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Page D-8-The .Sunday Times-Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport-Galli.polis, Ohio-PolntPieasant W.

v._.

December 7, 1Q86

.,
By ELLEN FREILICH
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UP!) - The
stock market advanced last week
In, hea.vy trading but all gains
came In a single, spectacular day
when the Dow Jones Industrial
average soared to a record high.
The Dow gained 10.83 points to
1925.06 for the week. On Tuesday,
the day It set a record, It cllmbed
43.04 to 1955.57, surpassing Its old
' high of 1919.71, set Sept. 4.
Gainers outnumbered losers
1,054-865 among a total of 2,218
issues traded on the New York
Stock Exchange. The market rallied Tuesday as
investors welcomed President
Reagan's announcement that a
Watergate-style Independent
counsel would Investigate the
Iran arms scandal. Stronger
bond prices and futures- related
buying helped fuel the · drive,
traders said.
The market sustained losses
Wednesday and· · Thursda'y,
mostly on profit-taking, and was
hurt Friday by a weak bond
market and futures -related
selling.
Traders Friday also cited
nervousness about going home
for 'the weekend, leaving la rge
Investment positions whose
·value might be vulnerable to new
developments In the Ivan Boesky
Insider-trading scandal or In the
crisis over arms ,shipments to
Iran.
Alfred Goldman, stock market
strategist at A.G. Edwards &amp;
,Sons in St. Louis, called the. Iran
arms deal "a sword of Damocles
that wlll hang over the market
for at least several months and
damage the market.
"We all love a father figure in
Washlngtdn, and Reagan's been
a Wall Street favorite," Goldman
said. "There's no que.stlon thaf
the Iranian mess Is a negative. "

· Vot.:ie,

Canada but there have been no
overseas exports of American oil
for .vears.
The export of Alaskan oil had
been specifically prohibited until
President Reagan announced
that the ban would be removed
for some of it, Doug Perry, an oil
and gas specialist for the Department of Commerce, said.
Alas ka produces one-fifth of
this cou ntry's all, most of It from
the -giant Nort h Slope oil fields at ·
or near Prudhoe Bay, and It
remai ns agalnstthelawtoexport
North Slope oll although Alaska ·
officials are seeking to have the

,

·
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UP!) Tennessee Attorney' General
W.J. Michael Cody said Friday
he has asked the 6th U,S. Circuit
Court of Appeals In Cincinnati for
a rehearing of Its decision on
' plans for a nuclear waste dump
J n east Tennessee.
• A threl'-judge .panel of the
'court ruled Nov. 25 the Energy
:Department dld not have to
·consult and cooperate with Ten:nessee officials · before submit:tlng the proposal to Congress.
• DOE has proposed building a
:monitored retrievable storage
: -facility for nuclear waste In one
of three locations In East Tennes:see, an Idea opposed by Gov .
-Lamar Alexander and other
"state leaders.
Immediately after the ruling,
' Cody asked the court to prohibit
· · DOE from presenting Its proposal lor the MRS to Congress
untU the case could be heard by
the full court or until the
Supreme Court can rule on a
petition.
The court has taken no action

By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON (UP!) -The
decorations are up and 'the 20foot tree In place. But as
President and Mrs. Re,agan
begin a round of holiday season ·
entertaining this week, the mood
In the White House Is decidedly
less than festive.
At what might otherwise be the
start of an end-of-the-year lull,
the White House Is rife with
speculation and apprehension
spawned by th'e Iran armsContra aid scandal that has
placed Reagan on the defensive
and shaken public confidence In
his presidency .
The. Reagans wete all smlies
Sunday as they led off a starstudded tribute to the six 1986
recipients of the Kennedy Center
Honors for lifetime contributions
to the performing arts.
At a reception Sunday for the
Kennedy Center honorees, Reagan maintained his distance
from reporters.
However, the tension and the
ensuing uproar over a secret plan
that diverted up to $30 million In
profits from arms sales to Iran
into a secret Swiss account for

ban lilted.
Perry said the exported oil,
from the Cook Inlet near Anchorage, probably represents the
firs t U.S. oil to be shipped
overseas since the Arab oil
embargo and the energy crisis
that gripped the country In the
early 1970s.
At one time, before the development of major Middle East oil
fields and the advent of'! he OPEC
cartel, the Unlted .States was an
oil exporter, Perry said.
Now the United States Is a
major Importer, and the drop In
world oil prices has led to
.
1

predictions that the United
States, which already imports
one-third of Its oil, will increase
Its Imports.
This has made Alaska all
exports controversial, but state
officials have been enthusiastic
about selling their all abroad.
Alaska ' receives royalty oll
from four offshore fields southwest of Anchorage In the Cook Inlet
basin, and 97 percent of the
state's royalty all will be sold to
the Taiwan company, Eason
said.
Friday's preliminary decision
to sell the all to Chinese Petroleum Corp.obecomes final Jan. 5
following a 30-day comment
period. Eason said he expects to
sign a one-year contract Jan. 8
and see the first Alaska oil loaded
said.
onto tankers lor Taiwan In July.
Triplett said the state's next
Eason said Alaska will earn
action must walt until the court $2.4 million more by selling Its 011
rules on the petitions.
to Chinese Petroleum than if
The Energy Department's Alaska continued to sell It to
plan Is to temporarily store American companies for domesnuclear waste from west of the tlc markets.
Rocky Mountains at a Tennessee
State officials have argued that
dump untO a permanent dump Is export.lng Alaska oil to Asia will
operational. Candidate sites for not result In domestic shortages
the nation's !lrst permanent and will Improve America's
dump are In Texas, Nevada and balance of trade.
Washington.

on the request for a stay, Martha
Triplett, a spokeswoman for
Cody, said Friday.
"The court has not ruled on our
(earlier) petition," Triplett said.
"We thought they were going to
rule In a more expedient
fashion.··
In the rehearing petition, the
state asked that a full, 10-judge
panel of the court rehear the
case.
"The petition argues that the
rehearing Is warranted for three ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~
reasons," Cody said Friday In a II
statement. "First, the case In·
valves issues of extreme national
impOrtance.
~
"Second, the three-judge panel
decision misinterpreted the conIOn,
I
sultatlon and cooperation provlslons of the nuclear policy act.
'
•
"Third, the decision of the
three-judge panel raised questlons regarding \he right or the
governor and General Assembly
under the act to Issue a notice of
disapproval to Congress if and
when the DOE presents the MRS
proposal to Congress," Cody

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1 Section. 8 Pages

Fire guts
jeweler's
location

"'

the N'caraguan rebels Is hard to to lead._to further discomfort Ignore. ·
and even tension - this week as
Returning Sunday from Camp the Reagans host the usual round
David, Reagan barely acknowl- of .holiday receptions for Conedged the presence of . waiting gress, the press and members of
reporters and ' ignored their the Wh.ite House staff.
shouted questions.
Reagan will attempt to busy
Congressional leaders wel- ' himself this week with dellberacorned his admission Saturday ti0!1S on his flscal1988 budget, a
that "mistakes were made," but meeting with President Mobutu
hinted he would have to do more Sese Seko of Zaire and political
to put the affair behind him. pep talks to Republican goverSome White House aides sounded nors and newly elected members
notes of optimism while others of Congress·.
exuded deeo concern.
But his ·staff remains preoccuThe normal holiday routine at pied with damage control, which
the White House has been dis- could become even more Imporrupted and the tr.adltional slow- tant with the start of televised
down of activity has been .de- hearings on Capitol Hill Into the
railed by the serles.of revelations Iran· Contra· connectl()n.
concerning the clandestine
operation.
White House · officials conWhen Mrs . Reagan went tinued ·· to Insist Sunday that
through the annual ceremony of .Reagan qld not know that profits
accepting ·· the White House from the sale of weapons to Iran
Christmas tree last week, she had diverted to the Contras
faced a larger-than-usual con- fighting Nicaragua's Sandini~ta
tingent of reporters and photo- government.
graphers and was peppered with
A n'por.ted comment by House
questions about whether her Speaker Thomas O'Neill, Dhusband would fire White House Mass., that "the president knew"
chief of staff Donald Regan:
of the diversion drew a sharp
The crisis atmosphere Is bound response.

,.. .Jy J;. !'fiCHAEL MYERS

worsened with· the revelation

American, hostages held In
Lebanon.
Marine Lt. Col. Oliver North,
But critics say Reagan vioaide to national security adviser lated his own arms embargo
Vice Adm. John Poindexter, had against Iran and shattered hls
run the operation out of the NSC, anti-terrorism campaign by
diverting up to . $30 million In dealing with a government that is
arms sales profits to tlie Nicara- blamed for the deaths of Ameriguan Contras at a lime when can servicemen and citlzehs.
Congress had banned any milThe Miami Herald reported
Itary aid to the rebels.
Sunday that Iran paid more than
Shultz had the unenviable task $1 million to arrange the 1983
today of explalnitig a policy of bombings that killed nearly 300
selling arms to the Tehran U.S. servicemen and diplomats
government -a policy he said he . in Lebanon, and White House
opposed and was only "sporadl· officials knew that when U.S.
call)?' ' informed . about after arms were sold to Iran.
)l.eagan approved It tn January.
Other witnesses to be called
include
Robert McFarlane, ReaReagan· had said the arms
gan's
former
national security.
sales represented an attempt to
open a dialogue with moderate affairs adviser, who secretly
factions •of the Khomelnl govern- visited Tehran In Ma y wlt h
ment, to end the Iran-Iraq war shipment of arms: and VIce
and to win the release of Adm. John Poindexter, McFar-

.... :;tWASHl\'JGTOI'l (UPll' ~ Se- ·· tha.t· Reagan- was ·unaw~re that

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cretary of State Geor~e Shultz,
who says he opposed and was left
-In the dark about the covert plan
to sell arms to Iran, has been
called on to defend the administration's tattered credibility be·
fore Congress.
The House Foreign Affairs
Committee scheduled the first
public hearing today into the
clandestine operation which funneled up to $30 million In Iranian
arms sale profits to the Nicaraguan rebels fighting the Sandi·
nlsta government.
The unlo!dtng Iran-Contra affair has rocked the administration, severely eroded President
Reagan's popularity and raised
questions about the administration's foreign policy.
The situation dramatically

a

PLANE - Tim Knolls, son of Brady and Carol Knotts, Route 2,
. Pomeroy, il; pictured with an airplane door which he found while
deer hunting Friday afternoon on the farm of VIrgil King,
Klng.~bury Road. The State Highway Patrol and Sherif! Howard
Frank were called to the scene and an Investigation is underway as
to how the plane door could have come to be on the property. It was ·
lying oulln an open field, Knotts said.

lane's successor, who resigned
Nov. 25 in the growi hi! furor
surrounding the scandal .
Attorney General Edwin
Me~se said Poindexter had only
peripheral kn owledge of the
Iran-Contra link and that North
was the alleged mastermi-nd of
the covert plan. Nqrth was !Ired
from his post on the National
Security Council the same day
Poindexter resigned.
The Senate Intelligence Committee called both men last week
to testify about the Iran-Contra
connection, but both In voked the
Fifth Amendment on grounds of
self-Incrimination and refused to
answer questions .
While Shultz distanced himself
from the disputed Iran arms
policy, he Is apparently Implicated In anot her covert program
lo aid the Contras.

TESTIMONY - Secretary
of Stale George Shultz testified before the House Foreign
Aflalrs Committee today on
the Iran arms-Contra aid
scandal. ( UPI)

Council limits usage · of Racine·firehouse, annex
After lengthy discussion, Ra- annex.
cine VIllage Council voted In
In- a related motion, council
recent regular session, to pro- established a $35 user fee for the
hibit the use of the firehouse and annex, for non-profit groups. An
annex for use by profit-making addlt tonal $5 will be charged for
groups.
use of the kitchen.
Council defines profit making
groups
one that will use . Non-profit groups must file a
·proceeds for personal use or take written application for use of the
the money out of the village to be annex or firehouse, and must
spent.
abide by certain rules.
Council Is taking this action to
, Counc.ll also requested from
insure that private groups or the fire department and the
Individuals are not benefitted by ladles auxiliary of the fire
tax dollars which are ·used to department, copies of their quarmaintain the fire house and terly financial reports.
·

as

Councilman Frank ·. Cleland
will meet' soon with the Board of
Public Affairs concerning · a
proposal that the board again
pick up of one-half of the street
commissioner's salary, as done
In former years . 'Council feels
that at the present time, the
street commissioner Is spending
more lhl!n one-half of his time
Involved In work for the water
department. although other village funds an? paying almost two
thirds of hls salary.
Council took no action on
co,nflrnilng Mayor Charles

Pyles' permanent appointment ing bills to vouchers , maintainof Officer Joe Kirby as police Ing personnel files.
Also on recommenda tio n from
chief, until the village solicit or
advises by letter whether Kirby the state. the mayor Is to make a
must first serve a probationary monthly court report to council,
period as chief before a perman- use pre-numbered receipts, and
deposit bond and fine money
ent appointment can be made.
Report of the state examina- wit hin 24 hours .
Clerk Jane Beegle reported
tion of village books by the state
auditor's office, has been re- and council expressed gratit ude
ceived, with no findings or lor a $500 donation to the vlllage
cita tions. Several recommenda- from the Dave Diles charity golf
tions were made, many of which tournament .
Council recessed until 7 p.m.
are already implemented, such
Dec.
15.
as, using purchase orders, not
paying from statements, attach-

I

FlEE GIFT WRAPPING

OPEN EVERY NIGHT
TIL 8:00
SUNDAY 1'10 S

WIMM Fllllllan Cllld 8u llr Make 111e Dllht111oe '"

'
SILVEI BIIDGE
SHOPPING. CENTEI
'
STATE IOUTE 7
GALL"O...S
I

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Clothiers to Ladi_es and Gentlemen . ,

.

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SENIOR GRIDDERS HONORE)) - 'nlese lov Halor
athletes recently concluded their vanity lootbaU careen and
were honored allhe Eaalern Hllb School Fall Sports Banquet
Saturday. lalronl II Dou1 Beave,, Ranked by Kirk Flck at the
left aad Jell Roush on the right. In back II Ttim Parker. See
story and additional phol1111 oa Page 8.

25 Cents.

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

Congressional sleuths c~ll upon Shultz

~·~~ICS·=~

' Mt..,nllip Just $2 4.00
IGift

Address _ _ _ _ _ _ __

enttne

Porrieroy-Middleport. Ohio, Monday, December B. 1986

'

Rain tonight wllb a' low In
the lnld 40s. Rain Tuesday
with a high near 50. The
probability of precipitation Is
near 100 percent through
·
Tuesday.

•

Less-than -festive mood
dominates WhiteHouse

·

Glflr- _ _ _ __ ;:___

1&amp;1

1988

Reheartng sough. t Ofi dump proposaI

·Address _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _

17

Daily Number
367
Super lotto
38-11-3940-2-26

at y

1

)ltft MemHrlfltp tor.

Days _'til
.Christmas

•

Alaska to export crude oil to Taiwan

By JEFF BERLINER ·
• ANCHORAGE. Alaska (UP!)
-Alaska plans to sell more than
1. 3 million barrels of oil to a
Taiwan firm arid become the first
overseas exporter of U.S. crude
.since the Arab oll embargo,
, officials announced.
, Chinese Petroleum Corp. was
selected over slx other fir ms two each from Japan, South
. Korean and the United States for a one-year agreement to buy
.:3,600 barrels per da y of oil owned
,;,by the state, Alaska Division of
·on and Gas director James
·Eason announced Friday .
The United States sells all to

Ohio Lottery

GRID ROIIIOREES - Top grid honors ,at the
Eaalem Hl1h School Fall Sports Banquet were
Kyle Davll, Best Back; Dour Beaver, Most

Improved; Jell Johnson, The ·"Stick" award;
Bryan Durst, Guts and Glory; and Sieve Horner.

By JUDY MORGAN
OVP News Editor
POINT PLEASANT- Raging
!Ire destroyed the Tiffin's Jewelers building on Point Pleasant's
Main Street Saturday night, but
efforts on the part of volunteer
firemen from Point Pleasant,
Flatrock, Valley and Gallipolis to
contain the .blaze may have
saved adjoining buildings from a
similar fate.
On a street where century-old
buildings, many of which have
been remodeled several flmes,
butt up against one another, a
fire In one becomes a threat to the
enflre block.
Rosalee Williamson of Williamson's Jewelers, next door to
Tiffin's, credits the local lire
departments with saving her
building, ''I'm telling you the
truth, they were wonderful."
Mrs. Wllll,amson said this mo rnIng. "We're lucky . to be here,
They were absolute lifesavers .
' "(The volunteer firem en 1
saved the •whole block Is what
they did," she added.
·
Meanwhile, Tiffin owners Bill
and Sonja Wellman are intent
upon re-opening Tuesday in a
building just several doors up the
street for the Christmas shopping season and hope to re-build
. their store.
The cause of the fire, which
started on the, upper floor or the
two-story brick ~tructure at 416
Main at about 8 p.m., has not yet
been determined but firemen are
speculating it may ha ve begun In
wiring or the store's heating '
system which Is locat ed on the
second floor.
The state fire marshal has
been notified, according to Point
Pleasant Fire Chief Jim Wood;
but officials have ruled out arson . .
Monetary loss has not yet been •
determined, but Mrs. Wellman
said this morning the building,
which dates back to the mid '
1800s, was insured lor $100,000.
Fire damage was contained to
the upper floor of the structure
but fire and water damage on the
first floor , where the store's :
merchandise was located . was '
extensive, according to Wood. •
who described the building as '
"totaled."
Wood said the fire department ,
located across Viand Street from
the back of Tiffin's, was notified
· of the fire at about 8 p.m. Upon
first entry to the building. fir emen discovered the top floor was
completely engulfed In flames.
At that point, Wood said, one of
hls department's major concerns
was confining the blaze to the one
building and the decision was
made to call the other fire
departments for assistance.
Firefighters' ef!ort s were
aided by hrlck fire walls betw('(' n
Tiffin' s and Williamson's Jewelers on one side and Tiffin 's and
the G.C. Murphy store on the
other, Wood said. Fire walls
break the temperature of the
blaze down and slows fh e progression of the fi re, he explainPd .
Williamson 's Jewelers sustainPd
quite a lot of smoke and "'"tor
damage, and the G.C. Murphy
building had minor smoke and
water damage, bu1 nett her of
those busin ess were tou ched IJy
fire, Wood said.
Three members of 1he Por nI
Pleasant Volunteer Fire Department. suffered minor injuries.
Wood said Ri ck Harris and .lim
Board were lransported b_,. lh &lt;'
Point Pleasant Emergenc)' Modteal Service to Pleasant Valle)'
Hospital where they were trcat t•d
and released. Harris apparen11y
suffered an arm injury nnd
Board, smoke inhalation .
In adflltlon, Joe Durs1 was
treated for smoke lnhalat ion by
EMS personnel at the srene,
Wood sald.Firemen battled the blaze for
at least three hours and stayed on
the scene throughout the night .
Wood expressed apprecatlon to
Carolyn Harris of Harris' Steak
House, Shoney's, McDona ld's,
Murphy's and the Flatrock La dleS Auxiliary for providing rood
and coffee throughout the night.

�-.
l
J.

·comment

Page-2-The Daily Silntinel
Pomeroy-MiddleJ!Or1, Ohjo
Monday, .DIJCt!ITiber 8, 1986'.
,,

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Monday,

.~ Giants r9mp; ·Browns,
·· BengalS, set for clash

The Daily .Sentinel
. Ill Court Slrl'€'t · ·'
Pomeroy, Ohio · .

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DEVDTED TO THE INTERES'Dl OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA
I

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~rb

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\
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rsm~ . I"T"\;,.JL._..,_,~c,~=::~

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~v

·-

ROBERT L. WINGETT
PubliSher'. ·
·
PAT WIDTEHEAD
A~ISt!WI Publlsll!r/Conlroller
DALE ~OTHGEB,
N~ws Editor

BOB HOEFIJCH
General Manager .

JR.

A MEMBER of The lJnited Press International, Inland Dally Press

A sso~ iation and the American NeWspaper Publtshers Assoclat~on .

' .Jxt

.

.'

LE'M'~RS OF OPINION arP welcorile. They stJould be li:!ss than
words
long. All letters a re subject tO editing and foost beslgntd with name address and
telephone riumber. No unslgnro letters wUI be publis hed . Letters' Should be In

· The lran-and-C.ontraS'Controv- , it ,.whol~heartedly'. . 'T his ·woufd nesses to put before the public the
ersy is now a certified Class r preernpt the probes .q elng "ase-anditisastrongone:-for
crisis, , and· the president's suci • .. launched l:!Y other con~essiorial the ~sent Ially honorable nature
cess In' overcoming it Is clearly · committees- (at last count there of their inteqttons. !Americans
going to depend on how swiftly, were 'nine), and · perhaps also care about' such things. and
.decisively ai)d openly he arts to render unnecessary the appoint- ri~ht}Y so . .
deal w,tth lt.
. ·.
.
rnent ql a ~~tal Investigator. ' Watergale revealed In · the
At this writing, there would
. It would also; unquestionably, . Nixon administration a 'sort of
seem tQ be a lot to be saldJodhe ' doom the' nation t6 many imin\hs cynical, power-hungry arro·
president's calling a special· of ' public hearings at which gance that is strikingly different ·
session of Congress, as Sen.
admlnlst~a.tk&gt;n offictais wotild'be from the kind of high-minded
Robert Dole · has ·proposed,,• to . grllled by publicity-hungry 'De- .' passion for conservative princ!. create a joint select committee of ·.mocratic congressnjen. But that pies and goals that antma(es the
the House and Senate to ihvesti- seems inevitable anyway 1 and . Reagan White House. So far as
gate . the whole affair, and his better one committee ·t han nine. y'et appears, ' this whole enterordering the officials of .. his ·.•
the heartrigs "could be prise had only lhree objectives:
administr,apon to-cooperate wlih : . .
' admini~tratlon ' wit-,, ma~lng overtures to potential

.

'•

good tas te, add ressing issues, not persQr:lalltles.

· Ohio Politics

GOP candidacy deal
could
spur disse~sion
.

By JOEL' SHERMAN
needs to :wtn Its last two games
. UPI Sporis Writer ·
while I he Rams lose their final
The, NFC Eas t has bec'ome the iwo, inclUding a regular-season
Land of the Giants. ·
finale against Los Angeles, to
After, . two seasons ' of near
capture the division.
·
misses, the New York Gian!s are
The 49ers and Minnesota , 8-6,
· on the brink of winhing t'heir first
which routed Green Bay 32-6, are
div.Jston title since Y.A. Title the top two competitors for the ...
direcled 'the team' s offense'Wear- 1 wild-card spot. ·Ailanta, .6-7- 1
lng black high· tops in 1963. .
after a 28-23loss to Indianapolis,.
Phil ·Simms passed for ,l hrcc · and Dallas, 7-7, are just hanging
touchdowns and the Giants int er- on in the race.
., cepted Jay Schroeder six times
In the AFC; 'nd playoff spots
Sunday to inflict Washington : have been. assured yet and nine
with . Its ' first home los s . this teams are battling for the five
season, a 24·14 victory over the posts ~aso n berths. Cincinnati's
· .
Redskins. .
31-7 triumph over New England
For the Redskins, 11-3, to kept both the AFC Central anq
capture the NFC Easl title, they East races tigh.L
mus t win their next two games · The Bengals, 9,5. remained one
while the Giants; who are · 2-0 game ~hind Cleveland, 10- 4,
against Washington· this-s~ason,
wHich beat Buffalo 21-17. The
Browns play at Cincinnati next
lose their final two regularseason games. New York is 6-0at Sunday in a game likely 10 decide
the Central crown.
Pal riots
home this . season and closes ,at
Giants Stadium against st :. and Jets are both 10-4. ,
I SENIOR CHEERLEADER
Kansas City , 8-6, rout e d
Louis,. 3·10-1, then. Green Bay,
In the absence of Delani
3-11.
'
Denver, 10-4, by a 37-10 score to
1
Baker, Missy Calaway was
Regardless of the outcome. the prevent Denver from winning the
recognized as the lone
AFC West and keep four teams
Giants and Redsklns are guaranVOLLEYBALL SPECIA~TIES - Special Vol· Rucker, Most Points Scored; Krist! Hawk, Best
member of the varsity cheeralive in the·dlvision·ra~e. Seattle,
teed playoff spots.
leyball honors w~re presented to 'these four EHS Spiking Percentage, and Lee Ann Rohlnson, Most
leadlng.squad.
Five teams are battling for two H. and t~e Raiders, 8-5, play at
senior stars; Pictured In no particular order are Improved.
·I'
the Kingdome tonight.
playoff spots in the NFC, with
.B ey Wigal, Best .serving Percentage; . Lesa
The 'lorie AFC team with a
Chicago already having wrapped
playoff chance. but no division
up the NFC Central and the
title. hOpe Is Miami, which
Giants and Redskins · having
improved to 7· 7 with a 31-27
gained the NFC East title and a
'
, I
,, .
wild-card between them. That triumph over New Orleans.
By sCott Wolfe
reserve squads. Missy Calaway proved went to Lee Ann ga l. Lee Ann Robinson, Arlene
Elsewhere Sunday, Pittsburgh
leaves the NFC West and a
EAST MEIGS - Athletes, was recognized with Delani Robinson.
Ritchie. Tonya Savoy,. and Lesa
tbpped Detroit 27-17, St. Louis cheerleaders, pare nt s, and Baker as senior cheerleading
second wild card berth available.
Senior nctt crs included Kristi Rucker.
· The Rams beat Dallas 29-10 and Philadelphia tied 10. 10, coaches involved In the Eastern members.
Hawk, Melissa Nutter. Bev WICo ntinued oit page 5
Sunday night to im)lrove to 10-4 Chicago routed Tampa Bay 48-14 Hi gh School Fail sports pro and Inch closer to the NFC West and San Diego blaked Houston grams were honored Saturday theCoach
Donhigh
Jackson
recognized
junior
volleyball
girls
27'0.
.
title. San Franclseo: which deeven.ing with an,awards fete and for a fine 4-3 season.
feated the Jets 2n0 to go to 8-5-1,
Continued on page 5
Coach Pa m made junior var·
, well-prepared dinner.
sity
presentations first , com·
Daniel Apl!ng, principal ,
served as master qf ceremonies mending her future athletes for a
and gave the welcoming address, great 7-3 season and continued
followed by Eastern local super- il)'lpr,ovement. She then honored
EAST MEIGS - The Eastern season.
Intendent' Richard . Robert who t·he SVAC runner-up Eaglettes
. Eaglettes of Coach Pam Douthitt
· who posted a 9-3 league mark a nd
17 COLE ST,
Arlene Ritchie paced the at - gave the invocalion.
POMEROY
10.12
overall
mark.
claimed' two big SVAC cage tack will! 15 points and 7
Following the pot luck style
victories during the past week by rebounds, while Patty Durst
Special awards went to Bev·
dinner, which Included ham and
•Precision Machine Work &amp;
defeating North Gaiiia 45-35, then canned 13 and five rebounds.
steak purchased by the athletic erly Wigal for best serving
Shaft Repair ·
whipping Hannan Trace 55·27.
Tanya Savoy tallied 1i markers . boosters, the guest speaker percentage (88~ 1 and Kri stl
' · East ern trailed North Gallia and a good floor game, senior David Gaul addressed the crowd Hawk . 'for the Best Spiking
•Welding Fabrication &amp; Repair
percentage of 70 percent. Lesa
4·12 after the opening round, but Lesa Rucker canned 5 points,
In attendance.
•Radiator Repair &amp; Replacement
when the fireworks had con· Mel Mankin 5, and two each by
Gaul, a former Eastern high Ruc~er earned the most points
•Boil Out Rod and Recore
eluded in the finale, Eastern had Erica Kessinger and Jenny
grid star. SVAC honoree, and scored award and lYios t Im. outscored the Lady Pirates 19·9 Cowdery.
&amp;
Supplies
ail -stater spoke br!efly on what it rt=~~;;;;;;;;;::;l
to take
23 -21 halftim e . Rucker cleared the . boards
takes to be successful. Gaul said,
advantage .
wjth 7 ca)'oms.
"You have to set high goals for
HIIME DECORAnJIIG OPEN
Seniors Tanya Savoy and Lesa .
Eastern hit 15 of 46 from the
yourself... have a dream and
HOUSE FII. &amp; SAT, DEC. 12
Rucker forrQed a dynamic duo in floo[ for JJ percent and canned 23 work hard to make those drea ms
REGISTER FOR LINCOLN AC 22 5
&amp;· 1'3, 10 A.M.·9 .P.M.
scoring 32 poin(s an\l grabbing 18 of 43 at the ,line for 53 percent.
come true. You }I'OU!d be surEach Day Door Prize,.
AMP WELDER TO BE GIVEN
Everyone Welcome.
rebounds ..Savoy led EHS scorers
Paula Van Hoose and Lori Van
prised what youcandoifyouoniy
Gloria Oiler, St. Rt. 326,
' with J7. markers. while Rucker Hoose each• had 8, Michelle put your mind and heart Into
AWAY
DEC. 20 AT 12:00 NOON
avllle, Ohio, 742·2076
'
' wuredJn, l5·polnts and ,grabbed · t;rnroe .6, Terry Queen 2, Crissy
14 rebounds .
Caldwell 2, and Valerie Dillon 1. working
Gaul, toward
a hard-working
a goal." dedi·
, , Arlene Ritchie added 6 points,
Coach ' Pam Douthitt sta ted.
ca ted athlete himself, perfeclly
Patty Durst 6, and Trish Spencer "Overall I was very pleased with
fitting the mold of a lrue
'J.
out game play. We ran our American, Is a living example of
·. Ritchie added 7 rebounds .
offense well and we only commit his opening words: "Hard work
Campbell led NG with 20,
ted 12 turnovers, which is muc h does pay off."
'Corct'eii added 6, Borden 5, better. We shot much better from ·
Gaul earned a full athletic
Parsons 2, and Coe 2.
the foul line tonight and that · scholarship as a walk-on player
Three EHS gals hit double proved to be a big fa ctor. "
for the Ohio University Bobcats,
figures In leading the Eaglettes
Eastern 2-2, and 2-1 In the earni ng a starting posi tion this
'o a 55-27 route of Hannan Trace, SVAC meets league-leadin g
season for his efforts.
Easterns second win.of the young Kyger Creek tonight at Eastern.
" The next thing' I am going to
'
talk about Is something every?ne

!f'lends in · Iran: ·bringing pressure on terrorists In Lebanon to
free American hostages (three of .
whom were actUally treed); and
finan~ing military .aid to 'the
Nicaraguan contras. through foreign sources at a time . when ·
Congr.ess was still barring the
use of American funds for that
purpose. · · . · . '
.
Oni&gt;may question the 'Wisdom
of the methods used in achieving
these goals,• but it \¥OU!d take a
pretty hardhearted congressman to deny that at Je~~t the first
two of them were, and still are,
intrinsically desirable.
As for the .third: Encmuragirig
Israel and/ or Saudi P,rabta· to
give military aid 16 the contrasif that is what-Col: Oliver North
did - was' certainly not illegal.
On the contrarY, · many lawabiding Americans would regard
It as . downright praiseworthy.
After all, Congress Itself later
changed its mind· on the subject
of such aid and authorized a
hundred mllllon dollars' worth.
'
The fact that the non-American
aid was contributed out of a profit
Israel made on arms it bought
from Ihe United States'and resold
to Iran is irrelevant. (the reports
that a Saudi arms dealer "financed" Iran's purchase suggest
that the contras' real benefactor
may have been SaUdi Arabia, but
that too . would not affect the
above analy.sis. 1 .
Bul the admlnistrallon~s critics can be expected to contend
that Israel was merely the
United States' agent In the sale of
arms to Iran. rather .than a
purchaser who later resold. If so,
it can be argued~hat Isreal owed
the United States the entire
amount it received from Iran
rvariously •etimated.at anywhere
from $22 million to. $42 million 1
rather than merely the . $12
million at which the United
States valued the arms on their

The

.

'

By LEE LEONARD
.
UPI Statehouse Reporter
.
· COLUMBUS IUPII - Last week's repo rt that Cleveland Mayor
George V. Voinovich and Coiumbus Mayor Dana G. Rinehart struck a
deal on the next U.S. Senate and governor's races looked like another
In a series of moves to save the job of Republican State Chairman
Mic hae l F. Colley.
But the clu msy attempt to clear I he 1988 Senate race for Volnovich
' -and lhe 1990 governor's field for Rinehart only created more
,- dissension within the already riddled Republican party.
The story was thai Rinehart agreed to back Voinovich for the
•• nomina tion in two years to run aga inst Sen. HowardM. Metzenbaum,
' D-Ohio. In return, Voinovich would support the Columbus mayor for
' governor in 1990.
Colley and Robert E . Hughes, the GOJ;&gt; chairman in populous .
Cuyahoga County, have been busy trying to keep I he party rightside
, up after being hit by a Democratic l idal wave last month.
·
They believe that in the fa ce of scarce funds, expensive primary
, : battles are to be avoided in the future.
.
.
So it was no surprise that Voinovich, who has replaced 'former Gov.
~
~ James A. Rhodes as Hughes' prim e statewide candidate, and
-rt.l
1,_
Rinehart, a Colley favorite. would try to pre-empt I he fi eld in the next
two elections by scratching each other's backs.
That it will not work is no surprise, either.
Two years is too long for •Ill' deal to hold, especially one I hat goes
, public.
·
.
': There are plenty of ot her GOP aspirants for Senate and governor
· who will not stand st ill for s lat e- making at this s tage.
WASHINGTON - The one American administration delib- Aziz replied : " Well , I don't want ,which actually would lead to the
place where t,he Reagan adminis- erately deliyered arms supplies to u~e any names in l)lis respect, neutralization of the Iraqi super-'
·· "Deal or no deal, it makes no difference to me in terms of what I'll
tration's arms deal with Iran has
be doing," said Ohio Senate President Paul E. Gillmor. R-Port
to Iran during the time when It because I have to keep - well, lority in the two fields, and that
Clinton, who finished a respectable second to Rhodes in this year's
created as much. ~nguish and
was .assuring us ·..: and telling us . the minimum of a &lt;jlplomaltc means that the Iranian superiorGOP gubernatorial prim ary and wants to go again in four years.
uproar ~sIt has in Washington is
In official meetings - that it was attitude or' diplomatic dea ling in Ity (In troops) is . going to
Baghdad, the beleaguered cap!·
:
"! tHought the Republican party had learned its Jesson ," he sa id,
taking all possible measures to this respect. But I think the prevail. "
recalling that big county chairmen stacked the dec k in Rhodes's
tal of Iraq, wl\ose. soldler.s are on sto p the flow of military equip- definition is quite clear."
Azlz also ~ejecte~ .~~~ga n's
: fjlvor, perhaps depriving him of the nomination and a reasonable
the rece!V'i ng e nd Of the ment to Iran."
·
Despite the injury the Iraqis contenlton '· Jhat his emissaries
·.chance to defeat Gov. Richard F. Celes te.
American-made · anti-tank and
Aziz met with Shultz on six feel they have suffered, " we were dealing with Iranian "modanlt-alrcraft
miss iles sold to separate occasions dating back haven' t received'" ny apology
Hamilton County Commissioner Robert A. Taft II , who was
erates," saying: "This Is absurd .
their Irania n enemy.
Rhodes's running mate, makes no .s ecret of the fact that he's eyeing
to 1983, and said they both agreed from tiny American official," If they were moderates t·hey
. the goverpor' s spot in 1990, and he 's not likely to shrink from a contest
We originally broke the story of that "the best means to press the Aziz said.
wouldn ' t ask for arms to end the'
. with Rinehart , who ran for treasurer in 1982 and lost.
the administration's ·covert arms ·Jr~ nlans to stop thjs war Is to stop
The Iraqi leader took pains to war. If they asked for medical
; Peelings run even cteeper in thelmpendingSenateflght , which will
dealing with Iran, and Dale Van the flow of arms to Iran ."
explain why Iraq refuses to equipment, for tnstanc~. II they
: begin in less than a year, and which displays the party's urban· rural
Alta traveled to Baghdad for an
accept the justification for the asked for wheat, meat, some
• and conservative-moderate splits.
exclusive interview the other day
The two met most recently on arms deal given by President kind of human assistance - yes,
.; Supporters of Rep. Robert McEwen, R•Ohio, or Hillsboro, have
with Iraq 's foreign minister and Oct. 1, and Shultz still gave no ·Reagan in his Nov. 13speech. He
I could understand there Is some
deputy prime minister, Tared indication that the admlnlstra· particularly challenged Rea · logic
; increased by lea ps and bounds, especially south of Route 40. They are
in that."
, convinced he is the best candidate to oppose Metzenbaum.
Aziz. It was the first time Azlz lion's policy on arms to !ran 'had gan's statement that the wea·
Summing up his country's
; And McEwen has helped them feel that way by raising money for
had ta lked with an American changed, Aziz said.
pons sold to Iran were "defensive grievance, the Iraqi foreign
" legislators and other Republicans in the last few years. He brought
reporter since t he sca ndal
In 1984, Aziz visited Washing- equipment."
minister said: "Providing arms
erupted last month.
;; both Vice President Bush and Jack Kemp to Ohio to assist in those
ton, where he met not only Shultz,
The material included at 'least to improve the military situation
:efforts . Such deeds do not go unnoticed.
Though he was too diplomatic but then·Natlonal Security ~d­ 2,000 TOW anti-tank missiles and
of Iran against us, thl~ls a hostile
.: Voinovirh, on the other hand, wins In Cleveland.but generally does
to use the word "lie," the affable, vlser Robert.McFarlane and ' 'all 235 Hawk anti-aircraft missiles.
what he pleases. not always to the advantage of the party.
English-speaking Azlz made It the group who were involved "The American administration attitude against Iraq which we do
: "He's got som.!' penance to do after he turned us down in '82 "said
clear that he felt he had been later" In the secret arms deals, '·knows v~ry well that Iran has a not deserve by any means .... We
:• state Rep. Robert L. Corbin. R-Daylon, referring to Voin~vlch's
betrayed personally by Secre· Azlz said. There was "tull ' superiority In numbers (of soldi- did not hurt the United States of
;.1 refusal to take on Celeste In the governor's race despit e universal
tary of State George Shultz and agreement" on U.s: efforts to ers); Iraq has a super iority in America. We did not threaten the
. ~ appeal {rom Republicans.
other Americans who had at least stop the sale of arms to Iran. he tanks ,and aircraft," Aziz sa id. interests of the United States of
America. We sympathized with
;: Corbin said the nominations should go to people who have worked to
a good idea of what was going on said.
" So the American administra- · the American people and other
·:·earn the m . "'I'm kind of fed up with Cuyahoga CounJy dictating to us
over the past 18 months.
Asked 'if he considered the tion provid ed the Iranians with people about the agoqy of the
:·what we ought to do," he said.
"It Is clear," he said, "that the American officials to be liars, equipment called defensive, but
hos tages."
: So are a lot of Republicans.

Ollr..lE. .

e ,G\

In-.

Eastern fall athletes honored Saturday evening

r;:======================::;

~ ~pinions of other editors

992-3768

Lan

l;;~~;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;~

' '

.

must face at somE' point In their

NFL resulls

It will be difficult In the next ters that they believe military
few months .to focu s atfention on spending Is already high enough.
problems ot her than the Reagan A similar · majority Is · against
administration's apparent mis- cuts In funds for edqcation, the
conduct In lhe Jranian - environment arid the poor. But
Nicaraguan arms affair. But Mr . Reagan continues to press
there are related aspects of this for expanded military spending
controversy that need to be even If It means reduced , social
considered If we are to under- services and other domestic cuts .
stand how this could have hapFrom the beginning the presl·
pened so soon aft er the Water· dent and his men 'h aveseemed to
gate scanda l.
be more Involved in orchestratOne interesting factor is the ing the press and managing
remarkable personal popularity public opinion that in carefully
of Ronald Reagan In contrast to developing public policies and
the lack of soundness and public managing the government.
approval of his policies.
Reagan's former budge! direcIt has been clear for some time tor, David Stockman, d~scrlbe s ·
Ihat Mr. Reagan 's sl rongest suit with dismay in "The Triumph of
has been his personal popularity. Politics" how top Reagan off!·
. Poll after poll has demonstrated clals broke off Important policy
lha! while majority of Ameri - meetings 'to see how the pres!·
• • Toda'y is Monday, Dec. 8. the 342nd day of 1986 with 23 to follow,
cans have approved of the · dent was being covered In .the
•• The moon is In lis- first quarter.
President personally, 'that same nightly television ney.&gt;s. Stock:: The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
majority does not endorse his man leaves no doubt that the
,• : The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
policies.
keynote. of 'the administration
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagltlarius. They
In the opening years of the firs! has been 'Public relations rather '
• :-; include Ell Whl!ney , Inventor of the colton gln, in 1765; journalist Joel
Reagan administration, the pub- than public policy. . .
, :· Chandler • Harris, author of the "Uncle Remus" stories, In 1848;
lic by a large majority consistThe two most serious . prob• ' General Motors founder William Durant in 1861; Finnish composer
ently favored a freeze -on the lems confronting the Reagan
,, John Sibelius In 1865; Mexican muralist Diego Rivera In 1886·
production, testing and deployare .the·.escalatt., humorist James Thurber In 1894; actors Lee J. Cobb tn 1911, and ment of nuclear weapons. Th¢ · adminls)ratlon
ing ndciear arms race antl the
t Maximlllan Schell in 1930 (age 56); entertainer Sammy Davis :rr: In president just as strongly op- skyrocketing federal deficit.
· .- 1925 (age 6p; comedian Flip Wilson In 1933 (age 5jl; Irish flutist
posed such a freeze.
Those two problems have dram_. James Galway 'in 1939 (age 47), and rock musician Jim Morrison tn
The public has clearly opposed atically worsened during the
~ 1943.
U.S. military involvement in Reagan years. Indeed. It . has
;: On thls date in history:
Central America. One poll indi- seemed as tHough the president's
• In 1886, delegates from 25 unions founded theAmer1jcan Federation
cated that a majority of.Amerl- appetite for more and more
~ of Labor, forerunner of the modern AFL ·CIO, in Cofi1mbus, Ohio. · cans don't know which sideofthe military ,spending Is bo~ndless ·
k In 1941, the United States, Britain and Australia declared war on • Nicaraguan conflict- the Sandi· while his concern over , the
~ Japan .
nlslas or the contras - the mounting federal deficit is usu-.
~· In 1949. the Chinese Nationalist government, defeated by the
administration Is supporting. ally expressed · by attacking the
o.! communlots, retreated from the mainland to the Island of Taiwan.
Yet Mr. Reagan pushes ever Congress or the Democrats.·
: ( In 1980, former Beatie John Lennon w~s shot to death outside his
harder for a reluctant Congress
In his first ter,m Mr. Reagan
;; apartment house in New York City.
·
.
to subsidize the contra forces ih shoWed an lgno~ance of nuclear
Nicaragua.
• · In 1985, the two-week Synod o( Roman Catholic bishops tn Rome
Issues tllat was beYOnd compre&gt; reaffirmed the modernizations begun by Vatican II In 1965.
hension. After two years in office
icas
have
told
pollsMost
Amer
.~ .. ~

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he expressed his belief lhat •tax- Increase bill while he connuclear missiles fired from sub- tinues to submit budgets to the
marines could be recalled if Congress that are $200 billion in
launched by mistake. He offered .t he red?
·
the Russians a series of armsThere is surely more to the
control proposals that were ridic- apparent 1ranlan-Nicaraguan
ulous and certain to be rejected. arms scandal than a popular
As for the expanding national pres ident who has neglected
deficit, how could any other public )l&lt;'ilcy, but I suspect that
result ·have followed th e pres I· "the.arroga nce of popularity" ts
denl"s repeated warning to Con- part of the problem.
· :
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SJNHJ,ECOPY

life ... FEAR. When I first set my
goals to play at Ohio University I
feared that I would em barrass
myself or worst of all embarrass
my parents. but I set out to
conquer that fear ."
"Eac h letter represents
another word in 'fear·, said Gaul.
Gaul noted that "Faith. E nthusiasm. Ambition, and Reinforcement " make u)l the word. Ac·
ceptlng any challenge with these
thin gs in mind will conq uer any
fears, ·l hc young athlete
concluded .
Mr. and Mrs. Don Maxson.
were honored for their dedicated
service to the at hletic program
and booster club.
Advisor Sally Ca ldwe ll presented awards to the J~nlor High
cheerleaders. while Ca rolyn
Tripp honored the vars ll y and

Plttshuq::h 27, Dt•lrolt 17

lndllUiupolls :!M, 1\tlanht :!:i
Miami :u. Nt•M· Orlt'1UIM :.'1
Mlnnt'!oiOta 32. Urt•t•n Hay tJ
St. IAJUL'i 10. l0 hllatMphia 10 fnt• )
( ' hit ·a~~;o IM, Tampu Rlt ,V 11
S;UI Frant·IM'tl 2-t, Nl' ·lt•t!i I()

:-iun Uh•go ~. llou10ton fl
1.:\ Rums t9, llullll'&lt;i 10
Monday'!'! (ianw
J.. A Raldt'I"N a1 St•alllt•. B p.m .

saturdllly, Ot•t·. l:l
PIU!'\hurgh a1 Nl' .Ms,I2::1U(I.m,
M'lL'illlngton at llrn''''r, ~ p.m .

( ' lt•\·t•hmd at ('lndnnlliL I p.m .

'

'

Y·Wash

l'l 'l II .1\;1'0 2119 20~
II :t 0 .iXG l17 2.'U

A(h'!'rll :-i nl.! Fl:i'JH·r.S&lt;•nlal l\'1'. Bra nhnm
Nr'\np;qlr'r Sair '~. 1:1.·' T h i n! AVI'OU(' .

POSTMASTEi t N•n1 l :111111'1-ss c·h:•ngtw.;
In Tlw fbih· ~f' u tlnf'l, 111 Cnut•t SL .
Pnml't 'l~'. Oh.ltl -i:iiti!l.

'

~,.· S\'

St. l.tmls u.l r\"\' lOhmbi. I p.m.

OnP \\' t•f\k .................................. $ 1.1:i

,.

~ ltl I) .'lXG ~.f ;U:i
1\'atlonal ('onft'f('Ot'l'
East
\\' I. 1' 1°1'1 , PF 1',\

Mf' mbrr: l.Jnlt••!l P t'l'~): lntnnatlnnal.
ln l:r ncl [):~ ill · P r ·p:-;~ 1\ ~): of'l a t Inn ;r nd 1hf•
Ohio Nr1npo1 Jl l'l' A ~~ ndatlon. Nallnn:t l
Nt•w York Nr11 Vn rk 10!11 1.

...-,'.

ll~

N.r\'1'101'1\ i\lt FOOT0,\1.1. 1.1•:,\4; l iE
F'

~

The JournaJ-Bulietin, Providence, R.I.
" lf anyone needed further proof that the Mafi a not only exists but
,.: extends Its p~wer across the whole count ry, the conviction of eight
;.. members of t)s ruling "commission" In a New York federal court
~ ought to provitle the specifics.
,.. More to the point , Ihis convict!o~ of "commission" members fo~
:; racketeering, murders a~d extort tOn caps a series of prosecutions
.. that oughl to senously, dtminish the abil it y of the .Mafia. to control
•• criminal "familles" .in most oft he larger U.S. cities.
This time, the feds have bagged the big bosses, some of the most
1;
:; powerful ,a nd mos t ruthless figures in the whole Cpsa Nostra complex
'i t!tat, one way or another. has a hand m racketeering acllvitles from
: coast to coast.
.
;: THe greatest consequence of their conviction Is that, with the older
., leaders sidelined by long prison terms , younger Mafia members will
,. be less able. perhaps less ruthless, and moce vulnerable to
,. prosecution .

We Sell Lincoln
Welders, Vedor
Cutting and
· Welding
Equipment, Jackson
Helmets and Safety ·
Equipment

a

Arrogance of popu)~ity____Ge_or.:::_ge_M_cG-=-ov.:...=.er:..:.:...ri

~

TWIN CITY MACHINE
&amp; WELDING

Eagle girls pOSt two wins

U.s•betrayed minister_·_la_ck_And_e_rso_n_de&amp;_iver__,D-=~t-=-~r-~..::.:.~an.:...::A:..:.:t:.:.:ta:.._

•'·

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3 .

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

~tmdu .v,

llt't'. II

8uffu.Ju 111 lndhtniiJIIIIb,. I p. m.

l0r4•t•n Ray ul T1tn1pa &amp;)', 1 p.m.
Nt•w Orlt•anH W i\llan111, 1 p.m.
l,hll:ult•lphla a1 lla111L'i 1 I p.m.
S:.ln Fnnd!'it'tllll N1•w Enghm'd, I
p.lll.
Kunsu.o.; ( ' It)' ut l.i\ Kuldt•n~, ~

p.m.
1\Uaml 1M J.A Rum ~&lt;~ • .f p.m.
1\linnesotu ut IJouHion. ~p. m.
Sfoattlt• al Sari Di&lt;'KQ. ~p . m . .
Monday, Det·. 1!1
Chlt' ugo 111. Del troll, 9 p.m.

You're Invited
To Our FREE·
•

TAX

SEMINAR'
WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1Oth
7 P.M. til 10 P.M.
MEIGS HIGH SCHOOL CAFETERIA
RALPH DICKSON &amp; COMPANY
CERTIFIED PUBLIC ACCOUNTS FROM COLUMBUS
Raiph Dickson &amp;Co. have condu,ed seminars for business and professional
people, businesses, hospitals and personal. They will be prepared to answer
specific questions -:- Plan now to attend.
PLEASE CALL FOR RESERVATIONS
BY TUESDAY

PRI(jE
D.:lll\' .....

.. .. ., ..... ... 2~

Ct•m~

'!oitJbse' rit)('rs nnl dPSirlng 1n pa y 1hrcur-

•••

l'if'r ma v rf"m!r In adv an('(&gt; dlrC'{'I to
Thl' Da ilv S!'ntln l'l on u 3. ~o r 12 month
t&gt;:~sK CI:C'cllt will bt'~lvrn carrlff£'a!'h
Wl'f&gt;k.

No su bseripllons by motll pt:&gt;rmlltrd in
urn1s wht'fl' homt• C'lU'riC'r SC'fVi('(' Is
tl \• ail&lt;~bl!'.
'
·

Mail SuMt~rlptlon!'l
lnMkh! M e l~ Co11nty
1:1 Wet' k ~ ... ,............. ,............... . ,,17.29
26 1J\' C'{'lkS.................... '" .. ,....... . $.1~ . 0ti

"I'm not so sure we 're not living a John
Le Carre novel.... "
·

52 WC'C'ks ....................... .. ......... $66.56
Outf'lldc M«!lp County

)3 \\'f't:'k.S .................................. $18.20
26 \\'f'!;'kS , .. ,, .. ., .... " ..... ,.. ,. .• .,, .. , , $3~. 10
52 Wt•i;&gt;ks ...................... , ........... M7.60

JOHN A. WADE, .M.D. Inc.
VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAl
GENERAL ALLERGIST
\\WE HAVE HEARINS AID$"
CALL (614) 992·2l 04
675-12

.

Fo
.
~ ~·

Farnters
Bank
.

•:raw
•• ·. _Established tn 1904'

'

Pomeroy, Ohio

'

�Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

re$1dence.
Born July,15, 1917, at Gahanna.
_ Lucy Ann11 McKinney,, · 72, son of the late Guy and Garnet
- Middleport. died Saturday In Denney McMillin, he was a
• Veterans Memorial Hospital, · retired construction worker and
: · Bor-n Mar~h 28, 1914. In Pliny, a World War II Army Air Force
: :W.Va .. she was the daughter of. veteran. l_le was a member of
·the late Clarkston and Mary Vinton American Legion Post 161
:chapman Adkins. - and Vinton Masonic Lodge 131,
· She was a member of the and attended Pine Grove MethoUnited Bretheren . Church of dist Church.
Broadway.
Surviving are his wife, Alma
Surviving are her husband,
. ·;Burwell S, "Bud" McKinney; Gooch McMillin, whom he ·mar·
: three sons and daughters-In-law, rled on April 3, 1946, at Rio
.Mr. and Mrs . Samuei E . McKin- Grande; three sons, John R. ·
: :hey Sr., Mason, W.Va., Mr. and McMillin of Eureka Star Rou te,
·: ~rs. William M. McKinney, and Charles G. McMillin and
; Middleport, and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph D. McMillin, both of Rt. 1,
· Darrell L . McKinney, Frederick- Vinton; four grandchildren; and
: {own, Ohio; one daughter and a sister, Verna Chamberlain of
· son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Vinton.
Batey, Middleport. one daugh~
Services wUl be 1 p.m. Tuesday
ter, Shirley A. Tyree, Middle-In
McCoy-Moore funeral Home,
port; 21 grandchildren and 18
Vinton, with the Rev. C.J. Lem· • great -grandchildren. · ·
She was preceded in death by ley . officiating~ .Burial will be In
Vinton Memorial Park. Friends
lour sisters and five brothers.
may
call at the funeral home
Funeral services w111 be at 1
from
2·4
and 7-9 p.m. today.
• p.m. Tuesday In Foglesong Fun' eral Home. Mason, with Pastor
The flag will be presented at
AI Hartson officiating. Burial
will follow In Sun crest Cemetery, the graveslte by Vinton AmeriPoint Pleasant. Friends may call can Legion Post 161. Masonic
at the funeral home from 2-4 and · services by Vinton Masonic
Lodge 131 will be held at 7:30
7-9 p.m. today.
tonight in the funeral hqme.
Dale McMillin
Pallbearers w111 be Harry
Smathers, Mark Mohr, Bill RaDale McMillin, 69, Rt. 1. tliff, Eric and Anthony Mulho: Yin ton. died early Sunday at his land and Larry Smith.

EMS units answer 11 calls
Meigs Col\lftY Emergency Pomeroy Squads -1 and 4 at 11:32
Medical Services reports 11 calls a.m. transported Gayle Mullen
over the weekend, with ten of and Gayle Hill fro.m an auto
those calls on Saturday.
accident at the intersection of
On Saturday. at . 1:53 a.m., Ohio 7 and Union Avenue · to
· Pomeroy to 1728 Chester Road Holzer Medical Center; Letha
i&gt;ror Mary Pickens who was Cotterill was transported !rom
treated but not transported; the same accident to Veterans
Syracuse at 2:04 a.m. to 1728 Memorial Hospital; Middleport
·Chester Road for Mary Pickens at 12:15 p.m. to 85 S. Fourth Ave.
to Veterans Memorial Hospital; lor Lucy McKinney to Veter~ns
•.Pomeroy Squad 1 at 6:46 a.m. Memorial Hospital; Tuppers
was called to 109 Ebenezer St. for Plains at 4:28 p.m. to Ohio 681 for
Jennings Wayland to Veterans Edith O'Dell to Veterans Memor·
· Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy tal Hospital; Racine Squads 24
: Squad 4 at 7:05a.m. was called to and 28 were called at 7:51p.m. to
· assist Pomeroy 1; Middleport at an auto accident on Ohio 124. but
8: 46 a.m. to.307 Stonewood Apts. no transports were made.
-for Irene Christy to Veterans
On Sunday at 9:20p.m., MidMemorial Hospital;
dleport
was called to Riverside
Racine at 11:17 a.m. to 48470
Scout Camp Road lor·Bud Darst
Apartments
for Tina Hendricks
Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
r? to to Holzer Medical Center: to

East~rn:: · _· contin:~fr~mpage 3

Center honors legendary perf()rmers

Area deaths
Lucy A. McKinney ·

.- ·~~~!~~~b8~,~~~8~,!19~8~6~--------------------------!P~o~~~r~o!y:!M~id~d~le~po~rt,~-O~h~i!o--------~--------~~----~Th~-~e~D~a~ily~Sen~ti~M~I:!P8!ge~:!5

Monday, December 8.1986

By KATE CALLEN
WASHINGTON (UP!) - The
queen of TV comedy and ihe king
of soul were saluteil along with
four other American eni('rtalners Sunday at a Kennedy Center
gala bursting with music and
memories.
Comedlan Lucille Ball, singer
Ray Charles and the .other 1986
recipients of the Kennedy Center
Honors basked· in an even(ng of
·accolades from t)lelr colleagues
,before a YIP-audience including
PreSident and Mrs. Reagan.
Ball, Charles, violinist Yehudi
Mehuhln, choreographer Antpny

Tudor and the acting d\JO of series which earned her four
Hume Cronyn and Jessica Tandy Emmys.
r~elved their lifetime achieve-Looking back at the show 's
ment awards -from Reagan at a runaway success, Walter Matspecial White House ceremony thau recalled that, "'MoreAmeriearlier In the day.
cans tuned in to watch Little
The star-studded show, to' be Ricky being born than saw
aired Dec. 26 by CBS. featured a , President Eisenhower's inaugusing-along led by Stevie Wonder .ration. They liked Ike. bul they
and a rollicking jam session by a loved Lucy."
·
street-corner \)rass band o.ut of
Perhaps the evening's most
New York City.
.
· ·.poignant tribute was a passage
Ball, 75, swathed m a black written ' by Desl Arliaz, Ball' s
gowliglitterlngwithlargerhlnes- ·
·
.
•
tones, laughed along . with !he
audience at vintage scenes from
·
•
"I Love Lucy,"_the long-running
CLEVELAND tUPil - The
l . winning numbers drawn saturday night in the Ohio Lottery
produced two _winning tickets
holding a· slake in a -jackpot of
more than $1 million.
Because of a fire In June; City
The numbers 2,11, 26, 38,39 and
City Loan Bank's Pomeroy
Loan
Bank's
Pomeroy
office
is
40
were drawn for a total prize
office Is scheduled to relocate In
March to 236 E. Main St., In temporarily located at UG E. payout oi $2,092,.974. The two
grand prize winners will share a
renovated quarters, o.ne block Main St.
"The siZe of our ·permanent $1,204;742 kitty.
above its previous location at 125
Lottery officials report there
E. Main St., the company an- location at.236 E. Main. when
complete, will be approximately were also 289 players wfto ·chose
nounced today.
2,400 squarE!' feet. That'S slightly five of the six winning numbers
larger than our form,~! location," tor $843, arid 13,715 selected four
said Branch Manager Bob of the six winners to win $47.
More than $3.2 was wagered.
Miller. "The additional space
w.lll better accommodate ou r Lottery officials estimate next
The drivers of both cars and a customers who have continued to Saturday's jackpot at $!million. ·
passenger of one were treated bear with tis during an of the
and released from local hospitals movihg."
·
Saturday afternoon for Injuries
City Loan Bank, a subsidiary of
sustained from an accident at the Commercial Credit Co., operates ·
lnterseclion qf Ohio 7 and 'Unlon 81 branch offices throughout
Avenue.
Ohio. City Loim,offers a full line
Letha Cotterill, 571 Pomeroy, of flnancjal services and loan
who was treated by Veterans products .
Memorial Hospital , was south· r:=========~~~
· bound on 7 around·11:35 a.m. and
slowed to make a left turn onto
Union Avenue, according to the
Gailia-Meigs Post of \he Ohio
Highway Patrol.
Gayla Hill, 23, Gallipolis, was
Denied the benEfits you de-trailing Cotterill's vehicle and
serve? ' Call ~ lawyer with
was unable to stop in time,
experience In handling Social
striking CotterUI's vehicle. lfill
Security cases. No att~
and a passenger lnhercar,Gayle
fee unless your claim Is
Mullen, 73, 536 ' Jackson · Pike,
approved . Free Initial
were treated by Holzer Medical
,.
COnsultation.
Center. Gallipolis. Hill was
•··
treated and released contusions
Court' St., Gallipolis
to the right leg and chest
abrasions. Mullen was admitted
1\ ·
ior a broken right knee and Is In
stable condition.
Hlil ,"!_aS ciled (or. failure to
11:00 A.M..4:00 P.M.
mainta in an assured, clear dis·
Mondays thru Saturda~

2 tickets net prize

.
. Loan pIaDS reIOCatmg
Ctty

. eroy office m·_.March.
Porn

Accic:lent injures 3

former husband and long-timc
co-star, who dl ed·iast week from
lung cancer. Actor Robert Stack
read aloud an excerpt from
Arnaz's memoirs that ''Lucy was
the show. Vlv IVance l. Fred
(William Frawley I· and I were
just props.... P.S. 'I Love Lucy'
was never just a title. "'
-

OSCAR'S
RESTAURANJ ,
NOW SfDVES.
LUNCH

Durst, "Guts and Glory;. and

ll

ill

SYRACUSE OHIO

271 N. 2nd, Mltklleport
992-5766
OPEN: Mon.-Fri. a·am-9 pm-Sat. ·8 -6
Walk -ins Wtil.come'
,

UR PIEiCING, MANICURING, PEIMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS
Debbie · Meidowa-Owner:. Imojeen Blevins
Loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
· Merri Amsbery

Beeler and David Adams.

Bengals 31, -PatriOts 7 · ·
Browns 21, Bills 17
49ers 24, Jets 10
At Foxbofb, _1\ta'ss:, . James
At Orchard Park 1 N.Y., Kevin
At San Francisco, Roger Craig
Brooks · rush~·' lot '163'. yards, · Mack rl!n lor two touchdowns to rushed for two touchdowns and
including a ,56;yard, ~o4chdown, power Cleveland over Buffalo, San Francisco's defense limited
and totaled 101 yards rec!!lvingto _ 4-10. Mack, who rushed lor ~5 New York to 199 yards of offense
help &lt;:;incinna!l, amass, a team- yards on 16 carries before to spark the 49ers. New York lost
record 573 yards or offense. a,nd leaving In .the second half with a its third straight after a nine-. end New England's.seven-game , shoul(jer Injury, scored. both of game winning streak.
·
. · winning streak. :rbe Patriots his touchdowns from 1 yard out.
·- were held ,to !~ss ·thap_20 pol11ts
. Rams 29, Cowboys 10
Vikings 32, Packers 6
: lor the first time this· season.
At Lo~ Angeles, LeRoy Irvin
At
Green
Bay, Wis., Tommy
"This was an important vic- returned an lntercepHon 50 yards
tory for us, both from · a: , fo.r a ,touchdown, and the Los ~ramer. returning after missing
: - confldence-buil,dlng standpolm Angeles Rams pushed Dallas to t~o 'weeks with a thumb Injury,
and a character-building stand- the brink' of playoff elimination threw a 7-yard touchdown pass to
point," Bengals linebacker Reg- for only the third time since 1966. Anthony Carter and Minnesota
: :gle Williams satd: "Most lrilPI\'r-" Dallas Coach Tom "Lanary re- converted three fumble recover: tant was setting \he stage for t,he· ;• ~c'elyed _a,· series of telephone . les and a blocked punt Into
-- -very Important. clill)a\'llc clash threats and wore a bullet-proof touchdowns against Green Bay,
: against the Cleveland Browns on. vest oil -the sideline, late In the 3-11.
- ~.home turf.''t
·•. ~ ··
. · ,.
·
•

J

..,.,t, &amp; !;rays. , ~
HUBBARDS
m
GREENHOUSE . !

!

-ill

MlkP Hoffman , Wes Holter, Dan Lantz .

Robinson. Arlene R!tchlto; Tonya Savoy ,
Lesa Rucker, Mt&gt;lanle Mankin , Tr lsha
Spi&gt;ncer'. Amy Conn oll y. Am:v Berkhlm('r,

I

Open Daily t to s. l,;niloyl to ·s ll
PH. 992 -8778
;a

·lllil~lllillllillllillllillllii~!Oil--

FREE E~UCAnONAL
SEMINAR PLEASANT
VALLEY HOSPITAL

.

PVH CAFETERIA/
DINiNG ROOM ·
"SPECIAL CONSIDERAnONS:
CLOTHING, SHOES AND
SPECIAL EQUIPMENT"

The seminar will be conducted
. ~Y Ralph Dickson and Co., a
certified public accounting firm
of Columbus. The rlrm's tax
specialists have conducted sim·Uar . seminars lor various bus I·

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Rain tonight with a low in the
·· mid 40s.
Rain Tuesday with a high near

ness and professional organizations. medical organizat!Qns anc:t
public organizations across the
State of Ohio.
The seminar will provide Information on how the individual can
prepare his finances . for the
sweeping tax reform since the
new tax reform bill will have a
significant Impact on the ability
of the Individual to maximize his
Income potential.
At the close of the seminar,
there will be a question and
an~wer sess_
ion.

Veterans Memorial

50.

• The probability of precipitation Is near 100 percent through
Tuesday.
Winds will be from the south at
five to 10 miles an hour ton ight.
- Ohio Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Chance of snow In the north
Wednesday. Fair Thursday with
a chance of snow Friday. Highs
will be In the 30s. Lows will be in
the 20s.

Saturday Admissions - Mary
Pickens, Pomeroy; Irene
Christy. Middleport; Edith
O'Dell, Reedsville; Leondus Lee,
Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges "" Mag·
gte Caruthers, Roy,Stone, Edna
Leach.
Sunday Admissions- William
Smith , Reedsville.
Sunday Discharges - Judy
Tyree.

-·
The · :Oaily ,Sentinel

z:r:

TUESDAY,

8-13 tin

GENERAL REPAIR ·
REMODELING
INTERIOR PAINTING EXTERIOR

BANKS CONSTRUCTION CO.
317 N. Stcoild

'\ ~

COMMERCIAL - RESIDENTIAL
-'-fREE ESTIMATES-

PHONE (6141 992-5009
SPECIAliZING IN IVIN~W l DOOR. REPlACEMENT
mo .

Otpt.
Ul Court St., POIIIC fOJ, Dhio C5769

10' MESH ANTENNA
PANASONIC RECEIVER

d

Public ~ot)~e.

Public Notice -

It Pays
To Advertise ·

NOTICE TO ·IIIDDERS
Subject: Purchaoe o.l "'ton
'four Wheel Drive Truck

For&gt; The Board of ''lhe
Southern .Local Scho&lt;il Die·

_ trict, Box 171, Racine, Ohio
... 46771 .

CALL

•• Sealed proposato will be
•' received by the -Boorjl of
1
'
Educ1tion of"-ihlll 'So'Oihern

992-2156

;• Loc•l School District. of

,.

'·.

' l

.·.' 2

.

'

In Memoriam

.

·Public
,,
'Notice

Racine, Ohio at the.TNiiur-

FULlY REMOTE &amp; INSTAllED

Business

Ha~lOn

Southeasern
Business College
629 Jackson Pike - Suite 312
Gallipolis, Ohio 46631

•

Please send me more information on Southeastern Bueinell College.
Name1----------------------------------

the office otthe Treeaurer.
Recine. Ohio.~"' t ·¥ '"
The aoarq, ~:u

11211 . 8. 16; ~tc

Phone *·- --

WANT ADS bring

OF FIDUCIAllY
"On November 25, 1981.

I·
I
*

CARPENTER
SERVICE
..-Addont •nd rtmodeting
.l...ftooflne tnd QUtter work

. .

..
'.

TIE ADtl.T EllOO\TJ(tl CEHib
Tri-tountr Vocatlonal School
Rt.I,St.Rt.691
''
Nt ltonv I I h ,, OK 45764
&lt;614) 753-3511 1 txt. 25

•

r

'

:

r

RANGE

30' ELECTRIC

ONLY $299 95

.:;::::::;:;:::;:::;;:;:;:::;;::::;::;:,

.

1181 WINTER QIMRTER BE81NS JNU\RY S, 1987

.

Host clann art .htld frOtt 3100 li••• to 9!30 p ·•· &lt;•·xctpt
Hurting Aui~tant and Dlv•rslfl•d Htdical Occupationt - 9100
a.m. - 3130 p.m.) All classtl mttt Hondar through Thuradar

I
8

319 95 .
-2H.oo Rebate·

$29995

TDDAY'S JOBS REIIUIRE SKJLLS- tkllh Mhich rou can acquirt ·
through our adult vocational progr•t. Our insti\Uc.tion
tmphaaizts a hands-on approach to ltarning Mi\h aost of rour
c-hnrocn timt sptnt in laboratlli'y or actual Job stttings. Tht
progr• art all nlnt •onth in ltngth (txctpt Carptntrr - 12
raonths, Cotllttologr - 18 •ontht, and Nursing A(thhnt - 18
IOittks&gt; 1 and clatsn mttt Honday through Thurtday. Cot~ae·tologr,
Nursi'ng Assistant and Dlvtrsifitd Htdical Occupations not optn
Wi nhr Quarttr.

"

II
[B

.

RB181BER1 AT THE Aotl.T EDUCATIO. CENTER, WE
AND YOUR FUTURE,
-

~

TELEVISiON

'NOW .

ONLY

$7995

vc• ·tA;Es

OILY $2 99
·•
GOLDS'AI

, MICROWAVE

$1·09 95

MGM

FARM CITY INC.
POMEROY

. ":. AjMliT YI&gt;U

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE

~

progr~n~s.

MAINTENANCE

~

.

ONLY

25(

EACH

USES FOI ALUMINUM SHEETS-RANGE

DIVERSIFIED ['+),!===MACHINE '
-.l..~~
TRA~
"''''V"'ATIONS
•. 1

•

l

.

. FROM ROOFING DO$ HOUSES TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAM' SHA~ES.

·-..:;;:

State,_ __l,Z!p_ _

CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT Til
-·• D.lllY. SENTI,.L Ttl' 3 P.A- ·

-

(

·•
r

-1
I

"'

work

(Free Ettlmateo)

•Water W~ll Orilling ,
•Trucking

V. C. YOUNG IR

Call: l42·2A07

tt-28-86-1 mo.

109 MUlBERRY AVE.

•New Roofing

POMEROY, OH. -

"FlEE ESTIMAtES"

JAMES KEESEE
PH.
2

PH. 992-9949

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAIR

Announcem enls
.'

Bob Burloo, Dwnor
11-28-86~ 1

3

· Truck, auto, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding.
!All •makes &amp; models)

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

BOGGS -

: IUSIIISS PHONE
(614) 992-6550
llSIIINCE PHONE
(614) "''·" "

Aulhoriud Jcltn Dttro,
Now Hollanil, lush Hog

POMEROY,O.
. 992-2259
NI.W umNG-POMEROYNice I\l story home wrth vinyl
sidin&amp; t-3 bedrooms. partial
basenH!I1\ and equippro
k!chen. Just $10,0011.00.
SYRACUSE - Colonial ranch.
1728 sq. It, cenlral Ioyer.spac~us krtchen, country family
room(raised hearth fireplace,
4 bedrooms, laundry mud
rootit. ample closets, and a 2
car garage. $49,900.00.
'

.

BAUI SUB DIVISION Approx 5 yrs. old, 3-4 bedrooms with 2 baths, deck,
palio and garage. Split Ioyer
desig~ all io good contlition .
Natural gas' forced air heat
and ·central air.· Nice lot.
$59,900.00.
RUSTIC HillS - SYRACUSE- Nice ranch with colonial porch, large living
room. with lireplace, 3 bedrooms. 1\l car garage, patio,
central air, and a large lot.
IINERSVILLE AREA - 6
room home 0n a ,nice lot 3 ·
bedrooms. basement. nice
woodwork wrth 2 fireplaces.
Carpeting and maJ!Y other lealures. Asking $24,900.00.

Far111 E~tllt•••t
/ Part1 &amp; Serwlee

1-3-'86 tic .

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985·3561

Roger Hysell
Garage

All Maku

.

SEFIVIC~E

REPAIR

Alto TraJ~Itlo•

J.R.'s REPAIRS

PH. 992~5682
or 992-7121

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
lnstalation
Service

6-17-tlc

D&amp;P
APPLIANCE
'
REPAIR

Electronic Organs
Mobile sesvice

614·843-5248
lfASONAilE - RfUAilf
8-20-'86 tfn

7 Years
Maintenance
Experience
Work
Guaranteed

· · DEN.NY CONGO
WILL HAUL
614-446-7126
JUST CALL!
992-3410
LIMESTONE
•VJJYl siDIIG
*ALUMINUM SIDING
'BlOWN II

GRAVEL - SAND
TOP SOIL .

. INSULAnDN

BISSRL
SIDING CO•

OIIice ................ "2-ZZit

New llamts luNt

FILL DIRT

."FrH Eatimet•''

PH. '"9·210 I
or :949·2160
No Sunday C11l1

t-.;..,.,..,,.,..----~J~----'·

·j

12 Gouge Shotg11ts Only
.
10-8-tfn

WE ARE YOUR SAlES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
*SYLVANIA

•Rengea

PARTS end

Factory Chcko

•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATnUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

•Refriger1tors
•Dryers •Freez:••

AUTO &amp; TRUCK

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

•ZENITH

•Walhers •Die"washerl

Rt. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

llfi!JY E. Cltltncl, Jr.
tiZ-Iltl
.1t1n Trumll ..... 14,..21111

Dattil Tt1111tr ..... "2·St2 ,-

(CUT OUT fOI FUTUI£ USE)

Farm fltuipmont
Doaltr

T..~.IIIII
. "tlfy
RIDENOUR
TV I APPLIANCE

beginning at 1:00 p.m. Factory
Choke, 12 guage shotguns . ~

Taking orders for Christmn.
Colonial style doll cradles end
Deacon style toy chnt, made
sturdy. 614·992-3362.

Ahention former Avon Repr&amp;sentativesl Return home to
Avon . No shipping charge. Call
.6t4-992 -7t80.

4/1/lfn

FOR SALE

CHRISTMAS
TREES

,.

0~~0
JACK'S SEPTIC

To the penon who stole my

40625 St. Rt. 681
· Pomeroy, Ohio
U HOUR SERVI!:F.

No hunting or trespassing,
Mynes Farm located C~utnut
Ridge Road .

614/992·7119

4

Walker Coon Hound from Racine

and tookhertolangsville. please

call me end hava a linle chat/ Call
614-949-2171 ,

W. VA: Residents
Call Collect
11·4-86-t mo .

r--------1
.. ...,_.,. . , ,.,. J

1;

.,

BISSELL
BUILDERS

,.

Giveaway

Long hair female dog 11 mo ()ld.
Half St. Bernard ,and 'It Dash
Hound very gentle to a good

home. Ph. 8!4-446-4666

Tot good home a female Betgle
mixed dog, A female Collie

mht.ci dog Ph . 814, 446 -7862 .
3 kittent, 1 mother cat, 2 male~,
1 female. Only to a good home if

· CUSTOM IUILT
HOMfS &amp; GARAGES

intertl1ed C.ll814-4466 -0120

"At Reasonable Prius"

Keeshond Dog to give to gOod
home. 40 lba ., been spaved .

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night

NO SUNDAY ·CALLS
4-16 -'86 tin

N~i with

992-7t94.

children. Call 81.t-

Pan Retrl811ar puppies to give
owey . 614-742-2320.
M ixed Beagle pups, 3 malu, 1

female. 614-742 -3143 .
7 week old half German Shepherd puppies. 304· 675· 7966 .

RADIATOR

SERVICE

We can repair and r9'core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and Fod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992 -2196
Middleport,
1 -1

Good u•od toy• to low income
families , call 304-675·8389•for
more information.

2 vel)ow kittens ready for
Christmas, 304-676 -6464 or

304-882 -2614 .

6 Lost and Found
LOST:
Gray Schnauur In
vicinity ot State St . &amp; Hedgewood Ph . 614-448-2106:

LOST one 1mall btack femtle
kitten. long hair, near Beale
School. child 's pet, REWARD,

304-e75-6504 .

=::--:-- - - DONE

CIRCLE
"'H"

AUTO

24, Hour Wrecker Service
' ' &amp; Repar.
Full StrvKt
35 809 Titus Raad
Middleport, Ohio
Ph. 742-2592

.-zoli'h21:. .

~

•AUTOS •UGHT TRUCKS

TAGGING NOW

LOST pair dogs, black German
Shepherds. wearing red colltrs. ,
Reward ! 304-468- 1098.

9

Wanted To Buy ;

We pay cash for late model clean
used cars.
.
,
Jim Mink Chev .· Oids lne.
Bill Gene John son
614 -446-3672
TOP CASH pa id for '83 model
and newer used cars . Sml.h
Buielc-Pontiac. 1911 East•n
Ave.. Gallipolis. Call 614·446 -

2282 .

Used Mobile Homes Ph 61 1 ~ -

446-0 t76.

Prt·cut tnes available
Located on
Flatwoods Rd. (Co.
Rd 28) at Harley
Haning reoidence. 2
MI. from Five Points
Watch for
-~-·~

Taking orders for homeniade
and cookin 614 ·992 ·
6019 alter 6:00p .m.

candy

,..

Sh~

CIIESTER-915-3307

Announcement~

Racine Gun Club. Every Sundav.

John II. Bentz
Owner /Mechanic

Wa HsvJ A Full Tl•

-

Buying daily gold, silver coins,
ri ngs. jewelry, sterl ing ware. old
coins. large curroncy. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Sho'o
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 61~ :

982 -3475.

.-

•

W1nted to buy. Stlndlngtimber.
CsU 614·742·2328.
~

l&amp;W ClfANNG
' CARPO
UPHOLSTERY
PLus ·

446·6323 Doy or btnifllt
"'· 11·11·111

LIMESTONE
-. HAULED

Window - Wood - Paper
Plastic -Truck
Silk Screening
Boel ~ettering -·Realty

rrnpllllll!i'lll
Sfir'JI,;p~

Jackets - T-sh iris
JERRY'S~

TROMM
EXCAYAnNG
742·2328
11-7-86-1 mo.

' 3/tl~tfn_

mci.

Racine Gun Shcot sponsortit by

PH. 949·2893
or 949-2756

Bashan Building

SALES &amp; SERVICE

U. S. IT. SO EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

...

Pomeror, -:--.-;, .••

RACINE
. FIRE DEPT.

Ntw
168 N.rlh Stcond
Middleport, Olio 45760

sAus &amp; SEIYICE
E.Miin

"'

GUN SHOOT

PLUMBING I

We Carry Fishing lupplin

Real Estate General

.992-6215 or 992-7314

Knlvea
Chiula ·

12, 5-'86-1 ....

BEECH GROVE ROAD - Approx. 2 acres with a3bedroom,
I\\ story home. Equip pro
k!chen, outbuid1ng, and dioing room. $26,~.00.

SIZE 23X30X007 ·

Tri-cout, Yac:atlooal Sc•ool dots 101 ~itcrillilllt ia tttud to
r~et, crtttl, cal.-_
, aatiooal arigi1 1 111 w hMica,.

INDUSTRIAL

$2§995

SWEEPERS

•

r

.

H00¥11

Call, Mritt or stop in for furthtr inforra~tion - about our ·

2a:

GE t9"

SEIYICE

Circular Saws
Saw Chain
· Planer K~ive•
Drill Bits

PH. 992-2975

'

VCI

1

Btsidts dtvtloplng rour Job ikllls," our ctnttr offtrt rou tht
opportunity to brush q~ on rour Job lttking s~ils by dtvtlop\ng
your rts._t, thinking through answers to _inttrvi~ qutstions and
othtr activltits. Additionally, rou mar rtgisttr Mith·our
Plactlltnt Coordinator for Jab ltadt In rour skill aria.

1&amp;.

~E

4-Event 14-Day Ti!i\er

F' inancial aid andlbr tuition tubtidr is avaihbl-i frcn a varitb
of ·1 ourct11 Ptll Grint, VA, Guarantnd Studtnt Loan, Singh
Partnt/Hcn•aktr Grant and J.T.P.A. &lt;Camunitr Acti~J!~ Agtnclu).

G

1

:!~~4~M;:isc;::.;M~e~r~ch~a~n~d;is~e

- Plumbing and alectrical

•Water 6: Gas Lines

Ponitroy, Ohio

64 Misc. Merchandiee

HOTPOIIT

SHARPENING

. 204 Condor St.

Ad-

Kitty Moy Lowe, dacoooad.
lata of Pomeroy, Ohio."
Robert E. Buck
·
Probata Judge
Lena 11-- Ne11elrood. Clerk
(1 21 ·1. 8: 1 6; 3tc

eyes
sn·
The lace we keep in me''
mary.
• And God will link the bro•
ken chain ·
Still closer. when we meet
apin.
'
Sadly missed by Mommy,
Daddy, Chris, Gramps,
I
Connie and Family

YOU!

HTI

i

Wit opPo~

' .,)&lt;- Concrete wori

•Buemento
•Sewego Systems

.. GUVELY
TIACIOI SALES .

miniatr•tor of the eitlte of

-llltlh

~.

.Yaeation
- u
....,.Ri,-

In the Molgo County Probete
c·ourt. Cata No. · 211335,
Dovid E. Jenklna, 38 lludoon Street, ·Mi~fi!Jrt. DH

48780

•Storm Doors
•Storm Windows

TANK SERVICE

YOUNG'S

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

cencel1nd

E)

.,

~ in

lano K. Nelltlroed,

Address-------'----------------City ---~-----,----

PH. 992·6173

SpecifiCitiont 1nd in-

.·•...
' -ndac..,.,..,
..... ,""".... ~ ...1;~&lt;""

Taking Appllcatlotts lllow

rCLERK TYPIST
•MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
•ACCOUNTING, and more
Eligible for the Training of Veterans
FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE

Rd.

CARPETMiddleport,
OUTLET
.
OH.

structions to bidders on file

FoJOTII:E::."·~.;
OF APPOINTMENT

RUN·
ASHLAND '

SUGAR

•lnsul atlon

11·19·86-1 mo.

NO DOWN PAYMENT
.

LARRY~S

according 'to 'tlpeclflqiliona
of 11id Board Of Education .

'

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

PER MONTH WITH

Ton Four Wheel Drive Truck,

'

VINYL &amp;
AlUMINUM SIDING

$4800

or' t office until 1·2:00 Noon
o~ December 19. 1988 end
at, that limo Opllllod by the
1'"aourer of •ollid' boa'rd ao
provided by lew .( 1.) Now 3A

Public Nqtice

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS'

J&amp;L BLOWN
.INSUL-ATION

Middleport, Ohia

DECEMBER 9, 1986

7:30 P.M.

,

•Rep! ace ,-.ant Windows

BUILDING

. ...Exc8VIItlng ................

DON'T WAR - INTO THESE
JOB IIAINING PIOGIAMS

IIIEW CLASSES STAmNG EVElY 12 WEEKS 1111:

.

•All Type1 of

OUT OF A JOB?

(614) 446-4367

Licensed Clilical Audiologist

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

.
PHONE
992-2156
Write Daillv s.m•tl CUnifit4

I'• _·,.

Or

r~ta~n~
c~e-~B~o~t~h~c~ar=s~w~e~r~e_d_a_m_a_g_ed_j~=:::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~:::::::::::=::====:!:::::
heavll~.
trodpers said

WHY1

Come by or Call

-aZ: Swim Molds - lnteiJiretilll SeNices ·

j:i LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

Tax refonn seminar slated
The Farmer Bank Is sponsoring' a tax reform seminar at 7
· p.m. Wednesday In the Meigs
. High School Cafeteria.

FREE HEARING TESTS WEDNESDA'IS
CJ Coq~uterized H•ri~ Air Selection

'';

I'

, Services·

t;==:::;::=:;::;:J::;::::::::::::r;;;;;=::~;n~~~===::;;~

Giants. ;.·___co_n_ti_nu_ed__fr_o_m_p_a_ge_3_____~-----'-------.--------------

I NO* 'OPEN FOR THE !
I CHRISTMAS SEASON 1
B
TrHI, live &amp; Cut ~
g Piin~
Clwl'stmoi TrMl). Foil• Plants,
Gran

ADVISOR - Carolyn Tripp; Captain· Deb·

Kirk Flck, Tom Parker, Jeff
Roush, Rex · Justis, and Doug

lfi-ll:!illllil·----~--,

!
!

''frlsha Spencer. Amy Hager. Amy Connollv. Amy 'llerkhlmer, Ltsa Driggs,
.
Bernard.
manager- Deteah Sanders.
Mankin. Amber Short, Carrie
JUNIOR HIGH
- Mefanle
ADVISOR·
Sally CHEERLEADERS
Caldwell; Michelle
JUNIOR HIGH FOOTBALL
Tina Connolly, Amy. Well, COACHES- Mike Douglas. George Gaga!.
cLaugh.,-y,
C.D. Mcintyre; ' Chris Adams, Bob
arrle. Ctlillian, Captain- Angle Murphy. and
ll!lltey, Jerrod 1\arber, Pa.ut Ervin, Matl
Co-cap\.ln · Sherry Laudermllt, Amy
Fl n1aw, J ason· Hager, ~1om Hun t er, Dol e
Metzger and Andrea Cleland.
. HIGH SCHOOL CHEERLEADERS - Stpve
Laudermut.
A~ ron Wilson. Randy Moore .
Barnett, rtm Bissell, Jeff Durst ,
,-

ble Brooks. Co-captain- Amy Murphy ,
James McDanlt'ls , Shane James, MUte
"The
JeffJ
, ohnson.
Donna Curlls , Mindy Wells, Tara Morris , Newland, Rod Newsome: Danny Sttort ,
Varsity awards were pres- Ca ptain· Larissa Longl Co-qaptain· De ian! " Mlkt' Smlth,,Jay Swa!n an d Phil Wood s.
Bak.,-.MellsoaCalaway,LoriBurke,Ruth
HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL ente db y C0- Coac hes Don El chin· Nutter, Jayne Ann Ritchie, Amy ShrlvPrs COACHES· Don Eichinger and Ron Hill;
ger and Ron Hill and assistant anJu~.~~~raHIGH VOL' EYBALL _ !\ss1Sl8nt Coaches· Bot! Ritchie and i&lt;elth
Weber ; Kirk Flck·. Torn Parker. Jeff
Ke fth We'ber . CO~C h Ei Chl nger l COACH·DonJackson; Lee""'Gillilan, Jenny Roush,
Rex Jus)ls; Ro ger Carpenter,
reflected on .the past season ani( O.em. Mary Jo Reed. Melissa Eddv. ChartesCieland,Kyle Davls,Bryan Dursr.
concluded' that 'this year's te'am · Michelle Maholtra. Tiffany Gardner. , r.Jark Griffin. Jeff Johnfoon. Steve Horner,
Stepha nie Gar~ne-r, Edna, Driggs, J &lt;i mieTerry Newsome, .Doug Beaver, Chris
· "truly gave 'It · every t hing t hey Brannon and Alvena VanMeter.
Lantz. Frank Parker. J'lf,Reynolds. Brian
·COACHH!G!f_, SGHOOL
VOtLEYBALL sharp. chad ,slncla1r, au.1 .Sml t h, Mlke
ha d.
p .. m Douthitt·. Krist! Hawk.
ch 1
idd
h
d
"'
Weber, Jeff Horner, Derek Yonkeor, Dan
~nor gr
ers onore were Melissa N~tter, Beverly· Wigal, L'ee Ann Tripp, Billie Wells, Jeremy Barber, Brian

'

11 · ....ing laskols, Chrls'iJI
Wr11thi, Clllldtt Ari'Dft9l1111nts,

Beaver. '
Honored were:

S 1Ick A ward"

Charles. 54. · the rh~· thm and
blues singer who overcame blindness, drug addict ion and l'i!CiSn'!
to win io Grammy awards . .was
·praised .by Quincy Jones fo r
"fusing the urgency of gospel
with the aching pain of tho
blues."

BULLETI

DID YOU KNOW?

Junior high football players•,
were honored by Coaches C.D.
. Mcintyre and George Gaga!.
' Varsl t y f00\ba li awar d.S went
. .to Kyle Davis, Be.st Back; Steve
. Horner, Best Linemait 'wltl;l 22.7
' Yar ds per reception; Doug
' Beaver, Most Improved ·, Bry'an

Busin~e·ss

•

SIGN SERVICE
992-1460
SIGNS OF All KINDS
iERRY

SIIGFREID

Rt. 1
MiddlepoN

1 1 Help Wanted
.QOOD

MONEY!
Wotllly 1
ProCHSing Mt!HI
INFOAMAnON!
Send oelfaddressld, stllmplld envelope to
P.O. Bo• 21152, Eeal liverpool n
Ohio 43920-0762 .
'

..

�~ .'

Page- 6-The Daily Sentinel
11

Help Wanted

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Mtunt Mance parson to live in
apartment complex Call 304·
676-5'104

44

51 Household f&gt;oods

-APll rtment
for Rent

_,,_
$16,040 .

-::-- - -- - --

FurniShed effiCtency $150 utlh·
t1e1 peld, share bath, 701 4th.
Gatlipohs C!lll446i· 4416 after6

CI.Jrrent federal list

Ntted bebystttet' Must have ear

pm

Come to my homo Watch one
child 6 days

fl

weak Call aft er

FurniShed 3 rooms and bath.
clean. adults only, no pets Call
'
614·448 1!i19

7 00 p m 614-742-2050
Wa n t ltVEH n middle aged
wo mAn to wattoh 2 children 1
child rn school lrght house
work moderate cookmg Salary,
room and board Call 614 74 2-

Ntcaly furmmhed 2 bdr apt
Adults only lnqutre at corner
First &amp; Ohve St a1 Shejlpard s
Salus &amp; Serv1ca

2050 after 7 00 p m
liVe-m 5 days a week to care for

elderly woman

Patrent care

,,

only Cetl 614 -992 7479
1979 Datsun 210. 4 door
wagon Runs good, 4 speed
$550
Sandy s Auto Sales
614 992 7403
Need money tOt continue your
collage? Bef ore you drop out.

Furntshed apertmunt. upstairs
Adults only, all uttlttles patd Call
614·446-9523

.

"Would you mind paying
advance?"

•

ill

call
e Army Nettonal
Guard
for 1
~;::;~~:::::;-::-::~~~r:;:;~;;:~:::;:~:;~::-j
free thmforma110n
on our
educa·
t10n a:o;stsrance program 304·
31 Homes for Sale
41 Houses for Rant
676 3960 or 1· 800·642· 3619
Neat 3 bdr Cll)rpeted, central
Needed Babysitter to our nome heat &amp; atr Newly remodeled
2207 Wuhmgton Avenue, 6
for mfant and preschooler, Mon· lowut1ltty. orwillrent 824,900
rooms and bath , 8275 plus
day thru Friday Send resume Call 614 448 ·2495
ut1lltles, reference and depostt
and references to P 0 Bo11 452,
304 &amp;75 2661
Pbtn l Pleasant. W Va
32 Mobile Homes
Houle for rant, 2 bedrooms, tn
for Sale
let Av rm help you get tl'le best of
New Haven , $150 montl'l Oep
thou1 post Christmas btlls and
OStt r&amp;qutred. 304 882 2583
blues Fr ee gth with first order.
call 304 -882 · 2646
NEW AND USED MOeiLE
4 room houae for rent on At 62
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUAliTY
304-676 3017
lot Avon help you get the best of MOBILE HOME SALES 4 Ml
those post Chns tmas bills and WEST GALLIPOLIS RT 36
blues Free gtft w tth ftrst ord&amp;r
PHONE 614 446 7274
Ca!l 304 -675 1429
42 Mobile Homes
1973 Vmdale 12x65 With 7x14
for Re11t
Sou thwestern Communtty Ar:.- expando Total electric set up for
tmn Cou nctl Inc tS accept mg woodburner Good Condition
epphcattons for tile chtld and Ph 614·245· 5308between9S.
2 bdr , 111 utrllttes patd eJo:cept
fam1ly development program f or 5
etec , fum . or unfum , sec
a teachmg osststant lor Mt Ohve
depostt requtred Convement
Headstar t Center m Ashton. 1977 Fes1tval 141170, total
locatiOn Call 614·44«;\·8568 or
Mus t l'lave htgl\ school dtploma electrtc 2 bedroom Ph 614·
614· 446·4778
n r GED and have car wtth vahd
367·01B8 after 5p m or 614rlrtver s ltcense Apply at 540 446·0662 e11t 32 before 5
2 bdr fully furnllhedadults only,
5th Av&amp;nue. Monday througl\
ut1l pa1d Cell 614·446· 41 10
Frtday 9 am 5 p m , Huntrng· 81 Oakbrook e11pando. 3 bed·
ton la~t day for app hcat•on ts 5 room . 2 full baths stove &amp;
In Eureka· ntce and clean, adults
p m Monday Dec 15 SCAC tS refrtgerator. new carpet Mus1
only No pets depoSit raqutred,
an EOE Employe r
sell Ph 614· 379-2587
18000mo call614· 2!56· 1636
before 10• m
8tg down payment. sl'lort t1me
emptoymMt or past crecht IusSituations
2 Bedroom furnished We acce pt
tory !topptng you from buymg?
HUO , Beauttful rl\ler vtew Fos·
Wanted
Constder a re-clatmed 1411701
t8f't Mobile Home Park 614
&amp;500 00 down assumable
446 1802
loans No charge for delivery
Interested? Cell 800· 826·0762
PARENTS!!
2 bdr mob1le home. Upper Rtver
San ta wt!l visrt your chtld at
Rd Vl mile from Gall1polis 2
home Buhevers call North Pole 1974 Camage House 12x66 2
ch ildren accepted Call 614·
baths , 3 bedtooms. total elect·
6 14 245 9563 for deta1ls
446 0508
riC Carpet thru out must 888 Ph
614-448-0175
Room and board for employed
2 Bedroom fully furn1shed
man N!ce home Fnmlly atmos·
Adults only, All uttlit1e.1 petd
1986 mobtle home for sale
phere Call 614 992 6873
except gu &amp; electrtc Owner
14,.70. axcellent conditton 2
pays water &amp; sewage, mowtng
bedroom. 2 full Nths Call
and tramh pickup Cable TV
614 992 7163.
avail.ttle Ph 814·448 7793
18 Wanted to Do
3 bedroom Furmshed. Washar.
dryer. atr, awnmg Completely
ut -up on rented lot 86700 Call
W1ll do babvsmtng tn my home
614 992·7479
2 Bedroom. rio pet!. Crown C1ty
Mon thru Fttd ay 6 ·30 to 5 l ots
Oh Ph 614· 256·6484
of TLC. CaUGrandma m Vt nton
81141 two bedroom With Qll
Ph 614· 388 8193
furnace Call 614·985 ·3350 or
1985 141t60 1m• south of
6 14·985· 3351
g111ipolts dam St Rt 7 No pe1s
W11l carfl for child ren tn tl'le~r
call after 3pm Ph 256-6089
homa, 30 4 675 7298

12
:
,
,
·
'
:

Stbysrtt!ng In my 1\ome Monday thru Fnday. dav shift. phone

34

Business
Buildings

• 3tio''61S "123if

Financial
21

Office space • Store space tn Pt
Pleasant. A On e Real Estate Ph

304 875-5104

Ren tals

Business
Opportunity
41

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH
lNG CO recommend• that you
do busmeu with people you
kn ow and NOT to send money
through the mall unttl vou have
1nvest1gated the oHe11ng

Bustneu Opportuntty , oper&amp;t mg
bar cl ub 3 000 sq ft on 2 acres,
304 675· 3509 evenmgs

23

Professio nal
Services

Houses for Rent

Newly remodeled 3 bedroom
house Close to ctty schools.
tnquire at 53 Garfteld A\le
Small 3 bdr house ntee netgh·
borhood. ctty schools, no pets,
couple or couple wtth children
$300 per monlh Deposit 1 year
lea!e References required Cell
614·446 0122 aher 4pm

St arks Tree and Lawn Ser\IICe
H e dg es shrubs, bushes
Hlmmed, land5Caping, stump
und leaf removal, 304 576·
2842 or 576· 2010

Real Estate
31

Homes for Sale

3 Bedroom. breeze way , 2 c&amp;r
garage 1 Y, acre app 5 mtles
from Holzer Hosipttal route160
call61 4· 388 9301 or814 388.
9706
1 2yr. old house, 3 bedrooms,
1 'h b~t l\ s, e.~tua large LA , kttcl\en
appltnnr:tts, 8111 4 u11ltty room 2
car carport 10111 4 bldg FrUit
trees grape arbor 1 80 Acres
l e&lt;.~el lot eppr 15 m1les from
Gtllltpohs on blacktop Rd Ph

256 6836
6 room house 1 2 acres Double
car garage l ocated on Rose H1ll
Bargam ptt cP.d $20 000. Call
614· 678· 25 13
Governman1 homes from S1 IU
repatr) Delinquent toll property
Repossessions Call 805· 687
GOOO Ex t GH 9805 for current
r epo lt~t
2 bedroom house for sa le m
Chtton (M oble Johnmon prop·
er tyl Ftilly carpeted recently
reruodalod now roof Asking
$ 1 6 000 Call30 4 773 553 4 or
304 773 -6784
Large hnuse wr1h throe tots , 810

E Main Pomeroy . 518,000
C11tl 6 14 986 -4427 after 6 00
pm
2 br kitcfl en bathroom, wrtl\
laundry room, hvlng room &amp;
dining room all elec:. Approx 7
m iles from Pt. PI on Rt. 62 2
tr.acua pprox 1 ecremoreorless
.O\Ier look lng Kanawha R1v er
$40 000 Call 304 · 1375·5440
bet ween 8 .30 and 4 30..
Clean, wetl maintained, alum!·
num ! tded, 3 bedrooms, 1%
bnth s, form!ll dinmg, rec room,
large eat rn kitchen , 2 Clf
garage. New tuel efficient fur·
nace, 304·«;\75 -460•

12x65 trailer fully carpeted. 2
bedroom gas furnace, 5 acres,
S2!SO per month plus ut1ht1H
614· 992 2016 or 614-992 ·

7784

4 Room hou me. gil! heat. bt g
yard, $150 00 plus u1tlittBI Ph
614 -446·0974
3 bedroom w•lkmg dtstance 1o
ci ty mchools S350 00 PElf month
S350 00 Secunty Depo11t. Ph
614·446·4051
bedrooms, utthtv rm .• ga1 heat.
t ·atr den or storage, 6ml trom
town Ref Ba Oep requtred, rent
325 OOmo plus utilities Ph
614 -446·4761
3 Bedroom l'louu 8300.00
month plu s depostt On Rt. 218
Ph 614·256 -1523 lo,fad1emp
Srm house. 2 bedrooms located
on 58B tn Rodney Oepo11t
required no pet! Ph 446· 2266
2 bedroom I 3 bedroom l'louset
for rent Ph 4413· 1875
2 Bedroom house located 58
MtiiCreek 815000mo S7500
Depo sit Ph 446· 3870 or 446·

1340
2 bedroom house for rent in
Middlepon Complet&amp;iy remD·
deled New carpeting through·
out New cabinets 82715 per
month plu s deposit. Call 114·

992· 6858
8eaut1ful new flou se in Pom•
roy Also new ana bedroom
furntsl\ed apartment tn Middleport C1ll 614·446 11552 or
614 -992· 5304 ,

Small 4 room and bath home
wltl'l attached gtrageln Middleport Carpeted, new stove and
refngerator Excellent condition
Ideal for a smgte or "'llumum of
2 adults Sorry, no pets or
chtldren S176 month tv plus
secunty dMJOIIt Phone 614·

992-5292
l ar ge farm houte in count,.., , 8
m1les from town, fr" g11,

304-676-4800 , 9 00 10 4 00
PM

Unfurnished 3 bedroom avatl•·
ble, Point Ple•!lnt. good loce·
tion, nice yard , easy on Mat:,
refrigerator and •tove If needed
t22S 00 month plus utilltt"
Call 304-d76·6240 lfl•l5 p m

Apartments for t ent S100 00,
$15000. $20000 Ph 304
675-5104

KIT 'N' CARLYLE

72

73

2 Bedro om. 1 year lease
$250 00
per month Phone

448 2158 p
Apartment s for rent tn Pomeroy.
On e and two bedroom Clean
and nt ce Call 614·992·6215 or
614 992· 7314

Furnished Room s

For rent Sleepmg Rooms and
ltght house keepmg rooms Park
Central Hotel Call 614· 446 ·

0756
Ro oms for rent, day w eek
month Galh11 Hotel Call 6 14
446 9715 Rent as low asS 120
montl'l
Furnished room 919 2nd, Galh·
polls $115 Utihttes pd Share
b•th Stngle mele Call 446·
4416 after 7pm

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MO BI LE Hom e Park
Ro ute 33, North ol Pomeroy
large lots Call614-992 7479

SWAIN

2 bedroom mobile home, Mld
dleport 0 Reference witl'l secunty deposit 304·882 3267
or 304 n3· 6024
bedroom mobile homet 304

- - - -- - 3
Mobtle home. 2 bedrooms,
located Ashton Upton Road,
$150.00 month plus utiliturs.
304· 675-4088.

AUCTION &amp; FUR NIT ~RE 62
Ohve St , Galltpolts Now &amp; used
wood·coal mtoves 6 pc wood LR
SUitt $399, bunk bads 6199,
antron recliners S99, new &amp;
used bedro om su tt es ranges,
wring• wash ere. 81 shoes New
hvingroom SUites a1 99 $599
lamps, also buymg coal &amp; wood
stoves Call614·446 -3159 .

County Appli ance, Inc Good
umed apphancem and TV seu
Open SAM to 6PM M on thr u

S11 614·446 1699 . 627 3rd

44

Apartment
for Rent

N·cely turntsl\ed. ftrst tl oor. one
bedroom apanmen1 wtth atteched garage No stept Ideal for
stngle or couple. Sorrv. no pet s
Phone Wmgett Racine. 814·

949· 2441 .
APARTMENTS, mobile hom es.
houses Pt. l'leasantand Galllpo·
II• 614·446-8221
Small turnished apartment 1
bedroom ground floor, 8225
montl\, hu1 and W!lter fur
ntsl'led Adul1s only, reference
and depoatt, 304-675-2651
Just completed two bedroom
duplex ep1rtment for rent . h
tellent looat1on Secunty dep
ostt and refet'ences requir ~d
Sorry no petsl C•ll 446- 1260
aher 7pm
Very nt ee, unfum m town ,
apecioua. 2bdr refrig , renga
yard &amp; cov8f'ed pat to, qutet
street No pau s 176 00 mon1h
plus depottt &amp; references cell
Earl Tope. 446-0332 days or
446·01611!1Venmg s &amp; wk·endt.
, Bedroom ba11c rent $176 00
plu1 electric Also required a
1200 00 security depOSit CON·
TACT J1ckaon Estltl!lm Dept Ptt
!46 3997 Equal Houatng
Opportunity
2 end 3 bedroom ap • rtments
and houHJ 1n Pometoy or
Middleport Furnished or unfurnished Pay own utUitt• Call
days 814·992· 2381
1 apd 1Yz bedroom apt available
It R1veuide for rent. B•lic rent
start I 1t • 179 plus utUitles
*200 tacurlty depoah required
InqUire at 614 -992· 7787
In Ractne. 1/try ntce 2 bedroom
duplex Fufty carpeted. $200.
per month plus utlliti•. Call
814· 949· 2801 or 814· 949·

2880
1 bedroom 1pt for rent Bas ic
rent 111rts t21 6 a month that
lnclud• all \ltlht,.. Deposit
raqu1red of • 200. Contact Vtl
lege Menor Apt . Middleport.
992-7787 Equal Housing
Opponunrty

11•

~ bedroom f\lrnlahed apt. in
Mlddlepon Allutllttie~paid Call

614-992·6084

-----

Wh1te.s- metal detectors. new &amp;
used models, low prices. Ph.
614·446 -054B
Gratn Feed Freezer Beef for sale
CBII61 4 -245·6064
NFL electtt c f oot ball game
S20 00 r owtng exe rciser
625 00 Wtll do babySitting tn
my home evenings or weekends
Ph 614.446·0065
1803 1978 Ohto 1 75th Ann I·
versory Colt Government model
46 caliber !pacta! ed1t1011 1 of
260 collectors Item never been
f tred $1 000 00 firm Call 614·
446·9476 any1lm e wk·ends.
a~tor 6 week days
So fadtemp
1980 360· C John Deere Dorer,
wt th conopy and wench PI\
38 8 9312 or 388 9052 atking
prtce $ 13.000 00
live Xmas treus $28 50 Firew ood. $96 00 Dump truck toad,
heap vouchers accepted Call
614 446 9646 Oon 's
La ndscapes.

Ave Gallipolis. OH.

Vellay Furmture. new &amp; usAd
large uctton of quehty furni
ture 1216 Eastern Ave
Galltpolts
LAYNE'S FURNITU RE
Sofas and ch&amp;lrs pncad from
1396 to S995 Tables $60 and
up to S125 H1de·a beds $390
t o 8595 Recltners S225 to
8375 Lamps S28 to $126
Dinettes 8109 and up to $49 5
Wood table w·6 chatts S286 to
8796 Demk $100 up tu S376
Hutches S400 end up Bunk
beds complete W·mattresses
$295 end up to S396 Baby beds
811 0&amp;8 176 Mattr essesorbo11
sprtngs full or twm S63, ftrm
173 and 883 Queen setsS226.
K1ng S350 4 drawer che$1 966.
Dressen $89 Gun cabm cts 8.
10, &amp; 12 gun Gas or electrtc
range $376 Baby ma1tf esses
$36 &amp; $45 Bed trames S20,
S30 &amp; Ktng frame S50 Good
selection of bedroom 1u1tes.
metal cabmets, 1\eadboards S30
and up t o' $65
Used Furnttu re Wasl\or &amp;
dryer, gas ran ge wood taDi e &amp;
2 benches beds, dresser, wood
wardrobe 3 miles ou t
Bulaville Rd Open 9AM tCI
6PM M on t hru SAt

614-446 032 2

Student roll ·lop desk. Usod very
httle Would maku excell ent
Chr tstmas gth Call 614· 992·

3356

Firepllce msett glass doors
2 speed blowers good condt·
t1on S1 00 00 Ph 814· 245·
916 3 &amp;her 5pm

or 614·245 -6131
1979· Chevy Panel Van. 31A ton,
auto, PS , PB, 8 ply M &amp; Stires

Macl\ine qwtted qu tlts for sale .
$60 Aach Call614-992 2466

Sh o p for Chrtstmes w1th
FUllER BRUSH PRODUCTS,
Call 30 4 675· 1090
Andersen s High Performance
wmdows , s1tll In carton Never
been used. 304 67?- 547 8 Call
aftar 5 p m
PRICE WARI Half prtcel Flasl'l·
mg arrow slg nm $2891 light &amp;d,
non arrow U79 1 Unlighted
$2391 Free letters! See locally
Fecto rv
1 (80 0)4 23 0163 ,
any time

'"-'~

~.!:=::=======::;=======~==~
55 Building Supplies

Craftsman. 10 incl\ radinl arm
sa w, Dr and new nO\Inr been
used, 304·675·5478 ,
26 inch Zenith color conso l11 TV,
re ce nt ly repD!fed. S100 00 ,

080 , 304-675-6504
Fuewood $26.00 P1ckup load,
304· 675·7771 .
M etal office desks. drawerm or
typewnter paltform with edJUI
table swtvel chair, both tor
s 126 00, 304·372-2B01
Contemporary couch anti love·
seat . earth tonu strtp DI wttl\
loose cus hion a, good cond1t 1on,
6200 304 ·676·21 83.
Uke New - 27 tnch Huffy
626 ·12 speed $75 00 304
675· 1647
Dog house medium stZQ dog.
excellent cond•tion, 825. boA
sp r~ng s . e11cel!ont l condltton ,
tit26 ; matching ITI&amp;ttrest free
with box springs, wood grain,
drapery rods $10 eacl\. 304·

56

1985 Cetebl'ny 4-door, 2 8L 8
stereo, clock, rutt proof under
coat, gauges. trip odom. interm
wipet's, new llret, floor mats. all
service recorda, local owner
$8,000 Ph 814-245-6820

Pets for Sale

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel
CFA. H1maleven, Pers1al'l and
Siamese k1ttens A.KC Chow
puppies Call 61•·446-38•4
after ?PM

7!S Chevey Monte Carlo. body
RuH, motor good thape, runs
good t400 00 or best offer
lnqutre at 84 G•rfletd ave

-..:.-~---- 3

1983 Plymouth Turlamo, 1 1
engine, 2-door, 16 000 m1les,
nice. t3000.00 Ph. 614 -379·

Groom &amp; Supply Shop
ProfemJtonal Ser\lice. eH Jtylel,
all breeds nate Rt 141 Gallipo·
lis, Oh10 45631 . Julie Webb, Ph

614 448-0231
Pure bred black German She·
pard female, p11pen, 3yrl old

Se th Thomas mantle clock
$66 00. 100 amp tratlerdlmcon·
nect boll 835 DO Phone 30 4·
675·4038
M~stlotoe ,

304·675- 1759

Devenport IOV81811 and chair
Uke new Old coffee ta~e and 2
end tables Cali Erma Roush

6 place ll11mg room set good
co nd1t1on , 8160.00 304-676
1703

4 p1ece livmg room teble set 2
end tables 1 coffee tabla. 1
com mode t11bl e Marble tops,
e!lcellent cond ition Also 2
lamps. $400 Ca ll 6 14·992
7866 after 6 ·00 p,m

Concretu bl ocks all sizes yard or
delivery Mason und. Ga lllpollt
Blo ck Co , 123 '1&gt; Pine St.
Galllpollt, Ohio Call 614 448-

Picken~ Used Furniture. Good
qualtty used furniture Open 9 to
8 or call f or &amp;ppointmon1
304· 675 ·848 3 (If 676- 1450

Pole Bu1ldlngs by Quellty
Builders Workml\opm, carports,
animal shel1 ert, garages Free
omtlmetem Ph ono 814 -384 -

27 83.

6762.

1986 Ford Ranger 4x4. e11cel·
lent conditiOn, dull exhaust.
V-6. PS, PB. five spHd. 304·
876·71521 after 6 p.m

74

'84 Ford Escort,

614·448 7414.

614-398·8897

CD Fine Romance

76

1980 flrtblrd Tten•·AM , power,
elr. ltetfO, CB, neN engtne. 2 ~
MPG E11cellent mamtenence,
not e hot rod U,600 00 or best
offM. mev trade Ph 61•· 448·

$50 00 304-676-8174.

2745

A K C Chow Chow puppnts,
five week t old, ready to go now
or wtll 1\old tiM Ch"atmas ell
black. three maiM and one
female 304· 882-2760

198• • Cl'levetle 4 · spaed, AM ·

FM Tape, wtre rims. S2,499,00
Jotlns Auto Sales, Buhwille Rd.
Galhpolla
19671mpaia Convertable Super

Musical
Instruments

Spon, runs. not wrecked Secriftced at S160 00 Ph 614·2•6·
9894

e14·

locks digital stereo Ph

MIJtlfV Ferguson, New Holland.
Bu1h Hog Sales &amp; Serv1ce. Over
40 ut ed tractor• to choose from
&amp; complete ltne of new &amp; used
equtpmtnt largest sei8CIIon 111
S E Ol'lio

1979 CheYtolet Monra 4 speed,
runs good S400 . Sandy's Auto
Sties 614·992· 7403

614-286-6461 .

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT

CENTER SR 35 W Gallipolis.
Oh10 Cell 614· 446·9777. eve
614-448· 3692 Up front ttac·
t ors Wllh warranty over 40 ustd
trectou, 1000 tools

448-2Z7B.

·As it. 1978 Dodge Aspm 4
door. I cvl. . 4 speed New snow
t1res 1nd battery Needs ft.,
wheeL •n&amp;. Call 614 986·
4312

1930 Ford ftvt wmdow coupe
on a Nova frame. Need bwtlders
title. t300 . Call614·992·3598

UTiliTY BLDG SPECIAL
27' 1136 ' x9'EA.VE with sliding
door &amp; 'let'Vtce door t4,288 00
erected
Iron Horse Buildings Ph 614·

1970 Oldsmobile Cutlet Con
11ert•ble Runs good. needs
Plint 8660. lots of new parts

332-9746

1980 Cutlass Supreme, PS , PB ,
power window•. cru11e, ttlt
whe&amp;l , low milft, 304· 882·
2788 after 7 OOPM

Coll814·992· 3698.

·n

TrantmlutOn and Nove part ~.

304-676· 1703.

Serv1ct:s

B1

Home
Improvements

Un conditional lifetime guerari·
Free utimM:" Csjl colltQt
1·6U·237-0...,8, diV or night
Rogers Basament
Waterprooftng

448-0294

1980 Cordoba, body In great
thape. car runs good, phone

304-876-3385

676· 1807

72
Livestock

Yearling Pulled Hereford Bull Ph

2 Ch•olals Cows. 3 ChafOials
l'leifers Ph 387·7466

Hay &amp; Grain

Otied shelled corn, '4 60 per

cwt. ground t6 00 per c:wt.
ground with molnsnl&amp;. 715 p•
CWt 304·468· 1031

Transportation

Trucks for Ssle

1985 Ford 160XL, 2 tone red.
PW, power door locks, AM · FM
stereo, factory air, CC tilt
•tearing ,wheel, DB, factory
in1tall«f trailer towing package
chrome bumper Ph 614· 388·

814-387-7224

2 hogs for sale 1 boer and 1
sow. Cell814 -992· 3866

8874.
1984 Dodge Ram 4 ·speed
AM ·FM radio Ph 44&amp;- n&amp;7

Autos for Sale

Mercades1978 4160SEL•· door
X)( Sh•p lollded wiH tr~de

1-814-888-7311
1983 Oldsmobile Royale. excel·
lent condition, PS , P8, crul11
contro11 reaf' dtfrotter. Crull'led
velvat 11111,4 dr. , sil\ter Pri ced
to sell•t t4500 Call 441 -0UO
or 448- 1429 aher !Spm
1977 Ford Pinto, t300.00;
1984 Honda 3 whHier, ucellent CGnditlon, 304·175-8784
Cen reached 1ft• 1 :00

.. .

82

.

Plumbing

.

&amp; Heating ,

T11E JGABBIT DOE:6N'r

-..ot..l CAN'T' I.MAG1NE THE

DISAPPEA.R ~ t:vERYSODY
IN THE AUDIENCe 001:.5.

L.AWeU/'T9 HES SEEN
GETT1NI!i HITWI'Tl·L

I
•
I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING

UG-4471

85

General Hauling

•

ELVINEV
WHAT ARE YOU
WON'T lET
DOIN' OUT HERE
IN TH'YARD,
ME SMOKE
IN TH' H.OUSE
LUKEY?

tUHEY!!

GIT IN HERE AN'
.•DOTH' DISHES!!

&gt;

James Boy t Water Service A hi(,
pools ttll&amp;d Call614·266 · 11•l
or 614 446-1 1 75 or 814 44'1:7911
~
T &amp; l Wa1ar dehveryanyttme Ph
614 388 · 9732 same [lay
dehv e,..,

86 5 ·10 piclcup, like new
AM ·FM cas1ette stereo Pay
bal1nce on loan. Call &amp;14· 44d ·
8888 after 8

W•tt erson's Wat ar Hauling,
reasonable rates , tmm edtate
2.000 gallon dehvery, cistern•.
pools welt, etc call 304 5711-

SNAKE!! ·

2919

1976 Chwy short wheel ban
Side Step pickup, 350 auto, PS ,
looh and drivu nice ,

11,460.00. 304·675·8768 or
_8_75..:·_4_18_1_·--,- - - - - -

1

1g77 Datsun plc:kup. 1800 00,

l:-3:0:4::·,-57-:8_·_2_9_11_._ _ _ __

1975 Ford F·, 00 LWB new
G&amp;O. WS rims, good work trudl

1300 00. 197&amp; Ford F100.
197&amp; 302 four IPMCI. lldder
r•cka, GOOd rirt1, 10.000,00.

304-&amp;78-2842 •h• 8 00, 304178-2010

to test the securtty system

Coal. ltme~t on e graveL etc
Delivered 1 ton end up Jim
Lant er. 304. 675 1247 Of 675~
7397
'
Coal , h me~ton e. sand and gravel
I
delivery 304· 676- 3190

87

m11t

.'ik

Mowrev'• Upholat~~tlng serving
tr1 county area 21 yean The best
in furn iture upholltenng C.ll
30• · 676 - 415• htr fru
estimates

replied,

"For !hall wouldn't SOf1EDULE a game."

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

He.knew what
was needed ·

COMES OUT? IIJHAT IF
IT'S DESTRO'(ED?

. A great player can sometmies see '
the' handwriting on the wall. If 11 l ells
him that he is going to be set m his con·
tract if there is normal d•stnbullon,
then he 9hould surely play for abnormal dlslnbutlon. Look at the problem
confronting declarer Augustin Santa·
mana of Argentma in today's deal
When the two-club open1ng b1d was
passed , 11 was clear that West would
not hold as much as the spade ace The
bidding now continued unlll Santa·
maria ended up havmg to play lour
spades. Declarer won dummy's ace ol
clubs and led a low diamond ·East
grabbed the ace of diamonds, cashed
lhe king of clubs and played a second
diamond What would happen 1f East
held the A·J or A-10 of spades• When
declarer played to the spade kmg.
East would take the ace Then, hop1ng
for h1s partner to hold a spade h1gh
enough to force out the remaming honor in dummy, East would play back a
club. That defense would be effective
whenever East had started out with e1·
ther of the above-mentioned spade
combinations
Since Santamaria knew he would be
set if either of those distnbutions ex·
1sted, He' played for that' spilt of the
cards that would let him make h1s

ACROSS

.9863

.Q7
• J 10 8 7 53

t A 96

+H

+KQ983
SOUTH
+9 8 713
.52
.KQ

+toTs 2

Vulnerable. Both
Dealer: East
Wes1

Nor1b

Ea11

South

Pass

Obi

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

3+
1+

Pass
Pass
Pass

2+

Opemng lead

Pass

3t

Pass

+J

L----------,-...J

four·9pade contract. He played a low
spade from his hand When West followed low. he played a low spade from
dummy. The spade ace from East had
to beat the air. and the game contract
was made.

DOWN

6-++-+-

wear
29 Zoroastrllll1
sacred

Scnptures

32 Commot;on

®J ill @

Ill ® Simon &amp; Simon /U
and R1ck pose as wtnos to
ftnd ou1 who has been ktd·

.A

tJ106

I Pulpit
I Make
of old
one's own
5 Astonished 2 Tooth
9 Sullen
3 Water
10 Amer poet cooler's
12 Spanish jar neighbor
13 Spellbinder 4 Mouths
15 Buddy
(Lat.)
16 New
5 On ship
27 Hardy
Guinea
6 "American 14 Spoke
town
Gigolo"
at length
compamon
17 Singmg
star
16 So)l1ary
30 Milhnery
syllable
7 "Put .L
19 Blend
net
18 Qmver
Happy
20 ":I Foolish 31 Eve 20 Formerly
Face"
Tlimgs"
33 Yield
21 Conduce 8 Under·
23 Whip
36 "The Song
22 Male lead
sW1d
24 Milady's do2 Is-"
23 Church
11 Cornda 25 "I'm m • 37. G ill~spie's
part
star
- Again
mus1c
25 Bad car (sl) ,;;.;....,....,._,...
26 Chinese
SOC!ely
27 Fail to keep
28 Boxer's

Die

® Mlgnum. P.l.

EAST

WEST

by THOMAS JOSEPH

CIJ Canadian

(JJ

11-IJ.II

+AI

By James Jacoby

v1ews of 1echnology (60.
m1n.)
~ Ill (W Newhan (CCI
Otck and Joanna are asked
to head up a dn\le to sa ve
the loaal ltbrarv
® Making of a Continent:
The Price of Gold CCCI Cal1·
forma· s geological problems
are examtned (60 mtn )
9:30 ® Ill il2J Cav11naugho
10:00 Ill NFL Football: Loa An ·
gelas Raiders at Seattla
Seahawko !CCI 12 hrs.l
1!11 (!) Please Dont Let Ma

ernTul

NORTH

tK QS 2
• A K J 10 4
.12

I

m

Magician/comedian• Penn
and Teller perform sl&amp;lgh1-of
hand and vartous rouunes.
,
@ Haneymoqne,..
:1 1 :30 D Cil @ Bnt of Caraon
l
Tonigh1's gues1s are Gary
Busey. Roseanne Barr and
daredevil S1eve Troner. (60
mln.)(Ajln S1oreo.
CD SportaCenter

I_

outraged wife Ill her foalbalk:oaeh husband. ''No, deer," he

•

33 Prompt
. 34Seapon
in Oman
35 Gary of golf
37 Undisguised
38 Disintegrate
39 Gaze m
a way
40Arfair
of honor
41 Hammer
part

h.-+-+-+-

1....-1-+-

DAJLYCRYPTOQUOTES- Here's bow to work It:
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW
One letter slands for another In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's , etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinla. Each day lhe code letters are diffel'ent.

CRYPTOQUOTES
12·8

ZL

ZC

LDNL

ZHXRWFKG .

NQVNMC

L R

D G H CZYQG

v1ce . (80 min I

PEANUTS

1 1 I I ·I

LETTERS

YESTJIDAl 'S SCIAM-I.EIS AJISWEIS ,
Paddle - Slant - Luncll - Hanger - SCHEDULE ~ .
"You'd mill my lulieial for • football game," yelled me

N

N

VRWNH

KGPBCG

!ill Penn &amp; Toller Go Public

WHAT IF IT NEVEii:
R &amp; M Custom Couche s and
Raupholmte,..,, St AI 7, Crown
City Oh 614· 266 1470, Eve,
814-446·3438 Open da1ly 8 to
5. Set 9 30 to 1 30 Old &amp; new
Uphoatered

1 u~~R~~N~~~E

'at a secret military tns1alla·
11on . (60 mm 1IRI
0 (I) NFL Football: Loa
Angeles Raiders at Seattle
Seahawks (CCI13 hrs.l
Day the Universe
Changed: A Peroonal View
by James Burke ICCI Burke
looks at the difference b e~

Brass Live
Cagney &amp; Lacey
(CCI De1 Pe1ne IS sus·
pected 1n the murder of a
man who may have raped
and killed Petrie 's sister 14
years earher. (60 m )n )
!ill Rock and Roll: The
Early Days
@ News .
10·05 Ill Better World 'Society:
Oark Circle (90 min. \
10 30 Cil Bill Cooby Show
f.ll (!) INN News
11 :00 IJ CD~ G @@ News
Ill Hardcaotle end McCor·
mlck
(!) 19B8 Heisrnan Trophy
Winner ""'file
1!1 (!) M*A*S*H
Cil Managing Our Mira·
cleo: Health C111e In Amer·
lea PaneliS1s deba1e on
whose responsibilty 1t IS

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

wtll not follow medical ad·

• &gt;

Upholstery

•

when the elderly can not or

I

Coat , hay, wood, lumbar
thmgs , 30 4-675·6724

lora--."
A Complele lho chuckle q_U01od
·
V by lilhng In 1he milll"9 Words
L-.1.--'-..IW.....IL-_.___, you develop' lram step No .. 3 below.

tween sctent tflc and public

BARNEY

742 2328

1985, S10. 4 cyl. 4 speed.
AM·FM cauett, sliding window ,
other extras. 304· 882· 3487.

Weat Virginia at St Joseph's (2 hrs I
0 (I) MacGyver (CCI Mac·
Gyver must face a super·
computer when he attempts

1

t---r~-r~-r.ls'rl-rl""1

to test the secunty sys1em

MY WNC\.E HARLEY,
TI-lE MAGICIAN, j-1..6.6
A NeW ACT.

;

814-448-4991

Two 1973 White fr.tght liners,
both good cond, 1 178 motor
homa cl•n I for Hie or trade

Square Garden.

NY (3 hrs. l L1ve
li) (!) College Basketball:

I

CHOYEK

One summer whll&amp; I wu
Ylaftlng Grandpa on hil firm, ht
gavemethii81M:e. "Only alOOf
L.-L..--L.--L.---1L---1.;.,
r -::-::-'7":::-::-::---,.., wlllargu~ with the cook, 8 mula

My Sister Sam
(CCI Pam goes on a starva- •
uon d1et when she feels
she' s not attracttve
9:00 1J CIJ @I MOVIE: 'Analta·
sia: The MysteiY of Anna'
(CCI Par1 2 of 2. In Stereo
Cil 700 Club
CI1 MacGyver (CCI MacGy·
ver must face a super·
computer when he attempts

I

Coal 11nd hmestone hauled
Tromm hcmvatlng Call 614·

'8&amp; Ford Ranger pickup 4wheel
drtve. standard trantmiulon
Rtll lhlfp , Calll14·912-8421

Madtson

I

L A KNP

1--TI----r-l..,""--r.:~--t ..,

®l Gl !l2l

~

304-876· 6••5 or 675·5152

-tl. 1i

from hiS self-absorbed par·

MQRTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP ..

Ashby Construct ion , c:arperi· 1
tery, remodeling. room addlt1ori',1
cement block work,. roofing. •
interku and exterior painting.
si~ing Roofing frH esttmetes.

r. I' I l I I. 't
-rY-i-TE~N.,..O~Ji-,

en ts In Stereo .

,.

304-576-2010 or 578-2842

1982 VW 5 tpeed w1th topper
AM ·FM casette, alldlng wtn·
dow, new tWas, sharp Cell

304·4&amp;8· 1728

71

' ~- ~

RINGLES ' S SERVICE, expt· •
rtenced carpenter tlectt~cian,
muon, patnter, rooting {lnc:lud·
ing hot tar applicatiOn) 304- 1
875· 2088 or 675·7147.
St•rks Tree and lawn Service,
Hedgu , shrub1, buahtt
trtmmed. landscaping •nd
slump removal Luf removal.

2

boy dtsc overs a new world
that offers him an escape

HPMI.JS A Df.Ft.CTIVt:

Fetty Tree Tnmml~g. stump •
removal Cttl 304·875· 133 1. ,

Cor Fourth end Pine
Gallipoha. Ohio
Phone 614· 446·3888 or 814 -

CCC Generic Certittc:ltts. 304·

Reg. Appaloota gelding. 3yra
old or trade for Reg. Hereford
Heifer Ph 2&amp;6· 1385

D\11tJ5 SERJI(( IS

;I

Phone 304-e75-6141

63

.

'

RON'S TelevisiOn Sarv1ct
Hou1e callt 9n RCA, Quaar,•
GE Speatling 1n Ztnnh. Call 1'
304 -&amp;78·2398 or 614· 4•8&lt;
2454

676-4359
1984 Pontiac 1,000, 12 860

2986

EEK .&amp; MEEK

SWEEPER and sewing m~~ehlnlll •
repair, peru. end 1Uppl1es P1c:tt 1
up end dthverv. D•vlt Vecuurn,
Cleaner, one hilt mde up '
Georg" Creek Rd Call 814·

1989 Choven ss, 0800 oo.
304-875· 7250

62 Wanted to Buy

Now buymg shell corn or ear
torn Call forlltftt quotft, Rivet'
Ci1y Farm Supply. 614-441 -

.

C(lrd•bl. good eond. phone

197&amp; Volare Ford, ready to go,
good condttiOn , $696 304·

IBl Benson
7 .35 Cil Honeymooners
B·OO 0 CD@ A.L.F. In Stereo
Cil Father Murphy
(!) Tennis: 19B6 Nabisco
Masters Round Robm from

11on (60 min I (AI
C1J
MacNeil-Lehrer
Newshour
®I G1 il2l Kate &amp; Allie iCC)
Allie and her new boss Edd1e
mus1 s1ngle·handedly keep
the TV statton on the atr dur·
tng a blizzard 1n order to
keep the statton franchtse
® Wonderwori&lt;o An old·
erly brother and sts1er seek~
ong a young boy 10 help wi1h
farm chores end up wi1h a
1alka11ve hnle g1rl (60 m1n I
IBl MOVIE: 'Sixteen Can·
dlos'
8:05 (l) MOVIE: ' Night Pas·
sage'
·
8:30 0 CIJ@ Amazing Stories
!CCI A neglec1ed 5-year-old

304·875· 7978 coli 11 :00AM

1978 Plymouth Tra11 Ouster. 4
wheel driVe, 318 V· 8, 304· 676 3121 after 6

i'LJG.

Ill @ @ Jeopardy

at a secret military tns1alla·

tee loc•l refer.nc. furnt.l'lecl

CROSS &amp; SONS
U S 36 Wnt. Jackson, Oh10.

LlT"'f'l..C

•I

3763

t816· Plymouth Ouster. 2·door

-4 86 Ctltbr1ty blue wagon Vtl.
00, 81r, 3 teats. cruiae, auto,

WITH ONE

V6 Bu1ck motor and transm11·
ston 31,000 actualmiln, e125
Call )14·992·7841 or614 · 992·

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

1 ~.000 miles Ph . 814· 24&amp;
96156 or 614 245- 5131

WH~L.E

992-6344

1970 VW square back Sedan , 1t
needt work t1150.00 Ph 614
448 -8224 C.llafter &amp;·DO
1port model, automatic loaded

Tiif=

PO You~ WHOL..f:' MOUT'H

Used auto ttres, $115
M•s·
matched snow tirH, $1 0 True~
tiret, $20 and up Call 61 4·

·n

Must sell 1978 Datsun 200SX
56.000 actual miles. 5 speed
ITansmlaaion, looka &amp; run1 good

U$~

Le-NGitl of t&gt;t=NTAL f/..05$
ALL. A'i" ONCE', '(bu CAN

2220

01 .200.00 Ph.614-6808

Farm Equipment

IF you

Budget tranemissiont. uaed It
reb\lllt Tool converters It
transfer Cll81 Will d..1ver C..h
&amp; Carry or Install ca ll 61 4 · 379

'811 Sky Hawk, '81 Chevene. ' 66
Ch"rger,
Honda. 'BO Honda,
'74 Oustlllt'. "74 Oetl\ln Truck
Ph. &amp;14-448-9933

676-3978

&amp; ltvestuck

Auto Parts

$2,895.00

blooded Beagle pup1,

fMIII SUIIPitt:'

®l Wheel of Fonune

&amp; Accessories

4 tpeed

Ph 814·388-981 5

UO 00, hold till Christmas

Peavy Sound Syttem, 20 piece
Tema drum sat, 304·1375· 2107.

Motorcycles

198&amp; Honda 70 3 wheel•.
1986 Honda 126 4·wheeler. Ph

$1,895.00

614-985·4460.

814-992-6661

f;5 Building Su pplies

1978 Jeep. Pt~ctd On lnspec·
tiOn 304·67&amp;-6704

1983 Honda XR 80 S400 00,
excellent condttlon . 1979
Honda CR 125 1200.00 Call

'81 Mercury Lyn~~;. automati c. atr

AKC Regtstered Beagle pups 7
weeks old. Both parent• excel ·
lent hunters. t50 each C.ll

61

1970&lt;8ronco 4 wheel drive. '8
cyl .. 3 speed. Runs excellent
body rough. t4&amp;0. Call 614
992·3&amp;915.
:

,986 2 2 Engme, Auto It AC,
11 .000mi. like new $4,926 00
Ph 814· 379-2726

$1.000

noo oo 44&amp;-7862.

67

814 992·1421

2726 .

·n

1 male chmese 'pug 1yrs old. has
papers Excellent chrittmes gift

'84 Ch1111v cunom van, like new
26.1l00 ~ilea. loadad Phone

1985 Honda 4 - wheeler. 198&amp;
Honda 3·whetler Ph 614 · 4467414

Chevell Mllibu S795 DO
'79 lnternet1onal Scout. 4x4

Clll614-448 -0848

Full

Autos for Sale

CVi MPFI. Auto, AC . AM FM

246·6121

64

25 tn ch Zen1 th color conmole TV
S175 00 30 gal gas Wlter
hea t er Shop llghta. M ise ttems
I o
304 ·676•1060

Call

71

Building Materials
Block, brick, sewer pipes, win·
dows. llntela. etc. Clauda Win·
ters, Rio Grande, 0 Call 114·

Surplus Insulated C11mfh1uge d!l • For ule· J 0 460 Dozer 6 way
blade , wmch and canapy
cron coveralls small. med ium.
large $26 00, XL $30 00 end Tromm Exc.vatlng . Call &amp;1•·
copv thts adv. Carhart army 742-2328
1ssue cloth mg, boots, bibs denim
$16 .00, Wrangler Ja ckets. White Farm Tract ors. Belt Price
shtrts. plam pocket denim p&amp;nts In Area , Siders Equipment Co,
14 ou . Sam Somervtlle June· Hendeuan. W Va 304· 876·
!ton hidependance Road, Old 7421
Rt . 21. East Ravenswood. Frt,
Sat, Sun. 1 2.00 8 00 PM . other John Deere 60 farm tractor, e~~;c
days afl(lr 4 00 PM Phone cond New one row mechanical
304 ·273 -5656 or 304 676 - transpJanter tobacco setter
614-268-8011
3334

16 cu ft upright freezer . cycle
dafrost . Corbtn 8t Snyder Furni·
lure 95 5 Second Ave Ph
446 1171

36 tnch new bar tt ool
614-992·2462.

'4

tlon Aebuill engine Call after
3 00 pm 814-742-2976.

Fttewood. all hord wood Heat
vouch&amp;rs accepted $35 a
ptckup load PAone 6 14-742·
2466

676 6678
Sob &amp; Cha1r In good co ndttion
1250 00 Ph 614 256-6002

Railey wheels, 306 HP. 400
Trans 1At ton Ph 614· 246·9556

Dobro excellent conditton Can
be seen et 161 Third Ave or call
Mn.:ed hardwood slabs S12 per
, 614·446 -16.1
bundle Contaming approx 11JJ
tons FOB Ohio Pallet Co
Peavey P.A System XR700
Pomeroy, Oh1o. Call 614 992·
mt.Jtet
with tpeakers. montton
646 1
microphones. stand, Ph 304·

Tony 's Gun Repaus, 1\ot rebfue·
mg Open 9 00 AM to 7 00 PM
Ca ll 304 675-4631

2 bedroom . completely fur.
n11hed No pets Cell614· 949·

2263

Muytag 0 1shwasher like naw 2
Acoust tc Gmtars Ph 614 4460556

MUSESA

m

1979 Jeep CJ6 Oood eondl

Now Moped S400 1970 Butck
Skylard S300 Call 61 4 ·992·
76 90

Merchandise

(!) Mazda Sportslook
(!) J~fferaons .
(I] 3·2·1 , Contact (CCI
® Secret City
@ Facti of Ute
6:05 [[] New Leave It to Beaver
6:30 Iii Cl) @ NBC News
(!) Action Outdoors with
Julius Boro1
([I 0 (I) ABC NeW$
1!11 (!) H011an' s Heroea
C1J Doctor Who
®I Gl il2l CBS News
® Body Electric
@Good Times
8:35 Cl) l:lown to Earlh In S1ereo
7:00 Iii CD PM Magazine
IJ) Hardcastle and McCor·
mick. 1
,
(J) SportsConter
(I] College Basketball:
Ohio at Bawling Green (2
hrs 1
. 41) (!)•M•A•S• H
0 Cil People's Court
(I] Nightly Business Repon
®I News
(jjJ
MacNeil-Lehrer
New&amp;hour
G1 @@ Wheel of Fonune
IBl Bamey Miller Pan 1.
7:05 ' Cil Sanford and Son
7:30 0 CD New Newlywed
Game
(!) Zenith NFL Monday
Night Metch·UP Los An·
gales Aa1ders a1 Seat1le Sea·
hawks
Ill (!) Too Close for Comfon
OCU Judge

1984· Ch...,ey auuville Win·
dow Van Atr, cruiae, stereo

Callahan '! Used Ttre Shop Over
1.000 ttrea sll e5 12. 13, 14, 16.
16, 16 5 8 mtlea out Rt 218.
Call 614·256· 6251

Several pieces an ttqu e mllv&amp;r.
BM)( Btkeltke new 635 00, Bear
Grtzzla Huntmg Bow&amp; Arrows&amp;
Out\ler $40 00 PI\ 614-446·

I I 1· ·1 I I I

Iii CIJ (lJ 0 ([) ~ Gl (jjl(j~
News

54 Misc. Merchandise

Ftrewood dehvered Oak &amp; hick·
ory, split HEAP voucher. p1ckup
load 535 Call 614·446 ·2223 or
61 4·446 -3028

low 1a form f011r ~mplo -dt

Ill Big Valley

446·9700 .

5131

Vauety shop on Rt35 under new
management large anor1m9flt
of Chnstmas gtfts used ttres S.
recaps mud &amp; snow Jtrem new
tires guaranteed

4897

6:00

Ph 614·246· 91566 or 61 4 ·246·

p! est•c septic tanks. plasti c
Plasttc c1steJn
approved.
culverts,
metal state
culverts
RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
son, Oh 61 4·286·6930

Roatronge lottorl of 1M
0 four
JCrambled -a; b.

12/8/86

1879 CJ -5 Golden Eagle, v.a.
3-apttd, apokerwhtell, AM ·FM
stereo, tow milugt, Ph. 814·

Electric whtte range wtde oven,
good condt110n Ph 614·446~
84f}O,

The Oaks ApartmQnt s We ore
now havmg a December move m
mpectal on rent &amp; depostt $199
tS all you pay to movu tn for
Oecember Get in 41n the actton
&amp; ca ll tor more mformahon Colt
614·682·7570 Tarrv H'le, Res
Mngr E H 0 Managed by US
Sttelter Corp

Nt ce 4 room partially hnn tahed
apt •n town locAtton S260 00
mo plus uttlittes Ph 614· 446

&amp; 4 W .O.

--~~-----~~yC~YR.~

EVENING

Complete Sears WtnmB the Poo
Nu nery Colloct11ml
Bed. droner, lamp dresstng
table. ce tlm g hght , wall
hangtnQ$ and cut1ams Never
been u ~ed $250 00 Ph.
614-446· 1324

8398

Nt ce 2 bedroom apt rufng &amp;
stove &amp; water turntshed No
pets 4V, m1les from Gatltpolls
$210 00 per mo $50 00 dep
omn Ph 614 446· 8038

Vans

....
'=~=' em~4llA-·~-s~s· ....
'

Television
Viewing

Truck• for Sale

I:CI.L'I, WHI\T'S 111AT ~ W'IO
GRew AA'Tit&lt;t&gt;&lt;-

USED APPLIANCES
Washers, dryers, refngerators,
ranges. Skagg&amp; Apph1ncu.
Upper Rtver Rd beatda Stone
Creat Motel 614· 446-7398

Oakwood opt s. modern 1 bed
r oom units S165 00 plus utili
ltes, no pets, smgle person
preferred Cell 614 446·2055
after 6p m.

51 Household Goods

676-3000

7 Rooms beth, full basment
Ctty Sch ool d11tr~ct. 3mt. fl'om
town No pe1s. ref. It depomit
reqwed Ph 614-446 0143

Duplex 64&amp; Second. Carpeted 3
bedroom. LR , DR. n&amp;w kitchen
8t bath. washer &amp; dryer hook·up,
$286 00 mo plu s ut1ltt1es &amp;
aecurtty,dapO!nt Ph 614· 0690

2 bedroom 1 child. no pets Call
304 B82·2468

446-3870
Avenue References required
Adults preferred

Furn1sh.ed Apt S210 00 uttle
ties Pd 1 bedroom , ftrst floor Ph
446 4416 after7p m

992 -7479

K &amp; K Mobile HomM , 2 and 3

6 Room houu. 1'h bath. 3
3 bdr , air, pool, gtuage N1ce
Commercial property corner
l oti &amp; highway frontage ltst
wtth us W e have buyers A · One
Re11l Est!ltA Broker Call 304674·51 04 or 304· 674 5386

3 bedroom furniShed Washer
11nd dryer Atr •nd awning S200
plus deposit and uttht1es 614·

2 Bedroom house very clean
$150 DOper mo . $75.00 dep·
ostl. located 9 White Ave Ph
2 Bedroom house, 53 Garfteld

P1ano Tunmg end Repan Chp
th ts ad tor 25 percent d11count
Lane Camels 614· 742 -2951

Tr•tlet apace across from Ohto
Pellet on C R 20 TPC water
Call 614·992-2941 evemngs
and 614· 992·6461 daym

Furnished efft cten cy $175.0 0.
2rms &amp; bath uttlit1es Pd , 446 ·
4416!1fter7p m

45

Pomeroy- Middleport, Ohio

Monday, December 8, 1986

Gasol tn e Bumh Wecker w ith
blade $125 00, Toyo nove
kerosene heater with bl ower
$226 DO Ph 614-446· 7209

Govtlrnment JObs
$59,230 V' Now hmng Ca ll
805 -687 6000 E'xt R-9806 for

'

GOOD

Nlcf!IY furnt!hed mob1l11 home
CA &amp; heat, excel location,
adults only Caii614·446.Q338

Alflmas now tmmg Fltght At·
ten darns, Agents, Mechanu::5,
Customer Servrce Salanes to
$50K Entry level po!utlons Call
' 1 805-6 87 8000 E.11t A-9805

..

NH

W N H

CD RBQT

RP P GK

Rp

WNKKZNIG . -ENHG
NBCLGH
llatartlar'o ' CQPtoqaote: AN OPTIMIST MAy BE ·

WRONG, BUT HE BEARS ljiS MISTAKES W1TI! F'Ofm.
nJDE - ANONYMOUS

;
nopping Skid Row bums.
•
(70 mm IIRI
: 11':35 Cil N.tlon.l Geographic

•

Explorer

' 12:00 CD Burne &amp; Allen
:
(]) One on One V1nny Tes•
taverde .

Cll lii([)New.
(!) Rawhide
Cil SC'TV
•

12:15 ()) BPQno Fl.,.
12: :lo 8 rn tlll !.Me Night with
David letterman Tomghfs
guests are Jane Fonda and
S1eve '~lenin . (60 min I

�Monday, December 8, 1

Pomeroy-Middlepon, OhiQ

·Simmons twins
note birthdays
Thomas and Tyjer, twin sons of
Thomas and Deedrah Simmons,
Tuppers Plains, celebrated their
second bir thdays with a party 111
the home of their maternal
grandparents, Roher(, aiid Nina
Sanders, Tuppers Plains.
Gifts were presented, to the
children a nd . refre~hments
served to the maternal greatgrandparents, Harold and ' Lav- .
ina Brannon, Reedsvllle; mater nal great-grandmother, Ettie
Sanders, Tuppers Plains; paternal great-grandfather, Theodore
Cremeans, Rutland; paternal
grandparent s, Tommy and Shirley Sim mons, Rutland; aunt alld
uncle, Mike and Debbie Hoi.·
brook, Logan; paternal auQts,
Kathy J effers, Albany, and Melanie Dudding, Darwtri; maternal aun t, Deleah Sanders ,

OVP -employees conduct annual Christmas party
Jeff Cochran and Lynn Wood, Morgan. Wendy Harhlll, Cr!sH::
Bob W)rigett , Jeannie Surface. · Hemphill. Blll and Margaret •:
Tammy Surface, Cleo Llevlng, Le hew.'' Dave ·Harris, Charles·:_:.
ThOmas and Phyllis Roach, Tony · and Angela Hall, Mark and •.
Keathley and Lisa Fields, Mr . Nan~Y Yoacham, Jim and Jean :
and Mrs. Hobart Wilson ,Jr., Mr-. .Davison. Larry ,a nd Pat Boyer, -·:·
and Mrs. Gay land Bush, Mr. and Katie Crow. Cha rle ne Hoeflich, '-.
Mrs. Vernon -Deweese. Steve and Tom and Debbie Skinner, Kevfn· '
Cozy Halstead, Dennis ShUmate, Kelly, a nd Keith and Barbar a :
·'·,
Lee An n Welch, Damo n and Judy · Riggs.

Employees of the Ohio Valley
Dally Tribune and the Poi nt
Pleasant'Regis ter.
Publishing Co. and their guests
held their annual Christmas
Thos e alteilding were Tim and
party Thursday at the Gallipolis
Trhonda Casto, Pa ul and Terra
. Elks Lodge,
Barker, Fred Hoffman, Betty
A ·. 'meal was provided by
and .Paula Tope, Margaret FlnniCircle's Catering of Gallipolis,
cum; Emina Lou Davis, Helen
a nd entertainment was offered
Davis, Pat a nd Kitty Whitehead,
courtesy 0fl the Madrigals of Donald and Evelyn Wright and
Gallla Academy · High School
their son, John, Mark Bowen.
under 'the direction of Anne.--------------------------'-:------:---:----:- ~
Fischer. The Madrigals per:./
· formed several holiday and con•
temporary tunes.
Gifts and door prizes were
awarded to employees following
the Madrigals' performance.
Thomas and Tyler Simmons
Attending the party were em•
ployees
of
all
three
OVP
papers,
••
·Tuppers ~lalns, maternal uncle,
.. J;.•.••
Jonath!!n Sande rs, Tuppers The Dally Sentinel, the Gallipolis
'. • •
P.Iains, a nd a grea t aunt and
•
uncle, Danny a nd Judy McDo. nald and children, .lingle and
•.,•
Danny Jr: ·

..'

Church holds
holiday dinner

Jonathan
has 1st birthday
Mr. and Mrs. Delmar Charles
Larkins, Middleport, recently
honored their son, Jonathan
Charles, wit h a party In observa .c~e of his first birthday on
Nov. 19.
A Pound Puppy cake ··was
baked and decorated for the
occasion by his mother. Attend~
ing the party besides his parents
were his grandparents, Clarence
and Wanda Wolf and Randall and
Margie Peck .. His sisters and
brother, Angle, Sarah, and Brandon Larkins, Greg, Della and
Greggie peck. Others sending
cards and gifts were Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Corns, Mr. and Mrs.

Jonathan Charles Larkins
John Nichols, and Mr. and Mrs.
Blll Boston.

Community calendar
MONDAY
POMEROY - DA V meets
Monday, 6:30p.m .. DAVHall, 124
Bullernut Ave. Dinner will be
served.
RUTLAND -Rolland Garden
Club will have !\Inner at Craw 's
Family Resta urant, Pomeroy,
Monday. 6 p.m. Following
dinner. the group will move to the
home of Mrs. Vernon Weber,
Rutland , for the regular meelin!(.
Members are to bring cookies
and there w ill be a gill exchange.
IJ:ARRISONVILLE ...1. Ladles
Auxlllary of the Scipio Volunteer
Fire Department will hold a
Christ mas potluck supper Monday, 6 p.m .. for members of the
department at the fire station In
Harrisonville. There will be a gift
exchange.
MIDDLEPORT Intern ational Order of Job 's Daughters
wil l elect officers Monday, 7:30
p.m ., at the Middleport Masonic
Temp le.
TUESDAY
POMEROY- TOPS 570 meets
Tuesdav at Veterans Memorial
Hospital. Weigh-in, 6 to 7 p.m. A
holldav covered dis h dinner will
be followed by a weigh-ln.
Membf;rs are to take food.
HARRISONV ILL E - Harrisonville Senior Citizens will have
its regular monthly blood pressure cftnic, Tuesday, 10 a. m.noon . Ferndora Story, R.N., will
be In ch arg~;&gt;.
RUTLAND - Rutla nd Vill age
Council meets Tuesday, 7 p.m.,
a t the civic cent er.
POMEROY - Pomeroy Area
Chamber of Commerce monthly
meeting Tuesday, noon, Porn.?roy Trinity Chu r.ch. Guest
speaker will be Jim Tompkins of
Southern Ohi o Coal Co.. )'Jho will

Honor rolls
Letart Fotto El...,...ary
Th(\ second six Wf'f'ks grading period
honor roll ar lhP U&gt;ta rt Falls ElfmPnlary
School has bePn announced. Makln~t a
.({T ad~ of B or abOve In allthPir subjOO!I to
be namt:'d to the roll Wf're:
Second Grade.-: John Gilland, Adain
Roush. Jesslra Sayr(', Lora Sayre, Va ·

nessa Shuler.
Third Grade: Jason Barnett, Bobbl
Ki n$:. Jason Shuler.
Fourth Grade: Sabrina Congo, Tracy

Plckl'll. Brandy Roush.
F'lfth Gra&lt;k&gt;: Stephanie Sayre.
Sixth GradP: Ntcklt&gt; Bf'E"~Ie. Darn•ll
Sayr(', Mlt'hellf:&gt; Stobarr. Kyle Wickline.

Syracuu Elfftlentary
Tht" serond six w('('ks gradi ng l)f'r'lod
honor roll at t hf:&gt; !'iyracuse Elementary
~ hool h,u been announCPd. Mak lnJt a
.l{rade of B or abov(lln all their subJects to
be named to thP roll wtre:
·
Grade Six: KE'vl n Arnott, Bethany Sus,
Jn hn &amp;nl!f'Y', Raberta Caldwell, Valrrle
Connolly. tamara Hayman. Heather
Mc ftlall , Angte Mills, Angl e- Swiger.
Grade Five: Aaron DrummH, Andrew
FIE'Idft, Crystal Harmon. Jod i Mobbs.

Michael Mcl&lt;l'lvcy. Amy Moorf'. Amber

Ohlin~er .

Grade Four: Brian Ande-rson, Randy
Ma lon Fisher, Be1h Hysell, Andrea
Moore. Ma11 MorrOYJ, Amy Weaver, Ryan
Wllllama, Adam KrawiCZ)'n.
GraM Three: Rochelle Jfnklns, Jen·
niter LaWI'ftJCf', Jay McKeolvey, Amanda
Mills. Sa mantha Sl11011, Rayan Young.
Grade Twa: Brian Allen. Carilaa Ash,
Chris Ball, Jorrmy Buskirk. Donat~
Elkins, Philip Hamm , Et1ft Kraw§C1yn,
Juon Lawrence, Travtl Llale, Tom
Powell. Adam Sayre, Nate Stuon, Amber
Bl n~t.

Thomas.

present a brief program and
discussion of operations at local·
coal facilities. All members
urged to attend. Turkey luncheon
will be served.

•
•

The annual Thanksgiving
dinner of the St: Paul United
Methodist Church was held in the
basement recently • with 66
attending.
Turkeys were furnished by the
adult class, and a Thanksgiving
dinner was held tn ' the church
sanctuary following the dinner.
"Count Your Blessings " was
sung by the group, there was
prayer by the pastor, and a
reading, "Count Your Many
Blessings" by Joanna Weaver.
Jessica Chevalier had a plano
solo, Hazel Barnhill, a reading,
"Make Every Day Thanksgiv·
lng" and Roger Wilford accompanied by his mother Mrs. Roger
Wilford' Sr., and a song "What
It's Like to Grow Old Together "
by Chester and Lorean Gorrell.
There was also special music by
Edna Coe ana daughers , Donna
Wolf. Diane Wolf, and Pam Bond,
and a group of the men attending.
Dorpthy Stout read "Father
Carved the Turkey," and the
closing song was "How Grea t
Thou Art" and a prayer.

.

VMH auxiliary

JEAN NAT~
GIFT SET
NO. 341-CONCENTRATEO

BODY PLEASURES

honors

volunteers

EWINGTON
- Pine
Grove
Holiness
Church
will be
In
revival Dec. 5- 14, wit h the Leroy
Manns family. Services begin
7: 30 nightly.
Auction scheduled
ROCK SPRINGS - Word of
Life Church is sponsoring a
Christmas auct.lon Sa turday,
Dec. 13, beginning at 11 a.m ., In
the coonhunters · building at the
Meigs grounds. Proceeds are Jo
go to the chuch building fu nd.
Donations. of merchandise or
money wlll be accepted. For
pickups call· 698-7238, 698-6855,
992-5316. Mall donations to Rev.
Ray Laudermllt, 34055 Pine
· · Groye Road. Racine, ~hio, 45771.
Chrlstma~~ auction

SYRACUSE - Syracuse Volunt eer Fire Department Is sponsoring a Christmas auction Sa t. urday, Dec: 13, beginning at 7
p.m., at the firehouse in Syracuse. Toys, tools and miscell aneous items will be so ld. Everyone
welcome.
•

.,u..,., :

WEEKENDS, SOME HOLIDAYS AND

Jusr ,,r;;•rEATHl.,,,

••
••
•
. '
•
t

NOtTtONS ARI £XCLUOtQl •

WEDNESDAY
RACINE - OAPSE chapter of
Southern 'Local Schools Christmas dinner, Wednesday, 6 to 8
p.m., Southern High cafeteria.
Those pla nning to attend should · J essie White was presented her
ebjng a covered dis h.
6,00()-hour service pin at the
recent meeting of the Women' s
Annual Christmas dinner
Auxllary of Veterans Memorial
CHESTER - The Chesler Hospital held in the conference
Volunteer Fire Department will room.
hold Its annual Chr lstrpas party
Others receiving pins were
and dinner al the Chester fire- Mary Folmer, a 1,000-hour pin,
house on Sunda y at 6 p.m. The a nd Freda McFann, a 100-hour
department will provide . meat pin.
imd beverage. All fire departA Chris tma s par ty was
ment members and families, planned for Dec. 11 at 6 p.m. at
a uxiliary members and famili es, the cafeteria. Each person is to
and anyone who ass isted the tai:e a covered dish and their own
department at the fair booth or table service. Turkey and dres sbar-be-guess, a nd their families, Ing wlll be provided. There will
are Invited to a tt e nd. Sa nta will -be a $3 gift exc hange.
Members continue to operate
make an appearance for the
children and door prizes will be the gift shop In the lobby of the
awarded.
hospital using the proceeds to
purchase needed Items for patients and service departments.
Revival continu~s

OLD SPICE
TRAVEL
GIFT
SET
NO. 3300-STICK

COLOGNE SPRAY-1 .5 OZ.
&amp; AFTER BATH SPIASHSIZE

DEODORANT-2.S OZ. SIZE
&amp; AFTER SHAVE-2.26 OZ. SIZE

99

99

s·oz.

CANDY WORK SHOP
AI

OHIO VALLEY
BULK FOODS
MAIN ST. 992 •6910 OMtROY

THURSDAy FRIDAy
&amp; SATURDAY
I

DEC. 11·12·13
10 A.M.'til 4 P.M.
.Ct~IH In and Itt Jonni,

ht or D" show you
how to make candy for
the· Christmas llelldays
·,... Chocolate CoYered
Cherrits, Coconut Bon
Ions, Peanut Iutter
Cups .... It's fun and
easy to do.

CALL NOW FOR ·YOUR· PROFESSIONAL
CONSULTAnON:
KATHY CLONCH-DEBBIE POW~LL, OWNER .
PHONE 992·3982

FOR THE BOTH OF US

Cundiff, Shaua H1rrll, AUda Mulford,

STYLING SALON
SYIACUSI, OHIO -

Lisa Russell. Evan Struble, Kevin VIning,
BIUy Young.

---------·· -

.I

_ ______

----···_..,.

\

RITE
WE

THE RIGHT TO LIMit QUANTITIES • PRICES EFFECTIVE PECEMIER 8 THRU 14, 1986 • NOT

I;Ui.J

•

. '"

·~

FOR TYPOGRAPHICAL !RR~~

'RITE AiD DiSCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST MAIN STREET
POMEROY, OH.
PHARMACY PHONE: 992·2586

16

Daily Number

079
PICK-4
'9552
•

•

at y
Vo1.36. No.152

Ponwroy ~ Middleport,

!=opyrightod 1.986

Rain possibly chanpns &amp;o
snow flurries before endlns .
tonight, wllhalowllltheupper ·
30s. M011tly cloudy Wednes- ·
day, with temperatures fal· .
lil)g Into the 30s during the ,
afternoon.

..

en tine
26 Con11 '
A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper ·:

3 Sections. 24 Peg eo

Ohio, Tuesday, December 9, .1986

MiddleiJ?rl to consider owit cable TV systeni
By BOB HOEFLICH
increases are not In accordance
Sentinel Staff Writer
with the franchise the company
The'Consolldated Communlca- · has with the vlllage but are the
!Ions Group, which provides result of federal deregu lation.
, ca ble television service for Mid-- . Mayor Hoffman . said he Is
dleport, came under heavy fire- "very displeased" wit h the· ineven to the point . of being creases and the service of the
replaced - when ·Middleport company. He ha s Solicitor Steve
Village Council 'met In regular Story revlewlngthe franchlse the
· sess ion Monday night.
village has with the company and
Mayor Fred Hoffman reported charged that the company has
tha t he had met with represent a- not abided by . the franchise
lives of the firm and stated that agreement and contends if the
rates in the town are being cornpany can break the franchise
increased for basic service from agreement, then so can the
$10.74 a month to $12.95 and all village.
·
other services of the company
He said the 3 percent the
are being increased by $1 a village receives from the franmonth.
chlse should be Increased to 6
The mayor said th at these percent.

COLU MBUS tUPI)- Mic hael
C. Harris of Cleveland has been
rehired by the state to coordinate
surveillance and publlc education !or acqu ired Immune deficiency syndrome, despite some
controversy over the way information h_as been disseminated.
The state Goll.trolllng Board
voted 5-2 Monday to award
another unbid contract to Harris,
a consu ltant who has been ·on the
Ohio Department Of Health payroll s ince January 1984.
Harris will be paid $31,994,
in cluding travel expenses,
through next September.
Robert Campbell, AIDS progra m supervisor for the de partment, said Harris mee ts with
high-risk groups, chiefly the gay
a nd bisex ual community , dispels
myths about ,the disease and
promotes precautions to be
ta ken.
Rep. Robert E. Netzley, RLaura, one of the members
opposed, said the Health De partment 's own physicians should be
doing the educating, and Sen.
E ugene J . Watts, R-Columbus,
objected to the lack of control
over what he termed "controversial materials" which have been
dis tributed.
Before approving I he contract,
the board added langu age giving
the department "control over the
distribution and content of materials which are dissemina ted. "
Cont roversy surfaced las t fall
over the dissemination at the
Ohio State Fair of a pamphlet
cont aining graphic information
about preventin g AIDS. Ca mpbell said a n Independent organizatio n. and not the department,
distributed that pamphlet. He
said Harris felt the pamphlet was
·.. ,oo strang and offensive."
. Cam pbell said t hal all hough
Harris Is not a physician , he Is a
specialist in sexually tran s mit led diseases and In communications. "Unfortunately, ther e's
misinformation that's spread
about AIDS," he sai d.
Cam pbell said Harris is conducting a pioneer ing program,
trai ning bartende rs in gay bars
to help dispense factual Information on how AIDS Is trans mitted
and what precautions to take.

r;;:==========:;i

BALDNESS - ACNE - WR~NILES
- PSORIASIS .- EXTREMELY
DAMAGED HAIR - MAKEUP
PROBLEMS

Days ~til
Christmas

Council authorized Mayor Hof- stated the defendant has not been November report of Mayor Hoi- land from the company for ·the
!man to contact an engineer in g handled severely enough in the !ma n totaling $2,943 in fln es and development of a bicycle patti.
firm to conduct a study in the
may or's court.
fees.
, A letter was read from Freda
community to determine the cost
That defend ant is scheduled to
VIllage receives hmds
Welling expressing her appreclafor the village to have Its ·own lace charges again tonight in the
A letter was read from John tion for the services ·or the publlc
cable telev ision system. Ma yor court of Mayor Hoffman. During Wolfe, representing the annual transportation system now operHoflman was also authorized to the discussion, Chiefo!PollceSid Dave Diles .. Golf Tournament, at'lng under the name of Bi~e
contact the Columbus &amp; Southern Little repqrted that the subject indicating that Middleport is Streak Cabs. Mayor Hoffman
Ohio Electric Co. to de term ine agai nst whom the co mplaints receiv lng. $750 from the annual reported that he has applied for
thE&gt; cost of utility pole rental for a were leveled has been arrested 24 fun d ra iser to hel p with further a n additional $9.300 in ,federal
village operated system.
limes and fined a total of$4,0251n ·development of the Dave Diles funds and $2,500 In state funds to
Resident seeks action
the mayor's court.
Park. The tournament raised finance the service for the
A Broadway Street resident
Mayor Hoffman commen ted $13,550 this year.
rema inder of the year. He
appeared before council and
that the actions In the court were
Mayor Hoffma n reported that a nticipates no problems.
charged that one individual is not a matter to come before the vlllage has received a $4,000
Facilitate buDding buy
har assing him a nd his famlly . He council and declined further travel and tourism grant and a
Council authorized Mayor Hof·
charged 'that t he Individual has
commen t on the matter except io letter was read from a Chesa- fman to facilitate the purchase of
damaged his automobil e, made · say that Solicitor Story has made peake &amp; Ohio Railroad Co. the burned out Empire Furniture
threateriing and obscene calls to 'recommendations on tonight' s representive inquirlllg about the Store bulldlng if action needs to
Ills home and others a nd, he
hear,lng. Cou ncil approved the village's intention on purchase
(Continued on Page 8)
·

··s·~ultz, McFarlane say they
]mew little of secret scheme

Expert
on AIDS
rehired
by state

ARE YOU TROUBLED WITH
ANY OF THE FOLLOW1tl8 ...

Grade One: Erl&lt;:a Amott, Mlck Barr,
Cynthia Caldw&amp;!ll , Ja1011 Counts, Valerie

'

.

Ohio Lo.ttery

drizzling rain to· appear on his
·
. braved '
1
sleigh Monday night when the Middleport Cham be~ of Commerce
_staged Its annual Chrlslma.~ Parade.' The raln not_only klll.ed
parade participation but reduced greatly the crowds coming into
the town to view the parade and shop . . Walking units of
Feeney-Bennett Poot 128, American Legion, and fire department
and a pollee vehicle composed the parade units.

Tom Lantos, D-C ali!., said of the
By E. MICHAEL MYERS'
affair.
WASHINGTON
(UPI)
Tw"
o
1
"This was the most ludicrous,
of President Reagan 's key forins
ane, count er-productive, hyeign 'policy advisers told a House
pocritical
and duplicitous initiacommittee Investiga ting the Iran
tive
I
have
ever heard of In all my
arms-Contra aid scand al they
in
the'Congress,"
said Rep.
years
received little. if any, information about the secret operation. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., aft er
leading one panel member to meeting with McFarlane In executive session. "It litera lly bogd ~ mn the entire affair as an
gles
the Imagination."
exam pl e of "s taggerin g
·
The
administration ' has been
stupidity.".
fire since the Nov. 25
under
Secretary of State George
Shultz and former national secur- disclosure oft he covert operation
Ity adviser Robert McFarlane that diverted up to $30 million in
testified under oath Monday profits from arms sales to Iran to
before the House Foreign Atlalrs the Nicaraguan rebels fighting
Committee In the firs t public th e Sa ndlnlsta government
hearing of the unfoldlng·scandal. through--a secret Swiss account,
The testimony by two of at a time when ,milita ry aid to .the
Reagan's closest aides prompted rebels was banned by law.
Three other pivotal players
several pointed remarks from
were s ubpoenaed to appear tocommittee members.
" It was 'mind-bogglin g myopia day before the commit tee - Vice
a nd staggering st up idity," Rep. . Adm . Joh!l Poindexter, McFa r-

DWI awareness week,. enforcement scheduled
The fifth annual Drunk and
Drugged Driver Awareness
Week wlll be observed Dec. l4-20,
Lt. Dan Henderson, commander
of the Galli~- Melgs post of the
Ohio Highway Patrol, said.
A few years ago, the public
demanded . and got tougher
drunk-drugged driving laws and
strict er punishment for drivers
convicted of driving under the
Influence of alcohol and other
drugs.
This grassroots . support for
DWI enforcement action has
been very helpful to to law
enforcement officers who work
to rid highways of these dangerous drivers, Henderson said.
Drun_k and Drugged Driver
Awareness Week Is promoted by
the Na tional Highway Traffic
Safety Administration to focus
a tt ention on the drunk-drugged
driver problem apd maintain
that much-needed public support
for effective enforcement of our
drunk driving laws, Henderson
said.
Drunk and Drugged Driver
Awareness Week wlll once again
be kicked off by a concentrated
anti-drunk dr iver enforcem erlt
effort called D-Day on Trafficways. D-Day wUI begin at 4 p.m.
Friday. Dec. 12, and end at 5p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 13. During these
13 hours, thousands of state,
county and local Ia~ enforcement officers across the United
States will be on the highways
looking for alcohol or drug
impaired drivers.
Last yea r, 6,900 pollee officers
were .wor king du ring' D-Day.

They arrested 2, 743 drunk and
drugged drivers. On D-Day 1985
ther e · were only 34 alcoholrelated deaths reported. By
comparison, on an average day,
62 people will lose their lives to
drunk or drugged drivers in the
United States.
This D-Day, officers of the
· Meigs County Sheriff's Department, Pomeroy and Middleport

police depa rtments and troopers
of the Gallla-Meigs post will join ·
together in this 13- hour enforcement effort. They will pat rol
those Meigs County streets and
hi ghways tha t .have a history of
a lco hol -rela ted accidents or
drunk driving violations.
Henderson concluded by "askin g Meigs County motor ists to
report drunk or ' other dangerous

drivers before they involve some
innocent motorist In a serious
traffic accident. You can call the
highway patro l a t 992-2397. We
will send the nearest available
officer and notify the appropriate
pollee agency if the violation
occurs within a city. The highway patrol also monitors CB
cha nnel9 all day. Our ca ll letters
a re KNN 3083."

lane's successor; Lt. Col. Oliver
North, an aide to the National
Security Council and the alleged
mas termind of the covert
sc heme, and Howard Teicher,
senior director of politicalmilitary affairs at the National
Security Council.
Poindexter and North lnv.oked
the Fltt h Amendment on grounds
of self-incrimination before the
Senate Int elligence Committee
las t week.
Shult2 and McFa rlane described Monday how the admlnls1ration was approached unofficia ll y In July 1985 by
representatives of Israel - ,although they did not identifY the
country-:- about elements In Iran
who opposed terrorism, wanted
to end the war with Iraq and
sought better · relations with
Washington.
There was no request for arms,
and McFarlane said Reagan told
them to pursue the dialogue.
But in August, the Israelis said'
their contacts needed help to win
support In the Iranian Army and
as ked for "modest quantities" of
mllitary hardware.
Shultz said he favored Reagan's policy of trying to arrange
a new relationship with Iran but,
" I was opposed and very skeptical about the use of arms In thai
connection."
In December, It appeared t~e
diploma tic effort was getting
nowhere and the Initiative was to
be phased out because It appeared to be·taking on the guise
of an arms-for-hostages swap,
exchanging the weapons for the
release of Ame rican hostages
being held In Lebanon by proIranian factions.
McFarlane said hew as sent to
London on Dec. 8, 1985, to tell the
Iranians Reagan wanted a political dialogue but "we would not
·engage In arms s hipments to
Iran nor encourage others to do

so."

CROWD - Even though a cold, drenching rain them an opportunity to visit with Santa In
fell , parents, many with umbrellas, lined up Middleport Monday night.
outside the Plant Parlor with their children lo give ·

McFarlane re turned t6 tell
Reagan there was no reason to
continue the policy. "I then left
the government ass uming th ~t
the matter was closed, " McFarlane said.
However, in August 1985, Rea gan had au thorized "lndirec.t
delivery of small am0 unts of
arms to element s (within Irani
opposed to terror is m," McFarlan e sa id.
His test imony directly cont radicted Attornev Gener al Edwiq
Meese, who h"s said Reagan
,wasn't aware of the arms s hipment, which was delivered by the
Israelis. until after It occurrl'd,

U.S. helicopters return to .base after Hondur~ troop lift
.
By NOE LEIVA
. JAMASTRAN, Honduras tUPI) - Honduran
troops nown to the front by U.S. helicopters
combed the rugged hills along the HonduranNicaragu an border for Sandlnlsta troops .who
crossed Into Honduras apparently In pursuit of
Contra rebels.
U.S. officials said the four Chinook and five
Huey helicopters that ferried the Honduran troops
to Jamastran, 25 miles from the rtghtlng, returned
to base at Palmerola airfield in western Honduras
Monday, ending the 36.-hour airlift.
In Ma~agu a, Nicaragua, the Defense Ministry
said Monday that fighter jets flying from
Honduras bombed clvlllan and mllltary targets in
two Nicaraguan provinces, kllllng seven soldiers

and wounding 12 soldiers and two chlldren.
Lt. Col. Javier Carrion, chief Nicaraguan
officer in the northern military zone, said
Nicaraguan soldiers were not able to Identity the
planes but said intelligence Information deter·
mined the attack was directed by the United
States.
Nicaraguan Foreign Minister Miguel d'Escoto
said Monday the planes that attacked the
Nicaraguan cities were American. U.S. offl~lals
denied attacking Nicaraguan cities .
A Honduran officer said seven 'Nicaraguan
soldiers were killed and seven wounded by
Honduran soldiers combing the hills along the two
nation's rugged and poorly defined border. The
report was not confirmed by U.S. officials.

U.S. Embassy spokes man Arthur Skop said
Monday night that he could not conrtrm repor ts
that 1,500 Nicaraguan troops, who overran a
border outpost on Thursday and wounded three
Honduran soldiers, retreated Into Nicaragua in
the lace of the !-londuran operation.
"I don ' t have any Idea," Skop said of the
reports. " I don't have complete information."
A Honduran official, who spoke on condition
'that he not be identified , said, "The army
co ntinues to sweep the area in search of the
In filtrators. There is no confirmation they have
left Honduras."
Honduran army spokesman Lt. CoL Jose Oscar
F lores said, · 'Unt II the Sandlnlstas, supposedly In
the area in which they Intruded, leave, the

.-

operation will continue."
The fighting and Honduran request for U.S.
assistance came after Nicaraguan troops , appaj"ently In pursuit of U.9'. -backcd Contra rebels
based In Honduras . overran a frontier post th~ee
miles inside Honduras Thursday .
.
A senior official said Monday that President
Jose A2cona warned Nicaraguan President
Daniel Ortega last weekend that the Intruding
Sandlnlsta troops would be attacked !!they did hot
leave Honduran terr itory.
·
The official, Deputy Foreign Minister Guillermo CacereS Pineda, said Ortega dented fhe
charge during the. telephon e conversation arid
A2cona told him that "the Sandlnjsta troops Will
be taken out of Honduras." ·
,
'

'! '

I

·•
'

'

'

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
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        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
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      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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      <name>mcmillin</name>
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