found In Harrison Count y. an
area In eastern Ohio dominated
by the troubled coal mining
Industry, where the number of
people In poverty went up 157
percent since_ 1980 to 4,587, lh(•
study sa id.
Other Increases ·or more than
100 percent were found In Ashtabula Count y at 135 percent, Mon·
roc 117 percent, Columbiana, 113
percent, Carroll 113 perceJ,It, and

Guernsey Hlll percent . Al l IJut
Ashtabula are located nNJr Pach
ot her In Ea stPrn Ohio.
The blgi(PSI urop in pow•t'ly
was found Itt C' hamp&lt;tl~n Countv
in west centr"l Ohio when· the
number of pro ph' In povMty fe ll
27 percent to ~.Ctll:l .
Cuyahoga, th&lt;' stH ie's larg&lt;'S I
count y in popularton. IOpJ)f'd the
list wllh 24fi,4.14 people living
under the poverty level 117
percent 1. followed by Hami lton
County 141.005 (16 percent),
Franklin !0, .:!62 02 percent),
Montgomery 7~&gt;.97 9 !13 percent)
and Luc~ s 69, Ht.1 (15 percent) .
"There's more poor people In
the cities, but the rates are
higher (In smaller counties 1:·
Zeller said . Some portions tlf
Cleveland . however. have pov·
crty rates as high 11s 60 perc·cnr.
Zeller said .
;,ThP highest rates of poverty
are In households headed by
females, minorities families and
handicapped people." he said.

,.
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�•

Wednesday, January 21, 1987

Contmenta

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
;Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
~ednesday, January 21, 1987 ..

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.

Tell, don't teach---.---______.:.___G_eo.....:::rg_eR_._P--=lag=---en_z.

The ·Daily Sentinel
ll I Court Stre!ll
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED 'fO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh
ts:m;iil

I•

.'

'qlv

.·....

m....L.....-.-, ..-r=d•=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assio;tant Puhll•her/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

.·
.·

.-..
.

'

A MEMBER of The Un lled Press lnlcrnatlonal. Inland Dally Press
Association and thc- American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE'ITERS OF OPINION ar£&gt; W€'lcome . ThC'y flloold be less than :n1 wor ds
long. All leiters an• subj{'('f t oed lt!ng and ll'RlSI be signed with name. address and
ll'l"'~Jh one number . :-J o un signed l f'tt er s will be published. Letters sho uld be In
good tas tf', ud(lr ess in~ Jssul'S, not persona lltlcs .

I hate to keep repeating my- lsts' religious bel.lefs. The judge
self, but there Is a simple, · ruled parents are entitled to
sensible way lo resolve thi s Insist that chtldren not be forced
Interminable textbook controv- to reatl material In schoollhat go
ersy- and it Isn't via the courts. counter to their faith.
Thai was tried again only re·
After the decision, a public
ce ntly and will he be no more sc hooC teacher expressed diss uccess ful than the other may. "I would think parents
a ttempts.
would want their children to hear
In lhls lates t case, a judge in other points of view. not just their
. Tennessee came out In favor of own," she said.
Chris tia n fund amentalists who
That was a swilch of sorts. It
object to the books their children wasn'flong ago that her side wa s
are exposed to In class.
objecting to teaching "other
These parents say that many points of view." That was when
books used in the public schools the issue was evolution vs.
hav e a "humanist" (as opposed creationism. The fundamentalto Christian ) slant. One of the Ists wanted the Genesis story of
c haracters in "The Wizard of creation to be taught side by side
Oz," for examp le, is a wilch. This with Darwin.
goes against the fundam ental·
In this instance, two points of

view was ··one too many for the
Darwinian side. When you're
r ight. they said, any other poinl
of view would have to be wrong.
And you wouldn't want to leach
what's wrong.
No, ofcourseyou wouldn't. But
It's on the one word "teach" that
this whole argument hangs . If we
simply substituted " tell" for
"teach," we could be home free.
The word teach has th e connotation of Indoctrination - of
Implanting information and
Ideas that are to be learned and
absorbed .
We teach our children the three
R's and good manners so they
will sink in and be applied . We
teach brotherhood and tolerance
for similar reasons.

.

. Washin!(ton Window

$5 werth of
paper clips

.'

.·
,'

By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
UPI Senior Editor
WASHINGTON (UP I) - When President Reagan's budget arrived
on Ca pitol Hil l last week, I he bus iest people in Washington were the
congressional press secrelaries.
,
Ca nned sta tement s fl ew like f&lt;:•at hers at Fwank Perdue's chicken
fa c lory. "Dead on a r.r.W!r' was a popular, if cliched, verdict. "Off\ he
track ." said a Democralic senalor. "Hasn't a prayer," said a
Republican. "Will do as a sla rti ng point" was about th e kindest
:· commenl heard. •
•· The docum ent. greeled by whal lhe late Speaker John W.
·: Mc Cormac k might have ca lled lhese "minimum high" plaudit s,
Involves a trillion dollars and cha nge Ia couple of billion dollars
change, as a ma tte r of fact. I Every thing the federa l governmenl does
flows from the budget. A very bi g deal indeed.
Thai' s why it may beworlhwhile to note thai despite the commcnls
above, it is most unlikely Ihal the entir e Reagan budget is going to be
. chuck ed in some Cap itol trash can and trucked to the dump.
In truth, a very la rge part of the pres ident' s budget will become
. law. Th e c hanges probably will involve less than $100-billion, which
~ sounds like a lo! of money and is, but represent s only aboutiO percent
of the Reagan proposal.
The ~on fll c t that will swirl around lhr budget has mos t to do wilh
•'several majo r concep ts that went int o Its construction- s uch issues
•• as whether the military should get more and social programs less of
: the money ava ilable a nd whether taxes should be increased or
; spending decreased lo reduce the federa l defici t.
•
What probabl y won't be done on Capitol Hill is a !irs I dollar to las I
~ dollar examination a nd justification of the spending proposed by Ihe
·:. pres tdenl.
•·
This is supposed to be don e by the official s of th e agencies who
prepare the budget for the Office of Man agement and Budget. by Ihe
OMB for the president. and by lhe congressional budget and
· approrlatlons commiltees for the lawmakers. Jimmy Carler made a
-' big Issue of this process and gave it the buzz word tit le •. "Zero Based
Budgeting," but It was supposed to be happening anywa y.
In practice, this doesn't seem to happen. The people who run the
federal agencies traditionally operate under Ihe bureaucratic rule of
lhumb that In order to get $5 for paper clips. ask for $10.
Of course, the OMB know s Ihat game and routinely cuts the $10 lo
$5. Th e president sends lhatt o Congress. which holds public hearings
where the out side groups Ihat have a vested int erest in the Hem plead
for the $10.
The congress ion a l com mittees. influenced by th e lobby isis for the
paper clip Indus try ur by membNS with paper clip fa ctories inl'!heir
di s trict s, approve lh&lt;' $10. or If In a bud get-cutting mood. "slash" il 25
.. percent to $7.:&gt;0. If rconomy fever Is really running high. the }'louse or
Senate o1· I he con ference com mitt ee fo rmed to reconcile differences
·in their bills, may chop It furth er lo $5.
At th at point. everyone claims Ihe paper clip budget has been
·' thoroughly exam ined and cut lo the bone. In fact. no one really looked
at the $5 10 sre if the agency really needed a ny paper clips.

&gt;

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'

Berry's World

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·

"/take It , Bushell. that this Is your first power
bresklsst '! "

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~~-Today in history
:::
By United Press International
: : Today is Wednesday, Jan. 21, the 21st day of 1987wlth 344 to foll ow.
· : The moon Is approa ching Its last quarter.
. . The morning stars arc. Venus and Saturn.
::; : The evening stars ar~ Mercury. Mars ,&lt;~nd Jupiter ..
·- . Those born on this dat e areundertheslgn of Aquarius. Th ey Include
;- $Oidler and Vermonl folk hero Ethan Allen In 1738, explorer and
::.historian John Fremont In 1813. Confederate Gen . Thomas
· :· "Stonew;lll" Jackson In 1824, firearms designer John Browning In
: ::1855; fashion designer Christian Dtor In 1905, actor Telly Savalas· tn
:0 1924 (age 63), comedian Benny Hillin 1925 (age 62), golfer Jack
-;: Nicklaus in 1940 (age 471, Spanish opera sta r Placido Domingo ln1941
;- (age 46), singer Mac Davis In 1942 (age 451, a nd actor Robby Benson
&lt; 1n 1955 (age 32).
• On this date In history:
,
In 1792, French King Louis XVI was execut ed In Paris.
'
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.

{

As a parent, I want my children .
to know about the theory of
evolution. I also want them to
know - as part and parcel of .
being educated - that there are
people who don' I believe In
evolullon, peopl~who believe the .
world and man were created as
the Bible says.
I want them to know how such a "
view gol started and whal
legitimacy, If any, It may havefrom both a scientific standpoint
and as a way of stating a truth
that science on ly can dimly,
awkwardly hint at.
If man is just a monkey who
has learned how to shave, this
may not rule out the possibility
that he is also a special creallon
of God who evolved s lowly
according to a divine plan. But .
that possibility Is not something
that would occur to us after
seeing this ancestor of ours at the
zoo.
II Is not the monkey story that
is necessa rily untrue. It Is just
that, If man is a special creation
of God, the artist - which the
author of Genesis most certainly
was - may do a better lob than
the scientist of getting us to see
this.
To tell- not "teach' ·._ Ihis to
schoolchildren is not to indoctrinate them with any particular
phl19sophy. II Is to gel them to
unde rstand how It is that we have
two opposing philosophies of the
origin of man and the world whictl. in very fact, may be
complementary rather than
conflicting.

Rebellion from within_J_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~_an_A_tt_a
WASHINGTON - Opposition
to the Ayatollah Khomelnl is
bubbling Inside Iran - bul nol
from the "moderates" that PresIdent Reagan's eager emissaries
went looking for. Unbeknownst to
most Americans, a determined
group of anti-Khomeinl rebels is
actually fighting the ayatollah's
conscripts inSide Iran and along
the Iraqi border.
These unsung warriors are the
People's Mojahedln, and they
form the largest, most effective
Khomelnl opposition Inside or
outside Iran. Their charismatic
leader , Massoud Raj avi, was
a nti-American during the days of
U.S. support for the shah, bul he
proclaims him self neither for or
against the United i)tates now.
Rajavl's politics are best described as nationalistic at home
a nd socialistic In his world view.
with a Moslem,.llll nl.
Last June RaTavl was expelled
from exile in France in a secret
dea l with Khomelnl for the
release of some French hostages.
Rajavi found refuge In Iraq - a
" defection" to the enemy that
Khomelnl carefully did nol ex-

ploit to discredit his most serious
rival.
He had good reason: Khomelnl
was afraid that if Iranians knew
Rajavl was lust across the
border, military deserters and
others disillusioned with Khomelnl's tyranny would rush to
join the Mojahedln. In fact ,
according to sources In Iran and
Iraq , Khomelnl held a special
session of his cabinet within days
of Rajavl' s expulsion from
France to discuss Its effects.
" I hope the day won't come
when we regret asking France to
kick Rajavl out," one minister
reportedly said at the meeting. A
direct result of the slrategy
session was to allocate six of the
few operational Iranian aircraft
for bombing sessions against a
Mojahedln base on the Iraqi
border.
Recently Dale Van Alta flew to
Baghdad to assess the People'.s
Mojahedln efforts. He was the
first journalist to meet with the
organization's top officials Inside
Iraq.
·
Nader Raflnejad, t11e group's

She helped many
,.

So tt's natural that parents who ,
believe In evolution do not want
their children to be "taught"
creationism. And vice versa.
But teaching and telling are
two different things. Couldn't we
Jell our chlldien about both
evolution and creationism with·
out scaring anyone•

International secretary, gave a
briefing on the situation as
Iranian bombs dropped on the
city. Raflnejad said the Iraqi
government has been supporllve, partly because Rajavl and
Iraqi President Saddam Hussein
nave agre:ed to end the war (now
In lt.s seventh year) if Ralavl
eventually takes power in
Tehran.
"There are no Iraqi restrlc- .
lions to our operations along the
front s, " Raflnejad said. "Incur·
slons Into Iran are a dally affair
for us. The principal aim Is to go
to the towns and cities, where our
strategy is based o·n overthrowing the Khomelnl regime through
massive operations."
The main concentration of the
Mojahedln fighting forces in
Iranian cllles, Raflnejad explained. Rajavl is leading lhe
Mojahedlns military forces personally, operating mainly in
Iranian Kurdlstan. The Kurds
have fought many battles against
Khomelnl's army, both on their
own and In temporary a lliance
with the Moj a hedln.
Rafinejad acknowledged that

Rajavl is not pro-American but
insisted that the Mojahedln are
not Marxists.
Noting that Khomelnl tries to
discredit the Mojahedln as
" American hypocrites" for seekIng aid from the west, Raflnejad
said: "But It is very Important lo
realize what the Iranian people .
think. They have seen Khomelnl,
and they know how he acted when
he came to power. In their first
few days, stx million people
came out to cheer him. Now they
are arresllng people in movie
lines to send them lo the front."
Rajavl has promised elections
within six months of Khomelnl's
overthrow. The Mojahedln executive committee felt it would ·
take that long to stabilize the
country. Acknowledging that
power corrupted both the shah
and Khomelnl, Raflnejad said
this couldn't happen with Rajavl
- becau·se the people wouldn't
stand for it. "Really," he said,
'"the Iranian people cannot walt
for democracy any longer. The
gl~e that sticks us all together Is
this conviction for the freedom of

Iran ."

fly _ _ _ _ _R_ust_yB_row......._n

She carried an orange business
organize," and, with activist
card with a picture of a witch on · ·Laurie Shields, co-founde d the
lt. ••Me retlred?" It read. 11 1've
the di splaced homemakers'
just begun to Oy.'; The card
movemen t.
They lobbied Congress and
Identified her as Tlsh Sommers,
state
legislatures until classes.
"free-lance. agitator." She died
centers and programs, such as
Oct. 18, 1985.
the one I visited, spread
I remember sitting in a class'
nationwid e.
room 10 years ago with a group of
On Oct. 18, 1985, at age 71, the
women who h!\d not mel before.
patron
saint of displaced home
but who were sharing painful life
makers
died in a big VIctorian
stories with each other.
house In Oakland, Calif., a
·,. 1 quit sc hool at 16 to get
residence she shared with
married ... said one. "That was 19
Shields. a yarytng number of cats
years ago. Now l'm divorced. My
and homeless women.
only job .was six months as a
I last talked to her In the spring
telephone sollcllor."
of1983.
We sat at a picnic table In
Another said: "Nobody wants
a downtown park In Albua 57-year-old widow. Even the
querque, N.M., a thin April sun
men executives who Interview
warming our backs . Her curly
me are younger."
hair was peppered with gray; her
The stories were different, yet
energy not as vibrant.
alike. Each woman desperately
She told me of the cancer she
wanted a job. Each lacked skills
struggled against. But she talked
and feared for the future .
more about the Older Women's
They were all ove r 35, divorced
League, which she helped found
or or widowed. They were women
In 1980 to give visibility to the
who sometime before had been
needs and concerns of older
wiping noses, making pot roast
·
women.
Before her death, there
and running the PTA. But life had
would be 90 chapters and 13,000
wrenched· them from the world
members. OWL monitors cases
they knew.
•
of age discrimination and InequiNow they were In this college
ties in the Social Security,
classroom · to participate In
pensions and medical benefits
Ohio's tlrst pilot program of
often
faced by women, divorced
education, training and counselor Widowed.
Ing for people called "displaced
It worried her that women
homemakers." ,
retire on less than half of what
Until that day . I had not heard
men do and that two-thirds of all
the term . Nor had I heard of the
widows
live alone. "Many are
remarkable woman who eolned
lsola{ed
and very lonely," she
the phrase to deseFlbe herselfsaid, "almost if they are under
reeling from a divorce and 30
'house arrest.' Between their
years out of the job market.
meager finances and the crime In
A person of great inner
the streets, 'they stay at home
strength, Tlsh Sommers rallied
with only a TV for company."
with the credo: "Don't agonize-

She longed to see more shared
housing for older women as a
wa y to lower expenses and
provide companionship. "EI·
derly women, " she said, "should
not be deprived of the touching,
caring and sharing that make us
warm and human ."
She spoke with enthusiasm· of
older women developing new

skills and evolving as much as at
any other time In their lives.
"Being older," she said,' "Is not
over the hill. It's just another hill
Ito climb.''
Tlsh Sommers climbed many
hills In her lifetime and reached
many summits. What will endure
Is that she showed countless
other women how to do the same.

Berry's World ·
THlS IS WHAT IT'S All
ABOUT,
FOLKS
.

BlG BUCKS.

WELCOME TO THE

BIG BUCKS BOWL!
••

,1...------------J

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

·The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

Meigs com~s from ·behind in final period to win, 65~51 ·
TRIMBLE - Meigs had to
oome from behind In the fourth
: quarler to notch a 65:51 win over
upset-minded Trimble here
Tuesday In TVC cage action.
· Down 40-39 heading for the
final eight minutes, the Marauders zipped to an eight point lead
durin g the rirst two and a half
mi)lutes of that final period and
the Tomcats never came closer
afterward.
Meigs goes to 12-2 on the year
including an 11-1 mark tn the
TVC . Trimble continues Its hardluck seasim at 1-11 overall and
1-10 In the.conference. ·Meigs had
nipped the Tomcats by four at
home earlier.
. Balanced scoring marked• the
Meigs play, as six players scored
between seven and 14 points.
Mike Bartrum took game-high
honors with 14 . while J. R.
Kitchen followed with 13. Donnie
Becker added ll, Huey Easo'n
and Phil King eight each, and
Brent Bissell chipped in seven.
Chris Karns led Trimble with 13.
Coach Mlck Childs ' crew re
mal ned on top Ihe TVC 'lh th I
WI
er
ll·l mark, but only by a razor' s
edge as Vinton County now 1a- 1 ·
d 111
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r ed Wellston 95-82 Tuesday.

Meigs made 24 of 57 shots for42
per cent and 17 of 25 foul shots for
68 per cent. Trlmbleputln23of59
fielders (39 per cent) and only
five of 16 free throws for a Icy 31
per cent.
The Tomcats, led by Karns' 12,
dominated the backboards with a
35-24 rebounding edge. Bissell led
Meigs with seven. Meigs had II
assists, led by Becker's six, while
Trimble had 14 with · Jimmy
. Holbert's seven being tops.
Meigs had ~nly 10 turnovers
compared to Trimble's !!0. Meigs
had 15 louis whistled while the
Tomcats eommltted 19.
Coach R~sty BoOkman'·s Little ·
Marauders were shadl,'d by the
Tomkittens ·In the. reserve opener, 52-46. Aaron .McCowan led
Trimble with 14 while Dave
Kovach added 13. Joey Snyder's
14 paced the Little Marauders,
now 9-5 overall and 9-31n the tight
TVC race.
Meigs returns home against
Belpre Friday while Trimble
must go to Vinton County.
MEIGS C&amp;JJ - J. H. Kllehen &amp;-1-13,
llonnle Becker HJJ, Mike Bartrum
5-rl-14, Huey Eason 4-0..tl, Phil King 2-4-ft
Brent Bt, ..n 3-1-1, Bill Brot~..-. Ho:
Steve M...er 1·2-4. Chrts Smith o.~o .
TOTALS 24-11-tl.'l.
TRIMBLE (511- Chr"' Karn&gt; &amp;-l-t3,

.MHS girls remain
unbeaten; romp 63-24
ROCK SPRINGS - The unde· 36 per cent and nine of 17 charity
feated Meigs Marauderettes lore tos ses for 5.1 per cent. VCmadeiO
·apart Vinton Co unty 19-2 during of 17 free throws for 59 per cent.
·the second quart er here Monday MHS had 44 rebounds with
and cr uised to one-sided 63-24 win Swartz and .Julie Miller grabbing
over the Lady Vikings.
seven eac h and Jenny Mil ler and
Showing a balanced scoring Wendy Fry pulling down six
attack once again, the Marau - apiece.
'
. derettes' Jennl Swartz and Jennl
In the·reserve game, VC scored
Couch paved the way with 15 a 24-20 wln. Taml Case led the
point s each. Jenny Miller added Vinton Counly reserves with 10
nine and Missy Woods added six while Beth Ewing topped Meigs
as 10 differ ent Meigs lasses hit with eight.
the scoring ,column.
Missy
The Meigs lasses are at home
Runyon led VC with 11.
against Trimble Thursday n.lght.
Coach Ron Loga n's Maran·
VINTON COUNTV (241 - Missy Hu·,
derett es are now 13·0 overall and nyon 3-5-11, Carla Crewey H._2, Lori Ward
O-t - &lt;1~ Michelle Croqse 3-0.6. TOTAL~
11-0 in the TVC Coupled with 1-111-21 .
.Alexander's surpri sing o6-35
MEIGS (83) - Tammy Wrlghi 1·1·3,
thumping over Federal-Hocking , ,Jenni &lt;:ouch &amp;-:l-1~, denny Miller &lt;1-1·9,
,Julie Miller 2-1 -5, J"nnl Swartz 7-1·15,
Monday . Me igs tak es command Shelly Stobart HH, MII!IKY " 'Ood.'i 3-IHI,
of the TVC race with a two-gam o, Wendy Fry l-2-4, Dt-eHt•nder.~&gt;onO.O.O,Jodl
lea d over both Alexander and Taylor 1·0.2, Beth Ewing 1·0;-%. TOTAI...Iil
!7·9-81
Federal -Hock in g with five 8)• quarler!&lt;l :
Vlnlon County .......... . 9 2 R 5- 24
games lefl.
Meigs dropped 27 of 76 shots for Mel11!' ........................ 12 19 15 11-63
Vinton County U , Mei«S 28.

Re!ien~ -

Scoreboard ...
f)\l e hrt· .......... ...... .... lll11 7 -IS Ut 161
Hutfl&amp;lo .............. ...... l:l tl li :12 1:5% lilt
(' AMI"BF.LL CONI\'ERENfE

NBA Standings
R~·

Unitf'd rr~•:o" lnt•-rrmtiomd

W I.

P1·t. Gft

Hoston . ................... ... . .'!i II

Oil -

l'i•ll:tdt•lpllia ................ t~ r; . 36~
\\'u.o;hinld"n ......... ...... .. 111 1!1 ..itn

.i •:
K

N••"' r,,k .............. ...... t:t tl .:m II
:-.;,.". ·l cr~P~' ................. tn

Smytlw DM•Iio'n

('o • nlrnllll ~l~hm

........ ...... t.~ II .ti!U -

llt•lrolt

,\tlitnht. ....... . ... ..... ..... :~;; 12 .b11i

St. l.ouls .. .. .... .. .-... .. .. 16 00 II 40 I .'H 171
{ 'hlt· ~o ..... .............. 17 2:1 &amp; ~0 lli-1 IM9

Erchnumon .. .............!HI II ~ n :l l5 158
Wlnnlpelfl .. ........... ....'!e l'l' 4 Ml Hl51$1l

:'tf:l l'f

·~M

Norrl" Dhi l~lon
\\' L T Pb. GI-' GA
MIIIIW'~&gt;Ohll ...............tl ~ I .t H IM'll7-l
llMroh .... .... ............ IM !0 ~ U 1-10 llfi
Tnronto ... ... ............. JM tl , ~I 'liS6 16~
'

t: ,\."iTF.RN CONf' l&lt;~ kENC' E
Allantk Olvlslon

'~t

:\tlhnaukl•t•....
....... '!1 I&lt; . ~5 :1•,,
...................... to 17 .3H ;;t't
Indiana .. .. ...................'!11 Ill .ltli II
~ ' ll'\l'l~d .................... l3 t.a . JII~ II' !

l'ldKllry .... .......... .... .ttl :!0 I :Jll Iill IHfl
Lo.. Anlfl(·lr"~&lt;o .............w ~~ i ~6 19:1 11:1
\'~tnt·ou~·r ............ .. l.a i!:PI 5 :1.1 Ui IKII

fhlt · ~fCII

U' t; STF.H~ (.'O~ t· t: Ht: ~('t:
)1id~t.,.lllh· ;o.Jnn

K' I. 1'1'1.
..: ...... ... ............ ~ II .6:12
l 'tuh
........ 21 16 .:'1611
llou stnn... . .. ..... ........ 1!1 HI .:100
Ut •nH•r ................... .... 1"1 2:1 .I'!')
.•ilu·rurnt•nw ......... .. ... .. 1'! ~'ti .:lUi
:oian ,o\nllrnltl ........ ......... ll ·!K .:!lit
Pat'lfh· Dl\ lslun
1••\ l.uluor~ .. ................. :ift M .iM!I
l'urlliw d ... ~................ .. t -1 17 . ~~
(;oltt.•nStalo• ....... . ........ :!:l Ul . .161
Si •ultlt• .. .................... .'!fl 17 - ~H
ll lllh~~

08
~~ -~

5
~

C'llpp·r~ .. .............. .. .l

:1~

. 1 ~11

1:1•.1

-

Pilb;ltur,;h ..al..O!&lt;i Aln,;I!I• •M, lft ::\5 p.m .
71 1
111 1

'!31.1

l.llkf'r .~

(J :um""

at ,\tlunt a , 7:.'111 p.m .

NHL Standings .
' WAU.:."i ('OJ'Iin•:H.;N('E

1 2~

I 50 H;ll 1:»!
~s

I I:!

m

Ill~

1113
-12 161 1511
II lti!l ! U

·

~:1

seasons.
Lee completed his transit ion
from a college safely to an NFL
conerback this year, when he
earned a starting position at the
beginning of the season.
Ta lk-show host Bill ,Gray expects the lis tening and viewing
audience to enjoy meeting and
talking with Lee.
"Carl Is very personable, and
is looking forward to coming to
Ohio .Valley Bank and talking ,
football with all the fans," Gray

p.m.

Thun.di\,V':oo f.am1'S
l\lnntrt•11l W. lluMon. nl.r;hl
ntiJ~tr.t· 111 Nt•w
niJht

"''"t'Y·

161! HU

ll:lrllurd ,. ............. ,..'!'! Ill 8 GO IU 1 ~.,
RU!'ol un . ...... .... . .. .. ..... '!~ Ill ' ~!t Ui~ Ill

player of the year, led all scorers
with 22 points. Ron Rllllnge r
added 16 points and Mike Smith,
last week's MOC player of the
week , and Jimmy Kearns each
scored 13.
"It was a war, " RedmenCoach
John Lawhorn said alter his
squad rolled to Its lOth straight
vlclor.y. " One team had to come
out of here 4-1 and the other 5-0.
It 's nice to be undefeated In the
confer.ence."
Walsh, who fell to 14·6 and 4-1
with the loss, was led offensively
by Allen Walker with 18 points
and Jeff Young 16.
In RGC' womens action, ·the
Redwomen, 12-4 overall and 1·2
In the Greater Ohio Athletic
Conference, lost to host Malone
83-80 Tuesday night.

PICKENSMASON,
HARDWARE
WV.
r---------------·--------~
If There Is A Quesdon • ••

WALSH (8H) - Wtdker H · IK; Young
1·1H6; Remenow!lky '-0-12; Md)onald
3-0-8; Rcynold8 2-0..5; Gam blf'2· 0.-t; Sikora
l· t-4: Selmon 1· 1-3; Pinzonei ·0--2. TOTAL~
:I0-1·8R.
RIO GRANDE (7-&amp;) - Vt•rhoff 1·7·22:
RIHinger 5-&amp;16: Smith 6-i-1:1; Kearns
2·!H3; .Jackson ;{..0--8; Raymore 2-t-a.

TOTAI.Jl26-i2-74.
Halftime

!ICOrc:

,Walsh !H . Ri o GrMdc

:t2.

Don't Take A Chance.

said . " ... plus he remembers hi s
roots, he wants 10 help his alma
mater by assisting In recruiting
people toward MarshalL
"There ar~ only about 1,200
jobs In the NFL, and Carl has one
of them ... it makes him a special
person, one that I think everyone
Is going to enjoy this Saturday."
Lee, hi s wife Donna and son
Dominic live in Hurrica ne,
W.Va ., during the off-season.

675 .!1340

·------'

WE'RE
~JtiACt&lt;SON

AKE · Rt3S WEST

---452-4

BIIGIIN IITINI!S Sit. &amp; SUN.
ILL SEATS 12.50.
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY 12.50

JANUARY 11 thru 22
FRIDAY thru TH\IRSDAY !

OPEN
FOR YOU
F'R I,D AY'S

Til: f•lt Of nil fVTUM LID

tiiiiOIM II TMl MIT,
K»ot..WUI Olt Umt ... ftM.

UNTIL
7 P.M •
Includes Lobby,
Installment Loan Department.
orlve·ln And Walk·UP
Window

8o!ootOn -

Sl~l'd

&amp;vlor -

N~ml'd

Peoples Bank

fOIJ.F.fiE
Sid Hud11011 pl• ·•hiJ:

Nllmf'd, l!lob
· l~nt• QIIIUtt•rhtu·k c:ullt:IL Wt'lli \'lr~nl11
Nlllli•( 'nlltol(r- N11nwd l)olll l'lm.nh· a~

"The letter lank"

a... .;]!o~~tnl hlt!lf'hldlt•o"':h.
t'O(YI'It\1.1.
Mhuul - NamNI {' it'\'l' llllld lof't'l)lllhtry
t'Oat•h Tom Olluutolll a~ dt•lt'nliiVf'
t·oor.llnlllnr 10 rt'pllli.'# C11111c-k Mtudlf'3',

MEMBER F.D.I.C.

w·.ho WIIM n11med IIIM'flat.' ltt•r t.-o~~rh: Reh
Mlllhl.'fiiJil reflll(rll'd liM lhwh~~e~t'l'!oi t:•w:·IL

Z212J.,._A_

HOrKEY

--

.·

Nf'M' l 'orlt K11n.:•·r~-CIIIIm•·• dt'ft'riKf'"
m• Rud M... wt•ll on Wllh't•n. from

oi,W. Yo.

171-1121

lith a....

- - . W. Va.
. 112·2136

\' ~nc~UI\'f' r .

CARL LEE

Driessen could
rejoin Cinci'nnati
CINCINNATI (UP!) - It's
possible that former Clnclnnall
Reds' first baseman Danny
Driessen could re-join the Reds
this season.
Reds' general manager Bill
Bergesch says he has talked with ·
Driessen about the possibility of
a spring training tryout, although no final decis ion has been
'
reached.
Driessen. 35, with. the Reds
from 1973 to 1984, is now ·a free
agenl following short stints with
the Montreal Expos, San Francisco Giants and Houston Astros.
Bergesch also said he has
talked recently with another free
agent, Terry Francona, 27.
Both Driessen and _francona
could fiJI a couple of Reds' needs
- left -handed pinch hltllng and a
backup first baseman.
Driessen said his meeting with
Bergesch was "encouraging.''

Trlmble..................... IG 12 12 II - ~I
R&lt;~•••"" - Trlml~e u. rot•• ill" 46.

Transactions

NoriiM•I&amp;III l.•tul!ilwua -

l'h ll:td••lphl:a ............ :n I '! (I li3 l!t4

.u

Minnesota Viking defensive
back Carl Lee will speak on "The
Roundball Review" 10 a.m. Saturday morning on WJEH -AM .
with an autographing session
also planned at the Ohio Valley
Bank, 420 Tl)ird Ave.
Lee, a former Marshall Unl·
versUy star, will be discuss ing
Super Bowl XXI on the program,
taped live from the bank lobby.
Lee and the Vikings played
against three of the four .teams
involved In this year's conference championship games, with
the Denver Broncos being the
exception.
He will be at the bank 10-11:30
a.m. No admission will be
charged.
Lee starred at South Charleston (W.Va.) High School befo re
attending Marshall University,
where he was All-Southern Con- ·
terence as a safety his last two

I'UIU' il.

I' at rli'k Olv~kJ n
'
\\' I. T l"l!oo. IIF (;,,

10 211 - 8~

•Stove Pipe
•Furnace Filters
•Pipe Insulation
•Hea·t Tapes

to visit Gallipolis area

rooklr ~urd fonm•r
lh•nry 111 u t·onlrut·t lvr lht• rt•mWndrr ol
I hi• st'll.~nn .

Thursda,v'11 fin !Ill'
l.11h ni al lndhuu~ . nl~thl

" 'a-lllnfrll)n ............. 19 '!'~ ~
N\' llun ll•'r .. .. ..... ..... 1M ·at II
l'llt ~ hlltl{ll ............... " ·,!G II
,'1:;•"' , lf ' f !ool'~' .. ........ ... 1" 24 ,,
.\dwn'~ lllvbdnn
.' \luntrt'lli ................. t llll 7

18:~5

By quarlm:
Mell!" ....... .... ............. 10 t9

Carl Lee, Vikings QB,

RMKETBALI.

nt•lrullall'luh. fl ::«&lt;jt.m .

:-..T l ~ l:and!• r" ..... ...... '!1 00

111 VIUU'OUVf'f.

RIO GRANDE - The Rio
Grande College Men's ~asketbal!
squad moved Into sole possession
of first place In the Mid Ohio
Conference Tuesday nigh! with a
74-68 victory over Walsh m Paul
R. Lyne Center.
Sophomore guard Jim Kear~s
canned five of Rio Grande s .
seven techmcal free throws In U1e
l~st two minutes to clinch the
VIctory and the league lead for
the Redmen.
The Redmen successfully converted all seven of their technical
free-throw attempts in the final .
i
two-m nute span .
The visiting Cavaliers, who
entered the game tied with Rio
for first place with a4-0, jumped
out to a 17-7 advantage early In
the first half and held onto a 34·32
lead at halftime.
In the second hall, the Red·
men, 19-4 overall and 5-0 in the
MOC, built a seven-polntlead In
the second half and hit on a total
of eight of 10 free-throw attempts
In the final four minutes to
preserve the victory.
Joe Verhoff, last season's MOC

Nunu•d L11rr~· Wltllmor r Mt'nrrul
diiUUII,II;t'r ,
PIU!ihur~h - Slpt-d ~IMirl,.lnP"&gt; IIOU!oo•
IIIII ,flmf'ilt•t 11ild \ I.L . ~' wohlntrlon loAtU
t•unttads.
lolan Frutu·l-"t'O- C'lllc·hf'l'·lnflrldt'l' Roh
Hrrnly IIJ:r('l•d 111 lt'rm~&gt; on ll lwo-yt•ur
t•ontr:at•l .

MJiwuultN' al fli•\'f•liutd. 7::10 p.m .
N••w l 'nrk at J)alhl~. It: :MI p.m .
llnu _..,_OII nl ~an 1\IMnnln, II: :UI p.m.
( Jollk'll Sill II' ut l&gt;t'll\'f'r, II: :ut p.m .
l o~\

Han~r~

Aaroo McCOwan

Rio Grande free
throws top Walsh
74-68 in MOC tilt

fharh·~ utn t SftUIII Allanlh• IA•lltr~~t•l­

lndi1U1 :t :tl Huslun, 'I'::Ill p.1n.
l'tuwnlx ul ,o,:,."· ·h•rM•.t' , 7:!111 p.m .
S(•'-'llt• itl l"hllad i• lphl:l, 7: :UI p.lll.
l.r\

Nl'

HH Jell Koo .. 6-I).U,
1-0-2: TtrrALSZS-5-!1.

·

IVJ~EBALL

Ttu-sda,v',; Kl· ~u hs
f'hll'lill:ll 10:1. Milw ~ uk, •t• IIO
.'&lt;i:wrllnw ntn I'Z:I. (i uhl••n stalt· Ill
M't•dnl'1od :~v·~

"' ••dnf*lii.Y ' ~ O~tmf'!oo

MontrnJ Itt Jl a rtlurd, 7: !l'i p. m .
N\' l!! lnndl·r~lll Dl'tr~Jit . 7: 3~ p.m.
st. l .oul!'i Ill Toro•lo. 7: a~ p.m .

l'tllhtdt·lphla 111 l'hlt•llii:IJ, 11: !15 p. m.
F..dmonton 111 "'lnniPf'l:· 11: :1~ p.m.

I~

91 1
l'hcwnl:.: ... .... .. ........ ...... lti ~:1 .110 1~1 1

L\

Tlu.,;dll.,v's lt.'!lullli
8, Nt·~· .lt•r,;t•y :1
Huston ~. tt•t'hel' :1
fKI,~~;~tr~ 3. N\' l rdMdrrl' I
Mlnr-utll5, Bllllalu D
W~~!-ihln~on

Jimmy Holben 3-Z.K, Kyan McCieiiBB
Z.O·I.- Scott Shamhart Z.O·I, Tom ShtOot

IMP-ORTANT
NOTICE
TO
• Lime Giil'i'tin
•Raspberry Gelatin
•Cherry Gelatin
·
•Lemon Gelatin
EQUAL TO 4 SMALL IOXES

WHITE &amp; YELLOW POPCORN............... 60c •·
YELLOW CORN MEAL........................... 35c •·
SPECIAL TH'S WEE.K

POWDERED SUGAR ....._
............... , ... 95'

Ohio Val-leyt
514 DST MAIN

·-101.

Foods
992-6910
,_,,..,.
We leapt

DOG OWNERS

•

OF MEIGS COUNTY
Owners are responsible for seeing that their dogs
art licensed each year. Beg,i,n,ning F•bruary. .l,...
198 7, the Mtigi County Dog Warden wUI begir:chtcking dogs for tags. Owners of dogs not having
tags will be cittd to court and subiect to fine. Final
day to purchase dog tags without penalty is
JANUARY 30, 1987.'·

�Page- 4- The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy- MiddlepOrt, .Ohio

.

~

.

~orth Gal~ia ·comeback tops Easte~ Eagle .five,
By Scott Wolle
EAST ME IGS- Red -hot North
G~)lla outscored host Eastern
44.27 1n the second ha lf enroute to
a \4 -59 SVAC tri umph at Eastern
High School Tuesday evening to
remai n just one game out in
le4gue standings .
!"he sharp-shooting"! rio of Todd
Holstein, Mi ke Kemper, and
R\{Sty Denney combi ned for 61 of
th~ team's poi nts, scoring 24, 20.
ani! 17 respectively . I n addition
to ' he strong fro nt line. Pirates
Shane Glassburn and Steve Bur ne(t netted nine and four points .
Jl:astern pla'ced th ree men In

double ligures led by Junior teams produced much excite- resulted In the ten point defici t.
guard Jeff .Caldwell with 15, Ed men! In a hectic, free-wheeling The two SVAC clubs tr aded
Collins wit h 10, and sophomore shoot-out: Eastern gr abbed a buckets for a 52-42 third period
Mike Marlin 11. Allen Tripp had 29·26 1ead and elected to freeze Its score.
another good Inside game with 6 leading margin, however·, an
Despite a good comeback et- ·
points and 6 rebounds, while over anxio us EHS crew tur ned
for t by Eastern In the final round,
Tony Hendrix netted two points.
the ba ll over once and good
the period was purely academic.
Eastern grabbed a 3-0iead just Pira te defense turned another A torrid tempo and pressure
fi fteen sec~nd s Into the game as possession Into a 30-29 ~I rate defense allowed the Pirates to
Mike M ar ti n completed a three lead.
take a 63-44 advantage. Eastern,
poin t play . The ensuing play
Rusty Denney and Todd Hoi· how ev~r. C()!lntered wi th a press
resulted In a torrid nip-and-tuck stein gave the Pirates the l ead, of Its own, .cutting the lead to
battle tha t ended In an 18-15 · bu t a Caldwell jumper wit h :30 nine, bu t ran out of steam In the
Pi rate lead.
left gave EHS a 32-30 halftime
final stretch.
·
A highly contested second lead.
.
. Eastern hit just 24 o(86 for 29
In a game much closer than Its percent, and canned 7-9 at the
fra me didn't produce an abun dance of offense, however, both final score, North Galli a held a line. North Galli a hit a torr id 33of
slight 42-40 edge with 2:43 left In 56 for 59 per cent, while nett ing
the third fram e. A .Nor th Gallla just 8 of 20 at the line.
press, poor Eastern shot selec-. . Despite its cold night fr om the
tlon, and Pira te fast break broke floor Eastern held onto a strong
open the two point game, the Inside gam e with 38 rebounds, led
Pirates scoring ten unanswered by Mike Martin with 10, and Ed ·
points for a 50-40 lead with :49 Collins with 7. NG had 28 led by
remaining.
Kemper and Denney with 9 each.
Three K em per goal s a·nd
E HS had 9 steals, 12 assists, 18
scores by Gl assburn and Burnett

Southern
hands
.
~C ·66-50 defeat;
Wildcats, SW cop
)~ague triumphs
.

•

•
SOuthern bounced Kyger Cr eek
66-00. Hannan Trace rolled pas t
Sy(i,mes Valley 7:!-52, and
Southwes tern edged Oak Hil l
;;;;.54 in Southern Valley At hletic
ga !)lt's Tuesday night .
Southern 66 KC 50 .
-' \ hot shoot ing first quar ter
which carr ied into the remainder
of t he game propelled Southern
High School ro a G6-50 So ~t her n
V a ~ley Athletic Conference basketball victory Tuesday night .
'!'he vlsil ing Tornadoes, 8-4
owira ll and 6-.1 in the SVAC,
junjped out to an 18-6 lead after
one period on strong perimeter
shooting. The solid shooting
per]o rmancc co nt inued in th e
second period. as Sout hern held a
36-t7 lead at halft imr.
T)le Tornadoes hit on 30 of 50
s hot~ from the field 160 percent)
for ~ he game.
'fite, hosting Bobcats comm it led ·24 turnovers on the eveni ng.
preventing 1hem from staging a
cor{leback.
'\lfurnovrrs arc going to kill
yoU: every timr," Bobca t Coach
Scotl Stemple sai d after hi s
squtld fell to :\-9 and 2· 7. "We had
'been eliminati ng our turnovers,
but:here la tely we have had our
problems again."
sQu thern w~s led by guard
Da~e llmburge.v, who scored 26
poi nts, and Kevi n Turley 14.
Mike Bradbury led Kyger
Cn:tk with 21 poin ts.'" the only
Bobca t to scor e in double figures.
Box score:
.SO UTJit~ KN 16fil Milli ron ll-1-1;
,\n\}lll r ~t'Y ll ·.j·2ti: Hlffl1• :t-0-6; lla r rl"
1-11·2: s,·11U Md ' htlll Hl-2; llollz 1·0-2;
'l'urtt•y-'7· 1._1 ~: :\lt· Millan l-'I·H: Kim es 'toG-~ .
TilT
:1~ 1&gt;66
K)'GE!! CRF.E K Iilii I - llud&lt;oo t-H:
Gnr.d nn 2·0--1; Brudhu ry ~i.. 21: L.owday
2· ~· t': R t• 11 :t• 1 · 2~: IA•tu-h .2- 0·4: O••mwy
I·D·Z: Lundnn 1-ll-2. TOTA I.S IIH I-:wt.
R)' tJUa rtt•r.. :
AouOwrn ......... ......... ... 1M lit I ~ IM-Iili
KyKe&lt; C" ' ''k ........ ..... ... 6 II 7 26--~1
RetrWr \'t' ~~ ·orp: Soutlll'rn 17, ky~~:er

AI..,

C"rt!~k

:n.

SW 55 Oaks 54
.~s ty Burlrson picked off a
m iSsrd flw lhrow ar tempt wlt h
six· seconds left ancl was fou led,
I hen hit one of lwo charity tosses
to gtve host Southwestern a 55-54
SV Ac hardwood victory over
Oa~ Hill Tuesday night.
'llw Oaks had gone ahPad 54-0:1
latr in the game wh~n Andy
HaC. top made lha first of
one:-&lt;md-onc frcc throw with
~lghl s~co nd s left to knot the
count . Then ca me Bur leson's
l'l'b(Jund off a missrd second
attempt.
Th e Oaks' Brian HOWC'I I
mi~C'u a dl'SJX' t'a tlon shot from
20 fret out a! the· bu zz••r.
The win left SWHS 7-6 overall
and;._,, in loop pla y. The Oak s
dropped Jo 7-6 and :i-4 . Friday,

a

74 to 59

tur novers, and 16 fouls. NG had 9
steals, 14 assists, and 4 turnov· ·
.er s, with 8 tout s.
Jert Caldwell and Ed Collins
shared good floor games, comblplng for 10 assi sts. Caldwell
had tour steals and six assists.
North Gall Ia clatriled .an exolt·lng reserve match 55-53 led by
Steve Geor ge's 22 potnrs and
Greg Glassburn's 9. For East«;&gt;rn
freshman Shaun ·Savoy had '20,
Kenny Caldwell 13, Mike Frost

Wednesday, January 21·, 1987

•

10, and Chad Sinclair lo.
Eastern travels ' to Ha nnan
Trace F ri day .
NORTH GAL~LIA ( 7t l - Todd Hoi·
stein, 11 -~24: Mike Kf' mper, 8-4-to; Ru sty
Denn ey, ft- 1· 17; Shane GIIL"i!iihum, ~- J- 9:
K£&gt;1th Burnette, 2·0-t 1 '0T.U..~ a:i-M-n
EASTE RN (S9) -Ed Collin&gt;, }~ 10:

Jeff Caldwell, 6-3-15; Mark GrUHn . l:i-3- I:J;
Tony Hendrix, 1-D-2; Mike Ma rtin,
AI Tripp, 3-~6. TOTAJ.'i 26-7-59.

By quarter":
North Gall la ...... ..~ ..... l8 t2 22 22- 7~
Easle rn ..................... l5 17 It 17 - 59

53.

I

'

,,'

..'
• &lt;

·

We Reserve The Right To
Limit Quantities

STORE HOURS ..
Mon.-Sat. 8 AM-10 PM
Sunday 10 AM -10 PM

'

~

'.,.,
••

"1

RUTLA~JO

Phone 742-21 DO
PRICLS UFtCTIVE THRU SAL JAN. 24. 1987
SHREDDED ..... ;•.Ib. $2.39

"•1,,
'"'"'
•"•

..••

WIN!!

298 SECOND ST.

POMEROY, OH.
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT., JAN. 24, 1987
.........

•

''•·I

Ham Salad ................. ~!~......... 99&lt;

'I

AT

1

''

.

Powell's
Super valu

ECKRICH

Turkey Breast .......... ~!!•..... S2.89

t:t-~~2.

YEllOW ONIONS ........ J9c

VElVEnA
CHEESE ............!Po~..... S3.99

'
I'

"'

RED
RADISHES .......... 2 PAm 59&lt;

.,•

LEMONS .............. 2 FOR 29C

CHICKEN

'

6 OZ. PACK

16S CT. SUNKJST

79(
Drumsticks •••••• i~·••••
CHICKEN
s·9(

..
...'

Thighs •••••.••••••••L~

••

..

.••••

( l'!&lt;W!&lt;i U ~9001

Pllh li~ h! 'll

1'\ '1' 1'

. •1 1 ~ ' !"11 i!l1n .

M o nda ~

C i ~tll' l

Sl. . Pt•

thf oul-( h F1"111:1v. 111

ml,r n~·. Ohio. ll ~ TIH' Ohln \ 'all r·y Pull
tt-.hln~:

('om p:•n' Mull lmNIIa. I n•·..
Pnnwro' . f1hifJ ~ ~· 7 f.o~l . Ph. ~l!l'! 2 1 ~••• Sf'
m nd d . 1 ~~ IW~t &lt;~ ~ l' tMid &lt;II P o mf'l'!l ~ ,
ni(Jn

..

Mqmlll" r : Llni!NI Pn ·.. ~ lntt· t·nal ton;tl .
I n•ttncl Da IIY Prf');)O A1-lSO('I al lon a ncl I hi'
Cl trl n Nl'w ~ p&lt;tpt • r 1\ "' tlt 'l.il lun. Natlon;tl
Adv r rt l-.l n ~ Rrprrst• nLLII\'f' , Antnham
~ev.' ~ l)iiPI'I" Sail'&lt;. . -;;t\ Thlnl 1h ·rmw .
No.w 'l'Mk . Nrw Yn t•k l111l17.

.

POJiTMASTEn ~nfl .uh[n .c.~ r h.111J.,.':'&lt;
Da\1,\ St•ntl nl'l , 111 C'nm1 St..
Pninrrov, Ohio -1r1i1;!,

tc • ~ Th f'

:~

SUKSC'IU M ION Ut\ l'E.\i
8" Cu rrl••r nr Mu l nr Koult•
•
O~f" Wt' rk ... .....
.
..... $L •.1
01\f' Mo nt h ..... .... .
.. . ~5.4tl

i.

20 OZ. FRESHUKE

·.

Vegetables FoR souP •••••• r~.c.•••• $1.3 9
16 OZ. MRS. PAUL'S . .

Onion Rings ...................... $2. S9
I OZ. IIRDS·EYE
(ool Whi

0 flo(J Yt•ar ....... ..........

.

D:'!,IY ..

. ... .$4,~UXl

SINGU; CO PI'
' PHict:
. ... 2!l Cf'n ts

..•'

10111 OZ. CAMPBELL'S VEGnABLE AND
NORTON SHOOTS - Eastern's Brent Norton ( 40) takes a jump
shot as North Gallla's Todd Holstein tries to stop the EHS eager In
Tuesday's SVAC contest at East M eigs. The Pirates won, 74·59.

CHOICE . .

Roun·d Steak ....L:.•••
.u.s:o.A. CHOICE ·

'

EHS girls defeat Pirates
VINTON - Visiting Eastern
broke open an 8-7 game In the
second period with a 17 point
offensive outburst to claim a
45-34 SVAC girl s' vtNory over the
Nor th Gallla L ady Pirates.
Eastern's L esa Rucker poured
in a game-high 22' points and
collected 7 r ebounds In another
fine· Individual effort. Senior
tea mmate Tanya Savoy netted 9
mar kers, Arlene Ritchie 6. Patty
Durst 4, Melanie Mankin 2, and
Jenny Cowdery 2.
Rita Cordell paced North Gal·
Ita wit h nine marker s, whlel
Ta mmy Coe had 8. Denise
Pickens 5, Jayne Campbell 5,
Anna Parson 2. Rachel Borden 4,
and Lori Axline 2.
Eastern cJ"atmed an 8-7 l ead In
the first ca nto behind four points
each by Savoy and Rucker. A
good tea m effort ra llled EHS to a
comfortable 25-16 halftime lead
which EHS held to the finish,
45-34.
EHS hit 16 of 38 for 42 percent
and 13 of 16 at the line for 81
percent. The Eaglettes had 6
assists. 9 steals, and 16 fouls.
Savoy had 4 steals and Melanie
M.ankln 3 assis ts to lea d the
wi nners, who collected 27 rebounds . Besides Rucker's 7.
Ritc hie. Durs t , and Trlsh

U.~.D.A.

"•

Spencer each had 4.
Coach Pam Douthitt said, " We
shot a lot better at the line, but
commltted too many turnover s. I
am very pleased with our bench ,
strength. They ar e doing a fine ·
job and everyone Is pl aying good ·
tea m ball ."
Eastern Is 5-8 overall ; 5-4 In the
l eague. Eastern plays Hannan
Trace at home beginning at 5: 30.

. ·

$

Turkey
Franks
••••••
9
19

•
Su4lsrrlb4
'1"1" not d rslrl ng Il l p11y I hl'Ci:ll'·
rll"f mav rPmil In ildvun{'(• dlrPCI to
TttP Oa liv S.•nllnrl on a J, flnr 12 month
b~l~ . rr'PtiH wil l bfo s;liV(In cu rr ier f'{l c-h
wQ/Ik .

NG s ubsr rlpOon~ bY mftlll)('rmltrNt In

11rtA" whNf' holl)(' rarrl('r scrv lcr Is
avnllabll'.

•

Mall SuhMcrtptloml
Ins ide Melp Cou llll y
J:\;Wf'f'k:s . .... ............................ . $1 7.29

~-----....
---iI REWARD!

CASH PRIZES
( 1)

·

$100

PKG.

COLUMBIA

CASH PRIZE
JACKPOT

Bacon ••••••••••••••••••••
12 OZ. PKG.

MINIMUM OF ' 100
MAY BE MOREl

'·

(
Bananas •••••••••••L~ 29
BROUGHTON
Sl 59
2°/o Milk ••••••••::; •••
KRAFT PARKAY.
.
2
I
Sl
Margar1ne ••••••••••
.••••

Nec.chi's Educa tion Department placed orders in an tici pation of previous yeor l
soles . Ou e to budget cutl these sol es ore unclaimed . These machines must be l
sold I All machines otfered are the most modern' 'm achi nes ~n tha ~ecch i Unt. l
These machines ore M ADE OF METAL and sew on all fobncs, l eviS , Canvas,
Upkols tery , Nylon. Stretch. Vi nyl, Stre tch . Vinyl, Silk , EVEN SEW ON LEATHERI
Thas.e machines ore new with o 25-yeor warranty. With the ~ew 1987_rtecc~L yo ~.o~
Ius! 1el the color -coded dial and see mag ic happen : stro•ght aewmg, ZIQ·tag ,
buttonholes (any tile), Invisib le blindhem, monogram, sotln stitch, embroidery,
applique, sew on buttons and snOpl, topstitch ... o~ of this and mar~ without tfl~
need of ·ol d fashioned cam or progromm er1i . Ydur price with thtl ad, $198,
without this od $5~ .95 . MosterCord ond Vlsa 1 accept ed ~ your checks are
welcome. Showing In conjunction with Necchi Distribu tion Co .. Educa llor101
Division.

I

450

I

:!ll"W•rks .................................. $34.00
52'11'•1'1&lt;.• ..... ............... ....... .... ... $61l.56
'
Ou l~df' Melp Co unty

n,:W f'f'ks ............... ...... ............. St8.20

Saturday, January 24th
10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

·
__
_
---- ---

........

26-W'N•k.o; .. ........ , ,, ,, ... , , ..... ........ · $35.10
52&lt;We&lt;'k• ........... ......... ........:..... 167.110

•

,~.~t~·.~~!. !~N

-ONE DAY ONLY-

•:

&gt;

1I

SHOWING AT

........

,

'

lB

~~~

-.,
I
UNCLAIMED SCHOOL ·SEWING MACHINES I
I
II
I
II

I

___............~,.~

sso

Sl .19

Chuck -Roast ....L:....
KENTUCKY BORDER
oz.
W·•eners •••••••••••••••••
12

(2)

LB.

-------.........-~~~

I

(4)

CASH PRIZES

LONGACRE

--~--~

I
I
I

Now thru February 28th

$1 29 $25
Lunch Meats ••• i~·...
-

=-!

Tlw Dail y Senlin.-1
, A Ul\'l.. lon 11f 1\t ulll nwdla, In&lt;·.

EACH
WEEK

FLAVORITE SLICED

By tJUa rter s:
Oa klflll ......... .. ......... l-1 II I ~ H - ~~
So uthwt•s tf' rn ............. 19 Ill 10 16 - 5:\
KL-s t'n'l! .. to rP- Oa k IIIII :DI Sou lhwrst·
f•r n 2~

HANNAN TR1\rt: 1~:1) -Tim Hru m·
lll't d, G-0·12: Scou Ra nk in, &amp;- 0-l t: Rlcit
~wain. ;,..J- 11; l 'hrl'i P f•l ro. 9-3-:t l ; Kl t'ltard
Sllff. 0-·1--1; .la k P .l o nt ~. :t- l·i; ~tu r k
·lt•nkl n!'o. t).:t-:1: Brttd Cr t•ml•enf!i, 0-1~0:
L.tr n- ·h.rrt• ll. 0.0·0. TOT!\J,S 2~ 1 ~. 7:1.
Rl; lflt arlf•rs:
Sy m mt~ Va ll ry ......... 10 10 HI 1:4- l 'l
lla nmm 'J'r ut•t• ........ ... IK :ro IM 17- 7:J
H.t'Sf'r\'t' . .t •tt r t• ll unn un T r a l't' ·10
S)'O utll'~&lt;~ Va ll t')' :1~ .

MARGARINE QTRS ........s3c

2·11. IIAFT

Ru rlf'!!!OD, + 1·9; l)a n P at ri ck. -1-:i· l l; .John

Ml k t• l•o.tl ~rHtlll, 0.1~ 11; 1) . Mt •(' a rt ~. ().(HI;
St·oll " 'llll ums, 0--G-0; St·olt Mlll t•r. 0-0-0.

3 Ll. NEW

CHEESE WHIZ ..!~! ..... Sl. 99

fotJ•y. 2-:1-7: TOTAu; !HH!.

SV I\-1M!'ti E"'' Vi\ U ,EV ($21 - D1tlla..o.;
S.B- It; Tony St·hn h&gt;dt-r • .J.'l· IO;
Shant• Ml'adnw s, 3-:t.-9; l.arr,v fo' u rriN,
; .:Hi; su•vf' Gat.t t&gt;M, ~&lt;H: •Jit)' Whil e, 0·0.0:

'

1-ll. !(HEDD SPREAD
16 OL IIA"

2-1--ft.U
SOUTHWESTERN I Ui - ~ nd y Hul• ·
lop, !'i-::-1%; Rl ~ k lla ls lop, 7-2-16; .lustln

T lht~.

·•.
I

·······················~·········~~~(

OAK HILL U -11 - Cr aht ree. 1-0·2; Hal e,
7-1· 15: Copplo;, ~ 0· 10; Fuyc, 7·J.I5:
ll owell,-1- 3· 11 : Ra wlins, 0- 1-1. TOTALS

Wild cats 73 VI kings 52
Host Ha-nnan Trace jumped off
to an 18-10 firs t period lead and
never t ra lied In an easy 73-52
vic t ory over ne i ghbori ng
Symmes Valley Tuesday.
It was 38-20 at halftime and
56-39 after th ree periods. Coach
Mike Jenkins cl ear ed his bench
ea rly and oftl'n. ·
Chris Petro led the Wildcats,
now 9-5 over all and 8-1 In loop
play. Rick Swain added 14. Scott
Ra nkin and Tim Brumfield had
12 each.
Lar ry Farris led the VIki ngs
with 17. Da llas Tibbs added 12
and Tony Schnieder had 10. ·
The VIki ngs dropped to 1·11
and 0-9. Friday, SVH S plays at
Nor th Gallla. HTHS will hos t
Eastern.
The Wildcats hit 29 of 59 from
the fiel d and 15 of 22 free throws ,
had 38 rebounds, 11 by Swain and
nine turnovers. Symmes Va lley
hit 22 of 49 field goal attempts,
was eight of 16 at the line, had 26
rebounds, Farris had 12 and
committed 19 tur novers.
Box score:

.."

12 OZ. KEtUUCIY IORDER

..·.

WIN!!

';' ·~

'"••

Boiled ·Ham .......... lH~Ef••••~·•• $2. 19

'

WIN!!

•

DEPARTMENT STORE
·'

·cash
Jackpot

,.,

~ I - ll:

· He~&lt;~ev e sL"Ore- Norlh Gllllla ~5 Eastern

SMITHFIELD

'

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5 : :

Pomeroy- Middlepart, Ohio

'

HOMEMADE

Oak Hill is at Southern and
Southwestern at Kyger Creek.
SWHS led 19-14 and 29-25 at the
first two brea ks be for e the Oaks
forged ahead 40-39.
For the Highlanders. Rick
Halslop led the way with 16
point s. Andy Halslop added 12
and Da n Patrick 11. Er ic Faye
and Mike Hal e led I he Oaks wit h
15 apiece. Howell added 11.
The Oa ks were 24 of 42 from the
field and six of nine at the line.
The visitors had 52 rebounds, 12
eac h by Jedd Raw lins and Hale, ·
and had 14 turnovers.
Southwestern hit 22 or 47 from
the field and 11 of 23 from the line.
The wi nners had 56 rebounds, 18
by Bur leson and 15 by Pat r ick .
Box score:

TOTI\L"''

.

Wednesday, January 21, 1987

DAIRY LANE

:
$
11
9
Ice
Cream
•
•••••••••••
89&lt;
Orange D~ink •••••••

WAGONER'S
That's the way we are at City Loan
Bank. Up front, fair, plain talking. So call
City Loan Bank. Get the money you need
·today, without getting payments you'll regret
tomorrow
•

G:r
'2r.m
Member FDIC

Pomeroy: 116 E. Main St., 992-217L
-----------------

oz.

REAMES

NABISCO PREMIUM

I

Saltines ••••••••••. i!·••••
••••
• ••••••
•·····cou~&gt;m·······
•
•
FINAl TOU(H I
:

•

•

'

.
•

~

64

oz.

•
.:

· -· • • • ·• • • • ' . e • • • • • • • • •

•

... .•

WHITE ClOUD

TOILET TISSUE

99&lt; :

o
limit 1 P" Cut!•
Goa!l only at Powell'• Super Yalu
• ·· GoM ttwu Sot Jilt. 24, 1917

...

4 ROLL
t

89&lt;

Umlt 1 '" Cutt"""
Good only ot Powoll't S.,.. Yolu
Good llw• Sot.
24, 1"7

. :

coo~

• ,••••

C\11, • , , , ,.. 1.-

• : CLOROX BLEACH :

~

GAL..

79C .
.

limll 1 Per Cutlomtl

:

J.,..
.....
•••••••••••••••••••

•

·
Noodles •••••••••••••••••
..
...
.....
.
.....
.....
.
.
!
••
12 OZ. PKG.

•••• .'CO(Jp(fi'.•••••
.•
'

•
:

: FABRIC SOFTENER •
•

• Commertlol Credit Company

(MUST COME IN
AND CLAIM
PRIZE BY
FOLLOWING
SATURD~Y, 10
P.M. NO
WINNING
NUMBER
GIVEN OVER
P"ONE)

'

"'
I

tl•

. ''

•12 GAL

54

At City Loan Bank, we tell you right up
front how low your monthly payments will be.
And along with your low payments, we give
you plenty
MON1lfl.Y
of
time to
AMOUNT TERM PAYMENT
repay, and
$3,000 48·month s 97.64*
we don't 11slt
$4,000 48 month $130.19*
for one bit
$5,000 48 month $157.26**
of collateral.
$6,000 48 month $188.72"
We'll
Otl\er amounn llld ..,... olio miJible.
even take
your application right over ·the phone. And
give you an answer fast, usually in just 24
hours.

WINNING
NUMBERS
POSTED IN
THE STORE
SUNDAY 10
A.M.

Good only at Powol' 1 Super Valu
Good 111111 Sot., liiL 14, 1917

...•

••••••• • ••••• ••

•

:

•• •

•

cou~·

• • • •• ••

(HICKEN OF THE SEA

TUNA

• 6.5 oz.

OIL ar

2]11

limit 2 Per Cuttomtr
• ., GoH only '' Powtll's S.,.. Yalu
•
Goa!l ttwu Sot lao. 24, 1917

•

:

~·

~ ·················· ·

IF ANY PRIZE
IS NOT
CLAIMED IN THE

'

I

ALOTTED TIME, _
THE PRIZE WILL
BE INCLUDED IN
THE NEXT
WEEK'S $100
CASH PRIZE
JACKPOT.
NO PURCHASE NEC£SSARY

.,' l'

�•
•

By The Bend

Wed!18sday; January 21, 1987

!n rhe spotlight Be springtime fresh, even during
winter moriths
By Cynthia S. Oliveri
County Extension Agent
Winter or spring? With the
weather we have been experlenc·
lng so far this winter, it's dltncuit
to tell. One thing that's pretty
dellnite though is that there wlll
be plenty or cold days anead.
Cold weather for most famllles
means more time spent inside
the house.
During the winter months
many products are used to rid the
home of stale odors and germs.
Disinfectants and deodorants are

two examples. Each performs the wide variety or disinfectant
different functions. This week In · bathroom cleaners on the
The Spotlight will take a look at market. In addition to killing
these two products; their diller- odor-causing bacteria such as
ences and possible uses.
strep and staph, they help control
A disinfectant Is a substanct&gt; mold, 'mildew and many viruses.
that destroys microorganisms
Disinfectants destroy the
such as bacteria and tung! that growing forms of these mlcroor·
grow on hard surfaces. These ganlsms and should be used
microorganisms are the cause of regularly to achieve the best
many unpleasant odors In the control. Disinfectants have nuhome, and kllllng them ellml· merous uses aroound the home,
nates the ardor associated with and an Important one In winter Is
them.
their abtllty to destroy the
Closed, musty bathrooms, for bacteria and fungi that tend to
lnstance.are easy to freshen with multiply in humidifiers . Follow

Sweetheart pageant announced
Vateilline's Day, Feb. 14, hasbeen appropriately s!'t for a Bend.
Area Miss Sweetheart Pag!'ant
to be staged In the Pomeroy
VIllage Hall Auditorium under
the sponsorship of the Pomeroy
Chamber of Commerce.
Thepageantlsforglrlsfrom3
through 13 years of age and has
been broken into age groups for
the selection of winners. Selections will include Wee Miss
SweE'thear t, ages 3 and 4: Tiny
Mi ss SweE'theart, ages. 5 and 6;
Junior Miss Sweetheart. ages 7
through 9, and Miss Sweethear t.
10 throu gh 13.
The first place winner In each
ca tegory will receive a trophy ,
banner, corsag~. crown and a
savings bond while th!' first
runner-up will rec!'lv!' a trophy
and banner a nd the second
runner-up will receive a plaque
and ba nner. Winners will also
have the opportunity of riding In
local' parades.
Judging will be based on poise
and pe rsonality, clothing will be

party and dressy clothing and
contestants will be required to
answer a question during judgtng. There are no business
sponsorships Involved with the
pageant, which will be held at 3
p.m.
Entry fee before the Feb. 10
deadline Is $8 .. However, entries

will be taken up to one hour
before the pageant. The entry fee
for late contestants, those after
the Feb. 10 deadline, will be $10.
Contestants · are to complete
the accompany form and send It
with the registration fee to the
Pomeroy Chamber of
Commerce.

Bend Area Sweetheart Contest

WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Literary Club wUI meet at 2 p.tn.
Wednesday ,a t the Middleport
Presbyterian Church with Mrs.
Sibley Slack as hostess.

'

'

the manufacturer's instructions
which usually specify that a
humldltler be cleaned perlodl·
cally with a gOod disinfectant.
A deodorizer Is any product
that can mask or remove an
unwanted odor. They are especially h,elpful in combatting
odors that are caused by something other than bacteria · growIng on a surface.
Deodorizers work in a number
of different ways. They can
replace, neutralize or destroy the
source of the odor. Use deodorizIng cleaners, sprays and soUds to
control odors In everything from
carpets and upholstery to trash
containers and closets, and your
house wlll be a much more
pleasant place to be in the winter
months.
If you are trying to tackle an
especially stubborn household
odor, start by reading the labels
of the products on the shell at the
grocery store. Consumer demand has led manufacturers to
develop new products formu lated specifically to control such
difficult problems as cigarette

Calendar

POMEORY A gtrest
speaker, Mrs. Hart, of Point
Pleasant, W.Va., wUI speak
Wednesday , 7:30 p.m .. at' the
Holiness Chapel on East Main In

•

smoke and cat box odors. Though
Read Ia.bels carefully. Some •'
some deodorizers have dlslnfec- products a.re designed to be used ,
tan! qualities , do not assume this in well ventilated areas. This .
is the case unless it Is ·clearly may mea'n opening windows and
stated on the label.
· doors on opposite sides of the
Are disinfectants and deodorlz- boose.
ers the same · thing? Not at all.
Keep these . tips In mind to
But both have an lmpor1ant role make your home more enjoyable
to play In eliminating household until spring really does arrive!
odors, and that's good ·news at a .
Old You Know That: Aerosal - ·
time of year when we all spend . cans when empty should be
more time than we like Indoors.
wrapped in newspaper and dis·
It you are using an aerosal posed of with nonburnable trash.
disinfectant or deodorizer an They should never be tossed In an
important thing to keep in mind Incinerator or fireplace.
Is proper storage. The cans
should never be stored near or
used around heat or· an open
flame. This advice Is especially
important during the winter
months when we have Y(OOd·
stoves, coaf stoves or kerdsene
heaters in operation. Don't put a
can on top of a radiator, mantle,
Ill S..1111d St., P01111roy
the range or clothes dryer.' And
don 't store aerosal cans In places
YOUR INDEPENDENT
!hal get hot such as cablnl;'ts next
AGENTS SERVING
to the stove, dishwasher, and
.IGS COUNTY
water heater or In storage areas
near the furnace, wood stovt&gt; or
SINCE 1868
:
space heater.
L----;.;...-...1

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio_
Pomeroy. E veryont&gt; welcome.

sides soup and chill , the group
wlll offer sa ndwiches . pte, cake
a nd beverages for sale.

Rice, Southern Home Economics
Instructor, will present th e program on how to make fabric
flowers.

THURSDAY
RACINE - Auxiliary o! Ra·
cine Post 602, American Legion,
meets 7: 30 Thursday at the hall.

POMEROY - The se nior
c itizens dance club Is sponsorin g
a dance Friday. from 8 to IJ p.m ..
at the senior citizens cen ter on
Mulberry Heights In Pomeroy.
Music by True Count ry and
Larry Hubba'rd. Admiss ion $1.50.
Everyone wel come.

FRIDAY
MIDDLEPORT - Evangeline
BRADBURY ·..:.. The Meigs Chapter 172, Order of Eastern
County _ J:: h~JCI!es of Christ . Star, will stage a public soup
Women's Fellowship will meet at supper from 11 a.m. io 7 p.m. ·
7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Brad- Friday In the basement of the
bury Church of Christ. Diane Mlddl!&gt;port Masonic Temple. Be·

Hold !nfkn10n At beN W ttn T~~ Gri'O:
611)'1 m tJ'!t C10U ~fltd ) « tiOo'l

,.•
,,

DOWNING CHILDS ···
MULLEN MUSSER

INSURANCE

(February 14, 1987)
Spoils9red by the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce.

OUR BUSINESS BEGINS
WITH FILLING YOUR
PRESCRIPTIONS.

Age Category 3• 13
Name _ _ _ _ _..,
.:..·- - - - - - - - - - - - ' - -

ALL STORES ,
OPEN 7 DAYS AWEEK!

Ace__ Birth Oate - - - - - - - - - - - - - Phone No. _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
Parents' Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __

•

DENVER
BRONC.OS

W. RtMI'":f Tt11 fl'9hl Yo ltiM Ouanlotlft
~ ~Mbll fCI Ptlfttlng EuOfl

$8.00 entry fee deadline Feb. lOth.
$10.00 entry fee at door.
Return form and entry fee to the Pomeroy Area Chamber of Commerce,
Courthouse, 2nd Street, Pomeroy, Ohio 45769. (No business sponsors
needed •

ADVII'TIIUJ IHM I'Ot.ICY
Each ot theM t d Yfl rl o, ad ill l'lll 11 rtqu lrttl to

be reldrtv
ot1e•

40 Count

OFF SALE

· Matthew D. Wandling celebrated his fi rst birthday Jan . 9
:With a party at the home o! fils
J(l'andparents, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Roush.
: The party was hos ted by his
mother and father. Julie Roush
Dave
Wandling.
A Pound
f·and
uppy
theme
II( as carried
· out ·
with cake and Ice cream being
served . Favors were given to the
-guests.
. Attending besides his parents
·were Mr. a nd Mrs. Don Rous h,
'maternal grandparent s, (&gt;lr. and
:'Mrs . Peggy Stobart. patt&gt;rnal
'grandmother, Mr. and Mrs .
·Roscoe Fife. maternal grt&gt;ati!randpar&lt;'n ts, Matthew's aunts,
:Amy Roush, Terri Fife, a nd Julie
Wandling, his uncles, Jos h Wandling, Stev&lt;' Fife, and other.
guests, Randy Ca rl, Krlsty
T1,1cker.' Carla a nd Tony Pulloh,
Leigh Leach, Teresa Walker,
'Cindy and Nicholl Bing, Peggy
and Brandy Jo Stevens. Ella and
Sarah Roush .
' Sending gifts were Evelyn
1casto, Margaret Rose, Mr. and
Mrs . Dale Colbur n, and Mr. and
·Mrs. Dave Fife, Matthew's uncle
·and aunt.

.

o~@~~~[J ..
Food
Processor
.I.W411l~ - SMS_...,..IIIlle OW.Hhtfutt
SMil'/. DO'fl'tfllll-motor Wllldtd lor 11\ot ,_.,.
tompad- lan 1m llllllltl ~ MyOul IOiRr

t.e..-wau·lllltiMIY-,
~ •. dwfllood~bAU.d C

Stereo sound you

ca" take along! REG. S89.99

SALE

.--.---:==:""-·

IN THE

$399

DE~I-PASTRY SHOPPE

Wishbone ·
Fried Chicken ........ 8-Pieces

2

UG. S69.99

"

.;

.......... ,_,. n
!10;~

··

AVAILABLE ONLY IN STORES WITH DEll-PASTRY SHOPPES

IN STORES WITH DEll-PASTRY SHOPPES

__

SAl£ $59 99

12-ln.
Med. Crust

$6

290 North Second

JUICE

.NATURt\LIZER

64 oz.

32 oz.

~;fk;vyrk.l

$}49

$}59

Rea. '2"

40°/o
OFF
ALL NATURALIIER ·
•DRESS SHOES
•CASUALS
•FASHION &amp; SNOW
BOOTS

~--·

r

New/

r •

I
-

,....... , $939

•

FROZEN

14-0Z. BAG

IPlain, No Salt, Cheese or Jalapeno)
AT THE REGULAR PRICE OF $1.89 BAG

FROZEN GOLDEN VALLEY.

Popcorn ................. 21 .8-oz.

FREE!

·California
Head Lettuce

Diet~

Coke or
Coca Cola

Head

2-Liter

KODAK VR35
35MM

~:Onnaise

•Auto Focus
• Alto AdYIIIU

'

'139"

,$1

. . , .•

LIMIT ONE PLEASE

29

Regular or Just My Size

Available In 5 Winter Colors.
•WinaeNavyeBiack•Cre_ameCharcoal

COMET
CLEANSER

N SHOES .

--

IIIXT TO IUIIREDS Ill 1'-IOY.
•

'

·-

..

Dori!DS Br~nd
$}8 9
Tortilla ChipS ........... 11 -oz.
'•

Winter Leggs
Pantyhose
-14 oz.

-s

24 oz.

99~

$2 29

M'i~rowave

GET ONE

NON RETURNABLE BOTILE, SPRITE,

CAMERA OUTFIT
Kt2

compertblt •ttm .

$J59
Pillsbury
Microwave Pizza .. .. 9:~~.

BUY TWO
Nacho Chips

NACHO CHEESE SAUCE 19-0Z. CUP . $2.99
SALSA SAUCE 14-0Z. CUP ... $2.59

t~~~~~;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
SAUCE

1

'

OE llri"'JJ DODd thingllo 111e

..

your cr.e&lt;e ot

GIANTS

,Rea. 'lu

2 Value

1 11

~ou

NY

99¢

}79

•40°/o off Seasonal Apparel
•40°/0 off Jewelry
•40°/o off Seasonal Socks
•40°/o off Men's
and Ladies'
Billfolds .

Whaley birthday
The Falthful Followers Class
: of the Hemlock Grove Christian
• C}!urch honored Dorothy Whaley
of Shade on her birthday annlver·
. sary Sunday at her home.
The afternoon was spent taking
· pictures, making a ·tape and
: reminiscing with Mrs. Whaley
· and her husband, Ray , a former
" : teacher of the class, as well as a
I . "'"'', former school teacher tor many
1
·• of thos e attending.
·
I
'
. Cake and lee cream were
'
· served. Attending were Leota
Smith Naomi Reed, Mlldred
; Zelgle~. Aletha Randolph, Ca: rolyn Sinclair, Luchla Riggs,
' jtuth Francis, H~len an.d HUber ·
;Qulvey, Margaret and Harley
: Haning, Sylvl.a and Zlba Mldklft,
· and Muriel and Wallace
: Bradford.
' .'
,.

Krg.gtr

•

4 Pack

"

Wandling
birthday

•r'l 11t h

wne n twt ilab lt retltClln(l tilt llml UY!flgl ot
1 !llf1 C hK~ wh1ch wtlt tr'l1•tll vou to p~ouchaM
the tc!Yflr'lllld illm at lht lrl,..rtiMd prk:t
W11h it1 JO diVI Or&gt;lv ont vtfldor COUPOn wil
bt I CCI!p1ed per Hem pUIC hiMd

.CHARMI
THROOM
TISSUE

DAN'S

Matthew D. Wandlln~

lor wit

we do run aut ol I Maoven•Nd iltm. WI wol l

•

40°/o

t¥t ll tb lt

Store . t• cepr n \pftC&lt;Iic l lly not"! on thlllt:l U

y;;p·ii;.J;.t_"'" . $1 ~9

U.S. GOV'T GRADED CHOICE GRAIN FED BEEF

London Bro1l............

lb.

For

TRIM
I

'

•

B~~bl;'&amp;ee

·

Tuna ......................... 6.s-oz

49c
.

�Page-a-:The Daily.Sentinel
LOCALLY and

-

P9meroy- Middlepor1, Ohio

INDEPENDENn Y OWNED

Wednesdilv. J!lnuary 21, 1987

••••• Your

DO·UBLE COUPONS

..

SUPE

WITH
'''
'
1

EVERY DAY!!

,.

on Conrail

'

..

Public Notice

Pepsi-Cola

Jenny Beth Daniela

',

CASE NO . 26377
NOTICE BY PUBLICATION

To Gerald David Bennett.
whose last known address

•

was Box 692, Canton . N.C .
28716, and the unknown
heirs, devisees, and legataes
of Ge rald David Bennett, if

32 oz.
JAR

Plus
Deposit

he be deceased. whose resi-

dence and addreas are unkpown .

You are h8f8by notified thlt

10

01.

Limit 1 Jar With S10.00 or More
Additional Purchase

pkg.

nett has been filed in the Probate Division, Meigs County

Common Pleas Court, Po-:

m8foy. Ohio 45769, Case
NO. 26377.
The demand of the peti ·
tion is that Bus Gilbert Daniels adopt your child, Jenny

ea

limit
2

nently diveste d of ·an your

..

parental rights.

You are required to answer the Complaint within
twenty-eight (28) days after
lhe lest publication of this

Coffee

Scot Towels

Beth Bennett for a change
of name to Jenny Bettl Da-

niela, and that you be parma-

Mt. Blend

ASST. COLORS ·

ROLL

,

notice. which will be published once each week fo r
.. ~ . siK (61 consecutive weeki.
: · The last publication will be
• · made on January 21 . 1987
: · . and the twenty-eight davs
· ' (28) "for answer will com~
· mence on that date.
:
In caSe of our failure to an ·
~ · swer or p therwise respond
• as required by the Ohio

oz.

JAR

; - Rules of Civil ·Procedure,
. .. judgment by default will be
· . rendered against you fo r the
: · relief damanded in the peti·

• · · tlon.

'Peanut Butter
. .. .ASST. PillSBURY

Cake Mixes

16-11.5 OZ. lOX

$14'9

79C

ASST. VARIETIES GREEN BEANS •CORN •PEAS

· • • The hearing of the petition
:

FRESH LIKE

Vegetables

n- 14·5 owN

Court, Pomeroy, Ohio on

the 24th dey of February
1987, at t :30 P.M.
'
Robart E. Buck. Judge

FOODLAND FROZEN

Orange Juice

herein shall be held in the
Probate Court Room, Meigs
County
Common
Pleat

and Ex-Officio CIBrk

112)1 7.24, 31:1117. 14. 2t
6tc

12 OZ. CAN

•

1 Card of Thanks

VAlLEY BELL

Cottage Cheese

24 OZ.CTN.

$12 9

100 CT. lOX

given that the C:ltv Loon
Bank, Lima, Ohio. hat tiled

an applicetion with the State
of Ohio, Diviaion of. Banks,
to re:locate Ita ·-clty Loan
Bank, from 116 East Main

Street.

Street,

Pomeroy,

4676.9.
11120.21. 2tc

'

Ohio

Public Notice

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
The Cantle! Trust Com·

NOTICE TO:
Lany Rogar Love. please
take notice that Koren Eileen

Loan Department the fol- his addrea is currentty un·

known. The plaintiff - . a
1) 1988 Admiral Pontoon divorce. cuiiOdy ol Suoan
Boat aallal #DVN60· 779· Love, on oweld of the reel es·
E888; 1986 Mo1cury 46 H. toll, and ololr divlolon of of
·P. Motor ooriol #A980082; property and aalgnment of
lowing :

1988 Tarua Pontoon Trailer debbl. Llny Roger love is required to anawer the com·
so1iol #DVH4025408B8.
The ·minimi..lm acceptable plaint within 2B daytllter tho
offer mu , t be greater than loll publlcotlo~ . by 181VIce ol

an answer upon the Meigs
16.000.00.
2) 1984 Bomber Com· County Common Pteaa Court
mender Boat nri81 #FBK Clerk.
0348MF484: 170 Mer· (1) 21 , 28; !214. t1 , 18.25
cruiser 1/ 0 motor ~erial Btc
#8878086; Cla11ic 1767
Boot Troll,r aerial #t F·
Public Notice
KA3CR184100i 12.
The minlm"um acceptabli
NOTICE OF PRIVATE
offer muat be griater than
SALE OF REAL ESTATE
82.500.00.
On the 30th day of Jan·
31 1 976 Rankan Boot uary. 1987. at 10:00 A.M.
s01lol #RBMBM015M76C; Dougtoo W. Uttlo, E•eeuto•
140 MercruiHr· 1/ 0 motor of the Estate of Margaret
oerial #4482807; Tonne•· Ella Lewla. deceand, 111 re·
ooo Boat Trailer oorlel corded In Caoe No. 24,961 ,
#GE03557.
of the Meigl County Probata

The minimum acceptable
offer must be ,greater than

The min imum . acceptable· described real estete beoffer must be nrealer than longing to the late Margaret

the whole thing.
though Investigators have not cords show that Ricky Gates, the
"We believe th at In this case, ruled yet whether the crewmen Conrail engi neer blamed by
the evidence Is overw helming were actually under the lnfl u· Claytor In the cras h, had several
that the sole causeof the accident ence of the Illegal drug.
. automobile vio lations ~ n d re·
at Gunpowder Interlocking was
But even wlthou.t the National ce ntly was arres ted for drunk en
the out rageous conduct of the Tra nsportation Safety Board driving.
Conrail crew In violating not one having pinpoi nted the causes of
Claytor, a vetera n railroad
bu t a whole series of Important· the cras h, federa l Invest igators man, told the pa nel! he conduct of
operating r ules, each of which have Ind icated th ey believe pri m· lh&lt;&gt; Con rail crew was so lrrespon·
was designed to prevent ju st th is ary faul t may lie wit h the Co nra·u slble that. ' They must have been ·
sort of thing from happening."
crew- said to have d isre~arded Impaired. I don' t know how else
Tes ts revea led traces of marl· several warni ng dev ices . lnclud· you ca n explain It . It ran b('
Juana In the bl ood and urine of th e lng a stop signal.
hard!~· cxpl ainflcl ln any oth('r
Conrail engineer and brakema n,
Mary land motor vehic le rc· way."

PHONE 992-2156.

tn Memoriam

heart.

So. deer, a year hoo
paned eince you toll
us. and ndly went

away:

But. Mom. you' re

'I ••

bert Grate. Cheater D
of A Lddge. Pomeroy
Chapter O.E.S.. Ladies
Au•iliary ol the Cheot'or

Perhaps

•

love ly card,
Or aat quietly in a chair .
Pe rh a p s vou sent a funeral spray,
·
If so. we uw it there.

you

sent

a

Perhepo yo,u spoke the
kindest words.

As any hiond could say;
Perhaps you were not

there at all,
'', • ' Just thought of us that
l"·

day .

. :: · ' Whateve• you did to
! : · cons ole our hearts,
; ·: We thenk you 10 much

GENUINE

CALIFORNIA

Idaho Potato·es

Carrots

•

10 LB.

BAG

$ 69.

:~

3

1-lb. bags

$1

EXTRA FANCY lED

Del. Apples

JUMIO SWEn SPANISH

D'ANJOU

Yellow Onions

Pears

59 Ll.

whatever the pert.

Tho Evelyn Gaul
Family

( ~

woyo In my heen, of
each paning day,
Never forgoHen byyour
daughtll, Betty Peorl
Caldwell

Don Archer: Rev. Her-

1

~

•

6

•

8

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

AU CHON

EveJY Friday Nite
7:00 P.M.

Located in Rutland
American Legion
Bldg.,_Rutland, Ohio.
Fresh produce, Thomas:
ville wall huger chair,
fools, aroceries,
lara• truckload somelh·
inc for enryone .
Prizes Given Away

Auctioneer: Lon Neal
614·367·7101

(We accepl conslpmenb)
·Also bookinr houu &amp;
farm SillS for the
sprinr.

Happy Ad1

who
,,,,, 16

,,.,,,,

111d 18 Iii

M•ll•d•

100

FOR

,,, OtWII

•

,

£)

'I
~

11~

K'""

County of Meigs,' in the
State of Ohio and in tha
Township of Salisbury and
bounded arid described 11

follows:
Situate in 100 acre Loll

No. 308 ond 307 ond In Lot
No. 21 ol Penny's Survov

and detcribed •• follows :
Beginning on Ella Hyaell's
north Una at the aouth·eaat
corner of Griff RUIHII'tlot

thencooouth 22 dogroos 45'
E. 71 foot along Ella Hyooll's
north line to a stake; thence

north 89 degrees 30' E. t 63
Real Estate General

'· lH
TEAFORD
Real Estate · RW.IOR
216 E. 2nd St.
Phone
1·(614)·992·3325
67 ACRES - Orange Town·
ship near Sumner on good
hard road &amp; all minerals.
BUIUIIGHAII - 4.8 acres
off Rt 33. Some trees, garden
spot. dug well and 12x65 mobile home. $16,000.
MIDDLEPORT - 5 or 6 rm.
older hOme on 4th. All city
utilrties, I~ front porch, garage
&amp;_!g. lot lisking $25,1100.
ROCK SPRINGS - Good 3
or 4 bedroom home ine•cel·
lent condition. Centra l heat,
T.P. water, carpet in~ cook &amp;
bake units, relrigerator &amp;
prase on lg. lot.
100 ACRES - S..lisbury
Township on good gravel
road. 2 gas/oil wells, mi·
nerals and 2 water Iaps.
POMEROY - 7 acres, good
2 bedroom home, I ~ bat hs,
natural cas furna ce, pane l·
ing and carpeting.
HANDYMAN ~ Paythe bal·
ande &amp; own this 8 rm.
house. 2 baths, gas furna ce,
carpeting &amp; 2 I~ about
$165,000.
RACINE - 4 BR, one floOr
home. Buck wood stove, pa·
nelin~ carpeting. Insulated,
storms &amp; level ot ned to the
school.
HAVE A SELLING

PIOBUI7

CALL AliCE AT 112·3325

I(,

ll&lt;J!I',IIIIJ
d&lt;lqu.HI•·',

Public Notice

Public Notice

title and interest
which tttoy may have ·to the
right -of-way which lies bet·
ween the property above described an~ the adja cent real
estate now owned by the

237, Page 195. and Volume
264,
Page 66 3, Meigs
County Deed Record a.
Subject to all leases, easements and rights of wav of

Public Notice
feet to 8 ltake on the aouth
aide of the Brad~urv. and
Rutland Road; thence N . 27
degrees 30' W. 1 09 '12 feat
along the south •ide of said
place
W.
136
feet S to
Road;
thence
. 76'the
degrees

right ,

beginning, containing

Hyooll. single. to Clair F.
Russell
WandaJuno
Ruooell.
by deedanddated
tO.
1953 and ••corded In Vol.
174, P•L • 387 of the deed
Reco•ds of Meigs County,
Ohio.
Reference
174,
Page Deed:
649, Volume
Meigs
County Deed Reco•do .

th=A~O::!~.~~ 5~~uatS~Ii~~

bury, County of Meigs, and
State of Ohio: Baing in Soc·
tiona 24 and 30. Range 13.
ond In Lot 307.
Beginning at an i•on pin at
a post in the fence at the
aoutheatterly corner of the
right·Of·Wiy
along ' the

southerly aida ol tho Charles
C. Lewl• and Margaret Ella
LowiaproportydeiCIIbod in
Deed Book . .... . Page .....
MaigaCountyDeedrocorda;
thence in a weatarly dirac·

tion porallol wnh the oouth·
o1ly line of the Lowlo pro·
poerty. 1e0 feet. more or

loll, to a post and on Iron
pin; thence In a ooutherly dl·
rection following the fence.

Truck. auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding ,
IAll makes &amp; models)

Middleport, 140 loot to tho

place of beginning, contain·
ing one-half acre, more or

leu.

Being port ol tho 18-acre

tract of real estate dtscrlbed
in deed to Stanley H. Do11
and Sharon l. Ooas. re·

corded In Volume 234. Page
417. Meigs County Deed ••· •
cords.
,
The Grantors further quit·
claim to the Grantees. any

The minimum accept11 ble

bid will be $9600 .00. Term s
of sale: CASH on delivery of
dead. Subject to accr ued
real est ate ta u •• for the year
1987. -The Exe cutor res-

John 11. Btnh

Own~r/Machanic

1-2·'17-J mo.

Roger Hysell
Garage
Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

•lao Trtllllllllllon
,.
PH • 992 • 5682
or 99 2. 7121
6,17 ·tfc

MIDDLEPORT ~Th is older
home is close to stores and
schools. 2·3 bed rooms, level
lot, ca rpeting, other!eatures
include a nice front porch.
Must see to appreciate.
$26,900.00.
POMEROY - 11! ~ory lrame
home with new vinyl ~di ng
three bedrooms, some new
carpeting and patio. Neatly remodeled and decorated. The
upstairs would make an mel·
lent bunkroom lor children.
$29,900.00.
RACINE - Own.2 acres ol
land with gard en space,lruit
trees and elbow room. 2
story home with four bed·
rooms in good condition.
Garage, and near schools.
$24,000.00.
.
POMEROY - One lloor plan.
Two bedroom hom e with
rural water, range and refri·
sertor and a bath. MAKEOF·
FER, $16,000.00.
LETART AREA - Approli
mately 2 acre mini farm with
small barn. fe ~ cin g to the
sheds, plus a 1978 modular
unit with 3 bedrooms, salel·
lile -dish, 2 good aarden
areas. Drilled water well.
Henry E. Cleland. Jr.

992·6111

. Jean Truutll ..... 949-1&amp;60
Dtttll Tumw ..... 992-5612
Ofllet........., ...... H2·Z259

{1 ! 21. 26. 2t c

Bustness

*VINYL SIDING

e

*ALUMINUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
··
INSULAnON

se rv I•ce s

BISSELL
SIDING co.

New Hames Built
" Free Eatimatea"
PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
No Sunday Calls

WANTED:

MILLS ELECTRIC

OLD RADIOS WANTED
Any l1ond Nomo...Bought
laloro 1940
lop monoy lor ,.,., modtls ol
z.,it~ Phil&lt;o, ilwotoo ''"'·
PH. 13041 112 -2220

COMMERCIAL
RESIDENTIAL

614-992-3023
t-u.'l&gt;·l mo.

SHARPENING
SERVICE

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY
•All Typea ol
E•cavatlng
•Landtcaping

,•B•aements
•Sewage Sv stems
•Weter • Gu Unes

•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

Call: 742-2407

1· 16-'87·1 mo.

Circula r Sa ws

222 E. Main, Pomeroy

Planer nivea

GRAVELY

SUGAR RUN
ASHLA"D

TR~qOI SALES
204 Condor St.

POMEROY, OH.

Drill Bits
Kni ves

Chisolo

190 MULBERRY AVE.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND S£RVIC£
HEADQUARTERS FOR
• ZENIIH
• S!LVANIA
• SPEED QUIEN lAUNDRY
• GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Sunday thiU Thu•sday
Friday • Seturday
4 P.M. ':)'it 1:30 A.M.
P1ZZIS, SUI$

PIZZIIIUD
1·2·'11 -1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!
. 992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
IO·I·Ifc

G&amp;MTV
REPAIR

RIDENOUR

"f•E ESliMA11S"

1·1t·1 -

Pomeroy, Ohio
4-f5-'861c

All Mtku

•Washe" •DIIhWal hfrt
•Ranges

•Refr ig.,ratort
•Dryers •Freeze rs

PARTS and SERVICE
4. ·IIC

992-2526

GINGERBREAD
HOUSE
PRE.· SCHOOL

SANDY'S
AUTO SALES

Middleport, Ohio

(614) 992·7321
OFFE RS ENRICHINO:
LEARN&lt;N G EX PER&lt; ENCEI
FO R CHILDREN 3 TO I
YEARS OF AGE

I Service
to TUNSMISSIONS
CALL 992 · 7403 Apt.
St. Rt. 33, Pomeroy, OH.
TUN!U~S

We Ct iTY Ftthing Supp UH

Pay Your eable lo
Phone Billa Here
IIUSII!SS PHON!
~614)

H2 ·6Sl0
ISIIINCI 'HONE
It 141 H2·11l4
I

Open Emoltment
Thru The Veer
OPIN TUESDAY,
WIONUDU &amp; THU.SDAY
9 AM to 11 •30 AM onil
12.30 PM Ia 3 PM :
Call Administrator Mr4.
Shlrin. J. Nuggud. MEd.
1-7-'17· 1 mo.

We'll Sell You A
Used Car or Fix
Your Old .One
(.7.'87·1 mo

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM IIIILT
HOfll S &amp; GARAGES
"At leasonabll Prius"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Dor

or Night
NO SUNDAY CAUS
4-l&amp; -'• tin

Ann ounr:e !Ill! nIs
3 Announcement•
fhclne Gun Shoot lponl(lred b'f
. Rtclne Gun Clu b. e"~~•rv Sundey,
beginning 11 t !OO p.m. FtctOJY
ChOkt. 12 ouage shotguns.
New Art Cia ..... Tuetdty tnd
Th ursdty for •du ha tl'ld &amp;ttur·
dty hu undtt
11. C•ll
81 4 · 949 · 30&amp;0 for m rue

•o•

informttJon .

4

RADIAtOR
IER~CE

We can rlpiir 1nd rP.

core redraton 1nd
huter cores. We can
IISO Kid boil 1nd rod
out rldiatelh. We 1110
repair GIS T1ris.

PAT HILL FORD
882·2188

Middleport, Ohio
1· 13-tfc

l
C!J Co~erized HMri~ Air Selection

z

-a: Swim Molds • lnllrpretinc Se!Yices

~

:c
z

-

IJSI)

985·3561

AutontGtlve Repair

SALES &amp; SERVICE

tfn

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

I· 11·1,. ,

PLUMIING &amp; HEAnNG
Now lo&lt;tlrion:
161 North Sacond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

1·3-'• lfc

ICUT OUT FOI FUIUII

Pomtroy
HOURS: Tut.·Wtd,· f•i.
11 a.m. to 7 p.m.
Sun&lt;loy: I p.m.· 7 p.m.
ly (henco or Appolntm1111
RUSS MOORE

V. C. YOUNG In

24 HR. SERVICE

8 - 20 -'~

RIVERINE ANTIQUES
1124 East Main St,.

992 -6215 or 992-1314

•••t,

R£ASONAIII • IIUAIII

ANTIQUES ·
BUY OR SELL

!Free Eotlmataol

Fe,. E~tlp
Pert• &amp; Serwl11

-All Makes &amp;
Models

614-843 · 5248

1-1 .-'87-1 mo.

- Plumbin g •nd tl.ctrlc• t
wo rll

949·3081 Bus.
9t9· 2606 Home

Electronic Organs
Mobile seNice

PH. 992-2772

CARPENTER
SERVICE

U. S. RT. SO EAST
GUYSVH.ll, IiilO
Autltorhad John Daoro,
Now HoHontl, luah Hog
form Eqtipmant
Dooltr

49135 St. lt. 124
ltld11t, Ohio 45771

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

JAMES·IIEESEE

YOUNG'S

SAUS &amp; SEIYICE

J.R.'s REPAIRS

VlNYL &amp;

Sht T11~1lelt•
01 D•lf

BOGGS

Fo&lt;tory Choko
·12 Gouga Sholgunt Only
___
.,...._ _.:,::1
0;,::
· 8-;:.:lf!!,Jrn

ALUMINUM SIDING

"' MIW.t AFill Tltlll

1/18/ tfl'l

6:30 P.M.

INSULATION
•lna ulation
•Storm Doors
•Storm Windt&gt; ws
•Repl acement Windows
•N.,w Roofing
..

- ConCt"tlt wo rk

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT

J&amp;L BLOWN

•SATELUTI SALES &amp; SERVICE

PH. 992-2228

Bashan Building

Bob Barton, Owner
12·30-86·1 mo.

1·15-'87-1 mo.

4 P.M. 'Til 11 P.M.

RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

PH. 992-9949

PH. 992-297 5

- Addon a tnd rt modtHng
- Rool lnu end gulttr work

GUN SHOOT

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED .

Saw Chain

TV &amp; APPLIANCE
CHESTER- 915 -3307

MAIN STREU
PIZZA

3/ 111,11"

AUTOMATIC'
TRANSMISSIONS

Pomeroy, Ohio

ow Open

992·2259
POMEROY - Beau tiful view
ol th e Oh io River. th is taste·
fully designed home can be
yours with a little ellort. Two
story home features three
bedrooms, nice livinf room,
din ing- room, lull basement
wit h a two car garage &amp; a
large front sitting porch, II!
baths and attic area. MAKE
OFFER. $23,900.00.

Executor of the E•tate of

Margaret Ella Lew is, dec .

------.1..--------t ::::::::::=::::::=::;

411/lln

608

erves th o right to rejec t anv
and all bids.
Douglas W. little,

or 949-2756

Real Estate General

E . Main
POME~OY,O.

Public Notice

PH. 949-2893

140 teet to a post and an

iron pin; thence In an eaa·
terly direction. 160 feet to a
post and en iron pin at the ·
right ·of ~way of .t he public
road; thence northerly along
the fence parallel with said
road leading from Rutland to

Public Notice

Referenc e Deed: Volume

~G~r:a:nl:••:•:·====::::;~_::re:c:or:!!d;..
25/ 100 of an acre. more or
EAGLE RIDGE
toss.
Being the same real estate
AUTO REPAIR
conveyed by Margaret Ella

of

Ello Lewio, locotad et 3915t
Bradbury Road, Middleport.
Malgo County. Ohio:
PARCEL 1: Situated in tho

way du•lng·thio dllficuJt

• · Hunt . AlsO; thanks to ,
• · Those who rememberus with prayer,
• ed
cards,
flowers. and
food . YOur kindness
w ill alwavs be remem·
bered .

Court, will offer for aale at
the offlcea of Porter. Little,

8600.00.
'
• Freckel. 211 ·213
4) t 986 Ford Escort oorial Sheets
East
Second
.. Pomeroy,
#1 FABP3693GW186190 . Ohio 48789, St
tho following

to express their warm·
es t and heartfelt thanks
to all who helped in any

Hilda

theM units without warranties, and re~ervaa the right to
accept or reject any offer rt·
ceived. Terms of sale will be
caah or credit bv prior er·
rangement.

(1)11.21,1tc

IN MEMORY OF
EVA V. BARREn
Mom. just a little thank
you note fo• always be·
o~g h11e end juat ~o ,let
you know you 're 1n my

• • . and especially

These units may be in·
spected by appointment.

aby offer for oolo on tho 24th DR-831, Tho loll known ad·
day ol Jonuory. 1987 at tan d1"' of Lany Roger Love was
o'clock a.m. In the Gelllpolio Bo• 31488 Bowlaa Rood,
office of the Installment Dexter. Ohio 46728 and that

2

Fire Dept., the pallbear~
e rs, Kathryn Windon

uoo.oo.

·

NA the toga! holder ol the love has filed a complaint for
following described person- dhrorce, in the Meigs County
al property by virtue of ••· Court of Common Piau, Pocurity agreements does har- meroy. Ohio (Caoa No. 86·

Rev. Cerl Hiekl . Rev .

. . SIZE

Ohio

pany of Southaaatern Ohio.

Ho lzer Medical Center,

Temple Oranges

Pomeroy,

46789' to 238 East Main

to Dr. Arnold Sattler,
the Nursing Staff of

•

The minimum acceptable
offer must be gr•ter than

You may call 446-0902 01
Two Nationwide Piau; Col· 992·8881 ,to make an ap·
umbuo. Ohlo_4~2$6-0649. polntment. The bank offer~

The I amity ol EVELYN
!GAY) GAUL would like

t.,

#2A23746H8.

Section

TABLETS

· Anacin

6) 1978 Harley Davidaon
Motor CYcle serial

1111 .02 of the Ohio Ro·

time . A spec ial thanks

FIRST OF THE SEASON

to

' 3.000.00

vlaed Code. notice is hereby

oooption of Jenny Bet11 Ben·

NESCAFE INSTANT

JUMBO

Pursuant

Jenny 9eth Bennatt by Bus
Gilbert Daniela demanding the

POTATO CHIPS

Public Notice

PUBLIC NOTICE
DIVISION OF BANKS
PUBLICATION

a Petition for Adoption of

ASST.
HERR'S

limit 2 With Additional PurchastS

Public Notice

IN THE COMMON PLEAS
·COURT OF. MEIGS
COUNTY, OHIO
•
PROBATE DIVISION
' IN THE
MATIER OF THE
ADOPTION
of

DIET or REGULAR

18 OZ. JAR

this accident. "
The collision of a speeding
northbound. Amtrak train and
three linked·Conrail locomotives ·
that blundered onto the same
trac k kllled 16 people and Injured
175 others north of Baltimore at
Chase, Md ,
"There Is no ques tion about the
sole cause of this accident, "
Clay tor told the Senate subcommittee. "The sad thing Is If any
one of (safety ) rules was complied with, we would have avo ided

Or Write Dailly Sentinel Classified Dept.
111 Court St. , Pomeroy, Ohio 45769

Miracle
Whip

. BELL VIEW CREAMY

WASHINGTON (UPI ) ~A m ·
trak's chai rman blames the
"outrageous behav ior" of Con·
rail crewmen for the worst crash
In his company's history, alleg·
lng before Congress th at the
fr eight line employees broke
routine railroad procedures.
· In t~stlfnony, Tuesday to a
Senate panel probing the fatal.
J an. 4 crash, Amtrak Chairman
W. craham Claytor declared his
· company's passenger train ''was
the victim. not the perpetra tor of

KRAFT

2 Liter Btl.

16 oz.
BTLS.

The Daily ~entinei ...: Page-9

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel

DIET OR REG.
Citrus 7, A&amp;W Root Beer

Seven-Up

.,

NEW LOW P'RICES

AVI

....

·Railroad
chainnan
l~ys. ·blame,

EVERY ·WEDNE·SDAY

RKET

OF

Wednesday, January 21, 1987

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Licensed Clinical Audioloeist

Older •mtll couch • 11er.,
contoll . You pick up. Call
441 ·01 41 tf1er IIPM.
1 y ..r. til whkl Milt dog · p• rl
Hutklt. Shott 1r fh:tn•••· C1 11

0 14·2151·191 8 or sftet
2111· 1232.

•

e. ou .
· fc-

2 lcm•l• Pllt lull puppl• to a iYt
I Wiy.

·(614) 446-7&amp;19 or (6141992.fi4i01
417 Sectrnd Avetlut, Bol 1213
Gllllpolis. Ohio 45631
·

GIVIIWiy

C•ll 6 14· ''2·2200

Otc:tr flth to eN• I WIIy . I inch
lonv. E• t• Dnly live lood. Ca tt
lt4-H2-27S3 .
3 Finch blrda In cag1 to gN...
w•y. Ctll 61 4·112· 24 1t, 10· 4.

·
•

�'
Page-1 0-The' Daily Sentinel
4
Giveaway

42 Mobile Homes

LAFF-A-DAY

44

for Rent

l 'mala end 1 fem11e Collie type

dogato give aw•v· Either 1o11 or

dumped out. Very friendly dog1 .
~uat find hofl'•- Call evenings..
&amp;14-867-3073.

6 Lost and Found
1 year old Border Collie. Auatr.J Ian Healer. Blaok end white

male. Alto .4 year old Biack
labrttdore Retriever. Cell 614898-1144.

and right front paw. Call 814-

992-7369. Reward.

~ LOST NorweGian Elk Hound.
dog loat letart or surrounding
area, named Smokey, 3 vrs old.

304-B9&amp; -3&amp;B3 .

Yard Sale

"For the frrst time in my life,
I know what it feels like to
be fmancially independent."

-····· Pomerov -···--·
Middleport
&amp; Vicinity

.. ... .. ..... .... -------.-- .. - ·-· -- 1 1 Help Wanted

1 - - - - - --

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cl!llh for late model clean

uted cars.
Jim Mink Chav.- Otds Inc.
Bill Gena J ohnson
814-448 -3672
TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer uaed cafl. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eettern
Ave .. Gallipolla. Cell 614 -446-

hs2.

Lot for mobiltt home or will rent
~rivate lot Call614-446·9601 .
Used mobile homes. Ctll 614446·Q176.

'

6uving daily gold, sliver coins,
!lings, jewelry, nerllng ware. old
eoina. large currency. Top pricea. Ed . Burkett Barber Shop.
~nd . Ave. Middleport. Oh. 614992-3476.
BUYING RAW FURS! Ginseng.
Yellow Root1 baef end deerhides. Alto telling trapping
supplies. Wheat Litts. Nite Litea.
Ploura 1 :00-9:00. Closed Wed.
(ieorga Buckley 614-664-4761 .
Buying junk cars . Call614-9921648 ehlf 6 :00 pm
Old bookl. pamphlets, diary•.
letters. steam boat logs, etc. Pre
1900't. No 1111. Box 114
Athens. Ohio 46701 . 614 -5938916, evenings.
C:::ontrol hunger end lose weight
\\lith New Shape Diet Plan and
Aydrex Water Pilla . Fruth
lharmacy
62~

vur,- old ftmale teeka male
for corretpondence. Bo111 579.
New Haven . W. Va. 26265.

F111 pI oy11 11~ nl
Se rVIC es
1 1 Help Wanted
HOME ASSEMBLY
bcellent spare time income;
electronics. crafts. no experlenca. Otftert, information 604.641 -0091 lxt . ,2987, 7 days.
CALLNOWI
. ·
Enthuaiattlc &amp; energetic penon
with good communication skills.
Potlllon available to work ror
Southea•tern Ohio'• finest outdoor recreation firm . No experience needed. Will lraln . Start
immediately. Call between 10 a.
4 at 614 ·288-2248, Wed. thru
Sat . Ask lor Sue.
Need a job1 Sell Avon part-time
or full ·time. For Information Ca ll
614-44&amp;-2168.
Delivery -person whh tmlllauto.
lrH to travel. UOO e week plus
o•penl8t . Cell 1-800 -6478177
Babysitter needed : Chethl re/ Additon eraa . Age• 4 and 16
montht. Call614-387-7767.
Secretary . E1perience nace• tlry: typing, computer, phone
and · recaptlonitt dutiea. Send
resume to: Bo11 T -6000. C•
GaiNpoiia Daily Tribune. 825
Third Avenue.' Gallipolis, Ohio
45131 .
OLAN MILLS. Neada tocalllght
delivery work. Economical car.
Start immediately . Apply : Mrs .
Dovle-Lowe' s Motor Hotel. 1o. 1
&amp; 6-9. Tu111 .. Wed., Thurs. only .
EOE .

--------:-:--:-·IC-

Government jobs. 116 ,0'0 ·
169.230 yr . Now hiring. Call
806·887 ·8000 E.. . R-9B05 for
current ftdaul list.
Dental Hygenlll and dental
asslatent. Send tvped written
reauma 10 208 N. 2nd. Ave.
Middleport, Ohio. Good potition
avtllehle for the right person.
AIAUNES NOW HIRING . Flight
Attndanta. Agents, Mechtnlca.
Customer Service. Salar1e• t~&gt;
t&amp;OK . Entry level potltiona. Call
806-187-8000 Ext . A· 9806 for,
CUHtht ll1tlng1.

GOVERNMENT JOBS .
.f11.040· 159,230 yr. Now Hiring. Call 805-887-8000 Ext .
R-9806 for current federelllat .
Heelth·homa aide . Qualiflcetionl include explflence in worling whh eldertv and or helllh
ratatld fitld. Mutt have rellsblt
trlntpottalion 1nd willing lo
work flelible houfl, including
wethnda. An Equtl Oppol'tunll'f Employer. Reply by Jan. 23,
1917 to P.O. Box 722. Pom•
,oy, Ohio 417&amp;9 .
Baby aitternttdKin my hom• in
p0 m..-oy •r•a but will conlider
yours . IS days 1 week. Referen·
cea r~~qu.,td . Send lppllc:atlonl
to Tha Oaltv .l tndnel, Bo• 721 P,
Pom•O'f. Ohio.
The Mtlgt L'oeil School DIWict
Ia curr~tntly tNklng •ppliclfion•
fron'l ctrtHiecl .tpplicantt fof I
V.raltv FootllaU -Coec:h for tht
1117·8B oehoal VOif· Appll·
CIIDtt mutt hold a veNd Ohto
, ..china c:ertlftc.. t end fof
coaching poeitlont mutt meet
~rtlfication requlremHtt of
Ohio tor aportl medicine and
CPA . Pareonl l n t « - ohould
contael D•n E. Morril. lupwln·
of Mol91 Loolll lchoolo,
II 121 South Third A... In
Mldllopott. OhiO.

-ont

2 belt. fullyfurniahedadultlonly.
ulil. paid. Cell 814· 446-41'10.

One bedroom fumlhHd ept In
Point pteaunt, adultl only, no
pou, phono 304·17&amp;·1388.

2 bdr . mobile home loolted 2
mil.. from HMC In Evergreen.
Cable TV hookup. children tc·
ceptad. Call 814-448-;)897.

One bedroom furnihtad tpt,
adults only, ~na 304·6752482.
.
.

OLAN MILLS . Nead telephone

appointment cler~• - No expe·
rience nece11ary. Morning and
evening shifts available. Start
immediately. Guaranteed t3.60
per hour to nan. Appty : Mn.
Doyl8. Lowe's Motor Hotel.
10-1 &amp;. IS-9 . Tues .. Wed., Thurs.
only . EOE .
CHRISTMAS BILLS PILING UP/'
The Army Netional Guard may
have the solution. Monthly pay
chedl for part time wor~ . Join
now. 304-875-3960 or 1-800842·3819.
REPS NEEDED for butlnatt
accounts. Full-time t80,000t80,000 : Part - time
$12,000 .UO -e 18.000.00, no
selling, repeat business. set your
hours. Training provided. Call
1-612-938-6870, M-F, Bam to
ISpm !Central Standerd Time) .
AVON. no service charge, open
territories. phone 304 · 676 1429.

31 Homes for Sale
3 bdr ., air. pool, garage. Nice.
Commercial property. corner
lots a. highway frontlige. Ust
with us. We have buyer~ . A-One
Real Estate-Broker. Call 3041],4: - ~1~4 or 304-674-538&amp;.

What a Bergahif' 2 stoi'y'house;
Remodeled. totally rewired. in·
tulated. brand new hot water
heater. 2 or 3 BR'alow haetlng
billa, vary nice lot, IJI!II'Igtwlth 2
outbuildings . All for only
120,000. Coli B1•·245-937B
after 6PM .
3 bedroom, 2 story wood house
wlth 1 car garage and 'h
b11ament . New carpet on first
floor. Hemlock Grove•rea. Must
sell dua to transfM. t33,000. or
best offer. Call 814-992-8104.
Government homn from $1 . [u
repair I. Delinquent t111 property.
AIPOIIIISiona. Cell 80&amp;-8878000. fit . GH-9805 for currant
repo list.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

12

Situations
Wanted

-lcWill do book -keeping In my
home. Call 614-992-2668 arter
5:00p.m.

1 8 Wanted to Do

l--------------.,---Painting: Interior &amp; e11terlor. 25
years uptlience . Reaaonlble
ratet. Call 614-256-6786.
FIREWOOD! Locutt , oak ,
chltf'ry. 136. per pick-up load
dellver&amp;d. Bill Slack 814-9922269 .
Will do income ux forms In my
~omo . Colll14-992-1822.
Professional cleaning. Home or
office. Aeferences. Call any-time.
&amp;14· 742-2788.
Plano Ieaton• for btginnars. Celt
for sppolntmant. Taught by
college graduate. 614-949 ·
3060 .
New An Cla11e1. Tuesday and
Thursday for adultl and Sl1urday for und• ege 16. CAll
&amp;14-949-3060 for more Information . Guaranteed, you'll
learn.
Prec:;tous Memotin Studio. &amp;pacializet in portraita. Quality work
guarntHd. Cell 8, 4 -949-3080
for appointment, Ae11oneble ,
pricn .

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends thtt you
do bualn"a with people you
know. and NOT to und monev
through the mall until you hl\ll
investigated the otfarlng .
Good moneyl Wettlcly1 Proceuing mafll Information? Ruth
..If-addressed. stampedll.anvelopa. Terry Lee. Bo11 131 -A.
Eureka Star At . Gelllpolis. OH
45831 .

-::------~ · lc -

Own your own jean-tporlswaar.
ladlea apparel, children• ·
mattmitv. large sizes, pathe,
danc.w.ar·atroblc or accnso·
rias store. Jordacha. Chic, lee,
lAvi, lzod. Glteno. Guttt, Calvin
Klein . Sarglo Vtl.-.tt, Evan
Pieone, Liz Claiborne, Mtmbara
Only,
oline. Heelthta• ovar
1000 othau . t1•,aoo. to
$28,900 . inventory, training,
fl11tura1, grand opening ate. Can
open 15 days. Mr. McComb
14041824 46B3.

o..

22 Money to Loan
Financing evalleble for all types
of busin••· Loans&amp; real-11tat1.
Compatltlva rates. Call 8142&amp;5-1772.

23

Professional
Services

Piano &amp; organ le•aone. Merv
Lucaa. Call 114-441-8787 or
e14-44&amp;-4421 .
Starks TrH and Lawn Service.
Hedgu, shrubl, bulhll
trimmed, landac•r.lng. atump
and ltaf remova, 304·678·
2842 or 57&amp; ·2010 .

31 Homes for Sale
2 br. kitchen. btthroom. with
laundry room. lfvint room •
dining room. ell .tee. Appro•. 7
miles from pt , Pl. on Rt. 82. 2
1racttapprOJI. 1 acremortorleas
O'iltrlooklng M.enawha River.
uo.ooo. Coli 30•·17&amp;-&amp;4"11
bttw"n 8:30 ond 4:30.
House, 6 aorM , living dining
room, kitchan, 3 badroom1, 3
bath1. large family room, wood·
burning atove. ahop
den
or 4th bedroom, Heat pump.
run I water, appralnd • et
180.000.00. 304-871-3018.

a•-;•.

APARTMENTS, mobllt homH.
haunt. Pt. Pt. .entandO.IIIpolio. 014-441-8221 .

73

7479.
Space for Rant : Treiltl' •P•ces.
Locust Ad. Rt. 1. Point Plaaunt.
304-875- 1076.

Merch allllise
51 Household Goods

2 bedroom mobile home. Middleport, 0 . Reference with se-curity deposit. 304-882-3267
or 304 -773·60241

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNirURE 82
Olive St. . Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood-coalltovn, 6 pc wood LR
suite t399, bunk bed1 1199,
recliner• new &amp; used bedroom
suites. wringer washert, &amp;
shan. New llvingroom euitet
8199-8599. lampt. Call 114·
446-3169 .

K &amp; K Mobile Homet, 2 end 3
bedroom mobile homn, 304·
675· 3000 .

2 bedroom trailer. couplet. 1
1mall child. Locust Rd. At. 1, Pt .
Pleasant. 304-875-1076.
Mobile home, 2 badrooma,
located Ashton Upton Road,
8160 .00 month plua utilitin.
304·676-408B.

County Applllnce, Inc. Good
used appliaricn 'and TV teta.
Open BAM to IPM . Mon thru
SOl. 614-448·1899. &amp;27 3rd.
Ave. Gallipolia. OH .

1983, 14•70 trailer. call eher
6:00, 304· 773-59&amp;3.

Velley Furniture. new 6 used.
Large HCtlon of quality" furniture . 1216 E11tern Ave .•
Gallii?OIIt .

Two bad room mobilt home,
furnished, after 5:00, 304-8768512.

GOOD USW APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refrtgeratora,
range1 . Skaggs Applitncfl.
Upper River Ad. b"kl• Stone
CrMt Motel. 614-446·7398.

Apartment
for Rent

1 Bedroom baeic rent $176.00
plus electric. Also required a
ezoo.oo aecurity deposit. CON-.
TACT; Jllckton Eetetet Dept. Ph
446 -3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.

Mollohan Furniture. At. 7 NOrth.
Gallipolis, OH PH. 81•-44874U. Why PlY more? Chedc us
oul for low prices on fumfture 6
appliances. 8 piece wood living
room group. f389.

Furniahed spt. 1176.00 water
pd. 2 bedroom. 131 v, Fourth
Ava. Ph. 446-.t416 after 7pm.

Cheat fr"zer f126. kerotana
heater
BA dres..r &amp; mirrOr
t26, light brown eterto t46.
box epringa for' twin ~ 126.
lawn mowerl40. Cell61•·446·
2026.

••&amp;.

2 Bedroom lpt. nice cerpetlng,
water paid, waahar &amp; drver
hoo~ - up , 1tova, refrig. furnish ltd
avaliebl11 Jan 1, 1987 Ph.
814·448-702&amp;.

197&amp; Freedom, 12•80, 2 bedroom , electric, carpet, stove.
retriger•tor, on rental space in
town , Point Pleuant ,
86, 700.00. Call after 6 :00,
814-446; 9740 .

Furnished &amp; unfurnished aptl.,
1160.00 end up, referenctt Ph.
304-875· n38 A-1 Real Estate.
Upatai;• unfurnished apl, carpeted. utilhin paid, no children,
no pet• cal\448-1137.

Farms for Sale

Compltttly rurn . 2 BR apartment. large living room. 4&amp;8
Second . Adultl . 1226 per
month. Sec. Oep . &amp; Ref. Cell
&amp;14-446·2238, 446· 2681 .

32 acral . 4 miln ou~aide of city
limit1. Cory 7 room. 1 slory
home. Popular Addison school
district . Fishing pond. bern •
outbuilding. 304-529-6033.

Furnished tpartment. next door
to library. One profnaionaladult
only. Parking . Call 614·«60338 .

Business
Buildings

Furnished apt . 919 Second.
(;allipolis. 1150. Utllitlaa pd.
Single male, share bath. .t484411 after 7pm.

Pleatant, 8200.00 A-One Real
Estate Ph . 304-676-6104

Deluu downtown apertm~mt ­
newlv redecorated 2 bdr, apt.
with full insulation. complete
kitchen. waahiH·drver. eir con d .
sundeck. Call 614-446-4383deya, 814-446-0139 evenings
a. weekends. 1

t .3 acres At. 7 close to Pom•
roy . U.tOO . Call 814-992 7871, 814--992-6732 or 814992-55B7.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE

Modem 1 bedroom apl!lftmant.
Coli 614-441-0390.

Athton building lots, mobile
homta permitted, Clyde Bowen.
J•. 304·67&amp;-2338 .

2 bedroom aptt ., New Haven.
Also commercial apace suitable
for aerobics. tanning, crafts . Cell
304· 182· 3&amp;81 o• 614-992 74B1 .

Renl ols

1 bedroom apt. in Middleport .
1150. month plut utllitltt. D1y1
814· 992 -5,&amp;46 or evenings
0 14·949-22 18.

41 Houses for Rent
Delu111 2 BR houae, 842 Firat
Avenue. Gallipolis, off atrHt
perking, no pett, refarenctl.
dopooh . Coli 11•-25&amp;-1629.

2 bedroom river view iptrtment.
Equipped kitchen, trash pickup.
Ideal for 2 pertiH to thare
••pencil. Cell 61•·992-1639.

3 bdr. ranch, Rodney 'JIIIege II ,
t285 mo. plus depotll. Refer-ences required. Call 814-4480008.

Gracious living. 1 and 2 bedroom apartment• at Vlllaoe
Manor and Rlveraida Apartments In Middleport. From
t216 . including utllltlat. Cell
114· 992·77B7. EOH.
- - - - - - - ' - (18B71
Room and boltfd for senior
citizen. TLC. 24 hour care. Cell
81 4-992-6B73.

Nice 3 BR house. t380 plus
utilhea &amp; aec. deposit. Call
814 -448 -9280 after &amp; 6
Wll~tndt .

3 BR . ranch on 1 acra lot.
Attached UM'ItQI. AC . 1 mila out
16.0 . t350 a month . Call 814·
4•8·23&amp;0.

2 bedroom apt. Syracu11. t1&amp;0
month, plus utilitin. Dt~oait ,
required . 114-992-!5587, 814992-1732 or 114 -992-7&amp;71 .

Pltttic cltttrn stat• approved,
plastic ttptic tanka, plastic
culverts. metal culverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRIIES. Jocfl·
10n. Oh. 614-211·1930.
Propene hot water tenk. 40
gellon. L.e11 thtn 8 mot. old.
Son offef. Colll14·"&amp;·9348.
79 Frueh1uf Van. 415 fl . 13.8
1124- .5 radiale. Notecont,
Swing doou, amooth aid".
New floor. Call 814-378-2280.
Tree 6 stump rtmoval . .. ont,
fil1dirl, firewood, pld!.up-t45.
dump-185 . Hetp vouchertl
Oon'a a..ndtcepn. 114-4419648.
Giblon upright frtoer : 11Y.. cu.
ft . Enerov liVer, 2 yre. old. Cell
81. ·379 · ~~01 .

10 g1Uon IXttrlor paint, one lug
all halat, ant dHp wall pump •
link. Colll14·"1·3028.
Olympic w•ghta a. bar, dtluJia
bench. 1325. AadhawkAuger. 1
of5000. t1000ortradeforclr.
Colll1 4· 44&amp;·24&amp;8. ,

I :::::::::::::::::::=1==~=======~

Smell,yard.
2 BR
roull.mo.
f•nced
in ~
front
t200per
Utllhltt
not included. Call 814-9884150.

64 Misc. Merchandise

61 Farm Equipment

Mixed hardwood alebt: 112. per
bundle. Containing appro•. 11,;
tons. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy, OhiO. Call 114-9928411 .

UTILITY BLDG . SPECIAL'
27'JI38••&amp;•EAVE whh sliding
door &amp; Nrvice door 14,288.00
orectod. '
Iran Horse Buildings Ph.61.t332-9745.

1970 JO 310-C Bulldozer. I
wev blldt, winch end canopy,
Firm 17100. 1973 C·&amp;&amp; Chovy
Live T1ndum. t3600. Call 614·
89B·6&amp;31.

1030 Call di..,l with ceb. 5
bottom plOws. t4950. 4 row·AC
nO til pltnter. e1&amp;00. 12 toot
whnl -disc, 1800. 3100 Ford
tr.ctor. low hrt. with 515 late
Firewootl toi-Mia. •315 . per load; model Ford mowhlg machine,
6 loadt. t1150. Delivet'ad and · f6450 . No. 3 MF bailor, 1660.
llockod. Coli 814·949· 2101
Putl type rUe. 1•76. Call
lfter 6:00 p.m.
1 ·28&amp;·1522 .

Two A71x13 snow tlrn. 120.
Alao 4 drawer flUng ~ablnet with
koy locfl. tal. Coli 114-892·
&amp;916.
Tonv'a Gun Aeptlira. hot reblu•
ln9. Opon 9:00AM to 7:00PM.
Coli 304·17&amp;·4831 .
UMCI A·&amp;l dttch witch trlnchtr
and John Deere backhoe, 814694·7BU o.eU-&amp;B08.
Stereo SANSUI, 120 w ~ch emp,
7 blnd-ch equet11er. auto rtverte c.a deck. linear traCking
tumteble, ·electronic tumltl', 2
tower speak•s. matching .t.nd,
remota control. htrdfy u ....
phone 304-17&amp;-3690 or 8754188.
.
Firewood 121.00 pickup load
not dtllvtrid. wood splitter
1800.00. ~04-876-7771.
Antique ctd.- . cloMt t260.:
Electric Speed Queen alothM
drver 1100.; Meytag wringer
wuhor t7&amp;. 304· 773· &amp;303.
For ule or Trade. L model
Gr•vely tractor tor repallr or pM'tt
*200.00 or trade on IN Ford
plow and disc. 30..-875-1311
oltor &amp;:00.

Concrete blocks all tint yard or
c~e~~v.,. . Meson sind. Gallipolis
Block Co., 123~ Pine St.,
Golllpollo. Ohio con 114·441·
2783 .
Pole Building• by Quality
Bulldert. Workahopa, earpons,
enimal ahtlters. ger-a•- frlt
••tlmatet. Phone 114-3148712.

66

Pet1 for S•le

Oragonwvnct Cenery Kennel.
CFA HlmaltVtn. Perelan tnd
Sl1.,... klttono. AKC Chow
pu~n- ,New Hlmmln • Ptrollllo. Coli 814-448-3144 1h1&lt;
7PM.
Angort Ham at.. Golden MIIFnsacca•ori• 8nd toad.
no
Alia Albino oorlill IIOd
for 111. 304-?73-1111.

,.,, c..-.

"""I•·

One female bugle, 11 montht·
old, 110.00. 304·171·41 &amp;4.

2010 John Deere d1Mal1ractor-

Ovn• ,..,... _

'·

t4tl. Lito

modol 224T Jolin Dooro bollr

11ZII. Hoy wo- UOO. Col
B14· 2•e.ee22.

CROll. IONS
U.S. II WOOl, Jo-n,
114·218-1411 '
'
MaMty Fell II CR. NewHolend.
luolottot-•-o. .

"~~1-- .. - .........
Ultd
eq11lpment. LettMt ... tGtion In
~of,..,.

1 .!. Ohio.

JIM'I FARM !QU.,MINT
CENTI!II. IR II W. Gollpollo.
Ololo. Coli 114-..._r777, """·
,,........_1111. u, trooton wttll-oarty owr 40.-

"I've got it... let's play hlde-and-seekl"
\

ull L I;

1

rI I

MOTOR CAR BROKERS. St .
Rt. 180 North of Holzar Hoap,
Golllpolio, Ohio, 614-448-6&amp;92
or 448-4522. See us for all vour
liVettock and horH trail" needs.
Alto, in etock steel truck bedt for
pickups 11'\d ton trucks. P 6 H
spring bumpers.

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buying ehell corn or ear
com. Call forlatntquotat. River
City Farm Supply, 814·446·
2986.

63

Livestock

Llvatock - 4 COWl. 1 Aegiltered bull, 17 celv11, 304·&amp;7641B2.

ANP HER&amp;'!&gt;
THE PROOF! HI!O&gt;
MONOCLE!!

trootoro.l--.
,, .

79 Ford Pinto, New tires.
eJCcelent running cond. Looks
gOOd. •400- Ctn bt"'" et ISle
Jackeon Ettltn. Apt. 88-B,
Jocfl""' Plkt, Golllpollo. OH.
197.t Impale. Auna good. Call
IU-"&amp;-1122.
1113 Forti Eacort OL, 4 dr., air,
auto .• .PB,.B. 12,000
AM/FM/Cou. Coli 114-4410141 oftl&lt; I PM .

mil•.

81 M- CO&lt;Io. 13 Old1 Hu .. t.
Coli 114·448·1201.
'

1 tl4 Buick LISobfo, 89,000 .
mllea. lnttrior •u . cond ...
.xtarior·Dood cond. Mutt nil.
Coli 814-241·1412.
18 Mlldo RX 7 . •o.ooo ocutlll
mill. 78 Chovy 4•4. Col
tU-441 -111Z o• 814-288931 • .

fOR AMOI#.~tolT THERE,
I THOUGHT OIJE Of U&amp; WI.&amp;
l.O~II-lG HI~ MIND'

76

MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
·
Ill @ @ Wheel of Fortune
ill! Barney Miller
CIJ Sanford and Son
0 C1J ()) New Newlywed

Game

ED CD Too Close

Ford FMX. Call614-446 -0966 .
Rebuilding is -available.
Budget transmiuions used a.
rebuilt all types. Torque conver·
ten &amp; 1r1nafer Cites. Engine
over haullcits. Allison Transmitsin parts and CVC joints. Mnimum 30 day to lifetime warranty. Will deliver, ceah and
2·~2t, , or install. Call 814-379-

You

WANT i1::&gt; SE-E

HIM .5WE'AT?

you

D~
ANt&gt; [4A.T'T'-E- HIS

· SiANI&gt; ffY iHE'
I..!:'A.S'H

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

WHIL~ I:

l&gt;F!(J(&gt; .$0Mf:" fOOt&gt;

IN HIS gowt..
Omega fi~arglan. mounted on
Nittan. 1984 Model, 6 speed,
dual wheels. 23 MPG in overdrive. e9900. Ceil 614-9923921 .

ALLEY OOP
PERSONALLY, I THINK 'rOUR FRIEND.
MR.BRVAN , HASSliPPEI&gt; A COG,

HENRY! I .. ....

Service s

for Comfort
0 ())Judge
®I Wheel of Fortune
Ill @ ® Jeopardy
ill! Jeffersons
7:35 CD Honeymooners
· 8:00 0 (I) @ Highway to
Heaven (CCI Mark sabo·
tages Jonathan 's attempt to
reunite an aged film slar and
her daughter when he learns
that Jonathan may be ;;en t
to Heaveri after I he assignmentis completed . !60 min .)
In Stereo.
1Il Bring 'Em Back Alive
Ill 0 Ill Perfect Strangers ICCI Saiki and Larry
plan an elegant homemade
gourme t dinner for Jennifer
and Marv Anne.
ED (!) College Baskelball:
Vanderbilt at Kentucky (2
hrs.J
'
CD
MacNeii-Leh•e•
Newshour

@ New Mike Hammer

81

.Mike inves.t igates the case
of an amnesiac man who is
an important link between
Soviet a'nd U.S. secre1
agents. [60 min .)
Cill An Evening of Cham·
pionship Skating 1986
Taped live at Harvard University, the world's top figure
skaters compete in pair
skating , ice dancing, and
men' s and women 's skating
in the 17th annual exhibirion . World champion Brian
Boita no and U.S. dance
champions Renee Roca and
Donny Adair are featured .

Home
Improvements

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unconditional lifetime guarentH. Local flfet'ences furnished .
FrH eatimatet. Call collect
1·614·237-0488, day or night.
Rogers Basement
Waterproofing.

EEK &amp; MEEK

SWEE.PER and sewing machine
rep1ir, P..,a, end tupplies. Pick
up and delivery, Davia V,ecuum
Claaner, one half . mila up
Georgn CriHIIc Ad. Call 814448-02f4 .

(60

_

All typH carpenter &amp;concrete
work: Interior. exterior, remodeling, painting. roofing, tree
eatimttn. Call 614-448· 6174.
RON'S Television Service .
HouM ctHI on RCA, Quaz•r,
GE . Sptcialing in Zenith. Call
304-178-2398 o• 81--448 2414.

__

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
,.------..__
I WISH 1 COI..JLD SCRATCH

Fetty Tree :Trimming. stump
ramoval. Ca11304-871S-1331.

MY EAR WITH MV FOOT

LIKE YI:XJ·O\N,CHIPS.

RINGLES 'S SERVICE . o•po·
rienctd carpenter. electrician,
meton. pain tar. roofing (includIng hot tar application) 304876-2088 or 875-7147.
·

__,

AND r 'WISH I ~,.~~to.5 FA61
ENOL..GH 1'0 CKASE: THE
1/EiARf)I'I:(E TRUCK, l..IKE 'a.l O'N.

BQ&lt;,IE'O=LJ6~

If AND SOOE

OF I..J5 OON'r.

82

YESTERDAY'S SCRAM-LEIS ANSWEIS

·BRIDGE

BAI{NEY

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor . Founh and Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone &amp;14-441-3888 or 61444&amp;-4477

TATER'S GITTIN'
TERRIBLE
5MART-ALECKY,

86

~AW· ·

General Hauling

IT'S HIGH TIME
HAD A MAN·TO·
MAN TALl&lt; ·WITH
THAT LEETLE
VARMINT

Jame1 Boys Water Service. Also
pools filled. Call614-266-1141
or 814· 4•6-1176 or 614-4487911 .

------ ·

A problem
with entries

NORTH
• ~J7
'6 5

By James Jacoby

+B 4 2

HouH coal. Oetivered 1 ton and
up. Jim Lenier. 304·875·1247
or 876 -7397.

1818 MGI. low mN-. noodo
Mint reptlr, make an offer, .,304·&amp;78· 3190.
phono 304·171· 3811 oftor
4 :00PM,

1

'

-;;;=:::;:;:;::::;:====
••
87 Upholstery

Tiuck1 for Sale
A &amp; M Custom Couch11 and
Aeupboltt.,Y, St. At. 7. Crown
City. Oh. &amp;14·2&amp;1·1470, Evo. '
&amp;14-448-3438. Opon dollv 8 to •
• •30, SOl. 9:30 to 1:30. Old • :
n.w Uphott•td.

PEANUTS
THAT'S W~Ar'S CALLED
UI'SETTIN6.THE 8AI.Af:ICE
OF NATURE .•

~~,·~·-'
b, tHOMAS JOSEPH

min I

College Basketball :
West Virginia at Maryland
(2 hrs.J Live .
ill! Hogan's Heroes
8:05 CD MOVIE: 'The Sons of
Katie Elder'
·
8:30 ()) D ())Head ohhe Claos
ICC) Charlie faces a crisis
when his Class suggests he
cheat on an eK8m to keep
his teaching license.
ill! College Basketball: De·
Peul at Evansville (2 hrs.)
9:00 I) IJ) @ Gimmo a B•eak
ICC) Nell blames hersell
when Joey accidemally
loses little Matthew on the
s1reets of New York . (60 ....,
· m in.) In Stereo.
1Il 700 Club
(!J College Baokelball : VIllanova a1 Synocuse (2 h•s.j

fr•• •
.._._

mlck

ha.n;
3 Clctse nr
1h• day
6 Wei~ht
allowance
7 Cr ash into
8 Om· -

rcru~el'

II Pari sh

pri•st

.

'

12 Grad.&lt;•
9 Craving
13 -, om) volt ' ll ·~'ufll

14 Sunday

15 Unc:losc

dinrll'r

(pctrl.)

16 Whcro• I'm 23 Go•nLIIily 34 Kin
pointin~
27 Pun l.&lt;h 35 ChinPst•
p:1g1Hia
I 7 WcsiJ•rn
hy fim•

161la."•1Jall
hil
18 Soft d lPI
21 Sl•l ecl.t•tl
22 Sunin1·1
24 ChnnJ(f'

28 Cllf'f'kt•r 37

show
18 Habhh·
19 Showy

the

d l' l'llf
2~ Uvl~ rdul'

20 Equal
21 Crowd
toRNher

scttin~

M1Hador'~

•,'

31 Sicilian 38
dty
32 In I nmsil 39 Dnwnln~
St.
33 Arah

garmPni

number

&lt;r.-y;-r;-r:-,

28 Mea.&lt;uring

device
29 Farml'r
or lndiu
30 S&lt;:anty
32 Medicinal

'"

herh

...
' .

33 DirecLion
on ship

'

'

36 ll othed

40 -

.

'

I.Withy
- Lanka
(Ceylon)'

pl(.•('t'

n oWPf

26 Sport-'

Jagj(Pr

41 "It I

'•

Didn't -"
42 Lessen
43 "- go
hra~h"

DOWN
I Exclu&lt;lc
2 Okhllonm a
city
3 On the -

'

' "

..

(In night)

DAILY
AXYDLBAAXR
IILONG'FELLOW
One letter stands for snolher. In lhis sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letlers,
apostrophes.lhe length and formation of lhe words are all
hln~ . Each day the code letlers are different.
·

,1-21

GBP

FJ

QC Y D

JGWPMVOBPMJ
-

vccy

Q SG

uc w

J C WWCI

GBP

.JXFWPG

HZWAPE
XWCS.IG
YHterdoy't CryptDquote: TIIOSE WH O CANNOT BE

ALONE AJIE ALWAYS BORED XNO TllEREFORE
BORING. - PRINCE OE UGNE

C!l

America' • Cup Chal ·
ltnge Oownunder: The
flllll Four (4 hro.J
M*A*S'H
()) Ettolco on Trill
• CD &lt;Ill Tonlghl Show In

• rn
11 :30

SlettO.
()) WKRP In Clnclnnortl

.• CD [lXI
•

...

..

' I
'

I

CRYPTOQUO'I'E

ll Z X X F M . P J J

• rn

NIIWI
CD Hordcaotle and McCor.

4 Pul hehind

I Soul11 Sea
5 Meander
10 Early

Arthur Hailey'o
HotellCC) Da ve 's drug dependency loads to his suspension from lhe S1. Gregory and a woman who
spent 10 years in a coma is
desired by 1wo men . (60
min.)
• (!) Odd Couple
()) Kanawha Counly on
the Una
@
ClZ Equlllzer McCall
s1epo In when a young w ife
may have to submh to a
crooked judge's demands In
ordef 10 free her hu•bend
from a false drug pollea sion conviction. (60 min.)
(]]) NeWIWIIICh
10:30 CD American 8111pohoto
INN NtWI
(]]) Heart Has Ito Reaoon•
(]3J Noiwo
10:35 CIJ MOVIE: 'Short Walk to

, 1:00 • (I) CIJ. ()) (j§J . ClZ (jJJ

ACROSS
isle

Oeyllght'
1

fQ10953

,.

a

1

ccotl and limnton• delivary, ··i
,---------------------

1·11 ·11

EAST
Sometimes an unblocking play is WF.IlT
+K9865
• 32
needed ror. a reason other than simply 'KJ9
'Q 10 8 3
taking tricks in the suit. Unblocking t86
• J 74 2
can create additional entries to the +Ks7
• Q 10 6
dummy, for. example. When dummy's
SOUTH
seven of spades was played at the firsl
•
Q 10 4
trick, East played low. Declarer also
played low, unthinkingly. and then
·~
7 42
fAK
took the A·K of diamonds. Now he
·~J5l
played' the 10 or spa des, intending to
Vulnerable: Neither
finesse Lhe jack and play lhe diamond
Dealer: South
queen. But declarer's carelessness had
given West an opportunity to exercise
Norlb Eaol
Soullo
some ingenuity. Real,izing that declar- w...
er might just need lwo entries to dum·· Pa"'
It
Pass
2 NT
my and hoping Lhat declarer had not · Pa"'
3 NT Pass
Pass
started with a four-card spade suit
Pass
West put up the spade king smartly.
Declarer could now take dummy's
Op&lt;!ning lead: +6
spade ace and try the queen of diamonds. When the jack of diamonds did
not fall. he could not come to nine
tricks before the defenders took make h\s contract. even with the un·
enough tricks' to set the contract.
fortunate diamond distribution. The
Declarer gained nothing by his play lesson is simple - plan the play be•.
to trick one. It's easy to see that either fore playing to Lhe first trick.
defender mighl have started with four
.'
diamonds to the jack. If !haL is the A new book by James Jacoby and hi; •
case, it is imp&lt;!rative for South to win father, /he late Oswald Jacoby, Is n!.Ur;
the Op&lt;!ning lead with his spade queen. .available at bookstores. It Is "Jacoby
Thal way, he cannot be deprived of on Card Games," published by Pharos
two entries to dammy and will easily Books.

()) 0 ())

Lim"loneand ltebwood hauled.
AI Tromm, Rutlend. Call 8147U· 2328.

Mowrey'• Upholtttrlng a..ving
:-tircOuntyarea 21yeere. The :,est
II Chooy plclllup. lllort wlltlll in twnhure upholltering . C.ll
...._ no Ntt. b . eond. C.~ 304'· 171-4115• for
114-UI-IZOI .
. tttlmtt11.

James Jacoby

Dynasty ICCI
KrySIIe
despera1ely
searches Singapore for an
amnesiac Blake , who ·IS resuming his romance with AI·
exis. while Sammy Jo
reache s a decision about
Clay and Nick' KirT!ball comes
to Dominique's rescue . (60
min.J Part 2 ol 2.
CD Cill Eyoo on the Prize:
Awakenings 1964-1968
ICC) Post World War II ra·
cial discrimination in America Is looked a1. (60 min.)
~ Magnum, P.I. Con artist
Mac poses as Magnum and
lands the private eye in trou·
ble wilh a group of gangsters . (60 min .)
10:00 0 IJ) @ St. Eloowhore
ICC) Ehrlich forces check·
ups and flngerprim leSis on
the couple claiming to be hia
parents , while Dr. Kiem at·
lempls to keep her longdiSiance marriage alive . (60
min .)

Plumbing

below.

Florid - Chase - VIper - Bleeps - CRISIS .
Old gent 10 young lady: "A marriage without conlllc1s Is
almost es lnconcslvabls BB a nallon without a CRISIS."

()) 0 ())

8o Heating

Comp lete oho chuck le quoled
by f11i ing in the missing words

_

f) ~~ic:~~~~\ LETTERS TO 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1

Uve.

Rotary or cable tool drilling.
Molt walls completed umedey.
Pump salet and service. 30.tB96-3B02

_

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS
IN THESE SQUARES

Ill @

FTM General Contracting 13yra
e~~:perltr1ce . Roofing •
Conltruction Ph. 814-388-9308.
Fr" altlmtln 10% off during
the holidtya, oHer e•pirea Jtn
15, 19B7.

1871 Chwy Mollllu. 4 door.
good tlr11. llotttry ond motor.
uooo. eo11 304·773-1717.

1111 Ford: tuto., bedMntr,N~I
good . . .oo. Coli 114·441·
'2101.

e

der·· .

7:'05
1:30

Auto Parts
8o Accessories

1 8&amp;3 Fllld Fohlono 800, 304175·23U.

1 HI Cllovrvlol. u . o:on4. Now
- · Coli 114·211· 1141 or
114-258-1174. .

.

(jj)

Wanar•on ' t Water Hauling,_ •
reuonable rates. immediate
2,000 gallon dellve,.., , ciatlt'na. '
pools. well. ate. call 304· 5762919 .

72

_

'--L-..L.-.O........J-..J..-.1 you de.,.elop f rom st ep No. 3

ED aJ M'A'S'H
0 ()) People's Court

64 14 h . speed boat. 40 HPs .
Motor $350. Call 614-4461512 or 814-256-9314.

Dillard Water Service: Pools,
Sllttrnl, Walla. Delivary Any' ,
time. Call 114-441 -7404.

1867 ClmltO. Rtttor~ . M•lc•
olfw. CoM 11•·892-8822 .

_

Runaways '

1982 Cutlet• Celaia. One
ownar, •xctlltnt condition.
Auto, to.ded. New tiree. Cell
114-742· 3142.

co-.

REMAPP
t--.:16'
,1---lr;1-rl.,,.,.l--iI0

®I News

-------11887)

1 118 AMC lplril II 203 Rock
II.• PomtfGY. Ohio. 1800. In

A, not-so-bright teenager lnlormBd his mom 1hat "In spite of
thecost ollivlng, It's still-."

(!J SportsCenter
()) 0 ())ABC News
ED crl Hogan's Heroes
Cil Doctor Who
@ ID @ CBS Newo
Cill Newlon's Apple [CC) .
ill! WKRP in Cincinnati
CD Andy Grlffhh
0 (I) PM Magazine
(]) Hardcastle and McCormick
C!J College Baske1ball:
ConneCticut at Georgetown (2 hrs .t Live .
Ill Enlertainment Tonight
Ally Sheedy discusses her
role in the soon-to-bereleased f1lm. " Maid to Or-

CD MOVIE: 'The Young

T a. L Weter delivery lnytim'e Ph.
81 4 -388 · 9732 umti day
delivery .

good

6:35
7:00

Boats and
Motors for Sale

Aegiattfed Sttnd•rd brad mare,
will told In spring, will drive or
rido, 12&amp;0.00. 304·17&amp;· 7260.

Autos for Sale

I I 1I .

'!

6:05 CD Beverly Hillbillies
6:30 0 (I) (j§J NBC News

1988 Ytmaha Tri-Z 260. very
Qood cond. Extresinclui:ted. Call
614-448-9710 after 6PM .

76

I-rS-'-PrU::.,.,M3 -'-M,..--11

CD 3-2·1. Contacl iCC).
Cill Sec•et City
ill! Fac1s of Life

OM 360 Turbo tranamisaion 6

Building Materi .. a
llod!:, brick, NWer plpee, windows. linitis. etc. Claude Winten, Alo Grinde, 0. Cell 114241·1121.

plowo, dloc 13880. Now lcllo

2 bedroom home, Rt . 141.
carpeted, 2 mil• from. down IOWft Golllpollo, ..,..h ond
rM•ancee r.qulr.d, f271 .00.
304-171-3888.

7421 .

71

2 btdroom, furnished . Em ployed persons only. New
Hevan. t110. per month. Cell
304-112· 248&amp;.

3 bedroom houH for rent In
8yr1Ctll4. Coli 81•·912-7&amp;88
oftor 5:00p.m.

1

EVENING

(!J Mazda Sportsloolc

-;:;;::::::;:;=.:::=::;:===
-.
74 Motorcycles

White Farm Tractors, Beat Price

56 Building Supplies

61 Farm Equipment

3 bedroom home In Pomeroy.
U28. per month plus deposit.
Coli &amp;1 4· 112·&amp;713.

letter• of the
words below to form fo v_r simple words.
f ou~ ~rambled

ED rn Jefferson•

Standard.
4 tpetid.
15983.
At~lng
$6500.114-992\978 CJ-5 Jeep, 304-67&amp;2911 .

6n Aret. Sid~ Equipment Co,
Henderson, W. Va. 304·676·

Surplut-Army-Rantei-Ciothint,
llinld ·Denim Jackett. C1rh1rt
Clothing 10 per cent dilcount}
Decron lnaul•ted Covtrl\11
U&amp;.OO. Sem Somerville'• Eett·
Raventwood Junction lnd•
pendance Road, Rt. 21, Frl, Sal,
Bun. 12:00·8:00 PM. 304·27J.
666fi.

Hou11 tor rtot, At. 180 North, 3
miltl from Holzer Hotpitel. Call
&amp;1•·•4&amp;· 27S3 doy~mo o• 11•·
44&amp;·2851 tvtninga.

At 160 Mulberrv Aw .. Pom1r0r,·
Avtlllble Feb. 1tt. Rtuonab •
,.nt, houtt Midi ~ . Call
114-182·&amp;781 oltw 8 :00.

0 R:~~rronge

News

1984 4 wheel drive Ford Aenger.

I ,II ''I ·;tll'lill·,
,\ I lVI' ,[Ill f.

HouH close to city tchoolt. Rtf.
• Osp. No pets. C•ll·lfttf 8 :30
PM 514·441· 1734.

PUUIU

6:00 D CI HIJOCIJ®ID illl®

Vans 8o 4 W.O .

1876 C·J6 Jeep. 4 wheel drive.
Runt goo~t. body·rough. t500.
Coll814-142·2763.

l r.tll SII IIrl ii llllll

Callahan 's Uaed Tlre Shop. Over
1.000 tirn, tizes12, 13, 14, 15,
16. 11.5. I mll11 out At. 218.
Colll14-211·1281.

TNATDAILY

1/21/87
.

78 Ford Custom van, ••- cond.
Coli 014·448-8201 .

Sofas and cheire priced from
$4 Hay &amp; Grain
t3915 to 1995. Tabl11 1&amp;0 end
up to *121!L Hlde-1-btdt 1390
to til&amp;. A8ollntn U25 10
Large round btl.. of hay for ole.
t375. Lamps t28 to 1121.
t10.00 •each Ph. 814 -•4eDinetttl 8109 and up to •491.
.
10fi2. .
Wood table w-8 chelrt t286 to
8796. D11k 81 00 up to 8375.
large round btiH for ~~tie or
Hutchn f400 and up. Bunk
lredt. Call 814-387-7640.
2
E
Computer
with
disc
Apple
beds complete w-mettrnsn
_$296anduptol39&amp; . 8abybRa , drlva monitor Jay .. ldt, mouN . GoodtlmothymixtdhiV. 9001b.
sound &amp; .-ch card. Madam
1110 &amp; f17~ . MattrHtn or box
with deN. with Iota of aottw.ar, round lNi}l•. 1t0ted In btrnt. Call
apringa full _or twin *83. firm
•1 .000 .00 Firm. 304 ·112· 814·241-9480 oft" &amp;:30 PM .
173, and t83. OuHn Hltl226,
2210 after 4 p.m. 'lntw.ted Hoylofulo. Colll14· 379· 2807
King 1350 . .t drawer ch•t t66 .
Parti.. ,Only' .
Ornsera U9. Gun ceblnete 8.
10, 12 gun. Gator electric range
. . milled hl'f, never wet.
Apple II E computer. "00.()0. Cl
$37&amp;. Baby mattre11• $35 &amp;
t1.2&amp;
Collolto• &amp;:00, 614-441·9740. 4013. a hla. Ctll 814-446f46. Bad framn t20, 130 &amp;
King freme 160. Good Hlectin
Sears hNt rtclaimer tOr 6 Inch Gran hav, •1 .00 bale. Min. of
of bedroom euitM, met1l caplpo, good cond. 12&amp;.00. 84oro
binttl, headboard• UO and up
Salt Savet water eohantr, 100 billet. eon &amp;1•·2&amp;6·8618.
tot66 .
121.00. n..ct1 tome work. Ground til' corn, 176. ton; 138.
30.· &amp;7fi-&amp; 174.
U1td Furniture: wood.ttble &amp; 2
half ton . Your ucks. Alto hay
benchel, btdt, dre11er, wood
ttraw. Long Bottom, Ohio.
21 cubic foot freazer UOO.OO. and
wardrobe. 3 mllta Gut Bulavilla
· Ad. Open BAM to 5PM , Mon.
Kenmore renve and refri. .etor Coli &amp;14-9BB-3181 .
t250.00. Jonaerlda 70 E cheln Hav for sale. miJiad. t1.00 &amp;
thn~ Soo. 81•-4•6-0322.
11w t210.00. Remington chain
n .n bolo. 304-881-3410.
NW t100.00. Franklin truck
Picllena UHd Furniture. Good
c.mper
t40Q.OO.
I
hp
air
quality ut.cl furniture. Open 9 to
sMiled corn. t4.10 per
compretiOf .. 60.00. O.ek and Cried
I or call for •ppolntment.
cwt. Ground ti.OO per cwt.
304-87fi·&amp;483 Of 878-14&amp;0.
~~.c:.blnot, •100.00. 304·115· Ground with mol111n t&amp;. 76 per
cwt. 304-418-1031 .
ht1tlng etove. uMCI ¥try
64 Misc. Merchandise Coal
llttlo. 127&amp;.00. 304·17&amp;-1892.

2 room, furnished, upatalra apt.
clean, no pets. Adultl. Utll itlet
furnlthed. Ret. &amp; dep. raqulred.
colll14-44&amp;· 1fi19.

For tale: 90JI11'c1 lot in Twin
Ceder eddlton. New Haven.
W.V. '4500 firm. 304·8B2·
3208.

'

1973 4•4 Toyota land crulter.
Runs good. t1400. Call 61444&amp;·8&amp;23.

46 'Space for Rent

2 bedroom . Water and heat
included. t200. per month. Call
814-742-2170.

2 to 3 ~room apt, Convenient
locaUon In town. All ulilhinpaid
t326.00mo.. r-'erenctl 6 depoelt reQuired. Wittmtn Re81
Ettata Agenty' Ph. 614-4463844

lD ~ l.IVI&lt;£ 16 liU&lt; rt01' OF .

1977 CJ6 Jeep. 8 cyl. 268 CV
eng. 3 tpd. Call weeknights
814-44&amp;-8173.

Aoomt for rtnt. dl'f. week.
month. Gallla Hotel. Call 114446-9716. AentaaloWatl120
month.

Nice 2 bedroom Mobile Home.
Routh Lana. On nice spot in
Cheshire. 304-n3-&amp;828.

2 bdr: complete with washer- a.
dryer. New refrigerator a. new
couch. Bob Voung's ,traitor
coun. Cell 114-4.t8-2899.

Television
Viewing

lll~ 1&amp;:~1'7 Cf '1tu: Tf.o&gt;T&lt;; POIJJr

11

The Daily

Cil Big Valley

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
ltght houae beplng room1. P~rk
Central Hotel. Call 814--4410768.

Nice 3 bdr. partia!ly furtfiahed .
Convenientlocttion on upper 7 .
Water paid. Cell 814-246·5818.

1984 Shult mobile home. 14k70
whh 7•21 e11pando, 3 BR. 2 full
bathJ, toteltleclric, IPICesaver
microwave, immediate potlll·
tlon . Originally 1old for
122,000. will ltll for 81 ,000
leas than payoff. Call 61.t-446·
6726.
.

111~ ~?ULT&lt;; Cf ~TeSTS FbtmW ~C.~? A&lt;; 111~; ii:CUr

1974 C~evv lAton, 360 engine,
4spHdtrans. runs good, topper.
Asking 1400, 304-773-5260.

~==========:r:======•:•:r:":""'::'":·:.~

Office IPICI · Store apeceln Pt .

21

1888 Ford plcflup' 4•4. F-250,
V-410, low mlleaga. 3.200
mlln. Uke new. Ca11 .614-4460408 doytlmo. 614· 446-2BOO
evenings.

Henenvllle. Stove, refrlg., Natu· :._
ral gea, city water • sewer. New
1
carpet. t160 / month , t100 COUNTRY MOll I.E Home Ptrk. ~
deposit. With Reference Call Aoute 33, North of Pomeroy:
014-446·3188 .
Aantel treilwe. Cell 614-992·

14x?O FIHtwood, 3 bdr. 2 full
bathJ, total alec. Like new, price
negotiable. Call after 4 weakdll'fs, anytime weekend•. 8143B8-B633.

34

BORN LOSER

46 Furnished Rooms

2 BR trailltf at 2 Bonnie Lane,

44

Trupks for Sale

'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Unto

5 room unfurnished apt, ·304-

2 bdr. Adultsonlv. Nopeu . 322
Third. Call 814-448-3748 or
614-2&amp;8-1903.

NEW ANO USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS, RT 36.
PHONE 814-446-7274.

33

72

Wednesday, January 21,.1987 ·

-~7&amp;-1415 .

2 BA unfurn. 10~~:60 with
expando, 1h mile peat HMC-Rt.
36. Ret. &amp; Dep. required. Call
614-4.t6· '369 or 304·876·
9760.

Coli &amp;14 -3&amp;7· 0104.

Moving Sl!lle. 9 :00 to 9 :00.
Furniture, l!lntiquas. Hysell Farm,
Co . Ad . &amp;. Bradbury, Ohio.
Tuesday thrU Friday

-------~-­

2 BR Mobile home fonen t. Call
614·446·0722 .

Lost: Red Tonneau covDr for
shon bed plck ·uptruck . Reward .

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Llrry Wright

Apartment
for Rent

2 bdr., all utili" .. pel~ excapt ,
alec.. furn. or unfurn.. ate.
deposit required. Convenient
locetion. Call 814-448-1&amp;&amp;8 or
&amp;14-441·4718.

2 bdr ., new carpet, AC. furnished, wuhar-dryer, U215 mo.
LocatH in Centenary 1r11. Cell
014·448·2390.

lost : Bleck female Cocker Spt·
niel type. Tuteday, In Bradbury
area. Hta white' patch on chesr

7

Wednesday, January 21, 1987

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

()) ABC Nowo N)Ghdlne

(IDI@ Megnum. P.l .

High Wlrt A port.,;1 ol
l!ghl.ape walker Phlllppo p1•
111 ho prepare• for 1 1182
walk eelebrallng the ro·
8ump1ion of cortalruc:don
work on the Cothtdrol ol81
John the D1vlne.
•
~IAddtrly 170 min ,)
12:DO CD Bumo &amp; Allen

' 1

.

,I ' · ~

••

'

·,
'

..
.....
.'
••

el

a

'

.

• •

�•

:Page-12- The Daily Sentinel

Wednesday, January :ll, n.ttl/
'

..---.-Local Briefs:-- Sheriff report~ break-in probe progress
Long names staff members .

State Sen. Jan Michael Long, D·Circlevlfle, has appointed
stall members to serve the 17th Dis trict, which Includes Meigs
and Gallla counties.
Long said he was " pleased to say that I have obtained a staff
that Is not only from our district· but also very competent and
highly qualified, "
.
·Long' s legislative aide will be Scott E. Ellsar of Athens, a 1981
gradu ate of Athens High School. Ellsar graduated from' Ohio
Unjverslty with a degree In public administration In 1985.
Long credited Elisar with his understa nding of southern Ohio
and said his knowledge of the dally operations of state
government "will be very beneficial to all of my constituents ."
Long s(lld his secretary will be Pat Lambert of Ironton, a
former administrative assistant lor the Lawrence County
Commissioners. She was also employed by the Ohio
Rehabilitative Services Commission and the Ohio Bureau of
Employment Services.
"Pat Lambert Is very knowledgeable of the Inner workings of
local government In southern Ohio," Long said, "and as the
emphasis on local gove rnment assistance switches to the stale
government , Pat will be a valuable asS€! to the 17th District ."
A former page In the Ohio Senate himself, Long has appointed
Jim Raterman of Circleville as his page. Raterman Is currently
a senior at Ohio State University, majoring In criminal justice.

Two fined iTJ: Middleport court
Two were lined and two others forfeited bonds In the court of
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman Tuesday night.
Forfeiting bonds were Patrick H. Hanshaw, Cottageville,
W.Va., $41. speeding; and George Stilts, Middleport, $225,
assault .
Fined were Ma ry L. Buzzard, Mason, W.Va., $17 and costs,
and Charles R. Adams, Bidwell, $18 a nd costs, both on charges
of speeding.

Bonds forfeited in mayor's court
Of the 18 cases handled In the court of Pomeroy Mayor
Richard Seyler Tuesday night, nine were on speeding charges
with all forfeiting bonds.
In the group were Shirley Mills, Pomeroy, who forfeited a $45
bond; Raclnda Van Meter. Racine, a $49 bond; Gregory Kaylor,
Letart, W.Va., $46; Frank Clark, Middleport, $44; Lynn Taylor,
Pomeroy, $45; Michael Green, Patriot, $46; Randall Moore,
Syracuse, $46; David Michael, Pomeroy, $46; and Ronald
Phalln, Gallipolis, $47.
Others forfeiting In the court were Sherr! N. Butcher,
Pomeroy, $63, no operator's license, $63, expired license plates,
and $163, knowingly giving false Information to a pollee officer;
Valerie Hanstlne, Pomeroy, $43, s top sign violation; Thelma
Garrett, Pomeroy, $63, expired plates; and Arnold Priddy,
Rutland, $53, expired plates.
·
Fined In the court were Robert Sawyers Jr .., Racine, $43 and
cos ts, speeding; Rick Shaffer, Middleport, $50 and costs,
expired plates, and $50 for no financial responsibility; Jerry
Moon•, $113 and costs, public Intoxication, Middleport , with a
s ix-day jall sentence; Greg Hicks, Pomeroy, $63 and costs,
failure to pay old lines; and Carl Hughes, Pomeroy, $63 and
costs each on charges of !allure to pay old lines, expired plates,
and no operator's license.

SAR chapter ·meets Thursdny
The Ewing Chapter of the S.A.R. will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Meigs County Museum, Butternut Avenue,
Pomeroy. There will be an election of officers and a vote on the
constitution. A dinner will be held at 6:30. ·

EMS units answer six calls
'\

Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports six calls
Tuesday.
Rutland at 7:46a.m. to Salem Street lor Garnet Williamson to
Holzer Medical Center; Tuppers Plains alll a .m. transported
Elise Wager naif to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Racine. Fire
Department at 3:52 p.m. to a minor fire at the Mickey Hoback
residence on Elm Street: Pomeroy at 6:24 p.m. to Pomeroy
Health Care Center lor Audrey Sauter to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 7; 12 p.m. to VIllage Manor Apartments
fo r .Josephine Stanabrook to Veterans Memorial Hospital;
Pomeroy at 7: 47 p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Marjorie Milhoan to Vetera ns Memorial Hospital .

Meigs County Sherif! Howard
E. Frank reports significant
progress In solving last weekends' rash of breaking and
enterlngs .
Sheriff Frank spent all weekend, Monday and Tuesday,
collecting evidence, lntervlew·
lng witnesses and pursuing severalleads, which Included a trip
to A!hens County. Physical evl·
dence found at the scene of one of
the Meigs County break·lns, at
Tuppers Plains, has been tied In

with a break-In repOrted Tuesday · pectls being withheld until he has ·court before Judge Patrick H.
O'Brien for his Initial appear·
been taken Into custody.
morning In Athens.
·
In another matter, the sheriff ance on the charge;
The break-Ins, In Meigs and
Danny W. Kuhn, 21, of LangsAthens Counties, have similar reports that a PagevUie man Is
characteristics, and a suspect Is being held. at the county jail In ville, who was being held In the
being sought by authorities. It Is cOJinectlon with domestic county ja}l, hfls been transferred
to Gall Ia County where author!·
believed that the same person Is violence.
The sheriff reports that Jerry ties there also had charges on '
responsible lor a series ofbreak·
Ins over the past several days J . Haning, 29, of Pagevllle, was him. Kuhn appeared In Meigs
arrested Tue·day evening and County Court Tuesday morning
and weeks In both counties:·
charged
with domestic violence on a domestic violence charge In
Sheri!! Frank reports that the
In
conection
with an assault on connection with an assault on his ,
suspect has an extensive prior
mother, Dessle Kuhn. Kuhn ·
his
girlfriend,
Sue Geog.
criminal record, Including a
Domestic violence Is a mlsde· . entered a plea of not guilty, and
break-ln. The name or the sus·
.meanor of the first degree and Judge O'Brl~n set his bond In the
carries a pos~lble maximum amount of $3,000. In addition,
penalty of six mon.ths In the Judge O'Brien ordered that
county jail and a fine of up to Kuhn, If he Is released on bond, In
no way contact the complaining
$1,000.
Haning Is to appear Wednes· witness until the case is
day morning In Meigs County concluded.

CarlE. Dickson, 54, of Albany,
died ~nexpectedly Tuesday even·
lng at O'Bieness Memorial Hos·
pital's emergency room.
Born Sept. 23, 1932, he was a
son of the late Mark and Esta
McCallister Dickson. He was a
former auto salesman for the Bill
Edwards Co. and S.&amp; R.'Motors.
He was a U.S. Navy veteran and
a member of the Bethel Holiness
Mission.
Surviving are his wife, Ada
Stanley Dickson; one brother,
Glen Dickson, Columbus; one
sister, Mrs. Paul (Carolyn) Sin·
clair, Route 1, Shade; two
stepdaughters, Lavonda Lawrence, of Athens, and Kay
Porter, of New Marshfield, and
two stepgrandchlldren.

Health unit

Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by an Infant
s,lster.
Services will be 2 p.m. Friday
at Blgony-Jordan Funeral Home
In Albany with Rev. Leonard
McVay officiating. Burl;1l will be
In Alexander Cemetery. Military
graveside services will be con·
due ted by Albany VFW Post 9893.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4· and 7-9 p.m.
Thursday.

lio1.36, No.182

Veterans Memorial
Tuesday Admissions -Donna
McCloud, Middleport; Audrey
Sauters, Pomeroy; Marjorie Mil·
hoan, Pomeroy; Josephine Sha·
nabrook, Middleport; Ferra Bar·
ringer, Reedsville.
Tuesday, Discharges - Paul
Grady, Kenneth Wolfe, !rene
Russell, Martha Adkins.

(Continued from Page 1)

rash. Headache, stiff neck and
confusion occur in less than one
half of the patients. It takes from
one to 10 days to Incubate the
disease.
Diagnosis Is suspected alter
testing spinal fluid but It is
confirmed by a blood and-or a
spinal fluid culture In people who
have suspicious signs and symp·
tons, Torres states.
The type of meningitis outlined
by Torres can be treated with
penicillin G followed by rlfampln
treatment. All close houS€hold
contacts must be treated with
rlfampln also. Other contacts.
such as those In a school or work
setting, do not need to be treated
unless they are In a daycare
setting In which age group saliva
• may be exchanged, Torres points

out . Cultures are not recom·
mended for screening contacts
as they ar&lt;&gt; of no value In making
decisions relating to prevention
type treatments, known as
prophylaxis.
Torres reports that the Meigs
County Health Department does
not have the !acllllles to do blood
cultures nor does It have prophy·
laxls treatments available. Resl·
dents concerned In ' regard to
contact Information or treat·
ments are asked to consult their
local physicians. Torres points
out that all of the Information she
gives on the disease Is based on
Information supplied to the Ohio
Department of Health by the
Center of Disease Control In
Atlanta, Ga.
'

By NANCY YOACHAM .
Sentinel Slalf Wrller
Ohio Department of Transpor·
tation o!llcials have changed
their minds again on ·a proposal
to co nnect Bedford Township
Road 367 to U.S. 33.
When the limit ed access U.S. 33
four-lane from Rock Springs to
Darwin was constructed in the
1960s, ODOT denied requests
from George Carper, owner of
Carper's Nursery, for access
from the four-lane lo TR 367,
leading to his business.
Carper took legal ac tion to
attempt to for ce ODOTto provide
access, but. the cour t upheld

Jan'uary .Home Appliance
Clearance Sale
MANY ITEMS ARE 1 ONLY!
Sewing Machine 117171.1
Vacuum 1m111
Range 1926611
Range 1924611
Range 1721611
Microwave 1167611
Dishwasher (154651
Dryer (661211
Washer 1267211
Washer 12672!1
Dryer 1662t 11
Dryer 1661211
Dryer 1666111
Dryer 166721'
Elec. Water Heater 1314371
Elec. Water Heater 1315!71
Refrigerator (630711
Refrigerator 166111 1
Freuer 1151521
Freezer 1173311
Freezer 1173511
T.V. 142411
Stereo so w11n 1921961
Stereo 1911651

WAS
1449.9,9
1329.99
1499.99
1469.99
1499.99
1569.99
1429.99
1399.99
14119.99
1459.99
1229.99
1399.99
1329.99
1379.99
1159.99
1259.99
11149.98
11199.99
1279.99
1379.99
1369.99
1419.99
1359.99
12!9.99

SAVE

NOW
1219.99
1184.99
1359.99
1329.99
1359.99
1349.99
1279.99
1219.99
1359.99
1369.99
1199.99
1289.99
1249.99
1279.99
1109.99
1179.99
1549.98
1519.99
1239.99
1319.99
12119.99
1249.99
1249.99
1139.99

5230
S145
5140
5140
5140
5220

S90
S30
5110

sao
5100
sso
sao

sno
sao

. ABOVE PRICES DO NOT INCLUDE SHIPPING AND TAX
AU PlllES GOOD UNTIL MERCHANDISE IS LIQUIDATED

SEARS CATALOG MERCHANT

Bill and Jenelle HaptoMtaii-OWNERS
N. 2nd Ave.
992·2171
Middleport
Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back.

MONEY SAVING COUPON

usual. All members·are urged to attend this Important meeting.

Couples file for divorce

* UrriqNr Ulstom ftAhlrrs
* Liftlikt Dttoil

The probability of preclplta·
tlon Is: near zero tonight and 50
l?l!rcent Thursday .

1

' $84~·

,

OfFERED • EXCLUSIVELY• BY

.. &amp;0$'

~e:hlers
212 E. M1ln, Pomeroy

WHAT IS DELAYED GRIEF?

Grltf, one of the moat peraonaland indi·
vidual of emotional atllu, ahowa ltN!f In
different waya with each peraon who ex·
perlencea it. E1ch peraon'a actlona in the
11.011 of grief are axpreqlona of hia own
Individuality.
·
Sometlmu that grief Ia not apparent lm·
medllt8ly tfttr the lola of e loved one. The

nJRKEY NUOOETS

and ottu fUI~ meals and snadcs.

· In the freSh meat case.

""""' whoee grief .. "delayed" mey lhow
little emotion at the time of lou. perhepa bu·
ay(ng hlmMif with ~ choNI, llp8iMIIng
much mont time It work - anything but -··leellng thl grief he riiU8I lllpetleohl6.

(l •.,~~ '"'·rii'4··.::0
§",.,./ .tftlfiU

...

!1111-1141

~

· 'I

around a nd th&lt;' project Is on
agai n. '
According to a letter from
George Dougan, ODOT dis tric t
deputy direct or in Marietta,
ODOT has decided to grant the
request to connect ,TR 367 with
"the eas terly side only'" of U.S .
33. Per mission is being granted
with th e stipulation that at such
time as TR 367 must be ell ml ·
naled to make U.S. 33 a full y
limited access highway, that
elimination will occur wi thout
damages or compensation to the
abutting propert y owners, or the
county.
There will be no ODOT or

Federal Hig hway fu nds In volved
in the project. how eve r, the lettrr
sta ted, it is ARC policy to turn
their funds over over \o FHWA
for admi nistration.
In this case. F HWA wit\ have to
approve the design, and ODOT
will adm inister the projrct as far
as co nstr uction is concrl'n Ptl.
Robert s noted that fed eral rioviewers "could still nix the who le
thing."
The co mm is sioners Instructed
Robert s to contact ODOT' s Ma riett a office, to determine• If
rev isions mu st he made to
existing plans. ThPPxl s tln ~ plans
also called for ml'd\an uccess to

Panel hears views
on reform issue

Evt!ntually•.the penon cornea to fell the :;J~;:b;b~~~~:;:
lull Impact of hla aorrow. thla may be trig·
gerecl by aome minor Incident or leaaer
grief, auch 11 the loll of e pet.
Delllyed grief 11 common; aorrow, after
all, Ia a!Waya diHicult to cope with. But
with true empethy. for the penon whoH
grief. II dlllyed, the reellty of death can . be
field - ·and the bereaved may continue
STH STREET
with their llv11.
(114) 117·3110
COOLVILLE. OHIO
We welcome your queatlona and com·
mentl.

• '• T
lid

TJ

f-l",fl J1f
II ', !

j,

By E. MICHAEL MYERS
WASHINGTON iUP I\ - Private tes timony by Secrl"tary' of
StatP George Shultz has led at
least one legislator probing arms
sales to Ira n to the blunt
conclusion that CIA Director
William Casey lied about his role
in the once-secret policy.
Rep. Lawrence Smith, D-Fia.,
a memper of the House Foreign
Affairs Committee, accu.sed the
ailing spy chief Wednesday of
ollerlng dishonest testimony to
the panel before Casey's hospl·
t a llzat ton lor brai n-cancer
surgery last month . •
"Casey !led, and now Shultz's
tes timony Indicates to us that
other people hav e said lhlngs
which conflict sig nificantly with
Shultz," Smith to ld reporters
after a three-hour private com·
mlttee''meet lng with lhe secretary of s tat ~
Shult z was on Capitol Hill to
keep a promise to lhe House
panel that he would return after
an open hearing In Novem ber to
expand upon his testlf(lony be·
hind closed doors. While he was
speaking Wednesday, acting CIA
Director Robert Ga tes was ans·
werlng quesllons from the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee.
Gates told reporters that Casey
is lmprovJng from the Dec. 18

t . , ____ ,..

J

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

•

ODOT. In the years si nce, with pletlon of the project would
the nursery cut of! from the main create additional jobs at !he
hi ghway, Carper has had to lay nursery. Ca rper himself pledged
off employees. Still, he has Ihe ad ditional $14,000 needed for
remained engaged in an on-going the con·stru ction.
Plans for the construction were
battle to convince ODOT officials
to reconsider his reques t fo r completed by Meigs Count y
Engi neer Philip Roberts and
access.
submitted
to the state.
In March of last year, the
Then in J uly, the co mmission·
count y comm issioners and
Carper met with ODOT officials ers were infor med that ODOT
to discuss Ca rper's proposal. At was rejecting the project , despite
th at time, ODOT agreed to the t.he ear lier agreement to
project, if fund ing could be proceed.
Carper continued to pursue the
obtained by the commissioners.
A $56,000 grant through th e matter, and th e commiss ioners
Appalachia n Regional Commls· a nnoun ced Wednesday th a t
s ian was secured, because com- ODOT had made ano ther turn

25 Cents

A Multimodi a Inc. Newspaper

Middleport. Ohio, Thursday, January 22, 1987

Angered lawma~er accuses
ailing CIA director·of lying

* lndividuolly Hand-Crofttd
~
* Sp«iol Lowj'rict
R. JOHNS, LTD.

Winds will be !rom the south at
10 to 15 mph tonight.
Ohio Extended Forecast
Friday through Sunday
A chance of snow Friday and
Saturday, with lair weather on
Sunday, but with a chance of
snow flurries In the northeastern
art of the state.

~~.

2 Sections. 12 Pages

toed the las t bill in UPc~mber.
Th e new bill is cxpP&lt;' ted to
inc lude a modified provision on
product llabllit .\·.
Thomas Kat zPnml'yrr . C&lt;'·
lcstr' s Jeglslutlvc aidr, said tlw
governor' s offi ce will br r&lt;•auy In

By LEE LEONARD
UP I Statehouse Reporl&lt;lr
COLUMBUS I UP! \ - f{cprescntallves of bu siness, lnsura ncr
companies. trial lawyers and
co nsumers gra bbed for their best
holds Wednesday as the Statr·
house wres tl ing mat ch ovr·r civi l
just ice and insura nce refor m
rrsuml"d.
Test ifying before thr Hous&lt;'
Insurance Commltt t'f', th r Ohio
All ia nce for Civ il Just ic&lt;'. rPp res cntln g busi ness , rai led for
strengt hPnlng some of th t• tort
reforms :1dopted as par t of an
omnibus bill in 19Bb.
But the Ohio Publ il' lnt rrest
Campaign , a consumers' crm ll ·
t ion, said the tor t reform s should
be scrapped and stro ng lnsu·
r anc&lt;&gt; Indus try regulatIons
should be substltut rd.
Th e comm ittee chairma n.
Rep. Mic hael P. Stln zlano, D·
Columbus, Indica ted the prop·
osal, with onP notable exception.
wil l be virtually the sa m&lt;• onr
which cleared ihe Ge neo·at As·.
Sl'mbl v last Novem ber.
The. exception Is a section
limiting laws uit s aga inst man u·
fa ctu rers for defective product s.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste wantPd
that section eliminated and V&lt;'·

about a Wf'f.'k to makf' som P

sugges tions in th at Cll'f' H a nd
negotiate.
" I'm feeling pretty optimis tic
abou t this who!&lt;' thing." said
K;II ZP nm ryer. "Til&lt;' lines or
com muni ca tion arc co mplctrly
open with thr Housra nd Senat r."
Thc Insurance Commltt re lis·
tened to tes tim ony for thret'
hours In preparat ian for ac tin g
ncKI month on the hill, wh loh Is
s uppds~ d to provldt' co mmercia l
liabilit y In surance

cov~'ra JH:o

at a

more' rvasonahl r cos t.
Mark D. Davidso n, chai rman
of thr Alliance· for Civil .luslke.
IPd off tlic hearing and re pea ted
thl' alllancr's conte;nt lon lhat
cos ily judgments have unblll·
anced th&lt;• civ il justlcr sys ll'm
against busi ness .
Davidso n said th e sys tem
" hands out bi g uW:11·ds th at ha ve

no relationship to Injuries ... ·
"Our job Is not fin is hed until
tCont l nu~d

on Page 12t

GNP's 1986 increase falls short of expectations

Thursday's meeting of Olive-Orange Memorial VFW Post

South Central Ohio
Variable cloudiness tonight,
with a low between 20 and 25.
Cloudy Thursday, with a chance
of snow and highs between 30 a nd

en tine

United Press Inlernallonal
OVP Staff Reports
Carol Hess thinks it's time for
the Hess famil y to own a house.
The Gallipolis Fer ry woman
won $100,000 in the West Virg inia
Ins'tant Lotterv last weekend .
The 36-year-old woman and her
unemployed husband . Larry,
have thrw children, Cory, 4,
Larry Jr .. 7 and Chrlstlna, 16.
Carol Hess said when she sa w
the three$!00,000s on her Instant
lott ery tlcket,.shewasn't sure she
was looking at her t lcket the right
way. She said she asked her
husba nd, " Did I just win
$100,000?"
" You -surE' did," he sa id, and
then she s tarted shak ing and
started to cry . "We never had
. DOWN - A Pomeroy landmark, lhe Meigs Inn, Tuesday afternoon. On Wednesday a little over
anything before," Carol said .
Is comlnK down this week. Heavy cleanup half of the former hotel, whkh extends from Main
The woman said she bought her
equipment was moved onto the s ite Wednesday. Street to Second Street, ".1s still standing. It had
ticket at Les' Carryout in Mas on .
afternoon after almost on&lt;•· hal! of Ihe aged hrlck heen tostlmated earlier lhallhe structurc would he
"It's the fir st tim e I've ever
structure
had co me down. Work on leurlng down d&lt;1wn In a maller of just a few hours. llowever, It
gotten anything over $2," th e
the
building,
badly hit by fire In June 19!!6, began appears that It will lake long.,r.
woman said after scratching off
her Insta nt ticket and seeing a
trio of $100.000 figures awaiting
her.
The anticipation, )hey sa id,
wa s terrible because they had to
services and adjusts the total for
The ad min is tra tio n stea di ly
hold their ticket from Saturday
WASHINGTON I UP I \
until Tuesday morning. " We America's real gross national infl ation, rose by $16 billion in or n•vlscd It s pred iction downward
thought we were go ing to lose it." product grew an anemi c 2.;, I. 7 percent in the fourth quarter. to 2. 7 percent by earlier this
"The a nticipation was a percent in 1986, the Co mmerce comparPd with 2.8 percent month and sli ll ended up gettin g
less than expected ou t of the
· Department sa id today, for the grow th for the third quarter.
killer ," Larry Hess sa id.
The 2.5 percent annua I growth nation's broades t measu t·c of lis
"The adren aline goes through wprst pNform ance s ince 1982,
you and you have to calm down and fa r below Reagan admlnis· to an estimated $4.21 trillion economic health .
It was the worst GN P per forcame nowhere nrar the Reagan
somehow - we haven't ye t," tratlon predictions.
mance
since th P recession of
admin
istration
's
prediction
at
The
department
also
sai
d
the
Carol added.
!982.
when
th e gross na tional
\his
tim
e
last
year
that
the
GN
P
The Hess' received $80.000 rea l GNP. which meas ures the
product
decreased
2.4 pNcr nt.
nation's output of goods and . would jump 4 percent In 1986.
!ContlnuPd on Pa.ge 121

S100
S180
S40
S60
SJOO
S170

9053, Tuppers Plains, will be held one-hall hour earlier than

Ohio, area weather scene

I 0-19-6-4-13-3

Mason
·family
•
mstant
•
wmners

suo
sno
sno

'VFW post to meet earlier

Filing for divorces in Meigs Counly Common Pleas Court are
Agnes Murrell Buckley , Pomeroy , against Carl Leroy Buckley,
Mlnetsvllle; Linda K. Persons, Long Bottom, against Denver
Russell Persons, Long Bottom; Teresa Lynn Wisecup,
Middleport, against Marvin Keith Wisecup, Pomeroy; VIolet G.
Satterfield, Reedsville, against William A. Satterfield,
Reedsville; and Armlntle Cade, by Mary Hawk, her sister and
next friend, Reedsville, agalnsl Charlie Cade, Middleport.
The court has Issued a temporary restraining order against
the defendant In the Cade divorce.
Sabra Jean Click, Pomeroy, and . Paul Richard Click,
Nelsonville, have flied lor an annullme~t of their marriage.

Super Lotto

Pomeroy

Copyrighted 1987

Snow likely and conlinued
windy today, with a low near
tO. Moslly cloudy Friday, with
a chanc•· of snow nurrles and
temperatures falling to near
z&lt;'ro by evening.

886

at y

-SEARS

APPLIANCE

Daily Numbrr

•

Area deaths
Carl E. Dickson

Ohio Lottery

OU, Miami
tie for third
within league
-Page 3

...' ___...- .....

.. "":""' .......

su r!(ery that removed a ca ncer·
ous bwin tumor, but ABC News
reported Wednesday night the
director is suffering from life·
threatenin g prosta te ca ncer as
wel l.
Neither foreign issues panel Is
responsible for co ntinuing the
congressional probes they bega n
last month Into the secret sa le of
U.£. arms to Iran and the
subsequent diversion or profit s
for Nlcarai!Ua n Contra rebels.
That task now belongs to the
spec ial select co mm ittees
formed th is month In both
chambers.
Presid ent Reaga n's specia l
adviser on ihe Iran-Contra sca n·
dal, for mer NATO Ambassador
David Abshire, was expec ted to
turn over a new batch or
documents today to the Sena te's
select commit tee.
·
Committee Cha lrman Dan lei
Jnbuye, D-Hawal!, said late Wednesday he had met with Abshi re
and expec ted the documents
"withi n th e next 24 hours." He
said they were gat hered from
several executive branch agen·
cies and differ from those sent to
tO&lt;" Senate Intelligence Commit·
tee lor Its Inquiry last month .
Inouye also said his committee
was ready to a nnounce Its top

_... ..-_ -·-···

stall members today , though It s
public hearings on th e or Isis are
still a month away.
.Casey, In his closed sess ion
with the House Foreign Affai rs
Comm ittee last monlh , n'port·
cdly asser ted his agency had a
minimal role In the ar ms sa ll"s,
which Reagan has defend ('() as a
bid to forge new lies with Iranian
"moderates" and win freedom
for U.S. hostages In Lebanon as a
byproduct.
·
Shultz, In his testimony Wed·
nesday, reportedly sa id the CIA
pressured him to allow conti nu ed
meetings with Iranian conl acts
even alt er the arms deals were
exposed in November and Rca·
gan pledged publicly to end such
weapons sales.
Shultz, who has made clear he
opposed the policy !rom Its
outset, agreed on the condition or
Slate. Department presence at
such meetings. Accordln~ to
severa l accounts of his tcstlm·
ony, Shultz said hew as lnlurlaled
to learn that at a subseq uent
meeting In E urope Dec. 6, ,the
Iranians presented a nine- point
arms-for -hostages plan and said
It had been worked out with U.S.
1ntelllgence.
"(Shul tz) Is pointing out things
now that make other people's
tes timony appear much less than

Heal persona l consumption.
what th ~ t ~· pl ca l America n sp&lt;· nt
In lnfl ation·Hdjusi&lt;'U dollars. lr\ 1
$2.9 t&gt;llllon In .the fourth e;uao"tl'r,
the first suc h dccr!'aSP In llv&lt;'

Another Important govern·
mrnt indrx, th e GNP Impli ci t
prlcP deflator. lncr!'asrd 2. 7
percen t fn 1981i - the low&lt;•s• si nc-e
1967 . wh!' n It ros&lt;' just2.6 perc&lt;• nt.
It differs In I hat th&lt;• usual GNP
Is t&gt;asrd on the makPup of tht•
Pco nomv In J9R2 while the 1m
pll rlt p.rlcr defla tor l&lt;t kes Int o
ureount tht· changing rompos l·
lion or the GNP .

V !'i ti"S .

· Consu mption for tht, y flar· was

up $89.o bill io n fort h ~ y!'a r .
Rc.'a l Jl('rsonal lncom('. ml·an·

wh\11', lncn•aso•d $:~t . ti bi ll ion In
th!' fourth QLw rt er co mpa rt&gt;d
wit h $1~•- " billion in the thi rd .

Nancy says silence
frustrates president

George Shultz
trut hful," Smit h said. "Mr. Ca ·
sey, as far as I'm concerned, !led
to the committee when he was
here. ''

Comm lilce Cha irman Danlc
F'ascell. D·Fia ., would not support Smith's cha rge. say ing:
" I' m not prepared to make th at
statement yet because I ha ve not
been abl e to sit down and
compare the testimony."
Rep. William Broo mfield of
Michigan. the panel" s ra nking
Republican, said Shultz was
"really candid" V~edn esday but
"the keys" are held by "the real
pla yers" - specifically VIce
Adm .•John Poindexter and Lt.
Col. Oliver North.

WASHINGTON iUP ii- PrPS·.
tdcnt Reagan Is fru strated In his
self-Imposed s ilence on th&lt;' Iran
arm s-Cont ra aid sc!!n dal Y&lt;"'
considers It · the "rPsponslblt•
way " to ha ndl e thr matter, the
fir st lady says.
\\(I t h her husband still out oft he
public eye since his worst poUt I·
cal crisis broke. an unusually
Jalkatlvc Na ncy Reagan stcpJl"d
forwa rd WcdnBday to speak for
him on the scandal. his agenda
and his health In th &lt;' wakf' of
prostatc surgery .
"Sometimes. you know, It 's
harder to sit herea nd say nothing
wh en you rea lly want to say
somethin g,.. Mrs . Rc:ogan told
repor ters . ack nowledgi ng the re
11re many questions th •president
has not addr·cs st'd In we~k s.
Reigan has been secluded
s ince before his surgery Jan . &gt;.
but In what seems to bo a n&lt;•w
strategy. th e Wh ite House an·
nounced Wednesda y I hill he met
lor the second time wJth his
speci al adviser on the Iran·
Contra scand&lt;!) and has agreed to
sit down with the panel he se t up
10 rev iew his Na tional Securi ty
Council.
Last week, Reaga n ai des were
pus hin g the Image of a detac h('(\
president who was not go ing to
deal with the scandal and Its
ramifications until all the facts
were lined up. His public debut In

•

lhP new y{'a r ha!-i bf'rn Sfil for .Jan .

27 , when h&lt;' drllv&lt;"rs his Stair· ol
the Union addrr•ss to CongrPss .
Tod11y. howr,vcr, :ilde•s sa id
Heagu n would address by tr·lr·
phone from t ht• Oval Offlcf' t ht·
annual "H l ~ ht to Llff' Rally"
staged by antl·,•bllrtlo n forc&lt;•s on
the an nl vrorsar~ or th f' 197:1
Supr&lt;'mr Cou rt dec ision tha t
IPga llz&lt;•d mos t l&gt;t1ort Ions.
In the
h&lt;' has addr.-.sst•ll
\hr anti-abortio n n llty on th r
Ellipse behi nd the Whltr l·lousp
and Ofif'n hitS invi tPd lr:td NS Of
the movPmr·n t Into the Wh ite
House for a mld·aftt' rnoo n
mee \ln g.

P""·

In working toward r(•gCtlnlng
his hl ~ h puhllc profliP. thP
prrsldent now has mel twkew llh
his sped a! I ran·Conto·a co unselor, former NATO Amba ssador
Dav id Abshlrr•. The dip lomat Is
coordinatin g thr ~athcrlng and
release or Information for the
var ious Inqui ries In to th&lt;:&gt; con·
trovcrsy that ge t underwa y nex t
month .
Besides a probe by Inde pendent special prosccutor Lawr&lt;' ncc
Wals h, two others are under w:oy
In spcclallnvcs tlga! Jvc commll ·
tees or both chambers of Co n·
grcss -and Reaga n upparrn tly
wa nts those probes to begin
before he gives his version or
vent s.

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