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"-.' \
JJage-D-6- The Sunday Times-Sentinel

...

Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis, Ohio- Point Plea1111nt, W. Va.

January 5, T986

Christmas miracle

Countdown begins for Monday shuttle launch
··. CAPE CANAVERAL. F la.
'(UPI) - The countdown began
.:wtlh computer 'Precision Sarurday
;!Or '!he shuttle Columbia 's predawn
jlunclllng Monday. 19 days late, on
·jlle first of two January shuttle
flights loring In the new year with a

.roar.
. Columbia and Its crew of seven.

including congressJonal observer
Rep. Bill Nelson, [). Fla., are
scheduled to ta ke off at 7:05a. m.
EST Monday on a flve-&lt;lay voyage.
the first ff. a record 15 missions now
planned for J!)llj.
The veteran shuttle's countdown
began on time at I a.m. and NASA
officials said work at the seaside

firing stand was on schedule. A
preliminary · weather forecast
called for acceptable conditions at ·
launch 11me.
At the controls wm1X, com·
mander Robert "Hoot " Gibson and
co-pilot .Charles Bolden. Their
crewma tes are Franklin Chang·
Dial , Steven Hawll'y, George Nel-

.:Fugitives commit suicide
•
:after. bloody cnme spree
SALEM. Va. (UP!l - Two R.M. McCoy. responding to com·
fugitives who killed a salesman. his plaints of an errat ic driver on
Interstate 81 tailga ting cars and
wife and a state trooper, committed
suicide when their stolen van · trucks with bright 'lights blaling,
overtllrned during a lugh·speed pu Ued over two men in the stolen
chase and gunfight wit h sher iff's Buick Opel.
Police said ti"&lt;' 28-year·old
deputies. police said.
"It may take us days to pi!'C(' all truopo.' r was shot in the face with a
this together," Roanoke County sawed-of! shotun as he approached
til£&gt; ca r. T he two suspo.-,ts fled on
~riff s Capt. L. J . Wade satd
foor through a w(l(){j('d area until
Friday.
' One dead suspect. beliPved to be they came to the home of Antoony
!'rom Jamaica. has not be!'n Loicano
Thev blasted through a sl iding·
. Identified. The other. Danziel N.
. .- Malcolm, was wanted for the O!'c. glas.' door. shooting and stabbing
· · ~ murder of hi s i(lr ~rien d . Annie the -14-year-old businessmen to
death . Police said the two men
· ~ones, In Hanis burg, Pa.
The two arrived in Martinsburg . ordered Loicano's two children into
· W.Va., Thu rsday night and paid an upstairs lx'dmom. fo=d his
Harry Har tis SJO for a ride to wifp Christine into t~r muplt&gt;'s van.
Winchester. Va. Outside Winches· and spo.'&lt;i awa~·.
When the suspects spotted a
ter, they commanck&gt;ered Harris'
· Buick Opel and shot him in 1he deput\· approaching them from the
opposite direction. they ran him off
back.
~ Harrts said from Ius hospital bed the road . la unching a high-speed
chas.' back on I.S1 that ended wit h
he was "blesSj'()" to surv ive.
: About 2: 30 a.m. Friday. Trooper the va n cras hing 7 m iles south oft !1(:&gt;

spot the trooper was killed .
"Alt er the vehicle tu rned over,
I)Jiice officers heard ""' shots
come from inside the van," Wade
said.
"When (deputies! looked inside,
they saw the hostage had be!'n shot
and the two suspects had commit·
ted suicide," said Salem Police
Chief Harry Haskins.
1\'adp said Christine Loicano had
be!'n shot In the a bdomen with the
saw!'d-off shotgun duling the chaSI'
and added "the suspects appa r·
ently committed suicide with the
shotgun and a handgun."
The Lolcano children , boys age 7
and 8, were unharmed physically.
but one was in shock when pollee
arlived and had to be hospitalized.
Harris. an employee of the
Veterans Administration Hospital
in Mar1 insburg, was hospitalized in
sa tisfactory condition with shotgun
wounds to the shoulder. neck and
chCPk.

~exans

call for boycott of
Ohio tire finn·'·s products
DRIFIWOOD. Te., as t l 'Pi l Opponents of a proposed oil pipeline
that wouid cross an acqu tfrr tha t
provides drink ing water to 1 mil!ton
Tt&gt;xa ns Friday called for a bo;coll
of products made b\ the \.ood,·ea ,.
Tire &amp; Rubtx'r Co. of Akron. Ohio.
and It s subsidiaries.
: Goodyear is th~ parPn 1 firm of a
company that plans to build a
1,750-mile p ipelin~ from ll{'ar Sant a
Barbara. Ca!U .. to \I'Pbs!Pr on tht•
Texas G u ~ coast
Former sta te Rep. Bob k..tl'lun of
~~~
Marcos told a rail\ of
opponents a l J r ~JllCh a OOut ~~ mt!C'~

southwest of Austin that Hill
Country farmt&gt;rs and ranc hers
should stop bu,·ing Good.' ear
products.
"Why should we• pa~ monr) to
makr a profit for a com pam· lx'nt
on ignoring our past and drstn1~· 1n g

our fullln·. " he Silid.
The All Amr-rican Pip&lt;'irm• t'o .
qwned

by

CI¥J(J~·t\lr' ...

one of

sra:r officials who allended the
rally. including Rl•p. J.J . Pickle.
D-Texas. a nd s!Hte Agriculture
Commissio ner .Jim Hightower.
But SC'\'rra l ranchers said thP\
~WP

l:&gt;anding together to 00\' CO il
the rompam . And Travis CountY
.Judge MikP .Renfro said he will ask
thf' county Jttonw~ · to explorP the

fXJSS ibillty of the cou nt\ bo\'COI·ting
proclucts

r.ood~ Par

"Alt hough I want Goocl\'f'ar to

'hw d0\1.11 dncl 10 look ·or thf'
c on~qut·n('('o.; _ moq of all I n·a nt
t!wm ru s11 up ,1ncl t a kr not icc-:· sa id
Ht·nfrn
· lJur l'lt'C' ff'(_i officiJb and our
la"~'ers

arr dotng all thE'y can. but

proplc in the Hill Coontry l grew up
in neq'r let a noth('r man dO his

work or fight his figh ts for him ."
said Barton .
"l.f't'o;; lrt our frirn ds do their
~11

the' agrncirs . commissio ns
.md rourt ..:.." 1-K" sa id . " Bur when

nnrk

t•nou~h ~·opil'

tha t can•stop bu~·i ng

:Stfl.t tl'il('lOJ' lire~ .m d nthf'r Goo;

subsidiariPS . is SPt'king .1 pt'rm rt

rl~ rrdt

!rom th&lt;' Trxas Railroad ( o mmt~
slon to build the Texas pori! on of 1ht&gt;

rou r1 o r romn 11ssion f'Y Pr t'Qu ld

plpelint?, which ~~,-ould tr~n~f t • J
hea ted hPa,·~ rrudr oil To n' fin t'rtt'"'
rfear H ou:-.ton .

Thf' rou tf' would plaC(' ti l. mtlr . .

of the pipeline O\'Pr part ot thr·

enviromrntall.v sPnsit in' Ed \A. at d~
Acq uill'r. a largl' and import" n'
undf'r~&lt;t·ound source of \\'ali'r fm
south-rent ra l Tr xa s.
Barton's ca ll ror

~'

hovcort of

Goodyrar was not sanr tionf'd b\

products. thr' n ll ' f' will havr
'l'nt ;h r lf'c.n· d mf'ssagr as a n~ ·

.riXJu l hm~· s1mngly wr frcl aboul
out land and our wa1rr ..
( lppnnt·nT.., nf thf&gt; prpdmr Sd~· il
\-Al-"t'" .r ctangt"'r lo thr a('(Jui.frr. and
tl" ct m... T:\Jciion would pr 1manPntl\

J)tt ·r !Ill· rwtun• of the Hill Cou ntry
~.~-~~~

and ..;outh of .·\ustin .

Pip! •l!nr officrdl~ hcwe concf'd.C'd
th.rt cl ll\ lk ls likrl~ ,II SOffi(' point
dunng ih -U. I .\ "f'&lt;:Jr lifrspan . but t he~
"~ri d t l~t • r t• WJ!-. o n!~ d 1 in iO chan('f'

it woukl be along the acquiler
iXJt1ion and tha t it would be quickly
contained .
Spokesman Dan Moody also said
ttw&gt; oil. which must be heated in
order to move through the pipeline.
would cool and thicken U the line
ru ptured. limiting any damage tha t
a spill could cause.
Hightower said thP pipeline
should be renamed the "unAmerican pipeline" sin('(' the pipe
will lx' from Brazil or Europe a nd
ti'&lt;' pipe coating from Canada . He
snid IIY'rf' arP only SE'Vi?n TPxas

companies listed among the pipeline'.s 49 vendor~ .

"We suppon the oil industry and
a i wa~· s will. " said Hightower.
"Bul wr'v(' got to protect our water
at ti'e sdme time. After all. you
can't drin k oil and neither ca n your

we

cat tlr."

Meanwhile. Travis .County Com.
missioners joined the ba tt I!' to delay .
mnst mctio n of the pipeline until
thc'rC' is moll'
impac t .

stud~·

of lts C'COiogical

The commiss ioners voted Thurs.
Jxorome partir s in a lawsuit
aimed at stopping ttw&gt; Railroad

1 To hang In folds
6 Strander
11 Sour in tast e

t6 Change
2 t Textile fiber
22 Hollow stem s

23 Sphere at conflict
24 Concise
25 I possess: cont r.

26 Plague
28 Vetches
30 Display
32 Tantalum symbol

33 It follows U
34 Greek letter
JS ·Decorative kn o t

36 Pass over
37 Spread lor drying
38 Naval ott.
40 Spirited
42 The Alder tree
43 Fencing sword
44 Modify
45 High note
47 Save
49 Spoiled chil d
50 Pelt
5 1 Endures
54 Seven. in Sp ai n

Commission from Issuing a con.

55 Farm building
56 Recover
59 Always: poetic
60 Music : as written

62 Reorganizes
64 Son ot Adam
65 Artificial language
66 Father
67 Equip
69 Lustrous
70 Surrender
71 Unruly person

72 Mr. Gershwin
74 Haartng: comb.
form

76 Nothing
77 Expressions of
triumph

78 Tropical lrult
79 Helpers
8l Breaklast food

94 Farm laborers
98 Italian currency

99 Withstand
100 Household pet
t02 Diner
103 Goal
t 04 Beast of burden
105 Control
106 Sweeping motion

t08 Zoology suHix
109 Concerning

110 Myself
111 Christmas car ol

89 Collections: suffix

BUY 2 LBS. OF

GROUND FRESH.
SEVERAl nMES DAilY

LUNCH MEAT, GET A
: LOAF OF HEINER'S
.: BONUS BUY BREAD

FREE
·~:r~H~PS LOIN END

~. S179

l8.

Sl 29

ROUND STEAK

..

II .

$179

90 Worries
92 Winged being

3
4
5
6

lustrous
Aftirmative vo te
Italian river
Inner: comb . forM •
Pencil tip

7 Wants

9 Revised: abbr .
tO P-U linkage
t t Moses' brother
12 Gang
t3 Electrical

compartment

15 Container
16 Over and above

119 Lawyer's concern

17 Actor Ayres

96 Funeral hymn
97 Stander
99 Spelling contests

ceremonial
dinner

152 SoN mud
t54 Enrage
156 Accumulate
158 Odorless gas
159 South Pacific
Island
t 60 Clark Gable role
16 1 Acoustical device

20 Prepared
27 Finial
29 Open: Sp.
3 t Hasten
36 Bridge

93 Tempt ·

t Urge onward

Jimmie Jude, 29, of Rose Alley
Rd .. Pomeroy, was arrested early
Sunday rnol't)lng on a cltargt! of
rape.
Meigs County Sheriff Howard E .
Frank reports that Deputy Kenny
Klein and POIJII'roy Patrolmwr
Harold Will were called to the Jude
residence near the Intersection of
Rts. 7 and 33.
When the officers arrived, Pam·
ela Marie Jude said she had been
srruck by her husband wm was In
the act of s(lxually assaulting a girl
under the age of 13.
The officers entered the house
and removed Jude.
The gi rl was transported to
Holzer Medical Center where she Is
listed In stable condition following
surgery .

101 Steeping sickness

tty
105 Cult ivated
106 Purity
107 Singer
Krl stofferson

11 1 Nanosecond :

37 Scarlett's home

abbr .
112 Gala event: sl ang

39 Scorch
40 Craze: pl.
4 t Rhone tributary

1t3 Prophet
115 Sign ol boredom
t t6 Solar disk

42 City in Texas

118 Hebrew month
119 Attract ive
121 A small amount

43 Goes astray
44 Cavity
46 Lanthanide
symbol
48 A hundred: Sp.
49 Without hair
50 Entenatn
51 Dark reddishbrown

52 Disrupts
53 Walks in
swaggering
manner

55 Seethed
56 Cincinnati team

57
58
6t
63

Angry
Knots
Verdi opera
Pertaining to the
ear
64 Fasten
68 Cotton cloth
70 Large country
house

DOWN

Man .faces
rape charge

feature

95 Letters : abbr.

compound

amoog IaiJor and bo•eln'!lll
Interests.

92 Prison

engineers: abbr.

t8 Transpose: abbr.
t9 Chemical

wW belln 80011 on IPcl!th!!gn to
replate IIM0'11. Al1lo on tile
agenda 15 lhe slate's woltlen'
cornp&lt;matlon relonn wl*h
WitS aegotlaled fate Jut yeal'

89 Conceive

14 Hospital asst .

t20 Fastened
t22 Christian testlvat
t24 Plot of land
t25 Quieti
t26 Declare
t2B Little
129 Not professional
131 School subj .'
t32 Open: poet. var.
t33 Got up
·
t35 Pony
t38 Axle part
t39 Weary
140 Friend: Fr.
t41 Bulkhead: abbr .
t42 Physician: abbr .
143 Silver symbol
144 Variable star
145 Unexcited
147 Adjust by line
149 Enemy
150 Jewish

SENATE HEARINGS SETSenate Presldeat Paul GDimor,
(R. Port CUnlonl!Nil'S Bnlp

' 90 Fire
Stairwa~

7t Hut
73 Spring !towers
74 Snakes
75 Former

t 23 Selenium symbol
125 Harry
126 Sacred bull
t 27 Collarless
undershirt co mb.
form

A flrsJ degree aggravated felony,
the rape charge carlies a possible
penalty of not less than five years
nor more than 25 years In prison
and a fine ci up to $10,(0).
Jude has also been charged with
domestic violence In connection
with the assault on his will'
A first degree misdemeanor, this
charge carrys a possible penalty of
up to six months In the county jail
and a fine ci up lo $1001.
Several Items of evidence were
collected from the residence and ·
will be submitted to the Ohio
Bureau of Criminal Investigation
according to Paul Gerard of the
Meigs County Prosecuting Attorney's office.
Jude was scheduled to make an
Initial appearance 11 a.m. this
morning before Meigs Coonty
Couti Judge Patrick O'Brien.

129 Capital ot Tibet
t30 Boring_ toot
t3t Roman 1004
t32 Nebraska city
t34 Edition: ab br .
t36 Worship
137 Snowless
t39 Ripped
t40 In addition
144 New: comb. torm

t45 Vagrant
146 Corn unil

t47 Mature
148 Curved le tter

t49 tn place ot
t51 Decigram: abbr.
153 Musical syllable
155 ''The Granite

State"
t57 Agave plant

GROUND BEEF
SUPIRIO•

FRANKIES

89&lt;

12 OZ.
PKG.

CUBE STEAK

$229 ·

lB.

SUPUIO. JUMBO r•E-SLKED

BOLOGNA
WHOlE OR HAlf

STICK 89• 18.

II.

99(

3-LB. OR
PKG

MORE ll.

$1 09

BACON

•

at y

S129

BONELESS

CHUCK ROAST tl.$)59
ENLGISH ROAST 11.$)79

COKE
· TAB, SPRITE

Lester made a complete adm!s·
sion to Sherif! Frank and Is
scheduled · to appear 10::.1 a.m,.
Tuesday bl'fore M~!gs County
Common Pleas Judge Charles
Knight toentera pleaofguUty lathe
charge .
·
Lester remains In the custody of
the sheriff.

::ns.'6 oz. $14 9
Plus Dtp.

:(OOICING
311.

:· lAG

® 1985 United

•

entt~e
1 Section, 10 Pogeo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Monday, January 6, 1986

COLUMBUS (l,JPI) - Gov.
Richard F. Celeste wW address a
joint session of the Ohio General
Assembly Wedlnestlay evening as
state lawmakers begin their 1!Ri
meeting.
.
Celeste w!ll deliver his annual
"State of the State" address In the
House chamber to kick off the
second half of the 116th legislative
session.
The governor's speech Is sciJe.
duled for 7 p.m. -a time calculated
to get sOme staleWIIie" television
exposure.
One administration source said
the governor w!Jl dwell on "the
messy situation he took over and
describe the progress he has made
In thn:e years." HI' Is expected to
stress economic development, edu·
cation and taxation. ·
"He wUl characterize quite
strongly how the decline rJ. the state
has hailed and the recovery has
started," said the source. "Tile
state Is back oo track."
The legislaJive pace may be slow
for the early part of the year. Tile
House Is expected to meet weekly to
vote on bills, but the Senate wW he
concentrating on committee work
untO the end of January.
The Senate may take up House
amendments to a mandatory auto
seatbelt bill Wednesday, If the right
combination cl votes Is on hand.
"My strategy would bl' to see who
all Is there on Wedinesday," said
Sen. Paul E. Pfeifer, R-Bucyrus,
chief sponsor of the measure which
cleared the Senate by only 17-16tast
year.

"My hope would be that we would
he able'todo It on Wednesday," said
Pfeifer. adding that some senators
may bave ·thanged their minds
since tbe vote last May. "It wW bl'
nip and tuck, there isn't any doubt
about it."·
Senate concurrence would send
the pro~ to the govermr for
signature and fl'qu!re seathelts to
be oockled 00 Ohio highways
sometime In AprU. Defeat would
send It to a conference committee
lor negotiations with tre House, •
Another piece of ooslness left
011er from late In 1985 Is an auto
emissions Inspection bill for the
Cleveland and Cincinnati areas,
stalled In the Hoose lor lack of
votes.
1bat blll, defeated onre, was
offered In response to a U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency
threat to wllhhold federat highway
and sewage treatment funds •from
the Cleveland and Cincinnati areas
If exhaust fumes arent' eUmlnated.
But tbe measure may remain
dormant for the first part of 1986.
VIrginia Aveni, tJel&gt;uty director of
the Ohio EPA, reported that the
U.S. EPA Is "SEVeral months
behind" in Its evaluation of the
situation and It wW probably he
May he!ore federal sanctkms are

pressed.
Meanwhile, Rep. Robert L. Cor·
bin, R-Dayton, said he has a
majority of &amp;use members ready
to vote to chan~ the p-ovlsklns of
the bill from a centralized tanp!pe
Inspection system {operated by an

outside contractor) to a decentralIzed system (in existing service
statlonsj. That Idea laUed in
November.
Senate President Paul E. GU·
im&amp;, R·Port Clinton, said hearings
wW soon begin on legislation to
regulate health maintenance
organizations.
Gilllmor has been annoyed since a
special Senate committee found
examples of abuse In the Celeste
administration's program to switch
Medicaid recipients to "unrnon!tored and potentially substwrdard"
HMOs.
.
"Much work needs to he done in
the second hall of our legislative
session," said House Speaker Vl'r·
nal G. Riffe Jr., D· New Boston.
Riffe said top priority Items wUl
Ill' to enact a cap!talimprovl'menls
bill andpass enabling legislation lor
a S100 mUllan pondlng program lor
research and development on
high-sulfur Ohio coal as approved
by the voters in Novembl'r.
Riffe also said he IDpes lawmak·
ers revise slate ethics laws and
enact workers' compensation reform. The latter Item was nego.
tlated late last year among labor
and business Interests, but no
consensus was reached.
Rep. Clifton Skeen, D-Akron,
chairman of the House Conunerce
and Labor Committee, Is expected
to Introduce a bill and start
hearings on It In the absenCJ&gt; of an
agreement.
Gilllmor said the Senate also wUI
he holding hearb\gs on workl'rs '
compensalkm, which he said -~

26

Cents

A Multimedia Inc. NewJpeper

Feature Syndicate

'

I

..

been a concern to labor leaders,
small business operators and
farmers.
"I also would expect the General
Assembly to tackle legislation
which strengthens the Medical
Board, addresses the med ical
treatment or terminally ill, and
chan~s sentencing laws to make

oorprison syst em more workable,"
said Riffe.
A special Joint Committee on
Savings and Loans will he looking
over six months worth of testimony
and planning a final report on th&lt;'
sav ings and loan crts!s ofl9ffi, due
Feb. 1..

wn.t. ADDRESS SESSION - Gov. Richard Celeste w!ll address a
joint session ol the Ohio General Assembly Wednesday evening. He wW
deliver his annual "State of the State " ad~ kicking cif the second
half rJ. lhe With leglslallve session. Celeste Is expected to describe
progress he has made In his three years In the governor's mansion.

u.,

..

..

Mechanical problems delay Columbia launch
CAPE

CANAVERAL,

Fla.

(UPI)- TI!edelay-plaguedslruttle

Columbia was grounded today for
-the third lime In 19 days because of
mechanical problems despite a
down-lo-th!'- wtre effort to launch
the spaceship. Another launch try
was scheduled lor Tuesday.
"We'll look forward td trying It
again In lhe moming,"commander
Robert Gibson told ground
controllers.
·uwas a bitter d!sappointmentfor
Columbia's seven· member crew,
including Rep. BUI Nelson, D·Fla.
Tile shuttle filers experienced a

similar frustration Dec. 19 during
the pl'l!lllous taunch attempt when
the counldown stopped 15 91!COnds
before blastoff because of electrical
problems.
The llnal blow today came when
rJ.tlc!a!s In charge cl. the satellltl' in
the ship's cargo bay saldtbeYhad to
he off by 8:47 aJil: EsT In order to
have the sateU!te deployed under
the proper conditions. NASA did not
have enough time to meet that
deadline.
~toll had been scheduled for
7:05a.m. EST but a series of snags
· delayed the countdown as engl•

neers scraml:jed to come up with a
Columbia' s countdown pro·
way to get Columbia airborne ceeded flawlessly throughout the
before Its "launch window" closed.
morning iintU bur minutes .IJefore
The request to postpone blastoff the planned launch time when
came from RCA American Com· • mglneers stopped the countdown
munlcatlons Inc., owner of the $50 because a liquid oxygen propellan t
mUI!on RCA Satcorn communlca· drain valve failed to close on
lions sateU!te in Columbia's pay· computer command.
load bay.
.The valve was resPI manually bu1
The other crew members are the Initial trouble allowed too much
commander Robert "Hoot" Gib- lrigld Uq~!d OXY.gen In to the ship's
son, co-pUot Charles Bolden , St""en main engine propellant Inlets,
Hawley, George Nelson, Franklin dropping temperatures bl'low aJ.
Chang-Diaz, the • flrsJ Hispanic· Iowable Umits, and the countdown
Arnerlc8)1 astronaut, and RCA was stopped again at 7:10a.m. just
satelUte engineer Robert Cenker.
31 seconds before the planned
launch.

Engineers did oot give up and the
countdown was recycled to ti'&lt;' '
T·minus ~· minute point In the hope
of ~lting the shuttle airborne
before the day's launch opportunity
expired.
"You're going to try to recycle
and go today? That's terrific ," said
~ i bson when told mission manag.
ers plan ned to proceed with the
launch attempt, which then was
posti)Jned at RCA's request.
Columbia 's flight , scheduled to
end with a landing In Florida , is the
first of a record 15 missions ):ian ned
for 19&amp;i and the Impact of today' s
delay has not been determined .

'Suicide squad' threat
· sent by Libyan leader
WADDIALKHAIR. Libya (UPI I
- Libyan leader Moa mmar Khad ·
afy has threatened to Sl'nd suicide
squads to "American streets" if
President Reagan orders a strike
against Libya for Its alleged
suwort 0( terrorists.
Khadafy called on the United
States to help ease tension result ing
from the guerrilla attacks on Rome
and VIenna airports, bu t said
Sunday U.S. military moves in the
Mediterranean had pushed the
nations to the brink of war.
"America can hit any place with
Its aircraft earners and stra tegic

bombers." Khadafy said at a news
conference on a state farm 35 miles
west of Tripoli.
"We don't. have aircraft earners
or bombers but suicide groups ,"
said Khadafy, his head wrapped In
a linen cloth . "We would act Inside
American streets bull think It is a
dangerous tum. madness."
Friday. the U.S. aircraft carrier
Coral Sea left Na ples, Italy, on a
coui'SI' the! will ta ke it near the
Li bya n coast, Navy planes arlived
at a base in Sicily. a nd U.S
warplanes in Britain reporl ediv
\\.'err put on &lt;J lrrt .

·

Ohio has eight deaths
By United Press lntenlatlonal
Eight people were' killed in
accidents on Ohio roadways during
the weekend, the Sta te Highway
Patrol reported today.
There were four deaths Sunday,
thn:e Saturday and one Fr iday
night, a patrol spokesiVOman .said.
The victims, Including a pedes·
tliwr, died in seven accidents.
Only one . of the auto-crash
victims was wearing a seat bell. the
spokeswoman said.
Tile patrol counts fatalities resuit ·
Ing from accidents on the stat~1·s
public roads each WEekend bet wet'! !I
6 p.m. Friday and midnight

&gt;

"

..

SeePage6

·Mean whUP, Bobby Joe Lester,~.
of near Vinton, was arrested
Saturday afternoon by Meigs
County Sheriff Howard E . Frank In
connection with the Dec. ll breakIng and entl'ring pf the unOCCI.\pled
Irene Steel residence on Bui:zard
Run Rd.
The B&amp;E was discovered and
reported to thesherUfsdepartment
Saturday.
Several household Items. lnchldlng a radio, electric blanket,
telepoone, 'sleepplng bag and a
small quanlty, of cash were taken.
Mc;st Items have been recoVered.
1 The felony charge carries · a
possible penalty of up to 18 months
In prison and a line rJ. up to $2500.

IAHN'S NE-SUCm

II.

Story, pbole 011 Pqe S

quiz ·team

Celeste prepares 'State of State' message

84 AcJOr Bert
87 Card game
91

Mei~

Vo1 .3&amp;. No.182

abbr.

8 Horse dlrecti've

Tornado victory

Copyrighted 1986

77 Nest
78 A Span1sh lady
· 80 Jot
81 Indian weight
83 Royal Air Force:

1t2 Trades
t 14 Pigpen
116 Turkish otticiat
t 17 Deletes

84 Ear features

85 Spinning toys
86 Semifluid butter
88 Stitched told

2 Black and

Stories on Page 4

e

SUNDAV PUZZLER

da~· 10

st twtion permit un tilrllies regu la!·
ing the cunstr1Jction ar(' approved.
A Tra\'L' County District Coun
.Judge will hear test imony Monday
in support of a req uest for a
trmporar,· In junction against the
commission, which has scheduled
a11olhPr hearing on the pip&lt;&gt;linr for
.Jan . 14.

Letter 011 Pqe %

lime of! over th&gt;' holidays resulted
O.allen~r. bolted to a newly
son, RCA engineer Robert Cenker
and BUI Nelson, on board In his activated shuttle pad about I 'n in the Monday launch dale.
Columbia's landing back at the
capacity as chairman 11 till' House miles !rom Col\llllbla, Is scheduled
Keni'ledy
Space Center Sa iurday
to
take
111
Jan.
23
to
launch
a
new
subcommittee that oversees NA·
SA 's budget.
NASA communications satl'illte wlll be the fi rst Florida shu ttle
The shuttle filers !lied to take off and a retri.....able science probE&gt; to touchdown since April when Sen.
Jake Gam , ft. Utah, the first
Do;&gt;c. 19, but an electrical problem study Halley's comet.
Columbia's launch oclginally was lawmakl'r to fly In space, landed
stopped the countdown just 15
seconds before launch. which was scheduled lor Dec. 18 but It was with his six crewrnate&gt; aboard ttw&gt;
already 24 hours behind schedule delayed 24 hours bl'causeenglneers shuHle Discovery.
needed more time to makl' final
One of Columbla ' s~dlfications
because of wtflnished work.
preparations.
On
Dec.
19.
the
is
a new nc;se-w!l!el steer ing
Landing now Is scheduled lor
system
expected to reduce the tire
stopped
just
15
countdown
was
Jan. 11 back at the Kennedy Spac~
Centt&gt;r.
seconds hl'fore liftoff hecauSI' of and brake damagt&gt; experlt&gt;nced
"I guess they 've been telling us U electrical problems in the right -side during many shuttle touchdml'!ls
solid rockl'l booster steering and It was the Implementation of
we keep practicing this we'll get It
system.
that program that cleared the way
right ," Gibson joked when the crew
Time needed to correct that for a resumption of landings on the
arrived at the shu Hleport Friday.
problem and NASA's commitment relatively narrow runway In
"We're looking forward now to
to hard-pressed shuttle workers lor Florida.
being the first flight c1 '86 Instead of
the last flight of '!5."
~;;;,:~=;:;;;:;;:;:;:;:;;;:;;:;:;:;;;:;;;:;:;:;:;;;;:;:;:;:;;:;;;;:;;;:;;:;::;:;
During their live days in space, lr
the shunle fliers plan to launch an
RCA communlca lions sateU!te one cl. the most powerful television
relay stations ever carried aloft and to carry out a variety of
experiments, Including ob.serva·
lions of Halley's comet as It races
toward the sun .
It wlll be Columbia's seventh E:F.
flight sinCP kicking all the shuttle E;h++.
era in Aprill981 and Its first since
O!'cember !983.
In the in terim, the billion· dollar .....,.+7-rT.h&lt;
spaceship has been dry docked lor
ex ten sive Improvements to bring It Ei~h
up to par with the oti'er three newer
membl'rs of NASA 's fleet .
1-i':+-7Launch crews also are readying
7.4-.;ct-'~
!he shuttle Challenger lor blastoff
on a weeklong mission that feal\lr-es ~+=+-7New Hampshire high school 1-:::+-7teacher Sharon Christa McAuliffe 1-:.~
as a crew member.
1-C'~it-'i't-:~3-

br,Rtll~!:

Patriots, Bears win

~y.

_,.,111-=11
'

Satunlay

Dayton : unidentified woman. so.
when struck by a car as she
attempted to cross a city street.
Cleveland: . Jennifer Farrer. 1.
Clevelan d, In a too-car accident on
a cl ty strret.
Cincinnati: Dorothy M. Auble, 74,
Cincinnati, in a !IVO· car crash on a
Ha milton County road.
Friday night

K!lled were:

IAVNQIDEIAYBDAGAIN-'nluplllle..-ale dlea.11•' 'llel .......... '111tllid&amp;lew..louve
Colz•~~*••...,.Pad8Lhller_.S. ' , llll'ltltll a _ . , _ •• 'crlarltlacoiC•=
reMJ l1lr
wltldtt- CMM. Far tile 111111 Ml N ' • lJPl
tl*dtme Ia It dip, tile 1llallle ...... _~

U.S. 52 in Clermont County.
Bowling Green; Ja mes A. Gib·
son. 60, Bowling Green, In a
two-vehicle accident on Ohio 25 In
Wood County.
Cincinnati: Kt&gt;nneth Overstreet .
.17. Cincin nati, killed one-vehicle
accident on a city street.

Sunday

Batavia: Joseph F. Bol ton, 24,
Felicity, and Honle R. BoltOn, ll,
Norwood, In a ooe- car accident on

ColumblJS: Hol:eri D.· Evan s 26
' '
Co!umrus, In a one-car aCCident on
a Franklin Coonty'I'Oad whtle being
pursued by pollee.

�I'

Monday, January 6, 1985

:Commenta

Page..:.2-The Daily S8ntinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Southern defeats Wahama crew, 72-56:

Monday, January 6, 1986

•

Baby-boomer .politics _____Ric_ha_rd____R_eeves_

The Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON .\REA

l'llb

B!m~ "'""--'~
.... r-T"""E!!:!!d·--

~v

ROBERT L. WINGETI'
Publisher
BOB HOEFUCH
General MIUiager

-PAT WHITEHEAD
"Assistant Publisher/ Controller
DALE ROTHGEB, JR.

News Editor
LET'TERS OF OPIN ION are welco me . They should bP IMS than 300 words
long. Allleners are subjN't to editi ng and must bt' signed with name, address and
telf'phane number. No unsigned letters will bE' published . Letter s should be In
,.good taste, addressi ng Issues, not personal ities.

A guess about
Ted Kennedy
When Ted Kennedy announced he would not seek the Democralic
presidential nomination In 198l, all sorts of reasons were advanced to
eKplain why the Massachusetts senator was bowing out.
: Here's another. Maybe Kennedy was thumbing through .the history of
the Democratic Party and, llngpring over the pathetic story of William_
Jennings Bryan, decided, "I don't want to end up Uke that."

The way Bryan ended up was being humiliated at the 19:14 national
convention. A year later, alter the Scopes monkey trial that liKed his JXJblic
Image as a Bible-thumping windbag, he was dead .
Political parties make much rl. their dead heroes. Pictures cJ. Abraham
Uncoln. Teddy Roosevelt and Dwlght Eisenhower often are the backdrop
.at Republican gatherings: Thomas Jeffer.;on, Andrew Jackson, Franklin
Roosevelt and John Kennedy look down oo Democratic conclaves. But not
William Jennings 5ryan.
Yet, In his day, Bryan stood astride the Democratic Party. as the saying
goes, like a colossus. It nominated him lor president three times, twice bY
acclamation, ancUie was a potent fo!U' in national party affairs for more
than two decades.
In 1896. with one speech- "You shall not cruciJy mankind on a cross rl.
_ :gold" - the J6. year-old obscure former congressman from Nebraska
-sta mpeded a national convention that was expected to nominate a senator
- who had been In Congress for more tban 7J.l years. In 1900. despite a
thorough drubbing four years earner, "the boy orator cJ. the Platte" won
the nomination on the first ballot. and did It again In 191ll.
In 1912. Bryan probably turned the convention tide toward Woodrow
Wilson, and In 1916, even though he was at the convention as a journalist,
was called to~lum to address the delegates.
In 19:ll, he a,s active In the drafting of the party platform, but his
Influence wa waning. At the marathon 1924 convention tl03 ballots over U
days I. the man whose voice once held the Democratic Party captive roseto
explain his opposition to Alfred E. SmJth and was drowned out In a chorus
of booes and catcalls.
Two more dissimilar characters than Bryan and Kennedy would be
difficult to Imagine. Brya~sa fundamentalist Protestant, an advocate
of prohlbltion, a champio
raJ values and puritanical morality.
who could not win theonl"nationalrl.fice his
He also was a national lea
country bestows. In short. a loser who refused to lace the !acts~ jlllltlcal
life.
So to the premise of this piece. Ma ybe, just maybe, Ted Kennedy looked
at the Democratic Party and the nat io n as they are In the ft!th year of
Ronald Reagan's presidency and made the cold, hard decision that his
chance to make a credible run for the presidency had come and gone.
His decision. to remain In the Senate and work there for the public
policies and programs he believes right tor the country, means he will have
considerable Influence on the course of ""ents for some years to come.
. . He may n""er have his photograph put up beside the other Democratic
· giants at SOII'l(' future nationa l convention. bu t he probably won't be hooted
out of one either.

Letters to editor
Pet care important
Now that wintf'r is upon us

on~

again I'd like to !'!'mind p!'t owners
that It Is very important for a p!'t to
)lave proper food and shelter.
A dog should have a well built.
Insulated. slanted ·roof house whose
floor Is covered with clean dl}·
straw. The house should be raised
about 6 Inches off the ground . and
faced away from the north. Also the
house should not be so big that it
ca nnot retain the dog's natural
txldy hear.

Make sure that an outdoor dog 's
food supply Is Increased IO to lo
p!"rcent in the winter. And don't
forget that a dog needs fresh water
S('Vera l times a day. even in winter.
Cars should be kept Indoors. or at
least In a warm barn or heated
garage at night. Take care of your
pets. It's the law.
Dorot hy Davis
560 Sycamore St .
Mlddlepon

Christmas miracle

;(

I would like ro glw my thanks ro

the nurses and the doctor at
-veterans Memoria l Jlospital who
helped keep my little ooy a live
today . I would like to tha nk the two
lad les on the Pomero)' squad for
taking him down to Holzer ~rdira t
_c;en tcr. All the nurses and PSI*'·
clally Dr. Groth for ll'orklng "1th

him as sweat poured I rom his head.
If it wasn't for all of I hem working
with Floyd Dean Oeland he
wouldn' t be herPtoday. So that was
our Christmas miracle. I just hope
to God lr doesn't happen again to
him or anyone rlS(' .

Chris Cleland
Middlepor1

Expresses gratitude
I wou ld like to pu blicly express
my deep gratitude to Jim Kroegle
and Jay Rought from ttv&gt; Pomeroy
Pollee Department. After acci·
dently locking my keys In the carrn
Christmas day, these men worked
.In: tll€ bitter cold determined that!

WOUld be With my family for It'&lt;'
holiday.
I deeply appreciate their kind·
ness and dedication. Thank you Jim
and Jay tor the unexpected Christ·
mas gift .
SistPr .!anN REctenwald
Sacred Heart Church

Today in history
•
·::
:.
:

Today Is Monday, Jan. 6, the six th day of 1~ with li9 to follow .
The moon Is moving toward It s new phase.
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus, Mars and Saturn.
The evening star Is Jupiter.
'illose born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They Include
archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann, who discovered the remains of
ancient Troy, born ln18Z2: poet Carl Sandburg In 1878; silent movie cowboy
s tar Tom Mix in 188&gt;; Lebanese poet·phUosopher Khalil Glbran In 1883:
actor Danny Thomas In 1914 (age 72); author E .L. Doctorow In 193l(age
55), and actress Bonnie Franklin In 1944. (age 42).
·
,._ On this date In history:
- ln 1759, George Washington married wklow Martha
Dandridge Custis.
I
,

.

.

•

(This Is thesecondoltwo Richard
Reeves colurnns on the aging of
America's babY-boom generation.)
The baby hoom that began this
week 40 years ago, on New Year's
Day of 1946, and continued for 18
years, produced 78 mWton men and
women who are now between the
ages of 21 and 40. They are all of
voting age now, a jDlltlcal factor
whose potential magnitude can be
calculated by noting that the total
number ~Americans who voted In
the presidential elecllon ol1984 was
just under !Kl million.
The power of those numbers has
dazzled more than a few American
jDlltlclans and political analysts.
The most notable of ttv&gt;m mJght be
3l·year-old jllllster Patrick Cad·
dell, who has tried to convince a
series of Democratic candidatesfrom George McGovern to Jimmy
Carter to Gary Hart - that his
"generation" ldeniifles just that
way, as "the gpneratlon." Ftnd out

wr.at unites them , Caddell has systems. "Movement politics" was
argued, and you have the key to the theu· thing - "i!"t i.Vietnam" .or
next 30 or 40 years of American "nuclea r freeze."
L&lt;lndon Y. Jones. whose 1980
politics,
What always united ttv&gt; people of book, "Great E.\1Jeetations," Is the
the Pepsi, Now, Woodstock, and Me definitive work on baby boomers,
generations was distrust of author- has a somewhat similar view of the
Ity - parents, teachers, and the generational psychology. " The
authorities who brought them baby boom mqy s\111 be uniquely
Vietna m and Waterg-ate. lnflallon ''i'Uinerable to a mass political
and bureaucracy. Now. as they gPt 'movement," he wrote. "(They\ will ·
older, more baby boomers and be growing up disaffected, crowded
Yuppies seem to be· united by the out of advancement. ... All of this
reallz.ation that each of the.m Is approaches the psychological state
getting a smaller share of Ameri· of an ungrounded person part icuca 's wealth pre&lt;:isely bee au se there larly vu ln erable to a ctiarlsmatic
are so many of them. Family religious leader - only it will be
Income of Americans between 18 happening to an entire generation."
and 34, for Instan ce. dropped 14
Jones saw a "need for heroes"percent In real dollars bctwe.:n 1973 and the election results in that year.
and 1984.
1980, and In 1984 could indicate that
Understanding the ir disn·ust, many boomers found a charlsmallc
Caddell has thought that the baby hero in Ronald lleagan. Bur It Is
boomers would rn ntinue to be hard to believe that commitment
attracted· to politics that was , or wlll be permanent. particularly
appeared to be, outside establi shed when the economics of young

1 TALK~ TO M~ ANAlYST TOPA'(
MA~CIA, AN9! FEEL A LITTLE BE'TIEI&lt;.
l-IE SAil? 'I JUSi HAVE TQ 8!;

HONEST WITH MYSELF= AND
!.'LL BE ABL~ iO HANDLE IT.

?'

M'f 6ANI&lt;E1&lt;'S KNOWt)l fOR YEARS .
I NEVER WAS A REAL YUl'PIE.
IN MY HEART, I'VE AlWAYS BEEN
A 12.1NSO-BLUE COLLAR.

IT'S NOT ALL THAT
UNCOMMON. STILL,
IT'S NOT ~AS'(

COMING OUTQr
THE CLOSET.

A~E '&lt;OU 11&lt;'t'IN6
TO TELL ME "THAT
Tlo\E PORSCHE, THt
GUCC.I6, ~ND lt\E'
fERRii;R AI&lt;E ALL
WINDOW tli?E~SIHG?

Wl-\fl..T CAl-l I SAY, EDWAI&lt;??
THE IMPORTANT ~lNG TO REMEM~ER
IS THAT YOU'RE STILL IN STYLE.

J•

(

eJ&lt; p!'rience Is so obviously at odds

wl t h the optimistic rhetoric of
Reaganlsm and American
conservatism.
"Yuppies, " now the roost celebrated of baby boomers, are still up
lor grabs In the analysis of David
Boaz of the Cato Institute, a
libertarian think tank. "There are
special interests In both parties," he
sa id. "If neo·liberal Democrats
ffilily move toward a marketoriented economics ... In combination with t tv&gt;lr liberalism on foreign
jDIIcy and social issues, they could
become the party of the Yuppies ....
American's political future wUJ be
determined by whether the' Detnocrats declare their independence
!rom the AFL.CIO hefore the
Republlcans break tree of the
Mor at Majority."
All posslblc. but the only thing
anyone Is sure of about the boomers
Is that they b&lt;lve the power to
change national polities but have
shown little lncllhatlon to do much
beyond toweling the voting age and
tryin g not to be drafted Into the
Army. They have spent so long so
fervently committed to themselves
that it's the Republicans or the
Democrats, conservatism or liberalism - or simply bum out their
J'oiitieal energies In their own
ritualistic fl ames.
My own guess is that despite their
attraction to Father Reagan and
the religion of ReaganomJcs, the
postwar babif's are beginning to
unde rstand why their parents voted
Democratic for so tong. The
boomers are getting a lesson now In
the hard rules of a conservative I""'
market. a supply -a nd ·de mand
system.
"Millions of baby boomers who
had been promised everything
from their education were being
delivered nothing," Jones wrote in
"Great Expectalions,'' "forever
shackled to the oversupply Inherent
in theu· large numbers."

School for terrorists __J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;_D_a_le_Vt_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - lran is train ·
ing terrorists to hij ac k airliners and
kidnap hostages, wlth special ven ·
geance toward Americans. This
underground warfare. directed by
the Iranian foreign ministry . has
accounted for the deaths of at least
262 Americans since 19&amp;'1.
Encouraged by the absence of an
effective U.S. response, the Iran ·
lans not only remain unrepentant
but have made Americans their
principal targets.
U.S. Intelligence has pinpointed
two hijacker-training centers In
Iran: one near Mehrabad airport
outside Tehran , the other near the
holy city of Qom. We'veseen secret
sa tel tire photos, which dearly show
commercial airliners parked at the
training camps: they are used by
the recruits as "hands·on" lnstruc·
tion material in the methods of
hijacking modern airliners.
The training cours es Include

fami!iar'lzation with the instnr ·
ment s, fuel consumptiOn and other

features of Boeing 7!.7s an d 747s, as
well as Ai rbus 300s. &amp;&gt;me of the
planes are on loan from Meilrahad
airport during "d0\111 time" be·
tween internationa l flight s .
Part of the training is in the
psychology of hijacking and ~os·
tage trea tment. The Iranian In·
str'Uctm·s teach a r~· n\ c al mix of

techniques that alternate betwwn
brutality to Americans 1to Instill
fear in the capl i\'e passrngcrs l Hnd

occasional small kindness.·s Ito
prevent any despe'ratr !T'S istanre
by the hostages 1.
The CIA ha s no clear idea ho11·
many potent ial hijackt•rs are cur·
rently taking the dcacllv training.
IJJt a Saudi Arabian int elligence
report . which lhP CJ.~ l&lt;•liP\'CSto be
credible. estimatE's that :l.C.. stuck&gt;nt

terrorist s studied hijacking in Iran
in late 19&amp;1 alone. The)' Include

Iranians, Iraqis, Tunisians. Moroccans and Egvptians- and at least
one Saudi. The report ident ified the
chief instructor· as a Palestinian
guerrilla who had participated
persona ll y in airliner hlj ac kings.
At present. there are about half a
dozen ot her terrorist training
camps located in Iran. Several are
reserved for foreigners recruited
by the Ayatollah Khomeini's agents
from amo ng Moslem students and
workers th roughout the Middle
East, Asia , Europe and even the
United States.
Student s ar the camps ger three
months' indoctrination in Moslem
fundaiTI{'ntali st icleolo!!:v as well as
in the nuts and oolts of terrorist
opera! ions, Including constru ction
and placement of sophisticated

drmolition

de\' \c~s.

'11le CIA has also received
detailed report s of an estimated 30
groups of women terrorists taking

The Daily Sentinel-Page:-3

Pomeroy-MiddlepOrt, Ohio

similar n·alning at segregated
camps In Tehran. Qom. Isfahan
and Behec htleh. One alumna rejl)Iiedly effused to her fellow
terrorists: "Our fmam Khomelnl
has authorized us to participate In
the holy war against the atheist
enemies of the Islamic Republic.
We are the kamikazes fl. Islam. We
11'111 each die after killing a hundred
enemies- where In the world Is not
importan t."
The terrorist s tfained In Iran's
"hoot ramps" share one trait :
devotion to Khomelnl, whose scowling Image glares at Iranians
from ('Very wall poster and television set. The old ayato llah routinely
refe1~ to the United States as "the
Great Satan,'' a nd Inspires his
fe llow fanatics with this weird call
to arms: "All Moslems must rise up
and conquer their fear of death so
that they can conquer the whole
world!"

A positive trend ____-:--___D_on_ c_ra.::..::._iff
A higher percentage of the world's Good news:
ture. Or, as survey director Raymond realize , however. that they need not
people lived in freedom during 1985 - Latin America in general. In D. Gastil observed in summary: "We live under repression, maintaining rethan in any year since the start of the 1985, democracy was furthe r consoli- must not forget that in spite of certain pressive systems in ma ny countries
deca~.
dated in Brazrl. Elections strength- positive trends, most of the world con- appears to require ever more
But before you get to feeling too ened the popular support of El Salva- tinues to live in non-democracies, or violence ."
good about that, listen to the rest of it: dor's civilia n president. Uruguay what at best might be called semi-deIt 's difficult to say exactly what
An even higher percentage of people re-established crv ilian democratr c mocracies. As more and more people that last is - good news, more bad or
were not free.
·
government. Grenada held an electiO n
some of both.
The information comes from Free- judged free and fair. And late in the
dom House, the New York-based orga- year Guatemala elected a civilian
nization that charts freedom ·~ gains government that. however, "must still
and losses. It recently issued a report walk a narrow path between chaos
on the state of the world press during and a coup."
the past year that noted continuing reElsewhere. Pakistan went
strictions on the free flow olinforma- through with a long-promi sed parli ation in mucb of the world and a signifi- mentary election. Bangladesh experi·
ca nt increase in violence directed at mented with elected local governjournalists.
ment. Communist Hun~arv . judged
The follow-up survey of political partl y free despite its Soviet satelirte
liberties makes somewhat more en- status, held parliamentary elections
couraging reading. While free peoples that allowed voters some choice
remain in the minority , the worldwide
Bad news:
trend is in their favor.
- Most of Africa , where "the condi ·
' Specifically, Freedom House judged tion of freedom was regarded as un36.27 percent of the world population promising as ever" in t985 The only
to be free in 1985, up from 34.85 per· country rated truly free on the entire
cent the previous year. The only point continent was Botswana. a black in the 14-year history of the survey ruled neighbor of partly free South Afthat 'free peoples have scored higher rica. in Zimbabwe , also in that neigh was In 1980, with 37 percent. A few borhood. elections that initi all y raised
countries then rated free , according to some hopes were followed hy rrprcs·
Freedom House, subsequently slipped sive measures against the losers. In Si a bit.
erra Leone, an uncontested election
But the free remain runners-up to strengthened military control. In Bur·
the not free - 40.43 percent of the kina Faso, labor unions were supworld in 1985 . The remaining 23.29 pressed and new s media turned into
government mouthpieces.
percent were rated partly free .
- In an exception to the Latin ·
In penple terms , it works out to I.75
billion living in 56 free countri es and American rule , Panama's elected
32 related territories, 1.95 billion in 55 president was dismissed by the mili not-free countries and 2 territories, tary, and loca l Mexican elections were
and 1.12 billion in 56 partly free na- rigged to the advantage of the governing party .
tions and 19 territories.
- In Greece. the gorrr"":PWrlt 10nk
· Freedom House ranks countries on
" .and !low&lt;. my favorite baby boomers?"
the basis of some two dozen criteria unfair advan tage of nc\\s mcdt&lt;J u;,;h r
relating to political rights, civil liber- its control to ensure ti s own election
ties and popular participation in victory.
So it went, a decidedly mixed picgovernment.

Berry's World

BY SCOTT WOLFE
Sl:IS hit lB of 'l1 tor a cool67 percent · ers. and 25 personal foub .
Sout hern travels to Easterri &lt;)n
MASON -Taklngadvantageofa
and the hosts netted 10of 28.
After tra iling tare In the ga me dt
Friday.
21-8 scoring stretch In the second
The winners collected 31 re- 10-:*1, the Whirlwinds of Coach Jay
SOL'fiiERN 1121 - Murtron IJ.6.6; Ambur·
bounds led by Bostick, Turley, and Rees kept their perfect 10-0 record
gey &gt;tll: s. Grueser 113; Harr~ no; K
period, the Southern Tornadoes
Gru&lt;'Ser. J..'l-9: A.dams 5-2·12: Bostick S-2·18:
broke away from a 9-9 tie, tren
Adams with 9,8, and 6 respectively. In order by claiming a stunning
Turley :I·H c;ubricte aM Kimes aM:
turned up the wlckenroutetoa 72-56
Wahama won the battle of the 52-38 triumph over the little Fat·
Wickline 11·0~: H•"'r" HI ror.u.s
72
non-conference victory over crossIDards with 42 ted by Thompson's cons. Shannon Riffle had 25. Shawn
ZH~
·
WAIIAMA
(56)- Barnltz 4·1-Y; Thompson
river rival Wahama.
14, six bY Clark , and 1 by Marshall. Cunningham \0. and Da,·id. McM il·
;.;~•. Claok Wl2 ; Jewell H&gt;2: Gr"'s r 1,1;
Southern placed thrae men In
The winners committed only 12 tan Rfor the winners.
Wul!e t.0·2. Tucker aM; T. Bumgacd&lt;&gt;""'
.
"'
2
.
"'or·
"'ahama
Mr'ke
VanMeter
1.0.2; Marshall .'J..l-7: B. Bumgardener 1-2-4.
do uble llgu res, IncIudl ng
sen .. r
turnovers, had 11 steals, assrsts,
r
"
rorALS '*10-51;.
pivot man JayBostlck who grabbed
and 23 fouls.
had 10. J .T. Lloyd 13. and R.
By""""''"
16 21 - :li
nine rebounds and netted 18 points.
Wahama had 7 steals, 21 tumov- Redman 14 .
Wahama
·.....
... 99 218 18
Southt'rn .... .
:M - n
Senior guard Todd Adams had six r---7"'--~--------------------------rebounds and ootched 12 point,
"
while sophomore David Amburgey
netted 11 jDints and Kelley Grueser
added 9.
.
A spirited Waliama effort was led
by Matt Thompson who collected 15
jDinls and 14 rebounds. Rltd!le
Oark tossed In 12, Jeff Barnltz
added 9 and Blll Marshall 7.
A cold first pefiod·saw Southern
fail behind 3-2 early In the game at
the 6:19 mark after Oark swlsbed
the opening bucket and Thompson .
cashed In on a fiee throw tor the
Falcons. Southern's Kelley Grueser
'AS PEA POSTED SCHEDULE
put the Tornadoes on the scoreboard at the 7: ~ mark, however,
neither team visited the scoring
colunm unW 3: ~ was left In the
frame.
After 10 possession changps,
numerous trips up-and-down the
lloor, and several missed shols
lARGE later, Wahama went ahead 7·2 on
5 OZ . TUBE
goals bY Thompson and Barnltz. At
OR GEL' the 2:05mark Adams connected for
4.6 Ol TUBE
Southern, sparking a seven jlllnt
rally that was capped by a
three-point play by Sean Grueser.
Bamltz finally tied the score at
4 OZ. BOTT! E.
the buzzer lollowlng a missed
:J 12 HOUR EXTENTAaSSouthern shot with 6 seconds
PKG. OF 12
remaining.·
Going scoreless the first frame,
muscular senior Jay Bostick com.
blned jllwer and !tnesse to spark a
Southern rally ln the second frame
by netting 9 very i)'nportant jlllnts.
Using Its usual pressing and
running game Wahama started to
tire In the second frame, a direct
result o! Southern's Intensity and a
lO
BOHLE
very big key In the outcome of the
OR
PKG OF 2BOTTLE
game.
Southern led at the haU ]).17.
Both clubs played a tough second
hall , however, SIIS clung desperately to Its healthy lead. The
~~SORE THROAT
Tornadoes often Olrled with a
twenty point lead, but a determined
LOZENGES
Wahama effort steadily fought
back Into contention and ended the
final frame at 48-33.
As both clubs hustled, the fourth
quarter pace picked up steadUy.
Southern at ooepolnt went ahead by
24, but eased up on the throttle
belore ending the frame oo nearly
even terms 24-23, producing the end
result of 72-56.
Southern clipped the nets at 36.9
percent (27-73), whlle WHS hit 23 of
61 for :r/.7 pe!U'nt. From the line

COLOR FILM
DEVELOPING*

""'OLGATE
.TOOTHPASTE

99c

GOES IN FORLAY-UP-Southem'sdayllostlck (33) pul!iupalwo
pointer In Saturday night's '72-56 non-oonferenoe victory by Southern
over Waltama. Bostick had IS poklls for the night to pace the Tomado
attack. White Falcon players sho\&gt;11 In this Scott WoHe photo are Todd
Gress (20) and Troy Tucker (32). The victory gives Southern a S-2
season rerord.

Salary arbitration
filing starts today
By dOE ILLUZZI

UPI Sports Wr~er

While all the focus this week will
be on which teams advance to
Super Bowl XX, baseball is in for a
bu sy week.
Today, major leaguers who have
two-to-six years' service become
eligible to file for salary arbitration.
Players can file through Jan. 15.
Arbitration hearings will run from
Feb. 3-7J.l, but players can continue
negotiating with their team throu gh
the hearing date. If a player signs
hefore the hearing, It will be
canceled.

Marauders
seek 11th
straight win

Some noteworthy players who
could file include American League
MVP Don Mattingly of the New
York Yankees, National LeagueCy
Young winner Dwight Gooden of
the Mets and AL batting champ
Wade Boggs. whowasawardeda$1
million salary last year. The record
amount handed out is $1.2 million to
Montreat's Tim Raaines last vear.
Starting next year, players utider ttl' new Bas ic Agreement
signed last August ~ must have at
least three years· service to file for
. arbitration.
Also on Monday. Commissioner
Peter Ueberroth will begin conduct·
lng Interviews wlth the :M current
and retired players who testUiedor
who were mentioned in testimony
at the Pittsburgh dru g trials last
September .

DIMETAPP
ELIXIR

239

NUPRIN
IBUPROFEN
NAIL pOLISH 1M
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Marauderettes defeat
Warren Local, 43-34

Meigs goes after their 11th
straight win Tuesday night as the
Marauders travel to Federal·
Hocking marking an end to tlrst
round boys' TVC action while in
VINCENT- Senior Julie Miller
girls' action tonight. the once·
ted Meigs with 15 points and seven
beate n Mar aud e re ttf's host
rebounds as the Marauderettes
Wellston!
Bot h Meigs cage teams are in the defpa ted Warren Local 43·34 here
Saturday in girls' TVC cage action .
first _place as Coach Greg
The Mei gs win lifted Coach Ron
Drummer's ooys are one and hall
Logan's
cn•w to 7-1 owrall and
games a head of Beipll' and Warren
allowed them to remain deadlocked
Local with an 8.0 mark . The Meigs
with Alexa nder for first place in the
lads arc 10-0 overall. Coac h Ron
TVC witil a 6-1 siate. The Meigs gals
Logan's girls are &amp;I In the league
have won four straight since an
action. tied with Alexander for the
upset loss to Nelsonville- York three
top spot. Both arc defendin g TVC
weeks
ago.
champions.
Th&lt;;
Lady Warriors n""er reco·
Against Fedcrai · Hoc~lng. the
vered
from
a hot Meigs first half as
Meigs boys wlil be facing nearly the
the Maraudcrettes built a 29-11
same p!'rsonnel that came within a
halftime advantage that included
whisker ci upsettin g the Marauders
eight of 13 shoot ing from the field In
In last year's regular season finale.
the second p!'riod.
Meigs winning 54·52.
'We played very well in the first
Both trams send experienced
but ran Into foul trouble in the
half.
starting fives onto the floo r as
second
half . We had just tour
Meigs ha~ an all·senior starting
turnovers In the first two quariers,
line-up and Federai·Hocking has
but had 12 In the second half.' said
four senior starters. With only 6-5
Coach Logan.
Tony Takaah the lone starter aoove
6-1 , · the Marauders wUJ have a
Jodi Harrison added eight point s
decided he ig ht advan tage
tor Meigs while Jenni Couch had
underneath.
seven and ,Jenni Miller six. Jennl
The Lancers have a powerful . Swartz co nnibuted seven rl. Meigs'
backcour1, how('Ver, that includes
31 rebound s. Tia Worstell led the
sharpshooting 6-0 guard1 Keith
Lady Wartiors with 11 points and
Barnhart. one of the top scorers in
Erika Gessel added nine.
the TVC , As FfiHS coach Tim
All In all , Meigs made 15 of 35
Simpson put It, 'If you leave him
from the Deld lor a respectable &lt;13
open, he's going to nail it.' Also
per cent and dropped 13 of 21 foul
startl{lg for the Lancers will be Jay
shots for62 p!'rcent. Warren made
Ethridge. Terry Deeter. and Doug
11 of 16 from the line torOO percent.
Kincade, all listed at &amp;1.
Meigs had 16 turnovers and 15
Meigs counters with 5·7 Brad
personal fouls. Warren committed
Robinson and 5-9 playmaker Rick
21 fouls .
Wise at the guards, 6-5 Mike
The Meigs reserves lifted their
Chancey and 6-0 Shawn Baker at
record to 5-3 with a ]).26 w,in over
forwards, and &amp;6 Lee Powell at
the Wa rren reserves as Young
center. The Meigs bench, which
Marauderette Miss! Woods popped
came on strong In last Frklay's
In 17 points and Jodi Taylor added
92-39 shellacking over Wellston with
another seven. Also scoring lor
34 points, Is led by juniors J . R.
Kit chen, 1-luey Eason, and Don
Ohio scores
Becker.
SM11.w,y 'r. Oh[l) ('.oi PV
Start lng for the Meigs girls
PaouWth..U....-.
M lr hl~.tn 1'8. Ohio Sl ~
tonight against Wellston should be
WMif'rn Mlrh ~ ~·llnll GrC"f'TT 73
· Jodi Han)son and Jenni Couch at
Ohk1 Unl..- iH, Cm1rnl Ml rll m
Norlhrrn l lllnffis 76, ~ ~ S1 f\2
guards, Julie Mltter and Jei\DI
MJum ! li.1, Eas1rrn Mlt'h ~2
Swartz at fotwards, a nd Jenny
To~ m. n,,u S1 till
I."Jf'Pau l li6, OliytiJO ~
Miller at center. All are junior~
Allron tiol, YountlSICM'n Sl G2
except lor the team's lone senior,
('11-.•Pirmd ~ 9'l, Utira 6.1
S F'lorkt11 ~7 . Xavk'r ~2
Harrison .

179

BEN•GAY
OINTMENT
REGUlAR, GREASElESS
OR NON -GREASY GEt

GILLETIE
ATRA

SHAVING
~=::OJ CARTRIDGES

Miller Saturday.
MEJG..~

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~r ril'tll -l{l.)l.

Jullj•

139

1.250Z
TUBE

Meigs was Rhonda Ztrklewlt hfour
and Dee Henderson two. T. SmJth
led Warren with 12.
The Meigs ladles return home
this evening when they host Well·
ston at 5: 55 p. m. Meigs also plays
at home this Thursday against
Federal·Hocking while traveling to
M i lt.&gt;~·

PKG.10
OF

f.-3- l.'t. .Jt•nnl C'CU'h z,l-7 .. lf'n~ Mllh" 2 'U. .lf'nnl
S.wyr r1 114-4. Tamrf\\· Wrljth1 1.().2. Trrt'!l.il Join-on

32.?.

!1·1·1 'NYI'AIS 1$-IH.'I.

RYDAY SAVINGS

W,\RHF.N LOC\1. 1l-i 1- T WorJt('JI H -11. F:r!ka
(it""!'iSl"I-IVI, C. \\'t\111' I t-1 . T Smllh I H. 1.. F"l\"f'
1n.z, r. Wocxf'\Wd I 0.2: i\ . Bari\J1 ~ 0-l:Z. TOTAl-"

l lllhll
R~

qu.mrrs.:

Ml'il"'
10111-llfl-.&amp;.1
Warrl'fl Local
2 9 10 I~ -:w
fttwn..,.MI'lp 311. " 'anm ~~~~~ 5

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�Pomeroy- Middleport. Ohio

Monday. January 6. 1985
Pomeroy:_Middleport, Ohio

Patriots upset Raiders, 27-20

This

LOS ANGELES (UPI) - ThePalriots finally threw off .a reputa·
lion of failure in big games and to
hear Coach Raymond ,Berry des·
critlt" it , New England had the
power of some higher being behind

a berth in Su!X'r Bowl XX .
New England, which led the AFC
in ta keaways with 47, continued the
trend against the Raiders, recover·
tng
fumbles and making tltree
interceptions. They shut the
lt .
playoff· seasoned Raiders out in the
" I think you've seen a remarka· second hall.
ble happening," Berry said Sunday
Trailing2().17, Ute Patriots scored
after Jim Bowman recovered a twice in 14-second span pf the third
fumble in the end zone late in the quarter to go ahead . New England
third quarter and the Patriots took tied the score when Tony Franklin
advantage of six turnovers en route capped a 54-yard drive with a
to a 27-20 upset victory over the Los 32-yardtield goal with 71 seconds
Angeles Raider s in an AFC semifi· remain g in the quarter.
nai game.
Sam
ale twice fumbled the
New E ngland. whichoverthelasl ensuing kickoff, the second time
decade fielded some of the most after being hit by Mosi Tatupu.
talented teams in the NFL but Bowman, whose recovery of a
never went anywhere. will play Ute • fumble earller in the game led to
Dolphins at Mi~mi next Sunday for New England's first touchdown, fell

Week's
Games
MEIGS
BOYS BASinBAIL
Jan. 7-Ftdtrai:Hocking """'"Away

Jan. 1D-Miller ......................... H01111

Jan. 14-Ntlsonille-York ..... ~ Away

tllree

GillS BASIETIAIL
Jan. 6-Wellsfon ...................... H01111
Jan. 9-Ftdtrai-Hockilig .......... Home
Jan. 11-Milltr .......................... Away

i"\._

SOUTHERN
BOYS BASKETBAlL
Jan. 10-Eastem ..................... Away

Outstanding defensive effort
provides .~ l-0 win Jor ·Bears

Jan. 14-Kyger Cr... _, ........... Home
Jan. 17-Oft Hill ........... ~........ Away

GilLS BASKETBAlL
Jan. 9-Eastem ........................ Hontl
Jan. 11-Gallipolis ................... Home
Jan. 13-Kyger CrHk-........... Away

EASTERN

BOYS BASKETBAlL
Jan. 10-Sout..m ................... Home
Jan. 14-North Galia ............ Away

.

Jan. 17 -Hann•-Trace ............ Ho1111

•
GilLS BASKETBAlL
Jan. 9-Southtm .................... Away
Jan. 13-North GaRia ............. Ho1111
Jan. 16-Hannan-Trace ........... Away

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2:00 tf (:00
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992-2342
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108 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

' - TVC games

FOR

HOME PEOPLE'

A GIUI PLaa···
fOIUUiflST

!' SYRACUSE OFFICE.
992-6333

: RA(INE OFFICE
l:) · 949-22•10

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov. 20 - At Trimble Tournament
Waterford vs. Eastern
Southern vs . Trimble
Nov. 23 - At Trimble Tournament
Consolation gamo
Championship game
Nov . 25 - At Eastern'
Dec . 2- KYGER CREEK'
Dec . 5 - At Oak Hill'
Dec . 9 - NORTH GALLIA'
Dec. 12- HANNAN TRACE'
Dec. 19- At Southwestern•
Jan. 2 - SYMMES VALLEY'
Jan. 9 - EASTERN'
Jan. 11 - GALLIPOLIS
Jan . 13- At Kyger Creek'
Jan. 16- 0AK HILL'
Jan. 21 - At Gallipolis'
Jan . 23 - At North Gallia
Jan . 30 - At Hannan Tr~e·
Feb . 3 - At Symmes Valfity'
Feb . &amp;- SOUTHWESTERN
' - SVAC gamoo

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 26 - At Southern'
Dec . 3 - NORTH GALLIA'
Doc . 6 - At H•nnan Trace'
Doc . 10- Kyger Creek'
Doc . 13- Southwestern'
Doc . 20- SYMMES VALLEY'
Dec . 21 - FEDERAL HOCKING
Doc . 27 - At Wahama Tournament
Eastern vs . Wirt
Wahama vs . Gilbert
Doc . 28 - At Wahama Tournament
Consolation Game
Championship Game
Jan. 3- At Oak Hill'
Jon . tO- SOUTHERN'
Jan . 14- At North Gallia'
Jan. 17- HANNAN TRACE'
Jan . 21 - PKBG. CATHOLIC
Jan . 24 - At Kyger Creek'
Jan. 31 - SOUTHWESTERN'
Feb . 4 - At Federal Hocking
Fob . 7 - At Symmes Valley•
Feb . 8 - WAHAMA
Fob . 14- OAK HILL'
• - SVAC ga met

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov . 20 - At Trimble Tournament
Waterford vs . Eastern
Southern vs. Trimble
Nov. 21 - MEIGS
Nov. 23 - At Trimble Tournament

Consolation game
Championship game
Nov. 24- SOUTHI;RN'
Dec . 2 - At North Gallia'
Dec . 5 - HANNAN TRACE'
Dec . 9 - At Kyger Creek'
Dec . 12- SOUTHWESTERN'
Dec . 14- FEDERAL HOCKING
Dec . 19- At Symmes Valley•
Jan. 2 - 0AK HILL'
Jan. 9 - At Southern'
Jan . 13 - NORTH GALLIA' ·
Jan . 16 - At Hannan Trace'
Jan. 18 - At Meigs
Jan. 23 - KYGER CREEK'
Jan. 30 -'- At Southwestern•
Feb . 1- At Federal Hocking
Feb . 3 - At Oak Hill '
Feb. 6 - SYMMES VLALEY'
' - SVAC games

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CHEVY, liNt

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Dec. 28-At Southeastern
Jan. 3 - At Symmes Villay'
Jan . 4 - At Wahama
Jan. 10- At Eastern'
Jan . 14- Kyger Creek'
Jan . 17.,- At oak Hill'
Jan. 24-NORTH GALLIA'
Jan . 26 - At Ravenswood
Ja . 28-WAHAMA
Jan . 31 - HANNAN TRACE'
Feb . 7 - At Southwestern•
Feb . 14- SYM M ES VALLEY'
' - SVAC gamoo

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GIRLS BASKETBALL
Nov . 21 - At Eastern
Nov 30-MILLER'
Doc . 5 - At Nelsonville-York'
Dec . 9 - VINTON COUNTY'
Doc . 12 - TRIMBLE'
Dec . 16- ALEXANDER'
Jen. 4 - At Warren•
Jan . 6 - WELLSTON'
Jen . 9 - FEDERAL HOCKING'
Jan. 11 - At Miller'
Jen. 16 - NELSONVILLE -YORK'
Jan . 1B - EASTERN
Jen . 20- At Vinton County'
Jan . 23- At Trimble'
Jan . 27- BELPRE'
Jan. 30- At Alexander'
Fob . 3 - WARREN'
Fob . 6 - WELLSTON'
Feb . 10 - At Federal Hocking

Ben H. Ewing-Director

l

BOYS BASKETBALL
Nov. 26 - EASTERN'
Nov. 29-GALLIPOLIS
Dec . 3-At Kyger Creak'
Dec. 8 - OAK HILL'
Dec . 10- At North Gallia'
Dec . 13- At Hannan trace'
Dec . 20-SOUTHWESTERN •
Dec . 30-Peebles

Meigs

"DIGNITY AND
SERVICE ALWAYS"

MEMBER FDIC

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Eastern

HOME

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Southern

BOYS BASKETBAll
Nov . 22 - At Athens
Nov . 29 - At Miller'
Dec . 3-NELSONVILLE-YORK'
Dec . 6 - At Vinton County•
Dec . 10- At Trimble'
Dec . 13- BELPRE'
Dec . 17 - At Alexander'
Dec . 20- WARREN'
Dec . 28 - ATHENS
Jan . 3 - At Wellston'
Jon. 7 - At Federal Hocking'
Jan . 10 - MILtER'
Jan . 14 - At Nelsonville-York'
Jan .17 - VINTON COUNTY'
Jan . 21 - TRIMBLE'
Jon . 24 - At Belpre•
Jan . 28 - ALEXANDER'
Jan . 31 - At Warren'
Feb. 7 - WELLSTON'
Feb. 13 - FEDERAL HOCKING'
·- rvc games

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ALL YOUR
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on the ball in the end w ne for the
go-ahead ('lints.
The Patriots' other scores came
on a IJ.yard pass from Tony Eason
to Lin Dawson. a 2· yard run by·
James and Franklin's first field
goal.
The Raiders, whose season ended
last year with a loss to Seattle in a
wild card game, got a 1&amp;-yard
scoring strike from Marc Wilson 'to
Jesse Hester, an 11-yardTD run by
Marcus Allen and two field goals by
Chris Bahr.
James, third in the ronlerence in
rushing with 1,2Z7 yards, finished
with 104 yards on 23 carries. The
Raiders had oot allowed anyone to
rush for 100 yards this season
despite facing eight players who
gained more than 1,000 yards.
Eason was 7·of-14 fur 117 yards.
Wilson, a six ·year veteran seeing
his . first playoff action, finished
11-of-27 for 135 yards and three
interceptions. Allen, the NFL's
leading rusher in the regular
him in the first quarter at SoUder Field in Ollcago
SACKED AGAIN - Giants' quartf'rbadi Phil
season, gained 121 yards on 22
Sunday
afternoon. The Bears advanced to the NFC
Simms is sacked but still looks for a. receiver
carries.
championship
game with a 21-U \ittory. UPI.
downlleld after the Bears' Mike Singletary tackled
The Raiders blew a 17-71ead but
ted 20-17 at halftime when Bahr
nailed a 32-yard field goal with six
seconds remaining in the second
period.
New England, which kJst to the
Raider s 35·20 Sept 29, took a 7-0
advantage 4)1 minutes into the
game alter the Raiders' Fulton
Walker fumbled a punt and Bow·
Chicago took a 7-U lead with 5:28
"Against the Ram' . it will ix' the
man recovered at the Los Angeles
CHICAGO (UPI ) .,. The Chicago
remainL1g
in the fi rst quart er when
same
slopping
Ertc
Dickerson
was
21. One pl ay later, Eason hit
Bears set their defensive I rap and
rookie
Giant
s' punter Sean Landeta
s
today."
it
was
stopping
Morri
Dawson with a scoring toss over the
the New York Giants fell inl o it.
muffed
a
punt
in his end zone.
"We didn't have a chance to test
outstretched arms of · defender
Now, the Bears will rese t the
Shaun
Ga
.
v
le
picked
the bail up at
them ," said Simms. who .was
springs for the Los Angeles Rams
Stacey Toran.
the
Giants
fi
vi?
and
went in
14·01·35 for :iJ9 yards bu t didn't haw•
The Raider s closed to 7·3 six
next week.
W1IOI("h ed lor thE' only score of the
his best drive until midway through
For the second straight year.
minutes later, turning a blocked
firs t half.
the
fourth
quarter
when
New
York
punt by Greg Townsend into Bahr's
Chicago advanced to the NFC
The Bears could have stretched
trailed
21
-0.
29-yarder.
~
champ ionship game aft er they shu I
t
he
7-0 lea d b' norma lly reliable
Dent
also
put
a
sh&lt;jllering
hit
late
Bahr missed a 44-yard attempt ClJ 'out the New York Giants, 2Hl.
Kev in Butler missed three
rookie
in the first quarter on Morns, who
seconds into the second quarter, bu t
Sunday.
fie
ld
goals.
including I "o w ilhin the
was limited to 32 ya r ds aft er a 141
The Bears. who losl to the
the Raiders went ahead 10·7 on their
40whcre
he
had hit 22 straight In the
yard petiormance in the Giants'
eventual Super Bowl champion San
next possession when they drove 52
first
two
and
one·half quarters.
wild card w in over San Francisco.
yards. Wilson, booed lor a slow
Francisco 49ers last year, played
Morri s retumed rut was ineffective . - - - - - - - - - - start In the gam e, found Hester
"old-fashioned" football according
in the second hall.
to Coach Mike Ditka, who was a
curling in front of cornerback
"We were beaten bv a better
member of the Bears' last NFL
Raymond Clayborn in lhe left
THE GINGERBREAD BOY
team
today. They didn 't make the
title-winn ing team that beat · the
corner of I he end w ne .
SAYS ...
errors thai we made," said Giants'
Giants 22 years ago, 14-10.
center Bart Oates. " 1llere are
All pha~ of the Bears' team
SIGN UP
people we had assigned to where
con tributed with Ute special teams
FOR OUR
lhe p11'ssure wa s com mg from . I
taking advantage of a shanked punt
BASKET
don't know if it was ment al
for a TD, the offense producing a
CLASS£5
breakdown s or what. "
pair of Jim McMahon to Dennis
NOW
The Bears ' offense also spullered
M cKinnon Utird-quarter TDS and
GINGEIIIIREAD
at first. prompting Gian ts coach
the defense pitching a shutout in
Bill Parcells to note, " their offense
HOUSE
weather that saw wind ch·Uis
was not that hot. either. 11w y're not
around 15 below.
T7 IIASOA, Ill. Wl,
703 SECOJID ST REET
the best offensive team yet, they
9
But It w as the defense. the heart
the same time as Robinson did in
are the best defense."
of Chicago's nearly flawless l985
1983, said the Rams have the best
campaign, that may be the Bears '
team in his three seasons.
ticket to New Orleans.
"The first two years I didn't feel
The Rams will have to figu re ou I
we had a great tl!am," Dickerson
a better way of containing lhe
said. " This year, I think cur chance
Bears' defensive fron t four led by
is just as good as the Chicago Bears.
Richard Dent if they are to stop the
I think we can go all lite way."
Chicago juggernaut. Dent had
Dickerson, who played at South·
three and one half of the six Bears'
ern Melhodlst, doesn't know what
sacks and led Bears' defense thai
to expect from the Ollcago shut down back Joe Morris and
weather.
pres~red Giants quarterback Phil
· ':I've never played in sub- zero
Simms all game.
weather," he said. "I don't know
" Our '46' defense just puts a lot of
how I'll reacl to ~b· zer o. "
pressure on the quarterback," said
Cowboys ruming back Tony
Dent, the Bears' All-Pro ri ght end.
Dorsett would have liked to give
sub-zero weather one more lly.
Dorsett was held to 58 yards on 17
carries Saturday bul caught eight
passes for 8l yards.
" This was uncharacteristic of the
Cowboys," Dorsett said. "Usually
we are on lhe upswi ng this time of
I he year. I was really disap(Xlinted
abou t how we played in the second
haH t tt was J.O al halftime I. 11
seemed like we just gave up. We
should have just gone back lo
Dallas and gave them the oollgame
at halftime"

·HOME

•'

STOU HOUISt
MoM..sAt;
I A.M.·10 P.M.
SUfllll
0 U:-.10 ....

Blla a: FiSHER
BlllllOWEI

"S111Ju ,111....
A1tt1tl111• Oilfll"
992-5141
MIDDliPOIT, OH.

HURDLES LINEBACKER - Patriots wide rec eiver Irving Fryar
hurtes Raider linebacker Jeff Barnes as Patriot quarterback Tony
Eason watches the play. Fryar lost a yard on the reverse in the third
quarter of Sunday's playoff game at Los Angeles. UPI.

Rams defeat Cowboys, 20-0;
play Bears for NFL c~own
credit. They have a chance to beat
anyone. · It will be an interesting
game."
The Rams won the same way
they did during the regular season
-with Erie Dickerson, defense and
special teams.

ANAHEIM, Calif. 1UP! I - The
Los Angeles Rams are as happy a
bunch of guys you will ever find to
be going from SQuthe ~n Ca lifornia
to frigid ChiCago in mid-January.
"Everybody sboukl play at leasl
one game in Ute cold," Rams
cornerback LeRoy Irvin said In
reference to·the NFC championship
game against the Bears next
Sunday.
The Rams advanced with a 2ll-O
victory over the Dallas Cowboys
Saturday and watched lhe Bears
top lhe. New York Giants 21·0
Sunday in Chicago. The Bears
played in 20 mph winds and the
wind chill factor was 13 below. The
Rams can expect more of the same
liE' XI week.
That one game w ill be aga inst a
team thai wrnt 15-1 during the
regular season and bowled over the
Giants Sunday. B ut lhe Rams did
some bowli ng of Jheir own · Satur·
day, impressing the Cowboys in the
process
" I 'm much more impressed with
the Rams now," Cowboys quarter·
back Danny White said. " Maybe
coming in I didn' l givethem enough

The shutout was the first for the
Cowboys in li playa! appearances
and the third in club history. The
Los Angeles special teams forced
two of Dallas' six turnovers.
Die kerson broke loose for an
NFL·playoff record :M8 yards on 34
carries. Including TD runs d 55 and
40 yards. It was the finest moment
of a frustrating sreson for Dickerson, who fell from' a league record
2,105 yards in 1984 lo 1.234 this
season. Part of Dicken;on's problem was a preseason holdout that
kept him inactive until the third
game of the seaon.
"I lhink tt's a greal tribute to Eric
as a man," Robinson said. "It
hasn't been the easiest year for
him. Sometimes you see an athlele
as a man . He fought through a lot ri
difficulty this year."
Dickerson. who J;Jined the Rams

TiJ.S

JOHN A•. WADE, M.D. Inc.:
VETERANS MEMORIA.L HOSPITAL

a

CALL (614) 992-2104
(304) 675-1244

THANKS RUTLAND
SUPERCABLE
IS .A HIT!!!

Michigan whips Bucks, 78-68
Iowa a 60-59 upset win over, No. 14
Illinois. The dPCision was even
more surprising because it came in
Champaign, where the Illini' had
won .l2 straight gamE'S.

By KENT McDilJ.

the wrong end of these scores,"

Iowa coach Georg~&gt; Raveling said.
UPI Sports Writer
'Tve newr played against a
The Michigan Wolverines are
!hal's played as well as Iowa
team
unbeaten and Ohio Stale coac h
did."
said Illinois coac h Loo
• E ldon Miller th inks he knows why.
Henson.
"Michigan is a lol stro nger than
Th e con t inually surprising
mosl teams." Miller said after the
Gerry Wright 1&lt;'&lt;1 the Hawkey&lt;"
Purdue
Boilermakers made it two
Wolverines whipped his Buckeyes
(1 ·1 in the Big Ten. 11-4 overall)
ln
a row in the Big Ten with a Gl-61
78-68 on Saturda)'. " They have size,
with 18 p;Jints. Anthony Welch
win over Minnesota bul now must
weigh! and quickness and great
scored 23 ('lints for the 'llltni, now
tllke its show on the road.
athlet ic abil!ly . They are th&lt;' best
10-3 and H
Todl Mitchell scored 18 points
team we've played so far this
Marble was louted by Welch with
and Troy Lewis had 17, including 15
Yt:lar."
the scor e tJed 59-59 and hit one of
in the second hall, as the Boner·
· Mic)tlgan raised its rPCord lo 14-0 two free throws. Welch missed a
makers raised their record to 13·2.
overall and 2.0 in the Big Ten with
corner jumper with less than 10
Minnesota fell to 10-5 overall and0·2
I he win which followed a tough 74·69
seconds remaining lo secure the
in Jhe conference.
victory over l oth-ranked Indiana
Hawkeye viCtory,
"{ Purdue coach Gene ) Keady Is
Thursday night.
" It 's probably just a game thai
doing a good job with a young
Sophomore guard Gary Gran t
was a tong time coming to us,
ream." said Minnesota coach Jlm 1
sco red 23 points. 19 of those ln the
because God knows wp've been on
Dutcher.
S&lt;'COnd half and 10 during a
four·mlnul e stretch al the start of
the period when the Wolv.erin('S
padded a 31-23 halftime m argin inlo
a 44 ·29 lead.
Ohio State had led 19-17 with 8: 14
loft • in the half before 6· foot·ll :
cenrer Roy Tarpley scored eight
consecutive (Xllnts to put Michigan
ahead to stay .
ONlY
Richard Reli ford had18pointsfor
Served with
potatoes , chicken
the Wol ver ines. Brad Sellers scored
gravy. cole slaw,
roll . butter &amp; coffee.
25 ('lints and grabbed 15 rebounds
Sorry. no sub stitutes except beverage·w•th
•
for Ohio Sta ir. now 7-4 over all and
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PH .

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST

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The Daily Sentinel

By The Bend

Monday, January 6, 1985

Page- &amp;

DAR meets,

.
Qll'q TEAM -This Is the MelpHigb Qillz Team
at the Bobcat Buzz-In at Ohio University. From the
tell are 11m Sloan, Shannon Slavm, Scott Pullins,

Kevbt V. King. The ft!th partlclplmt not pictured was
Gary Coleman.

Meigs quiz team participates in show
The Meigs High Quiz Team was a . take place on Feb. 1.
recent panlclpant In the Ohio
The quiz team is also Involved In
University Boocat Buzz-In double tv.1) television competitions. They
elimination tournament. Meigs won preliminary matches on HI -Q
competed In Class AAA against from WOWK-TV In Huntington and
Jackron, Warren , Waverly, Vinton. oo Honor Society from WTAP-TV in
Athens, Sheridan, and Philo. Vinton Parkersburg. Both second round
was the eventual winner .
matches will he aired later this
Two other tournaments are also yPar.
scheduled this year. Jackson High
A new type r:i competition for the
School Is hosting an eight team tea m this year is rronthly matches
dOuble-elimination and the Pionf'l'r with other schools who are
Quiz competition at Marietla wUI members of the Tti-Valley Athletic

Conference. Meigs has a 1-3 record
in these matches so far. The rext
mf'l'lwlll be at Mlller High School in
February. ln March the conlerenCl'
competition " i ll be concluded with
a double elimination tournament at
Vinton .
Senior members of the quiz team
all' Gary Coleman.Jan Durst,Scott
Pullins, and Tim Sloan. Sopoomore
memhers are David Beegle, Sean
Dodson. Kevin V. King, Shannon
Slavin. and Angle Sloan . Team
advisor is Rlta Slavin .

Forest Run UMW conducts meeting
A newsletter from "Heart and
Hand House" about flood damage
In West Virginia was read at the
recent mf'l'ting of the Forest Run
United Methodist Women held at
the churrh.

Hilda Yeauger presided at the
mf'l'ting with devotions heing giv{'n
by Kathlf'l'n Scott on "The Tree
Kings." She displayed a map
outlining the journey of the three
kings. The proj!ram concluded "1th

Caleru:Mr/ happenings
MONDAY
POMEROY - Big Bend Civitan
Club, 7:30 p.m. Monday at Community Act ion Agency offices in
Pomeroy.
LETART FALLS- PTO meet
ing at the school. 7 p.m. Monday,
with guest speaker.
POMEROY - Meigs Cou nt y
Salon 710, Eight and Forty, me&lt;'ts 7
p.m. Monday. home of Julia Hysell .
TUESD.\\'

PT. PLEASANT. W.\' a.- MGM
Running Club meets Tuesda)·. 7:30
p.m .. Mar)'s.
POMEROY, - Dinner meeting
when Drew Webster Post ~­
American U?¢on. meets at 7 p.m.
Tuesday at the post home .

RIJTLAND - Rutland Village
Council mf'l'ting. 7 p.m. Tuesday at
the Civic Center.
POMEROY - Xi Gamma Mu
Chapter. Beta Sigma Phi Sorority,
meets Tuesda)·. i: .10 p.m.. home cr.
Evelyn Knight. Plans will be made
for the Mother's March of Dimes .
\\EDNESD,AY

EA..&lt;;T MEIGS- Eastern Local
District Athletic Boosters m&lt;'etlng.
7:.10 p.m. Wednesda)' at the high
school.
Group to meet
POMEROY- Ca tholic ll'omen·s
Club will mf'l't Thursday with mass
at i p.m follo"·ed by the meeting at
7:30. Hostesses will he Anna
Blackwood, Marty Gress. Betty
Ohlinger, and Wilma Mansfield .

Hensley birthday
Tiffanv Hensle\ celebrated her
SI'Cond birthday on Dec. 24 with a
party held at the home of her
grandparent s. Mr. and Mrs. Lan}·
Hud so n. Fla twoods Road.
Pomero\.
A Ca'obage Patch theme was
rartird out in thf' d('('Qrations as
well as the rake. a gift from Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Kuhl. Attending were
Tiffany's grandparents. Mr. and
Mrs. H~nl')' Hensie)·. Long Bottom :
Teresa. Stefanie and 13&lt;-&lt;·ky Evans.
Julla Hayman. Becky. Melinda and
Melina Mankin. John, Jaunita,
Angie and Andy Grurser. Da,·id
and Car la Ca rter. Man·. Billi&lt;' and
Amanda Well s. Mr. and Mrs.
Ronnie Hensle)'.
The youngster al.so tl'I'Pivrd gifts
from Frank. Rit a and Mark U&gt;wis.

'

WMFI holds recent meeting
A ChrJstmas party for the foyer was placed there by Shirley
Wanda Eblin hosted the holiday
meeting of the Laurel Cliff Free children of the CYM was reported Friend.
Methodist Church WMFI Mission- on by Shirley Friend, and a special · Mary Miller and Mrs. Friend had
ary group. Devotions were given by missionary offering for Jesus' the program which consisted of a
Brenda Haggy who read scripture birthday was taken. Members sent Bible quiz using Luke 2. Refresh·
from the first chapter of Matthew. out Christmas cards to ments were served by Kay Clark
and Donna Gilmore. Others attendReadings and prayer inducted "He missionaries.
Frut baskets were prepared for Ing were Iva Powell. Shirley
is OJmlng Again" by Donna
Gilmore; and "Why we Say Merry several shutlns, and a caroling Meadows, Belinda Soulsby, Evelyn
party was held . A v1sit to the county Young, Octa Ward, Eva Robson,
Christmas" by Jean Wright.
Jean Wright conducted the meet- lnftnnary was made over the Janet Eblin, and Becky Eblin.
ing with Wanda Eblin giving a oolldays and gilts were presented to Mary Miller will host the next
report· on the Bible study and the residents. ThE' tree In the church meeting.
\1sltatlon, and Donna Gilmore , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - reporting on mission goal giving.
t:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:;:;:; :::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:;:;:::::::::;:;:;:;:;:;:::::::;: ;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::::::::::::: ::::::::: :::::;:;:;:::;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;::t~

Health Club gift
exchange held
A Christmas dinner and gilt
exchanged was enjoyed by
members of the Laurel CUI! Better
Health Club at Craw's Restaurant.
Attending were Eva Robson, Octa
Ward, Donna Gflmore, Linda Powell, Beulah Oehler, Kate Parker,
Jean Wright, Marcella and Nara
Hartman, and Iva Powell.

,,

DR. RIGGS

~~

:: Announces the Re-Opening of His

J
~:

DENTAL OFFICE

Glen and GracP Thoma. Chester.
Gail Thoma. New . Haven. W.Va .;
Jeff Jones. Reedsv111e. Ruby Burnside. Pat and Sman Thoma . Rick.
Marylou, Audra and Betsy Houda Sh('lt , ail of Pomeroy, and Marlca
-King, Middleport. and June Kalona. Syrncuse.
Miss Thoma Is currently employed at Veterans Memorial Hospital and Super America In
Pomeroy.

Teresa VanMeter, data processIng; Teresa Covert and Steven
Dunfee, Industrial electronics;
Betty Jo Collins and David CoiUns,
machine trades; Clara Young,
medical occupa llons, and Michael
VanMeter and David Jenkins,
welding.

~~

:_

THANK YOU : :

I

Meigs County Emergency Medical Service units answered six calls
Saturday and seven calls Sunday.
Saturday at 1:12 a.m., Syracuse
ID Maplewood Lake for Harley
Jones to Veterans ~mortal Hospital; Tuppers Plains at 2:31 a.m.
transported Sandra Massar to
Camden-Oark Memorial Hospital;
Middleport at 3: lB a.m. treated but ·
did not transport Larl)l Grimm
from 235 Walnut; Rutland at 3:52
a. m. transported Melvin Roach to
Veterans Memorial Hospital from
Meigs Mine No. I; Pomeroy at 3: 55
a.m. was called to a trailer fire al
the Ronald McWilliams residence
on Holley Rd,.-- no injuries reported; Rutland at 5:58 p.m. to
Hysell Run Rd. for Shannon Walker
to Holzer Medical Center.

Sunday at 10: 24 a.m., Tuppers
Plains transported Junior Kennedy
to Holzer Medfcal Center; Pomeroy
at 1:56 p.m. to Second St. for Mike
Doughey to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; PomE'roy at 6: 13 p.m. _to
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Wald Smith to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Mlddlepeft at 6:45p.m. to
Grant St. for Chris Becker to
Veterans Memorial Hospital; Ra cine at 8: 52 p.m. to Antiquity for
Ralph Shain to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland at 9:47 p.m.
transported George Everett to ..
Veterans Memorial Hospita l;
Pomeroy at 11:01 p.m. to the
Pomeroy Health Care Center for
Harry Koenig to Veterans MemorIal Hospital.

Meigs County happenings ...
Potential layoffs
topic at conference
State Hospital Employees Union,
District Jl99, AFL-CIO which represents employes at the Lakin
State Hospital was to hold a press
con!erenCl' late this afternoon at the
Mason County Courthouse in Point
Pleasant to discuss the potential
layoff or 62 of the oospltal's
employees.
The union is opposing any layo!!s
as the result d closing the oospital's
adolescent union and wUI outline Its
proposal for the transfer cr affected
employees.

Veterans Memorial
Saturday Admisslons-- Ancll
Prunty, Bidwell.
Saturday Discharges--Harold
Smith, John Hunnell, Mary Riggs,
WUey Ours.
Sunday Admisslons-Wald Smith,
Pomeroy; Floyd Dally. Racine.
Sunday Dlscharages--Lynda Stewart, Randy Rlffie, Chester
Mundry, William Jewell, Jeffrey
McKinney. Paul Smith.

Police helping
maintain traffic
Offlcers of tlhe Pomeroy Police
Department are helping control
traffic at the Intersection of Nye
Ave., and E. Main St. between4 and

DR. RIGGS AND STAFF :::

5 p.m. each day .
The timing of a traffic light at the
Intersection is not pennittlng upriver traffic enough time to get
through on the green light and, as a
result, traffic Is stacking up on the
upriver ·side of the Ught. Officers
are directing tmffic through the
intersection during the problem
oour of 4 to 5.

Meetings set lonight
Bedford Township Trustees wlll
have their organizational meeting
for 1986 tonight (Monday). 7 p.m ..
at the town hall.
Racine VIllage Council will mf'l't
tonight (Monday !, 7 p.m., at the
Shine Club Park building for a
combined organizational and regu'
lar monthly meeting. The public Is
Invited to attend.

Weather forecast
Today ... sunny but cold. High 25to
,10. West to northwest winds 15 to 25
mph.
Tonlght...clear and cold. Low 5 to
10. North winds about 10 mph.
Tuesday ... mostly sunny android.
High around ro.
Extended forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday and Thursday.
A cbanoe of snow Friday. High§ In
the 2&amp; Wednesday and 30s Thursday and Friday. lA&gt;ws 15 to 25.

The Daily · Sentinel

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

Roy H. Boggs
Roy Haymond Boggs, of Lot!ridge, fonnerly of West Palm
Beach, Fla., and Ravenna, died
Saturday at the Hickory Creek
Nursing Home, The Plains, following a long IUness.
He was born May 19, 191l! at
Reedy, W. Va., a son of the late
Leroy and Laura Hunt Boggs. He
resided In Lottrtdge in his early
years and gradu~ted from the
Coolville High School.
He married . Ihe former Grace
Miller in Weizel County. W. Va ., in
1928 and moved to Akron where he
was employed by the Pepsi Cola Co.
and the B. F . Gootl'rich Co. In 1945
he moved to Ravenna and in 1957
married Aim ZOvonlnk Voll and
moved to West Palm Beach
returning to Lotttidge in 1976. He
was a member of the Valley Bible
Center Church.
Surviving are a daughter, Mrs.
Charles (Lois Gene! Sanford. Ra venna; a son, Gerald E. Boggs and
three grandchildren of Berea; a
stepson, Wllllam Voll , a stepgranddaughter and a step greatgrandson of North Benton; a
brother, Rexel. Athens Cou nty, and
a son, Mrs. Robert (Catherine)
Babsl. Akron. Preceding hlm in
death were his parents, a grandson,
-'
Douglas Boggs; a stster,
Mrs.
Alphonse (Roxie) McBee, and two
brothers, Carson and Raymond.
Services wUI be held at I p.m.
Tuesday at the White Funeral
Home In Coolville where friends
may call from 9a.m. Tuesday until
ttme of services. Graveside rites
will he held at 2p.m. Wednesday at
Grandview Memorial Gardens In
Ravenna. Friends may contribute
to the Athens Area Hospice, P .O.
Box 873, Athens. Ohio 45701, In his
memory.

107 Sycamore St., Pomeroy, Oh.

t~~~~~~:.J
8!19/~~!

' -

THE TAXIDERMY SHOP 2 LOCATIONS
New limo Rd.
108 Vine St.

Have Your Trophy Mounted By A
Full Time Taxidermist

TilE

KO~~~RY t1}
~\

1ilf

Golf
Equipment
- Grits lns!alied~Sl-50 "'
0n1tgo Gall lolk .... $6.00 Doz.
•New S. Prior Ownfld Clubs
•Custom Clubs

457'9

More choices for a better breakfast
Mad~-to-order breakfasts
• SK-ak and eggs
• Pancakes and sausage
• Eggs and bacon
• Whatever you want , however
you want it'

Improved Breakfast Bar
• Steak finger.i

• Boneless chicken finger.&gt;
• ·Cinnamon honey butter
• Peaches
• H01 apples
• Doughnuts
• A large variety of fresh fruit daily

•
JACKSON PIM.E · RT

Public Notice

Public Notice

Public Notice

IN THE
COMMON PLEAS COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
GEORGE LEMLEY,
PLAINTIFF
N0 .86 CV 339

VS
·UNIVERSAL FUEL AND
CHEMICAL CORPORATION
DEFENDANT
NO . 86 CV 367
SERVICE BY PUB! CATION

agoinll- h for the relief de-

bida Will be received with

THE HOCKING DOMESTIC
COAL COMPANY
DEFENDANT
SERVICE BY PUBICATION
The Hod&lt;ing Domestic Coot
CQn'1&gt;1f1Y, Nelooovitle, Ohio it
lwflby ro!lfiod thot it "" ' - '
,.mod dofendont in ologotoc1ion onlilled Goorgo l..omloy,
plointiff VI. Tho Hqd&lt;ing 0o-

C&lt;&gt;o,.. atioo '· wtro10teot """""
odd- II, 825 lln&gt;ldwl'f, Fw-

~ WEST

"-

lJnivonot Fuot ond Chemicol

rett. Pl. fii12t. ilhonil&gt;y rntified thet k has'-' nomod doin 1 toqll oelion .,titled
RICHARD STEWART. ot II VI

UNIVERSAL
FIJEL AND
CHEMtCAL CORPORATION,
clofendlnt. Thio ectlon hoi'-'
llllligned ....., No. 85 01 357·
f1l011ic coot c.,...., ..y, do- and It pending in the Common
,_,__This oelion has ' - ' Plooo Court. Meigo County,
uoignod Co,. No. 85 CN 339 . Ohio. Pomoroy, Ohio 46769 .
The object of the comMid is pending in the Common
Pleu Coon, Moigo Coomy. plaint is to acquire title to the
following de1cribed reel II·
Ohio, 46769.
The object of the com· tate by order of the court.
plaint is to acqu ire title to the '
Said real estate being
following de1cribed real ea·
situated in Township of Sal·
tete by order of tha Court.
isbury. County of Meigs and
Said r11l estate being lit· State of Ohio .
ualed in the Townohlp of SatThe .,rface lend end rtver
iatuy. County of Meigs and lending form~ known as
State of Ohio. Beginnilg in the Stlvlf Run C01l Co111Jany
the cent« of the public rom lim ~g and described as fo~
IHding from Middleport 10 lows: Bounded on the ooll by
Golipo~o . Ohio, tnonoe 0111
the low water martc of the
233 foot 10 the Nil line of Ohio River, on the north by
Min""'l Hysotl'o 2 33 / 100 lend of Rov end Gail Herracre lot; thence north 61 deg. mann. on t~ west by the aest
46 min . .... 105 feet 10 the line of the C&amp;O Roilwoy
northeast comer of 111id tot; co,.anv's riaht of wav. on
thonat weot 233 foot to the tho by Iondo of F..,k
center of the public road ..d
Lvnch. baing IPProximately _
northwest comer of Mid lot; 600 feet ak»ng the river ani"'
thenee south 25 dog . 30 200 feet wide and containing
min . welt 106 feet to the .3 acres more or less. in 100
pt.ce of beginning, contain ·
acre k)t No. 376.
ing 67/ 100 acre• more or
This deed convevs the
rights of Jan Mining Co. in the
.
.
The prayer of 11id .ction ia roldwav toedlng from Silver
that the above described rul Run River londing to Stare
e.tate be awarded to the Route #7 over the C&amp;O Rail·
plaintiff. George Lemley, bv way tractl ana it is under·
order of the Court and for llood thet the land hereinoonsuch other relief 11 may be veyed lies between the C&amp; 0
just end equi1able .
Railway's rtght of way and the
The defendant is required low water ,..rtt of the Ohio
to en•~wer the c:;omplalnt River.
,
within twenty-eight day11f~
Roy and Gall Herrman
ter the le•t pu bUcation of have the right for ingre11
'this notice. which will be and egrets over the ro1d tnd
publi1hed one e1ch weerk for land herein c::onveyad to
aix contecutive week•, tt. their ftrm property adjoinlett pubication will be made ina on the north .
on the 13th day of January
The prayer of said 6Ction Ia
1986, and the tw.,ty-oight that the ebove described real
dav• for antwer will com- estate be · aWarded to the
mence on that date.
plaintiffs:-· RICherd Stewart
In CIH of the t.ikue of the and Betty Stewart. by order
ctefenant to an1wer or other· of the c:;ourt and for sucft
wiN reJPOnd U required by
other relief (II mev be ju1t
Ohi&lt;!_.lluleo of Civ~ Prooedure and equitable .
'
judgment will be rendered
The defendant is required
against It for the relief de·
to answer the co~Caint
manded, in the 00"1Jllint.
within twenty·elght days af·
·
Larry E. Spencer tor the tell publication of
'"',."' u• "'ouna thit notice. which , will be
• Melgo County published once Nch w11k
Common Pleas Coun tor sht con1ecuttve weeki.
(121 9. 16. 23, 30; jt )6 . 13 the lest publication will be
6tc
made on the 27th dov of
January, 1986. and the
Public Notice
twentv·eight days for an·
1wer will commence on that

"'"-

Phone 446· 4524

BARGAIH ~ TINEES SAT &amp;SUN
All SEATS $2. 25

TUESDAY $2 .

Great new :s elections for a super,salad
• Broccoli

• Cauliflower
• Sprouts
• Nature mix
• m:ight W.llchers®

• Pineapple-walnut salad
• Pistlchio salad

Plus all your favorites
• Three-bean and other
fresh homemade salads

• lWo hot homemade soups
• Ganlen fresh vegetaiJies
• Fresh fruit

dressing
1

Enjoy over
40 items in ali'

Featuring lbmato Florentine Soup and our House Ranch D~sslng.

~lt~.
Dinner Thble .

IN THE COMMON
PLEASE COURT.
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RICHARD STEWART. ET AL
PLAINTIFFS

date.
1
,
In case of the faiklre of the
defendlnt to answer or other
wloa roopond •• f1141lred by

Ohio Rulel of Civil Procedure
judgment will be rendered

manded in the coqtllint.
Larry E. Spencer
Clerk of Couns

Meigs County Common
Pleas Court
(121 23. 30;
(1)6. 13, 20, 27 6tc

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FtoUCfARY
On Deoember 30. 19B6.

in the Meig• County Probate

Court, Co,. No. 24999,
Richard E. Janel. A.D. #2,
Pomarov. Ohio 45 769, w11
appointed Executor of the
estate of Manning D. Wabs·
tar, dec11Hd, ltte of 1 1 4
· Butternut Street . Pomeroy .
Ohio 45769.
Raben E. Buck,
Probate Judge

re1pect to the chania and
body typo and willotatathet
the but when assembled and
prior to deUvery comply with
all achool diJtrict specific•·
lions, all safety regulations
and current Ohio Minimum
"Standlrdt fOr School Bus
Construction of the Depart·
ment of Highway punuant
to Sec::tion 461 1 .76 of the

Revloed Code and all other
pertinent provistons of law.
SpecifK:ationt and instruc:;tions to bidders are on file in
the offic::e of the Treasurer,
Racine. Ohio.
By Order of the
Board of Education
Dennie E. HilL Treas.
Southern local School
District. Box 176
Racine , Ohio 46771
(t )6, 13, 20, 27. 4tc

Public Notice
Sea~d

Real Estata General

FARM OR INYESDINT
&amp; IUILDING L()TS
POMEROY
Wriaht St.

15 acres wooded lan·d, huge
poplars, excellent timber,
scenic.

MONTGOI'tiRY
REAlTY
614-385-7419

Collect .Calls Accepted

CARS &amp; TRUCKS
•T{IANSFEA CASES•
•TORQUE CONVER f OAS•
•USED - REBUILT
TRANSMISSIONS•

LISA M. KOCH , M.S.

i3:t

Che1ter, Ohio

11-11-1 mo.

.•

z

-

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

FRONT·END

! OCA Tf ll ON
MJ\IN ST

614-379- 1230 mo.

y,, Ptl«ti•S N"i'

Offite Supplin &amp;

furniture, Wedding
ancl Graduohon
Stationery, Magnetic:
lignt, Rubblf ltampt,

Business forms,

Copy Sorwic11, Etc.
255 Mill It., Middleport

lr\. R\.ITLJ'H\1)

Fo1 l\pporrl[ll1!~nt

CALL
141 2o;,;

104 Mulberrw h ., Pomeroy

l] , ~ lie

TOWN &amp; COUN111Y
VETERINARIAN
CLINIC
305 Jack10n be.
SMALL ANIMAL HOUU
Mon.-Wttf.• Thurt. 3-S pm
TuOt. 6:30-8; Fri. 1-2 pm
Saturday 10-11:30 am
LAIGE ANIMAL &amp;

SUIGEIJ BY APPT.

SERVICE

992-3345311/lln
.

All STEEL &amp;
POLE BUILDINGS
Sizes Start from 12'xl6'

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Sizes from 6'x6' Up

to 24'x36'

Insulated Dog Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

Racine, Oh.
Ph. 614-843-5191
I 0-6-tfc

ELUM
REST HOME

~Pr•vioudy

Rullond Rut Hamel

674 Plum St.
Middleport

985-3561
All Maku
•Refrigerators

PLUS:

Parts and Servtce

KEN'S
APPLIANCE

Transmission OvertlatA

F" All

Complete Fro nt End

!CUT OUT FOR FUTURE USEI

•Washers •Dishwashers

THE QUALITY
PRINT SHOP

ALIGNMENT

I

licensed Clinical Audiologist

II'• ()1/lm

Rt. 2, Patriot, Oh.

JOHN TEAFORD

•Ranges
•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and SERVICE

H -tlc

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.
Bashan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
11:30 P.M.
Factory Choke

12 Gauge Shotguns Only

9-30-lf

THE HAT RACK
OPEN THURSDAY
llfltU RINOAY

AT

•Tender Loving Care
•Senior Citizens
•Disabled

•24 Hour Care
CAll JOE BOWLAND

992-3595

11/3011 mo .

B&amp;D Mobile Home
Repair Service
SHADE, OHIO

Anything that has to
do with o mobile
home. No job too smoil
or too big . We do
Setups and

Underpinning.
"Special latos.,for
Senior Citiuns"

PHONE fbl41 992 -6 100
12·20·8S 1 me.

Roger Hyseli
Garage ,

11SIIICKST.

Rt. 124,Pameroy Ohio

POMEIOY

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

CROCHETED
HATS
IN YOUR COLORS
Manv Other Crafts
Available

992-5738

12-5-1 mo.

REPAIR

Also Trau111lsslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121
3-24-tlc

PH. 304-675-2441
BEND AREA CALL
Ripley Office
For Hours
304-372-5709

10-14-llc

CIRCLE
CONTRACTING
Complete Building
and

Contracting Senice
(Free Estimates!

JOHN C. EBLIN
GARBAGE SERVICE
Rt. 2, Coolville

JEFF CIRCLE, SR.

915 -4189

long Bottom, Ohio

WE HAUL- BIG OR SMALL
PICK UP WEEKLY
Reason.tlle Rates - Aeliablfl

PH. 949·2649

lt-22- t mo.

11-12-1 mo.

INSIDE YARD SALE

•Complete Remodeling
•Room Additions
dooling
•Siding

21

Business

Opportunity

Down from Rutland Post
Office. will be running until
after Christmas. New &amp;
used toys, something for
ttle whole family , dolls ,
tools. novelties, etc .
12-4-15 t mo.

MOORMAN FEED
BUSINESS
OPPORTUNITY

Nationally-known manu la&lt;:turer needs loaf ules
and service representative.
On-the-job training. Woufd
prefer person who has
raised livestock or been in
our business. Must have
&amp;ODd reputation and credit
ratinr. For confidential interview send resume to Box
II c/o The Daily Sentinel.
Box 729, Pomeroy, Ohio.

54 Misc. Morchandise'

•Garages &amp; Pole
Buildings

MARCUM
CONTRACTING

Hou ,..,, Woddi..,,

long Bottom, Ohio

Anniwtnory or lptcral

Ph. 985-4141

Occasion on Video ....We
Topo Any Sptciol Occalion.,

Free Estimates

9-111 mo.

CHAlliS IA•EY
PH. 742·2050

11 -18-3 mo.

BOGGS
SALES &amp; SERVICE

MAKE"IT ARULE...

U. S. RT. 50 EAST

. USE WANT ADS. •::· ·
ARANDY ".

GUYSVILLE, OHIO
Authorized John Doero,
New Holland. Bush Hog

TOOL

Farm Equipment
Dealer

2 BUILDING LOTS
1 ACRE PLUS
14,000 CASH
SPRING STREET
6 ACRES- $6,000
ATTENTION BULDERS
This property has been sub·
divided into I acre - 10
acre sites, can be sol d individually. Leu water oblain able, priced low, possible
excellent terms. Th~ ~ an
excellent buy for either far m
or development
•

AU AMERICAN MADE

Automatic

•R epair

....................
WANT ADS

(1 ) 5, 13. 20. 3tc

Education of tha SQuthem
Locat.Scttportl"illricl of Ro~
cine. Ohio at the treasurer's
offic:;e until 1 2:00 noon on
January 31. 1986 end at
that time opened by the trea·
turer of Hid board 11 pro·
vldod by law-for two (21 71
panenger school busu, ac·
cording to IPIICiflcations of
uid Board of Education.
Separate and lnclopendont

a:

MILLER
ELECTRIC
SERVICE
FOR ALl YOUR
WIRING NEEDS

Residential &amp; Commercial

Call:

992-5875 Or
742-3195

11 -14-tfc

RENT A CAR
CALL
446·4522

"W1 Rul Fotlm"

U-SA~E

AUTO
RENTAL
St. Rt. 160 North
Cllllpolls, Ohio

]Il l f lirt

.MI . . . . . . . - . . - .

Lena K . Na11elroad, Cl!trk

PUBLIC NOTICE
proposals will be
received by the Board of

z

8-13 tin

AUTOMAnC
TRA'NSMISSION
OVERHAUL

Youth Clubs
•Shoes •Trop hies

; 7 Yr&lt;&gt; r~P'''I''!IU'

Pcml!~, . 0~1 0

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

Compm Quelltg, Not Ptiee

No lottery winner

PHONE
992-2156
01 Wnte Da1lly Sentinel Ctassilted Dot.

Cl

Rutland
Gollip&lt;l~s
742-2225 or 742'-2778
446-9244
9:00 A.M.· 1&gt;:00 P.M. Monday-Saturday

DUGAN'S
CLEVELAND (UPII - When
Ohio Lottery officia ls found no
winning tickets in Saturday night's
Ohio Lotto, they raised the jackpot
for Wednesday night's drawing to
at least $3 nillllon.
,
Officials looked through
$3,698,6Z7 worth of tickets for the
numbers 4, 7, 12, 15, 35 and 39.

Sentinel - Page~ 7

Business Services
'Bi.UTSiiEAK aiTct:-'t · PHONE 992-7075 t·
t ··, Now Se~vlng All OF f;
Melfi Counfg
A:
t. . . and Sunounding '

Area death

Public Notice

vs.

Mr. and Mrs. Jake Holman and
Rodnry and Mist&lt;'&lt;'. and Ethel
Carter of Oregon.

E~ ERY

&lt;

Emergency squads kept busy

Paul E. Shockey, DVM
Pl. PLEASANT OFFICE

The Rutland Bowhunrers Association has elected offiCE'rs for 1986.
The group includes Paul Searls,
Salem Center. president; Charlie
Wil liams, Rutland. vice president:
.Jackie Searls. Salem Center, secretary: Bill Perine, Amesv111e. beasurer: Barbara Stewart, Rutland,
repot1er. and Terry George, Ru tland: Ron Collins. Rutland ; Ron
Fraley, Addison. and Paul Sea&lt;is,
range captains.
The club has numerous event s
scheduled for 19!li the first of which
will be indoor shooting at the
Rutland Ci,·ic Center to he held all
p.m. every Satuttlay through
March I.
Anyone wishing fut1 her informa tion about the club and its activities
is asked to call Paul or Jackie
Searls. 7-12-2%3: Charlie Williams,
7-12 -2~&gt;1i0. or Bill Perine. 592 1919.

~31

)

:i

: : AFTER MAJOR REPAIRS DR. RIGGS WOULD UKE TO
·: : THANKS HIS PAnENTS FOR THEIR UNDERSTANDING

::

t,

The Daily

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Ill Court St..

TiffMy He nsley

;

,.

new Items had been sent to the
Veterans Memorial Hospital in
Chillicothe and that used Items wUI
be shipped later.
The chapter agreed to cooperate
with the Sons of the American
Revolution in beating Revolutionary soldiers' graves In the county.
Mrs.' Reynolds, regent, and Mrs.
Nan Moore, Mrs. Dayton Parsons
and Mrs. Clyde Ingels were elected
as delegates to the state ronvEiltlon
In Columbus In March. Mrs. George
Hackett, Mrs. Clarenoe Struble,
Mrs. Virgil Atkins, Mrs. Pearl
Mora, and Mrs. EUeen Buck were
named alternates.
Delegates electi!d to Continental
Congress In Washington, D. C. were
Mrs. Reynolds, regent, and Mrs.
Clarence Struble, with Mrs. Atkins,
Mrs. CEcll Blackwood, Mrs. Dayton
Parsons and Mrs. Vernon Weber as
alternates. Refreshments were
served by Mrs. Weber, Mrs. Atkins,
Mrs. CecU Blackwood, Mrs. Stephen Jenkins, and Mrs. Parsons.

'6. 1985

•

.Joe Humphre)•. son of Mr. and
Mrs. Gene Humphrey, Port\eroy,
left Tuesday for Lackland Air
Force Base. Texas, for basic
training. He Is the grandson of
My nil' Grover.

Named to honor roll.
Eleven Meigs Countlans have
been named to the fall quarter
honor roll of the Tri-County Voca tional Center's Adult Education
Department. R('Cclving ali A's and
B's to be na med to. lhP rull at the
.school In Nelsonv ille were James
· . Brown and Danny Jacks, carpentry
course; Marsha Barnhart and

Including the house, berry potato,
melon, buttocks or egg, market ,
twill weave, apple feather, heart,
measuring and key baskets. She
noted that the key basket was kept
by the backdoor and was actually
used as a place for the keys to
outbuildings.
Mrs. Ronald Reynolds, regent.
presided at the meeting which
opened In ritualistic form . Mrs.
ClarenCl' Sttruble was acting cha·
plain. In the national defense ·
report, Mrs. Pearl Mora told alxiul
possible give-away of some of the
Islands &lt;1ft he roast d Alaska which
are rich In oil deposits. The regent
reponed that tlhe president general
had presented $:lXJ,(XX) to Lee
IOC!l&lt;ra, chairman llr the restoration cr. the Statue of Liberty with the
balance d s:IXI,&lt;XXJ due In 19!1&gt;.
Mrs. Mora, registrar, reported
tbat Mrs. James Patterson and
Mrs. James Werry had been
received Into membership. Mrs.
Robert Ashley rported that S53'7 in

basketry

Officers
elected

Returns to duty

Woman graduates at
business college
Linda Thoma. daught er of Glen
and Grace Thoma. Chpster. graduated Dec. 21 from the Southeastern
Ohio Business College at Jackson
.-ith an associates degrf'l' in
micro-computer science. For the
past quarter she received a four
point grade average. For the two
year program. shr has a 144
accumulative grade point average
Attending he graduation ceremo- .
nics In Jackson were her parents.

.

gmup singing of "We. Thff'l' Kings"
and a poem, "What Can I Give
Him."
The love offering was collected.
Officers' reports were read and 24
sick and shu tin calls were reponed .
May Holter was reported ill. Fruit
baskets were prepared for delivery
to shu tins .
Evelyn Hollon was program
leader using the topic, "Gifts of
Love." Scripture was from Luke 1
and 2, read by Faye Wiggins. TherE'
were several readings on the
customs of Christmas and legends
intersperced with hymns. A prayer
on Christmas was followed by a gift
exchange and refreshments.

Mrs. Shirley Huston talked on
"Baskl'try" at a recent mEeting of
Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter,
Daughters or the American Revolutlon, held at t~ home of Mrs.
Vernon Weber.
Mrs. Huston introduced her
program with comments on the
history of baskl'try referring back
to Biblical times when Moses was
placed In a bask£'! on the Nile River.
Baskl'ts then were woven of roots
and vines, according to Mrs.
Huston, who allll told of the
American Indians who made several different kinds of baskets,
Including work baskets as well as
ritual baskets. The Algol)quln
Indians, she said, made what was
known as tlhe Nantucket Lightship
baskets. Cultivated wUiow later
came from Europe to be used In
making market baskets and
hampers.
The speaker displayed various
baskets !rom her own collection,
some of which she had made,

discus~es

Monday, January

F11111 EquipMent
P1rt1 &amp; SeNiee

t .J.If&lt;

SALIS REPS
CCG CABLE
Is

now

occepling

YOUNG'S
op.

plicarions for quolified
soles people. Candidates
should be well ·groomed ,
personable ond relioble.

Travel Is requi red with

lodging

paid. These are

full -l imo, com""inion paid
posili0ml wi th potential lo
$500 / weel.; . So les ' elf·

perle nce preferred. Apply
In person at CCG, 1410
Jefferson Blvd., Point

, Pleasant.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addoot •nd remodelinl!
- Roofing •nd gutter work
- Concrtt• woflt
- Plumbing •nd •lectric•l
work

• (Free Estimates)

V. C. YOUNG Ill
992·6215 or 992·7314
Pomtroy, Ohio
12-8-llc

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

10-8-tfc

3 I 7 North Se&lt;ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE
We Also Carry

Fishing Supplies.
"""''- IUI!HIII PHONE
(6141992 -6550
IEIIDENCE PHON!
(6141992-7714'
I 72/t!

J&amp;F
CONTRACTING

RADIATOR

DOZER , BACKHOE.
TRENCHER. SEPTIC
SYSTEMS, WATER ,
OAS &amp; ~EWER UNES,
RECLAMATION, PONDS.
SPRING DEVELOPMENT.
HOME FOOTERS.
DUMP TRUCK STONE
&amp; DIRT

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

JIM CLIFFORD
PH. 992-7201 ,

9n-2t9s
Middleport, Ohio

•VINYL SIDING
• ALUMINUM SIDING
0 ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSRL

SIDING CO.
New Hames Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949·2801
or 949·21110
No Smdar Calls
1/ 11 / rln

SERVICE

PAT HILL FORD
1-13 -lfc

EUGENE LONG

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.
VINYL &amp; ALUMINUM
Complete Gunor Wortt

Complete Remodeling
Roofing of all Types
Worked In home area

20 years
" Free Estimates"

CALL COLLICT:

Ph. (6141 843-5425

11 -12-2 mo.

�..,._..""'....

~·

,.

. .. ...-..... .. ... . - - .

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
11

AIl llUll llC t:lil t: Il lS
3

1

Announcements

Giveaway

WE NEED YOUR PRIOR Mil·
rTARV SERVICE EXPERIENCE
IN THE ARMY NATIONAL
GU AR 0 . Monthly paycheck.
retirement benefit1. education all
aulstance, end ot:her benefit~
av1ilable to our par1 · t•m•
memben. 304-6715 -3950 OJ
1 ·000·642 -3e19

Cute, male puppy to good home.
8-8 wks old, blec~ with whit•
blue. Call614 -"6- 1364
To give away-puppies. mixed
bteod . mother 11 a beagle.
814-742 -2010 anytime.
lr11h Setter end Auttrallan
He1ler miud puppies 10 give
~ay . 2 to 3 months old . Black
colored witt1 f11tur11 like the
SeHM. 61 4 -742 · 2578

ARE THOSE BILlS FROM THE
CHRISTMAS HOUOAYS Pll ·
lNG UP . Join the ArmyN1110nal
Guard and voo will get a monthly
paycheck. a good pan-time
care~r , 1nd many other grut
benefits 304 ·175·39M or 1800 -M2· 3619

304-882 -3427

lost and Found

lady to hve1n with elderly ledy.
304 675 2685 Of 576-2242 .

LOST Bleck &amp; tan Gordon
Setter . Since Christmu
Aodney-Btdwell Ad . 1n11 . Pleaae
Clll 614 -246 -9375 .

Easy Assembly Workl 8600 00
par 100 . Guaranteed payment.

LOST:male brown German She·
pherd end also • black Dober ·~
man If found deed or 8li\le, 1
pleue call 614 -367 -7191 Reward offered
lOit : Vel"¥ friend!'¥ bleck, brown
and white m1le dog with blue
eyes . Jencho Rd . 304· 675 ·
7446 .
P.11r1 Siamese m1le cat Body
creamy. rest 1triped . Blue eyes.
Greer Rd . Reward l 304 -675·
2169 .

8

No Elq)erience·No S1l11. Details
!lind selt-eddreued ltamped
envelope: Elen Vl181 -5847 3418
Enterprise Ad , Ft Pierce. Fl
33482

12

Situations
Wanted

Vacancy for the elderty in 01..1r
hom~ Tra1ned and fiftaen ye•ra
upar1ence . Call 614 -992 ·
7314
Individual with nperi«1ce' in
typing, shortt1and.•nd word pro·
ceiling. Seek•ng employment.••
secretary or recept ionist For
co ""'lete reaume call 61 4· 992·
7419 .

Public Sale
.,. &amp; Auction

RICK PEARSON AUCTIONEER
SERVICE . Estate. farm, antique,
liquidation sales licensed Ohio
and Wett Virginia . 304 -713 ·
-6786 or 304-n3 · &amp;&amp;30

Vac8ncv lor an elderty man or
woman h private home 614·
992 -7553

18 Wanted to Do

·9 , Wanted To Buy
Wep.ay cash tor late model clean
used cars .
Jim Minlc Cl'lev ·Oids Inc
Bill Gene Johnson
614 ·.UIS -3672

W111 be by Sit i" my home . 5 devs
a wetHl . From 7· 6 dayshift See
in person· 202 'h E. MainSt
Apt.2, Pomeroy , Oh.

Financial

WANTED TO !!IUY used wood &amp;
. coel heaters SWAIN 'S FUANI·
TURE . 3rd. &amp; Olive St. Gallipo lis Call 61 4·446· 31 59 .
TOP CASH paid for "83 model
and newer used cars . SmitM
BuiCk-Pontiac. 1911 Eestem
Ave ., Gallipolis Call 61 4 -446 ·
2282
Good u•ed datil. Call 1ft1H 8PM,
114· 441 -4053 .
Buying d11ly gold , silver coms ,
rings , jewelry, sterling ware .. old
coins. large currency Top pri·
ces. Ed Burken Berber Shop.
2nd A\18 Middleport. Oh 61 4 ·
992 -3476
- - - - -- - - - · lc Buytng Raw Fur Beef •nd Deer
hides. Sellmg 1r1pptng supphes
WMeet and nite lites. Geo rge
Buck ley , 614 - 664 - 4761
Hours12 9pm
350 eng1ne lot 77 Chevy p1ckup
truck 304 ·57 6 2ti95 after 6
pm

Employment
Servic es
11

21

Staal bUikllflg dulerltup w1th
miJOr man ufacturar-sales &amp; en ·
gineerlng a~pport . Starter ads
fum1sl'led . Some ~reu taken .
Call 304 -759 3200 ext . 2401
Beauty Shop for ule . Owner will
f~n anca Call evet11ngs 814 698 5 535

22 Money to loan

23

Help Wonted

Piano tuning and repair. tune up
for fl'le holidays. speciel d11 ·
count Werd 's Keyboard . 304·
675 -5500 Of 675 · 3824 .

Kaep thos e New Vears Aesolu·
tion1 Lose we1g1"1t . feel great .
eam extre dollars lOAM RPM .
614 · 446 4746
AVON Sell Avon pay Clmstma1
b1l11 . hmited time start up fu ·
AHE Ca ll614 -446 -3358
DECK HANDS immed11teopen ·
ings for de ck hands . hne
h.andlen . mec1"1a n1e1 . welders .
other trades Excellent ben efits
packege includes on the 10b
training , world travel and 1 great
pay check . Applicants 5hould be
17 -24 , in good ph y5ical condi·
tion, must pau SA curity baclt ·
groun d invUI Jgatio ns MuJt
have tugh schoo l d1plome or
GED Call tOll lr ee m Oh 1o
1 ·800 - 282 1384 Mon -F11 .
9AM 2 PM .
Seniterien Posmon Open in the
Gellie Coun ty Health Depart ·
ment Expenence 1n En\llf On·
mantel S1n1tat1o n preferrl'ld
A S or R s eligible preterrl'ld
Applic aho "s are l\1811able at the
Health Department 1n the 8ue
m111t of the Courthouse Mon·
day thru friday , 8 -12 1nd 1-4
Equal Opponunity Empiover
AN or LPN lor priv&amp;te du ty Ca ll
614-446 · 4421
Position s lor interv1ew5 for
._.bllttute and part time pro
gr•mmers 11 Middl&amp;ten Estatel
on January 8 and 9th. Applice·
tion to be tilled at Th1 Oh1o Job
Serv1ce• on January 7 and 8th
Funher information will be given
It 614 -"6· 9676 or 8U·446·
2283 . Ask lor su perviabr
Eeay As•embly Wo rk l 1600 00
per 100 .Guarenteed Payment
No E lq)&amp;rience· No Sell!ll. Deteill
send seH·eddr&amp;Ssod 1t1mpoc:t
envelope: Elan Vital -715 3418
Enterprile Ad , Ft Pierce, Fl
33482
Government job s t16 .04 0
S&amp;9,230 NIJ~ h~ring . Cell 806
887·6000. ~t . R-9805 for
Current fedl!lrellist .
Attent io n A . N 1 •nd
L.P . N.'e:Pomarov Health
Center II accepting appli cations
for elevtn to 18Ven sh ift nu11es
who en;ov wortdng in long term
cart. Excellent benefits Salary
commensurate with area. Only
thOle nurs" wtlo enjoy t,e
profu1ion need IIPPIV · APPiice·
tlone accepted through Jan . 10 .
E.O.E

c.,.

Professional
Services

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

Bv owner Must Hll ·moved 3
bdr ranch . one CIT gar8ge.
walkmg distance from Nonl'l
Gallie High Scho ol Reduced to
S29 .900 C•ll 614 -388 -8711
4 bedroom hou1e for Jell.
fi rap lace . 3 m1. south of Gall1p0·
l11. $32 .500 Call diYI 614·
446 161 5 or n1ghts 614 446·
1244
6 room house 1 '11 ltory , '1::! b811"1
shower b11ment . 2 car garage,
3' 1 e cre1 in Waln ut Twp on SR
79 0 Cell6 14 -446 -0568
- -- - - - - - - ·lcBv o wner Remodaled 3 bed·
roomhOuseonRI 33 Newf A
furnace, large lot t23 ,000
Collect 614 --423 -6289
- -- - - - - - ·IC8y owner. Stitely. 3 bedroom
hou 1eat 10 E St in Po meroy 5
wood ed acrftl lem1ty room
dming room. f .A haat 2 b•tl"1s
basement. gar~ge S27 .000
Col le ct 614 -42 3 ·6289
At 2 . Ashton, Arrington House.
3 bedrooms , 1 'h blthl, modern
kitchen , basement. 1 1cre plu s,
priced m ti"1e 40 ' s Cl-rde Bowen ,
Jr , 304-578-2336
Exterio r co mplete
intarior
ralldy to complete All bridl .
enMgy efftcient. three bedroom
A•ncher 11tting on 1 acre Pr1ced
on inspection only . 304·675
2961 .
1906 N Ma in, 4 br housa
Newl y re mode led 304 -676 ·
2 130
3 bedroom hou11e . 2 ll:tM. city
w•ter. frn gas . 10 minutes from
Kaiser for sele or long tirm rent.
304 -273 -2848 .

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
1973 Baron trlller, 3 bedrooms.
furnished , tot• l elec, m~w c •rpet
and fum itura . Newly painted
roof, c• ilings •nd outside . Out·
door storage bldg. corner lot.
304-773-&amp;812.

72

Momlay, llanuari 6, 1985.

Television
Viewing

1 WANT 10 1A LK

1tl TRACY! CSET Hl M!

For ula Ford pickup 81 bed.
S760 &lt;'88 Fnbd1l Honde 250 Bit
Red. 81 .200. C1ll t14 - ~9901
.

0

1980 Chevy 4x4 3150 auto .. 4ln.
lift kh. new 38 Gumbo's. eliding
beck gl..e. mtnv utral, a1klng
06.100. Coli 814 ·246·6407.

(I

•

73

Vans

' CAPTAIN EM.l:'
IN THE ROOM AIVD READ. 1 FEEL
L.IKE L'M INTRUDIN5 ON THE~E
PeOPLE.&gt; L I Ve~.

740'h SecondAV• 3bdr .. •190
mo., diP requlr.ci . Call 114·
441·'222 betWHn 9 &amp; 6.

45

dinner!"

Furnished Rooms

----------For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light house keaping rooms . Park
Central Hotel . Call
4 ·446·
07&amp;6

54 Misc. Merchandise 63

I,

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEn QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI .
WEST. GAlliPOUS . AT 35 .
PHONE 814 -448 -7274.
1982

Cl1y10n. 14X66. fully
furn ., wui"1er. dryer, AC . under ·
pinning &amp; porch Exc. cond ..
Meke an Offer. C•ll 614· 256 1821 Of 614 -268 -6315.
1982 14x70 with 22ft. expando
on rented lot. 2 bdr, AC ,
underpinning , porch , metal
building. Call 614· 246-9634
14x70 fleetwood . 3 bdr .. H'!
bathl, extre riloe . owner moved
and must sell. C•tl 614 ·256·
6587 Of 814 -868 -1887
1980 Uberty 1 4•54 , 2 bed·
room. unfumi1hed , vinyl underpinning Included Must MII..Call
304-n3 -6B73 .
MOBILE HOMES MOVED : in·
sured , reason1bll rates , Call
304·576· 2331
1980 Uberty 14x54. 2 br
unfurnished . vinyl underpennmg
Included. Mutt Sell. 30ol· 773·
5873.

41

Houses for Rent

3 bedroom hou,. in Henderson
304-876 ·7448

Hou11beping room, .. nge. refrig ., lhare bath, mele preferred,
utillti• pd •125 Call 44&amp;·
44U •fter 7pm.

2 bedroom home , 101 Burde"t
St. 304-875 -7207.

46 Space for Rent

2 br hou1e, 2107 Lincoln
Untumillhld, ltove •nd refriger·
ator 304-675·8747

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
furnished , AC , cable. no city
tiJIII, beautiful river viWI" in
Kaneuga . folttft Mobile Home
Park. Cell 11 4 -441·1602
2 bdr fully fumlsh.cl, 1 2xl15,
con\1 . location, Uppet River Rd,
water paid. sec . dep required .
Caii614 ·«1-BI558 .
12x65 Windsor fumiehld. new
carpet, gal hut. centnl air,
Aoulh Line in Chathira. Call
8U ·317·0221 or .814-387 7242.
2 bdr. furnishttd trailltf fOf rent .
Neighborhood Rd. Call 814446 -4767.
12d5 mobile ,ome, 2 bdr.
pr.ttr coupl1. Call Rd. Call
614-256 -1110 .
1982 1 4x 70 wrth 22 ft 8.1p•ndo. 2 bdr . Call 814· 246·
9534.

Why pey double price? We build
big 4 bdr Early American Hom•
818 ,996. New model open . Csll
8 14·886 ·73 11.

3 bdr., trailltf , Addison , metropolitln housing approved, ehildrtn I pet1 wMcome •1 &amp;0 mo .
Call after 8 :00 , 81•· 245-9845.

Ju1t 2 '1J miln off At 35 in
Muon County. Ellie. hunting &amp;
pri\lacy on th11 133 acres
Adjoining Corn Stall• State P1rk.
11k1ng t37 .000. Must IIAI Call
614·446 0208 after 5 :30PM .

2 bdr . moblle home for rt~nt.
ldulte only, no pets, ref. &amp; dep.
required. Call 814-367-1743.

Houses for Rent

3 bdr , \1tge kitchen. nice utility
room, 1 car garega. 1295 mo .
Ref a. dep required . Cell 6144U -1358
5 roomt &amp; bath. newly deco rated Inquire •t 918 Second
Ave ., Gallipolis .
4 room• &amp; b1th , newly deco18lad Inquire at 918 Second
Ave . G1llipo lis
'-'1 duplex for tent 2 bch .. 2 miles
hom Holzer. 1 yr old Cell
614 -446 -1910 or 614 -379
2248

3 bdr. home Wilk-in cadit
Kyger Creek 1c:hool dis·
trict Caii614 ·448·0U8

I

Nice, one bdr ., central location
In city, g81 halt , CA. patio &amp; off
ltrMt parking. Must have ref . I
dep . Call 614· 448 -4169.
2 bdr. 811 eiii!ICtric, wood burner.
carpat throughout. AC , dad
with •wning, 2'1.! mil .. on At.
688 , ~ chlldrtn. or inlida pets.
Call 614·-448 -4807 or 614·
4•&amp; -2602.
2 bedroom mobile home near
R•cln1 . 61'4 ·992 ·!i868
10x50 mobile homa for rtnt.
C1ll 814· 949-2424.
1-4-.70 . 3 bedroom Peni"lv
furnished . U25 . per month plus
d1p01it and utilitin . No pete.
614-992·74.7 9 .
for rent with opti~n to buy. 2 br
S135 , month . w-.er furn ished.
C1ll ettet" 4 :30 p.m 304·676·
1108
One and two bedrooms , Sand
Hill Road . 304-676 -3834

c~nt.

N•ce 3 bdr. home 111 k1tchen
8PPiilncu . ' lo cated Sanders
Drive , Gellipol is , 1300 per mo ..
ue dep. ref . required. C•ll
614 -446 -0254
3 bdr . 8'1::! mil.. p!'lst Holzar on
Rt 160. t300 mo . 1150 dep .
no pets Call 614·388 -9763 .
2 bedroom hOuse t 210 mo. S76
dePOsit 42 Chillicothe Rd. Cell
614· 4-46 -1340 or 614 -446 ·
3870
House for rent. S350 mb . plus
S150 dep or for ule 3 bdr ..
fam1ly room. batl'1 &amp; '.-': . loc1ted
3v1 m1 out of G•llipolls on At .
688 Call 614· 266·6789 or
614 -256 -6206
6 room house , o pen g~raga . In
Alhed Cummuni ty Referencn
8fld dep011t r~tquired Call 614 985 -3849
House or 8Pf lo r rent . FutnishMI
or unturn11htd . 614 ·992 2381
d•v• Of" 614 -992 -6723 eves
Secluded country f~rm h~'ll , 3
bedroom F A hMt Wurlty
deposit "• t 260 mo nth 614·
742 -2877
5 room houae •nd b1th m Racine
area. Available J•n uary 4th . C•ll
614 -992 -5858 .

44

Mobile home lot, 12 ' d0' or
smelllll", 17!5 water paid, 4th &amp;
Neil. G1llipoli1. Call 448-4.16
aftllf 8PM.
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Large lou Calll14-992 -7479 .

35 Lots &amp; Acreage

41.

•

Apartment
for Rant

Deluxe 2 bdr downtown, com·
plett kitchen , •II c~rpet. washer.
dryer . electric heat a. AC. Dap.
raquired Cell days 6,4 .446·
4383 , eve &amp; weellends 614 446·0139
furnished apt ., 4 rooms &amp; beth.
no pets, adults Awillble Dec. 1.
Call614 -446 -1519
large 5 room uplt8!rt 8pt.,
lum11hed kitchen. 8200 mo
plus utiliti8s, 238 1st Ave Rei
&amp; dep. no peta Call 614 -446·
4926 .
~aw

one bdr. eHic1eney lpt C1ll
814·-4•6· 0390.
Juat IVIilable 2 1ptnment1 for
rent Cell 614 ·446 -924.1

Merchandtsu
51 Household Goods

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 12
Oliva St., G1llipoli•. N.w 6 uHd
Wood ·co81 1tove1. 8 pc wood lR
suite t399 , bunk beds t1 99 ,
antron rt~ehnera 199. new &amp;
uMd bedroom suite~ . ranges .
wrlngtf' wsshers. Ill .tloet. New
llvingroom suit• t 1 99 -t699 ,
lemps, •lao buying coal &amp; wood
stov•. C•ll 8H -....1-3159 .
lAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sot• and cheirs priced from
t286. to S89! . Tlbl01. t60 and
up to t125 . Hkle-a ·bedt,t390 .
and up to t560., 10fa beds
f1415. Recliner~, 1226 . to
t375 , lamp• from t28 . to
t125. pc dineHn from S109 .,
to 435. 7 pe. I 189 and up . Wood
teble with 1111. ch1ira t285 to
1745. Dnk t110 up to t226 .
Hutch01, tl5150 . Bunk bod comp4eta wlttl m1ttre1101 , 1276 .
end up to 1395 . Baby bedl,
t110 Mettrau .. or box
aprinv•. full or twin , t&amp;3 .: firm,
S73 •lld t83 . Queen Mts.
U2fi 4 dr . cheatl, t49 5 dr.
c,e1t1. 169 . Bed frames ,
UO.and 126 .. 10 gun • Gun
cabinets. 1360. Gas or electr•c
rang" t3715. Baby mattru1es.
US C. 145, bed tramM UO,
S26 . .. no. king frame uo.
Good se lec tion of bedroom
auites , rockert , metal c1bineta,
heldboards t3B Ill up to t85.
Used Fumiture .. Dresser. &amp; bed.
met1l office d"kl . 3 m ilet out
8ul•ville Rd. Open 9am to 15pm,
Mon thru Sat
&amp;14· 446 -0322
GOOD USED APPLIANCES
Washers. dryers. retriger1tors .
ranges . Skeggs Appliancu .
Upper River Rd . betide Stone
Cre~t Motel. 81 4· 441 -7398.

2 bdr . ept ~Mrtially turn ..
downtown, wltlt p11d, f115
mo Houseforrant7room, S150
me Call 114 -446-3919 or
814-441·0021

3 bedroom house for rent in
Middl epon t226 pM month .Oakwood ept . 1 bdr, stove &amp;:
plus deposit . Pay own utilities refrtg .. See. Dep .. no pets. C1ll
Ce ll 614 ·992 · 7607. 1ft 5 614 441· 2065 lfttr 2pm.
weekdays
New 1 1nd 2 bedroom furnithed
Large Mouse and apartment. 8PII and houll i" Middleport
unfurn111'11d . 304-6 75 -1385 .
~:~ . 1~~~-.992 · 5,304 Of 114HO USES FOR RENT 911 Wil ·
low La ne. 3 bedrooma. living 2 bedroom furnishttd apt in
room. b8th. eet -ln kitchen with Middleport . Allutilltieapald . Cell
w111het and dryer hookupl end 614· 992 -15084
carport Aenter PIYI electr ic 1nd
water t200 par month plus 4 room apt with bath. Partillty
dePOSit
furnished . 814-982 ·15908 .
711 Viand , 3 ~ooms . bath ,
living room , dining room, ktl · Furniahld 1 b41droom 1pt . No
chen. l•u"dry room, 1nd base· pets. Deposit required . 814.
ment . A1nter p•ye water, g" 992 ·2937
1nd electric. t2!50 per month
plua deposit
5 room unfumlshfil' apartment .
1102 Viand . 3 t».droom1 . 2 Call 814 -992 -5434 or 304baths. li\lino room. dining room, 882 -2168.
f1mf ity room and k/tchtn wtth 1- - - - - - - - - - wu,lf and dryer hoo~up . Ren - APARTMENTS , mobil• hom",
ter PlY I gal. w1ter and el.atrtc. hou .... Pt. PlaUint and Gallipo·
S176 par month lut dlpOiit .
lis. 814·448-8221 .
APARTMENTS FOR RENT'
2806 Jacll.10n Ave., 2 bed· 2 br apartments In Henderson.
roomt, bath , kitchen •nd living 304-17!5 -1972 .
room , ranter peyulectrlc, 1250
per month plu1 depoeit.
NIDI 1 and 2 br apertmtnll
14 10 Ohio. 1 IMdroom. living downtown . 304·876·221 8 .
room ·ltitchen combinetion and 8·1
bath. Renter p11ys electric and
Wltet , S200 per month plus Furnished one bedroom ept In
deposit.
upper Point Pl1e11nt, ellltn nic. ,
TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
no pets, phon• 3()41..876-1388.
REAL ESTATE.
Broker. 175-6148
Unturnishlld garttJt apt. , adult•.
no pet1. CaN 30•·171·1011.

Callahan' s UMd Tlr~ Shop Over
I ,000 tires, aiz• 12. 13 , 14, 15 ,
11. 18 .6 . 8 miles out At . 218 .
Call614-266 · 6251 .
Dairycue9 ft . widewtttl remote
comp ., UOO . C1ll 614 -246 6062 .
Firewood 840 loed delivered .
Lendaceplng. Get your free
e1tim1te1 NO'Ik for Spring .-.d
....... c.n 614 -446 -1799 d•v•
or 814·«1· 9646 after e.
Slab•- te per bundle while they
last. C•ll tl14 -24!!i-6804 .
Bl•clt powder t5 .95 Tho~son
center guns . muu le loading
tuppW• .tlop . Koebel 's Guns Ill
Repau . Mill Creek Rd. 1 mile ofl
Rt. 7. Hrs. M-F, 6 -8PM. Stt.
1 ·15. C•ll 814 -. . 8 -2316 .
Kenmore .ewing machi"•· wei ·
nut c8binet •&amp;o. Presto oooker c•nn• including j•r• t26 . Call
61 4·448 -1746 .
Firewood for 111e t26 .00 pickup
lold. 8315.00 delivered . Call
61 4· 251·6208 .
Continued- Ammo Sale et 2310
Eutam. further reductKlns on
10 &amp;. 410 .tlot 1,1111. rifle Ill
pistol ammo reduced additional
$1 .00 · 12.00 , 10me rarities .
Sale continuing thru 1 · 14 · B6 .
Stop in &amp; IN !0 pc. display of
hea\ly, light &amp; sw~m•chin1gun1 .
Call 81-4 ·448 -1822 eve. 4 30·
8 :30 . Open all day S1t &amp; Sun
20 g11ton aquarium complete
with bleck rod Iron stand &amp; ell
accee10rlts, like new t76 . Call
114·448 ·0015 .

Gons ava/leble for tale or trede.
304-676 -n17

64

Hay

Cobr1 CB, 2 chnt of drewers. 2
beds, c1pt1in ' s bed , 15' snow
tlrn Call814· 256· 1768
300 series John o ..,. glfden
tractor bled e. term ptes. Reese
hitctt, ton ch1in Mitt. Call
61-4-2&amp;8-1529 .
125.00 ca•h paid for junlc can .
C•ll 814 ·246·9264 or 614 ·
6a2·7183 .
Mbed hardwood 1llb1. 112 . per
bundle, containing approx 1 'h
ton , fob. Ohio Pallet Co .. Pome roy . Ohio. Phone 614· 992 6461.
firewood 135 .00 large pick-up
toed . Heap vouchers eccepted .
614 -742 ·2466 .

L..l!lrge round beles of hay t20 ee.
Call 614 · 441· 10 52 •fter 5PM.
At1•1fa, orchard grau hev · 1st.
2nd, ltd . Cunlng by tht bale or
truckloed . C•II614-26S-8536.

Good clean clover Ill orchard
gren hav . Cell 614-388-8713.

Hay fo r sale . Excellent qu81ity
large round twltes . 120. &amp; 125 .
814·742-2Sn
Hay for sale. Orchard grau&amp; red
clover. Seventy tNe canu e bale
614· 949 -2656 1ft. 5 p.m .

54 Misc . Merchandise

TO NV 'S GUN REPAIRS, hot dip
reblueing . all type• of gun1m1th
work . fell Mrvice, 304-675.
4&amp;31 .
lump houte coal. limastona.
gravel , Hnd delivered . one ton
end up . Jim Lanier , 304-176·
7397 or 675 -1247 .
Serious •bout loeino weight1
Contact Glori• Gr~te . R t 2. Bo•
282 . lttart. WV . 26253. 304·
882 ·3162.

56

BrilfPitCh Kennels All· br&amp;ed
grooming. Adults &amp; puppie1 .
Enghsh Cocker Spenlels . 3889790.
Dragonwynd C•ttery Kennel .
CFA Himalayan. Persl•n and
Siemese kittens . AKC Chow
pupptes. Call 446 ·3844 after
7PM.
AKC REg . lh•se Apio ·puppies.
6 week told . wormed , firat
shots, 1 mall, 1 fem•l• C•ll
614 ·441 ·0706 .
Burros. 1-6 mo . m•le 1-1B mo .
mele . Very gentle and well
m1nnerld . 814·742·2877 .
M1l1 Beegle . Good rsbbit dog .
140 Call614·992-2832.

Far m Suppl tt!s
&amp; Lt veslod

Moto Ski 210 Ski doo snow
mobile• . •4215 .00. 304 -882 3376.
She 50 per cJ.tll Fluhing
arrow stgn1 128911 lighted ,
non -errow 1289 . Unl lgtlted
1219. tFrH IIHert l) SH lbCIIIy.
!800)423 -01 8 3 , •ny tl me .
(800)828-2828, ext 1504.
Rugar Alfie No . 1 B 300 Wln ch .. lef Ma.gnum with 3d Sim·
mona. Scope priced t370. Exc .
Cond. 304·171·1141 .
One electric, 1 g110line air
compre11or 6 HP . t710 . e1ch .
3404-171-3002.
Apt site g• 1tow t75. 304 175 ·4135.
Trector, radial sew. grind"
.. IWIIM, drill preu. tire chalna,
870 81. Clf\1. 12
304-881 ·
301&amp;.

a•·

Bedroom eulte, living room
couc:h 1nd Zenith coneola TV .
M.Uofftr. 014-992 -60150 diVtlma , 814-992-5086 eves.
Like new . Hoy1-Eu1on pro ·
mtdal6tt com,KMJnd bow. llue
and wftht. Call Barbara Stew•rt
otl14-742-3001.

Pets for Sale

Farm Equipment

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 Witt , J•c~IQn . Ohio .

114-281 ·1461 .
M••MV flrvuson , NeW Holland.
Bush Hog Sales &amp; Service . Qver
40 usld tractor• to choose from
&amp; co""late line of new llo used
eQuipment lergnt Mlaction In
S .E. Ohio.
3,000 Ford dltllltrector. 4 new
tirn . t2 .995 firm . 8ft. Internedonal buth hog 1295 . 8ft . Ford
heevy duty gr8der blede f UO.
C•II614· 2BI· M22

Good hay for
5633 .

11~

ATROC.~

PU~WATIO~!

f?"I'LL 1\AVE. )()I) t:miJ
I MVE~'T 6ml LATI'
TO OCfY. IIJ 1/..fl'ICS!

Mixed hay tor u le . Ca ll 614 ·
992 -3709 evenings .
Conditioned h1y tor 1111 . Cell
Art Nease at 614 · 992·15363 or
814·949·2764

Game
(!] NFL Filma

Ill (!J WKRP In Cincinnati
0 l!lllll Jeopardy

Auto Parts

(]) Good Neighbors

®l Wheal of Fortune

ANNIE

~

For aela or trade profnsional
built pto·ltocll fiCI car chassie.
look like Jegster chassle. Air tire
changer. Hyd. unit tor Oliver n
or 88 . Oliver 66 ttandard wide
front . Oliver 4 bottom dreg
plow . Clll 614-388-9884 eft~r

[HBOI
Fraggle
Rock:
Sprocket's Big Adventure

~AAOOCK 5 .' FII!5T
TIME I'VE FELT
51\FE IN MOI'ITM5/

ICCI

7:35 CIJ Sanford and Son
8:00 0 Cllllil TV's Bloopers 8o
Practical Jokes Meredith
Baxter-Birney · and Jennifer

o ·Neill

3-19&amp;5 Mustangs , will aell
p•ckage for t860 or part out.
Call 61 4 -379· 2630 .
1981 AMC Concord DL. auto,
good 1hepe. Asking t1 ,800. C1H
1514-258- 1932 after 4PM .
76 Ford Pinto black with red
stripes, runs 6 looks good.
1600. Ce ll I to 10 PM. 814·
448-4412.
1982 Camato, 1harp , AM · FM
st~reo , AC . cn.~isa . v.e. new
tires . mult •II. Call 1514 ·441·
3769
1983 Plymouth Reli•nt SE- •
door. automatic. AC . PS. PB.
cru ise. rear window dtfrolter.
47,000 milts. 1984 Plymouth
Turismo 2.2 1utometic, AC,
sunroof. 19,000 miiM . Call
614· 379-2726.

1981 DaiiUn 810 Maxon AT,
full power. sunroof. Call 614 446· 1607 &amp;42 Fifth Ave .. Galli·
polls. Oh.
1978 Dodge Magnum excellent
condition , 81 ,500. Call 614·
245·6104.
1977 Monte Carlo, AC . cruiu.
rilly wh&amp;e11 , new tirn , ni ce c ar,
low mileega. Cell 614 ·245 5183
1972 Pontiac . 360 auto .. run•
good, needs exh1u11 , First t175
drives •w•y Call 614 -448 6641 .
1916 white Mullang with red
interior. A-1 condition 614742-2325.

Home
Improvements

J .•nd l. Installation. Roofing,
vinyl siding, storm door~~ and
window• Free estim1tee . Ce ll
114 ·992·2772

RINGtes ·s SERVICE . ellpt·
rlenced carpenter , electrician,
m110n, pelnter. rooting (lnclud·
lng hot tit IPPiicatlon ) 304 ·
676 -2088 or 675 -7368.
Starks Tree and lawn Service,
lendec•plng 304· 676 · 2010 .

American

@ Newhart !CCI
When George becomes a
Big Brother. his voung
charge becomes more •m·
pressed with Dick and his
television show
10:00 (!] College Basketball:

•

WINNIE

0 CIJ

With

E•cavating

VIe ws with Ph1l Collins.
CIJ o m~@

11 :ooo m

-- I 'm us ill r it
righ t tiOW_,
Lou;aeay !!

CAN I SORRY
'{OUR TVPE·WRITIN'

MACHINE?

I ANNICE±

t
I J I J

tMEEPID

News
I]) Man from U.N.C.L.E
1!11 (!J Benny Hill Show
CIJ SCTV
® Eyewitness News
1HJ WKRP In Cincinnati
!MAX) MOVIE: 'Porky's'
1 1 ,30 0 Cll (1lJ The Best of Car·
son Tonight's guests are
John

Davidson,

.A6
+

+

~M~td
by THOMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS
I Attendant
5 Word willl

life or row

8 Strauss
Yesterd~y's answer
waltz
20 "Treasure 27 Exchange
16So that's it! II Wandenng
Island"
30Type of TV
17 An italian 14 Actress
character 31 Genuflect

of spaCe
15 ReverJ.ge

chresr
Dennis
23
18 Execute
16 Main ·
20 F1lled
tained
24
pastry
19 "La Vil.a
21 Heraldic
Nuova"
25
des1gn
author
22 Art or John ,-..,.,..-,--,,-23 I n need of
sca.o;omng
25 Ot•voutness
26 Enrlurf'
27TIP
2811emg (Sp.)
29 Assail

34 Opt•ra's
Mernman
35 l.in•nse
37 Country
co usin

38 Tantalize
39 Compe1en1
40 Play the
41 Undress
DOWN
I One kind

or bear
DAILY CR YPJ'OQUOTES- Here's how to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR

Is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
·apostrophes, the length and fomlalion of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different.
CRYI"roQUOTES

involved in rad1cal campus

n c.

DO 1'00 LIKE ME

TAl STATE
UPHOLSTERY SHOP
1163 Sec. Ave.. GalllpoH1.
114 · -448-7833 or 814 ·441 -

1833.

'.

A &amp; M Furniture ManufiCturing.
St. At. 7 , Crown City, Oh . C1ll
814 ·216 -1470, c1ll Evoe. 614·
448 · 3•38 . Old • new
Upho•tared .

J

7

I-lEAR THE REST!

Electronic 33 Italian
sound
city
Surgical 36 Floor
knife
covering
lie sorry 37 Criticize
for
(sl.)

b-+-1-+-

poli1ics. (60 min I IAI.
(]) Austin Cl1y Umi1s:
Mickey Gilley and T.G .
Shepherd
® Taxi
(j2) ABC News Nightline
IHl Trepper John. M.O.
11 :55 (HBOI 1st &amp; T.en: Not Quite
Mr. Right Is Diane 1oo much
in love to concentrate on
foo1ball .
12:00 I]) Boot of .Oroucho
C!J SportoCenter
(]) Entertainment Tonight
Kenny Rogers talks abou1
his latest album 'Hean of the

Upholstery

play,
with "'fhe"
4 Bard's
adverb
5 lndistinc1
6 Pledge
7 Belgian
commune

10 Shaping
machine
12 Oebtur'•
burden
13 Uppcr
reaches

J•m•• .Boys W•ter Service. A..o
pools filled . Cl ll 614 -266-1141
or 814-446 -1176 or 614 ·441791 1 .

87

2 Nimble
3 Marc
Connelly

9 Bugbear

General Hauling

• m Gunsmoke
®MOVIE: 'Elmer Gentry'
@ Eye on Hollywood
12:t5 (]) MOVIE: 'Iron Ml1tre11'
12:25 (HBOI MOVIE: 'Just TeN
Me What You Went'
12:30 D (I) [jl) Late Night with
David Lenennan Ton1ghf s
gueS1S are Don King and comedian Jeff Allman. 160
min.) In Stereo
I]) Bill Cooby Show
(]) NFL Filma

t·•·ll

EAST
WEST
Last October I enjoyed playing du· + 9 63
+HI
plicate bridge at Dennis Oawsons · • Q J 7 5
• K983
club near Boston. He showed me thiS • 10 54
• AJ 2
deal, suggesting that North-South +A 6 5
+Q74
might have had a better result ~ad
SOUTH
they been using the Jacoby transfer
+KI0872
bid as an adjunct to an opemng one notrump . Here's how the play went, with
• 876
Dennis sitting East.
10 8 3
West led a trump to dummy's ace,
Vulnerable: Neither
and declarer cashed the trump queen,
Dealer : North
led a heart back to his ace and picked
up the remaimng trumps Now the
WeSI
Norlb Eas1
eight of clubs was led and ducked, al·
Pass
I NT
lowing Dennis to win the queen. There
Pass
Pass Pass
was no w~y to deny declarer eight
tricks . but in duplicate competition it .
Opening Ieaiie
3
is important to stave off the overtrick,
and East saw the way. He played the
deuce of diamonds right back into the
teeth of dummy's K-Q-9-3. His partner's 10 forced out an honor. Later, tion named after us JacobyS, I believe
when West won the club ace. a dia- the defenders should hold either North
mond through netted the defense two or South to eight tricks. With North dediamond tricks to hold declarer to his clarer after a Jacoby transfer, East
contract. It is Dennis's contention that should play either a low diamood or a
he would not have been able to come low heart after winning tl.e club
up with this fine play if his opponents queen . If East chooses to return a low
had been playing transfers and North heart after winning the first club.
were the declarer in two spades.
: West should switch to a low diamond 1 •·
Much as I like touting the conven- for the same result.

Mtchael

Matter'.

NORTH
+AQ
.10 1 2
t K Q93
+KJ9 2

By James Jacoby

1·6

'

J umbles CEASE FAITH SPRUCE TAUGHT
An swer. What' s tile best thmg tor na•l · bitlng ?SHARP TEETH

The contract is
ambidextrous

to a campus ghost and al·
umni who. years ago. were

FORGET IT! I
· DON'T WANT TO

I

Saturday 's

Davis and Elya Baskin . !60
min.)IRL In S1ereo.
(]) WKRP in Cincinnati
· fil (!J One Step Beyond
0 CIJ Remington Steele

Ken ·• Wiler Service Well 1
cisterns , pools filled Phon~
0 14 -367 -0823 or 1 .14-3&amp;7 .
·lj141 night or d8y .

Now arrange the Circled letters to
lorm the surpnse answer, as sug ·
gested Dy me abo~o~e ca~O(m

(An swers tomorrow)

laura and Rem1ngton inves·
ligate a murder which leads

B5

WHAT !SETTING
FI.ID OF HER
MAIDeN NAM~ WAS.

XXI XXJ( Xl )

Answer here: HER (

s h1 eld
33 Snoop

Conversation

performance footage and
behind-the-scenes
inler-

ELVINEY!!

I I K ]

10:30 I])

ters'

BARNEY

·--

32 Mt&gt;tlieval

Collins See new videos ,

CARTER' S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor . foun h and Pine
G•llipolis , Ohio
Pllone 6U-446·3888 or 614·
4-46·4477

,,

~·- ·---- ...

South Carolina at Memphis State
Ill (f) ®l Cagney and Lacey
IHl News
tHaOJ Maria' s lovers
10:20 CIJ MOVIE: 'The McMas-

!MAXI Album Flash: Phil

Dump truck ..rvice now awaila ·
b!e, will haul gravel, und, tiM
dtrt. COlli. lite. Call 114 ·448 ·
7447

84 p;cku p F 100 Ford, 78 Olcl1
Cutl••• S1lon . 30•-675-21 30.

9:30

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

1980 Chevy Luv U ,199 . 1980
Ford Courrier t1 ,999 Johnt
Auto Saltt , BulavUie Ad .,
G•llipoli1.

1971 Chevy 'II ton 8ft. bed, V·B
1tenderd 1hlt1 . 1700 304 -8753002

Greatest

Hero

Fred Lewis
82

~a ugh ·s Water Service. Wells,
Ctltlrl)l, PDOII. Fast. reliable
1ervlce. C•ll 814 ·256 -1240 or
114 · 256 - 1130 . Reasonable
r8tes.

63

@

G111 -rour c81pe1 in thip 1hape
with C8pt8in Steamer. furniture
cleaning· w•ter damage worll;.
304-676· 2295 .

1976 Ford PU, new jMint. llh
new . 1982 Oodge PU. lika new .
Gall614-388· 9909.

1984 Ford 8f0nco II . 304·875·
6276

tist's office for him ro return
from an errand

Rotery or cable tool drilling.
Mott wellt completed umadey.
Pump aale1 1nd service. 304 ·
891·3802

Good-1 E-.cevating, ba•~m .. tl,
footera . driveways. uptic tan ill,
landscaping . Call anytime &amp;14446·4637, James l. Oaviaon,
Jr. owner .

1980 GMC , S.rt• Grandi V·8,
auto .. 32 ,000 mi. , 1 owner. Call
814-446 -1838 etter !5PM.

is caught in a power black ·
out while waiting in her den-

Fetty TrN Trimming, stump
remov•l. C•ll304·675- 1331.

1968 Dodge Polaro , 73,000
actu•l milu , good cond ,
01 .600.00. 304 ·895·3972

One 1992 ford 4· WD . 8ft. bed ,
1tand1rd. tl cyl. 11ngine, t8 .900 .
One 1977 GMC 8500 Mri• 11
ft., durT1) bed. Call &amp;14 -4482532.

Maybe you should You're the
qo up and check! one who
sent him!

RON'S Telavi1ion Servlct .
Houll celts on RCA. Quazer.
GE . Spaciellng in Zenith. Cell
30 4 -576· 2398 Of 814-448 ·
2464 .

83

Trucks for Sale

GASOLINE ALLEY

COLEMAN WATER WELL
ORILUNG
Pump ulel, Mrvic.. R1gi•terld
1n Ohio. All work guaranteed
C•ll 304· 273-2811 Raven•·
wood , W Va

' 83 Camltfo 2:2B . loaded . S•
riou1 lnqulrlet onty. 304-6766383 after 6 p.m.

1982 Butck Skylark, convert•·
ble, 64.000 ectu1l mil• . e-.c
cond , 11 ,600 .00. 304 -7736910

monitions of McCormtck's
violent death. ~60 min. ~
1!11 ill Elvis : Aloha from
Hawaii
0 (f) ®I Scarecrow and
Mrs. King
(]) Great Porlonnances
Uve from Uncoln Conte&lt;:
Pavorottl Plus
IHJ Dempsey and Makepeace
[HBOI MOVIE: 'Mass Ap·
peal' (CCI
!MAXI MOVIE: 'The Shin·
lng'
NBA
Basketball:
8:05 CIJ
Philadelphia at San Anto·
nio
9:00 0 Cil llll MOVIE: 'The Enforcer' IRI .
CD 700 Club
(!] College Basketball:
Syracuse at Villanova
(]) (j2) MOVIE: 'Shattered
Spirits'
0 (f)® Kate &amp; Allie Kat e

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Un(Wlnditionallilltime guaran ·
tee . Local referencn furnished .
Free •timetl!ll . Call collect
1·614 · 237 -0488. day or night .
Rogers B1sement
Waterptoofing.

J IM' S PlUMBING &amp; HEATING .
Rt. 1 , 801 366, Gallipolil. Call
114·317·0676.

1974 Okls Toronedo. new t1re1,
good n.tnning c:ond. 304-1765589 .

week 's

pect, his new housekeeper
experieOces psychic preLEAN ON IT, BII\J KV~
TH' BIS VARMINT'S
GO IN' FOR GUZ ~ ~

1982 Chevy C1v1lltr , bllclc, 2
door hltchb1ck . 4 cyl., 4speed,
E C . loaded . One owner .
13600 . Call &amp;14· 992 -7422 .

.

th1s

m1n.l
I]) Father Murphy
(f) (j2) Hardcastle and
McCormick (CCI Wh•le
Hardcastle searches for a
Beverly Hills murder sus-

Scr vtce s

Autos for Sale

are

practical joke VICtims. (60

1980 Yellowstone camper, 29
ft , •ir eond 1nd •wning ,
a8.&amp;00 oo. 304·57&amp;-2006.
'

81

1974 Ford Country Squire stationwagon , 59 ,000, uc . cond.
Cell 6, 4 -4'8-0264

Price Is Right

IHJ Bob Newhart

GOOO T' BE HEllE,

Transport atto n
71

his latest album 'Heart of the
Matter' .
fJ) (!J JeHersons
Ill CIJ (1lJ Wheel of Fortune
(f) Nightly Business Ro port
®I Eyewitness News
~ Divorce Court
IHl Barney Miller
7:05 CIJ Rocky Road
7 :30 0 CIJ (f) New Newlywed

814 ·992 ·

1979 ~ tOfl Ford P.U. 400
.. gine. U&amp;OO . 814·992 ·1270.

Poll.t Cherolais bulls purebred ,
900 lbe. Woodw8rd Ohntco
Ferme. Cell &amp;14-379-2&amp;97.

DISCUS~&gt; '/aJ~

&amp; Accesscrias

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

1981 MatHY Ferguson trector.
greder bltdl, 2 wheal treiler,
potato plow . 12,300.00 . 304176·2001.

Livestock

76

Good mhced hay for tale . 61 4·
742· 2331

72
61

WA»T 10

Boats and
Motors for Sale

I.

1983 Dodge Cherg• Shelby
Edition . AM ·FM ea11., 14,000
milet . Calll514· 441-7307 1ftlf
4 :30

Three chrome tables with 1moke
gl•11 tops . 1 ·co ffee. 2 end a Cell
61 4·448· 7688.

75

Mixed gra11 hay for sale . 614·
9·9·2237

Building Materials
Btoclt., brick. sewer pipes. win ·
dows. lintels. etc. Cl•ude Winters. Rio Grande . 0 Call 614
246 ·5121

Chrome glasa top d inene sat
wt1h 4 pldded c,ain t1 76 . G.E.
refrtgentor hke new t200 . love
lilt f75 . Call 814-446 · 7927 Of
614 ·379·2798.

l~MIS?

1982 RM &amp;0 . exc. cond., Cell
304-676- 2126 after 6pm .

Hay for tele 81 .00 bale . C1ll
814·266-6881 .

Valley Furn iture, ntw &amp; used .
large sectlo" of qu1liti tuml ture . 121 I Eutern A\le ..
Gallipolis

Block, brtck , mortsr and masonry supplies. Mounta in State
81odl. At . 33, New H1\len , W.
Va . 304-882 -2222

~~~----~

John boat for ule. Call 814258 ·6417.

1979 Concord 6 cyl , auto , PS.
good eontl: Call61 4 -441-1522.

Kentucky Lump , Ohio lu~ .
Ohio Stokltf Yard or delivery.
cement bloch and building
material. Gallipolis Block Co .
Pine St., Qallipolis. Ohio C1ll
614 -446-27'!3 .

Motorcycles

PI&lt;"W

55 Building Supplies

Broyhill. 10f8. loveaeat. chair
solkl oack wood trim . Broyhill
solid oat~ premire top ot tht line
tables , cocllte il, ,eugonal. oc tegon•l. •ntlqlfll bress trim. 2
touchmetic antique brill lightl.
All 1 year old A· 1 excellent
conditKln. C•ll 304 ·676 -7559

B.ORN LOSER
7

&amp; Grain

For ute till dirt &amp; hay. Contact
Bruce Dawieon, 814-266 -1427
Firewood h1rdwood split ,
stacked. delivered. 135 a large
load , delivered promtly. Cell
814 ·446 ·7993 .

1979 Chevy luv, 4 wh811 drive.
standsrd 4 speed tran•miuion
with c1mp11 top, t2 .000.00 .
304·678- 2005.

74

Coonty Applian ce , Inc. Good
used 1ppliance• •nd TV •eta.
Open BAM to 6PM Mon ttlru
Sat. 814-448·1699. 627 3rd
Ave . Gellipolil. OH .

Apt . on Main St . in Cheshire. 5
rooms &amp; beth , comp. turn . Dep. . 2 yelt old Tappan electr ic range.
Almond . UOO . lflce new. 614·
req . noo mo . C•ll 614 -245
986 -4266 anytime .
!1818
Furni1hed effi ciency 1p1. all
util1tiea paid 1175 mo be1ide
Rio Grande College Call 814446 ·2064.

House coal. lump • stoker Zinn
Co1l Co . Cell &amp;14-441· 1408.

Livestock

Unsc,amb!e these lour Jumbles.
one teuer to each square, 10 fonn
fou r ordinary words

/

6 :00 II Cll No-Center
CD Green Acre•
(!) Mazda Sportsl.ook
CIJ Ill (]) (j2) llll News ·
Ill (!J DiH'rent Strokes
CIJ 3-2-1. Contact (CCI o
@Ey-eooN0W11
llJI Good Timea
[HBOI The Tender Warrior
[MAX] MOVIE: ' Follow the
Fleet'
6:05 CIJ Down to Earth
6:30 0 Cll NBC Nlgh1ly News
CD The Rifleman
(J) College Basketball Re ,,
port
CIJ G2l ABc ·News
1!11 (!J Taxi
Ill (f) ® CBS News
(f) Doctor Who
·llJI ,Jl!!fersono.
llll NBC News
8:35 CIJ Sale at Home
7:00 0 Cll PM Magazine
I]) Alias Smith and Jones
C!l SportoCenter
·
(f) Entertainment Tonight
Kenny Rogers talks about

Upst•ira unfurnished apt.. cer·
peted . all utilitin Plld. no
chlldrtn, no pets. Call 81 4-441·
1137 .

"I like it when Dad makes

~ THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME
by Henri Amold and Bob Lee

fi)lf

\.9 ~~ 1

EVENING

REALI.YoEAS.'(, l 'P RATHER 'iTA'/j

&amp; 4 W . O.

\ffl\i~

~

1/6/86

78 ford F-100, AM· FM I trade.
4 radial tlr•, new eahault
evtJtm, new b1ttery. run• &amp;
loolcl good. Cell 6 to 10 PM.
614-441-4412 .

0

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

TRACY

Trucks for• Sale

1sn GMC trUck V·8 , PS, PB.
long wida 1bed, IHICI tefSO. Cell
304·468· 19&amp;7.

Redecorltld apt., 2 bdr., •1&amp;0
to U50 . Call304-1715-6104 Of
304·875-1398 or 304·1715 ·
7898

Rental s
I NOTICE •
THE OHIO VAllEY PUBLISH ING CO recommend• that you
do businell wtth people vou
know , •nd NOT to sand monev
through the mail unt il -rou have
investigated 1he offering .

HOM E OWNERS Ref1nanc e to
low f111ed rate . Use equity tor 11ny
purpose leader Mo ngage Co ,
614 -592 -3051

f&amp;dera l. State and Cl\111 Serv1ce
JO bS now available 1n yo ur area
For l'lfO call 1602 ) 837 -3401
Dept 120 1.

,,

Business
Opport_unity

Monday, January 6, 1985

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wrlghl

Nlcsty tumlahld mobile home,
eft. apt. , centrtll air end He•t In
city. adult• only. Call 114-448 0338 .

Application• for ca1hiera. No
experience nectn .. ry . Need
tomeone who is friendly. polite
and good with numbert. Can
pick\up •plicatton at Vaughan ·•
Caralnal Monday through Thursday between 9:00 -3:00 p.m .

7 mo . otd pup, mothltf Reg . Irish
SeHer. father 1 Call 814· 256 8139 .

-6

0

,,itt.

Hunting or treape11ing.
Picken• F1rm It Fl1trock. All
prwious p1nniuion cancelled.
P1ul A. Pick«11.

Apartment
for Rant

-

.JACKSON ESTATES APART·
MENTS fEQUII HoualftQ Oppor·
tunity) monthty rent eun1 It
t1&amp;SI tor 1 bedroom and t204
for 2 b.droom. d4tP01it 8200.
locewd n. . Sprinp Vllile'f Piau
and Foodland. pool end Cable TV
availebll, office houra M poui·
ble 10 IM'A to 4 pm 1nd 7 pmto 8
pm MOftdav · Fridev, Call e1 4·
446-2748 or INW m....ga.

Help wented:Must be 1ble to
woftt dly or evening
Bring
rnu1111 to McCiur• D1iry l1l1in
Mtddleport.

No

ugly puppy
before 4 :00.

LAFF·A·DAY

Help nMdld In priv1W home to
carl for Senior Citizen. Apply ·
174 Plum St., Middleport, Ohkl
46710.

Racine Gun Shoot 1pon10red bo;'
Racine Gun Club Every Sund1y.
beginning at 1:00 p.m Factory
Choice 12 gueae st\otguns.

1

44

Senillrlan polltion open in the
Gallle County HHhfl DIPir1·
ment. EIQ)trltnce in Enwlro"·
mental Sanitation pref1ned. R.S
or R S. eligibl1 pr.t1n'«&lt;. ApplicatKm• 1re IVIlllble 11 th1
Health OepartJNnt in thl &amp;.slment of ,,. Coorthouae ·
Monday thry Friday. 8· 12 and
1 · 4. EQual Opportunity
Employer.

,,If

4

Help Wanted
/

SWEEPER and IWI"ing mKhine
repair, pertl, 1nd 1uppli... Pick
up and .U.Iivery. Davia Vacuum
Cl11ner, one
mile up
Georg• Creek Rd . C1ll 81 4·
441·0294.

'

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C II S N I A G X A E 11

Yesterday'&amp; CI')'Jltoquote: A NEW TH!NK EH I~ ONLY
ONE WHO DOES NOT KN OW WHAT TilE OLn
THINKERS HAVE TIIOUGIIT. - f'RANK M COLBY

CIJ ABC News Nightline

0

(])

MOVIE: ' Loving

Couples '

G2l NeilJI MOVIE: 'The

Pink Jun ·
gle'
12:40 !MAXI MOVIE: ' Endgame·
t :00 I]) Doble Gl!lla
(]) Track : Kinney Cross
Country
Championship
Coverage from San Diego,
~IWomia .

(]) Ald1ie Bunker' • Place
• (I) Wild, Wild West

~ CNN

1:30

News

Cil Father Knowo Boot
C!l Outdoo&lt; Ufe

(f)
2:00 I])
(])
•

News
700 Club
Mozda Sportolook
CD MOVIE: 'O.otlnl·
tlon Tokyo'
®J CBS News Nightwm:h ·.
2:25 tH801
MOVIE:
'Four
Friends'
.
!MAXI MOVIE: 'My F.-ite Year'
2:30 (J) Spc&gt;rtsCenter

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