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                  <text>.•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.

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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.

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••
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.
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

~

.......

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on PI• 5 In Fruth Pharmacy
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Celeste campaign consultant
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G-J·M Board briefed

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'

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

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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.

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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

�·,·

Comment
The 'Daily Sentinel
111 Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~tb
!Slm~ ,.....,__,.._...... ,......,..=,..,
~...

.

.

ROBERT L. WINGETr
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
·News Editor
• A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Assoclallon and the American Newspape&lt; Publishers Assoclallon.
LETTERS OF OPINION ar~ welcome. They should bf less than JlO words
lon!{. Alllc11ers are subject toed lUng and rnut be signEd with name. address and
f€'1t&gt;phone- numbrr. No unsignEd letters wiiJ be p.~blished. Letters should be in
good !astP. addrPSstng issues, not pE'rsooalllies.

••

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Tuesday, December 16, 198.6

In that case, or any otber case
In which the money cannot be
identified as U.S. funds, President Reagan 's foes .will fall back
to a previously prepared position. Maybe it was lncteed·some
other country's money (they wlll
argue), but even so, what busj ness did Col. Oliver North or
Adm. John Poindexter or anybody else in the administration
h&lt;~ve encouraging Its expendl·
tur·e on military aid to the contras
at a time whe American law
express ly forbade the use of U.S ,
funds for such a purpose? Didn 't
that violate "the spirit If not lhe
letter" of the law?
.
The answer to t hat question,
however, Isn't quite as open~ and·
shut as some of Its enthusiasts
wou.Jd have you believe. If some

President Reagan's foes naturally hOpe that It will be possible
to prove that the profit that was
realized by Israel on the arms
sale to Iran , and which was
diverted too the Nicaraguan
contras to pay for military aid,
was money the u.s. government
was entitled to. For, In that case,
the diversion was illegal , since
Congress at that time was
barring the use of U.S. funds to
aid the contras militarily.
My own guess, however. Is that
It will ultimately transpire that
the "profit" was actually money
donated by yet another country ,
was intended by that country for
the contras from the outset, and
was simply piggybacked onto the
arms .sale to Iran to conceal Its
origin.

liberal tries It on you, ask him
whether FDR. and l!Jembers of
his administration were morally
bound to encourage other nailons
to remain ne utral 'In World War
II , as \ w.e were, prior to our
involuntary entry into It on Dec.
7, 1941.
In other words, U.S. government officials are bound to obey
and uphold American laws and
policies, but that Is .far from
saying that they must seek Io
apply the · supposed "spirit" of
those laws and policies to other
countries and work for lhelr
enforcement everywhere. For
one thi ng, II may be far from
clear that .congress Itself. In a
particular lnsta'nce, actually de·
sires universal conformity to an
American pollcv. In the very

WE S~OUL? GO AI-IEA'P ANI'
PO IT 8E'fOI:tE TH I; EN? OF .

Van Meter
reborn
.
as Bush supporter

' ~IS Y~~

.

...

7"

~
Jt

~'E ~I.SO

SA'IS TliERE IS ~ME
~0~ TtiAT ME~ICAR~ COVE'AAGf:

us S~NIO~

~A'11M~OVE F'O~
Crfi"Z-EN~ IN

A. YEAfZ.

OfZ. SO·"

?

weeks.

Van Meter said he has lleen in contact wilh Bush's political people,
but' ,other potenlial Republican preside ntial candidates also have
made "overtures" to him for exploratory work in Ohio. Has he agreed
to help the others? "No," was Van Meter's response.
And that response is telling . For among the 1988 hopefuls are Rep.
Ja &lt;:k Kemp. R-N.Y. , like Van Meter the quintessential conservative&gt;,
a nd Gen. Alexand er Haig, a rlghthand man to former President
Nixon.
' Van Meter is a former militarv
. officer and-a strong admirer of

Nixon.

" l:ve always liked the guy personally," said Van Meter of Bush.
" The gu;' is tough, especially In foreign affairs. The real guts of a
President to me is his· ability in foreign affairs. I don ' t think there' s a
person In eit her party that can hold a candle to George Bush when It
comes to foreign affairs. From my position, he' s rock solid."
Van Meter. who supported former Texas Gov. John Connally lor
prcs,ldent In 1980 befqre skipping over Bush to Reagan. believes
Bush' s record in Congress actually was more conservative than the
way ·he Is perceived.
·
W~y is It important who Van Meter supports? He has lost a
Rcpublican primary for governor (19821, been rebuffed by
Republican s ta te senators in his bid to return to the SenatE' 119851,
been rejected by Republicans In his old Senate district 11986), and
backed a loser in the governor's race&gt;, James A. Rhodes (]986) , ·
Van Met e r is well· known in GOP circles. He Is well-grounded in the
knowledge of Ohio politics and running statewide campaigns, a nd has
aceess to an impressive money-raising list of names. Van Meter
wolUid be an asset to any presidential candidate he chooses to support.
Jt's also important to know that Van Meter isn't finis hed politically
dcloplte four rough years. If George Bush carries Ohio and gets
no_tltinatcd. possibly elected, he's going to remember Tom Van
M~Jer, who s tuck his neck out, and not some faint-hearted folks In
thi:ee- pier~ s uit s who sat on thE'ir hands when things looked bad.
Van Mrter has established credit with Rhodes. a nd now Bush. He
will be back .

.• Berry's Worl·d
•.

•

••••

~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~02~~0--_.-:~----:;~-------;~n.~~~~~~~~·~
•

Bears edge Lions 16-13 on
last.second Butler .field ,goal

Maybe it's not our money___W~ill_ia_m_A._R_us_he_r

Ohio Politics

By LEE LEONARD
UPI Statehouse Reporter
COLUMBUS !UP I l -Resilient Tom Van Meter, who's been kicked
moretlmes than an alley cat a nd has returned the kicks with rellsh,ls
back again - this time as a n early Ohio booster of Vice President
George Bush for President in 1988.
Van Meter. a conservative state legislator from Ashland, i~ not
afraid to wear his ideas or his ca ndidates on his sleeve.
And while his fellow Republicans are hunkering down, trying to
ana lyze the fallout from the Iran-Contra arms debacle before
choos ing sides in th£&gt; 1988 presidential sweepstakes, Van Meter has
marched front and center carrying the Bush flag.
flow do we know? Because twice now, Van Meter has furnished
Sl alehOUSE' reporters with ropies or articles In the Washington press
and ,t he national media about Bush's impressive record as a combat
pilot and his stance on the Iran·Contra issue.
Van Meter tries to downplay his involvement. saying he wants Ohio
reporters to be properly ba ckgrounded when the 1988 follies reach the
Buckeye State. "It is not done from the standpoint or -trying to
generate a ny publicity on it ," said the former state senator and
soon-IO·be former state representative, who leaves office in two

case. -of the contras, after all ,
Congress had previously allowed
U.S, funds to be used for military
ald. A few months after the
di sputed payment, It would, as
we now ·know. appropriate
another hundred mllllon for. the
sa me purpose.
.
The fact that other countries
had helped the contras militarily
In the past was certain ly no
secret to members of Congress.
Some or the congressmen ~ho
provided the voting margin by
which U.S. funds were temporarily limited to humanitarian
ra ther than military aid may
well have ca lculated (or hoped)
that foreign cduntrles would step
Into the breach .
Certainly, Presiden t Reagan
made no secret of his own strong
belief that th e contras deserved
military ald. and there is little
doubt tha t he would have applauded publicly the decision of
any other country to extend it.
But most countries are accustomed to being more secretive
about such things than the.United
States. so the decision (when · It
came) was not made public.
Wha t moral obllgallon, however,
was Col. North (or any other
American) , under to oppose It If
he found out about it? None
whatever, as far as I can see.
But (critics will argue) he may
have gone mucli further. He may ·
not only have found out about ,lt;
he may have conceived the Idea
and engineered the e~tlre
operation.
Per haps - though that has Is
not yet proved. But even so. he
would not necessarily have been
transgressing lhe " sp irit" of the
law. for the reasons given above.
Who can say with confidence that
Congress, In the period in ques tion , not only opposed U.S.
military aid to the contras but
also opposed a nybody else giving
II ?

with him )he plan to get the Soviet
weapons.
Our associate Donald Gold ·
berg has learned that Schwartz,
in a detailed affidavit, named the
names or Ihe Int elligence agents
he met with and the dates and
locations of the meetings,
Schwartz claims he was fir st
approached. by a "lree-iance"
CIA operative In November 1982,
and told about the agency's
interest In the state-of-the·art
Soviet tanks. Schwartz traveled
to Vienna and Warsaw and
pursued the complex deal with
Polish officials. The Poles In·
s lsted that U.S. arms would have
to be part of the transaction,
Schwartz says.
The arms dealer su bmitted a
report on his trip Io a CIA official
in the agency's New York office
through an Intermediary. The
CIA later handed the case orr to
the Defense Intelligence Agency.
Schwartz's claim that he had
several meetings with DIA offl·
clals Is confirmed by closed·door
testimony. One meeting took
place at DIA offices near Wa·

,sh ingto n, and included two
agency officials and a legal
advisor. One of the officials was
James Hetrick.
According to the Schwartz
affidavit, Hetrick was well
aware of the a rms-for- Poland
deal, and told Schwartz: "We
take care of our own. We will
never let you hang." But Hetrick
has dE'nled ever authorizing
Schwartz to sell weapons to
Poland.
Schwartz says he was given
si milar assurances of protection
by FBI counterintelligence
agents in New York who wanted
his help In tracking Polish spies
in the United States. The agents
have admitted meeting with
Schwartz, but denied sanctioning
illegal activity.
Schwartz says that when he
fold , one G-ma n that the plan
might entail shipping arms to
Poland, the agent told him that
"It didn't hurt to get a little 'dirty'
In this business," because It
helped one' s credibility.
Schwartz swears he met with
FBI agents at least five times,
the first being on Aug. 23.1983, at

26 Federal Pla za in New York
Cit y. There he was Informed of
the bureau 's lnte.rest In informa·
tlon about Polish officials.
As the plot grew thicker, the
meetings were most . secret.
Fearing that he might be .under
surveillance by Polish agents,
Schwartz arranged to meet the
G·men In out·of-the-way location s instead of their Federal
Plaza office.
His final meeting with the FBI
occurred at th e Meadowlands,
the sports complex across the
river in New JE'rsey. It wa s then,
Schwartz says, that he told the
FBI that the Pol es wa nted U.S.
weapons as part of the secret
dea I.
'
As II happe ned, It wasn't the
Poles Schwartz had to worry
a bout , but a government infor·
ma nt who was also a business
rival of HLB Security ElectronIcs. Th e inform a nt st umbled onlo
evidence or the intricate Polish
scheme while working lor the
Customs Service. and Schwartz
and his co-defendants were in·
d ieted.

'foday in history
:
By United Press International
Today Is T uesday, Dec. 16, the 350th day of 1986 with 15 Io follow.
'1)1e moon is full.
,
,'l:he morning stars are Merc ury, Venus and Saturn.
fhe evening stars are Mars a nd Jupiter.
'f.hose born on this date are under the sign of Sagittarius. Tbey
inclhide Ca lherlne of Aragon, firs t wife of England's King Henry VIII,
in'l485: novelist Jane Austen In 1775; playwright and composer Noel
C6Ward In 1899; antliropologlst Margaret Mead in 1901; science
ti(ilon novelist Art hur C. Clarke In 1917 (age 69), and actress Llv
Ullmann in 1939 (age 47).

-.On

'
this date In history:
tD 1773. protesting the Brit Ish tax on tea, some 50 American patriots

dumped 342 chests of tea into Boston harbor In "The Boston Tea

.·.

P~ty . "

•
•'
•
••

security of the United States .
Notwithstanding the young worn ·
an's excellent record at Columbia Universlly and he r poslllon
as an accomplished journalist
who has gained the respect of
Colombian politicians of widely
differing views. Abrams tried to
paint her as a serious threa t to
America .
Linking her to the M-19 guerrillas of Colombia and to the Cuban
govprnment , Abrams vaguely
referred to her frequen t visits to
Cuba, Implying that she must
somehow be under the control of
Havana. Citing no proof or her
involvement In terrorlsl activ ities, he sa id , "She hasn't heen
one of the bomb throwers, but her
role Is -every bit as lmportanl."
What that role Is we are left to
wonder.
Actually, In 1984 Patricia Lara
publicly praised a truce In the
guerrilla war. The following yea r
she publicly criticized th.e M-19
guerrillas lor their vloll!nt attack
on the Palace of Justice In
Bogota.
Miss Lara, a lso Interviewed on .
"60 Minut es," categorically de·
nled the charges made against
her by Reagan's spokesman.
Although she has been cr itical
of the government In Bogota as
well as the Reagan administration , cabinet officials In Cololl)·
bla have nonetheless defended
her patriotism and Integrity
while expressing shock over her
treatment by Reagan officials.
The New Yorker magazine, In
an article on this issue, cites the
Colombian fore ign minister's

observations aboqt adminlstra·
lion charges, "'We don 't know
where the U.S. government Ob·
talned s uch Information."
Also cited by the New Yorker
was former President Bellsarlo
Betancur, a strong critic of the
M-19s, who said that Patricia
Lara is "In the first ranks of he r
profess ion."

Betancur then referred to
those in the Reaga n admlnlstra·
lion who have attacked Patri cia
Lara as "officials who do not
brlrig honor to the Ideals of
freedom so ught and proclaimed
by lhe found e rs of the great U.S.
nation."
To Beta ncur's words, I can
only say amen .

Pontiac, Mich. Mark Bertz (62) tries to help
Fldtle. The Bears rljllled to win, 16-13. '(U PI) '

Scoreboard ... \ Stars

I

NFL results
H)· Unltt'tl Prt'!'l!li International'
American ('ORit&gt;ren~t.·

Ealil

y·NV .re~
' NW En~
Mluml
Buffalo
lndnpi!Oi
X•f1('V

('lnt.'llt

Pththr
HOUI'itn

. W L T Pel. PF PA
10 l 0 .M7 :113 :IM
II I 0 •8117 11111 2100 •
~ l 0 .3~11113 371
I II 0 . 117 liiO 3:Jl
2 13 0 .l:l:l 189 1178
Ct•nfrul
II 4 0 •l!l:l :144 1!93
9 6 0 .1111 :157 :m
6 9 0 .400 2111! ~12
411 0 .8117

Wc~t

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1

9 6 o .n 2'25 !77
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&lt; 7 0 . il'l:t 2911316
S.n DIK
' Ill I .26'1 :11~ · 349
Natlonai .Conlerenl't.'
East
W L T l'o·l. PF P~
x·N\'
t3 ~ • .IW! :n6 m
Y·W""h II l 0 ,1:!3 :147 211~
Dallas
7 ~ 0 ' 141'7 33ti :113
Phldlp
3 9 I .:1417 212 %91
,St. Lout.
311 I .~13 111'1 :l.l4
Central
x-C hc
l:t 2 0 .Kti7 32M 177
Mlnnst
K 7 0 .3:13 :UJ!j t56
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i 10 0 .3331171306
Gr"' tly
HI 8 .ll'l atl383
Tmp By
!13 I .l:t:Utl 4!2
~

.

p.m.

'

Montrt•ill at lilt. l..ouiM, g::t!i p.m.
Delrollat Call{ary, 9:a5 p.m.
Wedn(l1!jday's Gamel\
Buffalo a1 Hartford, night
q.ebf,. ld Edmonton, nl.hl ,
WW4tunl(ton at ·Nl' Ran~f-r!l,

nl1hl

.

Toronto ill N~w Jer!'lf'y, niRhl
Pltb400rlth at LoN A.nKt.'leoi, niKhl
fkatroll at Vanoou"er, nlrchl
'winnlpl'f&lt; at Chicago, nlRhl

\\'eHI

10 3 I .111'11!9UIS
y-~n Fr
9 5 1 ·.w 3$0 t:l!l
Nw Orl
l R I .141'7 il71 ~
AUanla
ti ~ I . ~l:Utll 'Ill ·
X·cHncht•d dlvl!'lkln llh•.
y·cllnchf&lt;l ployollllerth.

\

.Moaday's Rhull
Chlc~aKD 16. Detroit IS

NF.W l 'OKK ( 1'1'1) - Tup !!! t•ullt'(t'
hu"'ltrtlu&amp;U nUnJ:&gt;i l!y I.'RII1'1t l'r• ... ~
lntt•rn ~tllonlll 's Ro•d of f'o..cht'!l. with
llrM· pi~M•t•l'olt•"· rtt•twlt&lt;;, lnt"' polniM ~ar~d
Ill'! I Wl~·k '~ r-.lttn~~: . t \'oil• a- ~~nd rt•t•ort.,
hn.-t'CI on IUUJU'!I throop !'Wind")'. nll!:hl
"'llh tn polnl" uwurckod lor 111'!4 piLW·•· · 1~
lnr l"t''on d, I'H'. 1
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4~ ~
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Ill. Syrlk'V~t· H·llr

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It, Natv)' (il- 11

Friday, Dec. 19
l.A Ram.; a1 San Frant:lsoo, H
p.m.
~

Grt'('n Bay ut N\' Gbuats, U: !UI

I~U

. 1:1. l'llhihurdl H· l 1

1'.!11 17

H. st . .r.m·s tf.OJ

1:1. Nnrthf L
II'OIInust . tS.I!

16. l:f l. ,\ (~· II
11. (11-:) Ari!WA~IU'

p.r'll.

D4•nver at Seattle, 4 p.m.
Sunduy, Ot'C. 21
N\' ·IIPI!'i at C'lndnnall, I p.m.
i\thUlha at Detroit, I p.m.
BuffuJo Mt Hou1d~ I p.m.
KafL"iWI Cit~. rlthihurKfl, 1 p.m.
Nt•w Orleans al Mlnnutlltll, 1 p.m.
Jiia n DIPgn ut Clt•\•cland, 1 p.m.
Tampa Ray at St. Lnubl, 1 p.m.
Wa~tungton u1 Phlladt•lphlu., 1
p.m,
fhh-ago .al DaiiiL'i, ~p. m.
lndlanapulls ui L,\ Haidl'rs, ~

p.m.
Monda\', Dt'&lt;'. 2~
l'it•w Enghsnd 'at Miami, !I p.m.

NEXT

IMPRoVI~ATioN ...

Ill

~

!1:1

I~

"~ ;

t~IIJ

fill 1.\

11. tllf') Dl'Puu t (5-0)

"':u '

Ill. T••mplt· t'HI
Ktntuf'll,t t:J.I ).

7.

~.

topple
Rangers ·

NeiJada-Las Vegas still number one:. .:

NEW YORK iUPI)- Nevada· Navy and. Old Dominion to the
NEW YORK (UPII - Brian
Las Vegas , victorious in Its only Bud Lite Classic. ·
MacLellan, playing his first
game last week, Monday earned
Purdue, one of four Big Ten
game In Madison Square Garden
. Its second straight selertion as schools in the first six spots.
since being traded by t·he
the nation' s No. I college basket·
advanced one slot to No. 2.
Rangers, overcame a groin pull
ball team in voting by the UPI collecting six first;place votes
and the flu to score Iwo goals and Board of Coaches.
'
and 524 points. The 5-0 Boller·
lead his new team, the Mlnn!'sota
The Runnln' Rebels, who col· m~kers had defeated Wichita
North Stars, over his old team.
lected 27 first-placE' votes and 694 State and Detroit last week.
MacLellan scored a goal in
North Carolina, 5-1, Improved
points, became thE'flrstteam this
·each of the first two periods
two spots to No. 3 after defeatIng
season to hold the No. 1 rating
Monday night Io carry the North
two weeks In a row. Loulsvllle Jacksonville 98-69. The Tar Heels
Stars to a 4-3 triumph over New
and North Carolina had each helil collected eight flrst-plac~ votes.
York.
the top spot before UNLV. The The next three spots belong to
"I would rat her score here in
Cardinal:·, th!' preseason No. 1 schools Irom the Big Ten: Iowa,
Madison Square Garden than in
selection, did not receive a vote though undefeated In two games
Minnesota because I didn't have
last week, sllllped a notch to No.
from any of the 42 coaches
a good season las! year a nd I
compris ing the UPI board. Bal·
4, Illinois Improved one spot to
really would like the fans here to
No. 5 and Indiana, after losing to
lotlng was based on games
know I can still play this game."
through Sunday night with 15 Vande rbilt 79· 75, dropped from
said MacLellan, who now has 13
points awarded for a first-place · second to sixth. Iowa collected
goals - only Ihree fewer than
vote, 14 for second. etc.
the other first-place. vote.
last season.
Rounding out thE' Top 10 were
The Runnln' Rebel s. who beat
"MacLellan has had a groin
Nevada-Reno 99·88 to Improve to No.7 Auburn, No .8. Georgetown,
pull and the .' flu, and we've
6-0, will only play once this week, No. 9 Oklahoma and No. 10
excused him /rom practice for
a Dec. 17 rematch with the Wolf Syracuse. Completing the rank·
that reason, but he really dug In
Pack. UNLV then hosts two ings were No. 11 Kansas, No. 12
the corners,'' , said Minnesota
tournaments before the end of Navy, No. 13 Pittsburgh, No. 14
Coach Lorn!' Henning. "Maybe
the year: Dec. 19-20, UNLV wlll St. Johu's, No . 15 North Carolina
time orr agrees· with him."
bring Duquesne, Louisiana Tech St .. No. 16 UCLA, co-nos. 17
MacL!'llan. who was traded to
and Ohio to the UNLV Miller Lite Arkansas and DePaul, No. 19
MlnnesQta Sept. 8, opened the
Classic and, Dec. 27-29, Idaho. St .. Temple a nd No. 20 Kentucky,
scoring at 3:46 of the first period
when his soft, 10-foot backhander
wen! between lhe pads of
Rangers goalie Doug Soetaert .

Z· llnrlllllwd

"I just didn't play aggressively
enough tonight.'' said Soetaert.
who was replaced after the
second period. "I should have
• moved out and chall enged more
for the puck. It' s nol lack of
work: I ju st have not been
coming up with the big save and I
have to admit It' s been bothering
me.''

College scores
Monday'i'i
Ohio ( ' oDcKC Rwdut hall
Mlt ~hlrcun 7ti, Rowlln~t (~ret'ft G~
NhiNon flO, fln«•lnn•U .\6
~mth Aluhamll 72, Vonn,;stown
Slll.l
C'upltlll 6t lh•lcll&gt;flwr,; :i9
f't' dunUh• 12'l, Palm R.•ach ~Flu)
Athanllt- !t.l
NllUonal ('oii4'Kt' S.:ort'N

East)

!oil , T}lom~ ,\q-.i~a.ot »1, l\1cn·y
'l't'nlJIIt'&gt; 7tl. lJ('LA 8.~

NHL results

('oil .,H:J '

N•ITIONAI.IIIlfK.:\ · U!M:UF.
11utrit'k lllvL'iiOn
l1 llila
l)lln
l'tt"hr

" ' I. T
2'! ~
lti 12
I' II

11 11'i. GF (~:\
2 46 I!~ "i6
2 :1~ Ill) IU:I

I1IH111• /Ji1 ;,;,.u
Ro~loo

Munlrl

llrtfrd

Mlddl4• TPnn . St. KH.

U I~ 'l :W lUi J:Jli
IOJ.l fi ~ ll'l'IZH
Ill J:i fi 26 tl IlK

~w . lfl'i~'

Nl' Hn
W!ihn

311 Ito

Mt· ~t'4'St'

9~

32 ll'l "'
:t.! Jl:t !17

l}nt•h(•
Ruffaln
li 20 ~ II 94 12:!
('umptlt&gt;ll C'onh'fl1U'1'
Norrl!&gt;! Dh·Lo;lun
W I. T I..M. OF C.i ,\
St. IAIUS
It 12 .1 :l'9 fNIIOfi
Miunsl
t:lt:l :t 211 121 ~~ ~
Turonl
u t:l J lll 9~ 10:1

T\'('

31

Illlnol"' St. 90, 1\rm.;trong ~l. 69
Louitll/nlv. G6. Ft•rrls Sc . 5H
Mlchl~tan 7ti, Bowii•K Gn~&gt;n 6~

The I;laily Sentinel
IUSPS 14~!1111)
A Dlvliilon of Multimedia. lne.

•'

, PuhllshC'c~ I'VC'ry uflf'rnoon . MondH~'
throu~!h F't'lthtv. Ill Cc'J url St .. Po.

TuetMia)''s p:alllt'i'i

Oak IIIII' al l'ttlnfo.rd
So•ltlv.'t'Siet'n nl Ohio \'alh'Y ('hrlstlan
f'rldlly's cumt~
Kyr;w frt'f'k 1\1 Ouk IIIII
S.lht'f'n al ~m ltnn.,.h•rn
Eu!ill'rn al SymmC!' Vallt·~·

North Gnllllt at llunnan Tnu·t•

{('onf••rt'fl~el

Rt•f'terve a(:Uon

I 3t I
North Gullla .......... .... ,....... 4 I :114
I
I
3
.I
3
3

:121
Z'l1

:Its
:113

P,.t
2116
117
:116
!Ill
306
%92

an . ~7

2:hl ttlli

ll'onft'f't'flt.•t• l

Team

l~fi'

rA

I t-15

1~1

\\' L

North Chdlla ..................... ..t

Routht'I"JI .................... ... .... .. 1 tll 211

E1L,h'rn ..................... ........ 3 2 110 207
Han•.., Traco• .... ...... ...... ... :! 2

I~ I

1611

Oak 11111.. ...................... .. ..'! :1 l&amp;!i 170
Southwt~horn ............ .... ..... t 3 IMI 197
KYKt•r ('rf'~k ..................... . l 4 159 17~
Symmt:t~ Vallt')' ................. ! 4 IKO 197

.,_ TVC Standings
lOvl'rMII)

Jl'ederal-Hocklh~................ 1'

TI'IUH
" ' I. pp PA
AlftWider ......................... $ 0 396 3-t3
MelK""' ......................... ,... 5 I 419 318
Vlnlon founty .......... ......... 3 1 2H 23R
Betprc............................... l 3 433 311

Nel~tonvUie-l'ork................ I

Nei8IM'IVUie-Vork .......... ...... 2
Well•! on ........ .... .. ........ ...... 2
Federal-plo,•klnt; ........... ...,.. l
llllllt'I'.:.. ........ ....... ....... ...... D
Trlmhle......... .................. ,.&amp;

4
I
"
4
I

439
332
.21111
Ill
287

.aN
317
~3

1111
311

(fonrtrencel
TCim
W' L PF PA
Mel~'····· · ·· · .. ··· .. ,............ ,,l I . . Ill
J\lrxander ...................... ..... I II! lt1
Belpr&lt; ..... ,................... ...... l I S3l 1M

,,

Vlnloo 1'.. 111~ ................\:,3 I 113

_,

· \\'t•ll.o;too ul!\l lll t'f'
Ft•th'l'uJ llnckln.:; a1 \llntun fount)'
•\lt~11nder at Mt·l~
'
Rt•lprt• al Trimble
1\thrns 111 Ncli'!on\I Uir-\'ork

Mldw~t

" ' ·~
PF p t\
II lUI nan Trat•t• .................. A I :111 2116
N.. rth C:allla ............... ...... .4 I l!); 250
Ouk IIIII .......... •... ....... ....••• 1 % :1111 :141
Southwtstt•rn ... .. .. , ..... ,....... 4 t , :J:UI :l:l!t
EM.sttrn ..... .. .. .................... :J :J :JXI :{M;e
Kygo•r Cro~k ... ..........•........ 2 3 :u:t 1\12
Soulh(•rn ..... ... ............. .. .... :l .J :n~ :100
Symnu'!t Vlllll•y ... ......... , .... 0 tJ 2:1M ~IW

O•k Hill ........ .. ..... , ......... .. ,:!
Soulhwo~l&lt;m ......... .. ..........3
Eu:dt+n ... .... ......... .............2
Kno•r t:r..!k•.•...... •, ..... ...... l
Southf'rn ........................... :!
Symmt" Vallry ................. .0
Suiurduy's .-amt'M
011k Hill 70, Rot·ll. IIIII 51

SVM '

Oak IIIII at Minford
~ulhw~lt•rn ut Ohio Vallt•,v frlstlan

('aplhd 64. lbldt•lhrrg 39
fl•nlrai,Mic:h ti9, Oukland ~ 1\-ll(.'lq

Tt'IUII

'l'r••·• .................. ,l

··:,

.Vu,)

Ea.o«t•rn fit, Mill« fl;t

\\' I. . PF

YOUR FIRST LINE OF DEFENSE
AGAINST S·NOW • ICE • MUD

1
( \\

1'2

I 0\'l'rllll)

T(Hlln .
II annan

TOLEDO, Ohio (UP!) - B~lj
State forward Charies Smith was .•,
selected Monday as the Mid: .,,
American Conference basketball · ·
"'
player of the week.
Smith, a 6-foot-4 senior from
Gary ., Ind., was named the MV~ .~
as Ball State won its own
Cardinal Varsity Club Classi( ; ,'
last -weekend.
.' ,
Smlt h had 55 points, 20 re- .
bounds and 12 blocked shots In '"
two gam!'s, hltllng 22 or 28 field .
goals and 11 of 13 free throws. , . :·;
He had 24 points. Including t~e ·
winning basket at the buzzer , aiid
nlrie blocks In the Cardinals' 62-61 .:·;·
win over Valparaiso and32 points '
In an 87-70 win over Butler. · ·
Earlier In the week. he had is · ,.
points In a loss at Western ·. ;
Illinois.

Ln~:an ld Zullt"N\'Uit•
('amhrldg•• al ~1:.rl•&gt;ttu
Park4'f!oihUrK ( \\'.\ 1a . ) at J'nlnl l'lt•,....mti

st .

Nrw Orlean!'4 !17, Manklt.l o St. H~
JL.dford K2, Maryiand·Ea!dt'rn
Short• 6.'t
Stl'lSon 68, flnclnnatl :W
\INf·.\!'4twvUit• 65, Furmah n
Viildoi&lt;;la St. K1, Kennt,;a"' ( 'uU.

3-t Ill 184

Smith MCC honoree

,\lht•ns 111 ~d!tOD\' 1111"- \'ork

110

1

16 II I
I ~ ta t
II I 4
U 14 ~~

Sfo;t);\1.
Snuth Pulnl ld ·fa1·k:own

prl'nliut• ~~

4 :11 117 10:1

Western Kentucky, which. hail; ··.
climbed to No. 10 but lost twlc~ .
last week; Wyoming and Ala· '
bama dropped out of the rank- '
ings. St. John's, after a victory ' '·.
over then-No. 7 UCLA, made' lls'
first appearance , as did DePa~.f: : .":
.'
I

TRACTION TIRES

Tonight's games

South
1\tthurn IIi, F.a"il4'f'n M1•ntut·ky H:!
&lt;'t•darvlllt• 1:.!:.!, P . Rt•at'h ,\tJantl "
!·•
(' hr. Nl'wpor1 79, N Nt'" '" i\,P:

Wul•-s f 'onft•r4'tU't'

are both 13-2, but New 1fork has a
there's no doubt about that."
better record against NFC
Flutle' threw just one pass - a :
opponents.
9-yarder to Willie Gault -In the. •
"We tried to throw the ball
winning 50-yard drive. The rest .
instead of run It," Dltka said,
was on the ground with Payton ,
"and our game is to run the
gaining 33 yards in five carries to ,
football . We know that we can do set up Butler's ~econd field goal
it as g09d as most people, against· or the ' quarter and third of the •,
anybody, and w.e got to learn.
game. He kicked from 41, 32 and '
"We were trying some dlffer· . 22 yards .
,. '
ent things and we just should
Suhey , scored on a 4-yard run
never have done that. We're thl' up the middle with 5: 49left to tie
best rushing team In t he league the score at 13, and there was •
and we should have gone right to only one pass on that 74· yard
It In the beginning."
drive ~ a 25-ya rder to Emery ~
Doug 'Flutle made more mls· Moorehead at the start. After
takes than Chuck Long did In his that came seven straight han·debutfor the Lions. Flu tie was 13 doffs , with Payton carrying :
of 24 for 130 yards with an twice lor 18 yards,
Interception, but he presided
Eddie Murray kicked field ·•
over live Bears fumbles - three goals of 52 and 39 yJrds for
of which he committed.
Detroit, 5-10, In the first hal(.;'.
Long threw an Interception but Long threw a 4·yard touchdown.
was 12 ~f 24 for 167 yards In a · pass to veteran Leonard Thomp- -'
p~omlslng debut. He rumbled
son . on the ,play after Payton ~
once and was sacked six times fumbled at the Bears 1 and
for 63 yards in losses by the Demetrlous Johnson recovered
league's toughest defense.
on the 4.
:.
" It 's a little bit different than
"I think l,ong played Wfll.' ' •
college," said Long, the former Ditka said. "I thought his perforlo'l'a star. "It's a little bit laster mance was awfully good for a
out there. I expected It to be ha rd rookie against our defense. He ,
-and It was hard. They did some tossed It weak against certain. ,,
things on defense to mess up my • defenses and · he ~udfbled th~ , ~
reads .. They did confuse me right passes agamst certain. ·
·
defenses."

;.!liB

SVAC Standings
FoR MY

K:O!i

College ralings

y-LA

SaturdU)', (h't·.

Tut'!'ldu_y'!'i Ga~U'I .

Mlnn~of:a L&amp;l N\'l~&gt;~lander~

~ :t~

Jl :1 0 , 723 3412
~ 6 8 .lllo:liiUOl

Klllis Ct

10 13 3 II A5 93
~ ll 6 22 182 1:16
Smythe DlviHion
Edmn
20 II J 4t 144 112
CIIIK&lt;Y
Il I :1 I 311 115111
w••,. ·
nu 1 rl 115 10~
La An•'
1:1 n l 111 1:13 1411 .
V~('\'r
119 3 21 113 II%
Mond..y'tt Rt•Muh
Mlnnotoht .a, Nl' RanKer!'! :1

Delrol
Chic...,

NATIONAL FOOTBAtL J.EAGUE

~\ ·

One of the most miserable
performances by a public official
I have witnessed was lurned In
recently on CBS-TV' s "60 Min·
utes " by Ronald Reaga n's assist ant secretary of state for Inter·
American affairs, Elliott
Abrams.
Abrams appeared on the show
to justify the Reagan ad mlnlstra·
tlon 's mistreatment or a respected young journalist from
Bogota, Colombia - Patricia
Lara. A graduate of Columbia
University' s Graduate School of
Journalism, Lara Is a highly
regarded reporter for El Tlempo
- Colombia's most prestigious
newspaper . She Is also an acclaimed author.
Recently , she was selec ted lor
an award by her alma m a te r. She
arrived on Oct. 12 at Kennedy
Airport In New York with a bona
!Ida visa lor what should have
been a routine walk through
customs en route to the award
ceremony at Columbia
University.
She was Immediately seized by
customs agents and held under
guard overnight at the airport.
For the next two days she was
kept Imprisoned at an Immigration and naturaliza tion detention
center. Then she spent another
two days under maximum security and solitary confinement at a
federal prison. She was finally
called Into a summary legal
proceeding and kicked out of the
country.
Abrams told the CBS audience
that all of this bizarre procedure
was necessary to protect the

UPI Sports Writer ,
PONTIAC. Mich. iUPI)
Chicago Bears Coach Mike Dltka
had wanted to see some dif.ferent
things. And he did.
Aqd after he sawsomeolthem,
he went back . to basic Bears
foot'ball.
'
·
Chicago abandoned Its plan to
throw all over the ·s uverdome In
the fourth quarter Monday night
and reverted to its running game
to score 13 points and earn a 16-13
victory over t~e Detroit Lions.
"About 13 assistant coaches,
Matt Suhey and Walter Payton"
prE'valled upon Dltka to return to
the running game with Chicago
tnililng 13· 3.
"When we got to the locker
room," Dltka said, ' 'Suhey said,
'If It ·a in't broke. don't fix it. ' We
went ahea!l and fixed somet hing
that wasn't broke . .
:·we tried to get away fro in our
running game,' ' Dltka said of a
victory that kept his Bears in the
running for the _home- field
advantage thro ug hout the
playoffs.
Green Bay has to beat t he New
York Giants at Giants Stadium
Saturday, a nd Chicago must win
at Dallas Sunday for that to
happen. The Bears and Giants

I

No help here._______Ja_c_k_A~nd_e_rs_on_&amp;_D_al_e_~_an_A_t_ta
WASHINGTON - A New York
arms dealer was sure he could
count on U.S. intelligence agencies to protect him If he skirted
the law to help t hem get somE'
Soviet weapons they wanted to
study. But when he was arrested
lor trying to sell some rifles and
ammunition to Poland as part of
the scheme, his contacts . hung
him out to dry.
Solomon Schwartz, three other
Individuals and HLB Security
Electronics Ltd. were indicted
for ihe attempted sale of 500
Ruger automatic rifles a nd
100,000 rounds of ammo to
Poland. Their defense Is that the
sale was a necessary element In
the plan to obtain two Soviet T·72
tanks and some SAM-7 antiaircraft miss iles - and that the
U.S, intelligence contacts knew
it.
But In secret testimony subm itted by federal prosecutors In
New York, FBI and and Defense
Intelligence Agency oflcials insist they never authorized
Schwartz to do anything Illegal ,
although th ey admit discussing

j•

By RICHARD L. SHOOR

THE HEAT'S ON - Chicago's Doug Flulle .
(left) has the heal put on by Detroit's Eric
Williams durlnK Monda:v nll!'ht's NFL contest In,

'

.

'

~·aUI('

Unfair expulsion ________G_eo___;:rg~e_M_cG_ov_e_rn

" You want HOW many millions of dollars
worth of U.S. weapons.?"

.. . - ... ;;-- . .

'1311

Mlllt'f'...... ,.; .......................

3 210 2.J
ol :Ui4 :1!11

o a tal m

Trlmtlh.•............................. o 4

26~

tiM

Welt.loo .......... .................. l 4 267 :lll3
SMiurda;y'l'l re&gt;~uttM
1\luander K4, AlhenM '16
Welhtton K Jacbon 61
Eutr.m Miller a

•t

Wllterlonlll, Fe4erai·Hocldna:43
Warren Ucal 59, Belpre 5S

TueNdaf'&amp; Gamet~
o\leuader Ill Molp
Belpre II Trlmhle

FO!Ierii-HD&lt;kllilll Vlnloo Coollly
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NeleonWe-Vork

at AlhenN
J'

HIT Steel Belted Radial has a vigorous
open-styled knobby tread pattern for
outward flaw of snow, mud ar water.

rnf'rov, Ohio. b\' th (' Ohio Vall&lt;•v Pub·
llshlnf! ('n mp;.m~· 'Mu111m«:lla .' ln t' ..
Pumf'r~·. Ohio ~!l7tN. Ph . 992·215fi. SP..

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Nf'"' York, Nl'\1.' York 1001 7.

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01

FRLLS POMEROY HOME .&amp; AUTO
TIRES

600 EAST MAIN
992-2094
POMEROY ·
AUGMINI' MOST CAIS 114.50
SDVING .IGS COUNI'Y F.~ 20 YEllS

'

�. . . ..,. r·· , .

•
0

f~~D~r16,1986

Pomerov-Middllputt. Ohio

Michlgan wal,ops . Bowling .Green .·· .
By United Press Internattona l
Michigan basketball coach Bill
Ftleder was happy the Wolverine
reserves got a chance to play .
Wit h Garde Thompson and

Ant oine J oubert co mbining for 23
first · h·alf points, Mic hi gan
opened a 47-20 lead and a!lowed
Frieder to play his reserves for
most of t he second half In a 76-64

win. over Bowling Green at Ann
Arbor, Mich.
·
..
"Our reserves have been playlng hard . In practice and they
deserved
a .,
chance to play ' "
·
r_
Frieder said. For t~e most part
.,_.?;.' they did a good job.
Michigan held. a 49-:ll lead at
16: 36 of the second half when
Frieder emptied his bench. The
Wolverine substitutes proceeded
to score six straight points, liut
BG went on a 20-10 run that cut
the margin to 65-50.
Falcon guard Frank Booker
scored 14 of his game-high 21
points during · the second-half
comeback. A Booker jumper at
1: 33 eventually cutthe Wolverine
lead to 10, 72·62, but Bowling
Green got no closer.
Joubert and Thompson led
Michigan, now 6-2, with 16 points
each.
Lamon Pippin added 15 points
for Bowling Green, 2·3. Steve
Martenet chipped In 14 for the
Falcons.
Michigan broke the game open
with a pair of first -half spurts
.after building a 7-6 lead In the
FIRST DEER - Jared Spencer; 13, son of Tom and Oathy
opening four minutes. Thompson
Spencer, Long Bottom, .bagged his fir st deer on the first day of
hit a pair o! jumpers, Grant sank
December at 10:30 a.m. while hunting In Chester Township. The
a
layup and Joubert dropped In a
. deer weighed 181 pounds lleld dressed, and was a 12 pointlropby
I
hree·
pointer to build the Wolvequ ck.
·
rlne lead to 17-6.
The teams traded · a pair of
baskets before the Falcons hit a
five-minute scoring drought.
When Pippin finally ended It at
6:17, Michigan held a 29-12 lead.
The Falcons compounded their
problems by hitting jus I five ofl4
first -half free throw attempts.
The half ended with Michigan on
top 47-20.
"They took the gaine over right
from the opening tipoff." said BG
coach Jim Larranaga. " We dug
ourselves a hole we couldn't
climb out of. I thought we had a
chance In the last .four minutes If
a couple of things went our way.
" They didn' t."
Elsewhere Monday night, Stet·
son trimmed Cincinnati, 60- 56;
South Alabama defeated Youngstown State, 72-63; Capital
topped Heidelberg, 64-59; and
Cedarville bombed Palm Beach
Wla.) Atlantic, 122-92.
At Mobile, Ala ., Jeff Hodge
• scored 24 points to lead South
Alabama to Its triumph over

y

t

Transactions
fooU:IIIII ooacb Jo._ Gutfkunilt' M
oontrlt.C.t lwt yelll'!t.

........n

51 1

~~ftt ~=ba~!;. 4-4

abbed
ail earl lead and built ltfmargln
10 15 .,;;ore settlbtg lh.for-a 31-~ ·,
halftl me 1·ead.
·
The Jaguars led by as m~ny as
17 1n the serond half before
Youngstown State rallied to cut
the margin to 67·61 with 2: 50 left
to play.
·
The Penguins 4-3 were led
with 15 points by'nllri,an l!e)rely
and also received 13 from Robert
Johnson, 12 points from Jim
.Gilmore and 11 - from James
Wilson. Gilmore also grabbed 11
rebounds to give the Pengulnl; a
35-31 rebounding advantage.
At Columbus, Tom Lanter
scored 19 points to help Capital
score a comeback win over
Heidelberg In an Ohio Athletic
Conference battle.
TraDing 32-27 at the lialt,
. Capital rallied to take Its first
lead with 8: 2lleft In the game on
a three-point goal by Lanter. The
lead changed hands a couple ot
times until Tim Mueller's jump
shot put Capital up.for gOod with
4:12 left.
Lanier led all scOrers with 19
j&gt;otnis, followed . by Rodney
Palmer with 16 and Mueller 15 as
Capital Improved to 3-4 overall
and 2·0 In the OAC.
Tony Meyer led Heidelberg
with 16 points, followed by
VIncent Finkley with 13 and Tom
Hllgenbergwlthll. Heidelberg Is
3-5 over II and winless In twoOAC
games.

Howtt• - Slped frte qent
D••ey Lop"' llroap lhe · 11118

........

Tu:u Tt"ch - NAR!ed .Robert
Ford wide rf'l.:eiVrrM c..ch.

.

Hock~ .

luld .... l

.

I,

st . LouW - llltuNHI rlpt wier

Sl.'ltllt• - Waived rmen'€' cmter

Todd .,;,..., t, b

CurtiiKH-.

Peoria. CII.)

lllflllole ol I.., lnl«niiiOool

Coli ere
Mlu•ata - ExlMIIed head

Hocker·Lelllue. ·

.---

·. KYGER - CJ\eshlte Township
Trustees wlll .meet Tuesday, 5:30
p.m., at the township bu.lldlng_ln
Kyger.

---

LETART FALLS - Letart
Falls Elementary School will
present the program, "Counterfelt Santa Chius," Tuesday, 7
p.m., at the school. Everyone
welcome.
WEDNESDAY
MIDDLEPORT - A Ch rist·
mas program wlll. be presented
ai the Sliver Run Baptist church,
Wednesday .nlght" 7: 30 p.m. ·

Brand N·a me

'

WOMEN'S

.

•HUSH PUPPIES
•liORGM QUIIIII
•DANIEL GREEII
•CLIIIIC

AND MUCH MORE!

lrand Name
Like
•HEIMAN •WOLVIItNI •WINIIIINNII
'MOIOAN OUINN •CHtPPIWA •CAIOLINA
OOUTDOOISMAN

-,.- -...

771-5977

. ...

· ~ ·., ~

HillY IN WHILE S£l£CTIONS UE QOODI

BEN FRANKLIN
.CO.
Sltoe• Slnco
·

•TIIo Homo of Ooofl

422 lhin StiNt ·

!90S"

675·2060

NOW OPEN FOR THE
CHRISTMAS SEASON
FAMILY HUNTERS- The Roger Spaun family In Racin e wUI
be eallnr; lots of venison this coming year, as three memhers oft he
family e.wh hroughl home a deer during hunting season. Spaun
reports that he look his eight-point buck In the first 15 minutes of
bunting season. HI' wile, Sharon, huntin g lor the second year,
bagr;ed a seven-inch spiked hu ck later in the w&lt;•ek. Son Ronnie, 13,
hunting for the second year, got a hutt on buck. Unfortunately, their
camera WlL' out of film hy the lime Ronnie got his deer. All three
deer were taken in the Raci ne

P.,.llils, lloly Tr-. lin &amp; Coot
qw;._
T,_ .._
, .CJolstt=
. """"'
............
Wrooltll, (_. Arn 11 ,.,,
Gr......lh &amp; s,r.,..

HUBBARD$
GREENHOUSE

o,..IJt~ACUSE.

OHIO

PH~ :;~:~;;~• ·1 to"S

ar~··~a·~---------J~~~~~~~~~~~~

Fon't- lo hosts
Wichita Satunlay
PITTSBURGH (UPII - Jim
Berger, a 6-foot-4 junior forward
from John Carroll, was na med
Monday as the Pres idents' At hletic ConferPnce basketba ll
player of the week.
Berger scored 45 points and
grabbed 17 rebounds In victories
last wN'k ove r Heidelberg and
Wooster. He hit 19 of 33 shots
from th.l' fiel d and seven of 10
from 1he lou I lin&lt;'.
Berger, a native of Parma
Heights, Ohio, also had 10 steals
and sil&lt; assists in the two games.

· A holiday dinner .follow ed by Merribers ga ve the Lord's P rayer
Christmas games and a·' gift a nd pledge tn unison and re· exchange Was enjoyed by . sponded to roll call by naming
members of th!l Past Co!lncllors th eir !avo rlt e Christ m as
Club of Chester Council 323, tradition.
Daughters of America, held at
Mary Showalter gave the
Mom Perry's Bounty Table. treasurer's report . Mrs. Morris
and Mrs. Showalter prepared
Ravenswood.
.
Errna Cleland gave (he bless- Christmas trays and delivered
Ing pr~edlng the dinner served them to two shutln members,
at deCorated tables. Candy Ad a Morris and Letha Wood.
canes, donated by Erma Cleland Erma Cleland and Laura Mae
and Laura Mae Ntce, were at Nice conducted the Christmas
each phice.
ga mes with prizes being
Fern Morris presided .at th~ awarded to the winners. Door
meeting reatling from Luke 2.

p.m., at the Racine First Baptist
Church.
TUPPERS PLAINS - Orange ·
Township Trustees will meet In
special session, Thursday, 7 p.m.

.

MIDDL EPORT - Middleport
Child Conservation League wlll
meet -tor dinner Thursday,' 6:30
p.m .. at the Down. Under Res taurant In Gallipolis. Christmas tree
o_r naments wlll be exchanged. A
party with a gift exchange will
follow at Ohio P(\wer.
·
FRIDAY
Syracu se
SYRACUSE
Homemakers . Club meets Friday, 6 p.m. , at the Syracuse
Pres byterian Church, lor / he
a nnual Christmas dinner.

Past

Matro~s

!'oint Pit-t

· ,... e1 -~~

Woman receives
nursing degree

With wreaths of holly and mistlecoe, stockings hung by the fire
and scenes blanketed with snow, Christmas encompasses
warmth and good cheer as we cherish the blessings we've shared
this past year. For us it means saying "thanks" to you, our many
friends, old and new, whose kind support we'll always treasure.
Doing business with you is our greatest pleasure!

, RACINE - Racine Elementary School will present a Christ·
mas program Thursday. 7:30

Wish all your customers and friends
a very Merry Christmas in our
Christmas Greeting Edition on
December 24th.

COME IN WITH COUPON FOR TEST

.,

. . . "" .

...•. •"

..
•.

••
•

.-'
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·'. •. . ..
~

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.•

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I

If you -have received .ANY untnl~9ymHt
or other btnefifs from Ra,ilroad ·
Retirement'Board in 1983-'84 or '85
please contact my office or call
. 992-3795

I

/

CumntA.PR.

)

PRIMEPWSl%
GUARANTEED
roR 90 DAYS.*

H&amp;R BLOCK

POMEROY, OH.

•.
•

This suf'!&gt;: rate is l:"fJmntced on a Qmtral.inc
of Credrf" iu»nc l!i/Uity loan for 90 doys rmcc
you n, approved. Tlll!n you pay 1111/y the incmdihly low mte shown below:

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

..•
. .
..
•

If your CentraLine
of Credit is

rur Secured Rate"is
Prime+ I%
$50,000and up
Prime+ 111:!%
$25,000 . $49.999
Prime+ 2%
$ 5.000 . $24.999

-..

And,you canpaybackas little each nwnth as
!he inlmsl due 1111 your mtt&lt;lllndin!I!Jalance.
For complete /i1111ncialfleribility.

"-&amp;'
c\\\2\~ttr~l\l .

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~-----

thePOWER
XTSertes

thePOWER
SerleSIOOO
Save$25.00
72·Month l imited warran1y

'

$5995

$4995

Save$25.00

•

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72-Month L1mited Warrarttv

A Gold MasteTOlrrl is inchuialjillcosy

oa:ess to your vrl/ru Linc r{ Crrtlit. Ust•

NAPA Wiper-Blades 20% off
Macs Winter Chemicals 20% off
lfltl pay mclosing wsts or appii:llmn foe

if}flU tx:l before jmuory 3L A '*1V~Wf-" r!

NAPA SILVERLINETIISpecials!
s ............
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oru,.

NAPA SILVERLINE Thermostats only $1.49
NAPA SILVERLINE Starters as lOW as $23.49
NAPA SILVERLINE A~emator as low as $24.95
DRY GAS (#7400) only 89¢

with·-·

Jor-or

OarW•-.r

Plene send me more information on Southeaatorn Bual·
neu College.
·"

up /o $20Q.

,

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THE MOTOR PARTS CO.

CALL 992-2156- ADVERTISING

157 Walnut St ·

Middleport, OH

THE DAILY .SENnNEL
.

122-2131

'

I

I

162 Third Ave.
Gallipolis, OH

448--

Also available at participating Dealers.

The annUIJI/f1! is on/y$30. And
paymeul is de!erml untilJlU use
}fJitl' U!ntml.irll! rfCredd.

itjMmtJjar puwlwsf'.'i , or IIJ gel rush at
any Centro{ '/rust '1fire oral"'"' 500
Owlaulnmowd /J•Ik-r machines llmntllh·
out Ohio. K£nturkt: lndiallll arrd l#st ·
VirJ{inio and 15.00() CIRIIUS mochiw., ·

•roasl·iM:oa~t.

. 10 find out moreabcut CentraLine of Credit, visit any one of our corwenient
branch offices. Or give us a call. But do it today. If you get your application in now,
you may soon be enjoying the best way to borrow money around. More or less.

THE CENTRAL TRlNT C&lt;MPANY
The Bank That Mtks Things Hafr!Jen:

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Name ________________~--------~~--------

.

"' ..

-....
..
~ ...

ALL RAILROAD EMPLOYEES

·618 E. MAIN ST.

.

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...

I

M

•CLERK TYPIST
•MEDICAL OFFICE SECRETARY
•BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
•EXECUTIVE SECRETARY
•COMPUTER PROGRAMMING
•ACCOUNTING, and moro

Phone N_ _ __

Anyone who has trouble hearing or Understanding con.arsaltOn is mvrteG to
have alree hearing test to see it this problem can be helped! Bring this coupon
wllh you tor your FREE HEARING TEST ol $50 value. Mutts only. P!taM. •

The intetrst clro~s on secured Qmtml.incs mar be Ill:!. dtdu&lt;tible.
The III1W Ill:!. /owalkni!S[ordeductilm r! sonworall rftlwin/ems/
on/nan.&lt; secured fly a fJimillltOIII!sidence. ·

NEW CLASSES 51AinNG EVElY 12 WEllS IN:

City _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ state·_---~.Zip_

THE TESTS WILL BE GIVEN BY A LICENSED HEARING 'AIO SPECIALIST.

...

Don't Settle For Less.
Get NAPA's Best.

·.

(614) 44.6-4367

Address _____- ' - - - - -- - - - - -- - --

DR. RANKIN PICKENS
509 SOUTH THIRD AVENUE, MIDDLEPORT
THURSDAY, DECEMBER 18
FROM 9:00·12:00 NOON

....
r---------.1...:---------------.. ,. ··

..

Come by or Call

Gallipolis, Ohio 46831

.

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THURSDAY
• ·RACINE - Thl' Ladles AuxilIary of MI. Morlah Church of
, God , Racine, will have Its annual
christmas dinner on Thursday at
6 p.m. at the LaSalle Christian
Restaurant In Middl eport. The
church's Christmas play will be
held at 7 p.m on Dec. 21.

Taking lpplltatlons Now

REG . #86-11-10568

Free Electroni cs hearing tests will be given by Bottone Hearing Aid Center .P~

AnENTION:

' '

DON'T WAn- EtnEI THESE
JOB TRAINING PIOGIAIIS

So"theasern
Business College
629 Jacl(son Pike - Suhe 312

HEARING. TESTS IN MEIGS COUNTY

'

OUT OF A JOB?

Eligible for the Training of Veterans
FINANCIAL AID AVAILABLE

COUP.ON

•

. POMEROY - Ohio Eta Phi
C)tapter, Beta Sigma P~l Soror: lty will meet Wednesday for a gift
. exchange at the home of Char·
l!llle Hoeflich. Each member Is to
; bflng an, ornament and meet at
tlie Pom£&gt;roy Fire Station at 6:30
p(ln. befQre gj}!n.g tq t.h~ )foefllch
Mme.

.

meet

I

The Past Matrons _Club of
Harrisonville Chapter 255. Order
of the Eastern Star, joined by
their husbands, held a Christmas
dinner party at the Wes tern
Slzzlln' Steak Hous~ In Athens.
Following the dinner , the
group enjoyed ·a social hour and
gift exchange. At-tending were
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Rice, Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Reed, Mr. and
Mrs. Harvey Erlewlne, Mr. and
Mrs. Jim Nelson: Mr . and Mrs.
Paul Pauley, Mr. and Mrs. Don
Wilson, Mr. a nd Mrs. Fred
Georg&lt;', Mr. and Mrs. Dana
Hoffman , Mrs. Ja ck Morris,
Mrs. Robert Canaday, Mrs.
Eugene Atkins, Mrs. Virgil At·
klns, Mrs. Robert J ewell and
Cheryl Jewell.

. Mary Amber Warner

prizes went to Ma rcia Keller,
Lora Damewood, . and . Fern
Morris .
Attending besides those named ·
were Margaret Amberger,' Alta'
Ball ard, Co ra Beegle, Ada Bls·
sell, Goldie Frederick, Charlotte
Grant , Ma ry Haye:., Opal Halon, _
Ma.e McPeek, Mary K. Holter,.
lnzy Newell, Ethel Orr, Pauline
Ridenour, MarC.la Keller, Betty ·
Roush, Sadie Trussell, Margaret '
Tuttle, Thelma White, and gu·
es ts, Shirley Beegle and Harlan ..
Ballard.

Meigs property
transfers

MIN'S SHOES

• GINGERBREAD!'
HOUSE Of GIFT ,

'

Mary Amber Warner, R.N.,
SATURDAY.
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale
RACINE - R;aclne Am&lt;'rlca n War ner, Forest Run, was pinned
Legion Is having a Christmas In ceremonies ·at ·.the Hocking
, party and dinner for members, Technical College Gymnasium
MIDDLEPORT - Mjddleport
a uxili ary members and their Friday afternoon.
Amateur Ga ~deners will meet at
Immediate famllles, Saturday,
She received an ' associate
8 p_.m. Wednesday at the home of
st arting at 7 p.m .. at the legion degree In the Nursing Techno!·
Jean Moore. Kathryn Hysell and
hall. Anyone needing Informa- ogy Career Ladder Program
Lillian Moore will be co·
tion should contact Ed Turley at
hostesses for the meeting. There 949-3010, or Pete Bearhs at offered by the College. A graduate of Southern High School, Miss
wm be a $5 glft exchange.
949-3074. or Pauline Wolfe at Warner - received her licensed
949-2773.
pra ctica l nursing degree from
POMEROY - Meigs County
Buckeye. Hills befo re going to
American Cancer Society Board
SUNDAY
Hocking Techni cal Co)IE'ge to get
will hold a luncheon meeting
SYRACUSE - Sant a Claus her associat e degree.
W,ednesday, noon, at Veterans will be at the Syracuse fire house
Attending Friday's pinning ceMemorial Hospital.
2 p.m. Sunday. Donations are remony and graduation were her
being ac cept~(! lor treats which parents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael
I'
~. · - ,
POMEROY
WU·dwood ' will be distributed.
Warnl'r and Matthew, and David
Garden Club meets Wednesday,
Findley.
7:30p.m.. at 'the home of Carrie .
HEMLOCK GROVE - HemGrueser.
lock Grove Christian Church will
present at Christmas progra m
POMEROY- Christmas Craft
Sunday evening at 7. Santa will
program , Pomeroy Library,
visit. Regular 9:30 Sunday mornWednesday , 5 to 6:30p.m., with
Ing services will fea ture special
Margaret Johnson .
music. Sunday Sc hool at 10:30.
Richard M. Colllns. to Joseph
Everyone welcome.
·
M. Donahoe. Terl Lynn Donohoe.
RUTLAND Rutl a nd
17.006A, Scipio.'
Friendly Garden Club meets· Trustees
Natalie
Richard A. Lelbmann,
' Wednesday to·go the Down Under
SALEM CENTER - Sal em
•
Young,
to
Paul
K.
Strauss,
Restau ~ant In Gallipolis for th~
Township Trustees will hold their
annual Christmas party. Follow- December meetin g on Dec. 30. 14.85A , Rutland.
' lng dinner, the group will return
9:30 a.m ., at the township !Ire · Floyd 0. Griffith, Glenna M.
to the home of Janet Bolin for a
house. There will be no meeting Griffith, to Thomas Allen Crisp,
Mary Faye Crisp, 1.98A, Salem .
. meeting and gift exchange.
on Dec. 26.

Like

•IIATURALIZER
eCAlJCO
eOUiliOOIABI.ES
•SEBAGO

Past O:&gt;uncilors enjoy Christmas ·meal ..

'

TUESDAY
' MIDDLEPORT - -XI Gamma
Epsilon Chapter of Beta Sigma
Phi Sorority will meet at 6:30 p.' m
at· the home of Phyllls Hackett ,
sponsor• .There ,wlll be a gift
elii'bange along with an orna·
ment exchange. ·

The Dailv Sentinel- Page &amp; .:

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

c;ommunity calendar
area happenings

BaJT OAC honoree
TOLEDO, Ohio (UPI) - Marietta sophomore Keith Barr was
selected Monday as the Ohio
Athletic Conference basketball
player of the week.
Barr. a 6-foot-4 forward from
Pleasantvllle, Ohio, scored 51
points In three games as Marietta defeated Denison and
Baldwin-Wallace and lost to
Robert Morris (Pa .).
Barr was 11 of 11 !tom the floor
Saturday against Baldwin· Wallace with his last two shots giving
the Pioneers a 68-65 victory. He
also had 15 rebounds, five assists
and six steals In the three games.

•

,

97 North Second
Middleport, OH.
Phone 992-6661

352 Second Ave.
Gallipolis, OH.
Phone 446-0902

• lbur CentmLinemust be approved by january 31, 1987 1JJ qualify for the 90-doy mil! gruJmntee.
• • Tilt annual p.rr:entage mit may wrx due to f luctuatiom in Pri""': Pri""' ra~ 11!/ers 1iJ the th~n ·CII rrrml Prime mh ,
Tilt Centml'll'usl Colnpany. Tlwmtes[oran unsectmd CentmLrni!IJ/CII!drta,..: $5,000-$24.9.9.9, Pri 'lll£ plu.&lt; ..
$25,00?'$11~999, -~llll phls21f2'fo; $50.000and up. Pri""' plus 2%.
.
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..Vfilill~· Tlu· C"'lml &amp;no..,.,.lim!, Cioci•Mii. 0/Jill

M""~'' FDIC

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o=v Sentinel
r----Local Briefs:--w
Peg a 6-The

-

16, 1

Area deaths

Meigs wells involved in project
More than 300 samples of oil !rain wells In Ohio, Including
several In Meigs County, have been collected .as part of an
Ashland College research project that could have a positive
economic effect on the state's future.
The project. funded by an Ohio Board of Regents research
grant, will Indicate where the best grades of Ohio crude oil are
located. This may possibly facilitate private Investment In
Ohio, according to the college.
.
The work Is being done by Dr. James Noel, an associate
professor qf geology, who has been gatherl!lg samples from
I?roduclng wells In Ohio and neighboring states, and Dr. Jerry
Cole, chairman of the chemistry department, who Is using an
atomic absorption Instrument to energize the atoms In the all
and measure the amount and type of metal found ln. each
sample.
A total of seven wells are checked by the college·are lnMeigs
County, Including three in Rutland Township, two In Bedford ·
Township , and one each in Salisbury and Chester townships ..

Local slates Christmas dinner.
The Christmas dinner of USWA Local 5171 w(ll be held
Saturday at the un ion hall in Hartford. W.Va.
Serving will be from 11 a.m. until 6 p.m.

Robert B. Morris

Robert B. Monis
I

· Emergency units answer 9 calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports nine calls
Monday.
.
Pomeroy at 9:44 a.m. to Rock Springs Road for VIrginia
Folmer to Ve.terans Memorial Hospital; Rutland at 12:12 p.m.
to Dye Road for Shirley Lambert to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; later to Holzer Medical Center ; Pomeroy at 12:48
p.m . to Darwin for Yvonne Walker to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Rutland and Salem Center fire departments at 1:36
p.m. to a car lire on Hampton Hollow Road; Pomeroy at 2:37
p.m. to Pomeroy Health Care Center for Louie Watson to
Veteran~ Memorial Hospital; Salem Township Fire Depart·
ment at 6:.24 p.m. to a truck fire on Bowles Rl\ll Road; Racine at
8:24 p.m. transpor1ed Dale Lawson, Zelia Lawson and David
Laudermllt from an auto accident on Ohio ·124 to Veterans
Memorlai·Hospltal; Pomeroy Fire Department at 9:02p.m. to a
structure fire at the Steven Moxley residence on Willow Creek
Road; Middleport Fire Department was called to as~lst at 9:11
p.m.

Area salt industry made history
Did you know that Pomeroy In the late 1800s enjoyed an
International rel'utatlon based on Its salt Industry?
In 1899, an engineer and chemist In the service of hls Imperial
Majesty, the Emperor of Japan, came to· Pomeroy to learn
about local salt operations. The Sept. 21, 1899 Issue of "The
Democrat" reports that the visitors' tour of the United States
Included only three stops between California and Washington
D.C., Chicago, Columbus and Pomeroy.
'
According to the newspaper account, the Japanese officials
were Impressed not only with the local salt works- there were
10 In the Pomeroy Bend at the time - but by the beautiful
scenery as well. The Japanese men said the hills and cliffs of
Pomeroy were just like those of their native city, and that they
felt more at home here than anywhere.they had stopped.
The Meigs County Historical Society, the source of this
account, Is concerned with preserving Information regarding
present and former .residents as well as other historical data
about the county, The society urges all county r~sldents who did
not record their family history In Meigs County History, Vol. I,
to submit material for publication In Vol. II. Deadline for
submission' of articles, Feb. 15,,1987, Is fast approaching.

·.

Fire guts area residence
Losses were estimated at $35.000 as the result of a fire which
gutted the Philip Moxley home on Willow Creek Road , near U.S.
3.1. about 9 p.m. Monday night.
Pomeroy Assistant Fire Chief Tom Werry said that the fire
star1ed from when grease caught fire on the kitchen stove. The
family was able to get a few Items out of the blaze. However,
losses to the Interior and to contents amounted to an estimated
$35,000. There Is no Insurance.
No one was Injured In the lire, Werry said. Firemen were on
the scene untllll p.m. and were called again to the scene early
Tuesday morning, but the rekindled fire was put out by Moxley
before firemen arrlvl.'d.
At 2:48a.m. Tuesday, Pomeroy firemen anwered a call to the
Betty Mankin home at 108 CondQr St .. when a electric motor on
the furnace overheated Ill ling the home with smoke. There was
light damage but there Is Insurance, Werry reports.

Celeste campaign (Continued from Page 1)
Ohio State University for the to Vermilion Local School Dis·
purchase of 32 acres of private trlct. Erie County, and-another
land near Don Scott Airport as an $557,250 to the Hubbard,Exemp·
Investment for future ted VIllage School District,
development.
Trumbull County, for the same
-A $1.556 million contract with purpose.
Arthur Andersen &amp; Co. for
-Release of $2.7 million In
maintenance of an automated excess lottery profits to pay for
tax collection system In the the state's share of court-ordered
attorney general' s office.
desegregation costs In the Clncln·
-Release of $1 million from nail and Lorain"school districts.
~ the emergency school loan fund
by

Robert Bruce Morris. 58,. 114
Union Ave., Pomeroy, well·
known Meigs County educator,
died Monday afternoon at Veterans Memorial Hospital follow·
lng a lingering illness.
Mr. Morris was born in Pomeroy on June 1, 1928, a son of the
late Robert F . and Marie Young
Morris.
He was a veteran of World War
II having served in the United
States· Navy. He served as a
teacher and administrator for 26
years and was a pa~t principal of
the Bradbury, j\'llddleport and
Pomeroy Elementacy Schools.
He ' recelved his bachelor's and
master's degrees· trorri Ohio
University and did post master's

Property transfers

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'

• •The jury vprdlct, dPllvered on
·:Dec.
.. .. 5 following a four -day. trial '

carried no mercy, meaning that
under West VIrginia law
Drescher can never be eligible
for parole.
Drescher was convicted of
murdering Saint Denis, a fellow
Krishna with whom he allegedly
had feuded over the sale of a
house.
The body was npvpr recovered,
but the stat!' charged that
Drescher enticed the missing
Krishna out to an Isolated spot,
pumped about a dozen shots Into
him, then used a knlletoflnlshoff\
the dying victim.

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CHRISTMAS TREES

BRADFORDS
TREES AYAilAilE

Louise Folmer
Louise Folmer, 73, 34926 Rock
Springs Road, Pomeroy. died
Monday at Veterans Memorial
Hospital .
Mrs . Folmer was born May 27,
1913, In Mason County, W.Va., a

daughter of th~ late Hugh ahd
Mattie Swan McMillin. She was a
homemakPr and was a member
of t.he Rock Springs United
Methodist ChurciJ, and the Rock
Springs Better Health Club.
.
Surviving are her husband,
William Folmer; a son, Charles
Pow. ctevetandi three daugh,
tefs, ,Bonaie Jean Wilkins and
Charlotte Armstrong, 'both of
ToiPdo, and Doris .Johnson, ·Co·
lumbus; two stepdaughters, Judith Durham, Gibsonia. Pa .. and
Jenneth Hill, Forest Hjll; Md.,
and a stepson, Jeffrey Folmer,
Pomeroy. Also surviving are 22
gi'andchlldr.en arid 14 grpat· . Mark· Hawk, L.U.T.C., has
joined the Davls-Qu,ckel .
grandchildren. ·
Agency,
Second Street, Pome, Services will be held at 1 p.m.
roy.
Hawk
wUI be specializing ,
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral
In life, bealth, disability acclHome with Rev. Melvin J.
.dent and retirement plans
Franklin officiating. Burlal twlll
such as IRA's and payroll
be In Rock Springs Cemetery:
de~uctlo.n Insurance: Hawk Is
friends may call at the funeral
a naUve ·of Meigs County, a
·home from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m.
gt'allilate flf ·Eastern High ·
Tuesda~.
School an~ was formerly
employed wllli Western &amp;
Gretchen \' eag~r
Southern Ufe Insurance Co.
'
Gretc.hen Yeager, 80, Mason,
He and his wife, Lou Ann and
W.Va., died Monday In thP Paula
son, Michael , reside In
Camps residence, West ColumTuppers Plains.
bla. W.Va.
r-'' - - - - -·- - - - - She was born March 7, 1906, In
Mason, to the late John and
Margaret Hood Wilson.
She was preceded In deatlf by
her husband, Stanley 0. Yeager,
who died tn 1978.
She was a dietician for Howard
Johnson Restaurants.
,
Surviving are two sons, Jack,'
Sporlngporl.lnd .• Danny, Selma,
Ind.; one sister-In-law, Pauline
Pullins; several grandchildren
and great-grandchildren; nieces
and nephews.
Services will be Wednesday,
1:30 p.m.. at the Foglesong
Funeral Home, Mason, with the
Rev. Bennie Stevens officiating.
Burial wlll be In Kirkland Mem·
orlal Gardens. Friends may call
from 11: 30 a.m. Ia 1: 30 p.m.
Wednesday at the funeral home.

Ohio weather

RUTLAND
TIRE
SALES
"OmiH "01·TilER• I

..

COMES TO

----------------------·

NEW YORK (UP I) -Investor Dayton, Ohio-based restaurant
Asher B. Edelman rejected Mon- chain, but refused to accept
day what he called Ponderosa conditions on the talks.
Inc.'s demand that he agree not
The rejection came In Edel·
to pursue a $27.50-a-share tender · man's response · to a ·letter
·offer for the restaurant chain If it Ponderosa said It delivered to the
begins negotiations for a higher Investor Sunday.
bid.
In Its Sunday letter, Ponderosa
"You can appreciate tha\ that said It had been Informed Edel· kind . of cond.ltlo'n Is. wholly man would negotiate a higher
I unacceptable to an actual bidder,
price .only If the t~lks were
who has committed substantial supported by confidential flnan sums to the commencement of a clal data the company hitherto
tender offer (and) who Is also the has refused to disclose.
·'
company's largest stockholder,"
"As you well know, It Is
Edelman said In a letter to standard practice to require
Ponderosa management.
prospective bidders who obtain
Edelman repeated his wish to such Information to agree that
~egotlate his acquisition of the
they wlll proceed ... only by way

....

••:

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~

, .
\, ;
o;

•
:
:"
~

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•

i'

:•·
:·
~~

;_,
".
:
:
:
\

.
j

,

____

Admissions - Brenda Petrie
Middleport; Eva Lawson. Ra :
cine; YVonne Walker, Shade;
Loulp Watson, Pomeroy.
Discharges- Elvira Barr.

Plolntlfl.

vo.

Clifton! R.
Defondlntl,

Smilh. et ol.,
upon 1 Judgment thoreln
rendorwd, being eo.. No. 86·
CV·98 in Hid Court, I wll of.

2 ' In Memoriam

SANTA •s SCHEDULE
Thursday, December 4th
Friday, December 5th
Saturday, December 6th

· 6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.
3 to 5 p.m.

Point Pleasant, W. Va. Store
Gallipolis. Olio Store
Middleport, Olio Store .
4

Sunday, December 7th
Monday, December 8th
Tuesday, Decell)ber 9th

You just won't find a
better value for your in·
surance premium dollar
than a Homeowners
polity from the State
Auto Companies. As an
independent agency representing State Auto,
we offer truly oulstanding protection packages
for houses, apartrneniS
and condominium

214 EAST MAIN
POMEROY

.........
.........

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on Order of Sole
luued out of . the Common
P!t01 Court of Meigs Countv.
Ohio. in me con of Dlllmond
Sovingo &amp; Loan Company,

Point Pleasant, W. Va. Store
Gallipolis, Olio Store
Middleport, Ohio Store

3 to 5 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.

Wednesday, December lOth
Thursday, December 11th
Friday, December 12th

Point Pleasant, W. Va. Store
Gallipolis, Olio Store
Middleport, Ohio Store

6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.

Saturday, December 13th
Monday, December 15th
Tuesday, December 16th

Point Pleea~t, W.Va. Store
Gallipolis, Ohio S1Dre
Point Pleea~t, W.Va. Store

3 to 5 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.

Wednesday, December 17th
Thursday, December 18th
Friday, December 19th

Gallipolis, Olio Store
Middleport. Ohio Store
Point Pleasant. W. Ya. Store

6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.
6 to 8 p.m.

Saturday, Decembet' 20th
Sunday, December 21st

Gallipolis, Ohio StoreMiddleport, OhiO Store

3 to 5 p:m.
3 to 5 p:m'.

992·6887

'

c..., ......

-·-

Bring Your C.fne,. And Take Your Childs
Picture With Santa • • Or We Will Take
•
A Polaroid Picture For Only '1 50

In loving memory of
Carl E. Moore who
passed away one
year ago today, Dec.
16, 1985.

IZ·I6·'86-I mo.

FOR SALF

CHRISTMAS
TREES
TAGGING NOW

Pre-cut trees availablt

located on
Flatwoods Rd. (Co.
Rd 281et Harley
Haning rasldence. 2
Mi. from Five Points
Watch lor Signs ·
11'24-86·1 mo.

Public Notice

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE

HEADQUARTERS FOR
•ZENITH

•SILVANIA

•SPEED QUliN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SAIELUI£ SALES &amp; SERVICE

•• HIWJ Afill tl ...
. Shop Ttt~lltltti
H

. RIDENOUR
TV &amp;·APPLIANCE
CHESTER-915-3307

YOUNG'S
- Addona 1nd remodeling
-Roofing and gutter work
- Concrete work
- Plumbing and electrical
wo&lt;k

. V. C. YOUNG ID
992·6215 or 992-7314

Pomtroy, Ohio
._ _ __.:.4·15-'86-lc

D&amp;P
APPLIANCE
REPAIR
7 Years

614-446-7126

11·26'86'1 mo.

SKATE -A-WAY
Wm

~

P(l'f nf \kntt•s
Chrr\IIJHJ\ Pur ty !)pf iO
Nr,v Yprrr' ~~·1· Purt~·

li
tr

!~I'

$299

-20.00 Rebate
S29995
Gl 19"

TELEVISION

a~~ s2s9• 5

s~IIVIRs

SIZE 23X30X007

. ONLY

2s(

S7995

. VCR TAPES

EACH .

ONLY $299
GOLDSIAI

USES FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES:TO
MAKING HAMMERED LAW SHA~ES.

MICROWAVE

Sl 0995
MGM
FARM CITY INC.

CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT Til
DAilY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M. '

POMEROY
992·2104

·"

· or 949-2:756

6-17-tfc

MOUNTAINEER
BODY SHOP
PARTS INC.

!CUI OUI FOR fUIURI

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

Has Lowered Prices

Ford &amp; GM Truck Fenders
Early •39 - late '65
Chrome Bumpers- GM 73·
80 S65- Ford 73-77 859
THRU DEC. FREE INSTAL.
ON BEDLINERS
We sell
i
and h1V'e

985-356'1

All Maku

•Washers .•Dioh~root18r.

•Ranges
•RefrigerB!tor•

•Dryers •Freezers

PARTS and S

"At Reasonable Prices"

Day or Night

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

NO SUNDAY CALLS

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

4-)6.'116 tfn

New location:
161 North S«ond
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SAlES &amp; SERVICE

SHARPENING

SERVICE

Circular Saws

Saw Chain

Planer Knives
Drill Bits

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

Knives
Chisels

GRAVELY
TRACTOR SALES

109 MULBERRY AVE.

POMEROY,

OH.

204 Condo, St.

PH. 992-9949

Pomeroy, Ohio

Bob Barton, Own11
11-28·86·1 mo.

PH. 992-2975

We Carry Fi1hing Supplin

...,, - · IU~ ISS PM ONE
14) 992-6550
AESIOEN~E PHONE

'J&amp;L INSULATION
JAMES lEESE
HEATING &amp; COOLING
•NEW FURNACE
•AIR CONDITIONING
•HEAT PUMPS . · .
•BLOWN INSULATION
•REPLACEMENT WINDOWS
FREE ESTIMATE

. 992·2772

10' MESH ANTENNA

PANASONIC RECEIVER

REASONABLE • RIUABLE
8·20-'86 tfn

FULL V REMOTE &amp; INSTAllED

$4·aoo

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Jilt

PH. 949-289

CUSTOM BUILT
HOM£S &amp; GARAGES

IDshan Building

1 00 1

1111tli

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Also Transmhsloa
PH; 992·5682
or 99.2-7121

614-843-5248

' ShtriH of Molgo County. 457e9 .
457e9, woo appointed Exe·
Tho object ol tho Com·
Ohio
cutor
of the estate of Ellen
pl8int
is
to
.,_rtition
the
fol·
1121 9, 16 , 23 3tc
lowing described rMiet1ate:
Stewart, ldece11ed, late of
A million times I've nuded
Sltuolt In the County of
Middleport. Meigs County.
Public Notice
Public Notice
you .
Ohio.
Moigo, in the &amp;toto of Ohio
A millicn times I've critd.
'and in the Tovvnship of Olive
Robert E. Buck,
NOTICE OF
IN THE
If love could have saved you.
..d bounded and described
Probate Judge
APPOINTMENT OF
COMMON PLEAS COI.lRT 11 follows, viz:
You never would hlvt died.
Lona
K
.
Neuolrood.
Clerk
FIDUCIARY
OF .
In life !loved you ds1rly:
Tho well hell of tho woot
11212.9,
18.
3tc
Pocember 11, 1988,
MEIGS COUNTY. OHIO
In doth I love you still.
holt of 1eo Acre Lot No. In On
tho
Mtlgo
County Prob&lt;ote
RICHARD KIBBLE.
In my hoort you hold 1 plltt.
11&amp;9. Soctlono 4 ond 10,
Plointill
No one can ever fill .,
Townohip 4, R,nge 11 of Court, Coso No. 25372. 64 Misc. Merchandise
It broke my hurt lo lose you,
- vstho Ohio Compony'o Pur· Billy l. Wllllomton, Main
Rutllnd.
Ohio
ER NEST l. Kl BB LE.
But you did not 10 1tone:
ch11e, containing 40 acres, StrHt.
4&amp;775,
woo
oppointod
Ad·
For port of me went with you.
Oefendlnt
more or lep.
HOTPONT
Tho day God took you ltome.
Coso No . 8&amp;-CV-334
DEED REFERENCE : Vol- miniatrator of the eltate of
Edith
K.
.
Wllliomoon,
deNOTICE
8Y
ume 294. Pogo 9. Meigs
RANGE
Sadly missed by:
ceaaed, late of Sllem Street,
PUBLICATION
County
Died
Rocordt.
30'
ELECTRIC
Autlond, Ohio 45775.
Wife. dauahters. son-in·
To Jean Turney ChamberYou are r~ulred 10 anRobert
E.
Buck,
95
law. aranddauchters and
lain end theu'*no\M"' heirt, swer the Complllnt within
ONLY
Probote Judge
rand-son-in-law.
deviaeet, 1nd leg1tee1 of 28 do yo tfltr tho loot publi·
lena K. Neaulroed, Clerk
GE VCR
(12) 11, 23. 30, 3tc
Hvent 14-Day Timer
3 Announcement• ·
1319 95
64 Misc. Merchandise

Office in the County Courthouse, Pomeroy, ~~plica·
lions for the Meics County Housh!&amp; Rehabilitation
Procram second year will be accepted. The Housinc
Rehab Office is located at the strut ltvel near the
iron! entrance of the 'Courthouse.
This is a county-wide housinc procram desicn~ lo
tehabtlitate homes and improve them to metl State
Housinc Standards. Any qualifted homeowner livinc
in Meics County may apply. Appltcants must own
their home In llelp County, hive total annual in·
come at oi below HUD Sectron Bcuidelints, and be
willin1 to coopttrale tn tnitiatlq a mortp1e so lhlt
property cannot be sold wtthln five (5) years
without reimbursement for 1ny cost of repairs pro·
vl~ed.
. ·
Before cominc in, interested
should call
Rick llcDo111ld at 992·2393 for an
and

1·3-'86 tic

Truck, auto, 8o :
heavv equipment •
repairs and weldi1ngi
tAll makes &amp; ·"JO•delsl

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

B. O' Brien. 100% Court
Street, Pomeroy, Ohio,

ALUMINUM SHEETS
.. FOR SALE

Flr111 Equipment
Part• &amp; Servlee

TYs, Ant1nnas
Satellite Salos
Installation
Service

DIAMONDS

CE
N
Becinninc December 15.1986.atthe Housinc Rehab

Authorized John D~re.
Now Hol..nd, lush Hog
farm Equipment
Dtolor

•
••
•
•

EAGLE RIDGE
AUTO REPAI ·

Roger Hysell
Garage

GUYSVILLE, 01110

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Maintenance
Experience
Work
Guaranteed

II'., I

•

. U. ·S. AT. 50 EAST

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here

(Free Eotlmatesl

9RI 391Y "' 981 9996

Ohio

SALES &amp; SERVICE

PLUMIBING &amp; HEA nNG

CARPENTER
SERVICE

WANT. ADS Grr

Pomeroy,

'BOGGS

4/1/tfn

cation of. this notice which
10,00 A.M., the following
will be ~· blished once eech
Iondo end tenemontl, located
ot Second Stroot, Syrocuoe, . known eddreu woo 431 6 week fOr aix llloceulve
Crooked L.noRoed, Howell. weeks. T~o loot publication
Ohlo46na.
will be made on December
'
Situoted in tho Vllloge of Michlgon; orfd
To L1wrence Van A mburg 23, 1986. ond tho 28 doys
Syrecu•• County of Meig1
and the unknown helrt, de- for answer will commence
ond Stoto of Ohio.
Sting Town loto No. 11, ~•••· ·and legatees of Law· on that dite.
UKE
In cue of your failure
12, 13ond 19 in me Town of renoa Van Amburg. if he be
deceased.
whose
la.a:
1m
own
to
answer
•
or
otherwisereSyracuM, for 1 mora partie·
ulaf dttcrlption reference is addrHI wu t 286 N. s., opond 11 roqu ired by tho
mede to the town, plat of said Gabriel Blvd.. APirtment Ohio Rules of Civil Proco-·
18, Azuu. Colllomlo;
duro, judg mont by dofeu~
Town of Syracuae .
You oro horoby notified will be rendered ogalntt you
llofeflftet Deed: · Volume
283, Page 701. Mtige County thet you hove boon nomed for the relief demanded in
Public Notice
Defendant• in a legalact;on the Complaint .
Deed RICOrdo.
on~tlod
Rich11d Kibble. Dated: No~ombor 14, 1986
APPRAISED AT:
NOTICE OF
Larry E. Spanoer,
st5,000.00. Tho reoleotote Pl1intiff, VI . Ernest l. Kib· .
APPOINTMENT
OF
blo.
Et
AI
..
Defondonto.
This
Clerk
of
Courts
cannot be sold for lets then
FIDUCIARY
Meigs County
two-third1 the appraised va· action hal been asaignlld
Cue Number 85-CV-334
On Novombor 25. 1986,
Common Pleae Court
luo.
TERMS OF SALE: Caoh ond is pending in tho Court (11)18, 25; 1121 2, 9. 1e. in the Meiga County Probate
Court, Case No, 25300, J .
9f Common Phioo of Meigs 23,. 6tc
on deli'18ry of deed.
County,

"" . 11·17-llt;

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860

Daty

Jean Tumey Chamberlain. if
she be deceased. who.., lett

Howard E. Frank

446-6323 Day or £venina

BISSELL
BUILDERS

1 ·.0 tlll 1 d i fJ oo
flvorl&lt;Jblr· fm
A11 thdoy' (huH h.
Prrvolr• Porlll'\

Public Notice

L&amp;W CLEANING
CARPET
. UPHOLSTERY
PLUS.

·- -

Own Wl'rl

Dtpt

the Colirthouoe in Pome•ovMoigo County, Ohio, on the
18thdovo1Jonuorv, 1987,at

•

PHONE
992-2156
Or Write Olillv Stnli11tl CllsUfttd

OH.

OPEN 8 A.M.-4 P.M.

I r HJ

Ill Cturt St .. Polltflly. O~ io 4S169

Public Notice

550 Page St•
Middleport,

0 I'\

The Daily .Sentinel

Public Notice

·GEARY'S .
BODY SHOP

of

Jury finds for ·widow
in GM seatbelt ·Jawsuit ·

•~•

The'

Business Services

'

·(

a negotiated agreement ap·
proved by the board," Pondero·
sa's let.ter said.
In his reply to Ponderosa
Chairman Gerald s. Office Jr., .
Edelman offered to "listen to ·
whatever facts , you wish to
present which would justify a
higher price than the $27.50 we
have offerect." ·
,
But he refused to commit to
giving up the offer, announced
Dec. 3andsettoexplreDec.30, to
acquire the 81.5 percent of
Ponderosa's stock his group does
not already own for $27.50 a
share, or a total of about $218
million.
Edelman said that what he
called "this Impasse between us
and Mr. Office" could be resolv.ed · If Ponderosa management releases details of a
planned recapitalization plan on
Monday or Tuesday. Ponderosa
last week said It was considering
alternatives to protect Itself from
AKRON I UP I) - A jury has
"This was an unusual case, and Edelman's btd : The alternatives
awarded $800,000 to a woman It has a very significant effect," it cited Included recapitalization,
who says her husband might still said Baird's lawyer Tim Scanlon restructuring, "or a transaction
be alive but for a faulty safety after the verdict was announced. Involving a third party."
belt design used in most "It affects anyone who drives ,
"Slife!!" management utilized
American-made cars since the almost any American-made car Ponderosa Information in formu·
late 1970s.
. since (the belts) were put ln. It's latlng this plan and will be
The . settlement against Gen· a very significant problem- and required to .disclose all material
eral Motors Corp. came after a a very serious one."
facts in connection with it, we
U.S. District Court jury !)ad
General Motors said the presume you wlll be willing to
deliberated aboqt nine hours window-shade system Is In· prmptly meet with us, (and\
followt.ng a 2'/,-week trial.
stalled lor the comfort of drivers provide us with all the informa·
Lois Baird was seeking $3 and to encourage the use of seat tlon your management had ac·
million for the August 1982 death belts. Engineers tPstlfled during cess to." Edelman' s reply said.
of her husband, Dr. William the trial that although there Is
Ponilerosa has 300 Pmployees
Baird II, 63, whose car ran off a potential for too much slack to at Its Dayton headquarters and
suburban Akron road and stru~k accumulate, typical movement 660 steak and Mexican-style
a tree.·
Is not likely' to cause lt .
restaurants In the United States
Baird also claimed that an axle and abroad . It-s 1985 revenues
Baird said her husband, a
neurosurgeon, always wore a fallurP In the 1979 Pontiac Grand were $474.1 mllllon.
·
safety belt and would \X' alive Am caused her husband to lose
Edelman's is the third ta·
today but for excessive slack'1n control of the car, which left the keover attPmpt launched at
the "window-shade" belt . The road In a straight, diagonal line Ponderosa l,n recent years . Pon·
belt Is so named because the and traveled more than 200 feet derosa successfully fended off
shoulder narnes·s can be loosened before striking the tree.
acquisition bids by General Host
by pulling on lt,lnmuch the same
The jury's vPrdlct said the axle Corp. In the early 1980s and the
dld not cause the accident.
way as; a window shade.
Dallas-ba·sed steakhouse chalri.
Critics say the tea ture allows a ·
An autopsy showed no evi· USACafes last year. dangerous amount of slack that dence that the doctor had suf·
may leave little protection In an fered any medical probll:'m that FBI briefcase agents
accldPnt.
would have caused him to lo ~ e
control. There also was no
By UniJed Press International
The lawsuit is believed to be evidence of drugs or alcohol In
Prior to 1934, FBI agents werP
the first to go to trial challenging his systerri.
dubbed "briefcase agents" be·
General Motors said It may cause they were not permitted to
the safety of the seat belt system.
but automotive safety consultant appeal 'he decision.
carry a gun or make an arrest
"We are disappOinted with thP other than those an average
David Blss said more such cases
may be expected as more states verdict and are considering an citizen could make. A package of
enact mandatory. safety belt appeal." the company said In a crime laws passed In 1934,
statement Issued from Detroit. lar~ely because of crimes such
laws .
The design Is not permitted In "Our analysis of ·the accident as the Lindbergh kidnapping,
Europe because it Is considered indicated that the comfort tea- widened the'scopeof the FBI and
unsafe. ac~ordlng to thP National . ture did not' play any role In Dr. ·gave lts.agcnts the right to carry
Highway Transportation Safety Baird's death in this extremely firearms and make arrests.
spver&lt;&gt;
Administration.
......._ Impact.:'

fMfor Ale It tilt front door OJ

Veterans Memorial

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Inves,tor rejects Ponderosa
demand for .share offering

SANTA ·cLAUS

I

FRESH CUT
OR CUT YOUR OWN
Lealttd ... Cherry Rldtle· 11rn latt at Darwin onto lt.
611, .. 4 Mi. to ...,..t, Turn South 011 grayef road,
1VI . . topon.
WATCH FOI SIGNS
HOURS: I0 'Til Dark

,

degree work also . at Ohio
University.
1 Mr. Morris was a member of
the Middleport Masonic Lodge
363, Free and Accepted Masons;
a member of the An~ient Ac·
cepted Scottish RUe; Vally of
Columbus; a life member of the_
PTA; a member of Drew Webs·
ter Post .Jll, American Legion,
~OmeJ;oy; the Pomeroy 'United
~ethodlst Churc~ and of the Ohio
AssociatiOn of Elementary
School Admln'lstrators.
Surviving are his wife, Joan; a
son, Ric!&lt;, of Pomeroy; a daugh·
ter and son-In-law, Paula and
Dale Whitt, Bidwell; two grand·
children, Eric Whitt and Ml·
chaelle Dawn Morris, both of
Bidwell; a brother, · Dan E.
Morrls.-Pomeroy, who Is super In·
tendent of the Meigs Local School
District; several nieces, aunts,
cousins and a nephew.
Friends may call at · the
Rawllngs·Coats·Blower Funeral
. Home In Middleport from 2·4 and '
7·9 p.m. Wednesday. Services
will be held at the funeral home
at 1 p.m. Thursday with Rev.
James Corbitt officiating. Burial
will be In Wells Cemetery.
Masonic rites will be held at 7
p.m. Wednesday at the funeral
-- home and graveside military
rites will be held. Memorial
contributions may be made to the
Meigs County Unit of the Amerl·
can Cancer Spclety or to tbe
Meigs Co~nty Branch of the
American Heart Association.

Ruth Pauline Thompson, Bill
Little , Lora Maxine Little,
Wilma L. Parker , t Howard
Parl&lt;;er and Peggy A. Thomas,
Charles A. Thomas, Ji&gt;hll Sheets,
Boundary Line Agree, Salisbury.
Sec'retary of Housing &amp; Urban
Dev., to Ro~M:rt D. Brenneman ,
South Clllltral Ohio
Patricia P. Brenneman , lot ,
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a
Porn. VIII. . ·
.
low between 30 and 35. Mostly
Julius A. Wagner, Mary E. cloudy Wednesday, with highs
Wagner, to Ronald H. Ritchie, between 45 and1SO.
parcels , ChPster.
The prohablllty of preclpltaJohn Utstnger, Joyce Utsinger, tlon Is 20 percent tonight and
at~""
to T.O. Stewart , ease and right of WednPsday.
1
• ,.....,. 1
way, Rutland.
Winds will be light and south·
LOWEST PRICES ON r•ASSENGEI CARS
Ralph G. Smith, Gwenda M. westerly tonight.
Smith, to Paul Phillips, Diana D.
Ohio Extended Forecast
AND UGILI TIUCI niES
Phillips, parcels, Scipio.
Thursday throush Saturday
*ALIGII-11 *FIONT END WOII
Joseph W. Masters, Barbara
Fair Thursday, with a chance
· *IAMitES *tilE IEPAII
F. Masters, to Herbert L. Grate.. of rain or snow Friday and
Hel~q R. Grate, parcels, Ollye.
Saturday. ·Highs will range from
LOCATED: MAIN St .. RUTLAND:' OHIO
OPEN: 8·6 MON.·SAT.; 8·8 FRI. '
· James Arnold · Anderson; to ' the mid 30s to the mid 40s each
,Wallace Morris , Connie Morris. day, with overnight lows ranging
Mealer ~~;/~~-~~~elcome
parcels, Letart.
r~fr~o~m~t~h::e~m~l~d~20~s:_:t~o~t~he:_m~ld~30~s._L~=====~~~~~~!:=~==~==~~~~
Roberta C. O'BriPn, J .B.
O'Brien, to Allen T. Downie,
Janet B. Pownle, 20. 700A ,
Salisbury.
Richard C. Meredith, Dec'd,
Mary L. Meredith, Affld., Bed·
ford/ Chester.
Magnum Gas &amp; 011, Inc.,
Colorado, to Ernest B. McClung,
Juanita McClung, pare~! .
Salisbury.
Maude Betz to Loraine L. Lee.
'
William J . Lee, lots 304 &amp; 306,
Mldd . VIII .
Verna Sturgeon, to Richard C.
Caruthers, Roberta J . Caruth·
ers. Jennie L. Ollan, 0.25A.
Salisbury.

: 'Krishna gets life sentence
KINGWOOD , W.Va. tUPIJ The defl'!lse Is planning to appeal
th(' conviction of Thomas
Drescher, who could spend the
rest of hls life In prison for the
1983 murder of fellow Hare
l{rlshna dl'votee Charles Saint
' Denis.
In a 90-mlnutl' hearing Man·
day, a llfl' sentence was Imposed
on the 37-year-old Ravenna,
Ohio, natlv!' by Preston Circuit
:Judge Robert Halbrltter.

.

- - .. - · ·.- ----- ....

Pomeroy-Midd~. Ohio

'

.. '

. . -· - .

factory Choke
12 Gouge lhotg1011 Only
10-B·tfn

*VINYL SIDING
•ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSUL~nON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

PER MONTH WITH

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPET

Hobson Rd.

PH. 992·6173

Mltlldteiaor·f.li)tiJ,

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW, INC.
405 MAIN

Street. Pt. Pleasant. WV 25550
(304) 675·5252

Ths PROFESSIONAl Hom•
/mptmtlllnl Cuflf

•Insulated Replacement

Window

•Vinyl, Steel Siding
•Storm Windows
•Doors

"FREE

INST~LL~TION"
SHOWROOM HOUtn:
9 to S l\loo,, fun.. Wed. &amp; Fri.

New Homes Built
"Free Estimates"

PH. 949-280 I
or 949·2860
No Sunday Calls

lit t/tln

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

•All Types of

Excavating
•Landscaping ·
•Basements

.

i

.

--

,.

-. _,.,___

" CoRJ):iterized Hearing ~ir SelectiQ!J
~ SWim Molds · Interpretrng Servic~~

a:

~ .LISA M. KOCH, M.S. . ~· :

:z:

z

licensed Clinical Audiologist : '

- (614) 446·7619 or (614) 992-6601

'0

417 Second Avenue, Box 1213
Gallipolis. Ohio 45631
8·13

·
tin

•Sewaga Systams
•Water &amp; Gas Unes
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking .

Call: 742-2407

11·28·86· 1 mo.

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

g Salon
271 N. 2nd, Middleport
992,57~6
OPEN : Mon.-Fri. 8 am-9 pm-Sat. 8·5·,
Walk-Ins Welcome
.;:

EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND -'
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS
"1

"'
Debbie Meadows- Owner: tmojean Blevin~
Loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
,"
Merri Amsbary
·

10·9-Uc

RADIATOR

SER~CE
We can rtpiir and rp
core radrators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiators. We also
repair Gas Tanks.

PAT HILL FORD
992·2198

Middleport, Ohio
1-13-tlc

llf you are a
Veteran)

(with a lot purchm
11 rotular price)
of this area must

MEIGS COUNTY MEMORY GARDENS
POMEIOY
1'141592·6151

�. '

- ___ _.__ ..

''·

LAFF·A·DAY

44

SMALL
WANT ADS

Furnithed ap . . ment upltairt.
Adultt only, all utilltiel pllid C.ll
814-448-9523.
Furn1ahed efficiency 8176 00,
2rm&amp;. &amp; bath utilities Pd . 448·
4416 after ?p.m .

A n nounce ments

Furnrshed Apt. 8210.00 utit•
tie• Pd . 1 bedroom, first floor Ph,
446-4418 1fter 7p.m.

Racine Gun Shoot sponsortKI bv

Ouplllt 648 S.conc;t. carpeted. 3
bedroom, LA , DR .. rHIW kitchen
• beth, waaher 6 dry., hook·up,
t286.00 mo. plus utilities 8t
tecurity depOSit Ph. 8 1·-0690,

Racine Gun Cl ub Every Sunday,
begrnnmg at 1 00 p.m. Fact ory
Chok e, 1 2 gu~ge sho tgu ns
Rtverino Anttques open evemn gs

and by appomtment 1124 East
Matn St , Pomeroy , Ohio. RUss
Moore, owner 614 992 -2526

huntmg or trospass mg,

Mynes Fa rm located Chestn ut
Ri dge Road

Giveaway

40 Gallon Gas Hot Water Hea ter

to gtve away , JUSt pttk up Ph

614 446 -2310

4mo
oldphkitten,
grav-9535
st riped
Nt ce per
614 -446
3 ado"ble black lemale """"" '
toagood,homu 304 -675- 7966
Tt11ec black and w htte ktttens
long h1med . hner tratned , 304
675 -7242
Chnstmas pupptes. 3 male, 2
female 304 576 25 73 any
ttme 576 -2678 alter 6 p m

6

' '•

Gray Sc hnauzer in
vtct nity of State St &amp; Hedge·
wood Ph 614 446 -2105

rto when I return to England
:s get a different coat of
arms!"

r-;;:~:;:::;:;:;:::::;::::"1';~~::;~::;::::::::::1
11

H e Ip

Wanted

let A11on help you get the best of
those post Christmas bill&amp; and
blues Free gift with flrtt order.
Call 304 -675 -1429.

-1 2

Situations
Wanted

Someone to live in with elderly
gentleman. some light cle~ing
involved Room &amp; board plus
small salary. If interested call
614-446·8507

On C!ov Chapel
VP,IIow Town Rd Wh1te wit h
brown spo ts prt bull. ears have
been,chpped Ph 614 -256 -1702

Roam and board for employed
man N1ee home Family atmos·
phere Ca11614-992-6873

FoUl¥! ca r keys m front o f Parler
and l ottie law Offrces Contac t

Baby sitti ng in my home. Monday thru Friday Prefer infanta to
.5 year old. Call 304-676-3774.

FOUND

Snn tinel Off1ce

,, "r

"The first thing I'm going to

Lost and Fo und

LOST

32

Mobile Homes

for Sale

1976 Windsor, 70•14, 3 bed·
room1. In very nrce condition.
Mty &amp;t•v on lot. $8000 7423033.
1973 20' Ch.teau travel trt1ler
Self contained, air conditroner,
thermatic controlled heater.
used verv little. 83400. W1lden
F. Routh, 304-67&amp;· 2834 or
876· 6737.

34

Business
,Buildings

Office space · Store space in Pl.
Ple1sant, A·One Real Eltate Ph.
304-875-5104
Renlals

7

Yard Sale

Gallipolis

&amp; Vici nity
Monday Dec 15. 16. 17. 198 6.
Addruonal m1sc . good hos p•l td
bed. sllwmg mac hin e. elect ric
roaster chrrst mas decoraions.
drshes &amp; pans 218 Thr rd Ave.

9

18

Wanted to Do

Need help with that special
cleaning job? We cleen homn,
renta l propertiet. offrc•s,
churchn. Glat&amp;burn Cleaning
Ser\lrCes Ph. 614·388-9027

Fmanml
21

Business
Opportunity

Wanted To Buy
I NOTICE I

cash tor late model
cleaan used cars
J1m Mrnk Chev -Oids Inc
Brll Gene Jo hn son
614-446-3672

We pay

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO . recommends that you
do busmet&amp; w1th people you
know, and NOT to send money
thrcugh the mall until you have
in\lestigated the oHerrng.

TOP CAS H pard fo r '83 mod el

and newllr used cars. Smtth
Burck"· Pon tiac. 1 9 11 Eastern
Ave Gall1poli!l Ca ll 61 4-4462282
S25 C!l:9h par d for junk cars.
Complete Bcdres towed awav
Call 614 245 9264 or 614·
682 6750
Buvmg dar ty gold, srl\ler coi ns,
rrngs JCWelry, sterling ware. old
co rns, large curre ncy. Top prrces Ed Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd Ave Mrddleport, Oh 614992 3476
BUVING RAW FURS• Ginseng.
Ye ll ow Roo t, beef and deer
h1des Also selling trapping
stJpplles. WheAt Utes. Nito L1te5
Hour s 1 00-9.00 Closed Wed
George Buckley 61 4-66 4-4761 .
QUILTS

BOUG HT SO lD
Cas h pard P re 1950's Smgle or
whole coltectron Call Ma rc and
Ellen Fu ln 614-992-210 1 dav s
or 614 592 2461 e~e n i ngs and
weakends
GUILTS

BOUG HT -SOLD
Cash pard Pre 1950 s. Single or
whole coHoc hon Ca ll Ma rc and
Ellen Fulli 614-992-210 1 days
"or 614 -692 -2461 evenrngs and
wallkends
Now buymg st11:elled corn and ear
corn Must be dry and clean.
Why d1111e 100 mrles when you
can get th e same price at MG M
Farm Crty rn Pomeroy? Call
61 4·992 ·21 91 and as k for
Richard
A good snare drum priced under
S1 00 Ca ll614· 742 2660
Buying JUn k cars Call after 5 00
614-992-5648

Employmenl
Services
11

Help Wanted

Lady to lr11e-in, care f01 elderly
lady 5 days a we ek. Roo m &amp;
board &amp; salAry, Pt Pleasant area
Ph. 614-446 479 8
Excellent Income fo1 part ti me
home assem bly work For mto .
call 312 -741 · 8400 Ext 313
ArrllnP.S now humg Fl1ght At·
tendants, Agents. Mechanic&amp;,
Custom er Ser11ice. Salaries to
&amp;50 K. Entry level positions Call
1-805-697· 6000 Ex t. A-9805.
-lcGo\lernment jobs 61 6,040 .
$59, 230 yr. Now hiring. Ca ll
805 ~ 687 · 60 00 Ext , R-9805 fo r
current federal list
Won t liv o· in mldd lo aged
wo man to wa tch 2 children. 1
chrld rn school Ltght house
wor k. modertlte cooking. Sala ry,
roo m t1nd board. Call 6 14 -742 2050 11fter 7 :00 p m.
Somaone to do roofing work on
pri11ate ho me. Must have no fear
of hfl,ighu Ce ll 61 4 -992 -2887.
Part tim e work-full time benef·
itall Members of ttte Army
National Guard ce n receive a
monthly pay check, $60,000 life
insu rance, S18,000 u du~:at ior~
asaiaunce and much more
304--675-3950 or 1·800· 642·
3619.
LBt Avon hulp you got the be1t of
those pos t Chriumas b1!1s and
blues Free gtft wrth firs t order,
call 304-882-2645 1
.Federal. State and Crvil Service
job• now allallable ~n your area
For Information call (805) 6449533

Apartment
for .Rant

Nic.ly furnished 2 bdr. 1pt.
Adults only. Inquire at corner
Firat 6 Olive St 11 Sheppards
Sales a. Service.

PACK
ABIG PUNCH!

4

23

Professional
Services

Sterks Tree and lbwn Service.
He d ges . sh rubs , b ushes
tummed, land1caping, atump
end leaf removal, 304-576·
2842 Of 576-2010

Real Eslale
31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr . air. pool, garage. Nice.
Commercial property, corner
lots &amp; highway fron togo. list
w•th us We h.ve buyen. A· One
Real Estate-Broker. Call 304·
674-5104 or 304-674-5386
1 2y r old hom e, 3 bedrooms, 1 11'2
bath, e•tra ltrge living room,
kitchen appliances, 8x14 utility
room. 2 car carport. 10•14
building, fruit tree&amp;, grape har·
bor, 1 80 acres, level lot Ap·
prox 15mi. from gallipohs, on a
bttck top road Ptl 614-25&amp;6836.
Neat 3 bedroom, carpeted.
cen tral heat &amp; air Newly remodeled, low utilitin, or will rent
02 4.900 Call 614 ·4.4 5·2495.
6 ro(lm house. 1 .2 acrn. Double
cnr gerage Located on Rose Hill
Bargain priced $20,000. Call
614-678-21513.
Go ver nment homes from 81 (U
repair) Oelinquent ta111 property.
Reponessions. Cell 805 ·887·
6000 E•t GH-98015 for current
repo hst.
2 bedroom house for ule rn
Clifton (Mi ble John10n proparty) Fully c~r ptted . recently
remodeled, new root. Alktng
$16 ,000 Call304-773-5534or
304-773-6784.
large house with three tots, 810
E. Main, Pomeroy. 118.000.
Call 614-985-4427 after 6 :00
p.m
Apanment for sale In Chester.
Call 814·9S6·3867.
380 Grant St . Middleport 6
roo ms; bllt h, garage, work shop
82 3,700. Make offer. Ca11614·
992-2502.
2 story. 3 bedroo m house with 1
car garage on ApproJI 1.5 acrea
$33,000. Call 514-992· 5104.
Hemlock Grove are1
2 br, kitchen. blthroom, With
laundry room. living room &amp;
dining room, all alec. Approx. 7
mrtes from Pt . PI on Rt. 62. 2
tracts appro• 1 tcremoreorl&amp;ll
overlooking Kenawhe River .
&amp;40,000. Clll 304-675-5440
between 8 .30 and 4 .30.

32

. .____ •--·

Mobile Homes
for Sale

NEW ANO US ED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL 'S QUALITY
M081LE HOME SAlES, 4 MI.
WEST. GAlliPOliS. RT 35
PHONE 614·448-7274.
End of year sale. No p1ym.n11
until April 1987, on any new
mobile home Purch811 before
Dec.31 , 1988. French City Mobile Home Inc. Ph. 814· 4489340
1986 mobile home far ule.
14•70. e.11cellent condition. 2
bedroom, 2 full beths. Ce ll
61 4·992 ·7163 .
8.1141 two bedroom with ga•
furna ce. C1ll 614· 986· 3360 or
614-985-3351 .

41

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom houses
for rent Ph . 446-1875.
3 Bedroom Renctt, Rodney
VIllage II , $285 00 per month.
plus depotlt. reference&amp; re·
quired. Bltckburn Realty Ph.
614-446· 0008

2 Bedroom. 1 '12 bath•. located in
downtown aree Adult&amp; only
reference• 81 depotit required
Ph. 6U-446-3776
3 bedroom house. ·90 G1rfield

Ave Ph 614· 245-5269 .

3 Bedroom on At 218
$300.00mo plus deposit Call
514· 268· 1623
2 bedroom house for rent in
Middleport . Completely remo·
deled New carpeting through·
out New cabtnets. S276 per
month plus deposit Call 614992-5858
Beautiful new house m Pomeroy Alao new one bedroom
furnilhed apartment In Middleport. Call 814-446-15&amp;2 or
614-992-5304
low rent unfurnished house,
Ohio Street. Pay own utililies
Phone 304-675-571 1 after 5
p.m.
House For Rent - 8 rooms.
beth. located on Lincoln Awnue,
304-675· 1 180.
2 story 6 -room• &amp; bath , btse- ,
ment. large yard, close to
schools, all carp. Referencetand
depo&amp;~t. 304·676-2861 .

42

Mobile Homes
for Rant

2 bdr .. aU utilities paid e.11c.,.,t
elec.. turn . or unfurn.. sec.
deposit required Convenient
location Call 614-446 -8558 or
614·445-4778
2 bdr. fully furniahed adults only,
util. pe1d. Call614-446-4110
In Eureka- nie e and clean. adults
only No pets. deposit required,
180 00 mo. call 61 4· 266· 1636
before 10a.m
2 Bedroom furnished. W• accept
HUD, Beautiful river view. Fo&amp;ters Mobile Home Pe rk 614446-1602
1985 14x60 1mi south of
gell1pohs dam St Rt 7 , No pett
call after 3pm Ph 266 ·6089
2 bedroom mobile hom ein'kygar
creek school dittrict Ph . 614446-0722
Plantsaub-drv lsion Buii~NilleAd
S175.00 per month.8100.00
Securtty deposit Call after 6pm
Ph 614-446-4554
Mobile hom e. Stella Court. Call
614·446·0758 .
12.1160 Mobile Horne. 2 bedroom
furnished. In Centenary ' 1rea
S226 .00mo . Ph. 446-2390.
3 bedroom, furnished or unfur·
nithed . 1 child, no pets Cell
304-882-2456.
2 bedroom mobile home, M•d·
dlepon. 0 . Reference with •ecurity depo stl . 304-882-3267
or 304· 773· 5024.

K &amp; K Mobrle ti omH, 2 and 3
bedroom mobile homes. 304675· 3000.
Two bedroom tre1ltr, co uples,
one small child References &amp;
Deposit. EY81rett Schw1rt1, Rt 1
Locust lane, Pt Ple a~~n t backot
K&amp;K.

Two bedroom trill•, air condl·
lion, w11her &amp; dryer, 8180 00
plus utilities, references ,..
quired. Gal\lpoli&amp; Ferry. 304175· 3216.

44

Apartment
for Rant

Nicely turnlshed mobile home
CA &amp; heat, exctl. locttion.
adult• onty. Call814·"8· 0l38.
513'1.! 3rd. Ave. 1 bdr. private
btth, 8140 per mo. Deposit
required. C1U 614·448· 4222
.,_tween 8 II 5.
Furnishtd eflldency •110 utili·
ti .. paid, sh•e beth, 701 4th.
Gallipolis. Clll448·44 1 I aher 8
pm,

51

Tuesday, December 16. 1986

Household Goods

KIT 'N' CAJIL YLI! ®br LIIITJ Wright

72

1AVNE 'S FURNITURE

1878Ford Ranger. Black. F150,.
running board1, cab llghtt.
Sh•p kKtldng ttuck. Carpadng.
AC. C.ll 814-992-7181
1973 C·&amp;!S Chivy luv Tandum
•3&amp;00. 1178 JD 310-C I woy
blldt and winch. *81500. 61•IU-1131 uk for Rick.,.

0
0
0

1981 Ditton plc:k~up truck. 4 '"
wheel drivt Call 61 ( -9925148.

73

Semorcitlzens,niceepenments
Ph 304-675-6104.
- - - - -- - - Unfurnished apt. 4 rooms &amp; bath
centrally located Refrtrencee &amp;
Security deposit required. Ph
814-448-0444
Furni&amp;hed apt. • 175 00 water
pd 2 bedroom 131 'h Fourth
Ave. P~ 448 -4418 after 7pm.

gr::MR;~:. 5R1d4.::~~3=~~··

SWAIN
1
AUCTION 6 FURNITURE 82
quve St. , Gallipolis. New &amp; uaed
WOOd·COal ltOVH, 6 pc wood LR
tulte 8399 , bunk beds 1199,
1ntron reclin•• 199, new &amp;
used bedroom suit", rangn,
wringer washers. &amp;: thon. New
livingroom tultes 8199 ·1 6~9.
l•mp1, alto buying coal &amp; wood
·~o\les . Call 614-448-31119.

Vans

.lil.l~ ~., .}.)G;r

'1bO

~~ 11-)20 Ml~

Television
Viewing

. ,.

.....

6 :05
6 :30

8o 4 W.O.

8:36
7:00

1911 International SCout, run1
•800.00. Ph . 61•-446782

gGod

~~~'-:""'~·'"~·~=~=~1~=;=~~~==~--------64

Misc. Merchandise

61

Farm Equipment

Peavey P A. Syatam XA700
mixer with spllk••· manttors, White F1rm Tr1ctor1. Best Price
microphones, ltand. 304-876· •n Area,· Sidtrl Equipmtnt Co,
3978
Htndnon, W. Ve. 304-8717421 :
65 Building Supplies 310 Can Dozer. good candl·
tion, .14100. 1977 · Chevy
pic:ll.up. good running cancltlon,
Building Material•
81 ,000. Motlnla earn shill.,,
Blodr.. brick, aw., pipes. win" good work condition, 30 ft.
dowt, lintels, etc. Clautt. Win· llevetor btd, 8800 304·878·
t•t. Rio Grande, 0 . C.ll 014· 1487 tnytk'ne.
246-5121 .

Oounry Applltnee. Inc GoOd
Furnished apt. In Rtcine. $200
J sed appliances and TV uts.
Call 614 -949-2801 or 614- · Open BAM to 8PM . Mon thro
949-2860
Sat. 814-446· 1699, 627 3rd. Concnrte blocks 1111111" yard or
Ave. Gallipolis. OH
delivery. M11on tend. Galllpollt
5 room unlurmshed apartment
Blodr. Co., 123% Pine St ..
for rent Call614· 992· 6434 Or \(alley Furniture, new &amp; ut&amp;d
Gallipolit. Ohio Clll 814·4•1·
304-882-2585.
~rge Hction of quality furni·
2783.
t,ura . 1216 Eastern A11e .,
New 2 bedroom apts. in M11on, Gallipolis.
Pole Buildings by Quttity
W. Va. Quiet setting, off street
Builders. Worbhops, carports.
perking Rent ttlrt&amp; at $199
anlm.r shelter1. g.-ages. FrH
54
Misc.
Merchandise
Call Linda Canon at 304-775.. tlmat81 . Phone 814·3145011 or Denise Streib et 6145782.
86 3- 4111 ( Equtl Hou11n g
•
I
.
Opponunity
Callahan's Used Tire Shop. Over
, ,000 tires, tizes12, 13.114, 15, 58
Pats for Sale
2 Bedroom apt. nice carpeting. •1 6. 16.6 8 milet out Rt. 218.
water- · paid, wuher 81 dryer Call 614-256-6251
ttook-up, stove, refrig. furnis hed
available J1n 1. 1987 Ph. Plastic cittllfn 1t1te approved, Dr-aonwvnd Cattery Kennel.
51 4-448· 7026.
pllttic septic tanks. pla1tic CFA Himalayan, Penlan •nd
,culverts. metal culverts. RON Slamue kitten•. AKC Chow
puppleo. Call 814-448-3S44
1 Bedroom apt, ell utilltie1 pa1d, •EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jack·
after 7PM.
washer &amp; dryer hook-up, 11ove &amp; son. Oh. 614-286 -1930
refrig, furnished. Rear of Smith
'
Groom &amp; Suppty Shap
Pontiac Buick Ph. 814-446· F~rewood delivered Oak • hick·
7025
ory, 1plit, HEAR voueh:-r, pickup Profa11lonal S.rvlot~. aH atylea,
load 836. Ca11814-446 1 2223or ell breedt, stile At. 141 O.llipolis, Ohio 46631, Julie Webb, Ph.
2 to 3 bedroom apt. Can\lenienl 614-448·3028 .
814--441-0231.
loc11ion in town. All utilities p11d
8326 OOmo . referencet &amp; dep- 1803-1978 Ohto 175th Anni·
osit reqwred. Witem•n Real venary Colt Government model AKC regittered Beagle pupple~,
Euate AgeP'CV Ph 814-446- 45 caliber apaciel edrtlon. 1 of 11wks. old, •50 00 each. C.ll
3544
250 collector~ Item n&amp;ver bnn 814-388-a485.
f1red . $1.000 00 firm Call 614·
2 and 3 bedroom apartments 441-9476 anytime wk-endt, AKC Regittlftd Norwegian Elk
tiound1, 6wka old reacty to go
and houses In Pbmeroy or 111fter'6 week days.
·
Ph.614-268-1117.
Middleport. Furnl1hed or unfur·
nlshed. Pay own utilitiet. Call DP Gympac Plus, lfor sale
days 614-992-2381
complete with bench, leg ma- Winter felhion• 6 tpacial chrltt·
chine, rowing, curl II let b.-. mu gifts for your pet1. Groom &amp;
1 ar~d 1'lz bedroom apt. available 1651b&amp; of weight &amp; comt1 with Supply Shop Ph. 614-448-0231
at Rivers1de for rent. Ba1ic rent self supporting ttend. $400 .00
Regestered TOy Poodl• 2 f•
ttarts at 8179. plus utilities
Call after lpm 814 -446-2252 .
male, 1 male. n26 00 ••·
t200 security deposit required
Inquire at 614-992-nB7.
64 Commadore Computer with 'R..dy for Chriltmn Call 614·
prrnter, softwtre. ditk drive ctll 441-1854
1 bedroom apt. for rent. Batie 614-268-1989
AKC Regiatertd Pekinese pup·
ran1 m•n• 1216 e month that
includes all utilltiH. Dapotlt JEWELRY · We will bill oft•ing pies. AKC Miniature Dtchthund
requif8d of 8200 . Conttct Vii· 20% oft our elr..dy low pricN puppin Boxer pupt Ph. 114ltge Manor Apt. Mtddleport. from now until christm11. 446·7920
814-992-7787. Equal Housing Franks • Pawn Shop Ph. 814Rlgistered Miniature Oach·
Opportunity
446-0840.
shund Puppln. Ready tnd will
Apartment• for rent In Pomeroy. Stove coal -wood burner with hold fDrChriatrn. Ph. 614-379One end two bedroom Cletn fan -blower. Oriental , rug' very 2273
and nice Call614-992-6215 or large. Item&amp; in good condition.
114·992·7314 .
B81t offer accepted Ph . 614- 2 rtgistfl"ed Weikert. 1 male, 1
female . 9monthsold. One7yeer
379-2144
old Grand Nlgtlt Champion
APARTMENTS. mobile homes.
hou1e1 Pt Ple•entand Gallipo· 20in. Dirt bike, 24i_l'\ · &amp; 26in. Walk..-, mtle. C.ll 614·149·
•I
lit. 814-448-8221 .
10·speed biket. Zemth Console 2867.
Stereo Ph 614·367-9 448.
UKC pit bulls 4 wHits old, reldy
One bedroom 1pertment, Hand·
to go byChrittm•Eve.-871.00.
erton. 1150 monthy Stove and Oak antique kitchen cabinet with
reffigerator furnished Phone Uour bin and roll top refinished 126 00 will hold. 304-882·
3795 . 1
_3_0 4-_8_7_&amp;_·1_9_7_2_.- - . , - - - UOO.OO. Ping Pong Table complete 850 .00 Ph 614·446 ·
For sale Pomer•nian puppi•
Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt. 4614.
I
pure bred 7 wellk1 old, wormed
V1rd and ba1ement. 8150. Deposit. 304 -175 -7541 avaninga.
Pllid brown &amp; tan • gold couch &amp; flrtt shott. 8100. each.
and matching chtir 1Ph. 814- 304-S82-221 1.
Furn 1 bedroom apt., first floor. 245-9397.
t
8215 00 month Heat and water
57
Musical
turn~ shed. Ret . S. dep. 304-17!S ·
4 tons of lump co•lt7s.oo. coal
2657 . •
&amp;tove 875.00 1979 Dodge
Instruments
Omnl 024, auto, high mileage
t860.DO Ph. 814-44a-8518
45 Furnished Rooms
Beautiful Christm• Gift- Ptcan
6 chain binders, 2 of them are
Console Piano, eJicellent condiFor rent Sleeping Room s and recoileu 8100 .00 W1ter tiOr\ Call 614·-"6· 766!S after
light house keep ing rooms. Park softnar used vary linle 150.00 4 .00pm.
Central Hotel. Cell 814-446· Ph. 514· 448-2819
0756.
M1ud hardwood 1la6a. S12. per Upright pitno. W11 player. Oak.
VfltV goodcond . 304-876· 1320.
Rooms for rent. dey weelc. bundle CMtalni"g appro• 1 Y.r
tons
F08
Oh
io
Pallet
Co.
mont h. Gallia Hotel Cell 814Pomeroy. Ohio. Caft614· 992446 - 9716~ Rent as low a&amp; S120
fMJII ~IIIJIJIII'
6461 .
I
monttt
&amp;. liVI: SIIII:k
Furnished room 919 2nd, Galli- Firewood, all tterd 'flood Heat
vouchers
accepted
t35
.
a
polis. t 116 Utilities pd. Share
bath. Single male. Cell 446· pickup load. Phonf 814-7422468
I
44, a 8fter 7pm
61 Farm Equipment
U1ed 275 gallon f~el oil tank
$35. Can be 1een ak Meigs Tire
46 Space for Rant
CROSS &amp; SONS
Ce nter or clll614 -992-2101 or U.S. 35 Welt, Jackton, Ohio.
614-992·2319.
I
514-2SI-8481 .
I
COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park, Firewood . Seuohfl d miaed M111ev Ferguson. New Hollend.
8ulh Hog Sit• • Servict. Ov..Route 33, North of Pomwoy
htrdwood, aplit a~d delivered. 40 uaact trtctora to chooo from
large lott . C1ll 614-992· 7479
840 tor X·largt P.ick·up lotd, • compl•a lint of new &amp; uHd
614-992-3110. I
equlpm.m. Larg•t selection In
Bu &amp;ine'' or Offlc&amp; Space for
rent. New H1ven . 304 -773- Used 275 g•llon L ei oil tank S .E Ohio
6024 or 304·882·3267
835 . Ctn btr s•n ~t Mtlga Tire JIM "S FARM EQUIPMENT
Center ot c1ll 614 ~ 92 · 2101 or CENTER . SA 35 W. GolllpiiHo.
Mobile home lots. small children 814-992-2319.
Ohio Calll14·441·1777, eve.
accepted. Rt. 1 L.ocutt Rd.
Mobile home lots, Ohio River Firewood . SeasOned mixed 614-446-3192 Up front trac·
tott with w1"1nty over 40 uuc:l
Rotd 8r Patten Creek, At 1
hardwood, split llf'ld delivered. trlcton. 1000 taoll.
304-675-1078:
840 for X-l1rg1 pick-up load.
614-992-3110.
UTiliTY SLOG . SPECIAL;
27'l!l38'x9'EAVE wtth 11idlng
200 plecetof slatJ lroof). 1 2•24 door &amp; servia door •4.288.00
inches 12.00 each or all for
•ectad.
UOO. Ctll 814~949 -'2801 Of Iron Hor11 Buildings Ph.l14·
514-949-2880. 1
332·9745.
51 Hpusahold Goods Firewood for sale.' 135 'per load,
SALE SAlE SAlE
5 load• t160 . f()elivered tnd
Jivldent Farm Equipment
stacked. Cell 814-949-2501
Speelll veer tnd nle price~ on
18 cu ft. uprigtlt freezer, cvclli af1., 6:00p.m. i ·
Trtctort and VlrmHr Hay
defrost . Carbin Ia Snyder Furnl·
Equlpm.nt; up to •3000.00 offl
Tony
'•
Gun
Rept'r•.
hot
reblu•
Mowere. mower condhlann.
lure 955 Second Ava Ph.
ing.
Open
9:00AM
to
7
·00
PM
448-1171
rak•teddlfs. l round blln.
Coli 304-875-4131 .
Teh advantage of your
Good used colcr T.V ' 1, ung•
m.nt t1x crlldh tor the lilt time
from ti&amp;.OO to 81!SO.OO C1ll Shop for C h,rlttmu with thit\ e.-I A compl•ellnecf bft
FUllER
8RUS~ PRODUCTS,
Lee T V.'t Sale 1t 814· 448·
handling ·• fHCitng 1ccaeorl•,
Coli 304 ·875· 1p9o.
1149.
feed bunkl, ltvlltock Wltlrert,
grind• mlx..-a, wagon,, rbtery
3 piece nurstfY &amp;et 1121.00 Call For tale 10'' r~al1rm saw. lots tHin, ra41ry-cutt... blldes,
of attachment•. Plut Hobby disc culttvtt0f1, pfowt, ,....,.,
614· 288-1 205.
corver. 0475 . 304-81!2-2203.
post driven,woodlplltten,
W..1lngh~u1e Eleeuic Range,
glial, hadg•ea, h"ucfl. redts.
For
111e
toboQgan-never
used.
white li.. n.w 81&amp;0.00, 2
truck t.dt, trtllerl, IIWIVIfl.
compteta .btd• 150.00et. h1r1 p1dded ... ttng for fcur 1&amp;0.00,
Hueq't'lma ch81niiWI.
•prtnas • mlttrHI 125.00 Ph. TIH1ny style hinging light t 40 ;
USED
VIolin
with
Case
and
1tand
304-176-5901
A veriety of uaed tractort, round
1125 ; Ski bobts Polomhe lizt biN•. wegont, toNcco setttr,
Pick.,., UsN Furniture. Good 8. 125 · Nordi ca tiie 7 , 840.; culttvlton ditc:, plows, rlk•.
qullity uted fumhure. Open 9 to Junior golf clubs 860. 304-676· '7'NH hiVbin.. IqUiri bll...
l
6 or call for appointment. 6110
mowing machine. h•FO)'W· bullh
304-875-8483 or 175-1450.
flog .
intufated cemoflaugt Bee ua for • complete line of
.Soft
' bed couch. 304·175- Surplu1
decron covtralls. small. m•
44 11
dium, large 82&amp; 00; XL 830.00. Plrtl • tervlce ••· 1· " ·
4212.
Ctrhlrts, armv iltul clothln8. 1-8 ~- v•lt ~ tor ~
•• _.. ~ r-,or·
P~·•
Tippen tlec. cook stove. IVIC· boota, blbl denim 118 0
orrollulld. 0200. C.nl14-387oda gr•n. UOO.; 1878 Chev. Wranglet' jaclurtt, 1hlrt1, plain 7114.
drive, 360 l uto., poc6tet denim pant• 14 011. Sam
pickup 4
8ft. bed, good tires. 82,1500. Ph. . Somerville, Junction lndtpend· Alllt Chllmer C TrMtor wMh 2
ance Road , /Old Rt. 21 , E..t • row cuhlwaton. RuM good
372·1390.
Rtventwol?4 Fridey, Saturd.y, 19715.00 Ph. 114-2H·111l.
Werrn Morning coal II wood Sunday, 12,:~· 8 : 00 P.M . other
stove with blower 8t pipes days after 4;00 P.M. After O.c. 1121-1831 F20 Fermllllftllqul
·
Warm momtng apt. ld:• gu 17th, open dalty. 12:00 tHI8:00 •lator. ..-~wh-~- · run1
.
hooter 050.oo . 304 · 175 - 4~31 . P.M. Ph0f1o 304·273-5811.
0300. COli 114·742· 201 .

I

i

I

'"""t·

wh"'

'f.'"

62

" I 1!1E6AN THI~KIN&amp; W~ COUI.D RE'AI.LY

197&amp; DodGe Van, AM -FM Rt·
dio, PS, new tlret. One owner,
good condition Must 5111 call
anytime 446· 1641 .

1871 Jeep CJS. Good condition. Rabuih engine. new body
work. Call 114 · 742 ~ 2975 after
3:00p.m.

WIN THI~ ~CAVE'NGE'R HUNT." ...

.' '

',•'

''
,.I '

Wanted to Buy

Now buying shill corn or ear
corn . C.ll forlltlltquotet. Rivlf
City Farm Suppty, 614·"8·
2916

Motorcycles

'·''

1981 v...,ahl 060, run• good,
low miles, t .llctllent shape
0800.00 Ph. 614-446- 1522

76

63

Livestock

&amp; Holatein I'Pringer Heifer•.

Aver-a• weight 9601bs. Ph.
614·-·4053
AOHA Stud Colt. Big ond
mu1cultr. 8400. or trldt. C.ll
814-849-2455 or 814-992·
78S3.

&amp;

Grain

Llrge round bails of hay for ..le
110.00 each Ph. 814-4411012.

Servicr!s
Ho,ma
Improvements

BASEMENT .
WATERPROOFING
UncondillonM llt•lm• gueren·
111. Locel reftrtncn furnMhtd.
FrM ••imatll C•ll collect
1-114-237-0488, d.-y or night.
Rogers Ba se ment
Waterproofing.

1881 Ariet-K Dodge Stltion
Wtgon. AM - FM" Stereo
Cassette, auto. CC. ,..window
wi.,.-1, good condltton Ph ·SWEEPER end eewing m~ehine
repair, p..t1, end 1uppli•. Prck
I
814-245-919a.
up and delivery, Dtvis Vacuum
1984 Mercury Lyn.11 StM~n Cl81ner, one h11f m1t1 up
Wtgon. 4 · tpeed, AM · FM . Georg• Cretlt Rd. C.ll 61482,719.00 Johna Auto Sal•. 441-0294
lullnille Ad., O.lllpollt.
FTM Generll Contracting 13vn
1884 Ptvmouth Reli.,t. auto, experi.,.ce Rooting • Con·
t lr, cru .... AM· FM . Cuh p[lc. ttructlon Ph 814-388-9308
Frn ntim.tn 10" off during
83,418.00, Jahns Auto
BullwMie A~. Galllpollt.
th1 hollday1. offer ••pirttJ Jan
16, 1987.
1979 ChrytlerCordobl ti T., air,
PB. PS, 47,000 mil... Sti•P RON ' S Television Service
cu! 91. FlntAve Ph. B14-UI- Moun call• on RCA . Quu~r ,
GE . Specillling In Zenith Call
OSI8.
304-578· 2396 or 614-446·
1988 Plymouth Turitmo , 2454.
•1,100 00. 1981 Pfymouth Re ·
liant, U ,IOO,OO Ph. 11•·441 - Fttty Trn Trimming. 1tump
1682.
rernov11. Clll 30C·675· 1331 .

s.l•.

1979 Dido Cut I•. o 1no. .,
boot offer C.U14· 9.8 5-3505.
1984 Dodge Dlplom ... 30,000
mil•. Lo.dld . •1100. Cell
114·742·2451 .
1981 Mercury Merquit PS, PB,
tir, crul11. Good condition New
tirn. t1900. C.ll 114-9492S01 or 814·848 -2SIO.
1979 Oodgt Mllgnum 1276.
Coli 114·7•2-2481 .
1881 Olda 98, automltictrt'n •miltion; ~ doof, gOod condition.
Phon• 114-182· 5S70.
1978 Mun.ng, naw paint, new
tires, e•ctll.nt condition. B81t
offer. Pho.. 814-892-7887.

t982 GMC o-15 Plcl&lt;·up. I
cyllndt&lt;, longbtcl, 17.000mHM.
Good ""- 03,000 Ph. 814-448-QIO.

surprise Tonv w•th a very

II

NUMBERED! NaiN

GIYe IT U"l

.,
'·'
•

..•

.

••

. '.I'
•••

-.'

..,.. .
..'
.
..; ~

87 . ·

WHAT WILL BE. lHE: GREAT
COOMVIJlCATORS l.f.GACY
10 lHf. AME:.RlCMJ
ru.:A£ ...

9 00

·~ ·
.,

•

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
I T(X;1( C HIR&gt;a-J HIS
LEASH TO THE VETS

WE DID FINE UNTIL
CHIP.;; RECCErN IZED
THE BUILDING...

Y ESTERDAY.

AND THEN, ALL OFA
6LIDDEN, Wr:' WE:RE
iWOMILESAWAY.

1

8

Heifer - LobbY., - Giant - Aghaal - NEIGHBORS

Famous Quote: 'Borrow trouble ~ that's your nature,
but don't land It to your NEIGHBORS.

BRIDGE
Avoidance play
to the nth degree

DON'T GIVE TH' VARMINT
ANY MORE IDEES !!

ACROSS 41
I C hemical 42

.

spray
5 Footprint
9 Love d one

whether or not to break his

11 Tibetan

••

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..••.
'

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.,'·
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.~,

PEANUTS .
1 WAS WONDERIN6 IF

_,•'

'{()U'D LET US MAKE
SOME PAPER CHAINS FO~

Upholstery

OUR

••'
i.''

VOU KNOW. AS SORT
OF A CLASS PROJECT..

WE COULD START WITH
MV MATH

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

CHRISTMAS TREI: .•

I'

1:

engagement and l1ndly
gives bir1h. 12 hrs .} Pan 2 of
3 , In Stereo
(]) 700 Club •
ID CIJ Moonlighting !CCI
160 mm .}
(IJ MOVIE : 'Going My
Way'
@Ill illl MOVIE : ' luy and
Moe' lA} .
® Christmas Special
With Luciano Pavarotti

monk
12 Wobble
14 Mature
15 Apiece
16 Me morable
years
17 Beak
18 Wrath
19 Ten t h of
a sen
20 Yemem
seapon
22 Chinese
socie ty
23 Steak

from the Notre

"-.._'I
~

.. ' '
,. .. r '

••

SOUTH

t6 32
.AKQ7S2
+7
+A 10 3
Vuhierable· East-West
Dealer: East
West

North

East
I+

2+'
Pass

3.
Pass

Pass
Pass

•weak jump shaft
Opening l ead : • Q

game contract by discarding a spade
loser on dummy's last little club.
Although declarer had played nicely, at the other table the opening spade
queen lead was ducked, East winning
the singlet~n king. Now declarer dld
not have to be so careful about keeping West off lead. He drew trumps ud
made his contract easily by playing
ace and a club.

2 Maxim
3 Enter
abruptly
4 Musical
note
5 Dinah
o f song
6 Male~ lace
71magme
8 Gazi ng
10 Isaac 13 Earshot

Yetotenlay'o A!Qwer

15
21
22
23
24

Past ry
goody
Actress
Susan
Small bird
He p layed
Superman
Make
stride s

27 Frolic
28 Englis h
river
30 Salary
32 Therefore
33 German city
38 Turmoil
39 Ex1inct
hird

order

Dean"
26 Ne rvous
27 Winsome
29 Mldianlte
king
30 Hos1illties
31 Haggard
nove l
34 Mover's
truck
35 Imitate
36 He bre w
lette r
37 Hue
39 "Gentle on

® Gatfery
II(]) CIJ Ill (IJ ® G1 illl {)I)

min .I(A}

+KQS

+K J 10 9 S42

25 "Gloomy

CD Portrait of America: Co-

(]) hat of Oroucho
Ill 111ta1e Amen~ 1988:
Pelra Competition 160

1,

+J91

I Italia n
city

Rim

My -"

mick

•

43

I 0 Alan Ladd DOWN

Ill

SNAKE!!

•10 I

Formerly
Adam's
grandson
Yemenite
port

a grueling bicycle race. Glen
pressures his wtfe to abort
her baby , Sam must dec1de

NFL's
Superstera
George Hallas IR}
1!11 (!) M'A'S' H
(]J Fred Waring'o U.S:•
Chorus
® Cold Froaty Morning
@ Honeymooners
t 1 :20 CIJ MOVIE: 'It Started In
Naples'
1 1 :30 D (]) llll Tonight Show
Tonight's guests are Steve
Marlin, Singer Sandi Patti
and magician Joseph Gabriel. 160 min.lln Stereo.
(IJ SponoCen1or
(f) WKRP in Cincinnati
• (!) Tul
Ill (f) ABC NeW. Nlghtllne
®®Magnum. P.l.
Ill Cli1 Hot Shota Amanda,
Jason and Pendleton pan&gt;cipate in a 'murder-mystery
weekend ' at a country inn
until 1hey uncover two real .
life killings . (70 min .}
12:00 (1) Burna &amp; Allan
(!)NFL Filma PmentoiR} .
Cil Jefferaont1
•(!)Rowhlde
Cil SCTV
12:30. (]){)I) !Ate Night with
David Lenerman Tonight's
guests are Jay leno, Dizzy
Gillespie and tennia atar Pam
Shriver. (80 min } In Stereo.

tK

• 86
+Q 8 3

by THOMAS JOSEPH

(1) Hardcastle and McCor-

- '

EAST

WEST
+QJI09 S

ti,,,.~.-(

N-s

'

- ' I
I

+A&amp;

Although West 's two-spade b1d
suicidal," it was a weak jumpshift response, used by many experts.
The deal occurred in a crucial match
m lhe World Teams last September.
When today's South, Ron Rubin , arrived in four hearts, he didn' t care for
hiS chances. Although normally a
queen lead would deny the king , Rubin
was suspicious of his ezpert opponent
on lead. So be grabbed the ace, immediately regretting his haste when the
king appeared from East. Still he had
to go about his business of establishing
dummy's fourth club.
Doing that without allowing West to
have the lead was not a simple task.
Bul there was one card combmation
that would work, and declarer had to
play for it. At trick two he played a
low club frO!Jl dummy. If East had
played the king or queen, declarer
would have played low from his hand.
He would then have returned to dummy and played anotber dub, intending
the same strategy. However, he was
spared that trouble when East played
low He rose with the ace and played
another club. East had lo win the
queen of clubo and could oot get his
partner on lead to cash his two spade
tricks. Eventually a third club was
played , and later Ron Rubin made his

lorado 160 m in.}
1 0 ;30 (J) Celebrity Chefs
t1 :00

40Sweet
o r hard

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES- Here's bow to work It;
AXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

One letler stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L 's, X for the two O's, et c . Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hinls. Each day the code letlers are diffe·rent.
CRYPTOQUOTE
12- 16

S P T (; ll Y II H I.

\ 11 ( 1 ()[1
liAY O O

II R Y L

p ll

t' IIEYT

llR ll

I; II \'

II

.10

till

I!TIIIiRM

nvn 'wov 'J

QEII F.L oTo
Yetiterday'o Ceyptoquote: LEARN FRoM I.WI: AN I I
CORRECT YOUR MI ~'TAKES IN LI V I ~C: .- ('IIIUSTIAN
MORGENSTERN

Cil ABC No- Nlghttlne
ill MOVIE: 'Kid Blue'
19 MOVIE: ' Alexander the
Oraat'

2 :40 •

•

1 :00
1 :2&amp;

(It MOVIE: 'Goldie and

the

Bour Go to Holly-

Wt!O&lt;f

ffi Jack

Benny

Cll Dick Clllien

e

(!) Wild, Wild Woot
({) MOVIE: 'The Pink Jun-

~e·

1 :30

D (})

Todlly'a Bualne11

.Ill Doble' Glltla

.,

,,

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ti-11-H

+a 7 52

seems

®@ News
t 0:20

NORm

tA874
.J9 3

By James Jacoby

a man who nsked his life to

CHICKEN STEALIN'?
WHAT ARE YOU
MOONSHININ'?
LOCK IN' PAW UP
GAMBLIN' ON CARDS?
FOR THIS/.
TIME, rf j
SALT AN'
SHERIFF?
[~~~~.._:BATTERIES?

I

James Jacoby

seve a small boy from dan ger, whtle Jack gains adv1ce
on commodities from a
group of e lderly people . 160
mini

!I

Complele the chuckle quc1ed

YEnEIDAY'S SCIIM·IIlS ANSWEIS

Jackie anemprs to intervtew

BARNEY

them."

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

Demo Cathedrel m Montreal.
160 m1n}
10:00 0 (IJ Jack and Mike ICC}

.••''

IMin. He grlni'Mid and eald, " I -

PRINT NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES

~e~.~r:::~ ~~!~~~~~~ '

classics

tl8kad him how he got lhe Icing eo

_

by fillinv In the missing words
L-.1.-..L.- -'·--'---"-·....J ..
you develop lrom step No. 3 below.

··o

.

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I1-"""'TIN~s..:r.I6,:D~I:.E. :C;. I,:S~I---~1 e

s1ngs ··Avo Maria.' ·
Holy
Nigh1 " end other Cnris1mas

!'

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0

The Metropolitan Opera star

I

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Seavers

• ' I '

--·..

I1..::::::::::_-_,

lebrate Chris1mas with the

i·
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•

,....;.L:...;.I
,._
,-,· · icing
My nephew llkea to put lhe
I I..:D~R~L--11
~~ I
on hie mom's cupcekee. I

'1

tattered homeless girl to ce-

• ; •r'

&amp; Heating

Coli. lim81tona. gr~Wel , etc
Delivered 1 ton end up. Jim
Llnler, 304-&amp;75·1247 or 676·
7397

EEK &amp; MEEK
ltv 'rCXR ()JfkJIW. SIR .. .

Plumbing

CARTER'S PLUMBING
ANO HEATING
Cor. Fourth tnd Pine
Gallipollt, Ohio
Phone 614-446-3888 ar 6,4441-4477

IMPO~TANT

IS THAT YOU'RE OUT·

Ashby Conttructl&lt;;n. carpen ·
lery, rM1odeling, room tddltlon.
cemtnt blocll work. roaflng,
Interior •nd a.11tlrior painting.
siding. Roofing. FrM •tlm1t15.
304 · 675~ 5446 or &amp;78·5152.

82

spectal Chnstmas card .
MacNeil-Lehrer
News hour
® G Ci2l Wizard Simon a1tempts to protect a 12-yearold 'wo~ girl' from an unfeel·
ing scientist and a ruthles s
tndustna1ist. who want to
use the child for their own
means 160 min .}
® Nova: Leprooy Can Be
Cured (CCI Nova s1ud1es
"!hY some 12 million people
worldwide still suffer from
leprosy, even though a cure
has been evailable for more
tha n 40 years 160 m1n.}
@ MOVIE: 'Chriatmaa In
Connecticut'
B:05 CIJ NBA Basketball : Phlla·
delphia 78ers at Milwaukee Bucks 12 hrs , 15 min.}
8:30 0 CD Growing Paino ICC!
Ben unexpectedly br~ngs a

(IJ

Rotery or cabls tool driling.
Most wells completed 11med1y.
Pump ..1.. end service. 30•·
181-3802 .

1181 Ford R1nger 31.000
·m••· tapper'. runnlno board. A 6 M Cuatom Coucheo ond
New ttr-. AM-FM a.,ette,
s ' ~ trona. ••IQO
.R•uphotttel.
~.
·oo "'·
'CI~
Oh 6 4 st.
2"!At. 7, CI'QWri
81 2&amp;8·1411
·
·
·
· • · 1&lt;470. Eve.
81 · 448-3438 . Opon doily a to
72 Chovy '&gt;I tDf1, huvy duty. 5, Sot . 8 :30 to1 ;30. Old 6 ,...,
1octy feh', motor needl minor UpholtarMI .
wort. •*X) firm. Calll14-241·
1077. ,
Mowrey's Uptlolsterlng serving
trioounty ere• 21 Yllrt. The bast
,1973 Dodge Truck.. gOod coRdi- in furniture upholltering. Call
· 175 · 4114 tor fru
tion. Mult ...1 Ph. 8 14· 441- 304
lltimot".
7.14 '
1 --~------

,'-----'

'

lttrkl Tr" and Llwn Service,
H1dge1 . shrubt. bu &amp;h•&amp;
lrlmmed , landsupmg and
ttump remov1l. L11f remo11al
304-578-2010 or 578-21142.

-

Truck• for Sale

..
'
••

RINGlES'S SERVICE . uporlertced carpertt•. electrician,
m110n. p.tntw..roofin'g (includ·
ing hot tar application) 304·
·871-208B .. 576-71&lt;47.

85 General Hauling
1179 lulcl&lt; Rogal s,.... Coupe
(llactt, rad interior, vinyl top. PS ,
PB, auto. wtre whMlll, new ttrn
end blttary. A-1 condition . rJ1mt1 8oy1 Watlf Service. Alt o
pools filled Call614 -266· 1141
t199S. C.ll 304-8a2-24a8.
or 614-448-11711 or 614-(46·
1984 PontiO&lt; ~.000. 02.110. 7911 .
Phono304-871·8141.
T &amp; LWeter delivery anytime Ph.
11'· 388 -9732 same day
1985 VW .lotto. • ·• 5 opood. dollY...,.
em-fm t.,., 28,000 mil•. ltRI
undtr w~rranty . 304· 87&amp;·1440
um .. tone end slabwood h t uled.
dOl'; 575-159&amp; ovonlng
AI 1Tromm, Rutland. Call 614·
742· 2328.
1875 Plymouth 4 dr. po. pb. oc.
cruloo, good cond t8SO . C.l Wtttenon' s W1ter Hauling,
304~
· 77..:..:..3·..:.630:..:.::3_ ·_ _
-p1070 rauont--1111· rate1 , lmmed1ate
gallon delivery. cistetns,.
1980 Iuick Rivwe .3.800. 2.000
pools, well. etc. can 304'-1571·
304-S?e-2284.
2919.
72

' •,•
'
••

•

71
Autos for Sale
---------

1889 Pontlec UrMnt, new
tr1ntmi11ion, rMr-end, w1ter
pump, tlelders. Nll.clt body
wort. 0900.00 Ph. 614·448·
2819.

"

J

81

1878 Nov1, IUtomatlc. PS, P8,
AC. A·on• condition. 2 door.
Stlirley Elkin1. 27 Ewna Hgt1.
Golllpollo, OH.
•

.:r: WA5N'T iHI:? MAmF?
of MY P~iiNY·

Stlt contelned tilde· in camp If
Sleept 4. C1n be -letn It
Syracute on Second St Cell
514-912-7111 .

I rrt iiSIJ IIr laiiOII

1979 Oldtmobile Sttrfire, runt
good, • n.w tirH,· 4 cyl.,
4·JPMd. t500.00 Call anytime
.
114-3a8-9718.

.

Motors Homes
&amp; Campers

Mi.11ed gre11 hiiV for ..11 C.ll
114-948-2237.

Mutt Mil 1978 Datsun 200SX
IJ,OOO actual mil•. !S· tpeed
trtnamlslioft. kl;ob • runs good
0900.00 Ph.514·448-81108.

"
"'
...

7:35
8 :(10

••

'19
Hay

•'

Auto Pa rta
&amp; Accessories

Budget trantmllliont uted S.
rtbutlt all tVP•· TorQue conv•·
ter1 a. transfer c•es. Engine
ov• haul kits AIUson TrM1ml1·
tion part1 and CVC Joints Will
. dlltver, CQh and carny or in1tall
"" 614· 379-2220.

\"IAL.FWAY PoWN Tl1E
5!&lt;=i 5L.OPE, ~ {&lt;EAU'Zt=P

'.•

CCC Generic Certificate•, 304·
571· 1807.

64

7 :05
7 :30

'•'

MacNett·Lehrer
Newshour
Gl Ci2l {)I) Wheel of Fortune
@ Bllmev Miller
CD Sanford and Son
II Cil Cil New Newlywed
Game
CD 1986 Equitable Famttv
Ski Challenge Coverage
from Vail, CO lA}
0 Cll Judge
(]J Bless Me Father
® Wheal of Fortune
II illlllll Jeopardy
@ Bonaon
CIJ Honeymooners
II(]) llll Matlcick (60 m1n.}
In Sweo.
(J) Hall Town
Ill NHL Hockey: Montreal
Canadians at St. Louia
Blues 13 hrs.l Live.
Cil College IIHketball:
Ohio State at Dllyton 13
hrs.}
Q (J) Who' I the Boaa1
ICC} While Tony chooses
the nght Christmas gth for
Angela. Angela hopes to

_
11

.11 11. t

®Newo

'.

1985 Ford Ranger 4"4, eKe.
con~. duale.11hsu11. v-6 , ps, pb,
five tpltltd. 304·875- 7!21 aher
5 p.m.

(J) 3 -2 -1. Contact ICC) .
Secret City
@ facta of Ufe
(Il Andy Griffith
II (]) Gil NBC Newa
Ill NBA Today
Cll G CD ABC Newa
liD (!)Hogan' a Heroes
(]J Doctor Who
® Ill Ci2J CBS News
® Body Electric
@ GoodTimn
(J) Safe at Home In Stereo.
II (]) PM MIQulne
(J) Hard&lt;:aotle and McCormick
Ill SportaCenter
Cll Enhlrtalnmenl Tonight
ET talks wrth actress Glenn
Close about her new f1lm .
"Fatal Anraction ".
1!11 .(!) MOVIE: 'Dr. Zhi ·,
vago'
0 CD People' 1 Court
(]J Nightly Business Report

2

®

,.

1979 · c~.. , swe. 4 wheel
drrve, loaded, ntw 1 Ox SO tir11,
55.000 milll. or fair offer.
304-1178-2842 after 8 p.m.
571-2010.

74

r

..,:.:.K.:;,A,.:L..,:I:...:E:r--~1

®

•'

IC farm four simple words

A

(J) Big Valley ,

''1 ,.. .

tho

l&gt;e·

I ti I~ IHI I

II CIHIJ III CD 00 Ill illl illl
Ill Mudll SportaLook
fl (!) JefferaoM

Dodge Window Ven. 3·
1pHCI. 225, 6·cyHnder runt
good. body good t850.00 Ph.
814·241· 9624.

40

lew

NeM

~ 971

•

0 four
Roarranee lollen of
oc:ramblod words

EVENING
6:00

.........

Tilt Milt
PVULII ,

12/16/86

''
.,'

0 .

a••

.
W~&amp;hefl,
dryllft, APPLIANCES
raftlg.-atort,
GOOD USEO
re,nges Skagg 1 Appllancllll,

fbi I DON'T MAt:~;. ~
CALLS! '510€ ~ AT MY Cff~l

Trucks for Sale

1974 FQrd F100.. 3151 engine,
like new 1lumlnum topper.
nlld• some body work. heel·
lent work vtNcle. As Is 8760.
Phone 114· 7U-2745

Sot• 1nd ch1lr• priced from
*396 to 1996. T1bln t50 and
up to 8126. Hid••·beds 8390
to 8696. R•clln•ra 8221 to
83715. Limps U8 to t1ZI.
Oinettes ~ l109 lhd up to t498.
Wood llbl• w-1 dulirt 8285 to
t79,. Desk t100 up to 8371.
Hut~ 1400 and up. Bunk
bed• complete w· mattr"'"
8291 end up to 8_3915. hby bed•
111.0118176. Mattre11•orbo•
IPfings full or twin t63, firm
873, and 883 Queentttt8226.
Kin; $350. 4 dr.wer chett telL
Or•••• t89. Qun p1binet1 B.
10.1&amp;r 12 gun Gu or eiKtrlc
rahga 8376. Baby mattretiH
835 a. 846. Bed fremH 820,
83() &amp;r Krng frame t50. Good
sel.ctlon of bedroom suites.
metal cabinets, headboard&amp; e30
and up to t8&amp;.

Nice 2 bedroom apt. retrig. •
stove 8t water furnished . No
pets, 4 '11 miles from Gltupolit.
Uted Furniture· Wesher &amp;
8210.00 per mo. 860.00 dep· . d~Jer ,
range, wood table &amp;
osit. Ph. 614·448-8038.
2 ~enches. beds, dresser, wood
t w1rdrobe. 3 milt1 out
2 Bedroom . 1 ve~r letu
flullvrlle Rd. Open 9AM to
U!SO.OO
par month Phone
I 5PM, Mon. thru Sat .
445·2158.p
814·445-0322 .
1 1 Bedroom basic r.nt 8178.00
plu&amp; electric. Also required a
8200.00 security depotit. CON ·
TACT: Jackson Estates Dept. Ph
446-3997 Equal Housing
Opportunity.

OhJQ

-· .

··~-.-........· · · ---

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Announcements

No

~~

'

Page- 8- The Daily Sentinel

3

-~·

'·

�•
I

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol)io

This
Week's
Games

Days 'til
Christmas
•

Vol . 36, No.158
·COpyrighted 1986

Ewi11g-Directot ·

PH. 992-2121'
. 10• MULBERRY AVE.
POMERO¥ I o.H.

BOYS BASKETBALL
19-Southwestern.;.., Away
27-Peebles .................. O.U
Convocation Center
GIRLS BASKETBALL
18-Southwestern ...... Home
20-Aiexander............ Home
1

BOYS BASKETBALL
Dec. 19-Symmes Valley .. Away
Dec. 23-Fed. Ho,king ...... Away
GIRLS BASKmALL
Dec. 18-Syinmes Valley ... Home
Dec 20-Fed. Hocking ........ Home
Dec. 22-Trimble ............... Away
Holiday Tourn.

-;'HOM~ B~NK ,
FOR

' _,

· (OATS .,~~

Meigs
BOYS BASKETBAlL
Dec. 1S-Aieunder .. ................ Home
Dec. 23-logan ......................... Away
Jan. 2-Wellston ...................... Home
Jan. S-Federal Hocking ........... Home
Jan. 9-Miller .................. ......... Away
Jan. 13-Nelsonvile ................. Home
Jan. 1S-Vinlon ........................ Away
Jan. 20-Trimble ........ ....... ........ Away
Jan. 23-Belpre ..................... :. Home
Jan. 27-Aiexander ....... ............ Away
Jan. 31-Point Pleasant .... ....... Home
Feb. 3-Warren ........................ Home
Feb. S-Wellston ...................... .'Away
Feb. 13-Federal Hocking .......... Away

SYRACUSE OFF~CE
·. 992-6333
'
RACINE ·OFFICE
' 949·2210

Southern
BOYS BASKETBALL •
Dec . 19 Southwestern .... : .. ... :..... Away
Dec. 27-Peebles ., .................. Convo.
Dec. 30-Southeastern ............. Home
Jan. 9-Symmes Valley ............. Home
Jan. IS-Eastern ...................... Home
Jan. 20-Kyger Creek ................ Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ..................... Home
Jan. 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31-Miller ......................... Away
Feb. 6-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Feb. 7-Federal Hockin2 ........... Home
Feb. 13-Soulhwestern ............. Home
Feb. 17- Ravenswood ........ ,...... Home
Feb . 20-Symmes Valley ............ Away

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Dec. 19--'Symmes Valley ............ Away
Dec. 23-Federal Hocking .......... Away
Dec. 2S-Wahama Holiday Tourn ..... Away
Dec. 27-Wahama Hoiday Toom ......Away
Jan. 9-0ak Hill .................... .. .. Away
Jan. IS-Southern ... ................. Home
Jan. 20-North Gallia ..... .. ... .. ... Home
Jan. 21-Hannan Trace .............. Away
Jan. 30-Kyger Creek ................ Home
Feb . S-Southwestern ................ Away
Feb. 7-0PEN ....... ......... .... ...... Home
Feb. 13-Symmes Valley ........... Home
Feb. 17-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Feb . 20-0ak Hi!l ................ ...... Away

GIRLS SCHEDULE

A GIEATPUO
·FOIBIIAifAST
WICH &amp;DI.D
featuring

* Great Hamburaers

+.

4.- .

"'"i ·' i)

· BlOMR
·. 'FUNERlL'
'

·HOft'E
BRUCE FIStiER . :{ ,

Bill lltOWER . .

' '
' ·,·~,,~ P.lttt,.;.·)
.

AHfMI••·
wDlfill"
'

., 992 ·5141:. :
MIDD(EPOIT,

otL

POWELL'S

·
h
I

Pane c airman

Meigs
"'

·

*Roast Beef on a
ro::!;:o~s
•• Stuffel!
etlled
p(
Taco Salads

* Salad Bar .

* Rea I Ice Cream *
Dining • Carry Out •
Orive-ThN
Mon .·Thurs . 6 A,M.-11 P.M.
Fri. &amp; Sat. 6 A.M.-12 P.M.
Sunday 7 A.M.- 11 P.M .
198 W. Moil&gt; Street. " " ' " -

992-2057

THE
CENTRAL
TRUST
COMPANY
"YOUR FINANCIA,L
.CENtER"
. 97 N. 2ND STIEII
MIDDlE POll

992-6661
tiSTAllATION LOANS

992-3007

~

'

''

,.

GillS BASKETBALL

Sou thern

Dec. IS-Alexander ................... Away
Jan. 5-Wellston ....................... Away
1an. 8-Federal Hocking ............ Away
an. 10-lliller ........................ Home
1an.· 12-Southern .................... Home
an. IS-Nelsonville ................. Away
1an.l9-Vinton ... ..................... Home
an. 22-Trimble .......... ............ Home
~~-Belpre ................ ........ Away
F!~: -=f!!~;~der .................. Home
Fb 5
........... .. ........... Away
e . -Wellston ...................... Home
:e~. i-Ftderal Hocking ........... Home
e . 4-Southern ..................... Away

GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 18-Southwestern ............. Home
Dec . 20-Aiexander ..... ............. Home
Jan. 5-Gallipolis ..................... Home
Jan. 8- Symmes Valley .............. Away
Jan. 12-Meigs ......................... Away
Jan. IS-Eastern ....................... Away
Jan. 19-Kyger Creek ............... Home
· fan. 22- 0ak Hill ...................... Away
Jan. 2S-Gallipolis .................... Away
Jan. 29-North Gallia ............... Home
Feb . 5-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Feb . 9-Symmes Valley ............. Home
Feb . 12-Southwestern .............. Away
Feb. 14- Meigs.. ...................... Home

j•n.

2

•

enttne
2 Sectlono, 16 Pageo 26 Cento
A Multimedia Inc. New1paper

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 17, 1986

MANAGUA, Nicaragua iUPI)
security of Nicaragua (and)
- President Daniel Ortega said
were aimed at promoting terror·
that an American arrested on 1st
act.lons on behalf or the U.S.
suspicion of spying was a terror· government."
1st planted in Nicaragua by the
Asked If Hall should stand trial
U.S.-supported Contra rebels before a People's Tribunal, Or·
and worked Indirectly for the tega said, "Yes: The tribunals
U.S. government.
are for terrorists."
Ortega also said Tuesday that
Ortega said Hall was giving
I he American. Sam· Hall. 49, an
"co.herent" statements and
Olympic diving medalist and would be presented to the press
btother of Rep. Tony Hall. soon. He said operatives like Hall
D-Ohlo, should be tried as a are "planted" In Nicaragua by
terrorist before a , Sandlnlsta the ·Ntcaraguan rebels to gather
Peoples' Tribunal.
Information.
.
Hall, a former Ohlo legislator.
"All his activities serve the
whose scorn of communism and functions of . the U.S. govern·
terrorism has driven him .to the me~t." Ortega said. "He was an
battlefields of Chad and Le- In.dlrect worker for the U.!l..
banon, was arrested Friday at a government."
restricted air base ln Punta
The government said hand·
Huete, 12 miles north of drawn maps showing the alr
Managua.
.
base, ports and other potentially
He Is the second American .strategic points were found hid··
arrested by Nicaragua this year. den In Hall's socks, and said he
Former Marine Eugene Hasen- was gathering Intelligence that
fus. who admitted running arms . could be used in an attackagalnst
to the U.S.·backed Contra rebels, N)caragua.
was captured Oct. 6 after his
U.S. congressional sources fa·
supply plane was shot down.
mlliar with Hall, of Dayton. Ohio,
Hasenfus was convicted by a said he Is linked to a network
Peoples' Tribunal, a court Involved In Illegal military aid to
created by the Sandlnlstas to try Nicaragua's Contra rebels. CBS
political crimes, of supporllng News reported this week.
terrorism and· was sentenced to
The sources said Hall worked
30 years In prison.
. with mercenaries operating llleOrtega. commentln!( publicly gaily under former National
for the first time on the Hall case. Security Council staff member
said Hall " Is a m~cenary who Lt. Col. Oliver North, fired for his
was In our country carrying out role In the Iran arms·Contra
activities 'that go against the funding scandal. CBS said.

RAWLINGS .

BOYS SCHEDULE

···

-. ,.,.

•

"We've heard from enough people to know how
this operation was handled, and we know that on
every lever were Ollie North's Mnds," Durenber~ter told reporters Tuesday night.
"While the president of the United States
clearly wanted the Contras ·supported. in no way
did he want that support come from Ulegltlmale
or Illegal means," he said.
Poindexter resigned from his NSC post Nov. 25
and North was fired the same day. when Attorney
General Edwin Meese disclosed the alleged
diversion of funds .
In hearings before sever at congressional
committees, both men refused to answer
questions about the clandestine scheme after
Invoking th~lr Filth Amendment rights against
possible self· incrimination.
Shultz and Regan, testifying under oath, told the

panel they had no knowledge of the operation to
assist the Contras during a time when Congress
' had barred military aid to the rebels fighting the
Soviet-supported Nicaraguan government. .. ··
Duren berger · said he believes that Reagan,
Shullz, Regan and others "can't be lying and Ollie
North telling the truth."
Durenbeger and other committee members
also said they are not sureanyoftheestlmated$30
million and diverted to secret Swiss ballk
accounts ever reached the Contras.
"This (conversion of the funds) Is focused on
one person," Duren berger said. "The whole
program, the implementation of the program,
was Ollie North's work.
. "Even through therewereotherswhomayhav~
. been involved in the transfers, It could not have
happened without Ollie North." he said.
'

Ortega condemns·
.arrested Ohioan

.HOM£
PEOPLE"
. .
,.
~..

PICK-4

By E. MICHAEL MYERS
rejected Reagan's request, saying it was too early
WASHINGTON iUPI) - The Senate lntelll;
In the Investigation to begin bargalnlng "over
gence Committee, which initially balked at
protection from crlmlnai prosecution
President Reagan's request for Immunity for the
North has been fingered as the ma~termlnd of
two men With apparently all the pieces to the
the covert scheme to divert up to $30 million In
lran·Contra puzzle, may be reconsidering.
proflls from arms sales to Iran to the Nicarguan
Sen. David Duren berger, R·Minn.,chairman of
Contras, ·and Poindexter allegedly was ·aware of
the panel. said that follotying today's scheduled
the operation.
tes~lmony from · Defense Secretary Caspar .
After hearing 1esllmony Tuesday from White
Wemberger • the ~ommlttee planned a meeting to
House chief of staff Donald Regiln and Secretary
consider Reagan s request, delivered Tuesday.
of State George Shultz, Durenberger said he was·
Under the law, the committee. with a two-thirds
convinced the president knew nothing of the plan
voter can decide to seek an Immunity order from a
. to dlvertthe funds.
federal court.
North, who worked for the National Security
Reagan had asked that limited Immunity be
Council, ran the operaton entirely on his own,
granted to former national security adviser,
"totally without proper authority," Duren berger
Adm. John Poindexter, and his aide, Lt. Col.
said, adding that Reagan "had nothing to do with
Oliver North.
the (Contra) authorization."
Ear.Jier Tuesday, committee leaders had all but

EASTERN
~-

Patchy dense foK and
and drizzle likely
a low In' the upper 308.
cloudy Thuroday 1 with hlglllll
In the· mid 408,

886

Committee may reconsider immunity stance •

SOUTHERN

. ...,

Daily Number

aty

BOYS BASKETBALL
Dec. 16-Aiexander.............Home
Dec. 23-logan ................. Away
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 18-Aieiander........... Away

Dec.
Dec.

' .

0986

MEIGS

Dec.
Dec.

Ohio. Lottery

Easl'ern
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Dec. 18-Symmes. Valley ... ........ Home
Dec . 20-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Dec. 22- Trimble Holiday Tourn ..... Away
Dec. 29- Trimble Holiday Tourn ..... Away
Jan. 8-0ak Hill. .................. .. .. . Away
Jan. 15- Southern .................... Home
Jan. 19- No~h Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 22- Hannan Trace ............. Home
Jan. 19- Kyger Creek .......... ...... Away
Feb. 2-Meigs .. ................. ....... Home
Feb. 5- Southwestern ............... Home
Feb. 9- 0ak Hill ......................, Home
Feb. 12- Symmes Valley ............ Away
Feb . 14- Federal Hocking .......... Away

298 SECOND ST.
POMEROY OH.

..

I

STORE HOURS:
, MON.-SAT.
8 A:M.·)O P.M.
. SUNDAY
~ 10 A.M.-10 P.M.

.. l Rqistertd

.Pgmaclsts
~o $iwe You" ,.

eCOMPUTl RolOIATO~ SUVICB
oMA.IIIIIIIPAIRS

&lt;COiiiiiLCTl.,MJEl AUONMI:NT
118ANCI
· tMOtt JIIA-1011 CRIDn CAll Ill
~·0

.

PAT IIUi FOlD; lie.

b

•

p~ovi
.1. '

'

DISCOUNT DEALERS - A permanent flea calling 992-8164 between 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Aspace
market facility, Discount Dealers, Ohio 7, two ·ofelghtfeetbyel«hlfeetbyslxfeeltenlsforS6per
mUes south of Middleport, formerly the Kings . day. The owners, Roger Lee Atkins and Terry
Anns Nile Club, opened Monday.' Tbe new Matthews, wlll also sell new ant~rused Items on
establlslunent will be open seven days a week consignment. The owners welL-orne Independent
from 8 a.m. to 11 p.m. The new facility will offer dealers as long as space Is available. Pictured,/
space to persons wishing to sell Items that from left, IU'e Roger Atkins, co-owner, Barbara
normally lll'e sold at yard and garage sales. Jewell and Judy Reynolds who had their
Persons wishing to reserve spaces may do so by handmade wares set up lor sale Monday.

elieves tes.timony clears Reagan

, WASHINGTON !UP!) -The
chairman of the Senate Intelll·
gence Committee. having heard
testimony by White House chief
of staff Donald Regan. says
President Reagan had no part lh
diverting funds tQ the Nlcara·
guan rebels and Oliver North
alone pulled "every lever of the
operation." .
Sen. David Durenberger, R·
Minn., spoke to reporters late
Tuesday and said the only person
respons ible for the scheme was •
North, who was fired from his
staff position on the _ National
Security Council Nov. 25.
Duren berger said he based his
judgment on nearly two weeks of
closed testimony. Including the
Tuesday appearances by Regan
and Secretary of State George
MEI!;TING THE PRESS Shultz .
White ·HoliSe Chief of Staff
Defense Secretary Cas par
Donald Regan spoke with
Weinberger was scheduled to
reporters Tuetiday following
trstlfy today .
more
than four hours of
·
At the same lime, he and other
\ · committee members said the
closed-door testimony before
the Senate Intelligence Comwhereabouts of the diverted Iran
mittee Investigating the Iran
arms sale prollls are unknownarms-Contra aid affair. (UPI)
If Ihey were diverted at all.
"I am convinced from what I
nothing to do with that (Confi·as)
heard here today that the presi·
he said. " While
authorization,"
dent of the United States had

Eastem
boardd .
es .:•
f undIng
•

the president of the United States
clearly wanted the Contras sup·
ported, In noway did he want that
support to come from lllegltl·
mate or Illegal means.
"We've heard from enough
people to know how this opera·
tlon was handled and we know..on
every lever of this opera lion was
Ollie North's hands. I've come to
that conclusion because afl of
these folks can't be lying and
Ollle North telling the truth,"
Durenberger said.
"(Former national security
adviser Vioe Adm. John) Poin·
dexter did not pull off the scam,"
he said. "That's Ollie North's
work."
Durenberger and vice chairman Sen. Patrick Leahy. D·Vt .,
said they were pleased with
Regan',s testimony, which they
described as candid, open and
given with little sign of rancor .
Regan, who testified for more
than 4~ hours In the closed
hearing, said the two operatives
Identified as knowing details
about the controversy- North. a
Marine t't'eutenant colonel, and
Poindexter - should tell all
because the "American people
want to get this story."

•

Meeting In regular session
Tuesday night, the Eastern Local
School District Board of Educa•
lion encumbered 1985 lottecy
monies for electrical repair wora
at the Chester and Tuppe~s
Plains elementary schools. · :
The board also accepted bid$
on motor vehicle supplies and
insurance. The fleet Insurance of
the district went to Fleet Insu'
ranee, John Turner Jr., Nationwide. Cincinnati; City Ice and
Fuel Co .. Point Pleasant, was
named to supply regular gas,
with Sohio, Gallipolis. named to
supply heating oil, diesel fuel and
motor oiL Tires wut be pur·
chased from the Tire Warehouse
in Athens.
The board approved the allen&lt;jance of Cathy Johnson. Chester
Elementary principal, t.o ~ read·
ing recovery conference of the
Ohio Department of Education In
Columbus on Feb. 4 antl5, and
granted professional leave to
Band Director William Hall to
attend a band conference to be
held at Morehead State Unlver·
slty Feb. 13·15.
.
Mrs. Johnson also discussed
with the board the posslbllty of
the partlclpatlon or third graders

~nar::,s
a~~~et~~~::t:;a:a:~~
helping. David Chadwell and

That appeared to be an oblique
"The answer Is very obvious." Cheryl Llght!rltz were added to
reference to Reagan's call ear· he said. "The National Security the substitute teachers list.
ller In the day for the Intelligence Council does not report to the
A discussion was held on the
panelto seek llmltedlmmunlty In chief of staff atthe White House. establishment of guidelines for
federal court for North and Never has reported to It .
passing or falling ln gra~e
Poindexter. both ol whom cited
"The president said 'Adm. school. and the board agreed to
their Fifth Amendment right s Poindexter, the national security pay bus drivers $1 a week for
against self· Incrimination In
adviser, reports to me directly; diesel buses, which have to be
refusing to tesllfy.two weeks ago. he does not report to ihe chief of plugged Into electricity. with
Members of the committee staff. "'
payment to be made at the end of
criticized the Idea as premature
But if that appeared lo Imply the year. A discussion was held
and a possible obstacle to what
Reagan knew of the Contra aid with Roger Rose on bus
the administration professes to plan. Regan said, "The president turnarounds.
want - full disclosure by Norlh
has not talked to Admiral Poln·
The board's organizational
and Poindexter.
dexter about the diversion of meeting was set for 7 p.m. on
Members of the committee funds. The president got that Jan. 13 with a budget session to
criticized the idea as premature report from the attorney follow. Attending the meeting
and a possible obstacle to what general."
were board members .Jim Cald·
the admlnlstrallon professes to
Attorney · Ge neral Edwin well, Kathy Manlcke, Jim Smith,
want- full disclosure by North Meese annou nced the Contra Roger Gaul and Su~le Heines:
and Poindexter.
connection publicly late las I
(Continued cin Page 11 1
·However, Durenberger said rm,:::::on:::l:::h...__ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
late Tuesday the committee
would consider Reagan's lm·
munlty request today after hear·
lng from Weln)lerger.
Regan, mobbed by reporters
as he left the hearing room, said
there was no way he could have
known abOut any transfer of
arms sale profits to the Nlcara·
CINCINNATI (UPI) -The latest Ohio Poll reports that six
guan rebels because the head of
out of 10 Ohlolans rate the quality of educalion In their local
the NSC does not report to the
public school districts as good or excellent.
chief of staff.
In the poll released Tuesday, 43 percent of lh&lt;' respondents
rat.id !heir local public schools as "good." while 19 percent ' ·
rated them as "excellent." About one In four Ohioans said thC'
local public school is "fair." and 12 percent described them as
"poor."
Many Ohioans (39 percent) said they believe the quality of ·
ofthellew holding company. wllh
their local public schools Is Improving. Eighteen percent said
Cornell C. Maler to be vice
they are getting worse, and 41 percent said they are "staying
c~alrman and remain as Kals·
abou1 the same." The remaining 2 percent had no opinion.
er's chairman and chief execu·
The poll, conducted by the Jpstltute for Polley Researchatthr
live offlcer. Kaiser will continue
University of.Cinclnnall, surveyed 865 adults from throughou 1
to be operated by Its current
the state. It Is accurate to within plus.or minus·3.5 percent.
management team, and Its head·
Adults living In households with children rated Ihe quality 0 1
quarters wlll remain In Oakland,
education more highly than tbose In h9useholds with n~
Calif. The agreement. between
children, and they were also more likely to describe publit
Kaiser and Clore requires the
education as Improving.
.
company and Clore to jol~ forces
Thus, the poll's researchers said. those with the most direct
on a business pian and also
information about the public schools 'are the most positive.
dispose of Kaiser assets.

Ohioans rate ·quality
of schools as 'good'

Kaiser directors OK ·restructuring agreement
RAVENSWOOD, W.Va. year, the. Jackson Herald of
Kaiser Aluminum &amp; Chemical
Ripley. vy .va ., reported today.
Corp. directors approved today a
· The plan Includes the creation
definitive agreement with Brit· of a new holding company, an
Ish Investor Allan Clore, Kaiser's · infusion of $140 mUllan of new
largest shareholder, to Imple- . equity provided by a Clorementa restructuring plan for the controlled entity, certain protec·
company.
tlon for non-Ciore group shareThe plan was approved In holders, and a continuation of
principle three weeks ago and Is present Kaiser management. '
subject to final approval from
With' the board's approval,
lenders and shareholders at a Clore and Guy de Chabanelx,
meeting scheduled for early next senior vice president of Moseley

•

'

Securities Corp., were elecled
directors of Kaiser, with de
Chabaneix also elected to the
board's executive committee. .
Under the plan. the new
holding company will bold all or
Kaiser's outstanding common
stock, and have holders of Kaiser
common stock exchange their
shares for the same number or
shares ol the new holding com·
pany's common stock.
Clore will become chairman

·

.

'

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