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By The Bend

The Daily
Sentineri.

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Monday. Deci!mber 22! 198Q

Days .'til .
Christmas:·

Page--,.14

Friendly Circle has holiday.meeting
Plans were completed for
preparing and delivering Christmas food baskets when the
Friendly Circle met Tuesday
evening at Trinity Church.
Preceding the meeting rem embrancess for the elderly and
shutin members of the church
were tagged and will be delivered by circle members.
Allee Globokar · in a brief
business meetlrfg, thanked those
who helped with vartus holiday
projects. New program books
made by Norma Jewell were
distributed. In recognition of the
circle's 50th year the books have
gold rovers. The basket order ,
has been delivered along with the
jelly packets. A thank you from
the Perrfn family was noted.
Mrs. Ciobokar closed with her

own' version of the 12 Days of
Christmas.
·
A holiday dinner by candlelight
was enjoyed by the 17 members
att ending. Carrie Kennedy offered grace. Favors were Santa
face lapel pins created by Diane
Hawley.
)\1rs. Kennedy, program chairman, presented an Interesting
account of the national · Christmas tree, a seq uoia called
GeneraJ'Grant, located In King's
Canyon National Park in California. She no ted that In 1924
Charles E . Lee was observing the
hugh tree when a little girl, eyes
wide with awe, remarked, "What
a Christmas tree that would
make!"

'

Lee was instrumental in inter-

esting the president in de,sigrl~~
ing that sequoia the
Christmas tree in 1926. Eai;ll
year there . is a journey .QJ
Interested people to the are~
where a short program I~ co'h1
dueled. A man named Biebelertii'
Redley, Calif. was 26 when.. lil!
a !tended that first observanc'e'in:,
1926.
:,,. ,..
In spite of the rough terr'afa'
and the cold weather at 81 he hu+.:·
never missed a year.
' ·~·
Gay Perrin read lheChristma '·
story from Luke, followed by :a,.
Christmas prayer. Games wer ~­
played. Mrs. Kennedy gaveeaol!;:
member a sequined Christmas&lt;
tree lapel ornament . A ·gift•
exchange around the lighted tr~ :
and Christ mas music by Mar~ .
Stewart completed the evening, ·
'

Homebuilders group conducts meeting·'f

PRESENTATION
FLAG - Before tht•
student body at the Tuppers Plains Elementary
School m embers of th e OlivtcOrunge Memorial
Chapter 9053, Veterans of Foreign Wars,
presented a new American flag to the school.
Receiving the fl ag from Charles ('arr, quarler -

muster, and Ken Hager. commander, is Prlniclpai Donald Sbue. Chapter members looking on
from the left are Edgar Pullins, Guy Callaway,
Herman Black, Drury Harper, Ted Sedgwick,
Elmer Kaylor.

Apple Grove
UMW meets
The annu al Christmas dinner
of the Apple Grove United
Methodis t Women was held at the
hom e of Mr. and Mrs. Dallas Hill.
The 12 members and nin e
guests enjoyed a buffet dinner.
During the dinn er a Christmas
recordin ~ of music by the Mormon Tabernacle Choir was
played.
Sue Grace pr.esided at the
meeting which opened with the
reading of the Christmas story
.from Luk e by Ed ith Manuel.
Several members told of special
Chris tmases and the group sa ng
carols with Mrs. Carl Hicks at the
piano. There were poems by Mrs.
Grace, and the Rev. f\oger Grace
and the Rev. Ca rl Hicks told of
Christmas experiences. Vicki
Ables noted that gifts were
collected fOI' a needy family .
Brenda Anderson sold the traveling basket to Cindy Sands with
the one in January to be provided
by Mary Roush. Next meeting
wUI be held on Jan. 13 with Dolly
Wolle and Florence Smith servIng refreshments.
The annual Christmas program at the App le Grove Chu rch
will be held Sunday at 7 p.m.

••

The annual holiday potluck•of and Kathryn Evans. Small Bi· Dorothy Roach and Tneuna::
the Homebuilders Class of ihe blcs were given to each one Boyer were on lhe kitcheit:
Middleport Church of Christ was attending by Mr. and Mrs. Tuttle. commit tee. Hartson had the'"
'
held Tuesday night at the church.
In lieu of a gift exchange closing prayer.
••
Clay Tuttle had the opening members gave love offerings for - Attending were those named·~
prayer.
a special project.
-and Raymond and Farie Coie,.;
Gifts were presented to Willard
Mrs . Evan s Doris Carter, and Thelm a Boyer, Bill and F,IO: •
and Nettie Boyer, custodians, Cla rice Erwin had the program,
Grueser, Danny and Kathy Tho~ ;
and AI and Donna Hartson, with Mrs. Erwin reading "The mas, Dorothy Bryant , Dorothy :
pastor and his wife .. The holiday Shining Tinie of Chri stm as" and and ftaymond Baker, Delete(.
theme was ca-rried out in decora- playing carols for group singing. Forth, and Elsie King.
tions prepared by Flo Grueser,
Geneva Tuttle, and Coleep Van .
•
Meter. Favors were ceramic 1 - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - -.!:
Christmas trees donated by Glen

j!

Calendar

BEDFORD TWP - Bedford
Township Trustees will meet
Monday, 7 p.m., at the township
hall .

BEAUT\' WINNER - f'rystal Renee llolman, daughter of
Joseph and Melanie Holman, Ohio 124. Racine, wus selected first
runner-up in · the beauty division of America's Sweetheart
·Chrlstma.' Pageant held Sunday at tht• Anchor's Inn In Columbus.
She ulsu placed second In both the talent and sportswear divisions
and rect•lved thret• trophies for her participation. Sht• wHI
participate In national competition Fch. 14·15 in Huntington
·
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W.Va., at the newly-opened Radisson llotel.

SHADE - Shade River Lodge
453 will hold a special meeting
Monday, 7:30p.m., with work In
the EA degree. Refreshments
will be served.
CHESHIRE - Ga!lia-Meigs
Community Action Agency will
hold its free clothing day for
low-income persons on Monday
and Tuesday, from 9 a.m. t 12
noon, at the old high school in
Cheshire.

TUESDAY
POMEROY - ·c alvary Pilgrim Chapel, Ohio 143, will
present a Christmas program
Tuesday, 7:30 p.m., entitled
"Love Took A Journey that
Ended In My Heart."

CAREER WEEK - Pomeroy Elementary
Sehool students looked to the future when they
observed Career Education Week by wearing
clothing and carrying tools or their " future"
careers. Room parades, photo sessions and
reports highll,;hted activities planned by Bonnie

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\., ' J

\ .. 1
J

~""fAiiGE
MEO.

MEIGS
COUN-TY

FARM
FRESH
EGG$

89( DOZ.

79( DOZ.

5 LIS.

CABBAGE

1oc lB.

LETTUCE
2 H£ADs$) 00

CRANBERRIES
12

$100

RACINE

MOM PERRY'S
.BOUNTY TABLE

138 WASHINGTON ST.

RAVENSWOOD,W VA.

Tired of Turkey &amp; HaM?
Try Our
Seafood Feast SMorgasbord
NEW YEAR'S EVE~ WED., DEC. 31
3 PM TILL 8 PM
Frog Legs, Mini Shrimp, Catfish, Oysters, Crab Clusters, :
Cod Fish, Popcorn Shrimp, Egg Rolls, Plus Lots More.

CLOSED WED., DEC. 24th
and THURSDAY, DEC. 25th

BROUGHTON'S

MILK
$1 69 GAL

2%
HOMOGENIZED

$1,99 GAL.

oz.

RADISH
6 OZ. PACK

79C

5/$100

'Tis the season to be jolly ••• and to say 'thank
you' for your contlnufng.confidence in us.
•EMERGENCY ROOM/URGENT CARE
•SKILLED NURSING/INTERMEDIATE CARE
•SPECIAL CARE UNIT
•OPERATING ROOM/RECOVERY ROOM
•ACUTE CARE
•OUT PATIENT CLINIC
•CONTINUITY OF CARE

OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK 9 A.M.-9 P.M.

FARM RKET AND
. CONVENIENCE STORE

290 WEST lAIN

SUN FUN PENNZOIL

Fisher, career education representative for the
school, to promote career education lor students.
Students In their outfits for the observance are,
from left, Jeremy Grimm, archaeologist: Da·
nlelle Crow, nurse, and J .P. Davis, police officer,

'

CARROTS

SANTA WIL BE HERE
MON., TUES. &amp;
WED. 6-8 WITH
TREATS FOR THE
KIDS

MONDAY
SALEM CE~TER- At 7 p.m.
on Monday a Christmas program
will be presented at the Salem
Center United Methodist Church,
followed by Christmas Holy
Communion and the Festival of
Lights.

MORNING STAR - Morning
Star United Methodist Church
Christmas program , Monday ,
7:30p.m. Public invited.

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· POMEROY

~'AC ILITY

VE·TERANS
MEMORIAL HOSPITAL
•

Veterans Memorial Hospital

115 E. Memorial Drive

Pomeroy, Ohio

992-2104

Ohio Lottery
Dailv' .Number

578

PICK·4
1503

•

at y
Vot.36. No.162
c.,Pyrighted 1986

Cloudy tonight, with a
chance of rain or sn~w and a
low In the mid 30s. Rain likely
Wednesday, wltb highs In the
mid 408. The probability of
precipitation 18 40. percent
tonight and 80 percent Wednesday.

en tine
2 Sections. 1~ Pagos 26 Conto
A Multimedia (nc. Newspaper ~

. Pomeroy-Mi~dleport, Ohio, Tuesday, December 23, 1986

Celeste, Senate face
showdown on. tort veto
I

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By LEE LEONARD
UPI Sl alehouse RePorter
COLUMBUS (UP!) - Gov.
Richard F . Celeste's veto of a
complex and controversial bill
revising Ohio's civil ·justice system and strengt1Jening regula tion of the Insurance Industry
drew OhlQ s~nators back to town
today.'
Sen~te President Paul Gil, lmor, R-Port Clinton, scheduled
· a vot ~ for 11 a .m. today on
whether to override the gayernor's veto. The bill passed the
Senate 20-10, exactly the margin
needed to reverse the veto.
The House also will have to
vote to override the veto by a
three -fifths majority. House
Speaker Vernal G. Rille, D-New
Boston, ~a id he will schedule a
session Wednesday, Christmas
Ev~. if the Senate overrides the
veto.
, When Celeste vetoed the bill
Friday, he objected to a section
long-souglii by manufacturers
that limits lawsuits against defective pt,oducts. He said If not
for that provision he would have
supported the bill.
The section. backed by the
business c'pmmunity, was inserted by a Senate-House conference committee to gain support
of Senate Republicans.
Gillmor 1 said Friday he
wouldn't schedule a session un·
less he was I reasonably certain
~- tbere were :j(l vot~s to overr,lde.
• Sen. rHarry Meshel, Dy ou ngs town; however, 'urged Democrats to vote-to sustain Celeste's veto. I
Only four Democrats supported the bill originally and
Meshel said I only one or two
would vote to loverride.
The packa~e was spurred by

complaints from businesses and
local · governments that they
were unable to obtain commer·
clal liability Insurance coverage
at affordable rates.

economic losses from an Injury.
Another part of the package
strengthens the powers of the
Ohio Department of Insurance in
regulating the insurance Industry. It also requires detailed
reporting of flnan~ial information, includlpg claims. payouts
and reserves.
The industry claimed such
reporting would be useless unles s
it were thterpre,ted within the
context of the experiences of
Qut-of-state Insurance firms.

The issue was hotly debated for
most of the 1986 session by
representatives of the Insurance
industry and Insurance agents,
trial lawyers, organized -labor,
and business and consumer
groqps.
The Insurance Industry complained 't!lat exorbitant jury
awards in civil suits had forced
Attorneys said changing the
them to increase premiums or civil justice proce~ures would do
withdraw coverage because of nothing to lower :insurance prethe excessive risk. ·
miurns or make coverage more
But trial lawyers ·claimed the accessible.
industl'YOad l'llanulactured a
Sponsors said the product of
false "crisis'' to cover up unwise weeks of work In the 'conference
business practices of several committee was among the best
years ago when interest rates laws In the n~tion on the subject.
•
Manufacturers have sought
were high.
The consumer groups, trial protection for years against
lawyers and organized labor lawsuits In accidents inv,olvlng
bombarded 'Celeste in recent products which have been al·
days with requests that he veto tered, or used for lengthy periods
the legislation, which they said of time.
would unfairly limit the rights of
The new section condenses the
workers and consumers to rec· manufacturers' exposure to a
over damages from negligence single legal theory instead or
suits.
eight or nine concepts In common
One part of the package is law. It also changes the standard
aimed at encouraging out-of- of fault from proof'of negligence
court settlements of damage · to proof that a manufacturer
claims, providing Incentives for knew a produc! was "unreasona·
avoiding trial.
bly dangerous" when It was sold.
It als91lmits aw~rds lp certain . L~tft for next session was
Instances .bjr requlr)nR~hi!I'A.,_ry~hft!''JI'ri'- Of- tiM! IJWIUranceccuillder collateral ' Sources of civil justice problem - revising
recovery, such as heallh or the law on medical malpractice
accident lrisurance. and by sub- insurauce coverage.
If the attempt to override the
ti-actlng from the award If the
plaintiff was partly at fault.
veto fails, -the new General
The bill also limits attorney Assembly, which convenes In
contingency fees and provides January , will probably ·try to
for periodic, instead or lump pass an insurance liability-tort
sum, payments of future, non- reform bill again.

Miners'
efforts
brighten
holidays
for kids .
WILKESVILLE - "You
are the greatest Santa Claus. in
I he whole world'"
Few p~ple , !n attendance at
Southern Ohio Coal · Co.'s
Meigs No. I mine recently
· would have di sputed that
claim, which was uttered by a
delighted youngster as he
received a shiny. new bicycle
for Christmas.
The "Christmas party,"
which was put on by the Coal
Miners' Christmas Planning
Committee ofl Southeastern
Ohio, entertained 29 children
of the Gailia County Children's Home arid area foster
· homes with ~pproxlmately
$3,000 worth of gifts, including
11 bicycles.
The event, which took place
at Meigs No. 1 for the second
consecutive year. represented
only a portion of the donations
collected this yr ' r by the
committee. lnclua.ng approxImately $4.500 raised at the
Coal Miners' .Jamboree In
November, the committee,
comprised of 10 Meigs No. I
employees, collected nearly
$15,000 for the chll,dren during ·
1986.
.
I
"Just to see the joy on the
faces of the kids ~as a real
thrill," spld "Santa.'' played
by Meigs No. 1 s,huttle car
operator Max Whitlatch. "I'm
just tickled to death with the
attitude of everyone involved
In this thing. It realy! has
grown in the past year.''
Whitlatch, who Is also a
member of the commirtee,
said coal miners, union and
company -officials and other
businesses in the area and
individuals have all come

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EXTENSIVE DtUtAGE - Many Pomeroy
businesses arid residents from Meigs Tire Center
to the Middleport corporation limits were without
power most of Monday afternoon and evening.

About- 12:511 p.m. Monday, a large General
Telephone Co. truck, driven by James R.·
Bashour, 42, of Athens, clipped a power pole and'
crashed Into a garage and apartment on West
Main In Pomeroy.

Truck accident. blacks out
numerous. ~illage businesses
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By NANC'k' YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Many Pomeroy businesses and
residents from Meigs Tire Center
to the Middleport corporation
limlts were without power most
of Monday afternoon and
evening.
Aboul 12:58 p.m. Monday, a
large General Telephone Co.
truck, driven by James R.
Bashour, 42, of Aihens, clipped a
power pole ·and crashed into a
garage and apartment on West
Main Street in Pomeroy .
Pomeroy police report that
Bashour was traveling west,

,

facing -the sun, and fell asleep at
the wheel. The truck went off the
right side of the road: clipped the
Ohio Power pole, also knocking
out Columbus &amp; Southern Ohio
Electric Co. lines , some telephone special service lines which
rely upon electric power, and
cable television, before striking
and heavily damaging the garage and apartment, owned by
Charlie l:egar and occupied by
Becky Triplett.
The accident also caused a
small gas leak. Bashour and a
passenger tnt he vehicle, Gary E.

r

Hiles, 49, Logan, '&gt;~1ere trapped
within the vehicle for about 45
minutes, due to downed power
lines.
There were no injuries. Ba shour was cited by police lor
failure to have vehicle under
control. The GTE truck was
heavily damaged and had to be
towed from the scene. Utility
workers were on the scene
immediately to begin restorinp;
services to customers. Electric·
ity was restored to 175 C&amp;SOE
customers about 4:35 p.m. Ohio
Power customers were restored
about midnight.

Gallia m~n charged in fatal blaze
GALLIPOLIS - A Rt. 4,
Gallipolis man has been charged
with aggravated arson In connection with the Sunday lire that
killed the man's mother.
Following a preliminary investigation by the Gallia County
Sheriff' s Department and the
slate fire marshal 's office, Wil liam 0 . Curley, 64 , was taken into
custody Monday and faced an
arraignment this morning in
Gallipolis Municipal Court.
He was placed on $25,000 bond,
which he did not meet, and was
returned to the Galila County

Jail. A preliminary hearing has
been set lor Wednesday, Dec. 31,
at 9:30a.m.
Aggravated arson Is a felony of
th e first degree, according to a
sheriff' s spokesman.
Noldie E. Curley, 81, was found
dead Sunday morning some
distance outside of the doublewide mobile home she shared
with William Curley on Kemper
Hollow Road, about a mile off
Ohio 160. William Curley was not
home at the time of the blaze, the
spokesman said.
The fire. which ex tensively

gutted the rear of the mobile
home, was discovered by a
pass ing motorist. The fire was
reported by the sheriff's depart ment to the Vinton Volunteer
Fire De parlmenl, which respo_nded to the scene. .
The cause of Mrs. Curley's
death remains under
investigation.
Dr. Edward J . Berklch. assist- ·
ant Gallla County coroner, said
Monday the probable cause or
death was incineration. Mrs.
Curlev's body had been taken to
(Co ni lnued on Page 8)

Foote staff seeks reopening loan

A CHRISTMAS REQUEST- "They're aot a selfish bunch of
kids," said "Santa" Max Whitlatch, an employee of Southern
Ohio Coal Co.'s Meigs No. I mine. Santa listens to the request of
this youngster, who later received a lar1e talking doll from the
Coal Miners' Christmas Planning C!lfllmlttee of Southeastern
Ohio. The youngst~r was one of291nvlted to a special party held
recently at Southern Ohio Coal Meigs No. 1 mine.
fortq · to contribute money.
According to the committee,
checks totaling $10,000 were
divided between the children's services or Gallia,
Meigs, Vinton and Jackson
eounties.
After the gifts were dis trtbuted to 'the first wave of
children, Carl Hysell, a representative of Meigs County
Juvenile Court, presented
"Santa" with a plaque. The
plaque, signed by the Meigs
County Commissioners,
Meigs County Juvenile Court

and Meigs County Children's
Services, was offered as a
token of appreciation to Southern Ohio Coal's staff and
employees for providing a
merry Christmas for the children in 1986.
·
Members of the committee
Include Keith Davis, general
superintendent of Meigs No. 1,
George Thacker, Mike Bus·
kirk, Chris Bailey, Whitlatch,
Johnny McGuire, Terry West,
Carl Thompson, Jack Stol·
lings and Gary Evans .

NEW HAVEN, W.Va . -Employees of the Foote Mineral
plant at New Haven, which shut
down nearly a year ago, are
working with Gov. Arch Moore's
office in an attempt to secure a $4
million loan from the state of
West Virginia· to enable them to
buy the plant, State Sen. Mike
Shaw has confirmed.
Shaw, contacted by the Point
Pleasant Register at his law
office in Point Pleasant Monday,

said such a loan would put
members of United Steelworkers
Local 5171 in a position to secure
additional fundin g through a
number of banks and insurance
companies.
" We are making several modification s to the proposal submitted to the state in order to reduce
any (risk) to the state's money,",
said Shaw, who has also been
working closely with plant employees on the 'buyout IJian.

Elements of the package,
which Shaw termed "excellent,"
in clude accelerated paymPnt in
the event of profits, a S1 per
wage-hour cont.ribution by employees to an interest-bearing
trust account as additional collateral to the state and a no
profit-sharing or dividends policy until the loan from the state is
re-paid.
Shaw s~id the $4 million would
(Continued on Page 8)

Patrol issues DWI warning.
'

Despite the effectiveness of the
recent D·Day on Trafficways.
the drunk driver remains a
menace on area highways, particularly during the holiday season, advised Lt. Dan Henderson,
commander of the Gallla-Meigs
Post of the Ohio Highway Patrol.
"There will still be people who
will drink and drive during the.
·upcoming 'holidays and run the
risk of seriously injuring innocent drivers and pedestrians,"
Henderson said.
Henderson said the drunk
driver Is especially dangerous
because his driving is so erratic'

'

·.

that even a skilled, sober driver the patrol having awarded
cannot avoid an accident.
"Saved by the Belt" awards:ro
201
people who were sparro
"When this happens, you need
the protection that qnly a prop- death or Injury in 1986 because
erly fitted safety belt and they had taken the time to buckle
shoulder harness can give you," up befort" they went out on the
he said. "A n accident can occur · highway.
"I'm sure that as more people
so swi(tly that you don 't have
time to steer out of the way or give their safety belts a fair trial
apply your brakes. Obviously, no and get used to having them on,
one will have the time to reach we will see the Ga llia and Meigs
down and fasten their safety belt. counties' and Ohio traffic death
It can't do you any good hanging toll drop significantly," Hender·
from its reel or laying across the son said. "Your voluntary comseat.''
pliance with Ohio's safety belt
law
.. can help you to have a truly
Henderson said benefits of the
seatbelt law are being seen, with Merry Christmas and a happy,
sale New Year."
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'C ommentary
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UI Couri Sireel

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l'omeroy, Ohio

DEVOO'ED TO THE INTERf:STS OF THE MEIGS-MASON AREA

~lb

~m~
~v

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'""'"'-'
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L...-""'T'"I ~=·~:;;:::.

ROBERT L. WINGETT
l'ubllsher
PAT WHITE.HEAD
Asslslanl Publlsher/ Conlroller

BOB BOEFUCH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Daily Press

Association and

the

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American Newspaper Publishe-rs Assoclalion.

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LETI"EBS OF OPINION are welcome. They shruld be less than :m words
long, AI! leltt?rs are subjec t toedlllng and rnist be signed with name, address and
telephcm e numbPr . No unsigned lPHcrs wlll be published. Letters sh.ould be in
~ood taSH'. addressing Issues, not personalities.

!f"ashington Window

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Grogan l~ads ~ats to AFC East crown :~--

Page-2-The Daily I•••
Pomeroy-Middleport, Olill .,
Tuesday, December ~3. , ...

'

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. - It Is Democratic Leadership ·Co~ncll
apparent, to m·e at least, that held In this restored colon!~!
there ls not much wrong with the town; the historical grace note
Democratic !;'arty thatoneoftwo was provided In a.l~cld speecljby
men could not cure. They are Prof. William Leuchterib;erg enSen. Sam Nunn of Georgia and titled. "The Progressiye Tradiformer Virginia Gov. Charles tion of the Democratic Party."
' T~e 'heroes In the speech were
Robb.
Because this Is a tale of the Franklin Roosevelt, Harry TruDemocratic Party, and because man and Lyndon Johnson, des' it Involves political labels, it gets cribed by Leuchtenberg as liber·
als all.
complicated.
.
The Democratic Party Is the
But, of cou rse, Democrats are
more liberal of our two parties. like most people (and all amoBut "liberal" has become a eba) in at least one regard: They
polson wor.d In most elections. subdivide'. And so within the
(Recent exit polls showed only 16 progressive Democratic Party
percent of American voters des· we ran now find the following:
crlbing themselves as ltberals.I "very liberal progressives,"
So now many Demorrats say the "progressive liberaJs," .11 proparty Is the "progressive:· party gressive moderates," and· "pro(on the theory that not many gressive cons~rvatlves."
people are against progress ).
Now the DLC was, formed
And so, at the meeting of the

bee~ use the publir perceived.the
national Democratic Party as too
liberal. TheDLC was designed·to
show that progressive moder a tes an d prog)'essiveconservatlves are In the Democratk game, too, and thill
Democrats might even w.lri the
presidency by nomiriatlng sOil)&amp;·
one from the rjght -wlng half of
the left-wing party.
The DLC so far has already
succeeded In three of four major
objectives. Thus, the recent
Williamsburg conference pub·.
licly demonstrated that' not all
Democrats are liberals . A
swarm of television cameras and
political writers covered the
event, which dealt with non·
liberal solutions of defense and
economic .issues.
Moreover, ·the DLC leaders
have helped create an early.

·:3 straws too many
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
Ul'l Senior Edllor
: , WASHINGTON !UP!) -The Iran arms-Contraaldsltuation seems
:to have robbed President Reagan of his greatest political asset, the
·ability to communicate persuasively to the public. This may be a
~lasslr case of camel overload.
· The president. from the start, has been trying to get 'Americans to ·
believe three propositions.
·
·
· :· First, that It Is so .!mportant to the United States to find and help
::lf!oderate political leaders In Iran that he was jusilfled In waiving the
:·law banning the sale of military equlp!flent to Iran.
-~ :second, that while Iran had· Influence with the kidnappers of
:::f\JYierlcans In Lebanon, Iran did not engage in terrorism Itself, so the
··release of hostages after the arms sales did not constitute paying
·ra nsom to terrorists.
· .; A!¥1 third, that he knew absolutely nothll)g about the use of
groceeds from the Iranian arms sales to help the Contra rebels
:filihtlng the Sandinista government In Nicaragua.
~. ·While these three points are all.part of·the same crazy-quilt story,
::tliey can be examined as separate Issues.
~ :The first and second points ask A:merlcans to forget what they have
·been told for years about U.S.-Iranian relations and Reagan's poliCY
:On terrorism.
Slnre 1979, Americans have been given to understand that Iran
under the Ayatollah Khomeini Is tota lly hostile lo the United States.
: rhe Image of the embassy hostages and "student " mobs screaming
; ·Death to Amerira" still is fresh In many minds.
• The idea that there are people. let alone leaders, In Iran who might
:be friendly to the United States may not be difficult for professional
:&lt;J iplomats to und erstand, but for most most Americans It Is almost
-s urety is a shark.
Reagan's Iranian vent ure has been compared to Richard Nixon's
surprise "opening to China" In the 1970s. But many Americans found
t lia t hard to a crept even though U.S. grievances against Mao and his
m hort were not nearly as fresh in the public memory as with Iran.
On the 'second point. the president was asking the public to believe
t hat the the arms sales and the hostage releases were not the kind of
direct this -for-that deal he had repeatedly rejected In the past .
• He asked Americans to believe the same thing when U.S. journalist
Nic holas Dan!loffwas freed by the Soviet Union at the same !line as a
f{~B agent was sent home. Whatever the legal niceties Involved In
fioth episodes, many Americans considered that It was an Insult to
ihelr Intelligence to insist these were not simple tradeoffs.
· Finally, the question of whether the president knew what was being
gone with the arms sales money. .
·
• If this Issue stood by itself. It is probable, based on the evidence of
(he 1984 election results. that Americans would be willing to believe
Reagan and suspend judgment on who to blame or credit for the idea.
; But In this case, Reagan already was offering explanations for two
pther bizarre situations that. to say the least, called for Olympic-dass
h&gt;aps of faith. .
Asking Americans to believe that the president didn't know what
his own staff was doing in the White House basement and that a
ljeut enant colonel of Marines was running a major element of U.S.
foreign policy entirely on his own may have been the two straws that
put the camel into traction.
: So the polls no.w show a large number of Americans believe their
president Is lying. That Is very bad news, not only for Ronald Reagan
but for the country that used to believe him.

.()pinions of other editors

•
Chicago Tribune
: &amp;fore th e story of the Iran-Contra connertlon gets too far Into the
play-by-play of legal and congressional maneuvering, it Is Important
(o undt•rstand why this mistake has hurt President Reagan so badly.
: His poll ratings arc not dropping berause he defied Congress. Or
he engaged in secret arms sales ....
• What happened is that he ran afoul of his own powerful image. He
.,; lola ted the expect at Ions that he so skillfully created. He stood up and
4cted like Clint Eastwood In "Dirty Harry,".but then it turned out that
sccn·tly he was beha ving like Monty Hall from "Let' s Make a Deal."
·PNple like to the see the United ~tales defying characters like
Moammar Gadh afi and the Ayatollah .Khomelni. Maybe it was
'simplistic. Maybe it didn 't take into account all the geopolitlrat
subtlN!es. But the president made It feel good to be uncompromising
1~1t h thes&lt;• peo ple.
The Milwaukee ,Journal
•-· Strange th at Reaga n should be so hos tile loward the media. He has
:t&gt;een Ihe beneficiary of unusually gentle press rover age during most
:Of his tenure. Lyndon Johnson, Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford and
·Jimmy Carfrr certainly nflver had it so easy .
• ... Having enjoyed benign coverage for so long ... It may be all the
more diffi cult for him to abide the rerent flood of bad news about his
~reside ncy. Even his image-maker. who in the pa st knew how to put
t)1c most fa vorable spin on unfavorable news, rouldn't rescue him this
Jlmr.
· Some people argue that the media must avoid crippling the
:Presidency, lest the eon duct of foreign affairs be lmparled even more
jlwn It is now. The press always should strive to be fair and
·r.rsponsibl&lt;•, but it has no duty to protect political leaders from their
blunde rs .... .lournallsts must never start down that treacherous
i:Oad. II kept press is allen to democratic society.
~&lt;-cause

..

~oday in history
:· TOday is Tuesday, Dec. 23, the 357th day of 1986 with eight to follow .
:: The moen Is approachlpg Its last quarter.
, .· The morning s tars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn.
:: The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
' Those born on this date are under the sign of Capricorn. They
fuclude Egyptologist Jean Francois Champolllon, who deciphered
the Rosetta Stone, In 1790; Mormon church founder Joseph Smith In
1805; Manhattan res taurateur Vlpcent Sardl Sr. In 1885; British film
e~ec utlve .1. Arthur Rank In ISSB; former West German Chancellor
'Helmu t Schmidt in 1918 (age 681, actor Harry Guardino In 1925 (age
6]1, and marathon runner Bill Rodgers In 1947 (age 39).
:-on this date In history:
· In 1783, Gen. George Washington resigned his commission with the
U.S. Army and retired to Mount Vernon, Va. He became the nation's
fi rst ~ res ident in 1789.
•

.

Nunn or Robb or neither__~_Be.---n_W_au_en_be...;.;rg;
.

The ·Daily Sentinel

-

T~~~mber23,1~9~86~~~~~~~~--------~~~~~!2~~~~~------------~----_!~~.~D~atilt~~~~~

.

multi-state "Southern prl~" .
·to lend more weight :o •nllbe~al views in the nominating
. process. ·
.,'
The DLC has also · helped
legitimize the presld~~ttal caill·
paigns of several act!v~ candidates who · are probably lltSt
defined as ·progres·srvemoderate: Gov. Bruce Babllllt,
Rep. Richard Gephardt and~. Jos eph Blden, all membersoll~he
DLC.
What has not happened - ·yet
- is· the surfacing qt , a
progressive-conservative cHilldate for president. This Is IJ'I!Ik
because sorb a candidacy WO.ld
probably run best In that SMihern primary, which wllf be
contested OR turf that ls,,_t~Qth
Democratic and conservltllve.
It ·Is doubly Ironic In th~J~e
mere announcement o!,a c. .J. .
dacy pf a , progr,H.-1-¥•conservatlve stripe would Jlllt
the whole party towari ~ille
center, which Is where th~ -~C
wants It to go.
·&lt;.
It is finally Ironic In thaf.tlle
progresslve-conservatlvi pOll• :
tion Is niost closely attuM41 to
mainstream America, arNI t'Wid
maximize the Democratlc~ln
the November· '88 electk»&gt;;lte- .
member, tqe right wing .t !lie
Democratk,Party Is clo!lf' to tile
l~ft wing Of the Repdllr'in
Party, that Is, it is In t~ cetittr.
The only, two talked·ii..Ot
progressive ~onservatlves lif tile.
Democratic field are two-fMIIders of th~ DLC. Robb and N'~~a.
Until now.
they haVI' ·?ifm
endorsing each other; Clllitk ,
says Sam would make a ~at
randldate, Sam says Clllock
would make a great candldllte.
l think either of them wouloti:lle
gr~a t , but time Is running ouffllr.
a decision. For. after all· "ltle '
ideological analysis Is flnlslle4.
America still has a iloll.~l
system that Is energized · lid
captu r~d by a man, not a lliW.
If neither Nunn or Robb fllilf
It , they will burt tht&gt;lr v.......g
DLC organization, •th•lr ~,
and their country. They ...ioiilif't
do that , would they?

~R,\DiffiU"- New

lalks wllh backup quarterack steve Grogan (14) during the
seconds of their 34-2'7 vlclory over hosllng Miami Monday
nlglit.
w.a s Injured and laken oul of the game In ~ second
quarter and Grogan gul4ed the team to the AFC Eastern division
, championship with the comeback victory. (UPI)

.:GAHS gridder · n~~d
-.-to All-America team
. .!

By JIM WEID.£¥0YER .
OVP Slaff Writer
The end of the . 1986 football
season for Gallla Aoodemy H'lgh
School's Andy Howotrd signified
the beginning of a &lt;\liferent one.
Howard's second season has
been comprised of numerous
awards and honors for his efforts
In the first season.
,, Culminating this second sea' son was the slx-foct, 200-pound, .
• senior who led the Blue Devils to
.a 10-0 regula!" season and serond
slralght SEOAL football title,
;being named to Bally's 1986 High
&lt;School Football All-America
: :Yearn.
·
; , Howard was selected a Bally
: 'All-American from among the
. ;~57,000 high ~hool football players across !be nation. Bally's
' ,learn Is the only sq uad picked
, !k&gt;lely by high school coaches .
ffhe All-America team was nof
&lt;mly selected on athletic·ablllty.
According to Robert E. Mullane,
: Bally president and chairman,
$cademlcs play a key role In the
: ·selection process.

Naming names._____-'--J_ac_k_A_n_de_r_so_n_&amp;_J_·o_se_;_p_h_S;,;.~~
-~ ~
WASHINGTON _ lnterna- our associates Corky Johnson company, Associated Traders,
Ilona! arms dealers belong to a . and Donald Goldberg have ob· reveal that Sherwood ha s
small. secretive fraternity . In· talned th,e suppressed •. docu- handled · millions of dollars In
slders In this multibillion-dollar ments, which shine a light Into transactions as lhe middleman
industry know who' s selling what the murky arms trafflr.
for CIA arms trafficking.
to whom - who's Involved , for
Sherwood has grown from a
Kokln declin ed to comment .
example. In the lran/ contras small California company Into a When we asked him two years
weapons sca ndal. But they are worldwide arms network with ago about CIA lies, he said, "I
reluctant to lalk because It would offices In Los Angeles, Washing- have never met a real.CIA man."
knock them out of the clandestine ton. London and Miami. Trade
With secrecy so Important, and
trade.
publications and Its own catalog so much money at stake, It Is
On rare occasions, this conspl· show that Sherwood can supply surprising that Sherwood risked
racy of silence Is broken by a everything from automatic rifles. blowing Its cover In a lawsuit
squabble over some lucrative to heat · seekIng m I ~ s II e with Its disgruntled sales agent ,
arms contract. That's what hap· launchers and armored combat .Carlos D~vlla . But It did just
pened when Sherwood Interna· vehicles.
·,
that, and thecatsllppedoutofthe
tiona I Export Corp. was sued by a
Under Its president, Michael , bag before the case was settled.
former salesman for a $300,1100 Kokln , Sherwood has b\'come the
The case began when Honducommission he claimed was CIA,'s trusty right arm In the ras s~ught to buy as many as 150
owed him on a Central American
movement of guns and material ' Minimis rl!l&gt;ld-flre machine guns
arms deal.
to the hot spots of the world. from Belgium's respected Fa·
The case was quietly settled Purchase documents between brlque Natlonale. Herstal. When
and the court rrcords sea led. But Sherwood and the CIA's front Sh~rwood tried to broke r the

Sell more goods

deal. a telex from the Befilan
government .company said no
thanks. "Handling this business
directly," the tel ex explained.
Later wires show that Sherwood did manage to .Jnterww In
the sale. Davila claimed lie was
responslbl~ for the Belli:itis'
change of heart; he had bNI a
manager at Fabrlque Natlllllle
Herstal before going to work for
Sherwood. Davila said his ltjm- ("
tract railed lor "procuring ltlfia. 1
ments from (the Belgian cernpany ) for resale through va.-.s
offshore subsidiaries (of Slier.
wood! to certain special o«ur!'Y
agencies In the U.S. and "¥- o.•
more foreign governments.'I:Because of a gag order Imposed on
the case, Davila would no"l ay
whether "securit y agenclet"-i&lt;e!erred to the CIA.
, !' :

price and quality. The solution
lies In opening mar.kets !Or
American goods - ,not closing
markets to foreign goods."
Indeed, most politicians have
become sensitized to the dangers
of protectionist legislation, even
when It might provide a popular
"quick fix" to problems f~ced by ·
c.onstltuents clamoring for artlon
' from their elected officials .
But the long-term solutions
will be nei ther cheap nor painless . They Include enhanced
worker training and retraining
programs, drastic restruc,turlng

: squad that balances the talent,
Intellect and determination to
jfln both on and off the playing
.field with Bally's AU-America,"
Mullane said.
.: Bally Manufecturlng Corp., a
:Sl.6 billion leisure and recreation
company, honors 100 men on its
squad, In cooperation with the
'National High School Athletlr
Coathes Association.
, Bally's AII-Amerira defensive
,team. will be spotlighted during
ltw halftime of tonight's Hall of
· Fame Bowl. The game, live from
Tamp&lt;~, Fla., will be aired at 8
p.m . on WVAH - TV,
l Hunt lngton/ Charleston.
• The offensive squad debuted
idurlng halftime of the lndepend·
!ence Bowl Saturday.
Howard was not chosen to
:.Pit her of those-honorary squads.
jHe Is listed as one of "The rest of
Bally's top 100 players," and will
:no! be·aired on television.
But to be named among the top
:-liXl'hlgh school footb all players In
'

.-r:'an

to make workplaces mol't' .
cient and produrtlve aid .
ov~rhaul of the nation's ..,_.
tlonal sys tem that placet _.,
emphasis upon matheflllltJrs,
science and foreign Jan~
instruction.

t'We-belleve we have chosen a

• ·Jil

a~road ____Ro_b_ert_W,_a_li~_~rs

WILLIAMSBURG, Va. !NEAl afleet the people living In com- " Our country Is In the munities throughout the
economic fight of its life," warns Mideast.
.
- Ancient factional rivalries
Sen . Max Baucus, . 0-Mont.
"Tti!rty years ago. Americans among potentates and ruling
produced 60 percent of the families In Middle Eastern kingworld ' s gross national product . doms determine the price of
Today, we prod uce 30 percent." . petrol e um throughout the
That's only one indicator of the Southwest .
- Economir strategies devenation's lnabillty to compete In
the global marketplace cited by loped by Asian nations half a
the political leaders and others world away can devastate the
who met here In mid-December auto, textile, machine tool, elecunder the auspices of the Demo- tronics and other domestic Industries that previously provided the
cratic Leadership Council.
economic
foundation for entire
In 1981, this country registered
regions.
a positive balance of $26 billion In
Although President Reagan
the crucial field of hi ghtechnology trade, analyst Pal has embraced a laissez faire
Choate noted. This year, there approach to the Issue, there Is a
will be a negative balance of $2 growing belief among Democrats that remedial action must
billion In that account.
"Today, 70 percent of our be taken soon.
Several speakers at the meetindustries face brutal. competent International competition. " Ing sponsored here by the DLC,
added Choate, a highly. pre- an organization of moderate and
garded futurist and economist centrist Democrats, cited the
employed by TRW, Inc. "We fact that 18 major studies of
must make some fundamental competitiveness have been rondueled during the past 2~ years.
shifts In our Ira de policy."
Indeed, the current trade pol- The problems •have been thoIcy produced a situation In which roughly analyzed they. Insisted,
the United States last year had a and now they must be resolved.
"The first Imperative In the
$148.5 billion trade deficit that Is
IOOth
Congress will be to come to
expected to grow to $170 billion
grips
with our Amerlran trade
this year.
In contrasl, Japan this year Is deficit and the steady decline In
expected to enjoy an $87 billion American competitiveness,"
trade surplus while West Ger- said Rep. James ·c. ,Wrlghl Jr.,
many probably will have a $45 D-Texas . "This may be the
dominant economic Issue of the
billion trade surplus.
Those nations and others not remaining years of the 20th
only have a healthier f!nanrlal cen tury."
But exartly what should be
relationship with their. trading
partners but also, as Arizona done? Wright, who will be
Gov. Bruce Babbitt notes, they e levated to Speaker of the House
wield growing Influence over tile next month , suggests the outlines ·
direction of t.hl$ country's of a likely legislation remedy:
economy:
"The main part of the solution
- Decisions made· by traders lies In selling American goods at
opera tlng on the Tokyo or Buenos home and abroad - American
Aires grain exchanges directly products that can compete In

'iio.'

Finally, business, labor;
vernment and academic :e· Ills
must forge a new compact lllal ,
assures an unprecedented ~- - ..
gree of cooperation among Interes ted gro ups whose attitude
toward eac h other until now has
ranged from susplr!on to hostll- 1
ity .
.'i.,

...

: . Like a snowball rolling down,IIIII. Meigs will take plenty .•f
:momentum into Logan Tuesday
:n_lght as the Marauders come off

· The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS !t5-9601
A Olvl&lt;~~lon of Malllmcdla, Inc.
,

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Publ l~ hrd

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rll'l" -mav rmtlt In advance direct to .

Th(t Omtiy S&lt;&gt;nlln~l () R a~- 6or 12 month

'''

" The latest polls show that your approvll rMIng Is better than President Reflgen's 11(111/n."

'
II

"

' ''
'
'

the nation Is more than all but
three other Ohio athletes could
do.
Cincinnati Academy of Physl·
ral E\lucatlon running back
Carlos Snow was the only In-state
athlete to be named to one of the
honorary squads. He was se- .
lected to the 14-member offensive unit.
,
Two otber Ohio players, Mark
Smith of Canton McKinley and
Chris Williams of Lakewood St.
Edward, accompanied ·Howard
on the remaining top 75 list.
Howard finished the season
one game before his teammates, ·
Injuring his leg and missing the
regional semifinal playoff
against Columbus Mifflin, bul
still managed to amass 100 total
tackles (63 solos, 37 assists and 11
quarterback sacks) and rush for
688 yards In 101 carries (6.8-yard
average).
·
Those figures have caught the
eyes of a number · of coll~ge
recruiters, arcor(!lng to
Saunders.
Recruiters from Ohio State,
West VIrginia, Ohio and Miami
(ol Ohio) universities have visited Howard. Kentucky also has
expressed Its l~terest ·by request~nagu~d~~~\!~~e film of Howard,

ba.11l". Crrdll will bE&gt;glvcn carrlcrcach
WN'k.

No subscriptions by mall J'l('rmittPd In
homt.' carr iP.r service Is

art&gt;{l ~ w h('~
avail ~l bl r.

'

'

'
'

•

-

I I~
I •.~

I'I

.

'

two straight sharp g.ames In
quest of their seventh straight
win.
The Chiefs, now 2-4 overall and
2-1 In the SEOAL, also have
lmpro~ed drastically since the
· season s first two weeks despite
the absenceofa_returnlngstarter
from last dyearAsdSEOALt~ha~t
pion squa ·
n once aug
even worse, Coach Kirk Hardman, does not have a single
returning letterman or a senior
on his team.
,
But the Chiefs . Inexperience
shook off sooner than expected.
AN!t:"' 0fi~~~g kwit~ b~~'::,b~~
e sonv e or an
Brookhaven,Logan defeated M,arletta and Jackson, then locked
gzocd ln 1osses
68-t o two tdoughldes,
anesv 111 e 1 581 an un efeated Gallipolis (67-621.
The Marauders .. seemed to
have learned the up-tempo style
of
thefirst-year
past two games,
Coach blasting
Mlck Childs
both

Mall Sub8cr1ptlonll
In~ ide Melp Co1 nty
13 Weeks .................................. 117.29
2e Wceks ........................ .......... $34.06
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Qut•de Melp C•unl:r
13 Wt"eks .. ......................... ....... $18.20
16 Weeks ...................... ........ .. .. $M.l0
~ Weeks ......................... .. ....... $81.60

Jets, Chiefs to open
1986 ·.playoff action
By Unlled Press lillernatlonal
NFC East
NY Giants (14-2) - The
division-champion Giants will
have the home field through out the NFC playoffs and will
open Jan. 3 or 4 against either
the Rams or San Francisco.
Washington (12-41 - The
Redsklns will be home In the .
Dec. 28 wild-card game
against the Rams.
NFC Central
The
Chicago (14-2 )
division-champion Bears will
host a divisional playoff game
Jan . 3 or 4 against either
Washington or San Francisco.
NFC West
San Francisco (10-5-11 The division-champion 49er~
will play at the Giants or
Bears Jan. 3 or 4.
LA Rams 110-6) - The
Rams will play at Washington
In the Dec. 28 wild-card game.

the ball was headed In my to be the winner for us In the last
direction. !.Just took the ball up to seronds."
the basket. and l was pushed as I
Ka rl Malone added 23 points
was putting It ln.''
and Kelly Trlpucka 22 for the
The loss was Philadelphia's Jazz. Charles Barkley led the
sixth In Its last seven games.
Slxers with 23 points and a
''This was a tough loss," said game-high 21 rebounds. Cliff
Philadelphia Coach Mat Goukas, Robinson added 19 points, and
whose Slxers held a 111-110 lead · Julius Erving 18.
with 49 seconds to play. "They
in the only other NBA game,
play what we call loose ball. New York tripped San Antonio
When l say playing loose ball, I 103-99.
mean you're playing together as
Knlcks 103, Spurs 99
a team. Unfortunately, we
At New York, Patrick Ewing
couldn't play loose ball tonight. scored 29 points, pulled down a
We have to cut down on our game-high 15 rebounds and made
turnovers."
a key steal with 13seconds left to
The Jazz have won 10 of their help the Knlrks snap an eightlast 11 games.
game losing streak. Ewing
"Our defense was the key the scored 11 points In the third
whole night, " Hansen said. " It quarter when the Knlcks took
kept us in the gaine, and proved command.

'

Horford needs to learn; Miami loses to
By SCOTT NEWMAN
UPI8perlo W -

Tito Harford agreed to play at
two schools before settling al the
University of Miami. The way he
Is playlng, Hurricanes Coach Bill
Foster can be pretty ~ure Morford won't be leaving again any
time soon .
After two games, Harford has
much to learn. The 7-foct-1
freshman from the Dominican
Republic has to polish his game.
and In particular., his shooting
touch.
·
Harford made 4 of 14 attempts
from the floor Monday night to
finish with · 1,'! points and the
Hurricanes lost to co-No. 20.
Duke, 74-67. In his Miami debut
Saturday against · Dartmouth,
Harford mad!! only 3 of 14 shots
that were·not dunks.
"The big kid played pretty
well, " Foster said . ."If he could
make all those shots, he probably
would be playing somewhere
else.••
Duke Coach Mike Krzyzewskl
liked what he saw of Harford.

"!. like the way he battled,"
Krzyzewskl said. "He plays with
composure and he Is a team
player.''
Duke Improved to 6-1 with the
victory. The Blue Devils, who ·
lost four starters from last year's
Final Four team, have been
forced to play team basketball
since they lost scoring machines
David Henderson and Johnny
.
Dawkins.
Monday night, Tommy Ani. aker scored 21 points and Kevin
Strickland .added 19 to assume
lhe role of point producers and
hand the 1-6 Hurricanes their
· sixth straight loss.
"We put two games bark to
back with, good effor~. " Foster
said. "We can't forget that this Is
ihe youngest team In the
country."
There Is some Irony In that
statement. Duke, In 1981, said the
same thing and In fo'lr years it
was playing for the national title
last April against Louisville.
In other games. No. 2 Purdue
downed Toledo 89-67. No. 3 Iowa

Belpre (82-681 and Alexander
179-611 to . take control of first
place In the TVC. Meigs has won
two straight TVC titles, but'was
picked behind favorite Belpre
this season.
Brent Bissell lind Mike Bartrum, Meigs ' bulky junior frontcouriers at 6-3 and 6-5, combined
for 48 . points !Bissell 30 and
Bartrum 18) against Alexander
last week. Leading scorer J. R.
Kitchen, a 6-1 senior, and 6-2
senior Donnie Becker, who
popped in '10 {lgalnst Alexander,
along with 5-9 junior Chris Smith
have paced the Marauder
backrourt.
Either starting or seeing
plenty of action will be 5-!0senlor
Huey Eason, 6-2 Phil King, and
6·5 Scott Powell.

Logan will counter with 6-0
junior Jose Medina (16 points vs.
Gallipolis), 5-11 sophomore
Doug Stiverson 120 points vs.
Gallipolis), 5-9 junior Sam Eggleston, 6-lJerryGabrlel, and6·2
junior Jon Tompkins.
While Meigs was Idle last
Frld~y the remainder qf the
TVC t~ams went Into action as
Vinton County ran past Belpre
77-61 Alexahder defeated Trimble 's2-71, Wellston upended
Nelsonville-York 82-69 and
Federal-Hocking 67-46, over
Mill
B;:lnnlng, VInton County and
Alexander remained one game
behind Meigs with 5-1 slates In
second place. TVC play does not
resume until Jan. 2.

rr---~,~Fs~~i13;n~~fAT,·---~

'
pounded Rider
71, No. 4 North
OaroHna stomped Fu'rman 95-65.
No. 11 Kansas edged The Citadel
74-71, No. 15 DePaul ripped
Northwestern 72-54, and Vanderbilt upended Louisiana State
63-61,

,,

AFC East
New England (11-'51 -The
Patriots won th e division with
a 34-27 victory over Mla~l
Monday night. They will play
In Denver on Jan. 4.
NY Jets (10·6) - The Jets
have clinched at a wild-card
berth. They will host Kansas
City on Sunday.
AFC Central
Cleveland (12·41 - The
divlsion-rhamplon Browns
will have the home field
throughout the AFC playoffs · •
and will host the Jets-Chiefs
winner Jan. 3.
AFC West
Denver (11-51 -The Broncos have clinched the division
title and will host New England Jan. 4.
Kansas City ( 10-6) - The
Chiefs clinched a wild-card
berth and will play at the Jets
on Sunday.

You just won't find a
better value for your insurance premium dollar
than a Homeowners
policy from the State
Auto Companies. As an
independent agency representing State Auto,
we offer truly outstanding protection packages
for houses, apartments
ind condominium unhs.
-J."ftf

~

~

--

~·

...

iililnw-

2-1 4 EAST MAIN

POMEROY
992-6687
Slate Aulo

.,_.,..

Ccl.........

GRANNY'S CRAFTS

128 MULBERRY AYE.

POMERY

Wishes You Happy Holidays
'

WE WILL BE CLOSED AT NOON DEC. ·
24 AND WILL RE·OPEN FRIDAY,
DEC. 26 FOR CHRISTMAS
CLE~RANCE SALE
50°/a OFF ALL CHRISTMAS ITEMS
FRIDAY &amp; SATURDAY, DEC. 26 &amp; 27
WILL BE CLOSED .DEC. 29-31 FOR INVENTORY

7e 9°/o

APR AND

$500

REBATE ON ALL
DODGE TRUCKS

T~il

DEC. 31, 1986

1B UNITS IN STOCK

Yule Save a-Bundle
On aNew
'DODGE .TRUCK
AT

BLUE STREAK
CAB CO.

COOPER

Would Like To
Thank Our Riders.
CLOSED CHIISTMAS EYE
AND CHIInMAS DAY

start ... Miami Coach Don Shula
said of the Dolphins, whO started
2-5. "If we would have won
tonight. we would have been
playing as well as anybody In the
AFC .

Utah .UpSetS Sixersat home 114-11
By GERRY MONIGAN
UI'I Sports Wrller
The 76ers needed an extraordl-.
nary effort to lose to the Jazz at
Philadelphia for the first time In
nine years, and committed four
turnovers In the final half-minute
to turn the trjck.
Bob Hansen scored with six ·
seconds remaining off a steal by
John Stockton Monday night to
lift Utah to their' third st,ralght
victory, 114-111. The last time the
Slxers lost at home'to the Jazz1977- the visitors franchlsew.as
based In New Orleans.
·
"Everything happened real
fast," said Hansen, whoscoredl7
of his game-high 25 P9lnts In th~
second half. "All of a sudden, I
just blinked and looked. up, and

Andy Howard

tempts 16231, and his 44 touchdown passes are second only to
the 48 he threw In 1984.
" We feel we came a long way
this year after a horrendous

Sublcr lbers not dcslrlnf! 1o pay lhrcar·

,.'
qa.:._~

game with the NFL's . worst
rushing team, ran the ball seven
straight times and 11 times In 12
plays to move to the Miami 30.
Grogan then hit Morgan with a
30-yard TO pass.
"On that final drive their
safeties were coming up to gl.ve
run support sit\ce we were
running the ball well," Grogan
said. "! knew ·Morgan would be
open and we had a good chance
for the touchdown."
Morgan · finished with eight
catches for 148 yards and two
touchdowns.
"I told Steve In the huddle I
thought I co.uld beat the defenslve back (Reyna Thompson)
and he put the ball right there,"
Morgan · said' "We got the run·
nlng game_golng'and the passing
game was there. toe.' :
The Patriots also scored on
Grogan's 7-yard bootleg, a 12yatd pass from C:rogart .to Tony
Collins, a 22-yard pass from
Eason to Morgan, and field goals
of 47 and 44 yards by Tony
Franklin. Miami scored on
passes of 32 and 19 yards from
Dati Marino to Mark Clayton, a
!-yard Marino pass to Bruce
Hardy, ~nd field goals of21 and42
yards bY Fuad Revelz.
Marino cOmpleted 23 of 39
passes for 266 yards, three
touchdowns, and ·two lntercep!Ions ..He set NFL season records
for completion's (37'7) and at-

!Meigs
carrying
momentum
in.
quest
.of
7th
win
..
:'

. ..J. ,

'

By BOB,KEJM
UI'I Sports Wrller
MIAMI (UPll - The New
England running game - a
dominant forctl a year ago bul a
major disappointment In 1986came to life Monday night just In
time to lead the Patriots to their
· · first AFC East title since 1978.
·
The Patriots' 34-27vlctory.over
Miami In the final NFL. game
played In the Orange Bowl gave
New England an 11-5 record and
a play.off game at Denver In two
weeks. Miami, 8-8, Is out of the
playoffs for the first time since
1980 and the Dolphins' string of
five straight division titles Is
' over.
. Quarterback Steve Grogan
· came.of(the bench to replace the
Injured Tony Eason and com·
pleted 15 of 24 passes for 226
. yards and two touchdowns, Jn,
eluding a 30-yarder to Stanley
. Morgah wltli 44 secopds left. iTh.e
pass to Morgan won It, but the
running gaine set up the play.
Eason stretched nerves In his'
right shoulder and his status for
the Denver game will be determined on a day-to-day basis.
Running back Craig James separa ted a shoulder and may
require .oft-season surgery, bUt
did not miss any playing ti!De.
The .Patriots got thi! ball on
their ·own 14 with the score tied
27-27 and 6:55 left In the game.
New England, which enter~ the

Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge Inc.
·399 SOUTH THIRD
MIDDLEPORT, OHIO

CROW'S .FAMILY RESTAURANT

PH. 992-5431

Frild Cltkbft

.-oiiiOT, 011.·

1
'

�T~ay, December 23, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
I

M•W' MBf'lo;ub
Nl'W l'orlr. IN. &amp;n Ant0fl6e. II
Utlltl II ... Phllld1Piph6• Ill

NFL Standings
B)' Unllt&gt;d ~~ lnh'f'n.u Uuul
Alnt"t'h·• ron' fl'l'tt"'~'

'fvto.dly'!lll Gaml'!'i

.

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) '·M ' ·l tbi .... ,........... .. ID iD . eJ ~aM
,'' "hunl ............... ..... , .. ll Kl.:iOIII.'tii iiS
Rufl;alo .................... .. -1 Itt . ~ ~, :1-111

1:\t . llil\ mIll

lndiwl!!pull~ ... . ,... .... .. :\

( 'f'l'llriU

:t ·( ' k•\••1-d ... ... ........ lt ~t . 'T.!O:JBI310
( ' Jndnnlli. L .... .. ... ..... Ill I I . UI Wj~~
r\ltsllur~~:h ......

.........._6 ·JU 8 . 37$ :l)j Ul
Hnu.o;n n................. .. ii · II 0 . 313 ~t ~~
Mo'PSI

x-I,J•m·••r , ....... ·.......... IJ 5 0 . 1111137H~!'l'
)' · Kan~a.'i t' IIJ ... .... ,.... Ill 6 0 . 1123 3311 .1 $
S.•!illh• .................. .. ... IO iU .1!5 !t116 '!t:l
L:\ Ruldt•rs ......... ....... 11 II 8 . 580 :l:!~ 3~
Su.n hii'J:o .... , ............. ~ lt0 . 250 :UU!II
!li!llkuutl lcml;orl'll~·

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Phlhulelphla .............. :t 10 J . :J.I.I U6 31 2
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: 11rl't'n lta,r ..... ......... A ltfi . 2.'Wl ~Hit
Tumpa 1111,\' ....... ....... ~ 1.&amp; I . 123 23'9 n3
"'!'!'I

.... 10 ll.i$6:mtn
~·- lA Kam!i .... ,.. ......... lll fiii . IZ., :w~ 'llli
,\thuua, .. ;........... ...... i It I . 469 tiii1 2MII
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Sl•llll l•• ~1 . n,... ,.,... 16

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P( ' l! '\' lantl ..... .. ............... \ 1 1:1 . 1311

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11o·nlo'f' , .. ,.,......
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::oo,•allh•.. ,,, .. ,, ................ ll II
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.

Tole6111
Loyola (Ill) M, Clncta•all 'M
.Uran 7S, Robert llferrila iP.I M
OOerbela H. Martelli •
Ur.a a, Ohio N.rtllern U

9. GHrl\'(oWn 11-0) .. .......... .. ...... . U! II

UnlvPnik)' of Hou.'llon - N'a&amp;ml'dCan•lnn
lb&amp;r~~T&amp;n r~~vil1 ro~~t· ll.

· Houkf!
lluflalo -Fired ( :oachfrlli• Rllnu.l.)·:
namH Ted S!Uor hel&amp;d t'O~h; RIUIII•d
Gtorrr MH han rrnerlll mP!lJt'r .

Nalion's Top 20

10. lllno~ t7-1) .'............. .. .... ........ !15 S
II , Kan~&amp;l! 15-1 ) .. .... ......... .... .. ,..... I II&amp; II

12. N11~ 1 t!i- 1) .. ...... . ......... ............ 151 n
13. Norlh frlnSt.~ H ) ................... IN 15
II. l"llbihllrKh Il-l) .. .. .... .. .... ... ~ ... IU 13
U. Dr Piwl ~1 · 01 ..... .. ....... ............. 1M 11
HI. st. -1oM's C1·1) .......... ...... , ........ !It H
11. Tt'mplt (t.I J .... ............ ......... .... tl 11

19i!Q by UP I
NE"' l'ORK (UPI )- TOP. a collf'llr

~~~

. ~~ l• ..
. 611~ ;•;
.,. 1.,\ f ' llpfl' ;" " """"'"'"" ~ '!II . !til W .

llarMiulll AI; Marri ••~ 81. IIi
Mortt~elda .

Meii'Gpollt .. Ute OIMIIIt
Flnt ~nd
tit .. St. ki, Portllam 1111 (0'1'1 ,

00. 1111'1 D11~ 15- H .................. ........t l z
iO. (lk&gt;l Fullft'trfit.(i-1) ................. . 21 z

hMketball rlll.lnp h:f Unllt'll Prl!fl~
t· unrllllkl'4
.
lnternaUonlll' ~ Boltl'd u,l l'oai:lie~~ , with
Note: 8) lll{rl'rln~t ·wtlhtht• Natlonitl
flnll· , plact ' vot..,., ret-or._ total pollil~
A111t0tlllllo~ of Ba11kEthall fo1.1ch~ of the
and !IIIIi ~·eek's rllllklaK· tl'ollar ~~~~~ . Unlleti,Sitle!io U!¥1'fionprobM!Ioal)y liM&gt;
rf.t-.rltl h~t'den ~IUIIt~ lhrouch&amp;lnUy
~CAA and lnellllhlt fo~ lht NCI\1\
Tounaml'niiAI'e lneiiJI!ihlt for 'to, 31 Wid
niJIItt wkh 15 polnl~ 11warckod for 61'1!111
pl ~~~eto:, u for ~~~o nd, ttt•. )
naU•nal ch~~mploMh6p l'Ontdderatlon hy
l . l iNLVl'U) tt-D) ... ............ ........ $$3 I
IIK&gt;UPIBoardoffo~tehPS. '111eonlyliuch
2. Purdue (I) t'-01 ....... ................ IKR ~
leamw lhiM lif'MOil llrl' BriUII~ , Ell!il
3, Iowa ill (f.Q) ........... .. ...... , ....... ~7~ t
'hnAefo!liM' ShUt' aad Memph111 .' lit!.

Flr,~t Kell'rul

' M1111klnJ11m 11, Alma SS
Tllfln 10~. Rle Gran* MJ

...

Utah fluMI~ FlrN Round
Arm)' II. Nl. Mar)''M Calli. 1-1 iOl'l

Ot&gt;P~~~r171,

Ufllll71, North Te'lll 8i . •

.

t Moiiiii'C'III ~ (Tirl

f:11m es

I LAST-CHANcE rtro !
CHRISTMAS.

IIIUMIUI!t '('d df'partan• nf '-IJna \ 'aJI'k,

:BOILED HAM •• :?;~~.~~~~~!~~~~ ..~,. S2 .19
'HOMEMADE HAM SALAD ....~.... 89&lt;
SMITHFIELD SMOKED
.:CALLIE HAMS •••• ~.1u.w\~~q.....~•... 99&lt;
:1 lB. CRISP &amp; SEIVE VACUUM PACKED
~SLICED BACON ..................... S1.29
:·E
H JALAPENO LOAF •••.,.Sl. 99

Save

'40

2295

*60

15 "-'~ 7915

33~
·
()ff ·29

44.95
Two separale wake-up Hmes-

Tune in pollee, aircraft, VHF
weather and foreign broedcaslsl
Receives 6-18 MHz SW, VHF HiLo, UHF, FM and AM. #12·779

perfect gift for working couples!
Big 0.9' LED display. Forward/
reverse lime set Battery backup.
FM, AMA12·1551

S.tteriel extra

flack.., bottory .....

liiple·Mode Printer

By Realistic

OMP130by

_,.

Cut
_

I(MFT 12 0!: 16 SLICE PROCESS

DELICIOUS
APPLES .................... 2/59(

4V2'' B&amp;W Television

2-Way Speaker

Cordless Telephone

Nov..-·15 by Realistic

ET-395 by Radio Shack

PortaVision• by Realistic

CALIFORNIA

399!

battery. #16-107 Diagonally meuurod.

8etterlts e~re

Dlagort~lly

me11ured . Baritrln extra

By Aedio Shack

:FRUIT
PIES .......................lh. S2~2 9
12 01. MINUTE MAID
ORANGE JUICE .................... S1.3 9
i2 01.
..•...•.....•.. s1.19

30~0H

ATO CHIPS ................ ,T.~\~ S1.29
t OZ·. MAXWElL HOUSE
INSTANT COFFEE ••••••••••••• JM S3.39 .
.12 01.1mY CIOCKEI1WIN PACK
·
:CHICKEN STUFFING ••••••••••••••$1. 79
:32 01. VUSIC
:KOSHER DILL PICKLES •••••• JM S2.09
4 IOU CHAIMIN
.
$
.JOlLEY
TIS~UE ................ tA~w,;. 1.29
• .5 01 AIMOUI fUCED

-

In the women's class. Runner-up

the ·1een
the!N)SI

Tuesday night class, J~Jilce
Reltmlre was ruJIIIer-up. .

I

"..

tertes. #22.(198

25-Key Organ

,.......::::.-..1

seen

. "I
tt
.....

Dlpaelllt coins into
bank anc:r &amp;n-.a

~1~··

$

oCitllilo,...... Clldlt fnllll ~. ~ n-.y 'flfY

.,

FROM $6900

·Merry Chrislmas
Yoll and Yours
From Ingels Furniture
and Jewelry!

To

I.AT MliiUTE
oan IDEAS

•'

lhUOND

. ·'( ~

WITH CHAIN

30°/o OFF

IN OUR JEWELRY DEPT.

14 IT GOLD.CHAIN&amp; ADD·A·BEADS

INGELS FURNIIUiE &amp; JEWELRY

MIDDLEPORT

.

992·2635

,. .&amp;

IIWIP

.'

..

ULI

BOX OF 10
OR CAPLETS

"IF
WASA PAIN,

~ 6995

COITAC
12-IIOUR

Reg. 99.95

COLD RELIEF
..

EC:417 by Radio Shack

Cut
41°/o

99.

lOW

ONLY

1785

LIMIT 2

LIMIT 2

......
·lOIII

.,

SitRALIFE
IIMRIES

Portable Seneory

SAIIl

CheaBoerd
By Radio Shack

Hu eight prepro-

grammed melodies

--

or~your

own.

1091

ONLY.

ONLY •

Endorled by Garry
l&lt;apiiOvt Nine lev• of play. tlf80.2187

=r:lpsl

-·"""'
ona-

"""""""Clll-.

ONLY

Rre electronic

IIIMie to link hidden

••

·'

99

....

2·PACI

16 EXPOSURE UCI

DISC Fl
319

SALE!
LESS REBATE

LIMIT
2

3915

.

.

'

The Etilptdye,s of Your $ut~dry Store Would Like To
~'Thank--,Ybal' For.Youri1(ind Patronage In 1986
and Wish · · and Your !4 · The Best For 1987!

Climbs 45° hills!
Working searchlight
·13' long . .¥60-4059
Banerletextra

Moat MaJor
Credit C.rds
Accepted

•

,.

OUR REGUlAR $2.69

HLY!

I rhht1ij

--

,/

.,

\

- ..

.·

APPLY TO lfEMS ALL READY ON SALE I

•

'30

•

PENDANTS

EARRINGS

," .

.~

Make or take calls around the
house without cords. Selectable
security code. Swl1chabie Tone/
pulse' dialing. 143-547

Save

'SWITCHAILE TlliJCH.TONEIPUlSE pl••r•l- on botlltontll1d"""' inll. -~
only PI*' (11011y dlll)inll, ""'.., d""
roQUiri1g - · llo 1111 ,.. 0.9&lt;10~&lt;~ systtmo 1 0 1 1 - · rv.; "'JJIIInd. Rot tor PlfiY hi. WI- IIIII!"' MI.

-

SWEEPERS

'.

~·-ONLY1215

EUREKA

RECUNERS ·
no•

t lliW

on TV

Clarinell..·122 by Realistic

Fqdlo Shack 1860

By Radio Shack

:[HUNK PINEAPPLE ............~~•••• 93&lt;•
15 CT. IIIII SUPII WEAl
:PAPER PLATES ••••••••••••••••••••• S1.39

•

CHill STill·SALE

Save

•

'•

Lo

'60

:20 OZ. DOLE

:CORN BEEF.......................... 1.59
' 22 OZ. DIIMASAGE
DISH DETERGENT ................." S1.09
t6 OZ. VAN CAMP
~PORK &amp; BEANS •••••••••••••• J.s~lt\ •• 99&lt;
·I 01. JAI CANDIED
:.FRUIT &amp; GREEN CHERRIES ••• Sl. 99

the most

'

r
!

$l990°

21 Rmlges
one to your "do it your·
seller"! Protective folding design.
WHh test probes and Instruction
manual. 122·211 Bolt- o&gt;&lt;lrl

"o·-:-: ;"M" and .. MA"";~ bat~

COMP·ACT
MICROWAVE OVEN

,

Reg. 21.85

A ANI H811dy Gift
Tests ail popular sizes I Meter indl·
rAtes strAnnll\ of 9V trano~otor,

..

Dual-Cassette Stereo .

BEEF .......................... S1.19

.· 12 OZ. AUOUI

--

Saw $80 on a pelrl Tuned port.
8" woofer, 211•' tw.ter. Genu·
lne walnut veneer enclosure. 19"
#40-1034

ByMicronta"

Reg. 3.H

~·.

T

Reg. 71.95

·~ Cut 27~Mt

279

11&amp;11111)

,t,,,,

.

1~1280 •tBMfTM International Busl·
neu Machine~ Corp.

'V! PRICE

IAwAa120Por-·

01. MIS. SMITH'S

Bot10neso&gt;tra

.

·sAVE ON
BEAUTIFUL
CURIOS

JEWELRY DEPT SPEC IALS

dot-addressable graphics modes .
Every computer buH needs one!

~HALF

Save

Ideal for kitchen, car, van or boatl
Au(jio/video Inputs/outputs. AC/

The third birthday of
Gene Hudaon, daughter o! !;ie~Pe~tf·
and .[lrealllii Hudson, .
port, was observed rt!l'elltly
a party !or tie,r pre-school ·
Tech class. Cupcakes' aM koolalde Wt're served..
. .;
She was aLio honored at a -•·"·· ·~
held a!Showbidl!zza'i
'
b~rg, ~lth ~~uck . ~:1 Cheese
pre!ij!ntln~r· hero ~ .gift ~nd blr)h·
day cake', - Plzz.a1. garres and
erilimalnmettt were erljoye.l I&gt;Y
the group lacludtni Iter. brother
Allen, Chris, Julia ·and Brooke
Nl~hols, aM Joshua Eagle.
'Sending •Its were her grud,
parents, RaroJdc and. Blondena
Rainer, Toni; Bess and Craig
Jo. Ann.
· and

- . 341.95 lAw AU20 ,_llonth•
•--v
Has word or data processing and ·

5112" Color TV

Blueberry, #12·7

GUN CASES ·

,

.
::w~as~M~·~a;r1gl e~Lai1w~s:on~·;;A;t~l:he~
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Kids love lhe98 bright and cheer·
lui AMIFM radios. With ear·
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t,

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AM radio mounts on most handlebars. E.-lly removes from bracket
for portable use. 2'1•" speaker.
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Mrs. Charles Blakeslee, Pomeroy, and Mrs. lr.a Butcher,
Mlddlepqrt. Mr. and Mrs. Bla·
keslee were In Rockport at the
time of tbe birth of Joanna.

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Pa!rolman8 SW-60 by Realistic

' Jim and Jennifer Butcher,
Rockport, Ind., formerly o! Racllle, ..unounce the birth of1helr
fOiN't~ child, Joanna Marie. Nov.
15. :rhe couple's other cltlldren,
are Jelfrey, 12, Julie, nine, and
Jess.tca, five.

are

~
'

S•·~· \'ork J,\1.1 - .-\n-no.·••d II did not
of11•r plu ·hl'h Mlkr ,\rm~rOIIJ Md Bolt
Shlrll':f l~t nlrMti :.. makln,; thrm lrl'f'
al{•·n.ts; trndt•d pil~htr St·ou Slf'l~f'ftllnd
lnllrlck'f' MlbSttPfl tofhlrll~ (,\L ) for
pih-tu.. P••lr Fllo,;nn ar.; pii,.VI'I'll to hr
nllm!'41 hlt•r In romplf'llnR: );t'\'f'fl· piiQ'rr
d1•\d math• In .Ju~v .
St•w l 'orkt:'&lt;il. t -Addt•dSam P•• rluz:w
Ill lho.• ,,,achlnJ llt11fl: lhlmrd (~ff'J
Pa,·lld&lt; 11.~ rovlnJ minor h•Mavr pllt•hln R:
t·oada.
Sl. Lotlltoi - Acqulrl'd rt•IM plltflt•r Bill
Da wlt'Y lrom I ht• fhll'll.~ Whit ••Sox for a
pl~t'l' In hl• nanu•d lah'f'.
. P'tll Blr.J,;kA.hull
Mllwwlkt''' - ,\t•tlvulfld IIUll.rd st•··~·
.\1onrr lef: plact•d I{Ullrd ~'Gil skilt"' !l'n
loju rt•d ll!!t
Pori land- Plat·t•d t't'fllrr fhrlt;. F.nJII'r
on wuh•••I'JI.
t 'nothllll
,llllllltu - flrr dl 'oat•h Dun H•·•nln~t­
llulflllo- llnii!Mint·rd lhll&amp; """' IUIII!Ioil·
ant ,,. • .h'" will not hr r et lll111'd tor rw~ l

Uor: ANt·ll M'lt'•• •· oat!!ltlt• lin ...
hut•kf'l' I'OJW:h: Dk:lt MOt«~ft\' , drfrnJOoivt•
h~b ~'Oat:ll: II"' Lralty , qUill'tf't'badr.
t'IIIM'h: lllld.fot' Oulo•IJOo, n-t•rlvrn.rvat•h;

.\I

SMALL

:- ...

Mr. and Mrs. Sisson alsolla,vea
Randy and Pet~"sj'penter o!
Mr. and .Mrs. Rodney !CMr)rl)
son, Nathalilel, 7; and a daugh- • Lake Worth, Fla.,
announc- Baney m annouaclng the lilrt•·
ter, J;lrenna. 3.
. ,Jng ·tllr' blrtll o( a !Hill, Branden or' their ttrst .chl!4; a dau~.
'
· Ray, · Nov.:'H7. at , the Good Resree Denise. he !nfanf was
Sa
. rTIIIf.Jian :W.osplt~~he ln!atit
bornonNIIv.18. Sllewelglled lillie
weiKtifd .s!X1j.i1(n~3 ounces ·pounds and was 22 laches Ioiii'
.• and .... lt~hi!J Jillli.
' Materul grandparenli an
_.: GlllliWp~ ·,.r.. : Uoyd ind Mrs. Ruth Barnhart and the late
;:;·Th~llltii Peilidil 'oU'.!ue Worth · . Ernest Barnhart, and pater'llal
: Fla.;&lt;~Be~:nd. •• · • Carpes~: grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
William Bailey
•ter •. -..
......., - . rt,
. ohn aad
· M . . GrUt·
dM
Dorothy Chaney; ·me Grove srandparents are r. an
~·
Dale Barnhart, Mr. and Mrl.
Road, f(act~. ,
carl Bailey, and Elber Johnson.

Model 31 by ReaiiBtld"

Page-5

B,irth
announced by Butchers
.

Ed and Ann Sisson. Yoot Road,
. Racine, arfannu~nclngthe birth
of an eight pound, five o\uice '
daughter, Clare Maijreen, · on
Nov. 19 at Veterans Memorial
HospitaL
·
Paternal grandparents are
Edith Slssoti, Pomeroy, · and .
Ralph Slsaon. also of P6ml't'oy,
and Elm a ·Holter, ·Racine, Is the
paternal cr@al-grandmotb~r.
Matern~!
grandparents are
Carol and Phil Ohlinger, Rose
Hill, Pomeroy, and maternal

~~~~!r~~~~~~~~~o.;;:oy~~s.i,~
c1r~nter,
birth.
Mrs. Bernice Evans, Gallipolis.
· · l:'"":J•
.ol:

Stereo

Bas" hill!

.SMITIIFIELD

'

Wr.trnotll 181. 8pMma fill. 1111

Mast S1D111IIpln I a.m.-11 p.m. ·Today/Ex18nded Haurs T..-1

·25%

(B. ILUI BONNET

Prp~r•n~ 1.1, UC'-8nta lrhr Mil
Strmnl st. 7'1, P•&lt;el Sound 12
Kula Clllralll. Plu·tnc Ill

158.85

Cut

CHEESE ................P.KG. s1.89

Hayward 81. 16, San ·JOM~ !\1:. 60

....

Archer Road Patrol"

.

Mhlwt~~tl

Sisson birth

d

Bike Radio With Hom

P.IMENTO

Alalika-A nch 107, C:' Oill!Ordloi (N\' I 95
ArtJ:onaSt. ~6. N. Arit&amp;Jul 54 ,
GOIIIIlJI:Il 711, l:.rwl:;.fhrk Sf. ~.

Nl)rrn Dl\'l!ilon.,.-

\\' LTPts. GFIJA
MlnnPlooota ........... ....... U 15 3 H ' 1:111~
Toronln ...... ................ l:I Uno lltll8
st . Lout~ ................ ..... I~ u 11:10 110m
Dt•lrull .. .. ................... 11 IS 6\!11 fMI IU
Otlu,ro ..................... . un ti ~~~ 1~0 m
~yltl'-' Dlv.,lon
F.Amonien .. ....... ......... tt II ~-II Ill IU
fai,;IU',,. ..... ................. 211 U 1.&amp;I 137 1t9

...'

Wr~~l

RIIIM.W.Ilt, MI~Df'.-hll
la4-P•r 1..,111 71, WI•MIIw •
Ill_,.., 71. 8•1«' II

Allnlc Cltntf.n 71, NV Tech 111

. ·.

15, Ttltn-CIIatiiUIOOJI' '74
UTEP fill, La.mar IJ!

NntM.-rn Sf

TueSday, Deeember 23, 1986

"

Te•~

w.

The .Daily Sentinel~~. •. ·

••

!Ceal""'~

NG. KMdl)' .. IU,PIJ-Ft. Waynt' U
Old ~I!Jie•I!. .Ric:tmlOnd M
9 flll'elln•11. &lt;lHrK" WIU!• ft
S.lllera MI ...
.Ten ... Teeh n
Tt•niltl, VMI ..
l'Mderbilt 13, 'low II
Va TPdl '11. WU~ Forni a

. San Frabclsl'(l Ill. Hano•rrl a
Mu~klllaum ChrlriltmpTolrnamtnt
I

tl, W.Va. Treh t 1

No. Crllaall, Flrrm. 15

r.=~======~~~~~~~~~~

~1 ' 1111011 : llf'f'h PltMTa. th&gt;ltn~ ivr c'INJrdl·
31~

8etl•llall1f. Mot~~~t ~. Ill
Wapwrl1, HiiiMn It
W vtra:IM. Rltpn lit
Sotllfl
A...11, Ga 71
Dike 1t llliam117
Grp Mao• n, l ... nt'IIA
-lrMIIIa-.n 71. Rldford 1-&amp;

111fll MS. Rh Grudfo 11J

lt. Fklrtda:(~I) ...................... ,. , ..... Uz

fopyrl~

_.* llil•i!U. .4.-pt•lt

Yota•ow• .. AIIIIMd 1t
'hm• Man:U, OMctltemllrllua Ill
hc:e l.N\'1 11. WtiPI IM. •
Mwdllll»'m Chrillm• Twru.menl
M•lda11m 11, Abna (Mkh.) U

Ill, Keatudcy 15-IJ ,.,.,,,,.. ,, .............. .fJ 2ie

IOWII St!Ur til, FhtJnl Ill
ll.an111111 74. ('lt1Uifol11
L1..'WI11611, S lndl~a 1.'1
1~o1~ 11111 !'-!. 1 111n"
Mf'rnP.II St. 101, !!lUI Dge St . 7$
M.Tra~t. !U. 81. Ark. -LUI Rck U
M.. n tt. Wichita St. 61
MorriWad 81 . II, " ' Va Tl'ch I~
~'rhruk• 11. Ot~roll M
Nnhrn Iowa lh, f'llt'l'dl~~o "m ~
Oltuheln H. Marll!lla 611
Purdlle 118, Toledo n
~"' MIMIMirl M, 1\rlr. #If
'111om111 Morl' g, Ohio Dmnnn MI
UriiM;al'l. Ollllo Nrthrn 5.'f
W)'on11•11'111, Drake- II
Voun«tiiown 113. AMhllllld18

lrkiJ• M. W1Mh!W 8
ftWik'll U, Cali1Wu11 •
.1"1)' C:b fU. 7!1. _
I Ahtnll '13 iOT)

181P tr, M•hlalii'JII71
· • Pa« 11. Wtllilll St. Ill

Pur$1~•.

Transactions

t~"l!'l'll

: J~all..-. ....................... 1~
11 a h......
..... . ...... n

Thunnaa.

Mon~'• 01111 a..1111iM

No jtl&amp;lnt'ft Nt.'ht•tltled

NBA Standings

\~

Walt,.; fonfei'enl'f'
Pltlrll'k Dlvlo!lon
'A' LTI'bi.GFG ,\
"IIIMiphht ............ ... e!i 7'!5! U4 Jt
!\'\' T!! IIUidf l'll .............. llll3 2 :sH 1%! Ill
PMtlihurj~:h ................. 15 13 3 ~5 Its liS
N..w -ler~f'Y ................ 11 U ~ Sl 121 1-Mi
!\'\' Rlinl"l'll ........ ....... llll sIll 1!111311
" 'iljj hln.r;ten ................ IIJ1Stil 104133
!WillR!i Dk·l!lilon
Hartfor . ................. .... l7 8 5 39 1ti" tt
Monlrt•al ..... ...... ... ...... !':US 3!1 IH liS
Bntilon ........................ lli 13 ~ 3i 117 111
ftlat•hft.· ....................... l51.1 535 lfi 113
Bul'fWo ....................... i tt ~ Ill IU 133
fumphfol! ronftrt'fh't'

Nrw -lt'rs f')' 161 ~1' Kanl(l'l'!l. 7: :1t p.m.
R!Nnn 111 Hartford, j:$5 p.m.
Phllac:Mphla a1. Bufllllo, 7: :u p.m.
C'hkulfO Ill Dt•troJt, 1: 15 p.m.
Pltt~hurch all\'1' IKI1111der... M:O.i p.m.
Torolll-. lit Mi•neoota, II: 3.'\ p.m.
M'lnnlpt•,; 1M F.dmonton. 9::Jl p.m.
J.o, An,;t'lt!'i al Vant'UtJVt'l', Ie:!ll p.m.
" '''*'1'114ht,v's G•m~

:u , l'lll llm l !l

l:!

NHL Standings

Tl!f'!ooday ' ~

:10, L\ R:tld!'r"' 2-1
Ht•.. ul

( ' hit•a~:n ......... .... .... , .....

No UltH'fl ~~· ht&gt;dult'd

Pllbhur~

,"!undu,,· ·~

. f'hll tHII'Iphht .............. 11 1:.!
" 'w-hlndun ................. ! ~ 1:1
S't•~o~.· \'urk ..................... ti n
\'t·~ .f .. ,...,,.. ................. :i I!
l't •ntrW Pn·biinn
1\lloutt a ........................ l!l '
·" 'llw:wkN•......... ........ .. III 11
llt•trolt ........................ ll , 11

*

D11lh111 Pbombl, t : 38 p.m.
Porilland at Goldttl Maatt, 18:31 p.m.
LA Lakll'f'!i Ill .S.cr•mento . .It: :til p.m.
Dellv« Ill Sfo.llllltlt•, 10 :.10 p.m.
Wl!cM Nda,v~,; Gl mt'ti

l.oti Anl(t'lt"S 1. ( 'IIIIIIW')' :1

C'lnd nnlll.l .12. ~'\' ,Jcls ~ I
:\Uunta '!0, DNreilli
Hnustnn lfl. Hufllllo ';
ll.a n~~" fll ,l ' U, T'lu~hurth Ill
,, llnnt'!'HI.:t :1:!. St•11' Orh•lll'l!i li
( ' l! "·•·l•ul r;. San Dk•JO Ji
~ . Lllu koo ll. Tampa Ra,\' 17
" ·a.~hln~:t o n •!J , Phlhwldphla U
( ' hh•aKU '!-1. Va lla~~ Ill
~ t' l\' t-: n~ hmd

N~tn tb lollkl lit MIIWIUikN!, ~:JIIi p.m

\\-1nnlp€'• .... ................ UI~-IJ.I 11:1118
IAii APJt'll'!l ................ n n 31~ Ull lSI
Vllnt'IIUVI'r .................. !l '!':3'!1 II! 136
Mont!Q'!i Rftiub

~ nday ' ~ R~·-~ult~

lndh111 apo ll ~

lh'tmlt at I•M•a. S: :'lt p.m.
Utllh at Nt!w IPney, 7:» p.m.
I.A rllppt&gt;"' at Houlllon. Mp.m.
f~el..njlatfhlu~o, A:»p.ni.

College Cage Scores

.J. Nurthfllrln\3 )(1H ) .. .. ...., ... ,. .... &lt;UK :1
cHr f't:tor ol pre 'per!IOn..,:i; lu&amp;i-nt!d Beht.y
RotiM p~t~~lnJ'KIUnt' ro.&gt;rdi•llllor ll!ldu' li. :\111111111 1'1-I J ....................... .. ,.. U% .,.
fl. lndl1111• (6-1 ) .... .. ........ ...... , ... .. .. 3%2 I
q~~anl't'htu.· lol .-.ach.
Sl. Loukl - Jlt&gt;l€'~t'd «nh•r Rluldy
1. !'lyral11~f Cll-1) .. •... .... . ~-- .. ·········· Ufl ..
!1. Oldahom11 tf.l ) .... .... ... ............. 'l70 t ,
fharkiUidRal1'1.1t'!ll.t&gt;r Nr1~onand Dl'nnl!i

I

..'

~·

.

., ' '

'

..

�.

'

Chester firemen, auxiliary, have party .
The annual Christmas dinner
anli party of tbe 9Jiester Firemen
and Au;Kiliary members was held
at ihe firehouse Sunday e'lenlng.
A cov.ered diSh . dinner was.
served wltli baked harp, punch
and coffee beingfurnj~hed .by the
firemen. Hobart Newell gave the
blessing. A plaque, Inscribed
with his name and' the names of
the line officers, was presenied to
. D?rsel Miller for his service as
fire chief and for the other dulles
he has performed. .'
Several door prizes were
awarded. Santa arrived to talk to
, the children and each one received a' sack ol candy. He also
distributed gifts to the chUdren
that had been placed beneath.the
.decorated iree. . ·
Members and guests attending
were ·Mr. and Mrs. · Hobart
Newell, · Mr. .and Mrs. Pearl

Cafe·· J ~f
=====r=tua=
,::;:===
=
TUESllAY

POMEROY
Calvary
Pih
grim
Chapel, -Ohio
143, wUI

~~~~~~Y.a 7~~is~~~. P~~~f:
~~~~~~J~~ H!ar~~~rney that .

.

PRIZE WINNERS- The~e are six of
students at Pomeroy Elementary School who
participated in the Mental Health Super-Read-A·
Thou which was designed for quality reading.

on
sponsors
participant. Pictured wilh their pi'lz\!8 are front, I
to r, Mike Klein, Stacie Reed, Israel Grimm;
back; I lo r, Michael Anderson, Amy HarrjSon,
JayDayandJoanieJeflers,facultymember,who
served as coordinator of the event. Not pr~ent lor

EachstudentreadiOhooksand~btainedavaried

number of sponsors raising a total of $261 in the
mental health lund drive.

Dinner

h~ld
' '

'·

by ladies auxiliary ..
.

·-

,·

'

.

'

-

.'

'

The Ladies Auxiliary of Mount . dra Boothe, An)la Wolfe, Anna
· Moriah Church Qf Cod, Racine, Tuc~er,· Shirley Simpson, Marhad .their annual Christmas ganit Powell, June,Bearhs, Faye,
dinner Dec. 'l8 at the Lasalle Napper, .'!'essie Wolfe, Helen
Christian. Restau~an ,t iq Melda\1, Lois Wolfe, Yolan SatMiddleport
,
· terlield, Mildred Williams, Car- .
Gifts were exchanged and men · Marshall, Lori Bearhs, ·
those in attendance .were Hedy Juanita Poweli, ' Tammy Bable .
. Laudermilt, Ann Findley, Ailsa and Goldie Ingels. ,
· ·
\
' Findley, PatsyLaudermllt. San-·

The Law Firm of Po-fter, .Little,
Sheets and Frecker Will Close At
Noon ·On· ·Christmas
·.Eve
and
Will
·
·
'
' Re-Open December 29th•.
.
.
We ,Will Also Be Closed .On·New
Year's Eve and
New Year's Day:•
,
·.

Dec~.'.23·--Logan ....·:•. ~............. Away

·

Jan. 2-Wellstl!n ......,.••..•.•..... Ham• •
G~R~S

BASKOBALL

· Jan. 5-Wtl!ston .......:•••:....... Away

.
SOUTHERN
'

Dec.
27-Peebles ..............:...Convo;
.
.
Dec. 30-Southeast,rn•.•...•.•.••Home
'

'·

'

'

GIRLS BASKOBALL

Jan. 5-Gallipalis ..•.~ ..............Hame

EASTERN,
BOYS BASKOBALL·

'

Dec, 23-Fad. Hocking .......... Away
Dec~ 25-Waharna ........~.........Away·
Holiday Toum.
Dec. 27...... Wahama...........;..... Away
' Holiday Tourn.
GIRLS BASKOBALL

Dec 29-Trim~le .................... Away
Holiday Tourn.

Winners in the Middleport
hom e decorati ng contes t were
annou nced today by the sponsoring clubs, Midd leport Amateur
Gardeners and the Middleport
Garden Club.·
In the religious division, the
homo of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Byers a t 125 Fair lane Drive, was
the wi nner. In the door contest
the win ners were Mr. and Mrs.
Wilia m Morris, 606 S. Second
Ave., while the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Boyles, 297 Mill St.,
won in the overall division .
The'"home~ of Mr, arid Mrs.
Art hur Strauss, T)lird Avenue,
and Mr. and Mrs. George Hacken , Sevent h Avenu e. look honorable men tions in the contes t.
Gladys Cu mings, president of
the Middl eport Amat eur Gardeners, drove the judges , Susa nn e
War ner and Thelma Giles of the
Fernwood Ga rden Club, around
town to view the decorations.
They were accompanied by
Betsy Horky. Flower bulbs were
given as prizes in the conies!

BOYS SCHEDULE

-w

. .'

,..

.

Meigs

Southern

BOYS IASICmAll ,

BOYS IASICmALL

Dec. ' 23-Lop~ .:........... ;.,........, Away
,.. .,.IQ .•2,..Well~.,:, ,, , ,.,.,; •••~,.. 11oM ,
Jan. &amp;-Fedenli'Hotkina :..... ,..:: Homf
·Jan. 9-Millei .'.......................... Away
Jan. 13-Nelsonvile ................. Home
Jan. 16-Vinton ........................ Away
Jan. 20-Trimble ....................... Away
Jan. 23-Belpre .. :.................. :.Home
Jan. 27-Aiexander ................... Away
Jan. 31-Point Pleasant ........... Home
Feb. 3-Warren ................... :.... Home
Feb, 6-Wellston ....................... 'Away
Feb: 13-Fe,deral Hocking .......... Away

....

. .

Dec. 27-Peebles ................... Convo.
Dec. 30_:Sui:Uiwltefn ,, ....~ .. m llll'*
Jan. 9-Sylllmts Valley .:........... Home
Jan. !&amp;~Eastern ...................... Home
• Jim. 20-Kyger 'Creek ................ Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ..................... Home
Jan. 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31-Miller ......................... Away
· Feb. 6-Hannan Tra~e ................ Away
Feb. 7_;Federal Hockine.. ......... Home
Feb. 13-'-Southwestern ............. Home
Feb. 17-Ravenswood ............... Home
Feb. 20-Symmes Valley ............ Away.

Eastern
BOYS BASIOIALL
Dec. 23-Federal Ho_cking .......... Away
Dec. 26-Wihama Holiday Toum..... Away
DiL n
Toum ......Miy'
Jan. 9-0ak Hill. ....................... Away
Jan. 16-Southern .................... Home
Jan. 20-North Gallia ............... Home
Jan. 21-Hannan Trace ......... ,.:.. Away
Jan. 30-Kner Creek.. .............. Home
Feb. &amp;-Southwestern .. .............. Away
· Feb. 7-0PEN .......................... Home
Feb. 13-Symmes Valley ........... Home
Feb. 17-Federal Hocking ......... Home
Feb. 20-0ak Hill ..... ................. Away

w·••:•lfOidaj

GIRLS SCHEDULE

. ..·

•

Meigs
GIRLS IASKniAll

ener1ccom
•

Jan. 5-Wellston .......,........ ....... Away
Jan. •-Federal Hocking ............ Away
Jan. 10-MIIIer :........~ .............. Home
Jan. 11-Southern ........... ......... Home
Jan. IS-Nelsonville ................. A.-y
Jan.19-Vinton ............... ......... Home
Jan. 22-Trimble ...................... Home
Jan. 26-Belpre ........................ AWay .
Jan. 29-Aiexander .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eastern .. :.......:............ ,Away
Feb. 5-Wel)ston ......... ............. Home
Feb. 9-Federal Hocking ........... Home
Fe~. 14-Southern..................... Away

Taste breakthrough,
generic price!

'

Regular&amp; Menthol,
Kings&amp;IOOs

Wolf Pen notes
Mrs. J .R. Mu rphy and Peggy
were las t Sunday evening. visItors of Mrs. Iva Johnson and
,
Mrs. Charley Smith.
Mrs . Leslie Frank and Sarah
Beth of Texas Road were Friday
visitors o~ Mr. and Ms. Eugene
Haning a nd Ronald .

•oYS BASKETBAL'

. BOY$ BASKOIALL

Lighting
contest
winners named

Dawn G. Thomas and Donald E.
Dye Jr , Middleport , bas signed
w'lth the Roy le De Modeling
Age ncy and wi ll begin some
professional work in New York
City in mid·January.
The youngster. accompanied
by his mol her and gra ndmot her,
Virginia I. Thomas, will fl y via
Eas ter n Air lines to Lake Placid,
N.Y ., where he will be met by his
agent. Andrew De Champagne,
who wil l host a •bu ffet dinner
honoring Ma ll hew at his studio.
. Fro m there the youngster. who
will be 2 years oldp n Ja n. 2. and
his escor ts wil l go lo the Waldorf·
Astor ia where they will be
stayi ng while in New York City.
Ma tt hew wil l be modeling clothin g ra nging from spring sports
wea r to dress-up fas hions. For
his enterta inment , he will meet
with va rious ca rtoon characters.

MEIGS .

rliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiijiiiiiiii,iii.~iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii

Prizes~·~w:::er~e:_:a~w~.a~rd~e~d~~~~h~e~p~ic~lu~re~w~er~e~M~I~ch~e~ll~e~l.e~e~an~d~T~ar~a~D~ol~d~ge~.......~t~he~p~u~b~llc~.--..:...----l~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~

Boy to begin
model
career
Matt hew Scott Thomas, son of

'

·'T

'

Revival scheduled
POMEROY - Calvary PU' grim ChapeL will be in revival
,: Sunday through Dec. 31 at 7:30
nightly. Dec. 31 services will be
watch night services. Rev. Victor
Roush will be speaker. Rev.
Delfey King, pastor, welcomes

'fj

This
eek's
Games · ·

Edwards and Mary, .Mr. and Jared, Mr. and Mrs. John NeMrs. Larry. Cleland, Mr. and well, Misty and Mike, Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Newell, Mr. and. Mrs. Errol Conroy, Mr. and Mrs.
Mrs.Ciaytoi)AIIen,Mr.andMrs. Buel Ridenour, Mr. and Mrs.
Bruce A. Myers, ,Mr. an!l Mrs. · William Pooler al)d Blllee, John
Mary In Taylor, .Becky and Ml- . L. Ridenour, Leonard Koenig, Ed
chael, Dorsal Miller, Mr: and . Werry, Cleo Smith, Marcia
Mts. 'Raymond Wer~y and Bra~ - Keller; ¥r. a'!d Mrs. Rick
don, · Mr. and Mrs. Bruce D. Hollon, Eric, .Rick . Jr., and
·Myers, · Mr. and . Mrs. Kirk Chastie, Jim fluff, Linda, Tracie
ChhBiier. Jessica 'and Kristen, . and · James · Westjohn, VIctor .
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Christy,,.Mr: Bahr, Opai'Hnllon, Janet Werry,
and Mrs. Charles Radford, Jes- Paula Wood, E:rma Cleland,
sica .a.nd Nathan, ' Mr. ;md ·Mrs.. Bonnie Landers, Betty Hawk;
.John B. Ridenour, Jason and and Robyn Hunt.
'

The Daily Sentinei-Page-7 ;

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohip

23, 19.8 6

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking
By Pregnant Women May Result in Fetal
Injury, Premature Birth, And low Birth Weight.
'

.

Mfr. suggested retai price, ·

12 mg "tar:' 0.9mg nicotine ev. par cigarette by FTC malhod.

,. '

(

.'
·'

Southern

Eastern

GIRLS IASICOIAll

GIRLS BASIIETBALL

·Jan. 5-Galllpolis ..................... Home
Jan. 8-Symmes Valley .............. Away
Jan. 12-Meigs ......................... Away
Jan. 15..:..Eastern ....................... Away
Jan. 19-Kner Creek ............... Home
Jan. 22-0ak Hill... .............. ..... Away
Jan. 26-Gallipolis ..................., Away
Jan. 29-North Gallia ............... Home
Feb. 5- Hannan Trace ............... Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ............. Home
Feb. 12-Southwestern .............. Away
Feb. 14-Meigs ........................ Home

Dec. 29-Trimble Holiday Tourn .....Away
Jan. 8-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Jan. 15-Southern ..:.... ............. Home
Jan. 19-North Galha ................ Away
Jan. 22-Hannan Trace ............. Home
Jan. 19-Kyger Creek .............. .. Away
Feb. 2-Meigs .......................... Home
Feb. 5-Southwestern ............. .. Home
Feb. 9-0ak Hill:.. ...... .... ..... ..... Home
Feb. 12-Symmes Vall~y ............ Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hockmg .......... Away

�Pege-8-The

Sentinel

r-----.... Local Briefs:~___,
No Sentinel on Thursdny
The Dally Sentinel will not be published 'T hursday so that Its
employees may observe the Christmas holiday.
Regular publication and business hours resul)le Friday.

..

•

Farm Credit office to close
.
'

F artn Credit Se rvices, 21 Locust St., Gallipolis, will close at
2:.'10 p.m. Wednesday and will be closed Thursday and Friday.
'

'

, Planned. Parenthoo'd to be closed
' '

EMS responds to four calls
Meigs County Emergency Medical Services reports four calls
Monday.
TUppers Plains at 10:13 a.m. transported George Nichols
·rron\ the Tuppers Plains fir e sta tion to Veterans Memorial
Hospital; Middleport at 10:45 a.m. to Maple Street for Florence
McDaniel to Holzer Medi cal Center; Pomeroy at 2:48p.m . to
Pomeroy Health Care Cent er fo r VIola Cole to Veterans
Memori al Hospital; Middleport at 7:07 p.m. to Walnut Street for
Larry Grimm to Veterans Memorial Hospital..

Libraries to be closed

•
•
•

Pomeroy and Middleport P ublic Libra r ies will be closed
· Wednesday and Thursday for the Chr istmas holid ay.

Cou,rt issues marriage licenses

.'

Marriage licenses have been Issued in Meigs County Probate
Cour t to J effr ey C. Shifl et, 22. Rutland, anct Melissa Ren ee
Black. 17, La ngsv ill e; Ala n Cecil Wilson , 26, Ra cine, and Chris ti
Ly nn Laudermilt.
Raci ne.

n

.
.,

'

.

Restraining order request filed

An act ion for a temporary restraining order has been filed In
Meigs Count)· Com mon Pleas Court by Lead ing Cree k
Conserva ncy District aga in st .Joseph Loftis, Pom eroy.
The conservancy district all eges that Loftis Is excavat ing in
the vicinity of thei r e ight ·ln ch main waterline and that
extensil·e damage could be ca used if the temporary restraining
or der to stop the excavat·ing is not iss ued.
In other court ·matt ers , a restrai nin g order has been issued
· against the defendant in the case of .Juanita Reed. by hPr fath er.
Milford Frederick, against James L. Reed .
Thl' rases of Linda Tu r ley and Edward M. Turley, c t a!,
against James E. Steey Jr.; and Charles William Craig against
Debra Craig. have bem dis missed .

Dissolutions [.,rranted in court
Ca thy A. Da niels and Larry L. Daniels, and Ricky E.
Luns ford and Paula L. Luns ford, have been granted
disso lutions oft heir marr iages in Meigs Count y Common Pleas
Court.
Ca thy Daniels has been restored to her former nam e Cathy
Swar tz. Paul" Lunsford has been restored to her former name
P;mla Thompson.
Martha J o Ferguson has been gra nted a divorce from Charles
Ray Ferguson on grounds of gross neglect of dut;•.

~ Gallia

man _ __:l_c_on_rl_nu_ed_fr..;_om.:.:....P..:ag::.:e..:1,;,1_ __

Jhe Franklin County Co roner's
offlee for a n autopsy , wh ich was
. w nducted Monday.
Be•·kic h was unavailable for
; w mment this morning and the
coroner's office . referred all
:ques tions on the autopsy to
: Berklch . However. Mrs. Curley's
• body was released to McCoy·
Moore Funeral Home in Vi nton
and graveside SNI' ices were
•s cheduled for 4 p.m . today.

An investigat ion was launched
by officials Sunday. Present at
the scene were State Fire Mar·
shal Frank Eisnaugle. Prosecu·
tor J oseph L. Cain, Assis tant
Prosecutor Brent A. Saunders
a nd Capt. Carl Langford and Sgt.
Arch ie Meadows, both of the
sheriff's department.
Th~ s heriff' s spokesman d~·
cllned to comment on a motive
for the arson.

'

; Ohio, area weather scene
South Central Ohio
Cloudy tonight , with a cha nce
r&gt;t rafn or snow and a low in the
rnld 3()5. Rain likely Wednesday,
with highs In the m id 40s. '
:The probability of preclpila·
I)J n is 40 percent tonight a nd 60
l'f'rcent WednesdaY, .
• WJnds will be from the sou·
theast at 10 mph or less tonight .

•

'

Ohio Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
Rain likely Christmas Day,
with a c hance of snow flu rries
Friday and Saturday. Highs will
be In the 40s Christmas Day and
in !he 30s Friday and Saturda:..
Overnight lows wllJ be In the 30s
Christmas morning and ranging
from the upper 20s to lower 30s
Friday and Sat urday mornings.

.Tuesday, December

Last. witness·maintains silence
WASHINGTON (UPII -The ' the panel In a Capitol attic
House Intelligence CommHtee hearing room.
held Congress's final Iran arms·
The ra re and £ina! holidayContra aid scandal session of the week · meeting of · the H ou s~
year today and the final witness, committee mar ked I he end of
a retired Air Force general efforts In the ~9th Congress to
re fused, as expected, to answer unravel the ma(ler. The House
·
ques tions. •
panel, the .companion Senat e .·
Ret ired Maj . Gen. Richard committee, ·and· the House For·
Secord, committee aides said, eign Affairs Committee wllJ turn
Invoked his Fifth Amendment their work over to the House an(j .
right to protection against self' Senate select. committees orga,n· ··
Incrimination in an appearan ce lzed to investigMe tlie foreign
that lasted just minutes before policy debacle when thr 100th

'

Planned ·Parenthood of Southeast Ohio Patient Services
: · of!ices will close at noon Wednesday and remain closed through
· Dec. 25 In observance of Christmas. Offi ces w111 reopen .on
· Friday at-8: 30 a. m.

;

Oecemller

Ohio

r---Ohio Briefs:-_,

Congress'tonvenes in January.
House Intelligence Committee
member George Brown. D ·
Calif., said Secord's appea rance
was'' so short that Secord had
come and gone when Brown
showed up five minutes late for
the panel's scheduled 9 a. m. EsT
meetin g. He said members still
in the room told. him there were
" no surprises" · in Secord 's
appea rance.
·
Sepord.' linked both to secl'l?)
u.s. arms sales to Iran Hnd tb
effo r ts to provide supplies for the
Nicaraguan Co.ntra r e bels. In·
v0 ked the Fifth Amendment two .
weeks ago when he was sum ·
mbned before the Senate Intelli·
genre Cqmmittee.
An Independent prosecutor
also has been named to Invest!·
gate "the sca ndal, which could
Involve violation of severa l laws
including bans on wea pons sales
to terrorist sta tes and a prohlbl·
'tlon on gover nmenl aid, to the
Contras.
,
Secord. a former CIA operative, has been li11ked to virtually
e){ery phase of tjle poss ibly
crlminal ·scheme to divert u.s.
arms profits from Iran to the
Contras via secret Swiss bank
accounts- as well as to private
supply effort s for the rebels at a
time when U.S. military aid to
them was illega l.

COLUMBUS IUPI) -Ohio Development Director Clarence
D. Pawlicki says $500,000 iii Community Energy Outreach
Program fund s are available to non-profit community
organizations to provide energy conservat'ion services· to
low·anct moderate- income residents.
.
.
.
Grants of up to $25,000 wlll assist organizations which serve
•·esldents with incomes below 80 percent of their counties'
'
median Incomes.
Grant proposals will be accepted through Feb. 13 a nd the
gra nts will be awa rded March 20.
This If the fourth yea r for the program. In the first three
vears, 79 organizations received. $1.8 million.

Celeste awards training grant

.

All

DIAMOND
RINGS

30°/o

OFF

OPEN TILL ·8 TONIGHT
UNTIL 5 P.M.
EYE

(~ &gt;
~~,.,~~y 'i

~~~~lll:!;•;•~;•;•~-~fi:l~!li:I~W~~~· ;Bli:~Si:l;~~;;;;;;;:~::~

l "'"''Moo;- ·-.,

l

J••·•i••· '
GINGERBREAD '·
HOUSE OF Gl

ll

Shop Pomeroy •••
Friendlv people, best
selection, and great gift
Ideas make Pomerov the
pl'ace to shop - No
hassle, no long drlfes,
and FREE parking.
THE POMEROY MERCHANTS
'

I

'

.

Last Minute
Gift Ideas

Foote staff

S &amp; L moves
were ~ky,
official ,says

Energy outreach funds available

Elyria Memorial Hospital.
Evelyn A. .Gaul
A truck driver; Mr. Delph was
E velyn A. · !Gay) Gaul, 78,
born at Nora, ·VtJ..,' on Feb. 13,
Chester, owner and operator of 1938, a son of Ma,ry Annie Couch
Gaul's Market in Chester, died
Delph, Cleveland, and the lat e
Monday at the Holzer Medical · ,Willie. Delph: He was affiliated
Ce nter.
with the Baptist Church.
Mrs. Gaul was born April 25,
'
''his mother,
Surv.lvlng ,b esides
1908, in Pomeroy, ·a daughter of are his wife, Jean Bias Delph,
the late Adam and I)ernice
Pomeroy; six' sllipchlldren, Roy
Sponagel Ebers bach. She was a
E lbln, Pomeroy; Debbie Abbey,
member of the Chester United Joseph VanCooney, Mi chael
Methodist Church, the Pom eroy VanCooney. all of Elyria; An·
Chapter .of the Order of Easter n thony VanC.ooney · and Sandy
Star. and was a chart er member Van Cooney , both of Pomeroy: a
of the Chester Council, baugh· brother. J .D. Delph, Elyria; a
ters of America.
sister, Frances Bake r, CleveSurviving are a son, Richard land ; a daughter, R o'se Ann
Ga ul , Chester; a daught er, Mrs . Delph, and a son, JeffD elph, both
Ronald (Gay ann) Clay, Chester;
of Cleveland. Two grandchildren
three sisters, Irene Powell, Par· a(so survive.
Veterans Memorial
kersburg, W.Va., and Eloise
Services will be held at 2 p.m.
Wilson and Maxine Hobstetter , Wednesday at the Calvary Pll·
Admissions -George Nichols,
both of Mld~leport ; five grand· grim Chapel with Rev. Dewey Tuppers Plains: Pauline Cun·
children, ,Phlllp Gaul, David King officiating. Burial will be In nlngham , Pomeroy; Viol.a Cole,
Gaul, Mark Hall, Todd Clay and Beech Grove Cemetery. f".riends Pomeroy .
Suzanne Clay;
two great·
ni ay caii at the Ewing Funeral · Discharges - Christy Nelson .
grandchildren and several nle· 'Hom e from 2-4 and 7·9 p.m. Ivory Bush.
ces and nephews.
+---------------------._--------~----~~-- .·:
Besides her parents, she was today.
preceded in death by her hu s- Viola Cole
band, Eldon Gaul, an infant son,
a brother and two sisters.
Viola Cole, 93, a resident of the
Serv ices will be held at 2 p.m. Pomeroy Health Care Center,
'
Wednesday at the Ewing Funeral form.er!y of 5 Northwood Driv e,
'{ I
.••
...
Home with Rev. Carl Hicks and Athens,. died Monday evening at
·d
Rev. Don Archer officiating. Wterans Memori al Hospital in
'
Burial will be in Meigs Memory Pomeroy.
Gardens. Friends inay ca ll at the
Mrs. Cole was born in Meigs
funeral home any time after 1 County, a dau ght er of the late
p.m. today. Eastern Star servl· Abra ham and Ma ry Ann Chu te.
ces will be held a t 7 this evenin g She lived" In the Coolville area
and Daughters of America r ites before going to Akron to mak e
will be held at 8 p.m. this evening her home in 1942 and returned to
at the funeral home.
Athens Coupty in 1969. She was a
charter member of the LakeJark 1- Delph
Jack L. Delph, 48, .166 E. Main m ore Bap ti s t Ch ur ch at
Lakemore.
St., Pomeroy, died Sunday at the
Sur viv ing are five daught ers,
Mrs. Robert iSylvial Martin ,
Little Rock. Ca lif.; Mrs. Jack
(Continued from Page 1 t
(Allee) Cordray, Fullerton,
be drawn down as funds are
Calif.; Mrs. Gale (Annt Price,
needed.
with whom s he made her hom e In
Th e senator sa id workers a t the 'Ath ens: Mrs. Olare nce (Garnett)
plant have talked with Moore on Hamm ersm ith , Bellevue, Ohio;
severa l occasions and that the Mrs. Harry IMyrtlet Morehead,
governor is working closely wit h Cuya hoga Falls: four sons, Floyd
them to ma ke their bid to take Cole, Athens; Herm an and RusCHII~IIAS
'
over Ihe plant a reality.
sell Cole. both of Chesterhill;
Your
Dependable
Jeweler
·•... ')
" We feel like we're making Lawrence Cole of Norton; 28
progress ," he sa id . " I'm grandch ildren and several great ·
optimistic."
grandchildren and great ·great The 28-year·oid Foote Mineral
grandchildren.
plant closed Dec . 31, 1985, putting
l=lesides her parents, she was
nearly 300 people, In cludin g 250 preceded in dear h by her hu s·
hourly workers who took conces·
band, Elmer Cole. In 1957; a son,
sions two yea rs earlier to help Ga rrett. in 1986; and by six
keep the ,planr operating, out of a brothers a nd a sister . ·
job.
•
Serv ices will be held at 1 p.m.
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
'· ";.
At the tim e, Foote officials sa id Sa turday at the Hughes Funeral
the decision to close the plant was Hom e. 168 Morris Ave., Athens ,
FREE RING SIZING
based on dec lining market con'di·
tlon s ca used primarily by Ia rge with
Rev . Harol
d Jeffers
official·
Ing. Burial
will be
in the Fairview
volumes of Imported fer roalloys . Cem etery, Ath ens . Cou nt y .
At the same time Foote Mineral Friends may ca ll at the funeral
a nnou nced the closing of the New home from 2-4 a nd 7·9 p.m .
Haven plant. the compa ny said it
Friday.
had entered into an agreement
wit h SKW Alloys or Niagara
Fa lls to tranfer to SKW, a ,rr;;;: ·;,,;;~;.~;;;-.:.~:t&amp;,;;,~
division of a West Ger ma n firm t f uil fl• IJ,.,;,.. I,.,. HMirlay .v~,.
~
of the sa me name,. it s specia lty
l;llo.o . • 5;10 •·• ·
found ry products lin e including
""""
technology, trade names a nd {·.
'
!:31
.....' lll•m.
l:ll... . l'
patent s.
M
s.~~r . l
Th e New Haven plant had
produ ced primarily ferrosllico n
used to pre pare iron for making
castings. Shaw said em ployees
are lookin g at significa nt
changes in one of the fu rnaces
and toward the possibility of
p•·oducing a new product.
. ~ r 1 4 • .._, , ,....., 773-5977

.

Pomeroy-

1986

H.tJ

1S5/IOIU·
165/10113

. . . ..

175/leiiS
401
185/1.13
...... . . .
215/70114
•W.
205/75Rl4
SMf
21517SRI5
6S.ft
225175115
·~·
23517SRI5
6Ut.
Many - . 1i111 CIIM!t11 ..W.&lt;'
signs rtducedl Sto
out yaur she.
.t

in_....

COLUMBUS tUPI) - Gov . Richard F. Celeste awarded a
$28,000 job training grant to the Butler County Private Industry
Council· Employment and Training Administration.
The grant will fund a program to assist dislocated workers
from the Hamilton· Fairfield General Motors plant.
The Butler County PIC·ETA will provide skills assessment
and job search training to more than 300 dislocated workers
from the Hamilton facility, which has been targeted for closure.

Fire panel appointments made ·
COLUMBUS.(UPI)- Gov. Richard F. Celes te has nam ed two
peopl e to t·he State Fire Comm)ssion for terms ending Oct. 31',
1 ~91.
'
Larry L. Snyder, an 18·yeaP veteran of the Springfield Fire
Division will succeed Danny L. Knigh t, whose term expired.
Rlchard'A. Keebl er of Oxford, assistant chief of the Oxford Fire
Department, succeeds Da rrel A. Chapman, whose term also
expi red.
Snyder has served the last 14 years in Springfield's Fire
Prevent ion Bureau. -Keebler has worked for Miami.University
since 1972, and has been director of purchasing and central
services since 1982.

. ,

Teen hurt in struggle with police
DAYTON (UPI)- A 15-year·old youth was shot In the thigh
during a struggle with police officers who tried to thwart a
break-in and another teenager was arrested.
•Police Maj. Ronald Labatszky said one of the youths was
~parently confronted by a female police officer during
~unday's break· in a t a public accountant's office.
.
,
"Somehow the youngster got away and shots were fired,"
• Labatszky said. "We don't know from whom. But the youngster
~ s wounded." ·
·
Officers Monda y searched a nearby residence and round an
adding machine, telephOne and tools that were believed to have
been taken during the break· in.
·
•
Three divisions of the police department are Investigating' ' Int ernal affairs, homicide and burgla riy .
·,
Th e teenager charged with breaking and entering was
.,
released to his parents .

..1, , . Physician ends colorful practice

..,-.

DAYTON (UP!) -A doctor who delivered about 6,000 babies
and
even treat ed a gangster Is retiring Wednesday , ending a
'
55· year medical career.
·
• '
Dr. Charles Thomas, 81. said he was the. only physician In
, Dayton suburbs of Brookville. Englewood and Union when he
·' ' started his practice in 1931.
He said he treated doctors, scientists, investors, university
presidents and one of John Dillinger's gang ·after an area
'., shootout. He sai d the gangs ter lived for a short time after the
shooting.
He estimated during his career that he delivered about 6,000
' '
babies, many 'of whom he watched excel in athletics In the
Brookville school district.
-;'
He attended every Brookville home football game for 48
·,
years, as both a fan and team doctor.
'

'

'

.

·'

~

CINCINNATI (UP!) -Home
State' Savings Bank's dealings
with a Florida investment firm
were "Imprudent, " an official of
the Ohio Deposit Guarantee
Fund says.
.
Charles May Ieben, vice president of the ·ODGF, testlffed
Monday that there was no
question in his mind that Home
State's transactions with ESM
Government SecuritieS Inc. of
Fort lauderdale, Fla., were
' risky and represented a .potential
hazard to his organization as
well.
,
"In our opinion, 1t was impru·
dent and unfair, " May Ieben said.
"In my opinion •. (Home State
officials ) exposed the company
to substantial rtsks, which were
not necessary. "
.
Mayleben was the r.tfth of an
expected 60 witnesses to testify In
the s tx.week·old trial in Harnll·
ton County Common Ple.as Court
of former Home State owner
Marvin Warner and ex·bank
presidents Burton Bongard af\d
David Schiebel. .
Warner, Bongard and Sclriebel
are accused of illegally funnel·
ling millions of Home State
dollars to ESM, wl)lch owed
Home State $144 million when It
collapsed last year that triggered
the state's savings and "loan
crisis.
Mayleben said in February of
1982, he sent a letter to Home
State asking Its analysts to
answer three questions: to how
much risk was Home State
exposing Itself; whether the
repurchase transactions with
ESM were considered loans or
sales; and Home State's maxi·
mum loss if ESM collapsed.
Mayleben testified that In
February 1984, Home Sate. l)ad ·
borrowed $84 mllllon, for which It
gave ESM $177 million In colla!·
era!. May Ieben told Home State
In a letter that such transactions
were unsafe and unsovnd practi·
ces that would not be tolerated by
the ODGF .
Also testifying Monday was
former Cincinnati television talk
show host Bob Braun, a former
Home State director' s board
member.
Braun, whose term as a director expired shortly before Home
State faile d In March 1985, sal,d
that at the directionoftheODGF ,
the board In April 1983 passed a
resolUtion ordering a reduction
· of over·coliaterallzation - the
lunds and securities put up with
.ESM to back Home State loans.

• - - - - .... _____________

AUG. .IIIT

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992 2094

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PH. 992-2975
12· 5·'16·1

J&amp;L. INSULATION
JAMES KEESE

PH. 949·2801

SHARPENING
SERVIC.E

•Insulated Replacement
Window
•Vinyl. Steel Siding
•Storm Windows
•Doors

110.

•

"FREE

INSTALLATION"

SHOWROOM HOURS:

271 H. 2nd, Mitltlleport

992-57..
OPEN : Mon.·Fri. 8 am·9 pm-Sat. 8·6
Walk -ins Welcome

EAR PIERCING, MANICURJNG, PERMS AND
ALL YOUR STYLING NEEDS. '

Public Notice

Debbie Meadows-Owner; lmojean Blevins
Loretta Holsinger, Shelly Ohlinger
Merri Amsbary

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On Decemb&lt;lr 11, 1988,
in the Meigs County Probate

Court, Cooe No. 25372,

Billy L. Willie.,_, Molft

Street,
Ruttond.
Ohio
46775, wet appointed Ad·
mlniatr.ll!tor of the ntate of

Edith K. Wlltlomeon, dt·
·oiood, tote of Solem Stroot,
.tutlond, Ohio 46775.
Rob&lt;ln E. Buell,
Probote Judge
Lone K. NHMirood, Clerk
t12J 18. 23, 30, 3te

·64 Misc. Merchandisa

MEIGS

EXCAVATING
COMPANY

~

z

a:

Co1111uferized Hearing Air Selection

Swim Molds • Interpreting SelVices

•AU Typeo of
EKCOVoting
•Londoc:oping

~

LISA M. KOCH, M.S.

•8111mtnt1

::t

Licensed Clinical Audioloeist

-z

•Sewage Svotem•
•Wotor • Goo lines
•WetB&lt; Welt Drilling
•Trucking

Call: 742-2407

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

11·28·86· I mo.

l · ll.tfn •

HOTPONT
Notii:a on Filing
of Inventory

j

'

i

and Appraiument

flhe State of Ohio, Meigs
~ County Court of Common
: Pleas. Problte Division

1

To the Executor or Admin-

litralor of the ••tate. to such

the following
ore
l1mldentt
of the Stale of
of

11

i Ohio, viz:-the 1urvivlng
' lpOUIO,

tiM "'" of kin. the

end to

the attorney or

: btneliciariea under the will ;
1

~ a1tornevs repmentlng any
1 'OI the afor•mentioned
, Persons :
1. Name of Decedent,
~ Rttidenca:
, DreKal Lambert. aka

NOTICE OF SALE
By virtue of on Order of Sale
issued out of the Common

Plo10 Court of Mtige County,
Ohio. In tho COlO of Diomond
SIYingo • Loon Compony,
Plaintiff,

...

Clifford R.

Smith, et at., Deftndonh.
upon o Judgment rondoood, being CliO No. 88·
CV·98 In llicl Coun. I wil of·
for for . . altho front door of
tho Courthou10 In Pomeroy,
Moigo C...,ty, Ohio, on tho
18th dovofJonuorv, 1887, ot
10:00 A.M., tho ~
Iondo
and -·
tocotod
at
Seeond
Stroet,
Synoeuoe.
Ohio45179.
Situoted in tho Vltloge of

INTHE .
COMMON PLEAS COURT
OF
.MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
RICHARD KIBBLE,
Ploolntlff

- vs-

ERNEST L. KIBBLE,
Defendant

Cue No. 85·CV· 334
NOTICE BY
PUBLteATION
To Jeon Turney Chamber·
lain and thounl&lt;no- Mira,
devisees. and ..gat•• of
Jton Tumey Chtmbertein, W
1ho be dactoood , whooo tell
known address was 4318

Crooked Lone Rood, Howell,
Mle~lgon : end
To l.aiwrence VanAmburg
end the unknown heirs, de -

RANGE

and bounded and dueribed
ao fottowe. viz;
The west half of tt. west

hoff of 180 Acre lot No.
1159. Soc:tiono 4 and 10.
Township 4, Range 1.1 of
the Ohio Company'• Pur40 acrea,
more or leu.
c:hllt, containing

DEED REFERENCE; Vol·
ume 294, Pogo 9, Moigo
County Deed Recordo.
You 1re r-.ulred to 11'1·

•wor tho Comploint within
28· days after IM lui publication of this notice which

will be publlohod onoo - h
w.&amp;k

$299 95

GE VCI

4·Event 14-0oy Timer

' %~&amp; Rebate
$)9995
3

Gl19"

TELEVISION
~2~ "l25995

$7995

$2

-~mw~vE

$109
MGM
FARM CITY INC.

REWARD

5

Happy Ads

In Livin1 Memory of
Happy Birthday on

this your 64th.
We, your family, feel
Heaven Is richer. We
miss you and we'll
reunite when God
CIIIS US.

Hann1n Queen
and Chndren

81
Mo111f

FUU YREMOTE &amp; INST AILED

.S4800

7 Years
Maintenance
Experience

Work
Guaranteed

614-446-7126

PER MONTH WITH

NO DOWN PAYMENT

LARRY'S CARPET OUTLET
Mitltlleport, OH.

Hobson Rd.

PH. "2 ·6173

11·26-'86'1 mo.

SWEEPERS
TAPES

3 Announcements

· APPLIANCE
REPAIR

HOOYII

for liJI SUCCIIIJ\t'8

The toot publication
witt b4l mode on D..,.mber
23. 1988, end tho 28 dav•
weoka .

ONLY

1or MESH ANTENNA
PANASONI( RECEIVER

D&amp;P

30' ELECTRIC

' Drexel lambert, 34370 Side SyracuH. County of Meigs
for answ~ will commence
, Hilt Road, AD 1, Box 24, and State of Ohio .
vlooeo, and tegatou of low· on that due.
' Rutland . O~io 45775.
Baing Town lots No . 11 , renoo Von Amburg, if ho be
VCR
In cue of your failure
• You are hereby notified 12. 13 ond 19 inl~oTown of deceased
. whoselalt known to answer or otherwi1ere·
99
ONLY
: thol tho tnvontorv ond Ap· SyracuH, for • more ,-nic· oddrooo wao 1286 N. Son
opond
11
roqulrod
tW
tho
prol~ment of tho ntote of
ular d..crlptlon reference it
Blvd., As-rtment Ohio Ruleo of Civil Proce·
i the aforementioned . de· made to the town plet of nid Gobrlet
18, Azusa . CaNfomie;
duro. judgment by default
' eeesed, late of uid County, Town of Syracuu.
You ere her.by notified witt b4l rondorod ogoinlt you
; Wtre filed in this Court . Seid
Ralwaw:w DMd! Volume thot you hove been nomod
95
for tho relief domondod In
1 tnventory ind Appraisement 293, Pogo701 . MelooCounty
Doltndonto In 1 togo! oction the Comptolnt.
·
i· will be for hellrklg before
Deed "-do.
ont~tod
Richerd Kibble. Dttod : November 14, 1881
thil Court on tho 9th doy of
APPRAISED AT;
Plootntlff,
vo
. Emoot L. Klb ·
Lorry E. Spt!rioor,
Januory , 1987. at 2;00 115,000.00. Thoreoloototo ble. Et At ., Defondonto.
This
Clerk of Cou rtt
o'clock P.M.
eonnot b&lt;loold for Ina then octlon hoo ·boon oooignod
Malgo County
Any person dn.iring to file two·thirdet!M appralood voPOMEROY
Cleo Number 8ti·CV·334
Cqmmon Pleoo Court
e:~tceptlons thereto must file lue .
ond
11
p&lt;tndlng
In
tho
Court
992·2104
(11118,
25:
11212
.
••
18,
them at least five days prior
TERMS OF SALE; Cooh pi Common Pleoo of Mtlgo 23, ltc
. to the date set for hearing . on delivery of dHd .
County, Pomeroy, Ohio
Oivon under my hond ond
HoWIIrd E. Frank 48719.
'
1011 of oaid Court. thio 17th
Sheriff of Meigo Co.unty,
3 Announcemen....-Tho
object
of · tho Com·
. dey of December 1988.
Ohio plolnt is to s-rtltion tho to f.
Rob&lt;lrt E. Buek (12) 9, 16. 23 3tc
lowing daocribod r•t alleto;
Judge
Situate in tho County of
Bv Lena K. Nenelroad
Meigs. in the Stale of Qhio
Deputy Clerk
and in the Township of Olive
1121 22, 23: 2te

GEORGE L. QUEEN

POMEROY
HOME
AND
AUTO
.
_
600 EAST MAIN
•
. · POMDt'l

..;.;....;;;.,'""-'~"-i-

The Daily Sentinei-Page-9

Ohio

'

A rtward of ssoo cash is offered
for the apprehension and Conviction of the person or persons responsible f,.. firing several .gun ~hot,$
into a ,gas compressor station.
owned and operated by Carl E.
Smith Petroleum in Portsmouth.
Located on Sliver Ridge Rd., ·Orange
Twp., Meigs County, Ohio• .
Anyone having any information re·
garding this criminal act are urged
to contact tht Meigs Sheriff's Office
or notify (arl E. Smith Petroleum
Inc. at 304·273·9313.
·

•VINYL SIDING
*ALUMfjUM SIDING
*BLOWN IN
INSULA DON

Roger Hysell
~a rage

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR

Naw

Ho11111

luilt

Rt. 124, Pomeroy Ohio

Trt~&amp;•laalee

"FrN Eltimat•"

Alu

PH. 949·2101
orl49-2860
No Sunday Calls

PH. 992·5682
or 992-7121
6· 17-tlc

J.R.'s REPAIRS
PLUMIING I

TYs, Antennas
Satellite Salei
Installation
Service

IIO&amp;IIIIr.

Now Loca tiom ·161 North S«IIMI
Middleport, Ohio 45760

SALES &amp; SERVICE

We Cem Fishing

luppll• ~

Electronic Organs
Mobile seNice

Your Cable &amp;
IIllo' Here
1US1N ISS PliOIIE
l6141 "2·65~

614·843-5248

~~al'ltOIIE

(CUT OUT rot IUtu• USIJ

.ASONAILI • IEUAILI
8·20-'16 ttn

SHOOT

KEN'S
APiliANCE
SERVICE

Bashan lulldlng

·•Wolhert •DithWuhoro
•Ron'"•

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

915-3561
All M1ku
•Rofrigorllorl

•Diyo,. •Free1or1
PARTS Mtd at."1vr

RACINE
FIRE.DEPT.

F01torr Chah
12&amp;.....

.•,

�~age-:- 10-The Daily Sentinel.

Anrt tlliiiCI' PI I' 111'

·LAFF-A-DAY

44

Nic.ly turnithed mobile home
CA a heet. Mat loatioi'l.
odulto only. C.ll810-448-0338.

Racine Gun Shootapontored by

Racint_Oun Club. Evwy SundiY.
beginning at 1:QO p.m , Factory
Choke, 12 _gu.ge thotguns.

11131.-i: 3rd. 'Ave.' 1 .bdr. prlv•te
INth, t140 p• mo.· Depoait
roqulood. C•!l 114·448-4222
between t • 115.

Rlv..-ineA.ntlquuopen evening,
and by appolrUment. 1124 Eut
Malin St .. Pomer~y. Ohio .. Ruu

Furnlthed efficiencY t1.5 0 Utilitin psld, thtrt b1th. 701 4th,
Galllpoli1. Call448·4418 1fter8
pm.

Moore.. owner. 614'· 992 -2&amp;26.

Giveaway

Nicely fumiahed 2 bdr. IPI.
Adultt only. Inquire at corn•
Firat a Oliv~ St. at Shappards
Sales 6 Servh::o.

4 healthy puppiH, "fiiV friendly ,

3 Border-CoJ!ie mi.Jttd. 1 BorderCollie Pit Bull mix. Ph. 614 -446-

337.8.

Fold down couch . C•ll6 14-448-

Furnittitcl apertm.,.tr upateir~.
Adulttonty, all utlliti•paid. Call
614-446-86,23.
.

2 fem111 Beagl•. Call304 -4581583 between 9 ;00 1nd 5:00.

Furnished efficiency •175.00,
2rmt. &amp; btth utUitiH Pd. 446·
4418 after 7p.m .

785B.

One male, onefemele. blaek •nd
whi1e, 3 month• old pups.
300-675-3628 .
1

f~tmale si• wMks old puppies,

pon Go.,.on ShOf&gt;herd husky.
Great
5686.Christmeaglfts. 304-675Mattreu tnd box springs.
Couch. 304-875 -4380.

6 lost and Found
Bl{!ck ~emale Great Dane with'
chain. Vicinity of Koontl SaiiOJ
Rd. Call 614 -388-8678 after
6 :00pm.

Found: Female Colli• type pup.
Brown artd white. C.ll814-667-

3073.

Lait letart

area. Aultralhln

Shepherd. male. black &amp; white,

no• tail. Call 304-896-3624 or
89&amp; -3807

9

Wanted To Buy

We pay cash for late model clean
used cars .
Jim Mink Chev.· Oids Inc.

Bill Gene Johnson
614-446 -3672

1

to. .

,

/IJ~IJj.JI'\/ alA

~ · 111

•.,.f--~

Part time work-full time benef·
ttsll Members of the Army ·
National Guard can receive 1
monthty PlY check. •so.ooo life
in1urance. •18,000 education
•uiatance and · much mora.
304-675-3950 or 1 ·B00-1023819.
Let Avon hllp you ge1 the,beltaf
thase post Chrlatmas bill1 and
blues. FrH gift whh flrtt ordtf,
coli 304-BB2· 2645. ·
DIRECTOR OF NUASING ~ong- t.-m care, eJtecutive ltvet
poaitioh. Self starter with Pit'·
tonel budgetary, management
end tuperviaing skills needed.
Knowledge of federtl tnd tUte
lieensure and certification resulltion, with 3 veers nursing
manegement in long tiH'm cere
raquired. BSrt orequlvatentwith
Gerontological Nursing exp•
rien~ or training dHired. Sllery
negotrllble. Contact Adminiltrt·
tor. Hillviaw Nurling &amp; Rehabilitation Cen1er. 304-529-8031 .

Used Mobile Homes Ph . 614••6·0175.

12

BUYING RAW .FURS!' Ginseng,
Yellow Root. beef 1nd deMhidet: Also sellmg trappirlg
suppl•n. Wheat litH, Nite Utes.
Hours 1:00-9 :00. Closed W8d.
George Buckley 614-864-4781 .
QUILTS
•
BOUGHT-SOLO
Cash paid. Pre 1 950't . Single or
whole collection . Call Mare and
Ellen Fulfl 614-992-2101 d..,t
Of 614-592-2461 evenings and
weekends.
QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLO
Cash paid. Pre 1950's. Single or
whole colleetlon . Call Marc and
Ellen Fultz 514 -992-2101 diYS
or 614-592-2461 ev~mings and
weekends.

Situations
Wanted

Room 1nd board for employed
man . Nice home. Family ltmotphere. Call 814-992· 6873.
Houte damoU1hed in exch•nge
tor met•ials. lntlfesttd partiet
cell 304-175-20150, 9 a.m. to
8:30p.m. R•f•ences required.

w.......,.,__

1

380 Grant St., Middlepor1. 6
rooma , bath. g1rage, work thop.
t23, 700. Meke off•. Call 614992-2602.
2 story. 3 bedroom houee wilh 1
car g•tge on Approx 1. 5 acres.
033.000. Coli 614·992-8104.
Hemloctt Grove area.
For rent ot sale, 3 bedroom, 2
bath, all new inside and out. 300
W. Main, Pomeroy. Open house
SundtY, Dec. 28at1~ : 00· 3 : 00 .
2 br, kitchen , b•throom, with
laundry room, livtng room &amp;
dining room. allelec. Approx. 7
miles from Pt . Pl. on At. 12. 2
tr1ctupprox. 1tcremoreorhtsl
ov..-looking Ktnewha ·RiVer .
,.0,000. Coli 304·875-6440
bttw.. n 8 :30 and 4:30.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale
NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL'S OUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.
WEST, GALUPOUS. AT 36.
PHONE 814-401-727• .
1981 Oakbrook 14x70 with
7k12 tkpendo. 3 bedrooms, 2
blthl. wood blnnw. EXcellent
®ndhion French City lrokM"age
Ph. B14-448-93.0.
1973 Schult:~ , 2 bldrooom
trtller, good condition. Price
negotleble Ph. 514·448· 4013
.. 814-448-942 • .
1985 mobile home for sale.
14•70. e.:eellent condition. 2
bedroom, 2 full baths. C1ll
B1~ · 912 -7113.

18 Wanted to Do
Need help wit:tl thll special
claaning iOb? We clean homn.
rental propertlet , offieea,
churcha. Glassburn Cleaning
Serviea Ptl. 814-388-9027.
Lady would like to earn ntr•
doing odd iobl. betr¥ lhting.

reeding, '"' caring for elderly,
houtefceepfng, teeriCarill chort.
Call814-387-7197eveningtor
weekends only

1976 Windtor. 70x14. 3 bltdrooml. In very nice condition.
M1y ttty on lot. tBOOO. 742·
3033.

34

R1:ntals
41

Ftnanml
Emplnyn11:nl

Business
Buildings

Office IPICt · Store space In Pl.
Pleuant. 1200.00 A·One Real
Ettate Ph . 304-876-6104

Women ionkjng for en ev•ing
job. Call aher &amp;pm 814-3BI9373.

Buying junk c..-s. Callafler 5:00
614· 99H6•8.

Houses for Rent

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom houHI

for rent Ph. 446-1871.

Servtc"s

11

'Furnithed Apt. •210.00 utll•
tin Pd. 1bedroom, firttftoorPh .
446·4416 onor 7p.m.

t-;::;~:;:;:;::;;:;::;::::;~::"j~;::~~:::::;:::;;::;~
11 H8 Ip Wante d
31 Homas f or Sale

Someone t9 do hautev.oork end
care for eldtrfy man during day,
304-675· 2931 '

Buying daily gotd, silver coins,
rin!Js, jewelry. sterling were, old
cotrs. 1.-ge currency. Top prices. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,
2nd. Ave. Middleport, Oh. 614992·3•76.

Inc;

"I won't enumerate .my trespasses. y QU know ffiY WQfk.,n .

TOP CASH paid for '83 model
and newer used cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 19f 1 Eutern
A...e., Gallipolis. Call 614-4462282.

Top c.sh paid for compltrtelunk
can. Bodies towed away Ph.
614-245-9264 or 614-6B26760.

1~ " '

21

Help Wanted

Business
Opportunity
1 NOTICE I

Llldy to INa in light houli1eeping
Ph. 304-675-5104.
Executive Secretary Responsf..
bilitln to Include recepUonitt.
seeretarial, &amp; book· keeping.
Previous uperienee Pf&amp;flmed.
Send rHume to 11165 St. Rt
279, Oak Hill, Ohio 46631 or
call614-682-??28.
REPS NEEDED
For busin•s accountl. Full·
Time, t80,000- t80,000. PartTime, t12.000- t18, DOO. No
seMinv. repeat bu1inns. Set your
own hours. Training providlld.
Coli: 1·612-938-6870, M-F,
8em to 5pm !Central Standard
Time!.
Relitble sitter for 3yr. old
Mon· Tues in my home PIYI
o 20.oo c~l B1•· '*f· 2•79 .

THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO . recomm.nds th .. you
do businell with peopl• you
know , 1nd NOT to 1111nd mon~ty
through the mail untH you hwe
lnvettigeted th• offering.
HIRING! Federal government
jobt in you, lfet and OVerMII.
Many' immedflte opening• whh·
out waiting lil'l or ttrt. •1 5·
tl8.000 . Phone cell refundable.
1602) 838-8885. En. 1203.

23

Professional
Services

Starks TrH nd Lllwn Service.
Hedges , 1hrub1, buthU
trimmed, landtet~fing, tlump
and ltlf flmOVI , 304· 578•
2B42 or 576·2010.

Rr:dl Eslalr:
31

Homes for Sale

3 bdr .. air, pool , glfage. Nice.
Comm•clal prop.-ty, earner
loti A highwty front1ge. Ult
With ut . We hllll'e buy•rs. A-One
Aetl Eatat•Brok•. Call 31)4.
67.· 510. 9" 300-.174-5388,

Airlines now hiring. Flight At•
tendants, Agents, Mechanics,
Customer Service. Salaries to
S50K. Entry level po1ition1. Call
1-805· 687-6000 E•t A· 9805.

3 Bedroom home In Centenary,
rtdueed to ..n. gM"tge. AC,
fenced eompletety, beth &amp;1h Ph.
61·-··8-7023.

t 59,230 yr. Now hiring. Call
806· 687-6000 E.:t . R-9806 for
currtm fedtral litt.

Pan time btbvaitttr needed.
Prefer In my home, Harrisonvlhe.
c.n814-742-2385.
Avon! No shipping eh•ga1 Free
sign up l Sell to frltndl and
relativ811Call 814-912-7180.
Need babysiner, must hiV e e1r.
wateh one cl'llld. Call mer 7:00
p.m . 814-742-2050.

refrig, furnished. Re• of Smith
Pontitc Buictt Ph. 614-448 7026.
2 to 3 bedroom ept. Conv.nient
location in town . All utilities Plid
8326.00mo., ref.,encn • deposit requlrtd. Wi1emen Rul
Ettttt Ageney Ph. 614·4•&amp;·
3840
Extra nice 2 bedroom duple•.
carpeted, wtshar &amp; dryer hookup, lltove II nlfrlgerator excellent
locelion. Deposit • reference
1'11. 81···4B-1260.
2 and 3 bedroom apartments
and houses In Pomeroy or
Middleport. F,umlshed or unfur·
nlthed. PI'( own utilttin. Call
diVI 514-992-2381 .

Smtllsofe, 304· 676-2369.

54 Misc. Merchandise
C1llahan's Uaed Tire Shop. Over
1.000 tlret, sizes12, 13. 14. 1&amp;,
16, 16.6. 8 miln out Rt. 218.
Coii6H· 256-B251 .
,Plastic eistern state IPPfmlld,
pl11tie septic tankl, plattlc
culverts, metal cutverts. RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jocklion, Otl. 814-281· 5930 .
Firewood delivered Otk &amp; hlektplit. HEAP vouc~er. JHckup
lood 036. CoiiB14·4•6-2223 or
B14·446·3028.
OfV,

Ends of ctrpet, DS 185 Dirt
Motorcycle t400.00, TF 126
Motorcycle 8260.00, exercise
roiiM *46.00 Call 614· 256·
1267.
Reduced t100.00 Brand new
wood and coal huter. Catalytic
option ..,•liable. Call 814-268·
1772 after 8pm.

Bar with matching swivel ttools
•120.00. consalstereo t76.00,
e111'1 regilter S20.00 Ph. 114·
401-1324. ,

45

New fully ••If-contained jecuzr:l
spe. 1988 Gallla County Fair
Displty. Retail 14.900.00 liking t2.900.00. Padded cover&amp;.
,.,. chemiCIIIIs Included. Ptl.
61.·44B-1324.

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park,
Route 33, North ol PomM-oy.
large lOti. Clll614-992· 7479.

In Eurek• nice and cllll"'. adults
6roomhoute. 1.2•cret. Oouble on1y. No plla. deposit required.
cer gar. .. LoettedonRouHIII. · 180.00 rno. col181•· 251-1638
Bargain priced UO,OOO. Call before 101.m.
610-678·2613.
2 ledmo'm furnlehed. We 1Ccept
Governmem hom• 'from •1 . (U HUD, Bltuttful rtv• view-. Fos·
repairl . Delinquent t•• property. t•• Mobile Home P1rk 814.. ·
Repossnliont. C1ll 805-811· 441-1102.
6-000 bt. GH·9801 fof Currem
'8p0 lilt.
2 bedroom mobile homain kyg•
crMic ichool dia-trict Ph. 814-2 bedroom houH for ttlt In 408-0722.
Clifton !Meble Johneon prop.
eny) , Fully c"poood,
14x70 Moblt Home for rtnt,ln a
remodel_., -""' root. Aaldng qultt country setting on 0. J .
011.000. C.l1304-773-653... White Rd. Clott to Holi•
300· 773-6714.
Hoipl,.l Coli 614· 048-7187
ollwB:OOpm.

1------ - -;__ _

2Vt bedroom apartment for rent.
phone 304-675-5918 aftlf 5
p.m.

''

51 Household Goods
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE B2
Olive St .. Gtlllpolis. New • used
WOOd•COIIItovH, 8 PC Wood LR
lulte t391, bunk be&lt;ll 1199.
antror:t reclln•• ees. new a
u~ bedroom sultn, rangH,
~"r'IOtr washerl, • sho111. New
INtngroam suit11 *199- 1599
ltmps, 1110 buying coal &amp;. wood
•toves. Call 614·•4&amp;·31 58.

SNAFU™

New 100 amp. electric weldre
Ph. 814 ·3~1- 9853 sfter 7pm.
1978 Freight linit, recent inframe over heul Call 814-448·
1425.
Ml.:ed hardwood slllbs. t12. per
bundte. Containing 1pprox. 1 'h
ton1 . FOB Ohio Pallet Co.
PomtrG'-1, Ohio. Clll614-992·
1081.

-

Shop for Chrittmu with
FULLER BRUSH PRODUCTS
Coli 30•·8711-1090.
'
Surplus iniUIIted camofl-..ge
d!"=ron coverellt, small. m•
drum, large t25.00; XL UO.OO.
Ctrh•rtt, army l11ue clothing,
boott, bibs denim t18 .00.
Wrangl., lack••· ltllrt1, plain
pocket denim pint• 14 ou. Sem
Somervi,l•. Junction lndapendence Ftotd. Okl Rt. 21 , EaatR•venawood. Fridty, SaturdtY.
Sund~y, 12 ~00- 8:00 P.M. other
deys after 4;00 P. M. After Dec.
&gt;7th, ·dolly, 12:00 tHI ,:00
P.M. Phone 304-273-58155 .

•,

WITH A
CLASSIFIED ~.D

. '

Bruce Beattie

, , f(l[

'

Naw'tuU-Iength Norwegi1111Biue
Fo• furcottfar•leS2,100. Cell
Donna at 304-773-59n or
882-2184.
115" bicycle. 28" girla 3 apHd,
dithwesher, King Wood bumer,
gtrbage disposal, 1973 Buick
standard shift, phone 304·15715·
.192.
Uud Wither, 304-6?G-31533.
Freezer beef, oni hllf beef, corn
ted, weight appro• 250 lbt,
01.0Bib. 304-671-1113.

55 Building Supplies
Building Material•
Block, brick, HW• pipes, windowt. lintela. etc. Cl1ude Wlnlefl, Rio Grenda, 0 . C.H 814205-6121 .
Concr..e blocks til 1lr:u yard or
delivery. Maton sand. O.IHpolil
Blade Co.. 123'h: Pint ·St ..
Gellipolil, Ohio Call 814·448·
2783.
Pole Bulldlnts by Ou•lity
lullden. Worklhops, Carportl,
enim_. ahehers, 1•11•- Fret
lltlmetes . Phone 114-3846712.

56

;. I

Vans &amp; 4 W.O. ,

llll Body Eletltrlc
CleM ~ Plllt 2 '
1:3&amp; SW.
M Home In S1oreo.
7:00
(I) PM MIIJ8IIne
~'
11w J runtl Mceor-

Dragonwynd Cattery Kannel.
CFA Himal.y~~n, Persian and
Siameu kittens. AKC Chow
puppioo. Coil 614-44&amp;-3844
lfter 7PM .

o.0om ...._Shop

lls. Ohio 48831 , Julie Webb. Ptl.
614-446·0231 .

Ph.&amp;14·

SALE SALE SALE
Jivldent Farm Equipment
Specili Yl• end ule ~Ieee on
Trtctors end Vermeer Hty
Equipment: up to t3000.00 off!
Mower,, mower conditlon.-s,
rH•teddtrt, • round ballt't.
TIAce tdvtntege of your Investment 111 credit for the l11t time
this year I A complettllna of bale
hl!ndiing &amp; feeding •ceeaoriH,
feed bunks, llvlltock water••·
grinder mb:•s. WIIGJOnl, rotery
titian, rotary-cutter1, bladn,
disc cuhNatOf'l, plows, Hed.1,
POit drlvefl, woodsplitt•ra.
gates, helldgiCea; truck r~c;.ks.
' truck bed1, trell••· 1pfayers.
Husqverna ctlelntaWI.
USED
A variety af uted tractor1, round
btler, Wlgont, tobtcco setter.
cultivators dlec,. plow1, rtkn,
7'NH hayblne. squtre blllf'l.
mowing machine, h1rrow, buth
See u1 for 1 ootripl81e line of
pert• a 1ervice 84-448-1876.

64

Hay &amp; Grain

Urge round baila of hay for tale.
f10 .00 ooch Ph. B14-. .6 1062.

Dried aheled corn . •4.50 per
CWI. Ground U .OO per cwt.
Groundwhhmolutcta •6.75 Plf
cwt. 304-488·1031 .

614- 246 -91~7 .

AKC Aegltttrld Chow-Chow
PuPSMn. bcelltnt Ptdlgr. ..
Reedy tor Chrittm11. Ptl. 814·

Tr .Ills jiiH !.1! 11111

2~8-1908

Two AKC Registered Germ1n
Sh ..... ord puppiH. Coli 44"
803? •Iter 8Qm.
1 tuH blooded IHI•er puppy, 9
wks. old. Female. '75. Cell
61.· 288-6817.

AKC FtegistlrM Siberi• Hutky
pupplea. 4 femeiM lett. ltlot1
tnd wormed. *100. etch. Call
61•·949·21ol0 oftor 6 :00.
For Hit Pomeranitn puppi11
pure bred 7 wHks old, wormtd
&amp; first tha1s. .•100. Itch.
304-882-2211 '
2 boaer dogt lfernalll) 2 y11r1
old. 300-178·2186.
2 Norwegl• Elkhound puppi•
roody to go. 304·U&amp;-3128.

Musical
Instruments

Setra ulmuht o,Qan wlthb.nch.
ExQtllent condltlrtn 171.00 Clll
614·38S-81ZO.

58

Fruit
&amp; Vegetables

Freth trucklo•d New York
grown l•e• appl•, 7 klndt.
NIW,- oranges. tangelo•. ban•
nu,grapes. Smtllotsorl:.-yba1.
Jack• Fruit Mark•. Rt. 31,
Henderton.

I dl 111 S11P1tl11
,\ I ,•, l'c,llil,,
Farm Equipment

White F8rm Tractor•. Belt Prlct
In A,..., ljden lqUipment Co,
Henderaon, W, Va. 304-e757421 .

d~ IGdo hy'd
volue. "'110 wMh oW&gt;py.

.. - ..

discount•hly tool -December
· ·all Only
- .
Model 481 7' mowert
01,,100.00: MHol 118 10'
toddor 01,210.00: MHol 268
rllkoo 02.000.00: MOdel 472 7 '
h~yblnoo Q,IOO.OO: Modol474
7' hoyblnoo ... 400.00: MOdel
..... ho¥111. . 11.100.00:
Madel 411 I' · heybines
17,100.00. Kootwo IO&lt;VIoo
Contor, II. Rl. 17, 1'1, ,._1,
Rlol~y Rood . Pll. 104-1163l74.
.

,, .

• .I

'

'

71

Auto1 for Sale

19110 Flreblrd Tuns Am, Power,
oh, -11t V-8, 22 MPG. Good
c011dh6on, take panill trade 1lso
Je.., Of 15 PIIIIHng• 4-wheet
drive. Atking loan value
*4.100.00 or be.t offer Ph.
441·2706.
Chriltm11 SpeclaJI
84' Ford Escort 4-tpeed .
83,000ml. U .too.OO. 81' Mercury Lvnx, euto. 79,000mi
eue~. OO. 88' ChovyCh.,otto
8 , 000ml 03,196.00 . 84'
Chevene 1uto, 29.000ml .
02.996.00. 84' Ford EXP, &amp;·
opoocl. 43,000ml. 03,860,00.
71' lntem1donel Seoul 4114
12.000m1 otoo.oo. Dodrlllo
Auto Soloo 1'11. 614-388·9616.
19B!i Dodge Arltt, IUtO, air,
AM -FM. Cash prlee 13,199.00
John• Auto StiM, BullVille Rd.,
Golllpollo.

.

'

'tF.J, :

1

:
,
'
•
'

fort

'
~1:

.,
'

0 (I)Judgl
(]) lllHa Me Father

MIKE' S AUTO BALES
''XMAS SPECIALS"
197B Cadillac. 2 door, sharp
OM tW•. Wll •4.100.00 now
03,100,00.
197B Oktt Delta. 88, 2 door.
clean. W• •1. 791.00 now
01 . ~98 . 00 .

1880 T-Bird, new tires, V· B.
59,000ml., cleen . Wu
12,816.00 now U , 195.oo:
1871 Mercury Boboot, olr, PS,
Pl . Was S1 , 385.00 now
01 ,011.00.
117B Pont i.e Bonn avilla. loaded
runallk• ntw. W• a1 , 015 now
0185.00.
1876 Joop Chorok•. 4••· 6 cyl,
3 - -. PI, PI, tlroo.
Woo 0918.00 now fe85.00.
1878 LTD II. 2 - · 302 VI, PS
PI, air, crulaa. W• •ati.OO
now o8116.00.
1170 Novo, 2 dooi, S.eyl., AT.
PI, ISI6 .00.·
1171 Chtorott•. 2 - · •c:vl.,
4-..,-. W• •51&amp; .00 now

t•4ti.OO.

a..... """

·

1112 P1v
&amp;.
3-spe•d.Wa• *318 .00 now
0281.00.
. .
'
40 CARS AND TRUCKS TO
CHOOIE FROM
Coli 61.·448· 2100.
1t7B Monte Carlo. 1 owner.
AC, PB, P8, AM·FM Topo, tlit,
Good ........ V-1 , 308. e18t&amp;.
Colll14-44"8234.
1174 ford Torino. good condl·
11on. 1ow ....... e7oo.oo C.N
11.·441-2212.

emuat(I)defend
()I ~ Ma11ock
an oxo11c dancer accused of murdering
her vindic1ive ex-husband.
160 min .) (A) In S1ereo.
(]) HoH Town
CIJO (])Who' a the lou?
(CCI A miaunderatendlng
from Tony inadvonontly
lead a10 Angale' a firing from
her advertising limi." Pert 1
of 2. (fll .
• CD Hall of Fame Bowl:
G~ia VI. lloa1lln Col·
logo Live from Tampa, FL.

... ,•
... '

+G~

.1017

.7

(3

hnl.l

+t.KJ71S

•uz

Valnerable: North.SOutb
Dealer: South
Wtll

N- Bul

....

••
••
1+

Paa

Paa

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING
Unccmditionel lifetime guaran· ,
tH. Local referenc• furnithed. 1
Fr.. ettimatet. Call collect 1
1· 614·237-04BB. dey or night. ·;
R o g e r s 8 a • e · m en t ,
Wttllt'prooflng.

''

Pus

OpeD!ng lead: +K

.

(Ill,

•,

(JD Chrlwb •• wte11 the
Mortnon Tllllernaclo Choir
and Shlrtiy V...at (60
min.)

t~~J-'Dt,(
loy 11t0MAS JOSI'"

IBi MOVIE': 'Gtii119 My

SWEEPER 1nd sewing machine
repair, perU, and IUpQiiet. Pick .
up and dallvery, Davis )lecuum
Cleanar. on• helf mi le up ,
Georg• Creek Ad. Call 814- ', .
441-0284.
t

EEK&amp; MEEK
VJ.IW I AI'ST ~

W"'''
11:06 ClJ NBA Basketball: Loa
Angelos

"

\

1 :00

I

RINGLES ' S SERVICE , "P orltnced ctrpenter, eleetrleiln,
muon, painter, roofing (IncludIng hot tlr application) 30467~- 2088 or 875-7147.

cop kHis his black pannar
under questionable cirCIJmt1oncos. (60 min .)
(]) 700 Club
Cll
Cll Maonllthdnu
(CCI A hot cast leeds Maddie. David and Ms. Dlpesto

e

MORTY MEEKLE
A 6LJ ITOISE Ai&gt;JD"'

MY AARCN"T!lAI&gt;JD I

experience when they encounter thre8 'kings ' in

KUALA LLJ/v\PLIR.

VE'RY WE:LL.

1

35 Yield
38 Frequently

search of a babe in arms.

Rotary or Clble tool drilling.
Mott wellt completed 11med1y.
Pump 111111 1nd service. 304·
895-3802

'

(60 i'nin .IIR).

....
•

(poet.)
39 Redden

A CHRISTMAS CAROL
CHORGE C. ICOTT le

42 Ameri&lt;:an
bird
44 Redolence

beok I I Sci oogo· Itt

IBM'o holldly d ......

Ashby Conttruetion, carpen tery, remodeling, room addition,
carnent block work, roofil)g,
intarior and e•terlor painting,
siding. Roofin'g. Free estimates.
304·875-5445 ar 675-5152.

CBS

4S Witless
46 Biblical
tower
47 Debark
DOWN
1 Farm

Ad•.

Soren·

(]) ,MOVIE: 'Penny
' Ide'
~
~ MCWII: 'A
Chrtstm~~o CliO!' (AI .
(j]) MOVIE: 'Ciad'o Cootn·

e

BARNtl'
•

ELVINEV!!
HAVE YOU GOT

CARTER 'S PLUMeiNG
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh and Pine
Gallipoti1, Ohio
Phone 614· 441-3888 ar 61444B ·4477

f!o/ lH"WAY -"', '
HtWE VCXJ GOT

SOME JUICY
GOSSIP?

.:10

NOPE·· NOT
A CRUMB.
ElVINEV'

·•

try'
(!) NHL I Iockey: Wlto~puf
J11to M Edmon1Dn Oilers 13

10:00

e

•~

nickname
4 Dance

(I) 1]1) t 98t ICCI 160

for two

min.)

e ())

DAILY CRYPI'OQUOTES-Here'sbow loworll il:

Jack anll Mike
(CCI While Jockie helps a
man in need of a heart trafl-'
oplan1, Mlk e' 1 okl rnusic:ian

..

"••
"

General Hauling

structure

2 Boundary
3 Greek

hrs.) Livo.

Cll

AXYDLBAAXR

IILONGFELLOW

buddy bec:omos a house
guea1, which cauoea problema a1 home. !60 min.) (R) .

1:1

One.letter stands for another. In this sample A is used
for the lhree L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apostrophes, the length and formation of the words are all
hintS. Each dey the code letters are different.

tO::io rn s~c Wrap Show

James Bov• Water S11vJce. Also
pools filled . Call614 -25&amp;-1141
or 814·448-1176 or 614-446·
7911 .
... '

•.'·. 30

. . 10

Cttm
Cl!l 01ti:tf
Noww
·
~IE :
1

"I 'gl'l'o

, , :oo ern me m® ellllli!l

T &amp; l Water delivery anytime Ph.
114 -388 - 9732 tame day
delivery.

Ntwa

(I) Hardcllotle and Mo:Cof·

Will haul 1tone. cotl, dirt, mc.
Vaughn E. Taylor trUck ing 614246· 5815 ,

CDc-my &amp;pr"'

(D) AflhonlwiM: Till
foroW~ofl.lfe

· ,•.

01 ='lle ·rn &lt;m Bast ot

~

•

e (I) M•Aos•H

.I

Umutone and •labwood hauled
AI Tromm. Rutland. Call 61 4~
7•2·2328.
'

CRYPTOQUOTil

ml'*

,
:,:

Pilht

"

•1

'
1814 Chevrolet Celebrity . · R II M Cuttom Cou,c hes and :
Reuphol•t
ery
,
St.
Rt.
7,
Crown
t
27.000 mi611. Power windows.
power ...... Pl. Pl. Meke offer. Chy, Oh. 814· 256- 1410. Eve' "'
114-448· 3438 . Op.., delly 8 tO'l*
C•III1•·H2·38te.
&amp;, Sot. 9 :30 to 1:30. Old &amp; nJ"'
~
1114 Chovy 1- 10 , ••• Uphotttrtd .
33,000ml. Tohoepocllogo. outo,
CfUioo. u. 111. V-S Aftor 6 ool Mowrey's Upholsttrlng tervlng
trlcountyarea21 yean . The belt ' '
304-171-2186.
In furnhure urholstering. CaH ~
1tl0 Ctlevv Monu, V-1 , ,304-17~ - · a• for fre• ..
rtlatlmates.
40,000 mNoo. 304-176· 2322.

token hos1oge whlln I rio1
brttalls out in 1
prison. !70 min.)
Burnt &amp; AHon '
Cll Jefferoon1
CD Chriotlan Children's
Fund

wo,_,·,

iDMOMOW
IS OlRIITMAS

•

(I) 8CTV
(1). (15 1.1118 Nllhl with

eDMIIAnelmln f enighl'o
guHII 01'11 Chevy

CheN,

Elayne ·Booaler and Frttneh
modellnas de Ia Fressange.

l
,,,

,,

w.

'

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0 RM L

H Z R A J

MKIW U

FL

I

HIM

AZWJ

1'iV 1114n.) ln S1ereci.
(]) I1Mt of GIOUCho
(!) SportiCentt&lt;
(I) ABC News Nlghtline
• CD Benny Hill Show
® MOVIE: ' Sky Riders'
(B MOVIE: 'It Hepponed

e
:10

HFG

C Z P

D Z WG
DPWZG

I

•,

UNKNOWN

\*:tO'(])

EVE ••

HKZ

Yeoterday'o Cl')'lltoquote: CHRISTMAS JS THE
SEASON WHEN PEOPLE TAKE THE MILK OF HUMAN
KINDNESS OUT OF THE DEE!' FREEZE.- SOURCE

C1J WKRP In Clndnnatl

Coli, lm•tone, gravel, etc. ·"'
Delivered 1 ton end up. J im
Lenler, 304-171·· 1247 or 6767387,

I A A

LHFG . -

em Taxi

O([IABC NowaNightllne
([I Bl=•mbl•
()liB
um, P.l.
•t~~ Hot
Amanda ia

12-23

KINNF GU MM

c.-.

Tonlgh1's guos1a are Batte
Midler and Ana Obtegon.
(60 min.) (R) In S10reo.

••

6 Airway
7 Mature

3Z Shte·wm&lt;&gt;Use
33 Orderly

to there a special Christmas

PLANE'. TICKer TO

DON'r6:ET ALONG'

1

5 Grant

I Till'

8 "That
Lucky
Old -"
lands
( 1949 song)
12 Fatigued
9 Cosset
13 Concerning 10 Faucet
Y~tel'&lt;day'o Anower
14 "The Raven" 16 Lummox
2S ' Luck, 37 - off
poet
17 Pulsate
(resist)
15 Author Vldal18 Languish
Be a-·
17 Rock the - 19 "Bus Stop" 27 Football 38 Baby's
discovery
pass
(disturb)
playwright
39Hack
30
Cover
18 Dilly
ZO Equal
34The- 40 -et
21 Lacerated Zl ·ru. labora
to pay
24 Cat
Goes By"
28 Perfect .
22 European 3~ Arrive 41 Toss
38 Algerian 43 "Deep
28 Scope
river
- Dream"
port
2B Cerebral
23 Wrest from
.,....,.-..--r.-,..-,
31lmpala, e .g.

mtllll. lfll.
ell! Gil Hill Street BluM
Furlilo CDJIIII wilh l'ltliallension on the Hm after a white

Fatty Tree Trimming, stump
removal. Call 304-675-1331 .

ACIOSS

S Embrace
10 Crown
II The - ,
Nether-

e

.

.,ON ' S Television Serv ice .
Houaa calls on RCA , Quanr.
GE . Speeilllng in Zenith. C•ll
30•· 576-2398 or 614-44B ·
245 • .

cu_. M Hous-

ton Roclteta 12 hra., 15
min.l Live.
1:30 (I)
(I) Ort&gt;wl119 l'llna
ICCI Joaon and MIGiio attempt to calabrlla 1hair
wedding anniveraery, evan
1hougll Millie ia lbout to
go on one of her mo11t im~
porton1 in1t&lt;Viaw ouign-

J

MWI£M: ...

FTM Gener1l Contraeting.13yrs : ·
experience. Roofing &amp; Con- ;
struction Ph. 614-388-9308.
FrM estlmetes 10% off during
tha holideyt, Offlf expirn Jan
15, 1987.

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

Paa
Paa
Paa

(])
MaaNeii-Lohrer
NMihour
IJIIeiBI Wlzlrtl A blind girl
and a robo1ic guide dog thll
Simon invented for her ere
both abduc1ed by a ring of
anne amugglara. 160 min.)

Improvements

~8~7=U~p;h;o;ls;te;ry;==

.JtJU

1100'1'11
. , It 7

1:410

.....
''"

Watter1on' t Wat er Hauling 1
ratsontble rttri , immediate
2,000 gallon delivery. cister~s.
pool•. Will. eto. tall 304-576·
2911.

'tQIIUZ
.Q IOZ

~~ (1), Houof111001111111 Pan 2 .

:;::---;;----·
81
Home

85

EAST

tau
tJtQJ

~~~_.ty

W1nted to buy, front end for '71
Buick Skylark, 1970, 1971 can-be used. 304-675-4828.

1974 FOfd Torino, good condl·
lion 0760 .00 Pll. 814-448·
2292.

+QU

+IU

:·
·

li-IW4i

., .. u

(II Wheel of Fortune

'·,'::

c:AN EXPL.A•N ·..~ .
. 'll!AT ~f -'(~ ~
IN MY; eMPL-oYMeNT· , ·
MY AI-AftM CI.-OCfc: ·
PI.PN'i &lt;50 off.

•
,.

Flbtrglan truck topper, 8 ft.
glats' windows.
good eondition, $260.00. 304· '
BB2· 323B.

82

NORTH

WEST

Live.

bed, sliding

Sterk• Tr" tnd Lawn Service,
Hedge~ , lhruba . bushes
trimmed, l•ndscaplng and
stump removal. Le1f removal.
304-576·2010 or 676· 284~.

.,.,. ,

Colleee lllllloe1ball:
Loulavllle Mlndia.. (2 hrs.)

• CD Tao Close for Com-

Olle ol lhe most successful ~n ·
play~ ~ Ciff Rlmil, will h3s woo hall a
dozen Nalion~ Knockout Team-d.foor
Chilllpilnships. An aggres!ive playll', he w~l
~equently "stily 111 occasional ove1id by
finding away 1D make the contract Elillline · ·
loday's deal, ~which Cill Russel was Soutfi. :
Purists migtrt quesliln h~ jump 1D tlree ·
diamonds on only 15 high-card poiflts, but
A-Kin lwo suils ~always abetter l'ddirlgthan
scattered honors. North cue-bid his ace of
dubs and then len otjigaled Ill bid ~~
diamonds aftll' South had bid lour spades.
Wmng IU'im do not me heart just
because the cmlract has ittle plav. Instead,
they ~re out a combilation of opposing .cards that will alklw the oontract1D make, and .
play for lhal com~nalion 1D exist. Here..
deciii'IJ had 1D find aWilY to dispoSe of oneof.:
h~ dub ~ The only chance lies i1 the
heart sui. He not only had to set up that fifth
heart as a w~nll' but also had 1D be able to
cash t That meant that evt11 ~ hearts Wll'e
4-3. South needed ill extra t11lry to dummy
to do tl'e worll The answer? Adiamond
finesse against Hie 10.
.
Declarer won dummy's dub ace, pi!Y411 .
Hie heart ace and ruffed a heart Nexi he
played a diamond 1D dummy's n~e end .:
ruffed another heart. Now he led adiamond to ··
dunrny's queen and he ftashed abig smile as .
both ilerendln ilbed. One moreruftsttup ·
dunrny's last heart. and tl'e spade ace and a
spade ruft allowed decl;rer to shed alosing
dub on Ihe fifth herrt s~ diamonds bid end
made!

BRIDGE

(!)

=---.:-.:-:-=::-~.
76 Auto Parts

Services

b1iRo - cp - Oklen - Villill - J.ll&gt; GOOD
In thll cJay lll1d 11g11 II someone paya you In cash you get
auaplciGul. You think maybe their credit IB NO GOOD.

a

condition. Mekeoftar. Csll614- ,
985-4488 tfter 6 :00p.m.

BudgiC tranamlasiont u1ed &amp;
rebuilt all typH . Torque eonvartlt'l &amp; trantfer easea. Engine
over heul kits. Allison Trantmis·
lion part• and eve Joints.
Minimum 30 day to lifetime
wlm~nty . Will daliver. cah and
carny or inatall Ph . 814-3792220.

. ... fESTEIDAY'S SCIAII-111'S ANSwEIS -- .

a-

•

5

"

port
ll!l Nowl

MlcNeH· Lehrer
Newlhour
• (!I ()I WhHI of Fortune
@ lllmey MHior
J:M (l)lltnfvrthnd Son Pan 2.
Uo
(I) (I) Ne¥r Nellllywed

------------------·
1981 Moped. PUCH . Excellent :

LETTERS TO

r 1 I' I' I
IIIIIIII

(I) Nlglnly Bualneoa R•
(j])

'

• -~F:~:~~

ee ([I hopl1'1 caun

.'

Motor cycle traitor, 1981 y,. l
mtha. 760 Virago . Call 614- 1
r
.46-7414.

&amp; . Accessories

1
I ~~~~~~M~~~~E~mERS 1
r I'

(!) SpamCenter
Cll EntaiiiiiiMIWifR TCf!1lght
ET 1111&lt;1 Wlm Amold
Schwarz-r about hio
1w0 upcoming tim projects,
" The Running ,.,..,.. end
"Predllor" .
CD M•A•&amp;•H

'•

,.,

Now buying shell .corn or ear
corn. Call forlltttt quotes. River
City Ferm Suppty~ 6-14-448·
2988.

Bleck Sprtnger Sptnhtl. male &amp;.
ftmlle 4mo. old, hu ahots Ph.

57

...

. ....

Motorcycles

hog.

ZOO bal" of hay for ••le. t1 . per
b•e. 30 bushels of corn. Can
61.·887-8519 .

Solo 01,160.00.' C wlth us on all HPrtng11. W.oen
fln~not on 7;17 percent 1. . .
puroh-IIIM. NEW HOLLAND

"At least we caught one fish todayl"

~uHdings

Winter f..tliont &amp; apedM christ·
m11gifttforyour petl. Oroom6
Supply lhopPh. &amp;14-448-0231

_

Two bedroom trailer, air condl·
11on, - - • drvor. 0180.00
plue utiHtiM, referencee r•
qultod. GoiHpoMo Forrv, 300871-487•.

eriiCied.

Iron Hor•
332-1706.

Profeuional Service, 1M 1tyl11,
all breeda, ltlte Rt. 141 Oellipo-

-

87~ · 3000.

UTILITV BLDG . SPECIAL:
with s~dlng
door • IIIVice door t4,288.0Q
27':~38'1C9' EAVE

I

,...

.

74

IJIIe (]I 011 N.-

' ·'

CROSS. SONS
U.S. 315 Wilt, Jackson, Ohio.
61.·288·1061 .
1978 Chevy 4x4 truck, good ;
M111ey Fergu10n, New Hollend. tires,
6 " lift, IQck In loc~ out
But" Hog S1lt1 • Service. Ower hubs, auto, 83,800.00. 304· 1t
40 uted trtCtors to chooM from '
773-6337.
&amp; complete line of new a ulld
equipment. largett ,_.lectlon in
S.E . Otllo.
JIM'S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER. SR 31 W. Galllpolia,
Ohio. Cell 814·"8-9777, eve.
814·441·3592. Up front tractors with wtrrlnty over 40 uaed
traCtors. 1000 tool•.

Doc10r Who

'\

Pets for Sale

DEutz-ALUI LAST OF YEAR
TRACTOR II'!CIALI. MOdel
6038 33 PTO liP dloool, 8 ~.

K • K Mobile Hom•. 2 and 3
bedroom mobMe hOm•. 304-

Farm Equipment

r==·

I' I.·;

1978 Ford Van, customized\
1988 Chwy PV, good condition;. •
Air compreuer 5HP, 85 gallon"~
ttnk Call 448-8113 or 4488201 .

62 Wanted to Buy

Ge,hl O(inder-Mixer. Ntw Hollond 7 ft, hoyblno. 11114 Ford
F38Q Lont- wfla ..••• ton truck.
22,000 ml111. AI OICol·
' 1..1 ~-n. 304-273-.216.

2 t.droom mobile tlome, Mid·
dltlpOrt, 0 . Rtf•ence whh ••
c ..lty dopooll. 304-112-3287
.. 304-773-1024.

Moble home. 2 btclroomt,
lo""'od Aohton Upton Rood.
1180. month plue utlttd•. 304178-0081.

'Firewood, all hard wood. Heat
vouchtrs tccepted. a35 . ·,
pickup load . Phoncl 814-7422461.

61

'"*"lv

"SUGiRACT" THOSE THif:GS
GATHERifJG.DUSt
'~DD" DOLlARS
TO \'OUR POCKET

t~ Cll~~~~Newo

CAPTAIN EASY

1979 CT-5 Golden Eagle, V·Q;
3·apeed, spokerwheela, AM·FM
Stereo. low mHeage Ph. 814.
-.&amp;-9700
•.a

Fork lift. _Yale. n00 lb. CIPICity,
13 ft. hft. Baum lumber Co.
614-986·3301 .
Tony' 1 Gun Rapaln, hot reblu•
ing. OPen 9 :00AM to 7:00PM
Coli 30•·B75· 4631 . ·
·

Merchanrl1sr.

Cll U -1, Can1aCt ICC).

(j]) .Secret City
@ Foca ot Ufe

a••

Male AKC Brittany male Cock•
Spani_el, · 26in. bike UO.OO.
Swing let •26.00 Pl'l. 814-448Apert:mentl for rent in Pomeroy. , ·7023.
One tnd two bedroom. Clean -:;:--~-=~-:~and nice. Calll14-992-821&amp; or Complete Bingo Syttem. S•tt·
814-912· 7314.
lng cepacfty of 100 Ph . &amp;1•446· 9869
2 bedroom tpts., New Htven.
Alto commereitl 1JP.C:8 IUitable
ReUtblle woman would ttke to
for aerobic., taMing, craft1. Call
babysit any hours. Call 814·
304-882-3681 or 610-992- 4·6·9280.
7481 .
Bear mini mq compound bow
One bedroom unfurnithed, tOtll
e6o.oo . Weight btnch •
liiiCtrlc apt. Owner PIIVI wtter weights •60.00 Ph. 814· 446and trash pickup. Call814-9921168.
2094.
Brand new acoustie guhar &amp;
APARTMENTS. mobile homes, case, used flute &amp;. ease, ••housn. Pt. Pl ..11nt and Otlllpocond., regulttlon ping pong
llo. BU-•46-8221 .
table, like new. Caii114-4412B85.
'
Furn. 1 bedroom apt .. first'iloor.
t21 15.00 month. Heat llf'ldwater 1 alectric whHI chair wittl
furnished. Ref. &amp; dep. 304-676·
batteries, 1 manual wheel ctlelr.
2651 .
Coli 614-ZBB-1989

Furnished Rooms

I

PhonoB1• · 742o274~ :

61

•

em....,_•

,lfke new aluminum topper; ·
neede tome body work. Exceb1.
lent work vetllcle. As Is t750r-

.

I

NEWTHI

I!) Mu$ lport.a..ualt

·I•-·

•so.

I

Newo
(I) tllg V81'-V

runt good Ph. 114-Z&amp;8· 126B.

73

bt--

low to form four simple word1 .

ernm!llel111(J)

-,..,~-------=:-1974 Ford F100,, 361 itlgine,

Tappan alee. cook stove, evac·
ode gr..n. 1200.; 1979 Chev.
pickup 4 whe_. drive, 360 1 uto.,
8ft. bed. good tires. *2.600. Ph.
372-8390.

1 Bettroom apt, all Lftllltln paid,
weah.- • dryer hook-up, stove It

• '

0 Roorrongo
loHero of
lour ttrambled word1

-

.... ·,

------------------~·
1972 Ford Pick-up, good body,- 4

Furnished apt. • 176.00 water
pd . 2 bedroom. 131YJ Fourth
Ave. Ph. 446·4416
7pm.
New 2 bedroom •pts. In Mooon,
W. Vt. Quiet Htting, off ttreet
parking. Aannt t1art1 It t199.
Cell Unda Carton at 304-7756011 or Denite Streib 1t 6148153·41 11. Equal Housing
Opportunity.

2 bedroom•. In Middleport.
Complttefy r.modelad, new earpetlng, new 'ctbin"•· Caiii14992· 8B58.

2 bdr. fultyfumiehedadulttonty,
u111. pold. Col1 810-441-•110.

'

Commodore Vlc· 20 pertontl
color computer . 304·675·
3658.

4 rooms, unfumlthed. lnRecine.
Co11814·149-2819.

2 bdr ., 111 utiNtiM paid except
elec., fum. or unfurn., sec.
depMit required . Convenient
location. Cell 614-44&amp;-8668 or
S14·44"0778 .

Sofu 1nd chairs priced from
U98 to S991. Tablll *jSO and
up to •ns. Hlde-e·bed• •390
to t69&amp;. Redin.,. .*2215 to
U76. Lllmps UB to t12S.
Dinettes •109 and up to ••as.
Wood tlble W· l5 chairs tZII to
079~ . Pook 0100 up to 037&amp;.
Hutehes S400 end up. Bunk
bads complete w-mattr•111
029&amp; onQup to t398. Boby bodo
t110 •• 175. M"ttrt11Morbo..
1pring1 full or twin S63, firm
•73. tnd *83.,Ouaan sete *2~15.
~lng uao. 4 drawer ch ... t815,
01,1n •t:rablnett I.
OrHiera
10. &amp; 12 gun .
or electric
f'8nge *376. 81by mtttr•HI
us • e45. Bed fr~m• t2o.
e3o . &amp;: Kina frtme
Good
•election of bedroom 1uMea.
meta' cablnetl, he1dboards •30
and up to t85.

Picken• Used Fumitimt. Good
quality Uted furniture: Op.., 8 to
6 or call for appointment.
304-875-6483 or 676·1•60.

46 Space for Rent ·

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent

LAYNE 'S FURNITURE

Unfurnished ept. 4 room• &amp; bath
ceptralty located. Referances S.
Security depo.ait required. Ph.
B14·•46·04.4

2 Bedroom -pt. nice cerpeting,
w•ter paid. washer &amp; dryer
hook-up, nove, refrlg. furnished
evaUible Jan 1. 1987 Ph.
8U-446-7025.

'

....

· wo11

TMTNAT
PUULU

,~

SM1TH GMC TRUCKS
133 Pin• Street
Gallipolis, Oh 4&amp;131
814-448-21532
I
WidaSeleaton · New1187GMC f
Pick·up truc:k1. Low prlc" WfllY ,
day. Specialiling In genuine OM ¥
Parts. in 1tock and tQeclll (
:
ordlt'lng aveileble.
Herb Smith. Owner
1

Fhewoodfornle. t36. c:~erload,
5 loeds •150. Dalivered and
1t1cked. Call 814·949-2501
after 5:00p.m.

•fl•

'

'

GOOD USED APPLIANCES'
Washers, dtyl!tl't, refriglf'etort,
ranges . Skaggs Applltnces,
Upper River Rd~ beside Stone
Crool Motel. BH-448-7398.

1 BedrOOm basic rent t176.00
plua el,atrlc. Alto required a
t200.00 IICUrity depo11t . CON TACT: Jacklol\ EatatH Dept. Ph
44.$ - 3997 Equal Hous.i ng ·
Opportunity.

TrL!ckl for Sale ,

'

Valley Furnltur;, new a used,
Large tecd011 of qliality furni·
ture . 1211 Eutern Ave.,
Gallipolis.

•n.

elevision
·,...... Viewino
e

1179 Ford Pick-up tilt wheel. :
Pl. PB. no rust extr• cle~m Ph.
610-379·2896
I

54 Misc. Merchandise

2 Bedroom, 1 y.iar laasB
*250.00 ,.. month Phone
• 4B-21&amp;B.p

72

County Appliance. Inc. G~
u1ed applllf1CIII and TV •••Open SAM to IPM . Mon ttlru
Soi. 814-448-1899, 62:7 3rd.
A\HI. Gallipolis, OH .

Used Furniture: Wether •
dryer, 911 range. wood teble &amp;
2 benches, beda, dr•w. wood
wardrobe. 3 miln out
Bulaville Rd . Open 9AM to
SPM, Mon. thru Sat.
81.-446-0322 .

For rant SIMPing Room1 1nd
B11utilul n.w houtt In Pom• light house keeping rooms. Park
roy. Alto new one bedroom . Centrlll Hotal. Call 814-446-turnithld tpartm•t In Middl• 0786.
port. Call 114-441-15&amp;2 or
Rooms for rent. diiY. week.
810-992-8304.
month. Gallla Hotel. Call 6142 bedroom home on 1 acre. 448-9716. Rentaslowtst120
Clean . Oepo.tt required. Lint•· month.
ville area. Ctll
?42•2641 .
Furnished room 919 2nd, GalliUnfurnished , 3 bedroomt. polis. t1 15. Utithl• pd. Share
•100. dopook. 813 Mill S1., blth. Single male. ·Call 448Middleport . Call 614 -992 · 4416 efter'7pm.
7701 .

FOf tale or rent. 3 bedroom. 2
btth, all new lntkle end out. 300
W. Main, Pom.-oy. Op'" houae
Sundey, Dec. 28 et 12 :oo- 3:00.

Now taking applic.tions for
detlvery persons e.. lltlnt men agtrJ . Must be 18, have a ;ood
driving r~ord . Retieble vehicle
insurance. Appty in ptnon et
Domino's Piua .-

--------·1•Govemment jobs. t16.040 ·

2 Bedroom houte, 842 First
Avt., Galllpotle. No pets, refer·
ences &amp; deposit requlrad. Avail·
ebleJan . 1, 1987Calll14· 266·
1629.

Duplex 845 Second, cerpetld. 3
bed•oom, LA, DR, now kltehan
a*2815.00
bath, wtsher
dryerutllitlea
hook-up,
mo. 6plul
&amp;
tecurlty deposit Ph. 6-14-0690.

en-

E.:ptt"itnced babysitter . nHded
In my home Call 814-256-1786.
X-Ray Technician, lmmediet op·
ening for a ·full time or pa" time
ARRTRaglnry or Reglttryellg•
ble technict.n. Varied ahift.
benefits. Reply to 350 Ch1rlotte
Ave. Oak Hill, Ohio 45158.

Zlledroom, 1112 bath1, kJc.t:ed In
downtown area. Aduh1 ontv
m•eneea • deposit required
1'11. 810·448-377B

KIT 'tlr CARLYL! ®br ""rr, Wrlfht

61 Household Goods

Apartment
for Rent

3 Announcements

4

Tuesday, 08cember 23, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

The Daily Sentinel-· Pa9e-11

Ohio

One Chrlotmao'

12:40. 1Bi MOVIE: 'It Uvoo
12:10

r~OVIE:

Ptt'
1:00 (]) Jock Benny

'TIIICher'o

(!) NFL Fllm1 Prosonta (R).
(I) Dick Cavett
8 II) Wild, Wild Wost 1:30 D CD Todll'(' • Buolneoa
® Dobie Gilllo
® 1986 Equltllbla F11111lly
Ski Challenge Coverage
from Vai, CO. (R) .
2:00 (]) 700 Club

&lt;Il M•de llportsl.aok (AI

eGl (HJ
CD MOVIE: 'DMcllell'
News IRI.

,,

-

�Pomeroy~Middleport,

Page-12-The Daily Sentinel

- '
Tuesday, December 23, 1986

Ohio

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Vol. 36,

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No. 163

Mayor urges
sharing out
of tax funds

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Middleport residents are already being shortchanged by
Meigs County and will be further
disadvantaged by the proposed
sales tax, Middleport Mayor
Fred Hoffman charged today .
- Mayor Hoffman made his
allegations in a letter sent to the
Meigs County Commissioners.
Copies of the letter also went to
the heads of other villages and
township trustees In the mayor's
protest against the proposal that
!)roceeds from the sales tax be
directed· to Meigs County
.operations.
The letter reads:
: "I recently read In The Dally
Sentinel that, due to the need for
more operating funds, a sales tax
is. being levied by you on sales
within Meigs County .
"As mayor of one of the
communities In the county from
wher~ a large portion of this
Income would be derived , I would
like to express a somewhat
limited support for this proposal.
As mayor, I realize there has
been a substantial loss of revenue
not only Into the county treasury
due to the loss of revenue sharing
funds but also there has been a
Joss to all the villages and
(owns hips within the county.
Uttle response heard
'
"I realize that you as well as
other political subdivisions In the
county have made cuts during
the past s~veral years in order to
provide as many n~cessary services to county residents as Is
- possible with the funds available.
· "I have heard little response as
yN either for or against the sales
tax. I personally am not against
this tax as I do not feel It would
adversely affect businesses
within the county. As you pointed
out, most surrounding counties ·
already have this additional
sales tax.
, . "What I do stronl(lyoobj;&gt;ct to is
the Ignoring of the financial
~eeds of the villages and town·
ships within Meigs County which
have also lost substantial funds
with th~ loss of r~venue sharing.
You state thP county Is facing a
deflclt of $35l,OOJ and these funds
would be used to offset I his deficit
plus make improvement s at the
court house. When our 1987
budget was submitted In July,
the Village of Middleport was
showing a dPflclt budget of over
$70.00J which we have to somPhow work out for 1987. I'm sure
·most of the other villages and
townships within the county have

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•

enttne

. Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Wednesday, December 24. 1986

: Copyrighted 1986

•

similar problems.
Government only concern
"Since the Imposition of this
sales tax is something which only
the county commissioners have
the authority to do, It appears to
me to be a shame that the only
thing you appear to be concerned
with Is the county government
operation. A vast majority olthe
Income from this sales tax will be
derived from sales within the
various municipalities and It
wouldseemonlyfalrto 'm ethata
portion of this new tax should be
allocated to the villages and
townships within the county· to
partially offset some of their
financial losses.
"II the county cannot legally
allocate these sales tax funds
directly to subdivisions, I would
suggest that each subdivision be
gjven a substantial portion of the
lriside millage which Is now used
lor county operations. I'm sure
that a method could be devised If
you really wanted to see that
various subdivisions received a
financial benefit either directly
or Indirectly from the new sales
tax.
Middleport suffers
"I would like to point out that
3.4 mills of the property tax
which comes from the Village of
Middleport gors for county operallons while only 1. 7 mills of this
same property tax Is allocated
for the operation of the village. It
would appear that the residents
of Middleport are paying approxlmately twice as much ol the
Inside millage for county opera!Ions as they are for their own
community's operation.
"I would also like to point out
that two of the highest traveled
county roads In Meigs County
enter Middleport from Hobson
and over Middleport Hill. Both of
thes~ roads are In dire need of
resurfacing. It would appear to
me that with a county highway
budget ol over a million dollars
that surely asmall percentage of
this could be allocated ·to take
care of two of the most traveled
roads In the county. The resldents of Middleport pay probably
more gasoline tax than any other
community In the county and
certainly ·get very lilt le If any
assistance from the county highway department. Money has
been spent on halfway patching
these roads which would have
gone toward properly resurlaclng them so they could last .
(Continued on Page· 21)

Occasional rain tonight,
wilh a low near 35. Cloudy .
Christmas Day, with a chance
of rain and highs In the low 408. ·
The probability of preclplta·
lion Is 90 percent tonlghi and
50 percent Thursday.

'•·

\

2 Sections, 24 Pages

25 Centa

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper • •.

Military ··
figures

hold key to deal

WASHINGTON 1UP! I
Three career military officers.
apparently hold many answers in·
the Iran arms-Contra aid scan:'
dal, but their steely silence In,! he.
]now-ended first phase of the
Investigation has clearly left
many questions.
Retired Air Force Maj. Gen.
Richard Secord kept that silence.
Tuesday in his final bout with:
Congress In Round 1. joining
Navy Vice Adm. John Poindexter and Marine Lt.. Col. Oliver
North In refusing to talk about
w~al they know .
· Secord. an enigmatic figure
ll~ked both to secret U.S. arms
sales to Iran and to the subsequent diversion of profits to the
Nicaraguan Contra rebels, thus
brought this month's House Intelligence Committee work to a
sputtering close.
CHRISTMAS CHEER - Members of the Big
and Rlchy Dill, and front, Katheryn Metzger,
The House panel, together with
Bend C.B.- Club and Its AuxUiary spread some Connie Rankin, Roberta Dill, Etta Will, Helen
it~ Senate counterpa rt and the
Christmas cheer Monday. They prepared and
Johnson, and Tony Jones, second row, Linda
House Foreign Affairs Commitdelivered 20 food baskels to needy families, gilts
Foster, Howard .Jeffers, Linda Jell, Belly Dill,
tee, now will turn over findings
to about 40 children, and fruit trays to 13 shullns
and Simon ,Johnson, and back, Harold Will and
from the preliminary probes to
and older members. Working on the project, left John Metz~er. Assbling but not pictured wert•
select panels In each chamber ·
to right, were children Ginger Darst, Tanya Dill
~!arlene Wllson and Gall Duckett.
that will investigate the scandal .
completely after the 100th Congr~ss .convenes Jan. 6.
An Independent criminal investigation by a sp;&gt;cial prosecutor ·
COLUMBUS (UPII - The bi-ll h
.d- would deny consuThe action sealed the 116th appointed last week, Lawrence
ohlo Genera 1 Assem bi y a Iter me e sat
d
kl
1
almost a
f
h 'd
rsan wor ngpeop eaccess sessionoftheGeneralAssembly. Walsh, also is under way. But :
0
questions remain.
among Y1ear tpus -an -pull to reasonable recovery in negli- which officially ends today.
var ous 1n erest groups, gence lawsuits
- At issue Is the possibly crlml,
Is back to "square one" ori civil
.
·
But Snyder and Riffe both nal diversion of the Iran arms
justice and Insurance reform
Majonty Republicans support- vowed to return next year and
legislation
lng the controversial bill failed to push through a similar package sale profits for use by theContras
The stat~ Senate giving wh· t round up the 20 votes required to of reforms to make commercial at a time when U.S. military aid
organized labor a~d consum:r . overnde the veto.
liability insurance available at a to the rebels was Illegal , and
groups described as a Christmas
Two Democratic senators who reasonable cost to businesses there are questions about private
had voted Jor the bill Nov . 21 and local govt"rnments. Celeste American efforts 10 supply the .
present to the people of Ohio
sustained G&amp;v. Richard F. ce: changed their minds and voled ~.a id the bill would have placed Contras and the goal of President ·
reste's veto of the 1986 version of with the governor. They were
far too onerous a burden on the Reagan's secret dealings with
Ira n.
the packag!' TueSday.
Democratic Sens. Oliver Ocasek, backs of thecons_umers." He said
The New York Times reported
Celeste termed the action D-Northfleld, and Eugene Bran- he vetoed the bzll because of a
today
that CIA Director William
"gratifying." But business stool, D-Utica.
.
section, inserted In confez·cnce
Casey
wrote a memo describing
groups. backed by the bill' s
Debate on the. override at· committee. llmlling lawsuits
the
arms
sales as a clear swap for
original sponsor, Sen. H. Cooper · tempt, which brought senat?rs against manufactuzws fordefechostages and detailing hOW' the
Snyder, R-Hillsboro, and House back from Christmas vacatton tlve products.
president would d ~fcnd the deal
trips as far away as Florida and
The governor downplayed talk
Speaker vernal G. Riffe Jr
If
discovered.
D-New Boston, a major for~ California, lasted only 40 of his political clout, despite the
·
Since
the contacts were disbehind the package vowed to minutes.
speculation that he talked Branclosed
In
November, Reagan has ,
start over tn the next legislative
Sixtet&gt;n Republlcans ,held firm stool and Ocasek into sidi~ gw ith
said
repeatedly
he did not swa p
session, whicch begins In 12 days
In their support of the legislation, hzm . He also tned to mzmm1ze
for
hostages
and has
arms
In its final act of the 1985-sti which was crafted during more the widening rift between himdescribed the secret sales to Iran
session, the Senate voted 19·12 to than eight months of hearings. s~lf .and Riff!', who. orchestrated
as
a diplomatic initiative to
uphold the governor's veto of I he But they could attract only three the msurance por11on of the bill
contact
"moderates" in the IsDemocrats to override.
and supponed an override.
lamic government.

Lawmakers uphold Celeste's veto

Ruling issued in fatal fire

HAPPY HOLIDAYS FRoM YOUR TEN THOUSAND FRIENDS AT BANK ONE.
\

•
•

•

-·BANKEON£.
1lm thoUS&lt;Jnd fl"Opl• who can~.

(

.·

GALLIPOLIS - An elderly
Gallla County woman died of
smoke Inhalation and severe
thermal burns, an autopsy completed by the Franklin Countv
coroner's office has revealed . ·
Dr. Edward;]_ Berklch, assist·
ant Gallla County coroner. said
the burns came from the !Ire that
swept through a porllon ofNoldle
E. Curley's double-wide mobile
home on Kemper· Hollo.w Road
S)Jnday !l!Ornlng.
· Mrs. Curley, 81, Rt. 4, Gallipolis. was found some distance
outside ol her home after the
Vinton Volunteer Fire Department arrived to extinguish the
fire. Her body was sent to
Columbus for examination later
in the day.
Berklch noted that " nothing
else" astothecauseofdeathwas

.

Indicated In the coroner's report.
Mrs. Curley's son, William 0 .
Curley, 64. who shared the
mobile home with her but was
reportedly not hOme at the timP
of the fire. was charged Monday
with aggravated arson 'following
a preliminary investigation by
the Gallla County Sheriffs Department and the · state !Ire
marshal's office.
He was arraigned Tuesday In
Gallipolis Ml!niclpal Court and
placed ·on $25,000 bond. He
remains In the Gallla County Jail
today . The court has scheduled a
preliminary hearlhg In his case_.
for Dec. 31.
'TIS THE
and
go
·
Aggravated arson Is a felony ol
Pomeroy
Salvation
Army
church
members
who
were
Involved
the !lrst degree, accordln~ to a
Tuesday with their annuallood and toy rtveaway. Dora Wining,
~herlff's spokesman. who deabove, outpost sergeant, reports that over 200 food bags and toys
clined comment on a possible
lor over 200 children were distributed yesterday,
motive for the alleged arson.

\

DIFFERENT AND BEAUTIFUL - Florence Barrett, of New
Uma Road, Rutland, adds one more candy Cline to the
cotton-covered ChrlstmllS tree which sits In the ~:orner ol ·her sun '
porch. Mrs. Barrett got the Idea from her daughter-In-law, Jane, of ::,
RosevUie, whose own grandmother, Mrs; Carl Hartley did this for
years. Mrs. Barrett's tree, a sassafra.,, was brought f~om the hill
behind her home and II look several days to wrap lhe bare tree
·.
• from top to bottom with strlps__ol100 percent cotton.

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