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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.

-·

.
..

&lt; •
- 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'."

�Pomeroy- Middieport, Ohio
'

:~==~~======~~~~----~----~~------~--~~-------·

The ·Daily Sentinel·
Ill Court Street
Pomeroy, Ohio

DEVOTED TO mE INTERESTS OF THE MEIGS· MASON AREA

~lb

~m~

~v

..,.,_,.._.,..,..,...,d,=

ROBERT L. WINGET!'
Publisher
PAT WHITEHEAD
Assilitant Publlsl!er/ Controller

BOB HOEFLICH
General Manager

DALE ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor
,(,
A MEMBER of The United Press Internationa l, Inland Dally Press
Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LE1TERS OF OPINION are welcome . Th ey should tx&gt; less than n1 words
long . All let ters are subject to editing and nust be signed with name, address and
telephone number. No unsigned letters wUI be published. Letters· should be tn
good taste, addressing·Issues, not person a lltles.

Washington Window

Time .for 'glad games'?_______,__c_eo....:.rg_eR_:_P_l~_en-:-z:
News item: " The U.S. surgeon
general has' recommended that
AIDS sex education be lntro·
duced Into the schools as early as
the third grade."
That's sad, Isn't It? Really sad.
Children In grade school should
be reading "Pollyanna" or
"Night of Wonder" and doing
other things that belong to the
special world of childhood.
"Night of Wonder" hasn' t been
published yet. but I have ·the
author's manuscript on my desk.
It 's a delightful fantasy of a
young girl , about the ;~ge of
Pollyanna. who is whisked off
one starry night , like Dorothy In
"The Wizard of Oz," to strange
and marvelous places In our
country's past - an Amish
village. George Washington 's
house In Mount Vernon , an

Indian Encampment out West, a
Pilgrim settlement - where she
lives with the people and families
who made American history.
"Night of Wonder" Is a kind of
literary history for children, an
"admirable stimulus to the slug·
glsh youthful mind which Is none
too apt to develop enthusiasm
either for history or for litera·
lure," as G.M. Trevelyan said
about literary history. It makes
of learning an adventure.
More than that, though, books
like "Night of Wonder" keep
a live children's imagination and
Innocence. Elie Wiesel, who has
just won the Nobel Peace Prize,
said the world today is not a place
we would wish to bring children
into. Yet we must , he said, for the
world desperately needs the
Innocence which childhood
brings.

A major setback
By HELEN THOMAS
UPI White House Reporter
WASHINGTON tUPI) -No matter how the Iran arms sca ndal
comes out, P res ident Reagan' s adm inistra tion will never be the
sa me.
The 75·year·old president. r e·elected by a landslide, had vowed
never to be a " la me duck" a nd insisted that he had an agenda to fulfill
before his eight years are up.
But with Reag~n weighed down with several Investigations and the
need to defend hts presidency against the onslaught from his secret
a;ms dea l with the transfer of funds to I he Nicaraguan rebels, some of
· hiS most cher is hed conservative goals may become an impossible
drea m.
·
It is nat ural for a waning presidency to lose some of Its clout. But
who would have expected that in the sixth year, the president would
have to be subj ected to an ordeal that will cast a long shadow on his
~ billt y to govern.
·
An ardent campaign to save the presidency and contain the scandal
is. the. way some m ay propos.e lo go. Many of President Richard
Ntxon s friends went that route In the Watergate scandal, hoping he
would be able to pul it all behind him. But the disclosu res were
inevit able an&lt;;! Ihe tragedy inexorable.
, Whit e House Commu nications Director Patrick Buchanan's latest
st at~ments exemplify the tendency to count erattack against the
tned1a and to ex hor t the faithful to the cause. An a rdent partisan and
Reagan devotee, Buchanan has taken up lhe cudgels to denounce
Ihose who have displayed some skepticism.
The media, he said. "gleefully" reported secrets to the Soviet Union
a~ut the financing of th e Nicaraguan Insurgency.
Buchanan Is a true believer. but it's doubtful the att acks on the
press and lawmakers will prove effective. The sca nd al Is too
pervadl~g. Americans, who were the stronges t supporters of
Reagan s pohctes , parti cularly agai nst dealing with terro ris ts, do not
quite understand what happened on the way to the forum. .
The president has the prerogative of changing policy. viewing it as
a way to woo Iran back into the Western fold . But he should have taken
the people along with him , educating them. ex pla ining to them, and at
the same time easing up on the drumbeat against Iran.
)f the White House is a bully pulpit as Teddy Roosevelt said, then
ngbody could use It more effec tively than Reagan himself. He co.uld
have opened the way to a rapprochement and won support for his
change of heart if he had been a bit more forthcom ing. As It happened,
the country wa s s hocked with a decision to secretly sell weapons to
Iran. He has denied he knew that profits from the sales went to
1
support the Contras.
The preslden l has been trying to'cut his losses. He has su pported the
appointment of an Independent counsel, named a special board to
Investigat e the role of the National Security Council and named
Frank Carlucci as nallonal security adviser.
'
.. Last w~k In his weekly radio address. Reagan_ acknowledged
mistakes were made In the Implementation of his policy. Hedld not
explain what mistakes were made or who wa s to blame, nor has there
been a chance to ask him .
:what has puzz led observers has been Reaga n's ow n apparenllack
of cur lou s ity as to whal happened . P('rhaps he has soug ht the answers
quietly on his own. But his aides say that as soon as !here was some
Indication of wrongdoing he turned the whole matter over to Attorney
Ge neral Edwin Meese.
&amp; me of his aides Indicated that the impact of the scandal and It s
l'Qtent!al for devastating his administratio n did not lmmedlalely sink
In; But Re agan now seems lo have a greater realiza tion that his
p~es lden cy and his place In history are at stake.

Do
~o\J K~ WHERE

rT'§

10:00.

~oUR

FoREIGN
Pol.JC'{ tS?

Today in history

•

Today Is Tuesday, Dec . 30, Ihe 364th day ofl986 with one to follow .
The moon Is new.
The morning.stars are Mercury, Vertus and Saturn .
The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter.
Those born on this da~e are under the sign of Capr icorn. They
Include British author Rudyard Kipling In 1865, Japan's World War II
Prime Minister Hidekl Tofo In 1884, former Miss America Pageant
emcee Bert Parks In 1914 (age 72), rock 'n' roll pioneer Bo Dlddley in
1928 1age 58), and former Los Angeles Dodgers pitcher Sandy Koufax
In 1935 tage51).
On this date In history:
In 1853, the United States bought 45, 000 square miles of land along
the Gila River !rom Mexico tor $10 million. The area Is, now southern
Arizona and New Mexico.
In 1903, 602 people died when flames swept through the Iroquois
Theater. In Chicago. The fire led to safety regulations for theaters
around the world. ,

Yes, except that nowadays we about In everything that :
take that Innocence from child· happens.
When old Tom, Aunt Polly's
ren too soon. We force Into the life
bentover
hired hand, can't find
of youth the experiences and
thoughts of age. It Is no blessing anything to · be glad about,
to children to see life as an older Pollyanna reminds him he can be
person sees lt. They are denied glad he doesn't have to stoop so
what makes being a child so far to do his weeding~ " 'cause
wonderful - a time of. life that Is he was already bent part way
carefree, light-hearted and with· over."
out fear.
Pollyanna conceded it wasn't
Do I sound like Pollyanna ? I alwys easy to play the "glad
am glad. And Pollyanna would be game" - like t)te time she was •
happy with me for play ing the hoping there would be a doll 'In .
· the missionary barrel at the :
"glad game" with you.
You know, I hope, the story of church where her father was :
the 11-year-old orphan girl who minister before be died . But all
comes to•live with her Aunt Polly that was in the barrel was some ,
In Vermont and changes the child's crutches.
,
"But then," said Pollyanna, "I :
heart of an entire town with her
happy outlook . She did It by saw I could be glad that I didn't •
teaching the townsfolk to play the need 'ein."
'
"glad game," which Involved
The word Pollyanna made It •
finding somethlnll tn hP al~d into the dictionary some years ;
after Eleanor Porter. who lived
In Littleton, N.H., wrote the story •
in 1913. Mostly It Is used today in '
a disparaging sense, referring to '
someone whose Irrepressible op· :
tlmlsm falls to take account of ;
the hard facts of the real world. •
But don't you believe that :
definition. How we look at things
changes the hard facts of the real
world.
Dell Books Is coming out In
January with a new paperback
edition of "Pollyanna." I am
getting It for the two little girls at
my house (who are 21 and 27). 1
And you can get "Pollyanna"
on a home video at the library - ·
the 1960 Walt Disney version with :
Hayley Mills as Pollyanna, Jane '
Wyman as Nancy (Aunt Polly's ·
maid) , Agnes Morehead as Aunt :
Polly and Adolph Menjou as John :
Pendleton, who was a grouchy ·
old recluse before falling under :
Pollyanna's spelL
Pollyanna's critics want to :
warn children about the dangers '
of living In an unreal dream ·
world. What they ought to be ·
doing Is helping to build a world ·
that wlll be safe for the dreams of •
childhood .

Man in danger ______ _:J. =.ac:.:. k:_.:.A.: . :n.:. : d:. .:.e:. .:.rs.: . :on-=-.:. :&amp;:. . : D:. .:a:.:. le~ -=an.:. .A;,.: . :. :. :;ua
WASHINGTON - Jordan 's
diminutive monarch , King Hus·
se!n , has survived more than a
half·century- despite the worst
Intentions of over a dozen
assassins.
"I've alwa ys been a fatalist, "
lhe king explained In a recent
Interview with Dale Van Alta .
"I've believed that, right or
wrong, one has to do one's best at
any given mom ent, and that
when life Is ended by the will of
God. that 's what happens."
Then, using "one" to replace
tlte royal "we" In a masterpiece
of und erst ate ment . Hu ssein
added: " One has been through a
lot. n
Hussei n's first narrow escape
was bloody a nd traumatic- and
could eas ily have convinced
"o ne" that he led a charmed life.
II occ,urred on -July 20, 1951.
Husse in. then 15. was standing
beside his beloved grandfather,
Klng Abdullah , at the Al Aksa
Mosque In Jerusalem when an

assassin opened fire at close
ra nge.
Abdullah was killed with a
bullet to the head,' and as the
assassin and the royal body·
guards exchanged fire, Hussein,
though unarmed , ran toward hi s
gra ndfather's k!ller . The boy was
struck by a bullet , but legend ha s
It that the slug bounced off a
meda l ·on the uniform that
Ab&lt;iullah had Insisted Hussein
wear that day.
Was tha i really the way It
happened ? Van Alta asked.
" Ye s ," re plie d Hu ssein .
"There was a medal, and (the
bullet) actually glanced off 11 ."
Hussein began carrying a pistol
the next day .
In 1957 Hu ssein drove alone to
the Zerka arr;ny base to put down
an officers' rebellion. He drove
Into the mutineers' midst and
dared them to shoot. Some of
them did - he said he could "feel
the heat" of bullets whizzing pa st

him - bu t most were too
ashamed.
On another occasion, he suc·
ceeded by a s!m.ilar confronta·
tlon- but wllh a da ring lwlst. He
demanded that all 700 rebellious
officers approach him , salute
and pledge their allegiance to
him . The procession·. took 90
minutes.
There were more bizarre at·
tempts on his life. For example:
"I had sinus problems, " the king
recalled. "I still have them to this
day. I used (nasal) drops . One
day I came In a nd felt that I
needed to use them."
Hussein had been warned by
his Intelligence chief that there
would be an attempt on hi s life by
·someone on his personal staff. A
taped conversation wa s 'played In
which a would-be assassin
boasted to a royal spy: "We've
recruited somebody In his resl·
dence to finish him off and It
won't be long now. If (the king)
had only stuck to a proper

rQutine, we would have got him
days ago. "
On the day his sinuses began
throbbing. Hussein reached for
the nose drops, but luckily
exam Ined I he bolt Je. "It looked a
little old, so I poured It down the
sink and It started to froth and
bubble." The acid In the med!·
cine bottle was so strong It ate
away the chrome trim on the
basin drain .
"I didn't use It, consequen·
t la lly," Hus sei n a dd e d
sardonically.
Equally bizarre was the tragic
case of the royal cats.
"I have always had cats
around." the king said. "My
gra ndfa ther. Abdullah, loved
ther;n . And one day I saw that the
ca t population (on the palace
grounds) was getting a little
smaller. I wondered about it. And
It turned out that someone had
been trying some poisons. unfor·
tunately. on the cats ."

!hey know the mayor Is virtually
certa in to win any election primary or general - In which
the white vote Is divided among
two or more contenders.
Three Democrats already
have proclaimed their Intentions
to topple Washington . They are:
Former Mayor Jane Byrne,
who vacillated between being an
organization loyalist and a reformer during her first term. She
eventually antagonized people in
both camps and left most voters
unimpres se d with h er
stewardship.
Alderman Edward R. Vrdo·
!yak, cha'l rman of the Cook Cunty
Democratic &lt;:ommlttee and strl·
dent leader of the old-line faction
In the city council that has fought
with Washington throughout his
3~ years In offi ce.
Cook County Assessor Thomas
C. Hynes, who was the most
popular Democrat on the ticket
as he carried all 50 the city's
wards In last ,month's elections.
He Is un scarred by the brutal,
divisive political battles of recent
years.
·
When Hynes announced his
candidacy In m!d·December, he
said he would run .as an lndepend·
ent, thus avoiding a potential
division of the white vote In the
Democratic primary. Then, two
days later, he said he would
organize a new Chicago First
Party and enter the race as Its
ca ndidate.
· At the same time, Vrdolyak's
allies let It be known that he also
was considering abandoning his
candidacy as an Independent and
was considering a campaign
under the banner of the Illinois
Solidarity Party.
·Byrne and Vrdolyak are not

IJ«ely to generate substantial
voter support, but Hynes Is a
pot e ntiall y formidable
contender.
The lt!sh Ca thol!c politician Is
popular In the blue·collar wards
that long provided the voter base
for the Daley organization. He
also has a following In the wards
bordering Lake Michigan that
are home to many politically
active, reform-minded , "up·
scale" liberal Democrats.
That grass-roots popularity Is

D•• flan1 ~·

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Miami &gt;14i, M't•l"·r Sl:llt• lCl 1n l l

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Berry's World

Ort'I{IJn :)(1

( 'nn:o.ui:Uinn Hrm'nd t:mn t'"
ldulru ";U. ,\U.,.,j., ~ lpfll St . r;; ltrl' )
Wll" hln~uu 1' 1, ""uthwr.,;ll'rn l.rmlsl·
itrlil i l
t'l••..t :L1\jo\lo I ( 'Ja.,,.k
( 'ltlllliplon,hil!
.\ rtwna ;:t, To"\ II ~ 1'•••·1r Ill

By ROBERTO DIAS
UPI Sports Writer
CLEVE LAND !UP]) -When
summing up hi s coachin g philosophy, Ma rty Schotlenheimer
believes in keeping ma tters
simple.
"The goal of everybody on the

Cleveland Browns is to win the
Super Bowl. " he said ea rly thi s
season. "Undersla ndlng Ihat . all
we have to do each week Is what
must be done - find a wav to
win."
·
The Browns managed a team·
record 12 such ways during th e

Redmen advance to

FINlltnund
Ht&gt;,

·r~ti, ·l ~:t

Tnurn:tnt Pnt
•.,,.., ltmr nd
,\hna 711, .\lhlun till
:\urth l':trk Tt~llrmutto · nt
l;' lr..l ltnu nd
lh•ld&lt;' IIMirl:' li:l, IJtolnll .il
~nrt11 l':rrk 1119, :\urlho· ,L.. t. Ill.
() fl uh T•mrn:um•rll
t'll'l&lt;t Knu nd

WILMINGTON - Mike S mith free·lhrow line. Rio Grand e
scored 26 points . Joe Ver hoff 25 jumped out to 52·34 hal ftim e
a dvanl agi&gt; on the strength of it s
and
Ron
'
, Rittlnger 22 Monday inside ga me. Th e Redmen outre·
mght to lead Rio Gra nde Co ll ege
men's basketball tea m to,; 104·82 , bound ed Dyke 40·:ll: Verhoff and
victory ovr1· Dyke College in 1he Rifling&lt;'r each co llected a ga me·
opening rou nd of th e Wilmin gton hig h nin(l .
E ric Pl air led Ihe losers with 20
Toui'Da ment.
point
s a nd nin r rebound s.
Th e victory sends the Redm en
The victory im proves Rio
agains l Thomas Moore. a 90·72
victor. over hos l Wilminglon Grand e's record lo 11 ·4.
Monday ni ght, for the tourney ·
IUO fiR ,\XIlt: t HI-l t - U;~ymor1• ~ - l · t(;
championship tonigh t.
\\'ltltt• l·ll·t: ('Iuxton lt- 2-'! : Kt•arns l·:.!·.i :
Despite shoolln g a horrendous
fumh:o. I· IJ.t: Hollmrti 11-1-1: Smllh K-l'r'lH:
RUtinl{t 'r i · K-2'?: \ 't•rlwU II· i·'!:i: .~n h1 2· :'! · !4:
39-:iR 167 perce n11 fr om the

Otlt •ri••ln ~ II . K11huu:u:uu U
Cif ,\1 '1' I IIlii. I ti!. 8ulf,tJuSI.
l't' ll" l hn ilallumal

time s in ce hr has seen a more
phy~ical game.
" II was a tough one for either
team to Jose," Majors said . "This
was a gu t check tonight. Mlnnesota was phys lc'a l a nd· hard·
nosed and it jlutmore press ureon
our passi ng ga me than we had
hoped for.
"The mos t significant thin g
that ha ppened was the winning
touchdown drive. The way we
brought the ball downfiel d was a
thing of beauly. We were In a
tough, aggressively fought game
in whic h the players got carried
away fo r five minut es or •o there
in the second hall. But I talked to
our pla yers and cautioned them
to keep the ir poise an d not get
an,· unnecessa ry penalties that
could cos ! us Ih0 game."

finals

·••u·ks un 11·'!-t 'I'O'I't\I.S :U). :I~IIII .
UYKt: 1K~1 - ( 'nlt•man :1-U-i: T :l)'lllr
HI-~: Kinnt•,, · :l·B·i: ,\nnstrnn J.: ;s.'tHi:
\\'i IIi a lii)&lt;; :1-+111: Ht•!\iurl'll ;~:1-11: \\ alllo~ t·r
:1-~· M; liobd ml ij.(l- 1~: \tmnh •:HI-6: l\lurruw
l ·ll·t l' lair !).1).:!!1. '1'1)'1\\Uoi .i:i-,..1\t
IJaJfl itn'' !OOI 'Oft•: ltftl C:rantlt•l ~, ()vkt• :1 (,
1'hrt't.. JIIIinl ~o:oal,; : Hiu (i r:\Hdl' - f(, ,.trns ,
Sml!h (21. Vt •rhuft ('!l: ll,l'kt •- ( 'uh•man ,
1\lunt·~· .

l' la ir (~).

helmer received 28 votes to win
comfortably over New England' S·
Ra,' mond Berry and New York' s
.Joe Wallon, who lied for seco nd
wi th 9 votes eac h. They were
followed by Kansas Cit y's John
J'v1ackovic with 6, Denver's Dan
Reeves with 31·2 a nd Tom Flores
of the Raiders wilh 1· 2.
"I t's a tremendous honor to be ·
assoc iated with such talent ed
coac hes," said Schotle nh eimer
a 43·ycar·old native of Ca nons'
burg , Pa . "But one m an ca n' t do
it a ll and receive all the kudos
himself.
"Ba sica ll y, I'm the guy who
talks the loud es t a nd Ihe most at
the learn meetin gs.

'

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1986 regular season , finishing
with an AF C·best 12·4 record and
winning the AF C Cent1·aJ Div·
is ion for thrsrcond straight yea r .
For hi s success. Sc hol tenhei·
mer was voted UPJ's AFC Coac h
of the Year. In balloting by 56
media represenlallves. Sc hott r n·

tou~ey

t 'n11, ui :Uir1n

:\ .1 . f lt urlull i• KK. st . Hnml\ t•ntrrr.• ";II
lllntl ,.r · ltn )lll!• ,\,·lu l ' hrl., tm:..'l
l'uurnam t• nt
t'lr.. t ltnuntl
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, ·1111111 ( urru llluh· • · r~k~ TnurilanwrM
t' lr"l Rim nd
llu ld\\ ln·Wullllt 'l' till, lllll'rli n i ll
Kllo\'llll i.,·Shr lrt• • Tl!urnauu •nt
.\h~rl• ·tt . l

''We jus ! wa nlrd to take Ji
down the fir ld and not make a
mi slake, " Francis said. "! knew
we had to get the big p lay."
Francis, who was na med the
game's most va lu able pl ayer ,
comp leted 22 of 31 passes for 24:l
yards. His three touchdowns was
a Tennessee record for bowl
ga mes. Clinksca lrs wound up
with sQven catches for 72 yards
and Tenn essee's other wide re·
CPiver, Anthony Miller. finished
with six catches for 72 yards.
For Minn esota. Foggir com·
pleied 10 of 25 passes for 136
ya rds and Da rrell Thompso n
rushed for 136 yards on 25
carr ies. Foggie carried 1~ times
for 52 yards.
Majors sai d it's been a lon g
,

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( 'nn~ul:llkln

~lidlll• · l•trr llfi. Hlnmnrll'ld u:r
R u lni~J\\' f lrl'""'
' ftrn~Hfalktn ltunnd

t' lrrrlll.l 11 :1. lla" all t~:l
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( 'llll llljllnn~hljl

l'lll.,hur ~::lr

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'F! •AAI '!o"'f' MI. C'o·nlra l t ·t.,ritlnli:!
1-'lrrrhl il St . M1, ,U1 1rr n )l; t, 6!

The Daily Sentinel
IUSPS

t4~900 )

i\ Dlvl'ilnn nf l\-lulllmedla. Jnc•.

Publlsht'd N'NY aflrr noon. Monda y
thr ouRh F' rld&lt;~ :v. 111 Court Sl .. Po ·
mrr p:v. Ohio. by th(' Ohi o V&lt;~ ll r:v Pub·
ll~ ht ng Comp &lt;J ny !Mul11mNlla, Inc..
Po m rroy. Ohi o 4~769 , Ph. 992-21fi6. Sr.
·co nd duss poslap:r paid at Pomrroy.
Ohi o,

l'1W\

ViiLJ

Mr mbN : Unlt r d Prrs~ 1ntrrnallona l.
Inla nd Dally Prrss Associat io n and t hr
Ohl o-N r wspapN Associat ion. Na t tonal
Advrrllslng R1•presPnlai iVl'. Bnmham
NI'W spa'prr S~i('S, 7:13 Third Avenu(',
Nl'w Yor k, Ne-w York 10017.
POSTMASTER : Slind addrr&gt;Ss C'hilngl'!'
1o Thr Dallv Sl'nlint'l. 111 Court Sl..
Po mt&gt;r~· . Ohio 4$769

.Urun MI. S f :~rnlinu Sl 4iR

augmented by backing from
some of the city's most lnfluen·
tlai Democratic power brokers .
These range from Cook County
State's Attorney Richard M.
Daley, son of the late mayor. to
Rep. Dan Rostenkowskl, chalrm·
man of the U.S. House Ways and
Means Committee.
Hynes' candid acy constitutes ·a
serious Ihreat to Wa shington but only If he ca n som ehow avoid
the multi-ca ndidate race that
now seems Inevitable.

.i 'j,

1'hlr.H ' Iat t• liunw
ltro · ~un St. 1;.;, San .llllio· st . :;:'i

l.ihl'f'h' 1\n"l C)lo•mphl.. . l 'o•nn 1 -

'rl•nrttos.,,,,

~i

~l a r .. llatl

,, ••. '!:\

n•.,.

Suut ll!·t·n I tuh st. ll»i, Wt-. h •r n ·"'' ·
· ( •mn• ·rl l\ 111 :'t1utuul f ' la :-.~11'

By ,JIM' LEWIS
TennQssee Coach Johnny Ma jors
said.
MEMPHIS. Tenn. (UPTI
Tennessee, which had trouble
"Tennessee did a good job
stopp ing the run all season, t defensively 1 on the option, seal·
stymied Rickie Foggle, Mlnneso· • ing off the backs," Minnesota
la's scrambling quarterback, Coac h John Gutekun st said.
and won the Liberty Bowl Mon·
Francis hit Cllnks.cales with
da y ni ght.
scoring strikes of16 and 18 yards
Jeff Francis threw three touch· and con necled with fullback
down passes, two to J oev Clinks· William Howard on a 23·yarder.
cales, and the Vo.lunt eers Minnesota, down 14·0 a t one
stopped Foggle and the Gophers' point, could mana ge only one
option a ttack in a 21·141riumph In touchdown, an 11-yard run by
Ihe 28th ann ua l classic.
Foggl e. Th e Gophers ' other
"Our defense was better to· points came on field goals of 25
nigh! becau sE' we have made and 27 yards by Chip Lohmiller.
Francis directed the Volun·
progress In the latter part of the
seaso n from a phys ical stand· teer s to a 66-yard, S·play drive to
point and a lso because we had break a IH4 deadlock in th e final
tim e lo put in a few wrinkles that qu arter. The drive plimaxed with
helped us against Minnesota ," his 16·yard pass to Clinkscales.
.

Schottenheimer voted AFC's best coach

C nlnrudu \lin&amp;'!. ltll , l.a\'l'rlll'llli ( tiT I

."it•n 1\nl!.' l rt:II ';L.. u1Tt•\a.,t - \luh.nu :t
\\ :too lrinl,rt 11n li
Ur•t·. !':'
\lnh 11 l!n~· l l llmlorlniU J - .\rl'lullll :m.
"uri h ( ':1rullna ~ I .
IO:ol nr lht\lo'l I· IIU'Ji .,um·llll•, t' lll.l
f'lt •m.,nn '!7, l&gt;ihmfurd '! I.
lh•t•, '!!1

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l..t• Mu) nrt• K:t Rt•nti••Y

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Alahllmll· BirmlnJ~:bam ln. 1\la,.,k ll·
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Mlthll1• Tt•un. !-11. ~"J. Mlt · hl~t:IUl Ill
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.1

:!~ .

Showdown in Chicago._____R_o_be_rt_~_al_te_rs
CHICAGO- Shortly before his
death, Chicago Mayor Richard J .
Daley called together his closest
politica l allies and reportedly
offered them this advice: "When
I'm gone, you guys gotfa stick
together ."
Now, as Chicago mark s the
lOth anniversary of the late 1976
demise of the best . known and
most powerful mayor In Its
history, there Is no evidence that
Daley's proteges are willing to
cooperate to consolidate what
re ma ins ol their dwindling poll !I·
ca l power.
Indeed, the prelimina ry rna·
neuverlng for next spring's may·
oral election has produced a
confusing profusion of candl·
dates with ties to the Democratic
organization th a t Daley sus·
talned through his more tha n two
decades as mayor.
Moreover, most of the Demo·
crats say they ma y not even seek
the party's nominati on In the
Feb. 24 primary bu t may run In
the April 7 general election as
Ind ependents or thi r d part y
candidates.
Much of that bizarre political
behavior Is attributed to the
racial divisions In Chicago. Of
the approximately 3 million
people living In· the city, 40 to 45
percent are while and an equal
proportion are black, (The re·
malnder are Hispanic and, to a
lesser extent, Asian. )
Mayor Harold Washington,
black anti-organization Demo·
crat now approaching the end of
his first term, a lmost surely will
receive the unified support of the
city's black voters In his bid for
·
re·electlon.
All of the candidates seeking to
unseat Washington are whit~ " but 1

Tenn~ssee ·stymmies Foggie; wins Libertr

I

Page-2-Jhe Daily Sentl~l .
Pomerov-:-Middleport. Ohio · ·
·Tuesdav. December 30. 1986 •

The Daily Sentinei- Page- 3

SUBSCRIPTION R&gt;IT E8
Ry Carrier or Motor RouW
Onr Wrf'k ............... .................$1.2~
Om• Month ................................$~ .45
OnC' Yrttr ................................ $65.00
SING I.E COPY
PRICE
Dally .. .... ............................. 25 C£&gt;nts
Sub~rrib('rs no~ dl'-"ir t n ~ 10

FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS
FULLY EQUIPPED!

pay th('Car·

rlrr mav rc&gt;mil in ndva n('(' di!'('C'I to
Thr Oaliy &amp;onllnrl on &lt;.t 3. fi or 12 mont h
basis. CrC'dil will txo giVC'n carrlrr r ac h
W('('k ,

No s ubsc riptions b~· mail pc&gt;l"miltf'd In
arro .'i whNc&gt; homr car rier :-;C'rv lrt' Is
ava ii Hbl£&gt;.
~:1

Mall SubscrlptlonM
Inside Ml'lf:8 Co unty
·
13 W£&gt;c&gt;k!0 .................................. $17.2!4
26 W('f'kS .............................. ... ,$.1 4.()6
52 Wl"('kS... ..... .... ...... ., .. ........... $66.56
Outsld ~·

Meigs Clounly

1,1 Wl•l'k!i ....... .... .... ................ . . SJR.20
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52 Wt&gt;C&gt;k-" ............. ........... .......... $67.60

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•

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Page 4 The Daily Sentinel

Tuesday, December 30, 1986

Pomeroy Middleport, Ohio

'

---Local·Briefs:~.......... ·A lr controller .confirms UFO sighting ·
. · No Sentinel Thursday

ANCHORAGE, Alaska (UP!)
Air Force officials confirmed
ra tional. The wea ther was clear, rould not identify but reported
- An air controller said radar their radar picked up somet hing
the FAA said.
while and yellow strobes." The
FAA ·spokesman Paul Steucke lighting · was not a normal air·
showed a mysterious object near the JAL plane, but Capt.
following a:' Japan Air Lines Robert Morris of Ow Alaska Air
sai d there was no other air traff!c craft marking patlern. the crew
cargo flight at the time the crew Comma nd suggested .the UFO
alo.ng th~ sa me little-traveled said.
route that night. Steucke also ";======:::===~
reported a UFO with fl as hing · was "random clUtter or wea ther
lights trailing the jumbo jet near interfere nce." Anot her Air
no ted the FAA's electronically 1 ,
the Arctic Circle.
Force spokes man, Sgt . Jack
recorded radar data did not
All three crewmen on .JAL Jiokanson, said. "We got out of
s.upport the UFO sighting.
·
Flight 1628 told Federal Aviation llie UFO business some time
Butt he exis tence of anuniden·
Admini s tration Inv estigators ago."
tified object was confirmed by a
they saw white and yellow lights
FAA ·security manager Jim
re ~ort from ·the flight controller
close to their Boeing 747 on Nov. Derry Interviewed the three
in charge of JAL 1628. Steucke
17 after they crossed the Arctic crewmen- Capt. Kenjyu Te~a u - · said the controller , who was not
On January 1, 1987,
Circle 30 miles southeast of Fort chi, 1st Officer Takanori Tame· named ·, had two years
a small'but important
Yukon In an over:t he-pole flight 'fuji and Flight Engineer Yoshio experience.
change will take place.
Du r ing thP flight. the con·
from Reykjavik, Ice land, to Tsukuda - and concluded they
Tokyo via Anchorage.
were not hallucinating and not on troller asked Terauchi to identify
Deregulation will be
The FAA released details oft he drugs or alcohol artd were the cra ft and then wrote. " He
giving yol.l responsibil: .
Incident Monday wh_en queried r---=:......-----~---------------1
ity for repair and main- .
by United Press Int ernation aL

The Dally Sentinel will not be published Thursday so that Its
employees may enjoy the New Year's holiday.
Regular publication and business hours resume Friday.

Meigs SWCD receives funding
. The Meigs County Soil and Water Conservation District is one
. of 47 such districts todivide$250,500 Issued by thestateo!Ohio to
initiate a multiflora rose control probl em.
· Planted atone time as a living fence or as a measure to control
soil erosion. multiflora rose has become a problem on hundrects
of thousands of acres of pasture and woodland in the state.
The district will help landowners who wish to control the rose
plants on their proper ty and cost share funds will be available to
local landowners from the Meigs SWCD.

Meigs County Emergency Medical Se~vlces reports five c~ lls
Monday: Pomeroy at 7:58a.m. to Willow Creek Road lor He len
Bailey to Veterans Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 10 a.m. to
Lincoln Hill for Mrs . .A.R. Knight to Veterans Memor ial
Hospita l; Rutland at 10:57 a. m . to Meigs Mine No. 2 for Randy
' • McKinley to O'Bieness Memorial Hospital; Pomeroy at 1:43 .
p.m. to Main Street for Paul Sayre who was treated but not
t!ansported; Pomeroy a t 11:39 p.m. to Country Home Mobile
Home Park for Marion Oiler to Pleasant Valley Hospital.

South Central Ohio
Mostly cloudy tonight, with a
low hear 30. Partly .cloudy
Wednesday, with highs near 40.
Th e probability of precipita·
lion is near zero tonight and
Wednesdav.
Winds will be light and wes·
teriy tonight.
Oblo Extended Forecast
Thursday through Saturday
A cha nce of snow flurri es
Thursday and Friday. with fair
weather Saturday. Hi ghs will be
in the 30s each day, with
overnight lows generally ranging
from the middle to upper 20s.

Rutland post to host euchre party
Rutland Legion Is sponsori ng a euchre party on Friday .
beginnin g at 7 p.m . Admission $3 per person. Bring a friend.

Pomona Grange schedules meeting 1
Meigs County Pomona Grange will meet Friday, 7:30p. m.. at
the Rock Springs Grange Ha ll. Laurel Grange will host.

MHS Band Boosters to meet
Meigs High School Band Booste rs wil meet Monday, 7p.m., ln
the high school band room.

CY
Point Pleasant, W. Va. ·
..
Gallipolis, Ohio • Middleport, Ohio

( HOLIDAY SAVINGS! ·)

Veterans Memorial

Flame Chapter sets meeting

Monday Admiss ions - Owen
Dailey. Rutland; Helen Lam·
bert, Vinton; Helen Bailey,
Pomeroy; Ev elyn Knight.
Pomeroy.
Monday Discharges - Chris·
topher Diddle.

· Flame Chapter. Long Bottom, will meet Tuesday. 7:30p.m ..
. at Mount Olive Community Church. Speaker will be Joyce
Hoback. President Suzanne Bush we lcomes the public.

Church to hold watch night
· Bill Wise. of Pomeroy, Bob Manley, of Morgan Center, and
. Charles B1as. of Gallipolis. will be speakers at New Year's Eve
· wa!chnight services at the Hobson Chu rch of Chr ist of Christia n
· Umon.

MeigS
County Court cases
.

'

Fined this week in Me igs
County Court by Judg'P Patrick
O'Brien were the fo llowing:
. Brian Bowling. Racine. $250
an d costs. 30 days In jail with ail
l)ut three days suspended, two
yea rs probation. DWI; $100 and
costs. parking on roadw ay: Gary
Emery, Wes t Ches ter. $250 and
cQsts, spotlighting; Greg Nease,
Syracuse, $35 and costs with $20
0t fine suspended. fa ilure to
cqntroi; Geraldin e McGinness.
Long Bottom, $20 a nd costs,
driving on plates belonging to
another vehicle; Clar ence Stet·

Denies plagiarism
ATHENS &lt;UP)) - An Ohio
Univers ity physics professor has
emphatically deni ed he piagiar·
li ed work from two 30-year-old
SOv iet monographs lor a book
p4 bllshed In 1983.
The charges. originally pub·
lis hed in October in the-Moscow
week ly Llteraturnaya Gazeta,
w.ere picked up last month by the
British journa l Nature and Man·
day by The New York Times.
Two Soviet scholars allege
Hollis C. Chen lifted several
chapters of his 1983 textbook.
"Theory of Electromagnetic
Waves."lrom works by the noted
Bl!Ssian physicist Fyodor I.
~pdo rov . ThP Gazeta arricle
called Chen "one ol th e greatest,
most cynical and shameless
plagiarizers in the history of
;sC'Ience."
·

JAOCSON PIK£ · RT.3&amp;
Pllono 448· 4524

531

son. Cleveland, $20 and costs, no
seat belt.
Fined for speeding were Billy
Lloyd, Letart , W.Va .. $20 and
cos ts; Carol J . Strauss, Gali ipo·
lis. $25 and costs; Ricky Si mpkins. Chesterland , $25 a nd costs;
Curtis Shi nn , Mo rgan town ,
W.Va .. $25 and costs; Robert
Vigna, Ashland. Ky .. $24 and
costs; Judith Perkins. Syracuse.
$21 and costs; James W. Peddl·
cord, Newark, $25 and costs;
Kenny Osborne. Rutland, S22and
costs; Beth Willoughby, Letart,
W.Va. , $14 and costs; Robert
Riffle. Racine, $84 and costs.

WEST

with evtf'(dllc orooll ol
color print film blooght
In for processing.

BARGAIN HATtNEES DAILY
All SEATS 12.50
ADMI SSION EVERY TUESDAY $2 .50

offer good thru .
Jan. 4th

DEC 26 thru .IAN t
FR IOA'f'
r--

t~ru T~RSOAY !

Cdor~•• Ct.AS•&lt;ff

12

24
EXPOSURE
36 .
EXPOSURE

EXPOSURE
15

EXPOSURE

Page-f!

The

libraries . ·
Ohio Valley Area Llbrar- no lo gy · A.s'sociatlon, Iowa
· les (OVAL) Board of Trustees Library Association, and the
The mission statement was
held Its monthly meeting Thurs- Wisconsin Educa tiona! Media developed by the OVAL member
day evening, Dec. 18: ·
Association.
library directors with input from
Shirley Fischer, OVAL Dlrec· . OVAL is awaiting approval 8 of the 11 member library b~ards
tor. Introduced Eric Anderson, · from the State Library for the and the OVAL Board of Trustees.
the new OVAL E~tenslon Consul- reallocation of $64,833 from 1986 The priorities Include the 5 roles
· rant. Anderson holds the second federal funds. The bulk of these for OVAL identified most often
: top position In the 19 staff monies will provide the hard· by those participating In the
organization. He Is responsible ward and softward to begin the process.
Ms . Fischer provided the
· for the Extension Services Pro- · automation process of the Book·
Board an assessment of the
gram which in 1987 Is funded for ·mobil e and the Books-by-Mall
member libraries using the 1986
$510;660. The Program provides Programs . Anderson's expertise
· the Books-by-Mall Service to 10 will- also be available to member · Standards for Public Library
Service In Ohio. Eight of the 11
. counties and Bookmobile Service libraries desiring to a utoma te
member libraries participated in
their bookmobile services.
' to 6 counties.
the assessment . There were no
Anderson comes to OVAL from
The OVAL Board approved a
points. on which ali of the 8
, Iowa where he held positions at mission statement for the ·re·
libraries
meet the Standar ds .
the Sioux City Public Library and glonal library which Included
During 1987 Ms. Fischer and
the State Library. In addition he ·' priorities over · the next live
other OVAL staff will place
has held library positions In years:
.
-public school systems In Illinois
To e nable the Improvement of special emphasis on working
with the libraries to assist them
a nd South Dakota . .
·
library service to area residents
Anderson has a high' leve l of by facilitating resource sharing In their efforts to met the
,expertise In microcomputers and among libraries In the region; To Standards. Increased State fund·
ing lor public libraries In OVAL
:their applications In managing. strengthen the knowledge and
He produces and edits the Wired eipertise of library staff· and which began to be received Is
:Librarian 's Newsletter, the old· trustees through continuing edu· ·1986 will enable the libraries to do
more and t-he Standards Is one
:est monthly newsletter lor micro cation programs and profes·
tool the library directors and
.user librarians wlih an interna· slonal consulting ser~lces;
tiona! subscription list of 700.
To coordinate library purchas- boards of trustees can use In
:. A graduate of Rosary College , ing and administrative functions focusing on how the Increased
In Rive~ Forest, Ill., and Mon·
In order to control costs and funds can best be used.
The Board approved a 1987
·mouth (Illinois) College, AnderImprove local purchasing
:son rece ived a Ma sters of Li·
power; To ' provide means for agenda for Its meeting. Slgnlfl·
brary Science In 1982 and a
libra r ies to take ;J.dvantage of cant agenda Items Included:
Approval of revislohs to the
Bachelor of Arts 1!1 the teac hing
resources outside of their service
OVAL Long Ra nge Plan in
~f history throu gh film and
areas;
li terature In 1975.
And to act as a coordinating February:
Approval of the 1988·1989 Ser·
. He holds membership In the
and facilitating agent to dis semi·
following profeSsional assocla·
nate ln!ormalion to ensure ade· vice Program In April.
Approva l' of · an assess ment
itons : Am~rlcan Library Associ·
quaie funding and appropr iate
enabling legislation for the re· plan to provide for 50 percent
a lion. Library Information Tech·
system and the member matching cash from the member

'---

Open .
New Year's'

BROUGHTON'S

MILK

Forfeiting bonds were Paul
Jacobson. Athens, $750 and costs.
· reckless operation; Ke ith Lythe,
&amp;&gt;!pre. $40 and costs. no sea t
belt: Betty Writesel. Racine. $30,
improper backing; Timothy
Arney, Vinton , $43, speeding; Jay
C. Dean. South Charleston. $50,
speeding; Jill Myers. Columbus ,
$00. speeding; Mary Cassady.
Logan. $50. speedi ng; Mt&gt;llssa
Jahr. Marietta. $50, speeding.

HOMO ................$19_
9 GAL.
20/o .................... $169 GAL.
112 GALLON ................ Sl29

\

PRESENTED - Duane Weber,
., manager of the Quality Print Shop In Middleport,
Is pictured receiving a "Big Drop" Award from
· the Meigs County American Red Cross Blood

Day
9 A.M. til 9 p.M.

....._-

Program chairwoman, Marlon Ebersbach. Tlie
award Is lor outstanding participation In the blood
program through free bloodmobile announce·
ment plac ards provided lor many years by the
shop.

.,_

COCA
COLA

FARM
FRESH
EGGS

LIGHT TRUCK
SPECIALS

Clanitied Dtpt,
Ill Court 51 .. hftleroy, Ollio .t516~

89( DOZ.
MED. 79C DOZ.

PEPSI
COLA

..

12

PACK CANS

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT OF
FIDUCIARY
On December 11. 19B8.
In the Moigo County Probate
Court. Cue No . 26372 ,
Billy L. Wltllomoon, Main
Ohio
Street,
Rutland,
46n5. woo appolntad Ad·

NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENTOF
FIDUCIARY
On December 19, 1 9B6.

$299

lri the Meiga County Probate

Bananas
4 LIS.

3. LBS. Sl oo ·

$100

County, Ohlowaaappointed

Potatoes

oJ Donald E. McKenzie. deteuod. tate of Pleaoant
hidge. Pomeroy, Meigs
County , Ohio .
Robert E. Buck,
. Probate Judge
· lone K. Neuelroed. Clerk
(12130: (116. t3 3tc

'
50 LB.
BAG

miniltrtltor ot the e1tete of

ll:dmlniatratri1. of the ntate

$499

Edith · K. Witllomoon , do·

·eased. late of Salem Street,
.luttand, Ohio 45776.
Robert E. Buck.
Probate Judge
Lena K. Nea!liilroad, Clerk
(12118, 23. 30, 3tc

12-16-'16-1 mo.

YOUNG'S

- Roofing 1nd tun.tr

HOTPONT

Dncrlpti1111

22S/75R1S

Price

FIRESTONE ATX A/S STEEL
FIRESTONE SUPREME A/S STEEL
ROWL STEEL A/S
ROWL STEEL A/S
FIRESTONE STEELTEX A/S
ROWL STEEL MTS

47.95
45.00
62.00
89.95
89.95
I

. 28.50
' .

New tires mounted and balanced no charge.
Retreads plus ltcapable Trade.
14 EAST MAIN
POMEROY
992-6687

'

.....
......
"~
lnllf .... .

•

Pomeroy Home &amp; Auto
600 EAST MAIN

POMEROY

CABBAGE

10C

CARROTS

.39&lt; ':::·

LB.

lED' DELICIOUS, GOLDEN
DELICIOUS, ROME

APPLES

S2 89

CELERY

39C

STALK

.

, .,.,,

OPEN
9 AaM.-9 P.M.

' 19n Votklwagen - So·
rial W1173134706
, 19BO Datsun
1 HLA1010&amp;879
1980 Pontiac Phoenht
ZZ8B6AT114Z41
. The Formlfo Bonk and .
Sovingo Company, Pomo ·

~7 DAYS A

WEEK

PECK

roy . Ohio, reserves the right
to bid •t this aala. and to

FARM MARKET AND
CONVENIENCE STOlE .

290 WEn lUll

PUBLIC NOTICE
•. NOnCE is hereby given that
on Saturday. Jonuory 3rd,
19B8, It 10:00 a.m., a public
1M will be held It 106 Union
Awnue, Pomoroy, Ohio. to
IIIII for cosh the following col·
•1

·

POMEROY

withdrew the above cotto.....1 prtor to 1111. Further,
The Formoro Bonk ondl Sav ·
9111• Compenv rnervea the
riGht to reject any or all bida
eybmlned.
; •Fuither. the above cotta·
tirat will be oold in tho con·
dillon it 11 in with no ox-

•

ireaaed or implied
tleo given.

warran~

11.21JO. 31 : 111 Z 3tc

REWARD
A reward of

ssoo cash. is offered

for the apprehension and Conviction of the person or persons res·
ponsible for firing several gun shots
into. a gas compressor station
owned and operated by Carl E.
Smith Petroleum in Portsmouth.
Located on Silver Ridge Rd., Orange
Twp., Meigs County, Ohio.

..fore 1940
ldp ....., for • - .,.., of
Zenit~ Philca, Atwat• •••·

Pit. (3041 811·1220

- Concrete wortt
- Plumbing end ~eetrlctl

"""'

V. C. YOUNG In
992-6215., 992-7314
•-oy,

GUN SHOOT
RACINE

TVs, Antennas
SattHitt Salts
Installation
Service

llcnhan lulldlng

Electronic Organs
Mobile sarvice

6:3G P.M.

lllSONAil£ • IIUAII£

1·20-'16 tfn

GE VCR

AUTOMAnC
TRANSMISSIONS

95

Rt. 124, ' - " ' ' Ohio

SU.GAR RUN
ASHLAND

ONLY

$29.995

4-Evtnt 14-Diy Timtr

1319

- zij.oo Rebate

$299 95

GE 19"

TELEVISION
ft~~ . $25995
IOOVII

SWEEPERS

$7995

VCR TAPES
ONLY

$299

MICROWAVE

S1099S

MGM

FARM CITY INC.
POMEROY
992-2104

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
REPAIR
Al11 Trua•l,.lo•
PH. 992-5682

lfiUILT I REPAIRED

190 MULIEDY AVE.

POMEROY, OH.

PH. 992-9949

or 992·1121
6:17-tfc

... larton, Owntr
• 12·30·16-1 mo.

THOSETHMS

GATIIRINCDIIt

:4DD" DOLLARS
TO Wilt POCKET
.WITH A
.IUSSOD AP.\

Now

FIRE .DEPT.

.•

161 North .... . .
Milkllport, Ohio 4576t:

SAlfS &amp; Ullttrll:;

EVERY
SAT. NIGHT
factory Choh

614-843·5248

Roger Hysell
Garage

GOLDSUI

Anyone having any information re·
garding this criminal act are urged
to contact the Meigs Sheriff's Office
or notify Carl E. Smith Petroleum
Inc. at 304·2
13.

loy .,.,. Nomt. .. lought

12 Gauge

Shotg..,, Only

I ~!::~~~~ilM;d

~---....:•~D-:;8-~tfnu I J

RANGE

30' ELECTRIC

Public Notice

won

(Free Estimoteel

"3,....:-,A,. . n_n_o_u-nc.!.e_m_e_nu-

COLUMBIA TWP- Coiumbl&lt;\
Township Trusi.e es will meet
CARPENTER - Mt. O nion Wedn esda y. 7 p.m .. for the flna £
Baptist Church.locatedoi!Route business meeting of t~e year. AI{
143 on County Road 10. Carpenter organizational meetihg will be
Hill Road . services starting at 8 held Thursday lit the fire station-.'
p. m. The Stevens Family will be
SYRACUSE - Syracuse VII'·
present to sing.
Council meeting scheduled
!age
~-lor
Jan.
1 will be postponed until
CHESHiRE - Sliver Run
Jan.
8
at
7 p.m.
Baptist New Year's Eve service
starting at 7:30p.m. The church
SALISBURY TWP - Salis·
in located In the Cheshire area.
bury Township Trustees will
RUTLAND - Rutland Ch urc h meet Friday. 7 p.m .. at the
of 'God serv ices will begin at 9 township ha ll on Rock Springs
p.m. and there will be special . Road .
singing. preaching and a com·
Special Sel&gt;SIOnS
munlon service.
REEDSVILLE - Two special
RUTLAND ...!. Rutland Free- meetings will l1f held by the Olive
will Baptist Church, starting at 7 Township Truslees. The first will'
, be on Dec. 31 to complete 1986'
p.m.
· · business while the second has
been set for Jan. 2 and will be the
,I
organizat tonal session. aoth .
Dance and dinner
meetings will start at.6:JO p.m.
RACINE .- Raci ne American and will be held at the Reedsville
Legion Post 602 will have a New. Fire Station.
·
Year's Eve dance and dinner .a t
the post home. Fes tivities start Closing
at 9 p.m. and admission will lje
POMEROY - The Planned
$10 a couple and $5 single. All Parenthood of Southeast Ohio
legion and auxiliary members Patient Services offices will
are to bring a covered dish . The closed at noon Wednesday a~d ·
legion will furnish the ham. will rema in closed J an. 1 In·
Music will be prov ided by Doug observance of New Year's Day .
Circle a nd the Circle "D " Offices will reopen at 8: JO a. m·.
Wranglers .,
on Friday, Jan. 2.

J.R.'s REPAIRS

CARPENTER
SERVICE
- Addona •d remadtlino
64 Miac. Merchandise

HOBSON - Hobson Churc h of
Christ In Chrlstllin Union, s tart·
lng at 7:30p .m., with speaking by
Rev . Bob Manley, of Morgan
Center. and Rev . Chester Wise.
of Gallipolis. Special singing
also.

Trustees meetings
PAGEVILLE - Scipio Town;
ship Trustees will meet Wednes~
day . 7 p.m .. at the township
building in Pagevllle to finalize~
e nd·Of·the-year business. An or·"
ganlzational meeting will be held
Thursday. 10 a.m .. at the same
location.

OLD RADIOS WAtmD

PH. 992·3537

992-2156

ness Church. Ohio 325, starti ng at
10 p.m .. wjth special s\nging and
communion.

'

WANTED:

GEARY'S
OPEN 8 A.M.-4 P.M.

Public Notice

member libraries for program~
for the public - especia li}'
preschool and elementary age
c hildren.
:
Professional attention to thE.'
systems gra phics, logo, and
printed materia ls.
:
Patricia Holter, represents the:
Meigs Coun'ty Public Library on
the OVAL Board of Trustees. ~
Established In 1973 as the first:·
state-funded regional public II·.
brary agency In Ohio. today
OVAL administers through local .
public librarJes a variety of·
progra ms des igned to improve,
a nd extend services . to local ,
residents. OVAL Is making up of~
public libraries In the Ohio,
counties of Athe ns, Hocking, '
Jackson, Lawrence. Meigs. Pick·
away, Pike. Ross. Scioto and .
Vinton.
The OVAL Board of Trustees, ,
'which cons ist s of one trust~i
from each member public II·\
brary board, determines policy ••
controls · finances, a nd makes ;
final decisions on what services •
will be offered.

Business Services
BODY SHOP

rothe l . McKenzie, Pleasant
Ridge. Pomeroy . Meiga

Grapes_

DANVILLE - Danv llle Hall·

550 Page St., Ml ........t

Public Notice

URGE

PHONE
992-2156
o.m, Stntiritl
Or Writt

$139

6 PACk

CANS

MIDDLEPORT - Middleport
Independent Holiness Churc h.
starting at 7:30 p:m .• with special
speaking by Rev. Steve Tomek.
of Oak Hill. and Rev. Leroy
Manns, of Point Pleasant.

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

The Daily Sentinel ·
MEIGS
COUNTY

RETREAD

POMEROY - An end of the
year revival will be held through
Wednesday, 7:30 nightly, at
Calvary Pilgrim Chapel, Ohio
143, near Pomeroy. Victor Roush
will be speaker. On the final
Pvenlng. a Watch Night service
will be conducted with Rou sh and
others to speak.

BURLINGHAM _:: Word of
. Life Church, Burlingham. sta rt ·
ing a: 7 p.m. , with singing by the
Full Gospel Travelers and the
United Gospel Singers .

\

19517SR14LT
215/70R14
23S/7SR1S
31X1 O.SOX15
23S/8SR16

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 s!ng.

POMEROY - Calvary Pll·
grim Chapel, Ohio 143, s tarting at
7;30 p.m.. with Rev . Victor
Roush speaking.

tijij

stan. for serv ice on the OVAL
Board from January, 1985,
through December, 1986.
.
To D. Christine Hunt , OVAL
Extension Librarian responsible
lor the Books-by-Mail Program,
for the additional responsibilities
she assumed during the vacancy ·
of the Extension Consultant
position.
Transfers were approved to ·
reallocate surplus 1986 s tate
funds to allow for the purc hase
of:
Microcomputers, prin ters,
monitors. modeums. and soft·
ware for each member public
library .
Cushioned chairs to replace the
metal folding chairs used for
meetings and workshops.
Video projector and video
cassettes to upgrade a nd expa nd
the current training and contlnu·
ing education program main·
ta lned for OVAL stall and Its
member library S\affs.
Video cassettes and other
materials to add to Its resource
collection and used by the

~

Community calendar/area happenings

MIDDLEPORT - Ash Street
Freewill Baptist Church. Middleport. starting at 7:30 p.m. with
special preach ing and singing.

Fined $10 and costs lor runn ing
a stop sign was Ke nny Osborne.
Rutlaod .

Sin

libraries for any federal funds In
April .
The Board acknowledged re·
celpt of a letter from the
Logan-Hocking County District
Library Board declaring an
Intent after 1987 not to support
arty cash matching requirements
required by OVAL's federal
grant. In 1987 OVAL will receive
$408,528 In federal fund~ with the
membef libraries providing a 25
percent cash 111atch or $102,132.
If the current pattern of
funding and cash matching re·
qulrements continves for 1988.
the Immediate Impact to the
public of the Hocking County
Library 13oard's declaration of
Intent would be to terminate the
Books-by-Mail Service to Its
county residents. It also places In
jeopardy the other services from
OVAL and the cooperating
member libraries, I.e. Hocking
County residents borrowing of
mate rials from other libraries.
Resolutions were approved to
express appreciation.
To Mary Helen Jones, We n1

Eagle
EAGLE RIDGE
Ridge Church, from 8 p.m. to
midnight, with special singing by
Wayne and Linda Rhodes, and
others.

Coun, Case No. Z5354, Oo-

You just won't find a.
better value lor your insurance premium dollar
than a Homeowners
policy from ·the State
Auto Companies. As an
independent agency re'presenting State Auto, ·
: we offer truly outstandino protection pacJ&lt;ages
tor houses, apartments
: and condominium units.

tu8sday, December 30, 1986

·OVAL trustees ·meet, report on p~ojects throughout service .area .

tenance of inside
phone wires and jacks.
This means GTE will no
longer be responsible
.for fixing them.
What can go wrong
that you might have to
repair? Well, humidity ·
can harm wires.A
puppy can chew them. ·
A vacuum cle.aner
,
could hit and break a
jack. Lots of things can
happen.
These problems are
facing everyone these
days. So you're not
alone. \hat's why GTE
set up a jack and inside
wire maintenance plan
in August 1985. It's
optional. And it costs
just 23 cents a month,
Unless you called us
to cancel it, you are
already covered by
this plan. If you want
details, call our Service
Order Center.
This inexpensive
GTE service contract is
worth the peace of
mind it provides. With·
out it, a service·call
. could cost you up to
$70. But with our contract, fixing your wires
will never come down
to costing you a small
fortune.

Ohio weather

The Daily Sentinel ·

'

...

Deregulation
has now [Ome down
to the wire.

EMS units respond to 5 calls

By The Bend

BISSELL
"BUILDERS

.....
(CUT OUT JOI FUIUII uSI~ '
\

CUSTOM BUILT
HOMES &amp; GARAGES
"At

R~ai4NIGbll l'ricts"

PH. 949-2801
or 949·2860
Day or Night
NO SUNDAY &lt;AUS

4-16-'• 1111

KEN'S
APPLIANCE
SERVICE
915·3561

All Me.. , ·

•W11hlre •Diahwattwrs
•Range a
•Refr.-ratora
•Dryera •Freezer•

PARTS end SERVICE

4· 5·~&lt;

~·

BOGGS

SAUS &amp; SRYICE
U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSYRlE, CliO
Authorirlll .lehn D..,.,
Ntw .Jtofla Ill, lu.. Hog
,_ Et!uipmtnl

,.,. ••.,••....
.......

,.,.. &amp; ....,••.
1-l-'16 tfl

DENNY CONGO
WILL HAUL •..
JUST CALL! ,.
"

992·3410

LIMESTONE
GRAVEL · SAND
TOP SOIL
FILL DIRT
IO·I·tfc ;

�Page 6 The Daily Sentinel

Pomeroy~Middleport,
lllldllCidl

44

3 Announcements
21
Racine Gun Shoot aponaored by
Radni Gun Club. Evetv lund.,,
~innint at 1:00 p.m. Factory
Chokt, 12 guage aholguna.

Imperial Marine. Inc. ~lng
and cl,.r~nce. ate. O.C. 28-30.
1112 Miry·St., Perknburg, W.
v•. 304-485-2118 .

Giveaway

23

--n PLEASE

11 49.

Mother S. 4 p;t. Bull pup pill,
weened, reedy to go. Call
614 - ~8- 7241 .
.

(,IVE

1

Lost and Found

~~~-~'g~~~~n

Found· bltck &amp;greymateterrior.
on Rt. 35 c.u
Male beagla with collar In
1 otditon Township. Pleue cal
wolh information . Call e14·3170658.
Lost; lar9f1 white Hu•ky typ1
dog in Letart Falla arH. Call

814·247·3611 .

Lost : 2 white femelekinens. 3or
4 montha old. Call 614-9928683.
loat : hmale Beegle, vallow and
white. Crook on the end of taU .
.Lon in Carmei-Suhan area. C. II

614-949·2194 .

~rofessional

Services

Adorilbl.a brown &amp; white puppy.
Will bt small. To DODd home
onty. Call614-~6&amp;-132 .

6

Busina11
Opportunity

I NOTICE I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISH·
lNG CO. recommend• th.t you
do bulinlll wit~ paople, you
k"now, and NOT lo 111nd mOney
through the mail linll you have
inve11~td tM offering.

Rabbitt to give IWIY Ph. 448·

Real Eslali:

~:=:;;=:~~;:~~~~";=;:;==~;:::;::::t~-H&lt;;MuTcirisii8
I 9 Wanted To Buy
9 Wanted To Buy
31 ~omas for Sale

TOP CASH p1id for '83 model
and ntwer uted cars. Smith
Buick-Pontiac. 1911 Eut•n
Ave., Gallipolis. Call 814-4462282.
Buying daily gold. silver coin1,
ringa, jewelry, sterling ware, old
coins. l•rge cuneney . .Top pri·
CH . Ed . Burlcett &amp;.rber Shop.
2nd. Av11. Middleport, Oh. 814·

992-3476.

Found: Femlle Bo•er type pup.
Redtth brown with yellow. Ha1 BUYING AAW FURS! Ginseng,
l~ther ten collar . Found in
Yellow Root. bMf and de•·
Rocksprings •rea. Call 614- · hkfes. Alto seiUng tripping
992 ~ 5320 or 814-992-7612 .
aupplies, Whelt Utes. Nita Lhet.
Hour~ 1 :00-9 :00. Closed Wed.
FOUND. small tan Snootledog, George Buckley 814-884-4761 .
caii304-176- 122B.
. QUILTS
FOUND mtla 8111gle dog mostly
BOUGHT-SOLO
white soma blaek IPOtl, Middle Ca•h p•id. Pre 1950's, Single or
Nine Mile, 304-875·2228 .
whole collection. Call Marc •nd
Ellen Fuhz 814-992·2101 day1
Pt111cripttoo nftey gl11111 in or 614-692-2461 evenings and
bfown cue. 304-175-4321 .
weekendt .

Counlry furniture, colltcti~ll , 3 bdr .• air, pool, garage. Nice.
chlklr-.,'atoya, dolla, Pr•19&amp;0. · Comm•cial prop.-,v. cor~er
lots a highway frontave . Ul1
Cora Mill. Call 814 -379-2727 .
wilh u1. WI h,.... buyers. A-One
Rul Ettlt&amp;-Brok•. C•ll 304·
QUILTS
674-6104 or 304-674-6388.
BOUGHT ·SOLO
Caah paid. Pre 1960's. Single or
Whole collection. Ctll Marc and 6 room house. 1 .2 acr... Double
Ell., Fultr 1,.·992-2101 diYI car gar11g1. Located on Rose Hill.
or 614-1592 -24111 evening• and Barg1tn priced 120.000. Call
814-678-2&amp;13.
we..enda .
Buying junk cara. Call614-992- 2 bedroom houte for 11111 in
Clifton (Mable Johnson prop·
5848 after 6:00pm .
.-.yl. Fully carplted, rece~ly
SAVED Gotptl Singing Group remodeled, , new roof. Asking
billing booking ltartlng Janutrr,· 115,000. Cell304-n3-&amp;&amp;34or
1987. Anyone Interested n 304-n3-5784.
booking "SAVED" c.n cellaraa
code (304) 171-8073. Thlll'llt 2 1tory, 3 bedroom housa'With 1
you for your 1upport and may c•r.gauge on Appro~~: 1.5 1Cr111.
U3.000. Call 814-992 -8104.
GOd Bleil You. " SAVED" .
Hemlock Grove area.

In

2 br, kitchen, b81hroom, with
llund~ room, Irving room a
dining room, all elec:. Approx. 1
milea from Pt. Pl. on 'Rt . 82. 2
tr8cts8ppro•. 1 acrtmoreorlllll
overlooking Kanawha Rlv.,.
UO.OOO , C1ll 304·87fH5440
between 8:30 and 4 :30.

IIIIIY'liPili

S1:rv111!s

,,

Help Wanted

-------------------1 . ..

Lady to Nvein light houskeeplng

32 Mobile Homes
for Sale

304-17!·5104.

.Business Services
•VINYl SIDING
*ALUIIINUM SIDING
'ILOWN IN
INSULAnON

- WE ARE YOUR SALES

BISSELL
SIDING CO.

All DSERVICE
HEADQUARTERS FOR

•ZENlTH
•SYLVANIA
•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDR!
•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR
•SATRUTE SALES &amp; SElrllC£

New Ho1111s Built
- ''Free Estimatas"

PH. 949-2801
or "949-2860
No Sunday Calls

We lllfJ Ahll Tl•
Sh~ THhlel..

• DIIY
RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHE~I--915·3307

4/ 1/ Hn

J / 11 / tfn

&lt;

..

RADIATOR
SERfiCE

· .Je can repair and

r~

·core radiators and
heater cores. We can
also acid boil and rod
out radiatats. We also
repair Gas Tanks.
992-2198
Middleport. Ohio
t -13-11~

SHAIPENING
SEIYICE

MOUNTAIN EEl
BODY SHOP
PAllS INC.

Circular Saws
Saw Chain

Planer Knives

lias Lowered Prices

Drill Bi1s
Knives
Chlseli

GIAVELY
TIACTOI SALES
204 Cotttlor St.
Pomoro,, Ohio

OEUVEAV IN TFU -SlAT£ AREA

Local 304·882·3729 '
Inside WV 1-800-854-4857
Ouaidt 'IN 1 ·800-523-2013

PH. 992·2975

12-S.'I&amp;· I mo.

12·1-16-1 mo.

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

992-2772

I Mo. 12-!1-1&amp;

RESIDENTIAL WINDOW,

INC.

40S MAIN Street. Pt. Plnunt, WV 25SSO
(304) 67S-52S2

TH PROFE$$/ONAl Htllll
1•'""111111 C.lltl
''

•lnsul•ttd
Window

Coli: 1-512·938·6170. M·F,

Bam to 5pm (Central Standard
Tima] .
E•P•ianced babylltter nHdiMi
In my home Call81 4-2&amp;6-1786.
Retired couple 10 live-in adjoinIng 1panm.nt. rent free. plua
IIIII'Y in eJCchtnge for full care of
in patient. S.nd Itrill' of IPPNCI•
lion to P .0 . Bo• 985, G1lllpolls.
Ohio 45831 .
Athens Mental H..lth Center. A
200 plus bed JCAH accredited
psychiatric hotpilalla ••pending
i1'1 nursing ttrvic. and stiff
dt¥elojlmtnt progrtms. Ohio
Univlll'tlty BSN progrtm ltu
then 1 mile from hotpltal.
Stwtlng Nlari..· BtaH Nurse
122,000 II 10.11 Pllf . hour),
Nune ,$uperviiOr·l28,500
(112.2CJII'; per hour(.• Aft~~tnoon
·and night •hlft difftrllfltial. ExOIIItnt beneth program. Contlct : "-'tonntl Office. Athent
Mental Heetth Center114· 592·
3031 -e•t. 318. EEO • AAP.
H6ME ASSEMBLY
hc.tlent spare time incom1;
IIIICtrOnics, crtftt, no ••P•
rience. Othan, lntorm.t~n 1504·
841 ·009 IJCt, 2887, 7 di\'1CALLNOWI

PAT HILL FORD

Ford &amp; GM Truett Fende.._
Ea rty 1 39 - Uti ' 56
Chrome Bumpen- GM 73·
80 t56 - Ford 73-17 159
THRU DEC. FREE INSTAL.
ON BEDLINERS
We sell lop quality l)lrtl
and have 3 yr. rust -through
warranty avllillblity

REPS NEEDED
For buslneas account•. Fu ll·
Time. 160,000-180,000. Plrt·
Time, 112,000-$18,000. No
selling, repeat busin .. a. Set your
own hours. Treining provided.

An Ohio Oil Co. offttl high
income. plus c•tn bonutn.
blntlitt to m.ture p..-.on In
O.Hipollt •ea. R•g•dl"' of
••l*iiii'ICI, write M.D. Reacl.
Am•lcan J..ubtic•nts Co., Box
428 Dayton. Ohio 46401 .
Alrlint&amp; now hiring. Flight At·
ttndiMI. Agen11. Mechanics,
Cultomer Service. S11IMI61 to
t&amp;OK. Entry level poshions. Call
1. ·..:1..:0.:.5·..:1.::S.:.7·..:SOOO
.:..:.:..:.E..:''.:.
· .A.:·_::
l805.
-lcGov.-nment jobs. 111,040 ·
t69,230 yr. Now hiring. Call
805·887-1000 bt. R-980&amp; for
current t~eral 1111.
Someon• to move in and th•e
IWing 111.pence. 814· 992· 7662
cell after Wed .
Pert time work-tul time ~tf·
ltaif MembiiJI of the Army
Natlon11 Guard C1n rec.fve 1
monlhly pay chat*, 160,000 lite
intuflnctl, •11 .000 educetion
HlietlnCe lll"'d much mOfe.
304·111· 3950 or 1· 100-... 23118.
Let; Avon http you get the IIMt of
tho.. post Chri11m11 bills and
blu•. Free gtft with flnt ordtt.
eat! 304- 882 · 21~5.
Pin lim• employment, compu·
til' b1ckground and accounting
llltpel'itnce • plut, write Box
C-22. cart of Pojnt Pl ...nt
R-c~lster . 200 Main St .. Pt. Pit.,
W. Va.
DIRECTOR OF NURSING,Ion11·
term a.e, ••c 1111111 pot-itlon, Mtf
sun• with ,_tonal budg.Ury,
management end ~Upe~Vltlng
skills nNdtd. Knowledge of
federlll lnd ltMI ttcensure and
'*"ffiAtlon ,..uletlon. whh 3
v-s nursing mMtegtment In
tone term c•• requhd, BIN or
tttuivllllnt with Gtrontologicll
Nurai,. •PIIrien• Of trelnint
diiHII. Sal.-y negotlebll. Contect Admlnlltrator. Hlllv ilw
Nursing end Rthlbllltatkln Center. 304·829-0031 .

12

R•PIIcem•nt

14•70 Fleetwood, 3 bdr. 2 full
baths, tot•lelec. Like new, price
nagotiable. Call 1fter 4 weekdiVI , •nytime weetc.endt. 614·

388-8633.

34

Businesa
Buildings

Office tpace · Store apece In Pt.
Plusant, $200.00 A-One Real
Ettltt Ph . 304· 675-6104

For Stle: 90•!110 lot in Twin
Ced• addition, New Haven,
W.V. 14500 firm. 304· 882·
3208.

Renlals
41

•Storm Window•
•Dooro
"FREf

IIISTALLA 1011"
SltOWIOOII IIOUH:
IO s ...., ,.,..,, WINI. &amp; Fri.
I I 12 lhvrs. &amp; lot.

'

CJ Coii1)Uteriztd H•rirw Air Sellc1Jon
z Swim Molds - I'*'Prttif1 Serllces ·

2 bedroom I 3 be-droom housn
for rent Ph. 448- 1875.
2 Bedroom house, 842 First
Ava.. O.lipollt . No pett, rtfer·
tnctl &amp; depolit requk'lld. AvaH·
ableJ11n. 1. 1987Call014·258·
1!29.
3 bdr. ht. unfurniahed, 2 child·
ren , no pllts, referance rl·
qUetttd. C•ll 61.&amp;-448-0321 .
2 bedroom, 1 Yl balhs, located in
downtown aret. Adults only .
RtferenctS and Depotit ,..
Quired. C1ll 814-448-3778 .
Beautiful new houte in Pom•
roy. Also new one bedroom
furnlth.cl apartment in Middleport . Call 814· 448-1552 or
814-992·5304.
2 bedrooms. In Middleport.
Completllly remodeled, new carpeting. new cabinet•. Calll14·

a:

"" LISA M. KOCH, M.S.
~ Licensed Clinical Audioloiist
z

2 bedroom . Furnlthtd. 1180.
pw month. New Haven. W. V•.
Cell304·112-24115.

42 Mobile Homes
for Rent
2 bctr .. ' " utllitill plid except
.. ec.. turn. or unfurn.. sac.
deposl1 required. Convanlllflt
location. C•ll814-448-85158 or
I14·U8-t771.
2 bdr. fullyfurnlilhedtdulttonly ,
util. paid. Call 81•· 441·•1 10.
In Eurek• nice and clean , •d!ollts
only. No pftl, diiPOIIt required.
180.00 mo. cllll14-2151· 1830
bllfore 10e.m.
2 Bedroom fufi'Mshed. WI acc~~J~t
HUO. Baeutlful rfver view. Fosters
Mobile Home Plrk 8144-'8-1102.
14x 7o Mobl• Home tor rant In e
quiet

count.., ....... on o . J .

- 417(614)Second
446-1519 (614) 992-6601
Awnue, Box 1213
or

Gllipolis, Ohio 45631

1-13 til

.

Tuesday,

...... C.lll14·992·1•73.

121110 2 bedroom plrliallv fur·
nilhecl in Centtn•rv Ph. 814441-4212

ftoom end bollrd tor Mnlor
cltb:tn1. ...enty of TLC. Cell

2 BR, 1110/ mo. p4us d.,otit
and utllldtl. Raccoon Rd. c.n

114·9t2-H73.

114-448·9341.

18 Wanted to Do

2 bedroom. 1 child, no Plltl.
FrvnitfMd or unfurnlahlld. New
H1ven, W.V1. Call 304· 882·
2466.

S14·441-41S1 '

Rtllllble women woukl lika to
bebvlll •ny hours. Ph. 114· C4•·

Pomeloy-Midlllaport.
' ,_.. .... .
.. Oi;io ·.

....,,ng. ,...,_1

Odd Jobt.
olumbiltg,
hi. cl..ung, ,....,.......
en011. C.l 114-2•1·tl48. ·

FlfiEWOOO . O•k, lacuu.l'

-.y. Us ,..

pldo-up

told.

Nlciply furnished mobile home

CA &amp; htet, · excel. locat~n.
ldulu only. Ctll 814-44fl-0338.
Nlc.ty fumlshed 2 bdr. apt.
Adults only. Inquire at corner
First a Olive St . at Shepptrdt
Sllea &amp; Service.

'

Furnished tpt . S176.00 w•i:er

[IA7J(t'{

l.:e:··::-:""::~:·:::::::::;=========~
51 Household Goods
V1iley Furnitura, naw II used.
Llrge •~ion of qualily furni·
ture . 1216 E111tarn Ave ..
Gallipolis.
LAYNE'S FURNITURE

614-446-7026 .

Sofa• and ch8irt ptlced from
$395 to 1996. Tlbl111 t&amp;O anst
2 to 3 bedroom apt. Con~tanient up to 1126. Hide·a·bedt $390
location in town. All utilitin paid to t59!5. Rtctlners $2:26 to
1325.00mo .. reference~ &amp; dep- · t375. Umps 128 to 1125.
otit required . Wileman Real ' Dinettas t109 tnd up to t495.
Etbite Ag111cy Ph. 814-446·
Wood table w -6 chairs 128!5 to
3644
1795. Deak 1100 up to 1375.
Hutch111 140Q and up. Bunk
Furnished • unfurnl1hed apt1., bed• complete W· mlttrnsn
$160.00 11nd up, refertncaa Ph . U95Jnd up to •395. Babvbeda
304-875-51Q4 A-1 Rell Eltate. $110 • $175. Mtttrnsaaor box
1prjng1 full or twin $83, firm
Uptt8ir• unfurnished IIPI. ca r- 173, and $83. Qu"n setsi22S.
peted. ulilitiet pai d, no children; King 1360. 4 drawer chett t81J.
no pets call446-1637.
Drntera 189. Gun ceblne11 8.
10, • 12 gun . Ga• or e4ectrle
Apartment for Rent 821 Se· range S375. Baby mattrnt81
coi'KJ Avenue. 2 BR. Elttra Nice, $36 I. $45. Bed fr1m111 120,
equipped kitchen , C I A $30 • King frtme 160. Good
$250/ mo. Ctll814-448-2158. Hlectlon of bedroom suitlll,
mettl Clblnat!&gt; headboard• $30
2 •nd 3 bedroom ap•rtment• and up to $6o.
and lloutes in Pomeroy Of
Mlddhtport . Furnlahad or unfur·
Used Furniture: dryer , wood
nished. Pay own utltitiet. Call
table &amp; 2 bench11. beds,
dlyt614-992 ~ 2391 .
dreaser, wood wardrobe. 3
lfliles out Bull\tllle Rd. Open
Aplnmtnu for rent in Pomeroy.
9AM to &amp;PM, Mon. thru Set
On• and two bedroom. Cleen . 614-448-0322 .
and.nlce. Call614· 992· 621&amp; or
814-992-7314.
2 bedroom 8pt•.• Naw Htven.
Alto commercial spaca tuitable
lor aerobi ct, tanning. crtfU. Call
304- 882-3581 or 614·992 ·

Ona bedroom ap•nmant in
Middlepon. Fully cerpeted. toni
electric. equipped kltchan, good
location. Cell614 -992-3867 or
814-992-6170
bedroom rivar ~tiew apt.
Wa~her 1nd dryer avlifable,
uitliti• paid, equipped kitchen.
newty painted end curtainl, no
pall. deposit. Ideal for wMklng
girls to sh••••pence. 614-992-.
1539 morning1,
2

APARTMENTS, mobile homes,
houtn . Pt . Plu11nt •nd Gallipolis. 61.4-441-9221 .
Unfurnished 2 bedroom 1pt,
ytrd and b~tement. 11150.00
plut depotit. 304· 875-715:41
evenings.

W•h• GE 196, Waaher West·
lnghouse Avacado 19fi, Washer
Kenmore Avacado t9fi , Washer
Coppertone Kenmore 196,
Electric reR{Ie HINMI Gold 196,
Gn range 30 Inch 19!5. Aafriger•tor Av1ndo t95, Refrlg•ator
Whita 2 dr. 195, Gn dryer 196.
Color tv floor model 1125,
Sk,gt Appllencet Upp~r River
Rd. 14·441-7398 .
1 coueh •nd 1 chair for 11ia
1100. Cl!ll814·992·2791 . .
Pichent UMd Fumltura. Good
quelity used furniture. Open 9 to .
6 or call for ..,pointm~~nt ,
304-87&amp;-11483 Of 1,75· 1•150.
SWAIN
AUCTION &amp; FURNITURE 52
Olive St., Gallipolis. New &amp; used
wood-coalstovlll, 8 pc wood LR
lUiIll $399, bunk btdl I 199,
entron recliner• 199, new &amp;
uted bedroom suitn, rangu,
wringll' walhlft. &amp; 1ho11. New
INingroom sultn 1199-t599.
lempt, tlto buying coal &amp; wood
stovn. C•II8U-U8-3169.

45 Furnished .Rooms
For rent Sleeping Room• and
light houte keeplflg room1. Park
Central Hotel. Call 614·446·
07&amp;8.
Room1 for rent. day. week.
mon1h. Galllt Hotel . C•ll 814446-9715 . Rentaslowa•l120
month.
Furnithed room 919 2nd, Gelli·
polia. 1116. Utlliti• pd. Shere
b8th. Singia male. Call 4484416 after 7pm.

46 Space for Rent
COUNTRY MOBILE Homa Perk,
·Route 33, North of Pomeroy.
Large lou: Ctll 614· 992· 7479.

47 Wanted to Rent
F1mily for adultl needs 3
bMfooms and blltmtnt In Pt.
PleiHnt whhln 5 mil•. Referent~~~ fumithed Ph. 1715· 1091 .

MerchM11I1se
61 Household Goods

64 ,M isc . Merchandise
Callah11n'1 Used Tire Shop. Ovar
1,000tlm,elzes12, 13, 14, 15,
16, 18.5. 8 miln out At 218.
CIII614-258·821J1 .
Pltatic cittern 1t1t1 epproved,
pintle 111p1ic ltnkt, plastic
culverts. m1111 cul~tllrtt . RON
EVANS ENTERPRISES, Jtck·
ton. Oh. 614·286-5930. ·
Firewood dellvtftd Oak &amp; hick·
orv. tpllt. HEAP voucher, pidtup
load 135. C•ll814· 448· 2223 or
614-448-3028.

675 ·6612 .

· 65 Building Supplies
Building Matllrial•
&amp;lock·, bricl, teWer pipn, win dowt. lintel•, etc. Clauda Winters. Rio Gr1nd11, 0 . C•U 614·

246-6121 .

Pola Buildings by Ou11lity
Buildar1. Workahopa, c•rportt,
anim11 lhthlrt, g111gea. Free
utimatlt . Phone 614-384·

56

Pets for $ale .

Dr•gonwynd Cattery Kenne+.
CFA Himalayan, Penian and
Siamne kittens. AKC Chow
puppies. Call 614·446-3844
aft11r?PM.
,

AKC Shetltnd sheep dog "Minilture Colli a" 7 w•eks old. Shott
' wormed, table &amp; white
' ftmiiH. bllck • white m.tet.

614 - ~5 - 1149 .

Black powder 15.9!5. Ctpl. fill lis,
horn•. bags, quick loaders.
Thompton center p1rt1, Muul•
loading Sptcilllity Shop, Mill·
creek Rd. Hn. M-F6·1 PM , S•l.
1-5 . .Ctll814-441-2318 .
Milled hardwood slabs. $12 . per
bundle, Cont11inlng appto• , 1 'h
tont. FOB Ohio Ptllet Co.
Pomeroy, Ohio . Call 614-992·
6481 .
Firewood. 111 hard wood. H..t
vouchtrl eccepled. 135 . •
pickup lotd. Phon• 614·7422488.

I

y~'(..l

n.-ch for
new record tebel.
eCDM&lt;A"..H
attempt and

r-------,

W~OOP!t

61

Farm Equipment

614·281-1461 .

Massey FMguton, New Holland.
Bulh Hog Sal11 &amp; Servict. Over
40 used tractort to choote from
S. complete line of niW't' • Uled
equipmlll"'t. lArgut •election in
'S.E. Ohio .
JIM ' S FARM EQUIPMENT
CENTER . SR 35 W. O.llipolis,
Ohio. Call 614 - ~8 - 9n7 , eva.
614-448-3592. Up front trectora with warrlnly over 40 uted
triCtora. 1000 tool a.

7421 .

-

62 Wanted to Buy
Now buying shall corn or ••
corn. Call for latnt quote&amp; . Rtvtt
City Farm Supply, 814-448·
2986.

63

· · -- I

--

1978 Chevy Vega, 1978 Dodge
Aspen. S.art and Robuck table

2 47 47 3

~~A=•=•·:0:•:":'":":.':·= ===:J~u~w:.:C:':":':4-=::·::"::· =~
1

SNAFU™ by Bruce Beattl'e
'-P11fl

Hay &amp; Grain

64

Larg• round
ballsPh.
ofhiiVfor
••le.
110.00
uch
IU-•461052.
...:.:.::__ _ _ _ _ _ __

Oltotl ollollod corn. '4.50 pe.

cwt . Ground 115.00 pw cwt .
Oroundwithmot. .n•5.75per
cwt. 304-418-1031 .

Llflll

71

Autos for Sale

Christmal Special•
84' Ford Escort 4 -speed.
53,000mi. 12,800.00. 81' Mercury Lyru, •uto, 78,000ml
$1,181.00. 81' Chevy Chtwlltle

I .OOOml U,IU.OO. 84 '

Chevettl tuto, 28,000ml.
t2.19S.OO. 94' Ford EXP. I ·

opood.

~.ooom1.

u .sao.oo.

446·7414.

I

ou~ 'G.Arct-t of
THS' PAY " ?..
'(ou'R~ OUpi! fl~j.

Auto Parts

(jj)
MecNoii-L.oh,.r
N-hour
• Glllll Wheel of Fortune
(It a.ney Miller
7:05 (I) IInford ond Son
7:30 • (I) ()) N- NiO,ew;;,;ri!MfWMOodd
Game
(!) NHL Hockey: Torno to
Be Annou.-13 hra.) Live.
CD Tao Ctooe for Com·
fort
e())Judge
(I)BitooMe Fotl1tr
.ilt Wheel of Fortune
etB!BIJ-.rdf

®a..- .

Hoo..,,._,.,.

7:35 Cll
Part 1.
8:00 eCil!BIA-T...,(CC)Tho
1oom joins wi1h a spry group
of senior citizens 10 rMCUe a
,acientlof.o kidnapped 1Hnage daughter trom tho
clutchao of 1ho KGB. (60
min.) In S1erea.

Budget lr8nami11lor\t ultld •
rebuilt all typet. Torque converters &amp; trantler c•es. Engine
over haul kits. Alllton Tran1mit·
lion pMU tnd CVC Joints.
Minimum 30 diV to lif.time
warranty. Will detivtt, cash •nd
carrry or lnttlll Ph. 614-379·

(I) Holt Tllwn
(I) • ()) Who'tllte lou?
iCC) Angela's lUdden
unemptoymen1 pitlngoa her
into u~-doubt 1ho family 1ri01'10 solve tho erial&amp;.
Part 2 of 2. (R).

ALLEY OOP

2220 .

•

78' lntemrional Scout •114
e2,000m1
OodriNs
Auto Iaiii Ph. 114-318-9815.

••oo.oo.

1!1.

Clll614·311·2721.

1181 Dodge Omni O.L.H. I

hra .)

())
Home
I mprovamants

ings of a teen~age actemlat

SWEEPER 1nd tawing mechinft
repMr, plrts, end tuppll•. Pick
up end dtlivlry, Davis Vacuum •
Clun•r. one htll mila up '
Georges Crllk Rd. Cell 814· ·

laad Simon into a confrontation with his arctHnemy

Troyan. 160 min.) ·
1
(jj) Novo: Fount111111 of P•·
ltdloe (CC) Thia program
loolta a1 a largo hydroeiac1ric projoc1 in Sri Lanka and
1ho offec1 i1 has had on 1ho
island and ito poopla. (60
min.) (RI .
(It MOVIE: 'Hltlor: The

. I

EEK &amp; MEEK

Loot Ten o.y.·

8:05 (IJ NBA -otioll: Debolt Plotoml ot MllwlukH
._(2hra., 15min.)Uve.
8 :30 (I) e ()) Orowlnc Polna
ICCI As a new school year
bogino. Mike jugglea two
da18to for tho aama dance
and Ben facto a bully . IR).
9 :00 • Cll (lll Hill StrHt Bluea
The capture of a meu murderer creates havoc among
citizens fighting over reward

'

FTM General Contrectlng 13yl'l
up•ience. Roofing • Conltruc:tlon Ph. 814-381-9308.
Fr" t1timlll:111 10" oH during
the holtdays, off• ••pirll Jan
15, 1887.
RON ' S Teltv itlo n Service .
Houle calls on RCA, Quaur,
GE . Spacllling In Z1t11hh. Call ,
304-678·2398 Of 614-448·
245,.

money and gives Caven·
port, his defense anomev,
cauu for tear. (60 min.) (R).

Fetty Tree Trimming. ltump
Jemov81. Call30•-&amp;7&amp;-1331 .
RINOLES 'S SERVICE, e•p•
rlenced carpenter. electrician,
m111on, painter, roofing !including hot 18r applicalionl 304·
67&amp;-2088 or 875-7147 .
Stlrkt Tree and Lawn S.rvlc1,
Hedge s. thrubt, buthe s
trlmmad. tandactping and
stump removal. Lflf removal.
304-578-2010 or 671· 2842.

(I) 700 Club

MORTY MEEKLE AND WINTHROP

(I) • ()) M-ollghlittt
!CCI Ma. Dipeato Iindo her
life in danger after ahe meet a

r----.,.-----,

IT5URI2
15 A DULL
'M:JRLD.

THIS SIDE ISN'T
ANY6ETTER,
. E'l 'fl-~ER .

NOTHINI!i BUT

DUU..NE56,AS
f?IRASTHE
EYEO\N.6EE.

a handsome stranger at a

banque1. 160 min .)(R).
(I) MOVIE: 'An Arnlricln
In Perla'
(j))
(lll MOVIE: 'OIIvw
Twill' (CCI (R) .
(jj) Mandtla ICCI Naloon
and Winnie Mandala. two of
South Africa's moat prominent opponents of apartheid. are profiled. 160 min .l

e

./(#''&gt;.

Rotary or c8ble tool drilling.
Mott wells complet.clstml day,
Pump 111111 end 111n1ice. 304-

895-3902

IRI.

Ashby Construction, c•rpan tery. remodeling, room •dditlo,,
c.mem blodt work. rooftng,
Interior •nd llllttrior painting,
aiding. Roofing. Fr" estlm.tn.
304· 175· 5U5 or &amp;76·15152.

- -·
'

'

10:00. Cll (liJ 19811 ICC) (60
min.)
(I) JI!Ck and Mike
!CCI Jackie uncovers a
story about coltega prCJ1ea-

()) e

aora pressured to giva pass-·

Plumbing
&amp; Heating

l TOLD YOU TO STAY
OFF MY PROPITTY, YOU
PIG-HEADED Ol! GOAT !!

CARTER'S PWMBING
AND HEATING
Cor. Founh 1nd Pine
Gallipolis. Ohio
Phone 814-448· 3888 or 814441-4477

ing grades to star athletes.

(60 min.)IR) .
(jj)fB10:20 Cll MOVIE: 'None lut the

._.

1O:lo (I) Celebrity Ci1efo
(!) College llltOkttboll:
UAB Cllllllc Flnol Winner
of Alabama-Birmingham vs.•
Michigan game will plav tho
winner of 1he Middle Tennosaott
vs.
AlaskaAnchorage game. 12 hrs.)

General Hauling

Uva.

Jam11 Boys Watlll' Servlca. ).110
pools filled . C111 81 4· 2&amp;&amp;-1141
or 814· 448· 1175 or 1114-•46·
1911 .

11 :oo

T• LWatll'dellveryenylimePh.
814 -388 - 9732 u ma day
d.. ivery.

" Batter not claim thla land . Everywhere
you plant a flag, slippery black

liquid oozea oull"

Call 81•· 371·2721.

(I) Mlltdola !CCI Nelson
ond Winnie Mlndola, two of
South Africll'a f11011 prom!·

'1914 Plymouth Horizon • dr., I
optl.. with ounfloot. U ,cloo

mll11. C.H 114·378·2721.

_

• ,;'!

~omplete

the ch"kle quoted .
by filling in the missing wordt

L._J......JL.,-...l..-1........1-.J yov develop fro m step No. 3 below.
PRINT NUMBERED LETIER5 1
IN THESE SQUARES

6 ~~{c!~~:E~
Soaalt;y -

LETTERs TO

IIIIIIII

"IESJEIDAY'S SCIAM·IIIS ANSWEiS
Orand - Ou1do - l.u!IY - J...r\NW)RD

An enlhueln11c lour guide chirped, "lNa hlalorlc house hilt
not h.t a poll or beam repaired." From the crowd a voice
mumbled, "Wa must have the same LANDLORD."

BRIDGE

. ..
'

..,

.. ,

"

.

.,

~

'

James Jacoby .

Charging
into seven

NORTH
tJ 7 I 2
9J87
tAH
+613

ByJaMJoetllly
A player doesn't bold 28 high-card WEST
point&amp; very often. Not used to such +9 8 4
wealth be 1e11c1a to llld his band with • 6 4 2
the deHcaey of a bull let loooe in a chi- tl0742
na abop. Tllua South aaked for aces ao +J 9 6
· soon aa his partner showed heart support. Fllldillg his partner with one ace,

11·11·11

EAST
+.Q 10 6

•s

3

t98S!
+Q 107Z

SOUTH

tAK5
.AKQI09
tKQ
tAKS
Vulnerable: North-South
Dealer: South

.

-.
he simply bid sevea hearts. Tbat was
runaway bidding at Its wonst. On a bad
day, declarer would find that his part·
ner would have only two diamonds, so
that be would not even be able to get .
rid of one of his looens on the ace of
Nortb East
diamondll. On a good day, of course, Wes1
North would hold a five-card black
Pass
2t
auit beatleol by the q1100o, and now the Pass
39
PaA
Pass
lll'lftd'slam would ~ave a decent play.
st
PUB
How should the band be bid? The Pus
Pau Pau
Pau
beat lhln&amp; Ia for South to start cue-biddin&amp; llil c:0111trols, even Up to the SIX·
Opening lead: t 2
level, after North baa auppo~ the
heart suit. 'rben, If North decides to
bid a lll'and alam, the contract will spade ruff now brought down the .
probably be a good ooe. As It was, lbe queen. Declarer played to dummy'• :
cblllee for a lll'•nd slam was jack of hearts and threw his loolng ·
....-ble.
club on the spade jack. Making aeven.:
Declarer took his belt play. He won As the Uietl old saying goes, "He ·
the diamond In his hand, drew two played it better tbaa he bid II."
l.ll&amp;b trumps leaving the heart jack in .
dummy, and then eaabetl the A-K of ~ new clook"by James Jacoby and bis ·
spadel. Wben the q-. did not fall, he father, the late Osw1ld Jacoby, Is DOW
overtook his aecont1 diltllODd with available at boobtores. It 16 "J.cpby . ·
dummy's ace and played the jack of on Card Games.'' pqb/jsbed by Plw'os ·
dlamoada, tm&gt;wiDg his small spade. A Bcob.
·, :
.,'

4G Pick up

ACROSS
I Italian

staple
8, Beyon~
10 Window
II Performed
13 Like
winter
coats
14 Go Dutch
IG New · Guinea

the lab
DOWN
I Opinion
sampling
2 S1rdi.as
rendition
3 Tendon
4 To a5 Spaghetti
cooked
crunchy

LOwn
18 Consume
18 Wrath
It Flinch
21 Composer

·.

Yttterday't Anawer
.

8 Adhesive 20 Myth.
7 German
princess
outcry
ZS "The
8 Like
Klngfish"
church

Sl Insipid
32 Talk
pompously
36 On naval

24 Anfractuous
maneuvers
ZG Chewy
37 Jaun1y

Rorem
glass
22 Native
9 Eanhly
candy
(suffix) 12 Conveyed 26 Uving
2S Smooth
legally
27 Tout h
consonant 17 Golf term 29 Li .k
24 Sunnounl
27 Llk:.:fiA
me
e
28 Glass

39 Blue
grass

.' -

- .

41 Body

~

of lawyers

''
..
•.

..&lt;

section

lll Cargo

weight
3e Son of Rela
31 Gambling

,

•
•

game

3S lleliwether

'

,.

is one

34 Tennis term
SG Criminal
b-~~
charge (sl.)

. . .....,'

6--1-+-

38 Territory
in Orazil
48Humble
42 Pretend
41 Provide
party food&gt;
44Gulde
IMILYCilVPTOQUOTES-Here's how to workil:

_,

·'

,,

12130

ltXYDLBAAXR
lsLONGFELLOW

Mn1~1 of~rt~

old, are ptofiled. 180 min.)

Watterson' s Water H1ullng,
tiiiiOnable ratH, Immediate
2,000 gallon dtllvtty. ciat.-n1,
poolt, wall, ate. cell 304· 1118·

(R) , .

flD Apwtholda People

IBlCollece Bnltsllllll: QePall ot fJ~na(2 hre.)
t 1 :30 • Cll !BI 'tonight Show
Tonight'• guea1a .,. Ttm
Conwoy and •Inger D1ane
Schuur. 1119 min.) ill S111f80.
()) WKRP In Clllolnnetl

2919.

Coli. limetum•. gravel. etc.
DtiNertd 1 ton •nd up. Jim
leni«. 304·875-1247 or 876·
7397.

Mowrey'• Uphollttring wvlng
trl county1r.. 21.,..,... Thlbttt
In fumtture upholst.tng. Call
304 · 875 - 415• for tr ..
edimltn .

(ll•llll (lll

Newa
(I) H...-e and Mc:Cormldc

742·2329.

R • M Cuttom Couchtl and
: Reuphollttry, St. Rt. 7. Crown
City, Oh. 114· 218-1470, Evt.
814·UI-3438. Open dally 8 to
I , Sat. 1 :30 to 1 :30, Ofd a. ntw
Upholterld.

I=rn

.CDM•A•S•H

Limeslona and tlebwood hlul~.
At Tromm, Rutland. Call 814-

Upholstery

Mec-·l..ohrer

Nevnhour
()I e ()I W1un1 Tho find-

PEANUTS
ON 'fOUR WAV TO THE
CO\IRTI10USE, I SeE

eCDreo~

I IMA61NE

e())AIC H-. Nlwltdlnt

vou'RE QUITE

FELLOW ATTORNii'r'S

CRYPTOQUOTE
Of)UFM(,IUFD

a- (2 hre.l Live.
12:00 (I) ...... Allen .

12:30

Xli.' PMB

T I. E L it (' I.

r \I II ••

'

e ()) Tllte of the U..X-

K F P 0 [) L
Y~ter*y'e CryptoqUO\e: AN', AU. OF l iS CIIIL-

ii;

AROUNI&gt; THE KITCHEN FIRE ANil BAHTilt: MOSTE51'

L.ote Nlglft wi111 .

o.vtd Len.tn••

. I

-.

'·

I&gt;REN WHEN SUPPER THINGS IS llONE, WE SET
FUN1·-- JA~ES WIIITCOMfl RILEY

~

.

-~ '

•
.- -.
•

(,1 L R X L (,1 M A . -

(I)Jeffwu•il
.(!)RaMtldl

BllUF -

Gf)QL.I

Z P X R A

..·'
--:; I'

II-SO

(li~.J&gt;.I.

WELL KNOWN AMON6
'IOU~

One letter slands for another. In this sample A is use&lt;j
for the three L's, X for the two O's, etc. Single letters,
apoi!lrophes, the length and fonnation of the words are all
hlnla. Each day the code leiters are different.

• Ill Calege - . - : '
Woot ~ ot ,....,.. .

.d., 18,ocro mil•, 4 dr., nice

oiun w.

CD Freedom Bowl:

UCLA vs. llrlchlm Yount
Uve from Anaholrn. CA. (3

VOU MAY HAVE GOTTEN lHE POWDER
WAGON, M'( FRIEND, BUT I'M GOING
TO SliT WIUI

Serv1ces

I0

... . .

e

&amp; Accessories

87

_

·.

shoveling snow wlll be arrested
tor disturbing t h e -."

port

I~

F~ANK &amp; ERNIE'S '
SEAFOOD G~OTTO

Motor cycle traitor, 1981 Yamaha, 760 Vir1go. C1il 81 4·

86

a

()) Nightly Buolneoo Re·

Motorcycles

Livestock

13 roosttu end 2 h••· game
chickens for ule. Will tefl
raa•onably. Call 814 -387 7.39.

I

iltN-

1981 Chevy ven. sharp, U ,OOO.
1978 Ctmaro. utre nice.
13,000. CaiiSU-379-2820.

82

-

KICTTE
1-....,,;......;.,,.,::..~,
'-ilr.7.::..,,......j.

e (I) Poople' o COurt

oocw

446-9700

441-0294.

L.

~

It~=
e

ARLO AND JANIS

3018.

&amp; Ll v1:stu1;k

I
I=:·==·==·~-:::_:~·

8:38 lD sm. ot Hameln S111f80.
7:00
Cll PM " a ••
(I) l .. doeolle ond McCor·
mlck
.
. (!) 8ponaCerner
.
.
()) EtlletWI1t11elll 'T'onlght
ET talko wkh Holtin Roddy
lbout her CUfrtlf11 comebaclt

'

Slliill lii:S

I .A man who hated shoveling

cas

•, BASEMENt
WATERPROOFING
Uncondttional lifetime guarantH. Local ref•tncll furnished. ·
FJM ntlmet•. C•ll collect
1-81•· 237-0488, diiV or night.
Whilney Kimball Piano, lika new . . Rogers Basement
Ph. 614-446-2961 or 814-992· Waterproofing .

'¢

__--·-·-

.

Musical
I natruments

f ,, l ll l

I

D R uG 0 N

Z 0 F E R . • anow mo8~ to his wife, "I long
: 1 15 1 ,. o lor~dsy. WhBOanybodyt~~ught

.()) Doctor Who
!lit • tlll
N-

for ule. A'-o trMtrimmin'g. Cllll
Greg Haymlll"' 814-9815-4340.

304·H2·3287
.

-orod. IIHI llooll f14·H2· ' , 17S·3000.
·2211.

EVENING

.110. 304·372-5656.

67

II

12/30/88

eCDHopn'o-.

1979 CJ 6 Golden Eagle, V-8_.
3-tpeed, tpOkerwhlfJII , AM ·FM
Stereo, low mileage, Ph. 814-

81

be-

low to form four simple words ,

lDe())AIC-

Vans&amp; 4 W.O .

AKC Registered Chow· Chow
Puppies. Eltctllitnt pedigr"'·
ReMty tor Chrittmat. ·Ph. 814·
2511-1948

While Farm Tr•cton, Best Price
in Area, SKI•• Equlpm•t Co,
Henderson. W. Va . 304 -876-

'

304-713·1024.

a

·• WI VII!RE LOCKED IN,. DE THE GVM"...

1977 Chevy helf ton pickup, '
auto. long wheel bate. runs .
good. $750 .00. 304-676 2941 .

76

l.et•r• of the

~erambltd wards

()) 3-2·1. Contact (CC).
®SecNtCity
Ill! Facti of Ufe
8 :05 lD Andy Orttllth
8:30 • Cll (JII NBC (!) NBA Tcidlly

, CAPTAIN EASY

'72 Chevy truck , 307 4 sp..d.
shorl bed, step tide. lookl good
in and out, $1 ,800.00. 304875-1146.

73

8 four
Rwarrang•

• CD Jolhtf'IOIIO

.

1986 Chwy C 10 ~icll - up, 1ir,
111.110. AM -FM c111ette player .• 1

6712 .

1912 Plvmouth Horlr:on, auto,

K K Mobfl. Homtt, 2 end 3
btcHoom mobile ham•, ' 304-

''

1986 ·ford .Ran9er. 4 wheel ,.
drive, '''· AM-FM cassette. Call r
814-992-8421.

74

Concre11 blockt allsiial yard or
dellvtry. Muon send. G111ipolis
Block Co., 1231h Pine St ..
0811ipolil, Ohio Call 814-448·
2783 .

Good used ponable • floor
modal color TV tor 111111, Call

441:9846.

2 bedroom mobile home. Mid·
chport, 0 . "-f•enot with ••

~--'--'---....C...:..---------------:___

Ges water heater, g11 warm
morning heater with thermoatlt
and fin, gaa refriger•tor, gu
cook ttova 7 months old, all in
••c cond, attar 6 :00 call 304·

Tree I. ttump ramov•l. stone
malt, firewood 19&amp; . dump load,
HEAP Vouchers accepted .
Don 't LlndtcaPn. Call 81•·

1401110111t1. 114·

·

304-676-1169.

UTILITY BLOG . SPECIAL:
27'•38'•9'EAVE with sliding
door &amp; service door 14,288.00
erected.
hon Horse Buildings Ph.614·
332-9746.

·10-oit..
tullty -

Topper ~or ameli truck. t85. Call

CROSS &amp; SONS
U.S. 35 w.. t, Jackson, Ohio.

Locutt fence poll tnd firewood
County Appllanct , Inc. Good
used eppliencet end TV sets.
Opan lAM to 8PM . Mon thru
Sit. 814-448· 1599, 827 3rd.
0
OH:
.

Tony' I Gun Repeiu, hot rebluelng. Open 9:00AM to 7:00PM .
Caii304-87Ji-4631.

"IlLII

~-;.VolleY

;:;-c.-:-,.,..--=--:--::-1 Coll614-992-6421 .
64 Misc . Merchandise

IMfNtLf

(!)MozdoSportll.oolt

1981 'Ford. F-100, YJ ton, 361 . ~
V·8. Sttnd•d. 56,000 mil••• '
Jhort bed. good condition. ,.
13,000.00 C•ll614 -246· 6017. ~:
.

Television
Viewing
.acoo_• rn ()) • ()) IJie tll (JII

Wide SeleCton · New 1987 GMC
Pick-up trucb. lowprlCH"WV
diV. Specililzingln genuine OM
part1, in ttock 1nd apedal
ordering av&amp;dl•bJ•.
Herb Smith, Owner

()

URIJ{

One bedroom unturniahed, total
electric apt. Owner pays water
and tr..h pi,ckup. C811614-9922094.

'

.

{

The

,

'

'

H~
10~.

814-446-2632 '

Opportu~ity.

7481 .

$'SECT'

SMITH GMC TRUCKS
133 Pine Street
Oalllpoll1. Oh- 41831

Dupla 845 Second, c•peted, 3
bedroom, LR, DR . niW't' kitchen
a bath, wa1her a dryer hook-up ,
$286.00 mo. plut utilltiet &amp;
IIN:Urity depollit Ph, 614·0690,

2 Bedroom apt. nice carpeting.
water p•id, wa•her &amp; dryer
hoQ\-up , slove. refrig. fumithed
•"•~•ble .lin 1 . 1987 Ph .

jl; 8lq)JUS /«)

~.,.,,I)J

Trucks for Sale

72

Furnl1htd Apt . 1200.00 util•
tin Pd. 1 bedroom. flrlt floor Ph .
~8- 4416 tflw 7p.m.

Naw 2 bedroom apts. in Muon,
W. Va. Quiet setting, off 11rtet
p1rklng. Rant atart1 It 1199.
C1ll linda Oenon a1 304· ns.
5011 ~ Denise Streib 11 614883 · 4111 . E·q u•l Housing
Opportunity.

04~11m~

114·24H292.

Furnlshecf efficiency 117!.00, ·
2rms . • bath utililiM Pd. 4484418 after7p.m.

Ave.
4t8-4411
1fter
7pm.
pd. 2Ph.
bedroom.
131
Ya Fourth

lo; lllAT I!I.ANCII!i'

1878 Dattun 8210. Good con·
.dillon. neo. 1979 Chrvtler.
Good condh~n . ~750 . · Celh

1 bedroom mobl• home fvltyo
tunMih.-1. You Pf1V Ill utllld11.

Of

BORN LOSER

. 1978 Fetthlll' Duater.. 1 owner,
1700 Or belt oHtr. Call 814·
288-8808.

3 bedroom trtiler for rent In
C~tlhlre. Calll1•· 317-7148.

~~~· Z3t4.

Autos for Sale

71

f rMlspiJrLiilfl ll

Room and bOitd for employed
m1n. Nlct hom•. Ftmlty atmot·

12ot.

•

30, 1986

yo-

992-5851.

Mob'!• Hom• Stela Court Ph.

CUSTOM SEWING
Ah.,11ktnl or new gwmtntsull

Apartment
for Rent

Houses for Rent

11.·441·07&amp;1.

•Vinyl. S1eel Sldlng

•

NEW AND USED MOBILE
HOMES KESSEL' S QUALITY
MOBILE HOME SALES. 4 MI.
WEST. GALLIPOLIS. RT 35
PHONE 614·446·7274

White Rd. CioN to Holzer
Hotpltll Call 114-4&amp;15-7 1&amp;7
lftllf 1 :00pm.

Situations
Wanted

KIT 'N' CARLYLE ®by Larry Wright

Starks Tree •nd Uwn Service.
Hedgu, thrubt, bu•hn
trknmed.. laf'!dtclping. ttump
end ~nf removal, 304· &amp;78- · 1 Bedroom bislc rant 1176.00
2842 or 678-2010.
plut lltectrlc. Alto r!Miuired a
$200.00 IICUrity dapQIIt. CON·
TACT: Jackton EstaiM O.pt.·Ph
446 - 3997 Equal Ho~sing

"...But I do have a job."
We pay ceth tor late m~ei Ciean
used c•rs.
Jim Mink Ch8111.· 01dtlnc.
Bill Gena Johnson
814-446-3872

December

~

LAFF~A-DAY

4

Tuesda ,

Ohio

.. -...
~'
~

·-

.
'

')

'.

�.

'

I

.l _'-'•'- ,-;
.,

Po1118rov-Middleport, Ohio

Have a safe
and happy

This
eek's
Cames

PICK-4
l33l

•

.
enttne
'

at·Y

\

2 Sections, 16 Pages

Pomeroy-Middleport; Ohio, Wednesday, December 31, 1986 .

25 Cents

A Multimedia inc. Newspaper

·Few offer .comment on proposed. sales tax

MEIGS

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel_Staff Writer
Response to Tuesday's public
hearing on the proposed 1 percent sales tax for Meigs County
was llghl. Less than 25 people
· were present for the meeting at
d he Meigs County Courthouse,
and Qnly seven of those offered
comment.
. Long Bottom resident Delmar
Pulllns was first to speak and told
Meigs County Commissioners
Manning Roush, .David Koblentz
and Richard Jones that he was
against the sales tax, and felt It
would hu rt more than help the
county by driving business awa_y _

BOYS BASKETBALL

Jan. 2-Wellston ..........Home
GIRLS BASKETBALL

Jan. 5-Wellston ......... Away

SOUTHERN
BOYS BASKETBALL

Dec. 30-Southeastern... Home GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jaa. S-Gallipolis ......... Home

Pullins said he recently moved
to the county, and ·came here
because of "t he low tax base."
He pointed that real estate taxes
just went up In the county also.
Norman Weber of Tuppers
Plains spoke against the s_ales
tax, pointing out that the commissioners knew the fede ral
revenue sharing program was
being phased out and therefore,
t hey (the cb mml ss lonersl ·
"should have tightened ~p.' '
Weber said.that "everything's
coming down bu t taxes, and
they' re going up." He added that
he doesn't believe the sales ta x
will heip the county.

Spokesmen favor tax
Others speaking at the meeting
were in favor of the sales tax,
with-just a few $tlpulations.
Pomeroy VIllage Councilman
Bruce Reed said he questioned
only If a 1 percent sales tax was
necessary ve r sus one-half
percent
Reed also said he was surprised there were no local
automobile dealers · present at .
the meeting to discuss the sales
tax proposaL
Mayor Fred Hoffman of Middleport commended the commissioners for keeping the county
flna~clally stable for so long, and

said his main concern was "not
the imposition" of the tax, but
rather "the distribution" of the
tax reveune.
Hoffman said that just like the
county Itself, Meigs' villages and
townships have los t revenue
sharing dollars. He suggested
that with the sales tax, the
commissioners could use " Inside
millage': to hel p villages and
townships hurting financially
from the loss ol revenue sharing.
Middleport lost-$15,000 in revenue sharing funds, Hoffman
reported.
Mary Bacon of Middleport said
.she would also be lot the sales tax

if it could be distr ibuted among
the villages 'and townships, not ·
lng that if this was done, perhaps
Pomeroy's income tax could be
elltninated:
Bacon said she thought a sales
tax would be the most fair form of
taxation, since "every consumer
would be required to pay it."
Revenue to aid 4-H
Margaret Crane, Middleport. a
4-H advisor, said she was in favor
of the sa les tax because the
county extr nslon office could not
afford to lose money from the
county, which helps fund progra ms such as 4-H. Crane noted
that many children who benefit

from 4-H in Meigs County often
spend their ad ult lives working in
the county in agriculture and
business.
The commissioners had earlier
an nounced tha t without the sales
tax, money could no longer be
paid to the ex tension office. In the
past, money to the extension
office was paid from revenue
sharing dollars.
Although comment s were
made that with the sales tax, It
would be cheaper to purchase
automobiles out of the county,
Larry Spencer, Meigs County
clerk of courts, explained differ(Continued on Page 16)

Pomeroy w~man's
positive attit~de
.overrides infipnity

EASTERN
BOYS BASKETBALL

Jan. 9-0ak Hill ......... Away
GIRLS

Jan. 8-0ak Hill ......... Away
'

BOYS SCHEDULE

IISTA1LATIOI LOANS

Mostly cloudy tonight, with
· a low in the upper 20s. Mostly
cloudy New Year's Day, with .
a chance of -snow, possibly
mixed with rain and highs
near 40. The probability ol
jlrectpltalion is near zero
tonight and 40 percent Thurs·
day .

Daily Number
992

New Year's

: Vol . 36, No.167
Copyrighted 1986

Meigs

Ohio Lottery

Southern

aors usrmau

BOYS BASKETBAU

Jan. 2-Wellston ...................... Home
Jan. 6-Federal Hocking ........... Home
Jan. 9-llilltr ........................... Away
Jan. 13-Nelsonvile .; ............... Home
Jan. 16-Vinton ........................ Away
Jan. 20-Trimble ....................... Away
Jan. 23-Btlpre ....................... Home
Jan. 27-Aieunder ................... Away
Jan. 31- Point Pleasant ........... Home
Feb. 3-Wman ........................ Home
Feb. &amp;-Wellston ...................... .'Away
Feb. 13-Federal Hocking ........_,. Away

Jan. 9-Symmes Valley ............. Home
Jail. 16-Eastern ...................... Home
Jan. 20:....Kyger Creek ................ Away
Jan. 23-0ak Hill ..................... Home
Jin. 30-North Gallia ................ Away
Jan. 31-Miller ......................... Away
Feb. 6-Hannan Trace ................ Away
Feb. 7-Federal Hockinr ........... Home
Feb. 13-Southwestern ............. Home
Feb. 17-Ravenswood ... :........... Home
Feb. 20-Symmes Valley ............ Away

Eastern
BOYS BASKETBALL
Jan. 9-0ak Hill ........................ Away
Jan. 16- Southern .................... Home
Jan. 20-North Gallia ............... Home
Jan. 21-Hannan Trace .............. Away
Jan. 30- Kyger Creek ................ Home
Feb. &amp;- Southwestern ................ Away
Feb. 7-0PEN .......................... Home
Feb. 13- Symmes Valley ........... Home
Feb. 17- Federal Hocking ......... Home
Feb. 20-0ak Hill ...................... Away

By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Writer
Since September, 87-yE'ar-old
Thora Blackwood has made'her
home at the extended care
facili ty of Veterans Memorial
Hospital. There, she and her
husband , Dean, who has lived at
the facility for more than a year,
·continue to share a room, their
·love, their happiness, their con. cerns, their sorrows, and their
·fears.
·. The Blackwoods lived on East
Second Street In Pomeroy for
years,·
., ,
Altl:lough failing health limits
Thora's physical activity, she
has an endless supply of menta l
energy. And she would probably
agree that It Is her positive
mental attitude that has kept her
going beyond the time allotted
her by her doctors. The personal
belongings found In the Black·
woods' room attes t to Thora's
positive thinking.

'Family skeletons'
She has a small Christmas
tree, which she s~ys "is beautiful
when It's lit ," chocolate candy·
for visitors, a large picture of an
old riverboat because "everyone
loves riverboats," some old
family portraits, two wooden
dancing dolls, which Thora calls
''our family skeletons" and were
made by DE:an many years ago,
and her sculp tures, Including a
Nativity scene which Is displayed
In a cardboard stable, also made
by !;lean,
The Nativity figurines were
fas hioned several years ago by
Thora from white clay, and fir~
In the kiln at the Meigs County
Senior Citizens Center.
When asked when she · first
developed her Interest for sculpture, Thora laughed anjl replied,
"We Pratt kids always made our
own toys out ofclayormud . We'd
let them dry, play with them till
they broke, and then make

more."
Early talent shown
The Pratt kids were Thora, her
one brother and two sisters.
But even though all of Mr. and
Mrs. Will Pratt 's children modeled toys out of clay and mud,it

was Thora, according to a 1917
news paper account from "The
Democrat, " that had talent for
sculpturing.
Thora was pictured In the
n ~:~~~~~; with a variety of her
"'
of which one, a

sq uirrel eating a nut, remains
intact. The article tells of 17year-old Thora's display at a
school carnjvalln Pomeroy, and
explai ns that her figurin es were
made "not of plaster of paris, but
just plain pld Bedford Township

She sm iles when she recalls the
day she was "way off from home
picking berries, " and discovered
white clay in a creek bed. For
Thora. It was like fi nding a go ld
cContlnu ed on Page 161

Rhonda Dailey

Rev. Stephen Deaver

Wallace Bradlord

Muriel Bradford

Mike Duhl

Emmogene Holstein Congo

TALENTED MISS ~ Tbora Blackwood was 17 years old when
. this picture was taken In October of 1917. Tbe picture appeared in
the Melp Couaty newapaper "The Democrat" and aa
accompanying article described Thora's talent lor sculture work.
Seventy years later, the talented Miss remains a tate11ted Mrs.

HANDMADE - This Nativily Is proudly dis played In Thora and
DeiUI Blackwood's room at the Veterans Memorilll Hospital
Extended Care Unit. Thora scuiJiled the figurines several years
ago and Dean made the stable.
mud."

GIRLS SCHEDULE
Meigs
GIRLS IASKETBAU
Jan. 5-Wellston ....................... Away
Jan. 8-Fecleral Hocking ............ Away
Jan. 10'-lliller ........................ Home
Ju. 12-Southtrn .................... Home
Ju. 15-Nelsonville ................. Away
Jan.l9-Vinton ........................ Home
Jan. 22-Trimble ...................... Home
Jan. 26-Belpre ........................ Away
Jan. 29-Aieunder .................. Home
Feb. 2-Eutem ........................ Away
Feb. 5- Wellston ...................... Home
Feb. 9-Fecleral Hockin&amp; ........... Home
Feb. 14- Southern ..................... Away

So uthern·
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jan. 5- Gallipolis ..................... Home
Jan. 8-Symmes Valley .............. Away
Jan. 12-Meigs ,........................ Away
Jan. 15-Eastern ....................... Away
Jan. 19-Kyger Creek ............... &lt;tlome
Jan. 22-0ak Hiii ..................... . Away
Jan. 26-Gallipolis .................... Away
Jan. 29-North Gallia ............... Home
Feb. 5-Hannan Trace ............... Home
Feb. 9-Symmes Valley ............. Home
Feb. 12- Southwestern ........ ...... Away
Feb. 14- Meigs .;..................... . Home.

Eas-tern .
GIRLS BASKETBALL
Jan. 8- 0ak Hill.. ...................... Away
Jan. 15- Southern .................... Home
Jan. 19-North Gallia ............... . Away
Jan. 22-Hannan Trace .... ......... Home
Jan. 19-Kyger Creek ................ Away
Feb. 2-Meigs ..... ..................... Home
Fe~ . 5- Southwestern ............... Home
Feb. 9- 0ak HilL ...................... Home
Feb. 12- Symmes Valley ............ Away
Feb. 14-Federal Hocking .......... Away

Residents reveal their wishes for Meigs County in 1987
By NANCY YOACHAM
Sentinel Staff Wriler
At the end of each year, The
Dally Sentinel asks several
Meigs County residents what
their wis hes for the count y would
be In the coming year.
Re~po ndlng to our question this
year were Emmogene Congo,
Rev. Ste1·e Deaver, Mike Duhl,
Rhonda D:lilev . and Wa llace and
,

Muriel Bradford.
Said Congo, who serves the
public as Meigs County recorder,
"I wish everyone a Happy New
Year and good health and
prosperity for all our citizens. If
we have our health and are
prospering. what more do we
really need?' '
Rev. Deaver, who pas tors the
Racine First Baptist Church,

said he wou ld wish for "a
reviva l" "In the county, and
paraphrased Old Testament
scripture which promises that If
the people "humble themselves,
and pray, and seek the Lord, and
turn from wickedness, their sins
will be forgiven and their lands
will be healed ." Continued Rev .
Deaver. "We need healing In
Meigs County and throughout

Southeastern Ohio - .economic
healing - economic develop·
ment -eco nomic revival."
And Duhl, a new resident to
Meigs County who came here to
serve as district conservation for
the So li Conservation Service,
said he wishes all residents In the
county "would join together In
one concerted effort to manage
our r.oo given natural resources

In the very best way possible."
He wis hes he could "get to know
and become friends with as many
Meigs Countlans as possible and
that any ass istance requested
from my office would be of
pr9fesslonal quality and that all
would be totaly sa tlsfled with our
conservation efforts." And fl.
nally, Duhl wis hes "that the New
Year be filled with joy, peace,

good health and happiness for
everyone.''
Said DaiiE'y, director of nursIng at Veterans Memor ial Hospital's Extended Care Unit, "My ·
wishes for Meigs County fo r 19R7
are peace, prosperity and good
health. And I hope 19R7 will give
ail Meigs Count tans a chance to
explore thl' new and ex t£&gt;nded
C ~ontinued op Page 6)

A look back al what made news in Meigs Coun.ty in 1986
(EDITOR'S NOTE: As 1886
An addition to the Meigs
draws to a close, Sentinel stall Cou nty Emergency Medical SerWriter and General Manager vices Building In Pomeroy proBob HoeOich takes a look back at · gressed In January. Pomeroy
the events that made ne~s in · Village Council re-enacted the
Melp County during &amp;he year. Income tax and the Meigs County
Today, he examines the first six Commissioners approved a $7.6
months. The next six months wlll million budget for the year.
appear In Friday's Sentinel.)
Pastor Mike ?anglo announced
plans for the establishment of a
Christian school In Middleport to
By BOB HOEFLICH
open In the fall. Meigs Libraries
Sentinel Stall Writer
received an additional $100.000 January
Early in· the year . the Meigs for 1986. The Racine Fire DepartCounty Highway Department ment received Its new truck and
budget was revised to avoid Syracuse Village Council hiked
employee layoffs and James F . water ratE:s. Bill Nease became ·
Tompkins was named general new president of the Pomeroy"
manager of Southern Ohio Coal Chamber of Commerce.
Treacherous road conditions
Co.'s Melgs Division.

and power outages took over on
Ja n. 19 after a heavy snowfall.
Ja n Michael Long, former Middleport res ident, announced his
candidacy for the state senate
and won out over Incumbent
Oakley Collins in theiall election.
Schools closed and icy conditions
prevailed as a long Janu ary drew
to a close. Meigs Countlans
joined the nation In shock as the
Challenger exploded.
February
Pomeroy residents signed petilions against the village Income
tax for the second tlme. The
Douglas Rosenbaum murder.
trial got underway in Meigs
€ounty Common Pleas Court. ,
Pomeroy went on another flood
\

watch. A cold snap and snow fell
on the county; frigid tempera-:
lures continued. A-$100,000 fi re
occurred at the Tuppers Plains
Hardware Store and Mike Chancey, Meigs High athletic star,
signed with Ohio State.
Valentine's Day b_rought
another snowfall. The PUCO
denied eKte!ld.ed telephone ser·
vice between the Coolville exchange of Western Reserve and
the Pomeroy exchange of General Telephone. An explosion and
fire leveled the Dexter General
Store. About 200 residents turned
out to a meeting of the Meigs
Local Board of Education In
support of football coach Charles
Cl:lancey. Ohio Department of

Transportation representatives
met with Meigs Countians to
discuss, a co nnector road to the
Ravenswood Bridge. On Feb. 24.
another two Inches of snow_fel l to
again to close schools and create
dangerous driving conditions .
Meigs County Commissioners
accepted a $76,000 litter control
grant .
March
The Meigs Marauderettes captured the first basketball district
champions hip In the school's
history at Athens as March
roared in. Syracuse VIllage received a $22,000 grant for des igning, constructing, ·maintaining
and operating a marina and
launch ramp, havi ng received

··-·... .---.

$44,000 earlier. Kenny Caldwell.
Eastern District, was named
Meigs County's champion
speller.
Rita Smith and BarbanoSmith
were named new 0lectlon board ·
employees. Former Gov . .J;omes
Rhodes ·visited Meigs Count v
whne on the campaign trail to
become governor agai n. The
seventh new home was co m·
pleted at Middleport's new hous- •
ing area on Hartinger Pa rkway. '
Dan Levingston was named
county litter control officer_ Ohio
Attorney General Anthony ,J.
Celebrezze visited Meigs County.
Joe.Struble was named cit !zen of
the year and Mickey Williams, ,
(Continued on Page 6)
·

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