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~-14-The Daily Sentinel

_s

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Pomeroy-M~rt. Ohio

'.

Wednesday, November 1 ~. 198&amp;.,

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·AIJ)S researcher urges -strong PQlicy to ·. address disease
By ALISON G~ANT
field ·, said Reagan has skirted the
SPRINGFIELD, Ohio tUPI 1- Issue of AIDS, publicly addressThe United States ·needs a strong lng It only twice, and -never
national p&lt;illcy .to address the linking the risk of inf~ction by
catastrophic threat of AIDS, says hypodermic needle io the adminmedical geneticist Margery istration's strong anti-drug
Shaw.
.
campaign.
Shaw, a member of the Com" It is a-very serious problem
mlttee on a National Strategy for and we can't remain complacenf
AIDS, said development of an or disinterested," Shaw said.
anti· AIDS vaccine will take at
In addition to ~ .roo confirmed ·
least five years, and meanwhile AIDS cases, as many as 1.5
AIDS should be fought thraugh a million ltmericansaresuspected
massive_public health campaign to be carriers of the AIDS virus,
and increased federalfundinglor and the committee projected
research.
179,000 AIDS deaths in the.United
The committee, sponsored by States by 1991.
the National Academy of Scien·
Researchers studying AIDS
. ces and the Institute of Medicine, are tracking a " moving target,"
called for President Reagan to Shaw said, citing !he ever.take a strong leadership role in lengthening time the AIDS virus
the effort against AIDS, or is found to lie dormant.
·Acquired Immune Deficiency
Studies of high -risk groups
Syndrome.
'found avtr ~ge lifespans follow·
Shaw, speaking Tuesday at lng diagnosis ranged from four
Wittenberg University in Spring-

months lor .Intravenous drug
users to 14 months br homosex· ual men. But now scientists are
.finding Infection with the virus
may not result In an · actual
occurrence of AIDS lor 10 years.
and some res1;'8rchers speculate
the latency period may extend. to
ll years, she said.
AIDS afflicts men and women
equally In parts of Africa, and
gender distribution will soon
occur In .the United States and ·
. Europe, Shaw said.
AI OS was firsttound ):a'imarily
among homosexual men , Hal·
tlans and Intravenous drug us ers, but now Is spreading to the
heterosexual population in 155
ccuntrles.across the globe, Shaw
.said. It is expected t.o strike.7,000
American women and3,000 child·
ren born of Infected mothers by
1991.
"We don't have the time and
we don't have the luxury to

CINCINNATI tUPI I - A ,
threatened strike by 5.000
workers at 58 Kroger · grocery
stores In southwest Ohio was
averted Tuesda y night when
• negotiators reached a tentative
agreement on a new contract.
Members of the United Food
and Commercial Workers union
were to vote on the proposal
'today !rom 8 a.p1 to 8 p.m. ,
Details of the agreement were

Celtics _hand
126-114 loss ·
to Milwaukee
-Page 4

moralize on homosexuality,"
Shaw said.
··
The national Ams ·ccmmlttee
I.•
estimated costs of caring for the
174,000. AIDS patients projected
. l
to be alive in 1991 at $8 billion to
$16 billion In that y.::ar alone .
The committee called for a $2
billion-a-year IJ'Ogram to curb
the spread ott be diseasetlrough
a massive public awareness
ca-mpaign and increased
research :
(MANY STYLES TO
The proposoo national progt am amo.un.ts to eight times the
CHOOSE ·fROM)
current spending on AIDS reTHURS.,
SAT. ONLY
.search, and would allow for
\
public health measures ~uch as
' .
voluntary and confidential test ·
'
lng for infection, treatment and
prevention of Intravenous drug
MIDDLEPORT - ON THE T use and availability on an ex peri·
mental basis of sterile needles
and syringes for drug addicts, v
. '
Shaw said.
l.iiiiiij;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;~;;;;

ALL

·Sweaters·

OINZA

-.

earn $11 an hour.
Employees also opposed Krog·
er's plans to eliminate five
holida ys and to order straight ·
time pay on Sundays for new
employees. Current employees
receive time and a half pay on
Sundays .
The ccmpany previously of·
fered several ent icements for
acceptance of the new ccntract ,
including a one-time $1,000' cash
bonus for employees taking the
biggest pay cuts and a one-time
payment of $10,000 for highest·
paid · employees • taking early
ment she included in a written
Dodd also statoo that the retir ellien t.
assignment distr ibuted to her students' . lack of respect for
Kroger vice president Wayne
lOth and 11th grade English themselves explains wey they Harris promised workers a
classes.
don't respect their teachers, "rosy" future if the concessions
The target of the parents' parrots and other adults in were approvoo, but at a union
anger was a handout directing positions of authority.
meeting that prediction was
'
the students to assess themselves
grreted
with hoots and jeers.
The parentswho attended last
in regard to enterln~ the job week's board meeting also al·
" They're very upset," Wits ken
mar 14:!1.
leged that Dodd admlnistered said of his members . "They feel
In a preface to the assignment, mooicafion to students, fre· the company doesn't care about
Dodd st atoo that If she ever qul!'lt!Y klst students' homework them."
becomes president of the United . and called the students deroga Said six-year Kroger e~t~ploy('('
·s-tates, "I will be able to say that tory names In the classroom.
Robert Co by, 25, "They've been
my experience as a teacher at
Dodd·, who did not attertd the taking stuff away from us the
East High School has prepared board ineetlng, is a first -year past few years. We can't afford to
me well for the element of my job teacher In the district.
go on strike , but we can't afford
oot to ." ·
which entails 'dealing with low

\

Vol.36 , No.135

By NANCY YOACJIAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
"When you create the problem; I think you have
a responsiblity to find a solution for. that
problem."
. This is the belief of Meigs County Commissioner·
Richard Jones, in reg~rd to the Ohio Department ·
of Transportation's reluctance to help PomeroyMiddleport secure ferry service to West Virginia
while the Pomeroy-Mason bridge is closed lor
repairs.
• Bridge repair is scheduled to begin in February,
and government officials and businessmen on
both sides of the river have been unable to
overcome financial problems which have surfaced In trying to establish a ferry operation.
ODOT maintains It cannot legally help pay ilr a
ferry service.
Jones, however, believes ODOT has more of'a
responsiblity to the people of Meigs and Mason
Counties, who depend on the Pomeroy-Mason

Phone 742 2100

PR ICES Ef-FECl iVE 1HR U SAL NOV I :J.
"' :&gt; '
&gt;.

The probability of pr{'('ipitation is .fl. percent tonight and ncar
zero Thursday.
Winds Will become northwesterly at 10 to 20 'mph tonight.
. --

.

ea
rl y Friday,
ingInInto
20s
night
lows willrisbe
thetheteens
Sat urday morning and to near :JJ
earlv Sunday.

HOMEMADE

SPECIAL HOURS ON
THURSDAY, NOV. 13th
. OPEN AT 8 A.M.
FOR OUR SPECIAL. SAVINGS
ON JAZZY SWEATERS AND
COORDINATES
'

SEE CIRCULAR IN TODAY'$ PAPER

,
.
39Q N. ~EJ;QNO..A_VE .

MIDDLEPORT

~;~========~~~~~======~~~~~
WILL YOUR
UTILITIES
(, PUT YOU IN
1
; • THE POOR
HOUSE THIS
WINTER?

For Your Holiday Fruit Cakes We Have A
·
Fres.h Sup.ply Of

Drop by

and~heckout

CONSIDER:

I

'
the r•t of our Baking Staptea
for

tlncomt guidelin•• hive rcenttv be1111 u·

OHIOYALLEY BULK FOODS

614 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

~

. ...·

.

_

•

HAM SALAD •••••••••••••••••••II••••••• 99&lt;
ARMOUR

.

$

'2.39 LB. SH.REDDED

BOILED HAM .............l!Sfv.~.• 2.19

I ll PIKI SIVII

14 CT.

MARGARINE ...... ~nil\. 99c

HEAD LETTUCE ... ..l~t... S9c

tiOl.

IIAfT t6 !LICE

\\

VELVEETA
CHEESE ............... 11~.$1. 99

CARROTS ..............uG..lSC

14 OZ. CTII. IIIOUGHTOII'I

30 CT.

COTTAGE
CHEESE: ................. $J .49

CAUFORNIA

t6

oz. CillO rm

CELERY ...................... 69'

I LB. TASTY IIRD FRYING

.

CHICKEN
LIVERS
••••••••••••••••••••
79(
1.0 P&lt;. 2 lB. BANQUET FRIED
.
CKEN DINNER ...........~q!. S .89
26 OZ. CAMPBEll'S CHKIIEN

NOODLE SOUP·•••••••••••• l.\'1~~ ~ 1.69
16 OZ. QUAKER
·
CORN, BRAN CEREAL. ••••••••• f·1. 99 ·
320Z.
, ··
•
~
WISK DETERGENT •••••••••••••• S2 .29

tondod.

992-8910

FOR FIIITH£R DETAILS CAll TODAY

We Accept
Food Stompo

1-614-9,2-7022

. ~~eee~e
•
·- ---

.
'

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I

I OZ. PINEAPPLE WEDGES, PINEAPPU SliCES, GREEN CHERRIES

CANDIED
·FRUIT •••••••• ;....
~'1·•• S1. 99
16 OZ. STOIIEl Y TINY WHOLE
,
PICKLED _BEETS•••••••••••••••~M ••••• 79(
41 CT. lUIZIANNE DECAFFEINAltD
TEA
B
A
GS
•••••••
~ ..... ~ ........~q~. S2.39
46 oz. JUICE IOWl
.
ORANGE
JUICE
•••••••
~ ......~~~. $1.09
1SO CT. KUENEX
SOFT TISSUES ••••••••••••••••tq~. $~1\ .1 0
240Z. ROYAl PRINCE
I,

your Holiday Needa. 1

'.

WIENERS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 7~'9&lt;
CHOPPED HAM LOAF •••••Y••• Sl.S9

'

Chopped Dates ............................................ •2.10 lb.
Fruit Mi~ ......................... ... .... ..... .. .. ..... ....... •2:3o lb.
Candied Pineapple ·........ ......... .............. .... .. .. '2.151b.
Candied Red 8o Green Cherries .. .. ..... ........ .... '3.00 lb.
Pineapple/Cherry Mix .... .. .... ..... ... ................ •2.90 lb.
Dark or Golden Raisins ................................ '1.49 lb.
Macaroon Coconut ........ ................. ............. 1 1.40 lb .
Afl!lel Flake C09onut ........ .... .... .................... '1.80 lb.
Mincemeat ...... ... ...................... ............ .. , .. '1.561b.
Pecan Pieces ............................................... 1 4.26 lb.
Walnut Piecas ................. ......... ...... .,............ '3.50 lb.
Nut Siftings -................................................ 11.80 lb.
Black Walnut Pieces ................. ...... ........ ...... '6.60 lb.
NEW SHIPMENT OF CANDY MOLDS
Ambrosia Chocolate
· Merckena Chocolate
\
Wo Witt Prepare Your Chaeta Trays for' Your Next Party

I.
1

ECKRICH

Ohio, area weather scene
Ohio t;)(lendlld l&lt;·orecast
Friday through Sunday
F'air Friday and Saturda y.
wIth a chance of •·a in Sunday .
Highs will be In the lls F'ridav ,
climbing Into the 40s Saturday
and ranging from the middle 40s
to the middle 50s Sunday. Over-

I~JH6

I

12 OZ. KENTUCKY BORDER PACKAGED

.

South Central Ohio
Partly cloudy tonight, with a
chance of snow flurries and a low
between 20 and 25. Mostly sunny
Thursday:,wlth highs near ll.

RUTLAND

DEPARTMENT STORE

Clerk details \Tillage funds
'

•

•

enttne
4 Sections, 48 Pages

· f'ollleroy-Middleport, Ohio. Thursday, November 13. 198~

YAMS
•••••••••••••••·••••••••••••••~~~. SJ~.29
oz. JET PUFF

16

I

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MARSHMALLOWS
......... ~.~~~••••• 89(
1St/1 OZ. WHITNEYS
•
PINK SALMON ...............~~. S1. 98
..

25 Cent1

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

bridg!), than to post detour signs to bridges 20
miles east an(! west of the structure being
repaired.
..
"It's ridiculous," Jones said, and he noted that
ODOT routinely c6nstructs ternporary roads
when state highways are closed for repairs. Jones
feels ODOT should kick In some of the fln¥ling
necessary to develop ferry landings In Meigs and
Mason counties.

Chamber of Commerce, President Bill Nease
reported that Point Pleasant ferry operator Doc
McCoy Is still trying to secure private financial
backing to develop the landing at Clifton.
McCoy wants to establish his ferry between
Middleport and Clifton, rather than Pomeroy and
Mason, because he would he abte 'io operate even
· during high water.
Nease said McCoy feels he will be able to secure
about $40,000 for the landing, If merchants and
In a meeting last week which includedU .S. Rep.
businessmen will put up an additional $40.000, in
Clarence Mlller, ODOT was asked by Mlller to at
the form of advance ticket purchases, tD pay his
least take part In subsequent meetings regarding
liability insurance.
the ferry service. A meeting ·was held this past
Nease said that letters asking for pledge money
Mondi\Y in Mason, but ODOT was not
were sent to several local businesses a couple
represented.
weeks ago by both Pomeroy and Middleport
Jones also believes the U.S. Arrny Corps of chambers. Nease said the chambers received
Engineers, which operates on taxpayers' money,
total pledges somewhere in the neighborhood of
.
Is not playing as active a role as It should in $12,000.
alleviating the problem of the ferry.
He said if the chamber wants to pursue the idea
In Wednesd.ay's meeting of the Pomeroy Area of gathering pledge money to front the $40,000 for

insurance, that money would be held in escrow
until the ferry is a'ctuauy ready to go into
operation. Once the ferry is operational, the
.money would be given the operator and
businesses would receive ferry ticl\ets In return . . ·
Those tickets could then be distributed from the
respective .businesses.
·
Nease pointed out that time is an important
factor In the whole problem, because· repairs to
the landings cannot be made lin extremely bad
weather.
Businessman Greg Gibbs pointed out that local
power plants . and other Industries may l)e
interested in purchasing advance tickets which
could then be resold to employees right on the job
sit~ .. Gibbs . volunteered to follow up on his
suggestion by contacting the various industries.
Another meeting on the ferry service will likely
not be scheduled until more positive information
is available.

Bus tum
upkeep
discussed
by board

County receives
litter control grant

IN MDDLEPOO

All Middleport Village funds ·. $13,005.11J, $15,112.82 deficit; san·
totaled $385,773.56 as of Oct. 31, itary sewf.'T escrow, no rec eipts,
Village Clerk -Treasurer Jon no disbursements. $113,217.29;
Buck reports.
firehouse improvement fund ,
Receipts, expenditures for the $4.86, no di s bursements.
month, respectively , and the end $43,ffiO.:D ; water tank, no reo! the month balance include:
celpts. no disbursement s,
General. $21,186, $14,992.40, $)30,977.!il; water, $10.~0.76,
$41,818.1!); street maintenance, $12,484.81, $ll,939.~: sanitary
$4,150, $4,849.54 , $4,849.54. sewer. $7,910.&amp;1, $8,389 .22,
$3,784.3!; federal revmue shar- $28,815.18; sanitary sewer. no
lng, no receipts, no disburse- receipts, $365.91, $813 .!6 deficlt;
ments , $3,811.~; street lights, no cemetery, $1,2\9.49 , $1 ,3!7.17,
receipts, $1.!il4.!fi, :tllSS.lli de- $2,2\2.!11 deficit: water meter
licit ; street levy, no receipts, no trusts, $400. $513.91, $12,:tl0.79;
disbursements, $2,343.56; fire , economic development , $917.45,
equipment. $150 , $545.31, $1,!91.62, $9,4J3.!1l.
$4 ,lil.fll deficit: fir e tru ck. no
Receipts for the month tot aled
receipts, $2,343.44, Sl.t'i3.Zl: pub- $5!i,m4.fll while di s bursements
lie transportation. $9,195.42. amounted to $61.~ 9 . 17 .

•

_,

...... AVIH

~

. ('learlng tonighl 1 wilil a low ,
near 10. Sunny .Friday, with
highs near to. The probablllty
of precipitation is near ~ero
this afternoon through Frl·

Jones: ODOT, corps need to address problem

'

.

609
Supt&gt;r l.ouo
32-31-21-41-42-39

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r-;·------;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~!!!~' ..

DAN'S

Daily .Number

•

,.

Copyrighted 1986

·officials eye teacher-student dispute
; YOUNGSTOWN 1UPI I
·Youngstown City School District
:officials continued Tuesday to
:review the case of a teacher who
-referred to her students as "low
' life" and accused them of cheat · tng, stealing and lying.
. District spokesman Chuck
:zmo said Superintendent Ema nuel Catsoules met Monda y'wlth
·East High School teacher· Nlco'leen Dodd, who 'has come under
·fire for the statements she made
:about the students.
· Zillo said Catsoules will con·tinue to gather Information and
.expects to make a decision on the
Issue within the next two weeks.
· Dodd has been kept out of the life .'
"My students have shown mP
school while the matter is under howtheycancheat.lleandsteal,
· review .
how the~· can misbehave In class,
how they can fight with each
The teacher came under fire at other, how they can come to class
'tast Thursday's school board drunk, and how they can be
meeting When paretts COrn· low-down and COMivlng," the
plalned about a personal state· preface continued.

.

at y

PIR

not released. However, Kroger
Kroger clerks and meat de·
officials said .the proposed con- partment workers had votE-d to
tract contained significant im- strike at midnight Tuesday un provements over previous offers, less Kroger offeroo a new conwhich the union had said were tract in place of previous conunacceptable .
tract offers. WC)rkers 6bjected
Gene Witsken, president of the primarily to thrre proposals,
UF'CW Local 1099, said' he be- including a 72-cent per hour wage
lieved the company 's latest offer cut for top-leve employees over
was the best the union could the life of a new thrre-year
e.,pect to receive.
contract. Top-leve clerks now

Ohio Lottery

~ay.

25°/o OFF

•Kroger workers vote today-_on contra~t
'

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,.

..

By NANCY YOACHI\M
Sentinel Stall Writer
The Meigs County Commissioners announced Wednesday
that Meigs County's litter grant
for next year has been approved
by the Ohio Department of
Natural Resources In the amount
of $79,650.
The grant application was
reduced from $83,495. The commissioners will he receiving
additional information regard· ·
. ing the funding within the next
two weeks.
The board approved a bill of
~· troih,'Melgs p.ounty Common Pl~as Court for typing of·
court transcr.ipts' In the Llnds~
Taylor appeal. Taylor, who .was
convicted of murder In Meigs.
County, appealed his case at. the
time of his sentencing. Bills for
the transcripts are to be paid out
of revenue sharing money.
In regard to overall county
finances, a letter Is to be sent
from the commission to a II
county officeholders and agen·
cies to curtail spending through·
out the remainder of the year.
"Anyone who can save .a few
bucks wlll be called upon to do
so," said Commissioner Richard
Jones.
Noted Commissioner David
Koblentz. "We'll have to tak~ a
hard look" at the budgets of the
respective offices when the over·
·all 1987 county bud~et is preparoo In tate Decemt.;&gt;r .
·
In other matters , the board
approvro paY,ment of a $500 bill
to McNelly; Patrick and Assoelates, Jackson. for insurance
consultation on behalf of. the
county with BlueCrossofCentral
Ohio. The boardalsoapproved an
agreement for continued consulfallon through Jan. J, 1988.
Meigs County Engineer Phil
Roberts has pr epar!Ii descrlp·
lions of Dixon Lane and Carmen
Road, as requested by Salisbury
Towns hlp Trustees, who wish to
havetbe roadsaddedtotownship
mileage. !loberts said the "mi:
leage man" from the state will be
In Meigs County on Tuesday.
Roberts is In favor of adding the

roads to Salisbur~ Township
mileage.
He also reported that the
ccunty highway department wlll
be assisting Columbia Township
Trustees with a problem at an
intersection on County Road 11
near Dyes ville.
The commissioners asked Ro·
berts and Ted Warner, county
highway superintendent, if the
county has sealed the entrance to
Racine's Shrine Club Park, as
part of Racine's block grant to
improve the pa~k - Warner re·
porrMthe entrante has not been
sealed, and that "it Is probably
too late" to buy the needed
materials . Clerk Mary Hobstetter notoo that a purchase order
for $988 to putchase aggregate
and asphalt for the Racine
project was sent to the highway
department on Sept. 18. Warner
said he was not aware of the
purchase order.

SALES - Plctuted are some of the 40 residents
who turned out Monday evening to get tips oo how

to become more effective salespen~ons.
meeting, held at the Senior Citizens Center,
sponsored by the Meigs County Retention
Expansion CoO)mlttee and the program

The
was

and
was

presented by Scott Wright, Jack Monda and Dr.
Dwight Pugh of the SmaU Blfilness Resource
Center in Athens. The meeting stressed that
elfecllve salesmanship can Improve sales by 15 to
20 percent and the value of knowing the (roducl
and where It Is located.

Senate to vote ·on \tax relief action today
By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - The
Ohio Senate was to vote today on
personal and corporate tax relief
designed to offset an upcoming
windfall in state revenues be·
cause of the elimination of
certain federal tax deductions.
Meanll(hlle, the House sche·
duled a vote on Senate-passed
legislation moving Ohio's presl·
dential primary from May to the
second week In March , to coin·
cide with the llllnols primary .
The Senate was to convene at
11 a.m. and the,House at 2 p.m.
The Senate Ways and Means
Committee recommended the
tax cut bill Wednesday after
slightly reducing the break for
individuals and shifting It toward
corporations.
Meanwhile, a joint SenateRousse conference committee
made little headway In asselli·
bllng a compromise reform blll

for the civil justice system and
Insurance Industry. Final action
on that may be put ofi until next
week.
The Senate Republicans ' tax
cut bill, which originally had
promised Individuals an 11 per·
cent reduction In their income
tax rates, was amended to
IJ'OVide 7 percent next year and
another 1 percent In 1988.
The corporate tax reduction
was tailored to help the tarj:!:st
and the smallest businesses.
''We're being told that we're
ron-competitive (toward busi·
ness) with other states," said
Sen. Richard H. Finan, R·
Cincinnati, chairman ct the cern·
mittee . "These are (cuts) that
will impact on development in
the state."
'rhe committee also voted to
reduce the top bracket ln the
personal Income tax from 8
per&lt;~nt of Income to 6.9 percent.

Finan said that would help
company presidents to' brln~
their ftrms to Ohio because their
personal taxes would not be so
high.
The top corporate tax bracket
would be loweioo from 9. 2
percent to 8.9 percent. The first
$50,000 of income would be taxed
at only 5.1 percent , instead of the
. first $25,000 of income.
Total tax relief in the package
is calculated at $303 million in
fiscal 1987, which begins next
July 1, and $411 million In fiscal
1988.
If it is !DO much , the state tax
ccmmissloner Is required to
adjust the tax rates accordingly
at the endo!Junei988, subject to
the veto of a special House·
Senate panel.
"We're being cautious," said
Finan. '"This is a lot more
realistic (than the original 1)111
introduced last summer) ."
The Ways and Means Commit·

tee also reported out House·
passed legislation .Increasing
from $15,000 to $16,506 the max! ·
mum income for eligibility for
the income tax credit now
available to elderly property
owners. The added tax relief will
cost the state $3.5 million a year
starting in 1988.
The Senate Finance Commit tee reported ou t a House-passed
bill providing an income tax
crooit lor Zi per rent oft he cost of
day care for dependent children
or adults . .
Families earning less than
$30,000 a year would be eligible in
1988, costing the state $16 million
a year in tax bsses.
In floor action. the Senate
voted to establish a special task
force to evaluate the best a~ricul­
tural, commercial, recreational '
and residential uses of tllf Lake
Erie shoreline, and to produce a
20-year plan .

Gallia County man's seven-day standoff ends today
By JIM WEIDEMOYER
OVP Stall Writer
GALLIPOLIS - The man, ,
refusing to be served a court
order. who barracaded himself
within his own home for seven
days was forced out early this
mornln~ by the Gallla County
Sheriff's Department, taken Into ·
custody and transported to
Holzer Medical Center.
On Thursday, Nov. 6, sheriff
deputies went to the home of
Joseph A. Bevan. located at the
junction of Marti and Fairview
roads In Harrison Township, to
serve a Gallla County Common
Pleas Court order. Deputies were
serving the · order to obtain
clothing belonging to his wife,
Martha L. Bevan, 34,-and her two
children. His wife filed for a
divorce last month.
The order stated that, 11 Bevan
would not comply, the deputies 1
were .directed to enter the pre· 1
mlses. After meeting resistance 1
from Bevan'·s relatives, deputies !
!

Athens Mental Health Center to
be evaluated, authorities said .
Bevan was apprehended with·
out any gun Shots fired , Montgo·
mery said . The shot !!roo,
reportedly by Bevan, was the
only 'f irearm discharged
throughout the incident.
The sheriff' department llfted
Its six-day news blackout Wednesday on information pertain·
lng to the Incident. Until around
noon We!lnesday, the department had placed .a blackout on
the entire Incident, refusing to
release any Information. Author·
lUes feared news of the IJ'Oblem
would entice onlookers and possl·
bly endanger Innocent llves.
Upon arriving at the Bevan
residence last Thursday, the
department met resistance from
Deputies Immediately In· the members of Bevan's family,
formed Bevan of his lights, who were arrested and jailed for
served warrants lor his arrest . disorderly conduct and resisting
and transported him to HMC, · arrest. Arrested were Dwl.ght B.
Montgomery ~ald. It Is ex pee too · ·Bevan, 68, Rt: 1, Crown City;
that Bevan will be transpo~ted to David D. Bevan, 28, 1220 Second
were forced back by an apparent
gun shot from Inside the
residence.
The scene was secured follow·
ing the the gun shot, authorities
said. Members of the sheriff
department had been attempting
to negotiate with Bevan since
that time.
After exhausting all avenues In
attempting to convince Bevan to
surrender, Sheriff James. M.
Montgomery directed his depu·
ties to use tear gas to force Bevan
to vacate the residence around
7:30a.m. today:'
Montgomery said the use of
tear gas was to ensure a
harmless apprehension. , Bevan'
was removed from the residence
unharmed, authorities said.

Ave.; Timothy K. Beva n, 24, Rt.
1, Crown City; and Jeffr~ K.
Slone, '1/, Gallipolis.
After the altercation with the
family members, the deputies
attempted to enter !he house but
were forced back by an apparent
gun shot, !ired from the inside,
according to authorities.
Authorities ' said they had at·
tempted to communicate with
Bevan every 15-ll minutes.
'three clergymen, famlly
members, mental health author!·
ties, and thrEE certified hostage
negotiators have. made numer·
ous attempts to persuade Bevan
to surrender to authorities.
On Frtday, Nov. 7, the court
granted Montgomery's request
to order Buckeye Rural Electric
Cooperative Inc. of Gallipolis to
disccMect the electrical service
to the house.
Memoors·of the sheriff depart·
ment remained on the scene·
contlnlously until Bevan surren- '
dered, Montgomerv said. Fair·

,,

I.

'

view Road was block~ off.
Bevan was married to his wlf~,
for a little more than 14 years and
has two childrm , a 13-year-old
son and nine-year-ol d daughter,
through the marriage. After
weeks of threats and mental
abuse, hls wife was forced to
leave the home, according to
court records.
Mrs. Bevan signoo an affidavit
on'Oct. 9 stattngrhat he had told
her she would he punished for
what she was doing and told the
children several times ihat
"!helP mother is going to die."
The court served a restraining
order the same day and Mrs .
Bevan moved out of her marital
home, taking the children .with
her. to tempOrarily ilve with her
· mother in 'Gallipolis.
·
On Oct. 16, the court granted
Mrs. Bevan her request to obtain
the clothing belonging to herself
and the children wMch her
husband maintained In the
,· house.

By BOB HOEFUCH
Sentinel Staff Writer
Cost problems in maintaining
school bus turn-arounds were
discussed Wednesday night when
the Eastern Local School District
Board of Education met In
regular session at the high·
school.
The board has been advlsoo
that the three townships within
the district which have been
maintaining the turn-arounds
can no longer assume full cost
responsibility because of a reduction In the funds which trustees
receive.
The board discussed a pro·
posed suggestion through which
the school board and the trustees
would split the maintenance
costs on a 50·50 basis, and will
further study that approach to
the problem . Archie Rose, transportation supervisor. will survey
the turn-arounds to determine
what work is needed.
The board hired C.D. Mcintyre
as junior high school basketball
coach . Mcintyre is a noncertified person, but there were
no applicants for the position
from the certif ied staff
members.
Jon Jacobs oft he Meigs County
Health Department met with the
board and explained that there is
a head lice problem not only in •
Meigs County but across the ~
stale. The district i&gt; nqulroo to
have a policy to deal with the ~
problem and research indicated
that the district does have an :
existing policy wti ch provides •
that a student cannot be readmit·
ted to school unt U both head lice
and knit sit uations are cleared up.

,

Bus drivers, wit h Mary RDse as": •
spokesperson, met with the. :
board In reference to activity •
trips. The board agreed that :
policy will be that a school bus • •
taken oo such a trip must remain"·'
Oil the site but that a driver ma y.: .
leave the bu s for lunch cr some •· '
other reason but should advise~ :
lhe person in charw . The boant:' -:
agreed to reimbu rse Ralp h Wi gal·~
for mileage for a trac k team trip::;
made last Ma".
:-..;
The board . agreed to ' stud)" '
whether It wishes to pu rchasl' at
$391. a guaranteed maintenance
agreement on a new copirr
recently purrhasoo. A nE'w at-:-:
hletic handbook preparoo by Don ~
Apling, high ~chool principal, ;,
Dennis Eichinger, and the at' ·
hletic cou ncil was distri buted ,:
and will be studied by bo urq ,
members . Mark E. Null, Prank· '
lin Petrie Jr. and Ronald Jutton
were added to the su~tltut~
teachers ' ilst.
,
The board moved Into exec:U- ·•
tlve session to discuss personnel'
and negldtlons which are under- .,:
•way with n on -cer tifi ed .,_
employees.
·:
Artending the meeting were' .
Apiing, Superintendent Rlcharq .
Roberts, Susie Heines, James
Ca ldwell and James Smith, :.
board members : and Elois •
BOston, treasurer.
·'·
The next r~ular meeting wilt'-:
be from 7to 9 p.m. on Nov. 21 and' ·
the next special meeting was set
for Dec. 3 at 7:30 p.m.

�'

J.-·

\

Comrnenta
The :Daily Sentinel
lll Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF TilE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lh

ts:~m~
~v

,.,..,__,._.....,n-e..~·-=­

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/ Controller

.808 HOEOJCH
General Manager

DALl): ROTHGEB,

JR.

News Editor
AMEMBER of The United Press lnterna tiona!, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.

or

LE'ITERS
OPINION are welcome. They should be less than :IX) wards·
long. AJI!etters are subject to editing and I'TUst beslgnOO with name, address and,
telephon e number. No unsignEd leHers wUJ be published . Leuers should be in
good taste, addressing Issues, not pE&gt;rsoo alJIIes .

WASHINGTON - At the RPpubllcan National Committee it
was the morn!ng altenhe night
before. A weary staffer. kreplng
a stlfl upper lip, added up the
kind of statistic that losers le;~n
on, "We would have held the
. Senate." he said, " If we could
have swltchl'd 32.000 votes in Ilve
states.':
.
Sure. ~nd If wishes were
horses, then beggars could ride.
The unadorned fa ct is that In the
most slgnlllcant arena ol the 1986
elections. the RPpublicans took
an unmerciful shellacking. The
Senate will shift !rom 53-47
Republican to 55-45 Democratic.
Not even the most conlldent
Democratic spokesman had pre-

dieted such an outcome.
•
It wasn't quite a debacle.forthe
GOP. The party plckl'd u'p eight
governorships, a gain that will
prove especlaily useful 1n building the party toward 1990 and
beyond. The Republicans gained
one state legislative chamber,
possibly two, They held ttietr
_ losses in the H1,mse of Represen_tatlves to six. I( there were other
'. rays 91 sunshine Wednesday
morning, no one at Republican
headquarters could see them.
Loss ol the Senate won't
cripple Ronald Reagan's program for the last two years of his
presidency, but it will make
things vastly more difficult for
him. A president's . principal

legacy lies In his judicial nomina- .
lions, for federal judges serve for
llfe.II Edward Kennedy replaces
Strom Thurmond as chairman ol
the Senate Judiciary Commlttre,
Reagan 's effort to reshape the
federal courts ·wm be · greatly
burdenl'd. ThP president will
have other prol)lems In such
areas as ptotectlonlsm- and .str~teglc defense.
In tbelr mal&lt;e:the-best-of-11
analysis, some RPpubli~~rts observe that not all the committee
c~alrmanshlps wlll he omin-ous.
At Armed Services, Georpa's
Sam Nunn will carry on where
Arizona's Barry Goldwater
leaves olf. There won't be any
dram atic ideological swings at

DPar Mr. Editor and thr public in
gPnPral,
I would like to compliment Bro.
Ray and sis ter Sherill Laudermilt and their )(roup for what
they are planning for ThanksgivIng da y. That Is what the Bible
commands us todoasChristians,
to bring our tithes and oflerings
In to the storehouse that It ca n be
given out to the needy, widows
and orphans.
1 want to say this, that we are
oot affiliated with the church in
anyway and Iamnotwritingthis
!or any praisl' for myself. But I
would like to give Ihe Lord praise
lor what they aredo ingfor Him . !
ha ve been to their chu rch on
different occasions when in revival or special hymn sings and
tbeY always try their best to
mak P you welcome . There are so
many churches of today that are

trying to build their treasures on
earth Instead of being interested
in getting souls savl'd to lay up
treasures In heaven.
I would like to Include my
phone number a long with theirs,
that ~ anybody wants to ca II me
in advance I will help arrangl' a
way lor them to get there and if
anybody for any reason Is not
ab le to get t bere from age or
sickness . call me and I will bring
their dinner to tllelr bedside if I
am ab le at aiL Sister Sherlll was
given up to die all over the state
by doctors and the Lord healed
her and she is the picture o!
he all h. I guess He had work for
her to do. I hope someone will get
a blessing out ol this. Keep the
good work going, Bro. Ray.
Love and prayers.
Ross and Willie Scari:Erry
phone 949-227.2

The

-·

•

;;r;

Other changes will have,morp
telling effect: Georgia's . Mack
Mattingly has been "politically ···
colorless but conservatively ·. '
-faithful. He wlll be replaced by a .,.•. ,
populist Democ" at, Wy che . · "1:
Fowler. who rates high with tbe .-' '"'
ACLU and lowwitht he American
·;J·d'l
'--· '·
.
•
Conservative Union. • Another · ·
major shift will rome from ' ··:
Nevada, where Democrat Harry ~.'';
Reid (ACLU 00) will bl' far ..••...,-1
removed from the retiring Paul ·
Laxalt. Terry sanford ol North I .,_._.
J - - . Carolina Is not ex~ct)y a !laming ·:~
';~~;;;;;:;;;:
liberal. but he stands about 180 ·.. ·~
~
degrees apart from the late John ', .;.
East. Two nPwcomers to Wa- · '·'
shlngton, Tom DE'schle of SQuth ..,.,
and Kent Conrad of North : "
train here, you're Dakota
Dakota, wlll be vot)ng in shatp .... .
- '~
contrast to their predec!'ssors.

&lt;

First you were FOR contra aid, and nowthat they can
AGAINST it. Why don't you make up your _mind ....

He wanted chandeliers
WASHINGTON _ While State
Department oiflclals were begglng Congress for money to beef
up sec urity a t terrorist threatened posts _ and closing
others 10 save money _ the
American ambassador In Trl·
nldad was picking out crystal
chandeliers for his olflclal resti ·
dence and ,proposing a tepnls
co urt and costly renovation olhis
swi mming pool.
All told, Ambassador Sheldon
Kry s wanted an estimated
$150,000 worth ol 11)1-provements
for his digs in Port-of-Spain. the
T 'd
Caribbean capital of rim ad
and Tobago. At the same tlnie.
the department was preparing to
close consula tes in Bremen, West
Germany: Rotterdam, Net herlands; Salvdaor da Bahia .
Brazil: Sevllle, Spain; Trieste,
Italy; and Winnipeg, Canada, to
save money.
The State Department's pleas
for additional security fund s
were only partly met: Congress
cut $138 million from the depart ment 's salaries and expense
budget, a nd $8ll7 million !rom the

proposl'd outlays lor security.
Word of the bu&lt;jgetary crisis
apparently trav!'ll'd by banan a
boat to the southernmost U.S. •
outpost In the Caribbean. but
information on the ambassador's
luxurious refurbishing plans was
se nt to Washington In cables and
ofllclal order req~lsltion · forms.
some of which ha ve been obtained by our associate Stewart
Harris. Here are some pages
!rom the ambassador's dream
book:
-Construction ol a tennis
court and paving ol the ambassa·
doria! parking lot : $40.000.
-Re-tlllng, scraping and repainting of the swi mming pool :
$7,000,
- Installation or central air
co nditioning for the residence:.
$20.130. Cables explained that the
residence's exis ting window un Its repeatedly break down .
-RPnovatlon of the master
bedroom and bat hroom and
another ba throom : $~.000. The
master bathroom "can only
accommodate one person at a

\

• ,....,!:...

'

Jack Anderson &amp; Joseph Spear _;~·~:, j'''•

.. ,,.,..

time," one cable noted.
is only onC' public court: how- '"_..
-Remodeling guest .bedroom ever, it Is located In a high -crime . :
and bathroom, repairing or re- area."
,' .
. . ·-t.·
placing plumbing and E'lectrlcal
The Foreign Building Ofllce ""'
fixtures: $10,000._
'approved the ambassador's ten- '• ' •
In a telephone intcr,view. Krys nls court - "in Rflnclple," but · "'·
told us that some improvements officiaL• said that ,fundirtg for all ..•;:;
to the 29-year-old residence were emba ssy tennis courts was put on , ' '
approved long brforb he took _hold after the bUdget cuts. The ,lJ,,,:
over In August 1985 -which was
departmE'nt authorized -only ''"' '
also, ol course, before the cur- $17,000
lor the Port-of-Spain '""''
ren t fisca l crisis. The ambassa - residence 's 1\Jrnishlngs, $.'i.OOO :. c::
oor said much of the furniture is lor new gutters and a new roo! : "''
1a years old, and the flpors are and $.'i7.000 for tbe air condlilon- "' .,
covered with "a cacophany , of ing and bathroom work-.
,. "
carpets." The only Item re·
Not included in the TP!urblsh ~- , • .. .quested that could be considered ing outlay werC' tbe .plano Ilown ''
extravaga nt , according to Krys, down to the Islands and . the ·"!' .'
was a $2,500 chandelier lor the armor-plated Opel Senator car, . • i
dining room .
shipped from Europe lor $20,430. • ,,,,
In one cable to Fo~y Bottom, Officials "dC'IC'nded the expend!- ·•.::•
the ambassador said a tennis tures, partlcu larly the .repairs to .:'•
court would Improve the "post's the residence, which they said
morale and provide a healthlul had deteriorated badly from 'J';
outlet" for embassy E'mployees. constant cx ~ s ure to the sea air. -~ .-~.
Private tennis clubs are expen- Th&lt;'Y also pointed out that the
sive and have standards ol renovations were ordl'reil · to ·. ,
athletic prowess that not a ll coincidE' with S{'('urlty wprk 9n ··_'.:·
emba ssy staffers can meet. the
the embassy compound to a.void .,1'·
ca ble explained, ad ding: " There tearing
It up twice.
I )\1.'

French fries _________A_rt_B_uc_;_hwa....:._;,ld_· ·.;;.:,,,,
..

There are many methods o!

When the Syrian Embassy got
lnvohied In trying to blow up a 747
the British klckl'd them out. And
what did tll&gt;y get lbr it? Nothing
but scorn !rom their friends In
the Middle East. On tbe other
hand the French , by ignoring
Syrian dirty tricks, will not only
wind up with a very good tradl'

'
By FRED McMANE
twice about awarding
Clemens power di'Uvery . Roger Is vei-y - . Others rPCelving votes werethe Cy Young. The rlght-handl'r oompetltlve and vl'ry disci- Davl' Righetti ol theY ankees 120
UPI A1111181ant Sport&amp; Editor ·
NEW YORK (UP!) - Roger
won unanllnously,
··
pllned. His best years arl' ahead
points). Jack Morris ol the
Clemens cllnched the American
Clemens, who led the major ol him, hecause the .best years lor Tigers i13 ) and rookie Mark
League Cy Young Awar~ months
leagues In victories with 24 , a pitcher are hetween.27 and 32 Eichhorn of !he Toronto Blue
before It officially was awardl'd
became the first AL pitcher to years, especially a power Jays (2).
to him Wedni'Sday. The suspense ·ri'Ceive all 28 flrst ,place votes pitcher .."
·
The previous seven AL Cy
' surrounding his post-season ac- since Ron Guidry ol the New
The only surprise in the voting . Young Award winners all suiclaim will be resolved Nov. 18 York Yankees In 1978: The only - and a mild one at tllat ~ was lered disappointing seasons the
when the league's Most Valuable other AL pitcher ever to be a that Mexican lelt-hMdPr Ted , . following yea·r and three ol them
Player Is announc~d.
unanimous Gy Youngwlnnerwas 1 Higuera ol the Milwaukee Brew- - Steve Stone , Pete VuCkovlch
''I'll think about it after to- Denny McLain of the Detroit ers beat out right-hander Mike anti Brei Sabl'rhagen- sufferedday,'' Clemens said ol the MVP Tigers in 1968.
Witt or-the Calllornla Angels lor crlppllng Injuries:
after being named the 1986 ·Cy
s~ond place. Higuera received
"That gives me something to
Young Award winner. "And If I
"He'll get a pretty big raise," 11 sPCond place votes aiid n,bte shoot lor.lo try to lalock off those
don'twinlt,IhopeJimRicedoes. · Red Sox General Manager Lo~ ­ thirds !rom the 28 voting BB\ff\A gremlins," said Clemens via a
. "But people who said they· · Gorman said .of the 6-foot-4, 215- members - two !rom each AL telepholK' confer!'nre call !rom
: .wouldn't vote for pitchers for the pound right-hander. "Only he is city - for 42 points while Witt his Katy, Texas. home. "Past Cy
MVP have charged their minds capable ol having that type of rPCeived nine second place votes Young winners have had tough
and said they would vote lor me, season again. As long as he's and eight thirds br 35 points'.
years and It will be tough tow in it
·
physically sound, he's capable of
and that's gratifying."
Clemens is ooly the second Red back-to·back. Cy Young is an
None of the 28 vollrrg members doing it. •
Sox pitcher to win the Cy Young award for the best 'pltchC'r, and
ol the Baseball Writers' Associa"His mPChanics are sound, Award, joining Jim Lon borg who now I will rank up there with my
tlon ol America had to think.... he's got a very smooth, strong won it In ·1967.
heroes.''

.:-t,;:

V·

Gaston looked shocked.
handling countries who train and "France never pays blackmail .
harbor terrorists. One way Is What we are doing Is taking a
what the British did reeently 'special' role In the Mlddlp East
when It broke all relations with crisis, We can ' t play that role If
Syria and booted their Ambassa- we take Britain's side over
dor out o! the country. The reason Syria's."
was the Syi-!ans were found to bl'
" Have you ever heard of
knee deep in helping a terrorist Georges Ibrahim Abdallah?" I 1
blow up a n El Al plane. The asked.
British askl'd their NATO allies
"We are holding him In prison
to support them in punishing the In Paris beca use he Is a terrorist
Syrians for their lousy behavior ~ swi ne a nd a presumed
Naturally the French fl'fused .
murderer."
Why did the French turn the
"Do you know that when he
British down ?
comes to trial this winter the
_ Once again It was a question ol French have assured Syria they
French pr ide.
will acquit him?"
Gaston de Boccado r. a deputy
"It Isn't all that simple. We will
French minister ol Duplicity, only acq uit him II Syria promises
said, "It was eit her a question of us that the terrorist bombings in
honor or of selling the Syrians a Paris will stop.''
half-billion dollars' worth of·
"Is that blac kmail or isn't It?"
arms. What choice did we have?
" No, It's smart thinking," he
We had to send a message to said . "We hav e to persuade Syria
Damascus."
that we have good faith so sll&gt;'ll
"WhaJ kind o! message?"
Today Is Thursday, Nov. 13. the 317th day ol1986 with 48 to follow.
help us frre our captured French
"Fra n ce do esn' t hold
The moon is moving toward its full phase.
hostages."
·
grudgi'S. "
The morning star Is Venus .
"Which Syria was Instrumen"My dear fri end, there are tal In kidnapping In the Ilrst
The evenin g stars are Mars . Jupiter and Sat urn.
bombs
going of! all over Paris place. What happens when they
Those born on this date arl' under the sign o! Scorpio. They Include
these
days.
Doesn't that get the release these hostages and then
Kin~! Edward III of England In 1312; Scottis h physicist Jami'S
French
angry
at Syria?"
Maxwell in 1831; actor Edwin Booth, brother of pres ldentlal assassin
kidnap nine more?" · ·
"You
miss
the
point. II Syria
John Wilkes Booth, In 1833; a nd Scottish author Robert Louis
"We can deal with It," Gaston
knows who is responsible lor the said. "France knOYIS more about
Stevenson In 1850,
bombings in France, then she Is lighting terrorism thabn any
On this date In history:
.
,
the
only one who can stop them. It other country In Europe." ·
In !927. the Holland Tunnel was opened under the Hudson River,
would
be a serious mistake to
!Inking New York City and New Jersey . ·
·
"How Is that?"
anooy
a
country who has such
In 1933. the first ri'Corded "sit-down" strike In the United Stall'S was
"When someone insults us and
close links to the people who are slaps us across til&gt; face , we say,
staged by workers at theHormel Packing Co. In Austin, Minn.
trying to blow us up."
In 1973. the Senate approved a bill au thorlzlng cons tructlon o!iln oil
'What do you want from us? ' And
"There
Is
somethl
~g
wrong
pipeline !rom Alaska.
when they tell us we give It to
ll&gt;re. Syria starts the terrorism
In 1914, Yasser Aralat, head of the Palestine Liberation
them.''
and you have decidl'd_to be nice to
Organization, told the United Nations Genl'ral Assembly the goal ol
"That will get you respect
evl'ry time," I said.
the PLO was to establish an independent state of Palestine.
· her so she 'li stop it. Haven't you
people In France evl'r heard or
In 1982, the Vietnam War memorial was dl'dlcated In Washington,
"We like to think we're more
blackmail?"
D.C.
practical than our NATO allies.

Today~ in

Ohio

·-·

the head . Q! tbe committee' ·......:
- handling app-oprlatlons, tbe :r.,t
budget, comment&gt; and til&gt; en vir; · ~:
onme!!t. But , the president will'~
have his troubles wll&gt;n Claiborne ~:
Pell takes char~ at. Foreign ~·
Relations and Howard Metzenbaum d1Splaces 1Dn'ln Hatch. as ;~~~:
chairman of -Lallor and Humal) -~ ·
l'!.esou~ces :
· "\ ·
, _ · ·, -- :
· '
· . ·, ·1:~:
The Seriate wlil~ have l3 -n~.;
members. In same lnstan,ces, the ;•~
change in party labels will have_
Ilttle legislative effect. Alaliarna 's Incoming Richard Shelby, ~:
lor example,' can be expected-to · '
vote aboui: as Jeren'l!ah .penton -_
h8s voted .. Tim Wirth o1 Colorado, who rates 90 perrent
approval . from the ' American
Civil Liberties Union. - is as -,
Illleral a Democrat ~s Gi!ry Hart._ ._. ••
Bol) Grall am. o( Florid~ 1s as , .,.,•
toygh on drugs · and 'crim&lt;' as . • .;:,
outgoing Paula Hawkins. The . ',,
president never got ll)uch supf ' •'
port from Republican Charles, ; •
Mathias ol Maryland; Democrat"- ·· .._
Barbara Mikulski wliii'XIibit the· --same enthusiasm.
. I ..

cri ricize.

As Christians .should do

·-· ~

'Not _q-. uite
a
deba.-;le_~__.,;__~=-------=--~.. - ~~
-

There was a lot of negat ive comment during the polltlcal campaign
that mercifully !'nded last wrek abou t all th e " negative advertising " - candidates using much of their effort and moriey knocking each
other.
Not that negative campaign ing is so mething new in American
politics. Some historians sugges t George Was hington , who was
unanimously elec ted presiden t in his first two terms. really dl'cided to
go home_to Mount Vernon when political critics started calling him
"tyrant" and "dicta tor."
In 'any case. there is a n argument to be made lor campaigns that

Letter to the Editor

-

November 1

·.!"""'"'

Roger Clemens nanied AL's .top pitcher · :'

What to do when
the mud is flying

It is entirely within thl' ru les of civilized campaigning to criticize a
candida te's voti ng record or a challenger' s positions on the issui'S .
It Is legitimate for an incumbent to question whether a challenger
has thr qualifications for the office being sought or a challenger to
criticize the incumbl'nt's attendance r'PCord on important votes.
But just as there is a difference in football between "a clean hit"
and "a cheap shot ." there is a difference In politics between
legit imatC' cr iticism and mudslinging.
It is dirty politics to pretend that a legislator who voted for
everything in an an_tl-drug billl'xcept a capital punishment clause is a
friend of the dope pushers. It is mudslinging to insinui! l&lt;' that a
candidate .iS a homosexual because she is a feminist or he is a civil
liber ta ria n.
It is as off base to suggest that a member of Congress who votes to
cu t defense spending Is a communist sympathizer as ills to claim that
a legislator who supports more monl'y for the Pentagon Is a
warmonger.
It would be nice to report that ca ndidates who play dirty politics
always or at least usua lly lose. Some do, but the really sad truth is that
when one- candidate starts sli nging mud. thl' other frequently gets
down in the slime to reciprocate.
There were a numbl'r ol campaigns like that in 1986, and the !act
that . some ca ndidates got elected with dirty cam paigns probably
means that "political consultants" - the new horde of professional ,
campaign managers - will be at it again In 1988.
So what Is the voter who is offended by ~ uch tactics to do?
On0 possi bility Is to refuse to vote for any ca ndidate who runs for
office by crawling through the mud . Another is to pay no attention to
candidat es when they begin such tact ics.
•
·
In that conni'Ctlon, here is a modest an d only partially whimsical
suggl'stlon about what to do If a campaign gets dirty.
Find a shoebox or other contai ner of similar size and cut a slot in the
top. Every time a candidate or a candida te's supporter does or says
something you think is out of bounds , drop a note or a newspaper
clipping into the box. Sometime before Election Day, open the boxes
and separate the slips and clips into two piles. Vote lor the candidate
with the smaller pile.
And il both campaigns are so bad you can't bring yoursell t ovote for
eit her candidate? Aside from staying home from the polls. about the
only rC'course is to move to Nevada, which gives it s voters the
clvillzl'd ballot choice of "none of the above.:·

---

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"

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business, but with a sympatbetlc ·
ear in Damascus the next urne ·
thl' Syrians try to pull off another ·
bombing."
·
· .
I said to Gaston, " The French
really seem to know how to
handle terrorism."
He agrred , "We ha1·c to be
we~k or people will walk all over

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Victory .Circle
'

Rival classic Saturday. _
By SCOTT WOLFE
II you're looking lor some! bing
to do Saturday evening or II
you' re just interested in boosting
the Eastern and Soutbern athletic boosters , then mal&lt;e plans
to atte~d the t,hird annual "Rival
Classic" alumni football game to
he played at Southern High
School this Saturday at 7 p.m.
Tickets sold by Eastern alumni
bl'nelit the Eastern athletic program, while tl~kets sold by
Southern alumnl .benellt the SHS
program. Tickets are available
from any participating player.
Tickets will also bl' avail able at
the gat&lt;'. ,
Over the years Eastern and
Sollthl'rn teams have had many
memorable baHles with Eastern
currently holding an 18-7 edge In
the high school series.
Southern claimed til&gt; .first
Rival Classlc 1 but Eastl'rn came
back last season to even til&gt;
series . Saturday's contest will be
the rubber match.
Although held on lrfendly
• 1erms to henefit a good cause,
team pride and personal pride
still surface, along with a competitive •attitude to mal&lt;e for
great compPtltlon. '
Players !rom as far back as
JJI66 still" put on tbe pads for the
annual bout; It's something to
look forward to · they say ...
jokingly adding that they have a
year to get ready for lbe next
game as •they refer to the sere
muscles and aching joints !bey
ex perience on Sunday.
For further ln!ormatkln contact C.D. Mcintyre who heads the
Eastern .!iQuad ·a- Brady Huffman who heads ' the Soutbern
team.
Individuals purchas-Ing tickets

.

.i

Bengal~ defense at bottom of league

AL ' HQNOREE - Roll"• Clemens
~~ American League
champion Boston Red Sox was·nllllled ill&gt; unanlmOil~ will net ctthe
.\merlc,an League Cy Young. Awar~ by the Baseball Writers of
America Wednesday. Clemens JTUtkes ·his home In Katy, Texas.
(UPI•)

.'

CINCINNATI (UP!) - AIjhough the Ben gals are 6-4, their
defensi ve statis tic s say
otberwls&lt;;-.
Cincinnati has given up 271
points, the most In the-NFL. Not
lar behind are Tampa Bay (269),
Miami (266} and Green Bay

the fewest. 120.
·defense has , stan I'd playing
"Sure, It 's disappointing," said poorly."
defensive coordinator Dick LeThe Bengals oiiense Is nearly
Beau. " I think we've given up at the other end ol the spectrum .
few er points than we had last The Bengals have scored 237
year at this time , but that's not _ points, seventh best in the
saying much, Is it? WI' had bad · league.
·
games against the run a cqu.pleof
The Bengals hope the react iva -

•

and safety Robert Jackson from
lnjurl'd reserved will shore up
the defense. ·
Blllup; , a rookie who had
startl'd since the beginning of til&gt;
season, has heen sldelinl'd lor
lour weeks with a broken bone in

are~~~et~wlnthega~b~I ~~;~;);.;T;h;e;Be~a;~;h;a;v;e~g~~;e;n;u~p~;w;ee;k;s;l;n;a;r;ow;,;a;n;d;oo;w~oo;r;pa~s;s~t~~~n;o~l~eo~r~n~e~rba~c;k;L;e;W;~;B;I;ll;up;~~h~ls;h;M;d;.~~~~~~~~

as a door prize arid yru nred not
be present to win. So whethev or
not you plan to attend see yrur
resPective alumni' soon and boost
your school's atl!letlc program.

1

1986

--'i"""

Former Meigs Co\l·ntian Charles Elchlqger, son of Opal
Elchlngl'r, Chester, had a dream
come true this past Saturday as
he ass'umed the head coaching
reigns o! the Ml!filn High loot ball
squad participating In the state
·
playoffs.
Charli&lt;' took til&gt; retgns •o! the
Punchers alter head mentor Bob
Orth became Ul and 'underWI'nt
surgery Saturday, the day oft he
game.
Incidently , Ml!flln won tbe
gam'e, 21-0, over the Gallla
Academy Blue Devils and thus
advance to the rpglonal Ilnals
this weekend.
Charlie has been teaching at
Mlfllln since 1972, but has served
as head football coach at Rey ·
noldsburg for three years, while
stlll teaching at Mlfllln.
Char,lle also- help; with thi&gt;
wrestling team. however. he has
also eoachl'd baseball and bas-·
ketball at the school during his
long tenure, enjoying much success in all his endfivors.
Charlie Is til&gt; brother of
Eastern High basketball coach
Dennis Eichinger and football
ro-coach Don Eichinger. Sister
Laura Is connPCtEd with tbe
recreation department In
Worthington.
Charlie Is also' an avid au to
racing enthusiast, thus qualifyIng him lor a special good guy
award. Untll next tim&lt;' I'll see
you in the victory circle.

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CEDARFALLS,Iowa tUPII- not too happy when we don't win _
Relaxed and jocular, former and I hope I'm not unhappy too
eJh"io State Coach Eldon Miller long.' ~ '
unveiled his Ilrst Northern Iowa
McGrath, a 6-8 !O.rwl!rd- cenbasketball team Wednesday by ter, said the Panthers may· be a
tl'lllng reporters hP knew he was better team than expected and
in trouble when he saw his could surprise some opponents
pict ure - and not one ol his this year. Thl' vetl'ran Inside
players' profiles - on billboards player added that he would not
promoting UNI's new season .
rule out a winning season this ·
That's been the case for Mlltar year.
this year, The Ilrst -year UN! ; Along with his veteran pi ayers ,
coach - who left OSU after 10 Mlller said freslunen Jonathan
yea rs with a 176-118 rccora and a Cox, Maurice Newby and Jason
l986 NIT title - has been the Reece are among til&gt; team
showcase of a graduation-riddled m~mb?rs who are ready to play
Panther team tha t returns only With two wreks o! practice
fivP veteran P.layers.
remaln)ng before the Panthers
·:we couldn't play a game play an exhibition Nov. 24
today. We could. but we couldn't aga inst the Yugoslavian Na.control anything," Mlller said . . tlonal team and open the season
" It' s like that analogy o! the at home against Marylana·
stomper and stompee - we're Baltimore County Nov. 29. The
not the stomper right now."
remainder o! the UNI players
. Miller said his debut UN! "areapotentlalredshirt,"Miller
sq uad will be long on youth and ·said as he looks to build a winning
short on experience . with nine p-ogram in Cedar Falls.
freshml'n included on the 15Miller said the situation at
player· roster. Last year's UNI Nortbern Iowa , being sandtea m, which finished with an 8-19 wlched between powerhouse
overall mark ani! 3-11 In the schools Iowa and Iowa State, Is
Associa tion of Mid-Continent similar to tbe situation_he lacl'd
Univers ities conferroce, gradu- when he ooached ~~ Westprn
at I'd the school's alltlme leading Michigan with Notre Dame and
scorer Randy Kraay!'nbrlnk and Michigan ·to contend with -lor
top rebounder Scott Plondke. •
rPCrulls.
This year Miller will be relying
"We're not g:~lng to replace
on senior Inside players Kirk Iowa or Iowa. State. We're not
Francis and Jim McGrath, jun- even g:~lng to get caught up In
tors Greg MQDermott and Pat that kind of thing," MU!er said.
Quinn and junior c,ollege transfer "Really, what we'll try to do Is do
Mike Bailey to form tbe nucleus the best job with what we could
ol a team that grad)late&lt;:\'players do here.
·
'
responsible for 73 f~JCrcent o! its . "I'm sure we're going to
scoring and 66 tJer!,'enl of Its recruit some kids ,woo are going
r·eboundlng last yPar. Aoother tQchoose'towa andwe'regolngto
key player Is guard Nick Nurse, recruit some kids wiD are going
who Is sidelined wllb an ankle to ehoose Iowa State," he said.
injury.
·
"But, hopefully, some day they
·•we expect towln.J don't know may recruit somebody who
whether we can or not but we
chooses us because there's some
hOpe \O," sald Miller. whose good things going on here." '
team was plckl'd to finish last in
The first -year Panther 'coach
the"AMCU 1n a poll ~nducted at said his team wUI feature a
the conferroce p-evlew meeting . full -court man-to-m·an defense
lnChicagoearllerthlsweek. "We , with emphasiS on re)loundlng
can't afford to walt because I'm' and the last break.
•

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13, 1986

Ohio

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Big 10. teams · looki~g for :4 more.bowl .~mes
EVANSTON, Ill. (UPil- The
Big Ten Conference Is IOi,&gt;klng to
place at ,least .four other teams
besides its conference champion
Into post-season bowl games.
The winner of the Nov: :12
Mlchlgan.Qhlo State game Is
. expected io decide the league
championship and automatic
trip to the Rose Bowl to face
Pac-10 champion Arizona State.
'The Cotton Bowl reportedly
has said It wants tlle loser of tre
OSU·Michlgan game against the
Southwest Conference cham·
pion. Other bowl scoutswlll be at.
various games this weekend.
The Big Ten has sent six teams
to -bowls In each of the last two
years.
" lthtnk traditionally we have
five or six teams lnoowlgames, "
said Iowa coach Hayden Fry ,
whose club Is out of the running
for the league title after .being
upset by Illinois last week.
"Even with all that has happened
to us ~¥ilh injuries and all we' re
still in it."
Iowa. the defending Big Ten
champion that lost in the~ Rose
Bowl last year, has several

things going . for It lor bowl
scouts, including a large followlng ·of fans .
"From what I hear we don't
need to win the final two games to
go to some bowl," Fry said.
"Obviously, Michigan and Ohio
State will go and I would think
Indian~ and Michigan State,
along with possibly Minnesota ."
Minnesota, 4·2 In the league ·
and 6·3 overall, plays at Michl gan Saturday. Cl)'och John Gutekunst said an u~et would likely
be nooeded lor the Golden
Gophers to go tO a SECond
successive bowl game.
'
" We've got a chan're J! we
win, " said Gutekunst, who has
said early season losses trobably
doomed his club's chanres lor a
bowl game.
Illinois coach Mike White,
wmse team won 't be going to a
post-season game, said the
league should have ftve solid
bowl cont~;nli&gt;rs.
"I know from previous expe·
rlence what the bowi people are
·Jooklng at," White said . "The
bowl people are looking for you to
win six games or have six wins

Boston Celtics coast
.to 124-116 NBA win

IT'S MINE -Boston's Dennis Jolwlson (foreground) falls to the
floor while battling for loose baD with MUwaul&lt;ee's Terry
Cummings at Boston In NBA game Wednesday night. (UPI)

Browns prepare for
Plunkett-let Raiders

: ••

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BEREA, Ohio iUPli -To a
man, the Cleveland Browns say
the Los Angeles Ra iders are a
lim e bomb waiting to explode,
and it is quarterbac k Jim Plun·
kett whose finger is on the
trigger.
As expected. Raiders ·coac h
Tom Flores has be nched Marc
Wilson in favor of the ~ - year- old
Plunkett. In the Raiders' 17- 13
victory Sunday at Dallas. Plunkett came off the hench to throw
two touchdown passes to Dokie
Williams . The c han ge is
permanent.
"Things weren ' t go ing very
well against Da llas In the first
half," Flores said. " Marc was
having problems and his thumb
was bother ing him. We weren't in
sync In the fi rs t half and I felt a
change was necessary.
"The change worked out well
and I decided to stay with it . It's
Jim 's ball and we're going with
him. He's a warr ior and a battler
a nd yo u ca n never write him off. "
Browns Coach Marty Schottenhelmer sai d the change won ' t
affect how he prepares his team
for Sunday's game In Los Angeles. but added he wasn 't
surprised at the switch.
"The Ra iders usually find a
way to win regardless of their
quarter oock," Schottenhelmer
sai d. " Plunkett Is very resourceful. He's a winning quarterback .
He once sa t !l.l t a year (1978 ), but
he came back . That' s indicative
of ttv:&gt; type of competitor he Is.
The pl ayer s on that team res~ nd
to him ."
·

Plunkett was the fir st pl ayS'
chosen In the 1971 draft and was
the NFL's Rookie of the Year
that season wlv:&gt;n he tlr ew 19
touchdown passes for tre New
England Patriots. He started 56
siraight games and thr ew for
2, 000 yards his Orst four seaso ns.
However . mostly because of
Injuries, thi ngs soured for Plun-kett in 1975 and he attempted just
92 passes. He was traded to San
Francisco where he played as a
llick up for two seasons and was

By GERRY MONIGAN
UPJ Sports Writer
By the end of the first quarter
of Wednesday night's Boston·
Milwaukee game. both head
coaches and the league's best
player were gone. The scenario
was right for an unlikely hero.
and Fred Roberts filled the role.
Milwaukee Coach Don Nelson
suffered back pains on Wednesday morning and did not accompany the team to Boston, and
Celtlcs Coach K.C. Jones missed
his second straight game due to
the flu . Larry Blrd,last season's
Most Valuable Player, earned an
ejection by referee Bill Oakes
with 2:52 remaining In the first
quarter.
The Celtics also played without
Danny Alnge. Bill Walton and
Scott Wedman, who are all on the
injured list, but led 65-58 at .
halftime. They then outscored
the Bucks 35-16 In the third
quarter. Roberts. a 6-foot· 7
reserve Iorwa rd acqu I red tr om
Utah during · the offseason,
scored 7 of his 23· points In the
ou tb urst, an d fl n Ished wl t h a
team-high 12 rebounds and 6

Illinois ."

Pittsburgh Penguins slip past ·Bruins

·

victory. extending their streak of
home·court triumphs to 44. The
Bucks lost fo~ the first time In
their last lour games.
Bird was ejected after protest·
ing a call by twice throwing the
ball high In the ali·, then arguing .
"That's when we should have
taken control," said Milwaukee's
Terry Cummings. "Instead tbey
picked up,the pace."
B!rd's 2 points was rot the'!
lowest total of his carrer. On Jan . .
31, 1981, he was held scoreless In ~·
a game at Golden State.
In other games, Wastington f
edged Chicago 101·!11, Detroit '
downed Phoenix 108-100, Dallas ·
whipped Houston 114-85, Sacra·
menlo nipped Denver U0-108,
and the Los Angeles Lakers
pounded Seattle 122· 97 .
B~lets 101, Bulls 00
At Landover, Md ., Moses Ma·
lone sco red 33 points andgr abbed
the final rebound and Jeff Malone added 30 points to help
Wastington break a thrre - game
losing streak. The loss prevented
the Bulls A-om getting off to their '

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POMEROY -The Ken Am• ·
r; · bury Chap!er of lzaak Walton
;;:. recently ·spo nsored Its annual
:-: . Natio nal Hunting and Fishing
~&gt; Day event a i Roya l Oak Park
~: :· More tha n 150 people partlclpatrd In a variety of demons tra ·
lions and presrntations offer ed
bv event orga nizers.
lzaak Walt on sponsors th'
· national ~vent each year in an
/ effort to lntroctuc~ moreproplr to
.· var ious recr~a liOn.&lt;. to prepare
more prople In outdoor respo nslbllllirs. ,to drmo nstra te safe and
i&gt;njoya bl!- trchniques , and I o lxosl
srrve thr public In achlrving !he
~als of the orga nizatio n.
· Jza ak Walton Is a conservation
orga niza tion. whose goals arc to
sc&lt;' that the nation's air, soli.
wa ter . and nat ura l resourecs are
protf'Ctrd and wisely used . '
This ,vPar's National Hunt ing
and Fishing Day activities were
ai med at permitilng pro ple. oo th
young and old . to ollserve and
participate in a va riety of actlvltlrs with special emp hasis pl aced
on huntin g and fishing et hies.
m orality. sa fely a nd
co nserva tion.
Activities for the day included
a gun sa fety and hunter ethi c
presentation by Meigs County
Game Protector Keith Woods .
J im Spleet present ed a tur key
ca llin g demonstration and •acco mpanying movie.
J ohn Hetzer a trappin g prcsrn • fal lon. whiiP · George Morrison
• demo nstr a t ed filleting tech .- nlques: ' D.C. While. Ice fi s hin g:
.,
Brian Yonker a nd Joe Bailey,
CanoPing; Owen D am~wood,
Blackpower: The Ch ~s t er Bo·
whunters Associ at ion a nd
Archery Club. Archery: .and 1rap
shooting by John and Wendel
Jeffers and Bruce Zirkle. Larry
Well presef\led proper reload ing
techniques .
The day was highlighted by a
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Reagan recreated Chicago
Cubs' games as a sJ)or tcaster in
Iowa in till• 19.lls. He also
recalled how he '' pitched thr re
games for the Car dinals" in the
1926 World Series but had to wait
until 1952 to do g) , T hat was the
year Reagan, then at I 1'1;&gt; mid po int of his Hollywood carre r .
played pitcher Grover Cleveland
Alexander in ttv:&gt; mov ie "The
Winning TPam."
The Mets defeated ltv:&gt; Boston
Red Sox four games to thr re after
a thrilling comeback In the lOth
Innin g of Ga me 6. New York t bird
baseman Ray Knight was named
the series' Mos t Va lu able Player.

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In response, New York Mayor
Edward Koch lashed back,

"Speakes speaket h with a forked
tongue."
Wednes da y. Speakes watched
from the sidelines as Reagan,
standing before a larw gathering of White Hous e staffers , paid
tribute to Ihe Mets for a drea m
that '' began In sprin g training
and culminated by bringing the
championship to the Big Apple."
" You 've come a long way !rom
that 40-120 record the . amazing
Mets posted in 1962," Reagan
said. "Believe me, even this
lifelong Cubs fan has to dis h out
the praise. You have cert a inly
done yourselves. the city of New
York and all America proud."

D'difHta

m:150, take 'part

DAKOTA

America that 'the other tea m
from New York' could play this
game, but they did It their way ,"
Reagan said. ''The Mets mape
'em say, 'You gotta believe."'
Dressed in suits and ties. tre
champs were· a picture of protocol, although when the event
was announced two weeks ago ,
White Hou se spokesman Larry
Speakes jokingly suggested the
executive mansion might not
withstand the kind of ruckus that
followed the Mets' World Series
win.

r--======================::::::::;.:::::=================:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;

&gt;More than

r ....... ucs ...

The BankThatMakesThings

. .. ousting
Swededay
Stefan
•'
Edberg top-seeded
on a disastrous
for
'
seeded players In the $375,000
Bens on and Hedges ten nis.
~
tour nament.
:
, Hlasek. who left his hom eland
•· of Czechoslovakia with his fam •
when he was 3, took 1 hour . 57
,.,. lly
minutes to score his 7-6 18·61. 3-6,
' 6-4 first-round· victory over ·the
' world' s fourth -ranked player .
Edberg, who had reac hed at
least the semifinals In his las t 10
Grand Prix tournaments , failed
to show the form which which
carried him last week to the
Stockholm Open .title .
Hlasd&lt; , with superb consistency. took a 4· llead In the third
•
set with two servi ce breaks.
• Although Edberg managed to
• •• pull one break bac k. the 20 -yearold Swede never looked like
getting back to level ter ms.
Earlier , Wednesqay. Israeli
army sergeant Amos Mansdorf,
ranked 83rd in the world, de• feated Henri Leconte 6-2, 6-7
,;. (5·7\, 6-3. John McEnroe. who
•• ~·• has won four of his Iasf five
:-: tournaments since oomlng ou t of
•; · his six- month sabbatical, b st 6-3,
: ' 5-7, 6-4 to Australian Pat Cas h In
'
a 2 hours . 10 minutes.
.
Yanhlck No ah. seeded third.
; · : ad\:anced to the quarterfi nals
•; · with a 6-2,7-6 17 -ol seco nd - round'
: .~ ~,

SHADOW

Johnston said. "I feel it Is better
for Mike and for Ire bett erment
of our club to make a change.''
Hannan scored hi s seco nd goal
or tre game at 2:33 of the thiJ d
period after Chabot passed from
behind the Boston net and Han ·
nan came down the slot to direct
the puck past goalie Pat Riggin.
The victory boosted Pittsburgh
back into firs t place in · the
Patrick Division. With 22 PQints,
the P enguin s have one more than
the idle Philad el phi a Flyers.
In other ga mes, Montreal
outl asted Quebec 4-3. the New
York RangE"rs edged Buffalo 2- 1,
New Jersey downed Detroit 5-3,
St. Louis topped Toronto 4- 2,
Chicago and Waslington Hed 2-2.
and Hartford nipped Vancouver
4-3.

'

tilt ..... ..........
'""""""tilt ......... ... ... -IOtllt
t
m~~ .. wtC811hllltV'OUF t ,. . , . .

•EXAMPLE: Assume a 110,000.00 loan for 120
months. The monthly PIYrntnt of principii and
Interest would be 1137.84. The first monthly
payment would be due 80 dltys from the date of
your loan. Loan Ia secured by a MCOnd mortpge
on real estate.
.

WASHINGTON (UPii - The
world champion New York Mets
stepped up to the White House
pla te Wednesday with congratulallons from lifelong Cubs fan
President Reaga n and no mention of a minor tiff over hints of
LOOSE PUCK- Adam Oa.tes, left, oft he Deirolt Re!i Wings and
unruly behavior ,
Kirk Muller of the New Jersey DevOs can't find the loose puck by
Flanked by the stars of the
Oates's skate during llrst period action' at the Meadowlando; Arena
cliffhanger 1986 World Series,
Wednesday In a NHL contest. (UPI)
. Reagan praised the Mets during
a Rose Garden ceremony and
said their seven-game victory
. over the Boston Red Sox epitomIzed 1he adage coined by Yogi
Berra
that "The game isn't over
LONDON (UPI) - Jakob victory over Amer lean Mike
'Ill
It
's
over."
Hl ase~ of Switzerland celebrated
DePalmer. but was not sa tis fied
"Not only did the Mets show
his 22 nd birthday Wednesday by with his performan ce.

TIMEX WATCHES

BILLFOLDS

' 'We were kind of shocked," pastt'hree years. But this season,
Chabot said. "Our second best he has two goals and 10 assists In
player behind (Mario ) I,emleux 14 games for the surging ·Pen·
is traded. Mike always kept us guins. After Berry thumbed him ,
loose (before a game 1&gt; It's going from practice Tuesd!ly. General .
.to be tough for a while.
Manager Eddie Johnston c:on·
" We knew someone had to pick tacted every other· NHL tea m
up the slack," said Chabot. who about Bullard.
along wi(h Hannan usually is
''He dictn :tseem like he wanted
given the responsibility of keep- to wor k," Berry said. "So he left
Ing the opposition's top line off the Ice."
the scoreboard. "We decided we
The 5-foot -10, 185-p:&gt;Und Bul- .
had to plck up our socks. We've lar d was in trouble per iodica lly
been playing too defensively, we · with the Penguins during the la st
weren't taking any chances."
few seasons. He broke curfew at
Upon arrlv lng In Pittsburgh for
least twice while on roadtrips.
the 1984-85 season, Berry gave
and he wa s charged with driving
the captaincy to Bullard, wm
under the Influence of alcohol
was the Penguins' No. 1 draft
aft er an accident Involvi ng two
choice in 1910. The previous
pedestrians .
season, Bullard had scored 51
"Mik e has given us a numbe r
goals and has aver aged 41 In the
of years of great SE!'vice.''

World champ Mets visit White House

~----------------~--~

Green, Waiters
earn defensive
honors
.BLOOMINGTON. Ind. iUPI.I
- Van Walters and Alex Green,
, . kept busy during India na 's upset
victory over Michigan Slate.
have been named co-Big Te n
defensive players of the week. .
Walters , a junior outside linebacker from Coral Gables, F la ..
had 11 tackles, Including nine
solos a nd four sacks for 28 ya rds.
He also ca used a fumble , recovered another fumble and deflected a pass .
"Someone was In my face all
day bng," Michigan State qua rter back Dave Yarema said of
Waiters' play.
Gree n, a senior rorneroock
from Glen E lly n, Ill .. lnterrepted
two passes. The first he returned
29 yards for a touchdown In the
SECOnd quarter and the second
stopped a Spartan drive at the
Hoosiers' 1-yard line with 28
seco nds left In the game. ·
The efforts of Grre n and
Walters propelled the Hoosiers to
a 17-14 victory. which Improved
their overall record to 6·3,
keeping them in tre hunt for a
bowl bid. ·
"It was the biggest win si nce
I've been here," Green sai d.
" Everyone was trying to keep
everyone up. We didn ' t want a
tie . We had confidence something like this could happen so me
day."
.

By LISA HARRIS
UPJ Sports Writer
The pl~yers on the Pittsburgh
Penguins decided they suffered a
big enough loss before their
game Wednesday night against
the Boston Bruins even began.
, Mike Bullard. extremely popular wit~ his teammates but long
a t odds with Coach Bob Berry,
was traded earlier In the day to
Calgary for Dan Quinn In an
e~cpange of centers. Bullard had
heen stripped of his t~a m cap·
talncy Tuesday after he was
thrown out or practice by Berry .
John 'Chahot, who set up both of
Pittsburgh's goals by Dave Han nan In a 2·1 triumph over the
Bruins, said the Penguins will
miss Bullard both on and off the
lee.

SACRED

as~!sceltics coasted to a 124-ll6 r-;:===::;:============'--=·=-=-===-~;;:--·-====-=----·:-:-------:

cut.

Plunkett was signed by the
Raiders tn 1978 as a frre agent,
but spen t the season on injured
reserve. In 1979, he sat the bench
behind Ken Stabler.
The Raiders traded Siabler 10
Hou ston for Dan Pastorlni prior
to the 1910 season. Plunkett took
over the starling job when
Pastorlnl was injured and led the
Raiders 10 a Super Bowl vic tory
over Philadelphi a .. Two seasons
later, he guided tre Raiders to a
Super Bowl victory over
Washington.
The Browns respec t Plunkett's
resu me.
"Plunkett knows how to read
defenses extremely well," linebacke r Eddie Johnson sai d.
"They play a lot better when he's
In the game. He's the type of
quarterback you want to put a lot
of press ure on up tl)e middle.
" If he has time. he has an
uncanny abilit y to mak e things
happe n. He showed that aga inst
Dallas tlle of her day."
Plunkett said he should've
heen·slar tlng a ll along.

best start &lt;:'Ver. Chicago's MIchael Jordan scored 28 points but
missed 6 of 7 fourth quarter fteld
goal attempts.
Pistons 108, Suns lOG
At Pontiac. Mich ., lsiah Thomas soored 18 of his 31 points in
tre first quarter to he lp the
Pistons hand the Suns their fifth
straight road loss. Chu ck Daly
became the winnlngest coach in
Pistons history, surpaSsing Ray
.Scott's record 151 victories.
MavEricks 114, Houston SIS
At Dallas. Rolando Blackman
scored 31 points to lead the
Mavericks. Blockman touched
off a streak of 17 straight
Maverjcks points in Ire socond
quarter, then ignited a ID-5 surge
at the end of the third period.
Akeern Olajuwon scored 32 for
the Rockets ,· but no other Hou s'ton player srored in double
figures .
Klnp 110, Nuggets 108
At Denver, Terry Tyler scored
20 points and held Alex English to
a season-low 16, helping Sacramen to to Its first road victory of
Ire season. The Nuggets lost
their third straight.

and have a tremendous followlng; Tre lust thrre (I' 8JUr years
· we vesentllve or sixteamsand!t
should be the same again this
year."
Michigan State and Indiana
are lxlth lxlwl candidates but
prol!ably need to win their .
remaining two games to ensure a
spot In some bowl .
The Spartans; u[:fiet by · th_e
Hoosiers last week, ate3-3tn the
·league and 5-4 overall. MSU has
gone to bowls In each of Ire last
two years and ooncludes with
Northwestern this Satutday a nd
Wisconsin next week.
"If we hoPe to play any more
games at the end of the season
we're going to hav e finish strong
with theselasttwo games ," said
MSU coach George Perles.
Indiana, the surprise team in
the league, Is 3-31n the league, 6-3
over all with games against !Illnols and Purdue remaining.
" I havm 't thought rriuch ahout
the bowl itself. To have a chan ce
we do have to do a good job and
finish It out," said IU coach Bill
Mallory said. "The main thing Is
that we do well this wrek against

The Daily Sentinel- Page- S
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61, . _ .

�Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

ThurSday. ·November 13. 1JJ86 ~i

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

I

'

'November

Scoreboard ...
NBA results..

\\'.W.lngton :!,~&lt;; hlcago 2{ tle,OTl
Ha~tloi'd 4, VMOOUVtT '3
"Thursdaly's Garnt'fJ
Edmonton u.t BoiUoo, 7: 35 p.m.
DttroltatPhiiHdl"'phla, 7:~p.m· .
Hartford lit Cal cary, 9:35 p.m.
Winnipeg at Los An~~:el_es, 10:35

NATIONA L BA.SKETBALL
ASSOC.
By .United Pr~s lntematlonal
Easlern Conference
Atlantit· Dhislon
W L P&lt;t. GB
Pblb. •
BOfiiton

N~ Jersey

5
t
!
2

! .7U ~

.m

t .W
w..hlnrtn
5 .21\6
New York
2 6 .250
Central Dlvbion
A.tlllnta
5 1 .833
Chtcau
~ % .7H
Milwauk c
1i 3 .623

Cleveh,nd
Det~olt

3 . :1 . .500

p.m.

%

~y1

3

3~1
~

Transa('tions

1

~
2

Bu..,l'hall

3 3 .500
3 3 .iilO 2 •
' \\'estern Conference

. OuUit'lder 4u'ry ,B lackwell and
pltchen; ,Joe Klink, \ 'orkls Perez
nnd Alan Sontug: removW from
•ht' rotd er outllelder Al·\\io od!'!, who
heutmf' a rree age nt.
Philad e lphia Remo\·ed
pltL•h e~ Tom Hume, Davt&gt; Rucker
and Rocky C hildress and first
hasemu.n Ril-ky Jordan from th£'ir
ro:o;ter;· added ~even minor lea,;uerstothejrr~ter: ouUil'lder ,Jim
Oh1nder, s horlslop Ken .Jaekl!oo,
f irst basiPma n·oulfietd er Gr~
,Jelks and pllc~hers Lt&gt;n \\'atts, Todd
Frohwirth, Tom Nf•wf•ll and Bob

Indiana

Midwest DI\'Jolon
Hou~tton

W L Pet. GB
4 2 .817

Ulllll

3

2 .1110

-1 l .$it
Dcft\'(&gt;1'
3 .. ,(29
Saeramnt
· 3 1 .-129
&amp;n Antmlo
2 5 .:!lti
Pacific Di\1 ~ion

Dallas

LA Lak""'

I

Goldea Slat
LA Cllppt..'l's
Seattle

3 3 .Sto
3 3 .1}0
3 4 .129

Phoenix

~

Portland
2
M'l.'dnt'Sduy',., Results

Bo!otOO

I .11110

-~6
5 -~tl

a

'•

%

~ ~~

Jl .1

2~
1~

11,1
2

12t

Milwaukee i16
WIL~hinM;IOn 101 . Chicago 00
Detroll lOt', Phoehix 100
Dadla~ U-1, Hou!'ilm ·&amp;l

SacramentO UO, Den,\·er 101'1
lA Lak ers 1%2. SCltUie 97

Thursda y's Gam~

Indiana at NN-· ·•••rsey, 7::10 p.m.
Clevt.'land ~t San Ant1111io, M::IO

p.m.

LA Clippt&gt;rs at Utah, 9:30p.m.
Philadelphia at Golden Stah'.
10::10 p.m.
Friday's Gamt&gt;s
1\.thmtu at DNroU, night
Bo!itoo ut Chh.'a go. night
New York l&amp;l MUM·aukte, night
Dalla."iatl Den"cr, night
·
Phi~IUi tlphla ut Phoenix, night
1A Clipper.. at P ort lund, night

NHL results
NATIONAL HOCKE\' LEAGUE
By Unlh'CI Pretts lnf{'f'n;ttlonal
Wil le'&gt;! Conferent-e
Patrick Division
.
W L T Pls. GF GA
Pttshr
10 4 2 ~ li6 :i-1
Phlla
10 3 I 21 rt9 32
NY l"lln
M 6 t 17 !i8 46
Wshnttt
7 i 3 17 37 66
Nw.Jrsy
7 7 I 15 ~ 89
NVKn1

Scanhm,

3
3

~7~12~63

Friday'S Garnes
Qul'hr.: at Washlngtoo , nighl
Phlladelphlu ut NY .Rangers,
nt,;ht ·
PUhhur~th at New .lersey, night
Wlnnl~ eg 1\l Vancouver, night ·

•

PitlsburJth - Named Rock~·
Brtd,;es manaacr of Vanc:ouvcr

a flillate In l•ac:tfk Coast Lea,;ue
(AJ\A): ,Jackie Rrown a.11 Vant'OU\'·
er's pitching t·Oach and Ca rlos
Ledezma as cluh'ii trainer: usked
waiver!i on pitcher Ray Krawc-zyk
and purch.u;ed contract of pitcht&gt;r
Martin Her nundt•z from 'Hawail of

PCL.

Oakland - S i~t"ned pltch('r ~1oose
_Haas 111 ll one-year contrad.
San Dietto - Addc"lll'ight play£'rs

;·
t

Hock ey ..
PlttshufKh - Tradfd c.-entei'
Mlb Bullurd lu Cat. htary for coe ntfr
Daa Quinn.
'
-

&lt;
!I'

Montreal .a. Qut'h« :1
1\'V Ran•ers 2. Bu!•lo I I OT )
~- Leu" ~. Toronlo i
·

and that could unnerve anybody.
·Penn State stays· unbeaten, bu t
not by mucq .•
Penn State 21, Notre Dame W
East
Syracuse 1plus 7'12 1 over Boslon College - The Orangemen
and Eagles are !nth bof. Troy
Stradford carrles·BC to a narrow
victory and Improved .bowl
position. .
Boston Co ll eg~ 27. S)•ra.cuse 23
Pitt (minus 7) over Rut gersKnigh ts lost shot at bowl wltti
upset defeat by West Virginia
last week and proba bly bst their
spirit as well.
·
Pit I ll , Rutgers 7
'
South ,
Auburn I minus 10 '12) over
Georgia - Brent Fullwood carries Tigers closer to Sugar Bowl.
Auburn 35, Georgia 6
Mississippi State (plus 9) over
Louisiana Slate - LSU has a
letoo wn coming off hu ge -upset of
Alabama and playinginJackson,
Miss., worsens problems.
Mississippi State 19, Louisiana
Statel7
·
Midwest
Colorado (plus 23) over Okla-

'i!MW distrkt chie/to lwld job

Texas A&amp;M33. ArkansaS· 14 .·
Texas Tee h (mlrius Ph I 0ver
Southern Methodist ·~ Red Raid·,
ers are clawing for oowl ga me
while SMU is realizing another&lt;
year of probation 'rill keep It
away.
.
h,
Texas Tec h 28, Soulher,nMet odisl 17
. West
. .
-UCLA 1plus'2'h 1over Washing- ~
ton _ The Bruins all but·
guarantee themselves anot her
Southwest
New Year's Day bowllll ip .
Tex&lt;!s A&amp;M 1[!linus 41 over;
UCLA 30, Washington •:.l'l
Arkansas -Baylor took.a lot of
Last
week: 6-4
.
life out of' Arkansas last week.
season
recorct:
53-$
· ·
Aggies assure their trip to Cotton
Feature
ga
me:
7-4
Bowl.
homa - Buffaloes can wrap up
Big Eight Iitle with a triumph.
Thai Is ,unlikely, but snow in
Boulcrr, Colo., is and Sooner
turnovers can kee11
this one
.
close.
Oklahoma 26, Colorado 14
Michigan (minus 25.) over
Minnesota - Wolv~ines "'mind
everyone woose No . 2.
·
Michigan 41, Minnesota 10

Burks.

. By'LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The
Ohio General Assembly seems to
.have found an agreeable solution ·.
to ibe coyote · problem that has
been 'plaguing farmers, especially In eastern Ohio.
_
The Senate Wednesday passed,
30·1, and returned to·the House a
bill proytdlng ·• a system for
farmers to recover losses If their
livestock ,or property are .damaged by coyotes or coydogs.
Conside;atlon of .the coyote

t

, , F~RMONT, W.Va; (UP!) - Tpe Jqture of United Mine
Workers D!strlct 31 might be unsettled ; but Eugene OaypJie
says he Is prepared to handle the job as president atiE!' deciding ·
to complete hls.tenn thro)lgh 1989.
. ·
. ·
Claypole, 48, announced two weeks ago he \VOUid re5tgn at the
. end' of the year )lut his ,decision was rejected during an
emergency meeting of the district's exreutive board ·
Tha! action,meant ClayPQle, who was elected to theJl)st last
year, would remalli In office until his term ex(Xres In three
.
.
. ~ .
.
years.
· · The·district president said Weilnesday lie wUI complete the
. term "knowingw.hat's full well ahead oft be mine w&lt;rkers In the
IIYIJnedla_te future .an,d the problems we have." .
.
· .
• Ciaypole. q~lded . to resign af~er returning from the UMW's
, lint special constitutional conventio~ . He said he did not get a .
. ctlance ·to express his views at the meeting of union ooleg;~tes .
' beld Oct. 27·28 In Atlanta .
·
·
'
' .''lt'ileemS the opinion I had ex!X'esSed was mutual througho\lt
.., the membership," he said. "The member~hip itself has a voice .
In any ·situation, their .voice must be heard."

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WITH ·ANY OIL CHANGE SPE~IAL
OR TUNE-UP SPECIAL. ''

Oil and filler Change

CHARLES.TON, W.Va : (UPI) -: The.number of Wrrking co.al
miners in West Virginia fell for the 5eventh straight' month in
By JEANNE REALL
·. August wlille .'productionTose .signlflcantly from a r,ecord low,
AKRON (UPI) - Richard
/ says ,the state pepartment of Energy.
. · · ·· ·
, Cooey II took ,part In \he Labor
;,/ The agency this week released a summary of the state's coal
. Day rape-slaylngs of two Univer": Industry fQr the first eight months of 1986.
· ' . . ·
sity of Akron women, but dtd not
' The report shows 26,480 miners worked In August com para! ,
premeditate the acts, his defense
• to ·28,317 in July. Tile number of working miners has dropped
Ia wyers say.
-; every month this year since it was r~orted :rl,!li4 people
· In opening statements Wednesworked In January.
·
·
/
day before a three- judge panel in
The Energy Department reports 32,712 peoplewere,working
Summit County Common Pleas
··· Jn West. Virginia mines during:August 1985.
.
Court, the defense conceded the
,. The agency also announced this week 10.3milllon tons of coal
evidence would weigh heavily
;,, .were produce!~ In August :1986 comparw to 8.2 million tons In
against their client.
' July, the .year's lowest total.
The defen~e focused on Cooey's
, A total of 86.5 million tons have been produced in 1986 ·
history of drug and alcohol abuse
, · compared ·to 84 million tons fo ~ the first eight months of 1985.
and what they called his lack of
Sixteen people have died In mining-related accidenis so far
prior calculation In the slaylngs
: ll!is year compared·to nine at ihls time In 1985:
of
Wendy O!fredo, 21, and Dawn
JJ
.
.
·McCreery; 20.
·~~
.
Cooey, 19, and C'llnt Dickens ,
·[~;PUCO
17, both of Akron, face 13 counts
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.
each in the case. Both men were
. :; COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Public UtUjtles Commissl&amp;,!l of
intllcted pn four counts of aggra·
Ohi!J has approved an agreement allowing the Chllllcothe
vated murder,' lhree with death
" Telephone 9o. to increase net revenues by about 8.11 percent.
penalty specifications, fopr
:• Under the agreement approved Wednesday, the fiat rate for
counts of rape, two counts each of
• :aver aile residential customers will Increase from $17 .!li to •
kidnapping , . and aggravated
about $20. However, the agreement calls for certain zone ·
robbery and one count of felon·
...charges· to be eliminated which wlll result· in a decrease for
lous assa ult.
~ some customers .
·'
·
.
Offredo &lt;1nd McCreery, both
" Chillicothe Telephone serves abou t Zl,OOO cu stomers ·in Ross,
waitresses at the Montrose
•· Pike, Pickaway, Jackson, Hocking and VInton counties.
Brown Derby restaurant, left
Ml
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work just after midnight, early
Labor Day. As they drove along
.
Interstate 7/ in Offredo's car, a
~.Fuel
concrete
block thrown from an
t '
.
' .
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.
overpass
shattered the car's
COLiiJMBUS (UPI) - Averag~ residential customer~ of the
windshield.
.
\ Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio Electric Co. will see their electric
Police
charge
·
that
Cooey and
;; bills reduced llY abouj 40 cents a month beginning Dec. 1.
Dickens,
after
throwing
tbe
The Public Utllltles Commission of Ohio on Wednl!Sday
block, offeted to help the women,
; approved a fuel rate adjustment for C&amp;SOE. The new rate is 3.7
but Instead took them to a
P,ercent less than tbe current rate.
secluded area .In nearby Norton
Monthly bills for C&amp;SOE customers using 600 kilowatts of
where I hey raped and robbed the
·electricity wUI be reduced by abo.ut 40 cents as a result of the•
women and beat them to death.
','Change.
·
Testifying Wednesday were
'
Offredo's mother, Gerllyn Muck,
and McCreery's mother, Mary
1
., .
- :
Ann Hlickenberger. Both women
· TOLEDO (UPI) - Protests last month by University of
wept
they Identified jewelry
Toledo studenfs prompted the scl)ool's boardoftrustees to move
]Xlllce say Cooey i&gt;ok from their
up a tjlrget date to divest Itself of stock holdings ln.companies
daugMers ' Indies after the
doing buSiness In South Africa.
slayings .
Unlversily spokes.man Marty Clark said the board voted 6-2 .
Cooey's father, Richard W.
Wednesday ,to set Apri11987. as the month which tbe university
CO\lf!Y , left tbe cowtroom during
will sell Its. Interests In any firm that has not enoorsed the
tearfUl testlmOI\Y by Muck about
Sulllv.an Principles, a·rode designed to foster racial equal'lty In
the last time sbe saw her :
South Afrit a. '
· ·
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daul!llter,alive.
'

appraves rate increase

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rate adjustment wins nod

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Divest.iture target date tmoved up

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Cle,ir,lng )ontght, · with a low
near 10. s'uMy Frid&lt;IY. with highs
near 40.1 I
The prol&gt;ablllly . of precipitation is nellr zero this afternoon
through F'dday. ·
·
Winds will be from the northw- .
est at 1~ to 25 mph tonight.
Ohio Eldended Forecut
Salurday .lbrou lh Monday
Fair S.atwday,. with a choance
· of rain Sunday. and Monday.
Highs wll) rllnee ftom the upper
30s 10 the k&gt;w!!', 40s Saturday,
climblniJ i,nto the «&lt;s Sunday, and
i!ltO the. upper 40s or lower 50s
Monday. Overnight bv.s will be
In the tel\ns 'Saturday morning,
ranging from the upper IDs to the
lo.wer :rls early Sunday, and In
the lower lls Monday morning.

n~ts

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·Birthstone &amp;Diamond

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NowS12995
WAS.$169.95

141

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· 'CLEVELAND (UPII . - One
player plcked all six numbers In
Ohio's Super Lotto drawing Wed·
' nesday'night to win the $5 mlllilln
jack !&gt;lit.
· Tile name of the player will be
announced after the winning
ttckel Is validated at a regional
lottery office, a lottery commls·
slon spokesman said today. The
winning numbers were 21, 31 , 32,
· 39, 41 and 42.
·

WAS SJ.9.95 . · SAVE 140.00
MATCIIS AIOVI liNG

Slodl ~ 721 41. 2 dool"$.0)11)1', 6t'f( .•• ('l)'1d
aul!l tw , PS. P!i!»MM' WIIHtw!l. PI!!"
WI POWfl" D r b:lts. ~~ "~ · CtUISI'
tx~nlr~. !WifM radit *'ffl ta. riOial tlfa

Sb;l ~ 69701. 4 dl:o;. '#dan. tronl wl1!0el
tlrrte. ~ l'.'it, a« lmli. I IIID tUns.. PS fl8.
CI\IR IXIltrol. AMlfM rar:kl. rldttl t,I!S. wtwtf

Ill's. ti.Jcvt ¥At'~

il,995'Tb,99! li99s .

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CLUSnRS

1983 RENAULT
ALLIANCE

1984 FO~D TEMPO GL
"ll!h! w&amp;~. ~cket wb. r!lll" wrnlbrr

7 DIAMOND

~tk • 7)34? 'I r'«or 1 "''t'' t~ !mnt
rtr yP •I r ~ J.M tt\1 r1WII'l . 111hl l'""

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The winnings will be paid ln.,:aJ
annual Installments of $250,00d,
minus taxes. , '
,.. ·
'In addltiOil to the top prize
winner, ,96 players chose fi~e of
the numbers· win $787 each.
AlSo, 4,910 players selected four
of .the numll!J:S, winning $58
apiece.

S!I!Cil-fi4901 ? ~ V·IJ,Mo

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446-1691

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There were 89.81~ 'tickets sold
with t lree of tie JUmliiors. Those
tickets are worth
. $3 each. .
Tickets sale, for the ·WEekly .
drawln.gtolaled $4 ,ffi3,$i. with a
total prize paywl of_SS,UI4,414.
The jackpot, tst ' ,ltext week's
c!rawlng · wUJ( t~e· ,;u ·leastl.$5
mtlllon.

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618 E. MAll ST.
POMEROY, OHIO tSU9
PHONE 614·992·7270

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•Inspect emission
components •Set timing .

remedy, part of · an omnibus . groups, including the Ohio De· tbe. damage was ca used by·
wildlife bill, alsci rekindled 'the partmenl of Natural Resources, coyotes . A clai[ll co uld the n be ·
debate of 10 years ago on whether Ohio Department of Agriculture, submitted to the Department of.
mourning doves should be added . wlldllfe and hunting groups, the Agr iculture.
.
Approved cl&amp;~ms lor tte fair
lo the state's list of game birds. governor's office, the Ohio Farm
They were not.
Bureau Federation and counly market value oft il:' toss would be
. In voting to indemnify farm ers · commissioners.
paid out of a· spe&lt;'ial $2 milliop
for their losses, the senators
fund In lhe deparlmenl .
Sen. Robert L .. Burch, DCeles1e malntalned'lhe coyote
discarded a proposed bounty on
Dover,
saidfarmerswooseanlmbount y would not . wor k. He
coyotes, which was sought by
farmers and county commission- als ·a re killed or injured by recommenck'd ·1hal coyotes be
er~ but vetoed last December by · coyotes would haye to file notice
placed on the tis t. of !ur·bearing
with the do g wanEn within three animals 9:J I hey could be trapped.
Gov. Richard F. Celeste.
Sen. M. Ben Gaeth, , R· days. The warcEn would then · Sen. H. Coopl•r · SnydE'r. R·
Defiance, said the revised 11lll report the lncick'nt to tte game · Hlllslnro, ·proposed a mourning
has the support o,f all interested protector , who would verify th at dove hunting season. setting off a
debate among sportsmen,
farmers and animal bvers.
"They' re a pest," said Snyder.
"They're much like a flying
rabbit. " ' The senator said the
.
doves rutn farmers' crops and
eat grain out of sloragc bins. He
said a hunting season would .
attract . tourists and provide
another game bird for Ohio
. "The last time I saw her alive graphic account.
hunters. ·
·
was tbe day flelore her death ,"
Cox said one victim had 11 cuts
But Sen, Eugene Bran·stool,
Muck said.· "We had a long on her face and head . A section of D-Ullea, a farmer and 'defender
discussion that eve'fblg, plan- the other woman's skull had been of mourning doves, said I he birds
ning her future ."
crushed. One woman had been are ground feede r~ and eat only
Also testifying was Terry stabbed In the neck.
shattered grain which is left to
Grant,19 , woo has t1eaded guilty
Both women were found with spoil.
to obstructing justice in the case sooestrlngs stU! tied around their
" If you lhink for one minute
for allegedly helping todisposeof necks, an apparmt attempt at that all huntersareclamorlngfor
strangulation, Cox said, One the right to hunt mourning doves,
evidence.
Grant, whcl'Said he has known woman's legs were straddled thai is not the case," he said.
Cooey since elementa ry school, around a tree and round at lhe
Snyder's amendment was desaid Cooey had descr ibed the ankles with a red bandana feated, 19-13 .
belonging to Cooey, he said.
slayings 1D him.
The wildllfe bill also:
" He •tar!ed telling me about
-Adds crows 'to the game
the girls and tilt killin gs ... He
Akron pollee detectives testi- a nimal Ust and badgers, otters,
'also said he beated them with a fied they found a bloody night- coyotes and boocats to tbe
nightstick," Grant sa1d. "He also stick, belleved to be the murck'r trapping list.
said he tried cutting o.1e of them weapon, In Cooey's bedroom the
-Raises penalties for hunting
with a knife, but his Jtnlfe was night he was arrested. Cooey also a nd trapping witoout permission
dull."
was wearing jewelry be longing of a landowner.
· County .coroner wmam Cox to the victims . they said.
-Creates a lhr E!i'-d ay non:
desa-ibedt in ck'tall t~~ inlurles · Grant said Cooey and Dickens res ident tourlsl small game
lnfilcted on the women. Several each claimed to have hit the hunting llcense. •
members of the victims· families women three times with the
-Increases certain nonleft the courtroom during the nightstick.
resident fees for hunting and
fishing licenses.

;paon t~nager goes on trial
for ·.Labor Day rape-slayings

i.Wo~kirfg. miners' ri·umbers Jail

FREE ANTIFREEZE CHECK '

Engine Tune·UI,)

( :n /lr •~t • •

Iowa State - foln"CC tEad ro~h
.Jim Criner; namEd assistant
Chud1 Ban~er actin( coach for ttK•
remainder of ltk• season.
Loulsluna Tc~ ch - Coac h A.L.
\\'illiam~ resigned rffr ctlv~ at the
md of ttM.• !H.'U!ion.
_/
Foolhull
Miami - l'lat:ed nost• lal•kle Boh
Raumhowrr m Injured rt'l'itrve and
signed frf't• ugmt defcnsivt• tlll! klt•
Brian Socllla.
1\1' J eb- Plad!d del~sive end
Murt~· L~·ons on Mjuft"d ~ene;
!il~nf-'d lrl'l• agmt deltnsive t.on d
.Jim Stu ckt&gt;y.
S~tn Die~o - Waivl.t qJIU'Ier·
hac~ · Bru ct' Muthisoo .
Wa..,hlngton - Waived lint•ha c~ ('l' i\n~t'l'lo ~lp ~ and ' resiJ:ned mok h• llnt'backer Shaw"

Pht.hurwh 2. Bolton .t

By JOEL SHERMAN
UPJ Sports Writer
.Notre Dame (plus 6) over .Penn
State'-- There will be two sets of
bowl folks here holding their
breath: those who are chasing a
Penn State-Miami mega-game
and those smaller bowls pursu·
lngt he big name of Notre Dame.
A Fightin' Irish triumph would
give it four straight viclories and
push it over .500, making Notre
Dame an at tractiv e bowl partictpanl In Lou. Holtz's first nar.
With a" John C'ongeml-less . Pitt
the only tea[ll left after the Irish,
the Nitlany Lions know this Is the
'big game to stay undefeated .
Penn State ·comes In after a close
victory over Maryland and Notre
Dame a blowout of Southern
Methodist. Aga inst SMU, · ·16
Notre Dame rushers carried and
six scored touchdowns. Ba ll
possession against the. Lions is
vital. As usual, get ting the ballln
mu lti- talented Tim · Brown's
hands is the key to the Irish
auack. QB Steve Beurlein comes
off his best game. There is likely
to be cold, maybe snowy weal her
so D.J. Dozier's running ab ility
also Is very importanl for Penn
State. The Lions are loaded wit h
fifth-year experience. but Notre
Dame Stadium will be rocking

Randy Ready, Edw il Rodr igu ez
and outfielders Rand('ll Dyer!!,
·famr!'l Stl't'lts and Scou Parsons.

Adams Division ·
' MOOI....
K 5 3 19 62 57
QufiH'C
7 6 I IK Ill SK
llorllrd
6 I :1 15 15 iro
Doolan
6HIIlll13
Buffalo
4 10 2 10 ~ :17
CaJtlllbell Copferen(.('
Nor"" Dlv"'lon
' L T Pis. GF GA
Toranlo
7 5 3 17 -M .ax
Dt'trolt
7 ; I 15 -12 U
St. Lou...
l I I II 16 t 3
Mlnnt'8t
' 8 2 12 57 60
Chl..,lo
I I 3 II :II 69
Smythe Di"ktiion
Edmn
10 i I 21 ;~ dH
CaiRary
9 7 0 Ill $t1 511
.' " 'lftnpl
H I I 17 Ill 50
LM A~~~t"'
5 18 I II !II 72
...i Vucvr
4 II 3 11 :m jft
,
Wedne u.. y's Results
" NN .Jt•ri.ey $. Jllotroll 3

7

Ohio Briefs·.----....... Lawmakers approve modified coyote .bllll

lo Ihe major lea~: ut• t Qoiler: pitch l'l's
Rusty Ford and Jo t' BUker , l'll h.il er
Sandy AJomar .Jr., ilrieldt•rM

Toronto - Pun:hasOO the contract or l:.ltflelder Loo Thomtoo
and a."'·"''lltned wtfielder Roo ShephC'rd ootrlght to Syracuse of 1~
lnlfn.atlona l League; added to
their rost('r pill·h f'r ,Jose Mt&gt;Sa,
outfield i'rs Silv c-'N ire Ol ft1:1usano
·, •and Rob Ducey, w lcht'fs Matt
Stark and Grtog M.vcr..; und " ~ ­
fl(•ldc•r!i Santiago Garcia ~md Nel!oiM Llrlano.
Ba!!kethaU
NV Knicks - i\cquired pard
Gerald Hl~nder!oiOII from Seaale lor
draft choices,
Se~t ttlt• - 1\t'tivah'll guard Natf'
McMillan from the mjured 1st .

Ohio

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Thursday, November 13, 1986 ·

·The Daily Sentinel :

By The Bend
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historical basis that was added to
local tradition through a play
written to dramatize the battle.
Mrs . Gibbs was presented a
co rsage donated by the Pomeroy
Flower Shop and an honorarium.
Keith Ashley presided at the
meeting with the 22 members
and guests attending. 'fhe 50th
anniversary of the chapter was
discussed ·and plans made for a
banquet In observance.
Compatriot David Meder! of
Albany was appointed by the
president as the Revolutionary
War gr aves chairman lor the
purpose of notifying the state
society of those Revolutionary--

Evangeline Missionary
Society conducts meeting
Mrs. . Pat Thoma hosted a
recent meeting of the Evangeline
Missionary Group of the Pomeroy Church of Christ.
For ro ll ca ll members read
poems and reflected on the
bea ut y of the autumn season.
Evening devotions were by Mrs.
Anna Lockhart. Cards were
signed for several who are 111,
and a letter was read from the
Walter Maxey family now on
furlough from missionary work
in Japan .
It was noted that Ekklecia, a
singing group from Kentucky
Christ ian College. will ap pea r In
concert Su nda y evening at the
Pomeroy Church of C.hrist.
On Monday the Meigs County
Men and Women's Fellowship
groups will meet at the Pomeroy
Church lor a Thanksgiving
dinner. All Church of Christ and
Christian Churches are invited to
attend.

A mtsston study by Mrs.
La Donna Clark closed the meet·
ing. Others attending were Mrs.
Betty S~ncer, Mrs. L~ura
Proudfoot, Mrs. Eileen Bowers,
Mrs. Trudy Andrew, Mrs.
Brenda Veney, Mrs. Charldlne
Alkire, Mrs. Eva Dessauer, Mrs.
Gertie Bass. Mrs. Helen Miller,
and Mrs. Janet Venoy.

War veterans burled in the area. ·
The president · also assigned
three members to· a by-laws
revision committee.
Information on the Eagle.Scou t
Scholarship Program sponsored
by th e National Society SAR was
explained. ·
·All Eagle scouts . who have
received this honor between,
Sept. 1, 1985, and Aug . 31, 1986,
are eligible. Each partiCipant In
the contest will. receive a specla lly designed patch. The chapter winner will receive a certlfi·
cate and a military-style medal .
He will then be eligible for state
competition.
Cou nty chairman appointed
for the contest were Bill Beegle,
Ga llia; Keith Ashley, Meigs;
David Meder!, Athens; and
Henry Climer, Ross . .
The president discussed the
RCJrC award which is given to
the most outstanding cadet In
each branch of a college ROTC
program . Ohio University and
Rio Grande College will be In the
chapter's jurisdiction.
Merert will work with. Ohio
University In the selection, while
Rio Grande College will be
contacted.
A third program discussed was
the Douglass G. l:!lgh Oration
Contest open to sophomores,

Holiday · party · plans were
made .at recent meeting Of the
Asbury ·United Metl:lodis't Women
held in the church social rooms.
The partY wllbe held at monon
Dec. 2 ai the home .of Beulah
Ward with the meat to be
furnished for the dinner. Those
attending are to take a covered
dish and a $3 gift for the
exchange, along with toys for the
hospital and a card·signed for her
secret pal. Mary Lisle opened the
meeting with a reading from
"Stepping Stones", "Dally Pray.. ·ers Dissolve Your Cares" by
Helen Steiner Rice. Devotions

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SAR hears speaker on Pt. Pleasant battle
Mrs . Mildred Chapman Gibbs
.In recognit ion of the anniversary
pf the Battle of Point Pleasant ,
first battie of "the American
Revolution , spoke at a meeting of
Ewings Chapter, Sons of tbe
American Revolution. ~e ld re·
centiy at the Meigs Museum.
Mrs. Chapma n. a member of
the Col. Charles Lew is Chapter,
DAR. said tha t the reaso n the
battle received so little recogni tion is that it was fought in a
sparse\y 1popula ted area creating
little news whic h reached the
colonies.
She also mentioned that the
alleged "Curse or Chief Corn ·
stalk" appears to he an item of no

Asbury United

Thursday. Novembe~' 13, ~986 ; '
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juniors and seniors at high
schools In Meigs, Galli a, Athens.
Vinton, Jackson, and Ross Cou nties. Any student interested
should contact someone in thr
chapter or call 992-7874 alter ~
p.m.
. .
The state president has asked
Ewings Chapter to host the July
state board of management
meeting In Marieita on July 10
and 11 to be held In conjunction
with the Northwest Territory
celebr atlon.
A schedule of meetings i&gt;r the
remainder of the year was
announced : Dec. 18, Eagle Scout
program; Jan. 22, Feb. :Ji , March
26 (Douglass G. High Oratorical
Finals), April 23, May 28, ·and
June 25.
The president announced the
commemoration celebration at
Reno for the purpOse of dedlcat· .
lng a marker lor one of George
Washlngion's camp sites. The
president .will be attending the
celebration along with the representatives of the Return Jonathan Meigs Chapter DAR.
,Anyone Interested in membership In the SAR is asked to
contact the presideni. Anyone
who is a blood relative of a DAR
member Is automatically eligible. Edward Holter of Flatwoods
.Road, Pomeroy, was presented
his membership certificate. ·

you want it ...
you've got it ...

NTHE

FOR A
LIFETIME
Of
COMFORT
AND
ENJOYMENT!

Nationally and Internationally,
and to give thanks tlr those woo
began tiJe·work and for those woo
continue 11 .
The program Included an criginal poem by Ruth Shain, "Things
for Which to be Thankful.".
Taking part In the progr~m were
Mary Cundiff, Mrs. Ward, Mrs .
Shain, Mrs . ·Teaford, and Mrs.
Lisle.
Officers elected were Mrs.
Lisle, president; Mrs. Shaln,·vtce
president; April Harmon, secrtary; Helen Teaford, assistant
secretary; Ann Sauvage, treasurer; Irene Parker, assistant

treasurer; Beulah Ward, ChrisHan Personhood, Nora and Marie
Houdashelt , supportive
,
community.
Irene Parker, Christian social
involvement; Christie Nelson,
Christian global concerns; Christie Nelson, Christian global concerns; Mrs . Ward, Mrs. Cundiff,
and Kathleen Fryar, committee
on nominations; Bernice Winebrenner, secretary of program
resources; Mary Cundiff, spirit ual life.
Tbe meeting . closed with . a
meditation on .votlngfrom Guideposts . Refreshments we-e pro·
vided by Christie Nelso~.

A pledge and !bank offering Wise announced that Christmas pressed her thanks to ail who
service highlighted the Monday cards are on sale for $3 a box.
helped with her golden wedding
night meeting of the United
The treasurer reported tha !the a nniversary reception . Mrs.
Methodist Women of Heath 1986 missionary pledge is com- Criswell reminded the trea·surer
Church, Middleport, held In the pletely paid . Pauline Horton of tbe annual dues.·and offerings
church social room.
o~ned the meeting by weicom·
to be sent to Church Women
Mrs . Beulah l\kComas had lng 22 members and giving · United of Meig County.
char)J! of' the program which devotions entitled '"Time for
A fellows hlp hour followed the
Included a film strip on. the ways Blessings."
meeting. Clara Criswell, Ka· . mission dollars· are spent. Sev·
Devotions were given by Jean thryn Knight and Donna Byer
;
.
~ ,'.¥ ~ I
eral members "assisted· with Ann Bradbury woo used the .served refreshments of hot cider
AFRICAN YELLOW JACKEr mVE? - This hive, tiDed with
script and scripture readings and letters whlch make up the word, and assorted donuts. The table
yellow jacl\els and a queen almost two Inches long, was
ed off
by giving testimonies of various "Tha nksgiving." She listed was decor a ted In fall flowers and
the side of t~e Kasper house In Naylor's Run by Charlie Werry.
kinds. of giv.tng expected of blessings ofl our lives for each cen tered with a Thanksgiving
1
Yellow jackets tradltlonally buDd tootr hives In the grbund, which
Christians. At the conclusion of letter. Kathryn Swanson exarrangement.
makes Werry-tllink that perhaps these are of too African variety.
the pledge service. a litany was
Werry sprayr' the hive with lacquer ID preserve it.
read · responsively with Mrs . rp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
McComas as leader. Pledge · 11
cards were signed and turned In
lor 1987. The thank offering
services was also led by Mrs .
McComas following the opening
THURSDAY
· SATURDAY
tooughts by the leader; prayer
POMEROY - Rock Springs
RACINE - The Eastern- . and presentation of the offe'rings .
Grange will meet at 7: 30 Thurs-· Southern alumni football game
A report was given oo the Ohio I
day night at the grange hall.
will be played Saturday, 7 p.m .. West Conference of the United
\' .
Keith Wood, game protector; will
at the Southern High field . Methodist Women at Columbus
'!
he the speaker..
Tickets may he purchased at by Emma Kay Clatworthy. She ·
Southern High or at the gate.
described the tnspir ationa! pro· ·
REEDSVILLE - Revival at
gram of the morning and after·
Reedsville United Methodist
. ORANGE TWP - Orange noon sessions as well as displayChurch through Nov . 15; special Township Volunteer Fire Depart- ing a model windsock simtliar to
singing; 7:30p.m. services..John
ment's annual turkey dinner will those used as papal centerpieces.
Gibson evangelist...
he Saturday, at the firehouse,
It was announced that the
wlth serving to begin at 4 p.m .
annual bazaar will be held at the
POMEROY - Preceptor Beta
church on Dec. 6. The Eleanor
MADE IN AMERICA
Beta Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi
POMEROY - Salisbury PTO Circle will have a bazaar work·
Sorority will meet Thursday, fall festival will be held Satur- shop Thursday evening. Mary
7:30 p.m., at the Episcopal day. The kitchen will open i!-1 ·5
Church Parish House In p.m., games will begin at 6:30
Pomeroy.
p.m. and there will be a perfor·
mance by the Shady River Works lop
MIDDLEPORT- Film strips, Shuftlers. The public is Invited.
POMEROY- Afreeworksoop
pn resrorchlng and writing lam·
stories and' crafts are a part of
Uy hlstories wlll be held ·at the
the fun ·going at the Meigs County
SUNDAY
Meigs
County Museum in Pome·
Library story . hour for pre-POMEROY - Meigs County
sc.hoolers every Thursday at 2 Genealogical Society will meet roy, Saturday 1 to 4 p.m . The
p.m. at the Pomeroy Library and Sunday, 2 p.m .. at the Meigs Meigs County Pioneer and Hls·
tortcai Socie)y is .offering the
every Friday at 2 p.m . at the .County Museum.
wcrksillp to assls,t lnd!Yicluais
Middleport Library.
interested
In having family histoRACINE - ·Racine First Bapries
Included
In 'the Society's
FRIDA\:
tist Church will dedicate their
of
Meigs County
publication
POMEROY - ~1HY Shrine buDding addition 9Jnday, 2 to
History
Vol.
II.
Ali
articles must
No. 37, White Shrine of Jerusa- 4:.30 p.m., with a short dedication
lem, will meet Friday, 8 p.m., at service in the sanctuary, fol · be submlited to the Society rrtor
the masonic hall In Pomeroy.
lowed by O])E'n house and refresh- to the deadline date, Feh. 15,
1987.
ments . Public invited.
POMEROY - Return Jon a·
than Meigs Chapter, Daughters
of the American Revolution, will
meet Friday, at 1:30 p.m.at the
home o( Mrs. Ronald Reynolds .
Prospective members and guests are invited to attend.

FRIDAY AND SATURDAY ONLY

Community calendar

.'

•FREE
PARKING

•lAYAWAY
NOW FOR
CHRISTMA$

•FREE

DELIVERY

•ROYAL HAEGER POnERY

•FOSTORIA LEAD CRYSTAL

. ..••.•

•. ••

-.,

Courtni Marie VanMeter

.,

cambrid
blowsaWa:

VanMeter birth

Holiday party plans were
made when the Chatter Cl ub m ~ t
recently at the home or Linda
Hubbard . Syracu se.
A dinner will be held on Dec. 8
at 6:30 p.m. at Scbastla1ns • in
Parkersburg . Members were
asked to donate $2 at the next
meetin g In lieu of having a lund
raising project. Ga mes were
•played with prizes going to .
Janice Fetty , Brenda Bolin.
Mary Starcher. and Susie Cie·
land . Hostess gifts .were presented to Mrs. Hubbard. and
anniversary gifts went to Mary
Starcher, Dorothy Roach, and
Elaine Quillen .
For the meeting members
ca me costumed with Connie
Aldridge and Debbie Jones being
the winners in judging.· Prizes
w!re awarded to Donna Fry, the
ugliest, Elaine Quillen, the funniest, and Doris Wilt, the most
original. Dorothy Roach won the
door prize. The November meet·
lng will be held at the home of
Dorothy Roach.

from the Up~r Room were read
by Helen Teaford woo also gave
the secretary's report. Twentysix shutln calls were noted and
Ann Sauvage gave the treasurer's report·after whlch a freewlll
offering and World Thank offering were taken.
All members are to ·read the
last two chapters or Daniel and
review others . The _program by
Bernice wlnebrenner was
"Clouds of Witnesse" written by
Mary Grace Lyman. · Purpose
was to celebrate some success
stories of til:&gt; work of United
Methodist Women in Missions

Women .meet .

sw..,

~

Chatter Club
ha.r meeting

~ethodist

Heath UMW conducts meeting·

.....
.....

Mr. and Mrs . John M. Van
Meter, Minersvlile. are announc·
ing the birth of a daught er,
Courtni Marie, born on Oct . 30 at
the Pleasa nt Valle)' Hospital.
The infant weighed six pounds, 12
ounces and was 19 inches long.
The mother is the former Cindy
Musser. Pomeroy.
Maternal grandparent s are
Ms. Judy Musser. Pomeroy. and
Charles Musser, Gallipolis. Mat er nal grea t-grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Musser,
Rutland, Ms . Anna Welch, Mid·
dleport . and the maternal great ·
gr~at - grandmother is Maude.
Smith. Rutland .
Paternal ~:ra ndparc nt s are Mr.
and Mrs . Paul Gene Van Meter.
Rutland. and the paternal great·
grandparent s are Mr. and Mrs .
C.A. Schuler. Rutland .
Mr. and Mrs . Van Meter also
ha ve a son: Kri stopher John, age
two.

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Pomeroy-Middlliport, Ohio .

·•

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.------------------------1 ....----

POMEROY.:... DelmarHamm,
South Webster. will be at the
Morning Star United Methodist
Church basement Friday at 7:30
to display his woodworking
crafts. The public is lnv.ite to
attend.

SAVE

20°/o,o 50°/o
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WITH APPROVED CREDIT -OVER $300

RUTLAND - There will be a
dance Friday. 8 to 11 p.m., at
Rutland Civic Cente r. Music by
Music Expr&lt;'SS. Admission $2
si ngle , $.1 couple. Everyone
welcome .

''l" ''
',,

Taste breakt
generic price!

The Daily

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2 FOil

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·BasecJ on manuttctultfs suggn~ea retatt pt!Ce 01 pac~~age eomparei:lto
pnetng lot the optiOIIS putChased s.eparatety

ltle traddiOftll SUWHted

Se~tinel

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A Dt.t.oloo of Muittmedla, Inc.

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GUN

Pomeroy, Ohio 45769, Ph. 992·2156. Second class postage paid at Pom£'roy,
Ohio.
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HCUNERS

POMEROY - Meigs County
senior citizens are having a
dane&lt;' Friday. 8 to 11 p.m., at the
senior cllizen center on Mulberry
Heights, Pomeroy . Admission
$1 ,;,o, Music by String Dusters.

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�Page-1 0-The Daily Sentinel.

'

•'

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

....

ThiA'Iday,

' ·'

This thinning of bones can lead to
a: condition called ·osiroporosls .
The word osteoporosis means
porous bones. Bones can develop
a honeycomb appearance, which
can also be described as looking
like swiss cheese.
Osteoporosis affects 20 million
people, one of foql' women over
tiE age of 00. ReJearchers now
believe th at osteoporosis ac·
counts for !ll pErcent of all

fractures In people over the age
Studies also link poor dietary
of 00 .
habits, prople wlil eat excessive
Who Is at risk for ostroporosis? amounts of protein andttVsewho
Females are more prone to drink live or more cup; of coffee
osteoporosis as are srort, small· a .day. Possible causes mJW be a
fra med, slender prop! e. Other lilrmonal Imbalance, decrease
rlskfactors,lnclui:lepeoplewlth a In physlcal ·actlvtty and lack of
family history of osteoporosis, ,calcium In the diet. ·· · ·
those with a fair complexion, · Studies have been ·oone over
caucaslans, prople who have a · extended periods of time and
sedentary life style and .tiDse · slilwthat a persOn can loos&lt;'1Y,
who smoke or consume aloohol. : inches In height in a decade after
' menopause due to softening of.
the vertebrae In the back.
What are some ways to help
prevent
osteoporosis? Qf course,
remaining cells, Summers said.
tbe
most
obvlous .ls to Increase
"It Is not a cure, just as Insulin
your
Intake
of calcium. Natu.
is not a cure for diabetes. The
rally
Is
the
best method; by
disease continues. But It relieves
Increasing
rtch
calcium· foods in
the gymptoms. What we're look·
diet
.
Calcium
supplements
your
lng to do Js allow these people to
stay functlan&lt;\lln the rornmunlty are enhance rs, and sho uld not be
lor a longer period of time," he substituted for the total amount
of calci um your body needs. It Is
said .
best
to talk to your physician
Dr. Kenneth Davis of the
before
you start taking calcium
Mount Sinai, Medical Center In
supplements
to get hls/ her
New York said he doubted the
advice.
drug would be useful for all
E:.erclse Is not a
live
Alzheimer's patients because It
rnly acls on one aspect of the
disease.
"From the perspective of a
disease that has almost no hope
you can be pleased with these
results, but I think It's hard to be
enthusiastic as this study indi·
cates ." Davis said . "Ther&lt;''s too
much suffering in these patients
to hold out hope at such a.n early

By ROB STEIN
" It's very exciting," Dr. Wll·
UPI Science Writer
llam Summers, wlil headed the
BOSTON I UP!) - An expert· research, said in a telephone
m€'ntal dru g seems to relieve interview. "But I really want t9
sym ptoms such as memory loss stress that people not get too
in Alzheimer's disease victims. excited . There area lot of further
. but researchers say the treat- studies we have to do. It 's
ment is not a cure because it encouraging, but it's not going to
offers no defense against the be. on the shelf Of the local
erosion of brai n cells.
pharmacists for oome time ."
·A study published Wednesda y
Alzheimer's disease causes a
in The New England .Journal of gradual, irreversible erosion of
Medicine said the drug tetrahy. brain cells that control thought
droaminoacridine, or THA, ap· and memory. The disease affects
p&lt;&gt;ared to improve the mental up to 5 million Americans. The
abilities of I6 of 17 patients cause is unknown. There had
suffering fro m moderate .to se- been no effective ireatment.
ver&lt;' forms of the disease.
THA blocks an enzyme needed
In some cases. patients were by a neurotransmitter known as
able to ret urn to work. golf..(lnd acetylcholine in a part of the
household chores. However, the brain involved with memory that
researchers who conducted the is affected by Alz!Eimer's disstudy and ot her scientists noted ease. By blocking the enzyme,
that the results needed to be the drug apparm tly helps im·
confirmed by larger trials.
prove the effic iency of the

stage."

New artificial heart recipient improves
By GERALD KOPPLIN
MINNEAl'OLIS tUPi i -The
you ng moth&lt;'r who became .the
fourt h woman to receive a
mlni·Ja rvlk 7 artificial hea rt
showed dramatic improvement
the day after the implant , re·
spondin g to her husband and
children wi th smiles and
al!ectlon.
Nicole Chr istoffersen, ~. of
Minot. N.D.. who had improved
from critical to critical but
stable. tal ked. wii h her hu sband .
Dean . her 2·and 4·yea r·old so ns
and staff members Wednesday
when she was taken off a
respirator, Ab bott Norihwester n
Hos pital spokeswoman Mary
Small said.
·
·" Her condition. has changed
dramaticallv for the better since

her operation," she said of
Christoffersen. who smiled ,.
"squeezed the hands of family
members. moved her legs and
wiggled her fingers " early
Wednesday.
"We are pleased with her
progress rut cannot .project at
this lime when she would be
cons idered for a human heart
transplant ," said Dr. Marc
Pritzker, a cardiologist with the
Min nesota Heart Institute.
The mechanical pump was
implanted in a ~ '/,- hour operation
Tuesday by a team lEaded by Dr.
Lv le Joyce. a member of the
team that-1mPfanted the first
permanent artificial heart In Dr.
Barney Clark. Joyce also lm·
planted a min i-Jarvlk 7 into

Mary Lund of Kensington, Minn.,
the (lrst woman to receive an
artificial heart.
Lund 's heart was rapidly des·
troyed, appar6'1tly by vir us. Sh&lt;'
received a minl·.larvik 7 at
Abbott Northwestern on Dec.18,
got a human heart 45 d~ys later
· rut died Oct. 14 at age 40.
Two other women ~ecelved
artificial tlearts as bridges to
human heart transplants - in
Tucson, Ariz.. and Pittsburghbut both died tn October.
Prltzker said experience in the
Lund case made it easier ·for
doctors to Implant the artificial
hea rt In Christoffersen anti will
make it easier to control infec·
lions and deal with blood clotting
problems. ,

SPECIAL

•to be placed on intrav.mous
feedi ng to keep him alive, but It
also damaged his tiver and IE'ft
him malnourished.
He was flown to Chicago
Tues da y w!J'n organs be~ame
available from the unidentified
baby. Surgery began at 5:30a.m.
Tuesday and ended at 10:15 p.m..
Ryan Is (lily the second person
to undergo such a compllcated
tr.ansplant.
Williams said the new proce·
du re could provE' life -sav Jng for
many children born wit II short .
gut sy ndrome.
"If this works, who knows, It
could be an answer," Williams
said . "But it may turn out tha t
after we try a few of these, they
don 't work and we'll have to go
back to the lab."

3~DAY

9UciFO!IIt:e-145 by

Cut.

·Machine reduces exploratory
surgery need with 3-D images
.

'

By ALISON GRANT
DAYTON . Ohio 1UPI1 - Offi·
clals at St. Elizabeth Medica l
Center in Dayton say an ad ·
vanC&lt;"d com put&lt;'f allows doctors
to 'perform exploratory surgery
without operating on the patient.
The compu ter produces thr ee·
dimensional pictures of orga ns
and bones by synthesizing the
multiple, slice- like images pro·
duced from CAT-scans and magnetic resonance Images, said
Burton Must , director of St.
Elizabeth's ra di ol ogy
department.
Using the com puter, a surgeon
problnl( for a possible brain
tumor ca n view a three· dlmen·
slonal vldro picture of the skull
from all angles and visually
· " dissect" the image by peeling
away successive layers of skin
and bone. Hospital officials sa id
the computer has applications
for orthopedic, neurological and
plastic surgery.
CAT·scanners "turn you into a
stack of poker chips," Must said .
But the three-dimensio nal
computer gives anatomical pic ·
rures "accurate to the sub·
mllllmeter leveL You can see the
eyelashes on a patient's lace,"
said Ken Waldbllllg. applications
man~ er lor the Minneapolisbased Dimensional Medicine.
manufac turer of the computer.
The computer gystem helps
prevent malpractice suits, redu ces . ttx; need for ex par a tory
sur gery and limits the time

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T he thrre -dlmenslonal system
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meas urements of anatomic de· Elizabeth will act as a threefeels, whi ch Dimensional Medi· dimensional Imaging referr al
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tlfMt Off

sells the gem, he will
: pl :lce,.!hemoney ina trust fund/

bitt- .....

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andsaldltwouldbelmplemented·
In the suri)mer to/ ''set an
Important example In our coun· , .
try's struggle with this most
serious tbl'oot to our national
health and security."
The urine testing was to begin
with new and transferring em·
ployees wiD work In drug enforcement, carry firearms or
handle classified matB"ial.
. Justice Department lawyers
argued. administering drug tests
to Customs agents .would not
vlolatethelrconstltutl~nal nghts
because the tests do not Intrude
on any legitimate &lt;'Xpectation of
trivacy .

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'·

coqld .t:e constructed under the
executive order that w01.1id sur- ·
vtve after this decision," she
said. "lfthisdeclslonls (upheld!,
I don't believe the president's
tes tlng program can go
forward."
.Another union· suit against
Reagan's executive order Is
pending.
LJz Or.geron, a, spokeswoman
for the Customs Servlce tn New
Orleans, s aid o\(lcials wer~ un·
certain wjlether they will pursue
an appeal.
Cmtoms Commissioner Wllllam von Raab announced the
drug·testlng program March 13

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"The trogram .was very carefully constructed to avoid what
appeared to be any constitutional
violations," · Murphy said. "I'm

sure they I the lawyers) will be
taking a very hard look at the
decision."
Lois Williams, a lawyer br the
National Treasury Employees
Union, wlltcll represmts Cus·
toms Service workers, predicted
Coillns's ruling would kill Rea·
ga n's order for random drug·
testing of federal employ.ees In
unspecified "sensitive" jobs.
"We believe ... there Is JIO way
the execu!!Ve order can go· on,",
she sai,d. ~Y will hav~ to go
back lo tiE dr,awing board and
try again because that Js a very,
very wide·ranglng order.
"Idon'tbelievethata prograrn

~.~7.95

PensonaiTehtphone
111111

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!I

Save

•so

court's sense of justice," Collins·
wrote. "The JusticE' Department
used a dragnet approach thai
tested workers without probable
cause and was overtly intrusive
and constitutionally Infirm."
Customs spokesman Dennis
.Murphy said more than llO
people had been tested lltrder the
program, which involved mont·
torlng · new employees in sensi·
tlve positions and workers who
wanted to transfer to those slots.

Register to Win ·SO Free Gifts! We will draw a
name for a free gift every day till Christmas

wares.1,

He• spotted the stone, CO·
·vered with dust, in a 'Tupper· ·
ware,; dis~ . ~d knew lmll)e•
dlatal w,liat tt was.
• " I sal &lt;f. ,l'You want $15 'for
rockJ' knd the guy says,
you wtiat. I'll let you have
for·$10. It's not as pretty as
ot
'" Whetstlnl' said.
When returned to Texas,
showed his .find to
Grl!fl~. ,
' ; " Hecamclnandjus,tfl~tou·t
s}l.ld, 'Have you soon anything '
this?~ I pulled ·myself off
· nd an d pulled m:ys~!f
t :tl)ge tho$r.' I r6,'ogntzed it IYIJ·
l ' rTJedi.ati'Iy." said Griffin.
the L.A. Ward G!'n'l
Lat)Qf!ltor·y of Fallbrook .
, valued the 1. 005-carat
at $1,al0 per carat, or
.million.
In a written appral~al .. \¥.ard
s~ggllsted tiE srone be cut Into
of star sapphires~· one
carats and the other about
C'arats·. with a total value of
million.
f
' E~l'll cuI. the lar ~'r of the
t ~ stones would outweigh the
orevi·ous largPst sta r sapphire
li. Pver ilund, th&lt;' Star pr Queensdisrovered in 1948 in
t P•USIIrat.la . The Star of Qurens·
had ,a ;~ough, ~eight of
1
.1~6 carats and !l~lshed out at
. 733 carats. :
1 ,
· Whclstin~ decided, how·
noi to.ru t his stone and Is
nif'"'" it for sale lor $1 .:.
"It
. put on the market
In Its
I st'a tr," he said.
'"!'here is a certain amount of
risk in 'cutting a stone. that
r.t~IC· l·e might be hidden flaws . .
t' ~ beh X-rayed but with a
structure you· can
1.\m~ver b&lt;' entirely sure.",
Whetstine said he bas ro
.oua.tms about paying just rio
the sapphire.
"W hen l! man !laces a price
· something he sells, that's
,
w
1 ,m• it's worth to him,':'he
t~s :siO. "When it does get :r!~d. It
brook my heart . Byf It 's
lwctrtn so much, we just can't
)afl.nrd to keep it.
"It's true it 's only a rprk.b!lt
's all a diamond is before
cut, too:·
,,
· 'Whetstine calls his ~one tiE ·
'Life
Pride of America."
his two young sons,
iJohniltha 11, and Stephen, 4,
up $5 .for ~il'n to buy

CO ptorer
llel. ..,_
Low At 123 Por Month•

Wnh Ch. t4 crystals,

BULLOII

Raellstlc

•IA-101 SleiiG AMp Wllflf.IIH

The. Daily Sefrtinef..... page-11

Fl
AL
EE
Elliqtt's i.s offering the lowest.p·rices e~er to show you

'f

Bltteriesextra

· The boy's mother, Doreen
Threet. 32 . said the transplant
was "Ryan's only hope." A
6-mon th-old baby ll'as the donor
of the organs, which the Threets
had awaited·since June.
Rya n's new organs were irra diated before transplantation In
a " highly experimental " procedure Williams said may prevent
rejection of the transplant. a
major reason prev ious gut transplants have failed .
The boy was born with short·
gut sy ndrome , in which the small
Intestine is an Inadequate length
of bowel to absorb food . ThE'
small bowel. which connects the
stomach to the larl'l" intestine, is
abou t 22 feet long in a normal
adult .
Ryan ·s short bow€'1 forced 111m

.

we .·appreciat~ your business for the. last SO .years!

Rare transplant was tot's 'only hope'
By LARRY DOYLE
UPI Scienct• Writer
CHI CAGO I UP I)
The
mother of a 1i·m'onth -old Arkan·
sas boy who underwent a " highly
experimental" bowel and lil-er
transplant says the risk)" opera·
lion was lh£' tot's only hope for
survivaL
· " It's Imposs ible to tell; nobody
has any expNiPnCP with this. But
we wouldn't be doing it if we
WE'ren't hopefuL " said Dr. James
Williams. head of transplanta ·
tlon at Rush-Presbyterian-St.
Luke's Medical Center.
Ryan Threet of · Mountain
Home. Ark .. was in critical but
stable condi tio n early today after
receiving a new sma ll intestinE'
and li\·er during a 17-hou r opera·
tion Tuesday.

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29!!

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. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

NEW ORLEANS (UP! I - A
ruling by federal judge striking
' down the testing ~f . Customs
Service employees lor drug use
wUI ·doom . President Reagan's
order of random drug testing for
thousands of federal employees,
a union tawrer "said.
U.S. District Judge Robert
Collins ruled Wednesday the
LONGVIEW, Texas (UP!)
Customs ServJ,ce's . mandatory
.:... GE'm br9ker Roy Wnetstlne
testing violates . J)le Fourth
said he almost decided to skip , Amendment' and ordered It
a gem and mineral show in
·stopped lmme,dlately because II
·Arizona where. he· discovered
c.onstltutes llle!;lal and unwar· 1he world's bigg&lt;'st star sa~ ­
ranted search and seizure.
plllre. and bought It from an
."The testln£ offends this .
un\o\1tllnjl amateur .rockbound
for $10.
·
. The .'uncu t lavender·gray
stone, about the size of a
potato, has been appralsed.at
$2 .28 million .
"This Is a real rags-toriches story," said jeweler
Jim Griffin, Whetstlne's,agent
for the stone~s .sale, who this
week revealed the story of the
gein for the first time.
Griffin said the purchase
was i(ept secret until ' now for
l ·~~cuJrllv reasons but did not
;ex1~~;~~s:th~;o~:se reasons,
bought · the ··sap·
• •utm eln February ~.t a Tucson
l ;gem show he almost missed.
. lriltlally defidlng hot to
!tend, he said he r llanged his
mind and arrlv~ on the last
day of the 10-dlW show. ·
. For the first time In y&lt;'ars.
said, he igoored the hotel
wnere the better gems ·Were
l, dlspll~y4~ and )vent Instead t'o
' '
!day jnn South, wher&lt;'
J:~\~!~ of. the1 amateurs had

for ostwporosls but ithelps. The t]Dse bones, to
the :
best exercises are those where chance of'problems later In ilte . . .
musdes pull on tiE bones such as
As winter season'.apprQach~, _;
walking, jogging, biking, jump· tJjs vegetable ,chlll!se soup will '
lng rope or aerobics.
.
tlke the chill on on a ~!d day! It ~
Experimental treatments · In-' has 264 Cl!lorles per 1cup serving ,
elude Oourlde and estrogen . and contains 452 mlllfgrams of :
These treatments would be done calcium.
·
under a doctor's care,
·
· 2 T. margarine or butter; 1 c. ,
If supplements are ·a choice chopped zucchini; y, c. chopped ·~
tbat you make,keepinmlndthat onion; '4 ' c, chop{led greeh ·,
bone meal or dolomite irre not . peppe~ : \\ c. sliced carrots; 2 T.' !
recommended. They have .been flour; 3 c. skim . milk; "1': 'c. ~
!mown .to contain high levels· of shr~e~ Cheddar c~~e; d~stl ·~
mercury.
of salt"and pepper to taste. ' · · '.
If you would like a c_hart
In · medium saucepan ' meit ~
comparing various types of sup· ·wtter. Add vegetables and sauie 1
plements contact our office at tlr five minutes or until vegeta· ;
992·6696: The ,chart lists !)'pes of bles ar~tender. Stir In tlour,cook r
supplements, cost per 1,000 mUll· tlr one' minute, Slowly add milk .:
grams and ' milligrams per to mlx·ture. Cook and stir until :
capsule.
· '-·
mlxture~ ls thlckened .• Biend ·in •
CalciumandVItamlnD~upple· cheese, salt and pepper. ·Heat '
m6'1ts may slow the rate of bone '· untU ch~e melts. Setv~. Mak~ ,~
)a;s rut wlll.not ·cau&amp;e neiv bone 4.portlons,
·.
·~
to form..
.
. . Did }'au' Knoil: 1'hat': A cup, of ~
As I mentioned
n)llk or yogurt and two ounceS of ,.
never outgrow ·
cheese. will ,
about , 000 :
calcium In the

Drug shows promise for Alzheimer; s.

November 13, 19!8

Expert · ·;ifederal _j~dge'~-. ruling ·imperils drug testing'_~ov~
a
:locates
.
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largest
sapphire ·

Osteoporosis: the neecl for calcimnjS great infiietJ
m~linize
By Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extension Agent
Last week In the Spotlight
focused on the importance of
calcium In the diet. This week we
will take· a look at osteoporosis ,
Its causes, met iDds of prevention
and tlilse who are at risk.
Our bones continue to become
dense until theageof:6 .After the
age of 45 our bones start to thin.

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Thursday. N~ber 1.~ •.1986

In the spotlight:

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992-21.56
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446-805

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\3' COLOR1V

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. Page. 12 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

Thursday. NoveiT!ber 13. 1986

·· Thursday, November 13, 1986

.----Local Briefs:-- Pomeroy -Christ.Dtas parade·set Nov.\ 30
Mary-Shrine to meei Friday

Marv Shrine No. 37. White Shrine of Jerusalem, will meet
Friday , 8 p.m ., at the masonic temple in Pomeroy.

Divorce action filed in court
Valerie J . Imboden, Syracuse, has flied for a divorce in Meigs·
County Common Pleas Court from Timothy F. Imboden,
Racine, cha rging gross neglect of duty and extreme cruelty.
Darrell L. Henderson. Tuppers PlaiJIS, and Michelle A.
Henderson. Belpre , have filed for a dissolution of marriage .•
A divorce has been graht ed George Clin ton Thompson and
Melinda Jane Thompson .
·

Coal company found liable
Dat·k Diamond Coa l Corp., et.al. , has been found liable to Ire
plaintiffs. Avet·y Goeglein and Helen Goeglein. et.al.; In the
amount of $42,1171.91, in an action in Meigs County Common
Pleas Court.
Title to property In question in the action. has been quieted In
favor of the plaintiffs.
A decree for judgment , foreclosure and sale has been filed In
Mei!&lt;S County Common- Pleas Court in an actio n by Diamond
Savings and Loa n Co., against Cli fford R. Smith.
George Hobstetter. Horace Karr and John T. Wolfe will be
re placi ng John Pickens. Gordon Proffitt and Gayle Price as
commiss ioners in an action by Dora Foutty, et al. against Elsie
Conaway Williams, for partitioning of property.
An action by Pa rticia Ann Morgan. ot.a l., against James D.
Ca ldwell . et.a l., has been dismissed .
A rec iprocal action for child support has been fil ed by
Washington Cou nty, Ohio, and Jennifer L. Hawk aga inst Mar k
Harold Hawk.

Board OKs student placement
Meeting in regular sess ion Tuesdav night, the Meigs Cou nty
Board of Education approved the placemen t of two student
teachers !rom Oh io University in I he speec h therapy program
for thr winter quarter.
Approved fo r bus driver certificat es were Keit h Black, Mona
Erv in and Patsy White, Carleton School.
A contract 10 prov ide for the coordination of the early
childhood incentive gran t programs with Carleton School was
approved along with a co urse of study lor the occu pational work
experience program.
Norma Torres, R.N.. of the Meigs Cou nty Depart ment of
Health , mPt wit h the board to discuss the problem of head lice in
Meigs County. The board pa s~ed a poli cy recommending that
a ll local school districts adop t a nil ·free policy if such a policy
does not already exis t in the distric t.

EMS units answer three calls
Meigs Count.1· Emergency Medical Services reports three
ca lls Wcd nesdav.
Middleport ai 4: 1~ a. m. 10 the corner of Palmer and Seventh
streets for Dewaync Taylor to Veterans Memoria l Hospital;
Middlej&gt;ort at 10: 49 a.m. to Beech Street for Virginia Bachus to
Veterans Memorial Hospltal: Pomeroy at 6: 11 p.m. to U.S. ~3
for John DeMoss to Veteran s Memori al Hospi tal.

Plant relocates to Point Pleasant
POINT P LEASANT - Appalac hian Wood Prod ucts In c ..
announced today that all operations prev iously conducted. at its
Ravenswood facilit y have been relocated to the corporat ion's
major manufacturing facility located in the Point Industrial
Park. Point Pleasan t.
Included in the move arr the corpora te offices for
Appalachian Wood Products and the Pedrst al Man ufactur ing
Division, which had been located on W.Va. :;6 in Ravenswood .
In making the an nouncement . &lt;'Om pany president Jack
Hendricks expressed appreciation to t he Ra venswoodcommunlly for its cooperation wit h Appa lachian Wood over the years
a nd stated that the decision to consolidate ope rations In Point
Pleasant was based on economics and efficiency of operation.
Hendricks furt her stated that there would be no job loss as a
res ult of the move other than some temporary downtime while
the eq ulpm~nt was being installed and that the net result would
be an additio nal 24 jobs in the Point Pleasant facility.
For further information. contac t R. Frank Lee, executive
direc tor, Mason Count;• Development Authority, at filo·l497 or
filo.mo.

Pomeroy Chamber· of Commerce wUl kick off the holida y
season with their annual Christmas parade on Sunday, Nov. 30,
at 2 p.m.
,
All participants will line up
behind. the old Pomeroy high
school it was announced in
Wednesday's regular chamber
mee ting, and will move ,through
Pomeroy only.
' Chamber reported tl)at "Big
Bend Varieties of ·oo.~· a show by ·
the Big Bend Minstrel Associa·
lion, will be IX'esmted Saturday,
Nov. 29, at Rutland Civic Center.
The show Is ro·sponsored by
chamber and tre Rutland Civic
Center organization, and curtain
time wfil be 8: 10 p.m. Advance
tickets wlll soon be on sale for S2
each. T!cke\s at the door will be
$2.00 .
Beth Stivers, R.N ., and AdminIstrator Scott Lucas, of Veterans
Memorial Hospital, were at the
mee.tlng to promote VMH's lm·
proved emergency roomandnew
urgent care center. A slide
presen tation by Stivers outlined
the facilities.
The emergency room has undergo ne ex tensive remodeling
and has been relocated to better
facilitat e Emergency Medical
Service vehicles which transport
to and from VMH. Mu ch new'
equipment has been purchased
fo r the faclllties.
Stivers noted the difference
between emergency and urgent
care.· Patients may visit urgent
care from 9 a.m . to 9 p.m. da lly,

at reduced rates, for treatment
, much the sa me as would be
received in .a physician's office,

CHARLESTON, W.Va. (UPit
- After months of legal maneuv ering, opening arguments were
expected to begin today In the
· trial of West .Virginia Attornej• .
General Charlie Brown, a Mans·
field, Ohio, native charged with
soliciting campaign contribu·
tlons from his staff.
"'
The trial wa s assur!ed Wednes·
day, after · Kanawha Circuit
Judge ·Margaret Workman denied Brown's last attempt to
throw out the charges on grounds
that he was being selectively
prosecuted under a 7l·year·old
law which makes solfciting on
state property against the law.
"Given the distinct possibility
that o.ther violations of tre law
may have occurred and gone
unpros~uted over a course of
time, Mr. Brown might conclude
that Ufe ha s been somewhat
unfair to him In that he is being
prosecuted," Workman said fn
court.
"The fact that such an fnequ al·
ity may exist. however, Is not
what Is contemplatal by the law
"

Brown 's lawyers also argued
Ire eight charges against Brown
vloiatal his First Amendment

.. Plrasr· lL'r our be ll it ies," sho.
concluded . "We' r~ there fot' the
pu ,blir ."

By S HA~I L. SCALES
Younce sa id one of the most
INDIANAPOLIS t UP() - Now surprising resu lts of the laW is
that about half of all Indiana the numbE&gt;r of regional acq uisf·
banks have taken advantage of a lio ns, whi ch has climbed to more
new law allowing cross·co unt y th an 45 in the fiVC·State region.
and in terstate banking, the presIndiana banks make up the
' sure Is on for th e 1987' General larges t portion of acquisition
'Assembly to expa nd that . targe ts from out·Of·s tate banks.
program.
About 32 banks in Indiana are
A spokesman for the Indiana being acqu ired, co mpared to
• Bankers Association called the nin e in Kentucky, four in Michibankin g ac tivity resuliing from gan and one in Illinois.
· the · new law "phenomenal. "
Howev er, Indian a banks aree
· However, his orga niza tion is doing the leas t acqu ir in g- only
· callfng for an expa ns ion of tha t two Indian a bank companies
· program.
have mad e , steps to acq uire
"There's a prospect the Indi- out ·Of·state banks.
ana Banking Association will be
On the other hand, Ohio promoting legislation in 1987 to whi ch does not have any of its
trigger fo r nationwide inters tate ba nks being acq uired by 'other
reciproca l banking to be effec· state banks - ha s Initiated the
tlve in 1990," said Thomas B.
most activity in the fiv e-state
. Williams, dir ector of governmen- region. wit h sev en of lis bank
. tal relations for IBA :
holding co mpanies plan ning to
ynder an Ipdlana law adopted
acq ui re a total of 37 out·of.state
las t July, Inters tate banking banks .
· agree ments arc restricted to fou r
Other figures ·show about 90
neighboring states - lilinois, Indiana ba nks were tar~ted for
· Kentucky , Michiga n a nd Ohio.
in -sta te acq uisitions. About 73
A{ report recently released by have been targ!ted for involve·
the sta te Departm ent of Finan- mcnt in multi-bank ho lding ·cor·
cia l Institutions indicates the para tions ·and 29 others by
activity In cross·count y a nd re gio n a l bank holdin g
interstate banking is showing ito companies.
sig ns of slowing down since tha t
" It is a pretty phenomenal
law was adopted.
rat e.'' Williams sa id . "I don't
".It's still a t a pret ty stea dy think very .many people ant ic!·
pace .. . but It probably will start patal the rate of merge rs and
slowing down•after the first of 1he ac qui sitions wou ld reach the
year," sal,9 Gregory Younce, a lev('! 1hat it did during t hat period
bank analyst for the departm en t. of time."
'

I

$29 and costs; Diana L. Shorter,
Thurman, $21 and costs; Jerry R.
Runyon, Middleport, $22 and
costs: Delbra L. Estep, Pome·
roy, $30 and costs; Lanny T.
Lester, Ga ltlpolls, $20 and rosts;
Teddy Dillard, Point Pleasant ,
$22 and costs; William Capehart.
Pomeroy , $21 and cos ts: Ron
Mlllantl, Steubenville, $27 and
costs; ·Melanie Black , Syracuse,
$20 and costs.
Otrers fined In the court were
Willte Causey, Coolvllte , stop
sign violation, SIO and costs;
John M. Haggerty, Pomeroy,
failure to wear seat belt, $20;
Claudette S . . Harbin, Ravens·
wood, W.Va., stop sign, .$10 and
costs ; Arlin Radekin , Albany,
overwldth. Sl'i and costs ; Karen
L. Hood, Syracuse. ex pi red operator 's license, $)0 and costs;
!allure to displ ay valid license
plates, $20 and costs; Gerald V.
Arnold, Pomeroy, driv ing while
intoxicated, S250 and costs , three
days In jail and 60 day license
suspensio n; no operator's II·
cense. $50 and costs, 60 days in
jail, 53 days suspended , one year
probation; left of center, costs
only: Robert Venoy, Pomeroy,
no operator's ltcense, $75 and
cosls, ll days In jail, 'll days
suspended, one year probation;
Debbie Halley , Syracuse, dlsor·
derly conduct, costs; Kenneth
EE. Rockhold, Reedsville, disorderly conduct, $100 and costs,
fine suspended , six months probation and defendant refrain
trom compl ainant.

lights beca use it prel'mted his listC'nlng to t es timon)' from hi s
s taff about th e all ege d
political ex pression:
. Wor.kman responded to that. sollclt Jl io n.
ar{Nment by say in g, "The court
Gru bb and seven ot ~r lil rmer ,
Is tot ally unable to · accep t the and current at tor ne)!s ge neral
contention that one's righ t of are ('Xpected to be ca ll ed as
freedom of speec h permits him to
prosec ut io n witnesses. '
violate the law, evro if ,others · After Workman denied .the
have done so in the pas t."
selec tlv&lt;' prosec ution motion ,
The · lnvestlgation of Bro";n's defense and proseeution ·lawyers
alleged criminal conduct began
spent the rest of Wednesday
after form er Deputy Attonrey selec tin g t re 12 -pe.'son, onr alter·
General David Grubb cha rge d nate jury. ,
Brown with shakin g oown his
staff for polftlcal cqntributions.
Opening arguments in the case ,
Grubb was fired wltllfn days of were expect'ed to begin at 9 a. m . ..
that statement.
today.
•
Grubb charged Brown, brother
Getting thi s thr case . to court "
of Ohio Secretary of State Sher· ha s tak en several months and at ,
rod Brown, with asking hi s staff least one trip to · the · state ,
to buy $100 tickets to a November Supreme Court.
fundralslngdfnner to help redu ee
Brown's lawyers took the case
a $40,000 campaign debt.
to the high court In July after
A Kanawha County gran d jury .Workman r¢used to step down
indicted Brown Feb. 1l aft er from the !rial.

Snow falls in northeast Ohio ~·,
By United Press International
A travelers advisory was in
effect lat e Wednesday night and
early today for extreme northeastern Ohio.
Snow fell Wednesday evenin g
in the northern half of the statr
and was expected to spread over
the rest of Ohio overnight.
Snow was forecas t to accumu late 2-3 inches around Cleveland
overnight wfth about an inch of
accumulation elsewhere in nor·
thea stern Ohio, except in the
snow belt, where squalls were
forecast.
Accumulations of up to six
Inches were possi ble in the snow
belt, National Wea the r Service
personnel said.
Winds of aJ.lJ mph wHe
expected to stir up the snow,
making vlslblilty poor, and cause

"•

dri fts on roadways .
People In the extreme nor· ,
theastern portion of the state _
were advised to allow extr a tim e ~'
for travel and Io proiec
. t against a •
vC'rV cold wind -c htll factor.
Over ni ght low temperatures ~·.
state"1de were forecast to be';:"'
betwee n 10 and aJ degree s.
:,.
Forecasters sai d western and•
southern Ohio sbould hav e no •
worse than partly cloudy skies -~
today bu t the nor th&lt;'astern part ••
oft re sta te mi ght not get a break~
(ro m the .snow until late in the "
ctay.
:
Highs around the state today .,:
were forecast to be In fhe uppe r
teens and lower lis.
The low to night was ex pected ,
to fall back into the teens.

.

· Union joins apartheid protest
CHARLESTON, W.Va. iUPit
- The United Mine Wor kers'
Hea It h and Retirement Funds
sold its Royal Dutch Sheil·
related stock the sa me month t ~·
coal mi ners union joined an
anli·aparlheid boycott of the
energy co nglome-rate in protest
of its dealin gs in Sout h Africa.
UMW officials said Wednesda y.
Joe Corcoran, a UMW spokesman In Was hington. D.C., said a
check of the pension fund s' 'tock
po rtfolio . $tvwect that about
· 32.400 sha'res in Shell Transpor t &amp;
Trading Ltd. wort h about $1.2
million were sold In J a nuary, the
same montht hat the UMW joined
the Shell boycott.
Corcoran said that while the
pension fund s '!Ire operated Inde·

' .

Veterans Memorial
Admissions - Dewayne Ta)··
lor , Middleport; Blythe The iss,
Racine.
"
Discha rges- Mar ilyn Shamb·
lin, Louis Young, Robert Morris.

I

It has operations in Fos toria
and Parma . Ohio; Gra&gt;nvllle.
S.C.; To ronto, Canada : She!·
field. England : and Juarez,
Mexico.

Kroger paf'l ratified
CINCINNATI tUPI J-Apossible midnight strike was averted
Wednesday when some 5,000
Cincinnati grocery store clerks
and meat cutters voted by a 4·1
ratio to accept a new contract
offer from the Kroger Co.
Th&lt;' employees, members .of .
United Food and Commercial
Workers Local 109~. rejected a
proposal calling for contract
co ncessions Monda y, and a walkout was averted late Tuesday
when employees gave the company and union negotiators one
final chance to come up with an
agreement.

LADIES &amp; MEN'S

AMITY

BILLFOLDS

40°/ooFF
LAYAWAY fi)R CHRISTMAS
992·6669

VILLAGE
PHARMACY
IIDDLEPOIT, OHIO

,

pendently of the union Itself, the
stock divestitu re was mad e after
the UMW leadership made it
'kn own publicly that it was ta king
pill' I in the boycott .
Mi chael Holl and. the union's
general counsel. sa id he received
a lett er from the chairman of the
pension funds stating that the
Shell stock was sold 11 months
ago.
The Charles ton Gazette had
reported in late October that it
had 'obtai ned records itdicating
the pension fu nd s st ill owned the
Shell stock . At that tim e. the
newspaper reported that a spo·
kesman lbr the fund had declined
to commen t on whether !he stock
had been sold. Corcoran had said
at tha t time he didn't know
whether the story was true.

The Daily Sentinel

1

.ALL
I

SWEATS
IMANY STYLES TO
CHOOSE FROM)

·eiNZA

ONLY

992-2156

MIDDLEPORT - ON THE T,

Public Notice

54 Misc. Merchandise

PUBLIC NOTICE
• ~ The annual rep ort Form
·, 990PF tor December 3t ,
;. 1984 tortho Kibbte Founda ·

, t..ow

oHic~ .

11 1V• W. So·

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

r-~"~

_______,,..__

-~ ~--'"

~,.."-·-·..,.

...... - ... _.

SIGN UP FOR OUR FRIDAY
NIGHT MYSTERY GIFT
REGISTER BETWEEN ..
5 AND 8 P.M.
NOVE-l nH WIN ... I
CHAlLIS (FlOG) WAYLAND
. '"

•FREE Gin WRAPPING•
•COFFEE &amp; COOKIES•

.FRIDAY NIGHT

•

of 180 days subsequ.,t fD

: publication of this notice .

PR·E-HOLI·DAY SALE!!

(1 11 12 , 13,

SAVE ON ENESCO

'

'

PRECIOUS MOMENTS

30°/o OFF',

'
'

-•
-•'

PFALTIGUFF STONEWARE

VILLAGE, 'HERITAGE &amp; HEI,LOOM PAmRNS

50°/o OFF
PR~NT . BIBLE
SALE $14 95

Pyblio Sale
8t Auction

CHRISTMAS AUCTION

:REGISTER FOR OUR "PRE-HOLIDAY GIFTS
.
EVERY FRIDAY NGHT

'

I

•

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

•'

Middleport Book Store

'

'•

I.

'

•
••
•

••

FRI. EVE., NOV.l4r 1986
.
7:00 P.M.

Located al Scip,io Township Fire Dept. in Harii-

sonville, Ohio.

All kinds of toys, silveiWate items, toOls , clocks,
limps, pictures, jewelry, leather wallets . Sunbeam
razors music box, all ktndsof Christmas gift items.
Come 'one, come all. Help the fire department.
~ts
Gta b Baas
Poor Prizes

DAN SMITH - AUCTIONEER

I&amp;S SAL£S WILL FURNISH SAL£ ITEMS
742·2882

Debbie Meadows- Owner: lmojaan Blevins
Loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Malisaa Downing, Merri Ann·!'~''Y..

mo.

BUILDING

GENERAL REPAIR
REMODELING
, INTERiOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. Second

THE QUAUTY

COMMERCIAl • RESIDENTIAl
-FREE ESTIMATES-

PIINT SHOP

F11 AN

Middleport, Ohio

y,, Pllttltf N.Ut

PHONE (614) 992-'5009

PW!: OHict Sui'Pii" &amp;
Funiiturt, WHiling

fPEC/AllliN&amp;IN WINDOW. I. DOOR REit!ACflllffNI

and Graduation
Slaliinery, Magntlic
SigM, lubber S1amp1,
lulin11s Forms,
Copy Sonicos, lie.
255 Mil 51. - l...orl
104 Mulberry b., Po..roy

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDA'IS
Cl CoJI'C)uterized Hearing Air Selection .
z Swim Molds - Interpreting Services

--a:
~

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

:r:: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

-z

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

TROMM
EXCAVAnNG

GUN SHOOT

742-2328

R4CINE

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

F•• E DEPT.

EVERY

SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

c,..,

Foclorr
I 2 Gaugt Sholg111s Only

10·8-tln

190 MILHBY AVE.
PO.IOY, 011.

PH. 992-9949

lob larton, Owner
10-27-86·1 mo.

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

992·3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

J.R~'s

REPAIRS

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Salts
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
Mobile service

614·843·5248
RfASONAI1E • REUAiiE

JO' S GIFT SHOP

In Syracus~. Ohio
''YES. WE ARE OPEN."
THURS.-FRI.-SAT.
9 to 5

l•IJflllg lot C4nlllrlfr
CEMENT HORSES .
DEER&amp; . RABBITS. DOGS .
CATS . EAGLES . VIRGIN
MARY, WHIT.E ANGELS
ALSO LARGE BIRO BATHS

RIASONAIII RAllS
10·30-'86· t mo .

·® C!~H~~E
AUTO

24 Hour Wrecker Service
FuN !orwi&lt;o &amp; topair

35809 Titus load
Middleport. Ohia
l'h. 742·2592 '

4

•AUTOS •UGHT TRUCKS

11-4·86·1 mo.

8·20-'86 tfn

Roger Hysell
Garage

BISSELL
BUILDERS

BISSBL
SIDING CO•

~Ito Trt•t~ttlo•

At. 7

Middleport
11-7·86-1110.

•VINYL SIDING

Ntw

Hot1111 Built

"Free Eatimatae"

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121

PH. 949·2801
or '949-2860

loca~on:

161 """"

--

s.c•

Milldltpart, Ohio 45760
We COllY Fishing S..,pll•

01

CHE~R--915 · 3307

Ply Ypur Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Hera

~ IUIINISS PHON!

!6141 991-6550
IISI)IN(I PHONE
(6141 00 ' ' · " . .

VINYl &amp;

AlUMINUM SIDING

•lntUIII~n

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows
•Repltcennt Windows
•New Roofing

"fill tniMA115"

JAMES KEESEE
PH.

RADIATOR
. SERVICE

We Cln repair and rP.
core 11diators and
heater cores. We e1 n
alsucid boil and rod
out radiators. Wealso

repajr Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992-2198

Mlddlep~rt•.Ohio

1-13-tfc

Rew.11rd it you know the wheret·
bou ts pi eue eall 614 · 388 -

8734.
Lost a med -blue medical eneyc bpedi8. around Holzer ., Eu reke. If found pteue ull 614 256-8097.

Lost Y! Irish Setter. 'h Cod!.er
Spaniel, 21h ft. tall, brown.
answers to Br idget, REWARD
Ph 614 ·446 · 3780"' 61-· 446·
3077 nk for Eleine MuQ1:1ower.
lost - Reward : For the return of a
" Datmation" Taken from PteaHnt Hill School Rd . Call 614-

379·2246.
Found : White gelding pony on
Rock spring• Rd . Sunday morning . Call614 -992 - 7300.

White male dog lon., vicinity of
Condor St end Spring Ave. All
white with curly tail~ndenswan
to Brandy. Family pet. Anyone
wrth info rmadon can 614-992:2065 . t50 reward .

Wanted to buy freerer in good

cond. 304·875· 2927 .

lott·Redmond Rktg e. All white
female German Shepherd, btack
collar. rCJin tag . Reward . Tony
Ro ach. 304-675 -5433.

7

Yard Sale

....... Giiltri&gt;olii ......._.
&amp; Vicinity
First time sale Centenary Townhouu Nov . 13 &amp; 14 twandnam e
clothing . toyt, jewelery . new
auto rad io.
Back porch Rummage Sale Wed .
&amp; Thur. Nov. 12 . &amp; 13 9 till 7469
Lariat Drive.

lnskla, stlfeo, 2 10 -eenulbtaa,
pillow panel1. mite, Thurs .. Fri ..
6 Sat . Harmtn·Northup Ad .

Centenary .

9

Wantad To Buy

We pay ca1h for late

waed cart.

lfiOdel c lean

.

Jim Mink Chtv .·Okh Inc.
8111 Gene John10n

614-448· 3672
TOP CASH paid for "83 model
and newer used cars. Smith

Bulek -Pontiae. 1911 Eultrn
Ave .• Gallipolis . Ca" 61•· 448-

2282 .
WANTED TO BUY u1ed wood &amp;
co.t heaters. SWAIN'S FURNI TURE, 3rd. 6 Olive St. Gallipo lis. Call 114-4415· 3159 .

Buying daity gold . silver coins,
rings , iiWtky, sterling ware, md
co ins, lefJe currency. Top prictt. Ed. Burtlett Barber Shop .
2nd. Avt1. Mkldlaport , Oh . 1514·

992· 3476 .
Wa nted to buy. Standing1imber.
CeiiSU -742 -2328 .
Header panel , grill end
bu,....er. for 1981 Gran
mouth Fury. Car ute
1979 - 1982 . Chrytlar
Yorller, New Port or Pty .
Cell &amp;U-992 ·11!15.

front
Ply from
New
fLWy .

C11h Plid for standing timber.

Phone 814 -992-3811 .

Wanted 10 Buy st.,.,ding tlmb..-,

304·675-4412, 11:00·
5,00 PM otrer 5,00 PM 30•·
675 ·3924 .. 304· 372-6192 .
phono

EmplnymPnl
Serv1ces

NO SUNDAY CAlLS
4-16-'86 tin

SALES &amp; SEIVICE
U. S. IT. SO EAST
GUYSYIW, OHIO
Authoriz~

....., D11n,
Ntw H....nd, lu1h Hog
Form Equipmtnl
O..ltr

Fer• E•al,llllf
Perle &amp; SeNiti

SUPERIOR
SIDING CO.

VlnL &amp;AW..UM
Comple1e Gutter Work
Complete llomodeling

Roofing oloii Typeo
Worked in home er11
20 YNII
"Free Estimates"

CALL COLL.ECT:

Ph. (614) 843-5425
11 -1 1-11

An nnu ncr.111 enls

(CUf. OUT FOI fUIUII USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE ·
915·3561
All Meku

•Woollen •Oiah'weatwro ·
•R1ng11

oflofllgoro1an

•Dryerl tfNIIIrl

PARTS lind

1 1 Halp Wanted
Make Ch ristmas money . · sell
A110n . Mak e 4!1 perc&amp;nt. Cell

614 · 446· 3358 .

.

Enlhu tl'lllic - en•getic pflt~on
with goo d co mmun icatio n•
lkilla . Position .-a ilable to work
tor Sou thee11em Oh io's tinflst

outdoor r&amp;crflttion f irm. No tlll:p .
rteeeuary, will trH\. st11tt Imme diately. Call between 10 &amp; 4 .
exe:ept Mon . &amp; Tues. Cal 81 4 ·
288-2248 .

Salupeople-F ull or part tlm8' t o
sell ceme tery &amp; merch . Call

814-446· 36 16 or 614 -5t2 -

3 Announcements

J&amp;L BLOWN
INS'"'AnON

Lost small Beagle childs pet.

Dar or Night

EUGENE LONG

BOGGS

Ntw

814 ·446-0370 .

6-17-tlc

No Sunday Calls

PlU.ING &amp;Nm1NG I

$1QO reward for rtturn tJt
-information leading to the where
abou11 of malt black Labroador
tostin O.J . White road arae . Call

LOST. shon haited black dog , 60
lbs. blu11 oolar. answers to
"Umburg" , 304-676· 1373.

JERRY'S
.SIGN SERVICE

RIDENOUR
. TV &amp; APPUANCE

'I

1

Call:

EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860

1012!/ 86/ tt.

8

THUMIINDEX~D REG. S22.95 SALE $1995

83 MIU. ST.
•DDLEPOIT

•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

SALES &amp; SERVICE

NELSON GIANT

,

•Basements
•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Linas

OPEN:Mon .-Fri .' 8 am-9pm- Sat. 8-6
Walk-ina Welcome

AUTO &amp;TRUCK
REPAIR

OPEN DAILY 9 AM· S PM

•

•All Types ot
Excavating
•landscaping

9'12-5766

Rl. 124, Pomtroy Ohio

701 2nd Ave.
Gallipolis, Ohio

•

MEIGS
EXCAVAnNG
COMPANY

N. 2nd, Middleport

•ALUMINUM SIDING
•ILOWN IN
INSUlAliON

OLD TIME
HEATING CO.

·'

271

Call Collect

Plastic • Truck
Silk Scteening
Boat Lettering - Realty
Jackets • T-shirts

JERRY
StEGFREID

'

W. YA. Residents

1ME

CUSTOM BUilT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"AI Reasonaltle Prices"

Window - Wood - Paper

SIGNS Of All KINDS

•
'

614/992·71.19

-. 10·8-tfc

992-7460

•

ALL FIGURI,.ES \

REG. SJ7.95

t4, 16 , 17, 18 ,

• 19 7tc
•
'• 2
In Memoriam
'
'
•'

PIICES GOOD Fll., NOV.14-5·8 P.M. ONLY
ON niE "T"IN MIDDIIPOIT

business hours for 1 period

EACH

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAMP SHADES.

54 Misc. Merchandise

• : •mnd Street,
Pomeroy ,
~ • Ohio. 4.6769 during regular
_,

2 s(

CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

, • tion . Berr,ard V. Fultz, Trus• : tee , is available for PJ blic in :, · tpeCtion at Bernard V.

Pomeroy, Ohio
24 HOI IR SERVICE

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

SIZE 23X30X007

THURS., FRI1 SAT. ONLY

JACK'S
TANK SERVICE
40625 St. Rt. 681

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR ·SALE

Gi.vea way

Ph . 614·446·0321 . .

Iathan Buildilg
Cl~nifil•
Po~~t r or . Ohio 45719

4

Electric cOOk stove. refrigerator,
box springs and manreu, chair
frame end studio, couch frame

11·7-86 -1 mo.

til Ca~trl St.

25°/o·oFF

•Residential
•Commercial
•Industrial

LIMESTONE
HAULED

PHONE
992-2156
Or l ri1 e Daiftr Stnlilltl
Dtpl .

Viu·Misterc.rd -get your card
TODAY! Also New Cred it Card.
NO ONE RE f USEO!Coll f.61B ·
469-3646 ext C1980, 24' ~urs.

'

992·33

'

ON THE ~'T" IN MIDDLEPORT
MIDDLEPORT ·DEPARTMENT
STORE
WILL BE OPEN UNTIL
8 P.M. EVERY
FRIDAY NIGHT FOR YOUR
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

However, Wllllams said, Indl·
ana ~ou ld benefit from expand·.
ing It s law to permit interstate
,
banking natlanwfde.
"When · the ma r~ tplace Is
opened on a national basis, It will
pres mt opportunity for bank
lnves tments ... and Indiana
bankers should be pr epared to
take advantage of that.
"If we don't become involved,
the situation may develop wrere
Indiana bankers will be missing
out on some opportunities to
expand their· own markets ,"
Williams sa id. ·
He also not ed Indian a ma y be
pressured into adopting nation·
wide intersta te banking.
Ke ntucky is already involved
in a na tionwide sys tem, and Ohio
and Michigan have adopted
legislation .1~ iha t will become
effec!ive In 1988. So far, about 20
sta tes have enacted similar
legislation: and otrer states are
cons ide ring the (roposal:
·
"With thrre of our neighbors
involved we felt It was approp·
nate" for lndian.a to follow suit ,
Williams sa id .
If Indiana do es not fall In line,
snags would develop In transac·
tions and acq uisitions with it s
neighboring . states, Williams
said, cit ing the problems that
occurred in a recent acquisition
proposal Involvin g a Kentucky
co mpany that owned two Indiana
banks.
A Pennsylvani a bank holding
co mpany was interested In buying out tre Kentucky concern ,
howev er, Indiana law does not
allow lndian a.tJa nks to be owned
by companies from an y . states
ou tside the five -state Midwest
region.
"Some of t he ou t·of·state banks
will find themselves in a very
restr ic ted situat ion to expand
their marke ts outside to! the
area)," Williams said.

----

Union Carbide to sell unit
DANBURY. Conn. IUPl i Union Car bide Corp. ha s an·
nounced it has reached an
agreement in principle to s&lt;'ll the
assE'IS of It s electrical carbo n
busi ness to a British firm for $2o
million in cash.
The chemical giant based in
Danbury said Wednesday the
move is part or its res tr ucturing
plan under whi ch most of the
company's asset s In businesses .
outside the core ctiemical industry are being divested .
The e l ~ t r l ca l C'd rbon business.
a part of Cartide's Specialty
Products unit , Is being sold to the
Morgan Cruclbl&lt;' Co. of Windsor.
E ngland.
The uni t markets a range of
ca rbon-based specialty produ cts
for industrial uses prroomi·
nantty under the Natio nal
tradr mark.

13

Ind•.grQup ·seeks expansion
·of·banking, a~tivity legislation

W·.Va. official's trial opens·

Meigs County Court
processes ·40 cases
Forty cases were processed
Wednesday in Meigs County
Court presided over by Judge
Patrick O'Brien.
Ten persons forfeited bonds,
seven of them on speeding
'c harges. Forfeiting on the
charge were Donald Bunce,
Middlepor t, $70; Miles Clark,
Albany, $50; Rebeckah McGraw,
Racine, $50; Charles R. Jones,
Wythevilte, Va ., $50; Alan Lerch,
Rushville, $50; Carolyn S. F ree·
man, Pltny , W.Va ., $44 ; Kevin
Eastman, Gallipolis , $50. Others
forfeiting bonds were Johnny
Ratllffe, Middleport, $45, failure
to display va ltd registration;
Ricky Stone, Middleport , $120,
permitting an unlicensed minor
to operate a motor . vehicle;
William Colmer,' Pomeroy, $40.
falhire to wear seat belt.
Fined on speeding charges
were Robert A. Davis. Tuppers
Plains, $23 and costs; Michae l C.
Cornes, Groveport, $20 and
costs; Kelli J . Mlller, South
Point, $21 and costs; Antbony
Griffin, BridgePort , W.Va., $24
and costs: Wllllam R. Dull. .
Akron, $21 and costs; Kenneth J .
Fogle, Cleveland Heights, $25
and costs ; Dwight R. Snyder Jr ..
Canton, $22 and costs; L. Jean
Delph , Pomeroy, $22 and costs;
Michae l E. Johnson, Wheelers·
burg, $20 and costs ; Jeffrey A.
Gray, Ga liipolts, $24 and costs;
Frederick P. McNeal, Patriot,
$25 and cos ts; Kent M. Steprens,
Parkersburg, $21 and costs;
Mar k C. Vorys, Wendell, N.C.,

sh!: said. Tht• emerwncy JO!lm is
for more intensi\'r treatment
than w·gen t care can offer.

The Daily

Ohio

I

Seve your lovlld on• 10me or
the sorrow • lq»enu. Purehll·
ing memonel property before
nMd tajuatgoodurnmon ,.....
CaN now far llmduJre. Ohk)
Vtthy Memory O.rdena. Cetl
114-oM&amp;-•15. Mtlat County
Memory O.rd.nt Calf 114· 115921111

1151 .

CASE MANAG ER to work with
adults at

men1ally

diubled

WOQdl~nd

Centen. Bachtlor'a

degree in toCial work or equivtl·
ent fldueatkln . E~trtence with
chronic mentally ill or PIYchlat·
riC ctitn ts he_,ful. For ~re
ln1ormaUon contact Sanl)n
McfltrtMd It Woodltnd Canten. 114 -441-5!500

II!~;;,;;,-s;;;;;c;;,;;;;;;"i,
SnRk co,..tny is

tor an aggressive tales
person ID dilttibuta their pro duots ~ the .,... Established
llfritorv for rnJra th'an tf'llrty
y8an, Sales tJCPtrlen ca necu.
Sate pertort applying ma at
or be lbll to buy rou te v"an
or equal aqulpmant . Send la- ·
aunt to Bo11 f ·eo 0 cattt of th a •
Gllllpolit .Dt!ly Tribun e 8215
Third A111 . GaiJ~polit , Ohio

. '

•

�.

Page 14 The Daily Sentinel
11

· Pomeroy Middle

LAFF·A~DAY

Help Wanted

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

MHn.,.,c. per10n to Nve in
IP•rtment c:on1)leK CaH 304·

2 bedroom mobile home. Mid dleport , 0 . Reference whh st·
curity depo sit. 304 -882 ·3267
or 304-n3-5024.

175·&amp;104.

E..,l.,ced ovllf the rold 'truck

*"'•· c.•

114·44·1426

lfter Sp.m. Ph .

For rent 101160 treillr t50 .00
depo11t !1 35.00 month . Weter
end u"h pickup included. 304-

Sub Bus Oriv• · mY It hokl bus
liwn" or wi•tnu to
otJtllin, .,d a phylicel exam

675·2247.

*iv•

3 bedroom mobile home, gas
heet a150 . per month &amp; aecurity deposit. 304-882-2686 or

Sal..-y 15 Q6 per hD ur Contact·
Mr . O.wld Aatlifl, Principal,

Guid_,g HWid School, P.O.

Bo~t

882·3323.

14, O.•hire, OH •5&amp;20 or call

!6141 367·0102
HELP WANTED
No

44

ntceuary, must
be ••illb*e for immediate empfoym.,l. major medical benet·
iti &amp; .,.._ vacation. Call 614·
tltper._.,~

Regency Inc. 2 bdr . kitchen.
mce. good location. furnished ,
reaaonabla. Cell304-676-&amp;104
or 304-676-7437.

446-3687 10a.m to 4p m

N.U Blbysitter 2 nightsa week.

Ph. 114·368·9862.

3000 Governrntnt Jobs J.11t.
I 11 ,040- S59.230 yr Now Hiritg . Coli 806·887-6000 E•t.

"Y

R· 9906

l'lln·t;meRN . poS&lt;tlonova;lable

It a 100 bed skilled long term
care flcility operated by a

leodng rousing home corpora·

Nicely furnished mobile home
CA &amp; heat. excel. location ,
edults only. Cal\614-446-0338 .

d 5QOL

spen
70 Of your
energy on your J"ob, 500/.0
on
7l
your hUSband an d · 5001.70 on
your children. 1 thm· k I see

between ,9 &amp; 5.
-----~::-::-:::-:::-:-

your prO Cll\,.

Furnished aipt 1 bdr $226
utllhias paid. 7014th Gallipolis .
Call 446-4416 after.&amp; pm

0U

tion. Euellant opportunity for
tho•o
who may .be .n.. d;ng
IChool or have family c;ommittments. Position ideal for capen
'
bit genetrie nurses or nursee
who would u.. e lllditionai expe- .__ _ _ _.,.,...,_,...,...,...'T",...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,...,..."i
riena~ in long term care. Excel1
l.,..t b.-.efits, salery commonsurate w1th experience For
additional i'ltarmation, contact
31 Homes for Sale
3 L

b}

Von Motor. Director ol

Nancy

Nur1ing Pomeroy Health Cere
Center , at 614 - 992- 6606 .
E0 E
Applications for the p(Jiition of
Activities. Oittc::tor at Pomeroy
Health Care Center are being

accepted .

Gradu~tea

from ac-

m

credtted schools, majoring

rllcreat10nel thet"IPY .,, desired
~ut. considerations will be g1.Jen
to motl\ltted applicants exper.ienoed in recrutlonal ICti'llities
wtD possess drNe, inovation
.,d a col'q)etsion to rearing and
tlndeutanding of tfle elderly.
ApplicatiOn tare available et The
Pomeroy Health Care Center.
Mond1y throu(ll Friday.

Me1p nHded in home for Seniors

1Mn-1ime. C.ll 614 -992-6873 .
Avon . 0p., territories
••illlble 304·615-1429

Ins.

MOM AND DAD - looking tor
m lllg e funds ror your son or
d .... .,ter7 The Army National
G ...rd CM'I provide mort than
*18.000 i'l edutldonusistance
;o IJ.Ialifled individuels. Seniors
can enlilt now and begin •m ings 185.00 for one week-end
per month .,d delay Ba1lc
Trtining until June 1987. For a

FI!EE INFORMATION PACKET.
coli 1·s00·642·3&amp; 19.

'I.ETER ANS ·· Your prior military
s~ice is worth MONEY. An E-4
in the Ar~ Nadonal Guard can
um up to S 131 .96 tor one
WMk·tnd per month; an E-5. up
tO 1163.80 Other benefitt
indude: S50 ,000 life Insurance,
education funding aulstance.
miremtnt, end much mort. Cell

304·876·3960 or HI00·642·
3&amp;19
12

Situations
Wanted

6

9277.

Blbytit n my home or yours. will
do som1 hght t.&gt;usework . Reftt·
... ces . Cell enytime 304-675-

1912.

Tumips Ill Kale, also firewood
35.00 T.L catl614-256-8233 .
1 ptir of Pet Clipper1 Ph
614 -2&amp;6·19891fter &amp;p.m.

1B Wanted to Do

Houses fol llent

Immediate occupancy.

2 bdr. house with g1rage car-

2 br, kitchen . bathroom, with
laundry mom. living room &amp;
dining room. ell alec. Appro~~: . 7
miles from Pt . Pl. on Rt . 62, 2
tractsepprox. 1 acremoreorless
overlooking Kanawha R111er
$40.000. Call 304-675 -5440
between 8 :30 and 4:30 .

peted, curtlint, d•shweshtr &amp;
refrlg Near new city pool, 105
Kineon Or. Rant $300 mo. dep.
&amp; \use required Cell 814-448-

3 bedrooms , 1 Y1 baths, formal
d1n.ng , rec room. 2 cat garage,
cen walk to town . 304-575-

4604.

3 bedroom. one thlfd acre , 4Va
mile• out Sand Hill Road. air
cond. kitchen appliances. 304-

675·2698.

6 roome. bath . full s ite beaement
on 40x160 lot 311 22nd Street,
304-678-2810 afteJ 4.
.t.shton, W. Ve. Nice 3 bedroom
home 18'olel tot , 304-675-7600

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USEO MOBilE

MOBILE HOME SAlES. 4 MI .
WEST. GALUPOLIS, AT 35.

PHONE 614·446·7274.

Repoueued 198 3 14x70 .
Three bedroom•. 2 baths.
noo 00 down take, $235 per
monlh. Fr.. delivery. We tJeve
teveral . Mid Oh1o Finenci1l
SeNice. 800-826-0752.
141170 Fleetwood 3bdr. 2 baths
Must 11le, for more info. call
614-388·8633 after 4 p.m.
" Used homes" Large sel~ctlon
price reduced on ell homn
French City Mobile Homes Inc.

4347

3 · B&amp;droom home in country,
partly furnished. bottlad gas
heet , water and trash furnished
200.00 per mo 160.00 Deposit
Chtldren allowed, refer·
ence required. cell 614-388-

9688

1 bedroom new house, furnished , except utilities Weter
furnished. *225.00 rOO . Ph.

614·446·1769

House •n city, Patio, porch bl.nlt
In kitchen Ph . 814-256-8338 .
Furnl1h'ed house. 4 rooms Ill
bath located et 735 rtlr third
ave . 8130.00 mo. S715.00 dep osit Ph. 814-446-3870 or 814·

446·1340.

2 bdr. ht. 8200 per month.
Utililtes not included. gae heat.
stove &amp; refrig . supplied, hasW-0
hookupa, $200 security deposit.
Reference required Cell 614·

988·4150

Beautiful 3 bedroom house in
Syrecu1e. Deposit end ref•rencea required Cell 614· 9928298. 9 -5, Mondev through
Saturday.
2 bedroom. Clrpeted, WISher
and dryer hook up . large yard.
Ref . req1,1lred 814-742-2541 .
Small 1 bedroom house. Total
aleetrie. In Mintrtvilla beside
Bulk Plant Caii614 -992-621S.
2 bedroom, furmahed. clean. 1
child, no pets. New Heven. 8175
per month. 304-882· 2466.
3 bedroom haute in Middleport.
Stove end re1rig . futly cerpeted.
no pets. Call 614-992-2051 .
2 bedroom house for rent in
Middleport. Comple1el-, remodeled . New cerpttlng through out New cabinets 1275 per
month plus deposit. Call 614-

614·44e·9340.

992·5868.

GOhct 114 ·286-&amp;930 .

Fall ule. no payments til Feb.
1987 . We will make the firat 3
months peyments on any new
mobile horne . French City Mobile Homes. Inc. call &amp;14 -446-

New H1ven. very nice 3 bedroom house. 2YJ baths. tem1ly
roo m. heet pufT1) , 2 cer garage,
references , Homestead ~ealty .
304-882-2405 or 304-675·

Fmonc ial
21 .

Business
Opportunity
I NOTICE

I

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do butin•s wtth people you
know. end NOT to send money
throu~ the mail ~til you have
inve~tigaull the offering

23

Profenional
Services

Starks Tr• 4M'd LIIWn Sarvi~e
Htdgu . shrubs . bushes
wiiiiiMd , lendlc;aping, lfu.,..,
end l•f removal, 304-576-

:1142 or &amp;76 -2010 .

Will c:.re for elderly in my horns .
e.,.rien01d. r1110neble r~tes
304-1715 -n:n . No Answer

304·E2·3271

9340.

1972 New Moon 12x.60 total
electric . 2 bedrooms. new
carpel , excellent condition
Must sea this. *4,950.00 Ph.
614 ·oM6 -0175

1972 Liberty, 2 br .. stove &amp;
refrig . Underpinning. fuel tenlc.

t4200. C•ll 614·682·6760 '"
814·245-9264.

Bflnd new double wide, 3 bdr., 2
baths, furn ished, double Insula lion. large lot. &amp;21 .900. Ceil

614·446·3040.

Mu1t sell! 12x.66 Vindelt 14x70
a11p. rotal elec. cant. air. dishwuher , 2 decks -awning ,
woodbumer, &amp; underpinn ing,
Must see to eppred ete C1t1
614-256-1608
12X50 2 bfdroom 1974 111
electric, fully carpeted , eKceltent
condition , built on porch. IM'Ider·
pinning, tie dawn atreps. One
owner. mult •e to appreciate.
Ph . 814-446·300&amp;.
1974 12X6S Carriage House,
totel electric, 3 bedrooms. 2
baths, completely cerpeted, very
nice 85950.00 Ph 614·4460116.

31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr., ai1. pool, garage Nice
Commercial property, corner
tots • highwey frontegt Ust
with u1. We ftiYI buyers A-One
""' Eltete-lroktf'. Cell 304-

874.5104 or 304·874·5318.
Cloy~on

1982 12xl0 2 btd·

•

6640

1978 Go11ernor Trailer 12116&amp;
tor Nle. 2 bedroom, full beth,
U11ing room, din1ng room and
kitchen combined , ntfrlgefllor.
ato\le end microwl'ltl oven
Underpinning. Front end back
porch II. Cell 614-742-3076.
after 6:00 p.m or conteet John
Ash

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bdr., all utilitin paid except
elee .. furn . or unfurn .. sec.
deposil ~tqu~red . Convenient
locatton. Call 614-448-8558 or
~

14·448·4178.

.2 bdt full-, furn11hed eduhsonly,
ulil. paid . Cal 614-oM6-4110 .
3 bedroom. Bulnille ~d . Call
614 ·446 -0&amp;27 after 2 pm.
In Eureka nice and clean adults
only . No pets. deposit required ,
180 00 mo. callt14-266-1636
~afore 101 .m.
2 bedroom tra•ler aocated at
Bidwell cell 814-446.9669

2 Bedroom trailer at Porter
117&amp;.00 mo. we1er furn ished.
aduht ont-,. Ph. 614 -388-9376
2 Bedroom furnished 'h milt on
160 on 564. a1&amp;0 .00 .,o plut
deposit . Ph . 814-388 -9851
2 Bedroom tully furnished . .
edults only, aK uttlitlts ptkt f
except Gas &amp;: eleculc Owner
payf water. tiWege, moWing &amp;
trash Pick·I.I.P· Four tenthe of 1
m•le from city fimits Ph. 614--

441·7796

2 Bedroom trailer *1 35.00 mo.,
edults only or 1 beby, no l)lts.Ph.
3 bedroom. semi-furnished,
clean condition, 1 child, no pets.
New Heven • 175 per month.

One e.droom housa furnished.
one trNI child. na .-c.. Thrn
Bedroom hou• 1.mfumished Ph.

1181 Shennon Mobile Home. 2
bedrooms, 14.115&amp;, exc. cond.
M1ny extras. 304· 937-32U .

2 bedroom treller for tent. Close
to schools and stortt. Cell efter
6'00 p.m. 814·992·691&amp;.

3

Taking epptlcatlons on e11tre
cletn 3 bedroom. . total tlec,
70x14 mobile home. security
depotit required , UDO.OO. 304·

3 ltdroom. bf'Hie wey, 2 Clf
glf'ege, 1'1t eere 1pp. 5 mil•
from Holzer Hoeph1f route 110

... 11 4·311·1301 or U4·318·
1708.

I rootn houee. 1.2 KNI . Double
cer llfllle. Located on Rote Hill.

1- -

114"·878·2&amp;13.

020.000. CoM

(Ko

trailer for sale or rent In

Muon . 304·773·5112.

Lesage, W. Ve Like new 1984
mobife home 1•x70 on two level
loti . 304-175-7500 or 304-

712.2&amp;17.
33

Farms for Sale

4 -....m hDI'N. 1 'It bJths

'--od on Grovel Hill 770 Aoh

lt. Mlddl-rt. Dfllo. Coli e1 4·
H2-1714.

Offioe ' tp•ee • S1ore apece
A·One Reel E••te Ph. 304-1715-

6104

f\urnlshed effiCiency $160 utili·
ties pakl. share bath. 701 4th.
Gallipolis. Call 446-4416 after e

pm. ,

Fumished 3 rooms and bath,
clean. adults only. no ~J~ts. Call
614-446-1519 .
N•cely furnished 2 bdr. apt
Adults only. Inquire at corner
First &amp; Olive St. at Sheppard&amp;
Sale~ &amp; Service .
1 bdr. apt. owr looking cltv park,

K-0 t160 per month . C11ll P,J 's;
614 -446- 1819 or evenmge

614·448-9623

2 bdr newly redecorated. all
utilities paid. near McOonelds.
Ca11614-446-7025.
Oak Apts. now aeeepting appli·
cations for 1 or 2 bedroom apts.
For more information call 614682· 7570 call collect if out of
town E H.O. Managed by US
Shelter Corp. Call anytime day
or night
1 bedroom apt for rent . Basic
rent sterts 8215. a month that
Includes all utilities. Deposit
required ol $200 Contact Village Manor Apt Middleport
614-992-na1 Equal Hou s1ng
Opportunitv.
Clean , roomy 2 bedroom epartments New Haven, W \le Call
614-992-7481 Also co mmer·
clal. space.

2 bedroom, partly furnished
apartment oH Spring Ave
Pomeroy, Ohio. large pa1lo and
-,ard. Call 614-992-6886 after
6 :00p.m.

51 Household Goods

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®bJ Larry Wrltht

Sofas and eh-'ra priced from
839!5 to 8996 . Tables teo end
up tc $1215 . Hide -e-beds t390
to 1696. Atclineu a225 to
f376 . Lemba 128 10 *126 .
Dinettes 81 I and up to S496.
Wood teble w-6 d'lelrs e215 to
8796. Desk t100 up to •37&amp; .
Hutch• S400 end up. Bunk
beda COf'T111ete w-mattrenea
t29&amp; ar\d up to 1395 . Bebybeds
t110&amp;: $175 . Manr•nesorbo~~:
springs full or twin U3, firm
873.end e83 . Queen seta S226 .
King 8350. 4 dr1wer "'"t e65.
Dras1ers 889 . Gm cabinets B.
10 , &amp; 12 gun . Ges or electric
range 837~ . Baby mattres~e~
835 &amp; 145 . Bed frlmM *20,
UO Ill King trima 150. Good
selection of bedroom a~ites.
metal cebinets. headboards $30
and up to $66 ..

:;,;:~~:;::;:~
·I
73. Vans &amp; 4 W.O. ·,
' '
"

."

446·4292

--------~~~'
Jeep tor sale •1.500.® call_

Good used cobr ttlrvisiona for
sale or .uade Call 614·446-

1149

Electric heat pufT1l •100.00 .
Roller exerciser $46 .00 PI).

814.266.t267

4 Poster bed with box aprings
and maHress, a~~:cellent condition also antiquea cell 614·4461&amp;17 or evening• 614-245-

9372.

Whirlf!OOI He.a11y duty Wesher &amp;
Dryer, 3 piece Bedroom set with
box aprings &amp; Manress. 1 Sofa
Chair Ph. 814·446-0876 after
3 :30pm
Pickens Used Furniture. Good
quahtv used furniture. Open 9 to
6 · or call for appoint....,t.
304- 675-6483 or 676-1450 .

52 CB,TV, Radio
Equipment
Commadore 64 Computer. Disk
drive , key board rroniter &amp;
printer &amp; softwert for more
information Cell 614-256-1989
after 6p m.

64 Misc. Merchandise
Callahan's Used Ttre Shop Over
1.000 tires. sizet12 . 13 . 14 . 16 .
16 , 16.5. 8 m•les out At. 218 .
Call 614-256-6261
Plastic cistern Slate approved ,
plaatic septic tanb, plastic
culverts; metal •:ulverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son . Oh . 614-286-6930 .
Firewood for sele *30 .00 PU
load Call Roger Meade, 514-

56 Building Supplies
Building Supplies
.
Surplus-Cioseouts·Buyouta
1 . Wood burning sheet metal
stovet similar t6 Franklin
S69 .96 each or 2 for 8,1 00 00 .
2. Steel insulated prehung
door's ; no brick mold 69 .96 .
3 Interior prehung door'• el
sites and finishes 129 .96 each .
4 . 42"Vanily with (8jmarbletop
1149 .96 each .
5. 6" by 20' White commerclel
gutter $1 ,QO per ft
6.1 and2pcFibarglasstub 'und
ahowen white and colors
$169 .96 to t199.95.
7. Prefini1hed oek flooring ,~ .. T
K 2 3A"W random length T.G.
Gun stalk end netural finish
S1 .76 sq. f1
8. 60% off Vinyl sidmg trim
0 S .Corners $4 .00 , !na•de
Cornen 13.00. 12 -J . Chanel
$160,00 161 c;olort.
9. Wood Roof TNII 20 ' to 20 '
$10 .00 to 25 .00.
10 : Tempered lnsuleted Gless
Panels. \1" T x 32"W. 11: 76" H.
$29 .95 81th .
11 . Scrubbeble prepnted vlnyle
wall covering doubltroiiS6 .99 .
12 . lnsulalad whltettorm door 's
111.T .11 38"WII80"H . ~eg .
$129 95 Now $89.96 .
13 . 4"x8"x YJ" A Guerd Foam
Board F'oll Face $3.99pc.
14 . Oec::orator Wood Paneling
$6 .&amp;$ Seconds t4 .99
16 .Keyed or Bed (R) locks
SJ 99 eech.
16 6pc. Hight Glo11tub wail kit1
with shelvet '29.96 .

PENN"S WAREHOUSE

Pole Bu•ldings by Quality
Builder•. Workthops, carports,
animal shelters. garag M Free
estimates . Phone 614 - 384·

6762

Fit8W'ood delivered Oak &amp; tick ory, split. HEAP voucher, pickup
load S35. Call614·446·2223 or

Pets for Sale

9678.

Fall Lendsceping , Includes
mulching. tree &amp; sh rubplant1ng,
fill dirt &amp; topsoil. Otvisons
Landscaping Ph . 614-266 -1427

Female Chihuahua 5mo . old
with cage 876.00 Ph 614 -446 -

&amp;p .m.

1211

AKC registered female Gorman
Shepherd puppy, chtmpion
bloodllnet, thots given Ph . 61' ·
448 -4211 after 4p.m.
AKC Reg . Dobenllln ~ppies , 8
weeks old, excellent ped~gree .
1150 00 Ph . 614-2&amp;6-6403 . ,

New one bedro'om apt. In
Middleport. Call614-992· 5304
or 614· 446 -1552 aher 6 :00
p.m.

_...:___ _ _ _ __ ·lc-

3 roo m apt tor rent. Cfll
614 -992- 5434 or 304- 882-

Firewood for ule. $35 pick -up
load . Delivered . Heap Vouchers
accepted. Call 614· 742·2466 .

Fiekl Regi•tered English setters.
One pup, 7 month• old . One dog .
3 years old . Call 114 -245-5697
after 6.

Mb.ed hardwood slebs. $12 . per
b'undte Contamlng appro11. 1Y1
tons FOB Ohio Pallet Co
· Pomeroy, Ohio . Calh614· 992-

AIC.C registered Shetland Sheepdog puppy, Cochr Spaniel,
Min iarure Schneuun No
checks. Call 614-992-2607 .

Firewood tor sale. US pick-up
load . Delivered . Heap \louchan
accepted .

e461

Half Pricel Fleshing 1rrow signs
S2991lighted , non-arrow S2891
304·895·3460
.. Unlightad $2391 free lenersl
3 rooms and bath. refrigeretor See locally. Call todeyl Factory:
and stove furn ished , pr~vate 11800J423-0HI3 , envtime.
entrance . all ut11it1es paid, 30 4·
Fisher Wood ar Coal Stove.
676·1090.

304·882·2488.

87&amp;·3002.

Teking appltcelion• on four, 2
bedroom mobila homu .
*180.00 per month plus get,

UOO 00 dopoolt. 304.175·

3002.
Nice 2 bedroom t,.iler, 1 smell
child, referenced •nd depotit
Evtren Swen1, At. 1 Locun Ad,
Pl. P1o. lock of K 11. K.

{

Ashley Wood Burner with
blower. S200 . Cell 614· 9923301 or 614-"992-6461 .

0756

Wood end coel stoves 'br sale.
G1t sto11es, fuet oil ttove . Call

Rooms for rent da-, . week.
month . Gallia Hotel. Ctti 614·
446-9580. Rentas lowu S120
month.

Tony ' s Gun Repe irs, hot reblu eing. Open 9:00AM to 7:00PM. ,
Cell 304 -676·4631 .

614·992·n13

COUNTRY MOBilE Home Ptrk,
Route 33 , North of Pomeroy.
Large tots. Call 614-992 -7479.
Mobil horne lots. fflllll children
accepted . Rt. 1, locust Road .
Mobil home lot1 . Oh io River
Road and Potters Creek Route1 .

304·176·1076.

Buliness Of Office Sp.ce for
rant. New He11en. 304-773 5024 Of 304-882-3217.

57

Musical
Instruments

1 new RCA Model 78 Kerosene
heater. 304-676 -280$ .
Surplut regular army "Cemou·
flege, C11hartt . Denim. Rentel
clothing , camouflege coverells
$ 30.00. H 0 . ''Sam" Some rville, (Sgt US .A. Ret I Eest of
Ravenswood . Fri. Sat. Sun.
12 :00-8:00 PM, Olhtrdlyufter

4'00 PM 300·273·5666.

HALF PRICE! Flashing a"ow
sign• $2991 Lighted . non -anow
12891 Unlighted 1239! Free
lettersl See locelty. Cell todayl
Fectory : 1 (800),23 · 016 3 .
anytime.

304 · 88~ · 3136 .

51 Household Goods

1986 Eagla moped 1300 .00 .
Verv old ciiW foot blthtub
faucet lncludtd S100.00. 304676 .6638 •fter 5:00.
Black "AfttrSix' ' TUXEOO with
teils, cummerbund. shirt and tie,
site 40 Ft tli:C cond, 304-676-

&amp;21 1.

SWAIN

AUCTION 11. FURNITURE 62
Olive St .. Gellipolis. New &amp; used
WOOd•coalltOVH, 8 pc wood l.R
suite 1399. bunk bed1 *199.
enua" r.clintrs 199 , new •
uud bedroom suites, rMgea ,
wringer wash••· 6 shots. New
llvlngroom suitea 1199-•899 ,
lttnpl. elao buying coalS. wood
ttovu. Call114-448· 3159 .
County Applience, Inc:. Good
UNd appU•nces end TV aets.
Open BAM to 8PM. Mon U'lru
s.t. 814·441-1699, 827 3rd.
AYI. Gtlllpollt, OH.
Valle., Furniture, naw I uaad.
large section of quelity tumi·
ture . 1218 Eutern Av e ..
G1lllpoU1.

Couch end stereo, good a)nd,
304-675-1385.

2797.

Transportation

Building Meterlals
Block, brick. sewer Jlip•. win dows. lintels, etc. Claude Win·
1er1, Rio Or•nde, 0 . C1U G14 -

246·&amp;121.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

APPLES - Plenty el)ples, large
site, ell veriety. All fruit s and
produce. JACK 'S MARKET. At.
36 , HtndtJson.

rmn

Suppli 1:s

&amp; LIVest oc k

71

Autos for Sale

1982 Subaru 4 WO wagOn. VG
cond. $3,360. Call 614-446 -"
414, '

.
'84 Ho nd a XR -80 . exc cond.

nion" an upcoming HBO

S.25 Cash paid for junk cars
COfll)/ete. Body' a towed IWiy.
Call 614-682-61&amp;0 or 614-

246·92e4.

Mercedes 1978 460SEl4 -door
XX Sharp loaded will trade

1·814·881·7311 .

1975 Cordova UOO.OO
good. Ph 614-446-8272.

n.~ns

1973 Oldsrmbile Wagon &amp;:
,975 Chevelle t300 00 each

614·388·9303.

'
Impala

396-326

Budget trans7i
'sshlns. uaed Ill
rebuilt . Tool converters •
transfer cases
II dflliver Cast'!
Ill Carry or Install call 114-4464870 or 614· 379· 2220.

i

.:
,,
•.
'·

Ph.

llll

MacNeil· Lehrer
Newshour
G (jj) !l1l Wheel of Fortune
@ Bamey Millar
. 7:06 CD Sanford and Son
7:30 D Ill (]) New Newlywed

FRANK

Game

ERNEST

SNAK·:.
SHAK'·

• Cil Too Close lor Comfort

.1'

,.

•

-ALL

.

~RNIE-~ 810L.OfilcAL
'

CL.OC~ EvE-~

HIM I,S' iHAi
.MI:AL'ifMe.

Cutla11. $100. Call 1!114-949· ,•

~ ~1=7~.;;;;;:~·~·;;;==== ~

.pvER

a

IT~

@ Wheel of Fortune.
. . (ft) ® Jeopardy
@Benson
7:36 (I) The Honeymoonera
8:00 Bill® Cosby Show ICC)
In Stereo.
Cll CDrll Jungle
CD II CD Our World ICCI
(60 1111n.)
• CD MOVIE; 'Take This
Job and Shove It"
(]) .
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
liJ) • (jJ) Simon •&amp; Simon
A.J . and Rick con1end wi1h

•

' ~

-.,

Tow bar aastmbty lor• towinb.
co~act car behind motor home
or truck . 304-n3 -9665.,
~

614·246·9609.

814·J87.no9 .

the aggressive young son of
a murdered investigative re·
pon.er, who is determined t~

198&amp; Chryaier laser, Sun roof,
A.T.. A C .. All options.
14,000 miles . Ph . 614-446 4160 after 5p.m.
t

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS 11. SONS

U.S. 3&amp; Wut, Jackson. Ohio.

614·288 ·6461 .

Mtlll'( Fltt'guton, New HoUend.
Bush Hog Selas &amp; Sal'\lice. Over
40 used tractors to dloo.e from
&amp; co""let•lina of new 6 used
equipment. latgtlt Nlldlon In
S.E. Ohio .

JIM"S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 36 W. OenlpoHe,
Ohio. Call 114· 441-9777. lVI.
614·446-3182. Up fronl 'ti'IC ·
tors with ¥111rtanty over 40 used
wectora, 1000 tools .
Dozer BOO cen trecks '"· good
condition 88.500 .00 1982
Buk:.. Regel limited itt power~

Colll14·448·3040

Olivera, M· M, Oeutz trectors.
Slden Equipment Co., 304-

675·7421 .

John Dttrt coniline ~th corn
head and grein platform. *1 200.

30&lt;1-4&amp;8·1031 .

1986 Plymouth Turismo .' 6
IPeed . 16.000 miln. Many
•~~:tras . U&amp;OO. Cell after 4 .00

614·992·8837.

1967 Plymouth GTX 440 four
weed, also 1976 M~ sta ng 2
eutomatlc tour cylinde•. Phone

1967 Pontiac. 97 ,000 mHu.
326 auto. Oil filter and greased .
New baUery and rear tiret.

19n AMX for sale. 614-742-

:1169.

1938 Ply. 2 door, mechan•cally
good, body good. cwigin•l -nevar
restored . Best offer, 614-992Xtfi1
.

1882 Pontiac Grand Prix
B10u~am $4 ,1100.00. 1980
Pontiac Bonneville '2.500 .00 .
Both uc cond . 304-895-3820
or 895-3681 .
1979 Mercury Ceprl, 304-676-

4041 .

286&amp; .

'78 Ford lTO, air cond, crulse ,
high mileaga, $1 ,200.00. ' 76
Cedlllec Coupe De Ville, new
trenamission S900.00 . Both
good co net , 304·676· 1121 .

livestock

1----------6 year otd Ouarter Horse,
getdlng , hta been shown 4 -H.

-

Galileo. Kepler and Newton

EEK
- . &amp;MEEK

jc;~

A W.Y-

~· Y

SO fAST" 1 HAD 1D TAlc$.
A CAe.~

elopement. In Sweo.

9:00

Feny Tree Trimrnlng, stump
removel. Call304-675-1331 . ~,,

,

:--:--::---:-~--::--:- '

Starks TrH and Lawn Serv1ce, 1;
Hedges . shruba . buehes 1
trimmed , landscaping •nd ..
stuf11J n~moval. Leaf removal. ~

304·676·2010 .. 576·2842 .

Rotery or CJble tool drillin9 1
Most wells completed semeday. ,
Punlfl sales and service. 304· '

When Sam poses as a noled

ance at a popular restaurant,

~ORTY

he cancels 01ane's reserva·
tions and Diane is determined to get even. In

MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

.--------,

I'M TRAPPI:;D
iNHERE! r
IX&gt;N'rEVEN
. f&lt;NOWWHAT
SEAea-J

Stereo.

W~U::RE DID
TI1E S~MER

(1)700 Club
(]) Collage Football Gram·

Go;

bling at South Carolina State

or Indiana Stale ao Nortloern
Iowa. (3 hrs .l Live.
Cil 8 CD Colbya (CCI (60
min.)
Cil Nova: Can Aids Be
Stopped iCC) Tho spreod
and 1rea1men1 of Aids is 1he

ITI6.'

Ashby Construction , cerpentery, remodeling. room edd•tion. '
cement block work, roofing. 1,
Interior end eaterior painting, ;.
siding . floofing. Free estim.ltts ~t:
1
304·875;&amp;446 .. 676· 81· 5~ .~~

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

--..

--------~~----~~
·

• !&lt;

1

CARTER"$ PLUMBING
AND HEATING

•'

Cor. Fdurth and Pine
"
Gallipolis.' Ohio
u
Phone 614 ·446-3888 or 614 ~ •1
446 ·4477
.,

focus of intense studies end
searches for a vaccine. (60

miQ I

® •

for his problems , lilimae has
a premonition abou1 Paige

BAilNEY

and Gary delivers JiH an uhi·
matum. (60 min .l
llll Myaterr: Brit Farrar
ICCI A desohute man who
bears a close resembhmce '
10 the heir of a weallhy fa·

SMARDV. SMARDV,
DON'T BE TARDY!!

SAKES ALIVE !!
LITTLE JU6HAID

WENT OFF AN'
· FERGOT HIS
SCHOOLBOOKS

America. enguHing himself
In a wicked p!o1. 160 min )
Part 1.
9:05 Cll World of Audubon Speclolo: Galapagos l•l111do
(60min.)
.
9:30 D Ill ® Night Court As

,,

:.

:James Bo-,s Wa1er Set\lice. Atio. •1
poalsfined. Call814 ·266-1141 ::
or 614 -446-1175 or 614 ·4•&amp;.";1

.

1976 Lin co~ Mark IV , very good
condition . Priced raesonablv.

304·875-6090.

1

304-876·2377

Dan lies in a coma, Harry regrets that his last words to
him were in anger. Pan 2 of
2, In Stereo.

,,

72

Trucks for Sale

1980 Dodge D-&amp;0 4 -apeed.
Rtdlo . topper . a1 , 699.00
Johns Auto Selea, Bulevilte Ad .

seoo.oo

1981!1 8-10 truck bed end 2.8
v. 6 rmtl!lr1 other pert• call

114·21&amp;-6439

1978 Ford &amp;.~per Cab with
topper. Needs little body. wort..
Runo f&gt;Od . Coll814·849·21tl.
1971 OMC \4 ton , 354 tnOint.
Also 1974 Prowler Cemper;elr,
1V tntenne . Slttpt I . I1H

oonloiltld . Colll14·7e2 -1177.

----"""-~-

---·~ -

Renko

~------------------- · ·

L.OOKAT
11"~~

Sec.

a

R
M Cuttom Couches and ,,
Rtuphulstery, S1 . At. 7 , Crow'! /

City. Oh &amp;14·2&amp;8, 14 70. ~·· · •'

814·44&amp;-3438 . Open daily B to •t
5. Sat. 9 :30 to 1:30 . Old &amp; new 1 · :
Uphostered .
,1,

;;;:-::-:::--:::-::--:-:--:-:--.,
Mowrev's Upholaterlng serving ' :1
ul eountvlrta21 years . Thebe~
,!
In tumiuue up~olsttrine . C
304 · 171 · 411~ for fr
etthmteJ

.... ..; .. ........ ,,,, .... ,.............. ,......., .. -··'l•r-...._,

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

"'

The right card
of the right suit

NORTH

11·11-11

tU3

•a6
t\0 7
tAQJI072

By James JaeGby
'Jack Blair of Tulsa. Oklahoma, has
been inactive in tournament bridge ln
recent yean. When be bad more time
forithe game, be won the Life Master
Pairs in 1973. He and I were also on
the winnlDg National Men's Team in
1972. Today's deal. whicb was played
a few yean ago, shows his ezpertllle in
flndinc the right defeue to set a game
contrl(lt.
Tbe routine bidding did not give
much information to West for choosIng an opening lead. However, since
North did not bother looking for a rna·
jor suit fit, it seemed right to lead a
major. West decided on the seven of
spades, a tojH)I·nothing lead·that was
not likely to cost a trick. When Jack
Blair, sitting Eas1, won the spade ace,
be bad no trouble figuring out that his
side needed to take the setting tricks
in a hurry. His best suit was diamonds,
but I'm sure you astute readers have
already seen that switching to a
fourth-best four of diamonds will just
not get the job done. Declarer will
play low, West will win the ace, and
eventually declarer's diamond queen

&amp;Ur

WEST

tH2

u.Qs

'JU2
+A 8 6
·9~ 4

'Q 10 7

tKJH2

...' ''
.. '

tB&amp;
SOUTH
tK J 10 I
'AKU
tQU

tKS

Vulnerable: Both
Dealer: South
West

Nortlo

Eul

Pass
Pass

2NT
Pass

Pass
Pass

Opening lead:

S..tll
INT
!NT

+7

..

·wm win a tiick. Jack follllll the rlcbt
play without much thought - be returned the jack of diamonds. That ef·
fectively obliterated dummy's
mond 10 and enabled the defense io
take five diamond tricks aad put tile
contract two down.
.· •

dli;

~~~c•cotaf
by THOMAS JOSEPH

ACROSS 39 Fuilction
I Fuss

DOWN
I Peerless
2 HlsLOric
flag motLO
3 Have debls
4 Chide
5 [)roopin~
6 Kin
7 Speeds up
8 [)ross
· 21 [)arne
10 Wandering
Rebecca 13 Pup221ndian
15 Covey
sheli.&lt;&gt;r
of cows
23 Chicago pro
18 Chopin's 24 Nail
lover
25 Cognac

4 Von:e
Of fish
8 Oilatoiy
9 Choice
II Solitaoy
12 Stack

or Donat

14 Hill
dweller
15 Chance
16 Prior to
(pre!.)
17 Prepare
to start
19 Antonio

or Jose

28 Bring joy
29 Tellle
31 Fleming's
brainchild
34 Turner
or Knighl •
36 Aust. bird

20 lnrrequent
21 Hahi1
22 Watch
over

23 Inclin·
ation

24 Oroplel
25 Ouldo
26 Marx man

27TV
anchorman

30 Service
add .....,
31 Exclude

32 Yalie
33 Texas rily
36 Old oa1h
36 Revise
37 Chess lerm
38 Small .

AX. YDL~AAXR

is LONGFELLOW

One letter stands for another. In this sample A is \.sed
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single leiters,
apostrophes, the length and lormatio~ of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different.

.
11· 13

CRYPTOQUOTE

~

WC X RB

VQE

W C TEYI

EllPilX

AB

ZLPR.

CTKKBE

SLGEWQTE

Q

QEK
LE

U IJXII.E
V (l S RZ

Q

zones, and their successes

and failures wi1hin Islamic
and Westernized states are
contraa1ed.

PEANUTS
SOME PEOPLE STAV IN

THE SAME PLACE
AU. TIIEIR L.IVES

NOT ME .. WHEN. I
6ROW UP, I'M 60NNA

MOVE ON!

1

'(OU RE NOT 60NNA CATCH
~ERE FOR TilE
~EST OF MV ~IFE ••

M£ LMN6

@•~KeyO"BrlenKayo

'IOU DON'T
LIKE IT
IIERE?

W~ERE

ARE WE?

struggles for a weHare pa·

tien1 10 have a deapera1ely
needed

heart

operation

which ahe canno1 alford. (60
min.l
[fi)@N.10:05 (]) Ooodwln &lt;James Open·
lng CeNmOtiln (2 hrs.l
10:~0 CD U Coebv Show
DCDINN Nnvo
illl Tony Brown'• Journal

'·

.,

Q

- .
Q X Q A
U X L P ll X,. A
Yesterday's Cryptoquote: WHEN A PERsON TURNS
GREEN WID! ENVY YOU CAN REST ASSURED THAT
HE IS RIPE FOR '!ROUBLE. - BERNARD MELl'ZER

Stability (CC) Unilateral
partisanships. ' mili1arized

All&amp;., Gell lpolls. -, , •

814·448·7633 or 614 ·441· •1
1833.
'
. 1:
'
I'

·I·'

min .)

(f) Afrlcano: In Saarch of

----"---'..il
UPHOLSTERY SHOP

''

Our kllchtn Will being remodllld, and bcix11 llttlfld the
entire houll. Dllrnl¥wd owr the g~~lllll dlllrrlv o1 her hOull,
Mom moaned, "I'd be 10 tmblmlled If I DIED just NOW."

XTKTEY

D CD Odd Couple

~~~==~
87
Upholstery
••
1163

YEStERDAY'S SCRAM-IllS ANSWERS
Ceahew- Wli'Tg- Dendy- Groow- DIED lUll NOW

Stereo.

(]) D (]) 20/20 ICC) 160

~

/ -!

UNSCI'-MBLE ABOVE lETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

solved murders . (60 min.) In

:1

TRISTATE

PRINT NUMBEREO LETTERS IN ·
THESE SQUARES

a

curse on him and LaRue arrests a suspect who con·
fesses to over a dozen un·

=----::-:::-:---r•'
Coel end limeBtonQ ltetivery •'
service, 304-676-3190 ,

When

gypsy accidentaUy places a

HAVE A

.

worries

NO,L.e:·ns

•C
- oal . li.mestone. grllltl, etc;.· 'rt,'
Delivered 1 ton and up . Jim •,
ltn ier, 304-675-1247 or 875- •,
7J97.

1978 3qulrterton ford pick-up ,
Ph.
V-8 eutometic

614 ·368·9303

10:00 Dill !l1l Hill StrHt Blues

Watte rso n'• Wat'\r Hauling . ~
reasonttbl e rates , •mmed•ate ~.
2.000 gallon delivery eluer ns.J:
pools. well. etc. ca ll· 304-576- ~

2919.

lno cnucklo quoled·

you d..olop lrom stop No. 3 bolow.

mily return s· to England from

General Hauling :: .,

7911

(jJ) Knot• Lending

ICCJ Pe1er seeks a solution

:;;:::;:::::;~::;:~·~..,
------------------~

D ill !l1l Cheera ICC)
hean surgeon to gain entr-

895·3802
.•
:-~--~----::-------- 10'·

B2

(60 min.)
@ MOVIE: 'The Firat
Deadly Sin'
8:06 (I) Portnolt of America:
Minnesota (60 min .)
8:30 D Ill® Family Ti.. ICCI
Alex follows Mallory and
Nick 10 New Jersey in an effort to stop their planned

_______....____.,
RINGLE$ ' 5 SERVICE. ••lit- ~
rienced carpenter, electrician.
mason, painter, roo1.ng ! inclufll o&lt;~ :
ing hot tar appllcetionj 30-t.

nulhfied the Aristotelian
doc1nne
of
an
eanh~
centered universe, forming
1he current laws of science.

·M HE. OOT" eitO: 1D JU.V

D•Uard 's Weter 'DeliverY. CiU""- ''
ems. pool &amp; well . Anytime but l
Sunday, 614 - 446 -,7404 ~
•.

•

63

discoveries of Copernicus.

'

B5

Dfl.

City Ftrm Supply, 614·446·

Changed; A Per10111l View
by Jarioea Burke ICCI The

RON '•S Televis io'n Service . :•
House calls on RC'A. Ouazer, •'
GE. Spedeling in Zenith. ca:u I
304 -671-2398 or &amp;14-446 - 11
2454.
..:;

67&amp;·2086 .. 87&amp;· 7147.

1978 01tsun 4-IPted Aiello.
topper for 1999 .00 Johnt Auto
S.les. 8ul1vHie Rd . Gellipolls,

62 Wanted to Buy

min.,

!llJ Dey the Universe

t

77 Chrytler NJwport . SJ001

Naw end usal pens for Whites,

solve his father' s death 160

1978 Mercury Cougar XA7, new • tee. Local
tires, wire wheell. very good ~ree ettimttet. Cell
condition S1 ,400.00 Ph. 814- 1· 6U· 237-0488, dey or "'''n'·• ~
' Roger• Basemen
446·0504
Waterproofing.
1985 Celebrity Wegon . V6 , 00,
AC. C.C., stereo, 3 uats. Chmtmas trees. sto.,e. mulch !'~.
89,000.00 excellent condition gravel. coal. firewood, $315\.
Delivered. Heap vo,ychers a~-.
Ph . 614 -446 -2278
cepted . Don'1 LandtcaP~Q9 · Call :~
1
76 DodgeD art. SE. V8. AT. AC. 6\ 4·448·9646.
CC, PS , ex , cond . One owner, -------------------c i, l
SW.EEPER and\HWing machlnt ·'
12 .460. Call 614 -446·0776.
repair, parts, and 1upplies. Pick 1
76 Blick lelabre. Has every.' up ilnd delivery, DeVis V.Cwm '
thing. Ex. cond inside • out. Cleaner, one half mile up
Must see to eppreciate. S1,000. Georges Creek Ad . Can 614- 1
448-0294.
II
Call 614 · 446· 0778 .
1982 Ford Escort. 4-spaed, air,
wire rims, new 1ires t 1 .999.00
Johns Auto Sales BullabiHe.

(I) PARENTS ·FIGHT

NEGLECTED CHILD!
OAD WANTS CUSTODVI
WCHS Ad•.
a(]) Judge
~ ~!~~&lt;! Rise of Ragin·

'reLL.,S"

1981 Buick Skylark, power
steering. brak•, air condition,'
front whflet drive , 4-cylinder
Ph .

trap.

filling in the missing words

@Npws

tender skirt, very good condition

$1.900.00

I

u a-

1--""TlMEDEER
--rl-:-.11-;l-lr&lt;s-1
f t Compiele
_ • V by

(I) Nightly Business Report

;;::---:----:-::::::-::::-:'·
350 motor out of 1974 Old't ;,

79 Motors Homes
·
&amp; Campers

I

tor

liD CD M'A'S*H
Ill CD People' a Court

t400.00 . '86 Honda ATC -200· 1
X, 3 wheeler. 6 montfts old ~

11 .400.00. 304·876·2988. - ·
1-;~=:::;:~;::;;;:=:::;==::.::•
runa good $400.00 coil e14· 76
Auto Parts.,
•'I•
448 "1106 .,vllnte.
&amp; Accessories
,.
75 Cordova, $300. Runs good .• -----..,.
. ,~
, "-'-- - ' - •·.
Call 814·446·8272 ,

My young daughter mlk11 UJ1
her own dellnliona ol worda. For
Instance, she !'111811 to a lit detec-

spec1al.

'·

1973 Ford LTD 350 autometlc,

1977 Cougar. Little rutt. Good
shepe. S1200 cw bett offer. Cell
614-986·3541 after 4:00p.m.

Molotoin """· 304-DI·3311.

-- -

.

1972 FLH Harley Devlcfson. 1
Fully dressed with 16\ 000milta.t
Call614-982-2817 . . ..,.
~ :

814·992·3703.

ti&amp;O.OO firm. 304·17&amp;·1799

-

:~
Stapleton '1 Cycle. Rebuild.le ,
cycles I parts. Cell 614·446- 1i
7414 after 6 p.m m weekdays. ~~

·The 1Oth Annual Young
Comedians All-Star Reu-

614·985·4301 . '.

1984 Chevy Cavalier PS. P8,
euto tr1ns . Cleen, low miles Call

Concrete bloch ell sizes -,ard or rrh• &amp;:30.
delivery Mason lind . Oellipolle 1-;--:--:::----:-::-::--:
Black Ca., 1231h Pine St .. For tile, Oumeey end Holstein
GellipoUs, Ohio CaM 614· 441· COWl. Rta , S.l'nr'nef'lttl cows,

2783.

Court" star, tetts ET about

~~~~~~~~ ·

$376. 614 ·949·3039 .

Now buying lh1U .com or eer
com . Cell forletut quotts. River

55 Building Supplies

614·3&amp;7·0397

•.
1
_

...

I

call ;,

r

I ·

1

(]) Entertainment Tonight
Harry Andarson. ..Night

'

7841

King coal or wood stove for 111e.
New blower arid grelt . '260

304·67 5·8937.

Honda 4 -whe&amp;ler

1

I1".:-~.,--l-,-1 N.,..,--,YI-111

'.

1984 3 wheeler. 70. Hal~
' 1 " ~l
Honda shift. lik8 new . · $
.

1980 Datsun pick-up Runs
eKcellent . 81500. C•ll814-992·

Upright Piano . e150. 304-576-

Kindlewood wood burning Insert
for fireplace and firewood for
sa le. Ph~;~ne 304-895-3808 .

Upright pleno meke Offtt , Wood
Professional office space fof' burning stove with fin .
rent Bend Aree Medi cal Ce ner. e22&amp; .00. Phone 304-175-2088
138 Main St.. New Haven. or 67&amp;-7147.

Mt:rehamJise

814.949·2273.

814 ·.986·4306.

Lsrge \11and S1fea t apartment,
ges and water paid. unfurnished ,

46 Space for Rant

Hay for sale S1 .00 per bale. CaH

1986

I I II

1

. I I I ·1l

cond round coverage from
Maui, Hawaii (2 hrs.) live .

~ Turbo.

614·446·7019

Rtminglon 1100, 20 gege.
skeet barred vent rib, IJJOO.OO
firm . Ph. 614-245-5697 after

Large round bales of hav, $10
each, Square be lea. $1 .26 each .
Call 614 -446· 10&amp;2 after Q.

•3.26o.oo
56

Motor~vciest'

74

HP . red with black interior.

388·8417 ..

---~---- · lc -

Furnlahed room 919 2nd. Galli polis. S115 . Utilities pd . Share
bath . Single male. Cell 4464416 efter 7pm .

'"

I

R "E T.O M N

-,U--rP_H"T"O~Cr.-11

(]) Doctor Who
@ II (ft) CBS News
llll Body Electric
@ \lood Times
8:36 (I) Safe et Homo 111 Stereo.
7:00 Bill PM Magazine
(I) Hardcaotle and McCormick
(]) PGA GoN; 1986 lauzu
Kapalua International Se-

. '·

1976 C~evey

6Days8to6

Two Reg Beagle mal1111 6rm .
old. also ha11e some younger
pups available Ph . 614-245·

For rent Sleeping Rooms and
light house keeping rooms . Park
Central Hotel. Cell 614 -446·

t

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Ph .

Wellston, Ohio

814·364·3646

Brownlflg Sweet 16 Beligum 18
gauge 550, Ruger .Modell n
LW 270 caliber 8380 00 Ph.

Furnished Rooms

"

4).' r.

1 bedroom apartment in Point
Plea11nt. Un1que carpeting. Call
1 · 614-992· 5868.

APARTMENTS, mobile homes ,
houses Pt PleasantandGeUip6 ·
lie. 614 -446 -8221 .

5pm.

Blll(])8(])@.~®

• CD Hogan's Heroes

1978 Chev-, o/4 ton 4 wfteei:.J
drive 350 auto . Excellent condh. ~
tion. Cali 614-247-3895 after j,
5:00 p m.
, 1t
'" .}·
'II
•'12 Chevy three qUerttr tons,
GOOC USED APPliANCES
lh-.t~rloEA.n
whael drive; reel good cond wit~.i · 1
Washers, dryer1, refrlgMators, '
e•tras. 81 ,250 00 ' 304-&amp;?'8'· ;\.
ranges. Skaggs Appliance I. 1-,...,...,...,...,.....;.,...,...__'T"_ _ _-:'_..;.,...,...,...,...-j 2704
1
•
~;
Upper River Rd . beside Stone
'"""'
Crest Motel. 614-448-7398.
\ \
'·

Life size Beerskin in ~od
condition. Ph. 614 -446 -1946
after 4p.m.

2666.

·1.1'

=~:-~~~
~ ~~~ ~
1974 Ct. eVe-, Van P.h . 814-266-;.
1989 or ' 814·44e 1.1683 ottof'"

----.~
~~:

Uted Furniture: Washar &amp;
drver. gas ren9e. W(l(ld teble &amp;
2 benc:htt, btdi, dre11er , wood
wardrobe. 3 m11es out
Bul..,flle Ad . Operi9AM to
&amp;PM, Mon. thru Sat.
614·446-0322 .

I

eli Big VIIley
(]) Mazda Sport•look
f11 CD Jefferoons
,
(]) 3-2-1, Contact ICCI
llll Secret City
@ Facts of Ufe
6:06 (]) Andy Griflltlo
6:30 Bill ® NBC News
(]) Sport.Center live.
(]) II (]) ABC News

1979 J..., 6 cyhnder good ~
condition u.eoo:oo 'Ph:· e14- .

tt,e
bo·

low to form fcur simple words

Newa

1982 Suberu 4 WD wagor, , VG r
oond 1'3,360 . Call 114-441-th
4141 .
.\ \
~

' \ I· f

Rearrange litters of
0 lour
scrambled words

£VENING

6:00

WOit
lA II

-~~~--

11/13/86

:·

614-367·7803 anytime •

,~~:~:~' sca~~-~£~s·
ldlood br CLAY I, POLLAN

_,.

------:-c:-::--:=::-.:
1974 Ford F 100, PS. PB, tuto. t
:IJ 4,.675-11120 .

The Daily Sentinei- Page-15

Televi'sion
Viewing
.

~

Trucks for Sale

1917 Ford piCk-up trUCk . 302 ~
S\glne ' Stend~rd trana. P.S . ~
t850. Coli e14-992 -3703 or 11
614· 992 ·7841 .
t

•

Oragonwynd Cattery K&amp;nnet
CFA Himalayan, Persien and
Siamese kittens. AK C .Chow
puppies. Call 614-oM6· 3844
llter 7PM

1 bedroom ept. in Middleport.
All utilities paid. U10 per
month, S100dtposit. 614·992·
6611 days, 614-992 -6763 ev'enmgs.

72

LAYNE"S FURNITURE .

e14.446·3028 .

2 bedroom, turmshed , new
carpet. 122&amp;. ptt month. Oep·
osit end refererce required.
Glenn Biuell 614-949-2801

Thursday, November 13, 1986 ~

11

2 1nd 3 bedroom apartments
and houses in Pomeroy or
Middleport. Furnished or unfurnithed. Pay own utilities. Cell
diVI 614·992·2381 .

61 4· 26e·, 5t.

81131 ho\JII trailer. 1 bedroom
1700 . Cen be seen l;. miles on

114·441·0321

448·4416 otter 7pm.

46

room, total electric, excelltnt
condhton. F,.,.~ City Broker·
"'I• 114·441·1340

Rt. U3.

Furn~had apt 0225 Utmt;es

paid . 1 BA . 920 41h . Gellipolis.

Ohio

$200. C•ll e14-992.2897.

2 bdt .n Crown C1ty, corner kit
Call 614 -446 -780&amp; work. or

614·448·1900 home.

bath , 8140 per ma . Deposit

required Csll 614·446·4222

Furnished apartment. upstairs.
Adult• only, eli utilities paid. Call

appo;ntment. Call 614·992· 41
&amp;189 8'30 A.M. · 4.00 PM.

log home, 3-4 br. 111 elec: fully
carpeted. finished basement,
Ambrosia. 7 miles from Pt. Pl. on
At. 62 . City weter. paved
drivewly a. septic tenk , Jituettd
on 11.1; eere. overlooking K.enewha
River s&amp;O,OOO Call 304-8755440 between 8:30 and 4:30

613V' 3r~ Ave. 1 bdr private

614·448·2325

Septic Tenk PurTPing. Commlf·
cial • resid.-.tial. 2 trucks for
pro"1)t 11rvice . 180 per 1,&amp;00

gol .... . RON EVANS ENTER·
I'IIISES. Jocllson. Oh. Coli

'

Renlals

N1ce 2 bedroom home at 301
Wright StriHit, Pomeroy . Aesi·
dance of the late Herbert end
Gladys Moore May be seen by

HOMES kESSEL"S OUALITY

17 Miscellaneous

ots &amp; Acreage

In Rto Grande, FA gas, LG kit.,
lotsofcabinets,40gai. HWtank. 7 ecres, 2 ~ms. 1 septic tank
4 bdr., well insuleted extra tots, and rural water for 7 ,000.
elate to 1chool. bank. &amp; college. 61~· 446-8699 .
Rental potential. Call814-2456823 after 5:30 or 814 -446- Lot approximately 1 acre City
wa .. r available . Rt 62 N.
5346 deys.
304· 675 -2961 after 6 p.m.
For sale 8 room house. 4 tots. E.
Main St. Pomero-, . Call 614 985-oM27 after 8:00pm.

or 304·762·2667.

W1nted Dirt • Rocks for fill . Cell
114-446· 4655 or 614-446-

Apartment
for Rent

rt,

'

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

, 1 :oo • mrn·a CD~ • Gb till
News
Cll Hordcaatle ond McCor·
mlck
.CD M'A'S"H
(]) Power Struggle An indepth look examtning nu·

clear po- and its possible
dangers . 160 min.l
llll ConatiMion: That DeUcete Balance .
@ The HoneymooiHI..
11 :30 D CD illl Tonight Show
Tonight's guest is animal
handler Jim Fowler and The

-'\m&amp;Zing Rando. (60 min .) In

., .

'

Stereo

CD.WKRP in Cincinnati
-~ ·
D CD Taxi
: .
II(]) ABC News Nightline
@@Magnum, P.l.
II @ Night Heet O"Brien · ··
and Giambone clash with lJ
young vigilante group when
an old man Is murdered by .... •

the friend of lhe Ieeder. 1'10 ' ·.
min:)

12:00 (]) Burna &amp; Allen ,.. •··· ·
· (]) Spo"aCentif Live.
·-' '
(I) Jeflersons
·•

�..

0

.
.
.
Inside thefts Widespread, veteran says. ·.:]

Page:-16-The Daily Sentinel

f.'-f.~ HANES

WASH!J:!GTON (J]Pil - A
In July, Helmer was arrested ltary equipment is widely used by drug dealers and burglar.s: ' ';;
decorated
veteran,
holl)e InfuU
Tampa,
Fla :, fp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;,;;;;,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
charged
with Army
plundetihg
tons of nejir
with his
a gar~e
of illegal
weapons and explosives from a weapons ·and ex(ilosives, includ'' ; ~
military ba se~ told a congres- lng 60 anti-personnel Claymore
,....~ .
sional committee tl)at Insider mines, 59 fragmentation gre·-~
pilfering Is widespread ·and tm- nades and more than a hundred
mensety profitable.
pounds of plastic ex plosive. His
"There's a large· market for trial is pending.
anything pilfered froin the U.S.
Army," Shawn "Helmer told a
He stole the Items, he·said, by
congressional task force Invest!- loading up a military truck at a
Sixth Street
gating mllltary thefts. "This Is supply depot, doctOring papers to
known Army-wide. The Army C9Ver the missing items and
Syraeuse; Ohio
may pay $8.61 for a grenade, but hauling the goods aiYaY in his
the (underground) rate is $50 a , private van and a li:!rtz rental
pop. You can get $1,~ for a truck;.lie was never questioned :'
·Nov. 14, 10 A.M. to 9 P .'
(light anti-tank rocket). ·
· "I Cbuld have taken a.lot more
Customers, he testified Wed- including (torpedoes) ', but 1 just
Nov. 15,. 10 A.M. to 9 P
nesday, include surplus dealers, wasn't strong enough to Uft ·
, gun buffs and criminal motorcy· them," Helmer said. "Some of
Nov. 16, Noon to 8 P.M.~
cle gangs.
those torpedoes weigh over 250
Friday, Saturday ~ S~f;;
"Sometimes one gang would pounds."
•••
buy a lot of stuff- grenades were
popular - then a rival gang
Introducing ;:;
Brig. Gen. Charles Murray,
would start buying up the stuff,"
said Helmer, a former Ranger deputy· chief of Army logistics,
battalion supply officer at Fort said the system's· protections
Lewis, Wash. "In a way the were basically sound.
· military weapons would keep·
"What Helinerdescribed was a
(the rivals) in ))alance.
syst~ with all the necessary
COUNTRY PINE
"Pilfering is Army-wide, al· policies in place,"' said· Murray,
most soldier-wide," ~e testified. · "but a system which could be
"The stealing (of ammunition circumvented by Individuals wil·
FURNITURE
a nd ex plosives ) takes place from llng to sign documents, 1o Ue, to
the (rank of) private on up. ·cheat and to steal."
614-992-5082
(Thefts) are cert'!lnly not limited
In relatro testimony, Dallas
·to the enlisted ranks ."
police officials said stolen mil-

THE BERRY BAS·K.ET

@n~Sau~ :.:

MISSES WRANGlER

unu

CORDUROY
'THERMAL
UNDERWEAR .. .
BlAZER

Warm, comfortable thermalltnit. Poly/col·
'ton blends. White, colors, stripes and prints.
Men's sizes S to XL. Also Big Man and Talis.

56,59 ............... SALE
S7.99 ...............SALE
58.49 ...............SALE
59.29 ...............SALE

S5.20
S6.20
S6.60
$
7.40.

SPECI~

SALE

~IlLS

DRESS SALE
Buy now for the holidays!
Entire Stock Reduced

'

Grey • Berry • Navy
·. • Taupe
Misses Sizes S-M·L

LlnLE BOYS'

CARMVAL

WINTER
COATS &amp;
SNOW SUITS

FULL FIGURE BRAS

SALE PRICED

$119 to Sl$99
DONNKENNY

SPORTSWEAR
SALE
I

Nice collection of fall sports·
wear in misses and exira sizes.
B10utiful jackets, slacks,
skirts, sw10ttn and blouses.
Colon include t10l, grey,
wine and blue.
S16.00 Sporhweor ..... •12.00
•20.00 Sporhwear ..... su.oo
S24.00 Sporhwear ..... SIB.OO
S36.00 Sporhwear ..... S27 .00 .

SALE
LlnLE GIRLS'

COATS &amp;
SNOW SUITS
REDUCED

25°/o

FREE AlBUM
JEANS
SPECIAL
Bu" any pair of jeans
men s, .women's,
, junior or children's)
and get a stereo LP
album ·

FREE!
WHILE SUPPLES LAST

MEN'S

BASIC JEANS

Wrangler and Lee quality. Pre-washed
straight legs in regular and full fit.
Sizes 29 Ia 42 waist.

$1788

SAVE

Sizes: 6 mos. to 24 mas.,
2 to 7

S3198 ,

25°/o

•
•

20°/o OFF SALE

PERFECT SLEEPER
FULL SIZE .
MATTRESS AND
BOX SPRINGS

WAIM

SCHOOL &amp; OFFICE SUPPLIES ":

~

Stamples, Notebooks, Envelopes, Pencils, Pens, ,
Crayons, Scotch Tape, Index Cards, Adding Machine
Paper and many mort items.
Stop up now and SGYI 20'1. on our entirt stock
of school and office supplies.

WINTER BLANKETS ·
Hugo sol11tioft of lui, ...., .,d
kitg silo Wonkoh. !Mr010l arrylia,
poiyntor and Votlux. Many colon.

Sale Prices Start At

SPECIAL

S34000sn

S1119

SEUA
SUPPOITAPEDIC

ELECTRIC BLANKETS

iliTE

QUEEN SIZE
MATTRESS AND

BOX SPRINGS

SPEeiAL

S39900sn
SALE

BED PILLOWS

ALLIIGT FIII-POLYFIU PillOWS

SWE~T

EARTH
CANDLES

MAnRESS PADS

Twin, full, QuHn Size
Stay Warm This Winter. and

20°/o

Smoker's candles, crodtery
candles, candle charms and
Stetson candles.
Scents: Cinnamon Butter and
Country Spice

BEDROOM SUITES
Oak·Pint·Maplt·Walnut

19.99 Standard Size ...... IJ.99
112,99 Q..... Sizi ...... 110.39
116.99 ling Sizt ......... l13.59

2S0/o to 60°/o

117.99 Standanl Siu ..... IIU9
126.99 Q-n Size - ... 121.59

AlliN STOCK

FOAM LAnx PILOWS

con

AND ILEC111C

SAVE

S3, 95 Candles ......... 53.16
56.95 Candles ......... S5,56
Sl 0.00 Candles ....... S7. 96

OFF

. BOYS
•N'S

SWEATER
SALE

FLANNEL

Sweater vests, shaker knits,
boat neck styles, V·ntck styles
and cardigans.
Size S·M·L·XL.

Sale Prtoed

SJ359 to S3059
SALE

FLOWER
BULBS

JEANS SALE
. STOCK UP NOW!

SPORT SHIRTS
Wrangler I OO"'o cotton.
Beautiful plaids.
Men's Sizes S fa XL

Lee and Wrangler straight
leg jaans. Sizes 8 to 16
slims, ragulars, huskies.
Student sizes 26 to 30.
Reg. 514.95 to 121.95

OUR REMAINING
STOCK OF DUTCH
BULBS

$1179 to $1 749

112 PRICE

,.,.

$899
LADIES

CARHARn BROWN DUCK

WO·lineRofK CLOTHES
jackttJ,

Co"'lett
Carhart!
C!llltl, COY· ·
trails, vtsts and 1111 overaHs. Short rtgulor ai.l
tall sius. Carhart! hunting dDt~ indudld in
this sale.

.

ON SALE NOW

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR ·
\\'ARM THERMAL KNIT TOPS AND

IOTTOMS.

MEN'S

DRESS
BELTS
Dress
and w1stem

btlh
belh, Many
styles and sizeL
.

$479

EA.

REG.
REG.
REG.

:

.

S8.50
BELT.S .......... S6.79. :.
s
12.00 BELTS ........ S9.19 :
S14.00 BELTS.:•••••• S9,99 :

Ohio·Lottery

State playoff
•
acbon
res••_,.
this weekend
~~;;:l- Page 3

Clear tonight, with a low in
the upper 20s. Increasing
cloudiness Saturday, with
highs lll'lwcen !ill and 55. The
prohahility uf predpit ation is
ncar zero tonight and. 20
perce•t Saturday.

499
PICK-4
3829

•

at y

enttne

Vot.36. No.136
Copy_rightod 1986

3 Sectio'"'s. 20 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper

Reagan
labels
eharges
"false' ··
WASHINGTON (UP!)- Pres·
!dent Reagan, ·denying he has
"gone- soft on terrorism, "
branded as " utterly. fa lse "
charges that U.S. arms sent to
Iran were used as ransom to free
American hostages in Lebanon.
In a nationally televised ad·
dress Thursday evening, marked
by defensive overtones, Reagan
acknowledged "small amounts"
of weapons had been delivered to
Tehran as a result of an 18-month
old secret operation aimed at
broadening the dialogue with
Iranian moderates.
The president 'said he decided
to speak out on this "extremely
sensitive" matter because of
rampant rumors concerning the
operation during the past 10
da ys.
" The · chargf' has been made
that the United States has
shipped weapons to Iran as
ransom payment for the release
of A,merican mstages in Lebanon
- that the United States undercut its allies and secretly violated
American policy against traf·
licking with terrorists," he said
in his broack.9,st from . the Oval
Office.
"Those charges are utterly
false,' ' he declarro.
• Reagan - spoke for about 13
minutes. criticizing the media
for forcln,g him to expose the
seeret operation and cllarging
that: "Due to the !XIbllcity of the
past week, the entire initiative is
11ery much at risk today ."
Deputy press secretary Peter
Roussel reported the White
House received 1,(126 ca lls in the
first 45 minutes after the broad cast, 726 oft hem supportiv~. 300
negative.
Stung by c h ar~s he had
committed a "major foreign
policy blunder," Reagan stated
flatly: "The United States ha s
not swapped boatloads or planeloads of American ,weapons for
the return of American hostages.
And we will not."
"Our government has a firm
policy not to capitulate to terrorist demands," he said . "That ·no
concessions ' policy remains in
force - In spite of wildly
speculative and false stories
about hostages and a lleged ran som payments .
"We did not- repeat- did not
trade weapons or anything else
for hostaJZes - nor will we.

.

.

Oail) Numhr•r

•

Senate
OKs
.
tax reduction;
House to vote

FLAG DISPLAY - These six Kroger Stor.e
employees look lime out from their dulles Friday
to place a new Ohio Dag on a new flag pole at the
Court st: mini-park In Pomef!!y. The Dag was
donated by the store and the pole is a gift of Roger

and Mary Morgan. Employees at the flag raising,
·Include John Sisson, Ron Grate, Gladys Cummlnrs, Betty Wrilesel, Gary Grueser and AI
Sines.

Akron mayor blasts, moves
to buy Goodyear facilities
NEW YORK (UP!) - Akron month with the Securities and officials and union representa Mayor Thomas C. Sawyer, in a Exchange Commission, Golds· tives to make their feelings
satellite-linked co.nference with mith's General Oriental inter na- know,n t o th eir e l ec ·ted
leaders in 30 cities. called British tional ronsortium said it held U.5 represent a tlves.
industrialist James Goldsmith's perrent of Goodyear's outstandNoting that ·Goodyear. with
bid to acqu ire Goodyear Tire &amp; Ing stock and plans to make a · 12,000 people loca lly, is Akron's
Rubber Co. "predatory, obscene $49-a-share tender offer for the lar!&gt;"'st employer. Sawyer said
and despicable.'·
company unless it can raise the each Goodyea r job supports
Sawyer, speaking Thursday in market price of its stock above between three and four other
New York to cities as far apart as $50.
local jobs.
New Bedford. Mass., and PhoSawyer will testify before the
Goldsmith has revealed that he
enix, Ariz. - ail of which have met . with Goodyear Chairman House Judiciary .Colf)mittee's
Goodyear facilltles in' or nea r R.E'. Mercer and proposed a s ub co mmittee on a nti ·
them - said Goldsmith is a $49-a-share takeover, which the monopolies Nov. 18. The panel is
corporate raider whose hostile company is fighting. Goldsmith's . expectro to focus on takeovers
S49·a·share bid for Goodyear is group has not yet gone directly to and give particular attention to
an attack on the American
stockholders with a tender offer. the Goodyear rase.
industrial base.
After his speech, Sawy,er
Sawyer blamed the workings
"Goodyearr is under siege and of the Goldsmith group for opened the conference to callers
our communities and citizens are forci ng GoodYear to forfeit Its from around thhe nation. wtn
caught in the cross fir e." Sawyer control or to undertake a difficult ec hoed his outrage at the Golds·
said.
restruct'urin g program that mith bid .
"A major part of Goodyear's
could shrink the company or
stock is now in the hands of a increase its debt load.
raider and the arbitrageurs. or
The Akron mayor. wtn was
speculators , who follow such just elected to represent the cit y
activity wit~ ail the ethi cs and and Its surroundi ng area in
morals of sharks."
Congress, appealed to a nation ·
In a document filed lat e last wide audi ence of mayors, local

By LEE LEONI\RD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Small
individual and corporate tax
reductions are on the last tr ac k
toward enactment by the Ohio
General Assembly next week.
The state Senate adopted the
tax cuts Thursda y despite some
mild objections that lawm akers ,
should wait until the state budget
for 1988·89 is considered next
year.
"We'll probably pass it next
week, " said House Speaker Ver·
nal G. Riffe JL, 0 -New Boston,
who said he has been kept
i~formed about the bill by Senate
President Paul E. Gillmor, R·
Port Clinton. " If it does what I
unders'tand it does, we'll have no
problem with II."
The bill. which shaves the
. individual income tax rates by 7
percent in 1987 and another I
percent the followi ng year,
cleared the Senate 29·1.
Total tax relief is pegged at
$303 million in fiscal1987. which
tegins next July I , and $411
million in fiscal 1988. 11 is meant
to offset a potentia I state revenue
windfall from the elim ination of
-credits, deductions and exemp·
lions by the federal tax reform
bill. Ohio's tax schedule is. ba sed
on federal1axable· rn'come.·· ' ·

would be to permit "a tax
increase wi thout a vote of the
people or the Legislature."
"I thi nk our constituents are
clearly asking that we do this, "
said Finan.
·
For corporations and corpora·
lion extc ut iv es, til:' bill co ntains ·
the following:
·
-A reductio n in'the top corpo·
rate income tax brae ket from 9.2
per re nt of income to 8.9 percent .
-No corporate tax on income
under $50,000, instead of only
$25,000, thus helping small firms .
-Accelerated depreciation,
as offered by the federal government,,pha sed in over five years.
-A reduction in the tax on
individual income over $100,000
from 8 perce nt to 6.9 percent.
Finan said that would help
persuade corporate executives to
move their fi rms ·to Ohio .
Some Democrats grumbled
that the tax cu t was a Republican
political gimmick which could
backfire if state reven ues fa II off.
"We oogh t not be dealing with
this blil toda y," said Senate
Minorit y Leader Harry Meshel,
D-Youngstown , adding that few
unders !and the implications of
the federal legislation ,
"We simply do not have
adeq ua te fiscal facts before I)S to
ac t intelligently on a tax reform
bill today," said Meshel, woo
Sen .. Ri chard H. Finan, R· ended up voting for the bill.
Cincinnati. archit ect of the bill,
Sen. Rotert L. Burch, D·
cautioned that some taxpayers Dover, proposed an amendment
will te paying more anyway. phasing In the tax cut over three
beca use of tbc federal tax years so the s ta te could send $126
chanl&gt;"'s. Finan said the purpose million to counties, townships,
of the bill is to make Ohio's total cities and villages to offset the
tax take "revenue neutral."
elimination of ' federal revenue
To ignore the P'Oblem, he said, sharing.

Wintry blast creates
record lows in Ohio
By United Press Intem11tional
Temperatures hovered in the
low t ~en s in the Dayton area this
morning•. but it didn ' t stop a
couple hundred people from
attending a tailgate party.
The party Is an annual fall
promotion by radio station

Commission race still even
following election canvass

BEDIOOM FUIJilUIE

MISSES

.

Reg. 59.00 Bras .....""" 56.75
Reg. 510.50 Bras ......... S7.87 .
Reg. s11.50 Bras ......... 58.62 &lt;

1/4 OFF

MEN'S WORK GLOVES
~~tXEo

Sport Bras, Camisole shoulder Tric~t
and Lace Bras and the new Give·N· Take. .
Contour Bra. Co"'lete range of sins.

SALE

$798to

$2488

Choose lined or unlined leather work glom, jtrsty gloves and
thermal lined gloves. 011' entire stock ·of work gloves is re·
duced for 2 da,s.

.~

.

.

. WASHINGTON (UP!) - A 13-member . congressional
delegation arr ived in Japan Wednesday 1o begin a.lO-day lour
designed to ''Impress the gravity of America 's trade problems"
on four of its major far eastern trading partners. ·
Led by House Ways and Means Chairman Dan Rostenkov.ski,
D-111. , the delegation ptaimed to meet wltn government and
Industria l officials in Japan. Hong Kong. Korea and Thailand
before return ing to Washington on Nov. 23 .
The group's agenda was not disclosed lor securit y reasons.
Rosten kowski was joined by 12 other House members, their
spouses and slx committee s taff members .
.
They are Reps. Willis Gradison, R-Ohlo; Charles Rim!&gt;"'l,
0 -N. Y.; . Ed Jenkins, D·Ga.; Ma rty Russo, !}Ill.; Ronnie
Flippo, D·Ala.; Barbara Kennelly, D·Conn.; Barb!ra. J3oxet,
D-C ali f. ; Nor man Sisisky. O-Va.; John Duncan; R-Tenn.; Guy
Vander Jagt, R·Mich .; Bill Frenzel. R·Minn.; and Richard
Schulze, R·Pa. Boxer and Sisisky are not committee mem be'rs.
" I believe it is extremely important for memters of the
comm it te on Ways an d Means twhich has jurisdlcation .over
trade issues) to gain first hand knowledge of our trade policies
abroad through direct contact with some of our principal
trading partners ," Rostenkowski said in a statement before the
group left Andrews Air Force Base aboard a military plane
Tuesda y.
"At the same time. we expect to speak frankly as members of
Congress about the need to open their markets to u.s. ex ports ,"
he said. "It is essentia l that we impress upon these countries the
gravity of America's trade problems and the strong support In
Congress for corrective actions."
The House approved a sweeping trade bill earlier this year
that aimed some tough retaliatory measures at Asian nations
like Japan that have large trade surpluses with the Uni\ed
Sta t ~.
·
·
But the Senate never aoted· on a trade bill, so the issue died
when the Congress adjourned In Octoter.

•

Thursday. November 13. 1_986;.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

U.S. · lawmakers take
··concerns to Japanese

REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.

' '~·•

POINT PLEASANT- It's been a week and three days since
Mason Cou nty voters went to the polls and the question of ju st
who will be sworn In as county commissioner come January
remains up In the air.
Republ,ican Earl Keefer and Democr at Thomas "Tucker"
Mayes are deadlocked at .1,959 votes apiece .
·
The Mason County Commissio n. acting as ' a board of
ca m·!lssers, declared the tesults of trro election Thurs cla .v nigh t.
The canvass opened Monday morning and. folio wi ng a tv.'O-da&gt;·
recess. concluded at about 9 p.m. Thut"Sda)· when Keeler ancl
Mayes werc declared tied . ThE' candidates ha ve until 9:06p.m.
Monday - 48 hours following the declara tio n of the resu lts.
£'xcludln !( weekends- to rpquest a rccount.
Should the two be tied foilowin!( the recount. the countv
commission would have 30 days to appoint one of them to the
seat being vacated by Michael E. Whalen, who lost his bid for
re-elecHon to Mayes in the primary . II the&gt; commission falls to
make the appointment. the decision wou ld be left up to Gov.
Arch Moore.
Unofficial totals on election night gave Keefer a 53-vote
victory over Mayes. But Monday, commisston£'rs,d lscovered a
50-vote discrepancy in Precinct 21. oite of four precincts with
polling places at Ordnance Element ary School. The tall v. sheet
there showed Keefer with 122 votes while the form turned In to
the county and circuit clerks' offices by poll workers gave him
172 votes. A one-vote discrepancy was discoveret) last night in
another precinct and those changes, along with the counting
during the canvass of several previously cliallenged ballots, left
the race dead even.
Following the C!iscovery of the disecrepancy in Precinct 21
Monday. the seal used to break and re-seal the wires on the
ballot boxes was secllred by the Mason 'county Prosecuting
Attorney's office and Ihe hallot boxes a nd keys wereseparated,
according to Prosecutor Damon B. Morgan Jr. The boxes are
now locked in the vault in the circuit clerk's office and the key
secured in the evidence locker at the Mason County Sheriff's
Department pending an anticipated recount .

WING . Partiers put on extra
layers of clothing and turned out
to eat donuts and sip coffee and
slushy orange juice.
" I took no evasive ac tion
except to put an extra battery on
charge last night," said one
partier. "Two stray kittens got to
spend the night in the basement,
but with 50 degrees tomorrow,
they're history.''
The temperature in Dayton at 2
a.m. hit 11 degrees. breakin g the
previous low for this day of 17 set
back In 1916. It was the second
day In a row that a record low
was established In th&lt;• city .
' were set in You ngRecord lows
stown. Akron·Canton.and Cincinnati il2l. Cleveland (131 , and
Akron-Canton and Mansfield
(111 .

Light snow fell in northeast
Ohio during the ni ght. but ended
in most places just before
sunr ise.

ODOT awards
span contract
A contract for the repair of the
Pomeroy-Mason Bridge has been
awarded the Malden and Jenkins
Construction Co., Inc ., Nelson·
ville. according to the Ohio
Department of Transpcftalio n.
' contract for the repair of
The
the bridge is for $1,Jl1,000 with
the work completion date to be
Sept. 30, 1987.
..
··So far, there has not teen a
date established as to when ihe
bridge will te closed to traffic
tetween Meigs and Mason Coun·
ties, a major CQncern for residents as well as businesses.
However, attempts· are· teing
made to establish a ferry service
between Clifton, W.Va., and
Middleport to be' operatro while
the bridge is closed.
\.
'

..

DEDICATION- Taking roles in the dedlcalion
of a pipe organ at the Coolville United Methodist
Church were, friln'l felt, Rev: .Jeffrey Btrd~aii,
present pa.,lor; Wesley McC wlC, minister of

music allhc First Baptisl Church in Parkersburg,
~.Va., J:Uesl soio.ist; Philip Thoma•, local Ia,v
reader: David Giiiil11n, chairmun of the klcai
tru;;tees, 11nd .Joe Ruder, hu·ul church sdoool
sup erinlendcnl.

Congregation, fund drive aid
church in getting new organ
In special ceremonies a pipe sail , organist was Wesley
organ was recently dedica ted at McC un e, minister of music at the
the Coolville United Met hodist
First Baptist Church in Parkers·
Church.
bu rg. A special choir taking part
The organ was pu rc ha sed1and included Nellie Creeger, Marjo·
installed by David Gillilan wit h rle Malone, Joe Rader, Da vid
ass istance from members of the Gillilan, Philip Thomas, Johnnie
congregallon . Philip and Boyd Coen, Rita Seals, Carolyn Rader.
Thomas remodeled th e worship Martha Sue Matheney, Susan
center to accommodate the or- Rader, Peg Burdsall, Ruth H~r ·
gan and enhance the bea uty of vey, Elva Gorrell, Olga Thomas,
the chu rch. The Modern Wood · Judy Adams, Dottie Norman and
·
men of America initiated a Evelyn Saunders.
matching · fund drive to supper!
Carol Rader, Susan Rader and
the project and contributions Martba Caldwell planned the
came from: local· church ·homecoming dinner sponsored
members and friends as far by the United Church Women.
away as Florida , Texas, Massa·
The church was established In
chusetts, Arkansas and Indiana. 1820 on land set as ide by the
· Guest organist on homecoming Colley family , founders of CoolSunday mornin g was Edward ville. Circuit riders and local
Smith, organi ~t at the Sixth preachers led worship In those
Avenue United Mettndlst Church days in hom es, the b g school
in Lancaster.
house and' sometimes outdoors. ·
Church Conference records,
During the organ . dedication
ceremonies, planned by David •found during xemodeling for the
Gillilan and Rev. Jeffrey Burd· pipe orga n .~ reveal that the

I' I ,&gt;

'

ClfCU II tn r iUUl' ll CU II)H't'~CJ IIUr r~ a I

Coo lvillr . Tuppers Plains, Brthel. Nrw Brn)·. Hockingport.
As bury, Lott ridgr. Sand Hill.
Flatwoods. Unitrd BrPthrrn . Mt.
Oli ve, Torch. Laynrr and
McGees in 18o6-57 . Confercn('('
apportionm ent s ror th at year
ranged from $7 at Torch t o~1 20 at
Coolv ill e. Ministers wrrr .J.W.
ClarkP. W.H. ChPJT!ngton and S,
· Rankin . A.S. Tidd 11'3 S secretarv. .
The present structure . bulrt In
1855, wa s remodeled In 1906 by
the Rev . d.H. Parkins who built
the altar ra il. pulpit , tell tower
and added sta in('(! glass windows
whi ch are still In use todav
Henry H. Parris h built pe";s:
which were refinis hed after 70
years of service , during a project
headed by Way ne and Sandi
Ca udill . Clyde Whit o, Jr., Billie
White , Emmett Swisher and
Johl! !l-iken directed the addition
of a basem ~nt and church school
rooms In 195~ .

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