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                  <text>Page-0-8 - The Sunday Times-Sentinel

Week's
-stock
•
pnces
retreat
By ELLEN·FRE1LJCH
UP! Business Wrltpr
NEW YORK (UPI) - Most
stock prices rt&gt;treated last week
in four sessions .oi trading dominated by tax-Jaw seiling and
other _end-of-quarter portfolio
adjustments.
The quietest session of the year
concluded the week's trading as
investors stretched the Thursday
Christmas holiday lniO a fourday weekend.
-Blue chip issues fared a little
better than the market as a whole
- the Dow Jones industrial
average edged up 1.55 point s to
1930.40.
Analysts said year-end tax law

30 lr idliSl l rd l•,

-December 26, 1986
30 Industrials
,------!"----.1-_ _.

'1980 - r - - - - - 1

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i'J Y S E
Volum e Prof 1IP

Up Down Unch.
·1790 lls73 lls29l _
Issues Traded: 1892
---------1 ndex--.;,____ _
141.14Up0.14
Composite Volume
. 62,,148,625 .

I

I

S.&amp;P . Composi!Ps

•

December

COLUMBUS (UP!) -Students
at four Columbus high schools
who aren ' t· planning to go on to
college are· getting some -assist,. .
ance in how to obtain jobs.
That help comes from a Ieder·
ally funded job-training program
that local officials hope can help
. as many as 160 students gain job
counseling an d placement
assistance.

High .... :..... 1939.12
Low ........... 1919.71
1 Close
.......... 1930.40
Up............... 3.52

The Jobs for Columbus Gradu·
ates Is a- pilot program in thP
schools and is sponsdred by The

~e

PHOTOGRAAN

SPRING VALLEY PlAZA
GAlliPOliS

We will be clo~ed
Christmas Day
and will reopen
Fri., Jan. 2 at 10 a.m.'

WOOSTER. Ohio (UPI) -The
highly popu lar " Vagabond
King" highlights the 1987
summer season for thC' Onto
Light Opera .
The "Vagabond ,King" premiered in New York in 192~i Five
years later it was turned into a
film starring Dennis King and
Jeanette MacDonald. Generations have been charmed with Its
songs of "Only a Rose, " "Love
for Sale" and "Song of the
Vagabonds."
This Is one of .the works that
will be performed at Freedlander Theatre on the College of
Wooster campus during the season that opens Ju ne 10 and runs
through Aug. 9.
"Operetta lives," says OLO
artistic director James Stuart ,
known to OLO fans for his many
roles In the Gilbert and Sullivan
offerings.
Revivals of works of the great
light opera masters are drawing
fans to theaters.

NEW HOURS:
Tues. thru Sat. 10·5

Thurlllay 'tit I p.m.
CLOSED MONDAYS

·

Mu_sic by Billy Lee _
CHAMPAGNE

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~t

Have Cable Service's?
Have A VCR?
'

.

Posey acknowledges supplying
· By NEIL ROLAND
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A tons of food, clothing and medi·
federal grand jury Is Investigat- cine to the Contras but says he
Ing whether Robert Owen, Lt. never had anything to do with
CoL Oliver North's alleged mid· weapons shipments.
dieman with the Nicaraguan
Contras, helped plan an illegal
The shipment that left March 6,
shipment of arms to the rebels In 1985. Included rifles, mortal's and
19ll5, a U.S. official says. -.,
ammunition and · was one· of
But the probe by the Miami many weapons transfers to the
grand jury, which convened hi Contras supervised by North, the
November, has bogged down fired National Security Council
while the Justice Department aide, according to tht&gt; witnesses.
and spt&gt;eial prost&gt;eutor Lawrence
The Miami investigation. one
Walsh dt&gt;elde whether Walsh of several federal Inquiries into
sliould take over the case, said U.S. aid to the Contras,Js the first
the official, who asked not to be to reach the grand jury stage:
Identified.
The U.S. attorney's office in
The official said Sunday that Miami. which has been overseemore than ro·witnesses have told Ing the probe. expt&gt;ets to find out
the FBI that Owen, a former in the next lew weeks whether Its
Republic~n Senate al&lt;!e. particicase will be Included in the
pated In meetings in Miami in special prosecutor's Inquiry, the
February 1985, when plans were U.S. official said.
made to ship six tons of weapons
The grand jury 's proceedings
from Florida to rebels based In h·ave been curbed partly because
Costa Rica .
of quespons In the Justice De·
Government documents show partment about whether Owen's
that these witnesses, some of apparent link to North places the
whom have testified before the Investigation under the special
grand jury about their role ill the prosecutor's jurisdiction. the ofshipment. also placed Tom Po-- ficial said .
sey of Decatur, Ala., at the
Walsh was appointed by a
planning sessions, the official three:judge panel Dec. 19 to
said.
Investigate the diversion of proPosey heads Civilian Materiel ceeds from I ran arms sales
Assistance, a non-profit, non- · through Swiss banks to the
government group that supplies Contras - a scheme which
non-lethal aid to the Contras. · Attorney General Edwin Mt&gt;esr

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Anti-te~orist
. By PAT O'BRIEN
WASHINGTON (UPil - Two
political action committees that
may have rt&gt;eelved profits from
the Iran arms deal also collected
thousands of dollars from private
donors, but nobody wants to talk
about it - if they rt&gt;member at
aiL
A random sampllnR of those
who donated to the PACs In 1985
and 1986 drew some host lie
responses and foggy memories to
&lt;questions about their donations.
Severalofthelargestdonorsto
t the American Conservative
'! Trust and the Anti-Ter rorism

.

Menu
Bclr
Nell \'o rk Strip Sirloin
lflit/; Mu shroo111 Cap

"' Tail
Broiled Lnlmer
Twic. l!aked Po(ato
Broccoli Polmtaife

-

..
.-

Gallitmli~

American Committee said they
could not . remember what they
gave.
"Did I send them money?"
asked Frank Darlington of Lt&gt;etsdaie, Pa. "I don't know . They
asked me to. I'm all alone. I'm
sick."
•
Federal Election Commission
reports say Darlington gave
$5,000 to ATAC and$2,000 to ACT
this year, b!lt when contacted by
phone, h_e seemed to Interpret the
qut&gt;stlons about contributions as
a solicitation lor more money .
"I can't give any more; I gave
too much," said Darlington, 95.

effect all over the country,"
By United Pre&lt;s International
Martin said. " I have seen fog and
Dense fog that delayed air
traffic across the nat !on on one of delays In 1986 but so far this year
the busiest trav el days of the I have not seen fog so thick as It
was early today or as many
year clung to the South for a
second day today, reducing the aircraft bAcked up and waiting. "
Martin said it was expected the
visibility to zero in Atlanta and
fog would burn off early today,
Birmingham, Ala.
Hartsfield International Air- and predicted airlines would
port In Atlanta, a hub for flights catch up with the delays by then.
"I feel like I was born and
nationwide, was shut down by the
In a plane," Jim Smalraised
fog for 2% hours Sunday, delaying nearly 2,000 flights to and lwOod of Norton, Va., said
from the airport during the day, Sunday . ''I've been sitting in a
some for up to five hours, said plane lor seven hours from
David Martin , airport operations Knoxville, Tenn., to Atlanta ....
And Lord knO\vs where my
supervisor.
luggage
Is."
Federal Aviation AdmlnistraThe National Weather Service
t ion spokesman Jack Barker said
the backed-up air traffic in posted travt&gt;lers advisories early
Atlanta triggered delays acrosss today 'tor log for north Georgia,
the country Sunday, the end of Alabama, the Florida panhandle
the Christmas holiday weekend and northwt&gt;st Arkansas.
Visibility was one-quarter mile
and one ol the busiest travel days
·
In
much of the warning area
of the year.
"Anytime you have weather early today, the NWS said, and it
sloWing. airline flights In lhe was down to zero In Atlanta and
major hubs ... it will cause an Birmingham, Ala.

R(J /If aud B11t1 er

Sherbet aud Cookie
Sixreeu Ni11af} -FiJ ·e

STORETOHOURS
9:30
5:00
MON. THRU SAT.

· Pt. PlcnMnl

J·

EIII 8rf8Icl s
'

,J

,.

said was englneerl!d by North.
North tapped Owen, 32, to
serve as his liaison to the Contras
and the private network supplyIng them with military aid as a
way of skirting congressional
restrictions on official participation. according to administration
officials, American mercenaries
fighting. with the rebels and
Contra sources.
Owen relayed North's Instructions to the field, delivered pay to
the mercenaries, and briefed
North on the rebels ' weapons
needs between October 1984 and'
October 1986, the sources said.

'

Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass .,
cited a witness's account in
October that Owen was at a Costa
Rica rebel camp when , th~
weap6ns arrived In March 1985 -·
from Floriqa's Fort Laudt&gt;rdaleHollywood airport through Tlopango Air Base in El Salvador.
Owen invoked his Fifth Amendment rights and refused to testify
before a Sen~te committee earlier this month and has repeatedly declined reporters • requests
for comment.
The grand jury, which has not
met since mid-December and is
not expected to reconvene until
late January, Is examining Owen's and Posey's activities for
possible violations of at least two
federal laws, the official sai d.

)I

"I'm sick with two Incurable
diseases and I need the money for
myself."
Tht&gt; two PACs art&gt; among
several groups managed by Carl
Russell Channell, whose or.gani·
zatlons may have received money dlvt&gt;rted from the profits of
U.S. arms sales to Iran .
A story published In the' Lowell
(MijSs.I Sun newspaper two
weeks ago said Channell's National Endowment for the Preservation ol Liberty received $5
million that was part of the arms
sales profits.
The new s story prompted
members of Congress to call lor

.

Farmers
confront
gloomy
future

REACH FOR CONTROL - An unidentified Peebles player
reaches upward to block a shot by Southern's Dave McMillan (40)
during Saturday's matchup of Peebles and the Tornadoes at the
Convocation Center In Athens. Southern won, 99-65. Coverage of
the game appears on Page 4.

P ACs collect from private donors

:Heavy fog disrupts
Christmas travel

St~lad

'

1 Section, 8 Pages
25 Cents
A Multimedia Inc . Newspaper :

the mine, some 100 feet deep, wasn't completely
filled when mining stopped. About $75,000 is
needed for that site, said Brockmeyer.
Rep. Ralph Regula . R-Ohlo, of Navarre, said
the federal program was a good one but was notworking properly because "the administration's
been dragging its feet getting the money out."
Regula said Congress would look Into the
reclamation funding next year.
The federal government does not recommend
spending as much as Congress thinks Is
necessary , said Regula, who also criticized the
state program as being too slow .
"I can't. figure out who's at fault," he said .

Federal grand jury probing
alleged illegal arms shipment

/

For Re;oroatio"'' 446-0090, ht. 306
Din111r Stnict 6 p.M. to Midnight
lal !t"i&lt;t to I UO Ut.

Research Council of the National i\cademy of
abandoned coal mine areas. It is funded by $3.3
Sciences shows Pennsylvania accounts lor more ' billion in taxes on U.S. coal mined between 1977
than one third of the nation's problem areas,
and 1992.
followed by' Kentucky, West Virginia and Ohio.
One top priority mine hazard in Ohio~xlsts near
In all, there are several million acres of
the football field of Rosecrans High School In
abandoned coal mine land in the United States,
. Zanesville. There. a )l lgh wall of crumbling clay
some of It mined and abandoned in the 19th
left by miners is considered a hazard to stud ents
century.
who clinib on It and play nearby.
Mining companies have left behind tht&gt; dangers
It-.w lll take a minimum of of about $300,000 to
of uncontrolled fires, pollution of nearby streams
reclaim the land,' says Frank Brockmeyer, an
and unprotected opt&gt;nlngs to deep shafts.
environq~ental scientist with the Ohio Depart To protect the public, Congress in 1977 passed
ment of Natural Resources.
the Surface Mine Control Act. which established a
A turn -of-the century mine in Palmyra Is also on
15-year program to reclaim or rehabilitate
the Ohio priority list. The main elevator shaft to

MEMBERS &amp; GUESTS

1987

d Jnd n.~-: pll'Jiiur('. P:my Fa vms.

enttrte
l

Winter Coats, Jackets &amp; Snow Suits

For )'our rn rcrtu inmenr and

•

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio, Mon~ay. December 29, 1986

By United Press International
Ohio ranks among the leading states In having
abandoned coal mine shafts, many of which are
hazardous and need to be reclaimed, but money
lor reclamation work is scarce.
More than 300 mines in Ohio are part of a
national Inventory of hazardous areas.'Reclamation work Is complete on about 60 of the most
dangerous.
Though a minimum of $113 million Is needed to
reclaim the remalniJlg sites, the state has
received only $8.5 million from the federal
government in t&gt;ach of the last two years.
A report recently completed by the National

WED., DE(. 31
9 PM TO 1 AM

.

GEOR GE Hiii.L

1-39-19-40-37-2

Cloudy tonight and Tu•esd11!j
with ll chance of snow.
tonight will lw near 25
highs Tuesday near 311.
probability ol precipitation
30 percent tonight and
percent Tuesday.

Ohio's UnuSed mines rate high·on priority list

ALE
MEN'S, BOYS', WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S

•

- Lotto

at y

Vol.36, No.166
Copyrighted 1986

ELBERF.ELDS

~

Daily Numher
840

•

•.tee

SNACkS PARTY FAVORS

Ohio Lottery

~·~~., -Page 4

FREE
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L------,....------------------..J.L-----------'

Company
schedules
operetta

Redskins,
Jets advance
in playoffs

Pl'ivate Industry Council of Columbus and Franklln County Inc,
The council's ·executive dlrec·'
tor says the re has always beet\ a
need for such a program wlth the
high rate of teenage
unemployment.
"There are many high school
·grads who don't Intend to go tq
college, but. _hav!) a net&gt;d for
acquiring. job-market · skills," .
says Wiley Clodfelder. "Many
don't know how you go about
getting a job, how to set up
•·
appointments."

AMERICAN -LEGION POST 27

· 246.92 Up 0.17

seiling
pressurt&gt;d
prices
term capital
gains
lose. Longtheir
preferential treatment under the
DOW JONES AVERAGE - The Dow Jones up 3.52, stock market analysis reported. (UPI)
new tax law.
average
of 30 Industrials closed Friday at 1930..!11,
The market retreated Monday
and Tuesday and advanced Wed·
nesday and Friday .
to 22 ';i .
year-earlier period.
,
with 853,819,002 a week earlier
The only popular group of
Merck jumped 12 % to 129 amid
UAL fell 4\i, to 54%. It said late and .129,828,820 during the same
stocks were D) akers of pharma- favorabl e publicity about its new Tuesday It would buy the Hi! ton week a year ago.
ce utical s. Publicit y abou t drug. The sharp rise stimulated
International hotel group from
Composite volume · touiled
Merck 's new an ti-cholesterol interest in other makers of Transworld for $980 million in 607,776,927 shares, compared
drug; which some analysts said pharm ace uticals . Squibb · cash and securltles.
with 1,007,605,412 a week earlier.
they believe will be av ailable in jumped 434 to 118\;. and Bristol·
Prices were lower In moderate
Lucky Stores fell 3% to 27. The
1987, stimulated interes t in the Myers climbed 3)'2 to 85.
company said it had accepted
group, and in Merck espec ially.
Alt er OPEC reached an agree14.4 million shares in Its buyback Exchange.
trading on the Amerlean Stock'
On the tradin g floor. AT&amp;T was ment to curb oil producfion to offer, part of a restructuring
The Ameplcan Stock Exchange
the most active NYSE-Iisted raise prices to $18 a barrel, des igned to deter an unfriendly
. ln~ex fell 1.36 to 264.10. Losers
issue, rising Y. to 25 '\i, . II fe lll 1\, storks of oil companies firmed.
takeover bid by investor Asher outpaced gainers 415-297 among
points a week earlier when it sa id Exxon rose '4 to 73 % after
Edelman.
the 918 issues traded. Volume
it plans to lay off about 27.400 jumping 1% the week before;
Overall, losers outpaced gain- was 45,861,060 shares. comp11red
employees as part of a corporate Phillips Pe troleum rose %to 11 % ers 1;233-676 among a total or with 64,103,920 last week and
reorganization.
and Texaco added V. to 35 Y,..
2.199 Issues traded on the New 33,502,735 during the same week
Commonwealth Edison fol Sears slipped % to 40%. K mart
a year ago.
York Stock Exchange.
lowed, falling J to ~4 .
fell 2';i to 44 and Federated
Wickes led the Amex actives.
The Dow utility index fell 2.59
Navistar was third. un cha nged Department Stores fell3 % to85Y,
to 209.47. The Dow transportation unchanged at 3%. Wang Laboraat 4%.
ami d persistent concern about
tories class B followed, slipping
average slid 16.21 to 819.65.
Among other blue chips, Amer · dis appointing Chris tmas sales.
Standard &amp; Poor's 500-stock % to 121/g . Falcon Cablevlsion
lean Express eased % to 58%,
Internal ion a I Technology fell
index fell 2.81 to ,246.92; the New was third, unchanged at 19Y, .
USX slipped V.. to 21\1 . IBM fell 6!1, to l6 ';i . A week ago Friday,
York Stock Exchange composite
3V,. to 122. General Motors rose% the company said earnings for Its
index dropped 1.51 to 141.14.
to 67\1, and Union Carbide rose V, fiscal third quarter will be below
Big Board volume totaled
the 16 cen ts a share earned in the
490,987,697 shares, 'c ompared

A trade publication recently
ran a survey that said " never
before has there been such an
abundance of reviva ls of Victor
Herbert , Sigmund Romberg and
Rudolf Friml. In addition to
Strauss, Lehar. Ka lman and
.Offenbach."
"We're deligh ted that the rest
of the country has begun to agree
with us that it s obituary wa s
premature," said Stuart.
Since 1979. OLO produ ctions
have played to a near ly sold -out
house during it s nine-week season. More than 24,000 patrons
have purchased tickets for the
program that includes some
popular as well as so mP lilt!P·
known operettas.
"People have lea rned to trust
us," said Stuart. "They know
they'll leave the theat er smiling,
whether or not the show has a
pre-sold name."
America 's foremost operatta
authority, Richard Traubner,
will return again this yea r to
direct and translate a new
production of Jacques Offenbach 's "Biuebeard," with a score
that Traubner says Is " most
delectable."
The Viennese school will be
represented by the--qscade of
Johann Strauss waltzes In
"Wiener Biut." Carl Mlllocker's
1882 !llasterplece "The Beggar
· Students," performed much In
Europe, makes a rare appear·
ance in the United States.
Offering ol Gilbert and Sulli·
van, the basis of theOLO , Include
"H.M.S. Pinafore, " the comic .
" Iolanthe." and " Utopia Ltd."

Job-seeking grads get help

Duw ,j,,,,, .. , Av•·I.HJP

Jones Average .

1920
1900
1880

D~e!llber 28, 1986

-Pomeroy- Middleport- Gallipolis. Ohio-Point Pleasant, W.Va.

an investigation of Channell and
at least seven organizations he
mana!(es. Recently published
rt&gt;ports also say the FBI Is
probing Cha nn ell's activit ies.
ACT and ATAC , as well as the
endowment. spent millions of
dollars on advert ising campaigns aimed at persuading
Congress to fund Nicaraguan
rebels and to target co ngres·
slona i candidates opposed to
aiding I he rebels, known as
Contras.
Robert Driscoll. of Chappaqua,
N.Y. , also said he couldn't
remember the $15.000 donations
he and his wife. Jane. made to

both PACs. Driscoll said at first
he "was not sure" if he had given
anything.
·
Later, Driscoll said he wrote
checks to the PACs but couldn't
remember the amount s. FEC
records show the Drlscolls gave
the maximum amount allowedS5,000 to ACT and $10,000 to
ATAC.
.
Channell reportedly was in
close touch with Lt. CoL Oliver
North, !he National Security
Council aide fired from hi s post
Nov . 25 after Attorney General
Edwin Meese finger ed him as the
architect of the clandestine
profits-diversion scheme.

By United Press International
Economic conditions 'continue'
to deteriorate lor Ohio farmers,
many of whom are struggling
with huge debts, forcing them
into liquidation and , in som~
cases, prompting thoughts of
suicide. "You know you are In trouble
when you know your family
would be better off without you,"
says Jim Troxel of Ashland
County who lost 1,316 acres of
land and his dairy farming
career two years ago after filing
for bankruptcy.
Troxel. 47, sold his 650 cows
last December to pay off part of a
$1.3 million debt. Last weekend
his son. Terry, signed papers to
purchase 240 acres of the farm.
Creditors took the rest.
"We were ail paper millio·
nalres," says Troxel. "Who
cared about owing a million when
the farm was worth $3 million?"
He says at the time when he
flied lor Chapter 11 , farmer ~ 60
miles away confided In him about
their thoughts of suicide alter
losing t helt land. He says he
harbored the same thoughts.
Because of a variety ol problems plaguing agriculture, 30
percent of Ohio farmers wit~
gross sales of more than $40,000
had debt-to-asset ratios larg~r
than 40 percent In 1985 and can
expect serious financial troubles
ahead, says the the Ohio Department of Agriculture.
A spokesman for the ODA says
8 to 12 percrnt of Ohio's 100,000
farmers are facing voluntary or
forced liquidation. The number
cou id get as high as 20 percent If
agriculture conditions remain
unchanged.
For farmer s who have held·
onto their land , the outlook Is still
grim. U.S. agricultural exports
have fallen as a strong U.S.
dollar made it more difficult to
sell agricultural produc.ts
overseas.
Foreign products are st ill
flooding the market. putting
downwa rd pressure on U.S. prices for wheat, grains and soybeans - some of Ohio's prime
agricultural products .
David Jordan , a Plckaway
County farmer , bought his first
larm In 1972 - 60 acres for
$32.000. Three vears la ter he
bought an 87-acre farm worth
$!'&gt;8,000. By 1978. he was rrnt ing
1.200 acres for soybean and corn.
Early In hi s career, Jordan
says, the creditors wr rc his
partners and the federal Production Credit Association was more
than willing to lend him_monry.
"I was going full force with the
PCA," he says. "I never WC'nt out
with less than I wanted to
borrow ."
But In 1980, Jordan's farm was
hit by a hailstorm that set off
chain' r'enctlon of disaster. still
felt by farmers In that area of the
state today .
"I knew I was done for." says
Jordan. "You just can't weather
that kind of storm. " It goi every
acre I had."
The crops and buildings were
gone and animals were running
lose. Two days later. a man from
the.PCA saw thedamageand toi!l
Jordan there would be no more
loans . Jordan had no Insurance.

a

CLOSED IN - A Jumbo jet broke through the
heavy fog to land a1 Rlll'tlfteld lnlemallonal
"lrport Sunday wblle another waited liS tum to
take off as more thiUIIOO Dl1hl1 were delayed with
vltlually no landlnp between 1:_30 and 9 a.m.

•

Traffic at the facility backed up delayln1 flights
all over the country on one of the busiest travel
days of the year, causing havoc ·with Olghl
schedules. (UPI)

I

J

�Monday, December 29, 1986

Commenta

Page- 2-The Daily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio
Monday, December 29, 19~~
r,

The' Daily Sentinel
Ul Court Slreel
Pomeroy, Ohio
'._ DEVOTED TO THE INTERF.'l'l'S. OF THE MEIGS-MASON /\IlEA

~~

Bm~ ~._-.-,........,=·­
~v

ROBERT L. WINGETT
·
Publisher
· PAT WHITEHEAD
~!slant Publisher/Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, .JR.
News Editor
A MEMBER of The United Press International, Inland Dally 'Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
~

;

.;

..

Housing the elderly______Ro_be_rt_~_al_te_rs
WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. (NEA)
-Janet K. Is a widow In her 70s
who lives alone in a large house
that once served as home to her
family of two adults and three
children.
·
·
Malnte~ance, and other costs
are so hi h that she often thinks
of movtn-1 Into an apartment but she c . nnot face moving away
from her home of almost hall a
century.
Anne B. Is a divorced mother In
her 30s who must work to support
herself and her two young
children. She has long se.a rched
In vain for a moderately priced

:m

apartment and for reliable as·
slstance In caring for her
children . .
There Is a solution to those
hypothetical but realistic problems. It's called "Match-Up
Home Sha\lng," and It's de·
signed to bring together elderly
people and others with compatible houSing requirements.
·
. In the case above. the divorced
mother and her children move
Into the vacant rooms of the
widow's house and pay modest
rent for their new housing. The
widow watches the children
when the yo11ng mother Is at

work. On weekends Anne B. does
the grocery shopping for the frail
Janet K
That's one housing option for
the elderly being promoted her~
In Westchester County and in 17
other counties In New York under
a project funded by the U.S.
Department of Health and Hu·
man Servl,ces.
·
Jointly ,sponsored by Cornell
University and the New York
State Office for the Aging, the
program Is designed to provide
the elderly and their families
with Information about innova·
live housing opportunities.

LE'ITERS OF OPINION are welcome. They rllwld be less than
words
long. AJIIeuers are subject toed ltlng and llllst beslgne:l with name, address and
telephone number. No WlsignEd IPtlers wUJ be published. Letters should be In
100&lt;1 taste, addressing Issues, not personalities.

'

~ashington Window

·The world changed,
not Barry Goldwater

t t t ti

By ELIOT BRENNER
: WASHINGTON I UP!) - Barry Goldwater is gone from Capitol Hill
nl)l\'. but the conservative Arizona Republican left an enduring mark
on. the Senate and the country.
: Goldwater hasn't changed much since he ran for president ia 1964
a~d wa s soundly trounced by Lyndon .Johnson because of his
conservatism. It was the country that came around toward
Goldwater, not vice versa .
· The plain-spoken chairma n of the Senate Armed Services
Committee Is packing up for his move back to Phoenix where he plans
to) ':Sit up on my hill and shoot the jackrabbits."
· Born when Arizona was a territory, Coldwater flew transports in
~orld War II, spent 37 years in military reserve units and :lJ years in
t~e Senate. He has flown virtually every plane in the U.S. arsenal , and
reorganized the Pentagon, his proudest legislative achievement. He
IS. a naturalist, photographer. author, friend of Indians and a ·
no-nonsense philosopher.

.1)
'

~-

Another form of home sharing
known as "Shared Living Resl·
dence" places three to 25 people
tn the same house, although five
to -e ight residents is most com·
mon In such arrangements. Bed·
rooms have one or two occupants
each while kitchens, living rooms
and other common areas are
shared by al].
· ·Jn both types of home sharing,
rent, utility costs, real estate
taxes, maintenance and other
expenses are shared by all
occupants. In · some Instances,
food costs as well as food
preparation and shopping also
are shared.
"For most older people, this
means reduced housing costs,"
says Patricia Pollak, a member
of the Cornell faculty who Is In
charge of the project. "For
many, It means they can remain
lndepertdent In the community"
rather than be Institutionalized.
A third alternative Involves
construction of an "accessory
apartment," a small, separate
housing unit Inside a larger
house. Usually an elderly ho·
meowner ren Is this out.
A fourth variation Is the "Elder
Cottage Housing Opportunities,"
Independent, removable struc·
tures that can be erected adja·
cent to an existing house .
In both of those cases, elderly
homeowners can have the bene!·
Its of enhanced security and
companionship without relln·
qulshing their privacy and
Independence.
Indeed, all of the options
reduce the loneliness and Isolation that so frequently confront :
the elderly and provide addl· ·
tiona! rev.enue for senior citizens :
who often are house-rich but
cash-poor.
'·

Ohio weather
South Central Ohio
Cloudy tonight a nd Tuesday
with a chance of snow. Lows
. tonight will be near 2!\ and hi ghs
Tuesday near 35.
The outlook for Thursday is for
a chance of ra in or snow and a
high between 3.'&gt; and 40.
The probability of precipita·
.lion is 30 percent tonight and 40
percent Tu esday.
Winds will be light and varia·
ble tonight .
Oltlo Extended Forecast
Wednesday through Friday
Fair Wednesday with a chance
of rain or snow Thursday and
Friday. Highs will range be·
tween 3&gt; a nd 40. Lows will ra nge
between 25 and 30.

POWELL'S

CASH

dissuade the UAE from standing the UAE gave Baghdad $1.5
up to !:ran over the unprovoked billion a year in ald. The amount
attack ·on .the oil facility, there is has since been cut because of the
also a p6tenttal fifth column of of drop In oil prices and the
frlghenling · proportions already resulting retrenchment.
In' place .tn the sheikdoms. The
But the sheiks have also tried
30,000 to 40,000 Shiite Moslems to stay friendly with Iran. Tehran
living · In the northern areas
maintains a diplomatic resi·
across 'the · Persian Gulf from
dence In the emirates, and ·
Iran could be Incited by Khomel· substantial trade· between the
ni' s fundamentalist mullahs Into two nations continues, though not
open :·revolt, · 'or at least into at the same level as hefore the
weiCO!Yllng a possible Iranian
war. The sheiks have ·tried to
Invasion.
negotiate an end to the bloodlet·
In fact, : pro-Iranian troubletlng - but falling that, they are
makers :· have been arrested In · determined to placate the Iran·
recent · ye~rs with weapons and
ian bully.
plans. for the overthrow of the
CIA LAWYERS: For various
ruling sheiks .in the name of
reasons, the CIA routinely uses
Khometnt's Islamic revolution:
lawyers to set up Its "front "
"There Is no ques tion tha t
corporations. A Maryland law·
(lraniap agents 1 could make
yer helped set up the CIA arms .
things pappen if they were told
shtpphig company , Associated
to," the Western diplomat told
Traders, which we have written ,
VanAtta.
about. And former intelligence
And so the fearful sheiks of the
analyst John Marks has revealed ;
United Ara b Emirates have tried
that the CIA used a Washington,
someWhat desperately to main·
D.C., law·firm in the 1960s to set
tain ·neutrality In the Persian
up Zenith Technical Enterprises
Gulf war. Their hopes are with
in Miami. Zenith's assignment
their. fellow Arabs, the Iraqis,
was 'to assassinate Cuban leader
a nd, In the early part of the war.
Fidel Castro .

JACKPOT

WIN·
C:ASH
.

EACH.WEEK
THIS WEEK'S ·
JACKPOT

S675
$25

wOmen rwho persevered -~---R_us..::_ty_Br_ow~n

'
; Goldwater's
departure takes from the Senate one of its last few
~lassie figures. He leaves the Senate, American politics and the
eountry far richer for his service.
' As one of his final acts In the' Senate, Goldwater sent the
Gongresslonal Record a one·paragraph statement to insB't in the
&lt;!hrpnlcle of House and Senate business. It is perhaps fitting that it
was Inserted as the last statement by a senator before Republican
leader Bob Dole adjourned the 99th Congress.
; " Alter :lJ years, I leave this body and I leave with one wish. Five
times I have stood at the president of the Senate's desk, my left hand
&lt;in the Bible. my right hand raised, and sworn to defend and protect
t~e Constitution of the Untied States against all enemies, foreign and
domestic. My wish is that when my time comes, our leader up above
say, 'Son, you did your best. ...
~If you ask those who know him. there 's no doubt he did .

will

Opinions
of other editors
.

'l'he Shelbyville (Ind. ) News
:A recent report has said that the nations of the world are spending
$1.7 million every minute on weapons, th@t one In three adults cannot
r.ad and write an d one In five lives In poverty. '··
Is notable and utterly discouraging to realize that nowhere is
t~e~e a strong movement on behalf of s ignificant arms reduction. It
seems Jhat such a n effort must begin with the United States and
So)vtet Union. These two s uperpowers alone account for about 60
p6cent of world military expenditures, even though together they
make up only about 11 percent of the world's population.
;VIrtually all of the world's spending for military purposes Is pure
waste. The world Is no closer to peace than It was yesterday, or a year
ago, or a decade ago.
:rhe arms race is growi ng out of contro l, and so Is poverty and
tiNteracy.
,
Tul•a (Okla.) World
Walter Mondal e, longtime s upporter of the American Civil
uberties Union a nd self·styled champion of civil rights, was one of
till' loudest protesters when Lt. CoL Oliver North and his former boss
at 'I he National Security Council, VIce Adm. John Poindexter, refused
to:answer qu estions !rom a Senate committee.
f.tondale had a s imple answer. The president s hould call In ali his
underlings and tell them to make all the facts known without
argument. No monkey business about the Ftrth Amendment.
!Veil, the fact is the Fifth Amendment guarantees every citizen .a
riJht against self Incrimination.... Mondale may be surprised to
learn that It also applies to gover nment officials who are being
tnyesttgated by the Depa,rtment of Justl ~e for possible criminal

:11

pr~tlon.
.y . Reagan can be blamed for a lot of things. But he can hard ly be

hefd at fault because the founding fathers guaranteed citizens a right
against self Incrimination and two of his aides chose to avail
t~selves of that protection.

The 1986 spotlight fell on a
multitude of women for a multi·
tude of reaso ns·. Some of the
notice, was modest and momen·
tary, whil e others made head·
lines for days. I'd lik e to single
out women who revealed remar·
kable qualities of bravery and
endurance. perseverance and
brilliance:
Taking on the Sundance Kid
Award. Most women would do
anything Robert Redford asked .
Not Lynda Witz of .Sante Fe ..
N.M .. where Redford was direct·
lng his latest movie. For scenes
in the capitol, Wttz, a state
employee, was given a bit part as
the governor's secretary and was
supposed to serve coffee. She
demurred at this stereotypical
secretarial chore and asked
instead to deliver papers for the
governor to s ig n . Redford
agreed.
Not Just Another Pretty Squaw
Award. Two native American
women broke the traditional
"follow the brave" role and
became tribal leaders. Wilma
Manktller Is first woman chief of
the 71,000 Cherokees. · Julene
Pepton Kennerly, me mber of the
Blackfeet tribe, was. elected
mayor of Browning, Mont., a
town on the reservation. Both
women are trying to inject some
economical vitality Into their
Impoverished communities.
Highest Flyer Award. For the
first time in the history of the Air
Force Academy, a woman led the
class. Terrie Ann McLaughlin
ranked No.1 In the 1986 gradual·
ing class of 842 men and lOG
women.
Only Woman on the Team
Award. Accompanied by five
men and 2() sled dogs, adventurer
Ann Bancroft, 30, a Minnesota
ph ys ical education tea c her ,

reached the North Pole after a
grueling, 55·day, l,OOO·mile trek.
They were the first team con·
firmed as reaching the Pole
without res upplying. Bancroft
survived a fall Into Icy waters
and blizza rds with 60-mlle-a n·
hour winds at 45 degrees helow
zero. Along the way, 28 dogs and
two men were airlifted out
because of exhaustion or
Injuries.
No Pass, No Play Award. A
federal court reinstated Unlver·
sity of Georgia Instructor Jan
Kemp and awarded her $680,000
In damages and back pay for her
refusal to alter falling grades of
super athletes. Her off-the-field
whistle-blowing resulted In the ·
resignation of the university's
president and has put all lntercol·
legiate athletic programs under
scholastic scrutiny.
G'e tllng Beller, Not Older
Award. Rear Admiral Grace
Hopper re tired at 79 as the
nation's oldest active military
officer - and promptly launched
a new career In computer con·
suiting. She ts co-Inventor of
COBOL, computer talk. Honora·
ble mention goes to Ellen Has·
kell. 84, and Maxine Langfteld,
83. who were trapped three days
without · food or water In the
northern California wilderness
after their car plunged off a
150-foot embankment. They told
rescuers, who reached them by
helicopter, that they survived
because "women are strong."
Take · II on the Chin Award.
When an accidental elbow to the
chin In a staged scuffle dlsJo.
cated her jaw, Metropolitan
Opera soprano Eva Marton went
on with her role in "Tosca,"
though barely able to open or
close her mouth.
A Switch for SWAT. Paula

Grundler, wife and mother,ls the
first. women In the nation to head
a city or state SWAT team. He r
squad moves In on barricaded
snipers or when hostages are
being: held. The Santa Fe pollee
sergeant 's ays, "I've always been
An a,g gressive person. I want to
learn more. I want to do more."
Am.erlca Dream Award.
Twenty-three years ago, Allison
Walker was a 16-year-o ld mother
of two , with an alcoholic husband

CLEVELAND (UP II -Ohio's
drunk driving law, which man·
. dates a· jail ter~ for motorists

'

9 weekend callo; occupy unit.'i

.

Ml'igs Co unty Emergency Medical Services reports thrt't'
calls Sa turday and six ca lls Sunday.
Satu rday at 11:52 a.m .. Tuppers Plains transportf'd Edna
Hanning to Veterans Memorial Hospit al: Syracuse at 12: 2&gt;
p.m. to Bridgeman Street for Samson Hall to Holzer Medical
Ce nt er; Pomeroy at 8:17 p.m. to Spring Avenue for Christy
Fellurc to Holz er Medical Cent er.
Sunday at 9: 19 a.m ., Ra cine to Smith Ridge Road for Arnold
Hupp to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Middleport a t It: 32 a.m.
to Bone Hollow Road for Nellie McCloud to Holter. Medical
Ce nt er; Pomeroy at 3:23p.m. to Mulberry Avenue for Kathryn
Oliver to Veterans Memorial tJospltal: Racine at 4:12p.m. took
Opal Cummings from the fire station to Pleasant Valley
Hospital: Mlddl~port at. 9:12 p.rn. to Hartinger Parkway for
Kathy Pierce to Pleasant Valley Hospital: Pomeroy at 10:56
p.m. · to Spring Avenue for Christy Fellure to Holzer Medical
Center.
·

Council

postpone.~

meeting

Syracuse Vill age Council meeting scheduled for Jan. 1 will be
postponed until Jan. 8 at 7 p.m.

Pizza party scheduled tonight
Job's Daughters and D~Moiay members, and their guests,.
ar~ in vit ed to a pizza part y to be held tonll(ht !Monday I, from 7
p.m. to midnight. in the basement of the Middleport Masonic
Temple.

Ridge Church, from 8 p.m. to midnight, with special
singing by Wayne and Linda Rhodes , and others.
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Ohio 14.1. starting at 7:30p.m .. with
Rev. Victor Roush speaking.
Word of Lif~ Church, Burlinl(ham. start inl( at 7 p.m., with
si nging by the Full Gospel Travelers and the United Gospel
Singers.
As h"Street Freew ill Baptist Church, Middleport. starl in!( at
7::10 p.m. with special preaching a nd singing.
MiddiPporl lndependmt Holiness Church. starting at 7:30
p.m ., wilh spec ia l spea kin g by Rev. Steve Tomek, of Oak Hill.
and Rev . Leroy Manns. of Point Pleasant.
,Danviil~ Holiness Church, Ohio :12:.. star ling at 10 p.m .. with
SJX'Cial s inging and com munion.
Hobson Church of Chr ist in Christian Union. sta rting at 7:30
p.m., willl spea king b.v Rev. Bob Manley, ol Morgan Center. and
R&lt;'v. Ch~ster Wise, of Ga llipolis. S p~cial singing also.
Rutland Freewill Baptist Church, starting at 7 p.m.

Sales tax hearing Tue.~day
A public hearing on the proposod I pNcent sales tax lor Me igs
Count y has been schoduled by the Meigs Count y Commissioners
fot· 10 a. m. Tuosday 'In thr common pleas courtroom in th~
counhouso. Pomeroy .

Po.~t .o;chedule.~

\

SlOO
CASH PRIZE
JACKPOT
LAST WEEK'S
WINNERS WERE:
S2S PAM ROACH
S2 S MAE GILLIAM
sso KAREN HATFIELD

Berry's World

WINNING NUMBERS
POSTED IN THE STORE
SUNDAY 10 A.M.
•·

(Must come in ond claim
prize by following
Saturday, 10 P.M.NO WINNING NUMBER
GIVEN OVER THE PHONE)
If Any Prize Is Not
Claimed In The Allotted
Tim,, The Prize Wiii"Be
Included In The Next
Week's $1 00 Cash Prize
Jackpot.

NO PUICHASE NECESSAIY

The Cleveland Plain Dealer:
reportf'd Su nd ay th at a motorist:
in Euclid who was barely lntoxi··
cated spent three days In jail,:
fined $750 and lost his license for;
90 days .

Maude Ross, 98, Cherry Ridge,
near Pomeroy, &lt;lied Sunday a t
the Pomeroy Health Care
Center.
A homemaker. Mrs. Ross was
born Dec . li. 1888. in Rutland. a
daughtet· of the late Linton and
E lizabeth Hubbel Midkiff. She
was a member of the Cheshire
Mel hodis t Church.
Surviving are a daughter and
son-In· taw, Elizabeth and EmPr·
son Well. Pomeroy, and a son and
daughter-In -law , David and
Betty Ross, Middleport. Fiv e
grandchildren and eight grand·
children ·also survive.
Besides her parents, she was
preceded In death by her hu sband, Oscar; a sister, Ethel
Midkiff, and a granddaughter.
Avis Well .
Graves ide rites will be ron ·
dueled at 1 p.m. Tuesday at th e
Cherry Ridge Ce metery wilh
Rev. Gilbert Spencer officiating.
Friends may call at the Ewing
Funeral Home from ti-8 thi s
evening.

Leslie Cla ude Siders, 66, New
Haven, W.Va., dil'd Saturdav at
Pleasant Vaiky Hospit aL ·
He was born Mav 2. 1920. in
Cabin C'rC'ek, W.Va.". to lhe la t ~
Lewis Albert and Rosie Ellen
C'a rncy Siders.
He wa s a rf't irC'd eoal m inc1
' and altend&lt;·d Ha rtford Church of
C' hrisl in Christian Union.
Surviving are his wi fe Eloise
Siders of New Havf'n: fi ve sons,
John Siders of Laurel. Md .. Paul

Siders. U.S. Army, sta tioned in
Germany, Richard Siders of
Houston, Texas, Ronald Siders of
Point Pleas an i, and Gary Siders
of New Haven: five daughtPrs,
Mrs. Opa l Pr ice of Grafton. Mrs.
Carolyn Sm i1 h of Cleveland. Mrs.
Joy Bunsey oi"Orlando. F la .. Gail
Mullins of Tucson. Ariz .. and
Ruth Sidel's ol Nrw Haven: on&gt;·
sisiN. Mt·s. Maxine Tabit of
Kimberling. W.V a.: nin e gra nd·
chi ldren. two step-gra ndchild ren
~ nd lwo grC'at -grandc hild rC"n.
He was preceded in death by a
son. Michael R. Siders. in 1%9.
F uneral SPrvirrs will be Tues·
da)· at I p.m. al th~ FogiC'Song
Funeral Homf' \Vilh thr Rev .

David McManis official .ing. Rur·
ial will be in C rah am ('em e• tc n .
Friends rna)· call at the' funNal
hom e toda:o-· fc:om li- ~ p.m.

However, a Berea man who:
damaged six cars and a store·:
front while trying to get out of a·
taver n parking lot, paid only $225;
In fines a nd never went to jaiL :

..

The Daily Sentinel
(USPS Ui&gt;960i
A Dl""'ion of Multimedia. Inc.

•

Puhlish t'd rvNy aftrr noon. Monday :'
th rough Friday, 111 Court Sl .. Po ·
m Prov . Oh\ o, bv lhf' Ohio Vallf'V Pub1i!&lt;.hl n·.e Comptin.v ! Mu ltlm('dla. · Inc.,

Pomrrov. Ohio 45ifi9. Ph . 992-2156. Sr- '
co nd l'1:.1.ss postagP paid a t Pomero~· .
Ohio.

Mf'mbr 1·: Un llf'd PrPss tnll'rnatlonal,

Inland Dallv PrPss Association and lh£'
Ohio Nl'wsPapC'r Assoc i ation. Nat ion::~ I
Advrr tlsln,e: RPprt'srntath•£', Branham
Nrw spapf'r Sa il'S, 7.13 Third A.vrnur.~ 1
Nrw York. NPw York 10017.
'
•
POSTMASTER: Se-nd adclrfoss chan ges

s, " llnrl .

F:ulah E . Grimm. R:l. l.&lt;' tart,
W.Va .. di~cl Su nda.v al Pleasa nt
Valky Hospital.
She was born Orl. 20, 1q11:1. in
Leta rt. to the late Warner a nd
Stella Fry l.rimm .

SUBSCRIPTION RATES
By Carrier nr Motnr Rllute
Onp Wt'Pk., ................ ..... .. ........ $].25
Onp Month . ....................... ......... $5.45
Onp Yf'ur ............... .......... .... .. $65.00

Pomcroy. Oh.lo 4:l1 till.

Sun•iv in g an' onP s istrr . 8{'U -

Iah K. Grim m of

!. ~!ar t :

rmd

·srvpr; d nif'crs a ncl nrphf'ws.

She 11·as preceded in d!' ath b)·
two brothNs. George A. a nd
William

,\ rnolcl

111 Cou n

~1..

Eulah (;rimm

1n Thr Oallv

(; rimm :

onP

s ister. Ethel V. Roush.
Funeral " ' IYicrs will b~ W~d ·
ncsda)' at I p.m. a t the' Fog il •,ong
Funeral H o m ~ wi th t h~ Rev .
Georg~ W~irirk offic iat ing. Rur·
ial will be in Union Crml'tt'J"\' .
Friends rna,· eall at th~ funeral
home on Tu ~sdrl\· from ( .q p.m.

SINGI.E COPV
PRICE
Dilll~· .................... .......... 2!l (('nl.~
S ubscr ibf'f~

not dr~lring 1o pav tht&gt;car· ,
r iN ma y r rm ll In advanc(' ·dlrt'Ct , 1o'
ThP Du lly S£'n1i nf'l on a l fi or 12 month
basi!'. Crf'd\1 will bf:• Jrlvf'n ('a r rlf'r ('JCho
V.' ('('k

•

,,
Nn subserl ptions b~· mnll prormltrf'd l,n
an•as whPrr homf' t'a rriN servlcr is
;walla bl &lt;'.
· '

~~

Mall Sut!Kcrlpt Ions

,

lnp;ldt&gt; Mel WI Count}'

1 ~ Wf'f'kS ................... ..............~17.29
2+i WPrks. .. ............................ $.14.00
!12 Ylflrks .................................. $66.56,
Outsidt&gt; Mt·l~ County
·
1.1 WflflkS ................... .......... $1R.20·

''

26 WPrks ................................. $35.\0 .
52 WC"rks ....................... ... ....... . $67.60

'•

Vt'leran,; Mt'morial
Sat urday Admissions - Edna
Hanning. Pomeroy: Mark
Duerr, Syracuse; Norma Good·
win, Pomeroy.
Saturday Discharges - Mar·
garel WalkN. Belly Manley ,
Claire Boso.
Sunday Adm issions - Frank
Wolford, Vinton; Juett ~ Hossler.
Pomeroy; Kathryn Oiiv f' r.
Pomeroy; Jodie McNick le.
Racine.
Sunday Disi•hargC'S - Mar~
Duerr.

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

EAR, NOSE &amp; THROAT
GENERAL ALLERGIST
\\WE HAVE HEARING A/0$"

' '
.,

. I'

'

.'

CAU (614) - 992~2104
L..-...;.,.,.__....;(:.::3.=..04..:..!.)-=6..::..;75=-·. :. :12:..:4;..::.4_ ____,_ ,:

Racino American Legion Post 602 will hav~ a New Year's Eve
danco and dinnt"r at the post home.
Festivities start al 9 p.m . and admission will be $10 a couplo
a nd$:; single. All legion and auxiliary members a rc lo bring a
covered dish. The legio n will furnish the ham. Music will be
provided by Doug Circlo and the Ci rcl e "D" Wrangl&lt;'rS.

Salisbury t ru.~l(Je,o;

t,n

meet

Salisbury Tow ns hip Trustees will meet Frida~'. 7 p.m., at the
towns hip hall on Rock Springs Road.

Lebanon trustees

.~late

Hurry in! '86 is the
last year to deduct the

meeting

l.Pbanon Township Tru stf'&lt;'S will meot Tuesday. 7 p.m: al thl'
towns hip building.

sso

CASH PRIZE

Maude Ross

drunk drivers never go to jail. a.
su rvey shows .

dinner-dance

CASH PRIZE

and an eighth grade education.
This summer, at 39_., the Pitts·
burgh woman became a doctor of
medicine. She recalls years as a
single mom on welfare and slits
as a chlld·care worker and
nursing student. "I know what
It 's like to be hungry and not have
a place to live. But I also know the
American dream . Look at me.
Here I am."
Women like this Inspire us to
follow our own dreams In 1987.

under the influence of alc.ohol. is
not consisten t I)' cnforc~d in
Cuya hoga County and most

Area deaths

Leslit• C. Sidt'rs

New Year's Eve services slated
Eagl~

Bully of the gulf_____---,-_.t_ac_k_An_d_er_so_n&amp;_D_ale_·~~an_A~t-'--t'a

:rhe clos ing days of Congress were full of accolades tbr Goldwater,
s lpwed a bit by age- he turns 78 on Jan . 1- but still vi!(orous enough .
to·shout down a debating opponent. Many of the tributes payed on the
words of his '64 campaign slogan, " In your heart you know he 's
WASHINGTON - Ayatollah only as "foreign."
right," a nd upon the title of his book, "Conscience of a Consf!'vative."
Khomelnt has become the bully
A Western diplomat was not
Ma ny were moving, and even those from the other end of the
of lhe Persian Gulf, and his surprised by the Abu Dhabi
political spectrum conceded the effect ' Goldwater's early and
neighbors are ·afraid to stand up government's refusal to identify
u~abashed conservatism has had - paving the way for the entry of
to
him.
· the attackers. "Even if they had
conservatism Into the mainstream political debate.
.
final proof, they would not admit
Late
last
.month,
for
example,
!'A li of us . Democrats as well as Republicans, know how Barry
Iranian warplanes mounted a It publicly," the diplomat ex·
G9idwater stood his ground, and how the world flnally camearound to
deliberate attack on an offshore plained. because the attack " rehi~ . The choice he gave the nation has echoed across the years. and
oil facility of the United Arab presents a serious escalation· of
Its reverberations can clearly be heard toda y In Ronald Reagan's
Emirates, killing five workers the war I hey do not want toface."
speeches," said Sen. Ted Kennedy, D-Mass.
and wounding 26 more. Yet the
The reason the UAE doesn' t
government of the emirates · want to challenge Iran I~ that the
.And Sen. Patrick Leahy, D·Vt., often at philosophical odds. with
didn' t dare accuse Iran openly of Maine-sized group of seven oil·
Coldwater, observed that he "wears his country not on his sleeve but
provocation.
rich sheikdoms' is Inherently
IJ! his heart. And in his heart, Barry Goldwater will always be right
There was no doubt In the fearful, weak and helpless,
'Fhal's a small 'r.' That's a big heart:"
·
minds of UAE government offl. afraid of th!j, ayatollah's ter ror·
: :f~ Stevens, R-Aiaska. called Goldwater's departure "the end of
ctals that Iran was to blame for isis and powerless before his
l(,n"·era ... of Independent conservatism," and said, "It is not.just his
the attack, which was the most military might.
conscience as a conservative that sets Barry Goldwater apart- 11 Is
serious on a non-combatant since
The armed forces of the Unites
t~e fact that he lives up to the expectations of his own conscience "
the Irantan-IraQ, war began more Arab Emirates number only
:Goldwater never shied away from saying what he thought , on~e
than six years ago . .In fact; Dale about 46,000 troops on paper,
describing the Senate one night in disgust about Its dilatory behavior • Van Atta saw a classified diplo- Including a 2,000-man air force
a~ a "cookie farm, " a deroga tory phrase from his frontier boy hood
matic cable from the UAE
and a 1,000-man navy. It has a
f~r a bunch of wimps.
government In Abu Dhabi declar- handful of American Hawk misIng that the emirates had deter· siles and French Exocets. But an
:And he sometimes tired of I he traditional and tedious niceties of
mined lhe attackers were astonishing 80 percent of the
running the Senate.
.
Iranian.
emirates' army Is made up of
: As he presided over the Senate late one night, a member offered a
The cable was sent on Nov. 25,
foreigners , and the officer corps '
·:unanimous consent" request on a minor matter, maklngthl&gt; request
the day the UAE oil terminal was
Includes men of 29 different
of the c hair with Jots of ceremony, flourish and formality. ·
na tionalities, who must commun; Goldwater took him down a notch, ruling , " It's OK by ml&gt;," rather · bombed. Yet the emirates' only
public announcement deplored
Icate with each other in English.
t~an the more traditional "without objection. so ordered."
As If that weren't enough to
the 'attack by planes identified
• His .language Is salty- not to impressor shock but just because
tbat 's the way he is. He keeps his words to a minimum. making his
point and then shutting up . That's a rarity In a chamber where many
like Jhe sound of their own voice and want their Do wing rhetoric and
b)ow-drled images on television.

Local Briefs:---. DWI law weak in Cuyahoga County~~

l winner announ~~d
CLEVELAND (UPii - One
Ohio Lottery Lotto player has a .
lot to look. forward to In 1987 . .
Lott~ry officials say the player
was the only one who chose the
s ix n~mbers drawn Saturday
night , to alone claim the
$1,129,865 jackpot.
The winning numbers were I,
2, 19, 37, 39 and 40. Total sales for
the drawing were $:!,049,452.
There were :!88 players who
selected five of the six winning
numbers. Each will collect $589.
Another 12.679 lottery players
wtil receive $48 for choosing four
of the six numbers. The es t! ·
mated jackpot for next week's
drawing is $1 million.

The Daily Sentinel - Page-~

Pomeroy..:.Middleport, Ohio

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OHer ends January 20th. 1987
.,afOSTMII

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·:·~

�r-aytt-..- 1ne

uauy l:iellt1ne1

Monoay,

rvttiGtuy-•vuuUitlliJVt "' v ,•i•v

Jets stop 5-game
skid with victory
~y

JOEL SHERMAN
UPI Sports W~lt er
EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J .
(UP!) - The New York Jets
Sunday cleansed themselves of
six weeks of doubt.
In need of some sign that th~y
belonged in the chase for the
Super Bowl, the Jets routed the
Kansas City Chl{'fs 3.'i-15 in the
AfC wild-card game. They had
become the first NFL team to
reac h the playoffs with a fivegame losing streak.
"It is the sweetest win I have
had In a long time," Jets Coac h
Joe Walton said. " It was a great
effort by the team. They never
lo~ t fa ith in what they could do.
We have been through some
toiJgh limes . We had a lot of
adversity but we hun g together,
played hard and deserved to
win."
The Jets returned to the form
they displayed during a nine·
game winning strea k albeit with
dffferent personnel in so m ~
cases.
. When I he J ets were 10-1, tops in
t1le NFL, their rus h defense was
the league' s best. How ~ver.
iiljuries to nose tackle .Joe
l!&gt;lecko, ends Marty Lyons and
Mark Gastineau and linebackrr
Lance Mehl, enabled opponents

uecemDUr

&lt;~.::~,

'

1aou

Ohio

Skins -win; face ·
.Chicago Saturday

to average 181 yards rushing ·
over the last five games.
But with tack le Derla.nd Moore
and end Jerome Foster.- newcomers claimed off wai vers in the
last month- and' Gastinea u and
Lyons joining nose tack le Tom
Baldwi n and end Bar-ry Bennett,
the Jets lim r t ~d the Chiefs to 67
yards on 20 carries. Take away
four scram bl es for :!3 yards by
quarterback Todd Blackledge
and the Chi efs averaged 2.1
yards a catTy.
Gastineau, who missed the las t
fi ve weeks of the regular season
beca use of knee surgery, bolstered a pass rush tha t managed
just fi ve ·sacks the last five
games. New York regis !Ned
only two sac ks Sunday but
applied co nstant press ure.
"Mark being in there was an
emotional lift lor us," Lyons
said. "When he's healthy there is ,
nobody better."
There was also quarterback
Pat Ryan. Ov~r the las t five
ga mes. Ken O'Brien threw 12
interceptions to two touchdowns.
STACKED UP - Washington Redskins running bark George
This week Walton benched him in
Rogers
Is sur.ounded hy Los Angeles Rams defensive players
favor of Ryan.
Nolan
Cromwell
(21), LeRoy Irvin (~7) and Carl Ekern (left) after
Ryan responded by leadi ng an
heing
'topped
for
a shdrt gain in Sunday 's NFC Wild-Card Playoff
effective ball-con trol attack in
game
at
Washington.
The Redskins won 19· 7 and travel to Chicago
which he completed 16 of 23
Saturday.
(UP
I)
passes for .15:l ya rds

WASHINGTO N (UPI J - The
Washington Redskins tr!ed, despl,te themselves, not to savor
their first post'sea son victory In
three years.
r
Sunday's 19· 7 triumph over the
Los Angeles' Rams In the NF'C
wild-card playoff game at RFK
stadium was only a few minutes
old, but the Redskin s were
forcing themselv es to look ahead
to Saturday, when they face the
defending Super Bowl champion
Bears in Chicago in a divisional
playoff ga me.
,"The good news is we won,"
Washington coach Joe' Gibbs said
after watching his team fo rce six
turnovers to subdue the Rams.
"The bad news is we have to go to
Chicago. At this point everybody
you play Is good. Chicago is
great. ' '
.
" I don't think that 's as much
bad news as how many bro~en
bones we have," defensive tackl e
Dave Butz added, refering to
inju ries suffered by offensive
linemen Joe Jacoby (broken
bone In right hand) and Ru ss
Grimm (severely bruised ribs 1.
"This game was very expensive.
Very ex pens ive."
Newly signed kicker Jess At·
kinson, who in his second game
as a Redskin tied the club mark

NBA Standings

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tempo that enabled them to post at the half.
a 7-0 lead befo re Peebles' first
Southern conti nu~d it s domi·
score.
nance in the third fr ame, out scorDriving in the op~nin g tip, Ing Peebl es 24-18 as its lead grew
Amburgey gave SHS a 2-0 lead to 68·50.
fo llowed by a Todd Kim es·
Souther n hit a sizz lin g 63
jumper from the top of the key. percent, hillin g 16-of-64 from the
The Tornado big man then floor, and canning IR-23 fro m the
powered in a shor t ju mpel' and charity circles . Peebles hit 27 of
capped i I hree-point play beforp 70 for 31\ percent an d hit -11 -1a
Marc Kremins drilled a long from the 11ine.
jum per from the wing.
Southern gra bbed 52 rebound
Southern slowed so m ~wh a t as 'to near a school record led by
P~ebles clim bed closr at J:l-9,
Turley's 2:l and Kimes' 10.
however, Sou thern stretched it s Peebl es had .19 led by Kremins
lead to 21-11 on go als by Am bur· with 11 .
gey and Turley, the score 21· 11
Southern had 10 stea ls, just ,7
afiPr one pPriod.
turnovers, 10 assis ts, and 1o
After Pet'bl es closed I he gap to foul s. whil e PHS had 3 steals, 14
:!0-2R, Southern reelC'd off nine turnovers. 1 as sist, and 17 fouls.
straight, holding on for a 4o-.12
In the opener Manchester
lead at the half.
outdistanced Oak Hill 16-9, then
Turley had 11; and Amburgey 12 raced on to a convicing 77-53 win

The Eastern EagiP&gt; fell 66-!i9
Sa turday niRht to Wirt County.
W.Va ., In the championship
game of the Simmons Memorial
Tournament at Wahama. W.Va .
Four Eagles scored in doubl e
fi gures. as Eastern held steady
throughout the first ha lf. Both
squads wpnt int o the lock~rroom
at halftime ti ed at :n.

Roger Hysell
Garage
AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Alto Tru&amp;Miulo•
PH. 992-5682
or 992-7121

INSTAil.ED - New officers of HarrlsonvUle ·
Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, were recently instlilled. They
~e lront, John Cooper, junior warden; Frank N.
Epple, worthy master, jUJd Larry Well, senior
warden; second row, Olen Harrison, chaplain;

Pa cing the Eagles was Ed
Collins with 17. Jeff Caldll'cll
addrd 1:\. Mark Griffi th chi pped
in with 12: Tony Hend rix 11 .
Wir t County could not shakl'
the F.a gl&lt;•s in thr first half.
de adl oc ked at 1R after one period
and ti e again at the half. ·
In the thi rd period. howe,w.
Wirt oul s&lt;'ored Eastem 15-I:l for

Items for infants to be given to
the Meigs County Health Department to disirlbute to needy
families were given by members
of the Middleport Child :Conservation League at the annual
Christmas party held at the Ohio
Power Co.
Members· went to the Down
Under for a dinner preceding the
party. Nancy Morris opened the
meeting with the pledge and
Mother's Prayer, and devotion s

'ft•:un
II' I. 1••~
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Su ulll"' I'S(Prn ....... .. ............ 6 I .i li6
Uann tUI Tr:u·p ,,, ..... .. .... .... . l j .H ti
link 11111 ... .. ..................... l j ,17/J
1-:a"l~ ·ru ................ ...... .... .. a l ~-)·
Snuilu-rn ...... .... .... ........... 1 I .i n
K,\ J('t'r ( 'rj•t•N..
.. ... I .I l:l t
-"'i)'IUIIII'S \'ali i',~' .............. ,. 1 H :Ill
(( onfnt•nt•t•)
'rj • ~un
II I . I'F
ll an nan Tr:u ·t• ......... .... , .. :'i I :t7 X
No rlh Halll:t ................. .... -1 '! 3-U
Oak 11111 ........................ .. I
:196
Su ut hwt•1&gt;1t•rn ..................... :1
:11 9
F.:t"(('f'fl ................... .. ... . ... ..!
:t!IM
Kyv; t•r C' rPt•k............ .. .. ..... :! t :!11 :~
Sn ullwrn .......... ......... ..... .. . :!
:~~
l'iynnnt"S Vallt•,v .......... ... .... 0 6 :.'1:17
Slltu rday'!'&gt; r~"Sulb;
(jallla ('uuni;•/Tournam cnt
Ky~wr f'rt't•k -19, II an nan Tr :u·t• li
~orlh (laiii:.~IHI. Smllhwt&gt;slf'm ~!I
\\'aluuu a (\\', \ 1a , ) Tnurnamt•nt
Wlrt founty (\\'.Va. ) 6ti, •: ustt•rn .i9
Oiht'I'S
Suntlu•rn 99, f't •t•hllos ti.i
:\lunt•hc-st t•r 77, OuN IIIII :U
Tm•sda y's ~amc
Souih cu.o;i••rn Ri Snutht•rn

C ' h lt~l

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IJt lr•i 5, Tnru•o o\

rn•·l

MoM rl'llll, H11rllor d :t
Mt. 1-o.tltt :t. Nl' Kan..-r~ t
l AIII ,1nplt.,; ~ ll"*olll[()T, )

!oitlad,,-'fll Rf'.11ulht
fllii{IU1 I, lluffMio I

-~
,)~j

501
Ill

IIAJIGAIN ltATINEES DAILY
ALL SEATS 11.50
ADMISSION EVERY TUESOAY S1 . 50

DIIC 2&amp; tllru .IAN t
fRIDAY thru THURSDAY :

r - - (f).q.~.. l "USS";

St-utt, HI-:!; .ft•U l lnK••r, :t-.J-14; ·lhnm~·
·•ohns1m , 1·0.:!: Kc • rr~ Malhtont•.\', 1-:t- 11';
llm•kl ( "onh·v. 0·11--rt; ('l1ri!-; Kt·ll~·v. 0-11--1~
,Stc·w " 1ti"1MI, HI-'!: -lim IIIIIJCt.f. t-11--1~
Kuh1•rt llnnl~t, 11-0.0. TUTJ\1 ..."\ 2i -IJ.fi:i.
Snullwrn .............. ....... :!1 ·u :!:f :U- 99
Ul 2:1- ti!i

Your

r•A

""

"

:J~II

:u;:t
:llfi
:15~

1('onlt'l't11l't')

TC' Illll
w I. PF I' A
Southern .............. ........ ..... 3 1 :no 258
North (iallla .. ... ... .. .. .. ... .. ... .a t 2&gt;1t till
Eu."lh'f'n ..... .... .. ...... .... .. .. .. .. .a t 2U 239

t

TOWNSHIPS

'!'l6 205
Oak 11111 .............. ..............:&lt; 3 205 209
Suulhwt.,..lt•rn ... ... ....... ...... .. t j ~ 1 5 2.t6
Ky~t·r Crl~·k ..... .. .......... .. ... l 5 19~ 21-1
Synum'!li Vallt•y ....... ....... ... 1 5 :!12 2!{0

COIBINATION DINNER ONLY
,.
DINING ROOM ONLY

b

AND CORPORATIONS

Served witlt wllipped potJiots, chicken eravy,
cole sllw, hot roll, butter and coffee . Sorry,
no substitutes except beverage witlt addi·

tion11 ·

$'3.25
.

.

CROW'S FAMILY RESTAURANT
Fried

POMEIOY, OH.

,•
u•

UOFORD
MoitJS
4.30
Elllem
4.30
CHESTER
Ellltrn
4.30
Mtitp
4.30
COLUMBIA
4.30
LEBANON
Eastern
4.30
Southern
4.30
LETART
4.30
OLIVE
4.30
ORANGE
4.30
RUTLAND
4.30
RUTLAND-VI LLAGE 4.30
SALEM
4.30
SALISBURY
4.30
MIDDLEPORT VILLAGE4.30
POMEROY VILLAGE uo
SCIPIO
4.30
sunoN
4.30
RACINE VILLAGE
4.30
SYRACUSE VILLAGE 4.30
Moip

FOR JUST

~

:lfl.i

IC4 '7'ier\•t• :U"tlon

H~tnnan TraL't' . ........... .. ..... ..

In pur111once of low, I, Goarge M. Collin' TrtiiUIIr of Mlitp Coun~. Ohio in compli•l with IIVilld Code No. 323.08
of Stoto of Ohio, do htllby 'f\'t notice of tbt Rltll of TIXIIion for th1 Tax VIII of 1986. Rat11 axprlll8d in dollars
and cents on aoch onethouand dollan tax valuetlon.

SCHOOL DISTRICTS

•:i:•
••
I

•

•

..
~

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•

oi

"

t• I•• 1
•
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ill

t,
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1.70 24.00 .50 .10 1.00
1.70 24.00 .50 .10 1.00

2.00 1.50 .75
2.00 1.50 .75

.050903
.050903

.025509 35.85
.025509 35.85

3.00 24.00 .50 .to 1.00
3.00 24.00 .50 .10 1.00
2.70 26.90 .50 .10 1.00 3.30

2.00 1.50 .75
2.00 1.50 .75
2.00 1.50 .75

.064944
.064944
.271284

.037681 37.t5 •
.037681 37.1 5 ;
.242040 43.05 ;

3.50
3.50
4.20
3.7JI
3.50
3.30
2.00
1.70
1.70
.20
.20
3.20
3.t0
1.20
1.80

2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.00
2.011
2.011
2.011
2.011
2.011
2.00
2.00
2.00

1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
1.50
-1.50
1.50
1.50

.75
.75
.75
,75
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75
.75'
.75
.75
.75

.060996
.142511
.141205
.073010
.066056
.061646
.t06665
.050903
.050903
.095046
.095138
.056019
.141094
.210475
.138368

.027465 37.6sJ
.050675 37.1 5 I
.057Bt5· 37.85
.D39869 37.85 :
.D36278 37.65 ~
.D30914 37 .45 !
.053041 43.t 5
.025509 35 .85
.025509 35 .as ··
.051916 43 .06 ••
.081904 42. 15 :
.030505 37 .36 :
.051330 36.76 :
.108158 .43 .95 ;
.055815 39.05 :

2.00

1.50 .75

.058682

.027883 37.25 '

24.00
23.50
23.50
24.00
24.00
24.00
24.00
24.00
24.00
' 24.00
24.00
24.00
23.50
23.50
23.&amp;0

.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.50
.liD

.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10
.10

1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.011
1.00
' 1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00
1.00

7.00

8.70
7.80

9.10
3.80

son and Tim Spencer; Roll call,
Florence Ann Spencer; Librarians, Jim Brooks, Lisa Henderson, and Todd Dillinger; Song
leaders, Marilyn Robinson and
Diana Pullins; Ushers, Richard
and Tim Spencer: Flower committee, Thelma Henderson , Dorothy Calaway, and Dorothy
Robinson .
Mr. and Mrs. Clair F'ollrod
returned Dec. 7 from a week's
tirp to Florida. They visited Mrs.
Follrod's s ister, Mr. and Mrs.
Aubra Bailey. They toured Daytona B-each, Orlando, Disneyworld, Epcot Center, Marco
Island, and Cypress Gardens.
Northeastern charge meetin g
was held at Alfred Church, Dec.
16. The meeting opened .with

Greetings by Rev. Don Archer
and group singing of 0 Come, All
Ye Faithful. Rev. Frank Row ,
new District Superintendent,
gave opening rem arks and devotions. Seldon Johnson, Joppa,
gave devotions . Trustee reports
were given by Lloyd Dillinger,
Alfred; Ron Cowdery, Long
Bottom; Jim Stout, Tuppers
Plains. All churches elected
officers. Betty Chevalier was
elected delegate; Thelma Hend·
erson, Charge chairperson. Mike
Weber gave a report on Youth
Camp. Church histories were
given by Mae Vineyard, Tuppers
Plains; Ron Cowdery, Long
Bottom; and Nellie ·Parker,
Alfred .
Alfred UMC served refresh·
ments after the meeting.

More on Medicare
the Part A carrier while Nationwide Insurance processes Part B
claims In both Ohio and West
Virginia .
Medicare subscribers don't see.
a Part A billing for hospita l
services because the providers of
th e care deal directly with the
Medicare carrier. However. the
patient will receive a stat eme nt
of usage tha t details the charges
and the amount Medicare Part A
ha s paid.
Part B reimbursements can be
handled -with more options. Doctors who have agreed to accept
medicare rates for services will
send th e billings in directly.
These doctors are known as
"part Jripat lng physicians." You
ca n submit the bllis your self
eit her paid or unpaid and have
the reimbursement mailed to
you. We have the proper forms at
your Social Security offlee and
will help you submit your claims
If you like.
Whichever method you choose,
you'll receive an expla nation of
Medicare benefits listi ng thE'
physician, the dates of service,

the amou nt billed, the assigned
rates, Information on deduct able
use , a nd the amount of reimburse ment . If you have anot her
Insurance. this statement can be
used to determine their payment
towards your bllis.
Nationwide has a toll free
numbe r If you have a question
about your Part B cla ims:
1-800-282-0530. For more informa·
tlon about Medicare, you can call
or stop by your Socia l Security
office. We 're lhert- to help.

CARPENTER
SERVICE

REBUILT &amp; REPAIRED

:_Addona Mel remodeling

work

V. C. YOUNG IR
992-6215 or 992-7314
Pomeroy, .,.._.~ ...

Phone 4-16·4517
GEORGE M. COLLINS, Meigs County Treasurer

...,,

·•

•landscaping

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE

SALIS &amp; SERVICE
We Ceny Fishing &amp;uppiiM

985-3561

Your Cable &amp;
Phtone Bills Here

•Wa1her1 •Diahwathers

~·.., --

EKCIVIting

{6141

54

Call:'

742-2407

BISSELL
BUILDERS

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At Reasonable Prien" ·
'

PH. 949-2801
or 949-2860 ·
Day or N9lt

NO SUNDAY CALlS

11-28-86·1 mo.

4-16-'86 tin

GEARY'S

GUN SHOOT

BODY SHOP

•Dryers •Freezers

RACINE
FIRE.DEPT.

SSO Page St., Middleport
OPEN 8 A.M.-4 P.M .

PARTS end SERVICE

Bashan Building

•Ranges

•Refriger1tor1

16141 992-6550·
IES.BICE PHONE

•Sewage System•
•Wate• &amp; Gas Lines
•Water Well Drilling
•Trucking

All M1h1

IUSIIISS PHONE

~5- tk

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
6:30P.M.

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 22. 1986.
in the Meigs County Probate

· Factory (halct.
12 Gauge Sllotg111s Only
~----~1::,.0·::,.8-tf:,::rnu

PH. 992·3537

12· 16-'86·1110.

54 Misc. Merchandise

HOTPONT

RANGE

30' ELECTRIC

ONLY

Court , Case No . 26383.

Teny C. Wayland, 109 Eba-

Public Notice

neur Street, Pomeroy, OH.

45789, WOI appointed Ad·
ministrator of the ntate o1

PUBLIC NOTICE

Jennings 8. Woyiond, dt·
ceased, tale of 109 Ebe·

Public water supplies a,. ,.,.

nezer Street, PonHiroy. OH .

Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Neuelrood, Citric
(12129; 1115, 12 3tc

NOTICE TO
CONTRACTORS
STATE OF OHIO
DEPARTMENT OF
TRANSPORTATION
Columbus, Ohio
Oecembar 12, 19B6

Public Notice
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENTOF
FIDUCIARY
On December 19. 1988,
in the Meigs County Probate

Court, Case No. 25381,
Lloyd M. Priddy, R.O. 111,
Middleport. Ohio 46760,

was appointed Adminiatratrator, WWA of theeatateof

Elsie E. Priddy. deceued,
tote of R.ll. #1. Middleport,
Ohio 457.
··•rt E. Buck,
Probate Judge
Lena K• Nn11lroad, Cleril

112129; 111 6, 12 3tc

quirad by State Ragulalion,
Rule 3746-81-21 . Ohio Adminiltretive Code. to routinoly

Public Notice

45789 .

Contract Sales

Legol Copy No: 87-20
UNIT PRICE CONTRACT
Seated propoMio will be
-.eel ot the offico of the
Director of tho Ohio Oeporl·
ment of Transportation . Col-

umbus. Ohio, untii10:00A .
M., Ohio Standerd Time.
Tuesday, Jenuary 8, 1987.
for improvements in :
Meigs end Wethington

Countieo, Ohio. on MEG248- (0 .00-5.041 ·State
Route 24B. and WAS-124(0.00·3.371 ·State Routt
124, by IMUrfocing wilh ••·
phalt concrete.

Projecl end Worlc Length
- 71 ,388 feet 01 13.62
milea.
Pavement Width - varle1 .
The d1t1 ut tor comple·

tlon of this worlc shall bo ••
forth In the bidding propout.
Each bidder shall ba required to file with his bid t
certified check or cathler's
check for an amount equal

to five per cent of hi a bid. but

in no event more than fifty
thousand dollars, or a bond

for ten per cent of hlo bid.
poyoble 10 the Director.
Blddera mutt apply, on the
p1ope1 forma. for quolifico·
tions at te..t ten d1y1 prior
to the date set for opening
bids Ii-I accordance wh:h

ChoptOI 5&amp;26 Ohio Revised
Coda.

ptans and a~cificationa
are on file in the DtiNirtment

of Trenoportatlon and lhtof·

lice of the District Deputy
Director.
The Director reserves the
rklht to reject al)y and all

blila.

WARREN J . SMITH.
DIRECTOR
1121 22, 29, 2tc

monitor tho microbiological
qualitv of tho drinking w-in
their distribution 1y1t11111 in
onler to insure that aafa " ' Is being IIUIJIIIied to tho con-

The village of Svracu1e is
required to collect and examine 1 minimum of one (11
microbiological sample each
month . No 11mple1 were
collected and analyzed for
the month of November.
The water department has
.taken stepa to insure that adequate monitoring will be
performed in the future.
Village of Syracuae

1121 28. 2B. 29 3tc

2

In Memoriam

We wish to lhlnlt the S~ ­
cuse and lllcine squids
lor their quick response to
our call for help. Also Rev.
Hill and Rev. O'Bryant for
their help; also our friends
and churth family, Ewinl
Funenl Home and the
wonde!ful peopleand doc·

tors at V.M.H.

Perhaps you sent a lovely
card,
Or sat quietly in a chair.
Perhaps you sent 1 funeral
spray,
If so we saw it there.
Perhaps you spoke the kindest words,
As any friend could say;
Perhaps you were not there
at all,
Just thoucttt of us that
day.
Wllatever you did to con·
sole our hearts,
Wt thank you so much wha·
tever the part.

The family of Woodrow T.
Zwill'

and son, Russell.

4088 Misses Sizes 10
to t8. Waistline whittling
coatdress; short or
three-quarter sleeves.
Size 14 takes 2% yards
ol 60-inch fabric.

The Daily Sentinel
wq '
NY 11m.

""""*"Prtlll-.
. . . . .._,
Zip, Sill,, _ .......

NEW FOR OftlY $1
96-page, fuR-colOr c.t.
tog of Cr1fla- pauems,
books, supplies, crewel,
cross stitch, needlepoint,
latch hook, quilting, and
more.

ANNE ADAMS

REWARD
A reward of

ssoo cash is offered

for the apprehension and Convic·
tion of the person or persons responsible for firing several gun shots
into a gas compressor station
owned and operated by Carl E.
Smith Petroleum in Portsmouth.
located on Silver Ridge Rd., Orange
Twp., Meigs County, Ohio.
Anyone having any information re·
garding this criminal act are urged
to contact the Meigs Sherjff' s Office
. or notify Carl E. Smith Petroleum .
Inc. at 304-273-9313.

529995

GE VCR

4-Event 14·Day Timer

S319.95
.
-20.00 Rebate

$29995

GE 19"

TELEVISION
NOW
ONLY

52 5995
HOOVU

SWEEPERS

oumer.

3 Announcements

P. ATTERNS
(

11-28-86· 1 mo.

Ntw lecati1111: ..
161 Norlh Slcend
Middloport, Ohio 45760

-~~~~~~ ... 91

UPPER RT. 7 • P.O. BOX 342
GALLIPOLIS, OHIO 45831

•All Typeo of

PlUMIING &amp; UU'ftNr.

---...

"EVERYTHING IN TWO· WAY RADIOS, SATELLITES &amp; VIDEOS"

'"·
992-9949
hb Barton, Ownor
i(UI OUI fOI fUIUR£ USEI

!lond ID:

BOB'S ELECTRONICS

POMEROY, OH.

•Basements

$3.25 for each paUem.
Add 75~ each pattem for
postage, handling.

VHS STEREO/MTSIHQ VIDEO CASSETTE RECORDER

MEIGS
EXCAVATING
COMPANY

109 MUlHRIY AVE.

IF'" Eotimates)

"ITOMIC SOUND" &amp;
JACK O'SHEA OF
Wm RADIO
lrin~ng you thi ultimate of
SO s, 60's, country, &amp; top
40 dance music.
IIO.DO P£R COUPLE
IYDI
CAll 304·67 5·6412

•
VHS STEREO/MTSIHQ
VIDEO CASSETTE RECORD

-$399

SUGAR RUN
ASHLAND

-Rooting 1nd g\.u.r wort
- Concrete work
- Piumblnglnd eltctrlc.ll

NATIONAL GUARD ARMORY
9 P.M.· I A.M.

FVH-919

•

t

614-843-5248
RfASONAilE • REUABLf
tfn

AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS

NEW YEARS'S EVE
DANCE

'

(If you are •
Veteran)

Electronic Organs
Mobile service

HI

The price of this Video Cassette Recorder was printed incorrectly
in Sunday's newspaper. The correct price is '399.00 as printed be·
low. We are sorry for any inconvenience this may have caused .

Real Estate taxes wh ich have not been paid • ~&gt;tha close of each collection carry a penalty of ten per
cent. Taxes may be paid at the office of the county treasurer or by mail. Please bring your last tax re·
ceipt, and if you pay by mail be sure to locate your property by taxing district and enclose,stamped
sell-addressed envelope.
·
Always examine your tax receipt to see that it covers all your property. Office Hours 8:30A.M. to
4:30P.M., Monday thru Friday, Closed on Saturday.

•

Service

YOUNG'S

-CORRECTION-

'

4.30 3.10 24.00 .50 .10 1.00

SocSec:

By LOU HOR\(ATH
Field Representative
In the last column we gave
some basic program information .
about Medicare, the nation al
medical insurance that hel ps
over thirty million Americans
with medical expenses. We ex, plained the details of Part A
hospital Insurance and Part B
medical insurance and gave an
overview· of the Intent of the
Medicare program .
We' ll get into billing and
relfllbursement information In
this col umn. The Medicare program Is administered by lhe
Health Care Financing Admin Is·
tratlon. (Most people mistakenly
believe that Social Security runs
the program.) At Social Security
we determine eligibility forM edIcare, enroll people In the program. h~lp with claims form s.
and give assistan ce when prob·
lems occur.
We don't process Medicare
claims: private insu rance co m·
panies contra ct with the Health
Care Financing Adn\lnlstratlon
to handle the claims . For exa mple, Blue Cross In Cincinnati is

Rates of Taxation for 1986

sun oN

'"· 992-5432

Sunday School attendance
bee. 7 was 39; church attend·
ance, 20. On Dec. 14 Sunday
School attendance was 27;
chu rch attendance, 21.
, Sunday Sehool elections were
held December 14 . Class
teachers elected were Su'n·
!Jeams, Doris Dillinger and Lori
Ritchie; Primary, Mary Jo
Buckley and Lisa Henderson:
Busy Bees, Charlotte Van Meter
and Marlene Donovan; Willing
Workers, Gertrude Robinson and
Diana Pullins ; Young Adults,
lfhelma Henderson, Dorothy Cal·
away, and Lloyd Dillinger;
Adults, Nellie Parker · and Russell Archer.
Other officers elected were
secretary-treasurer, Kathy Wat ·

\\IH 'r ( '()liNT\' ( li61 - Kt•mp 11-1-:!:t:
:'1-lthul:o. ~,.~ · II , Uulwrl.-. K- 1· 1:1; St•t,. :t-:!·11;
l' lchui,.,O· I· I: 'I'OT1\I .."i ~H-HI- Iiti .
1-:ll"'lt'rn....... ..... .. . .. .. IK 1:1 1:1 J :t-~)!J
\\'lrt t 'nnnl)' .............. IK 1:1 17 lb-66

:m

:u:1

............ I:IIJI II 3! IM I;Ji

tit'"'

l'!!l

.

.1;1 1111 ~2
:1:! 11!1 I:J!\

l'in1y lhfo Ul\'ilohon
F..dmnt11u11 ............... :Q 11 ! IM 11111:11
fl&amp;lnr y ................... 211-l 1 " I l"ll:tl
Mhtnlprc ................ 17 15 1 :111
l.ot'i "'"•"'•~ ..... ........ 111~ a :u U.'i I.if!
Vautt.'ll•wr ............... ll '!'l 2 U l'tlii:Z
"
Mul llrd,v'" Kl•!itdl~t
Nrw "l'tM':\' t Qurtwt· ~ tnd
N\' ,,.,.,..,,.. :1, Pttt,.t.rJh :1 f'hr)
\'llAc'VUH•r ~. MdhMtt-lplllhl \!

iJ6t

Hi

Pr ~ . 4 it-'CI ,\

li

I•A
HI

... liO16:!i

Mlnlll"'OIU ............. UJ; ;1 :tl Ull :l!l
Tttrnl'll tl ........... ... II 15 a :1.1 1'! 11'!11
' Uo-lruil . .......... . ...... l:t U
~ - l.o~~ko .......... ....... 1.1111

-.we--

031 MCKSON PII&lt;E ·RT.31 WBT

t On•r.tll 1

Hl\' l~lnn

\\' I.T

Alfred community happenings

:lti-i· ~~.

I s'vAC ~landings I

were given by helen Blackston. will be held at Rio Grande on
For roll callr:nembers exchanged April 24.
Christmas ornaments. · ChristPrior to the gift exchange
mas greeting letters were read packages were judged for wrap·
from Julie Near, state pres ident, pings. Prizes went to Ann Col·
and Carol Rupe, district burn, the pretties t, and Linda
president.
·Broderick, _the most original.
A thank you note was received Becky Broderick was welcomed
from the family ofFayeSauer for as a new member. Susie Abbott
a contribution niade to the won the traveling prize. The
Carleton Sehoolln her memory. meeting closed with group singIt was announced that the Sou- Ing of carols and refreshments of
theastern District Conference Christmas goodies.

'

1-:J\ STI-:H;\ 4~9) - C'HIIIn" K-1- 1";; ('uld\\1'11 tt-1 -U: Grtffith H- ll- 1 ~: llurst :!·:'-";:
!\lurt in :1-1-";: Tripp HI - ~ : III'IHtrb: 1._1 · 1.

TOTI\I.S

Glenn Brow a, senior deacon; Norman Willi Tyler,
Harold Rice, secretary; and third row, Bob Reed,
treasurer; Jerry Tillis, junior deacon; Larry
Well, senior steward; Jell Tillis, junior steward;
and Glenn Kennedy, trustee.

Middleport CCL holds Christmas party

I'EEBI,E."\ (l.t. UIUI•I- Man Krt•mln,
1'!- HK; Kunnl(• Rran.'lc•um , :t- rHi; Todd

IK

TVs, Antennas
SateUite Sal1s
Installation

6-17-tfc

•n- 19-~.

Pt•t•hlt '!'&lt; ... ........... ... ... .. U

J.R.'s REPAIRS

Rt. 124, P-noy Ohio

Rifflt'. 2- H; Mall ll urrls, U.t-I.J: Sc·nU
M1•Phall. U-fi-D: Tim ftllhrldt '. 0-0.0; -h·U
111111'1., l~lt-0; ShaM·n funnlnJ(ham, 1-:!-4:
K4•n 'l'urll')', JH}.2K: Dot\'t' Mc·MIIIIn,
.;..:J- 1:1: Tudd Klnws • .'i-1-11. TOT.\J..,"\

a 4R-46 lead entering the final
p~riod. Wirt extended it s lead,
outscoring the Eagles 17-13. in
the fourth period..
Tim Kemp led the winners with
2:l point s. Toby Nicho.ls added 14
and Ke\' ln Roberts 13.
Ea stl'rn. 5-5, next plays when it
hosts Oak Hill Friday , .Jan. 9,
19R7

'-

Busi-ness Services

SOI ITH.: Rl\' (Whllj•) - Erlt· i\11111ron ,
'!·O·.J; IJ1H't' .\rnhurJ;I'), -HII- UI: Slmnnnn

Eagles fall in title contest

PHONE
992·2156
Or Wfi11 Da1Hy Senlin1l
Otpt
Clmtl~

for field goa Is In a pos!season
game with four, also tried to
downplay his performance.
"It's something I can enjoy
until Tuesday," Atkinson said,
who hit on fle.Id goals of 25, 20, 38
and 18 yards- the first field goal
attempts he has made since
being signed by Ihe Redsklns two
we~k s ago. ~ · Yqu look at It today
and there's really not a field goal·
I shou ldn't have made.".
Despite their cautious moo!),
the Redskins had to be pleased
with the r_ediscovery · of their
defens e in ttime for the playoffs.
The Redskln s, who owned the
league's top pass defense last
season, ranked 20th In the NFL In
pass defense I his season and 21st
in overall defense. But they held
Los ·Angeles quarterback Jim
Everett to only 136 yards passing
and Intercepted the rookie signal
caller twice. Redskin. defenders
also forced four fumbles, three of
them. by running back Eric
Dickerson.
" We ' re rea lly a tea m that for
the bigger part of I he year has not
gotten the ball away from people," Gibbs said. "Today it
looked like we stepped up a
notch. We had some sharp, crisp
tackling and we s,hook the ball
loose."

over the Oaks of the SVAC.
Mark Goodman paced the
victorious Grey hounds with 20
point s, Anthony Whitt and Tony
Davis added 10, and Tad MitchPil
has 12. Eric Faye paced the
locals with lR mark('rs, while
Mike Hale and .Jcdd Raw lins
each had 10.
.
Man chester hit 29 of 62 from
the field and 19-21 from the line,
while Oak Hill canned ju st 18-60
a nd 17·2:\.
The Oaks won the ba ttle of the
boards 34-26. Manchester had 29
fouls compared to Oak Hills 2.'\.

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 5

Ill Court St. POIItiOW. OhioU75'

~ell-oiled Southem rolls to finest outing In 99-65 victory
Tonight we took the good percen·
lag~ shots and were more selecti ve. Look at th ~ results."
Junior Kenny Turley led the
Tornado attack with a careerhigh 2R points and dominated the
boards wi th 23 rebounds. just
three shy of the SHS reeord set bv
Max Knopp in the early 1960's. ·
Senior forward Matt Harris
collected 14 points. Junior guard
David Amburgey notched IR
markers: senior post man Todd
Kimes scored 11 points and
grabbed HI rebounds.
Senior guard Marc Kremins of
Peebl es tied for game-hi gh honm·s with 28. surpassing the 1000
poin t career mark and receiving
the game bail in the first half.
Jeff Unger and Kerry Matheny
ne tted 14 of 11 poi nt s
respecti vely.
Southern gained the ear ly
momentum. grabbing the open·
ing tip and unveiling a torrid
off~nslve sprre and up-beat

____

The Daily Sentinel

•

By SCOTT WOLFE
Sentinel Stall Writer
-ATHENS - Portraying the
well-oiled machine representa tjve of former Southern Tornado
powers, the 1986 Southern sq uad
tiombarded perennial Ohio Class
~ power Peebles 99-6.'i Saturday
E'Vening in the second game of a
hol,iday high school basket ball
triple- header at Ohio Unlversi·
ty's Convocation &lt;;,ent er.
: The Tornadoes , 4-4, gat hered
momentum throughout the contest to form an unsurmount able
poin t'fotal that left a st unned. but
talen ted Peebles crew with a 6-2
overall mark.
An elated Coach Howie Cald·
well reflected. "This game of
basketball is filled with peaks
4nd valleys. Tonight we were on
a peak an d hopefully back on the
winning side for awhil e. Early in
the seasoo people didn 't believe
that we were inexperienced, but
our shot selection was poor.

. ..._

...

$7995

YCI TAPES
OILY $299
GOlDSTAR

MICROWAVE

$10995
MGM
:
FARM CITY INC • .
POMEROY
992-2104

Real Estate General

E. Mait•W..
POMEROY,O.
992·2259
NEW LISTING - POMEROY
- large 2 story stooe home
wrth 4 bedroom~ I ~ baths.
family room, dinmg room and
full basement. A really mce
home lor just $28,900.00
SYRACUSE -Country decor,
~ n~e level. move in condi·
bon. 4 bedrooms. eal·tn
kitchen. family 1oom, ga~ age ,
lireplace. bookcases. closets,
1ntenor w1ndow shuUers, d1a·
penes. Appliances n egot~able
$49,900.00.
RACINE - Cute ltttte one
bedroom home rn Racine '"
gqod condtlton. alum~num Sid·
in ~ all simms, level tot REDUCED PRICE $12.000.00
·SYRACUSE AREA - H1gh
on a ht ll, great lor a CB 01
ham rad1o operator. Lar ge
yard area and a newer modu lar with 3 bedroom1
MAKE OffER. PRICE RE·
DUCED. $24.900.00.
LETART TOWNSHIP - DEER
COUNTRY - 29 acres ol
mostly wooded land. buitd ~ng
sne lor home or hunlrng
cabin. Most mtnerals Wanl10g
$14.1XXl.OO.
SYRACUSE - Antce ranch
type home '" Rustic hrlls. 3
bed10oms, garage, elec. B.B.
'heat. Patio and nrce Jot. In
good cond ilion. $37.000 00.
Henry E. Cleland, Jr
992-6191
Jean Trussell ..... 949-2660
Dottie Turner ..... 992· 5692
Office ..... .. .. .. ..... 992·6191

,,

'

�.

Monday,

"
Doeember ~9. 19as·

LOSER
AIIIIUIIIII: I' 1111'111 S
,3 Announcements

92oe.

beqlnnlng at 1:00 p.m. Ftctorv
Chok'- 12 UU8111• shotguns.

Vo. 304·4.8&amp;-2111. ·

ha. cleaning. reuonabte, refer-

onceo. Coli 814-245-8S48.

·

FIREWOOI;J . . OiJk, locust,
ch•ry. 131 per pick-up load,
deUvered. Bill Slack 114-992-

2269.

4

Finilncial
21

Business
Opportunity

Rabbitt to gtve away Ph. 446-

1149.

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH-

Red Tick Coon Dog, mlle.
1 6mo·. old Ph. 614-992-7103.

6

~~l.tN~.,..-o

·"Do you have to cry every

Lost and Found

Found- black &amp; grt't' maleterrior.
ne• Redmen Inn on Rt . 36 Call
114-441-1079.

time our daughter gets married?"

22 Money to Loan

Lott : 2 white femalekinent. 3 Of
4 montht old. Call 614-992-

1583.

Loat : Female Beagle. yellow tnd
white. Crook on the and of tail.

lost in Carmei· Bethan area. Call
614-949-2194.

5648 after 6 :00pm.

9

23

Wanted To Buy

WajMy eaah for lite model clean

SAVED Gospel Singing Group
taking booking atarting January,
1987. Anyone interested in
booking " SAYED" can callarH

coda 1304 t 676 ·60?3. lhtnk
vou for your support and may

•-:========:.LG:o:d:B:I•:"::Yo:u:·:":SA:V:E:D:':'·=~

:._8 USIDeSS
.•
s
. ervices
1

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

Jim Mink Chev.· Oida Inc:.
BiH Gene Johnson
614·446· 3172

TOP CASH plld for '83 model

and newer used cars. Smith
Buick·Pontiac, 1911 Eastam

Reol

Buying daily gold, tilver coins,

31

.rno•.i-•'rv. .... rinow .... ord

coint, large curtei1cv. Top pri-

2nd. Ave. Middlepon, Oh. 614-

6roomhoute.1 .2aeres . Double
car garege. Loctted on Ro1e Hill.
Bargain priced UO,OOO. Call
614-678-2613.
Government homn from t1 . (U
r~airl . Delinquent tax property.
Aepo11eifion•. Call 805·187·
8000 Ext. GH-9806 for current
repo Utt.

Cash paid. Pre 1960'• · Single or
whole collection. C•ll Marc and
Ellen Fultz 114-992-2101 days
or 814·692 ·2481 evening• and
weekendt .

2 bedroom houte . for 11le in
Clifton lM•ble Johmon PfOP·

OUILTS
SOUGHT-SOLD

I Mo. 12-9-16

eny). Fully carpeted. recently
remodeled. new roof. A•king

Cash paid. Pre 1960's. Single or
whole collectkm. Ctll Mire and
Ellen Fultz 814·992·2101 diVI
or 814·&amp;92-2411 evening• end
weekends.

2 nory, 3 bedroomhou.. with 1
Cit garage on Appro11 1.5 •.cret.

$33,000. Coli 614-982·6104.

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

Hemlocll Grove ltft.

Emplu v111 e111

T'' PROFEWONAl H,.,
I ,,,HIIIUI Clllt~

Sr:r m:e:;

_.. Insulated Replacement

Window

' •Vinyl. Steel Siding
"'·•storm Windows

,.

.'

11

"fREE
IMSTAllATIOII"

Lady

Help Wanted
to INa tn light hou•keepino

Ph. 304-575-5104.

5HOWaOOIII HOUitl:
fl to S •n., Tu11.. WH. I Fri.
• to 12 Thun. &amp; !at.

12·11-'86·1 1110.

2 br. kitchen, bathroom, with
laundry room, living room Ill
dining room. all alec. Appro~~: . 7
mUtt from Pt . Pl. on At. 62. 2
tracuapprox. 1acremoreorle11
ovarlooklng Kanawha River.

UO.OOO. Coli 304-675-5440

betwHn 8:30 end 4:30.

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

SAliS &amp; SEIYICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVI.Lfr 01110
Authoriud John D•re.
H. .llll. lush Hog
farm Equipment
Doaler

Ntw

F1r111 E4111~111..t
_Pirtt &amp; Service

1-3-'86 tfc

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

•ZENITH

•SYLVAIIIA
•SPEED QUEEN lAUNDRY
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATELUTE SALES &amp; SERVICE

Wt ""J Afill TIMI
Sh~ Tlt~tllltt

.. o_,

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

4/ lltfn

SKATE -A- WAY
Wm A Pw' of \~ntP\
Chr~~tn,•J' P Hf~ Dr·( 20
NPw Vror 1 fvp P11rty
DP(.

ll

un•tl I 001
OpPnWt&gt;rl . ~rl '1ol
1] lO

1- ---------

1-----~

1986 mobile home for a~le .
14~~:70, e•ceUflflt condition. 2
bedroom, 2 tul baths. Call
614·992· 7163.

1- - - -- - - - --

Has Lowered Pricts

Ford &amp; GM Tru6: Fender•
brfy •39 - Lite •&amp;&amp;
Chrome Bumpen- GM 73·
80 t65 - Ford 73-n 159

THRU OEC. FREE INSTAL.
ON 8EDLINERS

we 1e11 top qu1litv p•r1•
and have3 yr. run-through
warranty a&lt;Jalltblity

DEliVERY IN TIH ·IT.I.TE .I.REA

Loool 304-882·3728
In- WV 1-800-8&amp;4-4657
0 - 'M/1 -800-523-2013

We can repair and rl'!
core rad1ators and

GIAVELY
TIACTOI SALES

•

IH-' 16·1 mo.

•VINYL SIDING
• AI,UMINUM SIDING
WSUlADON

BISSBL
SIDING CO.

PAT HILL FORD

PH. ,49·280 1

1·13·1fc

An Ohio Oil Co. otfert hlgl'l
income. plut cah bonusn.
benefit• to mature pwaon in
Gtllipolit aret. Aeg•dlftt of
exp•lence. write M.D. Aead,
Americtn Lubflctntt Co .• Bo11
426 Dtvton. Ohio 411401 .
AirUn• now hiring. Flight At·
t•dantJ, Agent,, Mech•tiCI.
Custom• Senllce. Seltrita to
t&amp;OK . Emry lev.. potitiont. Cell

currtnt fad•tlli•t.
Pan tim• work-full time btntrf·
itell Members of the Army
National Gutrd cen reeeiva a
monthlyp1ychack. IIO,OOOIIfe
ln•uranct, t18.00D educttion
attlatance and much more.

Ntw

Ho11111

NoSWIIIay Cals
..

Furnithed Apt. *200.00 util•
tiu Pd. 1 bedroom, fint ftoor Ph.
448-44161ft• 7p.m.

Duplex 646 Second, carpeted, 3
bedroom. LA , IDA , new kitchen
&amp; 'bath. washer It dryer hook -up,
UB&amp;.OO mo l piU1 utllitiet •
aecurity deposit Ph . 814·0690.
1 Bedroom baale rent •171.00

plut electric: Alto required e

448 -3997 Equal Housing
Opponunlty.
Furniahtd aPt. •175.00 water
pd. 2 bedroom. 131 Y2 Founh
Ava. Ph . 446·4411atuw 7pm.

New 2 bedroom aptt. In Mason.
W. Va. Oui•t setting, off nreet
parking. Rent •t•rt• et t1 99.
Call Linda Ceraon. at 304-775·
5011 or Denlu Streib at 814883 · 41 11 : Ecfual Houaing
Opportunity.

2 Bedroom apt. nice eatpeting,
water paid. w11har Bl dryer
hook-up, ttove, refrig. furnished
avalltble Jae 1, 1987 Ph.

3644

Furnished &amp; unfurnished 1pt1.,
t150.00 and up, ref•ene~~ Ph.
304-675·!104 A-1 Ae1l Ettete.
Upttalrt unfurnithed apt, car·
Pettet. utilltl• paid, no children,
no pets c.ll 441·1837.
·
2 and 3 bedroom apartment•
and hout8t In Pomtroy Of
Middleport. Furnl•hed or unfur·
nished. Pay own utilitiet. Call
Apartment• for rent In Pomeroy.
One en~ two bedroom. CleM
and nice. Call 614· 992· 6216 or

114-992-7314.

2 bedroom aptt .. Ntw Hav.n.
Alto commercill 1paca suitable
for aerobict, tanning, craft•. Call
304-882-3681 or 814-992-

For Stle: 9011110 lot in Twin
Cedar addition, New Ht&lt;Jen.
W.V. f4&amp;00 firm . 304-882·

3201.

2084.·

Rcnlals
41

Houses for Rant

2 bedroom I 3 bedroom houtM
for rent Ph. 446· 1876.
2 Bedroom, 1 1h batht. located In
downtown area. Adultt only
rel•encet • deposit required
Ph.

One bedroom unturni•hed. total
electric apt. Owner pay• water
and u ..h pickup. Call614· 992·

614-446-3771

2 Bedroom houte.

8'2 Firtt

Ave .. Gallipoli1. No peu, rtfer·

.

One bedroom tplrtment in
Middleport. Fully carpeced. total
electric. equipped kitchen, good
location. CeiiiU-992-31167 Of

814-992-5170

2 bedroom river ~itw apt.
Wa•her tnd dryer tvallable,
ultlitltt peid, equipped kitchen,
newty plinted end cunaint , no
pet• . depotit. ldtel for WOI'king
gltlt to thert eKptnce. 61 4· 992·
8639 mornings,
APARTMENTS. mobile hom•,
houua. Pt. Plea.m and Gallipo·
Ill, 614·448· 8221 .

ren, no pita. reference re·
qunted. Call814·«8·0321 .

Beautiful naw hou•e in Pom•
roy, Alao new on• bedroom
fufnlthed •par1ment in Middleport. Call 814·448· 1552 or

114-992-5304.

p.m.

J/11/

0766.

Part time emptoyment. computer bllckground 1nd accounting
e111p..-,ca a plut, write Bo111
C-22. Cite of Point Pl...nt
A~itttf , 200 Mtln St., Pt. Pit .,
w. Va.

SNAFU™

45

Furnished Rooms

'

Aoom1 for rent, day. week,
month. Galie Hotel. Call 814·
:~~~?1; 6 . Rent 11lowast120
Furniahed Joom 919 2nd, Gallipol it . t1 15. Utiliti11 pd. Share
btth. Single mite. C•ll 4454416 after 7pm.

46 Space for Rent

Family for edult• needt 3
bedroom• and ba•ement in P1.
Pleaant within 5 mil•. Aaftr·
encea furnlth.ci Ph. 6'7&amp;·1091 ,

2183.

Pole Buildings by . Quality
Buildfn. Workthapt, carpor1•.
1nimal thalters, gllag• .. Free
"11male• . Phone 114-384 -

56

Pets for Sale

afttJ 7PM .

51 Household Goods

Winter f1thion1 &amp; spedtl chritt·
maglftt tor your peu. Groom &amp;

Supply Shop Ph. 614-441-0231

SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 62

Olive se.. Gelllpolia. New' Uled
wood-cotl •tovn, 8 pc wood LA
•ulte 1399. bunk beds t1 H .
antron racllnera t99, new •
uted bedroom suites. rtng,.,
wringer wath. .. • eho•. New
llvingroom tultn t199· t599.
l1mpt, al•o IHJylng coal • wood
ttovM. Call 814-441-3169.

AKC Regittered Cl'low·Chow
Puppi•. E)!Cetlent pec:Uar....
Ready for Chrlttmll. Ph. 614-

266·1848

AKC Regi•tered Siberian Hutky
puppl..._ 4 famal" leh. Shot•
1nd wormed. t100. aach. Call

614-949-2940 '"" 5,00.

AKC Shetland sheep dog "Mini·
etureCollle'' 7walktold. Shott
• wormed. aable &amp; white
County Applilnce. Inc. Good , femeiH.
bllck 1: white maiM.
uted appliances and TV tttl. 0150. 304-372-5866.
Open 8AM to 6PM . Mon tl'lru

57

Velley Furniture, new I used.
Large tectlon of quality furnl ·
ture. 1218 Eutern Ave .,
O.llipollt.

LAYNE'S FURNITURE
Sof• and ch•itJ priced from
• 39&amp; to t995. Teblea tiJO end
up to 1126. Hide-a·bedt t390
to tl595. Reclin.,. 1225 to
t371. Lamp• t28 10 1126.
Dinettn f101and up to t496.
Wood table w·l chlira Ull to
17915. Oaalc •100 up to 13715.
Hutch" t400 and up. Bunk
beds compltte w-mlttretlll

U85onduptoU95. 8oby-

t110 • t1711. Mattr... norbox
•pringt full or twin tl3. firm
t73. and•ll. Clueentlttt22&amp;.
King t3110. 4 drawer ch•t t86.
Dr.....,. •at. Oun cetHnett 8,
10. • 12 gun. a •• or .. ectrle
range U7&amp;. Baby mlttr•tn
136 &amp; 1411. 8ed tram• t20.
uo &amp; King lrame •&amp;o., Good
aalection of bedroom •ultee,
metal cabinets. headboard• t30
end up to t65.
Uted Furniture: W••h• •
dryer. a•• renge, wood ttble &amp;
2 btnchn,
drn ... wood
wardrobe. 3 mila out
8ulevllle Rd. Open lAM to
15PM, Mon. thru Sit .

bed•.

814-4,A6-0322.

Musical
Instruments

Whitney Kimball Piano, like new.

Ph. 514-448-2981 o•614-992·
301B.

s

F.!rill 1111111 iI':;
/; Lrvl:stor:k

61

Farm Equipment
CROSS &amp;'SONS

U.S. 3&amp; W•t. Jtck•on, Ohio.

114-2e6-11451.

Men., Ferguton, New Holland,
Bulh Hog S.l11 &amp; Ser&lt;Jice. Over
40 uttd tr1ator1 to choote from
• complete line of new &amp; uted
equipment. Llrgnt •tlection in
S.E. Ohio.

GOOD USED APPLIANCES

Waahera, drytrl, relriftratort,
ung•• · Sklgg• Applianctt,
Upper AIYtr Rd. beside Stone

Cr"t Moto1. 114-446-1398.

Pldt..,s Ulld Furniture. Good
quality ut.t furniture. Opan 9 to
.e or cal for appointment.

304·675-6483 o• 175-1450.

Tappen lite. cook ••o~a. 111ac·
oda grHn. t200.; 1979 Chw.
pickup 4 whHI drive. 350 auto.,
Btt. bed. goodtlrH. t2,&amp;00. Ph.

372-8390.

64 Misc. Merchandise
Ctllahan't Used Tire Shop. O~er
1.000 tirta. aiz•• 12, 13. 14, 111i,
HI. 11.1. 8 milee out AI. 218 .

Colll1.4·25e-5251 .

Plastic dttarn •tate IPPfOVed,
pl11tic teptlc tanks, plastic
culvtr1t. mettl culvent. RON

Ohio. Calll14· 446·9n7. we.
814·-.6· 3&amp;92. Up frctnt tree·
tors whh warranty CWIM"
uttd
tractoft, 1000 10011.

-.o

UTILITY BLDG. SPECIAL'

27'~t36'x9'EAVE

with tliding
doorS. aervice door 14,2B8.00
Iron Hofte Building• Ph.l14·

332-9745.

1 electric wheel chelr with
betterlet, 1 manual wheal ch•r.

t7.100.00. Keefe,. Service
Centar. St. At. 87. Pt. Pleutnt, ·

Now -buying me11 corn or a•
corn. Call forltt:Mtquotn, Alvtr
Chy Ferm Suppty, 614· 441·

63

Livestock

13 roosters tnd 2 hens. g1me
chicken• for Nle. Will sell
re11onably . Call &amp;14 · 367 ·

7439.
64

Hay &amp; Grain

Laroe round ball• of hiY for •lie.

"Geel The boat was lots faster
last weel!endl"

T - fo&lt;on)~ltNol!.

304-175-1 I II.

fiS. CoM

8:00

·HAve
TH~

v•£&gt;~TAPE.&gt;
"

'

of
At...L
.
'

Gt;\MES X MI.S'.SEP

v-...1888 !CCI Ron,.

Cl••., ........

~g~n and Ju•tlne Beteman
1oo1&lt; back at lhe major ev·
ena of 1988. (80 min.)
rD UH!ty Bowl: Mlnnesol8vo.T-Livl

e
Services

from Memphl•.

(JJ

- -- - - -

Cit eiDIKate • Allie (CCi

Ktto and Artie find tlltmselve• left ilone on New
Year'o Eve. (II).
® wonc~e,_m: All
Summer In a Dey/Dnly'o

'

BASEMENT
WATERPROOFING

Eft (CC).

Unconditk)nal lifetime guaran·
tH. Local reference~ furnillhed.
FrM •lmaln. Call collect
1· 114·237-0488. day or night.
Rogert Basement
W11erprooflng.

(H)

8:30 • (I) 1]11 Amellng 8toMo

·(CCI A nruggllng comedy'
writer becomeo a hugo tuc·
cen. lhanks to hi• ICrip-

1------ - - --

Stereo.
(!) NFL't 8ujNIII&amp;I4 Mlka

WI1H A
FA(£. .. .

FTM Gtntrtl ContriiGiing 13yrs
e11perience. Roofing &amp; Con'· ,
"ruction Ph. 114-388-9308. ,
FrH ettlmalea 1 ~ off during
the holldiY•· off• expires Jan

Curti•.

U ,OOO.OO. Phono 114-448-

3717 after lpm.

oollont u• mil ...... VOl'\' dopon-

dlllllo. UOOO. Nogotloblo. CoM
It 4-192-3118.

1178 Detaun 8210. OOOd ·con·
tltlon. 4150. t 178 Ch'Yolor.
000c1 COftdHion. •no. Coli

114-247-4212.

(ll) My

(JI •

sm. 111m

ICC) A 11sr-alruck P1tti
craohea Sam's lfii!IO'Iant
photo se11lon with a rock
singer. (R). .
9:00
1]1) MOVIE: 'liM

eo.vm.·
(])

RON ' S Televialon Service .
HouH ellis r&gt;n RCA, Quuar,
GE . Specllling In Zenith . Call '

m1ooetub

Bodybuilding: 1188
u.w.n. Chern·
plonllhlp Coverage from
Tucson, AZ. (80 min.) (R) .
[f) G [f) MOVIE: 'Lovtt
(!)

304-576-2398 o• 514-4462454.

AAU Mr.

Fetty Tree Trimming, ttump
removal. Ca11304-676-1331 .

RINOLES'S SERVICE, oxp• .

Thy

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

rlenced carpenter, electrlcien.
m110n, !*nter. roofing llnclud·
ing hot tar epplicltionJ 30,..

""""'*'' Amon-.
CD e llD Nowlwt ICC) Aa
Rehctloo• (CC).

I ATE A WHOLE
FROZEN PIZZA R:R

I DIDN'T HAVE
TIME TO DEFROOT
IT, 50

LUNCH TOD&lt;\Y.

I.. .

r DON'T THINK

Dick copes with lhe cancel·
lotion of hif tslevlaion show.
Stephanie leoma that Larry,

I WANTlOH&amp;IR

ANYMCRE.

Darryl

(Jl) Drtnlclng and DIMng:
TM Tol, the T_.. !CCI
The aftennllh of nine tragic
aecldenta Ia examined. (80

•"''

min.) (R) .

9:30 ()D 8 IB C.Vanauthf
· Father Chuck Jr.'s mN11ng

with a powerful bl•hop.
which could ldvenct hia

career, i• threatened when it
ia revelled thet lhe bifhop
and Pop hevo a long-

I ,CANT

MAKE ·
HE~D NER TAIL
OUT OF THIS
HEJoJ·SCR

I----- - -- -CARTER 'S PLUMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Fourth and Pine
Gallipolis, Ohio
Phone 814-446-3888 or 61•·

and Darryl havt

named their now pig after
hoqR).

Plumbing

&amp; Heating

Neighbor' !CCIIRI.

[f)

BARNEY

PAW

GIVE ME

IT'S A BILL FROM
01: DOC PRITCHART

A LOOK

AT IT ·

atondlng grudge. ·
Dunlop Phoenix

10:00 (!)

Golf

Toumement
Coverage
from Miyuaki, Japan. (80 .
min.)
Cll Drtnldng and Drtvtnv:
TM Tol, 1he T_.. (CCI
Tho aftermath of nine troglc:
accidtntl ia examined. (80
min.) (A) .
CID 8 &lt;lll Cagney • ~
(CC) Cagney and Lacey lnveatlgato a aerloa of Park

,.--....,-.,,

General Hauling

James Boys Wtter Ser&lt;Jice. Also
pool• filled . Call614· 256· 1141
or 614-446-1176 or 614 -440.

NORTH

1-l.a!

•Ku

.

.~

.• A 91
• A Q 10 2

By Jamea Jacoby

+9SS

EAST
There's a ' humorous adage about ·
82
begars l"llklng the streets of London • • 9 8 5 4 3
.KJ2
because they didn't pull trump~ . But · • J 4
.K987U
there may be just as many lmpover- +7 4
.AKJJ
lahecl players who tried to pull trump~
SOUTH
too soon. You can certainly dnw that
.A 10 7 8H
conclusion from toda)'.s deal, taken
.Q10
from last year's cl111ic "Play It
t3
Again, Sam," written by Terence
+Q
10 86
Reese and Martin Hoffman and publlahecl by Devyu Prea (lil Thierman
Vulnerable: North-South
•.
Dealer: East
LaDe, Loultvllle, KY 40207).
'
Playing 1D three spades, South cot
•
Nortk
the jack of dlamopds lead. He won Weol
''
dummy's ace and immediately played
a spade back to hill ace, cetUn1 the bad Pass
3t
news about trumpa. He played to dum· Pw
my's spade kina as Weal 11pllt h1l bon·
ora, IJld thea played the queen of dla·
Openin1 lead: t J
•.
IIKIIIdo from dtunmy, covered by East
u South ruffed. Now a opade to Weal's
honor, IJld West led 1 ~rt. J)e. 'what? West will play a heart, but
.
did the best he could, dlldlna clarer can rile with dummy's 1e1 tad •
the heart, but East won the kiDa IJld try the queen of dlaiiiOIIdll. Now wileD •
played A·K of clublllld a club, allow· East covers with the klnallld declarer
eat to ruff for the setUna trick. ruffs. declarer can next play ICI lid
larer can succeed If he clela11 klllg ol spades and cash the dlt""l'lld
playing trumpa. At trick two he sbollld I 0, throwing his heart queen as Wilt .
play a club from dummy toward his · takes h1l llnal trump trick. 'nit Ia •
lwld. Tnae, the opponents can play only four tricks for the clef-, tad :
three ,clubl, let!!J~c West ruff, but now the contract Is made.
•

••••

'-------,-1
de--.:

In!:,!

..

t!l"c•~
t¥
by THOMAS JOSE'H
ACA088
1 Small
hrBDch
6 Uke
"Adeline'

Will haul atone, coal, dtn, e1c.
Vaughn E. Taylor truCking 614-

245-5816.

FINDING A

••

Umntoneand slabwoodhauled .
AI 'l:romm. RutiMd. Ctll 814·

11:oo N_,
•m(])•Cilillecrt~
.
CD 1t1n1cuu. and Meeor-

~()KEN

'••

mlck

L.EG!!

(!)

Sarrvny Beugh.

!

[f) Mlrk RuiHII Comedy

"
•
•

•••

Upholstery

•'

R • M Cuttom COucl'ln end
Aaupholattt;y, St. Rt. 7 Crawn
City, Oh. 114-2&amp;1· 1470. Eve. ;"

S~jNitllwo

e (l) M•A•S•H

•

Coli. llmettone, grevel. etc.
Oeltverad 1 ton end up. Jim
Llnler, 304-6715 -1247 or 87&amp;- "' ~

NFL'o

PEANUTS
HI, FRANKLIN! ABOUT T~IS
'WAR AND PEACE'' WE'RE
SUPPOSED TO READ
DIJRIN6 VACATION ...

11 :30
WilY DON 'r WE SORT
OF COOPERATE ? YOU

''AND"!

READ "WAR': .. MA~CIE

CAH

''PEACE ''

5, Sat . 1:30 to 1 :30. Old &amp; new
Uphottered.

Mowrey'• Upholttering serving ,
trl countyaraa21 yeare. The belt o1:
In turnituft uphollttriftg. CaR , ~
304 - 1715 · 4114 for free
Htlm11" .

Time (CC).

Xl,lLR

onlght' •

•Z H R L

I•

.

''
'

•'
'

OQL

HK

C RR

YG

''

.'
•

I
J

..

GYNNLS

XL

Ol,lMROG

G L 0

WMO .JQLR

•&gt;•

Jl,lMAZSLR
MG

C SHYRZ
K MS L

CRZ

•

•

QCG

OQL

E C ILG

IHG OL GO
X~MOJ HIT

K YR .

8

-

iliiB Magnum, P.l.

Satul'day'o Cryptoqaote: BLESSErl ARE THEY WHO
CAN GIVE wrrtiOUT REMEMBERING ANO TAKE
WI:l'HOUT FORGE'ITING. - ELIZARE'Ill AlllESCO

• Ill! limOn • . , _

••

-·'

CJIYPTOQUOTES
CR ' ,

[f) WKRP In Clncl-'1
(l) Taxi
8(JJABC NewaNightllne
[f) N - Too Old (AI.

114-448-3438. Opon dolly Bto •

i

One letter slands for another. In this sample A is used
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters
apostrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are ali
,hinls. Each day the code letters are different.

Special Mark Ruosell coml·

(!)~

38 Vest
39 Drop
the bait
40 Small fish
41 Ablaall
-Buren
42 Prefix for
gram or
biotic
44 Gold (Sp.)

AXYDLBAAXR

cally rovlowa lhe new•wor·
lhy ovento of 19811.
(Jl) !lew Agalnet Plllne

Bonnett, magician Doug
Henning and the MiahtY Clr·
aon Art Playoro. (80 mln.) In
Steroo (AI.

\

Is LONGFELLOW

12-29

IT ;";"~:t-:;;
cguam .,. Tony

I

.

1 Chers
creation
2 "Beetle
Belley"
character
DAILYCRYPTOQUOTES-Here't how lowork It:

(Jl) Thla Old Houa.

IHE HOPE OF

'
..

DOWI'i

® 1B Newa
10:30 (I) IIH Coobv Show

UP !HEREIN

,
.t

•

1--+-1-1-+-

(80 min.) (A).

YOU ONLY GO

..

S Mature

4 Here (Fr.)
II The 'G" ·
in G.P.O.
8 Actor,
11 Mrs.
Martin Kramden 7 Pale
12 Split
8 Porker
In twain
9 Nightfall
18 Rabbit fur 10 Thrice
14 SU!p In
(Lat.)
15 Devoured 17 Skin
16 Lambkin's
problem 27 ·- to
mom
20 Not odd
Billy Joe"
18 Rickles 21 Come
281nsect
It New start
In ftrst
29 Dickens'
24 Sylvan
22 ·cakes and character
•
deity
"
31 Moray
21 Base
28 Hire
or conger
26 or sound 24 Top of
33 Corrupt
21 Belief
the head 34 Giant
SO Mine
26 Kids' game 311 Spread joy
entrance
31 One (Ger.) 1
32 Be
revenged
34 Young
sheep
37TV's .
"Tanan"
38 Asian river
39Couch
' 43 Count up ·
411 Turkish
city
46 Seeing red
47 Punitive
48 French
pelnU!r

Aveooe burglerie• while
Dot. CoraoN io oaligned a
ne,w atrtet·lllllrt panner.

T I LWattf deiWery any lime Ph.
114 · 388 · 9732 ume day
delivery .

B7

Too soon is as bad
as too late

twritlng oplder plant. In

446-0294:

2919 .

MOVIE: 'M8chlne Gun

8:011 CIJ MOVIE: '0'-'t'

SWI;EPEA and eewing machine
repair. partl. 1nd auppll• . Pick '
up and delivtry, Davia Vacuum
Cl11ner, one half mile up
Georg• C'Hk Ad . Call 614·

B6

•

MeDlin'

7397.
Autos for Sale

TN. 1nn.1

MtcNell·l,*w

N.-hour

Watterson ' • Water Hauling.
re11onable rates, immediate
2.000 gallon delivery, citUtrna,
poot,, will, 1tc. call 304-676·

1r drlsprrrt.ilron

.,...,. Cl'lllllllre cralhel Into
the 111f8911 of lhe Tanner fe.

(!) Meglc y_.. In 8porla
(R).
(JJ
•
(JJ
WMtl8

Wtill.. f .X: . WAS IN

&lt;:HUP:C.H ;&gt;•

m

e (I) &lt;lll ALF A bedraggled
mUy and llkH up ralidence.
IR) In Stereo.
(I) F81111r Murphy

4828.

Dried tiMied corn. t4.10 per
cwt. Ground ti.OO per cwt.
Oroundwlthmol.... t5.75per

1111 Thunderbird. loldtd. Ex·

»04-273-5111, Now Houro Frl ..
lot .. lun., 12-lprn.

(H)a7:36
ltorleymooMrl

fo~ Me .•. WIW.:. l'i

,
.•
·

1912 Chwetta, good thepe.

Sam lumm.vMie'a Army Sur·
plua , Elitt of RtvenswoOd. Ph.

Room ond - d to• oonlor

'

Wan1ed 10 buy. front tr~d for '71
Buidl Skylwk. 1970, 1971 ,
1972. can be uaed. 304-175·.

742-2328.

oil honl wOCMI. Hoot 71

Coli 304-175-4831 .

THAT' PLACt: IN Hl?Avt'N
THAT'.S /?f:5E~Vt:P

oondlllon. U&amp;O.OO. 304- .
eez-3231.

•10.00 ooch Ph. S14-4481012.

..... 304·41S-1031 .

Tony't Gun Aepairt, hot rtblu•
lng. Opoo g,oo AM 10 7,00 PM.

Coil I 14-182-1173.

~

good

Home
Improvements

,

James Jacoby

:':J

[f) FineR~

Cit Wheel of Fortune
• crt &lt;Ill ~dy

7911 .

446·1324.

2411.

8(J)Judge

446-4477

1411 .

Room and bolt'd for ~tnployed
.,..,, Nloe home. Femlty ltmot-

Auto Parts
&amp; Accessories

htYbin• •&amp;.900.00: Model474

Mlaedhnwooct"*. •12. p•
bunch. C0n11lnlng ...,ca. 1~
tons. FOI Ohio Pllltt Co,
Pomoroy, Ohio. Coii14·9BZ·

Situations
Wanted

(!) NFL Fllmo P...• (l) Too ClaM for Com·
fort

Flberglus truck topper. 8 ft.
bed, alidlng glaaa wlndowt. •

7' hoyblnn 11,400.00, Modol
2
481 9' hoybln" •1.700.00; B
Model 489 9' hoyblnoo

Bar with m•tching •wivel ttoolt
t120.00. contolttereo *711 .00.
cath revitter UO .OO Ph. 61,..

Fkowood,

Game

roll• *2.000.00: Modol472 7' 304-675-5446 or 615-5162.

Coli 614·256-1989

vouoh.,e accapted. 131. 1
plckup load. Phone 814·742·

7:30 8 (I) (JJ New N•.,ewwl"'~'uMuoldd

==---=--,---,;--:--- .•

B1

•

~

IBI a.m.y MIU.

1:o6 m 8enfotd onc1 aon

Motor cycle traitor. 1981 Y.. ~"
mlha, 760 Virego . Call 614-

2220.

..
... .

.'

BRIDGE

I)DN_,
(Jl)
MIICNi'll·l..ehrer
Newlhour
8 (ll) &lt;Ill WhHI of Fortune

,.'

...

~

part

.

2985.

Tr11 &amp; nump r..no¥el, ttone
malt. flr-.oad tiS. dump klld,

e

:-:--........-:-::-:-=- - '' .,
74 Motorcycles
~"

I II I I I I I I

DeadlY- Embed - I,m, - lladeem - lWIJY
Attar walking ll'OUI1d the store for tome lime lha clerk • ·
ed lha loa! chiiCI, "Have~ spotted ~r Mom yll?" "NDJ»,"
.replied lht child, "just DAD[!Y."

cusses his recent prescrip-

~

- ~~~~

YISIIIDAY'S KIAM-iris AIISWIIS .

tion drug problem.
(l) M•A•&amp;•H
8 (]) People{'o Court .
(JJ Nlghlly 81111- lie·

• .r"'

00,\o.IOW'

White Farm Tracto,., 8eat Price
In Aree, Sldtrt Equipment co . ._6,.7_5_·2_o_B_s_o_r_
67_5_-_7_14_7_. _ _
Henderaon. W. Va. 304-87&amp;- r ·
7421 ,
Stark• Tree tnd .Lawn Service,
Hedgu , •hrub• . buthu
DEUTZ·ALLIS LAST OF YEAR trlmmad , land1caping and
TRACTOR SPECIALS . Model llump ftmoval . Utaf removal. ' '
1031133PTOHPdlne1,8'Peed, 304-57e-2010 or 1171-2842.
~
powor ota.ing, dll locll hyd
11)001 qlue, ropa with cenopy. Rotary or ctble tool drilling.
Salt price sa.no.oo. Check Monwelltcomplttedumedey.
with u• on all HP rangil. Wectn Pump siN• and •ervice. 304flnance on 7.97 percent Ita• 1 B_9_5_-3_e_o_2_ _ _ _ _ __
purchut plan . NEW HOLLAND r·
hay tool tile with 1H cul'l A•hbv Conttruction. cerpandl•counts. Oectmber Only. tery, remodeling, room addition,
,.i
,.
Model 461 7 ' mowers cem .. t block work. roofing,
,.
t1 ,900.00; Model 168 10' lnt•lor and ·eat.,ior painting,
tedder 11,250.00: Model 256 tiding. Roofing, Free ntimtttt.

. Riploy Rood. Ph. 304-89&amp;EVANS ENTERPRISES. Jock- 3174.
son. Oh. 814-288-5930.
62 Wanted to Buy
Firewood dallvered Oek &amp; hick·
lood 135. Colll14·441-2223 ..
614·441·3028.

'LIGHT ~V FIRE"! AA~I

I I

•

o

by filling in the misting words
1L.-J.-J.L....J.L.....J...
I . 0you devolop
I I I . I-.1..--1.
lrom step No. 3 jlelow.

upcoming film. "The Three
Amigos," and also dis·

•

r• r I

·~~~~EfBLEFOR

Chevy Chase talks about hla

446-9700

Budget uanami••ion• u..d &amp;
rebuih all typa. Torque convar·
tera • trantftr can. Engine
over heul kits. Alliton Transmi•·
liOn Plrtl and CVC ~inti.
Minimum 30 d8'( to lif lme
and
warranty. Will deliver, e
carrry or Install Ph. 114 379··

·

s.rorac-r

llf.Rf,'i!J A REQU~&amp;T:

_,.:.T...:O;..;O::..,;.U..:;D.,........!.

I chlrpld,
An enthusllltlc tour guldl
"Thll hlllorjc ' - ~

A PRINT NUMBERED
't::ll' LETTERS IN SQUARES

(!)
(JJ Ente!Uinmem Tonight

JIM 'S FARM EQUIPMENT 15. 1987.
CENTER. SR 35 W. GolllpaMo,

erected.

814-441-114t.

tor, 304-521-8031 .

e

3·tpeed. tpokerwheett, A~ - FM
Stereo, low mileage. Ph. 814-

Sot. 614-448-1199, 627 3•d.

Ave. Oallipollt, OH.

Good uatd ,portable • floor
model color TV for sale. Call

Nuntng npert.,ca or training
dMJrld. IIIIFV negotiable. Contact Administrator. Hillview
Nunlng snd Aehlbllltatlon Cen·

8:36 (I)Downloe.thlnSlllreo.
· 7:00
(])PM ~ne
(I) HordcaoU. and McCol

...
1979 CJ 5 Golden Eogle, V-B, '

76

·

IBI Good Tlrneo

446·7414.

pu,.... Coli 114-441-3844

446-9646.

oqulvolom wi1h Oo&lt;ontologlcol

e

Vans &amp; 4 W.O.

73

!

S

(jj) Body E~

Phone 614·742· 274&amp;.

Dragonwynd Cattery Kennel.
CFA Himalayan, Penien end
Sltme~a kittens. AKC Chaw

HEAP Vouchere acceptad.
Don't Llnd~cepM . Call 114·

Y"''

clttlooo. Plenty ot TLC. Coli
614-892-1873.

Concrete block• 111 air.. yard or
delivery. M"on 11nd. Galllpolit
Block Co., 123111 Plna St.•.
Gallipolis. Ohio Cell 8 1•-••e-

5762.

814-441·1324.

··~

DIRECTOR OFNURSINO.Iong-

~horo.

Building Malarial•
Blo~. brick. HWir pipet, win·
dow•. liritelt; etc. Claude Wlnttrt, Rio Grande, 0 . Call 614·

245-5121.

Oltpl..., . Aet•ll 14,900.00 Ilk·
ing U .IOO.DO. Padded co~er &amp;
IJ)I chemical• includad. Ph.

Bruce Beattie

ttrm Clft, eiiC lwei potltkm, lttf
.tarter with Plt'lonll budgetary.
mlftaaement and tup.,...illng
skill• nMded. Knowledge of
federal end atate licensure 1nd
c..lficatton reaulatlon, with 3
nursing m~naaem.,t in
lont term Clfe rtqu6red, 18N or

12

66 Building Supplies

ory , tplit, HEAP&lt;Joucher, pldcup

luilt

or'949·2160

For rent Sletplng Rooma and
light houte keeping room•. P•k
Centra' Hotel. Call 61 ~ -448 -

~:::::::::::::::::-:.l=====:::::::::.,J opo.
New fulty
jKVZri
1986telf·conttined
Oolllo County
Fok

PH. 992·2975

'ILOWN IN

1_44_1..:6..:•:_fl_or_7_;p:_.m_.- - - -

7481 .

Complttelv remodeled, new car·
Ut Avon help you get the belt of pellng, new cabinett. Call 8 14·
those poll Cl'lflttmn blllt and 992 · 6858 ·
W.....
Fr•gltt wkh fh·tt ord8J,
coli
304-IU-2S45.

204 Condo• St.
Po..,oy, Olllo

"Free Estimttee"

··

hcellant tpare time income;
alectronica, crafu, no e11p•
rienct~. Others. information &amp;04641 ·009 eJ~t. 29B7, 7 diV•·

Office tpace . Store tpace in Pt.
Plea11nt, t200.00 A-One Real
Ett•te Ph. 304-875-6104

te9.230 vr. Now hiring. Call r-

SHAIPENING
SEIVICE

heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiatllh. Wi also
repair GIS Tanks.
992·2198
Middleport, Ohio

HOME ASSEMBLY

Furnished Rooms

Furnithed eHiciency t176 .00.
2rm1. &amp; bath Utilitl11 Pd. 446-

doyo 514-992-2381 .

304-676-3950 o• 1-800-11423619.
Z bedroomt. In Middhtpon.

IH16-J mo.

RADIATOR
SEIWICE

3031-oxi. 368. EEO. AAP.

Business
Buildings

105-6S7-SOOO Ext. R-9805 for 3 bdr . ht. unfurnitl'led, 2 child·

710 unld 10 C' J
Avnilobir· tO'
H1rlhrloy1, (hurd'
Pnwulf• Pr:r f1P\
qs5-J92q or ?8\ qqqo

Circular Sawa
Saw Chain
Planer Knives
Drill Bita
Knives
Chisels

Adultt only. Inquire at comer
Firtt &amp; Olive St. at. Sheppard•
Seles &amp; Service.

1 80 • •s• •ooo E • 9805 encu • depo•it requ6red. A&lt;Jail·
· •·•-•·•-- " · ~-- -lc-· obloJon. 1, 1987Coll514-2562Yt bedraom aptnment for r..,t,
Governmtnt joba. t16 ,04d' _ 1 1_5_2_9._ _ _ __ __ _
phone 30(1l-678-&amp;9e&amp; efter 6

• IO·I·tfc

MOUNTAINEER
BODY SHOP
PARTS INC.

200 plus bed JCAH •ccradited
paychittric holpit• it e~epandlng
it't nursing urvicu tnd staff
dwelopment program•. Ohio
Unlvenlty BSN progrem Its•
than 1 mile from hotpital.
Sttrting 11iwiea·Stttf Nu,.e
t22.000 (t10.118 per houri.
Nurse Supervitor-$21, 600
lt 1 2.20 Plf hourj . Afternoon
and night thlft ditfarential. Ex·
eel lent benefh progum . Con·
tact: Pertonnel Office, Alhan•
Mental Ha11th Centar 114-592·

CALL NOWI

CHESTER-985-3307

Nicely turnlahed 2 bdr. apt.

selling, rtPMtbuain••· Set your WEST. GALLIPOLIS, AT 36 .
own houra. Tfllning pro"'ided . PHONE 814· 448·7274 . ..

Ather" Mental Health Centtr. A 34

BOGGS

Nicety furni•hed mobile home
CA 6 heat. excel. location,
tdulttonly. Call 1$14-448·0338.

location in town. All utiUtin paid
8326.00mo., reference• &amp; depotlt required . Wittman Real
Ettate Agency Ph. 614-4A6-

Bam to llpm !Central Standard 1411170 Fleetwood. 3 bdr. 2 full
Timel .
bath•. totalelac. Uke new, price
negotiable. Call lfter 4 weak·
Experi•ced babytitttr needed dayt, enytime weekends. 814·
In my home Call 614· 2&amp;e·1781. 318-8833.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

Apartment
for Rent

2 to 3 bedrbom apt. Convenie~t

RetirBd coupla to live-In adjoinina eplrlment, r.-.t frH, plu•
11lery ine11ch~nge for full care of
Ill petient. Sind letter of applic•·
tion to P.O. Box 916. O.Wipolia.
0hio 4151131 .

46

COUNTRY MOBILE Home Park.
Route 33. Nonh of Pomwoy.
Urge lott. Call814-992· 7479.

FGr butin•t aceount•. Full-. N~W ,laND USED MOBilE

c.n, 1-812-838-8870, M-F,

-

675-3000.

614-441-7026.

REPS NEEDED

Time. U0,000-*80,000. Port· ' HOMES KESSEL'S QUALITY
Time. t12,000-*18.000. No MOBILE HOME SALES, 4 MI.

1· 13 tin

K S. .K Mobile Homes. 2 and .3
bttdroom mobile hom•. 304·

$16,000. Coli304-773-5534o• noo.oo •ecurttv depo•it. CON .
304-773-57B4.
TACT: Jackton Ettatta Dept. Ph

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW. INC .

' ·•Doors

Homes for Sale

3 bdr., air, pool, gwage. Nice.
Commercial property, corner
lou It highWay frontage. Utt
with ut. We hiVe buyen. A-One
Rnl Ettate· Brokar. Call 304·
674-6104 or 304· 674·5386 .

ces. Ed. Burkett Barber Shop,

FREE ESTIMATE

992-2772

2 bedroom mobile home. Mid·
dleport. 0 . Refar.-.ce with S.
curily depoait. 304·882·3287
or 304·773·6024.

e

!'"d•
•omeelumlnum
body work.topptr.
Excel•
~~;::;:=;;:=~;::=:=r.~;;~~~~~~~~ ·lent
like new
work ~lhide. A• i1 t760.

1 I 1 I I

_;;.,N~A..:.:R~G:...:DT--11

~

(JJ e (JJ ABC N_,
(l) Hopn'o H (JJ DaciGr Who.
Cit ()Z CIS N_,

mlck

1

:1" not had a poet 01' . . , . twpi!Nd. .
. L-...1.-.L
• ....J__.L_....J " From the ciOwd a voiQe murnbl1111111
Yl l AT
muat have .the
Complolo the chuckle quoted
7
1

Julluo llon!o

IN PUBLIC FOR A YEAR. WE; .
NEED NEW IH9TRUMENT!So
ANp UNIFORMS AHP-

n.ooo.oo Coli 814-245·50n.
-lc-

47 Wanted to Rent

QUILTS
BOUGHT-SOLD

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

'

WE HAVEN'T PERFO~MEP .

1981 F«d. F-100, 'II ton, 351 ,

1974 Fotd F100.. 3'1 engine."

44

Estole

Wide Sefecton · New 19B7 OMC
Pldl:· up truckt. Low prlcetwflltY
dey . SpecltllzingingenuifteOM
perts. In '"ock end •pacial
ordering avall1ble.
·
Herb Smith. Owner

1

_l'llt_j

1B1 F-ofute
8:06 (I) New~ It 1o a.ver
8 :30 8 (I) &lt;lll NBC N._ .
(!) Action Outdo!n with

133 Pine StrHI:

GoHipollo, Oh 45631
614-441-2&amp;32

12xeo 2 bedroom Pertially fur·
nlthed · In Centenary Ph. 614·

2282.

BUYING RAW FURSt Ginseng,
Yellow Root, betf and dter·
hid... Al•o selling trapping
tupplill, WheM: Lltn. Nite Lites,
·Houn 1:00· 9:00. Closed Wed.
George Bucklev 614· 664· 4761 .

HEATING &amp; COOLING

SMITH GMC TRUCKS

V-9. Standard. &amp;1.000 .m il•.
short tJ.d. good condition.

448·4292
Unfumlahed mobile home lo·
cated hi Buleville. Call814-446·

(!) .Muda ~Look
• (l) J.tmlona
(JJ 3·2·1. Contact ICC).
® s.cm City

Trucks for Sale

Mobile Home Stella Court Ph.
614-'46·07&amp;8.

Ave., Gallipollt. Cell 614-446-

992-3478.

J&amp;L INSULATION
JAMES KEESE

Professional
Services

Stark• Tree and Lawn Service.
Hedgu , •hrubs, buthu
trimmed, l•ndtcaping, stump
tnd letf removal. 304-5782842 or 676· 201 0 .

used cars.

72

14x70 Mobile Home,1tor rent ln a
quiet country •ettlng on 0 . J .
Whit• Rd. Close to Holz•
Hotpitel Call 614-446-71&amp;7
after 8 :00pm.

1137.

t~~~~~~=;~~~r----------j

Loot' Lorge white Huoky type 9 Wanted To Buy
dog in letart F1111 area. Call
114-247-3511 .
Buying jur'lk cin. Cal\614-992-

•

ING CO . recommends thai you
do busintsl with paople you
~now. and NOT to tend money
through the mall unt.Hyo,u !)ave
inveatigatad the ~ffering .

h._...,.,.._.., IJ·J'~

() 11111 .... F........ 6o,nck. .

. In Eurek• nica and cle~n. adult1
ofily. No pet1, d.,o•tt r~ulred,
180.00 mo. can e14· 266·1&amp;31
befara 101.m.

I

KNASYE

r

(I)BigV~

448-1102.

1 'h year old female Cock•
8253 10am. to 9pm.

8:00 e Cll (]) e(JJ ()ll• CD &lt;Ill
Newa

2 bdr. fulty turnlahtdadufteonly,
util. paid. Call114·441· 4110.

2 Bedroom ~rnl•hed . We eccep1
HUD, Bt~utiful rlvtf view, Fo.::
ters Mobile Hame Park 814-

Giveaway

Splftiel, white &amp;: gold . G09d
with children Ph. 614-388-

I

NENINQ

Odd job•. painting, plumbing,

Imperial Marint, Inc. remodeling
and CINrtnct 1111. DtC. Z8· 30.
1112 Miry St ., PtrklftbUrg, W.

•
•

12/29/88

ReUible wom•n ·would like to
baby•it any hours. Ph. e14-448·

Recine Gun Club. Every Sundey.

The Daily Sentinei...;.Page-?

Television
Viewing

LAFF·A·DAY

Recine Gun Shoot aponaored by

...... .

~

Ponierov-MiddlePort OhiO

.. '
I

S MilLV
•

•

f

•

�I

By The Bend

The Da}ly

.,

~entinel

Monday, December 29, 1986 '
Page-8

Rio Grande
defeats Dyke
•
In tourney
-Page 3 ·

Holiness Church holds fellowship dinner
The annual Christmas fellow ship dinner of the Middleport
Independent · Holiness Clurch,
· Inc., 75 Pearl St., Middleport,
was held recently at the FeeneyBennett Post 128, American
Legion, hall, Fourth St.
Shirley Knisley gave the
Christmas story. The Rev. and
Mrs. Ivan Myers of New Haven,

W.Va. acting pastor of the
church, were presepted gifts of
money and a picture in appreciation. Cuitar. accordian, harmon ica, banjo, mandalln and piano
music was provided by musicians of the group. Bveryone took
part In a gift exchange.
Attending were Rev. and Mrs.
Ivan Myers of New Haven,

Point Pleasant, Mr. and Mrs.
Bob Jeffers, Syracuse; Mrs.
Shirley Durst, Syracuse.
Mr. and Mrs. l'togerJelfer,Mr.
and Mrs. ,Dores Arnold, Mr. and
Mrs. Sonny Hudson and son,
Steve, Middleport, Rosemary
Hysell, Middleport, Charla
Burge. Middleport; Mrs. D_ottle
Hatfield and daughter, Wendy,
Pomeroy; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Roush, Mlddlepori; Mrs. Kathy
Siders and daughter. Janelle,
Point Pleasant, Mrs. Juanita
Roush, Rutland; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Older and family, Dorothy,
Ricky and Jimmy, Mr. and Mrs.
Bernard Hudson ' and d~ughter,,
, Kim, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Barr,
' Mrs. Margaret McDaniel, Mr.
and Mrs. Roger Manley Sr. and
daughter, Donna, Mr. and Mrs.
Roger Manley Jr., Tracl Manley,
Charlene Cadle, Mlqdleport; Mr.
and .Mrs. Terry Hysell, Mlnersvtlle, Mr. and Mrs. Kevin Hudson
and son, Randy, Rutland;
Tommy Lane, Pomeroy; and
·
Tahnee Johnson.

W.Va., Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Knisley and family, Joanna,
Joseph, Philip, · ,James, and
David of Letart, W.Va.; Miriam
Knisley of Point . Pleasant,
W.Va.; the Rev . and Mrs. William King and daughters, Sherry
and Julie, Point Pleasant, ·the
Rev. and Mrs. Leroy Manns and
family, Cindy, Beth and Doug of

Community calendar/area happenings
'

Woodmen · honor man}s project
with local church pipe organ

Christmas
program held
Alfred Christmas program
.was held Dec. 17 at the church .
Dorothy Calaway and Lori Rit ·
chie were directors.
Program: Welcome by Dorothy Calaway; 0. Co me, All Ye
Faithful, sung by audience;
Prayer by Rev . Archer; Ru dolph, the Red -Nosed Reindeer.
sung by Larry Ritchie: Christmas Is, sung by Debbie Brooks;
Keeping Christmas. reading by
Diana Pullins; song by the choir.
The Girl Who Had Everyth ing,
a play featuring Mary Jo Buckley. Lori Ritchie, Debbie Brooks,
Michelle Donnovan, Wesley and
Laura Buckley, Sherr! Burke;
Away In a Manger. sung by
Gertrude Robinson and Diana
Pullins; Do You Hear What I
Hear?. sung by choir.
Nativity Scene by the little
children, with Florence Spencer
reading the Christmas story
from Luke; visit of Santa Claus
and exchange of presents .

•

at y

~ Meese

•

Regular&amp;' Menthol.
~ings &amp;' 1005

•

..

Mostly cloudy tonight, with
a low near 30. Partly cloudy
Wednt&gt;sday •. with hlg.hs near
40. The prohabllily of preclp~
tation Is near zt•ro tonight and
Wednesday.

•

enttne

Pomeroy-Middleport. Ohio. Tuesday. December 30, 1986

1 Section. 8 Pages

25 Cents

A Multimedia Inc. Newspaper

reveals Israeli's role in arms affair

. WASHINGTON iUPil -The siphoning oflran
-arms sale profits to aid the Nicaraguan rebels.
:Attorney General Edwin .Meese told Congress,
·was originally the idea of a senior Israeli official,
'.The New York Times reported today.
: The Times, citing unidentified congressional
·and Justice Department sources, said Meese told
:a closed comwittee hearing, not Identified by the
;Times. that M'arine Ll. Col. Oliver North told him
·of the purported Israeli connection to the
:diversion of arms sale profits on Nov. 23. two day s
:before Meese made the diversion public.
· The government of Israel has repeated ly denied
:any connection to the diversion of Iran arms sale

profits to the Contras, or any knowledge of such an
operation. But if North's purported assertions
prove true, they would suggest a larger Israeli
role tha n has been officially acknowledged.
North was fired Nov. 25 from his National
Security Council staff job for,his role In the proilts
diversion, and NoNh's boss, Vice Adm. John
Poindexter, national security adviser, resigned
his post the same day.
Meese, according to two congressional sources,
told the committee In secret that North mN with
an Israeli official a bout a year ago to discuss how ·
to fu nnel aid to the rebels. known as Contras. But
the sources. the Times said, disagreed over

whether Meese identified the official as David
Kimche, director general of the Israeli Foreign
Ministry.
.
The report said North to ld Meese that Kimche
outlined three options for aidi ng the Contras, two
of which involved eit her direct use oiU.S. fund s or
use of U.S. foreign aid money provided tolsrae l -"both considered unacceptable, since they would
violate the congressional ban on aid·lo the rebels.
Kimche's third reported suggestion involved
increasing the price Iran would pay for the arms
and sending the profits to the Contras. it said.
The Times said an unidentified Justice
Department official confirmed the
of

Meese's congressional testimony, provided· by
unidentified congressional 'sources, but was
unable to corroborate North 's alleged assertion to
Meese. The newspaper said it was unable to
independently ve~ify North's reported assertions.
One congressional source and the Justice
Department official said Meese fingered Kimche
as the official, but another congressional source
claimed to recall only that the official was an
Israeli but not his Identity.
Asked a~ut the testimony, Kimche told the
Times in a telephone interview Monday: "The
whole thing is ridiculous . If that is what Oliver
North testified to. then he Is an unmitigated liar."

fWinter makes presence felt
in eastern half of country
By United Press International
A storm unloading light snow
and freezing drizzle laid a
slippery glaze .on roads in the
Great Lakes a nd Ohio Valley
today and headed to New Eng·
land, while dense fog hovered
over parts of South Dakota and
California.
Thick fog that had impeded a ir
traffic for lwo days in Atlanta,
where visibility was measured at
zero Monday, lifted today, allowing for a visibility of five miles ai
3 a.m. EST.
Snow fell over paris of Michigan and Indiana early today, and
freezing drizzle glazed roads in
southern Wisconsin and northern
Indiana .
Along it s eastward march. the
stor m was a lso expected to dump
snoil· in Pennsylvania. New .York
a nd New E ngland, National
Weather Service forecaster Paul
Flke said.
A mixture of rain and s now
threarened the Virginias, Mary land and Delaware. .
"Generally. the snow s huve
be&lt;'n around an inch or two and
arc nol really cxpectrd to be that
heavy," Flke said.

"

Along Its easlward march,
the storm was also expected to
dump snow In Pennsylvania,
New York and New England;
National Weather Service
forecaster Paul 'F ike said.
A mixture of rain and snow
threatened lhe Vlrglnias, Ma. ryland and Delaware.
"Generally; the snows have
been around an inch or two
and arenot really ex peeled to
be that heavy," Fike said.
The weather held out little hope
for skiers in the Bufl~lo, N.Y ..
area, where snowfall so far this
month is only a fraction of last
year's record accumu lations.
Only 4.8 inches of snow have
fallen this month In Buffalo.
compared with 68.4 inches In
'December 198!),·~,the snowiest
month In Buffalo's history.
"I wa s out there (on the slopes l
over the weekend. · and It was
terrible," said Erlr Drmme. 31,
or Elma, N.Y. He said he used an
old. worn -out pair of skis "for
skiing over rocks and . ihrough
mud.''

Heavy fog in north east South
Dakota and the San Joaquin

Poll: Ohioans say
·quality of life 'good'

Mr. and Mrs. Chuck Yost, the
former Nita Rusche!, are announcing th e birth of their first
child, a son, named Carson
Edward. He weighed six pounds,
and was 19 inches long. The
Infant was bor n on Dec. 22 at
O'Bleness Memorial Hospital,
Athens.
Maternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Allred E . Rusche!
Si-.. Pomeroy. Maternal greatgrandparents are Mrs. Hazel D.
Shuttleworth Hayes, Syracuse,
and Albert R. Rusche!, Sr., Palm
Bay, Fla. Paternal grandparents
are Mr., and Mrs. Gene F . Yost,
Syracuse, and paternal greatgrandparent ts Mrs. Marla
Skinner Foster. Pomeroy.

PICK-4
1967

-Copyrighted \986

Taste breakthrough,
generic price!

Yost birth

046

:vol .36. No.166

Cambrid e
blows
ener1ccom
r

Daily Numlwr

•

film on the life of D.L . Moody will
ORANGE TWP - Orange
be shown. and Tim Chevalier will . Township . Trustees will hold a
speak. There will be special special meeting Tuesday, 7 p.m ..
music.
·
to discuss end-of-the-year business. The meeting will be held at
Trustees
meetings
the
home of Dorothy Calaway,
RECEIVES AWARD- Sharon Henderson, Allred, presented
PAGEVILLE
Scipio
Townclerk.
the Modern Woodmen of America Community Service Plaque to
ship Trustees will meet WednesDavid GIIIUan, CoolvUie United Methodist ,ChuNh choir director,
day, 7 p.m., at the township
CHESTER .- Chester TownIn appreciation for his work toward the purchase and Installation
POMEROY
An
end
of
the
In
Pagevllle
to
finalize
building
ship
Trustees will meet Tuesday,
of a pipe organ at the church.
year reviva l will be held Sunday end-of-the-year business. An or- 7 p.m., at the town hall , lor the
through Wednesday, 7: 30 ganizational meeting will be held final buisness meeting of the
nightly, at Calvary Pilgrim Thursday, 10 ·a.m .. at the same year. An organizational meeting
Chapel, Ohio 143, near Pomeroy. location.
for . 1987 will be held Friday, 7
VIctor Roush will be speaker. On
p.m .. at the town haiL
the final evening, a Watch Night
BEDFORD - Bedford Townserv ice will be conducted with ship Trustees will meet Monday,
COLUMBIA TWP- Columbia
A community service award members. The annual collection
Roush and others to speak.
7 p.m., at the town haiL
Township Trustees will meet
was presented to David Gillilan, was taken lor needy families,
The fastest swimming bird Is
Wednesday, 7 p.m .. for the final
Coolville United Methodist and prizes were drawn from the
RODNEY - Faith Baptist
RUTLAND - Rutland Town- business meeting of the year. An the gentoo penguin, which can
Church choir director, by Camp Christmas tree. The benedition
Church will conduct a New ship Trustees will mee,t Tuesday, organizational meeting will be reach speeds of about 17 mph In
10900 Modern Woodmen of Amer- was given by the . Rev. Carl
Year's Eve Waich Night service 6:30 p.m., at the Rutland fire held Thursday at the fire station. the water.
'
lea, for his work relating to the Gillilan, Coolville.
9
p.m
.
until
midnight.
A
from
house.
purchase and installation of a
pipeorganlnthechurch.
.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------~--------------~------~:
As chairman of the board of
trustees, Gillilan Is also heading
a project to renovate the
church's stained glass windO\fS.
Gillilan is an employee of the
Bureau of Public Deptartment,
Parkersburg, as is Sharon Henderson, Alfred, who presented the
recognition plaque to him .
He expressed the church and
community's thanks to Modern
Woodmen of America lor the
matching fu nd drive which
launched the organ project.
The Woodmen's (ireed Service
was led by Thelma Henderson,
Warren Van Meter, D.C. Elliott,
a nd Wilbur Robinson, all of
Alfred. The group sang "God
Bless America" and observed a
moment of silent prayer for
America and its leaders.
United Methodist Coolville
Charge carolers arrived on a hay
wagon to sing carols led by Joe
Rader and the Rev. Jeffrey
Burda!!. Marjorie Malone directed the children in singing
several songs, and Larry Ritchie, 5, 5ang a special solo.
Major Robert Daugherty,
Athens County Sherifrs Depar·tment, was on hand to complete
children's fingerprinting for the
"Protect Our Children" program. Santa arrived with treats
for the children and lam!lles and
cheer plates to be taken to shutln

New year's eve
PORTER - There will be a
New Year's watch service at
Clark Chapel Church 9 p.m.
Wednesday with the Rev: Bill
Price and the Rev. John Saxon
preaching. The Heavenly Bound
Four will sing.

Ohio Lottery

CINCINNATltUPil -The most recent Ohio Poll reports that
80 percent of the state's residents rate the quality of life in Ohi o
as at least "good ...
Among r!'Spondents to the poll released Mond ay. 38 percertt
said they rate the quality of life In Ohio as "excE&gt;IIent," while 43
percent said it is "good." Oneln five Ohioans rated th~quality of
life in the Buckeye Statf' as "fair" il!i percent 1 or "poor" (4
percentl .
·
More Ohioans now rate the quality of 1\fe as excE&gt;IIent than
was the case 1 ~ years ago.
Thrit y-slx percen t of the state's residents said they now feel
the quality of life Is improvlnl(. compared to 1.1 percent who said
It Is getting worse. A majority (51 prrcent 1 said they feel it will
stav about the same.
By comparison, in thP spring of 1985.29 percent of Ohioans felt
the quality of life was improving, while20 percent thought It was
!(ettlng worse.
The poll, conducted by thr Institute for Polley Research at the
Uniwrsity of Cincinnati, is accurate to within plus-or mlnus -3.5
percent . A random sample of 865 adults from th roughout the
statP was interviewed betwet'n Oct. 20 and Oct. :lO for the most
recent poll.
Much of the optimism about th€' qualit y of life in the state is
attributable to the eco nomic recovery that has continued since
t:l&lt;'c~mber 1982, the poll's researchers said.
Regionally, residents of northwestern Ohio were the most
pos itive a bout their qua Illy of life, and residents of n.ortheast ern
Ohio wpre the least positive.
Morr than half of Ohioans 65 and older rated the quality of lif~
in thr.J;tate as excellent . while only one in four Ohioans under 30
didw. :
·
Managers and admini strators gave the qualit)· of life vPry
high marks - 5.1 perre"t said excellent and 41 percent said
good. This sam~ go·oup, along with profess ional· technical
workers and skilled cra ft workers, were I he occupational
groups most optimistic about the quality of life In Ohio
improving.

Valley In California today made
driving hazardous.
Birmingham, Ala., Bristol,
Tenn., and Hu,ntsville. Ala ..
reported vlslbilfty . near zero
Monday.
In Atlanta, flights were delayed for as much as two hours
for the second consecutive day
Monday at Hartsfield lnterna·
tiona! Airport. the nation 's second busies t . .
Dick Stafford, a Federal Avialion Administration spokesman
in Washington. said 706 of the
nation's 1.174 flikht delays Sunday w~re a direct resu lt of
Atlanta's fog and the situation
was similar Monday, when alrlln~s cancelrd or delayed about
200 flights before the fog llftrd
around 10 a.m. EST.
As many as 100.000 trawlers
were affectrd by the delays, FAA
officials said.
In the West. rain doused the
northern Pacific coast early
today, and snow spread over.
parts of t h~ Cascade Mountains.
Winds gusting to 69 mph blasted
Casper. Wyo.
Rain also fell along the south·
ern Atlantic roast. th e western
Gu lf coast and the southern lip of
Texas.

Iranians
may help
to free
·hostages
THE HAGUE, Netherlands
tUPll- Iran said Washington's
willingness to comply with a
tribunal's order lo release $500
million of Iranian funds lrozen In
the United States during the 1979
hostage crisis could "positively
- affect" the release of Americans
held hostage in Lebanon.
But U.S. officials denied the
talks between U.S. bankers and
Iranian officials. due to continue
today, had any links to the
American hostages held by proIranian gunmen in Lebanon .

WATCHING, WAITING - Sludents ,Jenny Boone, bottom ol
photo, and Susan Pedro sat on lhelr baggage Monday while
checking Hight ~chedules at Hartsfield International Airport In
J\llanta, as fog again blanketedJhe nallon'ssecond busiest airport.

(UPI)

Packaging, education boost
sales of religious materials
1

By Unlled Press International
Better-educated retail managers and a resurgence of religious
Interest In the United States Is
being credited for the success of
Christian supply stores.
The 5,000 stores nationwide,
which are flourishing in the face
of unimpressive overall retail
sales, are part of the nation' s
religious goods market, est imated at $1.27 billion annually.
The Christian Booksellers Association, ~ 3,000-member trade
organization, said members had
an average sales vo lume of
$2.1!i,OOO in 1985, up !i2 percent
from $155, 000 In 1980 and more
than three times the sail'S of
$86,700 In 1975.
" In the soc io-economic shift
from an Industrial to a technicalbased society , people are looking
for some stability in their lives. "
said William Anderson. president of the association based in
Colorado Springs, Colo.
"Gallup polls have shown that
people are reading Christian
books to strengthen their faith."
Anderson also credited
younger, college-educated managers, improved packaging and

a wider variety of products.
Many shops carry video and
audio tapes, novels, games.
cards and record s.
About 93 percent of the trade
organization's membership is
located In downtown areas or
central business di stricts. There
are 139 stores In Ohio, Including
Berean. Cornerstone and
Alexandria's.
Grismer's Ch ristian Gilts has
survived 55 years in downtown
Akron, despite the area's a lllng
retail economy. Sales grow 10 to
20 percent ,a year.
" We have survived in spi te of
downtown," said June Grismer,
who owns the store with her
husband, Patrick.
" We don' t advertise," she said.
"Our best advertising is the ·
service that we give to oJr
customers and word -of-mout h."
Not all religious goods stores
take such a passive approach,
however . The country's 19 Berean stores, headquartered In
Cincinnati, are dubbed "insplrallonal department stores," and
use aggressive advertising to
market between 30,000 and 40,000
different items.
•

"A Bible on our shelves doesn't
do anyone any good," Paul
Satterfield. genera l manager of
the Akron and Canton stores,
said. "We have lo market our
products. If people don't know
we' re here, we can't meet their
n.eeds."
·
Anderson said the Christian
Booksellers Association, which
es tlmatPs such s tores experience
a failure rate of abo ut 4 pe rcent.
recognizes basic bu si ne ss
principals .
" We encourage our mPmbcr
stores to promote themse lves as
a good placr for human beings,"
he sa id. "Ten years ago, they
were viewed as cloistered-away
businesses that ha d something
lor Christians and the c lergy.
Now, they have re-positioned
them selves with new locations
and new products and growth has
been stea dy for !he las t few
years ."
· G rlsmer agrrt'd .
"Many of the new (s tores)
close within two years," she &gt;aid.
"You can't play at I he religious
goods Industry and you can't run
II on sentiment . You have to run it
as a business because the bllls
have to be paid. "

"We see no link what socveo·
between these funds and th~
hostages ," Stat~ Department
spokeswoman Phyllis Oakley
said. She said the discussions are
"technical" and concern only the
disposition of the Iranian funds.
Officia ls from the Treasury
Department and the New York
branch of the Federal Reserve
Bank met with Iranian cent~al
bank representatives in The
Hague Monday but falled to
reach a lund transfer agreement
after 3~ hours of talks.
The fu nds werP frown after !;2
Americans were taken hostage
at the U.S. Embassy In Tehran in
1979 and held 4H days.
The Iranian assets include
interest on money in U.S. ' bank
accounts a nd on payments for
arms ordered by the late shah or
Iran but not delivered to the
count ry . The $500 million claim
was filed by Iran In 1982.
The Iran -U.S. Claims Tribunal
-a judicial body set up in 19R1 to
deal with billions of dollars of
claims and counterclaims involvIng Iran and the United Statesawarded the $500 million to Iran
Aug. 20.
The current talk s, th e third
round s ine~ the August award.
focus on reac hing agreement on
the technical terms of transferri ng the monry.
"We feel optimistic." an Iran·
Jan Embass)' spokesman sa itl.
"The Americ·Hns have agr('('d 10
return th~ hulk of th~ funds.
Th ere ar~ somr sma ll t&lt;'Ch ni c4!
matters to br rf'solvrd. but wr
bel lev~ they ar&lt;' go ing to deposit
the mone)' for us."
Assessing an ngrccmrnl' s im ·
pact on the fait• of the Am&lt;'t'ica n
hostages in L~hanon was --~
delicate m&lt;Ji trr ," lhespokcsman
said.

OEPA studies region's concerns over dioxin-tainted sludge
'·

Mlr.suggl!led retail price.

-·

.
..

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- c.

-

12mg "tar:· 0.9 mg nicotine av. per cigarene by FTC method.

~

. •1

•'"•'

SURGEON GENERAL'S WARNING: Smoking

By Pregnant Women May Result in Felal
Injury, Premature Birth. And low Birth Weight.
I
I

By KEVIN KELLY
OVP News Edilor
Southeastern Ohio residents
concerned about the potential
usp of dloxin·talnted sludge in
reclamation projects may not
knQw until spring If the Ohio
Environmental Protect ion
Agency will allow the byproduct
to be utilized.
AI Franks, director of the
OEPA's Public Interest Center,
said it may be mid-March or
"possibly even after that" before
the state agency decides for or
al(alnst the sludge.
Mead Paper Corp. has offered
, the ~!udge, an end product of its

wastewater treat ment plant at
Chillicothe, for use in reclamation projects in the area, lnclud-'
ing Ga Ilia and Meigs counties.
However, it was discovered last
year that the sludge contains
traces of dioxin, a toxic material
described by the U.S. EPA as "an
unwanted but almost unavoidable byproduct that comes from
manufacturing several commercial substances."
Franks said the OEPA Is
reviewing Input !rom Informational sessions and available
information on dioxin prior to
making its decision.
"The meeting~ did point out

..

some areas that needed to be
looked into, such as the effects on
vegetation and how wildltfe will
be affected," Franks said. "We
have requested information from
Minnesota and other states
where such projects have been
conducted because we want the
benefit ol their experience."
The cause of dioxin Is being
jointly Investigated 'by the U.S.
EPA and Industry .
Franks said OEPA's research
Into dl.oxin effects is "taking
tlrne, but when we make a
decision, we want It lobe the best
decision."
Prior to the discovery of dioxin

levels in the Mead sl udge, the
paper manufa cturer was offering It for use In reclamation
work. Dr. Harry Hoitink of Ohio
State University revea led dur·lng
a Sept. 3 Information session In
Rio Grande that the sludge has
positive effects on re-greenlng of
strlpmlne areas.
During that meeting, rural
landowners and environmentalIsts opposed use of the sludge
because of Its contaminated
nature, feellngthe region's environment can no longer tolerate
additional pollution. Because
complete Information on dioxin
was not available to OEPA at the
1

time, opponent Agnes Mal'tln of
Jackson accused the agency of
•:guessing with our lives a nd the
environment."
Similar concerns were aired at
a formal pu bile hearing In Logan
on Sept. 29.
Mead ha s shice employrd an
Independent scientific outfit, Envirologic Data of Portland.
Maine, to s tudy the e ffects of
dioxin on reclamation projpcts
upon humans and the
environment.
The firm· s 17-page report,
submitted to area newspapers
last week, "found that the use of
•I

Mead s ludgr to reclaim sll'ip
mine lands prPscnts l'!rtuall\' no
threat to human health, dom~stic
anima ls or wildllf~.' · said James
Joseph, Me"d co mmun1t1· rcla·
tlons manag~r .
·
Joseph said Env irologJc Data's
study determinrd that levels of
dioxin In Mead sludge "arc b&lt;·low
lhe levels which the U.S. Food
and Drug ,\dminlstration ha s
determined to hr safc In flshusrd
for food consumption. Thr st udy
concludcs tha t thr r~clamatlo~
program would not prrscnt a
thr~at at· dioxin levels which
were 10 to 100 times higher than
those found I~ Mrad sludgl'."

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