<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<item xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" itemId="13011" public="1" featured="0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="https://history.meigslibrary.org/items/show/13011?output=omeka-xml" accessDate="2026-04-12T09:22:31+00:00">
  <fileContainer>
    <file fileId="43983">
      <src>https://history.meigslibrary.org/files/original/899405755df462237902a15aea6af9eb.pdf</src>
      <authentication>f2924c21b7c10cb0a66f351438a135e7</authentication>
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="4">
          <name>PDF Text</name>
          <description/>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="52">
              <name>Text</name>
              <description/>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="40808">
                  <text>..

'-g1 D-8-The

.•.
'
·'
December 14. 1986.

· Pomeroy Middleport Gallipolis, Ohio Point Pleasant. w. Va. ·

Sunday Times-Sentinel

'

'

'

'&lt;

1 ~--------~--~~~--~--~~----~----~--------------------~-~~----~~--------------~----~----------,

. Gallia, Meigs ·to receive supplemental .·funds · :
POMEROY - Gallia and
United Way of America will
Meigs counties have been chosen , provide the administrative staff
to receive funding to supplement , and functiOn as fiscal agent. The
emergency food and shelt'\r board was charged with the
prograrhs in both counties. .
distribution of $70 million ap·
Gallia County received $14,6(l5 prolJrlated by Congress to ·help
expand the capacity, of food and
and Meigs County $11.671.
The selection was made by a sheller programs In high need
national board · made . up of areas around the country.
' affiliates of national voluntary
Local boards, n'l.ade up ·o f
organizations and chaired by, the members from various social
Federal Emergency ' Manage- seryice organliatlons, .religious
ment Agency.
and the cham!M!rs
SANTA TALK - Due to the Increasing amount of Christmas
activity at the · Pomeroy Health Care Center, Santa Claus,
pictur~d, and his helpers.,... senior cltlzens volunteers of Pomeroy,
1
partlclpanls ol the Meigs ~tired Senior Clllzeiui Volunteer
Prograin, and center ~esldents - have established a direct
telephone .line for area ., pre-,sch~olers and early elementary
children who wish to phone Santa. The youngsters can call99:1-3567
for a chat wllh Santa and to relate their Chflslmas lists. The
telephone line will begin functioning Monday b:om 3-6 p.m. dally,
Mond~tY t!U'ough Frida:~;., ,until 6'p.m. on Dec. 24

Veter~ns have until Jan. 31 .
, to apply for VJTA prQ~~un
POMEROY - A reminder has $10,000 reim bursement on wages
l:!een issued this week by Hugh · paid to the veter ans during · a
Custer, Meigs Coun ty Veterans pre-determined training period ..
service officer, and by Tom The employer es tablishes the .
White, Gallia Coun ty veterans trainin g program. wages . and
employment repr ese nt ativ e. selects the veteran to be trained.
that eligible veterans have until Under current legislation, an
Jan. 31.. 1987 to apply lor a employer ha s until Ju)y ,31, 1987,
Certificate of Eligibilit y for the to begin the training program.
E mployers or veterans interVeterans Job Training Act.
ested
in more information about
To tle eligible, a vetera n must
V
J
T
A
or other employment and
have served during the Korean
Conflict or Vietna m era. be training programs available to
' unemployed and ha ve been un· area veterans should contact Mr.
employed for at least 10 of the Cus ter at 992-2820 or the Ohio
past 15 weeks pr ecedin g Bureau of E mplo}lment Services
at 992·6671 or 446-1683.
•·
application.
The VJTA progr a m is adminis·
tered jointly by the Vetera ns
Administration a nd the Oh io
Burea u of Employment Servi·
ces. Throu gh VJTA. employers
who hire and trai n eligible
veterans may receive up to

WiD you be
eligible for
farm programs?
By Patty Dyer
USDA·Soll
Conservation Service
GALLIPOLIS - Farmers who
participate In USDA progra ms
such as price and income sup·
ports, Farmer's Home Adminis tration loans, Commodity Credit
Corporation storage payments .
farm storage facility loa ns. loan
and crop insurance programs,
and other p~ograms where pay·
men ts are made for commodi ties
produced by the farmer, need to
prepare now for so il erosion
control on all the land they
operate to be eligible for th ese
payment programs in fu ture
years.
.
The Sol! Conservation Servi ce
can help farm ers remai n eligible
for these programs by providing
Conservation Plans tha t oulline
tillage and rotation require·
ment s on a fi eld by fi eld basis.
Fields differ in needed erosion
control management because the
fields differ in their soi l type,
slo pe length a nd slope percents.
To be. eligi ble for farm programs on any of the la nd that a
farmer operates. the farmer
mus t show tha t he is opera ting a ll
of the highi.y erodible la nd
follow ing a n approved Conserva·
- lion Pian by 1990. Highly erodibl e
land is land which is currently
.eroding at higher than accepta·
ble levels or has the potential to
be highly erosive If current
conservation pract ices are dis·
c.ontlnued. This Includes nearly
all of the Galiia County cropland
except those that a re nearly level
or only slightly slopingo
Many of the conservation prac·
lice changes that need to be made
on Gallia County farms ca nnot be
easily made in just one year.
Farmers that think they need a
conservation plan should contact
the Gallia Soli and Wa ter Conser·
valion District now'so that a lime
can be scheduled to complete a
Conservation Pl an to be imple- mented in the futur e. For assist·
· ance , please cali446·B687.

of commerce will determine conduct a n annual audit; prac-. •
how t)le funds' awarded to each · tlce non-dJscrimlnatlo~; have :
county are to be distributed demonstrated the ca pability to ,
among the emergency food and deliver emergency food and/ or:
shelter programs operated· by shelter programs; and if they are
local service organizations in the a private voluntary organiza tl9n,
area.
lhey should have · a voluntary
Thelocalboardswillberespon· board. -,
.
sible for reoommendlng age ncies
Qualifying organizations· are
to receive these funds and any urged to ,apply and .. further
addlt.ionai funds avilable under . information on the PfOgr~ may
this phase of the program.
be obtai9.ed ,by sontactln~ the ,
Under the terms of the grant Meigs·· 'Coun\y (:omm~siOners, •
irom the natlona't board local 992-2895. Gallip.oli~ Area .
governmental or private 'voi un- ... Charr:tber of Commerce. 44.&amp;0596,
tary organizations chosen to . or Gallia·Meigs Convnumty Ac·
)'eceivefunds !lJUStbenOn'·profit;
tiop Agen·cy at 9~2·6629 o~ 367· .
have an accounting system
7341.

•

•

'• .

Birth 'Control;

Cancer

V.D.

~

•

~

•

•

",'..

,
•'

3 Sections, 20 Pages

.

26 Centl

1 5 1 98 6

'

PLANNED PARENTHOOD .
OF SOUTHEAST OHIO

POAUROY:

GALLIPOLIS ,
'414 St&lt;Dnd Ave., 2nd floor

Meigs Medi&lt;al Building
(a&lt;roll from Veterans Hosp.l
992-5912 Monday-Friday

446-0166 Mon.·Sat.
CLOSfD THIIISDAY
"

~::A:J:•o:::J:a:c:k:so:n:·:c:::::::::A~th:a~n:•·~C~hi~ll=ic:o:th:e:·::~==~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

6-GII. Wet/Dry V8CUUm power deans e-..ertth,ng

W•th

e ~~: te nslon wands. 6·tl . hose. nozzle. dolly.

'-'w&amp;»li

Stop in and pick up .y~r ~EE copy
· ol our Hardware Gilt Circular

&amp;UI

Portable Workbench has 6Wi ng ·UP front JCIWS 10f vert•CCII

2

42.99

49.99

clamptng. Fol ds.

~o~~u;oo

3x18-ln. Belt Sander. 7V•·In. Circular Saw has
:J,~a- HP motor lor 700ft Pe' m.n· a h•gh-lrirqu e 2-H,P motor.
~Me~1~

ute belt 5peed

JOLLY OLD ELF •• Santa made his round&amp; through' Racine
during Saturday's Christmas parade on the back of a fire truck.
Guess the magic sleigh must have been In the shop.

By OSWALDO BONILLA
.
MANA&lt;fUA. Nicaragua (UPI) - U.S. officials
said they have not been permitted to . visit an
American, believed , to be the brother of a
congressman, arrested on suspicion of spying on·a
Nicaraguan air base for the United States.
The man. identified as Samuel NesleyHall, 49,
of Dayton, Ohio, was arrested Friday in a
restricted are,a of Punta Huete air base, 12 miles
north of Managua, Foreign Minister Miguel
._ d'Escoto said late Saturday.
D'Escoto said HaU; who has played a role In
supplying Nicaragua's Misklto Indian guerrillas,
admitted that he was working for a private U.S.
espionage ·company. "rollecting Information for
the U:S. government ."
A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy said the
mission was Informed of the detentron but dld not
know anything about the suspect or the activities
for which he was arrested.
·
"We have asked for access to him. So far It has
not been granted." said AI Laun, the public affairs

TINY MISS WINTERTIME- Saturday's temperature was a bit
chilly, but Kayla Pullins bundled up warm so she could participate .
In the Rac;tne Christmas parade.
·

officer at the U.S. Embassy. "We have no
the region In the past. He was very surprised. He
independent Information on him."
thought he was in the United States at the time."
Hall is the second American arres ted by the
Gessel said. N'o on'e offered information disputing
Nicaraguans this year . Eugene Hasenfus, who
that Samuel and Ton y'Hail are brothers.
A statement from the Interior Ministry in
admitted that he was running combat gear to the
U.S.·backed Contra rebels. was captured Oct. 6
Managua. released by the Nicaraguan Embassy
after his supply J1lane was shot down.
in Washington, said a passport confiscated from
the suspect contained visas for travel to Israel,
D' Escoto said Hall might be forced to stand trial
before the Sandlnlsta People's Tribunal that tried
South Africa and El Salvador.
Hasenfus and sentenced him to 30 years in jail for
A U.S. government source in Washington said
violating terrorism and public security laws.
the information released by the Nicaraguan
Following announcement of Hall's arrest.
Embassy about Hall's passport "so~nds very
reports surfaced that he was the brother of Rep .
right. I know for a fact he's been in Israel and he
Tony Hall. D.Qhio. Hall said he received ,no
said he's been in Angola." ·
offlcl'al .word that ~h@ man ·"lll'r~ted ..l"l!A.•,hl&amp; . ,
''l'v!'. seen that pauport and ll!e.r~ly_ every~
'brother, an Olympic diving medalist and a
page is covered," said the source, who requested
self·styled "guerrUla commander."
·
anonymity.
But the congressman' s spokesman. Michael
A U.S. official said that It was unlikely Hail
Gessel, · told United Press International that
could have arrived at Punta Huete air base by
"based.on the Information we have and the news
accident. The United States has charged that
reports we've seen it's likely It's his brother."
runways at the isolated base are being lengthened
"Congressman Hall has known he has been In
to accomodate Soviet military aircraft.

"a

After his arrest, Hall told authorities he was
writer who came to see what was happening ln tlll'
country," d'Escoto said.
But after further questioning, d'Escoto said,
Hall admitted working for a li.S. espionage
company called " Phoenix Battalion" that was
"collectin g info r mation for the U. S.
government."
D'Escoto sa id maps and sketches of the air base
and "diverse objects of Nicaraguan military
interest" were found on Hail, who he said was
"advising the Mlsklto Indians." .
"If someone Is gathering intelligence informa·
lion, he cannot be walking around wlth good
Jnt~l!.tl9~. " ~ ' Escoto said, "(Hall) wUI be .
lnvestlgate!l in dep(h and possiblY stand before
the tribunals. "
Samuel Nesley Hall. the brother of the
congressman and son of a for mer mayor of
Dayton, is an Army veteran who won a sliver
medal in diving at the 1960 Olympics in Rome.

M..-n~

handy scales.

.Lawsuit faults GM seatbelts

HOMELIT£

14"XL®

AKRON iUPI) -The widow of
Lois Baird,. widow of Dr.
a prominent Akron neurosurgeon William C. Baird II, agrees with
has sued the General Motors critics of the system who say the
.' (:orp. and Its Pontiac division for belts allow a dangerous amount
, $3 million In what is believed to . of sla.ck to accumulate In the
lie the first trial challe.nging the ·shoulder harness and can leave
' safety of GM's controversial seat passengers with little or no
: belt system.
protection in an accident .

Official claims Bush
aide knew about deal
'

·14.88

9.99

2 -~ Slicing Knife Set incl
b•ea e~tct~e MAlle •na 4-ln
u bll l ykn.tewlt~ ~err altO 101111 lor·

B·irt

ITII,IIti •PIIfPQII illd~l)

The

&gt;I I

11

0RIHO '

1 Home Improvement Ency·
~ clopedl•ll'"n )'Ou coml)lelfll•n ·
, , r,uchons and lull ·ill us11111•onl o n
• t:lO bog and amllltob!
011• 1

Shoe
59.99

'

S.01'8Wet' Tool Ctlnl h•s 121'r·l
lrt. deep dra,...n,' tockable storag1
are• unde• th e lid , keyed cylinder
_,liM
lock fot exira security

7399
sCIII Saw/Sin••r

99.99

Ptrlecr tor

locka co mpletel y whl!" Ir on!

3-Drtwer Roller Cabinet
gane l ls cloud Orawfllr S. mea -

sur e

23W•17Da3~H

\"

.... ,,o,

99.80

·3795

. A) 10-Pc . Cutlery B•t

*'*' ... ,. ..... s-. ..........

. . ,. ... """",........... .... dill.

••·....- r...,.. ::.:'ilia

:::~=-==·
· """
Ill Ill . ..

V.-IIP B•cll Brlllller

SDiid Cnt-lrlllll COIIIIIM:MI, 8-111. 'lllllfl, H"" tTJihitkh , d1111

81tclon, N;ulthllltloelrntl. Ouilto,~~lllttn .

,,

O'DElL .]iae
N r VI I &lt; &gt;1

fo

fia.6AX

'LUMBER CO. ·

I l , N" I () 111,11 ol l 'I I' I l M I II 0 Y Cl fvH N T ll L 0 C K

----

634 EAST MAIN STREET, POMEROY, OH.
PHONE 992-5500
. '
Now· Op~n 7:30A.M. to 5:30P.M. ~y-Friday
Saturay 8 A.M. to, 3 P.M.

PLENTY
OF
FREE

VINE STREET AT 3RD AVE., GAlliPOliS, OH.
PHONE '446-1276
Now Open 7:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Monddy·Friday
Saturday' 7:3(! to 5 P.M.

WASHINGTON (UP!) -An
aide to Vice President George
.Bush pressured Lt. Col. Oliver
· North to hire a former CIA
· operative to help manage a
· private network supplying
arms to Nicaraguan rebels, a
White House official says.
The official said Sunday
that Donald Gregg. Bush's
national security advl~er, received . regular progress reports of the arms·supply net·
work and knew that North was
directing the operation.
North was fired from .his
National Security Council post
Nov. 25 for his role in the
diversion of up to S30 million in
profits from clandestine arms
sales to Iran to the Contras
through Swiss ba'nk accounts.
Gregg has said that he did
' not know anything about. the
private network until · the
, former CIA operative, Feliz
·Rodriguez, Informed him ·of
the operation In August.
However, the White House
official, who declined to be
named, ~hallenged those .
statements\ saying a subordl·
nate regularly Informed
Gregg about network
activities.
The official said Gregg
knew that North had been
· directing the private effort to
provide military ana flnahclal
assistance to the rebels, a
. CIA·formed force fighting to
overthrow Nicaragua's Sandi·
nista government.
North complained several
times to White House asso·

Vice President Bush
elates last spring that Gregg
was pressuring him to hire
Rodriguez to help run the
network. the official said.
"Gregg keeps pushing me to
take (Rodriguez) on," the
official . quoted North as
saying.
Bush's spokesman, Marlin
Fitzwater, said Sunday tbe
vice president has asked
Gregg to give him a chronol·
ogy of . 'his contacts with
Rodriguez, who used the alias
Max Gomez.'
"At this point there Is no
Indication of any wrongdoing
on Don's part," Fitzwater
said. "Our Intention is to get
all the information out about
Don Gregg and his contacts so ·
there can be no question about
hilt role."
'

~

•

•

'.

'

•

•
.

I

•

""'

enttne

..
•
•

•Sliding f~t scblt.- No one refused services because
of inability to pay.

For
Him

ON THE "T" IN MIDDLEPORT

at y

•

Scrtining; ,...egnclncy ,·
,_sh; education and counseMg
for individuals and couples.

Boots

THROUGHQUT THE STORE

•

Tonight, mostly cloudy.
l.ow In th~ mid 30s. Light
southwest winds. · Tuesday,
mostly cloudy. High In the mld40s. Ch.ance ol precipitallon Is
20 percent.
·

Suetning;

•

••' •

32-27-30-29-18-20

Frye

•

Daily Numlwr
103
Lotto

CUTLHI"'

? My$tery?
Specials

Days 'til
Christmas

•services inciudl:

OPEN TODAY ,
12 NOON-5 P.M.
•
•

'&gt;

Haroard

•

"

{. rv~m~.l~e.~N~o~.;::~e~e~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~P~o~rnieirioiyiiiN'iiidi~ileipioirti,iOiihiioi~i,..Aniioinidiaiyi,iDieicieimiibieiriii'i~:i~iiii~9i~j;ji;;~iiiiA~Mi"i~miiodiiaitinci.iN•i.wioip~ii·il-:

hobb, flll , do· it·
fOUIU IIIII. lnd. 3 undln,
dlscsandhckingpad. 611SP

•

10

..,..,

Ohio Lottery

r

Your privacy is respected
.·Your questions answered,

- John
Undcrwood, District Exten·
sion Agronomist, will be one of
the Instructors for the "Herb!·
clde for Row Crops" class to
be held Monday, Dec. 15, 7:30
p.m., at the Gallla County
Serilor Citizens Center. He will
be Joined for the presentation
by Kent Harrison, OSU Exten· .
sion Specialist In Weed
Science.

AKRON, Ohio !UP!) - The
selection of Cltibank as lead
agent · in the Goodyear Tire &amp;
Rubber Co. restructuring loan
package apparently has offended
ot her s in the bank ing industry.
According to "The Bank Letter," a weekly publication of
Instituponal Investor magazine,
Goodyear's c hoi ce was not well·
received among cert ain un.'
named bankers.

'

,

1

'DEllS

GO®year's choice
offends other hankers

' '

'
I

,

'
••

Something

known as the
"~indow·shade" feature, so
named because lhe should~r
harness can be lightened or
loosened by tugging it slightly in
the saine way a wt~dow shade Is
adjusted, Is crux of the complaint
a gainst the belts .
Baird died in 1982 when the
Pontiac Grand Am he was
driving, with his seat belt fas·
tened, ran off the road and struck
a tree.
The lawsuit has reached the
jury in U.S. District Court. ·
Paul Lewis, a consultant in
automobile litigation, has .kept
close watch nationally on law·
suits that blame the window·
shade feature lor accident·
related injulres. He believes the
Baird suit is the first such 'case to
go to go on trial.
'" It's 'a situation where all the
Amerlcan·manufacured automo·
biles have the same or similar
deveice, so 'lt's a fairly common
problem , although It may not be
recognized by people," Lewis
said.
Some critics say they expect
injuries related to the design to
become apparent very soon as
more states enact mandatory
seat belt laws.
"The reason these injuries
were not showing up is because
so few peoplewereweartngtheir
seat belts," sa id David Blss, an
automo(lve Sl\fety consultant.
"Now be pr~pared to see people
being seriously lnjuredwith their
seat belts on."
Attorneys for General Motors
·COntend that the wlndow·shade
design had "essentially no role"
In the Baird accident.
General Motors engineers testifying In the Baird case said that
although there Is a potential for
too much slack to accumulate,
. typical movement is not likely to
cause it.
Pontiac owner manual contain
warnings about the · potential
danger Of excessive slack in the
seat belts. Attorneys for Baird
said the problem Is the manuals
don't tell what Is excessive slac~.

ON THE LIST ...:. A judge on the special court
looking lor an Independent prosecutor to Invest!·
gate the lrans arms·Conlra aid scandal said the
panel has narrowed Its search, but the short list Is
"changing every day." Legal sources said a
le~tdlng candldale for lhe job Is Lawrence Walsh,

right, a former federal judge In New York, depaly
attorney general in the Eisenhower administration and a f~rmer president of the American Bar
Association. Publlsbed reports said that Herbert
· Stern, left, a retiring federal judge In New Jersey·,
is also a candidate for the job. (UPI)

Dole: Reagan nee,ds top legal advice
WASHINGTON (UP!) -Pres·
ldent Reagan s hould have a top
legal adviser to assist him in the
unfolding Ir.an·Contra scandal,
since chief of staff Donald Regan
does not have the legal background, Senate Republica n
leader Robert Dole says.
The Kansas lawmaker said he
believes, " What the president
needs Is someone to keep him
advised," of the legal ins and outs
of the affair, beyond the services
provided by the White House
counsel's office.
·"
"Bring in a past president of
the American Bar Association,
some prestigious lawyer, someone like Howard Baker for
example, to advise the president,
take a look at all the documents
and · explain to the press from
time to time what really has
happened," Dole said Sunday.

serve as "de facto" chief of staff.
Regan, under fire in the
exploding con troversy over secret divers ion of clandestine Iran
arms sales profits to the U.S.·
backed Nicaraguan rebels, received a tepid endorsement from
White House colleague Patrick
Buchanan.

concerning Regan.
Lately, . Mic hael Deaver. a .
former Reaga n White House
deputy chief of s taff. has lx'en
advising ·the White House on
damage-control in the Ira·n·
Contra crisis with sugges tions
for a replacement for Regan, The
New York Tim es reported today.

Saying he did not know If
rumors of Regan 's resignation
were true, Buchanan, the Whit e
House communications director.
said, "He should do wha t the
president tells him to do. "
Dole said he spoke with Regan
Saturday night and, "He said,
'I'll tell you one thing, I'm not
leaving the White House." ' .
Asked how long Regan would
stay, Dole responded, "He didn 't

Administration offl&gt;lals said
tha.t in recent days DeavE&gt;r has
contacted former Transporta·
tion Secretary Drew Lewis to
discuss his replacing Regan and
has raised the possibility that
retiring Sen. Paul Laxalt, R·
Nev., a close friend of the
president 11nd the fi rs t lady,
would wotk with Lewis in the
White House. Lewis, a P9PUiar
figure in the Republican Party. is
also close to Na nc:f Reagan .

say." . ·
Dole said, "I think the pres!·
dent's decided to keep Don

Dole said that person - he Regan."
Reagan, who with his wife,
specifically mention ed (ormer
.Nancy,
attended a taping of the
Sf!n. Howard Baker, R·Tenn.,
NBC·TV
special "Christmas In
who served on the Senate Water·
gate committee more than a Washington" Suriday night, redecade ago - would ultimately fused to respond to questions

..

-

In recent weeks. adminlstra·
tion officials and friends of the
first lady told the Times. Nancy
Reagan has spoken a lmost daily,
a nd sometimes several times a
day to Deavet, whose lobbying
actiV'Ities are under Investigation
by a Federa l grand jury.

�• 'J"

.. '

Paga 2-The Deily Sentinel

==07:?:&amp;~"8.~
(!iving everythi,ng·_____,_______Ge_~-:-r~_e·R_._P_lag_e_nz

Ohio

6

The

D~ily Sentinel

J

111
P Court Sireel
Ohio
·
0 "TS
DEVOTED TO THE INTERomei'C!y,
MEl
""' OF THE
llS·MASON AREA
A~

~m~
~v

,....,_..._-r,......,.,=,=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
AS8lslant Publisher/Controller

BOBHOEF~CH

General Manaser

~ALE

ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally Press
Assoc iation and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION art' wclcorll(&gt;. They shwld be less than .m words
long. AJII~tters arc-sul:lje&lt;.'l toe&lt;iillng and rrust be signed w\lh name, address and
IPI£'1)hone number. No Wlsl~nl'd letters wUI be pu blished . LeltPrs should be In
good taste-. addrC'Sslng Issues, not pPrsooalitlt~s .

For Alex Keaton Qf TV's
"Family Ties," it was more than
a collector's Item. It was a source
of great comfort- a warm, fuzzy
security blanket.
All those dollar signs cuddled
within the covers of a single Issue
of Forbes magazine would help
,America's favorite yuppie get to
steep each night.
. For others the "Forj)es 4QO"a ready compendium . of the
richest people In America T
would be likely to keep them
awake contemplating the mor~ltty of so much wealth residing tn
so few hands.
Not that anybody (even thl'
U.S. Catholic bishops) would
question the right of these
flnahclallords to amass ali those
megabucks. It is the American

dangerous to a 11enate a bl g g1ver
tn th e congrega tlon bY te111ng
· him, "It Isn't what you give, It's
what you keep that Interests t}le
Lord."
If that Is true, It wlll make .ft ·
harder on some people than on
others on Judgment Day. While
most of us who are asked by tl\e
Lord, "Well, how much· did you .
keep for yourself?" wlll give our
answers readily In four figure~ or
five (or in rare , cases, six.).
members of the "Forbes 400"
may feel like hiding rather than'
face the Lord and say, "$250
. million. Lord:"
'
Don't look for the churches to
To be In that spot' would be
give this little lecture to their eriough to make one turn a'tound
morl' affluent members. 1 and start looking for the down .
Churches court the wealthy like escalator without waiting for the
else. It would be Lord's reply.
way to reward enterprise, risk·
·
tasking and lnlthitive.
;
But though they had the right to
make all that money, Is It right
that they should keep so much for
themselves?
Another question designed to
disturb the slumber of some ·
while ·Alex Ke11ton nestles ·an
snug In his tied (with visions of
conglomerates dancing In his
head) Is why would anyone want
$250. million (to use a •nice,
middle-of-the-road "Forbes 400"
flgurt&gt;) In the bank anyway? It
never rains THAT hard.

Backstairs at the White House

Reagan stays busy
during investigation
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON !UP! ) - President Reagan has not gone
und erground whit~ several investigations probe Into his secret sales
of arms to Iran and into the funn eling of the profits to the Nicaraguan
rebels.
He Is keeping a high profile and keeping busy. His oflictal schedule
is packed as he touches all bases in preparation for his seventh year In
thP White House.
·
The forthcoming budget is the most timE- consuming business.
Reagan also will be making decisions on programs In that context
with a healt h Insurance measure to take care of "catastrophic
Illness" high on the agenda. The president's domestic policy and
economic advisers are trying to nix it, but Secretary Otis Bowen of
heal! hand human services believes It is the way for the country to go.
Behind closro doors in the White House there Is preoccupation with
the Iran arms-Contras sca ndal with aides saying they have used up
their "act ion options. "
Bu t they do not expect · the dust to settle soon, not with the
proliferation of Investigations and the spotlight on Capitol Hill In
January.
White House chief of s taff-Donald Regan is hanging in there, and the
voices calling for his dismissal are growing softer. He sttllis on shaky
ground ·but as long as he has the president root ing for him, he should
be safe.
Regan's aides are tense and defensive in view of the events 'ihat
have engulfed them. Their own futures are at stake as well since any
replacement for Regan will bring In a new team.
The same is true in the National Securit y Council. where newly
appointed NSC adviser Frank Carlucci. who succeeded deposed VIce
Adm. John Poindexter. expected to clean house, leaving few of the
previous adv isers around.
Some of the criticism of the NSC operatjo9 bas been the !aet that It
has become militarized under Reagan with admirals and colonels
taking the lead with little· diplomatic and political expertise under
their belts.
The nomination for "Grinch" in the Whit e House these' days Is
William Graham. the president's sciPnce adviser. who was acting
administrator of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration
at the time of the Chall enger space shuttle disaster.
Staffers were shocked when Graham. an electrical engineer, !Ired
Jerry Jennings. the highly skilled executive director of the Ofllce of
Science and Technology Polley. with the approach of the Christmas
s~ason. Jennings, who is married and has children, has been in the
White House for a dozen years and had been with the FBI and the
National Security Council·.
D1·. Burton Smit h.. the White House physician who had been the
president's doctor in Los 1\ngeles, quit to return to California. There
have ,been reports for months that Mrs. Smith was unhappy in
Washington and missed her friends and family .
Smith. a 'urologist. is being replaced by his assistant, Dr. John E.
Hutton, a colonel in the medical corps. who serves on the staff of
Walter Reed Army Medical Center as a vascular surgeon.
Tt had -been a tradition in the past to name a White House physician
from the Navy. part irularly since there Is a special presidential suite
at nearby Bethesda Naval HospitaL But during the "50s, President
Dwight D. Eisenhower . a five-star general. went to Walter Reed and
died there.
Deputy press secretary Larry SpeakeS teased radio and magazine
correspondent Lester Ktnsolving about the size of his tape recorder.
"What have you got there- an organ grinder?" SpeakPS asked him.
"Would you like to sit on my shoulder," Klnsolvlng shot back.
Presidential aides sign a lot of papers before they take leave of the
White House for greener pastures. Some of these papers prohibit the
signers from disclosing any classified Information or document s
when they leave the White House.
The counsel"s office apparently does not see any bar to Larry
Speakes writing a book when he leaves on Feb. 1 to join Merrill Lynch
Investment Corp. on Wall Street. Speakes, who Is orderly and
organized. has copious flies and he will probably take them with him,
following the tradition of previous press secretaries who wrote booki
after tht&gt;y left the White House.

T~ay in history
By Untied Press International
Today Is Monday. Dec. 15, the 349th day of 1986 wlth-16 to follow
The moon Is almost full.
··
The morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. They
Include the Roman emperor Nero In 37 A.D.; French engineer
AleKandre Elfie I. builder of the Parts to.wer that bears his name and
engineer of the Statue of Liberty, In 1832; playwright MaKwell
Anderson In 1888; billionaire oilman John Paul Getty In 1892; disc
jockey Alan Freed, who coined the phrase "rock 'n' roll," In 1922;
comic actor Tim Conway In 1933 (age 53), and actor Don Johnson In
1950 (age 36).
On this date In history:
In 1791, the Bill of Rights, comprising the first 10 amendments to
the Constitution, took effect following ratification by the state of
VIrginia.
In 1944, American forces led by Gen. Douglas MacArthur l§nded at
Mindoro In the Philippines.
·
In 1948, a federal grand jury In New York Indicted former State
Department official AlgerHtss for perjury in connection with his
denial thai he gave secret government documents to Whittaker
Chambers, allegedly lor delivery to a foreign power.
In 1982, Teamsters Union President Roy Williams and four others
were convicted In a Chicago federal court of conspiring to bribe
Nevada Sen. Howard Cannon.

~\.~

Browris
·bomb·
_
Bengals
34-3
.
to wi.n Central Division title
'

Jesus. .we know, · was not
tmpressedbytheblgglverstothe
church. (This also Is not something . ministers wlll willingly
reveal to their congregations especially on or near Pledge
Sunday.) To Jesus , the Important
question Is not "What did you
give?" but "What did you give
upr''
.There are plenty of large
church contributors who )lve In ·
the same style after giving as
before - country clubs, luxury
vacations, expensive colleges for,
their children, two houses wlth .a
Mercedes In each garage.
That kind of giving that doesn't
Involve giving up something In
the process does nothing lor a
man's soul, said Jesus. Mark'S
gospel records an Incident in
Jesus' Ute which he , used to
!llustrate what true giving
means: .
"Then he went · over to the
collection boxes In the temple
and sat and watched as the crowds dropped In their money.
Some who were rich put In large
amounis. Then a poor widow
came and dropped In two
pennieS.
"He called his disciples to him
and reinarked;-'That poor widow
has give~ more than all those .
rich men put together! For they
gave little of their extra fat, while
she gave up her last penny."
The axiom, "It's not what you
give, It's what you give up that
counts," applies to human .rela·
lions too.
The marriages that go best are
not those In which husbands and
wives give each other expensive
gifts, but those In which both
partners give'up a large measure
of their freedom and lndepend·
ence for compr.omtse and
Interdependence.
It's not what we give our
children that is so Important. It's
what we give up for them- such
as giving up time we spend away
from them .

Non-Aligned 'Nations. The war
with Iran caused the conference
planners to pick another meeting
place, but the hostilities clearly
haven't discouraged a series of
conventions from' sampling the
earthly pleasures of the city.
The hotels are filled with
convention delegates: a large
gathering of Arab pharmacists
and hundro&gt;ds of writers for the
seventh Al-Mirbad poetry festi val. The Arab passion for poetry
was evidenced by frequent stand·
lng ovations a nil the sight of men
weeping at the emotion stirred by
the readings. Many of tho&gt; poets
dealt with the war, and their
works portrayed Iraq . as the
heroic Arab &gt;hampton standing
up to the ancient Persian enemy .
In fact, there seems to' be an
undo&gt;rlylng cultural theme to the
government's war propaganda :
Ali that Is good and enduring

.,
•

.

••'
'

:I

human services, peace and a
healt hy environment, knowing
we feel strongly about those
Issues. Political analysts say the
women's vote 1In at least nine
states ) contributed to the recenl
Democratic takeover of the
Senate.
-"1 can re-Invent myself." 1
know a journalist-turned·
property manager who Is ·now
taking courses to become a
financial planner. We women are
developing a knack for changing
the way we look a t ourselves. We
r&lt;'·lnvent our Image by buying a
za ny feather boa or taking a
course In assertiveness training.
We arc very good at evolving and
growing through self-discovery.
-"Being someone's wife does
not say who I am." I'm not a
derivative of a husband, even
though· I may be very proud of
hlm. l am my own person. able to
realize myself In some Individual
way.
-"I may make more money
than my husband ." Five million
women do! That's one-fifth of all
working wives. Some are femal e
superstars In top executive jobs:
others make more because their
husbands experience labor-force
difficulties, are Ill or are retired.
-" 1 don't have .to be a
supermom anymore. •• After . a
decade of frazzling ourselves
trying to be perfect wives,
mothers, housekeepers and employees, we finally have learned
to take it easy on us. Forget

the joy or cooking, shopping and
vacuuming and folding laundry.
Some are plum proud of their
C.hlcken Kiev- or their ablllty to
Iron a shirt or nurture a baby .
-"Society listens to iny
nceils." After a long period of
neglect. business and govern·
ment are becoming sensitive to
working mothers. It has taken a
media blitz and a cadre of
forceful leaders to pull off the
turnaround. but there' s good

news In many places. Sick-child
lnflrmal'les, bills for federally·
subsidized day care, and child·
care centers In business parks
are already in place. Increased
options for job sharing, flexible
work hours and maternity leaves
are all Indicators that this
country Is a1 last ready to ease
the burdens of working parents.
Allin all. 10 reasons to be glad
to be a woman In the '80s.

,..

'r
• I

Forget the dust balls on the closet
floor. Let's walk the kids to the
corner for an Ice cream Instead.
-"My husband pitches th. "
Not In overwhelming numbers,
you understand, but more and
more men are being exposed to

.

Last weekend
of NFL .a-ction,
.
.'.Qffers.JJiany pivotalga~es · ,
'

...

SEASON

..

...

••

••
•

"

..
:... .,..·,

.

I I l

I

..'

.' '",.

...

...
. I.

.'

..

,,
'

. ~·

..
•

I II'

' .'

Eastern downs·Miller 69-63; ·
not~he~ 2nd stra~ght victory
By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Stall Writer
HEM LO CK - The Eastern
Eagles compiPted an Impressive
w~kenp Saturday evening by
defeating host Miller 69·63 In a
hard-fought non-lpague basket·
ball contest.
Eastern is now -3·2 overalL
The Eastern win was the
product of a team effort four
Eagles scored in double-figures.
Jeff Ca ldwell completed a fine
weekend series with a game-high
18 points, Eddie Collins managed
15 markers, Mark Griffin tossed
1~ 13, and Mike Martin JI , Bryan
Durst seven. Allen Tripp three, (
and Tony Hendrix two.
Tom Du'tlel led Miller scoring
as the Falcoi\S also placed four
men In double fl~ures. Outlet had
17, Jqhn Edwards had 12, Craig
Wilson JI. and Kevin Newman10 . .
Eastern soared· to a 12·9 llrst
period lead behind several Cald·
well jumpers and great lnsi~e
pOSt play by senior Ed Collins.
While Edmond Collins and
Mike Martin wen• enjoying great
Inside games. Mark Griffin en·
joye,d a solid outside shooting
performance to give Eastern a
35-25 halftime advantage.
Tom Out lei proved to be the
Miller workhorse in the first half,
however, Wilson, Edwards and
N~w/na n turned In consistent
second perlod·perform~es.
·Early In the third frame
Eastern pushed ahe
y 15
markers. but Miller concluded
!he frame with a hot outside
shooting streak that cut the
deficit to eight points, 46·38. · ·
Jesse Caldwell and Mark Grlf·
fin dazzled the away -from-home
crowd with fancy balihandllng

off the fast brea k.
The 5-foot ·ll Eddie Collins held
his own and · then some at the
post. giving up 4·8 Inches to
larger foes over the weekend, but
still getting the job done. Collins
grabbed 23 rebounds over the
weekend, 11 Saturday, while also
netting a key 15 markers with
several offensive rebounds.
Swing-guard Bryan Durst also
turned in a consistent effort
during Eastern's hot streak In
the third frame.
Eastern canned 25 of 61 field
goals tor 43 percent .and netted 19
of 27 at the line. Mill er hit 26 of 69
and 9 of 21 attempts from the
charity stripe.
,
Eastern won the battle of the
boards 32-31 had 14 assists , nine
steals, 14 turnovers, and 19
personals. Collins led , with 11
rebounds , Mart in had seven, and
Durst six.
Newman had seven tor Miller.
Eastern's reserves lost a heart·
breaker 37-39 on a last-second
shot by ~teve McCafferty who
tossed In 16 points. J . Brouton
had nine·:, and D. lla tfleld eight.
Eastern was ted b~ Fitch's 13,
. Sbaun Savoy witH 11, and Kenny
Caldwell's eight.
Eastern ·plays at ,Symmes
Valley next Friday in an SVAC
ll)atch-up. ·
EASTERN ljiiil -Tony Hen*l•. t -~!:
ADen Tripp, H·3: Mark Griffin, S-3-1:1:
Bryan llal'l!l, t-3-7; Ed Collin•. &amp;-3-1~: Jell
Uatdw.U, Ut8: Mike Man In, ~3-11: Todd
1\'1111011. 0.0.11: Brmt Norton, ~~0 . TOTALS

15-t&amp;-llf.

'

'

Mft.,LER (83) - Chrlo tlullel, t-0.!:
C'rWs: Wll~o~~, 1-1· 11; John Edwards:,
~-2·12:
~-2· 19 ;

Tom Dutlel, R-1-li, Krvtn Newman,

Wlnc:t• Hane)', ~-3-7; J. D~hon ,
0-0-0; Joh~ Glenaman. !·2-1. TOTALS
lt-tl-1.1. '
llliM~..,. .. .. .......... ...... ... n ~~ 2t 13- 11!1
lllltl&lt;'f ......... ....... ... ........ 9 t6 23 t!l-83

:... ~ ,

••

'·
'·•,
•

JOHN A. WADE, M.D. Inc•

..
..

EAR, NO$E &amp; THROAT

••
••..

'·.

:

•,,"•"

t

' ~

..

'

" Whst. csn you suggest for s boss who has
lost touch with her workers 71•

r

. HUBBARD$

,,

''Juggle,'' ''cope,'' .. manage. "

I

FOR THE

I

Berry's World

!

...

~

A good time for women _ ___;_____R_ust_y_Br_ow_n
Ca ll me a cockeyed optimist.
but 1 think these are good times
for women. Granted , there's still
a di stressing pay ga p between
the sexes . And sure. not every
woman ~tets the break she
deserves at the office or at home.
But for every frustration,
there's a new freedom. Think of
the possibilities_Today's woman .
can say :
-"1 may marry someone
younger or shorter." Romantic
attachments were once limited to
older. taller men, but these
shibboleths have gone the way of
black·and-whlte TV. We know
now that love can't be measured
In years or inches.
-" 1 am more likely to attend
college." Women outnumber
men on college campuses and are
52 percent of today's students , up
from 42 percent only a decade
ago. It's hard to believe there
was a time when fathers said a
college education was wasted on
daughters, who would "only get
married and have kids anyhow."
-"1 can bE' a role model In
many roles... Astronaut or
mother. volunteer or teacher,
women have a vast variety of
ways to Inspire other women. At
the recent White House Confer·
ence on' Small Business. one of
every three delegates was a
woman. Women are one-third of
today's medl :al students, and
the number o of women engineer·
ing students Is 18 times higher
than .It was In 1970. Women are
college pres idents, Nobel Prize
winners, Broadway producers
and sailors off to s~a. When
trailblazers topple barriers, others say, "I can do·that too."
-"I am a political force."
Savvy politicians woo the
women's vote with pledges for

I

By RICK,VANSANT
47-yard TO .pass to Webster worth, had only one catch for
•
eight yards. James Brooks, whO
CINCINNATI (UP!) - The . Slaughter.
'
Cleveland Browns are AFC Cen· · "We expected to win. but we set a Bengals' record with 163
· tral division chfupps today be· dldh' t expect It to be this score," rushing yards a week ago. was
cause they plun'g~ the•,NFL's said Kosar, who hlt13of29 passes held to just 43 yards In 12 carries.
"The keyed on me a lot," .s aid
hottest• offense Into the deep· for 246 'yaMs, with no intercep·
freeze Sunday.
'
ttons. "We felt crinfldent In the Brooks. "I got s hut down. But
The Browns, 11 ·4. held Clncln· way we were able to attack and then, everything we did got shut
down. "
nat!' s No. I NFL off~nse to 283 go deep."
A sellout crowd of 58,062 was
yards and prevented first downs
The 9·6 Beilgals, despite their
on 13 of 15 Bengai tp_ird down loss , will earn a wlla card playoff silenced . by Kosar's gameplays enroute to :a ·34-3 rout.
berth neKt weekend if they beat opening 66-yard pass to Lange"Wewerejustre)entless," said the New York Jets and Kansas horne at the Cincinnati 2. After
Cleveland coach Marty Scholten- City loses to Pittsburgh. And, Mack managed only one yard the
helmer . "Our defense , really even If Kansas City wins, the next two plays, the Browns. put
wasn't complicated, we just Bengals still get a wild card If 260-pound nose tackle Dave Puzbanged around and 'executed."
they beat 'the Jets and New zuollln the backfield to block for
"We didn' t allow t hem to get England loses to Miami Monday Mack on third and goal at the one.
Puzzuoll plowed open a hole for
any aspect of th,elr offense · ·night.
. going," added Cleveland nose
"If we beat ·the Jets, we' ll be Mack's 1-yard touchdown run
tackle Bob Golic. " We shut down · 10·6 and I think that will give us a and the Browns led 7-0 after just
a potent offense." .
good chance of making the 83 seconds.
Four minutes later, Cincinnati
Cincinnati, after advancing to playoffs," said Wyche.
the Cleveland 5-yard line' on Its
Cleveland, which lost 30-13 to pulled to within 7· 3 on a 23-yard
first •possession, never pene- Cincinnati earlier in the season, field goal by Breech, but late in ...' .;
trated 'the Browns' 20 the rest of enjoyed Its biggest victory mar· the first quarter Kosar connected ' -~
the game. ,
·
gin over the Bengals since the with Slaughter on a 47-yard TO ' '"'
..
"We were totally dominated," rivalry began in 1968. Cleve- pass' to up the Browns' margin to
admltted Cinci nnati quarterback land's previous biggest win over 14·3. Rookie Cincinnati corner·
I DIVISION WINNERS - Giant
.
over Si. Louis. The
gave the GIMtS a 12-2 . Boomer Eslason, who was Cincinnati was 31·7 In 1980.
back Lewis Bilups slipped and
Phil Simms stretches h!8teg during a workout at
record, clinching the
East tltle;' (UPI)
ru s hed ha rd all day and Inter·
Slaughter, In addition to his fell trying to cover SlaughteF and
· I Giants Stadium Sunday prior to their 27· 7 victory
.
•·
·
,
cepted twice. "Th.at was the best 47-yard TO reception. scored was 10 yards away from Slaugh·
defense we've played against all another . touchdown when he ter when Kosar's pass arrived.
Cleveland opened up a 17-3
year.
recovered Curtis Dickey"s fum·
"Their pass rush \"as llerce. ble In the end zone. Kevin Mack, halftime lead on Moseley's 39·
.
'
'• ·•.:
They really came at me. That who galn!'d 93 yards In 23carries, yard fi eld goal with just seven
was tM hardest I've ever been · bact a pair of 1-yard TD runs and seconds left In the second
"'
,, I '
hit . No cheap shois, just hard . Mark Moseley kicked fi eld goals quarter.
shot'S. Chip Banks •really laid his of 39 and 19 yards.
·'
helmet to n\"e. "
·
· Cincinnati's lone score was a
port .raced 35 yards· to th~ Los slappee\ St. Louts 27·7, 'Buffalo
By JOEL SHERMAN
"They simply out-hit us,'; 2J.yard field goal by Jim Breech,
Angeles 33'-yard line and, thr.ee ·downed Indianapolis 24·14. added Bengals' ~ cQach , $am as several Bengal offensive stars
UPI SJNirls Write~
I ·~ l
Foot ball junkies can load up plays later,. Duper beat Irvin to Cleveland Ctob~red., Cinclimatl
Wyche. "They were ·!)'lore ag· · ilaa very bad days.
.
·, .~
the
far
left
~orner
of
the
evd
zone
34·3,
Green
Bay
topped
Tampa
- for one final weekend !ammed·
,.
gressive tlian we w·ere. We
Eslason completed just14 of 31
.
. .
Bay 21·7, New Orleans beal couldn't handle $Qme of their ; passes for 151 yards. Cincinnati's
with tie- brea kers, wild cards.and to drop Los Angeles to 10- 5.
•••
point differentials.
Joe Cribbs rushed for 107 yards Atlanta 14·9, Philadelphia sur: players. : ' ·
,.
."'
leading receiver, Crls Collins'
.l
'.
!l
Su)lday's results gua'rantE'f"(( and ~cored on runs of 1 a~d 10 prtsed Dallas 23-21,· Kansas City · . " We didn't play w~h ·anntp ·
531 JACMSON P1&lt;E · AT. J&amp; WEST
Ploone448·4S24
the last four days of the regular yards. for San Francisco.· which ¢ged tht; Raiders 20-17, J:l'ouston enthusiasm and couldn't. ge,t it ', r - - - - - - - - - : - - - i
BARiiAIN
"--TINEES SA!UROAY '
season will be .. full , of pivotal gained 198 rushing yards In the shocked · Minnesota 23-10 and thing done. I even 'ga'il'e olirteam
SUNDAY • ALL SEATS IZ.SD
' . q
games . starting· F_rlday in San near-freezing temperatures at Seattle toppled San Diego 34·24.
ADMISSION EVERY TUESDAY IZ .SO
a good yelltng at )lalft)!ne,ana 'I t
· i\t East Rutherford , N.J., Joe didn't do anything.;; ,;~ . .'
Francisco and e~Jdlng Monday windy Sullivan Stadium. .
, Sunday's opponents of the 'Morris rushed for .179 y;trds and
night In Miami: · '
Offensively, the Browns put
San Fr&amp;ncisco and the Rams 49ers and Rams play next Mon· 'three short tou c hdowns and the together a combination of big
Pain1ettias, Holly lrtt1, Lin &amp; Cut
are assured playoff spots but, . day night at the Orange Bowl tq .a Giants sacked Nell Lomax nine · plays and clute}! performances to
Christmas Trttl, foilcrgt Pl.,ts,
Hooging losktts, Clwist1101
W·lth the 49'ers winning Sunday game the .Patriots need to wtn to times . The Giants, ri-2, would dominate the Bengals' defense.
Wreaths,
Cudll ArrMgtiMIIft,
and Los· Angeles losing, their · ensure a playoff bert h.
, clinch the home field for' as long Cleveland made first downs on
Gra¥1
"-k1ts &amp; SpriiJI.
game Friday night at Candles·
New England, 10-5, will win the as they are In the playoffs with a eight of Its 16 third down plays.
tick Park becomes a showdown AFC East title If It beats Mlainl·, victory Saturday over Green
Bernie Kosar . set the tone on
fo1· the NFC West title. .
8-7. However, the Patrlots have Bay. The Cardinals dropped to the first play of the game by
GR~ENHOUSE
AJ Foxb:oro, Mass .. linebacker lost ·!8 of 19 gaPnes In the Orange J.IJ.l.
launching a 66-yatd pass to
SYRACUSE. OHIO
Keena Turner forced a fumble Bowl, winning only last season's
Colis 24, Bllls 14
· R~ggie Langehorne to set up a
Optn Doily 9 to 5, s.o•.,-1 toS
and intercepted . a pass in the AFC title contest. The Patriots
At Indianapolis, Gary Hoge· tou chdown. Later Jn the opening
PH . 992-5776
fourth quarter to help ~ally •San .can lose and rea&lt;;h th~ playoffs as
tcontlnued on page~ ~ ,
period, Kosar fl ~ed il perfect
~ra nc lsco to a 29-24 victory over
a wild fard If only on11 other AFC
New England.
· • • team, excluding the ':Jet~·. !In·
"'
· ,.,·
At Anahetm,,Callf. ..Dan Marl· !shes 1()!6.
,,
· no's fifth touchdown pass of the
The Dolphins have won four of
• •
game, a 20-yarder to Mark Duper their last five games. In order to
~: 04 Into overtime. gave Miami a
qualify for 1he playo!fs, they
•
~7-31 upset of the Rams.
have to beat New England, and
f'
Duper's third scori ng recep- Seattle, Kansas City ,lhe Raiders
• ••
tion came after Miami had 1wQn and Cincinnati all must lose next
, t· ~
the coin toss a nd elected to:. week.
receive. Fullback Ron DavenElsewhere Sunday. the Giants
'

about Arab art and literature Is
pitted against the best of Persian
culture.
Except fo~ the trucks that
rumble through the .city laden
with coffins from the front, and
the silent. private grief of families who have lost sons, fathers ,
husbands and brothers, there Is
really only one sharp reminder of
the war In Baghdad : the occasional Iranian missile landing at
random In the capital.
Incoming missiles have become more frequent ·since Iraq
decided In lato&gt; July to use Its
superior air power to bomb
Iran's oil facilities as well as.
military targets. The Iranians
retali ated In the only effective .
mean s at their disposal - the
atinless terror bombing of Bagh·
dad with medium -range
missiles.

'

-

Iraq remains .confident._J_ac_k_A_nd___,e,--rso_n_&amp;_D_a_le_~_an_A_tt_a
and spanking-new boulevards
teeming with activity,
Part of this apparent Insouciance may reflect the Iraqis'
long historical view. The area
from the 'l'lgrls River, on wlilch
Baghdad sits, west to the Euph·
rates was known as the cradle of
civilization, believed by many to
have been the site of the Garden .
of Eden. Adam and Eve were
succeeded by the legendary
Slnbad the Sailor and All Baba,
the caliphs and the · decadent
glitter of the Turklsn sultans.
Today Baghdad Is a clly of
more than 4 million, the metropolitan heart and soul of Iraq.
Fantastically constructed monu·
ments awe the vlsllor: first -class
hotels and office buildings doml·
nate the clly skyline.
The ·new construction dates to
)982, when Baghdad was preparIng to be host to the Conference of

-

. ..

I

'I

WASHINGTON - Just as the
6-year-old Iraqi-Iranian war was
Igniting a political uproar In
Washington. Dale Van Alta was
visiting the suppo~edly beleaguered Iraqi capital to gain some
firsthand perspective. It was an
eye-opening experience. · '
1\aghdad certainly doesn't look
like the major city of a country
about to buckle under the onslau ght of a powerful and fanati·
cal neighbor. The conventional
wisdom In Washt'ngton Is that
Iraq Is on the losing end of ·the
war, but the ancient city 150
miles from the front gives no
signs of a nation about to
collapse.
If the Iraqis are simply putting
on an act to mask their despera·
tlon, It" s convincing makebelieve. There Is no blackout In
force; at night the city Is abiaze
with lights. Its high-rise hotels

.'
Th8 Daily Sentinei-,-Page-3

VETERANS MEMORIAL HOSPITAL

GENERAL ALLERGIST
''WE. HAVE HEARING
AIDS"
.
C.ALL (614). 992-2104
(304 675-1244

•
••

r•

-

•

Is
·WHih

11MT1
15

YOU! •

.'

. ",,
'

' •

.

.
'
PROOII(tll TO oeJELOP YOOR 8KJLI.!a TIIIOUIIH IWIII 114

1111\ININB IN II£ OF 14 PRO BltVtB

..

'lu

•

I' ~ ~

. .••.

· .

. •(

.: ·• ••
.....

Tl£ ADtl.T EDUQ\Tiitl C&amp;IIER

*
I
I
I

' I
' • ••
•

~

YEN•

WHY I

'

WINTER CliMTER BE81NS .rNIMRY

s,

1987

\

11o•t 'c laun art held frcn 3a00 P••• fo 9t30 P••• &lt;nctpt
Nunlng Aulatant anif·Diuenlfltd 111dica1 Occupations - 9r00
a.11. - 3rJO p.~a.&gt; A!'l clu11s 11ttt 11ondn through Thursday
TOOAY'S ·Jdes 'REQUIRE SKiLLS- skills which you can ·acqulrt
throuQh our adult Yocatlonal progr..s. Our instruction
tllphaliztt a handa-on approach to learning Mith 110st of your
claasroon tillt spent In laboratory or actual Job stttings. Tht
progr&amp;ft are all nint 11onth jn . 1tngth &lt;••cept Carpentry- 12
•onths, Couutol'ogy - 18 taonths, and Nursing Anistant - 18
weeks&gt; I and classes 11tet 11onday through Thursday. Cott~etology,
Nuralng Aaaiatant and Diversified 11tdical Occupations not optn
Winter Quarttr .. ·
Financiai aid and/or tuition subsidy is &amp;Y&amp;ilablt fron a Yarlety
of sources: ' Ptll Grant, VA, Guarantt-'d Studtn't Loan, Single
Partnt/HOIItll&amp;ker Grant and J.T.P.A. (COIIIIUnity Action Agencies&gt;.

i

=
a

Besides dtYeloping your Job skllls 1 our cent~r offers YOU tht
opportunity to bruah up on your Job lttklng ski~• by dtvtloplng
your re&amp;UJae, thfnking through anSMers to lnttrYttw questions •nd
othtr actiYities; Additionally, you lilY rtglsttr wlth•our
Plact~~ent Coordinator for Job leads in rour skill aria.

f

II
§1

I

II l '

..

' ·.·•

'"
UI

' ••.J

l

ll,.

:II~

!gO
)olll

-o
:II a
o(

\

Call, write or stop in for furthtr lnfortaation about our

.,

prograru.

.

. .

lri-toRtr 1/tc:ati••l Sclloal don lit •lwiiiiN~ Ia rf91td te
net, Ut:HI; calr, aatillll ....... ~·. ...... Cillo '

f1tJ ,

INDUST..W.

IIAIHI'ENANCE ~

•·

'---

o

..,..

REl1EHBEJh AT THE APulT EDUCATUit CENTER, WE CARE - ABOUT YOU"
AND YOUR FUTURE.

111

"II

..

(614) 7:53-3:511, •• t. 2:5

Ill

...._,

,J f l

Tri-c:Gunty Vacatlonal 'School
Rt. l, St, Rf. 691
Nthonvlllt, OH 4:5764·

· ()

I

••
••
.. "

o:=_eo (Wk),l===~=~e
'
T"

OCCUPATIONS .
---~

I

•

.

•: ' l\

r

�,,

•

•
•

""

Page 4-The Daily Sentinel .

Polnliroy.,...Middlaport. Ohio

Mets'
NFL Standings
I)' U•ltl'tl ~ IMft'Uio•a&amp;l
,\mwl~ - fllft fWI'III 'f'

•:."'

• .

" ' L T 1'.-t . l't' 1";\
... ...... .. ......... II S I .lili'i 3-U 331
N.·•· F.nll•ll.......... ll i 1 .QI'J nx '!Ill
MIIYfti •.•...o. ........... .. M 1' t .3.1.1.3311
11 e .m w :m
••·~~ ............ ttl 11 . l:tiJH m;

)' - :~il

:.-( ' ~f'l .. d., .......... U I I

IS1 :t13

Plll!ihurKfl ,,, ............ l 1. 1 .•

""H!

.....,.,

• ·ll_..v.., ..... .......... :11 t
::IISJ~Nftt)' ............. ! I
. lllllt-..................... !1 "
Lltt.,. .............. M 7
. ow................., 111

!!

!lundlQ''~

PN . PF P ,\

Jl"'

. tJ:1
~'t
. tl7 ;w ;m
.!lin -Mt '!tl
. UI!Sl 3:&amp;.1

(;IIlii ut M'llloihklll;lon. i::tl p.m .
lll-tn11t a1 .\tin a. i : 3Q J.m.

--c: ·hit'aKQ ............... n t 1 . liS~ :m til
Mlluh,r;ftlll .. : .......... .. II 1 I .S.\1li$ !H

II . Mi!SII~ .
t .&lt;'&amp;7'!;JI:ti:l
Tampula)' ............. ~ 1!1 II ..133 !'!':! tl2
('kof;rml; .................. .. 5 I
f~n~lby ............... lll
" 'I'SI

y·LA. Rltnh ............. ICI $ t .ilo !B,i 21:1
y ..~ FrMN:o.t,l ....... ll 3 I .1m :ufJ t:t.'t
N'Mt Orlt••"' ..... ....... i I t . tli"i til t .\.1
Alhlllla ........... ......... li II I . W :!Ill m
-.-rlladM•\11 ell\•Won Ilk
y·c·llat.iN-41 piQ·off twrth
~ ....a.y·,., JtJ.., ..
f'IU11hllr"" 11, SV .fl'tli t-1

,b

Dt'll\'11' :u. "'•llln~on :t1
!o~M'"'-.J· ' .~ lk-sutts
S\' (J.I ....,. '!7. St IAIIio; 'j

,,...... ~ u .•.,.. u

( ' k~VI'IIIfld. 7::11
~lh&amp;dt'IPti;t lll: Mll.waullc-t·.ll

1,1\ l.l&amp;ltt•n. "!!I

l'llt•w ole-~· at r•tt · ~~.~to. M::11 p.m.

l'llomh al Houl'ton. II::W p.m.
(Oolck'll N.lllt• Ill LA Cllppmo, Ul: .'W p.lll.
IJt'll\' ..r ;&amp;t S;t&amp;'ranti'IIIO, 10:3&amp; p.m.
~.-.utr w l'nrtl~~~~o4 II:!It p.m.

NHL Standings .
\\';th"" ( ' ll"fl't't'lll't .
l'atrlt·k Dh·llololl

\\ L T Pili. t:t· fi ,\
Mi I~ j j

Phil :!~~rip ••, t:s, IIilii .. tl

S.. Fr•ri.'«'O It N'rw E•!ti~d
~..,. .. U)' !e. L\ Rod...,. 1i
Ml1111l r.. L,\ Run" :n lot 1
HOM!i(&amp;a 'tl. Mlu4MI!.a It
N••lllr u. s- D~c&gt;cn !-1
M-dau''!i (iamt·
flllnp at o.-tr.tt, I p.m .

~.J

L \ Rilm... ..t San Fr..ndlit,,, II p.m.
SMtal'dJis. Dt't'. til
(l'"'~~ ftay .. N'V (;jiAIII :o.. U : :Nl p.m.
DNn'f'lll Nr.-1 .... I p.m.
Oft·. ':!:I
!\,. o~r~ .. oel ( 'lncl. .aaL I p.m.
Ad•• a1. Drtroll. I p.m .
I•R•III Ht•!liloll, I p.m.

s. •..,..

kllh.-f ·• y • Pltl!lbllrp. 1 p.m.
~·"'· Orlt•_.. • Ml•ftf':o~G!a. I p. m.
Su D...p Ill Ot'\1'4• .. I p. m.
TMtp . ., . Ill St . ..... ~. I p. n1.

W•llilllll,loallf l'llll.,.piiiM. 1 p.m.
U•it·Ja«~' 11111 n.n.., 1 p.n1.
......... io. at Lr\ llaldtrs. l p.nt.
MINlda,y , lk-t-. ~
Nt"'' F.nl~·h•41111 11illltiL ~ p.nL

"The officer noticed · M~.
Gooden walking behind him anti,
at thatt1me. Mr. Gopden gra.bhlio;l
the officer's arm and pulled hi~
toward. him and a physlc~r:
confrontation ensued," Cott~ ;
said. "Two of(lcers grabbed Mr. ·
Gooden and attempted to hand··, ·
cuff him . He resisted by klckidg
and punching the officers with
·
, • '1
ills fist

chargeo with disorderly'conduct, another car swerving toward
battery on a police officer .and each other on a street on the
resisting arrest .with violence city's north side. The officers
after the 10: 50 p.m. EST Incident. stopPed both cars, approached
The 1985 Natlonai ·J_.eague Cy GIJOden's vehlchi, questioned
Young Award winner was re- · ' him and examined his license,
lea!led on his own recognizance then told hi"' to stand on the
four hours later.
·
slllewalk while they question~'!!
· Pollee Lt. Tim Cotter said the the other driver, Cotter said.
Incident began when . Tampa
The Olher . vehicle,
red
officers saw,...C..oodgn's car and Corvette, drove awav.

a

. •~·

.'

II~

li t
!II~

1:141

II :!
IIi

.~., .

'i

FRESNO, Calif. (UP!) - San
Jose State forced the California
Bowl Into a passing contest
Saturday , a development Miami
(Ohio} was Ill equipped to
handle.
The Spartans relied on ·the
strong passing of quarterback
Mike Perez, who threw for I hree
touchdowns, and· a blitzing defense to earn a 37 ·7 victory over
the redsklns. San Jose . State
intercepted Terry Morris four
times. returning one lor a touchdown, and sack~'!! him seven
times.
"It .dellnltely was · the worst
blitzing we had seen all year, ..
. Morris said. "Teams In the MAC
(Mid-American Conference}
don't blitz much, they fall back
and play zone."
Miami coach Tim Rose said the
San Jose State defense was aided
by a 10-winl halfHme lead.

.~

~

~

~

*
.

PRICES 8000 DECEMBER 15th THRU DECEMBER tht

WEEKENDS, SOMIE HCL.IDAVS ANO ·

'

INCLEMENT W£ATHIR CONDJTIONS
ARE EXCLUDED.
.....
• e

..
. ....

,

SUPERIORS WHOLE
-·SEMI-BONELESS·

....'

''

.•..•- ..
.•'
•

It~

....

It!

*~

TBI

/

•••

POWELL'$.

. ..

-":'

\

'

'

&gt; &gt;I

..

'

'
"

( 'a!~~·

Ia. l.us .\nJ:I'IP.o ~
SvM~o~,\'' ~ RN.ulh•
S\' K&lt;~n~t'D :1, " '»hlnKt•n I

Rostnn I; Qurht'&lt;l· t
Rulfulil I, Hurlft,r4 :1

St•~~o• olt•l"rit':'' I.

S.•d11..,...,

( '..,uhilun
l .n.~nl;lilll . l

Ill

Rostun r ..ll••••· 71. Holy fr"'" U

~~ t

;• ,

:ns •

(continued____:....:;__
from page 31

Seahawks 34, Chargers 24
At San Diego, Dave Krieg
passed for 305 yards and fou r
touchdowns, two to Steve Largent, to keep the 9-6 Seahawks'
flickering playoff hope~ alive.
For Seattle to reach the playoffs
as a wild card. It must beat
Denver next weekend while
Kansas Cltl' loses and either
Cincinnati or New England lose.
San Diego fell to 4-11.

r;:==========:l
The Daily Sentinel
(USPS 145-!HIII
1\ Dl\'lslon of Multlml'dl a. hu·.
Puhllshrd ,..,.,..r~ · :tfl &lt;'r·noon . M o n d;.~\'
l hrnu,l! h F r ld;r y . Jt l Court Sl .. Pn .'
mf'r~· · Ohio, h~· rh C' Ohln Vai iP\' Pub·
l\shlng fn m pan~ · MulllmNII a.' In C'..

Pnmrr oy. Ohi o ~ 5'itl9 . Ph . !19'2·21~. ~
ro od cl ;1ss p ~I3J! C' paid al Pnmrrm·.
'

Mf'mhf'r': Unlrf'd Prf'~"' lnlil'rnll llon:rl ,
In Ia nd Da ll.\ ' Pr&lt;'!' .. .r'\s~oclal lon and 1hr
Ohio Nf'w sp.1pC'r A lisnrlal ion. Nal k&gt;nal
Ad\'rr! lslnJ! Rl'prl'SC'Oialh'4'. Br ;~ nham
Nc•wspapf'r SaiN&gt;l, 7.'\J Third A\'C'nUC' ,
Nrw Yor k. NC'w York 10017.

PO!ITMA.&lt;iTER: Sl'nd a ddrl'!i.~ r han l.?f'!'
In Thr Dall~· SC'ntlnil'l. Ill Co ut1 St ..
Pomf'r~· .

Ohio ~.i7*'9.

SU&amp;~CRIPTION

RATES

By Carrier or Mol or

Routt&gt;

Onf' Wrl'k ... ........... ................ ..... $1.2~
Onr Month ............... ..... ......... .... $5.45
OnC' Yrnr ... ..... ,...................... $6S.C.Ml
SINGLEfOPV
PRICE

Dall.v .................................. 25Crnr~

Subsr r lbrrs noI d~ i rln~! o pnv 1hi' C'flr ·
rlrr ma~· rMl il in advan{'(' 'dlrf'ct to'
Thf' Dally S&lt;&gt;ntlnd on a.l fi or 12: month
ba"'l!". CrOOll will txo l!lwn l'arrlt"''f'arh
WC'f'k.
su b ~cr ipllon s b.v mall pt•rmlltC'd·in
a rru ~ " 'hf'11'1 ho!TIC' car rl('l' SC'l'\' iCf' Is

No

(.1 \'i.tll ;rblf'.

Man

~uM-criPtlon~

lnMidt• Mel~ County
13 WN•ks .................................. $17.19

26 Wr('k~ ..... ........ ........... ....... ... s.:J.I .06
52 Wr&lt;'k.q.............. ..... ............... S66.S6
OUtJ!Wdt&gt; Melp f..ounty
13 \\'f'&lt;'kS ........... ,,, , .. , ..... .. ........ ,$11t20

26 \\'C'Pk~ ..... .. .. ................ ,,,',., .. , S3,';,10

!'i2 Wr&lt;'k!! .................................. $67.60

S.ned with whipped poutoes, chicken erawy.

colt sllw, hot .ro!l. butter and coffee. Sorry,
no sub~itules tJtCtpt beverap with addi·

FOR JUST

$3.25

CIOW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. ttf.S4U

POMEIOY, 011.

Frilll Chkbn

·'

..

....

1:' • •,

' .

·•

,

""::.. ::
...
.. .. .

CASH

·~

.-•...
' .

•·.

THIS WEEK'S
JACKPOT

DRY
ROASTED OR
UNSALTED
16 oz.
JAR

PIIIIID
. fiOWDII
LIQUID 01

tuii!

1

.( 4) S25

..

SUPERIORS WHOLE
BONELESS TA~ERN

...

MWR.

$250

.

POUND.

EACH WEEK

WITH · ADDITIONAL PURCHASE
·ONE PER FA MIL~ PLEASE
·POLAROID

nMIIIIOOI

·'

:

600HMIII

•

.,

139

:, t

.,

.

t

I

CASH PRIZES

(2)

sso

. ~.'~

.. .

'I

0

CASH PRIZ'S

(1) SlOO
CASH 'IIZE
JACKPOT
LAST WEEK'S
WINNERS .WERE:
$25 BEUNDA GOODE
$25 DEUIE DAVIDSON

PO UNO

..

;

t~ · .

GENERIC
DRUGS
SAVE

;'

I

'

•,•
~

I

(Must come in and claim
prize by following
Saturday, 10 P.M.NO WINNING NUMBER
GIVEN OYER THE PHONE)
If Any Prize Is Not
Claimed In The AlloHtd
Time, The Prize WUI It
Included In The Next
Week's $100 Cash Prize
Jackpot.
10

• ••.

o

•

'

•'• ' •• I

•

.,•

..'

&lt;

•

18 LB. &amp; UP

.•••
·~

\

Plm EFFKTM DK. l5 llllll

1916

o

IIIII

RITE AID DiSCOUNT PHARMACY
208 EAST lAIN STREET .

POMEROY, OH. ·
PHARMACY PHONE: 992-2586

ONE PER FAMIL ~

PER

'

POUNQ:,.

POP·UP TIMER$

•
•

.,

•

FOimoiWitiW!llOIS
,.

RITE

CARDINAL SELF BASTING GRADE A

••"
•.

SAVINGS EVERYDAY · RITE
IN EVERY AISLE AT. •• qp
liE II&amp;IIT 'IIIJIIT IIUII1l1IIS

....•

,:·. ~

ASK YOUR RITE AID
PHARMACIST FOR
COMPLETE DETAILS

WINNING NUMBERS
POSTED IN THE STORE

-

.
••
•• .

\

----

;~ .

t

l ....

ON YOUR NEXT
PRESCRIPI'ION ,

JACKPOT WAS:
MARY MeRRIS

'

.
''

I.

~50

---WINNER Of LAST WEEK'S

SUNDAY 10 A.M.

COIBIIIATIOII DJIINER ONLY
DINING ROOI ONLY

•'.,

~ .......

___

Oh i o .

•

WIN

Suulh
fk-m.~o• fl . Solllh f11relln1113
·lalllt.,. M tulbt~n 'il, Ohl OumhNun M
l.nt~11oiiUIU St . .l'!. GINlr~II . T••t•h "
M'lnllwopfnll•••w P. Mhunl iU
loiiMiliM·•'l't
Trl!Moi ,\,tM II. NI-IICIL'IItal~
Y&amp;. . t...t
~~~~IIUUrl t1, ft .. lt&gt;ftlll'~' ~

fiR
_
I

Oilers 23, VIkings 10
, ,At Houston, Warren Moon
threw for 2l!O yards and a
tOuchdown, and Tony Zendejas
kicked three field goals to help
the Oilers, 4-11, knock the Vlk- .
lngs, 8-7, from the playoff race.

til'tlr~u Nl; .

.....

II .

Eagles 23, Cowboys 21
At Irving, Texas, a 31-yard
touchdown pass from Matt Cavanaugh to Kenny Jackson with
3: ~7 remaining enabled Philadelphia, ii-9-1, to end the Cowboys'
2Q-year streak of winning seasons. Dallas, 7·8, was eliminated
from the playoff chase despite a
292-yard, total-offense performance by running back Herschel
Walker.
Chiefs 20; Raiders 17
At Los Angeles, the Chiefs. 9- 6.
forced seven Raiders turnovers
to move within a victory next
Sunday over Pittsburgh of reachIng the playoffs for the first time
In 15 years . For the8-7 Raiders to
reach the playoffs, they must
beat Indianapolis next weekend.
and Seattle. Kansas City and
Cincinnati lose.

IWI,

Hohu1 TuurniUllt'flf
f'&gt;~M' \\r,;llorn 11..1, S\' Pnlil•'t·h•k li:l
l 'p!lalu r., Hohw-t 11.1

;t ,

Buccaneers
7
AtP""kers
Tampa.21,Fla
.. Gerry Ellis
and Paul Ott Carruth each ran
lor a short second-half touchdown, and Green Bay, 4-11.
sacked Steve Y~ung seven times
in moving Tampa Bay. 2-13.
closer to the No. 1 overall dr aft
pick.

CASH
JACKP·OT

rt,; ull~

Tnurnanl...t~
I nUnn StUitos fi~Nok
4'humplomohlp
~l!·ntphl" St. !Ct. Oror~u 71

&amp;
i

' boom threw for 318 yards and two
touchdowns to lead a second-half
rally that endangered the. 2·13
Colts' chances of securing the
No. 1 pick In the NFL draft ,
expected to be Miami quarterback Vinny Testaverde. Indianapolls Is 2-0 under new coach Ron
Meyer and would have to lose
nextweekwhlleTampaBaywlns
to get the top choice. Buffalo fell
to 4-11.

Motttr••al ~

College Cage .Scores

NFL __
,

llli

The Daily Sentii-lei-Paga

"
~ Poi1)8~-Middleport,.
Ohio

"'

~. Phlladt•lphl~ ~
{ 'hlnlltll ... !'&gt;II. l .uutoi .. l ilt· tit• )

llcN.na ..... .................... IJ i .iii . . iladt•I•W ii .......... ...... IJ K .il9 I
M'•llilllfolt ................. lt 11 .mi t
.
ittir•· l 'ork..................... ~ IK .'t li I
N""' .. ,_,, . .................. 1 Ill . Ill:! In' ,
( 't'flfr.tiJI\t..il•n
·
1\ll:.ntll ........................ ll ~ .IIIII MllwllUiu"'................... ll K .U ·! ;p 1

""'-\'1'1' ........... ............. It 1:1 . IU
~ ,, . . . . .................. . ll .',N

I~

'

~r 1fS, 1986

•

Mlnni'SOia

L Pl'l . (;R

L Pt·l .
11 .1:11
11tah ............ .......... ...... l:l ; .8311
11.."" ............................. t II . Ill

llli
!1i

""r.o''\'

,\thmtk- llh' iiolnn

nan .. ......................... u" '

l.oul~ ................

. ... ......

t:.u.a .... n fonh'""('l '

lh'irMI ........ ....... ......... te II . ~
..diun:~ ....................... ll II .3tll
f 'IMt'a(n ........ ........ ....... ll II . ~710
t'ln· tol:.~~d ..................... t II . Ill
"''-.tt't'lt ( 'Oitlt'f't•fH,,
MllhwN Dh·iolnn

~~
••~

r.r (;,,

l'! 1:! j ~ !Ill
Turunlo ................. l'! 1;1 I !II ~
.\ llnn••!•Dh ............. l'!l!l :1 t7 114
[}l'trull ................ Ill U ~ :!-1 IG
( 'hkllltl ........... ........ llli li t~ ··~
Sm)'tht• Dlvb.lon
Edmontun ............. :!t II I II IU
f 'ul~tw,· ................. li 1:1 1 .l.l m
\\lnnipt•1 ............... l$ 1:1 t ,1't 1113
I~"""''~'!&gt;
1:1 1~ t '!!( ll:l
\ 'an4'011\'l'r ............... lt I! :1 '!I 111:1
Sal urdli,V' Ii Rt•~ 1111~
X\' l"lllll&amp;•n; -1, S1•• ·
r
\ 'IUlt,IU\o•r '!. ll11rtferd &lt;! ioC · t!.•J
Qut •hl't· i, BuH*o II
Tt~rrnJio :t. Plll!oihllrah! tut J
lllt'Oion I, Monlrt•ul ~

NBA Standings

I&amp;

m

IU
:tn !Iii I!Ll
~ IH 1:!..
:!t !I~ liM

" . t. .., l'li'i.
Sl .

FriO)•. D t'f' . 1!11

.................. •

St

t&amp; II -1 :li 110
)lnlllrl•ai .... ........ ... t:$1:1 -1 .U Ill
llurtford ................ H It I ·:l't !1:!
«ru~·bt •t · ... ............... H U .. :It 11:1
Ruflllln .................... &amp;~ I IIi !II
famphtojl fonlt"t'l'll'f'
Sorrb. Dh l!okln

~- Orlt'-. l-1, MIIIMa 8

~• · r...v-.•

:U IIi ' IU ~

R~on ...................

J

Gn-t'ft &amp;.)· :!1. T~tmp• Bll)' ;

"

p. n1.
p.nt.

San ,\fl&amp;onlo a1 D~ot.llllfi. II~ !I p.m.

l'hlhtdt•lphiu .......... t! ~ ~
~'\· l!'&gt;hYI•·n. ......... 15 It ~
l'lthllur~ ............. U II I
~n· .ll't'~ ........... I~ 1-1 ~
X\' Kllll(t'T'!I .. ........ Itl;i i
Wa-l~nr;t u n ........... Ill ~ I
t\dllm!to IJM!oiloll

• ~ ,.r

in California Bowl

flu'''""

I , lll'j :Ill '!U

8rrested in street.brawl

•t-• '

..

~.

Redskins lose 37-7

K4.osult ,

Ponl•d Ill, n. u.,. 111
MondlQ''" G•nw!l
No ,~totnli'IO -.c·ht•dult•d
· Tut~dM,.v 's
Ro.lo• at Nt&gt;lol' York. j : JD p. m . •

.sa'" u&amp; ·

( 'mlrial

1 ' '"'~'~•• :t.t, ( ' hlrl•n~l

m

ltl Phlh*lphllll'lt
Mthl:~•krt&gt; 113. (' hiu~O M
1
HUII!Iton lilt. Slrot•rllmt'ftlo It&amp;
Golclfoa ShUt• Jl1, s.rt Alllonlo Itt
tllllh 11$, Ll\ fHppm; Ill
PitttMP. lt:l, Ot'll\'\1' !lt
0:.1WILL'i 131. St•lltllfo Itt

0 . 'ttl ili2 '!Kti
I .W:tJ.&amp; .' ttj
t ·• :rtl m
•
n .m :till a.~t

I
1
1
I

J.~~oll,...,.

('lf\'i~•d

Sllllio•al fiMifft'~l't'
f.ll.'il

"' l T
A - S~- fllwu .... ........... 13 !
)' ·•.,.hl•aton .......... ll I
O.l.-; ..................... , 11
Plllhllk.. pllla ............ 5 w
st. ~i!o ......•..........• :i II

I~

Bototun Ill. Mo'•Wnaton 811

J)(otrolt 111. 1.,\

.trl t111 :~':!'!

HOMMIIa................... 1 II I

. I!NI

lndblla !II,, Nt'w .ft'"'f'Y 81
t\l!lllllllti. St•w \ '11rk 111

. "/3:13U~~

flnd••llll .... .......... .. l I t .•

·*

jj

Sidurday ' ~ ~\lh

r-n•···················· .

fmtr ...

TAMPA, Fla. (UP!) - The
New York Mets don'teven need a
· baseball game to reinforce their
Image as the sport's premier
brawlers.
New York pitcher Dwight
Gooden and four companions
were arrested during , a street
right Saturday night that sent a
· Tampa pollee ofrlcer t'o the
hospital with a mild concussion,
pollee said . Gooden, 22, was

· .
PIC'Irk• DIY..,_t0t1
1.1\Lialnn ................... li S .1litGol*n Nlalf' ............. ... I:J 8 .MI ;P -:
Punl~~nd ...................... ll ID .511:1
:11 !
Srutllt •... .. ................ .... ll II .pi ~ 1 1
Phomb; .... ......... ....... ... ll II
51 1
1.,\flppt•r.; .............. , .. , l

G~den

M011iday,

.Monday, December 16, 1981 .

..·,•

••

'

...·.
•

.-• .
... ..
.-,• ..
.-.

,

REMEMBER, FOR THE ·HOLIDAYS, YOU CAM COUNT ON ~AU8HAN'S
TO DELI~ER THE BEST QUALITY MEATS IN.·THE AREA
. •

•

~

Thanks for S~opping WI"" Us

J

.,

.,
i&lt;

•

j:•

.,.•

I

�•

•
I

.\

.

'.

'

.'

By The· Bend ·. ;
.•

.·,.

'

•l, •. '

'
·~

.

:'

Monday, December 15, 1986

'

'

'.'·

..

~

(

Com:munity calendar ; ·area .happenings

·The . ~ Dnily : Se~tinel ·,t·

&gt;

'·,

'&gt;

•

.

.

~

. I

,,

l

.

.

Phi Sorority will !lleet at .6: 30 p.m · Lillian . J'.loore .will be co·
at the home of Phyllis Hackett hostesses for the meeting..There
'sponsor. There · Will be ·a gift will be a $5 gift exchange; .
exchange a)9ng with an orna·
ment exchange..
POMEROY - Meigs . County
American Cancer Society Board
BARRISONVILLE ~ Harrl·
KYGER - Cheshire Township · will hold a. luncheon · meetli!g
sonville Senior Citizens Club will Trustees will meet Tuesday , 5:30 . Wednesday; noon , at Veterans
hold a potluck. Christmas dinner . p.m., at the·township building In Memorial Hospital:'
at noon Monday at -~he town hall. · Kyger . .

Monday; ~,CS_mber 15, 1 _98~ ., .
·· · ,
·· ··
Page-8 ,,

POMEROY ~ Fo~rth fifth
and sl~th graders at Po;.eroy
Elementary Christmas musical
entitled. "The North !'ole Goes
Rock and Roll" on Monday at 7
,
p.m.
TUESDAY
MIDDLEPORT -XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter
Beta Sigma

o(

The annuljl Christmas dinner
and party of the American
Legion Auxiliary: Lewis Manle.y
Post 264, was held recently at the
home of Mrs. Dorothy Casey,
Gallipolis.

NEW BOUTIQUE - In conjunclion wllh her '
of the Stairs Beauty and Tanning Salon, Mary
Powell has opened a boutique at hPr Ill W.
Second, Pomeroy, shop location. Currently her
en;~ phasis will he on sweater, blouses, skirts,
Pll)llS and jeans carrying a variel.v of lines

T~p

.•.

including Fashlonality, Southern Lady, and Susan
Berry in blous,es, Lee, Gloria Vanderbll,t, and
Fllipo-Tottl Designers in jeans, You Babes -In
sweaters, along wllh S!Jme pants and jackols In
Bobby Brooks, ,Jazzy, and'Dee Cee. Assisting Mrs.
Powell in the operation wQI be her daughter, Mila
Jane Raymond, left.
•
.~ ;

,gins, ' 1Joy to the World." After
the . ori~ln of each carol was

Star Grange giv~s ~ips on trees

'

Auxiliary has .dnntkll -holiday .dinner
given, the ·group sarig lt.
A gift exchange ~as held.

Annette Johnson, chaplain,
had grace preceding the dinner.
The · house was decorated in '
keeping with the holiday season. ·
Mrs. Margaret Bowles presided at the business meeting
giving Information from Mrs.
Qatherlne Curl, Eighth District
president, on the Dec.18 birthday ·
party at'the Chillicothe Veterans
Hospital. Also announced was
the Dec. 2l .party lor the party at
the home for·the orphan sons and
daughters of veterans at Xenia.
Games were played and a ·
'program· on the origin of C)lrist- . ·
mas carols was presented by
Mrs. Bowie~. Mrs. Lula Hampton
read by "Silent Night", Mrs.
t;:ase, on "0 Little Town of
Bethlehem: 'and Lorrene Gog·

The charter was draped in dinner and those attenamg are to
memory of Adrfa Wilcox at the take covered dishes . , ·
Anyone Interested ~~ . golrtg
recent meeting of Star Grange.
The Women's activities chair· Christmas caroling to, be at the
m(ln reported on profits from Montgoinery horrie on Dec. 22 at
sales projects and .gave safety 10 a.m. The group will make !rtilt
tips on Christmas trees and baskets before 119lng caroling.
decorations. Patty Dyer gave the Aprjl3, 4 and 5 wl)ll;li! the.Grange
youth report and the legislative . rally at the Friendly Hills camp.
The literary program theme
report was presented by Ray
Midkiff. Chester King reported was Christmas, and consisted of
on the Ohio State Grange session." readings- "The Spirit of Christ· ·
It was announced that the mas" by Bernice -Midkiff•' "That
annual Christmas dinner and · First Chrisfmas Day" by Vlrgl·
party will be held Dec. 20 at 5:45 nla Carson; 'Just Before Christ·
p.m. with Santa to arrive at 6 mas" by Linda Montgomery;
p.m. Parents are to take gifts for "Christmas Is" by Anna Halll·
Santa to give to !.heir children day; "Smiles" by Larry Mont·
and adults are to take a $3 gift for gonery; "Why Christmas?" by
the gift exchange. The Grange . Charlotte Erlewlne; ''Just Some
will furnish . the meat for the thoughts" by Ray Midkiff, and

.'

.'

''

'
"
' ..'.

..'

The Daily Sentinel

Arnual holiday dinner of the
Rutland Garden Cl ub was held
recent'ly at Craw's Stea k House
with a party and gift exc han ~c
follllwing at the horne of Ma rgaret Belle Weber.
~. thank you note was read
frofn the WII!Jamson family. 11
report was given on ribbon
winners in the Christmas flower
show includi ng Pearl Canaday,
Binda Diehl. Ocla Ward. Eva
Rolison: II was noted That several
metnbers attended open house of
the4lorists and! hat Neva Nichol·
son attended the "Festiva l of
Trees" . at the Hya tt Regency
Center.
Margaret Parsons. Pearl Ca naday, Roberta Wilson. Mrs.
Nicholson. Pauline i\ tkins and
Marcia Denison fu•·nishrd flow·
ers lor churches. Mrs. D&lt;'nison

1986

Meigs County· Fair

Financial Report

...,
..

,

•
'
"

.,'

Broderick
birthday
The fifth birthday or Joshua
Martin Broderick, son of Martin
and Nancy Broder ick, was observed recently wit h a party. A
Hullt Hogan theme was carried
out.
Attending were his sister,
Holly, paternlll grandmother,
Emma Broaerlck, maternal
griuldparents, Sherman and Mae
Buskirk, Christine GruPse r, .Jan·
Joshu:l Marlin Broderick
Ice Evans, Carol Ault, Matthew
and•IJ'y, Mike Jan, Joy, Bet h and Becky and Jamie Broderick. and
Ryan Buskirk, Dave. Sherry. Fra nk, Linda and VIncent
Jeremy and Jamie Buskirk, Jim, Broderick.

Baptist.church program
Tl!e traditional Thanksgivi ng.
ChriStmas party @f the Middle·
port First Baptist church spon·
sored .by the Board of Chris tian
Education was helq recent ly at
the church. Carolyn Davis and
Marjorie Wal burn had charge of
the party.
The Thanksgiving meditation
was given ·by Cathy Riggs and
that holiday theme was featured
In some of the decorat ions. II
traditional holidaY, dinner was .
served with the Rev. Earl Eden
giving grace. Marla Roush and
Darla Thomas had charge of
decorations. A tree was t~imm ed
by tile children who also enjoyed
'&lt; the video, "The Real Meaning of

Christmas·• and a gi ft exchange.
Favors were .stickers "Jesus is
the Reason for the Season."
Child ren atTending the party
were David, Claud(ne, Tina, and
D.J. Riggs, Craig and Ginger
Darst, Brittany Walburn, Be·
lhany and Bridget Roush, Au·
lumn and Amber Thomas, Adam
Shank , Jeremy, Jennifer Joshua
and Eric He&lt;Jk, Cindy, Penny, ·
and Ellen Lewis. Adults there
were Mrs. Walburn, !Vlrs. Davis,
Adelle White, Dan and Cathy
Riggs, Penny Lewis, Jerri Pul·
!ins, Marla Rous h, Darla tho·
mas, and the Rev. and Mrs.
Eden.

· Public Notice

Public Notice

Special
,
Attractions ........20,537.00
Sonlt-tlon ............ .. 126.00
Advertising .. ., .... .. 1,381 .24
Misc. E'\11 ... .........3,822. 79

N•·w f•::t

l ,.,.

1

.

'

·:.'301Ji1fd

Op;·n

P1rrty

.'

D&amp;P
· -.· APPLIANCE .
REPAIR .
7 Veers

1()1),

1-/pf.,, f'

Maintenance ·
Experience
· work ·
Guaranteed

···.ti

!'~()

utll:i 1000
h·•r:dobi•· f
Brr !hrloy·~. 01ur· h,
Pm'uiP Pur It('~

985 -J92? ,,

ns

?996

Ill

:.

dl

---r
'S
YOUNG .

r:----~.--.

CARPENTER
SER. VICE .

- Addoool!ld ramodtllog
-Roofing and guttar work
- concrato ·work
- Piumbinu·ond aloet•IO.i
work
{FrH Eotimatul

V. C. YOUNG IR
9'12-6215' or 992-7314

P..,.roy, Ohio ·
·

· 4-15-' 86-fc

FOR SALf ·

CHRISTMAS
TREES ·
TAGGING NOW

Pre-cut trees oYailable

Located on
Ftatwoods•Rd. (Co.
Rd 26) at Harley ·
Haning. residence. 2
Mi. from Five Points
Watch' for Signs
·
11-14-86-1 mo.

BOGGS

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, 01110

Public Notice

provided by taw (11New 'A
· NOTICE
Ton
Four Wheel Drive Truck.
OF APPOINTMENT
according to ·lpeclfications
OF FIDUCIARY
''On Novomlier 25, 1986. of aoid Board of Education.
Specificetion• and in ~
·in tho Moiga County Probate
Court, C110 No. 25336, ltructiona to bidder~ on ·file
Dovld E. Jonkina. 38 Hud- in the attica of the Tr'ea1urar
'
oon 'Stroot, Middleport, OH Racine, Ohio.
The Board hoa tho right to
46760 was appointed Ad·
ministrator of the e1t1te of conclll and rojoct all bids.
By Order of tho
Kitty May Lowe, docoaood,
Board of Educotion
lata of Pomeroy. Ohio."
Dennie E. Hill. Troao.
· Robert E. Buck
Southern Local School
Probate Judoo•l
Dlatrlct
Lena K. Noasolroad,
Box 178. Racine, Ohio
(121 t. B. 16; 3tc
•
46,771
•
(I 1124; 1121 1. 8. 16, 4tc
Public Notice

RECEIPTS
Gate
·
Admi11ion ....... f57,747.50 Premium ·
•
Membenhipa .. ... 27,9t 8.00 Books .... ... .. ... .... .1,665.30
Conceallona ., ... .15,116.00 ~'!inttl'!lnce, Repairt • · ·
Ci111 Entry
Supplies ..... ........ ,9, 660.88
Fees. ,...,....... :...... 1.565.00 Capital
Horseman's
Improvement .. ... 28,941. t 9
Feas .................... 9.510.00 Now
State
Equlpment ... ... ........731.04
Aid ...................33.233.98 Rotundo .. .... ...........150.00
County
Amusement Shar~ of
Aid ...................10.000.00 Fair ................... 29, 193.00
Soln ................... 1,785.00
Advertising .......... 2, 365.00
Short Term
Botancoln ·
Rentela ............... 3.791 .00 Treoaury .......... .. 29,436.74
,.
long Term
Totti ............. $209,703.&amp;9
NOTICE TO BIODERS
Rentals ............... 1.433.00 1121 15; 1tc
SubjOCti· Purchaaa of 'A Ton
Interest ...... ..·....... 2.601 .05
Four Wheal Drlva Truck
Refunds ...... .. .. .... 1,301 .12
For: Tho Boord of life
Misc. 1
,
Southern Loco! S.hoot Oil·
Income........... ..... 1.049.00
trict. Boj, 171, Racine Ohio
Total Receipts for
Public Notice
.
.
Period ... ..... .....169.413.65 - - - - - - - , - - -' .45771
S~alod propotola will lie
Bot Beginning of
rocotved by tho Board of
Period ..... .... ...... 40.289.94
NOTICE
Educetion
of the Southern
Total '
OF APPOINTMENT
Loco!
Schoo!
Diotrict oil
Receipts ........ $209, 703.59 ,
OF FIDUCIARY
Recine.
Ohio
11
the
Tntllaur~
EXPENDITURES
"On Novombor 25. I 988 ·
Salaries ............ .82,365.52 In tho Moiga County Probot~ or' a office until 12:00 Noon
Temporary
Court, C11o No, 21368 on Dacom,.. 19, 1986 and
Payroll .............. 11,018.08 Mory Ruth Det..morona end· at that time opened by tho
Busint.J s &amp;
·
Joy Roberta Sauor, 138 Tre11urer of "id board 11
Profenionel... .... 11 ,288.28 Garfield Ave .. Golllpolia, OH
Judges .. .................608.34 46631 . ond 197 Mulblrry
Board Members
54 Misc . Merchandise
E•ponao ..............I ,344.61 Ava .. Pomeroy, OH 48?89·..
re•pectlvely
, were 1p · !-~-~--,==-,
!;~~=:=;===::;
Administrative
pointed Co· Adminialratrix
II
-.
hp .............. .... ...... 257.73 with
the
will onnexod of th~
Taxes .................. 1,148.29 ..,.,. of Fey Mildred Sauer
HOTPONT
Duea ......................100.00 elul F1y M, S•uer 1k1 F1ye
1

Wtrt fl Pu:r ql '1kul·'
()Pr\tn f)~ l'rt· ty [!t•( }I)

SALES &amp; SEIVICE

S.nti~el

\

Mrs. r.:.endal Jordan of Columbia
Grange, attended the ·county
grand officers conference Which
was conducted by Mr. and Mrs.
Jordan assis ted by Opal Dyer,
Meigs Count y yout h director,
Art hur Cr abtree , Pomona
Grange lecturer, and Eldon
Barrows, Meigs County Pomona
Grange legislative director.
Me ig s Cou n ty gr a ng e
members have been Invited to
· share in a turkey and covered
dish dinner at the Rodney
Grange, Gallia County on Satur·
day, 7 p.m. Arthur Crabtree,
Columbia gra nge lecturer. pres·
rnted a Thanksgiving program
with readings, jokes, a co~ test,
and songs . A. turkey supper was
enjoyed before the meet ing.

won the trave li ng prize furnished
by Mrs. Canaday.
The program consisted of a
paper on "Chr istmas Flower, the
Poinsettia" by Mrs. Erlewine.
Sh ~ said !hat the poinsettia
outsells all other plants and that
thr Indians Ihink of it as a plant of
purit y. The Christmas legend
was read by Mrs. C!lnaday.
An art icle on pine cones was
rra cty by Ruby Diehl. She said
that pin~ cones are nor seeds but
are the sePd holders. The scales
stay ti ghtly closed until thev ·
matu re and then open to reveal
1\\'0 sma ll winged seeds at thr
basr. Mrs. Nic holson displayed
arrangements featuring pine
cones. Mrs. Weber served coo·
kies. coffee an punch at the close
of lhr m('('li ng.

'
Recent visitors of Ada Bissell
and son, Kenneth •. Long Bottom,
were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Groene·
veld and Tommy, Worthington; ,
Mr. and Mrs . Mark Miller,
Westerville; Steve Holter and
Billy Smith, Bremen; Mr. and
Mrs . Mike Bissell and Michelle,
Pomeroy, Mr. and Mrs. ·Harold
Holter and Judy, Stacie, and
Stephanie, and 1\{ae McPeek,
Long Bottom.

Ill C0111l St.. Po~ntray , Ohio ·~769

Public Notice

SKATE -A-Wl\ Y

614-446•7126

··

'

lt-16·'86'1 mo.

. ~-~~,.,...~~
WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH .
•SYLVANIA
•SP,IED QUEEN LAUNDRY
*GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp;SERVICE
Wt Hlft AflU Tlt11
~~~~ Tnbltlll
. 11 Dalf ·

RIDENOUR
Til &amp; APPLIANCE
· CHESTJ;R-985-3307
4/ 1/tfn

2.11 N. 2nd; Middleport
992-5766
OPEN: Mon .-Fri. 8 ~m-9 pm- Sat. 8·6
Walk·ins Welcome

J.R,'s R~PAIRS

EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND .
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS

·

v tSttors

PHONE
992-2156
Or Wr1tt OaiiiJ
Ctnsititd Dtpt.

~

Authori1MI John DHre,
Ntw Hollonlli, lush Hog
form Equipment
' Dtaltr
·

Far11 E••l~lllllf
Parta &amp; Servloe

1-3-'86 tic

PLUMIING &amp;·uu·n.,,

TVs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service
Electronic Organs
. Mobile serVice

CUSTOM BUILT

HOMES &amp; GARAGES

WANT ADS
AII.IUIPIIi

16 i 41 992-6550
RESIDIN(I PHONE

(6

w 9'12·17 l4

i!

Swim Molds ~ Interpreting

..

I

you leave in it. Achecking
WIIILE COIIRISS WAS
snu DDAnH PIOVISIOIS account which offers s.everal
OFn..WtAIUW WE · cash management optiOnsWIBILIIADYIUSYMUiiiG not just a checkbook. Aper·
OVJWIIAY ITWOULIMW sonal credit line which gives
you an easy cash resource.
. FOIYOU.
And a premium VISA card
On january 1, we're all
with substantially better
going to be playing with a
benefits, including a larger
different set of rules. The
line of credit.
new tax .law will challenge
TO Wll-1111 lEW
our old assumptions about
RULES,
CIIAIIGE YOUI OWl
IRAs, savings, loans, leases,
SIIATEGY.
and investments.
One thing is sure: now .
Today'schangingfinancial
more than ever, you need to
outlook means you'll need to
makeyour money work
reexamineyour money strate·
harder and smarter.And at
gies-the ways you save, bor·
BANK ONE 1we'vegot some row,and use cash.
new game plans to help you
First of all, take a hard
succeed.
look at your old financial
habits,and ask yourself if
th~ still make ~~se t~ay.
For example, ts It still a
good Idea to devote all your
~inanc~al energy to'fard ownmg ¥our home free and clear?
·.•
:
UIIOfllfsoumotiS":

Equity Money Service .
manager Christy Mongolier
knows thevalueofhome
eq~¥
· ty first•hand. Her advice:
hmgs are changmg m
how people regard their
ho,mes and their assets.
People are finding other
ways to save, rather than
just paying their homeoff.
"So what if your home is
paid off-how is that going
to really help you in the end?
It's going to help a lot more
ifyou have.an IRA. So why
h
·
h
not use t ee&lt;Jll_!t.Y you ave
in your home? Why wait?"
EQUITYMOIEYSIIMG:TIE
TII·WISIWAYTO IOIIOW.
• Equity Money Service is a
way to borrow large amounts
of money at a very low interest
rate, since the loan is secured
by the equity in your home.
What makes it a great
money solution for tpda'y is
.

UP-TO·Tlll·...rE WAYS TO

MAIIA6I fOUl • •, Ill Id.
At BANK ONE, we've
spent thousands of hours
dev~loping and refinin:&amp; an
entirely new product lme to
solve some of tooay's toughest money problems.
We call it "Money
Solutions".
Our ideas include a savings account which pays
you more, the more money.

. its tax advanta~. No matter
how you use our J&lt;;quity Money
Service, the new tax law says
you can fully deduct the interest when Y0\1 borrow any
amount up to the original
purchase price of your home,.
plus the cost of any home

Sr. Div
Premiums ..... ...... .3,744.67
Jr. Premiums &amp;

tate of 358711 Leading c....;
Road, Middleport. Ohio
hpenua ............. 6.874.84 45760.
Racing Purses Ba
Robert E. Buck
hpensas .. ....... .. 41 .696.97
Probeto Judge
Public
Leno
K
.
Neuolroad,
Clerk
Utilities ............. ,.5.726 .20 11.21 1. 8, 16; 3tc

•

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day ur Night ·
NO SUNDAY CALLS
.

4-16-'86 tfn

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

;:3 LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
:I: Licensed Clinical Audiologist
-z

2

••

..

'

.•
)

,•

, "This equity serviceis lffling lobe tltt
o•ly rn;ou ~e most cuslomm MIN! kftto
reduce theor tax rate. Everythingelsli i•
being taken away from them:'
Clldtt)l ........,lq.litrll_., .., . . .......,

. ' '
1mprov~ents you make. (If
you bolilllw more funds, interest is deductible only on · .
money spent for medical or
' tuition expenses.)*
.
JfiUIIIIG YOU
STAY 01 TOP OF CIWIII.
At BANK ONE, we think
it's our job to help you·take
advant:l;lge of change. We stay
up late to be sure we stay
~headofwhat'shappemng.
With the ex~rience and

money-management insight
of experts like Christy
M?ngol\er, we'regoing to do
everythll)g we can to help
you succtie&lt;;J.

I

.. '
•

4

l'

Ten thousand ~pie who care.

In loving memory of our
Mother and Grand·
mother 1 Ruth Buffing·
ton. wno passed away
six years aco today, De·
cember 15, 1.980.
A heart ol gold stopped
beatinc
It brelle our hearts the day,
God called you away.
But dHp inside we now,
He only takes the best.
A million times we have
cried
If love could have saved
you MOM
You never would have died.
Very sadly missed by
Children, Grandchildren:
Great-Grandchild,
Brothers and Sisters.

"

••

'

•

l

..
I

r
r

"
•
'•

•.

BANK'£ONE.

In Me!lloriam

'I
~

,.•
•.
I

.

'

''

i

Happy

Blrth••v
Love Aulfln
2

In Memoriam

In loving memory of
Florence C. Wilson
who passed away on
December 15, 1982.

In loving memory of
Carl E. Moore who
passed iway one
year ago today, Dec.

The days have pamd and
become.rears.
We've had the ariel and
cried the turs,
But we've crown stronaer,
the memoriM we've saved
Because of the joy and lovt
you IIYI.
You'll tiWiys be with ui.
we'll never part.
For we'll always carry you
in our hearts.
Sadly missed by Mother
· Pearl: Dluchter •
Christina. Sons • Ray &amp;
Robert tnd Friends.

A million limo I've neoded
you,
AMittlon tllltl I've cried.
If lovuould hne saved you .
You nevor would hivt died.
In life t tovs4 you tla11!y;
In ~th t loH rou IIIII.
In IIY hurt you hold I ~IICt,
. Jlo one can tvor 1111. ·
It brokt 1111 hnrt to lost you,
But you did not 10 alone;
For part of mt -• •"h you,
The dar God took rou home .
Sldly missed by:
Wife, daulh!trs, son-In·
law, .lratttfdaulftters and
rand·so ·In-law.

16. 1985.

'

992-2259

NEW LISTING - RACINE Newer ranch hlime on corner
lot. Seac&lt;ous livinR room with
beaulolullir~lace. large mo·
dern kttchen, 3 bedrooms, ba·
semen! Excellent condition.
large carport, concrete drive.
$47,500.00.
KENO-BASHAN ROAD
Completely remodeled 1971
Salem mobile home. New
house rooi installed. New
furnace, hoi water heat. 2
bed ro0ms, approx. \\ acre
lot. $16.500.00.
RACINE - ApprQx. 3 ~ acres
·of ian~ with 3-4 bedroom
home. Also small mobile home
for rental ·income. Must see!
ASKING $24.000.00.
,~RADBURY

- Recenlly re·
modeled 3 bedroom home
with partial basement. Huge
equipped kitchen, dining
area and free gas to house.
Also has 20 acres and sate!·
lite dish.

MIDDLEPORT - Nice horne
on a corner lot wtth garage and
basement New vinyl s~ing
and equipped krtchen, fireplace, shed. Priced lor quid&lt;
sa~! MAKE OFfER $28.000.00.
POMEROY - I \\ acres, nice
I floor plan home with cai·
port, sheds, and cellar. Gar·
den space and other nice
features. Priced to sell at. ·

·lllf!ry E. Cleland, Jr.
.

.
992-6191
J11n Truuoll. .... 949-2510
Dottie Tur11er ... .. 992·51t2
Ollice ................
'
. 992-2251 .

A

ONLY

$29995

GE VCR

4·Event 14-Day Timer

1319

95

-2~.00 Rebate

$29995

GE 19"

TELEVISION
~~rv s2s9•s
HOOYII

SWEEPERS
SJ995
VCR TAPES
ONLY

$299 ·

GOLDSYAI .

MICROWAVE

$10995

MGM

FARM
CITY INC.
. POMEROY
992-2104

•

. ,.

(614) 446-7619 or (614) 992.fi601
.417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis, Ohio 45631

L-------:--,;__ _;~lf~n_J

1

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW ~ INC.
405 MAIN Street, Pt. Pleasant. WY 25550
. (304) 675-5252

,

The PROFESSIONAL Hotr~~
•I nsuleted\ Replacarnent

"

Window .
•Vinyl, Stool Siding

..

••

•Storm Windows
•Doors

"fREE

INSTAI,L~TION"
S\IOWROOM HOURS.
9 to S Mon., lutL, Wed. &amp; Fri.

n

•

______ _______. ..
,:.....

....;....;,.

•"
'

10' MESH ANTENNA

PANASONIC RECEIVER

PH. 992-9949

FUllY REMOTE &amp; INST AllfD

lo~

)

. ....

,,.,,,,.,., Ctwlfr

109 MULIEIIY 'AYE.
POMEIOY, OH. ·
Barton, Owner
11-28·86-1 mo.

...

..

$4800
NO DOWN PAYMENT

Roger Hysell
Garage

••
LARRY'S
CARPET
OUTLET
'•
Hobson ld.
Middleport, OH.
~

,----..:.-.---..
J&amp;l INSULATION.
PH. H2-6173

Ill. 124, Pomoroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
. Alto Tr~aQllt~lon
PH.

992~5682

SER~CE

PAT HILL·FORD

992-2196
Middleport, Ohio
1·13·1fc

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

•All Types of
Excavating
•Landacaping
•Ba11ments

•S-age Systemo
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Welt Drilling
•Truck!ng

Call: 742-2407

3 Announcement.•

11·28-86-1 mo.

NOTICE

Be~inn!n&amp; December 15, 1986, atthl Housing Rehab

~ffice m the County Courthouse; Pomeroy, applica·
!tons for the Meip County Housinc Rehabilitation
Proaram second year will bt accepted. The Housina
Rehab Office is located at the street level near the
front entrance of the Courthouse.
This is a county-wide housina procr•m desianed to
rehtb.illtate homes tnd improve them to meet State
~ousma Standards. Any qutllfied .homeowner livin1
m ~elas .Co.unty may apply. Applicants must own
lhetr home m Meias Coun!Y, htve total annual in·
come 11 or below HUD Sectton B&amp;uidelines, and be
willin&amp; to cooperate in initiating a mortga'e so that
p~operty cannot be sold within five (5) years
r.:tthout ret mbursement for any cost of repairs pro·
vtded.
Before comiq in,
applicants should call
~lck McDonald at
for an tpPOintrilent and
documenutton.

·' '

HEATING &amp; COOLING

6·17-tlc

We can re~ir and r~
core radtators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

·

JAMES lEESE

or 992-7l21

RADIATOR

,

'

30' ELECTRIC
E. Mair1W...
POMEROY,O.

"'
•'

.

PER MONTH WITH

RANGE

Pickens S.uer. deceutd

S.

"At Rea!Onablt Prim"

SUGAR RUN
.ASHLAND

: IUSINISS PHONE

C!J Coq~uterized Hearing Air ~~~­

z

·BISSELL
BUILDERS

,SAlES &amp; SERVICE
Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

I

RfASONABll • REliABlE
8· 20· ·86. tfn

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Wt ClfTV Fishing Supplies

·r-----.....l-..:.....----··

. 614-843-5248

Ntw location: ..

• 168 North Second
Middltporf, Ohio 45760

Debbie Meadows-Owner; tmojean Btevino
Loretta Holsinger, Shotty Ohlinger
.
,.,...ri Amobary

WITH BARGAINS

Rutland Garden meets
•

Tr

..... ---------....:....o:;...--..:::...:._,-.

~-

Qolumbia Grange meets
fa ne Llewellyn took second
place in the state with her
crocheted tablecloth in the sew·
ingcontest, it was a·nnounced at a
recrnt meeting of Columbia
Grange held at the hall.
!(was also noted that West ina
C r~.btree had received lhed lstin·
guished secretary award for the
32nd year. Mrs. Mendal Jordan,
women's act ivities director,
urgM members to plan to ent ~r
the national sewing contest .·to
help 1111 the quota oliO ga rment s
per grange. The notebook en·
tered in state competition by
Columbia Grange Women's Ac·
tivities committee received a
blue ribbOn, it was reported.
Mr. and Mrs. Eldon Barrows,
Patty Manzey, Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Crabt ree and Mr. and

"Santa Claus" and riddles by
Ruby Lambert.
·a potluck supper and social
hour was enjoyed following the
meeting.

Is

'NOJICE
SUPPORT THE POMEROY FIRE 'DEPARTMENT: .
THE FIRE DEPARTMENT OF POMEROY IS SPONSOR_IMG, A FUND' RAISING 'PROGRAM TO RAISE MONEY
FOR NEEDED EQUIPMENT.
·'
'
A PERSON REPRESENTING
THE POMEROY
FIRE DE•
PARTMENT WILL BE CONTACTING ALL HOMEs IN THE .
ARIA ~ERVICED
!IY THIS
DEPARTMENT.
·•
' •
A
.
.
IN APPRECIAnON FOR YOUR TAX DEDUcnBLE DO·
NATION YOU WILL RECEIVE A COMPIMENJARY CEI·
TIFICATE FOR AN 8118 FAMILY PORTRArr. THIS WILL
BE . TAKEN AT THE POMEROY FIRE DEPnTMENT.
THIS FUND RAiSING PROGRAM IS LEGITIMATE AND
THE POMEROY FIRE
DEPARTMENT
ASKS
FOR
YOUR
'
.
'
t
SUPPORT. . · , · . ·
,, • · r · r ·

- '- -

WEDNESDAY
THURSDAY
,MIDD,LEPORT - A: Christ·
RACINE
The Ladies Auxil·
mas program1wl)l ·be presented · lary of MI.- Moriah
of
at ll\e SliV;er Run J;la~tlst church. .Goq, Racine, will haveChurch
Its ~nnual
Wednesday nigh~•. 7:30p.m.
Chris.tmas dinner on Thursday at
p.m. at the LaSalle Cl!rlstian
MIDD.LJ;:PORT - Middleport ~Rest~urant
·In Middleport, · The
AmateurGardeners will meet at church's Chr!S'tl!'llls
play' will be
8 p.m. Wednesday at the.home of held at 7 p.m on Dec. 21.
Jean Mbore: Kathryn Hysell and

. Sentiniii--Page-7 ,

Business Services

.

'

MONDAY
CfJESHIRE -Cheshire-Kyger
At~letic Association meets Monday. 7:45 .p.m. at grade school.
Rlnky Dinkslgnups to he held:.

'

The

· Pomeroy. Middleport, Ohio

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL
JUST CALL!

•NEW FURNACE
•AIR CONDITIONiNG
•HEAT PUMPS
•BLOWN INSULATION
•REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATE

992-2772

992-3410
LIMESTONE
GRAVEL • SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT

!CUr OUT fOR fUTURE USII

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
985-3561

*VINYl SIDING
*ALUMINUM SIDING
'BLOWN IN
INSULA nON

All Mtkll

PH. 949·.2801
., '949-2860
No Sundtly Calls

L&amp;W CLEANING
CARPn
UPHOLSTERY
PLUS

446·6323

YlantAds .
Navar 'IIIII a \k ] II
They\'Ok_Aillllrt
Arllll lll lii:I'IIW!ll l .

RACINE
FIRE 'DEPT.
Balhan Bulldillg

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.
facl•~ry Choh
12 Go ... 5heftllll

.

'

. l'
, I

)o

"
'
•

'•
3 Announc"ments

•Ranges

•Refrigerators
•Dryers •Freez•• .

PARTS and SEFIVtC:E

SHARPENING
. SERVICE
Circular Sows
Saw Chain
Planer Knive•
Drill Blto
Knives
Chiaeta

GR,AYELY .
TIACTOR SALES
204 Condor St.
Pomeroy, Ohio

PH. 992-2975

12·5·'86·1mo.

Racine Gun Shoot tpontor«&lt; by'
Recine Gun Club. Every Sunday
beginning _. 1:00 p.m. Pecto,Y ,lti,
Choke. 12 gu•g• shotguns.
·, ,,
Al\ilerine AntiQues open eveninga ' ~
and by appointment. 1124 Een u h
Meln St .. Pom•oy. Ohio, Ru11 1, ,
Moore. own'!', 114·892-2:152&amp;.
Book I VIlli ftom Senti for YOUr'
children. 814·949-2892 . .

tAGLE RIDGE ·
AUTO REPAIR

TruGk. a~to, &amp;
heavy equipment
repairs and welding.
(Ait mokea &amp; modeto)

PH. 949-2893
or 949-2756
· John K. Ientz
Owntr

1.-'

:

No hunting or ''"Pilling t ,
Mvn• F~rm loc.ted Chfttnui , ~
Ridge Rold.
~
:-~:-:--::-~---...e
· . .
Polttvetv No Tretpalllng on the 1 ,.i,~
Pantuote Property.
.

;::::::::;~~ ·· ·
4

Giveaway

''·

------ ---,• .•
40 Gallon Gu Hot Water He Iter •
to gtve .wey, jutl pict. up. Ph. ....
114·446·2310.
• '

4mo . old kitten, vr•v· striped · ;
_
NI' c7a...;p_.,...;P_h.....a_
t _:
•'..._
••~•..:·•::
u::s::..._·

-=-

GUN SHOOT

~·

·I '

•Washers •DI1h.west.r1

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

Ntw Homes lvilt
"Free Eltimat•"

I

IT

i

'lq

4 ftmel", 1 male pupp1w to
give 1w1y. Pert EngUih Coon.
hound end p.n Collie. C.ll
114·141·2eZS.

,..
"

11 old leying hene. 3 Yllrt otd '"
Cell 114-742 -2121 '"" 1 :00 1! •
p.m.

Aobblto

Ph. 304 ·178·7383 .

ltntiet rooatert and hen 1 . T.et 1
111. Aft« 8 , 304-837·200 3 ,

11

3 edor1ble bleck femlle puppi. . ' ' '
to 1 good home. 304·1715· 7111 .
Th•• bledl and whtte kltt
~
long haired, lin..- trlinld. ~
171· 7242.
~
' 10

�I
'

'

'

Page-8-The Daily Sentinel
6

LOST:

GriY

Poi'neroy-Middteport. Ohio

LAFF-A-DAY

Lost and Found

\

44

Schntuilf In

vic;:inlty of State St. • Hldg•
wood Ph. 814-448 -210&amp;,

Nicely furnished mobile home
CA • ht~l. e~eptl. location.
adults CH11y. c.ua1.._441.o338.

Found: carkeya in "ontofPoner
and little llw OfficH. Contact

613YI 3rd. Awe. 1 bdr. plfvate
bath, t 1'40 per mo. ~po.h
required. Cell &amp;14-448·4222

Sentlnlf Off!ct.

LOST Plir dogs,

bot-9···

bid. German

Shtphwda, wttring rtd coli••·
R~ardl ao•-4158-1098.

Furnlahed efficiency t110 utMI·
this p1id, thMt b1th, 701 4th,
Go Ill polio. ctii441·441S lit• 1
pm ,

l ost blut tick &amp; w1Uc• coon
Mound in baek or Meson. 304882-3288.
7

Furnlshld ' 3 room• •nd bath,
de1n. aduhs only, no pelt. 'C.I
814-446-1619.

Yard Sale

·····--GanTpons-----·--··

Nicely furnished 2 bdr. apt.
A~ultl only. Inquire ,at corn•
First a. Olive St . at Shepp1rda
Stlot &amp; Str\liet.

· &amp; Vicinity

Furni,had apartment. upttlirt.
Aduht only, all utilhia p1id. CaU
814-446-9623 ,

Monda'1 Dec. 16, 18, 17, 198&amp;.

Addlllonal misc .. good hoapiul
bQd, aewing, machln•. eiRtric
roatttt', chrittmea deCOI'tiont.
diahtl &amp; ~ens . 218 Third Ave.

9

! Wanted To Buy

We pay Cllh for late modtl clean
usod ,.,,,
Jim Mink Chav.-Oida Inc.
Bill Gene Johnson
614·448-3872

u..1 s

"NO matter what you write
nextl l't's been done'."

t~~:;;=:;:~;::=;==~r.;:::;;:::=:=:=~~~~~
23

Professional

Services

Stark• Tree and Lawn Service.
TO P CASH paid tor '83 model Hedgu . . thrubs . bushel
and newer used cars. Smith 'trililmld. landtclping, stump
8uick-Ponllac. 1911 Entem end letf removtl. 304-676Ave ... G•llipolia. Call a14-448- 2842 or 576-2010.
2282.

Real Estate

S25 cash paid for junk c••·

Complete. Bodie~ towed away.
Coli 614-245-9284 or 814682-6750.
Buying daily gold, aitver coins.

31

Homes for Sale

41

Houses for Rent

3 Bedroom Rtnch, Rodney
Village II, 82815 .00 ptr month.
plut deposit. reterenc11 requlred. Blackburn Realty Ph.
814-448-0008
2 Bedroom, 1'11 btthl, locattdin
downtown •rea. Adults ontv
references &amp;: deposit required
Ph. 814-448-3778
• 3 bedroom hO\I .., eo Gsrtield
Ave Ph. a14· 2415-6269.

2 bedroom hou1e for rent in
rings, i•elry, Jtertlng ware. old
coins. large currency. Top pri-. 3 bdr., elr, pool, garage. Nice. , Middleport. Completely remo. c... Ed. Burkett Blrbtr Shop, Commercial property, corner deled. New carplling through·
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 814- Iota It highway frontage. litt oul. New cllbinets. $276 per
with us. We hive buyel'1. A-One month plus depo1it. C1ll au..
992-3476.
Re.t Estat•Brok•. Cell 304- 992-1858.
BUYING RAW FURS! Ginseng, 674· 5104 Of 301l-674-5388.
Beautiful new house in Porn•
Yellow Root, beef end de•hidet. Alto selling trapping 12yr. old home. 3 bedrooms. 1'II roy. Also new one bedroom
supplies. Wheat Utn, NlteUtn. bath. extra large living room, furnished 1p1rtment in M!ddl•
Houtt 1:00-9 :00. Cloatd Wed. kitchen eppliancn, 8•14 utifkv pon, C,ll 6U-4•a-15&amp;2 or
George Buckley 814-e84-,781 . room. 2 car carport. 10x14 114-992-6304 .
building, fruit trMS, grape her~
bor. 1.80 acrita, lwei lot. Ap· Urtfurnished 3 bt' tvtillblt Point
QUILTS
prox. 16mi. ffom gllllpolla. on a Pleuent. Good locttion, nice
SOUGHT-SOLO
Cash paid. Pre 1960'1. Single or black top road Ph 614-266- y1rd, ea.,. on heat. Ref. &amp; s1ove
If needed. f221.00 month plus
whole collection . Call Mire and 8838,
utilities. Call 304-676-1240 af·
Ellen Fultz a14 -992-2101 days
or 814 -692-2461 evenings end 6 room houae. 1.2 tern. Double t• 5 p.m.
car garage. LoCated on Roae Hill.
weekends .
a.rgaln priced 420,000. Call '•;;--;-;;-;,-:-;,.-;c;----QUILTS
814-878' 2513'
, .42 Mobile Homes
SOUGHT-SOLD
for Rent
Cash paid. Pre 1960's, Single or Government homes from f1 . (U
whole collection. Call Mire and repair) . Delinquent tex property. l - - - - - - - - - - Ellen Fultz a1 ll-992· 2101 'd-vs ftepostesaions . Call 806-687Ext. GH-9805 for current
or 614-692 -2461 evenings and 6000
repo list.
2 bdr .. all utiliti• ptid except
weekends.
elec.. turn. or unfurn.. sec.
2 bedroom house for 1811 in depos it requiriKI. Convenient
Now buying ahelliKI corn and ear Clifton !Mable Johnson prop: locttion. Cell814· 446·8558 or
corn . Must be dry and clean.
. - - - -Why drive 1 00 miln whtn you eny) . Fully carp&amp;tad. recently , _8_14_·_44_8·_4_7_7_8_
can get the ..me price It MGM remodeled, new root. Asking 2 bdr. fully fumlshedaduh• only.
Farm City in Pomeroy? Call *18.000 . Col1304-773-5534or util. paid. Call 614-441-4110.
614-992-2181 end 11k tor 304 -773-5784.
Richtrd.
In Eufekl· nict and clean, tdults
Urge house with three lots, 810 only.
No pets, daposh required,
E.
M1in,
Pomeroy.
t18.000.
A good antre drum priced under
180.00
mo. call81•· 268-1a36
Cell a14-98&amp;-4427 after 8 :00 before tOa.m.
8100 , Coli 814-742-2860.
p.m.
Buying junk cera. Call.ttw &amp;:DO
614-992-5148 .

Emplnyment
Sermes
11

Help Wanted

Lad~

10 liv•ln, Clll for tld•ty
lady 5 daoya a week . Room a.
bo•d • tllery, Pt. Ple...nt aru
Ph. 614-441-4798
Airlines now hWing. Flight At·
tend.-.tt. Agents, Mechanic:t,
Cu .. om• Sentica. S.t8ri• hi
t50K. Entry l...,et poahiont. Call
1-805-187-11000 Ext. A-9801.

- - -----lcjobs. ne,O.O .
Govtrnrt~ent

159,230 yr. Now tUring. C.ll
801-687-8000 ht, A-9805 to.
current f«&lt;trlllitt.

W1nt live -in middle -tgad
woman to w-'Ch 2 chlldrtn. 1
cttild In tehDOI. Ught house
work. modtrete cooking. S.tery.
room and bo~rd. CaP 114-7422050 oft .. 7 ,00 p.m.
Aplrtment M1neger for 8 unlu
In M11on. W.V1. Call O.nltl
Streib II 814·883-41 11 Equol
Opportunity Employ•.

Apartment tor nle ·in Ch..tlf ,
Clll 614-985· 38 6 7.

End of ye~r sale. No Ptvmentt
until Aprtl 1987, on eny ntw
mobite home. Purch111 before
Dec.31 , UBI. French Cit¥ Mobile Home Inc. Ph. 614-4419340 .

let Avon help you get the bett of
those poll Chrlllmts biltt and
bluet. FrH gift with firet ordltl',
call 304 ·882 ·215415.

Prict r.. uced. CII'VtOn 1912
12•80 totll electric. 111cellent
condhion. French City Mobile
Homn Ph 814-448-8340

let Avon help you get the batt ot
t hOII poll Chrhnmu bilit end
blua. FrH gift with flr1t order.
Coli 304-875-1428,

Situations
Wanted

PARENTS II
S1nt1 will visit your child ·•t
home. Btllw•• etll North Pole
614·2415-9513 tor detlilt.
Someon1 to live In whh eld•ty
gentlem111. tome light cleaning
invotved. Room • bo1rd plus
•mall laltry. It inttf'nted cltl
St4-448-8507.
Room and boaJd tor amployH
mtn. Nice home. F1mily ltmosQhere. C.ll 814· 992 ·a873.
Babysitting In my homa. MondiY thru Frld.y. Pr•f•lnfantt to
5 yeor old. Coli 304-175-3774.
1 B Wanted to Do

CLEANING SERVICE
Wt cltsn hornet, otticM&amp; rentll
prop_.!... Call •nvtlma Ph.
81•· 388 -8700 o• 814-4482814.

19815 moiHie home for sale.
Ux70, excellent condition. 2
bedroom. 2 full bltha. Call
814-992-7183.
81141 two bedroom with g11
turntce. C•lll14· 9815-3350 or
614-986-3351.
18?2 Aleon•1hl0. 2 bedroom
mobile hc:in'te. Completety furnished, e~tcelltnt condition.
04900. Coli 814-985· 4227.
1972 Alcon• 1 2l80. 2 bedroom
mobile home. CompiMety fur·
nithed, ucellent c:ondltlon.
04900. Coli J14-9BI· 4227. '
1 9a9 2-btdroom PMC mobil•

home. Reidy tD lnOVI. t3,000
firm. 304-678 -2414.
1973 20' Chateau travel trailer.
Self conttlned. lir condttioner.
thermatlc controlled h11ter,
used very little, U400. Walden
F. Roush , 304·1575· 2834 or
675 -6737.
34

A1: Ill ol s
41

21

Business
Opponunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VilLLEY PUSLISHINQ CO. reoommtWtdt thll you
do bufin.. with people you
knOw' • . - NOT to stnd mon-r
thrCM.tgh the mMI untl you hl'le
inv•ifac.cl the off.Ong.

I

Busine11
Buildings

Otflce SPICI • Store IPKeln Pt.
Ple111nt, A·Ont Atll Elttta Ph.
304-875-6104

N..d help with that aptcill
cleaning Job1 Wt cleen homN,
rental propertlet , offiCII ,
churchtt. Gl...bum Clunlng
StrviCN Ph. 814-311-1027.

f lllolfiCidl

2 Bedroom furnished. We accept
HUD, Betulifl,ll river view: Fot·
tera Mobile Home Perk 61418_0_2_· _ _ _ _ __
_4_8_-_
_4

380 Grant St., Mlddl11p0n. 8
roomt, beth, garage. work shop. 1 1985 14x 60 1 mi. aouth of
t23,700. Make oHer. Call614· g111lpollt dim. StAt 7. No pitt
992-2802 .
clll after 3pm Ph. 266·8089
2 br, kitchen, betlvoom, with 2 bedroom mobile hamain kyger
laundry room, lh-tng rDVm 8t
school district Ph. 814·
dining room, all elfi:, Appro.. 7 cr-.k
·
mil" from Pt. Pl. on Rt. 82. 2 4•8-0722.
triCtS approx . 1 acremoraorlat
Plants sub-division Bull~illeRd .
owarlooldng Ktnawha Riwar. f1715
.0Q , . month .• 100.00
040.000, Call 304-175-&amp;440 Secyrity
depoth C.ll after apm
between 8:30.and 4:30.
.... 814-448-4&amp;84
Clean. well maintained, 11umi· Mobile home. Stell• Court. C.ll
num sided, 3 bedrooms, 1 Y:. 814-448;0758.
baths, lorm1l dining, rec. room,
ltrge ..t·in kitchen. 2 c• 1 2xa6 trailer, fully CII'Peted. 2
'IJifeQt. New fuel elficient fur- bedroom, g.. furnsce. 5 acr•.
ntce. 30tl-67fi-4804.
f2150 pw month plut utilltiet.
614-992 -2018 or. 814-992 ·
77U
'
32 · Mobile Homes
for Sale
2 btdroom mobile home. Mid·
dleport, 0 . Retennct with s•
curity deposit. 304-882· 3267
NEW AND USED MOB~E or 30•-773-602•.
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
.MOBILE HOME SALES, • MI. k I K Mobile Hom•. 2 end 3
WEST, GALLIPOLIS, AT 35. bedroom mobile hom11. 304675-3000 .
PHONE 814-448-7274.
I.,-,-::-:- - - -- - - - Two bedroom trlller. coupt81,
1973 Vlndlle12dl5 with 7x14
exp1ndo . Totti electric set up lor one amall child. Raf•tnCft &amp;
woodburner. Good Condition. Depo1it. Everett Schwart.1 , Rt. 1
locult Line, Pt . Plauentbsck ol
Ph. 814-245-5308 betwun 9&amp;
K&amp;K .
15.

Nled money to continue your
eolltGt1 Before 't'GU drop out
etll the Army N•tlonll Gutrd for
free informttion on our .ctucetion 111itlt"ce program. 304676· 396Q or 1·800·842-31519.

12

Apartment
· for Rent

l{ouaes for Rent

2 8tdroom hou11, very ciNn
01SO.OOp• mo., 075,00 d•·
otlt. lac.t.ct I White Avt Ph.
441· 3170
2 bedroom I 3 btdfoom hout•
for rent Ph. '48· 1878.

, Low rent unfumithtd hou11,
Ohio llrMt. Pav own utWUM.
Phone 304·S71-&amp;711 ott• S
p.m.
HouM For Rent - e rooma.
bM:h, ~cat.t on Uncot.n Avenue,
304·S71-1110.

Two bedroom trailer, air condition, wash• • dryer, t180.00
plu1 utilitin. refOfencn required. Glllipolit Ferry. 304·
175-32t6,
44

Apartment
for Rent

Furnithad tpt. In Racil)e. UOO .
Call 814-949-2801 "' 614949-2880 .
5 room unfurniehed apartment
for r.nt. Ctll a14·992·15434 or
304-882-2588,
New 2 bedroom 1pt1. in M11on.
W. Ye. Oui.t titling. oH strwt
perking. Rent 1c.rt1 tt t199.
Cell Llnd1 Clraon at 304· 775·
5011 or O.nite Strelb ,at 114·
183-,111 . Equal Housing
Opponuntty.

--~--~---------- 0

Z Bedroom 1pt. niot cwp.ting.
Wttw paKI, wash• &amp;: dryer
hook-up. ttova. refrig. furnished
IVIIIIble J1n 1•, 1987 Ph.
614·441· 702&amp; . •

Furniahed efficiency f176 .00.
2rms. &amp; bath utllitlet Pd . 4484416oftor7p.m.
Furnished
Apt. o21o.oo
util•
ti"
Pd. 1 bedroom,
first ftoor
Ph.
446-4418
?p.m.
_:_
_ _efter
_.:.:_
_ _ __
Duplox 848 Second. COipotod. 3
bedroom. LA. DR, new kitchen
• btth, Wllhlf&amp; dryer hook-up,
U86.00 mo . plus utilltiet &amp;
security dapotit Ph. 614-oti9D.
Nice 2 bedroom •Pt. refrlg. •
atove a. water furnished. No
pets. 4Y:. milet from Gllllpolia.
1210.00 per mo. t50.00 depDtlt. Ph. 614-44a-8038.
2 Bedroom. 1 year le81a
t2150.00 per month Ptlont
448-2158.p
1 Bectroom b11ic rent f176 .00
plus electric. Alto required a
t200.00 aecurltt deposit. CON·
TACT: J1cbon Ettl;tll Dept. Ph
441 -3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.
Senior citizens, nice apartments.
Ph. 304·875-5t04 .
Unfurnished spt. 4 raomt &amp; bath
centralty loclled. References a
Security depo11t required. Ph.
814-446-0444
Furnished tpt. ,f 175.00 water
pd . 2 bedroom. 131VJ Fourth
Ave. Ph. 448-441a after 7pm.

45

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooma end
light house keeping rq.omS. P~rk
Centre! Hotel. Cell a14-4.t80756.

SWAIN
AUCTION • FURNITURE 12
Olivl Sl., Gtlllpolia. New • used
Wood·COII llov". 8 pc wood LR
suite UBI. bunk beda f199 .
entron rectlntn f99 , new a.
used bedroom sultn. rangn.
wringer Wllhtrt, • thon. New
IIYingroom suit" 1199·1599,
lamps, 1110 buying coal &amp; wood
stoves. Call 814-4'8-3169.
County Appllence. Inc. Good
uNCI spplltnces tnd TV 11t1.
Open 8AM to IPM . Mon thru
Sat. e14-448-1899, 627 3rd.
Ave. Gallipoli•. OH .
V1iley Fumiture, n~rw &amp; ualtd.
large aectlon of QMIIity turn i·
ture . 1218 Eutern Ave ..
Gallipolis.
LAYNE'S FUANITUAE
Sof11 and chtirs · priced from
1396 to 1996. Teblet •so and
up to t126. Hide·l·bedl e390
to fl915. Recllnn t226 to
0375, Lampo 128 to 0125.
Olntetn f101 tnd up to f491 .
Wood table w-1 chair• Ull to
•79l5. O.tk •100 up to f375 .
Hutchet t.-oG and up. Bunk
beds complete w-mlttr•sH
t216 and up to •395 . Bebybeda
t110 • 1175. Maur. .narba•
springs full or twin fl3. firm
f73, and &amp;83. QuHn 11t1 t225,
King t3~0. • drtwer ch"t 186.
Drn. .a fll . Gun ctbinatt 8 ,
10. • 12 gun. Gu or alectrlc
range t376 . Baby mtttr••n
f315 • 1415 . led fr1m11 UO.
f30 &amp; King frame f60 . Good
Httction at bedroom tuh ...
metal ceblnttt, h11dboards f 30
tnd up to f815 .
Furniture: Wash• •
dryer, gas r..... WOOd table.
2 beflchas. beds. dreuar, wood
wtrdrobt. 3 mil• out
BullVille Rd. Open 9AM to
IPM. Mon. thru Sit.
814-446-0322 .
Used

1 Bedroom apt, aU utMitlet p1id,
wether &amp; dryer hook-up. ltCNe •
retr~ . furnlahld. Re• of Smhh
Pont1ec Buick Ph. 814-4417025 .
2 1nd 3 bedroom IPirtmenta
and houMI in Pomtf'oy or
Mlddl.,art. Furnish.t or unfur·
~thed . Pey own utllhi•. Call
doyol14-882-2381 .
1 •nd 1 'h bedroom ept. 1¥1illlblt
at Riverside for rant. B•lle rent
11erts at t179. plus utllidee.
1200. I KUrity depottt required.
Inquire at 114·192-7787.
t bedroom apt. tor rent. Beale
rent 1t1rt1 1215. 1 momh thlt
includ.. ell utiNUea. Deposit
·required of UOO. Contact VII·
Itt• Manor Apt. Mldcltport.
81•·992-7787. Equol Hou~ng
Opportunity.

Apartmen'ts for rent in Pam•ov.
One 1nd tWo bedroom. Clten
ond nlco. Coll114-t92·8215"'
81.·892-7314.
.
APARTMENTS. mobllo homll,
housea. Pt. Plt. .nt Md GaUipo·
Ill. 114· 441·1221 .

•

Smell 1 br IICOnd floor.
0132 .50 IIIOflth pluo 150. dop·
oolt. 304-875-5178 010onlngo"'
wttk.nds.
One bedroom tptt1mlllt. Htnd·
erton, t110. month¥'. ltovund
ref.....etor furNihM. Phone
304-S7S-1872.

61 Household Goods

KIT 'N'

cL..YLE ®bJ Larry Wright

54 Mise : Merchandise

1882 .. MC o-15 Plcfl-up, 8 ••
cylinder. long bed. 87.000 mil• ... •
Good ehepe f3,000 Ph. 61• 448-4380.

'

printer. loftwtre. disk'drlve cell
814-288-1989
JEWELRY• W1 w Ill b1 0 .,Ing
20% oH our alreMiy low "prlcet
trom now until chrlstmu .
Franks Pswn Shop Ph. 114446·08-a.
Stowe coal-wood burntr wit..''
fMJ· blower t187.00. Oriental
rug very lerge f16&amp; .00 items in
good condition Ph. 814-37921 .. 4.
201n. Dirt bike, 241n. •- 2•1n.
m
•
10-speed bikes, Z.nlth ConiOie
Stereo Ph . 814-387·0448.
01k tntiquekitchen Clblnlt with
Uour bin tnd roll top refinished
t300.00. Ping Pong T·tble complete 050,00 Ph. 114-4484514,
'PI•id brown &amp; tin &amp; gold couch
end mltchlng chlir Ph . a,..
246-9387.
'

=
•:.·If

Firewood for lila. '35. ptrlold.
5 loldt &amp;1150. Delivered end
IIICked. Ctll 81,·949· 2601
1fter 1 :00 p.m. ·
Tony' s Gun Atptira. hot rebtueing. Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM.
Coli 304-175-4131.
Shop tor Christmas with
FULLER 8AUSH PRODUCTS.
Coli 304 -875 -1090.
For sale 10 " radlai arm 11w. Lot•
an1chmenu. Plus Hobby
....... 047&amp;. 304-882-2203.

of

For 1111 toboggan-nw• uted,
piCkled tilting lor four UO.OO;
TIH1ny •tvlt hll'lging light •40.;
Violin with cne and atand
t121.; Ski bootl Polomht ai.11
8, U5.: Nordica silt 7, •40.;
Junior golf club• •&amp;o.304-8751110.

P

ets for Sale

84

AKC reailt•ld Beegle puppi•.
11wtla. bkl. tiSO.oo· nch. C.ll
814-381-84S&amp;.

Large round balls of hay for tel e.
•10.00 11ch Ph. 114-•461052.

AKC Aegittertd Na;:..=ian Elk
Hound•. 8wkl old
to 00
Ph.a14·288· 1117.

Mind gr111 h.,- for ..1e. Call
814-941-2237.
I

Winter fashlont. tpldll chrilt·
meagHts for your pttt. GroOm.
sup.,,
-•· Sh op Ph , 814--S-0231
••

1of ,- -

For Hie Pomnnlan puppl•
r.bold7woobofd, -.nld
~112 ·2211
.· t100. ···""'
-

l

-

CAPTAIN EASY

H

Musical
lnatrumenta

ay .

•
ra1n

Dritd . lhelltd corn, ••.10 p•
cwt, ground n.po per cwt,
grouhd wllh mol. .• fl. 75 ptr
cwt• 30•
••a· 1031 ·
•·-

1r&lt;illopllrl&lt;ilillll
71

67

11o G

'Autos for Sale

Mu11 Mil 1978 Oattun 200SX
151,000 aCtual miiM. 1 -tpeed
tranemlu~n. 'k xJkl• runt r.od
· 1800.00 Ph.S14·441·110 , ,

BeautHul Chriatm• Olfl· Pl'cen
Console Pl1no, ucelltnt condi· 1881 Oodp Arill, outomtlc.
tion Cell a14·441· 75a&amp; after with AC, 4-ctoor. 11 ,000rN like
4:00pm.
· now Ph. 814-378-2728,

o\ [IVI'\IIII.k

61

Farm Equipment

CROSS&amp; SONS
U.S. 35 W.l, Jadlton, Ohio.
81.· 288-1451 .
u,..., Ferguton, New HoRend,
lust. Hog Sel• &amp; Servlct. 0VIf'
40 uttd triCtors to choo1e from
A compltee line of naw A utld
equjpment. Urg11t llltctton In ·
S.E. Ohio.
JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SA 31 W. Gollfpollo,
Ohio. CoiiS14-441·1777, ov01.
814· 441·3582. Up "om troctOtt with we"anty over 40 uHd
tracton, 1000 tMI&amp;.
UTILITY eLDO . SPECIAL:
27'x31'd'EAVE with tllding
d-."'"'' ....... 14,211.00
erected.
.
Iron Horte Buldlnp Ph.l14·
332-9745.
.

1121· 1931 F20 Formollontlquo
trtetor. ltttl whHia. nllllfOOd.
0300. Coli 814· 742·2057.
White F~rm Trtctort; ltlt Prloe
In Aret, lidert Equipment Co.
Hender10n, W. Va. 304-1717421 .

Now buying •ell com or ..,
com.Colllori--•· R""'
City Fonn lupply, 814-4482111.

CCC Gon•lo CortlflootM. 304·
175· 1107.

1;;6,.3,---,,.,---.,--,----

t-

Livaatock

AQHA ltud Colt. Big ood
......... t400. "'
Col
114·141·2411 "' 814-H2·
7113.

8 :05
8 :30

THERE YA 60, EASY.
9EVEN 'WAN!l !lWIMt;\IN Go
j;IX GEE!le A~OUT TO ~AY-

.-

197a Dodge Window Van, 3· ·•, ;,
'spttd. 22&amp;. 6-oyllnder runt ·.,. ~~
body ~d t860.00 Ph. ' 1•/. ''
1!'
4-2415-96 4 .
·
' ' '
1911 International Scout. run• ...... '

6 :35
7 :00

r,od,

·A~

Ph . 614·446· ...·- ~
·

1978 Chovy SWB. 4 whoel •• ,
drive, lo..t..t. no.. 10, 6o 1;,.,_ :~oo'!' ·
..... ..,
156.000 m.i ln. or fair offer.
304-671· 28'2 tfter e p.m. ·1·1111'
1578-2010 .
, ... ~~~:
........
1981 Ford Ranger 4x4. •exc. ''. ;~~~~
cond .. dutl oxh•uat. v-6, pa, pb, : ' "' .... ;
five 1peed. 30•·876- 7521 after r. 1
15 p.m. "
'"'": ·
-.~, ~.
74 Motorcycles
• •

a

1883 Plymouth Turiamo. 2 -dOOf
&amp;15,000mi. Nice • clean Ph.
814-378-2726.
'
1111 Ari•·ll Dodge St¥1on
Wegon. AM -Fr.f Stereo
C•lltttt. euto. CC.,... window
wipera, good condition Ph.
814-241-9698.
1il4 Mercury lynx Station
Wagon, 4 -tpaed. AM -FM .
02,789.00 Johno Airto Soloo.
BuiiiVMio Ad .. Oolllpolfo.
1884 flt't'mouth Rtll.nt, IUIO,
tlr, cru6H, AM-FM . C11h price
t3,499.00, Johns Auto Salee,
Buii..,Miolld. Ooltpollo.
1885 Food Mu.._- 299.
tuto mag&amp;: 18111 ChiVy Impel•
IS Corwertllble. 75011 Hondt
Ph. 114-445-44S2
1979 Chrylltr Cordobl H.T., air,
PI, PS, .7.000 mHea. Sh•p
carl814 Firat Ave Ph. 81•· 4480819.
1177 Olds Cutl••· auto, 1if,
conditk)n. Must ole
Ph. 814-445-0498.

•c"tnt

1911 ~lymouth Turlsmo,
01.100.00. 111&amp; Plymouth fie .
liont, t5.&amp;00.oo Ph. S14· 441·
1552.
1178 Okttmobilt 8tlrfira; runs
DODd. 4 new tii'H. • cyl.,
4-1Pt8d. tiOQ.OO Cell anytime
11.·388-8718,
1978 NOYO, outomatlc. PS, PB,
AC. A-one condldon. 2 dDor.
Shirl'¥ Elkins, 27 Evtnt Hgts.
Golifpallo, OH ,
1879 Oldo Cut!". t 1810. "'
boll oH•. Coli 814-98S-3&amp;05.
1184 Dodgo Dlpiomol . 30,000
mH•. Loeded. •1100. eau
114-742-24111 .
1981 Mercury Marquis. Pl. PI,
1lr, crutH. Oood concltk»n. New
toM. ' 11900. Coli S1•· 949·
2801 "'81.·948-2880.
1171 Dodge Megnum. t27&amp;.
Coiii14-74Z-2411 .
1181 Old• 88, 1u10metic trMtl·
miNion, 4 door, good condition.
Phano 814-882-1170.
1178 Mulling, nwr paint. ntw
tlrta. OICCIII"'t co·ndltion. Beat
oH«. Phono 114-982· 7817.
1884 PantiiC 1,000, 02,810,
Phano 304-175-8141 .
17 Chovy II Novo SS. 12&amp;0.00
For 8111 or Trtdt. 304·876·
2285.
AMC 1811 Eogle 4-W-D, I cyl.
At-olo, a-1 oond. 304-175·
4437"' 171-33S4.
1981 Ford Elcort L•ttetlon
wegon,11.00001ot. mllee. uc.
oond. One owner. U ,100 c11h.
No chtdr.a. Abtolutaily no calla
oft« I p.m. 304-1111· 3874.

1986 260 Big Red, GC $1,000 :
:: :
Ph. 814·388-9906 .
., t · 1
··- · ,.
1981 Vemahe 810. run• good,
J!". ;:
I
II
II t h
~'
•oaOo.Oo ~'h . 8~:~4:6. 16s2z.pe ,.,.;j,.~.:·
------------- ' ~
=:--;--:---.:-:-7- - - . ,., ...
76
Auto Parts '
• ·' ·
S. Accessories

fort

1 Boas 302 Ford engine complete wtth haadert. 1 New cer
trailer f90().00. 1'Ualld t360.00
Ph, 614-388-9908.
I
,.

Trucks for Sale

4 cyc.. ltpetd, am·fm cusette,
a• rnloogo. 04150. 304171·1130 tftw I p.m.

-

72 Chevy 1.4 ton. heevv duty.
lody ftir, motot nl!lda minor
wo•k. l400 lflm. Coil 814-2465077.
1874 F«d F100 .. 311 ongino.

'

1873 C·M Choory Lu¥ Tondum
03100. 1171 JD 3110-C I woy
bllldo """wlncill, •1100. S1•·
819-8131 Ill lor Rlclioy.

fOP. HIM·

ALLEY OOP
Self contained slide· in camper.
Sleep• 4. Can be aeon at
SyracuH on Second St. Ctll
814-992-.7181 '

IF NOTHI"'G'S STIRRING
THEN HOW'D THESE REBS

"'
.'

·--.....

'· 1 •' 1

Servic~s

~·

(BJ Benoon
CIJ Honeymoonero
D (]) ilii Mlckay'a Chrlot·
mas Carol Disney charac·
1ers bring a new twiSt to
Charles DK:kens' Christmas
s1ory. 160 min .)IRI .
(]) Father Murphy
(!) Magic Yell'S in Sports
IR).
CIJ D CIJ MocGyvor !CCI
MacGyver helps out a young
ac1or and his wife when lhoy
are pursued by a group of
deadly counterfeiters . 160
min.)
Cil MOVIE : 'Whlte
Chriltmaa'
Cil
MacNell· lehrer

a

NEVER MIND! l'UPEAL WITH 'IOU I'&lt;FTE"-

HERE,PRI~TE?

lO:IiT

.:fu ' •

I CUT THESE TWO

News hour

DOWN lO SIZE!

~

®18 Gl1 Kate &amp; Allie (CCI
Allie

despera1ely

needs

Kate 's ad11ice when she is
swept off her feet by an atB1

tract ive ex·foo1ball player.
(jJ) Fred Waring'• U.S .
Chorus
!HI MOVIE : 'Going Home'
B'05 CIJ MOVIE: 'A Dream for
Chrlotmaa'
.
8 :30 Ill Zenith NFL Monday
Night Match-Up Chicago
Bears at De1roit Lions.
®I • Gl1 My Sliter Bam
ICC) Sam and Paui are lorn
when they must decide
whelher or not to sell their
family cabin .
9 :00 II (]) 1111 Veer In the Ufe
Joe and Ru1h Gardner's
Christmas is disrupted when
their son Jack uneKpected
returns home and their other
son Sam, about to be mar·
ried. falls inlo an affa ir wllh
ano1her woman. (2 hrs.l Pan
1 of 3, In Stereo .
I]) 700 Club

Home
Improvements

----~·~

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING '
Uncondittonaf lifetime gutran·
tit: locll refwenc• furniahed .
Free llltlmttH. C.ll collect
1-814-237-0488. diV or night. 1 .,.

___

_ _____ .

Ao g e r •

B • • e m e n t · ·'

Wat•proofing.
,;_ _:_

- -·

'\'

EEK &amp; MEEK

'·

......

SWEEPER and sewing mtchlne ' 1 "' ;.
tipllr, ptrtt, 1nd supplies. Pick
up and dell\lary, Devil Vacuum · • t'
Cleaner, one helt mile up • ::.. ~ 1;
O.org11' CrHk Ad. Call 614- :.
448·0291l. .
. - ••

,.J ,·

.,,

FTM Gen••l Contracting 13yrs
•parienee. Roofing &amp; Con·
otructlon Ph, 814-388-9308.
FrH eltimatn 10% oH during
the holldl'fl, offer expirn Jan
' 15, 1987.

'·

,,'·
,,'·.,

. . ..•

•'
,,,.

RON.' S Televi1ion Service .
Hou• calla on RCA, Ou1ur,
OE . Specialfng in Zenith. Call
304-675-2398 or &amp;i4-446- ',
2454 .

•'

'"

,(

,.. ""''

..

Fetty Tree Trimming. stump
ram0111i. Clll 304-875-1331 .
RINOLES 'S SERVICE . expe·
rienced ctrpenter, tlectrici1n . '
m110n, painltr, roofing (includ·
ing hot tlf •ppllcatlon) 30•·
875-2018 "'175-7147.

WHAT~'IWR

DAD DO Fa&lt; A

-~'

LIVING1 ALEX1

I DON'r
KNOW,

eur. ..

CIJ II CIJ

WHENEVIOR HE l-EAVES
THE HOUSE, HECO\IERS

NFL Football:
Chicago Bears at Detroit
Uona (CCI (3 hrs.) Live .
CIJ Day the Univaroa
Changed: A Poraonal VIew
by James Burke .lamas
Burke looks at !He many
systems of belief through
hls1orv that have been dis·
carded after acqlllring new
knowl edge , 160 min.)
®I G1 &lt;U1 Newhart ICC! After she suffers a mild toe in·
jury, Stephanie enjoys h er
time off work until she

MAYBE HE
SLJNBLJRNS

EASIL-Y.

HIS FACE WITH HIS HAT.

''

Starks Tr• tnd Lawn Service,
Hedgu. shrubs. bushas
trimmed, ltndscaplng end
atump removtl. lllf remov11 .
304-578-2010 "'178-2842,
'$

Rotary or ctble tool dfllllng .
Mottwellt completed temeday .
'Pump satn •nd ltrvice. 304895·3802

.....

I

..... .\
'

;
..
'
....... '

learns that Dick and Joanna

'

Alhby Con1tructlon, carpen· '
tery, remodeling, room lddltlon,
cement btodl work. roofing, r .~• •
lnttrlor and exterior painting. •· , •)."
tiding. Roofing. FrH edimetes. ·
304-&amp;71-5.46 "'875-6152. ·:

:;.;:::=~=:;::;:::=== :.·· ·~. i
82

Plumbing
S. Heating

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

have hired a super-efficienl
temporary maid .
(jj) Condie In tho Wind
9:30 ®I
Gl1 Cavanaugh• A

BARNEY

~AIERI! sroP.
II

'•

THAT!!

.~,

~.-:

.._' ·,...,_,.,.

I

CARTER'S PLUMBING
..~, ~
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh snd Pine
Gtlllpoll•. 01\i_o
,.•
Phone &amp;14-448-3881 or 814441·4477
B6

a

matctfmaking Pop pairs a
skeptical Kit whh a hand -

I TOLD VOU A
THOUSANT TIMES!!
WE DON'T ~AT
WITH OUR
·FINGERS!!

10:00

murdering a rap is t 160 min .)
(jJ) (D) Newo
10:10 (J) MOVIE: ' Hcipacotch'
10:30 CIJ Bill Cosby Show
Cil Children Crying ot
the Door
(jj) Thlo Old Houae
11 :00 D (]) ®18 Gl1 1111 News
(J) Hardcootll and McCormick
(!) Surlingr j&gt;lpelina Moo·
taro Coversge from Oahu ,
Hawaii. IRI.
Cil M'A'S"H
CIJ Harry Balofonta: Dori't
Stop the Comlval From
Centennial Concan Hall in

e

_,

SN

T •L Wetllfdtliv"ry tnylima Ph.
814 ·.388 - 9732 ume da~
dollvory ,

e

' ,,

Um"tone tnd sl1bwood hauled.
AI Tromm, Rutland. Call 614·
742-2328.

!

•'
'':
.

W11tenon's Weter Haul ing.
reuonlble rat.., immediate
2,000 gallon delivery, cisterna.
pools, well. etc. call 304· 676·
2918 .
' ...
Cotl, limntone. gravel. etc . .
Delivered 1 ton 1nd up. Jim
Lenler, 304· 675· 1247 or 6757397 .

'
'

'•
'•

.....

· ·~

PEANUTS
NEVER PLf&gt;l( POOL

87

Upholstery

Wml A SORE LOSER I

-'

R &amp; M Cuetom Couehes 1nd: ~ \'.

Reupholttery, St. Rt. 7 , Crown · 1..,
City, Oh. 114·2&amp;1-1470 Evo , ' ' ·
814-446-3438. Open dtliv 8 tO .~ . :·
I , Itt. 9 :30 10 1:30. Old' new •~-' 1'
Uphoatered.
I ..
•

Mowrey's Upholstarlng serving'
trl oountyerea2.1 yeara. The bnt
In fumlture upholttlrinc.. Cell
304- 171 - 4114 for free

. some Liltle League coach.
CIJ Candy Cane Concert
160 min .)
®I • Gl1 Cagney &amp; Uc:ey
Cagney comes to the aid of

aformer partnert accused of

General Hauling

~

(]) Swimming: MeDon·
ald'a U.S. Open Cham·
plonthipl Coverage from
Orlando. FL . 12 hrs. l

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

t.

like new tlumlnum topp1r.
needa aome body work. Excetltnt wort&amp; ..,.... d • . At It e7ao.
- 1 1 4-742-2745,
=~~---- H
117t Food Ao-. liD, F1 &amp;0,
running boarcll. Gtb lightt.
Sh. . looldnt bucll. Corpotlng,
AC. CoM 814-H2·7111.

7 :35
8 :00

_,...:''

pool• filled . Cell 814·268-1141 ,•
or a14-446· 1116 or 614-446·
7911 .
•.. - ...... .

72

®I Wheel of Fortune
. 8 Gl1 ilii Jeopardy

.

'·

uM• warranty. 304-171-6440
cloy; 175-ll&amp;lovonlng.

1177 Chwrollt ltttlon wagon
Coprico 310 -no. good cond,
. 1100. Fkm. 30'·115-3851 .

if~~IT"Of'l.Y

•
,,
''"
,,

' Water Service.
'
Am111 Soya
Alto

1175 Plyntouth4 do, pt,,pb, IC,
crulll, aood cond. •110 .. C•ll
304-773-5303.

Of cou~.)f= E~NIE IS
I.OST IN THOUGHT··
IT:f' UNFAMI'-IAP.

/

1915 VW Jo111, • ·• 5 opood,

•m-tm tepe, 28,000 miiM. Still

D (I) Judge
Ill Fina Romance

FRANK AND ERNES'T

I~

' '

~

Ei6~T

BALL

IN T~E
CO~HER ?
~OU 'RE

I

.,,

Winnipeg, Manitoba: Harry
Belafonle sings folk , pop
and calypso music · in 1hls
performance taped In July
1986. FeaiUres lho songs
"Ma1ilda" and "Banana
Boal " and mO&lt;e. 160 min.J
(jJ) Nuclllr Legocy
lBI Honeymooners
•
11 :30 D (f) 1111 Belt of C.I'IOII
Tonight'• guas11 ate Chlick
Norris, Glen Campbell and
Victoria Ja ckson . 160 min.)
IRI In Sleroo.
I]) SportaCentor
• Cil Taxl
®I @I Magnum , P.l.
• CDl Simon &amp; Simon A
mild-mannered omithologill
hires lho Simons 10 provo
Ihat ha Is no11he Jaguar, a ·
noloriouo)ewel1hlel w1n1ed
.&lt;..
1he pollee. 170 min.) (R).
12:w
CD .Burnt
l Allen
.
..
-

·----

111knlt81.

,

'.

ill'

lA II

'

!

1 I I I I'

1

2

-r.r
;
.
:
A
r,I
~

:::-".:r-G
--1!
I
I'
I
1
•
•
•
.
6

I

.·~,-!

~'

Famous qUOie: "BciiiOW IIOUble

•

PRINT NUMBFIIED 11
LETTERS
•

•

UNSCRAMBLE
,ANSWER

II that's your nature, bUI don't
lend h to y o u r - . "

Ie

ASHTAG
.:.,~~~,,...:
· ~

.,_-,.;,:18_;;1;,..:
.
T"l
-.L.
_.1..-..1.-..1.-.J.L...J
L.

Complote the chuclcle quoted
by lilllng In lhe m1111ng word1
you develop lrom s!ep Nci. 3 below.

FORI

I 1- I I I I I I I
YESIEIDIY'S SCIIII·Lm ANSwils
Bullat-Chrlt-Rurll--lll'lldt-AUVE
"" you ntVII' mike-·" llllllllhe IICihiist, "No ont
,

not- youf'MII, will knoW you Mra ALIVE."

M'A'S'H

Nightly Bu1ln181 Rl·
port
®I New•
liD
MacNeil-lehrer
Newahour
tW ilii Wheel of FOrtune
(BJ Barney MHier
7:3"0 II(]) CIJ New Newlywed
Game
(!)' NFL Filma P.--gtl
• Cil Too Close for Com·

.. ,. ~ ·

79 Motors Homes
S. Campers

CIHBIII llJiilll

'

BRIDGE

CIJ

,r,,•

1971 Plymouth A'Jow for pert a.
Good 4 1peed trant, new clutch
and prtuure plate. f7&amp; . 304·
458·1732 .

.

....

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

ORoarrango loltoro of lh1
lour ~eramblod words below 10 form fOiir llmplo words.

Newo
(J) Blg Valley
Ill Mazda Sportsl..ool\
.Ill Cil Jeffo1'10111
Ill 3-2·1, Contac1ICC) .
(jJ) Secret City
··
@ Facts of Ufe
CIJ Now leave It to Beaver
U (]) ilii NBC Newa
Ill Action Outdoors with
JuHus Boro1 .
CIJ liJ CIJ ABC News
Ill Cil Hogon'o Heroes
CIJ Doctor Who
®I • Gl1 CBS NOW.
(jJ) Body Electric
@Goodnmeo
CIJ Down to e.th In Slereo :
II (]) PM Magazine
(]J Hardca11l~ ond McCormick
(!) Sport.Canter
Cll Sanford and Son
CIJ Ento~inment Tonight
Cheryl Ladd talks about her
attempt to shake. her 'An~
gels· image in tler upcoming
role in a CBS·TV movie,
"One Way Out" ,

• Cil

'::~:~' S@~~~-~£~s·
1 - .,. ClAY I , POUAN

II CIJ People'• Court

' .

AKC Registered Oerm1n 1Sh•
ph.nlf.uppiea,goDdbloodNnlt.
raldy or lmmiNiiate ..11. Exeat·
lent Chrlttmu prlttntl Ph.
814·44S·4211 .
'

Pets for Sele

Sleeper lOft full tb:t, Inn•
opring ......_
130.00 Ph.
614· 441· 3417.
.

Ll"vastock

Groom • Supply Shop
Profeulontl Strvloe, all llyl•.
oil broodo, ototeAt. 141 Golllpollo,Ohlo41831 , JulieWobb,Ph.
114-44a-o 231 .
·

bel••·

UKC pit bulle 4 - old, rlldy
to IIObv Chrfltm• Evo.-176.00,
UI.OO will hold. · 304-1823788.
.

63 -'

Dragon,_.nd \ Con- •-nnil. , 2 VIII' Old hetfer eppro•. 8001bt.
-,
-~ ,_
CFA Himlllt;'an, Pet1ian and · Ph. 81,~ 2·8-1474
Slam111 kittent. AKC Chow
puppln. Cell 114·448-3844 · I Holdaln lprln1• Helf••·
eftw 7PM.:~~-:O~ht &amp;Oibl:. Ph.

SALE IALE SALE
SpKial VIII' tnd Hla pri&amp;* on
Tr~etort and Vermeer Hey
Equipment; up to t 3000.00 otfl
Mowers, mower conditionwt,
Ntw bllkttball, b1ckbo1rd end rlk•tldden, &amp; round
Tlke . ..mege of your Investhoop Ph. 304-875-1538,
ment tu cndlt for the l..t time
PtiVey P.A. Syltem XA700 thit y11rl A complete line of bile
mhter with tpHkera. monhora. hlndling • flltdlng acc•ori•.
mlcrophonn, sttnd. 304· •715- fMd bunb, Jhltttock Wlter.l,
3978.
grinder mllera. wagons, rotwy
till... rotay·outt... 114 . . ..
Surplus insulated ctmoflaut• dltc cultWt1on. plowt, •eed•a.
dacron covertlla. small, m• post drl¥ert, woodtpllttera,
dlum. ltrga t26.00; XL UO.OO. tat... heldgltM. truc:lc redls.
truck btdt, trltiltn. IJ)f'eyen.
Carhans. trmy i11ue clothtn,,
UIED
boott, bibt denim 118.00.
Wrangl• Jack•l. 1hirta, pllln A veritty of ullltd trRton, round
po&lt;*et denim p.nte 14 ozt. Sam bll•. wegon1. tobtcoo Hltw,
Somerville. Junction lndep.-.d- cutttvatot~ lltac. plows, r••·
lftct Rold. Old At. 21 . East7'NH hevtMne, • • • belen,
ReveniWOod, frid8Y, Saturd8'f, mowing meehina. h1rrow. buth
Sundev1 12:00-8:00 P.M. oth•
hOfl.
d..,. aft., 4:00 P.M. Afler Dec. Set us for a oomplllt line ot
171h, opon dolly, 12,00 tMI a ,oo p. . . . -~.. 84-448-2871.
P.M. Phone 304-273-5855 .
19158 C11eVAI triCtor- torperta
"'•lbuHd, 1200. Coli 814-317·
56 Building Supplies
7114.

Good ultd color T.V.'t, rangea
from t815.00 to t1IO.OO Cell
.., T.V.'o Solo ot 814-4411149 .

;,

..- :

66

e:oo urn CIJ •

'

S. 4 W . O .
..;f
-----------~-------- ~..·~....
Vans

~~~~~~~~~~::,;;~~;~~~,..~.,~-~.,.~~ 0792
good teoo.oo.

Firewood. Sauoned mlud
htr,dwDCJd, tplh and detlvered.
140 for X·l•g• pidt·up laad.
614-992-3110.
.
•
200 piecet of lllle(root). 12x24
lnchH. t2.00 each or til tor
noo. Coli 114-848-2801 o•
114·849-2880.

,,

1981 Dalton pick-up truek. 4~.+t,
•• ,
·
wh ..l drive, C•ll 814· 9928l48 ,
'
......\
•.
73

'803--1978 Ohio 171th Annlver11 ry Colt Government modet
'6 callbtr spectal edition. 1 of
280 collectors hem ne'tler been
tired. f1 ,000.00 firm Call 814- .
44a-947a •nvtime wk-ends.

84 Commldore Computw wh:h

Viewi~g
EVENING

... . . .

Firewood delivered Otk • hick·
ory, apltt, HEAPwouchar, pickup
load 035, Coll814-448-2223or
814-448-3028 ,

OP Gympac Plus. for uJe
complete with bench, IAn
¥• mt·
.
chine. rowing. curl &amp; Ill bar.
1561bo of weight • com" with
oolloupporting otond. 0400.00
Ctll aftlfl5pm 614·4•8·22152..

\11101~ M'('Sf'LF,

BG:AV&gt;f HI' THI/JI'$ ~'5
SAAIA CLAV5 ~

12/1_5/86

19815 Ford Rt~ger 31,000 ,
mllea, 'topper, running bo~rd ... ,•., ..
New tlret, AM·FM CIIUtte,,
1 -sPeed ' trans. ••.100.00 Ph.
814-288-1411
.:• ... .

PlaitiC clttem st1te approved.
pl11tic septic ttnks• . pl..tlc
culverts. mlttl culverts. "ON
EVAN$ ,ENTERPRISES, Jockeon. Oh' 81!l-288-5930.

4 white spoke wheel• with tira,
size 1000x11. with 8 tug
wh•la. UOO.OD Ph: 61 4 . 93,
or 304 . 871 •3313 _

ALITTLI&lt;

Television ·.

1882

C•llahall 's Used Tire Shop. Over
1,000 Uru, slz" ,Z, 13, 14, 115,
1a. 1~.5 . 8 mllea a;ut At. 218.
Coll814-258 -6251.

_
__
:______
5 week
doyo.
after_
'white spoke wheelt with tlr•.
~ze 1000x15, with 8 lug
whoei1. noo.oo Ph. 814-9340
or 304·871· 3313 .

I ~'T BLAAI' 'b.! I'OR&lt;;MII.IIb

Mi' ~.'ALPfL., r -miNI'. Hi;'$

vw e aplltd wilh topper,
AM-FM clletltl, llldlng Window, n.w tlree. tharp. Call
114·448·4991 .

66

-..

Truck• for Sale

Tappen 011 R1 Rge. Bektt
good.f215 . Qrop leaf table.UO.
Coli S14- 99~ ·7018 .

2 rtgistared W.. k••· 1 mlle. 1
femele. I montha old. One 7yHr
ofd Clrond Night Ch..,plon
w.... mtle. C.ll ~114 - IU2557.
'

quillty - ' " -... o..,8to
or 011
304-S71-U83 0&lt; 815· 1480. .

72

Pomeroy- Middleport. Oh ...

BOitN LOSER

1883 ChOIOOV S -10, 4-opood hu

Concrete bloclca tllsi.ltl y~rd or
dt4ivtry. Maaon und. GllilpoUa
Block Co.. 123VJ Pine St .• 310 CIM Dozer, good coftdi.
Gtllipolit, Ohio Cell e14-U8- tlon, ••eoo. 1 f77 Chevy
plcflup, a-1 ountlfllg -clition,
27B3.
t1 .000. Mallnle aom lhlll•.
Pole Buildings by Outllty good wDrk oondh:km, JO ft.
bed. 0100. 304·175·
Builders. Workshops, c•portt. eiiVIIo•
tnimtl shelters, gerq11. F'" 1417 onyflmo.
estimates. Phone 814-38-t5782 .
82 Wanted to Buy

•

. -.....,

·camper top cllle1•·•48-7010.

11 cu. ft .. upright tr-er, cycle
detroit. Corbin • Snydw Furniture 951 Second Ave Ph.
448-1171

'PidcMI Ultd Furniture. Good

·~

'

Good ustd dr~er t715.00 Ph.
614--.e-1797:

Building Mtttrlalt
Block. brioi, uwer, pjpM. win·
dowa, lintt11. etc. Cleuda Win·
ttrt, Rio, Grande, 0 . Call 814246-1121 .

King Silt Wetwbtld, big mirror in
the middle, night lights bulh In
on tiiCh tnd and 1 built In
boobhett. ExceU.nt condition
012&amp;.00 Ph. 814-379-21106,

'

•

CIOOO USED APPLIANCES
Walhers. dryert, refrlg•••ors,
rang11 . S11tgg1 Appllanc11,
Upper Ai\ler Ad . betide Stone
Crest Mottl. 614-448·7398.

1 -pc. Wood living room suh:e
0399.00, 4-pc, Lalgh bedroom
tulte f831 .00. Wa also htve
pottery. Moflohln Furnhure a
"'fpllanctt, tt.naug1, OH Ph.
8 4-448-7444.

'

Mond8Y. uacember 16. 1986 ·

Monday, December 16, 1986 ".$

Room• for rent, drt . wHk .
month. Gillis Hotel. Call 61-t· · 4 ton• of lump coal t?&amp;.OO. coal Upright pi111o. W• pl.yer. O•k ~
448-9715. Rent as low 11 &amp;120 stove f76 .00. 1979 Dodge very good eond. 304-a75: 1320.
Omni 024. auto, hlg" mileage
month.
0860.00 Ph. 814-441-8588.
Furnished room 919 2nd, Gtlli·
6B
Fruit
polis. 8116 . Utilltln pd. Share Mixec. h•dwood •••· f12 . per
S.
Vegetables
bundle. Conttlning IPPfOIC. 11h
belh. Single male. Ctll 446·
1ons. FOB Ohio Pillet Co.
4416 after 7pm.
Pomeroy, Ohio. · Call 61•·9928481.
Fresh truekfotd New YOrk
46 Space for Rent
gro.wn large IPPI•. 7 kinds.
Firewood, 111 htrd wood. Hett Nevel orang.. • tangt101, b••
vouchers •ccapted. • 35 . 1 nu · gr.,.., tmltllcMaorbybo11.
pickup k)ld. Phone 81•·7•2· Jec*s Fruit Mllrtlll, Rt. 31,
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Perk,
2488,
Henderson.
Route 33,. North of Pom•ov.
Lergelots. Call 61•-992-7479.
Ultd 2715 gallon fu" oil tank
fJ&amp; . C1n be teen It Meigs Tire
69 For Sale or Trade
Bulin•• or Office Space tor
CenterorCIIi814-992·2101 or
rant. New HIVen. 304· nl- 814-992-2319.
5024"' 304·882-3267,
Firewood. Seasoned mixed , 196a Dodge Bonhog motor
Mobile home lois. tmlll ehWdren
hardwood,
split •nd delivered. hbme, Colem1n fum8Ct, air
accepted. At. 1 Loculi Rd.
•40 for X-lsrga pick· up toed. condition•. uNCI Mec. 011 or
Mobil~!! home Iota. Ohio River
battery. Exc. Mape. C.n bt teen
814-992-3110.
RoM a. Pttters Creek, Rt. 1.
ot Koodil Po•k- 304-175· 7328
304-875-1078.
Used 2?1 gallon fuet oH tank .. 875·11112.
f315 . Can be INn al Meigs Tire
Center or call814· 992-2101 or
Mer~llo!lllli st:
614-992-2319 .
I IIIII S' I llilllr".

61 Household Goods

. ."'".

.

James Jacoby

Ultra-friendly
distribution

NORTH

ll·li-11

+H3

• A J B4

By James Jacoby

tss

....•s

+AK 94

Here is a deal that illustrates man) WEST
EAST
+AKQI0982
interesting aspects of the game. Firs!
there Is the bidding. The only justiflca•
tJ2
lion East had for openina such a tAKQ9643
+QJ0852
tJ73
strong hand with a pre-emptive bid
was the unfavorable vulnerability .
SOUTH
West was rlaht In decidina there was
+76 4
no future In blddlna after partner's
• K Q 10 78 3 2
tJO 7
pre-empt. North had a problem that ~
could be solved only by taltina a
' chance with a takeout double. It was
Vulnerable: East-West
risky since he lacked support for dia· :
Dealer: East
moods, a s uit South might have had to ,
Weol
Norlb Eosl
bid. But all was OK when South was
3t
able to bid hearts, although declarer 1
DbL
Pass
would normally be off tbe first live · Pass
Pass
Pass
Pass
tricks. But these were not normal

•s

+B

circumstances.
Mter the openina lead, West could
have ended the contest quickly by un·
derleadina his diamonds to partner's
jack, but he needed to see throuah the
backs of the cards. Anyway, he had
control of clubs, and declarer would
eventually have to lose some spade
tricks. That's . wbat defender West
thouaht, but look what happened.
After cashina the second diamond ,
West led his heart. Declarer won,
played A· K of clubs, pltchinB a 1pade,
and ruffed a club. He then played another heart to dummy and _p layed the

.t!!l,,,. "*

t K

L----------------------.l
•

last club. When ~st showed out, South
threw a spade and West '!'On the fourth
club. We!it bad to lead a minor suit, allowing declarer to ruff in tbe dummy
while gettina rid of his last lOlling
spade. There was no way for West to
escape giving this "sluff and ruff," and
friendly distribution bad made it possible for declarer South to bring home
a thin 1ame contract

J

JOSEP~

lly THOMAS

ACROSS

Opening lead :

48 Youngling

1 Nectar

.
collector
4 Beret
7Howard of "Dallas'

DOWN
1
2
3
4

Procreate
Moray, e .g .
Ennoble
Gregorian,

e.g.

8 Strini!Od
lnslrument

5 Indian
10 U.S. symbol
mulberry
II WatchfUl
6 "Music Man' Yeaterdoy's Answer
13 Heavy beer star
7 Cabbage 21 - and
29 Parisian
14 Large
9
Laud
fa•t
cap
lnlck
10 "Lend a n 22 Bowler's 30 Modify
16 Adage
problem
for use
__ '
17Take back
12 Tammany 23 Heavy
31 Entrance
19 Kinship
Hall
24 " - and
32 Watch
20 Belgian
figure
Old
Lace'
37 Wood
commune
15
Berlin
25
Reach
sorrel
21 Stockings
27
tee
38
Sticky
22 Shade
(perfectly) substance
of gray
r"'T""'I'"'25 Basil·
nadoed
26 Fathe r

(Fr.)
27 Craggy
hill
28 Spanish
article
29 Slavery
33 Chemical
s uffix
34 Devour
35 SandraO'Connor
36 Singer
38 Playing
marble
40 Fr. gam toling resort
41 Manage
(with)
42 "-- Ballou'

DAILY CRYPTOQUOTES -- Hue's bow to work it:
AXYDLBAAXR

II LONGFELLOW
One letter stands lor another. In this sample A is used
for the three L'a, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrcJphes, the length and formation of the words are all
hints. Each day the code letten are different.
CRYPTOQUOTES

'

12· 15

·DZLM\1

OMYE

TYMMZTII

IJRO Z

ER.IIIi.AZ.J

KYNM

TXMR -liiRLI.I
EYMWZI,l.IHZMQ

Y......,'l

Ci)p~tiOIAtl

AT

LAST WHAT

DIS'IlNGUISHES MEN FROM A?;IMAL'i:
WORRIES. - JULES RENARD

FINANCIAL

ffi

One. on One Earvin
" Magic" Johnaon .

Clle mNewa

(l] R8whlde
(I)ICTV
12:111 (I) """'"ith11
.12:20 CIJ Ntitlonel Geogrophl.
•

I KNOW

"

'

Explorer

12:30 D (]) ilii

Late Night with
David Letterman Tonighf&amp;
guests are Marla Oomond,

cartoonist Hervey Pekar end
comic John Wi1herepoon.
lll&lt;! .min.).ln Stereo.

•

0

,,
'

�.•Page 10-The DaHy Sentinel

Monday,o.c.nber15,1911'

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

'

Local Briefs:--- N.Y. abortion clinic time borrib fizzles
Patrol issues 2 citations
I
By JEFFREY K: J&gt;ARKER
The 15sticks of dynamite In the
NEW YORK (UP!) - A man bomb were to have been deto·
· pos&lt;~g as a rental client broke nated by a blasting cap activated
. Into an abortion clinic and by a timer, but the cap only
planted a brl~fca~e bomb power- spewed out smoke an,d fire and
ful enough to destroy the front of did not set off the bomb, pollee
the 10-story building, but the spokes!llan Sgt. Ed Burns said.
deylce fizzled and caused only
Had It exploded,, th~ dynamite
minor damage.
would have "absohltely
des·
I
•
,
· The male suspect had hand,. tro"yed" the front of tile 10-story
cuffed a teal estate agent In a building, said. Lt.) William
bathroom three floors above the McCarthy. commanding officer
clinic before setting the bomb of the police bomb squad. •
Sunday, but otherwise the ManThe real estate agent. who met
hattan office building was the suspect to sbow him office
empty' pollee said.
space, managed to pick the lock·

Both drivers of a two-vehicle accident on Ohio 124 In Olive
Township were cited by the Gallla-Melgs Post of the Ohio State
Highway Patrol Saturday.
Ernest Berringer, 52, Rt. I, Reedsville, was cited by the patrol
for !I seat belt vl!llat!on. Robert L. Reed, 45, Rt. 1, Reedsville,
was cited for Improper backing, resulting In the accident.
. Berringer was eastbound . around 12: 20 p.m. and struck
Reed's veh!~le which was backing out of a private driveway,
according to the patrol. Both' cars were damaged moderately,
· troopers said.
·

Legion post to hold party
Racine American Legion Is ·having a Christmas party and
!)Inner lor members, auxiliary members and their Immediate
families, Saturday, starting at 1p.m., at the legion hall. Anyone
needing Information should contact Ed Turley at 949-0010, or
Pete Bearhs at 949-3()74, or Pa\lllne Wolfe at 949-2773.

'

.

'

New . hudgetsugges~

Lighting judging slated Wednesday

sale of Amtrak line ,

Mlddlepqrt Amateur Garden Club and Middleport ·Garden
Club will be judging Christmas lighting In Middleport Village,
Wednesday evening. Residents wishing to participate in the
judging should have lights turned on by 6 p.m.

t~e

WASHINGTON iUPii -President Reagan's 1988 budget Includes a proposal to sell Amtrak's popular Northeast
corridor line to private Interests.
but the railroad's chairman
insists, "There are no buyers."
The New York Times reports.
Reagan's spending plan also
proposed to cut by more than half
the federal aid for urban mass
transit systems from $3.4 billion
to $1.6 billion for fiscal yearJ988,
which starts next Oct. 1. the
Times said Sunday. ·
Quoting unidentified administration officials. the Times said
the proposed sale of Amtrak's
heavily traveled Northeast passenger line, which serves Washington, New York and Boston,
would cover all the 'railroad's
assets, Including Pennsylvania
Station In Manhattan, and stations In Philadelphia, Baltimore
and Wilmington, Del.
Congress, which has shun,ned
most attempts to cut. mass
transit funds, Is expected to put
up a tough fight against the sale.

Authorities take part in search
Four Meigs County EMS and lire department units were
Involved In a Sunday search for a missing person.
Rutland, Salem Township and Columbia Township units, and
the Shade River Forestry Division, were called between 7:30
and 8:30 Sunday morning to County Road 10 (Mount Union
. Church Road), to look for 22-year old Jeff Workman.
Pomeroy rescue was called about 2:30 p.m. to aid In the
search. Authorities finally called a halt to the effort at 6:22p.m.
The young man returned on his own about midnight.

Meigs board meets Wednesday
Meigs Local School District's regular board of education
meeting for December has been changed from Tuesday, Dec.
16, to Wednesday, Dec. 17. Meeting time wUI be 7 p.m. at the
administration building in Middleport.

Sorority slates gift exchange
Ohio Eta Phi Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority will meet
Wednesday for a gift exchange at the· home of CharlenP
Hoeflich. Each member Is to bring an ornament and meet at the
Pomeroy Fire Station at 6:30p.m. before golng'to 'the Hoeflich
home.

I ''

••
'

•'

.
the sevent.h:

on his handcuffs, crash through a
·first-floor window and escape
wlthout Injury. The agent's name
was w!tl)held.
Only minor damage was reported to Planned Parenthood's
Margan.•! Sanger Center on the
fourth floor oft he building, Burns
said.
.
.
"We absolutely will be back to
work Monday morning and it wlll
be business as usual," said Jean
Coombs, deputy executive dlrector of Planned Parenthood In
New York.
Pollee said they had no suspects In the case, but a clinic
. offiCial blamed anti-abortion
activists.
"By attacking a Planned Parenthood cilnlc, anti-abortion act!vlsts have once again demon·
strated their wlllingness not only

Days 'til
Christmas· ·

the bathrooms on
floor, the suspect pulled a small ,automatic pistol, handcuffed tu.:
agent to a · steam pipe· and:
promised to return In 20 minuteS. ~
The gunman then went to t~;
fourth-floor abortion clinic, re- •
moved a door trom Its hinges and:
planted' the bomb, wblclt hal!{
been concealecl In the brlefcase,1
on the floor beneath a counter Ina)
waiting room, Burns said.
•· :
He activated )he timer and left,
the bulldlng, using a key he had!
taken from the agent, Burns sal&lt;l. :
Abou.t2:55p.m.,anan,onymouN
male caller to!&lt;) pollee about tiM!;
bomb at the clinic. Boinb·squalll
officers found the clinic lllle!l:
with smoke, but disarmed t~l
device, Burns said;
·'
The smoke 11nd lire from the!
blasting cap activated an auto-:1

at .y
Vol .36. No. t67
Copyrighted t 986

minor water damage, he laid. ' ,,
The federal Bureau of Alcoholll
•
Tobacco and Firearms joined ~
police In the Investigation of the;:
Incident. Burns said.
';
The incident was the third In'·• ,
two months and' the fourtllln a~
year involving bombs at abortion;:
clinics In the city .

ALL RAILROAD EMPLOYEES .

They estimated the sale. to a

ThE" White House had no
comment on the report, but
consumer group and Amtrak
officials ~rlticlzed the proposal,
saying passenger train service Is
Meigs County Emergency Hospital; Syracuse Fire Depart- undesirable to private businesses because It Is difficult to
Medical Services reports four men! at 9 p.m. to Morning Star
turn
a profit.
calls Saturday and nine calls for a chimney fire at the Fetty
Amtrak's
Northeast corridor
Sund~y.
residence, Firemen were on the
trains
carry
about 10.5 million
;
scene 33 minutes:. Racine at 7; 46
passengers
a
year
In eight states,
: Saturday, at 12: 49 a.m., Ra· p.m. toStlversv.llleforachlmney
~ineto Main Street for Dan Shat;r' fire at the Carpenter residence; . which Is more passengers per
day than any airline serving the ·
':,"ho was treated but not trans- . Bashan Fire Department at 7:51
highly competitive route, the
ported; Middleport at 7 p.m. to p.m. was called to assist · at
Ohio 554 for Henry Davis to Carpenter's, firemen were on the . newspaper said.
W. Graham Clayton Jr., chairtiolzer Medical Center: Middle- scene about one hour; Tuppers
man
and president of Amtrak,
port at 9:19p.m. was called to the Plains at 11: 54 p.m. transported
told
the
Times. "There are no
:Middleport Pool Room but the Doris Eastman to Camden-Clark
buyers. It's not profitable. No
~all was canceled ; Pomeroy at
Memorial Hospital.

If you have received ANY unemployment ·
or other ben~fits from· Railroad
Retirement Board in 1983·'84 or• '85
please contact my office or call
992-3795

H&amp;R
BLOCK
618 E. MAIN ST.
POMEROY, OH. ·

p~lvate corporation or 1tlirough a

public stock offering, could bring
about $1.5 till! Ion, the Times said.
The budget proposal~ are to be
submitted to Congress' on Jan. 5.

'
'

Mon. thru Fri. 9-5: CLOSED THURSDAYS AT NOON

Squads respond to 13 calls

10: 54 p. m. to Pome roy He all h
€are Center for Alva Will to
Veterans Memorial Hospital.
• Sunday at 7:30 p.m., Rutland
Fire Department was called to
County Road 10 to aid In a seach
lor a iost person; Salem Town~hlp and Columbia :rownshlp fire
departments at 8: II a.m. were
called to assist In thP search;
Shade River Forestry called to
assist ' In search at 8: 32 a.m.;
~yracuse at 1: 29 p.m. transt"'rted Lowell Wingett to Vete£ans Memorial Hospital; Pom!'toy Rescue at 2:36 p.m . was
called to assist In the search on
County Roal! 10; Middll'port at
5:28 p.m. to North Second for
Lori Price to Veterans Memorial

~

.......

. "'f\ .. .

.·

..

.

on PI• 5 In Fruth Pharmacy
December circular should read
SALE PRICE •26" lesa 14. 00 Moil-In Rebate
'We Appolaglzo
For Any .

•22••

RCA 19'~....,..
XL-100 Color TV

AFTER _REBATE

$278

FREE

t·

•Hi-Con picture tube sctetn

oCibte-&lt;:ompotible quortz tunin1

•Super Accufilte&lt; COTY picture lube

6

TV

·. 'f .; •'

.
I ,

.. liE'.

$209· RCA XL-100
,'"'.,' +.

Char\nelock digital
~ remote

13'dtagonal

II II

..oi'OITMII

control

5)'.
&gt;~'-· '·
'I' .

Sl 59

RCA 19" ··--·
Color TV Black &amp; White TV

Celeste campaign consultant
wins state tourism col)tract

G-J·M Board briefed

lR 1..,_

VMITIIOIIoUU

_..,...

p-;~;~;;,-·
.... ,.,eldON",.

• ~

on proposed changes

t.

-"".::..:,

BANK

I'LVJN'IT '" yA IPIO

$589

We Pay The
Postage Both Ways!

RCA25':._.t
XL-100 Color TV

RCA 25'1.~,
XL-100
TV

S6 39

Channelock digital
remote control

RCA26'~._,

• t&amp;-button ChlnneL.ock
remote control

Colotri'ak TV

PICK UP ASUPPLY OF PREPAID ENVELOPES

AT ANY OF OUR THREE CONVENIENT IDeATIONS

PEOPLES

3 Head• - Slow Motion
wlrltletll.r.rl~

BAN·K

Leora

lnon, W. Yl.

Point PIIIIMI, W. VI.

control.

RCA 20'1...~~
Coloill'ak Stereo TV

52 9

Quality 5alr•wlc:•
. After thl lsGI•

''The letter lanlc"
MEMBER F.D.!.C.

OPEN
TIL 8

5th Street
Nelr tt-l, W. V..

••-•713-·55iillittit4.-•--675iiti!·11·2itttl-·-·112-·21iiil5-.,

ELBERFELDS
POMEIOY

Z

'

"

'f
I

I

....,'='"·..~...:~"":. .
fltorl•l4•
..,. _ •

I

'

A PRETTV SITE- MelpCounty residents wW
want to lake a moment during thla holiday seuon
to vlalt a Jive Nativity iceae In Middleport, being
presented by members of Hope Baptist Chsireh,
on Graat Street. Church memben wUI re-enact
the Nativity, nightly throurh Dec. 23, 7to 8 p.m.,

,.

excluding re(Uiar Sunday ud Wednesday cburch '
nlghta.' Ia lbe scene are Judy MOler as Mtu'J; Bob
MOler u .Jt~~~eph, Rev. David Bryu aad IDly
Bailey u 11tepberds; Randy Smith as a klar, 1111d
Roae AM Bailey, Mary Bryan, Stephule Walker
ud Brenda Taylor In the choir.

Changes In the state's mental
health -law and preparing agen·
cles for receipt of Medicaid
funding were outlined Monday to
the Gallla-Jackson-Melgs 648
Mental Health Board by Its
executive director, Dr. Romola
Hopkins.
Hopkins said the law Is cur·
rently under revision to rectify
mental health Issues left unresolved, when the Legislature
approved the bill separating the
departments of mental health
and mental retardation In 1980.
Proposed changes are of an
organizational nature, Hopkins
explained, but she said she
expects the bill will undergo
many changes . before a final
draft reaches lawmakers.
"It's Into Its third draft and I
expect there will be 20 mor'e
· before It's over with," she said.
For that reason, she said, the
board chose to wait lor a final
draft of the bill to review rather
than get various revisions.
Hopkins told the board that
various agencies contractlhg
with the board are working on 336
certification to receive Medicaid
fl!ndlng. This fundlrig · Is lor

26 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

By KATHLEEN SILVASSV
, Sen. Howell Heflin. D-Aia.,
WASHINGTON (UP! I ~White returned to Washington .~r)'lld
House chief of staff Donald
speculation he will be named to
Regan , told by critics to step head the . special ' panel, but
down In the furor over ·the Iran congressional sources said late
arms-Contra aid scandal, went
White House spokesman
before a closed-door Senate com~rry Speakes said Regan ..,..
mittee today to testify about the
who has been repeatedly as. controversy.
sailed
lor the administration's
Reg~n went Into the bug-pr~f
·
handling
of·the muddled Iran·
vault used by the Senate IntelliContra
affair
~ would be
gence Committee for Its secret
happy
to
testify
to the Senate
hearings, the way for his testimcommittee or other panels,
ony cleared when President
investigating .the matter.
Reagan waived a claim of
"He'll be glad to do so In
executive privilege.
MERRY CHRISTMAS! - Residents of the
and Vlnion Counties. Each child received a gill
open session," Speakes
He did not speak to waiting
North
Pole
maintain
hectic
work
schedules
this
provided by donations from employees of
added.
reporters clustered outside the
time
of
year,
but
the
North
Pole's
No.
I
resident,
Ohio Coal Co., union personnel and local
Southern
However,
a
committee
spoheavily guarded committee
time
to
visit
Santa
Claus,
always
manages
to
find
individuals·
and businesses. The Cow Miner's
keswoman said It Is "lmproba·
room , turning .Instead briskly
with
young
friends.
The
jolly
old
fellow
paid
a
call
Christmas
Planning
Committee was responsible
ble" any hearlnp .would be
Into the arena where members
to
Meigs
Mine
No.
1
on
Monday
to
see
for
this
year's
collection
of over $10,000 lor
open,. noting, "It's very rare
planned to grill him about who
approxbnately
40
youngsters
from
the
Gallla
underprivileged
children
In
southeastern Ohio.
that we have open hearings."
authorized the secret arms sale
County
Children's
Home
and
area
foster
homes
Pictured
having
a
heart-to-heart
with Santa Is
Speakes also said he exthat triggered the charges profits
of
"Jelgs,
Gallla
served
by
the
Children's
Services
5-year-old
Jimmy
Russell
of
McArthur.
pected Regan would appear
were skimmed through Swiss
before
the L'Ommlltee without
bank accounts for the U.S.counsel .
. backed rebels fighting the Nicaraguan regime.
Committee Vice-Chairman Pa- Monday that Sen. Daniel Inouye,
trick Leahy, D-Vt .. said on CBS's D-Hawali, who served on the
Morning news he expects Regan special Watergate commlttee, ·is
also a front -runner for the job.
can help fill in gaps and might be
Durenberger said the Intelliable to tell the omrrilttee.whether
fired National Security Council gence committee should have a
By LEE LEONARD
Malone Corporate Communi- the state as a result of summer
aid Lt. Col. Oliver No~th acted on summary of what happened In
UPI Statehouse Reporter
the Iran-Contra cash scheme by
cations, Akron, received another promotions In 1984 and 1985.
orders. and if so, who gave the
COLUMBUS (UPI) - Gov.
the end of the week.
$50,000 coqtract extension on top
Tomasi said the U.S. Travel
orders. ·
Speakes also said he expected
"As chalt;man of this commit - Richard F . Celeste's campaign of Its exlsting$225,000todo public Data Center in Washington has
Regan ·would.~appear before the tee, and (since) this whole covert media consultant, Hameroff- . relations .about Ohio's suc&lt;:esses rated Ohio better th~n ~lchll!an ..
committee without counsel.
action without oversight oc- Mllenthal-Spence-Gray, has reIn tourism and business develop- · which has promoted tourism In
Sen. David Durenberger, R- curred on my watch, I have some ceived another $448,000 addition ment. sci other business leaders that state for 10 years. but she
Minn ., chairman of the commitvery ~trong feeling about the io Its contract to market the will be attracted to the Buckeye was unable to provide any
Ire. said Monday nl~hl that need that the American people state's travel and tourism and State.
concrete evidence in response to
negan is expected to make some have to get at the facts," he said.
business development
Republicans have been an- questions by Sen. Stanley J .
public statement following his
.
"It seems to me that's the one' · programs.
noyed about unbid contracts .t.Q.. Aronoff, R-C inclnnati.
But the Ohio Department of Hameroff-Mllenthal ever since
tes timony .
thing .everybody wants In this
Aronoff. chairman of the Se·
The panel also planned to hear country. They don't want a rush Development has been put on 1983, when the governor's media nate Finance Committee, said
from Howard Teicher of the to judgment, to start hanging notice to produce accurate statis- company received an $8 million studies by Chase Econometrics.
National Security Council and people, topple presidents." he tics about the numbers of jobs contract for promoting the state. and economic foreca sting firm ,
Secretary of State George Shultz said. "They just want to know created when It ventures before The contract was split with other have shown Ohio's economy to be
in the afternoon.
what went on. This Is the one . the Republican -controlled Se- firms In 1985 after an Informal "flat."
The Senate panel has been place In America today where nate next spring
' with Its 1988-89 bidding process.
Aronoff chided Pizzu ti . for
working Its way up .the bureau- you can find out most of what
budget request.
·
Marjory Pizzuti, deputy direc- companies moving from Cincincratic ladder in its effort to piece went on."
The state Controlling Board tor for marketing, told the board nati to northern Kentucky.
together the details of the secret
approved
the HameroffMII- HameroffMilent hal will devote
The lntell!gence panel had
"Very little was done a bout
arms sales to I ran and the planned a third session today enthal contract extension Mon- $394.600 of the new . money to General Motors moving (plants
diversion of profits to the u.s.- with CIA IJirector William Ca- day, 6-1, but only after Republl· travel and tourism and the other in Norwood and Fairfield ) out of
backed Nicaraguan rebels.
sey, but that was canceled when
cans had grilled department $53,400 to business development the state until after the fact." he
Attorney General Edwin Casey was hospitalized after officials about the results, or lack marketing.
said.
Meese and Defense Secretary suffering a "minor cerebral
thereof, of their ''Ohio, the Heart
She said the department has
"Our job Is to tell the positive
Caspar Weinberger will testify seizure."
of It All" theme.
received 2,600 inquiries from side," Pizzuti responded.
Wednesday, Durenberger said.
The contract extension, which businesses following a telemar·
Jack Stapleion, medical direc"I think travel and tourism Is
In other congressional probes, tor of Georgetown University
runs through July 30, brings to ketlng program in April. The an Important part ·of Ohio's
Senate Republican leader Robert Hospital. said Casey, 73, suffered
$3.7 million the amount paid to department Is working wIth 400 budget and we ought to fund it ,"
Dole of Kansas and Senate · "a seizure In which his arms and
Hameroff-Mllent hat during the prospective projects from that · said the senator. " I just think we
current two-year fiscal period. list , she said, and 60 to 75 of those ought to be candid about where
Democratic leader Robert Byrd legs suffered multiple spasms for
Department officials hastily are " hot" prospect s for expa n· we're going. The economic news
of West VIrginia were to an- a period of about a minute."
pointed out that the 'bulk of this slon or relocation to Ohio.
nounce today the members of a
Casey was In stable condition
that's coming Is not good. Th e
amount goes directly for paid
· Senate select committee to lnves· ' and will undergo tests for several
Marilyn Tomasi, director of gloss doesn't jibe with the private
media advert ising.
ligate the affair.
days, a hospital !lpokesman said.
the Bureau of Travel and Tour- memos we're getting."
The board also approved:
Ism, said "Ohio, the Heart of lt
-The expenditure of$2 million
All" has generated 22.000 new
(Continued on Page 6)
jobs and $350 million In income to

Nl"""•v
, ...uo

LY MAIL ·
BUSINESS REP ......,,.• ,.

2 Sections. 18 Pageo

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 16, 1986

'

2212 J1cbon nue

'

$ 389

•Chlnntlock mn remote control

· ~.

Bank·BY·Mail!

S1C11nt1 Stlwt

'

'

RCA 19'~.....
XL-100 Color TV

ICA. 13"•..XL· I 00 Color TV

lncorNonionct
Thio Ma, Cautt
Our~ Cuotomen"

Saturday Admissions - None.
Saturday Discharges .:.. Willford Hill, Maxine Evans, WI!·
Uam Lochary.
Sunday Admissions - Alva
Will, Pomeroy; Paul VanMeter,
Rutland; Marie Young, Racine;

Sttom. Dorotby Wright.

•'

WHIPPER SNAPPER

Veterans Memorial

~::~·rr~c::~t.-

I

rrect ion-

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
• Tonight, mostly cloudy. Low In
the mid 30s. Light southwest
winds.
Tuesday, mostly cloudy. High
In the mid 40s. Chance or
precipitation Is 20 percent.
Ohio Extended Forecaat
· Wednesday through Friday
. Fair Wednesday with a chance
of ralit or snow Thursday and
Friday. Highs will be In the 40s
Wednesday and range from the
upper 30s to mid 40s thursday
and· Friday. The low throughout
t!Je period will be In the high 20s
Or lower 30s.

..
'

rfiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~!!!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1

will share prize

: CLEVELAND iUPI) - Two
Ohio Lottery play&lt;'rs will share a·
$1,165,000 jackpot lor choosing
the numbers 18, 20, 27, 29, 30 and
32,
' that were drawn In Saturday's
.
game.
.
·' Lottery officials said $3,144.279
worth of tickets were sold to
create the top prize.
There were 319 tickets wIth five
of the six numbers. worth $740
each. Another 12.492 tickets bore
tour of th&lt;' six numbers. &lt;'ach
worth $50.
Lottery officials estimate the
jackpot fo&lt; Saturday's drawing
at $1 million.
·

....

ELBERFELDS.
. ~:' · f
· :.

enttne

a•1ns scandal

ATTENTION:

Mostly cloudy tonight, with
a low between 30 ud 35.
Mostiy cloudy Wednesday,
with highs between 45 ud 50:
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is 20 percent tonight and
Wednesday .

•

Regan·faces
panel probing

r-----....:..-------------'-------f •

Administration officials com· ·
pared the Amtrak pror1osal to the
sale of Conrail, the national
freight railroad , which took five
years to get through Congress.

Daily Number
361
PICK-4
64-24

•

jt~P:~~f:e ii~:s~ b~~e :~~e b~ c~t~ic
riiste~u.!na~~~~
n c. spr~~er
an
e o ce
&lt;!' j'

passenger service In
world Is
In
:
Profitable...
life," clinic spokeswoman Amy
noss Capon, executive director . Sutnlck said.
_
of the Nallonal Association of
c
1
Ralltoad Passengers , called the
The Helmsley-Spear o. rea
proposal "the dum~&gt;E:st Idea 1 estate agent met the suspect,
,
de,sci'ibed as being a miln In his
ever heard."
' ·
1a te 30s an d carry 1gg a br 1e fc a se,
r
outside the building about 2 p.m:
bu·y·;~,er~n;ll~ta~s nk,oto~grlv:~: to show him offices, Burns said.
When the agent was showing
Northeast corridor ) will be
saddled' with the costs If they
want the service to corltinue," he
said.
Amtrak, officially the National
Railroad Passenger Corporation, got a $602 million federal
subsidy this year and served 20.5
million pass.engers In 43 staies.

Ohio Lottery

senior ell izens programs, Hopkins explained, and will represent new dollars coming into those
agencies.
Currently, the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center is ready to
file for the certification , while
centers In Gallla and Jackson
counties are preparing to meet
certification standards, Hopkins
said. Additionally, the Gall!a
County alcohoilsm treatment
program Is working toward
meeting those standards, she
said. Woodland Centers Inc. and
Meigs County's alcoholism treatment program are already
certified.
The board invoked the 120-day
rule to notify agencies Its serves
that all contracts are now up for
renegotiation, and It accepted
the llscal year 1987 goals and
objectives from Hopkins. This
document will be a part of the
community plan and , Hopkins
said, and will be used by the
board In Its evaluation of her job
performance.
The board did enter an executive session to discuss Hopkins'
evaluation, but took no action,
she said.

v

Aides
deny
helping
rebels
By NORMAN D. SANDLER
WASHINGTON (UPI~- Despite three years of contacts with ·
a shadowy figure In the Contra
aid network, aides to Vice
President George Bush deny .
"directing, coordinating or ap- ·
proving military aid" to Nlcara-:
gu an rebels.
Bush's national security ad- ·
viser, Donald Gregg, and his :
deputy, Col. Samuel Watson, :.
admit they met at least six times ·
since August with ex-CIA opera- :
live Felix Rodriguez, who voiced .
concern about the flow of aid to ·
Contra rebels.
:
Through a spokesman Mon- :
day, Bush e xpressed "full con!!- ·
dence" In Gregg, and both aides ;
said they learned only later of ·
Rodriguez's larger role In private U.S. efforts to help the :
rebels fighting to overthrow •
Nicaragua's government.
:
Gregg and Watson reported. in ;
a chronology of the relationship •
that they met with Rodriguez :
Aug. 8 and at least five times ·
during the next three months.
They said his Involvement :
became clearer Oct. 5 and 6·
when, In two telephone calls, he:
tipped Watson that a Cont(a.
resupply aircraft was missing,
possibly in Nicaragua.
Watson Informed the staff of
tbe National Security Council,
the (eport said, and U,,S. officials
subsequently learned a C-123
aircraft with three AmericansIncluding arrested mercenary
Eugene Hasenfu s - had been
shot down .
Bush spokesman Marlin Fitzwater said the record of meetings
and phone calls sh&lt;lws, "Donald
Gregg arid his staff maintained
periodic communication with
Felix Rodriguez but were never
involved in directing, coordinating or approving military aid to
the Contras In Nicaragua."
Nor, Fitzwater said, "was
there any awareness" by Bush or
members of his staff that profit s
from the secret sale of U.S. arms
to Iran were diverted to the
Contras at a time when U.S.
military aid to the rebels was
Illegal.
The report was Issued Monday
am!d concern in the Bush camp
that allegations of Involvement
In the Contra aid program and
arms sales to Iran may damage
his political chances In 1988,
when Bush Is expected to run for
the White House.

Council gives
its thanks
for donation
Pomeroy VIllage Council
met Monday night In a brief
session, In which thanks wer~
extended by council to Mr. and
Mrs. Rich ard Rupe for donat ing the village Chr istma s'
trees, one on the parking lot
and one at village hall.
Litter problems under the
Pomeroy-Mason bridge and
on a hillside along Ohio 7 and '
U.S. 33 were discussed.
It was explaIned that debris
from the tearing down of the
Meigs Inn ha s been dumped as
flU along 7 and· 33 at the
request. of residents In the
area. It was reported that Dan
Levingston, litter officer, said
this procedure Is Illegal and
that the debris will have to be
cleaned up. Levingston said
that stone and brick, which
has al110 been dumped, may be
left.
Council also made plans to
have Utter under the bridge
cleaned up and no-dumping
signs posted.

v

�</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </file>
  </fileContainer>
  <collection collectionId="220">
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <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>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="2810">
                <text>12. December</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
  </collection>
  <itemType itemTypeId="1">
    <name>Text</name>
    <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>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40810">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <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>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40809">
              <text>December 15, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
</item>
