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0

12-The

Ohio

Plant' retoo~~g . will mean ·additio~al
em .....
.
.

'

FAIRFIELD, Ohio (AP)"!... The
·General Motors Flsber Body plant
here may add between 00 andOO new
jooo after it retools to produce front
fenders and hoods for luxury cars.

inerriploymentmayheaflrststepin ' in~re_sted in keeping the plant,
a much larger plan for the plant.
Nelson said.
.
Action by the cltl~ of Fatrlleld
Creation of the enterprtse zone, lf
all!l Hamilton and Butler County It Is approved by the state
commissioners that created an Development Department, wntena·

foranyiu~retooUngalsocouldbe

granted, Nelson said.
Nelson added that he belleves GM
Is tesUng the plant's productivity
and thecommunlty'stnteresthefore

~- ·~.,·~:n;:NiiiYSrr,·-· pg· ~~~j;&lt;.o~dtj~-"'~~~~~p8:11;!!Mlg "~~,...!:l::-- ·~~e,.:~~.y · :: =~;t.~ ·,:-. Ee~~l&amp;!:;:r~e...-\j!~W:ta·!

development direCtor, said the · Fisher Body plant appears to have
retooling and the resulting increase shownGM thatthecommunltlesare

·

·:-~:~·~

.

~rcent tax abatement for retooUng · chahges there.

the .plan~. Nelson said. Tax breaks

Company spokesman Jolm Davi·

·Middlepo
· rt , .mayor's
court
hands out• five fmes:t~j:en::'~OC:U!~~~th~
.
..
:
theplantlnfouryearsandwUlcarry
.,_ t ---' •n '0 "-ys 1n iall nn . conduct charge, and $100 and costs over Into the 1990s,· GM employs
~-- ~~~ ~;' ~:~: nl:t~ ~u;;::~~~t
theft w;; - for ttghtfui !ilpUblicwas ROy'Nat,- '2~:n\peopleat theF~eldplai!t, he
five persons ~ere fined, and three Terry Michaels, Middleport, Who Middleport.
,
said.
.
.
ottters (ortelt~ bonds on a variety of was also fined $100 and coots ·tor
Forteltlng bonds in the court were
Hoods and bumpers made at the
charges.
disorderly conduct. Robert Rim· VaughanJ.Spencer,Pomeroy,$450 plant wnt _be Used on the .1986
Richard Hemian, Middleport, mey Jr., Point Pleasant, was fined on a charge of OWl and S50 for Oldsmobile Toronado, Buick RJwas fined $50 and costs, on a charge $50 and ~ts. for dlsQrderly drlvin~ left of center; Carl Eugene viera, Cadillac El Dorado and
of destruction of jail pioperty, and mal)ner; $50androstsformenac;tng Smith Jr., LangsvUle, ?hio, DWI, CadlllacSevllle,pavisonsald.
a second charge Qf thre;~ts, and $200 and · costs and and $50, weavfog course, and David . . - - -----1
~~'"'-::~~~~~;{~ Tom Walters, sentencearolOilays_ ln_Jail on a K--;-Slmpson.l~Po\n\-Pieasan\,$100 \-,....~-was
$50-aildco'StS charge of assaulting an officer: lltsoroet!yrnanner,$1oooostrucllon

0

f. ut:..••---M

;tty

JA UAR~ .
-CLEARANCE
·~--"' ~/2 .PRI.CE..~~.
J

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VQI.34, 'llio.ta&amp; · · · · ·

Two fined in Pomeroy court
Two persons were lined and 10
othersforfeitedbondsinthecourtof
Pomeroy Mayor Richard Seyler
Wednesday night.
Coleman, ~ Albany ,-$4'7-and coots, on a speedingcharge; Cathy George, ZanesvUle,
$63 and costs, on a traffic light
violation.
Forteitlng bonds on speeding
charges were Jeffrey Whittington,
£hes~. $46; Carl ]1/iortit Long
Bottom, $43; Kim Bo~a. Athens,

Meigs County Sher1ff James J.
Proffitt reports that the department
"~handle--d-

twv=aeeldents Wednesday ·

night.
The first accident occurred at
Rutland at 6 p.m. Robert P. Hooten,
Mason, W.Va., was traveling west
on SR 124 (Main Street) in Rutland
arid. his 1979 International truck
struck a 1980 Chevrolet owned by
Rick L. Jolmson, Portland. The Johnson vehicle was parked
In front of Pizza Dan's and·,was
knocked apprux!mately one and
one-half car lengths onto the
sidewalk by the coal truck.
H_ooten was arrested for driving-

·-

.

Raclne, $46-. - - -Roger VIning, Middleport, forfe-~

ALL SALES FINAL, NO LAYAWAYS, NO RETURNS Jtllllltg Cfutllfl.~el
MEN'S

while under the influence and was
released on bond for appearance at
a later date in Meigs County Court.
The second accident occurred
around 9 p.m. on pr1vate property
in .Reedsville.
·
·- According to the report, Teddy
Osborne, Reedsville, was P'!rked on
private property near Thlrd and
Fifth Streets11n Reedsville, when an
unidentified statlonwagon report·
edly backed from a private dr1veway and struck the r1ght front of his
1971 Ford pickup truck.
·
Light damage was reported to the
pickup truck. . ·
·

WINTER

Sizes 8 to 20. Good selection of styles and
colors. ·

Men's 139.95
Men's 149.95
Men's 179.95
Men's 189.95

Reg. S22.95 .Jackets ... S16.00
Reg. ~29.95 Jac~ets.~: S19.00
Reg. S39.95 Jackets ... S27.00
Reg. S49.95 Jackets ... S34.00

Waist length styles and parka
lengths. Select yours now and
save.

.lockell .... 127
Jackell .... 134 .
.lockell •••• 155
Jackell .... 162

Jtnu11tg ,C/,,.,6, Sefe

Medical Center. At · 8: 53 p.m.
Syracuse Squad went to Minersville
for Freda Russell to Veterans
Memorial.

MEN'S

COATS

SHIRTS

Clearance sale prices on our entire

stock of winter coals and jackets. Excel·
lent selection of sMes and coiQrs 1n·

Includes all of our men's knit shirts
· sport shirts · dress flan.nels . Van
Heusen dress shirts and quilt lined
flannels. Sizes S thru XXl and some
tails.
·

eluding lurs. '" length coals and ' sta·
dium coats.

Junior. Misses an.d Hall Sizes

REG. 143.00 TO 1139.00
Cl~t~nll61 ~tis

$30°

·..

Men's
Men's
Men's
Men's

9 to

$9729

110.95
514.95
119.95
129.95

DRESSES

Misses and extra sizeo. casual
and laney dresses.
Misses sizes 6 to20.
Hall sizes 12\+ to 24!-\
REG. $30.00

DRESSES ••••• SA~E I 19.4 9

REG. l 31.00 •

DRESSES ..... SALE 124.69

REG. $45.00

DRESSES ..... SALE 129.29

REG. $52.00

DRESSES,,.,. SALE 133.79

. \~
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WINTER
SLEEPWEAR
-Long gowns and robes
...:..waltz length gowns and
robes
'
-Paja mas

Shirts ....... 57,35
Shirts ..... S10.00
Slirts .... SI3.35
Shirts .... 120.00

Pomar:ov_.:,_lilliddleport, Ohio;

A ~nd. 5e!:tl6n of the slngteceng!ne plane believt!\1 . ·. ·:·

Frid~y,

2 Sec1ions, 12 Pages 25 Centl
A. Multimedi• Inc . Newap1per

January 4. 1985

Ute d~ejy, but a &lt;jlsJ)atc~r with 'the detac~erit

feet from shore. Gibson said he checks th~ river four
· Hubert "Bert" Harder, 28, also of Columbus and a
. or five times a day from his nearby home.
graduate student at Ohio State Un)versity, was alSo
· found Thursday .a t · Glenwood In Mason,. County,
''Beckett Said the section apJ;iarently Is from the.area
Beckett said a more thorough visual·search of the
reported to h~ve been in the plane.
according to the West Virginia State Pollee. . · · . . ·. of ·the plane where. lhe right Wing Ill: attached to the
·artla will be conducted, hopefully next week, when the
A seat and a wheel, Identified as belonging to a llght ·
.
A _4-foot·sq~are section was fouild IIi the. over, . : · ·· !u-Setage..
·· ·. ·· · .
,
rtver level~ down.
1
plane were found shortly after the Initial search
~ ~~-fi¥~1J'!!le~ $9.11!11 Qt.th.er~~;~.IISL . : . Gibson took_the piece to _the:V~ey Y olunter Eire · - The plane reportedly crashed- in-the river Elec. 9 .. began. The search, which included special dive~
site around 9:30 a.m. by Earl Gibson, a GlenwOO(;I ,· DCPariment and Resc.ue Squad ritter he fished the . near the Galllpolls Locks and Dam.
from Cincinnati, was called off in late December. At
resident, Meordlng to Cpl. K.R ..Beckett,-commander
piece from the nver wtth a long pole. Gibson · told
The Eliot is believed to have been Paul.ffilwk§. ~of
least twice, sonar lQCat€!;1 ol)jectsJn tberiver, but they
-of-the-Point Pleasant state pollee detaclunent. ·- ' Beckett'he saw-me- piece fioat:IJ\g al&gt;proxlinately-15
Columbus, a free-lance photographer. Hawks' friend ,
had been moved by the strong current before divers
..A visual search of the ar.ea was conducted following
.
.
~ld investigate.

. .

REG.Ia.oo To $44.00

$ale
$6 39 To $3519

Gunman freeS
captives today:

..,. o•

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WASH)NGTQN .." (AP) .;.; Coal . suiibuy, ther~portsays :
consumption in 198.5 will be on the . . . But while domestic coahise ·wn~ .
r1se bec:allSe of higher.demapd from increases, 1985 wm be anottter slow
electric titiiltles, ·aceordlhg .to ' a : , year for coal exports, the depart:
report from the U.S: Departrrieill of . ll)ent'sreportsays.
· ·
· ·
Commerce. . . . .
· · · ·.
. . The strong U.S. dollar abroa&lt;l and
In its U.S. Industrial Outlook 'for
internatlpnal buying ,patterns ,have .
1985, the Commerce Department' hindered U,S:i:OaJexportsforyear-S,
predicts 'that coal consumption wfll the report says. The entry of new
grow-by llearly·6 pereent from 1984; traders ·s!l~h as .Argentina, Qdna,
jumping fl:om795 mllllon·toiis t(!842 New Zealand and Malaysia aiSQwUl
million tons. .
..
· keep U.S. eXpOrts low, the report
Coal Wodtictipn Is expected to predicts.
. ·
· · ·
ke,eppacebyincreaslng4,21lercent,'
In the . long run, domestic coal
the Commerce ~rtment says. . consumption Is &gt;e}(pected to .keep
Electric. utilltles wil) continue to rlsmg as tile naUop;s.eriergy needs
be the largest consumers oi domes- increase, the rep6rt says. .
tlc coal, increasing to 54-perce~t of
By 1989, coal production Is
the total market, the department . expected' to increase to·l.l b!Ulon
says. "
tons' annually. The Commerce
An expected Increase in raw steel . Department also predicts rapid
production also will mean Increased development of Western . coal recoalconsumption at coke plants, the sources and that 38 percent of all
department's report says.
U.S. coal production wnt be in the
This year, coke plants- are West.
expected to use 47 million tons of
'IbereportsuggeststhatU.S.coal
coal; an increase of 4.4 percent over exporters must off,er "coal teclutol·
1984, the department says.
ogy'' along With coal supply to stay
Residential and commercial cus· in business. New combustion tech·
tamers are expected tousetheleast nology amd· poiiutlon devices wfll
amount of coal among all consu· make more steam coal llsable.
mers but still will increase their use

Jtnuetg CfettiiiCB Sefe
LADIES'

J~n111tg Cf~~tlneer

LADIES' ·

Emergency calls answered

WINTER JACKETS

JACKETS
Regular and extra large sizes.

-

se~oRdsOOtiO!\l.f·.· · missirlg plarltntiscovered :

. .

Jmetg Cl,.,ln6el
LADIES'

Jmttg Cf•mnc~!
BOYS

·,: .

·. .... . . .. .

(:oal ·consumption
tojurnp in l985 · ·

SALE START$ FRIDAY, JAN. 4TH AT 9:30 A.M.

Accidents
probed
by deputies
.
.

~

~ to have ~rashed: into the Ohio River Ia~ month· wa.S :'. · said this inornlilg nothhl_g.e~ lias, qeeri found. ·

Long Bottom, $47; Brian · Zlrllle,
Pomeroy, $44; and David Cundiff,
ited $63 on a charge of f~ure to
register his vehicle; Paul Parsons,
Pomeroy, $375, on a dr1ving while
intoxicated charge; and Sharon
Sharp, ReedsvUle, $63 on f~ure to register hls vehicle.

.... . .

Copyrlghi.d, 1985 :

NEXT TO ELBEI;ELDS IN POMEIOY

~' \

$45; Timothy RJchardson, Parkers·
burg, W.Va., $43; Trlcla.· oaney,

.. .
. . ..-~ .·.. . ' ·- ··. .·,._ . ' " ·'

,.

·CHAPMAN SHOES

·"·· ~ I_
&amp;NIJ&amp;IIW/
_5

~threats.

.

·. ON ALL SALE SHOES

bd~~~~and-and ~~and~ooa~~-o;f~J~~~P~~~~~~,an~d~·:·m:en~a~ct~ng~~~~~~!!!~;~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i

coots for possession of marijuana.

.

,--

~-

I)A'l'lfi OF OFF1CE -

lint s&amp;ep. In taking

left, !!tanding, Enunop!lle &lt;JcoaKu, COUIIIy RlCOI'der;
Phil Roberts, county engineer; Robert Buck,
probate-juvenile judge; James COOde, county
coroner; and In front, Larry Spencer, clerk of COUJts.

•

.._.

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•

PA.INESVILLE; Ohio (AP) ~An,
armed man surrendered to pollee
early today after barricading ·him·
self, his i:Jrlfriend and herl-year-ol&lt;l
son. in her home for nearly seve!)
hours.
Police Chief Jeny White said the
woman suffered a· head injury · . . ·
durlngthe ordeallateThursdayand · ·
early today. . ·
·
· -·
The woman ·was taken to l.ak.e ·:
County Memorial . Hooptt&amp;l E~st,- :
where nursing supervisor· Colleen ·
Nawro.;kl identified her as Debra
· Petroblc; 28, of" Painesville: . Ms.
Petrobic was being treafe(f for an ..· :
unspecified head ·injury,. M~.' Naw-·. '
rocki said.-.
.
· Ms. Petrobic ·was llstedin: .fair "&lt;
condition at the hospital.today,_: ·
''There ' was . a shot flied . that .. we re aware of, prlortoouramvaJ·'' ,
White said.. · .
.
. ' :
Ms. Petrobic's son, Stephen;_was~
ta\ten_to the hospital but was not
Injured In the ordeal, Ms. NawrOCki
said.
•
'
· White saki the man gave up after
throwin,g a handgun out the door of
the home at about 1 a.m. tpday. The
man was taken to the city jail.
White said the child was not hurt.
"It was a domestic situatlon "
White said.
'
1

o~ for.any elected olllclaiiS to be swom, ln. Meigs
CouJdy Common Pleas Judge Charles KJIIgh&amp;,
exir..me right, admlnlsten lhe oath of office to, from

.,...

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"""~F'="'"= ~-~=~-.PJ'of!';.i,. --~director~~-~
But the effects are impossible to. ingful step would be belts, Cox
.
measure. And while a mandatory indicated.
·"A
lot
of
different
factors have
law woulcL not he. observ.ed b)' all
"'made
seat
belts
ahot
Item " Cox
grams promoting voluntary use of l drivers, Cox said he believes It
said,
although
he
stressed.
that the
seat. belts are helping, but a would. increase from about 15
department has not endorsed spepercent to ·50 or 60 percent the
~dat&lt;iry seat belt law Is the only
clfic )egislation.
hope for making fUrther significant number who would wear belts. ·
State Rep. Arthur Bowers, DSteu·
reductions in traffic dea-ths and
benvllle; plans to introduce next
Although there was a slight
injuries, Ohio Highway Safety
week a mandatory measure similar
increase In fatalities last year from
Director l{enneth Cox ~ays.
to
one which went Into effect in New
1983,
Cox
said
the
state
Is
still
at
its
He. said Thursday that the
York
last month.
lowes
\level
"in
about
30
years."
department has developed a coall·
That
law sets a fine of $50 for
The
·
55-mUe-an-hour
speed
llmlt
tlon of more than 300 groups around
failure
to
buclde up and applies to
thestatewhicharepaylngformedla and tough new drunken-driving
front
-seat
passengers as well as
and other programs that urge laws are credited for s,orne of the_
dr1vers. It also requires passive
Improvement, but the next mean·
drivers to buckle up . ..

By ROBERT E. MUJ,tR
~Press Writer
~GeLUMBUS, Ohio. (AP-) - Pro-

an Income tax for a period of one
year after enactment. If at the end of
a year, residents feel thatthemoney
generated by the income tax has pot
been managed properly, a petition
to revoke the tax can be filed. The
Issue can then be put on the ballot
" - ·and voted In or out,
The entire ordinance wfll soon he
publlshed 1!1 The Daily Sentinel.
"This should answer ~Y ques·
lions for thc;o;e affected by the tax,"
said Long.

As stated by those involved wtth
the legislation, the definite amount
ofrevenuetohegeneratedby!hetax
cannot yet be ascertained. However, at a recent councU meeting
attended by several concerned area
residents, Jolm Anderson, counctl
presld~t. estimated that around
$200,100 would come into the village
through the tax.
Some liullvlduals within the
vntage - feel the figure could he
considerably higher.

"'"'"9 Cfunne•f
llnlE GIRLS'

Wel~ome

The New Yell With The1e
'

WINTER SPECIALS

..

CONNIE FASHION BOOTS ............. 40% OFF
CONNIE.SHOES ............!.~~P.'!! ......... SO%\OFF
CONNIE SHOES ............!.~~'!'!........~ 30%)OFF
THOM MeAN SHOES.~!qU.f.!IJ~U....... 30% OFF
NUR.SEMATE$••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 20"/o OFF:
MEN'.S. .HIKER BD.OlS....;•.,.,......._.,..~ 3OOfo OFF
DINGO BOOTS .................: ............ 20% OFF
SLIPPERS .~ ..:.................................. 20% OFF
DEXTER SPORT SHOES ...............;.. 20% OFF
DEXTER MEN'S DRESS ...............;... 20% OFF
RAND &amp;.THOM MeAN MEN's........ SO% OFF
FALl PURSES ......................... ~ ....... 30°/o OFF
OPEN
UNTIL ·7 P.M.
FRIDAY

DRESS
SALE
Velours, corduroy jump·

J11/UifiJ. Clsmnce/

, Jsnuttg Cf69tlllei $1f1

LADIES'

· GIRLS'

SPORTSWEAR

Sportswear

Russ Girl and Russie qua,lity
blouses, skirts, jumpers, vests,
·sweaters and pants.
Girls' Sizes: 4 to 6X, 7 to 14

Special rack of misses and
extra size sportswear.
Skirts, Jackets, · Slacks,
· Blouses, Vests.

ers, fleece skirt sets, knit
dresses and poly/cotton
dresses.
.
Sizes: NB to 24 mos. 2 to
4, 4 to 6X, 7 to 14. ·
Reg. 11 0 ....... Sale 16.99
Reg. 114 ..... Sale 110.19
Reg. 121..... 51M 114.69

REG. 113.00 TO 125.00

Clemnee S•l•

$780 ·,0 $1 500

Reg. 132 ..... Sale 122.39

EIEN

'47••5 lly WUNGISt

J,.,.,-, Cllflltt•l

Jm11v Cl'""u $1/t
CHILDREN'S WltiTU

. MEN'S
CASUA' ·

IOYS'
CASUAL

COATS, JACKETS
&amp; SNOW SUITS

I

L1tt1e boys sizes 6 mos. to ·'

PANTS PANTS

INSULATED
COVERALLS
Dooble action zipper, red

Sweat shirt looks · rev·
ersible · parachute
cloths and novelties.
Sizes S, M, LanJ XL
Many styles coordi·
nate with men's knit
sale priced In this ad.

qiltt lnina &amp; adjustable leg
SI\Jp&lt; Navj bile "' olivewood .. Not

lt~t~tg Clfft•~"l

all ,;,., S

tllrooth XL SOOt, reculars
Old fills. )Yhile tlley laSt
sale.

1/2 PRI~E

.• ~:::::r-=~

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By EVANS WlTr

As8octaled Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP j' - With the
warmth of llrst -day festivities
already a memory, leaders of the
new CQngresS .are talking of "cold,
hard" ·decisions on cutting social
programs to deal with burgeoning
federal deflclts.
".We're going to all have to jump
off .the cliff several times, "Siild
Asslstaiit' Senl!te Majority Lead~r..
Alai! : K. Simpsj)n of Wyoming,
commenting on the political perlts of
, this year's budgetc~e&lt;;isions, ·
'Ibenewlyelectedmembersofthe
99th Congress were sworn in on
Thursday with traditional

formality.
Vice President George Bush
admlnlstered the oath to the new
and re-elected senators four at a
time, while House Speaker Thomas ·
P. O'NfUl gave the oath en masse to
the lower chamber as family
members and friends looked on
·. from packed galleries,
But the Eighth District of Indiana
remains without a representative as
the House struggles with the
question of who really won the close
fight there In November- Reput]li·
can .Richard 0, Mcintyre or
Democratic -Incumbent Frank
McCloskey. The House voted along
party llnes to let.Its Adminlstrl)tlon

Committee look into the matter.
The top leaders of both houses
were duly elected and installed in
other ceremonies Thursday. O'Neill
toolt the gavel as House Speaker for
what he sald -· ls his last term and
Robert Dole of Kansas aS.sumed hls
newly won job as Senate major1ty
leader.
,
But the question of who wUl be
~halrman of the House Armed
Services Committee remained In
doubt. Rep. Melyin Pr1ce of llllnois
should retain the p6st by senforlty,
but younger House Democrats have
called for his replacement! House
Democrats were to caucus in closed
session today to decide the Issue.

24 mos . 2 to 4

Sizes S, M,- Land XL
Sateens · corduroys·
and polyester colton
twills. Elastic boxer
waist. Big tops to coor·
dinate advertised on
sale in this ad . .

DWI ·sentencing law-signed

REO . '18 .00

Coats .. Sole 112.60
RE0.'24.00

Coats... Sale s16.10

REO. '32.00.

Coots .. Sole ,122.40

-l/2 PRIC~ . ·

REG . •47.00

.::, _

Coots .. Sale '32.90 '

FREE PARKING

lios PLACE ·

c:

Girls Sizes: NB to 24 mos ,1
to 4, 4 to 6X 7 to 14.
.
Many warm siyles. Most are
machine washable

•·

houst ·

~

'Cold, hard' decisions await
Congress .in coming months .

OHIO 'II"""" r=.

--

COLur,nJUS, Ohio (AP) - Gov. in duration, theoffendermustspend citizens' reward program $uch as
Richard Celeste has signed into law the balance of the time in .Jail.
"Crlmestoppers" groups which
a bill clarifying the authority of
Severalo!theotherblllsslgnedby have been set up in several Ohio
the governor address the appreben· cities.
~
·
judges to' SliooUtute certified driv·
ers' intervention programs for the , sian of ctlminals; the victims of
Once recognized, that group
three days in jail now mandated for vanous types of crime, Including _would be ellglble to receive fUnds
rape; and other subjectS ranging and set rewardS for the apprehen·
drunken-driving convictions.
The measure was among 28 from the state lottery to utillty bUl slon and convlcUon of criminalS.
approved by Celeste on Thursday
payments.
• Speclftcally, they would get 25
,without comment.
Sen. Charles L. BullS, 0- percent of. the proceeds from the
Although the bill permits the Cleveland, sponsored one new law salebylawenforcementagenclesof
suOOtltution for the mandated which allows but doesn't require . confiscated and!orteltedequlpment
county conimlssloners lo recognize·· . and property.
'!enlencet, It says that unless the
Wiihin~iill!it
courmeg o11e-omctlll
- - ~ ~-- ·~---..~..
in~fiOO ilt'Oill'ari'i IS tlil'ee days
•

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"just on the basis of statistics, the
restraints
matter where they are seated.
department has to look favorabi~!Jn
Cox· said Gov. Rlch;y-d Celeste this kind of legislation."
. s!iU -·15' conslderll!g '!egiSJatlliii,
The- departmeiif earlier cited
including Bowers', but that the figures showing that about half of
governor h':':s not advised him about the 1,100 unbuckled drivers killed in..
an official administration position.
Ohio this year would have survived
Celeste issued an executive order . had they been wearing seat belts. :
Another factor In favor of a
last July that requires slate em·
ployces to wear seat belts while mandatory law Is the potential for
driving state vehicles or while using savings on auto Insurance. With
their personal cal'!! on state fewer deaths and injur1es, lnsu·
ranee premiums would decrease,
business.'
The highway safety director said Cox said.

The U.S. Deparbnent of Transportation also Is applying pressure
on the §.lat~ !Q_ enact · passlve_
restraint laws- mandatedseathelt
usage or automatic buckle systems
-as an alternative toalrbagswhich
O\herwlse wUl be required in SOil1e
new vehicles startinJ; in 1987. ·
The federal agency recently ··.
adopted a regulatlqn requlrlr\g a1t
bags in all new cars B.tter 1~ but:·
said the rule will be rescinded.·lf '
passive restrl\lnt taws aie enactec:L ·
by two-thirds oftbe state!i. :
·

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Comment

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lll Court S&amp;reel
Pomeroy, Ohio

.

The Catholic bishops, In Issuing
the first draft of their proposed
· pastoral letter on social and
economic pollcy. explicitly asked
for cortrmenflllY;anll'frus has come~
In abundantly, as previously lndi·
cated in this space, from Catholics
and non,Cathollcs, There Is no
sense -In which tlie views of
non-Cathollcs are ariy less relevant
than those~ Qf _Catholics provided

DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE MEJG8-MASON AREA

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~ B!!!~-t:. LC: '-·-"'==''=""-~~c:;jl,,~ ~ ......._c ~ ,_....._.,.... ~ ,--

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GOphe~ up~et

sixth ranked
'Illinois, 60-58, in loop_opener·

~ Bishops' letter

The Daily ·Sentinel

J

P.u• 2-The Deily Sentinel
Pomeroy-Middlepor.t. Ohio
Fridlly, January 4, 1986

t

.

.

ROBERT L . WINGETT

Publisher ·
PAT WHITEHEAD

BOB HOEFLICH

Assistant Publisher / Controller·

General Manager

DALE 'ROTHGEB, JR.
News Editor

The !lrst Is that tile government
should declare that cltlzen.s have
"economic rights"; tile second, that
the government can usefully declile
Wllat lfi'e'tllierable dJSCI'I!pallctes'ln "
Income.
Peter Flanigan, tile dl,stjngulshed
banker, former assistant to Pre$1·
dent NixOn and a participant in tile
lay letter that anticipated the
blshopil' pastoral draft&gt; say$ It

nesota backup guard Marc Wilson we are overra~ right ndw."
gra~ lbe rebound and passed
Brad Daugherty scored 24 points
ahead to a sprinting Davis for Min- and grabbed nine rebounds and
nesota's game-winner.
North Carolina held off a second- ''II was just reflex," Davts.~ld of halJ Stetson charge.
.
·
.- c-ounted: .,
--· ·-"
- hls_basket o!Uhe1astb1:eak. When. • • •:pveratr.J-w:i:s ple.r!!ed witir ow'
Douglas stepped In front of me, 1 . play to!llght" said North Carolina
"We came but a little bit passive
crossed over a!)d laid It ln ." .
Coach Jle~ Smiih. "Stetson was
and II showed," guard Bruce
Minnesota Coach •Jim Dulcher Impressive. wecouldn ,-ts!OIJthemln
Douglas ·said after the Mlimesota
w~ thrilled, Q.utamazro.
the second half.''
·
Gophers upset hlsslxlh-rankedDIInl
It was a head-on jumper and
Tyrone Corblri scored 18 pointS aS
60-58 Thursday night
usually Douglas makes those," DePaul ·
St
The
Iillnols lralled for most of the
Dutcher said. "That shot Is the gamewas
·
but look ch,.rge · midway
By KENRAPPOI'ORI'
AP Spon. Writer
The Dllno!a basketball team was
hot-and-cok! In !tsBlg Ten opener.:...
and then lukewarm when II really

They can only be dellled by
government." It Is for that rwson

.frequently fails to provide it. The
means by which the unemployed
that the Bill of Rlghts Is an are cared for are means carefully
lnstnunent prlm8r0y negative In devised on the one hand to provide
cllaiaeter: congress Sli&amp;Ii ri'IAke no ·· ror 'dirporlfi -relief;- on ille olill'r
law ... "
hand to safeguard the incentive to
Now In order to guarantee a
the unemployed .to work, and to
person's llberUes, It Is. indeed · employers to seek extra workers .
necessary fot the government to This is a prudential problem the
take certain -affirmative steps. A
solution to which Is not actelerated
society in Which there are wnmg- by such sweeping · declarations

theyseekthesameend~~~ln~thls~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ls~a~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~a;
s~~
when he reminds the bishops that ·
not follow that a society In
The second problem
bishops

case, the ~1\d &lt;Jt devising

·:

which the poor can be most
helped.
The Issues are narrowing, and
they appear to revolve around two.
basic episcopal misapprehension.-

-

A MEMBER of The Associated Press, Inland Dally Press Association and the American Newspaper Publishers Association.
LETTERS OF OPINION are welcome. They should be less than :KXI words
long. All letters are subject to editing aDd must be signed with name, address and

c~

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does

"civil and polltical rights - the
light to free assembly, the right of
free speech, religious freedomare not created by government.

telephone number. No unsigned leiters' will be published. Letters should be In

good taste. addressing Iss ues , not personalities.

which there are Unemployed Is a . race most explicitly Is that' of the
society In which the government disparity In Income. What tfley
needstoprovldejobs.Afreesoclety decUnetofacelsthequestlon: Jflbe
strains for full employroent, and United Stales were to succeed In
bringing every citizen now below
thepovertyUneup'to thatUne, what
would this do to the disparity of ·
Incomes? Answer: Perhaps no-

' 1 ..-:_~

run that gave the Dllnl an 11-polnt
a
·15
Illinois has now lost two straight minutes left in the lialf.
game.
lead, 54-43, with 5~ mlnules lett.
games, including a 63-62 loss to was never close after that. .
But the Gophers, behind 'tommy
Loyola Dec. 22 . . The victory lmThe Blue DernoJis sllot ·a 54.7· ',
Davis' game-high 19 points, put
proved
Minnesota
's
record
to
8-3.
percent
from the floor, but. eoaCl1 · ·
together a 15-2 spurt in the final four
YVon
Joseph
scored
19
points
to
JoeyMeyerwasunhappywlththeir
minutes, climaxed by Davis' gamelead five Georgia Tech scorers in offense.
winner on a breakaway layup. The
doublefiguresastheYellowJackets
"We didn't run the fast break .
sliot triggered a wild celebration by
pounded
Maryland-Eastern
Shore.
well,
but we got good percentage~:·
rnaily or tile 14,532 fans at the·
It was the most lopsided victory In . shots," Meyer said. "We need to be •
Wllllams Arena, and many of the
MlruieSOta players ciiUed the vic- - -Tech basketball history and gave more-patient with our p~g.-~- 7~=""=
the Jackets, 10.1, thelrbeststartinH we've, also got to-ruri the-ball when
- tory4he~ blggl!st . upset ot their
years&lt;
we pave to."
·
· ·careers. ..
In other games lnvoMng ranked
Despite
tlie
'53-point
Win. Georgia
Tech
Coach
Bobby
Cremlns
said his .
teams Thursday flight, No. 8
YeUow Jackets "didn't play very
GRAVELY TRACTOR
Georgia Tech· crushed Maryland·
well.
Thereareabclut40otherteams
Eal!tern Shore 9340; No. 9 North
whoarea~_utwherewm.IIhlnk
SALES &amp; SERVICE
Qp-olinadeteated-Stetson 85-71; No.
204 COndor St.·. ·
·~
10 DePaul beat St. Maly's (Calif.)
Pomery,O.H
7&amp;53; No. 11 Kansas turned back
Phone 992-2.975
Texas Southern 78-74 In oveittme,
FALl
&amp; WINTER HOURS
and No. 15 Washington whipped
Tues.-Fri.
9 to 5; Sat. 9 to l
Stanford 78-Ql.
Closttl Monday
Top Ten
·.
With the score tied at 58, Douglas
~THE
took a 15-foot jump shot for Illinois
GAA'VELV
""":.ith !ree-E~.,~-g~. W..!t t&gt;,t&gt;. s~Ll~'! c.~-=o--!!
:JT~~·V:.TC·i"Vi -lc_~~r::
banged off the front of the rim. Min-

n.e

lliiiHI MEIGS GIRUI' VAR8ITY - Fl'llllt row
(left to ri~): RIIOIIda Neece, Jennifer SwarD,
JennHer Couch, Rhonda Haddox, Jocly llarrillon, B.J.
=~"'"Uorooil. Uck row (Ji.ft &amp;onp&amp;): Chamlele Tlimer

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Membership In Preslctent Rell!(an 's kitchen cabinet, a group of wealthy
CallfOI'II\a friends that helped convince him to seek public office two
deCades ago,.Is dwindling.
. ~ - " .... - •...... ~-... - • ·. 1'he annual New Year's Eve party at the 200-ac~ estate of miUionaire
pubtlsher Walter Anrienberg was the one occasion each year when the
-kitchen cabinet and other old Reagan friends would gafher to renew old
ties . .
Reagan and his wife. Nancy, and about 85 other guests celebrated the
arrival of the new year at the biack-tleAnnenbergextravanganzafor about
the 18th year in a row this week.
.
While the White House would not release the entire guest llst, the press
office did announce that among the Invited were several people who have
hei1n close Reagan friends for decades.
·
They .included,- several men now serving the Reagan administration,
such as Ambassa.~or to the Vati~an William Wilson, Attorney General
Wllllam .French Smith, Interior Secretary William Clark and Defense
Secretary~Caspar Weinberger.
·
: The names of two controversial members of the Reagallt"adrro!nl:~mot!anwho. also are 10M-time presidential friends, CIA Director William Casey
. apd USIA Director Charles WICk, were not among those made public by
fhe press office, but that doesn't mean they weren't at the party.
·
"The public list also included s;fh other old Irlends as Annand JJe_utsch
and Earle Jorgensen, who presided over a steel and-aluminum distribution
company.
In fact, the Wilsons, Smiths and Deutsches were houseguests of.the
Annenbergs, as were the Reagans.
.
· But as Is the case with any group of old "old" friends, where the average
age was probably In the 70s, several of the most Influential members of
. Reagan's kitchen cabinet have died during the past four years.
Jack Wrather, chairman of an on, entertainment and real estate
busineSs, died of cancer two months ;~go at the age of 66.
Multlmllllona!re lndu~trlalist Justin Dart, founder of the Dart Industries
«»nglomerate, died a year ago at the age of 76.
·. Alfred Bloomingdale; a millionaire who was sued for "palimony" by a
is-year-old woman, died of cancer In 1982 at the age of 66. His wife, Betsy, Is
perhaps Mrs. Reagan 's closest friend.
And Theodore E. Cummings, founder of a supermarket chain who
became ambassador to Austria after Reagan's election, died several years
ago.
: Actor William Holden , a close Reagan friend. also died several years
\\gO.
.
· And Holmes P. Tuttle, an automotive dealer and industrialist, reportedly

r--:::::::::::::::::::::::;..:..-----1

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MEIGS GffiiS' R~RVE- ~row (left to
right): Usa Pullins, Shannon SlaviD, Sue Pat"BOM,
Dee Henderson, Audra HoudaaheK, Tammy Wrlghl.

.

. EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP) Michigan State Coach Jud Heathcote easlly could have blamed
!njurtes If his Spartans had dropped
their Big Ten coUege basketball

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,p ncertainty: .how
~o yo~ . measure it?
-

• 'Aperlodof!ndecls!on,resultlnglargelytromanlnab!lltyto!oreseejust •
Ii9wtaxeswillbechanged,maybedescendlngupontheeconomy:
' ·A report from the Associated General Contractors of America offers _a n
example of the phenomenon and suggests the extent of uncertainty If not .
tear that results from lt.
·After forecasting a big Increase -In construction volume for this year,
Oftlc!als of the organization Indicated they had reservations.
• Said Doug Pitcock, a Houston highway and bridge builder whe Is
i-"esldent of the 32,1XXl-member organization: "The potent.lal for a
continued dramatic Increase Is really enormous, but the prospects for
cterallng the progress made and underway are making us very jittery."
: That· statement contrasts with earlier forecasts by the organization,
which speaks for some of the largest construction contractors in the

Reagan admi-nistration. The . documents ..seen by my associate
Energy Deparll]tent's use of South
VIcki Warren, this even extends to
· African uranium for enrichment
nuclear,weapons technology_ -One _
jumped 350 percent between 1!i!n
computer sold to South Africa and 1!Ml3.
after being embargoed by the
The money Pretoria gets for Its
Carter administration _- "can be
uranium Is particularly Important
used to model nuclear exploslo!ls."
now, when the world price of South
one document reports.
Africa's principal export- gold In fact, the number of licenses
Is so depressed.

tile law cut off that. trade, a large
amount of South African uranium
was awaiting • shipment In an
Energy Department warehouse.
Five U.S. utmlles eventually took
the enriched uranium off the South
African's hands· - and out of the
Energy Department's warehouse
- by buying It at a bargain price.

The map
· - O f freed0- m
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man
company
a
contract with . DOE For enriched
uranium-, an.&lt; Lthallt was possible
some. SQuth African uranium was
"commingled" with the material it
bought. The spokesman added that
Northern States has a contract with
EJQ&lt;on for some Imported uranium,
but didn't know If South Africa was
the source.

Don

T . . ._

Graif.~'

to ·t he Ed1•tor

·•

Bad taste le·'t

ealled

which

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reserve guard Greg Pedro and two
byJohnson-asOhioStatefouledin
a desperate attempt to catch up.
Ohio State Coach Eldon Miller,
'
.
wh~ Buckeyes dropped to 8-2, said
.,., ~...!:, p!u_,:&amp;""!3=mad.e -too ·

Johnson, oncrutchesthedaybefore,
blocked tour shots, canned 22 points
game, Miller said.
think we
· and hauled down 12 rebounds - could have done a better job all
ThursdaytoboosttheSpartansloan aroUnd, I'Vl! never coached in a
82-79 victory over the Buckeyes.
game where you give up 1!2 points
Jphnson, who hurt his knee In and expect to win.
practice Monday and played with
"We were mistake-prone on
his right leg bandaged from ankle to defense and onoffense." lhlgh, hiilO of 11 from the field. The
The game was billed as a
Spartans also played without sixth showdown between two or the Big
man Darryl _Johnson, out for two Ten's finest guard tandems. Ohio
State received a combined 32 points
weeks with a back Injury.
"Ken was on crutches until - fromltssllckseniorcomboof'I'royn
Wednesday's practice," HeathCote Taylor, who scored 17, Ron Stokes,
said. "But !tdldn'tlookllketheknee with 15.
.
botheredhlmatalLW!tboutKen,we
Ohio State's Joe Conchek's
couldn't have won the basketball jumper gave the Buckeyes a 67-65
game.
edge with 6: 15 remaining, but the
·- "It was a game that could have score was tied' 69-69 after two
gone" either way," · Heathcote said buckets by Michigan State's Larry
after the victory, _ which gave Polec.
Michigan State a 1().1 start, its best
Then Spartans guard Sam Vlnslnce19'n-18whenltwent15-1. "This cent broke the tie with less than 5
was a great g~e tor us to wtn."
, ' minutes to play with a pair of
The Spartans held off tile Buck- full-court drives and a free throw to
eyes In the final minutes by golng4-4 put Michigan Slate ahead for good.
from the free-throw llne, two by ·
,Vincent totaled . 15 points and

'------'-----------------....:...:...}
_.
.
quarters of the nations sui'Veyed, arrested, expelled, kidnapped,
print and broadcast media were threatened with death, beaten,
under the Influence · or outright bombed or otherwise harassed. ·
control of governments.
In short, Leonard Sussman,
· Censorship was also on the rise Freedom House executive director,
an(! 21 journal!sts were killed In 15 observed, It was "generally a
countries. Many times more were normal year."

dom House judged 53 nations and 32
The best .riews _about freedom related terrltoiies with a population
during 1984 came largely from the of 1.67 billion - 34.&amp;5 percent of the
Americas, the worst from Africa.
world total -as free.
• That lnfonnatlon .Is from the
Another .59 countries and 19
annual year-end report on the territories with 1.117 billion people,
subject from Freedom House.
- 23.3 percent, were partly free.
To cite a·few examples, ArgeritlAnd 59 countries and three
na·scontlnutngsuccesslnrestoring territories with 2.001 billion, 41.85
~Iter
Cowltry.
political and personal liberties, and percent, were not free.
..
: lnthedepthsofthe1983downturn,forexample,contractorscontldently
the election · In Uruguay, which
~om House, a New York• forecast an economic boom."Whether or not the ensuing recovery could be
holdi hope for something of the based Institution that has been
J'
a boom Is debatable, but construction volume rose a strong 13
same In that country, are among monitoring the rise and sometimes
Recent quotes In the p~ by
hanging) · determined that the
· • :e~it
·
·
the year's more notable advances. faD of free societies since World J,.arry Ray, Division of Wildlife
temporary tag was missing from
~A'&amp;: ~bers last year forecast a 24.32 perc.:.nt construction Increase Brazil Is also moving In fhe same War II, evaluates the degree of Area Two Supervisor, to the effect the deer my brother shot and
f6r 1!1l4. Optimistic as they were, the 11na1 r!gure came In at.better than 33 . (llrectloit.
freedom in a given c:ountry on the that the crlrne of illegal possession
confiscated his deer. My brother
percent. This year'!!' forecast Is for an additional 22. percent Increase.
. In Central America, every coun- basts of some two dozen criteria · of deer Is no big deal and that their · contack'&lt;! the local sheriff's office to
report the deer missing and found
. But, as Pitcock put It In a yearend statement, "a number of factors are ·try ettller maintained or Improved relating to political rights, civil WUdll!e officers should never be
8fvlng the construction Industry severe Jitters," among them:
Its rating during the year - even IIberti~ and popular participation second guessed, sure leaves a had
out that he had been cited for
• -Congress' failure to pass an Interstate Cost Estimate that already has
Nicaragua, about which you don't In government.
taste with me after what occurred - mlstagging a deer. We. Inspected
!aeld up for several months the release of more than S7 bllllol\ already hear many good words lbese days
SUD, there are ~&amp;· The , to my neighboring landowner.
the surrounding area that the deer
COllected from taxpayers for road and brtdge Improvements.
from most American sources.
.. report rated Iran pa
free and During the November -26 to Dehad been hung and did find the tag.
Freedom Hpuse noles that while Oman as not free. The Ia r Is an cember 1, 1984 Deer Gun Season II\
My brother was guilty of m!stag; According to the AGC, lhatllgure by Itself jeopardizes more than 400,(0)
C(II)SiruciiOn and constructiOn-related jobs. In addition, 11 creales opposition parties, "for sound rea· autocracy, to be sure, but an Ohio, our neighboring landown(l!
glng' a deer and did pay the fine.
sons," dlcf not participate In exceedingly benevolent one en- became involved In a legal problem
The lnterestlng part Is that our
uncertainty among equipment suppliers and contractors.
: -Proposed and rumored cuts by the administration In construction NICaragua's November election, ' gagedlnanambltlousdevelopment. which surprised us and may be of • nelghborwasalsoc!ted!orthedeer ·
prillrams. Including rural electrification, housing, water and sewer ~~=tcholce" was nevertheless effort that Is rapidly raising the Interest ~ ;&gt;ther farmers and (my brother shot) and was charged
programs, community development block grants and environmental
quality of life for a nation that landowners. ·-with possession of an -llleg41-deer, -·.Construction grants.
,
It was a much different year In emerged from 'a feudal past little .
My brother, who was hunting
Our neighbor had no connection
: -The Treasury's "otr-key musical-chair games with tax pallcles that Africa where "SUdan's a~t to more than ·a decade ago.
with me and several oilier fellows
with the mlstagglng, and was
~the Industry." The AGC says repeal or Investment ~q and
lmpoaeapartlcularlyharshverslon
Youknowaboutlran,buthere'sa on our flimlly farm and the
Implicated because he was a nice
N!habllltatlon tax credits, and other proposals, would devastate the of Islamic law, Ghana's move to postscript. The State Department . adjoining properties, was success; · guy and allowed us to hang ·t he deer
JndulbY.
·
gang rule, Kenya's.consolldation of reported the other day, almost tulln laking a deer. Our adjoining
on 'the bealn.
· It itpOI"IS that favorable factors also exist, Including stable labor costs: power, Uberla's kiUing of political simultaneously with the release of neighbor bad given us permission
Our J!elghbor, not having the time
~cooPeration between II!IIOJw and builders; more open shops, or Jobs
opponmts and students, and Boor- fhe Freedom House survey, 111e to hunt on his property and allowed
or money to abandon his business
ito
non-union and union penonnel co-exist; and loWI!r Interest rales.
kina Faalo's (formerly Upper executions during November and I!S to hang tile deer to a beam tiel! to
and farm to fight this cttatto'n,
: In llddltlon, 11 says, govel'l1lllelll at an levels has hei!Un to address ":rl Volta) pressures on the media and December of nine more members two l!-· The trees lie on his
followed his attorney's advice and
jean Jl!&amp;lect of the natlon's Infrastructure," SliCh 81 highways, bridges, unions ·-- reflected moves away of the persecuted Bahal religion. property between his home and
pafd a fine to settle the matter.
water ud sewage lines, schools, Hbrar!es. hoepltl!l and ~
from freedom and toward further Another 19 are reported under ours, and a county road passes
The benefit that can be derived
SlmultaDeously,lt addll, the lndusb'lal sector has*' modernizing and repreulon."
death sentences. .
.
between his home and the beam. . from such a case, Is that our fellow
~ to meet toreiiJI competition.
As might be ~. rommuAlso, South Africa rates as j&gt;artly The beam has been there for a
landowneril and· farmers 1n the
. Newrf)leless, the mood ts resiTIIlned, and the restraint 1s Induced
nilt COWttrles did not do weD free. That has to mean a vecy small number of years and we have used
State ofOhlo take the Ume to review
~bythatoldadversarycallecluncerlalnty.There'salotmoreoflt
most, following tile Soviet Union, part Indeed, omitting the threeIt for game and domestic
and determine just how the
illllund lban last year, and nobody knows how-much of an Impact It will drawing the rock-bottom rating of quarters of the population that Is · butchering.
ODNR's Division of WUdllfe codes
rilaJae
·
notfree.Afew,I!Qwever,cameoffa
black and as tolally cleprlved of
The local Ohio Department of
can affecl them by the actions of
It ~- unpredictable factor 1n many lndustTies, and maybe even In the bit better tilan others. Hungary, meaningful rights as any people In Nnatural Resource Division of others.
--Jimes R. Thompson
iiltlriieconomy. Ancflt Is Hkely to1'ei'IIB.Ilri011111Uthelssuestroniwhlchlt:- .Polandand.Yugoslavia-Wel'E!-rated - the world;-" -· · - - - - - - - - Wildlife g&amp;me-warde!l, upon-uQan- ~
1399 Wiltshire Road
~are dealt with:/
partly free.
A special section on freedom of nounced lnsP!!Ctlon of the deer,
Columbus, Ohio 43223
•
Taking a worldwide view, FreeInformation noted that In three (other hunters also had game

'•

Stohart, Julle Baity, Teresa .Johnson and stephanie
Engllslt.
·

OSU drops ·82-79
decision
to
.
'Michigan State in loop opene~
State. ·-

Invited to White House parties from time

Back row (left to right): Sue Fry, Shelly Wolle, Shelly

\

Sports briefs,•.
FOOI'BAI.L
NEW YORK (AP) -

Hetsman
Trophy-winning quarterback Doug
'

I Tonight's games
i·

I'

Logan af Gall!polls
Duval at Pt. PleasantWahama at Southern
Chesapeake at South Point
Fairland •t Rock Hlll
Washington CH at Greenlleld
Jackson at Athens
Southwestern at Hannan 'n'ace
(makeup) ,
Kyger Creek at Ea st ern
(makeUp)
Wellston ai Meigs
Ale~nder at Belpre
Federal-Hocking at NelsonvilleYork
Miller at VInton County
Warren Local at Trimble.

Satunlq'aprnea:
cross Lanes at North Gallla
Kyger Creek at Fori Frye
Wheelersbllri at Fatrlal)d
NorthweSt at Ironton
Marietta at Athens
Cincinnati Taft at Portsmouth

Flutle was amoj,g the 11 tlrst-teain
All-Americans chosen by United
StalesFootballLeagueclubsln.thelr
third annual draft.
The New Jersey Generals, with
the
the rights to B.c. players
league's territorial system, chose
Flut!e,' the ~toot-9* magician, and
four other members of the Eagles'
victorious Sugar Bowl team.
The Generals said they,will try io
sign Flutle; who also Is expected to
be coveted b)! teams from the rival
National Football League. The NFL
hOlds Its draft April 30 and the
Buffalo Bills, with the worst record
(2-14), have the No. 1 pick.

under

CANToN, Olllo (AP) - National

backcouri

mate Scott Skiles added

21.
The Spartans next meet Indiana
at Jenison Field House Saturday.
Ohio Slate plays at Michigan

Silver with burgundy cloth Interior, 305 V-8 engine,
a~tomatic transmission, power steering &amp; brakes.
cur conditioning, am -fm 8-track stereo, power an-

tenna, tilt wheel. cruise control, delay wipers, rear
defogger. sport whee'ls, new radial fires. rear
window louvers.

Real Nice Local Trade-In

•7,900 00

1984 OLDSMOBILE DE~TA 88
BROUGHAM · .
.4 ·dQOr , Royal blue with matching velour lnter.i or,
305 v.a, automatic transmission, air cOil;d. , tilt
wheel, cruise control, am ~ fm stereo, power seat.
power windows, power door locks, delay wipers,
rear defogger. w1re wheel covers.
Save A Grand Right Here!
NAD.,O.. Average Retail 511,900.00
•

Our Price ·· Only

•1 0 90.000
1

Celtics
retire -another
number tonight .
BOSTON (AP) __ No player for
the Boston .Celtics ever wore No. 1,
built Is retired, on a banner hanging
from fhe ratters or Boston Garden.
No member of the Celtlcs ever
wore No. 2. And no one ever will.
That' will join No. 1 and 13 other
numbers In retirement tonight.
No. 1 honors late owner Walter
Brown, who founded the Celtics In
1946 and barely escaped bankruptcy
for several years.
No. 2 represents the man who
llnally balled out Brown and built
the Celtics Into a National Basketball Association dynasty - Arnold
"Red" Auerbach.
Bob Cousy, Bill Russell, Frank
Rarrisey, Sam Jones, John Havlicek
and a bunchofhlsotheroldstarswill
loin In honoring Aue!'bach - who
has spent more than halfhls67years
With the Celtics - .at Boston Garden
before a game wifh the NI!W York
Knlcks.
The Celtlcs will •be folloWing a
tradition of retiring numbe1'5 Instead of players. Many oldtlme
players are still IIJlllmd. Television
announcers Cousy and Torn Heln!IOM have thetr numbers 14 and 15
not far from their seats. Havlicek Is
a frequent visitor. And K.C. Jones
can spot his No. 25 at every gameas coach of his pro alma mater.
For Auerbach. the Celtlcs' cigar: ·
put'fing wizard for nearly 35 years,
tbefestivitleswillmarktMstartofa
buay weekend - and another
chapter In a distlnguiBhl!d c~.
Wlfh 1,037 victories, he Is ·the
wlnnlngest coach In pro basketball
lllstoly. ~·s . a member of the
Basketball Hall ofFame.Andhehas
.
a "lifetime" JOb with the Celtlcs.
His ''number" will be hoisted In ·
tile area w~ other banners testilY
to the now-balding redhead's

l...ellgue Conunls81oner
Pete Rmli!Ue, tonner coach-turned
broadcaster John Madden and 13
tonner players were named 81 the greatneea.
Tllel'eare mother green and white
1985 tlnaU8ts tor Induction Into Pro
.
flap
lwlllni- They represent 15
Football's Hall of
NBA
champlonships.
I
Rlllllllna back O.J. Simpson and
Auerbach
was
the
architect
of
quarterbacks Joe Namalh, Roger
Staubacb and Fran Tlll'kEnton were nlne'u COICh trom'l9e0 to 1986, and
u ll'ftll!l'8l
a Peat 11e
among the nominated players.'I'he
~
to
"relax"
In
one role,
19851nductees will lie announced at ·
·as
team
president,
last
summer.
·
6; 30p.m. EST on Jan. 22.
Football

·1982 CHEVROLET CAMARO

Fame:

m:

"
•

rnanaaer.

1980 CHEVROLET C-10 4X4 TRUCK
Longbed.'carmine red Inside &amp; out .• 350 v .a engine, 4 Speed transmission , pOWer steeri1ng &amp; brakes, am
.
·
fm cassette, rear step buf'!lper , white spoke wheels .
1

$5,50000
Cheapies $2,000 &amp; Under
Sharp Truck

1978 AMC GREMLIN
'1,50000
•
1977 FORD LTD II
'2,00000
1976 V.W. RABBIT
'70000
1978 JEEP WAGONEER
'1.000 00
1-978 PLYMOUTH WAGON
., '1,60.0 00

1976 PLYMOUTH ROAD RUNNER
'60Q':"'

-·
1974 OLDSMOBILE 88
'20010

·"

. 1977 CHEVROLET TRUCK
•90000

. .

1978 FORD TRUCK
'1,00000

1976 DODGE ASPEN WAGON··.
'1,00000

1978-MERCURY COUG.AR

t ..

'2,000~

1977 JEEP WAGONEER
'2,00000
1977 FORD LTD
'1 ,40000 • ... .
1978 FORD LlD WA(;ON ·
. . '1',90000 .
1971 CHEVY STE"P VAN
'1,60000

STOP IN AND 511 - Merrill, Jay anti Alan Evans

OPEN • Mond~J thru Friday 8 i.m. • 6 p.m.,
Saturday 8 a.m. • 3 p.m.
·

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Friday, January 4, .1985

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Page-4-lhe Deily Sentinel

'The

Ohio

·· 'The Victory Circle'

Coriference titles on line this·weekend

P. J. PAULEY, AGENT
Nationwide Ins. Co.
·" of Columbus, Oh.
804 W. Main

Another year, winter gam'liS were played on tne second floor oft he
Spencer Ll.very Stal)le on Third Street This had handicaps The bare
lloorlng was large ooards with small cracks between them. It took quick
hands for dribbling.
,
'The spectators sat on bales of hay or straw. Then carhethefirst inside
• gyl!lln th!!_present Junlor High Building (then the new high school ...
around 1927) . Then followed the present new high school and Charles W.
Hayman gymnasium.
The first Inside gym came along with the beglnnmg of the great
depression. The now younger generation cannot vlsual~e the
conditions. A great many people were willing to work at odd jobs just to
buy lood for tbeir families. There had been no admission price for the old
games mentioned aoove. Now inside, the prices were 15 cents and 25
cents. These prices were maintained for many years.
• -·~ theJrl!rri~Jt:f!' D Y.e~.a.w~IM !I'll!' ll!!dtt~ .~llkJna;JtJ7.r.
cenis and !8 cents. 'l.1ds cau&amp;ed a ticket ~Her's headache~ All ttckel
..,... luld &amp;o he held for federal audit.
For pre-inllation comparisons, the layers were given 25 cents each
to eat with after each away game. But this could buy two large
.ham.llurgers and a oottle of coke. Were these the "Good Old Days"- or
are we having the good days now?

I'

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·\
1

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If

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0

I(~

;-;~;;;~~t

212
992·3785. Pomeroy

MEIGS
COOPERATIVE PARISH
UNITED METHODIST CHUR&lt;:H

Fay Sauer, Director
Rev. dame. E. Corbitt, A.MIMant

• """"l'iiii\1..HI.fDoAST_~L~~tt!:R,, ,....._
nev.

n ,.rcUI'I;:;r

Rev. Re)' Deeter
Be\'. Sekloa 'ehuon
ALFRED - Church School 9 30 a m ,
Worship, 11 am, UMYF, 6· 30 p m. UW.
Third Tuesday, 7.30 p.m Communion.
rtrst Sunday (Archer)
CHESTER - Worship 9 a m; Chllrch
SchoollO lt.m .; Bible Study, Thursday , 7 p.
m .: UMW. first Thursday, 1 p.m.; ...Com·
munlon, nrst Sunday tAf'Cher ).
JOPPA - Worship 9 JO a.m .: Church
'School 10:30 a .m. Bible Study Wedncs
day, 7:30pm tJohn.sonl
LONG BOTIOM - Church Srhoal 9 30
a m : Worship 7 p m , Bible Study, Wed
nesday. 7·30 l&gt; m : UMYF WMnesda)l
6 00 p m • Communion First Sunday
~

Last basketball season I had the privilege of matcl)ing Kelly
basketball magic. Kelly Is certainly a young master of the game, not
because of her natural talent, but because of her tremendous love and
dedication to the game of basketball.
Practice does make perfect ... she practices six-eight hours a day
throughout the summer and the results paid off; she just recently went
over the 1,00l.potnt mark mldw through her junlor year
Here is her story, titled, "Life Is a lot of 'ups' and 'downs' tor eager,"
a~ printed in the December 28, 19841ssue of "The Gatlipolls Tribune."
The following article best tells her story:

!Archer)
REEDSVILLE- Church School 9· 30 a
m , Worship ServiCE" 11 · 00 a m (DeeterJ
TUPPERS PLAINS ST. PAULChurch School 9 a m ., Worship 10 a m ,
Bible Study, Tuesday, 7 30 p. m, UMW,
Third Tuesday, 7:.10 p.m , Communion
First Sunday !Archer)
•
CENTRAL CLUSTER
Rev. Jamea E. CorttiU
Rev. Sleven Nelson
Rev. Richard Rothemlch
Rev. Robert E. RoblftAOil
~v. A•drew Ruben~Hnr
·
ASBURY (Syracuse ) - Worship 11 am
: Church School 9·45 a . m: Chafli!(' Blbl('
Study, Wednesday, 7 30 p, m . UMW first
Tl.lesday, 7 . ~ p m. Choir Rehearsal ,
Wednesday 6 JO.:p.m, UMW, fourth Sun·
day, 6 30 p.m !Nelson).
. ENTERPRISE - Worship 9 a m ,
Cliurch School lO am; Bible Study, Tues·
day, 7·30 p.m.: UMW, First Monday, 7 30
p.m; UMYF. Sunday, 6 p m. Choir Re
hearsal, 6 30 p m. Wednesday. 1Rothe·
mlchJ
FLATWOODS-

Middleport·

•'

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KELLY DOWNS

It is Interesting to note that Kelly trains hard on her own, further
emphasizing the Importance of practice and dedication, and hetng able
t~ realize that It takes more than saying you' re dedicated. Many
~ches envy an effort as that ot Kelly's, since so many times coaches
are disappointed when only a handful of players turn out for a two-hour
open gym in the summer
I hope Kelly's otory ln1lplres some of the younger boys or girls who ·
hope '&amp;o play baAiretball (or any sport for that matter). Just think It eight
or 10 teammates dedlcllted themselvO!! In this way. Wow! What a
piiWel'tloUIIe tltat would be!
In closing I was pleased tO see Meigs and Soutl\ern continue their

The answer to last week's trivia question: Mike Morrisoil had the
best won-lost percentage' In one season, posting two 21-1 seaso~ each.
Mike had 42 wins to just two losses, both of which came in tournament
play in 1962-63 and 1963-64.
Until next time, keep up the hard work and, yes, do set your sights
on the victory circle.

USED
CARS
'
.

'

1984 FORD TIEMPO ...............:.......... S6595

4 dr., auto., PB, PS, Air. Like new, 23,000 miles.

1978 FORD LTD II............................. S1695

2 dr. Excellent condition. ·

1978.MERCURY COUGAR.................. S1695

2 Dr., PB, PS,

•••••••••~ •.•.•••••.•.•.••.••••.. Sl 19.95
TC HAWKEN •••••."•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• S209.95
'
:• CVA KENTUCKY RIFFLE ................... S169.95
;TRADITIONS FRONTIER SCOUT ........ S129.95
: BLACK POWDER ................................ll-. s5. 95
PYRODEX • CCI • REMINGTON
IWS CAPS • RAM RODS • POWDER HORNS

~ir.

351.

'

·
,.
1977 CHEVETTE ..............................~•• S1295
2 dr., Auto., Runs good.
·

1'975 MAVERicit....................~ ............ S895

2 dr. auto., 6 cyl., one owner. 65,000 miles.

1976 FORD (LUB·CAB •••••••••,............ \.1295

Automatic. Topper.

.

·

1973 FORD F-100 .......................~ ...... S595

Auto., PS.

·

.

\'our t10p will be !NIIy movln' •t top IPM&lt;I '
far HMrty... hlgh t~"llty,' nutrii!OUI, c:hunka

-talnlng • -.,y 21 ~ p!Ot..n oon!enl to
llllp OM your Nn~-wortdng, ~t•ylng •
..-ta atra "*IY Md .,.., IINithl

......,.......

@nation @ppanyl

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

'

....,.

fo~~c~ ~~~~~e~d~Y ~fn~~7 ;r~~!~

~

.

LAUREL CLIFF FREE METHODIST
CHURCH. Rev Robert M1IIer, puror. Ro
bert J:. Barton, Olreetor otChrlattan Edu·
cauon: Lloyd Wrlt:ht, uaiatant. Sunday
SchOOl 9: :m a.m ; Mornln1 worship 10:30
a m.: Choir practice, Sunday &amp;· • p.m :
EveniD8 wonhlp T:M p.m. Wednooday
Pray.,. aDd Bible Study, 7;30 p.m .
DEXTER CHURCH OY CHRIST,
curt• RuaeU Sr., minister. Rick- Ma·
comber, 1\lpt. SWlday School -9: !0 a .m.,
worahlp aervlett 10:30 a.m. Bible atudy,
Tuoadoy, 7:30p.m.
REORGANIZI!D CHVRCR OF JESUS
CHRIST OF LATTI!R DAY SAINTS. Port·
land·Rachl• Road . WtUtam Roulll. pastor.
Linda Evans, chlji'Cil JCMol dlrector.

1969 CHEVROLET 112 TON................... S395

Flatbed.

SUGAR RUN
FLOUR MILLS

110 Mulbetry Ave.

.,

PH. "2·:21 15

Pomeroy, OH.

"'
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-·- -· ·-·- ___
.....

]DJ.

MILLING I;)IVIIlON

."' 11&gt;' ~

,_....

HOLINESS CHURCH.
located on
3~ betweton VInton and
Lan~svllle. Rev. Bt&gt;n Watts, pastor. Sun·
day Sc-hool. 8:30am., BobbyLamtiert, S
s Supt Morning worship 10· 30 a m , cpu
dren 's Happy Hour 6).45 p m. Prayer and
Bible Study. 7 30 p m Missionary meetlna
first Wednesday of each month 7' 30 p m
For Information call 388 8467
SILVER RUN BAPTIST, Bill Llltle.
pastor Steve Lillie. S. S. Supt. Sunday
School 10 a m, Mornln~t worslp. 11 a.m;
Sunday evening worship 7 :JJ p m Prayer
meeting and Bible study Thursday, 7· 30 p
m.: Youth meE-ting Wednesday at 7 p m
CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP CHURCH,'
:J83 N. 2nd Ave, Middleport Sunday
School 10 a.m Sunday and Wednesday
Evening scrvlet'S at 7:30pm. '
CHESTER CHURCH OF GOD, Rev R
E Robinson. pastor. Sunday School9 30a.
m , Worship service. 11 'a .m.; Evening
service 7 p m Mid week service. Wednes·
day, 7 p .m
LANGSVILLE CHRISTIAN CHURCH.
Robert E Musser pastor Sunday SChool
9 30 a.m .• Paul Musser supt : Morning
worship 10 30 a m ; Sunday e.enlni!' ser·
vice 1 7 p m , mld ·wet&gt;k !'iervice, Wednes·
day. 7 p m.
SYRACSE CHURCH OF THE f'A·
ZARENE. Rev. James B Klttl(' , pastor
Sherman Cundiff, supt Sunday School
9:30 a.m .. Morning worship 10 30 am.;
Evangelistic service, 6 p m .. Prayer and
Praise Wednesdav. 7 p m.; Youth meet
ing. 7 p .m.
EDEN UNITED BRETHREN IN
CHRIST, Elde-n ,R. Blakl' 1 pastor. Sunday
SchoollO a m : Robert Re&lt;'d. Supt. Morn
lng sermon, n a ~ -i Sunday night services· Christian EntW&amp;vor7•lJ p .m .. SonR
service 8 p m P!'f'achlnR 8· :.&gt; p .m . Mld·
week prayer meeting, Wfdnesday. 7 p .m .
Alvin Reed layleader
HEMLOCK GROVE CHRISTIAN,
Ro1er Watson, pastor C!'f'nson Pratt,
SllDday School Supt Morning worship~: 30
am.: Sunday Scboo110 lO a.m .; Evening
service, 7· 30 p.m.
MT. UNION BAPTIST, DonaJoJ Sbue,
pastor: Joe Sayre, Sunday School Supt.
Sunday School 9:45 am.; Evenlnl wor·
ship 6: :1) p.m.: Prayer Meeting, 6 30 p .m.
Wedni!Sday.
TIJPPERS PLAINS CHURCH OF
CHRIST. Jody Hollaad, minister Deryl
Wells, Supt. MomiDI worshtp, 8:QO a .m .;
Church School 9:00 a.m.
CHESTER CHURCH OF THE l'IAZA·
RENE. Rev Herbfn Grate, pastor .
Frank Rime, supl. Sunday Schoolt. 30 a .
m.; Worship aervl~. 11 a.m. and 7 p.m .
Sunday. Wednesday, 7 p.m Prayer meet·

suecess, while Eastern Is jus t around the corner from future success.
Also, congratulations to the Meigs and Eastern girls' teams.

Middleport

,

7•00 p m Wt"dnesday pra y~r meeting 7•00
Sunda~· School 9· 30 a m.. Second and
pm
fourth Sunda,Ys wors hip servlct' at 2: 30 p , MT HERMO N UNITED BRETHREN
m
IN CHRI!';T CHURCH, Located In Texas
MT MORIAH BAPTIST Fourth and
Community 9u Ct Rt 82 Rev Robert
Main ~~ Middlepor-t Rev Calvin Minnis.
~ Sanders, pastor DortWIU,layleadet Sunpastor Mrs Elvin Bum~ardnPr. supt.
· day School 9: 30 a m : MornlnR: Worship
Sunday School 9 :II a m ; Worship Sf'rvlce
10· t5 a.m., Evenln!l preac hing ser vice se-.
lO 45 a m
cond and fourth Sunday at 7. 30 p .m .;
SUCC'f:S." ROAD CHURCH OF CHRISTChristian End eavor firs t a nd th ird Sun
JOS&lt;'ph B Hoskin'J. F:van~:::PII,;t Sundav Bibk&gt;
day. 7: 30pm. Wednesdaypra y('rmeeli n~
Studv 9 ,t m . Worship 10 am, Sunday
and Bible Study. 7· 30 p m
('\"enlnJ! SC'r.1('(' m tip m WC'dnrsdav 5E'1"Vk.'t'
JEHOVAHjS WITNESS . ~ :lT.H9 State
7 pm- -· · ~~
Route 12-4 /nne mllf ea!t of Rutland! Sun·
day· Bible !('('lure 9· :11 a m Watchtower
PE:NTECO~i'Al ASSI-.:MHLY , Racine, :
Rt 124 William Hoback pastor Sunday
stud y 10 30 a m , Tuesday, Bible study
7&lt;11 p m ; Thursda) , Theocratic School
School 10 a m . Sunday evening service 7
7· ~ p m Service meeting, 8 '20 p m
P m Wednesday t&gt;venlng servlct&gt; 7 p .m .
CHURCH OF GOD OF' PROPHECY ,
CARPENTER BAPTIST. Don Cheadle,
Located on 0 J White Road of Highwa y
Sup! Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning
160 Pat Henson. pasTor Sunday School10
Worship 10 lOa m Praverservtce, altern·
a m Classt"s for all ag£&gt;s Junior Church 11
;ue Sundays,
am , MorninR worship 11 am Adult
MIDDLEPORT P£NTECOSTAL,1lllrd
Choir pract !Ct' 6 p m Sundav Young PPO·
Ave Rl'V Cl ark Baker. pastor. Catl Not
pte·~ . Children's Church and Adul T Bible
!Ingham, Sundav School Sup! Sunday
~t:O:~~·.~.'....... .,.k:~,-- .. r&gt;;-"%V,i'i. ~.c;:.:r- ~'-~~ Hld JY"u ~~c~,~Pr~ ;:~JIII)g',@$.,.ror
HOPE BAPTlST CHAPEL, 570 Grant
Evenlnll S&lt;'rVIC('S aT 6 p.m. WE"dnesday 81
St . MiddlepOrt. Arrtllated with Southern
ble StHdY at 7 :tO p.m Youth services Frl
1TliiUtlllftillll
Baptist Convention. Sunday School tO a m
day at 7' 30 p m
:liZ Zt
I 57-!11
Sol 1-10
341 ·17
: Morn in~? worship 11 am.: Evening wor
ECCLESIA FELLOWSHIP. l?R Mill St , ,
S.Wrdl)'
Middleport Brofh(&gt;f' Chuck McPherson ·
s hip 7 p m.: Wf'dnesday evening Bible
s tudy and prayer meeting 7 p m
past or Sundav School 10 a m ; Sunday
~ 7 1(1123
BRADFORO CHURCH OF CHRIST, St
evf'nlng ser viCE'!&gt; at 7p m , and WE'dqesda y.
Rt 124 a nd Co Rd 5 Mark SeeVf'rs.. mint s
Sf'rvicM at 7 P m
~ 1 ._._..;:........._.-·?~-c:--VAIIM
ter Sunday School Supl St('ve Pickens
NTIQUlTv-BAVT'IST Earl Shule-r. pas·
Sunday School 9 30 a m Morning wor ·
lor Sundav School 9 30 a m , Church ser ·
!Ohlp 10 lO 'a m Ev('nin~' worship 7 p m
vice&gt; 7 P m Youth meetlnli{. 6 p m Tues·
WN:Ine-sday wor.sh1p 7 p m
da y Biblf' STudy ~I 7 p m
ST PAUL LUTHERAN CHURCH .
FULL GOSPEL LIGHTHOUSE. 3.1045
Corner SycamorE' and Second Sts. p 0 .
Hiland Road Pomeroy. Tom Kelly , pas
meroy Thl' Re v. William Mlddlesv.arth,
lor Dannv Lambert S S Supt. Sunday
pstor . Sunday SChoo! 9. 45 a.m., Church
morni R~t st&gt;rvJ('(' atlO a m , Sunday even
ser vice 11 a m .
ln,R; st&gt;rvlct&gt; 7 30 p m Tuesday and Thurs
services, 7:30p.m
SACRED HEART CHURCH, Mslil'r.
day St'n Ice-s at 7 :wl p m
m.. Worship service 1U:JO 1\.m.;
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST Rev Earl
Anthony Glannamore. Ph 992 5898 SaturWORD OF FAITH . 9~ MIU St .. Mlddlf'· ,
Evangelistic Service 7· 30 p m . Wednes·
Shuler, pastor. Worship service, 9:30am.
day Evening Mass 7 ·3() p m: Sunday
port Richard St{'Wart, pastor. Sunday
day: Prayer meeting 7· 30 p.m Thursday.
Sunday School IO: 30 a m Bible Study and
~a ss, 8 am. and 10 am . Confessions onE'
morninli!: ~uv1ct' 10 am .. Sunday evl"ning ·
ZION CHURCH OF CHRlST, Pomeroy·
prayer service Thursday, 1 30 p.m .
half hour IX'foiT' each Mass . ceo class£&gt;s.
7: 30 Tu(lsday morn In~ Bible study 10 a .m
.Harrisonville Rd Robert Purtell, minis·
THE CARLETON INTERDENOMINA
11 a .m Sunday
Wednl" sdav evenln,ll 7 30 p m. Thusd.ay
ter, Ron Riffle, Sunday School SuperintenTJONALCHURCH, Kingsbury Road Rev .
mornln~ vid('O with Kc nnNh Copeland 10
VICTORY BAPTIST. 525 N 2nd St..
dent Sunday School 9 3{) am , Worship
Middleport Jame!l E Ket&gt;!lff'. pas tor
a.m ., frida y evcnin~ vldro wtlh Kenn@th
David Curfman, pastor Sunday School
service 10 30 a.m , Evening worship Sun9 30 a.m , Ralph Carl, Sup! Evening wor ·
Sunday mnrnlng worsklp 10 a m Even·
Copeland. 7 :\0 P m
day 7 p.m. and Wednesday, 7 p m .
ship 7 00 p.m. Prayer meettng , Wednes tng ser vice 7 p m : Wednesday ~venl ng
NEW HAVEN CHURCH OF THE NA·
ST JOHN LUTHERAN CHURCH, Pine
ZARENE . Rev Glendon Stroud , pastor
day 7· 00 p.m.
, wor ship 7 p m Vi sitati on. Thunday 6 30
Grove The Rev William Mtddleswarth,
pm
,
Sunday School !l·JO a m . Worship service,
LONG BOTTOM CHRISTIAN. Jody
pastor. Church service 9 30 a.m , Sunday
Holland. pastor; Wallace Damewood ,
TRINITY CHRISTIAN ASSEMBL V ,
10 :lOam . Youth !IE'rvicp Sunday 6 15 p ~
SchoollO: 30 a.m.
Sunday SChool Supt. Worship service, 9 a
CoolvillE&gt; Gllbf'rt SpPncE'r, pastor Sund ay
m Sundav ('Vf'ningSC'rvice7 OOp m WE'd .
BRADBURY CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Schoo!~ 30 a m , Morning sE-rvice 1 t a m
n E'Sda~ PrayE"r M{'('lin!i!: and Blblr STudy"
m.: Bible SChoollO am
John Wright, passtor. Sunday School 9: 30
Sunday ('vrnln~ SE'f\ ICE- 7 :J) p m . Mid ·
7 00 P m
HYSELL RUN HOLINESS CHURCH
a.m ., Larry Haynes. S. S. Supt. Morning
wettk prayE&gt;r St&gt;rvicE&gt; Wednesday 7 :W p m
'NEASE SE;'I"TLEMENT CHURCH. S~o~n·
Rev. Thereon Durham, pastor. Sunday
worship 10 30 a.m
MT OLIVE COMMUNITY CHURCH
day aftf'rnoon SE'rvlces at 1 30. Thursday
School at 9: 30 a m.; Morning worship a t
RACINE CHURCH OF THE NAZA·
Lawrence Bush. pastor Max Folmer. Sr
E"ven!ng §E'rvlct's at 1 ~
~
RENE. Rev. Thomas H Collier. paslor.
~::~i~~:*Su~n~d~ay~e~lv~enlngservlce
Sup l Sunday School and Morning Worship
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Mason, W
at 7:30p.m.at7 30
Martha W olfl', Chairman of the Board of
9 10 a.m • Sunday evening servicf', 7 p m ,
Va Pastor Bill Mur..phy Sunday SchooiJO
MISSION at Bald
Christian Life Sunday School 9·30 a.m.;
Youth m('('ting and BiblE' Study. Wedn.:-s·
am. Sunday f'vening 7 ~ p m. Pray('r .
Road 31. Rev
Morning worship 10 30 a m , Sunday
day , 7 p.m
mf'E"tln~ and Blblf' stud y W&lt;:-dnesday, 7: JO
pa!!l1or Re"
evening worship 7 30 p m Prayer meeting
UNITED FAfTH CHURCH Rt 7 on p 0 •
P m EVeryonC' wt&gt;lcoml'
Preaching
7 30 p.m . Wedn('sday
mt'r(,)Y Bv-Pass Rev Robt&gt;ri Smi th, Sr. .
RUTLAND FREE WlLL BAPTIST, Sa '
• LIBERTY CHRISTIAN CHURCH, Dex·
Rev Jam£'s Cundtu, asst pastor.
lf'm Sl ftcov Paul Ta ylor, pastor. Sunday
ter Woody Call, pattor Services Sunday
School 930 a.m; Morn1n~ wor·
School10a.m.: SundavevC'nln27 :l()p.m.:
10 a.m. and 7 p m.
.

~~~~;~~~~!~~~~~t~~~ io;;o.J:. Wrono~~!=!!,_P~~·!,.~Il?! ~:~~=-~·" --·

R~v Ph~llp

The Southeastern ace began her
varsity career as a freshman two
and one-half years ago, and has led
' her team to twti winning seasons.
She led the Panthers In scoring, free
throws, steals and assists the past
two years.
Downs Is the first girl at SEHS to
elier break the 1,00! point barrier.
CQrrently, she Is averaging 24.6
points a game. Her coaches are Don
Barron and Ken George, now It)
their third year at the Ross County
school.
Southeastern, as of Thursday,
oWned a 6-1 record in Its league.
;As a freshman. Downs scored 'Y.fl
points (15 ppg average). She taWed
466 as a sophomOre (20.3 average) .
She was selected to the all·
conference team roth years, and

·

992-3840 r

Pomeroy, Oh.

POifiWOW

,i

CK
SUPERMARKET

SENTINEL

Jo~• f. fllitz
J. •••• hill
"'· ltl-2101

K&amp;C JEWELERS

Downs, then a sophomore guard from Ross-Southeastern, perform her

LY .

·" . MEIGS TIRE
~ CENTER. INC.

CHURCH- Coolville RD
denour, pastor Sunday SchOOl 9 30 am:
worship service 10 30 a m , Bible study
Jnd worship-serv~ednesday,-1-prm-;RUTLAND CHURCH OF CHRIST,
Mark Jones , pastor Bill Nicholson , Sun
day School Supt Sunday Schoo19: 30 a m .,
Morning Worship and Communion 10 30 a
m.
RUTLAND BIBLE METHODIST. Amos
TUlls 1 pastor Jay Stiles. supt. Sunday
Schoo l 9: 30 a m : Morning worship, 10 ~
am, Sunday evening ~rvice 7:00 p.m
Wednesday service 7 p m WMPO pro
gram 9 a m each Sunday
,
RUTLAND CHURCH OF THE NAZA
RENE Rev LloydD Grlmm,Jr,pastor.
Sunday School9 30 a m , Worship !lervlet&gt;
10:30 a.m , Young people's service 6 p.m
Evangelistic service 6: 30 p m Wednesday
service 7 p.m .
MASON CHURCH OF CHRIST, Miller
St .. Mason. W Va. Eugene L. Conger ', ml·
ntster Sunday Bible Study 10 a.m.; Wor·
ship 11 a m . and 7 p.m. Wednesday Bible
Study, vocal music, 7 p m.
LIBERTY ASSEMBLY OF GOD, Dud·
ding Lane , Mason, W.Va. J. N Thacker.
pastor Evening service 7:30 p.m.: Women's Ministry, Thur!da.y, 9::.1 a.m. ,
Wedn~day Prayer and Bible Study, 7· 15
pm,
•
HARTFORD CHURCH OF CHRIST IN
CHRISTTAN UNION. The R&lt;'v William
Campbtll, pa stor. Sunday School 9· :II a
m .: James Hua:hes. supt. Evt'ning service
7 :10 p m Wednsday evening pray('r meet ·
ing 7:Xt m Youlh prayer service ('a«."h
Tuesday
FAlRVIEW BIBLE CHURCH. Letart ,
W. Va . Rt 1, James Lewis, pastor. Wor
ship servi(.'("S 9 3ll a m Sunday SChoolll
a .m ., Evening worship 7 30 p m. Tuesday
cottaKe prayer mwtlng and Bible STudy
9:30 a.m; Worship service, Wednesda\
7:30pm.
OUR SAVIOUR LUTHERAN CHURCH
Walnut -and Ht&gt;nry Sts .• Rawnswood. W
Va . The Rev. Georg:(' C. Weirick. pastor
sunday SChool9 JO a .m ., Sunday wo~hl~
11 a .m
CALVARY BIBLE CHURCH,Iocatedon '
Pomeroy Ptke, County Road 25 ne.ar Flat ·
woods. RE'v. Blackwood. pastor. ServicE's
on Sunday at 10:~ am . and7:30p m . with
Sunday School9· 30 a.m. BlbleSiudy , Wed·
nesday, 7 :JO p m
FAITH FELLOWSHIP CRUSADE FOR
CHRIST, St~ Rl 3.18, AntiQuity. R&lt;'v.
Franklin. Dickens, pastOr, Sunday mornIng 10 am.; Sunday evening 7:30 p .m .
Thunday evening 7 3J p.m.
STIVERSVILLE COMMUNITY BAP
TIST CHURCH. Pastor Robert Byers
Sunday School tO am .; Worship SE&gt;rvi~ 11
a .m .; Sunday evening servlce,7::.J p m ;
Wednt'lday ev.enlng ~rylce 7: :«1 p.m .
INDEPENPENT HOUNESS CHURrn
Inc., Pearl St .. Middleport. Rev . O'Dell
Manley, pastor Sunday School 9: 30a.m ..
Morning woNil'llp lO: XI a .m.; Evenln~
worshlp7 :llp m Tuesday, U :.lOp.m . Wo·
men's
meellna. Wednesday, 7; ~
p m Pra)'l'r and Praise servtce.
RtJTLAND APWI'OLIC' CHURCH OF
JESUS CHRIST. Eld"' J"'llet Mill.,. , 81
. ble Study, Wednesday 7:~ p.m. : Sunday
School tO a m ; Sunday night service. 7 lJ
p.m.
POMEROY WESLEY AN HOLINESS,
Harrlsonvtlle Road David ~ll, pas·
101': Clinton Faulk, Sunday Scllool Supl.;
Sunday School 9:30 am.; morning wor·
shtp. lla .r'n.; Sunday evt&gt;nlna aervlct&gt; 7 30
p.m . Pra)'fl' Meellna, Wedneoday, 7:30 p.
• m. .
SYRACUSE FIRST CHURCH OF GOO.
non-Penlet'OStal. Joy Clark, p81tar. Wor·
ship !lei"VJce SUnday 10 a.m.: Sunday
School n a m . Ev~tn• worship aervtce

P

St •

In~· ~~;~:.ip~~fi~ ; Ev~nriii~-,i~;;;l;:~6 ~

F~~~~·~:'"' ""'"""'C'~"'N'

m P
- nf'9day.--7 p m~FOREST RUN BAPTIST Rrv. Nvte
J?orden, pasto r .. Cornl'llus Bunch. sUpt

nesdav at
7 p.m....Dctnber:J hr:u.Ma¥-Sunda ~@\.ll' nlni---~
Fe-IIO\Io'!O hip 7 P m Junf' lhru September , P m Cktober thru Ma y
' -

r-----------------~----~--~ '

Sermonette
•

"I have learned," Wrote Sophia Loren, "what nearly everyone
learns at some time in life. It Is simply that 'prospect is better than
possession' and that, of all possessions, the material ooes are the
least In value and the mo5t transient." Wbat she says is true; we do
arrive at that point of discovery when material pleasures are
secondary to pleasures d. the mind. Long before we accept the notion
as part of our being, we receive and reject many times what we
consider an "Improbable truth."
Educators have always told us It was so but we somehow
surmised they were just selling their wares. We have heard the
statement from those who have dented themselves the pleasures of
the material but wondered It with them It wasn't just "sour grapes,"
But !hen someone Uke Sophia Loren says "prospect Is better than
possession an4 that, of all possessions, the material ones are the least
in value and the most transient." ... And we say "You know, she's
right! ..
After an, who would know better the value o! material
possessions than one whoSe very desire for even the very simple
things began as one of the poor children In :oiaples ... espectany llOW
that has everything most women would llfVer even hope for. So, with
an abundance o! wealth, Sophia Loren prefers the company of
knowledgeable friends; she prefers learning their languages ...
readtn'g good llooks. This Is no indictment against wealth.
A sufflclent amount Is necessary to enjoy the otber pleasures
. and that amount wtU vary with the lndMdual. But wltell success Is
defined as merely a possession of the material, somebody's ocales
are out of balance. It's true ... we knew an along. We just needed a
little reinforcement, and people lllre Sophia Loren help. -Lee Miller,
Rector, Grace Church.

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~""-lt1:~1i:2&lt;ii

9 am
am
Study Wed··
p m. J unl' thru Sl&gt;ptE'mber

c••

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�.
Rescue workers approaching jet cr8sh site

· Croes ottlclal, said 11 Red ~ been tothesummltolllllmanl"over
A-oo'e'M Preas Writer
rescue workers set up a base camp · ~ timeS" and Flchte haS climbed
LA PAZ, Bollvla (AP) -With at Uranu Mine, at the foot of the, otherpeaks.
·
·~ ~.;;l;l,c::::L"l'r..'!db:;he......Al'g~~'h~-!!:~-. ~-n~!~J!!I~,!fll2.11:"!'~t0tLa
"We have some good,
By PEI'ER McFARJI,EN

·=~~:c~£;E:

*

Felllitn\loLopezd~CastWo',aRed

·' ·

the highest capital In the world and and Susan, passed through La Paz
the approach to !hi: airport Is over on WednesdaY on
way to the
craggy, snowcapped mountain · Par~~guayancapltal,Asunclon.
peaks.
During the tllght thetllght from

··.

·before his plaMed tanding. then lost

their

contact.
Other Americans on the plane
wereWilllB.mKeUy,dlrectOrofthe

Sechesald9neoftheBoUvtansha~
· ., :

·

·

..

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'

~~~::~~~~;;:: ·SE:aS:E ::;:~J;~! =~:::=~;::p !::w~ris:~~r~

·age of .lin Eastern Airlines jet that ferried a U.S. diplomat and five
aboard.
Bolivian mountaineers toward the
craslw!dwJth
~ · .O(!Icla!'! sald there was no hope . Red Cross camp but the· weather
"-·'any0Jiewasallveaooarotlfel30i'lnf"""'l!lterfupteii'th'l!itii'ip.-·" ·--~
m. which crashed Tuesday night Steve ~e. a sgokesman at the
about 1,8Dfeet belowtjlesummltof U.S. Embassy In La Paz, said u.s.
2l,!XXHoot llllmanl Mountain. Eight Consul ROyce- Flchte and the .liYe
Americans were amongthoseonthe experienced cumbers were forced
plane.
to stop at Coanl, short ofthe mine.

~people

Friday, January 4, 1986

Pomeroy-Middleport, Ol'tio

Page-6-The Daily Sentinel

· · .· · By The Bend

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:The· Daily Sentinel·

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Friday, January 4, 1986

. ·,

... · P~I! .. 7 .
·

·:. Skiing··¢a.·'!· cre~ie ...·~u_·titl?et.·. ·_of.injurie.s ff!r.ine. :~p·.erienc~d/·_
exposu~.

"We have several Amertcans' on peaks to climb. And this ttmeofyear whom Karen described as Included Capt. Larry CampbeU,lst
·
·
·
the plane"and we want to check on the problems Increase because of ."spmlcy."
Officer Kenneth Rhodes and 2nd
)'
By Edward
·o.o:· . .
such as frostbite. MOst . pff.:
•. .... ·. .
.
falls ..
anx potential for survivors · and · 'constant drizzle snow and high
The Eastern jetliner disappeared Officer Ma.rk Bird, all based In ·
.
:Aislstant ProfesSor
..
lnjurtes lncuqed du_rlng sk)lng are
· Downhill skiers' a!5o suffer mi!Ry' . . QuESTIQN: What can be done to '
Wnineverthe·'situll1lon ~.apjl61S ro ,.;~ wtnds." --·· '..... ...
~.Ol!..a!llghtfromAsu.'1'!!®to.L!IPgk· _MI~ml, ~,!:;;wt, J.B. J. fk:;::;;,u;·--·~·-~··-· :-.:.;..,~ of.J')Inlll,\'..~I!!!!Jlll!!! . ~- ·" to mu~ciJ!. aq:Q. bon.es.,;::,a.trJl!l~,. .:..J~ fr~ct'!res ~a~t..tllei'_J!Ic~ . preYe~t skiln~ Injuries? · ·. ,_ ·._
be, .. Sechesatd.
·
Among the passengers was Mar- and American and Bollvlan air Miami and Haywood H. I
•
Ohio .University College ···.: . . sprains and fracturt&gt;S•
their bOOts qutte· tightly. When the · · ANSWER: Mak[ng ' silre equip: ·.
1\vo u.s. Embassy vehicles left tan Devts, wife of the u.s.
force omcers sighted the wreckage _ Jr.o!Houston.LosethandHargrove
' · II! Osloeopalhlc Medicine
· · · DoWnhill skiers .suffer at least
skier falls .. hls leg begins 16 bend mentIs In good condition; prperly!lt
La paz carrying proviSions for the ambassadQr jo Paraguay, Arthur Wednesday. The pllot radioed the were not working at the time of the_
· QUE1&gt;TION: My son's learning twlce as many lnjurtes · as cross
over .thi!. stiff lxiot top, and may . for the skiers'' height and 'weight,
rescue team. At l2,1XK!feet,LaPazls Davis. Two of her daughters, Karen
control tower at La Paz 10 minutes crash.
to ski. What should he know 50 he country skiers, largely because of
snap.
·
and correctly ~djusted ls a first
'
·
' · · · · ..
Won't gel hurt while skiing?
the speed at which they travel. A
Skiers often Injure their hand!; .: step . 'The skier also needs to get his
·. :•.
ANSWEit: The~ are approxl·
of Injury for
and arms, too. A common mjury body ready for the sport.
amtely eight mil·· ·
fitted
occurs when a skier falls on his ski
Before gets out to the slopes, a

"
Cross-country skiers also need
stret~h and warm .up ,;,.. the most
commol)· Injuries Nordic · skiers
ei&lt;perfellce~.. oecllf'" b'eC'ause · ·t'Jie~
Ac hill e's tendon Is suddenly
strt&gt;Ssed. ·
Performing a series of good
stretch)ng and warm-up exercises
for . muscles, tendons and joints
right before · skiing just mak~s
common sense. If a skier makes a

;0

~ ;_;:

a busy slope . or
ski resort there
may be four or
five Injuries per
day. Ab(&gt;ut one in
five ski Injuries

..

for lost missile
~Press Writer

. HELSINKl; .. Finland (AP)
Using snowm&lt;ibiles and helicopters,
Fbmlsh border g\lards are search·
tng In · Lapland's round-the-clock
winter darkness for traces of what
may have been an off-course Soviet
missile.

Ahout one out of 11 women will
·develop breast cancer at sometime

navy conducted fh1ng exercises In
the Barents Sea a week ago, .and
"our InformatiOn indiCates It (the
Intruding mlssUe)'was an old SN-3
mtssUe lbat the Soviets are known to .

use as drones.'' .

·

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" ·... ...e:;="''":-r-rm..~~-:-.=~.-"'""'-"-"''""=·

Noiway ls a memberoftheNorth
Atlantic Treaty Organization, and a
NATO sprikesman In Brussels said
6fthe Incident: "We view any Soviet
violation of Allied national airspace
as a matter of serious concern."
·However, some Wt&gt;Stern European officials and analysts stressel)
that thereported Intrusion presumably was accidental. Some diplomatic sources said privately that
reaction was being muted so as not
to "rock the boat" before the
reopening of the U.S.·Soviet anns
dialogue next week . ·

Arsonist sentenced
BOSTON (AP) - A 28-year-old
man who admitted leading a group
of fellow fire buffs In one of the
nation's largestarsonrlngshasbeen
sentenced to a total of up to OOyears
In prtson on state and federal
chargeJ; authorities said.
Donald F. Stackpole of Scituate
was sentenced Thursday to 19-20
years at Walpole state prtson alter
pleading guilty to slx arson counts
filed by state omclals; then was

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1982 BUICK LeSABRE 4 DR. SEDAN ,
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1979 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS SUPREME 2 DR.
1982 CHEVROLET CAVALIER 2 DR. HATCHBACK
. T979 SUBARU STATION WAGON 4 DR.
1981 PLYMOUTH HORIZON 4 DR. HATCHBACK
1081 FORD F~ 100 SHORT BED
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COMPUTER
to

Wolfe
Ajrman Lea M. Wolfe , daughter
of Ron'l)d M. Van Meter of 43949
Hartinger Road, Potneroy, has "
been assigned to .S heppard Air
Force Base, Texas, after complet·
ing Air Force basic training.
During the SIX weeks at Lackland
Air Force Base, Texas, the airman
studied the Air Force mission,
o(ganlzatlon and customs and
received special training In human
relations.
,
Jn addition, airmen who complete
basic training earn .credits toward

390/o 730/o

OFF

Racine.
' The airman Is a 1983 graduate ol
Southern Local High §.chool,
Racrne.

Nott
·
·
Spec. 4. Franklin N. Nott, son of
Naomi D. Nott of Rural Route 2,
Point Pleasant, W.Va., and brother
of Joseph F. Noll of' Gallipolis
Ferry, W.Va ., has been decorated
wlth the Army Achievement Medal
In Plrmasens. Wt&gt;St Germany.
The Achi evement Medal Is

Bend area
Holiday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
DeweY Smith Jr., Racine, and
Lucille Clay, Pomeroy, were Gay
Bush, Grove City; Mr. and Mrs.
Stephan Abdella, Chauncey; Mr.
and Mrs. Rusty Tinkham, The
Phi lns: Janet Ray, Harrisburg;
Juanita Young, Janice Bush, Mr.
and Mrs. Jeffrey Bush, . Jennifer
and Michelle, Athens; Mr . and Mrs.
Kenneth Brewer, Mr. and Mrs.
Michael Wood, Kenneth Brewer II,
Mr. and Mrs. Bill 'l'yre Jr., Steve
and Bill III, Columbus.
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bechtle,
Middleport, enfert~lned with a •
family holiday party attended by
·
Mr.andMrs.JohnA.Bechtle.Mrs.
Mary Ann Davis and Lacey.
Columbus; Mr. and Mrs. Russ
Klontz and Peter, Bremen; Mr. and
Mrs. Darrell Bechtle, John David,

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The airman will now receive
specialized Instruction in tbe civil
. - e ngineering flelll: - - --.
Her husband, Bryan, is I~ son of
Hllt~n N. and Marilyn L. Wolfe of

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Switchable tone/pulse dialIng" . White, t¥43-518. Brown,
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MON.-FRI. 9:00 T0'7:00

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Reg.

A DIYI80N Of' TANDY CORPORATION

In

Battalion.· ---~

In combination. New techniques in
All susp!c!ous- lumps..,sh&lt;luld...OO...-f€eellt years-have-made breasL
b!opsted for a definitive diagnosis- . reconstJ1!Ctlon possible after mas·
even when the mammogram is tectomy, and the cosmetic rt&gt;Sults
describes as normal.
are goop, she said. Reconstruction
Thesocietyrecommendsamam- now has become an important part
mogram every year for asympto· of trea tment and rehabilitation .
matte womel'\ age 50 ahd over, and
a baseline mammogram for those
If we can help you wit h breast
35 to 39. Women 40 to 49 should have self-examination I BSE). or if you
mammography every one-two Yi'· ·want free m.a terial or literature, or
ars, depepding on physical and If you belong to a club or
mammographic findings as well as organization anct want a program
other · risk factors . Jn addition , a . on breast cancer which includes a
professional breast exami nation is film and talk. call !!92·7531 on •.
recommended every three years Tuesday or Thursday afternoons or
·· _,,...~ =-~~
iOFw am~n- •ii w~: a ndevery'ft!a'i· ~ S10p ai th~ office .

Lloyd Wright were Mr. and Mrs.
John Anderson and Kelly, Cam·
bridge. They were joined for · a
famll~ dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Mike
Wright, Tammy and Jasop , Mr.
and Mrs .Ben ·Wright and Jessica ,
and Beulah Ochier, Middleport.

Wolf Pen
Mr. and Mrs. Carl McEli'oy of
Columbus. Mr. and Mrs . PaOI
McElroy Jr., Jeff." Joey and
Jessica, enjoyed their Christmas
Saturday evening and dinner on
Sunday at the homeofMr.andMrs.
Paul McElroy Sr.
Mr. and Mrs. Paul McElroy; Jeff.
· Joey and Jess!ca ,.;ere Cl)rl$tmas
daygut&gt;Stsof Mrs. vernon Blngand
family .
Mrs. Dorothy Reeves, Mrs . Eu·
gene Haning, Ronald, Mr. and Mrs.
Jack Elam, Bill and Carolyr(Mr.

Christmas day guests of Mrs.
Gladys Tuc'kerman.

Mrs. ·Robert Russell were Mat
Ethel Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Doria~
Russell,. M,, and Mrs. Ronaia
Russell, Mandy and Michael, and
Mr. and Mrs . Steve Haggy, Sti?phanie and Brad. Also visiting were
Mr . .and Mrs. Tom Summerfield.

Christmas day guests of Mr. and
Mrs. John R. Murphy a nd Peggy
were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Murphy,
Veronica, Debbie and Robbie, Mr.
and Mrs. John Downs, Adam, Eric ~~!2!.,:~,9:~~o~fJM~ed~in!!!a!.:.._
and Dickie, Trimble, Mr. and Mrs.
John E. Murphy a nd Chris , Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Evans, Tycon and
Jonathan. and Mr. and Mrs. Greg
Davis, Ashley and Joshua.
Christmas day guests of Mr. and

lmlJN'AI\H

Cinema._'?)

.. .

I I

NEW

~f~'~H·•·

.~

ADULTS S2.00 - CHILDREN $l .OO
ALL SEATS $1 .00 FOR MATINEES I
ALL SHOWS TUESDAY :

and Mrs. Paul Darne ll, Jeff and
·Mt:'"·and- Mtr Lesiie

·-----

--

MONDAY

c.t: 387

-In

Lowest ~Vl!rl Do word
prooess • y games, program in
IC.I26-1067

Trustees io. meet

lloy""' bo
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- - . -1111-...

SUNDAY

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Ofllrpuilo (rvtlly 1114 ..... !IIIII ClA 1111 ~~~~111011 al tho long-dllflnct
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. ""'*"" -· ..

SAT. 9:00 TO 4:00

MIDDLEPORT - Rev. Ri·
chard Gieger, Wellsion, will be
speaking Sunday at the First
Presbyterian Church, Middle, port. The service will begin at
1'1:15 a.m.

.

. POMEROY - MeigS Coun·
. ty's Assoclation o( Twonshlp
Trustees and Clerks will meet
. Thursday, 7: ro p.m. at tJie
Senior CIUzen Center' AU county
elected officials are Invited to
attend.

'

'

.

c opan vcr::ata.
In 8eY&amp;rtv HillS

ROYAL OAK - Bellt&gt;S and
Beaus Western Square Dance
Club will sponsor lessons begin·
ning Monday, 7 to 10 p.m., at
Royal Oak Park Recreational
Building. ~nstruc'tor John
Waugh. For information, call
992-2500, 992·7261 or 992-7477.

.
..

~

He Is a l!lro graduate of Point
Pleasant High School.

POMEROY -Meigs mothers
EAGLE RIDGE -The Meigs .
are Invited to'attend the Monday
Coun&lt;y Foxchasers"&lt;Assoctatlon
night meeting of the Point
wlil' meet Frtday at 7 p.m. at
Pleasant LaLeohe League, 3003
their clubhouse on Eagle Ridge.
L
Brook Drive, Point Pleasant,
7:30p.m. For more Information,
POMEROY - REACT wlll
contact Elaine Matheny. 675meet Friday, 7::ll p.m . at the
4439.
Senior Citizen Center. New
omcers will take office at thls
'rt.JESDAY
meeting. Regular meetings will
POMEROY - The Pomeroy
be · the 'first Friday of each
Area chamber of Commerce.
month. New members are
wlll hold Its monthly meeting
welcome.
'TUesday at' noon at t~ Meigs
Jnn. Scheduled gut&gt;St speak~r
SATURDAY
wlll be Dr. Ciodus R. Smith of
SCIPIO _Scipio Fire Depart·
Rio Grande &lt;;allege and Com·
ment will have a shooting
munlty Coll~ge. All members
are urged to attend.
·
match, Saturday, 11 .a.m. at
Pagevllle behind the townhouse.
WEDNESDAY
Events are 12 guageoniy factory .
MQRGAN .CENTER -Rev!· .
choke. luck and pattern shot.
val services wlll begin Wednes·
Shells'furnlshed, food served. • • • day and continue lnlieflnitely at'
' ·
the Morgan Center .Christian
Holiness Church, Morgan Cen·
HARRISONviLLE - Harr1·
ter: Rev. Ralph Spires will
sonvllle Lodge 411, F&amp;AM, wlll
conduct the service which will
hold its regular stated meeting
be@1 at 7:00 p.m. nightly.
Saturday evening, 7:30 p.m., at
Various singers will be featured
the temple. All masons are
throughout the revival.
welcome to attend.

•

a30fo.
Off

to

Nott is a tr~cked-vehicle mechanic with the 66th Maintenance

FRIDAY
POMEROY - Meigs County
Pomona Grange will meet Fel·
day at 8 p.m. at the Rock Sprtngs
Grange Hall. Harrisonville
Grange wlll be host for the
meeting. All officers are asked to
be at the grange hall by 7: 30 for
an entrance rehearsal.

Trlm-Fo~®

Only At

not cancer, but only a physician can
make a diagnosis. ·
The American Cancer Society
and the National Cancer Institute,
-ln'thelr joint Breast Cancer. Detec·
tlon Demonstration program, .
found that mammography - a
low-dose x-cay examinatiOn ·--'
could find cancers too small to be
felt by the most experien.ced
examiner, Michael said.
· Besides Its effectiveness in
screening women wlthout symp·
toms, mammography Is recognized
as a valuable diagnostic technique
(or women who dQ have findings
-suggeshve ofofeast cancer. Once a "

Calendar

AL~MSISCANNER/CB

STOP IN AND SEE FOR YOURSELF, WE H~VE '
A GREAT SELECTION OF 1985 MODELS

301 EAST MAIN ST.

for those over 40, Michael said.
Several methods are available In

_Meigs County personal happenings_. _ __

FOUR GENERATIONS- 'Ibis foilr-generatton picture was taken on
Tiffany HaD's first birthday, Dec. 1tTiffanylsheld herebY,hermother,
. Teni Hall, with Tiffany's grandmother, Martha Fo~, le(t, and her
great:grandmolher, Martha Hwmel. ..

·(All Vthiclts Locally Owned)

OLDS.-CAD.·CHEV.
PH. 992·6614
POMEIOY, OH.

M~li::ine , Grosvenor Hall, At~ns,
Uhld 45'101.

l)'lQ)',e

.

1011/o
...

recommends the monthly breast · breast lum p is found, mammoself-examination (BSE) by women graphy can help determine If there

man of the Meigs County Unit of the
~-Americ-an -Cancer Society.
Breast cancer Is the leading site
of cancer deaths In women. It Is
Important to note breast changes
that persist such as a lump,
thickening, swelling, dimpling skin
lrritatlml, -distortion, retraction or ·
scallness of the nipple, nipple
discharge, pain or tenderness.
lfyouareover50,haveapersonal
or famlly history of breast c.a ncer,
or never had children, or had the
flrsf child after age 30, the chances
of getting breast cancer are hlgller,
she said.
The ·"American Caneer ""SoCietY ·

1$~~~~~~~:\tj

.AT SIMMONS

I

chilly· rtde up the ski lift, and then
jumps off and begins · to sk

L..,-!d~ur~!~n;g"tc!~~lr~ll~v~e~s~,a!fcf"co'o"r~d9!1n~g~t'!"o"JS". .~20~yueabJrt.,s~andtd.-Jo~ld,ed.r.ba"s",.a,ro.uu,111"'ne~~
~""=""a~!re,;,.,o,;utht;;e:i:ror~l;:,es~~lo1t_;n~stuct,.;t;;.~~_;;,sa~m;;,e~o1jr_~;;.tre:;;,a;;;tm;ent ofmethodS
breast cancer. Often
.m ay be yr..,ed
'ol'--~

"' ~· 'i'in:- " C~J~1~ ' ~rri~1W:a'7t.~~ ·

However, Danish intelligence range tactical weapon capable of
sources said Thursday that the carrying nuclear warheads. It flies
object p~bably was a drone missile at relatively iowaltitudesand,cait be
fired by a Soviet warship for use as a launched from the ground or from
)lll.tmlar!Pes.
·
target during a training exercise.
Capt ...Pertti Kolvlstoofthe border
FJnnlsh border guards have been guard headquarters In Rovanleml,
coinbing the rugged . snowbound about 190 mlles south of the search
wllderness·pf the country's far north area, said the search was being
for. the. projectUe, but- the non· conducted under dHftcult conditions
Including below-zero
allgned government in Helsinki as temperatures.
yet has refusetl to characterize the
·'The search area Is 10 mlles from
object as a missile.
ihe Soviet border near Lake Inari.

··--=

I

..

The SN·3ls a 1954-vintatie misSile
capable of carrying t;Onvent;mal or
nuclear warheads but used by the
·~ ~SoViets
mostly for drones; said the
Norwegian officials say the ob- soUrce, wh6 spoke on condition ol
ject, tracked by radar on Dec. 28,
anonymity.
·
· ·
may •have been a Soviet cruise
He said. that after themlsslle's jet
missile and are . protesting to engines take over propulSion from
Moscow because the low-flying
Its booster rocketS, the drone
!lrojectlle passed through Norway's ·
navigatt&gt;S according to !Is program
airspace before disappe"1lring over but can be forced to crash on
Finland.
command.

groups In the lower extremities,
back and shoulders .

'

m~s,

Exams ~an mean early . detection of cancer

one Druush source said the Soviet ·

By RISTO MAENPAA.

---

poles often also are responsible for
the cuts and bruiSes suffered durtng

the bindings so
that when he
falls or his skl ·twlsts, the binding
does~'t releaSe qulcki)1'and twl,stlng
Injuries rt&gt;Sult. Every skier should
pay special
to ad)Jlstlng
Ski bindings
before setting

:

away,

aggre5slveiY' righ;
•hls
.
cles· and joints wlll be unpJ;&lt;ivared · ·
for the stldden demands ·. being
made on' thein:" ~ ""' - · - ·
A lew mlnutt&gt;S of warm -up before
the descent can keep a downhiij
skier . from week!; of hobblln~
around on crutches!
· "Farr!ily Medicine" Is a weekly
column. To submit questions, write
to Edward Schreck, D.O., Ohio

•

BI:'VERI~f

1-IIIJ.S.

~~
-

COMING SOON: "THE RtiER' I
"NICKY l I&lt;AUDE" - -

RECOONmON - PaUy Dyer, master of Star Grange In Meigs
County, prellellts Jom ~or Nelson with a gold sheaf cerilflcale for 50
years of oonllnuous membenlhlp In Star Grange.

Cardshower

~------------~

.being planned,

REMEMBER
WITH FLOWERS

Mrs. Nina Hart, woo spent most
of her Ufe In Meigs County, wilt.be
celebrating her 93rd birthday on
Jan. 10. Cards may be sent to her at
the WOolfslae\'lllage Care center;
Marion Road, MI. Golead, Ohio

r. •...11'1 ~

bc-~ "ul u llr Jr,•,.:rl&lt;.J

f11nrral
I"~ '

~rrJnJ.: •·•nc:no ,

\JI I ur ,.,,,.

POMEROY
FLOWER SHOP

"l'hr , .... ........~ins~""' '- "',.··
P'tl. tH-2CIU 01 9t2-11Zf

43338.

BEGINNING CLOGGING CLASSES

Over...the-Counter Remedies'
There are timet when over.. the-counterremedies can serve your
health need.. Pleue feel &amp;ee to uk' our pharmaoiot about our
oele~;don of non•preocriptioa producu that are readily a..u.
able. We are 'profealonalo who care about your sood health. '

.

----------------4-~

SUNDAY I JAN. 6th
2 to 4 P.M.

SlUISHER LOHSE
f' f· a r n1 a c .,.

~.....~

Pomeroy Village Hall
Call for. info: 992-2622 or

992~6720

lktlftouall. I.Pil.
et.t.. llttllt. R.P• .
IOftltd HHnin' R.P•.
Mon. tttru SM. 1:00 un. to 9 p.m.

Sunllay lOJO a.•. to 12:30 p.m. and t to I pJn.
PRESORIPltONS
PH . 992·291!

hst ltin St.

friendly ,$1Aict

·

~--~- ()pen !i~!.!'!!}

PoMeroy , Otl.

,.

••

•

I

l

I'

_______ .J

•

I

'

'r

_ _ _.....,....,.

�.·

•

'

'

•

'
Pomeroy-Middleport.
Ohio

~· a:..:..The·Daily Sentinel

Friday. January 4, 1986

AbQrtion clinics..
alerted to threat

•

- ,_- Ohio Briefs:

,

Administrator search continues

•

COLUMBUS, Ohio . (AP) _
Warned by an anonymous caller to
the Washington Tlriles newspaper
that an antl·abortlon cllnlc In Ohio ·
would he the next target of an
•
extremist ant1-abortlon group s
bombs, pollee and cllnlc operators
throilghout the state
taking
· spEcial precautiOns: ~
, · ,_

COLUMBUS . (AP) - . Ohio State Unlverslty.'s search for a

biotechnology director has come up empty, and university atll\!lals
$aY lt could jeopardize. plans to locate agenetic engbleerlngcenteron

. · ,
-~
"So far as I know, we're back to sq·
one. There was one
candidate, but he sort oftw'ned lt down." sal William Jensen. dean
of lbe 6su College or -Biological Sciences.
r ·
·

'lbe west campus. .

are

-.~····~· !·~ ~=;:.1~:~--:~~;~;:;~~~·:::~~:·t"';
OSU President Edw;ml Jennings. The report urged lbe hlrl!tg of a
:•sentor, research-oriented, InternationallY '~ scientist" as
dlrector to give the program prestige and help In recruiting.
A faculty search comrnlttee last sununer recorrunended twQ
candidates, one of whom was offered the job. But George T. Tsao of
:Purdue University said the otfer was withdrawn after he questioned
~~

:;

Although there have been no
threats agalnsl spe&lt;;lllc OhiocUniC$,
Michael Angel, with the Bureau of
A)cohol, Tobacco and Firearms In
Cleveland, ~ agents are concen·
the Akron area.

' 'V ,,':" '

'

.Three newspapers p_u~c~ed
GREENFIELD (AP) :._Jack Schiuep, president and pubUsher of
The Greenfield Times. says he has bought the dally newspaper and
two affll!ated weekly publications.
Schluep said this week that he pure~ the Times, The Leesburg
Citizen ailit The Lifncl)burg N~ tro111 ihe...£..C..Hm~_famlly,
wlilch has oWiied the Times since 1932 and the Leesburg and
Lynchburg papers· since 1972.
.
Schluep has been associated with the Hartleygroupofnewspapel'S
,
.
.
since 1955.
The late C.C. Hartley bought The Greenfield Times In 1932. Under
his guidance, the then-weekly pubUcation became the first dally
newspaper In Highland County.
The Times Is a five-day-a-week .,afternoon newspaper. The
Leesburg and Lynchburg newspapers are once-weekly Thursday
publications. All three are printed on the facWties of the Greenfield
newspaper.

Out-of-court settlement
COLUMBUS (AP) - The suit that prompted Ohio's first trial
Involving the Dalkon Shield Intrauterine contraceptive device was
settled Out Of COurt for an undisclosed amount, an attorney for the
plaintiff says.
Nell W. Rosenberg, attorney for Rosalie Nunley, l'i, of Glouster,
said Thursday that the A.H. Robins Co., the shield's maker, settled
Ms. Nunley's case and four others. He would not reveal terms of any
settlements.
Nunley's $6.5 million suit, filed In U.S. District Court In 1982, went

·m
·

LUcKY WINNER - 'Whell the 8IIOW lllarts1a111Dgln Melp Coody,
Dorothy Smith of Racine, seated, wm be otug 8lld wartn al home, busily
mflllllngawayoohernew .... '!'r"_,.....,, _ _...,was
.,..,.......,.
P
P
' 8 Fahrlc"'-durln 118
wlnneroftbl8 newmaclllne, Kfven by omeroy
~.....
g
recent Cbrlstmas promotion. Dorothy teams to Operate the machine as
. Fabric Shop employee 'Becky ~denon looks on;

-·•- ___._.__ ..-..-- the---........

:::=.asecurltymeasureswith
'The Cincinnati Enquirer, quoting
unldentllled pollee and abortion
clinic sources, reported Thursday
· that pollee have arranged speCial
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) -A man 'may not have been .the fatal one, . patrofs ofcllnlc bulldirlp and have
charRe!l,WUI;l)&lt;illinl( a,..clty 2Jl~__Jhere Is sufflctent basis uoder state prepared Illes of home telephone

officer stlll Inay -face

a niU.roer-

·Brown, Coleman face sentencing
DAYTON (AP) - Alton Coleman and Debra Brown are to he
!lelltenced at 8 a .m. Monday on a federal kidnapping charge.
Coleman and Ms. Brown; both o!.Waukegan, Ill., pleaded guilty on
Nov. 26 to charges of kidnapping Ollne Cannlcal Jr., a Kentucky
college professor who was abducted from a motel parking lot on July
16 and found unharmed ·the next day, lOCked In his car trunk In
Dayton.
A third person charged In the case, Thomas F. Harris, 33, of
Lexlilgton, Ky., pleaded guilty on Dec. 14 and also awaits sentencing
by U.S. District Judge Walter Rlc:e. The federal kidnapping charges
·Carry a maximum penalty of life in prl!lon. ,
· Coleman and Ms. Brown a,e wanteo:~ for questioning or have been
Charged In a series of crimes that occurred In a six-week pertod In
Ohio, Ket1tucky, Ililnols, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Intllana. Those
crimes Include abductions, robberies, and murders.
They have been Indicted on murder tharges with death penalty .
~lflcatlons in Toledo and Cinclnnatl, but have not yet been tried. ·

u.s. 35 rerouting announced ..
'

DAYTON (Af') - The Veterans AdmlnlstrattOn Iii Washlnglon
has approved a proposed rerouting of I.).S. l'i through VA center
grounds, Dayton o(f!clals say.
.
The approval means that acquisition of land .tor the highway · ·
project could begin next spr!Dg, once ail envirOnmental Impact study
.Is completed.
The 0.5. 35 project, which will provlde an east-westroute through
the city, has long been conslden!d a key to economic development In
the western part of Dayton.

- ..

'

\

Year entered without contracts
DAYTON (AP) - Teachers, (iollce ofllcers and county public
sernce wm kei s 1n Dayton have eatered ll)e new year without
contracts,
.
11ie contract between the 0.)'11111 Education Alaoclation and the
dty's achool board expred Monday. Both llldeihaveaped to call fn

a lederal medial« to help resolve dltferences.
Contracts with abo!Jt alx other unions Iepl enilng about l.IIX&gt;
non-teacbln&amp; ~ allo expbed Moaday, although neaotJatlons
"are an still open" and are expect.!d to remain open, said flohert s.
Weinman, the schoQl district's lll8latant superintendent ror
employee relations.
'

laWtO ptess1:h"'e-cDarge·oi"Wanton

nwnbel'Slo,-~cwu1:-up:n:.-~·
'Q1e newspaper said Cincinnati·

•

Box, 326
. Pomeroy. OH, 45769
For faster Service

pe&lt;4pb ·'.";'~--e ·"'-'e-'~,t~~-:-:

evidence was to he presented at
Mcintosh's arraignment today In
Campbell District Court. Buthesaldthere Is a Kentucky law that says
causing the death or an Individual
through "wanton conduct" also can
he grounds for a murder charge.
"Even though Mcintosh's shot

"':~:;;

"lt'sasltuation
crossfire, and It could happen
anytlme.;yoli 've got lll:!lll~ slloo!lng
back and forth at each other. It
doesn't make It any easier on the
family or the otficers who were
!Iring the shots. It's a fatal mistake
either way."

Police slowdown takes effect

_ ..

"The decision to lcDe the welded
pipe operat!Ol\11 In Aliquippa and to
concentrate production ol products
ln Youngstown and Counce was
reached only after a thorough study
to detennlne which of our mills
could compete most effectively In
market heavlly Impacted by im·
ported pipe and low demand," Hoag
safd.
•
He said the company In the
negotlatlolis tried to come ~p with a
plan In which LTV Steel would
oj)erate the Aliquippa contlnuoos
weld factllty In a combined effort
with its Youngstown operations.

a

CINCINNATI (AP) -City pollee,
·
broiled In
"It hasn't been discussed on the
em
acontractdlsputewith lodge noor, and wedon'tbttend to,"
the city, are Issuing considerably he said. "The tags have been down
fewer traffic tickets than usual, an before. They'll come back,"
act that Mayor Charles J. Luken .--------------w-ho_ll..,.Y_owned
_ _ _s_u_bs_idl_ary__:._ot_L_TV
_ _ _ _ _ _ __.__ _ _.....:._
wants to challenge as an Illegal
strike.
13e&lt;;ause Ohio's 1983law on public
employee unions forbids work
992~2156
slowdowns, Luken said Thursday
Or Writ• OtlUy S.tilltl ClnsiUtd Dqt.
"there's very llttledoubt that within
lll Court St., PINMray. Ollie 4S769
the meaning of the law, the police
are engaged In a strike."
Figures from the city safety
department show that pollee wrote
only 1,435 traffic tickets Dec. 26-31,
tt .........
nc.. ,., ..... ,.........,..
f :ln.il.fl•·•lt'"lf''• '"''''' Jllr•
compared with 3,002 In the period
fullmf'IH/f lr•lt'llhiiiU' j•.tr·hllll..,•• ,,,

The Daily Sentinel

PHONE

.........
..........
........_.
,,..................
,....
lf~

.,...,..
......................

Dec.5-10.

Luken called on city councll
. Thursdaytoflleacor:nplalntwiththe
State Employment Relations Board
charging the Fraternal Order of
Pollee with an Jllegal strike. The
matter was referied to Qty Man·
ager Sylvester MillTay.
Councilman J. Kenneth Black·
weU said the tllbtg of a charge
"probably will escalate Ill will and
put pubUc safetY at evm gr~ater
risk.''
"This Is lite wrong time to polarize
things," Councilman Guy c. Guck·
enherger added. "We have to
negotiate with the 'union, not fight
with them." .
FOP President Elmer Dunaway
denied that pollee are Involved In an
Wegaf slowdown.

"'""''~

I

CARS

I

I Mum!EN1S I
I REAL UIAIE I

W14JE 9CI19960 .
.
Sale of the security listed

Correction
Due to an editing error In
Thursday's &amp;!ntlnel, · the caption
under the photo of Terri Long, new
tax administrator for Pomeroy,
should read tliat she lives m the
lamlly !ann with her husband,
Richard Long, and a 15-year.ofd
stepdaughter, Teresa.

I

The folloWing described •tem
w1ll be offered for public sale to
the hrghest bidder on the 17th
day of January 198:6 atr ten
o'clock a.m.
197 9 dodge 8 swepllme
P•Ck ··u p ser
No

992-2156

above will be held on the
prer:mses of The C•ty Loan and
Savrngs Company, 125 East
Ma1n Street. Pomeroy.' Ohio.
Terms of Sale: Cash
Seller reserves the nght to bid
and the nght to reJect any and
all bids. Prior to the date of sale
~rrangeme~ts may be made tO
lnst~ect th1s trUck .by calling
992-2171 betv..&gt;een . the hours
of 9:00 A.M. and 5:00 P.M.

1114, 1tc

,•

3305 JACKSON AVE.
lMAJL ~ HOlliS,
...., 3 p.oo,-S p.m.•.
TutMoy 6:30 p.oo.-1 p.m.
I p.oo.·S p.01.
I p.nL•l p.m.
friWt I p.m.-2 p.m.

w-,
Thor...,

THE

BISSELL
CONSTRUCTION'

COUNTRY.
CLUB
~..
CHIISTMAS

·

SALE

(

. .,

·· "

-

CluhL............ - ....... 15.151f
Puttm ......... _ ....... IS.SJO
lag§-................:....1 I I ,110
Htad Co•ors ........... 16-111
GloYH .......................13.17
lolls..................... IJ.SJ.SO
Shaos ................ ~ .. 130.S50
Grips ltplactd ....'Ilk S2.50

Cuatom Built ·
. HOJ!!tl and Siding

·· Blown In ·Insulation -

"Frie Estimates"

8co11ofiA8 lllo•e 9nculatlo• 9ac.
a,.J,.-e, Ohio

C.R , NEWMAN, PrelldM11

HHU-75'4

,

TROMM EXCAVATING

' 'DOZER · BACKHOE .

"' ,..•.

GARAGE

St.RENTtL
Rt. 160 ,,..

Television Listening Devices
Computerized Hearing Aid Selection
Swim Molds • lnterpretinc Services

ltlllpolli, •lo

• Rt. 124,Pomeroy Ohio·

Your House CI~!J!.e~UJ
Weekly,

LEE CODNER
949-2030
·
12:31.1 mo.

J-lt'ttc

218 E. 2nd St.

Phone

' 1-1814)-992-3326

.

'

NEW USIING - 0.... 1,000
leet ol river rrontage, ideal lor
campin' 3 bedroom home,
bath &amp; 2 drilled wels. $32,000.

NEW LISTING - lnsu~ted, 6
rm~. 1\!stories, bath, TP water,

Public Notice

o -. s.rtlhFi.....
End of II. 7

Remodelinc
Insurance Work
CustQ.III Pole Bldts.
&amp; Ullllll
Roofin1 WOfk
Aluminum &amp; Vinyl Sidin1s
. 1&amp; Yeare Experience
GREG ROUSH
PH. 992-7583

or 992·2282
II ·I·Hc

BOGGS

SALES &amp; SERVICE

8-13 tin

DECEMBER PRICE BUSTER
Tht DISH: Commander 8' $tu1 Alllllituii
Tht FEED: ci!Dparral robstor 1
·
Tht RECBVER: Dexcel DXP-1100-01
AFC; Stereo, Card Remote Control

Batt ~alue

U. S. RT. 50 EAST
GUYSVILLE, OHIO

011

the Market Todlf

_ (2 Yr. Factory Warranty)

The PRICE: ·s1295oo .

Authorized John Dure,
New Holland. Bush Hoc·
farm Equipment

(Plus Tax and Installation)

Dlllir

ly Meigs High School
Tum ttlt, tnt• Twp. J9, ht
*lnway en rlaht.
"11/30/1 mo.

6 week old puppiH to 1good
homo. Coll814-2!8·1881 .
- - - - - - ·lc~ftc4
Two small pupP'•• to give
ilwey. . Pert Poodle. C•ll
614-992-2008 and aik for

11

Help .Wantecl' .

',

Account Clorl&lt; II ." ....,Y
•10.140-•11.024 onnuolly

,
,

depending on qu•llflcetlone. ~
Mullt bo f!lmltlor w1t1t gon- ;
orol occouritlng prindploo ,
and d81A proe~ulng equip· ·

ment. Apply City Buldlng,
&amp;11·8ocond
J•nuery 4,

Bov.. Scouts of Am•k:ll··

odult oppllcantt for Ml.mm.or
c.mp di~or, program di-

rector, buJIJ'ItH m•n-aer,

cooke, lifegu•rd. JuM 1 8·
July 27. Apply 733 7th

Ave . , HuntingtOn , Wv
2&amp;701 .
Babysitter to w•tch 3 _..II
qhlld,en in our hom.: Mon . .

thru

Fol., 8:0oAM \O
'lleferenc'•• · re·
qulrod. Coli 448-1418 betwo.., 8 :00PM-8:00PM ,
&amp;:OOPM~

.•

Relieble b8bylitter Wanted
In m.v harM on ·Riiccoon Rd
for 1"h yMr _ old, prefw
referencea. Cell 44S·.3'43t .

ARMV .
Enliat, end you hrle ·e
p•n·tlme ce,.er, educationll •nd retirement benetFemale Doberm•n hill been Its, •36.000 Hte lotur~nc8 ;
apiyect, •pprox 4 ye•rs old, AND A MONTHLY PAY·
good wotch dog. 304-882 - CHECK. 876-3960 Of I·
800·842-3119 .
2766 or 882-2712 .
12

Situation•
Wanted

''

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

New Holllts-htensive

10·6·111:

Tues.-Wtd.-Fri.-Sat.
&amp; Sun. 10 to 5·
Mondays 10 to I
Clastd Thursday

Real Estate
'

l11cine. Oh.
Ph. 614-843.-5191

The Coa•t~ Loft
81FT SHOP, · .
Is Now Ope11

TEAFORD.
1
'

CONSTRUCTION

UTILITY BUILDINGS
Siz•s from 6'•6' Up · ·
~ · fo 24'i36'
.
Insulated Doc Houses

P&amp;S BUILDINGS

~upploo, I wnkt old . Coli
'614-268-la&amp;&amp; otter IPM .

2 Collie dogs, 10 mo. old
m•le. 3 l'Hrl old female .
Coli 675-5079.

'!-!~_-!1 ,:L:;;
ic~~·. ~n!.~se~•. C!i~lca.', Audiologist

Sizes Start From 12'd6'

If You Need

•

11\l i ll~

1·15-'

AL[STEEl &amp; .
POLE BUILDINGS

-CLEAN

GIV&amp;jiWIV

1 mole ond 1 lomolt puppy,
call 304-876-3097.

LISA M. KOCH. M.S.

llV5CI' HJ;)l:J'f'

.'

·Mrl!l• t•n 8t while dog. 8
montho old. port-Collie port
1. Good watch· dog, 304·
678·1133 .

_b _____ lL.-..-11

AUTO &amp; TRUCK
·REPAIR
Also T•••••l~tloll
Pll. 992·5682
or 992·7t2t

HAULED
.

AUTO

JIM CLIFFORD

4

2 •dor•bl• fem•l• pupa, 9
weeki old, need to ... to
approctote. 61 4·448-0059 ,

U-SA~E

"DUMP TRUCK SERVICE

'CONCRETE WORK

Club ovory Sunday, I :PO
p.m . Featory ohooked guno
only,
·

B~nd• . ~

PH. 742-2328

"W• R11t hr l111"

'OIL FIELD' seRVICES

992,7201

-~·

446-4522

"RECLAMATION WORK

PH.

LIMESTONE
----

RENT A CAR
·CALL

OIL LINES

3/11/tlc

~

FOR FREE ESTIMATE
POl . PLEASANT

'CUSTOM BUILT HOMES

NO SUNDAY CAllS

'

J .R , KING, S•I•Ri!'llrftefltltlvt

J&amp;F
.CONTRACTING

Gun afloat at Racine Gun

G•rm•n Sh•pherd~ pupa.
Coli otter &amp;PM, 441-8290 ;

INSULATE YOUR ATTIC
qR WHOLE HOUSE

"WATER, GAS A

949-2801

JOHN TEAFOID '":."·

SUIGIIY lY .PPOtllf.NT
12-3-lfn

WNERS·COR Nl NG
· FIBERGLAs .

6:30 P.M.
Factory Choke .
12 Gauge shotcuns
Only

CaiJ; 742 .. ~'"'

6

Loat and

Found
'

· LOI;T: 2 Slbarltn H~llcy -In
Ewlngton vicinity both hove
1 blue eye &amp; 1 brown eye.
Reword . Coli 814· 388 ·
9939.

Will tlrk• ctr• af P•tlentl In
their ho~o. 6 doyo o wMI&lt;.
h8ve retlrencat. can 6 1'4·
446·0635.
.,. ' '
Ride ne8ded · to Rio . Gr8nde
College, d8y cleeae.:. w•l

holp with u••·
2629 .

Col~ ·

.•

448-

Loat: female be•g~ in vicln· Have, wcen'cy ..in n,y 't:totne.
ltv of Mudeock ... Reword . who need peraon•l ct~re . Call
Coli coHect 814·817' 5904 814-992-8022 .
or 817-8331.
- - - - --'---.:_

.

'

FOUND: Booglo dog otroyod
into my home Dec. 10th

dorl&lt; brown-ton 4 whlto foot,
whlte lip of leU. c.oller onlY
ond no tog. Coli Clinton
Smith, 448·2529.
LOSTfomolo Pitt Bull, block
with wh~e chollt. rod collar,
M•in Str"t, cell •tter 8,
304-871-3419.

15

•,

Schools
Instruction .

•

FOUND blk ond white puppy

F•r• E~ulp••••
P1rt• &amp; Servlee

•pprox 3 montha old, G•lll·

.polio F....,. phone 304-8766128 opr 876·1188.

Beginners guiter leuoila in
your homo. Coli 446-3126,

I·S.tft

LOST molo Sliver groy Poodlo vicinity of Pontoooto
Plant, 304·676·2288.

automatic heat and1arge level

17 Misce.Uane. ous .

lot in TuppetS Plains.

AMEND.. OIRDINArice
497, by tho Council of the
Villag11.. of_ Pomeroy,- all
memben: thereto concuning:
Sec 1 That the off1ce of th e
Vrllage Treasurer of the V1llage
of Pnmeroy. !lnd the oll•ce of
the V1llage Clerk of th e 'lllllaQ.Qof Pomeroy. shalt be c:onibm ed
1nto one off•ce to be known as
Clerk-Treasurer .
Sec 2 . Th at th e sala ry of th e
Cl erk- T r easurer sha ll be
S8400 00 for the year. and 1n
add1110n th ereto the ClerkTreasurer shall be en titled to all
other henef•ts prov•ded arrv
other employees ot the V1llage
of Pomeroy under •ts 1nsurance
prog ram s
Sec 3
That a copy of th•s
ord1n ance shall1mmedrately be
. cert1f1e&lt;;i to the Board of
Etec!IQn of Me1gs County, Oh1o.
not•fy1ng satd Board of the sa1d
corrib1 natron of sa•d off•ces to
be known as th f! Clerk ·
Trea surer
Sec 4
Thin the Clerk·
Treasurer shall be elected for a
term of fou r yea rs'com men.cmg
January 1, 1984 .
Sec 5 That thrs Ordmance,
1s hereby declared to be an
emergency ord1nance ne.:eS·
sary for the •mmed1ate preser·
va\l on of the pubt•c safety •n a
sard V1lla gc of Pomeroy and
shall go 1nto 1mmed•ate effect
and to be retro-ac t1ve to

---

S~vler

MAYOR

ATTEST· Jane Wai!On
CLERK-TREAS.

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

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

LETART - Renovated 8 rm.

family !lome. New ltjtchen,
carpeting and hot air heat ·

RACINE - An investment or
handyrl]an's opportunity. AI ·
utilities and oile acre.

45 AC~ES - HuntetS or ff you
would like to build your home
in lhe CDuntryc All mineral~
$17;000. '
'

Housing
HP.:•rfQtJt!!fcrs

~4 Misc. Merchandise

PROBATE COURT OF '
MEIGS COUNTY, OHIO
ESTATE OF OSCAR BAB·
COCK, DECEASED
No. 248114 Ooc:bt 12
Page 469
NOTICE OF
APPOINTMENT
OF FIDUCIARY
On De cem~er 28th. 1984. rn

c-

the Me•Qs Gounty Probate
Court. Ca!'&gt;e No 24664. Sta·
rl•ng Massa r, Route 1. Reeds VIlle. Oh1o 45 772 was apPOinted E)Cecu tor Of the estate
of Oscar Babcock.. deceased ,
late of Tuppers•Ptntns. Oh•o
Rob~Ht E Buck.
Probate Judge

lena K Nesselroad.

1114. t I. 18 3tc

Clerk

HOME.LITE
CHAIN SAW

F•~t~tg Sp•~l•l•
ON SAlE AlE
SUPEI 2-14"

240-16"
240-11"

1150
lEG. PIICI f31US

w. ,.. $219"

MGM FARM
EIJY · INC.
01110

MILLER .
ELECTRIC
SERVICE'

CARPENTER
SERVICE

- Addon• tnd ramodallng
- Rooting tnd guH•r work
-Conerett work
-Plumbing tnd electrlctl

FOR ALL YOUR

WiliNG NEEDS
Residential &amp;·
Commercial

(Free Ealinl•tea) •. , .

V. C. YOUNG Ill
991·6115 er 9fl·7JI4

,,.,,.,, o.r.

E.

WE ARE YOUR SALES
AND SERVICE
"EADQUAITERS FDR

r.\i.;,nl.l

•ZENITH

POMEROY,O.

.
PRICE REDUCED! Sjqcuse
' 992·2259

3 bedroom ranch,

~rae

EASTERN DISTRICf - Neat 3
lledmom ranch with luH
basement ret. room and den.
.level 1~ acres. Let us show
you lh~ one! $45,000.

tt21 28 (114. 2tc

i&gt;ublc Notice

YO

WOik

deck, nice. lot Gas ,fA heat
Owner needs to sell! $32,900.

II

t

for Trash Pickup
Service Call·

INRULAT£

. EVERY .
SAT. NIGHT

TUPPERS PlAINS - 3
bedroom ranch with lui
. basement 2 baths, electric
heat central air. 100'&gt;361' lot

$21.500.

NOTICE OF
PUBUC SALE

"0" Btrl"" /r 811ft
Or $11rlu" ' .

. . . hllding

· Wil'i do
of ex·
cavatina.
base!llents, sewap sys·
tems, water &amp; ps lines,
water ~ell drilling end
·service, truckinc (limestone &amp; dirt).

..B 0

u, .... ,._.,,,,
,,.......
. ............
.,......
·-······
.....
............... .·:::· ···'"''
, . ,._

Public Notice

~JDDL-EPOP.T

1-1~~/}J~~~
-PT. PLEASANT O!J!U
THURS.__EVE. 6-8

10 a.nt.-1 1:30 a.m.

APPROVED·

·.....

~~~~~~·W:l~~~~,~~.!
11R•nve•

GUN SHOOT

PASSED 12'-17-8 4

f ·load

AND

•Aefriger•lors
•Dryera •Freeaera
PAfiTS and SERVICE

January 1, 1984.

~

To Buy.

ill~~"'

and

to member ratification, If the
company would agree to acomblna·
lion -or employee ·stock ownership
and profit sharing.
"The company was unwU!Ing to
consider Issuing the stock to . the
workers and therefore rejected oor
proposal," Wllllarns said from the
union's Pittsburgh headquarte~
."In view of the hugearnountofstock
issued by LTV to acquire Republic
Steel, we think the' company's
position on this matter Is both
callous and shortsighted."
LTV Steel Is the nation's second·
largest steel producer and 1s a ·

Wentld

OPEN EACH

915-S$61
All llhktt

IUSIHESS~HSID£NnAI

~::n.:et-~bo:;;~llf~!J

cast a bad llghl onotbe movement."
Rachel ·Muha, dlrector of . the
Columbus Right to Life group, said,
"No members of the Columbus·
RlghttOUfecondonevlolence. That
doesn't mean l)lat there aren't

~

Call 614·992·6737

they

d
ped
Mill shut own ·rap ..
b y UDIOD
· • ' s·
•d
1 ent

I

•

tor of Planned Parenthood of
Clncl.'ll'.atHnc., se!d cl!nlc !lllt!Pn!s ~are not being warned because no
spirlflc threats have been made In
Cincinnati. She said it Is Impossible
to forecast what terrorists might do.
·
has shown that they
always
wtH,I the clinics are
•
~n•&gt;&lt;•Qii~
between 6::11
ckised ...

charge, even though an btvestlga· murder," Twehues said, adding
about abortion and may do solnetlon has revealed that a fellow that no charges would he flied area cllnlcsfirstwerealertedwhen
thlag like that. We can't control
officer fired the fatal shot, officials against the officer.
an unldentllled man recently called
anyone's actions.".
say. .
.
"According to the evidence, he
Officer Anthony Jansen. 25, was committed no criinlnal ·act ... he
• burled Thursday In a · ceremony saJd.
attended by hundreds of other
Williamsrefusedtosayhowmany
officers. tncltidtng his brothers. shots. were !Ired tn the tncident or
p~es
·
Mtchael,23,alsoacltypollceofficer, whichofflcerflredthefata)shot.
.
.
a'
.
and Kenny, 26, an officer In Boone
-"I don't think it's important for
CLE
. VELAND
.
(AP) _ LTV C
'
dl
tried .
also
. County.
anyonetoknowwhodldit/'hesald.
orp., a vers
company
Janlll!n was shot twice 1n the left
Williams said theotflcerwho ftred
Steel's·declslon to Idle the contbtu· Involved In aerospace, defense and
side early Sunday as he and two thefatalshotwasnotllledThursday
ousweldandelectrlcweldpipernills energy products.
·
_otheroffieersrespondedtoacallofa · afternoon.Hesaldtheofflcerhasnot ·at its Aliquippa (Pa.) Works,
David H. Hoag, LTV Steel's
man with a gun at a home. .
asked to he relieved but would he
affec!lng 500 workers, has Irked president ·and chief executive of· ·
Ricky D. Mcintosh, 25, has been grantedaleavelfherequestedone.
Lynfi Williams, president of the fleer, said Thursdayl)lattheidllng
charged with murder 1n thecase.He
Michael Jansen said the revela·
United Steelworkers of America.
will occur gradually as existing
Williams said Thursday, In reac- orders are completed and shipped.
was being held without hond In the tlcin that· his brother was ldlled by a
Campbell County jail.
fellow officer wpuld make Utile
tlon to LTV Steel's announcement,
The company's line of ~lded
Pollee Chief David B. Williams difference.
that the company sought conces- standard and line pipe and welded ·
said he received a report Thursday
"We don't hold anything against
sions atAilqulppa thatarenotpartof tubular goods will continue to he
afternoon after the burial. The anybody," he said. "They wouldn't
thetridustry'sbaslcsteelagreement prOduce(! at LTV Steel's YoungKentucky State Pollee lahoratoi-y In have been at the scene if something
and ''which would have set ott a stown and COunce, Tenn.,jllants, he '
c. haln reaction throughout the said
Frankfort reported that a bullet wasn't going on. Itwon'tbrlngback ·
·
from a pollee service revolver was my brother.
Industry."
The decision by the Oevelandresoonsible for the fatal woond.
"The pollee officer needs help
LTV Steel, ronned by the recent based company does not directly
"We were very surprised by the now," he ronllnued. "I know 11
merger of RepubUc Steel and LTV affect some 1,500 Olher LTV Steel
KSPreport," Wllllamssaid. "This Is . wasn't Intentional. But we pollee
Corp:"s J&amp;L Steel, sought to lower workers at Aliquippa in such
labor costs In three months of operations as the company's tin
not an unheard-of situation, but It offlcershavetosticktogether." ·
doeslft niake things easier."
. Newport Mayor Steve Goetz
negotiations concerning the ~-ijmilli,~co~ke~~;~bila~s~t~fu~rnace,
~

· A.H. Ro_E!!Js _attorney W. &lt;:;barles Curl~_had 3!'@!.i!!l.that !!!1 Ohio _
. statute, which nullifies Ohio's two-year statute of limitations for all
Dalkon Shield cases, Is unconstitutional.
. Altorl)eys for Ms. Nunley said she contracted pelvic Inflammatory
·disease from the shield In 1976 but dld not file suit until six years later ..•
Rooenherg said he was not surprised Robins agreed to setlle the
suit, even thOugh he and co-counsel Philip Q. Zauderer heUeve the
case was weak compared with the 71 cases their firm has pending In
~them District of Ohio.

., • BLACKSTON
NEW CAR &amp;
lRUC.!LlEAS!NG

w.,

Other .officer's bullet_
' ', rt cop'
ki'lled Newpo

9

;=~;;~;;;=;:;=~~::::::::::::::~1i~;;;;:::::::::::Z:::::::::::::::::j~::::~::::::::~~::::::::::::::::;1 3 Announcement.
INTERESTED IN A
"CUT OUT
JQWN &amp; COUNIRY SWEEPER ond - n g mo·
MAtiiY'S
NEW VEHICLE
FOI·
fUTIII USE"
chino Npolr. .,.no. ond
Wt'd liio to illtroduco you lo
VETERINARY
tuppllet.
PICk up ond
Enascs·A·C.r, lht modorn way
TiASH
SERVICE
ICEN'
S
CLINIC
delivery, 01¥11 VICUUm
to drive tho vohiclo of your
CJun«, one h•ff mile up
choice.
NOW PICIIING IP' If
IN MIOOLEPORT
APPLIANCE
·Goor11111 Crook Rd. Coli
No Down Paymilll .
PAUL
[.
SHDqEY,
D.V.II:
&amp;14·448-0284.
SEUICE
Lower llonthiy Payment
. POMEROY

••

a Cleveland:radlo talk smw to say
that Ohio would he the next site of ail
abortion-clinic bOmbing. But sev·
era! bornbtngS have occurred In '
other states since ·then, the newspaper reported.
Ann B. Mitchell, executive dlrec- .

.........

11 twa operations,_
~"~5.~;~;,o;;;=~"'
~
·
~
·
;
·
~;
·
~;·~N~·~ov~
.
~
1~9~but
w"s receo..s.."'l l!l Deoe!:!&gt;~l;&gt;e•~~;;;i~~t~e-~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~§~~~~~~~--~- -~
q
r
on

'i.

nallng
a U.S. Sup.-.e
Mitchell said.
"Our advice from the ATF has
decision In which most of the city's
ordlnanceregulatbtgtheprocedure beEn. not .to warn patlen••." Ms.
was struck down.
..
.,
Elsewhere In the state, ATF . Mitchell sale!. "Thatwooldhedoing
agentshavewamedothercllnlcsto exactly what they (the terrorists)
.....,..
want us to do."
he • ._....tIn light of bombings In . L!ndaDay,dlrectorofPregnancy
Florida and WashlngtOII, D.C.
Distress Center of Columbus, which
"!Qdlcalions are extremists are
doing this," said John Lawhorn, runs -Abortlon:-"Al:curate-Jnforma~
assistant special ageittln charge ol tlon, said her organization has been
the ATF Ohlo dlvlstm. "We're contacted by the bureau but has not
hoping a relative 9r people who received threats.
·
rned
bot the
knowof"'"'actswlllnotsupportuie
"We're conce
a u
bombings," Ms. Day said. "It' shard
criminal at;ts and report this
irrational behavior." '
to believe that calls.would he from
Cincinnati' pollee say they are those In the pro-life (anti-abortion)

Councilman receives ticket
. NEW PHI~ELPHIA (AP) - City Councilman Tony Danzo
- Was-among-the first-to-draw-the public's attention to speeding traffic
·qn his quiet residential street He also became the first person
ch8rJ!ed after his complaints prompted a poHOIT"ailal' Stakl!llllt.
"I think they're pretty etflclent," Danzo said of the Monday
Incident.
Danzo, .36. brought up the ·Issue of speeding cars on lWan Avenue
fNi at last Thursday's city council meellng. He proposed that pollee
.
...c- . . .
. _yse.. radar to.stem the problem..
. Safety Dltector David Sisson subsequently ordered raaar
detection eqUipment 'Set up In the area, and Tratf!c 'Officer Jeff
Urban issued his Orst cltatlon an hour later - to Danzo.
· Urban charged Danzo with dr'vlng :rr mph In a'25 mph zone.
"It was just one of those things," Danzo said. ,

•

Business S_e nices

,.

~mlhz:cq;]~
on ~ersy aver abortion, culml-$~~~~~~~~~~~!1l.ml
Court. at least

Jensen said the detay In hiring' could hamper ertorts to attract
faculty members In vtew of worldwide competition for top genetic
researchers. It also could delay construction of the center Itself.

,.

•

The Deily Sentiilei-PIQ)-9' :

.

•

CHESTtR- Approx. 1acre kt
with 14x70 toobile home, 3
bedrooms, central air, · II!
baths, storage building.
$19,500.

ST. RT. 331 -

~-

37

acres with 2 bedroom home,
outbuidi""' 2-~ ~- Gas
and oil rWJs, .fl1!.liiiL.
.·
REALTORS

.

•STLV~NIA

•SPEED QUEEN LAUNDRY

•GIBSON REFRIGERATOR

Wt H111 - fill Tl•e
lht , .... lelll
•• 011y

RIDENOUR
TV &amp; APPLIANCE

CHESTER--985-3307

PAT HILL FORD
9112-2198

Middleport. Ohio

vou

Call 992-5875
-Or 742:3195

·················-············
Moving Solo Jon. 71o 8th. 9
til ? Everything mutt go. On
Rt. 248 Eoot ofChottor. Coli
814-986-4420 .

8

Publie Sale
&amp; Auction

Auction everyfrid1y night It
the Hartford Community
C•nter. Truckla•d• of new
merch•ndiH every week.
Conligmentl ot MW • uMd
merch8ndiM alweya wei-

Morl&lt;et. 304-468-117·2.

9

Wanted To Buy

Wented to buy uaed CMI &amp;
wood he•ters. Sw•ln Furni·
ture. 441·31&amp;9. , 3rd. •
Olive St .. Galllpollo, Oh.

DAVID D. GIINOSTAFF
t !Wanted
I IF~Sllle
c )Announcement
I lForAenl
1. _ _ _ _ __
2. _ _ _ _ __

2 Milts oul
Oft Sl. II. 7

ld.

Nov. 5-Dec. 8
Mon.-fri. 9·9
~:Jt. 9-.5; Sun. 1·5
Kim Nelson

99!-2903

lluttt·Ann

3." _ _ _ __
4. _ _ _ _ __

5.====
----=---6. _ _ _ __
7,

8.

'·------

ID.------

· ~ · 11 ·tfl

11. -_
--_
-12.
_-_
_
_
1
--14. 3
_._
_-_
_ -

11. - - - - - 18.-----.-1
- ..;.__
- -_
-20. 9
_,_
_

21.-----22. - - - - ' - - 23... -_
..-_
- ._
. .:_
.u
_
_

25• ...:...__ _...;__
:M. _ __.._.....__
21. _ _ _.....;...__,

21.------29. _ _ _ __

31.
__
_
311. ._
, ._
-_
-32. _ _ _ __

15.------- 33-----J.I. -----

. Henry E. Clellnd, Jr.
GRI 992-6191
Je1n Tiumll 941·26&amp;0
Dottie Turner 992·5192
Jo Hill 915-~

crete work, · c•rpentry.
plumbing. No job to om 011 .

Reference• tveil•ble. C•ll
814- 367·7867 or 446 4271.

21

Bu1ina81
Opportunity

I NOTICE-I
THE OHIO VALLEY PUBLISHING CO. recommendt
th•t you do buein••• wilh
people you know, •nd NOT
to tend money through lhe
mail until yQu h•v• jrwelti·
geted lha. offering.
·
your own .

Je~.n -

16. _

__:_ _;__

35' - - . . - - - - - - -

Uatlnp In

Melg1

Co. •

~

,
~

R•w Fur. Top prlcea pt~id ~
Lake J1ckson Fin • Fut. OM
Hill. Oh. 814-682·7441.
ltondlng timber. Coli
388·1117 or 814·3•8-

89oe.

COMI'LETE HOUSEHOLDS
FURNITURE . Bodo, Iron,
wood, cupbo8rd1, chllin:.

brandt: Jordlcho. ChiC. LH,
Levi. Vandtrbltt. lzod, . Ea~
prlt, Brittani.o-:cColvln' Kliin,
Serigo. · V•lente, Ev•h- .Pi~
cono, Clolborna. Mo......,.
only, Organic•llv G'town.
Heafhtex:, 900 ·oth•ra.
17,900 to •24,100 ln"!!ttory. air11ra. training. , fix~
tu,.., grand

-•no .

Ole.

!:lin . clpon 11 do.,., Mr.
KHnlh 1305) 871·3138 ••

' \'

'

22 Money to Loan

HOME OWNEAI·RellnOnCMI
to low fl•od -roto. Ueoi equity .
Jan, antlqun, Jold for any purpoH. ~ ,
end allver:. Write· . D. 'Mortgoogo, .a o.. 114-182- ·•
MIUer, Rt.2, Pomeroy, Ohla 3051 . '
41711 ., coli 114·982·
jrJIO.
- t
ch•etl, buketl, diahea.

luylnt dolly pill, colno. tlngo,)twMv. • • • •
-.... old coin•• ...,. cur. .......,. Top . , - . Ed . ... r.
lleft lolbor 8hap. 2NI .. Aw.
Mlddlopa t, Oh. 114-HI·

3471.

23

Protetllionel ·
Senr:lcee .. · ·
.,

- Tunlnti lrunlcordt MUlto
0117. r .....,......

........
·eov-u
.. -~
.,.

qudty114-7-a-1111.
· .._ 0..
......

Now

•

large lire ltON •. N•tio'f!el

FrH lath1111tts.

12117 I mo.

. - . - - .J _

Sporttwe•r. t•Ciiea •PI-•rel,
combinetion , I!CCtll!)rfe~.

(oi, too lilt ., '" small
949-2061

-

(Baird) Swoln at (614) .266·
1419 oftor &amp;PM on •-rookdays or anY tiine on
wHkenda.

Own

30 Yoon bporitMo
, No

-~~

Home lmpro'V•manta cob-

NMd er1:r. moneyl We buy
•bout 1nything of v•lua, no
junk, plene, Leon Fl•e

Cusiom .,ill Now Homos
Complolo lomo4tlin9
·
lorYko.
Quality Workmansilip

--

Typing: Need eome· typing
don•7 Contact Mra. Cheryl

comod. R!chord Roynolde,
AuctlonMr. Coli 304-275·
3019.

HOME
CONSTRUCnON

1&amp;'011Eand1 re·

htlttr cores. We ctn
IISO ICid boiltnd rod
out radi1tors. We.also
re~ir Gu Ttnks.

•Write your
ad and
by mall witn this
. toupon. Cancel vour ad by phOne when
get
, resul~. Money nur relll!ldable.

1Nam•-------------------

1

.We CIIUt~ir
core radlltors and

Curb Inflation I
I
I
Pay Cash for
Claulfleds and
. . own
Savel__l
_l
.
order

•

·,
~

,

-

�..

. . ·. j

•
Pomeroy-Middleport, Ohio

Fridey• .January 4. 1 986

OhiO

Sentinel'
-.

"

KIT 'N' CARLVLI ®by

46 Spaco fof Ront

LAFF-A-DAY

I I \I :It'

' .

73

Vans Ill 4 W.O.

.

•
•
19711&gt; Chevy block 4x4, ~
ohort bed, oharp. Call 446 ' - ~
2911 ~

r

31 ·· Homo for ·Sale .

74

.

.•

Motorcycles

N

.

1980 Honda CR -250·R very «&lt;
good cond. Coll446-9110 . "

~===~:;:::=:Boats and
Motor• for Salo

•.......__.,, ..........."!-. '

•

IVIerch~rHitsl!
·'

51 Houaohold Goods

l

5I

LOw-Una Big John 14 ft . , :
john boat, 18 HP Mercury •
motor with trailer 1nd ecc . '
Call 446· 2322.
,1

Woodburning futnlnCe, au·
tomatlc controls, blower,
ready to hook up. neveruaed

$400, Coll614·256·1216.

I'

For ~ Sale:

56

Pots for Sale

71

Autos to'r Sale

1968 Banner
camper, sleep• B. attlf ·
contai.ned. good condition ,
$1 , 500. Call 614-256 ·6645 or 614-256·6878.

.

.•

.·'
Servrces

Marcum Roofing &amp; SpOut·
ing. Now ioetalllng rubber
roofa. 3Q yearfli experience,
apa.ciallilng in built up ·roof. '"' '
Call 61 4,3B8 -9B57 . .

44

Apartment
for Rent

For nint 5 rooma ..8t bath, 5
mlnutel from town 1/J: acre

Is it' tough

ground. Coli 446·4798.

Fivt&gt;ddtJS

kicking the
old pipei'

Iron Hors8 Builders. Firm S.

Commercial Pole Bldgs .
bdr. houaeunfumithed , no
.peta. must have ref. ·Call
helf 1ota. gerdfln •P•.c e. 448-0321.
Hartford , ·. w . Yo .,
a18.100.00. phone 304- House on Glen-Summit Rd .
BI2·3374.
COrnp.letily redecorated .
Cell 61 4-3B8-9909 .

32 .Mobile Homes
for $al.e .

.

.

Ho·me Improvements concrete work, carpentry,
plumbing. No job

till

; &lt;4

~

r\

-

small.

Reference• available. Cell
614·367·7867 or 448- .,':
4271.
•

2 or 3 bedroom houses i" or
near PomGroy. Furniahed or
unfurnished. Rent and utili-

GE.NE'S ' DEEP STREAM
CARPET CLEANING. Oper·
at.. ct by. owneroDeodorizera·
acotchguard. FREE eatl-·
· mot11. Coli 614-992·6309
or 614-742-2211 .

. Day 614eveninga 614-

NEW AND' USED MOBILE
HOMES J(ESSEL'S QUALITY MOBILE HOME SALES.
4 MI. WEST; GALLIPOLIS,
RT 31 . PHONE' 814-4467274.

~o

pipe!

*
!:

614·332·974'6 Collect.
Winter opl. : 30X40X9 w~h
16' track door &amp; man door:
$6236 erected.

7 ,oon; home with One end •

, old

'
.,.'

•

''

"'•

Candy'
®Taxi
II Ill ~!)!!!.'!!!..

vs.

- -----m

Ill · (j)-.f Street ·Haw~
!PREMIERE[ Rex Smtth

Tw'o bedroom,- all alec:triehome wtth full basement.
12x85 mQI&gt;ilo home. 2 bdr.,
new e~~rpet. washer &amp; dryer,
AC·, · ..ove • refrlg, oil

dr•pn. ·,outside deck W·
indoor ·outdoor e~~rpet &amp;
oto~ogo bldg.

oftor I.

·

CoM 448-1.806
_

1871 Oovornor . .1 2x66,
good ohopa, aeoo down
lekl over p.yment.. Cell
441-4095 .

large patio and carport on
wooden area . One mile back

8200.00 per
month plus depoait. Call
814-949· 2849 .
for

rent,

23271h

lincoln Avenue, *135 .
month, 304-876-.3689 .

42 Mobile Homes
torRent

1119 Schutz mobile home
with lot. Call ' 814-387·
7-1 81.
.

14x70 total electric 3 bdr .,
furnished, plus washer I.
14o70 Paiti Avo.~ bdr.; 1'1• dryer on private lot. 10 min .
betha, total .e lectric, good' from town. $200 mo . plus
toftd. _Coll 614·446·0115. deposit and utilities. Ref.
req. Call614·266 ·1393.
a.outHul twi1 bedroom with
.tWo fuH baths on 4 acres. 2 bdr. unfum. 12x&amp;O.% mi.
'Many ••tr11. Cou~try 'living pa.. HMC. Cell446-4369 or
on hill olta. U2,000 ondwill 676·9760.
fln,nc•- 15·milea from Mid·
dloport . Call 014 - 742 · 2 bdr. washer-dryer, stove,
2332refrigerator, 1 mi. from
hoop~ol, t200 ·mo .. $200
' 12o80. two bedroom w~h dep. Call446· 1364.
ce•ltrel air' heating. Block
er1d underpinnjng. ttont FOr rent 2 bdr. &amp; 3 bdr.
porch all In griat condition. trailer. Coli 446-3371 .
a4, &amp;.oo: fall 614-7422.4 88.
3 bdr mobile home. com-.,--- - - - - ftc4 pletely f~p.~rniahed. conve ·
1971. Wlndoor, 14x70. 2 nlent location on Rt. 7 . Call
bedroom, ~I olectilc., Wood 246-5818.

w•lnut p8nellnl .ttuoughout.
Coli 814·992• B,30.

Tr0Uor for 0111e 19BZ Fl.,.;twood, 2 bdr.: 2 batho.
14a70. Ca1814·99_2· 5747.
Uo85 Mobl'- Home, complllloly hlmiiMd and oat up
for Immediate occupetlon.
~ --~ ·- ...~11:4-1178: 13115 altar 15 PM .

311 Lqta Ill Acreage

1 bdr. apt. doWntc5wn, S160
per mo. Also house for rent,
2 bdr. References required.
Cell446-3919 .

mauers.
9:00 I I Cil (1) Hunter Hunter
crazed cop , k1tler who
chooses hts victim~ based
on their skills at v1d eo

RICK' S NEW AND USED
FORNITURE . Used -stoves

3 toomsand bath, furnished.

and refrigerators. Compare
our prices, save today .

Phone 304-773 -5430 .

'Pomeroy 2 tiedr .•~ Naylor's
Run area, $100 dep. req .

Cellefter 6PM. 992-6886.

(]) 700 Club

Picken s used fUrn iture. 304676-64B3 or 675 -1460.

2 bedroom furnished apartments. Call 614· 992 -5434,
614-992 -5914, or 304882-26616.
Call 614 -992-5908 .

Red ·and gold plaid tweed
couch and chair. Fair cond .
304· 676·5376 .

.-

APARTMENTS. mobile
homes, houses. Pt. Pleasant
and Gallipolis. 61 4-44.68221 . '

63

In Middleport, 2 bedroom
furnished apt, 1 child, -1304-BB2-2566 .

Upright player piano,
good
1
cond .• .approx. 60 rolls ' in·
eluded, 1350. Call 4463486 .

Antiques

66

(]) Tahoe_Billiards: Elimi,
nation Final Earl Stnckland
vs. Nick Varner. (SO min.)

Pets for Salo

0 Cll liG Dallas (CCI
C1J Greet Performances

62 Wanted to Buy
HILLCREST KENNELS
Boarding all breeds. Heated
Indoor-outdoor facilities.
AKC Doberman pupploo:
Stud So"'lce. Call814-446·
7796.
'Judy Taylor Grooming . Call
614·387-7220.

{CCI 'Dance in Amenca : Bal ~
anchine .' First of 2 pans

Standing saw timber •. phon'e

a1110 mo. pluo 9opoo~ on
Rt. 1114, Ya mi. oft Rt. 110.
Call 814'·31B·915,1 -

Hay Ill Grain

Pontiac Bonneville
Brougham, exc cond ,
loaded, 814-448- 1015 or
446·41B2 anytlmo.

83

m1n.)
(fi)

Excavating·

BriarpatCh Kenn ..s Prole•·
sional All-brMd grooming.
Indoor-outdoor boarding facilities. English Cocker Spa·
nlel puppioo. Coli 81 4 ·38B·
9790.

84 . · Electrical
&amp; Refrigeration
Large 2 bedroom apt·. ·
carpet, washer and dryer
hook-up. ex.c cond, private
parking. quiet neighbor·

bedroom

apt.

in

72

Pt.

For rent Sleeping Rooms
and light houee keeping
r'ooms. Park Cantral Hoteil.
Coli 614-446-0718: .
Furnished room, *126 . Utili·
ties. iange, 'ref, Share bath.
Man only. 919 Sec., Gallipo·
in ,
lio. 448·4418 ohar B p._

•

8:00

SEWING M8Chlne repairs.

hood , 304-875-1962 or
675·4180.

46 Furnished Rooms

2 bedroom mobile homo.
N.,_, goa heat. R8Cine
CoU -81(•992·11B68.

traced from Its early be·
ginntngs in lmpenal Russ•a
to the creation of th e New
York Ctty Ballet (R) (60

1s

1979

64

71

: Autos for S8le.._

Trucks for Sale

1 871 Chovrolot Scottodalo,
4o4, PS, PB, auto, now llrea,
locl out .hube. ••c. cond.,
51.000 mi. Call 814· 387·

7540 .
TOP Cl\SH paid for '80 1-~-:----:---~:-::- ·
model and no-r uaod caro.
Smith Bulck·Pontleo. 1811
Ea..ern Ava., Oalllpollo. Call
81 4·448·2282.

77 Pontiac Orand Prix 301 '
tir, PB/PB, goo4 oondltlon.
Ono owner. U210, Coli
aftariPM, 448-0137 .
1974 Muoiana Pl. AM-FM
coooetto, low mi., now bel··
tory. can 814·245·1419
after 4 .

Bala:nch~ne 's . care er

Ge orge

304· 676-4681 oltor 8 p.m.

2· 2 bdr. 'mobile homea.

2 · bdr. , fumiahed trailer.

·e

1880 Chevy Luv auto, AM·
Fm tapa, a2,988. 19711
Chovy Luv auto, radio,
to'ppor. •1 ,811. ,John'•
Auto. Baloa, Bullville Rd,
448·4782, Galllpollo.

1178 Ford 4o4 runo, uil
ch,.p. Ctii814·38B·9303 .
'BO ford Laart F100, air,
cruloa, bllilt·ln CB. AM·FM
radio, with oompor top,
0 . 00. 304-678 -

urvlce. Authorized Singer
Sal•• &amp;. Service' Sharpen
Sciuora. Fabric Shop ,

J •••..,..

Pomeroy. 614-992-2284.

811

General Hauling

10:16

CIJ World et War

(MAXI
Album
Flaoh :
Alebemo
10:30 ell Jock Benny Bhow
.
@NtWIWet:Ch

Ken•• Water Service. Wells.
clatern1. pools filled. Phone '
814-367-0823 or&amp;14-387-'
7741 night or day.

11 :oo

aro ()) m 111 oo ~ o

. !BI Nowo

(]) 8111 Coaby 6how
()) MOVIE: "Goln'
Town'
(fi)

Eug..- lverd: Golden

~·of

Uphol1tery

to'

llluetratlon

• Bonny HIH Show
!MAXI MOVIE: ' lntlmiite
Momenta'
1 1 :30 I I (f) C!l Tonight Bhow

•

Outsiders'

e

12:15 (I) Night Tracks
12:30 I I (f) C!l Friday Night

..

(]) Top Rank Boxing from

Adentlc City, NJ

..

,..

...

.-.

()) 0 ()) ® Gl (j) News

()) Agronsky and Company

il1l Taite of China
fl) To Be Announced

IHBOI

I!Pa~··

2 :15

MOVIE:

'Tho

Wlklern••• Family'
5 :30 ()) Ill !Bi ABC News ICCI
Ill (J) Concern

1 :30 CIJ Dobl, Ollila
(I) Star Search
2 :00 I I (f) Nawo

Richard

(]) The Monroea
()) World Championship

Wrestling

IMAXI
MOVIE:
'Risky
8uslneos' (CCI
1 :00 ()) I Married Joon
()) ABC Rocks
Gl (j) CNN Headline News
f!ll
MOVIE:
To
Be
Announced
IHBOI MOVIE: 'The Men
With Two Brains'
1 :15 ® MOVIE: 'X from Outer

(MAXI
Show

t

Belzer

(fJ CNN Headline News

2:30 (]) Blondle
_ _(j) SportsCent:er
()) MOVIE: '!lomaone at
the Top Of the Stairs'
2:45 [HBOI lnolda tho NFL
MOVIE:
'The
(MAXI

7:00

Rutlee'

Cl) Statewide
®CBS News
® Newton'• Appla !CCI
Ira Flatow demonstrates th e
p)lystcs of a car crash , why
allerg1es make us sneeze
and wheeze and why w e
blush .
(MAXI MOVIE: 'Journey to
the Center of the Earth'
I I I}) News
CD Laramie
Cll High Chaparral
()) 0 ()) Hoe Hew
CD Star Search
(I) Dr. Who
® Merv Griffin

1}1}~1.\.fl fii)'ft ~THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

~ ~ ~~·
Unscramble theM tour Jumbles,
ooetett.,-toeacn SQuare, to form
four ordinary words.

I COUPH
(] I,

by Henri Arnold and Bob Lee

When I cut
spells ther
stay caat

! ()

I
I -

- ()

(J) WKAP in Cincinnati

Ill (J) MOVIE : 'Cotton

...
~-I(IL.L.FIJI.

12 Distance
13 Prinling

3 Libra~

gaffes
14 Angl&lt;&gt;-

4 Summer,
· in Macon

wall

A"(

I Jumbjtt.

FISHY

slgn

....',.

~

5 Fish type

Saxon
king

8 Swiss

· river
Margaret 7 Prayer

15 Little

15 Botch
18 - out

really

: :Jdi':"

.. .

i7 Ponder

(defeat)

16 Molecule
meeting
17 One ollbe
phrase
reel Bonds, 8 Oregon
19 Hit sign

25 Auto
style

2Umprudent
ZZ Of Egypt's
capital
city
Z3 Pooch
1 Strong-ann 24 Stop
11 Compassion fighting!

·.

Zll Excite
Zl Saltpeter
:M Fraternity

.·

emblem

35 Duffer's
glldget

strap
ZZTU
Z3 -Hari
24 Neas
Z5Ham'sson '-:r+--t~
21 Lubricate r.
:n Actress

0

•

1..

..,

"

Ann

..

30 Mining

discovery

•

31 Egyptian

,.

king
3Z Law (Fr.)
33Jwnp

.
...
..
..

35 Tipsier

'

31.Author
Gunther's

word

.·'
••

· One letter stands for another. In litis sample A IS Used
f'!" the line L's, X for ihe two O's, elc. Single letters;
aPcodrullheo, the length and fortnlllion ollbe words are all
· hlnta. E'ach day the code_letterl are different.
CRYPTOQU01'E

Now arranoe the olrcled lettera to
lorm lhe SUfPI'IIe anawer, aa aug.
Ol8ted by the lbOve-oanoon ~
·

Prlnlanawerherw:

I I ]-( I I Xr

(Answers tomorrow)
GOUGE SUGARY BEL.FMY
Ant wtr: F!guret don't II•- but liars do 1hls FIGURE

f• liM ........ wrt1e to: ...._.. L.-. l'•n Clllb.

""• _

_,_,...,

=-:::•'------------'

'-'0"'0"-'.:;OO::.•.:;•::.•·~'::"":::J:::;.•":::":;.·

J

'

48 Gennan

WI'TC:H WA~.

I
() ()

~.

ACROSS

1 Instance
river
5 Pontifical ·DOWN
10 Exclude
1 Ludicrous
11 Raucous
2 - acid
tt~~

AXYDLBAAXR
loLONOFJ!:LLOW

WHA'T THA'T

LERCEY

v. eaterday 's

.. F THOMAS JOSEPH

DAILY CRYFI'OQVOTES -Here'a- ~work It:

I I ( J
. , HEELAX

~

37GaeUc
38 llsy.IJ(Isy

_.._ ~ ·-..·- ;•:.n~~=-~=n;; ~~·~~---==-=-;_:;...~-;.~.._~,:.i:::;·.;-_._.;:,~,;,-~~;-~-~m;•n;;;. ,;:..~~~-~"''%;=-J~W~m~...;,~:;;;·-------ond

..

5 :00

(j) News

(]) Bachelor Father
C!l News/Sign Off

StrOkea ·

EVENING

()) Soop

8

lor

SATURDAY
1/5/85

Vldaoo
C1J Ltwa That Bob

Tonight's guest Ia Charles

2 baclroomo. Band Hill Road,
3-1 4· 8711,3B34.

'The

12:00 (]) Bumo • Allen
..._ -.1
(JJ SportoCenter
""'\_
()) Nightlina
® MOVIE: 'It's Alive'
(j) ABC Rocks
@II Gunomoka

Christmas

Oratorio:
New Year's
Cantata Conductor N•ko·
laus Harnoncoort lectds the
~-~ Concentus
Musicus
of
V1enna m thiS contmuation
' of Bach's Christmas Orate·
rio . (90 min.)
fJ) America Betrays Her
Children
9:30 [HBOI Coming Attractions
10:00,D [2J IIl Miami Vice
(JJ Tannlo: AT.T Chal·
lenge of Champions Challenge Match · John
McEnroe
ve.
Jimmy
Connors
(I) lll __(j) Mo~ Hou~tg)l
(CCI Man helps the FBI pursue a kidnapper who once
terrorized tw"ta« when he was
a young boy , (60 min )
D (f) (jQ F•lc;:on Creal .
Ill Children
of
tha
Revolution
·
IHBOI MOVIE: 'Tender

MOVIE:

Merclea'

Jamea Boys Water Service.
Also pools filled. Call 614·
268 · 1141 or 814-446 -'
)176 or 814-448·7911 • .

B7

Bach

MOVIE: -To
Be
3 :15 Ill
AnnoUnced
----:- ·- 3 :30 (JJ Collage Football: 1985
Rose Bowl from Pasadena.
CA
3 :45 IHBOI
MOVIE:
'Cross
Creek'
4 :00 !MAXI MOVIE: ' Sink the
Biamarckl'
4 :30 (]) Rooo Bagley

Twili9ht Zone

IHBOI

and McCall are in search of a

games. (60 mm.)

Mobile home IPICI 1. mile
out Neighborhood Rd . Call
448·1340.
completely furnlthed . Cell
446-9888 .
.

with a weekly ,review

of economic and investment

992-7721 .

Ploa11J1t . Call 614-446 08B2.

f11 d

·eos

Riverside Apts. Middleport.
Spectal rates for Senior
Citizens . $130 . Equal Housing Opportunities . 614 -

1

: 1 I'

portrays a top-seeded mo·
torcycle cop recruited by the
Federal government to f1ght
crime and ride a motorcycle
specially equipped with sophisticated weapons: (90
min)
.
()) (jj) Well Street Week
Louis Rukeyser analyzes th e

of Recine.

Haute

I

(]) 700 Club
(JJ Mazda SportoLOol&lt;

'

.'

1-t

NMSZ JBP SQPHXWS, X

DXZ JBP

..-

•••

SQPHXWS XZ GZQGRGQPXV , NMSZ

J ·a P

S Q P H X WS

SQPHXWS

X

X

NMBVS

N B DXZ

J BP

TXDGVJ . -

U.D . DXH GRSU
·-Y"-let'day'tcm.cGifcl Jt.: W!t CAM'!OT SUPPOSE 'DIAT
SOME MEN HAVE A RIGHT TO BE IN TillS WORLD,
AND0111ERSNORIGHT. -HENRY GEORGE
L

•,

.. ''
•

�I;..;;

.-

l

Friday, January 4, 1986

Pomeroy- MiddleP,)f't, Ohio

Pege-12-The Daily Sentinel

~-Local
Briefs:---- freliminacy' hearii:lg set in cou~ty court.;.
·_ Sale confirmed in court
·,
·
. . . -.
.
, . . _ ·. ,
I

.

,

~

1

Thli"ty-tilree . cases were pro-

+~~· ~·An~;e~n~oy~-~h~as~bee~n~l~~ed~ln~Mi:e;_lgs~:Co:~unjy~~Comrnon:
. ::;:P;Ie~as:;Co:urt:. ~~

-

suspenSfon for

Dwl, costs oidY for ,

criminal

~Uzabeth,

W~a.'!! Brt~~,.k~. .:,..
$40; and Gary Boggs, Stockport, $45. -

"DANCE FOR JOY"

. I

Pomeroy, $26 and costs; Charles
Steverut;Mlddleport, ~ and costs;
FTancls Broderick, Pomeroy, $23
and costs; Arthur Hart, Gallipolis,

Stone

Mon.-Wod.-4:15 to
S
MonAJtcl.-1&gt;: 1S to 7:15
Tuoo.-Thun.-5:30 to 6:30

S1nlor Cltiz111s Building

Survtvlng are a brothe
. , r, George $21 and costs; Charles Jones,
Funeral servtces were held at 2
Joachim of Phoenix, Ariz,; a siSter, Langsville, $24 and costs; Linda
p.m. today In Stevens Funeral
Crace HolterofRaclne; andseveral Stewjlrl, Middleport, $21 and costs;
Home, Point Pleasant, tor Louise
and nep)\ews.
.
Stone, 70, West Columbia, W.Va.,
BeSides ller parents, she was .,who Q!~'l\IE!Sda.Lln Pleasant · . preceded In death by two sisters,
Valley Hospital following a lengtby - Edythe Calvert iind MUdred
illness.
FISher; by a
Henry H.

nl~

~

,, PEAl

:PMo ·

ler•blcs Dance Oass

~~~~~~M~d·~·-~$25;and~
. ~~~~~~lo'f;KI,.=~lost~r~ucjtior~
- ~j.._j
Pome9 SESSIONS-$35

~

'l\vo dtssolutlqns of marriage have been grapted tn Meigs County·
Common Pleas Court.
.
James Arthur Snyder a nd Barbara Ellen Snyder, both of
Langsville, have been granted a dissolution of marriage. Barbara
Snyder's malden name of McQuaU was restored.
J 1m o Mullin L n Bot
d Christy Mull! Pltn wv
· 0
•
s, 0 g
tom, an
ns,
y, · a..
.have also-been granted a dlssolutk!D.J)I maniage.

•

and . ·

~

amount Is due and owtngon a promisSory note.

Loui~le

.• • • TREAT YOUR FOOD BUDGET TO • • •

'

J?&gt;Un.

...... ,_···"-··":· -

Fined for speeding were·Joseph
Nestor, Toledo, $23 and ci:lsts;
Rnbert Ladin, The PlainS, $-lland
costS; Alfred Plance Jr., Burgettstown, Pa., $22 and costs, Catol

three days 1n !all and oo:day ucense

Dissolutions granted in oourt

W

$478 and. C08ts. overi&lt;Jad; Noel
Brady, Barboursvllle, W.Va., $10

a:o;..;. J.'D.'"~cha!i'M~n-;;-· tl:;';;;;;d=~~~U:r\:di!ofa' lri\ili'li~l~Qsint:

defendant.

I

Franklin Wolfe, Haclrie,

,

overwldth; w
Larry
Hah\dtiri,
and costs;
Kevin. King,
G!llllpd~,
.va.,:Box..,r,
$25 ·aild
costs, · .CQSts;
Jill Lawrence,
Pomeroy,
$25
~· and costs; and Ronille,
Rutland,PJandcosts.
..
· ..
and costs, Improper passing; .Jen- . . For1ettingbondsinMelgs(Wnty ·
nlfer Sheets, Pomeroy, $25 ..ll!ld Court lor ~ .were Edward
C08ts, lmPI otier passing; Wllllain
Fulks, Marietta; Jullanna Johnlon,
Gobel, Coolvllie, ~ and costs,
SoutH Point; Wanda Zeigler, Parequipment VIolations; and Walter
kersburg, _. W.Va,, and Edward Roush Rilcine $25 and costs
Mahoney Verona Pa. · $50 each;

CQurt by
Judge Patrick
O'Brien
and Woods,
Va.; $2150
and
cessec1
Wednesday
In Meigs
County
tauure Bickmore,
to control w.
vehltte:
Ha1.el
adateforaprelllniDacyheartngwas costs, 'three days In !all and 00-day
:'' siiflif'lwiht'iiercases; ""-= ~· uceiiSe--su.peili.-uJ; - ;rr,&gt;r;&gt;IIJie :
M, Capehart, Middleport, and Household Finance LDan ~,,.,
.Thomas Schutord and Lance Moon, Pomeroy, $100 and costs,
'
Hennon, both of Middleport, ap.
restltutlor!, ~ days tn !aU, susChesaPeake, own~rs of the real estate.
.. · The Iitaintlff purchased the property for the sum of $27,200. Th1s
peared before JudgE: ·O'Brien on . pended, and one year probation f9r
sum Is to be ~pplled to ihe totaljudgmft of $48,352.97, as orck;&gt;redby .
charges 01 drug theft andlbreaklng passing bad cheCks; Britt DodSon,
the.court.·
·
andentertng. Thecourtsetbondfor Middleport, ~ days tn JaU, sus·
··-"·--! " A.-~ng_olll!&gt;r~.!§!JJs~~courtj&gt;yJM""e.fharl,es _ !h twn t ""£QJ_ M d . 1 '"" ~""""
-""""'"
jlh•.
· Knlgllt againSt Wayne Staats, Pomeroy, as requested'by Loulse · "·
Staais, also of Pomeroy. .
· ,
. counsel. A prellrnlnary hearing for motor vehicle.
A Judgment of $14,619.46 has been awarded In court to Ohio Valley&gt;
Schllford and Herman was set'tor 1
Theodore Copplck, Poft)and, $25.
Publishing Co., Galllpolls, frol;ll lhe Jones Boys Inc., Pomeroy.
p.m. Monday.
and costs, falluretokeepvehlcleon
Judgment was awarded by Knjght for nonpayment ol Jones Boys
Fined by O'Brten were Douglas rtgbt half of roadway; Thomas
on a bill for advertising. Court costs are also to be paid by the
Rug, Detroit, Mich., $250 and costs,
Everett, Reedsvllle, ~ and costs,

the 5!'le of property In Rutland Township and ordering
of
from that sale.
..

.

inlschi~; Hotite McCOy',

'

L-Mul...
ry Hoigfltr,

P-or

4-LB.

'"'More l•f•rmotion &amp; ...islrarion

lAG

~~~===-~------~-========::::=.

.
.
WITH ObUPON INSIDE

-11 -·~~ii::;~~K~-c~~h;~ap~m~an;,~.Tu~p~t;~~O:..cfiied for dlvorce:froiii"- 1· --~·'J'!ie--Re;r:-. · Henna.-; -JerdQ.'t· Gff:-·...... Jea.d~u~;·~~&lt;ll~··~•'Pb!ll'l!~(;;er,~l&lt;l~=!!=""""""~=.Z
of
Teresa Chapman , Parkersburg, W .Va., charging gross neg1ect
duty and extreme cruelty.
Ray Barber, Reedsvllle, also charging gross neglect of duty and
-- extreme cruelty,- ha's flled lor divorce !rom _ Flo~ce Barber;
Reedsville ,

Couple files for m.arriage
Flllng 'for marriage In Meigs County Probate Court were Weng
Lock Kang, 37, Athens, and Claire Yellow Poplar, 31, Shade.

j .

Tobacco specialist. position

op~n

·

Tlie.West Virgliila Department of AgricuiiUre11as a'n openingtor atobacco speclallst, working out of the McCausland farm · near
Henderson, W.Va.
'
Persons applying must have a degree in agronomy-tobacco
production and tobacco marketing. Starting salary Is from $18,!00 to .

. $211,000.

-

'

· The department also has a poultry specialist's position open at Its
laboratory at Moorefield, W.Va . Those applying for the position must
have a degree In poultry science or In a field of agriculture closely
· · related to poultry from a four-year college or university.
·
Active experience In .the production and marketb!g of brollers,
turkeys and layers-eggs Is de$lred. Starting salary Is $14,000-$16,100. ·
· Those Interested In either position should write to Commissioner,
West Virginia Department of Agriculture, State Capitol, Charleston,
W.Va. 25305, prior to Jan. ll.

Middleport council slates meeting
Middleport Village Councll will meet In special session on Monday,
Jan. 7, at 7: ~p.m. In council chambers.

Mayor details village receipts

.
,
Middleport Mayor Fred Hoffman reported receipts through hls
o!flce during 1984 totaled $85,014.22.
·
Receipts were Usted as follows: bond forfeitures, $67,00; lines,
$14,458; court costs, $1,925; parking ~ts, $71, discontinued tn
March; merchant pollee collections, $636; trash hauling permits,
$100; accident reports, $!!6; poster permits, . $1W; bulldtng and
various other permits, $562.22.
·
The mayor said that all receipts through the mayor's office are

elated, and burial was In Kirkland
Ce t
p lnt PI
me ery, o
easant.
Born In 1913, at Cabin Creek,
W.Va., she was thedaughtero!the
lateGeorgeandTonlRalnesPayne.
• Survtvtng are her husband, CarseiStone; threesons,PhilllpHallof
Point Pleasant, and Randy stone
and Carse! Stone Jr., both of West
Columbia: a daughter, Patricia
Day of Middleport; two sisters,
. MlmrnleSparltngandRubyRalnes,
botho!KanawhaCity, W.Va.; and13
grandCYliilifj;n
- c=aJia' ''lou!'~!lYi'di-·
grandchildren.

·Bennett Rice.
n-ovate servtces wUJ be held.
.,. • •
Flowers are to be omitted. Bwial
will be tn Beech Grove Cemetery.
Arrangements are by EWing ,Fun,
eral Home.
'

DIAMOND STUD EARRINGS
AND MATCHING PENDANTS
. Prlctd From

SSQ And Up

James B. Vineyard

ROME

APPLES

James B. Vineyard, 73, Torch,
died Thursday at his residence.
BornlnRoaneCounty, W.Va.,son
of the late Delaney and Florence
Sntlli:r"V"'iii~yar\lMrc·:;;;as•in l~~:-

. S(AB BACON

--=6~- $299
•ar:-o.-

,

of Torch United Methodist Church,
Belpre Masonic Lodge &amp;e and
Freda E. Kennedy
Carpenters' Union Local 899, ParFuneral services were help Dec.
kersburg, W.Va.
00 In Jagers &amp; !';oils Funeral Home,
Survivors Include. hls wife, Lucy
Athens, for F,,reda E. Kennedy, 79, 9
Weaver Vineyard; three brolhers,
Pomeroy Road, Athens, who died
Dale of Tallmadge, Raymond G. of
Dec. Tl In O'Bieness Memorial
Columbus, . and Harold G. . of
Hospital, Athens, following a brief
Brookville; and three sisters,
.
llliless.
Mlldred Collins of · Canton, LDa
The Rev. Ken Macklin officiated,
Richardson of Brookville, andR!lsle.
. aild burial .was tn Athens County
Weekley of Columbus.
. • ·
Memory Gardens.
Besides his parents, he was
Born In Dexter, daughter of the
preceded In death by an Infant son.
late James ·A. aild Rose Castor
and Infant daughter, two brothers
Turner, she attended John Hancock
and three sisters.
Hlgh School and was a graduate of
FUneral services·wUJ be held at 1
Athens High School and Ohlo
p.m. Sunday In White Funeral
University.
Home, Coolville, with the Rev.
A retired elementary · school
Seldon Johnson o!flclatlng. Bwial
teacher, having taught for42years,
wUJ be tn sUccess Church Cemetery.
she taught third grade at the . Friends may call at the funeral
following schools: Columbia In
homeafter2p,m.SaturdayandunW
Meigs County, and Albany, Shade,
the time of the service.
Mechanlcsburg,MorrisonandWest
Side Elementacy In Athens.
She was a member of Richland
l:lnited Methodist Church, United
Methodist Women, Athens Senior
Citizens, Laurel Grange 1~. Peon·

SliCED

U.S. NO. 1

it·e Po.tatoes

CREAMY
• CRUNCHY
'
'

Jif Peanut Butter-:

$)39
MOUNTAIN BRAND

Jumbo Bologna.
.

ANY SIZE ·
PIECE .

I

For that luxurious louch ... our exqulstte diamond stud-earring
and matching pendants. A diamond touch In the _rtrht place at
the right price. Crafted ln precious 14K gold.

~~
212 E. Mlln, Pomeroy

20 ~···

IEEF
CUBED SJEAil

lAG

DAMN ON

S26~

Y9GURT

2aoz$1
(TN.

I

~~;~4~~::::~~th~.e~~~~~~~;;an~!d.a
~· ;re~--·;·Jsed
;-~,fo~"r~l~he~..j·~·~oina~-;
r:ra'!ge,-St~t~-~R-'!d ..Natto~na~Li':i.~~-~·;g·-~

Athletic booster
officers
elected
-·- --- ·.

-

The following o!flcers were elected at a recent meeting of the
Eastern Athletic Boosters: Don Maxon, president; Henry Hensley,
VIce president; Geneva Maxon, secretary; Keith Weber, treasurer;
and Joyce Ritchie, news reporter.

•

Miller r,epresentative at courthouse
Arepresentative frOm Rep: Clarence Miller'~ o!flce.will conduct
an open door session Jan. 9 !rom ll a.m. untU noon In the Meigs
County courthouse. ·
Anyone with questions concerning the federal government Is
Invited to stop by to discuss with the representative.

Stolen guns recavered
Guns stolen Thurtday from the Howard Wrltesel residence on
Nease Hollow Road have been recovered ln Franklin County through
the computer network of which Meigs County IS a part, according to
Sheriff James J . Proffitt.
The stolen guns were entered tn the Meigs sheriff's department
computer. The Whitehall Pollee Department checked the guns with
Its computer, resulilng In apprehension of suspects and recoY.ery of
the.guns.
.
•
• Three a rrests were made lor possession of stolen guns, Proffitt said.
Arrested a'n d held In the Franklin County Jall are Donald
Stutler, Tom Hoskins and Randy McNabb.

Delta Kappa Gamma, Athens
County Retired Teachers ASsociation, .- Amerk;an - AssoEla:ttoo of
Retired Persons and was a member
.of the Order of Eastern Star.
Surviving area son and daughterin-law, Ronald J. and Jo Ann
Kennedy of Middleburg Heights;
two grandsons, Kevin and Craig
Kennedy, both of Middleburg
Heights; and a sister, Neva Scbupb'
achofNewMarttnsvUie, W.Va.
She was preceded ln.death by her
husband, Owen W. Kennedy, In
1973; by a sister, Fefnle Alexander;
and by three brothers, Teny
Turner, and Raymond and Harold
Holcomb.

Reduced 20% to 30%
Reduced 20%
MEN'S SWEATERS

YAWES TO S32

.
.
· nie eost of audits or local governments coul(llncrease because of
~

changes In rules governing federal revenue.sharlng funds, state
·Auditor ~s E. Ferguson says. · ·
·
·
· · Beginning Jan. 1, any local goveriunent unit that receives $100,000
· · or:~~ In federal flil!ds annually must have an annual single audit of
, Its en~ ftscal operations, Ferguson said. Many local goverJIIlll!!lls .
rDN have audits every two years. Ferguson said there would be llttle or no change tn audit
requirements lor goVernrnellts receiving lesa than $100,000.

'-----~----------------"

1 /2 Price

Reduced 20%

LADIES' BLOUSES
Reduced 20%

Reduced 20%
MEN'S LEVI '

1 RACK OF

FASHION JEANS

. LADIES' SKIRTS
Reduced 40%

VALUES TO '28.00

Reduced Only SJ5.88
MEN'S STRAIGHT LEG

1 RACK OF

L_EVI DENIMS IUNWASHEDI

$1950

sunny.

LADIES' SUITS
By Jantl1n, Albee, Levi .

MEN'S

DRESS &amp; CASUAL HATS

Reduced 30°/o

Reduced 20%

l RACK OF
LADIES' SLACKS

MEN'S BROWN DUCK

INSUU1ED COVERALLS
--:-:-=:'...
==:-'7-:lo:':ng7=lS-:5=-:=5':::00:-----'··

Reduced 30°/o
LADIES' LEVI
CORDUROY SLACKS

MEN'S LONG SLEEVE

KNIT SHIRTS

Reduced 20%

. Lottery
CLEVELAND . (AP)' - The
winning number drawn Thursday

Reduced 30%

BAHR CLOTHIERS ·

night In the Ohio Lottery's dally
game, "1be Number.'' was 482. In
lhe "Pick 4" game, lhe wtnntng

'- MIDDLEPORT

numberwas3016.
I

99&lt;

ASSORTED

ASSORTED

Charmin· Tissue

Pillsbury ~ake
Mixes
.

LADIES' SWEATERS
Reduced 20% to 300fo

MEN'S LEVI

Tonight, snow likely, possibly
mixed with rain early this evening.
Low Ill the mid-mo. Saturdav, a
chance of morning nurrlf!S then
becOIDtng mo8jly
High In the
mld-30s. Thechanceo!preclpltatlon
Is 60 percent tonight and ~percent
Saturday.
Ohio exteDiled lorecaal
Sunday through Tuesday:
Fair and mild Sunday. Chance of
showen or numes Monday. Fatron
Tuesday. Highs on Sunday in the40s
and Monday and Tuesday In the
upper :lls and low 40!1. Low In lhe
mld-20s to mid-~. '

2°/o Milk

LADIES' DRE.SSES

· MEN'S -

·W eather·

Clll .

Sale $2495

Reduced 20%

Admissions - Amanda Murray,
Middleport; Jessie WUI, Pomeroy; '
Robert Moodlspaugh, Pomeroy.
Discharges ~ Charles Beegle,
Mary Wallace, Anita Aelker.

HOllY FAIM

PICII OF TilE

LADIES' LEVI DENIMS

CARDIGANS, PULLOVER &amp;
SLEEVELESS

Veterans
Memorial
.

. Local audit costs may increase

LADIES' COATS
AND JACKETS

Reduced 30% to 40%

CORDUROY PANTS

As announced by John· Anderson, president of Pomeroy VIllage Council , the telephone number at Pomeroy's tax office will
be 992-7090.

Sale S180

·MEN'S SPORT AND
DRESS .SHIRTS ·

SUBURBAN COATS
AND WINTER JACKETS

Tax office number .listed

l "LADIES' LEATHEL!OAT
SIZE 12, REG. $31 0

MEN'S TOP COATS AND
. ALL' WEATER COATS

Cora Mae Joacbbn, 73, Pomeroy,
died Thursday In 'Holzer Medical
. Center.
Born Dec. 10, 19ll, to' the late
George C. and Edythe Phllllps
Joachim, she was employed lor 42
years by General Telephone Co.,
retlrlng In 1976.

Middleport Emergency Squad answered three calls Thursday.
At 5:19a.m., Squad ll went to North Third Avenue for Amanda
Murray, whO was tf.msported to Veterans Memorial Hospital.
Squad ll answered a call to 967 S. Third Ave. at8: 00 p.m. lor Pauline
Taylor. who was also taken to Veterans Mernortal Hospital.
M 8:40 p,m ,, the Middleport Fire Department responded to an
auto fire at Danny Kuhn's residence on Ohio 7.

-,

Reduced 20% .to 50%

. Cora Mae Joachim

EMS ·units answer calh

'

MEN'S SUITS
ANir SPOil COATS

18'1• oz.

lOX

'
WIIITNEY

fOC)DLAND .

COTTAGE CHEESE

~~~ 129

~M.:,

PINK SAlMON
IIADOW GOLD

5Ofo Milk...... Gal. ~ 1

LIMIT 1 PWSE

:~$169

~·'

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