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                  <text>Page-16-The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

-WOMEN'S

ELBERFELDS

SALE

WRANGLER
SPORTSWEAR"

COTY
FRAGRANCES

lloUMS, Pants and
Sweats

Wednesday.

I'

Ptrfulllt, CoJotlls and
Dust1111 Pow.d tr Gift Sots

LITRE GUlLS'

MEN'S lEE &amp; WRANGLER

BLOUSES,
SWEATERS &amp;
KNIT ·TOPS

BASIC DENIM

JEANS leg

Prewashtd, straight
boot flare. ,'

to

$450 $1500

Sl788

to

LOID ISAACS

GIRLS'

MEN'S AND BOYS'

MEN'S

JUNIOR

SLACKS

TUBE SOCKS

NECKTIES

PANTS
SALE

New solid colors • new pal·
terns • dip·ons and four-in·
hand roady for yaunelection.

Many Styles and Colors

Sale

Jeans, Cords, Strirrup
Pants and Knit Pants.

Sale Prices

$13 50 $2700

$375 to $1800

All Styles All Sizes

•..

30°/o

Made by- Hanes - grey or
white with colored tops;

Reg. $1,75 ..... 51.28
. Reg. S2.25 ..... 51,65
,Reg. 5.2.50 ..... S1.88

'

S22's WRANGLER

llnLE GIRlS'

WESTERN DENIM
SHIRTS

DRESS24 SALE
2

S1829

OFF

Pttite, Missy &amp; Extra Sim

25°/o .OFF

Sale Prleaa
$1440 to $1840

Special sale prices on many
models on the 1st floor Uprights , Tank Sweepers , •
Power Ttom Combinations.

LITTLE BOYS'

MEN'S QUILT LINED

ICni t Tops, Shirts,
Sweaters

1ST FLOOR

•Winter Jackets
•Knit Shirts
•Dress Slacks
•Sweat Shirts
&amp; Pants

S, M, L, XL and
Regularly $21.95 to $29.95.

Sale Prices

11
Save /4

S1J59 to$2399

25°/o OFF

CHAIR
SALE
···Away ltdlntrl-

lock·A·le••g•n - Wood lockers
- Swinl lockers

FREE CHRISTMAS DELNERV

MEN'S DRESS BELTS
and WESTERN BELTS
New Selection - All Genuine
leather

Sale Prices

CHILDREN'S

.REDUCED

MEN'S

MEN'S BLUE CHAMBRAY

IMiudu westerns a11d sport shirts. Excel·

WORK SHIRTS

SHIRT SALE

le11t ·quality solids • patterm • big se·
lection.
•
1
l~g. Prices .1 14.95 to S24.95

Sale $1188 to $1988

GUN CABINETS
CURIOS
HALL TREES

CONSOLES
BOOKCASES
DRY SINK

MEN'S BUXTON

BILLFOLDS
Choose your fa,orite style and color.
Excellent quality.

Sale Prices
CHI.DREN'S

WINTER GOWNS
&amp; PJ's
Soft warm sleopwear at special
Christmas sa,ings.

. $639 to $1919

Selt

MEN'S

WINTER
JACKETS
lit soltction
,and
of styles
jadrtts included.

log.

Prices

$39.95

REDUCED

colors. Loathtr

to $139.95.

2 5°/o

OPEN NIGHTS
TIL 8 P.M.

Lo11g allll short slttvt styles L, XL and XXL

WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
Gowm, lobes, Pajamas, Nite Shirts,
Dust.rs a11d Hospital Gawm.
leg. 19.00 to S40.00

Pre-washed - 1OOOfo cotton
special.

SALE MEN'S S27.95 DENIM

LlnLE BOYS'

WORK COATS
Blanket lined - button front Bon by Wrangler.

Big

Sale $2288
S2 4. 9 5 Denim

M,

WR.NGLER DENIM
-JEANS

S12''

Zipper Jacliots ... S19 .8 8

LADIES'
ANGEL TREAD

COZY BOOTS

JEANS~ CORDS
AND SLACKS

25

OFF

THERMAL
UNDERWEAR
and

. Warm your fHt with Cozy Boots.

l _e gular
tallsi&amp;os ill tops alld bottoms.
Our o11tlro stodt l11dudttl.

ONLV$7-8

Sale Prices
DESK SALE

MEN'S

WORK UNIFORMS

Regular and extra size work pants
and matching long slee¥1 wor~
shirts - Big hn by Wrongler.

Sale Prices

3 styles of secretary desks and
pedestal desks. Oak quality.

Voar
ChoiH

ELDS

ONLY

$1888

Warm Lintel Glon
ONLY

$2188

HASSOCKS
Assorted Sins &amp; Styles.

S160~ 'to $2960
SALE! MEN'S

STRETCH DENIM50.

legular sizes and big sizes up to
Wrantler or Lee.

Sale Prices
MICROWAVE
OYENS
Sale Prleed
Fro111 Oalr

S13800
FUNNEL

SHIRTS

S, M. L111111 XL slzts plus hils and lar.. up to
size 20. lwo pockets, extra long shirt tails,
txtra htiJYY weight.
,.
'14.95 to 122.95

Sale $1170 to S1J94
LADIES'

DRESS ·SALE

:~::ed

HOLIDAY FUN - A clown and Miss Piggy
were the order ol the day during Tuesday's story
hour and party at the Pomeroy Library. Donna
Grate, the clowll, and Miss Piggy, Sharon Wise,
wer.e .a big bit "!lth children from the '11ny Tech

'

SALE

MEN'S S19.95

Sale $719 to $3199

original Unlined Glove

Sale Prices

S8.95 SHIRTS ....................... Sf .49
S9.95 SHIRTS ....................... Sf .99
S10.95 SHIUS ..................... S8.99
I

WOMEN'S

Sizes S,

ISOTONER
GLOVES

'
Sizes29 to 42. Big sizes 44 to 50. Select
your fayorite style and color•and save.

SA~E 20°/o

·'' .

LADIES'

DRESS SLACKS

B•ads, Chains, Earrings
· &amp; Pins

2 5°/0

The

OFF

SALEI MEN'S

JEWELRY SALE

COATS &amp;
SNOWSUITS

SALE

ACCENT PIECES
SAVE 1/4

Junior and N!issy Sizes

·

$2J 00 to $3900
E.l6etltld•
PO -.UO' . OMIQ
I' U l
HI 1

"J

CII'-IG( CAitO

'

concerns Meigs board

JEANS

··Sale Prices
BOYS' WEAR

FLANNEL
·SHIRTSXXL.

..

WRANGLER

Sale Prices

enttne

·Verbal contract issue ·';-

I

$5°0

•

.. •. ,

WOMEN'S

Solid colors and stripes. 14112
to 17, sleeve lengths 32 to 3 5.

Becoming pai'lly doudy tonight, with a low near 31.
Partly cloudy Friday, wllb
highs in lhe mid 40s. The
pr~bahilily of precl pilalion Is
near •.ero lonlghl and Friday.

2 Sections, 12 Pages 25 Ce.ntf
A MUltimedia Inc . Newspaptir-.:. ·

Sale Prices .

"EUREKA~'

•

Vo1.38, No.159
Copyrighted 1988

JEANS
.

VACUUM
SWEEPERS

WINTER
TOPS

•

at y

Slims • Regulars • Hus~ies
and Student Sizes

DRESS
SHIRTS

DEVON
SPORTSWEAR

•

BASIC STYLE ,

25°/o

VAN HEUSEN

LADIES'

598
Super Lotto
44-154-27-28-3

DENIM 01
COIDUIOY

SA~E

LOttery

Daily Number

BOYS'

Sizes NB to
mos., to
4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14.

Neck sim 141ft to 20. Sleeve
lengths 32 to 35 inches.

Days 'til
Christmas ·

or

SALE/ NEW SHIPMENT

to

Ohio

· Sale~~~· '22.95

Sale Pried

S1le Prlc ..

·R:~~CED2 5°/o · $1 56 $1320

17, 1986

December

By BOB HOEFLICH
Sentinel Stall Writer
A· conference with Assistan1
Prosecuting Attorney Carson
Crow on possible verbal contract
misu nderstandings relating to a
mela I building given 1o the Meigs
Local School District was sche·
duled when the district's board of
education met in regular sess ion
Wednesday night.
Bringing the matter before the
board of ed ucation was James
Sou lsby, president of the Meigs
Athletic Booslers.
Soulsby charged 1hat a loca l
contractor had agreed to lear
down a melal bulidlng given to
the district by Vaughan's Cardl·
nal In Middleport and reconstruct It at the Melg~ High Schoo l
site for a fee of $12,000. The
project was begun In late
summer of 1985, Soulsby said,
' and 1he boosters had secured
money to pay the approx imate
$1"2,000 c harre. Howev er.
Souls by saiQ the he was later
advised ,thai the contractor
want ed $24,000 for .1he project.
Me~nttme, some of the malerlals
were taken fr om 1he building 1o
the con tractor's site of opera·
lions, Soulsby sta ted. He said
Day-Care Center, who are re«Uiar visitors to lbe
that the boosters made one
library program. Each child ·recJelved a special
payment of $2,000 on the project
Chrlslmll8 treat, courtesy ol Ruth Powers,
librarian. Ladles from the Retired Senior while the contrac tor charges that
Volunteer Program are responsible for the : another $4,000 Is due.
monthly story hour.

Rich ard Va ughan, ow ner of

Vaughun' s Curdinal. which gavr
the building 10 1hc distr ic1 , also a
memtx&gt;r of 1he board of educa ·
tlon, said th at a complete listing
oft he building and mal eri als had
been made before the tearing
down processes starled.
Assistant Superi nt e nd e nt
James ·carpenter, who served as
superlntenden1 at 1he meellng In
the absence of Superintendent
Dan E. Morris, who was unable
to be present due lo the death of
his brother, Rober! Morris, said
thai he had lalked to Crow earlier
about lhe ma11er and !here is
some question as to the Meigs
Local Board's Involvement since
lhe verbal contract in question
was between the boosters and I he
co nlr actor. However, Board
Pres ident Rotx&gt;rt Snowden said
that the building was given lo I he
board and the dislrlct and the
board would deflnilely have
Involvement , in his opinion . .
It was agreed that Vaughan,
Snowden and . Carpen1er will

..

m akr an appoi nlm~n t to confer
with Crow on the mallrr.

The board hired substit ute
teachers David Chadwell, Roger
Hughart and Cheryl Llghltrltz.
for the cu rrent school year and
heard Treasurer Jane Fry report
t hai the district has been auo •.
cated $22,674 for the Chapter It
program involving libraries and·
books for I he 1987 fiscal year. The
res ignation of Helen Hood as
cook was accepted as of Dec. U
and Mary Haggerty was e m:
ployed as fres hman cheerleader,
advisor for I his school year.
·
The an nu al organlzatlonai
meet lng fo llowed by a regular.
meellng was set lor 7 p.m. on;
Jan.14 wil h the days a nd llmefo~
next year's regular sessions to be
sel at thai time.
Preceeding the open part oft he
meeting, the board moved ln iq
executive session for approxl•
malely one- half hou r to discuss'
linances. Ot her board member~
presen1 were Larry Powell, Bob
Barlon and Larry Rupe.
'

a

648 Board eyes new strategies for levy
By KEVIN KELLY
liy a nd multi-county mental
OVP News Editor
health boards, serves as a
Different s1ra1egles on pursu- funding agency for agencies
Ing a levy wUl occupy some of the providing meni al healt h servl·
Gallla·Jackson-Melgs 648 Mental ces, such as Woodland Centers
Health Board's lime · over the Inc. and Crislsline, or related
next few months . .
services. such as drug and
Dr. Romola 'Hopkins. the alcohol treatment programs.
board's executive director. said
In mosl cases, Hopkins sa id,
It's premature to star1 forming the funding the board receives ls
plans 10 try for a levy lo replace ca tegorical ald. money earshrinking fedrral and slate dol· marked strictly for certain
Iars for service agencies In the services.
three coumies.
Hopkins sa id federa l funding
Hopkins said the board may lor such boards and agencies
consider golrig wit h a levy In all began diminishing a few years
three counties. or try to get one ago and the stale's share of
passed in each county. A three- money Is being cut drastically.
county levy ha ~ been twice
As a n example, she said. the
defeated by volers this year.
state's " phase-down" ' funding
But since there Is doubt there was allocallng $1.2 million in 1982
will be a primaries In all three ·lo boards and contraclod agen·
countieS nexl yt&gt;ar, the board has cles, bu1 ttiis year, the amount
gone Into discussio n on the better has fallen to $333,407, and wlll
stra t ~ 1o pursue.
slide down lo $157,000 In 1987.
The 648 board, named afler t he This funding, which goes toward
legis lation that crealed commun- · such services asoutpaliem coun·

Region~)

office
legislation
is ·signed
United Press International
Sentln"el stall Reporls
Gov. Richard Celesle signed
legislation Wednesday selling up
a Governor's Office of Appalach·
Jan Ohio to represent the Inter·
es ls or 28 soulheaslern and
southern Ohio counties.
The blll, lnlroduced by Stale.
Rep. Jolynn Boster. D·Gallipolis,
takes effecl In ' 90 days.
·
The office, housed tn 1he 0hlo
Department of Developmenl,
will reporl dlreclly to the governor's ofllce.
II will help for m a consensus on
Issues and policies among organ·
lzations serving 1he Appalachian
area, and act as an ombudsman
to help resolve dlflerences belween slate or federal agencies
and the local officials of govern·
ments or private, non-profit
organlzatons.
The director of t he office wil l
represent Ohio on \he federal
Appalachian Regional
Commission.
"The federal government has
been phasing out the Federal
Appalachian Regional Commls·

gain a new · funding source,
Medicaid, for some of 1he 11
agencies contracllng wllh the
board, !hose agencies are work·
lng loward meeting Medicaid
standards to serve the elderly.
Woodland Centers and Meigs
Cou nty's alcoholism lreat men l
program are currently Medicaid
certifi ed, and the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Cent er is curre.ntly ready lo file for 1hal
cerllflcallon, Hopkins said.
pursue.
But anolher problem arises,
Hopkins said, In that Medicaid
sellng, will be gone ·In 1988, money requires a malchlng fund
Hopkins said.
from I he local agency. Because
Money for programs falling some agencies are unable IO
under Ihe guidelines of Title XX come up wllh lhe malch, they
of the Social Security Act, which lose out on a potential new source
funds related services such as ·or dollars, she said.
speech 1herapy, will go !rom a
"That's why ll's lmporlanl lor
one-time high of $2\i million lo people to understa nd why a local
$278,000 this year and $214,000 In levy Is lmp(lrlan l," Hopkins
1987.
noted.
"The days of the big federal
Hopkins. who became the
dollars are gone," Hopkins said. board' s execullve dlreclor In
" Mosl people unders tand that. 1985, stressed that money raised
We're just lucky to have funds from a levy will go lo help fund
coming In for lhe programs we the agencies con lractlngwlth the
have."
board, and not the board's
Hopkins said !hat In order to operations.
Hopkins said the board may
consider going with a levy In
all three counties, or try to get
one passed In eath t'Ounty. A
three-county levy has been
twice defeated by voiers this
year.
But since there Is doubt
I here will be a p~lmarl es In all
three counties next year, the
board has gone into discussion
on· the better strategy lo

BEFORE - This is the Five Points Grill which wasalhrlvlng
business on Ohio 7 near Pomeroy lor many years. Originally a ·
farmhOuse, an addillon was added at I he front oft he home and a ·
restaurant business began in the early 1950s.
·

Comm"issioners act
•
upon routine matters

/
'

Stale Rep. Jolynn Boster
sian for several years," Bosler
said. "We are breaking ground
and set ting the course for a
stronger, unified stale effort for
lhe future of 1hls region. By
creating a statutorily-mandated
office, we will be In a better
position to fil l the gap being left
by the demise of 1he ARC."
Boster said the necessity for
economic development throughout the regio n prompted t-he
formatio n of a bipartisan, bicameral Appalachian Legislative
Delegation and lhe Introduction
of Boster's bill. The legislation
was approved In both the stale
House of Representatives and
SenaW

•
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The Meigs County Commls·
stoners mel Wednesday after·
noon In regular session and
co nducled the following
business:
-Reappointed Denver Rice
and Thomas Weaver as
members of the Meigs County
Board of Menial Retardation. at
·the request of Lee W~demeyer,
super int e nd e nt oi Ca rleton
School-Meigs Industries.
·
-Reappolnled F red Hoffman,
Bob Buck, Bill Wickline and
E leanor Thomas to two-year
lerms as members of the Buckeye Hills-Hocking Valley Regional Developmen1 District
Board of Directors. ,
-Approved submission to the
Ohio Department of Liquor Con·
trol, a request for a D·5 liquor
license transfer from George and
Joann Ward, doing business as
Jack's Club, Ohio 143. Pomeroy,
to Ernest Barley and Geor.ge
Ingels, doing business as Midway
Tavern, same address.
-Decreued by $11,000 the
county's original public assis1·
ance certlllcatlon, as requested

'

by I he county budget co mmission
and Michael Swisher, dlreclor of
lhe Meigs Counly Department of
Human Services.
-Approved a request from
Swisher for appropriallon of
$10,76.1 1o !he state foster care
allocallon for the county.
-Appropriated $25,000 to the
public assts1ance general relief
account.
-Authorized Meigs County
Auditor William Wickline to
make all year-end budgetary
transfers as he deems necessary.
·-Approved budgetar y
transfers within several county
offices including. the sheriff,
common , pleas judge, coroner,
children's services and prosecu1·
lng atlorney,
-Announced thai a public
meeting to discuss the proposed
Meigs Counly sales tax "(Ill be
held Dec. 30, 10 a.m .. at the
courthouse.
-Announced the nexl regular
commissioner's meeting w!ll be
Dec. 26, 1p.m., at the courthouse,
at which time a public hearing on
the proposed nurs lng home In
Middleport will be held.

RAZED - This phOto shows the Five Points Grill on Ohio 7 ~
being razed to make way lor a new conv enience store to he·:·
operated by Michael Roherts and opening abou1 May I.
: ·:

New business slated
to replace landmark
A Meigs County landmark on Ohio 7 known as the Five Poln1 s
Grlll ls no more.
Recenlly, the es tablishment, which Included a business
operallon plus housing for the owner, was razed.
Although the farm home stood for many years at Five Poln1 s.
It became a business establishment In the mld·1950s when an
addition was built onlo I he front of .I he house and a res taurant
was operated by the Ollver family . In )he early 1960s lhE&gt;
establishment was purchased by John Atkins and a bar was
added to the restaurant faclllly. Jimmy Strwar1 1ook over
ownership In 1967 and remodeled and updated 1he building. In
1978 11 was. sold to Phyllis Adams. Th is year, Michael Roberls
purchased the business.
Recently, the structure was razed and Rotx&gt;rt s will open a
one-stop conveni ence store come spring. There will be a
drive-through beverage center and a convenience slore Inside
and gasoline pumps wUl be added to Ibe business operation. The
new business will be called the FlvePolntsExpress and Roberls
Is planning a grand opening fo r about May 1.

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Commentary
Ill Court Street

Last week, I reached a 40th .
milestone.
A couple of colleagues congratulated me, the ·Philadelphia
Dally News took dutiful reportorial nott', yet none of it convinced
me the occasion merited com. mendation. More. approprlatt'IY,
the causes . bt'hlnd · this ·40th
· milestone deservt'd to be
'condemned.
But anything involving tht'
number 40 is transfigured by an
ancit'nt mystique - Nol!h's 40
days and 40 nights ofrairr, Moses'
40 days and 40 night s on Mount .

Pomeroy, Ohio
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

'qjv
·

.........._.._..,...,I"'T'E:!do=

ROBERT L. WINGETT
Publisher

PAT WHITEHEAD
Assistant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ftOTHGEB, JR. ·
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press
Association and the Ar'!lerican Newspaper Publishers Association.
U ..l fERS Of OPfNtON are wt'lroTl'K'. They should

Thursday, December 18, .1986

A sad lnilestone_:...___--.-----.,.----C-hu_ck_·S_to-:ne

The Daily Sentinel
rs:m~

I

Sinal, Christ fasting for 40 days
and 40 nights, Dryden's resolve
to "grow old and look young till
40," the promise to newly freed
slaves of "40 acres. and a mule, "
Shaw's geriatric bigotry that
"every man over 40 is a
scoundreL"
.
My 40th mnestone sullies their
historical magnitude.
Last week . .the 40th criminal
' murder or a
suspect wanted for
shooting surrendered to me to be
turned over to the pollee.
Robert Lee Bowman, 24, has
been .sought by the pollee In toe

.

Thanksgiving eve stabbing death .
of a victim Bowman claims·
attacked him.
Bowman's surrender reflects a
paradox I have discovered In
nine years of arranging such
surrenders or mediating the
release'of'prison hostages: In a
particularly hei!IOUS crime. suspects are worrl~ the.\' ma.y
suffer official violence similar to
that infllcted on their victims.
A -suspect seeking · my help
r:epresents less a vote of confl·
dence In my journalistic Integrity than a fear of pollee

\

q,

less lhan m words
long. AJIIE'IIE'r s ar(' subjecl tolol;llting and rmst be slgned .wilh name, address and
lclcph one number . No unsigned leTiers will be published. Letlers should be in
good ta st(' . address ing Issues, no1 personalities.
b(&gt;

Washington Window

Iran probe gets
off to rocky start
Ry ROBERT SHEPARD
.
WASHINGTON I UP II -The congress ional probe of ·the Iranian
arms dea l has gotten off loa fitful stan and In some instances done
little to ins pire confidence in the ability of Congress to investigate a
-matter as sens tilive and controversial as the Iran-Contra affair.
: Bolh thP SPnatc and House w!ll set up special Watergate-type
;cum mit tees to begin investigat lng the affair next month. But initially,
·three regular: committees began looking Into if - the SPnate and
House Intelligence committees and the House Foreign Affairs
Committee.
The first public hea rings we re held last week by the Foreign Affairs
:c ommittee and des pite the efforts by Chairman Dante Fascell,
·D-Fia .. the occasion prompted bickering and overreaching by some
:Com mittee members .
: Re p. Michael Ba rnes, D-Md .. himself a lawyer. was properly
't'ebukcd by the lawyer representing former White House security
a ide John Poindexter after Barnes theorized that Poindexter, who
was appearing before the committee. might be charged with a
cri minal offen se. co nvicl!'d and !hen given a suspended sentence.
Possible criminal violations by Poindexter or any others in thf'
. growing cas t of characters in the Iran affair will be investigated by .a
special cou nsel. appo inted by a federal court. At the time of the
committee hearing, neither the cou nse l nor the special congressional
committe($ had been appointed, let alone begun their probes. Yet
Barnes managed to gaze into the future, convict Poindexter and then
give him a suspended sent ence.
Another member, Rep. Stephen Solarz, D-N.Y., was equally
unrestrained. Following three days of open and closed testimony by
Secretary of State George Shultz, former security aide Robert
McFarlane, and CIA Director William Casey, Solarz went before the
waiting tefevision cameras to announce his conclusion that President
Reagan " must ha,ve known " about the diversion of the Iran arms sale
proceeds to Nicaraguan rebels.
'!'he evidence seemed lar less certain to tlte other 40 committee
members. none of whom came even close to such a pronouncement.
Rl?p. William Broomfield. R·Mich., said not hing in the officials'
testimony Implicated Reagan . And when Rep. Michael DeWinc,
R·Ohio. heard of Solarz's comments ~quick ly put in his own
appearance before the cameras to express his outrage at the
statement.
DeWine, having heard the same testimony as Solarz. concluded
there was "absolutely no evidence" linking Reagan to the diversion.
On the SP nate side, Sen. Ernest Hollings, D-S.C., sat in on the first
three days of closed hearings by the Senate Intelligence Committee
and then told reporters Reagan knew money had been diverted to the
Nicaragua n rebels. Hollings said he ba~ed his conclusion not on
testimony given to the committee, but on " common sense."
How Hollings was able to separate " common sense" from sworn
tes timony is not clear. But hi s public statements angered fellow South
Carolinian Sen. Strom Thurmond, who ca lled a news conference to
comp la in . Thurmond sugges ted Hollings' comment s cast doubt on his
objectivity in th&lt;' invt'stigation.

WASHINGTON - Officials at reunions that are an important ern Virginia area as Conpie."
rode a bus for three hours to visit
the Petersburg (Va.) Federal ' part of any prisoner's life'. After
Hansen believes the others her husband for his birthday ...:
Prison Camp have not taken kindly all. Hansen had challenged the were sent away early as a cover their first \flSit in s ix months, "
to criticism of their Institution by In- system - anti he figures that's for revenge against him.
Hansen told us.
rna te George Hansen, a former Re- . what got him In trouble In the
On the Saturday after Thanks"The e)\pense didn' t matter,"
publican congressman from Idaho. ,first place. while other members giving, the same thing happened, Hansen said. " The distance
of Congress who bungled their Hansen told us. His wife was didn ' t matter. The siX months' ·
Unfortuna tely, the bureau- financial disclosure forms were again ushered out early, even time since the las t visit didn't
though she had been the first matter to the captain. He said the
crats have wreaked their petty let off the hook.
It's not that Hansen didn't visitor to arrive. and again no woman could sit out In the
revenge not only on Ha nsen. but
on innocent bystanders: his resent the treatment given his volunteers were solicited to re- ·administration building until her
fellow prisoners and their wives. wife. She had driven three hours I I e v e t h e s u p p o s e d bus left · for Washington four
Hansen. a n arch-conservative for a Thanksgiving Day visit, and overcrowding.
hours later."
conVIcted of falling to report was ushered out by the captain of
"Saturday's scene had one
The ex-congressman. who i§
extra cruel touch of Insensitivity sc heduled to be paroled this .
certa in transactions on his re- security himself at 11:15 a.m. quired financial disc losure fo rm . roughly four hours ~fore the beyond the Thanksgiving hap- week , gave us further evidence of
began serving a sentence of five nprmal departure lime. •
penlng," Hansen told us . petty retaliation against others
to 15 months last June at the
"The place was not at all "Another mother, fromWashing- that he believes happene.d be·
prisoncampnearRichmond.An overcrowded," the ex - ton , D.C .... wassentawayafter cause of the prison authorities '
unregenerate maverick; Hansen
congressman told us,'· "and no only 1~ hours." Th e ex- displeasure over hi s public comrefused to curry favor with opportunity was evt'r given for congressman was convinced tha t plaints. For example. four in this, too, was done to disguise the mates who became his friends
prison a uthorities by remaining volunteers 'to leave."
silent about the prison conditions
That was bad enough. But what fact that prison authorities were have been reassigned to low he considered disgracefuL He really outraged Hansen was that trying to punish their outspoken paying jobs in recent weeks, he
wrote letters and memos, called 'they terminated a small hand- Inmate.
said. One had been cited for
us repeated ly on the phone- and fut of others from Virginia after
"This young black woman, meritor ious performance less
aut hored a magazine article with Connie left, Including a mother who supports herself and her than four months earl ier. Hansen
the provocative title of "Amerl- and her children who had been family by working In a restau- believes they were punished
ca n Gulag."
there for less than two hours, and rant, had adjusted her schedule. because prison .olficlals thought
Hansen wasn't surprised when who had also dr iven the sa me · hired a sitter for her three - erroneously - that they were
prison officials cut short the
three-hour trip from the North· children, bought a ticket and sources of information for ·him.
visiting hours of his wife. Connie . . - - - - - , - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - who had spen t hours on the road
driving from their Nort hern
VirginIa home for tlie lam ily

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Gallery Hair·Arts
Slated for interviews
BATON ROUGE, La. (UP!)Southwestern Louis iana head
coach Nelson Stokley and former
USFL Tampa Bay Bandits coach
Steve Spurrier were scheduled to
Interview today for the LSU
football coaching job before a
school screening committee.
The panel also will Interview
former Cleveland Browns coach
Sam Rutigliano on Friday, the
committee chairman sa id
Wednesday.

111 E. MAIN ST.
Would like to onnounce that
they now have their holiday
hours in full swing.
Those hours. are:
Monday-Saturday
9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Thursday 9 A.M. to 7 P.M.
CaU for an Appointment
992-3233
or Walk-ins Welcome
"You'll love Our Styles"
Thanks and have a
Merry Christmas
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Wyche expects NY Jets to play hard
CINCINNAT I (U P!) - AI·
though the New York Jets have
locked up a playoff spot, Cincinnati coach Sam Wyche says he
expects the Jets to treat Sunday's
regular s~ason finale ag~lnst the
Bengals aSJi cruCial game.
"I think they wlll want to win inthe worst way," says Wyche.
The Jets are assured of a wild
card playoff berth, but a win over

Ci ncinnati would guarantee the
Jets the home field advantage In
the wild card game. Artd, should
the New England Patriots lose to
Miami Monday night, the Jetsno matter how they fare against
the Bengals - would become
AFC Eastern division champs
and not have to go the wild card
route In the playoffs.

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POMEROY MASON
S:S~

r.;:::::::======1

RUCK -Pat Aelker and son, Patrick, with a ll&gt;-polnt buck deer
bagged on the Texas Road. The deer ·welghed In at 195 pounds.

BANKE.ONE.

is thai ralt nvnou11N:Yi a,~ lht prime
rule/rom tirn11 to lime by IJA NK ONE:.

Uf~imt

::

·•..

1m llrous4nd {J«Jffl• who carr.

c 18816

•

I

defeated Symmes Valley 58-50 senior center Danny Patrick,
last Friday for Its second straight · who scored 20 points agalnsfthe
win. The hosting Oaks, 4·3 and Tornadoes in the two-quarter.
3-2, lost Friday, defeated Ohio preview, and senior SPan Colley,
Class AA Rock .Hill 70-51 Satur- who is averaging more than 20
day but lost to AA Minford points per game. Botn may be out
Tuesday 63-51.
with the flu.
The Highlanders won Tuesday
The Oaks are the only AA
.
night
54-47 over "Ohio Valley
school in the SVAC and were
Christian
School despite Patrick
picked by many as the favorites
to win the league.
lying at home In bed .and Colley
At Patriot, Southwestern will playing at about only 70 percent.
Southw,estern, 5-2 and 3-2, w~s
attempt to prove that its she!.lacking of Southern In the league the other school jammed In the
preview was no fluke. The four-way tie last week before
Highlanders, howeve r, may be being upset by Eastern 75- ~2
without. the services of 6-foot-7 Friday night.
Southern, 2-4 and 2-3, has
played inconsistently up to this
point with victories over Eastern ,
and Kyger Creek and finds Itself
commission to reverse the deci in a three-way tie for fifth place.
sion, arguing there was new
. At Willow Wood, Eastern travevidence.
els south to Symmes Valley in ah
The commission also susattempt to han~ the winless
pended Danny Weller. 50, of
Vikings their s ixth defeat. The
Chardon, the leading rider at
Eagles, 3-3 and 2-3 have won their
Thistledown. for seven conseculast two games, including their
tive Saturdays, starting April 4,
upset rout of Soutwestern.
1987, anti fined him $500 for
careless driving.
Weller had appealed his orlginal seven-day sentence.
The staff of the

River Downs told to settle dispute

1ovmlll

:

ltlltiO!

1100 a.m. Iii

fourth and fifth highest scoring .
offenses. Hannan Trace Is aver·
aging 64 points per contest:
North Gallla slightly under 60.
The edge defensively goes to
the Pirates, allowing a league. leading average of 50 points per
contest. Hannan Trace averages
slightly under 59 per game,
· which Is third. ·
In other SVAC action, t.he
Kyger Creek Bobcats travel to
Oak Hill; Southwestern hosts
Southern; and Eastern will
square off with Symmes Valley.
At Oak Hill, the Bobeats. 2-3
overall and in the conference,

COLUMBUS, Ohio (UP!) The Ohio Racing Commission
TeiiRl
w L PF · PA has given River Downs Race
North Goma ......................4 I : : :
Track 60 days to make financial
5 2 :t7' ~"
:;•thw
..
Trtem
....
"
...............
14nnan ace ..... , ............. 4 2
, .-. arrangements with 17 . bettors
Oak nm ............................ 4 :1 «8 uo whohadtickets-ontheflrsthalfof
llai!tern ... ,.........................:l 3 3111 3112 a twln·trlfecta on Nov. 19, the
Kyger,Creok ....... ;,, ...... ...... 2 3 ·au ~2
Southern ........................... 2 1 m 355 final day of the~rack's m~et.
symm"' Valley ................. o ; ~IR 2ii6 . Since nobody had tickets on
I Conlerencet
p•
both trlfectas. the CinCinnati
· ~~':.. Trm .................. ~ ~ ~~ ~6 track a~nounced it would carry
North Gatlla ..................... A · t l!!IR '150 the $46,997 pool over to opening
. Oai nm ............................ a 2 a21 :: day of1987. The 17 ticket- holders
~~'::.."::~~~::::
::::::::~ ~; :tOti objected. claiming the money
·Kner freek ...................... t 3 ua \!!12 should have been split among
Souther~ ........................... 2 a m m
them.
5 23 2118
Symm"' v~~,d~;;;;'~~;;;~
"
· The commission agreed Wed·
Kyaer Creek a1 Oak Hill
nesday that no fraud was In·
Souther.n "' Southw ..tern
tended but criticized toe track
for
EPtern al Symml'8 Vaii ('Y
1
NorthGalllaatHannonTraco
misrepresentation In ·us
S.lurda~H game .
adVertising,
. ' .
Wahamo tw.va.) at.Kytier Creek
The commission, also postponed until Its Jan. 21 meeting
ReHerve action
ICOI!ference)
the appeal of a $124,1000hlo Sires
T&lt;•am
.
" ' L PF rM~ Stakes race Sept. 3 at Scioto ·
North GaUia .., .... ............... ~ 1
Southern.:........................... I ~1 216 Downs, near Columbus.
Eastera ......... ..... ............... s ~ 210 ~1
• The winning 2-year-old trotting
lbtnnan Trlll't' .......... .. ....... 3 le
colt. 18 Karat, was disqualified
Dak Htll ............................ 2 3 ::~ :~
and placed sixth for Interference.
8euthweMem ..................... 2 3 IHt t97
KyRer Creek ...................... I -1 tl9 m An attorney for owner Hanley
Symm€!4 Valley .... :······· ..... 1 .J tHo 191 Dawson of Chicago asked the

•

Sll((J YOUR OWN

FOOTWEAR FOR THE
ENTIRE FAMILY

Hannan . Trace that w.III ~
enjoying the liome court edge as ,
the two fight It out. ·
Both teams are riding winning
streaks after losing t holr lone
games of the season. The Wildcats have rolled to four straight
wins since Its seasori;opening
loss to Southwestern. North Gal·.
li!l has won three straight followIng Its stunning 54-53 loss to
Eastern on a shot at the buzzer iil
the second week.
Neither squad. has dominated
their opponents as ·Friday's 8
p.m. battle matches the leagues'

SVAC Standings

RfiATI

lOAMI'

SPRAY
DE-ICER

with a win alter trie two squads go
head-to-head at MercervUle Frl·
day night.
'
Hannan Trace, 4-2 overall and
4·1 In the conference, defeated .
defending league champion
Southern 61-58 at .. Racine to
obtain Its share 'or the league
lead.
The Pirates of North Gall Ia, 4·1
In overall and In league play,
uphended Oak Hill, who was one
of the other -tWo schools sharing
the four-way tle, 65·.53 at home.
This week, however, 't will ~

I

(ut it anJ limt btfOft
Christmas, $12.00 any sill.

.

•

•

.

.

AFTIR

BAntRY CHARGER

LIMIT 6

UIH•
~·-·--

$6147
'
UCH.

IU·Sll
!UI-10 U61-IOI !11-10
!I .
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--

'

' CHRISTMAS TREIS

by

-

.

By JIM WEIDEMOYER
OVP Stall Writer
Last ·Friday nlght, a four-way
tie for first place In the Southern
Valley. Athletic Conference was
wlddled down to two after the
res ults of three games. .
This Friday night sole possession hlng!!!i· on the outcome of
only one game . .
After last Friday's ~onference
action, North Galiia and Hannan
Trace are standing at the top of
the SVAC heap with theopportun·
lty for one to grab sole.posses_slon

G.ifts Galore

All Over The

The Daily Sentinei-Page-3

Wildcats, .Pirates ·square.()ff for top .spot in conference .

Petty revenge ______J_ac_k_A_nd_e_rso_n_&amp;_Jo_se..:,_ph_S_:.,p_ea_r

AUTOSTORE

$34~~tL

brutality .
.
In Philadelphia, more than 1\ny
other major city in America, that
apprehe nsio n Is tragically
justified.
Twice. handcuffed suspects
have been shot to death by pollee
while In custody; suspects have
a ppeared In court with . badly
bruised bodies and swollen faCt's: one suspect, charged with
resisting arrest. was beaten Into
a r.atatonic state and has yet to
regain full use of his faculties;
a nd only a couple of weeks ago, a
driver who suffered a stroke was
arrested . and held for drunken
driving. .
A year ago, one man was
roughed up so badly after being
arrested in Center City by police
that he had to be hooked up to ·a
life-support machine. His picture, attached to the machine,
was pubtlshed In my column with
a detailed account of his accu~a­
t ions·of brutality.
Neither the FBI nor the district
attornev nor the pollee depart ment bothered to investigate.
That. Is why an overwhelming
number of blacks bellevt' pollee
abuse to be S.O.P. (standard
operating procedure) In
Philadelphia.

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

None of these excesses are
mitigated by hard-line pOsitions .
on Jaw and order. I believe in a
mandatory dt'ath penalty for the
killing of any Ia w enforcement
officer .
Criminal suspects know this
when they come to me.

PA·RT

.

Page-2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio ·

•
Thursday, E&gt;ecember 18, 1988

•·

_,,.

PoooeroM.'Inc.

Mtlhlolll GIIANC ~COIII'O!U.TIOH .

.

~o. Orw&gt;

I

�.'

Page-4-The Daily Sentinel

,

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Pomeroy . MiCidlftport, Ohio

.

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.Pomeroy-Milldleport, Ohio

Thlnday, December 18, 1988

Thlnday. December 18. 1986

The Daily. Sentinei- Page- 5. ... .

Ramsay accuses Celtics' K. C. Jones of· .instigating fight . , . ·
By GERRY MONIGAN
l!Pl Sports Writer

day night were ejected for say all but acc'used CeltlcsFoach
exchanging punches In the · K.C. Jones of lnstlgatl~g the
NBA's third fjght In the last two Incident.
· &lt;f
nights, Pacers Coach· Jac)&lt; Ram" I know Carlisle Initiated the

After Indiana's John Long a nd
Boston's Rick Carlisle Wednes-

Kaff-kaff!

'fide vs. Huskies is· best early .bowl
with a big win ov~r Arizona In the
Japan Bowl. Stanford rates the ·
Hoople nod to defeat Clemson
31-27.
ALOHA BOWL: A ritona 18·3! ''' ·
Nor1h Carolina 17·3-1). Honolulu ;
ABC-TV. Solurday. Dec. 27. 4 p.m .
EST.
The second Pac 10 ACC clash.
The Arizona Wildcats, No. 17,
handed the Pac-10 champ Ariz·
ona State Sun Devils their lone
defeat of the year, 34-14. Dick
Crum's Tar Heels played consist·
ent football all season. In another
tight one, the Hoople System is
calling It, 33-28, In Arizona 's
fayor.
·
LIBERTY BOWL: Minnr.nra
(6-5). Memphi&lt;. TPn-n .: Rovrn- TV.
Mondnv, Drr. 29. 8 p.m. ESf
Two teams that have been up
and down all fall get a Chance to
close on a winning note. Minnesota's Gophers shocked the Big Te n

:· By Maj. Amos B. Hoople
• Fearless Forecailter
Egad, friends! The college
. football bowl season is getting
underway, with elght of the
Hoople Top .20 teams seeing
action In vari9us early games.
And - a he m - during the
r!'gular season, your Hoople
Forecast has a very admirable
record of 448·183·12, that's .710.
Here's how we see the early
bowl games:
IND£PENDENCE BO WL: Texn.•
Trr h (7-2) ' '·' · Missis.• ippi (7-.1- 1).
ShrN'l't•pnrr. La: VSA-TV. Saturtlnv. D,,,._ 20. 8 p.m . EST.
The Texas Tech Red Raiders
stunn ed No. 9 Arkansas in
mldseason a nd followed with a
two-point win over Texas. Ole
Miss finished in a second-place
tie in the tough SEC. The Rebeis
handed LSU one of its two losses
this fall . Give this one to
Mississippi, 21-19.
HAU~
OF FAME B0Jl1 L:
Geor~in (8-.l) . Tampa. Fla.: Mi:lou1"1' Tue.•dn)·· Dec. 23. 8 p.m. EST.
For the Georgia Bulldogs, No.
20 in the Hoople rat lngs, this will
be their 18th bowl ga me in 23
years under coach VlnFf Dooley.
In his six years at B.C., Jack
Bicknell has taken· the Eagles to
three bowls: and he did a
masterful job this year, winning
the Eagles' last seven contests.
In a very, ve ry close encounter of
even ly matched tea ms , we give it
to Georgia, 27-24.
.~1'"1 BOWL: Jlln.•hinp:lon (8·2· 1!
r.~ . A/ahoma (9-.'lJ. El Pa.m . Texn.•:
f.BS-T V. Th ur.&lt;dny. Orr. ~5. 2:.10

and
football
hungcollegiate
a 20-17 upset
onwhen
the they
loop
champ Michigan. Tennessee, the
upset victors over Miami In las t
year's Sugar Bowl, got off to
terrible start In '136. The Vols lost
five of their first seven game. But
they finished on .roll, taking four
straight. QB Jeff Francis has
Tennessee on even keel - and
momentum should carry the Vols
to a narrow, 25-22, win.
FREEDOM BOWL: UCLA (7·3· /)

'84 and '85. UCLA's experience
and depth will assure the Bruins
·
a 35-17 triumph.
. .HOUDA Y BOWL: Iowa (IJ.3) ,.,,.
Son DiPRO Srolr (8·3). Dan Diep:o.
· Calif. : Lnrimar· T V. Tuesda·v, Dec.
.10. 9 p.m. EST.

· Playing at home, San Diego
State, the WAC champ, should
get a big assist from the frie ndly
fans . And the Aztecs are going to
need all the help they can get!
The Iowa Hawkeyes, tied at No.
20, are very explosive, averaging
32 points per game, 11th )lest in
the country. O,n defense, Iowa
has surrendered 176 points in 11
games; SDS has given up 240 in
the same num~er of games. We
see a Hawkeye triumph , 35-24.
Watch for my forecast on the
big bowl games - It 's coming
next.

fl·"'· EST.

Possibly the best game of the
early bowls. Alabama. Hoople's
No . 11, finished In a tie for second
tn·the SEC: and Washington No.
IS. did the same In the Pac-10.
Both teams are strong at QB:
Chris Chandler of the Huskies
has com pleted 20TDpasses; and
Alaba ma has cagey Mike Shula,
who knows how to win. The
Crimson Tide RBs , Bobby
Hut;nphrey and Gene Jelks,
shguld carry Al,abama to a 31-28
vletory.
·
r;ATOR llOWL: Sranforrl (8-3)

.WE HAVE ~ RECEIVED OUR
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: One of two matchups of the
and the ACC. Clemson, .
No . 16. won the Atlantic Coast
crown {5·1). Jack Elway's Stanford Cardinals, No. 13, finished
Pll~ · 10

· ~J(JACKSON

-~··524 .

5250

BARGAIN MilNES SATURDAY thru
WEDNESDAY· AlL SEATS $2 .50
ADH!SS!ON EVERY TUESDAY 12.50
LAST DAY~
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7:00 I 9:00 RATED (PG 13)

; The Daily Sentinel
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Publish1'tl pvrrv aft C&gt;rnoon. Monda\1
t,tl r nugh F •:llt ~Y . 111 Court St.. POmf'r ~ . Ohto. by th&lt;' Ohio Vall f'y Pub1\shinl! Com pa n ~· 'Mu 11\mrdia. InC'.,
Pomf'rm·. Ohio 4 ~7fi9 . Ph. 99'2-21!'iti. Sr ·
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SUIISfRIPTION RATES
By Carrier nr Motor Roult
Wl'f'k ... ................... ............. $ 1.2~
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W&lt;'f' k,
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ava tl :tblfl.
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MATINEES I FIRST EVENING SHOW
THURSDAI,DECEMBER 25th
MATINEES,EVENJNG SHOWS ~LV
THE PERFECT GIFT FOR SDNEONE
WHO HAS EVERYTHING ~
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OFF

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THE MIDDlE SHOE STOlE IN THE MIDDlE .KOCI
,POMEROY, OHIO
•

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RICE 8

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THE POMEROY MERCHANTS

"special moments" on disand nl!lllly orpnized.
Roomy photo album has a

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T111 morblo tollle
top ond .,k wll·
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atatl' ·a ,.,.. accent In any rwm.

!R$100

adid at ' HHJith Club Set
1.7 oz. Cologne

2 oz. STock Deodoronl

$399 '

6 8 oz. Shampoo ond

· LIMIT 4 TO
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No. 2197t

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Eacn ~tt con!.ltns one St1VeHoned Creme
Rtche Ltp5Ttc~ wtlh Sitverptateil Mt11or

comp~el "' ""1'"9 pouch

---- $750
• Reg. 51.00

adid.as

12" I 25 FT.

RIG. '6.99.

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WHAT TO GIVE IN A CLUTCH .

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f;_;:1:1~±:JJ..-..1
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ALBUM

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Lights, Ornaments,
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...~ . CJpm~erm f:r-2-2). }nl'kMm•·illi•.
f'l~. : CB.~ 'sawrrln~·; Dt•c. 27.
12:.'10 p.m. EST.

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lfi·PRICE

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REG. 12141.95

SAVE

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WAGONMASTER
RED WAGON

ALL
CHRIStMAS ·TRIM
AND DECORATIONS

•
For Those Who Have Waited,

fiiiiiijijij~~!i~i~rJiii~~~~

1 ·.~ . Bril(hnm Ynun,R (8·4·) . AnahPim.
Calif. : Mi:lau- T V. Tu r.•da•·. Drr. 30.
8 p.m . EST.

This is the s ixth straight New
Year's bowl trip for Terry
Donahue and his No. 18 UCLA
Brulns.They won the Rose In '83,
'84 a nd '136, and the Fiesta in '85.
The Bruins got off to a roc~y start
this fall, being blasted In ·.their
opener, · 38·3, by then-No. 1
Oklahoma. Since mldseason,
UCLA Is 5-1·1. The BYU Cougars
are no strangers to bowls; this
makes their ninth straight.
Coach LaVell Edwards' team
lost four games this fall. which Is
as many as they lost In all of '83,

action and .John responded,"
broke the Jazz's seven-gam~
(55-291 and gol to th~. lou! line
Ramsay said after the Celqcs: winning , streak with a 122·107 ' m?.re than we did (38· .H. 11 1
113-101 victory. "He ; Carlisle)
triumph.
.I thought we played we n
may have been put Into the game
Rodman scored a season-high the ·first quarter .. T~.en we lost
for that reason. It definitely was
18 points and Campbell, who that rhyt)lm we had.
··
.
to their a,ctvantage to lose tarll·
entered the game averaging only·
Baskets by Rodman and Tho·
sle when we lose a guy like John ·seven minutes a game. added 11
mas at the start of_ the fourth
Long."
points and 7 rebounds In 21 quarter gavr DetrOit an 89:76
Immediately following the al·
minutes to lead Detroit to Its advantage. l)tah responded :-"1th
tercat!on, the Celtics werit on a
third straight victory.
7 straight points to move wtthm
·9-1 streak to assume control.
"It's nice to know we' can win 89-&amp;1 with 9:37 left.
Danny Ainge, who scored 18
without VInnie," Detroit Coach
. Darrell ·Grlfflth cutthe margin
points, nailed a 3-pointer and
Chuck Daly said. "Tony gave us to 97-92. but a b~sket by . Rick
. Kevin McHale sco red a pail' of some g90d minutes, but I was Mahorn and 4 pomts from Bill
Inside baskets to give Boston a
worried without Vlhnle because La imbeer gave Detroit a 103-92
113:99 lead with 1:17 to p!'ay.
. he's been playing so well."
.
edge with 5:10 remaining. Utah
"There probably was some
Isiah Thomas and Adrian Dan· got no closer than 8 pomts
pus hing and shoving. That's thE'
tley each had 20 points to !Pad rh~ thereafter.
NBA, " Carlisle said. "The el·
Pistons.
. In other games .. CIE'veland
bows fly, the hands get up.
"You ask mE&gt; why we lost the dumped Philadelphia 110-107,
there's few swings and that's the
' said Utah Coach Frank and San Antonio whipped Pho·
end of that. It's just something
us enlx 94-81.
that happens."
Tuesday night. Detroit guard
Vinnie Johnson had tangled with
Atlanta Hawks center Tree Rol·
Uns, and missed WedMsday
night's game against Utah be·
•
cause of a · shoulder Injury
suffered In the brawl. Neverthe·
less, the Pistons received strong
perform ances from Dennis Rod·
man and Tony Campbell and

Gym Bog

The

$1 7 ~~~25.00

are of LIMITED
GALUPOLIS STORE ONLY

U,\I•W~• ,.,If .

i lu•ftt ~0 ·1111~ ''lfll"' "'~", lf(l.,,lflt: ~ ~
l:iii'IIPII':I .., Iti&lt;rs I!IHnu~ll!l S!Nf.! INti ~ r iOUtt•
So wtrUI.te ~011 ~ U$11 ~ . ., dly
I ;, ,' , . ~·

,,. (M,.flronHo'forAU.oflJ

I

1/2 PRICE

Reg. 52,99

__
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$·899
leg.

STOltE

PH
/,

•

•

.'

.

.
I

,.

�•

.

•'·

. Page ~The Deily Sentinel

NBA~ults

lncttana
Clovelad

11 12 .t71l
II \2 .4115

7
1~

· Wes&amp;ern C•ference
Ml~waol Dlvlolon
W L Pd. GB
Doll..
Utoh

15 8
14 H
II 13
! II
; li
&amp; 11'

Dennr
Houolon

.ill .1138
1i
.tsll • Yt
.111 5
.304 H
.an 9

San Antonio
Sacramnt
PaciOc Dl\lbllon
LA Llkers
11 5 .m
Golden Stt
II 9 .1189
Por11Knd
IS II .101
SeoiUe
II II .5!4

l'lloaolx
LA Clippers

-

3\i

:w,
5~

II II .11011 6
I IH .181 13

, Weda esday',. Resulit

Bomon 113, lndiiUIIl 101
Cl .. ~ud lit, Phlllldelphla 107
Detroit 112, Utllh 117
San Antonio 94, Phoenix Ill
Thurtiday's Gamm

Ne w Jersey at New York, i: :W
p.m.
· Chicqo allncUana, 1: 30 p.m.
Atlanta at MIJwiUikee, K:30. p.m.
Sacurru.• loal LACiipptr!t, 10:30
p.m.
Portlud lU LA UkHS , 10: 30
p.m.
Wa."'ihhn~on ul Golden Slate,
18:31 p.m.
HOu~don al Seatut'; 10 :36 ·p:m.
· Friday•,. Gameoi
BOfllton al Philadelphia, nll{ht
·Satn Anl.tw~io Ml Dttroit, niKhl
Uttdl ~ Clf'Vei1U1d, niPI
De,a\'tr at Dallwo, nl~~:ht
St'&gt;iltll(' ai Phoenix, nl«hl
Hou!riton at Portland. night

NRL results
~ ,\TIOKU

HOCKE\' u :,\Gl'F.

\\'altos ('onft'fl'ftt.'f'

Patr-Ick Division

Phil a
N\' lsln
Pllshr
Nw ·ll'l'i~·
NY lin

\\' L T
tl j
17 12
lilt
1a It
II ll

Pts. (;F (; ,\
'l Ul l;l2 jl)
t :lti 1:!11 IU
l :H '117 IN
~ :f~ 119137
ti 2&gt;1 lt:l It!!
10 16 1i '!6 !lliU

,\dams Oi\'l!tilon
I&amp; II ~ :~ 110 9:i

80t;lon

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio

...............
-..,.I.

16 1:1 ~ ;«; llli llt&amp;
13 ~ l :II !lti K9
u J:i t :12 llfi 10~
fi tl ~ 16 97 1~6
famplM&gt;II fonlrrt..'IIC'I'

Mont rl
Hrtfrd
Qut•tN·
Ruffaln

Chi.,_ I, Wloolpea I
E4moot .. S. Quobo&lt; I

Loo Aqel"' l PIIIAIIurrh e
~I'GII S. VaaCDIIver ·f
,
Tllo~'oGam"'

NV llluden II Phlllolelpllla.
7:SI p.m.
.
Mlnameta f'f Toronto, 'J:S5 p.m.
Hut~rd It aa.a., 1': 31 p.m.
Wlooipeall81. LouOI, R:SI p.m.
Quoboc II Colpry, 1:31 p.m.
Fr1doy'oGomro

.

Wuhlaat,.. Ill N•w olen.,, niKhl
Monlr•ol 01 Ballolo. niJhl
Viln~'t'ei' at Ed.moatoa, aiPl'

~~~Wen!:\h:Or~t:rr\hen;~~

Tran88etions
.

Baoebail

Kansaa City - Acquired out·
h~der Juan Benlquez from Baltimore lor twa ml•or lequm,
t~hortltop .Joto Jarrell and pkcher
Jimmy Danlet.
LoH AnleiM - Auouncetl left·
lwlder Ed Vande lfora: and c:Mehf'l'

JiLek Flmple wBI aot be offered
contracts for next seAson.
' NY Mels-TradedcatcherDoua:
Gwosdz from ,Jat.'b en ol TexAN
Leap• CAA I lo Sf ollie ond &amp;Htdpmftll wllh Call{aty ol Paliflc Coast

Le•ll'l• CA.U) for ouiDelder Rick
N(&gt;lsen, who wW p to11dewater of
lnl.,.llllonal Le~~Ue (AAI\).
NY Yank"" - Outrll(hted In·
fielder BohbJ Meacham and nilnor·

'

SIGN UP FOR OUR FRIDAY
NIGHT MYSTERY GIFT
REGISTER BEllfEEN
5 AND 8 P.M.

leape pllcher Steve Geor«e to
ColumbuM of the lntH11allonal
l.A·a~e.
·
St. LouiH - AMouncHIIt will not
offer a 1~7t'OIItract to left- handed

reliever Ke• Daylt&gt;y.
CoUe.-e

Ioise stat e -

Namt'd John

Gou~eh, Dick 'Arbuckle, Scolt PPI·

luer and Carl Keever

KanJ;aH - Nauned Ron TumH
olfcnsh1 e coordlnalor and u."'bitant
t.'Oacla.
'I'IIINa - NMmed D~nld &amp;der

W I. T PIN. GF GA
1:111 :1 l!l 1~1 119

st . Lou:-.
Toronl

I~

Prtrok

II 1-1 ii !'i 9.1 lO iS
9 17 fi t~ IDi 1r.

(' hl(· lt~O

13 :i 29

12 H

~

~

9H 110

Wt&gt;t~t'ein Mlchl~an - Naml'd .4.1
Molde ,helld foot hall couch.
Football
NV ,Jel!O - Rt-sl~ed llnehadter

CharleH ,Jil('kt~on: placed n~('
tackh• Jof' Klecko and tawlde
ReK:~e M(' EliOy on lhr lnJ•red·
rffiervt• ll"'t; slped n08e tackJP
Dertau.d Moort• and defetl!'lln end
.aereme FoMer; Wal\'ed defento~Jve
end .Jim Studt.,-.
-wuhlnKf;Oit - · Waived llne-twu:ker ,Jeff Paine and Mlped
runnln~ batk Reg~t- Branch.
Hockey
Hat.rtlord - Sfoat center BUI

BLACK -John Beavet, right, of the Melp Counly Karale Club,
recently pas.•ed Ills Black Belt test given at Ohio State University.
Beaver Is plclured recelviDg ·cOnlfl'alulalloDll from Ed Cozart, an

Gardner to Blnl(hwnton ·of thl'
Amerluua Hot.-ke)' Leape.

lnstnrclor of lhe local club.

Toronto - Recldlfd ao ..tendfr
Jeff ftioeMe from Newmark(( 'of the
.4.merlt.u Hockey ~aa:ue .

College scores

Edmn
('all!')'

" 'nnpa

"""".
V•t.'Vr

tl II I 1:1 109 113
IH 1:1 I :17 12:1119
U II t :t~ IIHI 109
1117 ~ :tO 1:11111
9:!11 l 21 1071r.

r--· -------:----~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==~~~~~~~ft~

East
Brooklyn At, Loyola Marymounl
75
Geor~ftown &amp;2, 1\merican lSI
Hobart M, Rochester ln.o4Uute12
NYV 105, Vetthl\'.ll. 56 ...uulh

Ohio seores

OLIDAY SPECIALS

Clem~MHJ

112. Annstron~: St. 31
EllHI CII'OIInallll. Campholl n

Wc•dnetdlf..y:s
Ohio CoOt«&lt;' Ba~~~keUmJI
South Florida 6~ ClnclnnoU 17
Ohio U11h· 11:. Youn.own St 6.1
Ohio Northwn 7i, Ml Vnion 14
WIUmt..ra $1. MWikJntum 5t
lllo GrMdo It~ lluffloo Ill
FlncUay !7, nflln 7t

Lon~ IHiand 11. Old Dominion 64
Lottls\'1111' • . Tampa 10
Mlddl~ Ten•. St. 116; Llnooln
Mem. H
I
N.C. SL 81,
15
!!oufh FtiJrldo
47,
Wak(• Formi 71,

CASH
BACK

CHRISTMAS SPECIALS
OPEN SUNDAYS 12·5
GREAT SAVINGS EVERYDAY
UNTIL CHRISTMAS

ON ANY NEW ESCORT •IN STOCK

fPECIAl

-SPECIAL141

7 DIA. CLUSTER

DIAMOND EARRINGS
NOW

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$1695

WEll 132.95

GREAT eiRISTMAS liFTS

Escort G.T.

Escort • 2 Door

3.9% Fil'ancing Alllilable For 24 Montlls

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1f2CARAT $7 4995

141 GOLD

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NOW

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INCLUDES CHAINS
COLOIED lEADS

YEllOW 01 GCU

'

1987 FORD
RANGER
PICK-UP

1986.FORD
AEROSTAR ·
CONVERSION VA

INGELS

Escort- EXP

WAS S99.95 SAVE $50.00

I

•

off pots and pans with a liquid a reguldr practice. Remember, save "fixing'.' time. They don 't
time, too. Prepare soups and :
dishwasher detergent .' Pour It you • r ci pay 1n g for the necessarily pu t meals on Ihe stews in slow cookers. Compl~t!!.:
over encrusted areas before convenience.
table quickly. For example, most with bread, ~a iad , relishes ao~ :
placing the pan In the dishwater. . Convenience foods used at frozen foods ·must cook 15 to 45 fruit for dessert . If you have· a •
If you want to 'spend less time home, like par.ually or com· minutes. On the other hand, microwave, use It!
··:
in your kitchen preparing meals pleteiy prepared meals, can help canned convenience foods like . W,ith these quick and'easy tlp.SJ :
for your family dUring this busy put a meal on the table quickly. canned spaghetti and sauce, cut you II have more time to ente: , ;
time. here are some short cuts.
To save money, stock up on both fixing time and total cooking taln and e ~joy holiday fun.
...
Something's got to give. And If frozen pizzas, pot pies, fried time.
Did You Know That : Th~ :
you're short on time, you're chicken club sandwiches and
Another time-saving sugges- microwave oven can cut cooking .
going to. have .to substitute other h'eat-and-eat foods when tlon Is to plan simpler mea ls. A tim e by 75 percent for certal~ '
money, know· how, or equipment they're on sale. Sometimes you casserole, soup, and salad n;ay foods? For a copy of the holiday :
to get those meals to the·table on can even glye these ready-to-go be all you need for an evemng. n,alcrowave recipes shared In our. t
time.
meals a homemade touch, ' for meal, then add bread and milk.
c,ass this year, send 50 cents I~ ,
An obvious way to cut meal example, by adding some extra·
When you have extra time, the Meigs County · Extenslo~.
preparation time Is to eat out. cheese or another topping to make foods ahead . Bake a double Office, Box 32, Pomeroy, Ohio Occasionally this Is fine, but It · frozen pizza .
. batch of cookies or prepare a big 45769 ,01 stop by the office
can wreck a budgetlfyoumakelt
Many convenience foods only roast to use. Equipment can cut postage and pay only 25
I

Sale prices in effect Dec. 18through Dec. 24,1986

Funiture &amp; Jewelry
(REDIJ TOMS-FREt DBMRY

10W30
Reg.99¢

Alter Rebate

5W30

2511

Reg.1 .09
llmit12

49¢ alter reblt'

10W40

11411 saleprlce

Your coal

14~

. Aeg.2.191imll2

Alt•r Rebate

From

3.39

2.50

Zerex AntH.-eeze .
Rlg.4.19
311t

•

- 5.00

salt price eoch
mtr's rebate u .

16tt -.youbuy6

44.88

.... your COIIOICh
t .,. ~If rebate

.....

AflerRIMt•

Qualrer State
Gaa Line AnfHreeze.

1.00

20°/o

GOLD
NOW

OFF

30°/o

•Bulova
•Seiko

OFF

SPEIDEL ID
BIACELRS

SAVE

SAVE

20°/o
FREE ENGRAVING
POMROY
992-2054
GAWPOI.IS
446-2691

PENS

.10°/o
NOW

FREE ENGRAVING

JEWELRY BOXES ·

1111-tn, sleral ... radials,

linllld -

wheels.

WAS '18,173."

NOW

$14,250*

vin~

tmch seat. 111irroo,

rol~~.

54;88 efttr rebate

Your
Choice

ONLY

Sparlromatfc Truclr Slllftera
Reg. 84.15 oiiPTS-5

Replace all fan belts
every two years or
24,000 miles.

$6,595*
DELIVERED!
tiurry While Selection
Is Goodl

2.99.

.

Super500
Steering Wlteel
Covers Reg. 4.95

3.000FF

From

1.75

WAS '13,140."

NOW

Foom

68.95

99¢

lnferpart Rear
Window Louvers

Reg. 1rom 1.2t

STARTING AT

All Victor
Hose Clamps

$128616

Aeg. lrom 88.85

SAVE20.00

RCA CAMCORDERS
OPEN EVENINGS TILL I P.M.

•LAYAWAY
•DISCOVEI
•VISA
•MASTEICAID

INGELS

; MIDOlEP&lt;IIT

•

\

1-

Cowhide Work
Gloves

14"#11-25418 Reg. 23.95

Fanlelts

FREE GIFT WRAP

Black

20.95

Reg. 4.49

20°/o

Superior Foam
Steering Wheels

15.95

2.88

•'

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK
•

I

Store houra 8:30 ·a.m. to 8:00 p.m. Monday through Friday, .
.
8:30 1.m. to 8:00 p.m. Salurlllly 1nd 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. ' Sunday.

992·2635

,,

Swiss Army Knife
Reg. 6.95 #SK 1

10"#11-25108 Reg. 18.95
12" #81-25218 Reg. 18.95

1·5 , ...

SAVE

Reg. S5.95 #7657or7&amp;58 .

Reg. U9#LD1

Radiator Hoses

12,300

Mr. Gasket Truck Shifters

Afedo Lock De·lcer

Remanufactured
. Water Pumps

radio.

..

39.95

13.88

Smck 117412, 4 wheel ch e. ooy1l1. ~"~ · :! '""~
trans., ~~eerin g &amp; ~brales,
ruckel seats. outside spa-e tire carrier.

mfr'l rebate

It
Yourself
--Tip

Stock N734l. 4 cyl. engine, 5 speed •ans.
Slxk NJio\5, 7 passm&amp;lf, 6 eyl.
auto.
trans., ~lleemg &amp;p.tralies. root"'~ ·nb!IV~ ~
~ chrome bu~~~P«S. !IIP!I ."""'"~ ~
running t.ds. lfivacy l!lass. fBct air

your coal
after rebate

your coal

Reg.4a.

13 in. Diag .••••••••;$219°0
\9 in. Diag.......... $269°0
25 in. Diag ..:.,......$~99° 0

NOW

•

XSV Oil Filters

Reg.1.09
· limit 12

•

CLOCKS

.

;. :

7411 sale price

Reg. from 15.95

ALL

.

·Kendall. Motor Oils

1987 FORD
BRONCO II
4X4

ALL

'

Carpenter
.community
happenings

Mr. and Mrs. Manning Kloes
1
hosted the annual Christmas
1 potluck of the Golden Rule Class
of the Mlddlepo'rt First Baptist
Church.
The Rev. Earl Eden gave the
blessing. A whit!' elephant exchange was enjoyed by the
lfi'OUp. Two new members, Betty
Denny and TPresa Crisp, were
welcomed, as was Lynn An·
drews. a guest.
Mrs. Kloes presided at the
meeting with plans being made
for a valentine party at the Melg
. County Infirmary. Church decorations were discussed with
ponsettlas to be purchased.
Games were played. Others
attending were John and Glenna
Reibel,• Randall ahd Carolyn
Davis, Dale and Marjorie Walburn, Jean Thomas, and · Jean
'Eden.

·. s3oo

GAWPOUS - POMEIOY

Brush a little vegetable oil on
food graters before using them so
that food won't stick In the holes.
Cleaning the grater after you've
finished with It will be a snap.
Keep some lemons handy.
They are great for removing
counterlop and cutting board
stains. Just squeeze a · fresh
lemon over the stain and rub the
juice Into it ·with a clean cloth .
. If spills mar your clean oven
during . bakl'ng, pour salt on the
spills Immediately. Then, just
brush off the burnlfood when the
oven cools,
Clean baked-on· food deposits

Golden Rule
holds ,meeting

THE WORLD'S BEST SELLING CAR••••
JUST GOT BE"ER

or

ov~r to drain for ·a minute or two.

Ida Cheadle and Metta Fisher
were guests of Freda Smith.
Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Eastman
recently visited Mr. and Mrs.
Arthur Crabtree.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Jordan,
Monroe, N.C. spept a weekend
here with their parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Dwaine Jordan, local. and
1\fr. and Mrs. James Keffer, New
Marshfield. and other relatives
'In the area.
Mr. and Mrs. Dorsey Jordan
were weekend guests of their
son-In-law and daughter. Mr. and
Mrs. Dennis Devin e In
Columbus.
Mr. ~nd Mrs. Greg Carr and
son, Columbus. visited her
mother and step-father , Mr. and
Mrs. Eldon Barrows.
Mary Woodyard, Columbus,
spent, two nights here with her
cousin, Freda Smith. Larry Stanley. Edison, was also a guest at
·the Smith home.
. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Crabtree,
local, and his sister, Marguerite
Scott, Albany Rt. 1, were in
Parkersburg, W.Va . to visit an
aunt, Mrs. Emzle Oavis.

•FREE GIFT WRAPPIN~•
•COFFEE &amp; COOliES•

100 lOti

Smylh•• DMNion

•

footballtoath.

Norrf.l Dkoislon

Mlnn...t

By Cindy S. Oliveri
County Extension Agent
Home Economics aad·f.H
As the holiday entertaining
season Is almost here, many of us
will be spending mc~e time to the
kitchen. Maintaining a clean
kitchen d11rlng the hedlc holiday
season doesn't have to. be timeconsuming.
.
This week, "ln The Spotlight",
. shares some quick and easy tips
to help rou keeP, kitchen cleanup
to a minimum, ·so you will have
time for otherthlngs.
Wash out blenders and food
processors as necessary between
recipe preparations by half·
filling them with water and
adding a few drops of dlshwash·
lng liquid. Turn on the appliance·
for a few seconds. Thoroughly
rinse the blender or food processor with hot water, then turn It

DEC. 12th WINNER
EVELYN NICHOLSON '.

MJ~lstanl

football coau.·heo.

~WMIHtanl

.

.MIDDLEPORT· DEPARTMENT
STORE '
WILL BE OPEN UNTIL .
8 p.M•.EVERY FRIDAY .
· NIGHT FOR YOUR ·
SHOPPING CONVENIENCE

~ints

.

Shine for holiday guests: fancy foods, without mess,,

The Penplna, also 4-4, were scored 14 polri\s and Darreli ·
By UDI~' Pret18 lnlernatlonal , break out of Ills shooting slump .
paced
Tilman Bevely's 19 points. Coleman added 12 points and 1'2 .
· Ohio University gu~rd Reggie ton~t. : '
(
James
Wilson added 18 and rebounds to lead South Flori~
Rpnkln snapped out o!' his scorHahn called off Wednesday's
•
Ing slump In timely fashion for sche~luled walk-through practice James Gilmore had 10 for YSl,!... .p-bPbhl,::. f'ln~I'\Jlatl...., ··.
Elsewhere Wedneday night, .' · Cincinnati, 3-3, played wlthoalt
the Bobcats.
·
and held a team m~ting lns.tead,
. With a pair of regulars out of urging hiS players to be prepared . South Florida defeated Cincln· Its leading scorer, guard Roger.
action with . the flu, Rankin to give a "total effort" In the nat!, 62-47; Ohio Northern topped McClendon, and without . cent Ell' .
scored a career-high 23 points game because starter Marty Mount Union, 77,64; Wittenberg . Cedric · Glover: McCiendo)l ..
Wednesday night to lead the host Lehmann and No. 1 sub Steve edged Musklngum, 56-54; Rio sprained a knee In .a worko'!l
Bobcats to an 82·63 victory over Bruning were sidelined with the Grande blasted Bluffton, 104-89; Tuesday and Glover wa.s side.
and Findlay bombed Tiffin, 97·72. · lined earlier following arthro~,.
Youngstown State.
flu.
At Tampa, Fla., Doug Wallace ·coplc knee surgery. ·
' ''
The 6-foot -2 redshlrt freshman.
"I felt that we got that from
who was hitting on!y 35 pereent of
Hahn said.
his field goal atteJ11pts going in.to them,"
· The Bobcats
jumped to a.10·2 rr-.ii;li:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
the game, sank 9-oM4 shots,
lncludlng ·5 three-point goals, to ·
help the Bobcats even their leading 44·28 at halftime and by
·
·record at 4- 4.
asmanyas19polntslnthesecond
"Reggie played like the Reggie half.
Rankin we recruited," said OU
'
PaulRhodes
"Snoopy"
Graham
coach Billy Hahn. "We felt all John
chipped
In withand
18
day lo.ng that he was golng to
....
each for ou.

NV
WuhlatiOIII
Ntow .lonfl' ~ Torooto I (OT)

I he Datly Sentinei-Page-7

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

In the spotlight ·

OU.ends slump,.,tops You~gstown Stat~,:

Hartford 4, Bullllo I

NATIONAL BASKETBALL
ii&amp;'!OC.
r.u&amp;en C•ference
AUullc DIYiolon
W· L Pet. GB
......
117 .• 1 l'llllodlph
13 II .MI l
~~
II II .1115 I Ii
Ntow York
5 I! .llli II ~
· Ntow Ieney ·
I I! . m II
C.nlrol Dlvlolon
Allut1
18 5 . 783 - .
16 8 ,117 I I&gt;
.MUw10ke
DotroK
11. 8 .1111) I ~
Chlc110
II II ,M 1\i

Thc.nday, December 18, 1986

••
ThiA'IIday, December 18, 1~:

209 Upper River Rd.
Gallipolis, Oh.

Reg. 4.99 #LG·1

Battery Tester
AC/DC Reg . 3.95

Temperature
Compass
Car Clock
Reg. 3.95 # TCC2

Whistling Key
Chains
Reg. 3.95 #WK·5

'

..

�(

. Page · 8 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy_:. Midd!eport,

Th-u rsday, December

Ohio

18, 1986

Community·calendar I area happenings '

· Beat of the Bend ·

Help sought in starting
·;·a b~nd at Southern High

will be at the Syracuse !lr'e house
2 .p.m. Sunday. Donations are
being accepted for treats whl c!)
W!ll be dlstribl! ted.

THURSDAY

RAC INE -The Ladles Auxtllary of Mr. Moriah_ Church of
God, Racine, will have-Us annual
Chris tmas di nner on Thursday at
HEMLOCK GROVE - Hem6 p.m. at the LaSalle Christian
B:- BOB HOEFLICH
a.m. Sunday at the Lighthouse Restaurant in Middleport. The lock Grove Christian Church will
Sentinel Staff Wr ller
Tabernacle Assem bly of God on church's Christmas play will be present _a t Christmas program
Act ion .is being taken at South- Route 160, Gallipolis, and at 7 held at_7 p.m on Dec, 21.
Sunday evening at 7. Santa wilL
ern Hig h School
p.m. at Liberty Assembly of God
visit. Regular 9:30 Sunday mornto get a band
on Route 33East in Mason, W.Va.
ing
services will feat ure special
RACJN E - Racine Elemenorganized· and
Chlidren taking part Include tary School w!ll present a Christ- music. Sunday School at 10:·30.
vocal music inJeremiah Alliso n, Michael and mas program Thursday, 7:30 Everyone welcome.
str uctor Ro Ian Barton, Roimie and Christina p.m .. at the Racine First Baptist
berta Maidens,
Hirth, Rachel and Becky Little, Church.
·
who does such
April and Karl Miller,· Crissy
SYRACUSE - Syracuse Ele. good things with
· Nqrvell, J immy Randas, J ustin
· her vocal stuuents, has been Rice. Amy, Jessica, Rachel and men tary School wtlj present a
na med to get the ball ro lling.
Sarah Ro bie, Sa brina Tennant, progr ain, "The Town Hall."
Roberta says that there is a lot and Erika and Matt hew Van Thursday, 7 p.m.. at the school.
of in tcrest - and she has Meter.
FRIDAY
students who would like to get
Both presentations are open to
SYRACUSE - Syrac use
-involved In band. However, there the public.
Homemakers
Club meets Friarc no instruments to speak of
'
day,
6
p.m.,
at the Syracuse
and an appeal is being issued to
Members of the Syracuse
for the
Presbyterian
Church,
ask residents to dig out instru- Homemakers Club are looking
Christmas
dinner.
annual
ments, no longer used, out of the forwa rd to f rid ay evening when
attic.
they will, .have their annual
SATURJ)AY ·
: While some purchases of in- Christmas dinner at 6p.m. a t the
RACINE - Racine Amer ican
struments could be made, the big Syr·acuse Pres byter ia n C h t~rch .
push is for residents to donate Since the club is comprised of Legion Is having a Christmas
these instru ments so that a band homemakers, let' s just say that party and dinner for members,
, can get going.
the food should be great. Those auxiliary members and their
If you can help. please contact
attendin g are to take their own immedi ate families, Saturday,
starting at 7 p.m., at the legion
Roberta at the high school or table service.
haiL
Anyone needing InformaPrincipal James Adams - · the
Kermit?
tio n should co ntact Ed Turley at
new number at the high school is
If you missed the special
949-2611. They' d love for you to holiday exhibits and decorations 949-3010, or Pete Bearhs at
: keep that phone ringing.
at the Meigs Museum .Sunday . 949-3074, or Pauline Wolfe at
when a Christmas open house · 949-2773.
Santa is goi ng strong at the was held. you can still take a
HARTFORD. W.Va. - USWA
: Pomeroy Health Care Center.
gander at them ·since the muChristmas
dinner Satu rday at
A special telep hone li ne has seum is open from 1 to 4 p.m.
union
hall.
Serving from 11
the
bt&gt;cn put in at the cent er for use of eve r y Tu es d ay t hr ou g-h
a. m . until 6 p.m.
area pre-schooier·s and early Satu rday.
.
elementary children who wish to
Marily n Poulin of Middleport
SNOWVILLE - Community
Kermit Walton can be
: phone for a chat with Santa. The and June Baker, M,lddleport,
is
tmas
tree
lighting,
SaturChr
service Is being carried ·out were winners of door prizes
· found on Fridays &amp;
: through senior citizens, partici- Sunday and these were holiday day, 6 p.m.. in the square at
Saturdays at
• pants of the Meigs Retired Senior floral · arrangements from the Snowville. Refres hments will be
hot
chocolate
and
cookies
.
Citizens Volunteer Program and Pomeroy F lower Shop.
THOMAS CLOTHIERS
Friends and neighbors welcome.
ot her volunteers. The line is
--Gallipolis ·
function lng from 3 to6p.m. dally,
The · Scipio Volunteer Fire
"C/•IillfiiiO
Ltlilll Bt~IIIMM "
SUNDAY
· Monday through Friday, and will Department was among the
SYRACUSE - Santa Claus
: be available unt il 6 p.m. on departments Involved Sunday
· Christmas Eve. The num ber Is night In a search for a person
~92&lt;l567.
believed missing. Wlv!'s of
members of both the Scipio and
th!' Columbi a Township Depart·..
Assem blies of Callipolis and ments served food' to the departMason. W.Va .. have united to ments during the long search.
: present "Christmas Fever,'' a
· ch ildren's Christmas · musical.
No , I haven' t given up on
this Sunda y.
urging you to k eep smiling.
The program featu res a com- Somehow, the end of a column
bined children's choir along with sometimes goes to computer
puppet sketches. A tiny tots heaven. You know it's the season
ma nger scene is the grand finale. to be jolly so I would wa nt you to
Perform ances wil l be· at 11 keep smiling.

held Dec. 28 and Ja n. 4. 'at t
same time.

Public Invited. ·

'

'

'

SYRACUSE- Santa will be at
Syracuse Volunteer Fire Depart·
ment Sunday, 2 p.m.
MIDDLEPORT .,. Middleport
Independent Holiness Church, 75
Pearl St.,w!ll have a special
candlelight service 1&gt;unday, 7:30
p.m. Rev. Ivan Myers, . New
Haven, W.Va., Invites everyone .
to attend.

----

'\ .

.., ..
.. ,
. . .' .". ...
... .", .

Pre-Christmas

R.van Condr. Jason Mor r is.

Sixth Gr ad £': Car rie Bar tels. Eliza b&lt;'l h

Down!(', Misty HAyman. J ason Huffma n.
Courney Midkiff. HE'a1hf'r Pauley. ShciiPy
Smllh. Yv£'tl t• Yo ung.

•

Salem Center Elemeftl•f)'

: COOJH&gt;r, Hf'alh4?r Da venporl. Stacey Dun• ra n. Sracey F ry, Tara G&lt;&gt; rlach. J£'ff'my
~ Hrck, Dar in Logan.• Joe M c-E lroy, Tammy
• MIIIE"r. MC'Ilssa Neu l 7. 1ln ~. Mira nda Nichol·
so~. Ja!ion Rey nolds. Jerl:'my Ru pc. John
Sa n~t'nl . Pau l Sharp. Tony Six. Mark
Stan iC'.~'. Bobby Va nre. Ron ald Vancr.
Chriss II' Wravr&gt; r, Robbv Wva tl ,
El,aht h Gr ade: ChaSf' Cleland, Randy
• Co r!il. Ter~a DE&gt;rm. John E vans. Da vid

The Sl'C'Ond six weeks gr&lt;Jdlng per iod
honor roll at the Salem Ce nter ElemC'n tary
has bet&gt;n annou ncro. M a kin~ a grade of 8
or aboVP In all Thelr subj K ts to be namro t o
th e ro ll

Cochran . Ki m JanE'y, An ni r. J&lt; ! n~ . Susa n
P a ~ e . Kerry Sex ton , M lchPII{' Shui Pr,
Cr vstal Va u ~h a n .
·
Gr adr Six: Alllson Ganawa y, Randall
Jo hns lon. Ta r a Sht'J)pNd, V lr~lnla Shul er.

Er lt Pt•lf't·son. Richard Pcv ton. Sh&lt;J n('
Phillips, TPrry fu&gt; ut r r . Stticey Sha nk.
Aaron ShCf'ts. Krlstf'n Slawl t'l'. Jason
Smith. J oseph Smll h, Kr!slf' n Sta nll'y,
JC'nnlf('r Tay lor, Ken VanMa tre. Amy
Waji!:nf' r. Strphanlc Walkf'l', 1\ rn v Wa rt h.
·,J€'nny \V['rry. Darri Wolfe. Daymond

• PECAN . ~
FINISH ~
• MIRROR
BACK

W OI(o'' .

Cantata planned

Elt mentary

The combined choir members
of the Bradbury Church of Christ
and the Zion Church of Christ are
pr esenting a cantata, "Hom£&gt; for
Christmas" by Don Wyrtzeri,
Phil and Lynn Brower, at the
Zion Church Sunday night at 7: 30
p.m...
Kathy ,Johnson will be pianist
and ot her accompan ists wlll be
Jeff Arnold on the flute and
Melanie Arnold on the bells.
Robert Purtell. pas tor of the Zion
Church is directing the rantata.

SChool has lx'cn announcro . M a kin ~ a
'gr adf' of B or a bovP !n all their su bj f'CIS l o
'tJr nam rd to thr roll wprp:
'• F irs t Gradf': David Banks. 81111 Jo

fkonT IC'y. La c:.' Dlrkf'M, J r .~ sf' Ea!itman.
"Chad Fo lml'T. Jason Fnx· kf'r, MlrhaPI
'U'IIhcl t. Hr ldl lejlla r. Bob Branch Mark·

Tar a Mtchat:;'i. Sh&lt;'ra Pall£'rson :

MC'IIssa Ramsburg, J&lt;-rrmlah Russell.

Sabrlnil Smi th. Jf'rrm.\' Kl n_g-.
' Sr roml G r adp: Lcr Cor dray. Bct s.v
Houdashrll , .Jarrd King, Timm y P ra~· l r~·.
Chl'iStoph('r Ro ush. Bn•nt Wh aley. Mr -.
'Ii ss a Whalev.
Third GrJdC': Ni('Oi f' Ek' nll ~· . Ooro1 h~·
l.:t'lrt! Pil . Ka rv n Thompson.
Fourth Gr~H1r: Ja rrod FolmN. Jf' H'·
m lah Gilh&gt;tT C'. Hrl dl Huffman, Emil.' '
,PhriSO_!I. Jorv L!psrom h. Shilo Moorr.
Robie. Amanda WC'll, Tonya Will .

• 71"H X 24"W

~1'

FOR CRISTMAS
BY PULASKI
For vour father - the man
with·a spectallove! Collectlng gu~. hunting, treasurtng
Grandad's trusty shotgun. A
practical handloole gift for
hill) that wm keep on giving
for years to come.

I

:Saturday, ·December 20, 1-4
WITH TREATS FOR THE KIDS

CHECK OUR
PRICES!
Choose. From. 6·8·10·12 Gun Sizes
111111

SHEA.
R
ILLUSIONS
S.
MIDDLEPORT

293

2nd

992·2550

UNDER NEW OWNERSHIP
PAULA BUTCHER AND SUSAN SISSON

ment whk:h concerns an aban-

·Zenith
Tops
Santa's List Again!

financial assistance in rt·

SUNDAY, DECEMBER Zl, 1:00PM
HARTFORD OOMMUNli'Y CENTER

RT. 33

Waldleo &amp;:

RICHARD REYNOLDS,
Auctioneers

.

Squarfl Court, Bultdlng H-2.
Cotumbut, Ohio, 43224.
Tho epacific project In-

abandoned aurface minas
that are a major aource of
sediment which leeds to

CHRISTMAS
TREES

ZEN1'111 Jr Dt 11 u1 C~rlts Color n' • 0 908W
• Zenith Cbromasbarp 90 Picture Tube for •uJ&gt;&lt;rb ·picr ~re
sharpnes! and h.iahlight detail.
• Dependable tOO% Modular Z- t Chassi• fo r tong-life reliability.
• Super Video Range Tuning with Perma-Scr, Finc· Tuning.
• Electronic: Po•er Sentry prolccls c h as~is . control .~ energy
usap .

• Auto-Control COlor System.
• Simulared"Walnut finish.

19"

COLOR

Wanted To Buy

WANTED TO BUY
IN GOOD CONDITION

Baby beds, hi1h chairs,

strollers, playpens, bas·
sinet, baby clothes, size

to

HUMAN GRATE, OWNER

(304) 773-5592

.

. ,.

•

.

Mason, W. Va ..

THE BARTER
SHOP

TAGGING NOW

ONLY

$29995

GE VCR

Hvent 14-Day Timer
3

' }9d~&amp;, Rebate
S29995

TELEVISION

32rv s2s995

REWAR-D
A reward of ssoo cash is offered
for the apprehension and Conviction !lf the person or persons res·
ponsible for firing several gun shots_
into a gas compressor station
owned and operated by Carl E.
Smith Petroleum in Portsmouth.
Located on Silver Ridge Rd., Orange ·
Twp., Meigs County, Ohio.
·

64 Misc. Merchandise

Balhan Building

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT •
6:30P.M.
factory ChGke

12 'Gauge Shotg111s Only
10-8-tfn

L&amp;W CLEANING
ClRPET
UPHOLSTERY
PLUS

446-6323 Day or lvening

mo. tt -17-llli

MOUNTAINEER
BODY SHOP
PARTS INC.

Hos lower•• Prices

80

US- Ford 73-77 &amp;59

GOLDSTAI

FARM CITY INC.
POMEROY
992-2104

SIZE 23X30X007

2s(

EACH

USES. FOR ALUMINUM SHEETS RANGE
FROM ROOFING DOG HOUSES TO
MAKING HA-RED LAMP SKADES.
CAN BE PURCHASED DAlY AT THE
DAILY SENTINEL TIL 3 P.M.

GRAVELY

TRACTOR SALES
204 Condor 5t.

Pomeroy, Ohio

'"2 -6215 or '~2 - 7314

11-24- -1 mo.

- --

Roger Hysell
Garage

PH.

Pomeroy, .hio

·

992-7v:J~

4-15-86-fc

RADIATOR
SER~eE

PLUMBING &amp; HEA nNG
New location:
168 North Second
Middleport, Ohio 45760
SALES &amp; SERVICE

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR .
Also Trantmhslon
PH. 992-5682
or 992·7121

We

CarrY Fi! hing Supplies

Pay Your Cable &amp;
Phone Bills Here
BUSIN!IS PitON!
(6141 "2-6S50

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

PAT HILL FORD

992"- 2196
Middleport, Ohio ·
1·13-tfc

!6 141

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

J.R.'s REPAIRS
TYs, Antennas
Satellite Sales
Installation
Service

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

Electronic ' Organs
l\llobile seJVice

109 MULBERRY AVE.
POMEROY, OH.

614-843-5248

PH. 992-9949

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

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

Bob Barton, Owner
11-28-86-1 mo.

RfASONABII · REliABlE
8-20-'86. tfn

:

We can repair and r&amp;core radiators aod

R!!ID!NC! PHON!

6-17 -ftc

MEIGS
EXCAVATING.
COMPANY

•All Types of
Excavating
•Landscaping
•Basements

271 N. 2nd, Middleport
992-5766
OPEN : Mon .- Fri. 8 am·9 pm- Sat. 8-6
Walk·in$ Welcome
EAR PIERCING, MANICURING, PERMS AND
ALL YOUR StYLING NEEDS
Debbie Meadows- Owner; lmojean Blevins
Loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Morri Amsbary

o

i

.

Co~uterized

•Sewage Systems
•Water &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

Call: 742·2407

ll-2S.S6-I mo.

!CUT OUT FOI FUTUH USE)

· KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

·-- ·- -- .. · - ·

Hearing Air Selection
z Swim Molds - I(lterpreting Services

985-3561

-~a: LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

1

Alllhke•

•Wa1he's •Dis hwasher •
•Ranges
•Refrigerators
•Drvera •Freezers

:z:: Licensed Clinical Audiologist

z

-

PARTS and SERVIC E
4-5-tlc

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

GEARl'S

Gallipolis, Ollio 45631

BODY SIIOP

S50 Pogt St., MicWieport

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW. INC.
405 MAl N Street, Pt. Pleasant, WV 25550

Th•

PH.992-3537

12· 16-'86·1 mo.

(304) 675-5252
PR.OFE$$/ONAl HIIN .

,,,,,,,, c..,,

Announce 111 cnls
3 · Announcements

•Insulated Replacement

Window

•Vinyl, Steel Siding
•Storm Windows
•Doors

Racine Gun Shoot sponsored bv
Racine G un Club . Every Sunday,
beginning 11 1:00 p.m. Fac::torv
Choke. 12 guage shot; uns.

"FREE

INmLLATION"
IIIOWROOM HOUIIl:

Riverine Antiques op e11 tvtninga
and by appoin lm ent 11 24 Eaat
Main St.. Pomeroy. Oh io. Au11

9 to l Mon., Tuts., WorL &amp; Fri.

10' MESH ANTENNA
PANASONIC RECEIVER
FUU Y REMOTE &amp;INSTAllED

$4800
NO DOWN PAYMENT

•VINYL SIDING
'ALUMINUM SIDING
•BLOWN IN
INSULAnON

BISSELL
SIDING CO.
New H011111 luilt
"Free Estimates"

PH. ,49-2801
or 949·2860

The lzuk Wal ton Club will h fte
th eir muu te lo• d ing gun sho o t a
on the following Sundaya: Dec .
2ht. Dec. 28th and Jan. 4th.
Stanlng time eac:h Su nd ay . is
1;00 p.m . Bench and off-h a nd
shoot ing, no 1cope permitted.
Pri zei -turkey , bacon 1nd Clah.
No hunt ing or

t rti PIIIing ,

Mynea Farm loc aled Chestnut
Ridge Rotd.

~.~~rs CARPET.~~!~~!.

M ASTE RCA RD - V ISA! N"o
c redit check. Also, new credit
card . No one refus &amp;d t f or In fo.
call (refund able) 1 -31 5-7 3 6 ·
1610 EXT. M -573.

11-19-"86- 1 mo.

LEG AL SERVICE : Puraonal In Ju ry, Social Security, Oia1bility
Claims. Domesti c:. Ma giatr•te
Co urt, Workers' Comp enMtion

PH. 992 -6173

J&amp;L INSULATION
JAMES KEESE
HEAT)NG &amp; COOLING

ONLY $299

MGM

Ch i s ~ ts .

V. C. YOUNG Ill

Ford • OM Truck Fenden

57995

510995

Knives

- Con crete work
- ~u mbing 1nd etewical
work
(Free Estimates)

PER MONTH WITH

Tll RU DEC. FREE INSTAL .
ON BEOLINERS
.We aelltop
I
and heve 3

VCR TAPES

Planer Knives

Drill Bits

Moore, ownar. 6 14-992·2626.

HOOVEI

ALUMINUM SHEETS
FOR SALE
ONLY

GUN SHOOT
RACINE
FIRE DEPT.

Early •39 - Lite •&amp;II
Chrome Bumpers- GM 73·

SWEEPERS

Saw Chain

- Roofing 1nd gutter wtnk

Pre-cut trees available
Located on
Flatwoods Rd . (Co.
, Rd 261 at Harley
Haning residence. 2
Mi. from Five Points
Watch lor SiM;"'

~ 8F,

MICROWAVE

(FormtriJ Files)
711 South Third St.
Middleport. Ohio
Phooe 614-992-7494

Anyone having any information regarding this criminal act are urged
to contact the Meigs Sheriff's Office
or notify Carl E. Smith Petroleum
Inc. at 304-273-9313.

30' ELECTRIC

Circular Saws

- ·Addona and remode lmg

HOl'ONT

RANGE

SERVICE

CARPENTER
SERVICE

OPEN 8 A. M .-4 P.l\11 .

raaidance1.

Gll9"

9

YOUNG'S

4/1/lhl

flooding -of local roads and

aou,cea. Division of Recla·
m1tion, 1851 Fountain

newborn
4T, crib
sheets, blankets, etc.

3 Announcements

Public Notice

sely affect•d by poat mining. (12) 18, 1tc
Acomplete copy of tho .,viron mental at&amp;ellmtnt is 54 Misc. Merchandise
available f1om th• Ohio Da_parimant of Ntturtt Ro-

HARTFORD, WI

Junlu8 &amp;: Charlie Colof!llm. Italian Gold Bracelets,
Glove &amp;: Scarf Sets, Larfl'l AMonmmt of Toys,
Candy, Elocter ~. Rup, Gill llemll F,..
Everyhody!
RICK PEARSON l!o

llllllt)ll

·

claiming, and r11toring land
and water rnourcu advar·

Melgo County. Tho projo9f
witt roclelm 161 acres of

New Lampo, Jewelry Skrre Quality

MASON FURNITURE CO.
.

Public Notice ·

cluded in this action Is the
Rutland-II ·Pha• I Reclam•·
tion Project located near the
community of Rutland in

Public Sale
&amp; Auction

Jewelry, Radios, 35mm Cameraa, Perflune Sell&amp;:

For Dad

Santa Will -Be Here

AND STYLES

Great Silections
At Super Savings

A Unique Gift

KIDS!!
20°/o OFF ALL HAIRCUTS.

REG; •249

:$188.
*·

HEY

panded cteskllne. roll top
and student desks in stock.
They a r ~ goln~ fast: get
vou rs todav'
.

8
15

Public Notice

cloned mined lind redlmlllion
OFFICIAL NOTICE
Pu,..,ant to TiUe IV of the project in tho State of Ohio.
Surtece Mining Control and Tho Sune of Ohio has - e d
Reclamation Act of t 977, 30 ar&gt;d the Office of s...tece MinU.S.C. 1201 at seq., the Ohio ing Recllmllion lnd EnlorceOoprwtmant of Natural Ro- mtnt, United Statas Dopan.
mtnt of the tnt-. hao apIOurce~, Division of Recl.-nation hereby givas notice of the proved the arwironmentat asavailability of a FINDING OF 'WifMMil for this project
NO SIGNIFICANT IMPACT wlllch Wll albmiltod by the
for an environmental ...... State In application for Thta tV

SEe

Michelle V o un ~ .

ThC' second s ix 14'f'f'k!'-i grad ln~ pM"Iod
honor rull at lhP Sa lisbury E lrm l'nla ry

Public No1ice

i

.w.

PHONE 992 _2156
Or Write Darllr SenliMt Cllssilitd Dtpl.
ll t COIIft Sl., '-"!OJ, OhiO4~769

NEED A.
DESK!
lri and
our newlv

C radr Four: Jo£'y Ba rrf't1. J ess ica

FOR SALF

a:OGGS

liKE

Desk 1 At Sale
Prices I

Ganaway, Mikf' J a rvis.

Business . Services

wou ld be present, prison officials Supreme Court was rejected
·sALES &amp; SERVICE
said.
Wednesday, marking the second
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
When as ked If he had a fin al time In less than a week t hat the
GUYSVILLE, 01110
statement,_ Andrade looked at · high court ref!Jsed to lnterven~ In
Authorizad John D.tre,
prison chaplain Carroll Pickett his case.
Ntw Holland, Bush Hog
and shook his head no.
The death row inmate filed the
· Farm lq"ui}lllltn\
As the lethal drugs took etfect, second request for a stay on his
.Dealer
Andrade grimaced, drawing his own, even though. his attorney
Ups back and exposing his ieeth. had advised him the earlier
Fttlll Eqal.meat
He made a loud coughing, r~jection meant all legal appeals
Parte &amp; Suvlee
choking noise and his stomach had been exhausted.
1-3-'86 tfc
jerked. He then made several
For his last meal, Andrade ate
swallowing noises before falling pizza, refr lea beans, Spanish r ice
slleilt.
and cake. He spoke briefly with
D&amp;P
He was pronounced dead at his former wife and his mother
12: 32 a.m. CST.
Wednesday, but at his request, no
APPLIANCE
In the hours before his death, family members witnessed the
Andrade was "calm, joking and execution.
· REPAIR
laughing with correctional officAndrade, who had received
7 Years
ers," Texas Department of Cor- stays of two previous execution
Maintenance
rections spokeswoman Linda . dates this year, had been on
McKenz ie said.
Experience
death row since November 1984
· Andrade' s· final appeal to the - less time than any of the
Work
previous 19 men 'fexas has put to
Guaraoteed
·death since resuming executions
In 1982. The average stay on
614-446·7126
11·26-'86'1 mo.
death row In Texas is abou t six
years.
He Is the lOth person Texas has
executed this year.
EAGLE RIDGE
Andrade was sentenced to die
Silverman and executive produ cer Paul Greenberg "had for the March 20, 1984, slaying of
AUTO REPAIR
knowledge of fa lsity .or had a Cordelia Mae Guevera, 28, of
Truck, auto, &amp;
serious doubt about the truth" of Corp!JS Chr istl , who was stabbed
heavy equipment
three broadcasts in 1980 and 1981. 14 times during an attempted
repairs
and welding.
"One or more of the Individual . sexual assiiJilt at the Chiquita
(All makes &amp; models)
defendants harbored Ill will or Fajita lo~nge she owned.
Authorities said Guevera
PH. 949-2893
hatred toward (Newton) and
fou
ght with her attacker, desperIntended to injure him," the .
or 949-2756
ately trying to fend him off by
verdict said.
John K. Bentz
Newton claimed In his suit that jabbing him In the back with a
pen.
When
Andrade
ballpoint
Owner /Mechanic
he lost millions In earn ing~ and
11-19-86-1 mo.
got an ulcer because of the NBC was arrested two days later,
pollee
found
ink
on
the
bac
k
of
his
Nightly News reports that said
Newton was less than candid shirt.
Andrade testified at his trial
with officials about his relationSKATE -A-WAY
he used heroin the night or
that
ship with reputed New York
Wm A P1!1r of \kntf'\
Gambino crime family associate the crime and had no recollection
(IHI ~Ir•·,n~ Pt~r 1y Ot•&lt; 10
of
Guevera's
death.
G ~ ldo PenosL'
N1•w 'Trot 1 f ~P Potly
Guevera' s sister, Cat alina
Galane argtied thar NBC preOt•r J 1
pared the negat lv~ reports on Meza, said In Laredo that her
was
"waiting
for
justice
family
(7
iO
untrl I 00)
Newton in an attempt to curry
to
be
done."
Oprn WPrl .. frr, 'Hll.
favor with "Tol\lght Show" host
"There Is no thing that can be
J ohnny Carson, ·who reportedly
7 JO u;nd l 0:00
was angry after his own attempts done as far as the life of my·
1huduhll' LJ·
sister.
but
we
feel
he
should
not
to buy the Ahiddln fell through
Art thrloy'. (lwrdl.
Prrwutl' Pot hr~
and Newton subsequently bought be allow~ on the streets to do.
the resort with a partner for $85 that again," Meza said.
98 5-3919 or 98S 9996
Andrade was the 68th person
million In 1980. Newton later soltl
put
to death since the United
his interest In the Aladdin.
States
resumed executions In
Abrams called the Carson
WE ARE YOUR SAL ~S
1977.
Texas
leads the nation In
theory Incredible and argued
AND SERVICE th at Newton ' s co nt inu e d executions with 20 since 1982.
HEADQUARTERS FOR
mult imillion-dollar earnin gs ~-----------; •ZENITH
proved that he was not harmed
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
by the network.
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR·
The verdict was returned In the
• SAJ[LUIE SALES &amp; SERVICE
sixth day of deliberations by a
Htf.t AFill n..
panel of fou r women and six men
Shop Tnhllalu
who heard 31 days of arguments
.. lhlf
.
and testimony.
DIAMONDS
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE
-'-- '- -..-- - - - - - --'-- -'-- ;
CHESTER-915-3307

The Daily Sentinel

WE'T(':

Grade Onr : . U&gt;igh-Ann · Canf('rbu ry.
Matt hew ME'I heney. Am anda Napper. A.J .
Va u ~ h a n .
· ..
Grade 'IWo: Melissa Barrf'll , Amy
CIPI&lt;wd. Jenn;r Erv in, Ca rrlr Ha rmon.
Ti mmy Lc&gt;wts, Andy Myers. Jo Sandy,
.
S1acey Silvers.
Grade Th ree: Bry an Colwell. Jake

Frymyer, Howard GrovPs. Pam Ha~ J!Y.
Rf'sa Harrl!t, Lo ri Hayl's, Eric liE' t k.
!tu san HOuC'hlns, Kr lly Johnson. Bil ly
Kt•rr. Jaml r Lill h'. .Jeann&lt;'!tf' Mc Do na ld.
Stf'\.'C' M. Marlin. Michelle Matthewli.
OrrPk Mlllf'r , Mary Mort on, Missy Nrllion.

ham.

LAS VEGAS, Nev. IUPI) NBC News was ordered to pay
Wayne Newton $19.3 million by a
jury that ru led network employees knew their reports linkIng the nightclub star to the mob
were false or seriou sly dOI!bted
the truth of the broadcasts.
Newton grinned broadly when
he met with reporters after
Wednesday's ve_rdlc t, but refused to comment on the advice
of attorney Morton Galane who
.sai d. " It is a major victory but it
Is not over."
Network attorneys said they
were surt- the verdict would be
reversed, saying the Las Vegas
jury may have been biased In
favor of a hometown boy.
"Way ne Newton ·Is one of the
favorite and most beloved people
In this community," NBC attorney Floyd Abrams said .. "It Is
'
apparent
what happened was the
.'
• jurors rallied In favor of someone
who was a leading citizen of the
community.
"There has never been a libel
judgment of this size (up)leld),"
Abrams said. " There Is no way
this verdict could· be upheld."
Gasps were audible In the
courtroom of U.S. Distr ict Judge
.Myron Crocker as the clerk read
the four' page verdlcf which
favored Newton on virtually
every Issue.
The rulin g said NBC reporter
Brian Ross, field producer Ira

.Jason Wlt her f'll.

· Mis ty Bul ~ hf'r. Dodir Clf'la nd, Sharla

Sall ~bur y

Convicted sex killer executed
by lethal injection in Texas

~n1

---Honor rolls--&amp;&gt;venth Gr ade: Barbara A rtdf'rson,
Fr·ank Blake. Ju/1(' Buck. Mkah Bunch.

The Daily Sentinei - Page- 9

. Ohio

Jury finds for singer
in defamation lawsuit

'•

Fifth Grad f':

1986 ~

HUNTSVILLE, Texas (UPI )
- Convicted sex kiJler Richard
Andrade, whqse r equest to die
without witnesses was denlf;'d,
was executed today after spendIng Jess time on death rQw th an
any Texas inmate execut ed since
the sta re resumed capit al
punishment.
Andrade, 25, whose emotions In
the final hours of !if&amp;swung from
tears to laughter, was silent
before receiving a lethal Inj ection for the savage stabbing
deat h Qf a bar owner during a
sexual assault In 1984.
Andrade avoided looking at
reporters who witnessed his
deat h. He had asked that they be
barred from the execution
chamber, and "cr ied and cried
and cried" wtren he learned they

Chrl•tmas Is Coming!
So Ylhere Is

Mei gs JuniOI' Hl~h

1

By MARY SCHLANGE NSTEIN

~--

Thf' S('C'O nd six W('t&gt;ks gra dlnJ!" pC'riod
ho nor roll at !h(' Mt' iJ!'SJ unior High School
has lx&gt;f'n annount't'd . Ma k in~ a gradc ot B
or abo\'f' In all l hE'ir subjecls to benamf'd ro
lh&lt;' rol l W&lt;'r(':
·

Thursday, December

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

992-2772

Claima. C1ll

Attor ney

Rhod ...

13041526-661 3 .

4

Giveaway

2 bag s of clothing. Ph. 614-388·'

8449 .
M ot ~ e r Cat &amp; 2 m ate kilt-enS
4mo. old. To a good home. Cell
6 t4-446 -0120
'•

Frao Chri1tmu

pu ppiru . c t,11

6 14-985 -4168.
Female Keeshond Dog. Been
spayed. Good with children.
Long hair, pren v eoat, tax-like

face. Call 614-992 -7 194.
White male Benji· typ e dog. Ver.Ji
sman . Hou1e b rolurn. good

wa tch dog. Not good witt!
children. Cell 61 4 -7 4 2-2260 . •

No Sunday

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM lllllT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At R10sonable Prices"

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY

Chrlst m~t~• puppies . 3 male. 2
an i~

fem•le. 304-676-2573

14me. 676·2878 • h er 6 p.m...·•

Gu coo k sTove P . 394-675:
5211 .

6 l ost and Found
LOST:

Gray

[il

S chn1uz er

vicinity ot State St. &amp; Hectg•
WODd Ph. 61 4-4 46· 2106,

FO VND: On Cloy Cnopot •.
Yallow Town ft d . Whitt with
brown spot• pit bull, elr1 h.ve
dipped Ph . e 1 4· 268 -1702

.,

•

�Sentinel

·; LAFF-A-DAY

44

1300.00 REWARD for the r•
turn crl blact mil' long hlk'N
Chlhuehua. atol.n from ~
home 11 -17-88 on Rauah Holl•

Apartment
for Rent

&amp;1Hou111hold Goods

Furnllhed Apt: t210.00 util•
ti• Pd. 1 bedrDom1 firltfloor Ph.
4.t6-4411 after 7p.m.

loat l.elll'l eree. Auttreli.n.
Sheptlerd. male. black &amp;: white,
no teil. c.n 304-896·3824 Of

Duplex 148 Second. c•Petld. 3
bedroom. LA, OR, new kitchen
• bath, wetl?er • dryer hook-up,
U85.00 mo. plua utMttln a
security depotil Ph. 8 t ,._0890.

9

Nice 2 bedroom apl. r~ . a
IIOVe a water fuml1hed. No
peta, 41h mil" from O.lllpolil.
t210.00 per mo. t50.00 dep-

895·3B07.

Wanted To Buy

~

rnodoj

.

.•

~

I

__

., .,..,..... ,..,....... .......... ,.... ,,.,.
"Want to hear a joke? Ifs

and newtt' uted c~r~ . Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eutern
Ave., Galllpolil. C•ll e14-448-

2282.

kin.d of Sl.Ck."

'----------1"""---------1

614· r-

Of

Buying deily gold. tltver coins,
rings. jewel,.,, sterling ware, old
coins, large currency . Top ptl·
cea. Ed. Burkett S.rbtr Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614-

992 -3476.

BUYING RAW FURS! Ginaeng,
Yellow Aool. beef and deerhides. Also aelling trapping
supplies. Wheet lites, Nittlite1.
Houra 1:00-9:00. Closed Wed.
George Buckley 614· 664-4761 .

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD

Cash paid. Pre 1950's. Single or
whole collection . Call Marc and
Ellen Fultz 614-992-2101 daovs
vr 614-692· 2411 evenlngaand
weekends .

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD

1 8 Wanted to Do
Need help with thlt spedll
cluning job? We CltM homH,
rentll proptrtl... officea,
churches. Olluburn Cleaning

Ph. 114· 388-1027.

Sorvlcet~

F111anCidl
21

34

Buaineaa
Buildings

A good tnare drum priced under
t100. Call614-742· 2660.

Business
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·

HIRING! Federal government
jobs in your artt and over11u.
Many immedi .. • openlrtga without waiting Ua~ or tn1. •1&amp;Phane c .. Irlfundtble.

••e.ooo.

Camero body. Engine not nee•·
sary. PYaitr 1974 bu1 not
necnaary. Call &amp;14-742-2280.

23

Profaaaiqnal
Services

Starkl Tree 1nd lAwn Service.·
Hedgee, shniba. buahu
trimmed, land1c1ping, ltump
1nd leaf removal. 304- &amp;78-

2842 or 676·2010.

11 .Help Wanted
Lady

Real

AI. 35

REPS NEEDED

For busin11s accounts. Fullnme. UO.OOO- fBO,OOO. Part·
Time. 112.000-·• 18.000. No
••Ring. repeat butinHs. Set your
own hours. Training provided.

Coli; 1·812·93B·6870. M·F,

Bam to 6pm (C.:ntrai Standwd
Time).

41

Homes for Sale

3 bdr., eir, pool, Vlf'IQt. Nice.
Commwciel prop.-ty, com•
lot• • highway fronttga. Uti
wtth ut. We have buyers. A-One
Atel Et111•Broker. Clll 30.t·

174-5104 or 304·874-1388.

Nelt 3 bedroom, cerpeted,
central helt • air. Newty ramod•ed. low utilitiea, 01' will rent
t24.too CaH 814-448-2.411.

114·441· 7023.

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom houses

lor rent I'll. 441· 1175.

reference~

• derpoalt requhed

Ph. 114·441·3771

614-266-1&amp;23

Betutlful new houn In Pam•
roy, Alao new one Hdfoom
fumlahtd I~Mnment In MldcU•

port. Coli 814·448· 1552
114-992·5300.

Of

2 bedroom home on 1 ecre.
Clean. Depoalt required.

llny•
viHo ""· C.lll14-742·214 .

Experienced full time sal•person wanted. 6 deys 1 week.
e•cellent pay plan. Appty in
piH'son Cooper Ctlry•l• Ply mouth Dodge, Inc . 399 S. Third,
Middleport.
Part time babysHt• needed.
Prefer in my hame, Harrisonville.

Coli 814· 742-2385.

380 Grant 81 .. Mlddlepan. 8
rooms. beth, garage. work shop.
123,700. Make oH•. Cell 81 ,._.

882·2102.

4 roomL unfumlshed. ln Aeelne.

Coiii14·941·281B.

2 bedroom•. In Middleport.
Compltttfy remodeled, new car·
petlng. new cebintts. Call 814·

033,000. Coli 114·992·1104.

~mtodc

Grove aree.

42 Mobile Homes ·
for Rant
2 bdr., aM utilitin paid eJICtpl

alec., fum. or unfurn.. sec.
depo1it required. Convenlenl
locttion. Ctlll14·448· 8&amp;158 or

1.14·446-·778.

utll. poid. Coli 614-448-•110.

In Eur"• nice end cleen, edult1
only. No peu, depotlt requtrtd.
before 10a.m.

HUO, 811ultful riv., view. Fot·
tlfl Mobile Home Park 114-

304-675-3960 or 1-B00-6423619.

~...,

2 bedroom mobile home In kyger
cr.tk IChool dietrict Ph. 114·

lei Avon hetp you get the bHI of
those post Chris1m11 bills end
blull. Free gift with flr1t order.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

Ut Avan h~p you get the belt of
those post Christmu billa and
blue a. Free gift with first order.

NEW AND USED 'MOilLE
HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
MST, GALUPOUS. AT 35.
PHONE 814·446·1274.

8 :30 and • :30.

Coli 304-8711- 1429.
DIRECTOR

0~

NURSING ·

long·tlfm care, tlttcutiYe IMttl
position. Self starter with personal bodget:tr;. rnanegtmll'l'l
1nd suparviling skills needed.
Kn()wlldge of federal and lttte
licenture and cenHic11ian rMU·
l1tion. with 3 yean nursing
mantgement in long t•m Clf't
required. BSN or equNalentwhh
Gerontological Nufling PP•
rlence or lulinlng desired . Sllery
negotiable. Contact Adminlnr•·
tor. Hillview Nursing a Rthllbili·
tatlon Center. 30.t-1529· 1031 .
We' re looking for 1 few OOOd
permanent snd plf'l-tlme AN's!
We are alicenaed·ctrttfled g«i·
atric inttrmldiate c~re facility
looking tor AN 'I inttrtllld in
providing geriatric nuraint •ervlc". We pravklt 1 competil:ive
plary and an n:ten.We benefit
peck-we thlt includn ennutl·
tick luvt, p1id holidays,
rn.ctlc .. · Nfa insurance. retir•
menl and tcklcattonll ltipend
funds : Contect llkln Hosph..

1304)171·3230. ht. 214.

12

End of year 11le. No PIYmtnts
until April 19B7. on any new
mobile home. Purcheu before

O.c.31 .1888. Fronch Cll't Mo·
bile Home Inc. Ph. 614·448·

9340.

1984 with e11pando, 3 Mel·
rooms. unfurnlahed, biockt, underpinning. porch. metel bullcf..

lnv included •13,000.00 Coli
114·379·2608 or 814·3772689.

Pl.msaub-dlvltlon lullavllle Rd.
t175.00 p• month.•100.00
S1CMity deposit Call afl:lt lpm
I'll. 614-441·4514

12d0 Moblt Home. 2 bedroom
furnllhtd . In Ctntenery area
3 bedroom, furnished or unfur·
nllhld. 1 child, no pett. Call

304·812·2411.

curlty dopoon. :lo4-BB2·3267
or 304-773-1024.
K • K Mobile Hom•. 2 and 3
bedroom mobile hom•. 304-

.676·3000.

K.K . .

171-3211.
44

1971 Wlndoor. 7,0x14. 3 btd·

3033.

10•10 nalltr, /lf'lty furnlthed.

lhii!IO. • ' 500. 304·4118·
1918.

-tel
---------------

Room
ond lor
mM. Nice hom._ Femlly etmotph•o· eou ,1 .. H2-W7J.

Two tote with mobile home. 1H
lltct:rlc. c;tnlrllllr, n.W Clf'Pift.

nlco bit ,.,,... I!P'Ioht food
· 304-882·2203.

33

Farm• for Sale

labyoittlng In my homo. MondO¥ 11wu Frldoy. Prof•lnlontoto .tl ICI'I f.-m, 4 br, bllh, lllteMn,
5 vo• o1c1 •.eon 304-671·3774. dining room. fuK booomont.
,.,..... wo1or. ·2 otory . ._

,...loo

HouM derltOIIhed In a-*enet

lor motoriolo. lnt-od
coli 304-171-2010. I 0.111. to
p.m. R - - ._Ired.

-n.

Furnished Rooms

For rent Sleeping Rooms 1nd
light house keeping rooms. Park
Central Hotel. Call 814· 446·
Rooms for rent. day. week.
month. Gallla Hotel. Call 614·
448-9715. Aent tslow 11 •120
month.

•
Furnllhed
room 919 2nd, Galli·
polls. e1115 . Utlllti• pd. Share
bath. Singh1 male. Call 448"1e after 7pm.

EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock·
oon, Oh. 614-288-6930.

Firewood delivered Oek &amp; hick·
ory, split, HEAP voucher, pickup
load 136. Call814-448-2223or

614·448-3028.

JEWELRY- We will be ott•lng
20% off our tlready low P:ric;w
from now until christines.
Frank• Pawn Shop Ph. 814-

448·0840.

Sto.ve coal-Wood burner with
ftn ·blower. Orltntel ru~;~ very
large. Items In good eondition.
Bell offer accepted Ph. 814-

379·2144.

Plakl brown • ten • gold couch
and matching ch1ir *9!.00 Ph.

614-246·9397.

Apartment
for Rent

Nlc;ely turnlthtd moltlla home
CA • he•. eaCII. locetion,
odulta only. C. II 814- 4411·0338.
1131h ltd. Ave. 1 bdr.S o
Hth, •140 P• mo.
It

roqulrocl. Coli 814-441- 222
bttw. . . . . l5.

Fwmllhld lfftdeney t110 utMi-

1101 poid. ohort both. 701 4th.
Oolilpollo. CoM 4411-441111torl

.....

Nlcoly lurnlohod 2 bdr. opt.

61 Household Goods

Supply Shop Ph. 814-448-0231

Reduced t 100.00 lflnd ntrW
wood end cosl heater. Catatytic
option available. Cell 814-2681'772 after 6pm .
Mtle AKC Brittany male Cocker
Spaniel, 26in. bike f20 .00.
Swing set t215.00 Ph. 11.t-448·

7023.

Mixed h1rdwood slabs, •12. p•
bundle. Conlainlng epprox. 11h
10n1. FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
Pomeroy. Ohio. Celll14-992e•t1 .
Firewood, all herd wOod. He&amp;n
vouchers accepted. •3&amp; . a
pickup lo1d. Phone 114-742-

.2466.

AQHA Stud Colt. Big end
mutcular. •400. or trade. Cell
;~: ~·8·2465 or 814·992·

3

l:lay &amp; Grain

64

RegeaterN Toy Poodl11 2 f•
mile, 1 male. t126.00 ••·

Lorge round bollo of hoy lor Nil.
UO.oo · each Ph. 114-4.tl1062.

AKC Rtgisttred Pekln•e puppill: AKC Minlsture Dechahund
puppie1. Boxer pups Ph.• &amp;14-

114·949·2237.

Roady lor Chriolm01 Coli 814·
446·1854

Mix.ed Ortu h., lor 11le. C.ll

hold lorChrlotmoo Ph. 114-379·
2273
2 rogioterod Wolk••· 1 mole. 1

female. 9monthsold. One7ye•
old Gr~nd Nlghl {:hampion

Wolkor, mole. Coli 114·9492657.

For 8111: lA IoKer, 1AI Phbull.
Puppiel bom july 21st. Eers ere
cropped, talla ere dockad. Thrt
h.ve en their shots. 5 m•l• and

2 lomolos. Call 014·702·2517

and Ilk for Barb.
UKC pll bulla 4weeltt old, ready

304,882-2211 .

2 boxer dog• (ftmelll) 2 yeart

old. 304-116·2185.
57

Musical
Instruments

BeautHut Chri1tm11 Gift- Pte•
Contole Plano, excellent condltion Call 6 14·448-7&amp;815 after
oi:OOpm.
Seera Upright Organ with bench.
Excellent condition •11.00 C1ll

814·388·Be20.
Two gutters bue Honda II whh
digmodgo pickup ampeg • 1mp.

304-882-2203.

814-246·9696.

1984 Plymouth Roll0111. outo.

elr, crutae, AM-FM . C11h price
t3,498.00, Johns Auto SliM.
1878 OldsmobUe St1rflre. run•
good, 4 new tlr11, 4 cyl.,
i·IPMCf. •100 .00 Clll tnytime

114·388·9711.

.·

f ,11111

Firewood for sale. Seuoned
Olk . Accept h..t vouCtllf. CaM

II LIVI!Siill.~

814-742-26.5.

miller with spelkers, moniton,
microphonft, ltlnd. 304-876·

397B.

Surplus ln•ul1tld camoftauge
dacron coveralls, small. medium, large t26.00; XL •30.00.
Carhert1. army iuue clothing.
boots. bib• d•nim •u.oo.
Wrangler jadcett, shU1t, plain
pocket dtnlmpanta14oza. Sam
Somerville, Junction lndep.-.d.,c:e· Road, Old At. 21 , Ellt·
Aavenawood. Friday, Seturdl'f,
Sunday, 12:00-8 :00 P.M. other
days lfiM 4 :00P.M. After Dec.

S111111111 ".

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS. SONS

U.S. 36 Will, Jackson, Ohio.

614·281·114111 .

MIIM'f Ferguton, New HoiWid,
Bush Hog Bel• • s.rvlce. Ovtr
40 ulld trKtors to chooH from
• complete line of niW' • used
equlpm~nt . Llrgeet 1tlecnlan In
S .E. Ohio.

LAYNE'SJURNITURE
U85 to •995. Toblw UO ond

up to e12s. Hide· a·beds t390
to U95. Recllntn t2215 to

U75. Lompo U8 to •125.

DlnettM 1109 end up to •496.
Wood table w-1 chalra UBI to
t78&amp;. Deak
up to .3715.
Hutchn l.tOO end up. Bunk
beds complete w·mtttretMI
Ulland up lo .3115. Baby beds
11 10. 1175. Mam. .ll Of box
springa full or twin *83. firm
173.andf83. 0UMn1111*225,
King 1310. 4 ·d rew• ch111t6&amp;.
Ortatrt til. Gun c•tMnets 8,
10, • t 21un . 011 or alectric

.,00

ron110 U7 . loby mot1r01'"

1989 Pontlec lAmans, new
trtnsmlulon. re•·end. water
pump, heMtert. Need• body
wark t900.00 Ph. 81'-.UI-

11t10 Finbird TrenaAm. Power,
air, rebuilt V-8, 22 MPO. Good
concUtion, take p1r1181 trade also
Je., or I PIIHnl• 4-wheel
drive. Asking loen \l'•lue
t4,100.00 or belt offer Ph.
441-2741.

1---------Christmei Specials
84' Ford Etcort 4-speed.

63.000mi. U,IOO.OO. 81' Mor·

•1.585.00. 85' ChovyChovone
B.OOOmi U,BBI .OO . 84'

U.ll5.00. 84' Ford EXP. 5·
opood. 43.000tnl. n,no.oo.

78' lnternmlonll Scout 4x4

'73

vw

lup•·Baetle. "'"'·

n - work. body good Ph.
114-448-1138.
1984 Dodge Arlll, euto, eir,

AM -FM. Colli prico U.198.00

John• Auto Stl-. BulavHie Ad.,

lllillpollo.

GOOD USED APPUANCES

ctrv••·

Wllherl,
rtfrlgerators,
rengtt . &amp;k1ggs AppiiJncu ,
Upper River ,.d. besldt Stone

Croot Motol. 114-40817388.

3 ~ece nurHrY ll't t 121.00 Call

114-211·1201.

WestmghouH Elec:tric Renge.
white Iitie new 1110.00, 2
aomplate b.da •lo.oo• . Exua

JCI4·111·8483 or 175·1•50.,

,_ /'\'!:'5.
·
l

614·992· 7181.

81

.. .

.'
'

...WHICH IS GONN"

Home
lmprovemant8

CilJ Day tha Universe
Changed: A Per110nal View
by James Burke James
Burke looks ao 1he many
systems ol belief lhrough
history that have been discarded after acquiring new
knowledge. 1e0 min .)
@ MOVIE: 'UHes of tha
field'
B:05 (l) MOVIE: 'Anatomy of a

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unc:ondltlonll lifetime guaranreference~ fumi1hed .
FrH Htlmetes. Call collect

tet. Local

1·114·237·0088. doy or night.

Rogtrt lstement
Waterproo1ing.
SWEEPER end MWing miChine
repair, parts, 1nd euppll111. Pick
up and delivery, Dtvis Vacuum
Cletner. Qne htlf mile up

EEK &amp; MEEK

8:30

for a tonsmectomy, Rick
claims to have wilnessed a
murder in the recovery

FTM Oan••l ContriCIIng 13yrs
experience. Roofing • Con·
ltruction Ph. 11 .. 388-9308.
FrH eltlm•• 10% oH during
the holkl8\'l, offll' expir• Jen

room . reo min .)
9:00 II CD Gil Cheers (CCI Di·
ane decides to pursue a car-

15, 1887.

RON'S Television Service.
Hau11 Celli on RCA, Quenr.
OE. 8poclollng In Zonlth. Coli

1

·304·578·2398 or 114-448·
2454.

son learns thai Connie has
disappeared , Monica wants

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP
TH I5 15 A NOTE

FI&lt;CWI MY T&amp;ICHER
TO MY PARENTS.

IF YOU ~REA R6A.L
FRIEND'IWD$Q'8 IT
AND CHEW IT UP.

I OON'T 81CLIEVE
IN EDUCATIONAL
CI?NSORSHIP.

a thr eatening lette r in her

Suzanne and Charlene into

BARNEY

Plumbing
&amp; Heating
CARTER'S PLUMBING
'\NO HEATING .

Cor. Fourth ..d Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Ptlone 11 .. 441-3888 or 61•:

446-4477
86

helping her chaperone her
dau~ter' s slumber

AI~J'T VOU

LANDS NO!! I ALWAVS

SORTA
PAMPERIN'
THAT HOG,
LOWEEZV?

DOLL HER UP FOR SPAGHETTI

1986 Honda 125M three
wheeler e499.00. Good condl·
tion. White twin ctnopy bed
e315.00. 30.t-882-2783 or 882·

dollvory.

tempt to uncover Paigo·s
claims, Lilimae conceals Olivia 's drug problem and ~ry

learns tha1 Jill lied to him
abouo Paler. (60 min .)
[jjJ@ News
10:JO ClJ Bill Cosby Show
1!11 (!) INN News .
CilJ Tony Brown's Journal
1 1 :00.11 m([) 0 CIJ ®! Dllil ®

SNAKE!!

00

Will haul stone, coal, dirt. etc.
Vaughn E. Taylar trucking 614-

2741.

YOUHA~

AMCm'OrHAI
You 1.-1~ f'&gt;Y?

246·6815.

Um•tone 1nd tlebwood htuled.
AI Tromm, Rutlend. C.ll 114·

72

Allo Ch- C Troctor with 2
cutll'lttora,

Runt tood

246-6121 .

row

Concrete bloclu 111 1i111 yll'd or
dlliver;. M11on und. Gtllipolis
Block Co.. 1231h Pine St. ,

1928· 1838 F20 forinollontlquo
triCtor.8tHiwhltlt.nlniiOOd•
noo. Coli 114-742-2057.

66

1971.00 Ph. 114·211·1859.

Whhl Farm Trecton, list Prloe

In A- Sid.. Equip"'""' Co,
Hondoroon.
W. Yo. 304-171·
7421
.
62 Wanted to Buy

Pete for Sale

Oragonwynd C.nery Ktnnet
CFA HlmiiiYIR, Penlen and
Slam•• ldtttns. AKC Chow
puppi••· Cell &amp;14.. •46· 38.._

I.""
.:.·_•_7_P_M_._ _ _ _ __

TNckl for Sale

1---------1111 Ford Ranger 31,000

Cil Hardcastle snd McCor·

miiW, toppor, Nnnlng boord.
New
AM-FM c. ..c-te,
• :-::, ~
'4 800 00 Ph
u·
uiM.
'
·
·

Coal, limestone, gr~vel. etc.
DeiNIJtd 1 lon and up. Jim

tlr•.

1.1:..1......:2:.:1:..8'_1_41:..1_ _ _ __

72 C'-\1 ~ tori. howy duty.
locty tw; mo1or n... minor
wort.• 400 firm, C.lll14-245·
·vv••·
·1173 Dodge TNdl. good condl·
Muot 0111 Ph. 814-0457414

lion.

18711 Fard Ploll·up tHt whftl,
PI, PI, no rult Ptrl clten Ph.

NOw buying ahll oom or ••
com. Cel' torl•eet quotM. Rlv•

114-371·2111.

Uotd Molollo H•- Ph. 81._
4411-0171.

like' n.. llumlnum lap per,
ntedl 41G:sLWeed. work. EJIOII·
lent work ~.. AI • t710.

City form IUHIY. 814-44112185.

1874 ford f100 .. 311
Phono 114-742· 2741.

onglno.

mick

@Auto Racing '86: IHRA
Drag Racing · Hursl Pro
Stock Shoo1ou1 from Bris·
101. TN. IAI .
'
f!l) (!) M•A•S•H
: ' (jjJ An American Chrllt·
ma• Through song and poe·

Watterson's Wetet Hauling ,
reuoneble rates, · lmmedi1te
2.000 gallon delivsry, ciaternt,
pool1, well r etc, ctll 304-1578-

2918.

•

try, the chorus and sym-

Lonlor, 304-875·1247 or 6757397.
87

~---,;.;..R. :;,E,..:.V...;:.E~Nr--ll
I..~

ceniUiy 10 the present (60
min .)
·
@ Honeymooners
11 :JI D CIJ @ Tonlght Show
Tonight',s guests are Jene
Fonda and Amy Grant (60

. CIWSTMA~ NE ..

j

Cll't. Oh. 814-211·1470. Evo.
114-445·3438. Opon dolly 81o

i

5, 811. 8 :30 to 1 :30. Old &amp; new
.
Upfto1t1rtd.

,
1

1~

I

Our oftice manager was taken
ill with the flu. He was considered
a real slave driver, so ona of my

S UJ I R T
~-.,--ilr-''-rl'--"'15:--,1--i
.

.

.

co-workers mumbled, "I pity
thosa poor - ."

I0

.

.

'

I I .t
Du G
.. II E . I '.
, . I . . - I· . ;

_

-

Compl•te rhe chockle quored
b)' f1lling in the missing word.s

•

.__._ _.__.._......_...___, you develop from sfep No, 3 below.

&amp; PRINT
NUMBERED LETTERS IN
THESE SQUARES
A

V

UNSCRAMBLE ABOVE LETTERS
TO GET ANSWER

..

YESTEIDAY'S SCIAM·LETS ANSWERS .

Anemia ..,: Minor - Brave - Nought - BARGAIN

•"

Gram and ~ramps celebrated thBir 50th wedding anniver·
sary. Gr11m proclaimed, "A happy marriage is the world's best
BARGAIN.'

.

BRIDGE
James Jacoby

Matching pairs
find key defense

... .

NORTH
+ A 10 3 2

12·18·if

..

.. l

l'

••

+ K QB 5

By James Jacoby

+J 10732

A lesson we learn early in bridge
play is not to lead away from A·Q
combinations. Instead, we are taught
to wait and take two tricks with lhal
combination. Another good lesson to
remember is that there are exceptions
to almost every nile. The West defend·
ers at both tables in this deal fr om a
team-of-four match remembered the
exception.
West led a heart. East took the ace
and played back the seven. Declarer
played the jack, losing to the queen .
Meanwhile declarer h.ad discarded
from dummy a club and a spade. West
was sure from the return of the heart
seven thar his partner had no more
heart winne'fS. West was looking at
two a~es. but where was the setti ng
trick? Declarer probably had good
spades to go with that suit in dummy
and would soon force out the diamond
ace. Finally. West concluded that
South just might be short in clubs. and
if so, a club lead would be best even if
South had the king. Accordingly West
played a low club. Declarer won dum·
my's jack and played a diamond to the
jack in his haDd. West grabbed the ac.e,

EAST

WEST

• Q 861,,.

+9
.Q B653

• A72

+A 7 3
+A Q9 4

·+ R6

+942

l)

SOU,TH

+K .I7
.K J J094
• J 10 6
+K5
Vulnerable: Neither
Dealer: North
West

· NOrth

I+

Pass
Pass

1

I.

Soulb

East

Pass
Pass
Pass

+

Pass

.

.. .'

3 NT

Opening lead: • 5

played the ace of clubs, which now
swallowed South's king, and cashed
the club queen for down one. A nice de-.
fense, but duplicated at the other (a.:·
ble, which was just another way of re··
minding both pairs of defenders that'
they were, after all, playing in a world
championship.

~Nd."tlt'
by THQMAS JOSEPH
ACROSS

5 "Tales of

1 Have a -

a- Inn"

loose
6 Chester·
field, e.g.
10 Macaw
II Angry
13 Take a
spouse
14 Unassisted'
111 Sheep
16 Saint (Sp.)
18 Just
published
19 Imbue
21 Cosby's
forte
24 Repellent
spray
28 Expiate
29 Fragrant
wood
30 Velocity
31 Contribute
32 Tendency
34 "- Joey"
• 37 Poetical
adverb

38

6 Trolley
sound
7 The "0"
in OPEC
8 English river
1011~.-F.il;..:
9 Prong
12 Morning
moisture
I 7 Some ·
19 Principle 26 ' The - 311 Parched
and the 36 Unreliable
20 Correct
Fl.ddle"
witness
a text
21 Detroit 27 Prior to 38 Confined
39To be
29 Mean
export
(Lat.) •
22 Japanese 31 Ruby 40
Equal •
Type
33
city
42 Memorable
of
23 Witticism
years
25 Nabokov
race
44
Vereen
novel
34 Vessel

.

..

.'

VIUUI&lt;'I

41 Bay
43
411 Crown
46 High·
strung
47 Cart
48 Join In

.. .'

DOWN

I Corresponding
2 Animal

.·

stomach

3 Uncommon
4 Blunder
DAILY CRYPTOQUOTF.S- Here's how to work il :

I V IIi

AXYDLBAAXR
is LONGFELLOW
One letter stands for another. In Ul)s sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hints . Each day the code letters are different.
CRYPTOQUOTE

12· 18

v ;;

fl

.1 S ll II ll

II

•J H V

.1 t i

ISFEVII V

!illl' .lflflJ)

s .

() ll

,J I. p t ;

A E II I II N I' T

ll T !I S .1 V

s

I S F T W

,. (; ll

IJ

min.) In Stereo . ·
@ StlortoCenter
' (l) MoVIE: 'To
~Wocklrllblrd'

Kill 1

()) WICIIP In Cincinnati
..D (!)Taxi

'1

t

\

.

Ii

ll 1-:

l'l ltll' lt

(; I! ll E H
I' II II ll I'
Yesterday's Cryptilquote: TfiE llEVII.. llf:I'F: Nil
UPON IT, CAN SOMETIMES DO A Vf: RY &lt;iENTI.E MANLY TfiiNG. - ROBERT IAIUIS ~·n:VEN SI •N

toms from the early 17th

l DON'T KNOW HOW
TO CUT DOWN A

R ..&amp; M Cultom Couchtl and
Reuphalstery, St. At. 7. Grown

Mowrey'a Upholnering •erving
trl county 1r11 21 y1 ar1. The "-t
In fumlt:ure upholttlfing. Call
304 · 17&amp;-4154 for free
ntlmetes .

phony orcheslra of 1he U.S.
Air Force trace holiday cus-

PEANUTS

Upholstery

. ..

News

742·2328.

5712.

I
I II I I 1

..

2

® Gl l1il Kno1s Landing

T a L'W ittr d"lvary enytimePh.
614 ·3 88-9732 same day

,.

low to form four simple words .

(CCI As Mack and Karen at·
Jam11 Boys Water Service. Also
,pools filled . Cell614·266-114.1
or 814-448-1171 or 814·448·
7911 . •

Pola Buildings by Quality
Builders. Workshaps, ClfPOftl,
animel shehtn, i4N'II•· Fret
1stlmet11. Phone 114· 384-

lands in ti-ouble when he has
a fling with the wife of 1he
client hEL s representing in a
divorce case and Kelsey
works with a contract dispute over a self- wringing

teabag . (60 min.) In Stereo.
([) 20/20 (CC) (eO

General Hauling

King Wood tlovt, f1n. included.
e176 .; Antique lamps, Blll'lko
grHn glaas lg. tao. ; C8 Siltronlx 101 AC 3· PC1. f200.
Plu1 More. 304-875· 2700.

Golllpollo, Ohio Coli 114·441·
2783.

party.

10:00 II CIJ @ L.A. law Becker

(l) 0
min.)

304·.58-1783.

Building Mlltriela
Bloc:k, brick. nwar pip... wlndowe, lintels, etc. CIIUde Win·
1er1. Rio Granda, 0 . Call 614·

to leave her job for Cash and
Zack presents Sable with
devastaling news . (60 min .)
([) Rape : the Boundaries
of Fear
·Cill Mystery: The Moving
Finger (CC) The local solici·
tor 's wrte is found dead wi1h
hand. reo min.) Part 1.
9:30 0 (I) (j§) Night Court In
Stereo.
I]) College Basketball:
Marshall vs. Florida A&amp;M
· "· (2 hrs .)
® Gl WJ Designing
Women Mary Jo 1alks Julia,

304·175· 544 or 1711-1152.

Chtlt fretrer 23.2 cu., SlitS,
flash dtfrott, 3 level 11orage.
tUO.; Western uddle t125.

ClJ 700 Club
@ College Basketball:
Tulsa at Colorado 12 hrs .)
Liv~ .

Alhby Construclio~:~ , cerpentery, remodeling, room ldditkm,
ClmWit blodl work. roofing;
Interior end exterior painting,
tiding. Rooftn• .. Frteestlmlles.

3869.

eer as a ballerina after the
gang forges a letter from her
dance teacher. In Stereo.

([) 0 ill Colbys (CCI Ja·

896-3802

82

Murder'
D (I)@ Family Ties ICC)

In S1ereo.
® II l1il Simon 8o Simon
During ~is brief hospi1al·ttay

Goort• Crook Rd. Coli I 14408·0284. .

Rotary or ceble tool dfilling.
Most well a completed aemedl!y .
Pump SliM end a.-vlce., 304-

Commodore Vic-20 p•sonal
color computer. 304 · 8715 ·

dodged the draft in Vietnam
has a vision of what might
have been. In Stereo .

CRei'ITE A 816
I'ROSLEM FOR Ull!

304·511·2010 or 5711-2142.

tort with warrenty ovtr 40 uald
triCtOrt. 1000 tOOII.

@ Fishln' Hole Spaciu11e0
min.) IR) . .
I]) 0 ()) Our World !CCI
. 160 min .)
1!11 (!) MOVIE' 'Meet John
·Doe'
I])
Mm:Neii-Lahrer
Nawshour
®! Ulllil Twilight Zona A
college professor who

ALLEY OOP

1881 MlrCUfll Marquis. PS, PI,
eir. CNIH. Good conlltlon. New . RINGLES'S SERVICE, oxpo·
tlrw. •1100. Coli 814·949· ri•ceC:I carpenter, elac:triclan,
2801 or 114-949·2880,
meson, painter, roofing Uncludlng hot 11r tppllc.tionJ 30,._.
1881 Oldt 9~. eulom .. lc trens·
175·2081 orl71-7147.
mlulon, 4 doOr. good condhion.
-·14-982·1170.
Starltt ~ree and Lawn Service.
Hedges. shrubs, bu1h ..
trimmed. landsc:eping and
stump remove!. Luf remove!.

JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . BR 35 W. Golllpollo.
Ohio. Coli 114·448·9777, ovo.
814·441·3182. Up front troc·

In Stereo .

·'

Self contained tlid•in camper.
Slttps 4. Can be •een at
SyrtcuH on Second St. Call

Servrces

[]) Full and Rise of Regin·
aid Perrin
®1 Wheel of Fortune
- lllllil @ Jeopardy
@Benson
7:35 Cil Honeymooners
8:00 II CD@ Cosby Show ICC)

Cil Corel Jungle

Fetty Tre• Trimming. tlump
remove!. C.ll 304-175-1331 .

HO.I:~~§~~~~~~~

., 4-448·0322.

'

2118.

130 • King fr1m11 fiJO . Good
UlICdon
• Ul.
fTOm•1uit11,
...
of lod
bedroom
melal cabinets, heldboltdt UO
and up 10 eee.
Uud Furniture: Walhlf' &amp;
dryer,,gll range, w004i table •
2 bel'lehll, bldt. drn . .. wood
werdfobt. 3 mlln out
Bulavllll Ad. Open 9AM to
IPM, Mon. thru Sat.

FRANK AND ERNEST

..

OoiNpollo, OH .

82,000ml •100.00. Dod&lt;Hio
Auto Sol• Ph. 81 .. 38B·9815.

piece. 304-773·6140.

ters three visitors from another world .
0 I]) Judge

79 Motors Homes
&amp; Campara

1978 Nove, tutometiC, PS, PI,
AC. A-one c;ondition. 2 door.
ShirJev EiklM, 27 Evtnt Hots.

cury Lynx, IUIO, 79,000ml

Homtoroon.

Auto Parts

&amp; J!,ccas1ories

lullovllo Ad, Oolllpollo.

' truckload New York
Fresh
grown ltrge appl11, 7 klnd1.
Navel orang•. t.ngtlot. ban•
nu, gr1p11. Smlllotaorbybox.
Jades Fruit M1rllet. At. 31,

P.A. Syotem XR700

@Speedwaek
@l (!] Cosmic Christmas
Animated. A boy encoun·

71

Firewood for ule. I 36. perlold.
6 loltda •no. Delivered and
1tacked. Call 114-949-2601
after 5:00 p.m.

114·849·2880.

Coll304 -875·•131 .

Game

ludaet trensmissions used •
::-:,...--A=-'-ut-:-o-s~.-:-fo-r--=S-a~la­
rebullt til typ11. Torque converters &amp;: translar caes. Engine
over htul kits. Allison Transmit·
lion p1rt1 and CVC Joints. WHI
1981 Ari11-K Oodg•. Station . deliver,
Cllh and ctrrry or ln1talt
Wtgon. AM·FM Stereo
Ph.
114·371·2220.
CIIMttt, auiC, CC. rew window
wiper'1, good condition ~h .

Chevene auto , 29. 000ml.

Tony' I Gun Repairs, hot reblu•
ing. Open 9:00AM to 7 :00PM.

11!1 Gil@ Wheel of Fortune
@ Barney MiUer
7:01i (l) Sanford and Son
7:30 II (I) ([) New Newlywed

1888 Moptd. PUCH. EI&lt;Colont

76

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

now. Coli 614·892· 7143 oltor
2'00 p.m.

Newshour

Motorcycles

TronspurL1I1on

6B

Far 1111: Infant girl I drlltes wrth
mslching bonnets. Just like

74

986-4481 oft or 6'00 P,.m.

Regl•tered Miniature Dach·
shund Puppi11. Retdy tnd will

New•
CIJ Big Valley
@ Mazda SportaLook
m [f) Jefferson.•
1Il 3·2·1 , Col11llct !CCI.
CilJ 'secret City
@ Facts. of Ute
(l) Andy Griffith
Ill])@ NBC News
· @ Beat of Bill Danca
([) 0 ([) ABC Newil
fJI (!) Hogan'• Heroes
I]) Doctor Who
®! II l1il CBS N•ws
(ID Body Electric '
@Good Tlmas r
Cil Safe at Home In Stereo.
II (IJ PM Magazine
ClJ Hardcastle and McCor·
mick
@ SportsCen1er
([) Entertainment Tonight
ET lalks with Melissa Gilben
abou1 her upcoming NBC·
TV movie, "The Godfa1h·

driVe, lotded. new 10d0 tlrn.
615,000 mlln. Or fair offer. ·
304·676·2842 alter 6 p.m.

678-2010.

.
'
'

of the,

· MENUAH

adult role .
f!l) (!)' M• A•s•H
0 ([) People's Court ,.
I]) · Nightly Busineas Re·
port
.
®News
GD
MacNeil-Lehrer

1979 Chevy SWB. 4 wheel

ietters

fovr scrambled words bo·

", er's Wife," her first starring

3:00p.m.

condltkm. Make offer. Call 81.t·

200 piec~tohlate(roof) . 12x24
inch... •2 .00 etch or ell for
f200. Call 61•·949-2801 or

6 ber stools. Grevtly Tractor
with tttlctlmenu. Arlifici .. fi,.

1!)79 Jeep CJ&amp;. Good ·condition. Rebuilt engine. new body
work. Cell 614·742·297&amp; after

408·7920

Far sale Pomerenian puppln
pure brM 7 weltks old, wormed
a. first thota. ·1100. Itch.

roller $45.00 Coli 614·268·
1267.

Livestock

P.M. Phone 304·273· 58155.

. upnoko.
IMilldlnp. ,~~~~~~~~~:
pild. Coli

11

Winter fuhlon1 • tpeclll clvlltglftt for your pett. Groom •

63

171h. opon doily. 12,00 11111,00

PIClktnl UM4 furnlturs. Oood
uallly uud fumhurt . Open 9 to
: or clll for appointment.

Flm • OIW. 81.
Sol• • lorvlco.

614·441·0231.

Enda of c~rpet, OS 186 Olrt
Motorcycle· t400 .op, TF 126
Motorcycle 1250.00, e~~~:ercl••

l'o"'l'f

30.·176-1078.

Profenlonsl Service, 11 stytel,
111 brHdt.ltete Rl. 1•1 Gilllpo·
llo, Ohio 01631. JulloWobb. I'll.

goodo Ph. 814·3BB·8185.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Urge lois. Cell 81.t!982· 7479.
Moblle home lots, tmall children
tccepttd. At. 1 Locust Rd.
Mobil• hom• lots. Ohio River
Aoed • Pttlera Creek, Rl. 1.

Pats for Sale

logobyChrlotmoi Evo.-175.00.
U6.00 will hold. 304·882·
3795.

FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS.
Coli 30•·&amp;76-1 090.

lltoppordo

Adutft onty, lnqulra It eotn•

Ph. 81···41-2819

Shop for Chriumu with

..,nnp • rnottr- 125.00 Ph .
304-178-1801

lruh lr-. Aoldnv JO.OOO. Moko
tool
bom. or 418·
Oflor.
304·111·110oM
1111. SOflouollll)ulrl• only I

Pl11tic cistern alate approvect.
plaatlc 11ptlc; tenkt. pl11tlc
culverts, met1l culverts. RON

46 Space for Rant

' priced from
Sof11 end chairt

2 bedroom mabh home. Mid·
diiiPOrl. 0 . Raf•enoe whh sa-

rooms. In verv nice c;ondltion.
May ttav an lat. 11000. 7•2-

Situation•
Wanted

furnlohod . Ref. • dop. 300·675·
-2651 .

U26.00mo. Ph. 041-2390.

Two bedroom trailer. air concU·
don, wesh• • dryer, •180.00
plus utillti•. ref••ncae required. O.INpolis Ferry, 304-

fumoco. Coli 514-111-3380 Of
114·111·3381 .

. 1 bedroom 1pt., first floor.
•215.00 month. Heat end water

114·4411·0751.

1981 mobile home for .....
14x70, exc;all~nt condhlan . 2
bedroom, 2 lull bl1ha. Clll

8•.t1 two, bedroom with g11

Unfurnished 2 bedroom apt.
Yard and b11ement. e160. Depotlt. 30ol-871!1i-7641 evenings.

Mobile home. Stda Coun. Call

Two bedrDom tr•ll•, coupl11,
one tmlll child. Refll'encet •
Depolh. Evtren Schwartz, Rt. 1
loeult Line. Pt. Pl . . .ntbldtof

good

,,JO

441·1102.

19B1 Otkbrook 14x70 whh
7x 12 eaptndo. 3 bedrooms, 2
b1th1, wood buJMr, Exctllen1
condition French City lrokertgt
I'll. 51 4·441-8340.

114-892-7163.

lio. 814·448·B221 .

2 Btdroom fumlohed. Wooccopt

448-0722.

coli 304·882·2145.

APARTMENTS, mobile hom•.
houHs. Pt. Plau1ntend Galli po-

0751.

1BO.OO mo. colll14·251·1831

••o.ooo. Coli 304-17&amp;-5440

Aptrtmentt torrtnrin Pomeroy.
One 1nd two bedroom. Cleen
and nice. Call61 4-992·6216 or

46

2 bt. ldtchWI, bllhroom, with
laundry room, living room 6
dining room. Ill tlec. Approx. 7
mltn from Pt. Pl. on Rl. 62. 2
trletuppi-ox. 1 teremoreorlltl
overlooking Kanawh1 River.

Part time worlt·full time benef·
it1ll Member• of the Army
National Guard can rftc;:llive a
monthly ply check, •so.OOOiite
inaurance, •18,000 tduc:ttion
auiltance and much more.

Opponunity.

dofloslt. 304-171-2851 .

2 bdr. fullyfurnl1hed adultl only,

2 story. 3 bedroom haute with 1
ctr VII' Ill on Approx 1.1tcrn.

1 bedroom apt. foto rent. Bulc
rent starts .t211 . 1 month thll
includea 111 utiliti•. Deposit
required of •zoo. Conttct Village Mtnor Apt. Middleport.
61 .. 912-n87. Equal Housing

&amp;1•·882-7314.

8000 ht. GH-98015 for cu"ent
repo lilt.

.11.000. Coll304-773-65340f
304· 773· 6784.

1 and 1 Y.l! bedroom spt . available
It Riverside for rent. B11ic rent
ltlrtl II • 179. plut utllitl11.
t200. tecuritv deposit required.

Inquire 11 114-992·7787.

•&amp;9.230 yr. Now hiring. C.tl
806-687·8000 Ext:. R-9806 for
current federal lilt.

2 bedroom house for 1111 in
Clltton (Mabie Johnson property) . Fully c•petM. rtctndy
remodeled, new root. Atklng

18,16.6. 8 mlloo out Rt. 218.
Coll614-251·6251.

Antique misc. gla11ware, Virgi·
nie Rose dilhes. othM ytrd sele

Government hom• from •1 . (U
repair) . Delinquent IU proplf'tV.

Went live -in middle -aged
womsn to watch 2 children. 1
chi~ in achool. Ught ttouse
work. moderate cooking. Salery,
room and botrd. Call 614-742 2060 after 7:00 p.m.

Ctllahan's Used Tire ~hop. Over
1.000 tlr11. alzet12.13.14, 1&amp;.

Z Bedroom. 1 'It bllha. lacllld In
downtown area. Adulh only

3644

56

Groom • Supply Shop

8 chain binders. 2 of tham tre
recoil01s •1 00.00 . Water
softner uaed very little *60.00

-------·lcGovernmlld joba. •t6,CMO -

R-HOoiono. Coli 101·187·

7025.

54 Misc. Merchandise

2 to 3 bedroom apt. Convenient
Bedroom Rench. Rodn-r ·location tn town. All utlliti11 paid
Vlllt~gt II, UII.OO per month.
1325.00mo., rlftrii'ICII &amp; depplua depoJit, refertncn rt· ollt required. Wlsem• Rill
qulred. IIICI&amp;bum Realty Ph . Estete Agenc:y Ph. 614·448-

2 .tory 8-rooma &amp; bath, b11•
ment, lerge ytrd. close to
schools. sll ctrp. Reflfencnand

614-67B·2613.

1 Bedraom apt, all utilhi11 paid,
wether &amp; dryer hook-up, stove&amp;
retrlg, furnithed. Rell' of Smith
Pontiac Buidl GPh. 614-446-

3

992·58118.

1·805·887-6000 ht. A-8801.

Unfurnished apt. 4roomt6beth
centrally loclted. Referlricu &amp;
Securlty . deposh required. Ph.

114-.46-7026.

3 Bedroom hGmt In Centenary.

reduced to tell. gsrage, AC.
fenced completely. bath a VJ Ph.

Senlorchl:r:ena. niceaplrtm•us.
Ph. 304· &amp;76·5104.

2 Bedroom apt. nic:e c~tpeting,
watll' paid, washer B.: dryer
hook-up. 1tove. refrig. fumi~hed
IVIilabte Jln 1. 1987 Ph.

Hou1111 for Rant

6:35

Opportunity . .

aprox 34 tcr ...
Call Linda Carson at 304· n&amp;Accoptlnv bid1 until· Doc. 30. 11011
or Denis• Streib at 1141988. For appt, to 111. Wliter
883-4111 . Equal Houtlng
White Ph. 114-2411-9408.
Opportunity.

8 room house.·1.2 aeree. Double
csr g•ll•· Loc11ed on Rau Hill.
Btrg•ln priced UO,OOO. Call

Airlin• now hiring. Flight At·
tendMta, Agent•. Mech~nict,
Custom• Service. Salarill to
•&amp;OK . Entry level posittons. Call

ARMV &amp;UDD'/ OF SAS.Y'G" ....

7:00

w...

Rl!llli!IS

6 :06
6:30

"&amp;I':NIE WELl.~ WA~ ANOTHSR

UOO.OO oocuril't dopoolt. CON·

New 2 bedroom apts. in Muon,
INVESTMENT OR DEVELOP· W.
Va. Quill letting. off llreet
MENT PROPERTY
parking. Rent atarts at t189.

3 Bedroom on At. 218 .
f300.00mo plu1 depoah Cell

31

hecutive Secretary Ae1ponsi·
bilities to include receptionist,
tecretarlal, • book-kllping .
Previous experi~~nce preferred.
Send resume to 17165 St. Rt.
279. Oak Hill, Ohio 45631 or
CIU 614:682-7728.

·cAPTAIN EASY

TACT: Jack1an Ettat• Dept. P.h
446 -3997 Equ1l Houslnt

304-882·2666.

!~~~.~·:"is:~8 0orfll!d

EsLJte

to live in light houskeeping

Ph. 304-&amp;75-6104.

.

Vans 8t 4 W
. .O.

73

I

5 room unfurnithed apartment
for rent. Call 614· 992· 6434 or

11.·4411·0008
Serv1ces

300·175·2700.

tlMI

O Rearrange

6:00 Ill])()) 0 CIJ ®!Ill (ill@

71 FoNI lA ton flat i*l 11500.

Momlng CCNI • wood
wllh blower • plpll.
momlng tpt. tl:r:e gil
•150.00. 304-675.4835.

won

PUULII

lor Rlclloy.

1 Bedroom bUic: r111t 1178.00
jllut tltctric. Alto requlrlld a

949·2B60.

do busine11 with people you
know, and NOT to ttnd money
thfough the maH until you h.,e
lnveaigatecl the offering,

18021 838·8885. E... 1203.

Employmr.nl

••~

406&gt;2168.p

Furnllhed ept. •175.00 wlter
pd. Z bedroom. 131 Yz Fourth
OffiCe s~ICI • StOre tPI~ in Pt. Ave. Ph. 4o18-..,18 aftlt' 7pm.
Pleuent, A-One Rell Ettale Ph.
Furnished ept. in Racine.'·120o.
304-075-5104
Call 614-949-2801 or 114-

3 6 Lots &amp; Acraaga

Buying junk c1ra . Call aft I f 5 :00

61.·992·66.8.

118·1131

Sentinei-Pa_ge:.... 11.

TlolT DliLT

r12/18/tUS

biNI and winch. •1100. 814-

I

614-441-0044

lNG CO . recommends thm you

Cash paid. Pre 1950's. Single or
whole collection. Call Marc and
Ellen Full! 614-992· 2101 dt!Yt
vr 614-692-2481 eveningS and
weekends.

U5oo. 111e JD 360-C e woy

ThEi Dail

Television
Viewing_

11111'11 MY 'NAliNV"!

1173 C·U Chivy l_uv Tandum

372-8390.

Warm
llov•
Warm
healer

•

._ _.... - - - -

P6A n~YLAp '

· AC. Colll14·882·7181 .

tappen elec. cook stove, avac·
oda green . UOO.; 1978 Chev:
pickUp 4 WhHI drive, 310 IUIO.;
811, bod, good tlr ... U, 500. Ph.

Pomeroy-MNidlepclrt, Ohio

I CA~ '5TlLL ~L
~ 'IJALI:.'S I TOOl&lt;

2 Bedroom. 1 year l&amp;au
t260.00
per month Phone

614·446-3872

Cell
114·245·9264
682-6750.

f'

·running botrdl, ctb lights.
Shltp looking truck. Carpeting,

4212.

December 18, 1988

BORN LO~ER

Trucks for Sale

oolt. Ph. 614-448·8038.

We pay cash for l11;e model chMn
uaed cara.
·
Jim Mink Chev.- Oidtlnc.
Bill Gene Johnaon

826 Cllh paid for junk c••·
Complete. Bodies towed away.

72

Sot• btd couch . 304-171·

Lost : Sunday, l•st.m Hill 1111,
near Cline's Fruit Ftrm. Mele
Dachshund, brown with white
on c;h11t. Antwert to Max.
Rewerd offered. Cell 814·&amp;17·
3073 after 1 :30.

TOP CASH pold lor '83

KIT 'N' CARLYLI ®by Larty Wright

1978 Ford Rongor. IIHk, F150. '

F.urnithed efficienCy •175.00,
2rms. a.blth .u tllitl" Pd . 448·
4.t11 after 7p.m.
·

Rd. Call 614·3B8·9832

Thursday,

December

Ohio

.,

Ill I]) ABC News Nightlino

@ ESPN Skiing Magazine
SEASON PREMIERE

I]) I Rememblf' Gorgeous

GIOI'ge News-pepar column·
isl Clifton Jolley ·explores
the myths and lruths behind
Professional wresoling .
(jJ@ Magnum. P.l.
II tm Night Heat A guilt·
ridden O'Brian slal~s a
. crand killer who escapes
froln his lriel. (70 min.) IRI .
t 2:00 CD Bums &amp; Allen

(]] Jeffersons

@)' (!) Rawhide
l{) SC TV

12 :30 0 ffi ,oS) La1e Night with
.

'

David Letterman Tonight 's ·
guest s are Sandra Bernhard , ~
Linda Gray and musician

Rodney Crowoll. (60 min .) In
Stereo .

ClJ Best of Groucho

'·

\

'

�..

."

'

t .. · '

Thurtdjly, December 18. 1986;: ·

Pliga-: 12-The Daily Sentinel

'

...--...;..LOcal Briefs:;-·-...,
EMS respom:ls to three calls
Meigs Co~nty Emergency Medical Services reports three
calls Wednesday: Rutland at 1:30 p.m. to Leading Creek Road
for CharleS Shuler to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport
at 8:26p.m. to Custer Street !or Bob Hunnell to Holzer Medical
Center; Tuppers Plains at 9:36p.m. to Scout Camp Road lor
Jose Mascorra to Veterans Memorial Hospital.

·Democratic meeting canceUed
The December meeting of the Meigs County Democratic
Executive Committee, scheduled lor tonight (Thursday ), has
been canceled. The next meeting will be Thursday, Jan. 15.

Steer weigh-in slated ]an. 3
All4·H and FFA members planning to exhibit a steer project
at the 1987 Meigs County Fair are reminded that the steer
weigh-In will be held Saturday, Jan. 3. The weigh· In wUI take
place from 9 to 11 a.m. at the Meigs County Fairgrounds in the
show arena. All steers mllst be weighed· In and Identified at this
time.
Members should also bring $7.50 to pay for their pictures for
1987. Ralgro will be available free of charge for those members
who wish to have it.
All steers must be castrated and dehorned priortowelgh·in. It
is recommended that steers weigh a minimum of 500 pounds at
weigh-In but this is noi a requlrement.ln brder to be eligible for
individual sale at fair time, steers must weigh 900 pounds or
better. All steers must be under the direct care of the 4·H or FFA
members. No steer may be replaced alter weigh· ln.
Anyone with questions should call John Rice at 992·6696.

Orange trustees meet tonight

. ' l

One ticket' wins Super Lotto \:·
J

Robert A. HunneU
Robert A. Hunnell, 73, 991 S.
Second Ave.. Middleport. died
Wednesday evening at Holzer
Medical Center.
Born July 31, 1913, In Pomeroy.
he was a son of the late. Robert
and Dora Hun.nell. He was a
World War U veteran ~nd a
member .of Feeney-Bennett Post
128 of .the American· Legion and
Middleport Church of Christ.
Survivors Include a daughter,
Martha Fox, · of Middleport; a
daughter and son· In· law, Jean
and Howard Lyons, of South
Webster; two sisters •. Margaret
Hutton, of Pomeroy, and Betty
Gilbert, of Springfield; seven
grandchildren; eight great·
grandchildren; several nieces
and nephews .
Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Martha L. 'Hunnell, on Sept. 18,
1985, several brothers and one
sister.
Services will .be Saturday, 11
a.m .. at Rawlings-'Coats·Blower
Funeral Home with AI Hartson
officiating. Burial will be in Rock
Springs Cemetery. Friends may
call at the funeral home anyllme
after 10 a.m. Friday, with the
family present from 2-4 and 7-9
p.m.

Charles A. Schuler

'

Charles A. Schuler. 87, of Route
1, Middleport, died· Wednesday
afternoon at Veterans Memorial
Hospital.
A retired coal miner, he was
born July 20, 1899, in Meigs
County, to the late Joseph and
Melvina Eblin Schuler.
Surviving are his wife, Evelyn
Denpy Schuler, whom he mar·
rl~ Sept. 1. 1927; three sons,
James Schuler, Columbus, Cha·
WASHINGTON \UP!) - The tee hearing and reportedly to a rles Schuler, Toronto, Ohio, and
Senate Intelligence Committee. Senate Intelligence Committee John Schuler. Rutland; four
winding up three weeks 'of closed hearing; Regan · Is re- · daughters, Evelyn Haley, Glen
hearings into the Iran arms· ported to have testified to that Dale. W.Va., Nancy VanMeter.
Contra·aid scandal, still does not effect in a closed session of the Rutland. Jane Eblin, Bidwell.
and Jean LaFleur, Collegedale.
know where the arms sale profits same Sena.te panel.
Tenn.
; several grandchildren
went and Is recalling a key
and great-grandchildren; and
witn~
·
resolve conflicts In
Durenberger and the commit·
test
ny
tee's ranking Democrat, Patrick one brother, Joseph Schuler, of
For ·e r national security ad· Leahy of Vermont, said Wednes· Route 1, Middleport.
He was preceded in death, in
viser Robert McFarlane was to day they have made no progress
addition
to his parents. by one
return before the committee In determining who directed the
brother,
George Schuler; two
today to clear up 'differences In diversion of up to $30 million in
sisters,
Bertie
Frazier and Mary
testimony by witnesses who profits from the Iran arms sales
Schuler;
and
one
daughter, Mary
appeared before the panel prob- to the Contras or In finding out
Schuler.
..
Ing the worst scandal of the where the money went.
Services
will
be
Saturday,
2
P.e~gan presidency .
p.m..
at
the
Hunter
Funeral
"It is an open agenda to call
"The Iranian part of It went off
back witnesses to examine them" just the way they planned It," Home with Rev. Lloyd Grimm
on areas In which other testim· Durenberger said. "They made officiating. Burial will be In
ony may be somewhat different some extra money for the.lnves· Cheshire Gravel Hill Cemetery.
from their own," said committee tqrs, and Ollie North saw that Friends may call at the funeral
chairman David Durenberger. part of It went Into an account lor home from 2·4 and 7-9 p.m.
R·Minn.
the Contras. That we know. Friday.
Of significance Is the conntct Whether It got out of the account
Clarence R. Marquis
between McFarlane's testimony and actually got to the Contras ...
to two committees that President we don' t'know. "
Clarence 'Robert Marquis. 60.
Reagan gave advance oral apLeahy and Durenberger. how- died Wednesday evening at his
proval for an August 198' ship· ever, remained at odds over what ..
Coolville Route 1 residence.
ment of arms to Iran and the role North played and who
Mr. Marquis was born In
reported testimony by White directed the operation.
House chief of staff Donald
Wa.rren Marquis,
Sr.,ofand
Parkersburg.
W.Va .. a son
the '
"I do not feel that Colonel late
Regan that the president ap·
Twila
Day
Marquis.
He
was
a
proved the shipment. after the North could act all by himself."
mechanic
and
served
In
World
Leahy said. "I do not believe
fact. In October 1985.
Colonel North could have done all War I! spending 11 years In the
McFarlane gave that testim· the things attributed to him by u.s. Navy.
ony In an open session of the himself. My feeling now Is that he • Surviving are two sons. Cha·
House Foreign Affairs Commit· didn't act alone."
rles and Jon, both at home; his
Orange Township Trustees will meet at 7 this evening at the
home of Clerk Dorothy Calaway to discuss finances and the
Robinson and Sargent fence issue.

Senate panel to recall
major probe witness

stepmother, Lucille Marquis,
Vienna, W.Va.; three brothers,
Warren Jr.. Quinlan, Texas;
Richard, Santa Ana, Calif'., and
Wayne or Phlladephla, Pa.; a
sister, Nora Rushing, Parkers·
burg; two half-brothers. Lewis
· Marquis, Ritchie County, W.Va"
and Larry Marquis, Caldwell;
two half' sisters, Sheila Marquis,
Vienna, aitd Sonja H6SS!11an.
Lubeck, W.Va.
. Besides his parents, he was
preceded In death by his wife,
Mary Anderson Marquis, In 1984.
Services wUl be conducted atll
a.m. Saturday at the While. Ethridge Funeral Home. 125 Lee
St., Belpre, with Mr. Donald
Seevers officiating. Friends may
call at the funeral home from 2·4
·
and 7-9 p.m. Friday.

(feU G. DeLong .
Cecil Gordon DeLong, 61, of
30790 Barringer Roa(j, Portland.
died Thursday morning at Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Born April 30, 1925, in Jackson
County, W.Va ., he was a son of
Charles and Laura K~ys DeLong.
He had been a deckhand for the
Ohio River Sand and Gravel Co.,
Parkersburg, W.Va., and · was
last self-employed as owner·
operator of J &amp; . R Trash,
Portland, He retired in 1982 and
was a member of the Second
Baptist Church, Ravenswood,
W.Va.
Survivors Include .his wife.
Louise DeLong, Portland; one
daughter and son-ln·law, Kelly
and' Ron Hawkins, Middleport;
three sons and daughters-ln·laj~~,
Charles and Debbie Shasteen.
East Liverpool, Jeffrey and
Wendy DeLong, Ravenswood,
W.Va., and Robbie. DeLong. at
home, In Portland; four grand·
children, Cindy and Michael
Hawkins, and Jennifer and
Chuckee Shasteen; one sister,
Ruth Staats, Murraysvllle,
W.Va.; four brothers, a twin.
Homer DeLong. Antiquity, Steve
DeLong, Akron. Everett De·
Long, Ripley , W.Va., Charles
DeLong, New Matamoras; and
many nieces and nephews.
He was preceded In death by
his parents; one sister, Virginia
Taylor; and two hall·brothers.
. Clarence and Howard DeLong.
Services will be Saturday, 1
p.m., at Ewing Ji'uneral Home,
with Rev. · Lawrence . Gluesen·
camp Sr. officiating. Burial will
be In Stivers ville Cemetery.
Friends may call at the funeral
home from 2-4 and 7-9 p.m. on
Friday.

.. ' ....

winning numbers were3,4, 15, 27. :-:~
28 and44.
·
:- '

CLEVELAND !UP!) - One
player Is eligible to claim the $7.5
• 'h
million jackpot In Ohio's Super
The player w!ll receive the ; ·~
Lotto g11me after picking all six
winnings
In 20 annual pre-tax . ;~
numbers In Wednesday night's
payments
of $375,000.05, the '~:
drawing.
: ;
The name of the player will be spokesmim said.
In
a&lt;l_dltlon
to
the
top
prize
.. •
announced after the winning
winner,
138
players
chose
five
of
"~
ticket Is validated at a regional
the
numbers
to
'
w
in
$591
each.
·
.. ~
lottery office, a lottery ~ommis·
Also,
6,941
players
picked
four
of
~;
sloli ·spokesman ' said today. The
the .numbers .to win $4~ aplece••;..l
There were 121,7~1 playerswho i,::
selected three or the numbers, , ·..
winning
$3 each.
:1'
South Central Ohio .
Ticket
s11les
for
the
weekly
"·
Becoming partly cloudy todrawing
totaled
$5,016,137,
with
a
'·
·,
night, with a !~ear 30. Partly
total
prize
payout
of
$8,259,067.
~- .
· cloudy Friday, with highs in the
mid 40s .
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is near zero tonight and
Friday.
'
Winds wUI tie light and wesPolntelliH, Holy lr111, Un &amp; Cot .
terly tonight.
Chriotowat ln11, fail111 PI.,IJ,
Ohio Extended Forecast
Manwil't laoktio, Clorlotmas
Saturday thi'OII(h Monday
WrNtho,
(o... Arrao... .nt~ .
Fair Saturday and Sunday.
Gra"
..,
.... &amp; S..ar•
with a chance of. rain or sriow
Monday. Highs will be between
40 and 45 Saturday. dropping lo
between ·35 and 40 Sunday and
SYRACUSE, OHIO . .
Monday. Overnight lows , will
Ojlttl Doil1 ' to l, lonilayt to l
range from the mid 20s to the low
PH. 982·877&amp;
30s.
'

WRAPPED UP LAST MINUTE
CHIRSTMAS SA~IMOS .FOR VOU •

STOREWIDE SAVINGS

50°/o SA.YINGS

SPECIAL FACTORY
PRICES ON
FENTON LAMPS

. PRELIMINARY WORK UNDERWAY- Road
beside the underlying roadway, to hold up th~
under the Pomeroy-Mason Bridge has been closed
structure while the &lt;'Ontractor replaces 15'(, fo~t
and gus and telephone lines under the structure
of the top section of the first pier on lhe Ohio side.
1\re helng moved io clear the way lor major bridge
Similar repairs wUI be made to I be first pier on the
repair work slated to begin this spring. ~enneth
West V)rglniiLslde. The 1111proach span on llleOhlo
Buckley, of the ~hlo Department of ';J'rllillp0\18· ' side wut also be removed and new approacheoi wQI
tlon, reports that the road under the bridge will be
be built on · both !lldes. ·Buckley dl~ not know
closed lor t~e duration of lh~ prime conslructlon ' exactly when the hrldKe ltsell wUI be closed, but
contract held by the firm Maldens, lenklns,
anticipates April. The span wUI not he closed until
Nelsonville. Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
needed materials are delivered lo the contractor.
reports that the road closure could last as long as
Workers for the Hughes Co., Huntington, W.Va. ,
eight months. Ohio Department of Transportation
are shown relocating the ullllly lines.
plans call for the building of a temporary pier

OPEN EVENINGS
TIL 8 P.M. .

ON THE "T' IN MIDDLEPORT

.

MIDDLEPORT
BOOK
STORE
MIDDLEPORT
ST.

Admissions Margaret
Walker, Racine; Elm a Holter,
Racine; Roland Neutzting,
Pomeroy .
Discharges - Alva Will, Paul

Report Taiwan flu virus in
22 states; young hit hardest

992-2641

~~~V;;an;;M~e;l~er;.;E;v;e~iy;n;K;n~l;gh;t;.;;;;~;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

ATLI\N'L\ {l iJ'I) - A new Taiwan lnlluenza
viru• has made its way Into this country, slrlklnJ
children and young adults in ~2 slates, Including
Ohio. and the llistrlct of Columhla, federal health
offidals say.
'l'ht• latest ' ji\-Taiwan" flu, caused by a new
typ•• of virus not seen in the United States,ln lhree ·
deca des, reQuires a special vaccine for protect ion. 'fht• vaccine is recommended for those under
:15 who have chronic health prohlems.
Ur. Tom Torok, a flu st•eclallst for the Rl\tlonal .
Cen ters for Disc&gt;L~c Co ntrol, said Thursday that
peopl e horn since the mid· 1950s have never been
t•xpuscd to lhe Taiwan flu virus and lm.ve no
natural immu nity lo it.
·
''It still causes plain old flu with typical
infhwn7.o\ sy mptoms of chills , headache and
fcv'er," lu.• said. " 'fhere I~ nothing to distinguish
thi:-; slr:lin of nu from other strains."
Fed••r:tl health o!liclals are urglnR people In
high risk grou ps to gellwo flu shots- the Taiwan
vaccina tion and a lriva,enl vaccine that protects
against lhi'Ce other s trains Of lnRuenza. The two

SHOP I&amp;C JEWELERS. FOR
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WATCHES:
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JEEPS &amp; RENAULT$

ENGlGEMENT RINGS
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ANNIVERSARY RINGS
CLUSTERS
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JEEP COMANCHE

LEGITIMATE

OR Up To

Councilmen Richard Wamsley
and Ca rroll Teaford were named
to sene on tl1e fi remen's depe n·
dency bo;lrd Monda y night when
Haclne Vi ll age Cou ncil met In
recessed se&lt;S ion with Cou ncil
P ro s id c nl F' r auk Cle land
pres l&lt;ling.
A rnePt ing of the finan ce
comm ittee was announ ced for 7
p. m . on Dec. 29 to work on 1987
app ropriations and th e clerk
reported that a letter has been
received irom the county development office stating tha t the
business expans ion and reten tion
commit tee was one of 20 pro·
gra ms in Ohio to receive a
supp01 t grant. The committee
met&gt;ts the fir st Tues day ~ I each
month at 7:30p. m. In the county
extens ion service office.
Cpuu cll sent a thank you note to
Dale Willis for donating the
community Christmas 1t·ee and
extended public thanks to res!•
dent s who donated decorations
and helped · decorate the com·
munlt y tree.
George Cummins, first aid
chief. ap peared before council
requesting cou ncil to Ins ure the
village squad truck for 1987. He

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administrat ion officia ls have we decided not tq comment on it ,
sa id the }:resident did not ap- for fear it would endanger t)le.
prove that shipment until so me lives of t he hos tages. To the best
lime In October . after the fi rs t of my recollection, the president
batch of arms had been was against the shipment at that
time."
delivered.
Durenberger characterized
Regan spent 2Y, hours before
the House committee Thursday McFarlan e's testimony as
and his questioning likew ise " much. more explicit, much:
appeared to deal with the timing more definitiv e than that of the
ch ief of siaff or tb.at of the
of certain events. .
·
" Most of us ca n't remember secretary of state or secretary of ,
· ·
what we had for lunch two days defense."
11
But Hous e Int elligence Com·
3go, he told reporters. "T~is is
why people's memories are mit tee Chairma n Lee Hamilton.D·Ind .. said Regan gave "very
different."
The chief of staff said Reagan co mprehensive and candid tes"was against " sending arms in timony and the ~ommiltee
August 1985 but, "When we · members res ponded quite favorfinally found out about It later, ably toll ."

principal high risk groups are individuals over 65,
nursing home patients and anyone In poor heallh
who could die from the !lu.
Torok said lhal an estimated 6 million doses of
the vaccine have been manufactured and sent to
distributors.
·
A typical case of ln!luenza usually runs lis
course in ahout a week hut . some victims feel
11
Washed out,. ~little longer, he said.
The 22 slates reporting A· Taiwan or A-Taiwan·
like lnOuen•a are Hawaii, · Oregon, California,
Montana, Texus, Ohio, New Hampshire, Connecll·
cut, Massachu ~ells, North Carolina, Florida,
Idaho, Colorado, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michl·
gan, Arizona, New York, Maryland, Tennessee,
Pennsylvania and New Mexico.
Torok •aid lhe number of flu cases has been
Increasing since the llrst of December.
" This has been a lypl~al season, In thai we get
Increasing numbers of reports through December
and January," he said. "It usually peaks toward
the end of January and early February."

top adm inistra tion officials , the
question of when President Rea·
gan ordered secret U.S. arms
shipment s to Iran - and. what
happened to profits from the
sales believed divert ed to the
Nicaraguan Contra rebels
remain unanswered.
· Sen. David Durenberger, R·
Minn., said Thursday that no
matter what else is revealed to
the Int elligence panel he chairs,
the ultimate responsibility for
answers be longs to Reagan.
"The ·issue Is clearly not just
who gave the orders to do what,
but who Is overall responsibl e lor
this policy, " Duren berger told
reporters.
"We have complied a mass of
facts about this fi asco." added
Sen. Patrick Leahy of Vermont.
· the panel's ranking Democrat .
" Much more needs to be learned
before a definitive account of the
Iran affa ir or the diversion of
funds can be prepared."
McFarlane s pent most of his
time In the hearing room Thurs·
day In a repeat performance of
questioning on when Reagan
a uthorized the first arms shipment to Iran as part of a policy to
build rela tions with "morler·
ales" In Tehran and work toward
release of U.S. hos tages held by,
pro·Ira n te rrori sts in Lebanon.
McFarlane to ld the panel.lasl'
week that Reagan orally ap·
proved the fir st arms shipment in
August 1985, before the weapons
were sent to Tehran by IsraeL
However. Rega n and other

STILL A PUZZLE - Sen. David Durenberger ilelt, R·Minn)
chairman of the Senate lnlelllgence Committee, and Sen. r3trlck
Leahy, vice chairman, head toward a press conference thursdy
after the committee conciuded 11• hearings. Leahy said three
weeks of Investigation lnlo the "flusco" of the Iran arms·Contra
afllr pprolvded a general unders tanding .~ul not a lull accounting
of it. \UP!)
•
1

'

Name Wamsley, Teaford to board

DIAMOND JEWEUY:

· ·- itt\~.

26

2
A

Yet despite the answers of such

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Also 3.9,-. APR On '17 Alliance &amp; GTA Models.

By JUDI !lASSON
WASHINGTON iUPI ) - One
of President Reagan's top men Is
sugges ting one reason congres·
slonal panels ar(' unable to nail
down details of the Iran arms·
Contra aid scandal: "Most of us
can' t remember' what we had for
lunch two days ago."
The Senate Intelligence Com·
mit tee .re&lt;:alled former national
security adviser Robert McFar·
lane for more testimony Thurs·
day about discrepancies between
his statement s and thoseofWhlte
House chief of staff Donald
Regan, who spoke to the senators
Wednesday and testified Thurs·
day be fore their Hous e
counterparts.
The House Intelligence Committee. meanwhile. was ex·
pee led to hear testimony today
from Attorney General Edwin
Meese.

WE~E

·SELECTED ITEMS UP TO

'

one recalls· 'details.,

•

TWO DAYS ONLY
Friday, Dec. 19 &amp; Saturday, Dec. 20

&lt;

Hearings resume; no

''

. HUBBARD$
GIEENHOUSE

PENDANTS
EARRINGS
IUCELOS ·

CASH
BACK

1986

.
'

'•

'

'
Ohio, Friday, December 19, 1986

.

CHRISTMAS SEASON

LANDSTROM'S
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ssoo.

Vo1!36, No. 160

Partly cloudy tonlghi. Lows
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Satu rday. Highs near 35.
Chances of rain near zero
tonight, 20 percent Saturday. ,.

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\tl

requirement Is waived by ordi·
also asked fo r a cha nge In the
nance.
Council authorized the
response pattern for the squads
wlththeldeatotaklngthevlllage . purc~ase of seals for the hydrau·
lie pump for the dump truck.
squad truck on all fire runs .
teeth 'for the backhoe bucket and
leaving the county squad at the
also
blades for the snow plow.
station. In prior years , council
Bills
are to be submitted before
paid th.e Insurance for the villa ge
the
end
of the year for payment.
squad so that the village squad
Television
switchover was distruck could be a backup for
cussed with several council
resident s. Cou ncil tabled any
members expressing th eir dlssa·
action until the next m eeting and
llsfactlo n with federal deregula·
requested Cummins to submit
lion of the cable sys tems and
his proposa l in writing. It was
reported that are receiving com·
announced that the fire hou se
plaints
of poor reception.
and·or the annex can be used by
Present for thee session were
non· prolit groups who are to pay
council members, Robert Bee·
a user fee and submit a written
gle, Cleland.
application for action at a village
Teaford, Wamsley, Scott
cou nell meeting.
Wolfe;
Clerk Jane Beegle: Mar·
Council also approved the first
shal
Joe
Kirby, Fire Chief Robert
reading of an ordinance waiving
Johnson,
Cummins, and Sti·eet
the residence requireme nt for a
Commissioner Glenn Rizer.
village tnarshal. State law requires the village marshal live In Council adjourned untll 7 p.m. on
the respect.ive village unless the Monday, Jan. 5.

Plan Saturday parade
A Chrlstmu parade will be held al4 p.m ..Saturdlly In Rutlwtd
sponsored by lhe Langhute Christian Church. The parade wUI
also go through LangsvUle.

FILLING FRUR
- Wedneoday was a
,busy day for legionnaires wtd auxUiary members
of the Mlddleporl P081 111 they prepared sacks of
fruit wtd candy lo bt! d cll~ered lo shullns and
members o~er 80. Baskets of frull will also be

laken to the
School and
,:
Home. Pictured as they worked on lhe project ·ar11 ·'
John Metzger, Lee Reed, Becky Tyree, Gerry •
Parsons, Roscoe Roush, Polly Chadwell, Grace .
1 Welch and Kalheryn Metzger . .

·.

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    <description>A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.</description>
    <elementContainer>
      <element elementId="7">
        <name>Original Format</name>
        <description>The type of object, such as painting, sculpture, paper, photo, and additional data</description>
        <elementTextContainer>
          <elementText elementTextId="40819">
            <text>Newspaper</text>
          </elementText>
        </elementTextContainer>
      </element>
    </elementContainer>
  </itemType>
  <elementSetContainer>
    <elementSet elementSetId="1">
      <name>Dublin Core</name>
      <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
      <elementContainer>
        <element elementId="50">
          <name>Title</name>
          <description>A name given to the resource</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
            <elementText elementTextId="40818">
              <text>December 18, 1986</text>
            </elementText>
          </elementTextContainer>
        </element>
      </elementContainer>
    </elementSet>
  </elementSetContainer>
  <tagContainer>
    <tag tagId="842">
      <name>delong</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="513">
      <name>hunnell</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="6478">
      <name>marquis</name>
    </tag>
    <tag tagId="1495">
      <name>schuler</name>
    </tag>
  </tagContainer>
</item>
